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                  <text>Warren teachers ratify agreement
· BY ASSOciATED PRESS
Teachers in_ the Warren Local
school system m Washington County
were bac~ ~their classrooms today
~te_r ratifymg a ·new contract and
ending a four-ilay~ld strike.
"The school board voted Sunday
afternoon and the teachers the same
night to ratify a new two-year contract," said Harvey Graham, acting
superintendent.
·
Under . the agreement, base pay
for starting teachers was increased
from $10,100 to $10,300. The new
wage package also includes a dental
insurance policy.
.
Graham, who assumed the
superintendent's job in June, said a
late start in negotiations was among

,

the reasons which intially led to the
strike by 140 teachers, but he was
pleased an agreement was reached
so soon.
''The strike was very well
managed by the teachers and there
wasn't any roughness or any trouble
like that," he said.
.
The district's .bus drivers refused
to cross picket lines during the
walkout and; as a result, kept attendance low, Graham explained.
·"This is a rural area,"· he said.
,;Ninety-nine percent of our students _
ride the bus and a lot of parents have
onlyonecarinthefamily."
Members of the Delaware City
Teachers Association were
scheduled to meet early today to

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decide wliat action to take as a result
of an ilnpasse in negotiations with
the school board.
A majority of teachers rejected a
board proposal Monday night on six
unresolved issues. ·
The major stumbling block!! inelude binding arbitration in the
grievance procedure and the expiration date of the contract, according to Arlene Gregory,
presid!!nt of . the 155-member
association._~r issues that were
still under discussion involved .life
insurance cover"'ge, salary and a nostrikeclaiJlle.
Teachers have been reporting to
their · classes in the 3,700-pupil
district.

•

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Teachers in Newark unanimously
approved the ratification of a new
contract Monday night, according to
Sandra L. Holcombe, president of
the 366-member Newark Teachers
Association, and will report for
classes when school begins Wednesday.
"Part of the problem revolved
around the language of the contract," Ms. Holcombe explained. ·
"Under the new contract, the basic
starting pay was increased from
$10,400 to $11,000. It's a two year
agreement - one year on salaries."
Negotiations on . the salary
schedule will reopen next April, she
explained. The new agreement also
streamlines the grievance

-procedure, said Ms. Holcombe.
The Tallmadge Teachers
Association, which represents 185
members in Summit County, had
agreed to report to the first day of
class today under an extension of
their current contract which expired
at midnight Sunday.
Teachers in Vermilion also agreed
to report to classes today without a
new contract, but will meet With the
school board Sept. 8 tO discuss a
salary offer.
No talks were scheduled in the
strike by more than 200 teachers and
non-teaching employees against the
Miamisburg school system ·in Montgomery County. Neither side met
over the long holiday weekend in

Astrikealso contin~edag~instthe

Northeastern Local district m Clark
County were 250 teachers remained
on strike.
.
The threat of a strike by nonteaching employees in Colwnbus
continues. An estimated 1,500 memhers o( the Colwnbus chapter of the
Ohio Association of Public Scltod
Employees voted to ,strike when
classes start this week if they don't
have an acceptabl~ wage pac~~e.
Admininstr ahon officials ,
however, said that a potential strike
by bus drivers, clerks, food service
workers and · maintenance employees won't keep schools from
opening.

en tine
FIFTEEN CENTS

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1980

.VOL 31 NO. 98

face-to-face discussions.

Parades, picnics, speeches
mark Labor Day ce,lebration
route.
By Tbe Associated Press
At the end of the parade, the U.S.
Parades, picnics and politician's
Army
Golden Knights skydiving
campaign kickoffs marked Labor
,
team
made
a jwnp, passing a baton
Day across the country, and amid
in
midair,
and
presented the baton,
the celebrations on the traditional
engraved
with
Needham's
name, to
·end of aunimer there were thoughts
his
parents.
for workers in Poland and the
Labor leaders also expressed conhostages in Iran.
Meanwhile, as thousands of people cern for the hostages, American
drove home - from beaches and workers and their Polish counmountain resortS, the holiday traffic terparts who won demands for free
unions.
death toll neared 450.
"On this holiday that honors those
Before Monday's Labor Day
who
do the work of the world,
parade in Omaha, Neb., a vintage
American
trade unionists are deeply
Ford Thunderbird rolled past specconscious
of
how much the workers
tators with a sign saying, "Captain
of
Poland
need
our help and supPaul Needham, Hostage."
port,"
said
AFlrCIO
president Lane
Needham, an Air Force captain
Kirkland.
,
who is one of the American hostages
Teamster President Frank Fitin Iran, was the parade's honorary
grand marshal. As reminders of the ' zsimmons said, "We hope for the
hostages' to-month plight, yellow freedom of the hostages and conribbons hung from light poles and tinued freedom for people
traffic signals along the parade everywhere....
UNDER ROOF - The new Bradford Church of
Christ is now under roof. Excellent progress is being
made at the construction site thanks to members of the

congregation of the church who are donating endless
hours of time to the building project. The new church is
located near what is known as the Cross Roads.

Mondale receives solid support
CLEVELAND - Vice President Walter F. Mondale drew solid
backing-from top Ohio Democrats during a lightning-quick Labor Day
visit to Cleveland. ·
He shunned the big crowds at Cleveland's traditional air show Monday and settled on a few hundred handshakes at a black picnic and an
ethnic celebration while gaining a chance to huddle with party
leaders.
Mondale spent the afternoon at a largely-black Woodland Hills Park
picnic for U.S. Rep. Louis B. Stokes, D{)hio. He then took his campaign to the Oktoberfest, where thousands of predominately-white
revelers were gathered to recall their ethnic past.
At both appearances, Mondale's reception was mixed. A heckler
used a megaphone to shout socialist slogans while the vice president
spoke in Stokes' own district.

Strike gains not mentioned
MOSCOW - Moscow Radio broadcast the first Soviet report today
of the strike settlement in Poland but made no mention of the political
gains won by workers in the neighboring communist nation.
After ignoring the agreement signed in Gdansk Sunday for more
than 12 hours, the official Soviet radio's international service said the
accord and a.companion one reached in Szczecin "regulate various
social and economic questions raised by the workers' representatives."
"Under the ag~:eement reached, workers in Gdansk and Szczecin
reswned work today,'' Moscow radio said.
The report was not immediately broadcast over Soviet domestic
stations.
Other East European Communist governments were were no more
informative.

TRA recipients tripled

COLUMBUS, Ohio - The nutnber of jobless blue collar workers
receiving aid under the federal Trade Readjustment Act has tripled in
central Ohio in the past year.
Nearly 86,000 Ohioans have been laid off due to imports, according to
the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services, including 3,000 in the
Colwnbus area. Last year, only 1,000 central Ohioans reeeived aid.
Foreign-made cars captured 26 percent of the U.S. market in 1979,
up 5 percent from the previous year.
To be ellgible for TRA assistance, three or more workers must file a
petition with the U.S. Labor Department citing imports as the reason
for being unemployed Of for working reduced hours.
The prosram, which began six years ago, spends ;2 million a day in
Ohloalone.
·

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy and not as humid tonight. Lows in the low 60s. Mostly
SliMY Wednelday. Highs In the mld-8011. Chance of rain 10 percent

tonJcht and Wednesday. Winds northerly to northeasterly 10 mph or
leu tonleht.

Ext I I lied 01111 Fereeut - Thursday through Saturday: Achance Of
llhowen or Ulun!lentonns Thursday. Fair Friday and Saturday. .
Gradual coollnc through the period. Hlghl In the mid to upper 80s
'l'lllnday, dropping to the '70ii by Saturday. Overnight lows in the 60s
'l'lllnday IIIOI'IIing, coolin« to the low to mld-601 by Saturday morning·.

)

·

Traffic accidents across the naUon
during the three-day bollday
weekend claimed at least 453 lives,
according to an unoHlclal tally by
The Associated Press.
Tbe NaUonal Safety CouncU
esUmated before lbe lbree-day
bollday began that between 450 and
550 people coqld die on streets and
blgbways between 6 p.m. Friday and
midnight Monday.
Last year, 502 people were killed
durlllg the Labor Day weekend. Tbe
blgbest traffic toll for the holiday
was 188 In 1968.
Around Oblo, II traffic deaths
were recorded during lbe long
bollday period.
None were Investigated In the Gallla-M~Igs Area.

·Iran's new 'p rinte ntinister
considers Muskie's appeal

By Tbe Assoelateed Press
Mohammad Ali Rejai, Iran's new
prime minister, is studying an appeal from Secretary of State Edmund S. Muskie for the early, safe
release of the 52 American hostages
spending their 304th day in captivity
today.
Pars, the official Iranian news
agency, said Rejai would discuss his
response to Muskie's letter at his
"next public interview." It gave no
indication when the interview would
be or what Rejai's answer might be.
State Department spokeswoman
Sondra McCarty said Muskie sent a
letter to Rejai "on the occassion of
the new prime minister's appointment... calling his attention to
the hostage issue and urging the
hostages' early and safe release."
Muskie's note was delivered Sunday afternoon by the Swiss Embassy
in Tehran, which has represented
the U.S. government in Iran since
By Tbe Associated Press
President Carter broke diplomatic
Ohio recorded a relatively safe relations with Iran on April7.
Labor Day weekend on the highThe message appeared to be one of
ways, with 11 persons dying in traf- the opening moves in a series of new
fic accidents during the 78-hour diplomatic initiatives seeking the
release of the American captives.
period.
The Highway Patrol said the toll Muskie promised the new campaign
included two pedestrians and three in an interview three weeks ago.
A Kuwaiti newspaper reported
motorcyclists. There were no
· · multiple-death accidents.
last week that diplomats from an unThe patrol counted traffic deaths named Arab country were trying to
this weekend from 6 p.m. Friday un- mediate the hostage dispute.
til midnight Monday.
The Majlis, Iran's new
The dead:
P!!rliament, received a letter in July
MONDAY
fr&lt;m about 200 U.S. congressmen
COLUMBUS - Jon C. Reinlasoder, , appealing for a speedy end to the
25, of Colwnbus, in a motorcycle ac- hostage crisis, and Tehran Radio
cident in Franklin County.
SUNDAY
BATAVIA - Velma M. Barkat, 21,
of Batavia, in a one-car accident on
Ohio 222 in Clermont County.
1
, Mc;DONALD .- Kenneth Stephens
Three persons· were injured
Jr., of McDonald, in one-car crash
and four drivers cited as the
on a city street in Trumbull County.
result of three weekend accidents
NORTH CANTON - Roger L.
investigated
by the Gallia-Meigs
Swick, 24, of North Canton, in a onePost,
Highway
Patrol.
car accident on Ohio 72 in Stark
Officers
were
called to the
County.
scene
of
a
two-vehicle
collision on
SATURDAY
Bethel-Church
Road
Monday
at
COSHOCTON - Jamie M. Harrah,
4:25p.m.
19, of Coshocton, in a motorcycle
The l&gt;atrol reports a south
crash on a rural road in Coshocton
bound
van operated by James
County.
,
Lane,
Richmond,
Ind., went left
McCONNELSVILLE - Danny
of center in a curve anli struck a
Gohring, 12, of Stockport, in a motor-.
north bound motorcycle ridden
cycle accident on Ohio 376 in Morgan
by Jeffrey Gardner, 19,
County.
Gallipolis.
ASTABULA - George Davis, 17,
Gardner displayed visible signs
of Struthers, in a three-vehicle ·acof
injury and was transported to
cident on U.S. 322 in Ashtabula Coun-

Ohio records
11 fatalities

President Carter attended a picnic ·
in TuscUIIlbia, Ala., his Republican
rival, Ronald Reagan, made a
speech at Liberty State Park in New
Jersey, and independent presidential candidate John Anderson was
home in Illionis campaigning atrallies.
·
Last-minute vacationers crowded
beaches in Maryland and other
states along the Atlantic seaboard,
but some West Coast shores had
cloudy skies. And some vacationers
in the Northeast sneezed through the
day as pollen levels reached record
highs.
:
Temt&gt;eratures were in the 90s in
Maryland, and 200,000 people turned
out at Ocean City beach resort.
Despite some rain on Labor Day
parades in Connecticut, parks and
beaches had sizable crowds, with
plentiful-gasoline supplies as an incentive to beachgoers.
·

said the draft of a reply was read to
the Majlis Monday by II spokesman
for the foreign relations committee.
The broadcast report said some of
the legislators expressed their
opinions, and the draft was. returned
to the committee for revision. The
reports gave no inkling of what the
draft said.
Tehran Radio also reported that
President Abolhassan Bani-&amp;ldr,
Rajai, Majlis Speaker Hashem Rafsanjani and other l~ders of the
revolutionary regime met Monday
night at Bani-&amp;ldr's oome to
"discuss matters connected with the
ministerial appointments and other
major domestic issues."
Rajai on Sunday named a Cabinet
of hard-liners, and Bani.SSdr was
reported opposed to many of his

choices. But the Majlis was expected
to approve the lineup after a debate
expected to start later this week.
Approval of the cabinet will be
another step toward the Majlis
debate on the fate of the hostages.
But there is no indication when that
might begin.
Meanwhile , in London,
magistrates sentenced three
Iranians convicted of offenses stemming from a violent anti-American
demonstration outsi.de the U.S. Embassy in the British capital last month.
One man convicted of assaulting a
police officer was sentenced to three
months in jail and the court recommended that he be deported. Two
others were jailed for 14 days for obstructing police.

Columbus man hurt in wreck
A passenger in a vehicle sustained
injuries as the result of an accident
Sunday at 4:30p.m.
The Meigs County Sheriff's Depar·
tment reports Gale T. Dennison, 29,
Galloway, was driving on private
property in Bedford Township when
his vehicle went over a hill. 11Ie
vehicle rolled over approximately,
three times.
R,ichard E. Glover, 33, Columbus,
a passeng~r, sustained a dislocated
shoulder, abrasions and bruises. He
was taken to O'Bleness Hospsital,
..Athens, for treatment. The vehicle
was heavily damaged.
Sheriff James J. Proffitt reported

w:

Huffthat '0 year~ld Richard
man, Rt. 1, Reedsville, was arrested
over the weekend on an indictment
for forgery out of Licking County.
Huff~n is presently confined in jail
until he appears befrore a local
judge before being turned over to
Licking County authorities.
Monday a 17-year old Pomeroy
youth was arrested on charges of
petty theft after being surprtsed
while preparing to take gasoline
from a Salisbury Township dump
truck parked at the Salisbury Township garage at Rock Springs. The
youth was released to the custody of
(Conti nued on page 16)

·Three people injured, four cited

!Cor11 i nucd on PdQe 16)

Holzer Medical Center for treatment. Lane was cited on a charge
ofDWI.
The patrol investigated a two. vehicle accident on SR 141, just
east of SR 325, Sunday at 5:10
p.m.
Officers report an auto
operated by George Haffelt, 22,
Patriot, struck the left front of a
farm tractor driven b)' Randall
Fisher, 20, Patriot, while attempting to pass.
Following impact, the Haffelt
auto passed off the right side of
the roadway over an embankment.
Two passengers in the auto-

Cain Ellis, aged 5, and Eve Ellis,
aged 3, both of Patrtot-&lt;lisplayed
visible signs of injury and were
transported to HMC.
Fisher was cited on a charge of
failure to display slow moving
vehicle emblem. Haffelt was
cited on a charge of improper
passing.
The patrol investigated a onevehicle mishap on Bill Geo~e
Road, just north of SR 554, Monday at 9:30p.m.
Officers report a south bound
auto operated by Ronald Denney,
33, Vinton, .who was cited on a
charge of OWl, passed off the left
side of the roadway into a ditch.

�2- Tile Daily Sentinel. Mlddleport-~omeroy, 0 ., T)lesda ""S~pt._2, 1~

.'

Opinions &amp;
Comments

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.Letter to·editor
Amiwers sought .
· Well, once again, our mayor and
city council have·followed a growing
trend to favor special interest
groups.
It seems to make no difference to
them thlit a majority of the people at
council meeting'only asked that they
be given the consideration of being
able to enjoy a good night's sleep
:and being able to sit out on thelr porches and in their yards without
'bearing a lot of profane, filthy
language, or having to observe a
brawl betwen a bunch of drunks or
hopheads or both. We understand
that one of the establislunents is free
to stay open until 2:30 a.m.
However, when their right infringes
on the rights of others to be able to
enjoy theii homes and property, we
feel it is time to make a change.
If the so-called town fathers can't
implement this change, then
perhaps it is up to the citizens of the
:; village to do so themselves. State
.:: law provides a m~ans of getting rid
•of establishments such · as these
! · which are becoming a nuisance. It
•' · seems a shame to penalize other
•'~ businesses that are conducting
:: themselves in a proper manner but
:: as in a court of law, weare judged by
:; a jury of our peers.
:;
U the other places want to run the
'·
risk
of getting voted out of business
•.
:t because of the irresponsible action
•• of one or hvo, that is their choice.
•·
We wonder why the city fathers ,
had to meet in executive session?
Wonder what was said behind those
closed doors? Wonder why it took
'· almost an hour to decide to ignore
the majority sweltering upstairs
awaiting their decision to ignore
them?
Wonder why Mr. Kelly's motion
did not receive a seeond? We
thought the Sunshine Law had stopped these "closed door'' meetings.
In the preceding council meeting,
council voted and the mayor concurred not to·renew the licenses of
the trouble spot and to let the liquor
board take it from there.
Wonder what happened in the interim to cause such an abrupt about
face?
According to Attorney Knight, the
owner's responsibility ends when a
person goes out or is thrown out the

..

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gavern door. Whose responsibility is
it when they whoop and holler and
fight and throw trash on the tavern
property as well as the surrounding
neighborhood?
Why was one of the police officers
who patrols these spots regularly
told to "shut up" by his superior of. fleer when he was about to speak up
for the citizens' conunittee? Why
were the citizens' committee
speakers not allowed to have their
chance to speak? Wonder why the
police officers can't be as diligent
about watching the trouble spots in
town as they are when it comes to
hiding and trying to catch someone
on their way to work conunitting the
terrible act of going a mile or so over
the speed limit, or straying over the
center line after a sleepless oight.
We realize· we have asked a lot of
questions, but we are sure our town
fathers willluive all the answers for :
us a!'the next meeting of council! If
not, they can always go into
executive session and dream up a
few.
We don't believe problems can be
eliminated by ignoring them but
perhaps we are wrong. We have
.been wrohg before as some of us
voted for the mayor and some of the
council members.
This letter is just to let the citizens
and voters of Middleport know what
kind of representation you get when
you take your problems to the cityfathers!
Let's all contact our pastors, the
ministerial association, neighbors,
friends and all other responsible
citizens in this matter. Perhaps once
again we can enjoy the freedom of
our home and property without
being subjected to the behavior we
now have to witness.
It seems to be and has long been a
favorite ploy of our city-fathers to
try and get everyone so disgusted
they just quit pursulilg a subject.
'l1link about it!
The next time you are subjected to
the nuisance, call . the mayor and
each council member. Maybe they
would enjoy watching and listening .
at 2 or 3 in the morning.
Concerned Citizens for freedom to
enjoy our homes! (39 signatures) Names withheld on request. .

Tax break for Ohio's
ailing auto industry
Republicans are continuing to pressure majority
Democrats in the Senate for passage of a sales tax break to
help the troubled auto industry. ·
The house has approved a plan to stimulate car sales by
offering to cut the 4 cents-on-the-dollar sales tax in half for
two months. Although it has also been endorsed by Gov.
James A. .Rhodes, the measure has been opposed by
Senate President Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron.
Sen. Donald E. Lukens, R·Middletown, said the proposal
should be the top priority when the Senate reconvenes
·Sept. 8.
"We must do out share to help the ailing auto industry in
Ohio and the thousands of workers who depend on it for
their family's well-being," Lukens said. ''We must pass
the auto sales tax cut as quickly .as possible."

~~

"Golly/ Just a minute/ I'll check my home computer to S6fl If th6re Is any more .beer In the ·
rf1frlf}6rator. "

With Congress now ahnost certain to reconvene for a
post-election session, Republicans wielding toy ducks and
Democrats. slinging indignation are battering each other
regularly.
Each day for the past several weeks, the House has
opened with criticism by GOP members at the Democrats
for planning a "lame-duck" session In November.
DemOcrats are retali.ating in kind. Speaker Thomas P.
"Tip" O'Neill Jr. even ejected from the House the toy, ban·
daged plastic duck that Rep. B11d Shuster, R-Pa., had
carried into the chamber to symbolize the lame-duck
session.
Shuster later said: "Donald Democrat is suing the
speaker. He doesn't understand why he's not allowed on
the floor of the House when there are so many turkeys
allowed."
Republicans are claiming that Democrats don't want to
take the political heat that might now from dealing with
·the federal budget before Election bay.
.
The budget may have a deficit of as much as $30 billion,
despite earlier promises by Democratic leaders to come
up with an inflation-fighting balanced budget this time, the
GOP antagonists gloat.
Republican Robert K. Dorium took to the floor .to
challenge O'Neill to a debate in Dornan's Los Angeles
district, where O'Neill next week will campaign.for Dornan's opponent, Carey Peck, son of actor Gregory Peck.
"I will get you a town hall and an audience of a thousand

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Tiley ~ some of the biggest cities
and biggest corporations on the
financial ropes, and they watch·
while bureaucratic nitpickers deal

Today in history
--TOday· Ill TuesdAy,

Sept. 2, the

246th day of 1980. There are 111 days
left in the year.
'
Today's highlight iii histOry:
On Sept. 2, 11164, during the Civil
War, Union forces under Gen.
William ShernJ8ll occupied the city
of Atlanta.
qrtthisdate:
:
In 31 B.C., Mark Anthony and
Cleopatra were defeated by Octavius in the Battle of Actlwn. ·
In 1668, the great fire of London
broke out, burning for several days
and ultimately destroying 13,000
homes.

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they find they caMot afford it. They
lower their aspirations and choose a
more modest house and then find
they CaMOt obtain the flilancing.
The various conswner polls reveal
the gloom and distress, some of
with manuf'a-ctured legal which seems to arise fl'(IJI the
.technicalities instead of facing the realization that you cannot continue ·
issues.
to run an economy this way without
When they seek to buy a house for
ultimately having to face the truth.
which they have saved .for years
And the polls show alao, and have
since the mld-19'/0s, that millions of
families are In a financial bind, but
that their plight ·has been averaged ·
out In the statistics by a smaller .
.number who have been living ex.. 'iii iiil9,1he Treasury -Department traordinarily weU.
was established, with Alexander
Those who must deal with the
Hamilton as secretary.
dollar at the local meat market
In 1901, Vice President Theodore might not know the abstract subject
Roosevelt said In a speech at the of economics but they . know
. Minnesota State Fair: "Speak softly something about Its practical apand carry a big stick." .
plication, and they can rea11011 from
. Ten years ago, the space agency there.
canceled two of Its renlalnlng Apollo . They know that with high infiatlon
flights, reducing the program to four it doesn't INIY to save, and they
trips to the moon.
worry that it makea economic U not
Five years ago, Palestinian common sense to borrow and pay
guerrillas threatened to step up their back in cheaper dollars. And they
attacks on israel to wreck the.SlDal know It can't continue, becaUJe
agreement between Egypt and without savings you can't bUild failIsrael.
·
.tones to make jobs to pay wages .

...'

&lt;&gt;

Inflation or recession: a matter of semantics
dollar's low value is a measure of
economic weakness, and they see
evidence of it in the inability of
domestic cannakers to counter
Japanese imports. .
.
They hear political promises,
about balanced budgets and the like,
and they k(low the promises are insincere. They see their taxes go up
with inflation, and they wonder what
in the economy they are getting for

~~h

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&lt;&gt; .

'

NEW YORK (AP) - Ronald
Reagan is being criticized for saying
the country is in a depl'filion rather
than a recession, but the distinction
has meaning only for politicians,
economists and semanticists.
All three are likely to make·
something of it, but it will matter not
a whit to the public, except to the extent it distracts attention from the
real issues, and the' ability of candidates to deal with them.
Call it a recession, call it a
depression. No ·ooe group .l)WI)S the
definitions, and none has produced
generally accepted distinctions, except to say the differences are a
matter of time and degree.
What reaUy iS. important is the
current ·condition of the. economy,
not its descriptions, and if' the candidates don't recognize ~his fact the
public alinost certainly does,
because lhe public is tlle economy.
The publ~ ,lmo~s that it Is living
with chronic Inflation; chronic debt
and, for those with the least skills,
chronic unemployment. They read
that productiv ty is falling, and they
know their incomes are.·
They might not understand the
details, but they know that the

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For .C arter conventions are no fun
States.
Reagan's defense slogan now is
"peace through strength," a rather
Ironic echo of 1976. Ford adopted
that phrase as a substitute for the
word "detente" after Reagan campaign criticism rl administration
policy toward the Soviet Union.
Carter was applauded for his
stand on the draft:
"With great help from the
American Legion, we have won the
fight for peacetime draft
registration, We need the ability to
mobilize quickly and effectively and
we have shown our resolve to both
friend and foe alike."
On that, at least, he is more in tune ·
with the veterans than is Reagan,
who has said that draft registration,
won't save enough mobilization time
to make it worth doing.

a,))!

u

Rep. Mark Andfews, R-N.D., presented a heady
argument to a congressional committee the other day for
rejecting legislation to establish coal-slurry pipelines.
The cost, Andrews told a House · Commerce ·subcommittee, would be passed along to consumers "in every
bottle of beer brewed in the United States."
His logic: If coal starts moving in pipelines, It would
mean lost revenues for railroads, which then would have to
up prices for haufu.g other commodies - such as wheat
and other grains.

that he'd keep boosting it in a second
tenn. He's for higher military pay,
he's for the MX missile, for the
Trident submarine.
Tile American military is unmatched and will stay that way, he
said.
Reagan says otherwise, and
promised the Legion that he would
reverse Carter policies be said have
made a s'hambles of U,S. defen8es.
That Is not a new theme for Reagan,
nor is it reserved for Democrats.
Four years ago, challenging
President Gerald R. Ford for the
Republican nomination, Reagan
said that administration had let
.defenses slip, and claimed that
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger had described his role as
one of negotiating an acceptable
seeond place situation for the United

1'
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vince the generally conservative,
hawkish veterans that he is doing
everything he should to keep U.S.
military might unsurpassed.
GOP presidential nominee Ronald
Reagan already had been through,
drawing repeated cheers as he accused Carter of running a faltering
defense program that has left the
United States second in strength to
the Soviet Union. Reagan said that
as president, he would reverse that, '
and the Legion's 62nd annual con- ,
vention cheered some more.
The reception for Carter was ·
respectful but reserved. Carter
never has been a big man with the
veterarui. He ran four years ago on a
platfonn that called for $5 billion to
$'1 billion in defense cuts.
Now he boasts of having increased
·defense spending, and !IBid in Boston

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' .
WASHINGTON (AP) - 'Take it
from James 'Earl Carter Jr.:
American Legion conventions were
more fun for father.
His would have been the salad
days of practical jokes ·and watermled balloons, of late-night parties
Kith old pals.
And besides, he wasn't president
of the United States, trying to convince a skeptical croiV(! of Legionnaires, now middle-aged and more,
that American defenSes remain No.
1, the world's strongest arsenal.
Uke aimost every American
politician, Carter is a member of the
Legion; for afew moments in Boston
last Thursday he put on the campaign hat of Post 2 in Americus, Ga.
And like almost every recent
president, Carter had his hands
more than full as he tried to con-

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people," Dornan said. "And I promise you I will even have
some lovely la!Hes to greet you, singing lustily 'Hey Big
Spender."'
·
Replied O'Neill: "The gentleman seems upset,"
On the counterattack, Rep. John L. Burton, D-Calif.,
suggested that if Thomas Jefferson, Thomas ·Paine and
George Washington were alive today, Ronald Reagan and
· other conservatives probably would brand them as Communists.
And Rep. Parren J. Mitchell, D-Md., rose to note that the
quality of opening speeches had become so "vehemently
partisan" that "I now have to play so~e word games while
I listen to them." .
On this particular day, Mitchell said he mulled words
beginning with "C" that fit the speeches. His list: "carping, cantankerous, castastrophe, chafing, crotchety,
clamor, clatter and crud."

~~ .

Business mirror

\

@ 1110DyNEAtnc..

Democrats-Republicans sti.ll battling

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�2- Tile Daily Sentinel. Mlddleport-~omeroy, 0 ., T)lesda ""S~pt._2, 1~

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Opinions &amp;
Comments

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.Letter to·editor
Amiwers sought .
· Well, once again, our mayor and
city council have·followed a growing
trend to favor special interest
groups.
It seems to make no difference to
them thlit a majority of the people at
council meeting'only asked that they
be given the consideration of being
able to enjoy a good night's sleep
:and being able to sit out on thelr porches and in their yards without
'bearing a lot of profane, filthy
language, or having to observe a
brawl betwen a bunch of drunks or
hopheads or both. We understand
that one of the establislunents is free
to stay open until 2:30 a.m.
However, when their right infringes
on the rights of others to be able to
enjoy theii homes and property, we
feel it is time to make a change.
If the so-called town fathers can't
implement this change, then
perhaps it is up to the citizens of the
:; village to do so themselves. State
.:: law provides a m~ans of getting rid
•of establishments such · as these
! · which are becoming a nuisance. It
•' · seems a shame to penalize other
•'~ businesses that are conducting
:: themselves in a proper manner but
:: as in a court of law, weare judged by
:; a jury of our peers.
:;
U the other places want to run the
'·
risk
of getting voted out of business
•.
:t because of the irresponsible action
•• of one or hvo, that is their choice.
•·
We wonder why the city fathers ,
had to meet in executive session?
Wonder what was said behind those
closed doors? Wonder why it took
'· almost an hour to decide to ignore
the majority sweltering upstairs
awaiting their decision to ignore
them?
Wonder why Mr. Kelly's motion
did not receive a seeond? We
thought the Sunshine Law had stopped these "closed door'' meetings.
In the preceding council meeting,
council voted and the mayor concurred not to·renew the licenses of
the trouble spot and to let the liquor
board take it from there.
Wonder what happened in the interim to cause such an abrupt about
face?
According to Attorney Knight, the
owner's responsibility ends when a
person goes out or is thrown out the

..

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gavern door. Whose responsibility is
it when they whoop and holler and
fight and throw trash on the tavern
property as well as the surrounding
neighborhood?
Why was one of the police officers
who patrols these spots regularly
told to "shut up" by his superior of. fleer when he was about to speak up
for the citizens' conunittee? Why
were the citizens' committee
speakers not allowed to have their
chance to speak? Wonder why the
police officers can't be as diligent
about watching the trouble spots in
town as they are when it comes to
hiding and trying to catch someone
on their way to work conunitting the
terrible act of going a mile or so over
the speed limit, or straying over the
center line after a sleepless oight.
We realize· we have asked a lot of
questions, but we are sure our town
fathers willluive all the answers for :
us a!'the next meeting of council! If
not, they can always go into
executive session and dream up a
few.
We don't believe problems can be
eliminated by ignoring them but
perhaps we are wrong. We have
.been wrohg before as some of us
voted for the mayor and some of the
council members.
This letter is just to let the citizens
and voters of Middleport know what
kind of representation you get when
you take your problems to the cityfathers!
Let's all contact our pastors, the
ministerial association, neighbors,
friends and all other responsible
citizens in this matter. Perhaps once
again we can enjoy the freedom of
our home and property without
being subjected to the behavior we
now have to witness.
It seems to be and has long been a
favorite ploy of our city-fathers to
try and get everyone so disgusted
they just quit pursulilg a subject.
'l1link about it!
The next time you are subjected to
the nuisance, call . the mayor and
each council member. Maybe they
would enjoy watching and listening .
at 2 or 3 in the morning.
Concerned Citizens for freedom to
enjoy our homes! (39 signatures) Names withheld on request. .

Tax break for Ohio's
ailing auto industry
Republicans are continuing to pressure majority
Democrats in the Senate for passage of a sales tax break to
help the troubled auto industry. ·
The house has approved a plan to stimulate car sales by
offering to cut the 4 cents-on-the-dollar sales tax in half for
two months. Although it has also been endorsed by Gov.
James A. .Rhodes, the measure has been opposed by
Senate President Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron.
Sen. Donald E. Lukens, R·Middletown, said the proposal
should be the top priority when the Senate reconvenes
·Sept. 8.
"We must do out share to help the ailing auto industry in
Ohio and the thousands of workers who depend on it for
their family's well-being," Lukens said. ''We must pass
the auto sales tax cut as quickly .as possible."

~~

"Golly/ Just a minute/ I'll check my home computer to S6fl If th6re Is any more .beer In the ·
rf1frlf}6rator. "

With Congress now ahnost certain to reconvene for a
post-election session, Republicans wielding toy ducks and
Democrats. slinging indignation are battering each other
regularly.
Each day for the past several weeks, the House has
opened with criticism by GOP members at the Democrats
for planning a "lame-duck" session In November.
DemOcrats are retali.ating in kind. Speaker Thomas P.
"Tip" O'Neill Jr. even ejected from the House the toy, ban·
daged plastic duck that Rep. B11d Shuster, R-Pa., had
carried into the chamber to symbolize the lame-duck
session.
Shuster later said: "Donald Democrat is suing the
speaker. He doesn't understand why he's not allowed on
the floor of the House when there are so many turkeys
allowed."
Republicans are claiming that Democrats don't want to
take the political heat that might now from dealing with
·the federal budget before Election bay.
.
The budget may have a deficit of as much as $30 billion,
despite earlier promises by Democratic leaders to come
up with an inflation-fighting balanced budget this time, the
GOP antagonists gloat.
Republican Robert K. Dorium took to the floor .to
challenge O'Neill to a debate in Dornan's Los Angeles
district, where O'Neill next week will campaign.for Dornan's opponent, Carey Peck, son of actor Gregory Peck.
"I will get you a town hall and an audience of a thousand

Iii Washington

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Tiley ~ some of the biggest cities
and biggest corporations on the
financial ropes, and they watch·
while bureaucratic nitpickers deal

Today in history
--TOday· Ill TuesdAy,

Sept. 2, the

246th day of 1980. There are 111 days
left in the year.
'
Today's highlight iii histOry:
On Sept. 2, 11164, during the Civil
War, Union forces under Gen.
William ShernJ8ll occupied the city
of Atlanta.
qrtthisdate:
:
In 31 B.C., Mark Anthony and
Cleopatra were defeated by Octavius in the Battle of Actlwn. ·
In 1668, the great fire of London
broke out, burning for several days
and ultimately destroying 13,000
homes.

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they find they caMot afford it. They
lower their aspirations and choose a
more modest house and then find
they CaMOt obtain the flilancing.
The various conswner polls reveal
the gloom and distress, some of
with manuf'a-ctured legal which seems to arise fl'(IJI the
.technicalities instead of facing the realization that you cannot continue ·
issues.
to run an economy this way without
When they seek to buy a house for
ultimately having to face the truth.
which they have saved .for years
And the polls show alao, and have
since the mld-19'/0s, that millions of
families are In a financial bind, but
that their plight ·has been averaged ·
out In the statistics by a smaller .
.number who have been living ex.. 'iii iiil9,1he Treasury -Department traordinarily weU.
was established, with Alexander
Those who must deal with the
Hamilton as secretary.
dollar at the local meat market
In 1901, Vice President Theodore might not know the abstract subject
Roosevelt said In a speech at the of economics but they . know
. Minnesota State Fair: "Speak softly something about Its practical apand carry a big stick." .
plication, and they can rea11011 from
. Ten years ago, the space agency there.
canceled two of Its renlalnlng Apollo . They know that with high infiatlon
flights, reducing the program to four it doesn't INIY to save, and they
trips to the moon.
worry that it makea economic U not
Five years ago, Palestinian common sense to borrow and pay
guerrillas threatened to step up their back in cheaper dollars. And they
attacks on israel to wreck the.SlDal know It can't continue, becaUJe
agreement between Egypt and without savings you can't bUild failIsrael.
·
.tones to make jobs to pay wages .

...'

&lt;&gt;

Inflation or recession: a matter of semantics
dollar's low value is a measure of
economic weakness, and they see
evidence of it in the inability of
domestic cannakers to counter
Japanese imports. .
.
They hear political promises,
about balanced budgets and the like,
and they k(low the promises are insincere. They see their taxes go up
with inflation, and they wonder what
in the economy they are getting for

~~h

~
&lt;&gt; .

'

NEW YORK (AP) - Ronald
Reagan is being criticized for saying
the country is in a depl'filion rather
than a recession, but the distinction
has meaning only for politicians,
economists and semanticists.
All three are likely to make·
something of it, but it will matter not
a whit to the public, except to the extent it distracts attention from the
real issues, and the' ability of candidates to deal with them.
Call it a recession, call it a
depression. No ·ooe group .l)WI)S the
definitions, and none has produced
generally accepted distinctions, except to say the differences are a
matter of time and degree.
What reaUy iS. important is the
current ·condition of the. economy,
not its descriptions, and if' the candidates don't recognize ~his fact the
public alinost certainly does,
because lhe public is tlle economy.
The publ~ ,lmo~s that it Is living
with chronic Inflation; chronic debt
and, for those with the least skills,
chronic unemployment. They read
that productiv ty is falling, and they
know their incomes are.·
They might not understand the
details, but they know that the

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For .C arter conventions are no fun
States.
Reagan's defense slogan now is
"peace through strength," a rather
Ironic echo of 1976. Ford adopted
that phrase as a substitute for the
word "detente" after Reagan campaign criticism rl administration
policy toward the Soviet Union.
Carter was applauded for his
stand on the draft:
"With great help from the
American Legion, we have won the
fight for peacetime draft
registration, We need the ability to
mobilize quickly and effectively and
we have shown our resolve to both
friend and foe alike."
On that, at least, he is more in tune ·
with the veterans than is Reagan,
who has said that draft registration,
won't save enough mobilization time
to make it worth doing.

a,))!

u

Rep. Mark Andfews, R-N.D., presented a heady
argument to a congressional committee the other day for
rejecting legislation to establish coal-slurry pipelines.
The cost, Andrews told a House · Commerce ·subcommittee, would be passed along to consumers "in every
bottle of beer brewed in the United States."
His logic: If coal starts moving in pipelines, It would
mean lost revenues for railroads, which then would have to
up prices for haufu.g other commodies - such as wheat
and other grains.

that he'd keep boosting it in a second
tenn. He's for higher military pay,
he's for the MX missile, for the
Trident submarine.
Tile American military is unmatched and will stay that way, he
said.
Reagan says otherwise, and
promised the Legion that he would
reverse Carter policies be said have
made a s'hambles of U,S. defen8es.
That Is not a new theme for Reagan,
nor is it reserved for Democrats.
Four years ago, challenging
President Gerald R. Ford for the
Republican nomination, Reagan
said that administration had let
.defenses slip, and claimed that
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger had described his role as
one of negotiating an acceptable
seeond place situation for the United

1'
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.

vince the generally conservative,
hawkish veterans that he is doing
everything he should to keep U.S.
military might unsurpassed.
GOP presidential nominee Ronald
Reagan already had been through,
drawing repeated cheers as he accused Carter of running a faltering
defense program that has left the
United States second in strength to
the Soviet Union. Reagan said that
as president, he would reverse that, '
and the Legion's 62nd annual con- ,
vention cheered some more.
The reception for Carter was ·
respectful but reserved. Carter
never has been a big man with the
veterarui. He ran four years ago on a
platfonn that called for $5 billion to
$'1 billion in defense cuts.
Now he boasts of having increased
·defense spending, and !IBid in Boston

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' .
WASHINGTON (AP) - 'Take it
from James 'Earl Carter Jr.:
American Legion conventions were
more fun for father.
His would have been the salad
days of practical jokes ·and watermled balloons, of late-night parties
Kith old pals.
And besides, he wasn't president
of the United States, trying to convince a skeptical croiV(! of Legionnaires, now middle-aged and more,
that American defenSes remain No.
1, the world's strongest arsenal.
Uke aimost every American
politician, Carter is a member of the
Legion; for afew moments in Boston
last Thursday he put on the campaign hat of Post 2 in Americus, Ga.
And like almost every recent
president, Carter had his hands
more than full as he tried to con-

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people," Dornan said. "And I promise you I will even have
some lovely la!Hes to greet you, singing lustily 'Hey Big
Spender."'
·
Replied O'Neill: "The gentleman seems upset,"
On the counterattack, Rep. John L. Burton, D-Calif.,
suggested that if Thomas Jefferson, Thomas ·Paine and
George Washington were alive today, Ronald Reagan and
· other conservatives probably would brand them as Communists.
And Rep. Parren J. Mitchell, D-Md., rose to note that the
quality of opening speeches had become so "vehemently
partisan" that "I now have to play so~e word games while
I listen to them." .
On this particular day, Mitchell said he mulled words
beginning with "C" that fit the speeches. His list: "carping, cantankerous, castastrophe, chafing, crotchety,
clamor, clatter and crud."

~~ .

Business mirror

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OPEN DAILY 10-9; SUNDAY 1-6

carry Handle

,

44
Our Reg.

·

12.96

Be A Soft Touch
In AVelour Top!
Classic-mandarin collar-soft
cotton/polyester in smartly
toned colors. What a feeling
and ,a buy! Misses' sizes.

44

Compact Black-White TV
Just the right size for easy portability.
Molded-in carrying handle. Save oow'

$8-17.96
1 114

[.
-..' ~"'
/ ·•

Soft Corduroy
Fashion Pants

6To

Breeze thru this fall in our
cotton corduroy p_an.ts .
Newest colors and styles;
many back pocket details.

Girls' ·Back-to-School Dress Sale

September means more savings at K mart n l and 2-pc. dresses in polyester terry, triacetate/
nylon velour. polyester/cotton. Sizes 4-14.

Solid-state reliability. Easy automatic
frequency and color controls. Save.

For color TV cabinet up ·to 27:' wide .
Oor $42, Deluxe TV Cart ... : $34

-

Easy·roiUng TV Cart

1

Our Reg .
11.96

Our Reg.

GE®Porta Colar®TV

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GE®Quality 2-Siice Toaster

Hot air pops corn. Continuous-feed action. Automatic butter meller. Save!

Automatic pop-up toaster with color
selector, swing-open crumb tray.

Regina®3-Speed
Electrjkbroom®

. der •
- . cassette Recor
M101

Features built-in condenser mike, automalic stop, handy tape counter. Save.

I

Has 'Air Pulse' lifting aclion. 4 pile settings for
carpet and bare floors .
Powerful suction, easyempty dirt cup. Save.

·u... ·u.· a.ttefy, not inekldecl

Custom Fitting
and Drilling
Included with

44!!'!ce

Single Shat Shotgun*

H&amp;R Topper"' #08812, 16, 20, 410
ga Side lever _action release.

Our Reg. _2.96-3.22

Bras Alld Briefs
Bras in most popular
styles. Briefs with
front control panel.

Double knit polyester
pique. Misses' or lull
figure sizes 40-46.

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Divider-style. vinyl bag.
Nylon zipper. Wire rack
for shoes. In colors.

21o!!.

26.88

Sale! Galuie®300

Hard plast i c . ABC
approved. Choice of
weight and colors.

·496

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THE SAVING PLACE 'm

WED. THRU SAT.

OPEN DAILY 10-9; SUNDAY 1-6

carry Handle

,

44
Our Reg.

·

12.96

Be A Soft Touch
In AVelour Top!
Classic-mandarin collar-soft
cotton/polyester in smartly
toned colors. What a feeling
and ,a buy! Misses' sizes.

44

Compact Black-White TV
Just the right size for easy portability.
Molded-in carrying handle. Save oow'

$8-17.96
1 114

[.
-..' ~"'
/ ·•

Soft Corduroy
Fashion Pants

6To

Breeze thru this fall in our
cotton corduroy p_an.ts .
Newest colors and styles;
many back pocket details.

Girls' ·Back-to-School Dress Sale

September means more savings at K mart n l and 2-pc. dresses in polyester terry, triacetate/
nylon velour. polyester/cotton. Sizes 4-14.

Solid-state reliability. Easy automatic
frequency and color controls. Save.

For color TV cabinet up ·to 27:' wide .
Oor $42, Deluxe TV Cart ... : $34

-

Easy·roiUng TV Cart

1

Our Reg .
11.96

Our Reg.

GE®Porta Colar®TV

'

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Price

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I

I

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'

87

'

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21~,.~,

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The Great Hot Air Popper.®

GE®Quality 2-Siice Toaster

Hot air pops corn. Continuous-feed action. Automatic butter meller. Save!

Automatic pop-up toaster with color
selector, swing-open crumb tray.

Regina®3-Speed
Electrjkbroom®

. der •
- . cassette Recor
M101

Features built-in condenser mike, automalic stop, handy tape counter. Save.

I

Has 'Air Pulse' lifting aclion. 4 pile settings for
carpet and bare floors .
Powerful suction, easyempty dirt cup. Save.

·u... ·u.· a.ttefy, not inekldecl

Custom Fitting
and Drilling
Included with

44!!'!ce

Single Shat Shotgun*

H&amp;R Topper"' #08812, 16, 20, 410
ga Side lever _action release.

Our Reg. _2.96-3.22

Bras Alld Briefs
Bras in most popular
styles. Briefs with
front control panel.

Double knit polyester
pique. Misses' or lull
figure sizes 40-46.

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1.. .., ~ ' ' • • • • .~

Blwlill Bag

Divider-style. vinyl bag.
Nylon zipper. Wire rack
for shoes. In colors.

21o!!.

26.88

Sale! Galuie®300

Hard plast i c . ABC
approved. Choice of
weight and colors.

·496

Our Reg . 5.97

Pheasant/Duck Load

12, 16, 20-gauge, different

shot sizes available.
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7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday ,Sept. 2, 198()

·' I

•
-..·
-

MIXED

0

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Fryer Parts

Xl

"''" - ."'...

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59~ LB.

. · ::&gt;
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•.

_ TORNADOES READY- Southern opened its 198o
season Saturday night with a 31-1! victory over the

·Ham

.

'173 .

Meigs Marauder reserve squad. This Scott Wolfe ac-,
tion shot shows the Ton\adoes 'taking the field prior to
Saturday's opener.

.

LB.

BONELESS

Chuck Roast

.,..••-LB.

GOLD KIST

Chicken Franks
89~LB.
DELTA
·. ·

SOUTHERN OFFENSE - Terry McNickle gets
ready to scoot following a Dale Teaford bandoff in this
pre-game shot showing the Southern Tornado back·

By Scott Wolfe
The Southern Tor·
nadoes kicked off the 1980 gridiron
campaign with a 31-f triumph over
the Meigs Marauder Junior Varsity
here Saturday evening. The win,
Southern's first in two years,
marked a successful debut for head
coaches · Mick Winebrenner and
Howle Caldwell in their first !!eliSOR
at the SVAC schooL
Quarterback Dale Teaford helped
8pll1'k Southern's offense, rushing
for 86 yards on nine carries,
displaying a near perfect aerial at·
tack good for 105 yards and an 83
percen\ (10 for 12) completion accuracy while scoring two touch·
downs.
Tailback Robin Fortune, behind a
strong second half perfonnance,led
Southern's ground game with 72 yar·
ds. The TOI'Mdoes cranked over 299
total yards compared to the young
Melgsclub's175totalyardage. .
Meigs took the first possession and
during Its first series and bright
. spots in the Marauder backfield
began to shine through. The JV's
quickly rambled for a first down led
by sophomore speedster Mike
Jackson, who streaked for 102 yards
on 22 carries to lead teh Meigs
8J'IIUIIdgame
After two ~ore first downs that
boosted Meigs deep into Southern
territory, Dale Teaford leaped high
into the air to pick off a fourth down
J1IISS from quarterback Rick Chan-cey at the 10 yard line.
Southern then took over po1111dlng
out a 90 yard scoring drive capped
by a 17 yard touchdown pa~ to HB
Terry McNickle in the endzone with
2:00 left in the firSt canto, the score
~-

.

While
Meigs
just couldn't
find SHS
that
extra
punch
to spark
Its offense,

=~~!;or::!:=:s~::

with 7:48 on the clock saw split end
ScoU Neaae sprint into the endzone
on the scoring end of a 35 yard TD
pass from Teaford. The point after
again fell abort.
Seven minutes later, after a Flint
Greer fumble recovery, the victors
again took over. With time l'lllllling
out Teaford went to the air comP~ Rve for six pass 11ttempts to
Neale and Joe Bob Hemsley to set
up a two yard TD· run by the .
Southern quarterback. ·
After a quiet third canto which
saw both club&amp; trading poasesalon
without a score, the fourth pariod
'll'ila quite different.
Two minutes into the period
· Southern completed a 75 yard drive
. when Robin Fortune outran
· everyone in a 19 yard touchdown

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field. others ate Terry Patterson (45) and Dale
Teaford (18). Southern opened its season on a high note
with a 31-1! romp over the Meigs Marauder reserves.

jaunt. McNickle added the extra
point, 25-0.
Moments later, after a Meigs fumble deep in SHS territory, Teaford
drove across the goal line from the
one for yet another score, 31~.
Meigs youngsters still weren't
about to give up and fought back to
put together a successful i!().yard
drive ending on a four yard touchdown run by quarterback Rick
Chancey- That made the score 31-f
which it remained until the final buz·
zer.
Southern collected 12 first downs,
fumbling only once and giving up no
interceptions. they were peMlized .
seven times for 45 yards. Meigs
collected seven firstdowns, fumbling
four times and giving up one in-terception.
Danny Talbott had a fine defen·
sive game with seven unassisted
tackles. Terry Patterson, Mike
Collins, Greer, McNickle, and For•
tune each had six while Greer added
two fumble recoveries.
C. T. Chapman had four tackles, a
quarterback sack, and one fumble
recovery- Southern punters punted
four times for a 39 yard average,
Unofficially Rick Edwards of
Meigs had a super game with nine
· tackles, Greg Taylor, and Terry
Wayland five unassisied tackles.
Meigs was penalized nine times for
60 yards. Other stats were
unavailable.
· By quarters'
Southern
6 12 0 13-31
Meigs J. v.
o o o 6 - f·
Scoring: McNickle 17 yard pass
reception. Nease 35 yard pass reception. Teaford 2 yard run. Fortune 18
yard run. McNickle point after.

DELTA

BELTONE
HEARING AID
SERVICE CENTER

6 ROU . ,

BROUGHTON

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK

BUTTERMILK

$}79

GAUON

16

16 OZ. 8 PAK

All Week .

.,,.

oz.

To Repair and Service
. Hearing Aids .
Batteries and supplies for
all makes for sale.

JOB SQUAD
REG. OR SUGAR FREE

Mr. Black will be glad to
give you a free 'hearing
test with the latest Bellone
Electronic equipment.

.DR~

TOWELS

PEPPER

8 PACK 16 OZ.

BELTONE

JUMBO ROLL

All Week

HEARING AID CENTER'
601 SIXTH AVE.
HUNTINGTON, W.VA.
PHONE 525·7221

YOU

•

DISPOSABLE

DIAPERS

TEDDY BEAR
·TODDLE:RS 40 ct~4 99
~EDD~

BEAR _• 499
DAYTIME 48 CT.

K_e_rr Regular Mason
save

you

...(,.,..

money on •Aura •Homeowner
•Life •Health •Business

POMEROY,O .
992-5131 or 992-5739

...

99

:RC &amp; DIET RITE ;

BREAD

Will Be At Lowe Hotel
Point Pleasant, w. va. o~
Wednesday, Sept. · 3rd,
from 9 a.m. to 12 Noon.

ouri-DooR....OPEN FOR

REUTER BROGAN ·
INSURANCE SERVICE

%GAL

4

FAVORITE

MR. JAMES BLACK

r;.:;;;:;;;;;;:::;:;:;;;:::::::;;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;;1

.

39 .

.

TOILET TISSUE .•.................~~~....... -

.

214MA1N

JUMBO

PAPER TOWELS ..................~~~~.... _ .

Southern wins
RACINE -

;

-~
.,.;. .
,~
'·'•

CANNING.
LIDS
-c;T:_ '1 00
3 12BOXES
.
·-

-~-COKE
8 PACK 16 OZ.
All Week

;

�••

--

----

.

&amp;:
.,.,&lt;&gt;J: ~

~-,;
i .;:· CD

i$ :! IIC -&lt; C&gt;

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0~

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7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday ,Sept. 2, 198()

·' I

•
-..·
-

MIXED

0

.,c:

Fryer Parts

Xl

"''" - ."'...

-

...

59~ LB.

. · ::&gt;
c. IIC
-&lt;

!"'

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=
.,. --

QUARTER SLICED

~

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....,

"' ::1
$Iii·
• ::r - ·
-~ ::ft - ·

c:.
~

~-.-

-&lt;
•.

_ TORNADOES READY- Southern opened its 198o
season Saturday night with a 31-1! victory over the

·Ham

.

'173 .

Meigs Marauder reserve squad. This Scott Wolfe ac-,
tion shot shows the Ton\adoes 'taking the field prior to
Saturday's opener.

.

LB.

BONELESS

Chuck Roast

.,..••-LB.

GOLD KIST

Chicken Franks
89~LB.
DELTA
·. ·

SOUTHERN OFFENSE - Terry McNickle gets
ready to scoot following a Dale Teaford bandoff in this
pre-game shot showing the Southern Tornado back·

By Scott Wolfe
The Southern Tor·
nadoes kicked off the 1980 gridiron
campaign with a 31-f triumph over
the Meigs Marauder Junior Varsity
here Saturday evening. The win,
Southern's first in two years,
marked a successful debut for head
coaches · Mick Winebrenner and
Howle Caldwell in their first !!eliSOR
at the SVAC schooL
Quarterback Dale Teaford helped
8pll1'k Southern's offense, rushing
for 86 yards on nine carries,
displaying a near perfect aerial at·
tack good for 105 yards and an 83
percen\ (10 for 12) completion accuracy while scoring two touch·
downs.
Tailback Robin Fortune, behind a
strong second half perfonnance,led
Southern's ground game with 72 yar·
ds. The TOI'Mdoes cranked over 299
total yards compared to the young
Melgsclub's175totalyardage. .
Meigs took the first possession and
during Its first series and bright
. spots in the Marauder backfield
began to shine through. The JV's
quickly rambled for a first down led
by sophomore speedster Mike
Jackson, who streaked for 102 yards
on 22 carries to lead teh Meigs
8J'IIUIIdgame
After two ~ore first downs that
boosted Meigs deep into Southern
territory, Dale Teaford leaped high
into the air to pick off a fourth down
J1IISS from quarterback Rick Chan-cey at the 10 yard line.
Southern then took over po1111dlng
out a 90 yard scoring drive capped
by a 17 yard touchdown pa~ to HB
Terry McNickle in the endzone with
2:00 left in the firSt canto, the score
~-

.

While
Meigs
just couldn't
find SHS
that
extra
punch
to spark
Its offense,

=~~!;or::!:=:s~::

with 7:48 on the clock saw split end
ScoU Neaae sprint into the endzone
on the scoring end of a 35 yard TD
pass from Teaford. The point after
again fell abort.
Seven minutes later, after a Flint
Greer fumble recovery, the victors
again took over. With time l'lllllling
out Teaford went to the air comP~ Rve for six pass 11ttempts to
Neale and Joe Bob Hemsley to set
up a two yard TD· run by the .
Southern quarterback. ·
After a quiet third canto which
saw both club&amp; trading poasesalon
without a score, the fourth pariod
'll'ila quite different.
Two minutes into the period
· Southern completed a 75 yard drive
. when Robin Fortune outran
· everyone in a 19 yard touchdown

•••
~l
~~

lf

.

•

•

~- - - - . -:----___;;;=

~
'••

...

·:.

J
'

I

.

49~

..

field. others ate Terry Patterson (45) and Dale
Teaford (18). Southern opened its season on a high note
with a 31-1! romp over the Meigs Marauder reserves.

jaunt. McNickle added the extra
point, 25-0.
Moments later, after a Meigs fumble deep in SHS territory, Teaford
drove across the goal line from the
one for yet another score, 31~.
Meigs youngsters still weren't
about to give up and fought back to
put together a successful i!().yard
drive ending on a four yard touchdown run by quarterback Rick
Chancey- That made the score 31-f
which it remained until the final buz·
zer.
Southern collected 12 first downs,
fumbling only once and giving up no
interceptions. they were peMlized .
seven times for 45 yards. Meigs
collected seven firstdowns, fumbling
four times and giving up one in-terception.
Danny Talbott had a fine defen·
sive game with seven unassisted
tackles. Terry Patterson, Mike
Collins, Greer, McNickle, and For•
tune each had six while Greer added
two fumble recoveries.
C. T. Chapman had four tackles, a
quarterback sack, and one fumble
recovery- Southern punters punted
four times for a 39 yard average,
Unofficially Rick Edwards of
Meigs had a super game with nine
· tackles, Greg Taylor, and Terry
Wayland five unassisied tackles.
Meigs was penalized nine times for
60 yards. Other stats were
unavailable.
· By quarters'
Southern
6 12 0 13-31
Meigs J. v.
o o o 6 - f·
Scoring: McNickle 17 yard pass
reception. Nease 35 yard pass reception. Teaford 2 yard run. Fortune 18
yard run. McNickle point after.

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�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 2, 1988

s;~;;~TNFL. quarterbacks seeking jObs
BY ASSociATED Pl\ESS
Francisco and Minnesota, was cut
A scrambling quarterback puts a by the Rams. An 11-year NFL
lot of pressure on the defense in the veteran, Lee played two years with
National Football League. Today,' the Atlanta Falcons and eight years
. ~. the prmure is on the quar- with Minnesota, twice going to Super
terbacks who are scrambling for Bowls with the Vikings.
jobs.
The St. Louis Cardinals dropped
. NFL teams had to get down to quarterback Steve Plsarkiewicz,
their 41&gt;-player limit by Monday who cost l!ud Wilkinson his job as St.
night, and a lot of quarterbacks . Louis' head coach last year. Wilkinfound themselves looking for son was fired by Cards owner Bill
another team rather than a wide- Bidwill after he refused to play the
open pass receiver,
former No.I draft pick from
Bob Lee, . who came out of Missouri.
retirement late last year and direcOther veteran signal-callers who
ted the Super Bowl-bound Los were waived Monday include Gary·
:Angeles Rams to victories over San Huff by the San Francisco 49ers,

Jerry' Golsteyn by the Baltimore
Colts Norris Weese by the Denver
Bron~, Kim McQuilken by the
Washington . Redsklns, Mike
Kirkland by the San Diego Chargers
and Ed Bums by the New Orleans
Saints.

Rookie quarterbacks cut were
Steve Ensminger of Louisiana State
by the Saints, Jimmy JordanofFlordia state by the New England
Patriots and Jeff Knapple &lt;1
Colorado by the Broncos.
Reserve quarterbacks Cliff Olander, who has thrown just 24 passes in
three years with San Diego, and
Mark Miller were luckier. Olander
was traded to the New York Giants

G_M's pep talk helps Phils
BY ASSociATED PRESs
Pete Rose Jlllght bave been the
man with the )east to gain from a
pep talk, but the words of
Philadelphia Phillies general
manager Paul Owens were not lost
on "Charlie lfustle."
"That pennant is there for all of
us. It's going to go to the team that
goes out and gets it," Rose said.
Foc the first time since July 12, the
Phlllies grabbed hold of first place in
the National League East by
rallying to beat San Francisco 6-4
Monday. The Phillies ( .5348) led
Montreal (.5343) by one-half percentage point, with Pittsburgh
(.5338) me point back. Pittsburgh
split a pair with Houston, losing the
opener 16-4 and winning the nightcap
7-&lt;&gt;. The Expos defeated San Diego I)TENNIS
· NEW YORK (AP)-Bjorn Borg
advanced to the quarterfinals or the
U.S. Open tennis tournament,
beatlllg Frenchman Yannick Noah
6-3, 6-3, ~. while his next opponent,
Rascoe TaMer, heat Brlsn Teacher
6-3,6-4,1)-7,6-2.

In other matches, Wojtek Fibak of
Poland, seeded 14th, beat No.4
Guillermo VIlas of Argentina 3-6, 6-3,
6-4, 6-3, and Johan Kriek of South
Africa beat Buster Mottram of
Britain 6-4, l)-7, 6-3, 6-4.
Among the women, second-seeded
Martina NavraWova was upset by
No.9 Hana Mandlikova 7-i;, 6-4.
Third-seeded Chris Evert Uoyd
defeated Joanne Russell &amp;-2, &amp;-1 in
the fourth round and will meet No.ll
Kathy Jordan, a 7-5, 6-3 winner over
Yugoslavia's Mirna Jausovec, in the
quarter(inals.
In other matches, No.6 Dianne
Fromholtz of Australia was
eliminated by No.l3 Pam Shriver $6, 6-1, 6-1; Tracy Austin, the top
seed, booted No.IO Virginls Ruzici o£
ROmania 6-4, ~-

Dodgers 5, Mets Z
R.on Cey and Dusty Baker each
homered to pace Los Angeles to its
fifth win in a row. Bob Welch, 11-9,
struck out li season-high eight batters and combined with Steve Howe
for a four-hitter. Howe worked the
last two innings for save No.13.
. Cey also doubled home a run, and
Steve Garvey, who had only one hit
in his previos 28 at-bats, went 2-for-4
with an RBI..
The loss was New York's eighth in

game, singled and went to second on
a wild pitch by Greg Minton, $-5.
Boone brought him home with a
single. An unearned run scored later
in the lruting on a fielding error by
Giants second baseman ·&amp;nnie
Stermett.
Phils lefty Steve Carlton tossed a
seven-hitter for his 21st victory
against only seven losses.
In the other pennant race, Los
Angeles defeated the New York
Mets 5-2 and moved within a half
game of Houston ln the NL West,
while Cincinnati whipped St. Louis 81 to move within L-games of the
lead. Atlanta downed the Chicago
Cubs l&gt;-2 in the other NL Labor Day
game.
Aslrolll~5, Pirates 4-7
Terry Puh1 and Rafael Landestoy
each drove in a pair of runs for
Houston in the first game as the
Pirates lost their eighth straight. It
was Pittsburgh's longest losing
streak since 1968 when the Piratea
·Jost 10 in a row imd wound up sixth.
Bill Madlock hit a pair of homers
in ·Pittsburgh's loslng effort, and Ed
Ott homered once.
The Pirates finally snapped the
losing streak in the second game.
Pitcher Rick Rhoden smacked a
two-run homer and two doubles,
driving in three runs, and Mike
Easler also homered for Pittsburgh.
Expos 5, Padres 3
Rowlarid Office drove in two riuls
with a homer and a sacrifice fly to
help Montreal break a five-game
losing streak. Scott Sanderson, 13-8,
went seven innings for the victory,
getting relief help from Elias Sosa
and Woody Fryman. Office's homer,
his sixth of the year, came with none
aboard in the fourth off Rick Wis!!, 5-

95% of smokers stating a preference, the
MERIT low tar/good taste combination
was favored 3 to 1 over high tar leaders
when tar levels were revealed!
Long-Term Satisfaction: In the latest
survey~}{ former high tar smokers who
have switched to MERIT, 9 out of 10 . .
reported they continue to enjoy smoking,
are glad they switched, and reported
MERIT is the best·:tasting low
tar they've ever tried!
MERIT is the proven
alternativ~ to high
tar Sf!ioking. And
you can taste ·it.

where brand identity was con- ·
cealed, a significant majority of
smokers rated the taste of low tar.
MERIT as good as- or better than
-leading high tar brands. Even
cigarettes having twice the tar!
C Phi lip M or ris Inc , I'J!IO

. Kings: 8 mg "tar:· 0.6 mg nicotine - 100's Reg: 10 mg "tar: · 0.7 mg nicotine100's Men: 11 mg "tar:' 0.8 mg nicotine av.per cigare11e. FTC Report Dec: 79

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smok1ng Is Dangerous to Yow Health1•

Kings &amp;lOO's

'

J

'.

Braves 5, Cubs Z
nine games.
Gary Matthews doubled twice and
singled twice to pace Atlanta's 1$-hit
attack. With the victory, the Braves
went over the .500 mark, 66-65, for
the first time since 1974 and equaled
their total wins of last season.
Bob Homer and Glenn Hubbard
each added three hits for Atlanta.

Volleyball

HARNESS RACINQ

DU QUOIN, Ill 3AP) - Bill
Haughton won the. $293,500 Hambletonian with Burgomeister, a colt
which had been owned, trained and ·
driven by Haughton's son Peter, who
was kil\ed in an auto crash this year.
Haughton drove Burgomeister to
victory in the second qualifying
division and then came back to win
the third heat and the race by
holding off Devil Hanover in the
stretch.

\

'Coder.

·

In another trade; Cleveland obtained Joe DeLamielleure, the longtime Buffalo Bills guard who teamed
with Reggie McKenzie tO anchor the
"Electric Company" line which
blocked for O.J. Simpson.

SHOP

MASON .FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST l&gt;E4LS IN THE
TRI STATIO AREA

MASONtURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to's:oo Thursday till 12 Noon

yACIITING
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) _Australia
drew within one victory of capturing
the America's Cup challenger role,
thrashing France 3 in the third mat-

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate
Mason,

w. Va.

r~ch~of~a~best~·~.o~f-~se~v~en~se~n~·es~-=~-·j~~===::::::::::::::::::~~~~~:::~=~~

EASTERN EAGLES

Volleyball Schedule
SCpt. 2 at Trimble.
Sept. 8, Miller.
Sept. 11, Eastern • Kyger Creek' ·
Southern.
Sept. 16 at Soothwestern • Kyger
Creek -Eastern.
Sept. 18 at Eastern • Southern North Gallla.
Sept. 23 at Eastern· North GalliaSouthwestern.
Sept. 25 at Eastern -Hannan Trace
-Southwestern.
Oct. 2 at Eastern - Hannan Trace Kyger Creek.
Oct. 7, Southern - Hannan Trace Eastern.
Oct. 9, North Gallia.
Oct. 13 at Miller -Southern -Southwestern.
Oct. 25, Trimble.

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Suppose you had a special furnace and water
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punter Larry Swider, Detroit; and
fullback Jimmy DuBoae, Mia!nl.
The Dallas Cowboys pliced ·
veterans Preston Pearson and
Aaron Kyle on the injured reserve
list, meaning they will not he eligible
to play for the team this season
unless they fits! clear no-recall
waivers.
Guard Wade Key, a 1~year
veteran, was waived by
Philadelphia · while the Seattle
Seahawks cut veteran guard Ron

schedul~

·WITH A
RATE.

Smoker Preference: Among the

Smoker Quest Ends
Blind Taste Tests; In tests

.

6.

The Phils won the ·game in the
eighth inning, snapping a 4-4 tie.
Larry Bowa, who had four hits in the

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for an undisclosed future draft
choice while Miller was dealt by the
Cleveland Browns to Green Bay.
Besides Pisarklewicz, the Cllrdinals asked . waivers on veteran
place-kicker Roy Gerela and three
·other players, including ll·year
veteran defensive end Ron
Yankowski. Veteran wide receiver
Dwight Scales was among four
players cut by the New York Giants.
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers
waived wide receiver Danny Buggs
and running .bllck Tony Davis,
bringing their roster to only 44
players, one under the regularseason minimum. Tbat spot will be

filled by a place-kicker since the
Dues cut their only me, Neil.
O'Donoghue, over the weekend.
Among other veterans placed on
.waivers · were: linebacker Greg
Westbrooks by Los Angeles; offensive lineman Bob V a1'l Duyne,
Baltimore; cornerback Gerar&lt;l
Williams, San Francisco; center
Jim Pietrzak, New Orleans; center
Ted Fritsch and running back Bobby
Hammond, Washington; safety
Doug Beaudoin and linebacker Sam
Hunt, New England; running back
Haske! stanback, Atlanta; wide
receiver Larry Brunson, Oakland;
safety Marvin Cobb and wide
receiver Billy Brooks, Cincinnati;
tight end C.onrad Rucker, Houston;
offensive tackle Cleveland Elam and

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�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 2, 1988

s;~;;~TNFL. quarterbacks seeking jObs
BY ASSociATED Pl\ESS
Francisco and Minnesota, was cut
A scrambling quarterback puts a by the Rams. An 11-year NFL
lot of pressure on the defense in the veteran, Lee played two years with
National Football League. Today,' the Atlanta Falcons and eight years
. ~. the prmure is on the quar- with Minnesota, twice going to Super
terbacks who are scrambling for Bowls with the Vikings.
jobs.
The St. Louis Cardinals dropped
. NFL teams had to get down to quarterback Steve Plsarkiewicz,
their 41&gt;-player limit by Monday who cost l!ud Wilkinson his job as St.
night, and a lot of quarterbacks . Louis' head coach last year. Wilkinfound themselves looking for son was fired by Cards owner Bill
another team rather than a wide- Bidwill after he refused to play the
open pass receiver,
former No.I draft pick from
Bob Lee, . who came out of Missouri.
retirement late last year and direcOther veteran signal-callers who
ted the Super Bowl-bound Los were waived Monday include Gary·
:Angeles Rams to victories over San Huff by the San Francisco 49ers,

Jerry' Golsteyn by the Baltimore
Colts Norris Weese by the Denver
Bron~, Kim McQuilken by the
Washington . Redsklns, Mike
Kirkland by the San Diego Chargers
and Ed Bums by the New Orleans
Saints.

Rookie quarterbacks cut were
Steve Ensminger of Louisiana State
by the Saints, Jimmy JordanofFlordia state by the New England
Patriots and Jeff Knapple &lt;1
Colorado by the Broncos.
Reserve quarterbacks Cliff Olander, who has thrown just 24 passes in
three years with San Diego, and
Mark Miller were luckier. Olander
was traded to the New York Giants

G_M's pep talk helps Phils
BY ASSociATED PRESs
Pete Rose Jlllght bave been the
man with the )east to gain from a
pep talk, but the words of
Philadelphia Phillies general
manager Paul Owens were not lost
on "Charlie lfustle."
"That pennant is there for all of
us. It's going to go to the team that
goes out and gets it," Rose said.
Foc the first time since July 12, the
Phlllies grabbed hold of first place in
the National League East by
rallying to beat San Francisco 6-4
Monday. The Phillies ( .5348) led
Montreal (.5343) by one-half percentage point, with Pittsburgh
(.5338) me point back. Pittsburgh
split a pair with Houston, losing the
opener 16-4 and winning the nightcap
7-&lt;&gt;. The Expos defeated San Diego I)TENNIS
· NEW YORK (AP)-Bjorn Borg
advanced to the quarterfinals or the
U.S. Open tennis tournament,
beatlllg Frenchman Yannick Noah
6-3, 6-3, ~. while his next opponent,
Rascoe TaMer, heat Brlsn Teacher
6-3,6-4,1)-7,6-2.

In other matches, Wojtek Fibak of
Poland, seeded 14th, beat No.4
Guillermo VIlas of Argentina 3-6, 6-3,
6-4, 6-3, and Johan Kriek of South
Africa beat Buster Mottram of
Britain 6-4, l)-7, 6-3, 6-4.
Among the women, second-seeded
Martina NavraWova was upset by
No.9 Hana Mandlikova 7-i;, 6-4.
Third-seeded Chris Evert Uoyd
defeated Joanne Russell &amp;-2, &amp;-1 in
the fourth round and will meet No.ll
Kathy Jordan, a 7-5, 6-3 winner over
Yugoslavia's Mirna Jausovec, in the
quarter(inals.
In other matches, No.6 Dianne
Fromholtz of Australia was
eliminated by No.l3 Pam Shriver $6, 6-1, 6-1; Tracy Austin, the top
seed, booted No.IO Virginls Ruzici o£
ROmania 6-4, ~-

Dodgers 5, Mets Z
R.on Cey and Dusty Baker each
homered to pace Los Angeles to its
fifth win in a row. Bob Welch, 11-9,
struck out li season-high eight batters and combined with Steve Howe
for a four-hitter. Howe worked the
last two innings for save No.13.
. Cey also doubled home a run, and
Steve Garvey, who had only one hit
in his previos 28 at-bats, went 2-for-4
with an RBI..
The loss was New York's eighth in

game, singled and went to second on
a wild pitch by Greg Minton, $-5.
Boone brought him home with a
single. An unearned run scored later
in the lruting on a fielding error by
Giants second baseman ·&amp;nnie
Stermett.
Phils lefty Steve Carlton tossed a
seven-hitter for his 21st victory
against only seven losses.
In the other pennant race, Los
Angeles defeated the New York
Mets 5-2 and moved within a half
game of Houston ln the NL West,
while Cincinnati whipped St. Louis 81 to move within L-games of the
lead. Atlanta downed the Chicago
Cubs l&gt;-2 in the other NL Labor Day
game.
Aslrolll~5, Pirates 4-7
Terry Puh1 and Rafael Landestoy
each drove in a pair of runs for
Houston in the first game as the
Pirates lost their eighth straight. It
was Pittsburgh's longest losing
streak since 1968 when the Piratea
·Jost 10 in a row imd wound up sixth.
Bill Madlock hit a pair of homers
in ·Pittsburgh's loslng effort, and Ed
Ott homered once.
The Pirates finally snapped the
losing streak in the second game.
Pitcher Rick Rhoden smacked a
two-run homer and two doubles,
driving in three runs, and Mike
Easler also homered for Pittsburgh.
Expos 5, Padres 3
Rowlarid Office drove in two riuls
with a homer and a sacrifice fly to
help Montreal break a five-game
losing streak. Scott Sanderson, 13-8,
went seven innings for the victory,
getting relief help from Elias Sosa
and Woody Fryman. Office's homer,
his sixth of the year, came with none
aboard in the fourth off Rick Wis!!, 5-

95% of smokers stating a preference, the
MERIT low tar/good taste combination
was favored 3 to 1 over high tar leaders
when tar levels were revealed!
Long-Term Satisfaction: In the latest
survey~}{ former high tar smokers who
have switched to MERIT, 9 out of 10 . .
reported they continue to enjoy smoking,
are glad they switched, and reported
MERIT is the best·:tasting low
tar they've ever tried!
MERIT is the proven
alternativ~ to high
tar Sf!ioking. And
you can taste ·it.

where brand identity was con- ·
cealed, a significant majority of
smokers rated the taste of low tar.
MERIT as good as- or better than
-leading high tar brands. Even
cigarettes having twice the tar!
C Phi lip M or ris Inc , I'J!IO

. Kings: 8 mg "tar:· 0.6 mg nicotine - 100's Reg: 10 mg "tar: · 0.7 mg nicotine100's Men: 11 mg "tar:' 0.8 mg nicotine av.per cigare11e. FTC Report Dec: 79

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smok1ng Is Dangerous to Yow Health1•

Kings &amp;lOO's

'

J

'.

Braves 5, Cubs Z
nine games.
Gary Matthews doubled twice and
singled twice to pace Atlanta's 1$-hit
attack. With the victory, the Braves
went over the .500 mark, 66-65, for
the first time since 1974 and equaled
their total wins of last season.
Bob Homer and Glenn Hubbard
each added three hits for Atlanta.

Volleyball

HARNESS RACINQ

DU QUOIN, Ill 3AP) - Bill
Haughton won the. $293,500 Hambletonian with Burgomeister, a colt
which had been owned, trained and ·
driven by Haughton's son Peter, who
was kil\ed in an auto crash this year.
Haughton drove Burgomeister to
victory in the second qualifying
division and then came back to win
the third heat and the race by
holding off Devil Hanover in the
stretch.

\

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·

In another trade; Cleveland obtained Joe DeLamielleure, the longtime Buffalo Bills guard who teamed
with Reggie McKenzie tO anchor the
"Electric Company" line which
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Sept. 8, Miller.
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Sept. 18 at Eastern • Southern North Gallla.
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Sept. 25 at Eastern -Hannan Trace
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Oct. 2 at Eastern - Hannan Trace Kyger Creek.
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Oct. 9, North Gallia.
Oct. 13 at Miller -Southern -Southwestern.
Oct. 25, Trimble.

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punter Larry Swider, Detroit; and
fullback Jimmy DuBoae, Mia!nl.
The Dallas Cowboys pliced ·
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Aaron Kyle on the injured reserve
list, meaning they will not he eligible
to play for the team this season
unless they fits! clear no-recall
waivers.
Guard Wade Key, a 1~year
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·other players, including ll·year
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Yankowski. Veteran wide receiver
Dwight Scales was among four
players cut by the New York Giants.
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers
waived wide receiver Danny Buggs
and running .bllck Tony Davis,
bringing their roster to only 44
players, one under the regularseason minimum. Tbat spot will be

filled by a place-kicker since the
Dues cut their only me, Neil.
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Among other veterans placed on
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Baltimore; cornerback Gerar&lt;l
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Ted Fritsch and running back Bobby
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Haske! stanback, Atlanta; wide
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safety Marvin Cobb and wide
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�1t-The Daily Sentinel. MiddleP,Ort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 2, 1980 ·

·Lf!nghorns tJulllp

•••e 1!;le•••a

.. l..._._.
IJ

• • I, • •

Ra:zorbac~s·

11- The Daily ~nlinel; Middlei&gt;ort-Pumeruy, 0., Tuesday, Sept. 2, 1980

· "I Clllled the play and Coach Akel'!l said Holtz. "U you do that, you con••• j
AUSTIN, Texas (AP)- The loth- fans in Memorial Stadium.
Arkansas hoodwinked the went along witli it,'' said Uttle. "I trol the game."
ranked Te!UIS Longhorns beat the
He added, "You have to give
jus! didn't tell the team. I faked the
sixth-ranked Arkansas Razorback Longhorns in the second quarter
TeliBB
all the credit in the world." ·
ball to carl Robinson and everybody
23-17 Monday night on a play the when sophomore Gary Anderson
Quarterback
Tom Jones and italf·
team knew about and another one it faked a reverse. While he traveled 39 went one way. I went the other."
back
Gary
Anderson,
both A.rkanus ·.
yards Wltoucbed for a touchdown,
Nobody was surprised any more
didn't.
sophomores, played well. Jones, · ·
(n)
.lMEIUCAN L&amp;WUE
It was Tew ·Cosch Fred Akers· the Texas team chased wide · than offensive tackle Terry Tausch,
N.., Yarit (Pacella 3-2) at IA1o Anples (Galli
EAST
0-7), (n)
Won I.Allt Pel GB
who decided to gamble In the second receiver Gary Stiggers, who should a !Ulman road clearing machine in starting his secood game, completed
i2 of 18 pasle8 for 177 yards. ·
. Phllodelpl1ia (Christeno&lt;ln 5-I ) at San Fran19 $1
.801 llowYort
quarter and pass up a chip shot field . win an Academy Award the way he thl.s collegiate footbe.ll opener.
Tl (il
.1411
1\io
ciJco 1Biue1S.7), (nJ
Baltlmoro
Anderson gained 1011 yards OS1 nine
Only g..... scheduled
71 lO
.559
8\io
goal to try for a touchdown from the canied out the fake handoff.
"We all thought it was a sweep to
canies
and almost · broke several
M 112
.~23
II
Cleveland
Texas narrowed the count to 7-3 on the left and everybody block~!(~ that
Arkansas 2 on fourth down with the
: Milwaukee
70 64
.522 II
·times
for
touchdowns.
a ~yard field goal by John Goodaon way," said Tausch. "Surprised fi1
62
.519 11 ~
Longhorns trailing 7-3.
lletruit .
However,
It was. the Longhorns' .
H111
.mz
Toronto
'
I'd say. My heart was in my throat."
Akers called for tailback A.J. and then charged to the Arkansas
TODAY'F MAJOR LEAGUE LEA,DER!l
WEST
ground
game
which pulverized the
AMERICAN LEAGUE
11:1 47
JIM "Jam"Jones to circle nght end. The end zone where Akers had to make
Robinson was dumbfllWlded.
BATTTNG
(310
at
bola):
Brett,
Kanaas
City,
Porkel'!l
to
the
tune of 314 yards
611 1111
.4116 llllio
·
"I thought the play was a bust,'' he Longhorn blockers swept the Razor- his critical decision.
.401 ; C~r. Mllw1ukte, .380; DUane,
s:; trl
.4112 :II
overland.
·
"We wanted a touchdown awful ' said. "Donnie juit wouldn't give me
Cleveland, .344; Carew, Call!ornia, .~ ; Rivers . backs away from the Une of scrim56 12
.438 71
Teu~~,
.330.
'
"They were the best team," said
51 111
.1211 :11\io
mage and Jones scored Wltouched bad," said Akers. ."I COII$idered a the ball. NoW, I know why!"
; RUNS: Wllloo, lWIIu 'ctty, 107; YOIIDt,
51 111
.SIIII :rilio
Arkansas
defensive tackle Billy Ray
field
goal.
But
It
was
awful
quiet
•
Miht'IUII:ee,
10'
.
11;
WWs,
Texas,
94;
Bumbry,
41 13
.362 !II
Arkansas Cosch Lou Holtz also
and standing up that gave Texas a
,
Baltimore,
12;
Rivera,
Tezu,89.
-y'aGomeo
doWn there. I knew my staff and the knew why his team lost. He was Uke Smith. "They just ran the ball over
lead it never reUnquisbed.
RBI: Cooper, Milwa~ee, 103; Oliver, Teus,
Clllclio IN, Cleveland 1-7
100;
Bntt,
K.anou
City,
97;
Re.JacUon,
New
Mllwa-11, Dolroll8
However, there was yet another team wanted to go for the touch- Robinson: The Razorbacks just . and aroWid us."
vn,N; l'l!n!l, ao.tm, 90.
Toronto7, Min,..,.. I
And sometimes most of the
down. That's what we needed. I couldnt't get the ball.
; HITS: WiiJoll, Kansas aty, 118; Cooper ' vital decision to be made.
~5.Colllomla0
Longhorns
knew which way It wu ·
voted
to
go
for
it
since
my
vote
coun.
Milwaukee,
113;
Riven,
Teu.s,
182·
OUver'
1
Soallloi,NewYortO
Arkansas had rallied late in the
"They controlled the line of scrim',
.Texas, 187; Bwnbry, Baltlmore,l$9. '
going
and
one
time they ~·t.
-~.OHland!
ts
the
mOlt.
lt
was
a
big
momentwn
mage and they COSitrolled the ball,"
I DOUBLES: Yount, Mllwollkee, 43; Morriion, : game and Texas was faced with 3rd playforus."
KoNu etty 4, reus 3
·
Cblc:qo, 36; McRae, Kanus City, 31; OUver
and 15 from its own 32-yard Une. If
....
r....,,~i.!,Ytm· -..... 32.
·,
New Yaritl, OUIInd
0 a.Texas owned a 17-7 halftime lead
TelW could make a first down, the
TRIPI...I!;.'S: Grlfftn, ',l'~o, 15; Willon, Jtan.)
~~.S..IIle4
after Jones, who had 165 yards on 29
au Clty, 12; Yount. MUwaukee,lD; Waahin«ton. ' Longhorns could run the clock out.
Boolm4,Calllomla3
. KansuCity,IO; Brett, Kuau City, 9.
Clllclio II, lletruiU
canies for his evening's wost,
This
time
quarterback
Donnie
UtHOME IUINS: Re.J-. New Vorl&lt;, M; :
Taal :t;.oronto l
scored on a 1-yard dive over the mid- ·
OglJvie, Mllwautee,32; 11mlu, Milwaukee, 32; : Ue had .a suggestion: "I'll keep the
Mlln
1, KaMU City 1
Annu, Oakland, 27; M\IIT8y, Baltimore, 23.
Clevelaadl, -~
ball after a fake to the halfback," he die.
1'ueldli)'11 Gules .
' . STOLEN BASES: 11eni1enon, OUiand, 88;
Enraged Arkansas narrowed the
..WIIIon, K.anau City, 51; D!lone, Cleveland, 49;
Ollcuo (Proly ~11Uld Dobon 1-8) at Delrolt
told Akers. "But we won't teU the
,J.CI.:!!'...~.IIle,311; Blllllbry, Baltimore, 34. ·
· (Fidrym0.21UldWllcox1241),2
count
to 17-10 will! a 1&amp;-yard field
blockers or Arkansas."
; Pm,;runG (11 DedoloosJ: Darwin, Teua.ll·
CaiJiornla (Doroe)' ~)at- (Renko W) ,
goal
in
the third quarter by Ish Or2,
.1146,
2.48;
St.me,
Baltimoro,
21-6,
.1108,
3.116;
(nJ
Uttle dashed 17 yards · on the
Gura, Kansas City, 1&amp;.6, .'113, 2.21; Rainey
S..ttle(Beattlef-11) at llaltimcll'e (Palmer 14donez.
little
countered with a Illbootleg and the Razorbacks were
: Bostoo, 8-3, :m, c.•: Jobn,Nn York, 1&amp;-7, .711J:
8), (nJ
yard
scoring
run for · a 23-10
'
3.53;
McG_!'eFr',
_BalUmore,
18-7,
.698,
3.02;
'
Oaldond (McCatty 11).12) at New York (May
dead.
M.NDrris, OUiand.lU, .892, 2.34; R.May, New,
11-6), (n)
Longhorn
lead.
The nationally televised matchup
Yarit,II-6,.6111,Z.41.
:
Toronto ( Loa! l-3) at Teus (Jenkiniii·IO),
Then Ariansas made things re8i
· STRIKEOUTS: Barker, Oeveland, 150; : of SouthWest Conference teams had
(n)
M.Nortia, Oakland, 149; Guidry, New Yorl&lt;, 132; :
Cleveland (Garlalll 1-8) at · Minne!ola
sticky.
l&gt;an'yl Bowles ran 2 yards
a UtUe bit of everything for the 70,000
Hau, MUwautee, 1211; F.Bamlsier, SeaWe 1~.
(J-1-I),(n)
for
a
touchdown
with 3: 11 to play:
NATIONALI,EAGUE
'
'
~-NATIONAL
acbeduled
IIATTTNG (310 at bola): llendriclt, St.Louli, i
LEAGUE
Which
brings
us to the play 10
.3~; Templeton, St.Loula, .;nz; Trillo, .
EAST
Te!UIS players didn't know about.
40'0#'r'
' Phllodelp111a, .319; K.llornandez, st. Lwls, .318;
Won Ullt Pd. GB

the D~y ·

Carmel News, By

'

· Mr. and Mrs. Roger Duncan and pa, Fl;!., Mr. and Mrs. Buren Dunf;unily, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Dun- . can of Blueridge, Ga., were guests of
can and family, Mr. and Mrs; Wille Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle and
Beancbamp and family, all of Tam- · F"lorence Circle on a recent Thur-

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

sday.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle and
Paul Moore were at the Leavitt
F"uneral Home, Parkersburg, recently, tu pay their respect to Mrs.
Helen Griswald Cantwell, a foriner
resident here.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles r.ri,wald of

rAJUisville, Ky., and granddaughter called at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
called un Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Cir· William Carelton, daughter Angela
Dawn Thursday. Angela Dawn had
cle on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pierce of spent the evening at the Johnson
Athens cal.led on Mary Circle on . home:
Mr. and Mrs. William Carelton,
Saturday evening.
Betty Van Meter, Sheryl and daughter Angela Dawn of Racine
Patrick Johnson and F.uni~ Brin~_er called at the home of Betty Van

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Moo-U,SaniJieCo3
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Rldlardo. San Die!!•: ·

PJ'IUIJNG (II llodsiooo): Reua, lJla
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21·7, .'llO,:UO; Bibby, Pillll&gt;olflh.li-6, .1$0, 3.34;
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llaclooatl IM..UU H) at SI.Loola (B.Fonch
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Mlllllnal (La 4-6) at San Dleco (MW"a 4-11. '

H-.r..a
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!HI • ·

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HOIIIIOn, lit; P. Nleluo, At/ontl, 116
Blyleven,PIIIIbolrgh, 14$; Soto,&amp;tnciMati, 134.

.

.

·-·

-

ST. LOUIS (APJ- "You just hold
your breath and h9Pe that this ia for
the rest of the season,'' said Johnny
Bench, "because George can make
thlnp happen." .
.
~ by the Cincinnati catcher l.s the current .583 hitting rampage of George Foster against
NatioaaliAlgue pi~. Although
lq overdue, the flurry represents
the key to a five-game Red,s wlnnillg
streak.
"You don't bottle up the middle
too lq," Bench said after Foster
ezploded Monday for four more hils,
powering Cincinnati to an 8-1 triumph over the st Louis Cardinals.
"He can be an offensive machine.
He takes a load off other people's
shoulders," Bench said. "It's easier
for me when he hits a horner or
double or whatever. I can call a different ball game."
Bench's portrayal of Foster's role
encaJIIUles, of course, the hope the
Reda attach to the heavy bat of the
ouUielder as they head 'into the
aeuon'afllla130 games.
"With him hitting, the rest of the
club starts relaxing a Uttle bit,'' hitting coach Ted Kluszewskl said.
"Plus the guys around him start getting better pitches. It makes a big
difference - in more ways ·than
Cl\8. ,,

FOI!ter, in continuing his resurgence, deUvered an RBI triple in the
middle of a six-hit Cincinnati first inning agalnat st Louis.
The barrage helped the Reds grab
a 4-41ead, kayoing Jim Kaat, 5-7, af-

pq-. .........

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CHEESE

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2 79
CANS ·

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GALA

}~.~~.~~~.$1 Q9 .
ETERGENT

R

Jumbo
Roll

70• _OFF LABEL$

171-oz.
Box

GARVINS- FRESH
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$119

CARDINAL STICK

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MARGARINE 2L~.89'

Turkey. S.llebury Steek, 8Hf • Noodle,
Chicken • Noodle or Chicken • Dumpling

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BORDON
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19-oz.

MIXED VEGETABLES ........ !~.~-~

CANS

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12

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3 LB. BAG

• 13-oz. Cut or French StYle Gr•·•n
• 14Y.-oz. Cream &amp;t'fle Com
• 1 2 -oz. Whole Kernel C~m

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10 to 1- 2to6
Thurs. &amp; Fri.

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RED OR GOLDEN DELl.•

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MAXWELL HOUSE ALL GRINDS

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CHUCK STEAK ..
~·~· sl 49
59
.SWISS STEAK.............:....~~·.. s1
ENG-LISH ROAST.............~~~- s1 69

IEBET

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Delivery

79~

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FRESHLIKE Hfixa

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19

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NESTEA···. ············~-~.!~...;$1 99

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FORMERLY H&amp;H SANITATION .

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ONIONS

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GOLDEN YELLOW
3 LB. BAG

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STAR SLICED

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SNOWY WHITE

.WIENERS ..•..... ~ ..•..•..•...•••... !~.~~-89~
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OPEN DAILY FROM.
8 AM TILL 10 PM

QUANTITY RIGHTS

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· l.ooAn&amp;eloiiM, Sanllloco 11

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SUMMEI'S
EYE DOUCHE
..... -. ......

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II"'MJ E ke ld .. ...
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W-L-T Pel PF PA :
San FronciJ&lt;o 31,1WIIu City 21
110.7~7131
Miami
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2 2 o .500 " 1111
Olkland M,
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Plltsburlb II, DollU 10

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2 8x10
3 5x7
15 Wallets

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ter one out Foster. also singled In a

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run in the second and afterward
doubled In the·fourih and singled in
the sixth.
"EventuaUy I'm going to start getting the hils," Foster said after increasing his runs-batted-in total for
the year to 78, modezt by the fonner
home run png'.s standards.
"I just felt it in batting practice,"
he said of what signaled the start.of
his current 14-for-24 siege at home
plate. "The thing ia to put the ball in
play and be aggressive. The rest
takes care of itself."
In adtiiUon to the drives by Foster,
· the 18 hils by Cincinnati Included
three apiece by Dan Driessen and
Ray Knight, with Dave Concepcion
and Bench each chipping in two RBI.
During his tear, Foster hac
deUvered three bome runa, four
doubles, two triples and five singles.
The assortment giveli him 31 total
bases, a slugging percentage of
1.292. .
"Before, If we scored many runs, I
had to hit the ball out of the
ballpark,'' Foster said of his most
l'eCilllt eJhlblton. "We're scoring
runs now, so I don't have to."
The beneficiary of Foster's
devastation against the Cards was
left-bander Joe Price, 5-2, who
spaced five St. Louis hits - one of
them Ken Reitz' sixth homer.
"We had a 111-game stretch where
we weren't getting any base hits,"
Cincinnati Manager John McNamara said of his team•s· offense.
"It
In cycles. Sometimes
.just have to be patient."

;

'·

r?iiiii•-•ii=iiii&amp;==~-

·not Foster makes
things happen •••
-

I!

•
•
•"

•'

SPAIIII

.m.

Atllllto (A ..._IS.7) at Clllcli• (Krutow

•••

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TENDER

CHUC
ROAST

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Middleport, Ohio

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POTATOES

VAUGHAN'S

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HOME RUNS: Scllmldl,
ner, Atlanta, 28; Baker, IAI

AtlaDta •• St. Louill
Salll'raDcileo 11-9, New YortM
IAloAIIpleoJ.~7~~..2
SlolliocoiO, _ _ 3

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•

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'I'IUPLES: JI.Scott, M-L II; McBride, .·
Phlladelpllla, 10; 0. M&lt;nn0, Plttsburlh. 10; .
LeFlore, Montroal, I; T = S tLoW.
.
t

CDciobotll, Plllobuqb 4

1-13)

Chlcqo, .313.

RUNS; K.Hemandll, St.Louis, •: LeFJote, :

II
12
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FARMFRES
FRUITS
AND
VEGETABLES

SALE DATES
SEPTEMBER
2-6, 1980

~
FOR BACK TO SCHOOL

•I

Meter and the Arthur Jolmson
· family on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven were at the home o! Mary
· Circle on Sunday.
There were '£/ present for Sunday
school on Aug. 24.

FROSTY ACRES .

- ORANGE

·3 $1
oF

. Oz. JUICE
.R
OZ. LEMONADE .

l2

CHEESE
'

GARVIN'S

··-·--

~ GAL

ORANGE JUICE

.
,,

CREAMY OR CRUNCHY

•

PEANUT BUTTER ....................................................'~~~·· 95c
APPLESAUCE ..............................:............................. '~~- 37c.·
BROWNIE.MIX..:........... ;......................................... 1:k:~· 69C
MAC &amp;
·-j)iNNER......................................7 ~~:··24c
·SPAGHETTI SAUCE ...............................................3~~c;z· 89c
'WHITE BATHROOM TISSUE ...... ."................4 :i. 77c .
.....

PI.AIN, ME~T OR MUIHROOM

'

�1t-The Daily Sentinel. MiddleP,Ort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 2, 1980 ·

·Lf!nghorns tJulllp

•••e 1!;le•••a

.. l..._._.
IJ

• • I, • •

Ra:zorbac~s·

11- The Daily ~nlinel; Middlei&gt;ort-Pumeruy, 0., Tuesday, Sept. 2, 1980

· "I Clllled the play and Coach Akel'!l said Holtz. "U you do that, you con••• j
AUSTIN, Texas (AP)- The loth- fans in Memorial Stadium.
Arkansas hoodwinked the went along witli it,'' said Uttle. "I trol the game."
ranked Te!UIS Longhorns beat the
He added, "You have to give
jus! didn't tell the team. I faked the
sixth-ranked Arkansas Razorback Longhorns in the second quarter
TeliBB
all the credit in the world." ·
ball to carl Robinson and everybody
23-17 Monday night on a play the when sophomore Gary Anderson
Quarterback
Tom Jones and italf·
team knew about and another one it faked a reverse. While he traveled 39 went one way. I went the other."
back
Gary
Anderson,
both A.rkanus ·.
yards Wltoucbed for a touchdown,
Nobody was surprised any more
didn't.
sophomores, played well. Jones, · ·
(n)
.lMEIUCAN L&amp;WUE
It was Tew ·Cosch Fred Akers· the Texas team chased wide · than offensive tackle Terry Tausch,
N.., Yarit (Pacella 3-2) at IA1o Anples (Galli
EAST
0-7), (n)
Won I.Allt Pel GB
who decided to gamble In the second receiver Gary Stiggers, who should a !Ulman road clearing machine in starting his secood game, completed
i2 of 18 pasle8 for 177 yards. ·
. Phllodelpl1ia (Christeno&lt;ln 5-I ) at San Fran19 $1
.801 llowYort
quarter and pass up a chip shot field . win an Academy Award the way he thl.s collegiate footbe.ll opener.
Tl (il
.1411
1\io
ciJco 1Biue1S.7), (nJ
Baltlmoro
Anderson gained 1011 yards OS1 nine
Only g..... scheduled
71 lO
.559
8\io
goal to try for a touchdown from the canied out the fake handoff.
"We all thought it was a sweep to
canies
and almost · broke several
M 112
.~23
II
Cleveland
Texas narrowed the count to 7-3 on the left and everybody block~!(~ that
Arkansas 2 on fourth down with the
: Milwaukee
70 64
.522 II
·times
for
touchdowns.
a ~yard field goal by John Goodaon way," said Tausch. "Surprised fi1
62
.519 11 ~
Longhorns trailing 7-3.
lletruit .
However,
It was. the Longhorns' .
H111
.mz
Toronto
'
I'd say. My heart was in my throat."
Akers called for tailback A.J. and then charged to the Arkansas
TODAY'F MAJOR LEAGUE LEA,DER!l
WEST
ground
game
which pulverized the
AMERICAN LEAGUE
11:1 47
JIM "Jam"Jones to circle nght end. The end zone where Akers had to make
Robinson was dumbfllWlded.
BATTTNG
(310
at
bola):
Brett,
Kanaas
City,
Porkel'!l
to
the
tune of 314 yards
611 1111
.4116 llllio
·
"I thought the play was a bust,'' he Longhorn blockers swept the Razor- his critical decision.
.401 ; C~r. Mllw1ukte, .380; DUane,
s:; trl
.4112 :II
overland.
·
"We wanted a touchdown awful ' said. "Donnie juit wouldn't give me
Cleveland, .344; Carew, Call!ornia, .~ ; Rivers . backs away from the Une of scrim56 12
.438 71
Teu~~,
.330.
'
"They were the best team," said
51 111
.1211 :11\io
mage and Jones scored Wltouched bad," said Akers. ."I COII$idered a the ball. NoW, I know why!"
; RUNS: Wllloo, lWIIu 'ctty, 107; YOIIDt,
51 111
.SIIII :rilio
Arkansas
defensive tackle Billy Ray
field
goal.
But
It
was
awful
quiet
•
Miht'IUII:ee,
10'
.
11;
WWs,
Texas,
94;
Bumbry,
41 13
.362 !II
Arkansas Cosch Lou Holtz also
and standing up that gave Texas a
,
Baltimore,
12;
Rivera,
Tezu,89.
-y'aGomeo
doWn there. I knew my staff and the knew why his team lost. He was Uke Smith. "They just ran the ball over
lead it never reUnquisbed.
RBI: Cooper, Milwa~ee, 103; Oliver, Teus,
Clllclio IN, Cleveland 1-7
100;
Bntt,
K.anou
City,
97;
Re.JacUon,
New
Mllwa-11, Dolroll8
However, there was yet another team wanted to go for the touch- Robinson: The Razorbacks just . and aroWid us."
vn,N; l'l!n!l, ao.tm, 90.
Toronto7, Min,..,.. I
And sometimes most of the
down. That's what we needed. I couldnt't get the ball.
; HITS: WiiJoll, Kansas aty, 118; Cooper ' vital decision to be made.
~5.Colllomla0
Longhorns
knew which way It wu ·
voted
to
go
for
it
since
my
vote
coun.
Milwaukee,
113;
Riven,
Teu.s,
182·
OUver'
1
Soallloi,NewYortO
Arkansas had rallied late in the
"They controlled the line of scrim',
.Texas, 187; Bwnbry, Baltlmore,l$9. '
going
and
one
time they ~·t.
-~.OHland!
ts
the
mOlt.
lt
was
a
big
momentwn
mage and they COSitrolled the ball,"
I DOUBLES: Yount, Mllwollkee, 43; Morriion, : game and Texas was faced with 3rd playforus."
KoNu etty 4, reus 3
·
Cblc:qo, 36; McRae, Kanus City, 31; OUver
and 15 from its own 32-yard Une. If
....
r....,,~i.!,Ytm· -..... 32.
·,
New Yaritl, OUIInd
0 a.Texas owned a 17-7 halftime lead
TelW could make a first down, the
TRIPI...I!;.'S: Grlfftn, ',l'~o, 15; Willon, Jtan.)
~~.S..IIle4
after Jones, who had 165 yards on 29
au Clty, 12; Yount. MUwaukee,lD; Waahin«ton. ' Longhorns could run the clock out.
Boolm4,Calllomla3
. KansuCity,IO; Brett, Kuau City, 9.
Clllclio II, lletruiU
canies for his evening's wost,
This
time
quarterback
Donnie
UtHOME IUINS: Re.J-. New Vorl&lt;, M; :
Taal :t;.oronto l
scored on a 1-yard dive over the mid- ·
OglJvie, Mllwautee,32; 11mlu, Milwaukee, 32; : Ue had .a suggestion: "I'll keep the
Mlln
1, KaMU City 1
Annu, Oakland, 27; M\IIT8y, Baltimore, 23.
Clevelaadl, -~
ball after a fake to the halfback," he die.
1'ueldli)'11 Gules .
' . STOLEN BASES: 11eni1enon, OUiand, 88;
Enraged Arkansas narrowed the
..WIIIon, K.anau City, 51; D!lone, Cleveland, 49;
Ollcuo (Proly ~11Uld Dobon 1-8) at Delrolt
told Akers. "But we won't teU the
,J.CI.:!!'...~.IIle,311; Blllllbry, Baltimore, 34. ·
· (Fidrym0.21UldWllcox1241),2
count
to 17-10 will! a 1&amp;-yard field
blockers or Arkansas."
; Pm,;runG (11 DedoloosJ: Darwin, Teua.ll·
CaiJiornla (Doroe)' ~)at- (Renko W) ,
goal
in
the third quarter by Ish Or2,
.1146,
2.48;
St.me,
Baltimoro,
21-6,
.1108,
3.116;
(nJ
Uttle dashed 17 yards · on the
Gura, Kansas City, 1&amp;.6, .'113, 2.21; Rainey
S..ttle(Beattlef-11) at llaltimcll'e (Palmer 14donez.
little
countered with a Illbootleg and the Razorbacks were
: Bostoo, 8-3, :m, c.•: Jobn,Nn York, 1&amp;-7, .711J:
8), (nJ
yard
scoring
run for · a 23-10
'
3.53;
McG_!'eFr',
_BalUmore,
18-7,
.698,
3.02;
'
Oaldond (McCatty 11).12) at New York (May
dead.
M.NDrris, OUiand.lU, .892, 2.34; R.May, New,
11-6), (n)
Longhorn
lead.
The nationally televised matchup
Yarit,II-6,.6111,Z.41.
:
Toronto ( Loa! l-3) at Teus (Jenkiniii·IO),
Then Ariansas made things re8i
· STRIKEOUTS: Barker, Oeveland, 150; : of SouthWest Conference teams had
(n)
M.Nortia, Oakland, 149; Guidry, New Yorl&lt;, 132; :
Cleveland (Garlalll 1-8) at · Minne!ola
sticky.
l&gt;an'yl Bowles ran 2 yards
a UtUe bit of everything for the 70,000
Hau, MUwautee, 1211; F.Bamlsier, SeaWe 1~.
(J-1-I),(n)
for
a
touchdown
with 3: 11 to play:
NATIONALI,EAGUE
'
'
~-NATIONAL
acbeduled
IIATTTNG (310 at bola): llendriclt, St.Louli, i
LEAGUE
Which
brings
us to the play 10
.3~; Templeton, St.Loula, .;nz; Trillo, .
EAST
Te!UIS players didn't know about.
40'0#'r'
' Phllodelp111a, .319; K.llornandez, st. Lwls, .318;
Won Ullt Pd. GB

the D~y ·

Carmel News, By

'

· Mr. and Mrs. Roger Duncan and pa, Fl;!., Mr. and Mrs. Buren Dunf;unily, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Dun- . can of Blueridge, Ga., were guests of
can and family, Mr. and Mrs; Wille Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle and
Beancbamp and family, all of Tam- · F"lorence Circle on a recent Thur-

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

sday.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle and
Paul Moore were at the Leavitt
F"uneral Home, Parkersburg, recently, tu pay their respect to Mrs.
Helen Griswald Cantwell, a foriner
resident here.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles r.ri,wald of

rAJUisville, Ky., and granddaughter called at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
called un Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Cir· William Carelton, daughter Angela
Dawn Thursday. Angela Dawn had
cle on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pierce of spent the evening at the Johnson
Athens cal.led on Mary Circle on . home:
Mr. and Mrs. William Carelton,
Saturday evening.
Betty Van Meter, Sheryl and daughter Angela Dawn of Racine
Patrick Johnson and F.uni~ Brin~_er called at the home of Betty Van

-

Lh..$119

1111
l9

II
61

58
57
51
WEBI'

12
12
71

1$
14

111
Ill
111

n ez

-IAloAn&amp;eles

n

.anctnnau
AtlaDta

81

Ill
Ill
71

.-,..-

Son 1"raalcclco
Son IJieCo

•

56

i Budner,

.1135
.534
.534
.450
.442
.SIIII
::
.550
•liCM
.504
.411

· ,

PEPSODENT

:Montreal, Ill; Murphy, At!a;"!"t.lll; Scllmidl,
:Phllodelp111a, M: a-, Philo..,...., e.
; RBI: Sclunldt. l'lllladelpllla, M; Hendrick, •
St.Lwis, IM; Garvy, IAlo _....._ 13; Babr, •

TOOTHPASTE

St= ?:;"l'ci:§~: - :I
IAloAnplaa,II;K.-SI.~

-lio
2\io
1\io
8\io
:11

San~o;J,H:-.

DO

• -·

Clodnnoti, 14; J?oWBOII;

...... SJ09

,IIIII.
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, Sl; Kn11bt.
Mllllllq), Sl; K.illl' .

nandez,st.Loula,31; on-_ctnctnnaU, Sl.

Clllcliol,-1

·-

' ph~,ZI; llendriclt,St.Loola,D.

'

.. 7

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

-11-8, Plllobuqb4-1

·:: I\.Sc:oll, Montroal, 54;

~~~~I
Mlantal,
oJ
PNiodtlphlo '·
Frandlco 4
IAloAncelell, New Yaritl
Moo-U,SaniJieCo3
.

Rldlardo. San Die!!•: ·

PJ'IUIJNG (II llodsiooo): Reua, lJla
........ 11-4, .aoo. 2.14; Carltan, Phllodelpl1ia,
21·7, .'llO,:UO; Bibby, Pillll&gt;olflh.li-6, .1$0, 3.34;
G.Ja&lt;bon, Pllllbur&amp;l&gt;. ~••'Ill, Z.iil; Ruhle,
.- · N, .m, %.43; Somblto, Houolm, ~
Z.ZI: lllcbon!, - . 11).4, .m, uo·

--·-·

llaclooatl IM..UU H) at SI.Loola (B.Fonch
11).1), (D)
Mlllllnal (La 4-6) at San Dleco (MW"a 4-11. '

H-.r..a
....elaa.l:l-6,
3...
STRIKEOtm:
Carlton,.708.Ph!ladelt&gt;IQ.
!HI • ·

j

IRyan,

HOIIIIOn, lit; P. Nleluo, At/ontl, 116
Blyleven,PIIIIbolrgh, 14$; Soto,&amp;tnciMati, 134.

.

.

·-·

-

ST. LOUIS (APJ- "You just hold
your breath and h9Pe that this ia for
the rest of the season,'' said Johnny
Bench, "because George can make
thlnp happen." .
.
~ by the Cincinnati catcher l.s the current .583 hitting rampage of George Foster against
NatioaaliAlgue pi~. Although
lq overdue, the flurry represents
the key to a five-game Red,s wlnnillg
streak.
"You don't bottle up the middle
too lq," Bench said after Foster
ezploded Monday for four more hils,
powering Cincinnati to an 8-1 triumph over the st Louis Cardinals.
"He can be an offensive machine.
He takes a load off other people's
shoulders," Bench said. "It's easier
for me when he hits a horner or
double or whatever. I can call a different ball game."
Bench's portrayal of Foster's role
encaJIIUles, of course, the hope the
Reda attach to the heavy bat of the
ouUielder as they head 'into the
aeuon'afllla130 games.
"With him hitting, the rest of the
club starts relaxing a Uttle bit,'' hitting coach Ted Kluszewskl said.
"Plus the guys around him start getting better pitches. It makes a big
difference - in more ways ·than
Cl\8. ,,

FOI!ter, in continuing his resurgence, deUvered an RBI triple in the
middle of a six-hit Cincinnati first inning agalnat st Louis.
The barrage helped the Reds grab
a 4-41ead, kayoing Jim Kaat, 5-7, af-

pq-. .........

=

---

Now Enllancl

I
I

3
3

. CaRol

0
0

~ 47 72 1
.210 liM IIi '

2 . 2 a .500 11 II ·
3I 3I 0 .1$0
.. .'
.210 14
U 123

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J l ~ s5~:,·

; _..,

tE

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;:_ar!:r

•N.Y.Gioata
41

II

:3 l1 o~ :.1$0 :a ::K r.
2

2 0

~

~

.1011 IIi

r o , .210

•

.AIIplol

N ow-

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liM 1
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A: ~ ~ ~

................ •:at
.r..a

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NATIONALCIINJI'EIIENCE

·mrt
· Hll
IDIIIM 5

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1

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220.500111
130.2101193
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. broad property and liablll·
ty coverages required
safeguard vour operations. All for a·:lti{.·Y a"rac·
tlve, affordable premium.
Let . us · explain the
superior features of
SERIES ONE ... the "hortl
tl me we spend together
could prove Interesting
. and rewarding to you.
I Just give us a call
· mall the handv coupon,
DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE

w.
·-

' 102
Main "2:2143 Pomeroy, o.
'
.
1 Representing ,
STATE · '
. AUT-OMOBILE
MUTUAL
INSURANCE
COMPANY

·--

.

SIIAIINO

COLOR
PORTRAIT
PACKAGE

...

~-~--...,_,;;.;...:,;.

'

BOLOGNA ......... ..LP•••• 99~

IAIS

16Ul£

-:FEES WILL REMAI_N_~E SAME -SERVICE Will REMAIN
THE SAME -Please Make Checks Payable
s~~ers San~~ _
s_emc.

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package
ordert
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only.

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-SEPT. 3
THIU
SEPT. 7
WED.-SUN.

--

- ~OWER

-·-

TO SHOWER

10 to 1, 2 to 5:,30
6to8
Sunday.1-4

185 UPPER ,
RIVERROAif

RED GRAPES or WHITE
SEEDLESS GRAPES •
PER LB.

.

'

~
Cans

COFFEE ~o:.$
8
IX
PEPSI .
oi. $ 89

KRAFT

MIRACLE
WHIP
-----.

B.C.

16-oz .

.
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BETTY CROCKER

;Bottles

Pluo depotll

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6PK

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19

Boxes ·

FRESH-LIKE

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SWEET PEAS ••• ;....................

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. GARVINS .

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COTIAGE
CHEESE

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CANS ·

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ETERGENT

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Jumbo
Roll

70• _OFF LABEL$

171-oz.
Box

GARVINS- FRESH
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24 oz.

GENERIC
BUDGET BUYS

$119

CARDINAL STICK

"•
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BANQUET

'

BUFFET SUPPERS

MARGARINE 2L~.89'

Turkey. S.llebury Steek, 8Hf • Noodle,
Chicken • Noodle or Chicken • Dumpling

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BORDON
.
SLICED AMERICAN

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MIXED VEGETABLES ........ !~.~-~

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ASSORTED FLAVORS

12

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3 LB. BAG

• 13-oz. Cut or French StYle Gr•·•n
• 14Y.-oz. Cream &amp;t'fle Com
• 1 2 -oz. Whole Kernel C~m

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WED.&amp;SAT.
10 to 1- 2to6
Thurs. &amp; Fri.

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RED OR GOLDEN DELl.•

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MAXWELL HOUSE ALL GRINDS

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CHUCK STEAK ..
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59
.SWISS STEAK.............:....~~·.. s1
ENG-LISH ROAST.............~~~- s1 69

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FORMERLY H&amp;H SANITATION .

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ONIONS

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LB.

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INSTANT ICED TEA ·
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3 LB. BAG

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BLADE CUT

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SNOWY WHITE

.WIENERS ..•..... ~ ..•..•..•...•••... !~.~~-89~
· SLICED
_, . BACON ENDS &amp; PIECES ••~~·. $} 29

LB~ 139 _

3LBS. OR MORE

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CHARMS

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AMERICAN CONFER.ENCE
Detrolm, anctnna 10
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W-L-T Pel PF PA :
San FronciJ&lt;o 31,1WIIu City 21
110.7~7131
Miami
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2 2 o .500 " 1111
Olkland M,
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220.5001211 1
Plltsburlb II, DollU 10

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3 5x7
15 Wallets

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goes

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10

BROCCOLI

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SLICED BACON ••.•••. ~···········L~; 9 .

FRIENDLIEST
SERVICE
IN TOWN
•
I
•
BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

••

.-1

run in the second and afterward
doubled In the·fourih and singled in
the sixth.
"EventuaUy I'm going to start getting the hils," Foster said after increasing his runs-batted-in total for
the year to 78, modezt by the fonner
home run png'.s standards.
"I just felt it in batting practice,"
he said of what signaled the start.of
his current 14-for-24 siege at home
plate. "The thing ia to put the ball in
play and be aggressive. The rest
takes care of itself."
In adtiiUon to the drives by Foster,
· the 18 hils by Cincinnati Included
three apiece by Dan Driessen and
Ray Knight, with Dave Concepcion
and Bench each chipping in two RBI.
During his tear, Foster hac
deUvered three bome runa, four
doubles, two triples and five singles.
The assortment giveli him 31 total
bases, a slugging percentage of
1.292. .
"Before, If we scored many runs, I
had to hit the ball out of the
ballpark,'' Foster said of his most
l'eCilllt eJhlblton. "We're scoring
runs now, so I don't have to."
The beneficiary of Foster's
devastation against the Cards was
left-bander Joe Price, 5-2, who
spaced five St. Louis hits - one of
them Ken Reitz' sixth homer.
"We had a 111-game stretch where
we weren't getting any base hits,"
Cincinnati Manager John McNamara said of his team•s· offense.
"It
In cycles. Sometimes
.just have to be patient."

;

'·

r?iiiii•-•ii=iiii&amp;==~-

·not Foster makes
things happen •••
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SPAIIII

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Atllllto (A ..._IS.7) at Clllcli• (Krutow

•••

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TENDER

CHUC
ROAST

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•

Js. 'Mur--

CENTEI CUP BLADE

Middleport, Ohio

•~•

u.s.

POTATOES

VAUGHAN'S

.

:IIi: Ii.... '

HOME RUNS: Scllmldl,
ner, Atlanta, 28; Baker, IAI

AtlaDta •• St. Louill
Salll'raDcileo 11-9, New YortM
IAloAIIpleoJ.~7~~..2
SlolliocoiO, _ _ 3

I

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•

·

'I'IUPLES: JI.Scott, M-L II; McBride, .·
Phlladelpllla, 10; 0. M&lt;nn0, Plttsburlh. 10; .
LeFlore, Montroal, I; T = S tLoW.
.
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CDciobotll, Plllobuqb 4

1-13)

Chlcqo, .313.

RUNS; K.Hemandll, St.Louis, •: LeFJote, :

II
12
II

I

i

FARMFRES
FRUITS
AND
VEGETABLES

SALE DATES
SEPTEMBER
2-6, 1980

~
FOR BACK TO SCHOOL

•I

Meter and the Arthur Jolmson
· family on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven were at the home o! Mary
· Circle on Sunday.
There were '£/ present for Sunday
school on Aug. 24.

FROSTY ACRES .

- ORANGE

·3 $1
oF

. Oz. JUICE
.R
OZ. LEMONADE .

l2

CHEESE
'

GARVIN'S

··-·--

~ GAL

ORANGE JUICE

.
,,

CREAMY OR CRUNCHY

•

PEANUT BUTTER ....................................................'~~~·· 95c
APPLESAUCE ..............................:............................. '~~- 37c.·
BROWNIE.MIX..:........... ;......................................... 1:k:~· 69C
MAC &amp;
·-j)iNNER......................................7 ~~:··24c
·SPAGHETTI SAUCE ...............................................3~~c;z· 89c
'WHITE BATHROOM TISSUE ...... ."................4 :i. 77c .
.....

PI.AIN, ME~T OR MUIHROOM

'

�12- The Daily'Sentinel, Middlepurl-Pumeruy, 0 .. Tu~sday , Sept. 2, l!lllO

Outstanding senior citizen honored

•

The highlight ~ Senior Citizens
Day at the Meigs County Fair was
the presentation of the "Outstanding
Senior Citizens Award for Meigs
County" to Troy Ohlinger. The
award was to have been presented to ·
Troy at the Ohio State Fair, but
because it was schedujed on the
same day as Senior Citizens Day at
the Meigs County Fair, special permission was obtained from the Ohio
Commission on Aging to have the
award ce~ny at our local fair.
The following is the article sub-.
milled to the Ohio Commission on
Aging for this award:
His qualities of patience, helpfulness and Wllimited devotion to the
elderly pilople he serves are his personal trademark that makes him a
"legend in his time."
Ohlinger was hired In 1973 as a
janitor-aide throUgh the CETA
Program at the inception of the
Meigs County Council on Aging
Programs. It was immediately apparent that the Center could n&lt; ... , _
vive without Troy to meet the personal obligations that our seniors expected and required to live independently. Troy was then hired as

an RSVP van driver to insure a per,
manent position with the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center. Troy
expanded his services to include :
thawing of frozen pipes, installing
stoMll windows, replacing locks on
doors, 'delivering groceries and/or
medical prescriptions to ·the home.
Troy never told his supervisors of
the time spent after regular working
hours on what he considered " part of·
his job." The stories came back to
the Center via the people he helped.
The Chore Service, Escort Service
and Home Maintenance Programs
are now in effect t the Center to continue and expand Troy's personalized services.
It is his gentle and unassuming
manner which makes him a favorite
staff person at the Center, and the
most sought-after person in his
neighborhood. No request is too
.small for him to handle, and no job
too great for him to tackle.
A caring and dependable person,
Ohlinger's grandfatherly · ways
reaches out to people of all ages. His
after-hours responsibilities may include lending his "know how" to: install stove pipes for a teenage boys'
clubhouse, spade and supervise the

Polly's Pointers

Invisible coat hem

planting of a vegetable garden for a
widow, or fix a flat tired for a female
co-worker when everyone else ha
gone home.
Ohlinger's never counted the
hours he spent checking during the
weekend and early morning hours to
see If the old-time furnaces . at the
former Senior Citizens Center were
operating properly to insure heat for
the seniors, arriving early to replace
tables and chairs for Monday morning activities, or ·· opening · and
closing the Center for weekend activities. He assumed these were part
of his duties and never worried
about receiving compensatory time
for additional hours given. It soon
became apparent that supervisors
.would have to arrange comp time
because Troy never bothered to
tecord it.
If a popularity contest were held
among the seniors of Meigs County
and fellow staff members alike,
there is no question ti)at Troy
Ohlinger would win above all.
All are sure that every senior
citizen who has come in contact with
Troy agrees with this decision to
honor him as "Meigs County's Outstanding Senior Citizen" for 1980.

Senior Citizens'
Scenes

Members of Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
lilet Thursday at the ho,ne of
Mildred Karr for a luncheon hosted
by the social conunittee. ·The luncheon marked the beginiling of fall
meetings for the group.
Attending were Ruby Baer, Nellie
Brown, Vera Crow, Norma Custer,
Margaret Follrod, June Freed,
Janet Hill, Mildred Karr, Clarice
.Krautter, Mary Morris, Betty
Ohlinger, Roberta O'Brien, Velma
Rue, Ann Rupe, Rose Sisson, Teresa
Swatzel, Reva VaUghan, Pearl
Welker, Jean Werry, and Leota
Young, with Mrs. Grace Eich, sponsor.
The next meeting will be held on
Sept. 11, 7:45p.m. at the Riverboat
Room of the Athens County Savings
and Loan Co., Pomeroy.

jason Wright

Jonathan sargent

'

Two celebrate birthdays

Mr. and Mrs. Mike Wright entertained recently with a party in observance of the eighth birthday of
tjleir son, Jason Lee.
Games were played with ·prizes
going to Melissa Oailey and John
Elliott. The door prize was won by
Brian Kovalchik.
Cake, ice cream and potato chips
were served. The group went
skating at the Skate-a-Way.
Attending were Jason's sister, ·
Mrs. Marlene Thompson took her
Tanuny,
Dena Manley, Niki Whitlatparents, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wolfe,
ch,
Scott
Barton, Bracy Kom, Terry
to Akron where they visited their
Reuter,
Stacey Shank, Brian
son, Uoyd and family. From there
Kovalchik,
Mark and John Elliot,
they went to GranviUe for a visit
Melissa
and
Melinda Bailey.
with their daughter, Donna Van
Sending
gifts
were Mr. and Mrs.
Meter, and her family.
John
Anderson,
Mr. and Mrs.
The Van Meters' son, Bill, was
home from Cheyenne, Wyd. While at Wlll.iam Oschire, Mr. and Mrs.
Granville, Mrs. Wolfe and Uoyd Wright, Mr. and Mrs. James
daughters, Donna and Marlene, at- Whitlatch and Mr. and Mrs. Max
tended the 50th wedding anniversary Whitlatch.
of Mr. and Mrs. Orvy Galler of
Hebron. Other guests at the Van
Meter home were Mr. an~ Mrs. AI
Stokenberg and family of Memphis,
Tenn.

Visits in Akron

Meigs Senior Citizens Center acher frozen br•aa will not be soggy
tivities
located in the Multipurpose
when thawed if she thaws in the
Special correspondeul
Senior
Center
on Mulberry Heights
DEAR POLLY - I bought a refrigerator rather than on the counin
Pomeroy
is
open
9 a.m.-1:30 p.m.,
beautiful black wool coat at a garage ter. I find that most frozen foods fare
Monday through Friday.
sale but It is too short and the entire better if they are taken from the
Tuesday, Sept. 2- Chorus, 12:45-2
hem baa to be let down. Is there a freezer and put in the refrigerator . p.m.
professional \vay to accomplish this for thawing. Candy will thaw and not
Wednesday, Sept. 3 - Social
so the coat will hang as if it had a be sticky and cheese ·Will slice and
Security
Representative, 9:30-12:30
not crumble if· it is put in tlie
good hem turned up?- NORMA
p.m.;
Blood
Pressure Clinic, 10
refrigerator for several days. DEAR NORMA
a.m.-12
noon;
Games,
1-2 p.m.
·VIVIAN
- Take out the
Friday,
Sept.
5
Art
Class, 9:30
DE'l\R POLLY - Saving money is
present hem and •
a.m.-12
noon;
Diet
Class,
1-2 p.m.;
certainly the name of the game
press out the
TOPS CONTESTS BEGIN
Bowling,
1-3
p.m.;
Square
Dance,
8these days. Save those empty coffee
crease.
A 1
The Rutland TOPS Club started
llp.m.
cans as they are invaluable in the
pressing cloth ·
Saturday, Sept. 6 - Holiday on Ice two new contests at the meeting last
garden when planting tomatoes,
dampened well
and Ice Follies Trip, Leave Center at week . Marcta Barrett, leader,
peppers or any stemmed vegetables.
with
white
presided at the meeling with Liilda
11:30a.m.
Remove the bottom of the can and
vinegar and water
Bailey
being honored as the weekly
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
then insert it in the garden soil,
should dolt. ·
to 12:45 p.m., Monday through , queen and Frieda Davis as her runlower than the plant will be bedded.
Cramer
ner-up. The winners of the pop conFriday.
Fill
the
hole
and
can
with
soil
and
Then stitch on a facing about thr~e
Menu for the week of Sept. 2 test were Una Bailey, Mrs. Davis,
inches wide, making sure it is about fertilizer, and put the plant in the
and Francis Hysell. The club showed
through
Sept. 5.
filled can. The cans can be fertilized
the same weight as the coat fabric.
·
a loss of 32 pounds.
Tuesday
Beans
and
ham,
cold
Wide black velvet .or grosgrain rib- individually and watered when dry
pickled
beets,
coleslaw,
cornbread,
bon should do the trick, and would be with no waste. Wetting the leaves
fortified margarine, pears and milk.
causes them to wilt and attract
easy to stitch on neatly. ·
Wednesday - Baked chicken,
When you hand-stitch the new· fungus. This method keeps cut wormashed potatoes, buttered green
hem, hold it back about one-half inch ms from attacking plants, too. I had
beans, bread, fortified margarine,
as you stitch and then only catch had a tin can garden for years and it
peach
crisp and milk.
was great. - MRS. W.E.E.
,
back threads to the coat fabric, and
Thursday
- Pork casserole, bt~t­
Polly will send you one of her
you will have a flat hem with no
tered
com,
vegetable slaw, bread,
disfiguring line where the stitching signed thank-you newspaper coupon
fortified
margarine,
chocolate pudclippers if she uses your favorite
is, Hope this works well for you, ding
and
milk.
Pointer, Peeve ·or Problem in her
POIJ.,Y
Friday - Fried fish, buttered lime
column.
Write POIJ.,Y'S POINDEAR .P OLLY- Do tell Opal that
beans,
stewed 'tomatoes, bread, forTERS in care of this newspaper.
tified margarine, fruited gelatin and
By Polly Cramer

t·.

Sorority
meets
Tuesday

Helen Help Us

He builds castles in sand,·
she wants permanent one

GET 00'1111!
TURN OUT

CIIEESE llfrERrtATIONAt. 15 REAUY
HEADQUARTERS OF OII6AIIZEP CIIIIIE
YOU lf!E THE
OF 801l5ES!!

THOSE
LIGHTS!

Cake and ice cream were served
to Mr. and Mrs. Gene Thompson and
Cindy, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Milhoan, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Reed,
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bailey,
Jonathan's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Guy Sargent, and his sister, Krista.
Sending a gift with his aunt, Bernice
King. Gifts were presented to
Jonathan.
He was also treated to a swimming party on his birthday by his
babysitter, Mrs. Beverly Roush.
Those attending were Jeremy Dean,
K. C. Arnott, who alsO celebrated his
birthday, Thomas Rawlings, Joey
Roush, Bety Roush, Cheryl Roush,
Rodney Roush, and Krista Sargent.

'

.
.'-

MEAN- I HADA
WHILE... WONPERf:UL

• YOU 5URE ~E
MNKLE DAME
DIDN'T I&lt;'ECOG NIZE YOU?

LOTS OF SUO:::EB5
WITH YOUR NEW
RESTAURANT1M!&lt;: .
TIPf'E!

TIME TONIGHT!

milk.
Coffee, tea, and a choice of whole
milk or buttermilk served daily.
Please make reservation. 992-2161.

Evening television listings

Social calendar .

DEARR.H.:
By Heleo and Sue Bolte!
TUESDAY
Special correspondeills
Start rating fellows as they pass
MEIGS Band Boosters will meet
DEARHELENANDSUE:
by, "Tit for Tat" makes "tat" not as · Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the liand
My boyfriend went to Hawaii for titillating.- Helen and Sue
room. All parents of band members,
two weeks - three months ago. He HELEN AND SUE:
and interested persons, are urged to
I live with my family and my
was an architect major and now he's
attend.
supporting himself building sand married sister comes to visit us ofPOMEROY Chamber of Comcastles.
ten. We get along really well and I
merce will meet Tuesday at 12 noon
He spends his days on the beach used to go camping with her and her
at the Meigs Inn.
building these great creations. kids, shop with her, etc., but not so
SUTI'ON Township Trustees will
naturally, he attracts crowds, and much any more. She seems kind of
meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the
when people started tossing money distracted.
Syracuse Municipal Building.
in the castle moat, he (as he wrote)
Helen and Sue, I think she is
HYMN SING featuring the Dun:'realized he was on to something fooling around on her husband, and I can Family, a gospel group from
good." He's been written up in like him a lot too. She's always conTampa, Fla., will be held Tuesday at
newspapers, and baa become quite a fided in 1me but now she's holding
7:30p.m. at the Eagle Ridge Comcelebrity.
·
back. Should I force the issue and try
mtinity Church. The public is inWhat bothers me is he may never to keep my favorite two people
vited.
come home and get back into his together or - ?? ?
POMEROY Chapter 186, Order of
career plans again. From the pic- DEAR ???: .
the Eastern Star, Tuesday evening
tures I see in papers, he's always
I'd say, wait until your sister conat the Pomeroy Masonic Temple. All
surrounded by pretty girls.
fides in you. This might.be a wrong
past matrons and past patrons will
Sbould I go to Hawaii and try guess. - HELEN
be honored.
· ~!king some sense into him (he
REVIVAL now in progress with
hasn't asked me!), or just wait and
And I say it wouldn't hurt to ask,
Norman Taylor, Evans, W. Va. at
hope?- SANDRA (Please don't call "Is something bothering you, Sis?"
the Freewilll!aptist Ash St. Church,
me "Sandy!")
Perhaps she needs talk but can't find
Middleport; will run through SaturDEAR SANDRA:
the words. - SUE
day night; 7:30p.m. each evening.
Walt and hope. We'd guess your
boyfriend will tire of sand castles ,.-----~----------~----------1
· just about the time his public finds a
new beach "celebrity." Meanwhile,
8AROAIN MATINEES ON SAT&amp; SUN
ALL .tEATS JUST .S 1.50
It's a great, free, holiday from duty ,
A{)flfSSION EVERY TUESDAY $ 1.50
and we're all entitled to one such
531 JACKSON Pfi&lt;E ·FI1. 35NORTH - Phone 446-4524
during our lifetime.- HELEN

•
(I) lllll
ILLY G•AHAM
CAUIADE
()) CJD NOYA 'Tennltee to Tllll·

THIS WEEK. FROM BURGER CHEF

cop. .• Or. Philip Morrlaon, lnatltute Prot111or and ProhtttOf of
Phyaloa at the w..aachuaetta
tnatllutl ol Technology, ptiHIIII

SAVES6.80

1 thOughtful end ptovocellve commentary on the n1tur1 of clvitlz•-

tlon. CCiond C.ptlonodl Ct!O
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doesn't return by fall, stop waiting .
and start hoping your new boyfriend
won't build all his castles in the
sand.

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TUESDAY NIGHT

IIOYI!: 'Echoea Of A Summer'
1078 Stara : Jodlefoater, Richard

tt.rrla . .
(I) CID PLAMIIARDS 'Now Blood'
Chrtatlna r1111rws to Flambarda
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{Anawera tomorrow}
Vesterday·sl Jumbles : WEDGE CHAIR POETIC FLURRY
Answer : What the~ aeld when the oil rigger came to
the party all covered with petroleum.
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CHARISMA
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NEWS
l it Take one's
a meu of
temtnt. Len Berman and Maury
10:00
TB8 EVENING NEWS
1:30
OLD on. CIOIIPI!L HOUR
eue
llnlrin5ic
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HART TO HART Tha
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10:30
fAITII 20
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TODAY ..
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PROPHECY

Breakfast Sandwich
Save 99¢ with coupon
Onecouponper cuslomer per visit
Not vajd where otn&amp;r discounts awty.
Good only at ptrUcipa!lng &amp;rger Chef

I

NIGHT OALLI!RY

DAVE All!N AT LAROE
DICK CAVUT SHOW
11:28
NEWS uPDATE
11:30
• CD Till! TONIGHT SHOW
'BIIf Of C1r1on' (Repeat; 90

'i11t\if.\fi )e))} ~ TIIATSCRAMBLED WORD OAii!E
ll!J ~ ~~ ~ byHenriAmold&amp;I'IOBobLee

I~------------T·---------·-~
Burger Chef'
1
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DEAR RAP:
I'm sick aild tired of guys playing
the rating game. Whenever we're In
a crowd, the fellows eye passing
girLs and give them aliyWhere from
one to eight. So far they've never
handed out a "10," but plenty of
uhros,
makes us gkls feel Ignored,
and aLso self-conscious, because we
know that they rate us two, even
though they say they don't.
How can we stop It? - RATE

HATERS

A party was held recently
honoring Jonathan Sargent on his
sixth birthday.

p ...
Pua

Paa

,.

Nortll

Eul

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Pau
Pau

Pua

Pus

one's knees
M Daring

the more lnteresling hands
here."

Alan: "This is an early
hand . All four South player.~
opened one spade and wound
up at lour although strangely

enough there were four differ~

ent bidding sequences. We are
showiJ18 ,tile one used by Ron
Smith and Hugh Ross."
Oswald: "At all four tables
the sl:l

38S.A. river
38Spoken
38 DeeUnlng
CO Rickey's
drink
·U Involve

cz Eaaay
DOWN

of diamonds was

1 Crook

opened and a low diamond
~ayed from dummy. Two
East playe,. rose with the ace
and gave their partner an
Immediate diamond ruff.
Tben they got in with the ace
of spadeS to give partuer a
second ruff for down one.''
Alan: "At tbe other two
tables Ealt &lt;hooe to play the
nine of diamonds. South won
with the queen and went after
trumpo. Eaat &lt;OOperated by
takinl his o&lt;e and leodinl a
trump ba&lt;k. Sooth cashed
dummy's ace of hearts, drew
the lut trump and &lt;Onceded a
diamond and a heart to make
his

lo

AXYDLBAAXB
LONGriCLLOW

one letter almply olando for onother. In lhla oomple A Ia
UJed for the three L's, l( lor the two O'a, etc. Slnrle !etten,
apo~trophea, the length and f~rmatlon of the warda are aU
hintl. Each day the code letten are different.
CIIYPTOQUOTIIS

JKL

VL

·z LX F R W

game."

Oswald: "That nine of diamonds _play led to a bad
By Oowald Joeoby
result. We also feel !bat It was
Incorrect, but when
con... A1lll Soootoa
sider tbat two out o lour of
O.Wald: "The loor teams In the best players In America
the .ml-fillail of lhla year'o made it, II bad to be reuonVIIIIIonllt pia~ the same able."
11111t11. !A6'1 di....... 110rne nf . !NEWSPAPER EN'I'ERPRISE &gt;SSN.) .

-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'• how to work It:

CLMRTBS
B K R'

lou

NOXBEMYBRV

DRYW
y

LH

RWM'i

LH

BKR

·ly M L E F V

BKR

KLMRX

YWF

y

CYXYNR.

- KLTYNR

YetlerdaJ'tCIIF=Ie: TAKE FROM ME 11IE HOPE THAT
I CAN CHANGE
F1JTURE, AND YOU WilL SEND ME

MAD.-ISRAEL ZANGWILL
IIi ,

·I

O ttllklfll~..._..,,....,., ,nt..

�12- The Daily'Sentinel, Middlepurl-Pumeruy, 0 .. Tu~sday , Sept. 2, l!lllO

Outstanding senior citizen honored

•

The highlight ~ Senior Citizens
Day at the Meigs County Fair was
the presentation of the "Outstanding
Senior Citizens Award for Meigs
County" to Troy Ohlinger. The
award was to have been presented to ·
Troy at the Ohio State Fair, but
because it was schedujed on the
same day as Senior Citizens Day at
the Meigs County Fair, special permission was obtained from the Ohio
Commission on Aging to have the
award ce~ny at our local fair.
The following is the article sub-.
milled to the Ohio Commission on
Aging for this award:
His qualities of patience, helpfulness and Wllimited devotion to the
elderly pilople he serves are his personal trademark that makes him a
"legend in his time."
Ohlinger was hired In 1973 as a
janitor-aide throUgh the CETA
Program at the inception of the
Meigs County Council on Aging
Programs. It was immediately apparent that the Center could n&lt; ... , _
vive without Troy to meet the personal obligations that our seniors expected and required to live independently. Troy was then hired as

an RSVP van driver to insure a per,
manent position with the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center. Troy
expanded his services to include :
thawing of frozen pipes, installing
stoMll windows, replacing locks on
doors, 'delivering groceries and/or
medical prescriptions to ·the home.
Troy never told his supervisors of
the time spent after regular working
hours on what he considered " part of·
his job." The stories came back to
the Center via the people he helped.
The Chore Service, Escort Service
and Home Maintenance Programs
are now in effect t the Center to continue and expand Troy's personalized services.
It is his gentle and unassuming
manner which makes him a favorite
staff person at the Center, and the
most sought-after person in his
neighborhood. No request is too
.small for him to handle, and no job
too great for him to tackle.
A caring and dependable person,
Ohlinger's grandfatherly · ways
reaches out to people of all ages. His
after-hours responsibilities may include lending his "know how" to: install stove pipes for a teenage boys'
clubhouse, spade and supervise the

Polly's Pointers

Invisible coat hem

planting of a vegetable garden for a
widow, or fix a flat tired for a female
co-worker when everyone else ha
gone home.
Ohlinger's never counted the
hours he spent checking during the
weekend and early morning hours to
see If the old-time furnaces . at the
former Senior Citizens Center were
operating properly to insure heat for
the seniors, arriving early to replace
tables and chairs for Monday morning activities, or ·· opening · and
closing the Center for weekend activities. He assumed these were part
of his duties and never worried
about receiving compensatory time
for additional hours given. It soon
became apparent that supervisors
.would have to arrange comp time
because Troy never bothered to
tecord it.
If a popularity contest were held
among the seniors of Meigs County
and fellow staff members alike,
there is no question ti)at Troy
Ohlinger would win above all.
All are sure that every senior
citizen who has come in contact with
Troy agrees with this decision to
honor him as "Meigs County's Outstanding Senior Citizen" for 1980.

Senior Citizens'
Scenes

Members of Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
lilet Thursday at the ho,ne of
Mildred Karr for a luncheon hosted
by the social conunittee. ·The luncheon marked the beginiling of fall
meetings for the group.
Attending were Ruby Baer, Nellie
Brown, Vera Crow, Norma Custer,
Margaret Follrod, June Freed,
Janet Hill, Mildred Karr, Clarice
.Krautter, Mary Morris, Betty
Ohlinger, Roberta O'Brien, Velma
Rue, Ann Rupe, Rose Sisson, Teresa
Swatzel, Reva VaUghan, Pearl
Welker, Jean Werry, and Leota
Young, with Mrs. Grace Eich, sponsor.
The next meeting will be held on
Sept. 11, 7:45p.m. at the Riverboat
Room of the Athens County Savings
and Loan Co., Pomeroy.

jason Wright

Jonathan sargent

'

Two celebrate birthdays

Mr. and Mrs. Mike Wright entertained recently with a party in observance of the eighth birthday of
tjleir son, Jason Lee.
Games were played with ·prizes
going to Melissa Oailey and John
Elliott. The door prize was won by
Brian Kovalchik.
Cake, ice cream and potato chips
were served. The group went
skating at the Skate-a-Way.
Attending were Jason's sister, ·
Mrs. Marlene Thompson took her
Tanuny,
Dena Manley, Niki Whitlatparents, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wolfe,
ch,
Scott
Barton, Bracy Kom, Terry
to Akron where they visited their
Reuter,
Stacey Shank, Brian
son, Uoyd and family. From there
Kovalchik,
Mark and John Elliot,
they went to GranviUe for a visit
Melissa
and
Melinda Bailey.
with their daughter, Donna Van
Sending
gifts
were Mr. and Mrs.
Meter, and her family.
John
Anderson,
Mr. and Mrs.
The Van Meters' son, Bill, was
home from Cheyenne, Wyd. While at Wlll.iam Oschire, Mr. and Mrs.
Granville, Mrs. Wolfe and Uoyd Wright, Mr. and Mrs. James
daughters, Donna and Marlene, at- Whitlatch and Mr. and Mrs. Max
tended the 50th wedding anniversary Whitlatch.
of Mr. and Mrs. Orvy Galler of
Hebron. Other guests at the Van
Meter home were Mr. an~ Mrs. AI
Stokenberg and family of Memphis,
Tenn.

Visits in Akron

Meigs Senior Citizens Center acher frozen br•aa will not be soggy
tivities
located in the Multipurpose
when thawed if she thaws in the
Special correspondeul
Senior
Center
on Mulberry Heights
DEAR POLLY - I bought a refrigerator rather than on the counin
Pomeroy
is
open
9 a.m.-1:30 p.m.,
beautiful black wool coat at a garage ter. I find that most frozen foods fare
Monday through Friday.
sale but It is too short and the entire better if they are taken from the
Tuesday, Sept. 2- Chorus, 12:45-2
hem baa to be let down. Is there a freezer and put in the refrigerator . p.m.
professional \vay to accomplish this for thawing. Candy will thaw and not
Wednesday, Sept. 3 - Social
so the coat will hang as if it had a be sticky and cheese ·Will slice and
Security
Representative, 9:30-12:30
not crumble if· it is put in tlie
good hem turned up?- NORMA
p.m.;
Blood
Pressure Clinic, 10
refrigerator for several days. DEAR NORMA
a.m.-12
noon;
Games,
1-2 p.m.
·VIVIAN
- Take out the
Friday,
Sept.
5
Art
Class, 9:30
DE'l\R POLLY - Saving money is
present hem and •
a.m.-12
noon;
Diet
Class,
1-2 p.m.;
certainly the name of the game
press out the
TOPS CONTESTS BEGIN
Bowling,
1-3
p.m.;
Square
Dance,
8these days. Save those empty coffee
crease.
A 1
The Rutland TOPS Club started
llp.m.
cans as they are invaluable in the
pressing cloth ·
Saturday, Sept. 6 - Holiday on Ice two new contests at the meeting last
garden when planting tomatoes,
dampened well
and Ice Follies Trip, Leave Center at week . Marcta Barrett, leader,
peppers or any stemmed vegetables.
with
white
presided at the meeling with Liilda
11:30a.m.
Remove the bottom of the can and
vinegar and water
Bailey
being honored as the weekly
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
then insert it in the garden soil,
should dolt. ·
to 12:45 p.m., Monday through , queen and Frieda Davis as her runlower than the plant will be bedded.
Cramer
ner-up. The winners of the pop conFriday.
Fill
the
hole
and
can
with
soil
and
Then stitch on a facing about thr~e
Menu for the week of Sept. 2 test were Una Bailey, Mrs. Davis,
inches wide, making sure it is about fertilizer, and put the plant in the
and Francis Hysell. The club showed
through
Sept. 5.
filled can. The cans can be fertilized
the same weight as the coat fabric.
·
a loss of 32 pounds.
Tuesday
Beans
and
ham,
cold
Wide black velvet .or grosgrain rib- individually and watered when dry
pickled
beets,
coleslaw,
cornbread,
bon should do the trick, and would be with no waste. Wetting the leaves
fortified margarine, pears and milk.
causes them to wilt and attract
easy to stitch on neatly. ·
Wednesday - Baked chicken,
When you hand-stitch the new· fungus. This method keeps cut wormashed potatoes, buttered green
hem, hold it back about one-half inch ms from attacking plants, too. I had
beans, bread, fortified margarine,
as you stitch and then only catch had a tin can garden for years and it
peach
crisp and milk.
was great. - MRS. W.E.E.
,
back threads to the coat fabric, and
Thursday
- Pork casserole, bt~t­
Polly will send you one of her
you will have a flat hem with no
tered
com,
vegetable slaw, bread,
disfiguring line where the stitching signed thank-you newspaper coupon
fortified
margarine,
chocolate pudclippers if she uses your favorite
is, Hope this works well for you, ding
and
milk.
Pointer, Peeve ·or Problem in her
POIJ.,Y
Friday - Fried fish, buttered lime
column.
Write POIJ.,Y'S POINDEAR .P OLLY- Do tell Opal that
beans,
stewed 'tomatoes, bread, forTERS in care of this newspaper.
tified margarine, fruited gelatin and
By Polly Cramer

t·.

Sorority
meets
Tuesday

Helen Help Us

He builds castles in sand,·
she wants permanent one

GET 00'1111!
TURN OUT

CIIEESE llfrERrtATIONAt. 15 REAUY
HEADQUARTERS OF OII6AIIZEP CIIIIIE
YOU lf!E THE
OF 801l5ES!!

THOSE
LIGHTS!

Cake and ice cream were served
to Mr. and Mrs. Gene Thompson and
Cindy, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Milhoan, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Reed,
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bailey,
Jonathan's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Guy Sargent, and his sister, Krista.
Sending a gift with his aunt, Bernice
King. Gifts were presented to
Jonathan.
He was also treated to a swimming party on his birthday by his
babysitter, Mrs. Beverly Roush.
Those attending were Jeremy Dean,
K. C. Arnott, who alsO celebrated his
birthday, Thomas Rawlings, Joey
Roush, Bety Roush, Cheryl Roush,
Rodney Roush, and Krista Sargent.

'

.
.'-

MEAN- I HADA
WHILE... WONPERf:UL

• YOU 5URE ~E
MNKLE DAME
DIDN'T I&lt;'ECOG NIZE YOU?

LOTS OF SUO:::EB5
WITH YOUR NEW
RESTAURANT1M!&lt;: .
TIPf'E!

TIME TONIGHT!

milk.
Coffee, tea, and a choice of whole
milk or buttermilk served daily.
Please make reservation. 992-2161.

Evening television listings

Social calendar .

DEARR.H.:
By Heleo and Sue Bolte!
TUESDAY
Special correspondeills
Start rating fellows as they pass
MEIGS Band Boosters will meet
DEARHELENANDSUE:
by, "Tit for Tat" makes "tat" not as · Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the liand
My boyfriend went to Hawaii for titillating.- Helen and Sue
room. All parents of band members,
two weeks - three months ago. He HELEN AND SUE:
and interested persons, are urged to
I live with my family and my
was an architect major and now he's
attend.
supporting himself building sand married sister comes to visit us ofPOMEROY Chamber of Comcastles.
ten. We get along really well and I
merce will meet Tuesday at 12 noon
He spends his days on the beach used to go camping with her and her
at the Meigs Inn.
building these great creations. kids, shop with her, etc., but not so
SUTI'ON Township Trustees will
naturally, he attracts crowds, and much any more. She seems kind of
meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the
when people started tossing money distracted.
Syracuse Municipal Building.
in the castle moat, he (as he wrote)
Helen and Sue, I think she is
HYMN SING featuring the Dun:'realized he was on to something fooling around on her husband, and I can Family, a gospel group from
good." He's been written up in like him a lot too. She's always conTampa, Fla., will be held Tuesday at
newspapers, and baa become quite a fided in 1me but now she's holding
7:30p.m. at the Eagle Ridge Comcelebrity.
·
back. Should I force the issue and try
mtinity Church. The public is inWhat bothers me is he may never to keep my favorite two people
vited.
come home and get back into his together or - ?? ?
POMEROY Chapter 186, Order of
career plans again. From the pic- DEAR ???: .
the Eastern Star, Tuesday evening
tures I see in papers, he's always
I'd say, wait until your sister conat the Pomeroy Masonic Temple. All
surrounded by pretty girls.
fides in you. This might.be a wrong
past matrons and past patrons will
Sbould I go to Hawaii and try guess. - HELEN
be honored.
· ~!king some sense into him (he
REVIVAL now in progress with
hasn't asked me!), or just wait and
And I say it wouldn't hurt to ask,
Norman Taylor, Evans, W. Va. at
hope?- SANDRA (Please don't call "Is something bothering you, Sis?"
the Freewilll!aptist Ash St. Church,
me "Sandy!")
Perhaps she needs talk but can't find
Middleport; will run through SaturDEAR SANDRA:
the words. - SUE
day night; 7:30p.m. each evening.
Walt and hope. We'd guess your
boyfriend will tire of sand castles ,.-----~----------~----------1
· just about the time his public finds a
new beach "celebrity." Meanwhile,
8AROAIN MATINEES ON SAT&amp; SUN
ALL .tEATS JUST .S 1.50
It's a great, free, holiday from duty ,
A{)flfSSION EVERY TUESDAY $ 1.50
and we're all entitled to one such
531 JACKSON Pfi&lt;E ·FI1. 35NORTH - Phone 446-4524
during our lifetime.- HELEN

•
(I) lllll
ILLY G•AHAM
CAUIADE
()) CJD NOYA 'Tennltee to Tllll·

THIS WEEK. FROM BURGER CHEF

cop. .• Or. Philip Morrlaon, lnatltute Prot111or and ProhtttOf of
Phyaloa at the w..aachuaetta
tnatllutl ol Technology, ptiHIIII

SAVES6.80

1 thOughtful end ptovocellve commentary on the n1tur1 of clvitlz•-

tlon. CCiond C.ptlonodl Ct!O
mine.)

Enjoy delicious meals from Burger Chef at terrific savings all week. Take
advantage of these coupon specials and save a total of $6.801

1:30

Ir------------~------------•
I
I

1:18

BUYCNE
BUYCNE
I GEf.(M:FREE I GETOOEFREE

I1 TOP SHEF®

: BIG

SHEF~

1 Save$1.14 wlthcoupori
I

TheBurgerWithTheBacon'"
Save $1.69 with coupon

I
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. ~I
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I e~7~~:~~:~~~~~:::,:~:~ o:J (' . 1 ~7v~~:':~:e~o~:~o:e::ue~,:~!~. 0 ] I' I
ont;o at parhetpat1ng Burger Chel
I
I Good or~ly at partiCipating Buroe r Cnet ~f I

I

Good

-mr

Good
Restaurants

RestaiJrants

'"'OUO"

GOOd t hroug h P!IS 180

~ ~ Good '"""""

..!,..

(!)

GOOd through 9/ lS/80

1

r----------~BUYCNE I ------------~
BUYCNE I

I

I GEI'&lt;M: FREE : GETCNE FREE :
II CHICKEN
CLUB
I
SAUSAGE SUNRISE I
Save $1.49
I
1
with coupon

I
I
I
I

NOTE FROM SUE: But if he
doesn't return by fall, stop waiting .
and start hoping your new boyfriend
won't build all his castles in the
sand.

I

.
One coupon per customer per vrsrl
Not wa~d wh ero other discounts apply.
Good only at parl i&lt;apellng Burger Chef
Restaurants.
Good throoph

I
~ 1
.:1=("r I
D~•
Ull
I

Good througn 9115/ 80

®

1·

1:00

C1J GOOD NeWS
CIJ 1111 •
UIVE""E

n

y

AND

~ TU!SOAY NIGHT AT
UPDATE

TH! MOVIES 'Mitlwa~· 1818
Stare: et,arHon Heaton, Henry

Fondo.

'

Cll 700 CLUB
(I) 1111 •
THRI!I!'I COIIPANY
Jack IHI t'lll Yllrt Of IChoollng
go down thl drain when tle 11111
tll8 final exam at ptlet aehool.
(BepHI) 1Ctoaed·Captloned)

•

(I) lllll

TUESDAY NIGHT

IIOYI!: 'Echoea Of A Summer'
1078 Stara : Jodlefoater, Richard

tt.rrla . .
(I) CID PLAMIIARDS 'Now Blood'
Chrtatlna r1111rws to Flambarda
1Her hearing of Wllllam'a death,
...mere lhl bua..a hlfHif with

hou"

repalra wt.U. prepari'tg to
twva hla baby. (CioHd CIPtloned)
mlna.)

ceo

Open lo r8rellklast6-10:30 a.m.

Restaurants.
Good through

-

®

BlJY'
I 99¢ SPECIAL I GETCNE FREF.
I

1 SALAD BAR

1. Save 60¢ with coupon

I
II
I
I

00

"

I

1 FISH FILET sanctwtch

1 Save 89¢

I
Ona coupon
· per cuatomer par '.'rs.t Dal'
~III
Good
Bur~r
*''
Goodtlwough GOOd t hrough 9/ 1S '80
® I

with coupon

orrtr nol good II Oriv• Thru Window

Not vllld whereolher drtcou ntl apply ·
orMy at part.crpatrr.g
Chel . . . .
"-11 1 ""·

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One coupon per customer per Ylti1.
Not valtcl Whera other diiCOUnlt appty.
Good only II partcr~lng Burgtr cn.r

Aettawanta
Ooodtnroogh Goodi horugh9 1 1S' M

1

1

I
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·--------------------------·

BRIDGE

ffi £Eifl&amp;c¥J'I'!Il

Competition play varies
NORTH
+851

••

tKJ753

WEST

+&amp; 32

EAST

+AI
.Q51Z
tAJ094
+AQJ
SOUTH
tKQJ 107
.KJ 1096
• Q 8%

..

---

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: SouCh

.....

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rECHE~
·
X) [ . . I

MIISH"i' I!JE P~WN
WITHOUT P"AF"ER

Ol't F"ENCII...
Now arrange the circled letters 10
form !he aurprtae anawer, 11 aug gested by the above cartoon.

{Anawera tomorrow}
Vesterday·sl Jumbles : WEDGE CHAIR POETIC FLURRY
Answer : What the~ aeld when the oil rigger came to
the party all covered with petroleum.
"HOW CRIII"'!EI"

.

'

9-1-lO

+K 10 7 5

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11

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t8
+1111!1

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old fftMd of Cannon'• 11 lmpllcat·
ed In a coUnterfeit ltock cer·

i

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter lo each square, to form
tour ordinary words .

IIJ

··~''1te4

•
Cll
CU_ LATE IIOYIE
'CANN&lt;Jti: Ttltt limping Man' An

~

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I

GOOd through 9/ 15180

,

ACROSS
zFrench river
tlllooto rlng. CRopootl 'BARNABY 1 Hockey shot 3 Throog
8:30 CD MOVII -(MUSICAL) ....
RlWES":tlio !lforoChon liluraOio' 5 Thingamajig CHanuner part
mint.)
11
Cebaret" 1D72
Storo: Buddy Eboon. LM liler· 11 Sped
5 Flamboyant
(D IIOtS IACIU!Y SHOW .... ..
(I) CIJ) a TAXI With thocobbleo
~~tt~tt'lar. (R.,eat)
(IJ IAIII!BAL.i:: RACE FOR THI!
still out oo atrtka, lhop ateward
1:00
.J).
TOIIOIIIIOW
Hoot:
Tom
12
Melodic
I Palm
PeNNANT Thl• •ction·packed
Elaine maklt 1n anonnoue ••·
Snydor.
O•oot:
lilllton
Borlo.
13
Yorkshire
7 Quick swim
11ri11
11 ~our IC:or~erd to tht
criflce to win their demartdl for '
opoot. 1!0 mlno.l
rl
8 u-"-g
WOftd Serlta II lt rtCIPI tht
worltlng
conditione:
batter
CHARISMA
ver
mu.u1
week'l lattlt baHball IXC:I·
~eat)
NEWS
l it Take one's
a meu of
temtnt. Len Berman and Maury
10:00
TB8 EVENING NEWS
1:30
OLD on. CIOIIPI!L HOUR
eue
llnlrin5ic
·
Willa c~hoet.
()I) •
HART TO HART Tha
(D IIOVI! o(DIWIAI•IO .. _
I:OO o(ADVUITUIII!ollltAMAI• :~.~: . 1li Overwrought
nat
woe
Yeatenlay'•
Hartt try to unravel an exotiC
of • SOOUftCir-'" 1011
myatary lnYolvlng a •~a11tul
cllontM
IOIOOd"
11168
'
17
T
-man
11
Football
score
U
Sumptu0111
a TV llblln8
(I) lUI •
ABC NFM1
halrdraaaer who 11 blackmailing
NIGHTUNI!
hla wealthy tamale cllenta.
2:13~-·E,:;:
Elfin
11 Diplomat's
21 Prefix
n Maude
•
(I)
U.S. Ol't!N TE(Hapeat; eo mlna.)
2:30
11081 BAGLeY 8ltOW
II Sober
...,.t
for clnlte
or apple
PDATE
(I) LOAD IIOUNTIATTEN: MAN
4:00 ·
700 CLUB
-judge
Z1 Without·
Z1 VIUate
!Z Real estate
ABC CAPTIOHI!D NEWS
FOR THI! CENTURY Thlo !lnol
MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• .. ...._
"Pr:"Jv~cw~TE~:,.:;... ze Feminine
exception
Z7 Ryegrass
sign
aplaoda covara MoYnlb~ten'a
Connection" 1t72
. work until retirement and hla
!973
suf!ill
zz
Scull
Zl "Christ
35 Electrical
11:110
(I)
1111•
TUUOAY
MOVIE
OF
concern with thll advancement of
Till! WUK
1:30 Cll JEBU8 IS Till! ANSWER
Z1 - du Ueber! ZS Some
. -Stopped
unit
Brftleh technology aftenvards. An
11:00 (IJ MOYIE -IADVENTUAEI •••
uPdeted aagmant conc:amlng hia
Z2 Fonnerly
pitchers
at -"
37 Aunt (II.)
death haa bun addeCI. (Cioaed
%3 Hat material r:--;;-r;-r.;Captioned) (60 mlna.)
%5 Senate
® NI!WI
employee
10:21
NEWS UPDATE
10:30
fAITII 20
ze
Herb
OV!:R !AIY Bu.. t: San
%'7 U.S. pabiFrantjaco MayOf Dianne Fein·
ataln. Holt: Hugh Downs. (Closed
otlc org .
Coptlonodl
Zl Before
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
:~:
&lt;Hlllll.
• ·Zl Hearing aid
NEWS
. :IOGymitem
(D
TODAY ..
IUBU ·
:i3Getoo
PROPHECY

Breakfast Sandwich
Save 99¢ with coupon
Onecouponper cuslomer per visit
Not vajd where otn&amp;r discounts awty.
Good only at ptrUcipa!lng &amp;rger Chef

I

NIGHT OALLI!RY

DAVE All!N AT LAROE
DICK CAVUT SHOW
11:28
NEWS uPDATE
11:30
• CD Till! TONIGHT SHOW
'BIIf Of C1r1on' (Repeat; 90

'i11t\if.\fi )e))} ~ TIIATSCRAMBLED WORD OAii!E
ll!J ~ ~~ ~ byHenriAmold&amp;I'IOBobLee

I~------------T·---------·-~
Burger Chef'
1
~
I

DEAR RAP:
I'm sick aild tired of guys playing
the rating game. Whenever we're In
a crowd, the fellows eye passing
girLs and give them aliyWhere from
one to eight. So far they've never
handed out a "10," but plenty of
uhros,
makes us gkls feel Ignored,
and aLso self-conscious, because we
know that they rate us two, even
though they say they don't.
How can we stop It? - RATE

HATERS

A party was held recently
honoring Jonathan Sargent on his
sixth birthday.

p ...
Pua

Paa

,.

Nortll

Eul

%t

Pau
Pau

Pua

Pus

one's knees
M Daring

the more lnteresling hands
here."

Alan: "This is an early
hand . All four South player.~
opened one spade and wound
up at lour although strangely

enough there were four differ~

ent bidding sequences. We are
showiJ18 ,tile one used by Ron
Smith and Hugh Ross."
Oswald: "At all four tables
the sl:l

38S.A. river
38Spoken
38 DeeUnlng
CO Rickey's
drink
·U Involve

cz Eaaay
DOWN

of diamonds was

1 Crook

opened and a low diamond
~ayed from dummy. Two
East playe,. rose with the ace
and gave their partner an
Immediate diamond ruff.
Tben they got in with the ace
of spadeS to give partuer a
second ruff for down one.''
Alan: "At tbe other two
tables Ealt &lt;hooe to play the
nine of diamonds. South won
with the queen and went after
trumpo. Eaat &lt;OOperated by
takinl his o&lt;e and leodinl a
trump ba&lt;k. Sooth cashed
dummy's ace of hearts, drew
the lut trump and &lt;Onceded a
diamond and a heart to make
his

lo

AXYDLBAAXB
LONGriCLLOW

one letter almply olando for onother. In lhla oomple A Ia
UJed for the three L's, l( lor the two O'a, etc. Slnrle !etten,
apo~trophea, the length and f~rmatlon of the warda are aU
hintl. Each day the code letten are different.
CIIYPTOQUOTIIS

JKL

VL

·z LX F R W

game."

Oswald: "That nine of diamonds _play led to a bad
By Oowald Joeoby
result. We also feel !bat It was
Incorrect, but when
con... A1lll Soootoa
sider tbat two out o lour of
O.Wald: "The loor teams In the best players In America
the .ml-fillail of lhla year'o made it, II bad to be reuonVIIIIIonllt pia~ the same able."
11111t11. !A6'1 di....... 110rne nf . !NEWSPAPER EN'I'ERPRISE &gt;SSN.) .

-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'• how to work It:

CLMRTBS
B K R'

lou

NOXBEMYBRV

DRYW
y

LH

RWM'i

LH

BKR

·ly M L E F V

BKR

KLMRX

YWF

y

CYXYNR.

- KLTYNR

YetlerdaJ'tCIIF=Ie: TAKE FROM ME 11IE HOPE THAT
I CAN CHANGE
F1JTURE, AND YOU WilL SEND ME

MAD.-ISRAEL ZANGWILL
IIi ,

·I

O ttllklfll~..._..,,....,., ,nt..

�1~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday Sept. 2, 1960

'H-T~ Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday..t..Sept. 2, 1980

7
Yardsaie ·-· -· 9-~-~ant~_to_B,~L:.:...
GARAGE SALE ·s ep, IR ON AND BRASS BEDS,
tember 1-5 from 9-5 located
off Route 7 bypass on old
route 143 south of Jack's
Cafe. Reasonl!lble prkes on
new painting SUPPlies, good

school clothing, toys and
much more.

Follow t he

1760.

SEVERAL FAMILY Yard

10 karat , ·u karat, 18 karat,
gold . Dental gold and gold

sale_ Boso' s, Great Bend .

available free by mail from: Market
News Branch, Fruit and Vegetable
Division, Agricultural Marketing
Service, USDA, Washington, D.C.
2D250, or from the Office of Transportation, Room 1405, Auditor's
Building, USDA, Washington, D.C.

;. WASHINGTON (AP) - Tung nuts
'·might become popular again. Not to
; eat, mind you, but as a way to repel
· the boll weevil, a peat that has
• chewed through cotton fields for
: generations.
; Some ASziculture Department
; scientists think tung nuts may be the
. answer. At least the tests so far have

buds were dipped in the substance.
Jacobson, chief of the Biologically
Active Natural Products Laboratory
at the Beltsville facility, first reported his findings in Denver, Colo., at a
meeting of the Entomological
Society of America.
Now, the agency says, the weevil
repellent made from tung oil Is so
been promising.
promising that the USDA has ap:. Only a few years ago the govern·
plied for a patent on it.
·· ment had a price-support program
Meanwhile, the substance will un·
: for tung nuts, an oil seed once grown
dergo further tests. The depart·
: oo trees along the Gulf Coast, from . ment's Boll Weevil Research
: Florida to Louisiana.
Laboratory in Mississippi plans to
. The USDA even had a special seespray cotton buds in field testa, the
agency said.
' tion that took care of price supports
. fortungnuts.
One reason for looking harder at
, But Hurricane Camille in 1969
tung oil is that it would be much
· destroyed more than 60 percent of
cheaper to use than many of the
; the tung nut orchards and freeze
chemical pesticides now sprayed on
;. damage put another squeeze on the
cotton fields, officials said.
yean. By 19'13,
WASHINGTON (AP)- Now hear
'' lnduatry In later
.
' production of tung oil dropped to
this, . good buddy. the Agriculture
WI'(),
Department baa set up a teleprnme
Tbe Agriculture Deparbnent, as
"Dial·A·Truck Report" so those who
'required by law despite the demise
haul fruits and vegetables can get
• of the crop, continued a pricethe latest weekly truck rate and cost
: support program for tung nuts · infonnation.
: before dropping It after 19'16.
Assistant Secretary P.R. Smith,·
., Althougb tung oil, once popular as
who oversees USDA marketing sere
;' a clrylnc agent, is ' not essential for
vices, said truckers now can call a
; making pabit and varnish, it still is
Wasllington, D.C., number; 312-447·
: important In . the manufacture of
2599, between 1 p.m. EDT Wed·
· hlgh-grade protective coatings.
nesday and 10 a.m. EDT Friday of
• Most of the tung oll required now
each week.
: is tmported from China, the anThe telephone call, however,ls not
toll-free.
: cestral home of the tung nut.
; How did the tung nut ~e fn.'
"They will hear weekly fruit and
: volved with the boll weevil? The
vegetable truck rate highJlghta and
USDA's Science and Education Adrates that have been reported for
inlnistration says research began in
shipping produce from the more lm~ the early 1960s on the possible use of
portallt shipping points to selected
. tung oil to mske weevil repellent.
cities of destination," he said.
: . At the agency's research center in
And during the first week of each
:. Beltsvllle, Md., Martin Jacobson , month - In the same time period :; says two organic "feeding deterrenthe report will include truck cost fn.
'· ts" were ·extracted from tung oil, formation such as fuel and main· labeled Deterrent I and Deterrent II.
tenance costs as well as Insurance
Tests showed that a derivative of al1d licensing costs per vehicle mlle.
: Deterrent I "almost completely
In addition to the recorded
: ,repelled the weevils" after cotton
telephone report, the information Is

Leona

Stewarts

on

things.

' CARPORT SALE . Sept. 3·
·~. 10 a ..m.· ?. 910 S. Th ird,
.Middleport.

SALE,

on North Main in Rutland.
Clothing, home jogger,
dust

buster,

Phone 742-2648 .

YARD SALE

Thursday,

corner of College , Locust
Streets in Rutland. Phone

142·2233 .
Maternity
cloth ing, kids clothing, lots

had ever known, followed a strategy
of waiting until after the parties
picked their candidates before
throwing the group's weight behind

affiliated unions on the convention
Door as delegates to the 1984

more.

Friday, Saturday on the

UR W boss has convention plan
AKR,ON, Ohio (AP) - United
Rubber Workers President · Peter
Bommarito is formulating a plan he
says would allow organized labor to
sway the Democratic National Convention in 1984.
Bommarito, a first-~ delegate
to the Democratic convention in
August, said organized labor has
done a poor job In getting union
members elected as convention
delegates.
He was a Kennedy delegate at the
convention.
"We:re missing an opportunity
here," Bommarito said in an fn.
terview. ''And I'm as much to blame
as anyone. I just never realized the
importance of electing delegates to
the convention."
The URW president said he will
propose a plan soon to the AFL-CIO
executive councll which could put
1,000 or more members of AFL-CIO

lots

more.

Marr.

Eta.,

Pla!nlifl,

'

• EDNA SCHOENLEB, Ad·
: l!linlstralrlx wilh the Will
.,.. Annexed ol . the Estate ol
-·

. ..

No. 11550
-NOTICETO THE DEFENDANTS
OF THE
UNKNOWN
HEIRS,
DEVISEES ,
lEGATEES DISTRIBUT·
EES.&lt;. ADMINISTRATORS,
EXt:CUTORS
AND
ASSIGNS, IF ANY, OF
EACH
OF
THE

...

,·

D. Miller, Deceased,

Defendants.

, Pomaroy, Ohlo45769,

I

--.~ -

Curb lnflatiGn.
.
. -. ·
.Pay (;ash ·for
'C iaultledJ ancl
Savell I
-

Print one word In each
space below. Each In· ·
ltlal or group of figures · .
counts as a. word. Count
name and address or
phone number If used.
You'll get belter results
, -j If you describe fully,
·:1 give price. The Sentinel
1 reserves the right to
' I classify, edit or reject
' I any ad. Your ad will be
. , pul : In the proper
·, I classification If you'll
· :11 check the proper box
,., .,below.
. .

( 1 Wanted ,
( ) For Sale
( ) Announcemer11
&lt; l For Rent

:~

'I

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1. _ _ _ _.....;

l

2. _

_

_

t1:.. '· - - - -1
4.

,;

' 5.
6

.I
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--11 8.7._
_ __

9. - - - -

' II
.I

10. ·_......;;...__

I·
'11
I,

.I
I

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rile·.., cash rates·
Include discount

.,

17~

18.
19.
20.
21 .
22.
23.
.2.1._ "'"""--- -,
25.

u.
21.
28.
29.
'll.

_,;.~

'32. _ _ _ __

..' I• . 16.
I' . .

' ·1•
li
I ·

...

CAROLINE
MILLER
FISHER, DECEASED ;
ALEXANDER
H.
FISHER, DECEASED ;
ELLA FISHER BRYANT,
DECEASED; HERMAN A.
FISHER , DECEASED ;
HAROLD
FISHER,
DECEASED; EUGENE E .
BRYANT, DECEASED ;
MARIE
MILLER
CUSTER, DECEASED ;
SAMUEL E . KAETZEL,
DECEASED; BERTHA M.
KAETZEL, DECEASED;
WALTER
BENJAMIN
MILLE~
·DECEASED ;
MARY t:LLEN MILLER
COX , DECEASED and
DONALD
COX , "Thank you, air-we're a little
DECEASED.
The Plainliff has brouQht shorthanded ."

--···1

this action naming

vou

as

defendants In the above

named court by filing her

Complaint on July 14th.
1900, In the Common Pleas
Court, Meigs County, Ohio.
The Compla int recites
that each Of you is posslbl ~
an heir-at-ll!lw and next of
kin of Mary D. Miller a .k.a.

Public Notice

Pomeroy, 'in the
Mary Dora Miller and each ·VIllage of
of Meigs and Stale
of you may possibly have ·county
In 100 acre Lot No.
an Interest In the real of Ohio,
and Fraction No. 17, .
estate described in the 303
No. 2 and Range No.
Complaint, which rea l Town
of the Ohio Company's
estate Is descrlbejl as 13
Purchase and bounded and
CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
follows:
bed as IOIIows :
PARCEL NO. 1: The desert
Beginning at the
following · described real southerly
corner of a lo
estate situated In the now or formerly
owned by
Village
of
Pomeroy,
In
the
eANNOUNCEMENTS
eRENTALS
Ma~y Dora Miller; thence
County
of
Meigs
and
State
1-c,,.. ol Thinks
41-HMIH fOr Rtftt
norlll 33 degrees west 100
of Ohio, and being a part Of
2-ln Memcwl•m
.n-Mottlle Ho"'••
feet to the main rock; then· .
Lol
No.
442
and
bounded
J-A•~entt
ce south '57 degrees west
and described as follows : 100
4-0IVNWIIY
44--lPirtment lot lttnt
let; thence south 33'
Beginning at the southeast degrees
" I-HIPPY Ada
100 feet to the
corner of a lot now or for , street ; east
6-L011.1IMI
46-lpace for II: tnt
thence north 51
mer Iy owned by Mary Dora degrees east
7- Yircl Stle
0-W•ntedtt Rent
100 feet to the
Miller; thence north 57
• 41-lt~ulpment for .....
t-Pultlc Sate
of beginning.
degrees east 20 feet; thence place
&amp; &amp;ucuon
Excepting real estale
north 33 degr.e es west to the recorded
1-WontodtoBuy
eMERCHANDiSE
In Vol. 91. Page
north
line
ol
said
Lot
No.
e EMPLOYMENT
s1-Hovtehotcl 000111
215 of the Deed Records of
442;
thence
south
.
88
SERVI!=ES
n-CI, TV, ladlo lqulpmont
County, Ohio.
degrees west lo the north · Meigs
1,_Hel, w1ntec1
SJ-AIUiCIUtl
Further excepting real
west
corner
of
said
Lot
No.
12-Situ.ttd Wfrllecl
54-Mite. Merchlndlat
conveyed 1n Vol. 15-4,
442; thence south 33 estate
IJ-Insuronct
n - lulklfnt Suppllt•
Page 29 of the Meigs Coun·
degrees
e•sl
137
feet
to
the
14-llfllneu Trelnlftl
56-Pttl. tor lilt
Deed Records.
.
place of beginning. Ills the ty Reference
11-ICitMIIIrllfniCtlon
Deed of this
.ntention
to
convey
a
strip
,,__
lltiCIIo. TV
parcel Is· Vol. 8~, Page 62~
. eFARM SUPPLIES
of land 20 leet wide from Meigs
&amp;CIRtPIIr
County Deed Recor·
&amp; LIVESTOCK
~ he westerly side or end of
1._WintedTI0o
Lot No. «2 of said VIllage ds.In Plaintiff's Complaint
n-Ftrm llqul,mtnt
6f-WantMt to luy
of Pomeroy .
eFINANCIAL
she has set forth the names
72-TrltCkltorS.r.
Save and except the coal
l l - IUIIIIHI
~LivntDCII
in said premises and The of each of the defendants ·
o,ortvnlty
· 64-Ht.- I Grain
right to mine the same. having an lnlerest In said
n-MOnn hi L01n
Being a part of the real real estate and the share of ,
tj...SMCII Ftr1111Ztr
2J-Prefn .. ~~n•l
caparcene'r In ·said
estale recorded In Vol. 81, each
~r\IICII
page ~90 of the .';lelgs Coun· real estate. :
eTRANSPORTATION
In Plaintiff's Complaint,
ty Deed RecordS.
71-Aut-., tor Sttt
e REAL ESTATE
Plaintiff demands thai said
NO.
2:
TM
PARCEL
73-Ytnt&amp;4W.D.
real ~tslate be partllloned
n-Hom" f« S.l•f
following described real
74-MotlrC'f'CIH
or ordered sold If It cannot
l2-MOblltt40'"tt
estate
situated
in
the
7
lor lilt
VIllage of Pomeroy, In the be partitioned, lor allowan·
~ Acc~-:!!r.:rt•
ce of allorneys toes herein
»-Farn'll for •••
County
of Meigs and State
77-A"t.R.,.Ir
.M-IUIIMII IUII~Inp
and further demands thai
of Ohio, and In 100 acre lot
all parties hereto set up
U - Lots &amp; AcrNfl
No. 303 Town No. 2 and sucli
M-Il HI lata.. WantMI
claims as they may
Range No. 13 01 the Ohio han against
J7- JINtiDrl
the rear Htate
.SERVICES
Company's Purchase and . above descrlbed
Including
11-Homtlmprcn,tmtnts
bounded and ' descrlbed as the ownel'llhlp 1Therein,
If
11-Piuf'l'ibint I IICIVIftftJ
follows: Beginning 33 feel
Want· Ad AdvertiSing
any, or be forever barred
ll-aiiCI¥1tlne
North and 33 degrees west from
Deadlines
asserting the same.
M-ltedrtc.el
from a lot now or formerly
You are required to an·
••ttrlttrltitft
owned bY George Fisher In swer
i :fo'P,M·. Dilly -~
the Complaint within
lf-OtMral HauNnt
the north part of 100 acre twenty-eight
12 Noot~lltunlrt
t
days after the
tt-M.H.I...Ir
lot No. 303 on the North side
ttrMot!Uy •
lasl publication 01 thl•
17-UitfiOittery
of the street; thence north
notice, which will bit
3J degr~es west 100 feet;
published once each week
thence south 57 degrees tor
six succ:esatve weeks,
I
west 33 feet to the Thomas
and the lasl publlqotlon will
lot;
thence
south
33
degrees
Rates and Other Information
be made on lhe 7th. day of
east 100 feet to the street;
1910.
thence along said street OCtOber,
In case of your failure lo
north
57
degrees
east
33
C1tlt
Chlrfl
answer
or
otherwise
feet to the place of begin·
l .H
1.25
resi)O!Id
as
permilted
bY ·
nlng,
and
tieing
Lot
num·
,
,,.
l.tG
2dh•
Ohio Rules Of Civil
bered 443 of said VIllage of , the
Jftyt
1.10
2.21
Procedure wllh!n the time
Pomeroy_
6cllyl
uo
us
stated,
\udgment bY
Save and except the coal
default wl I be rendered,
••cftwot'CIOWWftMmlniMUWI ISWot'CIIIIAI c.ntsptrWtf'd,.rdiV.
therein and the right tO
against you for the relief
.us ,..,.lrttotMr tun consteullw•••vswiiiiM '"'"'"•' ""1 c11y
mine the same without In·
roto.
cumbrl!lnce to the surface. . demanded In the Com·
111
-nelng,; part ofThe real
In mHMry, tartl" TNitll' • • Ottltutrv: f centt,..,. waN, su•
estate recorded In Vol. 81,
E.
minim•"'· Calft 1ft ...,..u,
Paoe -498 of the Meigs CounCLERKOFCOUR '
ty Deed Records.
COMMON PLEAS COURT
· MlltlleHolftuateuHY~nhlteureacco,totltftlywltttcalllwlth
PARCEL NO. l: The
MEIGS COUNTY, OH 10
order. t1 ctnt cNr" tor Hs urrvlnt hx NumMr In C•n of TtM
following described real
(8) 26, (9) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30,
.........
estale situated In the
(10)7,7tc
·
~~--------~~~! 1
or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St ,, Pomero'f, 0., 45769

,., ....,

,_.,ntl

'

1~.
15.

-I· '

Z.fccN.Eo6E!llsT:"6~

Pub.tic Notice

«5-:,.DDm.

•

. 31. ~·-----

11.
12.
13.

DECEASED: ESTHER
WILLARD
MILLER ,
DECEASED ; ALBERT
HENRY
MILLER,

Public Notice

most

. 0118'-------------""i

· iI

~~~'¥JESL~~c~t~l~~:

PHONE 992-2156

.A~d~·~~~··------~------~
Ph
.

',.

DECEASED; CHARLES
JR . ,
E . MILLER_.
DECEASED· t:DWARD
MILLEf!, bECEASED;
MARILTN
MILLER,
DECEASED; JOHN L.
MILLER, DECEASED; ;
WILLIAM
AUGUST
MILLER , DECEASED;
ELLA
E . MILLER
DECEASED; CLYDE
MILLER, DECEASED.(
HERMAN
ARTHUr&lt;

WANT AD INFORMATION

..

.

FOLLOWING: MARY D.
MILLER, a.k.a. MARY
DORA
. MILLER,
DECEASED; LOUISE D.
CAVERLEEc DECEASE ·
D;
L01&lt;EN
M.
CAVERLEE, DECEASE · .
FRANKLIN
M.
D·
CAVERLEE, DECEASE·
D; JOSEPHINE T.
CAVERLEE, DECEASE ,
D;
DANA
ELMER
MILLER, . DECEASED;
GE·ORGIA
MILLER_,
DECEASED; FLOYu
Ml LLER, DECEASED;
FREDA MILLER FAR ·
MER, DE~EAS .EOl LEE
R.
FARMER
DECEASED; CHARLE~
EDWARD MILLER .

.

Wr!le ,Your own ad and order by mail with this :
coui&gt;OI'f&gt; Cancel your ad bY phone when you get .
results. Money not refundable.
; ,

I

Public Notice

Mall This C.oupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

~~----- .... -~----~--·-·~~---~

...

p ~R-RY S~~N~~R'fl

.

i

ED

BARTELS,Loan

NOTICE
FOR SALEDF
COUNTY ·OWNED VEHIC·
LE
Pursuant

to

Section

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen tinel route carr ier. Phone
us ri9ht away and get on

the . elrgibility list at 992 ,
2156 or 992,2157 .

Immediate ly ! Work at
home -- no
ex peri en ce
necessar.y --eKcellent pay .
Write American Serv ice,

TWO FAMILY yard sale,
Seplember 3·4, All sizes of
clothing. Upper end of

STEWARDESSES

Public Sale
&amp; Auclion

OSSIE 'S AUCTION House,
20 N. 2nd Street, Mid·
dleport, Ohio. We sell one
piece or entire households.
New, used , or ahtiques, In·
eluding homes, farms, or

liquidation sales. Get top

vice, call 992·6370 or in

West Virginia 713 · 5~71 . Sale
every Friday night at 7
Beasley, apprentice auc ·

3
Announcements
1 PAY highest prices
possible for go1d and silver

rece ive sealed bids until 12
noon on Tuesday, Sept. 16,
1980, in the office of the

(no junk I

Me igs
Countv
Com missioners, located In the
Courthouse,
Pomeroy,

Ohio, with bids to be
opened at 2:30 P.M. and
read aloud, for the sale of

the following vehicle :
One 1912 International
Front Loading Garbage
Truck
Said vehicle may be
viewed at the Meigs County
Sanitary Landfill, located
off State Route 143, in
.Sollsbury Townsh ip, bet·
ween the hours of 7:30A.M.
and4 :30 P.M.
Truck to be sold as is

with no guarantees. Said
bids to be submitted in
sealed

" Bid

envelope

on

1972

marked

Garbage

Truck."

The

Board

of

Meigs

Countv
Commissioners
reserve the right to reject
any or all bids.

Meigs County
Commissioners

Mary Hobsletter,
Clerk
(9) 2, 9, 2tc

-

Memorial Hospital during
Paul &amp; Mary A~drews
recent hosp!lal
stay .
Thanks also to all who
visited &amp; sent cards. It was

very
Mr.
2

x

much ,appreciated.
Mrs. Paul Andrews.

Printed' Pattern

and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone

CANDY SUPPLIES on
sate .
Ann's
Cake
Decorating Supplies, 50716
Osborn

Announcements

"
REDUCE sare X fast witl1
GoBese Tab ets x E·Vap
'water pills' at Nelson's
Drug Store.
WILL
YOUR
House
wlthsland another hard
winter? How about that
roof and barn, that snow
gels pretly heavy I L~tl us
do any general main·
tanence work for vou, pain-

ting, gutter repair, palch.
wor.k, Odds and ends, so you:
can sit back in front of that
warm fire this winter and
not have to worry . Call992·
3U1,992-3519, or 992·5126
and we'll come and give
you a free estimate ..
References ·are provided

upon request .

'

ex ·

MASON HOME REPAIR
heating .and air con,

Insurance

Open 9 to 6 dally. The
Tackle Box , Sr . 124,
Syracuse, Oh. 992-6193.
SIGN UP now for fall
classes of tap and jazz .
Barbara's School of Dance.
Syracuse. 992·3282.

Phone
1· ( 614) · 992·3325
HMMMM !&gt; room,
bath, natural gas, flu e
for woodburner , city
water, can be used as a
home or a business or

Homes for Sale

class

.

Mlddt~Ol

,., .. .

· SUPEIUAA K

·

:

... ..~! f!l'.Le••• ' '
c;atiM,;;II!Mi'
t f126lfol 1
'
. or ColilmWI
'!

(614)-dJ.IIAt

Giveaway ,
4·
FIVE PUPPIES. 6 weeks
old, Chihuahua &amp; Terrier
mixed . 985·4302 .
GUINEA PIG. 992-7395.
MINIATURE collie, to
someone out of town. Good
watch dog. Also, a w~lte
pet mouse. 992,3789.
FRE!= puppies part beagle,
part collie. Callafter6p.m.

r~2·20«l.

6
Lost and Pound
LOST :' Child' I
Brown lramn.
blue

brick veneer, bath, nice
closets,
c arpeting ,

the end of the road in

kltch~n,

Pomeroy .

General

Swealer·inspired dressingthink of it for school in' an
easycare knit, in a velvety ••lour
tor parties later on. We call it our
happity,ever·afler dress, a classic
lhal aoes on and on.
Printed Pattern 4866: Child 's ·
Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. Size 6 takes
1 318 yards 45·•nch fabric .

with income of

more. Good for Write-off
and additionl!ll income.

Quick sale priced at
ly$35,000 .

.

room with fireplace, ful·
and

Large
patio.

on·

Housing
Hcildquarters

8·14· 1 mo.

42

Mobile Homes

lor Rent
THREE
BEDROOM
mobile
home
·ap ·

317 N.
Middleport,
PH. 992·6342
TRY USI
Complete Dry Cleaning
and Laundry
eCarpet

'proKimately five mites
from Pomeroy or Mid·

dleport. 992,5058 .

two bedroom ; 1967 Buddy ;
12 x 50 , 2 bedroom .
B&amp; S

home, rea l n1ce . Brown 's

TWO BEDR00/1,) mobile

All related equipment . .

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·143·2591

Trailer Park. 992 ·3324

Pt. Pleasant, W.VA.
675,4424 .

ROOFING
REMODELING
Serving your aref
for 25 years. Ci1"11
now for large sav·
ings. . For Free
Estimate Call
Eugene Long
(614) 843·3322
8· 18· 1 mo . pd.

All types ol roof work,.
new or repair guners
and downspouts, gutter

992· 2478
8

·pd. ,

.

IOOSU
CONSTRUCTION·
• New 11omes • ex·
tensive remodeling
• E Jectrical work
eMasonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
83·1 mo ..

·PARK ·
RNANCIAL .
' REAL ESTATE iLOANS
Federal Housing ·.
VP.terans
Administration :
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy
Office 992· 7544
Home992· 6191

' cleaning and palnl!ng• .
All work guaranleed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

Call Howard
949·2162
949·2160
1-22·1fc

•Draperies
• Furniture
c"We're No. 1 in
Service &amp; Qu•ality•

~;==~~;~~=~t=========~-.:==:;;;;;:=:;
' YOUNGS
J&amp;L BUMN
MORRIS
CARPENTER
EQt}IPMENT
&amp;
INSULATION
SERVICES''
ill
UCK ING', ·'
FURNISHED two bedroom
-Addonsanct
Vinyl. •
1R
trailer , no pets, deposit
remOdeling
Aluminum Siding
-Ha 'ut· Limestone, ·

home nt:tar

Racine . Call

TWO BEDROOM mob ile
mss5o .
TRAILER one adult only.
992,3181.

required, no children . 9-49-

2253.

-Rooting and guner
work
--concrele wOrk
-Plumbing and
electrical work .
(Free Estimates)

.

home for rent in Racine.

On big, quiet lot. Depos it
· required . 36n811 .

NEW LISTING- Farm

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

for country living! Ap -

44

home with 7 rooms, 5
bedrooms, full base-

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts . Phone 992,5434.

54

RENTER ' S ass istance for

HEATING OIL . Buy now at

Apartment
for Rent

Senior Citizens in Village

Manor apts . Call992-7187 .

comfort. Has a large
famiy room plus utility .
Other build ings for e•·
tra storage. $26,900.00.
NEW LISTING
WHERE YOU ' LL LIVE
• TOMORROW! A

FURNISHED
APART ,
MENT. 4 rooms &amp; baTh.
Adults only, no pets. 992·
3074 .
46
Space tor Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home

beautiful building site
with approx . 1 acre land
with util ities available .

Located on the old
Chester Golf Course.
$6,000.00.
SEE MOM'S EVES
SHINE A very
unus ual kitchen with .

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

99n479,

elnsulatlon
e Storm Doors
e Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772

V.C. YOUNG II

MiSc . Merchanise

Summer Prices . Excelsior

Co. 614·992,2205.

JONES MEAT Packing,
Washington co. Rd. 248,
Little Hock ing , Oh . Phone
inquires welcome. 667 ·3133.
10 lb. beef cube steak
S20 .90; 10 lb. sfab bacon
$6.90 ; 10 lb. whole hog
sausage $6 .90 ; 10 lb .
smoked

sausage

links

S9.90; 10 lb . hamburger
patties $17.50; 10 lb. beef or
pork llver$5.90.

·

TRAILER SPACE for rent
in Middleport. $45.00 per
month. 992,5349 .

bar, This 6 room home
has 2 baths and is

watch your investment
grow. A 1 room house on
East Main Street. 3
bedrooms and family

new . $325. 843,2032.

ELECTRIC RANGE . Good
working cond. 992·7395.
REFRIGERATOR . . Runs
good. $25 . 992-7395.

new furna ce, front and
rear porches on apprax.
11.. acre lot. $14,500.00.

Rr. 1, Portland, Oh.
8·13·1 mo.

Good COnd. $75. 992·5919.

equipment and licenses,
and inventory . Quick

sale price. $11 ,000.00.
OFFICE
HOURS - '
MONDAY
THRU
SATURDAY, 9·5.
ALSO MONDAY AND
FRIDAY EVENINGS
UNTIL8 P.M.
REALTOR

TWIN SIZE maple bed with
mattress
&amp;
box
springs.$100.00. Antique

55

whhe Si)( drawer dresser

with mirror. soo.oo. Twin
size white eyelet bedspread 1

$30.00. 992,3566.

'

Building Supplies
318 inch rebar1 17c per foot
by 20 ft . sect&lt;on only. D.
Bumgardner Sales, No ble
Summit Rd ., Mid~leport ,
OH . 992·5724.

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

992·6191 .
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949·2660
Ro11er &amp; l)~ltitlurn.er ·
-992·5692
OFFICE PHONE
.
"2·2259

A

--~~

HOLLOW:

PUT A cold nose in your
future. Meigs County
Humane Society. Wormed,

USED 30" electric rang e_

BUSINESS
Mid·
dleport lunchroom - All

ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO · YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
tor antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too Iaroe . Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·

•

s hots 992·6260. Two ger·
rnan,shepherd,elk hounds,
male; four lovely puppies.
pretty brown shepherd
Type dog, several lovely
cats and kittens.

Autostor Sale
1973 VW SUPER Beetle .
Price $1,300 , Call 614·949 ·
2540 after 5 p.m .
71

7._2c...._T
,
,_,r..::u..::c=
ks,_f,_,o=r..::S..::a:.:
le' - .

Pets for Sale

F ENDER ,STRATOCAST ·
tact Gary Fife. 992·2582.

canoe like new . $225.00. 773·

d iameter 10' ' on largest

end . $12 p·er ton. Bund led
s lab. $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co ., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992,2689.
, class r ings, wedding
diamonds. Gold or

Call J . A. Wamsley,
142•,2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
6462 .

--

'GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF THE ' WORLD.
RINGS , JEWELRY,
STERLING 51 LVE R AND
MISC . ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP·TO ·DATE
PRICES . CONTACT EO
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP , MIDDL'EPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL 9'12 ·3~76 .

-------

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

.MIDDLEPORT - Energy efficient with Insulated'
aluminum siding. Very comfortable three bedroom,
2 bath home, full basement. $40,000.00.

Llsllttt - NIII · U ,
Pomeroy home
A\le ., A Bfil , 1112

lo11 bn&lt;omeoOI,

RODNEY DOWNI.N~. BRQI(_~R
M.
OHIO

..,

.

~

CALL BILL CHILDS 992·2342

. IU-fslllllllllllle QJrlltlq$1.75
1• Sa 1 I 1Sm. 31-5U1.75
UNIIIcl/fllr T. . . ..$1.75
U7.,(,.._ 'n' 0111111 ... $1.75

'

''And It Will only last year that he
wall to be old enough to ahtMII"

.,·,

ser·:ltes

..'•'••

Home

81

Improvements

.

,•
~
..•

s &amp; G carpet Cleaning.

'!

,

~

1962 F.ORD FALCON
FUTURA
convertibl e.
Power top, partly restored.
Collectors item i Make an

Offer . 949·2013.

-----------

-.

~
I
I
I

83
Excavating
J x F BACKHOE SER·
VICE li scensed and bon·
ded, septiC' tank in·
stallatlon, water and gas

I

•

~
~

~
•

lines. E)(cavating work and

~

transit layout. 992 ,7201 .
EXCAVATING

..•

Want~d .

••

Dozer work or timber to

••

cut . 905·3567 or 992·3208.
84

{
·r't"._

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEW ING

Why pul up ·with hilh prices-

·'

,.·'

5008.

rates. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·221 1.

COINS, pocket wat ·

live dollars, 111 better quality!

.•

Steam c leaned .
Free
estimate.
Reasonable

--

. 101111. Pritll IWIE, NIOIIESS,
ZIP, SIZE. 11141 STru NUMBER.

:.

17 foot Sears fiberglass

•

HILLCREST KENNELS ~
Boording, all breeds . Clean
indoor·outdoor fa cililies.
Also AKC
reg istered

. 992-7132

some new
miles for

$1100.00. New heater fan
kit
for
type
two
volkswagon. $25.00. Phone
773·5008.
.

Musietal
Instruments
. -_.!.!=.!:=~ER Peavy electr ic guitars,
like new. Great buy . Con-

56

Ma v sticker,
parts, 93,000

. 57

WantedtoBuy
. • Poles max .
':· .· .'.. :. • ·,·.'· .J. ~-76·1-,3-16•1•o•r•5•51•,•34•1•1• ----D•o•b•e-rm_a_n_s._6.14_,_446-·l·l-95·.-'162CH IP WOOD

01

Seal Jobs
Located 6 miles north of
Albany; Olio On · 68i
North.
. 22 Years EX!Ntri~tnce ·
FuUy Guaranteed ·
Ph . 664·6370
II no answer
Call691·3113
7·31-1

imaginable in horse equip· , 1919 FORO F250. 29,000
ment . Bla nkets, belts, miles. $300. &amp; take over
boots, etc . English and payments. 843·2032 .
Western . Ru t h Reeves
(614) 698·3290.
77
camping
Equipment
TWO MALE pek ingese
puppies _ Reg istered . 949- 1970 VOLKSWAGON cam,
2890 .
per, pop-top, four speed,

pertone, double oven, like

room. Part basement.
$26,500.00.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
-3 bedroom home with

SPECIAUSlS
Bebullts·ReiNtirs

843-2803

and ponies and riding
lessons .
Everyth i ng

51
Household Goods
ELECTRIC RANGE. Cop-

- - 8-1·1 mo.

Call After S P.M.

HOOF

buildings. $36,900.00 .
ADD SOME PAINT
AND LOVE - . And

742·2455

INSIDE &amp; OUT

loca ted on approx . 1
acre level land . Storage

gravel,llll dirt
-Agr!c. lime.spreadlng
-Backhoe work
-New and used farm
equipment
·
-Mechanical work on
:~~~s. equip., . cars,

BELl
· House Painting

Pets for Sale
56
POODLE GROOMING'.
Judy Tay lor. 614·367·722Q.

tl..t - .. ,., PIP"'
243 Wtst 17 Sl, NIW Yorl, NY

•

• Dump Trucks

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

$1.75 .., . . Pllln Add 50$
fw -'t pilllrl fw first-ella
linlllllflfl ,lliHiill(. Send 10:
AMit AdMM
4 91 '
l'itllnJ o.,t.

Send f01 our NEW F~ll·Wi NTER
P~TTERN CATALOG. 94 Plltetns,
Fr" P1ttern Coopon (worth
$1.75). Cataloc. $l.OO.

P&amp;(!l' BUllDINGS

2 BEDROOM Furnished
house. 992·5434 or 992·5914.

-;..::-.--:-=·
-------~~~;..::~~;2;;;;~=::::·:.:-:.:·
Real estate- General

Within walking distance
of schools.

· ·-----

ss.so_oo

per month. Space tor 2 .

Three "biidrooms, 2...,
baths, large family
sundeck

2

Syracuse close to pool.
INCOME - 5 renta ls

FIVE YEAR OLD
BI~EVEL HOME
carpeted.

f or

bedrooms, bath, new
natural gas forced air
furnace, city water,
large basement, 2 porches and extra lot . In

FOR SALE .

l1H~n.,,,_ , -1/J.._~

Going

S47,500.
NEW LISTING -

.

SIZES 2-8

modern kit·

chen, full basement with
bar, fam ily room, utility
room and 2nd bath, on
large lot. Last house on

living &amp; fam•ly
Paneling &amp; car-

Real Estate

ty
..

2 ni ce porches .
PRIVATE- 3 bedroom

peting throughout, central
a ir &amp; heat . 992-7342 .

decorating novelty cakes.
Call or come In for details .
.992-6342.
NEW Ill Rent a pan ser·
vice" Rent the novelty cake
pan of your choice tor only
$2.00.
Call 992·6342 for
details.
·

home with 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, formal dining
room, modern kitchen ,
built-in range, hot water
heat, full basement and

equipped

dining,
rooms.

natural gas,

only $12,000.
RESTFUL- And just a
shOrt walk from the
stores. A good 2 story

COUNTRY

equipped mOdern

in

bat~ ,

city water, full basement and extra lot for

relocate, 3 bedroom , ·2 full
baths, garden tub in
mas ter bedroom , fully

DECORATING ·

mini

bedroom home .on corner lot near shopping .

MODULAR HOME . Must

in Middleport. Beginner,
Intermediate, advances

•also

both·for just $11 ,000.
BARGAIN - Handy 2
Has

work guaranteed.
Free Estimate

St. in Middleport. $350. a
month. 992,2394.

pro• . 23 A. ol Ia ~d and ;!

VIRGIL B. SR.i!',~~
216 E . Second Street

$100.00 . 992·2849.

4,_,1_ _:.H,o,u,.se::.:s:.,:I::;:O:_
r ,:.:Rc;,e;.:nl:__
4 BEDROOM, Central air &amp;

Moon , 12 x 60 wi th expando,

This 4 bedroom home
wil I give you space and

3543.
\

bedroom; 1971 Liberty, 14 •
65 two bedroom; 1968
Atlantic,
12 • 60 ' two
bedroom ; 1960 Ne w

ment, large storage
building. $«,500.00 .
NEW LISTING
HOUSE PINCHING?

1

Clark
797·4147
21 years experience . All

TWO BEDROOM mob ile

· Miscellaneous

--

two

attractive , drapes.

'1'12-5792 or 992·2606.

Living. Baum Addition .
Home on large landscaped
lot, 3 bedrooms, 2 1f:~ baths ,
large living roam , dining
room, paneled family
room, w ith stone firepla ce,
picture window &amp; sliding
glass doors to patio, gas
heat, central a.c ., extra
large double garage. 985-

ROds, reels, tackle boKes,
marine supplies, lures . No
lawaway on sale items.

64

'fY ~ . ',(1.!&gt; y

.

SALE: 20% off all fishing
tackle. Aug. 25 to Sept. 7.

x

dleport. New roof, new exter~or &amp; interior paint. new
carpeting &amp; draperies, f ull
basement, good location.

PLEASANT

992 · 23.1~ .

14

I""'UMICKV T, 0 • .

ditlonlng furnace cleaning,
service and installation .

Cameron,

VERY NICE home in Mrd·

garage, 1 acre·tot. 992,3454.

plumbing, repair, reslden·
tial electric wiring, sales

1975 western Mans ion 14 •
70 three bedroom ; 1971

Ca ll after 6 p.m . 985,3814.

13

Ger~ld

UNFURNISHED
2
bedroom house. 992·7395.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

my home . Any time. Have
reference,s. 742 -31 16.

NEw 3 bedrooin home for
sale. Built · i n kitchen ,
dinino
room,
larg e
recreation room, firepla ce,
lots of storage, 2112 baths,

Rd.,. Reedsville,

7 ROOM HOUSE for sale.

baths, fully carpeted with
most

Tom Hoskins or

heat . Located on Lincoln

12
Situations Wanted
WILL DO BabysiTt ing in

31

Oh. 667-6-185.

Elva, Jean &amp; Bernice.

3

with

992·2082 ..

IN LOVING Memory of our
Father. Edward Young,
who passed away 15 years
ago Sept. 2.

one ofthe best."
Sadly missed by daugh ters

Degree

perience .preferred . Call
Mr. Zldian for appoin tment
992·6606, 9·5 Tues.· Thurs.

wood

Lane

In Memoriam

Treasure him, Lord, in
vour garden of rest.
For when on earth, he was

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom

Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
fer .

8~3- 2911.

Mobile Home Sales

rafch brick home in Baum
Addition . With new garage
&amp; genie door . Gas heat,
newly installed central ai r
condition ing, family room
&amp; stone fireplac e, appliances buil t in, newly inst alled electric breaker
sys t em,
attractive l y
decorated base ment, 2

both the social worker &amp;
activity coordinator at

2 BEDROOMS, l'h baths,
garden, frui t trees. Must be
inside to appreciate. Wi ll
t a k e a m i n i hom e or pi ck vP
truck as pa rtial payment.

sto~m

$29,000. 1,614·949·2042.

(2191 345,2000. Write : Drost

17

· classes beg inn ing soon at
the Carousel Confectlonary

Telle, Dr . Villanveva, nur·
ses, &amp; stall at veterans

Aluminum siding,

doors, storm windows, ·2
baths, li ving room , dining
room, kitchen , ·carpet
throughout, laundry room, .
a half basement; natural
gas furna ce, drilled water
well, new block chimeny
for wood burner, chain link
fence, new septic system,
also large building with
new roof and a lum inum
siding goes with it. Approximately 3/.4 acres .

949·2160 Pomeroy
197·2432 Athens

.

.

Middleport. Low $40's . '1'12·
3341.

NICE 3 or 4 bedroom home
in Bas ha n, approximately
ten miles from Pomeroy ,

Enterprises, Box 2000,
Roselawn, Indiana 46372.

•

Daniels 142·2951. Tuning

CAKE

I
9rd of Thanks
SPECIAL THANKS to Dr.
1

Relocate to Indiana . Call

-=====::::::::;;..j pressor,
LARGE UPRIGHT com· ·
220 volts up to 180
PSI, $315 .00. King cast iron
cook or heat
New Sweater Dress stove burning
ne ver used for

coins, rings, jewelry , etc .

Tuning

tor Dick Drost's J etlin er.

Homes tor Sale

By Owner. Good location in

tloneer, Osby A . Martin.

Contacl Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
Piano

(18·32)

99BI32.

FULL TIME person to be

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2-181 or 949·2000. raci ne.
Ohio, Cr ill Bradford .

301.12 O.R.C. the Meigs
County Commissioners will

Mortgage
money
available. All types hom e
financing ,
new ,
old,
refinancing, and 2nd mortgages . Phone 992-7000 or

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training

8350 Park Lane, Suite 121,
Dallas, TX 75231

p.m. Auctioneer Howard
Public Notice

31

· Homes for Sale

31

11

residence on Broadway
Street in Rac ine.

8

Sizes from 4X61o 12x40

VINYL SIDING

and repair, gutters ,
downspouts, commer·
cial &amp; residen1ial.

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

Ma in St., Pomeroy, Oh.

ADDRESSERS WANTED

Mason next to the old driveinn: Rain or shine.

lkllldin...
Ill"'

1

Experienc.td Oper1ton
available lor local wortc.
• 2 rubbor tire beck hoes
e 1 elf.CIYifOr hoe 11/•
yd.
e2Doun

-

All types ol rooting, new

nesday, Thursday, Friday,

THE REV. DENMS SERDAHL prays that his liew lip will dilcoarage llllllntllorlled park·
. lllg iD lbe lot of St. Paul's Epbcopal CIJarch iD Sa!IDas, Calif. The other olde of tbe 1lp
carrieo tbe blanter. wamiDc that lllecaUy parked can will be towed.

utililu
,.,

plies . In ground and
above ground pools.
5. Hfc

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Wed,

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992·21 43.

Public Notice

SMALL

~-====::::::::::::=:::=::~~=======6·
:15=·=tf~c=~!=;=::;;===:::;===
- - -· ·- - - -

organization,
or successful
business management.

Representati ve, 1100 East

formation ·and pickup ser·

Public Notice
NOTICE BY
'
PUBLICATION
:• . IN THE COMMON PLEAS
&gt; COURT OF MEIGS COUN·
. TY,OHIO
· EDNA SCHOENLEB,
!r 333l•sley Street,

sates, service and sup-

to qual ilied church group,

in gooo shape and pric ed
resonably or would trade a
Linens. clothing, bedding, ' 197B Ford Fiesta ; give or
.dishes, toys, tools, Silver- take the di ffere nce . 949,
stone, pots &amp; pans, Avon, 2013 .
small appliances, Christ_
m as trimming, lots off
misc .
·

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads

.

corner lot on main hi gh-

v.. ton Ford pickup, must be

'· ------~--------~--------------~~--------------------------~----------------------.-----~---------------------------•,

REA L ESTATE fo r sa le :

31711 Noble Sum !I Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
tt2-5724

SHALLOW well pump and

WILL DO Hou se c lea nin g.
142·2431.

'

.Sizes
"From 30x30"

99BI86 or 992 ·2529 .

dollar . List with the man
who has over 25 years in
the new, used and antique
furniture business.
We
take consignments. For in·

..

or no

Fam:t Buildin15

THE POOL PEOPLE

town. 992 ,5106 or 992.-2529.

w~ y ; over 250 foot ol Iront~ge; 95 percent financing

Pulns ·
Exc:avati!(

ALL STEEL

SALES

home. Easy terms, close to

Osby &lt;Ossie ) Martin . 992,
6370.

Democratic convention.
"I don't think it would be that dif.
ficult ,to elect 1,000 or even 1,200 . ooeman.
.
Bommarito said · Lane Kirl!land,
delegates if we can get something
going early enough," said BomMeany's successor, appears to be JD.
marito, a member with 32 others on
terested In getting union memben
the AFL-CIO executive council. ·
behind a candidate before the
He said AFL-CIO unions could ennomination.
"Ive already had some talks about
courage their members to trY to get
elected as delegates. Tben the
this with Lane, and I believe he
unions could donate union staff
thinks the same way," Bommarlto
members to set up an organization
said.
to control the delegates during !he
At the last quarterly meeting of
convention.
the AFL-CIO executive council,
Money contributed by union memBonunarito said, he presented the
bers through the AFL-CIO's Comidea informally.
mittee on Political Education would
"It got the best reaction I've ever
be given to delegates to defray per·
seen," he said. "U we could elect
sonal expenses at the convention, ·· 1,000 delegates, we could away a conBonunarito said.
vention and perhaps even the course
The late George Meany, until last
of history."
year the only president the AFL-CIO

an

t.:ige in the Ra cine-Dorcas
area. 949-2890.
·

Gold, silver or fore ign
coins or any go ld or silver
items. Antique furn iture,
glass or china, will pay top
.dollar, or complete estates.
No item too large or too
small. Check prices before
sell ing . Also do appra ising _

FIVE FAMILY extra large
,yard sale September 4·5 at
the Roderick Grimm

GENEVA (AP) - The inflation
picture Is gloomy and the outlook is
for more of the same, according to
statistics re~ by the U.N. International Labor Organization.
During 19'19 Argentina led the
world with
inflation rate
percent. Israel's cost .of living continued to soar and reached lll per·
cent in 19'19, more than double the
level of 19'18.
ILO ell)lerts point out that even
SWitzerland which had maintained
annual inflation rates of 1 percent or
below In 19'17. and In 19'18 did not
escape the general rise in 19'19 when
Jiving costa went up by over 5 perc
cent;
,
The ILO attributes the sharp
escalation of inflation in many countries to Increases In the price of oil.

D. BUMGARDNER

___

35 · -·Lot s &amp; Acreage - ·
'-"--... -·
....__ ---·- --ONE ACRE· of good Iron·

YARD SALE . 010 S. Second
St ., Middleport . Sept. 1-6.

PORCH

~~TIONEVERYWHERE

sale,

Women's clothing, large
dresser, and lots of other

ton.
and other provisions that affect
growers.
The comments can be sent to:
Director; Production Adjustment
Division, ASCS, Room 3630, South
9ui!dlng; USDA, ,P.O• . Box 2415 ,
Washington, D.C. 2ro13.

PATIO

. I

742·3030 or 74n728,

ear p ins . 675·3010.

Mullier ry
Heights,
Pomeroy . · Friday Sep·
tembe r s from 9·5.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Public comments are being sought until Oct. 28
on provisions of the government's .
1981 cotton programs, says the
Agriculture Deparbnent.
The deparbnent is required by Jaw
to announce next year's upland cotton program by Nov. 1. There is no
deadline for announcing the
program for extra-long staple cot·
Comments are being sought on

Business Services

mont. 14x70 with expando,
central air, 3 bedrooms, l lJ;~
baths. Moving out of state.

SUI TABLE LOT for mobile
LARGE

2D250.

next year's price-support loan rates

Mobile Home s for Sale

1900 COLONADE' By Fair, ,

old furniture, desks, gold
rings , jewelry, silver
dollars, sterling , etc ., wood
ice boxes, jars antiques,
etc. complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, R1. 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992-

signs to great bargains.

Sept. 4,7, 11 till dark .

32

They'll Do It Every Time

Repa irs,

MACHINE

service,

all

makes . 992 · 228~ . The 'w
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy . 1•
Authorized Singer Safes ': 1
and Service. We shar*n ;:
Scissors.
· t

I•

l

i•

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR sweepers. ·"
toasters, Irons. all small

•:t
~

appliances. Lawn mower.

Next to State Highway ~
Garage on Route 1, 985· 1:
3825.
APPLIANCE service, all
makes washers, ·dryers,'
ranges.
d is h
washers,disposals,

water

~1:
:tt

tanks. Call Ken Young 985· ~-•
3561 before 9a. m . or after 6
p.m .

.,

�1~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday Sept. 2, 1960

'H-T~ Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday..t..Sept. 2, 1980

7
Yardsaie ·-· -· 9-~-~ant~_to_B,~L:.:...
GARAGE SALE ·s ep, IR ON AND BRASS BEDS,
tember 1-5 from 9-5 located
off Route 7 bypass on old
route 143 south of Jack's
Cafe. Reasonl!lble prkes on
new painting SUPPlies, good

school clothing, toys and
much more.

Follow t he

1760.

SEVERAL FAMILY Yard

10 karat , ·u karat, 18 karat,
gold . Dental gold and gold

sale_ Boso' s, Great Bend .

available free by mail from: Market
News Branch, Fruit and Vegetable
Division, Agricultural Marketing
Service, USDA, Washington, D.C.
2D250, or from the Office of Transportation, Room 1405, Auditor's
Building, USDA, Washington, D.C.

;. WASHINGTON (AP) - Tung nuts
'·might become popular again. Not to
; eat, mind you, but as a way to repel
· the boll weevil, a peat that has
• chewed through cotton fields for
: generations.
; Some ASziculture Department
; scientists think tung nuts may be the
. answer. At least the tests so far have

buds were dipped in the substance.
Jacobson, chief of the Biologically
Active Natural Products Laboratory
at the Beltsville facility, first reported his findings in Denver, Colo., at a
meeting of the Entomological
Society of America.
Now, the agency says, the weevil
repellent made from tung oil Is so
been promising.
promising that the USDA has ap:. Only a few years ago the govern·
plied for a patent on it.
·· ment had a price-support program
Meanwhile, the substance will un·
: for tung nuts, an oil seed once grown
dergo further tests. The depart·
: oo trees along the Gulf Coast, from . ment's Boll Weevil Research
: Florida to Louisiana.
Laboratory in Mississippi plans to
. The USDA even had a special seespray cotton buds in field testa, the
agency said.
' tion that took care of price supports
. fortungnuts.
One reason for looking harder at
, But Hurricane Camille in 1969
tung oil is that it would be much
· destroyed more than 60 percent of
cheaper to use than many of the
; the tung nut orchards and freeze
chemical pesticides now sprayed on
;. damage put another squeeze on the
cotton fields, officials said.
yean. By 19'13,
WASHINGTON (AP)- Now hear
'' lnduatry In later
.
' production of tung oil dropped to
this, . good buddy. the Agriculture
WI'(),
Department baa set up a teleprnme
Tbe Agriculture Deparbnent, as
"Dial·A·Truck Report" so those who
'required by law despite the demise
haul fruits and vegetables can get
• of the crop, continued a pricethe latest weekly truck rate and cost
: support program for tung nuts · infonnation.
: before dropping It after 19'16.
Assistant Secretary P.R. Smith,·
., Althougb tung oil, once popular as
who oversees USDA marketing sere
;' a clrylnc agent, is ' not essential for
vices, said truckers now can call a
; making pabit and varnish, it still is
Wasllington, D.C., number; 312-447·
: important In . the manufacture of
2599, between 1 p.m. EDT Wed·
· hlgh-grade protective coatings.
nesday and 10 a.m. EDT Friday of
• Most of the tung oll required now
each week.
: is tmported from China, the anThe telephone call, however,ls not
toll-free.
: cestral home of the tung nut.
; How did the tung nut ~e fn.'
"They will hear weekly fruit and
: volved with the boll weevil? The
vegetable truck rate highJlghta and
USDA's Science and Education Adrates that have been reported for
inlnistration says research began in
shipping produce from the more lm~ the early 1960s on the possible use of
portallt shipping points to selected
. tung oil to mske weevil repellent.
cities of destination," he said.
: . At the agency's research center in
And during the first week of each
:. Beltsvllle, Md., Martin Jacobson , month - In the same time period :; says two organic "feeding deterrenthe report will include truck cost fn.
'· ts" were ·extracted from tung oil, formation such as fuel and main· labeled Deterrent I and Deterrent II.
tenance costs as well as Insurance
Tests showed that a derivative of al1d licensing costs per vehicle mlle.
: Deterrent I "almost completely
In addition to the recorded
: ,repelled the weevils" after cotton
telephone report, the information Is

Leona

Stewarts

on

things.

' CARPORT SALE . Sept. 3·
·~. 10 a ..m.· ?. 910 S. Th ird,
.Middleport.

SALE,

on North Main in Rutland.
Clothing, home jogger,
dust

buster,

Phone 742-2648 .

YARD SALE

Thursday,

corner of College , Locust
Streets in Rutland. Phone

142·2233 .
Maternity
cloth ing, kids clothing, lots

had ever known, followed a strategy
of waiting until after the parties
picked their candidates before
throwing the group's weight behind

affiliated unions on the convention
Door as delegates to the 1984

more.

Friday, Saturday on the

UR W boss has convention plan
AKR,ON, Ohio (AP) - United
Rubber Workers President · Peter
Bommarito is formulating a plan he
says would allow organized labor to
sway the Democratic National Convention in 1984.
Bommarito, a first-~ delegate
to the Democratic convention in
August, said organized labor has
done a poor job In getting union
members elected as convention
delegates.
He was a Kennedy delegate at the
convention.
"We:re missing an opportunity
here," Bommarito said in an fn.
terview. ''And I'm as much to blame
as anyone. I just never realized the
importance of electing delegates to
the convention."
The URW president said he will
propose a plan soon to the AFL-CIO
executive councll which could put
1,000 or more members of AFL-CIO

lots

more.

Marr.

Eta.,

Pla!nlifl,

'

• EDNA SCHOENLEB, Ad·
: l!linlstralrlx wilh the Will
.,.. Annexed ol . the Estate ol
-·

. ..

No. 11550
-NOTICETO THE DEFENDANTS
OF THE
UNKNOWN
HEIRS,
DEVISEES ,
lEGATEES DISTRIBUT·
EES.&lt;. ADMINISTRATORS,
EXt:CUTORS
AND
ASSIGNS, IF ANY, OF
EACH
OF
THE

...

,·

D. Miller, Deceased,

Defendants.

, Pomaroy, Ohlo45769,

I

--.~ -

Curb lnflatiGn.
.
. -. ·
.Pay (;ash ·for
'C iaultledJ ancl
Savell I
-

Print one word In each
space below. Each In· ·
ltlal or group of figures · .
counts as a. word. Count
name and address or
phone number If used.
You'll get belter results
, -j If you describe fully,
·:1 give price. The Sentinel
1 reserves the right to
' I classify, edit or reject
' I any ad. Your ad will be
. , pul : In the proper
·, I classification If you'll
· :11 check the proper box
,., .,below.
. .

( 1 Wanted ,
( ) For Sale
( ) Announcemer11
&lt; l For Rent

:~

'I

t'.

1. _ _ _ _.....;

l

2. _

_

_

t1:.. '· - - - -1
4.

,;

' 5.
6

.I
"I · ----_
--11 8.7._
_ __

9. - - - -

' II
.I

10. ·_......;;...__

I·
'11
I,

.I
I

r

rile·.., cash rates·
Include discount

.,

17~

18.
19.
20.
21 .
22.
23.
.2.1._ "'"""--- -,
25.

u.
21.
28.
29.
'll.

_,;.~

'32. _ _ _ __

..' I• . 16.
I' . .

' ·1•
li
I ·

...

CAROLINE
MILLER
FISHER, DECEASED ;
ALEXANDER
H.
FISHER, DECEASED ;
ELLA FISHER BRYANT,
DECEASED; HERMAN A.
FISHER , DECEASED ;
HAROLD
FISHER,
DECEASED; EUGENE E .
BRYANT, DECEASED ;
MARIE
MILLER
CUSTER, DECEASED ;
SAMUEL E . KAETZEL,
DECEASED; BERTHA M.
KAETZEL, DECEASED;
WALTER
BENJAMIN
MILLE~
·DECEASED ;
MARY t:LLEN MILLER
COX , DECEASED and
DONALD
COX , "Thank you, air-we're a little
DECEASED.
The Plainliff has brouQht shorthanded ."

--···1

this action naming

vou

as

defendants In the above

named court by filing her

Complaint on July 14th.
1900, In the Common Pleas
Court, Meigs County, Ohio.
The Compla int recites
that each Of you is posslbl ~
an heir-at-ll!lw and next of
kin of Mary D. Miller a .k.a.

Public Notice

Pomeroy, 'in the
Mary Dora Miller and each ·VIllage of
of Meigs and Stale
of you may possibly have ·county
In 100 acre Lot No.
an Interest In the real of Ohio,
and Fraction No. 17, .
estate described in the 303
No. 2 and Range No.
Complaint, which rea l Town
of the Ohio Company's
estate Is descrlbejl as 13
Purchase and bounded and
CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
follows:
bed as IOIIows :
PARCEL NO. 1: The desert
Beginning at the
following · described real southerly
corner of a lo
estate situated In the now or formerly
owned by
Village
of
Pomeroy,
In
the
eANNOUNCEMENTS
eRENTALS
Ma~y Dora Miller; thence
County
of
Meigs
and
State
1-c,,.. ol Thinks
41-HMIH fOr Rtftt
norlll 33 degrees west 100
of Ohio, and being a part Of
2-ln Memcwl•m
.n-Mottlle Ho"'••
feet to the main rock; then· .
Lol
No.
442
and
bounded
J-A•~entt
ce south '57 degrees west
and described as follows : 100
4-0IVNWIIY
44--lPirtment lot lttnt
let; thence south 33'
Beginning at the southeast degrees
" I-HIPPY Ada
100 feet to the
corner of a lot now or for , street ; east
6-L011.1IMI
46-lpace for II: tnt
thence north 51
mer Iy owned by Mary Dora degrees east
7- Yircl Stle
0-W•ntedtt Rent
100 feet to the
Miller; thence north 57
• 41-lt~ulpment for .....
t-Pultlc Sate
of beginning.
degrees east 20 feet; thence place
&amp; &amp;ucuon
Excepting real estale
north 33 degr.e es west to the recorded
1-WontodtoBuy
eMERCHANDiSE
In Vol. 91. Page
north
line
ol
said
Lot
No.
e EMPLOYMENT
s1-Hovtehotcl 000111
215 of the Deed Records of
442;
thence
south
.
88
SERVI!=ES
n-CI, TV, ladlo lqulpmont
County, Ohio.
degrees west lo the north · Meigs
1,_Hel, w1ntec1
SJ-AIUiCIUtl
Further excepting real
west
corner
of
said
Lot
No.
12-Situ.ttd Wfrllecl
54-Mite. Merchlndlat
conveyed 1n Vol. 15-4,
442; thence south 33 estate
IJ-Insuronct
n - lulklfnt Suppllt•
Page 29 of the Meigs Coun·
degrees
e•sl
137
feet
to
the
14-llfllneu Trelnlftl
56-Pttl. tor lilt
Deed Records.
.
place of beginning. Ills the ty Reference
11-ICitMIIIrllfniCtlon
Deed of this
.ntention
to
convey
a
strip
,,__
lltiCIIo. TV
parcel Is· Vol. 8~, Page 62~
. eFARM SUPPLIES
of land 20 leet wide from Meigs
&amp;CIRtPIIr
County Deed Recor·
&amp; LIVESTOCK
~ he westerly side or end of
1._WintedTI0o
Lot No. «2 of said VIllage ds.In Plaintiff's Complaint
n-Ftrm llqul,mtnt
6f-WantMt to luy
of Pomeroy .
eFINANCIAL
she has set forth the names
72-TrltCkltorS.r.
Save and except the coal
l l - IUIIIIHI
~LivntDCII
in said premises and The of each of the defendants ·
o,ortvnlty
· 64-Ht.- I Grain
right to mine the same. having an lnlerest In said
n-MOnn hi L01n
Being a part of the real real estate and the share of ,
tj...SMCII Ftr1111Ztr
2J-Prefn .. ~~n•l
caparcene'r In ·said
estale recorded In Vol. 81, each
~r\IICII
page ~90 of the .';lelgs Coun· real estate. :
eTRANSPORTATION
In Plaintiff's Complaint,
ty Deed RecordS.
71-Aut-., tor Sttt
e REAL ESTATE
Plaintiff demands thai said
NO.
2:
TM
PARCEL
73-Ytnt&amp;4W.D.
real ~tslate be partllloned
n-Hom" f« S.l•f
following described real
74-MotlrC'f'CIH
or ordered sold If It cannot
l2-MOblltt40'"tt
estate
situated
in
the
7
lor lilt
VIllage of Pomeroy, In the be partitioned, lor allowan·
~ Acc~-:!!r.:rt•
ce of allorneys toes herein
»-Farn'll for •••
County
of Meigs and State
77-A"t.R.,.Ir
.M-IUIIMII IUII~Inp
and further demands thai
of Ohio, and In 100 acre lot
all parties hereto set up
U - Lots &amp; AcrNfl
No. 303 Town No. 2 and sucli
M-Il HI lata.. WantMI
claims as they may
Range No. 13 01 the Ohio han against
J7- JINtiDrl
the rear Htate
.SERVICES
Company's Purchase and . above descrlbed
Including
11-Homtlmprcn,tmtnts
bounded and ' descrlbed as the ownel'llhlp 1Therein,
If
11-Piuf'l'ibint I IICIVIftftJ
follows: Beginning 33 feel
Want· Ad AdvertiSing
any, or be forever barred
ll-aiiCI¥1tlne
North and 33 degrees west from
Deadlines
asserting the same.
M-ltedrtc.el
from a lot now or formerly
You are required to an·
••ttrlttrltitft
owned bY George Fisher In swer
i :fo'P,M·. Dilly -~
the Complaint within
lf-OtMral HauNnt
the north part of 100 acre twenty-eight
12 Noot~lltunlrt
t
days after the
tt-M.H.I...Ir
lot No. 303 on the North side
ttrMot!Uy •
lasl publication 01 thl•
17-UitfiOittery
of the street; thence north
notice, which will bit
3J degr~es west 100 feet;
published once each week
thence south 57 degrees tor
six succ:esatve weeks,
I
west 33 feet to the Thomas
and the lasl publlqotlon will
lot;
thence
south
33
degrees
Rates and Other Information
be made on lhe 7th. day of
east 100 feet to the street;
1910.
thence along said street OCtOber,
In case of your failure lo
north
57
degrees
east
33
C1tlt
Chlrfl
answer
or
otherwise
feet to the place of begin·
l .H
1.25
resi)O!Id
as
permilted
bY ·
nlng,
and
tieing
Lot
num·
,
,,.
l.tG
2dh•
Ohio Rules Of Civil
bered 443 of said VIllage of , the
Jftyt
1.10
2.21
Procedure wllh!n the time
Pomeroy_
6cllyl
uo
us
stated,
\udgment bY
Save and except the coal
default wl I be rendered,
••cftwot'CIOWWftMmlniMUWI ISWot'CIIIIAI c.ntsptrWtf'd,.rdiV.
therein and the right tO
against you for the relief
.us ,..,.lrttotMr tun consteullw•••vswiiiiM '"'"'"•' ""1 c11y
mine the same without In·
roto.
cumbrl!lnce to the surface. . demanded In the Com·
111
-nelng,; part ofThe real
In mHMry, tartl" TNitll' • • Ottltutrv: f centt,..,. waN, su•
estate recorded In Vol. 81,
E.
minim•"'· Calft 1ft ...,..u,
Paoe -498 of the Meigs CounCLERKOFCOUR '
ty Deed Records.
COMMON PLEAS COURT
· MlltlleHolftuateuHY~nhlteureacco,totltftlywltttcalllwlth
PARCEL NO. l: The
MEIGS COUNTY, OH 10
order. t1 ctnt cNr" tor Hs urrvlnt hx NumMr In C•n of TtM
following described real
(8) 26, (9) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30,
.........
estale situated In the
(10)7,7tc
·
~~--------~~~! 1
or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St ,, Pomero'f, 0., 45769

,., ....,

,_.,ntl

'

1~.
15.

-I· '

Z.fccN.Eo6E!llsT:"6~

Pub.tic Notice

«5-:,.DDm.

•

. 31. ~·-----

11.
12.
13.

DECEASED: ESTHER
WILLARD
MILLER ,
DECEASED ; ALBERT
HENRY
MILLER,

Public Notice

most

. 0118'-------------""i

· iI

~~~'¥JESL~~c~t~l~~:

PHONE 992-2156

.A~d~·~~~··------~------~
Ph
.

',.

DECEASED; CHARLES
JR . ,
E . MILLER_.
DECEASED· t:DWARD
MILLEf!, bECEASED;
MARILTN
MILLER,
DECEASED; JOHN L.
MILLER, DECEASED; ;
WILLIAM
AUGUST
MILLER , DECEASED;
ELLA
E . MILLER
DECEASED; CLYDE
MILLER, DECEASED.(
HERMAN
ARTHUr&lt;

WANT AD INFORMATION

..

.

FOLLOWING: MARY D.
MILLER, a.k.a. MARY
DORA
. MILLER,
DECEASED; LOUISE D.
CAVERLEEc DECEASE ·
D;
L01&lt;EN
M.
CAVERLEE, DECEASE · .
FRANKLIN
M.
D·
CAVERLEE, DECEASE·
D; JOSEPHINE T.
CAVERLEE, DECEASE ,
D;
DANA
ELMER
MILLER, . DECEASED;
GE·ORGIA
MILLER_,
DECEASED; FLOYu
Ml LLER, DECEASED;
FREDA MILLER FAR ·
MER, DE~EAS .EOl LEE
R.
FARMER
DECEASED; CHARLE~
EDWARD MILLER .

.

Wr!le ,Your own ad and order by mail with this :
coui&gt;OI'f&gt; Cancel your ad bY phone when you get .
results. Money not refundable.
; ,

I

Public Notice

Mall This C.oupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

~~----- .... -~----~--·-·~~---~

...

p ~R-RY S~~N~~R'fl

.

i

ED

BARTELS,Loan

NOTICE
FOR SALEDF
COUNTY ·OWNED VEHIC·
LE
Pursuant

to

Section

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen tinel route carr ier. Phone
us ri9ht away and get on

the . elrgibility list at 992 ,
2156 or 992,2157 .

Immediate ly ! Work at
home -- no
ex peri en ce
necessar.y --eKcellent pay .
Write American Serv ice,

TWO FAMILY yard sale,
Seplember 3·4, All sizes of
clothing. Upper end of

STEWARDESSES

Public Sale
&amp; Auclion

OSSIE 'S AUCTION House,
20 N. 2nd Street, Mid·
dleport, Ohio. We sell one
piece or entire households.
New, used , or ahtiques, In·
eluding homes, farms, or

liquidation sales. Get top

vice, call 992·6370 or in

West Virginia 713 · 5~71 . Sale
every Friday night at 7
Beasley, apprentice auc ·

3
Announcements
1 PAY highest prices
possible for go1d and silver

rece ive sealed bids until 12
noon on Tuesday, Sept. 16,
1980, in the office of the

(no junk I

Me igs
Countv
Com missioners, located In the
Courthouse,
Pomeroy,

Ohio, with bids to be
opened at 2:30 P.M. and
read aloud, for the sale of

the following vehicle :
One 1912 International
Front Loading Garbage
Truck
Said vehicle may be
viewed at the Meigs County
Sanitary Landfill, located
off State Route 143, in
.Sollsbury Townsh ip, bet·
ween the hours of 7:30A.M.
and4 :30 P.M.
Truck to be sold as is

with no guarantees. Said
bids to be submitted in
sealed

" Bid

envelope

on

1972

marked

Garbage

Truck."

The

Board

of

Meigs

Countv
Commissioners
reserve the right to reject
any or all bids.

Meigs County
Commissioners

Mary Hobsletter,
Clerk
(9) 2, 9, 2tc

-

Memorial Hospital during
Paul &amp; Mary A~drews
recent hosp!lal
stay .
Thanks also to all who
visited &amp; sent cards. It was

very
Mr.
2

x

much ,appreciated.
Mrs. Paul Andrews.

Printed' Pattern

and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone

CANDY SUPPLIES on
sate .
Ann's
Cake
Decorating Supplies, 50716
Osborn

Announcements

"
REDUCE sare X fast witl1
GoBese Tab ets x E·Vap
'water pills' at Nelson's
Drug Store.
WILL
YOUR
House
wlthsland another hard
winter? How about that
roof and barn, that snow
gels pretly heavy I L~tl us
do any general main·
tanence work for vou, pain-

ting, gutter repair, palch.
wor.k, Odds and ends, so you:
can sit back in front of that
warm fire this winter and
not have to worry . Call992·
3U1,992-3519, or 992·5126
and we'll come and give
you a free estimate ..
References ·are provided

upon request .

'

ex ·

MASON HOME REPAIR
heating .and air con,

Insurance

Open 9 to 6 dally. The
Tackle Box , Sr . 124,
Syracuse, Oh. 992-6193.
SIGN UP now for fall
classes of tap and jazz .
Barbara's School of Dance.
Syracuse. 992·3282.

Phone
1· ( 614) · 992·3325
HMMMM !&gt; room,
bath, natural gas, flu e
for woodburner , city
water, can be used as a
home or a business or

Homes for Sale

class

.

Mlddt~Ol

,., .. .

· SUPEIUAA K

·

:

... ..~! f!l'.Le••• ' '
c;atiM,;;II!Mi'
t f126lfol 1
'
. or ColilmWI
'!

(614)-dJ.IIAt

Giveaway ,
4·
FIVE PUPPIES. 6 weeks
old, Chihuahua &amp; Terrier
mixed . 985·4302 .
GUINEA PIG. 992-7395.
MINIATURE collie, to
someone out of town. Good
watch dog. Also, a w~lte
pet mouse. 992,3789.
FRE!= puppies part beagle,
part collie. Callafter6p.m.

r~2·20«l.

6
Lost and Pound
LOST :' Child' I
Brown lramn.
blue

brick veneer, bath, nice
closets,
c arpeting ,

the end of the road in

kltch~n,

Pomeroy .

General

Swealer·inspired dressingthink of it for school in' an
easycare knit, in a velvety ••lour
tor parties later on. We call it our
happity,ever·afler dress, a classic
lhal aoes on and on.
Printed Pattern 4866: Child 's ·
Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. Size 6 takes
1 318 yards 45·•nch fabric .

with income of

more. Good for Write-off
and additionl!ll income.

Quick sale priced at
ly$35,000 .

.

room with fireplace, ful·
and

Large
patio.

on·

Housing
Hcildquarters

8·14· 1 mo.

42

Mobile Homes

lor Rent
THREE
BEDROOM
mobile
home
·ap ·

317 N.
Middleport,
PH. 992·6342
TRY USI
Complete Dry Cleaning
and Laundry
eCarpet

'proKimately five mites
from Pomeroy or Mid·

dleport. 992,5058 .

two bedroom ; 1967 Buddy ;
12 x 50 , 2 bedroom .
B&amp; S

home, rea l n1ce . Brown 's

TWO BEDR00/1,) mobile

All related equipment . .

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·143·2591

Trailer Park. 992 ·3324

Pt. Pleasant, W.VA.
675,4424 .

ROOFING
REMODELING
Serving your aref
for 25 years. Ci1"11
now for large sav·
ings. . For Free
Estimate Call
Eugene Long
(614) 843·3322
8· 18· 1 mo . pd.

All types ol roof work,.
new or repair guners
and downspouts, gutter

992· 2478
8

·pd. ,

.

IOOSU
CONSTRUCTION·
• New 11omes • ex·
tensive remodeling
• E Jectrical work
eMasonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
83·1 mo ..

·PARK ·
RNANCIAL .
' REAL ESTATE iLOANS
Federal Housing ·.
VP.terans
Administration :
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy
Office 992· 7544
Home992· 6191

' cleaning and palnl!ng• .
All work guaranleed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

Call Howard
949·2162
949·2160
1-22·1fc

•Draperies
• Furniture
c"We're No. 1 in
Service &amp; Qu•ality•

~;==~~;~~=~t=========~-.:==:;;;;;:=:;
' YOUNGS
J&amp;L BUMN
MORRIS
CARPENTER
EQt}IPMENT
&amp;
INSULATION
SERVICES''
ill
UCK ING', ·'
FURNISHED two bedroom
-Addonsanct
Vinyl. •
1R
trailer , no pets, deposit
remOdeling
Aluminum Siding
-Ha 'ut· Limestone, ·

home nt:tar

Racine . Call

TWO BEDROOM mob ile
mss5o .
TRAILER one adult only.
992,3181.

required, no children . 9-49-

2253.

-Rooting and guner
work
--concrele wOrk
-Plumbing and
electrical work .
(Free Estimates)

.

home for rent in Racine.

On big, quiet lot. Depos it
· required . 36n811 .

NEW LISTING- Farm

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

for country living! Ap -

44

home with 7 rooms, 5
bedrooms, full base-

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts . Phone 992,5434.

54

RENTER ' S ass istance for

HEATING OIL . Buy now at

Apartment
for Rent

Senior Citizens in Village

Manor apts . Call992-7187 .

comfort. Has a large
famiy room plus utility .
Other build ings for e•·
tra storage. $26,900.00.
NEW LISTING
WHERE YOU ' LL LIVE
• TOMORROW! A

FURNISHED
APART ,
MENT. 4 rooms &amp; baTh.
Adults only, no pets. 992·
3074 .
46
Space tor Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home

beautiful building site
with approx . 1 acre land
with util ities available .

Located on the old
Chester Golf Course.
$6,000.00.
SEE MOM'S EVES
SHINE A very
unus ual kitchen with .

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

99n479,

elnsulatlon
e Storm Doors
e Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772

V.C. YOUNG II

MiSc . Merchanise

Summer Prices . Excelsior

Co. 614·992,2205.

JONES MEAT Packing,
Washington co. Rd. 248,
Little Hock ing , Oh . Phone
inquires welcome. 667 ·3133.
10 lb. beef cube steak
S20 .90; 10 lb. sfab bacon
$6.90 ; 10 lb. whole hog
sausage $6 .90 ; 10 lb .
smoked

sausage

links

S9.90; 10 lb . hamburger
patties $17.50; 10 lb. beef or
pork llver$5.90.

·

TRAILER SPACE for rent
in Middleport. $45.00 per
month. 992,5349 .

bar, This 6 room home
has 2 baths and is

watch your investment
grow. A 1 room house on
East Main Street. 3
bedrooms and family

new . $325. 843,2032.

ELECTRIC RANGE . Good
working cond. 992·7395.
REFRIGERATOR . . Runs
good. $25 . 992-7395.

new furna ce, front and
rear porches on apprax.
11.. acre lot. $14,500.00.

Rr. 1, Portland, Oh.
8·13·1 mo.

Good COnd. $75. 992·5919.

equipment and licenses,
and inventory . Quick

sale price. $11 ,000.00.
OFFICE
HOURS - '
MONDAY
THRU
SATURDAY, 9·5.
ALSO MONDAY AND
FRIDAY EVENINGS
UNTIL8 P.M.
REALTOR

TWIN SIZE maple bed with
mattress
&amp;
box
springs.$100.00. Antique

55

whhe Si)( drawer dresser

with mirror. soo.oo. Twin
size white eyelet bedspread 1

$30.00. 992,3566.

'

Building Supplies
318 inch rebar1 17c per foot
by 20 ft . sect&lt;on only. D.
Bumgardner Sales, No ble
Summit Rd ., Mid~leport ,
OH . 992·5724.

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

992·6191 .
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949·2660
Ro11er &amp; l)~ltitlurn.er ·
-992·5692
OFFICE PHONE
.
"2·2259

A

--~~

HOLLOW:

PUT A cold nose in your
future. Meigs County
Humane Society. Wormed,

USED 30" electric rang e_

BUSINESS
Mid·
dleport lunchroom - All

ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO · YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
tor antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too Iaroe . Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·

•

s hots 992·6260. Two ger·
rnan,shepherd,elk hounds,
male; four lovely puppies.
pretty brown shepherd
Type dog, several lovely
cats and kittens.

Autostor Sale
1973 VW SUPER Beetle .
Price $1,300 , Call 614·949 ·
2540 after 5 p.m .
71

7._2c...._T
,
,_,r..::u..::c=
ks,_f,_,o=r..::S..::a:.:
le' - .

Pets for Sale

F ENDER ,STRATOCAST ·
tact Gary Fife. 992·2582.

canoe like new . $225.00. 773·

d iameter 10' ' on largest

end . $12 p·er ton. Bund led
s lab. $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co ., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992,2689.
, class r ings, wedding
diamonds. Gold or

Call J . A. Wamsley,
142•,2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
6462 .

--

'GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF THE ' WORLD.
RINGS , JEWELRY,
STERLING 51 LVE R AND
MISC . ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP·TO ·DATE
PRICES . CONTACT EO
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP , MIDDL'EPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL 9'12 ·3~76 .

-------

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

.MIDDLEPORT - Energy efficient with Insulated'
aluminum siding. Very comfortable three bedroom,
2 bath home, full basement. $40,000.00.

Llsllttt - NIII · U ,
Pomeroy home
A\le ., A Bfil , 1112

lo11 bn&lt;omeoOI,

RODNEY DOWNI.N~. BRQI(_~R
M.
OHIO

..,

.

~

CALL BILL CHILDS 992·2342

. IU-fslllllllllllle QJrlltlq$1.75
1• Sa 1 I 1Sm. 31-5U1.75
UNIIIcl/fllr T. . . ..$1.75
U7.,(,.._ 'n' 0111111 ... $1.75

'

''And It Will only last year that he
wall to be old enough to ahtMII"

.,·,

ser·:ltes

..'•'••

Home

81

Improvements

.

,•
~
..•

s &amp; G carpet Cleaning.

'!

,

~

1962 F.ORD FALCON
FUTURA
convertibl e.
Power top, partly restored.
Collectors item i Make an

Offer . 949·2013.

-----------

-.

~
I
I
I

83
Excavating
J x F BACKHOE SER·
VICE li scensed and bon·
ded, septiC' tank in·
stallatlon, water and gas

I

•

~
~

~
•

lines. E)(cavating work and

~

transit layout. 992 ,7201 .
EXCAVATING

..•

Want~d .

••

Dozer work or timber to

••

cut . 905·3567 or 992·3208.
84

{
·r't"._

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEW ING

Why pul up ·with hilh prices-

·'

,.·'

5008.

rates. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·221 1.

COINS, pocket wat ·

live dollars, 111 better quality!

.•

Steam c leaned .
Free
estimate.
Reasonable

--

. 101111. Pritll IWIE, NIOIIESS,
ZIP, SIZE. 11141 STru NUMBER.

:.

17 foot Sears fiberglass

•

HILLCREST KENNELS ~
Boording, all breeds . Clean
indoor·outdoor fa cililies.
Also AKC
reg istered

. 992-7132

some new
miles for

$1100.00. New heater fan
kit
for
type
two
volkswagon. $25.00. Phone
773·5008.
.

Musietal
Instruments
. -_.!.!=.!:=~ER Peavy electr ic guitars,
like new. Great buy . Con-

56

Ma v sticker,
parts, 93,000

. 57

WantedtoBuy
. • Poles max .
':· .· .'.. :. • ·,·.'· .J. ~-76·1-,3-16•1•o•r•5•51•,•34•1•1• ----D•o•b•e-rm_a_n_s._6.14_,_446-·l·l-95·.-'162CH IP WOOD

01

Seal Jobs
Located 6 miles north of
Albany; Olio On · 68i
North.
. 22 Years EX!Ntri~tnce ·
FuUy Guaranteed ·
Ph . 664·6370
II no answer
Call691·3113
7·31-1

imaginable in horse equip· , 1919 FORO F250. 29,000
ment . Bla nkets, belts, miles. $300. &amp; take over
boots, etc . English and payments. 843·2032 .
Western . Ru t h Reeves
(614) 698·3290.
77
camping
Equipment
TWO MALE pek ingese
puppies _ Reg istered . 949- 1970 VOLKSWAGON cam,
2890 .
per, pop-top, four speed,

pertone, double oven, like

room. Part basement.
$26,500.00.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
-3 bedroom home with

SPECIAUSlS
Bebullts·ReiNtirs

843-2803

and ponies and riding
lessons .
Everyth i ng

51
Household Goods
ELECTRIC RANGE. Cop-

- - 8-1·1 mo.

Call After S P.M.

HOOF

buildings. $36,900.00 .
ADD SOME PAINT
AND LOVE - . And

742·2455

INSIDE &amp; OUT

loca ted on approx . 1
acre level land . Storage

gravel,llll dirt
-Agr!c. lime.spreadlng
-Backhoe work
-New and used farm
equipment
·
-Mechanical work on
:~~~s. equip., . cars,

BELl
· House Painting

Pets for Sale
56
POODLE GROOMING'.
Judy Tay lor. 614·367·722Q.

tl..t - .. ,., PIP"'
243 Wtst 17 Sl, NIW Yorl, NY

•

• Dump Trucks

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

$1.75 .., . . Pllln Add 50$
fw -'t pilllrl fw first-ella
linlllllflfl ,lliHiill(. Send 10:
AMit AdMM
4 91 '
l'itllnJ o.,t.

Send f01 our NEW F~ll·Wi NTER
P~TTERN CATALOG. 94 Plltetns,
Fr" P1ttern Coopon (worth
$1.75). Cataloc. $l.OO.

P&amp;(!l' BUllDINGS

2 BEDROOM Furnished
house. 992·5434 or 992·5914.

-;..::-.--:-=·
-------~~~;..::~~;2;;;;~=::::·:.:-:.:·
Real estate- General

Within walking distance
of schools.

· ·-----

ss.so_oo

per month. Space tor 2 .

Three "biidrooms, 2...,
baths, large family
sundeck

2

Syracuse close to pool.
INCOME - 5 renta ls

FIVE YEAR OLD
BI~EVEL HOME
carpeted.

f or

bedrooms, bath, new
natural gas forced air
furnace, city water,
large basement, 2 porches and extra lot . In

FOR SALE .

l1H~n.,,,_ , -1/J.._~

Going

S47,500.
NEW LISTING -

.

SIZES 2-8

modern kit·

chen, full basement with
bar, fam ily room, utility
room and 2nd bath, on
large lot. Last house on

living &amp; fam•ly
Paneling &amp; car-

Real Estate

ty
..

2 ni ce porches .
PRIVATE- 3 bedroom

peting throughout, central
a ir &amp; heat . 992-7342 .

decorating novelty cakes.
Call or come In for details .
.992-6342.
NEW Ill Rent a pan ser·
vice" Rent the novelty cake
pan of your choice tor only
$2.00.
Call 992·6342 for
details.
·

home with 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, formal dining
room, modern kitchen ,
built-in range, hot water
heat, full basement and

equipped

dining,
rooms.

natural gas,

only $12,000.
RESTFUL- And just a
shOrt walk from the
stores. A good 2 story

COUNTRY

equipped mOdern

in

bat~ ,

city water, full basement and extra lot for

relocate, 3 bedroom , ·2 full
baths, garden tub in
mas ter bedroom , fully

DECORATING ·

mini

bedroom home .on corner lot near shopping .

MODULAR HOME . Must

in Middleport. Beginner,
Intermediate, advances

•also

both·for just $11 ,000.
BARGAIN - Handy 2
Has

work guaranteed.
Free Estimate

St. in Middleport. $350. a
month. 992,2394.

pro• . 23 A. ol Ia ~d and ;!

VIRGIL B. SR.i!',~~
216 E . Second Street

$100.00 . 992·2849.

4,_,1_ _:.H,o,u,.se::.:s:.,:I::;:O:_
r ,:.:Rc;,e;.:nl:__
4 BEDROOM, Central air &amp;

Moon , 12 x 60 wi th expando,

This 4 bedroom home
wil I give you space and

3543.
\

bedroom; 1971 Liberty, 14 •
65 two bedroom; 1968
Atlantic,
12 • 60 ' two
bedroom ; 1960 Ne w

ment, large storage
building. $«,500.00 .
NEW LISTING
HOUSE PINCHING?

1

Clark
797·4147
21 years experience . All

TWO BEDROOM mob ile

· Miscellaneous

--

two

attractive , drapes.

'1'12-5792 or 992·2606.

Living. Baum Addition .
Home on large landscaped
lot, 3 bedrooms, 2 1f:~ baths ,
large living roam , dining
room, paneled family
room, w ith stone firepla ce,
picture window &amp; sliding
glass doors to patio, gas
heat, central a.c ., extra
large double garage. 985-

ROds, reels, tackle boKes,
marine supplies, lures . No
lawaway on sale items.

64

'fY ~ . ',(1.!&gt; y

.

SALE: 20% off all fishing
tackle. Aug. 25 to Sept. 7.

x

dleport. New roof, new exter~or &amp; interior paint. new
carpeting &amp; draperies, f ull
basement, good location.

PLEASANT

992 · 23.1~ .

14

I""'UMICKV T, 0 • .

ditlonlng furnace cleaning,
service and installation .

Cameron,

VERY NICE home in Mrd·

garage, 1 acre·tot. 992,3454.

plumbing, repair, reslden·
tial electric wiring, sales

1975 western Mans ion 14 •
70 three bedroom ; 1971

Ca ll after 6 p.m . 985,3814.

13

Ger~ld

UNFURNISHED
2
bedroom house. 992·7395.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

my home . Any time. Have
reference,s. 742 -31 16.

NEw 3 bedrooin home for
sale. Built · i n kitchen ,
dinino
room,
larg e
recreation room, firepla ce,
lots of storage, 2112 baths,

Rd.,. Reedsville,

7 ROOM HOUSE for sale.

baths, fully carpeted with
most

Tom Hoskins or

heat . Located on Lincoln

12
Situations Wanted
WILL DO BabysiTt ing in

31

Oh. 667-6-185.

Elva, Jean &amp; Bernice.

3

with

992·2082 ..

IN LOVING Memory of our
Father. Edward Young,
who passed away 15 years
ago Sept. 2.

one ofthe best."
Sadly missed by daugh ters

Degree

perience .preferred . Call
Mr. Zldian for appoin tment
992·6606, 9·5 Tues.· Thurs.

wood

Lane

In Memoriam

Treasure him, Lord, in
vour garden of rest.
For when on earth, he was

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom

Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
fer .

8~3- 2911.

Mobile Home Sales

rafch brick home in Baum
Addition . With new garage
&amp; genie door . Gas heat,
newly installed central ai r
condition ing, family room
&amp; stone fireplac e, appliances buil t in, newly inst alled electric breaker
sys t em,
attractive l y
decorated base ment, 2

both the social worker &amp;
activity coordinator at

2 BEDROOMS, l'h baths,
garden, frui t trees. Must be
inside to appreciate. Wi ll
t a k e a m i n i hom e or pi ck vP
truck as pa rtial payment.

sto~m

$29,000. 1,614·949·2042.

(2191 345,2000. Write : Drost

17

· classes beg inn ing soon at
the Carousel Confectlonary

Telle, Dr . Villanveva, nur·
ses, &amp; stall at veterans

Aluminum siding,

doors, storm windows, ·2
baths, li ving room , dining
room, kitchen , ·carpet
throughout, laundry room, .
a half basement; natural
gas furna ce, drilled water
well, new block chimeny
for wood burner, chain link
fence, new septic system,
also large building with
new roof and a lum inum
siding goes with it. Approximately 3/.4 acres .

949·2160 Pomeroy
197·2432 Athens

.

.

Middleport. Low $40's . '1'12·
3341.

NICE 3 or 4 bedroom home
in Bas ha n, approximately
ten miles from Pomeroy ,

Enterprises, Box 2000,
Roselawn, Indiana 46372.

•

Daniels 142·2951. Tuning

CAKE

I
9rd of Thanks
SPECIAL THANKS to Dr.
1

Relocate to Indiana . Call

-=====::::::::;;..j pressor,
LARGE UPRIGHT com· ·
220 volts up to 180
PSI, $315 .00. King cast iron
cook or heat
New Sweater Dress stove burning
ne ver used for

coins, rings, jewelry , etc .

Tuning

tor Dick Drost's J etlin er.

Homes tor Sale

By Owner. Good location in

tloneer, Osby A . Martin.

Contacl Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
Piano

(18·32)

99BI32.

FULL TIME person to be

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949·2-181 or 949·2000. raci ne.
Ohio, Cr ill Bradford .

301.12 O.R.C. the Meigs
County Commissioners will

Mortgage
money
available. All types hom e
financing ,
new ,
old,
refinancing, and 2nd mortgages . Phone 992-7000 or

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training

8350 Park Lane, Suite 121,
Dallas, TX 75231

p.m. Auctioneer Howard
Public Notice

31

· Homes for Sale

31

11

residence on Broadway
Street in Rac ine.

8

Sizes from 4X61o 12x40

VINYL SIDING

and repair, gutters ,
downspouts, commer·
cial &amp; residen1ial.

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

Ma in St., Pomeroy, Oh.

ADDRESSERS WANTED

Mason next to the old driveinn: Rain or shine.

lkllldin...
Ill"'

1

Experienc.td Oper1ton
available lor local wortc.
• 2 rubbor tire beck hoes
e 1 elf.CIYifOr hoe 11/•
yd.
e2Doun

-

All types ol rooting, new

nesday, Thursday, Friday,

THE REV. DENMS SERDAHL prays that his liew lip will dilcoarage llllllntllorlled park·
. lllg iD lbe lot of St. Paul's Epbcopal CIJarch iD Sa!IDas, Calif. The other olde of tbe 1lp
carrieo tbe blanter. wamiDc that lllecaUy parked can will be towed.

utililu
,.,

plies . In ground and
above ground pools.
5. Hfc

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Wed,

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992·21 43.

Public Notice

SMALL

~-====::::::::::::=:::=::~~=======6·
:15=·=tf~c=~!=;=::;;===:::;===
- - -· ·- - - -

organization,
or successful
business management.

Representati ve, 1100 East

formation ·and pickup ser·

Public Notice
NOTICE BY
'
PUBLICATION
:• . IN THE COMMON PLEAS
&gt; COURT OF MEIGS COUN·
. TY,OHIO
· EDNA SCHOENLEB,
!r 333l•sley Street,

sates, service and sup-

to qual ilied church group,

in gooo shape and pric ed
resonably or would trade a
Linens. clothing, bedding, ' 197B Ford Fiesta ; give or
.dishes, toys, tools, Silver- take the di ffere nce . 949,
stone, pots &amp; pans, Avon, 2013 .
small appliances, Christ_
m as trimming, lots off
misc .
·

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads

.

corner lot on main hi gh-

v.. ton Ford pickup, must be

'· ------~--------~--------------~~--------------------------~----------------------.-----~---------------------------•,

REA L ESTATE fo r sa le :

31711 Noble Sum !I Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
tt2-5724

SHALLOW well pump and

WILL DO Hou se c lea nin g.
142·2431.

'

.Sizes
"From 30x30"

99BI86 or 992 ·2529 .

dollar . List with the man
who has over 25 years in
the new, used and antique
furniture business.
We
take consignments. For in·

..

or no

Fam:t Buildin15

THE POOL PEOPLE

town. 992 ,5106 or 992.-2529.

w~ y ; over 250 foot ol Iront~ge; 95 percent financing

Pulns ·
Exc:avati!(

ALL STEEL

SALES

home. Easy terms, close to

Osby &lt;Ossie ) Martin . 992,
6370.

Democratic convention.
"I don't think it would be that dif.
ficult ,to elect 1,000 or even 1,200 . ooeman.
.
Bommarito said · Lane Kirl!land,
delegates if we can get something
going early enough," said BomMeany's successor, appears to be JD.
marito, a member with 32 others on
terested In getting union memben
the AFL-CIO executive council. ·
behind a candidate before the
He said AFL-CIO unions could ennomination.
"Ive already had some talks about
courage their members to trY to get
elected as delegates. Tben the
this with Lane, and I believe he
unions could donate union staff
thinks the same way," Bommarlto
members to set up an organization
said.
to control the delegates during !he
At the last quarterly meeting of
convention.
the AFL-CIO executive council,
Money contributed by union memBonunarito said, he presented the
bers through the AFL-CIO's Comidea informally.
mittee on Political Education would
"It got the best reaction I've ever
be given to delegates to defray per·
seen," he said. "U we could elect
sonal expenses at the convention, ·· 1,000 delegates, we could away a conBonunarito said.
vention and perhaps even the course
The late George Meany, until last
of history."
year the only president the AFL-CIO

an

t.:ige in the Ra cine-Dorcas
area. 949-2890.
·

Gold, silver or fore ign
coins or any go ld or silver
items. Antique furn iture,
glass or china, will pay top
.dollar, or complete estates.
No item too large or too
small. Check prices before
sell ing . Also do appra ising _

FIVE FAMILY extra large
,yard sale September 4·5 at
the Roderick Grimm

GENEVA (AP) - The inflation
picture Is gloomy and the outlook is
for more of the same, according to
statistics re~ by the U.N. International Labor Organization.
During 19'19 Argentina led the
world with
inflation rate
percent. Israel's cost .of living continued to soar and reached lll per·
cent in 19'19, more than double the
level of 19'18.
ILO ell)lerts point out that even
SWitzerland which had maintained
annual inflation rates of 1 percent or
below In 19'17. and In 19'18 did not
escape the general rise in 19'19 when
Jiving costa went up by over 5 perc
cent;
,
The ILO attributes the sharp
escalation of inflation in many countries to Increases In the price of oil.

D. BUMGARDNER

___

35 · -·Lot s &amp; Acreage - ·
'-"--... -·
....__ ---·- --ONE ACRE· of good Iron·

YARD SALE . 010 S. Second
St ., Middleport . Sept. 1-6.

PORCH

~~TIONEVERYWHERE

sale,

Women's clothing, large
dresser, and lots of other

ton.
and other provisions that affect
growers.
The comments can be sent to:
Director; Production Adjustment
Division, ASCS, Room 3630, South
9ui!dlng; USDA, ,P.O• . Box 2415 ,
Washington, D.C. 2ro13.

PATIO

. I

742·3030 or 74n728,

ear p ins . 675·3010.

Mullier ry
Heights,
Pomeroy . · Friday Sep·
tembe r s from 9·5.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Public comments are being sought until Oct. 28
on provisions of the government's .
1981 cotton programs, says the
Agriculture Deparbnent.
The deparbnent is required by Jaw
to announce next year's upland cotton program by Nov. 1. There is no
deadline for announcing the
program for extra-long staple cot·
Comments are being sought on

Business Services

mont. 14x70 with expando,
central air, 3 bedrooms, l lJ;~
baths. Moving out of state.

SUI TABLE LOT for mobile
LARGE

2D250.

next year's price-support loan rates

Mobile Home s for Sale

1900 COLONADE' By Fair, ,

old furniture, desks, gold
rings , jewelry, silver
dollars, sterling , etc ., wood
ice boxes, jars antiques,
etc. complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, R1. 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992-

signs to great bargains.

Sept. 4,7, 11 till dark .

32

They'll Do It Every Time

Repa irs,

MACHINE

service,

all

makes . 992 · 228~ . The 'w
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy . 1•
Authorized Singer Safes ': 1
and Service. We shar*n ;:
Scissors.
· t

I•

l

i•

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR sweepers. ·"
toasters, Irons. all small

•:t
~

appliances. Lawn mower.

Next to State Highway ~
Garage on Route 1, 985· 1:
3825.
APPLIANCE service, all
makes washers, ·dryers,'
ranges.
d is h
washers,disposals,

water

~1:
:tt

tanks. Call Ken Young 985· ~-•
3561 before 9a. m . or after 6
p.m .

.,

�\.
ill-The Daily Sentinel, Middlcport-Pumeroy, 0 .. Tuesday , Sept. 2, 19110

Hoofs and Paws
. By Marion C. Crawford
Meigs County ;
Humane Society
II you read this column the past
couple of weeks and have seen the
pictures of animals I've had run in
the paper in addition I think you
have the right idea - we were up to
our ear lobes in dogs, cats , puppies
and kittens.
G!)Od news! Most are now in
responsible homes with new owners
who love them! We only fared badly
in one area aod that was with kit-

tens.
There are just too many being
born every day and as I 've said a
million times " not enough homes to
go around."
Would you believe that we had
something like 24 puppies, almost
that many kittens and a couijle of
adult cats not to mention about eight
adult dogs and thanks to.reaUy nice
- no - "great" people of Meigs
, county, we working members of the
Humane Society were able to let our
ulcers have a rest due their
placement.
One item I would like to dwell on
for a minute however. The Thrift
Shoppe in Middleport is strictly that
- a Thrift Shoppe. There are no
provisions or qualified help to care
for animals. If you have an animal
or come across one that needs our
assistance ple11se call our "animal
guardian angel," Mary Ann - at
99U280. She knows exactly what our
situation is, what you can do, what
we can do, and has at her fingertips
all the phone nUJI!bers and ad·
dresses of the veterinarians in and
near Meigs County,
If you've been careless and let
your animal breed and now you want
to know what to do - call her and
she will advise you. However, do not
assume that we take all animals sometimes we cannot - sometimes
that little Inn of ours gets pretty
filled up and tliere comes a time occasionally when we ask the public to
be patient. Our little "charges" take
a lot of work, time, and money to be
properly cared for and believe me,
folks, you can rest assured that
when your Humane SoCiety gets hold
of an aliXJDlimal it not only probably
lives better than it ever has in its
lifl!, but it gets lots of individual at·
tention and love in addition.
We have aU shed tears more than
once at losing an animal we've
grown to love in the short time we
keep them normally before finding
good homes for them. Our biggest
worry this summer has been the
number of poor sick cats we've come ·
across with upper respiratory
problems and both cats and. dogs
that have had distemper. Although

there are cases of Parvovirus in. the
area, we have not had any of ours
that have come to us with this new
virus going around ... thank good·
ness, Another type situation that has
come to us often - too, often - is
older dogs being dropped aU over the
county. Just when they need
someone most they are abandoned
and since older animals are very difficult to place, we have no choice but
to euthaniie the poor little things.
We are never without ailimals who
need you though, folks, and this
week we have a new Inn full that you
may call and make an appointment'
to see any day noon until 7 p.m. please, only emergencies on
Tuesdays. Donations are required in
order to continue our work with the
homeless animals and any of you
, just wishing to help us out, although
you don't need any more pets,
remember any contributions are tax
deductible - Meigs County Hwnane
Society, Box 682, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Available to get homes are: Calico
cat, a beauty with three brand new
tiny kittens (two white, one cream
colored). We will take the kittens
and place them when they are old
enough if you will give the young
momma a permanent home. We also
have a grey Tiger kitten and an
unusual Calico plus a coal black kit·
ten. Next, we have three really nice
little "Snoopy" • Beagle type puppies, two regular Beagle color and
one a really nice chocolate brown
with white - so cute ... all females.
We have a Spaniel type, small
male probably a little over a year
old, he's auburn colored and a sweet
little housebroken animal. And, we
have a sweet dispositioned Beagle
type female that would make a nice
companion for a senior citizen or a
pal to a very small child. And lastly
we have another ariimal that would
be great with children - a mixed
bree.l, medium size dog who is
brown and white and such a gentle
boy!
A special message to Gallia Countians: If you are looking for a lost pet
or want to give an animal a chance
at life that bas been abandoned please go to the GSI property there
in Gallipolis and look at the many
dogs and puppies they have that are
kept for only three days. If animals
are not claimed • in that state
required time period these animals
are destroyed and some are really
beauties. One word of advice though
- take any animal you get from
there straight to a vet and have it
given a health check. It won't cost
you but a few dollars and the.distem·
per shot should be given at the same
time.

Area deaths
Goldia· R. Denney
Goldia R. Denney, 116, Route I,
Langsville, died Monday at
Veterans Memorial Hospillll.
Mrs. Denney was born Aug. 21,
1894, at Wilkesville, a daughter of
the late Amer and Effie Hogg. She
was a homemaker all of her life. On
Jan. 10, 1914 she married Clesson
Denney who preceded her iii death
on Aug. 22, 1979. . She was also
~ed in death by an infant
daughter, Dorothy.
Surviving are a son-in-law and
'daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce (Donna) Morris, Route I, Langsville;
three grandchildren, Mrs. John
(Judy) Uoyd, Tampa, Fla.; Mrs.
Ron (Betty) Wright, Dublin, Va.,
and Larry Morris, Langsville, and
four great-grandchildren, David and
Chris Uoyd, Tampa, and Daniel and
Debbie Wright, Dublin.
· Mrs. Denney was the last living
graduate of the class of 1912 of the
Wilkesville Academy. She had been
a member of the Wilkesville United
· Methodist Church for over 50 years,
Graveside services will be held at
1 p.m. Thursday at the Salem Center
Cemtery with Mr. Gene Musser of·
ficiatihg. Friends may call at the
Walker Funeral Home in Rutland
anytime after 2 p.m. Wednesday untill2 noon on Thursday. The family
will receive friends on Wednesday
·from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
I

Helen K. Goett
Helen K. Cooper Goett, 87, 999
Caldwell Place, Columbus, a
frequent Meigs County visitor, died
Friday at Mt. Carmel- Hospital in
Columbus.
·
Among the survivors are a
daughter and son·inlaw, Mary {Peg)
and Lee Jackson, Columbus: grand·
daughterskj, Mrs. Richard (JoAnn )
Moore and Mrs. Delmar (V. Kay)
Sprague, and a nwnbet of great and
great-great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were held at 10
a.m.' Tuesday at the Jerry Spears
Funeral Home in Columbus. Burial
was·tn the Glen Rest Cemetery.

George W. Ha~es
George Waahington Hayes, 83, a
resident of Middleport, and a former
GIIWpolls resident, died Saturday in
Holzer Medical Center following an

Emergency runs

Area hospital news
Mullins, Delores Penix, C1&gt;nnie Pot·
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions.- Darlene ts, Garnette Proffitt, William Rice,
Johnson, Mason; Connie Mays, Doi.ald Roush, 'tathel'ine Rowlimd,
Reedsville.
· Barbara Scho0)craft, George
Saturday Discharges- Kenneth Shipley, Anthony Stewart, Lilliam
Matson, ura Largent, Wilbur Win· Stowers, Bev.erly Swain,·Mrs. Cecil
dland, Joan Carnahan, Gerald Ar· Van Meter and son, Sherry Vergilio,
mstrong, Adrienne French, Pamela Ludla Wetzel, Charles Wickline,
Alley, Allen Moore.
Mrs. Malachi Willis and sqn, Bart
Sunday Admissions-Kathy Robin· Wiseman, Vernon Woods.
son, Middleport; Monda Farra,
BIRTHS
Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. George Bush, S!t'l.
Sunday
Discharges--Ronald Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Geary
Richards, Jr. , Lil\ie Adams, Inez Caldwell; son, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie Cruse, daughter,
As.h.
Monday Admissions-Alice Mills, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Norman Mit·
Middleport; Daphne Cremeans, cheU Jr., daughter, Radcliff, Ky.
AUG. 31
Chester; Faye Dunlevy, Middleport.
Monday Discharges-Hubert Seth,
Mrs. Norman·Byler and daughter,
Joan Hiles, Virgene Smith, Hazel ' Clarence Campbell, Nina Cadill,
Curtis.
.
Mrs. Dale Collins and daughter,
·Roberta Halley, Mrs. Robert Linton
and son, Patricia Miller, · PaUl
Mullins Jr., Robert Rose, Harold
Smith, Albert Wowards, Lora
· Stevens, Mrs. Charles Wardell and
daughter, Andrea Williams, Wilson
Wolfe.
BIRTHS

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kingery,
,son, Crown City; Mr. and Mrs.
David Shuler, son, Rutland
.
SEP'l'.1
Roxanne Bush, Dana Canter, ,
Veda · Channell, Mrs. Orland
Cremeans and daughter, Raymond
George, Mrs. John Hopkins and son,
James Moore, Mrs. Joseph Powers
and son, Mrs. Stephen Roberts and
son, Michael Rouse II, Adam
Russell, Margaret Scurlock, Diana
Walton.

Columbus...

' Several emergency runs were
1Contin ued irom page 1)
made over Sunday and Monday by
his
parents
penQ!ng a hearing 41ter
local units, the Meigs County
in
Meigs
County
Juvenile Court.
·Emergency Medical Services.
Sunday
the
sheriff's
de!'Brtment
Headquarters reports.
was
notified
by
Danny
Walker,
Rt. I,
Sunday at 1:30 p.m., the Rutland
Rutland that sometime during the
Unit went to Route 325 for Eldon
night his one yeaNJ!d Doberman
Soesker , taken to Veterans
had been stolen. Speakers has also
Memorial Hospital; 8:50 a.m., the
been taken from his pickup truck.
Rutland Unit to near Meigs Mine ·I
A. F. Gainer, Rt. 1', R.eedsville,
for Barbara Hayes, taken to
reported
that sometime Friday
Veterall.!l Memorial Hospital ; Monevening a 16 foot log chatn, a 12 volt
day, Rutland Unit, 2:20 p.m., for
battery and other items had been
Larry M. Darst, Harrisonville,
taken
frun a jeep parked on his
taken to Holzer Medical Center:
property.
Pomeroy Unit,IO:06 a.m. for Watren
Mrs.. Opal Fitzpatrick, RD,
Reeves, from Veterans M~orial to
Albany,
said that within the last
Holzer Medical Center; 4:30 a.m.,
week
two
soeket sets, a digital watch
Pomeroy Unit for Carl Plantz from
22
Luger
and four wenches had
a
Veterans Memorial to Holzer
·
been
taken
from
a truck parked in
Medic~! Center, and 1:38 a.m. Tuptheir garage.
pers Plains Unit, Leonard M. Gill
Deputies are also investigating
from home on Hocking Lake Road to ·
valdalism
to mailboxes on Hysell
Camden- Clark Hospital, Parker·
RunRoad.
·
sburg.

Gallia Christian School, Gallipolis,
is now starting its fifth school year.
The school is non-denominational
and stresses a Christ· centered
academic education.
The school presently has students
enrolled from .kindergarten through

VOL. 31 NO. 99

Ohio records

--------~~
--=
- ~--~-=
- -----------------------------~~~~~·

.
•

enrollment are taken 11ny Ume
throughout the year and more information can be obtained by calllng
446-3041 or 742-2442. Anyone interested in transportation from
Meigs County may call 743-2372.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SALE

-

(Cont inued f r om page 1)

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were issued to
Ross Edgar Stewart, 71, Middleport,
and Edna Mae Stewart, 57 ,
Pomeroy; Terry Gene McCarty, 28 ,
Gallipolis, and Cindy Lou Dorst, 20,
Shade; Harold Douglas Clark, 48,
Reedsville, and Peggy Sue Alkire,
28;Reedsville.
TO END MARRIAGE
An action for dissolution of
marriage was filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Sandra L.
Korn, Pomeroy, and George J .
Korn, Jr., Pomeroy.

ty.
TOLEDO- Kevin J. Fletcher, 25,
of Toledo, in one-car accident on
U.S. 20 in Fulton County.
AKRON - Jeffery Carber, 21 , of
Akron, a pedestrian struck by car on
a city street in Sununit County.
MARION - David A. Dudley, 19,
of Marion, in two-car accident on a
rural road in Marion County.
FRIDAYNIGIIT
WOOSTER - Larry R. Heiple, 41,
of Orrville, a pedestrian struck by a
car on U.S. 30 in Wayne County.
. MEETS WEDNESDAY
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM will
hold a regular meeting at 7:30p.m.
Wednesday. All Master Masons are
invited.

Save 20% on any suite in stock. Kroehler quality in a large selection of 2 and 3 piece suites.
Many different styles and fabrics .

.

Free Delivery .:.... Credit Terms Available

OFF TO SCHOOL '"" All Meigs County schools are
in session' today with Meigs and Southern joining
Eastern Local which began classes last week. A
familiar scene across the county this morning was
children hoarding school buses - sol)'le delighted to he
on their way, others not so happy. And then there were

the "first timers" - like J. Christopher Cremeans, a
Middleport kindergarten student, five-year old son of
Middleport Chief of Police and Mrs. J. J . Cremeans.
The nice thing lor J. Christopher is that his mother is
the bus driver.

Contract
ratified

20% OFF
ELBERFELDS I·N POMEROY
Teachers ignore court order ·
As teachers walked off their jobs in six other states, striking
teachers in Rochester, N.Y., pledged to ignore an injunction
prohibiting their walkout and remain on picket lines as schools
reopened for 34,600 students today.
In Philadelphia, contract talks resumed between striking teachers
and the school hoard in an effort to settle a contract in time for the
start of school Friday for 220,000 students.
Teachers also were striking in Michigan, Illinois, Ohio, Arizona and
Washington.
Rochester, N.Y., school offi cials said they would staff classrooms
today with substitute teachers and supervisors as children ended their
summer holidays and returned to studies.

cher officiating.
Burial will he in Providence
Cemetery, Gallia County. .
Friends may call at Miller's Home
for Funerals in Gallipolis from 2-4
and 7·9 p.m. Tuesday.
The body will lie in state at the
church one hour prior to services.

Four killed as fighting continues
BEIRUT, Lebanon - Palestinian guerrlllas and Shiite Moslem
militiamen battled for a third straight day today in the southern
Lebanese town of Ghaziyeh. Police reported four persons killed and 19
wounded.
· A police spokesman said the fighting was touched off Monday by a
traffic quarrel between a Palestinian patrol and a militiamen manning a Shiite checkpoint in Ghaziyeh, 30 miles south of Beirut.
The combatants have ignored ceasefire orders from their respective
commands in Beirut, the spokesman said.
,
Today's casualties brought the death toll to six.

Personal. It's an important word worth repea tin g. The Farm ers Bank is yo ur personal
bank. Consid ering today's trend toward treat·
ing peo ple as numbers you might have tho ugh t
perso nal banking wa s a t hing in the past.
But not at the Farmers Bank. From the
small est personal acco unt to the ·largest business
accoun t, we ma ke yo u feel welcome. We kno w
that each person 's financi al needs differ and
require special consideration. That's why the
Farmers Bank is your personal banker.

'

Police brace for possible violence
KAMPALA, Uganda - Police braced for possible violence in and
around this East African capital amid reports of a likely delay in
balloting scheduled for Sept. 30 - the nation's first elections since
1962.
Police set up roadblocks around the capital and searched travelers
and their vehicles for weapons, authorities said.
Uganda's Democratic Party, a major faction in the election contest,
said Tuesday it had learned from reliable sources that the ballotinf
would be delayed for one month. No reason was given for the reportet
delay.
·

SUNDER ELLA DIET" CLASSES

Wrongful death action filed

Monday Evening-7:30, p.m.-Mason, W.Va.
St. Joseph's Catholic Church ·
Tuesday Moming-10:30 a.m.-Mason, W.Va.
St. Joseph's .Catholic Church Tuesday Evening-7:30 p.m:-

Farmers

Middleport, Ohio - Heath United Methodist Church

Bank

Thursday Evening-7:3o p.m.-Chester, Ohio - Fire Station
',

JO ANN NEWSOME, LECTURER, at 992-3382 invites
all "Overweight Men and women" to join the classes
and eli joy losing weighl and eating ·balanced meals at
reasonable priced.

Pomeroy, Oh.

MrnltllrFDIC

The Community Owned Bank·

SPECIAL. . . . . . . . . . . . .. .
I,

FIFTEEN C~NT~

POMEROY-MIDDLEPO RT, OHIO WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3. 1980

the !!!nth grade. Applications for

liVING ·ROOM SUITES

en tine

'

Christian school begins fifth year

,--- ----------------------1

'
.____________ COUPON

.

a1 y

BIRTHS

Mrs. and Mrs. Mitchell Allen, son,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Bentley McCarty, daughter, Jackson; Mrs. and
Mrs. William Spangler, daughter,
Ripley, W. Va.

extended illness.
He was born Dec. 24, 1896, in Clay
County, w. Va., son of the late Jessie
and Menerva Johnson Hayes. He
was a coal miner for more than 39
years.
In 1952, he married Loretta Ar·
thur, of Gauley Bridge, W. Va. She
Mary Jane Stanley
survives, along with two daughters
Mary Jane Stanley, 55, Route I,
and one son: Ralph Hayes, TenShade, died Saturday night at the
nessee; Mrs. Ruby Kinder,
Blooming Grove, W. Va.; Mrs. Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Stanley was a daughter of the
Marie Dulcia, Jonesboro, Ga.; steplate
George Crawford and Bertha
children: Mrs. Kay Stanley Kincaid,
'Rawey,
1
w. va.; Mrs . 0ary1 Canter Van Hom She was also
Stanley, Stonestreet, Spencer, W. pr,ecedt;ed in death by a sister,
va.; J ames Stan!ey, Oak Hill, w. Marie Groves, and a brother,
William Van Horn.
Va.; several grandchildren survive.
Surviving are her husband, Henry
The Hayes family moved to
Stanley;
a daughter, Connie Ann, at
Gallipolis in 1952 and operated a
home;
a
brother, Glenn Van Horn,
truck stop restaurant in Eureka.
Springfield,
Ohio; two sisters,
They moved to Middleport three
Dorothy
Newcomb,
Chicago, and
years ago.
Grace Van Horn, Chicago, and a
He was a member of the United
stepmother, Clarice Berman, .
Mine Workers of America and was a
Chicago.
member and deacon of the Ash
Funeral services will be held at 1
Str t F
Will B tist Ch h 10
·
ee
ree
ap
urc
p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing
Middleport.
Funeral
Home with the Rev. Robert
Funeral services will be held 2
.
McGee
officiating.
Burial will be in
p.m. Wednesday at the Ash Street
Burlingham
Cemetery,
Friends may
Free Will Baptist Church, with Rev.
call
at
the
funeral
home
at anytime.
Raymond Fife and Rev. Ralph But·

l ..- -

-e

•

EUZABETHTOWN, Ky.- A $1 million wrongful death lawsuit has
been filed in Larue Circuit Court against the late Clyde Daniel
Graham.
·
Hodgenville attorney Larry Raikes said Tuesday he is bringing the
suit against the deceased Graham on behalf of Brenda Harris, the
widow of Kentucky State Trooper Eddie Harris, and the trooper's
three children.
Harris was shot to death Niw. 7 in Larue County after halting a car
on US 31 Wnear Hodgenville. Graham was shot to death by a Kentucky
state trooper before being brought to trial as the prime suspect in the
slaying.

Weather forecast
PaJ;tly cloudy tonight. L!&gt;ws in the mid to upper 60s. Variable
cloudiness, warm and humid Thursday with a chance of showers and
thunderstonns. Highs around 90. Chance of rain 20 Iiercent tonight and
40 percent Thursday. Winds southeasterly to southerly 10 mph or less
tonight.
• I
'
'
· ·· ~DiletfOblo Forecast- Friday through SUnday :A chance of
'showers ·or thunderstorms early Friday. Fair Saturday and Sunday.
Hig~ in the ~ow to mid-80s. L!&gt;ws in the low to mid~ Friday morning
and 10 the nud to upper 50s Saturday and Sunday mornings.

Meigs Local District schools
opened on schedule today following
a last. minute settlement with the
non-eertified employes (OAPSE)
Tuesday night.
·
Linda Morris representing the
classified employes said the vote
was 57·9 in favor of accepting the
agreement between the Board of
Education and the Meigs Chapter of
the Ohio Association Of Public
School Employes.
According to terms of the contract
for this year only, noiK:ertified em·
ployees will receive a 10 percent
salary increase effective Sept. 1.
The 12-month employes will receive
time and a half pay for their work at
the buildings on calamity days.
Negotiations have been underway
for sometilne in all three Meigs
County school districts, but were set·
tied only within the past two weeks.
Southern Local School District's
non-eertified employes received an
increase of seven percent, while
·those in the Eastern Local School
District received a nine percent pay
hike.

In Pomeroy Village

•

Police o zcer
gets reinstated
BYKATIECROW
Pomeroy Council Tuesday night
aired a problem in the police department
at great length with
Attorney Charles Knight which
resulted in the reinstatement of
suspended police officer Rar.dy Carpenter.
Knight explained that Carpenter,
a full time officer, had been suspende!l for three days and upon his
return to work he had been cut from
full time officer to zero hours. "
Knight said Carpenter was not
notified of the change in writing nor
any explanation had been given.
Knight observed that when Car·
penter filed for unemployment
benefits he was turned down
because he is an extra duty officer,
but at the same time is not working.
Carpenter, who was also present,
informed council he was notified by
phone not to report to duty.
Knight asked if Carpenter was still
employed as a full time officer?.
Mayor: Clarence Andrews said he
and Chief Charles McKinney had
received several complaints con·
cerning Carpenter's work thus the
officer was placed on three day
suspension.
Knight again emphasized Car·
penter never received a written
notice of his suspension.
·
The attorney said he felt it was an
improper dismissal and he plans to
rue a grieveance With the Bureau Of .
Employment Services and civil ser·
vice.
Most members felt proper
procedure was not used following
the three day suspension.
According to Rod Karr, COUD·
cllman, the procedure outlined by
village solicitor Fred Crow was not
followed. 'l'he procedure is that the
work schedule of officers is to be
made up by the chief. T'1e mayor and
the chief have the •" ~ht to suspend
an officer for a three day period.
Following the suspension the
problem is brought before coWICil.
Council also felt that full time employes should be given con·
sideration. Carpenter has been a
long time employe.
Chief McKinney was to make up
the schedule. However from in·
fonnation . given Tuesday night,
Mayor Andrews, has been making
up the schedule.
Larry Wehrung, councilman,
opinioned that evidently the department is having problems with man·
power scheduling and that things
are in shambles and getting worse
and worse. He suggested some sort
of system be set up. Wehrung felt
that ·the safety conunittee should
work out a solution to problems
within the department
Harold Brown, councilman, said it
should not be a devise of the
schedule.to eliminate employes, to
which Wehrung added, "We have a
problem in scheduling."

Bill Young, councilman, also ·
noted the Mayor and chief are not
following guidlines.
A motion was made to reinstate
Carpenter to a full time officer. The
motion failed as Betty BaroDick and
Wehrung abstained.
Wehrung said we must take a
stand as things are not any better
than they were several months ago,
Wehrung insisted that a meeting be
set up with the safety corrunlttee to
iron out the problems.
'
Before leaving Knight said he was
going to have Carpenter report for
work and if not given work would
consider him (CarJienter) fired.
Following a verY lengthy
discussion, council on a motion
made by Young and seconded by
Brown, agreed to reinstate · Car·
penter 'to a full time employe.
In other pollee matters, Chief
McKinney reported that he was not
paid $56 for two days he was off sick.
and another day when his wife was
offsick.
Since Chief McKinney is stU! on
probation council is unable to pay
for the time off since he has no sick
leave or vacation time available.
Council feh some provisions
should be made for salaried em·

ployes. It was agreed to study the
situation and make necessary
changes.
Also meeting with council was
Mrs. Isla Darnell concerning a
parking ticket which she claimed ·
she did not deserve since the meters
are not accurate and she was unable
to get to her car due to water standing on the parking area. She of.:
fered a payment of 25 cents for her
parking which council accepted.
Council added it wasr working on
a program that will offer designated
parking for downtowm employes.
Paul Gerard, president of the
Meigs County Jaycees, met with
council regarding village im-'
provements.
Gerard said he has a great interest
·in Pomeroy stating, "For anything
worthwhile aU persons must work
together."
"Pomeroy is a very special town
which we take for granted, we have
very special buildings, and there is a:
lot of thingS about Pomeroy which
are very special. We can't sell it to
others unless we sell ourselves"
Gerard commented.
'
He suggested that a memoriam be
placed in the vtllage in remeriliC ontinued on page 12)

One-half mill levy
sought for libraries
Meigs County Corrunlssioners
Tuesday agreed to place a one-half
mill levy Qn the November ballot for
the upgrading the Pomeroy and Middlejlort Libraries.
.
Meeting with the commissioners
concerning the levy were Pat Holter,
Wanda Eblin ,and Ted Reed, Meigs
County District Library Board of
Trustees and Ellen Bell, librarian.
Mrs. Holter outlined the intended
use of the additional funds, should
the levy pass.
She stated that the libraries would
be upgraded for use by the elderly
and handicapped and additional funds would be required to cover the
cost of upkeep on the buildings.
Tax dollors would also be used for
the salaries of a professional
librarian and assistants and would
provide for a five percent salary increase for other employes.
Reed said if the levy passes the
bookmobile will continue, if not, then
it could no longer operate.
Reed emphasized that the board
had no intention of moving the
libraries out of\ Pomeroy and Middleport.
Also meeting with the com·
missioners were James Hartzler
and Paul McNamee of John David
Jones and Associates, consultants
for the Tuppers Plains EPA
wastewater project.

They requested approval of
resolutions giving them authority to
make application to the EPA for a
grant for a facility plan to meet
federal and state
in order
to get the building ban lifted in the
Tuppers Plains area.
A motion was passed to adopt a
resolution of intent to meet the U. S.
EPA's minority business utilization
goal for the Tuppers Plains step I
facilities plan and to adopt a
resolution stating the intent of Meigs
County to Implement the Tupjlers
Plains facilities plan.
Phil Roberts, county engineer,
discussed needed repair to a bridge
on county road 45.
The engineer recommendeil that
bridge work be done by outside forces at an estimated cost of $20,000.
Commissioners approved the repair
work, subject to confirmation of the
cost.
The commission also agreed to advertise for bids on a ballot tabulating
system capable of processing 200 or
mo,re ballots per minute for use by
the board of elections, with bids to be
opened at 2 p.m. on Sept. 19.
A~nding were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells and Chester
WeUs, commissioners, Mary Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha Chambers.

guidlinea

•

Roush retires after 29 years service
' Brunton, State Director,
Wallace
Farmers Home Administration, an·
nounces the retirement of Milton E.
Roush of Syracuse.
Roush began his career with
FmHA April 15, 1951, as Assistant
County Supervisor at Batavia. He
served in that capacity in several of· ·
flees untU April 1954 when he was
promoted to county supervisor of the
Woodsfield office.
In August 1955, he was named as
one of five Area Supervisors. As '
Area Supervisor he did all real ,
estate appraisals and generally
supervised the FmHA loan program
in severla office~ in Southeastern
Ohio.
Due to budget cuts the nwnber of
area supervisors was gradually
reduced friXTI five to three. This
caused considerable travel in supervising the work in 33 counties in
Eastern Ohio from Ironton to
PLENTY OF SUNSH1NE
Plenty of sunshine and lower
humidity are in store for the
Buckeye state today. People in northern portions of Ohio should lind ihe
decrease in humidity most
noticeable.
This break will be rather short
lived, however. The temperature
and hwnidity will rise again on
Thursday as a warm front llll)ves
,across the state.

Cleveland. Therefore, when the
number of area supervisors was
reduced to two, he took a reduction
in grade to become .the County
Supervisor in the Athens Office.
During his tenure, many farm and
rural housing loans were made to
associations - Hollister, Bishopville, Le-Ax Water Distribution
·Corp., Margaret Creek, Sunday
Creek Water District, Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District and
Leading Creek Water District.
' These systems are continuously ex·
panding and they now provide good,
adequate and potable water to 6,150
customers, both to Individuals and
businesses. These systems cover
hundreds of rural miles and have
contributed a great deal to the
quality of family living with
business growth.
In April 1971 after serving as county supervisor for five years in the
Athens Office, Roush accepted ttMt
position of district governor in
Southeastern Ohio. His primary
duty was to provide guidance to
eight county offices serving 21 counties of Southeastern Ohio, par·
ticulariy assistance was given on
· processing of group type loans ..
Roush is a graduate of Wahama
High School, Mason, W. Va., Mountain State Business College, Parker·
sburg; W. Va., and Ohio University,
Athens, with . a degr ee in
Agriculture.

•

ROUSH RETIRES - Milton Roush, Syracuse, district director ,of
Farmers Home Administration, retired following 29 years of service.

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