<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="18406" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/18406?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-16T13:46:24+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="51878">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/c1fd38b909dcf34752160765265f87ed.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d1083f85c34ddd5ad227a982b573ff43</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="58497">
                  <text>Iran threatens OPEC's joint plan
by Dick Cavalli

WINTHROP
He 5TRUG;~LE,D OlJT a=- "THE:.

THE 6TOR/ OF J0ANKIND 1'5
IN DE E-D A STRAN6£ CNE.

PRIME=VA.L 5LIME, AND
L&amp;V&lt;.N~D lV 5TAND ERECT:

VIENNA, Austria (AP) -

Iran

~llll with Saudl Arabia today and

threatened to block OPEC's first
joint plan for raislng oU prices and
controlling production. The 13nation cartel opened debate on the
long-term proposal at its 2llth annlversay meetlng here. '
OPEC GeneralSecretary Rene
Ortiz confinned that oil pricing had
been dlscuilsed in the first session.
Iran's chief delegate, Ali Akbar
Motnrar, threatened to block action
on the plim unless the Organization
of Petroleum E:g&gt;ortlng Countries
conference also dlscussed production.
·
Iran blocked Iraq from chairing
the conference, apparently because
of the two countries' recent border
fighting, conference sources said.
Iran threatened to demand a reversal of the agenda if Iraq took the
cbalr. forcing a di8cussion of current

oil prices and production dlsputes
pefore . taking up the long-term
strategy- the official subject of the
meeting.
Algeria, which has held the
presidency Since the June meeting
in Algiers, was chosen to serve as
chairman. Iraq was originslly
scheduled to preside over the
meeting and also )!old the rotating
presidency until an OPEC summit in
Baghdad starting Nov.4.
Algerian Foreign Minister
Mohammed S. ,Benyahia was named
chainnan and Iraqi Oil Minister
Tayah Abdul Karim was named
alternate chairman. The OPEC
secretary-generakl said Iraq will
preside at the Baghdad conference
as originslly planned.
"If we do not have a short-term
decision on production, then it's a
joke to have a long·term strategy,"
said Iran's chief delegate. He called

•

51TTINq IN A DARKE:NED RO:::)',A,.

HE51.JCCEEDEDAT LAST IN LEAVINGHIS PLANET, 10 BE.G-IN TO E::XPL.ORE

e

WATCHINQ- II THE qQNq et-ION.''

THE VA5TNE55 OF SPACE:.

VOL. 31

NO. 107 .

for a Saudi production cut to drain
off the current world oU glut and
keep prices up.
."That's not right," Saudi Oil
Minister Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani,
a proponent of the long-term plan,
told reporters when asked about
Motnrar's contention. He said Saudi
Arabia still had made no decision
about its fourth-quarter production.
Although no serious dlsalreement
previously appeared looming over
the joint strategy of th.e
Organization of Petroleum Ex·
porting Countries, Moinfar said
when asked if he thought a long·term
pricing plan would be worked out, "I
don't think so."
But with the oU market glutted
again, several ministers predicted
there wOUld be no price increase
before next year.
There had appearlid to be general
agreement among the oU, finance

•

and foreign ministers on a long-term
disaster at the end of the 1980s."
strategy plan with provisions for
"Even if the OPEC countries
raising oU prices every three months
produce at their JJI8lllmwn capacity
to keep up with world inflation, . there will not be enough oU. We will
currency fluctuations and economic · also be protected agajnst inflation
growtl) in industrial countries.
and any fall in the dollar."
They also had appeared ready to
OPEC economists estimate that
agree on automatic joint cuts in
the cost of energy from other sour·
production when the market is overces now averages the equivalent of
supplied and joint increases when
~ a barrel. OPEC's base price is
supplies are felt to be too low.
$32 for a 42-gallon barrel of oU.
"Hopefully we will have a
Since January 19'19, market conunanimous decision,'' said Sheik Ahdltions, OPEC economic worries and
med Zaki Yamanl, saudl Arabia's
world politics have driven oU prices
oU minister .and a major backer of
up 132 percent. Some British
the plan.
economists predict the OPEC plan
"In the long term, we want to
would raise oil prices 15 percent
gradually reach the cost of alterwithin a year. But some of the oil
native sources of energy," said Iraqi
minl.liters on their arrival in Vienna
OU Minister Tayeh AlxJul Karim.
said the current glut in the world's
"This will encourage the inoU markets; largely attributed to
dustrialized countries to shift their
high Saudi production, made any independence to other forms of
crease in the $32 base price unlikely
energy. otherwise, there will be a
before 1981.
·

entine

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

''

Weekend wrecks
leave 16 injured

•J.

I WONDER WHY

OUR EVENING
PAPER NEVER
CAME!

Sixteen people were injured and
four drivers cited as the result of
five weekend accidents investigated
by the Galla-Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol.
Foilr people were injured during a
two-vehicle , accident investigated
Sunday in Meigs County on CR 3,
just south of SR 124.
Called tQ the scene at 3:20 p.m.,
the patrol reports a north bound auto
operated by Clifford Plantz, 57, Middleport, and a south bound vehicle
driven by Brenda Quillen, 17,
· Syracuse, collided head-on in a ,

by Ed Sul.livan

Priscilla's Po,p
YES, BUT
HE WASN'T
HOME.'

DID YOU CALL
OUR PAPER '
CARRIER TO
FIND OUT?'

MAYBE HE

Fa&lt;GOT; TCXJ.'

I I/OUBT IT,
· HE 5EEME!7
KIND OF ANGRY'

hillcrest.

BURN MORTGAGE-Mortgage burning ceremonies were held Sunday
at the St. Paul Lutheran Church. Pictured 1-r, were, Walter Schrieber,

Mrs. Eva :;chrieber, Pastor Joseph Kraly, Frank Ryther and Mrs,
Elmora Boice. A mortgage for $96,000 was paid off in 13 and one-half
years by the congregation,
·

·Congregation bums
HE SAil/ CUSTOMERS
KEEP CALLING ABOUT
UNDELIVERED PAPERS·"

" ' AND
HE'S SICK
OF IT.'

_.....

FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1980

..
•'

Saudl Arabia was under .press~
from more militant OPEC members
to reduce its output of 9.5 million
barrels a day and to raise its base
price of $28 a barrel to the $32 level
set by . other OPEC members in
June. But Yamani pointed out to
repoJ;"ters that the S.udi price 11
close to the prevaUing Jllarket price
of$29.50.
The meeting is "the biggest
gathering of the organization in its
headquarters city sillce .the 1975
terrorist attack on a meeting of oU
ministers in Vienna. Pro-Palestinian
guerrHias killed an Austrian
policeman, an OPEC guard and a
Ubyan statistician, then took 11 Of
the oU ministers hostage and took
them to North Africa.
After that, OPEC held its big
meetings in various other cities under extraordinarily heavy security
nrotectlon.

WELL, I HOPE HE
GET5 IT STRAIGHTENED
OUT--· GOOD NIGHt l7EAR .'
' \

Crash kills 89 Arabian servicemen
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia - A Saudi air force C.130 Hercules troop
transport crashed in flames at an airport near Medina, killing a1189
pensons aboard, the Saudi DefeJUJe Ministry said today.
The Sunday evening crash was the second air dlsa.!lter in Saudi
Arabia in '1:1 days. On Aug, 19, a saudi Tristar jetliner burned at
Riyadh airport, killing 301 passengers and cmnnen in the third worst
dl.!aster in clvU aviation history. Moot of the victims were Saudis and

PaldBtanis.
A Defe111e Mlni.!!try communique issued 14 hours after the crash of
the U.S.-buUt Hercules quoted eyewitnesses as saying the front section
of the plane was on fire when the craft fell to earth.
It said the plane was carrying a "group of servicemen" when it .
crashed near Islam's second holiest city. It was not inunedlately
known if there were any foreigners aboard.

Resident's death investigated
WIO~eT

illl6 1~n~1N"

1-EAD$ """' flii..O

COLUMBUS, Ohio - 'lbe Highway Patrol is investigating the death
af a resident at the Orient Developmental Center.
Dr. Albert Soforenko; the center's superintendent, asked the patrol
to investigate the death of 68-yeaNid Anna Ryser, a severely retarded
patient who died of a broken neck on Aug. 26. He said the patrol was
called in after an internal investigation turned up conflicting reports
111 the woman's death.
The broken neck was not dlagnosed Immediately. Two reports said
Mill8 Ryser fell out of bed and fell in a shower on Aug. 19.
Soforenko said medical authorities told him the woman would have
hBd to fal120 times to suffer the bruises she had.
-

One hundred and five persons attended mortgage burning services
SWtday at St. Paul Lutheran Church.
The Rev.Joseph R. Kraiey of ·
Loyal ,Wisconsin, pastor of the chur·
ch at the time when the the old church was tom down and the new
building erected, delivered the
message. Presiding at the services
was the present pastor the Rev.
William Middleswarth.
The comer stone for the new structure was laid in 1965 and the new
building was dedicated in 1966. A
total of $95,000 was borrowed for the
new structure.
·
The 15 year-old debt was paid off
in 13 and one-half years through
donations by church members and
several money msking money
projects.

m~""lgage

Afellowship dlnner was enjoyed in
the fellowship hall at 12:30. Robert
Elberfeld showed some slides he had
taken over the years.
Also participating were the Meigs
COunty Voices of Uberty.
Frank Ryther, president of the
congregation, o((eri!d words of
By Tbe Aisoclated Press
welcome and told of the years of
Fifteen persons, tncludlng three
work and faith that brought them to
pedestrians and a motorcycle rider,
the day of celebration.
were killed in traffic accidents
Trell Schoenleb, treasurer in 1966
around Ohio over the weekend, the
and now vice chairman of the · Highway Patrol said.
congregation; told of the many ways
The patrol counts traffic fatalities
people rallied to work and pay for
from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunthe new building. Walter Schrieber · day.
Mrs. Eva Schrieber and Mrs.
The dead:
Elmora Boiece , as the oldest memSUNDAY
bers of the congregation, helped to
YOUNGSTOWN- Brian Penny, 16,
burn the mortgag~.
of Poland, in a one-car acc(dent on
(Continued on paQe 10)
Ohio617 in Mahoning County.
DAYTON - David W. Cunningham, 22, of Dayton, in a one-car
crash on a Dayton street.
TIFFIN -Alice E. Kenner, 66, of
said the legion has a standing Tiffin, in a two-car accident on Ohio
reward for information leading to 53 in Seneca County.
the arrest and conviction of persons
TOLEDO - Virginia E. Konerdamaging Legion property. Anyone mann, 33, of Toledo, in a one-car achavlng information may call the cident on a Toledo city street.
sheriff's office or the Post ComWARREN - Marjorie A. Howell,
mander at 99Z-7087.
44, of Warren, in a two-car accident
The department reported an auto on Ohio 422 in Trumbull County.
fire Saturday which destroyed a
GEORGETOWN - Wendy F.
Volkswagon owned by Michael Carrington, 2, of Georgetown, a
Dellavalle, 32, Rt.l, Langsville who pedestrian struck by a car ·on a
was traveling east on the Flood Brown County road.
Road when it caught lire. There
SATURDAY
were no Injuries.
CLEVELAND- Kevin Lemley, no

Deputies probe legion theft
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating the breaking
and entering of the Rutland
American Legion Post, Beech Grove
Road, that occurred between the
hours of 1:30 a.m. and 8 a.m. Sun· day.
Entry was made through a rear
window. Missing were a
microphone, pop, candy and other
items. Several items taken from the
buildlng were found on the grounds
nesr the buUdlng.
Post Conunander Harry Thomas

Both drivers and two passengersAlice Plantz, 35, Middleport, and
Truman Hall, 43, Pomeroydisplayed visible signs of injury and
were transported by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment.
Quillen was cited on a charge of
left of center. Both , vehicles were
demolished.
The patrol investigated four injury
accidents in Gallia County Saturday.
Officers were called to the scene of

a two-vehicle accident on SR 21~,
just north of CR 15, at 7:12 p,m.
The patrol reports an auto
operated by Shirley Angel, f&amp;;:
Crown City, swerved to avoid an opcoming unidentified vehicle, and
passed off the right side of the roadway over an embankment.
·
Angel and a passenger, Cathy
Ours, 16, Crown City, displayed in-'
capicitattng signs of injury and were :
transported to Holzer Medical Ceil-'
ter for treatment. A second
passenger, Brett Burd, 16, Crown
City, claimed lDjury. There was no
report of treatment.
Officers investigated a twO:
vehicle colliSion on SR 160, at the
·
junction of CR 49, at12: 15 p.m.
The patrol reports the brakes of an
auto operated by Randolf Wagner,
17, Gallipolis, faUed causlng the
vehicle to travel onto 160 into the
path of a.north bound.vehicle driven
by Phyllis Hash, Bidwell,
.
Both drivers claimed injury and
were transported to HMC. Two
passengel'l\ in the Wagner auto-

46;

(Continued on page 10)

15 people killed in traffic
age listed, of Brunswick, in a twoCol!• accident on a Cuyahoga County
road.
COLUMBUS- Dora Wooda, 15, of
Columbus, a pedestrian struck by a
car on Interstate 70 in Franklin
County.
SPRINGFIELD - Carla Flora,
23, of Springfield, in a one-car accident on a Clark County road.
CADIZ - Dianna Wright, 24, of
Bellaire, a passenger, in a motorcycle accident on U.S. 250 in
Harrison County.
CAMBRIDGE - Kathy K.
Adamo, 25, of Cambridge, in a onecar accident on a Guernsey County
road.
LEBANON - Jeffery D. Hunter,
32, of Middletown, in a two-car accident on a Warren County road.
CLEVELAND - Kennit Burgess
Jr., 16, of Cleveland, a pedestrian
struck by a car on a aeveland city

street.
FRIDAY
DOVER - Mitchell A. Miller, 26, of
Berlin, in a one-ear accident on Ohio
39 in Tuscarawas County.
LEBANON - Tammy Williams,
17, a passenger, in a two-car accident on Ohio 47 in Lebanon Countv.

.

Fuel economy figures need overhaul
"GERALD'S HANDICAP ISa MY HANDICAP IS CIERALOI"

"AND THE.!NGINEEAING ISN'T ALL IN THE CAR ...
THEFIE'S A LOT IN THt: FINANCING!"

wASHINGTON

-The goverrunent's fuel-economy figures for new

cars, criticized for years by motorists who say they don't reflect
reality, may be overhauled.
The Environmental Protection Agency Is considering various formulas to adjust the laboratory test figures downward and better
reflect what a driver can expect on the road. EPA officials say they
have not decided how much the figures should be reduced, but they
hope to issue notice of a proposed rule change in the next few weeks.
The tests are done in laboratories with cars running on treadmllls
rather than under actual driving conditions, a situation the EPA admits leads to lnflated figures since rough roads, wind resistance and
other weather factors aren't Jll"e5lint to reduce mUeage.

Weather forecast
aear tonight. JAws til the mid-50s. Siumy Tuesday. Highs near 110.
. Chance of rain near zero percent tonight and Tuesday, Winds northerly around 10 mph tonight.

"THAT NANCY IS THE GREATEST/ PERSONALITY,
BRAINS, LOOKS AND CABLE TV I''

"I SUPPOSE YOU 'DRATHER HAVE ARABS
CONTROL THE EC,ONOMYI"

"LIT'S 8!1 ...10HOOL.IS OUT AT 3:15... 1'0 SAY JIMMY
HAS THE 7·HOUR·15·MINUTE FLUI"

Extended Oblo Forecast~ Wednesday through Friday: Chance of
showers and thunderstorms Wednesday. Fair Thursday and Friday.
Highs in the 70s Wednesday and Friday and in the upper 60s to mid-70s
Thursday. Lows in the 50s Wednesday and Friday and in the mid-lOs to
low 50s TJwrr..day.
·

,, ' \'!I•
•.r..... ,.

'I

SOUND TRUMPETS- The trumpet section of the Meigs Marching Saftd
perfonned well for the lead nwnber during last Friday's band show at

'M. ·

halttlme of the Melgs-BarboursVUJCI football gaine. Doug Hill Ia the
· Meigs band director whlle field commanders are I.Jnda Eason and Lynne
Oliver.

�· 3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 15, 1980

2- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Sept. 15,1980
'

Eagles demolish Minnesota;
Bengals lose in last minute

Opinions &amp;
Comments
111E DAILY SENTINEL
i USI'S!......)
DEV!nED TO 111E

~tten

cf.,....

.

. INI'ERESTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
are wdcomed. 'l'ky •boukl bt Ina dlaa •

draalq-,IIOip&lt;l'llbllolled ilolly e•«Pt So-y by Tbe !)Ilk&gt; VoUey I'Ublllldlli COIOJIOI)" Mlllfmedll, Ill&lt;. ,
111 (:IIIU'l St., PoaKrey, Olalo IS7tt. Buillta1 Office Pboaelf!- Zl.SI. Editorial Pbolle tn-Zli7.
Sec:eMcllu ~tlce~ldaiPIMIIeroy , Oblo.
Natklui ·Mh'ertii:ID&amp; represeatadve, Laodou Auodo~ta, Sltl Eu.cUd Ave., Clevtlaad. OhJo
44115.

Tbe Ataoelated Prest ll elclul\lely eaUUed to tbe Ute for pablicltJon (i all aew1 d.bl~tcbea
CR4Uted ta die aeMpa,er aDd also &amp;be 1 - aews publilbtd berelD.

R_,Wiqen
Robert Hoefllcb

Publbller

Go....I Mcr· l City E41tor
NewaEdllol'
~
Adv. MUqer

~m~ ~'-"""T""IF""T"""&amp;ed•~
~~

1980

DaleRotll&amp;eb, Jr.
CarlGbeeo

Leuers to editor
Time to take stand
Dear Sir,

: ·A few years ago there was a story
in the Readers Digest about some incredibly terrible things that were
happening in Cambodia; 'Ibe article
iras based on reports from cambodlan refugees who claimed that
·- tbll communillt Kluner Rouge anny
~r the leadership of Pol Pot wBB
llllll'dering tens · of thousands of
jleople !limply because they were
''contaminated" by foreign culture
..:. they llstened to rock music, they
spoke a foreign language, or they
llad worked for a capitalist COJDila!IY
Vt Phnom Penh.
•:One of my friends brought the
Readers Digest story to me and said,
"Look here, you keep teUing me that
cOmmwlista are just people: no betier and no worse than us. Look what
the communlst.ure doing in Cambodia." After we talked about the
story for a while, I concluded, "It
can't be true. Nobody could be that
vicious. It's just propaganda." But It

Wasn't.
Last swnmer the Vietnamese arlily pushed Pol Pot's_ forces out of
diOst of Cambodia and foreign jourIJ81lsta got .their first view of that
country since 19'15. The world was
sbocked.
; 'Pol Pot WBB revealed BB an Asian
J;litler. His "purification" of cambodia was recognized as genocide.
Jimmy Carter caUed Pol Pot and the
1hmer Rouge the "world's worst

r~~=:~u::~~ry

had a
ijappy ending; if we could say: The
M1 king was chased away and the
people lived happily.ever after. But
It's not like that. The Kluner Rouge
,fightaon.
The Cambodian people are caught
In a struggle between giants. Russia
and Vietnam are aligned on one side
against Chlru! and the U. S. on the

other.
Last September, at the inslstance
of our new found friend, China, the
U. S. .voted to give Pol Pot's commat Kluner Rouge government,
Democratic Kampuchea, the UN
seat reserved for Cambodia. That
vote helped preserve and revitalize
what wBB left of the Khmer Rouge
amiy. That vote has prolonged the
power struggle that is destroying
Cambodia. That vote cost many ·
people their lives.
That vote to seat Pol Pot's
"Democratic" kampuchea also
stained our American heritage with
the bloody hand print of an Asian
Hitler's genocide. Politics d~ f.n..
deed Jllllke strange bedfeilowa. Who
could have believed ~t Uncle Sam
would have gotten in bed with the
evil Kluner Rouge? Of course, there
was an explanation: . something
about "real politics," etC. I doubt the
Cambodian survivors of Pol Pot's
terror would understand. .
Later this month, there will be
another vote to see who gets the
Cambodian chair at the UN. I know
it is hard for us to vote in favor of
Vietnam's client govenunent in
Phnom Penh; but, couldn't we at
least abstain from voting inStead of
supporting Pol Pot's "Democratic"
kampuchea(
I keep thinking of the song "God
Bless America"; It's reaUy a prayer
set to music. I wonder if we can expect God to bless America while we
curse the people of Cambodia with
our wte for the govenunent that has
plagued them so?
It is time for each of us to take
responsibility for America by personally demanding morality instead ~
of politiCll from our repesentatives in
Washington. Send your letter today.
- Emy Davies, Rt. 1, Box 42, Langeville, Ohio.

Where are parents?
Dear Editor:
I know this day and time everyone
Is very busy. But where did the
parents go? My pet peeve is, Why
don't parents get active in P.T.O.? I
have been four years now and I find
It very rewarding.
Just to see what we have accomplished for the chllclreo through
P.T.O. School can be very boring
with nothing new added or no activities. Those eyes sure get bright
when they see new playground
equipment or new story books, a
small dance or party for the students.
Say, by the way, one hour from
each mother or father would be ap-

preciated by the P.T.0.
Brighten up your child's eyes
when he or she says, "My mom or
my dad helped to earn that for us. By
the way, my husband and I both
have work. But we are never too
busy . for the kids. Do we have
delinquent cbildren? No, sOmetimes
we get a little delinquent as parents.
Mter aU, what good is a card that
'says P. T.O. if we only go to meetings
when we want to gripe? Everyone
should cooperate and working
together can be a lot of fun. Rutland P.T.O. member, very, very
active and proud of it. (Name
withheld on request).

Today in history.
Tooay 1s Monday, Sept., 15, the259th
day of 1980. There are 107 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history: ·
On Sept. 15, 1776, New York City
was occupied by the British during

• •

the Revolutionary War.
On this date:
In1789, the Department of Foreign
Affairs changed its nsme to the
Department of State.

Berry's World

"Keep 'em on track six, then switch 'em to track nine, then back to six, then to
"
track five, go north
. . on three,
. . then south
.

Congress in the early 1800s trumstarted in the late 1940s and had
By Don Graff
peted
American support - of the
·
Democrats
on
the
defensive
and
You've probably heard more than
moral
rather than material kind Republicans scoring largely
you want to hear by now about
for
the
cause of Hungarians, CZechs
rhetorical points for decades.
Ronsld Reagan's two-China policy.
and
others
under the rule of imperial
There was less and Jess to be gotAnd quite possibly the same can
powers.
To
the powers it was at most
ten out of it, however, BB China's
be said about Ronald Reagan, who
ail
irritating
habit that Austrian
relations worsened with the Soviet
continues to give the impression that
.he can't quite figurtl out what the . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --·fuss is all about. ·
· As well he might. According to
some agitated quarters, this intrusion of politics into foreign policy
- or vice versa ~ threatens to shatter fragile American relations with
Union - American relations with ~tuulcellor P1ince Klemens von
the mainland Chinese to disastrous
effect on the world political balance.
which power are at issue in every U. Metternich, the Henry Kissinger and
more of his day, dismissed as .an imWell, maybe. But more likely not.
S. election of recent times.
pertinence. (Peking's labeUng of the
One suspects the Chinese, despite
The 1976 presidential race
Reagan position as an Insult
their possibly justified irritation,
provided something a little different
that while muc!' ~Jse is difsuggests
and Reagan, if he is elected, will find
when Gerald Ford's problems with
ferent,
diplomatic
language hasn't
a way to avoid the looming minieither the English language or the
Annageddon.
facts of cool·war politiCll brought changed much in a century and a
haH.)
And for ali that it has produced the
Polant briefly to center stage.
ActuaUy, there has always been
first dust-up of the post-convention
There are examples and more
more
myth than relllity in that
campaign, Reagan's mixing of
examples, but you get the idea.
business
about politics stopping at
foreign policy with domestic politics
There is nothing new a bout
the
water's
edge. Perhaps It Is only
is nothing unusual. Very much to the
American mixing politics and .
matural
that
foreign interests
contrary. It is.in the American cam• pdlicies, and in the process often
should
bedevil
our domestic
paign tradition.
enraging foreign governments. They
not
only
because
of our
debates,
A tradition in which .China, if go aU the way back to the nation's
world
position
but
as
a
result
present
you'll take a minute to recall, has
earliest years when the new
of
the
diverse
heritage
of
Americans
figured prominently before. The
democracy, smugly confident of its
"who lost China" (to the same Com- . superiority, was given to offering as a people.
In other words, don 't blame
mats all parties are now so conunwanted advice as to how other
cerned about offending ) ·debate got
regimes might best run their affairs. Ronald Reagan judgment or

Today's commentary

Peking's sensitivity for these
recurring flaps - our devils make
us do it.
11IE PEKING POLL
There's more going on in China
these days then wnbrage over the
American presidential campaign.
A late dispatch fran Peking IDfonns that the country has taken
another giant step into the 20th century.
It is taking the plunge into public
opinion polls.
The national Institute of
Psychology, according to official
press reports, has been taking e:&amp;·
perlmenlal samplings of workers'
views at several factories with good
results. The focus so far has been on
such issues BB working conditions
and Jabor-management relations.
But the ready response to the confidential questioning is encouraging
authorities to expand poUlng Into
other areas, Including some that
verge on the political, such as views
pro and con on local leadership,
housing and education.
The polls, the Institute has
decided, are "a good way to get
direct ... opinions from the people."
There is an even better way, of
course.
It's caUed elections.

Carter's campaign off to a good start
ByRobertJ. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
sounds of giddy laughter were heard
recently by those who found themselves passing in front of either the
White House or Carter-Mondale reelection headquarters over on L
Street.
'Ibe reason for the joyful noise? It
seems that Carter-Mondale staffers,
from top to bottom, are absOlutely
delighted with the way the first week
of the campaign went. In fact, things
went so weil in the first week after
the Democratic convention that one
campaign higher-up Said, only par·
tly in jest, "If this k~ up, our ·
main problem will be overconfidence."· ·
At the convention, the CarterMondsle people privately were
making several predictions: Carter
would rebound in the polls; Ronald
Reagan would go a long way towards defeating himself with his penchant for making tactical errors;
and the campaign of independent
John Anderson would never get off
thegtound.
What the e-M people never expected was to be proven right on all '
three counts within days of making
these predictions. But that's just

now · riui by a private foundation,
what happened.
First, the polls. The post- taken over by the federal governconvention polls ~how Carter aU but ment.
Predictably, this caused a
caught up ·with Reagan. In one
firestonn
in Peking. And, when
nstional poll, the president made up
Bush
got
there,
Instead of being picover 12 points in three weeks. In a
tured
as
the
experienced
foreign afprivate poll of the South, a key
expert
(the
reason
for
the trip) ,
fairs
region for Carter (he swept it In 1976
and must hold It in November if he 1s the GOP No. 2 had to spend his time
to overcome Reagan's big lead in the trying to assure Chinese officials
West), Carter now has moved ahead · that Reagan really didn't mean it.
Bush might have carried it off had
of the GOP standard-bearer in every
state but one, Florida, where the two Reagan listened to ·pleas from his
own staff that he play down the issue
men are neck and neck.
from then on. But that appears to
Seco nd; Reagan's penchant for have been asking too much. In
Houston for a speech, wbile Bush
t,Jctical errors. There were two:
I. Running-mate George Bush's was still in China, Reagan was
mission to China. The media tour asked, yes or no, wBB he for "official
was meant to showcase Bush's relations with Taiwan?" "I guess
foreign policy experience and to it's a yes," BfiSwered Reagan. The
head off expected Carter clairiJs of official China news agency then acRepublican foreign affairs inex· cused Reagan of "meddling in the
perience.
internal affairs of China." Bush was
Before Bush left, however, made to look like the fool and the
, Reagan in a news conference Reagan operation took on an aura of
restated once again his 'desire to see ineptitude.
some foqn of official goverrunent-to- ,
2. Reagan's statement to the
govenunent relations re-established Veterans of Foreign Wars ca1ling
between the United States and· the U. S. involvement In Vietnam "a
. Taiwan. He even suggested this noble cause-'' As with the China
might be accomplished by having
Issue, this statement was Reagan's·
the U. S. liaison office in Tai-n . idea entirely. Reportedly, It had ap-

peared in a first draft of the speech,
but had been crossed out by campaign aides. 'Reagan reinserted It in
the final draft.
Said a Carter strategbt: "When I
saw the quote on the (news) wire, I
just couldn't believe it. It was obviously the right statement foe that
audience, but they were Reagan supporters going in. That's his problem,
he's simply so u.sed to teUlng true
believers what they want to hear. l
guess his people can't get through to
him that he has·got to stop It if he is
to broaden his base."
: By week's end, Reagan waa
blaming the press for hia problems
(a charge moat candidates save for
mid-campaign, not the first week) ·
and Reagan media director Lyn Nof- o
zlger was saying It would be solved
by greatly limiting direct contact between Reagan and reporters.
While aU this was going on, Carter
was starting slow, making a few
well-planned appearances and
always looking "presidential."
Aa the Carter strategist put It: "U
every week was go go like this one,
the campaign would be over by Qc.
tober. But we know It won't. Still, It
'lsanicewav to start."

Rent control: militant tenants vs.landlords
,.opes

of averting The showdown!
med rillllstance- groups throughout
are
limited
by the hard realities, one
the country, and earlier this year a
between Republicans and
Democrats, big as they seem to be at .National Tenants Union was fonned. of which is the growing shortage of
Owners, claiming they no longer housing units. Frustrated by tight
election time, may not have a small
pereentage of the emotional content- can operate buildings profitably, money, small builders have almost
especiaUy where heating bills are ceased activities in aome areas. '
of Issues that separate landlords and
Apartment bulldera claim mortgage ·
tenants.
highest, have sought huge rent inrates prohibit construction.
And the biggest of these Issues - . creases and, when stymied, have
Even if housing starts rose shar·
growing bigger by the day because
hurried to convert to cooperatives: .
The two groups, already scrap- ply, various housing offlctala say,
of Inflation, oil prices, politics, a
ping in a thousand and one skir- ml111ons of potential homebuyers,
housing shortage and a changing
mishes, seem headed for a i making a median Income of close to
concept of who has righta to what . ill rent control.
showdown that could, say represen-. $20,000, would be unable to afford the
tatives of both sides, r'esult in a' ~.ooo to f'IO,ooo price tags.
Militant tenants, claiming their
Demographics add to the problem.
redefinition
of private property·
rights to homes supersede the rights
Close
to 40 ml111on Americans will .
rights.
of owners to raise rents, have for- NEW YORK (AP)- The dlsputes .

"What EVIDENCE or PROOF do you have that
George Brett eats his BruSS8/s sprouts?"

~ I

•

year's National Football Conference
playoffs by Tampa Bay and that
single loss has them playing like an
Inspired team now.
The Eagles destroyed MiMesota
42-7 Sunday, rolling up 529 yards in
total offense and posting their
second straight victory. Quarterback Ron Jaworski , who com-

pleted 20 of 26 ~ for 234 yards
explained the Eagles' drtve this
way:
"A Jot of guys look hack to our
playoff loss against Tampa Bay last
year with bitterness. We're not
going to forget it; .We're going to
take it out on some people this
year."
Other NFL teams running their
records to :t-0 Sunday were Detroit

with a 2S-7 romp over Green Bay;
Boffalo, which beat the New York
Jets ~10; San Diego, which
defeated Oakland 30-24 in overtime;
Pittsburgh, 20-17 winners over
Baltimore; and San Francisco,
which beat St. Louis 24-21 in over·
time. Both Detroit and San Francisco matched their entire nwnber
of wins last season.
Tampa Bay had won Its second
straight last Thursday night,
shading Los Angeles i0-9.
In Sunday's other games, it wBB
Atlanta 37, New England 21;
Chicago 22, New Orleans 3; Seattle
17, Kansas City 16; Washington 23,
New York Giants 21 ; Miami 17, Cln.
cinnsti 16; and Denver 41, Dallas 20.
Houston plays at Cleveland
tonight.
EaglesU, VikiDgs 7
Besides Jaworski's 234 yards, the

24-yarder to wide receiver John JefEagles got 169 on the ground from
ferson that carried San Diego past
workhorse running hack Wilbert
Oakland at8: 09 of overtime.
Montgomery, who scored two touchOakland forced the extra period
downs. Leroy Harris also scored
when reserve quarterback Jim
twjce BB Philadelphia administered
Plunkett threw an !B-yard TD to
the worst defeat MiMesota has sufRaymond
Chester with 33 seconcls
fered in 13 years. ·
remaining
in regulation time.
LIOD1129, Packers 7
Sfeelers
20, Coljs 17
No.1 draft choice Billy Sims
Terry Bradshaw's 24-yard TO
rushed for 134 yards and hooked up
pass to Jim Smith in the fourth quaron ail 87-yard TO pass play with
ter provided the winning points. But
· Gary Danielson BB Detroit pounded
Pittsburgh's victory over Baltimore
Green Bay. Ed Murray kicked five
was not secure until safety Donnie
field goals and Sims ran his twoShell intercepted Bert Jones with 3_
game NFL rushing total to 287 yarminutes to play after the Colts had a
ds.
first-and-goal from the three.
Danielson, playing despite the
49ers 24, CardlDa1s 21
death Thursday of his nine-day old
Ray
Wersching's 33-yard field ·
daughter, completed 11 of 17 passes
goal
beat
St. Louis in overtime. San
fQr 246 yards.
·
Francisco
tied the score in the final
Bills :10, Jets 10
when
Paul Hofer swept the
minute
Jeff Nixon returned an hiS fourth
26
yards
for a TO, coping
right
side
interception of the season 50 yards
for a touchdown as Buffalo defeated •an 80-yard drtve. _
FalcoDB 37, Patriots 21 ·
New York.
Rookie tight end Junior MiUer. I
Joe Ferguson hit on 18 of 29 passes
for '1Jf/ yards and Nick Mike-Mayer 'shut out in his NFL debut a week
ago, caught eight passes for 117 yarkicked field goals of 47 and 38 yards
ds and two TDs from Steve Barfor the Billa, who won their first two
games of the season for the first tkowski BB Atlanta surprised New
England.
time since 1975.
William Andrews ran for 124 yards
Dan Fouta completed 29 of 44
passes for 38'1 yards but his last one for the Falcons and Bartkowski
was the most important. That was a . completed 19 of 39 attempts for 244

Weekend entire loss for Reds, Pirates

Reagan's two-China policy: who cares?

·reach age 30, a typical homeliiiyuig
age, In the decade of the liiiiOs. A·
shortage is likely even If housing ''
starts double to 2million a year.
Aa the aituation becomes critical,
the issues have become politicized
especlaUy in recird to reat control
Aware of a large and growing constituency, calidldatea and Of·
flceholders have stirred activity.
Once restricted to urban areas,
rent control J~glalatlon now hu Invaded even small communlUea and
It 8eellll deatlned to spread
multifamily apartment houses to
bulldlnp of only a few rental Wlita.

uP

from .
•

IIA8EIIALL

•

:
UJ6 ANGE!ni DODGERS - Traded Dennll •
Lewallyn, plldla. and CMh to tbe Tnu ·.
Rangers i,.. Pepe Frill, lnUelder.

:

PHI LADELI'HIA PIDLLI&amp;'! - A&lt;quiml '
~rky Lyle, plldior, frml tho Teus Jian&amp;en ,
~aamedllter.
.

NolloUIBIAelbolllaPe

NEW YORK KNICKS - cut AI Skinner, Terr)' ·
PoaV)' oncl Carl Wlnf,.., gwu:d!o, and hmel •
Klng, forward.

;

.

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The game sticks in their hides like
a festering sore that will not heal. It
happened nine months ago, but the
Philadelphia Eagles have long
memories.
The Eagles were eliminated in last

wordl &amp;oq lor aubject to mfacUoll by tile tit..,) ud lll..t bt 11ped with &amp;he slpee'• ..Jdrnl, Names m.)' be wUbbtld upon
pabllcaU.. a-wever, oa teqllel&amp;, I&amp;IDet wW be diKIOIM. lAteen abould be Ia cood tute, •d-

..._._..

Woel&lt;eodSportootro.o-

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
For the Cincinnsti Reds and Pittsburgh Pirates, it was a lost
weekend.
The defending division champions
in the National League both started
the weekend In third place, but with
high hopes of making two close pennant races even tighter. Instead,
they fell even further behind and
both now face difficult climbs to
another championship. .
The Reds dropped three games in
a row to Los Angeles, including a 3-1
defeat Sunday, giving the Dodgers
their first series sweep at Riverfront
Stadiwn Bince it opened in 1970. Cincinnati now traiLI the Dodgers and
the Houston Astnls by 5'&gt;'z games In
theWest. .
At Mon!real, the Pirates dropped
two of three to the Expos, two of
them shutouts, with Expos rookie
_Bill Gullickson hurling a ~ three-

·hitter In Sunday's finale. The
Pirates now trail the Expos by
41'. and Philadelphia by 3lf.t in the

East.

.

In other NL games, Houston

defeated San Francisco 6-4,
Philadelphia stayed close in the
East by whipping St. Louis 8-4, the
New York Mets outlasted the
Chicago Cubs 10-7 and Atlanta edged
San Diego 4-3 .
Rick Monday drove in three runs
with a homer and a single to pace the
Dodgers attack, while Jerry Reuss
stopped the Reds on five hits.
Reuss, 17-5 overaU, Is 11·1 this
year against the five other contending teams from both divisions.
Gu11lckson, 9-t, struck out only
three after whiffing 18 in his
previous start for a rookie record,
but he also aUowed only three hits in
his victory over the Pirates, his ninth triumph in 10 decisions.

Rookie Marty Bystrom shut out St.
Rodney Scott tripled and scored on
a single by Andre Daw8on, who later Louis for the first seven innings,
scored on an infield out to climax the allowing five hits, but he bad to be
relieved by new acquisition Sparky
Expos' three-run first Inning.
Aatnlll I, GlaDts 4
Lyle because of an aching foot.
Alan Ashby highlighted Houston's
Braves fPadrea 3
four-run second lnrilng-With a twoJerry Royster's fourth single of
run single to help Houston win its fif- tne game CII'Ove in pinch-runner
th game in a row and 22nd out of the Gary Cooper in the ninth inning to
last29.
.
lift Atlanta over San Diego.
Chris Chambliss homered for the
Ashby's hit followed a single by
Jlise Cruz, a walk to Cesar Cedeno Braves.
Mets 10 Cuba 7
and a rurHCOring single by DeMy
Lee Mazzilli drove in five runs, inWa111ng.
. PbJWes 8, Canll4
cluding a.alngle for the tying tally in
Philadelphia scored six runs in the the ninth, before Steve Henderson's
third inning, three of-them on Bake · three-run homer won the game for
McBride's three-run homer, to stay New York over Chicago.
Dave Kingman had two homers
only one game behind Montreal in
for the Cubs.
the East.

.vards.

Bears 22, SalDts 3
Walter Payton rushed for 183
yards in 18 carries including a personal record 69-yard TO run BB
Chicago battered New Orl~.
Before the TD, Payton spun off a
61-yard run but was caught when he
slowed up for a blocJo; to develop.
Seabawks17, Chiefs 16
Seattle scored aU its points in the
first half as Jim Zorn passed for a
pair of TDs. Then the Seahawks held
off a Kansas City rally that included
three field goals by Nick Lowery,
one of them a 57-yarder which set a
Chiefs' club record.
Redlldns 23, Giants 21
Mark Moseley's §-yard field K'!Bij
sank New York with 1:55 left.
Earlier, Moseley had an extra point
attempt blocked, ending a string of
69 consecutive conversions.
Phil SinunB threw two TO passes
for the Giants, the second giving
New York the lead with just over
five mlilutes to play.
,
Dolphins 17' BeDgala 16
Uhe von Schamann kicked a 39yard field goal with I :55 to play,
carrying Miami to its comebacJo; victory over Clncinnsti. Bill B&amp;rnett
blocked a punt with 3:42 left, setting
up the winning score for the
Dolphins, who trailed IS-7 with just
over five minutes to play.
Broncos n, Cowboys :10
Safety Bill Thonmpson returned a
fwnble 32 yards for a TO and Denver's defense forced two other turnovers that gave the offense the ball
at the Dallas 5-yard line, wearing
down the Cowboys.

Insurance Package
For You
Do you own or operate a
small or medium-site ,
retail store~ office, apartment or church?
Then - you may qualify
for State Auto Mutual's . .
• SERIES ONE Business
Policy ... a modern-a$tomorrow package plan
that combines an array of
broad property and liability coverages required to
safeguard your opera. tions. ,O:,JJ for a :'l/er.y attrac·
tive, affordable premium .
Let us explain the
superior
features
of
SERIES ONE ... the
time we spend together
could prove interesting
and rewarding to you.
Just give us a call or
mail the handy coupon.
DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE
102 W. Main 992-2143 Pomeroy, 0 .
Rep resenl ing
STATE
'
AUTOMOBILE
MUTuAL
INSURANCE
COMPANY

Riverside ·
Volkswagen
NOW ACCEPT! NG
ORDERS FOR
1981 V .W.'s

' Please tell me more aboUt tile·
SERIES ONE Buslneu Polley . ..

Rabbit , Scirocco, Jeha
vanagon. Tr uck, Diesels, Fuel

injection, S speed. etc. All com·

NAM

binations avail~ble .

Upper R1ver Rd .
Gallipolis

44 -9

, !

ADORES:

PHONE

'

Lessor known Davis
continues to do job
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ron 'Davis doesn't get the
publicity - but he does get the outs.
"I don't mind whether people
know that I'm winning or losing
games just so long BB the team
wins,' ' says Davis.
While not getting BB much notice
BB his more illustrious buUpen mate,
Rich Gossage, the pencil-thin righthander conUnues to pitch strong
baseball - BB he did Sunday with 4 1·
3 innings_of hitless relief against the
Boston Red Sox.
That helped provide tqe Yankees
with a ~ victory and greatly improved their chances of winning the
American League East title.
Coupled with Baltimore's 4-3 loss to
Toronto in 13 innings, the Yankees
Improved their lead In the East to
five games over the Orioles.
Elsewhere in the AL, KanSas beat
IJBkland 4-3; California trimmed
TeXBB 3-1; Minnesota edged Chicago
3-2; Milwaukee defeated Seattle 3-2
and Cleveland swept a doubleheader
from Detroit~ in 131nningaand3-0.
Davis checked the Red Sox after
Boston had taken a 3-2 lead with a
pair of runs In the fifth. Bucky Dent .
and Aurelio Rodriguez each lined '
two-run homers and Eric Soderholm
smashed a solo shot as the hot
Yankees came back to win their 13th
gamein15.
Blue JaY. 4, Orioles 3
'
BOb Bailor's alngle scored Uoyd
M011eby from aecond base in the 13th
Inning to give Toronto its victory
aver Baltimore. The Toronto rally ,
. overahadowed a great day by
Baltimore's Eddie Murray, who hit
three homers for all the Oriole runs,
including one in the ninth that sent
the came into extra Innings tied at 3-

singled in a run to lead Calliornla
over Texas.
Winner Frank Tanana, &amp;-10, got
belp from Mark Clear and Andy
Hassler to pick up his tooth career
victory.
Twlua 3, Wblte Sox Z
Mike Cubbage delivered a two-run
pinch slngle with two out In the
eighth inning to lead MiMesota over
Chicago.
' Ross Bawngarten, 2-11, who has
not won sine~) July 2, gave up a
double in the eighth to Gary Ward
and theiJ walked Jolll Castlno before
being replaced by Ed Fanner. Farmer struck out Roy Smalley and
Glenn Adams but Cubbage, hitting
for Ron Jackson, singled to score
Ward and Castlno.
Cecil Cooper doubled home two
runs in the seventh Inning, leading
Milwaukee p!l,'ll Seattle. .
Cooper's game-winning hit came
off Mariner reliever Shane Rawley.
h!d!an• W, Ttceni4-G
Gary Gray, who had Ued the game I
with a dramatic, twiMIIIt home run
In the nintl/. delivered tbe winning
run with a ~t single in the 13th
to lead Clev'eland over Detroit in the
first game of their doubleheader.
Le(t-hander Bob Owchinko pitched his first American League
shutout and his first victory aJnce
July 1, scattering four hits to pace
the Indians' second-game victory.

ItS.oite big reason

.electric.rates are · ·
national average.

-

~

DEFENSE IMPORTANT

BALTIMORE (AP) - Brooks
Robinson, who won 18 Gold Gloves
for his defensive skl1l over the years
with the Baltimore Orioles, 1nslsta
that defense shOuld be considered IS
important as offense when players
3.
and general managers discull con~~.s· .
Pete LaCock hit a solo homer and tract tenns.
Robinson, now an analyst on
Dan Quisenberry chalked Up his 33rd
Oriole
telecasts, said that no G.M. in
save aa Kanaal City beat Oakland'
his
memory
had ever asked how
and clOIIed In on the AL West title.
many
ground
balis
he had picked up.
The victory dropped the Royala'
"It
may
be
changing,
however,".
"magtc number" for clinching the·
Brooks
added.
"Graig
tiettles
of t)le
AL West to two games. The RoyaJa,
Yankees
turned
a
whole
Wurld
1
lead the second-place A's by 17
Series around with his glove work.
games.
He proved that It takes just aa much '
ADCe113, RaDgen 1
concentration
and natural ability to
Bob Clark homered and Jason
'
..'l'hompaon and Rick Miller each play the infield IS it does to hit."

It takes a lot of fuel to .make · cheaJ)er to bum than oil. It's an
abundant f)lel source. And it's
the eleclricity our customers·
·· use. And because fuel rs the
. found right here in America.
· Last year the American
·rnajor factor Ill the cost of. proElectric Power System which
. dudng'electrlcity, your electric
l costs are directly affected by the we're part of burned over 38
million tons of coal. And that
: kind of fuel we use_
· . Coal is the answer . It's
saved our country over·150

Royals'·

..

~

million barrelS·.Of oil .• '
· . Just as.ImPortant, lfhelped
keel? Yo~' electriC rat~.l!ielow
the .national average. , ' And
that's good news for aU'of us.

.~: Edloon- ~••. Ji.l,; 1979

report for lnvestOI'·Owned Elactt'c. l.IIID..,

'

We give itourbest.

OHIO .POWER COMPANY
•

··. '
the

�· 3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 15, 1980

2- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Sept. 15,1980
'

Eagles demolish Minnesota;
Bengals lose in last minute

Opinions &amp;
Comments
111E DAILY SENTINEL
i USI'S!......)
DEV!nED TO 111E

~tten

cf.,....

.

. INI'ERESTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
are wdcomed. 'l'ky •boukl bt Ina dlaa •

draalq-,IIOip&lt;l'llbllolled ilolly e•«Pt So-y by Tbe !)Ilk&gt; VoUey I'Ublllldlli COIOJIOI)" Mlllfmedll, Ill&lt;. ,
111 (:IIIU'l St., PoaKrey, Olalo IS7tt. Buillta1 Office Pboaelf!- Zl.SI. Editorial Pbolle tn-Zli7.
Sec:eMcllu ~tlce~ldaiPIMIIeroy , Oblo.
Natklui ·Mh'ertii:ID&amp; represeatadve, Laodou Auodo~ta, Sltl Eu.cUd Ave., Clevtlaad. OhJo
44115.

Tbe Ataoelated Prest ll elclul\lely eaUUed to tbe Ute for pablicltJon (i all aew1 d.bl~tcbea
CR4Uted ta die aeMpa,er aDd also &amp;be 1 - aews publilbtd berelD.

R_,Wiqen
Robert Hoefllcb

Publbller

Go....I Mcr· l City E41tor
NewaEdllol'
~
Adv. MUqer

~m~ ~'-"""T""IF""T"""&amp;ed•~
~~

1980

DaleRotll&amp;eb, Jr.
CarlGbeeo

Leuers to editor
Time to take stand
Dear Sir,

: ·A few years ago there was a story
in the Readers Digest about some incredibly terrible things that were
happening in Cambodia; 'Ibe article
iras based on reports from cambodlan refugees who claimed that
·- tbll communillt Kluner Rouge anny
~r the leadership of Pol Pot wBB
llllll'dering tens · of thousands of
jleople !limply because they were
''contaminated" by foreign culture
..:. they llstened to rock music, they
spoke a foreign language, or they
llad worked for a capitalist COJDila!IY
Vt Phnom Penh.
•:One of my friends brought the
Readers Digest story to me and said,
"Look here, you keep teUing me that
cOmmwlista are just people: no betier and no worse than us. Look what
the communlst.ure doing in Cambodia." After we talked about the
story for a while, I concluded, "It
can't be true. Nobody could be that
vicious. It's just propaganda." But It

Wasn't.
Last swnmer the Vietnamese arlily pushed Pol Pot's_ forces out of
diOst of Cambodia and foreign jourIJ81lsta got .their first view of that
country since 19'15. The world was
sbocked.
; 'Pol Pot WBB revealed BB an Asian
J;litler. His "purification" of cambodia was recognized as genocide.
Jimmy Carter caUed Pol Pot and the
1hmer Rouge the "world's worst

r~~=:~u::~~ry

had a
ijappy ending; if we could say: The
M1 king was chased away and the
people lived happily.ever after. But
It's not like that. The Kluner Rouge
,fightaon.
The Cambodian people are caught
In a struggle between giants. Russia
and Vietnam are aligned on one side
against Chlru! and the U. S. on the

other.
Last September, at the inslstance
of our new found friend, China, the
U. S. .voted to give Pol Pot's commat Kluner Rouge government,
Democratic Kampuchea, the UN
seat reserved for Cambodia. That
vote helped preserve and revitalize
what wBB left of the Khmer Rouge
amiy. That vote has prolonged the
power struggle that is destroying
Cambodia. That vote cost many ·
people their lives.
That vote to seat Pol Pot's
"Democratic" kampuchea also
stained our American heritage with
the bloody hand print of an Asian
Hitler's genocide. Politics d~ f.n..
deed Jllllke strange bedfeilowa. Who
could have believed ~t Uncle Sam
would have gotten in bed with the
evil Kluner Rouge? Of course, there
was an explanation: . something
about "real politics," etC. I doubt the
Cambodian survivors of Pol Pot's
terror would understand. .
Later this month, there will be
another vote to see who gets the
Cambodian chair at the UN. I know
it is hard for us to vote in favor of
Vietnam's client govenunent in
Phnom Penh; but, couldn't we at
least abstain from voting inStead of
supporting Pol Pot's "Democratic"
kampuchea(
I keep thinking of the song "God
Bless America"; It's reaUy a prayer
set to music. I wonder if we can expect God to bless America while we
curse the people of Cambodia with
our wte for the govenunent that has
plagued them so?
It is time for each of us to take
responsibility for America by personally demanding morality instead ~
of politiCll from our repesentatives in
Washington. Send your letter today.
- Emy Davies, Rt. 1, Box 42, Langeville, Ohio.

Where are parents?
Dear Editor:
I know this day and time everyone
Is very busy. But where did the
parents go? My pet peeve is, Why
don't parents get active in P.T.O.? I
have been four years now and I find
It very rewarding.
Just to see what we have accomplished for the chllclreo through
P.T.O. School can be very boring
with nothing new added or no activities. Those eyes sure get bright
when they see new playground
equipment or new story books, a
small dance or party for the students.
Say, by the way, one hour from
each mother or father would be ap-

preciated by the P.T.0.
Brighten up your child's eyes
when he or she says, "My mom or
my dad helped to earn that for us. By
the way, my husband and I both
have work. But we are never too
busy . for the kids. Do we have
delinquent cbildren? No, sOmetimes
we get a little delinquent as parents.
Mter aU, what good is a card that
'says P. T.O. if we only go to meetings
when we want to gripe? Everyone
should cooperate and working
together can be a lot of fun. Rutland P.T.O. member, very, very
active and proud of it. (Name
withheld on request).

Today in history.
Tooay 1s Monday, Sept., 15, the259th
day of 1980. There are 107 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history: ·
On Sept. 15, 1776, New York City
was occupied by the British during

• •

the Revolutionary War.
On this date:
In1789, the Department of Foreign
Affairs changed its nsme to the
Department of State.

Berry's World

"Keep 'em on track six, then switch 'em to track nine, then back to six, then to
"
track five, go north
. . on three,
. . then south
.

Congress in the early 1800s trumstarted in the late 1940s and had
By Don Graff
peted
American support - of the
·
Democrats
on
the
defensive
and
You've probably heard more than
moral
rather than material kind Republicans scoring largely
you want to hear by now about
for
the
cause of Hungarians, CZechs
rhetorical points for decades.
Ronsld Reagan's two-China policy.
and
others
under the rule of imperial
There was less and Jess to be gotAnd quite possibly the same can
powers.
To
the powers it was at most
ten out of it, however, BB China's
be said about Ronald Reagan, who
ail
irritating
habit that Austrian
relations worsened with the Soviet
continues to give the impression that
.he can't quite figurtl out what the . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --·fuss is all about. ·
· As well he might. According to
some agitated quarters, this intrusion of politics into foreign policy
- or vice versa ~ threatens to shatter fragile American relations with
Union - American relations with ~tuulcellor P1ince Klemens von
the mainland Chinese to disastrous
effect on the world political balance.
which power are at issue in every U. Metternich, the Henry Kissinger and
more of his day, dismissed as .an imWell, maybe. But more likely not.
S. election of recent times.
pertinence. (Peking's labeUng of the
One suspects the Chinese, despite
The 1976 presidential race
Reagan position as an Insult
their possibly justified irritation,
provided something a little different
that while muc!' ~Jse is difsuggests
and Reagan, if he is elected, will find
when Gerald Ford's problems with
ferent,
diplomatic
language hasn't
a way to avoid the looming minieither the English language or the
Annageddon.
facts of cool·war politiCll brought changed much in a century and a
haH.)
And for ali that it has produced the
Polant briefly to center stage.
ActuaUy, there has always been
first dust-up of the post-convention
There are examples and more
more
myth than relllity in that
campaign, Reagan's mixing of
examples, but you get the idea.
business
about politics stopping at
foreign policy with domestic politics
There is nothing new a bout
the
water's
edge. Perhaps It Is only
is nothing unusual. Very much to the
American mixing politics and .
matural
that
foreign interests
contrary. It is.in the American cam• pdlicies, and in the process often
should
bedevil
our domestic
paign tradition.
enraging foreign governments. They
not
only
because
of our
debates,
A tradition in which .China, if go aU the way back to the nation's
world
position
but
as
a
result
present
you'll take a minute to recall, has
earliest years when the new
of
the
diverse
heritage
of
Americans
figured prominently before. The
democracy, smugly confident of its
"who lost China" (to the same Com- . superiority, was given to offering as a people.
In other words, don 't blame
mats all parties are now so conunwanted advice as to how other
cerned about offending ) ·debate got
regimes might best run their affairs. Ronald Reagan judgment or

Today's commentary

Peking's sensitivity for these
recurring flaps - our devils make
us do it.
11IE PEKING POLL
There's more going on in China
these days then wnbrage over the
American presidential campaign.
A late dispatch fran Peking IDfonns that the country has taken
another giant step into the 20th century.
It is taking the plunge into public
opinion polls.
The national Institute of
Psychology, according to official
press reports, has been taking e:&amp;·
perlmenlal samplings of workers'
views at several factories with good
results. The focus so far has been on
such issues BB working conditions
and Jabor-management relations.
But the ready response to the confidential questioning is encouraging
authorities to expand poUlng Into
other areas, Including some that
verge on the political, such as views
pro and con on local leadership,
housing and education.
The polls, the Institute has
decided, are "a good way to get
direct ... opinions from the people."
There is an even better way, of
course.
It's caUed elections.

Carter's campaign off to a good start
ByRobertJ. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
sounds of giddy laughter were heard
recently by those who found themselves passing in front of either the
White House or Carter-Mondale reelection headquarters over on L
Street.
'Ibe reason for the joyful noise? It
seems that Carter-Mondale staffers,
from top to bottom, are absOlutely
delighted with the way the first week
of the campaign went. In fact, things
went so weil in the first week after
the Democratic convention that one
campaign higher-up Said, only par·
tly in jest, "If this k~ up, our ·
main problem will be overconfidence."· ·
At the convention, the CarterMondsle people privately were
making several predictions: Carter
would rebound in the polls; Ronald
Reagan would go a long way towards defeating himself with his penchant for making tactical errors;
and the campaign of independent
John Anderson would never get off
thegtound.
What the e-M people never expected was to be proven right on all '
three counts within days of making
these predictions. But that's just

now · riui by a private foundation,
what happened.
First, the polls. The post- taken over by the federal governconvention polls ~how Carter aU but ment.
Predictably, this caused a
caught up ·with Reagan. In one
firestonn
in Peking. And, when
nstional poll, the president made up
Bush
got
there,
Instead of being picover 12 points in three weeks. In a
tured
as
the
experienced
foreign afprivate poll of the South, a key
expert
(the
reason
for
the trip) ,
fairs
region for Carter (he swept it In 1976
and must hold It in November if he 1s the GOP No. 2 had to spend his time
to overcome Reagan's big lead in the trying to assure Chinese officials
West), Carter now has moved ahead · that Reagan really didn't mean it.
Bush might have carried it off had
of the GOP standard-bearer in every
state but one, Florida, where the two Reagan listened to ·pleas from his
own staff that he play down the issue
men are neck and neck.
from then on. But that appears to
Seco nd; Reagan's penchant for have been asking too much. In
Houston for a speech, wbile Bush
t,Jctical errors. There were two:
I. Running-mate George Bush's was still in China, Reagan was
mission to China. The media tour asked, yes or no, wBB he for "official
was meant to showcase Bush's relations with Taiwan?" "I guess
foreign policy experience and to it's a yes," BfiSwered Reagan. The
head off expected Carter clairiJs of official China news agency then acRepublican foreign affairs inex· cused Reagan of "meddling in the
perience.
internal affairs of China." Bush was
Before Bush left, however, made to look like the fool and the
, Reagan in a news conference Reagan operation took on an aura of
restated once again his 'desire to see ineptitude.
some foqn of official goverrunent-to- ,
2. Reagan's statement to the
govenunent relations re-established Veterans of Foreign Wars ca1ling
between the United States and· the U. S. involvement In Vietnam "a
. Taiwan. He even suggested this noble cause-'' As with the China
might be accomplished by having
Issue, this statement was Reagan's·
the U. S. liaison office in Tai-n . idea entirely. Reportedly, It had ap-

peared in a first draft of the speech,
but had been crossed out by campaign aides. 'Reagan reinserted It in
the final draft.
Said a Carter strategbt: "When I
saw the quote on the (news) wire, I
just couldn't believe it. It was obviously the right statement foe that
audience, but they were Reagan supporters going in. That's his problem,
he's simply so u.sed to teUlng true
believers what they want to hear. l
guess his people can't get through to
him that he has·got to stop It if he is
to broaden his base."
: By week's end, Reagan waa
blaming the press for hia problems
(a charge moat candidates save for
mid-campaign, not the first week) ·
and Reagan media director Lyn Nof- o
zlger was saying It would be solved
by greatly limiting direct contact between Reagan and reporters.
While aU this was going on, Carter
was starting slow, making a few
well-planned appearances and
always looking "presidential."
Aa the Carter strategist put It: "U
every week was go go like this one,
the campaign would be over by Qc.
tober. But we know It won't. Still, It
'lsanicewav to start."

Rent control: militant tenants vs.landlords
,.opes

of averting The showdown!
med rillllstance- groups throughout
are
limited
by the hard realities, one
the country, and earlier this year a
between Republicans and
Democrats, big as they seem to be at .National Tenants Union was fonned. of which is the growing shortage of
Owners, claiming they no longer housing units. Frustrated by tight
election time, may not have a small
pereentage of the emotional content- can operate buildings profitably, money, small builders have almost
especiaUy where heating bills are ceased activities in aome areas. '
of Issues that separate landlords and
Apartment bulldera claim mortgage ·
tenants.
highest, have sought huge rent inrates prohibit construction.
And the biggest of these Issues - . creases and, when stymied, have
Even if housing starts rose shar·
growing bigger by the day because
hurried to convert to cooperatives: .
The two groups, already scrap- ply, various housing offlctala say,
of Inflation, oil prices, politics, a
ping in a thousand and one skir- ml111ons of potential homebuyers,
housing shortage and a changing
mishes, seem headed for a i making a median Income of close to
concept of who has righta to what . ill rent control.
showdown that could, say represen-. $20,000, would be unable to afford the
tatives of both sides, r'esult in a' ~.ooo to f'IO,ooo price tags.
Militant tenants, claiming their
Demographics add to the problem.
redefinition
of private property·
rights to homes supersede the rights
Close
to 40 ml111on Americans will .
rights.
of owners to raise rents, have for- NEW YORK (AP)- The dlsputes .

"What EVIDENCE or PROOF do you have that
George Brett eats his BruSS8/s sprouts?"

~ I

•

year's National Football Conference
playoffs by Tampa Bay and that
single loss has them playing like an
Inspired team now.
The Eagles destroyed MiMesota
42-7 Sunday, rolling up 529 yards in
total offense and posting their
second straight victory. Quarterback Ron Jaworski , who com-

pleted 20 of 26 ~ for 234 yards
explained the Eagles' drtve this
way:
"A Jot of guys look hack to our
playoff loss against Tampa Bay last
year with bitterness. We're not
going to forget it; .We're going to
take it out on some people this
year."
Other NFL teams running their
records to :t-0 Sunday were Detroit

with a 2S-7 romp over Green Bay;
Boffalo, which beat the New York
Jets ~10; San Diego, which
defeated Oakland 30-24 in overtime;
Pittsburgh, 20-17 winners over
Baltimore; and San Francisco,
which beat St. Louis 24-21 in over·
time. Both Detroit and San Francisco matched their entire nwnber
of wins last season.
Tampa Bay had won Its second
straight last Thursday night,
shading Los Angeles i0-9.
In Sunday's other games, it wBB
Atlanta 37, New England 21;
Chicago 22, New Orleans 3; Seattle
17, Kansas City 16; Washington 23,
New York Giants 21 ; Miami 17, Cln.
cinnsti 16; and Denver 41, Dallas 20.
Houston plays at Cleveland
tonight.
EaglesU, VikiDgs 7
Besides Jaworski's 234 yards, the

24-yarder to wide receiver John JefEagles got 169 on the ground from
ferson that carried San Diego past
workhorse running hack Wilbert
Oakland at8: 09 of overtime.
Montgomery, who scored two touchOakland forced the extra period
downs. Leroy Harris also scored
when reserve quarterback Jim
twjce BB Philadelphia administered
Plunkett threw an !B-yard TD to
the worst defeat MiMesota has sufRaymond
Chester with 33 seconcls
fered in 13 years. ·
remaining
in regulation time.
LIOD1129, Packers 7
Sfeelers
20, Coljs 17
No.1 draft choice Billy Sims
Terry Bradshaw's 24-yard TO
rushed for 134 yards and hooked up
pass to Jim Smith in the fourth quaron ail 87-yard TO pass play with
ter provided the winning points. But
· Gary Danielson BB Detroit pounded
Pittsburgh's victory over Baltimore
Green Bay. Ed Murray kicked five
was not secure until safety Donnie
field goals and Sims ran his twoShell intercepted Bert Jones with 3_
game NFL rushing total to 287 yarminutes to play after the Colts had a
ds.
first-and-goal from the three.
Danielson, playing despite the
49ers 24, CardlDa1s 21
death Thursday of his nine-day old
Ray
Wersching's 33-yard field ·
daughter, completed 11 of 17 passes
goal
beat
St. Louis in overtime. San
fQr 246 yards.
·
Francisco
tied the score in the final
Bills :10, Jets 10
when
Paul Hofer swept the
minute
Jeff Nixon returned an hiS fourth
26
yards
for a TO, coping
right
side
interception of the season 50 yards
for a touchdown as Buffalo defeated •an 80-yard drtve. _
FalcoDB 37, Patriots 21 ·
New York.
Rookie tight end Junior MiUer. I
Joe Ferguson hit on 18 of 29 passes
for '1Jf/ yards and Nick Mike-Mayer 'shut out in his NFL debut a week
ago, caught eight passes for 117 yarkicked field goals of 47 and 38 yards
ds and two TDs from Steve Barfor the Billa, who won their first two
games of the season for the first tkowski BB Atlanta surprised New
England.
time since 1975.
William Andrews ran for 124 yards
Dan Fouta completed 29 of 44
passes for 38'1 yards but his last one for the Falcons and Bartkowski
was the most important. That was a . completed 19 of 39 attempts for 244

Weekend entire loss for Reds, Pirates

Reagan's two-China policy: who cares?

·reach age 30, a typical homeliiiyuig
age, In the decade of the liiiiOs. A·
shortage is likely even If housing ''
starts double to 2million a year.
Aa the aituation becomes critical,
the issues have become politicized
especlaUy in recird to reat control
Aware of a large and growing constituency, calidldatea and Of·
flceholders have stirred activity.
Once restricted to urban areas,
rent control J~glalatlon now hu Invaded even small communlUea and
It 8eellll deatlned to spread
multifamily apartment houses to
bulldlnp of only a few rental Wlita.

uP

from .
•

IIA8EIIALL

•

:
UJ6 ANGE!ni DODGERS - Traded Dennll •
Lewallyn, plldla. and CMh to tbe Tnu ·.
Rangers i,.. Pepe Frill, lnUelder.

:

PHI LADELI'HIA PIDLLI&amp;'! - A&lt;quiml '
~rky Lyle, plldior, frml tho Teus Jian&amp;en ,
~aamedllter.
.

NolloUIBIAelbolllaPe

NEW YORK KNICKS - cut AI Skinner, Terr)' ·
PoaV)' oncl Carl Wlnf,.., gwu:d!o, and hmel •
Klng, forward.

;

.

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The game sticks in their hides like
a festering sore that will not heal. It
happened nine months ago, but the
Philadelphia Eagles have long
memories.
The Eagles were eliminated in last

wordl &amp;oq lor aubject to mfacUoll by tile tit..,) ud lll..t bt 11ped with &amp;he slpee'• ..Jdrnl, Names m.)' be wUbbtld upon
pabllcaU.. a-wever, oa teqllel&amp;, I&amp;IDet wW be diKIOIM. lAteen abould be Ia cood tute, •d-

..._._..

Woel&lt;eodSportootro.o-

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
For the Cincinnsti Reds and Pittsburgh Pirates, it was a lost
weekend.
The defending division champions
in the National League both started
the weekend In third place, but with
high hopes of making two close pennant races even tighter. Instead,
they fell even further behind and
both now face difficult climbs to
another championship. .
The Reds dropped three games in
a row to Los Angeles, including a 3-1
defeat Sunday, giving the Dodgers
their first series sweep at Riverfront
Stadiwn Bince it opened in 1970. Cincinnati now traiLI the Dodgers and
the Houston Astnls by 5'&gt;'z games In
theWest. .
At Mon!real, the Pirates dropped
two of three to the Expos, two of
them shutouts, with Expos rookie
_Bill Gullickson hurling a ~ three-

·hitter In Sunday's finale. The
Pirates now trail the Expos by
41'. and Philadelphia by 3lf.t in the

East.

.

In other NL games, Houston

defeated San Francisco 6-4,
Philadelphia stayed close in the
East by whipping St. Louis 8-4, the
New York Mets outlasted the
Chicago Cubs 10-7 and Atlanta edged
San Diego 4-3 .
Rick Monday drove in three runs
with a homer and a single to pace the
Dodgers attack, while Jerry Reuss
stopped the Reds on five hits.
Reuss, 17-5 overaU, Is 11·1 this
year against the five other contending teams from both divisions.
Gu11lckson, 9-t, struck out only
three after whiffing 18 in his
previous start for a rookie record,
but he also aUowed only three hits in
his victory over the Pirates, his ninth triumph in 10 decisions.

Rookie Marty Bystrom shut out St.
Rodney Scott tripled and scored on
a single by Andre Daw8on, who later Louis for the first seven innings,
scored on an infield out to climax the allowing five hits, but he bad to be
relieved by new acquisition Sparky
Expos' three-run first Inning.
Aatnlll I, GlaDts 4
Lyle because of an aching foot.
Alan Ashby highlighted Houston's
Braves fPadrea 3
four-run second lnrilng-With a twoJerry Royster's fourth single of
run single to help Houston win its fif- tne game CII'Ove in pinch-runner
th game in a row and 22nd out of the Gary Cooper in the ninth inning to
last29.
.
lift Atlanta over San Diego.
Chris Chambliss homered for the
Ashby's hit followed a single by
Jlise Cruz, a walk to Cesar Cedeno Braves.
Mets 10 Cuba 7
and a rurHCOring single by DeMy
Lee Mazzilli drove in five runs, inWa111ng.
. PbJWes 8, Canll4
cluding a.alngle for the tying tally in
Philadelphia scored six runs in the the ninth, before Steve Henderson's
third inning, three of-them on Bake · three-run homer won the game for
McBride's three-run homer, to stay New York over Chicago.
Dave Kingman had two homers
only one game behind Montreal in
for the Cubs.
the East.

.vards.

Bears 22, SalDts 3
Walter Payton rushed for 183
yards in 18 carries including a personal record 69-yard TO run BB
Chicago battered New Orl~.
Before the TD, Payton spun off a
61-yard run but was caught when he
slowed up for a blocJo; to develop.
Seabawks17, Chiefs 16
Seattle scored aU its points in the
first half as Jim Zorn passed for a
pair of TDs. Then the Seahawks held
off a Kansas City rally that included
three field goals by Nick Lowery,
one of them a 57-yarder which set a
Chiefs' club record.
Redlldns 23, Giants 21
Mark Moseley's §-yard field K'!Bij
sank New York with 1:55 left.
Earlier, Moseley had an extra point
attempt blocked, ending a string of
69 consecutive conversions.
Phil SinunB threw two TO passes
for the Giants, the second giving
New York the lead with just over
five mlilutes to play.
,
Dolphins 17' BeDgala 16
Uhe von Schamann kicked a 39yard field goal with I :55 to play,
carrying Miami to its comebacJo; victory over Clncinnsti. Bill B&amp;rnett
blocked a punt with 3:42 left, setting
up the winning score for the
Dolphins, who trailed IS-7 with just
over five minutes to play.
Broncos n, Cowboys :10
Safety Bill Thonmpson returned a
fwnble 32 yards for a TO and Denver's defense forced two other turnovers that gave the offense the ball
at the Dallas 5-yard line, wearing
down the Cowboys.

Insurance Package
For You
Do you own or operate a
small or medium-site ,
retail store~ office, apartment or church?
Then - you may qualify
for State Auto Mutual's . .
• SERIES ONE Business
Policy ... a modern-a$tomorrow package plan
that combines an array of
broad property and liability coverages required to
safeguard your opera. tions. ,O:,JJ for a :'l/er.y attrac·
tive, affordable premium .
Let us explain the
superior
features
of
SERIES ONE ... the
time we spend together
could prove interesting
and rewarding to you.
Just give us a call or
mail the handy coupon.
DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE
102 W. Main 992-2143 Pomeroy, 0 .
Rep resenl ing
STATE
'
AUTOMOBILE
MUTuAL
INSURANCE
COMPANY

Riverside ·
Volkswagen
NOW ACCEPT! NG
ORDERS FOR
1981 V .W.'s

' Please tell me more aboUt tile·
SERIES ONE Buslneu Polley . ..

Rabbit , Scirocco, Jeha
vanagon. Tr uck, Diesels, Fuel

injection, S speed. etc. All com·

NAM

binations avail~ble .

Upper R1ver Rd .
Gallipolis

44 -9

, !

ADORES:

PHONE

'

Lessor known Davis
continues to do job
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ron 'Davis doesn't get the
publicity - but he does get the outs.
"I don't mind whether people
know that I'm winning or losing
games just so long BB the team
wins,' ' says Davis.
While not getting BB much notice
BB his more illustrious buUpen mate,
Rich Gossage, the pencil-thin righthander conUnues to pitch strong
baseball - BB he did Sunday with 4 1·
3 innings_of hitless relief against the
Boston Red Sox.
That helped provide tqe Yankees
with a ~ victory and greatly improved their chances of winning the
American League East title.
Coupled with Baltimore's 4-3 loss to
Toronto in 13 innings, the Yankees
Improved their lead In the East to
five games over the Orioles.
Elsewhere in the AL, KanSas beat
IJBkland 4-3; California trimmed
TeXBB 3-1; Minnesota edged Chicago
3-2; Milwaukee defeated Seattle 3-2
and Cleveland swept a doubleheader
from Detroit~ in 131nningaand3-0.
Davis checked the Red Sox after
Boston had taken a 3-2 lead with a
pair of runs In the fifth. Bucky Dent .
and Aurelio Rodriguez each lined '
two-run homers and Eric Soderholm
smashed a solo shot as the hot
Yankees came back to win their 13th
gamein15.
Blue JaY. 4, Orioles 3
'
BOb Bailor's alngle scored Uoyd
M011eby from aecond base in the 13th
Inning to give Toronto its victory
aver Baltimore. The Toronto rally ,
. overahadowed a great day by
Baltimore's Eddie Murray, who hit
three homers for all the Oriole runs,
including one in the ninth that sent
the came into extra Innings tied at 3-

singled in a run to lead Calliornla
over Texas.
Winner Frank Tanana, &amp;-10, got
belp from Mark Clear and Andy
Hassler to pick up his tooth career
victory.
Twlua 3, Wblte Sox Z
Mike Cubbage delivered a two-run
pinch slngle with two out In the
eighth inning to lead MiMesota over
Chicago.
' Ross Bawngarten, 2-11, who has
not won sine~) July 2, gave up a
double in the eighth to Gary Ward
and theiJ walked Jolll Castlno before
being replaced by Ed Fanner. Farmer struck out Roy Smalley and
Glenn Adams but Cubbage, hitting
for Ron Jackson, singled to score
Ward and Castlno.
Cecil Cooper doubled home two
runs in the seventh Inning, leading
Milwaukee p!l,'ll Seattle. .
Cooper's game-winning hit came
off Mariner reliever Shane Rawley.
h!d!an• W, Ttceni4-G
Gary Gray, who had Ued the game I
with a dramatic, twiMIIIt home run
In the nintl/. delivered tbe winning
run with a ~t single in the 13th
to lead Clev'eland over Detroit in the
first game of their doubleheader.
Le(t-hander Bob Owchinko pitched his first American League
shutout and his first victory aJnce
July 1, scattering four hits to pace
the Indians' second-game victory.

ItS.oite big reason

.electric.rates are · ·
national average.

-

~

DEFENSE IMPORTANT

BALTIMORE (AP) - Brooks
Robinson, who won 18 Gold Gloves
for his defensive skl1l over the years
with the Baltimore Orioles, 1nslsta
that defense shOuld be considered IS
important as offense when players
3.
and general managers discull con~~.s· .
Pete LaCock hit a solo homer and tract tenns.
Robinson, now an analyst on
Dan Quisenberry chalked Up his 33rd
Oriole
telecasts, said that no G.M. in
save aa Kanaal City beat Oakland'
his
memory
had ever asked how
and clOIIed In on the AL West title.
many
ground
balis
he had picked up.
The victory dropped the Royala'
"It
may
be
changing,
however,".
"magtc number" for clinching the·
Brooks
added.
"Graig
tiettles
of t)le
AL West to two games. The RoyaJa,
Yankees
turned
a
whole
Wurld
1
lead the second-place A's by 17
Series around with his glove work.
games.
He proved that It takes just aa much '
ADCe113, RaDgen 1
concentration
and natural ability to
Bob Clark homered and Jason
'
..'l'hompaon and Rick Miller each play the infield IS it does to hit."

It takes a lot of fuel to .make · cheaJ)er to bum than oil. It's an
abundant f)lel source. And it's
the eleclricity our customers·
·· use. And because fuel rs the
. found right here in America.
· Last year the American
·rnajor factor Ill the cost of. proElectric Power System which
. dudng'electrlcity, your electric
l costs are directly affected by the we're part of burned over 38
million tons of coal. And that
: kind of fuel we use_
· . Coal is the answer . It's
saved our country over·150

Royals'·

..

~

million barrelS·.Of oil .• '
· . Just as.ImPortant, lfhelped
keel? Yo~' electriC rat~.l!ielow
the .national average. , ' And
that's good news for aU'of us.

.~: Edloon- ~••. Ji.l,; 1979

report for lnvestOI'·Owned Elactt'c. l.IIID..,

'

We give itourbest.

OHIO .POWER COMPANY
•

··. '
the

�~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pmneroy, 0., Monday, Sept. 15, 1980

· 4-The Dally Sentinel, Middle~rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monliay, Sept.l5, 1980

_Ironton will repeat- -·- in SEOAL
·a ccording to. --coaches,
newsmen
--- ·- -.

.

.

-

Stunned Buckeyes ral'y to
defeat Syracuse Orangemen
By GEORGE STRODE
COWMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Maybe
Syracuse caught top-ranked Ohio
State's football players reading their
press clippings. Not so, insist the
Buckeyes, with one notable ex·
ceptlon.
''I know Syracuse ill good team ••
118id Doug Donley, · Ohio State'•s
record-gathering ~er. "but I
think It was a matter of us. We didn't
come to play. We can't wait for
things to happen. We have to make
things happen...
~ The other stars of Ohio State's 31·
21 victory over Syracuse on Satur·
day said they weren't looking ahead
to this Saturday's game against Minnesota, the first roadblock toward a
JIOIISible second straight Big Ten
Conference title.
·
"I don't think we took it lightly.
Your first game milltakes always
come Into~said Art Schlichter
the BuCkeyes · heralded quar:
terback.
Two of his passes were intercepted. The first Interception set
up Syraeuse's second touchdown,

a

this year."

giving the 28-point wxlerdogs a 14-0

_Middleport, Ohio

I' ..

·-The 191111 SEO Sport.swrlter.-.nd

.

SALE DATES
SEPTEMBER 15 • 20, 1980

BI'OIIdcasters poll:
· 1.1~

(114)

2. Jackson

(103)

It appears that the coaches see eye
to eye with the sp&lt;irts media In the
1980 grid prognostications as both
polls resulted in almost identical
pre-season finishes.
The only exception is a narrow
reversal Involving Logan and
Gallipolis where the media gave the
nod to the Chieftains for third place
and the Blue Devlls fourth . .
The coa~hes placed Gallipollls
third and Logan fourth, by the same ·
margin, just one point difference.
In other business Sunday the
association reelected the 1979 of.
fleers for another year and Include
. P~te Wilson, president, Waverly
News Watclu!lan; Craig Dunn, vice
president, Logan Dally News; and
Randy Heath, Radio WLMJ,
Jackson; as secretary-treasurer.
1n the media voting 15 members
repreaenttnc the eight league cities
voted, with a possible 120 points.
Ironton received 10 first place
votes and Jackson five.
The eight head coaches compiled
64 points, giving the Tigers seven first place ballots and Jackson one.

3. ~

(81)

4. GaWpolls

(80)

5. Athens
(53)
6. Meigs
(50)
7. VVaver~
' (31)
8. Wellston
(28)
The 1980 SEOAL football C!laches
poll:
l.lrotiton
(81)
(52)'
2.Jackson
(45)
3.GaWpolls
(44)
4. Logan
(29)
5. Athens
(24)
6.Melgs
7.Waver~

~FRlqJ_DJ.JfST

$fRYICJ IN TOWN
B.IGGEST
-· - BARGAINS IN .TOWN
'

New quarterback Dave Warner
lead.
figured
In all three of Syraeuse's
Schlichter later threw a 47-yard
touchdowns,
throwing 21 and 5 yards
scoring pass to Donley and ran 10
yards for two of the Buckeyes' three to tight ends Tony Sidor and Chris
Jilleba aiid keeping the ball for a 1·
touchdowns.
Reserve tailback Ricky Johnson yard score.
"Even my parents didn't think we
scored the other touchdown for Ohio
State and said: "We knew we could do that good," said Warner.
The Buckeyes showed afterward
couldn't take them too lightly
because they would be up for the No. what they thought of the amallest
teaii! member, D-foot-7 Vlade ·
1 team."
Joluison's 3-yard touchdown run Janakievski. They voted him the
and reception for two eXtra points game ball. His field goals of 35, 34
provided the Buckeyes their first and 42 yards kept the Buckeyes In
the game at halftime 21-9. ·
lead of 24-21 in the third quarter.
"It was a good kicking game, if I
Frank Maloney, Syracuse's coach,
say
so myself," said Ohio state
wasn't surprised that the
Coach
Earle Bruce. Janakievski,
Orangemen stunned Ohio Stadium's
who
was
a soccer player as a fresh71st straight sellout crowd of more
than 86,000 fans with a 21-3 lead in man, now has made 21 of his 24 field
gOal tries In the last two seasons.
the first 17 minutes.
"All of us were so sick of reading . The · Orangemen will open the
about Ohio State all summer," said home segment of their schedule
Mal\IIley. "It was a challenge for us. Saturday night against Invading
· We were detennlned to play hard. I Miami of Ohio, a1f&gt;.14 victim of Centhink last year we did a lot of tral Michigan last Saturday. The
. stargazing here (when they lost 31· Gophers will visit Ohio State In the
8). It really helped us to play here second of four straight home games
for the Buckeyes.

..

OPEN DAILY FROM'

OI.JAtdiTY RIGHTS
· RESERVED

8 AM TILL 10 PM
SIZZLE AN

(18)
(15)

8. Wellston

CUBE STEAK

FARM FRESH
FRUITS
AND
VEGETABLES

BREAKFAST
STRIPS
-

•229

LB.

AMEJIJC;AN LEAGUE

--

W. L.PeL GB

NewYorlt

91 $2 .131
!II $7 .801 $ .

Balt!mon!

n

65 .~ 1410
71 67 .535 1410
73 Ill .514 17\1
73 70 .&gt;10 18
&amp;I 112 .42'1 30

Milwaukee
Cleveland
Detroit
WEST

KanouCit)'

Ill :;6 .611
'II 72 .500 17
Ill 73 .488 19

OUIIncl

Tuu
-

63
Ill
5I
51

!?.'~..

~~-

SuUie

~otl110, Day. KJaerO

EAST

10 .M1 2510
11

.4211 27\1

14 .408 30
II .:JW 37

=•G.f.O, Ill game, I! 1nn1np

Cievelancl ~.
Tonrio4, Balllmore 3,13 innlnp
NowYorlt5,-3

M.lnnelotiS, Ollcago 2
C&amp;Wornil s, Tuu 1
Kanou Cit)' I, Ooklancl3
Mll ...ut.. II, Seall1e 2

Maaday'ollameo

Ooklancl {K....P lii-12) at r .... (F~;.

10), {nl
Chicago {Hoyt 11-2) at SuWe {Abbott IG-10),
{o)

7. Sandually st. Mary 0
Fairless 26, NorwayneO
Glhnoure34, Hudlon W. ReserveO
Hawkmll BeaclllrooctO
Kansas ~ota 20, Footorta st. WendeUn
Lake Catholic 32, Y011111. Ul'Bullne 0
Lorain Clearview M, Monroeville 0
Lorain Swlhvlew20, L&lt;nlnKlni 0
Lueu I, Centerbur!!O
.
Millm Edioon 7. SaDdually st. Mary 0
flew London I, Welllnilon 6

U. S. NO. 1

POTATOES
TENDER GREEN

BROCCOLI

PER BCH.

.

RIPE

BANANAS
U. S. NO. 1

-

3~i 794
3 LBS. 894

5-LB. BAG
GOLD MEDAL

~-Rour .
Enriohed
..................

When you purchase any five items listed below :
• Bisqulck Biscuir Mix (40-oz.)
• Batty Crackel Cake Mixes
a Betry Crocke1 RTS Frosting
• Betty Crock•• Hamburger Helper
• Cheerios Ce1eal (16 -oz.)
• 2 % Lowfat Milk (gallon)

NAnONAL WollE
BATI'ING (:till al ball) - ~. &lt;lllc:qo,

...

N-F-II,eape
AIAGlaace
Alllerieaa c-tm:aee

.121; Templtlca, St. Loula, J:D; K. Hemancleo,
st. Loula, .S21; J. Cnl, HOUIIoo, .311; Cedeno,
llwslon, .318.

W. L
2
1
I

_,.,_

a..-..

II'-

-r·-

·-

· -..-II,NlleaD
-·.!~
0
. BlllaiN!t Wbooimo, w. Va. l'lr1t0
· w.
Va. J1.1110ubomt1Je CalhoUe 8
•. 8ucDre
N. :D, ..... IS

• ~ Mc:Klnley 21, New Philadolphla 3
On. Colnlr7 Day~ II, Landmark Cilrllllan I
. ~II- 31, 111'1-,lld., DeMalhi 0

. -•·lloi1Nameii,PannaSr.O
am. St.[lnauuu, aev.. Hta. o

C1on. Unl...-allyS,OranpO
COl. w.u..on 11, c.nton CatboUc 7
Day. O&gt;am-Ju113, Cln. 7
Day.ll-leii,Day. Wrtohll

-

i

1•

lesd the National Football League In
punttnc... Armstrong said. "The
winds at Soldier Field, where we
H - a t Cleveland, (n)
, play our eight home games are too
tough. But he Ia a master at placing
the ball and often negates l'l!nMAJOR LEAGUE L&amp;\DI!IIIl
backil."
AIIEIIICAN LEAGUE
BATI'ING (11110 at bata) -Brett, Kanou City ·
The record book bore that out. In
.3M; Cooper, Mllwallkee, .3$7: Dllone'
the
1979 aea,!IOil, Parsons led the NFL
Cleveland,
.:111:
CaWomla :m· a ~~en'
Tex.aa, ,3IQ,
in punta downed Inside the opRUNS - Wlllon, IIanNa Cfty, 116; Yount,
pQnellt's 20-yard line with a total of
Mllwa~•. IOR; llumiJr]l , Balllmon!, 103: HenSanDtegoSO,OaklandZI ot
Son FI'IUI&lt;bco24, St. Louis 21, ot

_,.,GolDe
:roo""

ea-.

I '

I

'

t

denorl, Ouana, tl; Wills, Texu, N.
RBI MJ!waukee,ll•; OUver, Texa.s.

Cooper.

26.

CARD NAL

:l% MILK
Gal.

lil=
I

.:-::==""

I

Ctn.

\!!IOZ ONLY

'Good thru September 20, 1910 at Vaugh;ln's Cardinal Store.
·\ . (limit one coupon per family-may not be reprOduced In any rormJ

-------...------

,

I
I
I
I:

----,BEVERAGE 8UY . _ _

:

:

COCA-COLA
'299

-~~~, "'1''

YJG~l~,!~~ STVLE....................,2 ~~=· 79

1
•
GREEN BEANS OR SWEET PEAS

6.96

WHOLE OR SLICED

.

.fiREEI GIANT MUSHROOMS .. 4~~~· 99,

•

Enjoy delicious meals from Burger Chef at terrific savings all week. Take
advantage of these coupon specials and save a total of
96

_,.,Gomeo

. W~IIio~D

.

FLOUR

WITH PURCHASE OF ANY 5 DIFFERENT ITEMS BELOW

• 12-oz. Niblers Corn
• 1 7 -oz. Whole I&lt;
GREEN GIANT
ernel or Cream Style Com

THIS WEEK FROM BURGER CHEF
8

'

RUNS - K. llemandeo, St. Loull, et; llartJI1y,
T. P&lt;L PF PA
MillnelotlatMllwaukee, (n)
&amp;lfalo
0 0 1.000 37 17 . Allanla , 12; LoP'Ion, M - . II; SebiDldl,
Ooklanclatr..... (o)
lla1tlmoro
I 0 .1100 34 34
PhllaRBI~b!,\;.Ro.!;e, f'h'lr'"lpiM, et.
California II Kanlu Cit)', (n)
Miami
I 0 .1100 24 33
m!w'~Jh'a 101: - .
OlleqoatSeattle, {n)
New En(!.
I I 0 .1100 35 34
St. Louii,IOI; Goner, Loo AD8oleo. tl: K. llor&gt;
N.Y. Jell
......,.,III. L&lt;Ws,I1;Banr,IAIO-IO.
0 2 0 .000 24 "'
NAnONAL LEAGUE
Caln1
.
lilTS - Garnr, too Anceleo, t'ie; J. Cruz.
EAST
PIUs.
2 0 0 1.000 II 34 , HOWI&amp;On, til; R1c:batdl, san Olelo, 111; Role,
II'. L. Pet. GB
Cleve.
010 .0001734
Phlladelllhia,l:j.~ 1lomandol, 5I: LOull, IN;
·a llendrlcli, st.
1111.
010.0001731
79
114 .545
711 II&amp;
I
Cine.
DOUBLES - Role,NedeJpbla a; Buck:Der,
0 2 0 ,.000 21 34
75 Ill .521 110
Weol
&lt;lllc:qo,M; K . H.....-, St. ~M; Kn1Bb1.
81 79 .4411 II
S.n Di"tto
2 0 o 1.000 14 :r7
Cincinnati, 34· D a - . - - 3 3 ; Slmmllno,
11,112 .m 11
St. Lou11,33; ~. Atlallta,33.
.~:'!!.
1 I 0 .1100 f/ 17
l(j 67 .317 13
TIUPL.ES - R. li&lt;oll, 1 1 - , II· 0.
~N
I I 0 .1100 ll ' II
WEST
Seo M..--, Pittaburlh, II; LoP'Ion, M&lt;iiilnif. II;
110 .11003010
12 10 .$TI
0 2 0 .000 30 II
Mcllride, Plllladeobla,IO; TO!Ill&gt;i&lt;lon. St.IAIIIII,
IIanNa City
1m
All(elea
12 80 .5TI
Na"-lc.f~R~~Ce
1: Herndon, s. F'rarx:ilco,l.
'
Clodnrill1
T/ Ill .5311 510
Eut
.
HOME Rlll'IS- s.bmldl, ~. R;
Atllnll
71 II .5:11 I
P1111a.
2 011.000. 13 , Homer,Atlanta,D; Murphy, Atlantl, 2t; Blllllr,
SanFnndaco
67 75 .472 ,.
DaUu
I I 0 .1100 :r7 M
LooAnleleo,ta;Carter,M"'-.24:-.
Sanllioao
62 II .434 10
. N.Y. Gianll
·
'
110.&gt;1111151 ' St. Loulio,SI; Cey,LooAnleleo,SI.
Wuh.
I I 0 .1100 21 31
I!I'OLEN BABES - u.P!ore, Montr-eal, II; 0 .
~I, St. Loulll
st. Loull
0 z 0 .000 Ill II&amp;
M..,..., Plllaburlh. Ill. ~· ClndnnaU, II;
M
4, PmaburgbO
C..tral
.
R. li&lt;oll, Monlr'eai,IMI; .........,!loll Diego, liS.
New Yort 10, Cbicalo 7
Detroit
2 0 0 1.1110 70 f1
P1TCIIING (14 Dod-) - ~ Loo
• Alllnlll,lloiiDtego!
Tampa Bay
2 0 0 1.0011 f1 II
Antleleo, 17-6, .773,~18·
, Pill t !lb.tH,
' Loo Anplail, Cincinnati I
Olleago
.7112, 3.1t; Carlton,
,IW, .'133, Ull;
I 1 0 .1100 21 ll
. H - I, SanFrandoeol
Green Bay
I I 0 .1100 10 35
Sutton, Loa Anctlea1 11..,., . , 2.te; Hooton, u.
Minn.
110 .5003116
Anaeleo, 1J:!, .722, 3.11; Rlchonl,
lo-t,
St. Loull (aoodt-4) at &lt;lllc:qo (Captlla u or
lfeol
.714, 1.110: wallt, Plllladelphla, 10.0, .1111, 1.73;
~tf-11)
San Fran.
sa.ndenm, Montreal., IN, .ID2, 2.11.
2 0 01.000 lO M
LooA11!eleo (H-IH)ItAI!anta {lloga 1Atlanta
STRIXEOUTS - Carlon, Phlledelpbla, 217; ·
I I 0 .1100 80 Ill
.t) {D)
LOoAna.
Ryan, HOUlton, 1111: BMeven, P!llaburoh. 1111;
0 2 0 .000 29 ll .
• &amp;o
{Blue 1).7) at ctnelnnaU
New Orloans
P. Nlekro, Atlanta,ue;· &amp;M, Cincinnati, l5i.
0 2 0 ·.000 26 " '
'{-lo7),(n)
'ftwwday'l Game
San DleiO (CUrlll 7-e or Shirley 111·!0) at
T.,_llay!O=LooAngeleol
'
_-{RUble H), (n)
10.....
()oly-~
Allanla:ri,N.,.
21
SKILLFUL PUNTER
1
Detroit IIJ, Green BIJ 7
8t.IAula at Chicaao
· Qlieqo:a, Nro0rleano3
.
CWCAGO
(APXCoach
NeW
ArSu.:"nnda.-oatOndnnau
lluflaloll, New Yori!Jota 10
-phtllll'llllllurlh, (I )
mstrong of the Chicago Bears waa ,
Pli!IMelpNo II,-~
, IMAIICOieoaiAIIanla, (0)
~ .. Balllmon! 17
,
talldllg
about Bob Parsons, who does '
-atNewYort, (n)
Sullie 17. IIanNa City 11
• S..Diegoat-, {n' ·
his
punting.
WuliDal&lt;Jn:D,NewYortGianta21
M.laml an.:tmetl
"PBniOIIII probably won't ever

_,,_

II

I

FLOUR

PEPSI COLA

Norrla, OU!and.158; Guidry, New Yadl,1411; F.
Bannlater,Seattle,35; Clancy, Toronto, US.

.

&lt;*~~HIP &amp;doOoir-

I

·I

5LB. BAG OF
GOLD MEDAL®

PAK
CANS

Ballimore,ll-7, .~ . 104; Gura,~City. la..
7, .77D, 2.815; M. Norria, OUiand, 1M, .'lOt, 2.27;
Barker, C1evelancl, 11-8, 611, 3.'12; Lecunl,
Kanou CIIY,!!:!f, .1187,1.111.
STRIKEOu·,,. - Barker, Cleveland, lllll; M.

Yoong. M~35 ,E. UverpooiO

.

12

Cruz,-·

Wynford 14, Bo&lt;teyeCentraiO

1-Lb.
Can

,---------~---,

Jumbo69~
Roll

llumbrY.11al111Dore, II; 1.
411.
PITCimiG {14Dadllollo)-Siolle,BIIllmoro,
ZU, .'113, 2.81; JobD, New York, 11-7, .'IDO, a.to;
R. May, New Yorlt, IW, .'lfl, 1.30; Mc:G,.....,

S..tbincton 21, Mlneral Rldi• 8

,,C

CINNAMON CRISP ..... ,::: 89c
I

HOME Rlll'IS- He. Ja-. New Yorll, 37;
Ogilvie, M.llnakee, »; Thomu, MBWiukee, 34;
Armu, Oakland. II; ~Bolllmore, •.
STOLEN BASES -I
- Oakland, 79;
Willm, Kanlu City, 51; DUane, ClevelMd. 52;

Smmnlt Country Day 33, Cllnlm-Mwle a
To!. SCOII 8, Tol. Ubbey 0
'l'l&amp;lcarans VaUwy IB, Smilhvllle 7
Warren W. Relerve SZ, Valley Forge 0
Welrlon. W. Va.Madoana54,BuekeyeTraUO
Wellin&amp;IAln I, Nn London 8, Ue
Weotonille fl. 34, Cleve. Adams o

n.

-

·-

KEEBLER

·I

• •

.

MAXWELL HOUSE

!Andreau,-.1.

Roety!Uverl:l,llereaO
Slllker Hla. 31, aev..South 0

Denver II, Dallu II

Lb .

IDTS - Wlllon. KAnau Cit)', 203; Cooper,

New!Uehmondlll, BatavlaO

'l'ororrtoaiNewYorlt,{ o)

.

ALL GRINDS

FANCY GOLDEN DELICIOUS

.A'PPLES

LB.

. La

$119 .

CAULIFLOWER

.

'BATTER DIP
FISH

RUMP_
•229
RO A 5T...... '-'~·. ~· ........-~

694

PER HEAD

SNOWY WHITE

~LDEN

STEAK ..............

99
20 LB. $1

MUwaukee, 198; Rivera, Teua, 118; Oliver,
Texas, 1M; Bumbry, Baltimore, 111.
DOUBlES- Youn~ Milwaukee, t7; Moniloo,
al.l.eqo 38; Mc:Rae, Kansu Oty, • ; ouver,
Tnu,31; MWTI~~_!WUmore,34.
TIUPIES- Grunn, Toronto, II; Wlllon. Kan,.. City, 14; WuhJnclon, Kanou City, II;
Yount, Mllwaukee, 10; Bfttt, JCarw.u City, 9;

l'olandS,I'&lt;Ieraburi!Sprins.O
Portomaulh Notre tioine M, Sherwood FllrvlewZI
Rlc:hmoncl Hta. 13, CUyahcip Hla. a•

()oJy ,_IChoduled
'heldly'l Gamel
Detrolhtl!altimol'e, (n)
ClevelanclatBootoo, {o)

120Z.'1
SEA STAR

103; ()gllvte, MU\Qullee, IOO; BretiJKWuCit)';
100; Murray, BaWmore, Ill; Re. aetson, New
Yort,M.
I

a

29

FULL CUT

----.:...With coupon

For the record.

49

SUPERIOR BONELESS

MUSJC80018&amp;8
NORWALK, COnn. (AP)- Pro
golfer Mary Dwyer gaw up a Career
In millie to gooo the LPGA tQur. Site
is still rated 811 acoorr~!Jel!ed
planiat.
STEWART - Racine's Bob
"The plano Ia a great reJuer for
Adams, Jr. made the debut of his
me," ahe said. "You need IICIIIIet1tlng
brand new c. J. Rayburn Chassis
Uke that. Scmetlmel you want to
Camara a huge success by winning
slash your wr1st1 or pull out your
the 25 lap late model championship
hair because of golf. P1aJing the
feature at Bond's Speedway Friday .
plano atnll!ht helps me get over bad
evening.
days out on the course."
Adams No. 55 approiately named
"The Bandit," stole the show by .------------...;;.;;....;._ _ _ _ _~_.......;_
sprlntlne from his fifth place starMROAIN IIATM£5 ON SAT. SUII
tine position Into the lead on lap 8.
Al.l. SEA" NSr f.l,fO
Adams raced side-by-side with Dave
AIWISSION EV£/W I'Uf$0AY fi.IIO
Robinson for several laps before put·
531 .MOlSON PI&lt;E • RI . ~ NOfff1; -flhi;JM ..........
ling the pedal to the metal to build
up a huge lead.
After a caution flag, 1 former
Columbus Speedway Champion Ted
Joluison closed the gap, but on the
re-start the hard charging Adams
left the competition sitting their
trackil and ·raced to the checkered
fJ8g nearly a half lsp ahead of
second place Jolmson:
An elated Adams. carried the
checkered flag around the track for
his victory lap before a large crowd
of cheering fana.
Charlle ·Seymour, Dave Robinson, .
Roy Pierce, Allin Russell, Don
Claik, Scott Russell, Jim Deete, and ·
Racine's Bruce Neigler rounded out
the top 10.
Pierce won the fast heat event
over Adama wltile Robinson placed
third. Greg Hatfield and Ted Johnson won the other heat events.

Friday night against an elite field of cars. 11le Black
nwnber A55 Cmnara, appropriately named "The Bandit" was built by prestigious stock car owner C. J.
Rayburn from Indiana.

ADAMS TRIUMPHS - Racine's Bob Adams, Jr.
shown with his brand new lightweight Camara won the
late model Championship feature at Bond's Speedway

statistician.

Adams
takes
event

.

.

~·

champions In a phone poll conducted
Saturday by Tml Metters, league ·

The road to the 1980 SEOAL foot·
ball champlcirlsltlp leads through
Ironton, home · of the defending
SEOAL and Class AA Ohio champion Tigers.
Members of the SEO Sportsw.r iters and . Broadcasters
Associaton, meeting Sunday In
,Jackson, voted the Tigers to repeat
as grid champions. Jackson was
picked aa runnerup.
The league's elgh~ head football
coaches also gave · the nod to the
speedy Tigers to repeat as loop

VAUG_HAN'S

J•.
I,------------~------------·
BUYC!ffi I BUYC!ffi I

I GEl' CNE FREE I GEl' CNE FREE I
I1 Save
BIG SHEF~
I
I1 TOP SHEF®
$1.19
1
The Burger With :he Bacon ··
wtthcoupon

I Save $1.74

I

with coupon

.

I

II ~~·.::.:.·~~or.;:~::~,, ~
mr II ~:.~=·.':r~~~~~:~ ~ II
Good only at pastlcipalir'lg 8\Jrg&amp;r C~l

1

.Restaur8!}t_s .

Good through

Good onty 11 partlclplting BurQ&amp;r

·

9~28/80,

®

I

RestaUJants

GoodihrOuGn9/28180\

1

{!)

I

I
I
I
I

1

Oneeouponpercuttomerper'4illt

Not valid wl'lereolher dlaco\Jnll apply. . . .
Good ooty at pa1iclpatfng Burger Chel ,
RettaurtntJ.

.~ lhrOUQh t!21/80j

®

~

1,·
I
I

~
·
·

I Good
only at ~iflg llufger C~l
ReMauranta.
I .
91~10 1
Not valid IW1efe o4her diiCOunll .W.r

GOOd throtigh

Bd

Onec®ponpet c\ls10merperv••lt
Not va~d whOre other dl.counll appl~
Qood only al partk:.p111lng Burger Chel

Retia~.Jranta.
,-Good--u:i'ioug{9/21('10

,.

,

1 Save 95'

I

·I
I

®J

~:

,,
1

........ 1120110

c....

ft~ · - ltorM

00· 12.07

t3

"'~
.,

012 11100 ~

CARDINAL \IT"

1
~ II
.
I
® I

1 FISH FILET Sandwich

.')lie&lt; noJ good ol o.Jvo. Thn&gt; Window.

Um~~w:.c= ·

Itt

"

BOlDIN SLICED AMERICAN
. CHEESE . SINGLES 12 oz.

'

.·

1,

'

1 j
I,
II i

With coupon

On~~ coupon ptr euttomer

l)tlt

Yi~t.

Not V4llld wneteCIItlef Oit«&lt;onla ·~·
Goooc:no, at ~llelp.atlr.g Buro-r Chef

~~::~gh • 9,(21/101

GAIYI_N'S ·

_

12

oz. c;TN.

C

79 ·
~g::i, ~~~~~~.~..........! 119
COllAGE 0tEESE...........

.G_~_IYIN'S ·PLASTIC GAL.
. -- . - ..
I
.

CARDINAL
FRESH LOWFAT

I

·------------ ------~-----~1

t1C9

······················~··

II S99¢ SPECIAL I1 &lt;mrCM: PRee. I1 I
I Save 60¢ with coupon

u

RTS FROSTINGS
i
$
Can

BlJY'

ALAD BAR.

~

181JJ:·Dl.

I~------------~---~--------~
Burger Chef
1
{lilE
1

I

BETTY CROCKER ASSORTED FLAY RS

Breaktast Sandwich
Save 99¢ with coupon

~
.'I
,(" II """""''"'-"" .. '~""·"'·

·

OneCO\!I)Oflpercuatomer pervlsit

;i

~

Ir------------~------------~
.BUYC!ffi I BUY~ I
I GET mE FREE I GEl' mE FREE I
I CHICKEN CLUB
'II SAUSAGE SUNRISE II
I Save $1.49
with coupon

xg.111 e;·u 1

• ~01&gt;0 STORES • CARDINAL FOOD STOR ES

c.!t

.

~~ 21Mt

.
'

ORANGE JUICE ••·

3

.

5

1u~!--:
-

lORDEN PREMIUM

"12 GAL.

t

Ia CREAM a•••••••••••••••••••

.

69
Gal.
Ctn ..

MINUTE MAID FROZEN

MIS. PAULS

.

1

Jt

00·10.07

· 10 OZ. PKG.

'129

Cia WHIP···················· 59~
.

'

•

"'~

oun~#

FISH KABOBS .... ,; ........ .
BIRDS-EYE

COIJIKtl' ,... .....u,. ~

8 OZ. BOWL

r .

�~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pmneroy, 0., Monday, Sept. 15, 1980

· 4-The Dally Sentinel, Middle~rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monliay, Sept.l5, 1980

_Ironton will repeat- -·- in SEOAL
·a ccording to. --coaches,
newsmen
--- ·- -.

.

.

-

Stunned Buckeyes ral'y to
defeat Syracuse Orangemen
By GEORGE STRODE
COWMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Maybe
Syracuse caught top-ranked Ohio
State's football players reading their
press clippings. Not so, insist the
Buckeyes, with one notable ex·
ceptlon.
''I know Syracuse ill good team ••
118id Doug Donley, · Ohio State'•s
record-gathering ~er. "but I
think It was a matter of us. We didn't
come to play. We can't wait for
things to happen. We have to make
things happen...
~ The other stars of Ohio State's 31·
21 victory over Syracuse on Satur·
day said they weren't looking ahead
to this Saturday's game against Minnesota, the first roadblock toward a
JIOIISible second straight Big Ten
Conference title.
·
"I don't think we took it lightly.
Your first game milltakes always
come Into~said Art Schlichter
the BuCkeyes · heralded quar:
terback.
Two of his passes were intercepted. The first Interception set
up Syraeuse's second touchdown,

a

this year."

giving the 28-point wxlerdogs a 14-0

_Middleport, Ohio

I' ..

·-The 191111 SEO Sport.swrlter.-.nd

.

SALE DATES
SEPTEMBER 15 • 20, 1980

BI'OIIdcasters poll:
· 1.1~

(114)

2. Jackson

(103)

It appears that the coaches see eye
to eye with the sp&lt;irts media In the
1980 grid prognostications as both
polls resulted in almost identical
pre-season finishes.
The only exception is a narrow
reversal Involving Logan and
Gallipolis where the media gave the
nod to the Chieftains for third place
and the Blue Devlls fourth . .
The coa~hes placed Gallipollls
third and Logan fourth, by the same ·
margin, just one point difference.
In other business Sunday the
association reelected the 1979 of.
fleers for another year and Include
. P~te Wilson, president, Waverly
News Watclu!lan; Craig Dunn, vice
president, Logan Dally News; and
Randy Heath, Radio WLMJ,
Jackson; as secretary-treasurer.
1n the media voting 15 members
repreaenttnc the eight league cities
voted, with a possible 120 points.
Ironton received 10 first place
votes and Jackson five.
The eight head coaches compiled
64 points, giving the Tigers seven first place ballots and Jackson one.

3. ~

(81)

4. GaWpolls

(80)

5. Athens
(53)
6. Meigs
(50)
7. VVaver~
' (31)
8. Wellston
(28)
The 1980 SEOAL football C!laches
poll:
l.lrotiton
(81)
(52)'
2.Jackson
(45)
3.GaWpolls
(44)
4. Logan
(29)
5. Athens
(24)
6.Melgs
7.Waver~

~FRlqJ_DJ.JfST

$fRYICJ IN TOWN
B.IGGEST
-· - BARGAINS IN .TOWN
'

New quarterback Dave Warner
lead.
figured
In all three of Syraeuse's
Schlichter later threw a 47-yard
touchdowns,
throwing 21 and 5 yards
scoring pass to Donley and ran 10
yards for two of the Buckeyes' three to tight ends Tony Sidor and Chris
Jilleba aiid keeping the ball for a 1·
touchdowns.
Reserve tailback Ricky Johnson yard score.
"Even my parents didn't think we
scored the other touchdown for Ohio
State and said: "We knew we could do that good," said Warner.
The Buckeyes showed afterward
couldn't take them too lightly
because they would be up for the No. what they thought of the amallest
teaii! member, D-foot-7 Vlade ·
1 team."
Joluison's 3-yard touchdown run Janakievski. They voted him the
and reception for two eXtra points game ball. His field goals of 35, 34
provided the Buckeyes their first and 42 yards kept the Buckeyes In
the game at halftime 21-9. ·
lead of 24-21 in the third quarter.
"It was a good kicking game, if I
Frank Maloney, Syracuse's coach,
say
so myself," said Ohio state
wasn't surprised that the
Coach
Earle Bruce. Janakievski,
Orangemen stunned Ohio Stadium's
who
was
a soccer player as a fresh71st straight sellout crowd of more
than 86,000 fans with a 21-3 lead in man, now has made 21 of his 24 field
gOal tries In the last two seasons.
the first 17 minutes.
"All of us were so sick of reading . The · Orangemen will open the
about Ohio State all summer," said home segment of their schedule
Mal\IIley. "It was a challenge for us. Saturday night against Invading
· We were detennlned to play hard. I Miami of Ohio, a1f&gt;.14 victim of Centhink last year we did a lot of tral Michigan last Saturday. The
. stargazing here (when they lost 31· Gophers will visit Ohio State In the
8). It really helped us to play here second of four straight home games
for the Buckeyes.

..

OPEN DAILY FROM'

OI.JAtdiTY RIGHTS
· RESERVED

8 AM TILL 10 PM
SIZZLE AN

(18)
(15)

8. Wellston

CUBE STEAK

FARM FRESH
FRUITS
AND
VEGETABLES

BREAKFAST
STRIPS
-

•229

LB.

AMEJIJC;AN LEAGUE

--

W. L.PeL GB

NewYorlt

91 $2 .131
!II $7 .801 $ .

Balt!mon!

n

65 .~ 1410
71 67 .535 1410
73 Ill .514 17\1
73 70 .&gt;10 18
&amp;I 112 .42'1 30

Milwaukee
Cleveland
Detroit
WEST

KanouCit)'

Ill :;6 .611
'II 72 .500 17
Ill 73 .488 19

OUIIncl

Tuu
-

63
Ill
5I
51

!?.'~..

~~-

SuUie

~otl110, Day. KJaerO

EAST

10 .M1 2510
11

.4211 27\1

14 .408 30
II .:JW 37

=•G.f.O, Ill game, I! 1nn1np

Cievelancl ~.
Tonrio4, Balllmore 3,13 innlnp
NowYorlt5,-3

M.lnnelotiS, Ollcago 2
C&amp;Wornil s, Tuu 1
Kanou Cit)' I, Ooklancl3
Mll ...ut.. II, Seall1e 2

Maaday'ollameo

Ooklancl {K....P lii-12) at r .... (F~;.

10), {nl
Chicago {Hoyt 11-2) at SuWe {Abbott IG-10),
{o)

7. Sandually st. Mary 0
Fairless 26, NorwayneO
Glhnoure34, Hudlon W. ReserveO
Hawkmll BeaclllrooctO
Kansas ~ota 20, Footorta st. WendeUn
Lake Catholic 32, Y011111. Ul'Bullne 0
Lorain Clearview M, Monroeville 0
Lorain Swlhvlew20, L&lt;nlnKlni 0
Lueu I, Centerbur!!O
.
Millm Edioon 7. SaDdually st. Mary 0
flew London I, Welllnilon 6

U. S. NO. 1

POTATOES
TENDER GREEN

BROCCOLI

PER BCH.

.

RIPE

BANANAS
U. S. NO. 1

-

3~i 794
3 LBS. 894

5-LB. BAG
GOLD MEDAL

~-Rour .
Enriohed
..................

When you purchase any five items listed below :
• Bisqulck Biscuir Mix (40-oz.)
• Batty Crackel Cake Mixes
a Betry Crocke1 RTS Frosting
• Betty Crock•• Hamburger Helper
• Cheerios Ce1eal (16 -oz.)
• 2 % Lowfat Milk (gallon)

NAnONAL WollE
BATI'ING (:till al ball) - ~. &lt;lllc:qo,

...

N-F-II,eape
AIAGlaace
Alllerieaa c-tm:aee

.121; Templtlca, St. Loula, J:D; K. Hemancleo,
st. Loula, .S21; J. Cnl, HOUIIoo, .311; Cedeno,
llwslon, .318.

W. L
2
1
I

_,.,_

a..-..

II'-

-r·-

·-

· -..-II,NlleaD
-·.!~
0
. BlllaiN!t Wbooimo, w. Va. l'lr1t0
· w.
Va. J1.1110ubomt1Je CalhoUe 8
•. 8ucDre
N. :D, ..... IS

• ~ Mc:Klnley 21, New Philadolphla 3
On. Colnlr7 Day~ II, Landmark Cilrllllan I
. ~II- 31, 111'1-,lld., DeMalhi 0

. -•·lloi1Nameii,PannaSr.O
am. St.[lnauuu, aev.. Hta. o

C1on. Unl...-allyS,OranpO
COl. w.u..on 11, c.nton CatboUc 7
Day. O&gt;am-Ju113, Cln. 7
Day.ll-leii,Day. Wrtohll

-

i

1•

lesd the National Football League In
punttnc... Armstrong said. "The
winds at Soldier Field, where we
H - a t Cleveland, (n)
, play our eight home games are too
tough. But he Ia a master at placing
the ball and often negates l'l!nMAJOR LEAGUE L&amp;\DI!IIIl
backil."
AIIEIIICAN LEAGUE
BATI'ING (11110 at bata) -Brett, Kanou City ·
The record book bore that out. In
.3M; Cooper, Mllwallkee, .3$7: Dllone'
the
1979 aea,!IOil, Parsons led the NFL
Cleveland,
.:111:
CaWomla :m· a ~~en'
Tex.aa, ,3IQ,
in punta downed Inside the opRUNS - Wlllon, IIanNa Cfty, 116; Yount,
pQnellt's 20-yard line with a total of
Mllwa~•. IOR; llumiJr]l , Balllmon!, 103: HenSanDtegoSO,OaklandZI ot
Son FI'IUI&lt;bco24, St. Louis 21, ot

_,.,GolDe
:roo""

ea-.

I '

I

'

t

denorl, Ouana, tl; Wills, Texu, N.
RBI MJ!waukee,ll•; OUver, Texa.s.

Cooper.

26.

CARD NAL

:l% MILK
Gal.

lil=
I

.:-::==""

I

Ctn.

\!!IOZ ONLY

'Good thru September 20, 1910 at Vaugh;ln's Cardinal Store.
·\ . (limit one coupon per family-may not be reprOduced In any rormJ

-------...------

,

I
I
I
I:

----,BEVERAGE 8UY . _ _

:

:

COCA-COLA
'299

-~~~, "'1''

YJG~l~,!~~ STVLE....................,2 ~~=· 79

1
•
GREEN BEANS OR SWEET PEAS

6.96

WHOLE OR SLICED

.

.fiREEI GIANT MUSHROOMS .. 4~~~· 99,

•

Enjoy delicious meals from Burger Chef at terrific savings all week. Take
advantage of these coupon specials and save a total of
96

_,.,Gomeo

. W~IIio~D

.

FLOUR

WITH PURCHASE OF ANY 5 DIFFERENT ITEMS BELOW

• 12-oz. Niblers Corn
• 1 7 -oz. Whole I&lt;
GREEN GIANT
ernel or Cream Style Com

THIS WEEK FROM BURGER CHEF
8

'

RUNS - K. llemandeo, St. Loull, et; llartJI1y,
T. P&lt;L PF PA
MillnelotlatMllwaukee, (n)
&amp;lfalo
0 0 1.000 37 17 . Allanla , 12; LoP'Ion, M - . II; SebiDldl,
Ooklanclatr..... (o)
lla1tlmoro
I 0 .1100 34 34
PhllaRBI~b!,\;.Ro.!;e, f'h'lr'"lpiM, et.
California II Kanlu Cit)', (n)
Miami
I 0 .1100 24 33
m!w'~Jh'a 101: - .
OlleqoatSeattle, {n)
New En(!.
I I 0 .1100 35 34
St. Louii,IOI; Goner, Loo AD8oleo. tl: K. llor&gt;
N.Y. Jell
......,.,III. L&lt;Ws,I1;Banr,IAIO-IO.
0 2 0 .000 24 "'
NAnONAL LEAGUE
Caln1
.
lilTS - Garnr, too Anceleo, t'ie; J. Cruz.
EAST
PIUs.
2 0 0 1.000 II 34 , HOWI&amp;On, til; R1c:batdl, san Olelo, 111; Role,
II'. L. Pet. GB
Cleve.
010 .0001734
Phlladelllhia,l:j.~ 1lomandol, 5I: LOull, IN;
·a llendrlcli, st.
1111.
010.0001731
79
114 .545
711 II&amp;
I
Cine.
DOUBLES - Role,NedeJpbla a; Buck:Der,
0 2 0 ,.000 21 34
75 Ill .521 110
Weol
&lt;lllc:qo,M; K . H.....-, St. ~M; Kn1Bb1.
81 79 .4411 II
S.n Di"tto
2 0 o 1.000 14 :r7
Cincinnati, 34· D a - . - - 3 3 ; Slmmllno,
11,112 .m 11
St. Lou11,33; ~. Atlallta,33.
.~:'!!.
1 I 0 .1100 f/ 17
l(j 67 .317 13
TIUPL.ES - R. li&lt;oll, 1 1 - , II· 0.
~N
I I 0 .1100 ll ' II
WEST
Seo M..--, Pittaburlh, II; LoP'Ion, M&lt;iiilnif. II;
110 .11003010
12 10 .$TI
0 2 0 .000 30 II
Mcllride, Plllladeobla,IO; TO!Ill&gt;i&lt;lon. St.IAIIIII,
IIanNa City
1m
All(elea
12 80 .5TI
Na"-lc.f~R~~Ce
1: Herndon, s. F'rarx:ilco,l.
'
Clodnrill1
T/ Ill .5311 510
Eut
.
HOME Rlll'IS- s.bmldl, ~. R;
Atllnll
71 II .5:11 I
P1111a.
2 011.000. 13 , Homer,Atlanta,D; Murphy, Atlantl, 2t; Blllllr,
SanFnndaco
67 75 .472 ,.
DaUu
I I 0 .1100 :r7 M
LooAnleleo,ta;Carter,M"'-.24:-.
Sanllioao
62 II .434 10
. N.Y. Gianll
·
'
110.&gt;1111151 ' St. Loulio,SI; Cey,LooAnleleo,SI.
Wuh.
I I 0 .1100 21 31
I!I'OLEN BABES - u.P!ore, Montr-eal, II; 0 .
~I, St. Loulll
st. Loull
0 z 0 .000 Ill II&amp;
M..,..., Plllaburlh. Ill. ~· ClndnnaU, II;
M
4, PmaburgbO
C..tral
.
R. li&lt;oll, Monlr'eai,IMI; .........,!loll Diego, liS.
New Yort 10, Cbicalo 7
Detroit
2 0 0 1.1110 70 f1
P1TCIIING (14 Dod-) - ~ Loo
• Alllnlll,lloiiDtego!
Tampa Bay
2 0 0 1.0011 f1 II
Antleleo, 17-6, .773,~18·
, Pill t !lb.tH,
' Loo Anplail, Cincinnati I
Olleago
.7112, 3.1t; Carlton,
,IW, .'133, Ull;
I 1 0 .1100 21 ll
. H - I, SanFrandoeol
Green Bay
I I 0 .1100 10 35
Sutton, Loa Anctlea1 11..,., . , 2.te; Hooton, u.
Minn.
110 .5003116
Anaeleo, 1J:!, .722, 3.11; Rlchonl,
lo-t,
St. Loull (aoodt-4) at &lt;lllc:qo (Captlla u or
lfeol
.714, 1.110: wallt, Plllladelphla, 10.0, .1111, 1.73;
~tf-11)
San Fran.
sa.ndenm, Montreal., IN, .ID2, 2.11.
2 0 01.000 lO M
LooA11!eleo (H-IH)ItAI!anta {lloga 1Atlanta
STRIXEOUTS - Carlon, Phlledelpbla, 217; ·
I I 0 .1100 80 Ill
.t) {D)
LOoAna.
Ryan, HOUlton, 1111: BMeven, P!llaburoh. 1111;
0 2 0 .000 29 ll .
• &amp;o
{Blue 1).7) at ctnelnnaU
New Orloans
P. Nlekro, Atlanta,ue;· &amp;M, Cincinnati, l5i.
0 2 0 ·.000 26 " '
'{-lo7),(n)
'ftwwday'l Game
San DleiO (CUrlll 7-e or Shirley 111·!0) at
T.,_llay!O=LooAngeleol
'
_-{RUble H), (n)
10.....
()oly-~
Allanla:ri,N.,.
21
SKILLFUL PUNTER
1
Detroit IIJ, Green BIJ 7
8t.IAula at Chicaao
· Qlieqo:a, Nro0rleano3
.
CWCAGO
(APXCoach
NeW
ArSu.:"nnda.-oatOndnnau
lluflaloll, New Yori!Jota 10
-phtllll'llllllurlh, (I )
mstrong of the Chicago Bears waa ,
Pli!IMelpNo II,-~
, IMAIICOieoaiAIIanla, (0)
~ .. Balllmon! 17
,
talldllg
about Bob Parsons, who does '
-atNewYort, (n)
Sullie 17. IIanNa City 11
• S..Diegoat-, {n' ·
his
punting.
WuliDal&lt;Jn:D,NewYortGianta21
M.laml an.:tmetl
"PBniOIIII probably won't ever

_,,_

II

I

FLOUR

PEPSI COLA

Norrla, OU!and.158; Guidry, New Yadl,1411; F.
Bannlater,Seattle,35; Clancy, Toronto, US.

.

&lt;*~~HIP &amp;doOoir-

I

·I

5LB. BAG OF
GOLD MEDAL®

PAK
CANS

Ballimore,ll-7, .~ . 104; Gura,~City. la..
7, .77D, 2.815; M. Norria, OUiand, 1M, .'lOt, 2.27;
Barker, C1evelancl, 11-8, 611, 3.'12; Lecunl,
Kanou CIIY,!!:!f, .1187,1.111.
STRIKEOu·,,. - Barker, Cleveland, lllll; M.

Yoong. M~35 ,E. UverpooiO

.

12

Cruz,-·

Wynford 14, Bo&lt;teyeCentraiO

1-Lb.
Can

,---------~---,

Jumbo69~
Roll

llumbrY.11al111Dore, II; 1.
411.
PITCimiG {14Dadllollo)-Siolle,BIIllmoro,
ZU, .'113, 2.81; JobD, New York, 11-7, .'IDO, a.to;
R. May, New Yorlt, IW, .'lfl, 1.30; Mc:G,.....,

S..tbincton 21, Mlneral Rldi• 8

,,C

CINNAMON CRISP ..... ,::: 89c
I

HOME Rlll'IS- He. Ja-. New Yorll, 37;
Ogilvie, M.llnakee, »; Thomu, MBWiukee, 34;
Armu, Oakland. II; ~Bolllmore, •.
STOLEN BASES -I
- Oakland, 79;
Willm, Kanlu City, 51; DUane, ClevelMd. 52;

Smmnlt Country Day 33, Cllnlm-Mwle a
To!. SCOII 8, Tol. Ubbey 0
'l'l&amp;lcarans VaUwy IB, Smilhvllle 7
Warren W. Relerve SZ, Valley Forge 0
Welrlon. W. Va.Madoana54,BuekeyeTraUO
Wellin&amp;IAln I, Nn London 8, Ue
Weotonille fl. 34, Cleve. Adams o

n.

-

·-

KEEBLER

·I

• •

.

MAXWELL HOUSE

!Andreau,-.1.

Roety!Uverl:l,llereaO
Slllker Hla. 31, aev..South 0

Denver II, Dallu II

Lb .

IDTS - Wlllon. KAnau Cit)', 203; Cooper,

New!Uehmondlll, BatavlaO

'l'ororrtoaiNewYorlt,{ o)

.

ALL GRINDS

FANCY GOLDEN DELICIOUS

.A'PPLES

LB.

. La

$119 .

CAULIFLOWER

.

'BATTER DIP
FISH

RUMP_
•229
RO A 5T...... '-'~·. ~· ........-~

694

PER HEAD

SNOWY WHITE

~LDEN

STEAK ..............

99
20 LB. $1

MUwaukee, 198; Rivera, Teua, 118; Oliver,
Texas, 1M; Bumbry, Baltimore, 111.
DOUBlES- Youn~ Milwaukee, t7; Moniloo,
al.l.eqo 38; Mc:Rae, Kansu Oty, • ; ouver,
Tnu,31; MWTI~~_!WUmore,34.
TIUPIES- Grunn, Toronto, II; Wlllon. Kan,.. City, 14; WuhJnclon, Kanou City, II;
Yount, Mllwaukee, 10; Bfttt, JCarw.u City, 9;

l'olandS,I'&lt;Ieraburi!Sprins.O
Portomaulh Notre tioine M, Sherwood FllrvlewZI
Rlc:hmoncl Hta. 13, CUyahcip Hla. a•

()oJy ,_IChoduled
'heldly'l Gamel
Detrolhtl!altimol'e, (n)
ClevelanclatBootoo, {o)

120Z.'1
SEA STAR

103; ()gllvte, MU\Qullee, IOO; BretiJKWuCit)';
100; Murray, BaWmore, Ill; Re. aetson, New
Yort,M.
I

a

29

FULL CUT

----.:...With coupon

For the record.

49

SUPERIOR BONELESS

MUSJC80018&amp;8
NORWALK, COnn. (AP)- Pro
golfer Mary Dwyer gaw up a Career
In millie to gooo the LPGA tQur. Site
is still rated 811 acoorr~!Jel!ed
planiat.
STEWART - Racine's Bob
"The plano Ia a great reJuer for
Adams, Jr. made the debut of his
me," ahe said. "You need IICIIIIet1tlng
brand new c. J. Rayburn Chassis
Uke that. Scmetlmel you want to
Camara a huge success by winning
slash your wr1st1 or pull out your
the 25 lap late model championship
hair because of golf. P1aJing the
feature at Bond's Speedway Friday .
plano atnll!ht helps me get over bad
evening.
days out on the course."
Adams No. 55 approiately named
"The Bandit," stole the show by .------------...;;.;;....;._ _ _ _ _~_.......;_
sprlntlne from his fifth place starMROAIN IIATM£5 ON SAT. SUII
tine position Into the lead on lap 8.
Al.l. SEA" NSr f.l,fO
Adams raced side-by-side with Dave
AIWISSION EV£/W I'Uf$0AY fi.IIO
Robinson for several laps before put·
531 .MOlSON PI&lt;E • RI . ~ NOfff1; -flhi;JM ..........
ling the pedal to the metal to build
up a huge lead.
After a caution flag, 1 former
Columbus Speedway Champion Ted
Joluison closed the gap, but on the
re-start the hard charging Adams
left the competition sitting their
trackil and ·raced to the checkered
fJ8g nearly a half lsp ahead of
second place Jolmson:
An elated Adams. carried the
checkered flag around the track for
his victory lap before a large crowd
of cheering fana.
Charlle ·Seymour, Dave Robinson, .
Roy Pierce, Allin Russell, Don
Claik, Scott Russell, Jim Deete, and ·
Racine's Bruce Neigler rounded out
the top 10.
Pierce won the fast heat event
over Adama wltile Robinson placed
third. Greg Hatfield and Ted Johnson won the other heat events.

Friday night against an elite field of cars. 11le Black
nwnber A55 Cmnara, appropriately named "The Bandit" was built by prestigious stock car owner C. J.
Rayburn from Indiana.

ADAMS TRIUMPHS - Racine's Bob Adams, Jr.
shown with his brand new lightweight Camara won the
late model Championship feature at Bond's Speedway

statistician.

Adams
takes
event

.

.

~·

champions In a phone poll conducted
Saturday by Tml Metters, league ·

The road to the 1980 SEOAL foot·
ball champlcirlsltlp leads through
Ironton, home · of the defending
SEOAL and Class AA Ohio champion Tigers.
Members of the SEO Sportsw.r iters and . Broadcasters
Associaton, meeting Sunday In
,Jackson, voted the Tigers to repeat
as grid champions. Jackson was
picked aa runnerup.
The league's elgh~ head football
coaches also gave · the nod to the
speedy Tigers to repeat as loop

VAUG_HAN'S

J•.
I,------------~------------·
BUYC!ffi I BUYC!ffi I

I GEl' CNE FREE I GEl' CNE FREE I
I1 Save
BIG SHEF~
I
I1 TOP SHEF®
$1.19
1
The Burger With :he Bacon ··
wtthcoupon

I Save $1.74

I

with coupon

.

I

II ~~·.::.:.·~~or.;:~::~,, ~
mr II ~:.~=·.':r~~~~~:~ ~ II
Good only at pastlcipalir'lg 8\Jrg&amp;r C~l

1

.Restaur8!}t_s .

Good through

Good onty 11 partlclplting BurQ&amp;r

·

9~28/80,

®

I

RestaUJants

GoodihrOuGn9/28180\

1

{!)

I

I
I
I
I

1

Oneeouponpercuttomerper'4illt

Not valid wl'lereolher dlaco\Jnll apply. . . .
Good ooty at pa1iclpatfng Burger Chel ,
RettaurtntJ.

.~ lhrOUQh t!21/80j

®

~

1,·
I
I

~
·
·

I Good
only at ~iflg llufger C~l
ReMauranta.
I .
91~10 1
Not valid IW1efe o4her diiCOunll .W.r

GOOd throtigh

Bd

Onec®ponpet c\ls10merperv••lt
Not va~d whOre other dl.counll appl~
Qood only al partk:.p111lng Burger Chel

Retia~.Jranta.
,-Good--u:i'ioug{9/21('10

,.

,

1 Save 95'

I

·I
I

®J

~:

,,
1

........ 1120110

c....

ft~ · - ltorM

00· 12.07

t3

"'~
.,

012 11100 ~

CARDINAL \IT"

1
~ II
.
I
® I

1 FISH FILET Sandwich

.')lie&lt; noJ good ol o.Jvo. Thn&gt; Window.

Um~~w:.c= ·

Itt

"

BOlDIN SLICED AMERICAN
. CHEESE . SINGLES 12 oz.

'

.·

1,

'

1 j
I,
II i

With coupon

On~~ coupon ptr euttomer

l)tlt

Yi~t.

Not V4llld wneteCIItlef Oit«&lt;onla ·~·
Goooc:no, at ~llelp.atlr.g Buro-r Chef

~~::~gh • 9,(21/101

GAIYI_N'S ·

_

12

oz. c;TN.

C

79 ·
~g::i, ~~~~~~.~..........! 119
COllAGE 0tEESE...........

.G_~_IYIN'S ·PLASTIC GAL.
. -- . - ..
I
.

CARDINAL
FRESH LOWFAT

I

·------------ ------~-----~1

t1C9

······················~··

II S99¢ SPECIAL I1 &lt;mrCM: PRee. I1 I
I Save 60¢ with coupon

u

RTS FROSTINGS
i
$
Can

BlJY'

ALAD BAR.

~

181JJ:·Dl.

I~------------~---~--------~
Burger Chef
1
{lilE
1

I

BETTY CROCKER ASSORTED FLAY RS

Breaktast Sandwich
Save 99¢ with coupon

~
.'I
,(" II """""''"'-"" .. '~""·"'·

·

OneCO\!I)Oflpercuatomer pervlsit

;i

~

Ir------------~------------~
.BUYC!ffi I BUY~ I
I GET mE FREE I GEl' mE FREE I
I CHICKEN CLUB
'II SAUSAGE SUNRISE II
I Save $1.49
with coupon

xg.111 e;·u 1

• ~01&gt;0 STORES • CARDINAL FOOD STOR ES

c.!t

.

~~ 21Mt

.
'

ORANGE JUICE ••·

3

.

5

1u~!--:
-

lORDEN PREMIUM

"12 GAL.

t

Ia CREAM a•••••••••••••••••••

.

69
Gal.
Ctn ..

MINUTE MAID FROZEN

MIS. PAULS

.

1

Jt

00·10.07

· 10 OZ. PKG.

'129

Cia WHIP···················· 59~
.

'

•

"'~

oun~#

FISH KABOBS .... ,; ........ .
BIRDS-EYE

COIJIKtl' ,... .....u,. ~

8 OZ. BOWL

r .

�.DICK-TRACY
-·-- .... ·-

~The DallySentloel, Ml~rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., MOl•day, Sept. 15, 19110 ..

Katie's Komer
Benny Ewing wins goH award

Fred Goeglein was re-elected
master of Rock Springs Grange at a
meeting Thursday night at the hall.
Other officers elected · were
William Grueser, overseer; Ethel
Grueser, lecturer; Roy Holter,
steward; William Radford, asalstant
steward; BeWIB Grueser, chaplain;
Lucille Leifheit, treasurer; Frances
Goeglein, secretary; Harold
Blackston, gate keeper; Susie
Pt!llins, Ceres; Helen Blackston,
Pomona; Nancy Morris, Flora;
Martlia -King, lady assistant
steward; Roy Grueser, executive

BY KATIE CROW
Selldaelllaff
Coqealal Bellll)' Ewlq wu the top wim1er of tbe re«ot golf toar..meat 1po11141Rd by the Pomeroy Cbamber ol CommerCe beld at
Jayaw- Golf Coane, Pomeroy.
Ilea reeelved a aet ol Wlboo 1Z80 clubs which be douted back lo the
dlamber. Wbala Dice gealllre.
Secead place wilmer wu Cbuck Follrod who reeeived a golf bag.
Oilier wlllllen werp Jolul ADdenoa wllb tbe Joqeat drive, Pal IIlii,
lqeat pathmd ErDie ShDier cl01e1t lo the pill.
. Tbe ch!!mller wiiiiJIOIIIOr &amp;Dotber loanlameot oil Oct. 9. The eveol
will be opeD lo the public.
EliDa a.m, Rllcloe, wt11 celebrate ber Mtb birthday 011 Sept. 19.
Mni. Roalb ulbe mother of 1la cblldreo 8Dd JIIIIDerou&amp; gnmdcblldreo
81111 great-gr8Ddcblldreo.
Slle realdes witb ber daagbter, Gladya Sbleldl, RaciDe.
We aead our vey bell wllbea 8Dd IM!IJe your day Is a bappy one,
.

JOHN ROBERT WEDDLE,
Jr., aoo of Ode111a 8Dd Jobo Wed- '
die, Porlbuul, receutly completed
biB ballc tra1DiDil witb tbe U. S.
Marine Corpa at Paris Island, S.,
. C. Weddle Is preseoty home oo •
leave viiiUog family 8Dd friendl.
He wt11 be aladoned at Aberdeen
Proving Groundl, Md. He attended Southem High School ill
RaciDe.

U y011 ileed a CGIIWDe for a 1peelal party or an 0111flt for a school
play Tbe Coltome Comer of Melp HDD181le Society's lbrlft Shop,
Middleport, eaa supply your ileedl.
Wltb Halloweeu com1og up II II Dice lo mow tbat tbere Is a place
wben you eaa ebtaba 110111e sort ol c01tome.
'l1le dlop llu wlp, bats, evetdq ilreue8, 8Dd faDcy pautl. tbey allo
bave Walt Dlmey character muiii&amp;Dd eorreapondllJil oalflta.

Wood
reunzon
success

W&amp;DIIo eoJoy a good "•OIIJIIIDPPtl'?" KDew jail wbere yOII'.CBD e~t­
I011Deb a meal 81111 also good fellowsblp.
Tbe Pomeroy Elementary FrA wiiiBJIOIIIGI' a aopper eu Friday,
Sept.lll, fromt:38p.DL lo7p.DL aiPomeroy ElemeatarySebool.
Tbe meDII iDcludeB lwuemade vegetable IOIIjJ, bot dop 8Dd deuel'

•

IL
Take 0111 orden will be avllilable but yOIIIDDII PI"Vide Mltllioen.
Tbe dbmer II prior lo the Melp Game al Marallder Sladiom.
Mary Jean R4lalb, West Jeffenoa, 011 bebalf ol bet' melber, Laora
Wataoa, f-erly of RllciDe, extend~ 1locere tbauU lo each 8Dd
~ for lbe eardll 8Dd !etten leal to Laura wbDt a paUeal at

Madk- Coaoty HOBpltal.
Laara wu moved from the hOipllal to llllniDil home for exleDded
care. Her oew addreu II L8Dra Wataoa, Hope H01111e Mallor, Z317 R.
Home Reed, SprllJilfteld, Olllo wei.
·
Laura resJded Ill tbe Rllcloe area for mBD)' yean IUid Is well koowD
Ill Melt~ Coaoty.

a

Community Corner
Former area teacher dies

,

·.:,.

.. ,_ .., ·.:-·:·:
_:

: .,

.

RECEIVES GED-SailuBe&amp;.

·IIIII Wblte, LGag Bottom, eiDpleJed billie Melp C4111111y Ctm- 1
mH
I CETA )lnllnlll aiDce
Dee. S, JJ71, bu ~ beri
G.E.D., eqalvaleat to a ldlh
. . . . dlplmla, tbrODgb the

CETA

111111 the MeiiJI•
.c..., Ubrules. She bu " -'
-fllac Ia the . . Coaoty plat·
. , pnJect. Sblce Sept. •ta the
ead ol tile .. elll put, the
Help C4lllllly Commla•l--.are
)lnllnlll

committee; Louise Radford and

Elma Louks, pianists; Lucille
Leifheit, youth chalnnan; Mrs.
Pullins, juvenile chalnnan; Barbara Fry, CWA chairman; and
Wllllam Radford, legislative agent,
During the meeting contributions
were made to the Ohio Travel Fund
and the State Youth Fund. WIWam
Radford gave the leglsiatlve report,
and Mrs. Fry, CWA chairman, noted
that Mni. Louks bad won first In the
afghan and shawl contest at Pomona
Gr&amp;lJile, and will be entering these In
the state grange contest.

Communications were read frcm
the Ashland OU Co. and the Melt~ .
Extenilon Office. A vote ol thanks
Willi given to Jim and Barbara Fry
for donating a plano for the Grange '
ball. The grange allo thanked Mrs. ·
Nancy Radford for making a sign fOl'
the grange ball.
·
Dorothy Long WB!I reported !11,
and sympathy was extended to C. E.
Blakeslee. A potluck dinner wiD be
held on Oct . .9 at 6:30 p.m . .with the
grange meeting to be at 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments·were served by Martha King, Judy Humphreys, asalstild
by Genevieve Burdette.

••I&lt;IIC •

SEPT. 1J, 11180
EVENING

8:oo

8:30

memoriam for her by the Pbllson
·family whose son, Rush, was one of
her students.
Community service Is a party of
every garden club's program and
one ol the Chester Garden Club's Is
providing altar fiowen for local
churches. 'I11ey've been doing it for
about15~now.

In 1966 several rnemben of the
club placed fiowen on the altar at
the Chellter Methodist Church for
special occaslona and holidays, but
by 1971, four memben of the club
bad taken on the responslblllty of
seeing that every · Sunday
arrangements were on the altar. In
summer it was fresh fiowen, In the
winter dried materials, but never artificial Rowen. 'I1Ie number of club
memben participating now has
grown and Include Mrs. Purley
Karr, Mrs. Earl Dean, Mrs. Horace
Karr, Mrs. Donald Mora, Mrs. Roy
Mlller, Mrs. Robert WOOd, Mrs.
Leonard Erwin, Mrs. Woodrow
Mora, Mrs. WIWam Buckley, Mrs.
Curtis King, Mrs. Dale Machlr, Mrs.
Richard Kublentz, and Mrs. Fred
Rayburn. Others who have helped In
the past have been Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell, Mrs. Paul Karr, Mrs. Oris
Frederick, Mrs. R&amp;dY~, and
.the late Mrs. Paul Baer.
On occasion, Mra. Richard Barton
and Mrs. Klrl!: Chevalier provide
fiowera for the Cbellter Church of the
Nazarene, and I'OIIel ~ and
arranged by Mrs. Roy Holter have
through the yean graced the altar at
Trinity Church.
Providing altar arrangements is
no small service and one In which
many garden club members participate and congregatlona appreciate.

Emma Fox waa dellg!Xed to be Included In a trip to Charlotte, N. C.
taken by Leonard L)'OIIB, hill wife,
Carol, and Joy Hladd. Leonard Is a.
pilot fOl' Oblo Univenlty. He ~
tly flew his grandmother, Mil· Fox,
and the others to Charlotte for a visit
to Heritage VIllage and the Fl'L
Club .at Heritage, USA. The tbrill of
the trip for Mrs. Foz wu. to Ill In
Jim Bakker's chair. She described it
allua fanlaltlc place. ·

. ATHENS - Athens District
United Methodist Church Women
will sponsor a "Spiritual Day Apart"
for all' United Methodist Women and
friends, Sept.18, from 9:30a.m. unUI
2:30 p.m. at Sant Mark's United
Methodist Cllurch, Belpre.
Mrs. Harold Jeffers, Chesterblll,
Conference Coordinator for
Cluistlan Personhood, will be leader
for the retreat. Mrs. John Freshour,
Crooksville, will be In cb!u'ge of
music, and Mrs. Sharon Rhonemus,
Pastor of Twmel Church, Marietta,
will direct the Bible Study. The
theme for the day's study and

0REATI AND
A NIAR MIRACLE I

~IONIO HAe

FRI~DS

~LLAALEGRE

FOR 1'000

8:58
7:00

Partl

FA/lilLY FEUD
IWORDS
BULLSEYE .
OF HOPE

7:30

Cf'l!-liOIJ I 1"5
THc;~I0HT

Jazz Vocalist Sarah Vaughan .

Cf'
7:88

8:00

l

rt~A/IIILY FEUD

/IIACNEIL-LEHRI!R REPORT
• FACE THE IIIUSIC
NEWSUPDATE
• (l) SHOGUN An English

Social calendar

reeked In Japan at the atart of the

17th century, and are held captive
In a vlftage ruled by fierce 11mural
warrlora. Stare: Richard Chamber·

lain, ToahlroMIIuno. (Pt. I. of 1 five·

part

glaucoma.

Pot baa a down effect on me which
·Cillltrols my emotions. ExAmple:
When I get mad I go wild and start
throwing things. I can acarcely talk.
After a few hits, wltbln ten minuteS I
am calm enough to review tbe
situation.
· I'm not a drug addict. I don't overdo, but If It hadn't been tor
marijuana I might have killed
.myself. Another fallacy: people .
don't outgrow hyperactive probleJDIIi
as doctors often say. I'm 19 and wl1i
probably have the trouble aU my
Ule, ao I must learn to live with It,
and' pot helps - NOT SO
EMOTIONALLY DISTURBED
ANYMORE
NOTE FROM HELEN: I'd appreciate doctors' comments here.

Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talke it over
In her column If you write to Helen
.Botlel, care of this lleWIIpaper.

3

hra.)

ROCK CHURCH
~tor"/IIOYIE-(A,PYENTURE)••
"G.tll78

I

BRONIN

I []

ID

HAPPENeD TO
WA'TCH 'THAT
STOLEN l!!oY
'TFCAN\P'~

Now arrange the cirded letters to

-ve

IT[ XX)[TITHE(

I

J)

Jumble look No. 13, contelnlng 110 puulea,la evelleble forS1.75 poatpeld
from Jumble,clo~hla niWipiiJ'r, Box34, NoMood, N.J . 07848.1ncfudeyour
n1m1, eddrwSI, zip code end mekl checka payable to Newspeperbooks.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Slow bidding, odd results

Garden club
hears Dean

t]) EVI!NINGATPOPS'Stephono
Grappelll and Bucky P.lziarelll'

dlacussed.

powerful document.ry on living
wtth cancer, thla program daa·
crlbea Joan Aoblnaon 'a 22 month
battle with her lllneea and raieea

alanlflcant /aouea confronting all
vlctlmaondthelrlamlllea.(2hra.,30
mlna.)
'
8:58 ~ NI!WBUPDATE
11:00
7PQ_CLUB
· IJII. MONDAYNIGHTFOOTBALL Houaton Ollitra vo Cl..,.eland
Browne

poaaage olthe Clean liirAct In the
Houae of Repreaentatlvee, thla
documentary captures the

lnvolvedlntronliatlngtho'wllloltho
poop/a' Into thalaw of tho land.(80
rnlna.)
10:110 C!JMOVIE·)COIIIEDY) 00 •14o "10"

"GASOUNE
ALLEY
oc

18711
(I) JAZZATTHI! MAINTENANCE I

Now the

l

OP "Bill

Evana Trto' (80 mlna.}
10:10
JIUII!VI!NtNG NI!WS
10:28
NEWS UPDATE
10:30
RIB! AND II! HI!AL!D
CllllDI III.A.S.H. Abeautiful and
ombftloua young nurae, who plana

CO!Ant4
knows
we're
here!

••

to become

valved In a mleunderetandlngwlth

11:10
11:28
11:30

WINNIE

NS,_euT I GOT THE
t-t:ELING E&gt;I-IE:
DIDN'T COM-

PLETELY

APPROVE
OF ME.!

Gun McCaln 11 1170

liD- JOAN ROBINSoN EPILOG:
FIVE YEARS LATER Thalaauao .
raiatd In 'Joan Robinson: One ·
Woman' a Story' will be dlacu11ed

!fl..!hla follow·up program.
11:40 LIJIIIOVII!-(WISTI!RN)••\4, "llltl
t:.1t!l2
11:41
NEWS
12:00
GR!AT!ST SCANDALS OF
THI! CI!NTURYThegreetoat ocan·

I &lt;IJI.

dall ofthe century are revealed In

WOULD VOU
MIND GIVIN'

thle documentary· tale a of aax,
eplea and aulcldlt. R•r• fllm too·

togo, atlll photoorapha and cow·

"/ORE MAW

troomteetlmonyallhelptorecrute
thetlmee oftheu truly acandaloua

A HAND?

!!!!d ap..!l;y a!Jllra.
12:15 (1)- ·l'ill W
ABC NEWS
NIGHTUNI!
12:31 IJII• BIG VALU!Y
12:58
NI!WS UPDAi!
1:00
• TOMORROW
TRANSI'ORMI!D
NI!WS
1:30
Q.JAIIESKI!NNEDY
1:38 • NEWS
2:00
IB!LII!VI!
2:10
/IIOVII!
-(BIOGIIAPHY·DRAIIIA)
•••
•• _ _ .. 1031

TATER-·

.'

&lt;
I

.,'

I o

TALLER 'lliAN 1(0\1 SO
OliT IN TilE KITCHEN,
MAKE ME ASANDWICH

'l"

I

'

2:21
2:30
3:41

PEANuTS

''

I

Jook Klugman. Vol Bloogllo.
(Aepoot) 'The Saint: The Houaa on

Moore , Anthony Bata. (Repeat)
Cll ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
ilDIIIIOVIE-(DRAMA} .. "llloclllne

BV

~6-7129

M.E.: Vlaltoreln Paradlee' Stare:

Dragon'a Rock' Stara: Roger

THAR'S A BODACIOUS
OC HICKORY L06 OUT
't'OI\IDER IN TH' WOODS
I CAN'T
ALL

or Coli Athens Collect 593-lSU

i

HER GOOD .
SIDE/

,BARNEY

0

Kelly Garrett. Calvin Tr/11/n.
epaat; 110 mlna.)
.!1_081 BAGLEY SHOW
(J) CBS LATE /IIOVIE 'Quincy.

10 WIITCH
1-!ER•..GEr ON

'

~I .

Partl
NIGHT GALLERY
~!WSUPDATI!
• (l) THE TONIGHTBHOW
'Tho Beat of Coraon• Guoot: Peter

Strauaa , Charlea Nelaon Reilly,

YOU'LL HAVE:

.,

Joe Hollern
750 First St., Gallipolis

i

DAVE ALLEN AT L.AIIGE
DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueal:

Jazz Vocallat Sarah Vaughan.

or.

I

a· doctor when ahe

/aovaa tha Army, flndo hefletf In·

:~: ~Fotii~~~;~;

. Refreshments were ~~erved bY
Mrs. vera Crow and Mrs. Pearl
Welker. Otben at:tendlng were ~.
Janet HID, Mrs. Ann Rupe, Mrs.
1Jone Freed, Mrs. MUdred KarP,
Mrs. Betty Ohlinger, Mrs. VelmB
Rue, Mrs. Rose SIMon, Mrs. June
·VanVranken, Mrs. Reva Vaugbari,
and Mrs. Jane Walton.

I

Oswald: "East might well
have passed as dealer or
preempted with some high
number of clubs, but he elect·
ed to start with one club. La t.
er on he rebid to just two
clubs and was delighted to get
:
a raise from his partner."
Alan: "Meanwhile, South
was doing a little slow bidding
on his own. He could well •
afford to jump to five dia:
moods after North raised two

+AS
.AK864
tKQI0652

•....

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
w..t North

I.

diamonds to three, or even to

llave cue bid either clubs or
spades In an effort to get to a
slam, but maybe South want-.
ed to gel doubled."
Oswald: "We don't know
what South was thinking
about. We do know that East
could have let South play four
diamonds, but by this time
East had decided tha t it was
an East·West hand ·so East not
only tried five clubs, but he
proceeded to double five
diamonds."
Alan: "South took his ace of
spades, drew trumps, played
hearts and wound up making
six for a plus 650."
Oswald: "The story had an
unexpectedly happy ending
for East. It was a team game.
At the other table North and
South bid to six diamonds.
East had to sacrifice at seven
clubs and lost four tricks for
minus 700."
·

South
2t .

Pass

3t

It

st

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead:+ K

By Oswald Jacoby
aod Alan Sontag
Oswald: "East set a trap
and fell right into it. He decided to bid his preemptive type
band slowly in an effort to buy
the hand cheaply. Finally, he
pushed llis opponents to five
diamonds and then doubled

them." ·
Alan: "It is something along

•

i NEWS P~PER

ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

dynamlca, from aptclallntereat
lobbying to pollllcal maneuvering,

'

ASIC TOWED

·

(I) AN ACT OF CONGRI!BB
Focualng on the atruggle over the .

that he fin ally believes his
own rumor."

SOUTH

aelectlonalncklde the Venuti com·

poaltlon 'Limohouao Blue a'. (80
mlna.)
(jJ} JOAN ROBINSON: ONE
WOIIIAN'S STORY An emotionally

a rumor and does it so well

9· 15-80

+96532
.Q7
t A 981
+s4
WEST
EAST
+KQI074
+J
.J953
•to 2
tJ7
t3
+J 7 3 2
.AKQ10986

COnduotor Hlrry Ellie DlckBOn and
the Booton Pop aora join ad by Jazz
violin lot Staphone Grappellland
gultarlat lucky Plzzarelll, whooo

Mrs. Betty Dean ol the Chester
Gardea Club W88 guest arranger for
the recent meeting of the Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter ol Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority held In the Riverboat
Room of the Athens County Savlnp
and Loan, Pomeroy office.
Mrs. Dean presented "58 Yean of
Flower Arranging," making
arrangements showing .the trend!!
for the past five decades. She allo
talked about arrangements ol tJii, 1
·future. For 'ler demonstration Mrs.
. Dean used ·nowen from her own
garden.
•
Mrs. Maidie Mora, program chalr!man; distributed program boolft
noting that this is the 5001 Bit
niversary of Beta Sigma Phi. Plani
, were made during the meeting for a '
· valentine dance to be held in
February for the public. The group
also made pans for attending church
In a group on Oct. ?AI at the Pomeroy
United r.tethodlst Church when
Bruce (Stalnaker) Stone will preaent
,a concert. A September tour ol Blen·nerhassett Island was also

the lines of a man who start$

NORTH

'
lheiory
I

t])/IIOYIE -(DRA/IIA) 0 •• "Sma""'
ol a Woman" 1047
iDI THAT'S INCREDIBLE
(I)
SPECIAL IIIOVIE PRE·
&amp;ENTATION 'Foul Play• 1978
Slara: Gold/a Hllwn. Chevy Chao a.

ANNUAL SESSION
The Meigs County Unit ol t1111
American Cancer Society wiD hoi~
Its annual meeting at a p.m. ~
sday in the East-Weal dining room
MEETS'niURSDAY
VeteransMemorlaiHoapltal.
!
The Magnolia Club will meet at
Dr. WUrnaManlfieldwlllbegues(
7:30 p.m. Tbunday at the home of speaker and the area director and
Ella Smith with Georgia Watson In division repreaentatlve will be;
charge of devotlona.
pneent. Awards wiD be presented to:
. . . . _ - - : - - - : - - - - - --- -=..._k_;ey:_vo_l_unteen
_ _._ _ _ _ __,;.

•.

drama;

oood·Captlonod}

ANNIE

Right now be's In San Francisco. I

DEAR HELEN:
The letter from the woman who
llu a hyperactive son Inspires me to
write.
I too am hyperactive. Instead ol
taking pills, which may be addictive,
I smoke pot, and though it's Illegal, I
swear on my Ule It really worka.
Research should be d - on this, as
It has on marijuana and cancer or

WHAT
'THe
WAS
A

I riJ I

SANFORD AND SON
CHANNEL 8 FALL PREVIEW
NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
Cll JOKER'S WILD
DICK CAVETT SHOW Guoat:

\4JKI\T I 11-l 'bll&lt;.

Sha-

beard about the convention the day
before be left and when I mentioned
I'd love to go, be made the 111ual uCUBe: I'd be bored. I'm bored sitting
lit home! Finances aren't the
problem. What is?- RESENTFuL
DEARR.:
...Spousal boredom, I suspect.·
WO!it toward change In your home
Ule - be less conventional, perhaps
- and convent101111 may start
coming your way.- H

STUJYL

form the surprise answer, as sug.ABCNEWS
gostod by the
cartoon.
NEWi UPDATE
• P./11, MAGAZINE
NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
Answerhere:
AUINTHEFAMILY
FACE THE IIIUSIC
(An11W8111 tomotTOW)
WCYSHOW
,
Jumbles:
LUSTY
GLADE
ALBINO
GUITAR
t]) TIC TAC DOUGH
· Saturday s
.
·
Answe r: How the stre et urchm spoke IIIACNEIL-L!HRER REPORT
"GUTIER·ALLY"
NEWS
DICK CAVETT SHOW Guoat:
Jazz Vocallat Sarah Vaughan.

11IE 7$'1'11 blrtbday " Mn..
.Amaod• Mllmly WU celelnted1
receotly wltb allli1'PI'ile party. Jo,
FIDk, Dorotby McC1oad, 81111 Joe:
McCloud plaooed the party alleDded by Carol Triplett, Baddy·
1bompsoa, SMrry Hall,
McCarly, Reglla Hawklal, BrlaD
Nltz, aad Tom McCloud. Cake
8Dd Ice cream were aerved.

Helen Help Us
Sweet suburban housewife:
is she daytime hooker???

f- lf

I

meditation is "Bloom Wbere You
Are Planted."
The dlsirict president, Mrs.
Everett McMahon, Galllpolla, and
the district Chairman of Christian
Penonhood, Mrs. Homer Matheney,
Chesterhill, urge each unit of United
Methodist Women In Athe111 Dlsirict
and surrounding . areas lo be
1 epres ented In this retreat.
Tboee attending lbould bring a
.Bible, notebook, and sack lunch: The
holt church will furnillh coffee and
doouta dlll'ing registration beginning
at 1:30 a.m. .Babysitting wtl1 be
provided at the church.

Pomeroy sebools.

.

I

J

I IJ

• (l) NBC NEW&amp;
IIIUSIC
/ll(lVIE -(DRA/IIA) •• 14. "Wild

8(J)ilDI CBS NEWS
t]) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS

!JLII'PID IA9Y A
GUN IN WHAT

proved now. He, of coune, attended ,

~.

~OW

'IOU CAN CLAMP IT
0"' VOIIM6LFl

THI!J CRUMMY
. LOCI&lt;UPl

Mn. Allen Hampton baa l'etur!led
after a three week visit In Seattle, ·r ------'---"-----------------;,;,:,4
Wash. witb her alep-ton, Ethan
Allen Hamptm, Jr., who is ill. Mrs.
Hampton report&amp; that he Is mueb iJn. :

Marriage Ucen&amp;e~ were Issued to 1
Patrick Soulaby, 22, Pomeroy, and
carla Jean Cowdery, 17, Reedav!Ue; ·
Daren L. Cogar, 21, GuysvUJe, and .
Rhcinda Lou ~e~ 23, Tuppen

FRii~~1V::SONTACT

t]) BOB NI!WHART SHOW
t])
CAROL BURNETT AND

IN

'ltJESDAY
fNAC meeting Tuesday at 7, 30
p.m. at Kyger Creek High School.
TOPS OH 570 Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
Roclt Springs Falrgrounda, Speaker
Members ol the Homebuilders from O'Bleness Hospital. All memClass of the Mlddieport Church of herS urged to attend.
r
Christ were In Athens Tuesday night
HUMAN RESOURCE Council
for the monthly party at the Athens meeting, 12 noon Tueaday at Meigs
Menial Health Center.
inn. "The Battered Wife - Serenity
House" will be the topic.
'
MIDDLEPORT FI'A, 7:30 p.m. .
Dee Hartinger was pianist for
group hymn singing and games were Tueaday at the Middleport Elemenplayed with prizes going to aU thOle tary School.
FRIENDLY . CIRCLE, Trinity
attending. Bob Melton bad prayer
with Ice cream, cookies, banana, Church, 7:30 p.m. 'nleldly at the
potato chips, candy and Kool-A.id church. Silent auctlan to be held.
CHESTER COUlll~'tL 313,
being served. Going over for the parol Amllrk:il, will meet
Daughten
ty were Coleen Van Meter, Regina
Tuesday
at
8
p.m. at the ball. Tbe p.
Swift, Dorothy Roach, Clyda Aliens- .
nual
inspection
wtl1 be held, there
worth, Bob Melton, Edna Evans,
will
be
Initiation,
IUid quarterly birReva Beach, Dee Hartinger, and
thdays
wtl1
be
oblerved.
Members
Denver and Nora Rice.
are urged to attend and wear white.

Class meets

Cll RAINBOW FACTORY
t]) CAROL BURNETT AND

navigator and hie crew are ehlpw·

The ninth annual reunion of the
Wood family W!IS held Sonday at .
Forest Acres park near Rutland.
Norman Will gave grace
BY HELEN IIC1ITEL·
preceding the basket dinner.
Special conespoadeol
Recognized were Mrs. Rosemary
DEAR HELEN:
Neese who traveled the farthest,
A reaUy nice couple moved nm
Rogervllle, Tenn.; Stephanie Wood,
door to us two months ago. We get
the youngest; Myrl Wood, the oldest
together for cards and weekend bar-.
mother with the most family
becues.
I don't see the wife much
present; Weber WOOd, the oldest
during
the
day because I work downmember.
town.
Officers · elected were Jolm CotHowever, i was home sick three
terill, president; Jean Wood, vice
days last week and what I observed
president and Peggy Wood,
from
my bedroom window makes
secretary-treasurer.
me pretty sure my neighbor
Noted were the births of DoiUI8
"works" too - as a suburban
Jean Wood, Feb. 25, 1979,. and
hooker.
Michael David Brickles, May 'l7,
One day five men carne to her
1979, and the deatha of Mabel Wood
house, each staying about an hour.
and RilsseU Hoffman.
The next morning it was more men.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Then she left in a flashy ouUit, returPearl Chase, Chauncey; John W.
ned later with two obviously tipsy
Cotterill, Marguerite Frank,
males . Third day: another
Athens; Mr, and Mrs. Darrell Napprocession of men.
per and Keru\y, Mr. and .Mrs. KenI can't understand how such a
neth Welsh, Mr. and Mrs. Dick
refined, almllll demure woman
Jewell, Earl and Oma Starkey, Ercould be a p~lute, and I wonder If
neat Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Weber
her husband knows.
Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King,
I told my h111band and he IBys
Grace King, Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan
what
abe does In the daytime Is none
'Wood, Ronnie WOOd, Leiba Cowen,
. of our business and we should still
Mrs. Roy Wiseman, all of Pomeroy.
remain casual friends. Okay, I'm
Jack and Peggy Cook, Pikeville,
broadmlnded, and I trust my man,
Ky.; Woody and Rosemary Neese,
but what do you do when you mllllt
Rogenville, Tenn. ; Anna Halliday,
pretend
ignorance and you're very
Alan and Ivan, Dexter; Mrs. Neva
-CURIOUS?
Nicholson, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs.
DEAR CURIOUS:
David Harris, Michael, Emma
Why pretend? Tell your neighbor
.Cline, Elma Harris, Springboro;
what you saw and ask her what goea
Donna Davidson, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
on? (When she reads today's paper
'Davidson, William Davidson,
- unless you camouflaged well Rutland; Anna Davidson, Cheshire;
she may save you the need of
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Coleman,
questioning.) - R
Colwnbus; Uoyd Bolin, Albany; Mr.
and Mrs. John Wood, Wilkesville ;
DEAR HELEN:
Alan Wood, Wilkesville; Mr. and
What do you think ol a husband
Mrs. Nonnan Will, Rutland; and
who
is an executive and never InMrs. Peggy Wood, Stevie and
cludes
his wife on his business and
Stephanie, Middleport.
convention bips? Other wives go
along.

Homebuilders

mernectJil iHm• NEws

HorHHink" 1880

".CAPTAINEASY

PA!J!JI~

lr7a.c to aet .. addlu..J IJUtl

. 4 .. t1ed to fiMacethe plat map
lpdate. Dae to her blterest Ill tbe
Jell IIIII tra1111ac 1be llu received,
While .. belli&amp; truaferred to
-a.1r put prupam 81111 wiD
, be
u emergeocy
·lllldlcal service diBpaleber.

1

UMW to have retreat

Syracue Fl'O bave pot logetber a ceokboot cootaiDiog %30 jllltltandlog reclpea.
Tbe boob, wbleb aell for $UG, may be purcbaaed by coatactbag
Xatle MDi1eD al !19Z-5l1'15.
Y011 CGIIIdo't belp a better orgaulzadoo 8Dd y011 get some u:c:elleot
reclpea lo boot.

By Cllarleoe HoefUeb
Selllloel staff writer
There wu a time when we had not
ooly prayer In the sebools, but
rellglaus education clrs'es ...
MIBB · BerDice G. Bowen, a
rellglaus education teacher In ·the
Middleport sebools daring the late
11HGB and early 1960s, died recently
at Rockford, Iowa.
.
'l1lrougb the years Mrs. Nan
Moore ol Middleport has beeo a
clOie friend of the late Miss Bowen.
She described her as a woman with a
"quiet Christian spirit In her work
and relationship with people." Mrs.
Moore llllld abe was generous In
giving ID her church and to the
people of the world whO were sick
and underprivileged. lit her later
yean, Miss Bowen traveled about In
a mobile home going to country
church schools and Methodist
mllslonary projects such as the Red
Bird Mlulon and Piney Woods
Sebools.
Frequently through the years She
visited In Middleport and attended
services at the Heatb Cburcb. Altar
fiowen for the SUnday morning worship services were placed there as a

Television
Viewing

Fred Goeglein master of Grange

I
I!
I

GIVE ME ONE GOOD
REA50N WI-ll( BEING TALLER
MEAt.15't'OLI CAN TELL
ME WHATTO DO!

I CAN f.IIT '(OU
ABOVE

I 51-lOULD HAVE A5KED
FOR SOME MORE REASONS

:
3 58
4:00
5:30
5:58

~

,.

NIWSUPDATI!
11081 BAGLI!Y SHOW
IIIOYII! -(NO INfOR/IIATION

~AVA:~::o::IMch~n"
700 CLUI
.
WORDS OF HOPI!
LOVI! AMERICAN STYLE
NI!WS UPDA:T!__

by THOMAS JOSEI'H

ACROSS
38 Egyptian
1 Pedestal
president
5 Covenants
39 To be (Fr.)
10 Barren
DOWN
11 Seaman's
I Woody fiber
chapel
2 Gioconda's
12 Pater"Suicidio"
familias
3 British
13 Flat·br&lt;asted playwrightYeatenlay's Alllwer
bird
composer
14 Beach hue
4 Dutch town 18 Titans'
27 Mr. Chips
15 Bad (Fr. )
5 American
mother
in
16 Palance film clergyman 20 Goneril's
the movies
17 Arch style
6 Siamese coin sister
31 European
19 Egyptian
7 Turning
21 "Honey"
river
weight
yellow
of a place 32 Invited
20 Hold off
8 Confined
22 Dickinson, 34 Thessalian
21 Present
9 Precipitated
e.g. .
mountain
22 John Paul II 11 "- New
23 Baseball's 35 Pronoun
and others
World"
Johnny·for
23 Booby15 Fail to attend 25 Bring down a ship
trapped
24 Richard
Harris film
25 Black
b--+--1--1-and blue
26 Taro root
21 Cheaper

by

the 28 Fishing
tackle
29 Be obligated to
30 Sailor
33 May
35 Balli)ark
beverage
38 Indian
military
chief
37 Colored

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It :
A ·X Y D L

a· A

A X It

II, LONGFELLOW
One letter aimply stands for another. In this umple A 11
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
ap01trophea, the length and formation of the wordo are all
hints. Each day 1he code letten are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
HMW
CRSZ

BFPPMS

SEFRP

KZMWSK

FPV

F

ZMEKT
TJITBS

RS
SM
MGTH
F
CZRKITE .
The world figure-skating ctuun= ·,
VFQMGTES
pionshlps in Prague were canceled
v.
~WPTK .
in 1961 after 18 membeJt of the . relterday'l Cryptoquote: REMEMBER mAT THE FAITH
· United States team died in a plane
THAT MOVES MOUNTAINS.ALWAYS~ A PICK AND
crash.
.SHOVEL-ANON

�.DICK-TRACY
-·-- .... ·-

~The DallySentloel, Ml~rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., MOl•day, Sept. 15, 19110 ..

Katie's Komer
Benny Ewing wins goH award

Fred Goeglein was re-elected
master of Rock Springs Grange at a
meeting Thursday night at the hall.
Other officers elected · were
William Grueser, overseer; Ethel
Grueser, lecturer; Roy Holter,
steward; William Radford, asalstant
steward; BeWIB Grueser, chaplain;
Lucille Leifheit, treasurer; Frances
Goeglein, secretary; Harold
Blackston, gate keeper; Susie
Pt!llins, Ceres; Helen Blackston,
Pomona; Nancy Morris, Flora;
Martlia -King, lady assistant
steward; Roy Grueser, executive

BY KATIE CROW
Selldaelllaff
Coqealal Bellll)' Ewlq wu the top wim1er of tbe re«ot golf toar..meat 1po11141Rd by the Pomeroy Cbamber ol CommerCe beld at
Jayaw- Golf Coane, Pomeroy.
Ilea reeelved a aet ol Wlboo 1Z80 clubs which be douted back lo the
dlamber. Wbala Dice gealllre.
Secead place wilmer wu Cbuck Follrod who reeeived a golf bag.
Oilier wlllllen werp Jolul ADdenoa wllb tbe Joqeat drive, Pal IIlii,
lqeat pathmd ErDie ShDier cl01e1t lo the pill.
. Tbe ch!!mller wiiiiJIOIIIOr &amp;Dotber loanlameot oil Oct. 9. The eveol
will be opeD lo the public.
EliDa a.m, Rllcloe, wt11 celebrate ber Mtb birthday 011 Sept. 19.
Mni. Roalb ulbe mother of 1la cblldreo 8Dd JIIIIDerou&amp; gnmdcblldreo
81111 great-gr8Ddcblldreo.
Slle realdes witb ber daagbter, Gladya Sbleldl, RaciDe.
We aead our vey bell wllbea 8Dd IM!IJe your day Is a bappy one,
.

JOHN ROBERT WEDDLE,
Jr., aoo of Ode111a 8Dd Jobo Wed- '
die, Porlbuul, receutly completed
biB ballc tra1DiDil witb tbe U. S.
Marine Corpa at Paris Island, S.,
. C. Weddle Is preseoty home oo •
leave viiiUog family 8Dd friendl.
He wt11 be aladoned at Aberdeen
Proving Groundl, Md. He attended Southem High School ill
RaciDe.

U y011 ileed a CGIIWDe for a 1peelal party or an 0111flt for a school
play Tbe Coltome Comer of Melp HDD181le Society's lbrlft Shop,
Middleport, eaa supply your ileedl.
Wltb Halloweeu com1og up II II Dice lo mow tbat tbere Is a place
wben you eaa ebtaba 110111e sort ol c01tome.
'l1le dlop llu wlp, bats, evetdq ilreue8, 8Dd faDcy pautl. tbey allo
bave Walt Dlmey character muiii&amp;Dd eorreapondllJil oalflta.

Wood
reunzon
success

W&amp;DIIo eoJoy a good "•OIIJIIIDPPtl'?" KDew jail wbere yOII'.CBD e~t­
I011Deb a meal 81111 also good fellowsblp.
Tbe Pomeroy Elementary FrA wiiiBJIOIIIGI' a aopper eu Friday,
Sept.lll, fromt:38p.DL lo7p.DL aiPomeroy ElemeatarySebool.
Tbe meDII iDcludeB lwuemade vegetable IOIIjJ, bot dop 8Dd deuel'

•

IL
Take 0111 orden will be avllilable but yOIIIDDII PI"Vide Mltllioen.
Tbe dbmer II prior lo the Melp Game al Marallder Sladiom.
Mary Jean R4lalb, West Jeffenoa, 011 bebalf ol bet' melber, Laora
Wataoa, f-erly of RllciDe, extend~ 1locere tbauU lo each 8Dd
~ for lbe eardll 8Dd !etten leal to Laura wbDt a paUeal at

Madk- Coaoty HOBpltal.
Laara wu moved from the hOipllal to llllniDil home for exleDded
care. Her oew addreu II L8Dra Wataoa, Hope H01111e Mallor, Z317 R.
Home Reed, SprllJilfteld, Olllo wei.
·
Laura resJded Ill tbe Rllcloe area for mBD)' yean IUid Is well koowD
Ill Melt~ Coaoty.

a

Community Corner
Former area teacher dies

,

·.:,.

.. ,_ .., ·.:-·:·:
_:

: .,

.

RECEIVES GED-SailuBe&amp;.

·IIIII Wblte, LGag Bottom, eiDpleJed billie Melp C4111111y Ctm- 1
mH
I CETA )lnllnlll aiDce
Dee. S, JJ71, bu ~ beri
G.E.D., eqalvaleat to a ldlh
. . . . dlplmla, tbrODgb the

CETA

111111 the MeiiJI•
.c..., Ubrules. She bu " -'
-fllac Ia the . . Coaoty plat·
. , pnJect. Sblce Sept. •ta the
ead ol tile .. elll put, the
Help C4lllllly Commla•l--.are
)lnllnlll

committee; Louise Radford and

Elma Louks, pianists; Lucille
Leifheit, youth chalnnan; Mrs.
Pullins, juvenile chalnnan; Barbara Fry, CWA chairman; and
Wllllam Radford, legislative agent,
During the meeting contributions
were made to the Ohio Travel Fund
and the State Youth Fund. WIWam
Radford gave the leglsiatlve report,
and Mrs. Fry, CWA chairman, noted
that Mni. Louks bad won first In the
afghan and shawl contest at Pomona
Gr&amp;lJile, and will be entering these In
the state grange contest.

Communications were read frcm
the Ashland OU Co. and the Melt~ .
Extenilon Office. A vote ol thanks
Willi given to Jim and Barbara Fry
for donating a plano for the Grange '
ball. The grange allo thanked Mrs. ·
Nancy Radford for making a sign fOl'
the grange ball.
·
Dorothy Long WB!I reported !11,
and sympathy was extended to C. E.
Blakeslee. A potluck dinner wiD be
held on Oct . .9 at 6:30 p.m . .with the
grange meeting to be at 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments·were served by Martha King, Judy Humphreys, asalstild
by Genevieve Burdette.

••I&lt;IIC •

SEPT. 1J, 11180
EVENING

8:oo

8:30

memoriam for her by the Pbllson
·family whose son, Rush, was one of
her students.
Community service Is a party of
every garden club's program and
one ol the Chester Garden Club's Is
providing altar fiowen for local
churches. 'I11ey've been doing it for
about15~now.

In 1966 several rnemben of the
club placed fiowen on the altar at
the Chellter Methodist Church for
special occaslona and holidays, but
by 1971, four memben of the club
bad taken on the responslblllty of
seeing that every · Sunday
arrangements were on the altar. In
summer it was fresh fiowen, In the
winter dried materials, but never artificial Rowen. 'I1Ie number of club
memben participating now has
grown and Include Mrs. Purley
Karr, Mrs. Earl Dean, Mrs. Horace
Karr, Mrs. Donald Mora, Mrs. Roy
Mlller, Mrs. Robert WOOd, Mrs.
Leonard Erwin, Mrs. Woodrow
Mora, Mrs. WIWam Buckley, Mrs.
Curtis King, Mrs. Dale Machlr, Mrs.
Richard Kublentz, and Mrs. Fred
Rayburn. Others who have helped In
the past have been Mrs. Wyatt Chadwell, Mrs. Paul Karr, Mrs. Oris
Frederick, Mrs. R&amp;dY~, and
.the late Mrs. Paul Baer.
On occasion, Mra. Richard Barton
and Mrs. Klrl!: Chevalier provide
fiowera for the Cbellter Church of the
Nazarene, and I'OIIel ~ and
arranged by Mrs. Roy Holter have
through the yean graced the altar at
Trinity Church.
Providing altar arrangements is
no small service and one In which
many garden club members participate and congregatlona appreciate.

Emma Fox waa dellg!Xed to be Included In a trip to Charlotte, N. C.
taken by Leonard L)'OIIB, hill wife,
Carol, and Joy Hladd. Leonard Is a.
pilot fOl' Oblo Univenlty. He ~
tly flew his grandmother, Mil· Fox,
and the others to Charlotte for a visit
to Heritage VIllage and the Fl'L
Club .at Heritage, USA. The tbrill of
the trip for Mrs. Foz wu. to Ill In
Jim Bakker's chair. She described it
allua fanlaltlc place. ·

. ATHENS - Athens District
United Methodist Church Women
will sponsor a "Spiritual Day Apart"
for all' United Methodist Women and
friends, Sept.18, from 9:30a.m. unUI
2:30 p.m. at Sant Mark's United
Methodist Cllurch, Belpre.
Mrs. Harold Jeffers, Chesterblll,
Conference Coordinator for
Cluistlan Personhood, will be leader
for the retreat. Mrs. John Freshour,
Crooksville, will be In cb!u'ge of
music, and Mrs. Sharon Rhonemus,
Pastor of Twmel Church, Marietta,
will direct the Bible Study. The
theme for the day's study and

0REATI AND
A NIAR MIRACLE I

~IONIO HAe

FRI~DS

~LLAALEGRE

FOR 1'000

8:58
7:00

Partl

FA/lilLY FEUD
IWORDS
BULLSEYE .
OF HOPE

7:30

Cf'l!-liOIJ I 1"5
THc;~I0HT

Jazz Vocalist Sarah Vaughan .

Cf'
7:88

8:00

l

rt~A/IIILY FEUD

/IIACNEIL-LEHRI!R REPORT
• FACE THE IIIUSIC
NEWSUPDATE
• (l) SHOGUN An English

Social calendar

reeked In Japan at the atart of the

17th century, and are held captive
In a vlftage ruled by fierce 11mural
warrlora. Stare: Richard Chamber·

lain, ToahlroMIIuno. (Pt. I. of 1 five·

part

glaucoma.

Pot baa a down effect on me which
·Cillltrols my emotions. ExAmple:
When I get mad I go wild and start
throwing things. I can acarcely talk.
After a few hits, wltbln ten minuteS I
am calm enough to review tbe
situation.
· I'm not a drug addict. I don't overdo, but If It hadn't been tor
marijuana I might have killed
.myself. Another fallacy: people .
don't outgrow hyperactive probleJDIIi
as doctors often say. I'm 19 and wl1i
probably have the trouble aU my
Ule, ao I must learn to live with It,
and' pot helps - NOT SO
EMOTIONALLY DISTURBED
ANYMORE
NOTE FROM HELEN: I'd appreciate doctors' comments here.

Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talke it over
In her column If you write to Helen
.Botlel, care of this lleWIIpaper.

3

hra.)

ROCK CHURCH
~tor"/IIOYIE-(A,PYENTURE)••
"G.tll78

I

BRONIN

I []

ID

HAPPENeD TO
WA'TCH 'THAT
STOLEN l!!oY
'TFCAN\P'~

Now arrange the cirded letters to

-ve

IT[ XX)[TITHE(

I

J)

Jumble look No. 13, contelnlng 110 puulea,la evelleble forS1.75 poatpeld
from Jumble,clo~hla niWipiiJ'r, Box34, NoMood, N.J . 07848.1ncfudeyour
n1m1, eddrwSI, zip code end mekl checka payable to Newspeperbooks.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Slow bidding, odd results

Garden club
hears Dean

t]) EVI!NINGATPOPS'Stephono
Grappelll and Bucky P.lziarelll'

dlacussed.

powerful document.ry on living
wtth cancer, thla program daa·
crlbea Joan Aoblnaon 'a 22 month
battle with her lllneea and raieea

alanlflcant /aouea confronting all
vlctlmaondthelrlamlllea.(2hra.,30
mlna.)
'
8:58 ~ NI!WBUPDATE
11:00
7PQ_CLUB
· IJII. MONDAYNIGHTFOOTBALL Houaton Ollitra vo Cl..,.eland
Browne

poaaage olthe Clean liirAct In the
Houae of Repreaentatlvee, thla
documentary captures the

lnvolvedlntronliatlngtho'wllloltho
poop/a' Into thalaw of tho land.(80
rnlna.)
10:110 C!JMOVIE·)COIIIEDY) 00 •14o "10"

"GASOUNE
ALLEY
oc

18711
(I) JAZZATTHI! MAINTENANCE I

Now the

l

OP "Bill

Evana Trto' (80 mlna.}
10:10
JIUII!VI!NtNG NI!WS
10:28
NEWS UPDATE
10:30
RIB! AND II! HI!AL!D
CllllDI III.A.S.H. Abeautiful and
ombftloua young nurae, who plana

CO!Ant4
knows
we're
here!

••

to become

valved In a mleunderetandlngwlth

11:10
11:28
11:30

WINNIE

NS,_euT I GOT THE
t-t:ELING E&gt;I-IE:
DIDN'T COM-

PLETELY

APPROVE
OF ME.!

Gun McCaln 11 1170

liD- JOAN ROBINSoN EPILOG:
FIVE YEARS LATER Thalaauao .
raiatd In 'Joan Robinson: One ·
Woman' a Story' will be dlacu11ed

!fl..!hla follow·up program.
11:40 LIJIIIOVII!-(WISTI!RN)••\4, "llltl
t:.1t!l2
11:41
NEWS
12:00
GR!AT!ST SCANDALS OF
THI! CI!NTURYThegreetoat ocan·

I &lt;IJI.

dall ofthe century are revealed In

WOULD VOU
MIND GIVIN'

thle documentary· tale a of aax,
eplea and aulcldlt. R•r• fllm too·

togo, atlll photoorapha and cow·

"/ORE MAW

troomteetlmonyallhelptorecrute
thetlmee oftheu truly acandaloua

A HAND?

!!!!d ap..!l;y a!Jllra.
12:15 (1)- ·l'ill W
ABC NEWS
NIGHTUNI!
12:31 IJII• BIG VALU!Y
12:58
NI!WS UPDAi!
1:00
• TOMORROW
TRANSI'ORMI!D
NI!WS
1:30
Q.JAIIESKI!NNEDY
1:38 • NEWS
2:00
IB!LII!VI!
2:10
/IIOVII!
-(BIOGIIAPHY·DRAIIIA)
•••
•• _ _ .. 1031

TATER-·

.'

&lt;
I

.,'

I o

TALLER 'lliAN 1(0\1 SO
OliT IN TilE KITCHEN,
MAKE ME ASANDWICH

'l"

I

'

2:21
2:30
3:41

PEANuTS

''

I

Jook Klugman. Vol Bloogllo.
(Aepoot) 'The Saint: The Houaa on

Moore , Anthony Bata. (Repeat)
Cll ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
ilDIIIIOVIE-(DRAMA} .. "llloclllne

BV

~6-7129

M.E.: Vlaltoreln Paradlee' Stare:

Dragon'a Rock' Stara: Roger

THAR'S A BODACIOUS
OC HICKORY L06 OUT
't'OI\IDER IN TH' WOODS
I CAN'T
ALL

or Coli Athens Collect 593-lSU

i

HER GOOD .
SIDE/

,BARNEY

0

Kelly Garrett. Calvin Tr/11/n.
epaat; 110 mlna.)
.!1_081 BAGLEY SHOW
(J) CBS LATE /IIOVIE 'Quincy.

10 WIITCH
1-!ER•..GEr ON

'

~I .

Partl
NIGHT GALLERY
~!WSUPDATI!
• (l) THE TONIGHTBHOW
'Tho Beat of Coraon• Guoot: Peter

Strauaa , Charlea Nelaon Reilly,

YOU'LL HAVE:

.,

Joe Hollern
750 First St., Gallipolis

i

DAVE ALLEN AT L.AIIGE
DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueal:

Jazz Vocallat Sarah Vaughan.

or.

I

a· doctor when ahe

/aovaa tha Army, flndo hefletf In·

:~: ~Fotii~~~;~;

. Refreshments were ~~erved bY
Mrs. vera Crow and Mrs. Pearl
Welker. Otben at:tendlng were ~.
Janet HID, Mrs. Ann Rupe, Mrs.
1Jone Freed, Mrs. MUdred KarP,
Mrs. Betty Ohlinger, Mrs. VelmB
Rue, Mrs. Rose SIMon, Mrs. June
·VanVranken, Mrs. Reva Vaugbari,
and Mrs. Jane Walton.

I

Oswald: "East might well
have passed as dealer or
preempted with some high
number of clubs, but he elect·
ed to start with one club. La t.
er on he rebid to just two
clubs and was delighted to get
:
a raise from his partner."
Alan: "Meanwhile, South
was doing a little slow bidding
on his own. He could well •
afford to jump to five dia:
moods after North raised two

+AS
.AK864
tKQI0652

•....

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
w..t North

I.

diamonds to three, or even to

llave cue bid either clubs or
spades In an effort to get to a
slam, but maybe South want-.
ed to gel doubled."
Oswald: "We don't know
what South was thinking
about. We do know that East
could have let South play four
diamonds, but by this time
East had decided tha t it was
an East·West hand ·so East not
only tried five clubs, but he
proceeded to double five
diamonds."
Alan: "South took his ace of
spades, drew trumps, played
hearts and wound up making
six for a plus 650."
Oswald: "The story had an
unexpectedly happy ending
for East. It was a team game.
At the other table North and
South bid to six diamonds.
East had to sacrifice at seven
clubs and lost four tricks for
minus 700."
·

South
2t .

Pass

3t

It

st

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead:+ K

By Oswald Jacoby
aod Alan Sontag
Oswald: "East set a trap
and fell right into it. He decided to bid his preemptive type
band slowly in an effort to buy
the hand cheaply. Finally, he
pushed llis opponents to five
diamonds and then doubled

them." ·
Alan: "It is something along

•

i NEWS P~PER

ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

dynamlca, from aptclallntereat
lobbying to pollllcal maneuvering,

'

ASIC TOWED

·

(I) AN ACT OF CONGRI!BB
Focualng on the atruggle over the .

that he fin ally believes his
own rumor."

SOUTH

aelectlonalncklde the Venuti com·

poaltlon 'Limohouao Blue a'. (80
mlna.)
(jJ} JOAN ROBINSON: ONE
WOIIIAN'S STORY An emotionally

a rumor and does it so well

9· 15-80

+96532
.Q7
t A 981
+s4
WEST
EAST
+KQI074
+J
.J953
•to 2
tJ7
t3
+J 7 3 2
.AKQ10986

COnduotor Hlrry Ellie DlckBOn and
the Booton Pop aora join ad by Jazz
violin lot Staphone Grappellland
gultarlat lucky Plzzarelll, whooo

Mrs. Betty Dean ol the Chester
Gardea Club W88 guest arranger for
the recent meeting of the Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter ol Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority held In the Riverboat
Room of the Athens County Savlnp
and Loan, Pomeroy office.
Mrs. Dean presented "58 Yean of
Flower Arranging," making
arrangements showing .the trend!!
for the past five decades. She allo
talked about arrangements ol tJii, 1
·future. For 'ler demonstration Mrs.
. Dean used ·nowen from her own
garden.
•
Mrs. Maidie Mora, program chalr!man; distributed program boolft
noting that this is the 5001 Bit
niversary of Beta Sigma Phi. Plani
, were made during the meeting for a '
· valentine dance to be held in
February for the public. The group
also made pans for attending church
In a group on Oct. ?AI at the Pomeroy
United r.tethodlst Church when
Bruce (Stalnaker) Stone will preaent
,a concert. A September tour ol Blen·nerhassett Island was also

the lines of a man who start$

NORTH

'
lheiory
I

t])/IIOYIE -(DRA/IIA) 0 •• "Sma""'
ol a Woman" 1047
iDI THAT'S INCREDIBLE
(I)
SPECIAL IIIOVIE PRE·
&amp;ENTATION 'Foul Play• 1978
Slara: Gold/a Hllwn. Chevy Chao a.

ANNUAL SESSION
The Meigs County Unit ol t1111
American Cancer Society wiD hoi~
Its annual meeting at a p.m. ~
sday in the East-Weal dining room
MEETS'niURSDAY
VeteransMemorlaiHoapltal.
!
The Magnolia Club will meet at
Dr. WUrnaManlfieldwlllbegues(
7:30 p.m. Tbunday at the home of speaker and the area director and
Ella Smith with Georgia Watson In division repreaentatlve will be;
charge of devotlona.
pneent. Awards wiD be presented to:
. . . . _ - - : - - - : - - - - - --- -=..._k_;ey:_vo_l_unteen
_ _._ _ _ _ __,;.

•.

drama;

oood·Captlonod}

ANNIE

Right now be's In San Francisco. I

DEAR HELEN:
The letter from the woman who
llu a hyperactive son Inspires me to
write.
I too am hyperactive. Instead ol
taking pills, which may be addictive,
I smoke pot, and though it's Illegal, I
swear on my Ule It really worka.
Research should be d - on this, as
It has on marijuana and cancer or

WHAT
'THe
WAS
A

I riJ I

SANFORD AND SON
CHANNEL 8 FALL PREVIEW
NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
Cll JOKER'S WILD
DICK CAVETT SHOW Guoat:

\4JKI\T I 11-l 'bll&lt;.

Sha-

beard about the convention the day
before be left and when I mentioned
I'd love to go, be made the 111ual uCUBe: I'd be bored. I'm bored sitting
lit home! Finances aren't the
problem. What is?- RESENTFuL
DEARR.:
...Spousal boredom, I suspect.·
WO!it toward change In your home
Ule - be less conventional, perhaps
- and convent101111 may start
coming your way.- H

STUJYL

form the surprise answer, as sug.ABCNEWS
gostod by the
cartoon.
NEWi UPDATE
• P./11, MAGAZINE
NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
Answerhere:
AUINTHEFAMILY
FACE THE IIIUSIC
(An11W8111 tomotTOW)
WCYSHOW
,
Jumbles:
LUSTY
GLADE
ALBINO
GUITAR
t]) TIC TAC DOUGH
· Saturday s
.
·
Answe r: How the stre et urchm spoke IIIACNEIL-L!HRER REPORT
"GUTIER·ALLY"
NEWS
DICK CAVETT SHOW Guoat:
Jazz Vocallat Sarah Vaughan.

11IE 7$'1'11 blrtbday " Mn..
.Amaod• Mllmly WU celelnted1
receotly wltb allli1'PI'ile party. Jo,
FIDk, Dorotby McC1oad, 81111 Joe:
McCloud plaooed the party alleDded by Carol Triplett, Baddy·
1bompsoa, SMrry Hall,
McCarly, Reglla Hawklal, BrlaD
Nltz, aad Tom McCloud. Cake
8Dd Ice cream were aerved.

Helen Help Us
Sweet suburban housewife:
is she daytime hooker???

f- lf

I

meditation is "Bloom Wbere You
Are Planted."
The dlsirict president, Mrs.
Everett McMahon, Galllpolla, and
the district Chairman of Christian
Penonhood, Mrs. Homer Matheney,
Chesterhill, urge each unit of United
Methodist Women In Athe111 Dlsirict
and surrounding . areas lo be
1 epres ented In this retreat.
Tboee attending lbould bring a
.Bible, notebook, and sack lunch: The
holt church will furnillh coffee and
doouta dlll'ing registration beginning
at 1:30 a.m. .Babysitting wtl1 be
provided at the church.

Pomeroy sebools.

.

I

J

I IJ

• (l) NBC NEW&amp;
IIIUSIC
/ll(lVIE -(DRA/IIA) •• 14. "Wild

8(J)ilDI CBS NEWS
t]) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS

!JLII'PID IA9Y A
GUN IN WHAT

proved now. He, of coune, attended ,

~.

~OW

'IOU CAN CLAMP IT
0"' VOIIM6LFl

THI!J CRUMMY
. LOCI&lt;UPl

Mn. Allen Hampton baa l'etur!led
after a three week visit In Seattle, ·r ------'---"-----------------;,;,:,4
Wash. witb her alep-ton, Ethan
Allen Hamptm, Jr., who is ill. Mrs.
Hampton report&amp; that he Is mueb iJn. :

Marriage Ucen&amp;e~ were Issued to 1
Patrick Soulaby, 22, Pomeroy, and
carla Jean Cowdery, 17, Reedav!Ue; ·
Daren L. Cogar, 21, GuysvUJe, and .
Rhcinda Lou ~e~ 23, Tuppen

FRii~~1V::SONTACT

t]) BOB NI!WHART SHOW
t])
CAROL BURNETT AND

IN

'ltJESDAY
fNAC meeting Tuesday at 7, 30
p.m. at Kyger Creek High School.
TOPS OH 570 Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
Roclt Springs Falrgrounda, Speaker
Members ol the Homebuilders from O'Bleness Hospital. All memClass of the Mlddieport Church of herS urged to attend.
r
Christ were In Athens Tuesday night
HUMAN RESOURCE Council
for the monthly party at the Athens meeting, 12 noon Tueaday at Meigs
Menial Health Center.
inn. "The Battered Wife - Serenity
House" will be the topic.
'
MIDDLEPORT FI'A, 7:30 p.m. .
Dee Hartinger was pianist for
group hymn singing and games were Tueaday at the Middleport Elemenplayed with prizes going to aU thOle tary School.
FRIENDLY . CIRCLE, Trinity
attending. Bob Melton bad prayer
with Ice cream, cookies, banana, Church, 7:30 p.m. 'nleldly at the
potato chips, candy and Kool-A.id church. Silent auctlan to be held.
CHESTER COUlll~'tL 313,
being served. Going over for the parol Amllrk:il, will meet
Daughten
ty were Coleen Van Meter, Regina
Tuesday
at
8
p.m. at the ball. Tbe p.
Swift, Dorothy Roach, Clyda Aliens- .
nual
inspection
wtl1 be held, there
worth, Bob Melton, Edna Evans,
will
be
Initiation,
IUid quarterly birReva Beach, Dee Hartinger, and
thdays
wtl1
be
oblerved.
Members
Denver and Nora Rice.
are urged to attend and wear white.

Class meets

Cll RAINBOW FACTORY
t]) CAROL BURNETT AND

navigator and hie crew are ehlpw·

The ninth annual reunion of the
Wood family W!IS held Sonday at .
Forest Acres park near Rutland.
Norman Will gave grace
BY HELEN IIC1ITEL·
preceding the basket dinner.
Special conespoadeol
Recognized were Mrs. Rosemary
DEAR HELEN:
Neese who traveled the farthest,
A reaUy nice couple moved nm
Rogervllle, Tenn.; Stephanie Wood,
door to us two months ago. We get
the youngest; Myrl Wood, the oldest
together for cards and weekend bar-.
mother with the most family
becues.
I don't see the wife much
present; Weber WOOd, the oldest
during
the
day because I work downmember.
town.
Officers · elected were Jolm CotHowever, i was home sick three
terill, president; Jean Wood, vice
days last week and what I observed
president and Peggy Wood,
from
my bedroom window makes
secretary-treasurer.
me pretty sure my neighbor
Noted were the births of DoiUI8
"works" too - as a suburban
Jean Wood, Feb. 25, 1979,. and
hooker.
Michael David Brickles, May 'l7,
One day five men carne to her
1979, and the deatha of Mabel Wood
house, each staying about an hour.
and RilsseU Hoffman.
The next morning it was more men.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Then she left in a flashy ouUit, returPearl Chase, Chauncey; John W.
ned later with two obviously tipsy
Cotterill, Marguerite Frank,
males . Third day: another
Athens; Mr, and Mrs. Darrell Napprocession of men.
per and Keru\y, Mr. and .Mrs. KenI can't understand how such a
neth Welsh, Mr. and Mrs. Dick
refined, almllll demure woman
Jewell, Earl and Oma Starkey, Ercould be a p~lute, and I wonder If
neat Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Weber
her husband knows.
Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King,
I told my h111band and he IBys
Grace King, Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan
what
abe does In the daytime Is none
'Wood, Ronnie WOOd, Leiba Cowen,
. of our business and we should still
Mrs. Roy Wiseman, all of Pomeroy.
remain casual friends. Okay, I'm
Jack and Peggy Cook, Pikeville,
broadmlnded, and I trust my man,
Ky.; Woody and Rosemary Neese,
but what do you do when you mllllt
Rogenville, Tenn. ; Anna Halliday,
pretend
ignorance and you're very
Alan and Ivan, Dexter; Mrs. Neva
-CURIOUS?
Nicholson, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs.
DEAR CURIOUS:
David Harris, Michael, Emma
Why pretend? Tell your neighbor
.Cline, Elma Harris, Springboro;
what you saw and ask her what goea
Donna Davidson, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
on? (When she reads today's paper
'Davidson, William Davidson,
- unless you camouflaged well Rutland; Anna Davidson, Cheshire;
she may save you the need of
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Coleman,
questioning.) - R
Colwnbus; Uoyd Bolin, Albany; Mr.
and Mrs. John Wood, Wilkesville ;
DEAR HELEN:
Alan Wood, Wilkesville; Mr. and
What do you think ol a husband
Mrs. Nonnan Will, Rutland; and
who
is an executive and never InMrs. Peggy Wood, Stevie and
cludes
his wife on his business and
Stephanie, Middleport.
convention bips? Other wives go
along.

Homebuilders

mernectJil iHm• NEws

HorHHink" 1880

".CAPTAINEASY

PA!J!JI~

lr7a.c to aet .. addlu..J IJUtl

. 4 .. t1ed to fiMacethe plat map
lpdate. Dae to her blterest Ill tbe
Jell IIIII tra1111ac 1be llu received,
While .. belli&amp; truaferred to
-a.1r put prupam 81111 wiD
, be
u emergeocy
·lllldlcal service diBpaleber.

1

UMW to have retreat

Syracue Fl'O bave pot logetber a ceokboot cootaiDiog %30 jllltltandlog reclpea.
Tbe boob, wbleb aell for $UG, may be purcbaaed by coatactbag
Xatle MDi1eD al !19Z-5l1'15.
Y011 CGIIIdo't belp a better orgaulzadoo 8Dd y011 get some u:c:elleot
reclpea lo boot.

By Cllarleoe HoefUeb
Selllloel staff writer
There wu a time when we had not
ooly prayer In the sebools, but
rellglaus education clrs'es ...
MIBB · BerDice G. Bowen, a
rellglaus education teacher In ·the
Middleport sebools daring the late
11HGB and early 1960s, died recently
at Rockford, Iowa.
.
'l1lrougb the years Mrs. Nan
Moore ol Middleport has beeo a
clOie friend of the late Miss Bowen.
She described her as a woman with a
"quiet Christian spirit In her work
and relationship with people." Mrs.
Moore llllld abe was generous In
giving ID her church and to the
people of the world whO were sick
and underprivileged. lit her later
yean, Miss Bowen traveled about In
a mobile home going to country
church schools and Methodist
mllslonary projects such as the Red
Bird Mlulon and Piney Woods
Sebools.
Frequently through the years She
visited In Middleport and attended
services at the Heatb Cburcb. Altar
fiowen for the SUnday morning worship services were placed there as a

Television
Viewing

Fred Goeglein master of Grange

I
I!
I

GIVE ME ONE GOOD
REA50N WI-ll( BEING TALLER
MEAt.15't'OLI CAN TELL
ME WHATTO DO!

I CAN f.IIT '(OU
ABOVE

I 51-lOULD HAVE A5KED
FOR SOME MORE REASONS

:
3 58
4:00
5:30
5:58

~

,.

NIWSUPDATI!
11081 BAGLI!Y SHOW
IIIOYII! -(NO INfOR/IIATION

~AVA:~::o::IMch~n"
700 CLUI
.
WORDS OF HOPI!
LOVI! AMERICAN STYLE
NI!WS UPDA:T!__

by THOMAS JOSEI'H

ACROSS
38 Egyptian
1 Pedestal
president
5 Covenants
39 To be (Fr.)
10 Barren
DOWN
11 Seaman's
I Woody fiber
chapel
2 Gioconda's
12 Pater"Suicidio"
familias
3 British
13 Flat·br&lt;asted playwrightYeatenlay's Alllwer
bird
composer
14 Beach hue
4 Dutch town 18 Titans'
27 Mr. Chips
15 Bad (Fr. )
5 American
mother
in
16 Palance film clergyman 20 Goneril's
the movies
17 Arch style
6 Siamese coin sister
31 European
19 Egyptian
7 Turning
21 "Honey"
river
weight
yellow
of a place 32 Invited
20 Hold off
8 Confined
22 Dickinson, 34 Thessalian
21 Present
9 Precipitated
e.g. .
mountain
22 John Paul II 11 "- New
23 Baseball's 35 Pronoun
and others
World"
Johnny·for
23 Booby15 Fail to attend 25 Bring down a ship
trapped
24 Richard
Harris film
25 Black
b--+--1--1-and blue
26 Taro root
21 Cheaper

by

the 28 Fishing
tackle
29 Be obligated to
30 Sailor
33 May
35 Balli)ark
beverage
38 Indian
military
chief
37 Colored

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It :
A ·X Y D L

a· A

A X It

II, LONGFELLOW
One letter aimply stands for another. In this umple A 11
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
ap01trophea, the length and formation of the wordo are all
hints. Each day 1he code letten are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
HMW
CRSZ

BFPPMS

SEFRP

KZMWSK

FPV

F

ZMEKT
TJITBS

RS
SM
MGTH
F
CZRKITE .
The world figure-skating ctuun= ·,
VFQMGTES
pionshlps in Prague were canceled
v.
~WPTK .
in 1961 after 18 membeJt of the . relterday'l Cryptoquote: REMEMBER mAT THE FAITH
· United States team died in a plane
THAT MOVES MOUNTAINS.ALWAYS~ A PICK AND
crash.
.SHOVEL-ANON

���1~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept.

·-

15, 19110

Supglomenl In: Tho Pommoy Seatlnd

Consider··new licensing bill
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Professional COWISelors and social
workers in Ohio may ·have to be
Ucenaed by the state if a blU being
considered by the Ohio Senate
becomes law.
Rep. Dale Loclter, D-Anna, said
the measure he's spo1190ring is
needed to make sure. that persoiL!
who offer such COWISeling services
to the public are qualified to do so.
"Currently, there are no edueation
or elllllllination requirements for the
positioiL!," Locker said. "No one is
tsklng the respoiL!ibWty for supervising the practices of those engaged
in the profession.
"Untrained people are setting up
shop, claiming to the public that .
they can solve complex problems."
'Hi! bW already has been passed .
by lhe House, and wW be heard by
the Senate Edueation and Health
Committee on Wednesday. It would
create a nine-member state board to
license and register counselors and
social workers.
The board would be required to
prepare and grade elllllllinatiOIL! for

BUT CAN · HE play dead? Tbls turkey vulture eats out of tbe baod of Joan Daniels at
lllilloili' Brookfield Zoo. Tbe young zoo keeper is trying to teacb tbe bird to respend to
.
commands.

Hostage debate begins Tuesday
By The A1180Ciated Press
The speaker of the Iranian
Parliament says debate on the U.S.
hostages will begin Tuesday, the
318th day in captivity for the 52
Americans. But two influential
Iranian religiOWI leaders said today
the regime has not dropped its
demand for an apology from the U.S.
government.
Radio Tehran said Speaker
Haaheml Rafsanjani told the Swiss
charge d'affaires in Tehran Sunday:
"A decision was made in the
Majlis (Parliament) today regar-

sent the Majlis in July by 187 some of the opinions voiced by the
congressmen who urged the release deputies.
On Friday, Ayatollah Ruhollah
of the AmeriCBIL! taken hostage last
Nov, 4 when young Islamic militants Khomeini, the leader of the Iranian
seized the U.S. Embassy In Tehran. revolution, listed four condltiDIL! for
The broadcast said the Swiss charge the release of the hostages. They did
d'affaires delivered a "follow-up let- not include the previOWI demand for
ter" from some of the u.S. an apology from the United States, a
congressmen on Sunday.
condition the Carter administration
The Majlis Foreign Affairs Com- . rejected, and U.S. observers inmittee submitted a draft of a reply to terpreted this as a hopeful sign.
But Hojatoleslam Mousavi
' the U.S. letterfor the second time on
Sunday.
Khlielnl, a member of the Majlill and
Tehran Radio said the Majlis the spiritual leader of the militants
asked the Foreign Affairs Com- holding the hostages, told the
newspaper
mittee to revise the draft to insert English-language
Tehran Times that a U.S. apology is
Emergency squad runs a basic condition for the release of
the AmeriCBIL!. He said Khomeini .
Nine calls were answered by local "listed some of the condltiDIL! for the
Police reported also that a motorrelease of the hostages but not aU of
cycle driven by Michael Salser, units over the weekend the Meigs them.' '
'
CoUllty
Emergency
Medical
SerRacine, caught fire on E. Main St.,
Hojatoleslam Sayyed Ali
vices Headquarters reports.
about 6:30 p.m. Saturday. Police
At 5:01 a.m. Sunday, the Racine Khamenei, leader of Friday prayers .
said that the front a:a:el on the vehicle . Unit took Edna Roush of Racine to in Tehran, a Mallis deputy and
broke causing It to skid and go out of
Khorneini's adviser in military afcontrol before it caught fire. Salser VeterBIL! Memorial Hospital and a fairs, also told the Tehran Times the
8:42 a.m., she was tranaferred to
escaped serious injury.
He is Pleasant Valley Hospital by the Mid- United States must apologhe.
charged with failure to register the
Khomeini's four conditions ·were
dleport Unit. At 9:15a.m., the Midplates on the vehicle.
dleport Unit ·took Sandra Powell release of Iranian assets frozen by
from Holzer Medical Center to her President Carter alter the hostages
home In ReedsvUle; 5:41; Mid- were seized Nov. 4, guarantees by
GRANTED DIVORCE
dleport
Unit, Renee Lefebre, Roote the United States that It wW not inIn Meigs County Conunon Pleas.
2,
Cheshire
to Holzer Medical Cen- terfere in Iran's intenlal affairs,
Court Walter Greg France, Rutland,
ter;
5:01,
Middleport
Unit, Danield suspe!L!ion of all U.S. cl alms againwas granted a divorce from Rita M.
Tyree,
from
Middleport
Park to st Iran and return of the ousted
·France, Myrtle Beach, S. C.
shah's wealth.
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Iran's official Pars news agency
Pomeroy Unit, 5:59 p.m., Bill
said
an Iraqi jet lighter tried to atMorris,
Union
Ave.,
to
VeterBIL!
UFEAFTER40
tack
a helicopter Rying President
Memorial
Hospital;
Rutland
Unit,
·
When you were 20, life was a lark;
Abo~
Bani.SSdr and Prime
4: 23 p.m., Alice Plants, Clifford
after 40, it appears to be more like a
Minister
Mobanunad
AU Raja! on a
Plants, Truman Hall, Brenda
hungry vulture.
inspection
tour
Saturday, bot
border
QuWen from an auto accident on
Iranian
warplanes
forced
the Iraqi
Leading Creek Road to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Monday, 7:'ST MiG to flee.
a.m., Syracuse Unit, James Roberts
from Long Hollow Road to VeterBIL!
Memorial Hospital.
ding a reply to the letter by the U.S.
Congress, and subatantial discussion
on the hostages wW begin on
Tuesday and the Majlis wW make a
decision.
"Since the U.S. CongrO!lll letter
was read oot in the Majlis and was
also covered by the press, we e:a:pect
the U.S. government to publlah .the
ten of the Majlis letter qf reply for
the American public. If it fails to do
this, it wW have shown 1¢11 lack of
good ·wru, and this wW have an adverse effect on our talks."
The "U.S. Congress· letter'' was

persons entering the professions. It
also would have to adopt
requirements for continuing
professional education as a con- .
clition for· a renewal of a license or
registration.
The panel would investigate
alleged irregularities in the practice
of counseling or social work.
In addition, the board would be
required to adopt a code of ethical
practice for the professions and set
up procedures for suspending or
revoking licenses of persons
engaged in unethical practices.
Locker said Ohio already licenses
48 other occupations and
professloiL!. Some legal regulation
for social workers is required by 23
states, and 15 states actually have
licensing lawa.
.
Locker said the qualUied
professionals and volunteer workers

Congregation

car

morning.

Area deaths
Earnie Welch
Earnle Welch, 68, Rt. 2, Albany,
died Sunday at O'Bleness Hospital,
Alhe!L!.
Mr. Welch was born in Meigs
County the son of the late Elza and
EliZabeth Harting Welch. He was a

Weekend.

• •

(continued from page 1) -

Daniel Wagner, 19; Bidwell, and
Elmus Devault, 18, Gallipolis-were
injury and taken to HMC. A
passenger in the Hash auto, Scott
Hash, age 8, claimed injury and was
transported to HMC.
Wagner was cited on a charge of
operating a vehicle with defective
brakes.
Officers investigated a twovehicle accident on U.S. 35, at the
junction of Mitchell Rd., at 11:~
a.m.
.
The patrol reports a west bound
auto operated by Thomas Saunders,
28, Gallipolis, turned into the path of
a vehicle driven by Treva Caldwell,
28, Gallipolis.
~ drivers dlaplayed visible
signs of injury and were transported
to HMC for treatment. A passenger
in the Caldwell auto, Sara Caldwell,
age 6, claimed Injury, but was not
Immediately treated.
saunders was dted on a charge of
failure to yield.
The patrol was called to the scene
of a two-vehicle accident on Nebo
Rd., just west of SR ~. at9:05 a.m, ·
Officers report ·an auto operated
by Donald canterberry, 62, Oak Hill,
went left of center to avoid a vehicle
parked on the roadway and collided
with an OIICOIIIInC auto driven by
JolmCarpenter, 21, Patriot.
An occupant of the Canterberry
vehicle, Jimmy Canterberry, 25,
OK Hill, dlaplayed visible signs of :
Injury, but was not Immediately
tr.ted.
c.nterberry wu cited on chargea
al 1Ift. af cenllr and no operator's

~-

-

STARTS

Good Thru September 21, 1980

vice."

While Quontlti.es Lost.
Quantity Rights Reserved . We a•e not ·responsible .for typographical errors. Sorry , No
dealers .

Hi! proposal also contalna a gran-

dfather clause, which means the
e:a:arnlnation requirelrienta would .
not cover any person who applied for
a license within one )'ear after the
bill's effective date.
In addition, It .contalna a aunaet
provision under which the law would ·
be repealed after four years unleas
specifically renewed by the

I

The buliding conunlttee was introduced and the 1965-fi6 church
coupcU. Making up the bulidlng
committee were Mickey WWtama,
George Baer, Ralph Pratt, AHred
Elberfeld (deceased), Harry MWer,
Kenneth Braun, and Charles EvBIL!.
Following lh!l burning of the mortgage a recttal was presented by '
Mrs. Beverly Kraly and sOIL!,
Christopher and Joseph, Jr. Mrs.
Beverly· played the plano and her
two soiL! played vioti!L!. Christopher
is.9 and Joey is 4 years of age.

IIOOSTER!l MEET THURSDAY
First meeting of the Meigs Glr!IJ
Athletic Boosters will be held Thursday night at 7:30 p.in. at the Melgil
High SchoOl. Plans wW be made for
the school year aild new off!em a will
be elected. The president, Dick
Rupe, has appealed for support of
the girls' program from not only
parents but other interested individuals. A speclallnvitaUon is extended to the parents of freahmen In'
volleyball, basketball, gymnastics,
track and softball.

ELBERFELD$

RTATOMEET
Fall meeting of the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Aasoctation wW
take place on Saturday with a luncheon at noon at the . Meigs Inn.
Reservationa are to be made at 992388'/byWednesday.
Mrs. Ethel Guthrie, Ohio
representative of the National
Retired Teachers Association, wW
be the speaker. All retired teachers '
.of the county are invited to attend.
Officers and chairmen of the local
organization attended the ORTA and
the NRTA area conference at
Marietta on Sept. 10, Districts 7, 8
and 9 were presented.
1

--

-

·- - ----

beauty brushing
will help keep your carpets
looking better ... longer.
Two-way sweeping ac• · ~ n
cleans, IIuffs up nap. • ·
!rashes your carpet :Ju ~ ·
dust pans. Thick cushion
bumper. Durable all-steel
case wo th Curry Gold
baked enamel finish.

"·"

PET BED

car-ha l"'tt
BROWN DUCK
BLANKET-LINED
COAT
~

liiiiTWILL• PIT •e.o
Jlylitfl • !elo• •on
-

~

pqry~otm cuthlon Moll·

. n.......k:. rnlktn"·prOCII •ll&lt;l

W~t~o•bl., A•IIIIPI• In uiOMM
&lt;hoo&lt;J!Gto;OIOtt.

WE HAVE THE COMPLETE
SELECTION OF CARHARlT
BROWN DUCK WORK CLOTIIES.
·clioose Brown Duc.k bib overalls, doubl
knees, copper rivets, triple seams, tool
pockets and elastic suspenders .. . .or car
penter's overalls with more pockets, swln
nail apron, etc. Examl[le the many differ
ent styles of heavy duty, rip-proof, wear
proof Brown Duck jeans, jackets, coat
and cover.alls, too. Come in and se
these gutsy work outfits that hav
got to give you a lift. All tOO% cotton
Preshrunk. Machine Washable.

NILSON' I

__,""""".·. lEN'S THERMAL ~ J
--t BOOT SOCKS .. -,

IIG. t7, r7

CARDGA.ME

2PIJ$2ll

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
LUMITRON Ill
BLOOD PRESSURE KIT

WITH OR WITHOUT COVER SHIELD

•22 Watt circline Fluorescent bulb will
last fo r years.
•Bulb includ ed .

0e11Qnlld lor onl ·t'Dnd opltrot ion ond WOr! Onted OCCUIOIII , lUMilRQN I( Ill il ihe knell
1tote-ol -tfle-o r t battery PQwered tle( tr o nlt lo. lt !hot f ore~•• dotu owoy w ith the neocllo• Q
1epo ro te ate thCO.(t)9e . V•••otile ot home . o!lrte or trovel monitor th l1 marvel ol m k roclr
(u itry enobl" thl u1er to tol.e o complete reod lng In lull unde r two minu l"

With Shield

$1
'899

Without Shield

The Farmers Bank,
a Meigs County bank
for Meigs .County people
owned and opera~ed
by Meigs County people.
.'FB !;, :' ·~·FaJ•,JtleJ.$1·

Bank··

The Community &lt;hVned '·Banl
'('

.

,p~~~:

.,

H0. 1tJI.TO

Bi-swing action back. Warm .
Weatherproof .
Snaps for
mate hi ng hood.
·

.

~~~~e:;'r::~!::

MILlON'S tiiG.

•

ON PRESIDENT'S LIST
President's List honors were ear·
ned by Toni Hudson, Racine, at the
Clay Cline Bums, 78, Middleport,
Pairicta Steve!L! Career College and
died Sunday at VeterBIL! Memorial
Finishing School for the SIUillller
Hospital.
session just concluded.
Mr. Bums was a son of the late .
Miss Hudson achieved a 4.0 grade
Walter C. and Maude Swearingen average in the fashion mer- .
Burns. He was born Oct. 31, 1901 at
chandlsing course for the tenn, June '
Wheelersburg in Scioto County. He
16 through Aug. 22. Sbe is . the
was also preceded in death by his fir- daughter of Mrs. Blondena M. Hudst wife, Violet, in 198G, a brother and son, Racine, and is scheduled to
two sisters.
graduate from her nine month acSurviving are his wife, Trula Mae credited fashion merchandlaing
Boram BuriL!; a son, DonBld Eugene .course in March, 1981.
1
Burns of Minford, and a grandlI
daughter, Donna Jean Burns, Min- ·
VI!.'TERANIIMI!;MORIAL
ford . .
Saturday Adrnl.sslona-Fred Mack,
Mr. Burns was a member of the Cheshire; Richard DeMoss,
Methodist Church at Stockdale. He Pomeroy;
Terrence Conlin,
was a member of the United Corn:- Rutland; Dwight Burton, Midmerctal Travela Truck Drivers dleport; Dennis McKinney,
ASsociation. · He was employed by Rutland; Kathy Perrine, Mid- I
... 1.
the State d. Ohio before lis I dleport
. '
1
retirement and at one time had been
Saturday Discharged-Wilma 1
a deputy sheriff.
GUrnore, James Buchanan, Sharon I
..
Funeral services wW be held at 2 .Wright, Mildred Gaul, Edward I ·
,..
p.m. WedneSday at the Stockdale Deem, Myrna Beaver, Robert Wood.
·;r·
' "
·,,.
Methodist Church with the Rev.
·
sWxJay
Admilsion8-Edna
Roush,
'.
Mark McClung ofllctating. Burial
·..
Racine; Leo Johnlon, Gallipolis; .·
·.
' .•
will be In the Stockdale Cemetery.
Frances
Adkins,
Minersvllle;
Friends may call at the Rawlings- '
. Po~roy, OhM. ·
Coab-Biower Funeral Home fnm 2 WWtam Morris, Pomeroy; Daniel
."
Tyree, Middleport.
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday. The
·f
body will be talt;en to the church to ,
'
M. ....
lie In lltate one.hour before the Wed- :
..-lay service.
Chapman,EdnaROWih.
j1
1 . ·.;_~-----=------:----:--"!'----:--_.:.___.:..,___·1
.
•

Clay Cline Burns

YOUR
CHOICE

DAISY ASW~~:.-=-·
daily

. I

retired employe of Ohio University.
He is survived by his wife, Kay
Haniung Welch; me son Donald
Welch, Dayton; si:a: daughters, Betty
Shorter, Sparta; Eileen Seyy,
Athens; Patsy Malone and Pauline
Stout both of Lancaster; Dolly Hawk
and Barbara Crabtree both of
Albany; 12 grandchildren, si:a: great
grandchidren; two slters, Lovey
Stanley, Pomeroy and Bertie
MiWgan, Athens; one brother,
Raymotld Welch, Athens; one halfbrother, Frankie Douglas, Pomeroy..
Funeral services wW be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Bigony- ·
Jordan Funeral Home, Albany, with
the Rev. John Palmer offlctatlng.
Burial wW be in Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Tuesday from 2 to 4and 7 to 9.

TOD~Y

.Le~t)lre.

!Continued from page 1)

Vandals hit two stations
Pomeroy Police are investigating
damages to large plate glass windows at two Pomeroy service
statiOIL!.
Police said windows were e:a:tenslvely damaged apparently by
being shot out at Loa's Ashland
Station and the Sunoco Station, both
on W. Main St. Damages were
cllscovered,Sunday morning.
Police also said there were minor
damag~ to two cars in an accident
on Lincoln Heights when a
driven by Lydia Johl190n, Middleport, backed fnm a driveway
and struck a parked vehicle. Police
also Investigating e:a:tensive
damages to a car owned by Arthur
Beegle, Racine. Police state that the
vehicle was apparenUy .struck by
another car near CroW' s Steak
HOuse, W. Main St., early Sunday

With whom he lias talked believe
that licensure will improve services.
He said more than 20 otganizatiopa
have volcecl support for the blli.
'l'he veteran lawmaker ilakf the
professlOIL! covered by the meuui-e
can have a great impact.
"Consider the nwnber of ilgenciell
that employ counselor and social '
workers. Consider the types of
problem8 enCOIUitered by members
of our society and the real need for
this service," he said. "I believe the
impact is great enough for us to be
concerned aboot the qualifications
of the people providing thla ser-

Red Driveway
Marken
..
•Reflective

19°

NBION'I-.W

'

MORTON HOUSE

.
•

I•

1t

-~,;~
~~

lllf ITIW

40% Wool
40% Acrylic
20~. Nylon

,,~
NILSON'IUG. $1.27

\

-.xmMIAI

' 11'/t Oz.

'YOUI CHOICI
INOIAVY

ll•
...-s-.w

....~J.totM!.
~-~nr
,)

•""&lt;

... , ,.
....

. \'
'

�1~ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept.

·-

15, 19110

Supglomenl In: Tho Pommoy Seatlnd

Consider··new licensing bill
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Professional COWISelors and social
workers in Ohio may ·have to be
Ucenaed by the state if a blU being
considered by the Ohio Senate
becomes law.
Rep. Dale Loclter, D-Anna, said
the measure he's spo1190ring is
needed to make sure. that persoiL!
who offer such COWISeling services
to the public are qualified to do so.
"Currently, there are no edueation
or elllllllination requirements for the
positioiL!," Locker said. "No one is
tsklng the respoiL!ibWty for supervising the practices of those engaged
in the profession.
"Untrained people are setting up
shop, claiming to the public that .
they can solve complex problems."
'Hi! bW already has been passed .
by lhe House, and wW be heard by
the Senate Edueation and Health
Committee on Wednesday. It would
create a nine-member state board to
license and register counselors and
social workers.
The board would be required to
prepare and grade elllllllinatiOIL! for

BUT CAN · HE play dead? Tbls turkey vulture eats out of tbe baod of Joan Daniels at
lllilloili' Brookfield Zoo. Tbe young zoo keeper is trying to teacb tbe bird to respend to
.
commands.

Hostage debate begins Tuesday
By The A1180Ciated Press
The speaker of the Iranian
Parliament says debate on the U.S.
hostages will begin Tuesday, the
318th day in captivity for the 52
Americans. But two influential
Iranian religiOWI leaders said today
the regime has not dropped its
demand for an apology from the U.S.
government.
Radio Tehran said Speaker
Haaheml Rafsanjani told the Swiss
charge d'affaires in Tehran Sunday:
"A decision was made in the
Majlis (Parliament) today regar-

sent the Majlis in July by 187 some of the opinions voiced by the
congressmen who urged the release deputies.
On Friday, Ayatollah Ruhollah
of the AmeriCBIL! taken hostage last
Nov, 4 when young Islamic militants Khomeini, the leader of the Iranian
seized the U.S. Embassy In Tehran. revolution, listed four condltiDIL! for
The broadcast said the Swiss charge the release of the hostages. They did
d'affaires delivered a "follow-up let- not include the previOWI demand for
ter" from some of the u.S. an apology from the United States, a
congressmen on Sunday.
condition the Carter administration
The Majlis Foreign Affairs Com- . rejected, and U.S. observers inmittee submitted a draft of a reply to terpreted this as a hopeful sign.
But Hojatoleslam Mousavi
' the U.S. letterfor the second time on
Sunday.
Khlielnl, a member of the Majlill and
Tehran Radio said the Majlis the spiritual leader of the militants
asked the Foreign Affairs Com- holding the hostages, told the
newspaper
mittee to revise the draft to insert English-language
Tehran Times that a U.S. apology is
Emergency squad runs a basic condition for the release of
the AmeriCBIL!. He said Khomeini .
Nine calls were answered by local "listed some of the condltiDIL! for the
Police reported also that a motorrelease of the hostages but not aU of
cycle driven by Michael Salser, units over the weekend the Meigs them.' '
'
CoUllty
Emergency
Medical
SerRacine, caught fire on E. Main St.,
Hojatoleslam Sayyed Ali
vices Headquarters reports.
about 6:30 p.m. Saturday. Police
At 5:01 a.m. Sunday, the Racine Khamenei, leader of Friday prayers .
said that the front a:a:el on the vehicle . Unit took Edna Roush of Racine to in Tehran, a Mallis deputy and
broke causing It to skid and go out of
Khorneini's adviser in military afcontrol before it caught fire. Salser VeterBIL! Memorial Hospital and a fairs, also told the Tehran Times the
8:42 a.m., she was tranaferred to
escaped serious injury.
He is Pleasant Valley Hospital by the Mid- United States must apologhe.
charged with failure to register the
Khomeini's four conditions ·were
dleport Unit. At 9:15a.m., the Midplates on the vehicle.
dleport Unit ·took Sandra Powell release of Iranian assets frozen by
from Holzer Medical Center to her President Carter alter the hostages
home In ReedsvUle; 5:41; Mid- were seized Nov. 4, guarantees by
GRANTED DIVORCE
dleport
Unit, Renee Lefebre, Roote the United States that It wW not inIn Meigs County Conunon Pleas.
2,
Cheshire
to Holzer Medical Cen- terfere in Iran's intenlal affairs,
Court Walter Greg France, Rutland,
ter;
5:01,
Middleport
Unit, Danield suspe!L!ion of all U.S. cl alms againwas granted a divorce from Rita M.
Tyree,
from
Middleport
Park to st Iran and return of the ousted
·France, Myrtle Beach, S. C.
shah's wealth.
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Iran's official Pars news agency
Pomeroy Unit, 5:59 p.m., Bill
said
an Iraqi jet lighter tried to atMorris,
Union
Ave.,
to
VeterBIL!
UFEAFTER40
tack
a helicopter Rying President
Memorial
Hospital;
Rutland
Unit,
·
When you were 20, life was a lark;
Abo~
Bani.SSdr and Prime
4: 23 p.m., Alice Plants, Clifford
after 40, it appears to be more like a
Minister
Mobanunad
AU Raja! on a
Plants, Truman Hall, Brenda
hungry vulture.
inspection
tour
Saturday, bot
border
QuWen from an auto accident on
Iranian
warplanes
forced
the Iraqi
Leading Creek Road to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Monday, 7:'ST MiG to flee.
a.m., Syracuse Unit, James Roberts
from Long Hollow Road to VeterBIL!
Memorial Hospital.
ding a reply to the letter by the U.S.
Congress, and subatantial discussion
on the hostages wW begin on
Tuesday and the Majlis wW make a
decision.
"Since the U.S. CongrO!lll letter
was read oot in the Majlis and was
also covered by the press, we e:a:pect
the U.S. government to publlah .the
ten of the Majlis letter qf reply for
the American public. If it fails to do
this, it wW have shown 1¢11 lack of
good ·wru, and this wW have an adverse effect on our talks."
The "U.S. Congress· letter'' was

persons entering the professions. It
also would have to adopt
requirements for continuing
professional education as a con- .
clition for· a renewal of a license or
registration.
The panel would investigate
alleged irregularities in the practice
of counseling or social work.
In addition, the board would be
required to adopt a code of ethical
practice for the professions and set
up procedures for suspending or
revoking licenses of persons
engaged in unethical practices.
Locker said Ohio already licenses
48 other occupations and
professloiL!. Some legal regulation
for social workers is required by 23
states, and 15 states actually have
licensing lawa.
.
Locker said the qualUied
professionals and volunteer workers

Congregation

car

morning.

Area deaths
Earnie Welch
Earnle Welch, 68, Rt. 2, Albany,
died Sunday at O'Bleness Hospital,
Alhe!L!.
Mr. Welch was born in Meigs
County the son of the late Elza and
EliZabeth Harting Welch. He was a

Weekend.

• •

(continued from page 1) -

Daniel Wagner, 19; Bidwell, and
Elmus Devault, 18, Gallipolis-were
injury and taken to HMC. A
passenger in the Hash auto, Scott
Hash, age 8, claimed injury and was
transported to HMC.
Wagner was cited on a charge of
operating a vehicle with defective
brakes.
Officers investigated a twovehicle accident on U.S. 35, at the
junction of Mitchell Rd., at 11:~
a.m.
.
The patrol reports a west bound
auto operated by Thomas Saunders,
28, Gallipolis, turned into the path of
a vehicle driven by Treva Caldwell,
28, Gallipolis.
~ drivers dlaplayed visible
signs of injury and were transported
to HMC for treatment. A passenger
in the Caldwell auto, Sara Caldwell,
age 6, claimed Injury, but was not
Immediately treated.
saunders was dted on a charge of
failure to yield.
The patrol was called to the scene
of a two-vehicle accident on Nebo
Rd., just west of SR ~. at9:05 a.m, ·
Officers report ·an auto operated
by Donald canterberry, 62, Oak Hill,
went left of center to avoid a vehicle
parked on the roadway and collided
with an OIICOIIIInC auto driven by
JolmCarpenter, 21, Patriot.
An occupant of the Canterberry
vehicle, Jimmy Canterberry, 25,
OK Hill, dlaplayed visible signs of :
Injury, but was not Immediately
tr.ted.
c.nterberry wu cited on chargea
al 1Ift. af cenllr and no operator's

~-

-

STARTS

Good Thru September 21, 1980

vice."

While Quontlti.es Lost.
Quantity Rights Reserved . We a•e not ·responsible .for typographical errors. Sorry , No
dealers .

Hi! proposal also contalna a gran-

dfather clause, which means the
e:a:arnlnation requirelrienta would .
not cover any person who applied for
a license within one )'ear after the
bill's effective date.
In addition, It .contalna a aunaet
provision under which the law would ·
be repealed after four years unleas
specifically renewed by the

I

The buliding conunlttee was introduced and the 1965-fi6 church
coupcU. Making up the bulidlng
committee were Mickey WWtama,
George Baer, Ralph Pratt, AHred
Elberfeld (deceased), Harry MWer,
Kenneth Braun, and Charles EvBIL!.
Following lh!l burning of the mortgage a recttal was presented by '
Mrs. Beverly Kraly and sOIL!,
Christopher and Joseph, Jr. Mrs.
Beverly· played the plano and her
two soiL! played vioti!L!. Christopher
is.9 and Joey is 4 years of age.

IIOOSTER!l MEET THURSDAY
First meeting of the Meigs Glr!IJ
Athletic Boosters will be held Thursday night at 7:30 p.in. at the Melgil
High SchoOl. Plans wW be made for
the school year aild new off!em a will
be elected. The president, Dick
Rupe, has appealed for support of
the girls' program from not only
parents but other interested individuals. A speclallnvitaUon is extended to the parents of freahmen In'
volleyball, basketball, gymnastics,
track and softball.

ELBERFELD$

RTATOMEET
Fall meeting of the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Aasoctation wW
take place on Saturday with a luncheon at noon at the . Meigs Inn.
Reservationa are to be made at 992388'/byWednesday.
Mrs. Ethel Guthrie, Ohio
representative of the National
Retired Teachers Association, wW
be the speaker. All retired teachers '
.of the county are invited to attend.
Officers and chairmen of the local
organization attended the ORTA and
the NRTA area conference at
Marietta on Sept. 10, Districts 7, 8
and 9 were presented.
1

--

-

·- - ----

beauty brushing
will help keep your carpets
looking better ... longer.
Two-way sweeping ac• · ~ n
cleans, IIuffs up nap. • ·
!rashes your carpet :Ju ~ ·
dust pans. Thick cushion
bumper. Durable all-steel
case wo th Curry Gold
baked enamel finish.

"·"

PET BED

car-ha l"'tt
BROWN DUCK
BLANKET-LINED
COAT
~

liiiiTWILL• PIT •e.o
Jlylitfl • !elo• •on
-

~

pqry~otm cuthlon Moll·

. n.......k:. rnlktn"·prOCII •ll&lt;l

W~t~o•bl., A•IIIIPI• In uiOMM
&lt;hoo&lt;J!Gto;OIOtt.

WE HAVE THE COMPLETE
SELECTION OF CARHARlT
BROWN DUCK WORK CLOTIIES.
·clioose Brown Duc.k bib overalls, doubl
knees, copper rivets, triple seams, tool
pockets and elastic suspenders .. . .or car
penter's overalls with more pockets, swln
nail apron, etc. Examl[le the many differ
ent styles of heavy duty, rip-proof, wear
proof Brown Duck jeans, jackets, coat
and cover.alls, too. Come in and se
these gutsy work outfits that hav
got to give you a lift. All tOO% cotton
Preshrunk. Machine Washable.

NILSON' I

__,""""".·. lEN'S THERMAL ~ J
--t BOOT SOCKS .. -,

IIG. t7, r7

CARDGA.ME

2PIJ$2ll

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
LUMITRON Ill
BLOOD PRESSURE KIT

WITH OR WITHOUT COVER SHIELD

•22 Watt circline Fluorescent bulb will
last fo r years.
•Bulb includ ed .

0e11Qnlld lor onl ·t'Dnd opltrot ion ond WOr! Onted OCCUIOIII , lUMilRQN I( Ill il ihe knell
1tote-ol -tfle-o r t battery PQwered tle( tr o nlt lo. lt !hot f ore~•• dotu owoy w ith the neocllo• Q
1epo ro te ate thCO.(t)9e . V•••otile ot home . o!lrte or trovel monitor th l1 marvel ol m k roclr
(u itry enobl" thl u1er to tol.e o complete reod lng In lull unde r two minu l"

With Shield

$1
'899

Without Shield

The Farmers Bank,
a Meigs County bank
for Meigs .County people
owned and opera~ed
by Meigs County people.
.'FB !;, :' ·~·FaJ•,JtleJ.$1·

Bank··

The Community &lt;hVned '·Banl
'('

.

,p~~~:

.,

H0. 1tJI.TO

Bi-swing action back. Warm .
Weatherproof .
Snaps for
mate hi ng hood.
·

.

~~~~e:;'r::~!::

MILlON'S tiiG.

•

ON PRESIDENT'S LIST
President's List honors were ear·
ned by Toni Hudson, Racine, at the
Clay Cline Bums, 78, Middleport,
Pairicta Steve!L! Career College and
died Sunday at VeterBIL! Memorial
Finishing School for the SIUillller
Hospital.
session just concluded.
Mr. Bums was a son of the late .
Miss Hudson achieved a 4.0 grade
Walter C. and Maude Swearingen average in the fashion mer- .
Burns. He was born Oct. 31, 1901 at
chandlsing course for the tenn, June '
Wheelersburg in Scioto County. He
16 through Aug. 22. Sbe is . the
was also preceded in death by his fir- daughter of Mrs. Blondena M. Hudst wife, Violet, in 198G, a brother and son, Racine, and is scheduled to
two sisters.
graduate from her nine month acSurviving are his wife, Trula Mae credited fashion merchandlaing
Boram BuriL!; a son, DonBld Eugene .course in March, 1981.
1
Burns of Minford, and a grandlI
daughter, Donna Jean Burns, Min- ·
VI!.'TERANIIMI!;MORIAL
ford . .
Saturday Adrnl.sslona-Fred Mack,
Mr. Burns was a member of the Cheshire; Richard DeMoss,
Methodist Church at Stockdale. He Pomeroy;
Terrence Conlin,
was a member of the United Corn:- Rutland; Dwight Burton, Midmerctal Travela Truck Drivers dleport; Dennis McKinney,
ASsociation. · He was employed by Rutland; Kathy Perrine, Mid- I
... 1.
the State d. Ohio before lis I dleport
. '
1
retirement and at one time had been
Saturday Discharged-Wilma 1
a deputy sheriff.
GUrnore, James Buchanan, Sharon I
..
Funeral services wW be held at 2 .Wright, Mildred Gaul, Edward I ·
,..
p.m. WedneSday at the Stockdale Deem, Myrna Beaver, Robert Wood.
·;r·
' "
·,,.
Methodist Church with the Rev.
·
sWxJay
Admilsion8-Edna
Roush,
'.
Mark McClung ofllctating. Burial
·..
Racine; Leo Johnlon, Gallipolis; .·
·.
' .•
will be In the Stockdale Cemetery.
Frances
Adkins,
Minersvllle;
Friends may call at the Rawlings- '
. Po~roy, OhM. ·
Coab-Biower Funeral Home fnm 2 WWtam Morris, Pomeroy; Daniel
."
Tyree, Middleport.
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday. The
·f
body will be talt;en to the church to ,
'
M. ....
lie In lltate one.hour before the Wed- :
..-lay service.
Chapman,EdnaROWih.
j1
1 . ·.;_~-----=------:----:--"!'----:--_.:.___.:..,___·1
.
•

Clay Cline Burns

YOUR
CHOICE

DAISY ASW~~:.-=-·
daily

. I

retired employe of Ohio University.
He is survived by his wife, Kay
Haniung Welch; me son Donald
Welch, Dayton; si:a: daughters, Betty
Shorter, Sparta; Eileen Seyy,
Athens; Patsy Malone and Pauline
Stout both of Lancaster; Dolly Hawk
and Barbara Crabtree both of
Albany; 12 grandchildren, si:a: great
grandchidren; two slters, Lovey
Stanley, Pomeroy and Bertie
MiWgan, Athens; one brother,
Raymotld Welch, Athens; one halfbrother, Frankie Douglas, Pomeroy..
Funeral services wW be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Bigony- ·
Jordan Funeral Home, Albany, with
the Rev. John Palmer offlctatlng.
Burial wW be in Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Tuesday from 2 to 4and 7 to 9.

TOD~Y

.Le~t)lre.

!Continued from page 1)

Vandals hit two stations
Pomeroy Police are investigating
damages to large plate glass windows at two Pomeroy service
statiOIL!.
Police said windows were e:a:tenslvely damaged apparently by
being shot out at Loa's Ashland
Station and the Sunoco Station, both
on W. Main St. Damages were
cllscovered,Sunday morning.
Police also said there were minor
damag~ to two cars in an accident
on Lincoln Heights when a
driven by Lydia Johl190n, Middleport, backed fnm a driveway
and struck a parked vehicle. Police
also Investigating e:a:tensive
damages to a car owned by Arthur
Beegle, Racine. Police state that the
vehicle was apparenUy .struck by
another car near CroW' s Steak
HOuse, W. Main St., early Sunday

With whom he lias talked believe
that licensure will improve services.
He said more than 20 otganizatiopa
have volcecl support for the blli.
'l'he veteran lawmaker ilakf the
professlOIL! covered by the meuui-e
can have a great impact.
"Consider the nwnber of ilgenciell
that employ counselor and social '
workers. Consider the types of
problem8 enCOIUitered by members
of our society and the real need for
this service," he said. "I believe the
impact is great enough for us to be
concerned aboot the qualifications
of the people providing thla ser-

Red Driveway
Marken
..
•Reflective

19°

NBION'I-.W

'

MORTON HOUSE

.
•

I•

1t

-~,;~
~~

lllf ITIW

40% Wool
40% Acrylic
20~. Nylon

,,~
NILSON'IUG. $1.27

\

-.xmMIAI

' 11'/t Oz.

'YOUI CHOICI
INOIAVY

ll•
...-s-.w

....~J.totM!.
~-~nr
,)

•""&lt;

... , ,.
....

. \'
'

�----- ...----

·• .
M'm!~ !I..!:CT~tiNCS .

-- -

------ ---

•

'

ELECTROIIC FOO BILL·

ELECTROIIC BISEBILL
You're at the bat. lulit In campvter ploys
defenll and controls the pitches.
Featur• two playing speeds and
slmulat.d IOUnd effects for home runs,
hits. strlkft. 01111 and game end. Play ' - - - - - - - - - - '

wesrBEND®

4 QT SLOW COOKER
I

. ou
control the offens ; lhe
built-in computer n trols the defense. Cui!
Run tor the Daylight!
Score~ TO and helt the
"victory " charge . Comes
tully assembled with
automati~ digital scoreboard, built-in sound

• Slow cooking brings out
the lull llavor of meats
and vegetables
• Separate cooking pot is
immersible and dishwashersale.

effects, precision lena.

• " See-thru " cover lets you
watch food cooking .

• Handsome almond and
brown exterior.

high speed LED display.
etectronir. nrinted
circuit

SET

Iaiii

NELSON'S REG . $18.99

99

~899

NILSON'S RIO ••31.M

a

NII.ION'I 1110.

DOI'l TIP liiE WAITER &amp;liE

NILSON'S RIO. U9.M

WESTBEND ,

"·"

Fun For Kids

AUTOMATIC
9 CUP ANYTIME PERK
5 to 9 cup
Automatic Perk
• Brews great -tasting coftee automatic temperature

NELSON'S RIG. S4.29

control maintains proper
serving temperature.

CRAYONS
•12 Muppe1 Colors

18. Cholks

4 Colors
Special
Maldlng Tool

'" 8 Colon
YO~.IR

....... _...-..

CHOICE

'149

ASST .
TRUCKS
AND

)

$399

/

•

NELSON'S REG. SS...

~1;):~·~

NILSON'S RIG, $1.79

f

MUPPETS

t~.li-

FIGURINE PAINTING KIT

1

BEACH BLENDER

~

•Jottl

;~~:;~r

•Easy &amp; fun to point

lec;:t.

•

,~

~

t¢

·~

!!!;;;;~~

NILSON'S AIO.

NELSON'S REG . $12.99

''Hands Free" operationposition can, pre5s lever, let
go-it shuts off automatically

$1 011

ILLE REDENBACHER'S -

YG,OURMET POPCORN

'

NILSON'S
REG. n3,99

n•."

•Mos f every kernel pops.
•Lorge si ze for family

,

i-."'l
~
, ·· , , ·N-:~
,';~
'9

30 Oz.

Tho po werful hair dryer that lolds lnio a com• pOCI ttOIItlf&amp;r . It ha$ 1250 WO!IS ol &gt;~9r~Oti l e
drying power. .. yet l!'s so lightwe•gtl! onl:l
smoll . Phxe it on your tabl A ond ityle you r
hoir us ing both hand 1. Unlo ld !he hondlv and
Uie il as o pi s tol dry ttr. .. fold 1lur han d le it
toke s no roo m ol all in your suitcose Style
'/0" ' hair anywhere In 1he wo1ld ... il operoles
on 110 o• 210 vol ts . Vo§JObond 1~50. the ideal
!ra 11eling com panion from Conair.

NILSON'S 110.
$11."

'

'. .

~, ,

PAPERMAID

I ALL

$1099

wid e travel • Swivel Cord - for ta ngle tree
styling • Ready Dot • Full 1 year warrantY;

in food

$1J99 ~~
.'

. .

NELSON'S REG. $13.M

styling • Dual Vol toge- 120/240v for world-

for cleaning

...__ --.,v

$

• Brush Release - hair spins free for no more
tangles • Mist - to help set hair and prevent drying • Cool Tip - for two handed

• Handy cord storace
.
• Durable Leun honl housmg
, , Magnet holdolids from falling

~~:~~v:ble
cutting unit

--~~~
'&gt;, ,,

World's most popular football. Soft, foam ·
'4 size football that's easier to pass and
catcti because It's easier to grip. Ages
6-up.

~

•44 Oz .

~L~

NERF
POOYIALL

,.

~-lk

NILSON:S RIO. tz.jt

tl'-\Jlr

•7 Spee

[
•

•Snap Open Crumb Troy
•Almond Bodv With Brown
• ' ' End Panels &amp; Florol
· Applique

· ~- - ·~~:~~~~;~~·~~l~ovabl•

d

-·

· ' ~·

•Six muppets to col·

•

· ~

' ·

# z ·

•B read Brain Control

Special Features:

~~g~2)

·,P:~j&gt; t~ HAM,.ILTO. N~,:.;J~
; '~.&gt;

PROCTOR-SILEX

TOASTER

CURLY PLUS . .·: ,
CURLING BRUSH

FIRE ENGINE
NILSON'S RIG. $1.59

$13.99

NORELCO ~(·,

• Color Crafted
•A luminum

YOUR
CHOICI

NELSON'S REG.

• Safety lock -on cover;
Polished Aluminum.

•2 '/ ,' Ot. Co'p acity

CARS

VehiCle•
Vehicles especially
designed for preschoolers. Chunky die·
cast vehicles with
rounded edges and
corners. Six other
FIRST WHEELS
Vehicles also available,
each sold separately.

CHALK &amp;
litASIR

CLAY

~ © Mattei. Inc. 1980

,.IS'"

SESAME STREET

REGAL TEA KETTLE

PlltabMll

XM".r::IL Prelchool

2 SLICE
1~J.1!l6J

NELSON'S REG. $1.77

COFFEE FILTERS
.

•Fits most Auto. drip
cotfeemokers

'3''

TRIPLE PLAY

CASSETTES

'

NILSON'S

PEICIL PAL

"·"
JAM PAC

100 Count

7 IN 1
TOOL KIT

REG.
NILSON'S

REG.

$2.1t

c

SHOPPING CART

FAMILY

CARS
,....

•Complete set of
interchargeable
tools with master
handle

STAPLE &amp;U

non-to•lc

SPICE RACK

DO-IT· YOURSELF

lor

P£NCILS
P£NSi

77e
N Min lach Tape

NILSON'S
110.

•lor home
•handyman
•muhf-purpose

ERASERS.etc.

Asst.

CONTAINS
• SPICE JARS

lleoabl..olt

olatlk

WICKER-LIKE BASKETS

PHOTO FRAME

Sizes and
styles

NILSON'S

"'

110.

25%

$4,"

NELSON'S REG. 12.95

OFF

NILSON'S RIG....

Make quick work
of tacking!
6mm
&gt;
Smm staples .

3 Pack

ggc

DUTY

photos

Coat Cars

!

NILSON'S

Soldering Iron

.

~J

RtO. ll.M

• Fast heat

NILSON'S 110. "·"

• Light weight
• UL listed
• BIIJ!ellte handle

• For general repairs
,•
• hobbyists
~
• homeowners, etc. '
~
• A 9.95 value
·
'

\

'

~~~··
....... Nl~!~:o.~
.
~
*
...."
~

..;~·~··

~·

COPPER

•6 \12' High
•Asst. Styles

IASKIII TIPE
•Faet Air for any In·
JOL........

•Watarproof aeala
heating and air
conilltlon lng
ducts.
•For all Types of ·
General Repair,

•'Y•" • N

NIILIOitl 110.

'"''

NELSON 'S REO. st.•t

DUST PU

Yda.

LADIES

VELO

SLIPPERS

ASST. SIZES &amp; COLORS

lln.xll YDI.

ll'

n•

MUSICAL
FIGURINES

Justen

Aut. Dla

NELSON'S 110.

PORCELAIN

NILSON'S 110. U.4.

NII.ION'I 110.

'7''

•Hold5 6
in5tamOtic

NELSON'S REG. 711' TO '5"

HEAVY

llatablo
•2 lt. pvmp hooo

PHOtO BLOCK

ASST.

~gLgtll

59~ELSON'SRIO.
A

NILSON'S REG.

n ...

89'
J_. . .~

NILSON'S

�----- ...----

·• .
M'm!~ !I..!:CT~tiNCS .

-- -

------ ---

•

'

ELECTROIIC FOO BILL·

ELECTROIIC BISEBILL
You're at the bat. lulit In campvter ploys
defenll and controls the pitches.
Featur• two playing speeds and
slmulat.d IOUnd effects for home runs,
hits. strlkft. 01111 and game end. Play ' - - - - - - - - - - '

wesrBEND®

4 QT SLOW COOKER
I

. ou
control the offens ; lhe
built-in computer n trols the defense. Cui!
Run tor the Daylight!
Score~ TO and helt the
"victory " charge . Comes
tully assembled with
automati~ digital scoreboard, built-in sound

• Slow cooking brings out
the lull llavor of meats
and vegetables
• Separate cooking pot is
immersible and dishwashersale.

effects, precision lena.

• " See-thru " cover lets you
watch food cooking .

• Handsome almond and
brown exterior.

high speed LED display.
etectronir. nrinted
circuit

SET

Iaiii

NELSON'S REG . $18.99

99

~899

NILSON'S RIO ••31.M

a

NII.ION'I 1110.

DOI'l TIP liiE WAITER &amp;liE

NILSON'S RIO. U9.M

WESTBEND ,

"·"

Fun For Kids

AUTOMATIC
9 CUP ANYTIME PERK
5 to 9 cup
Automatic Perk
• Brews great -tasting coftee automatic temperature

NELSON'S RIG. S4.29

control maintains proper
serving temperature.

CRAYONS
•12 Muppe1 Colors

18. Cholks

4 Colors
Special
Maldlng Tool

'" 8 Colon
YO~.IR

....... _...-..

CHOICE

'149

ASST .
TRUCKS
AND

)

$399

/

•

NELSON'S REG. SS...

~1;):~·~

NILSON'S RIG, $1.79

f

MUPPETS

t~.li-

FIGURINE PAINTING KIT

1

BEACH BLENDER

~

•Jottl

;~~:;~r

•Easy &amp; fun to point

lec;:t.

•

,~

~

t¢

·~

!!!;;;;~~

NILSON'S AIO.

NELSON'S REG . $12.99

''Hands Free" operationposition can, pre5s lever, let
go-it shuts off automatically

$1 011

ILLE REDENBACHER'S -

YG,OURMET POPCORN

'

NILSON'S
REG. n3,99

n•."

•Mos f every kernel pops.
•Lorge si ze for family

,

i-."'l
~
, ·· , , ·N-:~
,';~
'9

30 Oz.

Tho po werful hair dryer that lolds lnio a com• pOCI ttOIItlf&amp;r . It ha$ 1250 WO!IS ol &gt;~9r~Oti l e
drying power. .. yet l!'s so lightwe•gtl! onl:l
smoll . Phxe it on your tabl A ond ityle you r
hoir us ing both hand 1. Unlo ld !he hondlv and
Uie il as o pi s tol dry ttr. .. fold 1lur han d le it
toke s no roo m ol all in your suitcose Style
'/0" ' hair anywhere In 1he wo1ld ... il operoles
on 110 o• 210 vol ts . Vo§JObond 1~50. the ideal
!ra 11eling com panion from Conair.

NILSON'S 110.
$11."

'

'. .

~, ,

PAPERMAID

I ALL

$1099

wid e travel • Swivel Cord - for ta ngle tree
styling • Ready Dot • Full 1 year warrantY;

in food

$1J99 ~~
.'

. .

NELSON'S REG. $13.M

styling • Dual Vol toge- 120/240v for world-

for cleaning

...__ --.,v

$

• Brush Release - hair spins free for no more
tangles • Mist - to help set hair and prevent drying • Cool Tip - for two handed

• Handy cord storace
.
• Durable Leun honl housmg
, , Magnet holdolids from falling

~~:~~v:ble
cutting unit

--~~~
'&gt;, ,,

World's most popular football. Soft, foam ·
'4 size football that's easier to pass and
catcti because It's easier to grip. Ages
6-up.

~

•44 Oz .

~L~

NERF
POOYIALL

,.

~-lk

NILSON:S RIO. tz.jt

tl'-\Jlr

•7 Spee

[
•

•Snap Open Crumb Troy
•Almond Bodv With Brown
• ' ' End Panels &amp; Florol
· Applique

· ~- - ·~~:~~~~;~~·~~l~ovabl•

d

-·

· ' ~·

•Six muppets to col·

•

· ~

' ·

# z ·

•B read Brain Control

Special Features:

~~g~2)

·,P:~j&gt; t~ HAM,.ILTO. N~,:.;J~
; '~.&gt;

PROCTOR-SILEX

TOASTER

CURLY PLUS . .·: ,
CURLING BRUSH

FIRE ENGINE
NILSON'S RIG. $1.59

$13.99

NORELCO ~(·,

• Color Crafted
•A luminum

YOUR
CHOICI

NELSON'S REG.

• Safety lock -on cover;
Polished Aluminum.

•2 '/ ,' Ot. Co'p acity

CARS

VehiCle•
Vehicles especially
designed for preschoolers. Chunky die·
cast vehicles with
rounded edges and
corners. Six other
FIRST WHEELS
Vehicles also available,
each sold separately.

CHALK &amp;
litASIR

CLAY

~ © Mattei. Inc. 1980

,.IS'"

SESAME STREET

REGAL TEA KETTLE

PlltabMll

XM".r::IL Prelchool

2 SLICE
1~J.1!l6J

NELSON'S REG. $1.77

COFFEE FILTERS
.

•Fits most Auto. drip
cotfeemokers

'3''

TRIPLE PLAY

CASSETTES

'

NILSON'S

PEICIL PAL

"·"
JAM PAC

100 Count

7 IN 1
TOOL KIT

REG.
NILSON'S

REG.

$2.1t

c

SHOPPING CART

FAMILY

CARS
,....

•Complete set of
interchargeable
tools with master
handle

STAPLE &amp;U

non-to•lc

SPICE RACK

DO-IT· YOURSELF

lor

P£NCILS
P£NSi

77e
N Min lach Tape

NILSON'S
110.

•lor home
•handyman
•muhf-purpose

ERASERS.etc.

Asst.

CONTAINS
• SPICE JARS

lleoabl..olt

olatlk

WICKER-LIKE BASKETS

PHOTO FRAME

Sizes and
styles

NILSON'S

"'

110.

25%

$4,"

NELSON'S REG. 12.95

OFF

NILSON'S RIG....

Make quick work
of tacking!
6mm
&gt;
Smm staples .

3 Pack

ggc

DUTY

photos

Coat Cars

!

NILSON'S

Soldering Iron

.

~J

RtO. ll.M

• Fast heat

NILSON'S 110. "·"

• Light weight
• UL listed
• BIIJ!ellte handle

• For general repairs
,•
• hobbyists
~
• homeowners, etc. '
~
• A 9.95 value
·
'

\

'

~~~··
....... Nl~!~:o.~
.
~
*
...."
~

..;~·~··

~·

COPPER

•6 \12' High
•Asst. Styles

IASKIII TIPE
•Faet Air for any In·
JOL........

•Watarproof aeala
heating and air
conilltlon lng
ducts.
•For all Types of ·
General Repair,

•'Y•" • N

NIILIOitl 110.

'"''

NELSON 'S REO. st.•t

DUST PU

Yda.

LADIES

VELO

SLIPPERS

ASST. SIZES &amp; COLORS

lln.xll YDI.

ll'

n•

MUSICAL
FIGURINES

Justen

Aut. Dla

NELSON'S 110.

PORCELAIN

NILSON'S 110. U.4.

NII.ION'I 110.

'7''

•Hold5 6
in5tamOtic

NELSON'S REG. 711' TO '5"

HEAVY

llatablo
•2 lt. pvmp hooo

PHOtO BLOCK

ASST.

~gLgtll

59~ELSON'SRIO.
A

NILSON'S REG.

n ...

89'
J_. . .~

NILSON'S

�•

ASPERGUM

DES ITIN

GILLETTE

DES IT IN
OINTMENT

MEDICATED HAND LOTION

Clean
Baby Fresh
Scent

~ oil

ourt:t

c

SEE COUPON FOR DETAILS
.
• Tradtma~ 01 The Dow ChtfJ'IICII Company

CEPASTAT

CEPACOL

LOZENGES FOR
CHILDREN

And Gorgle

Absorbs Wetness • Absorbs Odor

~
corn

344hil

starch

sW

I Oz.

for Sore Throat

1~

24 Oz.

I

'\

24 Oz.

You Never
Outgrow ."

L

. ... FOR CHILDREN

I ... 1Mrllll·llllltlll111111 . .

aac

.

'

PLAYING CARDS

NAIL GLAZE

J!l . .

•Rose Petal
•Lemon .Blossom
•Alpine Meadow
•Autumn Harvest

I'

~-

NELSON'S REG. 39' EA.

ORNE X
DECOIIESTIIT
lllLIESIC

'

24 CAPSULIS

nal

c

YOUirCHOICf

.

----. ggc

•u•

NILSON'S REG. H'

REfRIGERATOR

NELSON'S REG.

CC;

1.75 oz.

'-

Puff
•Lemon

FRENCH GLOSS
LIP PENCIL

BUY

SIVIRAL

NELSON 'S REG. 12.59

Exclusivopotveoter ma1eriat.
• Stays soft. freSh and absorbent
will no! harden .
Super
to rinse clean .
• Scrubber material will not ·

SHAMPOO

•••v

1

34 O:t.

n .23

lOOTHBRUSH
HOLDER
An Opf*Jiing occe11ory for any both, thla
Toothbrush "yolet" 1tore1 five toothbrushes

Inviting flair design in to·
day's most popular size.
made
of
lustrous
thickwelled · styrene .
Dishwasher sale.

$181

NILSON'S
REG. n.7t

NILSON'S
IIG. S2,1t

convenl•ntly· and sanitarily
tranaporent cover which doubles

under a
01 a water

tumbler. Tllo Toothbruoh Holder lo molded In
lustrous styrene. the long-lasting llnlsh that
does not corrode rust or peel .

MAYiiLLINI

LIP I IIIL

TWO-WAY PEDESTAL

VANITY MIRROR
At the flick of a finger, this
vanity fashion mirror changes ·
to a mognlty, ing mirror. tilted
to any desired angle for con·
venient VIewing . 'It's sturdy,
light-weight construction of

durable

polished

99

c

VALUES TO 7t' lA.

---1' ..- -

$239
NILSON'S - ·

n.n

NELSON'S RIG. S5.79

UIICIP YITIIIIS

S,eolal F...... fer
htln ....le...

IITICID TABLETS

..,..1111111

Dally mulllrtllmle
In 111\"IO·IIte tallllllllnn.

Unicap(li) T
90 + 30

FREE

..,•••..
•Tablets

-

High potency formula
for daily supple!ll8ntation of
vitamins, minerals, and iron.

•Capsules

3llort Fret

••, 90
Iii 31
•ore free.

NEI.$0N'S

.IQ. st.

It

NELSON'S RIG. S3.7t

No more slruggling with unwieldy extra caps!
No more smears.or smudges!.

INTRODUCING:
L'OR~

QUICK&amp;
·SHINY ..

COVER GIRL
NOXEMA
PROFESSIONAL MASC
SKIN CREAM
3 Shades ·

•4 Oz.
•Greaseless

YOUR CHOICE

•Medicated

ggc
NELSON'S RIG. n.t7
NELSON'S REG. $1.47

NILSON'S REG. t2.5.

I.:OREAL:
1PREFERENCE!

IOLDEI IUTUII
SPRAY COLOGNE

"Because
Worth It" '

8Y MA TCHAIILLI

Formulated to help
dry, red. rough
hands
Concentrated. Use
very little.

All
the

SHAMPOO

crispness
of loll.

.
Preference •

NELSON'S
REG. 12.9t

NILSON'S .IG.

Shijdes lor glor •ous

las:.ng colo&lt;.

SS.1t

$

u

NUDIT

CIQII IIIII IEIOIER

hesh

249
· ll.47

NilSON'S IIIG. fl .P

OLD SPICE
STICK DEODORIIT

...

FOR LEIS

~.~~

IOnyer

N!LSOf1!'S -

MAYIELLINE
MAGIC MASCARA

f h .... 1'011 'Jhii iiQI! 10
PhJI('renoo t-fa•ICOIOr
Loc~s "'color t' t&gt;II 'S

Permanent C~e- ln
twrcolor
27 eas., ·to-am&gt;l)

@ltl~·
REGULAR
ONLY

Creamy

c

long·Mitlflg
hpel ~lo;

•••

penc•l

styrene

Beaulif111 .
Na1l Color

IIGULAR
PltiCI Sl.45

$ 99

COLOR DUO

protect•
""'

.NILSON'S

110.

'-

n.H

'" ••.,

3 Oz.
REGULAR PRICE

•N"'"' treatments for

U.ll

unwanted hatr.
remove it gentl~ swihly, beautifully.
bleach it to invtsibility.
smooth, smooth skin on legs
I Nr..., Specially priced.
· ·

Helena Rubinstein
The Scieit::e

I

NELSON'$ RIG. It'

ROLAIDS

~

makes if Ideal for use as o
hand mirror,

2 Packs For

•

NELSON'S REG.

2 Treatments

$119
.

Styles
and Sizes

C&amp;PSUus

$149 .

2 Oz.

1S 01.
YOUit CHOICE

NELSON'S REG, 79'

•Asst.

11'1

TABLnS

1 01.

YOUR
CHOICE

c

r-

•Regular
•Natural
Henna

SPONGE
. OR
SCRUBBER

•

TUMBLER

ggc

Ell IORWEIIII
FORIUU Hill CREAl

harm non·stick cook ing surfacH.

NILSON'S REG. 91'

REG. :17'

.

.,.,

NELSON'S RIG. U.7t
NILSON'S
REG. H '

NELSON'S REG.

SAFETY LOCK CM'

NELSON'S REG. t1.97

while conditioning cuticles
with natu ra l jojoba oil.

16 01.

~

Dsodor;zes . . Freshens

OffEI! E!tfltii!S........., 31, 1811

eow cn.ma~ Cornpwty

NILSON'S

PtJflt !IIANGE FUiftiR

With exclusive push·button top
you can use 9\len with wet nails.
Does all five nails at once.
Dramat ically speeds drying time

•Dry Cleaner
Conditioner

•
· VANISH
. QA.Ma es .
rm
BOWL CLEANER r-----:;;;;;::::::-::....;;::...,

VANiSH \
cnm.~
~
r)
-rre. · ·-

•Powder Mist
•Fresh Mint
•Ultra Scent

restrichd

REOIICfS.FEVER FAST

HEALIH AND BEAUT:Y -AIDS -

•Powder

~DlaJ•d
rubbei
e·
•
hi

YANISH BOWL FRESHENER

-

·rr~ ot rht

, ... One ... -

01ttr VOid Whirl prOhbttd. taxed Of

NILSON'S RIG, S1.7t

FOR CARPETS

YOUR
CHOICE

n• EA.

.

lndiel rr "i•, IN

~ CAP'SUL£5

NELSON'S RIG.
$3.27

PLUSH

ROOM DEODORIZER

2 In
A
PACK

NELSON'S REG. 96'

P.O. IIo.&lt;227

ZIP

Y. Oz.

Duralion

I
I
II
I
I

OHtr Elf~ive August 1. 1980

SINUSITIS &lt;1~
&amp;R.U .
•

L'OREAL

STICK UP DEODORIZERS

c

STA

MillO: ~ulliptt Vitar"nitt Of*

COLDS

NELSON'S REG. 11.39

AIRWICK

Softens Hands

"""""
CITY

.,

YOUR CHOICE

NELSON•s &amp; NANCARRow•s
22 Oz.

... _ .................._,.., .. 13 .001 - •-~· ....... --

75's

...........

NILION'I
110.

PALMOLIVE
DISHWISHIII LIQUID

c~. You will rlaive b¥ ,.... ct.dl' b

•Relief
fast
•Regular
•Spearmint
•Wintergreen

Glossy hard finish for
· chip-resistant nails .

.

CHAPSTICK
LIP BALM

. . ~Vitamin~ drdld, PlUS flit~

I
I

n .M

glaze

~a·
a
e
The 2-•·
Ai~

oiZ• o1

liD ....111 t• EIIIIW, T.._., SlrM.It 1.,._, ~X. Cough Formulli . or Cough I rdd Forn'IUIII and

36
TAM.ITS

relief

NILSON'S
REG. U.l9

BATH ·SIZE

llnlu

To-,....
-1"1' .. 13.001 . ..., tho-..,. .. ...,_
_,...,..,
........ _ .. _ .. ..._ ........___ ..,.._.....,.............

•12 Hour

NELSON'S RIG. 9t'

r===~--~--~~~--.-~~----~--~~~ .
TWICE AS FRESH
BI&lt;;YCLE
QUENCHER
PI
GOLD
·

ISPIRII Fll

NELSON'S REG. n.53

NELSON'S REG. 12.97

AIR FRESHENER

NASAL SPRAy

NILSON'S
RIG. 11.27

30 TABLETS

NILSON'S REG. $2,17

DEODORANT SOAP

I
I
I
I
I.
I
I
I

2 01.

NELSON'S REG.

11'1
Sugar Free

ST .JOSEPH
DOclli&lt;S rec~mosl.

lllllr l.lllt·C.

/COLD
ST.JOSEPH
TABLETS

)[

" It's A Feeling

$169

Mouthwash

Be Ready

baby
powder

DURATION

~--------------------~
CENTRIUM
S T • JOSEPH~::=:::::. COUIH STRESSTABS
IULTI-VITAIII
COLD TABLETS
SYRUP
600
FOR CHILDREN
IULTI-IIIERIL

NELSON'S REG. $1.67

NELSON'S REG. $2.29

NELSON'S REG. U.77

baby corn starch

~ ·

Buy any Novehlatlne"'
product and get a bottle of
multiple vitamins free

·

CHOICE

'

r· i-~EL~SD~IJS~IciiCiiiciW;S .,

I

age

YOUR

'

•Tile 0110 chllllret't

4V• 01.

16's

I

:.

News!

10 Oz.

•Cherry
•Orange

~

IUP to S3.00 refund by 1111111

I

•

tUM

,-

GOOD IEWS RAZORS :

O!NTM£Mf
u: co •liUOlll ED IY oocrou

'

d Boo.lty

NILSON'S REG•S7.7t

-·

Collt -

·-

~

..

--

3¥. Oz.
NILSON'S
RIG.

"·••

�•

ASPERGUM

DES ITIN

GILLETTE

DES IT IN
OINTMENT

MEDICATED HAND LOTION

Clean
Baby Fresh
Scent

~ oil

ourt:t

c

SEE COUPON FOR DETAILS
.
• Tradtma~ 01 The Dow ChtfJ'IICII Company

CEPASTAT

CEPACOL

LOZENGES FOR
CHILDREN

And Gorgle

Absorbs Wetness • Absorbs Odor

~
corn

344hil

starch

sW

I Oz.

for Sore Throat

1~

24 Oz.

I

'\

24 Oz.

You Never
Outgrow ."

L

. ... FOR CHILDREN

I ... 1Mrllll·llllltlll111111 . .

aac

.

'

PLAYING CARDS

NAIL GLAZE

J!l . .

•Rose Petal
•Lemon .Blossom
•Alpine Meadow
•Autumn Harvest

I'

~-

NELSON'S REG. 39' EA.

ORNE X
DECOIIESTIIT
lllLIESIC

'

24 CAPSULIS

nal

c

YOUirCHOICf

.

----. ggc

•u•

NILSON'S REG. H'

REfRIGERATOR

NELSON'S REG.

CC;

1.75 oz.

'-

Puff
•Lemon

FRENCH GLOSS
LIP PENCIL

BUY

SIVIRAL

NELSON 'S REG. 12.59

Exclusivopotveoter ma1eriat.
• Stays soft. freSh and absorbent
will no! harden .
Super
to rinse clean .
• Scrubber material will not ·

SHAMPOO

•••v

1

34 O:t.

n .23

lOOTHBRUSH
HOLDER
An Opf*Jiing occe11ory for any both, thla
Toothbrush "yolet" 1tore1 five toothbrushes

Inviting flair design in to·
day's most popular size.
made
of
lustrous
thickwelled · styrene .
Dishwasher sale.

$181

NILSON'S
REG. n.7t

NILSON'S
IIG. S2,1t

convenl•ntly· and sanitarily
tranaporent cover which doubles

under a
01 a water

tumbler. Tllo Toothbruoh Holder lo molded In
lustrous styrene. the long-lasting llnlsh that
does not corrode rust or peel .

MAYiiLLINI

LIP I IIIL

TWO-WAY PEDESTAL

VANITY MIRROR
At the flick of a finger, this
vanity fashion mirror changes ·
to a mognlty, ing mirror. tilted
to any desired angle for con·
venient VIewing . 'It's sturdy,
light-weight construction of

durable

polished

99

c

VALUES TO 7t' lA.

---1' ..- -

$239
NILSON'S - ·

n.n

NELSON'S RIG. S5.79

UIICIP YITIIIIS

S,eolal F...... fer
htln ....le...

IITICID TABLETS

..,..1111111

Dally mulllrtllmle
In 111\"IO·IIte tallllllllnn.

Unicap(li) T
90 + 30

FREE

..,•••..
•Tablets

-

High potency formula
for daily supple!ll8ntation of
vitamins, minerals, and iron.

•Capsules

3llort Fret

••, 90
Iii 31
•ore free.

NEI.$0N'S

.IQ. st.

It

NELSON'S RIG. S3.7t

No more slruggling with unwieldy extra caps!
No more smears.or smudges!.

INTRODUCING:
L'OR~

QUICK&amp;
·SHINY ..

COVER GIRL
NOXEMA
PROFESSIONAL MASC
SKIN CREAM
3 Shades ·

•4 Oz.
•Greaseless

YOUR CHOICE

•Medicated

ggc
NELSON'S RIG. n.t7
NELSON'S REG. $1.47

NILSON'S REG. t2.5.

I.:OREAL:
1PREFERENCE!

IOLDEI IUTUII
SPRAY COLOGNE

"Because
Worth It" '

8Y MA TCHAIILLI

Formulated to help
dry, red. rough
hands
Concentrated. Use
very little.

All
the

SHAMPOO

crispness
of loll.

.
Preference •

NELSON'S
REG. 12.9t

NILSON'S .IG.

Shijdes lor glor •ous

las:.ng colo&lt;.

SS.1t

$

u

NUDIT

CIQII IIIII IEIOIER

hesh

249
· ll.47

NilSON'S IIIG. fl .P

OLD SPICE
STICK DEODORIIT

...

FOR LEIS

~.~~

IOnyer

N!LSOf1!'S -

MAYIELLINE
MAGIC MASCARA

f h .... 1'011 'Jhii iiQI! 10
PhJI('renoo t-fa•ICOIOr
Loc~s "'color t' t&gt;II 'S

Permanent C~e- ln
twrcolor
27 eas., ·to-am&gt;l)

@ltl~·
REGULAR
ONLY

Creamy

c

long·Mitlflg
hpel ~lo;

•••

penc•l

styrene

Beaulif111 .
Na1l Color

IIGULAR
PltiCI Sl.45

$ 99

COLOR DUO

protect•
""'

.NILSON'S

110.

'-

n.H

'" ••.,

3 Oz.
REGULAR PRICE

•N"'"' treatments for

U.ll

unwanted hatr.
remove it gentl~ swihly, beautifully.
bleach it to invtsibility.
smooth, smooth skin on legs
I Nr..., Specially priced.
· ·

Helena Rubinstein
The Scieit::e

I

NELSON'$ RIG. It'

ROLAIDS

~

makes if Ideal for use as o
hand mirror,

2 Packs For

•

NELSON'S REG.

2 Treatments

$119
.

Styles
and Sizes

C&amp;PSUus

$149 .

2 Oz.

1S 01.
YOUit CHOICE

NELSON'S REG, 79'

•Asst.

11'1

TABLnS

1 01.

YOUR
CHOICE

c

r-

•Regular
•Natural
Henna

SPONGE
. OR
SCRUBBER

•

TUMBLER

ggc

Ell IORWEIIII
FORIUU Hill CREAl

harm non·stick cook ing surfacH.

NILSON'S REG. 91'

REG. :17'

.

.,.,

NELSON'S RIG. U.7t
NILSON'S
REG. H '

NELSON'S REG.

SAFETY LOCK CM'

NELSON'S REG. t1.97

while conditioning cuticles
with natu ra l jojoba oil.

16 01.

~

Dsodor;zes . . Freshens

OffEI! E!tfltii!S........., 31, 1811

eow cn.ma~ Cornpwty

NILSON'S

PtJflt !IIANGE FUiftiR

With exclusive push·button top
you can use 9\len with wet nails.
Does all five nails at once.
Dramat ically speeds drying time

•Dry Cleaner
Conditioner

•
· VANISH
. QA.Ma es .
rm
BOWL CLEANER r-----:;;;;;::::::-::....;;::...,

VANiSH \
cnm.~
~
r)
-rre. · ·-

•Powder Mist
•Fresh Mint
•Ultra Scent

restrichd

REOIICfS.FEVER FAST

HEALIH AND BEAUT:Y -AIDS -

•Powder

~DlaJ•d
rubbei
e·
•
hi

YANISH BOWL FRESHENER

-

·rr~ ot rht

, ... One ... -

01ttr VOid Whirl prOhbttd. taxed Of

NILSON'S RIG, S1.7t

FOR CARPETS

YOUR
CHOICE

n• EA.

.

lndiel rr "i•, IN

~ CAP'SUL£5

NELSON'S RIG.
$3.27

PLUSH

ROOM DEODORIZER

2 In
A
PACK

NELSON'S REG. 96'

P.O. IIo.&lt;227

ZIP

Y. Oz.

Duralion

I
I
II
I
I

OHtr Elf~ive August 1. 1980

SINUSITIS &lt;1~
&amp;R.U .
•

L'OREAL

STICK UP DEODORIZERS

c

STA

MillO: ~ulliptt Vitar"nitt Of*

COLDS

NELSON'S REG. 11.39

AIRWICK

Softens Hands

"""""
CITY

.,

YOUR CHOICE

NELSON•s &amp; NANCARRow•s
22 Oz.

... _ .................._,.., .. 13 .001 - •-~· ....... --

75's

...........

NILION'I
110.

PALMOLIVE
DISHWISHIII LIQUID

c~. You will rlaive b¥ ,.... ct.dl' b

•Relief
fast
•Regular
•Spearmint
•Wintergreen

Glossy hard finish for
· chip-resistant nails .

.

CHAPSTICK
LIP BALM

. . ~Vitamin~ drdld, PlUS flit~

I
I

n .M

glaze

~a·
a
e
The 2-•·
Ai~

oiZ• o1

liD ....111 t• EIIIIW, T.._., SlrM.It 1.,._, ~X. Cough Formulli . or Cough I rdd Forn'IUIII and

36
TAM.ITS

relief

NILSON'S
REG. U.l9

BATH ·SIZE

llnlu

To-,....
-1"1' .. 13.001 . ..., tho-..,. .. ...,_
_,...,..,
........ _ .. _ .. ..._ ........___ ..,.._.....,.............

•12 Hour

NELSON'S RIG. 9t'

r===~--~--~~~--.-~~----~--~~~ .
TWICE AS FRESH
BI&lt;;YCLE
QUENCHER
PI
GOLD
·

ISPIRII Fll

NELSON'S REG. n.53

NELSON'S REG. 12.97

AIR FRESHENER

NASAL SPRAy

NILSON'S
RIG. 11.27

30 TABLETS

NILSON'S REG. $2,17

DEODORANT SOAP

I
I
I
I
I.
I
I
I

2 01.

NELSON'S REG.

11'1
Sugar Free

ST .JOSEPH
DOclli&lt;S rec~mosl.

lllllr l.lllt·C.

/COLD
ST.JOSEPH
TABLETS

)[

" It's A Feeling

$169

Mouthwash

Be Ready

baby
powder

DURATION

~--------------------~
CENTRIUM
S T • JOSEPH~::=:::::. COUIH STRESSTABS
IULTI-VITAIII
COLD TABLETS
SYRUP
600
FOR CHILDREN
IULTI-IIIERIL

NELSON'S REG. $1.67

NELSON'S REG. $2.29

NELSON'S REG. U.77

baby corn starch

~ ·

Buy any Novehlatlne"'
product and get a bottle of
multiple vitamins free

·

CHOICE

'

r· i-~EL~SD~IJS~IciiCiiiciW;S .,

I

age

YOUR

'

•Tile 0110 chllllret't

4V• 01.

16's

I

:.

News!

10 Oz.

•Cherry
•Orange

~

IUP to S3.00 refund by 1111111

I

•

tUM

,-

GOOD IEWS RAZORS :

O!NTM£Mf
u: co •liUOlll ED IY oocrou

'

d Boo.lty

NILSON'S REG•S7.7t

-·

Collt -

·-

~

..

--

3¥. Oz.
NILSON'S
RIG.

"·••

�e

3 SPHD
MIXER VALUE 1

VOL 31

'WIWAMSBURG

NO. 108

•

•

enttne

at

POMEROY-MIDDLlPORT. OHIO

.

.~

FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 16, 1980

•7210
• ~ ~ $1El'jant styling makes this
aca1e a beautiful addition to any bath
deCor. The eiJ:s.l to clean vinyl mat is
handsomelY textured. The magnifying
' lens makes a verv clear statement from .
lheaocurate dial . ~
- ..

(3.

.8}:

;t"r

:'1j~

__..

--·

fof24 3!114

· IIINitoo ....... ..........

• "'';J"!&gt;;.Jj

!.. '

Meigs hoard split on
assistant hand leader

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

..O.m.tt

.

.~

:

Bus bids accepted

~EWHAVE~

NILSON'SIIIO ••11.H

.'N EASY COMPACT

aamRY OPERATED

IRO~ ·

CLOCKS

Steam .
. ·and dry

Colorful clocks add homey charm to the kitchen, den

BY BOB HOEFUCH
Bids on three new school buses to
be received in early 1981 were accepted when the Meigs Local Board
of Education met in regular session
at the Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport Monday night.
The district bas received six new
school buses this fall and will
receive the three additional b~es,
probably in January. The State
Department of Education will pay 62
percent of the cost.
Gibson Motor City, Athens, will
provide the chassis for the three new
buses with a bid of$!3,493and bodies .
will be pro~ded by Edwin Davis and
Son, Langsville, at $8612 each.
Employment of an assistant band
director brought on a lengthy
discussion at Monday's session.
Supt. David L.Gleason recommended the employment of Charles

NILSON'S
REG ••17...

LIGHT'nEASY" COMPACT
Steam and Dry
F203BLBiue

DIIITIL
FM/AM CLOCK RADIO

GROCERY BAGHOLDER .

.

.

.

PROCTOR-SILEX
10CUP
AUTOMATIC DRIP
COFFEE MAKER

,. .,.

.---olooll

PM•AII Dlolronlc
....... Ciockllellowllll

Brews-for-twa basket and
automatic control that switches
..

·~

.

Dl 1111111

•Silent LED' time dleplay • Wake·
to-Muelc or Wak•to-Muelc and ·NILSON' SilO.
Alarm •Snooi Alarm cl~ co!"'·
.M.ft
trol • One !lour eleep ewlt.:h
•Adjustable volume tone alarm
o Slide ryle rodlo dial with vernier tuning.

f~om brew to k-p warm. _

/ .,a••

$

keeps them in one
conve nient place

CLEAN-UP

·CADDY

\

-

Holliday, Salem Center Principal, as
the assistant director. However,
during a discussion on the matter
with Ed Harkless, vocal music
supervisor, Douglas Hill, band
director, and board member Robert
Snowden, it was brought out that
Principal Holliday is unable to get
to rehearsals on time and is unable
to devote the time required to the .
job.
Two parents Including Ed Kitchen, active band booster officer,
urged employment of an assistant
band director stating that Hill
should have help with the band and
that money for payment of an
assistant was included in the budget.
Snowden said he felt when Hill was
hired as band director an assistant
should have been named and he felt
that it was the understanding in
August that there would be such a

~

/.)

Motorcycle daredevil 'critical'

convenient

the Tabletop
HUMIDIFIER

storage

-nop•, dust pan

supplies
popcorn
mode witt!

oi.- not grease

$2199
.,...

NELSON'S REG.

provld••• ;op;ortmenl·slze
dry-;olr discomforts!

IRONING
ORGANIZER

Crisp

LAS vEGAS, Nev. - As 3,000 people and a television camera crew
looked on, a motorcycle daredevil attempting a feat that had defied
Eve! Knievel crashed into a wall after a 171)-foot leap over the fountains at Caesar's Palace.
The stuntfor AB~TV's "That's Incredible !" was at least the second
for the show to result in injuries.
.
Gary Wells was in critical condition today after hours ol surgery to
repair a tear in the main artery of his heart. He also suffered broken
legs, a fractured pelvis and a concussion, officials said.
Wells' doctor was "optimistic'' about the da•:edevil's recovery, but
said Wells was not out of danger.
The 23-year-old motorcyclist had completed the jwnp Monday when
his dirt bike clipped the edge of the landing ramp, skidded along a
parking lot and crashed into a retaining wall. Six spectators were injured when they fell13 feet as the wall gave way.

• far apartments off1Ces mobile
:ho•nes and oth er smaller areas
H wnld lf1es 625 sq tt o f 11v1ng a rea
Fea tur es Simula ted wa lnu t lmi s t1
cab111et direc tiOnal a1r flow from top
1n -hne on ott s wJ! Ci l 1eplaceab le
potywethane loam l11te r Capac ity
2 ~18 gallons

YOUR .
· cHOICf

$218

Students disperse without problem
, I

NELSON'S RIG;

,3,91
convenient atorar tor Jron,
ironing boa.rd,•p~starcb,
aprinkle':_bottle

ST. LOUIS - About ·33 white students - down from the 200 who
boycotted classes last week - dispersed without incident after·
security officers ordered them to end a demonstration outside newly
integrated Cleveland High SchooL
Monday's demonstration resulted from alleged name-ealllng and
reported sexual harassment of white girls by black students. School of·
ficials said some of the reports were false and the problems isolated.
The school set training sessions Wednesday to help students adapt to
the court-ordered integration. The school, with a 96.6 percent white
enrollment last year, now has a black enrollment of 45.7 percent.

post. He stated that the band has
been a souree of pride and should
Continue to be that.
Harkless and Hlll related that the
infiuence of music plays a role in the
lives of young people. They spoke of
an applicant for the assistant's post
who could be a great value both
vocally and Instrumental. .
Gleason maintained the district
cannot afford to pay an assistant.
The board went into executive
session with Harll!ess and Hill to
discuss the matter further.
·. TIEVOTE
Following the executive session,
board members Larry Powell and
Carol Pierce voted to hire Holliday
for the assistant's post. However,
board members, Snowden and
Richard Vaughan voted against
Holliday's serving in the position. It ·
was a tie vote since Dr. Keith Riggs,
the ruth board member, was not
present. A special meeting was set
for Thursday evenin!l to further
discuss the assistant's post.
The board awarded supplemental
contracts to Jeannie Taylor, high
school cheerleader advisor·; Mick
Childa, high school reserve boys'
basketball coach; Steve Lones, high
school freshman boys'basketball;
Ron Drexler, eighth grade boys'
basketball; Robbin Reyhl, junior
high cheerleader advisor, and
Gloria Ale:under who was hired to
teach at Harrisonville and to serve
as junior hJih girls' basketball
coach.
ReslgnaUons were accepted from
Jolm Amott as head of the Pomeroy
Safety Patrol, and Sadie carl as a
high school cOOk as of Sept. 30 when
she will retire. Arnott l.s now serving
as head teacher at the Middleport
Elementary School.
LEAVE DENIED
The baird denied a leave of absence reque.t for Diana Williams
who plans to work In a talented and
gifted program in Florida and attend a university.
Given
professional leave to attend
meetings In their fields were Fenton
Taylor and Sam Crow, athletics, and
John Blaettnar, distributive
education.
The board approved salary increases for the director of transporiation, the lunchroom super·
visor, and administrative.
secretaries, including help in the
treasurer's office, In accordance
with the rate of the negotiated increases received by all other noncertified personnel effective Sept. I.
The board approved Ida Martin at(continued on page 16)

SOPHIE MAE

MAGNAVOX
PORTABLE AM/FM

®

lOa. lox

_.$1211
NILSON'I.11.tS

Bank pays extortion demand

PEANUT BRimE

ModeiCB-2

69'

NaiON'I 110. lit'

Heated Electric Styling Brush
byCiairol
.
o Round brusll and controlled heat li"•· flips ,

smoolhes, and curls
.
• Can be used on t20thru240vottsACior

worldwide tralll!l

• Cur1 release mechanisni anows barrel to roll
freety when unwinding hair

De cor ate child's room
Bathroom Vtc .
•Easy to remove self si lck

'12"

.

NILIOitl 110. fii.M

•wood. holder ·"·-,.,
•Attraetlve

backing

•Asst. Characters

•Wood' and
Halder

I
L'OREAL
MASCARA
IYI ACCINTS

Fire victim said 'critical'
A 10-year old Bidwell girl-the victim of an early morning home firewas listed in critical condition today in the intensive care unit of
Holzer Medical Center.
Listed in critical condition with second and third degree burns is
Sheri Straugham, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Legg.
According to incomplete infonpation received this morning from
the Gallia County Sheriff's Deparbnent, the girl was Injured during a
blaze which struck the family's Bidwell-MI. Olive Road residence
during the early morning hours.
The girl was reportedly rescued from the burning home by Alan
Richards, Fire Chief the Vinton Volunteer Fire Department. Two
other daughters-Robin and Terri Straugham-at home at the time of
the blaze escaped the structure, reportedly, without injury.
Investigators from the State Fire Marshal's Office and the Gallia
County Sheriff's Deparbnent were at the scene this morning in a continuing investigation.

-

Resignation accepted
BY KATIE CROW
Pomeroy Council Monday night officially accepted the resignation of
Police Chief Charles McKinney effective Sept. 11.
Mayor Clarence Andrews named
Harry Lyons as acting chief WJtil
council acts upon a replacement for
McKinney.
Tom Werry, Pomeroy Policeman,

Bank president named
Chalnnan of BANK ONE OF
POMEROY, Edison Hobstetter, has
announced the election of 50-year old
Paul A. Barnett as President and
Chief ExecuUve Officer of the $34.2
million bank.
Barnett, a career banker with a
reputation for innovation and versaillity, started in 1957 as a trainee
with BANK ONE OF COLUMBUS
where be rose rapidly through the
ranks gaining experience in every
aspect of commercial banking.
In 1976, Barnett became President
of the Security Bank in Athens, and
returned to BANK ONE OF COLUM·
BUSin1978.

Anative of Colwnbus, Barnett served in the U. s. Marines in Korea
during 1951 and 1962.
Following his honorable
discharge, Barnett entered Ohio
State Univesity from which he
graduated in 1957 with a B.S.C.
degree in Finance. He is also a
graduate with a M.S. degree from
the Graduate School of Banking of
the University of Wisconsin and a
graduate of the Ohio SchQOI of
Banking in Athens.
Barnett will assume his position
Monday, September 22, at which
time Edison Hobstetter will continue
as the bank's chairman.

1 'eenager enters guilty plea
·TOLEDO, Ohio - Mark K. Mitruk, 16, pleaded guilty Monday to in-

NIIUON"I 110. 111.M

,, ••
MILSON'S IIG.

EUZABETH, N.J . (AP) - An extortion demand for several
thousand dollars was paid by a savings banlt official after a phone
caller said a bomb in the bank would explode, police say.
The unidentified official at Hannonica Savings Bank dropped off the
money at an undisclosed location Monday without notifing law enforcement authorities, said Capt. Gene Ahem,The official l!aw a person pick up the cash and flee, Ahem added.
Bank officials then called police, and when authorities arrived they
cleared customers and tellers from the bank. The bank was searched
by a police bomb squad, but no explosive device was found.

COSTLY VAN·
DALISM
Vandals
struck this past
weekend two service
stations on West Main
St. in'Pomeroy. Glass
windows in· overhead
doors at Lou's
Ashland Service were
damaged by gunshot,
apparently · from a
passing car. None of
the large windows
were struck. Mean·
while, workers of
General
Glass,
Parkersburg, W. Va.,
were busy Monday installing a large plate
,. glass window at the
Sunoco . Service Sta·
tion. The station's
large window was also
shot out · over the
weekend.

•t.at

voluntary manslaughter in the death of f).year-old Matt!Jew Catlett.
The boy died Feb. 24 after being beaten and sc;alded over a period of
weeks.
Mitruk earlier was ordered to stand trial as an adult. Two other men
were charged with murder In .the case. Two women, including the
child's mother, were charged with child endangering. 1

Weather forecast
Scattered showers and thunderstonns tonight, ending Wednesday
with some clearing. Lows tonight in low to mi~. Highs Wednesday
in the low 70s. Chance of rain 110 percent tonight ant;l 50 percent Wed-.
nesday. Winds westerly 10-15 mph tonight.
'

'

E&amp;teoded Ohio Forecast- Thursday throughSaturday:Fair Thursday with highs in the 70s and lows 50-4i5. A chance of showers Friday
but fair again Saturday. Higbs 7fMIS and lows ~-

Paui A. Barnett Heads Bank One
•,

'

infonned council fellow officers met
Sunday and· were endorsing Lyons
as chief.
Mayor Andrews said Lyons would
be considered.
Mayor Andrews also reported he
had been notified by Mrs Randy Car.penter that her husband was quitting
the police department.
Carpenter was asked to tum in his
uniformil and other equipment
belonging to the village, but as yet
had not done so.
Officer Larry Hudson asked council to make a thorough investigation
when hiring the next chief. He said
he had been with the department
seven years and does hot believe it is
necessary to go out of town to hire a
police chief. "Let's make ourselves
proud" Hudson stated.
Council agreed to change the title
held by women in the police depart·
men! to pollee women rather than
dispatchers. In making the change,
women would be able to become
members of the Fraternal Order of
Pollee and also have other benefits.

Henry Werry reported trucks on
Spring Ave., are blocking traffic.
Werry suggested that ·a specified
amount of time be given for trucks to
load and unload.
RAISE AP~ROVED

Lawrence Manley asked council to
renew his present garbage permit
and allow him to increase rates from
$4 to $5. Council approved the
requests.
An addendum to an agreement for
engineer services between Pomeroy
Village and Burgess . and Niple,
Limited Consulting Engineers and
Planners. was read by Harold
Brown, councilman.The addendwn
concerns extension of the sewage
system from Kroger .store to Kerrs
Run.
Since additional funding has been
made available by HUD, all parties
desired to revise the agreement for
engineering services. To be added to
the contract is 500 feet of six inch
sewer line; I, 400 feet of eight inch
line; six manholes; 3,000 feet of six
! Continued on page 16)

Mountaineer Plant operating
NEW HAVEN - Appalachian
Power Company's Mountioneer
Plant, located here, was placed in
conunerical operation Monday at
12:01 a.m. This coal fired generating
plant bas a capacity of 1,300,000
kilowatts.
· John W. Vaughan, president of Appalachian, said commerical
operations at the plant follows a 60
day testing period.
He added," The unit has been
relaUvely free of start up difficulties
and those problems which were en- ·
countered were managable. Since
Aug. 10, the unit has been available
for service all but a few hours.
Because of this outstanding test
operation, a decision was made to
place the unit in commerical
operation Monday."
Plant construction was begun in
early 1974. Later that year, work on
the plant was slowed due to Appalachian's worsening financial condition. Work was accelerated In mid
1977. The plant's turbine was first
rolled on July 9, 1980.
·
The plant is estimated t!) cost $633

million; of which $119 million or 19
percent, is for enviromental protec·
tion facilities. Included are electrostatic precipitators with an ef·
ficiency of 99.1 percent, a cooling
tower to provide the plant with a
closed circuit watersystem, and
other measures.
The plant will burn coal with a
sulfur content to permit it to comply
with air quality regulations, which
limits sulfur emissions to 1.2 poWJds
per million BTC heat imput.
The unit will conswne some three
million tons of coal annually, most of
it from the coalfields of Southern
West Virginia.
The 1.3 million kilowatt unit is the
fourth such unit to be constructed on
the American Electric Power
System, and the second in West .
Virginia. The other is located at Appalachian's John E. Amos Plant
near Charleston.
W.M. Robinson is manager of the
MoWJiioneer Plant at New Haven.
The addition of Mountioneer Plant
raises Appalachian 's generating
capacity to 5,885, 000 kilowatts.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="184">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2774">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="58499">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="58498">
              <text>September 15, 1980</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1739">
      <name>burns</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1681">
      <name>welch</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
