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                  <text>14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 24.1980

Effort n;tade by patrol to
help red~:tce fatal mishaps ·
The Ohio .State Highway Patrol evidenced by the· fact that of aU
has projected enforcement efforts fatl!lities this year, only 22 had seat
and patroUing techniques toward a belts buckled.
The · other trend, the drinking
10 percent fatal accident reduction
driver,
so far has decreased to 37
in 1980, according to Lt. Ernest
percent
in 197!i rather than the norWigglesworth, commander of the
mal47
-50
percent. Locally, however,
Galiia-Meigs Post.
Lt.
Wigglesworth
reports that four
In 1979, the Gallia-Meigs area
out
of
the
seven
fatalities
with eight
reported nine fatal accidents in
killed involved driving while under
which 10 people were killed.
Thus far in 1980, the area has had the influence, or 57 percent.
"This high figure is indicative of
seven fatal wrecks in which eight
the
high risk of drinking and driving
people have been killed, a 20 percent
and
our enforcement effort will be
reduction.
toward
taking every drinking driver
"In Gallia County we recorded
off
the
road that we see," Lt.
seven !atalities with eight killed in
Wigglesworth
concluded.
1979. So far in 1980 we have only
recorded two fatals, two killed, a
large 75 percent reduCtion in deaths.
However, in Meigs County the picture is not as good. We have had five
fatalities with six killed or an increase of 33 percent In deaths over
1979 in Meigs County," Wigglesworth said.
"Statewide, we had 2,010 fatalities
in 1979. As of August 1 we have had
1,035 · in 1980. We hope this
decreading trend continues and feel
our DWI enforcement has helped a
great deal in reducing these
fatalities, along with our speed
reduction enforcement," the commander said.
Lt. Wigglesworth further reported
that of the 1,035 total fatalities, 373
were on rural state highways, 272
were on county roads and the rest
within municipal corporations. Also,
of the . 1,035 fatals 132 were
pedestrians, 121 motorcycle and 33
were bicycles.
,
Two trends continue however. The
trend of not using seat belts is

e

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Kenneth Smarr, •
Parkersburg; Mary Evans, Por- ·
Uand; Dell)ert Bruch, Pomeroy;
Willie Blaine, Middleport; .Wayne
Adams, RuUand; Ann Fl"~Jllng, ·
Long Bottom; Ruth Congo, Racine;
Sarah Brown, Pomeroy; · Mary
Clark, Middleport.
Discharged-Velma Winebrenner,
Oleva· Cottrill, Emogene Knapp,
Lo~ Bartels, Lula Murray, Brandon Roush, Billy Hawkins, Dessie
Patterson.

VOL. 31

NO. I 15

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Sewage system
hid opening .set

•

MEETS TONIGHT
The Long Bottom Commurlity
Association will meet this evening at
8 p.m. at the coummunity building.
Mt:s. Delores Frank and Mrs.
Teresa Collins will speak on cancer
and heart attacks. Everyone Is
welcome to attend.

Bid opening has been set for Wednesday, Nov. 12 for a $5,000,000
sewage system for the villages of
Syracuse and Racine. This was announced Wednesday by Attorney
Frank W. Porter hwo represents the
communities.
The project will be advertised for
bidders immediately. Bids will be
opened at noon that day at the
Municipal Building In Syracuse.
A $4,425,000 grant has been
received from the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) while
balance of the costs will be paid
though an FHA loan and ftinds
provided by the two villages.
Plans for the sewage system first
began in 1968. According to Atty.
Porter, if the system had been built
at that time it would have been about

FROM WEST BEND AND THE CHILl
WONTCOST'VOU BEANS.

Hoffman terminates 22 cases
Fourteen defendants forfeited
Pomeroy, $28, speeding; Thomas
banda and eight others were fined in , Gillilan, Chester, $25, stop sign
the court of Middleport.Mayor Fred violation; Jeffrey L. Hoschar, West
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Columbia, $50,open flask.
Forfeiting were Marvin R. EdFined were Tommy Ward,
wards, Clifton, W. Va., $350, posted Georgia, $10 and costs, expired
on a charge of driving while in- license; Howard R. Roush, Clifton,
toxicated; Patricia A. Hindy, Mid- $16 and costs, speeding; . Ronald
dleport, $100 and costs, disorderly
Taylor, Middleport, $100 and costs,
conduct; Valerie J. Roush, Hartopen flask; John R. Tyree, Midford, $350, driving while intoxicated;
dleport, $100 and costs, disorderly
Edward J. Mitchell, Pomeroy, $100,
possession of marijuana; James S.
Eakins, Middleport, $50, disorderly
manner; James Grueser, Mid·
dleport, $50, disorderly manner;
William E. Camack, Huntington,
$33, speeding; Lance E. Chapman,
Pomeroy, $25, splnnlng tires, and
Glen Jackson
$100 possession of marijuana; Roger
Mrs. Mildred Spencer of Racine,
E. Eblin, Syracuse, $25, left of cenRt. 2, received word Wednesday after; Lois A. Taylor, Middleport, $33,
ternoon of the death of Glen
speeding; Gregory K. Cundiff,
Jackson. '73, who suffered a massive
Route I, Middleport, $25, weaving
cerebral hemorrhage at Salem City
course; George D. Warner,
Hospital, Salem, Ohio Wednesday.
Mr. Jackson was the father-in-law
of the late Betty Adams Jackson and
had visited frequently at the Spencer
home. he had many friends in the
Antiquity community.
He Is survived by his wife, Ethel
One defendant was fined, two were
Jackson
of Leetonia; one son,
placed on probation and three others
William
(Bill)
Jackson and one
forfeited bonds in the court of
daughter, Joan, four grandchildren,
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
and five great-grandchildren, aU of
Tuesday night.
.
Letonia, Ohio.
Fined was William R. Thoma,
Funeral services were held
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, public inFriday,
Sept. 19, at the Wood
toxication; $300 and costs,conFuneral
Home
in !J.eetonla with intrlbutlng to the delinquency of a
terment
in
the
cemetery at
minor, and $200 and costs, fleeing an
Washingtonville,
Ohio.
officer.
Mrs. Spencer and Mr. and Mrs.
Placed on six months probatton
Ralph
Shain visited the family and
were Basil Haynes, Pomeroy, who
paid
their
respects to Mr. Jackson at
was assessed court costs also, when
. appearing on an assault charge, and
Ralph Rose, no address recorded,
who was also charged with assault
and was assessed court costs.
Drew Webster, Post 39, American
Forfeiting bonds were Mary Fry,
Legion, Pomeroy, wiU hold an
New Haven, $2ll, posted on a
American flag burning on the upper
speeding charge ; Michael
parking lot in Pomeroy Sunday afKosnovich, Orient, $27, speeding,
ternoon
at 2 p.m.
and Daniel Territo, Pomeroy, $350,
Anyone
having an American Flag
driving while intoxicated.
(Old Glory) that is old, torn, faded or
mutiisted In any way and wonders
Juvenile Court News
what to do with it, bring it to the
parking lot Sunday and give to any
Nine juveniles were fined wheri
Legionnaire present.
they appeared before Judge Robert
E. Buck.
Fined were Scott Hartinger, 16,
Middleport, $13 and costs, operating
Meigs Juvenile Court Judge
privileges restricted 30 days, speed;
Robert
Buck has sentenced a youth
Ronnie Ginther, 17, Pomeroy, $10
involved
in a recent breaking and
and costs, driving wrong way on one·entering
at Rutland American
way street, accident Involved;
Legion
hall
to the custody of the Ohio
David Iannarelli, 16, Midd)eport, $10
Youth Commission's Scioto Village
and costs, failed to stop at stop sign;
Duane Jones, 16, 0\lxter, $25 and Diagnostic Center.
The youth had a prior delinquency
costs, no operator's license, accident
record.
Two other juveniles involved
involved; Franklin Wolfe, 16,
In
the
incident with no prior
Racine, $15 and costs, license
delinquency
records were placed on
suspended 30 days due to prior ofprobation.
fenses,IIJIOO(I; Jason Roush,l7, West
Judge Buck also committed a 17Columbia, $15 and costs, left of cenold Middleport youth on theft
year
ter, accident Involved; Tim Bishop,
charges
concerning two bicycles.
17, Harrisonville, $13 and costs,
speed; William Oyer, 17, Rt. 1, Bidwell, $21 and costs, speed.

manner; Tony Little, Dexter, open
flask, $100 and costs and misconduct, $100 and costs; Lucille Wise, no
address recorded, $200 and costs,
fleeing a police officer; Edward
Laudermilt, Middleport, $5 and
costs, allowing a dog to run loose and
$5 and costs, ailowing trash to accumulate; Cindy Robinson, no address recorded, $100 and costs,
assault.

Several runs by local units on
Tuesday were reported by the Mei!!S
County Emergency Service
Headquarters. They include:
Rutland Unit, 7:53 a.m., Robert
Riggs, Route 124 to Holzer Medical
Center; Racine Unit, 12: 35 p.m. , Joe
Cremeans, Tuppers Plains to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; .
Syracuse Unit, 2:33, Ann Fleming,
Long Bottom, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital;
Tuppers Plains, 6:08p.m.,
the funeral home Thursday evening
Patricia
Weyersmiller,
Chester to
in Leetonia, spending the night in
Holzer
Medical
Center;
Pomeroy,
Salem, Ohio, returning home
6:53
p.m.,
Sharon
Brown
from
Friday.
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; TupKaren Sue Singer
pers Plains, 9 a.m., Mrs. Ernestine
Winebrenner, Veterans Memorial to
Karen Sue Slnger,31, Columbus, · Pomeroy Health Care Center; 3:34
former resident, died Sunday in p.m., Dessie Patterson, Veterans
Columbtis.
Memorial to Pomeroy Health Care
She was preceded in death by her ·eenter; 11:02 a.m., Wilson Wolfe
mother, Anna Margaret Singer and from Holzer Medical · Center to
a sister.
Racine Route 3.
Surviving are brothers, Charles
Sorden, Connecticut; Jack, Mark,
Mickey and Mike Oiler, Pomeroy;
her grandfather, James Singer,
Gallipolis; three children, Stacey,
Raymond and Felecia, several aunts, uncles and other relatives.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. John King,
Gallipolis, officiating. Burial will be
In Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 7
to 9 p.m. this evening.

Area deaths

Mayor's Court

Meigs emergency runs

.I

Schooi funds received

..

The September State School Foundation subsidy payment, of
f80,969,345.25 to 612 Ohio city, exempted village and local school distrlcta and fl county boards of education
wu reported today by State Auilitor
Tbomu E. FeJ;'gWIOII.
Meigs County's three local school
dlatrlcts l"!lCelved a total of
tMO,f/9.72 after d~uctlons for
retirement.
Amounts received by each local
diBtrlct Include Eastern; $87,256.2JI;
Meigs, $178,155.14, and Southerri,
~.468.30.

In addition the Meigs County
Board of Education received a
direct allotment of fl7,1l88.3l.

.,

\

~

.

when

vou buy a Slo·COOiter Plul"

• 1-&lt;» . p~kttt CtNI'IIMitl «l Elbcw ... c.. Oftl
• 4·01. pack•t• !Nupnlo NlluUI Checldlr Ct!MU

• aa·ol . can Con~telllll e wnott '"'" fomttoe•

More thin 1 slow cook• -

the

Slo·Cooker Plu1 ~ 8 Qt . cook.,
bekea. ro.ista. grills and unetl
Oblong po1 hOlds 1 11rg1 roast 1)1'
Whole chicken . Pol r~mov.ct ,

.....

• t •o1 . c.,. CVI11tdlnt 1Pl Tomtlo ,, .. ,
• I S"'l . V1n C1mp' e\! N.wOriMnt styli RM Kldn•y

• 3.25-o! . con tlln.,

llh:Coffn ~ ~ I S.Chlll l ng

S..ton· tll ® S.uo&lt;~..:l

Sell

h11tlng bau with S hHt Httlnga
becom11 1 mlnl·vrlll. And hllre' t
1nott'l., PLUS - tend tt'lll eou·
pon to W•t Bend with proof of
purch111 tnd get FREE ' ' Ct'llll

It will be burned with all the
others.
Burning is tpe only proper way to
destroy the "Stars and Stripes" and
then bury the ashes.
The American Legion will have
new flags to sell.
All area Legtqnnalres are invited
along with all members of Post 39.

Queen City
would benefit
from merger

West S.nd Slo Cooker ptus Oil•
P.O. BoJt 278 Wesl Bend , Wl53095

s.na me m~ ,ouPOnl lor 1 fAf£ r 01 p..:•eo• o r c •• .,ntnt -' Etbo • ~ • c ••o~· • 01 o•c••g• o l
• Sl&lt;gen to Nat u•ar C hltdd.lr ChtiS t :lll o : c1n g l Corlldr~lf Wh cl t Deet td '~' ""l Ot~ S 01 c ~n c t
Cnn tad on a~ l o m~tc PM I ~ ) 1~ 01 coMoa·n111 ol o,!r.Co•m•tiJSChrll•no seuon ;~H ' Stnonea &amp;I l l
1n0 , 1 ~ Ol ~ In o l Ve n Ca m p o-" Nt'" Or tun• Siyl" Rota ll•d~ly B.. ns I f &lt;li; IO~&amp;Iht lOll porlron () I
lh '\1 Q,. ntr Shop ~egolltl l r&lt;&gt;n C1&lt;d ~ac ll tO ,.., , h tK" 1 ~2 1&amp; .W nl 8.., (1 Sto ~O;&gt; 'I' i&gt;l lll® f&gt; Ot
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IOO~ESS
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CITY

Du dl•t&gt;t " " reoutll5 mu!l ~~ PO!Imlr•td &lt;'0 llltr '"'~ J a nu"; ~~

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~·octU •n g ll &lt;:&gt;•d "' " ' ' ' ~lohobo l t&lt;l ll •tcl O• rf•lfh ( lfd l&gt;f ''"

L-------------------------------------~

1ST FLOOR-HOUSEWARES

hurt in gasohol explosion

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Seven persons were injured, two seriously, in
an explosion Wednesday at a gasohol display dUring an agricultural
exhibit.
Authorities said the explosion occurred when a 30-gallon drum of denatured alcohol caught fire during the demonstration of a gasohol still
at the annual Fann Science Review.
An eyewitness said the mixture of gasoline and alcohol " went up like
a rocket and sprayed liquid over the crowd.••
Injured in the explosion and transported to nearby hospitals were
Norbert Kim, 50, and 43-year old Donald Reinhart, both of AI veda ;
Elmo Sergent Jr., 41, of Ramsey, Ill.; Charles Bouillon, 51, of New
Riegal; Martham Williamson, 48, and Richard Williams, 48, both of
Cedarville; and Chester Sikora, 57, of Elyria.
Hospital spokesman said those injured suffered first, second· and
third degree burns.

Mother, children murder victims
EATON, Ohio - A woman and her three children were shot to death
Wednesday night in their farm house west of Eldorado in Preble County.
The Preble County sheriff's office said the murders were discovered
by the woman's husband when he returned home from work.
Identities of the woman, in her 40s, and the children, aged 4, 9 and 11,
were being withheld by the sheriff until relatives could be notified.
Shortly alter the bodies were found, sheriff's deputies took a man into custody in Eaton and were questioning him about the slayings.

CHOICE.

Alaska residents share oil wealth
JUNEAU, Alaska - The state of Alaska, overruled in its first attempt to share oil profits with its residents, is mailing out $185 million
In tax refunds authorized by a new law that aiso repeals the state income tax.
While the first version would have abolished the income tax for
residents who had filed returns for three years, the new law eliminates
the tax for everyone. It also refunds 1979 and 1980 income tax payments, with the average 1979 refund estimated at $211,

There was a ti_me when one checking plan could fit just
about everyone's banking needs. But today that's simply no
longer true. That's why, beginning September 1at Central
Trust, we'll offer you a choice in checking plans.

EXECUTIVE SESsiON
The Meigs County Conunissioners
met In regular session Tuesday but
the entire meeting was in executive
session.
Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells, and Chester
Wells, commissioners, Mary Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha Cham·
bers.

And the right choice can save you money.
For those who write only a few checks each month and
prefer to maintain a small balance, we recommend the Economy
Account. The service charge is only 75~ per month, plus M
for each check paid.
If you write quite a few checks each month and maintain
a larger average checking balance, you'll want the Balance
Account. The service charge is determined by your average
monthly balance, and there are no additional charges, no matter
how many checks you write. The absolute maximum charge
is $3.00 per month, but if you maintain an average monthly
balance of only $400 there will be no service charge for
that month.
· And one of the best things about cheeking at Central
.Trust is that with both the Economy f\ccount and the Balance
Account, you can eliminate all checking setvi~e charges just
by keeping a lllinimum balance of $1,000 i~ a regular Central
· .
Trust savings account.
Come in to any Central Trust office and pick the plan
that's right for you. A choice in checking. It's just one more better
banking service from Central Trust.
·

TO MEET TONIGHT
The Wildwood Garden Club will
meet at 7:30 this evening· at the
home of Mrs. Ada Holter.

HIGH
SCHOOL
SENIORS
Boy! Do we ever have a· line for you!
Yep- we liave a line for you in our senior partralt
appointment book.
· .
You'll like the individual attention we give you for
your senior portrait. You'll like the variety of previews
you get to select from- previews bf!lore traditional oil
backdrops plus previews done in attr'active outdoor settings.
•
AND- you'll like our reasonable prices.
Give us a call and get your name on "our line" .

Bus wreck leaves one dead, 20 hurt
· SHOW LOW, Ariz. - A road worker was killed and 20 other people
were hurt when a school bus crashed Into a highway sweeper, igniting
the sweeper's fuel tank, authorities said.
The bus .was returning to Show Low along Arizona 260 on Wednesday
with between 35 and 70 students aboard when it hit a sweeper rig attached to a one-ton flatbed truck, investigators said.
Van Holyoak, 51, of Clay Springs, the sweeper's driver, was killed
.when he became trapped between the back of the sweeper and the
front of the school bus, according to Walt Gray, a spokesman for the
state Transportation Department.

\,, .

12 demonstrators draw fines
AUSTIN, Texas - A judge has imposed $200 fines on 12 demon•
strat01'8, including nine Iranians and three Palestinians, convicted of
disrupting a speech at the University of Texas by a one-time
spokesman for the late ~hah of Iran.
, Travis County Court-at-Law Judge Jon Wisser also sentenced the
defendants to four to eight days in jail, but none will have to serve
because of credit for time served after their arrests.
The demonstrators were convicted on Sept. 4 of disrupting ~ Jan. 31
speech by Fereydoun Hoveyda, former Iranian ambassador to the
United Nations. Defense attorney Bill Allison said he would appeal.

....

Better Banking Service. That's.the Central Idea.

1HE

THE .PHOTO PlACE

•

.

I :

CENIRAL TRUST

(Charlene and Bob Hoeflich)
109 High St.
Pomeroy.

Township. Shown with the marijuana is Sheriff James
Proffitt. A second truck load was confiscated later in
the day from the same area.

MARIJUANA CONFISCATED - A large crop of
marijuana was confiscated Wednesday by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department at Guysville, Columbia

Fbln '1 " stare coupons . Huny

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP ) - Iraq
today claimed the capture of 115
square miles of Iranian border
territory, including four towns, as
Iranian jets hammered Iraqi oil installations near Baghdad and to the
north again on the fourth day of the
war at the head of the Persian Gulf.
The Iraqi air f~ce retaliated by
attacking and heavily damaging six
airportS and military installations
inside Iran, the Baghdad command
said. The air war cut off both
nations' oil exports through the Persisn Gulf, but the flow from Saudi
Arabia and other gulf oil states continued.
The Iraqi command said its troops
and tanks seized the Iranian border
town of Naftshah today while other
Iraqi forces raised the flag over
Mehran, 90 miles to tl:e dlluth.
Iraqi ttoops and armor took
Mehran Wednesday after completing the capture of the major
Iranian border town of Qasr-eShirin, 350 miles southwest of

- llmltec:ltlme otter .

Clip I his coupon tnd undto :

Porter said it has been suggested
one-fourth of today's costs.
that residents be charged a monthly
It was reported that if bids
rate before the system is completed,·
received are within the cost figure,
but Porter opposes such action. Thei
work on the system widll begin
early payment of the tap lees will'
within 90 days after bids are open.
help the cost of the system. Porter
The project will take approximately
also stressed that operation for the
14 months to complete.
sewage system is not for profit.
Atty. Porter explained that if bids
Money received from residents for
are above the cost figure it will be
the
system will be used' lor three
necesary to readvertlse or borrow
things
: (I) cost of operation; .(2)
additional funds. "We hope the bids
fund
maintenance
and (3) to repay
will be in the ball park', Porter said.
the
Joan.
'
Porter added that all persons in
It was reported that the buil\ling &lt;1
the sewage district will be required ·
the pumping station will take mu~h
to connect into the system.
longer thant he laying of the sewer
In order to the help raise the local
lines. The pumping station will be
share residents will be asked to pay
a tap fee. Arrangements on paying . located on the Maurice Lott property
in Racine.
tap fees will be made as soon as the
"A sewage system is the nicest
board of trustees of the SyracuseRacing Regional Sewage System thing that can happen to a community," Porter concluded.
take action.

Iraq claims big territory;
Iranian jets hammer fields

FRE:E CHILl FIXIN'S!

SoMETHING NEW
HAs BEEN ADDED To
CHECKING AT
CENTRAL TRUST.

Flag burning ceremony set

Youths cofllmitted

__. 0

wesreENo .
0

FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1980

BUY THE SLO-COOKER PLus·~

ded and the store's front will be enlarged. Additional
parking to better serve the many customers will also
be added. Even though the store is being extensively
remodeled and enlarged the operation of the store will
continue to operate and will not be closed at any time.
Owners of the store are Dick and Ruby Vaughan . .

enttne

at y

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

NEW ADDITION - Approximately 5,000 square
feet ~ being added to Vaugl)an's Cardinal Super
Market in Mid~eport. According to contractor Chuck
Kitchen, 2,000 feet will be additional store space and
the balance new warehouse area. The meat, produce,
and dairy departments are being enlarged and new
door type frozen ca.Ses will be added. A deli will be ad-

•

•

COM~

Weather forecast
Mostly cloudy with scattered showers or thunderstorms tonight.
Lows In the low ~ · Partly cloudy and cooler Friday. Highs In the low
eoa. Chance of rain 40 percent tonight and 10 percent Friday. Winds
northwesterly 10-20 mph tonight.
Exteaded Ohio Forecast- Saturday through Monday :Fair Saturday and Sunday. A chance of showers Monday. Highs In mid to upper
IIIII Saturday, warming to the 70s by Monday. Lows in the upper 30S to
mld-408 Saturday morning, .warming to the low to mid-005 by Monday.

'I"'' '"M~ ""

'

l

CINCINNATI (AP) - A railroad
company official says th~ merger of
the Chessie System and Seaboard
Coast Line Industries Inc. will turn
Cincinnati into one of the major
railroad freight terminals in the
nation.
"We'll have traffic here like never
before. We're already using peak
capacity, and the merger should
bring us additional business," said
Fred Yocum, general manager &lt;1
Chessie's western region. ·
The Interstate Commerce Cornmssion approved plans Wednesday
to merge the roads into a 'l/,000-mile
.freight system serving 22 eastern
states from Ontario, Canada, to
Florida.
The combination will be called
a;x Corp., but the individual rail
lines will continue to be operated
separately at first.
Yocum said the new system can
utllize Chessie's new automated yards in Cincinnati and Seaboard's
Louisville I Nashville yards in Northern Kentucky. Both systems
already operate side-by-side
piggyback freight operations in Cincinnati.
He also said that Chessie's
business had been generally to the
north and east while Seaboard went
south and east.
Now the merged system wiil likely
draw through traffic that it never
had before. the prospect of additional · business also indicated
more jobs in the future.
Yocum said that railroad freight is
becoming more competitive with
trucking and other fonns of transportation because of the increasing
costs of fuel.
"Business from Dayton, Ohio, to
Miami, Florida, for instance, we
weren't after as Chessie. But that
becomes very attractive to us as
C&gt;X," he said.
Previously, Chessie would handle
only business from Dayton to Cincinnati and then transfer to another
railroad.
Yocum said it is likely that more
employees will be added as business
grows.

Tehran, taking 351 prisoners and
pursuing fleeing Iranian soldiers to
Sar-e-Pol-zahab, about ro miles inside the border, a communique said.
It said the fall of Sar-e-Pol-Z8hab
was imminent, and that other forces
were advancing eastward after
taking Mehran.
Iran conceded its troops retreated
In the Mehran area and said the
Iraqis also seized nearby Salehabad.
It said the town's defenders withdrew to the hills.
In the air war, an Iraqi communique said Iranian jets hit the
Doura oil refinery on the outskirts of
Baghdad today, oil Installations and
airports In the northern cities of
Kirkuk and Mosul and residential
areas and economic installations in
the northern Kurdish town of lrbil.
The communique claimed Iraqi
ground-t~air missiles and antiaircraft guns downed 13 Iranian
planes, bringing the toll reported by
the Iraqis since Monday, to 134,
almost a third of Iran's air force.

Iran reported 34 Iranians killed
and 134 wounded In Abadan, where
the war has knocked out the big
Iranian oil refinery ; the nearby port
of Khorramshahr, and Ahwaz,
capital of Khuzestan province 80
miles to the north, but it said the toll
in Abadan did not include casualti~
among personnel of the National ·
IranlliD Oil Co.
It also said there were ''many"
civilian casualties in Qasr-e-Shirin
andMehran.
Radio Tehran said reinforcements
were being rushed to the invasion
area, whi~h extends 300 miles south
from Qasr+Shlrin to Abadan.
The Abadan refinery was reported
still in flames from Iraqi air attacks,
and both Abadan and Khort'III8Shal!r .
were under siege. Baghdad Radio :
urged the people of Khorramshahr
to surrender.
·
Heavy fighting also was reported
at nearby Salamshah, and Radio .Abwaz In the provincial capital urged
residents to help dig defensive trenches.

U S. keeps eyes on shipping lanes

MANSHOTTODEATII
HARRISON, Ohio (AP) ~ Allen
Zinkhon, 45, was shot several times
and died Wednesday night in his
home in Whitewater Township, the
Hamilton County Sheriff's office
said.
A neighbor told officers that she
heard shots coming from
Zinkhon's home, and saw a woman
running from his house as more
shots were fired.
No charges have been filed In connection with the shooting, a sheriff's
spokesman said.

'i

•

The key waterway- and the focal
specifically, Muskie said: "What
WASIUNGTON (AP) - President
one tries to do is to stay on top of the
Carter is stopping short of point of consultations with the ailies
situation as it actually unfolds and
threatening military action to keep - is the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow
undertake to do the contingency
Persian Gulf oil flowing to the West · channel at the entrance to the gulf. If
it
were
blocked,
tw~thirds
Of
the
planning, not in public, but within
as Secretary of State Edmund S.
Western
world's
imported
oil
could
the
circle of your administration as
Muskie and America's allies search
be
cutoff.
.
to
how you would meet confor a way to make sure the Iran-Iraq
Carter
was
not
specific
about
how
'
tingencies
if they develop.''
war doesn't close key shipping
the
strait
might
be
kept
open,
and
Carter,
meanwhile,
stressed that
lanes.
Muskle
said
the
immediate
effort
is
the
United
States
is
strictly
neutral
After a White House meeting with
to
promote
a
ceasefire
through
the
in
the
Iran-Iraq
conflict
and,
In
what
Muskie and other top. advisers WedUnited
Nations.
one administration official said
nesday, Carter said freedom to
In his State of the Union addfess
could be interpreted as a warning to
navigate In the Persian Gulf is vital
last January, Carter said the United
the Soviet Union, added:· "There
to the world's oil supplies.
should be absolutely no intervention
While Wednesdlly's cutoff of oil States was prepared to use military
by lillY other nation in this conflict."
shipments from Iran and Iraq alone force if necessary to protect Persian
Gulf
supply
routes
from
any
outside
Muskie said he would urge Soviet
sho.uld have no serious effect on supassault.
Foreign
Minister Andrei A.
plies and prices, the president said:
But
there
has
been
no
Indication
Gromyko
at
a meeting today to
"A total suspension of oil exports
that
the
president
is
prepared
to
recommend
that
the Kremlin use its
from the other nations who ship
carry
out
that
threat
in
the
current
influence
to
support
a U.N. Security
through the Persian Gulf region
crisis.
Council
appeal
for
a
Cf'.aseflre.
would create a serious threat to the
An administration official, who
Carter said that no matter what
world's oil supplies and conasked
not to he identified, refused to . happens on the battlefield, the
sequently a threat to .the economic
comment on the possibility that the
United States continues to hold the
health of all nations."
Iranian government responsible lor ·
"It is imperative that there be no United .States would join or assist
the safety of the 52 American
infringement of that freedom of some International naval force that
hostages now in their 3'llth day of
passage of ships to and from the Per- could be sent to the region to guarantee the safety of the world's tankers.
captivity in Iran.
sian Gulf region," he added.
Without mentioning such a plan

Lucey endorses Anderson's views
CINCINNATI (AP) - Patrick
Lucey, the Roman Catholic running
mate of independent presidential '
candidate John Anderson, said he
endorses Anderson's freedom of
choice abortion views.
The fanner Wisconsin governor
also told a Wednesday fund-raising
luncheon that Anderson, as
president, could work effectively
with a partisan Congress because
victory by an independent candidate
would be an obvious mandate from
the people.
"We are not a third party. John is
still a Republican and I am a
Democrat," Lucey told about 100
supporters who atten\led a ~­
head luncheon. "But I think it's important to send the two parties a
message.
"It's not automatic that a Catholic
is pr~Jife," Lucey said. "I would
hope the voters would judge me by
the same standa~ds as they would
the Protestant candidates. "I am a
Catholic and a Democrat who lear-

ned very early that separation of
church and state is an awfully important position in this country.
"While I consider abortion
morally wrong, I do not think I have
the right to impose my religious
beliefs on !he rest of the country."
Lucey told a news conference that
if the Supreme Court rules that
women have the constitutional
freedom of choice, he thinks women
should have that choice.
."1 want John Anderson to be
president," Lucey said. "But if we
only make a good run, I think we
have gone a long way toward
strengthening our political system."
Lucey said there would be very little interest in the presidential race if
Anderson were not running.
Anderson's Independent candidacy offers a viable alternative
choice for president "in addition to
offering a negative response" lor
voters who don't like either
President Carter or GOP candidate
Ronald Reagan, Lucey said.

He accused President Carter of
contributing to world unrest by
failing to adequately communicate a
strong U.S. foreign policy.
"I know the kind of foreign policy
we could have with John Anderson;
it would not be a foreign policy of
confrontation, it would be a policy of
communication," Lucey said.
"Military strength is only part of
the equation. If .we are to be admired
by our friends and respected by our
enemies, we have to have a strong
economy that is working, as well as
a working democracy and a participating llemocracy."
Lucey said he was eager to debate
the other two major vice presidential candidates in a tentatively
scheduled debate Oct. 2 In
Louisville, Ky.
He said he . considers Democrat
Walter Mondale and Republican
George Bush stronger candidates
than their presidential running
mates.

�3-The Dally Sentinel Middle rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 25, 1980

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Thursday, Sept. 25, 1980

eTTA

Opinions &amp;
Comments

rO~ WORm 5TAR·"TB€~ N,E.~. ~0

Browns kicking gam~
puzzles coach, fans

Meet the Meigs Marauders

HVtME

ntE DAILY SENTrNEI.

jUSP8 14&gt;-1601
DEVOTED TO TilE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS.MASON AREA

Ldtel'l of oplnloa are 'Weleomt'd. They sbould be len thaa 300 words lung I or subject to reduc-tioo by 1M edJ&amp;or) and must bt sigaed with the slgDee'S address. Names may l&gt;t' witbhdd upon
pu~katloo. Howenr, oo requesL names 'A'ill be disclosed . Letters should be In good taste , addnst~Di IIIUH, 001 persoullties.
f"'lbllsbed dally ncept Saturday by The Oblo \Iaiiey Publisbing Company- Multimedia, Inc.,
lll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio -157&amp;9. Business Office Phool' 99'!· ! 151i. Editorial Phone 99Z·2157 ·
Sec1UMI tlau poat.1e paid at Pomeroy, Oblo.
Natloul advertising reprnentative, Landon All soclatts, l!Ol Euclkl Ave. , Cleveland, Ohio
44115.
The Aasoc'-tH Press Is ncluslvely eotllled WlllP use .for publication of 11ll oey, !i dl Jpatt heli
credlled to the utwspaper aDd also the Iteal oews published herein.
Ro~rt Wingett
Publbltrr
.
Robert HIH!nit h
GeDtral Mgr. &amp;: City Editor

...
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NowsEdll•r

...,,

Adv. Mauger

:~

.

...
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~

I

"'~···

Dale Rothgeb, Jr .

11 ~

CariGbeeu

~m~ r"'T"\-.o.~-rt~c:::::l·~

"721~

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•

New benefits for
retired teachers

'.•'

~

....,

About 00,000 retired teachers in Ohio could find themselves receiving an extra benefit check under a bill
c: awaiting Gov. James A. Rhodes' signature.
:
The measure would allow the State Teachers
Retirement System to create a new temporary benefits
: : fund from which the supplemental payment would be
,,;i. made.
~:
Under the bill, the system would use part of its in~;
vestment income from the preceding year, over and above
. :-·~·.. the amount needed for its regular accounts to provide the
~~
benefits.
0 The system's board would decide whether to establish
;: . the fund and determine the size of the extra income checks
;. · that would be distributed to recipients in December.
::;•: IIi figuring how much teachers would receive, the board
.:•· · would take into account the date of a teacher's retirement
:
and the number of years of Ohio service credit, James L.
:• · Sublett, the system's executive director, said.
;
The size of the supplemental benefit has not been deter!
mined.
~
Legislation. authorizing the temporary benefits,
\ originally introduced by Rep. Jolm A. Begala, D-Kent, was
· amended into another bill which cleared the General
, Assembly last week. The thrust of the measure is to offset
.. the erosion of real income now paid to retirees.
i
"Such a proposal is desperately needed despite the cost'• of-living increases and other similar increases granted by
I the General Assembly because of the current economic
situation," Begala said.

r

That's over ·there
Even a veteran senator can become so caught up in the
business at hand that he momentarily forgets just which
group he's addressing. It happened to Sen. Richilrd H.
Finan, R-Cincinnati, recently.
Finan, who had just won Senate approval of two important amendments to a private investigator licensing
bill, rose to deliver a floor speech on the merits of the
measure.
"Members of the House ..." the former House member
began. Before the smiling Finan could correct himself,
Senate President Oliver Ocasek interrupted.
'
"That's over there," the Akron Democrat said,
. ..-.. gesturing toward the House chambers on the opposite side
~;:&gt; : of the Statehouse. "We are over here."
.....
··~.
~

.

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.,...,,.

Bill would overhaul
-.r.:·.
. ... auto buying p~ocess
,.,._.
_......
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.

_-.

...
.......
.
.
..~-··.. Rep. James S. Zelmer, D-Yellow Sprmgs, has won ap-

~~

...
..-. proval of a bill which could eliminate some of the hassle

consumers face in buying cars, trucks and other vehicles.'
...
. -...:·... It allows county common pleas court clerks to sell auto
~

......
~

... . .
".

license tags in conjunction with their auto title operations.
\.:"' .
bill is a rational first step to overhaul the process
...
•. .
... and"This
.....
save consumers time, fuel and frustration," tl'le
.t-.: Greene County lawmaker said.,
•.-.. Currently, consumers must go to one office to obtain
.. titles for their motor vehicles and to another, often in a dif.;.
........ ferent building, to buy license plates.
•·. . Zelmer's bill is awaiting Gov. James A. Rhodes'
··-.·-.. signature.

......
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1i81&gt; by NEA , Inc

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''If there's any more slippage In voter polls, I
sey promise some PAINLESS solutions to the
problems facing the nation. "

~· ~-------------------------·

7~--

.-a·~s.-~swll~-.~-. .~. .

. .

.

encourage the United States to begin
thinking again of withdrawing some
or all of the 40,000 American troops
in South Korea.
It could be a basic exercise in
psychological warfare designed to
shake up the new military govern·
ment in South Korea- as it has done
and which is convinced that the North remains coiiUllitted to forceful
unification with the South. It could
be intended to improve the North
Korean image among non-aligned
nations -with whom Pyongyang ha'
been making some effort of late to
identify itself.
Or it could be an e&lt;cuse for getting
the North Koreans out of the bind it
may feel the feud between the
Chinese and Soviets has placed
them.
None of the possible e&lt;planatlons
is quite so intriguing, however, as
the country itself these days.
North Korea, as thoroughly flattened by the war as the South, if not
more so, has made an impressive
recovery according to the accounts
of a stream of Western visitors.
Cities have been rebuilt, an in·
dustrial base established and high·

ways constructed. Peasants have
moved from huts to houses and been
introduced to electricity and running
water.

And even allowing for
exaggeration in official statistics,
North Korea, once food-poor in comparison to the South, appears to be
an exception among Communist
societies in successfully modernizing agriculture and significantly
increasing production.
Economically, it would appear to
be the very model of a model
people's state. Politically, it is
beginning to look like something
else.
The country is firmly under the
control of "Great Leader" Kim II
Sung, as it has been fo. more than
three decades. There is nothing
unusual here, longevity in power
being one of the traditions of Com- .
munist leadership - the other being
abrupt removal by coup or purge.
Kim, now 68, appears to be
making preparations for his suc·
cession. According to recent reports
by Western correspondents, one
man is taking an ,increasingly
noticeable public role. He is Kim

relationship with Vesco.
Allen admits that he received
monthly payments of $10,000 from
Cerney for six months, that he met
Vesco on at least five occasions in
1972 and that be accepted a free
trans-Atlantic trip on a Boeing 707
owned by a Vesco corporation.
He also says he arranged for Cerney to meet privately in the late
swruner or early fall of 1972 with
SEC Chairman William J. Casey - a
session at which Cerney sought to
quash the SEC's then-pending in·
vestigation of Vesco. (Casey, of
course, currently heads the Reagan
campaign)
But Allen insists that "I have
never done any work for Vesco" or
any of his companies.
When asked about the CerneyCasey meeting he set up, Allen Of·
fered a variety of exculpatory ex·
planations. "I was terribly emharassed" by Cerney's unexpected
remarks, he told one newspaper. "It
was an error of judgment."
In a second interview, Allen said
he was "really mortified and deeply
chagrined." Another journallst wastold that Allen "regretted having

Jong II, at 39 a member of the party's key Political Conunittee, a Cen·
tral CoiiUllittee secretary and recen· ·
.tly accorded the title of "Center of
the Party." And be is a prime candidate to be named party secretary
general at the coming October
congress, the first in a decade.
He is also the son of Kim II Sung
and there is every indication that he
is being groomed for the succession.
This is unusual. Nepotism at the
top of the Marxist heirarchy is not
unknown - Romania being an outstanding contemporary example;
But it has never before reached the
point of establishing a dynasty.

par-

ticipate in "district work periods."
O'Neill was plainly irritated at the
heat he and other Dem?Cratic
leaders were getting from
Republicans for planning the first
lame-duck session in. a presidential
year since 1948.

"What does that mean, 'lame
duck,' anyway?" he asked a group
of reporters in his office. "Does
anybody know where the term came
from?"
No one answered, and O'Neill
promptly renamed the session more

[ Today in history
Today Is Thursday, Sept. 25, the
269th day of 1980. There are '¥1 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight In history:
On Sept. 25, 1789, the first
American Congress adopted 12
amendments to the Constitution, 10
of which became the Bill of Rights.

EAST MEIGS .,..- This wee~ the
rfd,hot Eastern Eagles take to the
,.field against another tough contender, Belpre's Golden Eagles.
Both cluhs are at 3-1.
Eastern exhibits a star-studded
lineup that produces a different star
every ballgame.
·Last week, tailback Johnny Reibel
had the best night of his career of·
fensively with 179 yards rushing on
31 carries. Fullback Dennis Durst,
one-half on. the productive Durst
brothers act, again had another consistently good outing.
Eastern will be running at
Belpre's bruising line, hoping to
utilize its speed and quickness to
burst through developing holes.
On defense the Eagles have been
very strong as a unit, but this week
will have their hands full with a 6-7
187-pound quarterback John Moore
numing at them.
A big, strong backfield is another
factor that Eastern will try to bottle
up early in the game, because the
Belpre running game is their strong
point.
Belpre, because of its location, has
played many schools that are much
larger, but have !aired well against
that opposition.
Earlier in the year Belpre
defeated Meigs 28-20. Game time is 8
p.m.
Across the county, Southern's Torna\loes return home ot face the
Miller Falcon grldders, after
coming off an out of state road trip
that proved to be costly.
Southern is 2·2 on the year with
both victories coming at home.
Miller raised its record to 3-1 after
an opening season loss to Berne
Union.
During the · last two weeks
Southern has been hurt by injuries
and flu.
Lack of depth and experience has
been reflected in the Tornado lineup,
but even the younger players are
coming around.
TorLast week the

Politically, North Korea is commencing to look leBB llke a model
people's state than a Latin dictatorship on the order of the
Duvaliers' Haiti or Somoza
Nicarag_ua. It may never come to
quite that pass, but image and
reality in post-war and prospering
North Korea have clearly become
two different matters.
Which should be kept in mind
when evaluating apparent peace
proposals originating there.

had that association" with Cerney.
Yet, Allen moved into Cerney's
Washington office after that attempt
to improperly influence the SEC and
he continued to accept generous
monthly payments from Cerney for
at least three more months.
"I recall not knowing that Vesco
was under investigation," Allen told
one interviewer. But by early
November of 1972 he surely knew
because he was called upon by the.
SEC to give sworn testimony as part
of the government probe. So, Allen
continued to ·draw the $10,000 monthly payments from Cerney for at
least two months after learning of
the investigation.
If Allen indeed was oblivious to,

Vesco's allegedly illegal activities at.
a time when he was so close to
Vesco's organization, he' isn't smart
enough to give national security and
foreign policy advice to a major
presidential candidate.
If he was cognizant of those ac·
tivities, Allen ought to be once again
packed off to his lucrative consulting
busmess rather· than serve in a sensitive political position.

I

I

Great Selection
of levi
Fashion Jeans

the Gallia Academy Blue Devils 12-0
in Pomeroy last week, the Chieftains
had an equally easy evening troun·
cing Athens 32~- The high score by
Logan is somewhat misleading,
however.
The Chieftain defense set up three

nadoes fought to the final buzzer, but
Wahama's overpowering offense
blasted down the field for 517 yards.
This week Southern has patched
the holes in the defense and is going
to initiate the attack against the
Falcons.
The offense managed only 94 yards.
Miller combines six with
quickness to overpower the 01}ponents. Earlier in the year the
Falcons beat cross-county foe
Eastern 8-6 in a super defensive bat·
tie to the wire.
·
Game time is 8 p.m.

Super sprint cars
will return FriMy
STEWART - Friday night will
mark the return of the Super Sprint
Cars to Bond's Speedway in Stewart.
Winged Outlaw Super Sprints will
return to the local oval after a long
ahsence, but pre-race entries hope to
make this one of the fastest shows of
the year.
Bond's Speedway (formerly the
Skyline Speedway) in its time was
once the national capital of supermodified-sprint car racing due to its
IW&lt;urious purses and prize money.
The open wheeled sprint cars,
weighing 1300 pounds, in the past
haye been the training grounds for
many Indianapolls stars including
four-time Indy champ A.J. Foyt.
Many of today's famous ''Outlaw"
sprint drivers are scheduled to be on
hand for the event. The drivers are
referred to as "Outlaw" because
they belong to no sanctioning body
or organization, thus permitting
them to race when they want, where
they want, and a car that has no
restrictions except for driver safety
and a sprint classification.
Racing starts at 8 p.m. with time
trials preceding at 7 p.m. Semi-late
models are also on the agenda.

touchdowns. Logan also scored
three touchdowns as a result .of big
plays (a 51-yard run, a 52-yard pass
completion and a block punt) rather
than by steady, sustained drives.
Meigs actually amassed some impressive statistics in its win than
Logan did over against the winless
Bulldogs. THe Chieftains, on the
other hand, are 4--G ~year .
While the Marauders would be
considered the underdogs against
Logan by nearly any standards, they
were also underdogs against GAHS.
The Mrauders were emotionally
ready for the Blue Devils, however,
and the result was a total
domination of the game by Meigs.
Although statistics do not tell the
whole story, they can be interesting.
So here are the total statistics for
season so far tor the Marauders as
recorded byofficial MHS football
statistician Dave Harris:
TEAM STATISTICS
First Downs
°~
Total Yards
928
1188
Rushing
· 425 1111

I.

I ,I

N. 2ND AVE.

GIVE THE T~EASURED GIFT!
THE NORITAKE WEDDING BELL.

theK
· C Wlns
• match

"12

;:~~i~~~~~t-~)

39 .~~5 s-~~

Fumbles, lost
15-5
9-3
Penallies, yds.
17·122 16-360
INDIVIDU_AL ST!ITISTICS
Rushong (mtn. ID ca~rles)
Yds. Car. Avg ,
Kovalchik
233 68 3.4
Jackson
~~
Bush
23
22
1.1
Ashley
Receiving
, f5 ~~· · T·
wayland

:

Swan

Kovalchik
Judge
Passing
Ashley

g

11

m

J

6
3

3.ol
47

0

o

~· Co~. P~ Y:~
Scoring
TO PAT TP
~
~~

g

Kovalchik
Ashley
Wayland
Fields

1
1

RECORD
Belpre 28, Meigs 20
Point Pleasant 28, MelgsO
Barboursville 47, Meigs 16
Meigs 12, Gall Ia Academy 0

1
0

8
6

CHESIDRE ...: The Kyger Creek
Bobcats claimed victory in a
triangular volleyball match here
Tuesday evening over SVAC foes
SouthernandHannan·Trace.
In the first match the Bobcats won
Irs the new wedding tradition! Inscribed
in two games over the Tornadoes 1:&gt;by you- the Noritake Wedding Bell in ivory
11, 1:&gt;-13. Kyger took an early lead in
china
is a very special gift. Every attendant
the first affair and was never really
headed
in your wedding party will treasure the
·
Noritake Wedding Bell for years! Use it to
In the second contest, however,
adorn
the wedding cake, also/~
Southern took a 13--12 lead on some
1ht ' "Mrl (h.n,l
excellent serves by Tonja Salser in
For Thr ~m,HI \".bmJn
which Southern scored 11 straight
OPEN FRIDAY TILL 8100
times, but faltered in the waning
II!Oinents atl:&gt;-13.
Hours;
In the second match Southern
M.W 905
downed Hannan Trace in three sets
Thur. ,.12
15-.'1, 1~15, 15-0. Mel Weese served
Fri. 9--8113 Court St., Pomeroy 992-ZDS4
ten point searing serves over the net
Sit. 9-5 in the opener, while freshman Deb-'
bie Michael served 10 perfect serves 1--------~-----------------including the game point in
Southern's 15-0 come-from behind

£?~

7

win.

Kyger Creek beat ·Hannan Trace
in the nightcap 15-0, 1:&gt;-9 to emerge
the overall champion for the night.
Kyger Creek is now at a .very res~
table&amp;-3 overall while Hannan Trace
and Southern own 2-&lt;1 marks.

LATONIA RESULTS
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP)- Antonio
Costa rode Sleep On It to a m·length
victory Wednesday night in ·the
$4,MO featured eighth race at
Latonia.
The winnerpald$3.20, $3 and$2.60.
Resort Squaw placed, $14 and $9.60,
and Kelly Gene, third, $5.20.
Guard My Scotch combined 2-1 in
the double with Shwa for $27.60.
In the first exacta In the ninth
race, the 1 2 combinaton of Old HUJ1t
dred and Patarctlc Prince paid $228.
Attendance was 3,544 and the
mutuel pool totaled $449,772.

QUANTITIES

u..no
Master

MECHANICe

PROPANE
TORCH

7

now

PARK RESERVED SAT., SEPT. 27th I,!_NT_ll_, 6 P.M.

1

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to his liking.
Republicans continue to use the
phrase lame-duck session, however,
with its most frequently enco.untered
meaning: a session of Congress that
meets after elections are held but
before the tenns of present of,
ficeholders expire.
Webster's Third New In·
ternational Dictionary calb a lame
duck "an elected officer or group
: continuing to hold pubUc office
during a usually brief interim between defeat for re-election and the
inauguration of a successor."

In 1513, the Spaiush explorer
Balboa crossed the Isthmus of
Panama and discovered the Pacific
Ocean.
And Tip O'Neill? "Well, call It
In 1775, American Revolutionary
whatever
you want," he muttered,
War hero Ethan Allen was captured ·
"but
we'll
be back after the elec-by the British and Indians as he led
tion;''
an attack vn Montreal.
J

•

Sophomore Tailback

Eagles, Southern
face non-league
opponents Friday

Dismiss it with a name change
WASIDNGTON (AP) - House
Speaker Thomas P. "Tip" O'Neill
Jr. is dismissing the upcoming
"lame-duck" session, a potential
political liability for Democrats, just
.as he tenninated congressional
·recesses just a few years back: with '
a name change.
.
So Republicans may be returning
as part as a lame-duck Congress in
Novem~r, but O'Neill and his
Democratic cohorts will just be
corning back for a "post-election
session."
In O'Neill's lexicon, "lame duck"
has been interrred In the same word
cemetery where the Massachusetts
Democrat buried recesses several
years ago. Congressmen don't take
recesses a11y more; now they

5-10, 198lbs.
Junior Guard

, I

Richard -Allen: a shrewd or naive bystander
By Robert Walters
House. He resigned from governWASIDNGTON (NEA)- Richard
ment service on July 31, 1972 - and
V. Allen preswnably was selected to
the very next day he began receiving
be Republican presidential nominee
$10,000 per month as a "consultant"
Ronald W. Reagan's principal . to a lawyer nam"ed Howard Cerney.
foreign-policy adviser because of
Cerney wsa one of the principal atAllen's reputation as an astute
torneys and business advisers to
analyst of international affairs.
Vesco, who subsequently was
Yet, Allen portrays himself as a
charged in a civil complaint filed by
politically naive bystander who inthe Securities and Exchange Comnocently viewed Robert L. Vesco,
mission with looting $224 million
alleged to be one of the most sue·
from various mutual funds.
cessful swlhdlers of modern times,
Vesco has been indicted on
as merely "an international
criminal charges in. this country's
businessman from New Jersey."
courts no fewer than five times, but
Allen's impeccable credentials as
he remains a fugitive from justice
a sophisticated operator in the often
living abroad (currently in the
treacherous world of national
Bahamas) ·and resisting extradition.
security and foreign affairs. include
The Allen-Vesc·o link and
two stints as a.member of the White
allegations of improper cOnduct on
House senior staff under PTesident
Allen's part first surfaced several
Richard M. Nixon.
months ago in an article in Mother
From January through October of
Jones, a feisty San Francisco-based
1969, he served on the senior staff of
investigative magazine.
the National Security Council under
The information developed by
Henry A. Kissinger. He returned to
Mother Jones received cursory
the White House in July 1971 as
coverage from other news media;
deputy assistant to the president for
but no attention was paid to the
international economic affairs.
credibility- or lack thereof - of the
Mter only one year in the second
explanation offered by Allen to
job, Allen again left the White
reporters inquiring about his

Brill King
5--4, 12llbs.

By LANCE OLIVER
The Meigs Marauders will at·
tempt to remain at teh top of the
SEOAL when they travel to Logan to
face the tough Chieftains in the
second league game Friday night.
While Meigs was handily beating

An offer that would have been hard to refuse
By Don Graff
At another time, under other circrnnstances, the offer might have
been difficult to refuse .
North Korea says it is ·willing to
renounce its military alliances with
the Soviet Union and People's China.
. In return, it asks only a peace settlement with the United States.
It's not quite as surprising today
as would be an offer from the
Iranian ayatollahs to kiss and make
up, but once it would have been in
about the same league. Before,
during and for long years after the
Korean war the Pyongyang regime .
was quite possibly the most
vehemently hostile . in the Com·
munist bloc. This, after all, is the
country that seized and held the USS
Pueblo in 1968, the Tehran hostage
crisis of its time.
But times change and hostility
lessens, although to what extent and
exactly why are questions for in· ·
triguing speculation in this instance.
Various reasons are being advanced for the North Korean
statement, delivered to a party of
\listing Japanese poiiticians. It could
be a transparently obvious effort to

Brian King
5-8, 147lbs.
Senior Back

For a

Mike Edwards

Meigs tries for 2nd
SEOAL win at Logan

;,
•.

'

Cockroft kicked an extra point
Sunday against Kansas · City, and
that marked his 1,000th career point.

•'•

•·.

.

days. ''

'

.

-

He tater kicked another e~ra po\nt,
but also had one blocked and missed
on two field goal attempts.
"I'm stronger now than l 've ever
been, which is why what's ha!&gt;pening is so frustrating," Cockrott
said. "What I must do is discipline
myself to do it right and exercise the
determination I need to overcome
what I'm going through."

I'm kicking well, but I'm losing
something in the game.
"I know it's an important tiine for
me to get the neces11ary concentration, to regroup and get a good
groove to perform better on Sun·

Middleport, 0.

923 S. lrd Ave.

LAST OPEN DA'Y OF 1980 SEASON

1

,,..i

992·2709 or 992·6611
Open: 7:00 to 5:00 Mon. thru Fri.
7:00 to3~~~~===~
.'

�3-The Dally Sentinel Middle rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 25, 1980

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Thursday, Sept. 25, 1980

eTTA

Opinions &amp;
Comments

rO~ WORm 5TAR·"TB€~ N,E.~. ~0

Browns kicking gam~
puzzles coach, fans

Meet the Meigs Marauders

HVtME

ntE DAILY SENTrNEI.

jUSP8 14&gt;-1601
DEVOTED TO TilE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS.MASON AREA

Ldtel'l of oplnloa are 'Weleomt'd. They sbould be len thaa 300 words lung I or subject to reduc-tioo by 1M edJ&amp;or) and must bt sigaed with the slgDee'S address. Names may l&gt;t' witbhdd upon
pu~katloo. Howenr, oo requesL names 'A'ill be disclosed . Letters should be In good taste , addnst~Di IIIUH, 001 persoullties.
f"'lbllsbed dally ncept Saturday by The Oblo \Iaiiey Publisbing Company- Multimedia, Inc.,
lll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio -157&amp;9. Business Office Phool' 99'!· ! 151i. Editorial Phone 99Z·2157 ·
Sec1UMI tlau poat.1e paid at Pomeroy, Oblo.
Natloul advertising reprnentative, Landon All soclatts, l!Ol Euclkl Ave. , Cleveland, Ohio
44115.
The Aasoc'-tH Press Is ncluslvely eotllled WlllP use .for publication of 11ll oey, !i dl Jpatt heli
credlled to the utwspaper aDd also the Iteal oews published herein.
Ro~rt Wingett
Publbltrr
.
Robert HIH!nit h
GeDtral Mgr. &amp;: City Editor

...
··••
~~

NowsEdll•r

...,,

Adv. Mauger

:~

.

...
.,.

.. ....
~

I

"'~···

Dale Rothgeb, Jr .

11 ~

CariGbeeu

~m~ r"'T"\-.o.~-rt~c:::::l·~

"721~

~' .

.....,
.

'.

•

New benefits for
retired teachers

'.•'

~

....,

About 00,000 retired teachers in Ohio could find themselves receiving an extra benefit check under a bill
c: awaiting Gov. James A. Rhodes' signature.
:
The measure would allow the State Teachers
Retirement System to create a new temporary benefits
: : fund from which the supplemental payment would be
,,;i. made.
~:
Under the bill, the system would use part of its in~;
vestment income from the preceding year, over and above
. :-·~·.. the amount needed for its regular accounts to provide the
~~
benefits.
0 The system's board would decide whether to establish
;: . the fund and determine the size of the extra income checks
;. · that would be distributed to recipients in December.
::;•: IIi figuring how much teachers would receive, the board
.:•· · would take into account the date of a teacher's retirement
:
and the number of years of Ohio service credit, James L.
:• · Sublett, the system's executive director, said.
;
The size of the supplemental benefit has not been deter!
mined.
~
Legislation. authorizing the temporary benefits,
\ originally introduced by Rep. Jolm A. Begala, D-Kent, was
· amended into another bill which cleared the General
, Assembly last week. The thrust of the measure is to offset
.. the erosion of real income now paid to retirees.
i
"Such a proposal is desperately needed despite the cost'• of-living increases and other similar increases granted by
I the General Assembly because of the current economic
situation," Begala said.

r

That's over ·there
Even a veteran senator can become so caught up in the
business at hand that he momentarily forgets just which
group he's addressing. It happened to Sen. Richilrd H.
Finan, R-Cincinnati, recently.
Finan, who had just won Senate approval of two important amendments to a private investigator licensing
bill, rose to deliver a floor speech on the merits of the
measure.
"Members of the House ..." the former House member
began. Before the smiling Finan could correct himself,
Senate President Oliver Ocasek interrupted.
'
"That's over there," the Akron Democrat said,
. ..-.. gesturing toward the House chambers on the opposite side
~;:&gt; : of the Statehouse. "We are over here."
.....
··~.
~

.

~
.,...,,.

Bill would overhaul
-.r.:·.
. ... auto buying p~ocess
,.,._.
_......
:,..t ~

.

_-.

...
.......
.
.
..~-··.. Rep. James S. Zelmer, D-Yellow Sprmgs, has won ap-

~~

...
..-. proval of a bill which could eliminate some of the hassle

consumers face in buying cars, trucks and other vehicles.'
...
. -...:·... It allows county common pleas court clerks to sell auto
~

......
~

... . .
".

license tags in conjunction with their auto title operations.
\.:"' .
bill is a rational first step to overhaul the process
...
•. .
... and"This
.....
save consumers time, fuel and frustration," tl'le
.t-.: Greene County lawmaker said.,
•.-.. Currently, consumers must go to one office to obtain
.. titles for their motor vehicles and to another, often in a dif.;.
........ ferent building, to buy license plates.
•·. . Zelmer's bill is awaiting Gov. James A. Rhodes'
··-.·-.. signature.

......
~.:

...
~

.
,:.. r------------------------,
.•tt.:...
.-......
;..·~.

·~ ·

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w.··

t;;{-.

;.-:·.

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•..
•
M

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1i81&gt; by NEA , Inc

~e....:~·

•

·~

. ~·.;•.

..

\ ·~.

''If there's any more slippage In voter polls, I
sey promise some PAINLESS solutions to the
problems facing the nation. "

~· ~-------------------------·

7~--

.-a·~s.-~swll~-.~-. .~. .

. .

.

encourage the United States to begin
thinking again of withdrawing some
or all of the 40,000 American troops
in South Korea.
It could be a basic exercise in
psychological warfare designed to
shake up the new military govern·
ment in South Korea- as it has done
and which is convinced that the North remains coiiUllitted to forceful
unification with the South. It could
be intended to improve the North
Korean image among non-aligned
nations -with whom Pyongyang ha'
been making some effort of late to
identify itself.
Or it could be an e&lt;cuse for getting
the North Koreans out of the bind it
may feel the feud between the
Chinese and Soviets has placed
them.
None of the possible e&lt;planatlons
is quite so intriguing, however, as
the country itself these days.
North Korea, as thoroughly flattened by the war as the South, if not
more so, has made an impressive
recovery according to the accounts
of a stream of Western visitors.
Cities have been rebuilt, an in·
dustrial base established and high·

ways constructed. Peasants have
moved from huts to houses and been
introduced to electricity and running
water.

And even allowing for
exaggeration in official statistics,
North Korea, once food-poor in comparison to the South, appears to be
an exception among Communist
societies in successfully modernizing agriculture and significantly
increasing production.
Economically, it would appear to
be the very model of a model
people's state. Politically, it is
beginning to look like something
else.
The country is firmly under the
control of "Great Leader" Kim II
Sung, as it has been fo. more than
three decades. There is nothing
unusual here, longevity in power
being one of the traditions of Com- .
munist leadership - the other being
abrupt removal by coup or purge.
Kim, now 68, appears to be
making preparations for his suc·
cession. According to recent reports
by Western correspondents, one
man is taking an ,increasingly
noticeable public role. He is Kim

relationship with Vesco.
Allen admits that he received
monthly payments of $10,000 from
Cerney for six months, that he met
Vesco on at least five occasions in
1972 and that be accepted a free
trans-Atlantic trip on a Boeing 707
owned by a Vesco corporation.
He also says he arranged for Cerney to meet privately in the late
swruner or early fall of 1972 with
SEC Chairman William J. Casey - a
session at which Cerney sought to
quash the SEC's then-pending in·
vestigation of Vesco. (Casey, of
course, currently heads the Reagan
campaign)
But Allen insists that "I have
never done any work for Vesco" or
any of his companies.
When asked about the CerneyCasey meeting he set up, Allen Of·
fered a variety of exculpatory ex·
planations. "I was terribly emharassed" by Cerney's unexpected
remarks, he told one newspaper. "It
was an error of judgment."
In a second interview, Allen said
he was "really mortified and deeply
chagrined." Another journallst wastold that Allen "regretted having

Jong II, at 39 a member of the party's key Political Conunittee, a Cen·
tral CoiiUllittee secretary and recen· ·
.tly accorded the title of "Center of
the Party." And be is a prime candidate to be named party secretary
general at the coming October
congress, the first in a decade.
He is also the son of Kim II Sung
and there is every indication that he
is being groomed for the succession.
This is unusual. Nepotism at the
top of the Marxist heirarchy is not
unknown - Romania being an outstanding contemporary example;
But it has never before reached the
point of establishing a dynasty.

par-

ticipate in "district work periods."
O'Neill was plainly irritated at the
heat he and other Dem?Cratic
leaders were getting from
Republicans for planning the first
lame-duck session in. a presidential
year since 1948.

"What does that mean, 'lame
duck,' anyway?" he asked a group
of reporters in his office. "Does
anybody know where the term came
from?"
No one answered, and O'Neill
promptly renamed the session more

[ Today in history
Today Is Thursday, Sept. 25, the
269th day of 1980. There are '¥1 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight In history:
On Sept. 25, 1789, the first
American Congress adopted 12
amendments to the Constitution, 10
of which became the Bill of Rights.

EAST MEIGS .,..- This wee~ the
rfd,hot Eastern Eagles take to the
,.field against another tough contender, Belpre's Golden Eagles.
Both cluhs are at 3-1.
Eastern exhibits a star-studded
lineup that produces a different star
every ballgame.
·Last week, tailback Johnny Reibel
had the best night of his career of·
fensively with 179 yards rushing on
31 carries. Fullback Dennis Durst,
one-half on. the productive Durst
brothers act, again had another consistently good outing.
Eastern will be running at
Belpre's bruising line, hoping to
utilize its speed and quickness to
burst through developing holes.
On defense the Eagles have been
very strong as a unit, but this week
will have their hands full with a 6-7
187-pound quarterback John Moore
numing at them.
A big, strong backfield is another
factor that Eastern will try to bottle
up early in the game, because the
Belpre running game is their strong
point.
Belpre, because of its location, has
played many schools that are much
larger, but have !aired well against
that opposition.
Earlier in the year Belpre
defeated Meigs 28-20. Game time is 8
p.m.
Across the county, Southern's Torna\loes return home ot face the
Miller Falcon grldders, after
coming off an out of state road trip
that proved to be costly.
Southern is 2·2 on the year with
both victories coming at home.
Miller raised its record to 3-1 after
an opening season loss to Berne
Union.
During the · last two weeks
Southern has been hurt by injuries
and flu.
Lack of depth and experience has
been reflected in the Tornado lineup,
but even the younger players are
coming around.
TorLast week the

Politically, North Korea is commencing to look leBB llke a model
people's state than a Latin dictatorship on the order of the
Duvaliers' Haiti or Somoza
Nicarag_ua. It may never come to
quite that pass, but image and
reality in post-war and prospering
North Korea have clearly become
two different matters.
Which should be kept in mind
when evaluating apparent peace
proposals originating there.

had that association" with Cerney.
Yet, Allen moved into Cerney's
Washington office after that attempt
to improperly influence the SEC and
he continued to accept generous
monthly payments from Cerney for
at least three more months.
"I recall not knowing that Vesco
was under investigation," Allen told
one interviewer. But by early
November of 1972 he surely knew
because he was called upon by the.
SEC to give sworn testimony as part
of the government probe. So, Allen
continued to ·draw the $10,000 monthly payments from Cerney for at
least two months after learning of
the investigation.
If Allen indeed was oblivious to,

Vesco's allegedly illegal activities at.
a time when he was so close to
Vesco's organization, he' isn't smart
enough to give national security and
foreign policy advice to a major
presidential candidate.
If he was cognizant of those ac·
tivities, Allen ought to be once again
packed off to his lucrative consulting
busmess rather· than serve in a sensitive political position.

I

I

Great Selection
of levi
Fashion Jeans

the Gallia Academy Blue Devils 12-0
in Pomeroy last week, the Chieftains
had an equally easy evening troun·
cing Athens 32~- The high score by
Logan is somewhat misleading,
however.
The Chieftain defense set up three

nadoes fought to the final buzzer, but
Wahama's overpowering offense
blasted down the field for 517 yards.
This week Southern has patched
the holes in the defense and is going
to initiate the attack against the
Falcons.
The offense managed only 94 yards.
Miller combines six with
quickness to overpower the 01}ponents. Earlier in the year the
Falcons beat cross-county foe
Eastern 8-6 in a super defensive bat·
tie to the wire.
·
Game time is 8 p.m.

Super sprint cars
will return FriMy
STEWART - Friday night will
mark the return of the Super Sprint
Cars to Bond's Speedway in Stewart.
Winged Outlaw Super Sprints will
return to the local oval after a long
ahsence, but pre-race entries hope to
make this one of the fastest shows of
the year.
Bond's Speedway (formerly the
Skyline Speedway) in its time was
once the national capital of supermodified-sprint car racing due to its
IW&lt;urious purses and prize money.
The open wheeled sprint cars,
weighing 1300 pounds, in the past
haye been the training grounds for
many Indianapolls stars including
four-time Indy champ A.J. Foyt.
Many of today's famous ''Outlaw"
sprint drivers are scheduled to be on
hand for the event. The drivers are
referred to as "Outlaw" because
they belong to no sanctioning body
or organization, thus permitting
them to race when they want, where
they want, and a car that has no
restrictions except for driver safety
and a sprint classification.
Racing starts at 8 p.m. with time
trials preceding at 7 p.m. Semi-late
models are also on the agenda.

touchdowns. Logan also scored
three touchdowns as a result .of big
plays (a 51-yard run, a 52-yard pass
completion and a block punt) rather
than by steady, sustained drives.
Meigs actually amassed some impressive statistics in its win than
Logan did over against the winless
Bulldogs. THe Chieftains, on the
other hand, are 4--G ~year .
While the Marauders would be
considered the underdogs against
Logan by nearly any standards, they
were also underdogs against GAHS.
The Mrauders were emotionally
ready for the Blue Devils, however,
and the result was a total
domination of the game by Meigs.
Although statistics do not tell the
whole story, they can be interesting.
So here are the total statistics for
season so far tor the Marauders as
recorded byofficial MHS football
statistician Dave Harris:
TEAM STATISTICS
First Downs
°~
Total Yards
928
1188
Rushing
· 425 1111

I.

I ,I

N. 2ND AVE.

GIVE THE T~EASURED GIFT!
THE NORITAKE WEDDING BELL.

theK
· C Wlns
• match

"12

;:~~i~~~~~t-~)

39 .~~5 s-~~

Fumbles, lost
15-5
9-3
Penallies, yds.
17·122 16-360
INDIVIDU_AL ST!ITISTICS
Rushong (mtn. ID ca~rles)
Yds. Car. Avg ,
Kovalchik
233 68 3.4
Jackson
~~
Bush
23
22
1.1
Ashley
Receiving
, f5 ~~· · T·
wayland

:

Swan

Kovalchik
Judge
Passing
Ashley

g

11

m

J

6
3

3.ol
47

0

o

~· Co~. P~ Y:~
Scoring
TO PAT TP
~
~~

g

Kovalchik
Ashley
Wayland
Fields

1
1

RECORD
Belpre 28, Meigs 20
Point Pleasant 28, MelgsO
Barboursville 47, Meigs 16
Meigs 12, Gall Ia Academy 0

1
0

8
6

CHESIDRE ...: The Kyger Creek
Bobcats claimed victory in a
triangular volleyball match here
Tuesday evening over SVAC foes
SouthernandHannan·Trace.
In the first match the Bobcats won
Irs the new wedding tradition! Inscribed
in two games over the Tornadoes 1:&gt;by you- the Noritake Wedding Bell in ivory
11, 1:&gt;-13. Kyger took an early lead in
china
is a very special gift. Every attendant
the first affair and was never really
headed
in your wedding party will treasure the
·
Noritake Wedding Bell for years! Use it to
In the second contest, however,
adorn
the wedding cake, also/~
Southern took a 13--12 lead on some
1ht ' "Mrl (h.n,l
excellent serves by Tonja Salser in
For Thr ~m,HI \".bmJn
which Southern scored 11 straight
OPEN FRIDAY TILL 8100
times, but faltered in the waning
II!Oinents atl:&gt;-13.
Hours;
In the second match Southern
M.W 905
downed Hannan Trace in three sets
Thur. ,.12
15-.'1, 1~15, 15-0. Mel Weese served
Fri. 9--8113 Court St., Pomeroy 992-ZDS4
ten point searing serves over the net
Sit. 9-5 in the opener, while freshman Deb-'
bie Michael served 10 perfect serves 1--------~-----------------including the game point in
Southern's 15-0 come-from behind

£?~

7

win.

Kyger Creek beat ·Hannan Trace
in the nightcap 15-0, 1:&gt;-9 to emerge
the overall champion for the night.
Kyger Creek is now at a .very res~
table&amp;-3 overall while Hannan Trace
and Southern own 2-&lt;1 marks.

LATONIA RESULTS
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP)- Antonio
Costa rode Sleep On It to a m·length
victory Wednesday night in ·the
$4,MO featured eighth race at
Latonia.
The winnerpald$3.20, $3 and$2.60.
Resort Squaw placed, $14 and $9.60,
and Kelly Gene, third, $5.20.
Guard My Scotch combined 2-1 in
the double with Shwa for $27.60.
In the first exacta In the ninth
race, the 1 2 combinaton of Old HUJ1t
dred and Patarctlc Prince paid $228.
Attendance was 3,544 and the
mutuel pool totaled $449,772.

QUANTITIES

u..no
Master

MECHANICe

PROPANE
TORCH

7

now

PARK RESERVED SAT., SEPT. 27th I,!_NT_ll_, 6 P.M.

1

.,

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• Main
992·7034
Pomeroy, 0.

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MODULAR
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for Men and

Levrs

F_O R

to his liking.
Republicans continue to use the
phrase lame-duck session, however,
with its most frequently enco.untered
meaning: a session of Congress that
meets after elections are held but
before the tenns of present of,
ficeholders expire.
Webster's Third New In·
ternational Dictionary calb a lame
duck "an elected officer or group
: continuing to hold pubUc office
during a usually brief interim between defeat for re-election and the
inauguration of a successor."

In 1513, the Spaiush explorer
Balboa crossed the Isthmus of
Panama and discovered the Pacific
Ocean.
And Tip O'Neill? "Well, call It
In 1775, American Revolutionary
whatever
you want," he muttered,
War hero Ethan Allen was captured ·
"but
we'll
be back after the elec-by the British and Indians as he led
tion;''
an attack vn Montreal.
J

•

Sophomore Tailback

Eagles, Southern
face non-league
opponents Friday

Dismiss it with a name change
WASIDNGTON (AP) - House
Speaker Thomas P. "Tip" O'Neill
Jr. is dismissing the upcoming
"lame-duck" session, a potential
political liability for Democrats, just
.as he tenninated congressional
·recesses just a few years back: with '
a name change.
.
So Republicans may be returning
as part as a lame-duck Congress in
Novem~r, but O'Neill and his
Democratic cohorts will just be
corning back for a "post-election
session."
In O'Neill's lexicon, "lame duck"
has been interrred In the same word
cemetery where the Massachusetts
Democrat buried recesses several
years ago. Congressmen don't take
recesses a11y more; now they

5-10, 198lbs.
Junior Guard

, I

Richard -Allen: a shrewd or naive bystander
By Robert Walters
House. He resigned from governWASIDNGTON (NEA)- Richard
ment service on July 31, 1972 - and
V. Allen preswnably was selected to
the very next day he began receiving
be Republican presidential nominee
$10,000 per month as a "consultant"
Ronald W. Reagan's principal . to a lawyer nam"ed Howard Cerney.
foreign-policy adviser because of
Cerney wsa one of the principal atAllen's reputation as an astute
torneys and business advisers to
analyst of international affairs.
Vesco, who subsequently was
Yet, Allen portrays himself as a
charged in a civil complaint filed by
politically naive bystander who inthe Securities and Exchange Comnocently viewed Robert L. Vesco,
mission with looting $224 million
alleged to be one of the most sue·
from various mutual funds.
cessful swlhdlers of modern times,
Vesco has been indicted on
as merely "an international
criminal charges in. this country's
businessman from New Jersey."
courts no fewer than five times, but
Allen's impeccable credentials as
he remains a fugitive from justice
a sophisticated operator in the often
living abroad (currently in the
treacherous world of national
Bahamas) ·and resisting extradition.
security and foreign affairs. include
The Allen-Vesc·o link and
two stints as a.member of the White
allegations of improper cOnduct on
House senior staff under PTesident
Allen's part first surfaced several
Richard M. Nixon.
months ago in an article in Mother
From January through October of
Jones, a feisty San Francisco-based
1969, he served on the senior staff of
investigative magazine.
the National Security Council under
The information developed by
Henry A. Kissinger. He returned to
Mother Jones received cursory
the White House in July 1971 as
coverage from other news media;
deputy assistant to the president for
but no attention was paid to the
international economic affairs.
credibility- or lack thereof - of the
Mter only one year in the second
explanation offered by Allen to
job, Allen again left the White
reporters inquiring about his

Brill King
5--4, 12llbs.

By LANCE OLIVER
The Meigs Marauders will at·
tempt to remain at teh top of the
SEOAL when they travel to Logan to
face the tough Chieftains in the
second league game Friday night.
While Meigs was handily beating

An offer that would have been hard to refuse
By Don Graff
At another time, under other circrnnstances, the offer might have
been difficult to refuse .
North Korea says it is ·willing to
renounce its military alliances with
the Soviet Union and People's China.
. In return, it asks only a peace settlement with the United States.
It's not quite as surprising today
as would be an offer from the
Iranian ayatollahs to kiss and make
up, but once it would have been in
about the same league. Before,
during and for long years after the
Korean war the Pyongyang regime .
was quite possibly the most
vehemently hostile . in the Com·
munist bloc. This, after all, is the
country that seized and held the USS
Pueblo in 1968, the Tehran hostage
crisis of its time.
But times change and hostility
lessens, although to what extent and
exactly why are questions for in· ·
triguing speculation in this instance.
Various reasons are being advanced for the North Korean
statement, delivered to a party of
\listing Japanese poiiticians. It could
be a transparently obvious effort to

Brian King
5-8, 147lbs.
Senior Back

For a

Mike Edwards

Meigs tries for 2nd
SEOAL win at Logan

;,
•.

'

Cockroft kicked an extra point
Sunday against Kansas · City, and
that marked his 1,000th career point.

•'•

•·.

.

days. ''

'

.

-

He tater kicked another e~ra po\nt,
but also had one blocked and missed
on two field goal attempts.
"I'm stronger now than l 've ever
been, which is why what's ha!&gt;pening is so frustrating," Cockrott
said. "What I must do is discipline
myself to do it right and exercise the
determination I need to overcome
what I'm going through."

I'm kicking well, but I'm losing
something in the game.
"I know it's an important tiine for
me to get the neces11ary concentration, to regroup and get a good
groove to perform better on Sun·

Middleport, 0.

923 S. lrd Ave.

LAST OPEN DA'Y OF 1980 SEASON

1

,,..i

992·2709 or 992·6611
Open: 7:00 to 5:00 Mon. thru Fri.
7:00 to3~~~~===~
.'

�4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomero.&gt;:, 0., Thursday, Sept. 25, 1980

Concepcion paces Reds' win

• ••
:·:
•• •• I. ••• •••

••• •••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

UIERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

W L Ptl. GB
91 54
.81;-

-

NewYort

Balllrnore

93 5Q
12 12
19 ro
'18 1t

Milwaukee

1

Detroit
Cleveland
Toronto

14
81

7l

18

.612 5
.532 17
.$30 Ji"ii
.513 31
. .t90 ZHi
.421 :M

WFm

x-KArwuCity

92

~

61

~ ~

Colilomla
Cl&gt;lqgo

71 12
81r/
I!!

s.aw.

;7

z-cilnched division UUe.

1111
~

.601
.510
.-467
....

.424
.413
. 37~

14
al l,~,

21
'll
:!1~

31 ~

Weae.day'aGamet
lkltlmore 12,

Booton 9

r.....to a, 10 lnrllnl!•
Yun. 7, Cleveland 3
a, ColllomJa o

Detroit

_1,

Mil......
New

KinnMotl I , Ttu~ 5
Olkland 1, Chicago 1
SeaWe t, Kanau City 2

'l'bantbl)''tGames
Chicq:o {Baumgartm 2--11 ) at Oaklard
(IC""''!h 1&amp;-jJ)
•
Cleveland {Walll ll·lt) at New York
!Perry &amp;-11 ), (n)
Tau (Kainer D-0) at Seatue (l&gt;reM!er
lot), (n)
Ollly games Jclieduled
Frldi)''IGalllell
Baltimore at Cleveland, (n)
Boston ·~ Toronto, (n)
New Yori al Detrotl, (n)
Kanau City ol Minnesota, (n)
Chlcqo at California, . (n)

Milwaukee at Oakland, (n)
fe:ua at Seattle, (n)

W L

Montreal
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh

83

68
68
12

..
63
5Q

II!
..

8t

eo

St.Louis
NewYurk

Chicago

Atlanta

San Francisco
San Diego

GB
-

.5;0

92

WEST

Houston
LA&lt;! Angelt!
Cincinnati

Ptl
.;63

"

.S26

4

.4;4

IS

.414
.391

21
:btl&gt;

.:;66

-

86

~

116
8t

66
69

·*.549 -21&gt;

i9
11

13
81

1!1

68

~

.520
.467
....

]8\',

7

Wednesday's Games

Montreal 8, Chicago t
AUanta 4, HOU3ton 2
Philadelphia 1, New York 0, 10 innings
Pittsburgh 6, St. I...ou1a 3
Cincinnati 7, San Diego &amp;, 10 innings
Los Angeles :;, San Francisco 4, 12 inningo
T1Manday'a Games
Montreal IGuWckson 9-4 ) at Chicago
(McGlothen 1M3)
San Francisco (Whil!on 10.11) at Los
Anseles (Hooton 13-7) .
Cincinnati (Seaver 1~7 ) at San ' Diego
(Wise Hi
Houston (K.Forsch 1%-12) at Atlanta
(Boggs 10.9), (n)
New York {Zachry 6-10) at Philadelphia
(RuLhven 16-10), (n)
St.LouiS (Rincon U ) at Pittsburgh
(Robinson &amp;-3), (n )
Fndly's Gamet
Pittsburgh at Chicago
San Francl.sco at Atlanta, (n)

St.Louis at ' New York, (n)
Monlre11l at Philadelphia, (n)
Cincinnati at Houston, (n)
Los Angeles at San Diego, (n)

Ironton leads in
computer poll
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Defending playoff championil Cincinnati
Moeller and Ironton are leading
their regions today in the first
weekly CO!Jlputerized football
ratings released by the Ohio High
School Athletic Association.
Moeller's 38.66 points in Region 4
of Division I are the highest total in
)Illy of the 12 regions. The Crusaders,
4.().() this fall, won the Class AAA
playoff crown last year.
Ironton, 4.().() and the Class AA
winner in 1979, paces Region II of
Division 3 with 25.00 points.
Mogadore, also Wlbeaten in four
gameli and the Cla5s A champion
last 888BOn, is running second
behind Lorain Clearview in Region
17 in Division 5. The Summit CoWlty
school has 15.00 points to '!i.75 for
Lorailt Clearview, the 1972 runnerilp
fo Class A playoff victor Marion
Pleaaant.
.The OHSAA uses the ratings,
based solely on a team's victories
ahd notlts margins, to detennlne its
playoff field. The playoffs have been
expanded from three classes and 12
teams to five divisions and 40 teams
this fall.
. The winner and nmnerup in each
region will move into the first
weekend of playoffs Nov. 7~. The
semifinals are Nov. 14-15 and the
championships Nov. 21·22.
Other Division !leaders this week
are Willoughy South in Region I,
Sandusky in Region 2 and Lakewood
St. Edward in Region 3. Division 2
frontrunners are Solon in Region 5,
Colwnbus Watterson in Region 6,
Youngstown Mooney in Region 7 and
Pickerington in Region 8.
In Division 3, it iB Chagrin Falls
Kenston in Region 9, OttawaGlandorf in Region 10 and Hamilton
· B8dln in Region 12. In Division 4, the
leaders are Berton Berkshire in
Region 13, Bucyrus Wynford in
Region 14, Crooksville in Region 15
~West Jefferson in Region 16.
Elsewhere in Division 5, Liberty
Center iB leading in Region 18,
Glouster Trimble In Region 19 and
Wlllla!nsburg in Region 20.
COLIIMI!!!StOhio lAP) - Regional leaden in

tbe otdo J118D School Athletic Asaociation's
~Y

.....,terbed football rani&lt;lng.s. Tile lim

two teams ln each region after the regular
season qualify For the state playoffs:
DIVISION l
REGION 1 - l, Willoughby Eastlake South
31 .00 points. 2, Warren Hanfins ,28.75. 3, Shaker
Heights 211.00. 4, AUatintown Fitch 27.01. 5, Stow
%6.2t. 6, Youngstown Boardman 2U2.
REGION 2 - 1, Sanduky 32~. 2, WestervWe
North 23.SO. 31 Uppe, Adlngton 23.00. 4,
Springfield SouUl 21.25. 5, Columbus Northland
19.88. 6, Toledo Start 19.33,
REGION 3 - I, Lakewood St. Edward 34.66. 2,
Brunswick 31.83. 3, Lorain Senior 30.00. 4,
Massillon 27.66. 5, Elyria 27.50. 6, t&amp;nton
McKinley26.SO.
.REGION 4 - 1, Cincinnati MoeUer 38.66. 2,
Middletown 34.00. 3, CinclnnatJ Princeton 32.00. ·
4, Cincinnati Elder 30.50.5, Centerville 311.50. B.
Clayton NorUunont 27.00.
·
DIVISION%
REGION ; - . I, Solon 32.00. 2, Stow Walsll
Jesuit 24.00. 3, Akron East 22.00. 4 (tie), Richfield
Revere and Mentor Lake Calholic 19.00. 6, Akron

Kenmore 1&amp;.91.

REGION 6 - 1, CG!umbus W&amp;tterson 25.50. 2,
Gallon 20.00. 3, Columbus MiHlin 19.83. 4,
Penysbwz 19.50. 5, PataksUla Watkins
Memorlal19.00. 6, Sylvania Northview 18.00.
REGION 1 - I, Youngstown MO&lt;Jil&lt;Y 92.91. 2,
Y~ Rayen 24.11ti. 3, Ravenna 22.25. 4,
Bella1re 21.50. :t, Wooster 19.00. 6, Youngstown
South 17.16.
REGION a -., I, Plclterington 211.1111. 2, Cincimati GreenhlUa 19.50. 3, Amella 17.50. 4,
Lebanon 17.50. 5, Greenville 15.66. 6, UrbaAII
IUS.
DIVISIONJ
REG JON 9- l, Chagrin Falla Kenston 28.50. 2,
Warren Kennedy 2$.00. 3, Akron St. Vincent-51.
Mary 24.18. 4, Cleveland BenedicUne JJ.50. 5
(Ue ), COrtland Lakeview and Navarre ll!lrless
1t.OO.
REGION 10 - I, Ottawa-Glandorf 211.00. 2,
Fo.torla IB.SO. 3 Elyria Cathollc 1a.2S. 4, 011'vllle 17.25. 5, Milaii Ediaon 15.25. 6 .(tie), Lima
Cenll'&amp;l Cathollc and Upper Sanduaily 15.00.
REGION l1-l,Jronton25.00. 2, New Concord
GleM 22.16. 3 ,Wuhlngton Court House 1t.SO. 4,
Marysville 11.50. 5, Hebron Lakewood 17.50. B,
Zanesville WestMuskingum 18.'75.
REGION 12 - 1, Hamllton Badin ~. 00 . 2, Nor~
Ul Bend Taylor 21.75. 3, Carlisle 21.00. 4, Sl
Marys 1D.15. $, CincinnaU McNicholas 17.60. 6
(\_ie]_, Loveland Hurst and New Rlclunond 17 .00.
DIVISION I
REGION 13 - 1, Burton Berk.!hire 23.00. 2, Rittman 17.SO. 3, Garfield Helghia Trinity 15.00. 4
Pen-y 1lUO. S (Ue), Pelersburg Springfield and
LoudonvtlJe 13.25.
REGION tt - 1, Bucyr1111 Wyulord 18.25. 2,
MontpeiJer 13.00. 3, Mount Gllead 11.00. 4, Sher-wood Fairview 1Q.75. 5 (tie), Haviland Wayne
Trace and Colwnbus Wehrle 10.00.
REGION 15 - "1, Croobville 14.75. 2, Tiltoosville Buckeye South 1U2. 3 Hanoverton United
13.25. t, Toron1o 12.37. s, Cald.;;u u .oo.
.
REGION 16 - I, Weat Jeff"""" t7.SO. 2, C]n.
cinn.ati Mariemont 1U5. 3 Amanda Clearcreet
13.S0.4, Vei'I&amp;Weo1S.25.~. ~MiamiEut
12.50. 6, London 12.37.
DIVISIONS
REGION 17 - 1, Lorain Clearvlew 21.7~. 2,
Mogadore 15.00. 3, Leetonia 14.00.4, Greenwich
. South Centz-al 11.10. 5, Cleveland Cuyo~&gt;oco
Helghb U3. 8, MonroevilleUO.
REGION 1a - 1, Liberty Centu 18.1111. 2, Dial!·
ton 1t.OO. 3 (tie) Palldoro-Gilboa 11/ld Tillin
Calvert 10.75. 5,
St.
10.00. &amp;,
Raii'IOII Cory·Rawooo 8.00.
REGION 18 - I, Gk&gt;uater Trtml&gt;ie U.ll. z
(tie) , Beallavllleand Woodolleld IUO. I,Newarlt
CathoUc 10.00. 5, P&lt;&gt;rlornouth Notre D.ame 1.55. a,
Luca,ville Valley 9.50.
REGION 20 - I, Wllllamsburg 21.113. 2,
COvinglon 17.75. 3, Middletown Fenwict 17.SO. 4,
St. Henry 13.75. 5, Marim Cathotic 9.75. a,
Hamilton New Miami t.i!O.

{&gt;.....,, J-"

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Davy Concepcion and his Cincinnati Reds'
teammates must be doing
something right.
The litUe shortstop failed to get a
hit in lour official trips to the plate
Wednesday night, but still managed
to drive in three runs as the Reds
defeated the San Diego Padres 7~ in
10 innings for their fifth win in six
games.
The victory enabled the Reds to
move within 2\i, games of the

National League Western Division
While Concepcion was going
lead behind the Houston Astros and . hitless, Ken Griffey was having one
the Los Angeles Dodgers, who are of his best nights of the year with two
tied.
triples a double, a run batted in and
"It's weird to get three RBI with a. pair of nms scored, including the
an G-for-4 night, but I'll take them game-winner.
and the game-winning hit anytime,"
" This is the first time this year
Concepcion said with a smile. "I I've really been driving the ball with
don't care if I end the season going authority," said Griffey, as he nur.000 with 140 RBI."
sed a sore left knee wrapped in ice.
His three RBI gave him 75 this "!don't mind being tired and sore,
season and 19 in his last 23 games.
not tonight."
The Reds first baseman extended
his hitting streak to a modest seven
games with nine nms batted in
during that stretch.
"Griffey had a big night; we
needed every one of those hits,'' said
Cincinnati Reds manager John McNamara, after his club had
conquered the Padres for the 13th
time in 15 games this year.
The Reds appeared to put the
tained its half-game lead in the East.
game away in 'the fifth when they
Carter drove in three runs with a scored a pair of nms to take a i&gt;-2
pair of doubles and Parrish had four
lead, Griffey's double driving in
hits and drove in two nms in support
Dave Collins being the big hit of the
of Charlie Lea, S-5, who got the vic- inning.
tory although he was knocked out in
The Padres bounced back in the
the sixth inning after Jerry Martin's
sixth for a 5-5 tie on a two-out threetwo-run homer. Stan Bahnsen pit·
run homer by Gene Tenace, his 15th,
ched the last 32·3 innings without
off rookie left-bander Joe Price, pitallowing a run.
ching just a few miles from his home
Braves 4, Astros 2
Biff Pocoroba delivered two-run
double to go with home runs by Bob
Homer and Dale Murphy as AUanta
downed Houston and surpassed the
million mark in home attendance in
1980, the first time &gt;that all 12 NL
clubs reached that mark in one year.
Pocoroba's liner to left-center
field broke a 2-2 tie in the sixth inning after two walks, the seventh
and eighth free passes issued by
Houston starter Joaquin Andujar, 37.
The Braves had taken a 2-0 lead on
solo homers by Dale Murphy, his
31st, and Bob Homer, his 35th.
Houston's I1U1S scored on Alan Ashby's two-run homer.
:Plfates 6, Cardinals 3
Pitcher Rick Rhoden and Omar
Moreno both drove in two runs
during a six-run fourth-inning that
let Pittsburgh keep pace in the East
with a victory over St. Louis.
The triutnph kept the third-place
Pirates four games behind the firstplace Expos.
Davie Concepcion
Rhoden, 7--6, who pitched six innings and got relief help the last
three from Grant Jackson, singled
with the bases loaded in the· fourth
and Moreno followed with a triple.

Rose ends streak
with ·w inning hit
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The end of an G-for-15 slump by
Pete Rose had the Philadelphia
Phillies smelling like a rose Wednesday night.
Rose, in what he said was his worst streak since he was G-for-22 four
years ago in Cincinnati, boWlced a
single up the middle in the bottom of
the loth inning to give the Phillies a
I~ victory over the New York Meta.
The victory kept Philadelphia only
one-half game behind the first-place
Montreal EliJlOS in the National
League East.
In other NL games, the Expos
stopped the Chicago Cubs 8-1, Pittsburgh beat St. Louls 6-3, Cincinnati
outlasted San Diego 1~ in 10 innings
and AUanta defeated Houston 4-2 to
drop the Astros hack into a tie for first in the West with Los Angeles,
which beat San Francisco :&gt;-4 in 12
innings.
Although New York has the
second-worst record in the league,
Rose said he would rather be playing
the EliJlOS or Pirates than a team
like the Mets.
"I don't like to play noncontenders this time of year," he
said. "They're loose, they're ex·
perimenting. I'd rather play teams
battling for the championship."
Rose's game-winning hit came af.
ter pinch hitter Del Unser singled to
open the lOth and pinch runner Jay
Loviglio went to second on pinch hitter Tim McCarver's sacrifice.
Tug McGraw, 36, won his third
game In seven decisions with two innings of shutout reljef.
Despite his modest won-loss
record, McGraw has 18 saves and all
three of his victories since coming
off the disabled list July 17. He has
allowed only three runs in his last 41
innings.
Ed Lynch, making only his third
major league start, held the Phillies
to two hits for seven innings before
Nell Allen, 1-9, worked the eighth
and ninth and suffered the loss in the
loth. Larry Christenson, who hadn't
pitched since Sept. 6 because of a
groin muscle pull, allowed four hits
through eight innings before
McGraw came ln.
Dodgers 5, Giants 4
Manny Mota, the all-time leading
pinch hitter in the majors, collected
his 149th pinch-hit, a single with two
out in the 12th inning, to break a 4-4
.tie after San Francisco appelll'ed on
the verge of getting out of a basesloaded, no-out jam.
After Bobby Mitchell flied out to
short left for the first out, Dusty
Baker was caught off third on
Mota's missed squee2e bunt. But
Mota singled home Steve Garvey to
win the game.
Expos 8, Cubs 4
Andre Dawson, Gary Carter and
Larry Parrish combined for 10 hits
and five RBI as Montreal main-

LEBANON RF.'!ULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - High
Wind captured the $1,000 featured
pace mile in a photo finish Wednesday night at Lebanon and paid
$6.40,$3.40 and$3.80.
Winning time for the eighth race
was 2:04.2-5. Chatha's Brei was a
close second, $2.40 and $2.40 and the
show horse, Satin Sheets, paid $5.20.
The 2-5 double of Norton She Gota
and LitUe Sampson paid $22.40 and
the crowd of 1,163 wagered $113,534.

in Santee.
George Foster hit a lead-off triple
in the seventh and Dan Driessen
doubled him home as the Reds once
again led S-5.
But the Padres forced the game into extrtt innings with a run in the
eighth when Dave Winfield hit a
bloop double and then scored on a
passed ball and a throwing error by
catcher Vic Correll. ·
Rollie Fingers, !G-9, who struck
out pinch·hitter Harry Stilman with
the bases loaded to end the ninth,
was tagged for Griffey's one-out
triple in the loth to set up Concepcion's game-winning sacrifice
fly.
.Doug B~ir worked the fin~l two in·
nings to earn only his second victory
in eight decisions.
Padre left fielder Gene Richards
went 3-for--6 to lifi his average to an
even .300, and stole a pair of bases to
set a club record with 57, eclipsing
his own mark, set as a rookie in 1977.
The two teams met for the final
time in San Diego Stadiwn this af·
ternoon with Rick Wise, 6~,
scheduled to start for the Padres
against Paul Moskau, 9-7.

WedaetU)''J Gamn
Washington 2. Sweden AIK l
Tulsa (CHL) 4, Wlnnlpei 2

Edmonton 5, Vancouver 5, tie
Victoria (WHL) fo, Los Anseles 2
Philadelphia 5, N.Y. Islanders 2
0\lcago 3, Hartford 2
Detroit • • 51. Louis 3
Toronto 5, Montreal 1

National ButetbaD AuoclaUoo
Edibltiotu
Wedaesclay's Gamet
Washington 104, Chicago r1
San Antonio 117, Karuw City 100

Casey Kasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS

8 til Noon

1981 OLDSMOBILE
&amp; CADILLAC
ON DISPLAY NOW
SEPTEMBER 25TH

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC
242 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-6614

DOES YOUR
PHARMACY . . . .

Denver 102, Utah 92

•KEEP FAMILY RESCRIPTION RECORDS?

e GIVE A 10%- SENIOR
CITIZENS DISCOUNT
•ACCEPT 3rd PARTY RX's SUCH AS:
Ohio Medicaid, W. Va. Medicaid, United Milie
Workers, PCS, PAID, w. va . &amp; Ohio Compensation, Medimet.

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•HAVE AN EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBER FOR
AFTER HOUR .EMERGENCIES?

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Olympia
in Red, White
and Blue

•HAVE A FILM PROCESSING SERVICE?

(Check Our Prices)

Reg. Price '19.99

•HAVE LOW PRESCRIPTION PRICES?

SALE

•HAVE A COMPLETE .LINE OF OVER-THE-COUNTER
MEDICINE?

PRICE

$}299

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,- -..uilaait-·t =h..-,

Just Arrived- New Shipment
Converse High and Low Cut Shoes

. wha-arChefn .

he-r itage house.
Of SHOES

Middleport, Oh.

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Re·v. and Mrs. Robert Stewart

Silver anniversary
celebrated by couple

Installation of new officers by
. ~ ;. Ellzabeth Burkett, past
president, highlighted the recent
meeting of the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners held at the Burkett home.
Installed were Miss Enna Smith,
president; Mrs. Lillian Moore, vice
president ; 1\'lrs. Jean Moore,
secretary; a uu Miss Bernice Ann
Durst, treasurer. Each was presented a chrysanthemwn corsage by
Mrs. Burkett. Miss Smith named
Mrs. Lillian Moore, Mrs. Emogene
Crooks, Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mrs.
Elizabeth Lohse to the program
conunlttee.
Mrs. Nonna Custer was assisting
hostess for the meeting which
opened with the club collect and
devotions by Mrs. Lohse. Her theme
from "The Flowers of Inspiration in
God's Garden" by Judy Norris was
entiUed "Ivy and Individuality."
She Closed with prayer.
.For roll call members named their
favorite houseplant. Mrs. Clarice
Erwin was a guest. Officers reports
were given and the resignation of
Mrs. Veda Davia as treasurer was
accepted with Miss Darst being elected to fill that vacancy.
Members reported on other Meigs
CoWJty garden club meetings and
shows which they had attended
during the swruner. The !aU county
meeting was announced for Thursday evening at Trinity Church. Also
annoWJCed was the Meigs County
Christmas flower show to be held
Dec. 6 and 7at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Mrs. Margaret Ella
Lewis is chainnan and the theme
will be "Jingle Beilll."
The fall regional meeting was announced for Gallipolis. The
president urged attendance by
members at all the meetings and
shows.
At the conclusion of the meeting a
dessert course was served to the 11
members and Mrs. Erwin.

•HAVE FREE PARKING

SPECIALII
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Erma Smith,
president of
garden club

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A recep\ion honoring the Rev. and
Robert (Dorothy Chaney)
Stewart on their ' 25th wedding anniversary will be held on Sept. ?:1 at 3

AT
National J{ockey Lugue
Elhlbi-

Neville family .gathers at Krodel Park

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Mrs.

ON ALL RX's?

N. 2nd Ave.

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GROUP 0 MEETS
Group II of the Women's
Association of the Middleport First
United ·Presbyterian Church met
SWJday afternoon at the sununer
cabin of Mrs. William Morris for a
meeting for picnic supper.
Mrs. Kate Brown was co-hostess
with Mrs. Carl Horky presiding at
the meeting. Mrs. Dwight Wallace
gave devotions. The Women's
Associatioo poUuck dinner was announced for Thursday night. The
program consisted of poems from
Ideals by Mrs. Horky.

p.m. at the couple's home, 1301 Put·
nam Howe Dr., Belpre.
The reception is being hosted by
their · five children and their
families, Rick and Janet Stewart of
Johnstown ; Leonard and Tami Bick,
Washington Court House; Mark and
Sandie Spires, Ripley, W. Va., and
Rob and Debbie, at home. The Rev.
and Mrs. Stewart also have three
children, Angel, Ryan and Holly.

The Neville family reWJion was
.held recenUy at Krodel Park in Pt.
Pleasant.
Gifts were presented to the one
'traveling the farthest, the youngest,
the oldest, the one maJT\ed the
longest with the gifts being provided
by Audrey Neville Ours.
Attending were Charles 0 .
Neville, Eureka; Virginia Neville,
Gallipolis ; Edith Barn ett,
Langsville; Virginia Athey, Middleport; Leo Parsons, Judy Bmet~
l!lez, Ky.; Sterling, Dorothy,
'Teresa, Loraina, Lisa and Cody
Neville, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Harmon and Lisa, Bridgewater, Pa.;
Virginia and Willard Sisson and
Leslie, Eureka Star Route; Mayme
Hannon, Colwnbus; Eddie Sayre,
Point Pleasant; -Wiley and Audrey
Ours, Racine; Robert W. and Carol
A. Keeton, Eureka . Star Road,
Gallipolis; ·Sheri r..ee; Jimmie J.,
Charles J., Stacey L. and Mullens
Keeton, Gallipolis; Ruth D. Keeton,
Gallipolis; Jim, Peggy, Jinuny, Jr.,
Chrystal Ashton, Point Pleasant;
Mary Easter Nott, Newark; Pam,
Sherry, Mary, Billy Bard,
Marysville.
Trudy Brewer, Columbus; Mark
Rice, Evans Rice, Tammy Brewer,
Columbus; Robert, Geraldine, Betty
and Virginia Neville, Gallipolis;
Dean, Susan and Misty Hoschar,
Chasity ijoschar, Tracey Soarberry,
John Flinn, Parkersburg, W. Va.;
Larry, Anna May, Teresa, Tangle,
Billy and Sheila Parry, Point
Pleasant; Edith Rodman, Tuppers
Plains; Pearl, James, Bryan Wood,
Tuppers Plains ; P!!rry L. Anderson
III, Raymond L. and David Waldo
and Melda J. and Jean Anderson,
Newark; Milton Knapp, Newark;

CAR WASH SATURDAY
The Tuppers Plains Emergency
Squad will sponsor a car wash at

Hawk's Pennzoll Station in Tuppers
Plains from I to 5 p.m. Saturday
with the rain date set for Oct. 5. All
proceeds will go towards the purchue of equipment. The price will
be $3 for a wash and $4 for a wash
and use of the vacuwn cleaner.

and Camille Yoacham, Racine ;
Mary Neville Darst, Leon, W. Va.;
·nanny, Donna, Richie and Becky
Plants, Pt. Pleasant; Charles, Nancy, Chucke and Alisa Chapman,
Louise, John and Joyce Wright,
Colwnbus; Barbara, Tara Gail and
Troy Hill, Pt. Pleasant; Grover Garnette and Patty Neville, Pl.
Pleasant; Jewell Neville Martin,'
Cheshire ; Harold · Barnette.
(Continued on page 8)

Carrie Roush, Mason, W. Va.
Floyd and Abbie Neville, Apple
Grove, W. Va.; Billy, Ryan, Bill and
Pat Ours, Belmont, Miss.; Bob and
Ruth !gel Colwnbus; Joyce Neville
Long, Delaware ; John F. Aeiker,
Middleport; Tom and Linda
Morgan , Huntington; ~elen and
Jess Plants, Mason; Phil NeviUe,
Jr., and family, Delaware; Mr. and
Mrs. Sheridan Russell, Jr. and

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NOW IN PROGRESS

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ALL UVING ROOM SUITES REDUCED

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30% TO CELEBRATE OUR 30TH YEAR
IN BUSINESS.

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Herman Grate, Owner

773-5592

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MASON FURNITURE CO.
Mason. W. Va .

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II Festival of
ntastic Val
Portable AM /FM

t".Finlics

Cassette Recorder
Minisette · -vu by Realistic

A.A-1~ sandals with
.
~comfort features

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Save33°/o

95

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Reg.

Soft Ca ress

89.95

1 ". ~~1

Black
&amp; Rust

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30TH ANNIVERSARY SALE

BV MIIJ.ER

CHARGE IT
(MOST STORES)

Slide Resistant
Soles and Heels

Experience the comlor! of the sa ndals designed especial ly to
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1977 PLYMOUTH

1979 PONTIAC

ARRCM GT
2 DR HATCHBACK

GRAND PRIX U

4 cylinder, automatic, A/ C, rear
defogger, tilt wheel. r oad wheels.

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wheels, A/ C AM·FM radio,

95
Reg.

359.95

V·6 Engine, automatic trans.,

$2495

79 !~

4 speed transmission, A/ C,
deluxe cloth interior, mag wheel
covers, splash guards. We sold it
new.

A speed trans., good

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Extra Savings on a
Complete System
:I!UA

$28080_

Reg. Separate
Items 799.80

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149.95
Each • Realistic STA-820 AM/FM Stereo Receiver
Get a pair for superb stereo! 8" passive·
• Two Optimus-27 Passive-Radiator
radiator, 6'/i' woofer and 1" tweeter for
Speaker Systems
clean "transparent" · soundt 27%" high,
• Realistic LAB-270 Automatic Turntable
15'14' wide, only 6" deep! Walnut veneer.
·with Base, Hinged Dust Cover,

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By Mlcronta "'

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Save
$20

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3995
Reg. 59.95

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3%-Digit LCD Multimeter

mileage,

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L~=========::;===::....:s!27~·:95~·:Va:l~u~e=Magnellc Cartridge

local owner . New vw Diesel,

Trade-in.

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inputs let you make your own "Disco OJ" tapescut in and out from two turntables. Plenty of power
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by Realistic

radial t ires .

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power steering, custom interior.

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570

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PINTO
. HOMECOMINGSUNDAV
The Langsville Christian Church
will hold Its annual homecoming
SWldaY with SWlday sch09l at 9:30
a.m.; morning worship at 10:30 a.m.
and a basket dinner at noon in the
fellowship room. An afternoon ser·
vice will begin at 2 p.m. With Junior
Conger as speaker and special
music. The public iB Invited.

Veronica, Cathy, Rich, Linda,
Joseph and Toby Northup, Newark.
Mr. and Mrs. Helen ·Neville John·
son, Gallipolis i Randy and Deana
Clonch, Connie and Clarence Johnson, George and Eileen Rice, Tom,
Diana, Patty McElhatten, Galion;
Jerry Larona and Michael Ehert,
Columbus ; Grace Neville, Nancy
Scott and son, David, Alliance;
Warren, Juanita and CHarles
Wright, Columbus; John Styen,
Anita Kelly Renae, Jody Marie
Wright, Columbus; Erin Colleen
Moran Wright, Colwnbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Keith G. Aeiker, Jr., Todd,
Shelli and Laura, Cheshire; Mr. and
Mrs. Harlan Whitlatch. Kathy,
Mike, Kelly, Rt. I, Reedsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ojui, Phyllis
'Neville, S. Vienna, Betty J. Neville
Berge, Sparks, Nev.; . Coleen
Lockhart, Melvin and Arlene
Lockhart, Shelby, Tim and David
Lockhart, Forest Park, Ga. ; Bessie
Rowe, Trenton, Mich,; Aut Neville,
Jill Dyer, Jay Flax, Charles Oliver,
Carol, Roger and David Neville;
Anita Neville Styen and Earl and
Mary Ann, John and Elizabeth
Beaver, Ronald, Patricia, Kim and

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13 ranges, 10·megohm input for
accuracy. With leads, vinyl pouch .
Battery extr a. 22·197

69!~ Save

5

50

Don't wait - save now on CB featuring special instantswitching to Emergency Ch . 9 or Highway Ch. 19. 21·1503

$

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Check Your Phone Book for the lladle lhaek Store or Dealer Nearest You
PRICES MA Y VAR Y AT INDIVIDUA L STORE S

!j A

DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

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�4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomero.&gt;:, 0., Thursday, Sept. 25, 1980

Concepcion paces Reds' win

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••• •••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

UIERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

W L Ptl. GB
91 54
.81;-

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NewYort

Balllrnore

93 5Q
12 12
19 ro
'18 1t

Milwaukee

1

Detroit
Cleveland
Toronto

14
81

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.612 5
.532 17
.$30 Ji"ii
.513 31
. .t90 ZHi
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WFm

x-KArwuCity

92

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Cl&gt;lqgo

71 12
81r/
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s.aw.

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z-cilnched division UUe.

1111
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lkltlmore 12,

Booton 9

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Yun. 7, Cleveland 3
a, ColllomJa o

Detroit

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New

KinnMotl I , Ttu~ 5
Olkland 1, Chicago 1
SeaWe t, Kanau City 2

'l'bantbl)''tGames
Chicq:o {Baumgartm 2--11 ) at Oaklard
(IC""''!h 1&amp;-jJ)
•
Cleveland {Walll ll·lt) at New York
!Perry &amp;-11 ), (n)
Tau (Kainer D-0) at Seatue (l&gt;reM!er
lot), (n)
Ollly games Jclieduled
Frldi)''IGalllell
Baltimore at Cleveland, (n)
Boston ·~ Toronto, (n)
New Yori al Detrotl, (n)
Kanau City ol Minnesota, (n)
Chlcqo at California, . (n)

Milwaukee at Oakland, (n)
fe:ua at Seattle, (n)

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Montreal
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh

83

68
68
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St.Louis
NewYurk

Chicago

Atlanta

San Francisco
San Diego

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Houston
LA&lt;! Angelt!
Cincinnati

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Wednesday's Games

Montreal 8, Chicago t
AUanta 4, HOU3ton 2
Philadelphia 1, New York 0, 10 innings
Pittsburgh 6, St. I...ou1a 3
Cincinnati 7, San Diego &amp;, 10 innings
Los Angeles :;, San Francisco 4, 12 inningo
T1Manday'a Games
Montreal IGuWckson 9-4 ) at Chicago
(McGlothen 1M3)
San Francisco (Whil!on 10.11) at Los
Anseles (Hooton 13-7) .
Cincinnati (Seaver 1~7 ) at San ' Diego
(Wise Hi
Houston (K.Forsch 1%-12) at Atlanta
(Boggs 10.9), (n)
New York {Zachry 6-10) at Philadelphia
(RuLhven 16-10), (n)
St.LouiS (Rincon U ) at Pittsburgh
(Robinson &amp;-3), (n )
Fndly's Gamet
Pittsburgh at Chicago
San Francl.sco at Atlanta, (n)

St.Louis at ' New York, (n)
Monlre11l at Philadelphia, (n)
Cincinnati at Houston, (n)
Los Angeles at San Diego, (n)

Ironton leads in
computer poll
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Defending playoff championil Cincinnati
Moeller and Ironton are leading
their regions today in the first
weekly CO!Jlputerized football
ratings released by the Ohio High
School Athletic Association.
Moeller's 38.66 points in Region 4
of Division I are the highest total in
)Illy of the 12 regions. The Crusaders,
4.().() this fall, won the Class AAA
playoff crown last year.
Ironton, 4.().() and the Class AA
winner in 1979, paces Region II of
Division 3 with 25.00 points.
Mogadore, also Wlbeaten in four
gameli and the Cla5s A champion
last 888BOn, is running second
behind Lorain Clearview in Region
17 in Division 5. The Summit CoWlty
school has 15.00 points to '!i.75 for
Lorailt Clearview, the 1972 runnerilp
fo Class A playoff victor Marion
Pleaaant.
.The OHSAA uses the ratings,
based solely on a team's victories
ahd notlts margins, to detennlne its
playoff field. The playoffs have been
expanded from three classes and 12
teams to five divisions and 40 teams
this fall.
. The winner and nmnerup in each
region will move into the first
weekend of playoffs Nov. 7~. The
semifinals are Nov. 14-15 and the
championships Nov. 21·22.
Other Division !leaders this week
are Willoughy South in Region I,
Sandusky in Region 2 and Lakewood
St. Edward in Region 3. Division 2
frontrunners are Solon in Region 5,
Colwnbus Watterson in Region 6,
Youngstown Mooney in Region 7 and
Pickerington in Region 8.
In Division 3, it iB Chagrin Falls
Kenston in Region 9, OttawaGlandorf in Region 10 and Hamilton
· B8dln in Region 12. In Division 4, the
leaders are Berton Berkshire in
Region 13, Bucyrus Wynford in
Region 14, Crooksville in Region 15
~West Jefferson in Region 16.
Elsewhere in Division 5, Liberty
Center iB leading in Region 18,
Glouster Trimble In Region 19 and
Wlllla!nsburg in Region 20.
COLIIMI!!!StOhio lAP) - Regional leaden in

tbe otdo J118D School Athletic Asaociation's
~Y

.....,terbed football rani&lt;lng.s. Tile lim

two teams ln each region after the regular
season qualify For the state playoffs:
DIVISION l
REGION 1 - l, Willoughby Eastlake South
31 .00 points. 2, Warren Hanfins ,28.75. 3, Shaker
Heights 211.00. 4, AUatintown Fitch 27.01. 5, Stow
%6.2t. 6, Youngstown Boardman 2U2.
REGION 2 - 1, Sanduky 32~. 2, WestervWe
North 23.SO. 31 Uppe, Adlngton 23.00. 4,
Springfield SouUl 21.25. 5, Columbus Northland
19.88. 6, Toledo Start 19.33,
REGION 3 - I, Lakewood St. Edward 34.66. 2,
Brunswick 31.83. 3, Lorain Senior 30.00. 4,
Massillon 27.66. 5, Elyria 27.50. 6, t&amp;nton
McKinley26.SO.
.REGION 4 - 1, Cincinnati MoeUer 38.66. 2,
Middletown 34.00. 3, CinclnnatJ Princeton 32.00. ·
4, Cincinnati Elder 30.50.5, Centerville 311.50. B.
Clayton NorUunont 27.00.
·
DIVISION%
REGION ; - . I, Solon 32.00. 2, Stow Walsll
Jesuit 24.00. 3, Akron East 22.00. 4 (tie), Richfield
Revere and Mentor Lake Calholic 19.00. 6, Akron

Kenmore 1&amp;.91.

REGION 6 - 1, CG!umbus W&amp;tterson 25.50. 2,
Gallon 20.00. 3, Columbus MiHlin 19.83. 4,
Penysbwz 19.50. 5, PataksUla Watkins
Memorlal19.00. 6, Sylvania Northview 18.00.
REGION 1 - I, Youngstown MO&lt;Jil&lt;Y 92.91. 2,
Y~ Rayen 24.11ti. 3, Ravenna 22.25. 4,
Bella1re 21.50. :t, Wooster 19.00. 6, Youngstown
South 17.16.
REGION a -., I, Plclterington 211.1111. 2, Cincimati GreenhlUa 19.50. 3, Amella 17.50. 4,
Lebanon 17.50. 5, Greenville 15.66. 6, UrbaAII
IUS.
DIVISIONJ
REG JON 9- l, Chagrin Falla Kenston 28.50. 2,
Warren Kennedy 2$.00. 3, Akron St. Vincent-51.
Mary 24.18. 4, Cleveland BenedicUne JJ.50. 5
(Ue ), COrtland Lakeview and Navarre ll!lrless
1t.OO.
REGION 10 - I, Ottawa-Glandorf 211.00. 2,
Fo.torla IB.SO. 3 Elyria Cathollc 1a.2S. 4, 011'vllle 17.25. 5, Milaii Ediaon 15.25. 6 .(tie), Lima
Cenll'&amp;l Cathollc and Upper Sanduaily 15.00.
REGION l1-l,Jronton25.00. 2, New Concord
GleM 22.16. 3 ,Wuhlngton Court House 1t.SO. 4,
Marysville 11.50. 5, Hebron Lakewood 17.50. B,
Zanesville WestMuskingum 18.'75.
REGION 12 - 1, Hamllton Badin ~. 00 . 2, Nor~
Ul Bend Taylor 21.75. 3, Carlisle 21.00. 4, Sl
Marys 1D.15. $, CincinnaU McNicholas 17.60. 6
(\_ie]_, Loveland Hurst and New Rlclunond 17 .00.
DIVISION I
REGION 13 - 1, Burton Berk.!hire 23.00. 2, Rittman 17.SO. 3, Garfield Helghia Trinity 15.00. 4
Pen-y 1lUO. S (Ue), Pelersburg Springfield and
LoudonvtlJe 13.25.
REGION tt - 1, Bucyr1111 Wyulord 18.25. 2,
MontpeiJer 13.00. 3, Mount Gllead 11.00. 4, Sher-wood Fairview 1Q.75. 5 (tie), Haviland Wayne
Trace and Colwnbus Wehrle 10.00.
REGION 15 - "1, Croobville 14.75. 2, Tiltoosville Buckeye South 1U2. 3 Hanoverton United
13.25. t, Toron1o 12.37. s, Cald.;;u u .oo.
.
REGION 16 - I, Weat Jeff"""" t7.SO. 2, C]n.
cinn.ati Mariemont 1U5. 3 Amanda Clearcreet
13.S0.4, Vei'I&amp;Weo1S.25.~. ~MiamiEut
12.50. 6, London 12.37.
DIVISIONS
REGION 17 - 1, Lorain Clearvlew 21.7~. 2,
Mogadore 15.00. 3, Leetonia 14.00.4, Greenwich
. South Centz-al 11.10. 5, Cleveland Cuyo~&gt;oco
Helghb U3. 8, MonroevilleUO.
REGION 1a - 1, Liberty Centu 18.1111. 2, Dial!·
ton 1t.OO. 3 (tie) Palldoro-Gilboa 11/ld Tillin
Calvert 10.75. 5,
St.
10.00. &amp;,
Raii'IOII Cory·Rawooo 8.00.
REGION 18 - I, Gk&gt;uater Trtml&gt;ie U.ll. z
(tie) , Beallavllleand Woodolleld IUO. I,Newarlt
CathoUc 10.00. 5, P&lt;&gt;rlornouth Notre D.ame 1.55. a,
Luca,ville Valley 9.50.
REGION 20 - I, Wllllamsburg 21.113. 2,
COvinglon 17.75. 3, Middletown Fenwict 17.SO. 4,
St. Henry 13.75. 5, Marim Cathotic 9.75. a,
Hamilton New Miami t.i!O.

{&gt;.....,, J-"

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Davy Concepcion and his Cincinnati Reds'
teammates must be doing
something right.
The litUe shortstop failed to get a
hit in lour official trips to the plate
Wednesday night, but still managed
to drive in three runs as the Reds
defeated the San Diego Padres 7~ in
10 innings for their fifth win in six
games.
The victory enabled the Reds to
move within 2\i, games of the

National League Western Division
While Concepcion was going
lead behind the Houston Astros and . hitless, Ken Griffey was having one
the Los Angeles Dodgers, who are of his best nights of the year with two
tied.
triples a double, a run batted in and
"It's weird to get three RBI with a. pair of nms scored, including the
an G-for-4 night, but I'll take them game-winner.
and the game-winning hit anytime,"
" This is the first time this year
Concepcion said with a smile. "I I've really been driving the ball with
don't care if I end the season going authority," said Griffey, as he nur.000 with 140 RBI."
sed a sore left knee wrapped in ice.
His three RBI gave him 75 this "!don't mind being tired and sore,
season and 19 in his last 23 games.
not tonight."
The Reds first baseman extended
his hitting streak to a modest seven
games with nine nms batted in
during that stretch.
"Griffey had a big night; we
needed every one of those hits,'' said
Cincinnati Reds manager John McNamara, after his club had
conquered the Padres for the 13th
time in 15 games this year.
The Reds appeared to put the
tained its half-game lead in the East.
game away in 'the fifth when they
Carter drove in three runs with a scored a pair of nms to take a i&gt;-2
pair of doubles and Parrish had four
lead, Griffey's double driving in
hits and drove in two nms in support
Dave Collins being the big hit of the
of Charlie Lea, S-5, who got the vic- inning.
tory although he was knocked out in
The Padres bounced back in the
the sixth inning after Jerry Martin's
sixth for a 5-5 tie on a two-out threetwo-run homer. Stan Bahnsen pit·
run homer by Gene Tenace, his 15th,
ched the last 32·3 innings without
off rookie left-bander Joe Price, pitallowing a run.
ching just a few miles from his home
Braves 4, Astros 2
Biff Pocoroba delivered two-run
double to go with home runs by Bob
Homer and Dale Murphy as AUanta
downed Houston and surpassed the
million mark in home attendance in
1980, the first time &gt;that all 12 NL
clubs reached that mark in one year.
Pocoroba's liner to left-center
field broke a 2-2 tie in the sixth inning after two walks, the seventh
and eighth free passes issued by
Houston starter Joaquin Andujar, 37.
The Braves had taken a 2-0 lead on
solo homers by Dale Murphy, his
31st, and Bob Homer, his 35th.
Houston's I1U1S scored on Alan Ashby's two-run homer.
:Plfates 6, Cardinals 3
Pitcher Rick Rhoden and Omar
Moreno both drove in two runs
during a six-run fourth-inning that
let Pittsburgh keep pace in the East
with a victory over St. Louis.
The triutnph kept the third-place
Pirates four games behind the firstplace Expos.
Davie Concepcion
Rhoden, 7--6, who pitched six innings and got relief help the last
three from Grant Jackson, singled
with the bases loaded in the· fourth
and Moreno followed with a triple.

Rose ends streak
with ·w inning hit
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The end of an G-for-15 slump by
Pete Rose had the Philadelphia
Phillies smelling like a rose Wednesday night.
Rose, in what he said was his worst streak since he was G-for-22 four
years ago in Cincinnati, boWlced a
single up the middle in the bottom of
the loth inning to give the Phillies a
I~ victory over the New York Meta.
The victory kept Philadelphia only
one-half game behind the first-place
Montreal EliJlOS in the National
League East.
In other NL games, the Expos
stopped the Chicago Cubs 8-1, Pittsburgh beat St. Louls 6-3, Cincinnati
outlasted San Diego 1~ in 10 innings
and AUanta defeated Houston 4-2 to
drop the Astros hack into a tie for first in the West with Los Angeles,
which beat San Francisco :&gt;-4 in 12
innings.
Although New York has the
second-worst record in the league,
Rose said he would rather be playing
the EliJlOS or Pirates than a team
like the Mets.
"I don't like to play noncontenders this time of year," he
said. "They're loose, they're ex·
perimenting. I'd rather play teams
battling for the championship."
Rose's game-winning hit came af.
ter pinch hitter Del Unser singled to
open the lOth and pinch runner Jay
Loviglio went to second on pinch hitter Tim McCarver's sacrifice.
Tug McGraw, 36, won his third
game In seven decisions with two innings of shutout reljef.
Despite his modest won-loss
record, McGraw has 18 saves and all
three of his victories since coming
off the disabled list July 17. He has
allowed only three runs in his last 41
innings.
Ed Lynch, making only his third
major league start, held the Phillies
to two hits for seven innings before
Nell Allen, 1-9, worked the eighth
and ninth and suffered the loss in the
loth. Larry Christenson, who hadn't
pitched since Sept. 6 because of a
groin muscle pull, allowed four hits
through eight innings before
McGraw came ln.
Dodgers 5, Giants 4
Manny Mota, the all-time leading
pinch hitter in the majors, collected
his 149th pinch-hit, a single with two
out in the 12th inning, to break a 4-4
.tie after San Francisco appelll'ed on
the verge of getting out of a basesloaded, no-out jam.
After Bobby Mitchell flied out to
short left for the first out, Dusty
Baker was caught off third on
Mota's missed squee2e bunt. But
Mota singled home Steve Garvey to
win the game.
Expos 8, Cubs 4
Andre Dawson, Gary Carter and
Larry Parrish combined for 10 hits
and five RBI as Montreal main-

LEBANON RF.'!ULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - High
Wind captured the $1,000 featured
pace mile in a photo finish Wednesday night at Lebanon and paid
$6.40,$3.40 and$3.80.
Winning time for the eighth race
was 2:04.2-5. Chatha's Brei was a
close second, $2.40 and $2.40 and the
show horse, Satin Sheets, paid $5.20.
The 2-5 double of Norton She Gota
and LitUe Sampson paid $22.40 and
the crowd of 1,163 wagered $113,534.

in Santee.
George Foster hit a lead-off triple
in the seventh and Dan Driessen
doubled him home as the Reds once
again led S-5.
But the Padres forced the game into extrtt innings with a run in the
eighth when Dave Winfield hit a
bloop double and then scored on a
passed ball and a throwing error by
catcher Vic Correll. ·
Rollie Fingers, !G-9, who struck
out pinch·hitter Harry Stilman with
the bases loaded to end the ninth,
was tagged for Griffey's one-out
triple in the loth to set up Concepcion's game-winning sacrifice
fly.
.Doug B~ir worked the fin~l two in·
nings to earn only his second victory
in eight decisions.
Padre left fielder Gene Richards
went 3-for--6 to lifi his average to an
even .300, and stole a pair of bases to
set a club record with 57, eclipsing
his own mark, set as a rookie in 1977.
The two teams met for the final
time in San Diego Stadiwn this af·
ternoon with Rick Wise, 6~,
scheduled to start for the Padres
against Paul Moskau, 9-7.

WedaetU)''J Gamn
Washington 2. Sweden AIK l
Tulsa (CHL) 4, Wlnnlpei 2

Edmonton 5, Vancouver 5, tie
Victoria (WHL) fo, Los Anseles 2
Philadelphia 5, N.Y. Islanders 2
0\lcago 3, Hartford 2
Detroit • • 51. Louis 3
Toronto 5, Montreal 1

National ButetbaD AuoclaUoo
Edibltiotu
Wedaesclay's Gamet
Washington 104, Chicago r1
San Antonio 117, Karuw City 100

Casey Kasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS

8 til Noon

1981 OLDSMOBILE
&amp; CADILLAC
ON DISPLAY NOW
SEPTEMBER 25TH

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PH. 992-6614

DOES YOUR
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Just Arrived- New Shipment
Converse High and Low Cut Shoes

. wha-arChefn .

he-r itage house.
Of SHOES

Middleport, Oh.

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Re·v. and Mrs. Robert Stewart

Silver anniversary
celebrated by couple

Installation of new officers by
. ~ ;. Ellzabeth Burkett, past
president, highlighted the recent
meeting of the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners held at the Burkett home.
Installed were Miss Enna Smith,
president; Mrs. Lillian Moore, vice
president ; 1\'lrs. Jean Moore,
secretary; a uu Miss Bernice Ann
Durst, treasurer. Each was presented a chrysanthemwn corsage by
Mrs. Burkett. Miss Smith named
Mrs. Lillian Moore, Mrs. Emogene
Crooks, Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mrs.
Elizabeth Lohse to the program
conunlttee.
Mrs. Nonna Custer was assisting
hostess for the meeting which
opened with the club collect and
devotions by Mrs. Lohse. Her theme
from "The Flowers of Inspiration in
God's Garden" by Judy Norris was
entiUed "Ivy and Individuality."
She Closed with prayer.
.For roll call members named their
favorite houseplant. Mrs. Clarice
Erwin was a guest. Officers reports
were given and the resignation of
Mrs. Veda Davia as treasurer was
accepted with Miss Darst being elected to fill that vacancy.
Members reported on other Meigs
CoWJty garden club meetings and
shows which they had attended
during the swruner. The !aU county
meeting was announced for Thursday evening at Trinity Church. Also
annoWJCed was the Meigs County
Christmas flower show to be held
Dec. 6 and 7at the Pomeroy Elementary School. Mrs. Margaret Ella
Lewis is chainnan and the theme
will be "Jingle Beilll."
The fall regional meeting was announced for Gallipolis. The
president urged attendance by
members at all the meetings and
shows.
At the conclusion of the meeting a
dessert course was served to the 11
members and Mrs. Erwin.

•HAVE FREE PARKING

SPECIALII
~~·J

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Erma Smith,
president of
garden club

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A recep\ion honoring the Rev. and
Robert (Dorothy Chaney)
Stewart on their ' 25th wedding anniversary will be held on Sept. ?:1 at 3

AT
National J{ockey Lugue
Elhlbi-

Neville family .gathers at Krodel Park

~

Mrs.

ON ALL RX's?

N. 2nd Ave.

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GROUP 0 MEETS
Group II of the Women's
Association of the Middleport First
United ·Presbyterian Church met
SWJday afternoon at the sununer
cabin of Mrs. William Morris for a
meeting for picnic supper.
Mrs. Kate Brown was co-hostess
with Mrs. Carl Horky presiding at
the meeting. Mrs. Dwight Wallace
gave devotions. The Women's
Associatioo poUuck dinner was announced for Thursday night. The
program consisted of poems from
Ideals by Mrs. Horky.

p.m. at the couple's home, 1301 Put·
nam Howe Dr., Belpre.
The reception is being hosted by
their · five children and their
families, Rick and Janet Stewart of
Johnstown ; Leonard and Tami Bick,
Washington Court House; Mark and
Sandie Spires, Ripley, W. Va., and
Rob and Debbie, at home. The Rev.
and Mrs. Stewart also have three
children, Angel, Ryan and Holly.

The Neville family reWJion was
.held recenUy at Krodel Park in Pt.
Pleasant.
Gifts were presented to the one
'traveling the farthest, the youngest,
the oldest, the one maJT\ed the
longest with the gifts being provided
by Audrey Neville Ours.
Attending were Charles 0 .
Neville, Eureka; Virginia Neville,
Gallipolis ; Edith Barn ett,
Langsville; Virginia Athey, Middleport; Leo Parsons, Judy Bmet~
l!lez, Ky.; Sterling, Dorothy,
'Teresa, Loraina, Lisa and Cody
Neville, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Harmon and Lisa, Bridgewater, Pa.;
Virginia and Willard Sisson and
Leslie, Eureka Star Route; Mayme
Hannon, Colwnbus; Eddie Sayre,
Point Pleasant; -Wiley and Audrey
Ours, Racine; Robert W. and Carol
A. Keeton, Eureka . Star Road,
Gallipolis; ·Sheri r..ee; Jimmie J.,
Charles J., Stacey L. and Mullens
Keeton, Gallipolis; Ruth D. Keeton,
Gallipolis; Jim, Peggy, Jinuny, Jr.,
Chrystal Ashton, Point Pleasant;
Mary Easter Nott, Newark; Pam,
Sherry, Mary, Billy Bard,
Marysville.
Trudy Brewer, Columbus; Mark
Rice, Evans Rice, Tammy Brewer,
Columbus; Robert, Geraldine, Betty
and Virginia Neville, Gallipolis;
Dean, Susan and Misty Hoschar,
Chasity ijoschar, Tracey Soarberry,
John Flinn, Parkersburg, W. Va.;
Larry, Anna May, Teresa, Tangle,
Billy and Sheila Parry, Point
Pleasant; Edith Rodman, Tuppers
Plains; Pearl, James, Bryan Wood,
Tuppers Plains ; P!!rry L. Anderson
III, Raymond L. and David Waldo
and Melda J. and Jean Anderson,
Newark; Milton Knapp, Newark;

CAR WASH SATURDAY
The Tuppers Plains Emergency
Squad will sponsor a car wash at

Hawk's Pennzoll Station in Tuppers
Plains from I to 5 p.m. Saturday
with the rain date set for Oct. 5. All
proceeds will go towards the purchue of equipment. The price will
be $3 for a wash and $4 for a wash
and use of the vacuwn cleaner.

and Camille Yoacham, Racine ;
Mary Neville Darst, Leon, W. Va.;
·nanny, Donna, Richie and Becky
Plants, Pt. Pleasant; Charles, Nancy, Chucke and Alisa Chapman,
Louise, John and Joyce Wright,
Colwnbus; Barbara, Tara Gail and
Troy Hill, Pt. Pleasant; Grover Garnette and Patty Neville, Pl.
Pleasant; Jewell Neville Martin,'
Cheshire ; Harold · Barnette.
(Continued on page 8)

Carrie Roush, Mason, W. Va.
Floyd and Abbie Neville, Apple
Grove, W. Va.; Billy, Ryan, Bill and
Pat Ours, Belmont, Miss.; Bob and
Ruth !gel Colwnbus; Joyce Neville
Long, Delaware ; John F. Aeiker,
Middleport; Tom and Linda
Morgan , Huntington; ~elen and
Jess Plants, Mason; Phil NeviUe,
Jr., and family, Delaware; Mr. and
Mrs. Sheridan Russell, Jr. and

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773-5592

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Mason. W. Va .

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PINTO
. HOMECOMINGSUNDAV
The Langsville Christian Church
will hold Its annual homecoming
SWldaY with SWlday sch09l at 9:30
a.m.; morning worship at 10:30 a.m.
and a basket dinner at noon in the
fellowship room. An afternoon ser·
vice will begin at 2 p.m. With Junior
Conger as speaker and special
music. The public iB Invited.

Veronica, Cathy, Rich, Linda,
Joseph and Toby Northup, Newark.
Mr. and Mrs. Helen ·Neville John·
son, Gallipolis i Randy and Deana
Clonch, Connie and Clarence Johnson, George and Eileen Rice, Tom,
Diana, Patty McElhatten, Galion;
Jerry Larona and Michael Ehert,
Columbus ; Grace Neville, Nancy
Scott and son, David, Alliance;
Warren, Juanita and CHarles
Wright, Columbus; John Styen,
Anita Kelly Renae, Jody Marie
Wright, Columbus; Erin Colleen
Moran Wright, Colwnbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Keith G. Aeiker, Jr., Todd,
Shelli and Laura, Cheshire; Mr. and
Mrs. Harlan Whitlatch. Kathy,
Mike, Kelly, Rt. I, Reedsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ojui, Phyllis
'Neville, S. Vienna, Betty J. Neville
Berge, Sparks, Nev.; . Coleen
Lockhart, Melvin and Arlene
Lockhart, Shelby, Tim and David
Lockhart, Forest Park, Ga. ; Bessie
Rowe, Trenton, Mich,; Aut Neville,
Jill Dyer, Jay Flax, Charles Oliver,
Carol, Roger and David Neville;
Anita Neville Styen and Earl and
Mary Ann, John and Elizabeth
Beaver, Ronald, Patricia, Kim and

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~The Daily Sentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 25, 1980

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Surprise
party held

Your

Television
Viewing

ll lt\fNf fii}'ft

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~(.!:1~ ~

byHenri ArnotdandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one leNer to ea c ~ square. to form

rour ord1naf)l words.

SEPT. 25, !080

.
By Ellen Bell, Meigs County Ubrarian
In the time before election day, we expect to tell you what you and
your ·libraries DON'T have. Today, I want to take up the question of
what the. libraries DO have to offer you.
First, your libraries have books. At the last count (in August), the
libraries owned a total of 13,127 boks - hardback and paperback combined.
Second, your libraries have records, over 125 records altogether.
Third, your libraries own a 16 nun. fibn projector (a recent gift
from the Friends of the Meigs County Ubraries) and have another
that belongs to OVAL, the C()o()p to which yhour libraries belong.
Fourth, your libraries own an opaque projector; a gift from a
Meigs Countian who wanted to share with you.
Fifth, your libraries own inagazines an pamphlets.
. All these are things your libraries own which you may borrow, for
FREE.
·What else is available at the libraries? The libraries can borrow
(for you to use) more than 700 fiims and fiimstrips from the State
Ubrary Service Center at Caldwell. The libraries can borrow from
other libraries (for you to use) most books that the local libraries don't
own.
Both the Pomeroy and Middleport libraries can now make copies
of important papers, pages from books, and so on for 25 cents a page.
Both libraries have Adult Basic Education learning centers on
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. (The Middleport center is open
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; the Pomeroy center is open from 6 p.m. to 9
p.m.)
Sometimes, the libraries have programs. On Oct. 11, for example,
Chuck Carroll, Mr. Snake Man, will be at the Middleport Public
Ubrary with some serpentine friends io show you first-hand how to tell·
the difference between "good" snakes and "bad" snakes.
The only service for which the libraries charge is making copies.
Every other service is FREE.
. Your libraries have a lot to offer you. Why not stop in and check
.them out?

Home Health Week designated
The Ohio Council of Home Health
Agencies, Inc. has proclaimed Sept.
28 through Oct. 4 as Honie Health .
Week in Ohio. Home Health Agencies in Ohio will be promoting the
theme, "There's No Place Uke
Home" to encourage interaction between home health agencies and the
communities they serve and to show
appreciation for the work done by
their employees.
Home Health Service often makes
it possible for a patient to be
discharged from the hospital and
continue to receive necessary
professional care. This allows the
patient to recuperate at home,
creating a savings in expense.
Patients of all ages are seen through
the home health program when services are needed and referrals are
made to the agency.
Veterans Memorial Hospital,

sing, Physical Therapy and Home
Health Aide visits to residents living
in Meigs County. Three nurses, two
aides, one physical therapist and one
secretary serve on our Home Health
Staff.
Since service was initiated in 1971,
the organizlltion has made 22,221
visits and traveled 284,379 miles
throughout Mei!ls County.
A Home Health Advisory .Committee made up of members from
the community along with members
of the hospital starr; work closely
with Supervisor, Edna Russell, in
the continuing growth of this
program. Edna Russell, R.N. is
director for the Home Health Agency.
For further information regarding
home health care, call Veterans
Memorial Hospital - Home Health
Service at 992-2104; Ext. 44.

/

·•.
f.\.
..

t\

,...._

'I

-

PRECEPI'OR BETA Beta Chap. tyer, Beta Sigma Phi, 7:45 _p.m.
' Thursday iii the Riverboat of the
Athens County Savings and Loan Co.
.. Preceptor Chapter, Beta Beta, of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet at
· 7:45 p.m. this evening at the Meigs
Branch, Athens County Savngs and

. Loan.

vice.
·
NATIONAL HUNTING and
fishing day, Saturday, Royal Oak
Park. Prizes, exhibits and par·
ticipation events for youngsters 5
and older. Signup begins at 9:15a.m.
Signup begins at 9: 15 a.m. Day sponsored and organized by Ken Amsbary Chaputer, Izaak Walton
League and other sportsman clu!)!!
of the county.

m

I

CAPTAiN EASY
~OOK , MAPAME: &amp;OR&amp;IA!

WHY, E'II~Y-!!

HOW DARE YOU

DON'T SIVf Ml? AIJY OF
'fOUR POI!o0NOU5 !&gt;Wr:er

Greco.

TALK TOME

~II&lt;E TIIATi!

TALl&lt; OR YOIJR PHOt,JY
CROCOPi~J? TI?AR5!

8:58

!VE; HAD IT

· WlrH YOU

A~D

7:00

YOUR SLeAZY
i-CAM~! WE'RE

'-

i

Hoat:

Hugh

T'Hf(OU6Hf'INITO: 'IOU

rn

~Ji:T~~~~~ER

documentary. Through personal
letters and dlarlee, this one-hour
biographical feature sheds new
light on the man behln(tthe military

WHA'T THE DIAPER
5EFi:VIC.E '!&gt; MOITO

Answer:"[

action highlights, analyses and

l

SANFORD AND SDN
DCIJ JOKER'S WILD
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueat:
Jonathan Miller. Part IV.
MATCH GAME
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
• FACE THE MUSIC
7:58
NEWS UPDATE
8:00
G CD GAMES PEOPLE PLioY
Tonlght' a program will feature cars

INSTALLATION - Carrie Kennedy, seated centhe Auxiliary. Mrs. Janice Daniels is the assistant
ter, was installed as president of the Auxiliary of
treasurer, and Mrs. Bearhs the volunteer cbainnan.
Veterans Mejllorial Hospital in ceremonies conducted
Other chairmen are Mrs. White, snack bar; Mrs. Metby Jessie White and Clara Burris Tuesday night. Other
zger, news reporter, and Mrs. Ethel Grueser and Mrs.
officers installed were Katheryn Metzger, vice
Clara Burris, program chairman. It was noted that the
president, seated right, and Mildred Fry, secretary,
hospital bas a need for toys for the hospitalized
Emojean Simms, treasurer; and Katy Anthony ,
children. Membership was discussed along with ways
corresponding secretary, standing left to right. Mrs. · to recruit more members. It was announced that dues
Louise Bearhs, seated left, is the retiring president of
are now payable.

Friday 's Sermonette
Each day of our life many pairs of
eyes observe' us. That first thing in
the morning when we wash, comb
OIJJ' hair or shave we see ourselves.
Wives, husbands, families, aU look
at us, some seeing us and others not
really seeing us. On our way to work
or school or shopping, eyes are
looking at us. Clerks, people in cars,
· salespeople, the policeman walking
by and little hildren. They all see us
or at least heir eyes s·ee us.
I'm thinking now about child eyes.
Uttle children who are not in school
yuet. They may look and watch us
very intently or just give us a
passing glance. They do see us
however. Ever wonder what they
see as they look at us? Is it a look of
curiosity, a look of wonder, a look of
interest, a look of fear or fright?
What do they see? We mostly will
never know. They usually do not

l

Hush Puppl~'

all·tim•
comfort

seeing our every move?
The ;next time you see a child
looking at you, pause and wonder
what those unblinking and unsmiling
eyes see as they stare iii curiosity.
They are learning eyes, but what are
they learning from us and about us?
A child will unashamedly look you
in the eye, not caring if you are
looking back. Their little eyes do not
blink or change often. It seems like a
very long time as they sometimes
watch us. Very closely they watch

I

racing arou1d a track In Holland In

··I'IE HM TO
FloHT BY TilE
RULES, AMNIE!

responsible example?
Are we worthy to be seen by these
little eyes? Is our example worthy of
imitation by these "Uttle Eyes that
See Us." - Rev. William Middleswarth, Meigs County Lutheran
CHurches.

THE MOB
DOESN'T!

IF THEY 00-IT l'liLL BE 011. JEO ••

couw

reverae; part II. of gymnastics com·

BECAUSE THEY 60T liE I SPEAK TO YOO
FIRST! I PROMISE YOO
A MOME:HT?.

Yes terday·s

UZAIRI75'

THAT, Hnru~:

'10

The Rutland Garden Club will
meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Stella Adkins. There
wiU be a plant sale at the meeting
and dues are payable.

l

r.._._..,_..__..._.._.._..._ _ _
Your " E)(fr a Toucn"

!
!

Flor ist Since 1957

~

fl~

'I

.

!

.
I
......

FLORIST

PH. 992-2644

352 E . Main , Pomeroy

Your FTD Flonst

~

!

.

!I

I

I

\'

COPP!RFII!LD Devld Copperfield
demonetratet hie up-to.date style
ot illualon In the ancient art ofmagic.
mina:)
U. S. CHRONICLE
EVERYFOURYEARSJohnEhr·
!lehman, Cieri&lt; Clifford and Joseph
Calltano join Howard K. Smith tor a
look at the growing power of the
'Prealdenl'a
Man'.
CCioaed·
Captioned) (80 mino.)
8:30 (l) DR. JACK VAN IMPE
ffi MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •••
'.'Concord•Atrport '71" 1178
CIJ FOR THE RECORD 'Certain
Practices' This Ia the powerful
atory of a doctor who challengaa
the practices of a top hoepltaleur·
geon becauaa he teart tortheltvee
of hla pattenta .
8:118 (l) NEWS UPDATE
1:00 (]).CD THURSDAY ,.GHT AT
THE MOVIES 'Rage' Stare: David
ui, Jamea Whitmore. 1980
ZOO CLUB
C1J I)D) SPECIAL MOVII! PilE·
II!NTATION 'A Rumor of War'
Stara: Bred Davia, KeiiiiCe,..dlne.

-----if]
SWISHER LOHS

,_. ~'"'-· ·-~- ""'"'. .~.. 1
Pharmacy
..... llll&lt;•rU•t. l .

-

P~ .

· tll&lt;vt.l , l :lf•.m . t.l' m,

,.I;UC I IP'TIOH$

,.,_,,,.,.. ,tl

....,H

GASOLINE ALLEY

a- N i f~l\ llll t

..__..._._._..._.._...__._.._..~

WE NOW
RETURN
TO OUR
lv1USIC!

Weekend At Meigs Inn

Gretchen,

~ou

1980

should

1:30

be asleep!~~~~~P.J

IBl. 20-20

AUSTIN CITY LIMITS 'Mal TUllo
and
Gall
Davioa'
(Cioaed·

MENU_

,OOTBALL: INSIDE THE NFL

Hoetalen Dawaon and Nick Buon-

: WINNIE

icontltra back to bring you weakly
octlon highlights, analyaea and
Rl_edlctlona from the gridiron.
WI OVER EASY Gueat: Jose
Greco. Holt: Hugh Downa.

" l'LLHAVE 10
WOrl.r-.1\ MY WAY IN -

EVERYONE'5
IGCXJD GRACE~ .

10:51
11 :00

I TOLD
YOU BHE

WAB A
GEM!

Dessert

'

I.

•.

,,

Coffee, Tea, Milk

!,
.
h

patented tc:Kmula tor loot
ccm!Orl.t-t.ah Pvp~les~ .1hoes
would ownn . Mltlloos setecl

lh&amp;Se thOel y.a~ alief '1'901'· Why?

II could ta the roll'\ ond &amp;lOin rtllliOOI BIEIO!hll'l'

Bru$hed PIQII&lt;in' , the amootngtove leother, , t!'le
e~tro lleelthonk WPPOI'I . Ihe lofl , lle~ l b le
Mlcnx:rape ... 10111 or veoll d shOemoklng
crolltmor4hlp. 'Nhatevef the rltOSon . treat vourlell
to trw ctoUtc comfort ot H~n Puppl&amp;l ~ shDM .

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHT

mae com!~ tnotl teet.

9 til 1
All: LEGAL ·
BEVERAGES SOLD

Phone 992-3629

.....

CIJ CD • IIl ®l '16'

W

ffi

1
'Thunderball'' 1M5
I]) MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• 10 "EI•
l!!!ont.Wolk" 1854

SAMANTHY BARLOW··
YOUR INITIALS AIN'T

'' B.L~'

THATS WHAT
HE CALLS ME··

ll2l •
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLIN!
.CIJ CBS LATE MDVIE 'THEJEF ·
FEASONS: Uncle Berfrom' Stare:
lube ISanford, Sherman Heme ley.
A atranger trltt to pick up Mother
Jefftraon In the elevator and her
eon George flnda the incident
amualnQ until he learn• who the
gentleman Ia. (Ropeet) 'McMIL·
LAN AND WIFE :' Tii Death Do Ua
Part' Stare : Rock Hudaon, Suaan
Saint Jomea. (Rapaot)
C1J ABC CAPTIONEO NEWS
®lMOVIE-(WESTERN)'•• "Gunflllhlollha O.K. Corral" 10157

VOUNG-UNS!

''BIRD-LEGS''

SUNRISE
4 PIECE PWS
VOCAL
'·
FROM AtHENS. OHIO

11:50 (I)CHARLIE'SANGEL.li-POUCE

SIXTEEN

Pomeroy, 0.

IWJUPOATE

llJ

JUGHAID LOVES
ME, MIZ SMITH-LOOKY WHAT
HE WRIT ON
TH' BARN

THE MEIGS INN

~

oled-Coplioned)

NEWS
JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
NIGHT OloUERY
DAVE AUENATLAIIGE
. DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueal:
onathon Mllior. Part IV.
11 :28
.W!IUPOATE
11:30
CD THI! TONIGHT SHOW
Gueate: Walter Uatthau, L4&amp;c
Davia. (80 min a.)
I]) ROSS BAGLeY SHOW
(])MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) ••• 10

: aARNEY

If ever there was o

I

m
~~= ffi~paa~;~i:TPEAI.e

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

Tossed Salad
6 oz. Kansas City Steak
Baked Potato
Vegetable

+KJ6

WEST
·Q~J

TIMES

TWELVE?

2

.A

EAST

two winners in dummy. Now

• Q 10 7

+A~432

he led his last club.
Boice Holleman , sitting
West, had been doing some
counting while all this was
going on and came to the conclusion that South held 6-2·2-3

• Q 10 9
+QJI0 963

SOUTH
.K 109864

• 53
• 87

distribution. Boice who has

.AK4

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
Weit

Pass
Pass

Nortb

East

I•
3•

. 2.
Pass
Pa s~
Pass

South

2+
4•

Opening lead :• 7

been playing bridge lor a long
time had a cinch way to hold
. South to his contract. He could
ruf! with the queen of spades
and cas h his ace of diamonds.
An overtrick saved can be
worth a lot in match points,
but Boice !ell that everyone
would not be in that spade
game and if South made lour
spades he would get a good
~c ore ,

By Oswald Jacoby
Alao Sontag

aad

Here is a defen sive gem
!rom the Mobile regionals.
South arrived at a good four-

spade contract alter East had
made a rather doubtful two·
club overcall.

ACROSS

TRANBITIONS

. GOOD NEIGHBORS

RENA Tlo SCOTTO, PRIMA
DONNA Thio program tekoa tha
viewer behind the ecenea during
rahaaraala or Puccini' a 'Manon
Leeceut' in order to profile the
private world of an opera
aratar.
1ooo- TB8_EVENING NEWS

~~n

Fruit Cup

•a

He won the club lead,
entered dummy with a high
heart and led a spade.' East
took his ace and led a second
club.
South won and cashed the
king of trumps. East showed
out. South played a second
heart to dummy. Then he
ruffed a lhird heart to set up

and perforce Boice

would gel a bad score.
Therefore, Boice risked an
overtrick by underleading his
ace of diamonds. The play
worked . East had made that
club overcall. South decided
that he held the diamond ace
and · played the jack !rom
dummy. East took his queen
and led back to his partner's
ace.

tN r:WSI 'AI't-:H I'~N H~ HPHI S ~ ASSN.)

l

m ·rtn

1! . M.tin

9·25·80

.AKJ84

i

ALLEYOOP

•Man uracturers su~s ted retai l.

..,.....,~n · •""'' • Jf •IMIII• t

!178

.Cil!lal THI! IlloGIC OF DAVID

91

Famous Amity top-grain
leather lri·fold Body Bill·
folds at a s pecial once-ayear sale price. Your choice
or super-sort. eye-catching
leathers. All are attractively
gift boY"'\Cl.

NORTH

.7 5

~ltlt-

I X Ill]"

Jumbles TA STY ROACH ENAMEL AVENUE
Answer · It mig ht be behind the painter's ideas·CANVAS
'

.J7 2

Omsk Stampede, a rugged obsta·
cle race for horaea; amateur jug-

~.

]A[ I

Sleight of hand succeeds

•• 62

THURBDAY NIGHT
IIOVIE 'Bed Nawa Beare Go to
Japan' Staro: Tony Curti a, Earle

ge$1ed by the above ca rtoon.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

pelltlon from Eugene, Ore.; the

Hollywood Park stable boy. (80
mins.)
·
I]) MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
I]) MOVIE ·(MUSICAL-cOMEDY)
•••''GentlemenPreferBiondee''

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer . as sug-

BRIDGE

and a feature on an 82-year-old

Regular·
$15.50•

To MEET MONDAY

I

gling compet ition in Fargo, N.D. :

HOW

US .

I am sure they did the same to
Jesus in his day. Is our example worthy to be seen or imitated? l wonder
as we see those little eyes that see
us. I'm sure most of us would not
want to hurt or lead astray any of
these little ones. Still, look around
you the next time you are in church
or in the store or on the street and
see how many little eyes are looking
at you and how you behave and dress
and look. Is it a good example? A

dlctlona from the gridiron.

XI I

WAS .

(An swers tomorrow)

ALLIN THE FAMILY
IBJOI FAMILY FEUD
~DUNTRY ROADS
liJ TIC TAC DOUGN
MACN!IL·LeHRER RI!PORT
NEWS
DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueat:
·
Jonathan Miller. Part IV.
7:30 C2J G BUUSEYE
Cil ZOLlo LEVITT
(]) FOOTBALL: INSIDE THE NF~

\

f.,..~.,.,..,
. ...,.,

(J I I (lJ

mask .

'

I

I DUCLOY

himself is the subject of thle

&lt;;;AVVYE!

NORIS

Downa.

oaed-Captloned)
.ABC NEWS
NEWS UPDATE

PATTON: THE MAN BEHIND
THE MYTH 'Old Blood and Guto'

•

You must be 21 or accompanied by parents or I~al guardian.
FRIDAY
GAWA-MEIGS Community Action Agency free clothing day,
Friday, 9 a.m. to 12 noon at agency's
clothing bank located in the old high
school building at Cheshire,
·

FRIENDS
ABC NEWS
® 3::2·1 CONTACT
8:30
G CD NBC I!EWS
I]) MUSIC
I]) BOB NEWHART SHOW
Flo~ THE MUSIC
I]) ®l CBS NEWS
llllolNSTREAMING
OVER EASY Guest: Jose

I

': Sentinel Social Calendar
SATIJRDAY
KNIGHTS OF Pythias monthly
dinner at K of P Hall, Gallipolis;
6:30p.m. Covered dish, table ser-

I]) BACKYARD
I])
CAROL BURNETT AND

icontlare back to bring you weekly

\

What kind of example do we give
them to look at? Children are great
imitators, so we need to be on our
guard. Are we crossing agains the
light, are we dirty and unshaven and
in need of a bath and hair cut, are we
drunk or worse smoking or doing
some other thing that is wrong or
sinful? What example are we setting
for them. You see we do have
responsibilities. No one can do as he
pleases or say all manner of filthy
things anytime unless he lives on a
deserted island.
As we live and work and walk on
the streets we have little eyes
always watching us. They look and
maybe they will imitate us. How
should we act and behave? Are we
proud to haye these intent little eyes

THURSDAY
MEIGS Garden Club Association,
fall meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Trinity Church. Pomeroy Garden
Club to serve, program by Fernwood
Garden Club. Annual Christmas
show schedule to be outlined by
Margaret Ella Lewis.
TWIN CITY SHRINETTES, 8 p.m.
Thursday, home of Mrs. Beulah
Ewing.

EVENING

,,oo CIJ8(J)ii(I)(!D)lll\m NEWS

Hoata Len Dawson and Nick Buon·

speak.

DOUBLE FIVE GENERATION- Pictured is one of Meigs County's few double five generation families. The group includes front 1to
r, Mrs. Helen Miller, Middleport, mother of Herbert L. Miller, Ra~ine,
left at the back, and Mrs. Elizabeth Roush, mother of Frances M.
Roush Miller, standing at the right on the back row. Between Mr. and
Mrs. Miller are their daughter, Loretta Flynn, Wiilterville and next to
her is her son, Donald J. Flynn, Steubenville, holding his ;on, Michael
Joseph Flynn. Mrs. Miller will be 83 on Oct. 30 and Mrs. Roush is now
80.

The family of Mrs. Beatrice Buck
hosted a surprise party Sunday
honoring her on her 80th birthday l!t
the Route 33 roadside park.
Attending the celebration were
Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Buck, Jim Candice, Brenda and Belinda; Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas DuPerow, Levi and
Jesse, Mr. and Mrs. Richard McGill,
Kevin and Lori Ann GUiette, Rick
Hooper, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Dumolt,
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Dumolt, Stevie
and Nicky, Mrs. George McCauley,
Brian, Karen and Darren, all of New
Lexington; Mr. and Mrs. Wesley
McCauley, Mark and Gary, Mr. and
Mrs. Eddy Buck, Somerset; Mr. ang
Mrs. Pat Miller, Mary, Susan anq
Brad, Zanesville; Glorida Wallace,
Natalie and Buck, Lancaster; Mr.
and Mrs. Jon Buck, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Gail Buck, Pomeroy.

I KNOW!!

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN!

REALLI{?

SORRV, Mf:J.AM

JUST A
WILD GUESS

12:30
12:58
1:00
1:30
1:40

2:00
2:00
2:28

2:30

WOMAN ChlrHe'a Angale··'Maoic
Fire' Sabrina, Kelly andKrlelnvade
the wcrld or lllueion to help a flame·
throwing magician prove he ia not
moonllghtlngaeaneraonltt.Pollce
Women·- ' Tho Stalklno of Jooy
!,!_orr' (Ropoat; 2 hra., 15 mlno.)
CllleCHARUE'SANGELS'Mogic
Five' Sobrlna, Krlo. and Kelly In·
vade the world of illuaion to help a
flame-throwing magician prove he
nQtmoonllghtiflg a a an areonlat.
• TOMORROW
NEWS
NEWS UPDATE
KOINONIA
ROBERT
SCHUUER
CC.APTI9NED)
I]) MOVIE -(ORAMA) ••• " Tholnno" 1012
·
IJIEUEVE
• NEWS
NEWS UPDAT~
ROSS BAG~EY SHOW

l
l

40 Beseech

I Noted Auntie
5 Gay Nineties

wolf

DOWN
1 Word with

stone or post
2 Eager
12 Flll the lungs
3 Proffer
13 Go for
4 Opposite
14 Director
of WSW
Spielberg
5 Avariciolis
Yesterday's Answer
15 Dutch
ones
19 Prefi• for
26 Cull
commune
6 Cavities
phrase
28 Low point
16 For each
(anat.)
or
site
32
"Caro
17 First lady
7 "- Stoops 21 Supersede
Nome," e.g.
18 Horse or
to Conquer" 22 Stallion or
33 Word
soap 8 ConSider
Stallone, e.g.
with Moses
20 Tease
9 Heightened 23 Legislated
35 Donkey
21 Egg-shaped
10 Backed off 24 Prepare
(Fr.)
figures
16
Bombard
a
path
36
Snake
%2 Boundary
%3 Tennis queen
24 swnnioned
25ltalian

II Czar

river

26 Tossed 27 Jazz
drwmner,
-Blakey
28 "-?, well
hardly ever"
%9 Wine
vineyard (Fr.)
30 Frothy drink 1=+-+31 Burmese
knife ·
34 Screed
36 Hairdo style
37 Paradisiacal
38 Loam
39 Forsake

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One leller simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's. X for the two O's. etc. Si ngle letters.
apostrophes, the len gth and formation or the words are all
hlnls. Each day the code letten are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
VA

AQRA

VLZJPPVCX .U

VP
LRB

GULULCUGP

AJ

WUPZRVG

AQRA

QVP

SJ G
E QJ

QUXZUG

VP JLBVZJAUBA : - MUGULF ARFXJG
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE TRUE DEMOCRACY IS THAT
WHICH PERMITS EACH INDIVIDUAL TO PUT FORTH IDS
MAXIMUM EFFORT.-LOUIS PASTEUR
. C&gt; 1MO King '-tu,_

Syndicl1• ! Inc. •

�1
_DICK TRACY

~The Daily Sentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 25, 1980

' ol I .,. ' I "' . . ... , .. .......J 1 ..... ... L, _.. , .ooiU -'

Surprise
party held

Your

Television
Viewing

ll lt\fNf fii}'ft

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~(.!:1~ ~

byHenri ArnotdandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one leNer to ea c ~ square. to form

rour ord1naf)l words.

SEPT. 25, !080

.
By Ellen Bell, Meigs County Ubrarian
In the time before election day, we expect to tell you what you and
your ·libraries DON'T have. Today, I want to take up the question of
what the. libraries DO have to offer you.
First, your libraries have books. At the last count (in August), the
libraries owned a total of 13,127 boks - hardback and paperback combined.
Second, your libraries have records, over 125 records altogether.
Third, your libraries own a 16 nun. fibn projector (a recent gift
from the Friends of the Meigs County Ubraries) and have another
that belongs to OVAL, the C()o()p to which yhour libraries belong.
Fourth, your libraries own an opaque projector; a gift from a
Meigs Countian who wanted to share with you.
Fifth, your libraries own inagazines an pamphlets.
. All these are things your libraries own which you may borrow, for
FREE.
·What else is available at the libraries? The libraries can borrow
(for you to use) more than 700 fiims and fiimstrips from the State
Ubrary Service Center at Caldwell. The libraries can borrow from
other libraries (for you to use) most books that the local libraries don't
own.
Both the Pomeroy and Middleport libraries can now make copies
of important papers, pages from books, and so on for 25 cents a page.
Both libraries have Adult Basic Education learning centers on
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. (The Middleport center is open
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; the Pomeroy center is open from 6 p.m. to 9
p.m.)
Sometimes, the libraries have programs. On Oct. 11, for example,
Chuck Carroll, Mr. Snake Man, will be at the Middleport Public
Ubrary with some serpentine friends io show you first-hand how to tell·
the difference between "good" snakes and "bad" snakes.
The only service for which the libraries charge is making copies.
Every other service is FREE.
. Your libraries have a lot to offer you. Why not stop in and check
.them out?

Home Health Week designated
The Ohio Council of Home Health
Agencies, Inc. has proclaimed Sept.
28 through Oct. 4 as Honie Health .
Week in Ohio. Home Health Agencies in Ohio will be promoting the
theme, "There's No Place Uke
Home" to encourage interaction between home health agencies and the
communities they serve and to show
appreciation for the work done by
their employees.
Home Health Service often makes
it possible for a patient to be
discharged from the hospital and
continue to receive necessary
professional care. This allows the
patient to recuperate at home,
creating a savings in expense.
Patients of all ages are seen through
the home health program when services are needed and referrals are
made to the agency.
Veterans Memorial Hospital,

sing, Physical Therapy and Home
Health Aide visits to residents living
in Meigs County. Three nurses, two
aides, one physical therapist and one
secretary serve on our Home Health
Staff.
Since service was initiated in 1971,
the organizlltion has made 22,221
visits and traveled 284,379 miles
throughout Mei!ls County.
A Home Health Advisory .Committee made up of members from
the community along with members
of the hospital starr; work closely
with Supervisor, Edna Russell, in
the continuing growth of this
program. Edna Russell, R.N. is
director for the Home Health Agency.
For further information regarding
home health care, call Veterans
Memorial Hospital - Home Health
Service at 992-2104; Ext. 44.

/

·•.
f.\.
..

t\

,...._

'I

-

PRECEPI'OR BETA Beta Chap. tyer, Beta Sigma Phi, 7:45 _p.m.
' Thursday iii the Riverboat of the
Athens County Savings and Loan Co.
.. Preceptor Chapter, Beta Beta, of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet at
· 7:45 p.m. this evening at the Meigs
Branch, Athens County Savngs and

. Loan.

vice.
·
NATIONAL HUNTING and
fishing day, Saturday, Royal Oak
Park. Prizes, exhibits and par·
ticipation events for youngsters 5
and older. Signup begins at 9:15a.m.
Signup begins at 9: 15 a.m. Day sponsored and organized by Ken Amsbary Chaputer, Izaak Walton
League and other sportsman clu!)!!
of the county.

m

I

CAPTAiN EASY
~OOK , MAPAME: &amp;OR&amp;IA!

WHY, E'II~Y-!!

HOW DARE YOU

DON'T SIVf Ml? AIJY OF
'fOUR POI!o0NOU5 !&gt;Wr:er

Greco.

TALK TOME

~II&lt;E TIIATi!

TALl&lt; OR YOIJR PHOt,JY
CROCOPi~J? TI?AR5!

8:58

!VE; HAD IT

· WlrH YOU

A~D

7:00

YOUR SLeAZY
i-CAM~! WE'RE

'-

i

Hoat:

Hugh

T'Hf(OU6Hf'INITO: 'IOU

rn

~Ji:T~~~~~ER

documentary. Through personal
letters and dlarlee, this one-hour
biographical feature sheds new
light on the man behln(tthe military

WHA'T THE DIAPER
5EFi:VIC.E '!&gt; MOITO

Answer:"[

action highlights, analyses and

l

SANFORD AND SDN
DCIJ JOKER'S WILD
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueat:
Jonathan Miller. Part IV.
MATCH GAME
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
• FACE THE MUSIC
7:58
NEWS UPDATE
8:00
G CD GAMES PEOPLE PLioY
Tonlght' a program will feature cars

INSTALLATION - Carrie Kennedy, seated centhe Auxiliary. Mrs. Janice Daniels is the assistant
ter, was installed as president of the Auxiliary of
treasurer, and Mrs. Bearhs the volunteer cbainnan.
Veterans Mejllorial Hospital in ceremonies conducted
Other chairmen are Mrs. White, snack bar; Mrs. Metby Jessie White and Clara Burris Tuesday night. Other
zger, news reporter, and Mrs. Ethel Grueser and Mrs.
officers installed were Katheryn Metzger, vice
Clara Burris, program chairman. It was noted that the
president, seated right, and Mildred Fry, secretary,
hospital bas a need for toys for the hospitalized
Emojean Simms, treasurer; and Katy Anthony ,
children. Membership was discussed along with ways
corresponding secretary, standing left to right. Mrs. · to recruit more members. It was announced that dues
Louise Bearhs, seated left, is the retiring president of
are now payable.

Friday 's Sermonette
Each day of our life many pairs of
eyes observe' us. That first thing in
the morning when we wash, comb
OIJJ' hair or shave we see ourselves.
Wives, husbands, families, aU look
at us, some seeing us and others not
really seeing us. On our way to work
or school or shopping, eyes are
looking at us. Clerks, people in cars,
· salespeople, the policeman walking
by and little hildren. They all see us
or at least heir eyes s·ee us.
I'm thinking now about child eyes.
Uttle children who are not in school
yuet. They may look and watch us
very intently or just give us a
passing glance. They do see us
however. Ever wonder what they
see as they look at us? Is it a look of
curiosity, a look of wonder, a look of
interest, a look of fear or fright?
What do they see? We mostly will
never know. They usually do not

l

Hush Puppl~'

all·tim•
comfort

seeing our every move?
The ;next time you see a child
looking at you, pause and wonder
what those unblinking and unsmiling
eyes see as they stare iii curiosity.
They are learning eyes, but what are
they learning from us and about us?
A child will unashamedly look you
in the eye, not caring if you are
looking back. Their little eyes do not
blink or change often. It seems like a
very long time as they sometimes
watch us. Very closely they watch

I

racing arou1d a track In Holland In

··I'IE HM TO
FloHT BY TilE
RULES, AMNIE!

responsible example?
Are we worthy to be seen by these
little eyes? Is our example worthy of
imitation by these "Uttle Eyes that
See Us." - Rev. William Middleswarth, Meigs County Lutheran
CHurches.

THE MOB
DOESN'T!

IF THEY 00-IT l'liLL BE 011. JEO ••

couw

reverae; part II. of gymnastics com·

BECAUSE THEY 60T liE I SPEAK TO YOO
FIRST! I PROMISE YOO
A MOME:HT?.

Yes terday·s

UZAIRI75'

THAT, Hnru~:

'10

The Rutland Garden Club will
meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Stella Adkins. There
wiU be a plant sale at the meeting
and dues are payable.

l

r.._._..,_..__..._.._.._..._ _ _
Your " E)(fr a Toucn"

!
!

Flor ist Since 1957

~

fl~

'I

.

!

.
I
......

FLORIST

PH. 992-2644

352 E . Main , Pomeroy

Your FTD Flonst

~

!

.

!I

I

I

\'

COPP!RFII!LD Devld Copperfield
demonetratet hie up-to.date style
ot illualon In the ancient art ofmagic.
mina:)
U. S. CHRONICLE
EVERYFOURYEARSJohnEhr·
!lehman, Cieri&lt; Clifford and Joseph
Calltano join Howard K. Smith tor a
look at the growing power of the
'Prealdenl'a
Man'.
CCioaed·
Captioned) (80 mino.)
8:30 (l) DR. JACK VAN IMPE
ffi MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •••
'.'Concord•Atrport '71" 1178
CIJ FOR THE RECORD 'Certain
Practices' This Ia the powerful
atory of a doctor who challengaa
the practices of a top hoepltaleur·
geon becauaa he teart tortheltvee
of hla pattenta .
8:118 (l) NEWS UPDATE
1:00 (]).CD THURSDAY ,.GHT AT
THE MOVIES 'Rage' Stare: David
ui, Jamea Whitmore. 1980
ZOO CLUB
C1J I)D) SPECIAL MOVII! PilE·
II!NTATION 'A Rumor of War'
Stara: Bred Davia, KeiiiiCe,..dlne.

-----if]
SWISHER LOHS

,_. ~'"'-· ·-~- ""'"'. .~.. 1
Pharmacy
..... llll&lt;•rU•t. l .

-

P~ .

· tll&lt;vt.l , l :lf•.m . t.l' m,

,.I;UC I IP'TIOH$

,.,_,,,.,.. ,tl

....,H

GASOLINE ALLEY

a- N i f~l\ llll t

..__..._._._..._.._...__._.._..~

WE NOW
RETURN
TO OUR
lv1USIC!

Weekend At Meigs Inn

Gretchen,

~ou

1980

should

1:30

be asleep!~~~~~P.J

IBl. 20-20

AUSTIN CITY LIMITS 'Mal TUllo
and
Gall
Davioa'
(Cioaed·

MENU_

,OOTBALL: INSIDE THE NFL

Hoetalen Dawaon and Nick Buon-

: WINNIE

icontltra back to bring you weakly
octlon highlights, analyaea and
Rl_edlctlona from the gridiron.
WI OVER EASY Gueat: Jose
Greco. Holt: Hugh Downa.

" l'LLHAVE 10
WOrl.r-.1\ MY WAY IN -

EVERYONE'5
IGCXJD GRACE~ .

10:51
11 :00

I TOLD
YOU BHE

WAB A
GEM!

Dessert

'

I.

•.

,,

Coffee, Tea, Milk

!,
.
h

patented tc:Kmula tor loot
ccm!Orl.t-t.ah Pvp~les~ .1hoes
would ownn . Mltlloos setecl

lh&amp;Se thOel y.a~ alief '1'901'· Why?

II could ta the roll'\ ond &amp;lOin rtllliOOI BIEIO!hll'l'

Bru$hed PIQII&lt;in' , the amootngtove leother, , t!'le
e~tro lleelthonk WPPOI'I . Ihe lofl , lle~ l b le
Mlcnx:rape ... 10111 or veoll d shOemoklng
crolltmor4hlp. 'Nhatevef the rltOSon . treat vourlell
to trw ctoUtc comfort ot H~n Puppl&amp;l ~ shDM .

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHT

mae com!~ tnotl teet.

9 til 1
All: LEGAL ·
BEVERAGES SOLD

Phone 992-3629

.....

CIJ CD • IIl ®l '16'

W

ffi

1
'Thunderball'' 1M5
I]) MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• 10 "EI•
l!!!ont.Wolk" 1854

SAMANTHY BARLOW··
YOUR INITIALS AIN'T

'' B.L~'

THATS WHAT
HE CALLS ME··

ll2l •
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLIN!
.CIJ CBS LATE MDVIE 'THEJEF ·
FEASONS: Uncle Berfrom' Stare:
lube ISanford, Sherman Heme ley.
A atranger trltt to pick up Mother
Jefftraon In the elevator and her
eon George flnda the incident
amualnQ until he learn• who the
gentleman Ia. (Ropeet) 'McMIL·
LAN AND WIFE :' Tii Death Do Ua
Part' Stare : Rock Hudaon, Suaan
Saint Jomea. (Rapaot)
C1J ABC CAPTIONEO NEWS
®lMOVIE-(WESTERN)'•• "Gunflllhlollha O.K. Corral" 10157

VOUNG-UNS!

''BIRD-LEGS''

SUNRISE
4 PIECE PWS
VOCAL
'·
FROM AtHENS. OHIO

11:50 (I)CHARLIE'SANGEL.li-POUCE

SIXTEEN

Pomeroy, 0.

IWJUPOATE

llJ

JUGHAID LOVES
ME, MIZ SMITH-LOOKY WHAT
HE WRIT ON
TH' BARN

THE MEIGS INN

~

oled-Coplioned)

NEWS
JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
NIGHT OloUERY
DAVE AUENATLAIIGE
. DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueal:
onathon Mllior. Part IV.
11 :28
.W!IUPOATE
11:30
CD THI! TONIGHT SHOW
Gueate: Walter Uatthau, L4&amp;c
Davia. (80 min a.)
I]) ROSS BAGLeY SHOW
(])MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) ••• 10

: aARNEY

If ever there was o

I

m
~~= ffi~paa~;~i:TPEAI.e

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

Tossed Salad
6 oz. Kansas City Steak
Baked Potato
Vegetable

+KJ6

WEST
·Q~J

TIMES

TWELVE?

2

.A

EAST

two winners in dummy. Now

• Q 10 7

+A~432

he led his last club.
Boice Holleman , sitting
West, had been doing some
counting while all this was
going on and came to the conclusion that South held 6-2·2-3

• Q 10 9
+QJI0 963

SOUTH
.K 109864

• 53
• 87

distribution. Boice who has

.AK4

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
Weit

Pass
Pass

Nortb

East

I•
3•

. 2.
Pass
Pa s~
Pass

South

2+
4•

Opening lead :• 7

been playing bridge lor a long
time had a cinch way to hold
. South to his contract. He could
ruf! with the queen of spades
and cas h his ace of diamonds.
An overtrick saved can be
worth a lot in match points,
but Boice !ell that everyone
would not be in that spade
game and if South made lour
spades he would get a good
~c ore ,

By Oswald Jacoby
Alao Sontag

aad

Here is a defen sive gem
!rom the Mobile regionals.
South arrived at a good four-

spade contract alter East had
made a rather doubtful two·
club overcall.

ACROSS

TRANBITIONS

. GOOD NEIGHBORS

RENA Tlo SCOTTO, PRIMA
DONNA Thio program tekoa tha
viewer behind the ecenea during
rahaaraala or Puccini' a 'Manon
Leeceut' in order to profile the
private world of an opera
aratar.
1ooo- TB8_EVENING NEWS

~~n

Fruit Cup

•a

He won the club lead,
entered dummy with a high
heart and led a spade.' East
took his ace and led a second
club.
South won and cashed the
king of trumps. East showed
out. South played a second
heart to dummy. Then he
ruffed a lhird heart to set up

and perforce Boice

would gel a bad score.
Therefore, Boice risked an
overtrick by underleading his
ace of diamonds. The play
worked . East had made that
club overcall. South decided
that he held the diamond ace
and · played the jack !rom
dummy. East took his queen
and led back to his partner's
ace.

tN r:WSI 'AI't-:H I'~N H~ HPHI S ~ ASSN.)

l

m ·rtn

1! . M.tin

9·25·80

.AKJ84

i

ALLEYOOP

•Man uracturers su~s ted retai l.

..,.....,~n · •""'' • Jf •IMIII• t

!178

.Cil!lal THI! IlloGIC OF DAVID

91

Famous Amity top-grain
leather lri·fold Body Bill·
folds at a s pecial once-ayear sale price. Your choice
or super-sort. eye-catching
leathers. All are attractively
gift boY"'\Cl.

NORTH

.7 5

~ltlt-

I X Ill]"

Jumbles TA STY ROACH ENAMEL AVENUE
Answer · It mig ht be behind the painter's ideas·CANVAS
'

.J7 2

Omsk Stampede, a rugged obsta·
cle race for horaea; amateur jug-

~.

]A[ I

Sleight of hand succeeds

•• 62

THURBDAY NIGHT
IIOVIE 'Bed Nawa Beare Go to
Japan' Staro: Tony Curti a, Earle

ge$1ed by the above ca rtoon.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

pelltlon from Eugene, Ore.; the

Hollywood Park stable boy. (80
mins.)
·
I]) MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
I]) MOVIE ·(MUSICAL-cOMEDY)
•••''GentlemenPreferBiondee''

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer . as sug-

BRIDGE

and a feature on an 82-year-old

Regular·
$15.50•

To MEET MONDAY

I

gling compet ition in Fargo, N.D. :

HOW

US .

I am sure they did the same to
Jesus in his day. Is our example worthy to be seen or imitated? l wonder
as we see those little eyes that see
us. I'm sure most of us would not
want to hurt or lead astray any of
these little ones. Still, look around
you the next time you are in church
or in the store or on the street and
see how many little eyes are looking
at you and how you behave and dress
and look. Is it a good example? A

dlctlona from the gridiron.

XI I

WAS .

(An swers tomorrow)

ALLIN THE FAMILY
IBJOI FAMILY FEUD
~DUNTRY ROADS
liJ TIC TAC DOUGN
MACN!IL·LeHRER RI!PORT
NEWS
DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueat:
·
Jonathan Miller. Part IV.
7:30 C2J G BUUSEYE
Cil ZOLlo LEVITT
(]) FOOTBALL: INSIDE THE NF~

\

f.,..~.,.,..,
. ...,.,

(J I I (lJ

mask .

'

I

I DUCLOY

himself is the subject of thle

&lt;;;AVVYE!

NORIS

Downa.

oaed-Captloned)
.ABC NEWS
NEWS UPDATE

PATTON: THE MAN BEHIND
THE MYTH 'Old Blood and Guto'

•

You must be 21 or accompanied by parents or I~al guardian.
FRIDAY
GAWA-MEIGS Community Action Agency free clothing day,
Friday, 9 a.m. to 12 noon at agency's
clothing bank located in the old high
school building at Cheshire,
·

FRIENDS
ABC NEWS
® 3::2·1 CONTACT
8:30
G CD NBC I!EWS
I]) MUSIC
I]) BOB NEWHART SHOW
Flo~ THE MUSIC
I]) ®l CBS NEWS
llllolNSTREAMING
OVER EASY Guest: Jose

I

': Sentinel Social Calendar
SATIJRDAY
KNIGHTS OF Pythias monthly
dinner at K of P Hall, Gallipolis;
6:30p.m. Covered dish, table ser-

I]) BACKYARD
I])
CAROL BURNETT AND

icontlare back to bring you weekly

\

What kind of example do we give
them to look at? Children are great
imitators, so we need to be on our
guard. Are we crossing agains the
light, are we dirty and unshaven and
in need of a bath and hair cut, are we
drunk or worse smoking or doing
some other thing that is wrong or
sinful? What example are we setting
for them. You see we do have
responsibilities. No one can do as he
pleases or say all manner of filthy
things anytime unless he lives on a
deserted island.
As we live and work and walk on
the streets we have little eyes
always watching us. They look and
maybe they will imitate us. How
should we act and behave? Are we
proud to haye these intent little eyes

THURSDAY
MEIGS Garden Club Association,
fall meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Trinity Church. Pomeroy Garden
Club to serve, program by Fernwood
Garden Club. Annual Christmas
show schedule to be outlined by
Margaret Ella Lewis.
TWIN CITY SHRINETTES, 8 p.m.
Thursday, home of Mrs. Beulah
Ewing.

EVENING

,,oo CIJ8(J)ii(I)(!D)lll\m NEWS

Hoata Len Dawson and Nick Buon·

speak.

DOUBLE FIVE GENERATION- Pictured is one of Meigs County's few double five generation families. The group includes front 1to
r, Mrs. Helen Miller, Middleport, mother of Herbert L. Miller, Ra~ine,
left at the back, and Mrs. Elizabeth Roush, mother of Frances M.
Roush Miller, standing at the right on the back row. Between Mr. and
Mrs. Miller are their daughter, Loretta Flynn, Wiilterville and next to
her is her son, Donald J. Flynn, Steubenville, holding his ;on, Michael
Joseph Flynn. Mrs. Miller will be 83 on Oct. 30 and Mrs. Roush is now
80.

The family of Mrs. Beatrice Buck
hosted a surprise party Sunday
honoring her on her 80th birthday l!t
the Route 33 roadside park.
Attending the celebration were
Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Buck, Jim Candice, Brenda and Belinda; Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas DuPerow, Levi and
Jesse, Mr. and Mrs. Richard McGill,
Kevin and Lori Ann GUiette, Rick
Hooper, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Dumolt,
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Dumolt, Stevie
and Nicky, Mrs. George McCauley,
Brian, Karen and Darren, all of New
Lexington; Mr. and Mrs. Wesley
McCauley, Mark and Gary, Mr. and
Mrs. Eddy Buck, Somerset; Mr. ang
Mrs. Pat Miller, Mary, Susan anq
Brad, Zanesville; Glorida Wallace,
Natalie and Buck, Lancaster; Mr.
and Mrs. Jon Buck, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Gail Buck, Pomeroy.

I KNOW!!

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN!

REALLI{?

SORRV, Mf:J.AM

JUST A
WILD GUESS

12:30
12:58
1:00
1:30
1:40

2:00
2:00
2:28

2:30

WOMAN ChlrHe'a Angale··'Maoic
Fire' Sabrina, Kelly andKrlelnvade
the wcrld or lllueion to help a flame·
throwing magician prove he ia not
moonllghtlngaeaneraonltt.Pollce
Women·- ' Tho Stalklno of Jooy
!,!_orr' (Ropoat; 2 hra., 15 mlno.)
CllleCHARUE'SANGELS'Mogic
Five' Sobrlna, Krlo. and Kelly In·
vade the world of illuaion to help a
flame-throwing magician prove he
nQtmoonllghtiflg a a an areonlat.
• TOMORROW
NEWS
NEWS UPDATE
KOINONIA
ROBERT
SCHUUER
CC.APTI9NED)
I]) MOVIE -(ORAMA) ••• " Tholnno" 1012
·
IJIEUEVE
• NEWS
NEWS UPDAT~
ROSS BAG~EY SHOW

l
l

40 Beseech

I Noted Auntie
5 Gay Nineties

wolf

DOWN
1 Word with

stone or post
2 Eager
12 Flll the lungs
3 Proffer
13 Go for
4 Opposite
14 Director
of WSW
Spielberg
5 Avariciolis
Yesterday's Answer
15 Dutch
ones
19 Prefi• for
26 Cull
commune
6 Cavities
phrase
28 Low point
16 For each
(anat.)
or
site
32
"Caro
17 First lady
7 "- Stoops 21 Supersede
Nome," e.g.
18 Horse or
to Conquer" 22 Stallion or
33 Word
soap 8 ConSider
Stallone, e.g.
with Moses
20 Tease
9 Heightened 23 Legislated
35 Donkey
21 Egg-shaped
10 Backed off 24 Prepare
(Fr.)
figures
16
Bombard
a
path
36
Snake
%2 Boundary
%3 Tennis queen
24 swnnioned
25ltalian

II Czar

river

26 Tossed 27 Jazz
drwmner,
-Blakey
28 "-?, well
hardly ever"
%9 Wine
vineyard (Fr.)
30 Frothy drink 1=+-+31 Burmese
knife ·
34 Screed
36 Hairdo style
37 Paradisiacal
38 Loam
39 Forsake

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One leller simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's. X for the two O's. etc. Si ngle letters.
apostrophes, the len gth and formation or the words are all
hlnls. Each day the code letten are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
VA

AQRA

VLZJPPVCX .U

VP
LRB

GULULCUGP

AJ

WUPZRVG

AQRA

QVP

SJ G
E QJ

QUXZUG

VP JLBVZJAUBA : - MUGULF ARFXJG
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE TRUE DEMOCRACY IS THAT
WHICH PERMITS EACH INDIVIDUAL TO PUT FORTH IDS
MAXIMUM EFFORT.-LOUIS PASTEUR
. C&gt; 1MO King '-tu,_

Syndicl1• ! Inc. •

�..

9-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Sept. 2S,l980

·.-.3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept 25, 1980

:; Chairman of board retires

Congress seeks answers to
Arkansas missile explosion

'

:Columbus official addresses
~ual meeting Monday
Dr. James M. Shulman, Chief of
the Bureau of Drug Abuse, Columbus, was guest speaker during Monilay night's annual dinner meetir)g of
Ule Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Mental
J'{ealth Board. The meeting was held
at the Down Under Restaurant in
Gallipolis.
role
: {)r. Shulman emphasized
¢ prevention in maintaining good
•physical and mental health. Stress
imd its effect on the body, what can
be done to recognize it and the support systems individuals can call
'upon to deal with it, were added
jloints. "We can help ourselves by
tlrawing on our own energy," he
said. "Mental Health professionals
are urged to Identify and support
preventative techniques. Look to
prevention, do it yourself or seek
professional jluidsnce before life
problems become too big and stress
tO., damaging."

tne

Spe&lt;:ial recognition was given to
the retiring chairman. of the board,
Annette Levine of Wellston.
Executive Director, Maxine Plum·
mer, thanked Mrs. Levine for "your
leadership for a caring society and
your input into dramatic changes in
public understanding about mental
illness, not only in our three-county
area, but in the entire State of Ohio."
John C. Rice of Meigs County was
introduced as the new board chair·
man. Serving with Mr. Rice will be
vice-chairman, Dr. Richard B. Simpson, Gallia County; secretary,
Virginia Blazewicz, Meigs County;
and treasurer, Ann Niebling,
Jackson County.
Jeffrey B. Paddock of Holzer
Medical Center, Social Services
Department, was introduced as a
new board member from Gallia
County.

PASSES BOARD- Tammie
DeBord, a June, 1980, graduate of
Hocking Technical CoUege with
an associate degree In nursing,
has received word from the State
.of Ohio Board of Nursing
Education
and
Nurse
Registration that she has passed
the state board examination for
registered nurses. Miss DeBord
graduated from Hocking
TechDical College with a 3.87
grade point average. She Is ·now
employed at Doctor~ Hospital In
Nelsonvllle.

Neville

RECEIVES PLATE - Mrs. Levine received specially designed plate
,in honor of her many years of service with the Mental Health Board.

Health department offers flu shots
The Meigs County Health Depart·
IJient will be administering flu ,vaccine at the Senior Citizens Center on
0et. &amp;-7 from 9 a.m. to 12 noon each
day. Because of the limited supply
available, the vaccine will be limited
to persons at increased risk of ad-

A UleDI Uvettock Sales
Setun:lay1 Aucdou
&amp;!pt. tt, ltse

Total Head foil
" CATTLE PRICES:
Feeder Steers: {Good and Cho!ce ) :m-500 lbs.
66-71.30: 500-700 Ills. 57-9$,75.
Feeder He!(ers: {Goodandelx.li:ce) JOO..SOOJbs.
6:1-70; 500-700 II&gt;;. 5H2.75 ,
Feeder Bulls: (Good and Choice) 300{iOO Jbs.
61.~73.00; 500-700 lbs. 53.1~&lt;11.

Slaughter Bulls: (Over 1.1100 lbo.J44.5G-OO.OO.

Slaughter Cows: Utilltl~ 46-52 ; Canners and
Cutters 35.:;o..t:~ . § .
Cow and Calf Pairs: (By the Unll) 47G-600.
Veals · (CHoice and Prime) 64.50-15.
Baby Galves: (By the Head) 39-132.00.
.HOG PRICES ,
Hogs: (No. 1, Barrows and Gilts) 200-230 lbs.

;&amp;.50-17 . .
Butcher Sows 34.20-44.25.
Butcher Boars »-39.20.
Feeder Pigs (By the Head ) 12-25.
SHEEP PRICES:
Slaughter Lambs 45-57.50.
Feeder Lambs t~.

OHIO VALLEY
UVESTOCK CO.
MARKET REPORT

"All prices taken from the auction of Saturday,
Sfpt. 00. TRENDS: Feeder CatUe J4-7.00, cows
$1 to $2.50 lower. Veal Calves steady,

Total Hood 711
Feeder Steers : Good and Choice 250 to 300 lbs.
66.lo-73.50: 300 to400 111.50-71.10: 100 to500 Jbo.IW70;.-500 to &amp;00 lbs. 62.50-M.OO; fm to 700 Ills. 11066~; 700 to 800 lbs. 57-64; 800 and over 56.50&amp;2.10.
Feeder Heifers: Good and Cholce250to300 lbS.
_ , 300 to 100 11&gt;1. _, 400 to 500 lbs. 80.5067.10; 500to 6110 lbo. 51&lt;1fl.so, 6110 to700 11&gt;1. 57,50u , 700to61101bo. -.50; 6110andover5UI.I41.
Feeder BullJ!: Good and Choice 250 to 300 lbo.
&amp;5 lo 71 : 300 to 400 lbo. 82.50-70; 300 to 100 lbs. 6261.50; 400 to 500 lbs. -.10: 500 to 500 lbo. ~
111.:1.0: 6110 to 7110 lbs. 52.~.10; 7110 to 100 lbs. 5611.00; 800 and (]Ver M.SO«&lt;.
Hobteln oteeraand bu1lJ! 300to61101bs.50&lt;;1.
Bulls (1,000 lbi'J. and over) 51).42.50.
Slaughter Cows Ulilltiel!l 41.50--40.60; Canners
and Cuttera3'i' .50-43.25.
Cows and Calves (by the head}00N40.
Vealcalves70-91.
Baby calves ts.-110.
HOGS
Top Hop (210,.230)411-49.

verse consequences of influenza.
Conditions predisposing to such
risk include:
-Persons age 65 and older.
-Those who have an acquired or
congenital heart disease associated
with altered circulatory dynamics,
both actual and potenttal.
-Persons with any chronic disorder with compromised pulmonary
function.
-Those who have chronic renal
disease with azotemia or the
nephrotic syndrome.
-Persons with diabetes, or
chronic, . severe anemia, or conditions which compromise the iin·
mune mechanism.
Persons age 28 or older will
require only one dose of the 1~1
influenza vaccine.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES SEPr. U
Sharon Bailey, Michael Barcus
Jr., Lucille Bearhs, Mrs. John Boyd
and son, Harold Brinker, Stanton
Burdette, Michael Burns, Keith Carter, Jason Clagg, Doris Dixon, Den·
nis Doddrlll, Eleanore Donnley,
Mona Forrest, Helen Halstead, Anna Hanunond, ELizabeth Hill,
Richard Jones, Clyde Law, Freds
Long, Mrs. Tony McCoy and
dsughter, Mrs. Dennis McFarland
and son, Marcus McKeen, Everett
Michael, Mrs. donald Miller and
daughter, Mrs. Mark Mlller and
daughter, Charlotte Mullins, Shasta
Murphy, Amer Myers, Douglas
Priddy, Ralph Ross, Paul Sheets,
Ardis Shirley, MelodleStumbo, Mrs.
Roger Swann and daughter, Roger
Walker, Roy Whaley, Jeff Willis,
Peggy Wood.

(Continued from page 5)
Roseville, Calif.; James and Betty
Neville, Pl. Pleasant: Barbara Hill,'
Gallipolis; Tara and Troy Hill,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mr. and Mrs.
George Williams, Newark; Harry
Sharon, Angie, Ivan and Erin Ours,
Columbus; Wiley Ours, Levittown,
Pa.; Terry and Rita Hannon, Middleport.
W. R. Barnett, Rt. I, Bidwell;
Dorothy Neville, Delaware; Grover
and Garnett NeviUe, Pt. Pleasant;
Rachel Neville Long, Delaware;
Karen Sue Kiken, Radnor; Leona
Roach, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
George Hanke, Jr., . Kathleen
Whalen; John, Ruth Ann, Dan, Billy
Lovedsy, BidweU.
Hai'Old Barnett, Sana Rosa, Calif. ;
James and Darla Gillman, Columbus; Keitha Ann Neville Williams,
Odell, Shonda Ann, Danjta Lynn,
OdeU Williams, Jr., Gallipolis;
Warren Wright, Jr., Columbus;
Waldo Neville, India, Calif.; Bonnie,
1Inuny,Jantie,Kabrtna,Tanya,and
Toni Lynn Anderson, Irene Plants,
New Carlisle; Harold Simon, Junior
and Linda Preston, Gallipolis; Donnie and Kathy Barringer, Reedsville; Delores M. Neville Aeiker
and Charles Roy Aeiker, Keith
Aeiker, Sr., Pomeroy; James and
Louise Neville, Oklahoma; Anna
Lee, Anita Jo, John F., Jr. and
Althea Gail Aeiker, Middleport.

Serenity House

asks volunteers
"Serenity House, the Meigs County organization dedicated to helping
victims of domestic violence, is
looking for people who are concerned, responsible, and caring,"
announced spokesperson Ellen Bell.
"We will be setting up a program
to provide training in listening skills
and counseling techniques for
helping victims of faily violence
(such as wife abuse and child·
abuse)."
Mrs. Bell explained that people
who want to help victims by
providing transportion from a safe
place to a shelter or by providing
shelter temporarily will be trained
by qualified jpeople. After the
training, volunteers will be given the
chance to change their minds if they
decide later that helping in these
ways is not for them.
"Anyone interested in volunteerng
should come to the Grace Church
Parish HsU, behind Grace Church at
328 EastMainSt.la Pomeroy at 7:30
p.m. on Monday," said Mrs. BeU. "I
would suggest parking behind the
old Senior Citizens building, where
there is a large lot."

ACTIONS FILED
A suit in the amount of $1,888 has
been filed In Meigs County Common
Pleas
Court by Capital Savings and
BmTIIS
Loan
Co.,
NKA Beneficial Finance
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Frazier,
Co.,
Pomeroy,
against Bernard
daughter, Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs.
Gilkey,
and
Betty
Gilkey, MidTim Jones, son, Thurman.
dleport.
A suit for partition of real estate
was
filed by Mattie Allison,
SESSION CANCELLED
Zanesville,
against Nancy CumA session by the September grand
mins, Rt. 2, Racine, and Ralph Ross,
Boars:J!.J7.
jury scbeduled for 9 a.m. Thursday
Pigs by lhe head $-18.
·
Mason.
in the Meigs County Common Pleas
Sow!l46t lbl . and over 31-43.50.
John B. Stahl, Pomeroy and BarCourt has been cancelled and jurors
bara
J. Stahl, Cheshire, filed for
are not to report tomorrow, Rick
dissolution
of marriage.
Crow, Meigs Prosecuting Attorney,
MEETSTHURSDAY
_
'
?receptor Beta Beta Chapter of announced late Wednesday morBeta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet at · ning.
7:_~ p.m. Thursday at the Meigs
Branch, Athens County Savings and
GIBSON PROMOTED
FUNDS RELEASED
Loan, W. Main St., Pomeroy.
Kenneth M. Gibson, son of Nellie
The sixth regular distribution of
M. -Gibson of New Haven, W. Va.,
1980 license tax revenues is being
has been promoted In the U. S. Air
released by the Bureau of Motor
SUIT FILED
Force to the rank of master
Vehicles.
The allocatlon being sergeant.
A sult for divorce was flied in
distributed among Ohio's 88 counties
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
Sergeant Gibson Is a medical sertotals
$29,996,325.27. Meigs County's vice supervisor at Wright-Patterson
by Floyd A. J{ewolds, Middleport,
portion of the total is $98,371.53.
against Kay Rey41!1lds, Marietta.
Air Force Base, Oh.

.

3

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Congress
has several questions about last
week's Titan II missile explosion in
Arkansas, but Air Force Secretary
Hans Mark left many unanswered in
his testimony before a House comrilittee.
Marks, summoned before . a
hsstily called session of the House
Armed Services Committee, was
asked:
- Why wasn't there enough water
to flood the silo when fuel fumes
began escaping from the rocket?
-Why was there no safety net in
the silo to catch objects such as the
wrench that W&amp;s dropped? The
wrench punctured the lnissile's skin,
allowing the fuel fiJilles to escape
and ultimately leading to the ex·
ploslon.
-Why did the Martin Marietta
Co., which built the missile,- advise
the Strategic Air Conunand to
overrule the on-site team. which

Meigs County happenings.
DINNER SCHEDULED
The annual homecoming of
Chester United Methodist Church
wiU be held Sunday, Sept. '28 with
dinner at at 12:30 p.m. in the social
room of the church.
The Harvest Trio will be featured
during the afternoon program which
gets underway at 2 p.m. The public
is invited to attend.

JUDGMENT SOUGHT
A suit in the amount of $53,549.08
has been filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Racine Home
National Bank, Racine, and Central
Trust Co., N. A., Middleport, against
Ronald G. Shepard, dba,
Southeastern Ohio Truss Rafter Co.,
Marble, N.C., eta!.
DANCE SLATED
Parents Without Partners will
sponsor a dance Friday, Sept. 26,
from 9 p.m. to I a.m. at the Moose
Hall, Point Pleasant. Music will ·be
provided by the Tex Harrison band.
Admission is $5. The dance is open to
the public.

1 PAY · highest

Tuning

• •

SHOOTING

Emergency squad runs

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 -$649.00··Mobile home wood
burning systems, the on l y
HUD II. UL approved WOOd
burner for mobile homes.
Unit comes complete with
wall vent stack. See them
at Kingsbury Homes Parts
&amp; accessories at Route 124,
Minersville, Ohio.
Or
phone 992·5587.
slaughtering, custom
processing, retail meat.
Washington Co. Rd . 248,
Little Hocking, OH 667 ·

6133.

BUSHEL apples $4.95
and up, Also pumpkins.
SOil

bring your containers. Bur·
son Fruit &amp; Vegetables.

Phone

12 miles

69~· 1028,

nor1h of Pomerov on U.S.

33.

RACINE GUN Club has

changed their gun shOots
from Sunday' s to Friday

7:30 p.m. Factory choke
guns only.

BOTTLE GAS cook sieve to
someone who really needs

one II. upright piano to
Church. 992·7764 .
FREE

puppies.

mixed.

irish setter / fox hound ,
beagle . Two months old .

LOST : Golden Retriever,

female, m i ssing since Fri.
from lower Klngsbury

Beju. 992·7832 or 949·2535.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby give"
that
Saturdav
temberun 27th.
1980, , 10Sec·
:00
A.M. a publ ic sale will be
held at 105 Union Avenue,

.1978 Ford Sty leside the right to reiecf any or all
Prckup - #F25HccG7690
TJ:le Farmers
BankCom·
and
Savrngs
Company,
P.any, Ohio. reserves the I
(
rrght 1o bid at this sale, and 1

to Wtfhdraw any of the
a~ve mentioned vehicles

collateral,
to-wit:
1979 VW Rabbit. Serial

proor Farmers
to the sa le.
Further,
the
Bank
and

Nl79380857l

Ur

I
II

r---W-A-NT-AD-IN-FO-RM~A___;.no_N___

.I

PHONE 992-2156

I

1-CanlofTh•nb
1-1n Memoriam

41-HOVIII for It tnt
42-Mobllt Hom••
tor Rent
44-Apartmtnf fliJF' Rtnt

name and address or

phone number If used.
if you describe fully ,
give price. The Sentinel
reserves the right to
classify, edit or reject
any ad. Your ad will be
put in the proper
claslflcatlon If you' ll
check the proper box
below
You'll get better results

s1 - Houtehold GOOCII
52- CI, TV, Rtdio EQVIPm•nt

ll- Htlp wentett
12-Situetecl Wanted

n-Antlques
14-Misc. Mtrchandilt
Ss-lulldlna Juppll•s

lJ-tnsurar~ce

lf-lu1inus Training

Jt-Pftl

lJ-ScltcKIIslnstructiOfl
,._,
Redlo, TV

for sate

'
eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

&amp; Cl Rtp.81r

11-WentetToDo

61-P:arm ltruipment

e Fl NANCIAL

61-Wirtttd to luy
12-Truckllor S.lt

IUIIIIIII

6.1-Li'IHtotk
64- Hay &amp; Ortln

0HOf1unltv
22-Moneyto Lllln
n-ProteuiOftel

1

Wanted
For Sale

u- SHcl &amp; Fertilhtr

StrYices

Announcement

eTRANSPORTATION

eREALESTATE

For Rent

71-Autos fGr S•l•
7:J- VInl&amp;4W.D.
74- Motlrcyclts
1~
,AUIOI'Irtl
&amp; Acceuorlts

Jl-Homtl for S.ltl
l2-Moblltttomes
torhte
U-FarmJ for hit

71-Auto Rtpelr

J4-8uslntu Buildint•

1.
2.

U-Lots &amp; Acreett
J6-Reet E1tete Wenttd
J1-Ntlltctn

eSERVICES

W•nt·Ad Advertising
Oe•dllneo
2: fb "P.M. Dally
12 Noen Sthlnl~

torMondoy

1.

3.

11-Homtlmpravtmtnts
n-Ptum~tt,.. &amp; ••cnatlnt

•.

s.

U-EJLCIIIItint
14-l!l.ctrlul
&amp; Rtfrl..,.ltien
15-0tHral Haullnt
N-M.H. Repair
17-Upholtflr)'

I :

.

I

Rates and Other Information
ISWOr«&lt;l or Undtr
Celli

I dey

2day,
Jdtyl
6dav•

....'·"

Chartt

J .OO
f

3.75

t,IO

•

....
us

1.2$

6.
7.
8.
9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,

10.
11.

Moltilt ~·lilts lrMII Y,,rei IIIII arfllccepttd ani,- with cash wlftl
order. 2S cent charge for eds carrylnt 101 Number In Cart of TIM

...Untt

YARD SALE , Friday·
Saturday, October 3·4 from
9·5. In Chesler first house

YARD SALE, Thursday,
September 25, Friday, Sep·
tember 26 from 9:30a .m. to
6 p.m. on College Road in
Public Sale
&amp; Auction
OSSIE 'S AUCTION House,
20 N. 2nd Street, Mid·
dleporl, Ohio, We sell one

12.
3~·------13.
35.------14. - - - - - - : - - -

take consignments. For in·

\

.

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN ·

can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's l icense? Phone

15

Schools Instruction

Within

distance

schools. 992·7132 .

the new. used and antique
furniture business.
We
formation and pickup ser·
vice, call 992·6370 or In
West VIrginia 773·5471. Sale
every Friday night at 7
p.m. Auctioneer Howard
Beasley, apprentice auc·

, tloneer, Osby A. Marlin.
(no junk)
17
Miscellanea'!!._._.
NOTICE: I have a full set
of black•mith tools for •a le.
James P, Roberts, 992-5927 .

,..

Real Estate- General

of

HAYES
REALTY
IP•.POMEROY,O.

FOR SAL.E, lhree or tour
bedroom house, carpeted,
woodburning stove, a lso
woodburning fireplace.
Two car garage. Total elec·
tric . 10 x 27 sundeck, 2 •ta
acres. Beautiful setting .

Cllilrles M. Hayes, lhallor
Neacil E. Carse-y, Br. Mgr.
Pt'l . 992· 2-tOl ar 9112·2180 ·
NR ·68 - New Listing - Rustic
H il ls. beau t i ful new three

bedroo m home, fa mil y room,
large fen ced in ya rd . Thi s one
won ' t tast long. priced In tne tow

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

2 BEDROOM, bath

II. •;,
with expando, 1 acre fen ·
ced lot, 12x16 building, truit
II. nut trees. black top road,
rural water, sk irted &amp; tied .
down . Moving must sell .

NJ;1! · 66

-

R i ggs

Add it ion ,
spl it leve l home on

be&lt;"Julifu i
Iaroe tot , fam 1fy room , recrea·
tion room. two car garage, bu i!l
in applian(~ ~. plentv of room for
e v er~tn l ng you wMt , e~&lt;cc un~o~e
home. Priced ror QUICk '" le.
It you really want to sell list w1th
ust"oc:Ny .

.Appraised at S1S.OOO, 843·
2971 or 843·3103.

1973 Crown Haven , 14 x 65,
three bedrooms, new car ·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet.

Real Estate- General

bedrooms. new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric . 1971
Skyline, 12 x 65, two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/a, new

carpet .

1970

ners, advanced, adults .
send
name. address.

telephone number to Vera
Jane Holl iday. Box 224,
Rutland, Ohio 45775.
18

Wanted Jo Do

PMC,

POMEROY,O.
992·2259
NEW LISTING - IN·
VEST IN THE BEST!
This spl it entry 6 room

Real Estate- General

home has 3 bedrooms

with 2 balhs. The lull

Housing
Het1dquarters

basement with garage

has woodbvrner to sup·

Homes for Sale

ED BARTELS,Loan
Representat ive, 1100 East

Ma in St ., Pomeroy, Oh .
Mortgage
money
available . All types home
f inancing ,
new,
old,
refinancing, and 2nd mor ·

tgages. Phone 992·7000 or

11. genie door. Gas heat,

newly installed central air
cond i tioning, family room
&amp; stone fireplace, ap·
pliances bu ilt in. newly In·
stalled electric breaker
system ,
attractively
decorated basement, 2

baths, fully carpeted with

most

attractive

drapes .

Phone

large lot. metal building,
partially lenced in. 992·
7453.
THREE Bedroom house in

Racine, beautifu l lan dscape, two acre yard, one

acre garden. 949·2706.
FIVE POINTS. 3 bedroom

home, bUilt in kitchen,
dining room, living room, 1
acre ground. 992·5726.

PLEASANT COUNTRY
Living. Baum Addillon.

hOOd, disposal and bar

in kitchen and basement
rec .
room .
Just

$25,500.00.
ACREAGE
PORTLAND- About 56
$23,900.00.

FARM FOR COUNTRY
LIVING! Approx. 23

holding the mortgage.
NEW LISTING

acres ot land with a 7 ·
room, 5 bedroom home,
fu ll basement, large

Redecorate this one to
suit your taste. 3

o•th,

full
basem&lt;c;O~"rge level

building. $44,500.00.
SO YOU WANT A LANO
CONTRACT! $2,500.00

tot near playground for
the children. Want only
$6,500 .

down , owner
will
finance the balance on

this 2 bedroom, a II elec-

tric home on approx. 1

acre. $17,200.00.

70 properties to choose
from, we have what you
want!

liv ing. \..Olburnlng
fire pia, c;O oarge block
garage with ut.il ity room

REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
992-61?1
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949·1660

on level lot. Just ofl 33
North. Luxurious inside.
Asking $35.000 .

FOR RENT -

Large

business room ·In Mid·

Dottie &amp; Roger Turner

dleport.
LIVE IN YOUR IN·
VESTMENT.
CALL
992-3325 or 992-3876.

992·5692
OFFICE- 992·1259

Housing
Headquarters

large living room, dining

paneled

family

949 2875
.
·
INCR EDIBLE! Fully car·

peted apts. in downtown
Middleport. All utilities in·
eluded, 1 bedroom from
$170. Special rates for
Senior Citizens. Equal Op·

BEDROOM

furnished ·

1·304·882·3356.
APARTMENT

for

rent,

two bedroom, utilities paid.
One kid accepted . No pets
or drunks. John Sheets, 3 113
miles south of Middleport
on Route 7.

TWO bedroom furnished
apartment. 992·5914.
46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call

992-7479.

Real Estate

General

REAL ESTATE

fireplace inserts, free stan·
ding stoves, warm atr furnace adapters, mobile
home wood heaters, and
triple wall chimneys. Out·

heata , central a.c ., extra

FOR SALE : White
Whirlpool dryer-good con·
dition . Call 985·4276,

lingerie
MATERNITY
feduced 25% Maternity
;eans $15.00, Fall .mater·

plenty of storage. Radiant

room . No closing costs, will

arrange financing for 9 Va.

SAVE $120.00 a MONTH In·
terest. 992·3454.
7 rooms house completely
carpeled, bullt·in kitchen,
approximately

2 3~

acres

with barn In Letart Falls.
247·2684.

6·18. The Watermelon Pal·
ch. 5th St .• New Haven,
W.Va.

-

... ........... ' ..

MIDOLEPORT - En@rgy efficient with Insulated
aluminum siding. Very comfortable three bedroom,
2 bath home, full basement. S40,000.oo.

CALL BILL CHILDS 992-2342

RODNEY DOWNING-BROKER
Middleport, Ohio .,

REALISTIC STEREO, 125
watts per channel, cassette
recording deck, turntable,

2 speakers, head phones,
lists at $1,400. will sell for
$800. 247·3594.
1 used Siegler wall furnace

in good cond. 85,000 BTU .
105.000 counter flow fur·
nace. 1 hlde·a·bed &amp; mat·
chlng chair. 992·3139 after 5
p.m.

and Laundry

eCarpet

• Draperies
• Furniture
c"We're

1 · 22-tf~'

62

Wanted to Buy

end. $12 p-er ton. Bundled

bucket. PhOne 773·5238.

M·1 CARB INE . 30 round

slab. $10 per Jon. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2.
Pomeroy 992-2689.

box of shells, $175. 247·3594.

OLD COl NS, pocket wat·

clip, 4X

Bushnell scope,
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or

Now At
Pomeroy
Lanomark

silver. Call J. A, Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
6462.

New Wood Burner

63

plus blower
1 Like New Sears

DICK FRENCH Uvestock
Hauling. Day or night.

Stoves

Only 1395

Coldspot Side by
Side Combo
1400

1 Good Used Frigidaire

Relrigerator

SISO

~~S~e~rv~i~ce~&amp;~~~~~
l

Livestock

local or long distance. 35
years experience. 614·593·

5132 or 614·593·8883.

· Livestock

63

FAMILY GURNSEY milk
cow with April heifer calf

$1,000. 992·3890.

SEVEN ·EIGHTS polled
charolais bu II. goo¢.
guality . 16 ' mohths old;
Gayle Price. Portland,
Ohio.
polled
good
quality, Sixteen montfts
old. 843·2653.
SEVEN· EIGHTS

charo lais

bull,

.

64
Hay &amp; Grain
NEW EAR corn for sale al
tarm near Chester. 22 per-

cent moisture. 12.65 bushel.
. 985·4116.

... . ........ -......
............
...........
~

IV.. _

POMEROY
~LANDMARK
··-=·=
Pomeroy
E. Main St.

Ouick Ouilt!

Autos for Sale

71

1974
DODGE
CHALLENGER, 318, ··4,

56
Pets lor Sale
HILLCREST KENNELS .

barrel. P.S., p .b., new tire~
II. wheels, 247-3861.

Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.

. 1979 CAMARO Z28 loade~:

Also AKC registered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795,

11,000 miles, brown
in

II. gold
condition .

excellent

Pr iced lor quick sale. '742·

2143 ask for Duane.

HOOF HOLLOW: Horses
and pon ies and riding
lessons .
Everything
imaginable in horse equip·

1971 4 DOOR CHEVY car.
Good ·running cond. S200,
667·3402,
..

ment. Blankets, belts,
boots, etc. Eng lish and

Western .

Ruth

(614) 698·3290.

Reeves

1973 Chevelle Malibu, gOOd
work car. Call985·4276.
TWO TON 1967 Chevy flat·
'bed dump truck with grain
bed 11. cattle· racks. Phone
773·5238.

tigers, &amp; a pure black ; all
males.

AKC

Trucks for Sale

72

6260. Hours 12·7 daily,
closed Tues. Tabby's,

73
vans &amp;4 W.O.
1979 FORD BRONCO.
Reds&amp; white. 742-3035.

REG ISTERED

Cocker Spaniel puppies. 6
weeks
old .
Blonde ,

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessoties

2 HR78xl5 rad ial snow tires

CALL today tor a beautiful

on Ford rims, like new. $50.
both. 985 ·4356 eventngs.
~

992-6260.

Servlees

ONE AKC reg istered
pekingese puppy , Phone
,949·2890.
BEAGLE puppies, six
weeks old, three well

trained beagles, male &amp;
fema le, one started beagle.

Phone 742·2521.

ATHENS produce II. equip·
ment for sale, lease
available.
1974 In ·
ternational cargo Star .with

twenty foot produce bed,

elso walk· in cooler. 949·

nitv tops &amp;. iumpers, sizes

PH. 992·6342
TRY US!
Complele Dry Cleaning

949·2862
949·2160

en ·

INTERNATIONAL

ATTENTION :
I IM ··
PDRTANT TO YOUI Will
pay cash or certified check 61
Farm Equipment
for antiques and collec·
1978
J
D 450C Dozer. 6 way
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also, blade, winch, canopo; limb
guns, pocket watches and risers. 1700 hrs . exc . cond .
coin collections. Call 614· $28,000. After 5 p.m. 752·
2372.
767·3167 or 557·3411.

HOUSE FOR Sale, route
124 In Rutland. Two story,
five
rooms.
bath.
$23,000.00. Call742-2742.

Middleport, Ohio

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

dloader with four in one

Antiques

Co, 614·992·2205.

.~

All types of rool work,

new or repair gutters
and downspouts, guHer
cleaning and painting ..
All work guaranteed .

CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest

puppy or dog. Humane
society, shots &amp; wormed.

Summer Prices . Excelsior

heat, thermostat In each

S4
Misc. Merchanise
'--"-~===='-""='--

ADMIRAL. Color TV. gOOd
plcture$200., Genera l Elec·

FIVE room oil heater, like
new. John Sheets, 3 •IJ
miles south of Middleport
on Route 7.

V.C. YOUNG II

99H215or99H314

1-----_;_----j_:_---------J

females, champion blood
lines. 843·2684.

large double garage. 985·
3543,

plus garage, laundry room,

•New Homes · extensive remodeling
•Electrical work
•Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
9·14·1 mo.

door Equipment Sales, Jet.
Rls, 7 &amp; 35. Gallipolis, Ph,
446·3670.

tric refrigerator $75 .. an·
tique gas stove. 992·5880 af·
ter4p.m.

electrical work
&lt;Free Estimates)

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

GET A Nice soft lovable

54 Misc. Merchanise
HEATING OIL. Buynowal

glass doors to patio, gas

NEW
BEAUTIFUL
CUSTOM buill home, 1600
square feet of living space

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

kitten from your Humane
Society . Shots &amp; wormed.
Donation required. 992·

51
Household Goods
STOVES· , We have

.

work
-ConcretewDrk
-Plumbing and

~~========~~~~~~~~9~-1~0-~1~m~o~.~f,~~~P~D~m~e~r~oy~,~O~h~.==~

apartment,

FURNISHED apartment
with tour rooms II. bath.
Adults only, no pets. 992·
3874,

eReplacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

Pomeroy
Oil ice 992-7544
Home 992·6191

un ·

Pomeroy, $150.00 plus
deposit. 992·6130 or 992·
7511 '

53

Home on large landscl!ped

Jot. 3 bedrooms. 2'1• baths,

bedroom furnished apt. In
Rac ine. $150. month plus
utilities. No pets, one child .

acres, pasture, woods,
and building sites .
Abundant wild life!

sand down with owner

estate
setup,
2
bedrooms, rt l··tng, large

II.
shower, full basement,
aluminum siding, storm
windows &amp; door, big porch,

room , 3 bedroom home
is a real value at this
price! In excellent con·
dition with an unusually
elegant bath, range,

trailer spot. Only ss,2oo.
NEW LISTING - 4.7

8 ROOM House, Bath

AVAILABLE OCT. I. 2

apartment, utilities paid,
no pets. Deposit required.

stretcher. $19,500.00,
REDUCED
FOR
QUICK SALE! This 6

Will se ll as is anytime.
V iew of river and fran ·
tage with all city
utilities.
NEW LISTING - Old 6
room house and 2 lots. 3
bedrooms, bath, natural
gas city water and

NEW LISTING - 1979
Holly Park, 14x70 real

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
Is, Phone992·5434.

Storage building and
tree house! Secluded
but in town. $52,000 ,00.

rooms, 3 bedrooms, with
forced ·a ir gas heat, and
at this pr ice a budget

1- ( 614) ·992· 3325

Call985·3814 or992·2571.

Apartment
for Rent

·

IN MASON, West Virginia,
two , bedroom furnished

NEW LISTING- EASY
ON THE BUDGET!
This home · offers 5

bedroom•

Pomeroy. 247·3942.

ptement electr ic heat.

Approx . 2.36 wooded lol.

NEW LISTING - New 2
bedroom Jog type home.

31

Country Mobile Home
Park, on Route 33, north of

992
TWO

Pleasant, WV Phone 675·
4424 ,

Harry

Administration

107 Sycamore

--

-~e":::::~~~:
-Roofing and guHer

• Storm Doors
eStorm Windows

for appointment.

WILL care for elderly in
my home in Pomeroy .

Roush, Minersville, Ohio.

$150.00 a month , Lo~ated in

9·14·1 mo.

~::~~ESTE~

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsulation

REAL ESTATE LOANS

Adulls only, Deposit
required. 992·3647. Com·
plele ly furnished .

1975 Two qedroom mobile
home partially furnished,

calls.

1NSULATION

FINANCIAL

TWO BEDROOM mobile

2 BEDROOM T.RAILER
for rent. 992 5914.

or

h
P one 9 4 9·2414
9·10·1 mo. pd.

Vetera~s

2Home.
BEDROOM
Mobi
Je
Adults only.
992·
3324.

Call for Free Siding
Estimate, 949·2101
949·2860. No Sunday

r~======~=~~~~~~~~~~~~t==~~~~;:==~
"YO
·PARK
J&amp;l BLOWN
UNGS

home with utilities paid.

44

TV, CB &amp; HAM

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

Federal Housing

Mobile Homes
for Rent

42

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

INSTALATIONS

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

portunity Housing. Village
Manor Apts. Call 992-7787

12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet . B x S Sa les, Inc .,
2nd x Viand Street, Point

t ing . Call this number 1·

air
furnace,
centralII. nice
air
condilion
ing, garage
porch. 949 2734.
TWO bedroom house for
renl, unlurnlshed . 992·3090

..C's.

PIANO l.ESSONS Begin·

8

who has over 25 years in

~------------~----------J·

patio.

1972 Champio~ . 12 x 60, two

room,

liquidation sales. Get top
dollar . List with the man

1

hours. Call949·2875.

room, with stone flreplece,
picture window II. sliding

3
2_
· -_
- ,_
.-_
-33 . _
_
_;_

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel ·
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Wilt do babysitting in your
home. 5 days a week. any

Syracuse. Follow signs.

piece or entire households.
New, used, or antiques. in·
eluding homes~ farms, or

raft.

x

ran ch brick home in Baum
Addition . With new garage

talns, stereo, sofa, etc.

Eun word over tht minimum 15 word I 114 cents per word p~r dt., .

deck

walking

GARAGE SALE. Sept. 26·
28. Quilts, pieced polyester.
Fireplace ,

742·3030 or 742·2728.

family room with fireplace,
fully carpeted. Large sun·

and
T . P.
water
available. Will sell as is
for $4500 or One thou·

YARD SALE , THUR ·
SDA Y, at 371 South Second
Avenue, Middleport. Cur·

16. _ _ _..;__ _

home with 3 bedrooms, two
11. two·thirds baths, large

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom

YARD SALE, September
26·27, llfth house behind
POSt off ice in Clifton.

...
15.------

992·6139.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1980 70 x 14 mobile home
with 1 x 24 expando. Ex·
cellent condition. Phone

Relocating, owner must
sell . Five year old bi ·level

acres, 4 room house, old
mobile home, · electric

misc. Items.

30. _ _ _ _ _ __
31. _ _ _ _ ____.

SaliSbury .

992·5732 .

on right across bridge on
248 . · Women's &amp; boy' :;
clothes, furniture, books.

29. _ _ _ _ _ __

IN

nice clothing all sizes, lots
Of misc . Items.

GARAGE SALE, ThurSday-Fr iday at 44 Lincoln
Street.

Acl1 running other then COflltCutlve days wilt bt Clllrtfllat ttlt t City

In memory, Card ot Thank' altcl Obituary ! ' Ants per word, $3.00
minimum . Cash In advlnet.

9·S across from Codner's
Texaco station in Syracuse.
Lots of children ' s, men's &amp;
women's clothes, also lots
of new items at 10 percent
discount.

SVIile, Oh. on Co. Rd , 1
mile. Phone373·6276.

v.
I
28._ _ _ _ _ __

Jo

li vein· to help care for in·
val id husband , 992-5505 or

614·992·7714, Mr.
" ::;YARD SALE. starting
September 22 through 27th.

1/&gt;

17. _ _ _ _ __
18._ _ _ _ _ __
19. _ _ _ _ _ __
20. _ _ _ _ __
21. _ _ _ _ _ __
22. _ _ _ _ __
23. _ _ _ _ _ __
24. _ _ _ _ _ __
25. _ _ _ _ _ __
26._ _ _ _ _ __

Someone

WILL do odd jobs 11. pain·

Franklin

These cash rates
include discount

WANTED :

children ' s clothing and
·many more items.

rototiller, new wash basin,
Homelite cha in saw, han·
dquilted qu ilt . Between
Tuppers Plains II. Reed·

w_a_rd_s~~~!!!~~~~-!

992·7314,

Reasonable. 992·6022 ,

cedar wardrobe, large size

AD WANTED

my home. Trained &amp; ex·
perienced . Have vacancy .

Davis residence. Rose

High School on County Rd .
28, Old table and chairs
with bullet, pony saddle,

CIRCLE

space below. Each In·
ltlal or group ol figures
counts as a word. Count

Yard Sale
YARD SALE - Sept. 29
II. 30. Monday and lues·
day, 9:30 a. m. Iii dark .

residence above Eastern

Savel I I
Write your own ad and order by ma ll wilh this

Print one word in each

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Classlfleds and

Phon•·~------------------

45-FRoom•

&amp; Auc:ti!MI

21-

RENTALS

$25 .

GARAGE SALE. Sept. 2511.
26, 9·5 at John Damewood's

results. Money not refundable.

46-lpue for Rent
47-Wenhtd to Rent
• ...,_Eflulpmtnt tor Rent

9-WantedtoBuy

n a on.

Name~.-----------------Addreu. ________________

eANNOUNCEMENTS
1-Ann~nctmtnfs

bids submilled.
!01 24, 25. 26, 3tc

1 coupon. Cancel your ad b\1 phone when you get

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

in

Hill. Odds and ends,

Pay Ca'sh for

!
l

,1

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero.,-, 0., 45769

4-0h,re•way
5-HIPPVAdl
...,_LOiflnd Found
7-YarCISIIt
t-Publlc Salt

7

r----------------------b I fl fl

Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell for
cas h the following

area .

reward . 742·3117,

Ptlb;ic Notice

SavingS Company reserves

Lost

32

Homes for Sale

32

992·2143.

area . Male, shaggy brown
&amp; black hair . Answers to

SIX ROOM
house
forforced
rent,
bath,
turn! shed,
gas

"But buying a house within your means
Is not the American way!"

ANTENNAS

.

SiJes from 4x' to 12X40

nished. 992·3890.

985·3934.

6338.

nFrom 30xl0"

Utility Buildings

5 ROOM HOUSE $50 , per
room or $225. for complete
house .
Located
in
Pagevill e. Partially fur·

paneling, floor tile, ceiling
tile. Call Fred Miller at992·

13

Lost and Found

6

Langsville

Public Nollce

Situations Wanted

843-4815.

. PEKENESE .

Public Notice

Health Care Center . 992·
6606.

WILL CARE foreldersly in

Giveaway

LOST DOG , Bashan Rd .

returns, Sentinel Want Ads

PART· TIME RN. 7:ooa .m.
to 3:30p.m. Call Pomeroy

WILL do odds 11. ends,

Siamese, 742·2452.

Small investment, large

· and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
t inel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992· 2157.

RACINE

Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night starting at

.•l

Vinyl and Aluminum •
Siding

TOWERS&amp;.

:.iz:es
-

Houses for Rent

41

HOME

12

SHOOT,

I

31

nights starting September
26.
GUN

•

B&amp;D

Farm Buildings
SMALL

WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD ,
SILVER ,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COI.NS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
Y. MISC. ITEMS. A.B·
SOLU T E
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP. MIDDLEPORT ,
OHI0992·3476.

GET VALUABLE training

ALL STEEL

iientals

Osby ( ss ie) Martin. 992·
6370.

as a young business person

6 BABY KITTENS , Part

Memorial Hospital to Pomeroy
Health Care Cewnter.
At 10:35 a.m. the Middleport unit
took Herman Haddox, Hamilton St.,
Middleport to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at8:14 p.m. the Racine until took Elton Kraueter from his
home in Racine to Holzer Medical
Center; at 11:47 p.m. the Rutland
unit took Bill Schoonover from Mine
No.2 to.O'Bleness Hospital, Athens.

Gold, silver or forei9n
coins or anv gold or silver
items. An t ique furniture,
glass or china , will pay top
dol tar , or complete estates.
No Item too large or too
small. Chec k pri ces before
selling.bAiso do appraising.

JONES Meat Packing···

area . Reward , 992·3505.

Public Notice

REAL ESTATE for sale:
corner lot on main high ·
w a y ; over 250 foot of fron ·
tage; 95 perce"nt financing
to qualified church group,
organization , or successful
business management
992·57111&gt; or 992·2529.

Lane

992·2082 ,

Business Services

home. Easy terms, close to

.and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone

·4

AFTER GAME TEA
Tea will be served in the cafeteria
following the Eastern-Kyger Creek
game next Friday to alumni from
OJive-(}range, Chester and Eastern.

·

.

.

town. 992·5786 or 992·2529.

Daniels 742-29511 Tuning

VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMITI'ED-Richard DeMoss,
Pomeroy; Herman Haddox, Middleport; Charles Ohlinger, Albany;
Robert VanMeter, Pomeroy; Helen
Gibbs, Hartford, W. Va.; Robert
McLaughlin, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES-Anon Fleming,
David Brickles, John Powell and Ar·
tie Houdashlet.

Six runs were made Wednesday by
local emergency units, according to
the report of the Meigs Emergency
Medical Services Headquarters.
At 1:07 a.m. the Rutland unit took
Jolui D. Lewis from Meigs Mine No.
1 to Holzer Medical Center; at 9:41
a.m. the Racine unit took Hubert
Price from his home on SR 124 in
Long Bottom to St. J opseph
Hospital; at 10:07 a.m. the Rutland
unit took John Powell fr0111 Veterans

prices

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
Plano

-~-----

SUITABLE LOT for mobile

possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelrv. etc.

He said the Titans are needed
. more now than when they were first
deployed in 1963 because "the
strategic balance .(with the Soviet
Union) is not nearly as much in our
favor as It was then."
There are 84 Titan II sites in
Arizona, Kansas and Arkansas, and
each missile can carry a nuclear
bomb about 1,000 times as powerful
as the bomb that destroyed
Hiroshima, Japan.
The Titan was designed primarily
as a threat to Soviet cities. Recently,
the United States has developed the
more accurate Minuteman missile,
designed to knock out the enemy's
nuclear defenses.
Adhering to policy, Mark refused
to say publicly whether the Titan's
warhead was in danger of
detonating or leaking radiation. He
said he would discuss the ~uclear
device only in private with members
of Congress . .

wanted to vent the fumes Into the at·
mosphere in an attempt to halt the
dangerofexplnmon?
Marks had no answers for those
questions Wednesday. Nor would he,
tl)e Air Force secretary said, untll
the service finishes its investigation
of the explosion near Damascus,
Ark., which killed one man and injured 21 others. The nuclear
warhead was apparently blown off
the missile but was recovered undsmaged.
He said he hoped to have some of
the answers within a month.
But he said the Titan is still vital to
America's defense, despite the
questions and fears about the safety
of the nuclear missile.
'
Mark Insisted ·!he aging Titan· II
''Is required in our strategic force . It
accounts .lor about one-tldrd Of the
destructive power of our land-based
missile force. There is no near-tenn
replacement."

-- ---·

~$ -·- _L~t! ~~cre~-g~ __

Announcement'S- -

2115.

81
Entertam baby with fascinating
pels on a colo1ful Quilt.
Swill sketches in easiest appl ique and embroidery b•ings lhe
happiest •esult- lhis hantjmade
crib Qui ll fo• mom to treasu1e.
Pa«ern 7031: bansfe1 ol molifs
and easy dtrections.
SIJ5 for each pallem. Add 501

each pattern for ltrst-class ·air·
ma1 l and handling. Send lo:
Alitt BIGO!Is
4 ?
NHtlemH Depl
The Dally Sentinel
llol 1&amp;3, Old Chtbu St.., Now
loft, NY 1011J. Print Nemo,
Atldlt$$, Zip, Pettwn Numbtr.

a

Catch on to lhe mft boom! Send
lo1 ou1 NEW 19Bi NEEOLECRAfT
CATALOG . Over 172 designs, 3
hee patterns inside. 11.00
All CRAFT BOOlS . .$1.75 uch

13HIISition Home Quillin1

132-Quilt Ori&amp;inals

131-Atld 1 lllocl Quills
130-Swullttfaltlans-Sizesll-56
129-Quicl 'n' (ISJ Trensfers
nhead and 2 row smapper .
12a.£~ Plkhwoft Quills
head, excellent condition,
$5595. Shinn's Tractor 127-Af&amp;hiiiS 'n' Dollies
125-Thritty CrefiJ Flowers
Sales, Leon, wv 458·1603.

1976 JOHN Deere 3800
chopper with 2 row cor·

125-Pitll !!!'Ills

1974 NEW Holland Super
717 chopper with one row
head, gOOd condition, $2495.

124-hsy Grits 'n' O...mtnts .
123-Stltdo 't' Plkll Quilts
122-SboH 't' Pull Quilts

121-Pillaw Show-Otis
11HM,
Art ol Flower CIOChet
Leon. WV. 458·1630.
116-llfty Fifty Otrilts
ONE
New Massey 115·£esr Art ollip"t Ctodttl
Ferguson 200 chopper, two 11Kotftpltlt 51ft ....
row head,weathered, list . 111-11 Jiffy lluf
price. $8000. sale price 10!-Stw + lnltilesictisltltind)
$3995 , Shinn's Tralor Sales, 105-1- Cniclitf
102·11-tll Qlilts
Gallipolis, Ohio 446·1044.
101-Qullt llotlli.c.tllction I
Shinn's

Tractor

Sales,

Home

1mprovements

s 11. G carpet Cleaning.

Steam cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonabl.e
rates. Scotchguard. 9412: ·

6309 or 742·2211 .

REMODELING ,

panelin~. :

doors, ceilings, floors. 992·.

2759 ,

.

Excavallng
J X F BACKHOE SER·

83

VICE liscensed and bon·"

ded,

septic

tank

1~ - '

stallation, water and gas

lines. Excavating work and ·
transillayout. 992-7201. ·

EXCAVATING Wanted·:
Dozer work or timber tb
cut, 985-3567 or 992·3208.
DOZER work, small jobs'.a
specialty, quick depeo·
dableservice, 742·2753.
84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING
Repairs,

makes!
Fabric

MACHINE
service,
992 - 228~ .

Shop,

all

The ·

Pomeroy. \

Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We

Scissors.

shar~n ~

·

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn

mower:
7, 91.5 ..,.._.

Next to Slate J11ghway' .;

Garage on Route

3825.
_ _ _ _ ___c···

�..

9-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Sept. 2S,l980

·.-.3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept 25, 1980

:; Chairman of board retires

Congress seeks answers to
Arkansas missile explosion

'

:Columbus official addresses
~ual meeting Monday
Dr. James M. Shulman, Chief of
the Bureau of Drug Abuse, Columbus, was guest speaker during Monilay night's annual dinner meetir)g of
Ule Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Mental
J'{ealth Board. The meeting was held
at the Down Under Restaurant in
Gallipolis.
role
: {)r. Shulman emphasized
¢ prevention in maintaining good
•physical and mental health. Stress
imd its effect on the body, what can
be done to recognize it and the support systems individuals can call
'upon to deal with it, were added
jloints. "We can help ourselves by
tlrawing on our own energy," he
said. "Mental Health professionals
are urged to Identify and support
preventative techniques. Look to
prevention, do it yourself or seek
professional jluidsnce before life
problems become too big and stress
tO., damaging."

tne

Spe&lt;:ial recognition was given to
the retiring chairman. of the board,
Annette Levine of Wellston.
Executive Director, Maxine Plum·
mer, thanked Mrs. Levine for "your
leadership for a caring society and
your input into dramatic changes in
public understanding about mental
illness, not only in our three-county
area, but in the entire State of Ohio."
John C. Rice of Meigs County was
introduced as the new board chair·
man. Serving with Mr. Rice will be
vice-chairman, Dr. Richard B. Simpson, Gallia County; secretary,
Virginia Blazewicz, Meigs County;
and treasurer, Ann Niebling,
Jackson County.
Jeffrey B. Paddock of Holzer
Medical Center, Social Services
Department, was introduced as a
new board member from Gallia
County.

PASSES BOARD- Tammie
DeBord, a June, 1980, graduate of
Hocking Technical CoUege with
an associate degree In nursing,
has received word from the State
.of Ohio Board of Nursing
Education
and
Nurse
Registration that she has passed
the state board examination for
registered nurses. Miss DeBord
graduated from Hocking
TechDical College with a 3.87
grade point average. She Is ·now
employed at Doctor~ Hospital In
Nelsonvllle.

Neville

RECEIVES PLATE - Mrs. Levine received specially designed plate
,in honor of her many years of service with the Mental Health Board.

Health department offers flu shots
The Meigs County Health Depart·
IJient will be administering flu ,vaccine at the Senior Citizens Center on
0et. &amp;-7 from 9 a.m. to 12 noon each
day. Because of the limited supply
available, the vaccine will be limited
to persons at increased risk of ad-

A UleDI Uvettock Sales
Setun:lay1 Aucdou
&amp;!pt. tt, ltse

Total Head foil
" CATTLE PRICES:
Feeder Steers: {Good and Cho!ce ) :m-500 lbs.
66-71.30: 500-700 Ills. 57-9$,75.
Feeder He!(ers: {Goodandelx.li:ce) JOO..SOOJbs.
6:1-70; 500-700 II&gt;;. 5H2.75 ,
Feeder Bulls: (Good and Choice) 300{iOO Jbs.
61.~73.00; 500-700 lbs. 53.1~&lt;11.

Slaughter Bulls: (Over 1.1100 lbo.J44.5G-OO.OO.

Slaughter Cows: Utilltl~ 46-52 ; Canners and
Cutters 35.:;o..t:~ . § .
Cow and Calf Pairs: (By the Unll) 47G-600.
Veals · (CHoice and Prime) 64.50-15.
Baby Galves: (By the Head) 39-132.00.
.HOG PRICES ,
Hogs: (No. 1, Barrows and Gilts) 200-230 lbs.

;&amp;.50-17 . .
Butcher Sows 34.20-44.25.
Butcher Boars »-39.20.
Feeder Pigs (By the Head ) 12-25.
SHEEP PRICES:
Slaughter Lambs 45-57.50.
Feeder Lambs t~.

OHIO VALLEY
UVESTOCK CO.
MARKET REPORT

"All prices taken from the auction of Saturday,
Sfpt. 00. TRENDS: Feeder CatUe J4-7.00, cows
$1 to $2.50 lower. Veal Calves steady,

Total Hood 711
Feeder Steers : Good and Choice 250 to 300 lbs.
66.lo-73.50: 300 to400 111.50-71.10: 100 to500 Jbo.IW70;.-500 to &amp;00 lbs. 62.50-M.OO; fm to 700 Ills. 11066~; 700 to 800 lbs. 57-64; 800 and over 56.50&amp;2.10.
Feeder Heifers: Good and Cholce250to300 lbS.
_ , 300 to 100 11&gt;1. _, 400 to 500 lbs. 80.5067.10; 500to 6110 lbo. 51&lt;1fl.so, 6110 to700 11&gt;1. 57,50u , 700to61101bo. -.50; 6110andover5UI.I41.
Feeder BullJ!: Good and Choice 250 to 300 lbo.
&amp;5 lo 71 : 300 to 400 lbo. 82.50-70; 300 to 100 lbs. 6261.50; 400 to 500 lbs. -.10: 500 to 500 lbo. ~
111.:1.0: 6110 to 7110 lbs. 52.~.10; 7110 to 100 lbs. 5611.00; 800 and (]Ver M.SO«&lt;.
Hobteln oteeraand bu1lJ! 300to61101bs.50&lt;;1.
Bulls (1,000 lbi'J. and over) 51).42.50.
Slaughter Cows Ulilltiel!l 41.50--40.60; Canners
and Cuttera3'i' .50-43.25.
Cows and Calves (by the head}00N40.
Vealcalves70-91.
Baby calves ts.-110.
HOGS
Top Hop (210,.230)411-49.

verse consequences of influenza.
Conditions predisposing to such
risk include:
-Persons age 65 and older.
-Those who have an acquired or
congenital heart disease associated
with altered circulatory dynamics,
both actual and potenttal.
-Persons with any chronic disorder with compromised pulmonary
function.
-Those who have chronic renal
disease with azotemia or the
nephrotic syndrome.
-Persons with diabetes, or
chronic, . severe anemia, or conditions which compromise the iin·
mune mechanism.
Persons age 28 or older will
require only one dose of the 1~1
influenza vaccine.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES SEPr. U
Sharon Bailey, Michael Barcus
Jr., Lucille Bearhs, Mrs. John Boyd
and son, Harold Brinker, Stanton
Burdette, Michael Burns, Keith Carter, Jason Clagg, Doris Dixon, Den·
nis Doddrlll, Eleanore Donnley,
Mona Forrest, Helen Halstead, Anna Hanunond, ELizabeth Hill,
Richard Jones, Clyde Law, Freds
Long, Mrs. Tony McCoy and
dsughter, Mrs. Dennis McFarland
and son, Marcus McKeen, Everett
Michael, Mrs. donald Miller and
daughter, Mrs. Mark Mlller and
daughter, Charlotte Mullins, Shasta
Murphy, Amer Myers, Douglas
Priddy, Ralph Ross, Paul Sheets,
Ardis Shirley, MelodleStumbo, Mrs.
Roger Swann and daughter, Roger
Walker, Roy Whaley, Jeff Willis,
Peggy Wood.

(Continued from page 5)
Roseville, Calif.; James and Betty
Neville, Pl. Pleasant: Barbara Hill,'
Gallipolis; Tara and Troy Hill,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mr. and Mrs.
George Williams, Newark; Harry
Sharon, Angie, Ivan and Erin Ours,
Columbus; Wiley Ours, Levittown,
Pa.; Terry and Rita Hannon, Middleport.
W. R. Barnett, Rt. I, Bidwell;
Dorothy Neville, Delaware; Grover
and Garnett NeviUe, Pt. Pleasant;
Rachel Neville Long, Delaware;
Karen Sue Kiken, Radnor; Leona
Roach, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
George Hanke, Jr., . Kathleen
Whalen; John, Ruth Ann, Dan, Billy
Lovedsy, BidweU.
Hai'Old Barnett, Sana Rosa, Calif. ;
James and Darla Gillman, Columbus; Keitha Ann Neville Williams,
Odell, Shonda Ann, Danjta Lynn,
OdeU Williams, Jr., Gallipolis;
Warren Wright, Jr., Columbus;
Waldo Neville, India, Calif.; Bonnie,
1Inuny,Jantie,Kabrtna,Tanya,and
Toni Lynn Anderson, Irene Plants,
New Carlisle; Harold Simon, Junior
and Linda Preston, Gallipolis; Donnie and Kathy Barringer, Reedsville; Delores M. Neville Aeiker
and Charles Roy Aeiker, Keith
Aeiker, Sr., Pomeroy; James and
Louise Neville, Oklahoma; Anna
Lee, Anita Jo, John F., Jr. and
Althea Gail Aeiker, Middleport.

Serenity House

asks volunteers
"Serenity House, the Meigs County organization dedicated to helping
victims of domestic violence, is
looking for people who are concerned, responsible, and caring,"
announced spokesperson Ellen Bell.
"We will be setting up a program
to provide training in listening skills
and counseling techniques for
helping victims of faily violence
(such as wife abuse and child·
abuse)."
Mrs. Bell explained that people
who want to help victims by
providing transportion from a safe
place to a shelter or by providing
shelter temporarily will be trained
by qualified jpeople. After the
training, volunteers will be given the
chance to change their minds if they
decide later that helping in these
ways is not for them.
"Anyone interested in volunteerng
should come to the Grace Church
Parish HsU, behind Grace Church at
328 EastMainSt.la Pomeroy at 7:30
p.m. on Monday," said Mrs. BeU. "I
would suggest parking behind the
old Senior Citizens building, where
there is a large lot."

ACTIONS FILED
A suit in the amount of $1,888 has
been filed In Meigs County Common
Pleas
Court by Capital Savings and
BmTIIS
Loan
Co.,
NKA Beneficial Finance
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Frazier,
Co.,
Pomeroy,
against Bernard
daughter, Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs.
Gilkey,
and
Betty
Gilkey, MidTim Jones, son, Thurman.
dleport.
A suit for partition of real estate
was
filed by Mattie Allison,
SESSION CANCELLED
Zanesville,
against Nancy CumA session by the September grand
mins, Rt. 2, Racine, and Ralph Ross,
Boars:J!.J7.
jury scbeduled for 9 a.m. Thursday
Pigs by lhe head $-18.
·
Mason.
in the Meigs County Common Pleas
Sow!l46t lbl . and over 31-43.50.
John B. Stahl, Pomeroy and BarCourt has been cancelled and jurors
bara
J. Stahl, Cheshire, filed for
are not to report tomorrow, Rick
dissolution
of marriage.
Crow, Meigs Prosecuting Attorney,
MEETSTHURSDAY
_
'
?receptor Beta Beta Chapter of announced late Wednesday morBeta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet at · ning.
7:_~ p.m. Thursday at the Meigs
Branch, Athens County Savings and
GIBSON PROMOTED
FUNDS RELEASED
Loan, W. Main St., Pomeroy.
Kenneth M. Gibson, son of Nellie
The sixth regular distribution of
M. -Gibson of New Haven, W. Va.,
1980 license tax revenues is being
has been promoted In the U. S. Air
released by the Bureau of Motor
SUIT FILED
Force to the rank of master
Vehicles.
The allocatlon being sergeant.
A sult for divorce was flied in
distributed among Ohio's 88 counties
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
Sergeant Gibson Is a medical sertotals
$29,996,325.27. Meigs County's vice supervisor at Wright-Patterson
by Floyd A. J{ewolds, Middleport,
portion of the total is $98,371.53.
against Kay Rey41!1lds, Marietta.
Air Force Base, Oh.

.

3

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Congress
has several questions about last
week's Titan II missile explosion in
Arkansas, but Air Force Secretary
Hans Mark left many unanswered in
his testimony before a House comrilittee.
Marks, summoned before . a
hsstily called session of the House
Armed Services Committee, was
asked:
- Why wasn't there enough water
to flood the silo when fuel fumes
began escaping from the rocket?
-Why was there no safety net in
the silo to catch objects such as the
wrench that W&amp;s dropped? The
wrench punctured the lnissile's skin,
allowing the fuel fiJilles to escape
and ultimately leading to the ex·
ploslon.
-Why did the Martin Marietta
Co., which built the missile,- advise
the Strategic Air Conunand to
overrule the on-site team. which

Meigs County happenings.
DINNER SCHEDULED
The annual homecoming of
Chester United Methodist Church
wiU be held Sunday, Sept. '28 with
dinner at at 12:30 p.m. in the social
room of the church.
The Harvest Trio will be featured
during the afternoon program which
gets underway at 2 p.m. The public
is invited to attend.

JUDGMENT SOUGHT
A suit in the amount of $53,549.08
has been filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Racine Home
National Bank, Racine, and Central
Trust Co., N. A., Middleport, against
Ronald G. Shepard, dba,
Southeastern Ohio Truss Rafter Co.,
Marble, N.C., eta!.
DANCE SLATED
Parents Without Partners will
sponsor a dance Friday, Sept. 26,
from 9 p.m. to I a.m. at the Moose
Hall, Point Pleasant. Music will ·be
provided by the Tex Harrison band.
Admission is $5. The dance is open to
the public.

1 PAY · highest

Tuning

• •

SHOOTING

Emergency squad runs

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 -$649.00··Mobile home wood
burning systems, the on l y
HUD II. UL approved WOOd
burner for mobile homes.
Unit comes complete with
wall vent stack. See them
at Kingsbury Homes Parts
&amp; accessories at Route 124,
Minersville, Ohio.
Or
phone 992·5587.
slaughtering, custom
processing, retail meat.
Washington Co. Rd . 248,
Little Hocking, OH 667 ·

6133.

BUSHEL apples $4.95
and up, Also pumpkins.
SOil

bring your containers. Bur·
son Fruit &amp; Vegetables.

Phone

12 miles

69~· 1028,

nor1h of Pomerov on U.S.

33.

RACINE GUN Club has

changed their gun shOots
from Sunday' s to Friday

7:30 p.m. Factory choke
guns only.

BOTTLE GAS cook sieve to
someone who really needs

one II. upright piano to
Church. 992·7764 .
FREE

puppies.

mixed.

irish setter / fox hound ,
beagle . Two months old .

LOST : Golden Retriever,

female, m i ssing since Fri.
from lower Klngsbury

Beju. 992·7832 or 949·2535.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby give"
that
Saturdav
temberun 27th.
1980, , 10Sec·
:00
A.M. a publ ic sale will be
held at 105 Union Avenue,

.1978 Ford Sty leside the right to reiecf any or all
Prckup - #F25HccG7690
TJ:le Farmers
BankCom·
and
Savrngs
Company,
P.any, Ohio. reserves the I
(
rrght 1o bid at this sale, and 1

to Wtfhdraw any of the
a~ve mentioned vehicles

collateral,
to-wit:
1979 VW Rabbit. Serial

proor Farmers
to the sa le.
Further,
the
Bank
and

Nl79380857l

Ur

I
II

r---W-A-NT-AD-IN-FO-RM~A___;.no_N___

.I

PHONE 992-2156

I

1-CanlofTh•nb
1-1n Memoriam

41-HOVIII for It tnt
42-Mobllt Hom••
tor Rent
44-Apartmtnf fliJF' Rtnt

name and address or

phone number If used.
if you describe fully ,
give price. The Sentinel
reserves the right to
classify, edit or reject
any ad. Your ad will be
put in the proper
claslflcatlon If you' ll
check the proper box
below
You'll get better results

s1 - Houtehold GOOCII
52- CI, TV, Rtdio EQVIPm•nt

ll- Htlp wentett
12-Situetecl Wanted

n-Antlques
14-Misc. Mtrchandilt
Ss-lulldlna Juppll•s

lJ-tnsurar~ce

lf-lu1inus Training

Jt-Pftl

lJ-ScltcKIIslnstructiOfl
,._,
Redlo, TV

for sate

'
eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

&amp; Cl Rtp.81r

11-WentetToDo

61-P:arm ltruipment

e Fl NANCIAL

61-Wirtttd to luy
12-Truckllor S.lt

IUIIIIIII

6.1-Li'IHtotk
64- Hay &amp; Ortln

0HOf1unltv
22-Moneyto Lllln
n-ProteuiOftel

1

Wanted
For Sale

u- SHcl &amp; Fertilhtr

StrYices

Announcement

eTRANSPORTATION

eREALESTATE

For Rent

71-Autos fGr S•l•
7:J- VInl&amp;4W.D.
74- Motlrcyclts
1~
,AUIOI'Irtl
&amp; Acceuorlts

Jl-Homtl for S.ltl
l2-Moblltttomes
torhte
U-FarmJ for hit

71-Auto Rtpelr

J4-8uslntu Buildint•

1.
2.

U-Lots &amp; Acreett
J6-Reet E1tete Wenttd
J1-Ntlltctn

eSERVICES

W•nt·Ad Advertising
Oe•dllneo
2: fb "P.M. Dally
12 Noen Sthlnl~

torMondoy

1.

3.

11-Homtlmpravtmtnts
n-Ptum~tt,.. &amp; ••cnatlnt

•.

s.

U-EJLCIIIItint
14-l!l.ctrlul
&amp; Rtfrl..,.ltien
15-0tHral Haullnt
N-M.H. Repair
17-Upholtflr)'

I :

.

I

Rates and Other Information
ISWOr«&lt;l or Undtr
Celli

I dey

2day,
Jdtyl
6dav•

....'·"

Chartt

J .OO
f

3.75

t,IO

•

....
us

1.2$

6.
7.
8.
9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,

10.
11.

Moltilt ~·lilts lrMII Y,,rei IIIII arfllccepttd ani,- with cash wlftl
order. 2S cent charge for eds carrylnt 101 Number In Cart of TIM

...Untt

YARD SALE , Friday·
Saturday, October 3·4 from
9·5. In Chesler first house

YARD SALE, Thursday,
September 25, Friday, Sep·
tember 26 from 9:30a .m. to
6 p.m. on College Road in
Public Sale
&amp; Auction
OSSIE 'S AUCTION House,
20 N. 2nd Street, Mid·
dleporl, Ohio, We sell one

12.
3~·------13.
35.------14. - - - - - - : - - -

take consignments. For in·

\

.

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN ·

can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's l icense? Phone

15

Schools Instruction

Within

distance

schools. 992·7132 .

the new. used and antique
furniture business.
We
formation and pickup ser·
vice, call 992·6370 or In
West VIrginia 773·5471. Sale
every Friday night at 7
p.m. Auctioneer Howard
Beasley, apprentice auc·

, tloneer, Osby A. Marlin.
(no junk)
17
Miscellanea'!!._._.
NOTICE: I have a full set
of black•mith tools for •a le.
James P, Roberts, 992-5927 .

,..

Real Estate- General

of

HAYES
REALTY
IP•.POMEROY,O.

FOR SAL.E, lhree or tour
bedroom house, carpeted,
woodburning stove, a lso
woodburning fireplace.
Two car garage. Total elec·
tric . 10 x 27 sundeck, 2 •ta
acres. Beautiful setting .

Cllilrles M. Hayes, lhallor
Neacil E. Carse-y, Br. Mgr.
Pt'l . 992· 2-tOl ar 9112·2180 ·
NR ·68 - New Listing - Rustic
H il ls. beau t i ful new three

bedroo m home, fa mil y room,
large fen ced in ya rd . Thi s one
won ' t tast long. priced In tne tow

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

2 BEDROOM, bath

II. •;,
with expando, 1 acre fen ·
ced lot, 12x16 building, truit
II. nut trees. black top road,
rural water, sk irted &amp; tied .
down . Moving must sell .

NJ;1! · 66

-

R i ggs

Add it ion ,
spl it leve l home on

be&lt;"Julifu i
Iaroe tot , fam 1fy room , recrea·
tion room. two car garage, bu i!l
in applian(~ ~. plentv of room for
e v er~tn l ng you wMt , e~&lt;cc un~o~e
home. Priced ror QUICk '" le.
It you really want to sell list w1th
ust"oc:Ny .

.Appraised at S1S.OOO, 843·
2971 or 843·3103.

1973 Crown Haven , 14 x 65,
three bedrooms, new car ·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet.

Real Estate- General

bedrooms. new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric . 1971
Skyline, 12 x 65, two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/a, new

carpet .

1970

ners, advanced, adults .
send
name. address.

telephone number to Vera
Jane Holl iday. Box 224,
Rutland, Ohio 45775.
18

Wanted Jo Do

PMC,

POMEROY,O.
992·2259
NEW LISTING - IN·
VEST IN THE BEST!
This spl it entry 6 room

Real Estate- General

home has 3 bedrooms

with 2 balhs. The lull

Housing
Het1dquarters

basement with garage

has woodbvrner to sup·

Homes for Sale

ED BARTELS,Loan
Representat ive, 1100 East

Ma in St ., Pomeroy, Oh .
Mortgage
money
available . All types home
f inancing ,
new,
old,
refinancing, and 2nd mor ·

tgages. Phone 992·7000 or

11. genie door. Gas heat,

newly installed central air
cond i tioning, family room
&amp; stone fireplace, ap·
pliances bu ilt in. newly In·
stalled electric breaker
system ,
attractively
decorated basement, 2

baths, fully carpeted with

most

attractive

drapes .

Phone

large lot. metal building,
partially lenced in. 992·
7453.
THREE Bedroom house in

Racine, beautifu l lan dscape, two acre yard, one

acre garden. 949·2706.
FIVE POINTS. 3 bedroom

home, bUilt in kitchen,
dining room, living room, 1
acre ground. 992·5726.

PLEASANT COUNTRY
Living. Baum Addillon.

hOOd, disposal and bar

in kitchen and basement
rec .
room .
Just

$25,500.00.
ACREAGE
PORTLAND- About 56
$23,900.00.

FARM FOR COUNTRY
LIVING! Approx. 23

holding the mortgage.
NEW LISTING

acres ot land with a 7 ·
room, 5 bedroom home,
fu ll basement, large

Redecorate this one to
suit your taste. 3

o•th,

full
basem&lt;c;O~"rge level

building. $44,500.00.
SO YOU WANT A LANO
CONTRACT! $2,500.00

tot near playground for
the children. Want only
$6,500 .

down , owner
will
finance the balance on

this 2 bedroom, a II elec-

tric home on approx. 1

acre. $17,200.00.

70 properties to choose
from, we have what you
want!

liv ing. \..Olburnlng
fire pia, c;O oarge block
garage with ut.il ity room

REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
992-61?1
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949·1660

on level lot. Just ofl 33
North. Luxurious inside.
Asking $35.000 .

FOR RENT -

Large

business room ·In Mid·

Dottie &amp; Roger Turner

dleport.
LIVE IN YOUR IN·
VESTMENT.
CALL
992-3325 or 992-3876.

992·5692
OFFICE- 992·1259

Housing
Headquarters

large living room, dining

paneled

family

949 2875
.
·
INCR EDIBLE! Fully car·

peted apts. in downtown
Middleport. All utilities in·
eluded, 1 bedroom from
$170. Special rates for
Senior Citizens. Equal Op·

BEDROOM

furnished ·

1·304·882·3356.
APARTMENT

for

rent,

two bedroom, utilities paid.
One kid accepted . No pets
or drunks. John Sheets, 3 113
miles south of Middleport
on Route 7.

TWO bedroom furnished
apartment. 992·5914.
46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call

992-7479.

Real Estate

General

REAL ESTATE

fireplace inserts, free stan·
ding stoves, warm atr furnace adapters, mobile
home wood heaters, and
triple wall chimneys. Out·

heata , central a.c ., extra

FOR SALE : White
Whirlpool dryer-good con·
dition . Call 985·4276,

lingerie
MATERNITY
feduced 25% Maternity
;eans $15.00, Fall .mater·

plenty of storage. Radiant

room . No closing costs, will

arrange financing for 9 Va.

SAVE $120.00 a MONTH In·
terest. 992·3454.
7 rooms house completely
carpeled, bullt·in kitchen,
approximately

2 3~

acres

with barn In Letart Falls.
247·2684.

6·18. The Watermelon Pal·
ch. 5th St .• New Haven,
W.Va.

-

... ........... ' ..

MIDOLEPORT - En@rgy efficient with Insulated
aluminum siding. Very comfortable three bedroom,
2 bath home, full basement. S40,000.oo.

CALL BILL CHILDS 992-2342

RODNEY DOWNING-BROKER
Middleport, Ohio .,

REALISTIC STEREO, 125
watts per channel, cassette
recording deck, turntable,

2 speakers, head phones,
lists at $1,400. will sell for
$800. 247·3594.
1 used Siegler wall furnace

in good cond. 85,000 BTU .
105.000 counter flow fur·
nace. 1 hlde·a·bed &amp; mat·
chlng chair. 992·3139 after 5
p.m.

and Laundry

eCarpet

• Draperies
• Furniture
c"We're

1 · 22-tf~'

62

Wanted to Buy

end. $12 p-er ton. Bundled

bucket. PhOne 773·5238.

M·1 CARB INE . 30 round

slab. $10 per Jon. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2.
Pomeroy 992-2689.

box of shells, $175. 247·3594.

OLD COl NS, pocket wat·

clip, 4X

Bushnell scope,
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or

Now At
Pomeroy
Lanomark

silver. Call J. A, Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
6462.

New Wood Burner

63

plus blower
1 Like New Sears

DICK FRENCH Uvestock
Hauling. Day or night.

Stoves

Only 1395

Coldspot Side by
Side Combo
1400

1 Good Used Frigidaire

Relrigerator

SISO

~~S~e~rv~i~ce~&amp;~~~~~
l

Livestock

local or long distance. 35
years experience. 614·593·

5132 or 614·593·8883.

· Livestock

63

FAMILY GURNSEY milk
cow with April heifer calf

$1,000. 992·3890.

SEVEN ·EIGHTS polled
charolais bu II. goo¢.
guality . 16 ' mohths old;
Gayle Price. Portland,
Ohio.
polled
good
quality, Sixteen montfts
old. 843·2653.
SEVEN· EIGHTS

charo lais

bull,

.

64
Hay &amp; Grain
NEW EAR corn for sale al
tarm near Chester. 22 per-

cent moisture. 12.65 bushel.
. 985·4116.

... . ........ -......
............
...........
~

IV.. _

POMEROY
~LANDMARK
··-=·=
Pomeroy
E. Main St.

Ouick Ouilt!

Autos for Sale

71

1974
DODGE
CHALLENGER, 318, ··4,

56
Pets lor Sale
HILLCREST KENNELS .

barrel. P.S., p .b., new tire~
II. wheels, 247-3861.

Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.

. 1979 CAMARO Z28 loade~:

Also AKC registered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795,

11,000 miles, brown
in

II. gold
condition .

excellent

Pr iced lor quick sale. '742·

2143 ask for Duane.

HOOF HOLLOW: Horses
and pon ies and riding
lessons .
Everything
imaginable in horse equip·

1971 4 DOOR CHEVY car.
Good ·running cond. S200,
667·3402,
..

ment. Blankets, belts,
boots, etc. Eng lish and

Western .

Ruth

(614) 698·3290.

Reeves

1973 Chevelle Malibu, gOOd
work car. Call985·4276.
TWO TON 1967 Chevy flat·
'bed dump truck with grain
bed 11. cattle· racks. Phone
773·5238.

tigers, &amp; a pure black ; all
males.

AKC

Trucks for Sale

72

6260. Hours 12·7 daily,
closed Tues. Tabby's,

73
vans &amp;4 W.O.
1979 FORD BRONCO.
Reds&amp; white. 742-3035.

REG ISTERED

Cocker Spaniel puppies. 6
weeks
old .
Blonde ,

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessoties

2 HR78xl5 rad ial snow tires

CALL today tor a beautiful

on Ford rims, like new. $50.
both. 985 ·4356 eventngs.
~

992-6260.

Servlees

ONE AKC reg istered
pekingese puppy , Phone
,949·2890.
BEAGLE puppies, six
weeks old, three well

trained beagles, male &amp;
fema le, one started beagle.

Phone 742·2521.

ATHENS produce II. equip·
ment for sale, lease
available.
1974 In ·
ternational cargo Star .with

twenty foot produce bed,

elso walk· in cooler. 949·

nitv tops &amp;. iumpers, sizes

PH. 992·6342
TRY US!
Complele Dry Cleaning

949·2862
949·2160

en ·

INTERNATIONAL

ATTENTION :
I IM ··
PDRTANT TO YOUI Will
pay cash or certified check 61
Farm Equipment
for antiques and collec·
1978
J
D 450C Dozer. 6 way
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also, blade, winch, canopo; limb
guns, pocket watches and risers. 1700 hrs . exc . cond .
coin collections. Call 614· $28,000. After 5 p.m. 752·
2372.
767·3167 or 557·3411.

HOUSE FOR Sale, route
124 In Rutland. Two story,
five
rooms.
bath.
$23,000.00. Call742-2742.

Middleport, Ohio

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

dloader with four in one

Antiques

Co, 614·992·2205.

.~

All types of rool work,

new or repair gutters
and downspouts, guHer
cleaning and painting ..
All work guaranteed .

CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest

puppy or dog. Humane
society, shots &amp; wormed.

Summer Prices . Excelsior

heat, thermostat In each

S4
Misc. Merchanise
'--"-~===='-""='--

ADMIRAL. Color TV. gOOd
plcture$200., Genera l Elec·

FIVE room oil heater, like
new. John Sheets, 3 •IJ
miles south of Middleport
on Route 7.

V.C. YOUNG II

99H215or99H314

1-----_;_----j_:_---------J

females, champion blood
lines. 843·2684.

large double garage. 985·
3543,

plus garage, laundry room,

•New Homes · extensive remodeling
•Electrical work
•Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
9·14·1 mo.

door Equipment Sales, Jet.
Rls, 7 &amp; 35. Gallipolis, Ph,
446·3670.

tric refrigerator $75 .. an·
tique gas stove. 992·5880 af·
ter4p.m.

electrical work
&lt;Free Estimates)

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

GET A Nice soft lovable

54 Misc. Merchanise
HEATING OIL. Buynowal

glass doors to patio, gas

NEW
BEAUTIFUL
CUSTOM buill home, 1600
square feet of living space

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

kitten from your Humane
Society . Shots &amp; wormed.
Donation required. 992·

51
Household Goods
STOVES· , We have

.

work
-ConcretewDrk
-Plumbing and

~~========~~~~~~~~9~-1~0-~1~m~o~.~f,~~~P~D~m~e~r~oy~,~O~h~.==~

apartment,

FURNISHED apartment
with tour rooms II. bath.
Adults only, no pets. 992·
3874,

eReplacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

Pomeroy
Oil ice 992-7544
Home 992·6191

un ·

Pomeroy, $150.00 plus
deposit. 992·6130 or 992·
7511 '

53

Home on large landscl!ped

Jot. 3 bedrooms. 2'1• baths,

bedroom furnished apt. In
Rac ine. $150. month plus
utilities. No pets, one child .

acres, pasture, woods,
and building sites .
Abundant wild life!

sand down with owner

estate
setup,
2
bedrooms, rt l··tng, large

II.
shower, full basement,
aluminum siding, storm
windows &amp; door, big porch,

room , 3 bedroom home
is a real value at this
price! In excellent con·
dition with an unusually
elegant bath, range,

trailer spot. Only ss,2oo.
NEW LISTING - 4.7

8 ROOM House, Bath

AVAILABLE OCT. I. 2

apartment, utilities paid,
no pets. Deposit required.

stretcher. $19,500.00,
REDUCED
FOR
QUICK SALE! This 6

Will se ll as is anytime.
V iew of river and fran ·
tage with all city
utilities.
NEW LISTING - Old 6
room house and 2 lots. 3
bedrooms, bath, natural
gas city water and

NEW LISTING - 1979
Holly Park, 14x70 real

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
Is, Phone992·5434.

Storage building and
tree house! Secluded
but in town. $52,000 ,00.

rooms, 3 bedrooms, with
forced ·a ir gas heat, and
at this pr ice a budget

1- ( 614) ·992· 3325

Call985·3814 or992·2571.

Apartment
for Rent

·

IN MASON, West Virginia,
two , bedroom furnished

NEW LISTING- EASY
ON THE BUDGET!
This home · offers 5

bedroom•

Pomeroy. 247·3942.

ptement electr ic heat.

Approx . 2.36 wooded lol.

NEW LISTING - New 2
bedroom Jog type home.

31

Country Mobile Home
Park, on Route 33, north of

992
TWO

Pleasant, WV Phone 675·
4424 ,

Harry

Administration

107 Sycamore

--

-~e":::::~~~:
-Roofing and guHer

• Storm Doors
eStorm Windows

for appointment.

WILL care for elderly in
my home in Pomeroy .

Roush, Minersville, Ohio.

$150.00 a month , Lo~ated in

9·14·1 mo.

~::~~ESTE~

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsulation

REAL ESTATE LOANS

Adulls only, Deposit
required. 992·3647. Com·
plele ly furnished .

1975 Two qedroom mobile
home partially furnished,

calls.

1NSULATION

FINANCIAL

TWO BEDROOM mobile

2 BEDROOM T.RAILER
for rent. 992 5914.

or

h
P one 9 4 9·2414
9·10·1 mo. pd.

Vetera~s

2Home.
BEDROOM
Mobi
Je
Adults only.
992·
3324.

Call for Free Siding
Estimate, 949·2101
949·2860. No Sunday

r~======~=~~~~~~~~~~~~t==~~~~;:==~
"YO
·PARK
J&amp;l BLOWN
UNGS

home with utilities paid.

44

TV, CB &amp; HAM

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

Federal Housing

Mobile Homes
for Rent

42

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

INSTALATIONS

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

portunity Housing. Village
Manor Apts. Call 992-7787

12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet . B x S Sa les, Inc .,
2nd x Viand Street, Point

t ing . Call this number 1·

air
furnace,
centralII. nice
air
condilion
ing, garage
porch. 949 2734.
TWO bedroom house for
renl, unlurnlshed . 992·3090

..C's.

PIANO l.ESSONS Begin·

8

who has over 25 years in

~------------~----------J·

patio.

1972 Champio~ . 12 x 60, two

room,

liquidation sales. Get top
dollar . List with the man

1

hours. Call949·2875.

room, with stone flreplece,
picture window II. sliding

3
2_
· -_
- ,_
.-_
-33 . _
_
_;_

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel ·
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Wilt do babysitting in your
home. 5 days a week. any

Syracuse. Follow signs.

piece or entire households.
New, used, or antiques. in·
eluding homes~ farms, or

raft.

x

ran ch brick home in Baum
Addition . With new garage

talns, stereo, sofa, etc.

Eun word over tht minimum 15 word I 114 cents per word p~r dt., .

deck

walking

GARAGE SALE. Sept. 26·
28. Quilts, pieced polyester.
Fireplace ,

742·3030 or 742·2728.

family room with fireplace,
fully carpeted. Large sun·

and
T . P.
water
available. Will sell as is
for $4500 or One thou·

YARD SALE , THUR ·
SDA Y, at 371 South Second
Avenue, Middleport. Cur·

16. _ _ _..;__ _

home with 3 bedrooms, two
11. two·thirds baths, large

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom

YARD SALE, September
26·27, llfth house behind
POSt off ice in Clifton.

...
15.------

992·6139.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1980 70 x 14 mobile home
with 1 x 24 expando. Ex·
cellent condition. Phone

Relocating, owner must
sell . Five year old bi ·level

acres, 4 room house, old
mobile home, · electric

misc. Items.

30. _ _ _ _ _ __
31. _ _ _ _ ____.

SaliSbury .

992·5732 .

on right across bridge on
248 . · Women's &amp; boy' :;
clothes, furniture, books.

29. _ _ _ _ _ __

IN

nice clothing all sizes, lots
Of misc . Items.

GARAGE SALE, ThurSday-Fr iday at 44 Lincoln
Street.

Acl1 running other then COflltCutlve days wilt bt Clllrtfllat ttlt t City

In memory, Card ot Thank' altcl Obituary ! ' Ants per word, $3.00
minimum . Cash In advlnet.

9·S across from Codner's
Texaco station in Syracuse.
Lots of children ' s, men's &amp;
women's clothes, also lots
of new items at 10 percent
discount.

SVIile, Oh. on Co. Rd , 1
mile. Phone373·6276.

v.
I
28._ _ _ _ _ __

Jo

li vein· to help care for in·
val id husband , 992-5505 or

614·992·7714, Mr.
" ::;YARD SALE. starting
September 22 through 27th.

1/&gt;

17. _ _ _ _ __
18._ _ _ _ _ __
19. _ _ _ _ _ __
20. _ _ _ _ __
21. _ _ _ _ _ __
22. _ _ _ _ __
23. _ _ _ _ _ __
24. _ _ _ _ _ __
25. _ _ _ _ _ __
26._ _ _ _ _ __

Someone

WILL do odd jobs 11. pain·

Franklin

These cash rates
include discount

WANTED :

children ' s clothing and
·many more items.

rototiller, new wash basin,
Homelite cha in saw, han·
dquilted qu ilt . Between
Tuppers Plains II. Reed·

w_a_rd_s~~~!!!~~~~-!

992·7314,

Reasonable. 992·6022 ,

cedar wardrobe, large size

AD WANTED

my home. Trained &amp; ex·
perienced . Have vacancy .

Davis residence. Rose

High School on County Rd .
28, Old table and chairs
with bullet, pony saddle,

CIRCLE

space below. Each In·
ltlal or group ol figures
counts as a word. Count

Yard Sale
YARD SALE - Sept. 29
II. 30. Monday and lues·
day, 9:30 a. m. Iii dark .

residence above Eastern

Savel I I
Write your own ad and order by ma ll wilh this

Print one word in each

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Classlfleds and

Phon•·~------------------

45-FRoom•

&amp; Auc:ti!MI

21-

RENTALS

$25 .

GARAGE SALE. Sept. 2511.
26, 9·5 at John Damewood's

results. Money not refundable.

46-lpue for Rent
47-Wenhtd to Rent
• ...,_Eflulpmtnt tor Rent

9-WantedtoBuy

n a on.

Name~.-----------------Addreu. ________________

eANNOUNCEMENTS
1-Ann~nctmtnfs

bids submilled.
!01 24, 25. 26, 3tc

1 coupon. Cancel your ad b\1 phone when you get

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

in

Hill. Odds and ends,

Pay Ca'sh for

!
l

,1

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero.,-, 0., 45769

4-0h,re•way
5-HIPPVAdl
...,_LOiflnd Found
7-YarCISIIt
t-Publlc Salt

7

r----------------------b I fl fl

Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell for
cas h the following

area .

reward . 742·3117,

Ptlb;ic Notice

SavingS Company reserves

Lost

32

Homes for Sale

32

992·2143.

area . Male, shaggy brown
&amp; black hair . Answers to

SIX ROOM
house
forforced
rent,
bath,
turn! shed,
gas

"But buying a house within your means
Is not the American way!"

ANTENNAS

.

SiJes from 4x' to 12X40

nished. 992·3890.

985·3934.

6338.

nFrom 30xl0"

Utility Buildings

5 ROOM HOUSE $50 , per
room or $225. for complete
house .
Located
in
Pagevill e. Partially fur·

paneling, floor tile, ceiling
tile. Call Fred Miller at992·

13

Lost and Found

6

Langsville

Public Nollce

Situations Wanted

843-4815.

. PEKENESE .

Public Notice

Health Care Center . 992·
6606.

WILL CARE foreldersly in

Giveaway

LOST DOG , Bashan Rd .

returns, Sentinel Want Ads

PART· TIME RN. 7:ooa .m.
to 3:30p.m. Call Pomeroy

WILL do odds 11. ends,

Siamese, 742·2452.

Small investment, large

· and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
t inel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992· 2157.

RACINE

Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night starting at

.•l

Vinyl and Aluminum •
Siding

TOWERS&amp;.

:.iz:es
-

Houses for Rent

41

HOME

12

SHOOT,

I

31

nights starting September
26.
GUN

•

B&amp;D

Farm Buildings
SMALL

WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD ,
SILVER ,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COI.NS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
Y. MISC. ITEMS. A.B·
SOLU T E
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP. MIDDLEPORT ,
OHI0992·3476.

GET VALUABLE training

ALL STEEL

iientals

Osby ( ss ie) Martin. 992·
6370.

as a young business person

6 BABY KITTENS , Part

Memorial Hospital to Pomeroy
Health Care Cewnter.
At 10:35 a.m. the Middleport unit
took Herman Haddox, Hamilton St.,
Middleport to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at8:14 p.m. the Racine until took Elton Kraueter from his
home in Racine to Holzer Medical
Center; at 11:47 p.m. the Rutland
unit took Bill Schoonover from Mine
No.2 to.O'Bleness Hospital, Athens.

Gold, silver or forei9n
coins or anv gold or silver
items. An t ique furniture,
glass or china , will pay top
dol tar , or complete estates.
No Item too large or too
small. Chec k pri ces before
selling.bAiso do appraising.

JONES Meat Packing···

area . Reward , 992·3505.

Public Notice

REAL ESTATE for sale:
corner lot on main high ·
w a y ; over 250 foot of fron ·
tage; 95 perce"nt financing
to qualified church group,
organization , or successful
business management
992·57111&gt; or 992·2529.

Lane

992·2082 ,

Business Services

home. Easy terms, close to

.and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone

·4

AFTER GAME TEA
Tea will be served in the cafeteria
following the Eastern-Kyger Creek
game next Friday to alumni from
OJive-(}range, Chester and Eastern.

·

.

.

town. 992·5786 or 992·2529.

Daniels 742-29511 Tuning

VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMITI'ED-Richard DeMoss,
Pomeroy; Herman Haddox, Middleport; Charles Ohlinger, Albany;
Robert VanMeter, Pomeroy; Helen
Gibbs, Hartford, W. Va.; Robert
McLaughlin, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES-Anon Fleming,
David Brickles, John Powell and Ar·
tie Houdashlet.

Six runs were made Wednesday by
local emergency units, according to
the report of the Meigs Emergency
Medical Services Headquarters.
At 1:07 a.m. the Rutland unit took
Jolui D. Lewis from Meigs Mine No.
1 to Holzer Medical Center; at 9:41
a.m. the Racine unit took Hubert
Price from his home on SR 124 in
Long Bottom to St. J opseph
Hospital; at 10:07 a.m. the Rutland
unit took John Powell fr0111 Veterans

prices

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
Plano

-~-----

SUITABLE LOT for mobile

possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelrv. etc.

He said the Titans are needed
. more now than when they were first
deployed in 1963 because "the
strategic balance .(with the Soviet
Union) is not nearly as much in our
favor as It was then."
There are 84 Titan II sites in
Arizona, Kansas and Arkansas, and
each missile can carry a nuclear
bomb about 1,000 times as powerful
as the bomb that destroyed
Hiroshima, Japan.
The Titan was designed primarily
as a threat to Soviet cities. Recently,
the United States has developed the
more accurate Minuteman missile,
designed to knock out the enemy's
nuclear defenses.
Adhering to policy, Mark refused
to say publicly whether the Titan's
warhead was in danger of
detonating or leaking radiation. He
said he would discuss the ~uclear
device only in private with members
of Congress . .

wanted to vent the fumes Into the at·
mosphere in an attempt to halt the
dangerofexplnmon?
Marks had no answers for those
questions Wednesday. Nor would he,
tl)e Air Force secretary said, untll
the service finishes its investigation
of the explosion near Damascus,
Ark., which killed one man and injured 21 others. The nuclear
warhead was apparently blown off
the missile but was recovered undsmaged.
He said he hoped to have some of
the answers within a month.
But he said the Titan is still vital to
America's defense, despite the
questions and fears about the safety
of the nuclear missile.
'
Mark Insisted ·!he aging Titan· II
''Is required in our strategic force . It
accounts .lor about one-tldrd Of the
destructive power of our land-based
missile force. There is no near-tenn
replacement."

-- ---·

~$ -·- _L~t! ~~cre~-g~ __

Announcement'S- -

2115.

81
Entertam baby with fascinating
pels on a colo1ful Quilt.
Swill sketches in easiest appl ique and embroidery b•ings lhe
happiest •esult- lhis hantjmade
crib Qui ll fo• mom to treasu1e.
Pa«ern 7031: bansfe1 ol molifs
and easy dtrections.
SIJ5 for each pallem. Add 501

each pattern for ltrst-class ·air·
ma1 l and handling. Send lo:
Alitt BIGO!Is
4 ?
NHtlemH Depl
The Dally Sentinel
llol 1&amp;3, Old Chtbu St.., Now
loft, NY 1011J. Print Nemo,
Atldlt$$, Zip, Pettwn Numbtr.

a

Catch on to lhe mft boom! Send
lo1 ou1 NEW 19Bi NEEOLECRAfT
CATALOG . Over 172 designs, 3
hee patterns inside. 11.00
All CRAFT BOOlS . .$1.75 uch

13HIISition Home Quillin1

132-Quilt Ori&amp;inals

131-Atld 1 lllocl Quills
130-Swullttfaltlans-Sizesll-56
129-Quicl 'n' (ISJ Trensfers
nhead and 2 row smapper .
12a.£~ Plkhwoft Quills
head, excellent condition,
$5595. Shinn's Tractor 127-Af&amp;hiiiS 'n' Dollies
125-Thritty CrefiJ Flowers
Sales, Leon, wv 458·1603.

1976 JOHN Deere 3800
chopper with 2 row cor·

125-Pitll !!!'Ills

1974 NEW Holland Super
717 chopper with one row
head, gOOd condition, $2495.

124-hsy Grits 'n' O...mtnts .
123-Stltdo 't' Plkll Quilts
122-SboH 't' Pull Quilts

121-Pillaw Show-Otis
11HM,
Art ol Flower CIOChet
Leon. WV. 458·1630.
116-llfty Fifty Otrilts
ONE
New Massey 115·£esr Art ollip"t Ctodttl
Ferguson 200 chopper, two 11Kotftpltlt 51ft ....
row head,weathered, list . 111-11 Jiffy lluf
price. $8000. sale price 10!-Stw + lnltilesictisltltind)
$3995 , Shinn's Tralor Sales, 105-1- Cniclitf
102·11-tll Qlilts
Gallipolis, Ohio 446·1044.
101-Qullt llotlli.c.tllction I
Shinn's

Tractor

Sales,

Home

1mprovements

s 11. G carpet Cleaning.

Steam cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonabl.e
rates. Scotchguard. 9412: ·

6309 or 742·2211 .

REMODELING ,

panelin~. :

doors, ceilings, floors. 992·.

2759 ,

.

Excavallng
J X F BACKHOE SER·

83

VICE liscensed and bon·"

ded,

septic

tank

1~ - '

stallation, water and gas

lines. Excavating work and ·
transillayout. 992-7201. ·

EXCAVATING Wanted·:
Dozer work or timber tb
cut, 985-3567 or 992·3208.
DOZER work, small jobs'.a
specialty, quick depeo·
dableservice, 742·2753.
84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING
Repairs,

makes!
Fabric

MACHINE
service,
992 - 228~ .

Shop,

all

The ·

Pomeroy. \

Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We

Scissors.

shar~n ~

·

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn

mower:
7, 91.5 ..,.._.

Next to Slate J11ghway' .;

Garage on Route

3825.
_ _ _ _ ___c···

�Iraq captures major lr;Jnian port
I
~---- .,
--- ••.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY :

:

•

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
WOMEN'S

SLEEPWEAR
CLEARANCE

FALL SALE

FURNITURE
THROWS

Special group of long and short
gowns and robes, pajamas and
baby dolls .
Nylon · Cotton · Terry- Knit.

Non·slip foam back - a special
group of real savings. Machine
washable· fringed.

REG. '5.50 ••••• ••• SALE •3.59
REG. '7.00 •••••••• SALE '4.49
Reg. '9.00•• •••• •• SALE '5.89
Reg. '13.00 ••••••• SALE '8.49
CYSTIC FIBROSIS WEEK- Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews,
seated, signed proclamation wednesday declaring Sept. 21 through
the 'r/ as cystic fibrosis week. A fund drive will be made during this
period. Standing, l·r, are Mary Mart!na nd Ruby Marshall, C()o
chalnnen of the fUnd drive sponsored by The Eight and Forty Meigs
County Salon 7-1.0.

a

Energy policies
will lead to wider
coal usage
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
White House official predicts
President Carter's energy policies
will lead to wider use of Ohio coal as
.synthetic fuel plants are built and

:exports increase.
· Gene Eidenberg, assistant to the
· president for intergovernmental af·
· fairs, made the forecast in a speech
· before the Ohio Municipal League.
. "We need Ohio coal. We will be ex·
:. porting Ohio coal," he told the 600
:municipal officials from throughout
.the state.
• "Do you know Western European
nations want to import our coal
today?" he asked the group, saying
thst increased reliance on coal
reserves was part of an administration attempt to reduce the
nation's reliance on foreign
produced oil and enable it to meet its
own energy requirements.
"The price of oil in ~ last 12 to 18
months has gone up 125 percent,"
said Eidenberg.
He said there is good 'news despite
the U.S. expenditure of $90 billion for
foreign oil. U.S. oil imports are running 1.5 million barrels a day behind
last year. "That is a significant
achievement. It is one we have to
sustain," Eldenberg said Wed·nesday.
·
: He said that development of plants
'that would tum coal into gas and
.liQuid petroleum will increase
. demand.
"There will be a synthetic fuel
program in the state of Ohio," he
predicted, but could offer no
specifics. "Obviously these major
plants are going to go where the

resources are.''
Ohio's coal industry has been hard
hit by layoffs stemming from
reduced demand fQr the high-sulfur
fuel.
Eldenberg said the economy is in a
period of transition in which inflation must be controlled and the
.country's industrial base
revitalized.
"There are bound to be sacrifices"
in trying to halt inflation, but most
Americans are willing to sustain

them to bring it under control, he
said. "The price of not doing
something about inflation is so much
worse than the cure."
He said the nation was embarking
on a long term program to solve
problems for which there are no
quick fixes.
Eidenberg's speech before the
group, which included Republican
and Democrat city leaders, was nonpartisan - at least on the surface.
He did not mention Republican
presidential nominee Ronald
Reagan by name or refer to the GOP
contender's economic proposals,
Earlier, Republican U.S. Senate
candidate James E. Betts adopted a
similar non-partisan stance as he
called for Congress to bring inflation
under control and provide a more
equitable distribution of federal funds to individual states.

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Poly/cotton or nylon in "navy, khaki or colorful stripes. Lit·
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Long sleeve coat style
top - adjustable Waist
bottoms (long legs) .
Solid color and patterns.
Sizes A, B, C, D.

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Colorful plaid 8nd solid coordinotes.
Skirts, slacks and jackets in poly ·wool
blends. Pre leen sizes.

Reg. SlB.oo ............... Sale $14.39
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Reg. $24.00 ............. .. Sale $19.19
Reg. $26.00 ............... Sale$20.79
Reg. $50.00 ............... Sale$39.99

Malched pants and shirts In live solid colors: khak i .forest green · dark olive · navy blue or charcoal. Per ·
manent press.

Community stunned by deaths

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$12.95 Work Pants, Extra Sizes ........ $10.99
$10.95 Work Shirts, Reg. Sizes .......... $8.99
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S 8.95 Short Sleeve Shirts ................ $6.99

ELDORADO, Ohio - The people who live in this tiny Ohio community of less than 500 were stunned by the shooting deaths of four
members of the same family.
Scott Creech, 17, was charged with four counts of aggravated murder ThursdaY in the slayings of his mother, brother and two s1sters, according to Preble County Sheriff Jan Spitler.
A second hearing at which the teen-ager will enter a plea to the
charges will be sheduled soon, according to the sheriff.
Jack Creech, the youth's father, discovered the bodies Wednesday
about ~ p.m. when he returned home from work. The_ victims were
identified as Chris Ann Creech, 39; brother Itobert, 11 ; sisters Kathryn
Marie, 9, and Rachel Rebecca, 4.

LAURA MAE

BLOUSES

Nice variety of styles and wood
finishes . Oak, cherry, maple or
pine.
West German movements and
cathedral chimes.

Intensive manhunt underomy

Plaids, solids and prints in
fashionable Laura Mae
blouses. Women's sizes 34 to
46.
Reg. Sl2.00 .. · .... Sale$9.59

r

·

LA AWA fOR
Reg, ~18.00 ...... Sale$14.39
_._.._._._._._. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .- .. . . . . . . . . R.eg•
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FLORENCE, Ky. - An intensive manhunt was under way by northem Kentucky and Cincinnati police for a man wanted for
questioning in the slayings oftwoblack Utah youths.
.
A man tentatively identified as Joseph Paul Franklin escaped
through a window in the interrogation room of the Florence jail.
Cincinnati Detective Capt. Donald Slaughter said the man, wh~ had
"a mulitiplicity of identification cards" was also wantell for
questioning in connection with the June 8 slayings of ~wo black youths
in Cincinnati.
'
Charges of first-degree escape and possession of stolen property _
were filed, said Det. Clay Newman, Boone-Florence-Felony Squad.

·Senate won't go with House
wASHINGTON - The Senate apparently doesn't plan to go along

CORDUROY JEANS

with a House action approving proposed coal gasification plants at two
locations, one in Ohio and another In Illinois.
The House approved a prowsed Conoco Coal Development Co.
projecl in Noble County, Ohio, along with one planned by the Illinois
Coal Gasification Group.
The bill voted out of the Senate Appropriations Committee this week
calls for continued competition between the two rival projects.
The Senate is expected to go along with the committee recommendation in voting within the next few days.

Wrangler western style corduroys in navy blue,
brown, green, grey and suntan. Sizes 26 to 42.
waist- 30 to 361nch lengths - straight leg.

MEN'S 119.95 CORDUROY JEANS ........... !15.88
MEN'S '21.95 CORDUROY JEANS ............. 'l7.51

SATURDAY OPEN 9:30 TO 5 P.M.
3RD ST., RACINE, OH .
Member FDIC

Binajpur, Bangladesh, said he
believed there is "mueh airing out"
to be done on the birth control issue.
"It has to be debated. Population is
one major problem in our country,"
he said.
"Don't expect any changes in doctrinal matters; because these .things
simply cannot be changed," said Ar·
chbishop Jozef Tomko, secretarygeneral of the Sixth World Synod of
Bishops.
"Our objective is to help Catholic
famili~s who must li,ve in an ambiance which pays little heed to their
Catholic principles. The family in
such circumstances needs help if it
is to defend its religious values and
live by them-in the face of pressures
from without and confusions
within,'' Tomko said.
In addition to dealing with the
basic tenets of the church, and draf·
ling guidelines for dealing with
Catholics who ignore them, the
bishops will, for the first time since
the 1!162-65 Vatican Council II, try to
find commqn views on a wide range
of other issues facing the world's 760
million Roman Catholics, including
the changing role of women, sex
.education, conswnerlsm and drug

MEN'S WORK UNIFORMS

CLOCK SALE

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

at

steadily through the Strait· of Hormuz at the other end Thursday after
a two-day slowdown, oil industry officials in Bahrain reported.
But the usual parade of ·empty
tankers into the gulf was reported to
have stopped because of the fears of
the owners and , captains, and
because of exorbitant new war risk
insurance rates. One authoritative
source in Bahrain said .loading
operations virtually halted Thursday at Saudi Arabia 's big terminal
at Ras Tanura and at other gulf ports.
On the diplomatic front, the U.N.
Security Council scheduled its first
public meeting on the war crisis for 5
p.m. EDT today after both Iran and

Iraq ignored the council's appeal
Tuesday night for a cease-fire an!l
negotiations to settle their differences peacefully. Moslem sour·
ces at U.N. headquarters said Iran's
government was resisting mediation
attempts and refusing to agree to a
cease-fire unless Iraq withdrew
from all occupied territory.
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A.
Gromyko met with Secretrary of
State Edmund S. Muskie in New
York and assured him the Soviet
Union will remain neutral in the
war, Muskie reported. But he said
Gromyko gave no firm commitment
to support U.N. initiatives to end the
fighting.
(Continued on page 12)

•

enttne
FIFTEEN

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1980

FALL ' SALEI

r

E1 ,..u. .S
fO~ D .

VATICAN CITY (AP) - Pope
John Paul II opened his first synod
of· Roman Catholic biShops today
with expectations that it wili break
no new groljlld and will reaffirm the
church's traditional opposition to
birth control, abortion, divorce' and
extramarital sexual relations.
In a solemn Mass in the
magniflcient ~istine Chapel, the pontiff declared that it is "the duty of
·each Christian family to guard and
preserve humanity itself. Families
must preserve fundamentar values
of the church."
.
The pope delivered his homily in
Latin, seated in the gold-t!mbossed
papal chair with his back against
Michelangelo's "Last Judgment."
Solemn hYmns echoed thi-ough the
15th-century chapel as more than 200
cardinals aiJ!! bishops in red and
·purple robeSprayed.
After the-Mass, Cardinal Terehce
Cooke of New York told reporters
that "the synod would be a wonderful show of support for family life
throughout the world." He said he
eX)lected "strengthening .and reaf·
ftrmatlon" of church values but no
major changes.
But Bishop Thenthonius Gomes of

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Special group of quality Buster
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socks. lOOo/o cotton in assorted col· .
ors. Sizes 5 to 81!2 .

3'12 ounce skein - made by
Coats and CLark. Big selection
of colors.

NO. 116

appeared imminent as the war enIranian raid on an Iraqi naval base
tered its fifth day. The oil refinery
in the waterway and two crewmen
has been shut down since an air and
on the Kuwaiti ship were killed.
artillery attack Tuesday set part of
The Iraqis also reported Iranian
it afire.
air raids Trursday on Mosul and
Iran's air force and navy carried
Kirkuk, two oil centers in northern
the war to Iraq,with attacks on its oil
Iraq; the Baghdad, Kut and Basra
industry, but there were no reports
areas, and the Um-Qasr harbor and
of the extent of the damage.
naval base built by the Soviet Union
'An Iraqi communique said Iraqi
at the mouth of the Shatt al-Arab.
gunboats and helicopter gunships
Iraq claimed 36 Iranian planes
fought off a naval attack before sunwere shot down Thursday; Iran
down Thursday on Khor Abdulla,
claimed 16 Iraqi aircraft. Tehran
Iraq's main oil terminal at the nor- . reported 79 Iranians killed and 291
theastern end of the Persian Gulf.
wounded in fighting Thursday. Iraqi
The communique claimed three casualties were not reported.
Iranian frigates and two gunboats
Despite the war at the head of the
sunk. It said a Greek ship and a Persian Gulf, tankers loaded with oil
Kuwaiti ship were hit during an for the non-communist world moved

CENT~

Synod will reaffirm
church's opposition

CHILDREN'S SOCKS

Wintuk Knitting Yarn

••

BUNDLE OF JOYI
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1

Japanese consul in Khorramsbahr
reported Iraqi forces had not en·
tered the city Thursday night and
there was fighting south of the city,
the Japanese Foreign Ministry said
in Tokyo.
But Iraqi communiques said the'
city fell early Thursday afternoon
after a flanking movement by Iraqi
troops to the north cut the railroad
from Khorramshahr and nei$11borillg A,badari to Ahvaz and Tehran,
· and "made the liberation of every
yard of Arab land uSurped by the
Persians posSllle."
Abadan, five \niles east of
Khorramshahr and the site of one of
the world's biggest oil refineries,
already was under siege and its fall

,·e
VOL 31

Reg. '23.00•••••• SALE '14~99

to deal with cutoff

••

I

Reg. '17.00•••••• SALE '11.09

U. S. would be unable
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP)- The
director of the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency says the United
States would be unable to deal with
any reduction or cutoff in oil supplies resulting from war between
Iran and Iraq .
In a speech in Youngstown, James
F. MC.\VOy said due to inaction by
the Carter administration, the country is dangerously dependent on
foreign oil while the nation's coal
reserves go unused.
He said the president has twice
scaled back the coal production goal
set in 1973 of 2 billion tons by 1985.
That goal is now 1.2 billion tons by
1990. Meanwhile, McAvoy said, 5,000
coal miners in southeastern Ohio are
out of work.
McAvoy predicted any interruption in oil shipments would
have a serious effecl on the nation.
He called the Carter ad·
ministration's oil backout program
"too little, too late."

7.49 SIZE 60170 INCH .......... 13.99
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BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Iraq
called on the Arabs of Iran's southwestern oil province of Khuzestan
today to revolt in support of advancing Iraqi ground forces
threatening the provincial capital
ani! the Iranian oil fields following
the reported capture of the major oil
port of Khorramshahr.
"Resist the Persian occupation
with all means," said a Baghdad
Radio broadcast to the 1 million
ethnic Arabs of Khuzestan. "The
revQiutlon is yours. Victory is yours, .
Glory to the Arab nations."
Iran denied the loss of Khorramshahr, its biggest port 25 miles down
the disputed Shatt al·Arab estuary
from Basra, Iraq's chief port. The

Weather forecast
Clear and cold tonight with lows near 40. Mostly sunny Saturday
with highs around 70, Probability of rain near zero percent tonight and
Saturday. Winds light and variable tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecut- Sunday through Tuesday: Fair Sunday
and Monday. Partly cloudy Tuesday, Hlgha in the 70s Sunday and
Monday and·in 'the lower 80s Tuesday .. Lows in the 40s Sunday and
lflonday and the~ Tueeday.

I

\

•

addiction.
Birth control appears to he the
most controversial issue facing the
216 invited bishOPs meeting in the
historic Sistine Chapel. In a series of
speeches setting the tone for the
synod, Pope John Paul emphasized
his unyielding opposition to contraception, abortion and divorce.
The pontiff reaffirmed the church's rejection of all birth control
devices . and chemical contraceptives such as the pill. He said
artificial contraception violates
human and Christian ethics and is
unworthy of civilization.
Vatican officials acknowledged
that the pontiff's strong stand against birth control has been questioned
by several bishops, and is ignored by
large numbers of Catholics, including an estimated li(l percent of
the Catholic couples in the United
States. .
The pontiff has lined up marriage
and family-planning experts to address the synod on the so-called
"sinless" or rhythm method of birth
control endorsed by the church.
Among them will be' Drs. John and
Evelyn Billings, an Australian
couple who developed an improved
rhythm methQd sanctioned by the
Vatican. The basic rhythm method
calls for sexual abstinence during
the most likely time of ovulation.
John Paul also has invited 16
couples, most of them active in
promoting "Christian ways of life,"
to address the synod. They will try to
show, based on their experiences,
that there are means to rescue a
troubled marriage without resorting
to divorce.
After their deliberations, the
bishops will vote on individuai Issues
and then on a final document before
it is submitted to Pope John Paul.
Their report, however, is not binding
and the pope may reject or rewrite
any part or all of it.

.r.
: • ····..

"''' :~~~: i~·i. '.

'

WILL APPEAR AT FESTIVAL - Among the
traditional craftsmen at the loth annual Bob Evans
Farm Festival, Oct. 10, 11 and 12, will be Susan Faust,
Keyser, W. Va., a self-taught kickwheel potter. Susan
is a professional in her field, using clay to create functional pottery just as it was done in early America. She
has been a potter for seven years and believes thst her

special skill keeps her in touch with the traditions of an
earlier time. The Bob Evans Farm Festival is open
from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. for the three days at the Bob
Evans Farm near Rio Grande. Admission is $1 per car
and weekend camping is available for a $5 fee which includes admission.

Poll reveals Americans undecided
NEW YORK (AP) - Americans
say they couldn't pick a clear winner
in the first presidential debate bet·
ween John Anderson and Ronald
Reagan, saying both men scored
points in the nationally televised
confrontation, an Associated PressNBC News poll says,
President Carter's refusal to take
part in thst first debate sponsored
by the League of Women Voters on

'Superintendent
given authority
The superintendent was given
total authority to cancell any school
activities during inclement weather
when the · Eastern Local School
District Board of Education met in
regular session earlier this week.
Judy Wolfe wasa hired as the ,aubstitute librarian for federal
programs and approval was given
for the mathematics class to take
part in the Ohio Math League Tests
atacostof$50.
New Ohio School Law handbooks
and hew boardmanshlp books for the
board members were purchased.
The board approved the at·
tendance of Supt. Richard Roberts
arid Roger Gaul, board member, at a
Columbus conference on house bill
769 at a ~ost of -$35 a person. A
special meeting was set for Sept. 30
at 7 p.m. to discuss negotiations with
one teacher. The next regular
meeting was set for Oct. 28 at 7 p.m.

Sunday drew strong disapproval
from many likely voters.
But Carter's refusal, the debate
and the other events-of the past month left the presidential candidates
not much different from where they
stood in mid-August. Reagan is up
just a bit, while Carter and Anderson
are essentially unchanged.
Approximately 1,500 likely voters
across the nation were interviewed

.

by telephone Monday through Wed·
nesday for the latest AP-NBC News
poll.
Each was asked whom they would
vote for if the presidential election
were held today.
Reagan was the choice of 42 percent and Carter of 33 percent. An·
derson was named by 13 percent.
One percent mentioned others and 11

•

percent said they were undecided.
In the AP-NBC News poll taken
Aug. 15-16, Reagan was the choice of
39 percent ; Carter, 32 percent; and
Anderson, 13 percent.
·Because these figures are based
on error margins of either 3 or 4 percentage points, the changes in
Reagan's and Carter's figures are
not significant.

.Tehran radio denies death report
BEIRUT, Lebsnon (AP) -Iraq's
official radio reported Friday that
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini , the
Iranian revolutionary · leader with
whose regime Iraq is at war, has
died, but Tehran Radio denied the
report shortly after.
'
"It has been confirmed to us that
the impostor Khomeini has met his
death," said 'Baghdad Radio.
It did not say how the claimed confirmation was obtained.
It was the second report this week
by the Iraqi radio of a sensational
development in its adversary's
capital. On Tuesday it reported that
the 52 American hostages held in
Iran had been released unconditionally. Tehran Radio denied
the report, and Baghdad Radio
abandoned it.
The broadcast claiming Khomeini
was dead Sliid he has not been seen
ill ~bllc since,the war broke out bet·

•

ween Iraq and Iran on monday.
" All statements that have been attributed to him and broadcast on his
behalf over Tehran Radio have been
written by ·others and read by
others, because the tyrant is dead,"
ESCAPES SERIOUS INJURY
Janet Green, 25, Side Hill Road,
Rutland, escaped seriouJ Injury this
morning after being accidently shot
In the left shoulder, .
According to the report, she was
reaching for some clothing on top of
a wardrobe when a 22 rifle fell and
accidently discharged striking her
In the left shoulder.
Green was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Rutland
ER unit where she was treated and
released. The Incident occurred at
7:51a.m.

the broadcast said.
It challenged the Iranian government to put Khomeini 'on television
or have hiin make a speech to the
nation in person on Tehran Radio so
thai his voice could be identified.
"This cannot be done. This is the
end of the tyrant, to heU with him,"
.the Iraqi broadcast said.
Tehran Radio rebroadcast a
message by Khomeini immediately
after its denial. Khomeini spoke in
Farsi, in his normal slow sonorous
tone, and monitors in both London
and Nicosia, Cyprus, said It
definitely appeared to Khomeini
speaking.
An Arabic translation of his worda
after his brief message quoted him .
as saying, "We are sufficiently well
and victory is definitely on our
side." "We appeal to the people to
keep their morale high and put their
faith in God."

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