<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="17311" 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="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/17311?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-29T17:23:33+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="50462">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/283e4602778c7843bdfec2c22ca919d6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>79e1dc1588e4e894da6fb8a172d4c2d0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="55184">
                  <text>Death _toll at ·1,500

Aftershocks hamper 'quake rescue efforts

.,.

AL ASNAM, Algeria (AP) - Rescuers c)awing
through the ruins of AI Asnam, hampered by earthquake aftershocks and working by floodlight at
night, have foUI)d tho~ds_of_injl!!'eQ. @d ~!!!!Nil the
nllintier ·iif aead 'found' so far at 1,500, officials said
today.
.
"The entire Algerian naiion is mobilized" to ~elp the ·
~timated 100,000 persons left iOjured or homeless, the
state radio said.
.
The Red Crescent, the Moslem equivalent of the Red
Cross, said the death toll may surpass initial estimates
.of 5,000 to 21),000 dead.
But there was still no government estimate of the
number of casualties, and some. rescu~ officials ex·
pressed hope the final figure could be lower than the
Red Crescent's estimate.
Many of the dead and injured 111ere in mountain
villages within a 2G-mlle radius of AI Asnam. Sonie
remained isolated by landslides and rUined bridges but
a continuous helicopter airlift by the Algerian anny

• )

.W INTHROP

'

- '+·-i---IEY.- \,;VINT!-1~1

\-

b · Dick Cavalli
D:?N'T RUN AWAY; .•

COME &amp;0&lt;:. HERE!

LIKe A

WORD WITH"'tlJ !

.

was evacuating injured villagers to hospitals.
Teams organized by an Algerian women's group
-gathered up small children who lost their parents in the
disaster.,ami were _wandering aimlessly through the - -·
st~ts.
·
There was still no electric power in the city and eloo- ·
tricity for ·the rescue operation was provided by
generators.
Flags flew at half-staff throughout Algeria as the
nation observed seven days of mourning for the ear·
tbquake victims.
Officials said at least 900 survivors were
hospitalized, but Red Crescent President Mouloud
Belliouane told reporters tens of thousands were in·
jured. He said there was a severe shortage of hospital
beds and emergency operating equipment.
Hospitals were cleared of all but the seriously ill to
make room fbr quake victims. The army said it
mol;lilized every available helicopter to ferry the injured to hospitals around the country, and manv of tho.

'

COME= BACK HERE n-H5
Ml NLJTE1'YOU HSAR ME~

WO~

.

!.,..001&lt; AT HIM RUN!

.f.

f

VOL. 31

NO. 127

pilots took serious personal risks in the eva1uation effort.
·
The homeless were estimated at 50,000, 40 percent of
the city's population·of-125;000 .. - · ' After-shocks shook the rUins as r&lt;!scuers clawed
t))rough the debris in a round-the-clock search for sur·
vivors following the city's second killer quake in 26
years.
·
One tremor Sunday rocked the tent headquarters
where President Chadli Bendjedid was coordinating
rescue efforts.
Dogs flown -in from France and Switzerland, where
they were trained to sniff out buried avalanche vic·
tints, pawed at the rubble, along with rescuers armed
with listening devices.
Hopes waned for those buried in the wreckage, but
one police officer said he had heard of victims found
alive iwo weeks after the 19&gt;4 earthquake that killed
more than 1,600 in AI Asnam, 150 miles west of Algiers.
An international army of rescue workers and

•

•

enttne

at y

e

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

- medical personnel converged on the · rUined city.
Algerian officials called a temporary halt to further .
arrivals because of a iack of accomodations.
A government statemenl said 25 percent Of all the
buildihgs in AI Asnam were de~troyed and 50 percent
were "more or' less seriously damaged."
Algeria's neighbor to the west, Libya, pledged $10
million in aid from its petrodollar treasury.
. the U.S. military commands in West Germany and
Italy flew a team of 50 medical, engineering and com·
munciations specialists to Algeria to survey the needs
of the stricken cjty. A State Department spokesman in
Washington :said the United' States contributed $1
million in relief supplies .
Aid also cam~ from Western Europe.
Algerians responded to the plight of the victims with
what one official called the biggest demonstration of
national solidarity since the end of French colonial rule
18 YElars ago.

""'
s..wsu.vas
__.........

ltU ftleedam

....

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

FIFTE~N

MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1980

CENTS

.'

In Iran-Iraqi conflict

30
. civilians die
in latest battle
•

·Ed Sullivan
GET YOUR HOT
CHOCOLATE' HfRE '

BEST DEAL IN
IDWN_,.

IT'S

OKAY_~

ITH

ERY CUP

l.rOU GET A
STUART STAMP.. ,

I'M NOT
. INTERESTED,
THANk YOU."

FIVE STAMPS AN'

ltOU

WHAT KIND .

STAMP 017rEFI:

r

GET 'A FREE
CUP.'

THIS KINP. 1

OF Si.AJ\A.P IXJ YCU .GIVE
PEOPLE WHO ffiN'T BUY &lt;'

YOU ME:AN 'T-OU
C::ON'i LIKE M~

.

,.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Iraq's
planes and artillery pounded
Abadan as its ground troops repor·
' ted a small advance toward Iranian
oil refinery city. But the Iraqis were
still fighting holdouts in the neigllboring port city of Khorramshahr as
the Persian Gulf war entered its
fo,urth week.
The shelling killed at least 3(1
civilians and wounded 140, the of·
ficial Iranian news agency reported.
The Iraqi air force also hit targets
around Isfahan, Iran's second
largest city, for the first time. Iraq
. said Iranian pilots tried to attack
two towns near Mosul, the oil center
in northern Iraq, but were qriven off ·
by ground fire.
President Abolhassan Bani-8adr
claimed in an interview with The
AsSociated Press that Iran's forces
were "wearing down the Iraqis" and
planning counterattacks.
AB the Iraqis stepped up their
campaign to win control of the
Iranian side of the Shatt ai·Arab
estuary, their planes raided Abadan,
30 miles up the waterway from the
Persian Gulf, and their artillery was
firing up to 10 shells a minute into
Abadan and parts of neighboring
Khorramshahr where Iranian
revolutionary guards were still
fighting.
Iraqi ground forces wbo captured
the port sector of i\horramshahr
more than a week ago .made their
first significant advance toward
Abadan, 10 miles to the southeast, on
Saturday. They threw a ·pontoon
bridge across the Karun River east
of the city and.moved a tank force

across.
An Iraqi captain briefing visiting
reporters in Khorramshahr told AP
Correspondent Steve K. Hindy that
the tank force advanced to within 150

yards of the commercial bridge
across the river.
The paptaln claimed that the
crossing of the river also cut the last
Iranian supply lines into Khorramshahr. Iraq reported earlier that its
army had circled the city to the west
and north, cutting tile highway to
Ahwaz, the provincial capital 70
miles to the north.
Iraq claimed that its air force,
along with i~ attacks on Abadan,
raided the oil port of Bandur
Mashur, 55 miles east of Abadan,
destroying part of the harbor and
setting an oil refinery afire .
It said that Its jets bombed
another refinery and the airport at
Isfahan, 240 miles 'east of the
Iranian-Iraqi. Bani-Sadr In an interview with Tehran Radio said the
raiders ''hit the !lames of the
families of the men serving in the
heUCOjlter foree attached to the
gtound forces. ''
Bani-Sadr in a telephone interview
with The Associated Press said he
had not ~lean! previously of U.N.
Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim's
proposal for- a temporary cease-fire
in the Shatt al·Arab to allow foreign
ships stranded in the, waterway to
escape.
BULLETIN
No lDformatl.., wu avaDahle Ibis
momlllg concel'lllug lhe death of a 15 .
yeat"'Od New Have~~, w. va. boy lD
the Cbllllcothe area Saturday.
Rtcil Rousb reponedly died
followiDg au accident lo Tall Hollow
State Forest.
The Roes County Sheriff's Depart·
meot said lbe accident Is still WHier
lovestlgatloo.

15 people die in accidents
I

.

"ON THE COUNT OF THREE WE SHUT. OFF T.HE POWER I
NOW, ONE ... TWO... THAEE ...GRIPI"

By The Associated Press
Larke County.
Two young peOple died in each of
KENT - Steve Lukens, 24, of
two single-car crashes to _ raise . Stow, and Todd Knepp, 24, of Akron,
Ohio's weekend traffic death toll to in a one-car accident on a rural road
15, the Highway Patrol said.
in Portage County.
The count also included five teenNEWTON FALLS - Robert G.
agers killed in separate one-vehicle Beck Jr., 18, of Diamond, in a motoraccidents.
cycle accident on a rural road in
The patrol records traffic Tnunbull County.
fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday to .midDAYTON - Cindy !&gt;atrich, 15, of
Waynesville, in a one-car crash in
night Sunday.
The dead:
Montgomery County.
SUNDAY
FRIDAY NIGHT
LoGAN - Shane A. Windle, 23, and
WEST AlEXANDRIA - Dorothy
Rusty L. Holdren, 22, both of Logan, M. Kautz, 18, of West Al~~dria, in
in a one-car accident on city street in a one-car accident on Ohio 503 in
Preble County.
Logan.
PLAIN CITY - Charlll9 C.
COLUMBUS- Carol Ann Ehlers, .
Picklesimer, 11, of Milford Center, 30, of Columbus; in a ohe-car crash '
in a two-car accident on Ohio 161 on a city street.
WALBRIDGE - Donald Mull, 24, '
Union County.
MARIETl'A - Steven Williams, of Hoytville, In a one-car accident on
17, of Marietta, In a one-car accl4ent Ohio 18ln Wood County.
in Marietta.
.
NEWTON F AUS - Nlllle Clonch,
ELYRIA - Danny F. Kanzeg, 24, oo age given, of Newton Falls, when
of Columbia Station, In a·two-car ac- her car crashed on a city street.
cident on Ohio 82ln Lorain County.
NEW WATEJU'ORD - Carmen
SATURDAY
R. Henderson, 19, of New Waterford,
PAINESVIU.E- Carolyn Myers,
when strucil ·by a .c ar on a street in
40, of Harpersfield, In a pedestrian
New WatetfOrd.
accident on Mldd\erldge Road in

.

W .Y.ther forecaat
Clear tonight. Lon In the low 30s. Sunny Tuesday'. Highs in the low
to mlcHOe. Chance of precipitation near zero percent tonight and
Tueldlly. 'f(lnda 118ht and variable tonight.
E:deMed Oldo Fareeut- Wectneadaythrough Frlday:Mil8tly
cloudy Wednesdlly. A chance of showers Thuracbly and Friday. Highs
intbe801 Wednelday, warming to the 70s b)' Friday. Lows in the upper
30s and IIIII' 401 Wednelday, wannlng to the upper 4011 and low liOs by

Friday momlng.

•

.

·; ~_. ·' :&lt; . ,_ ,·

- . '"-"''

0

,_&lt;

..

-.

. ,. -.

•.

·(

FESTIVAf,. OVER

- Despitea clillly, faiT ilay,
thousands of people from
all · over the midwest at·
tended the 101h annual Bob
Evans Farm Festival this
past weeken~ at Ri
Grande.Theeventopened
under warm and · clear ·
skies Friday. The same
type of weather prevailed
Saturday but the ther-mometer dropped several
degrees S~~nday. The chil·
ly ·temper;atures did not
dampen tbe affair as ·peo-. ple crowded the grounds
touring the various tents
featuring antique crafts,
tools and other festivities.
During the day, exhibitors
made apple butter,
homemade soap, sawed
wood,• made sorghum and
gave · demonstrations onhow tblngs were done in
tbe 'old days'. One of the
biggest · attractions was
tbe old saw mill, lower
right..

;H

'

Accidents leave seven people injured
Seven persons, including five in
Gallia County and two In Meigs
County, were injured in a series of
weekend traffic accidents probed by
the Gallia·Meigs Post of the Ohio .
Highway Patrol.
The patrol reported Jane R. 1
Minor, 47, Belpre, was southbound
on SR 7 at the junction with CR 20 at
11:40 a.m. SaturdBy when a nor·
thbound car driven by Elizabeth A.
Evans, 71, Rl, 1, Cheshire, went left
of center arid collided with her .
vehicle.
According to the report, Evans
sweryed out of a lane to avoid a
collislqn with another car stopped iii
traffic preparing to make a left turn.
Botb Minor and Evans were in·
jured and taken by the Gallia EMS
to Holzer Medical Center. Minor was
' treated and released and Evans was
admitted and then released Sunday.
Three passengers in Minor's.~ar­
Norma P. Minor, 44; ScoU D.
·Adams; 19; and Terry S. VIncent, 18,
·a11 from Belpre-were also . injured
and taken to the Holzer Medical Cen. ter, where they were treated and •
released.

Minor's car was demolished and
severe damage was listed to the
Evans auto, troopers said. Evans
was cited for assured clear distance
by the patrol.
The patrol said Parthenia Vance,
51, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was northbound
on SR 7 in Meigll County at 11:30
a.m. Saturday, preparing to make a
left turn at the junction with SR 143,
when she was struck from behind by
another northbound car driven by
Gloria C. Decker, 'J:l, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy.

According to the report, severe
damage was listed to Decker's car
and slight to the Vance auto. Both
drivers were injured and taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital, where
they whe treated and released.
No injuries were reported in a tw(}car crash on SR 7near the Lawrence
County line Saturday morning.
The patrol said Luther Estes, 85,
Crown City, was stop~ in the
Gateway Markel at 9:30 a.m. when
he continued on and collided with a
car driven by Earl T. Harper, 70,

Huntington, W.Va.
Moderate damage was reported to
Harper's car and slight to Estes'
,vehicle. -Troopers cited Estes for
failure to yield right of way.
An Athens woman was cited by the
patrol for left of center in a two-car
collision probed Saturday afternoon.
Aecording to the report, Ruth E.
Murnahan, 37, Kitts Hill, was east·
bound on SR 143, west of SR 233, at 1
p.m. when she collided with a west:
bound auto driven br Janet S. Thorn(Continued on page 10)

Deputies ~vestigate minor. misha~
Gilbson was apprehended Satlll'Tillis refused treatment.
day
evening. He will appear in COUO:.
He was taken to Veterans
tment in\'estigated a single car acty court later this week.
•
Memorial Hospital by private car
cident Sunday at 4:55a.m. on New
The
department
is
also
m:where
he
was
treated
and
released.
Lima Road, approximately 150 feet
vcstigating vandalism to a mailbox
Tillis was cited for reckless
north of SR 124 at Rutland.
.
and
newspaper lube owned by
operation. There was extensive
Miohaei A. Tillis, 21, Rutland, was
George
Carper, oldRT33.
property damage.
traveling south towards SR 124 when
Trash
cans and restrooms were
The department is holding Don
he lost control of his.car which ra.!L
also
damaged
at the roadside park
Gibson, 23, Arcanum, Ohio, for the
off the raod and striking and
on
U.S.
33
sometime
Saturday ~ht:
Oct. 5tl1 theft of a chain saw taken
severing a \ltillty pole .
from Burl Coleman, Reedsville.
The Rutland ES was •called but

The Meigs County Sheriff's Depar·

...

I

�•
•

3-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Oct.l3, 1980

-

Defeat stubborn Astros 8-7

2-Thl) DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 13, 1980
'

Opinions &amp;
Comments

Phillies capture first pennant in 30 years
THFAI'
"~HOWNl_
·-;·
K
D
0
-- I
GRAFFI'fl

'mE DAILY SENTINEL

I USPS lG-tiOi
DEVOTED TO 11IE
IN1'EI\G!TOF'· - - - - .
MEI(;S.MASON AREA
Lrtten of opinion an welcomed. Tbey should be ~~ lbu 3tO words loag (or •~bjrct to reduc. tiO. by &amp;be·edt~) and mullt ~ .tJgned with tbe slpee't ~ddress. Names Dl8}' b:t wiUtbtld upoa
pUlicadOD. Howevn, oa request. Dames wW be dJaclosed. l..dt.en should be iD Jood task. ad• drHdq INun, not persooaUUea.
Publlllled dally neep' Sana.day by The Ohio Valley Publishing Com,.oy- MultflDedia, lat., .
111 Court SL, PomtnJj, Ohlo45719. Bw:lDels mtke Pltoae m.. %1.5$. Editorial Pheoe 9H--2157.
Se4!oad diJJ pottage paid at Pomrroy, Ohio.
Natioaal adnrtillng rtpraeaiiUve, Laodoa AsaOC!latel, 1111 EYelid Ave., Clnelaod , otuo
44115.

t DON'I .
MIND

'

Tbe AJSoeiated P l'68 Is eJ:tllislvely entided to the 1ne for l*bllcadou of aU ocwa dlspattbeS
ernlUed tG the DrWI~ptr 1Dd a lao the IO&lt;'al aews pubUiibed bertill- .

Publllber

Genenol Mfr. &amp; City Editor
News Editor
11 ~
Alh . MaDI&amp;er

~m~ I""T""L-''-""""r•~c:::d·~

HOUSTON (AP) - The ce a playoff goat, doubling across
straight extra-inning postseason
Philadelphia Phillies and the Kan- the winning run.
games before heading for the chamsas City Royals, disciples .of that
Both the Phillies and Royals won
pagne.
famous fable that if at first you don't · their divisions in four of the last five ·~ It wasJl series t!l!!tf~atured weird
succeed, try, li'Y-:agallf, are 1980 ·-· years. The-Royals lost ·three ·AL
plays, such as a triple play that
·World Series opponents.
·playoffs ·to the East c.hampion
became a doubl~ play after 8" 20
· The Phillies joined the Royals in
Yankees. The Phillies were swept by
minute rhubarb, a Houston run canending years of frustration by .win- Cincinnati in 1976, and'lost 3-1 to Los
celled because a runner left tllird
ning their league pennant to reach Angeles in bo!ll1977 and 1978.
base ·befor~ a sacrifice fly was
the besi-of-seven Series, which starWhile the Rqyals are making their
caught, a· ball that was trapped in
ts in Philadelphia tomorrow night.
first World Series appearance, the
right field 11nd resillted in a rallyKansas City, an expansion team
hUiles' history isn't much better.
killing double play when the umpire
which had never won more than its
Philadelphia reached the Series just
ruled it had been caught.
West Division, captured the
twi~e, in 1915 and 1950. They won .
All that happened in the fourth
American League pennant in a just poe game 65 years ago against
game. In the finale Sunday, the
three-game sweep of the New York the Boston Red Sox, and were swept
Astros scored three in the bottom of
Yankees. It was a tougher road for ~by the Yankees in '50.
the seventh and the Phillies rallied
the Phillies, who had to go the full
Their life has been frustration,
for five in the eighth.
five games before subduing the especially in i964, when they led the
The Astros wouldn't quit. They
Houston Astros to win the National one-division league by ~-games
scored two and tied it 7-7 in the
League flag.
with 12 to play and lost 10 straight to
eighth, and held on untU Del Unser
Philadelphia . fell behind two blow the pennant.
doubled and scored on Maddox's
games to orie, and came back to wii\ , The 'Phillies were the favorites to
two-out double in the loth.
For Maddox it was retribution. In
the two final games, both in e;dra in- blow .out the almost anonymous
nings.
Astros, who had to beat the Dodgers
1978 at Los Angeles he dropped a
The Phillies closed out the West in a one-game playoff to win the
Division champion Astros, IH in 10 West. But after winning the opening
innings Sunday night in the game, the Phillies were taken to a
major league record-setting four
Astrodome, with Garry Maddox, on.
.

·

RMJC'I1 Wlal:ett
Robert JioeRicb •

' Dale Rotbgeb, Jr.

CariGheea

' "q:1~

Columbus' fame
misunderstood
:·COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Christopher Columbus wasn't the first to prove
the world was round; he wasn't even the discoverer of America.
: But the Italian explorer did make some significant contributions to ac~ountfortoday'scelebration .
.
. ,
. "You have to give the man credit for sailing into the unknown," sa1d Brad
Peterson, an astonomy professor at Ohio State University in - .where else tfle state capital of Colwnbus. "He showed that you can sail somewhere
westward and eventually run into land.
: "And he did start the ball rolling in another direction - he got financing
from the government in order to start the whole thing." •
: Still, when conunemmorating the 15th century navigator today, most will
be saluting his more traditional - if misnomered - claims to fame.
: "I suppose Columbus Day is simply a matter of serendipity," Peterson
!{aid. "There's always someone who does it first. Colwnbus was just there a
bit later, more or less by accident."
: Though much of the common folk of his time feared the world was flat ,
Columbus knew the world was round because of docwnents written about 18
centuries earlier by Greek astronomers, Peterson said. The translations
' proved too much for him, however.
• ·
: "When the diameter. of the earth was given, he misinterpreted that as
being the circwnference," Peterson said.' 'So he thought the earth was three
times smaller than it really is."
: Columbus' incorrect analysis may have been responsible for his four
ocean.voyages, according to Peterson.
, .
: " I don't know if he even would have tried it if he realized it was three times
larger," he said.
So much for Columbus' discovery that the world was round. But surely, not
even the first to reach America?
"I'm Swedish, so I'm partial to Lei! Ericsson," Peterson said. "When
Columbus arrived at the continent - and it wasn't even untU his third trip
that he stepped on the continent in 1498 - he didn't discover somewhere
Oew."
•
: Paul Bowers, a history professor at Ohio State, also attributed the Vikings
as being the true discoverers of North America - some five centuries before
Columbus requested money from King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of
Spain to finance his trips.
,
·
Columbus never claimed he had found a new world during his first voyage,
Bowers said. When land was sighted on Oct. 12, 14~, the explorer thought he
had reached the Orient.
· " He thought CUba was Japan, and that certainly wasn't new at the time,"
Bowers said.
· So after all is said and done, does Columbus deserve a day in honor of his
' Ocean trips?
"I'm indifferent to the holiday myself," Bowers said. "But Columbus did
spark a tremendous age of exploration.
'
· "What happened as a result of what he did is wily he should be remembered today."

NEW YORK (AP) - If you want to spill drinks, induce oyerindulgence,
and eventually create hysteria at a suburban cocktail party, simply comment about "the corning collapse of real estate prices."
Just those few words are bound to halt levity more swiftly than saying
"My broker is E.F. Hutton, and E.F HuUon says.." They might dissolve
the elegant into disheveled wrecks seeking the oblivion of martinis.
The reason, which is acutely present in millions of minds, 18. that a
house is a bank. A family with few liquid assets might still feel rich, "you
known, because we have.enonnous equity ii1 Olll' house."
That money in the bank, so to speak, is there to be tapped for college
tuitions, for tl\e big trip 'rowtd the world, and for the retirement horne
and boat and all the other things that go with that way of !He.
If the equity goes, so goes the !He, and that provokes the question: Can
it?
"
Some commentators think so, but they have a curiOusly homogenous
backgroWid: Most, it seems, are or have been involved in the securities
business. They have a tendency to view the home as just an investment.
Horne costs, mortgage rates and upkeep ell(lllnses are pricing millions
of first-time buyers out of the market. They do not have the down
payments required. They,cannot afford the monthly Carrying charges.
They probably couldn't get the money anyway, because savings Institutions can't find the money to lend. Government and business needs
have reduced the money pool. There's not enougl) for all.

Upsets highlight '
weekend action·

Nothing new about that; housing has beenslwtoutbefore.
If there isn't enough money at rates that buyers can afford, then the
demand is obviously cut, and you cannot have a market made up only of
sellers. But in the market des'cribed, even sellers might be affected when
pbtentlal buyel'll back out because ~increased costs.
But, there is, the mattet' of demographics. During the 19808, a mortgage-lendiilg group observes, some 40 million Americans will reach age
30. They will beoseeldng homes. They cannot be denied.
Well, on reflection, tbe'y could be deiued. But can you imagine the
uproar, the pollllible riots that might develop if a generation of young
Americans was denied decent housing? Denied what "they consider their
birthright? Denied what bas been popularized as the American ideal?
A house isn't a security, they say. Unlike stocks 1111d bonds, which a person can do without, shelter is an essential of !He. It will always be in

demand; there is no choice but to demand it. It is necessary.
·'
True, but what about that financial situation? And to that question the
analysts who foresee housing prices not only holding their value but
gaining even more say that somehow it must be made available.
Housing might not hold top priority in the present economic and
political scheme, but, they say, it will. They foresee new lypelt of mortgages and regulatory changes that will funnel fwlda to houBing.
There can be no other way, they say, and they'll drink to that. 1

Ohio will lose two House members
COLUMBUS, Ohio .(AP) - Ohio
probably will lose two of its 23 mem. bers in the U.S. House because of
population Joss the I~ census is ,ex- .
pected to reflect.
Republicans, who now control the
delegation 13-10, will have tough
time retaining their edge or even
cutting their possible losses unless
they succeed in their intensive campaign to gain control of tl\e Ohio
Senate in the Nov. 4 legislative elections.
The Ohio Constitution gives the
Legisla,ture authority to draw the
boUI&lt;daries of congressional districts. Curiently, Democrats control the
House 62-37 and the Senate 13-15.
Although GOP strategists claim
they have a shot of turning arowtd
the big House margin, most of their
big campaign artillery is aimed at
the Senate.
They are concentrating on a baH
dozen Senate seats now held by
Democrats, n~g· to win only two

a

while holding their own to come out
with a 17-16 edge.
If the Republicans shO\Ild succeed,
Uley still would not be able to prevaU
in· the reshaping of congressional
districts, because the plan will have
to be concurred in by what is likely
to be a Democratic House.
But a GOP Senate could block any
plan sent over from the House and
force negotiations that at least
would give Republicans leverage. If
Democrats retain both·houses, they
can draw almost any kind of ·map
they please.
However, the GOP has one other
safeguard against Democratic
gerrymandering - the construction
of districts to give one party an edge
over the other. That safeguard is the
veto power of Gov. James A.
Rhodes, a Republican.
It is possible, but not considered
likely, that Democrat8 CQU).d not
only control both houses in 19!!1, bUt
add to their ranks 'to become "veto

proof" over Rhodes.
It takes 60 votes in the House to
override a veto, and 7JJ in the Senate.
But redistricting Is such a· controversial issue that It often puts
politically ambitious legislators of
the same party against each other.
Indeed, it · would be rare if the
Democrats could muster enough
unanimity to override the governor'sveto.
The redistricting squabble will
begin shortly after next April 1,
when the U.S. Census Bureau will
provide official results of the 1980
census.
At the same time, the fivemember state Apportionment
Board, controlled 3-2 by Dem\)Crats,
will draft new districts for the Ohio
Senate and House. They will stand
for the 1980s decade, unless
disallowed by the courts.
The law requires congressional
and legislative districts to be revised
after each decermial census.

However, the Legislature is empowered to revise congressional
di$tricts any time it wants.
Democrats in the Senate passed a
redistricting bill in 1977, when they
held veto-proof margins in both
chambers.
, But the Hiluse backed away from
the bill following highly publicized
charges that Democrats were using
their authority in a politically
blatantn\anner.
Beyond that, the Democrats were
wtable to agree sufficiently among .
themselves as to where some of the
proposed new boundary lines ll,hould
be.
Redistricting (Congress) and
reapportiorunent (Legislature) the statutory terms for those ac- ·
tivities - promise to be explosive
issues in 1981.
The power structure will be InfluenCed considerably by the outcome of those Ohio Senate races on
Nov.4.

•

'Born again' Christians major topic

t:OLUMBIJS DAY
Today in history
In 1960, presidential hopefuls John
Today is Monday, Oct. 13, the
287th day Of !~. There are 79 days F, Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon
appeared in a televised debate.
left in the year.
Ten years ago, black •ctivist
Today's hil!ffliglrt in history: .
On Oct. 13, 1775, the Continental Angela Davis was arrested by the
Coogress ordered the construction of FBl in New York in connection with
a naval fleet, thereby lawtchlng the a CalHornla courtroom shootout.
U.S. Navy.
Today's birthdays: British Prime
On this date:
In 1792, George ,Washington lald Minister Margaret Thatcher ia 56.
&amp;lnger-songwriter f'aul Simon Is 38
the cornerstone of the ezecutive
and singer Marie Osmond 18 21.
mansion in Wutington, D.C.
Thought for today: "What men
In 1841, Teus ratified the U.S.
·
value
in this world 18 not rights but
CmaUtutlon.
privileges."
- H.L. Mencken,
In 1M3, Italy declared war on GerAmerican
editor
(1•!966).
rnany,lta fonner Allis partner.

Canadian winner in tournament

~·

The coming collapse of real .e state prices

By George R. Plagenz
Today everybody is talking about
the "born ag~" Cltrlstians. A
decade ago It was the'
"charismatics." What has liappened
to them?
The charismatics are still around
- and in large numbers. They are
principally in Assembly of God churches and in the Episcopal and
Roman Catholic churches.
While the Pentecostal (or ·
charismatic) l)lOVement goes back
many yeal'!l, .it only started making
headlines in the 19609, after an
Episcopal clergyman on the West
Coast - who had always prided himself on his "cool approach to the
faith" - foWid himself speaking in
tongues.
The clergyman, Rev. Davis JJen.
nett, was then rector of a church in
Van Nuys, Calif. The stir created by
his strange, new religious experience forced his re-assignment to
a parish of less than 100 rnembent in
Seattle, Wash. That small parish has
since become the largest Epilcopal
COiigregation inJhe Nortllwtst.
Bennett is now considered the
father of the neo-PenteccistaJ
movement, 11 movement w!Uch
spread to many malnollne churches
in the 80s and 70s. He Is so busy lee- ·
turing throughout the COWitry tbat
he will resign his flourishing 8 tt's

pulpit next year,
While there are similarities between the born agains and the
charismatics, there are strong dlf·
ferences. A bom again Christian
claims to have had a &lt;;onverslon ex·
perience which assures him of his
salvation and makes him want to
"witness" to others about his faith in

~~~~~m!e~:We~~
the extent that the charl8matic feels

A year later she was still feeling
fine. One evening, Emma, her
yeaN~Id neighbor, locked herself out
of the boUle. Louise climbed in the
window and let her in. "It waslhe
only' thing to do," said Louise. "Poor
soul, Emma 18 Bll crippled up."
Speaking in tonguea is an ex·
perience that JllOIIt charismatics
cl$lm to have had. Under what they
c,onslder to IMJ the Influence ol the

n-

Holy-Spirit, wordS ~ have never
heard before start flOWing out of
them. · Bennett once foand himself'
speaking a sentence in Japanese
although be doesn't know a wOrd of
the language. A Japanese woman
who was ·in his cburch in Sea~
when he spoke the sentence during a
prayer translated It for him later
'·'and told me I was speaking
,flawless Japanese."

ternpt,with four seconds left.
·
ltalden 38, Chargen Z4

..challenged for the Jets' fullback job,

and dropped Rex off the exempt
list, a critical distinction for a
tour player.
· Even Halldorson said he was
thinking about that factor rather
than winning over the final few
holes.
"I already had the exemption
locked up so that took a lot f
pressure off me, made me much
more secure," he said.
Halldorson, 28, won by two·
strokes with a closing 70 and a 275
total, 13 strokes under par on the
7,133-yard Perdido Bay Golf Club
course.
"I was just trying to hold my
patience, hold in there. And
nobody really made a run at me,"
said ,Halldorson, who collected
$32,000 from the total purse of .
$200,000.
His first victory boosted his
money-winnings to $111,553 for
the year, compared with his
previous high of $24,559 last year.
He competed on the American
tour in 1974 but lost his playing
rights because of lack of performance. He rejoined the Tour
in 1978.
• Halldol'!lon was locked in a tie

PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) Canadian Dan Halldorson· was
the winner and Rex Caldwell the
big loser in the final individual
event on the !().month PGA Tour
schedule.
Halldorson, a soft-spoken man
who once lost his playing rights
for lack of perfonnance, broke
out of a five-way tie for the lead
with consecutive birdies on the
back nine and scored his first
Tour victory Sunday in the Pensacola Open.
He was the lith first-time winner for the now-completed
season.
Caldwell wasn't around. But he
was the loser.
He'd come into the closing tournament holding the 60th position
on the season's money-winning
list~ the last spot that gives a man
an exemption from qualjlying for
1981 Tour events.
Caldwell faUed to qualify for
the final two rounds. So he faUed
to make a check. And Lanny
Wadkins, No.61 starting the
week, won $4,150 for his lOth
place finish, vaulted over Caldwell on the money-winning list

got in the lineup anyway last week
when starter Clark Gaines suffered
a broken leg.
At Atlanta he carried 25 times for
100 yards and scored the winning
touchdown on a !·yard plunge with
1:38 remaining to give the Jets their
first viCtory of the season.
" Uoni. 24, Sidnts 13
Rookie Billy Sims rushed for 91
yards and ·scored a pair of fourtlr
period touchdowns, the first Of which
was set up by Rick Kane's 62-yard
kickoff return. New Orleans quarterback Archie Manning completed
25 of 36 pass attempts for 314 yards
in the losing effort.
Patriots 34, Dolphins o
"We got beat bad," Miami Coach
Don Shula said after the Dolphins
suffered their most one-sided loss in
10 years. Steve Grogan and Matt
Cavanaugh each threw one touchdown pass for New England and the
· Patriots' defense limited Miami to
just 88 yards and eight first downs.
Cowboys 59, 49ers 14
Dallas equalled its highest point
.
_
total _ in the franchise's 2!-year
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern - non-league affair. Later this month
history as Danny White threw four
Eagle netters defeated the North ·the Eagles and other area teams will
touchdown passes before leaving the
Gallia Pirates In two sets to claim
game in the third period. Three of
victory in the match and clinch the
those scores .were caught by Drew
SVAC volleyball championship
Pearson, who had been used as a
outright. Coach Debbie Weber's gals
decoy for much of the season_ l!lld
kept their perfect record intact,
had expressed his unhappiness
while increasing their record to 16-0.
about it.
Eastern ended league play with a
Eagles 31, Giants 1a
15-0 mark as each league team faces
Louie Giammona filled in for the
one another three occasions.
injured Wilbert Montgomery and
The · first game of the, match
ran for two of Philadelphia's four
developed into a serious battle, the
second-half touchdowns as the
lead changing hands at regular InEagles rallied to beat the Giants and
tervals. Both squads were looking
keep pace with Dallas atop the NFC
forward to the thrill of victory and in
East at 5-1.
the waning volleys it appeared both
Packers 14, Bucs 14, tie
were out to stake their claim.
Tom Birney; a substitute junior ·
The Eagles, however, rose to the .
high school teacher unW the
occasion and won in desperation 16Packers signed him last week after · 14. The victorious Eagles sported a
cutting kicker Chestor Marco!,
well balanced scoring attack with
missed a 24-yard field goal try with
each team member contributing to
the win.
1:09left in regulation, then faUed on
a 36-yard try with five secol)ds left in
In the second game, the champion
overtime. So the game ended as the
Eagles lived up to their title and won
firsttieoftheNFLseason.
quite handUy 15-2. The winning atRams 21, Cardinals 13
tack was led by Cassie Sheets with .
Vince Ferragamo passed for one
seven point serves, flanked by Sarah
touchdown and ran for another as
Goebel's four.
the Rams beat st. Louis to raise
Members of the championship
their record to 4-2 and pull into the , team are Carolyn Rowen, Aliaon ·
lead in the NFC West, one game
Cauthorn, Sarim Goebel, Pattie Edahead of Atlanta and San Francisco.
wards, Cassie Sheets, Denise White,
Vlklogs 13, Bean 7 .
Laura Eichinger, and Pebbles
Ted Brown's 1-yard scoring run
Blake.
early fn the fourth quarter erased a
. The Eagles have one ·remaining
regular season match which . Is
7-' deficit and game Minnesota an
error-filled victory over Chicago.
, tonight at Miller. The contest is a .

~agl~ netters capture

Daily Sentinel recognized

•

POLITICAL
ADVERTISERS
.
••
Do your.Need Assistance? :
,

*

*i

CALL:

record 38 tJmea for 178 yards for :
Houston.
'
·r MikeBtww•rr,Seebaml
PruiU J!ushed ·for 1l8_yards : ~
and two

meetingBJeta1t,"*-7
Kevin Long, who came to training
camp overweight and never

(

\I

\

11
:

.,f

'

*:
~

CARL GHEEN
"
2_2156
~

touchdown~ as cteveland

beat Seattle for the first time in four

STATE

AUTOMOBILE
MUTUAL
INSURANCE
COMPANY

280.

SVAC championship
.participate in the section/regional
tournaments.

The

i

*,
*

\a'

extrapointgaveKansuCityitsvt~ j
Earl Campbell carried a ell~&amp;

102 w. Main 992 ·2143 Pomeroy, o.
Represenling

******************11:*******************~
·:
"-· - ·

: : ·

•*

,tory.

oo you own or operate a .
small or medium·s ize
retail store, office, apart·
mentor church?
Then - you 'may qualify
for State Auto Mutual 's
SERIES ONE Business
Policy ... a · modern·as·
tomorrow .· package plan
that combines an array of
broad property and iiabili ·
ty coverages required to
safeguard your · operi! ·
tions. Ali for a '!I«·Y attrac·
tive, affordable premium.
Let us explain the· .
superior
features
of ;
SERIES ONE ... the short .
time we spend together ,
could prove interesting 1
and rewarding to you .
Just give us a call or
mail the handy couoon.
DALE C. WARNER
. INSURANCE

r-:-=:==·~
_
..;;·~;;;-~~~-:-:--:-:~-:-:-=-=-========1
_
.

y~·~en:~:/: : .:
*
*
*·

ned-oo feeling" toward !He.
National Newspaper Week
The charismatics generaDy are
more Involved with healing than the
born again Christian. One of een:
nett's favorite healing stories concerns Louise, an 88-year-old waman
rlie Meigs SOU and Water Con- 18, 1980, with the theme "Our
of his parish Wbo WIIB suffering from
servatiOn District has approved the Freedom Safeguards · Your
angina of the heart and arthritia ol
thesplne.
.
• follOWing resolutioo:
Freedam."
waEREAS, keeping the pubUc in:
One day, shortiJ after hls ex·
NOW, THEREFORE, the un:.
foniled ls an essential element in dersigned supervlaors of the Meigs
perience of ,...~ in tongues,
carrying out an effective prcltiJ'am of County Soil and Water Conservatioo
Bennett laid his banda on Louise's
conservation; and "
head "and asked God to heal her. I
District have unanimously PUled
WHEREAS, the Dally Seiltinel has this Resolution of Commendatioo
do not remembet that I pei'IIQIIIIly
provided ezeellent news coverage, and Appreciation to the Dally Senfelt much confidence. In fact, I left
the room ·after praying for her : tlirough ltorlea and photograplla, tinel and have signed It on thls 8th
during the put year on actlvitiea of day of October, 111110. '
without even uldnl her If abe felt
any better."
· ,
the Melga Ceunty Soli and Water
Rex Shenefield, Chairman; Tom
CoaMrvatklo Diltrict; and
About a week later Lou1ae c:ame to
Thelas, Vlce-Oialnnan; Theteot1
I the ljennettl' boule and llkipped
WHER,EAS. tiU board Ia aware Johnaon; Roy Mlller, Secretary•
that National N8Wipllper Week will ' David 9loeclmer.
about the room. "See what I can
'
be obeerved nationally October 1).
do?" she dlortled.

for thetop with Tom Kite, rookie
Gary Hallberg, Bob Mann and
Lyn Lott after they'd made the
tum. But one by o~e they dropped
away until only Halldorson and
Kite remained in a share of the
lead.
And Halldorson hit approach
shots to within six feet of the flag
on the next two holes and made
the birdie putts while Kite took a
bogey,
It was a three-stroke swing in
Halldorson's favor and gave him
a three-shot lead with three holes
to play.
"It was a big enough lead I
could bring it in," he said,
Hallberg and Mike Sullivan, a
winner the week before, eventually tied for second at 277..
Hallberg had a closing 71,
Sullivan 70, Another stroke back
at 278 were Dave. Eichelbeger,
Lott, Kite and Mike Gove,
Eichelberger and Lott had 70's in
the sunny, breezy weather, Gove
shot 73 and Kite had a disappointing 70.
1
Mann, the third-round leader,
went to a fat 78 and finished at

Insurance Package
For You --

Allletican Electric Power System~.

them oo a club-record •yard run .
thatbrOkea24-24tie.JustllsecondB , I*
It
later, San Diego's Chuck Muncie
~
fwnbled a kickoff . return and 1•:
Oakland'sToddChrlstensenfellonlt ·
It
in the enc1 zone for another touch- ,..
!:
' down.
]
jt:J
ClllefiZl, Often ZO
· 1 ~~
It
Steve Fuller, forced out of the it · For fast, c~urteous Information, regarding rates, dead· 'It
pocket by Houston's Jesse Baker, :: . lines, sizes, space reservations, copy and lay-outs.
,~
scrambled 38 yard!l for a touchdown
with 2:51 to play .00 Nick Lowery'S ·
Jt

hlmself ''filled with the Holy Spirit."
This iasald to produce a wann, ''tur·

•

By Associated Press
For five weeks the Buffalo Bills
led a charmed existence. Even when
they traUed going into the fourth
quarter, they somehow foWid a way
to win.
Not SundHy. Buffalo's bubble was
finally burst as the Baltimore Colts,
led by Berl Jones, beat the Bills 17-1~
to spoU the National Football
League's last perfect record.
In racing to a 5-0 mark with their
best start since 1964, the Bills twice
had rallied to win in the final period.
So when they foWid ihemselves
behind the Colts 17-9 going into the
fourth quarter, they weren't particularly.worried.
"We had a feeling that we'd come
back,'' said Bills guard Reggie
McKenzie. "It was just a matter of
stopping the mistakes.''
But it never happen~. All the
Bills could come up with was a 20yard field goal by Nick Mike-Mayer
in the late going, and it wasn't
enough.
Buffalo wasn't the only upset victim on the NFL's sixth Sunday, The
Pittburgh steelers were knocked off
by the Cincinnati Bengals for the
second 'time this season 17-16, but
stayed atop the AFC Central
Division because the Houston Oilers
were surprised bY the Kanaas City
Chiefs 21-20. The San Diego
Chargers were upset by the Oakland
Raiders 33-24, the Cleveland Browns
shocked the Seattle Seahawks 27-3
and the New York Jets surprised the
AtiantaFalcons!4-7.
.
The Jets' victory, their first of the
season, left the New Orleans Saints
as the only winless team in the
league. New Orleans was beaten by
theDetroitUons24-13.
In other games, the New England
Patriots clobbered the Miami
Dolphins 3411, the Dallas Cowboys
overwhelmed the San FranciscO
49ers ~14, the Philadelphia Eagles
beat the New York Giants 31-16, Ute
Green Bay Packers and Tampa Bay
Buccaneers fought to a 14-14 tie, the ·
Los Angeles Rams defeated the St.
Louis Cardinals 21-13 and the Minnesota Vikings topped the Chicago
Bears 13-7.
Washington is at Denver Monday
night.
Beugals 17, Steelen 18
"We're a better team than Clncinnati, so why in the world did they
beat us twice?" asked Pittsburgh
tacldeJoeGreeneaftertheBengals,
behirid quarterback Ken Andenton,
raced to a 17~ halftime lead and
. held on: Steelel'll kicker Matt Bahr
!lad
also an
missed
extra-point
a :IS-yard
tryfield
blocked
goaland
at- '

1

routine line drive that gave the
Boone, the veterari catcher who
single by Alan Ashby. When the
Dodgers the clinching NL playoff Astros scored three in the seventh, it · with Mike Sclunidt, Larry Bow a,
victory.
looked like the Phillies were done.
. Trillo, Pete Rose and Bake McBride
·~ -~I'd forgotten abo.ut that," said
.But the team-many said lacked~ formed the core of this team, Was in
the happy Maddox in the madhouse character refused to quit. They
an emotional state.
that was the Phillies' dre&amp;~ing rPOIII. · came ba,ck with fiveJn the eighth to
A champagne bottle in his hand, a take a 7-S lead. The Astros tied it
smUe as broad as the ocean on his with two in the eighth, but Dick
face, Maddox said, " This more than 'Ruthven, a starting pitcher, came on
inakes up for that. It's the happiest in relief and retired six straight bat.
ters, while Unser and Maddox
dayofmycareer."
·Second baseman Manny Trillo provided the winning run.
was voted the Most Valuable Player
Phillies l\'(anager Dallas Green,
of the playoff With eight hits in 21 at champagne dripping from his 6-foot,
bats for an average of .381, including 5-inch frame and tears welling in his
a two-run triple in the eighth inning eyes, said of his team :
of the clinching game.
"I don't know if I'll live through
The Astros took a Hl lead in the this one. I badgered these guys
first Inning behind fire balling Nolan about the necessity of character sinRyan on an RBI-double by Jose ce spring training. I don't know any
Cruz. The Phillies came back with greater display of character than
two in the second as Bob Boone rip- this team showed in the month of
ped a two-run sing!~.
September, in clinching the division
Houston tied it in the sixth with the and in this series. They didn't quit. It
help of a two-base error and.a pinch- was incredible."

It
•Jlo

•

TIM HALSTEAD
'
"2-2156

:·

*

·

~

It

""•*************************'***'***'*****'

Its
one
reasat ~electric rates
···are below the nati&lt;&gt;nal average.
.

'"

«onomtcaa ··

'

We're your hometown
powt1!1' company,. But iNe're ·
a1ao part of American Eectt:tc
Power, one ol the largest electriC iystems.tn the country.
· When you tum on a light
awttch, or an ippltance, or a .
teleVts10n1chances are you ..,
don't eare whlll'll thi electridty

get the most
comet from. But we do.
power
to you ~m anywhare
You see, at different times
in
the
system.
·
.,
Of the day, the cost of making
Being part of thll ~
electricity can vary from plant
system With split second effl~
to plant. And, because we'~
~ of the AEP. System, wert dency li one way we've kept
able to use the best combtna- your electric rata bUiw the
nallonillaverage. •
· ·
lion of generatiQn·and trans, _, u.. Elot:ltc lnotlMo, Julll1979
. mission efficiency to lnltantly

We give it our best.

~ lot ln--OwnociEioc:trlt Utltllo.

OHlO POWER COMM.NY

.

�'f-Tne uauy ~un~t, .l¥lluw~vuu·rvulclv.r , v., ~u.v..,_..r , ..., ..........., .. ... ....

&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 13, 1980

Helen Help Us
Husband and 'best friend·'
BY HELEN li()TTEL
Special correspoodent
DEAR HELEN: When my. best
friend from college days found a job
in our city, I invited her to stay with
us until an apartment she liked was
available.
She stayed a year - and hilt with
my husband r 1 learned they had
.,been meeting in our bedroom almost
every afternoon while I worked.
He's in real estate and she sells ads
for radio, so that wasn't difficult to
manage.
Wei), my husband came back. It
wasn't easy, but I've made this af·
fair past tense, and I hope he has too.
The problem is that my fonner
friend is part of our social group
because I introduced her around and
our friends accepted her. My
husband thinks this is okay - it's
over, so there's no need to llold a
grudge. I'm uncomfortable when
she's in the same room.
Should I try to get back on the old
standing, drop out of the group, or
what? - PRESENT TENSE
DEARP.T.:
If you've truly put this affair
behind you, why then i.s your present
so tense? Stay with the crowd and
hope a single woman who was only
accepted on your say-so will soon be
out of it. -H.

'

OHIO DAR - Mrs. Joseph L. Colburn, Southeast
District director_ of the Ohio Daughters of the
American Revolution, third from left, was the guest
speaker at the luncheon meeting of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter Friday. Other guests were Mrs. Ker&gt;-

neth Tomlinson, regent of the French Colony Chljpter,
left, and Mrs. Dwight Mutchler, regent of the Nabby
Lee Ames Chapter, Athens, right, along with several
members from both chapters. Pictured with the guests
is Mrs. Gene Yost, regent of the local chapter.
'

Ohio DAR director speaks locally
Mrs. Joseph L. Colburn, Southeast has served the State Society as
District di rector of the Ohio chairman of the Children of the
Daughters of the American American· lj.evolution an
Revolution, present~d the program d the Junior American Citizens comat the Friday luncheon meeting of mittees. A gradtJate of Ohio State
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, University, she is a substitute
D.A.R., held at the Meigs Inn.
• teacher in the Colilmbus Public
Introduced by Mrs. Clyde Ingles, Schools at the junior-senior high
program chairman, Mrs. Colburn school level. In addition to the DAR,
gave a slide narration and corr&gt;- ' Mrs. Colburn is active in many
mentary on the homes of women and school, civic, community and church
patriots of the American Revolution. activities.
She commented on the different
Gue~ts at the luncheon meeting
aspects of the homes of such people were members of the Nabby Lee
as Betsy Ross, Thomas Jeffers, Ames Chapter of Athens, and the
Ralph Wa ldo Emerson, · Paul French Colony Chapter in G.allipolis.
Revere, and Washington,. and told
Approximately 50 attended the
how the homes wer;e furnished and luncheon meeting presided over by
who lived in them.
Mrs. Gene Yost, regent. Mrs. Joseph
Mrs. Colburn is a member of the
Cook, chaplain, assisted ip the
Whetstone Chapter of Columbus and
ritualistic opening. It was noted that

Your
Libraries

L
I
6
' 1\
A

R

y

By Ellen Bell,
and the heat in the building stays
Meigs Cmwty Ubrarian
turned down to 68 degrees.) Without
Monday night was the one and
more money, the libraries will have
only meeting of the Library Levy
to close - most likely for several
Committee, presided over by Barhours a day or OQe or more extra
bara Knight. The discussion cendays a week.
tered on why the libraries need
Books have never been plentiful at
money and what the corrunittee can
either library and records are even
do about it.
more scarce. This _year, money for
Library service in Meigs County
records ran out long before June,
has historically been inadequate. As
library moriey for books ( e&lt;cept
late as the early 1970s, Pomeroy
thoseJor a Federal grant) ran out
Public Library was open to the
this summer, and OVAL money for
public five afternoons a week; Midbooks ran out last month. The
dleport Public Library was open
libraries didn't have very many new
three days a week. j.Jnder the leader·
books earlier this year, but people
ship of Pat Holter a,s Board
who are searching for the " latest"
president and Susan Flestunan as
books will be disappointed until next
the first trained librarian, the hours
spring.
were increased. Pomeroy began to
Bookmobile service in Meigs
be open seven days a week and MidCounty, which has been reaching
dl~ort six days. When Ruth Powers
people all along the river and in Tuptook over as supervis r at Mid·
pers Plaiils and RuUand and Cardleport, that library also added
penter and other communities far
evening hours on Monday.
from Pomeroy and Middleport, will
This year, Pomeroy Public
be cut from 625 hours per year to 440
. Library had to end Sunday service,
hours per year.
· keep half the lights turned off, and
How much more library service
turn the thermosta I down to 68
will be cut the Board of Trustees
degrees in cold weather and the air
really doesn't know. Repairs at the
conditioner off in hot weather - all
libraries have increased and se have
to conserve money in an effort to
utilities. If they continue to go up,
stay open all year. (Middleport
the Board will have to figure out new
Public Library never had Sunday . ways to cut back.
hours or an air conditioner. The
Library service in Meigs County,
· lights stay off in the children 's room
which never got to the point of being
unless someone is using the room
excellent, won't even be good.

H~alth

DEAR HELEN:
My daughter is another who got
mixed up with a prison pen pal.
·They've been corresponding for a
year. He says he needs to borrow
$1,000 for a lawyer to help prove he's
inn!X'ent. He'll be up for parole soon,
an~ I think he plans to disappear
with the money.

the·ooth anniversary of the founding
of the National Society is being olr
served this month.
Mrs. Kenneth Tomlinson, regent
of the French Colony Chapter, and
Mrs. Dwight -Mutchler, regent of the
Nappy Lee Ames Chapter, were introduced and spoke briefly. Besides
members of the visiting chapters,
Mrs. Albert Ingles of Coronado,
Calif. was a guest.
Flowers from the gardens of Mrs.
James Andrews and ·Mrs. Richard
Barton of the Chester Garden Club
were used on the tables. Hostesses in
charge -of arrangements were Mrs.
Dale Dutton, Mrs. Charles Lewis,
Mrs. Nan Moore, Mrs. Dayton Parsons, Mrs. Harold Sargent, and Mrs.
Pearl Mora.

Social
Calendar

She is selling her car and will walk
to work from her apartment. How
can I stop her? She's 23 and kind·
he&lt;ir!ed.- MRS. J.D.
DEAR MRS. D. :
Yo~~t daughter should realize that
$1:000 wiU · scarcely- start legal
wheels turning, if, in fact, there is a
legitimate case. But since the money
will take away her wheels, she'd bet·
ter be business-like about the loan.
Suggest that she get the name and
address of the lawyer and pay him a
visit. You yoursell might contact the
prison: if this pen pal is a con artist,
the warden will probably know.
You can't stop a · 23-year-old
women from doing as she pleases
with her money but the right evidence may change her mind. (I doubt
she'll thank you for it.) -H.
DEARHELEN:
,
I'm late in answering "Frances"
who thinks overweight policemen
should be fired .
Did she ever realize that those
''waddling" cops put their lives on
the line fQr her every day? They can
ma.ke split second decisions in lifethreatening crises just like the skinrues. And many can and do keep up
with lightweights on foot patrol.
If Frances were in need of an officer's assistance, would she turn
him away because he looked a
" mess" in' his unifonn? He'd look
pretty good to her if he were called
to her home on a medical emergency
or to break up a domestic squabble.
She should be grateful these men
are there to protect her. They work
hard! I know, as I'm married to a
slightly overweight officer. - S.

Get-acquainted circle games were
played when the Salisbury Brownie
Troop· 1220 met this week at the
Salisbury Elementary School.
Four new members were received
into the troop and the Brownies
talked about activities the)i would
like to have during the year. Mem·
bers sang "Happy Birthday" to
Julie Brumfield and Kewana Singer.
Refreshinents were served by
Mindy Carson, Melanie_Beegll! J!nd
Leslie Lyons. The girl scout promise
and the pledge to the flag closed the
meetinP

~;;;;-;::;~:;::-!TeleVision

The Past Councilors' Club of
01ester Council, Daughters of
America met recently at the hall
with Mrs: Inzy Newell presiding. She
read from the fifth chapter of St.
Matthew, and the members gave the
Lo!"ll's Prayer and the pledge to the
flag in unison.
.
.
For roll call members named their
favorite tree. Mrs. Opal Hollon gav~
the secretary's repolt, and Mmj-·
Mae McPeek the.treasurer's report;
Games were conducted by Mrs. ·
Thelam White, and refreshments
were served by Mrs. Mary Shoealter
and Mrs. Ada Bissell. Mrs:
Elizabeth Hayes won the door prize • .
The November meeting will be at
the home of Betty Roush with
Pauline Ridenour as the co-hostess. •
. Others attending tbe meeting were .
Leona Hensley, Laura Mae Nice;
' Charlotte Grant, Mary .K. Holteri
Ada Neutzling, Pauline Ridenour,
Jean Frederick, Letha Wood, Adli
Morris, and two guests, Fern Morris
and Sandy White.
MOVE TO DAYTON
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Zirkle and
children, Beverly and Andy, who
have resided at Wanter-Robbins, •
Ga. for the past nine years, have. ·
moved to the Dayton area. The:
family visited over the weekend:
here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs-:
Robert Duckworth and family, and.
·
other relatives.

Gilmore, and Mrs. Eichinger. Sun- ·
shine sisters were revealed and
namo!s were drawn for the new year.
A $5 contribution was made to the
cystic fibrosis fund .
Mrs. Iva Powell will host the
November meeting. Attending
besides those named were Mrs.
Della Curtis, Mr~. Ruby Frick, Mrs. o
B~rtha Parker, Mrs. Allil Mash, and
Mrs. Betty Stewart who was
welcomed as a new member.

Reservations for mee'ting asked
Reservations for the Region 11 fall
. meeting to be held at Grace United
Methodist Church in Gallipolis
Saturday are to be sent to Mrs. Bess
Call, Route 2, Bidwell, before
Tuesday. For the · luncheon and
program, the fee is $6, while for the
program alone the fee is $3.
Coffee hour will be held between 9
: and 10 a.m. Mrs. Francis Titus,
· president of the Ohio Association of

Garden Clubs, and Mrs. iJluise Ber&gt;nett, state advisor, will be presept.
Mrs. Janet Bolin will · conduct a
workshop on judging artistic
arrangements, specimens and pot.
ted plan~, with Mrs. Suzy Carpenter
to give the afternoon program on
designing traditional flower
arrangements along with, creative
artistic design.

SPOIL

H1!5

(() rml CBS NIWI
WILD WLD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
l~ICK CAVETT SHOW
.ABC NEWS
8:118
NEWI UPOATI
7:00
• PM MAGAZINE
·NORMAN VINCENT PIALI
ALI,lN THE !fAMILY .
(Ill. FAMILY FEUD
NAIHVIUE ON THIIiOAD
(() T1C TAC DOUGH
.
MACHEIL-LIHRER REPORT

TO

.JAW~

HAM 6AI&lt;II¥P ~

Winner.
NFORD AND ION
. ·
(I) JOKER'S WILD
HOllYWOoD SQUARES
DICK CAVETT SHOW
MACNEIL-LIHAER REPORT
• FACE THE MUIIC
7:118
NEWS UPDATE
8:00
. ( I ) UTTI.IHOUBEONTHE
PRAIRIE Hired tocoochlho Wolnut

i

I
•
!

plants

~

hang.ng

Iormor grid olor drlvoo tho young·

Syracuse, Oh.

It and endangorolhelr health. (80
mine.) (Ciooed·Capllonod)
" (J) COSTLY COLLAPSE OF
AMERICA'S COURAGE
()) MOVIE -(DRAMA) •••• "D-

:: ANNIE

~nlar" 1178

~~~ THAT'SINCAI!DIBLI

Open Daily Mon.·Sat.
9toS

lft(f)

DID YOU HEAR ABOUT

JOSH AIID KELLY? A comedy
divorce Ia about to be finalized but ·

who don't want to aeperate, and
conaaqu8fltly aettle on an lnnova·
tlvt cornpromlae.

(() OlinT PERFORMANCES
'Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy'Portlll.
SuporapyGoorgeSmlleyranoocka

~NAQIN

·atar aa Jonathan and Karen Alexander, attractive, upwardly mobile

a·: n

1:00

ATTENTION

youn11 nowlywodo with no prob·
I OKCepllhOI hi II blind. ·

I

I'EWSUPOATI

cr:JMONDAYNIOHTATTHE
MOVIES 'Tho Othor Side 01 Tho

Mounlaln'1975Storo: Ma~l\'ftHoo·

aett, Beau Bridgaa.

CARRIER
NEEDED

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sqntag

Chancy contract elusive
NORTH
•n

a slightly different hand and
failure to approach v1a a smt
bid might well cost a mmor
suit slam."
Alan· "Just make North's
four of ·spades the king and his
king of hearts the four and the
club slam would be a fa1r one .
Or make his hand K x A x K x
x x x K J x x and the slam
would almost be a cinch, yet
North would just raise two
notrump to three with either

l0-13-80

.AKJ
tQH82

• QJ9
EAST
WFSI'
.KJ6
.Q 10853
• 9 8 5 3'2
.107
t765
t K 103

.

.,

•K62

I

SOUTH
• ADZ

•Qu·
tA4
.A10875
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West

, Pass
Pass

North

East

Soulb

It

Pass
Pass

2NT
Pass

3NT

Opening lead:• 5

By Ottwald Jacoby
IIIII A1aa Solltag
Oswald: "We would prefer a
t,.o-ciub response with the
South band. He does have -a
standard · two-notrump
resporioe ab.o, but &amp;lve North

hand."

.

~

Oswald: "South does not
like the spade lead. If he stoP.s
to duck two rounds .he will
exhaust East's spades. Unfor·
tunately, South must take the
club finesse into West and the
duck play won'fsucceed ."
Alan: "There is a line of
play that may succeed. South
must win the first spade, go to
dummy with a heart and take
the club finesse . If it works, he
will make his ccntract in any
event."
Oswald: "It fails, OQ wha l is
West now going to do? He IS
very likely to tfiink that South.
holds the jack of spades. He
may lead a diamond in a de~­
perate attempt to put h1s
partner in.''
Alan: "If West does continue spades; South will go down

that SBllll: trick he would have
been down had he ducked to
start."
(NEWSPAPeR ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

•.

Waehlngton Redaklna and the
l!t~[DrOrlcoo.

•wrm&gt; M.A.S.H.Horrtllodbylho
glgonllcolzoathlo monthly bar lob

atthedfflcer'aclub,HIIwkeyavowa

: GASOLINE ALLEY

Gretchen piclt.ed
a fine time to

-

IN SYRACUSE

have to qo!

CALL

to give up booze for a -k.
·(!!OQ!ot)
(I) {ll) ADVOCATl8: ELECTION

--.

'80 Ue)ng a courtroom fotm11t, Ml·

chooiDUkaklomoderalooa-to

between repreaantatlvee of the

loading Preoldonllal condldatoo.
&lt;aomJn.o.)
11:30 • CIJ &lt;Ia&gt; 14U. ANNUAL
c:outmiY IIUIIC AWARDS
10:00 (() SYIIIOU OF THE PAIT .
· - Vlncenl Price norratao thlo film
·about 1he remarkable Aambov•

Colloctlon ot Egypllon entlquHioo
and Ita founder Nata aha Rambova,

. wllo at tho movlo Idol Rudolph

:~=~V~~5t~~~~r:eALID

.T88 EV!NINO NEWS
EIGHTEEN TONS OF MUSIC
?N AONE NIGHT STAND Thll flm
aflora o rare gt,.,poo of tho DllroH
Symphony on European tour, of·
fording a ..,lquo poropectlvo of tho
truotrottonoond)oyaofbolngontho

•
\YINNIE
5HE'5 GOT SOME

OF HER 13EBT ~TUFF

IN 'THAT COLLECTION!

WON'T WINNIE ~E 61JRPRISE()

WHEN oHE "TURNS UP AT
'THAT $2DO·PER-DEAT
CHAI&lt;:ITY EVENT•.• ,..,....."""-.,;

AND FIND$ 11-IAT TI-lE TI&lt;!UCK
CARRYING 1HE EN11 RE SHIP-

MeNT HAf7 ~EEN
11/.JACI&lt;EP ~

I

d.

lt::

OPINMIND

Bi~i NEWS

FESTIVAL OF PRAllE
ITANDINO ROOM ONLY
'Burlaoqua U.S.A.' Rod Iuliano
hoato o ulutoto the boggy panto
comedlano. olopollck okotchoo
and elaborate mualoal dance

umblro of the vaudovllla oro.
MONTY PYTHON'S FLYINO

(J)

rgu~CAVETTIHOW

'

~~;:: ffin=wNIOHTSHOW
'loll ot caroon' Guilla: Mlchool

· ··

LMdon,llllckHarlry.RoclniNJiago
Bulan. (R-1: eo mlno.)

.RAI'\NEY

WOULD '/OU
CHOP ME SOME
KINOLIN' WOOD.
HONEV-POT? '

A free how-to guide
for the frugal

I'

.

BAU ABC Sporto will provklollve
coverage oftho gomo botweonlho

BETWEEN 8:30 and 5&amp;00

S(;ill your best enellY value.
And we want to keep 1t that way.

.

~~Of.'i.'::.DAYNIOHTFOOT· ·

992-2156

c6wMBI~AAS

Answer: What he sa1d he'd do when he was chal·
fanged to a duel-TAKE A S1AB AT IT

DOUGLAS

8:30 .(l)fm) LOVEATFIRSTBIOHT
·
Philip Levien and Suaan Bigelow

THE DAILY SENTINEL

•

Jumbles: BATHE STAID
IMB IBE JUNKET
.

the peat In aearch of a clue to·the

Identity of the mole. tho Soviet
counloropywho Ia betraying Brltloh
lntolllgenco.(Cioood-Capllonod)
@mlna.)
liDCONVERSATlONWITHHELIN

r--------------------------1

Not only does the Columbia Gas "Everyday Energy Saver's Guide" make great reading, it makes
great sense. Especially ifyou're out to save money.
It's full of tips that you and your family can u8e
everrday to help make your home more energy
effic1ent. Which IS good to know. And even better,
Q1ost of the ideas won't cost you a cent. They take
~nly a little extra care, but can lead to real savings
m energy use. ·
And you can't beat the price. The booklet is free.
So ask for a copy: "The Everyday Energy Saver's
Guide'," available onlr from Columbia Gas. AI) it
takes is a phone cal or1 visit to _your Columbia
office-and a desire to save.

I

lJJMO.V IE-(DRAMA)••• ucarrle'' ·

992· 5776

by the above cartoon.

BRIDGE

Grove achoOI f9otball team, a

ateraeohardthatheruinathelreplr·

HUBBARD'-S
GREENHOUSE

'I ·

te,ma and try to plctc; thla yaar'a

';

Large selection'ot ho~se

·

two contending World Sorloo

i

FOR FALL SEASON

Saturda 's

ttrengtha and weakn•11••• of the

.,

gest~

r I I I XT I )KX 1 )

·die and Carroll Eateo. Profoooor of
Sociology. Hooto: Hugh Down a and
Fro!!!! Blair. (Cioood·Copllonod)
7:30 ~. IIJLUII!YE
WORDS OF HOPI!
BASEIALL:UIIO WORLD ·
SERIES SCOUTING RIPOIIT
MaJor looguo oKporto ovoluololho

oo I '5Ma.L AJUIC.Y

Now arrange the circled letters to

form the surprise answer. lis sug·

(Answers tomorrow)

Conference on Aging' Gueata:
ConterenceChalnnanJet"omaWal·

. BO~LOSER

WHAT YOU M 16HI
EXPECT DRACULA lO
U6E; WHEN 11'5 HIS
"TURN TO HIT • .

l]

Answerh.ere: A

OVER EASY 'Whllo Houoo ·

NOW OPEN

r

I/.

NEWS

fR

.

THAT 01.! ELBOW OF

110181AGLEY8HOW

MOVIE -(DIIAMA) •••141 "hot

·~~~TIIIOVIE'OUINCV

,
III.E.: AGood Smick In tho llloulh' .
St-: Jack Ktvgman. Garry W~l·

HiS OUGHT TO GIT A
80DACrOUS ''OSCAR"

bora. When tho wile of Quincy •
tiooo to Involved In o Ctlr oookllnl,
oho Indo up In tho hoopHal with a
yoUng hHchhlkor wllo Quincy au·
epectala a victim of chUd abuae.

bee~n~~~=---..

RID£NOUR GAS CO. __ _
CHESTER, OHIO

.

il ABC

I

'
'

•'

l~~
11:10

I

.

iiiOVJ!

NIWI

~TOIIGMOWHolt:Tom .

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Collar style •
1 Prince
DOWN
5 - fizz
1 Playwright,
aBorder on · David %Adam's son
9 Detest
13 Lugosi
3 He crossed
14 Patriotic
the Rubicon
music
4 One - time
. 15 Anne
5 Look
Yesterday's Allswer
Jackson's
1 Old Greek
16 "Darling, Je 25 Overfill
mate
colony
Vous 27 Plant
1&amp; Blackbird
7 Man's
disease
Beaucoup"
17 Prior to
nickname
19Gyrate
29
Screening
18 City near
11 Proverb
item
21 Picked up
Syracuse
quoted
zo German
by 3 Down 22 Hemmed-in 33 Besides
34 Horse
article
11 Start of
territor&gt;:
36
Cacophony
23
Mother
,
%l Applicant's
a toast
31 Fanner's
in
document
u Famed
need
Tours
Z3 Fail
essayist
%4 Ink (Fr.)
Z5 Look after
21 Read
through
Z'l "The Swamp
Fox"
1:-::-+-t28 Mexican tree
28 Locales
30 Barker
and Perkins
31 O'Neill
drama ·
32 Lift cage ·
il5 Ducked out
37 Blessed
one's
symbol
38 Originate
38Greek
mountain
40Unused
10·1
•
'
,
I
,
,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:
.

WORLD

11•1 8COUTIIIQ MPORT

(
I

•••

.

Olle letter olmpl7 otondo for another. In this sample A 1.1
used for the three L's. X for the two O's, ete: Single letters,
apDIItrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
blnta. Each day the code letters are different.
caYPTOQUOTES

LQW

VZRK

GUR

LQW

BYUR

Major i l l - • ....,..,.,.... lhl
olrlngtlll and WllkftiUIO at 1111 .
two contending World Sarlao
t"ml and try to plolt thlo , _.,

YULWJRWHWURWUL,

~--

LQW ZLQWJ.- FJWUEYXXW

::!IF~"'

, t:OO

II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Snyder. Ounto: Nonnan Mal)ar,
(1) .•A.IALL:1810

•'

''

ABC

-on. PllrN F~. (110

r

•
•

....

John
mini I

•
I

6«~~-~·r(

~P~_;&gt;H

. p;;;VINTUIII)
•••
•
"1111

For over 20 years Doxol propane has.
an efficient economical answer to clean
quiet home heating as well as cooking, '
water heating and clothes drying . .. and
that same pleasant, dependable service is
still available . .. and it's still economical! •

call ~' we'd ltke to help )allf ··-·--

'

(Repeal) 'THE NEW AVINOERS:
Houoo of Cardo' Staro: Potrlok
Moen••· Joanna Lumley. St11d,
Purday and Gambit manago to

1:31

•

tNIMER?j
IREMMEB± .

· FA(&lt;ITHEMUIIC

'THSN PROCI:EP5

. .. ....,.._

I ZOTAP

.

808 MWHAIIT SHOW

· Oi\P'fAINEASY .
E~Y I&lt;ICI&lt;5 DIRT IN.THJ: GUI&gt;lMAN~
. FACE' IN TIME- TO 'SPOIL HI? AIM··~

club has anniversary

The 44th anniversary of the Laurel
Cliff Better Health Club was
celebrated with a potluck dinner at
the Meigs County Infirmary Thursday.
,
Mrs. Polly Eichinger had table
grace. Readings were given by Mrs.
Eichinger, "God is Near," Mrs.
Marge Fetty, "Month of October,"
and Robin Campbell "Yell.ow
Roses." Named to the flower committee were Mrs. Fetty, Mrs. Donna

-OW"CTORY
CAR~ BURNETT AND
II!NDI
·i dNEWS
;
:to2·1 CONTACT
(I) N8C NEWS
THEDOOR

.

f~a:i..J

±
. [) ·-K J I

NEWS

'

and

I

EVENING

t:30

byHenriAmoldandBobloo

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

OCT.13,11180

F

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

one lett~r to each square , to form
four ordinary words.

Viewing

- ~

baskets.

'ft fljlf.\hl jl;)'\1

~ ~ ~~ 41

ibout a conrueed couple whoae

WINDING TRAIL WINDING
CLUB, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, at the
home of Mrs. Alice Thompson. The
program will be on care of
houseplants in the winter montha.

SIGH!
When you were 20, you thought the
sun rose and set with her. Mter 40,
she's always telling you when to go
to bed and when to get up.

D of -A meets·

Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talk it over
in her column if you write to. Helen
Bolte!, care of this newspaper.

MONDAY .
REVIVAL, 7:30 p.m. at Racine
Baptist Church, Oct. 12 through 19
with Jerry Neal preaching. Farrilly ·
night observance on Monday ·and
youth night on Wednesday; public
invited.
SPECIAL MEETING, PoJl!eroy
Chapter 110, Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
p.m. Monday. Worl,&lt;in the most excellent master degree; all companions invited.
POMEROY PTA Monday 7:30
p.m. Meet teachers night. Meeting ·
will be opened . by kindergarten
students.
TWIN CITY SHRINE Monday 7 ·
p.m. Twin City Shrine Park, Racine.
Barbecued chicken will be served.
TUESDAY
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday 7:30
p.m. Program "children's health" ·
to be presented by Joyce Thorn,
school nurse.

Brownies get acquainted

DICK TRACY

.lAIII&amp; K-DY
MWI
·

GVNDW

ZUW

CY L Q Z N L

KZN

GJW

IG!J'L

G A A WILY U, F

TXW ·Y DWJ

Ye1teri17'1 Cl'JPt..ilete: MAKE PREPARATIONS 11'1

ADVANCE. YOU NEVER HAVE TROUBLE IF YO\l ARE
PREPARED FOR IT.;_'niEODORE ROOSEVELT

.

'

�..
9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, 0&lt;-t. 13.1980

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday. Oct. 13, 1980

Polly's ·Pointers

Can 't get gray ·out
By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - Several of my
slips and other underwear have turned very gray after ooing was~ed in
the machine with hot water lind
detergent, and I wonder if this could
have cauSed them to turn gray. They
are poly,ester or similar materials,
so what do you recommend for
washing such garments of the
polyester family" Is there any tint I
could use to chang~ of gray color?•
THanks for any help. - FAY.
DEAR FAY This graymg of
·underthings usually comes from
too much of too little detergent and
too little rinsing.

T. K.

Cramer
I never use hot water for s uch
things and follow the chart on the
box of the "all-temperature "
detergent I use. Warin water does a
very good job.
There IS a commercial product
(available at the dye counterm most
department or variety stores) that is
a nylon whitener · and fabric
brightener that may be the answer
to your problem concerrung color.
Read directiOns on the label and
follow them carefully. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - We have had
foster children of all ages m our
home. I have found when small
ch1Idren ha ve m inor speech
problems, a tape recorder, used in
game form , Wll allow them t o hear
themselves as others hear them Often they will then correct their own

Hay~s

Barton,

reunion success

All of the Jolm Barton and Lucy
Hayes children, except Helen
Woode, who is confined to the Kimes
Convalescent Home at Athens, were
present at a family reunion at the
home of Clifford and Thelma Hayes
on Route 248 Sunday.
Attending were Russell and Mary
Bamum, Beulah Piatt, Hilah
RoumeUoti and son, Robert, and
Dottle Waugh, Columbus; the Rev.
and Mrs. Frank Cheese brew,
Shawnee; Gregory and Cindy Hayes
and daughter, Amber Nichole, and
Franc1s Case, Middleport, and
Charlie Woode and son, Clair and

VISIT our new gilt section,
handcrafted gills, seasonal
decorations by local ar·
tlsls. Halloween Items on
sale now. Check our prices
&amp; selection first Also Will
accept handcrafted Items
for consignment sale 992·
6193, The Tack le Box, SR
124, Syracuse, Ohio 45779

'

Mrs . Connie Thompson was
presented her 35 JIOiind pin and was
accepted into the slim and trim
program of Silnderella at a recent
meeting of the Monday night Mason
class. Mrs. Thompson and Mrs.
Carolyn Hesson lost the most weight
for the week with Mrs. Eileen Fields I
lis the. runnel'-up. At this- week's.."
meeting of the class, Mary Gress
lost the most weight, and Eileen
Fields was the rwmel'-up.
At the Tuesday morning Mason
Class, top losers the past \wo weeks
have been Virginia Robie, Mary
Lisle, and Evelyn McDaniel.
Debbie Fink lost the most weight
at the Tuesday night class with
Dodie Seth and Ruth Smith tying for
runner-up. At the Middleport class,
Delores Hawk lost the most with
Debbie Hill as rwJnei'-UP wbile at the
Chester Class there was a tie betwej!n Maxine Jordan, Betty Barker,
and Pauline Ridenour for the most
weight lost, 'and Olive Weber, Karen
Smith and Betty Newell for rwmerup.

problems. All children try harder
when !omething Ill taught m game
form. A dime a night for having a
dry bed IS gret for helping cure bedwetters as they do not have such acciden~ nearly a- often. Also while
potty training children, hand clappmg makes them happy when the
proper results are a~ed and they
do not dread this nearly so much.
Everyone likes praise for what they
do. - SHERRY
Congratulations, Sherry. You '
must be a most understanding,
patient and loving foster mother POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Used fabric softener sheets do a great job of shining
•hoes. Also, a fresh sheet can be put
n a suit case to make it smell good
and keep things static free. - MRS.

f_~ouncem;;,IS--

4-Her's receive champion medals

Thompson honored
by Slint.krella

SUe Woode, Dayton; John and Bernice Stolar and daughter, Marilyn,
Allison, Tracy Gary, and Negan Fotten, Lorain, and Stanley and Evadell
Martin, Westerville.
Afternoon callers were John and
Elizabeth Hayes, Chester, and Kermit and Ruth McElroy of SyrecUBe.

A birthday cake was enjoyed by
the group. It was presented 'bY the
Rev. Mr and Mrs. Cheese brew
honoring the October birthdays of
her sister, Thelma Hayes, and Hilah
Roumelioti.

i&gt;ins and medals were presented
tQ f.H Club members receiving
grand champion awards on their
project work at the recent Awards
Night held at the Senior Citizens
· Center.
The awards were provided by
~orpmerelal CO!Jipanies in the
project
area .
ReceivTng
achievement awards from the Ford
. Motor Co. Fund•. were Bill Dyer,
Ralph Jordan, Cindy Pitzer, and
Terri Pullins. The International
Harvester agriculture awards went
to Bill Dyer, Ralph Jordan, Cindy
Pitzer, and Patty Parker. ·
Tammy Calaway, Patty Parker,
Beth Ritchie and Klia Young
received the Stan4ard Brands Inc.
awards for breads, wbile the CocaCola Co. citizenship awards went to
Bill Dyer, Cindy Pitzer, Terri
PuiJiiis, and Tanunie Starcher.. The
Meigs County f.H Committee
presented the bicycle award to Scott
Starcher.
Other awards were for clothing
projects (Coats and Clark, Inc.),
received by Teresa Guthrie, Kathy
Parker, Kristi Haynes, Melanie Arnold, Renee Kaylor, Tammy
Calaway, Usa Collins, Beth Ritchie,
Susan Danner, Beth Ritchie, Conrue
Stout, and Cindy Pitzer; conservation, ( Jolm Deere) Patti
Dugan, Becky Edwards, Kevm
Napier, and Pam Riebel; consumer
education (Montgomery Wlird and
Co.) PaiU Dugan, Jolm Edwards,
Kirk Flck and Jolm Riebcl; Dairy
foods (Carnation CO.) Kathy Parker.
For dog care, the Purina Dog
Foods Co. , provided awards for Jo
Ellen Crane, Lee Ann Robinson, and
Demse Stegall. other awards
presented were as follows :

McGuire, Mike McGuire, and Klia

Entomology (Mobay Chemical
Corp.) April Brickles and Donia
Crane,
Food-Nutrition (General Foods
Corp. and the f.H Committee), Tammie ~her, Erica Kessinger,
Denise Stegall, Greta Kennedy,
Brenda Calaway, )!ecky Rife, Beth
Ritchie, Pam Riebel, Klia YOung,
Terri,$tarcher. Teresa Guthrie.
Food preservation (Kerr Glass
Mfg. Corp.). llia Collins, Lea Ann
Gaul, Kathy Parker, Allee Ritchie.
Forestry (International Paper
Co.), Bill Dyer.
Gardening (Chevron Chemical
Co.), Ulja Collins, Caralyn Barton,
Bill Dyer, and Becky Edwards.
Health (Ell Lilly and Co.), Jolut
Arnold, Sherry Arnold, Kristy·
Haynes, and Amy _Louks.
Home Management (Beatrice
Foods Co. ), Teresa Dorst.
Home Environment (TheS. and H.
Foundation), Amy Connolly, Mark

Young.
Leadership (Reader's Digest),
Beth Ritchie, Ralph Jordan, April
Parker, Patty Parker.
Petroleum power (Amaco Foundation, Inc.), Jolut Beave,r Bljl
D)'erJ and Nickey Leonard.
Veterinary Science ('f'he Upjolm
CO.), Jeff Arnold.
Photogtaphy (Eastman Kodak
CO.), Sherry Arnold, Jim Bahr,
Melanie Arnold, and Deniae White.
Public speaking (Union Oil Co. of
Calif.), Becky Edwards, Mary Edwards, Carrie Karr, and Tammie
Starcher.
Safety (General Motors Foundation), Sherri Myers, Joey Parker,
Kathy Parker, and Jared Sheets.
Wood Science (Weyerhaeuser Co.
FoundaUon), Doug Beaver, Tom
Pullins, Ed Collins, and Robert Jeffers.

At its October meeting, the Gallia
County Human Services Council
voted to endorse both the 1 mlll
Guiding Hand Levy and the one-half
mill Ubrary Levy which will appear
on the ballot on November 4.
Twenty-two members of the council were present to hear Jonathan
Louden, director of the BOSBard
Memorial Ubrary, explain the serVices of the library and the cuts in
these services as a result of the I~
of funding due to decreases in money
from Intangible Personal Property
Tax. Louden answered questions
and explained the reaSOilll for the

LARGE TAN fema le dog,
fou'nd in Rock Springs
area. Call992·2770

4FAMILY Yard sale. 3rd &amp;
Bridgman St., Syracuse,
Oh. Oct. 13-17, 9 30 till ?
Kitchen utensils, dishes,

glasswares, records of the

Pubhc Notice

LEGAL NOTICE

votmg th eret n, on Tuesday,

The Revenue Shanng
report of Lebanon Town·
shrp is avail ab le to be seen
by the publr c at the offrce of
the cler k, Shr rl ey Johnson,

Portland, Oh.

the 4lh day of November/
1980, the question o

Public Notrce

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION

NOTICE rs hereby given
1 ~t in pursuance of a
Resolu t ion of the Board of
E ducartron of the Southern
Local Schoo\ Oistr.ct ,
Racr ne, Oh ro, passed on the

19th da y of August, 1980,
there woll be subm 1tted to a

vote of the people of sa rd
School Drstn ct of Southern
Local , Mergs County, Ohro,
at the reg ular pla ces of

I

:

I

:
I
:

rehabilrtating, improving,
furnrshrng and equipprng
budd rn gs for school pur
poses.

Public Notice

to,

remodeling,

Sa1d tax be1ng · an ad
d1t 1onal tax of 3.0 mills to

r un for three years, at a
rate not exceeding 3 0 mills
for each one dollar of
valua ti on, whr ch amounts
to tttlrty cents for each one

hundred dollars of
valualton, tor thrM years.
The Pol ls for said Elec
lion Wi ll open" at 6:30
o'c lock AM

ana remrtin

open unll17 .30 o' clock P.M

Eastern Standard T rm e of
sard day
By order of the Board of
Electrons, of Mergs County ,
Ohro.

Curb Inflation. !
I
Pay Cash for
1
I
Classlfleds and !
I
Savell!
:

:

Write your own . ad and order by mail with th is

1

I

coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get

1

results. Money not refundable

:

•

I Name
I

,

l Address.__________
l1 Phone•.._- - - - - - - - - I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

II

the County of Me1gs,
Pomeroy, Ohio. passed on
the 2nd day of Sftotambar.
1980, !here will ·be sub·
milled to a vole of the
people of said County at a
General ELECTION to be
held in the County of Me1gs,
Oh 1o, at the regular places
of vottng therein, on
Tuesday. the 4th day of
No\lember ,
1980,
the
quest1on of levymg, In ex·

cess of the ten m111
llm1tat,on, for the benefit of
Me1gs County tor the pur·
oose of providing .current
expenses of a Publi c
Library (Meigs County
District Library) .

Sa1d tax be1ng : an ad·
dllional tax of 112 mill to

equipping buildings for
school purooses. .
Said tax being an ad
dltlonal tax of 3.5 mills to
run for five mills at a rate
not exceeding 3.5 mills for
each one dollar of
valuation, which amounts

Chairman

Dorothy M. Johnston

Director

baled October I, 1980
no1 6. 13. 20. 21, ~tc

to thirty -five cents for each

one

,e ANNOUNCE(.IIENTS

eRENTALS

1-c..rc1 ot Thulls

41- HDUUI for Relit

dollars of

The Polls for said Elec·
lion will open at 6:30
o'clock A.M. and rema1n
0pen untll7:30 o'clock PM.
of said duty.
By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs County,
Ohio.
Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman
• Dorothy M J8~~~~.~~~!
Dated October 1,
(10) 6, 3, 20, 27, 41C
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE iS hereby given
that In pursuance of a
Resolution of the Board of
Trustees of the Township of
Chesler, Chesler, Ohio,
passed on the 12th day ot
Auous)1 1980, there will be
submiTTed to a vote of the
people of said Township at
a General ELECTION to be
held In the Township of
Chester, Ohio, at the
regular places of voting
therein, · on Tuesday, the
4th day of NovembeT, 1980,

the question of l~vylng, in
excess of the ten mIll

llmitallon.J for the benefit of
Chester 1ownshiJ&gt; for !he
purpose of maintaining and
Ol)!!rating cemeteries.
Said tax being a renewal ·
of an existing tax of Q.4 mill
to run for fiVe years, at a

rate 1101 exceeding 0.4 mill

tor each one dollar of

valuation, which amounts
to four cents for each one
hundred dollars of

I valuation,
for five
The Polls for said E lee·
years

lion will - open at 6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open untl17:30o' clock P.M .
of said day .
By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs County,

Ohio.

Ernest w . Wingett
Chairman

Qorothy M. Johnston
,
Director
•
Dated October 1, 1980
(10) 6, 13, 20, 27, 4tc

~.,.,.....

5-Na_,., Adl
.,.._Lftlaftd f041nd

4~fllRoomt

~":l%f~!fa~~£"J:tl~
there will be submitted to a

4t-ISJK• tor l•t

. ._•._.,,...,for.... '

47-rWIII ... I'IIRiftt

&amp;Auction

9-WantedtoBU¥ .

1

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sl

Houttho~

GOCidt

U--CI, TV, RHio lfl•l,..tnt
~Antlclun

54-Misc. MtrdMinclise
SJ-Iulldl"' Su"""
M-Peh, .... l l..

'

It-·-...,.,. .

eFARMSUPPLIES
I LIV·ESTOCK

61-Wa•tH t1 l•r

n-Trvcka tor s.a.

....,..

.,_U'Itltodl
M-Hiy &amp; Grilli

o..erturrity
"'ll'lliiOLOM

22
JJ--PrwfnrNeNI

........

u-.._.&amp;Ptrtmaer

eTRANSPOIITATION

,,_..,.. ,.,. s.t4

•REAL ESTATE

&amp;

......,

for""''...,

4-GIYMW.y

J~Lots

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
lN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
- LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given
that In pursuance of a
Resolution of !he Board 01
County Commissioners Of
the County of Meigs,

• 42-MOIItte Hetfttl

7J--Vtnl'&amp;4 W.D •
U Mc:l6cwctn

n-MolllltftOMH
,.,. S.lt
D-ll'arms for Sate
M-4uttnliti•Hdlllp

75-

~vM.Pif11

&amp;ACctiiOr...

n-A•toll.,.ir

.«:,....

»-........... .,......

eSERVICES

J7--Nifort

Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman

11- HMttiii'I,.OUIWIR'tl

Went-Ad •dvertlsllltl
Dud line•

6.---------

hundred

valuation, for five years

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THETENMILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE IS hereby given
that In pursuance of a
Resolution of lhe Board of
Education of the Meigs
Local School 01strict, Mid
dleoort, Ohio, passed on the
29th day of August, 1980
there will be submitted to a
vole of the people of said
School Dl•trlct at a
General ELECTION to be

Difl'f ,,l .JIT.M.
.........
..,._,....,.

7. _ _ _ _ ___.__
8. _ _ _ _ _ __
9. ___________

D-I'IUMMftt 1 lxavatl. .

Dorothy M. Johnston
Director
Dated October 1, 1980
(lOJ 6, 13, 20, 27, 41c

.

IJ-IIS(I¥1tiftl
14-IIKtrfctl

..................
o-ral
.........
.,..,.
or-u_....,
11

""n111

t

1 10. _ _ _ _ _ __

I

remodel1ng, rehabi lltatlon,
improving, furnishrng and

Public Notice

Public Notice

.s1- Hem" tor 111e1

I 3. - - - , - - - - - - - 1 5.~-----------_ _ _ _ _ _ __

ten

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

eFINANCIAL

I

19

the

or Write Daily sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero'f, 0., 45769

1s-SchOIIIIInttr.ctlan
,.,_
IIICIIO. TV
&amp; CBII.,.Ir
It-Will... Te 0.

1I '

of

Me1gs Local School District
for the purpose of constructing , adding to,

PHONE 992-2156

.21 -

18
II _ _ _ _ _ _

mIll
limitation, tor the benefit 01

WANT AD INFORMAnON

,,_ Hei, Welttld
12-Sitv•,.,r~"'"
1r-lnturenc
14-luslnnt Trelnint

These cash rates
Include discount

excess

open untll7 ·30 PM. of sa1d
day .
By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs County,
Ohio
Ernest Wingett

Countv Cotnmissroners of

~PultlicS.Ia

g1ve pnce. The Sentinel
reserves the right to
claSSify, edit or re1ect
any ad. Your ad will be
put In the proper
clasiflcatlon 11 you' ll

to love cents tor each one
hundred dollars of
va luation. for five years.
The Polls for sard Elec·
tlon woll open at 6:30

Resolution of the Board of

:t-In MH'!arlam
.1-AIInounctn'IHtl

---1~~..!!~~~~!!.!

Public Notice
held in the School District
of Meigs ~ ocal, Meigs
county, Ohio, at the
regular places of voting
therein, on Tuesday, the
4th day of November. 1980,
the question of levying, In

not exceedrng 112 m i ll for
e ach one dollar of
valuation, whi ch amounts

pursuance of a

7- YardSett

1-------

I
1
I
I

in

1

name and address or words

I check the proper box
I below
I
•
I
1 Wanted
I
) For Sale
I
) Announ cement
I
) For Rent
I
I
I
I
I
1I 2. _ _ _ _ _ ___

that

Public Notice
run for t1ve years, at a rate

o'c lock A.M . and remain

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE is hereby given

1
I

Print one word in each·
space below E:ach in·
1tral or group of ft gur es
counts as a word Count
phone
number
used.
You'll get
betterrfresults
if you describe fully ,

Cha~rman

Dorothy M. Johnston
.Clerk
Dated October 1, 1980
(10) 6, 13, 20, 27, 4tc

r-----------------------·

:

Ernest A. Wln~gett

levy .ng, in excess of the ten
mil l l im•tation, for the
benefit of Southern Loca l
Sc hool Drstnct for the pur
pose of constructrng , ad

dong

I 10) 13, ltc

Public Notice

vote of the people of said
County at a General ELECTION to be held In the
County of Meigs, Ohio at
the regular places of voling
therein, on Tuesday, the
4111 day of November, 1980,
the question of levying, In
· excess of the ten mill
limitation, for tM benefit of
Meigs County tor the ptJr·
pose of providing a total
emergency medical service In Meigs County .
Said tax being an ad·
dltlonal tax of 1.0 mill to
run an Indefinite p~~rlod at
a rate not exceeding 1.0
mill tor each one dolrar of
valuation, which amounts
to ten cenll for each one .
hundred dollars of
valuation, for an Indefinite
period.
The Polls for said Elec·
•lion will !)pen at 6:30
d'clocl! A.M. and remain·
open untll7:30 o'clock P.M.
of said day.
By order of the Board of
Elections, ofMelasCIIUnty,
Ohio.
Ernest A Wl~tt
c·~alrman

--------o+...;..-------i

11 . __________

1 , 13.
12. _
---_
-_-_
_-_
__

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

I 1~. - - - - - - - - - - 1 ....
1 15. - - - - ' - - - - 1 16. - - , - - - - 1

0

IS W.,. w Unr1tr

Mail This Coupon with Remlffance
The Dally .Sentinel

1
1

Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.

~-~--------------------f
I

County Commissioners of

the County of Meigs,
Pomeroy, Ohio, passed on
the 26th day ot August,
1980, 11\ere will be sub·
m ltted to a vote of the
people of said County at a
General ELECTION to be
held In the county of Meigs,
Ohio, at the regular places
of

CMO

____
..__.......,..____
___
. _____
. _. _
_
,

mln'nl rr.C.IIt...._

-·

there in,

on

Tuesday, the 4th day of

November,
1980,
the
question of levying, In ex·
cess of the ten mill

New, used, or antiques, In-

Beasley, apprentice auc·

tloneer, Osby A. Martin .
("!'Junk)
9

IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
Qld furniture, desks, gold
rings, lewelry, silver
dollars, sterling, etc., wood
Ice boxes,jars antrques,
etc. complete households.
Write M. 0 Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992

dollar, or comprete estates

No Item too large or too
small. Check prices before
selling. Also do appraising ,
Osby (Ossie) Martin. 992·
6370.

Plano Tuning · Lane
Daniels 742·295]1 Tuning
· and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone
992-2082 .

WANTE 0 TO BUY :
GOLD,
SILVER ,
PLATINUM, , STERLING·
COINS, RINGS ,JEWELR ·
Y, MISC . ITEMS AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTEO, ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OHI0992·3476.

SHOOTING MATCH at
Corn Hollow In Rutland .
Every Sunday starting, at
noon
Proceeds being
donated to the Boy Scout
Troop 249. 12 gauge factory
choke gun only!
PRE-SEASON
SALE-S649.0Q-·Moblle home wood
burning systems, the only
HUD &amp; UL approved wood
burner for mobile homes.
Unit comes complete wit~
wall vent stack. See !hem
at Kingsbury Homes Parts
a. accessories at Route 124,
Minersville, Ohio.
Dr
phone992-5587.

DOt-J.)

01' 949-2519.

-bf:

OLD COINS, pocket wat
ches, class rings, wedding

• ·

bands, dl amends. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
742 2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH 59:f.
646l.

WANTED TO BUY : Class
rings,

wedding

bands ,

anything stamped lOK,
UK, 18K gold. Silver coins,
pocket watches. Call Joe
Clark, 992 ·2054, Clark's
Jewelry, Pomeroy, Oh10.
LIKE to buy 1 or 2 Used
clay II le, 30, 33 or 361n. wid·
th, 2 or 3ft. long. 992·35.13.
WANTED : Someone that
can

make

custom·made

shoes. 992-7086.

LEARN lome~
cllocol•t•
cherrl...

11
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some oreal gifts as a Sen·
tlnel route carrier Phone
us right away .and get on
the fllglblllty list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.
•
1 need the chimney sweep
&amp; a load of firewood. 992·

2044.

RNs.
looking
for
challenging and rewarding
work? Tired of rotating
shifts? Feel the need to
develop your Ideas In
resident care with a highly
motivated staff? Pomeroy
Health Care Center has the
answer for you . Due 10
achieving near maximum

census,, we

•~¥
•' ' •

;16 E . Second Street

Phone
H 6H )-992-3325
NICE
HOME

street parking, ready to
move in, upper Mlddleperl,
will take automobile or

for plotting in1o a nice

proj ect.

as

down

payment. $18,500.00. call 1·
304-882·2466 anytime

Real Estate

HOBSTETTER
~---- -

REALTY
Broker
"

NEW LISTl NG - L.llve·
ly 2 story home with
vinyl
siding .
4
bedrooms, living room,
dining room , breakfast
nook. 1 bath and modern
kitchen. Washer, dryer,
stove and refrigerator
stay. On nice size lot
with 2 buildings.
NEW LISTING - Charmmg home on lOO'xl.W'
lot in Middleport, on
Gravel Hill. Larg.,.
bedrooms ,

rooms.
2

room

NEW LISTING
CLOSE TO MEIGS
HIGH - A srx year old
house wrth 3 bedrooms,
extra lar&amp;e livrng room,
fin rshed)

GeorgeS. Hobsretfer Jr.

family

0.

and a full basement (not

742-2003
-

spaciou s

POMEROY,
992-2259

General

ONE &amp; one third acres with
12 x 50 two bedroom mobile
honl'e, ready tor occupancy Located on Route
143. 992 ·3081 or992·6095.

.4

baths,
has

fireplace . Qua1nt fish
pend gives this horne ex·
tra flair. Call tor your

Has a wood

burning stove and 2
acres with a garden
$29,900.
EASTERN SCHOOL
A big
DISTRICT beautiful
k1tchen.
heatllator flrep!ace, full

basement, and 4'h acres
IS just p~rl of !he charm
of this 2 bedroom home .
All for$36,500.
FEEL CRAMPED? You

won ' t

in 1hrs

bedrooms, bath , large
fam1ly

land

Printed Pattern

For rnfo and enrollment.

overlooking

county hrlls

the

20 acres

plus w1th some woods
for huntrng Near new

houses,

2

and all '"('lnerals . ThiS IS \
a hill farm with some
timber

$65,000.00 .
OPPORTUNITY
Workshop for the han
dyman off 33 North
Oupl ex for additiona l in
to 4 apts. very easily.
T P water and 3 acres

plus, BUilding's only 12
yrs old. Asking $45,000.
HAVING A PROBLEM
SELLING, TRY THE
TEA FOR OS AT 997-3325
or992·3876

Housing
Headquarters

furnace and

a nice

CANDY

·3~. Yd.
(Price Does not

Apartment
for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap'15. PHone 992-5434.
,

Brown ' s

.... ._. . ........
......................
'

~===;;;~===
53
Antiques
'
ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will'
•pay cash or certified check
for antiques an,d collec ·
tlbles or entire states.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
co1n collections. Call 614·
767·3161 or 557-3411 .

•

Misc. Merchanlse
TURNIPS. $3.00 bu. you
pull them . $4.00 bu. we'll l
pull them . John Cleek, Por·
tland. 843·2285.

54

t

~

DaUy Sentinel
CHESHIRE - BeautltUi oid hOmeoveffiiOI(fng ftie
onlo River If you're looklnli for peace a'!d quiet
with plenty of room and a home you can be proud of,
call us on this one. You've got to see II. $48,000.00 .

IUWIIII7~~
l.ll.
Prilll
ZIP,
SIJI,
..
;,•I•I•KULI.
Wily put ~P witll hill' poetS-

dollllrs aot btllel q1111t1Y!
Send lor our ftEW FAU-WINTER
PATTERN CATALOG 94 Plltems.
Free Psttem CoupGII (worth

salt

CAL( BILL CHILDS 992,2342

Sl.75) tatiiGl. $1.00. • 7S

RODNEY DOWNING-BROKER
Middleport, Ohio

tur U•MiiM~­
••11•
I 5
, .7S
~~~ltaal

-- -

J

..

s.

127--- •• 1111111. . . .7S

'

Farm Buildings
Stzes
" From l0x30"

SMALL

-

Backhoe
and
Dump Truck Service
-Shop and Portable Welding.

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Call:
992-7354

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph 614·843·2591
6 15 tic

9-26-1 mo

1\eslerson

Sunray gas ranoe, one year
old, used two months, 742·
2416. Three piece bedroom
suite, call after • :30 742·
2416.

317 N.

CARPET
W/Pad
Installed

'5"

SQ. Yd.

PH . 992·6342
TRY US!
Complete Ory Clean1ng
and Laundry

Sq. Yd .

• carpet
• Draperies
e Furnrture
c" We' re No. 1 m
Servrce &amp; Qu.alii'V"

.OCTOBER SALE
GIGANTIC SAVINGS ON ALL CARPET
Any regular carpet JObs installed wilh free pad.
'
'
7J

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-2211

Main St.
Misc. Merchanrse

56

Now At
Pomerov
Landmark

PUT a cold nose in your
future
Me lg's County
Humane Society, 992·6260

Only S395
plus blower
·1 Good M . Ward
S75
Electric-Range
1 Good Used
Gas Range
$100
1 Good Used Frigidaire
Refrigerator
$150
POMEROY

bunks. 52,000 miles, good
rubber. $2,500. Call 992·7207
after 5 p.m
18

turnace, stove with oven,

57

Musical
Instruments

~LANDMARK
M •

TRUMPET Pan·Amerlcan
conn, Kay acust1c guitar.
985·3942

I

Pomeroy

......... __ , ..... .
-·······
....... . . .
_. .

Moving out of town will sell
household furniture, four
Frldgldalre appliances,
rugs, draperies. bedding,
clothing. 992 3250 or see at
210 South 4th Avenue, Mid·

81

Home
Improvements

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam

cleaned .

estimate.

62
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. Sl2 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. $10 per ton Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co, Rl. 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689.

.New dinette table &amp; 19' ,
'camper self conta ined
Priced reasonable. 992·
3790.

l

Free

Reasonable

rates. Scotchguar.d
6309 or 742·2211 .

dleport.
• --------~
Bottles gas refrigerator &amp;
Warm Morning wood·coal
stove. Call992·2941 .

992-

BELL BROS. Home Im·
provements . Roofing
(shingle•) , siding, (vinyl &amp;
aluminum! painting In
side, paneling, drywall,
and painting. Ph. 843·2803.
If no answer, call 949·2739.
Plumbing

82

I Heating

7.::1- - - ,A.,u""
to::s-:f-::or=-s:::ac=l:
e -1973 Camaro, good runn ing
car, new paint job. Call 992·
3931.
1972 PLYMOUTH Satellite
Sebring. P.S., air, good
cond. $600. 247·2192

•1976 Mercury Monarch lour
door In excellent condition .
56
Pl!ls for Sale
$500.00 below book price.
HOOF HOLLOW Horses 992·7675 .
and ponies and riding
GE gold refrigerator for
1essons.
EverY I hI n !I .:;:==.=
, T;:ru
==.:c:;:
k;::
s :;:
fo:;:r::;S;::a;=:
le==
$200.00, 1974 Pontiac, runs
lmaolnable In horse equiP' 72
good, $250.00; pickup ~
ment. Blankets, belts, 1977 CHEVY Step Side 1.4
per, s1so.oo. Catl949·2368. · · bools, etc. English and ton,
350 engine, auto-.
We&amp;tern . Ruth Reeves 11 Asking $2,550. Number to
Approxi mate 4 tons of coali (614) 698·3290.
call 992 3240.
jor sale. 949· 2666.
I
GIT A Nice soft lovable i
111111111 from your Humane ' 7.~~~-~v_a_ns~&amp;_4_W_.~D~·-­
HEA't1NGOIL. No.1&amp;NII .
2. Buy now 11 Summer
SIItlaty. Sholl &amp; wormed.· 1978 Ford 8 passenger van,
Prices. Excelllor Co. 6,...
Donation required . 992· · power steering, pawer
992· 2~5.
6260. Hours 12·7 dally, • brakes, air conditioning,
closed Tues. Tabby 's, c ruise control , tilt wheel,
tigers, &amp; a pure black, all , captains chairs, white car·
HUMPHREY Farms have
males.
, pet, spoke wheels, radial
good supply Kennebec
tires, am·fm radio, cb, 8·
potatoes on hand now.
Lerge size, sa.oo per 100 lbs , CALL today lor a beautiful track radio, reese hitch
In your containers. Closed .puppy or dOg. Humane brakes, . gOod condition,
sundays. South of Reed- SoCietv, shots a. wormed . $4300.00. Phone 592·2883 at992-6260.
, ter 5 or weekends.
sville, Ohio. ~14· 378· 6295

'

1976 G.M.C. Van, 6 cyl.
standi!rd trl!ns , lnsull!!lted,
paneled &amp; carpeted, bu1111n

fridge, sleeps 7. 985 4279

Gf.,._

MO--:-R-:T:-A-:R
::-m
--:-lx_e_r . m-a-;-k-e -;-ls
Stone, 2 bag, 7 horse power
mtltOr, like new . Also
flrwlck a. approximately
2.000 regular brick color
grey. 992·2805 or contact
Elden Walburn, 380 Soum
Third,
. Mlddlepo•t.
,

Vans 14 W.O.

Camping
Equ1pment
Shots x wormed, one
CAMPER BOS. Sleeps 6.
min1ature collie type · 992-5260
.
female, one shephard type
female , one black x tan
Camper, excellent con·
Kerr female, one walker
dition, solid sides, pop-up
hound male.

Stoves

E. Main St.

Pels for Sale

Ave.

MidcUeport. Ohio

'9"

tn·

Jude installation. ) Cash &amp; Carry

Trailer

TRAILER spaces tor rent.
.Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
992·3954

1'1111111 .,.,._

ALL STEEL

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION

Rubber Back

STRIPE

44

Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots. Call
992·7479,
:

.......

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

CARPET
SHOP
"Drive A Little,--Save A Lot"

MOBILE HOME for rent.
Adults only. No pets. $150
pe~ mo. plus electric 949·
2638.

Space lor Rent
.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home

*

KAUFPS
PWMBING
AND
HEAnNG

SHOP IS FULLY STOCKED

46

. $1.75 Ill ......... AlN
.. ltclilllltn .. .......
linllil llll _,. I SM4 II:

10·7-tfc

9·14-1 mp.

New Wood Burner

yards 60-mch fabpc

992-5682

RUTLAND'S FURNITURE'S

Trailer Park . Adults only
992 3324.

45
Furnished Rooms
ROOMS for rent, room 8.
board by the month··
vacancies. Trained &amp; expenenced. 992-7314.

Stzes 8. 10, 12. 14, 16, 18. Stze
12 (bust 34) top, pants 3 318

9 A.M.-5: 30 P.M.

caJis.

10·13·1 mo pd.

Park. 992 3324.

S1mple sew~nr maxtmum Impact! The dii&amp;OOII shoulder
drape l"l!$ rop e.ctlement Ill a
tuntc poured over sleek (elasttc
watst) pants. for 10~. crepe
Pr~nte&lt;l Pattern 4670 M1sses

Hrs.: Mon.-Fn

ALMOST

Call tor Free S1d1ng
Est1mate, 949·2801 or
949-2860. No Sunday

- 949-2160 .

home, real nice, Brown's

only .

.
·
m
A ···"~

BARTENDER: lor private
club, good pay a. vacation.
Please send brief resume
to Box 32, Rutland, Ohio
45775. Include phone number, no pnone calls.

•

Call Tom Haskins ,

Two bedrloom aparfmen

level

-Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

FREE ESTIMATES

with large living room
kitchen. Furnished. Adults

yard with big shade
1rees. JUST! $29,500.
OPEN 6 DA.YS A WEEK
• 9 To. 5 · ALSO OPEN
MON. AND FRIDAY
UNTIL 8 P.M. FULL
TIME STAFF!
REALTOR
.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949·2660
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
992-5692
OFFICE 992-2259

GARAGE

10·9

1nside ilnd out. __ . . .

54

Into a home. ONLY!
$6,200.
A
CRACKLING
FIREPLACE - And a
wood burner is all you
need to heal this 7 room
unusually shaped house.
It also has a hot water

print

ROGER HYSEll'S

Ph. 614·949-2358

All types roofrng work,
New &amp; Repair.
All types of remodeling,

Two bedroom furnished
apartment. 992·5914.

a little work you can
turn this 6 room house

Call Howard
949·2862
949-2160
1-22-tfc

Evenings &amp; Weekends

OHIO VALLEY
-ROOFING -&amp;
HOME MAINTENANC
SERVICE

animals can have the

lime of their life. In·

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

anything! "

9 28 1 mo . pd

Mobile Homes
for Rent
bedroom mobile

All work guaranteed .

anything on ALMOST

'
20 Years
Expertence

42

cleaning and painting ..

1

Spec1al School Rates
" We,

992-2478

41
Houses for Rent
TWO BEDROOM unfurnished house, also two
bedroom furnished 8. one
bedroom furnished apartments. Call after 6 p.m.
992 2288.

new or repair guners

and downspouts, guner

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

yd.
at Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equipment

came. Can be turned in·

Print

T-shrrts
Shirts tor politicians,
ball teams, busrness or
1nd1Vrdua1s.
Shirts &amp; Hats $4.00 &amp; up

Experienced Operators
available for local work.
a 2 rubber tire backhoes
al e•cavator hoe 1r;,.

Ask.ing

custom

Shop
and llOVelfy

Pullins
ExcaVating

trarle r , natural spring
n ice

ft

•New Homes - extensive remodeling
•l!:lectricai work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
9 14·1 mo

bedroom

4111 types of roef work ,

Pomeroy, Oh.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

fences on old 33 . Two

ROOFING

992-6215 or t92-7314

9-28·1 mo.

bndge $50,000.
COUNTRY LIVING 70 acres with good

H. L WHITESEL

V.C. YOUNG II

Call949-2710

IN MASON , West Virginia ,
two bedroom furnished
apartment, utilities ~ld,
no pets Depeslt required
1·304 882-3356

$26,900.
ROMPING ROOM - On
this 2.4 acres children or

home with 2 rooms at·
tached. And a storage
bUilding. JUST! $17,000.
REAL CHEAP! - With

Velma Nlclnsky, Assoc.
Phone 742·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·3171

room, on high

work
-concrete work
- Piumbrng and
e'lectrtcal work
(Free Estimates)

Ballet, Tap .and Jazz.

offer

reasonable

Simply Sensational!

nice k itchen With lots of
cabmets and 1S Situated
on 4 level lots Severa I
storage buildmgs and is
close to the mtnes .

POMEROY '- Older 1
floor plan, solid built
home with 3 bedrooms,
kitchen, bath, full base·
rnent. Gas forced air
furnace
Garage and
nice •lze lot 75' x170'.
Asking $27,000 .00.
.
NEW LISTING - What
a buy!! 1979 Windsor
home with central air

have some II

No

refused. May take some
trade Call anytime 9492038.

4

eludes a l2x60 mobile

1

MOVING. Must sell, 2
bedroom Mobile , Home. 1
acre &amp; much, much more .

water

NEW LISTING - 4 yr.
old cou ntry ho m e of 3

TWO

bedroom home. Has a

showing

total electric, fully
equipped kitchen with
micro-wave. The home
has vinyl undersklrtlng.
Situated on , almost 2
acres with chalnllnk
fence, 20'Xl4' building
and dwarf orchard All
for ONLY $29,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT-S.3rd
Avenue. 2 story home
wllh 3 bedrooms, kit·
chen has birch cabinets
with side breakfast
nook Extra nice carpet.
Gas furnace Is only 4
yrs.old. New roof and
paint job. Sells for
$40,000,00,
BUILDING SITES- we

1973 EAGLE 12 X 65 two
bedroom , 1 &amp; one-half bath,
excellent condition . Partially
furnished,
un·
derplnnlng, anchors. 992·
7473.

TP

ava ilable

- Addonsand
remQdeling
- Rooftng and gutler

Now open with a studio
in Pomeroy and .Racine.
Classes offered are

COUNTRY
has 3

$32,500.
30
SUB-DIVISION acres pi us on old 33 near
the new rest home . 1deal

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER.
SERVICES"

CARPENTER'S
DANa STUDIO

bedro oms,
modern
bath, large ea t 1n kit
t hen, fu II basement, oil
forced a• r fUrnace, T. P
water, out 33 way

1980 70 x 14 mobile home
with 7 x 24 expando Ex·
cellent condition. Phone
742 3030 or 742-2728.

openings for full and part
time positions on day shill,
but will consider other s.hlf·
IS. Compe!ltlve salary, ex·
cellent working conditions.
life Insurance and
disability pel ley at no cost
to the employee, and
hospitalization Insurance
available. Come visit us qr
call: !\laney Van Meter,
R.N., Director of Nursing,
Pomeroy Health Care cen·
ter, 6 U -992-6606 .

12
lltuetlenl Wented
WILL do oddl &amp; endl,
penel1119, II- tile, ceiling
lilt. Call Fred Miller at m, 6331.

{ .

~~~~~I ~~t Ji

now have

WANTED LIVE· IN lady or
girl. 992· 2486.

I !l.. heii.GIIIII,Itellt ......

Housing
Headquarters

ced air gas furnace, off

home

Business Services

-down

Real Estate- General

refinancing, and 2nd mor·

mobile

srn.all

contract,

payment. 992·3921

31
·Homes for Sale
BA;;!TELS,Loan
EO
Representative. 1100 East
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh.
Mortgage
money
available All types home
financing ,
new, old,

and stereo. 3 bedrooms,

HAVE A Toy Party &amp; gel
tree Christmas gifts. Call
992·3561 .

lllll)laa- Ill delll't . . . a.• riJe _...,.... .
llltll'ld Wed to Malto.

I

Gold, sliver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
Items. Antique furniture,
glass or chlria, \Yill pay top

..

,
COI.GBADO RIVER
~
Tile eolanclo IUwr Clll'l'lla 111111 • much iC1I1iue •
the • mill ......... Riwr. But tbe CciiGndo
~'Wiw.

Announcements

will

(10) 6, 13. 20.17, •tc

'

Wanted to Buy

Business Buildings

J.4

A FRAME building, 51~
Easl
Main Street,
Pomeroy, will sell on land

SURANCE been can
celled?
Lost your .
operator's license? Phone
992 2143.
.
15 Schoolslnstructlon
PIANO LESSONS Begin·
ners, advanced, adults
Send name, address,
telephone number to Vera
Jane Holliday, Box 224,
Rutland, Ohio 45715.

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom
"Sh ' k
I
t
he
ranch brick home In Baum
e s eep ng coun so s can vote for
Addition . With new garage
the candidate who preempts the fewest
&amp; genie door. Gas heat,
of her favorite programs!"
neWly
Installed
central
air
r---------::-T:;;~~~~~;::;;:;:::::-1
conditioning, family room
&amp; stone fireplace, ap
31,_ __.cH
"-o
,m
=es'-'f"'o'-r"-S,_al,e'-_
pliances built In, newly InReal Estate General
~
Two bedroom house with
stalled eleclrlc breaker
double car garage in Mid·
system,
attractively
dlepert. 992-n68 alter 5.
decorated basement, 2
baths, fully carpeted with
most attractive drapes.
House 8. lot for sale, eight
Call985·3814or992·2571 .
rooms, bath, 2 porchs,
basement, out building, all
have been remodeled on
TWO story older home,
the corn~r of Main &amp; Tyree
seven rooms, bath ,
In Racine. Call949· 2778
basement,
hardwood
floors, fireplace . On four
large lots with river Iron·
tage . Ma i n Street,
32
Mobile Homes
Pomeroy .
Financing
for Sale
available. Call after 5, 992·
7284 $26,500
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
l~ree bedrooms, new car·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,
2112 acres, 3 or .4 bedroom,
two bedroom~. new carpet .
total electric, fireplace,
1972 Champion, 12 x 60,two
carpet. woodburnlng stove,
~rooms, new carpet. 1976
10x27 deck, 2 car garage.
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
Must see. 985·3934.
'
bedr09ms, all electnc. 1971
Skyline, 12 x 65, two
If you really want to sell
THREE bedroom house tor
bedrooms, bath &amp; '13, new
list with us today.
sale, living room ,dining
carpet. 1970 PMC,
room, kitchen, bath, full
12 x 6/J, two bedrboms, new
basement, newly decorated
carpet B x S Soles, Inc ,
inside, new carpet
2nd x Viand Street, Point
Real Estate General
throughout, new paneling,
Pleasant, WV Phone 675·
new water heater, new for4424.

cluding homes, farms, or
liquidation sales. Get lop
dollar. List with the man
Who has over 25 years in
the new, used and ant1que
furniture business.
We
lake consignments. For 1n
formation and p ickup ser·
vice, call 992-6370 or In
West VIrginia 773·5471 . Sale
every Friday night at 7
p.m. Auctioneer Howard

1 PAY , highest prices
possible for gold and silver
colos, rings, Jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burken Barber
Shop, Middleport.

.. ..._u, ... 011

YARD SALE . Sun.-Frl.
Oct. 13·18, 10·?. Gene Riggs
residence above Eastern
-High School on Rt. 7. Win·
ter clothes for men, women
&amp; boys, misc. household
Items. auto parts &amp; ace
s mall farm tractor, toys.

OSSIE ' S AUCTION House,
20 N. 2nd Street, Middleport, Ohio. We sell one
piece or entire households.

limitation, tor the benefit of
Meigs County for !he pur·
oose of providing for the
collection and dlsoosal of
garbage or refuse
(operation and main· JONES Meal Packing-·- · •
tenance of the Meigs Coun
slaughtering, custom
tv Landfill).
Said tax being: an ad· processing, retail meat.
dllional tax of T.O mill to Washington co. Rd . 248,
run for five years, at a rate ' Little Hocking, OH 667not exceeding l.u mill for 6133.
each one dollar of
valuation, which amounts
RACINE GUN SHOOT,
to ten cents tor each one
hundred dollars of
Racine Gun Club, every
valuation, for five years.
Friday night starting at
The Polls for said Elec· 7:30 p.m. Factory choke
tlon will open at 6:30
guns only.
o'clock A.M. and remain
open untll7:30 o'clock P.M.
olsaldday .
GUN SHOOT: Saturday
By order of the Board of
evening starting at 6:30
Elections, of Meigs County,
p.m. SJX!nsored by the
Ohio.
Racine Volunteer Fire
Ernest A. Wingett
Department, at building In
Chairman
Bashan. Factory choke
Dorothy M. Johnston
guns only .
Olr 1
ec or
Dated October 1, 1980 30 percent off greenware
( 10) 6 13 20 27 4'I
for !he month of October.
' • • • c
Drehel's Ceramics, 59 N.
Public Notice
Second Avenue, Mid ·
dleport. 992·2751.
NOTICI! OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY ,
Decorat.d cakes for all oc·
IN EXCESS OF
cau10111, character cakes
THE TEN MILL
'a. sheet cake~. Call 992-~2
LIMITATION
or992-2583. •
NOTICE Is hereby given
!hat In pursuance of a
Resolution of the Council of
SKTE·A· WAY
be
the Village of Racine, Ohio,
closed
oct.
a
throu!lh
Oct.
passed on the 2nd day ot
17. Reopen Sat., Oct. 18
september, 19110, there will
Open Weds., Fr1. &amp; Sat.
be submiTTed to a vole of
nJghts 7:30-10 ·00 . Also
lhepeopleofsaldVIIIaoeat
a General ELECTION lobe
available tor private parheld In the Village of
tfes 985-9998 or 985-3929.
Racine, Ohio, af · the
regular places of voting
!herein, on Tuesday, !hi!
4th day of November, 1980,
BAKER's Busy Bee
the question of levying, In ·CeramiCI, Tuppers Plains,
excess of the ten mill
announces
their fall
limitation( lor the benefit Of
eta-. Tuesday from 10.2
Racine v llaoe Village for
a. 7·10&amp; Thurtclay from 10.
lhepUrposeofCurrenlex·
2 &amp; 7·10. No children under
pense.
.
Said tax being: a r,_al
IQ ptea1e. Come make
of an existing tax of 3.0
beautiful
Christmas
mills to run lor five yurs
R•a•onable
at a rate not exceeding 3.0 presents.
prices. 667·3252, Pauline
mills for HCI1 one dollar of
Baker.
valuatlli(j, which amounts
lo thirtY cents for uch one
hundred dollars of
valuation, for five yurs.
RACINE United Methodist
The' POliS for said Elec·
lion will !)lltl1 at 6:30
Church II taking orders lor
o'clOck A.M. and rem. in
apple butlw. Sale 11 oct
15. onten will be taken un:
011811untll7
:3flo'cloek
P.M.
olsaldday .
til that cleM. Prlcel3.00 qt
By ord8r of ·lhe lloarct of
IUO pl. llCtrllf M Pr'ovl~
EIKfiOM. of MeigiC:Oufity,
Ohio.
, Iars. Cell P49-2013, N -2095

Dew onrr M.
Deled Oct. 1, 1910

I.H'

I• ......,.,, CAN pf n.tlt _. ......,. . • _.. . . --.AM

voting

Ernest A. Wingett·
Chelrman

._
•••• ••
....
•••• J.rs

.....

I

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE 1S hereby given
that In pursuance of a
Resolution of the Board of

'

.ldll ~ .........JI'IIIIIIM~~t IJWOf'lllll 4 CIIMI,.,..,..,., . ,.
Mt ................... aMICUtlvt . ., ....... dllf'IM ...... ...

I1

Public Notice

Rates aftd Otber Information

......

I

( 10) 6, 13, 20, 27, 4tc

3

c-~tr••...._ r

tgages. Phone 992·7000 or
992·5732

716/J.

Public Notice
Dorothy M. JOhnston
Director
Dated October I, 1980

rSIDE-;:CllA
:::-;;;;N-:-;-;
CES:-;;:;-;;;-=-;;;--------.:IJy:!...::&lt;itii=.F:.:o:x:_,
IN ·

50's a. 60's. Infants to adults
~c lothing .

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Pubhc Notice

Yard Sale

1

proposed one-half mill operating
levy.
Prior to Louden's presentation,
Loren Phelps, superintendent of the
Gwding Hand School and council
member, brieny explained the levy
that the Guiding Hand School will
have on the November 4 ballot.
,
Jack Roderus, vice president, '
presided in the absence of president,
John Dwut. The next meeting Will be
held on Thur&amp;lay, November 13 in
the Multipurpose Room of the
Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Community
Mental Health Center.

lnsur•nce

Lost and Found

6

Human SerVice Council
hears library director

13

'AUTOMOBILE

\,

HEAT! NG &amp; air con
dlllonlng ,
furna c e
cleanlng,plumblng. Call
992·2364 after 5 p m
Excavating
DOZER work, small jobs a
speclaltv. quick depen·
dable servi ce. 742·2753 .

13

84

Electrical
I Refrlgera!lon

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs, service, all
makes1 992 ·2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. L.awn mower.
Next lo State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 9153825.
APPLIANCE SERVICE:
all makes washer, dryers,
ranges , dishwashers,
dlspoMis, water tanks. Cell
Kan Young at PeS-3561
before 9 a.m. or lifter 6
p.m.
I'

..-

�'

Farmers brace for small soybean
WILMJNGTON, Ohio (APJ - The
hot, hwnid slimmer ·in southwest
Ohio has area farmers harvesting a
big corn crop, but bracing for a
smaller than expected soybean bar· .
vest, say county extension,ljgents. ·
Agents sa ld farmers in Clinton,
.WaiTen and Butler counties could

'Reagan lead!!!

Two Ohio papers endorse Reagan
The Columbus Dispatch endorseifRepublican Ronald Reagan (or
president, as 'Ille Cincinnati Enquirer also voiCed support for the can·
dictate.
"Ronald Reagan is by far the best choice to do the job that needs to
be done today ... ," the Dispatch said in its endorsement Sunday.
"Reagan sees America for what it is - energetic, promising and
skilled, but caught up in the dilemma of not being permitted to combine its talents With vision."
The Enquirer called Reagan on Sunday "a decent, compassionate,
intelligent, dedicated American who will, we think, make a great
president."

In their endorsements, both newspapers criticized President Jimmy
Carter's term during the past four years.

T~maker faces

trial Tuesday

CLEVELAND - U.S. Attorney James R. Williams will•ttempt to
show in a trial starting Tuesday that Firestone Tire &amp; Rubber Co.
made gold purchases overseas without a license.
·The government contends the major tiremaker violated the Gold
Reserve Act of 1934 and federal gold regulations when Firestone's
Alps Investment Co. acquired $31,066,079 worth of gold bullion and
coins in !97Jand1974. ·
The suit alleged that Firestone· and its agents concealed the gold
purchases by secret agreements, transactions and alteration or amendment of docwnents and therefore rriust pay $6~ million in penalties.

Cafeteria boycott enters third day
DANBURY, Conn.- A cafeteria boycott continued for a third day
SWJday while federal prison officials met With inmates to try to
resolve grievances over food service, medical care and overcrowding.
It was the second protest incident in a week at the prison, but the at·
mosphere between the staff and the 720 inmates at the mediwnsecurity facility was described as "cbrdial," by Scott Miller;
executive assistant to the warden.
Inmates were eating snacks purchased from the prison commissary
and those on special diets were getting food through the prison
hospital, he said.

BaJ.loons used to protect jet noises .
NEWARK, N.J . - About 40 helium-filled balloons were released
SWJday in a heavily trafficked air corridor in a second protest against
jet noise from Newark International Airport, police said.
The toy balloons had no e(fect on airport operations, said Bill
Harriman, airport duty supervisor.
The group of about 100 pe9ple planned to release 200 l)alloons Sur;.
day, but police at the scene said only about 40 were released.

Scientists believe Pinta located
KEY WEST, Fla.- It's been 488 years since Columbus sailed with
ships!hat became part of every American youngster's school litany:
The Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria. Now, jllllt in time for Columbus Day 1980, treasure hunters think they may have found the wreck of
the Pinta.
Olin'Frick and John Gasque, two Key West treasW"e hunters, aren't
totally con11,incro the ship they foWJd in 30 feet of water off the remote
Turks and Caicos Islands in the Bahamas is the Pinta.
But scientists say an iron cannon and a crudely formed lead cannon
ball removed from the wreck appear to be from the 15th century:

Study shows others cause wrecks
WASIDNGTON- A study of 4,500 motorcycle accidents shows that
other drivers are at fault more often than motorcyclists.
The analysis, made public Sunday by tbe Transportation Depart·
ment, showed that in 65 percent of the crashes, the driver of the other
vehicle violated the motorcyclist's right of way.
The motorcyclist was to blame 33 percent of the time. Other factors
-the roadway, the motorcyle's condition, a pedestrian or animal or
something else - were blamed in the remaining crashes.

'Self-control' urged by Pontiff
VATICAN CITY - Pope John Paul II ~lebrated a special Mass for
all _tl!e world's families Sunday and praised couples w~o practice
sexual Hself-control."
.
Engaged and married couples from all over the world made per·
sonal statements about the joys .and problems o,f. their relati 0nshlps
during ceremoriies to highlight a ciirrent meeting of bishops to discuss
birth control, divorce and other family issues.
Earlier, at an outdoor Mass, the poP., emphasized the religious side
of love and marriage after drawing criticism for saying four days ago
that a man should not feel exce5sive sexual desire even for his wife. ·

STECHE~ ~PEAKING

Fire causes
$2,500 damage
A fire of undetermined ongtn
caused $2,500 damage to a home at
1671 Uncoln Heights, Pomeroy, according tiJ Pomeroy Fire Chief
Charles Legar.
Chief Legar said a family was in
the process of moving into the home, .•
owned by Mr. and Mrs. Jack Carsey,
Middleport, when the fire broke out.
A neighbor noted heavy smoke ·
coming from the home and called
the fire department. The fire spread
from a floor furnace up a wall between tbe living room and ·kitchen.
Firemen kept tbe blaze confined to
· that area. Smoke damage was
heavy. Damage to contents had not
been determiqed WS morning. The
~omeroy . Fire Department answered a call to the residence 8: 11
p.m. Saturday.

at

.(

Jack Stecher, ,Democratic can·
dictate for Congress, will be a special
guest at a · meeting of the lOth
Congressional District Democratic
Action Club to be held at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Meigs Inn in Pomeroy.
Other candidates will be present
and all Democrats are invited.
MEETING DATE CHANGED
Parents Without Partners ~eeting
scheduled for Oct. 17, at the home of
Ernmogene Holstein, Syracuse, has
been changed to Thursday, Oct. 16, .
at7:30p.m.
MEETS WEDNESDAY
Middleport Youth League .., wiU
meet Wednesday, Oct. 15, at 6:30
p.m. at Middleport City HaJI. There
will be election of 9,fficers and a
discussion on the 1981\eason.

DAVMEEIINGSET
~elgs Chapter 63, DAV, will meet
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m .. at the post
home on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
There win be refreshments and llu
.members are asked to attend.

'

,-

'

HOSPITAL NEWS

newspaper poll

COI..UMBUS, Ohio - Republican Ronald Reagan Jed President Carter by '13 percentage p&lt;lints in a survey of Ohioans conducted by a
. Columbll!l newspaper.
The former California governor received support from 46 percent of
1,560 registered Ohio voters polled from 'Oct. 4-9, the Colwnbus Oispatch repQrted Sunday, Carter was favored by 33 percent of those stu"veyed, and Independent John Anderson claimed 10 percent.
Nine percent of those polled were undecided, and the remaining 2
percent opted for other candidates.

lose more than $3 million because of
SJnaller soybean yields. The conditions differ sharply from nort~west Ohio, where farmers are har·
vesting one of the largest soybean
crops ever.
"The conditions that were poodor
soybeans were
ideal for corn ," said
'

McCoy, Delinus Mink, William MOll·
tgomery, Howard Newland, Judy
Ousley, Erill P~nick, Betty PI~, ·
Mai'.ie Richards, Mrs. Gary .Short
and daughter; Garnet Smelizer, An' ·
na ·spencer, Lena Strait; Wye
Warren, Viola Weiman, Amber
Williams, Lorenna WOQten
BIRTHS .
· Mr. and Mt;s. Bobby Bolling,
daughter, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.
Basil Casey, son, Gallipolis Ferry;
Mr. aild Mrs. Paul CaSto; daughter,
Pt. Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs .. Duane ·
Lemay, daughter, McArthur; Mr.
and Mrs. John Manuel, son, Ra~ine.
OCT.l2
James Austin, Marilyn Barron,
HOLZER 1\IEDICAL CENTER
Frank Bell, Mrs. Randall Brewer
DISCHARGES OCT. 10
and""daughter, Ruth Carr, Randy
Lillie Ash, Gladys Barlow, Saylor Clary, Mrs. Cliarles Cremeans ·and
Berridge, Michael Bumgarner, daughter, Barbara Deck, Elizabeth
Mary CarroJI, Patricia Cleland, Evans, Louis Ford Jr., Robert Goff,
Brenda Davis, Jody Davus, Ruth Francis Kent, Dania) King, Milton
. Doptping, RandaJI Eshler,- Julia Massie Jr., Stanley Miller, Teresa
Gray, Wendell Gross, Betty Howell; Perry, Janet Raynes, Dorothy
Karen Erwin, Mrs. Larry Jividen Roach, Jason SJJlith, James Turner,
and son, Mrs. Chester Johnson and · Edward Wyckoff, Mrs. Cecl,l Yost
.son, Bertha Kingrey, Pearl McClain, and daughter
Cindy McDowell, Soilie MiJJer,
BIRTH
Michael Perry, James Phipps, Mrs.
Mr. and, Mrs. Elliott Perry, son,
Enill Tobert and daughter, Vernon Oak Hill.
. Vanover, Marsha Walters, Charles
Wilson, Click Woodard, Mrs.
Michael Yeager and daug~ter.
BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Humphrey
Otmer L. Grimm
Jr., son, Pomeroy.
·
OCT.ll
Otmer L. Grimm, 76, died at his
Marvin .Bates, Mary Clay,
residence 440 Broadway, Mid'
Dorothy Cook, Matthew Coughlin, dieport, Saturday evening.
Kathleen Fetters, Roy FiSher,
He was a son of the late Curtis and
Pamela Hampton, Marion Hoover,
Desta Clark Grimm. He was also
Carla Hudnell, Bessie Hudaon, Mrs.
preceded in death a}so by two
Fred Jones and son, Mrs. Ronald brothers and a sister.
Kapp and daughter, Pauline
Surviving are his wife, Virginia
L: ieving; Teresa McClasky, Hazel
Grimm, a siln, Ralph Grimm,
Stowe; two daughters, Linda
Foreman, Sheffield Lake, and Mary
Toth, Bristol, Corm., two sisters, Ora
Clark, Letart, W. Va., and Mabel
(Continued from page 1)
Rl)llch, New Haven, eight grand·
pson, 20, Athens.
children. and several nieces and
Troopers said Thompson's car
nephews.
went left of ·.center and struck the
Funeral services will be held at I
Murnahan auto.
There was
p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
moderate damage was listed to both -· Home with tbe Rev. Robert McGee
cars and Th,ompson was cited by the
officiating. Burial will be in the
P!ltrol.
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends .
The patrol investigated a one-car
may call at the funeral home at
accident late Saturday night.
anytime. ·
·
According to the report, Brian K.
Ahrold, 16, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was
westbound on SR 588 at the jWJction
bf Green Twp. Rd. 2 at 11:04 p.m.
when his car went off tbe right side
of the road and struck a ditch.
. Slight damage was listed to
Ahrold's car llid he was uninjured.
The patrol cited Ahrold for OWl
The weekend's list of mishaps ended SWJday night wben.a car caught
fire in Rio Grande.
The patrol said Eric P. Sites, 18,
Pomeroy, . jVas. northbound on E.
College Ave. near the junction with
U.S. 35 when flames came out from
under his car's hood.
The· fire was extinguished and
moderate damage was sustained in
the engine compartment. SiteS was
not injured, troopers said.
·
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions-William
Adkins, Middleport; Clyde Hen·
derson, Pomeroy; Faye Dunlevy,
Middleport; Kathy ~obinson, Mid·
dieport; Danyel Smith, Circleville;
Janna Wolfe, Racine. ·
Saturday Discharge·· Brook.e
Lyons.
Sunday Admissioris-Earl Bar·
nhart, Coolville; WiJJiam Soulsby,
Pomeroy; Esta David,' Middleport;
M;lrtha Edwards, Clifton; . Mary
Braley, Pomeroy; Nora Pearson,
Racine; AllredGans, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharge-Milton Gary.

Steve Bartels, agricultUral ex·
which is dQwn from 37 bushels lii.st
tension agent in Butler County.
· year," Bartels said, referring to the .
The hot, wet summer weather is
45,000 acres of soybean crops in
blamed for fungus, dis!:ase and stem
Butler County.
rot in· fields, Mexican bean beetles
"I think \ve've got Mexican bean ·
also may have contributed to tbe
beetles to blame partially. It was too
hot dtu"ing the p()llinatjon period,
drop of five to seven bil.shels an acre
reported in some counties.
aild we had 25 inches of rain dw'ing
- Donalil Cl!l!fir\, cnaifman of tlle "tliegl'OW!ng ~oll."
Mt;!~mwhile, Bartels said corn barWilmington College AgricultW"e
Department, .saicj soybean yields on . vests are improved about. five ·
the college farms al'l! down about 25 bUShels per acre in his county, .
percentfrom last year.
·
N~~boring areas also are repor· "We' re going to·have an averag~ ting strong com yields.
'
of 30 bushels of soybeans per acre,

Threatening Iraqi forces prepare •for seize.
BASRA, Iraq (AP) - lraqi'forces
tlie Iranians were replying with
threatening Abadan moved more ar·
''inaccurate" fire but .were getting
mor and artillery across the Karun
no air support.
River ~utappeared to be preparing
Iraqi officials claimed their forces
for a Stege rat~er than an assault to
advanced three to five miles toward
· ·· 0 ~~rrun the lrantan oil citY and its
Abaaan, but t~e Western reporter
.gtant re£mery~-·
+ - ~ -~·
said~it -appeared that-the Iraqis were
As the Iraqi war to win complete
planning a· siege of Abadail and
.. control·o ftheShatt al·Ara? estua_ry · Irania~·held parts of the pol'\ city of
wentt!}to tts 23rd day, Iraq s offtcl81
Khorramshahr, on the west side of
P&lt;1rs news agelll:y said the invaders
Karun' River's .juncture · with the
put two more pontoon bridges acros5 . Shalt al·Arab, ·
the_ Karun northwest of Abadaq,
"I wouldn't ' be surprised if they
glYlng them three crossing points on
just sat back," said the. reporter, 8
the approaches to the threatened
military specialist for a British
city..
·
newspaper. "They don't really have
to 'take' anything." . '
.
A British reporter who.JUsited the
area said he saw tanks, amphibious
Khorramshahr and Abadan are
vehicles and artillery moving across· the two big cities on the Iranla~ side
one of the bridges ... in a leisurely
of the Shalt al·Arab, Iraq's watermaliner" and that the Iraqi trOQps ' way to tile Persian·Gulf and a major
were relaxed and confident. He said
territorial issue fOr centtu"ies bet·
the Iraqis were shelll!lg Abadan and
ween the Ai'ab.s of .what is now Iraq
-C

••

e.
VOL. 31 NO. 128

and the Persians of what is. now more than 400 to less than 200.
'
Ii·an.
The outp~t of refined petroleum
ll'l,lqi troop:; siiced a cross the nor- products by buth countries has been
thern approaches to l(hori-amshahr,
drastically curtailed by the wa r, but
. Iran's chief port-for imports, earl y Iraq is reported getting supplies
. in the war, cutting its road and rail from neigh()oring &amp;iudi Arabia.
·-lin~s to the rest of oil"l'ich'Khuzisunr- -· -Irim·said-its-oir-and navaHorees
· Province, and the establishment of . shot down five .Iraqi MiG jet fighters. the Iraqi river crossings completed ' ·during·on attack Monday on the o~the isolation ofthr city. . .... -~!shore !raman 01J. terminal at Kharg
The . British correspondent who
Island, at the head of the Persian
visited the area -said the Iraqis had Gulf: !ran reported no damage to the
. blown . up .. pipelines bet ween. tetminal, where superankers loaded
' Khorramshahr and the oil field at
crude oil, but the depot was heavily
' Ahwaz, the provincial capital 70 da11)8ged early inthe war.
miles to the north, and oil in the lines
A Saudi newspaper, El Madina al
· were burning. .
·
Munawara, said the split between .
Another British reporter, Bruce conservative and radical Arab
Loudon of the · London Daily
governments over the war \Vas ex·
Telegraph, repol'ted &lt;tfter a visit to
peeled to force postponement of an
Tehran that a "desperate shortage';
Arab s~it meeting scheduled to
of fuel reduced the lranian .Air Forbe'held m Jordan m November.
ce's combat planes in serviqe from
1\.lthoug~ Iran and Arab Iraq are .

•

a1 y

MEE:J' TONIGIIT
The Southern Junior High Atilletic
Boosters will meet at 7 this evening
at tbe junipr high building.
. .• ........ .... . .... . .
SPECIAL SESSION
A special meeting of the Meigs
Local Band Boolters Will be held at
7:30 p.m. Tuelday in the band room
of tbe high ilchool. Parents of all
band members are asked to attend.

Regular

16.50

'1

NOW :

'11.79
Compact and versatile With pockets
for currency; coins and credit cards.
Carries your favorite .photos, too.
Choose from toP grain leathers in
great fashion colors.
•Man~turer's

suggested retail.

Elberfelds. In Pomeroy

.

'

~

~

'

,,

Evans and ~ Knight~ queen candidate£; third row,
Debbie Michael, freshman attendant, Cindy Cross,
junior attendaHt and Lori Warden, sophomore l!t ...
tendant. Southern will go against Southwestern Friday
night .

.

.

'.

..

open.

. If you'd like to enter, stop by the Farmers Bank and pick up your IJre.u.
A·Doll, Design·A·Toy materials and infonnation.
.
Dress the doll or decorate the truck, return it to us by mid-November
and it will be entered for judging in our Dress-A-Doll/Design-A-Toy ccintest
Awards to be given will be based on creativity, color, design and sltiJI.
Following tbe juctgmg, entries wiJJ be put on display for the public to admire
and share in the spirit ol Christmas giving.
·
.
.
" ~r. tbe display and in time for Christmas all dolls'and toys ,t.ll go to an
orgaruzation -for distribution to deserving children as a gift frim an
anonymous Santa.
·
·
This Christmas, show ihat you care with Dres&amp;-A·Doll and Design-A·
Toy.-.--~~~~
,
.

.

.

.

Shootout leaves one dead, one hurt
· CINCINNATI- A man was killed and a police officer was wotinded
1n a shootout at a bar late Monday night.lnthe city's Walnut Hills section. .
.
.
,
Dead was Eric Mal'tin, 28. Police Officer Marvin Johnson, a member'of the police plainclothes intelligence unit, was shot in tbe arm. He .
was liswct in serious condition at General Hospital..
, ..
Cspt. Donald Slaughter, head of the Criminal Investigations Section,
said Johnson was on duty at the time of the shooting in Mr. G's School
Bar. ,
· · ·· ·

.

· LOVELAND, Ohio - A 12-year-old Lovelarid boy is hOspital~
today after falllnll40 feet from the ropes of a hot air baJloon.
.
The state Highway Patrol said Daniel Shepard was among some
~ers· watching .a hot air balloon descend late Monday into a
rurlu aection of Warren County. The craft landed to let a paiiSenger out
' and then took off.
.
The boy grabbed one of the topes hanging fJ;Om tbe baU0011 aild rose
40 f.eet into tbe air before letting go and falling to the ground, troopers
-said.

Weather forecast

Generally clear tonight. Lowa ~- PafUy sUnny W~esday. Highs
7HO, Cbanc:e of rain 10 percent tonight and 20 percent Wednesday.
Mem.b lr FDIC.

POMEROY, 0.

.,

'

firm ;requests permission .

· ZANESVILLE, Ohio - A Boston company has asked the federal
Energy Reg)llatory Agency for' permission to study the feasibility· of
building a hydroelectric power plant on the Licking . River· ill
Muskingum County.
,
. Officials of the ~ntinental Hydro Co. sai\1 the study !"~ take about
three .years, The plant .would be built at Dillon Dam and could
generate about seven million kilowatts of electricity a year. . •.' •

Boy hospiialiied ·after fall

'

Farmers
Bank

· ATHENS, Ohio - An Ohio University zoologist said Monday. the .
Bigfoot-type creature reported to be roaming Vinton County is a hoax.
· Dr.. Gerald.Svendsen has spent weeks checking reports and evidence
·of the creature in the woods east of McArthilr, Ohio .. He said all the
evidence he has seen is man-made and fake.
.
The footprinls were c;lug out by hand, he said. "You can see the sand
that was dug out alpngside the track," Svendsen said.
Svendsen believes scratches found on trees·in the area were not done
by primates, but with 16-or 21}-penny nails. The only thing that can't be
discoWJtcd are people's claims of creature sitings.

~s,on

•·

Winds IOIIIheaiWly toaoutherly6-10 mpb tonight.

~Ollie Fer~- ThUrsday throu«hSaturdlly:Achanceof

lhowe11 'l1nlrsillly and Friday and fair s.turdaY· Highs in the upper
8111 toiJIId.'/011. Lowllln the upper tos Tlusday and the low to mtd-0011
Friday and Saturday.
'

J

A discussion on the operations of
. the PointView Cable Television .Co.
highlighted Monday's . bi-monthly
· session of Middleport Village Council.
Council, discussed at length with
Richard !&lt;jewell, reports that cable
service. is being cut off for· nonpayment of bills without
notification. Newell said many ac·
counts are handled by his office, but
normal procedure is that customers
are notified before there is any
cutoff in service. Newell sai&lt;;l th&lt;IJ'e
could be some exceptions through
error but stressed that standard
operating _ pr.ocedures provjde for
such notice to subscribers.
Council discussed the establish·

'

•

Form deadline
set Oct. 25
forms . being completed for a
Farm Home Administraon Joan application for extension of water lines
in Ra~ine to the newly annexed atea
must be signed by every property
owner by Oct. 25- '
The ·necessary torms are being
mailed to residents who are reminded to note the deadline for signing.
11te Joan would provide' for the
drilling of a new well, installation of
a new water tank and other im·
provements.
. ·A new water line · extension has
· been 'completed in Racine, officials
report, and fire contracts with
lebanon and Letart Townships have
been renewed for another year.
The Syracilse Fire Department
has·the fire protection contract with
Sutton Township. However, any
property owners wishing to continue
to be served by the Ra~ine Fire
Departinent can do so by paying $20
a year to RaCine Villiige.
Jack Lyons has been appointed by
Racine Council to serve as a
. daytime patrolinan in the community.

· Flotida man cited
on charge of DWI
A Florida man .was cited for DWI
by the Gallla·Melgs Post of the Ohio
Hlghway Patrol in a one-car crash
late Monday night. ,
'Mie patrol saljl 'fony .P. Fer· .
nandez, 32, Defray 'Beach, Fla ., l"BS
entering U.S. 35 from Sl'( 7 at the entrance ramp to tbe SUver . Bridge
when he lost control Or. his car,
struck tbe curb and flipped over.
According to the report, Fernandez was uninjured and moderate
damage listed to his car. ·

.

ment of a location in the community . · coverage would create a con·
siderable amount uf increased costs
where subscribers can pay for ser·
for which the costomer would have
vice. Newell pointed out that the
to
pay. He said that few comments
firm operates in a number of towns
or
complaints were received when
and could not financially afford to
the
local news service was discon·
have a collection point in each town.
tinued
about two years ago.
Anumber of collection points would
Newell
reviewed future company
also provide· probleins in ·record
plans
to
increase the number of
maintenance on payments for the
channels being offered to subcentral office .of the firm, Newell
scribers and ·stressed that no plans
stated.
are being made to decrease · .or
Newell explained situations that
can affect service to customers. A change the present service.
He explained that the FCC deterpower outage recently · caused
mines
what the company will offer
disruption of service· he said .. Sun
to
the
subscribers
and advised that
spots can also create certain outages
council
members
technically have
·of services, the firm·representative
only
a
control
over
the rate to the
repoJI(ed.
charged
but,
lle
said,
the company
He discussed local news coverage
(Continued
on
page
16)
arid again pointed ou_t that such

BolJrdman. district may use
Ohio's Ferguson Act soon
.

report a hoax

'

Fs

''

f{OMECOMING QUEEN AND ATTENDANTS Four senior girls at Southern High School are vying for
homeconiing queen. The queen will be crowned Friday
night .during half·tinle activities at Southern. High
. School. Pictured, first row, 1-r, Denise Manuel and .
Teresa· Holstein, queen candidates; second row, San&lt;jy

ADDITIONAL FUNDS
. An additional grant of $531,075
has been received by· ·tlie
Syracuse-Racine · Regional
Sewage District for the $6 million
sewage project in those two
villages.
According to Attorney· Frank
W. Porter, bids on the sewage
project will be opened 'Nov. 12 at
noon in the Syracuse Municipal
Building.

•
IS ·DOW•

".

'

By Bob Hoeflich

Our· annual
Dress-A-Doll
.
Design-A- Toy
.contest

""

CENT~

Cable TV operations
reviewed by council

Emergency squad runs
A nwnber of runs were made over
the weekend by local units, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services Headquarters reports.
On Sunday at 5:01 a.m., the
Rutland unit went to the New Lima
Road for Mike Tillis, treated at
home and at 12:32 p.m., the
Syracuse Unit took Tammy Cline
from Welshtown Hill to Pleasant
Valley Hospital and at 2:38 p.m., .
· Alfred Gans was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
Unit.
M 3:31 a.m. Saturday, the
Pomeroy Unit took Bill Lewis from
his home in Middleport to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at3:32 a.m., the
Middleport Unit took Harold Ebersbach to HolZer Medical Center. The
Middleport Unit took Bill Adkins
from his home to Veterans
Memorial Hospital at 8: 19 a.m. and
at 10:26 a.m., John Kelly, Route 5, to
HolZer Medical Center. At 1:09 a.m.
the Middleport unit took Faye
. Dunlevy from the office of a Middleport physician to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The Rutland
. Unit took Lawrence Chapman to
Holzer Medical Center at 9:30 p.m.
and at 11:22, the Racine Unit took
Joy Tucker to Pleasant· Valley
- Hospital.
·
·

FIFTEEN

At Middleport

I

Accidents •••

en tine

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO .1UESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1980

r-------------------------

1 Ar~a Deaths

both Moslem nations, nun-Arab Per·
Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad
sians are the dominant ethnic comAli Rajai told a news conference in
munith in Iran, but that has rallied
Tehran, " We are interested in
all the Arabs behind Iraq.
solving the problem of the hostag~s"
Jordan's King Hussein has openly
but ''the U.S. government is not,"
declared full supp,ortforiraq, set up
T~~lran Radio rep?rted.
·.
a truck-supply ·Jine- from the Jor• -- . -The only ~lutwn for- the-hostagedanian port of Aqaba to Baghdad,
ISSUe · ts for the Umted States to opened.his air bases to the Iraqi air
recogmze the nghts of Our d~tmved
force and says Jordimian troops are'
people and accept the condittons set
available to Iraq if needed.
by .the ,,mam (Khomemt ) ~nd the
_ Saudi Arabia and the other coli·
Majhs, the framan Parharnent,
servative Arab oil states of the Per·
Rajai said.
sian (;ulf are supporting Iraq cover· Khomeini's chit! conditions are
tly because of Ayatollah Ruhollah
the .return to Iran of the late Shah
Khomeini's attempts to CJ&lt;poi-t his
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's fortune
Islamic revolution totheir countries.
and .the release· of $8 billion -· in
But such radical Arab governments
Iranian· assets in the United States
as those of Syria, Libya and Algeria
frozen by President Carter after the
support Iran.
U.S. Embassy in Tehran was seized
. Meanwhile, the 52 American
by militant Islamic students last
hostages in Iran neared the end of
Nov. 4.
'
their first year in captivity, and
Today was the hostages' 346th day
in captivity.

By The Associated Press
Officials in the 5,300-pupil Boardman school district in Mahoning
County
said it would go to court
1
· today to seek action that could lead
to Ohio's Ferguson Act being im·
· posed on 290 striking teachers.
. Two weeks ago, Judge Clyde
Osborne issued a _ temporary
restraining· order in a futile attempt
to get the teachers to go back .to the
classrooms. School officials say they
will seek a permanent injunction,
Superintendent Ronald Overfield
said the next step would be the
Ferguson Act, which prohibits
strikes by,j&gt;Ublic employees and sets
stiff penalties for those disobeying
the act. Mass firings would be an option Overfield could use. ·
The Boordm!m strike and another
in the Lake County city of Madison
are Ohio'~ two lingering teacher
strikes.
In Boardman, ·a rally with
representation .from the National
EducatiOR Association, Ohio
Education Association and other
t.eachers' groups .boosted 5agging

morale of teachers striking for the
of education has kept school open
· 26th school day Monday.
.
despite a refusal by bus drivers to
"I think the rally helped. We had
cross picket lines.
almost full membership on the
Meanwhile in the Madison Local
picket lines Monday," .said Board- school district, all except three of
man Education Association · tl•e district's 229 teachers struck for
spokesman Kathy Imobersteg.
the sixth . school day Monday.
On Monday night, the Boardman
Another 130 non-teaching employees
Ministerial Alliance met with the
were on picket lines for the third
teachers and urged a reswnption of
day. Further talks were set for today
contract talks. A weekend of
in Madison.
negotiations between Boardman
Salary remains t.he primary issue '
teacliers and federal mediator John
in both ongoing strikes.
Duffy broke off Monday after the
Meanwhile, a $1.5 million civil suit
board of education did not offer a
by the Cleveland Teachers Union
counter proposal to iltw(}-year pact
against the city 's Board of
made by the teachers association.
Educa!ion was dismissed Monday
Twelve Boardman teachers found
by Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
in contempt of court last Thursday
Judge Leo M. DeGrandis.
were given a one week delay of their
The teachers accused the board of
jail sentence pending outcome of the
conducting a lockout in late 1977,
latest negotiations. Each teacher
when the schoof system was running
has appealed the conviction, $500
out of money and was unable to
fine and 10-day jail sentence. ·
repay its loans and meet payrolls.
Boardman's. 290 teachers walked
When the system failed to issue -out Sept. 8 in the ·first teachers'
paychecks, thousands of teachers
strike in Boardman history. Schools
refused to work on Dec. I, 2, 5 and 6
were closed for five days earlier in
in 1977.
the strike, but since then the board

E~quake
AL A8NAM, Algeria (AP) - Th~

resc.uers knocked on a-steel girder
and listened. Moments later, they
heard a feeble scratching, proof that
someone was still alive nearly four
days after AI Asnam's killer earthquake. buried him beneath the
wreckage of the office building.
. Suddenly, th&lt;) rescuers dl\lpped
tbeir tools and ran into the street.
The ruins · had been shaken by
anOther of the dozens of daily af~
tershocks. A concrete wall directly
·· overhead, leaning· .at a 30'degree
angle, threatened to bury tbe .
diggers.
' The aftershocks Monday, some
measuring ·UP to .S on the Richter
scale, caused a panic.!Hllong'the tens
of thousands of horrieless survivors •
receiving food and me.Jlcal aid in .
temporary tent cities. Terrified
men, women and children poured into the open air.
The official Alge~ian news agency·
said lh~re was no furt.her damage or
casualties Monday in AI Asnam,
whet , 1,600 bodies have been .
rc'CIIvered and the Red Crescent

-

deatlr toll hits 1,600

relief organiziltion estimated 5,000 to
20,000 people .were killed, 80 percent
,of the city of 125,090 people were
destroyed; and 250,000 of the provin·
ce's 1 million people were made
homeless.
As each aftershock subsided, the
thousands of Algerian·searcpers and
French and Swiss alpine rescue
teams with trained search dogs
returned to the rubble. More victiins
were brought out, alive but badly in·
jtu"ed.
The scratching was believed to be
coming from the watchman at .the·
building's WJderground parking lot.
· ''Last iught, we heard him crying
for help," said one of the searchers.
''This morning one of our avalanche
dogs confirmed his presence, but ·
now his cries have stopped."
Then they heard .the f'!'int scrat·.
ching from below.
.
''Every day there iS less and less
·hope for those bUried In the ruins,"
said a doctor standing by.
He said on Sunday. he had to amputate both legs o! a trapped man to
save his-life.

A week a~ter the 1954 quake which killed !,600 people in AI Asnam, sur· :
vivors were still being found alive in
the ruins, according to a police of.
fleer. ·
Small children who lost their
parents in the ·disaster wandered
aimiessly through the streets. Rescue teams - organized by a .
women's group gathered them up.
Those whose r.elatives could be
found were tltrned over to them . .
VoJWJteer families cared for others.. .
At one tent camp, 12-yeat-old ::
Fadll.a complained of the cold at•
night- "I have only a single blailJtet · :
and no mattress; could you help me
get another blanket 1" But she said
her· parents and all eight of tbeir
children escaped from their house
seconds before the wallS came
crashingdown.
.
"My eldest brother was carrying
litfle Mohamed, aged two, and
Mama clutched the new baby,
Thank God we are all safe," sbe
~d.
.
"But I don't think I want to live In
AI Asnarn any more. I am afraid.''

'I

: ',

•

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="194">
    <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="2784">
                <text>10. October</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="55186">
            <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="55185">
              <text>October 13, 1980</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="601">
      <name>grimm</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
