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                  <text>16-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 10, 1980

Mondale seeks labor's help

Polish leader
makes appeal
WARSAW , Poland (AP) Stanislaw Kania, Poland's new Communist Party chief, appealed for
unity in the trade union movement,
but journalists' and dockworkers'
unions were reported planning to
join others bolting the official Trade
Union Council to seek independence.
The trade union issue must be
treated "with cabn and consistency," Kania said in a speech
Tuesday to party faithful in the
southern coal mining city of
Katowice, one of the centers of the
recent labor crisis.
"We stand on the ground of unity
in the trade union movement," he
said. " Unity is our great
achievement and we shall take care
of U."

Polish Television, which broadcast a swnmary of Kania's remarks,
gave no indication whether the new
leader mentioned independent trade
unions, a major concession won by
workers who struck numerous enterprises across · the nation in a
three-week rebellion.
But his talk of unity appeared to
indicate that the party hopes to
foster cooperation between the independent unions and the official
unions headed by the partycontrolled Trade Union Council.
Kania, who was named lasi
weekend to replace ailing party
leader Edward Gierek, visited

Katowice on the second day of a tour
of the fla sh points of the labor
troubles. On Monday, he visited the
Baltic port cities of Gdansk and
Gdyma, where strikers first mixed
politics with labor by demanding independent unions, the right to strike
and other reforms in addition to
higher wages.
Meanwhile, Warsaw newspapers
reported the boards of the journalists' and dockworkers' unions
planned to submit motions of
secession from the Trade Union
Council to their organizations at
congresses later this year.
The papers also said teachers at
Warsaw University were organizing
an independent trade union with the
help of colleagues from the
JagieUonian University in Krakow,
who fanned an independent union
last weekend.
Strike committees in various
cities have also begun to organize
new unions. In Gdansk, the local
· government has given strike leader
Lech Walesa 's organization a
building to use as a headquarters
and allowed it to open a bank account for contributions.
Reports by the official news media
and dissident sources indicated
more strikes had broken out at scattered points over local working conditions including wages.

Reagan revives
•
hostage zssue
.CLEVELAND (AP) - Ronald
Reagan, looking for votes in Ohio
where poUs reportedly show him
leading President Carter, is trying
to rekindle the 1()-monliHlld Iranian
hostage crisis as a campaign issue.
The Republican presidential
nominee charged Tuesday that none
of Carter's efforts to free the
hostages amounted to anything
more than "kind of grandstanding."
In a day-long visit to Cleveland,
Reagan planned to meet with black
leaders today, make a speech att;acking Carter's energy policies and
help raise money for GOP candidates with a fundraiser in his hotel
suite.
Reagan chided Carter on Tuesday
for refusing to take part in a threeman debate including independent
John Anderson. Carter insisted on
debating Reagan alone before including Anderson.
"He's got to take the fuU responsibility if there are no debates,"
Reagan said in Chicago before flying
here. "I have said that I am not
going to freeze someone out and
debate without that third candidate
-Anderson- in the race."
At one point, Reagan appeared to
rule out any head-to-head debate
with Carter even after a three-way
debate. Later, however, he indicated
that a two-way debate was still a
m~iter of discussion.
Reagan repeated his familiar
criticism that the administration
should haw evacuated the embassy
before the hostages were taken.
"All the moves that have been
made since to get them out were
kind of grandstanding," he charged.
Reagan leveled his charge as

Emergency squad runs
Several runs were made by local
emergency units on Tuesday, according to the Meigs Emergency
Medical Services Headquarters.
At 9:27a.m., the RuUand Unittook
Christina Siehl to Holzer Medical
Center; at 2.49 p.m., Clarence Might
was taken to the office of Dr. James
Conde for treatment and returned to
his home.
James Barber of Reedsville was
taken from his home to Veterans
Memorial Hospital with a leg fracture and was later taken to Holzer
Medical Center by the Racine Unit
at8:54. TheRacineUnitat6:54also
transferred Ralph Butcher from
Veterans Memorial to the Holzer
Medical Center. At 5:55p.m., Loretta Beegle was taken from her home
·on Spring Ave. to Veterans
Memorial.
TENT MEETING CONTINUES
A tent J:Qeeting being held at the
corner of Route 7 and Union Ave.,
will continue at 7 e.~ch evening this
week. Speaker is Daniel Roush and
there are special vocal numbers at
each service.
ACHIEVES t. AVERAGE
Toni Hudson, daughter of Mrs.
Blondena Hudson, Racine, rece ived
a four point average in her studies at
the Patricia Stevens College and
Finishing School in MilwaUkee, Wis.
Miss Hudson has completed her first
quarter at the college.

Iranian Prime Minister Mohammed
Ali Rajai said his country would be
willing to discuss the hostage issue if
the United States would demonstrate it had repented for past
misdeeds.
Reagan said the United States
should have told Iran from the
beginning that, " We want our people
back and we want them back today
or the results are going to be very
unpleasant."
Reagan's state~tists think there is
a good chance he can capture Ohio's
25 electoral votes on Nov. 4 by
stressing economic issues in a state
suffering from a 10.2 per cent unemployment rate.

Papers filed
Secretary of State Anthony J.
Celebrezze, Jr. reports articles of incorporation have been filed with his
office in Columbus by the following
local companies:
R. E. Tracy Fire and Safety
Equipment, Inc. Incorporator(s)
Edward M. Blake, Jr. Agent, Edward M. Blake, Jr., 55 S. Second
Ave., Middleport.
Fanner Brown and Sons, Inc. Jncorporator(s) Virgil V. Brown,
Route 3, Athens Rd. , Pomeroy, and
Ball Brothers Fann, Inc., Jncorporator(s) JoAnn Ball, Thomas
Ball, Sally Ball, B. Ball et al. Agent,
Susan L. Gwinn, Athens.

l

-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Vice
president Walter F. Mondale sought
to shore up traditional labor support
for the Democratic ticket today
during his second campaign stop in
Ohio in less than two weeks.
Mondale was scheduled to leave
the airport hotel where he spent the
night and take a 40 minute walk
through the Western Electric Co.
plant here, looking' for votes among
electrical workers.
He was to wrap up his 11-hour visit
to the state , which also included an

Bill could help inancial- crisis

open meeting with Franklin County vote during a campaign stop he~e
last month, speaking before the Ohio
Democrats, at midday.
Mondale found himself and Conference of Tearnters and
Presiden t Carter trailing the . meeting privately with labor leaders
Hepublican ticket of Ronald Reagan from other unions.
President Carter has not been in
and George Bush by 5 to 10 percent
as he continued the battle for Ohio's Columbus since before the state's
June 3 primary, which he won. Ofcritical 25 electoral votes.
ficials at Democratic State
It was the vice president's second
Headquarters expect him to return
visit to the state this month. He
Sept.
27 for an appearance at the
opened the Ohio phase of the general
Ohio
Democratic
Convention.
election campaign in Cleveland on
Public opinion polls from both the
Labor Day.
Democrat and Republican camps
Reagan began courting the labor
show the Carter-Mondale team is
trailing the GOP contenders.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer said a
Reagan poll in Ohio by Robert
Teeter of Markel Opinion Research
sence of Judge John C. Bacon.
Corp. of Detroit gave Reagan a tl-toKenneth Collins, Pomeroy, also 31 percent lead over Carter.
appeared in Common Pleas Court
The Carter poll had Reagan
Tuesday on a bill of information.
leacling by 5 percent, the newspaper
Colfins was charged in connection said. The precise figures in the poU
with the sale of marijuana to an un- conducted by Patrick Caddell were
dercover officer on Sept. 6, in Megis
not published. ·
.
County. Collins entered a voluntary
Independent candidate John Anplea of guilty.
derson was running third in both
Judge Buck ordered the matter on
polls.
sentencing continued upon the comWhile Mondale was campaigning
pletion of the ·presentence inin Columbus, Reagan was stumping
vestigation by the county probation
for votes in Cleveland. His itinerary
officer. CoUins was released on a
included delivery of a major speech
$1,000 personai recognizance bond.
on energy policy.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - State fiscal experts say Ohio c~n make it
though its current financial pinch under a bill now on its way to Gov. James
A. Rhodes.
.
They referred Wednesday to a belt-tightening biU which had just cleared
the Senate 28-4 and the House 88-8.
That measure, along with belt'tightening moves imposed earlier by the
governor, reportedly will overcome an expected deficit of $266 million envisioned by the Jllly 1,1981, end of the fiscal biennium.
William D. Kelp, Rhodes' budget and management director, and Richard
G. Sheridan, who heads the legislative budget office, said the biU could mean
:that the state will wind up with a srnaU l)alance of $2 miUion to $2.5 million 10
months from now.
Kelp said that is based on "a number of assumptions, but it's going to be
darned close."
RePublicans in both houses took sharp exception to figures cited by their

Judge Buck delays sentences
Walter Mondale

Mayor's Court
Seven defendants were fined and
seven others forfeited bonds in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were- Judy Stewart, Middleport, $225 and costs and three
days in jail, driving while intoxicated ; James Pettit, Middleport, $25 and costs, expired
driver's license; Randy Randolph,
Route 2, Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
driving while under suspension, and
$25 and costs, spinning tires; Joyce
D. Porter, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
defective muffler; David Tyree,
Middleport, $100 and costs,
operating a motor vehicle without
proper regard for safety, and $200
and costs, fleeing an officer; Roy
Boggs, Middleport, $50 and costs,
public indecency, and Jeffrey
Dilcher, Albany, $25 and costs,
failure to maintain control of a
vehicle.
Forfeiting lionds were Charles M.
Cleland, Racine, $350, 'posted on a
charge of driving while intoxicated;
Dwayne C. Williamson, New Haven,
$25, spinning tires; Herbert M. Farms, NelsonviUe, and Robert K.
Chapman, Pomeroy, $50 each, disorderly manner; Michaer P. Salser,
Racine, and Jackie T. Cummings,
Racine, $2\i each, illegal exhaust,
and Earl E. Phelps, Middleport, $25,
spinning tires.
Two defendants were fined and 13
others fQrfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Fined $50 and costs on an open
flask charge was Jiunes Jones of
Middleport, and William Reeves,
Pomeroy, was fined $100 and costs
on a possession of a controlled substance charge.
Forfeiting bonds were Thomas
Hawley, Pomeroy, $25; Franklin
King,- Pomeroy, $23; Ruth Arnold,
Syracuse, $21; Laura Hupp, Racine,
$21; Richard Mahon, North Olmstead, $26; James Hobstetter,
Rutland, $23; Barbara Stahl ,
Pomeroy, $24; Barbara Gilland,
New Haven, $24; Kevin Jewell,
Rutland, $25; Raymond Cundiff,
Mason, $23; Clifford Smith,
Syracuse, $26, all posted on speeding
charges; Randy Randolph,
Pomeroy, $50, driving while under
suspension; Sharon Darst,
Pomeroy, $30, wrong way on a one
way street.

Richard Lester, 18, Washington,
Kansas, Tuesday in Meigs County
Common Ple.as pleaded guilty to a
theft charged involving $2,700 last
July. Lester returned voluntarily
from Kansas to plead guilty to the
theft charge.
Upon receiving _the plea, Judge
Robert Buck ordered sentencing
continued upon the completion of a
presentence investigation and
report by the county probation officer.
·Lester was released on a $1,000
personal recognizance bond. I Carson Crow represented the State of
Ohio. Judge Buck presided in the ab-

CONDUCI'S ~VIV AL
The Rev. and Mrs. Ray Lassell,
Brownsburg, Ind., are conducting
revival services at 7:30 each evening
through Sept. 14 at the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene.
The Rev. Mr. LasseU has a weekly
radio program "Ray of Hope" over
a dozen stations and publishes a bimont.ltly newspaper by the same
time. He is author of the book
"Seven Wonders of Hell and Other
Sermons". He also is a recording ar-

NO. 105

Bomb placed aboard in Seattle

needs ba tt eri es .

• Motorized -fi xed

Time-Zero
Supercolor

SACRAMENTO, Calif. - The package that exploded in the cargo
hold of a United Airlines jetliner on the ground apparently was placed
aboard the plane in Seattle, the FBI said Wednesday.
" We're working on a description of a man," said FBI agent Ray
Mathia in Seattle.
The airline has tightened its screening system for baggage and
packages since Tuesday's explosion, said United spokeswoman Eileen ·
Golab in Chicago, where the airline is headquartered.
·rwo baggage handlers suffered burns and cuts when the package
exploded as they were about to place it on a conveyor belt inside the
plane's cargo hold. Both were released from a hospital after treatment
Tuesday.

• Polaroid's new low pri ced I ittle instan t ca mera automat ica ll y h an ds
you th e picture.
• Leas t e)( pensive way to get new

Mrs. Lassell accompanies her
husband and assists in the music for
the revival meetings. The public is
invited.

foc us -

never

NEW TIME -ZERO
SUPER COLOR

SX-7 SX-70 FILM

Emergency agencies band together

world 's f ast es t developi ng co lor film
- with in 10 seconds tram ejec tion
image form s. Looks f ini shed in 30
seconds - dee per , richer, more
vivid colors .

CINCINNATI- Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana have banded together
to allow emergency forces to respond to disasters outside county.or
state lines, says Red Cross Disaster Service Director Gary Miller.
The newly ronned Tri-state Emergency Association is the first interstate group in the nation to combine regional emergency services,
Miller said.
Representatives·from Red Cross, disaster services, police, fire and
rescue departments from .Boone, Kenton and Campbell counties in
Kentucky, Hamilton and Clermont counties in Ohio, and Dearborne
County in Indiana are to take part.
Miller said a new law permitting Ohio emergency forces to transport victims to the closest hospital and respond to accidents outside
county or state jurisdictions goes into effect Oct. 6.

CAMERAS-1ST FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Complete walkout a possibility
SAN FRANCISCO - With II wineries already struck, California
winery workers are threatening to complete a walkout against 23 of
the nation's top producers by Friday, and some winemakers"are hiring
replacement help as the harvest crush nears.
Meanwhile, California grape growers say they are worried that the
wa-lkout could hurt them, too.
The companies so far untouched by selective walkouts against the
23-member Winery Employers As-sociation will be struck today or
Friday said Dan Sotelo, business agent for the Winery, Distillery and
Allied Workers Union.
California wines account for about80 percent of the nation 's produc- ·
Uon, and the association's members produce half of the U.S. total.

SoMETHING NEW
HAs BEEN ADDED To

CHECKING Ar _
CENTRAL TRUST.

Area deaths

Weather forecast
MosUy clear tonight. Lows in the low to mid-50s. MosUy sunny
Friday. Highs in the upper 70s to low 80s. Chance of rain near zero percent tonight and 10 percent Friday. Winds light and variable tonight.

CHOICE.

vinton MAsonic F and AM Lodge,
and the Huntington Grange.
Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday
Memorial Services for Miss Bernice Bowen, 70, of Rockford, Iowa, from the McCoy-Moore Funeral
one time teacher in the Middleport Home with Rev. R.D. Brown.
Burial will be inVinton Memorial
Schools, were held Aug. 24 at the
Part.
United Methodist Church in Rock, A Masonic service will be held this
ford.
Miss Bowen died Aug. 21 in a evening at8: 15 p.m.
Friends may call from 2-4 and 7-9 ·
Mason City, Iowa hospital after sufp.m.
today.
fering a massive stroke. She served
as religious education teacher in the
Middleport Schools during the late Hugh Franklin Hill
1940s and 50s and attended Heath
Hugh Franklin Hill, 62, New TrenUnited Methodist Church.
ton, Ohio, formerly of Gallipolis,
In later years she travelled exdied Monday at the Veterans
tensi~ely around the country visiting
Hospital in Cincinnati.
church sponsored schools and other
He was born Aug. 4, 1918 in
missionary projects of the Methodist
Gallipolis to the late George W. and
Church. She was a frequent visitor
Alberta Diggin Hill. He attended
at the home of Mrs. Nan Moore and
Gallia Academy High School where
Miss Mildred Hawley, Middleport.
he played softball.
Her nearest surviving relatives inHe was a veteran of the U. S. Arclude a sister and brother-in-law,
my
serving in World War II in the
Esther and Lester Kock of Rockford,
European
Theatre. Upon returning
and several cousins.
to this area, he married Betty Clark
of Gallipolis. She survives along
Ray George
with two sons, Daniel and Thomas,
Ray George, 82, Vinton, died at the
both of Cincinnati. Four grandresidence of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence children and two brothers and a
Might, with whom he made his sister, Chester Hill, Pensacola, Fla ,
1
home, in Salem Twsp. 7 a.m.
Howard of Ashland, 0., and . Mrs.
tuesday.
Mabel Lane, Middleport, also surHe was born Feb. 8, 1898, in vive. He was a member of the VFW
Morgan Twsp. to the late Jacob V. and American Legion in Indiana. He
and Mina Aekins George. He attended the First Church of God in
married Rose Brown in 1932, who Gallipolis.
died in June 1979.
Funeral services wiU be held at 2
He is survived by several neices p.rn. Friday from Miller's Home For
and nephews. Four brothers and two Funerals with Rev. Alfred Holley ofsisters preceded him in death. He is ficiating. Burial will follow in Mound
hte last of his family.
Hill Cemetery. Calling hours will be
He was a retired farmer.
held at the funeral home from 2-4
He was a 60 year member of the and 7-9 p.m. Thursday.

FIFTEEN CENTS

Soviet
help
sought

INSTANT CAMERA

Ti me -Ze ro f il m .

THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 11. 1980

------------------------~----

·THE BUTTON

-

enttne
POM EROY-M IOOlEPORT, OHIO

NEW FROM POLAROID

tist.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Charles McFarland,
Middleport; Alicia Tucker ,
Gallipolis; Mary Verenberger,
Pomeroy;
Louise Bartels,
Pomeroy; Goldie Holman, Racine ;
David Durst, Shade; Ruth Ann
Mulford, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Ethel
Moore ,
Charlotte Clark.
Court

VOL. 31

Sheridan.
" If there were a need for reducing spending further .. . perhaps the governor ought to take another 5 or 6 percent cut across-the-board," he said. .
Rhodes already has imposed a 3 percent cut, and ordered a 5 percent hike
in liquor prices to accomodate nearly $150 milljon of the shortfaU ..
Under the Ohio Constitution, the governor is not only authonzed to cut
spending to keep the state budget balanced, but is required to do so, Meshel
had said earlier.
The biU achieves more than $100 million in savings with a series of fund
transfers and by claiming certain funds which went unspent by various
agencies in the last biennium.
House Finance Chairman Myrl H. Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, conceded
that the deficit could turn out to the larger than now expected.
But he and others pointed out that at least Cor now , the cuts are not severe
enough that state employees will have to be laid off. " We're trying to ride out
the stol'lll, and only time will tell," he said.

•

e

ELBERFELDS ·.

1\Hil~Oll&lt; .O" DI•"'t~•

own party's administration and charged that the stopgap measure simply
conceals, for pre-November election purposes, a problem of much greater
magnitude.
Rep. Waldo Bennett Rose, R-Lima, ranking GOP member of the finance
corrunittee, said the deficit will be closer to $366 million and probably will
grow to more than $400 million as unemployed workers are added to welfare
rolls.
He said "thia doesn't deal totally with the shortfall," adding that the
Legislature will probably wiU have to come back in January and make much
deeper budget cuts.
Sen. Richard H. Finan, R-cincinnati, told his Senate colleagues the
measure misleads the public.
"I suapect there is not one of us on the floor who doesn't know the shortfall
is closer to $400 million than $266 million," he said.
Senate Finance Chainnan Harry Meshel, J).Youngstown, the Senate sponsor, said estimates were based on official projections from Keip and

By Tbe Ass...,lated Pre!ll!
Saturday lbrougb Monday:
A cbaoce of sbowers or thunderstorms Saturday aDd Sunday. Fair
Mollllay. HJgbs averaging In the upper 70s to low 80s Saturday awl In
the 70s Sunday and Monday. Lows In the upper 50s to low 80s._

Bernice Bowen

T here was 3 time when one checking plan could fit just
about everyone's banking needs. But tod ay that's simply no
longer true . That's why. begin ning September 1 at Ce ntral
Trust. we'll offer you a cho ice in checking plans.

WARSAW, Poland (AP) Poland's har~-pressed communist
regime turned to the Soviet Union
for financial help to improve the lot
of its restive workers as scattered
strikes continued despite government pleas for an end to the labor
unrest.
Polish Deputy Premier Mieczyslaw Jagielski and a delegation of
Polish officials went to Moscow and
met with Nikolai Baibakov, the
Kremlin's chief economic planner,
and other Soviet officials to diScuss
"a number of important questions
related to Soviet-Polish economic
relaUons," the Soviet news agency
Tass reported.
It said the meeting took place "in
a warm and friendly atmosphere"
but gave no other details.
Following the recent strike wave
that forced the Polish govel'llO'Ifnt to
promise the workers wage increases
and the right to fonn independent
trade unions, the- Kremlin agreed
to give Poland additionallong-tenn
credits to help with the interest on
the $20 billlon owed Western banks
and to pay for imports of oil, natural
gas and other raw materials, according to sources in Moscow.
Earlier this week, Henryk Kisiel,
Poland's economic planning chief,
said the Soviets made a total of $550
million in hard currency loans to
Poland between May and last week.
He also told a news conference Monday the strike had cost $1 billion in
lost production and that it would cost
abnost $3.7 billion a year to made
good on the wage hikes and other
economic benefits promised the
strikers.
Polish officials have said they also
had promises of economic aid from
other members of the Soviet Bloc
and from the West.
Sporadic strikes began in earl&gt;
July following hikes in meat prices
and in mid-August exploded into a
mass protest demanding political
and social reforms as well as wage
increases. More than 80-0,000
workers stopped work before the
government capitulated.

· ···

~

· ~.

•·,
NEW VILLAGE HALL? - Pomeroy Village officials have submitted an application for a $74,000
Economic Development Administration grant which
would provide funds to "winterize" the fanner
Pomeroy Senior High School. The money would purchase new windows, insulation and mecluinical fixtures with the idea of preparing the structure lor use as

a village hall. Completing the first floor of the building
would require an additional $50,000. Village officials
have until spring, 1981, to convert the Pomeroy school
building to a village hall or it will revert to the Meigs
Local School District Board of Education. The village
has had possession of the fanner school building for
that purpose since May 11, 1976.

School strikes breed
pressure, vandalism
By Tbe Auoclaled Press
strikes continued in six Ohio
school districts Wednesday amid
scattered reports of pressure tactics
and vandalism.
Non-teaching employees in
Columbus remained off the job,
along with teachers in Hubbard,
Boardman and Miamisburg school
districts and at the Leonard Kirtz
School for the Mentally Retarded in
Youngstown and the Lake County
Center for Mentally Retarded.
A walkout by Ohio Association of

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Come in to any Central Trust office and pick the plan
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·

Public School Employees in Colum- · their jobs.
bus moved into its sixth day ThurThree of those working reported
sday with no new talks scheduled. flat tires and broken windshields
The last negotiating session was when they left their jobs to go home
Saturday.
Wednesday,
said
school
Although the strike continued spokeswoman Katherine Anthony.
strong by bus drivers + only eight of Others say they are receiving
429 showed up for work Wednesday
threatening telephone caUs at their
+ about 42 percent of the 2,600 homes.
classified employees reported to
The school district reported 64,095
students are now enrolled in the
system, 1,805 more than Tuesday.
Officials estimate about 7,400
tag
students have not yet enrolled. The
Meigs residents whose last names district is not keeping daily atstart with the letters, N, 0, P, and Q tendance records.
Of the slightly more than 100
are required to purchase their motor
vehicle license plates during the schools in the district, 37 have food
service. Students at other schools
month of September.
The office of the motor vehicle are being asked to bring lunches.
Striking teachers of the Hubbard
registrar is located in the fanner
Gibbs Grocery building on Mulberry school system picketed the schools
Ave. and is open from 9 a.m. to I and homes of Hubbard Board of
p.m. and 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. , Mon- Education members Wednesday.
Pickets appeared at Girard High
day, Tuesday, Wednesday and
Friday and maintains evening hours School, where William Kinnick,
from 5:30 to 7:30 each Friday. The president ol the Hubbard board,
office is open from 9 a.m. to 12 noon works as a guidance counselor.
Pickets were also seen outside the
on Thursdays and Saturdays.
home of board member Alice Werner and board clerk-treasurer A.T.
Ponzio.
"It is one thing to keep it in your
Two drivers were cited foUowlng a
own
community, but I don't think it's
three-vehicle accident investigated
right
to do this ," Kinnick said. "I
Tuesday by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
think
the only thing it has really
Highway Patrol.
done
is
that it helped solidify the
Called to the scene on SR 7 at 1
of
education."
board
p.m. , officers report a north bound
Robert Paterniti, another board
auto operated l!y James Jayne, 20,
member
said, "l don't understand
Crown City, had stopped in traffic. A
whatihey're
trying to prove. "All
north bound vehicle driven by
they
are
going
to do is create more
Harold L. Sargent, 42, Patalaska,
animosity."
failed to stop and struck the Jayne
Kathy Paulenich, Hubbard
auto in the rear.
A third north bound vehicle, which teacher and chief negotiator, said
was reportedly following too close, the action was taken because the
operated by Ralph R. Orendorff, 44, board was: not willing to negotiate.
Columbus, then slruc.k the Sargent She said every day the strike goes
on, the situation is getting "uglier."
auto in the rear.
The district has 147 teachers and
Sargent was cited on a charge of
3,100
students. The teachers want
assured clear distance. Orendorff
$11,800
a year, about $400 more than
was cited on a charge of folloWing
is offering.
the
board
too close. ,

Auto

reminder

Two drivers cited

Better Banking Service. That's the Central Idea.

11IE

CENIRAL 1RUST
COMPANY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THE DELTA QUEEN docked at Gallipolis yesterday for five
hours, as hundreds of curious people flocked to tour the boat. The ship,

•'

I

•

which is 54 years old, features three decks and a steam calliope, which
sang out over the Ohio River as the vessel departed.
\

�3-The Daily Sentinel, ~~ •ddl eport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 11, 1980
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sepl.ll , 1980

Meet the Meigs Marauders

Opinions ·&amp;
Comtnents
1HE DAILV SENTINEL

lUSPSJU.Mt)
DEVOTED TO TilE

.'

....
....

INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
IAtWn ol opialoa art wekomed. They •bould be lt~~Cblla • wordlloag ~or subjecllo reducU. by Utt editor) ud mut be slped widl the alptt'i acldrul , Names liLly be wit.hbeld upoo
pa))lk:adcla. However, oa rt'fiUI!IL, 01me1 wW be dW:IOHd. ~tll!n lheltJd be In good t111tr, ad*-iq-.ooi...,...Uii&lt;t.
PaiiUIIIed daUy e•et~~ Satardly by '111e Oblo Valley Pu.bl.leblag Comp. .y· Muldmectt., Int .,
Ill Cewt S&amp;., Pomcroy, Obio U1tt. BllliDels Office Pbouf t1Z- Zl5t. Editorial Pboot tt2-Zl5i .
Sec.d clauJMMt.&amp;epmd•t Pomeroy, Olakt.
N•dtaal adwrUtl.q repretelllliUvt, Uadoa Attetiltes, 3111 EucUd A\le,, Clevt'la!MJ, Oblo
4411$.
'l"be Aued1ted Prt:a il es.clual\'ely e:aUtlrd t. the UJe lor pabUcatloa of all new• dlspatehetJ
.eedJ~ to tbe DtWipiptl' ud allo tbe local DeWI publilbeAerelll.
.
PubUiher
Robert Wiogett
GatralM&amp;r. • CJtyEd.Uor
N~• Editor
~,...A.
Alh'. Mauger
V"~

"~~

Parkersburg Catholic fields a
much better team than its record
shows. In their opener, the
Crusaders appeared to be heading
for victory, but Tyler County put
together a scoring drive in the final
forty seconds to win 13-12.
The Crusaders were also ahead in
the waning minutes \hanks to
flankless defensive play, but with
I :40 remaining in the game the
defense broke. PC ended up on the
short end of a 7-1i score .
parkersburg has a veteran back·
field which has enjoyed past success, The Crusader offense is held by
a powerful fullback. Last year this
same squad defeated Southern 12.{).
Defensively, the Crusaders has a
mixture of size and experience. The
defensive unit has had a tendency to
weaken in the late quarters.
Robin Fortune's 188 yards rushing
in 29 carries highlighted last week's
7-1i Tornado victory over Federal

Dale Rothge b, Jr.
Carl Ghtta

.

.

Mussels
exert muscle
.

A freshwater shell fish that was a source of food and a
livelihood to early day settlers along the Ohio River has
been reduced to a novelty item. But it still has enough
'. muscle to hold up a bridge.
The intended pun refers to a study of mussels in the river
which prompted federal transportation officials to delay
. plans for a new bridge linking Portsmouth with its Ken•' tucky neighbors.
.· Whether that problem has been finally resolved isn't
clear, but a reeent report shows that the mussels can serve
as an environmental barometer. A spokesman for the Kentucky Department of Transportation says the decision on
when, where and if a new bridge will be built rests on that
agency.
Portsmouth residents know the value of bridges. They
used ferries for more than a year while the 51-year-old
: Ohio River bridge here underwent a $10 million facelift due
: to the ravages of age. It reopened earlier this year.
; Frank R. Metts, Kentucky secretary of transportation,
. has two sites under consideration for the new bridge, when
· and if it is built. A spokesman for Metts said he is still con.sidering factors involved.
One proposed site is east.of the present bridge and would
carry bridge traffic through the middle of town. A bridge
there would cost an estimated $32 million.
The second site is two miles east of Portsmouth and
would link Kentucky with Ohio routes 52-104, bypassing the
downtown area. Kentucky officials estimate cost of a
bridge here at more than $154 million.
But bac~ to the mussels, more properly called bivalve
mollusks. Early settlers used them for food though their
tastiness is a palatable debate.
At the turn of the century, mussel shells were used to
make buttons, but .the business faded with the advent of
plastics.
Today, shells of the fish are cut into tiny squares and
shipped to Japan, where they are used as seed for cultured
pearls.
Biology Professor Ralph W. Taylor of Marshall University has published results of a survey of freshwater
mussels on the upper 340 miles of the river, roughly from
the headwaters in Pennsylvania to Greenup, Ky., midway
between Ironton and Portsmouth.
He found the mussel population mostly depleted and said
present day mussels in the river have no commercial
value.
"Their real value lies in the fact that mussels are good
indicators of suitc!ble water quality, and as we monitor
their increase or decrease ill distribution and numbers we
can evaluate man's efforts to clean up his environment. .
"If we create an environment unsuitable for mussels, it
will have long since been unsuitable for consumption and
use by man."

Letter to editor
Let's show them
Well, it's time to check the score in
southernOhio.
'
I've written letters to ask where
. did the money go? Well, we, as taxpayers, should have the right to
know, but I bet you in the last 10
years the northern part of the state
got at least 75 percent of it or more.
We taxpayers take taxes too easy.
We don't know as much as they think
but when you get your next raise
look at your tax raise. Yes, taxes are
there, and that's for sure. With more
and more people working this year
even over unemployment there are
more people working than before

and twice as much tax money going
in, so don't believe them when they
say, 11 Wehavenomoney."
We, the people, can do something
about it. Go out and vote in Novem·
ber. If you're not registered, go out
and do so.
This county needs every vote it
can get because you, the taxpayer,
can't complain if you didn 'I go vote.
So, let's show our power here in
southern Ohio and vote out un·
truthful people in government this
year.
,
Yours truly. - Floyd H. Cleland,
Box 223, Rutland, Ohio 45775.

Roger Kovalcblk
5-9, 168Ibs.
Junior Tallhack

1"80 by NEA Inc.

" Why don 't we call this alternative plan 'Operation Jack Anderson'?"

'

Scott Pickens
5-8, 144 lbs.
Sophomore End

Greg Thomas
5-7, 1251bs.

Junior Quarterback

Eagles hope to rebound against FH
By SCOTr WOLFE

"It sort of balances out appetite.'·

when I look at the price of food it ruins my

March 15, '81 : a day that may live in history
By Robe,rt J. Wagnian
WASIDNGTON (NEA) - March
15, 1981, may be a historic day. On it,
air travel as we know it today could
come to a screeching halt. For on
that date, the nation's air traffic ctmtrollers threaten to stage a nation·
wide walkout unless the Federal
Aviation Administration, for whom
they work, comes up with a lot of
money.
What an air controllers' strike
might mean to the traveling public
was driven home recently when controllers at Chicago's O'Hare Airport,
the nation's bl!Siest, held a mere
"rule book slowdown."
The FAA has rules on such mat·
ters as the distance between landing
aircraft and the amount of time that
must be allotted between planes
taking off and landing. In order to
handle the huge amount of air traffic
at buily airports such as O'Hare, the
controllers normally ignore these
rules. But the Chicago controllers,
angered over pay and working con·
ditions, decided to follow the rule
book to the letter for one day. The
result, for tens of thousands of
passengers, was chaos.
More than 600 flights in ·and out of

O'Hare were delayed, some for
several hours. Because O'Hare is a
main hub for air travel, the backup
spread throughout the entire air
system. Some planes were forced to
Circle in holding patterns for so long
they had to be diverted to
Springfield, IlL, or Milwaukee, Wis.,
to be refueled.
One FAA estimate is that over $1
million in extra fuel was burned up
by planes either circling O'Hare or
holding on the ground waiting for
gates to lake-off pennission. The
average flight was delayed over
three hours and one airline alone,
United, spent more than $15,000 put·
ting up passengers overnight
because they missed connecting
flights.
The slowdown came after the FAA
ignored a letter from the local chapter of PATCO, the Professional Air
Traffic Controllers Association.
Chapter President Richard Scholz
had demanded that Chicago controllers be paid an inunediate lax·
free bonus of $7,500. They weren't
and, hence, the rule book slowdown.
The battle between PATCO and
the FAA is an old one. From time to
time, controllers, angered over what

- grounding all private aircraft;
they call inadequate pay and staf·
- cancelling flights of short
' ing and the high pressure of their
duration on the basis that
iine of work, have staged "sick out"
passengers could drive, take trains
or rule book slowdowns. The results
or intercity buses;
always have been the same : substantial disruption of the nation's air
- limit air traffic to longer
domestic flights and international
system.
flights (only about 25 percent of
For its part, the FAA argues that
there is sufficient staffing and that
scheduled flights in this. category
could behandled).
controllers, whose average annual
pay (for radar controllers) exceeds
Caught in the middle of all this are
the airlines. They will lose millions
$40,000, are well compensated foz
the high pressure. ThiS is not enough · of dollars if the controllers walk out.
for PATCO, however, and, although Their current position is that it is up
. a strike by controllers is illegal, that to the FAA and the controllers to get
is what will happen when the present together on a new contract, blit that,
contract l'llllll out next March 15 because a strike is illegal, the
Justice Department should bring
unless the union's demands are met.
Sources within the FAA say the criminal charges against any con·
contingency plans already . have trollers who refuse to report for
work.
been drawn up in case of a nation·
wide controllers sick out. It is . As of right now, the FAA says it is
asswned that perhaps 2,000 of the standing firm and that it will offer a
17,000 controllers would ignore the reasonable new contract, but that it
strike and that they, along with likely will be far short of what the
some 2,000 FAA supervisory per- controllers are demanding.
sonnel, could keep part of the air
PATCO is saying its members are
traffic system operating - but only so angered by the situation that the
a part. Reportedly, the contingency union may not be able to control
them.
plan calls for :
- closing most of the smaller air·
~ost observers admit that, right
ports around the country;
now, the situation looks very bleak.

Today's commentary

Confirmation of the obvious

By Julian Bond
For nearly a · year, I've been
favored by the George Gallup
Organization to receive weekly
copies of its famous poll.
These readings of the nation's
popular pulse are an always
fascinating charting of changing
public attitudes and the rise and fall
of our political heroes and villains.
(The most surprising reports can
be those which confirm the obvious,
like a July 24 announcement that
"Whites, Blacks Hold Different
View on Status of Blacks in U. S.,"
which disclosed that 7 in 10 whites
believe blacks are treated equally in
their communities, while only 4 in 10
blacks hold the same rosy view.)
Most interesting in a recent series
of reports are Gallup's August sur·
veys of the American pOlitical mood
before the Democratic Convention,
which reveal a public unsure of the
caliber and quality of its leaders and
subject to mercurial shifts in its approval or rejection of them.
The series begins with the now
famous Aug. I poll demonstrating a
lower rating for President Jinuny
Carter than for any pesident sirice

Gallup began charting presidential
popularity more than 40 years ago.
Carter's 21 percent approval
rating was 40 points below a high he
scored in December 1979, the month
after the seizure . of American
hostages in Iran. He stood lower
than Richard Nixon (24 percent approval) on the eve of hi• resignation,
and lower than Harry Trwnan (23 ·
percent approval ) during the
Korean War.
Gallup next reported, Aug. 3,
another aspect of the plunge in
presidential popularity. The
Republican party did better among
a sample of 1,548 voting-age
Americans than it had done since
October 1972, just before Richard
Nixon outscored George McGovern
in 49 of the 50 states. The early
August .results, based on a mid-July
poll, showed that 52 percent of those
who choose between the two large
parties believed that the
Republicans were better able to deal
with problems considered to be important.
In 60 measurements Gallup has
taken of party popularity since 1945,
the Republicans have out-rated the

Democrats only 10 times, and never
in the last eight years.
Five days into August - and six
days before the start of the
Democratic Convention - Gallup
pubUshed an index of Carter's stan·
ding among Democrats. It was
lower, 32 percent, than for any in·
cumbent president before a
nominating convention than at any
time in the last 50 years.
Gallup reported that same week
that Republican nominee Ronald .
Reagan had gained over Carter sin·
ce mid-July; in early August, the
former California governor would
have defeated the former governor
of Georgia 46 percent to 28 percent.
Wild~ard candidate John Anderson then drew the support of 17
percent of Gallup's respondents.
As the Democrats prepared to
"open" or "close" their convention,
Reagan could claim the support of 45
percent of registered voters, com·
pared to 31 percent for Carter and 14
percent for Anderson.
·
By Aug. 17, Gallup was reporting
that Anderson's "strong" support
among his partisans had declined;
31 percent of the independent Illinois

congressman's voters had
"strongly" supported him in midJuly ; now, Gallup told us, only 14
percent of Anderson's electorate felt
the same enthusiasm.
Each poll - by Gallup, Harris,
this newspaper or last night's survey
of the boys at the corner bar - can,
of course, only measure the sentiment of its respondents at the time
the poll was taken. Gallup's reports
do have their qualifiers: " .. . a
president frequently rebounds .. ." or
" ... as of today, do you lean more to
"
Post~onvention polls, as it happens, do show an upsurge in Carter's
standings. But for all the tendency to
abrupt fluctuations, the polls are excellent guides to the public moods of
the moment.
Ten percent of the voters make up
their minds in the final weeks - or
days - of any campaign. That's
enough, based on current Gallup
results, to elect Carter or Reagan if
Anderson's support conUnue to
decline.
That "If'' is what makes polls so
fascinating, and the final poll, Nov.
3, so important.

Social Security dogs Ronald Reagan

@)

RACINE - Taking things as they Hocking. Fortune appears to be a
hamper the Southern lineup. Severa!
come seems to be the motto of the key factor this week in Southern's efstarters have been sidelined by the
1
Southern Tornadoes after their first fective ground game.
flu and injuries.
·
:
two football contests. Southern's
The Tornadoes of c&lt;H:oaches Mick
Lining up behind Southern's 1m;
corner was dominated by the Winebrenner and Howie Caldwell
proved line will be the aU-Senior
passing attack, while last Friday's hoJ)e to cut down on turnovers,
backfield of. Dale Teaford, Danny
fea tured a successful groundball.
penaltie s a nd fund a mental
Talbott, Terry McNickle and ForSaturday the undefeated Tor· mistakes, which kiUed several
tune.
nadoes hope to put it all together on potential scoring drives.
Game time is 8 p.m. at ParkerInjuries and illness continue to
sburg HighSchooiStadiwn.
their first road trip, against the
Parkersburg Catholic Crusaders, 9- .--------------------::-:----~~-2.

RoMrtH~Oieb

,....,_,._...,...,......_c:l.=

Southern plays PC Saturday

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Social
Security is an issue that has dogged
Ronald Reagan all his political life,
~'every time I'm in a campaign,"
and it's happening again.
Reagan still is trying to live down
statements he made five presiden·
tial campaigns ago, and repeated
later, suggesting that Social
Security be made voluntary for
people who could make better pension arrangements on their own.
That is not his position now. The
Republican presidential nominee .
says he wouid be a staunch defender
of the system, would see to it that
everyone receiving benefits gets
every dollar due them, and wouid
appoint a cortunlssion to look at the
future of the financially fragile

program.
Nonetheless, he's on the defensive
now against President Carte'r on the
subject, just as he was four years
ago in his carn)\aign against former
President Gerald R. Ford.
The trouble is that the early
Reagan was no fan of Social
Security. Campaigning for Sen.
Barry Goldwater, the Republican
presidential nominee in 1964,
Reagan did raise the possibility of a
voluntary system.
That was an idea Goldwater ad·
vanced, to the detriment of his own
campaign. On Oct. Tl , 1964, Reagan
said:
"Can't we introduce voluntary
features that would pennit a citizen

to do better on his own, to be excused
upon presentation of evidence that
he had made provisions for the nonearning years?"
Campaigning in Philadelphia on
Sept. 3, carter tried to make that
sound like current Reagan policy.
"The Republican candidate has
suggested that participation in the
Social Security System be volun·
tary," Carter said. "That would
destroy the systein. Millions of
Americans who have · worked hard
all their lives, who paid In their
share for.years, would be destitute."
Reagan then denied saying it.
"Every time I'm in a campaign,
somebody brings that up," he said in
Jacksonville, Fla., on Sept. 4. "No, I
!lave nevrr said such a thing, never
'

in my life."
Reagan insisted that all he was
talking about in 1964 was a change to
pennit workers who pay into Social
Security to choose their own
beneficiaries.
But as recently at 1975, he
suggested that there were possible
alternatives to the current, ~
datory · system. In a speech in
Houston on Dec. 13, 1975 Reagan
said that ooe example was' a plan to
ellminate the payroll tax now colleoted for ~lal Security, give workers
an eqUivalent
pay raise and then
'
reqllll'e them to invest at leaat 10
percent of their income in
retirement bonds. He said that was
an example, not hla proposal,

.

REEDSVILLE - Friday evening,
the Eastern Eagles will again lake
to the road to face Federal
Hocking's Lancers.
Last week the Eagles suffered an
~ loss to the Miller Falcons squad
while the Lancers lost to Southern.
Mter struggling through a 61.{)
· trouncing from Kyger Creek, the
Lancers came back to put up a good
fight against Southern, losing 7-1i.
Although Federal didn't produce
much offensive[Y, they displayed an
improved defense. Coach Chuck
Robinson stressed the "lack of ex·
perience" on the Lancer squad, but
was very pleased with the defense,
especially the secondary. Southern
completed only !-of~ pass attempts.
The Federal-Hocking line adjusted well and became stronger as
the game progressed.

Meanwhile, Eastern was involved
in a defensive battle at Miller. The
two squads battled to a scoreless fir·
st half.
In the third period, Eastern was
unable to shut the door on a 62-yard
drive which began from the opening
kickoff. '
The Eagles came back to score,
but still fell short as the two-point
conversion attempt was stopped.
Dennis Durst again led the Eagles'
ground game with 78 yards while
Greg Wigal passed for 129 yards.
Dave Wolfes scored the Eastern
touchdown on a 74-yard pass reception.
Tbe Eastern staff is confident that
the Eagles will come around anq lm·
prove as the season grows older.
Game time is 8 p.m. at Federal
Hocking High School.

Grizzlies BY RAND
••• take

you
roaring

back to
campus
feel In'
end
good! .

leather Suede
Uppers. Widths in
Narrow &amp; Medium.

TRAX M2005 2006

heritage ·house
N .. 2nd Ave.

OF SHOES

Midd

Oh.

SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR PRICES. QUALITY
MATERIAL AT REASONABLE P.RICES .

CASH &amp;CARRY
PRICES

WE
~ELIVER

.

923 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
•
992-2709
992-6611
Open: 7: _o oto5:00Mon. thru Fri.
7:00 to 3:00 Saturday

or

NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
OF OHIO FOR AN INCREASE IN ELECTRIC RATES
TO WHOM IT MAY
CONCERN:
glvtl no11ca that on June XI, 1980,
rt tiled wll" lhl Publle Ulll ltlll Com.
m11110n ot OhiO an tpplleat lon tor
authOrtlatlon to IJNnd and to lnCrMN,
tubatlnllally all ol 111 filed tarttta and

llfml and condttlont ot Hrvlce fl l( lng

'""and charget

tor etect rleHy .

. Tl'ltre are no rile changes propoted , other t han In the ta rtll s
tp.elftce lly relerred 10 In the fol lowing
p~ragraphl .
•
.
The IUbstanca of the reYi sloos
propottld In the Company' s applicat ion
at flle&lt;l on June 30, 1Ge0, Is u follow!'!:

TERMS AND CONDITIONS
OF SERVICE
In Section 4, Pllymtnll, 1 c us)omer
will be cha~ 18.25 tor any dlahOi'lored
check recelvld In payrMnl Of a bi ll
renderltd by the ComJ)Iny, untesa the
c uatom.r lhowe that the bank wtt In
error. A $G.50 charge It made under
lltltttng tarnta.
In Section 13, ExteneiOn or Rural
Llnee , the rural line mtntmum charge
r cuatomer under the opUonal plan
a tncrused by 38'.4 from 143.75 t o
S59.•o per month lor up to 5t11!1 of a
mue, and trom $17.50 to 123.75 per
month tor IICf'l acJdtttonal 111!1 mi le or
fraction th.,-eol . lhe mlntmum agg r•
gata or auc n charau tor e.ch line Is
fncr.. sld trom 1140.00 to $1QO.OO
monlh per line. No minimum charge
snail be !ell tnan S5lUO per month , an
lncreaM from SA3.75. nt. gross ermual
revenue trom an customer• on a line
necHeary to ellmlnall all minimum
charget unc:Mr this tarlll Is lncr81s1Jd
!rom $ot200 to $5700 per mile.
In Section 14, Tempotar, SArvlce,
the 1000 kllowan ma11lmum capaclly
limitation nat oe.n deleted. The filled
charg•• tor reldlng·tn and reading-out
an e1111t1ng mttlt 11 lncreaHd lrom
110.00 to 112.25, and th41 charge 101
tingle phiM 12012..0 volt serviCe from
permanent aource, up to 100 ampe1e
capaclly 11 Inc reased !rom $&amp;.5.00 to

r.

'*

aae.oo.

tn SICUon 21 , Oente l or Olacon·
llnuance Of Sti'\I'I CI , the ftiCOnnact lon
ctlargtl durtng normal woridniOJ hou rs Ia
l ncreaUd !rom $t2. 50toSt !5 .~. respec·
11vely, aM outatcte ot normal work ln!;J
nourt 11 lncreued from $23.25 to
$28.25. The cher!;Je lor payment ol
dtltnquent amounts to a Company
eme~toye~ perform ing a d isconnection
11 lnc.reaMd from $&amp;.!50 to 18.25.

TARIFF R.S. (RESIDENTIAL
ELECTRIC SERVICE)
The monthly cuat0n111r charge and
minimum bill are lncrnUd by 11.50 to
se.oo. Thll ttlrM erterg'l bloc;ks are
tncr..Md by about .2 cents ~r
kilowatt hour, 01 by appro11lmatety
1% to 15% . The O'tltlll lrtcrHIII Ia
about 14% (Q~ lncludhliJ fuel chai"gnt.
The a-vailability of thla tarllt t o farma
Ia limited to those ha-ving no more
than 15 kllowat11 of connected electrical
load outalde the retldence .
The lncr..see per KWH propelled
art 11 follows:
FOf the lira\ 800 KWHra uaed per
month hom 2.30 centa per
KWH lo 2.!50 cents per KWH.
For the next 700 KWHra uNCI per
monlh from 2.00 centa per
KWH to 2.20 centl per KWH.
For al l o-ver 1!500 KWHra uaed per
monlh from 1.65 centa pe r
KWH to 1.89 Cll"'tS per KWH,
The load Managemtnl Timt-Of ·
O.y l)tO'(Itlon hM the monthly cuatomer
chlrge and minimum bUt lncreutd by
11.50 to 18.50 along wltl'l Increases ol
B% to 8.5% In the energy charges. Tht
conHNition aM load management
crtdlt It cheno-a to 0.1584/KWH .
The lncr..MI per KWH proposed
are 11 followa :
For al l energy used during on·pttk
billing pet1od1 from 2.1M5 cen ta
per KWH to 3.2• cen ts per
KWH.
For 111 energ&gt;y uHd dur ing Ofl·pttk
billing periods from 1.60 cents
per KWH to 1.82 cents Ptr

KWH.
The charget In the Oolional Sll\llce

lookln'

' I

BUILDING OR REMODELING?

-

Put'1u1nt to the requirement• ot

But when they came back, the
Rams had to make room for them.
Halfback Elvis Peacock said that
hurt.
''It affected us by the guys corning
in the week before the game. We had
to cut some people who were good to
make room for those guys. Those
things hurt us. If we get those things
behind us, then we'll be all right,"
Peacock said.
Besides the dissatifaction, the
morale situation and the cuts,
there's also the problem of the top
veterans getting back their timing .
Malavasi is keeping his fingers
crossed that his veterans will fall in
quickly. "I hope they make a bigger
contribution against the Bucs than
they made last week. We had just
gotten them hack, and it's very hard
to get their timing.
" We have only two full days of
practice this week. How much better
they'll be is hard to say. You don't
just come in and do it overnight."
He's not concerned that
Ferragamo's brief walkout will fuel
the situation. " I really don't think he
intended · to stay out," the coach
said. "I think he just wanted to make
a pointforthat one day. He's not that
type of guy. He knows this is his opportunity to show what he can do."
Ferragamo, filling in for injured
starter Pat Haden, guided the Rams
to the victory over the Buccaneers in
the NFC playoff game last year and
led Los Angeles to the Super Bowl,
where they lost to Pittsburgh.

.•

ALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

Stc:tlon 4801 .1i Of the OhiO A.vlted
Code, OtiiO Power Company hereby

Rams Tampa Bay rematch
TAMPA, Fla. (AP)-The Los
Angeles !lamS- hoping their considerable problems of the young
season are behind them- meet the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers tonight in a
nationally televised rematch of last
season's National Football Conference title game.
The Rams won the .conference
crown last January in a tough defen,
sive battle that saw tbe · Rues
blanked 9-0 and sent Los Angeles to
the Super Bowl.
Los Angeles has been in a
revolving door situation with injured
and unhappy players since training
camp began. On Monday, quarterback Vince Ferragamo became
the seventh dissident to leave the
team.
He came back Tuesday after a
one-day boycott over wages, and by
then all veterans were back and accounted for . Coach Ray Malavasi
saw the toll it took in last week's
season opener, a 41·20 loss to
Detroit.
" It did hurt us," he said, referring
to late holdouts by Jack Youngblood,
a defensive end, linebacker Jim
Youngblood and defensive tackle
Larry Brooks.
"I didn't feel we could waste the
time and let them go without playing
another game. I felt the sooner we
got our veteran players in the ball
game the better off we would be for
the whole season. They had to get in
there and start playing ."

r-~~------------------------~·

and ·.
lmfldlng m·a terJalsi

fOI' Reeldtncll Pr l mt~rl l'l Heated by
EIICltrlclty provlaton are all lncreaatd
by about 13.&amp;¥. . The time periods are
rldlllned 11 being locet time rat ner
than Eaatern Standard Time.
The lnorea... per KWH propoaed
tre 11 tollowa:
Monthly ~Ice Cha rgalrom $8.&amp;S
ton .M .
For thou KWHra ulld Gu rtng the
monttl In excnt ot 400 tlmea
the monthly billing demand
trom O.UII ctnta per KWHr to
1.W centa per KWH r.
For lhON KWHrt used during !I'll
peak toad pertoo:
For !he firs! !00 fi:WHra from 3.CIO
centl per KWHr to 3.•1 cantt
per IC:WHr.
For all o..- !00 KWHra trom 2.t0
centl per KWHr to 2.73 cent•
per KWHr.
For all lddttlonat KWH11 uted
durtng the month from 1.20
cenlt PI'' KWHr to t .Je cenla
per KWHr.
The E11pertmentat Tl me·Of·Day
proviskHI chafVI• ere changed the
..,.. u t~ In the LCMid Menagement
TifMoCI·DIY proorletan.

Ia changed to se.oo lor cuatomere not
requi ring a demand meltr (f:1etlned II
cualomera whoM demand Ia not c.pablt
ot e11 ceedtng 5 KW) and to $14.00
tor cuelomera reQuiring • Otm•nd mettr.
Th• separete block of 3000 KWH
wllhln the "150 times KW' etep Ia
eliminated, reducing the number of
energy tlloc;ke from four to three.
The propoaed Increases are 11
tollowa:
.
KWHre equal to ltr&amp;t 50 ttmea KW
of mon1h ly billing demand
!ro m 5.2fl cent s per KWH to
• .87 cenls per KWH .
KWHr! equal to next 150 times
KW at mon1hly billing demand
from 3.96 cents PM KWHr
(li nt! 3000 KWHra) and 2.58
centa per KWHr (all over 3000
KWHrs ) to 3.88 cent3 per
KWHr (all KWHrs).
KWHra In excess ol 200 limes KW
of monthly blllng demand
from 1.73 centa par KWHr
t o 1.87 centa per KWHr.
The energy chargee are modllled
and tlattened auch that , Including the
c hange In customer charge, tiM overall
lncreaae Ia approlllmately 1t % (8%
Including fuel chargee). The equipment
c redit, minimum charge tor welders,
etc., and minimum charges 101' cuetomtl'l
haYing other aource&amp; ot anergy supply
are tncreaaed trom 22 cents per KW to
25 cenla per I(W; S1 .84 per I(YA to
52.04 per KVA ; and 12•.50 to S27 .13 ptr
month tor first 5 ftW or tract ion theraol
ol contract demtnd and from $3 . ~2 to
$3.80 per manU\ 101 each KW ol contract
demand over 5 KW, rt~pecllvety .

TARIFF E.H.G. (ELECTRIC
HEATING O~NERAL)
This tariff remalna in proceu of
elim ination and limited to l ll lttlng
customere. The Ural two energy blocks
were rep laced by a cuatomar charge of
$15.81 and 1 slng!e energy block. The
O't'lfll! level of chargee was Increased
by 14% (D% Inc luding fuel charges).
The proposed lncreatts per KWH
are 11 followa:
For the ll rat 700C I(Wtira used per
month !rom 4.71 centa per
KWHr ~Ural 200 KWHrs) and
2.33 cents per KWHr (ntlll
6800 KWHrs) to H2 cent a per
KWHr,
Fo r al l over 7000 KWHrs ull&lt;l ptr
month from 2.10 centa per
KWHr to 1.85 centa per KWHr.
Fo r demand In l ltCIII Ol 30 KW
addf"d charges from $2. tB lor
ea ch KW of monthly demand
In 111ceaa ot 30 KW t o S2.46 for
ea ch KW of monthly demand
In 811CIII of 30 KW.

TARIFF L.P. (LAROE POWER)
The rate , currently conslallng of
Mvtn declining bloctl ..-..rgy chlfgll
ba.Md on houra use ol KVA f:1emand, Ia
replaCed with a cuatomar ch'trge , a
alngte demand charge pet KY and a
atngte energy charge per KWH. The
minimum biH Ia chanOfld !rom a ch1rg1
per KY A. to the cuatomer chergeo plua I
charge per KVA of mon th!'/ billinG
demand. The onrall level of chergea,
Includi ng the equipment credits. was
Increased hom 22 centa pe r KVA of
monthly billing demand lo 2~ centa per
KVA tor dttl very vo lteges ot 2,300 to
12,000, and from 36 t!t nta per KVA. to41
~ II per KVA on Ill -vottegea OWW 23,000.
The O'l'lftllleYel ot charga wu lncruatd
1:1¥ abOUt 15"11 (9 •t. Inc luding fuel chaorges).
The current. and propoMCI ra1ea In
thl1 ta rll! ere at tollowa:
Current
Pri mal)' Portion :
KWHrs In an amount equal to
the product of tl'1e lira! 30
umea the KVA of mont h\'1
billi ng demand 8.77 cente per
KWHr.
Se&lt;:ondtfY" Portion:
KW Hrs In an amount IQUII to
the product of the next 170
llmea !he KVA of monthly
billing demand:
For the Ural 2,000 kwhra ·
3 .~ centa per kwhr
For t he nell! 8,000 kwh ra ·
3.13 cents per kwhr
.
For the nellt 110,000 kwhn .
2.33 cenll per kwhr
For ell over 100,000 kwhre .
1.80 cenla per kwh r
Ell ceas Portion:
Remai nder of enargy uatd
same month In • - ceaa of the
primal)' and MOOndrl portlona:
For the first 200,000 kwf\re ·
1.12 c•nta per llwl'lr
For all over 200,000 kwhrt 0.11 cent I per kwhr
Thla tarltt conta tna a monthly
mlnt,.,um of $2 .03 per KVA ot montnty
bllllng dtmand.
Proposed
Cuetomer Chlr;e
1123.00 per monttl
Demand Char~
se.a1 pe r xvA

en••s• c••,..

.30 cerilt per KWH
A month ly mlntmum cnarge ot
S123 .00 ptua 18.01 per t~;VA ot mont tit~
billing dlmlnd Ia propoaed .

TARIFF L.P.O. (LARGE
POWER OPTIONS)
Tt11a 111111 Is bl!ll lng wllhc:ltawn and
r•placed by tarlll I.P.

'TARIFF G.B.
(GENERAL SERVICE)

· TARIFF H.L.P. (HIGH
LOAD FACTOR POWER)

The mOnthly CUIIOf'Nf Chtrfl lrwl
minimum bill of 14.10 for Ill cuttomers

Uta tlrltt 11 betng withdrawn
and reptacea by tartii i.P.

TARIFF I.P.
(INDUSTRIAL POWER)
The n•nabllttl of thla tarut. ''
t Ia alao able to
accommOOale all cutiOI"IMifll now lllfYfKi
under Tarllll LP.O. and H.l.P. wtllch
are propoeed to bt ellmlnlted.
The provlaloo cumtntl&gt;y \n "larlfl I.P.
permitt ing cuetomers hav ing mulllple
planta to also rtteelwl sertlce 11 pl1nle
h.vlng demands 811 small aa 3000 KVA
under lhla tertii Ia propoaed to be limited
to the cuatomers and apeclt lc planta so
served on tne eiiBCt lve date ol the
revleed tarlll.
The preaent LP.O.. I.P. and H.L.P.
rates conteln multiple demand etepa
which also Include various leyela of
energy chargea, aeparate, single or
multiple energy atept for energy no1
Included In lht demand charges, a
reactive demand charge In the caee of
H.L.P.. and an equipment credit In the
c.ae of LP.O. The DfOI)()I8d raft 001'\llats
of a customer charQe, a alngle KVA
dem•nd charge and a tingle energy
charge for eac:h or three dei~Ytf'Y vott-oe
levela (PYimal)' 2.3 · 12 KV; Subtrans·
mlaelon 23 · 89 KV; Tranem laelon 138
KV or higher). Tht minimum ctlargt 11
made equal to the customer charge
plus the demtnd c l\arge, ralhtr than
almp ly the demand cllarge, and , In
ttle case of L.P.O. and I.P., the minimum
bl111ng demand Is lncre~sed from 60'/o
to 87 % ol the con1ract cepactty. Ttle
overall level ol chargee t or ttloae
cutlomers wae lncrttaed by abOut
181ft (8•/• Including fuel charges).
rne current and propo11d rates In
thlt terllf are aa foltowt:
Current
Prl mery Portion:
For the IIIII 15,000 KVA Ol
month!'/ billing demand 11
determined below • $4 .14
modlflfld 10 that

peo

KVA.

For all over 1~ ,0IXI KVA of
monthly bill ing demand . $3.83
peo KVA .
Thl cuttome11 ana.n bllltowld
300 KWHra tor each KVA Of
montf'lly billing demand billed
In accoroa.nce with tnts !MICtion.
Secondary Ponton:
·Energy In exce11 or :nJ KWHrs
per KVA ot monthly bi lling
demand . SO.CICI&amp;O per KWHr.
PropoMd
2.3 · 12 KV
CUatomer Charge !!.· !~tll(
.oova
·
Demand Cherge
._ .Energy Ch11ge
0.2844 /KWH
Cuatomer Cherge
Dlmand Charge
Energy Charge

2.3 · 88KV
12.•18.00
$4.1!12 lt&lt;VA
0.22q /KWH

Cuatomer Ch11ge
Demand Ch11g1
Energy Charge

s-.45 IKV-'

138 IC.V or l'ilghtr
$6,055.00

0.2051: IKWH

TARIFF I.R.P.
(INTERRUPTIBLE POWER)
A cuatomer c;tlarge 11 Included In
ttlt rate and In ttle minimum month ly
cttarge. The O'lll'all level ot ch1rges
was lncreaald by eboUt 21% (7 %
tncludtng tuet charge11.
TM propoeed tncrea11s era 11
lOll OWl:
Cultomer ctlatQI trom none to
11055 per montn.
FOf UC:h KW ot monttlty billing
Citmend lrom $1 .21 per KW to
$3.82 per KW.
For IICI'I kllo-v•r Ol tagging KVA.R
Citmr.nd In lltCMI Ol !iO% Ol
the KW biiiii'IQ oemand to r
nch month trom $0 ...:10 per
tc.VA.R to $0.!507 l)lff KVAR.
Fot the total KWHra taken 0.525
centl per KWHr to0.205 cents
per t&lt;WMr.
/4. month!'/ min imum bitt equal to
SG.OMOO plut$3.82 Plf KW of
monthly biiii"&lt;J demand It
contained In th41111111.

INSTALLATIONS:
2,SOO lumen lncanduclrnt !rom
$4.M per lamp per month to
1&amp;.50 per tamp per montn.
4,000 lumen lncandelcent trom
$4.8&amp; per lamp per month to

$8.1111 ,.. lamp ,., mOftlh.

For each lamp wlttl IIOOCIIIQI'Ittng
lumlnalre, controtlld by' pflOIOifectrlc
relty, where Mrvtce te euppttld from
an tlllttlng po le and MCOndary tectttttea
of Com~!IY :
20,000 lumtn mercury IIOOCIHght
trom $10.25
lamp per
month to 112.30 ~ tamp ptf'
month ,
50,000 lu!Mfl mercury flOOdlight
from $15.30 per tamp l)llr
month to $18.40 per lamp par
montn.
Wh•n Ml'fict cannot be aupplled
from an exlatlng pole ot tf'll Company
carrying a ••condary" circuli , !he
COmpany will lnlttll one pate ancHor
one apan or tecondary circuli ol not
over 150 teet tor an additional charge
ot 11 .00 per month, en tncruSI from

'*

$(),g().

POST TOP LIGHTING SERVICE
For each 7000 lumen mercury
tamp on 12 foot poll from 17.20 per
monttl to $8.8!! per month.
When a customer requires an
underground ci rcuit tonu-r than 30
feet tor pott·top lighting M!Yk:e, t. may
1
Ply to the Compan'lln advance
a charge of $27!5 per toot lor
ttle length of underground
circuit In exce11 of 30 feet, or
2 Pay • monthly teciiHiel c::I"I.IIVI
ot &amp;.a cents !Of eech ~ t•t (or
traction thereof) ol under·
ground circuli In eiiCHI of 30
feet. lncrealld from l1.5!land
$.47 rerspectlvaly.
Cuatom11r&amp; requiring HNica where
rock or o1her adverH soil condlllona
are encountered will be fumllhed
MniiCe provided tha. eiiCHI COlt Of
trench ing and backfilling (coet In
t rc esa of 80$/loot ol lhlr total trench
length) It paid to th11 Company by the
custom111r, Increased from •!k/toot.

TARIFF S.L&gt;.
(STREET LIOHTJNO)
Thll tarttt"'la betng withdrawn .

PRAYER
The Prayer of the -'J)pllclllon
reQl.M!IItl the Public Utilities CommiMJOfl
of Ohio to do the following:
(a) Find !hal the appllcallon and
erhlblte 1111 Uled In IICCOfdance
wHh Section 410111.18. OhiO
Ae-vllld Code , aM the rules
of the Oomm l11lon;
(b) Accept the applicat ion and
a11hlblta tor fil ing;
(c) Appi'O"Ve the fOfm of thlt
notice;
(d) Find that the praMflt rate• art
lntuftlcllflt IO .,.'-"' ~lble
companeallon for the aervlce
renderad and are un)ual and
unr111onable;
(e) Find that the tncrel.led ret11
1nd charges and amended
ttfml and condltiOnl o4 aeMol
pr-oposed In Ohio Power'•
Appllcallon are Just and
reaeonebte and appi'O'te the
same;
(f) Approve the Utlng of ll'1e
new achedulfl In the form
(g)

.._.....,...new,.ndacheduln

Make such
effecti-ve 11 eoon u It Ia
practical and lawful to do 10.
Tnt propoted amended IChedUIII
1hatl apply In ell territories Ml"'ttd
by 01\lo Power.
It Ia eatlm•ted that lhe repretenla·
live resldlntlll cuatomer'a bill wi ll bl
Inc relied annually, based on tttecaten·
dar ynr 1080, by U%; the f9Pfetenta1Ne
commercia l euttorner 's bill b'/ 8% ; and
the rweeentatl'll Industrial cuatomef'a

bll l bv 11%.

Att percenlagea preSinted In !hit
notice aN approximate and bated on
IYefi08 C!A101'T1111. lndtvldull ~torntft
TARIFF S.S.
may t llperlence rats adjuatmentt dlf·
lerent from tne •veragea preMnted 111
(SCHOOL SERVICE)
Thll 111111 remalnt In proceaa ot thla notice.
/4. copy ot the appllca11on Ia avlll·
sllmlnauon and limited to tll ltttno
cuatomlfl, A cuttomer cttarge ot 118.83 aDII tor tnapectlan •I th41 oltlce of OhiO
Company ..,.,., .. 301 co-lOnel
Ia Included In lfle rete 1nd the two snergy btocka arsatgnllleantty llatlenld." Ave. S.W., O.nton, Ohio 44702.
A copy ol the eppllcatiOn mty bl
The minimum ctlarge 11 mecle equal t o
the cuatomlf charge. TM ~all 11¥81 Inspected by tnt•rnted parlin at lhl
Ottlce
ot th~ Comm1uton 375 Sovlh
ot charges w11 lncr..Hd by about
Hlgtl Strwl , Columbua, Otl 1o.
21 % 113% Including luet chargetl.
Ae commeOOellans wh ich differ
"the propolld rncreau In KWH 11
trom ttle application may be medt by
IS IOIIOWI :
the
Stell
ol the Public Utllltln Com·
For tl'll tltal 300 KWHra ulld per
monlf'l for nett 1000 tquere m111ton Of by tnterrenlng part'" and
teet ot tnCIOI«&lt; 1111 !rom mey be adopted by the COmmiHion.
3.g1 centa per KWHr to 3.20
Tha Con\peny Ia unable t o = •
centa, per KWHr.
whet, If any, chanQM, InclUding
Fo r the btlance of KWHra ulld per In emount or fOt'm, may be midi tW The
monttl rrom 1 .~ centa per Public UlliiUet Comm1t11on of brito
KWHr to 2.21 «nil per KWHr. In the PfOpOIIId tlflffl, anrt~tbiCompa;ny
Ia unab._ to p,.Otct wNit , If any,
TARIFF O.L.
tmpt,et S!ICh modttlct~ttone may ,.._..
upon CUitOI'MfS I&gt;IIM~.
(OUTDOOR LIGHTING)
P£~ . FlAM, COfiJ,aoRA·
The overall trtel ot ch.argee wu TIONANY
OR ASSOCtATlON MAY FILE
lnctHMd by about 23'!. ~1V% tnchldlng
PURSIJ,ANT TO SECTtON 4801.18 oF
tuet chiiQII), The chargee tor IICOI'Idary THE OHIO REVISED CODE, AN
ctrculta , polea , and undtrground
TO THE INCFIEA.S£8
wtt1nt ..,. t~reued by a lutlltanl\atty OaJECTION
PAOPOIED IY OHIO POWER, WHICH
llttr percentao• !hen tM cher;ea
MAY ALLEGE THAT THE COMPANY-&amp;
or 11mpe.
APPliCATION OONTA.... PFIOfiOIAl8
Propoeed l~f911111 In O.L. ratea
THAT ARE UNJUST AND OUICRtMINA·
are 11 tonowa:
TORY OR UNFIEAIONAILE.
7,000 lumen mercury · trom $&amp; .1&amp;
The torm or thta ~101 hal bean
per temp pet month to $7 .15 appro-ved
by' tne Pu!)l!c UUttttee
Plf tamp per month.
COmmiHIOtl ot Otllo.
20 ,000 tumen mercury . from
Plf temp Plf month to 110.35

r.

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

•10

THE FOLLOWING LAMPS ME IN
PROCESS OF ELIMINATlON AND AFIE
NOT AVAII.AIIt.E FOf' NEW

-·

OHIO POWER cOMPANY
!yC.A. Heller

�3-The Daily Sentinel, ~~ •ddl eport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 11, 1980
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sepl.ll , 1980

Meet the Meigs Marauders

Opinions ·&amp;
Comtnents
1HE DAILV SENTINEL

lUSPSJU.Mt)
DEVOTED TO TilE

.'

....
....

INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
IAtWn ol opialoa art wekomed. They •bould be lt~~Cblla • wordlloag ~or subjecllo reducU. by Utt editor) ud mut be slped widl the alptt'i acldrul , Names liLly be wit.hbeld upoo
pa))lk:adcla. However, oa rt'fiUI!IL, 01me1 wW be dW:IOHd. ~tll!n lheltJd be In good t111tr, ad*-iq-.ooi...,...Uii&lt;t.
PaiiUIIIed daUy e•et~~ Satardly by '111e Oblo Valley Pu.bl.leblag Comp. .y· Muldmectt., Int .,
Ill Cewt S&amp;., Pomcroy, Obio U1tt. BllliDels Office Pbouf t1Z- Zl5t. Editorial Pboot tt2-Zl5i .
Sec.d clauJMMt.&amp;epmd•t Pomeroy, Olakt.
N•dtaal adwrUtl.q repretelllliUvt, Uadoa Attetiltes, 3111 EucUd A\le,, Clevt'la!MJ, Oblo
4411$.
'l"be Aued1ted Prt:a il es.clual\'ely e:aUtlrd t. the UJe lor pabUcatloa of all new• dlspatehetJ
.eedJ~ to tbe DtWipiptl' ud allo tbe local DeWI publilbeAerelll.
.
PubUiher
Robert Wiogett
GatralM&amp;r. • CJtyEd.Uor
N~• Editor
~,...A.
Alh'. Mauger
V"~

"~~

Parkersburg Catholic fields a
much better team than its record
shows. In their opener, the
Crusaders appeared to be heading
for victory, but Tyler County put
together a scoring drive in the final
forty seconds to win 13-12.
The Crusaders were also ahead in
the waning minutes \hanks to
flankless defensive play, but with
I :40 remaining in the game the
defense broke. PC ended up on the
short end of a 7-1i score .
parkersburg has a veteran back·
field which has enjoyed past success, The Crusader offense is held by
a powerful fullback. Last year this
same squad defeated Southern 12.{).
Defensively, the Crusaders has a
mixture of size and experience. The
defensive unit has had a tendency to
weaken in the late quarters.
Robin Fortune's 188 yards rushing
in 29 carries highlighted last week's
7-1i Tornado victory over Federal

Dale Rothge b, Jr.
Carl Ghtta

.

.

Mussels
exert muscle
.

A freshwater shell fish that was a source of food and a
livelihood to early day settlers along the Ohio River has
been reduced to a novelty item. But it still has enough
'. muscle to hold up a bridge.
The intended pun refers to a study of mussels in the river
which prompted federal transportation officials to delay
. plans for a new bridge linking Portsmouth with its Ken•' tucky neighbors.
.· Whether that problem has been finally resolved isn't
clear, but a reeent report shows that the mussels can serve
as an environmental barometer. A spokesman for the Kentucky Department of Transportation says the decision on
when, where and if a new bridge will be built rests on that
agency.
Portsmouth residents know the value of bridges. They
used ferries for more than a year while the 51-year-old
: Ohio River bridge here underwent a $10 million facelift due
: to the ravages of age. It reopened earlier this year.
; Frank R. Metts, Kentucky secretary of transportation,
. has two sites under consideration for the new bridge, when
· and if it is built. A spokesman for Metts said he is still con.sidering factors involved.
One proposed site is east.of the present bridge and would
carry bridge traffic through the middle of town. A bridge
there would cost an estimated $32 million.
The second site is two miles east of Portsmouth and
would link Kentucky with Ohio routes 52-104, bypassing the
downtown area. Kentucky officials estimate cost of a
bridge here at more than $154 million.
But bac~ to the mussels, more properly called bivalve
mollusks. Early settlers used them for food though their
tastiness is a palatable debate.
At the turn of the century, mussel shells were used to
make buttons, but .the business faded with the advent of
plastics.
Today, shells of the fish are cut into tiny squares and
shipped to Japan, where they are used as seed for cultured
pearls.
Biology Professor Ralph W. Taylor of Marshall University has published results of a survey of freshwater
mussels on the upper 340 miles of the river, roughly from
the headwaters in Pennsylvania to Greenup, Ky., midway
between Ironton and Portsmouth.
He found the mussel population mostly depleted and said
present day mussels in the river have no commercial
value.
"Their real value lies in the fact that mussels are good
indicators of suitc!ble water quality, and as we monitor
their increase or decrease ill distribution and numbers we
can evaluate man's efforts to clean up his environment. .
"If we create an environment unsuitable for mussels, it
will have long since been unsuitable for consumption and
use by man."

Letter to editor
Let's show them
Well, it's time to check the score in
southernOhio.
'
I've written letters to ask where
. did the money go? Well, we, as taxpayers, should have the right to
know, but I bet you in the last 10
years the northern part of the state
got at least 75 percent of it or more.
We taxpayers take taxes too easy.
We don't know as much as they think
but when you get your next raise
look at your tax raise. Yes, taxes are
there, and that's for sure. With more
and more people working this year
even over unemployment there are
more people working than before

and twice as much tax money going
in, so don't believe them when they
say, 11 Wehavenomoney."
We, the people, can do something
about it. Go out and vote in Novem·
ber. If you're not registered, go out
and do so.
This county needs every vote it
can get because you, the taxpayer,
can't complain if you didn 'I go vote.
So, let's show our power here in
southern Ohio and vote out un·
truthful people in government this
year.
,
Yours truly. - Floyd H. Cleland,
Box 223, Rutland, Ohio 45775.

Roger Kovalcblk
5-9, 168Ibs.
Junior Tallhack

1"80 by NEA Inc.

" Why don 't we call this alternative plan 'Operation Jack Anderson'?"

'

Scott Pickens
5-8, 144 lbs.
Sophomore End

Greg Thomas
5-7, 1251bs.

Junior Quarterback

Eagles hope to rebound against FH
By SCOTr WOLFE

"It sort of balances out appetite.'·

when I look at the price of food it ruins my

March 15, '81 : a day that may live in history
By Robe,rt J. Wagnian
WASIDNGTON (NEA) - March
15, 1981, may be a historic day. On it,
air travel as we know it today could
come to a screeching halt. For on
that date, the nation's air traffic ctmtrollers threaten to stage a nation·
wide walkout unless the Federal
Aviation Administration, for whom
they work, comes up with a lot of
money.
What an air controllers' strike
might mean to the traveling public
was driven home recently when controllers at Chicago's O'Hare Airport,
the nation's bl!Siest, held a mere
"rule book slowdown."
The FAA has rules on such mat·
ters as the distance between landing
aircraft and the amount of time that
must be allotted between planes
taking off and landing. In order to
handle the huge amount of air traffic
at buily airports such as O'Hare, the
controllers normally ignore these
rules. But the Chicago controllers,
angered over pay and working con·
ditions, decided to follow the rule
book to the letter for one day. The
result, for tens of thousands of
passengers, was chaos.
More than 600 flights in ·and out of

O'Hare were delayed, some for
several hours. Because O'Hare is a
main hub for air travel, the backup
spread throughout the entire air
system. Some planes were forced to
Circle in holding patterns for so long
they had to be diverted to
Springfield, IlL, or Milwaukee, Wis.,
to be refueled.
One FAA estimate is that over $1
million in extra fuel was burned up
by planes either circling O'Hare or
holding on the ground waiting for
gates to lake-off pennission. The
average flight was delayed over
three hours and one airline alone,
United, spent more than $15,000 put·
ting up passengers overnight
because they missed connecting
flights.
The slowdown came after the FAA
ignored a letter from the local chapter of PATCO, the Professional Air
Traffic Controllers Association.
Chapter President Richard Scholz
had demanded that Chicago controllers be paid an inunediate lax·
free bonus of $7,500. They weren't
and, hence, the rule book slowdown.
The battle between PATCO and
the FAA is an old one. From time to
time, controllers, angered over what

- grounding all private aircraft;
they call inadequate pay and staf·
- cancelling flights of short
' ing and the high pressure of their
duration on the basis that
iine of work, have staged "sick out"
passengers could drive, take trains
or rule book slowdowns. The results
or intercity buses;
always have been the same : substantial disruption of the nation's air
- limit air traffic to longer
domestic flights and international
system.
flights (only about 25 percent of
For its part, the FAA argues that
there is sufficient staffing and that
scheduled flights in this. category
could behandled).
controllers, whose average annual
pay (for radar controllers) exceeds
Caught in the middle of all this are
the airlines. They will lose millions
$40,000, are well compensated foz
the high pressure. ThiS is not enough · of dollars if the controllers walk out.
for PATCO, however, and, although Their current position is that it is up
. a strike by controllers is illegal, that to the FAA and the controllers to get
is what will happen when the present together on a new contract, blit that,
contract l'llllll out next March 15 because a strike is illegal, the
Justice Department should bring
unless the union's demands are met.
Sources within the FAA say the criminal charges against any con·
contingency plans already . have trollers who refuse to report for
work.
been drawn up in case of a nation·
wide controllers sick out. It is . As of right now, the FAA says it is
asswned that perhaps 2,000 of the standing firm and that it will offer a
17,000 controllers would ignore the reasonable new contract, but that it
strike and that they, along with likely will be far short of what the
some 2,000 FAA supervisory per- controllers are demanding.
sonnel, could keep part of the air
PATCO is saying its members are
traffic system operating - but only so angered by the situation that the
a part. Reportedly, the contingency union may not be able to control
them.
plan calls for :
- closing most of the smaller air·
~ost observers admit that, right
ports around the country;
now, the situation looks very bleak.

Today's commentary

Confirmation of the obvious

By Julian Bond
For nearly a · year, I've been
favored by the George Gallup
Organization to receive weekly
copies of its famous poll.
These readings of the nation's
popular pulse are an always
fascinating charting of changing
public attitudes and the rise and fall
of our political heroes and villains.
(The most surprising reports can
be those which confirm the obvious,
like a July 24 announcement that
"Whites, Blacks Hold Different
View on Status of Blacks in U. S.,"
which disclosed that 7 in 10 whites
believe blacks are treated equally in
their communities, while only 4 in 10
blacks hold the same rosy view.)
Most interesting in a recent series
of reports are Gallup's August sur·
veys of the American pOlitical mood
before the Democratic Convention,
which reveal a public unsure of the
caliber and quality of its leaders and
subject to mercurial shifts in its approval or rejection of them.
The series begins with the now
famous Aug. I poll demonstrating a
lower rating for President Jinuny
Carter than for any pesident sirice

Gallup began charting presidential
popularity more than 40 years ago.
Carter's 21 percent approval
rating was 40 points below a high he
scored in December 1979, the month
after the seizure . of American
hostages in Iran. He stood lower
than Richard Nixon (24 percent approval) on the eve of hi• resignation,
and lower than Harry Trwnan (23 ·
percent approval ) during the
Korean War.
Gallup next reported, Aug. 3,
another aspect of the plunge in
presidential popularity. The
Republican party did better among
a sample of 1,548 voting-age
Americans than it had done since
October 1972, just before Richard
Nixon outscored George McGovern
in 49 of the 50 states. The early
August .results, based on a mid-July
poll, showed that 52 percent of those
who choose between the two large
parties believed that the
Republicans were better able to deal
with problems considered to be important.
In 60 measurements Gallup has
taken of party popularity since 1945,
the Republicans have out-rated the

Democrats only 10 times, and never
in the last eight years.
Five days into August - and six
days before the start of the
Democratic Convention - Gallup
pubUshed an index of Carter's stan·
ding among Democrats. It was
lower, 32 percent, than for any in·
cumbent president before a
nominating convention than at any
time in the last 50 years.
Gallup reported that same week
that Republican nominee Ronald .
Reagan had gained over Carter sin·
ce mid-July; in early August, the
former California governor would
have defeated the former governor
of Georgia 46 percent to 28 percent.
Wild~ard candidate John Anderson then drew the support of 17
percent of Gallup's respondents.
As the Democrats prepared to
"open" or "close" their convention,
Reagan could claim the support of 45
percent of registered voters, com·
pared to 31 percent for Carter and 14
percent for Anderson.
·
By Aug. 17, Gallup was reporting
that Anderson's "strong" support
among his partisans had declined;
31 percent of the independent Illinois

congressman's voters had
"strongly" supported him in midJuly ; now, Gallup told us, only 14
percent of Anderson's electorate felt
the same enthusiasm.
Each poll - by Gallup, Harris,
this newspaper or last night's survey
of the boys at the corner bar - can,
of course, only measure the sentiment of its respondents at the time
the poll was taken. Gallup's reports
do have their qualifiers: " .. . a
president frequently rebounds .. ." or
" ... as of today, do you lean more to
"
Post~onvention polls, as it happens, do show an upsurge in Carter's
standings. But for all the tendency to
abrupt fluctuations, the polls are excellent guides to the public moods of
the moment.
Ten percent of the voters make up
their minds in the final weeks - or
days - of any campaign. That's
enough, based on current Gallup
results, to elect Carter or Reagan if
Anderson's support conUnue to
decline.
That "If'' is what makes polls so
fascinating, and the final poll, Nov.
3, so important.

Social Security dogs Ronald Reagan

@)

RACINE - Taking things as they Hocking. Fortune appears to be a
hamper the Southern lineup. Severa!
come seems to be the motto of the key factor this week in Southern's efstarters have been sidelined by the
1
Southern Tornadoes after their first fective ground game.
flu and injuries.
·
:
two football contests. Southern's
The Tornadoes of c&lt;H:oaches Mick
Lining up behind Southern's 1m;
corner was dominated by the Winebrenner and Howie Caldwell
proved line will be the aU-Senior
passing attack, while last Friday's hoJ)e to cut down on turnovers,
backfield of. Dale Teaford, Danny
fea tured a successful groundball.
penaltie s a nd fund a mental
Talbott, Terry McNickle and ForSaturday the undefeated Tor· mistakes, which kiUed several
tune.
nadoes hope to put it all together on potential scoring drives.
Game time is 8 p.m. at ParkerInjuries and illness continue to
sburg HighSchooiStadiwn.
their first road trip, against the
Parkersburg Catholic Crusaders, 9- .--------------------::-:----~~-2.

RoMrtH~Oieb

,....,_,._...,...,......_c:l.=

Southern plays PC Saturday

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Social
Security is an issue that has dogged
Ronald Reagan all his political life,
~'every time I'm in a campaign,"
and it's happening again.
Reagan still is trying to live down
statements he made five presiden·
tial campaigns ago, and repeated
later, suggesting that Social
Security be made voluntary for
people who could make better pension arrangements on their own.
That is not his position now. The
Republican presidential nominee .
says he wouid be a staunch defender
of the system, would see to it that
everyone receiving benefits gets
every dollar due them, and wouid
appoint a cortunlssion to look at the
future of the financially fragile

program.
Nonetheless, he's on the defensive
now against President Carte'r on the
subject, just as he was four years
ago in his carn)\aign against former
President Gerald R. Ford.
The trouble is that the early
Reagan was no fan of Social
Security. Campaigning for Sen.
Barry Goldwater, the Republican
presidential nominee in 1964,
Reagan did raise the possibility of a
voluntary system.
That was an idea Goldwater ad·
vanced, to the detriment of his own
campaign. On Oct. Tl , 1964, Reagan
said:
"Can't we introduce voluntary
features that would pennit a citizen

to do better on his own, to be excused
upon presentation of evidence that
he had made provisions for the nonearning years?"
Campaigning in Philadelphia on
Sept. 3, carter tried to make that
sound like current Reagan policy.
"The Republican candidate has
suggested that participation in the
Social Security System be volun·
tary," Carter said. "That would
destroy the systein. Millions of
Americans who have · worked hard
all their lives, who paid In their
share for.years, would be destitute."
Reagan then denied saying it.
"Every time I'm in a campaign,
somebody brings that up," he said in
Jacksonville, Fla., on Sept. 4. "No, I
!lave nevrr said such a thing, never
'

in my life."
Reagan insisted that all he was
talking about in 1964 was a change to
pennit workers who pay into Social
Security to choose their own
beneficiaries.
But as recently at 1975, he
suggested that there were possible
alternatives to the current, ~
datory · system. In a speech in
Houston on Dec. 13, 1975 Reagan
said that ooe example was' a plan to
ellminate the payroll tax now colleoted for ~lal Security, give workers
an eqUivalent
pay raise and then
'
reqllll'e them to invest at leaat 10
percent of their income in
retirement bonds. He said that was
an example, not hla proposal,

.

REEDSVILLE - Friday evening,
the Eastern Eagles will again lake
to the road to face Federal
Hocking's Lancers.
Last week the Eagles suffered an
~ loss to the Miller Falcons squad
while the Lancers lost to Southern.
Mter struggling through a 61.{)
· trouncing from Kyger Creek, the
Lancers came back to put up a good
fight against Southern, losing 7-1i.
Although Federal didn't produce
much offensive[Y, they displayed an
improved defense. Coach Chuck
Robinson stressed the "lack of ex·
perience" on the Lancer squad, but
was very pleased with the defense,
especially the secondary. Southern
completed only !-of~ pass attempts.
The Federal-Hocking line adjusted well and became stronger as
the game progressed.

Meanwhile, Eastern was involved
in a defensive battle at Miller. The
two squads battled to a scoreless fir·
st half.
In the third period, Eastern was
unable to shut the door on a 62-yard
drive which began from the opening
kickoff. '
The Eagles came back to score,
but still fell short as the two-point
conversion attempt was stopped.
Dennis Durst again led the Eagles'
ground game with 78 yards while
Greg Wigal passed for 129 yards.
Dave Wolfes scored the Eastern
touchdown on a 74-yard pass reception.
Tbe Eastern staff is confident that
the Eagles will come around anq lm·
prove as the season grows older.
Game time is 8 p.m. at Federal
Hocking High School.

Grizzlies BY RAND
••• take

you
roaring

back to
campus
feel In'
end
good! .

leather Suede
Uppers. Widths in
Narrow &amp; Medium.

TRAX M2005 2006

heritage ·house
N .. 2nd Ave.

OF SHOES

Midd

Oh.

SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR PRICES. QUALITY
MATERIAL AT REASONABLE P.RICES .

CASH &amp;CARRY
PRICES

WE
~ELIVER

.

923 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
•
992-2709
992-6611
Open: 7: _o oto5:00Mon. thru Fri.
7:00 to 3:00 Saturday

or

NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
OF OHIO FOR AN INCREASE IN ELECTRIC RATES
TO WHOM IT MAY
CONCERN:
glvtl no11ca that on June XI, 1980,
rt tiled wll" lhl Publle Ulll ltlll Com.
m11110n ot OhiO an tpplleat lon tor
authOrtlatlon to IJNnd and to lnCrMN,
tubatlnllally all ol 111 filed tarttta and

llfml and condttlont ot Hrvlce fl l( lng

'""and charget

tor etect rleHy .

. Tl'ltre are no rile changes propoted , other t han In the ta rtll s
tp.elftce lly relerred 10 In the fol lowing
p~ragraphl .
•
.
The IUbstanca of the reYi sloos
propottld In the Company' s applicat ion
at flle&lt;l on June 30, 1Ge0, Is u follow!'!:

TERMS AND CONDITIONS
OF SERVICE
In Section 4, Pllymtnll, 1 c us)omer
will be cha~ 18.25 tor any dlahOi'lored
check recelvld In payrMnl Of a bi ll
renderltd by the ComJ)Iny, untesa the
c uatom.r lhowe that the bank wtt In
error. A $G.50 charge It made under
lltltttng tarnta.
In Section 13, ExteneiOn or Rural
Llnee , the rural line mtntmum charge
r cuatomer under the opUonal plan
a tncrused by 38'.4 from 143.75 t o
S59.•o per month lor up to 5t11!1 of a
mue, and trom $17.50 to 123.75 per
month tor IICf'l acJdtttonal 111!1 mi le or
fraction th.,-eol . lhe mlntmum agg r•
gata or auc n charau tor e.ch line Is
fncr.. sld trom 1140.00 to $1QO.OO
monlh per line. No minimum charge
snail be !ell tnan S5lUO per month , an
lncreaM from SA3.75. nt. gross ermual
revenue trom an customer• on a line
necHeary to ellmlnall all minimum
charget unc:Mr this tarlll Is lncr81s1Jd
!rom $ot200 to $5700 per mile.
In Section 14, Tempotar, SArvlce,
the 1000 kllowan ma11lmum capaclly
limitation nat oe.n deleted. The filled
charg•• tor reldlng·tn and reading-out
an e1111t1ng mttlt 11 lncreaHd lrom
110.00 to 112.25, and th41 charge 101
tingle phiM 12012..0 volt serviCe from
permanent aource, up to 100 ampe1e
capaclly 11 Inc reased !rom $&amp;.5.00 to

r.

'*

aae.oo.

tn SICUon 21 , Oente l or Olacon·
llnuance Of Sti'\I'I CI , the ftiCOnnact lon
ctlargtl durtng normal woridniOJ hou rs Ia
l ncreaUd !rom $t2. 50toSt !5 .~. respec·
11vely, aM outatcte ot normal work ln!;J
nourt 11 lncreued from $23.25 to
$28.25. The cher!;Je lor payment ol
dtltnquent amounts to a Company
eme~toye~ perform ing a d isconnection
11 lnc.reaMd from $&amp;.!50 to 18.25.

TARIFF R.S. (RESIDENTIAL
ELECTRIC SERVICE)
The monthly cuat0n111r charge and
minimum bill are lncrnUd by 11.50 to
se.oo. Thll ttlrM erterg'l bloc;ks are
tncr..Md by about .2 cents ~r
kilowatt hour, 01 by appro11lmatety
1% to 15% . The O'tltlll lrtcrHIII Ia
about 14% (Q~ lncludhliJ fuel chai"gnt.
The a-vailability of thla tarllt t o farma
Ia limited to those ha-ving no more
than 15 kllowat11 of connected electrical
load outalde the retldence .
The lncr..see per KWH propelled
art 11 follows:
FOf the lira\ 800 KWHra uaed per
month hom 2.30 centa per
KWH lo 2.!50 cents per KWH.
For the next 700 KWHra uNCI per
monlh from 2.00 centa per
KWH to 2.20 centl per KWH.
For al l o-ver 1!500 KWHra uaed per
monlh from 1.65 centa pe r
KWH to 1.89 Cll"'tS per KWH,
The load Managemtnl Timt-Of ·
O.y l)tO'(Itlon hM the monthly cuatomer
chlrge and minimum bUt lncreutd by
11.50 to 18.50 along wltl'l Increases ol
B% to 8.5% In the energy charges. Tht
conHNition aM load management
crtdlt It cheno-a to 0.1584/KWH .
The lncr..MI per KWH proposed
are 11 followa :
For al l energy used during on·pttk
billing pet1od1 from 2.1M5 cen ta
per KWH to 3.2• cen ts per
KWH.
For 111 energ&gt;y uHd dur ing Ofl·pttk
billing periods from 1.60 cents
per KWH to 1.82 cents Ptr

KWH.
The charget In the Oolional Sll\llce

lookln'

' I

BUILDING OR REMODELING?

-

Put'1u1nt to the requirement• ot

But when they came back, the
Rams had to make room for them.
Halfback Elvis Peacock said that
hurt.
''It affected us by the guys corning
in the week before the game. We had
to cut some people who were good to
make room for those guys. Those
things hurt us. If we get those things
behind us, then we'll be all right,"
Peacock said.
Besides the dissatifaction, the
morale situation and the cuts,
there's also the problem of the top
veterans getting back their timing .
Malavasi is keeping his fingers
crossed that his veterans will fall in
quickly. "I hope they make a bigger
contribution against the Bucs than
they made last week. We had just
gotten them hack, and it's very hard
to get their timing.
" We have only two full days of
practice this week. How much better
they'll be is hard to say. You don't
just come in and do it overnight."
He's not concerned that
Ferragamo's brief walkout will fuel
the situation. " I really don't think he
intended · to stay out," the coach
said. "I think he just wanted to make
a pointforthat one day. He's not that
type of guy. He knows this is his opportunity to show what he can do."
Ferragamo, filling in for injured
starter Pat Haden, guided the Rams
to the victory over the Buccaneers in
the NFC playoff game last year and
led Los Angeles to the Super Bowl,
where they lost to Pittsburgh.

.•

ALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

Stc:tlon 4801 .1i Of the OhiO A.vlted
Code, OtiiO Power Company hereby

Rams Tampa Bay rematch
TAMPA, Fla. (AP)-The Los
Angeles !lamS- hoping their considerable problems of the young
season are behind them- meet the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers tonight in a
nationally televised rematch of last
season's National Football Conference title game.
The Rams won the .conference
crown last January in a tough defen,
sive battle that saw tbe · Rues
blanked 9-0 and sent Los Angeles to
the Super Bowl.
Los Angeles has been in a
revolving door situation with injured
and unhappy players since training
camp began. On Monday, quarterback Vince Ferragamo became
the seventh dissident to leave the
team.
He came back Tuesday after a
one-day boycott over wages, and by
then all veterans were back and accounted for . Coach Ray Malavasi
saw the toll it took in last week's
season opener, a 41·20 loss to
Detroit.
" It did hurt us," he said, referring
to late holdouts by Jack Youngblood,
a defensive end, linebacker Jim
Youngblood and defensive tackle
Larry Brooks.
"I didn't feel we could waste the
time and let them go without playing
another game. I felt the sooner we
got our veteran players in the ball
game the better off we would be for
the whole season. They had to get in
there and start playing ."

r-~~------------------------~·

and ·.
lmfldlng m·a terJalsi

fOI' Reeldtncll Pr l mt~rl l'l Heated by
EIICltrlclty provlaton are all lncreaatd
by about 13.&amp;¥. . The time periods are
rldlllned 11 being locet time rat ner
than Eaatern Standard Time.
The lnorea... per KWH propoaed
tre 11 tollowa:
Monthly ~Ice Cha rgalrom $8.&amp;S
ton .M .
For thou KWHra ulld Gu rtng the
monttl In excnt ot 400 tlmea
the monthly billing demand
trom O.UII ctnta per KWHr to
1.W centa per KWH r.
For lhON KWHrt used during !I'll
peak toad pertoo:
For !he firs! !00 fi:WHra from 3.CIO
centl per KWHr to 3.•1 cantt
per IC:WHr.
For all o..- !00 KWHra trom 2.t0
centl per KWHr to 2.73 cent•
per KWHr.
For all lddttlonat KWH11 uted
durtng the month from 1.20
cenlt PI'' KWHr to t .Je cenla
per KWHr.
The E11pertmentat Tl me·Of·Day
proviskHI chafVI• ere changed the
..,.. u t~ In the LCMid Menagement
TifMoCI·DIY proorletan.

Ia changed to se.oo lor cuatomere not
requi ring a demand meltr (f:1etlned II
cualomera whoM demand Ia not c.pablt
ot e11 ceedtng 5 KW) and to $14.00
tor cuelomera reQuiring • Otm•nd mettr.
Th• separete block of 3000 KWH
wllhln the "150 times KW' etep Ia
eliminated, reducing the number of
energy tlloc;ke from four to three.
The propoaed Increases are 11
tollowa:
.
KWHre equal to ltr&amp;t 50 ttmea KW
of mon1h ly billing demand
!ro m 5.2fl cent s per KWH to
• .87 cenls per KWH .
KWHr! equal to next 150 times
KW at mon1hly billing demand
from 3.96 cents PM KWHr
(li nt! 3000 KWHra) and 2.58
centa per KWHr (all over 3000
KWHrs ) to 3.88 cent3 per
KWHr (all KWHrs).
KWHra In excess ol 200 limes KW
of monthly blllng demand
from 1.73 centa par KWHr
t o 1.87 centa per KWHr.
The energy chargee are modllled
and tlattened auch that , Including the
c hange In customer charge, tiM overall
lncreaae Ia approlllmately 1t % (8%
Including fuel chargee). The equipment
c redit, minimum charge tor welders,
etc., and minimum charges 101' cuetomtl'l
haYing other aource&amp; ot anergy supply
are tncreaaed trom 22 cents per KW to
25 cenla per I(W; S1 .84 per I(YA to
52.04 per KVA ; and 12•.50 to S27 .13 ptr
month tor first 5 ftW or tract ion theraol
ol contract demtnd and from $3 . ~2 to
$3.80 per manU\ 101 each KW ol contract
demand over 5 KW, rt~pecllvety .

TARIFF E.H.G. (ELECTRIC
HEATING O~NERAL)
This tariff remalna in proceu of
elim ination and limited to l ll lttlng
customere. The Ural two energy blocks
were rep laced by a cuatomar charge of
$15.81 and 1 slng!e energy block. The
O't'lfll! level of chargee was Increased
by 14% (D% Inc luding fuel charges).
The proposed lncreatts per KWH
are 11 followa:
For the ll rat 700C I(Wtira used per
month !rom 4.71 centa per
KWHr ~Ural 200 KWHrs) and
2.33 cents per KWHr (ntlll
6800 KWHrs) to H2 cent a per
KWHr,
Fo r al l over 7000 KWHrs ull&lt;l ptr
month from 2.10 centa per
KWHr to 1.85 centa per KWHr.
Fo r demand In l ltCIII Ol 30 KW
addf"d charges from $2. tB lor
ea ch KW of monthly demand
In 111ceaa ot 30 KW t o S2.46 for
ea ch KW of monthly demand
In 811CIII of 30 KW.

TARIFF L.P. (LAROE POWER)
The rate , currently conslallng of
Mvtn declining bloctl ..-..rgy chlfgll
ba.Md on houra use ol KVA f:1emand, Ia
replaCed with a cuatomar ch'trge , a
alngte demand charge pet KY and a
atngte energy charge per KWH. The
minimum biH Ia chanOfld !rom a ch1rg1
per KY A. to the cuatomer chergeo plua I
charge per KVA of mon th!'/ billinG
demand. The onrall level of chergea,
Includi ng the equipment credits. was
Increased hom 22 centa pe r KVA of
monthly billing demand lo 2~ centa per
KVA tor dttl very vo lteges ot 2,300 to
12,000, and from 36 t!t nta per KVA. to41
~ II per KVA on Ill -vottegea OWW 23,000.
The O'l'lftllleYel ot charga wu lncruatd
1:1¥ abOUt 15"11 (9 •t. Inc luding fuel chaorges).
The current. and propoMCI ra1ea In
thl1 ta rll! ere at tollowa:
Current
Pri mal)' Portion :
KWHrs In an amount equal to
the product of tl'1e lira! 30
umea the KVA of mont h\'1
billi ng demand 8.77 cente per
KWHr.
Se&lt;:ondtfY" Portion:
KW Hrs In an amount IQUII to
the product of the next 170
llmea !he KVA of monthly
billing demand:
For the Ural 2,000 kwhra ·
3 .~ centa per kwhr
For t he nell! 8,000 kwh ra ·
3.13 cents per kwhr
.
For the nellt 110,000 kwhn .
2.33 cenll per kwhr
For ell over 100,000 kwhre .
1.80 cenla per kwh r
Ell ceas Portion:
Remai nder of enargy uatd
same month In • - ceaa of the
primal)' and MOOndrl portlona:
For the first 200,000 kwf\re ·
1.12 c•nta per llwl'lr
For all over 200,000 kwhrt 0.11 cent I per kwhr
Thla tarltt conta tna a monthly
mlnt,.,um of $2 .03 per KVA ot montnty
bllllng dtmand.
Proposed
Cuetomer Chlr;e
1123.00 per monttl
Demand Char~
se.a1 pe r xvA

en••s• c••,..

.30 cerilt per KWH
A month ly mlntmum cnarge ot
S123 .00 ptua 18.01 per t~;VA ot mont tit~
billing dlmlnd Ia propoaed .

TARIFF L.P.O. (LARGE
POWER OPTIONS)
Tt11a 111111 Is bl!ll lng wllhc:ltawn and
r•placed by tarlll I.P.

'TARIFF G.B.
(GENERAL SERVICE)

· TARIFF H.L.P. (HIGH
LOAD FACTOR POWER)

The mOnthly CUIIOf'Nf Chtrfl lrwl
minimum bill of 14.10 for Ill cuttomers

Uta tlrltt 11 betng withdrawn
and reptacea by tartii i.P.

TARIFF I.P.
(INDUSTRIAL POWER)
The n•nabllttl of thla tarut. ''
t Ia alao able to
accommOOale all cutiOI"IMifll now lllfYfKi
under Tarllll LP.O. and H.l.P. wtllch
are propoeed to bt ellmlnlted.
The provlaloo cumtntl&gt;y \n "larlfl I.P.
permitt ing cuetomers hav ing mulllple
planta to also rtteelwl sertlce 11 pl1nle
h.vlng demands 811 small aa 3000 KVA
under lhla tertii Ia propoaed to be limited
to the cuatomers and apeclt lc planta so
served on tne eiiBCt lve date ol the
revleed tarlll.
The preaent LP.O.. I.P. and H.L.P.
rates conteln multiple demand etepa
which also Include various leyela of
energy chargea, aeparate, single or
multiple energy atept for energy no1
Included In lht demand charges, a
reactive demand charge In the caee of
H.L.P.. and an equipment credit In the
c.ae of LP.O. The DfOI)()I8d raft 001'\llats
of a customer charQe, a alngle KVA
dem•nd charge and a tingle energy
charge for eac:h or three dei~Ytf'Y vott-oe
levela (PYimal)' 2.3 · 12 KV; Subtrans·
mlaelon 23 · 89 KV; Tranem laelon 138
KV or higher). Tht minimum ctlargt 11
made equal to the customer charge
plus the demtnd c l\arge, ralhtr than
almp ly the demand cllarge, and , In
ttle case of L.P.O. and I.P., the minimum
bl111ng demand Is lncre~sed from 60'/o
to 87 % ol the con1ract cepactty. Ttle
overall level ol chargee t or ttloae
cutlomers wae lncrttaed by abOut
181ft (8•/• Including fuel charges).
rne current and propo11d rates In
thlt terllf are aa foltowt:
Current
Prl mery Portion:
For the IIIII 15,000 KVA Ol
month!'/ billing demand 11
determined below • $4 .14
modlflfld 10 that

peo

KVA.

For all over 1~ ,0IXI KVA of
monthly bill ing demand . $3.83
peo KVA .
Thl cuttome11 ana.n bllltowld
300 KWHra tor each KVA Of
montf'lly billing demand billed
In accoroa.nce with tnts !MICtion.
Secondary Ponton:
·Energy In exce11 or :nJ KWHrs
per KVA ot monthly bi lling
demand . SO.CICI&amp;O per KWHr.
PropoMd
2.3 · 12 KV
CUatomer Charge !!.· !~tll(
.oova
·
Demand Cherge
._ .Energy Ch11ge
0.2844 /KWH
Cuatomer Cherge
Dlmand Charge
Energy Charge

2.3 · 88KV
12.•18.00
$4.1!12 lt&lt;VA
0.22q /KWH

Cuatomer Ch11ge
Demand Ch11g1
Energy Charge

s-.45 IKV-'

138 IC.V or l'ilghtr
$6,055.00

0.2051: IKWH

TARIFF I.R.P.
(INTERRUPTIBLE POWER)
A cuatomer c;tlarge 11 Included In
ttlt rate and In ttle minimum month ly
cttarge. The O'lll'all level ot ch1rges
was lncreaald by eboUt 21% (7 %
tncludtng tuet charge11.
TM propoeed tncrea11s era 11
lOll OWl:
Cultomer ctlatQI trom none to
11055 per montn.
FOf UC:h KW ot monttlty billing
Citmend lrom $1 .21 per KW to
$3.82 per KW.
For IICI'I kllo-v•r Ol tagging KVA.R
Citmr.nd In lltCMI Ol !iO% Ol
the KW biiiii'IQ oemand to r
nch month trom $0 ...:10 per
tc.VA.R to $0.!507 l)lff KVAR.
Fot the total KWHra taken 0.525
centl per KWHr to0.205 cents
per t&lt;WMr.
/4. month!'/ min imum bitt equal to
SG.OMOO plut$3.82 Plf KW of
monthly biiii"&lt;J demand It
contained In th41111111.

INSTALLATIONS:
2,SOO lumen lncanduclrnt !rom
$4.M per lamp per month to
1&amp;.50 per tamp per montn.
4,000 lumen lncandelcent trom
$4.8&amp; per lamp per month to

$8.1111 ,.. lamp ,., mOftlh.

For each lamp wlttl IIOOCIIIQI'Ittng
lumlnalre, controtlld by' pflOIOifectrlc
relty, where Mrvtce te euppttld from
an tlllttlng po le and MCOndary tectttttea
of Com~!IY :
20,000 lumtn mercury IIOOCIHght
trom $10.25
lamp per
month to 112.30 ~ tamp ptf'
month ,
50,000 lu!Mfl mercury flOOdlight
from $15.30 per tamp l)llr
month to $18.40 per lamp par
montn.
Wh•n Ml'fict cannot be aupplled
from an exlatlng pole ot tf'll Company
carrying a ••condary" circuli , !he
COmpany will lnlttll one pate ancHor
one apan or tecondary circuli ol not
over 150 teet tor an additional charge
ot 11 .00 per month, en tncruSI from

'*

$(),g().

POST TOP LIGHTING SERVICE
For each 7000 lumen mercury
tamp on 12 foot poll from 17.20 per
monttl to $8.8!! per month.
When a customer requires an
underground ci rcuit tonu-r than 30
feet tor pott·top lighting M!Yk:e, t. may
1
Ply to the Compan'lln advance
a charge of $27!5 per toot lor
ttle length of underground
circuit In exce11 of 30 feet, or
2 Pay • monthly teciiHiel c::I"I.IIVI
ot &amp;.a cents !Of eech ~ t•t (or
traction thereof) ol under·
ground circuli In eiiCHI of 30
feet. lncrealld from l1.5!land
$.47 rerspectlvaly.
Cuatom11r&amp; requiring HNica where
rock or o1her adverH soil condlllona
are encountered will be fumllhed
MniiCe provided tha. eiiCHI COlt Of
trench ing and backfilling (coet In
t rc esa of 80$/loot ol lhlr total trench
length) It paid to th11 Company by the
custom111r, Increased from •!k/toot.

TARIFF S.L&gt;.
(STREET LIOHTJNO)
Thll tarttt"'la betng withdrawn .

PRAYER
The Prayer of the -'J)pllclllon
reQl.M!IItl the Public Utilities CommiMJOfl
of Ohio to do the following:
(a) Find !hal the appllcallon and
erhlblte 1111 Uled In IICCOfdance
wHh Section 410111.18. OhiO
Ae-vllld Code , aM the rules
of the Oomm l11lon;
(b) Accept the applicat ion and
a11hlblta tor fil ing;
(c) Appi'O"Ve the fOfm of thlt
notice;
(d) Find that the praMflt rate• art
lntuftlcllflt IO .,.'-"' ~lble
companeallon for the aervlce
renderad and are un)ual and
unr111onable;
(e) Find that the tncrel.led ret11
1nd charges and amended
ttfml and condltiOnl o4 aeMol
pr-oposed In Ohio Power'•
Appllcallon are Just and
reaeonebte and appi'O'te the
same;
(f) Approve the Utlng of ll'1e
new achedulfl In the form
(g)

.._.....,...new,.ndacheduln

Make such
effecti-ve 11 eoon u It Ia
practical and lawful to do 10.
Tnt propoted amended IChedUIII
1hatl apply In ell territories Ml"'ttd
by 01\lo Power.
It Ia eatlm•ted that lhe repretenla·
live resldlntlll cuatomer'a bill wi ll bl
Inc relied annually, based on tttecaten·
dar ynr 1080, by U%; the f9Pfetenta1Ne
commercia l euttorner 's bill b'/ 8% ; and
the rweeentatl'll Industrial cuatomef'a

bll l bv 11%.

Att percenlagea preSinted In !hit
notice aN approximate and bated on
IYefi08 C!A101'T1111. lndtvldull ~torntft
TARIFF S.S.
may t llperlence rats adjuatmentt dlf·
lerent from tne •veragea preMnted 111
(SCHOOL SERVICE)
Thll 111111 remalnt In proceaa ot thla notice.
/4. copy ot the appllca11on Ia avlll·
sllmlnauon and limited to tll ltttno
cuatomlfl, A cuttomer cttarge ot 118.83 aDII tor tnapectlan •I th41 oltlce of OhiO
Company ..,.,., .. 301 co-lOnel
Ia Included In lfle rete 1nd the two snergy btocka arsatgnllleantty llatlenld." Ave. S.W., O.nton, Ohio 44702.
A copy ol the eppllcatiOn mty bl
The minimum ctlarge 11 mecle equal t o
the cuatomlf charge. TM ~all 11¥81 Inspected by tnt•rnted parlin at lhl
Ottlce
ot th~ Comm1uton 375 Sovlh
ot charges w11 lncr..Hd by about
Hlgtl Strwl , Columbua, Otl 1o.
21 % 113% Including luet chargetl.
Ae commeOOellans wh ich differ
"the propolld rncreau In KWH 11
trom ttle application may be medt by
IS IOIIOWI :
the
Stell
ol the Public Utllltln Com·
For tl'll tltal 300 KWHra ulld per
monlf'l for nett 1000 tquere m111ton Of by tnterrenlng part'" and
teet ot tnCIOI«&lt; 1111 !rom mey be adopted by the COmmiHion.
3.g1 centa per KWHr to 3.20
Tha Con\peny Ia unable t o = •
centa, per KWHr.
whet, If any, chanQM, InclUding
Fo r the btlance of KWHra ulld per In emount or fOt'm, may be midi tW The
monttl rrom 1 .~ centa per Public UlliiUet Comm1t11on of brito
KWHr to 2.21 «nil per KWHr. In the PfOpOIIId tlflffl, anrt~tbiCompa;ny
Ia unab._ to p,.Otct wNit , If any,
TARIFF O.L.
tmpt,et S!ICh modttlct~ttone may ,.._..
upon CUitOI'MfS I&gt;IIM~.
(OUTDOOR LIGHTING)
P£~ . FlAM, COfiJ,aoRA·
The overall trtel ot ch.argee wu TIONANY
OR ASSOCtATlON MAY FILE
lnctHMd by about 23'!. ~1V% tnchldlng
PURSIJ,ANT TO SECTtON 4801.18 oF
tuet chiiQII), The chargee tor IICOI'Idary THE OHIO REVISED CODE, AN
ctrculta , polea , and undtrground
TO THE INCFIEA.S£8
wtt1nt ..,. t~reued by a lutlltanl\atty OaJECTION
PAOPOIED IY OHIO POWER, WHICH
llttr percentao• !hen tM cher;ea
MAY ALLEGE THAT THE COMPANY-&amp;
or 11mpe.
APPliCATION OONTA.... PFIOfiOIAl8
Propoeed l~f911111 In O.L. ratea
THAT ARE UNJUST AND OUICRtMINA·
are 11 tonowa:
TORY OR UNFIEAIONAILE.
7,000 lumen mercury · trom $&amp; .1&amp;
The torm or thta ~101 hal bean
per temp pet month to $7 .15 appro-ved
by' tne Pu!)l!c UUttttee
Plf tamp per month.
COmmiHIOtl ot Otllo.
20 ,000 tumen mercury . from
Plf temp Plf month to 110.35

r.

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

•10

THE FOLLOWING LAMPS ME IN
PROCESS OF ELIMINATlON AND AFIE
NOT AVAII.AIIt.E FOf' NEW

-·

OHIO POWER cOMPANY
!yC.A. Heller

�4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Th~rsday, Sept. 11, 1980

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middieport-Pomeruy , 0., Thursday , Sept. 11 , 1980

Seaver pushes record over .500 mark with shutout win
ATLANTA (AP )- When Cincinnati right-hander Tom Seaver
has his pitch wor!ting, batters better
watch out:
"I was able to make my pitch
when I got into a jam," Seaver said
after shutting out the Atlanta Braves
3.() Wednesday night. "I used my
sinker mosUy, and I had that pretty
much Under control.''
"My overall pitching philosophy is
to try to go at least seven innings and
hold the other team to three runs or

less," Seaver said after the game.
" But, sure, I do go for the shutout. "
Seaver, 8-7 after suffering ann
trouble early in the season, got the
shutout for the 53rd Iinne in his
career.
Cincinnati Manager John McNamara called Seaver's per!onnance "outstanding" and added,
" he was in command all the way."
McNamara said, however, that
Seaver is past his peak as a pitcher.
· "I can't truthfully say he's at his
peak,'' McNamara said . "But he's

Dream OSU receiver
living dream offense
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMaUS-This is all a college
football dream lor Doug Donley.
"U somebody would have told me
·1-was going to catch 40 passes in one
season at Ohio State, I would have
laughed at them," said the
Buckeyes' fluid, swift wide receiver.
After all, Donley caught just one
pass his senior season at Cambridge, Ohio . His running, more than
2,500 yards of it in his career, is what
caught Woody Hayes' recruiting
eye.
"He recruited me as a tailback,
but said I might be a wide receiver
my freshman year, to keep me out of
contact because of my shoulder pin.
After my freshman year, I wanted to
move back to tailback," said the
· Ohio State senior.
Instead, with the arrival of
heralded
quarterback
Art
Schlichter, Donley remained at wide
receiver as a sophOiflOre. It was a
wiSe move. He now ranks as one of
the nation's prinne receivers.
· Donley accounted for 37 catches
and a school record 800 yards as a
junior. With Coach Earle Bruce
promising more passing for the toJ)ranked Buckeyes this fall, he is

e boxing promoter Don King says
the 15-roimd World Boxing
Association championship fight
featuring Larry Holmes and
Muhanunad Ali at Las Vegas'
Caesar's Palace Hotel Oct. 2 will
draw 25,000 fans.
He said Holmes and Ali will
split some $14 million for the one
night of work, and he predicted a
Holmes victory. ·
King has been on a nationwide
tour to promote the fight. He was
accompanied in Cleveland on
Wednesday
by
former
heavyweight champion Ken Norton, who is now a public relations
employee of Caesar's Palace.
"Ali is the greatest boxer of all
Iinne who took on the baddest

The Braves, 1-14 against the Reds
this year, remained eight games out,
but fell to 5t behind CinciMati.
"We've got to catch the Reds

before we catch anybody else,"
Braves Manager Bob Cox said when
asked about the fact that Atlanta
didn't fall too far behind the league
leaders. " We have to win every
series the rest of the way," he added.
"Everybody on the bench felt all
the way through the game that we'd
come back and win tonight. Our
relief pitchers did a super job," Cox
said.
They got an early chance.
George Foster's three-run homer

Expo strikeout artist whiffs
18 Cubs, 68 in 65 frames

likely to exceed that dream of 40
receptions in a single season.
Donley has remarkable speed. His
4.36 Iinne in the 46-yard dash, fastest
on the team, prompted his black
teammates to dub him, "White
Ughtning."
His hands are sure. He runs pass
routes well. But he believes his concentration may be just as big a plus.
" I drop some passes in practice
and the coaches get on me. But I
have no trouble concentrating in a
game. I didn't drop any easy ones
last year. That's my goal
again-catch all the easy ones and a
lew of the hard ones," said the communications major.
. Donley did not play in the 1979
opener against Syracuse because of
injuries, but he figures to be a prime
weapon Saturday when the
Orangemen visit Ohio State.
"On defense, they like to stop the
run. Pass defense is supposed to be a
weakness," he said of Syracuse,
beaten 31-3 by the Buckeyes a year
ago.
It will be the first on-the-field test
for the Buckeyes, ranked No. 1 two
straight weeks without playing a
game.

Holmes will win: Promoter
CLEVELAND (AP)-Talkativ-

more accomplished now and he's a
more complete pitcher now than he
was at his peak. He knows how to pitch."
The Reds swept their three-game ·
series with Atlanta to move within 2t
·games of f.,os Angeles and Houston,
who are tied lor the lead in the
National League's West Division.

boxers of his Iinne," King said at
. a press conference. But he said,
"Father Time has caught up with

Ali.' '
King said 22,000 seats already
have been sold for the fight. Ring
side seats are selling for $500.
Although he said Ali has a
chance at the victory, he said,
"Since I've painted a picture of
Ali as my brother and Holmes as
my son, I have to go with my

son.''
Ali is trying to regain his tiUe
for the fourth time.
·
King said he's taken fights to
every corner of the world and
that now he's hoping to bring
"s pectacular events to
Cleveland," his home town. He
· did not elaborate on his plans.

By Tbe Assodated Press
Bill Gullickson may turn out to be
a master of understatements as well
as strikeouts.
" I'm actually more excited about
getting the win than I am the
strikeouts. It was an innportant victory for us," said the rookie righthander, who came within one of the
major league strikeout mark for
nine innings Wednesday night when
he faMed 18 Chicago Cubs to pace
the Montreal Expos to a 4-2 victory.
"I had good control of the fastball,
both inside and out, and I was
staying ahead of the hitters," said
Gullickson, who has struck out 68
batters in his last 65 innings.
Expos catcher Gary Carter said
the performance put Gullickson ''up
there with the Koufaxes and the
Drysdales, and any other strikeout
pitcher... He's just a rookie. Look
how many years he has ahead of
him. II
Montreal Manager Dick Williams
said it was "the best pitching performance I've seen this year."
In other National League games
Wednesday, Cincinnati beat Atlanta
3-ll, Philadelphia shutout New York
!Hl, Pittsburgh nipped St. Louis 7~.
Houston outlasted Los Angeles 6-5 in
12 innings and San Diego downed
San Francisco 4-2.
Gullickson's performance was a
major league record for a rookie, He
fell one short of the overall mark of
19 shared by four pitchers.
Charles Sweeney of Providence
was the first to fan 19 batters in 1884.
His feat was matched by Steve
Carlton with St. Louis in 1969, Tom
Seaver with the New York Mets in
1970 and Nolan Ryan with California

The Meigs Marauders golf team
lost a tough match to Warren Local
in an extra-hole playoff. Both teams
had 171 after 18 holes at Riverside
Golf Club. J. R. Wamsley and David
Kennedy each shot 41s to share match medalist honors. Meigs is · 2-4
overall, and 1-3 in the SEOAL.
Individual scores:
MEIGS 171

41
41
44
45

Scott Harrison

48

WARREN LOCAL l7l
Wes Kaufman

42

~ttW~

~

Jim Brant

43
43
46

nm MlllllhY

ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS PRACTICE
IN

Matt Proctor
WARREN WINS ONE-HOLE PLAYOFF

Melt!•' Score: 2-4; SEOALRecord 1-3.

Melf!s' next match, 1bursday, Sept. 11 Meigs vs. Belpre at Oxbow Golf Course.

GENERAL SURGERY

Astros 6, Dodgers 5
Houston left fielder Jose Cruz
clubbed a solo home run over the
right field fence in the 12th inning to
send the Astros into a first-place tie
with the Dodgers in the National
League West.
The victory gave the Astros a
sweep of the tw~rgame series.
The Dodgers had taken a ~ lead
in tilt&gt; top of the 11th when pinch hitter Gary Thomasson drilled a tw~r
run single before Houston rallied to
tie.
Pirates 7, Cardinals 6
Manager Chuck Tanner was brimming with optimism after the Pittsburgh Pirates snapped their losing
streak at five games.
"We're going to win it, because
we're playing each other in the
division," TaMer said of the chase
in the National League East.
Offsetting a three-run homer by
St. Louis' Keith Hernandez, third
place Pittsburgh stayed 3~-games
behind Montreal and three games
behind Philadelphia with 22 games
remaining.

When Johnny Bench followed with
a single, McWilliams was replaced
by Preston Hanna, who yielded the
Reds' fifth hit of the inning, a single
by Ray Knight, before getting the
third out.

WITH OFFICES LOCATED AT

team total to defeat second place
Ironton's 182. The local Marauders
shot a 185. Jackson posted a 187.
Craig Goldsberry of Athens was
the medalist with a 36, while Meigs'
Fred Young shot 43 to lead Meigs.
Meigs, 2-3 overall and 1-3 in the
SEOAL, hosted Warren Local
yesterday evening at Riverside Golf
Course in Mason.
Individual scoring:
First- Athens; Team totall64 Craig Goldsberry 36, Tinn Kerr 42,
Judd Stephenson 42, Randy Nogrady
44, Dave Matthews 45.
Second - Ironton; Team total182
-Jay .Wolfe 43; Randy Johnson 44;
Steve Hurley 46 ; Brian Layne 49;
Steve Koening 53.
Third - Meigs; Team total185 Fred Young 43, Scott Harrison 46,
Brian Will 47, J. R: Wamsley 49 ,
David KeMedy 50.
Fourth- Jackson; Team totall87
- Doug Miller 43, Eric Coyan 46,
Jeff Moore 49, Ed King 49, Scott
Massie 53.

Your Libraries
By ElleBell
Meigs County Librarian
Bill Wickline, from the Meigs County Auditor's office, was kind
enough to come to the library one recent afternoon to explain why the
libraries received less money from the intangibles tax this year even
though more money was collected.
''Now, wait a minute,'' you say. ''What's this 'intangible tax'?''
Good question. Public libraries in the state of ohio are paid for
mostly by a tax on investments like stocks and bonds. The lax is collected by the county and distributed to libraries (and sometimes other
pubUc groups) in the county. In Meigs County, where the libraries
. receive aU of the intangibles tax money (after deductions), .6 percent
of the people pay the intangibles tax - which means that .6 percent of
the people !Ire paying for library service.
Well now, back to Bill Wickline and his explanation . Bill explained
that the County Auditor's office and the County Treasurer's office get
a percentagve of all the tax money .collected by th.,ounty . That's
what pays their e&lt;penses, I guess. Anyway, the per~ntage charged
for the auditor's and treasurer's fees goes down as the amount collected gose up, especially after the first$1 million.
Since the county's tax collections as a whole were lower this year
than last year, the rate charged by the auditor's office and the
treasurer's office was higher. Because of that, the libraries had less
tax money to spend than last year even though slightly more money
was collected.
Libraries are just like people, in some respects. They have to pay
lor repairs, light, heat, water and sewer service, books, magazines,
records, and the other things they need to keep going. Just like you, the
libraries re paying more for what they need than they used to pay.
Their expenses are rising and their income is going down. That's why
your libraries are asking for a one-half mill tax levy. They must have
more money just to keep things as they were !
In future weeks we'll have more about the upcoming levy. If you
have any questions you would like to have answered in this column,
please address them to Ellen Bell at the Meigs County Public Ubrary,
200 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH. 45769. And if you would like to help
urging people to support the levy, send your name and phone number
or address to the Library Levy Committee at the same address. (You
might like to call instead of writing; If so, the phone number is 9925813). Your libraries need your help.

'"

..

...

STANDINGS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
~T

Montreal
Philadelphia
Pitill burgh

St. Louis
New York
Chicago

Won l.ost Pct. GB
76 63
.$47 75

63

'h:

.M3

73 66
62 67
59 Ill
&gt;4 &amp;I
WEST
79 60
79 60
77 6.1

.521
.449
.424
.391

31&gt;
131.2
17
211&gt;

Howton
.568
Los Angeles
.568 .550
21,2
Cincinrulti
.Atlanta
71 66
.5 Jl
8
San Francisco
67 72
-~
12
San Diet~o
&amp;2 78
.443 21"2
Weclotsday's Games
Montreal4, Chicago 2
Cincinnati 3, Atlanta 0
Philadelphia 5, New York 0
Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 6
Uouston 6, Lo.s Ant~:eles 5, 12 irtnings
San Diet~o4, San Fnmcisco 2
Tbunday's Games
Chicago (Martz ~ll at Montreal (l..ea 5-5)
Phi41delphia (Ruthven 14-9) at New York
(Burrls1·10)

Pittsburgh (Blyleven 7·11 ) at St.Louis (Sykes
6-10)
Only games scheduled

New York

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
Won Lost Pet. GB
.62S -

Baltimore
Boston
MUwaukee
Cleveland
Detroit
Toronto

87
64
75

"55
61

74

fi7

71

67

.604

3

68

.551
.525
.514
.511

101&gt;
14
151&gt;
16

59

8Cl

.424

28

67
70
69

53
71
70

.621

61
59
5S

79
79

71

WEST

Karu.as City
Oakland

Texas

Minnesota
Chicago
California
Se.atUe

83
51 68
WedDHday's Games
Chicago 4, Seattle 3
Oakland 3, Texas!
New York 7, Toronto 6
Cleveland 7, Boston 4

.496

17&amp;;,

.496
.436
.428
.399
.367

171,/a
36
'Il
31
:lii\;

"•• TV--tailored to fit .

Baltimore I. Detroit 4

MUwallkee 3, MirmeMJt.a 1
California 8, Kansas City l
nundly's Games

MilwEiukee (Haas
(Koosman 11-IZ)

1!).12)

at Minnesota

Baltimore (Stone 22-6) at Toronto (Mirabella
4-10 ), ( n)

New York {T\ant 6-9 ) at Boston (Drago S-S ),
(n)

Karw~~s City

(Leoll8rd 17-9) at California

(Frost«!), (n)
Only t~ames scheduled

CaseyKasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS
~'i til Naun

Warren· edges Marauders

J. R. WB.D'UIIey
David Kennedy
BrianWlU
Fred Young

JOHNNY A. BRAWNER, M. D.

in 1974. Only five other pitchers have
ever matched Gullickson's total in
nine innings.
Bill Stoneman held the nine-inning
strikeout record with 14, which he
achieved twice in 1971.
The victory maintained the Expos'
half-game lead over Philadelphia
Phillies in first place in the Eabt
Division. Bill Buckner was the only
Cub able to solve Gullickson. He
collected three of Chicago's four hits
and drove in both runs.

in the first inning provided Seaver
with all the l'l!ns he needed. Dave
Collins and Ken Griffey opened the
game with singles and scored when
Foster connected against Larry McWilliams, 9-11, sending a drive over
the left field fence.
·

"Everything McWilliams
was high and I had to get him
out," Cox said.
Seaver scattered eight
allowing two in only one inning, ·
recording his first shutout
season.
Seaver had "a super game,"
Bench. "It was a pleasure to
him tonight. He was fantastic.
"The Braves are trying real
to beat us," Bench said. "They
· ran into three good pitchers. Th&lt;ev'''"
probably trying so hard that lhP•v'r•
pressing a little."

WASHINGTON (AP) - Just as
: • radio stations tailor music to their
• listeners- !rom classical to country
- hundreds of new, low-powered
. ~ television channels could aim
' : programs at particular audiences
: ~ under a Federal Communications
~ Commission proposal.
' ;, The FCC proposed on Tuesday
, ~ authorizing creation of new stations
• in the UHF band, channels 14 to 83.
.. The mini-stations could go on the air
: virtually anywhere because most
~ areas have vacant UHF, or ultrahigh frequency, chaMels .
With a radius of perhaps 15 miles,
the new stations could direct their
programs at a specific audience,
such as a minority population in one
portion of a lar~e city or farmers in
, rural areas that can't support a
- regular station.
11
For smaller communities, it
means first local TV outlets or ad. ditional UHF outlets that might
someday be come full-service
; stations," FCC Chairman Charles D .
, Ferris said. "For the larger cities, it
: means additional choices from the
• TV fare they now get."
, The new type of station, FCC of• ficials said, could ultimately push

Langsville
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RIOT OF SAVINGS!

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Patricia Welty and daughter,
; Vikki, of Butler, Ohio spent the
weekend with her mother, Mae
• Crouser and sisters, Mary Hob. stetter and Alice Levingston.
Kelly Easter of Columbus , Ohio

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Harrisonville
Social News
Mrs. Frances Young and Mrs .
Lola Clark visited Wednesday
evening with Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Sicple, Albany.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs .
Bob Alkire were Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Walton , Pomeroy, and Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Ewing, Mason .
Dana Turner, Jr. , former resident

Removing label glue
By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY -A reader's Pointer once told how to remove the glue
left on the bottle after the label was
removed. Please let us have that
again.- MRS. E. L.
DEAR MRS. H.
Put a
L.
vinegar-soaked
cloth over the glue
that is left and in a
lew minutes you
should be able to
rub it off with
your finger.

CRAMER
· I believe the answer you referred
to was the same as in the following
letter from another reader. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I used several
things on my bathtub to remove the
glue left when the safety flower
decals were taken off, but nothing
worked. I was so provoked and
wrote to the company that makes
them, and they suggested spraying
one of those laundry spot and stain
removers and leaving it about two

hours before removing with a damp
cloth. It works great and if some
glue remains, just repeat. CHERYL
DEAR POLLY- I have two egg
separators that did .not function as
intended, so I decided to work out
something of my own. I used a small
funnel suspended in a container of
the proper height, put the egg in it
and used a spoon to hold the yolk
aside and the white went right down
the fUJl!lel easily. -RONALD
DEAR POLLY - I think some of
the readers might benefit from a
clever idea I dreamt up. I use old
boots that I no longer wear as
storage places in baby's nursery.
They ~~~&amp;ke great hiding places for
toys. I also have a blue pair [ keep in
the kitchen to hold oranges and other
fruits. A small hole can be made in
the top of a boot and then it will hang
on the wall. They are perfect for any
room in the house. - MARTIIA
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POIN·
TERS in care of this newspaper.

course materials and lunch on the
consecutive Saturdays. The
course will be given in the clinic at
the Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis, and for physicians It
carries Category I · Credit. To .
register before tomorrow evenins's
deadline, call 446-Q247 to contact
Mary Waugh, R.N., in the Education
Coordinator's Office at the Holz!!l'
Medical Center.

two

Columbus is spending a few days
with Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy
and Mr. and Mrs. BillMcEiroy,Jeff,
Joey, and Jessica.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley E. Johnson,
Tammy, Cheryl, Terry and Jerry
Holley were camping last week at
Forked Run.

Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey of
Albany were Sunday visitors of ~­
coin Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey, Sr.
returned recently from vacationing
in Buffalo and Niagara Falls, N.Y.,
Chatham, Ontario, Canada, Detroit,
Mich., and various points of interest
in Ohio.
Bryan Reeves of Chester spent a
few days with his grandmother,
Dorothy Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of

r .-.·~;;u-;'7·~-;;Ta~h~~
Florist Since 1957

The U.N. General Assembly aJ&gt;proved Dag Hammarskjold of
Sweden as secretary-general in 1953. ·

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PRESCRIPTIONS
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Sketching/Drawing
Calligraphy
Begining Shorthand
Personal Typing
Real Estate Finance
Beginning Sign Language

FLORIST

PH. 992-2644

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URNITURE
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352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist
;,..._.
_.._.._.._. _..

Time
Mon. 1 p.m. tillO p.m.
Mon. 6 p.m. til7 p.m.
Thur. 7 p.m. til10 p.m.
Tue~. 6 p.m. tillO p.m.
Tues. 7 p.m. tillO p.m.
Mon. 6 p.m. til9 p.m.

Ph. 245-5353, Ext. 255
You Must Registe~ Before4:JO P.M. Friday, Sept. 12th
"GIVE YOURSELF CREDIT"

.

LEVI'S

"Seasonal Fantasies" will be the competitive, is being done by Ms.
theme of artistic designs to be · Colvin at the invitation of the host
exhibited by Sharon Colvin, Proctor, club. Her emphasis will be on doing
W. Va . at the Shade Valley Councll your own thing and reflecting your
of Floral Arts flower show to be own thoughts and personality in
staged Saturday and Sunday at the arrangements.
The second non-competitive
Rock Springs fairgrounds in the
exhibit will be by Gwenda
grange hall.
Fergusonon Deco plants, the process
The class, which is non·
whereby plants are grown in a soil·
free system. She will·have a variety
of here, is in intensive care at Holzer of plants on display.
Medical Center with heart condition.
THe show will be open for viewing
Tamra Clark, Middleport, spent
by the public from I p.m. on Saturweekend with her grandparents, Mr . day when the judging begins to 6
and Mrs. Roy Wiseman,
p.m. and from 2 to 4 p.m. on Sunday.
Miss Ruth Mason from Illinois is
Special awards to be made at the
spending a lew weeks with her granshow are "best of show", "reserve
dmother, Mrs . Mae Mason .
best of show," ucreativity", "junior
James and Rodger Cotterill took a
best of show", "jwrior reserve,"
motorcycle tour out west. They also
"horticulture sweepstakes", and
saw Mt. St. Helen.
"junior horticulture sweepstakes."

COLLEGE CREDIT COURSES

A regisgration fee for the course is

$50, which covers the cost of the

Wolf Pen News Notes

'Seasonal Fantasies '
theme offlower fare

Charles II of England and
Scotland was crowned at Scone,
Scotland, in 1651, two years after the
execution of his father by a
parliamentary court.

Clinic, Ltd.

Register by phone, or for additional information, contact:

Ktnrllfft MCCUIIDIJib, R.Pb,
Chlrllt Rlffte, R . llth.
Ronald Haning, R. Ptl.

-

spent Wednesday night with Beth
and J o Hobstetter .
Mr. and Mrs. Don Poole and sons
of Columbus , Ohio spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Levingston and daughter, J ody.
Mae Crouser, Patricia Welty and
daughter, Vikki, Mary Hobstetter
and daughters, Beth and Jo visited
with relatives in West Virginia
Saturday.
The community was shocked and
saddened by the death of the little
eig ht year old Rathburn boy on
Friday in an auto accid~nt.

Polly's Pointers

faculty members are from several
area hospitals, including Lawrence
County General, Veterns MelJiorial
Hospital in Pomeroy, Oak Hill
Hospital, Pleasant Valley Hospital
in Pl. Pleasant, Lakin State Hospital
and the Holzer Medical Center, as
well as from the Goodyear Atomic
Plant at Piketon and the Holzer

Any physician, nurse, paramedic
or other allied health team member
responsible for delivering emergency ·cardiac care throughout this
region who wishes to register for the
Advanced Cardiac Ufe Support
Provider Course given on two successive Saturdays, Oct. 11 and 18 in
Gallipolis, must do so before 5 p.m.
tomorrow, according to G. Wilson
Bowers, M.D., director.
A few openingS remain, with participants limited to 30 people. To be
eUgible to take this course, a health
care professional must hold cer·
tification in Basic Cardiac Ufe SuJ&gt;port within the past 12months, in accordance with the standards of the
American Heart Association.
Assisting Dr. Bowers as certified
instructors are three physicians, one
family nurse practitioner and six
registered nurses. This group of

MEIGS SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL

A TIMEX FOR EVERYONE

NOW IN STOCK AT

television toward the competition
that now Illllrks the radio industry.
That would mean a sharp change
for American television, which has
been built around the concept of a
limited number of full-service
stations , each expected to address
the needs of the entire population in
its city of license.
The rule change, which has attracted the ire of established
television broadcasters, must undergo public comment and another
FCC vote before becoming final. It
will be several weeks before the
corrunission even announces how
long it will accept public comments.
Ferris actually had hoped to go
even further Tuesday by gaining aJ)proval of a proposal to license new
VHF, or very-high ·f requency,
stations throughout the country. A
vote on the proposal , however, was
delayed after more than three hours
of debate focusing on the potential
harm that could result to existing
stations.
VHF stations operate on channels
2 to 13 and are generally less expensive and more attractive than
UHF stations.

Scott Lucas, Veterans Memorial
A soup supper was planned for
Hospital administrator, was guest
Friday, Sept. 19, with serving from S
speaker at the Monday night
to 7 p.m . Mrs. Lelia Haggy, Mrs.
meeting of the Pomeroy PTA.
Bernadette Anderson, Mrs.
Lucas talked to the group on the
Margaret Johnson, and Mrs. James
role of the hospital in the comRichmond are chairmen. The anmunity, detailing the facilities,
nual fall carnival was aMounced for
specializations, the 24 hour
Oct. 25, 6 to 10 p.m. Again this year
emergency room service, and the
Campbell soup labels and pop bottle
quality doctors, several of whom are
caps will be saved. It was also repornew.
ted that Post cereals has an offer in
Robert Barton presided at the
which playground equipment can be
meeting which opened with the
secured.
pledge to the flag and devotions by
A broken water fountain at the
the Rev . Floyd Shook, pastor of the
school was discussed and it was
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church.
decided that it should be either
Officers' reports were given . The
repaired or a new one installed. A
room count was won by Paula
plumber will be contacted.
Whitt's third grade.
There was a question about the
. It was noted that the lumber for
safety patrol advisor since the
teacher who fonnerly handled the
the bookshelves has been purchased
and prepared for the erection of the
patrol is now teaching in another
shelves once a permanent location
school. Robert Morris, principal,
has been chosen. John Dean, Sr. and
also noted that he has on display in
John Dean, Jr. are handling the job.
hia office a hardhat safety helmet
During the summer the PTA had a
which might be useful for safety
· games party which netted $77 and a
patrol members.
movie which brought in $150. The
The new teachers at the school ingroup discussed waiting WJtil after
troduced were Miss Becky Triplett,
football season to resume the
sixth grade, and Miss Donna Miller,
movies. Playground improvements · learning disability.
were noted with some equipment
Refreshments were served by the
being replaced and others relocated
officers .
during the summer months.

TO BE HELD AT

Offer Good Through .Monday;Sept . 15th

4" DRAIN PIPE

PH. 992·2811

Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Janey and
children, Joyce and Jay, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Ward and daughter,
Pammie and friend, Kinn Roush of
Pomeroy and Mrs. Sue Staats and
Mrs. Dora Richmond and children,
Paul and Becky of Cross Lane, W.
Va . went on a vacation trip to Myrtle
Beach and on to Daytona Beach ,
Fla . They a lso visited at Orlando,
Fla .
Elvira Barr spent Thursday at the
home of her son, Mr. a nd Mrs.
Duane Barr at Jackson, 0 .
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Pearson and
daughter, Belinda, of Waverly, 0 .
and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Morone and
children, Dickie and April, of
Marysville, 0 . are visiting Elvira
Barr.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Morone and
children went to Logan, W.Va. Monday to visit her uncle and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl White.

• •

Course registration due
Lucas speaks to PTA
at Monday eve meeting by 5 p.m. tomorrow

�4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Th~rsday, Sept. 11, 1980

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middieport-Pomeruy , 0., Thursday , Sept. 11 , 1980

Seaver pushes record over .500 mark with shutout win
ATLANTA (AP )- When Cincinnati right-hander Tom Seaver
has his pitch wor!ting, batters better
watch out:
"I was able to make my pitch
when I got into a jam," Seaver said
after shutting out the Atlanta Braves
3.() Wednesday night. "I used my
sinker mosUy, and I had that pretty
much Under control.''
"My overall pitching philosophy is
to try to go at least seven innings and
hold the other team to three runs or

less," Seaver said after the game.
" But, sure, I do go for the shutout. "
Seaver, 8-7 after suffering ann
trouble early in the season, got the
shutout for the 53rd Iinne in his
career.
Cincinnati Manager John McNamara called Seaver's per!onnance "outstanding" and added,
" he was in command all the way."
McNamara said, however, that
Seaver is past his peak as a pitcher.
· "I can't truthfully say he's at his
peak,'' McNamara said . "But he's

Dream OSU receiver
living dream offense
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMaUS-This is all a college
football dream lor Doug Donley.
"U somebody would have told me
·1-was going to catch 40 passes in one
season at Ohio State, I would have
laughed at them," said the
Buckeyes' fluid, swift wide receiver.
After all, Donley caught just one
pass his senior season at Cambridge, Ohio . His running, more than
2,500 yards of it in his career, is what
caught Woody Hayes' recruiting
eye.
"He recruited me as a tailback,
but said I might be a wide receiver
my freshman year, to keep me out of
contact because of my shoulder pin.
After my freshman year, I wanted to
move back to tailback," said the
· Ohio State senior.
Instead, with the arrival of
heralded
quarterback
Art
Schlichter, Donley remained at wide
receiver as a sophOiflOre. It was a
wiSe move. He now ranks as one of
the nation's prinne receivers.
· Donley accounted for 37 catches
and a school record 800 yards as a
junior. With Coach Earle Bruce
promising more passing for the toJ)ranked Buckeyes this fall, he is

e boxing promoter Don King says
the 15-roimd World Boxing
Association championship fight
featuring Larry Holmes and
Muhanunad Ali at Las Vegas'
Caesar's Palace Hotel Oct. 2 will
draw 25,000 fans.
He said Holmes and Ali will
split some $14 million for the one
night of work, and he predicted a
Holmes victory. ·
King has been on a nationwide
tour to promote the fight. He was
accompanied in Cleveland on
Wednesday
by
former
heavyweight champion Ken Norton, who is now a public relations
employee of Caesar's Palace.
"Ali is the greatest boxer of all
Iinne who took on the baddest

The Braves, 1-14 against the Reds
this year, remained eight games out,
but fell to 5t behind CinciMati.
"We've got to catch the Reds

before we catch anybody else,"
Braves Manager Bob Cox said when
asked about the fact that Atlanta
didn't fall too far behind the league
leaders. " We have to win every
series the rest of the way," he added.
"Everybody on the bench felt all
the way through the game that we'd
come back and win tonight. Our
relief pitchers did a super job," Cox
said.
They got an early chance.
George Foster's three-run homer

Expo strikeout artist whiffs
18 Cubs, 68 in 65 frames

likely to exceed that dream of 40
receptions in a single season.
Donley has remarkable speed. His
4.36 Iinne in the 46-yard dash, fastest
on the team, prompted his black
teammates to dub him, "White
Ughtning."
His hands are sure. He runs pass
routes well. But he believes his concentration may be just as big a plus.
" I drop some passes in practice
and the coaches get on me. But I
have no trouble concentrating in a
game. I didn't drop any easy ones
last year. That's my goal
again-catch all the easy ones and a
lew of the hard ones," said the communications major.
. Donley did not play in the 1979
opener against Syracuse because of
injuries, but he figures to be a prime
weapon Saturday when the
Orangemen visit Ohio State.
"On defense, they like to stop the
run. Pass defense is supposed to be a
weakness," he said of Syracuse,
beaten 31-3 by the Buckeyes a year
ago.
It will be the first on-the-field test
for the Buckeyes, ranked No. 1 two
straight weeks without playing a
game.

Holmes will win: Promoter
CLEVELAND (AP)-Talkativ-

more accomplished now and he's a
more complete pitcher now than he
was at his peak. He knows how to pitch."
The Reds swept their three-game ·
series with Atlanta to move within 2t
·games of f.,os Angeles and Houston,
who are tied lor the lead in the
National League's West Division.

boxers of his Iinne," King said at
. a press conference. But he said,
"Father Time has caught up with

Ali.' '
King said 22,000 seats already
have been sold for the fight. Ring
side seats are selling for $500.
Although he said Ali has a
chance at the victory, he said,
"Since I've painted a picture of
Ali as my brother and Holmes as
my son, I have to go with my

son.''
Ali is trying to regain his tiUe
for the fourth time.
·
King said he's taken fights to
every corner of the world and
that now he's hoping to bring
"s pectacular events to
Cleveland," his home town. He
· did not elaborate on his plans.

By Tbe Assodated Press
Bill Gullickson may turn out to be
a master of understatements as well
as strikeouts.
" I'm actually more excited about
getting the win than I am the
strikeouts. It was an innportant victory for us," said the rookie righthander, who came within one of the
major league strikeout mark for
nine innings Wednesday night when
he faMed 18 Chicago Cubs to pace
the Montreal Expos to a 4-2 victory.
"I had good control of the fastball,
both inside and out, and I was
staying ahead of the hitters," said
Gullickson, who has struck out 68
batters in his last 65 innings.
Expos catcher Gary Carter said
the performance put Gullickson ''up
there with the Koufaxes and the
Drysdales, and any other strikeout
pitcher... He's just a rookie. Look
how many years he has ahead of
him. II
Montreal Manager Dick Williams
said it was "the best pitching performance I've seen this year."
In other National League games
Wednesday, Cincinnati beat Atlanta
3-ll, Philadelphia shutout New York
!Hl, Pittsburgh nipped St. Louis 7~.
Houston outlasted Los Angeles 6-5 in
12 innings and San Diego downed
San Francisco 4-2.
Gullickson's performance was a
major league record for a rookie, He
fell one short of the overall mark of
19 shared by four pitchers.
Charles Sweeney of Providence
was the first to fan 19 batters in 1884.
His feat was matched by Steve
Carlton with St. Louis in 1969, Tom
Seaver with the New York Mets in
1970 and Nolan Ryan with California

The Meigs Marauders golf team
lost a tough match to Warren Local
in an extra-hole playoff. Both teams
had 171 after 18 holes at Riverside
Golf Club. J. R. Wamsley and David
Kennedy each shot 41s to share match medalist honors. Meigs is · 2-4
overall, and 1-3 in the SEOAL.
Individual scores:
MEIGS 171

41
41
44
45

Scott Harrison

48

WARREN LOCAL l7l
Wes Kaufman

42

~ttW~

~

Jim Brant

43
43
46

nm MlllllhY

ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS PRACTICE
IN

Matt Proctor
WARREN WINS ONE-HOLE PLAYOFF

Melt!•' Score: 2-4; SEOALRecord 1-3.

Melf!s' next match, 1bursday, Sept. 11 Meigs vs. Belpre at Oxbow Golf Course.

GENERAL SURGERY

Astros 6, Dodgers 5
Houston left fielder Jose Cruz
clubbed a solo home run over the
right field fence in the 12th inning to
send the Astros into a first-place tie
with the Dodgers in the National
League West.
The victory gave the Astros a
sweep of the tw~rgame series.
The Dodgers had taken a ~ lead
in tilt&gt; top of the 11th when pinch hitter Gary Thomasson drilled a tw~r
run single before Houston rallied to
tie.
Pirates 7, Cardinals 6
Manager Chuck Tanner was brimming with optimism after the Pittsburgh Pirates snapped their losing
streak at five games.
"We're going to win it, because
we're playing each other in the
division," TaMer said of the chase
in the National League East.
Offsetting a three-run homer by
St. Louis' Keith Hernandez, third
place Pittsburgh stayed 3~-games
behind Montreal and three games
behind Philadelphia with 22 games
remaining.

When Johnny Bench followed with
a single, McWilliams was replaced
by Preston Hanna, who yielded the
Reds' fifth hit of the inning, a single
by Ray Knight, before getting the
third out.

WITH OFFICES LOCATED AT

team total to defeat second place
Ironton's 182. The local Marauders
shot a 185. Jackson posted a 187.
Craig Goldsberry of Athens was
the medalist with a 36, while Meigs'
Fred Young shot 43 to lead Meigs.
Meigs, 2-3 overall and 1-3 in the
SEOAL, hosted Warren Local
yesterday evening at Riverside Golf
Course in Mason.
Individual scoring:
First- Athens; Team totall64 Craig Goldsberry 36, Tinn Kerr 42,
Judd Stephenson 42, Randy Nogrady
44, Dave Matthews 45.
Second - Ironton; Team total182
-Jay .Wolfe 43; Randy Johnson 44;
Steve Hurley 46 ; Brian Layne 49;
Steve Koening 53.
Third - Meigs; Team total185 Fred Young 43, Scott Harrison 46,
Brian Will 47, J. R: Wamsley 49 ,
David KeMedy 50.
Fourth- Jackson; Team totall87
- Doug Miller 43, Eric Coyan 46,
Jeff Moore 49, Ed King 49, Scott
Massie 53.

Your Libraries
By ElleBell
Meigs County Librarian
Bill Wickline, from the Meigs County Auditor's office, was kind
enough to come to the library one recent afternoon to explain why the
libraries received less money from the intangibles tax this year even
though more money was collected.
''Now, wait a minute,'' you say. ''What's this 'intangible tax'?''
Good question. Public libraries in the state of ohio are paid for
mostly by a tax on investments like stocks and bonds. The lax is collected by the county and distributed to libraries (and sometimes other
pubUc groups) in the county. In Meigs County, where the libraries
. receive aU of the intangibles tax money (after deductions), .6 percent
of the people pay the intangibles tax - which means that .6 percent of
the people !Ire paying for library service.
Well now, back to Bill Wickline and his explanation . Bill explained
that the County Auditor's office and the County Treasurer's office get
a percentagve of all the tax money .collected by th.,ounty . That's
what pays their e&lt;penses, I guess. Anyway, the per~ntage charged
for the auditor's and treasurer's fees goes down as the amount collected gose up, especially after the first$1 million.
Since the county's tax collections as a whole were lower this year
than last year, the rate charged by the auditor's office and the
treasurer's office was higher. Because of that, the libraries had less
tax money to spend than last year even though slightly more money
was collected.
Libraries are just like people, in some respects. They have to pay
lor repairs, light, heat, water and sewer service, books, magazines,
records, and the other things they need to keep going. Just like you, the
libraries re paying more for what they need than they used to pay.
Their expenses are rising and their income is going down. That's why
your libraries are asking for a one-half mill tax levy. They must have
more money just to keep things as they were !
In future weeks we'll have more about the upcoming levy. If you
have any questions you would like to have answered in this column,
please address them to Ellen Bell at the Meigs County Public Ubrary,
200 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH. 45769. And if you would like to help
urging people to support the levy, send your name and phone number
or address to the Library Levy Committee at the same address. (You
might like to call instead of writing; If so, the phone number is 9925813). Your libraries need your help.

'"

..

...

STANDINGS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
~T

Montreal
Philadelphia
Pitill burgh

St. Louis
New York
Chicago

Won l.ost Pct. GB
76 63
.$47 75

63

'h:

.M3

73 66
62 67
59 Ill
&gt;4 &amp;I
WEST
79 60
79 60
77 6.1

.521
.449
.424
.391

31&gt;
131.2
17
211&gt;

Howton
.568
Los Angeles
.568 .550
21,2
Cincinrulti
.Atlanta
71 66
.5 Jl
8
San Francisco
67 72
-~
12
San Diet~o
&amp;2 78
.443 21"2
Weclotsday's Games
Montreal4, Chicago 2
Cincinnati 3, Atlanta 0
Philadelphia 5, New York 0
Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 6
Uouston 6, Lo.s Ant~:eles 5, 12 irtnings
San Diet~o4, San Fnmcisco 2
Tbunday's Games
Chicago (Martz ~ll at Montreal (l..ea 5-5)
Phi41delphia (Ruthven 14-9) at New York
(Burrls1·10)

Pittsburgh (Blyleven 7·11 ) at St.Louis (Sykes
6-10)
Only games scheduled

New York

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
Won Lost Pet. GB
.62S -

Baltimore
Boston
MUwaukee
Cleveland
Detroit
Toronto

87
64
75

"55
61

74

fi7

71

67

.604

3

68

.551
.525
.514
.511

101&gt;
14
151&gt;
16

59

8Cl

.424

28

67
70
69

53
71
70

.621

61
59
5S

79
79

71

WEST

Karu.as City
Oakland

Texas

Minnesota
Chicago
California
Se.atUe

83
51 68
WedDHday's Games
Chicago 4, Seattle 3
Oakland 3, Texas!
New York 7, Toronto 6
Cleveland 7, Boston 4

.496

17&amp;;,

.496
.436
.428
.399
.367

171,/a
36
'Il
31
:lii\;

"•• TV--tailored to fit .

Baltimore I. Detroit 4

MUwallkee 3, MirmeMJt.a 1
California 8, Kansas City l
nundly's Games

MilwEiukee (Haas
(Koosman 11-IZ)

1!).12)

at Minnesota

Baltimore (Stone 22-6) at Toronto (Mirabella
4-10 ), ( n)

New York {T\ant 6-9 ) at Boston (Drago S-S ),
(n)

Karw~~s City

(Leoll8rd 17-9) at California

(Frost«!), (n)
Only t~ames scheduled

CaseyKasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS
~'i til Naun

Warren· edges Marauders

J. R. WB.D'UIIey
David Kennedy
BrianWlU
Fred Young

JOHNNY A. BRAWNER, M. D.

in 1974. Only five other pitchers have
ever matched Gullickson's total in
nine innings.
Bill Stoneman held the nine-inning
strikeout record with 14, which he
achieved twice in 1971.
The victory maintained the Expos'
half-game lead over Philadelphia
Phillies in first place in the Eabt
Division. Bill Buckner was the only
Cub able to solve Gullickson. He
collected three of Chicago's four hits
and drove in both runs.

in the first inning provided Seaver
with all the l'l!ns he needed. Dave
Collins and Ken Griffey opened the
game with singles and scored when
Foster connected against Larry McWilliams, 9-11, sending a drive over
the left field fence.
·

"Everything McWilliams
was high and I had to get him
out," Cox said.
Seaver scattered eight
allowing two in only one inning, ·
recording his first shutout
season.
Seaver had "a super game,"
Bench. "It was a pleasure to
him tonight. He was fantastic.
"The Braves are trying real
to beat us," Bench said. "They
· ran into three good pitchers. Th&lt;ev'''"
probably trying so hard that lhP•v'r•
pressing a little."

WASHINGTON (AP) - Just as
: • radio stations tailor music to their
• listeners- !rom classical to country
- hundreds of new, low-powered
. ~ television channels could aim
' : programs at particular audiences
: ~ under a Federal Communications
~ Commission proposal.
' ;, The FCC proposed on Tuesday
, ~ authorizing creation of new stations
• in the UHF band, channels 14 to 83.
.. The mini-stations could go on the air
: virtually anywhere because most
~ areas have vacant UHF, or ultrahigh frequency, chaMels .
With a radius of perhaps 15 miles,
the new stations could direct their
programs at a specific audience,
such as a minority population in one
portion of a lar~e city or farmers in
, rural areas that can't support a
- regular station.
11
For smaller communities, it
means first local TV outlets or ad. ditional UHF outlets that might
someday be come full-service
; stations," FCC Chairman Charles D .
, Ferris said. "For the larger cities, it
: means additional choices from the
• TV fare they now get."
, The new type of station, FCC of• ficials said, could ultimately push

Langsville
'

Values To 79'
HOUSEHOLD

GADGETS
RIOT OF SAVINGS!

:
•
',

Patricia Welty and daughter,
; Vikki, of Butler, Ohio spent the
weekend with her mother, Mae
• Crouser and sisters, Mary Hob. stetter and Alice Levingston.
Kelly Easter of Columbus , Ohio

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Mon. rtlru Sit. I:OOa.m. to' p.m.

POMEROY OH.

Harrisonville
Social News
Mrs. Frances Young and Mrs .
Lola Clark visited Wednesday
evening with Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Sicple, Albany.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs .
Bob Alkire were Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Walton , Pomeroy, and Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Ewing, Mason .
Dana Turner, Jr. , former resident

Removing label glue
By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY -A reader's Pointer once told how to remove the glue
left on the bottle after the label was
removed. Please let us have that
again.- MRS. E. L.
DEAR MRS. H.
Put a
L.
vinegar-soaked
cloth over the glue
that is left and in a
lew minutes you
should be able to
rub it off with
your finger.

CRAMER
· I believe the answer you referred
to was the same as in the following
letter from another reader. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I used several
things on my bathtub to remove the
glue left when the safety flower
decals were taken off, but nothing
worked. I was so provoked and
wrote to the company that makes
them, and they suggested spraying
one of those laundry spot and stain
removers and leaving it about two

hours before removing with a damp
cloth. It works great and if some
glue remains, just repeat. CHERYL
DEAR POLLY- I have two egg
separators that did .not function as
intended, so I decided to work out
something of my own. I used a small
funnel suspended in a container of
the proper height, put the egg in it
and used a spoon to hold the yolk
aside and the white went right down
the fUJl!lel easily. -RONALD
DEAR POLLY - I think some of
the readers might benefit from a
clever idea I dreamt up. I use old
boots that I no longer wear as
storage places in baby's nursery.
They ~~~&amp;ke great hiding places for
toys. I also have a blue pair [ keep in
the kitchen to hold oranges and other
fruits. A small hole can be made in
the top of a boot and then it will hang
on the wall. They are perfect for any
room in the house. - MARTIIA
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POIN·
TERS in care of this newspaper.

course materials and lunch on the
consecutive Saturdays. The
course will be given in the clinic at
the Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis, and for physicians It
carries Category I · Credit. To .
register before tomorrow evenins's
deadline, call 446-Q247 to contact
Mary Waugh, R.N., in the Education
Coordinator's Office at the Holz!!l'
Medical Center.

two

Columbus is spending a few days
with Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy
and Mr. and Mrs. BillMcEiroy,Jeff,
Joey, and Jessica.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley E. Johnson,
Tammy, Cheryl, Terry and Jerry
Holley were camping last week at
Forked Run.

Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey of
Albany were Sunday visitors of ~­
coin Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey, Sr.
returned recently from vacationing
in Buffalo and Niagara Falls, N.Y.,
Chatham, Ontario, Canada, Detroit,
Mich., and various points of interest
in Ohio.
Bryan Reeves of Chester spent a
few days with his grandmother,
Dorothy Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of

r .-.·~;;u-;'7·~-;;Ta~h~~
Florist Since 1957

The U.N. General Assembly aJ&gt;proved Dag Hammarskjold of
Sweden as secretary-general in 1953. ·

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Sundly IO: JOto 12:30 anct 5 tot .m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. tft· lfiJ

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Credits
3 hours
1 hour
3 hours
4 hours
:! hours
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Sketching/Drawing
Calligraphy
Begining Shorthand
Personal Typing
Real Estate Finance
Beginning Sign Language

FLORIST

PH. 992-2644

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URNITURE
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Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
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352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist
;,..._.
_.._.._.._. _..

Time
Mon. 1 p.m. tillO p.m.
Mon. 6 p.m. til7 p.m.
Thur. 7 p.m. til10 p.m.
Tue~. 6 p.m. tillO p.m.
Tues. 7 p.m. tillO p.m.
Mon. 6 p.m. til9 p.m.

Ph. 245-5353, Ext. 255
You Must Registe~ Before4:JO P.M. Friday, Sept. 12th
"GIVE YOURSELF CREDIT"

.

LEVI'S

"Seasonal Fantasies" will be the competitive, is being done by Ms.
theme of artistic designs to be · Colvin at the invitation of the host
exhibited by Sharon Colvin, Proctor, club. Her emphasis will be on doing
W. Va . at the Shade Valley Councll your own thing and reflecting your
of Floral Arts flower show to be own thoughts and personality in
staged Saturday and Sunday at the arrangements.
The second non-competitive
Rock Springs fairgrounds in the
exhibit will be by Gwenda
grange hall.
Fergusonon Deco plants, the process
The class, which is non·
whereby plants are grown in a soil·
free system. She will·have a variety
of here, is in intensive care at Holzer of plants on display.
Medical Center with heart condition.
THe show will be open for viewing
Tamra Clark, Middleport, spent
by the public from I p.m. on Saturweekend with her grandparents, Mr . day when the judging begins to 6
and Mrs. Roy Wiseman,
p.m. and from 2 to 4 p.m. on Sunday.
Miss Ruth Mason from Illinois is
Special awards to be made at the
spending a lew weeks with her granshow are "best of show", "reserve
dmother, Mrs . Mae Mason .
best of show," ucreativity", "junior
James and Rodger Cotterill took a
best of show", "jwrior reserve,"
motorcycle tour out west. They also
"horticulture sweepstakes", and
saw Mt. St. Helen.
"junior horticulture sweepstakes."

COLLEGE CREDIT COURSES

A regisgration fee for the course is

$50, which covers the cost of the

Wolf Pen News Notes

'Seasonal Fantasies '
theme offlower fare

Charles II of England and
Scotland was crowned at Scone,
Scotland, in 1651, two years after the
execution of his father by a
parliamentary court.

Clinic, Ltd.

Register by phone, or for additional information, contact:

Ktnrllfft MCCUIIDIJib, R.Pb,
Chlrllt Rlffte, R . llth.
Ronald Haning, R. Ptl.

-

spent Wednesday night with Beth
and J o Hobstetter .
Mr. and Mrs. Don Poole and sons
of Columbus , Ohio spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Levingston and daughter, J ody.
Mae Crouser, Patricia Welty and
daughter, Vikki, Mary Hobstetter
and daughters, Beth and Jo visited
with relatives in West Virginia
Saturday.
The community was shocked and
saddened by the death of the little
eig ht year old Rathburn boy on
Friday in an auto accid~nt.

Polly's Pointers

faculty members are from several
area hospitals, including Lawrence
County General, Veterns MelJiorial
Hospital in Pomeroy, Oak Hill
Hospital, Pleasant Valley Hospital
in Pl. Pleasant, Lakin State Hospital
and the Holzer Medical Center, as
well as from the Goodyear Atomic
Plant at Piketon and the Holzer

Any physician, nurse, paramedic
or other allied health team member
responsible for delivering emergency ·cardiac care throughout this
region who wishes to register for the
Advanced Cardiac Ufe Support
Provider Course given on two successive Saturdays, Oct. 11 and 18 in
Gallipolis, must do so before 5 p.m.
tomorrow, according to G. Wilson
Bowers, M.D., director.
A few openingS remain, with participants limited to 30 people. To be
eUgible to take this course, a health
care professional must hold cer·
tification in Basic Cardiac Ufe SuJ&gt;port within the past 12months, in accordance with the standards of the
American Heart Association.
Assisting Dr. Bowers as certified
instructors are three physicians, one
family nurse practitioner and six
registered nurses. This group of

MEIGS SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL

A TIMEX FOR EVERYONE

NOW IN STOCK AT

television toward the competition
that now Illllrks the radio industry.
That would mean a sharp change
for American television, which has
been built around the concept of a
limited number of full-service
stations , each expected to address
the needs of the entire population in
its city of license.
The rule change, which has attracted the ire of established
television broadcasters, must undergo public comment and another
FCC vote before becoming final. It
will be several weeks before the
corrunission even announces how
long it will accept public comments.
Ferris actually had hoped to go
even further Tuesday by gaining aJ)proval of a proposal to license new
VHF, or very-high ·f requency,
stations throughout the country. A
vote on the proposal , however, was
delayed after more than three hours
of debate focusing on the potential
harm that could result to existing
stations.
VHF stations operate on channels
2 to 13 and are generally less expensive and more attractive than
UHF stations.

Scott Lucas, Veterans Memorial
A soup supper was planned for
Hospital administrator, was guest
Friday, Sept. 19, with serving from S
speaker at the Monday night
to 7 p.m . Mrs. Lelia Haggy, Mrs.
meeting of the Pomeroy PTA.
Bernadette Anderson, Mrs.
Lucas talked to the group on the
Margaret Johnson, and Mrs. James
role of the hospital in the comRichmond are chairmen. The anmunity, detailing the facilities,
nual fall carnival was aMounced for
specializations, the 24 hour
Oct. 25, 6 to 10 p.m. Again this year
emergency room service, and the
Campbell soup labels and pop bottle
quality doctors, several of whom are
caps will be saved. It was also repornew.
ted that Post cereals has an offer in
Robert Barton presided at the
which playground equipment can be
meeting which opened with the
secured.
pledge to the flag and devotions by
A broken water fountain at the
the Rev . Floyd Shook, pastor of the
school was discussed and it was
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church.
decided that it should be either
Officers' reports were given . The
repaired or a new one installed. A
room count was won by Paula
plumber will be contacted.
Whitt's third grade.
There was a question about the
. It was noted that the lumber for
safety patrol advisor since the
teacher who fonnerly handled the
the bookshelves has been purchased
and prepared for the erection of the
patrol is now teaching in another
shelves once a permanent location
school. Robert Morris, principal,
has been chosen. John Dean, Sr. and
also noted that he has on display in
John Dean, Jr. are handling the job.
hia office a hardhat safety helmet
During the summer the PTA had a
which might be useful for safety
· games party which netted $77 and a
patrol members.
movie which brought in $150. The
The new teachers at the school ingroup discussed waiting WJtil after
troduced were Miss Becky Triplett,
football season to resume the
sixth grade, and Miss Donna Miller,
movies. Playground improvements · learning disability.
were noted with some equipment
Refreshments were served by the
being replaced and others relocated
officers .
during the summer months.

TO BE HELD AT

Offer Good Through .Monday;Sept . 15th

4" DRAIN PIPE

PH. 992·2811

Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Janey and
children, Joyce and Jay, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Ward and daughter,
Pammie and friend, Kinn Roush of
Pomeroy and Mrs. Sue Staats and
Mrs. Dora Richmond and children,
Paul and Becky of Cross Lane, W.
Va . went on a vacation trip to Myrtle
Beach and on to Daytona Beach ,
Fla . They a lso visited at Orlando,
Fla .
Elvira Barr spent Thursday at the
home of her son, Mr. a nd Mrs.
Duane Barr at Jackson, 0 .
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Pearson and
daughter, Belinda, of Waverly, 0 .
and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Morone and
children, Dickie and April, of
Marysville, 0 . are visiting Elvira
Barr.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Morone and
children went to Logan, W.Va. Monday to visit her uncle and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl White.

• •

Course registration due
Lucas speaks to PTA
at Monday eve meeting by 5 p.m. tomorrow

�&amp;-Tue Daily Sentinel, Mid&lt;lleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 11, 1980

The dark side
of hazing.
.

• •

'

BOSTON (API - Fraternity
haZing, a rite of passage for
generations of college pledges, is
ccrnlng back into vogue after a
brush with extinction during the
student activist days of the early
1970s.
This fall's initiations do not approach the sometimes brutal rituals
common 15 or 20 years ago, officials
say, but hazing has become enough
of a problem again for virtually all
of the national fraternities to forbid
it.
However, fraternity executives
concede t11at the insults ,
browbeating, silly tasks, forced
exercises and . other lessons in
hwnility will probably continue
despite their efforts.
"If there Is one single thing that Is
a black mark against fraternities, it
Is hazing," said Stephen Siders,
executive director of Alpha Tau
Omega. "The loss of life because of
some stupid fraternity ritual Is unforgivable."
But deatha occasionally do '!"cur
during hazing, the period of physical
and mental Intimidation that leads
to full membership Ina fraternity.
The latest was Aug. 31 at the
University of Lowell in
Massach118etts. Stephen Call, 19, a
pledge at Delta Kappa Phi, collapsed during calisthenics and died of
hyperthermia, overheating the
body.
The state university ordered
initiation rites ·stopped at its seven
fraternities and named a committee
to investigate the organizations.
CaD's death was the 15th hazing
fatabity In the past 2 and a half
years, according to Eileen Stvenii.
Mrs. Stevens of Sayville, N.Y., has
made the abolition of hazing a personal crusade - her own son died
during an Initiation prank In 1978.
"Very often they are called

isolated incidents or unfortunate accidents," she said. " They are
neither. Accidents are spontaneous,
and these hazings are premeditated
and planned and perpetuated in the
name of tradition. It's happening far
more often than people realize.''
Leaders of national fraternities
say the rebirth of hazing is an unfortunate . b'yproduct of th e
organiZations' returning popularity.
In 1971, the total active membership of the nation's fraternities
had fallen to about 139,000, according to the National Interfraternity Conference. This year,
it is expected to reach 245,000 members.
"I think there has been an increase in the number of incidents in
the last couple of years," conceded
Ken Tracey, executive director of
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, the nation's
largest fraternity. "People wouldn't
put up with it in the early '70s. The
fraternities- were worried about survival in those days, and they
couldn't concern themselves with
hazing."

Added Fred Yoder of Sigma Chi:
"It's a problem that is more potentially prevalent now than it was 10
years ago. There is more competition to get into fraternities, and
today's student tends not to be as
questioning, as critical, as many
were in the early '70s."
Most national fraternities punish
local chapters that violate their antihazing rules. Last year, SAE suspended its.chapters at the University of
Arizona and Gettysburg- (Pa.)
College for hazing.
Some fraternities have diminished
hazing by substituti-ng '.'Help Week"
for "Hell Week." Pledges organize
charity fund-raising events, blood
drives and work with retarded
children.

OU offers course locally
in biology and psychology

Not everyone even agrees what
constitutes hazing.
"If you make a kid learn the
names of 50 prominent fraternity
members when he should be doing
his political science, I consider that
hazing," said Geoff Fitzgerald,
executive director of Theta Delta
Chi. " We simply have a blanket
policy that encourages houses to do
nQthing that in any way demeans or
embarrasses or physically or
emotionally strains any kid who
wants to join the fraternity."
Some of the incidents are far more
serious than emotional strain,
however.
At Ithaca College in New York last
April, a boy. died of hyperthennia
during strenuous exercises that
were part of fraternity hazing.
Another was killed at Louisi-ana
State last year when he was struck
by a car as a group of pledges
walked blindfolded across a road at
night.
"In over 90 percent of the incidents, alcohol' is involved," said
Mrs. Stevens. "So when you are
dealing with peer pressure, secrecy
and alcohol abuse, you've got a very
dangerous combination."
Mrs. Stevens formed an antihazing organization, called Committee to Halt Useless College
Killings, or CHUCK, ilfter her son,
Chuck, died during pledge training
at Alfred University in Alfred, N.Y.
She said her son and two other
pledges were locked in the trunk of a
car and told they could not get out
until they drank a pint of bourbon, a
six-pack of beer and a fifth of wine.
Chuck died of alcohol poisoning and
fluid in the lungs.
This year, New York and New Jersey passed anti-hazing laws. Similar
rules are on the hooks in Texas,
California, Virginia, Wisconsin,
Wyoming and North Carolina.

Social Calendar

Area residents now have the op- and the Future of Man, which began
portunity to take courses in Ab- last Tuesday evening. It will meet on
nonnal Psychology as well as consecutive Tuesdays, also from 6
Biology, offered by Ohio University · p.m. until 10 p.m. for the fall quarand taught locally at Davis Hall, the ters, taught by Dr. Weldon Witters.
home of the Holzer Medical Center The course includes . human
·School of Nursing at 514 First sexuality, physiological effects of
Avenue In downtown Gallipolis.
environmental pollutants, drugs of
The Abnormal Psychology course, abuse and introduction to advances
• referred to as Psychology 332, is a In biological technology that in·
five credit hour course. It will begin fluence the future of man. It, too, is a
on Monday evening, Sept. 15, and be fence credit bourse course.
: held from 6 p.m. until 10 p.m. each
Tuition for each course is $33 per
: Monday evening for the fall quarter. credit hour. To register or secure adInstructing the course will be ditional information, call the Office
Howard Beazel from OU's of Continuing Education, 614-:i!MPsychology Department. The class 6876, or toll-free Ohio, l-800-2112-4400.
study and discussions will Include
Having these courses available at
behavior disorders, their causes and Davis Hall for area residents
• the effects on pe'rsons, families and provides a unique opportunity for
:· society.
college credit without long distance
• Openings are still available In the traveL
: Zoology Course 390, entitled Biology

Sepi.U, ...

:
•
•
•
•

•"
•
•
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••
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Manr v6an, opinions and aWtudea to which
you prevtoualy adhered otrongly will be altered
ln the comlng year. Your new ()Utlook wW be far
more productive and positive.
VIRGO IAq. -,c. !!I Pri&gt;toct your oeU·
lnle......, today, but be wary llf decelYin&amp; your·
aeU into believing you're eutiUed to more than
you really are. face the facts reau.tlcally. Find
out PKn of what lies ahead fvr you in the year
loUowlnl your blrtlldly by llelldinR for your copy
crt A.ttto-Graph. MaU Sl fvr each W A.stro-Graph,
Bcm 41t, Radio City Station, N. Y. lOOlt. Be 1ure
to IP"'UY birth date.
UBRA ~Sept. f.S..(kt. !.U Beeause yvu're a bit
too

:

SCORPIO

Mobiie Home Trades Welcome
Show Models

t4-N!n', ZZJ Outaide ~terests

or actlviUes could coat you more today than you
· had budieted ro.- than. If you go overboard
: you·u havevnly youralr to blame.
• SA.GmARIUS (Nin'. %3-Det'!. ZU It's very
• euy for you to get off-track today where im, portant Koala are concerned. Unless you want
IOIDe'thin8 b.dly eoo..gh, your chances are a
!rille slim.
CAPRIC08N (De&lt;. IWu. Ul Underplay

KINGSBURY
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~

"For the First in Manufacuted Housing"
1100 E. Main
992-7034
. Pomeroy, 0.

your recent aCCOOtPliahments, or you may &amp;ive
one who la jealous of you 1rlst for the mill. thls 1!
not a 1oodday to pat )'OUf'3eH on the back.
' AQUARIUS IJu. 11-Feb. Dl There's a
posslbWty you may not accomplish everything
_ you hope to "o today becaute of lndeclsiveneas .

• Anydeciakl'l.i.J betterthannoneatall.
~
PISCF.B ~Feb. zt.MJrt:h Zll) Be very eKpliclt
.. and detailed ln giving instructions tv anyvne per.. forming wortl: or servtces for you today. They
• ' may nut carnprehend your desires.
• ' AROl8 1Mordl tl·Aprll U) Yourwo&lt;t will sui·
"' · fer todly lf yau attempt to do tasks for which you
• have Uttle or no enthusiasm. Shelve such projec:

Plans have been completed for the
open church wedding of Carla Jean
Cowdery, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James Cowdery, Reedsville, and
PatrickSoulsby, son of Mr. and Mrs.
JamesSoulsby, Pomeroy.
The wedding will take place at
1:30 p.m. Saturday at the Reedsville
Methodis.t Church with the Rev.
Richard Thomas performing the
double ring ceremony. A reception
will be held following the wedding at
the Riverview School. Music by Mrs.
Kay Balderson, pianist, and James
Soulsby and Sue Reed, vocalists, will
begin at I p.m.

Sunday school
students visit
bedfast teacher
Keno Church of Christ Sunday
school students of Mrs. Lettie McCain were taken to her home Sunday
for a visit. Mrs. McCain is reupceratlng from surgery.
Mrs. Mary Newell, Mrs. Darlene
Newell, · Mrs. Tammy Bales, and
Mrs. Sandra Massar took Lora
Osborn, Joy 11nd Jay Swain, Wesley
Holter, Toby Curtis, Karen Morris,
Scotty, Misty, Mike and Jeannie
Newell, Rex Justis and Keith
Weaver to the McCain home.
After Sunday school members of
the church went to the Forked Run
State Park for a picnic. In the group
were Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Swain and
son, Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Holter, son, Wesley, and daughter,
Marty, Joy and Jay Swain, Mrs.
Esta White, Mr. and Mr John
Newell, Jeff, Scotty, Misty and
Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Newell, Jeannie, Mae, Scott and Rex
Justis, Kaen Morris, Mr. and Mrs.
Herald Osborne and Gary, Mr. and
Mrs. Gale Osborne and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bales, Terry and
Toby Curtis, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Newell, Mrs. Marcia Keller and
Mrs. Erma Newland.

course.
~
At 7:30 p.m., Pattie Rudiger,
professional Tai-Chi Instructor, will
demonstrate this relaxing nonstrenuous form of total body exercise.
For more information on the Open
House, or on any of the 51 Leisure
Time Classes and Activities, contact
the Lifelong Learning Office of Continuing Education, 309 Tupper Hall,
Ohio University, Athens, OH 411701;
telephone 614/594-68'16 or 1-300-2024408, toll fee In Ohio.

ONE DAY ONLY!
SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER 13TH

OPEN
10 AM TIL 10 PM
OPEN SUNDAY 10 A.M TIL 9 P.M .

1------------------------.BARGAIN MATINEES ON ~T' si/N
AU. SEATS JUST Sf. 50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY S_f.40
531 JACKSON PIKE · AL35 r.DRTH - Phonli 446· 452&lt;1

.,

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LEO (:Jaly ZS.Aq. Z!) Careless manag:ement
~s today could result ln an un• necessary loss. Don't lake gambles. Keep an eye

.•

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: on yow- possessions.

PI'OMEETS

The Rutiand PTO met Monday
night at the school with recognition
of parents and teachers highlighting
: the meeting. Several ajJ(jvities were
- discussed. PTO meetings were set
for the second Monday of each month. Parents are urged to attend.

TO MEET FRIDAY
_ Mary Shrine :rT, White Shrine of
• Jerusalem will meet Friday night at
" 8 p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic Tem, pie. A school of instruction will be
held. All offieers are urged to attend.
There will be potluck refreshments.

BOYS' STYL£S IN SUPERMAN, BOBA TILT,
DARlH VADER: RASH, GREEN lANTERN

AND SPIDERMA_N.
.
GIRlS' STYLES IN R2·D2, C-3PO AND
WONDER WOMAN.

9 tll1
ALL LEGAL .
BEVERAGES SOLD

cancer),
- Disease of the small intestines
(malabsorption syndromes or
regional enteritis ),
- Diarrhea secondary to laxative
abuse and to other medications, and
- Stomach related diarrhea ,(occurring after stomach surgery, or
syndromes associated with excess
stomach acid secretion 1.
QUESTION: What should I do?
ANSWER : See your physician and
be prepared to describe your
diarrhea. What is the amount, color
and consistency of your stool? Is
there any blood, pus or mucus
present? Does it have an unusually
foul odor? How often do your bowels
move? Does it happen after meals or
in the middle of the night? Do you
have any pain? Where is the pain
and what is it like? Does the pain go
away after your bowels move or after you pass gas? Have you lost any
weight? Do you have a fever or any
other symptoms? Are you taking
.any medicines or eating new foods?
Have you traveled recently, particularly out of the country?
This history of your diarrhea may
provide clues to its cause and help to
identify the areas involved. A
thorough physical exam might
reveal other pieces of information.
Additionally, special examinations ·
such as proctosigmoidoscopy (a way
of looking directly at the lining of the
large bowel ), x-ray and laboratory
testing wi,ll contribute to the total
picture. Once the information is
collected and evaluated appropriate
treatment can be begun.

more common causes are:
- Functional disorders (irritable
bowel symdrome or emotional
diarrhea),
- Disease of the large bowel
(diverticulitis, ulcerative colitis or

Helen Help Us
Do 50 percent of all wives
have extramarital flings

•.

WHISKEY
RIVER

•,

'

5 PIECE GROUP

.FROM lANcAsrER, OHIO

You must be 21 or acjompanied bv/;~rents or legal guardian.

'

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629

By Rogert G. Slockmal,
D.O., Ph.D.
Assislllnl Professor of
Famlly Medidne
Ohio University College
of Osteopathic Medicine
QUESTION: I have had diarrhea
for several weeks and have tried
several different patent medicines
without relief. Do you think they are
no good?
ANSWER : Diarrhea preparations
do have a place in the treatment of
short term (acute) diarrhea, but you
seem to have a chronic condition
that deserves some closer scrutiny.
Diarrhea generally means an increase in amount, fluidity or
frequency of bowel movements
relative to your usual pattern. Acute
diarrhea is most commonly
associated with a gastrointestinal
virus, bacterial food poisoning or
food intolerance. It usually comes on
rapi&lt;lly and lasts for a short time. A
spontaneous recovery is brought
about by simply reducing the ora) intake and resting the Gl tract
(stomach, small intestine ahd large
Intestine). Medications are helpful if
you have to be out of the house and
can't risk embarrassment.
Chronic diarrhea could mean
possible disease of any of the various
parts of the Gl tract as well as
diseases of other systems that influence it in some way. Among the

BY HELEN BmTEL
gpe.,lal correspondent

Tomato Juice
Tossed Salad
8 oz. New York Strip
Baked Potato
Vegetable
Dessert

ENTERTAINMEN1
FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY
NIGHT

· CANCER (JaaeZl.Jiuly Zl) Avoid Lhecompany

church which has 12 sides, one for
each disciple, of the choirs and the
service. She concluded with a
congregational prayer.
Mrs. Pauline Horton was the
program leader and used as her
topic, "For All God's Children"
reading scripture from Isaiah and
Luke and commenting on "shalone"
which means, peace, justice, responsibility for the &gt;rOrld.
A playlet was then presented with
Mrs. Juanita Bachtel, Mrs. Euvetta
Bechtle, Mrs. Qeulah McComas,
Mrs. Mae Lambert, and Mrs. Betty
Jo Krawsczyn taking part. The skit
was a mission travel first landing in
Africa where there was a conversation with a woman whose
husband was out hunting work in the
city while she stayed home raising
the children, working in the fields,
and carrying water and wood. Then
it was on to Taiwan and the Erex
plant where workers were paid 15
cents an hour, then to Singapore,

South Korea and Mexico which encourage American companies to
build factories there, giving low
taxes and salary scales as an incentive.
The program material also made
reference to the Exxon Oil industry
which is said to be flourishing in
foreign countries, and told of women
in the United States who have to
keep house, raise families, and work
outside the home. A discussion was
also held on senior citizens on fixed
incomes faced with infla tion, and of
crime asso ci a ted with unemployment.
· Mrs. Horton read an article on
why big auto makers are producing
parts in Mexico causing the closng of
U.S. plants. The Lord's Prayer in
unison closed the meeting.
Cards were signed for Ms. Emma
Wayland and Mrs. Freda Mitch.
Hostesses were Mrs. Kathryn
Knight and Mrs. E. M. Wilson , with
Mrs. Dorothy Roller a contributing
hostess.

RETURN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Wright have
returned from a vacation in California. They visited several relatives
including Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hood
and family, and enjoyed sightseeing
around Los Angeles. The couple also
flew over Mt. St. Helens in
Washington, went to board the
Queen Mary at Long Beach, Ca lif.
and enroute home stopped for a visit
with Becky and· John Anderson at
Cambridge.

Marshall Artists Series to begin
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - Columnists Rowland Evans and Robert
Novak will open the 1900-81Marshall
Artists Series' Forum programming
on Wednesday, Sept. 17 at 8 p.m. in
Old Main Auditorium with a
discussion oq "Politics: National
and International."
"For this first event , we not only
will be selling season memberships
for the Forum Series, but also individual ti.ckets for this one
program," Mrs. Nancy P. Hindsley,
MU cultural events coordinator, announced today.
"With the presidential and general
elections coming up in November,
we thought more people might be interested in hearing these outstanding political journalists," she
said.
Season membership tickets are
·available at $24 each from the Ar·
lists Series Office in · Memorial
Student Center Room 2W38 and may

be purchased at the door on Sept. 17.
The upcoming Forum season will
include: film-lecture visits to
Afghanistan, Greece, London, New
England and Denmark; a musical
duo, and a

Pomeroy;o.·

Please send your answers to Helen
BolteI, care of this newspaper.
Results will appear in a winter
column.

DEAR HELEN:
A survey in this month's
Cosmopolitan magazine reveals that
ii4 percent of its married female
respondents have had extramarital
affairs. And near 70 percent said
they had slept with a man on a first
date at least once. Also 23 percent
said they use no birth control at all,
though they have sex regularly.
Do you think this Is representative
of women in general, or Is the
"Cosmo .Woman" a special breed?
- CURIOUS
P.S. Why don't you ask your
women readers the same questions
and see what the result will be?
DEAR CURIOUS:
A Cosmo study won't produce the
same statistics as one conducted by,
let's say, Good Housekeeping
magazine.
.
A "Helen . Survey"? I wouldn't
dare predict the result - which
makes me curious enough to try it.
ForthWith:
.•
EXCLUSIVELY
FOR WOMEN:
If you'd like to be included in this
small survey, please answer the
• following questions: (Anonymously,
of course.)
1. Have you ever participated in
an extramarital affair? -~- More
than one? - - - How many?

.

2. If you have had an extramarital
af(alr, did it:
Hurt your marriage?
Help your marriage?
Have no effect on your marriage ?
3. Have you ever slept With,a man
on your first date? - - - Is this a
conunon occurrence with you?
4. ff sexually active, do you use
birth control?
What form? ·

'

Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talk It over
in her colwnn if you write to Helen
Bottel, care of this newspaper.

" Give 'em

(304 ) 696-6656 .

Individual tickets to the EvansNovak program will be $4 for adults
and $2 for youth through age 17.
Marshall students with activity and
ID cards will be admitted free.
Since 1963, Evans and Novak have
been writing their column, "Inside
Report," which is carried by more
than 250 newspapers in the United
States and abroad. The pair edit·a biweekly newsletter, "The EvansNovak Political Report," and wrote
" Lyndon B. Johnson: The Exercise

j

of Power," and " Nixon in the White
House: The Frustration of Power"
which were published in 1966 and
1971 , respectively.
Prior to combining talents with
Novak in analyzing the political
scene, Evans was associated with
several midwestern newspapers and·
was chief congressional correspondent for the "Wall Street Journal."
Novak wrote for the " Philadelphia
Bulletin," the Associated.Press wire
service and the now defunct "New
York Herald Tribune" as one of its
Washington Bureau correspondents,
covering Congress ·and national
politics.
Both men have traveled extensively throughout the United
States, Europe, the Middle East ,
Southeast Asia , Latin America and
Russia and are frequent panelists on
such news programs as "Meet the
Press'' and "Face the Nation.''

HOSPITAL N E W S - - - - - - - - Christian, Heather Clark, Amanda
Davis, Tim Dixon, Pamela Edwards, Teresa Edwards, Willie
Hackney, James Hammond, Carol
Harris, Beulah Knapp, Elizabeth
Layne, Travis Lipscomb, Charles
Martin, George Mayes, Gerald McDaniel, Dessie, Moore, James
Moore, Nancy Nibert, Stephen
Perrine, Harold Provens, Mrs.
Glenn RusseU and daughter, Jospeh
Saltsman, Jon Sargent, Harriet
Fesher, Joyce Sheilds, Roy Stumbo,
Daniel Taylor, Charles Truglio,
Johnny Tucker, Stephanie Ward,
Betty Weisenburger, Ray Wence,
Mrs. Fred Williams and son, Mrs.
· Richard Young aad son.
BIRTIJS
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Paul Channell,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Mr. ·and Mrs.
daughter,
Jackson,
DISCHARGES SEPT.lO
Kenneth
Fellure, daughter,
Heather Archie, Anthony Borwn,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Kathy Brown, Rose Bush, Darla

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admitted-Erma Riffle, Syracuse;
Robert Wood, Long Bottom; Robert
Cummins, Middleport ; Myrna
Beaver, Chester; Wilma Gilmnore,
Rutland ; Earl Barnhart, Coolville;
Dessie Patterson, Pomeroy; Velma
Siders, Pomeroy; Verndia Knight,
Racine; Jimmie Buchanan, Long
Bottom.
Discharged-Charles McGrath,
Paula Sayre, Harry Hayman, Lois
Wolfe, Sheila Wines, Clarence
Wolfe, Robert Deemer, Fred Mack,
Ronald Miller, Michael Johnson,
Lester Parker.

Fravel, son, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Gump, son, Cottageville, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Ricky Moore, son, Gallipolis; Mr .
and Mrs. Dana Williams, soli,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Williamson, son, Southside, W. Va.

DAR TO MEET
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
the Daughters of the American
Revolution will meet at I: 30 p.m.
Friday at the home of Mrs. Clyde
Engels, Middleport. C&lt;&gt;-hostesses
will be Mrs. J . Edward Foster, Mrs.
Gene Yost, Mrs. Everett Hayes, and
Mrs. George Hackett, Jr. Miss
Eleanor SmiPI will present the
program on " The Sun Rose in the
Constitution."

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DEAR HELEN :
My 30-year-old son and 31-year-old
daughter have always lived with me
and work at good jobs. When is the
proper time to start charging them
room and board? - MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER :
... About 12 years ago ! - H.
DEAR HELEN :
My husband Is 52, but his parents
still come before his wife and
children! He's with them almost
every dsy, five hours at a time, and
there are many telephone calls in between. He insists we include them in
everything we do, and they've a way
of excluding us as if we didn't exist.
He'll do anything ·for his parents,
very little for his family. The
children notice it and it affects them.
His parents gloat. I am getting
more resentful each day . I can't talk
to my husband because he.insists he
Is In the right. Says they're "getting
on," but they're In excellent health,
and he has always been their willing
slave. Is there any hope? - T. J .
DEART.:
Outside of death or a move, I see
little hope for breaking 52-year-old
apron strings. Your best bet is compromise: an evening with the family
in exchange for a " parents' night. "
II this doesn't work , start building a
life of your own - which may jar
some sense into your husband. - H.

on~man show,

Hell, Harry," featuring actor Kevin
McCarthy as. the late President
Harry S. Truman. Additional information may be obtained by
calling the Artists Series Office,

Optlmua®-27 by Realistic®

ta!UlUiyou'remorelnsplred.

ol one today whose presence tends to make you
· feel a bl.t W\C'Oil\fortlble. Sell!d only chums with
whom you are totaUy al eue.

The 200th anniversary of the Sun·
day School will be observed at Heath
United Methodist Church on Sept. 28,
with a carry-in dinner in the
evening, it was announced when the
United Methodist Women met Monday night at the church.
Mrs. Nan Moore gave a report on
the anniversary noting that former
ministers have been invited. She
also noted that word had been
received of the death of a former
member, Miss Bernice Bowen.
Mrs. Beulah Jones had the prelude
with Mrs. Betty Fultz, president,
welcoJ;Iling the 25 members. She also
read a poem entitled "Give", and
announced Bible study for 7:30 Wednellday at the church with the pastor
leading.
Devotions were given by Mrs. Emma K. Clatworthy who opened with
prayer than shared an experience
which she and her husband had at a
Springfield church where he had
been baptized. She told of the new

Health Review

..APPRECIATION DAY"
HAND

·Underwear
that's fun to wear!

... GEMINI (MIIf Zl.Jane !I) Seriow matters
• should not be treated frivolously today, or they ·
.. may create problems for you at a later date.
~ ~ Responsible behavior 1s a must.

Heath Sunday School observes
200th anniversary Monday

ANNl!_AL

Coffee, Tea, Milk

.
TAURUS ~April . .Miy Zl) Be sincere when
. deB Ifni with friends in social situatiOII.! today.
: Flattery vriU put Uteir guard up and make them .
.. back otf, "here honest comments won't.

7-The Daily Sentlrlel, Mid&lt;Ueport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. II, 1980

CAMDEN PARK'S

I ~

.

(Od.

and weekend Leisure Time Courses
and Activities offered by Ohio
University's Lifelong Learning Of·
fice of Continuing Education will be
given at an Open House on Monday,
Sept. 15, 5-8 p.m., In the O.U. Baker
Center Ballroom.
Convenient evening registration
plus demonstrations, displays and a
chance meet and talk with in,
structors will highlight the event.
At ~:30 p.m., a demonstration of
Tae Kwon Do will 1)\' given by
Kaman (Guy) Pensrinukun, holder
of Black Belt in this material art involving body/mind coordination and
controL Pensrinukun will use Tae
Kwon Do in his eight-week class,
Self-Defense for All Ages, with men,
women and children working in
compatible groups.
Authentic Balinese dance will be
demonstrated by Hylie Flournoy, a
student of "Dance of Bali" instructor Eddy Nugroho Sandjaja, at
6:45 p.m. Ms. Flournoy, clothed in
traditional custome, will show the
Intricate oriental art form, good for

body postlire and stance as well as
overall exercise.
·
Gerald Powell, fonner Arthur
Murraylnstructor, will lead several
couples from his ·Dance Club class.
through a demonstration at 7 p.m."
Couples In this course learn slow ·
dancing, disco, tango, ~.
polka, waltz and rock and may par'~·
ticipate in monthly dances at Royal
Oak Park. Powell will also offer a
free dance lesson for those Interested to show the new routines•
and steps offered In his eight-session.

fRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

tru!tlni of otherl today, you are vulnerable

worthy.

"A sneak review of the 51 evening

'

Weekend At Meip Inn

MODULAR
HOMES

wllen dealing with deceptive lndlvldWils. Do
....._ ooly with those you know to be trust-

•

Leisure time preview offered
Wedding
plans made

TIIURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
Society Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
Thrift Shop, Mid&lt;lleport.
EVANG~UNE CHAPTER 172,
Order of Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Mid&lt;lleport Masonic
Temple. Star points, 25 and 50 year
CLUB CONTRIBUTION NOTED
members to be honored. Officers to
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens
wear gowns.
Club contributed $25 to "Jeanne's
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE , 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the hall. No of- · Room" at the Senior Citizens Center
rather than $45 earlier reported.
fleers to be elected.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
United Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
KNIGHT PROMOTED
Thursday at the church.
Marine Lance Cpl. Dale W.
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453 ,
Knight, son of Venedia M. Knight of
F&amp;AM, will hold an educational
Route 3, Bol&lt; 45, Racine, has been
meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday;
promoted to his present rank while
refreshments will be served.
serving with 2nd Marine Division,
Marine Corps Base, Camp Lejeune,
FRIDAY
N.C.
COUPON REFUNDERS Club
He joined the Marine Corps In
meeting, 7 p.m. Friday at Riverboat
November,
1978.
Room, Meigs County Branch,
Athens County Savings and Loan.

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�&amp;-Tue Daily Sentinel, Mid&lt;lleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 11, 1980

The dark side
of hazing.
.

• •

'

BOSTON (API - Fraternity
haZing, a rite of passage for
generations of college pledges, is
ccrnlng back into vogue after a
brush with extinction during the
student activist days of the early
1970s.
This fall's initiations do not approach the sometimes brutal rituals
common 15 or 20 years ago, officials
say, but hazing has become enough
of a problem again for virtually all
of the national fraternities to forbid
it.
However, fraternity executives
concede t11at the insults ,
browbeating, silly tasks, forced
exercises and . other lessons in
hwnility will probably continue
despite their efforts.
"If there Is one single thing that Is
a black mark against fraternities, it
Is hazing," said Stephen Siders,
executive director of Alpha Tau
Omega. "The loss of life because of
some stupid fraternity ritual Is unforgivable."
But deatha occasionally do '!"cur
during hazing, the period of physical
and mental Intimidation that leads
to full membership Ina fraternity.
The latest was Aug. 31 at the
University of Lowell in
Massach118etts. Stephen Call, 19, a
pledge at Delta Kappa Phi, collapsed during calisthenics and died of
hyperthermia, overheating the
body.
The state university ordered
initiation rites ·stopped at its seven
fraternities and named a committee
to investigate the organizations.
CaD's death was the 15th hazing
fatabity In the past 2 and a half
years, according to Eileen Stvenii.
Mrs. Stevens of Sayville, N.Y., has
made the abolition of hazing a personal crusade - her own son died
during an Initiation prank In 1978.
"Very often they are called

isolated incidents or unfortunate accidents," she said. " They are
neither. Accidents are spontaneous,
and these hazings are premeditated
and planned and perpetuated in the
name of tradition. It's happening far
more often than people realize.''
Leaders of national fraternities
say the rebirth of hazing is an unfortunate . b'yproduct of th e
organiZations' returning popularity.
In 1971, the total active membership of the nation's fraternities
had fallen to about 139,000, according to the National Interfraternity Conference. This year,
it is expected to reach 245,000 members.
"I think there has been an increase in the number of incidents in
the last couple of years," conceded
Ken Tracey, executive director of
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, the nation's
largest fraternity. "People wouldn't
put up with it in the early '70s. The
fraternities- were worried about survival in those days, and they
couldn't concern themselves with
hazing."

Added Fred Yoder of Sigma Chi:
"It's a problem that is more potentially prevalent now than it was 10
years ago. There is more competition to get into fraternities, and
today's student tends not to be as
questioning, as critical, as many
were in the early '70s."
Most national fraternities punish
local chapters that violate their antihazing rules. Last year, SAE suspended its.chapters at the University of
Arizona and Gettysburg- (Pa.)
College for hazing.
Some fraternities have diminished
hazing by substituti-ng '.'Help Week"
for "Hell Week." Pledges organize
charity fund-raising events, blood
drives and work with retarded
children.

OU offers course locally
in biology and psychology

Not everyone even agrees what
constitutes hazing.
"If you make a kid learn the
names of 50 prominent fraternity
members when he should be doing
his political science, I consider that
hazing," said Geoff Fitzgerald,
executive director of Theta Delta
Chi. " We simply have a blanket
policy that encourages houses to do
nQthing that in any way demeans or
embarrasses or physically or
emotionally strains any kid who
wants to join the fraternity."
Some of the incidents are far more
serious than emotional strain,
however.
At Ithaca College in New York last
April, a boy. died of hyperthennia
during strenuous exercises that
were part of fraternity hazing.
Another was killed at Louisi-ana
State last year when he was struck
by a car as a group of pledges
walked blindfolded across a road at
night.
"In over 90 percent of the incidents, alcohol' is involved," said
Mrs. Stevens. "So when you are
dealing with peer pressure, secrecy
and alcohol abuse, you've got a very
dangerous combination."
Mrs. Stevens formed an antihazing organization, called Committee to Halt Useless College
Killings, or CHUCK, ilfter her son,
Chuck, died during pledge training
at Alfred University in Alfred, N.Y.
She said her son and two other
pledges were locked in the trunk of a
car and told they could not get out
until they drank a pint of bourbon, a
six-pack of beer and a fifth of wine.
Chuck died of alcohol poisoning and
fluid in the lungs.
This year, New York and New Jersey passed anti-hazing laws. Similar
rules are on the hooks in Texas,
California, Virginia, Wisconsin,
Wyoming and North Carolina.

Social Calendar

Area residents now have the op- and the Future of Man, which began
portunity to take courses in Ab- last Tuesday evening. It will meet on
nonnal Psychology as well as consecutive Tuesdays, also from 6
Biology, offered by Ohio University · p.m. until 10 p.m. for the fall quarand taught locally at Davis Hall, the ters, taught by Dr. Weldon Witters.
home of the Holzer Medical Center The course includes . human
·School of Nursing at 514 First sexuality, physiological effects of
Avenue In downtown Gallipolis.
environmental pollutants, drugs of
The Abnormal Psychology course, abuse and introduction to advances
• referred to as Psychology 332, is a In biological technology that in·
five credit hour course. It will begin fluence the future of man. It, too, is a
on Monday evening, Sept. 15, and be fence credit bourse course.
: held from 6 p.m. until 10 p.m. each
Tuition for each course is $33 per
: Monday evening for the fall quarter. credit hour. To register or secure adInstructing the course will be ditional information, call the Office
Howard Beazel from OU's of Continuing Education, 614-:i!MPsychology Department. The class 6876, or toll-free Ohio, l-800-2112-4400.
study and discussions will Include
Having these courses available at
behavior disorders, their causes and Davis Hall for area residents
• the effects on pe'rsons, families and provides a unique opportunity for
:· society.
college credit without long distance
• Openings are still available In the traveL
: Zoology Course 390, entitled Biology

Sepi.U, ...

:
•
•
•
•

•"
•
•
-

••
•

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"

Manr v6an, opinions and aWtudea to which
you prevtoualy adhered otrongly will be altered
ln the comlng year. Your new ()Utlook wW be far
more productive and positive.
VIRGO IAq. -,c. !!I Pri&gt;toct your oeU·
lnle......, today, but be wary llf decelYin&amp; your·
aeU into believing you're eutiUed to more than
you really are. face the facts reau.tlcally. Find
out PKn of what lies ahead fvr you in the year
loUowlnl your blrtlldly by llelldinR for your copy
crt A.ttto-Graph. MaU Sl fvr each W A.stro-Graph,
Bcm 41t, Radio City Station, N. Y. lOOlt. Be 1ure
to IP"'UY birth date.
UBRA ~Sept. f.S..(kt. !.U Beeause yvu're a bit
too

:

SCORPIO

Mobiie Home Trades Welcome
Show Models

t4-N!n', ZZJ Outaide ~terests

or actlviUes could coat you more today than you
· had budieted ro.- than. If you go overboard
: you·u havevnly youralr to blame.
• SA.GmARIUS (Nin'. %3-Det'!. ZU It's very
• euy for you to get off-track today where im, portant Koala are concerned. Unless you want
IOIDe'thin8 b.dly eoo..gh, your chances are a
!rille slim.
CAPRIC08N (De&lt;. IWu. Ul Underplay

KINGSBURY
.
.. . - HOME SALES &amp; SERVICE
~

"For the First in Manufacuted Housing"
1100 E. Main
992-7034
. Pomeroy, 0.

your recent aCCOOtPliahments, or you may &amp;ive
one who la jealous of you 1rlst for the mill. thls 1!
not a 1oodday to pat )'OUf'3eH on the back.
' AQUARIUS IJu. 11-Feb. Dl There's a
posslbWty you may not accomplish everything
_ you hope to "o today becaute of lndeclsiveneas .

• Anydeciakl'l.i.J betterthannoneatall.
~
PISCF.B ~Feb. zt.MJrt:h Zll) Be very eKpliclt
.. and detailed ln giving instructions tv anyvne per.. forming wortl: or servtces for you today. They
• ' may nut carnprehend your desires.
• ' AROl8 1Mordl tl·Aprll U) Yourwo&lt;t will sui·
"' · fer todly lf yau attempt to do tasks for which you
• have Uttle or no enthusiasm. Shelve such projec:

Plans have been completed for the
open church wedding of Carla Jean
Cowdery, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James Cowdery, Reedsville, and
PatrickSoulsby, son of Mr. and Mrs.
JamesSoulsby, Pomeroy.
The wedding will take place at
1:30 p.m. Saturday at the Reedsville
Methodis.t Church with the Rev.
Richard Thomas performing the
double ring ceremony. A reception
will be held following the wedding at
the Riverview School. Music by Mrs.
Kay Balderson, pianist, and James
Soulsby and Sue Reed, vocalists, will
begin at I p.m.

Sunday school
students visit
bedfast teacher
Keno Church of Christ Sunday
school students of Mrs. Lettie McCain were taken to her home Sunday
for a visit. Mrs. McCain is reupceratlng from surgery.
Mrs. Mary Newell, Mrs. Darlene
Newell, · Mrs. Tammy Bales, and
Mrs. Sandra Massar took Lora
Osborn, Joy 11nd Jay Swain, Wesley
Holter, Toby Curtis, Karen Morris,
Scotty, Misty, Mike and Jeannie
Newell, Rex Justis and Keith
Weaver to the McCain home.
After Sunday school members of
the church went to the Forked Run
State Park for a picnic. In the group
were Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Swain and
son, Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Holter, son, Wesley, and daughter,
Marty, Joy and Jay Swain, Mrs.
Esta White, Mr. and Mr John
Newell, Jeff, Scotty, Misty and
Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Newell, Jeannie, Mae, Scott and Rex
Justis, Kaen Morris, Mr. and Mrs.
Herald Osborne and Gary, Mr. and
Mrs. Gale Osborne and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bales, Terry and
Toby Curtis, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Newell, Mrs. Marcia Keller and
Mrs. Erma Newland.

course.
~
At 7:30 p.m., Pattie Rudiger,
professional Tai-Chi Instructor, will
demonstrate this relaxing nonstrenuous form of total body exercise.
For more information on the Open
House, or on any of the 51 Leisure
Time Classes and Activities, contact
the Lifelong Learning Office of Continuing Education, 309 Tupper Hall,
Ohio University, Athens, OH 411701;
telephone 614/594-68'16 or 1-300-2024408, toll fee In Ohio.

ONE DAY ONLY!
SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER 13TH

OPEN
10 AM TIL 10 PM
OPEN SUNDAY 10 A.M TIL 9 P.M .

1------------------------.BARGAIN MATINEES ON ~T' si/N
AU. SEATS JUST Sf. 50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY S_f.40
531 JACKSON PIKE · AL35 r.DRTH - Phonli 446· 452&lt;1

.,

•
•

•

•'-

'"

LEO (:Jaly ZS.Aq. Z!) Careless manag:ement
~s today could result ln an un• necessary loss. Don't lake gambles. Keep an eye

.•

• ol your

: on yow- possessions.

PI'OMEETS

The Rutiand PTO met Monday
night at the school with recognition
of parents and teachers highlighting
: the meeting. Several ajJ(jvities were
- discussed. PTO meetings were set
for the second Monday of each month. Parents are urged to attend.

TO MEET FRIDAY
_ Mary Shrine :rT, White Shrine of
• Jerusalem will meet Friday night at
" 8 p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic Tem, pie. A school of instruction will be
held. All offieers are urged to attend.
There will be potluck refreshments.

BOYS' STYL£S IN SUPERMAN, BOBA TILT,
DARlH VADER: RASH, GREEN lANTERN

AND SPIDERMA_N.
.
GIRlS' STYLES IN R2·D2, C-3PO AND
WONDER WOMAN.

9 tll1
ALL LEGAL .
BEVERAGES SOLD

cancer),
- Disease of the small intestines
(malabsorption syndromes or
regional enteritis ),
- Diarrhea secondary to laxative
abuse and to other medications, and
- Stomach related diarrhea ,(occurring after stomach surgery, or
syndromes associated with excess
stomach acid secretion 1.
QUESTION: What should I do?
ANSWER : See your physician and
be prepared to describe your
diarrhea. What is the amount, color
and consistency of your stool? Is
there any blood, pus or mucus
present? Does it have an unusually
foul odor? How often do your bowels
move? Does it happen after meals or
in the middle of the night? Do you
have any pain? Where is the pain
and what is it like? Does the pain go
away after your bowels move or after you pass gas? Have you lost any
weight? Do you have a fever or any
other symptoms? Are you taking
.any medicines or eating new foods?
Have you traveled recently, particularly out of the country?
This history of your diarrhea may
provide clues to its cause and help to
identify the areas involved. A
thorough physical exam might
reveal other pieces of information.
Additionally, special examinations ·
such as proctosigmoidoscopy (a way
of looking directly at the lining of the
large bowel ), x-ray and laboratory
testing wi,ll contribute to the total
picture. Once the information is
collected and evaluated appropriate
treatment can be begun.

more common causes are:
- Functional disorders (irritable
bowel symdrome or emotional
diarrhea),
- Disease of the large bowel
(diverticulitis, ulcerative colitis or

Helen Help Us
Do 50 percent of all wives
have extramarital flings

•.

WHISKEY
RIVER

•,

'

5 PIECE GROUP

.FROM lANcAsrER, OHIO

You must be 21 or acjompanied bv/;~rents or legal guardian.

'

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629

By Rogert G. Slockmal,
D.O., Ph.D.
Assislllnl Professor of
Famlly Medidne
Ohio University College
of Osteopathic Medicine
QUESTION: I have had diarrhea
for several weeks and have tried
several different patent medicines
without relief. Do you think they are
no good?
ANSWER : Diarrhea preparations
do have a place in the treatment of
short term (acute) diarrhea, but you
seem to have a chronic condition
that deserves some closer scrutiny.
Diarrhea generally means an increase in amount, fluidity or
frequency of bowel movements
relative to your usual pattern. Acute
diarrhea is most commonly
associated with a gastrointestinal
virus, bacterial food poisoning or
food intolerance. It usually comes on
rapi&lt;lly and lasts for a short time. A
spontaneous recovery is brought
about by simply reducing the ora) intake and resting the Gl tract
(stomach, small intestine ahd large
Intestine). Medications are helpful if
you have to be out of the house and
can't risk embarrassment.
Chronic diarrhea could mean
possible disease of any of the various
parts of the Gl tract as well as
diseases of other systems that influence it in some way. Among the

BY HELEN BmTEL
gpe.,lal correspondent

Tomato Juice
Tossed Salad
8 oz. New York Strip
Baked Potato
Vegetable
Dessert

ENTERTAINMEN1
FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY
NIGHT

· CANCER (JaaeZl.Jiuly Zl) Avoid Lhecompany

church which has 12 sides, one for
each disciple, of the choirs and the
service. She concluded with a
congregational prayer.
Mrs. Pauline Horton was the
program leader and used as her
topic, "For All God's Children"
reading scripture from Isaiah and
Luke and commenting on "shalone"
which means, peace, justice, responsibility for the &gt;rOrld.
A playlet was then presented with
Mrs. Juanita Bachtel, Mrs. Euvetta
Bechtle, Mrs. Qeulah McComas,
Mrs. Mae Lambert, and Mrs. Betty
Jo Krawsczyn taking part. The skit
was a mission travel first landing in
Africa where there was a conversation with a woman whose
husband was out hunting work in the
city while she stayed home raising
the children, working in the fields,
and carrying water and wood. Then
it was on to Taiwan and the Erex
plant where workers were paid 15
cents an hour, then to Singapore,

South Korea and Mexico which encourage American companies to
build factories there, giving low
taxes and salary scales as an incentive.
The program material also made
reference to the Exxon Oil industry
which is said to be flourishing in
foreign countries, and told of women
in the United States who have to
keep house, raise families, and work
outside the home. A discussion was
also held on senior citizens on fixed
incomes faced with infla tion, and of
crime asso ci a ted with unemployment.
· Mrs. Horton read an article on
why big auto makers are producing
parts in Mexico causing the closng of
U.S. plants. The Lord's Prayer in
unison closed the meeting.
Cards were signed for Ms. Emma
Wayland and Mrs. Freda Mitch.
Hostesses were Mrs. Kathryn
Knight and Mrs. E. M. Wilson , with
Mrs. Dorothy Roller a contributing
hostess.

RETURN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Wright have
returned from a vacation in California. They visited several relatives
including Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hood
and family, and enjoyed sightseeing
around Los Angeles. The couple also
flew over Mt. St. Helens in
Washington, went to board the
Queen Mary at Long Beach, Ca lif.
and enroute home stopped for a visit
with Becky and· John Anderson at
Cambridge.

Marshall Artists Series to begin
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - Columnists Rowland Evans and Robert
Novak will open the 1900-81Marshall
Artists Series' Forum programming
on Wednesday, Sept. 17 at 8 p.m. in
Old Main Auditorium with a
discussion oq "Politics: National
and International."
"For this first event , we not only
will be selling season memberships
for the Forum Series, but also individual ti.ckets for this one
program," Mrs. Nancy P. Hindsley,
MU cultural events coordinator, announced today.
"With the presidential and general
elections coming up in November,
we thought more people might be interested in hearing these outstanding political journalists," she
said.
Season membership tickets are
·available at $24 each from the Ar·
lists Series Office in · Memorial
Student Center Room 2W38 and may

be purchased at the door on Sept. 17.
The upcoming Forum season will
include: film-lecture visits to
Afghanistan, Greece, London, New
England and Denmark; a musical
duo, and a

Pomeroy;o.·

Please send your answers to Helen
BolteI, care of this newspaper.
Results will appear in a winter
column.

DEAR HELEN:
A survey in this month's
Cosmopolitan magazine reveals that
ii4 percent of its married female
respondents have had extramarital
affairs. And near 70 percent said
they had slept with a man on a first
date at least once. Also 23 percent
said they use no birth control at all,
though they have sex regularly.
Do you think this Is representative
of women in general, or Is the
"Cosmo .Woman" a special breed?
- CURIOUS
P.S. Why don't you ask your
women readers the same questions
and see what the result will be?
DEAR CURIOUS:
A Cosmo study won't produce the
same statistics as one conducted by,
let's say, Good Housekeeping
magazine.
.
A "Helen . Survey"? I wouldn't
dare predict the result - which
makes me curious enough to try it.
ForthWith:
.•
EXCLUSIVELY
FOR WOMEN:
If you'd like to be included in this
small survey, please answer the
• following questions: (Anonymously,
of course.)
1. Have you ever participated in
an extramarital affair? -~- More
than one? - - - How many?

.

2. If you have had an extramarital
af(alr, did it:
Hurt your marriage?
Help your marriage?
Have no effect on your marriage ?
3. Have you ever slept With,a man
on your first date? - - - Is this a
conunon occurrence with you?
4. ff sexually active, do you use
birth control?
What form? ·

'

Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talk It over
in her colwnn if you write to Helen
Bottel, care of this newspaper.

" Give 'em

(304 ) 696-6656 .

Individual tickets to the EvansNovak program will be $4 for adults
and $2 for youth through age 17.
Marshall students with activity and
ID cards will be admitted free.
Since 1963, Evans and Novak have
been writing their column, "Inside
Report," which is carried by more
than 250 newspapers in the United
States and abroad. The pair edit·a biweekly newsletter, "The EvansNovak Political Report," and wrote
" Lyndon B. Johnson: The Exercise

j

of Power," and " Nixon in the White
House: The Frustration of Power"
which were published in 1966 and
1971 , respectively.
Prior to combining talents with
Novak in analyzing the political
scene, Evans was associated with
several midwestern newspapers and·
was chief congressional correspondent for the "Wall Street Journal."
Novak wrote for the " Philadelphia
Bulletin," the Associated.Press wire
service and the now defunct "New
York Herald Tribune" as one of its
Washington Bureau correspondents,
covering Congress ·and national
politics.
Both men have traveled extensively throughout the United
States, Europe, the Middle East ,
Southeast Asia , Latin America and
Russia and are frequent panelists on
such news programs as "Meet the
Press'' and "Face the Nation.''

HOSPITAL N E W S - - - - - - - - Christian, Heather Clark, Amanda
Davis, Tim Dixon, Pamela Edwards, Teresa Edwards, Willie
Hackney, James Hammond, Carol
Harris, Beulah Knapp, Elizabeth
Layne, Travis Lipscomb, Charles
Martin, George Mayes, Gerald McDaniel, Dessie, Moore, James
Moore, Nancy Nibert, Stephen
Perrine, Harold Provens, Mrs.
Glenn RusseU and daughter, Jospeh
Saltsman, Jon Sargent, Harriet
Fesher, Joyce Sheilds, Roy Stumbo,
Daniel Taylor, Charles Truglio,
Johnny Tucker, Stephanie Ward,
Betty Weisenburger, Ray Wence,
Mrs. Fred Williams and son, Mrs.
· Richard Young aad son.
BIRTIJS
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Paul Channell,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Mr. ·and Mrs.
daughter,
Jackson,
DISCHARGES SEPT.lO
Kenneth
Fellure, daughter,
Heather Archie, Anthony Borwn,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Kathy Brown, Rose Bush, Darla

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admitted-Erma Riffle, Syracuse;
Robert Wood, Long Bottom; Robert
Cummins, Middleport ; Myrna
Beaver, Chester; Wilma Gilmnore,
Rutland ; Earl Barnhart, Coolville;
Dessie Patterson, Pomeroy; Velma
Siders, Pomeroy; Verndia Knight,
Racine; Jimmie Buchanan, Long
Bottom.
Discharged-Charles McGrath,
Paula Sayre, Harry Hayman, Lois
Wolfe, Sheila Wines, Clarence
Wolfe, Robert Deemer, Fred Mack,
Ronald Miller, Michael Johnson,
Lester Parker.

Fravel, son, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Gump, son, Cottageville, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Ricky Moore, son, Gallipolis; Mr .
and Mrs. Dana Williams, soli,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Williamson, son, Southside, W. Va.

DAR TO MEET
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
the Daughters of the American
Revolution will meet at I: 30 p.m.
Friday at the home of Mrs. Clyde
Engels, Middleport. C&lt;&gt;-hostesses
will be Mrs. J . Edward Foster, Mrs.
Gene Yost, Mrs. Everett Hayes, and
Mrs. George Hackett, Jr. Miss
Eleanor SmiPI will present the
program on " The Sun Rose in the
Constitution."

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DEAR HELEN :
My 30-year-old son and 31-year-old
daughter have always lived with me
and work at good jobs. When is the
proper time to start charging them
room and board? - MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER :
... About 12 years ago ! - H.
DEAR HELEN :
My husband Is 52, but his parents
still come before his wife and
children! He's with them almost
every dsy, five hours at a time, and
there are many telephone calls in between. He insists we include them in
everything we do, and they've a way
of excluding us as if we didn't exist.
He'll do anything ·for his parents,
very little for his family. The
children notice it and it affects them.
His parents gloat. I am getting
more resentful each day . I can't talk
to my husband because he.insists he
Is In the right. Says they're "getting
on," but they're In excellent health,
and he has always been their willing
slave. Is there any hope? - T. J .
DEART.:
Outside of death or a move, I see
little hope for breaking 52-year-old
apron strings. Your best bet is compromise: an evening with the family
in exchange for a " parents' night. "
II this doesn't work , start building a
life of your own - which may jar
some sense into your husband. - H.

on~man show,

Hell, Harry," featuring actor Kevin
McCarthy as. the late President
Harry S. Truman. Additional information may be obtained by
calling the Artists Series Office,

Optlmua®-27 by Realistic®

ta!UlUiyou'remorelnsplred.

ol one today whose presence tends to make you
· feel a bl.t W\C'Oil\fortlble. Sell!d only chums with
whom you are totaUy al eue.

The 200th anniversary of the Sun·
day School will be observed at Heath
United Methodist Church on Sept. 28,
with a carry-in dinner in the
evening, it was announced when the
United Methodist Women met Monday night at the church.
Mrs. Nan Moore gave a report on
the anniversary noting that former
ministers have been invited. She
also noted that word had been
received of the death of a former
member, Miss Bernice Bowen.
Mrs. Beulah Jones had the prelude
with Mrs. Betty Fultz, president,
welcoJ;Iling the 25 members. She also
read a poem entitled "Give", and
announced Bible study for 7:30 Wednellday at the church with the pastor
leading.
Devotions were given by Mrs. Emma K. Clatworthy who opened with
prayer than shared an experience
which she and her husband had at a
Springfield church where he had
been baptized. She told of the new

Health Review

..APPRECIATION DAY"
HAND

·Underwear
that's fun to wear!

... GEMINI (MIIf Zl.Jane !I) Seriow matters
• should not be treated frivolously today, or they ·
.. may create problems for you at a later date.
~ ~ Responsible behavior 1s a must.

Heath Sunday School observes
200th anniversary Monday

ANNl!_AL

Coffee, Tea, Milk

.
TAURUS ~April . .Miy Zl) Be sincere when
. deB Ifni with friends in social situatiOII.! today.
: Flattery vriU put Uteir guard up and make them .
.. back otf, "here honest comments won't.

7-The Daily Sentlrlel, Mid&lt;Ueport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. II, 1980

CAMDEN PARK'S

I ~

.

(Od.

and weekend Leisure Time Courses
and Activities offered by Ohio
University's Lifelong Learning Of·
fice of Continuing Education will be
given at an Open House on Monday,
Sept. 15, 5-8 p.m., In the O.U. Baker
Center Ballroom.
Convenient evening registration
plus demonstrations, displays and a
chance meet and talk with in,
structors will highlight the event.
At ~:30 p.m., a demonstration of
Tae Kwon Do will 1)\' given by
Kaman (Guy) Pensrinukun, holder
of Black Belt in this material art involving body/mind coordination and
controL Pensrinukun will use Tae
Kwon Do in his eight-week class,
Self-Defense for All Ages, with men,
women and children working in
compatible groups.
Authentic Balinese dance will be
demonstrated by Hylie Flournoy, a
student of "Dance of Bali" instructor Eddy Nugroho Sandjaja, at
6:45 p.m. Ms. Flournoy, clothed in
traditional custome, will show the
Intricate oriental art form, good for

body postlire and stance as well as
overall exercise.
·
Gerald Powell, fonner Arthur
Murraylnstructor, will lead several
couples from his ·Dance Club class.
through a demonstration at 7 p.m."
Couples In this course learn slow ·
dancing, disco, tango, ~.
polka, waltz and rock and may par'~·
ticipate in monthly dances at Royal
Oak Park. Powell will also offer a
free dance lesson for those Interested to show the new routines•
and steps offered In his eight-session.

fRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

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"A sneak review of the 51 evening

'

Weekend At Meip Inn

MODULAR
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•

Leisure time preview offered
Wedding
plans made

TIIURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
Society Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
Thrift Shop, Mid&lt;lleport.
EVANG~UNE CHAPTER 172,
Order of Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Mid&lt;lleport Masonic
Temple. Star points, 25 and 50 year
CLUB CONTRIBUTION NOTED
members to be honored. Officers to
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens
wear gowns.
Club contributed $25 to "Jeanne's
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE , 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the hall. No of- · Room" at the Senior Citizens Center
rather than $45 earlier reported.
fleers to be elected.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
United Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
KNIGHT PROMOTED
Thursday at the church.
Marine Lance Cpl. Dale W.
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453 ,
Knight, son of Venedia M. Knight of
F&amp;AM, will hold an educational
Route 3, Bol&lt; 45, Racine, has been
meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday;
promoted to his present rank while
refreshments will be served.
serving with 2nd Marine Division,
Marine Corps Base, Camp Lejeune,
FRIDAY
N.C.
COUPON REFUNDERS Club
He joined the Marine Corps In
meeting, 7 p.m. Friday at Riverboat
November,
1978.
Room, Meigs County Branch,
Athens County Savings and Loan.

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8-Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 1!, 1980 -

TELEVISI01V
VIEWING·

Temporary sales tax cut decision due soon
on-the-dollar sales tax would drop to
two cents for a period of 60 days,
meaning a savings of $160, for instance, in the purchase of a car that
costs $8,000.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., !)-New Boston, who favors the
reduction, and Senate President
Oliver Ocasek, !)-Akron, who is
skeptical, both have given assurances that the issue will be settled by
next week, one way or the other.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Ohioans will know within a week if
there is going to be a temporary cut
in the state sales tax to boost new
car sales, legislati ve lead.ers
promise.
The House Wednesday approved
.tbe legislation 87-9 and forwarded it
to the Senate, where some rnembers
say the outlook for passage is good.
If the bill is passed, the four-cents-.

Some dealers have been critical of
the Legislature for letting the
proposal, first introduced in ·July,
languish for so long.
They say the delay has customers
ready to buy cars waiting to see
what the Legislature is going to do,
and that is hurting their business .
Under the proposal, the tax break
would apply primarily to Americanmade cars, but because of its
technical language it also would be

extended to purchasers of the Maz·
da, Peugot, and Mercedes Benz.
Drafters pegged the qualification
to fuel economy, saying that the
break goes to 1980 and 1981
passenger car buyers if the respective manufacturers have improved
fuel efficiency 120 percent since
-1974.
Based on figures provided by the
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, the three foreign-built cars

on the issue Wednesday, with Rep.
Sherrod Brown, D-Mansfield ,
.
leading the opposition.
He charged his colleagues with offering "Band-Aids and gimmi~ks"
in its effort to assist Ohio's ailing
auto industry, adding that the bill
would not, as claijned, induce
anyone Ia purchase a car.
" This bill is ineffective, wasteful,
and unaffordable," Brown said.
However, Rep. Clifford Skeen, I)Akron, and other sponsors noted that
a similar experiment in neighboring
Michigan this summer has worked
well, resulting in an increase in sales
tax revenues, instead of a loss,
Skeen cited a study by the Jeep
Corp. in Toledo alleging there would
be a gain in other state revenues as
well , including illcome taxes
generated among plant workers and
sales personnel.
Senate Finance Chairman Harry
Meshel, !).Youngstown, said he
thinks there are enough votes in the
upper chamber for passage.
Senators have been under intense
lobbying pressure from the ·united
Auto Workers, which has 75,000 unmeployed Ohio members in its
ranks.
Gov. James A. Rhodes favors the
legislation, and has said he would
sign it. It contains an emergency
clause, meaning it would take im·
mediate effect.

meet the criteria, along witlr all
models of the · four major U.S.
automakers - Ford, Chrysler,
American Motors and General
Motors.
Originally, the sponsors wanted to
simply specify that the cut be
provided only to sales of U.S. cars.
But legal advisers told lawmakers
wording the bill that way might
cause constitutional probleins.
There was only a fllltTy of debate

Carter will follow Mondale in Ohio

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) President Carter, shown by polls to
have narrowed the lead of GOP
challenger Ronald Reagan, stwnps
for votes in Ohio next week for the
first time in the fall election cam·
paign.
Carter is to address a rally in
Cleveland Tuesday and appear at a
party fundraiser, state party officials say.
It will mark the third straight
week that Carter or Vice President
Walter F. Mondale has traveled to
Ohio in search of the state's critical
25 electoral votes.
Mondale heard some optimistic
I\5Sessments of the progress made in
cutting into Reagan's lead from
other Democrats during a Colwnbus
visit in which he tried to bolster support among labor's rank-and-file.
' "I told him it looks like we' re on
the rise," Martin J. Hughes,
Cleveland, said be told Mondale. The
union leader headed Ohio's
delegation at the Democratic
National Convention in New York.
"We're better organized and bet·
ter prepared mechanically than
ever before" heading into tile fall
campaign,
Hughes sa i d.
"I think he has good credentials
with the working people," he said of
the party's. vice presidential
nominee.
His assessment was shared by At·
· torney General William J. Brown, a
political fence-sitter who was tile
only .top elected Democrat to
· withhold his endorsement until the
party's national convention.
Brown, who appeared with Mon. d8.!e before a group of Franklin
Councy Democrats, said Carter and
Mondale are gaining on the ReaganBush ticket.

"What I hear now as opposed to
four months ago is that this thing has
turned around," Brown said.
Mondale toured a big telephone
equipment manufacturing plant af·
ter meeting with reporters and party
officials during an 11-hour stopover
here Wednesday.
"Ohio is a central battleground in
this campaign. What happens in
Ohio could very well decide who the
next president is. We think the
voters of Ohio will again support
us," Mondale told reporters.
The vice president, predicting better economic times ahead, con-'
trasted the administration's
economic · program with that
proposed by Reagan, which he said
would be the most inflationary
measure in the nation's histoty.
He said the administration plan,
based on an energy program that
would reduce .U.S. dependence on
foreign-produced oil and increase
the use of domestic coal reserves,
was fairer than the GOP package,
and would reduce inflation while adding more jobs.
Mondale, citing a drop in the
unemployment rate and other
economic indicators, said the nation
appears . tO be rising but of the
recession that has beset it. He said
the situation may be "more hopeful
than our official projections of a few
months ago."
Although statewide unemployment is higher than when tile administration took uffice, Mondale
said 315,000 more people are at work
in Ohio now than four years ago.
Mondale drew a friendly reception
as he made his way along aisles
lined with employees during a handshaking tour of the Western Electric Corp. plant here.
.

About 6,500 people work at the
facility , which makes telephone
switching equipment. It has been hit
by only one recent layoff that involved fewer than 100 employees,
said Hugh McDonald, manager of
public relations.
One plant toolworker, Howard Hill
of Colwnbus, said he is a rc~i stered

Democrat but plans to vote for
Reagan. " I've got no choice. I've got
to," he sa id. "I can't vote for that
liberal crowd. I'm not worried about
the Russians anymore - it's that
liberal crowd in Washington." For
another worker who talked briefly
with Mondale, Carol Johnson , issues

of war and peace appeared more important than economics.
"I told him to tell the President,
'Thank you for keeping us out of
war,"' she ~!Bid. Another president
might have reacted differently to
Iran's seizure of American hostages,
she said.

Prayer could he used against you
VM'COUVER, British Colwnbia
(AP)- Caution: Anything you pray
may be used against you.
God is not a person, the British
Columbia Appeal Court ruled Wednectay, and ·what you say to God is
admissible as evidence in court.
The court ruled in a split decision
that the contents of a prayer by
Morris Davie while he was in a
police station can be used against
him in a hew trial.
Davie, of the central British
Colwnbia community of Prince
George, had earlier been acquitted
by a Cariboo county judge on
charges of setting a forest fire .
Part of the evidence against him
was testimony from a police officer
who said he saw Davie drop to his
knees, raise his hands and say, "Oh
God, please let me get away with it,
just this once."
Defense lawyers argued the
prayer was a privileged communication meant to be heard by
God, not the police. Judge Ross Lander agreed and granted the acquittal.
But in the ·appeal court hearing,
the prosecution countered that under law a private communication is
between two people - and God is not

a person but a theological, or
spiritual, being.
If God were a person, tbe
prosecution argued, he could be
charged under the Criminal Code
because some of his acts end in
death.
Justice H. E. Hutcheon said that
Davie believed he · was flown from
the remote village of Fort Ware to
Prince George to undergo a lie
detector test and was unaware that
the room in the police station was
monitored by closed-ci rcuit
television camera and hidden
microphone. fl was in this room that
Davie sought God's help.
''In my opinion, the word person is
usedlin the statutes of Canada to
describe someone to whom rights
are granted and upon whom
obligations are placed, " Hutcheon
said. "There is no earthly authority
which can grant rights or impose
duties on God."
He said tne sections of the
Criminal Code dealing with protection of privacy offer no indication
that a speaker's statements to God,
a family pet or his dead mother are
due the same protection as a com·
munication between two people.
Justice Peter Seaton a~reed but

Chief Justice Nathan Nemetz dissented, arguing the statement was
made under circumstimces in which
Davie had reasonable grounds to expect it would not be beard by any
other person than for whom it was
intended.

Completes course
MARION - Melanie K. Simmons
of A-12 Village Green Apts.,
Pomeroy, a General Telephone Co. ·
of Ohio employee, has completed a
course at the company's Robert M.
Wopat Employee Development Center in Marion.
The one-week course focused on
proper handling of residence the
business accounts. Sinunons is a ser·
vice representative in the company's Athens district. Courses at
the development center are
designed to enhance employees' job
skills. The subjects range from basic
electronics to management skills.

'Mrs. Enuna Jennie Davis, 99, for·
medy of Meigs County, died Wednesday in Colwnbus.
~ .Mrs. Davis was preceded in death
~b9 her husband, Perry.
· Surviving are three sons and
· ·daughters-in-law, William and Theo
: Davis, Ernest and Virginia Davis,
- all of Grove City, and John and Ruth
- Davis, Florida; four daughters, Em- rna Atherton and Mrs. Paul
(Henrietta) Archer, both of Colwn:bus, and Mrs. Clarence (Merle)
Powers and Mrs. Charles (Helen)
Burton, both of Florida; 18 grandchildren, 50 great-grandchildren and
18 great-great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.in. Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Floyd Shook of-·
ficiating. Burial will be in Rock
Springs Cemetery. Friends may call
· at the Long Funeral Home Nor·
theast Chapel in Colwnbus from 7 to
. 9 .p.m. Thursday and at the Ewing
., Funeral Home after 2 p.m. Friday.
-

David Fields Sr.
David Fields Sr., 84, Hartford,
died Tuesday evening in the Holzer
Medical Center.
Born April 16, 1896, in Hartford, he
was
the son of the late James W. and
''Martha
Gibbs Fields.
•••
He was a coal miner, a member of
'
Local 543 Huntington AFL-CIO, a
'
member ·of District 17 United Mine
~
Workers for over 50 years, and a
'
member of the First Church of God,
New Haven.
: Surviving are his wife, Laura E .;
·nine sons, Frank and WUliam, New
. Lexington, Ohio, David Jr. and
Wetzel of New Haven, Glenn of
Mason, Gerald, Ray, Melvin and
Freddie, all Qf Hartford; two sisters,
Mrs. Bertha Dalley, Pomeroy, Mrs.
Dorothy Peoples, Hartford ; a
brother, William Fields Jr., Hartford ; 28 grandchildren, 21 great•. grandchildren, and one great-great.-- granddaughter.
Funeral services will be conducted Friday, I p.m., at the First
Church of God, New liaven, with the
Rev. Wlllfam "Bud" Hatfield of·
n
ficlating. Burial will follow in the
Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Foglesong
Funeral Home Thursday, 2to 4 and 7
· to 9 p.m., and at the church one hour
prior to services.

Dr. Nelson A. Park
Dr. Nelson A. Park, 61,2024 Mason
Blvd., P\. Pleasant, a well-known

EVENING
6 :00 (f) D
CJ ii)(Ibi ill) d) NEWS
CIJ BACKYARD
CIJ CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
CIJ ABC NEWS
(])(fil ZOOM
6:30 m U m NBC NEWS
Cil MUSIC
ffi BOB NEWHART SHOW
(j)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
D CIJ®i CBS NEWS
(]) MAINSTREAMING
® OVEREASYGuoai:Jazz pianiot

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EMS RUNS REPORTED
39 VISIT CLINIC
Local emergency units made four
Thirty-nine persons visited the
runs Wednesday and Thursday mor- free blood pressure clinic sponored
ning, according to the report of the by the Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Meigs County Emergency Medical Club held held Tuesday at the
Services Headquarters. They in- . townhouse.
elude 12:45 p.m., Pomeroy Unit, to
Lunches were served to 12 perPomeroy Health Care Center for sons. Guests attending werew Mrs.
Dessie Patterson, taken to Veterans Mary Frances Bwngardner and
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy Unit, Mrs. Edna Shaffer. The next clinic
5:07, 127 Mulberry Ave., for Mary will be on Oct. 14.
Knight, taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland Unit, 6:21a.m., to
RECEIVES WORD OF DEATH
Meigs Mine I for Roger Brawer,
Mrs.
Oma Hysell while visiting
taken to Holzer Medical Center, and
her
sister,
Mrs. Carl Gordon and
Tuppers Plains Unit, 6:23a.m. Thurson,
Bill,
Colwnbus,
received word
sday for Jack Toothman, Reedsville,
of
the
death
of
her
brother-in-law,
taken to Camden-Clark Hospital,
Thomas Turnbull of New Brighton,
Parkersburg.
formerly of Syracuse.

0

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NOW THRU SEPT. 20TH WE
HAVE REDUCED. OUR ENTIRE DIAMOND STOCK
20% AND MORE .

A SM~LL DEPOSIT HOLDS
ANY ITEM TILL CHRISTMAS

(liD $100,000NAMETHATTUNE
® MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
il2Jot FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
B:OO CI! U m GAMES PEOPLE PLAY
Attorney F . Lee Bail e~ and Pittsburgh Steel era superstar Franco
Harris are guests tor tonight's pro ~
gram which features arm wreatling,

HEAVY MAN'S DIAMOND

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THOS~ l'iiRES A6AlH...

1981 V.W.'s

YiELl· EVEl!Y IDEA.

I&gt;E 6REAJ ...

I1J

U.S. CHRONICLE
(fil EYERYFOURYEARSin lhollrot
of a three part aeries on the Pre·
sidency, host Howard K. Smith
uses an exc lusively commissioned
Gallup survey to examine what .
qualities the public looks tor in a
President. (Closed Captioned)

Upper R1ver Rd.

Gallipolis

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

m

i

th air privacy lnv aded by a b unglino,
would·be burglar. (Repeat)

CIJ ®J THE TENTH MONTH
Stara:CaroiBuriiett, Kellh Michell.

0

ALLEYOOP

Hull\ PupP,I~·

aH·ttm•

GADFRVI YOU'RE RIGHT, SO NOW WHAT?' WE'LL
ED! THEY'RE GOI\JNA
NEVER MAKE IT TO
CUT US OA'.'
THAT 11'\INE EI\JlRANCE!

comfort

Oori Grey , a successful divorcee •
learns that aha Ia pregnant and
decides to keep and raise her child
despite pressure from her brother
and her lover. (2 hrs., 30mlna.)

YE~.L!! LOOKS LIKE WE'RE
BE 1WJ:t=IIJ A ROCK AND A

HARD PLACE, ALL

RIGHT.'

(]) FOR THE RECORD
B:58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
9:00 mUCIJ50YEARSOFCOUNTRY
MUSIC From tho Grand Ole Opry
House In Nash'f'ille, Glen Campbell,
Roy Clark and Dolly Pan on are the
hosts and Johnny Cash, Ray
c·harlea and Lorena Lynn are the
spacial guest atara of this country
music extravaganza. (Repeat; 2

FiiTZif II
br111"-d PIQiklr1

CIJ (12) 8
NFL FOOTBALL
SPECIAL ABC Spons will provide

W19WW 1111918 WOI 0
polent&amp;d lormulo Ia 1001

ccmlorl . Huill F\.oples' shoes
WOVIO CHIO II Mii11Cf1S l8iecf
theM &amp;hOM Yeot' oiler y8(lo' Wh~ ?
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stee1 1honk SIJPP(I'T. Iha sctr. 11e1ible
Mlc:rocreoe ,. Kies or vecm or sho&amp;Mololl'll;l
OQjflmor-.tup Who!!JV81 I~ leoiCJ'1. treat lfCUMII
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to tl'le cloi&amp;lc comlorl d Hush !lupples' ll'loel
more coml cr!otlle ll'lOn lee!

Glmble and the Bosque Bandits'
oaed Captioned) (60 min a.)

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'5595

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SHOULIIERS

A~YONE WHO

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D W CBSLATEMOVIE'THEJEFFERSONS: Mother Jefferson 's
Fall' Nobody seems tohavetlmefor
Mother Jefferson, aoahe resorts to
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AND WIFE: No Hearts, No Flowers '
Stars : Rock Hudson, Suaan Saint

'4595
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VILLAGER
BOBCAT WAGON

James. (Ropoal)
(]) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
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11:45 Cil il2J
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12: 15 CIJ
8
ABC NEWS
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12:30 (!) FOOTBALL: INSIDE THE NFL

JlARNEY

DID SNUFFY GIVE YOU
ANYTHING FOR VOUR
BIRTHDAY, LOWEEZV?

Del~ )(e stationwagon, 4 cylinder
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Weeklyactionhighllghta,analyaea

12:35
1:00
1:25
1:30
1:35
2:00
2:30
3:00
4:00
4:30
5:30

and predictions from the gridiron.
Cil
CHARLIE' S
ANGEL5-BARETTA
CHARLIE '·SANGELS
TOMORROW
KOINONIA
m NEWS
ill MOYIE~DRAMAI"I1o "Houo·
!g_nStory" 1G58
ROBERT SCHULLER
W
APTIONED)
NEWS
I BELIEVE
ROSSBAGLEY SHOW
MOVIE ~WESTERN) 'l'o "The
roon And The Outlaw" 11157
700 CLUB
.
MAVERICK
SOUND OF THE SPIRIT
CIJ RAT PATROL

;I

I

m

OO

PEANUTS

11115 IS A DRAWIN6 I
MADE OF A COW IN A
MEADOW C~A51N6 MICE

·

'3195

WADDVA MEAN,COW5

DON'T.CHA5E MICE?

Gallipolis, 0.

446-9800

11'3 court St., Pomeroy 992-2054

ffiCIJ

Guest: EddleHttrrla. (90 mine.)

~lx Cylinder Engine, power steer·

Upper River Rd.

CIJ
ffi

NEWS
NEWS UPDATE
NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
MOYIE -(MUSICAL) ' " '

Cil ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

mg, loca l owner, c lean ca r . We

road wheels.

~

NEWSJ,!PDATE
D m .CIJ®l NEWS
JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
CU NIGHT GALLERY
(]) DAYEALLENATLARGE
(fil DICK CAVETT SHOW Guest :
Hal Prince. Part II.
11:28 Cil NEWS UPDATE
11:30 m u m THE TONIGHT SHOW

MISS 0 ' BRAI7Y?

Has air cond itioning, automatic,

$6995

lo'D5T

EXPERIENCE HAS BEEN IN
PAR15, FRANCE. WOULD )OU
MIND TELLING ME WH Y,

Fiberglass Hardtop, 4 speed,
While poke wheels, tracker tires.

DIAMOND
SOLITAIRES ·
Was 5280.00
Save $80.00

YOUR

;'Extra Nice·;-

WAS $155.00
SAVE $36.00

10:58
11:00

-

' """1""
' *'"' ""~"- h ' ~·-· ~"'''
........

WINNIE

1979 AMC
CONCORD
HATCHBACK

Six Cylinder

ALL STYLES

~

"Cabaret" 1i72

VERY SPECIAL

00

it's locked ?

THIS IS EPHEMERA
11:30
GOOD NEIGHBORS
CAMERA THREE 'Shodo: Palh
of Writing' (Closed Capllon'!d)
·
10:00 CIJ TBS EVENING NEWS
(]) AUSTIN CITY LIMITS 'The
Texas Swing Pioneers and Johnny

ClDOVEREASYGueat:Jazzpieniat
Lea McCann ..Hoat: Hugh Downs.
oaed Captioned)

$119

20%oFF

I wonder if

THE SHOE BOX

1977 DODGE
ASPE-NS/E

WEDDING BAN OS

live coverage of the game between .
the Loa Angeles Rams and the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

GASOUNE AILEY

sold it new .

Automatic trans ., air condition·
ing, power steering, rally strip·
ing, radials.

,

Now arrange the circled letters tO

I [J

form the surprise answer. as sug':
ge sted by the above canoon.

PriniBnswerhere: A

B

rI X)[ I I I]
(Answers tomorrow)

Yesl erday ·s

Jumbles· SWOO N LIN EA SLEIGH BIKINI
What th e top boss at the dQughnut b akery
was in c harge of-TH E " HOLE" WORKS

I An swer:

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Defenders handily duped
Hamlet in three notrump
after the Jair Ophelia raised
him from one to two.
NORTH
9-11-60
Polonius opened the four of
+uz
hearts. Laertes played the
jack and . Hamlet might have
• A9 4
stopped to soliloquize some'
+QJI0981
thing like, "To duck or not to
WEST
EAST
duck, that is the question. And
+K 10 6 5
+AJ9 4
if I do not duck whether 'tis
.QI0842
.J96
better with the ace to false. 73
• J 10 8 2
card or with the king to make
+&amp;4
+A3 ·
the simple play. Aye, there's
SOUTH
the rub and of all goes well the
rubber will be ours and then
+Q7 3
.AK3
to bed."
•KQ6 5
Hamlet knew better than to
+K75
waste time at this point. He
simply won the trick with llie
Vulnerable: Both
king and went after clubs. . .
Dealer: South
Laertes got in with the ace
and after considerabl e
West
Nortb East
South
thought led the nine qf hearts.
I NT
Pass
2 NT
Pass 3 NT
Hamlet, no longer the melPass Pass Pass
ancholy Dane, rattled off four ·
notrump. He might well have
made five, but Laertes hung
Opening lead:• 4
on to all his diamonds.
·
A poorer player than Hamlet would have won the first
heart trick with the ace.' In
that case when Laertes got,in
with the club he would ha¥e
By Oswald Jacoby
known where the king •of
and Alau Sonlag
hearts was located and would
We haven't reported a probably have · shifted to · a
game at Elsinore Castle for spade to defeat the contract.
some time. Here we find (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

.75

'

hro.)

V. W.-AMC-JEEP-RENAULT

1978 CHEVY
·NOVA HATCHBACK

WHAI A CANVAS.
D06HOU!7E. 6HOUL.D
!!&gt;E: CAL.L.5'D.

Cil 7® CLUB

1978 JEEP
CJ-7

lADIES' DIAMOND
CLUSTER

CIJ DR. JACK VAN IMPE
@ MOYIE·IcOMEDY)'"I'o "tO"
19711
(I) 1)2)
ANGIE Angie snd Brad
decide to spend a romantic weekend alone at home, but eoon find

8:30

'499.5

ALL 14K

that they are neighbors in the same
apartment complex. Stare: Gran·
ville Van Ousen and Lee Purcell.

YOU 6ET CAN'T

Rabbit , Sc iro cco,
Jetta
Vanagon, Truck, Diese ls, Fuel
Injection , S speed, etc . All com binat ions avail~ble .

'3495

Save $1:i5

bull riding and a tug of war. (80
mine.)
Cil MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
(I) MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• "leland
of the Blue Dolphin•" 1064
CIJ il2J MORK AND MINDY
DCIJ®i MYWIFENEXTDOORA
newly divorced oouple discover

RIVERSIDE

'5495

I

Hal Prince. Part II.

_10:2B
10:30

Local one owner, fuel injection, 4
speed transmission, Mi chelin
radial tires, cloth interior, AM·
FM ra dio.

ISOPPEO

'[j) IN SEARCH OF
m COUNTRY ROADS
DCIJ JOKER'S WILD
11J DICK CAVETT SHOW Guest:

I 1M!f.JTO
!,®JTAL ~'Ill'{

MIDO.EPORT, Ott.

1979 VOLKSWAGEN
RABBIT 2 Door

I RUPPE
I I I

Weeklyactionhighlights,analyaea
and predicti ons from the gridiron.
(§) SANFORD AND SON

"THE DEALER THAT CARES' ABOUT QUALITY"

DIAMOND CWSTER

Mrs. Lola Leslie Wolfe Smith, 82,
3490 Kauffman Road, Carroll, for·
merly of Racine, died Monday night
at the Crestview Manor Nursing
HDnle in Lancaster.
Mrs. Smith was a daughter of tbe
late Henry Wolfe, Racine. She was
also preceded in death by her
husband, Floyd Fay Smith and a
brother Robert Wolfe.
Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Joe
(Dorothy) Proffitt, Racine; a
nephew and wife, Charles and Helen
Wolfe, Carroll, with whom she made
her home, and several ·other nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at
I :30 p.m. Friday at tile Grawnlich
and Son Funeral Home with the Rev.
Jay Polson officiating. Burial wiU
be in the Green Lawn Cemetery_

SUIT FILED
A suit for money in the amount of
$5,336.44 has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Bank One of Pomeroy, NA, against
Gene Wolfe,R\.1, Reedsvllle.
Cheryl L. Kropka, Middleport,
filed suit for divorce against Joseph
EugenKropka, Middleport.

~m

ABC NEWS
NEWSUPDATE
U P.M. MAGAZINE
CIJ COME TO THE WATER
Cil ALL IN THE FAMILY
Cil FACE THE MUSIC
m ],!JCYSHOW
0 llJ TIC TAC DOUGH
11J MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
®J NEWS
® DICK CAVETT SHOW Guest :
Hal Prince. Part II.
il2Jm FAMILY FEUD
7:30 Cil U BULLSEYE
CIJ ZOLA LEVITT .
(!) FOOTBALL: INSIDE THE NFL

6 :58
7:CO

-

dentist in Pl. Pleasant since 1946,
died Tuesday evening at 7:20p.m. in
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
A member of the Presbyterian
Church, Dr. Park was a First
Lieutenant in the U.S. Navy during
World War II and was assigned to
the Marine Corps. He was tbe
recipient of the Purple Heart award.
A graduate of Pl Pleasant High
School with the class of 1937, he also
graduated from Washington and Lee
University in Virginia, and the
University of Pittsburgh Dental
School. He was a member of the Pi.
Pleasant Kiwanis Club and Mason
County Post 23 American Legion.
Born Feb. 6, 1919, in pt, Pleasant,
he was a son of the late Nelson A.
Park Sr. and Eulah Somerville
Park.
Surviving are his wife, Alice Lally
Park; four sons, Nelson A. Park ID,
Columbus, Oh., William E. Park,
Morantown, W. Va., Gary Lewis
Park, Pl. Pleasant and Dennis
Patrick Park, Pl. Pleasant; four
daughters, Mrs. Bridget Roush,
West Col~bia, Coletta, Regina,
and Maruca Park, all of Pl.
Pleasant; one brother, Samuel S.
Park, Wilmington, Delaware; and
four grandchildren.
Funeral services will be conducted Friday, 11 a.m., at the
Presbyterian Church with the Rev.
Rufus A. Cromartie officiating.
Burial will follow in the Suncrest
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the CrowRussell Funeral Home today ffrom 7
to 9 p.m. and at the church one hour '
prior to services.

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

Lea McCann. Host : Hugh Downs.
osed Captioned)

HEARD 0 F 5ANPRII
/ICITZIN6HAM

NOW ACCEPTING
ORDERS FOR

• •

byHenriArnoklandBobt.: e

ttl

Riverside
Volkswagen

UNDERGOES SURGERY
Kenneth McElhinney of Middleport underwent hip surgery at the
St. Anthony's Hospital in Columbus
Tuesday. His room number is583.

Area deaths· .·JMeigs County happenings.
l;mma Jennie Davis

SEPT. i 1, 11180

lffl\}1.\.ft ~lf 1~THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

\

'

MA'AM?

ALL RI61-1T...
SCRATCH ~E MICE

In retaliation for the burning of
buildings in York, now Toronto,
British troops burned the White
House in Washington, D.C., in 1814
during the War of 1812. Earlier, a
British fleet had entered
Chesapeake Bay and landed an ar·
my under Gen. Robert Ross.
Militiamen tried to defend the
capital city but were routed, and
Washington was captured by the
British.

6Lua•~t~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Coagulate
1 Peal, as of
5 River to
thunder
the Missouri
%Load freight
10 Liberace's
3 Hebrew
jacket fabric
measure
11 Put on
4 Take care of
sale again
5 Silver- ·
13 Arabian gulf
tongued
14 Arrange
speaker
8 Calyx
side by side
15 "Winter's
division
Tale" heroine 7 Snake
17 - vous plait 8 Canadian
18 Mountain pass air base
19 Alfonso's
9 Hamlet's
casUe
queen
1%
Stuck
zo All-male
in traffic
gathering
16
l.Jke summer
24 "-Named
drinks

Sue"

.,
30Goose
.33 Cupid
34 Alaskan
city
Crusoe
35U.N.
·
2% Hours
member
after 9-5
23 N.Z. parrot 36 Insincere
talk
24 Gotcha I
36 Minister's
Z6 Loot
talk (abbr.)
Z8 Girl's name

ZO Rebuked
21 l.Jke
Robinson

ZSWashed
Z8 Wall Street
item
Z7 Zone
2110scillated
Z9 For (Sp.)
30 "VIctory

at-"
31 Vessel
3Z Type of
gardening
37lsolate
39 Spartan

anny
division
10 Bring low
t1 Muscat

and 4% Ubyan port

43 Budget Item
D,t TJ,Y CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another.· In this sample 'A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code leiters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
FAB

UBJF

GBSUQ

ESFFR

FX

IGP B

GBNF
XUB 'N

FASUQ
NBPO,
I

GB

FX

D WX F B

..

I U X F:A -

BV'N
ESF . YAVSNFSIU
GXMBB
Yelllerday'a Cryploqaote: THE WORLD WILL NEVER
STARVE FOR WANT OF WONDERS, Btrr FOR WANT OF '
WONDER.--GILBERT K. CHESTERTON
()1910 King ~- Syndic.ett. Inc .

�"

.. ,,.,. _ .,. ..J .,....,,, ...... ,'-'•

LDICK TRACY

.otUIJ.WC•.,•t •

r--:

•

L rumt:l uy, u., tuw·we:ty, ~pL . .U , llHM.I

8-Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 1!, 1980 -

TELEVISI01V
VIEWING·

Temporary sales tax cut decision due soon
on-the-dollar sales tax would drop to
two cents for a period of 60 days,
meaning a savings of $160, for instance, in the purchase of a car that
costs $8,000.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., !)-New Boston, who favors the
reduction, and Senate President
Oliver Ocasek, !)-Akron, who is
skeptical, both have given assurances that the issue will be settled by
next week, one way or the other.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Ohioans will know within a week if
there is going to be a temporary cut
in the state sales tax to boost new
car sales, legislati ve lead.ers
promise.
The House Wednesday approved
.tbe legislation 87-9 and forwarded it
to the Senate, where some rnembers
say the outlook for passage is good.
If the bill is passed, the four-cents-.

Some dealers have been critical of
the Legislature for letting the
proposal, first introduced in ·July,
languish for so long.
They say the delay has customers
ready to buy cars waiting to see
what the Legislature is going to do,
and that is hurting their business .
Under the proposal, the tax break
would apply primarily to Americanmade cars, but because of its
technical language it also would be

extended to purchasers of the Maz·
da, Peugot, and Mercedes Benz.
Drafters pegged the qualification
to fuel economy, saying that the
break goes to 1980 and 1981
passenger car buyers if the respective manufacturers have improved
fuel efficiency 120 percent since
-1974.
Based on figures provided by the
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, the three foreign-built cars

on the issue Wednesday, with Rep.
Sherrod Brown, D-Mansfield ,
.
leading the opposition.
He charged his colleagues with offering "Band-Aids and gimmi~ks"
in its effort to assist Ohio's ailing
auto industry, adding that the bill
would not, as claijned, induce
anyone Ia purchase a car.
" This bill is ineffective, wasteful,
and unaffordable," Brown said.
However, Rep. Clifford Skeen, I)Akron, and other sponsors noted that
a similar experiment in neighboring
Michigan this summer has worked
well, resulting in an increase in sales
tax revenues, instead of a loss,
Skeen cited a study by the Jeep
Corp. in Toledo alleging there would
be a gain in other state revenues as
well , including illcome taxes
generated among plant workers and
sales personnel.
Senate Finance Chairman Harry
Meshel, !).Youngstown, said he
thinks there are enough votes in the
upper chamber for passage.
Senators have been under intense
lobbying pressure from the ·united
Auto Workers, which has 75,000 unmeployed Ohio members in its
ranks.
Gov. James A. Rhodes favors the
legislation, and has said he would
sign it. It contains an emergency
clause, meaning it would take im·
mediate effect.

meet the criteria, along witlr all
models of the · four major U.S.
automakers - Ford, Chrysler,
American Motors and General
Motors.
Originally, the sponsors wanted to
simply specify that the cut be
provided only to sales of U.S. cars.
But legal advisers told lawmakers
wording the bill that way might
cause constitutional probleins.
There was only a fllltTy of debate

Carter will follow Mondale in Ohio

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) President Carter, shown by polls to
have narrowed the lead of GOP
challenger Ronald Reagan, stwnps
for votes in Ohio next week for the
first time in the fall election cam·
paign.
Carter is to address a rally in
Cleveland Tuesday and appear at a
party fundraiser, state party officials say.
It will mark the third straight
week that Carter or Vice President
Walter F. Mondale has traveled to
Ohio in search of the state's critical
25 electoral votes.
Mondale heard some optimistic
I\5Sessments of the progress made in
cutting into Reagan's lead from
other Democrats during a Colwnbus
visit in which he tried to bolster support among labor's rank-and-file.
' "I told him it looks like we' re on
the rise," Martin J. Hughes,
Cleveland, said be told Mondale. The
union leader headed Ohio's
delegation at the Democratic
National Convention in New York.
"We're better organized and bet·
ter prepared mechanically than
ever before" heading into tile fall
campaign,
Hughes sa i d.
"I think he has good credentials
with the working people," he said of
the party's. vice presidential
nominee.
His assessment was shared by At·
· torney General William J. Brown, a
political fence-sitter who was tile
only .top elected Democrat to
· withhold his endorsement until the
party's national convention.
Brown, who appeared with Mon. d8.!e before a group of Franklin
Councy Democrats, said Carter and
Mondale are gaining on the ReaganBush ticket.

"What I hear now as opposed to
four months ago is that this thing has
turned around," Brown said.
Mondale toured a big telephone
equipment manufacturing plant af·
ter meeting with reporters and party
officials during an 11-hour stopover
here Wednesday.
"Ohio is a central battleground in
this campaign. What happens in
Ohio could very well decide who the
next president is. We think the
voters of Ohio will again support
us," Mondale told reporters.
The vice president, predicting better economic times ahead, con-'
trasted the administration's
economic · program with that
proposed by Reagan, which he said
would be the most inflationary
measure in the nation's histoty.
He said the administration plan,
based on an energy program that
would reduce .U.S. dependence on
foreign-produced oil and increase
the use of domestic coal reserves,
was fairer than the GOP package,
and would reduce inflation while adding more jobs.
Mondale, citing a drop in the
unemployment rate and other
economic indicators, said the nation
appears . tO be rising but of the
recession that has beset it. He said
the situation may be "more hopeful
than our official projections of a few
months ago."
Although statewide unemployment is higher than when tile administration took uffice, Mondale
said 315,000 more people are at work
in Ohio now than four years ago.
Mondale drew a friendly reception
as he made his way along aisles
lined with employees during a handshaking tour of the Western Electric Corp. plant here.
.

About 6,500 people work at the
facility , which makes telephone
switching equipment. It has been hit
by only one recent layoff that involved fewer than 100 employees,
said Hugh McDonald, manager of
public relations.
One plant toolworker, Howard Hill
of Colwnbus, said he is a rc~i stered

Democrat but plans to vote for
Reagan. " I've got no choice. I've got
to," he sa id. "I can't vote for that
liberal crowd. I'm not worried about
the Russians anymore - it's that
liberal crowd in Washington." For
another worker who talked briefly
with Mondale, Carol Johnson , issues

of war and peace appeared more important than economics.
"I told him to tell the President,
'Thank you for keeping us out of
war,"' she ~!Bid. Another president
might have reacted differently to
Iran's seizure of American hostages,
she said.

Prayer could he used against you
VM'COUVER, British Colwnbia
(AP)- Caution: Anything you pray
may be used against you.
God is not a person, the British
Columbia Appeal Court ruled Wednectay, and ·what you say to God is
admissible as evidence in court.
The court ruled in a split decision
that the contents of a prayer by
Morris Davie while he was in a
police station can be used against
him in a hew trial.
Davie, of the central British
Colwnbia community of Prince
George, had earlier been acquitted
by a Cariboo county judge on
charges of setting a forest fire .
Part of the evidence against him
was testimony from a police officer
who said he saw Davie drop to his
knees, raise his hands and say, "Oh
God, please let me get away with it,
just this once."
Defense lawyers argued the
prayer was a privileged communication meant to be heard by
God, not the police. Judge Ross Lander agreed and granted the acquittal.
But in the ·appeal court hearing,
the prosecution countered that under law a private communication is
between two people - and God is not

a person but a theological, or
spiritual, being.
If God were a person, tbe
prosecution argued, he could be
charged under the Criminal Code
because some of his acts end in
death.
Justice H. E. Hutcheon said that
Davie believed he · was flown from
the remote village of Fort Ware to
Prince George to undergo a lie
detector test and was unaware that
the room in the police station was
monitored by closed-ci rcuit
television camera and hidden
microphone. fl was in this room that
Davie sought God's help.
''In my opinion, the word person is
usedlin the statutes of Canada to
describe someone to whom rights
are granted and upon whom
obligations are placed, " Hutcheon
said. "There is no earthly authority
which can grant rights or impose
duties on God."
He said tne sections of the
Criminal Code dealing with protection of privacy offer no indication
that a speaker's statements to God,
a family pet or his dead mother are
due the same protection as a com·
munication between two people.
Justice Peter Seaton a~reed but

Chief Justice Nathan Nemetz dissented, arguing the statement was
made under circumstimces in which
Davie had reasonable grounds to expect it would not be beard by any
other person than for whom it was
intended.

Completes course
MARION - Melanie K. Simmons
of A-12 Village Green Apts.,
Pomeroy, a General Telephone Co. ·
of Ohio employee, has completed a
course at the company's Robert M.
Wopat Employee Development Center in Marion.
The one-week course focused on
proper handling of residence the
business accounts. Sinunons is a ser·
vice representative in the company's Athens district. Courses at
the development center are
designed to enhance employees' job
skills. The subjects range from basic
electronics to management skills.

'Mrs. Enuna Jennie Davis, 99, for·
medy of Meigs County, died Wednesday in Colwnbus.
~ .Mrs. Davis was preceded in death
~b9 her husband, Perry.
· Surviving are three sons and
· ·daughters-in-law, William and Theo
: Davis, Ernest and Virginia Davis,
- all of Grove City, and John and Ruth
- Davis, Florida; four daughters, Em- rna Atherton and Mrs. Paul
(Henrietta) Archer, both of Colwn:bus, and Mrs. Clarence (Merle)
Powers and Mrs. Charles (Helen)
Burton, both of Florida; 18 grandchildren, 50 great-grandchildren and
18 great-great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.in. Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Floyd Shook of-·
ficiating. Burial will be in Rock
Springs Cemetery. Friends may call
· at the Long Funeral Home Nor·
theast Chapel in Colwnbus from 7 to
. 9 .p.m. Thursday and at the Ewing
., Funeral Home after 2 p.m. Friday.
-

David Fields Sr.
David Fields Sr., 84, Hartford,
died Tuesday evening in the Holzer
Medical Center.
Born April 16, 1896, in Hartford, he
was
the son of the late James W. and
''Martha
Gibbs Fields.
•••
He was a coal miner, a member of
'
Local 543 Huntington AFL-CIO, a
'
member ·of District 17 United Mine
~
Workers for over 50 years, and a
'
member of the First Church of God,
New Haven.
: Surviving are his wife, Laura E .;
·nine sons, Frank and WUliam, New
. Lexington, Ohio, David Jr. and
Wetzel of New Haven, Glenn of
Mason, Gerald, Ray, Melvin and
Freddie, all Qf Hartford; two sisters,
Mrs. Bertha Dalley, Pomeroy, Mrs.
Dorothy Peoples, Hartford ; a
brother, William Fields Jr., Hartford ; 28 grandchildren, 21 great•. grandchildren, and one great-great.-- granddaughter.
Funeral services will be conducted Friday, I p.m., at the First
Church of God, New liaven, with the
Rev. Wlllfam "Bud" Hatfield of·
n
ficlating. Burial will follow in the
Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Foglesong
Funeral Home Thursday, 2to 4 and 7
· to 9 p.m., and at the church one hour
prior to services.

Dr. Nelson A. Park
Dr. Nelson A. Park, 61,2024 Mason
Blvd., P\. Pleasant, a well-known

EVENING
6 :00 (f) D
CJ ii)(Ibi ill) d) NEWS
CIJ BACKYARD
CIJ CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
CIJ ABC NEWS
(])(fil ZOOM
6:30 m U m NBC NEWS
Cil MUSIC
ffi BOB NEWHART SHOW
(j)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
D CIJ®i CBS NEWS
(]) MAINSTREAMING
® OVEREASYGuoai:Jazz pianiot

. CAPTAIN EASY
&amp;liT OF COUR;&amp;
I AM CIVII.IZ&amp;P•
M'l LITTL!!'
PIGISOI\J!

THEr.J SURELY
YOU MUST HAVE

EMS RUNS REPORTED
39 VISIT CLINIC
Local emergency units made four
Thirty-nine persons visited the
runs Wednesday and Thursday mor- free blood pressure clinic sponored
ning, according to the report of the by the Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Meigs County Emergency Medical Club held held Tuesday at the
Services Headquarters. They in- . townhouse.
elude 12:45 p.m., Pomeroy Unit, to
Lunches were served to 12 perPomeroy Health Care Center for sons. Guests attending werew Mrs.
Dessie Patterson, taken to Veterans Mary Frances Bwngardner and
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy Unit, Mrs. Edna Shaffer. The next clinic
5:07, 127 Mulberry Ave., for Mary will be on Oct. 14.
Knight, taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland Unit, 6:21a.m., to
RECEIVES WORD OF DEATH
Meigs Mine I for Roger Brawer,
Mrs.
Oma Hysell while visiting
taken to Holzer Medical Center, and
her
sister,
Mrs. Carl Gordon and
Tuppers Plains Unit, 6:23a.m. Thurson,
Bill,
Colwnbus,
received word
sday for Jack Toothman, Reedsville,
of
the
death
of
her
brother-in-law,
taken to Camden-Clark Hospital,
Thomas Turnbull of New Brighton,
Parkersburg.
formerly of Syracuse.

0

ocw.

REDUCED

20%

NOW THRU SEPT. 20TH WE
HAVE REDUCED. OUR ENTIRE DIAMOND STOCK
20% AND MORE .

A SM~LL DEPOSIT HOLDS
ANY ITEM TILL CHRISTMAS

(liD $100,000NAMETHATTUNE
® MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
il2Jot FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
B:OO CI! U m GAMES PEOPLE PLAY
Attorney F . Lee Bail e~ and Pittsburgh Steel era superstar Franco
Harris are guests tor tonight's pro ~
gram which features arm wreatling,

HEAVY MAN'S DIAMOND

$17995

Were$119.95
Save $30.00.
14K Gold Mountings

WAS $229.95
SALE $50.00

- LAYAWAY NOWLADIES 1 CARAT

$129500

Lola Leslie W. Smith

' WAS $1800.00.
SAVE $505.00

,..

m

~IT

SHOOLDI'I'T 8E 1DO
TOU6H T' HOOK UP
THOS~ l'iiRES A6AlH...

1981 V.W.'s

YiELl· EVEl!Y IDEA.

I&gt;E 6REAJ ...

I1J

U.S. CHRONICLE
(fil EYERYFOURYEARSin lhollrot
of a three part aeries on the Pre·
sidency, host Howard K. Smith
uses an exc lusively commissioned
Gallup survey to examine what .
qualities the public looks tor in a
President. (Closed Captioned)

Upper R1ver Rd.

Gallipolis

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

m

i

th air privacy lnv aded by a b unglino,
would·be burglar. (Repeat)

CIJ ®J THE TENTH MONTH
Stara:CaroiBuriiett, Kellh Michell.

0

ALLEYOOP

Hull\ PupP,I~·

aH·ttm•

GADFRVI YOU'RE RIGHT, SO NOW WHAT?' WE'LL
ED! THEY'RE GOI\JNA
NEVER MAKE IT TO
CUT US OA'.'
THAT 11'\INE EI\JlRANCE!

comfort

Oori Grey , a successful divorcee •
learns that aha Ia pregnant and
decides to keep and raise her child
despite pressure from her brother
and her lover. (2 hrs., 30mlna.)

YE~.L!! LOOKS LIKE WE'RE
BE 1WJ:t=IIJ A ROCK AND A

HARD PLACE, ALL

RIGHT.'

(]) FOR THE RECORD
B:58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
9:00 mUCIJ50YEARSOFCOUNTRY
MUSIC From tho Grand Ole Opry
House In Nash'f'ille, Glen Campbell,
Roy Clark and Dolly Pan on are the
hosts and Johnny Cash, Ray
c·harlea and Lorena Lynn are the
spacial guest atara of this country
music extravaganza. (Repeat; 2

FiiTZif II
br111"-d PIQiklr1

CIJ (12) 8
NFL FOOTBALL
SPECIAL ABC Spons will provide

W19WW 1111918 WOI 0
polent&amp;d lormulo Ia 1001

ccmlorl . Huill F\.oples' shoes
WOVIO CHIO II Mii11Cf1S l8iecf
theM &amp;hOM Yeot' oiler y8(lo' Wh~ ?
It eQUid be Ihe JOin On::l Jlo tn IIHIS!on16faothln '
&amp;uv1ed Plgtllln 1 . ll'o8 iiTIOOtn QIOJelaoTrtan. ll'le

don't know, Slim!
A school? Isn't it
aqainst ihe law?

stee1 1honk SIJPP(I'T. Iha sctr. 11e1ible
Mlc:rocreoe ,. Kies or vecm or sho&amp;Mololl'll;l
OQjflmor-.tup Who!!JV81 I~ leoiCJ'1. treat lfCUMII
a~rrc

to tl'le cloi&amp;lc comlorl d Hush !lupples' ll'loel
more coml cr!otlle ll'lOn lee!

Glmble and the Bosque Bandits'
oaed Captioned) (60 min a.)

•-',

PRIC E REDUCED

-'· WA S

Low. low miles.

'5595

/}~Q
,1:/J) JEWELRY

I ADMIRE

RECENT WORK

SHOULIIERS

A~YONE WHO

THE RE5PONS I-

Bil.ITY OF CARIN6 FOR
Hl5 PARENTS .

ill MOVIE -(DRAMA) 0 1'o "High
FIIQ!!_1" 1958
D W CBSLATEMOVIE'THEJEFFERSONS: Mother Jefferson 's
Fall' Nobody seems tohavetlmefor
Mother Jefferson, aoahe resorts to
desperate measures to get some
attention. (Repeat) 'McMILLAN
AND WIFE: No Hearts, No Flowers '
Stars : Rock Hudson, Suaan Saint

'4595
1979 MERCURY
VILLAGER
BOBCAT WAGON

James. (Ropoal)
(]) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®)MOVIE-iDRAMAJ•••'AI ' 1Per·
lonPI~a" 11151
·
11:45 Cil il2J
NEWS
12: 15 CIJ
8
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
12:30 (!) FOOTBALL: INSIDE THE NFL

JlARNEY

DID SNUFFY GIVE YOU
ANYTHING FOR VOUR
BIRTHDAY, LOWEEZV?

Del~ )(e stationwagon, 4 cylinder
eng,ne, . automatic A/ C, wQOd
grain tnm .

====~
)

PAW
GIFT- WRAPPED
IT

VEP·I BANGED
MY FINGER
AN'---

Weeklyactionhighllghta,analyaea

12:35
1:00
1:25
1:30
1:35
2:00
2:30
3:00
4:00
4:30
5:30

and predictions from the gridiron.
Cil
CHARLIE' S
ANGEL5-BARETTA
CHARLIE '·SANGELS
TOMORROW
KOINONIA
m NEWS
ill MOYIE~DRAMAI"I1o "Houo·
!g_nStory" 1G58
ROBERT SCHULLER
W
APTIONED)
NEWS
I BELIEVE
ROSSBAGLEY SHOW
MOVIE ~WESTERN) 'l'o "The
roon And The Outlaw" 11157
700 CLUB
.
MAVERICK
SOUND OF THE SPIRIT
CIJ RAT PATROL

;I

I

m

OO

PEANUTS

11115 IS A DRAWIN6 I
MADE OF A COW IN A
MEADOW C~A51N6 MICE

·

'3195

WADDVA MEAN,COW5

DON'T.CHA5E MICE?

Gallipolis, 0.

446-9800

11'3 court St., Pomeroy 992-2054

ffiCIJ

Guest: EddleHttrrla. (90 mine.)

~lx Cylinder Engine, power steer·

Upper River Rd.

CIJ
ffi

NEWS
NEWS UPDATE
NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
MOYIE -(MUSICAL) ' " '

Cil ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

mg, loca l owner, c lean ca r . We

road wheels.

~

NEWSJ,!PDATE
D m .CIJ®l NEWS
JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
CU NIGHT GALLERY
(]) DAYEALLENATLARGE
(fil DICK CAVETT SHOW Guest :
Hal Prince. Part II.
11:28 Cil NEWS UPDATE
11:30 m u m THE TONIGHT SHOW

MISS 0 ' BRAI7Y?

Has air cond itioning, automatic,

$6995

lo'D5T

EXPERIENCE HAS BEEN IN
PAR15, FRANCE. WOULD )OU
MIND TELLING ME WH Y,

Fiberglass Hardtop, 4 speed,
While poke wheels, tracker tires.

DIAMOND
SOLITAIRES ·
Was 5280.00
Save $80.00

YOUR

;'Extra Nice·;-

WAS $155.00
SAVE $36.00

10:58
11:00

-

' """1""
' *'"' ""~"- h ' ~·-· ~"'''
........

WINNIE

1979 AMC
CONCORD
HATCHBACK

Six Cylinder

ALL STYLES

~

"Cabaret" 1i72

VERY SPECIAL

00

it's locked ?

THIS IS EPHEMERA
11:30
GOOD NEIGHBORS
CAMERA THREE 'Shodo: Palh
of Writing' (Closed Capllon'!d)
·
10:00 CIJ TBS EVENING NEWS
(]) AUSTIN CITY LIMITS 'The
Texas Swing Pioneers and Johnny

ClDOVEREASYGueat:Jazzpieniat
Lea McCann ..Hoat: Hugh Downs.
oaed Captioned)

$119

20%oFF

I wonder if

THE SHOE BOX

1977 DODGE
ASPE-NS/E

WEDDING BAN OS

live coverage of the game between .
the Loa Angeles Rams and the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

GASOUNE AILEY

sold it new .

Automatic trans ., air condition·
ing, power steering, rally strip·
ing, radials.

,

Now arrange the circled letters tO

I [J

form the surprise answer. as sug':
ge sted by the above canoon.

PriniBnswerhere: A

B

rI X)[ I I I]
(Answers tomorrow)

Yesl erday ·s

Jumbles· SWOO N LIN EA SLEIGH BIKINI
What th e top boss at the dQughnut b akery
was in c harge of-TH E " HOLE" WORKS

I An swer:

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Defenders handily duped
Hamlet in three notrump
after the Jair Ophelia raised
him from one to two.
NORTH
9-11-60
Polonius opened the four of
+uz
hearts. Laertes played the
jack and . Hamlet might have
• A9 4
stopped to soliloquize some'
+QJI0981
thing like, "To duck or not to
WEST
EAST
duck, that is the question. And
+K 10 6 5
+AJ9 4
if I do not duck whether 'tis
.QI0842
.J96
better with the ace to false. 73
• J 10 8 2
card or with the king to make
+&amp;4
+A3 ·
the simple play. Aye, there's
SOUTH
the rub and of all goes well the
rubber will be ours and then
+Q7 3
.AK3
to bed."
•KQ6 5
Hamlet knew better than to
+K75
waste time at this point. He
simply won the trick with llie
Vulnerable: Both
king and went after clubs. . .
Dealer: South
Laertes got in with the ace
and after considerabl e
West
Nortb East
South
thought led the nine qf hearts.
I NT
Pass
2 NT
Pass 3 NT
Hamlet, no longer the melPass Pass Pass
ancholy Dane, rattled off four ·
notrump. He might well have
made five, but Laertes hung
Opening lead:• 4
on to all his diamonds.
·
A poorer player than Hamlet would have won the first
heart trick with the ace.' In
that case when Laertes got,in
with the club he would ha¥e
By Oswald Jacoby
known where the king •of
and Alau Sonlag
hearts was located and would
We haven't reported a probably have · shifted to · a
game at Elsinore Castle for spade to defeat the contract.
some time. Here we find (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

.75

'

hro.)

V. W.-AMC-JEEP-RENAULT

1978 CHEVY
·NOVA HATCHBACK

WHAI A CANVAS.
D06HOU!7E. 6HOUL.D
!!&gt;E: CAL.L.5'D.

Cil 7® CLUB

1978 JEEP
CJ-7

lADIES' DIAMOND
CLUSTER

CIJ DR. JACK VAN IMPE
@ MOYIE·IcOMEDY)'"I'o "tO"
19711
(I) 1)2)
ANGIE Angie snd Brad
decide to spend a romantic weekend alone at home, but eoon find

8:30

'499.5

ALL 14K

that they are neighbors in the same
apartment complex. Stare: Gran·
ville Van Ousen and Lee Purcell.

YOU 6ET CAN'T

Rabbit , Sc iro cco,
Jetta
Vanagon, Truck, Diese ls, Fuel
Injection , S speed, etc . All com binat ions avail~ble .

'3495

Save $1:i5

bull riding and a tug of war. (80
mine.)
Cil MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
(I) MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• "leland
of the Blue Dolphin•" 1064
CIJ il2J MORK AND MINDY
DCIJ®i MYWIFENEXTDOORA
newly divorced oouple discover

RIVERSIDE

'5495

I

Hal Prince. Part II.

_10:2B
10:30

Local one owner, fuel injection, 4
speed transmission, Mi chelin
radial tires, cloth interior, AM·
FM ra dio.

ISOPPEO

'[j) IN SEARCH OF
m COUNTRY ROADS
DCIJ JOKER'S WILD
11J DICK CAVETT SHOW Guest:

I 1M!f.JTO
!,®JTAL ~'Ill'{

MIDO.EPORT, Ott.

1979 VOLKSWAGEN
RABBIT 2 Door

I RUPPE
I I I

Weeklyactionhighlights,analyaea
and predicti ons from the gridiron.
(§) SANFORD AND SON

"THE DEALER THAT CARES' ABOUT QUALITY"

DIAMOND CWSTER

Mrs. Lola Leslie Wolfe Smith, 82,
3490 Kauffman Road, Carroll, for·
merly of Racine, died Monday night
at the Crestview Manor Nursing
HDnle in Lancaster.
Mrs. Smith was a daughter of tbe
late Henry Wolfe, Racine. She was
also preceded in death by her
husband, Floyd Fay Smith and a
brother Robert Wolfe.
Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Joe
(Dorothy) Proffitt, Racine; a
nephew and wife, Charles and Helen
Wolfe, Carroll, with whom she made
her home, and several ·other nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at
I :30 p.m. Friday at tile Grawnlich
and Son Funeral Home with the Rev.
Jay Polson officiating. Burial wiU
be in the Green Lawn Cemetery_

SUIT FILED
A suit for money in the amount of
$5,336.44 has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Bank One of Pomeroy, NA, against
Gene Wolfe,R\.1, Reedsvllle.
Cheryl L. Kropka, Middleport,
filed suit for divorce against Joseph
EugenKropka, Middleport.

~m

ABC NEWS
NEWSUPDATE
U P.M. MAGAZINE
CIJ COME TO THE WATER
Cil ALL IN THE FAMILY
Cil FACE THE MUSIC
m ],!JCYSHOW
0 llJ TIC TAC DOUGH
11J MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
®J NEWS
® DICK CAVETT SHOW Guest :
Hal Prince. Part II.
il2Jm FAMILY FEUD
7:30 Cil U BULLSEYE
CIJ ZOLA LEVITT .
(!) FOOTBALL: INSIDE THE NFL

6 :58
7:CO

-

dentist in Pl. Pleasant since 1946,
died Tuesday evening at 7:20p.m. in
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
A member of the Presbyterian
Church, Dr. Park was a First
Lieutenant in the U.S. Navy during
World War II and was assigned to
the Marine Corps. He was tbe
recipient of the Purple Heart award.
A graduate of Pl Pleasant High
School with the class of 1937, he also
graduated from Washington and Lee
University in Virginia, and the
University of Pittsburgh Dental
School. He was a member of the Pi.
Pleasant Kiwanis Club and Mason
County Post 23 American Legion.
Born Feb. 6, 1919, in pt, Pleasant,
he was a son of the late Nelson A.
Park Sr. and Eulah Somerville
Park.
Surviving are his wife, Alice Lally
Park; four sons, Nelson A. Park ID,
Columbus, Oh., William E. Park,
Morantown, W. Va., Gary Lewis
Park, Pl. Pleasant and Dennis
Patrick Park, Pl. Pleasant; four
daughters, Mrs. Bridget Roush,
West Col~bia, Coletta, Regina,
and Maruca Park, all of Pl.
Pleasant; one brother, Samuel S.
Park, Wilmington, Delaware; and
four grandchildren.
Funeral services will be conducted Friday, 11 a.m., at the
Presbyterian Church with the Rev.
Rufus A. Cromartie officiating.
Burial will follow in the Suncrest
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the CrowRussell Funeral Home today ffrom 7
to 9 p.m. and at the church one hour '
prior to services.

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

Lea McCann. Host : Hugh Downs.
osed Captioned)

HEARD 0 F 5ANPRII
/ICITZIN6HAM

NOW ACCEPTING
ORDERS FOR

• •

byHenriArnoklandBobt.: e

ttl

Riverside
Volkswagen

UNDERGOES SURGERY
Kenneth McElhinney of Middleport underwent hip surgery at the
St. Anthony's Hospital in Columbus
Tuesday. His room number is583.

Area deaths· .·JMeigs County happenings.
l;mma Jennie Davis

SEPT. i 1, 11180

lffl\}1.\.ft ~lf 1~THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

\

'

MA'AM?

ALL RI61-1T...
SCRATCH ~E MICE

In retaliation for the burning of
buildings in York, now Toronto,
British troops burned the White
House in Washington, D.C., in 1814
during the War of 1812. Earlier, a
British fleet had entered
Chesapeake Bay and landed an ar·
my under Gen. Robert Ross.
Militiamen tried to defend the
capital city but were routed, and
Washington was captured by the
British.

6Lua•~t~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Coagulate
1 Peal, as of
5 River to
thunder
the Missouri
%Load freight
10 Liberace's
3 Hebrew
jacket fabric
measure
11 Put on
4 Take care of
sale again
5 Silver- ·
13 Arabian gulf
tongued
14 Arrange
speaker
8 Calyx
side by side
15 "Winter's
division
Tale" heroine 7 Snake
17 - vous plait 8 Canadian
18 Mountain pass air base
19 Alfonso's
9 Hamlet's
casUe
queen
1%
Stuck
zo All-male
in traffic
gathering
16
l.Jke summer
24 "-Named
drinks

Sue"

.,
30Goose
.33 Cupid
34 Alaskan
city
Crusoe
35U.N.
·
2% Hours
member
after 9-5
23 N.Z. parrot 36 Insincere
talk
24 Gotcha I
36 Minister's
Z6 Loot
talk (abbr.)
Z8 Girl's name

ZO Rebuked
21 l.Jke
Robinson

ZSWashed
Z8 Wall Street
item
Z7 Zone
2110scillated
Z9 For (Sp.)
30 "VIctory

at-"
31 Vessel
3Z Type of
gardening
37lsolate
39 Spartan

anny
division
10 Bring low
t1 Muscat

and 4% Ubyan port

43 Budget Item
D,t TJ,Y CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another.· In this sample 'A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code leiters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
FAB

UBJF

GBSUQ

ESFFR

FX

IGP B

GBNF
XUB 'N

FASUQ
NBPO,
I

GB

FX

D WX F B

..

I U X F:A -

BV'N
ESF . YAVSNFSIU
GXMBB
Yelllerday'a Cryploqaote: THE WORLD WILL NEVER
STARVE FOR WANT OF WONDERS, Btrr FOR WANT OF '
WONDER.--GILBERT K. CHESTERTON
()1910 King ~- Syndic.ett. Inc .

�10-The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Thursday. Sept. 11 , 1980

Presidential campaign farm issues muddled
WASHlNGTON (AP) - Farm
issues in this fall's presidential campaign appear a b1t muddled as of
r1ght now, but a Mmneapolls radw
station thinks a debate will help
clear things up for farmers and conswners.
So WCCO, MmneapohsO has Invited " an agriculture Issue
spokesman" from the CarterMondale · and Reagan-Bush campaign corruruttees to a live radio appearance "or debate, if you w11l."
Responding for the CarterMondale conunittee, Agriculture
Secretary Bob Bergland sa1d Wednesday he would be willing to debate
farm issues with "any qualified
spokesperson" the Reagan-Bush
conunittee wants to designate.
But an official at Reagan-Bush
headquarters said he was not aware
yet of the invitation made by the
station, which also plans to a1r the
program through a network of other
clear-channel stations that emphasize agnbusiness prograrrurung :
WGN, Chicago, WSM, Nashville;
and WHO, Des Moines, Iowa.
Curtis Beckmann, weco news

director, suggested the debate be
held on one of three dates: Sept. 25,
Oct. 9 or Oct. 23.
The debate would involve a 00minute broadcast 1f two spokesmen
participate and 90 minutes if three
are mvolved, he said.
In his acceptance letter to Beckmann, Bergland said f\Uiher he
would " have no objection if a
representative of the AndersonLucey campa1gn takes part" in the
debate.
" My only qualificatiOn is that the
representatives of each campaign
be able to speak for the1r candidates
and that their positions be con·
sidered official policy," Bergland
said.
President Carter has refused a
three-way first debate with
Republican challenger Ronald
Reagan and mdependent John An·
derson. Carter wants a debate only
with Reagan in their first meeting.
Seeley Lodw1ck, cCHiirector of the
Reagan-Bush farm campaign, said
he had seen "no movement" on the
radio station's invitatwn.
Two weeks ago, Bergland

San Jose striking teachers
face-judge's court order
By The Associated Press
stltutes for 1,600 striking teachers,
Striking teachers in San Jose,
but many of the 33,000 students are
Calif., prohibited from blocking skippmg classes.
school entrances or encouraging
Classes for 34,600 students in
students to boycott classes, were or- Rochester, N.Y., were suspended as
dered to court for a hearing on a
negotiations reswned with a new of.
back-to-work order as teachers · fer from the school district to 2,300
walked picket lines in seven other public school teachers. The walkout
states.
IS now m 1ts e1ghth day.
Meanwhile, in Michigan, students
Nme Philadelphia teachers, part
in one school district boycotted of the nation's largest strike, wereclasses to protest cutbacks that for- taken into custody Wednesday on
ced cancellation of the junior prom charges of blocking school enand cheerleading squads
trances. They were released and a
Education officials said more than judge was to decide later whether to
600,000 students were affected by hold them in contempt for defying a
teacher job actions. The largest- m court order for them to keep enPhiladelphia and Rochester, N.Y. trances clear.
continued Wednesday along with
The 11-day-old walkout by 11,000
strikes in California, Ohio, Illinois, teachers has canceled classes for
Michigan, Arizona and Washington.
220,000 city students. Talks are
San Jose officials say they are stalled over job security for
spending $150,000 a day for sux- teachers.

agreement.
Under it, Russia can buy up to
eight million metric tons of U.S.
wheat and corn annually without
further clearance from the United
States. It was this provision that
Presi~nt Carter exempted from his
partial embargo of U.S. grain sales
on Jan. 4, a response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

challenged Reagan's chief farm adviser, Sen. Roger Jepsen, R-Iowa, to
"a ser1es of head-on debates" in
major farm states.
But Jepsen later said he was "only
an adviser" and that Reagan speaks
for himself. Further, he said, no
arrangements could be made until
Carter and Reagan agree to a
debate.
WASHINGTON (AP)
The
Soviet Union, continuing what has
become a pattern, has bought an additional 500,000 metric tons of U.S.
grain.
Agriculture Department officials
said Wednesdwy the latest sales in·
cluded 200,000 metric tons of wheat
and 300,000 of com for delivery in the
year that will begin Oct. L
A metric ton is about 2,205 pounds
and is equal to 36.7 bushels of wheat
or 39.4 bushels of corn.
Overall, the latest purchases reported to USDA by private exporting companies - raised to 3.66
million metnchtons the amount of
wheat and corn Russia has bought
for delivery in 198().:81, the fifth and
final year of a gram purchase

A walkout by non-teaching employees in Columbus, Ohio, was in its
sixth day, but officials reported attendance among the 68,000 pupils ·
was steadily improving despite the
job action by bus drivers, food
workers and others.
A state-approved program is
paying parents c55 cents per child
for delivering them to class. Only
eight of 429 drivers showed up for
work Wednesday, and three of them
reported finding flat tires and
broken windshields as they left
work.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Cotton ex·
ports in 1979-80 totaled about 8.8

more than two years ago.
The company lost $125,000 in 1979,
nearly double the 1978 deficit of
$65,000. Cattle and calf sales in 1979
were down to 36,257 head from 92,892
in 1978. Through Aug115t this year,
only 10,082 were marketed.
The condition of the 11()-year-old
complex that helped bwld the Cin·
cinnati economy has come under in·
creasingly strong criticism from
meat packers and minority
stockholders, who contend the
operation is failing from neglect.
" It's a disgrace," said Tom
Kluener, president of Kluener
Meats. " We haven't been able to
depend on them for two years. We

"China has the largest textile in-

million bales, the most in 53 years,
says the Agriculture Department.
Tbe exports, for the cotton
marketing year that ended on July
31, also were up 50 percent from
shipments of less than 5.9 million
bales in 1978-79, the department's
Foreign Agricultural Service said
Wednesday.
China was the leading market,
with shipments totaling 2.2 million
bales last year, compared to 6116,000
in 1978-79.

dustry in the world, and has been expanding Its industry to increase
foreign exchange earnings through
textile exports, and provide more
textiles to the domestic market," the
agency's report said.
Other big foreign markets were
Japan, 1.5 mlllion bales; and South
Korea, 1.4 million. Along with China,
those countries accounted for 58 per·
cent of last year's U.S. cotton exports, it said.

directed from the Clerk of
court of Common Pleas ot
Meigs County, Ohio, I will
offer for sale at public auction, at the door of the
Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Oh10, on tne
18th day of September,
1980, at 10:00 a.m., lhot
fo llowing rea l estate ·
Commending at t he
southwest corner of the
Bartlett Stevens lot known
by Lot No. 4 ot the nor
theast auarter . of Section
No 35, Range 19, Town NO.
2, thence south 87 degrees
east one hundred and four
teen (114) rods along the
north line of the Uriah
Stevens lot, thence north
3:1;,. degrees east forty·elght
(ol81 rods and e1~ht (8) l'"ks

-

lot down the stream wnere

the trussel now IS. There 1s
reserved on the l!bove
descnbed premises the

right of a road for an outlet
for the east end of the ·Bar·
!lett Stevens lot com·

menc1ng at a stake on the
east line of the above
described premises from
which a mulberry tree four

'"ches In diameter bears
south 4A degrees west two

bad to hire a whole staff to find cat·
tle anywhere we can. We've had to
scramble to fmd cattle, and m most
cases we're paymg a higher price
for it, plus transportation."

rods, thence south 50
degrees west stx rods,
thence south 53 degrees

west e1ght rods; thence
south 31 degrees west two
rods; thence south ~'lz

degrees west eight rods,
thence south 28 degrees
west four rods to a stake on

''I want to buy It,·' meat processor
Jack Koch said Wednesday. "I

REFERENCE DEED .
Vol. 11~ Page 216, Meogs
County ueed Records.
Said real estate is ap
pra;seo;l at $9,700.00. Terms
of sale, cash, not less than
two·thirds appraised value.
James J . Proffitt
Sheriff of
Meigs County, Ohio
(8) 28 (9) 4, 11, 3tc

the south line

of

the above

conv.:ved premises from

classes beoinntng soon at
the Carousel Confectionary

C McGee,

for
Pla1nt1ff
1
24 / 2 West Un1on

(8} 14, 21, 28, {9 ) 4, 11, 18,

LEGAL NOTICE
On May 19, 1980, .n the
Me1gs County Probate
Court, Case NO 23068, Lola
E Clark, Route # 4,

CAKE

July f 1Ve miles northea st of
Racine.
Ten month old

female walker fox hound .
Tattoo in ear Reward. 843

Yard Sale
YARD SALE Thurs , Fr.,
Sat, Sept 11 12-13 at Harry

7

Pomeroy, Oh1o was ap·
pointed Executnx of the

estate of Robert N Clark,

deceased, late of Route 11 4,

Porneory, Ohio.
Robert E. Buck
Probate Judge/Clerk
18) 28. (9) 4,11 3tp

cordwood sawtimber as
detailed ~low, on 26 acres
In Compartment 5 Shade

Public Notice

River State Foresf. Olove
Township, Me1gs County,
Ohio. For bid forms and

further information, con·
tact
James
Milliron,

Manager, Shade River
State Forest
Route 1,
Reedsville, 6hlo 45772 .
telephone (6W 378-6116.
(9) 9, 10, 11 , 3tc

v.

Case No. 17S77
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

James E Husk, whose
last known address was 201
South Un1on Street, Gal1on,
Ohio
and
whose
whereabouts are unknown,

in Middleport.

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

_,,,,,~

wo ll take notoce that on

August 6, 1980, Gwen o.,.
Husk, whose address is
General
Del4very,
Hemlock Grove, Ohto

NO

HUNTING
or
on Cooper' s
farm on St. Rt. 338.
trespassmg

45738, f1led her Complaonl

~- · · · ·

I PAY

tor D•vorce agamst h1m in
the Court of (.ammon Pleas
of Mei9s County , Oh 1o,
demandmg a Judgment
Decree of D•vorce on

highest

pr~ces

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

grounds ol gross neglect of

duty and extreme cruelty
towards her, temporary
and permanent custody of
the mmor children born as
1ssueot thiS marr.age, tem
porary and permanent
child support a11d for nil

P•ano

Tuning

Dan1els 742 2951

Lane

Tuning

and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone

hours a day , wanted junk

cars. Call742 3158.
Club
t~ng

E-very Sunday star

1 p.m. Factory choked

medies Joyce Souters 9927825.
NO HUNTING on George
Freeland's property,
Syracuse

SIGN UP n&lt;N&lt; for fall

classes 1n tap &amp; 1az:z. Bar·
bara's School of Dance tn

Syracuse. 992 3282.
JONES Meat Packing

slaughtering, custom
processing, retail meat

Washington Co Rd 248,
Lortie HOCking, OH 667
6133

WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 CourtSt., Pomero'f, 0., 45769

s--Happy •cts

CIRCLE

shoes. bOoks, doshes, Polly

Bergan bath powder, plus
much more.

LARGE YARD Sale, Sep
tember 11,12,13 from 9·

1?

.,f

.!l..

J.

~

WILL DO paint 1ng ins1de or
out &amp; Odd 10bs, six years
experience &amp; good referen ·
ces. Rea sonabl e rates ,
phone 992 7715 anytime

14- Misc Morchan-.st

YARD SALE Fr., Sept 12
at Bob Roy resodence.
Racine. 9 4 2 CB' s, 1 base,

;
/

.
~

!'

M-Ptts lor Salt

u-schoall 1n11ruction
,..,_
RadiO, TV
&amp; CB Rtpalr
11-WII'IIttl To Do

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp;LIVESTOCK

p1ece or entire households
New, used, or anttques, lnclud•ng homes, farms , or
hqutdatJon sales. Get top
dollar List wtth the man
who has over 25 vears 1n
the new , used and antique
furn1ture bus1ness
We
take cons1gnments For in ·
formation and p1 ckup ser
vice, call 992 6370 or in

West V~rg1n 1 a 773·5471 Sale

every Friday n1ght at 7
p.m Auct1oneer Howard
Beasley, apprentice auc ·
t1oneer, Osbv A . Mart1n

d-w....ttttteln

72-Trutlll far Salt
IJ-LIVt110Ck
61--Hay &amp; Grain

Strvlctt '

eTRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

71-Autos tor Salt
7l-Vans &amp; 4 W.D
74-Motlrcyclas
15AUtO P•f"fl

Jl-Hom" tor Saltf
St-MoiHit ... omts
tor Salt
Jl-Farm1 tor Salt
Jot-autiiiiHI luUdll'lll
U-Loh &amp; Acrtatt

21. _ _ _ _ _ __

22. _ _ _ _ _ __
23. _ _ _ _ _ __
2. _ _ _ _ __
24. _ _ _ _ _ __
3. _ _ _ _ _---,- 25. _ _ _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _......__ __ 26. _ _ _ _ _ __

1--------

17- Autoltopalr

eSEIIVICES

37- Rtalton

11-Homtlmprovtmtnts
12- Piumblne &amp; l~ecnatlnt

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

2
7 ._
=_
=_
=_
=_=
28.
29 __
30. _ _ _ _ __
31. _ _ _ _ _ __

2::JOlt M oanv
12 NOIN'I S•turci.,Y
tor Mon••'f

32. _ _ _ _ _.....;..._
33. _ _ _ _ _ __
34._ _ _ _ _ __
35. _ _ _ _ __

992-5746
WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD, SILVER, PLATINUM, STERLING COINS,
RINGS, JEWELRY, MISC
ITEMS ABSOLUTE MAR ·
KET PRICE GUARAN ·
TEED ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT.
OHIO ,
992 3476.

&amp; ACCIIIOf'ltl

l'-Roatlst•ttwanttd

5. _ _ _ _ __

LAN,D WANTED . from a

lot to one Of 1 112 acres in
Middleport school distnct

15- S"' &amp; Fertiliser

U-ProfHIIOMI

17
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
- _l8.' _
19. _ _ _ _ _ __
20. _ _ _ _ _ __

Gold, silver or fore ign
co1ns or any gold or silver
items Ant1que furniture,

IJ-1 IICUIIIng

14-eltdrlcal

Rtfrtttratlon
IS-GMtral Haulln1
16-M.H. ltepalr
11- UpMIItltry
&amp;

I,

11

Rates and Other Information

REGISTERED NURSES .

I

11 Words or Untitr
tday
2 claws
ldays
tdays

...

15.--~----

16. - - - - - - - - ' ' -

Ca1h

Cfllrte

'·"
....'·"'·"

l.:U

'·"
us
J. JS

Etch word over the minim 11m IS wor.. Is~ ctnts per wore"' h'f.
Ads runnlnt other titan (tnltcutlllt lla'fa w111:.. char.., at tht 1 day

rate.

Mobllt Homtsaln •M Yanlsalas areacctptH ctnly wltncashwJth
onltr. u cent ciMirtt .., ads carrytnt au Nwmftr In Care 0( Tht
ltfttiiMI

i

Full
time
positions
, available in long term care
unit and·or Children's Ser·

vices Unit. Salary com-

mensurate

with

ex ·

perience.
Exceptional
benefits Including total Insurance package. 3 week
vecatlon, paid sick leave,

In mtmtry, caret of Thank, and Obltutry: f cents per •on:l, 13.11
mlnlm•m. Calli In ICfvlnct,

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
BOK 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Help Wanted

-

'

14

paid

holidays.

retlremend program and
contlnumg
education

assistance. Apply Personnel Department, LaklnsHospltot. Lokin, W.V.
- 25250-(304) 675-3230.
--,:~----

trail er for sal e. It has 3
bedrooms &amp; IS equipped
wi1h washer. dryer, range,
r efrigerator , a1r con ditioner &amp; curtatns. Price

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

lS __ _ L:_ot_s &amp; !'r:.r~a11e__ _

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

yd.

• 2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equipment

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh .

992-2478
8 14 1 mo pd

Ph . 614 -~43 - 2S91
6-15 tic

SUITABLE LOT for mobile
home . Easy terms, close to

town 992 -5786 or 992 2529

"I just remembered. I left a roast in
the&lt;lven. How's It doing?"

All types of roof work,

may
help you
feel better.
Call:

31
Homes for Sale
NEW 3 bedroom home for
sale . Built · 1n kitchen,
dining
room.
large
recreation room, fireplace,

lots of storage, 2°/, baths,

31

382 E. Second Sl

Homes for Sale

HOUSE w1th one acre of

ground 992 2598
32

--~~-

1980 COLONADE By Fair BAR T ELS,Loan

mont. 14x70 wtth expando,
central air, 3 bedrooms, 1'12
baths. Mov•ng out of state .

742 3030 or 742 2728

Large sundeck

Home &amp; lot Exc. cond
Must see to appreciate . 2-17
3895 after 5 p m
Real Estate- General

7132

POMEROY,O.
Charlfl~

~;=.=-::;:-_Real Estate- General

M Hav es, Realtor

NR 61- 0utsta nd• ng ,

Pomer oy
home. Ior ge paved pa rk1ng
area
outtJw ldm g, atl r acl l\le
s hrub ~. no me has buill lfl lui

FOR SALE
CARRY-OUT

Wtfh all stock and equipment. lnqu~re at Maple
Tree Carry Out '"
Chesh1re, Oh.

chen full basemen• g as fu r
nace, 4 bedrooms IV2 bafh S
Ca l l for appo•nt menlloday
NR u - Beau T•I u l sp l•l lev el
hom e 1M R IQ(jS ACICI II IOh Must
see l o apprcc •ate

Real Estate- General

Housing
Headquarters

- - -Miscellaneous
- --

META L MINERAL detec

tor Retatls for $150 00 w •ll

stove,

bnc k lining, s1x tomts of

PIPe $150 00. 992 5501
\

HOTPOINT 7500 BTU alj

$130.00. 882·3425.
ALMOST

new

General

Electric black &amp; white 19
mch portable teleVISIOn.
Wmgback chair, new queen
s1ze off wh1te hetrloom bed·

spread 742·2524

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

7 ROOM HOUSE for sale.
By Owner. Good 1ocat1on m
M•ddleport Low $40' s 992·

3341

BEAUTIFU L 3 bedroom
ranch brick home m Baum
Addtt1on . Wtth new garage
&amp; genie door. Gas heat,
newly mstalled central atr
conditiOning, family room
&amp; stone f ~replace , ap
pllances built 1n, newly 1n
stalled electrtc breaker
system,
attractively
decorated basement, 2

baths. fully carpeted with

most

attracttve

drapes

Call985-3814 or992 2571

VERY NICE home 1n Middleport New roof, new ex~
ter 1or &amp; interior paint , new
carpeting &amp; draper•es, full
basement, good locat1on
992 5792 or 992-2606.

FOUR YEAR old seven

room house wtth 1 12 baths,
fully carpeted, electric
baseboard, heat, wood bur
ner, gas available, one car
garage, on three acres, one
mile outside Racine 12
mmutes from new brtdge
at Ravenswood 949·2706
1

11 6

POMEROY, 0.
992-2259
NEW LISTING - Ap-

E . Second street

Phone
1-( 614) ·992-Jl25

pro x 1 acre lot w1th
14x10 mobile home 3
bedrooms, 2 baths , front
porch, garden space

NEW LISTING - Fur-

ni shed 3 BR home, ba t h,
forced air furnace, full
basem ent, large eat 1n
kitchen , storm doors
and w1ndow s In the

$18,500

NEW LISTING - M ini
Farm - on St R1. 124.
13 acres rollmg land,

country . $32,500
PRIVATE - 13 lots

some t1mber , With 4
bedroom home
Also
storag e
bu 1ld1ng

near water, sewer and
natural gas for onl y

$39,900
NEXT TO NATURE -

$6,500.
$14 , 000 00

4

bed rooms, bath, natural
gas , fireplac e, 2 car
garage on one th •rd of
an acre C1 ty water and

21evello1s
70 ACRES - On State
Route 33. Hay land ,
pastu r e and good stan d•ng t1mber 2 houses ,
mobile home, block
bUIIdmg, garage and all
m tnerals $70,000

3 ACRES -

2 fam1ly

home The rent wilt help

you w1th the b1ils T P.

water , 12 rooms and
large 2 car garage for
car
r e pairs
Just

$45,000
REALLY NICE -

3

ktng stze bedrooms tn
this well cared for
home
Large shade
trees on one acre lot
Modern
k 1tchen,
2
baths, nlce' carpetmg,
large bas2ment, and a 2
car garage with apt . or
workshop over Want

$57,500.
RIVER FRONT- Any
size lot you want on Rt.
124
IN ADVERTISING
YOUR HOME. YOU
OPEN YOUR DOOR TO
STRANGERS . LIST
WITH US AND WE
WILL BE WITH YOU
FOR YOUR SAFETY!
Call992-3325 or 992-3876

Close 1n - 6 acres, 3
bed room home twth
equ1pped kitchen , fami ·
ly
room ,
s 1orage

bui lding $29,500
BUSINESS BUILDING
- 40 x60 glazed tile on
approx. '12 acre lot tn

Salem Cente r $9,000
OWNER WILL TAKE
MOBILE HOME OR
AUTO AS DOWN PAY MENT - On this 2-3
bedroom home All new
carpet, full basement,
F A
ga s
furnace

$19.000
ACREAGE - 10 acres
of

wooded

land

near

Me1gs H1gh School
Good budd1ng s1te Call
for more 1nformatton .

BUILDING LOT - Ap

prox
11;-t acre lot
located near Langsville
Util1t 1es
avail able

REALTOR
Henry Cleland. Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES

Jean Trussell949-2660

Roger

and

Dottoe

Turner

992-S69 2
OFFICE 992 -2259

Real eStite - Gener.al

new shingled

sizing,

roof.

Nice

frontage with redwood fen
ce Southern Local School
Distnct, 4

1/ 3

54

L•ncoln1 Heights. 4 rooms &amp;
bath, tull basement, all
hardwood floors, stove &amp;
refngerator furn1shed .
Clean &amp; ready to move into .

$175 mo.; $175 . depos1t. No
Mobile Homes
for Rent
Brown's

m1 te on Co.

Rd. 28 from Racine off 124
on black top road has 1 33
acres Phone614 949 -2830.
-- - - - - -\

style

hydrostatiC dnve

pnced

for

ANTENNAS
INSTAI.ATIONS

FIREWOOD for sale $30.
PICkUP load Call 647 3402

TV, CB &amp; HAM

843-2803

Phone 949 -2414
9·10·1 mo pd

Rt. 1, Portland, Oh.
8-13 -1 mo.

Pets for Sale

tndoor outdoor

MObile

facillt1es

Horses

and pontes and nd.ng
lessons
Everyth 1ng

required. No pets. 949-2253

1magonable 1n horse eqUipment
Blankets, belts,
boots, etc. Engl iSh and
Western
Ruth Reeves

992

MOBILE HOME for rent.

Trucks for Sale

72

1979 ONE TON Chevy flat·

bed truck in good cond 1t 1on
with low mileage
Phone
446 0762 GallipoliS .

1-----------1
Fabulous Filet

PUT A cold nose in your

kitchen furntshed, adults
preferred No pets Depos1t

future
Me1gs

992-2749

Shots,
County

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap
Is Phone 992 ·5-434.

pets. Deposit
2749.

requ~red

57

no

992-

WANTED

Ind. 46176

wheels for 5 hole 15" Ford
truck $100 like new 992
5388

clear·span bu1ld lnys Our
lowest price 1n over two
years Examples! • 30' x
ol8' x 12' for $3998.00, 40' x
48' 14' for $4763 oo, 48' x 72'

have

fireplace mserts, free stan·
ding stoves, warm air fur·

adapters,

x 14' tor $6904.00, &amp; IIJ' x
100' x 14' for $12,756 00.
Call collect today lor prike
guarantees 1-614-294-2675
I118P m.

mob ile

home wood heaters, and
tr~ple wal~chimneys Outdoor Equipment Sa les, J et
Rls. 7 &amp; 35 Galilpohs, Ph.
446-3670

62
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD Poles max.

S3
Antiques
ATTENTION
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Woll

diameter 10"

on largest

end $12 per ton. Bundled

pay cash or certified check
far ant•ques and collec ·
t1bles or ent1re estates.

slab $10 per ton De livered

to OhiO Pallet Co , Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 -2689

OLD COINS, pocket watChes, class rings, weddmg
bands, diamonds. Gold or
s11ver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
742-2331 Treasure Ches1
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462.

Mise Merchandise

63-------Livestock ---PONY 992-5926

USED APPL1ANCES
H1RE - Beautiful old home nv,orlool(inu iiie"
OhiO River. If you 're look1ng for
wtth plenty of room and a home you can
call us on this one. You ' ve got to see it &gt;40I,oo•u.uu.

-LOTS
Large buildmg lot 1n cent er ot town

on the main highway . S6i500 .

CALL BILL CHILDS 992-2342
RODNEY DOWNING, BROKER
OHIO

1 Good Used Sears

Coldspot

Combina -

1968 PONTIAC LEMANS.
Sale or trade for a pickup of
equal value 992·2779 .

tion Refrigerator SH

1 Good Used Gobson

Coppertone Combln.ltton Rctngerator $20
1 Good Used Un•co
Large Chest
Freezer

1964 CHEVELLE. $395
You get a new rebuilt 6 cyl
motor, auto . trans ., 4 door
body ' s fa1r, mag wheels

992·5388

~... - POMEROY
~LANDMARK
u
n
11111

E. Maon st , Pomeroy,O.

mag

per. $100 . 4 wh 1te spoke

Camp1ng
Equopment
FIF TEEN foot camper
Very nice 985 3565.

77

Household Goods

nace

reasonabl e

8' FIBERGLASS truck top

7193

61
Farm Equopment
Bl:JILDINGS!! All steel

We

Also 2 14"

thly payments on sp'"et

3080.

STOVES -,

All

pr~ced .

Motor products 992 2779

ResponSible

Contact Chris Pullins, 742

s1

parts

Hearse wheels for General

p1ano Can be seen locally
Write cred1t manager:
P 0 Box 537 Shelbyville,

W.anted to Rent

47

1972 MONTE CARLO body

Like new

party to take over low man ·

WANTED LOT for trailer.
Preferably in Meigs Co.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

76

773 5650.

46
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, Narth of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479

Boats and

Motors for Sale

like new . $1.200.00. 742
2142 .

Teen1e Gen1e

Lowery organ

HONDA TRAIL 90 S225 00
992-3653.

--~-------

Musical
Instruments

MAGIC

Motorcycles

74

1969 GLAST RON V-Hole, 15
foot . 1971 Mercury 65 hor
se, sure liner tra 11er. Runs

WHITE 2 year old male
poodle $50. Call between
8.30 11 week days 949 -2813

ONE HALF DOUBLE fur
rent. Two bedroom fur

p.m . al256-1967, GalliPOl iS

75

short hair .

Manor apts Call992·7787

furn•ture truck with 18 fl
body &amp; hydraul iC l1ft gate.
Call Kenneth Swam after 6

$750.00 882 3425.

cats, kittens. with long or

RENTER'S assistance for
Sen•or C1t1zens 1n Village

----SALE OR TRADE. F600
---~---

1976 KAWASAKI KZ 400

for emergenc•es only
Cocker
span i el
type,
terrier type , three beagle
types, hound dog, several

Apartment
for Rent

Trucks for Sale

12

motorcycle, new t~r es, two
helmets, crash bar ,
luggage carrier, SISSY bar ,
1n excellent cond1t1on

wormed
Humane

Soc1ety 992 -6260. Hours 127 da11y Open on Tuesdays

only ,

Call After 5 P.M .

fL:==================~~:::::::::::::::=~l

(614) 698-3290.

Adults

INSIDE &amp;OUT

quick

sale. 1·614-457 3139 or 1 614
873-4996

HILLCREST
KENNELS
Board1ng, all breeds
Clean

Home. Furnished, private
lot , adults on I y. Depos1t

n1shed

BELl
House Painting

TOWERS &amp;

dozer, s1x way blade. 1976

HOOF HOLLOW

44

Windows

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

B&amp;D

Also Dav•s trencher for
$3,900 00
Also Case 350

_
S6

Ba1ley 's, Middleport

SYRACUSE -

Pomeroy

1n ex

2

requ~red .

elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
eReplacement

Office 992 _7544
Home 992 _6191

eel lent condition $4,500 00

Also AKC reg,stered
Dobermans 614-446·7795

5914

vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

Federal Housing
Veterans
Administration
107 Sycamore

loader

mobile home, utll1ties paid
Deposi1 requ~red. Adults
only or w111 consider one
child. 992 3647

TRAILER for rent

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

anytime

Tra11er Park. 992 3324

BEDROOM

1r~======~~~~

REAL ESTATE LOANS

Mise Merchan1se

BOBCAT

model

inside pets 992 -3090

home, real ntce

Complete Dry Clean1ng
and Laundry
• Carpet
• Ora penes
• Furniture
c"We're No. 1m
Serv.ce &amp; Quali

9 10 1 mo

SHOE SALE . Men' s tennis
shoes. S3.99 pr .. boy's, $2.99
pr
Values to $8 .95.

double garage. 985-l543

PH 992-6342
TRY US!

~~==;;,;;;;;::lrr~==~~~===~lJ=;:::::::::~~~~~~~

HOUSE FOR RENT on

42

PARK
fl NANCIAL

work guaranteed .
Free Estuna te mo .
8 14 1

deposi t required, no ms1de
pets.
move992 1nto
3090. s11s mo ,

54

lot, three bedrooms, 2 'h
baths, large liv1ng room,
dining room, paneled
family room, w1th stone
f•replace , picture window
&amp; slid1ng glass doors to
patto, gas heat, centra l aircondtton•ng, extra large

aluminum vinyl

1-22-tfc

21 years expenence. All

767·3167 or 557 ·3411.

PLEASANT COUNTRY
LIVING, Baum Addil1on
Home on large landscaped

car garage &amp; breezeway,
tour bedroom , living room,
k1tchen, dining room, bath,

992-621SOr992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

HOUSE FOR RENT on

HOUSE NEAR Racine, 5
rooms &amp; bath 992 5858.

guns, pocket watches and
co1n collections . Call 614

country home with double

V.C. YOUNG II

949-2160

Lincoln Heights, 4 rooms &amp;

Houses for Rent

41

Nothing too large. Also.

Call alter 4 at992-7378

5 p .m. Modern two story

ca~~~~~~rd

All1ype~~~!~~.

STRIVE TO DO MORE!
•

317 N .
Middleport, Ohto

(Free Estimates}

new
and repaor, gutters,
downspouts, commerCia I &amp; res1den1oal.
949-2160 Pomeroy
797-2432 Athens
Tom Hosk1ns or
Gerald clark
797-4847

It' s the " Little 811 More
That Counts" ! So WE

THREE BEDROOM spl1l

FOR SALE CALL AFTER

remodeling
-Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work

$3,700

Housing
Headquarters

entry home, built-m k1t
chen, fully carpeted , 1 IJ"'
bath, two car garage, over
two acres of land SS.4,000

to ssoo.oo an acre
985·4185or985 3590.

TWO BEOROOM furnished

~~~~.c!~~w

- Addonsand

OHIO VALLEY

s•o oo

TWO BEDROOM mobile

Real Estate- General

1\esterson

I~==========-~==========~

and amount
school on
busmall
routes
Any
route I·
Eastern School d1stnct

Neac•l E Cuse v, Br Mgr
Ph 99 2 240l or 99'1 2'BO

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

-Plumbing and
e1ectr1cal work

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

bath, half basement, fully
carpeted. paneled liv.ng
'room, clean &amp; ready to

HAYES
REALTY

&amp;

pat1o
With•n walk•n g
d1stance of school s 992

Phone 992-6226

17

All work guaranteed.

tage, 95 percent f•nancmg
to qual•fied church group,
organization, or successful
bus1ness management
992 5786 or 992 -2529

12xiiJ KIRKWOOD Mobile

home with 3 bedrooms, 22.~
baths , large tam1ly room
with f1rep lace, fully car

peted

way , over 250 toot of Iron·

FIVE TO FIFTY acres.

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

garage, 1 acre lot 992·3454 .

----

NEACIL E. CARSEY

new or repa1r gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting~

REAL ESTATE for sale.
corner lot on mam h•gh ·

FIVE YEAR old b1 level

Our health

condit toner, new condition

Auctoon _ __
OSSIE 'S AUCTION 1-jouse,
20 N 2nd Street, Mid
dleport, Oh10 we sell one

Buildings

S1zes from 4x6 to 12x40

12•60

ROOFING
REMODELING
Serving your area
for 25 years . Call
now for large savings . For Free
Estimate Call
Eugene Long
(614) 843-3322
8 18 1 mo pd

Expenenced Operators
av.a1lable for local work .
• 2 rubber t1re backhoes
e1 excavator hoe 11 ' 4

SMALL

$4,500 992 2640

992 5732

HEALTH

5 FAMILY Yard Sale. 123

small Check prices before
se ll ing Also do appraising
Osby (Qss,el Marlin. 992
6370

•t-Farm lqulpmtnl

U-Mtnty to Lun

Wanted

T

KINGOHEAT

&amp;

CHAMP ION

VINYL SIDING

Excavating

S1zes
"From 30x30"

ut~ity
1970

Pullins

Farm_Buildings

675 4424

Representative, 1100 East
Mam ~t . , Pomeroy, Oh
Mortgage
money
avatlable All types home
f1nanc1ng ,
new,
old ,
refmancmg , and 2nd mer ·
tgages Phone 992 ·7000 or

sell for $)0 00. 992 3920

Park Drive, Pt Pleasant
Tues. 9 till Sat 13. From 83

ALL STEEL

Mob1le Home Sates
Pt Pleasant, W VA

ED

I car , tools, cloth1ng

dollar, or comp lete estates.
No 1tem too large or too

14-8\lllntn Tralnlnt

eFINANCIAL

992·2143

women's clothmg , all SIZes,
ladies 16 241/2. At Methodtst
Parsonage in Racine, 405

glass or ch1na, will pay top

U-lulkthll Suppl ltl

u
· - BUslntu

celled?
Lost
your
operator' s license? Phone

pliances, Maytag portable
dry~r. baby 1tems. cam·
P'"g equipment, men 's &amp;

etc . complete househOlds.
Write M D Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OHl or call 992·
77/IJ

11-Hou..hDidGoodl
n-CI, TV, RadiO l!q~IJH'IItnt
IJ-AI'Itlquts

1 J_Htlpw 1 ntt~~
12-SituattdWenr.ct
11--lnsuranct

IN can

3 FAMILY GARAGE Sale.
Fr1 &amp; Sat. 9 5 Small ap·

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOY ME NT
SERVICES

Insurance

13

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

Broadway

rings, i ewelry , silver
dollars, sterling, etc., wood
ice boxes-1ars antiques,

4t-Equlpment lor Rtflt

&amp;-Wanted to Buy _

HAVE VACANCY care for

YARD SALE September 12

4th St.

1968

12 x 60 two

12 x 50, 2 bedroom
B&amp; S

home anvtime. Located
above Eastern H 1gh
Sc,hool. E x perience, good
envtronment 985 3323 .

Pomern,, Ohu 45769
424

two

64

be Qro o m ,
1968
N ew
Moon, 12 x 60 With expando,
two bed room , 1967 Buddy,

992-6309

Tuppers Plains

at

)(

bedroom ;

Atlantic.

WILL BABYSIT in my

YARD SALE September
11, 12,13 on Success Road
1•; , m11es ott Route 7 below

13

14

home
for
pr e school
children Da v shifl only

Keller res1dence on route 7
across from the State H1gh ·
way garage. Lots of kn1ck
knacks, pottery x lamps .
Ra1n cancels.

PORCH Sale, at Oliver E

two

65

g

Everyth'"g cheap. Floren

Bailey res1dence on Sue
cess Road, County Road 46
iUSI 2 moles ott Route 7
September 12 13 from 9·

Business Servi(·es

1975 w estern Mans1on 14 x

70 three bedroom . 1971

bedroom ; 1971 L1berty, 14 x

l

ce S1dders res1den ce State
Route 33 m Darwm 992 ·

..

Mob•le Hom e!.
tor Sal e

Cam e ron.

11\.

1\

n

992 7314

dark . Clothes, btcycles,
some ant1ques, lots of m•sc

Wanted to Buy
IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furnoture, desks, gold

.._.,~rtmtftt for Rent
4t-lllllooms
.._Space for R.nl
41- Wanft11 tG Rtftt

6-Lost a!MI Fcwn•
1- Yercl Salt
t-Pvbllc Salt
&amp; Avctlon

AD WANTED

~-----------------------J

Lots of clothing &amp;

9

OpPCit'fUnlty

f

signs

(no junk)

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

name and add~ess or Words
phone number of used.
You'll get better results --1-~~!!l:¢!!.!~!!!~!
If you desmbe fully,
give price. The Sentinel
reserve• the right to
classify, edit or reject
any ad. Your ad will be
puf In the proper
claslllcation If you'll
check the proper box
These cash rates
below
1nclude discount

phony, Opera, Ballet and Music Festival all based at
Music Hall, a chamber orchestra and numerous
musical ensembles, a regional theatre and tourtng
Broadway shows, and a virtually limitless array of at·
tractwns at nwnerous universities and colleges.

our hom e Tra tned &amp; ex ·
pen enced have vacancy

home 992 IIJ22

----8
Public Sale

Prlnf one word in each

14. _ _ _ _ _ __

l

) ....

-

------WILL CARE for elderl y 1n

Street, Middleport .

for ltent

10. _ _ _ _ _ __
11. _ _ _ _ _ __
12. _ _ _ _ __
13. _ _ _ _ _ __

S1tui t iOils Wanted -

12

GUN SHOOT. Racine Gun

)-Annovnttmtnft
4-Givt•••Y

9. _ _ _ _ __

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

the eligibility list at 992
2156 or 992 21 57

an elderly person in my

GARAGE SALE Fri &amp; Sat.
at Alfred on 681, watch for

X

992-2082.

CANDY SUPPLIES on
sale .
Ann ' s
Cake
Decorating Supplies, 50716
Osborn Rd, Reedsville.
Oh 667-6485

collectable

dark . .

ack D•amond linament·
Spices ·flavorings .. cold re·

possible for gold and silver
coins, nngs, jewelry, etc

&amp;

YOST wrecker Servoce, 24

Phon•~·------------------

e._ _ _ _ __

Cha1nsaw, stroller. bike,

NEW ! 11 Rent a pan ser ·

41 - Ht~~lll for Rent
42-MaiHit Homts

7. _ _ _ _ __

Pomeroy .

YARD SALE September
12-13 from 9·4 at the Ralph

I-Card ot Thank•
2- ln Mtmorlam

6. _ _ _ _ _ __

Ave .,

3182.

eRENTALS

~~~~~~~ement
For Rent

ternut

Call or come 1n for deta11s
992-6342

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

counts as a word . Count

at

3 FAMILY Yard Sale .
Thurs. &amp; Fri , 133 But-

Intermediate, advances
also
mini
class
1n
decorating novelty cakes

SKAKLEE organic produc
ts· Rawlelgh products ·BI

Announcements

J

Addr•••·--------Ilia I or group of figurH

Residence

us nght away and get on

by Goll Fo x

SIDE GLAN CES

WILL BABY SIT '" my

Beg1nner,

guns onl y

Name ......- - - - - - - - -

space below. Each in·

Spencer
Bash an

DECORATING

voce·- Rent the novelty cake
pan of your chotce for only
Public Notice
$2.00
Call 992-6342 for
deta.ls
NOTICE
Sealed b1ds will be
rece 1ved by the on 10 SHOOTING MATCH at
Department of Natural corn Hollow In Rutland
Resources, Division of Every Sunday start1ng at
Forestry, Fovntaln Square,
Proceeds bemg
Columbus, Ohio -13224, u~ to noon .
and 1nclud'ng Fr~day, Oc dono)ed to the Boy Scout
Iober 3, 1980, at 3:00 PM., Troop 249 . 12 gauge factory
for p' ne and hardwood choke gun only!

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

CULTURE AREA - Culture abounds in Cincinnati
with the Contemporary Arts Center and its striking ar·
cade among numerous focal points of the fine arts an
outstanding art museum, the Taft Musewn, .the Sym-

- --- - - Lost and Fout1d --- - - ----- LOST ON the Fourth of

6

heating and a1r con·
d1t1oning furnace cleaning,
plumbing, repair, residen·
tial electric wiring, sales
service and installation.

Patr~ck

6tc

Pay Cash for
Classlflads and
Savell I

1

some great gifts as a Sen ''"ei route earner Phone

Has had all h1 s shots Ca ll
992 5613, is good w1th
children

MASON HOME REPAIR

992 - 236~ .

Street
Athens. Ohio45701
Phone 1614) 594 3558

r----------------------Curb Inflation.

asked them, but I never got an answer. I think it is still a viable
business. It makes me s1ck. We're
convmced its going to close."
The yards opened in 1870 to handle
the cattle, hogs and poultry
streaming into the c1ty from Ohio,
Indiana and Kentucky. It supplied
hundreds of slaughter houses here in
the ftrst half of this century.

2434

antoques

SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO LEGAL
SERVICES

Attorney

Public Notice

James E. Husk,
Defendant.

a private road w1th gates
through the Unah Stevens

as a young business person
a nd earn good money plus

glassware

other and turther relief as
1s 1_ust and equ1table.
The Defendant 1s hereby
notified that he 1S required
to answer sa1d Complaint
w1thm 28 days after the last
publlcat•on of th1s notice

degrees east ele-ven (11)
rods and nine links.

nmg, containing th1rty·s1x
acres, more or less.

Also the right of way for

About 92,000 Michigan students
were staying at home as strikes by
4, 700 teachers continued in 21
districts, the Michigan Education
Association said.

wh1ch the south east corner
of the above described
premises bears south 87

the section line to Wolf Pen
Creek; thence down the

creek to the place of beg1n

f1ve black, one gray t19er,
mother cat too, 1iger 74 2

five awa-;o to good home.

Public Notice

-

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Gwen D. Husk,
Plaontiff.

to the section l'"e; thence
north 87 degrees west along

11
Help wante~ _ _
GET VA LUABL E tra1ning

2354

Public Notice

Public Notice-

--~--

In pursuance of an order
of sale in partit1on to me

4 ___ q_o\'e~way - ~
SIX k1ttens, SIX weeks old,

carpet w1th pad, cab1nets ,

-

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
VIRGINIA R. BLAKE, ET
AL
Plaintiffs~
vs.
WADE F. KING, ET AL,
Defendants.
No. 17,443
NOTICE OF
SHERIFF'S SALE
AND PRDOFOF
PUBLICATION

11- The Da1ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, Sept. 11 , 1980

DOG TO GIVE AWAY , one
year old Dashound dog to

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

Owner won't close business
CINCINNATI ( AP)
The
president of the Cincinnati Union
Stock Yards says though his
business is faltering , he IS not about
to close.
But Martin·Golzer of Chicago said
he 1s willing to listen to industrial
development proposals.
"I'm in the stockyard business
today and next week, and, hopefully,
two weeks from now," Glotzer said.
"You try to do the best you can. If
anybody comes in with a plan for a
development, I would have to
decide."
He conceded that livestock sales
have continued to decline, continuing a trend of losses that started

...

I

1973 CAM ARO
cond. 992 3931.

In

exc .

StF\dEPS
Home
Improvements

81

Use th1s lascrnatmg f1iet crochet squa1e many beaut1ful ways

Cloth. spread scmes matsall are posSi ble w11h this lmly
rose square tha t fo rms another

deSign when ;orned Pattern
71 93 Chait, diiOCIIOri S, SQU31e
8" '" No 30 cotton
$1.75 lo1 each pallem Add 50!
each patter n for f1rst class aH-

and handlmg Send to:
Alice Brooks
Neecllecoalt Dept.
:J 1
The Daoly Sen'linet
llo1 163, Old Chelsea Sta., New
York, NY 10111. Pnnl Name,
Addras, Zop, Pattern Number.
Catch on to Ihe coaft boom' Send
f01 our NEW 1981 NHDLE CRAfT
CATALOG Over 1)1 des1gns 3
lree patlems 1ns1de $1 00
All CRAFT BOOKS . .$1.75 each
133-Fashoon Home Quillin1
132-Quiit Ori~tnals
llUdd 1 Bloc~ Quilts
130-Swuler Fashions-Silts 38-56
129-Quic~ 'n' Easy TronsfeiS
128-Envetottt Patchwor~ Qu1its
t27-Afil!•ns 'n' Doilies
126-Thr~lty Crafty FlowoiS
125-Petll Quoits
124-Easy Gtlts 'n' Ornaments
123-Stilch 'n' Patch Quoits
t22-Stuff 'n' Puft Quilts
121-Pollow Show-Oils
119-Easy Art of Flower Ctochel
116·Nifty Fifty Quoits
115-Eisy Art ol •opple Crochet
113-Comp_lele Gilt Book
110-16 Jiffy Rup
109-S.w + Knii(Basictissutincl)
105-lnslanl Crochet
102-MuHum Quoits
101-Quiil Book-Collection I
ma~l

S

&amp; G Carpet Cleanmg.
Steam
cleane d .
Fre e
esttmate.
Reasonab le
rates Scotchguard. 992·

6309 or 742 2211 .
83

E ~cavat"
'n"g'---·

J X F BACKHOE SER

VICE I1Sc ensed and bon
ded , septic tank 1n
stallat•on, water and gas
lines Ex cavat.ng work and

transit layout. 992-7201
EXCAVATING

Wan ted

Dozer work or timber to

cut. 985 3567 or 992 -3208
-

E lectnca I
_ _ !B- '!ftigerat1on

84

SEWING
Repairs,

makes .
Fabn c

MACHIN E

serv ice , a l l
992 2284 .
The
Shop, Pom eroy

Authorized Singer Sales

and Serv 1ce. We sh arpen
Scissors

ELWOOD
REPAIR

BOWE RS
Sweepers,

toasters, ~ron s, all small
appl1ances Lawn mowe r

Next 1o State Highway

Ga ra ge on Route 71 98 5

3825

APPLIAFCE service, all
makes

washers,

dryers,

ranges .

dish

wa shers,disposals,

water

tanks. Cali Ken Young 9853561 before 9a x

pm

or after 6

�10-The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Thursday. Sept. 11 , 1980

Presidential campaign farm issues muddled
WASHlNGTON (AP) - Farm
issues in this fall's presidential campaign appear a b1t muddled as of
r1ght now, but a Mmneapolls radw
station thinks a debate will help
clear things up for farmers and conswners.
So WCCO, MmneapohsO has Invited " an agriculture Issue
spokesman" from the CarterMondale · and Reagan-Bush campaign corruruttees to a live radio appearance "or debate, if you w11l."
Responding for the CarterMondale conunittee, Agriculture
Secretary Bob Bergland sa1d Wednesday he would be willing to debate
farm issues with "any qualified
spokesperson" the Reagan-Bush
conunittee wants to designate.
But an official at Reagan-Bush
headquarters said he was not aware
yet of the invitation made by the
station, which also plans to a1r the
program through a network of other
clear-channel stations that emphasize agnbusiness prograrrurung :
WGN, Chicago, WSM, Nashville;
and WHO, Des Moines, Iowa.
Curtis Beckmann, weco news

director, suggested the debate be
held on one of three dates: Sept. 25,
Oct. 9 or Oct. 23.
The debate would involve a 00minute broadcast 1f two spokesmen
participate and 90 minutes if three
are mvolved, he said.
In his acceptance letter to Beckmann, Bergland said f\Uiher he
would " have no objection if a
representative of the AndersonLucey campa1gn takes part" in the
debate.
" My only qualificatiOn is that the
representatives of each campaign
be able to speak for the1r candidates
and that their positions be con·
sidered official policy," Bergland
said.
President Carter has refused a
three-way first debate with
Republican challenger Ronald
Reagan and mdependent John An·
derson. Carter wants a debate only
with Reagan in their first meeting.
Seeley Lodw1ck, cCHiirector of the
Reagan-Bush farm campaign, said
he had seen "no movement" on the
radio station's invitatwn.
Two weeks ago, Bergland

San Jose striking teachers
face-judge's court order
By The Associated Press
stltutes for 1,600 striking teachers,
Striking teachers in San Jose,
but many of the 33,000 students are
Calif., prohibited from blocking skippmg classes.
school entrances or encouraging
Classes for 34,600 students in
students to boycott classes, were or- Rochester, N.Y., were suspended as
dered to court for a hearing on a
negotiations reswned with a new of.
back-to-work order as teachers · fer from the school district to 2,300
walked picket lines in seven other public school teachers. The walkout
states.
IS now m 1ts e1ghth day.
Meanwhile, in Michigan, students
Nme Philadelphia teachers, part
in one school district boycotted of the nation's largest strike, wereclasses to protest cutbacks that for- taken into custody Wednesday on
ced cancellation of the junior prom charges of blocking school enand cheerleading squads
trances. They were released and a
Education officials said more than judge was to decide later whether to
600,000 students were affected by hold them in contempt for defying a
teacher job actions. The largest- m court order for them to keep enPhiladelphia and Rochester, N.Y. trances clear.
continued Wednesday along with
The 11-day-old walkout by 11,000
strikes in California, Ohio, Illinois, teachers has canceled classes for
Michigan, Arizona and Washington.
220,000 city students. Talks are
San Jose officials say they are stalled over job security for
spending $150,000 a day for sux- teachers.

agreement.
Under it, Russia can buy up to
eight million metric tons of U.S.
wheat and corn annually without
further clearance from the United
States. It was this provision that
Presi~nt Carter exempted from his
partial embargo of U.S. grain sales
on Jan. 4, a response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

challenged Reagan's chief farm adviser, Sen. Roger Jepsen, R-Iowa, to
"a ser1es of head-on debates" in
major farm states.
But Jepsen later said he was "only
an adviser" and that Reagan speaks
for himself. Further, he said, no
arrangements could be made until
Carter and Reagan agree to a
debate.
WASHINGTON (AP)
The
Soviet Union, continuing what has
become a pattern, has bought an additional 500,000 metric tons of U.S.
grain.
Agriculture Department officials
said Wednesdwy the latest sales in·
cluded 200,000 metric tons of wheat
and 300,000 of com for delivery in the
year that will begin Oct. L
A metric ton is about 2,205 pounds
and is equal to 36.7 bushels of wheat
or 39.4 bushels of corn.
Overall, the latest purchases reported to USDA by private exporting companies - raised to 3.66
million metnchtons the amount of
wheat and corn Russia has bought
for delivery in 198().:81, the fifth and
final year of a gram purchase

A walkout by non-teaching employees in Columbus, Ohio, was in its
sixth day, but officials reported attendance among the 68,000 pupils ·
was steadily improving despite the
job action by bus drivers, food
workers and others.
A state-approved program is
paying parents c55 cents per child
for delivering them to class. Only
eight of 429 drivers showed up for
work Wednesday, and three of them
reported finding flat tires and
broken windshields as they left
work.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Cotton ex·
ports in 1979-80 totaled about 8.8

more than two years ago.
The company lost $125,000 in 1979,
nearly double the 1978 deficit of
$65,000. Cattle and calf sales in 1979
were down to 36,257 head from 92,892
in 1978. Through Aug115t this year,
only 10,082 were marketed.
The condition of the 11()-year-old
complex that helped bwld the Cin·
cinnati economy has come under in·
creasingly strong criticism from
meat packers and minority
stockholders, who contend the
operation is failing from neglect.
" It's a disgrace," said Tom
Kluener, president of Kluener
Meats. " We haven't been able to
depend on them for two years. We

"China has the largest textile in-

million bales, the most in 53 years,
says the Agriculture Department.
Tbe exports, for the cotton
marketing year that ended on July
31, also were up 50 percent from
shipments of less than 5.9 million
bales in 1978-79, the department's
Foreign Agricultural Service said
Wednesday.
China was the leading market,
with shipments totaling 2.2 million
bales last year, compared to 6116,000
in 1978-79.

dustry in the world, and has been expanding Its industry to increase
foreign exchange earnings through
textile exports, and provide more
textiles to the domestic market," the
agency's report said.
Other big foreign markets were
Japan, 1.5 mlllion bales; and South
Korea, 1.4 million. Along with China,
those countries accounted for 58 per·
cent of last year's U.S. cotton exports, it said.

directed from the Clerk of
court of Common Pleas ot
Meigs County, Ohio, I will
offer for sale at public auction, at the door of the
Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Oh10, on tne
18th day of September,
1980, at 10:00 a.m., lhot
fo llowing rea l estate ·
Commending at t he
southwest corner of the
Bartlett Stevens lot known
by Lot No. 4 ot the nor
theast auarter . of Section
No 35, Range 19, Town NO.
2, thence south 87 degrees
east one hundred and four
teen (114) rods along the
north line of the Uriah
Stevens lot, thence north
3:1;,. degrees east forty·elght
(ol81 rods and e1~ht (8) l'"ks

-

lot down the stream wnere

the trussel now IS. There 1s
reserved on the l!bove
descnbed premises the

right of a road for an outlet
for the east end of the ·Bar·
!lett Stevens lot com·

menc1ng at a stake on the
east line of the above
described premises from
which a mulberry tree four

'"ches In diameter bears
south 4A degrees west two

bad to hire a whole staff to find cat·
tle anywhere we can. We've had to
scramble to fmd cattle, and m most
cases we're paymg a higher price
for it, plus transportation."

rods, thence south 50
degrees west stx rods,
thence south 53 degrees

west e1ght rods; thence
south 31 degrees west two
rods; thence south ~'lz

degrees west eight rods,
thence south 28 degrees
west four rods to a stake on

''I want to buy It,·' meat processor
Jack Koch said Wednesday. "I

REFERENCE DEED .
Vol. 11~ Page 216, Meogs
County ueed Records.
Said real estate is ap
pra;seo;l at $9,700.00. Terms
of sale, cash, not less than
two·thirds appraised value.
James J . Proffitt
Sheriff of
Meigs County, Ohio
(8) 28 (9) 4, 11, 3tc

the south line

of

the above

conv.:ved premises from

classes beoinntng soon at
the Carousel Confectionary

C McGee,

for
Pla1nt1ff
1
24 / 2 West Un1on

(8} 14, 21, 28, {9 ) 4, 11, 18,

LEGAL NOTICE
On May 19, 1980, .n the
Me1gs County Probate
Court, Case NO 23068, Lola
E Clark, Route # 4,

CAKE

July f 1Ve miles northea st of
Racine.
Ten month old

female walker fox hound .
Tattoo in ear Reward. 843

Yard Sale
YARD SALE Thurs , Fr.,
Sat, Sept 11 12-13 at Harry

7

Pomeroy, Oh1o was ap·
pointed Executnx of the

estate of Robert N Clark,

deceased, late of Route 11 4,

Porneory, Ohio.
Robert E. Buck
Probate Judge/Clerk
18) 28. (9) 4,11 3tp

cordwood sawtimber as
detailed ~low, on 26 acres
In Compartment 5 Shade

Public Notice

River State Foresf. Olove
Township, Me1gs County,
Ohio. For bid forms and

further information, con·
tact
James
Milliron,

Manager, Shade River
State Forest
Route 1,
Reedsville, 6hlo 45772 .
telephone (6W 378-6116.
(9) 9, 10, 11 , 3tc

v.

Case No. 17S77
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

James E Husk, whose
last known address was 201
South Un1on Street, Gal1on,
Ohio
and
whose
whereabouts are unknown,

in Middleport.

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

_,,,,,~

wo ll take notoce that on

August 6, 1980, Gwen o.,.
Husk, whose address is
General
Del4very,
Hemlock Grove, Ohto

NO

HUNTING
or
on Cooper' s
farm on St. Rt. 338.
trespassmg

45738, f1led her Complaonl

~- · · · ·

I PAY

tor D•vorce agamst h1m in
the Court of (.ammon Pleas
of Mei9s County , Oh 1o,
demandmg a Judgment
Decree of D•vorce on

highest

pr~ces

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

grounds ol gross neglect of

duty and extreme cruelty
towards her, temporary
and permanent custody of
the mmor children born as
1ssueot thiS marr.age, tem
porary and permanent
child support a11d for nil

P•ano

Tuning

Dan1els 742 2951

Lane

Tuning

and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone

hours a day , wanted junk

cars. Call742 3158.
Club
t~ng

E-very Sunday star

1 p.m. Factory choked

medies Joyce Souters 9927825.
NO HUNTING on George
Freeland's property,
Syracuse

SIGN UP n&lt;N&lt; for fall

classes 1n tap &amp; 1az:z. Bar·
bara's School of Dance tn

Syracuse. 992 3282.
JONES Meat Packing

slaughtering, custom
processing, retail meat

Washington Co Rd 248,
Lortie HOCking, OH 667
6133

WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 CourtSt., Pomero'f, 0., 45769

s--Happy •cts

CIRCLE

shoes. bOoks, doshes, Polly

Bergan bath powder, plus
much more.

LARGE YARD Sale, Sep
tember 11,12,13 from 9·

1?

.,f

.!l..

J.

~

WILL DO paint 1ng ins1de or
out &amp; Odd 10bs, six years
experience &amp; good referen ·
ces. Rea sonabl e rates ,
phone 992 7715 anytime

14- Misc Morchan-.st

YARD SALE Fr., Sept 12
at Bob Roy resodence.
Racine. 9 4 2 CB' s, 1 base,

;
/

.
~

!'

M-Ptts lor Salt

u-schoall 1n11ruction
,..,_
RadiO, TV
&amp; CB Rtpalr
11-WII'IIttl To Do

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp;LIVESTOCK

p1ece or entire households
New, used, or anttques, lnclud•ng homes, farms , or
hqutdatJon sales. Get top
dollar List wtth the man
who has over 25 vears 1n
the new , used and antique
furn1ture bus1ness
We
take cons1gnments For in ·
formation and p1 ckup ser
vice, call 992 6370 or in

West V~rg1n 1 a 773·5471 Sale

every Friday n1ght at 7
p.m Auct1oneer Howard
Beasley, apprentice auc ·
t1oneer, Osbv A . Mart1n

d-w....ttttteln

72-Trutlll far Salt
IJ-LIVt110Ck
61--Hay &amp; Grain

Strvlctt '

eTRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

71-Autos tor Salt
7l-Vans &amp; 4 W.D
74-Motlrcyclas
15AUtO P•f"fl

Jl-Hom" tor Saltf
St-MoiHit ... omts
tor Salt
Jl-Farm1 tor Salt
Jot-autiiiiHI luUdll'lll
U-Loh &amp; Acrtatt

21. _ _ _ _ _ __

22. _ _ _ _ _ __
23. _ _ _ _ _ __
2. _ _ _ _ __
24. _ _ _ _ _ __
3. _ _ _ _ _---,- 25. _ _ _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _......__ __ 26. _ _ _ _ _ __

1--------

17- Autoltopalr

eSEIIVICES

37- Rtalton

11-Homtlmprovtmtnts
12- Piumblne &amp; l~ecnatlnt

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

2
7 ._
=_
=_
=_
=_=
28.
29 __
30. _ _ _ _ __
31. _ _ _ _ _ __

2::JOlt M oanv
12 NOIN'I S•turci.,Y
tor Mon••'f

32. _ _ _ _ _.....;..._
33. _ _ _ _ _ __
34._ _ _ _ _ __
35. _ _ _ _ __

992-5746
WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD, SILVER, PLATINUM, STERLING COINS,
RINGS, JEWELRY, MISC
ITEMS ABSOLUTE MAR ·
KET PRICE GUARAN ·
TEED ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT.
OHIO ,
992 3476.

&amp; ACCIIIOf'ltl

l'-Roatlst•ttwanttd

5. _ _ _ _ __

LAN,D WANTED . from a

lot to one Of 1 112 acres in
Middleport school distnct

15- S"' &amp; Fertiliser

U-ProfHIIOMI

17
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_
- _l8.' _
19. _ _ _ _ _ __
20. _ _ _ _ _ __

Gold, silver or fore ign
co1ns or any gold or silver
items Ant1que furniture,

IJ-1 IICUIIIng

14-eltdrlcal

Rtfrtttratlon
IS-GMtral Haulln1
16-M.H. ltepalr
11- UpMIItltry
&amp;

I,

11

Rates and Other Information

REGISTERED NURSES .

I

11 Words or Untitr
tday
2 claws
ldays
tdays

...

15.--~----

16. - - - - - - - - ' ' -

Ca1h

Cfllrte

'·"
....'·"'·"

l.:U

'·"
us
J. JS

Etch word over the minim 11m IS wor.. Is~ ctnts per wore"' h'f.
Ads runnlnt other titan (tnltcutlllt lla'fa w111:.. char.., at tht 1 day

rate.

Mobllt Homtsaln •M Yanlsalas areacctptH ctnly wltncashwJth
onltr. u cent ciMirtt .., ads carrytnt au Nwmftr In Care 0( Tht
ltfttiiMI

i

Full
time
positions
, available in long term care
unit and·or Children's Ser·

vices Unit. Salary com-

mensurate

with

ex ·

perience.
Exceptional
benefits Including total Insurance package. 3 week
vecatlon, paid sick leave,

In mtmtry, caret of Thank, and Obltutry: f cents per •on:l, 13.11
mlnlm•m. Calli In ICfvlnct,

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
BOK 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Help Wanted

-

'

14

paid

holidays.

retlremend program and
contlnumg
education

assistance. Apply Personnel Department, LaklnsHospltot. Lokin, W.V.
- 25250-(304) 675-3230.
--,:~----

trail er for sal e. It has 3
bedrooms &amp; IS equipped
wi1h washer. dryer, range,
r efrigerator , a1r con ditioner &amp; curtatns. Price

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

lS __ _ L:_ot_s &amp; !'r:.r~a11e__ _

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

yd.

• 2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equipment

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh .

992-2478
8 14 1 mo pd

Ph . 614 -~43 - 2S91
6-15 tic

SUITABLE LOT for mobile
home . Easy terms, close to

town 992 -5786 or 992 2529

"I just remembered. I left a roast in
the&lt;lven. How's It doing?"

All types of roof work,

may
help you
feel better.
Call:

31
Homes for Sale
NEW 3 bedroom home for
sale . Built · 1n kitchen,
dining
room.
large
recreation room, fireplace,

lots of storage, 2°/, baths,

31

382 E. Second Sl

Homes for Sale

HOUSE w1th one acre of

ground 992 2598
32

--~~-

1980 COLONADE By Fair BAR T ELS,Loan

mont. 14x70 wtth expando,
central air, 3 bedrooms, 1'12
baths. Mov•ng out of state .

742 3030 or 742 2728

Large sundeck

Home &amp; lot Exc. cond
Must see to appreciate . 2-17
3895 after 5 p m
Real Estate- General

7132

POMEROY,O.
Charlfl~

~;=.=-::;:-_Real Estate- General

M Hav es, Realtor

NR 61- 0utsta nd• ng ,

Pomer oy
home. Ior ge paved pa rk1ng
area
outtJw ldm g, atl r acl l\le
s hrub ~. no me has buill lfl lui

FOR SALE
CARRY-OUT

Wtfh all stock and equipment. lnqu~re at Maple
Tree Carry Out '"
Chesh1re, Oh.

chen full basemen• g as fu r
nace, 4 bedrooms IV2 bafh S
Ca l l for appo•nt menlloday
NR u - Beau T•I u l sp l•l lev el
hom e 1M R IQ(jS ACICI II IOh Must
see l o apprcc •ate

Real Estate- General

Housing
Headquarters

- - -Miscellaneous
- --

META L MINERAL detec

tor Retatls for $150 00 w •ll

stove,

bnc k lining, s1x tomts of

PIPe $150 00. 992 5501
\

HOTPOINT 7500 BTU alj

$130.00. 882·3425.
ALMOST

new

General

Electric black &amp; white 19
mch portable teleVISIOn.
Wmgback chair, new queen
s1ze off wh1te hetrloom bed·

spread 742·2524

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

7 ROOM HOUSE for sale.
By Owner. Good 1ocat1on m
M•ddleport Low $40' s 992·

3341

BEAUTIFU L 3 bedroom
ranch brick home m Baum
Addtt1on . Wtth new garage
&amp; genie door. Gas heat,
newly mstalled central atr
conditiOning, family room
&amp; stone f ~replace , ap
pllances built 1n, newly 1n
stalled electrtc breaker
system,
attractively
decorated basement, 2

baths. fully carpeted with

most

attracttve

drapes

Call985-3814 or992 2571

VERY NICE home 1n Middleport New roof, new ex~
ter 1or &amp; interior paint , new
carpeting &amp; draper•es, full
basement, good locat1on
992 5792 or 992-2606.

FOUR YEAR old seven

room house wtth 1 12 baths,
fully carpeted, electric
baseboard, heat, wood bur
ner, gas available, one car
garage, on three acres, one
mile outside Racine 12
mmutes from new brtdge
at Ravenswood 949·2706
1

11 6

POMEROY, 0.
992-2259
NEW LISTING - Ap-

E . Second street

Phone
1-( 614) ·992-Jl25

pro x 1 acre lot w1th
14x10 mobile home 3
bedrooms, 2 baths , front
porch, garden space

NEW LISTING - Fur-

ni shed 3 BR home, ba t h,
forced air furnace, full
basem ent, large eat 1n
kitchen , storm doors
and w1ndow s In the

$18,500

NEW LISTING - M ini
Farm - on St R1. 124.
13 acres rollmg land,

country . $32,500
PRIVATE - 13 lots

some t1mber , With 4
bedroom home
Also
storag e
bu 1ld1ng

near water, sewer and
natural gas for onl y

$39,900
NEXT TO NATURE -

$6,500.
$14 , 000 00

4

bed rooms, bath, natural
gas , fireplac e, 2 car
garage on one th •rd of
an acre C1 ty water and

21evello1s
70 ACRES - On State
Route 33. Hay land ,
pastu r e and good stan d•ng t1mber 2 houses ,
mobile home, block
bUIIdmg, garage and all
m tnerals $70,000

3 ACRES -

2 fam1ly

home The rent wilt help

you w1th the b1ils T P.

water , 12 rooms and
large 2 car garage for
car
r e pairs
Just

$45,000
REALLY NICE -

3

ktng stze bedrooms tn
this well cared for
home
Large shade
trees on one acre lot
Modern
k 1tchen,
2
baths, nlce' carpetmg,
large bas2ment, and a 2
car garage with apt . or
workshop over Want

$57,500.
RIVER FRONT- Any
size lot you want on Rt.
124
IN ADVERTISING
YOUR HOME. YOU
OPEN YOUR DOOR TO
STRANGERS . LIST
WITH US AND WE
WILL BE WITH YOU
FOR YOUR SAFETY!
Call992-3325 or 992-3876

Close 1n - 6 acres, 3
bed room home twth
equ1pped kitchen , fami ·
ly
room ,
s 1orage

bui lding $29,500
BUSINESS BUILDING
- 40 x60 glazed tile on
approx. '12 acre lot tn

Salem Cente r $9,000
OWNER WILL TAKE
MOBILE HOME OR
AUTO AS DOWN PAY MENT - On this 2-3
bedroom home All new
carpet, full basement,
F A
ga s
furnace

$19.000
ACREAGE - 10 acres
of

wooded

land

near

Me1gs H1gh School
Good budd1ng s1te Call
for more 1nformatton .

BUILDING LOT - Ap

prox
11;-t acre lot
located near Langsville
Util1t 1es
avail able

REALTOR
Henry Cleland. Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES

Jean Trussell949-2660

Roger

and

Dottoe

Turner

992-S69 2
OFFICE 992 -2259

Real eStite - Gener.al

new shingled

sizing,

roof.

Nice

frontage with redwood fen
ce Southern Local School
Distnct, 4

1/ 3

54

L•ncoln1 Heights. 4 rooms &amp;
bath, tull basement, all
hardwood floors, stove &amp;
refngerator furn1shed .
Clean &amp; ready to move into .

$175 mo.; $175 . depos1t. No
Mobile Homes
for Rent
Brown's

m1 te on Co.

Rd. 28 from Racine off 124
on black top road has 1 33
acres Phone614 949 -2830.
-- - - - - -\

style

hydrostatiC dnve

pnced

for

ANTENNAS
INSTAI.ATIONS

FIREWOOD for sale $30.
PICkUP load Call 647 3402

TV, CB &amp; HAM

843-2803

Phone 949 -2414
9·10·1 mo pd

Rt. 1, Portland, Oh.
8-13 -1 mo.

Pets for Sale

tndoor outdoor

MObile

facillt1es

Horses

and pontes and nd.ng
lessons
Everyth 1ng

required. No pets. 949-2253

1magonable 1n horse eqUipment
Blankets, belts,
boots, etc. Engl iSh and
Western
Ruth Reeves

992

MOBILE HOME for rent.

Trucks for Sale

72

1979 ONE TON Chevy flat·

bed truck in good cond 1t 1on
with low mileage
Phone
446 0762 GallipoliS .

1-----------1
Fabulous Filet

PUT A cold nose in your

kitchen furntshed, adults
preferred No pets Depos1t

future
Me1gs

992-2749

Shots,
County

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap
Is Phone 992 ·5-434.

pets. Deposit
2749.

requ~red

57

no

992-

WANTED

Ind. 46176

wheels for 5 hole 15" Ford
truck $100 like new 992
5388

clear·span bu1ld lnys Our
lowest price 1n over two
years Examples! • 30' x
ol8' x 12' for $3998.00, 40' x
48' 14' for $4763 oo, 48' x 72'

have

fireplace mserts, free stan·
ding stoves, warm air fur·

adapters,

x 14' tor $6904.00, &amp; IIJ' x
100' x 14' for $12,756 00.
Call collect today lor prike
guarantees 1-614-294-2675
I118P m.

mob ile

home wood heaters, and
tr~ple wal~chimneys Outdoor Equipment Sa les, J et
Rls. 7 &amp; 35 Galilpohs, Ph.
446-3670

62
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD Poles max.

S3
Antiques
ATTENTION
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Woll

diameter 10"

on largest

end $12 per ton. Bundled

pay cash or certified check
far ant•ques and collec ·
t1bles or ent1re estates.

slab $10 per ton De livered

to OhiO Pallet Co , Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 -2689

OLD COINS, pocket watChes, class rings, weddmg
bands, diamonds. Gold or
s11ver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
742-2331 Treasure Ches1
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462.

Mise Merchandise

63-------Livestock ---PONY 992-5926

USED APPL1ANCES
H1RE - Beautiful old home nv,orlool(inu iiie"
OhiO River. If you 're look1ng for
wtth plenty of room and a home you can
call us on this one. You ' ve got to see it &gt;40I,oo•u.uu.

-LOTS
Large buildmg lot 1n cent er ot town

on the main highway . S6i500 .

CALL BILL CHILDS 992-2342
RODNEY DOWNING, BROKER
OHIO

1 Good Used Sears

Coldspot

Combina -

1968 PONTIAC LEMANS.
Sale or trade for a pickup of
equal value 992·2779 .

tion Refrigerator SH

1 Good Used Gobson

Coppertone Combln.ltton Rctngerator $20
1 Good Used Un•co
Large Chest
Freezer

1964 CHEVELLE. $395
You get a new rebuilt 6 cyl
motor, auto . trans ., 4 door
body ' s fa1r, mag wheels

992·5388

~... - POMEROY
~LANDMARK
u
n
11111

E. Maon st , Pomeroy,O.

mag

per. $100 . 4 wh 1te spoke

Camp1ng
Equopment
FIF TEEN foot camper
Very nice 985 3565.

77

Household Goods

nace

reasonabl e

8' FIBERGLASS truck top

7193

61
Farm Equopment
Bl:JILDINGS!! All steel

We

Also 2 14"

thly payments on sp'"et

3080.

STOVES -,

All

pr~ced .

Motor products 992 2779

ResponSible

Contact Chris Pullins, 742

s1

parts

Hearse wheels for General

p1ano Can be seen locally
Write cred1t manager:
P 0 Box 537 Shelbyville,

W.anted to Rent

47

1972 MONTE CARLO body

Like new

party to take over low man ·

WANTED LOT for trailer.
Preferably in Meigs Co.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

76

773 5650.

46
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, Narth of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479

Boats and

Motors for Sale

like new . $1.200.00. 742
2142 .

Teen1e Gen1e

Lowery organ

HONDA TRAIL 90 S225 00
992-3653.

--~-------

Musical
Instruments

MAGIC

Motorcycles

74

1969 GLAST RON V-Hole, 15
foot . 1971 Mercury 65 hor
se, sure liner tra 11er. Runs

WHITE 2 year old male
poodle $50. Call between
8.30 11 week days 949 -2813

ONE HALF DOUBLE fur
rent. Two bedroom fur

p.m . al256-1967, GalliPOl iS

75

short hair .

Manor apts Call992·7787

furn•ture truck with 18 fl
body &amp; hydraul iC l1ft gate.
Call Kenneth Swam after 6

$750.00 882 3425.

cats, kittens. with long or

RENTER'S assistance for
Sen•or C1t1zens 1n Village

----SALE OR TRADE. F600
---~---

1976 KAWASAKI KZ 400

for emergenc•es only
Cocker
span i el
type,
terrier type , three beagle
types, hound dog, several

Apartment
for Rent

Trucks for Sale

12

motorcycle, new t~r es, two
helmets, crash bar ,
luggage carrier, SISSY bar ,
1n excellent cond1t1on

wormed
Humane

Soc1ety 992 -6260. Hours 127 da11y Open on Tuesdays

only ,

Call After 5 P.M .

fL:==================~~:::::::::::::::=~l

(614) 698-3290.

Adults

INSIDE &amp;OUT

quick

sale. 1·614-457 3139 or 1 614
873-4996

HILLCREST
KENNELS
Board1ng, all breeds
Clean

Home. Furnished, private
lot , adults on I y. Depos1t

n1shed

BELl
House Painting

TOWERS &amp;

dozer, s1x way blade. 1976

HOOF HOLLOW

44

Windows

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

B&amp;D

Also Dav•s trencher for
$3,900 00
Also Case 350

_
S6

Ba1ley 's, Middleport

SYRACUSE -

Pomeroy

1n ex

2

requ~red .

elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
eReplacement

Office 992 _7544
Home 992 _6191

eel lent condition $4,500 00

Also AKC reg,stered
Dobermans 614-446·7795

5914

vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

Federal Housing
Veterans
Administration
107 Sycamore

loader

mobile home, utll1ties paid
Deposi1 requ~red. Adults
only or w111 consider one
child. 992 3647

TRAILER for rent

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

anytime

Tra11er Park. 992 3324

BEDROOM

1r~======~~~~

REAL ESTATE LOANS

Mise Merchan1se

BOBCAT

model

inside pets 992 -3090

home, real ntce

Complete Dry Clean1ng
and Laundry
• Carpet
• Ora penes
• Furniture
c"We're No. 1m
Serv.ce &amp; Quali

9 10 1 mo

SHOE SALE . Men' s tennis
shoes. S3.99 pr .. boy's, $2.99
pr
Values to $8 .95.

double garage. 985-l543

PH 992-6342
TRY US!

~~==;;,;;;;;::lrr~==~~~===~lJ=;:::::::::~~~~~~~

HOUSE FOR RENT on

42

PARK
fl NANCIAL

work guaranteed .
Free Estuna te mo .
8 14 1

deposi t required, no ms1de
pets.
move992 1nto
3090. s11s mo ,

54

lot, three bedrooms, 2 'h
baths, large liv1ng room,
dining room, paneled
family room, w1th stone
f•replace , picture window
&amp; slid1ng glass doors to
patto, gas heat, centra l aircondtton•ng, extra large

aluminum vinyl

1-22-tfc

21 years expenence. All

767·3167 or 557 ·3411.

PLEASANT COUNTRY
LIVING, Baum Addil1on
Home on large landscaped

car garage &amp; breezeway,
tour bedroom , living room,
k1tchen, dining room, bath,

992-621SOr992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

HOUSE FOR RENT on

HOUSE NEAR Racine, 5
rooms &amp; bath 992 5858.

guns, pocket watches and
co1n collections . Call 614

country home with double

V.C. YOUNG II

949-2160

Lincoln Heights, 4 rooms &amp;

Houses for Rent

41

Nothing too large. Also.

Call alter 4 at992-7378

5 p .m. Modern two story

ca~~~~~~rd

All1ype~~~!~~.

STRIVE TO DO MORE!
•

317 N .
Middleport, Ohto

(Free Estimates}

new
and repaor, gutters,
downspouts, commerCia I &amp; res1den1oal.
949-2160 Pomeroy
797-2432 Athens
Tom Hosk1ns or
Gerald clark
797-4847

It' s the " Little 811 More
That Counts" ! So WE

THREE BEDROOM spl1l

FOR SALE CALL AFTER

remodeling
-Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work

$3,700

Housing
Headquarters

entry home, built-m k1t
chen, fully carpeted , 1 IJ"'
bath, two car garage, over
two acres of land SS.4,000

to ssoo.oo an acre
985·4185or985 3590.

TWO BEOROOM furnished

~~~~.c!~~w

- Addonsand

OHIO VALLEY

s•o oo

TWO BEDROOM mobile

Real Estate- General

1\esterson

I~==========-~==========~

and amount
school on
busmall
routes
Any
route I·
Eastern School d1stnct

Neac•l E Cuse v, Br Mgr
Ph 99 2 240l or 99'1 2'BO

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

-Plumbing and
e1ectr1cal work

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

bath, half basement, fully
carpeted. paneled liv.ng
'room, clean &amp; ready to

HAYES
REALTY

&amp;

pat1o
With•n walk•n g
d1stance of school s 992

Phone 992-6226

17

All work guaranteed.

tage, 95 percent f•nancmg
to qual•fied church group,
organization, or successful
bus1ness management
992 5786 or 992 -2529

12xiiJ KIRKWOOD Mobile

home with 3 bedrooms, 22.~
baths , large tam1ly room
with f1rep lace, fully car

peted

way , over 250 toot of Iron·

FIVE TO FIFTY acres.

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

garage, 1 acre lot 992·3454 .

----

NEACIL E. CARSEY

new or repa1r gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting~

REAL ESTATE for sale.
corner lot on mam h•gh ·

FIVE YEAR old b1 level

Our health

condit toner, new condition

Auctoon _ __
OSSIE 'S AUCTION 1-jouse,
20 N 2nd Street, Mid
dleport, Oh10 we sell one

Buildings

S1zes from 4x6 to 12x40

12•60

ROOFING
REMODELING
Serving your area
for 25 years . Call
now for large savings . For Free
Estimate Call
Eugene Long
(614) 843-3322
8 18 1 mo pd

Expenenced Operators
av.a1lable for local work .
• 2 rubber t1re backhoes
e1 excavator hoe 11 ' 4

SMALL

$4,500 992 2640

992 5732

HEALTH

5 FAMILY Yard Sale. 123

small Check prices before
se ll ing Also do appraising
Osby (Qss,el Marlin. 992
6370

•t-Farm lqulpmtnl

U-Mtnty to Lun

Wanted

T

KINGOHEAT

&amp;

CHAMP ION

VINYL SIDING

Excavating

S1zes
"From 30x30"

ut~ity
1970

Pullins

Farm_Buildings

675 4424

Representative, 1100 East
Mam ~t . , Pomeroy, Oh
Mortgage
money
avatlable All types home
f1nanc1ng ,
new,
old ,
refmancmg , and 2nd mer ·
tgages Phone 992 ·7000 or

sell for $)0 00. 992 3920

Park Drive, Pt Pleasant
Tues. 9 till Sat 13. From 83

ALL STEEL

Mob1le Home Sates
Pt Pleasant, W VA

ED

I car , tools, cloth1ng

dollar, or comp lete estates.
No 1tem too large or too

14-8\lllntn Tralnlnt

eFINANCIAL

992·2143

women's clothmg , all SIZes,
ladies 16 241/2. At Methodtst
Parsonage in Racine, 405

glass or ch1na, will pay top

U-lulkthll Suppl ltl

u
· - BUslntu

celled?
Lost
your
operator' s license? Phone

pliances, Maytag portable
dry~r. baby 1tems. cam·
P'"g equipment, men 's &amp;

etc . complete househOlds.
Write M D Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OHl or call 992·
77/IJ

11-Hou..hDidGoodl
n-CI, TV, RadiO l!q~IJH'IItnt
IJ-AI'Itlquts

1 J_Htlpw 1 ntt~~
12-SituattdWenr.ct
11--lnsuranct

IN can

3 FAMILY GARAGE Sale.
Fr1 &amp; Sat. 9 5 Small ap·

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOY ME NT
SERVICES

Insurance

13

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

Broadway

rings, i ewelry , silver
dollars, sterling, etc., wood
ice boxes-1ars antiques,

4t-Equlpment lor Rtflt

&amp;-Wanted to Buy _

HAVE VACANCY care for

YARD SALE September 12

4th St.

1968

12 x 60 two

12 x 50, 2 bedroom
B&amp; S

home anvtime. Located
above Eastern H 1gh
Sc,hool. E x perience, good
envtronment 985 3323 .

Pomern,, Ohu 45769
424

two

64

be Qro o m ,
1968
N ew
Moon, 12 x 60 With expando,
two bed room , 1967 Buddy,

992-6309

Tuppers Plains

at

)(

bedroom ;

Atlantic.

WILL BABYSIT in my

YARD SALE September
11, 12,13 on Success Road
1•; , m11es ott Route 7 below

13

14

home
for
pr e school
children Da v shifl only

Keller res1dence on route 7
across from the State H1gh ·
way garage. Lots of kn1ck
knacks, pottery x lamps .
Ra1n cancels.

PORCH Sale, at Oliver E

two

65

g

Everyth'"g cheap. Floren

Bailey res1dence on Sue
cess Road, County Road 46
iUSI 2 moles ott Route 7
September 12 13 from 9·

Business Servi(·es

1975 w estern Mans1on 14 x

70 three bedroom . 1971

bedroom ; 1971 L1berty, 14 x

l

ce S1dders res1den ce State
Route 33 m Darwm 992 ·

..

Mob•le Hom e!.
tor Sal e

Cam e ron.

11\.

1\

n

992 7314

dark . Clothes, btcycles,
some ant1ques, lots of m•sc

Wanted to Buy
IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furnoture, desks, gold

.._.,~rtmtftt for Rent
4t-lllllooms
.._Space for R.nl
41- Wanft11 tG Rtftt

6-Lost a!MI Fcwn•
1- Yercl Salt
t-Pvbllc Salt
&amp; Avctlon

AD WANTED

~-----------------------J

Lots of clothing &amp;

9

OpPCit'fUnlty

f

signs

(no junk)

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

name and add~ess or Words
phone number of used.
You'll get better results --1-~~!!l:¢!!.!~!!!~!
If you desmbe fully,
give price. The Sentinel
reserve• the right to
classify, edit or reject
any ad. Your ad will be
puf In the proper
claslllcation If you'll
check the proper box
These cash rates
below
1nclude discount

phony, Opera, Ballet and Music Festival all based at
Music Hall, a chamber orchestra and numerous
musical ensembles, a regional theatre and tourtng
Broadway shows, and a virtually limitless array of at·
tractwns at nwnerous universities and colleges.

our hom e Tra tned &amp; ex ·
pen enced have vacancy

home 992 IIJ22

----8
Public Sale

Prlnf one word in each

14. _ _ _ _ _ __

l

) ....

-

------WILL CARE for elderl y 1n

Street, Middleport .

for ltent

10. _ _ _ _ _ __
11. _ _ _ _ _ __
12. _ _ _ _ __
13. _ _ _ _ _ __

S1tui t iOils Wanted -

12

GUN SHOOT. Racine Gun

)-Annovnttmtnft
4-Givt•••Y

9. _ _ _ _ __

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

the eligibility list at 992
2156 or 992 21 57

an elderly person in my

GARAGE SALE Fri &amp; Sat.
at Alfred on 681, watch for

X

992-2082.

CANDY SUPPLIES on
sale .
Ann ' s
Cake
Decorating Supplies, 50716
Osborn Rd, Reedsville.
Oh 667-6485

collectable

dark . .

ack D•amond linament·
Spices ·flavorings .. cold re·

possible for gold and silver
coins, nngs, jewelry, etc

&amp;

YOST wrecker Servoce, 24

Phon•~·------------------

e._ _ _ _ __

Cha1nsaw, stroller. bike,

NEW ! 11 Rent a pan ser ·

41 - Ht~~lll for Rent
42-MaiHit Homts

7. _ _ _ _ __

Pomeroy .

YARD SALE September
12-13 from 9·4 at the Ralph

I-Card ot Thank•
2- ln Mtmorlam

6. _ _ _ _ _ __

Ave .,

3182.

eRENTALS

~~~~~~~ement
For Rent

ternut

Call or come 1n for deta11s
992-6342

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

counts as a word . Count

at

3 FAMILY Yard Sale .
Thurs. &amp; Fri , 133 But-

Intermediate, advances
also
mini
class
1n
decorating novelty cakes

SKAKLEE organic produc
ts· Rawlelgh products ·BI

Announcements

J

Addr•••·--------Ilia I or group of figurH

Residence

us nght away and get on

by Goll Fo x

SIDE GLAN CES

WILL BABY SIT '" my

Beg1nner,

guns onl y

Name ......- - - - - - - - -

space below. Each in·

Spencer
Bash an

DECORATING

voce·- Rent the novelty cake
pan of your chotce for only
Public Notice
$2.00
Call 992-6342 for
deta.ls
NOTICE
Sealed b1ds will be
rece 1ved by the on 10 SHOOTING MATCH at
Department of Natural corn Hollow In Rutland
Resources, Division of Every Sunday start1ng at
Forestry, Fovntaln Square,
Proceeds bemg
Columbus, Ohio -13224, u~ to noon .
and 1nclud'ng Fr~day, Oc dono)ed to the Boy Scout
Iober 3, 1980, at 3:00 PM., Troop 249 . 12 gauge factory
for p' ne and hardwood choke gun only!

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

CULTURE AREA - Culture abounds in Cincinnati
with the Contemporary Arts Center and its striking ar·
cade among numerous focal points of the fine arts an
outstanding art museum, the Taft Musewn, .the Sym-

- --- - - Lost and Fout1d --- - - ----- LOST ON the Fourth of

6

heating and a1r con·
d1t1oning furnace cleaning,
plumbing, repair, residen·
tial electric wiring, sales
service and installation.

Patr~ck

6tc

Pay Cash for
Classlflads and
Savell I

1

some great gifts as a Sen ''"ei route earner Phone

Has had all h1 s shots Ca ll
992 5613, is good w1th
children

MASON HOME REPAIR

992 - 236~ .

Street
Athens. Ohio45701
Phone 1614) 594 3558

r----------------------Curb Inflation.

asked them, but I never got an answer. I think it is still a viable
business. It makes me s1ck. We're
convmced its going to close."
The yards opened in 1870 to handle
the cattle, hogs and poultry
streaming into the c1ty from Ohio,
Indiana and Kentucky. It supplied
hundreds of slaughter houses here in
the ftrst half of this century.

2434

antoques

SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO LEGAL
SERVICES

Attorney

Public Notice

James E. Husk,
Defendant.

a private road w1th gates
through the Unah Stevens

as a young business person
a nd earn good money plus

glassware

other and turther relief as
1s 1_ust and equ1table.
The Defendant 1s hereby
notified that he 1S required
to answer sa1d Complaint
w1thm 28 days after the last
publlcat•on of th1s notice

degrees east ele-ven (11)
rods and nine links.

nmg, containing th1rty·s1x
acres, more or less.

Also the right of way for

About 92,000 Michigan students
were staying at home as strikes by
4, 700 teachers continued in 21
districts, the Michigan Education
Association said.

wh1ch the south east corner
of the above described
premises bears south 87

the section line to Wolf Pen
Creek; thence down the

creek to the place of beg1n

f1ve black, one gray t19er,
mother cat too, 1iger 74 2

five awa-;o to good home.

Public Notice

-

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Gwen D. Husk,
Plaontiff.

to the section l'"e; thence
north 87 degrees west along

11
Help wante~ _ _
GET VA LUABL E tra1ning

2354

Public Notice

Public Notice-

--~--

In pursuance of an order
of sale in partit1on to me

4 ___ q_o\'e~way - ~
SIX k1ttens, SIX weeks old,

carpet w1th pad, cab1nets ,

-

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
VIRGINIA R. BLAKE, ET
AL
Plaintiffs~
vs.
WADE F. KING, ET AL,
Defendants.
No. 17,443
NOTICE OF
SHERIFF'S SALE
AND PRDOFOF
PUBLICATION

11- The Da1ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, Sept. 11 , 1980

DOG TO GIVE AWAY , one
year old Dashound dog to

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

Owner won't close business
CINCINNATI ( AP)
The
president of the Cincinnati Union
Stock Yards says though his
business is faltering , he IS not about
to close.
But Martin·Golzer of Chicago said
he 1s willing to listen to industrial
development proposals.
"I'm in the stockyard business
today and next week, and, hopefully,
two weeks from now," Glotzer said.
"You try to do the best you can. If
anybody comes in with a plan for a
development, I would have to
decide."
He conceded that livestock sales
have continued to decline, continuing a trend of losses that started

...

I

1973 CAM ARO
cond. 992 3931.

In

exc .

StF\dEPS
Home
Improvements

81

Use th1s lascrnatmg f1iet crochet squa1e many beaut1ful ways

Cloth. spread scmes matsall are posSi ble w11h this lmly
rose square tha t fo rms another

deSign when ;orned Pattern
71 93 Chait, diiOCIIOri S, SQU31e
8" '" No 30 cotton
$1.75 lo1 each pallem Add 50!
each patter n for f1rst class aH-

and handlmg Send to:
Alice Brooks
Neecllecoalt Dept.
:J 1
The Daoly Sen'linet
llo1 163, Old Chelsea Sta., New
York, NY 10111. Pnnl Name,
Addras, Zop, Pattern Number.
Catch on to Ihe coaft boom' Send
f01 our NEW 1981 NHDLE CRAfT
CATALOG Over 1)1 des1gns 3
lree patlems 1ns1de $1 00
All CRAFT BOOKS . .$1.75 each
133-Fashoon Home Quillin1
132-Quiit Ori~tnals
llUdd 1 Bloc~ Quilts
130-Swuler Fashions-Silts 38-56
129-Quic~ 'n' Easy TronsfeiS
128-Envetottt Patchwor~ Qu1its
t27-Afil!•ns 'n' Doilies
126-Thr~lty Crafty FlowoiS
125-Petll Quoits
124-Easy Gtlts 'n' Ornaments
123-Stilch 'n' Patch Quoits
t22-Stuff 'n' Puft Quilts
121-Pollow Show-Oils
119-Easy Art of Flower Ctochel
116·Nifty Fifty Quoits
115-Eisy Art ol •opple Crochet
113-Comp_lele Gilt Book
110-16 Jiffy Rup
109-S.w + Knii(Basictissutincl)
105-lnslanl Crochet
102-MuHum Quoits
101-Quiil Book-Collection I
ma~l

S

&amp; G Carpet Cleanmg.
Steam
cleane d .
Fre e
esttmate.
Reasonab le
rates Scotchguard. 992·

6309 or 742 2211 .
83

E ~cavat"
'n"g'---·

J X F BACKHOE SER

VICE I1Sc ensed and bon
ded , septic tank 1n
stallat•on, water and gas
lines Ex cavat.ng work and

transit layout. 992-7201
EXCAVATING

Wan ted

Dozer work or timber to

cut. 985 3567 or 992 -3208
-

E lectnca I
_ _ !B- '!ftigerat1on

84

SEWING
Repairs,

makes .
Fabn c

MACHIN E

serv ice , a l l
992 2284 .
The
Shop, Pom eroy

Authorized Singer Sales

and Serv 1ce. We sh arpen
Scissors

ELWOOD
REPAIR

BOWE RS
Sweepers,

toasters, ~ron s, all small
appl1ances Lawn mowe r

Next 1o State Highway

Ga ra ge on Route 71 98 5

3825

APPLIAFCE service, all
makes

washers,

dryers,

ranges .

dish

wa shers,disposals,

water

tanks. Cali Ken Young 9853561 before 9a x

pm

or after 6

�•

•

12- t he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, Sept. II , 1980

31 court cases terminated
Nineteen defendants were fined
and 12 others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Conrt Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were David E. Huddleston, ltacine,

FRIDA Y·SATURDA Y SPECIALS

$75 and costs, reckless operation ;
David Mora, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, following too close; Glen
Werry Mason, $25 and costs, taking
more than the dally limit of

squirrels; Cletus T. Harden,
RuUand, $10 and costs, unable to
stop in asured clear distance; Jean
Garnes, Gallipolis, $22 and costs,
speed; Remigio :Jacob, St. Marys,
W. Va .. $20 and costs, speed; Bernard F. Eberto, Hamden, Oh., $167
and costs, overload; Rona S. Haggy,
Pomeroy, $72 and costs, overload;
Jayne Smith, Pomeroy, $23 and
costs, speed ; Rogie Boley, Nelsonville, $24 and costs, speed; Darlene
L. Rife, Middleport, $25 and costs,
speed; Joseph Jeffers, Middleport,
Bank spokesmen around Ohio say $30 and costs, unsafe vehicle; Betty
they are being hit harder by loan Tyree, Syracuse, $40 and costs,
losses than in the 1974-1975 recession speeding; Betty Wilson, Rt. 2,
and relative to banks elsewhere in Pomeroy, $23 and costs, speeding;
the nation. Though none would be Timothy Crites, Rt. I, Pomeroy, $30
specific, the b!lnks said losses were and costs, improper registration;
still within safe limits and were Timmy Ward, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $15
being cbarged against loss reserves. and costs, no muffler; Kenneth D.
Bankers say things might get wor- Mohler, No address recorded, six
se before they get better.
months · confinement, five months
"There is no Indication of tapering suspended, costs only, two years
off or of a turning down as far as probation, DWI; Bruce McGilvray,
we're concerned,'·' said W.E . · Middleport, restitution in 60 days,
Brownell, National City Bank's courts costs, six months probation,
senior vice· president for consumer insufficient funds; Thomas Laud41,1'credit said of loan losses.
milt, Middleport, pay current child
Brownell said losses began first support and back support, courts
for credit cards, where no collateral costs, one year prob!ltion, noneis involved, and that now consumer support.
delinquencies are across the board.
Forfeiting bonds ere Jeffrey A.
The present economy has resulted Sobataka, Cbarleston, Judy Nelson,
in a low demand for loans. Credit Parkersburg, Benjamin F. Jarrells,
restraints imposed by the Federal Norwood, Donald E. Palmer,
Reserve Board In Ml!rch scared a lot Columbus, Laura J. McGraw, Rt. I,
of people and led banks to impose Racine, David A. Blake, Rt. 2,
new credit card fees and other credit Pomeroy, Robert Hayes; II, New
tightening measures.
Haven, and Ridlard Burrows,
Poland, Oh., $40.50 each, speeding;
Berruce Theiss, Rt. 1, Racine, Janet
Hetzer, Parkersburg, George K.
Strode, Grove City, $35.50 each,
speeding; Tawney E. Freeman,
Chillicothe, $50, speeding.

SAVE FRIDAY, SEPT. 12TH AND SATURDAY,
SEPT. 13TH
(
ON THESE SELECTED ITEMS.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Harold Sizemore, Jane T.
Sizemore to Gerald W. Grenner,
Rebecca J . Drenner, 1.80 acres,
Chester.
Lester Shoemaker, Viola
Shoemaker to Ken Molz, Right of
way, Rutland.
Hattie Avice Frecker, Wendel J.
Frecker to Paul E. Harris, Marylyn
A. Harris, Parcels, Racine.
Cbarles Uoyd Dayidson, dec. to
Frances J. Davidson, Cert. of trans.,
RuUand.
Ralph T. Spangler, Deborah Lynn
Spangler to Henry Stanley, Ester
Stanley, Lot31, Pomeroy.
Ricbard A. Flnlaw, Gertrude
Finlaw to Kenneth Marklns, Vermont Markins, E. 1-2 Lot 49,
Pomeroy.
Fern D. Norris, Dorothy Norris to
Fern D. Norris, Trus., Dorothy
Norris, Trus.,1 acre, Sutton.

GRANTED DIVORCE
In Meigs County Conunon Pleas
Court Edith Waugh was granted a
divorce from Kenneth Waugh.

POLAROID
INSTANT ·
FILM
Save on Polaroid SX70 Film - 10 pictures
in a package.
Regular $8.85 SX70 Film

An excellent selection of Cannon sheets in
full, twin, queen, and king bed sizes. Solid
colors and patterns . All Cannon sheets in·
eluded.

REDUCED

Regular $9.85 SX70 Time Zero Film

SALE LANE

STEREO

CEDAR ·
CHESTS

ALBUM SALE
Weekend Sale prices on country·

western, popular, bluegrass, in·
strur:nental, gospel and children's
albums.

Reg . S189.95 Lane Cedar Chest
*Upholstered Top
*Oak, maple or pecan
*Lay-Away for Christmas

REG. 13.7 9.. _.....SALE 12.95 .
REG. 15.79 ........ SALE 14.65
REG. 18.79 ....... SALE '7 .05
REG. 112.79 ..... SALE 110.25

1' .... ·

NEW ADDITIONS BEING ADDED
Eber
Pickens, Syracuse, is adding 700 square feet to Baer's
Market, Syracuse, owned and operated by Helen Baer.
Entrance to the building will be changed from the old
section to the new portion of the building. Baer has

SALE
LITTLE BOYS'

turtle necks.
Sizes : 12·mos. to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to
14.

REG . $5.00 . ..... .... . .....
REG . $8.00 ... .. .. . . ... . . . .
REG. $9.00 ... . .. . ... . .... .
REG. $10.00 .... .... .......

REG . $6.00 . .. ........ ... ... .. .. . . .. SALE S4 .79
REG . $8.00 . .. ..... ... .......... ... . SALE $6.39
REG . $12.00 ............... .. ...... . SALE $9 .59
REG . S17 .00 . ..... . ..... . .. . . .. .. . . SALE $13.59

POMEROY, OH.

e ig selection of these popular

Gold prices soar in early trading

jeans for youn g men and
women. White - faded blue
denim and bright colors. Sizes
27 throu gh 36 .

husky sizes 8 to 18. Basic

styles and fashion lookS.
Made by Wrangler .

I like
the service.
I like
the peotle.
That's why
I ha at

NEW YORK ~ The sniper slaying of an attache to Cuba's mission to
the United Nations is part of an effort to make Cuban diplomats
"disappear from the face of New York," say anonymous callers
claiming to represent the anti-Castro group Omega 7.
Feliz Garcia-Rodriguez was shot Thursday as he drove a red station
wagon bearing diplomatic license plates in the borough of Queens. The
shots may bave come from a passing vehicle or the elevated ground of
a nearby cemetery, police said.
Secretary of State .Edmund S. Muskie condemned the assassination,
and officials promised " a vigorous investigation." Muskie said federal
authorities would cooperate.

PAINTERS
JEANS

Student sizes 26 to JO .
Regular - slim and

JEANS
JEANS
JEANS
JEANS

Cuban attache sniper victim

'13''

CORDUROY
JEANS

BOYS$12.95CORDUROY
BOYS $14.95 CORDUROY
BOYS $15.95 CORDUROY
BOYS $16.95 CORDUROY

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio - Youngstown's 89 bus drivers struck the
Western Reserve Transit Authority today, stranding nearly 10,000
public and parochial school pupils as well as corrunuters.
But schools were open in the city with the school officials telllng
parents to make other arrangements for their children's transportaUon.
The drivers, who are members of the Amalgamated Transit
Workers' Union Local272, sent up picket lines at WRTA's main depot
at about 4 a.m. today. The international union has not sanctioned the
strike.
The WRTA drivef$ have been working without a contract since Aug.
1. They bave asked for a 9 percent raise. WRTA has offered an extension of the present contract.

Woven cotton flannels in two ooc:k..·ts
tails · colorful plaid pattersn and checks.
Sizes S, M, L and XL - plus extra sizes
18, 19, 20 and tails in sizes MandL .

BOYS'

$10.00
$12.00
$13.00
$13.50

WNDON - Gold prices soared by a much as $20 an ounce in early
trading today on European markets and· hesded for their highest
levels in seven months. The dollar strengthened against most major
currencies.
Gold traded In Zurich, Europe's main buillion market, at $696.50 an
owice, up $20 from Thursdsy's close. That was gold's highest trading
prices since it hit $697.50 in Zurich on Feb.12. The all-time peak for
gold was$835 set In mid-January.
In London, gold opened at $695.50 an ounce, up $15.50 from Thursdsy's close. Dealers said trading was " very, very active."

S $11.95 PAINTERS JEANS ... SALE $9.
S$14.95 PAINTERS JEANS . . SALE$12.00
S$15.95 PAl NTERS JEANS .. SALE $13.00

FINAL CLEARANCE

ODDS AND ENDS - BROKEN SIZES

WOMEN'S SUMMER

Daugher, friend say rnurder,ed
LONDON - A former detective charges that his daughter and her
boyfriend were thrown to their deaths from a sixth-floor balcony
during a cocktail party in Ssudi Arabia for which the British hostess
was sentenced to be flogged.
The ex-detective claims that his daughter, Helen Smith, was gangraped by German guests at the party, and that her Dutch boyfriend,
tugboat captain Johannes Otten, was murdered with her because he
witnessed the rape and the assailants feared be would identify them to
pollee.'
British surgeon Richard Arnot, 39, and his 34-year-old wife,
Penelope, were convicted by a Saudi court of serving drinks at the party In J!dda on night of May 19, 1979 in defiance of the Moslem nation 's
ban on alcohol.

MEN'S BLUE JEANS

DRESSES

.

I

REGULAR PRICES UP TO '19.95

Junior, Misses and Half Sizes.

MOSTLY SMALL WAIST SIZES

REG. 116.00 TO 123.00 ............ SALE 14.00
REG. 124.00 TO 131.00 ...... .. .... SALE lfi.OO
REG. 132.00 TO 139.00 .... ....... SALE 111.00
REG. '40.00 TO 146.00 .. -..... · SALE 110.00
REG. 148.99 TO '64.00 .......... SALE 112.00

SOME DISCONTINUED STYLES
QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED.

1h PRICE

BLUE DENIM

Oil agreement signed quietly
TRIPOIJ, Libya - Seven years aner it took over most foreign oil
concessions, Col. Moammar Khadafy's radical gov~mment has
quieUy signed agreements with three Western companies to help it
find more oll.
Khadafy's revolutionary regime is also twisting the arms of the
foreign companies already working here to look for more oil, according to Industry sources.
Libya needs oil exploration knowhow from abroad because It is
rapidly draining its known petroleum reserves, aU experts say. Unless
It finds substantial new fields, it won't be able to sustain current
production of 1.75 million barrels a day beyond the mid-1960s, the experts say.
.

FINAL TWO DAYSI

JEANS
FOR MEN
Sl ightly fuller cut lor extr•
COmfort. Ba$1C styles and
fashion jeans . Waist sizes
32 to so, lengths 30 to 36 .

$16.95 MEN JEANS
$17.95 MEN'S JEANS
$19.95 MEN'S JEANS
$21.95 MEN'S JEANS

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

Weather forecast

$13.50
$14.00
$16.00
$17.00

By The Auociated Preas
Sunday through Tuesday:
Cbance of showers or thunderstorms Sunday. Clearing Monday and
fair Tuesdsy. Highs In the upper 70s to low 80s Sunday, cOoling to the
low to mid-70s by Tuesday. Lows mainly In the 50s.

*Cross You·r Heart Bras
* Supporl Can Be Beautiful Bras
*Living Bras
*I Can't Believe It's A Girdle Girdles

•
-JRD H., RACINE . OH .
Memllnr FDIC

I

(

•.,

"'f

btm..

been at the present location for the past 10 years. The
old and new section of the building will be covered with
aluminum siding. Ramps will be placed on each side
leading to the new entrance way. The new addition wiU
enhance the store service area.

10,000 school pupils stranded

FLANNEL
WORK SHIRTS

70%0FF

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

p •

FIFTEEN CENTS

ParUy cloudy tonight and Saturday. Chance of showers or thun.derstorms Saturday. Lows tonight in the lower 60s. Highs Saturday in
the mi~s. Cltance of rain 20 percent tonight and 30 percent Saturday. Winds S'1Utherly about 10 mph tonight.

Ted Jones.
It was reported the trio charged
were involved in setting up the $1 ,000
pyramitl scheme at 15 Dew St. Middleport. .
The spokesman said money and
other materials were confiscated.
Under a typical scheme, each person puts In $1,000 and tries to get two
other people to put in money. Half of
the $1,000 goes tothe person at the top
of the pyramid and the other half to
the player who got he new person involved.
According to reports from
prosecuting attorneys and law enforcement agencies from across the
state, the pyramid scheme is apparenUy sweeping Ohio.
Ohio Attorney General William J.

Brown and members of his staff are
Investigating the possibility of filing
possible legali!Ction against the trio.
Conviction on the charges carries
a six month to five year sentence
and a $2,500 fine or both.
It was reported that several
prosecuting attorneys in
Southeastern Ohio are conducting
their own investigations concerning
pyramid schemes. Numerous complaints have been filed in recent
weeks throughout South Central
Ohio.
Earlier, two brothers were
charged In connection with a
pyramid scheme In Morgljll County.
The three suspects will appear In
Meigs County Court but no hearing
date has been set.

.Turkey leader ousted
in bloodless coup

res.z gns

ELY MEN'S 16.95

Final clearance of our remaining stock of summer
necklaces ,
earrings,
bracelets, hair combs,
rings, name tags and sets.

•STRAIGHT LEG

.. :

•

SALE $4.29
SALE $6.79
SALE $7.69
SALE $8.49

1

JEWELRY
CLEARANCE

• •,

Police
chief

,., 1 r "

•FLARES

.~

Plaid cotton flannel and
Alaskan flannel in western
and dress cut stv les.
SizesOto7 .

Solids, prints and stripes in light or bulky
knit styles. Crew necks, cowl necks and

The original heavyweight
un-washed Levi ' jeans.

· ~- ·

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

PULLOVER
SWEATER

Levrs

•

'

SALE
GIRLS'

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1~80

Three out-of-county residents
were arrested in Middleport Wednesday night foUowlng a pyramid
presentation. Charged with fourth
degree felonies, (violation of the
Ohio Pyramid Sales Act) were Billy
Marie Hauk; 25, and Eula Marie
Thomas, 44, both of Athens County
and John Peters, 31, Jackson.
According to a spokesman frtrn
the Ohio Attorney General's Office
in Columbus, the arrests came after
an agent had infiltrated a meeting in
Middleport.
The Bureau of Identification agents (BCI) had been Invited to the area
by the Athens County Prosecuting
Attorney and Athens County Sheriff
·John Hicks and Athens Police Chief

$7.88

20%

en tine

Trio ·arrested
ollowing raid

TWO DAY SALE!

SALE!
20% OFF
CANNON
SHEETS

Middleport's funds
total $407,930.68

If ""'

POMEROY - MIDDLE ~ Ufn , OHIO

VOL. 31 NO. 106

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

Consumer loan market
worries Ohio bankers
CLEVELAND (AP ) - The
present economic recession has
Ohio's bankers bracing for the worst
in a consumer loan market that has
an increasing nwnber of unpaid debts.
Tighter money supplies and overspending are some causes listed by
bankers, but the overriding rea5on
for banks sensing trouble is
liberalized bankruptcy laws that
went into effect last Oct. I.
"We have seen a dramatic Increase In the nwnber of bankruptcies as a result of the change in the
law. You can almost see a distinct
difference In the pre-October and
post.&lt;Jctober trend," said A. Lee
Knicely, vice president in charge of
credit cards for AmeriTrust Co.
Loan losses in northern Ohio are
worse parUy because the economic
downturn has hurt the area's autorelated industry, bankers said.
Bankruptcy filings in a fourcounty area around Cleveland were
up 86 percent in the first seven months of the year compared with the
year-earlier period, said Sam Silver,
supervisor in U.S. Bankruptcy court
in Cleveland. He said August figures
might be worse.
Most banks in Cleveland are planning or already bave tightened
credit requirements for consumer
Total of aU Middleport Village funloans as a result of the new bankrupds as of Aug. 31 totaled $407,930.68,
tcy law.
according to the monthly report of
" People see it as a free out and it
Middleport Clerk-Treasurer Jon
isn't," Thomas J. Giblin, vice
Buck.
president for credit at Central
Receipts, disbursements, and the
National Bank In Cleveland; said of
balance of each of the categories
the liberalized law.
making up the total, respectively,
Kenneth R. Murray, chairman of ·. during August include: general,
the credit policy committee of Ban- $10,012.09, $10,374.62, $1,722.01;
cOhio National Bank In Columbus,
cemetery, $2,485.38, $1,009.30,
said bankruptcy-related losses for
$2,026.09; five equipment, no receiphis bank heated up in January and
ts, $782.15, $1,576.83 deficit; swimbave been high since. "And we see ming pool, $1, 755.20, $3,326.32,
people taking bankruptcy with $3,801.51; fire truck, no receipts,
reiatively small amounts of debt, $48,018, $18,859.43; planning corn$3;000 to $4,000," he said.
mission, no receipts, $17.26, $11.33;
street maintenance, $1,314.52 ;
$4,525.58, $2,372.42 deficit; street
levy, no receipts, no expenditures,
$11,466.62; federal revenue sharing,
no receipts, no expenditures,
$7,285.16; HUD, no receipts, $57.12,
$11,211.84; general bond retirement,
no receipts, no expenditures,
$19,455.09; sanitary sewer, $5,417.92,
$5,261.07, $15,589.54; sanitary sewer
Lily B. Prushing, Dana P. escrow, no receipts, no disbur. Prushing, Ethel M. Prushlng, Byron sements, $188,392.24 ; water,
P. Prushing, Elizabeth F. Prushing $9,537.65, $7,678.29, $33,797.58; water
to Dean W. Prushing, 64 acres, meter trusts; $310,$120.38, $7,691.44;
water tank, $1,000, no expenditures,
Olive.
$82,000.
Anthony Nardei, Dorinda Nardei
Receipts for the month totaled
to Willard Lucas, Geraldioe Lucas,
$31,832.76 while disbursements
Lot, Pomeroy.
Helena HOI)'Pll to James R. totaled$82,182.54.
Stewart, I acre, Bedford.
Jeannie Robbana to William 0 .
Arnott, Stefanie T. Arnott, Handy
Sub., Syracuse. ·
Kenneth E. Riggs, Judith A. Riggs
to Ralph Calvert, Pamela Calvert,
Parcel, Chester.
Micbael C. Custer, Phyllis A.
Custer to Colwnbia Gas Trans.,
Right of Way, Salisbury.
Robert E. Folden, dec. , aka
Robert Earl Folden, dec., to Ruth
Elizabeth Folden, Cert: of trans.,
Salem.
Orpba Roush, Affidavit, Rutland.
Mary Jane Ebenback, George A.
Ebenback to Karla J. Ebenback,
24.989 acres, Bedford.
Felix Alkire, Mildred I. Alkire to
Herald Oil and Gas Co., Right of
Way,Meigs.
Gale Eugene Wolfe, Charlotte L.
WOlfe to Willlarn T. Grueser1 ·
William Don Grueser, Lots,
Pomeroy.

at y..

·e

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews today ·announced the
resignation of Pomeroy Police Chief
Charles
McKinney .
MCKinney bad been named police
chief about four months ago and
came to Pomeroy from Thurston
where he bad been serving in a
similar position.
Mayor Andrews said he has Chief
McKinney's resignation In his
possession, effective at once, but did
not disclose any details of the letter
of resignation.
Mayor Andrews Indicated he will
probably name officer, Alfred
Lyons, as acting chief, until he can
confer with Pomeroy Village Council members on Monday to discuss
·what stepa council wishes to take in
filling the post on a permanent basis.

Lottery winner
seveo-fOUNIIIe
five-seven; one-slx-eigbl; lbreelwo-four-zero
one-six; flve-seveo-two; threethree-nine-six; four-five-two-eightthree; four-five-seven-zero-zero-three.

ANKARA, Turkey (AP ) Turkey's military commanders
ousted Prime Minister Suleyman
Demirel early today in a bloodless
coup aimed at restoring political
stability to this violence-wracked
NATO natipn. They put him and two
other major political leaders under
house arrest and announced that the
country's 19-year-old constitution
has been abolished.
The mllitary chief qf staff and
coup leader, Gen. Kenan Evren, also
announced on Turkish television
that his ruling five-man National
Security Conunlttee would soon
begin work drafting a new constitution paying particular attention
to altering the nation'~ laws on elections and political paru-·s.

Kremlin helps Polish government
MOSCOW (AP) - The Kremlin
gave the Polish government a
helping band with jts continuing
labor crisis, promising increased
shipments of food and manufactured
goods to help meet the demands of
restive workers demanding
economic benefits In addition to
labor union reforms promised them.
The official Soviet news agency
Tass, reporting on a meetinl! Thursday between Soviet President
Leonid Brezhnev and Polish Deputy
Premier Mieczyslaw Jagielski, said
that "in present circwnstances" it
was Increasingly important to raise
the efficiency of economic

Khomeini wants
feuding stopped
By Tbe Associated Preas
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
urged President Abolhassan BaniSadr and his foes to stop the feuding
and jockeying for power that is
keeping Parliament and the government from coming to grips with
Iran's pressing problems, lncludiilg
disposition of the 52 . American
hostages.
Radio Tehran said Khomeini, the
leader of the Iranian revolution, was
visited Thursday by Prime Minister
Mohammad Ali Rajal and 10 of his
cabinet ministers and told them :
"Avoid the practices of the past. You
must abandon dictatorships
...selfish!tess and self-love ....How
would God take lt if you wanted to
argue over posts? ... If all of
you ... reached an understanding to
establish friendship among you,
imagine how pleasant it would be for
thenaUon.
"I beg of you, all those holding certain positions, be they ...the prime
minister, the president ...! beg aU of
them to avoid what is contrary to
God's will.. ..Do not light among
yourselves."
Bani-5adr rejected seven of
Rajai's 21 Cabinet choices Sunday
and reluctantly accepted the others.
On Monday he accused them of
representing a "despotic" minority,
meaning the hardline Islamic
Republican Party that dominates
the Parliament, or Majlis, and forced him to accept Rajai as prime
minister.
On Tuesday and Wednesday

Evren, a political moderate, gave
The conunanders announced that
no indication when new elections the takeover, after five years of inwould be held but he promised a
creasing political instability and
return to civilian rule. He also said
violence in which more than 4,000
Turkey would maintain its propersons have died, was aimed at
Western foreign policy and would
preventing "a possible civil war" in
remain loyal to all its commitments,
the NATO member country.
Including those to NATO.
Some sporadic shooting was qeard
Helicopters clattered above the
during the night In Ankara, the
capital In the pre-dawn hours and
capital, but there were no reports of
casnalties. ·
hundreds of troops with armored
personnel carriers and tanks
The Ankara Martial Law Comcleared the streets. Sources said
mand said in a conununique that
mllitary buses rounded up deguties . Demirel, leader of the conservative
of the National Assembly. By dawn
J ualice Party, and the main opthe city looked deserted except for
position leader, fol'Did . fremi~ .
troops. By late morning, some Turks Bulen! Ecivit, leader of the left:of-'
ventured out to army-supplied bread
center Republican People"s Party,
stores and long lines formed for
"were Interned" In their homes.
food.

Rajai, Majlis Speaker Hashemi Rafsanjani and other leaders of the IRP
attacked Bani-&amp;dr for rejecting the
nominees and accused him of insulting the Majlis and the religious
hierarchy, includingKhomelnl.
Bani-5adr joined ·his rivals Thursday In rejecting Secretary of State
Edmund S. Muskie's overture for
talks about the hostsges and
Iranian-American relations.
"There's nothing new in it," he
said of Muskie's letter to Rajai last
week. He added that it would not
hasten the release of the Americans,
who today were spending their 314th
day In captivity.
U.N. Secretary-General Kurt ·
Waldheim told a news conference in
New York Thursday that the United
Nations has established contacts
with Rajai, but that he expects no
early breakthrough in the hostage
crisis.
Mostafa Dabiri, charge d'affaires
at Iran's mission to the United
Nations offices In Geneva, Switzerland, told a U.N. subcommission
that the hostage Issue cannot be COil-'
sidered "in isolation" but 'must include America's previous interference in Iran's Internal affairs."

Dabiri told the U.N. Subcommission on Prevention of
Discrimination and Proteqion of
Minorities that the hostages were in
" good health" and the Majlis wiU
decide their fate in keeping " with
the principles of justice and equ~ty."

cooperation between the Soviet
Union and the communist state on
its western border.
Tass did not say wbat additional
products would be delivered or in
what quantity. According to Soviet
trade figures, exports to Poland last
year Included grain, tea, sunflower
oil, preserved fish and beverages.
The, agency also attacked AFLCIO president Lane Kirkland, accuslng him of aiding "anti-socialist
elements in Poland" by starting a
fund to send financial contributions
to the Polish strikers.
"The trade union bosses of
Arilerica are exerting every effort to
support subversive, anti-social
elements in Poland," said Tass.
The strike wave in Poland that tur-

ned- into a national crisis in the last
half of August started with demands
for wage increases to offset increases in the governmentsubsidized price of meat. Strikers In
the Gdansk industrial area on the
Baltic coast injected political
demands and forced Poland's communist leaders to promise a new
labor law granting the right to strike .
and to fonn independent free trade ·
unions. But a rash of local strikes for
higher pay or improvements in
working conditions continues.
During the strikes, the Soviet
government agreed to give Poland
new long-tenn credits to help pay
the ihlerest on the $20 billion it owes
the West and to pay for increased
foreign imports, including sugar.

HAROW E. 1HOMAS

RICHARD E. PYLF.'i

.

Promotions announced
Harold E. Thomas and Ricbard L.
Pyles ltave been promo!~ to supervisory positions at Ohio Valley Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek
StaUon, according to Louis R. Ford,
Jr.,PlaritManager. Thomas is being
promoted to Maintenance Supervisor and Pyles to Unit SUpervisor,
effective September 1.
Thomas joined OVEC In 1955 as a
Laborer In the Labor Department.
Later that same year he tranaferred
to the ~lnte!Wice Department as a
Maintenance Helper and in 1972 was
promoted to Maintenance Mechanic
A, the position he held until hls
promotion to Maintenance Super~

visor.
Thomas is a graduate of Middleport High School. He and his wife
Cbarlene reside at 437 Grant Street,
Middleport, and are the parents of
two children, Teresa and Timothy.
Pyles joined OVEC as a Laborer In
1986. In 1967 he transferred to the
Operations Department as a Utillty
Operator and In 1976 was promoted
to Equipment Operator, the position ·
he held until hls promotion to Unit
Supervilor.
Pyles resides at Ashton, W. Va. He
and his wife, Doris, are the paren!lj
of three daughters : Susan, .Shelly
and Stephanie.

'{

I

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