<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="18393" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/18393?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-02T12:57:07+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="51864">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/c108983c2ddbf7618ea05bfd2b7291f3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0ccff3e6a7266606ca3ff12f9fb8628b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="58457">
                  <text>Economic indicators rise sharply

WASHINGTON (AP) - . The
government's barometer of future
economic activity rocketed by a
record 4.6 percent in July, offering
strong evidence the recession may
be nearing an end.
Last month's surge in the Index of
Leading Indicators (ollows a revised
1.5 percent increase in June, the
Conunerce Department said. Before
then, the index had fallen a total of
12.6 percent for eight straight mon-

ths beginning last October.
"Two conSecutive increases are
highly encouraging," said Feliks
Tamm, a · Conunerce Department
economist. "The combined 6.1 percent rise in June and July have been
very broadly bas~, and upward
movements of · this magnitude
usually signal a new future trend."
Nine of the 10 leading indicators
available for· July showed marked
improvements, with the greatest

e
..

VOL. 31 NO. 97

Page Sixteen- The Daily Sentinel Football Edition

change occurring fur the layoff rate.
Only the average workweek did nut
change last month, the department
said.
Another major contributor was
the money supply, an indicator that
could help relieve the recession, but
also can aggravate inflation,
economists say.
Other positive indicators were:
vendor performance, the change in
producer prices, stock prices, new

•

at

urdcrs for manufactured consumer
goods, new orders for plant and

equipment, the change in liquid
assets and building permits.
Despite the twl)omonth trend,
Tamm cautioned that July's figure
is "still preliminary" and subject to
significant revision. In fact, June's
rise originally was pegged at 2.5 per.cent before being re-evaluated by
the Commerce Department.
The sharpest, recent drop in the

leading indi cators occurred in April,
when the indeK fell 3.9 percent. The
recession turned out to be at its worst between April and June, with
overall economic output dropping 9
percent, nearly the worst quarterly
.fall ever.
.
Since June,' however, the
economy has begun to show signs of
improvement, particularly in the
housing industry, as revealed by
constant rises in building permits.

The record increase, while offering a bullish signal for recessionweary Am erica ns, .does not
represent all good news, sc'Jme
analysts say.
Much of the j wnp was be due to
money supply, which increased by
the largest amount - 0.65 percent in the history of the lndex, Tamm
'said.
"In the 13 weeks up to early
!Conti nued on page 121

•

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO FRIDAY, AUGUST 29. 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

Cubans take over barracks

T

FORT INDIANTOWN GAP, Pa. - Cuban refugees detained in a topsecurity area for suspected criminals seized control of their resettlement camp barracks Thursday, climbing to the roof and hurling
rocks and debris. At least five people were injured.
It was the fourth disruption at the resettlement camp here this month. In three disturbances Aug. 5, a Cuban teen-ager suffered fatal injuries, His father was at the camp Thursday in search of information
about the death, but his visit and the takeover did not appear to be
related ..
More than 150 security personel, including state police and U.S. Bor.der Patrol agents, surrounded the area, which houses 87 Cuban men
who authorities believe committed crimes in their homeland.
The nwnber of refugees involved in the takeover was not known, but
about 20 men were on the roof of the barracks. ·
Carl White of.the U.S. State Department's Cuban-Haitian Task Force said two border patrol agents and three Cuban juvenile detainees
suffered minor injuries. The injured were taken from the area, he
said.
Only refugees were believed in the barracks, and no immediate effort was made to remove them. The barracks, known as Delta House,
is the highest-security building in the camp, said White. The area is enclosed by a 12-foot-high cyclone fence and coils of barbed wire.

Too many helpers ruined recovery
,)

YOUNGSTOWN -A 60()-page study conducted by Youngstown State
University says that competing d(}-gooder organizations trying to
revitalize the economically-f.epressed Mahoning Valley contributed to
the area being ignored by fe&lt;leral agencies.
The report, examining the 1977 closing of Youngstown Sheet and
Tube's Campbell Works, was C(}-authored by Urban Studies Center
Director Terry F. Buss and former director F. Stevens Redburn, now
with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Nearly 4,100 workers lost their jobs when the plant was closed in
September 1977.
The report cites an apparent war among four development corporations, each of which was following a different redevelopment
strategy. They included: The Mahoning Valley Economic Development Corp., the Western Reserve Economic Development Agency,
CASTLO, (an acronym for the suburban Youngstown communities of
Cainptlu, Struthers and Lowellville) and the Ecwnenical Coalition.
"Each group, especially the group leadership, desired credit for
'Saving the Valley,"' the study states. "Many leaders apparently felt
that the individual responsible for solving the problems of Youngstown
would gain national prominence.

'

When you need
an experienced banker
on your
financial team,
call on us.

FOP sues city to prevent layoffs
YOUNGsTOWN - The Fraternal Order of Police went to court in
this northeastern Ohio community of 138,000 in an effort to prevent the

....
---BANK ONE™ ...
'

BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA

Pomeroy • Rutland • Tuppers Plains

Member FDIC

city from laying off safety forces because of a financial deficit.
City officials said they would seek a court order today aimed at over·
turning a temporary restraining order issued Wednesday by
Mahoning County Common Pleas Judge Clyde Osborn that prevents
the layoffs from being implemented.
"It was never quite clear how many officers would be affected by
the layoffs," said FOP attorney Dennis Haines. "But it's safe to say
that between 12 and 15 would be affected.''
The police and fire departments were the hardest hit under a plan by
Mayor George Vukovich to lay off 100 employees as the solution to
coping with a $400,000 deficit in the general fWld.
Originally, 50 officers were scheduled to by laid off in the police
department and 30 in the fire department. However, a meeting between the mayor and City Council earlier this week trimmed the nwn- ·
ber of layoffs to 12 in each department, with the remaining layoffs to
be evenly distributed among other departments.

Presidential candidates take break
WASHINGTON - President Carter is off to the mountains of
Maryland today while Ronald Reagan explores his comfortable new
home in Virginia's hunt country. But for John B. Anderson, the fading
life of summertime is anything but easy.
~
All planned major trips on Monday, Labor Day, and through the first
week of September. But while Carter took to Camp David and Reagan
eyed a mount from his four·horse stable, Anderson's stretch before the
stretch drive of 1980 lay in a dwindling budget - leaving his plans a
•sudden shambles.
Strapped for cash and falling in the public opinion polls, the independent presidential challenger shook out his campaign staff Thursday and handed full control of the organization to a New York media
adviser.
At the same time, the Illinois congressman canceled a four-day
whlstlestop tour of the Midwest next week, a ride which would have
taken him from his native Rockford, Ill., to the Madison, Wis., home of
runningmalePatrickJ. Lucey.
Anderson accepted the resignations Thursday of three senior aides,
deputy director Edward Coyle, treasurer Francis Sheehan and
scheduler Michael Fenandez, and gave media consultant David Garth
total administrative control of the campaign, informed sources said.

-

.

Weather forecast

Variable cloudiness, warm and hwnid through Saturday. Scattered
thunderstonns tonight and Saturday. Lows tonight in mid~s. Highs
Saturday in the low to mid-80s. Chance of rain 30 percent tonight and 50
percent Saturday; Southerly to southwesterly winds 5-10 mph tonight.
Extended Oblo Forecast- Sunday through Tuesday: Achance of
showers or thunderstonns Sunday. Fair Labor Day and on Tuesday.
Highs in the mid to upper 80s. Lows in the 60s.

COMJNG DOWN - This aged house at 104 High St., Pomeroy, is
being razed. The former residence of the late Mr. and Mrs. Stanley

Blazewicz, it has stood unoccupied for a nwnber of years. The proper·
ty was purchased by Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Clark, who live next door
to it.

Americans enter 300th
day of captivity in Iran
WASHII'fGTON (APl - Some of
the families of the American
hostages in Iran plan quiet commemorations of the 300th day of captivity. Others say there's no reason
to treat the day as something
special.
"Would you really want to com·
memorate a day when your husband
or son was held hostage?" asked a
Washington area woman whose
husband was among those taken
captive in Tehran Nov. 4, 1979, 300
days ago today.
"!will treatit like any other day. I
will go to work. It isn't a day to
celebrate in any way," said the
woman, who requested anonymity.
"The 300th day - those nwnbers
bother me," sighed Dorothy Royer,
79, of Houston, whose son William is
a captive. "I don't need to be reminded that it's thatlong."
But Mrs. Royer will, in her own
way, commemorate the day.
She is on her way to a vacation at
her son's cottage in East Texas.
Along the way, she planned to leave
yellow ribbons on trees, lampposts
and pillars.
At Tacoma, Wash. , the fence

Four charges
leveled against
Pomeroy man
Four charges were filed against a
,Pomeroy man Friday morning after
he allegedly broke into the residence
of his former wife at 144 Mulberry
Ave., and created a disturbance.
Pomeroy Police said Basil Hayes
forcibly entered the residence
Friday morning and police answered a call ·to the scene. They
charge Haynes with destruction of
property, disturbing the peace,
criminal trespassing and unlawful
possession of a dangerous weapon.
He was placed under $650 bond
and a restraining order was issued 1
. against Haynes.

Ohio lottery
CLEVELAND (API - The numbers drawn Thursd11y night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The
Number" and Its weekly "Pyramid"
and " Lucky Buck" games are:
Tbe Numher-366
Pyramld-26; 187; 9450
LuckyBuck -83; 825; 6724 ; 07001;
909432
The lottery reported earnings of
$466,886.50 from the money wagered
· on Thprsday night's dally narnher
drawing. Sales prior to th~ drawing
totaled $609,886.50 while winning
ticket holders are entitled to share
$162,292.50, lotlery·offlcials said.

surrounding Dave Schaefer's home
is adorned with a yellow ribbon for
each day his father, Air Force Col.
Thomas Schaefer, has held captive.
"It's just starting to strike me now
how long it really has been,"
Schaefer said. "Maybe the number
300 ... thai's a long time. And to think
that 300 days ago every*ing was
normal."
The family of Richard Morefield,
who was the U.S. Embassy's consul
general, is trying "to live our lives
normally and together as much as
possible, as dad wants it," said his
daughter, Betsy, of San Diego. The
family planned a quiet dinner with
friends, nothing more.

Eastern Board
approves
new contract
A new contract with non-certified
employes was unanimously approved when the Eastern Local
School District Board of Education
met in special session Thursday
night.
Members of the Eastern Chapter
of the Ohio Association of Public
School Employes had met Monday
evening, the night before classes
opened, accepted the contract and
began performing their duties on
Tuesday.
Under the new contract, employes
were given an approximate nine percent pay raise and there were some
additional insurance benefits given.
During last night's meeting,
presided over by President Dorsal
Larkins, the board employed Mike
Douglas as junior high football
coach and Pam Doughitt as junior ·
high girls basketball coach. Em·
ployed as library aides for the year
were Sandra Scott, Chester Elementary; Margaret Cawthorn, Riverview School; Linda Fitch, Tuppers
Plains, and Martha Durst, Eastern
High. Carolyn Tripp was employed
as a Tille Teacher for Tuppers
Plains and Riverview Schools. Kim·
berly Ohlinger was named to the
substitute teacher list. New physics
books were _purchased and the ad·
ministrative staff including the
superintendent, the high school principal, the treasurer and the superin·
dent's secretary were given eight
percent pay raises.
·

/

/
.....

~~

,··

/

.,. : &lt; / •

.

. /'
~·

'

'

/

.•

HASN'T SAGGED - Pomeroy's Leo Vaughan has continued his
participation in the American Red Cross blood program in Meigs
County over the years although the program has been sagging tremendously. Wednesday, during one of the most successful visits in many
months, Vaughan gave his 116th pint of blood. Vaughan started g ivin ~
blOIJd during the unit visits in 1948.

Bloodmobile· collection
exceeds 100. point here
.

For the first time in many months,
collections at an American Red
Cross Bloodmobile visiting Pomeroy
went over 100 pints Wednesday.
There were 112 persons reporting
to the unit to contribute 103 pints of
· blood. Thirty persons replaced
blood used by relatives and fri ends
and 29 persons \j'ere fl rst time
donors.
During yesterday 's visit which
was at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center Patricia K. Logan,
Timothy J . King, Rhonda Dailey and
Edward Cozart became one gallon
donors
; Gla•ence Mcintyre became
NO PAPER MONDAY
a
two
gallon
donor; Albert Parker
The Daily Sentinel will nut he
became
a
siK
gallon donor; William
published Monday in order to permjt
employees to observe the Labor Day Radford became a seven gallon
holiday.
donor and Richard Barton became a

17 gallon donor.

Nurses working at the unit yester·
day were F'erndora Story, Beulah
Maxey, Mary Osborne and Kathy
Lehew. Doctors were Dr. L. D. Telle,
Dr. Wilma Mansfield and Dr.-James
Witherell.
The Chester United
Methodist Church with Mrs. 'Ruth
Karr as chairman was in charge of
the canteen. Clerical workers were
Mary Nease, Jean Nease, Juanita
Sayre, Mace! Barton, Etta Mae Hill,
Grace Drake, Erma Roush, Joyce
Hoback, Emma K. Clatworthy, '
Virginia Buchanan, Jacki~ F~ost,
Lura Sweigar , Vernon Nease.
Rellred 54:!niu r Vulunteer f&gt;rot(ram workers
helpmt( with lht unit were Early RI)Wjh, Pal
lnl(eb , Eva Dcssauer. C!G r~:m:e Struble, Ber·

( Continued on page 12)

�'I

3-The Daily Sentinel, ~- •iddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., f"riday , Aug. 29, 1980

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug. 29, 1980

Opinions &amp;
Comments.

~Moeller
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
Ohio high schools begin a new footbail season tonight with a new commissioner, a new, expanded playoff
system and the sarne dominant force
at the top.
·
Cincinnati Moeller, the Class AAA
champion for four of the last five

favored to win Division I crown

years and loser only once in its last
58 games, is the heavy favorite to
win the state's first Division I crown.
Tbe Crusaders were so powerful a
year ago that they crushed Parma
Padua 41-7 in the title showdown.
Ironton won in Class AA and
Mogadore claimed the Class A
championship.

Dick Armstrong, a former North
Canton principal and assistant cummissioner of the organization, will
be leading the governing Ohio High
Sehoul Athletic Association fur the
first time. He replaces the retired
George Bales.
"We're going to cummuni~ate and

we're going .to listen, " the 52-yearold Armstrong said of his new
responibility. "I'm going to make
some mistakes. I might want to go
lou fa st, lou soon. That's a weakness
of mine.''
Armstrong, a former ·footbaii and
track coach, is sold on the new

playoff formaL The playoffs have
been expanded from three classes to
five divisions, from 12 to 40 teams
and from two to three weeks.
" It involves .more kids," said Armstrong, who succeeded Bates on
Aug. 1. " It creates more community
interest We think it is just more of a

:Rested Bench powers Reds over Pirates

;
:
•
.

Ohio tax reform
A sweeping tax reform package on
the Nov. • general election ballot
won't solve all Of Ohio's. money
woes, but backers say rejection 'Of it
will lead to a tax increase.
That prediction came from a
citizens committee formed til lead
the campaign in behalf of Issue 2, a .
proposed tax law revi.$ion placed on
the ballot by the Ohio Public Interest
Campaign.
Besides shifting · more of the
state's tax burden to corporations,
supporters say it will yield revenue
to help cover the state's budget
deficit and provide funds to maintain current government services.
"Jt isn't a curE!-!111. But if it passes,
it will help bring some sense back to
our tax system," said Cincinnati attorney Donald Mooney.
Mooney and four other persons
will lead the campaign in behaH of
the issue. " If it fails, the future is·
clear for Ohioans. Tbere will be no
tax relief from the politdans. Instead, there will be hikes ... taxes,
probably ne&gt;rtyear," he said.
Joining him at a press conference
Tuesday were committee co-&lt;:hairs
MaryLynn Cappelletti of Colwnbus,
legislative dlrector of the Ohio
. Public Interest Campaign; DorothyRyan of Youngstown, president of
the Ohio Council of Senior Citizens;
James Draper, an attorney from
Cleveland, and Charles Nash of ottawa, executive director of the Ohio
Farmers Union.
If approved by voters, the package
would give qualified low-and
moderate-income homeowners, renters and family fartners about $161
million in property tax relief in the

form of tax credits. But taxes for
corporations and householdS malting
more than $30,000 annually would be
increased.
"The tax relief provision of the
Ohio Falr Tax Initiative is clear and
simple - in 1981, an estimated 1. 7
million households will share $161
million u1 properly tax relief," Ms.
Cappelletti said.
Elderly persons living on fixed incomes but confronted by rising
properly taxes will support the
proposal, said Mrs. Ryan.
"Giving tax relief to homeowners
with property ,taxes exceeding 2.5
percent of income will be of tremendous benefit to senior citizens," she
said.
Under the proposal, homeowners,
renters and family farmers with incomes of less than $30,000 would
qualify for a tax credit if they paid
more than 2.5 percent of their income in property taxes.
Nash said the Ohio Farmers Union
believes the state's current tax
system is unfair, relying for most of
its revenue on farmers,
homeowners, senior citizens and
svaU businessmen.
Supporters say they are confident
the issue will appear on the ballot
despite a pending lawsuit again!;t it
in Franklin County Common Pleas
Court. Opponents of the proposal
have asked the court to prohibit the
secretary of state from placing the
plan before voters.
The case marks the 15th challenge
mounted in behaH of the Ohio
Manufacturers Association to the
tax reform package, Ms: Cappelletti
said.

Today in histo,.Y.
By Tile Associated Press
TodayiJFriday, Aug. 29, the242nd
day of 19110. There are 124 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Aug. 29, 1680, the British annexed the New Netherlands colonies
- from Connecticut to Delaware and re-named New Amsterdam
uNew York.''
On this date:
In 1533, the last Incan king of Per~
- Atahualpa - was murdered on
the orders of Spaitish conqueror
Francisco Pizarro.
In 1817", . the first abolition
newspaper in the United States "-the philanthr~pist" was
published in Mount Pleasant,.Ohio.

,,,
..

iJl ules
'

R·

• •

, In 1945, Gen. Douglas MacArthur

left the Philippines for Japan to ac-cept Japan's surrender.
In 1968, som~ 200 people were
arrested as a esult of a confrontation·
beween police and anti-war demonstrators at the Democratic National
Convention in Chicago.
Last year, Dr. Jeffrey McDonald
- a former green beret - was found
guilty in the 1970 murders of his wife
and two children. A Raleigh, N.C.,
jury returned the verdict.
Today's birthdays: Gen. Lyman
Lernnltzer is 81. Actor Barry
Sullivan is sa.
Thought for today: Money talks,
but it rarely gives itseH away. Anonymous

-·..

.

.

'

Berry's World

,·:·
?

'

.'

I'

~

~

•

'•

.•
,
•
•
•

ep e John Anderson on foreign policy

WASHINGTON (AP ) - John B.
Anderson's foreign 'policy would
combine a recognition of declining
U.S. influence overseas, closer ties
with Am_erican allies and a
willingness to negotiate with the
Soviets on arms control even while .
Moscow is attempting " to exploit
whatever world trouble spots arise
over the next decade."
"We cannot let our arms control
policies to be held hostage to
headlines of Soviet bad behavior,"
the Illinois congressman has said.
More generally, the independent
presidential candidate says, "I do
not subscribe to the conventional
policies and the conventional ways"
of Ronald Reagan and President
·
Carter.
On foreign policy questions, An·
derson is far closer to Carter than to
Reagan in his approach to relations
with the Soviet Union, China and
other major powers.
Yet he is insistently harsh in his
criticism of Carter.
" If there is one word to describe
the Carter administration's approach to foreign affairs, I would
call it unilateralism, failure to take
into account the views of our allies,"
Anderson said during a recent fivenation trip through the Middle East
and Europe.

.. This is the gD-it·alone approach
that has characterized the afministration's relations with its
allies," he said.

Because other countries have learned they cannot rely on the U.S. as a
dependable ally, they act only in
their own interests, he said.
As a former foreign service officer, Anderson says he would set a
straight course and stick to It,
avoiding Carter's "twists and turns
of American foreign policy."
Unlike many Republicans in
Congress, Anderson supported both
the Strategic Arms Limitation
Treaty with the Soviets and the
Panama Canal treaties that turned
the waterway over to Panama.
He also firmly supported Carter's
decision to recognize communist
China and suspend formal ties with
the government on Taiwan.
But he said he is troubled "that we
do not have the kind of political
leadership in this country" that can
push through raiification of a SALT
treaty " when to do so is so much in
our own interest.''
He argued that with an adequate
system of verification it would be in
both American and Soviet interests
for the Senate to ratify the
agreement and for the U.S. to go on
to negotiate a third SALT pact.

On- the Middle East," Anderson
believes Carter has created "an obstacle to peace" 'by pressuring the
Israelis to pull back new settlements
in the Sinai Desert.
On his trip to Israel, Anderson said
he opposes a policy that says " peace
can be pursued by pressure on Israel
or by deliberately increasing tensions between Israel and American
governments.''
Underlying Anderson's firm support of Israel is a belief that the
country is a stable democracy and
reliable ally, while most Arab states
are dictatorships subject to rapid
change of leadership and policy.
As for Iran, Anderson has said,
"efforts to prop up an authoritarian
regime can. be fruitless and
destroyed overnight - with a
devastating effect on American interests."
He has said Saudi Arabia and Jordan should be brought into
negotiations on the Palestinians and
other issues and the U.S. government should "not keep blaming
Israel for failure" of those nations to
join the talks.
Anderson finds the Palestinian
Liberation Organization "morally
repugnant. " Any move toward U.S.
recognition of the organization must
follow a PLO repudiation of

•
terrorism and acceptance of the
existence of Israel.
Once the Middle East peace talks
are near conclusion, Anderson said,
Jerusalem should be recognized as
the capital of Israel and the U.S. embassy moved there.
Anderson says that, unlike Carter,
he would make no attempt to
pressure the participants or dictate
a peace settlement.
In sharp disagreement with Car·
ter, Anderson has stiffly opposed
construction of the MX missile,
which he terms " $55 l»llion of
lwtacy."

He portrays the new, land-based
underground missile system as the
result of Pentagon weapons planning gone awry and says new, less
expensive alternatives like air·
launched cruise missiles or sea·
based strategic weapons should be
developed instead.
Anderson has proposed that the
problem &lt;i tens of thousands of
Mexicans illegally entering the U.S.
might be linked to new-found oil
reserves in Mexico. Help to poor
Mexicans driven by unemployment
to cross the U.S. border might be
provided as part of billions of dollars
the U.S. will be paying for oil and
natural gas to be imported from
Mexican oil fields.

Washington today

For Carter ·a greeting and a moral
WASHINGTON (APJ - When
President Carter addressed the
American Federation of Teachers in
Detroit last week, he was greeted
with a story with a moral by Albert
Shanker, head of the union which is
affiliated with the AFL-CIO.
It seems there is a window in the
office of the AFL-CIO president in
the District of Columbia that " looks
down at the White House."
Shanker quoted the late union
president, George Meany, as saying
that vantage point was necessary
because " whoever represents
workers always has to keep one eye
on what's going on down there.''
Carter, who has had his share of
cr~cisms from the union, said he
wai aware of the lofty window.
"Ttfere have been a few times when
White House binoculars were

trained on that window as well," he
added wryly.
The Carter adnlinistration now
has its version of an erased tape. But
unlike the Nixon administration's
famous 18 and a-half minute gap,
this time there's no question who did
it.
White House press secretary Judy
Powell held a new~ briefing in his office last week, and one reporter
inadvertently left his tape recorder
behind.
A couple of hours later, the reporter returned to retrieve the machine
and learned Powell had discovered
it during a private conversation with
another White House officiaL The
press secretary , not leaving
anything to chance, took it upon himself to erase the tape.
Frank Moore, the White House

liaison with Congress, missed
President Carter's trip to Boston
last week because of an embarrassing mishap.
Shortly before the president was
scheduled to leave the White House,
the hefty Moore was sitting in a car
talking to House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill, who was traveling with the
president.
As he got out of the car to board
the president's helicopter, Moore
ripped his pants. He turned around
to let O'Neill survey the damage and
was advised it was pretty serious: So
Moore grabbed an aide and said: ·
"Get on the helicopter." The surprised aide obliged.
Powell recently was reminded
that Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, Carter's defeated rival for the
Democratic
presidential

nomination, was involved in the ill·
fated swine flu program several
years ago. Someone asked why
Powell hadn't made an issue of it.
"We decided not to raise it during
the primary campaign, so there's no
reason to raise it now,'' be said. With
a glint in his eye, he added, "But if
you know of any connection with
Reagan ...''
The press secretary also has let it
be known that he 's tired of being
second-guessed about how the White
House treats Kennedy. He said
reporters should stop thinking that
they know how to handle · the
situation better, and proposed a
dea L
"You don't try to do our job and we
won't try to do you-ails - anymore
than we already do." ,1

The subject: the U.S. Savings Bond program

t

•

.1
•
•••
•
t

leW~'litE
EFF11111VIE

......

'OLITICII\II

.
r
rr .
•

.

@1H0by NEA,lnc.

PITI'SBURGH (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds catcher Johnny Bench says he
makes better newspaper copy when
he plays every day. But the 12-year
National League veteran says a little rest makes him a better catcher.
He showed what a 32-year"'llld can
do after two days out from behind
the plate - a twD-run homer that
was more than enough behind the 7hit perfOl'!JlliiiCe of Paul Moskau in
Cincinnati's 4-0 win over the slumping Pittsburgh Pirates 4-0.

-~

~~

'

··L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- 1

By Don Graff
The subject is again the u .s .
Savings Bond program.
As it has been in this space on occasion. And not, if develops, without
effect. A recent critique of the
program's flaws in respect to small
savers has drawn comment from
about as authoritative a source on
the subject as you can get.
The United States Treasury
Department.
Well, fair is fair, as rumor has it,
and the voice of authority on a subject Involving so much money
($73.275 billion worth of bonds outstanding by Treasury's reckoning as
of July 3) and affecting so many
people (so many millions upon
millions that not even Treasury has
a precise count) deserves to be
heard.
·
To start with, a spokesperson
acknowledges that the bonds, at a
top Interest rate of 7 ·percent, have

not been among the best bu~s
around during this prolonged period
of double-digit inflation. But
Treasury is both aware of the
problem and, in conjunction with ·
Congress, in the process of doing
something about it.
A bill, H.R. 7478, approved by the
House and pending in the Senate,
would authorize the Treasury, with
presidential approval, to raise interest rates a maximwn of one percent point_ every six months to
reflect trends in the economy,
This would be a significant change
in the program as presently set up.
Congress to date has been the
initiator of all inceases - a cumbersorne procedure for dealing with
a volatile economy that H.R. 7478, in
granting the executive limited
authority to adjust rates on its own,
would to some extent correct.
Another point : U.S. Savings Bonds
offer several advantages that cum-.

mercia! paper does not. Interest on
them is exempt from state and local
taxes and the federal tax is deferred
until they are cashed. That can have
the effect of rasiing the real yield by
several points over the face 7 percent. Particularly if a holder waits
until retirement to cash in. At that
time, a sharply lowered tax bracket
can translate into significantly more
interest re,tained.
There are other ways of '
. maximizing yield. Public employees, for example, may be participating in pension plans under
.which payments upon retirement
are exempt from federal taxation
until these equal total deductions
"from paychecks during the working
years. In effect, for the first year or
so the retiree 1.$ in a zero percent tax
bracket and all interest on bonds
cashed during this period can . be
retained.
All of this Is good to -know. And

as

true enough - as far it goes. Not
all bondholders, however, are in a
position to take advantage of the advantages. Only a minority of their
millions are public employees. And
many more have neither the finahces nor the financial sophistication
to manipulate bond holdings to best
advantage. .
Furthermore, unless something
wonderful happens to the economy ·
sooh, H.R. 7478 is likely to be another
case of too likely, too late. At the
authorized I percent inters! hike
every six months, It would take two
or more years to bring bond face
yield even with the current Inflation
rate. And how knows what heights .1
the latter may have reached by
then?
Still, it lsevidenceofWas~gton's
awareness of the problem and, once
the Senate ge~ around to acting, of
some progress m dealing with it.
It's about lime.

"When I'm catching everyday, it's
great for you guys," Bench told
reporters afterwards. "You guys ·
say, 'Yeah, he's an iron man. In the
meantime , I can't walk, I can't
throw ..."
"I feel awful good now," he said.
" That's the whole idea of not cat.
ching every day."
Moskau raised his record to !1-5
with his first shutout of the season
and passed some of the credit to
Bench.
"Toward the end of the game, I

been hard on Atlanta defense

ByBRUCEWWm
AP Sports Writer
Winning isn't everything - and
when it comes to Atlanta Falcons
exhibition games, it isn't anything.
Atlanta built itseH into contention
a few years ago with a uuperb defense, nicknamed the Grits Blitz. Then
the National Football League
• -changed the rules, limiting the lac-• 'tics a defense could employ in order
to stop opponents' offense, particularly the passing game.
And history - as well as every

team Atlanta has played in the past
two preseasons - passed the
Falcons by.
Last year they were 0-4 and the
team which in 1978 had made the
playoffs with a ~7 record sagged to
6-10. This year, heading into
tonight's final exhibition against
Baltimore, the Falcmns are ().3 and,
although Coach Leeman Bennett
won't be diverted from his primary
goal -assessing each player's
abilities, particularly those of the
remaihing rookies - he wouldn't

·. Murcer wants to
-win with Yanks
The Associated Press
Bobby Murcer has a special
: ,reason for wanting to win the World
Series with the New York Yankees.
. Onee acclaimed as the successor
to Mickey Mantle in ·the Yankees'
. outfield, Murcer spent six full, fairly
.productive years in pinstripes in the
· late 1960s and early 70s. ,
But the Yankees never won a pen-nant with Murcer, who finally was
.traded to San Francisco in 1975.
"Back in the early '70s, we
challenged once, but I tholll!ht we
.were a player or two away from win·
.ning," Murcer said.
· "It turned out that the only player
,who went away was me, but the
.Yankees brought me back, and it
means an awful lot to me to win and
go all the way," Murcer said.
Now, getting a chance to play even
.sporadically, the 34-year-old Murcer
has been a key to the Yankees' suc-cess of 1980. Thursday night, he hit
his 12th homer of the season t&lt;\ break .
a tie in the seventh inning and give
New York a 6-5 victory over the
Seattle Mariners. .
It was the ninth time this season
he has notched the game-winning
RBI , and this one helped the
Yankees maintain their haH-game
lead over the Baltimore Orioles in
the American League East.
· " I think that we'll play better and
play harder in the stretch and that
we 'II win this thing," Murcer said.
· The Orioles whipped California I~
'8. Elsewhere in the league, Boston
'edged Oakland 3-2, Detroit downed
Milwaukee 11·7 and Texas defeated
·Kansas City 1().6. The MinnesotaToronto game was susJ)ended after
14 innings, tied 5-:i.
Lou Piniella also homered for the
'.,Yankees, and lefty Ron Guidry,l3-9,
- picked up the victory out of the
· bullpen, relieving Rudy May, who
:·began the season out there.
· "It feels good to win," said Mur. cer. "I was looking for a good pitch
to hit hard. I had to figure Jim (Seat·
. tie pitcher Jim Beattie) didn't want
to walk me as the leadoff man in the
eighth. I sounded off earlier when I
wasn't playing, and I think I have
proved my point. ''
.;
Orioles 13, Angels 8
{ Baltimore set a club record with :16
. hits, and Ken Singleton, Eddie
., Murray, Gary Roenicke and Rick
Dempsey knocked in two runs
apiec!! for the Orioles.
. Jim Pabner notched his 14th vic-.. tory, going 61-3 innings before -he
needed relief help from Sammy
:stewart.
Roenicke, Murray and Rich Dauer
, each had four hits as Baltimore set
'another club mark with nine hits in
• the fourth inning to score six runs.
1• "It was
sloppy game, and it's
tough to bear down in a situation like
·that,'' Dempsey said. "But we have
.to kick oorselves · in the butts
.because we are still the ones chasing
New York.''
Red Sox 3, A's 2
Jim Dwyer came off the bench for
.the injured Fred Lynn and scored
the winning run in the eighth inning.
"Dwyer doubled and scored the
tiebreaker on a pair of groundouts.

a

game losing streak, 1.$ thinking
Foli is 1-for-15 , followed by Phil Garabout hitting baseballs. Except for . ner, in a 1-fur-21 slump.
Bill Madlock's double, the Pirates ·
Pirate Manager Chuck Tanner
got only singles of! Moskau, and only
spread some optimism around the
two base runners got past first.
clubhouse before the game.
Part of the prol)lem is that team
" I told them we have 35 games left
captain Willie Slargell is on the
and ail the plusses are on our side.
disabled list, and slugger Dave
Montreal and Philadelphia both
Parker missed his second game with
have to go back to the west coast. We
a sore knee.
don't. We have a lot of games at
But other · key hitters aren't home.''
producing. Leadoff man Omar
The ·Reds got more runs than they
Moreno is 3-for-18, No. 2 batter Tim
needed in the third. Dave Concepcion singled, stole second, went
to third on an infield out and scored
on Dan Driessen's single. Bench hit
Pirate starter Rick Rhoden's next
pitch over the left field fence for his
21st home run of the season.
In the ninth, Ron Oester and Dave
Tonight other games are New
mind if Atlanta won for a change.
Concepcion
singled off reliever
England at Seattle, Miami at New
"We want to win because the
Grant
Jackson,
and George Foster
Orleans and Washington at Tampa
players have worked hard an&lt;j
singled home the la~t run.
Bay.
played well for the most part. It's
Rhoden, who won two previous
bOOn very disappointing not to win
Qn Saturday night it's Pittsburgh
starts,
fell to H .
but 1 feel this ·may have been our at Dallas, San Diego at Los Angeles,
Moskau,
on the other hand, was on
best training camp since rxe been the New York Jets at the New York
target.
with the Falcons," said Bennett, in Giants, Cleveland at Minnesota,
"I had good control and I threw
his fourth year as head coach. "We Philadelphia at Oakland, St. Louis at
harder
than I have in a while," he
still plan to get a good look at our Chicago, Denver at Green Bay,
sajd.
younger people. If we don't, it Detroit at Cincinnati and Kan.sas
Still, Pittsburgh held on to the
wouldn't have done any.good to keep City vs. San Francisco at Tucson,
short
end of a first-place tie with
them around this long."
Ariz.
Montreal, which enjoyed a onepercentage point advantage in the
NLEast.

sta rted getting sloppy," said
Moskau. "He came out and gave me
a kind of verbal kick in the pants. He
said, 'This is your game, finish it.'
That gave me a lift.''
·Bench says he wants this to be his
·final season as a full-time Catcher.
" I'm nut even thinking about that
now," said Reds' Manager John McNamara. "We've gill a chance to win
a pennant and that's aU I'm thinking
about."
Meanwhile, Pittsburgh, in a four-

Lynn broke his toe in the first in·
ning when he fouled a pitch off his
foot. He will be lost to the club indefinitely.
Jim Rice hit his 16th homer of the
season for Boston in the .fourth in·

Today's

Tigers II, Brewers 7
Champ Summers slammed his
second career grand siam homer to
spark a nine-run outburst in the sixth inning, and the Tigers outslugged·
the Brewers, who stranded 18
baserunners.
AI Cowens also homered in the
Tigers sixth.
Mark Fidrych started for Detroit
but was kayoed in the third when he
gave up two rtlllS on a pair of singles,
Sixto Lezcano's double and a wild
pitch before retiring a batter.
Lezcano also homered for the
Brewers.
Rangers 10, Royals 6
AI Oliver knocked in three runs
with a homer and a single to pace
Texas' !!&gt;-hit attack and snap a fivegame Kansas City winning streak.
Bump Wills had four hits for the
Rangers, but Kansas City's George
Brett could managed just one single
in four trips, lowering his battin
average to .404. •
·
Pat Putnam and Mickey Rivers
also homered for Texas.
Twins 5, Blue Jays 5
Toronto's John Mayberry stroked
a pinch single to tie the game :;..:; in
the bottom of the eighth, and the
Twins and Blue Jays played 14 innings beforenthe game was suspended. A 5 p.m. curfew was invoked
because or" a rock concert at
Exhibition Stadium in Toronto.
The game will be resumed today
at noon, preceding the regularly
scheduled contest.
Aslros 4, Cubs I
Alan Ashby's twG-run single
highlighted a three-run third inning
that carried Houston to its lith victory in a row over Chicago, inclucling
all nine this season.
Terry Puhl had three singles and
an RBI for the Astros, who extended
thelr lead in the NL West to 2t·
games over Los Angeles.
Joaquin Andujar, 2-4, shut out the
Cuba for six innings and Joe Sambito
finished to eam his 13th save ·
although he gave up a run in the
seventh on Mike Vail's pinch single.
Cardinals 11, Braves 2
Dane Iorg drove in seven runs,
second-highest in the National
League this season, and Bob Forsch
fired a six-hitter to lead St. Louis
over Atlanta.
The Braves had won five games in
a row bot they were overwhelmed by
a 14-hit attack that included lorg's
twG-run double in the first inning, a
three-run double in the second and a
·twG-run single in the fourth.
Barry Foote of the Chicago Cubs
drove in eight runs on April 22.
"I've had more hits, butl've never
driven. In more runs,'' lorg said.
"The game was blown· away early,
so it was icing on the cake. I've been
happier. When you come off the ben·
ch in the eighth or ninth inning and:
drive in the winning run as a pinch
hitler, that's the ultimate.''

By WILL GRIMSLEY .
AP Special Correspondent

Money, attention drives Ali
What
motivates
the
remarkable Muhammad Ali?
Is it money? Is it the "necessity
to replenish coffers left barren by
the squandering of some $40
million earned over two decades
with his hammering fists? Or is it
the heady elixir of fame, the need
for the spotlight and constant attention which must be fed into the
veins like some addictive drug ?
"Both,'' snapped the 38-yearoid fighting wonder when the
question was shot at him Thursday after a seven-round
sparring session at Madison
Square Garden.
The single answer came from
the lips of an aging man. The
clean-cut, boyish look is gone.
The gray spots have been touched
up in his thick black hair. Flab
and bulges are now noticeable on
the bQdy that once was so lean
and sleek it resembled a bronze
statue.
He wears a dark mustache,
which gives him a dour middleage look rather than his old
puckish charm. " I'm the black
Clark Gable," he boasts but it's
just a means of masquerading an
fading facade.
There is a symbol of a bee with
outterfly wings on his boxing
shorts but it is the only replica of
an age when the a young
gladiator came out of Louisville
and felled an awesome brute

named Sonny Liston to win the
heavyweight championship for
the first of three times.
The great Muhammad, who .
changed his religion and his
name, no longer "floats like a
. butterfly and stings like a bee.''
In the ring, he looks slow and ponderous, easy to hit.
· Ali admirers - and the ntiiTIbers are both legion and world·
wide - worry that, although he
has · undergone another of his
stern training regimens, he will
be unable to avoid embarrassment when he goes again·
st his unbeaten, 3().year"'llld
protege, Larry Holmes, in Las
Vegas Oct. 2 for the World Boxing
Co uncil version of the
heavyweight title.
There are a faithful few who
believe "The Great _One" may
pull still another miracle from his
magician's pouch.
"But why even attempt it?"
much of the wodd asks. He has
climbed the heights of his
profession. There 1.$ flO other way
to go except to come down .
Ali addressed himseH to this
conundrum after an unimpressive workout before scores of
fans and critics at the G"arden.
"Wllat's wrong with wanting
money?" he replied to a question.
He went on to say if J. Paul Getty
and other multi-millionaires get
theirs, wliy shouldn't he, a black,
get his.

Seed and Milling

By MICHAEL_A. LUTZ
AP Sports Writer
HOUSTON (AP) - Ken Stabler of
the Houston Oilers, noted as one of
the deadliest twG-minute quarterbacks in the Natio"'ll Football
League, was too efficient Thursday
night.
Stabler took_ only I minute 28
seconds to lead the Oilers to a touch- down before halftime, leaving the
Buffalo Bills time to attempt a come
back.
But the Oilers wili take Stabler's
twD-minute drill just as they'll settle
for their 24-7 victory over Buffalo in
the final preseason tuneup before
the Sept. · 7 regular-season opener
against Pittsburgh.
"We have worked hard on our twDminute offense and at the end of the
first haH, we . did about as good as
you can do," Oilers Coach .Swn
Phillips said. "Hell, we scored so
darned fast, that we gave them the
bail with a minute left."
Buffalo had pulled to a 1~7 deficit
in the second quarter when Stabler
took the controls and guided the
Oilers to a quick score and a 17-7
halftime lead.
. Stabler paSsed 22 yards to tight
end Mike Barber and 17 yards to
wide receiver Mike Renfro and handed off to Earl Campbell for the first
of his two touchdown runs.
Stabler also hit running back Rob
Carpenter with a 7-yard touchdown
pass and Toni Fritsch kicked a 33yard field goal for the Oilers. Buf·

d~q

falo's second quarter touchdown
came on a !-yard dive by Auburn
rookie Joe Cribbs.
" Hey, man, it;s tough to go 50 or60 .
yards," Stabler said of Houston's
second quarter twG-minute drill. "U
you get it in one play fine. That's like
cussing someone for winning by five
. points when the betting line was six
points."
Camp bell 's performance
reacquainted the 45,973 Oiler fans
with the NFL rushing champion.
He had taken a backseat to
Stabler's passirig during the first
three preseason games but he exploded for .511 yards on the first play
of the game and finished with 109
yards on 11 carries and two touchdowns.
"I was watching Earl on the
sidelines during the game and it was
an awfully good feeling dbt flaving to
tackle him," said -Oilers defensive
back Jack Tatum, who played against CampE~ AS AN Oakland Raider ·
last season."He is a super athlete
and it is a pleasure to be on the field
with him."
Buffalo Coach Chuck Knox, trying
to get the Bills ready to face Miami
in the season opener, said '' I would
like to have played better but it was
a short week for us. We're nut ready
to play Miami yet. I know that.
We've got a lot to work on."
The Bills have nut beaten Miami
since 1969, an NFL-record 20
straight losses to one team.

0 ~0

CHAIN
SAWS

A SOUND ENERGY
SAVINO INVES I MENT

HEADQUARTERS

miD
Ruggedly engineered to pile up plentv of
firewood and fuel savings for years to come,
an Echo Chain Saw has to be_one of the
.
soundest Investments you can make.
Quit fUenn.gJ~roundl
Seeds · Bird Seeds • Oyster Shells and Grit- Fertilizers · Lime - Ce-ment &amp; Mortar - Stock Salt - Water Softener · Remedies - Salt - LiHers ·
•Vac:cine - Roofing - Paints - Re.d Brarid Fencing - B,a ler and Binder

Twin'e ·

Spr~ys

· Gates - Hay - Straw.

992·211 s

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
606 E. MAIN

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

'·

Stabler usual self

Sports World

Ding.

good thing."
The OHSAA began the playoffs in
1972 with 12 teams qualifying under
the three-class setup. That class
structure will continue in the rest of
Ohio's sports.
In recent years, the state football
championship games have alter·
nated between the Akron Rubber
Bowl and Welcome Stadium in
Dayton. But this year, the title sites
will not be selected until after the
semifinals.
Armstrong said it is a matter of
convenience for the schools who
reach the finals this fall.
"Why should schools from, say,
Toledo and Cincinnati have to play
for the tiUe in Akron?" the COIIP
missioner asked. "We would try to
find a site more suitable."
Each of the regional leaders will
serve as the hosts for the first-round
playoff games against the regional
runner-up Friday and Saturday,
Nov. 7 and 8. The state semifinals
will be.Friday and Saturday, Nov. 14
and i5,and the finals Friday and
Saturday, Nov. 21'and 22.
The new divisions are · based on
boys enrollment in the. upper three
grades, with ~hools having 541 or
more boys !aiming Division I.
Division II schools' enrollment ·is
351-MO, Division III 244-350, Division
IV 162-243 and Division V 161 or
fewer.
The OHSAA again will determine
its playoff field "by weekly co!IP
puterized ratings. Points are awarded on the basis of victories or ties,
with the opponents rated by
divisions. .
By beating a Division I foe, a
school will pick up 3.0 points, 2.5 for
defeating a Division II opponent, 2.0
against Division III , 1.5 against
Division IV and 1.0 against Division
V. Margins of victory do not play a
part in the ratings.

Pomeroy

-Brake Service

99N094

-Front End Alignments
$11 .50 most pass. cars ·

�'I

3-The Daily Sentinel, ~- •iddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., f"riday , Aug. 29, 1980

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug. 29, 1980

Opinions &amp;
Comments.

~Moeller
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
Ohio high schools begin a new footbail season tonight with a new commissioner, a new, expanded playoff
system and the sarne dominant force
at the top.
·
Cincinnati Moeller, the Class AAA
champion for four of the last five

favored to win Division I crown

years and loser only once in its last
58 games, is the heavy favorite to
win the state's first Division I crown.
Tbe Crusaders were so powerful a
year ago that they crushed Parma
Padua 41-7 in the title showdown.
Ironton won in Class AA and
Mogadore claimed the Class A
championship.

Dick Armstrong, a former North
Canton principal and assistant cummissioner of the organization, will
be leading the governing Ohio High
Sehoul Athletic Association fur the
first time. He replaces the retired
George Bales.
"We're going to cummuni~ate and

we're going .to listen, " the 52-yearold Armstrong said of his new
responibility. "I'm going to make
some mistakes. I might want to go
lou fa st, lou soon. That's a weakness
of mine.''
Armstrong, a former ·footbaii and
track coach, is sold on the new

playoff formaL The playoffs have
been expanded from three classes to
five divisions, from 12 to 40 teams
and from two to three weeks.
" It involves .more kids," said Armstrong, who succeeded Bates on
Aug. 1. " It creates more community
interest We think it is just more of a

:Rested Bench powers Reds over Pirates

;
:
•
.

Ohio tax reform
A sweeping tax reform package on
the Nov. • general election ballot
won't solve all Of Ohio's. money
woes, but backers say rejection 'Of it
will lead to a tax increase.
That prediction came from a
citizens committee formed til lead
the campaign in behalf of Issue 2, a .
proposed tax law revi.$ion placed on
the ballot by the Ohio Public Interest
Campaign.
Besides shifting · more of the
state's tax burden to corporations,
supporters say it will yield revenue
to help cover the state's budget
deficit and provide funds to maintain current government services.
"Jt isn't a curE!-!111. But if it passes,
it will help bring some sense back to
our tax system," said Cincinnati attorney Donald Mooney.
Mooney and four other persons
will lead the campaign in behaH of
the issue. " If it fails, the future is·
clear for Ohioans. Tbere will be no
tax relief from the politdans. Instead, there will be hikes ... taxes,
probably ne&gt;rtyear," he said.
Joining him at a press conference
Tuesday were committee co-&lt;:hairs
MaryLynn Cappelletti of Colwnbus,
legislative dlrector of the Ohio
. Public Interest Campaign; DorothyRyan of Youngstown, president of
the Ohio Council of Senior Citizens;
James Draper, an attorney from
Cleveland, and Charles Nash of ottawa, executive director of the Ohio
Farmers Union.
If approved by voters, the package
would give qualified low-and
moderate-income homeowners, renters and family fartners about $161
million in property tax relief in the

form of tax credits. But taxes for
corporations and householdS malting
more than $30,000 annually would be
increased.
"The tax relief provision of the
Ohio Falr Tax Initiative is clear and
simple - in 1981, an estimated 1. 7
million households will share $161
million u1 properly tax relief," Ms.
Cappelletti said.
Elderly persons living on fixed incomes but confronted by rising
properly taxes will support the
proposal, said Mrs. Ryan.
"Giving tax relief to homeowners
with property ,taxes exceeding 2.5
percent of income will be of tremendous benefit to senior citizens," she
said.
Under the proposal, homeowners,
renters and family farmers with incomes of less than $30,000 would
qualify for a tax credit if they paid
more than 2.5 percent of their income in property taxes.
Nash said the Ohio Farmers Union
believes the state's current tax
system is unfair, relying for most of
its revenue on farmers,
homeowners, senior citizens and
svaU businessmen.
Supporters say they are confident
the issue will appear on the ballot
despite a pending lawsuit again!;t it
in Franklin County Common Pleas
Court. Opponents of the proposal
have asked the court to prohibit the
secretary of state from placing the
plan before voters.
The case marks the 15th challenge
mounted in behaH of the Ohio
Manufacturers Association to the
tax reform package, Ms: Cappelletti
said.

Today in histo,.Y.
By Tile Associated Press
TodayiJFriday, Aug. 29, the242nd
day of 19110. There are 124 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Aug. 29, 1680, the British annexed the New Netherlands colonies
- from Connecticut to Delaware and re-named New Amsterdam
uNew York.''
On this date:
In 1533, the last Incan king of Per~
- Atahualpa - was murdered on
the orders of Spaitish conqueror
Francisco Pizarro.
In 1817", . the first abolition
newspaper in the United States "-the philanthr~pist" was
published in Mount Pleasant,.Ohio.

,,,
..

iJl ules
'

R·

• •

, In 1945, Gen. Douglas MacArthur

left the Philippines for Japan to ac-cept Japan's surrender.
In 1968, som~ 200 people were
arrested as a esult of a confrontation·
beween police and anti-war demonstrators at the Democratic National
Convention in Chicago.
Last year, Dr. Jeffrey McDonald
- a former green beret - was found
guilty in the 1970 murders of his wife
and two children. A Raleigh, N.C.,
jury returned the verdict.
Today's birthdays: Gen. Lyman
Lernnltzer is 81. Actor Barry
Sullivan is sa.
Thought for today: Money talks,
but it rarely gives itseH away. Anonymous

-·..

.

.

'

Berry's World

,·:·
?

'

.'

I'

~

~

•

'•

.•
,
•
•
•

ep e John Anderson on foreign policy

WASHINGTON (AP ) - John B.
Anderson's foreign 'policy would
combine a recognition of declining
U.S. influence overseas, closer ties
with Am_erican allies and a
willingness to negotiate with the
Soviets on arms control even while .
Moscow is attempting " to exploit
whatever world trouble spots arise
over the next decade."
"We cannot let our arms control
policies to be held hostage to
headlines of Soviet bad behavior,"
the Illinois congressman has said.
More generally, the independent
presidential candidate says, "I do
not subscribe to the conventional
policies and the conventional ways"
of Ronald Reagan and President
·
Carter.
On foreign policy questions, An·
derson is far closer to Carter than to
Reagan in his approach to relations
with the Soviet Union, China and
other major powers.
Yet he is insistently harsh in his
criticism of Carter.
" If there is one word to describe
the Carter administration's approach to foreign affairs, I would
call it unilateralism, failure to take
into account the views of our allies,"
Anderson said during a recent fivenation trip through the Middle East
and Europe.

.. This is the gD-it·alone approach
that has characterized the afministration's relations with its
allies," he said.

Because other countries have learned they cannot rely on the U.S. as a
dependable ally, they act only in
their own interests, he said.
As a former foreign service officer, Anderson says he would set a
straight course and stick to It,
avoiding Carter's "twists and turns
of American foreign policy."
Unlike many Republicans in
Congress, Anderson supported both
the Strategic Arms Limitation
Treaty with the Soviets and the
Panama Canal treaties that turned
the waterway over to Panama.
He also firmly supported Carter's
decision to recognize communist
China and suspend formal ties with
the government on Taiwan.
But he said he is troubled "that we
do not have the kind of political
leadership in this country" that can
push through raiification of a SALT
treaty " when to do so is so much in
our own interest.''
He argued that with an adequate
system of verification it would be in
both American and Soviet interests
for the Senate to ratify the
agreement and for the U.S. to go on
to negotiate a third SALT pact.

On- the Middle East," Anderson
believes Carter has created "an obstacle to peace" 'by pressuring the
Israelis to pull back new settlements
in the Sinai Desert.
On his trip to Israel, Anderson said
he opposes a policy that says " peace
can be pursued by pressure on Israel
or by deliberately increasing tensions between Israel and American
governments.''
Underlying Anderson's firm support of Israel is a belief that the
country is a stable democracy and
reliable ally, while most Arab states
are dictatorships subject to rapid
change of leadership and policy.
As for Iran, Anderson has said,
"efforts to prop up an authoritarian
regime can. be fruitless and
destroyed overnight - with a
devastating effect on American interests."
He has said Saudi Arabia and Jordan should be brought into
negotiations on the Palestinians and
other issues and the U.S. government should "not keep blaming
Israel for failure" of those nations to
join the talks.
Anderson finds the Palestinian
Liberation Organization "morally
repugnant. " Any move toward U.S.
recognition of the organization must
follow a PLO repudiation of

•
terrorism and acceptance of the
existence of Israel.
Once the Middle East peace talks
are near conclusion, Anderson said,
Jerusalem should be recognized as
the capital of Israel and the U.S. embassy moved there.
Anderson says that, unlike Carter,
he would make no attempt to
pressure the participants or dictate
a peace settlement.
In sharp disagreement with Car·
ter, Anderson has stiffly opposed
construction of the MX missile,
which he terms " $55 l»llion of
lwtacy."

He portrays the new, land-based
underground missile system as the
result of Pentagon weapons planning gone awry and says new, less
expensive alternatives like air·
launched cruise missiles or sea·
based strategic weapons should be
developed instead.
Anderson has proposed that the
problem &lt;i tens of thousands of
Mexicans illegally entering the U.S.
might be linked to new-found oil
reserves in Mexico. Help to poor
Mexicans driven by unemployment
to cross the U.S. border might be
provided as part of billions of dollars
the U.S. will be paying for oil and
natural gas to be imported from
Mexican oil fields.

Washington today

For Carter ·a greeting and a moral
WASHINGTON (APJ - When
President Carter addressed the
American Federation of Teachers in
Detroit last week, he was greeted
with a story with a moral by Albert
Shanker, head of the union which is
affiliated with the AFL-CIO.
It seems there is a window in the
office of the AFL-CIO president in
the District of Columbia that " looks
down at the White House."
Shanker quoted the late union
president, George Meany, as saying
that vantage point was necessary
because " whoever represents
workers always has to keep one eye
on what's going on down there.''
Carter, who has had his share of
cr~cisms from the union, said he
wai aware of the lofty window.
"Ttfere have been a few times when
White House binoculars were

trained on that window as well," he
added wryly.
The Carter adnlinistration now
has its version of an erased tape. But
unlike the Nixon administration's
famous 18 and a-half minute gap,
this time there's no question who did
it.
White House press secretary Judy
Powell held a new~ briefing in his office last week, and one reporter
inadvertently left his tape recorder
behind.
A couple of hours later, the reporter returned to retrieve the machine
and learned Powell had discovered
it during a private conversation with
another White House officiaL The
press secretary , not leaving
anything to chance, took it upon himself to erase the tape.
Frank Moore, the White House

liaison with Congress, missed
President Carter's trip to Boston
last week because of an embarrassing mishap.
Shortly before the president was
scheduled to leave the White House,
the hefty Moore was sitting in a car
talking to House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill, who was traveling with the
president.
As he got out of the car to board
the president's helicopter, Moore
ripped his pants. He turned around
to let O'Neill survey the damage and
was advised it was pretty serious: So
Moore grabbed an aide and said: ·
"Get on the helicopter." The surprised aide obliged.
Powell recently was reminded
that Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, Carter's defeated rival for the
Democratic
presidential

nomination, was involved in the ill·
fated swine flu program several
years ago. Someone asked why
Powell hadn't made an issue of it.
"We decided not to raise it during
the primary campaign, so there's no
reason to raise it now,'' be said. With
a glint in his eye, he added, "But if
you know of any connection with
Reagan ...''
The press secretary also has let it
be known that he 's tired of being
second-guessed about how the White
House treats Kennedy. He said
reporters should stop thinking that
they know how to handle · the
situation better, and proposed a
dea L
"You don't try to do our job and we
won't try to do you-ails - anymore
than we already do." ,1

The subject: the U.S. Savings Bond program

t

•

.1
•
•••
•
t

leW~'litE
EFF11111VIE

......

'OLITICII\II

.
r
rr .
•

.

@1H0by NEA,lnc.

PITI'SBURGH (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds catcher Johnny Bench says he
makes better newspaper copy when
he plays every day. But the 12-year
National League veteran says a little rest makes him a better catcher.
He showed what a 32-year"'llld can
do after two days out from behind
the plate - a twD-run homer that
was more than enough behind the 7hit perfOl'!JlliiiCe of Paul Moskau in
Cincinnati's 4-0 win over the slumping Pittsburgh Pirates 4-0.

-~

~~

'

··L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- 1

By Don Graff
The subject is again the u .s .
Savings Bond program.
As it has been in this space on occasion. And not, if develops, without
effect. A recent critique of the
program's flaws in respect to small
savers has drawn comment from
about as authoritative a source on
the subject as you can get.
The United States Treasury
Department.
Well, fair is fair, as rumor has it,
and the voice of authority on a subject Involving so much money
($73.275 billion worth of bonds outstanding by Treasury's reckoning as
of July 3) and affecting so many
people (so many millions upon
millions that not even Treasury has
a precise count) deserves to be
heard.
·
To start with, a spokesperson
acknowledges that the bonds, at a
top Interest rate of 7 ·percent, have

not been among the best bu~s
around during this prolonged period
of double-digit inflation. But
Treasury is both aware of the
problem and, in conjunction with ·
Congress, in the process of doing
something about it.
A bill, H.R. 7478, approved by the
House and pending in the Senate,
would authorize the Treasury, with
presidential approval, to raise interest rates a maximwn of one percent point_ every six months to
reflect trends in the economy,
This would be a significant change
in the program as presently set up.
Congress to date has been the
initiator of all inceases - a cumbersorne procedure for dealing with
a volatile economy that H.R. 7478, in
granting the executive limited
authority to adjust rates on its own,
would to some extent correct.
Another point : U.S. Savings Bonds
offer several advantages that cum-.

mercia! paper does not. Interest on
them is exempt from state and local
taxes and the federal tax is deferred
until they are cashed. That can have
the effect of rasiing the real yield by
several points over the face 7 percent. Particularly if a holder waits
until retirement to cash in. At that
time, a sharply lowered tax bracket
can translate into significantly more
interest re,tained.
There are other ways of '
. maximizing yield. Public employees, for example, may be participating in pension plans under
.which payments upon retirement
are exempt from federal taxation
until these equal total deductions
"from paychecks during the working
years. In effect, for the first year or
so the retiree 1.$ in a zero percent tax
bracket and all interest on bonds
cashed during this period can . be
retained.
All of this Is good to -know. And

as

true enough - as far it goes. Not
all bondholders, however, are in a
position to take advantage of the advantages. Only a minority of their
millions are public employees. And
many more have neither the finahces nor the financial sophistication
to manipulate bond holdings to best
advantage. .
Furthermore, unless something
wonderful happens to the economy ·
sooh, H.R. 7478 is likely to be another
case of too likely, too late. At the
authorized I percent inters! hike
every six months, It would take two
or more years to bring bond face
yield even with the current Inflation
rate. And how knows what heights .1
the latter may have reached by
then?
Still, it lsevidenceofWas~gton's
awareness of the problem and, once
the Senate ge~ around to acting, of
some progress m dealing with it.
It's about lime.

"When I'm catching everyday, it's
great for you guys," Bench told
reporters afterwards. "You guys ·
say, 'Yeah, he's an iron man. In the
meantime , I can't walk, I can't
throw ..."
"I feel awful good now," he said.
" That's the whole idea of not cat.
ching every day."
Moskau raised his record to !1-5
with his first shutout of the season
and passed some of the credit to
Bench.
"Toward the end of the game, I

been hard on Atlanta defense

ByBRUCEWWm
AP Sports Writer
Winning isn't everything - and
when it comes to Atlanta Falcons
exhibition games, it isn't anything.
Atlanta built itseH into contention
a few years ago with a uuperb defense, nicknamed the Grits Blitz. Then
the National Football League
• -changed the rules, limiting the lac-• 'tics a defense could employ in order
to stop opponents' offense, particularly the passing game.
And history - as well as every

team Atlanta has played in the past
two preseasons - passed the
Falcons by.
Last year they were 0-4 and the
team which in 1978 had made the
playoffs with a ~7 record sagged to
6-10. This year, heading into
tonight's final exhibition against
Baltimore, the Falcmns are ().3 and,
although Coach Leeman Bennett
won't be diverted from his primary
goal -assessing each player's
abilities, particularly those of the
remaihing rookies - he wouldn't

·. Murcer wants to
-win with Yanks
The Associated Press
Bobby Murcer has a special
: ,reason for wanting to win the World
Series with the New York Yankees.
. Onee acclaimed as the successor
to Mickey Mantle in ·the Yankees'
. outfield, Murcer spent six full, fairly
.productive years in pinstripes in the
· late 1960s and early 70s. ,
But the Yankees never won a pen-nant with Murcer, who finally was
.traded to San Francisco in 1975.
"Back in the early '70s, we
challenged once, but I tholll!ht we
.were a player or two away from win·
.ning," Murcer said.
· "It turned out that the only player
,who went away was me, but the
.Yankees brought me back, and it
means an awful lot to me to win and
go all the way," Murcer said.
Now, getting a chance to play even
.sporadically, the 34-year-old Murcer
has been a key to the Yankees' suc-cess of 1980. Thursday night, he hit
his 12th homer of the season t&lt;\ break .
a tie in the seventh inning and give
New York a 6-5 victory over the
Seattle Mariners. .
It was the ninth time this season
he has notched the game-winning
RBI , and this one helped the
Yankees maintain their haH-game
lead over the Baltimore Orioles in
the American League East.
· " I think that we'll play better and
play harder in the stretch and that
we 'II win this thing," Murcer said.
· The Orioles whipped California I~
'8. Elsewhere in the league, Boston
'edged Oakland 3-2, Detroit downed
Milwaukee 11·7 and Texas defeated
·Kansas City 1().6. The MinnesotaToronto game was susJ)ended after
14 innings, tied 5-:i.
Lou Piniella also homered for the
'.,Yankees, and lefty Ron Guidry,l3-9,
- picked up the victory out of the
· bullpen, relieving Rudy May, who
:·began the season out there.
· "It feels good to win," said Mur. cer. "I was looking for a good pitch
to hit hard. I had to figure Jim (Seat·
. tie pitcher Jim Beattie) didn't want
to walk me as the leadoff man in the
eighth. I sounded off earlier when I
wasn't playing, and I think I have
proved my point. ''
.;
Orioles 13, Angels 8
{ Baltimore set a club record with :16
. hits, and Ken Singleton, Eddie
., Murray, Gary Roenicke and Rick
Dempsey knocked in two runs
apiec!! for the Orioles.
. Jim Pabner notched his 14th vic-.. tory, going 61-3 innings before -he
needed relief help from Sammy
:stewart.
Roenicke, Murray and Rich Dauer
, each had four hits as Baltimore set
'another club mark with nine hits in
• the fourth inning to score six runs.
1• "It was
sloppy game, and it's
tough to bear down in a situation like
·that,'' Dempsey said. "But we have
.to kick oorselves · in the butts
.because we are still the ones chasing
New York.''
Red Sox 3, A's 2
Jim Dwyer came off the bench for
.the injured Fred Lynn and scored
the winning run in the eighth inning.
"Dwyer doubled and scored the
tiebreaker on a pair of groundouts.

a

game losing streak, 1.$ thinking
Foli is 1-for-15 , followed by Phil Garabout hitting baseballs. Except for . ner, in a 1-fur-21 slump.
Bill Madlock's double, the Pirates ·
Pirate Manager Chuck Tanner
got only singles of! Moskau, and only
spread some optimism around the
two base runners got past first.
clubhouse before the game.
Part of the prol)lem is that team
" I told them we have 35 games left
captain Willie Slargell is on the
and ail the plusses are on our side.
disabled list, and slugger Dave
Montreal and Philadelphia both
Parker missed his second game with
have to go back to the west coast. We
a sore knee.
don't. We have a lot of games at
But other · key hitters aren't home.''
producing. Leadoff man Omar
The ·Reds got more runs than they
Moreno is 3-for-18, No. 2 batter Tim
needed in the third. Dave Concepcion singled, stole second, went
to third on an infield out and scored
on Dan Driessen's single. Bench hit
Pirate starter Rick Rhoden's next
pitch over the left field fence for his
21st home run of the season.
In the ninth, Ron Oester and Dave
Tonight other games are New
mind if Atlanta won for a change.
Concepcion
singled off reliever
England at Seattle, Miami at New
"We want to win because the
Grant
Jackson,
and George Foster
Orleans and Washington at Tampa
players have worked hard an&lt;j
singled home the la~t run.
Bay.
played well for the most part. It's
Rhoden, who won two previous
bOOn very disappointing not to win
Qn Saturday night it's Pittsburgh
starts,
fell to H .
but 1 feel this ·may have been our at Dallas, San Diego at Los Angeles,
Moskau,
on the other hand, was on
best training camp since rxe been the New York Jets at the New York
target.
with the Falcons," said Bennett, in Giants, Cleveland at Minnesota,
"I had good control and I threw
his fourth year as head coach. "We Philadelphia at Oakland, St. Louis at
harder
than I have in a while," he
still plan to get a good look at our Chicago, Denver at Green Bay,
sajd.
younger people. If we don't, it Detroit at Cincinnati and Kan.sas
Still, Pittsburgh held on to the
wouldn't have done any.good to keep City vs. San Francisco at Tucson,
short
end of a first-place tie with
them around this long."
Ariz.
Montreal, which enjoyed a onepercentage point advantage in the
NLEast.

sta rted getting sloppy," said
Moskau. "He came out and gave me
a kind of verbal kick in the pants. He
said, 'This is your game, finish it.'
That gave me a lift.''
·Bench says he wants this to be his
·final season as a full-time Catcher.
" I'm nut even thinking about that
now," said Reds' Manager John McNamara. "We've gill a chance to win
a pennant and that's aU I'm thinking
about."
Meanwhile, Pittsburgh, in a four-

Lynn broke his toe in the first in·
ning when he fouled a pitch off his
foot. He will be lost to the club indefinitely.
Jim Rice hit his 16th homer of the
season for Boston in the .fourth in·

Today's

Tigers II, Brewers 7
Champ Summers slammed his
second career grand siam homer to
spark a nine-run outburst in the sixth inning, and the Tigers outslugged·
the Brewers, who stranded 18
baserunners.
AI Cowens also homered in the
Tigers sixth.
Mark Fidrych started for Detroit
but was kayoed in the third when he
gave up two rtlllS on a pair of singles,
Sixto Lezcano's double and a wild
pitch before retiring a batter.
Lezcano also homered for the
Brewers.
Rangers 10, Royals 6
AI Oliver knocked in three runs
with a homer and a single to pace
Texas' !!&gt;-hit attack and snap a fivegame Kansas City winning streak.
Bump Wills had four hits for the
Rangers, but Kansas City's George
Brett could managed just one single
in four trips, lowering his battin
average to .404. •
·
Pat Putnam and Mickey Rivers
also homered for Texas.
Twins 5, Blue Jays 5
Toronto's John Mayberry stroked
a pinch single to tie the game :;..:; in
the bottom of the eighth, and the
Twins and Blue Jays played 14 innings beforenthe game was suspended. A 5 p.m. curfew was invoked
because or" a rock concert at
Exhibition Stadium in Toronto.
The game will be resumed today
at noon, preceding the regularly
scheduled contest.
Aslros 4, Cubs I
Alan Ashby's twG-run single
highlighted a three-run third inning
that carried Houston to its lith victory in a row over Chicago, inclucling
all nine this season.
Terry Puhl had three singles and
an RBI for the Astros, who extended
thelr lead in the NL West to 2t·
games over Los Angeles.
Joaquin Andujar, 2-4, shut out the
Cuba for six innings and Joe Sambito
finished to eam his 13th save ·
although he gave up a run in the
seventh on Mike Vail's pinch single.
Cardinals 11, Braves 2
Dane Iorg drove in seven runs,
second-highest in the National
League this season, and Bob Forsch
fired a six-hitter to lead St. Louis
over Atlanta.
The Braves had won five games in
a row bot they were overwhelmed by
a 14-hit attack that included lorg's
twG-run double in the first inning, a
three-run double in the second and a
·twG-run single in the fourth.
Barry Foote of the Chicago Cubs
drove in eight runs on April 22.
"I've had more hits, butl've never
driven. In more runs,'' lorg said.
"The game was blown· away early,
so it was icing on the cake. I've been
happier. When you come off the ben·
ch in the eighth or ninth inning and:
drive in the winning run as a pinch
hitler, that's the ultimate.''

By WILL GRIMSLEY .
AP Special Correspondent

Money, attention drives Ali
What
motivates
the
remarkable Muhammad Ali?
Is it money? Is it the "necessity
to replenish coffers left barren by
the squandering of some $40
million earned over two decades
with his hammering fists? Or is it
the heady elixir of fame, the need
for the spotlight and constant attention which must be fed into the
veins like some addictive drug ?
"Both,'' snapped the 38-yearoid fighting wonder when the
question was shot at him Thursday after a seven-round
sparring session at Madison
Square Garden.
The single answer came from
the lips of an aging man. The
clean-cut, boyish look is gone.
The gray spots have been touched
up in his thick black hair. Flab
and bulges are now noticeable on
the bQdy that once was so lean
and sleek it resembled a bronze
statue.
He wears a dark mustache,
which gives him a dour middleage look rather than his old
puckish charm. " I'm the black
Clark Gable," he boasts but it's
just a means of masquerading an
fading facade.
There is a symbol of a bee with
outterfly wings on his boxing
shorts but it is the only replica of
an age when the a young
gladiator came out of Louisville
and felled an awesome brute

named Sonny Liston to win the
heavyweight championship for
the first of three times.
The great Muhammad, who .
changed his religion and his
name, no longer "floats like a
. butterfly and stings like a bee.''
In the ring, he looks slow and ponderous, easy to hit.
· Ali admirers - and the ntiiTIbers are both legion and world·
wide - worry that, although he
has · undergone another of his
stern training regimens, he will
be unable to avoid embarrassment when he goes again·
st his unbeaten, 3().year"'llld
protege, Larry Holmes, in Las
Vegas Oct. 2 for the World Boxing
Co uncil version of the
heavyweight title.
There are a faithful few who
believe "The Great _One" may
pull still another miracle from his
magician's pouch.
"But why even attempt it?"
much of the wodd asks. He has
climbed the heights of his
profession. There 1.$ flO other way
to go except to come down .
Ali addressed himseH to this
conundrum after an unimpressive workout before scores of
fans and critics at the G"arden.
"Wllat's wrong with wanting
money?" he replied to a question.
He went on to say if J. Paul Getty
and other multi-millionaires get
theirs, wliy shouldn't he, a black,
get his.

Seed and Milling

By MICHAEL_A. LUTZ
AP Sports Writer
HOUSTON (AP) - Ken Stabler of
the Houston Oilers, noted as one of
the deadliest twG-minute quarterbacks in the Natio"'ll Football
League, was too efficient Thursday
night.
Stabler took_ only I minute 28
seconds to lead the Oilers to a touch- down before halftime, leaving the
Buffalo Bills time to attempt a come
back.
But the Oilers wili take Stabler's
twD-minute drill just as they'll settle
for their 24-7 victory over Buffalo in
the final preseason tuneup before
the Sept. · 7 regular-season opener
against Pittsburgh.
"We have worked hard on our twDminute offense and at the end of the
first haH, we . did about as good as
you can do," Oilers Coach .Swn
Phillips said. "Hell, we scored so
darned fast, that we gave them the
bail with a minute left."
Buffalo had pulled to a 1~7 deficit
in the second quarter when Stabler
took the controls and guided the
Oilers to a quick score and a 17-7
halftime lead.
. Stabler paSsed 22 yards to tight
end Mike Barber and 17 yards to
wide receiver Mike Renfro and handed off to Earl Campbell for the first
of his two touchdown runs.
Stabler also hit running back Rob
Carpenter with a 7-yard touchdown
pass and Toni Fritsch kicked a 33yard field goal for the Oilers. Buf·

d~q

falo's second quarter touchdown
came on a !-yard dive by Auburn
rookie Joe Cribbs.
" Hey, man, it;s tough to go 50 or60 .
yards," Stabler said of Houston's
second quarter twG-minute drill. "U
you get it in one play fine. That's like
cussing someone for winning by five
. points when the betting line was six
points."
Camp bell 's performance
reacquainted the 45,973 Oiler fans
with the NFL rushing champion.
He had taken a backseat to
Stabler's passirig during the first
three preseason games but he exploded for .511 yards on the first play
of the game and finished with 109
yards on 11 carries and two touchdowns.
"I was watching Earl on the
sidelines during the game and it was
an awfully good feeling dbt flaving to
tackle him," said -Oilers defensive
back Jack Tatum, who played against CampE~ AS AN Oakland Raider ·
last season."He is a super athlete
and it is a pleasure to be on the field
with him."
Buffalo Coach Chuck Knox, trying
to get the Bills ready to face Miami
in the season opener, said '' I would
like to have played better but it was
a short week for us. We're nut ready
to play Miami yet. I know that.
We've got a lot to work on."
The Bills have nut beaten Miami
since 1969, an NFL-record 20
straight losses to one team.

0 ~0

CHAIN
SAWS

A SOUND ENERGY
SAVINO INVES I MENT

HEADQUARTERS

miD
Ruggedly engineered to pile up plentv of
firewood and fuel savings for years to come,
an Echo Chain Saw has to be_one of the
.
soundest Investments you can make.
Quit fUenn.gJ~roundl
Seeds · Bird Seeds • Oyster Shells and Grit- Fertilizers · Lime - Ce-ment &amp; Mortar - Stock Salt - Water Softener · Remedies - Salt - LiHers ·
•Vac:cine - Roofing - Paints - Re.d Brarid Fencing - B,a ler and Binder

Twin'e ·

Spr~ys

· Gates - Hay - Straw.

992·211 s

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
606 E. MAIN

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

'·

Stabler usual self

Sports World

Ding.

good thing."
The OHSAA began the playoffs in
1972 with 12 teams qualifying under
the three-class setup. That class
structure will continue in the rest of
Ohio's sports.
In recent years, the state football
championship games have alter·
nated between the Akron Rubber
Bowl and Welcome Stadium in
Dayton. But this year, the title sites
will not be selected until after the
semifinals.
Armstrong said it is a matter of
convenience for the schools who
reach the finals this fall.
"Why should schools from, say,
Toledo and Cincinnati have to play
for the tiUe in Akron?" the COIIP
missioner asked. "We would try to
find a site more suitable."
Each of the regional leaders will
serve as the hosts for the first-round
playoff games against the regional
runner-up Friday and Saturday,
Nov. 7 and 8. The state semifinals
will be.Friday and Saturday, Nov. 14
and i5,and the finals Friday and
Saturday, Nov. 21'and 22.
The new divisions are · based on
boys enrollment in the. upper three
grades, with ~hools having 541 or
more boys !aiming Division I.
Division II schools' enrollment ·is
351-MO, Division III 244-350, Division
IV 162-243 and Division V 161 or
fewer.
The OHSAA again will determine
its playoff field "by weekly co!IP
puterized ratings. Points are awarded on the basis of victories or ties,
with the opponents rated by
divisions. .
By beating a Division I foe, a
school will pick up 3.0 points, 2.5 for
defeating a Division II opponent, 2.0
against Division III , 1.5 against
Division IV and 1.0 against Division
V. Margins of victory do not play a
part in the ratings.

Pomeroy

-Brake Service

99N094

-Front End Alignments
$11 .50 most pass. cars ·

�l - The Daily Sen tine~ :ltiddleport-Pumeroy, 0 ., Fnday, Aug. 29, 1980

Gregg gets
Hoople says Alabama 'own'kick
.
er
will be tops in '80

Games of Sept. 1

- should be good enough tu capture
the SWC crown.
Pittsburgh's Panthers have all the
requisites lo be the top independent
club in the natioo a[ld round oul the
top hall of the Hoople Top Ten. Winners of their last 10 contests and with
50 returning lettermen, coach Jackie
Sherril's forces should sweep a
moderately tough schedule. Florida
State, Tennessee and Penn State are
among the possible stumbling
blocks.
The Hoople West Coast scouts look
for a change in the turmoil-ridden
Pacific Ten (or is that Five?)
pecking order - with Stanford
taking the loop title and Southern
Cal (ineligible for the Rose Bowl)
ftnishing second.
This would place them in the 6th
and 7th spots in OUr Top Ten.
The quarterback post is the big
difference in the two teams. Coach
Paul Wiggin of the Cardinals has
sophomore John Elway ready to go.
At the Trojan practice field, roach
John Robinson's biggest challenge is
to lind a replcement for All-America
Paul McDohnald. Not an ·enviable

By Major Amos B. Hoople
Peerless Prognosticator
Egad, friends, I'm back for 1980!
The old world of ours is spinning
around at such a wild and dizzying
pace these days that forecasting
almost anything is almost im- task'
Notre Dame's Irish should bounce
possible.
back
from a disappointing year.
. However, as sure as the sun will
Gone
is fantastic runner Vegas
· lise tomorrow morning, just as
Ferguson.
Back are three of the
surely will Alabama and Ohio State
finest
receivers
in the country be at the top of the polls when the
Dean
Masztak,
Tony
Hunter and
final ratings are posted some four
Pete
Holohan.
In
addition
to a bevy
months hence. Yas, dear readers,
of
returning
veterans,
the
Irish had
the Crimson Tide and Ohio State's
a
recruiting
se;~son
juSt
a notch
Buckeyes are loaded again and
below
those
of
Ohio
State
and
· teady to shoot down all foes!J
Alabama.
; • .And how about this for a switch to
Bobby Bowden has a rebuilding
:open the season? The Monday Night
!TV football shQw will feature those job to do with the Florida Stale
elong-time collegiate powers of the Seminoles. But any club with nose
:SOuthwest Conference - Arkansas guard Ron Simmons on its roster is
· going to win a lot of games. If the
! and Texas.
', More on that classic later, but now Seminoles get their new offensive
fto answer your annual requests for lineup clicking for their opener with
:the Hoople assessment of the rugged LSU, they will probably be
undefeated when they take on
:season's Top Ten.
powerful
Pitt on Oct. 11.
: Here is how we se~ 'em in '80; l.,
Rounding
out our Top Ten are the
-Alabama. 2., Oh10 State. 3.,
Houston
Cougars.
Bill Yeoman's
:Dklahoma. 4... Arkansas. 5., Pitclubs
have
represented
the SWC ln
·;tsburgh. 6., Stanford. 7., Southern
the
Cotton
Bowl
in
three
of the last
elifornia. 8., Notre Dame. 9.,
four
years.
And
they
well
couold be
;c&lt;·torida State. 10., Houston.
there
again
this
New
Year's
Day ~ Alabama, coming off a 1~ season
·
if
QB
Terry
Elston
and
running
'and winners of 21 in a row, is the
·Hoople choice to repeat as mythical backs Terald Clark and John
' national champ. 'Tis too bad we Newhouse play up to their potential.
Capable of moving into the Top
~ can't have a playoff for a real chamTen
before the season ends are Nor; pionship. Urn-kwnph!J
th
Carolina,
which boasts the count Paul (Bear) Bryant starting hiS
try's
nmost
explosive
runner, Amos
t, Zlrd year as head man at his alma
Lawrence;
Purdue,
whose quar• mater needs only 18 victories to top
terback,
Mark
Herrmann,
is
; famed Amos Atanzo Stagg's all-time
probably
the
best
pure
passer
in
the
~ ~ecord o( 314. A young 67 - heh-heh
• -the Bear is out to get most of them coUege ranks ; Nebraska, led by
another speedster, Jarvis Redwine;
: this year.
Auburn,
where the running tandem
: Giving Alabama a stiff battle for·
of
James
Brooks and George
; the top spot will be the ' bruising
Peoples
figures
to be just as good as
: Buckeyes. Earle Bruce, 11-1~ and
Brooks
and
the
graduated
Joe Crib• Coach of tW Year in his first season
l at his alma mater, had what all the bs, who combined lor a total of 2,328
! experts agree was the "best yards and 24 TDs a year ago; and
• recruiting year" in collegiate foot- the potent Missouri Tigers, under
: ball. Who says the rich don't get the leadership of yet another fine
field general, Phil Bradley, who won
; richer- humph!
: And the added talent Bruce dido 't all-Big Eight honors in '79.
There you hyave ll fans. A gold• really need. Leading a host of returplated
Hoople assessment. Harning vets is the incomparable junior
rumph!
, quarterback Art Schlichter, whose
Now to the season's first big con· passing and running accounted for
lest
- Arkansas vs. Texas, under
; 23 Buck TDs in 1979. 'Nul said 1
the
lights in the Longhorns'
; At Oklahoma, Billy Simms is
Memorial
Stadium.
:gone. But J .C. Watts is back. Watts'
Overall,
Texas holds a com! presence, either throwing the ball or
manding
46-1:Ml
lead in the historic
' lugging it for large gains, means
with
the
Razorbacks.
But in 16
series
! Oklahoma wil have naother top con: tender. The Sooners are big, tough of the last 21 renewals, the game has
helped to settle the Southwest Con· and fast.
: The Arkansas Razorbacks, with ference race.
This year it will be more of the
; amateur magician and maser of
same,
with Arkansas getting the
: one-liners Lou Holtz directing acHoople
nod to start off on the right
i tivities from the sidelines, could well
foot.
Fred
Akers' Texas club - led
' better last season's 111-2 recored by
Jam
Jones,
who clips off yardage
!which included a 24-91oss to national
lC»-plils
rate
- will give the
at
a
: chan\p Alabama in the Sugar Bowl.
Hogs
an
interesting
night but never• The Hogs running attack, led by a
theless
fall
by
a
21-17
count.
.:trio of speedster - Darryl Bowles,
This
one
will
be
worth
watching !
! Thomas Brown and Gary Anderson

!

'

WJLMJNUTON, Ohio (AP J Bengals Coach Forrest Gregg has
had his eye on place kicker Jan Sunter fur a long time - ever since he
coached him at Toronto tast season.
··When he was released by Toronto, I wanted to bring him in and at
the Same time New England was after him," Gregg said. ·'He's gut a
strong leg and he's an experienced
kicker."
The Bengals waived two place
kickers this week - veteran Chris
Bahr and rookie Sandro Vitiello and picked up Sunter, who was
released earlier in the week by the
New England Patriots.
" He was one of those guys who
always had his head in the game.
You didn 't have tolook for him and
say, 'Let's kick a field goal.' He had
agood knowledge of the gaJ!le."
General Manager Paul Brown
said Thursday he was impressed by
the distance Sunter gets on the kick
despite a rather short apProach.
" He has a very controlled cut at .
the ball," Brown said. "Vitiello had
a big backswing. Sandro was a
young guy and emotional. This guy

~~::s~~d.Forrestknowshim
The Dundee, Scotland, native said
he began kicking footballs when he
was 17 and two years tater kicked
the winning field goal in the Grey
Cup, Canada's equivalent to the
Super Bowl.
The Bengals are Sunter~s seventh
professional stop. He played three
years with the Canadian Football
League Hamilton Tiger-Ca.ts before
starting the 1976 season with the Buffalo Bills. He was released a(ter six
games. He then played far the
Detroit Lions and the Los Angeles
Rams before returning to Canada.
The 27-year-old kicker has made
135 of 234 career field-goal attempts
and was 21 of 32 for Gregg's.
Argonauts last season. He also
averaged 41.7 yards as a punter.
"The punting situation here is
pretty healthy," Sunter said. "If I
can help them in the kicking game,
I'll be more than healthy. I still need
a little work. Today was the first
time I worked on place kicking in a
month. At New England, all I did
was punt."
Sonier only punted twice for a 34.1&gt;yard average in three preseason
games with the Patriots. He said he
was surprised he wasn't waived until this week.
"! was grateful that the opportunity was still here," he said.
"It's quite often difficult to get
picked up. Needless to say, I was
hoping for a phone call, but I
couldn't count on it."

VeeCk remamS
• good
CIDCAGO (AP) _Chicago White
Sox President Bill Veeck remains in
.good condition in Illinois Masonic
Medical Center, a spokeswoman
said today.
Veeck, 66, was moved out of the intensive-care unit Wednesday but
continued receiving inhalation
therapy.
He has been hospitalized since
Sunday with respiratory problems.
Veeck was taken to Illinois
Masonic only two days after the
White Sox board of directors approved sale of the American Lague
baseball clul? to Edward J. DeBartolo Sr. of Youngstown, Ohio, for an
estimated $20 million.

BOWLING
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Kevin
Gillette of Florence, Ky., made his
ninth professional bowlers' tournament count with a 21-pin victory
over Mike Aulby of Indianapolis in
the Professional Bowlers
Association Canadian Open in
Hamilton, Ontario.
Competing in only his ninth
professional tournament, Gillette
earned the top-seed position in the
tourney after staying close to the top
thoughout. Gillette opened with a
spare and a six-strike surge in the
first seven frames ol the championship to open a JO.pin lead, which
he never relinquished.
Current PBA money leader Wayne
school and not practicing. Reggie
Webb
of Rehoboth, Mass., picked up
Echols hjls been moved from tackle
$2,050
for his 11th place finish in the
to middle guard to fill the ~acancy.
Canadian Open. For 'n tournaments
Freshman fullback Vaughn
Broadnax will be idle for seven to 10 Webb has stacked up $87,880 in priz~
days after pulling a hamstring . money. Mark Roth of Little SilverN.
J ., is second with $85,020 for 22 tourmuscle Wednesday.
naments.

lBruce shifts lineup
, COLUMBus; Ohio (AP) -

Coach
; Earle Bruce has made several
; defensive shifts as Ohio Stale
• prepares for 1ts Sept. 13 college foot' ball opener against Syracuse at Ohio
(Stadium.
.
t AI Washington has been moved
, from inside to outside right
linebacker in the Buckeyes' 3-4
, defensive allgnment to make room
; for sophomore Glen Cobb. Starter
. Keith Ferguson remains as left outrside linebacker' while sophomores
(Marcus Marek and Cobb are at the
!inside posts.
. Vince Skillings, who was a safety
jlast year, is back in that position af·ler being moved to left cornerback
llast spring. Rod Gorley replaces
;skillings at left cornerback.
; Bruce said the shift of Skllllngs
also would glve Bob Murphy some
'experience at cornerback. Murphy
;was a safety in the spring. Gorley,
;llkilllngs, Ray Ellis at right cor&lt;nerback and Todd Bell at rover are
'elqlecled to start in the defensive

j

"' iecondary.

; Middle guards Tim Sawicki and
;ftfark Sullivan are still in swnmer

PA.RK__~ESE_RVED
SATURDAY, AUGUST 30TH
UNTIL 4 P.M.
"FAMILY OUTING"
OF
CONSTRUCTION
&amp;GENERAL
LABORERS UNION
LOCAL NO. 1353
CHARLESTON

i&gt;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug. 29, 1980

Bringing families together.

'

Hendricks

reunion-~------

the Hendricks famlly reunion was
held Sunday a the Route 33 roadside
park north of Pomeroy, the first \n
many years.
the potluck dinner, the group
spent the afternoon reminiscing,
playing horseshoe and visiting. Pictures were taken.
Attending were Mrs. Alice White
Mrs. Verna Salser and children'
Mike and LaDonna, Sheffield Lake:
Mary Lou and AI Flack and Penny
Kuhn, Circleville; Pam and Don
Davis and children, Michelle and
~e, Blool!lingburg; Paity and
Kim Paullns, Oak Hill; Jerry
Paullns, Colwnbus; Mrs. Nondus

After

"-'-tJ~~

......

NO, THEY ARENT growiDg tbelr """' cbewiDg tobaceo. Pitcher Craig Swan (right) and

coacb Joe Pignatino of the New York Mets tend their vegetable patch in tbe Shea Stadium
ballpen. Tlull's cabbage in__!_~ loregroand.

Fans resnond
to home-town cut
'I'
CLEVELAND (APJ - Rarely has
the cutting of a player drawn the
negative reaction of fans like the
axing of running back Pat Moriarty
did in Cleveland this week.
Moriarty was the team's
hometown boy.
A Cleveland Browns' official, who
asked not to be identified, said, "We
got more calls about Moriarty than
we have about anything in a long
time, from both men and women."
Moriarty first became a wellknown football player in Cleveland
during his high school days, when he
was an all-state performer in football and track at Benedictine High
School. The single ~year-old went
to college at Georgia Tech, but he
now resides in Cleveland.
Last year he practiced with the
Browns during pre-season after he
signed as a free agent. He was
regardeil as a longshot to make the
squad, but he led the team in rushing
in pre-season games, going 175 yards in 37 carries.
In his rookie seasori in the
National Football League, Moriarty
was a reserve running back, gaini.ilg
just 14 yards in 11 carries in the entire season. He scored two touchdowns.
The &amp;-foot, l!l&gt;pounder knew he
faced stiff competition to retain his
reserve role this season, especially
when the Browns made Heisman
Trophy winner Charles White a
numberonedraftpick.
Even though he survived the first
two roste,r reductions, Moriarty said
he wasn t too surpnsed when his
P~k slip came Tuesday.
I apprec1ate all that Sam

employment. But he said he will acRutigliano did and tried to do for
me," he said. "Sam was fair with cept what comes. "I am not angry at
anybody, especiaUy the Browns," he
me right to the end.
" I know what. happened was not . said.
Meanwhile Cleveland fans may he
anti-Pat Moriarty, but rather pr()o
taking Moriarty's cut harder than
Charles White, pr&lt;&gt;Greg Pruitt and
pr()oDino Hall. It wasn't that Pat he.
A customer at Pat Joyce's tavern,
Moriarty wasn't good enough, it was
popular spot downtown among
a
that the other guys were very, very
football
fans, telephoned the
good and that's the way it should
Browns'
front
office and said, " The
be," he said.
flag
is
at
half
mast
and we're all getMoriarty said he hopes another
ting
drunk
in
sympathy
for our boy
NFL team will call and offer him
Pat."

GENERAL
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) Fonner stock car champion LeeRoy
Yarbrough was released from jail so
he can seek psychiatric treatment at
a private clinic in North Carolina.
Yarbrough, the 1969 NASCAR
driver of the year, had been confined
to the stale hospital in Chattahoochee since February after
being charged with attempted firstdegree murder of his mother and
battery of a hiw enforcement officer.

'

. .'

. 'QUIPMENT CO.
~orilerqy, 0.

Ph. f92·21~

Hours : I·SMon.-Fri.
1·12 Sot.
CJ.osed Sun_doy

International ·
H•r•ester

N.W ldN
Equipment

LABOR DAY FESTIVAL FUN!
IN ATHENS, OHIO

•ao
ARTS &amp; CRAFTS EX HI BITS

BARN RAISIN•
FOOD, MUSIC,

RE DANCING

1.00 ADULTS

1

SEPT. 1st

10 AM TIL 5 PM

50' STUDENTS

Sponsored by the Dairy
and the Citv. of Athens
Turn West on Dairy Lane/Off Richland Ave.
(Route SOl Beside The ou Inn

The annual reunion of the descendants of Newman E. and Florence
Hlll Kincaid was held in the
recreation hall at Royal Oak Park on
Aug.17.
A basket dinner was served at 1
p.m. with Jewell Kincaid asking the
blessing. The day was spent in
various games and renewing
aquaihntances.
The host family this year as Rubal
Kincaid Caldwell and sons, Howard
Caldwell, Jr. arid family and Jim
Caldwell and family. 'Gifts were
presented to the youngest, oldest,
farthest away and the family member with the most present and a door
prize was also awarded. A short
business meeting was held with
Hubal Kincaid Caldwell serving as
president.
Attending were: Frank and Jean
Bennett, Kathy, Beth and John,
Harry and Ala Madows, all of
Roseville; Eskey J . Hlll, Pomeroy:
Willoughby Hill, Long Bottom; Bob

''The phone

A layette shower honoring Mrs.
; Rodney (Debbie) Carl was held
: recently at the Carleto~t Church by
: Mrs. Eva King and Mrs. Judy Carl.
Games.ere played with prizes ging
to louise Queen, Mildred King,
Virginia Dean. The door prize was
won by Faye Pratt.
Pink, blue and white were
featured in the decorations for the
shower and were also carried out on
the gift and refreslunents table.
Cake, nuts, mints and punch were
served after Mrs. Carl opened her
gifts.
Attending were Bernice Riffle,
~I WUson, Faye Pratt, Elizabeth
Murray, Anita Dean, James and
Jeremy, Sadle Carl, Virginia Dean,

to begin at Irontori

phone
one.lt
.
•

for us .••••

-Phil Bowman, Vice Pre•ldent, Waterloo Coal Co., Oak BW

IRONTON - A new graduate
physical education program is to
. begin at Ohio University-Ironton this
, fall. The program is being designed
for teacben and coaches who are
currently working and caMot leave
their jobs to pursue a graduate
degree. The program can be completed in a two year period during
the evening.
All interested persons should plan
to attend the fecel!!jon at the South
Point Holiday Inn on Thursday,
Sept. 4, at .6:30 p.m. Enrollment is
limited.
For more information caU Scott
Howard at 614-532-9021 or 614-86737TI.

When is a emil company not a coal
company?
,
When it's also into trucking, farming and mine supply.
They're all parts of the Bowman family businesses, each with
its own phone system. But they
outgrew these systems, and
asked the General Telephone

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL

Communicati~sultantfor

help. We suggesteil a GTD120C computer-controlled system.
"Without Communications Consultant Esther Klinebriel, we wouldn't have
known what was available to save us time and
money," said Mr. Bowman. "Our new phone system handles calls for
all four companies. Yet each gets its own phone bills for accounting
purposes. The night-answer feature is very
important. Now we get after-hours calls at
home-these are almost always very important calls."
Our Communications Consultants
have only one job: to make your telecommunica'
'
tions better and better.
We have what you need .

HOSPITAL
, Admissions--Alan Moore,
Syracuse; Edward Deem, Portland,
Ronald Richards, Jr., Pomeroy;
Jared Armstrong, Middleport;
: · Steve Cremeans, Reedsville;
: · Ronald Russner, Columbus.
: . Discharge&amp;-Lucllle Lewis, Roy
· · Pierce, Melissa Collins, Jack Lunsford, Dwight Sayre, Steven
• LaValley, Murl Ours, Dwayne John: : son, Thomas Smith, Elmer Rutter,
: : Holly Green.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES AUG. Z8
George Bennett, Frances Blazer,
Christina Boggess, Patricia Botta,
Clyne Bnunfield, Deborah Bush,
Cheryl Clark, Harvey Collins, Opal
Conger, Heather· Cremeans,
Charlene Darst, Judy Darst, Teresa
Edwards, Mlllle folden, Thomas
TURSTEES TO MEET
Sutton Township Trustees will
·meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.

CAMDIN -.PARK
NGTON
SUNDAYANDLABORDAY

IIOOS'i'ERS TO MEET
The Southern High Scbool Band
•Booslen will meet Tuesday a 7:30
P:m. at the high sc'1.

-

•

and Janet Sheppard, Lisa and
Cheryl, Rosella Mayfield, of Akron;
Howard and Marvene Caldwell,
Reedsville; Bob and Terri Caldwell,
McArthur; Jim' and Sally Caldwell,
Jim, Jeff, Jodi, Howard and Hazel
Shumway, Roger and Dearina Shumway, Jill and Mark, Tom and
Dorothy Rausch, Chris and Tyler,
Raymond; Margaret Kincaid, Worthington: Jerry and Donna Kincaid,
Jeff and Mike, Dayton; Jim and
Carolyun Inciardi and Kristin,
Wilmington, Del.; Jewell and Zita
Kincaid, Lebanon; · Dorsal and
Genieve Kincaid, McConnelsville;
Deborah and Kim, Kincaid and Edward, Charles and Elizabeth Kincaid, Worthington; Frank Lee and
Geg Sutliff, Ecel Kincaid, Sutliff,
Warren; James M. and Ruth E. Kincaid, New Mexico; Tim and Martie
Baum, Chester; Howie and Christy
Caldwell, Roberta, Keri and Cynthia, Syracuse.

-Layette ~bower honors
:Mrs. Randy Hays here

Graduate P. E. program

systems
'big

Hendricks, Racine; Roy and
Rosemary Hendricks and daughter,
Cathy, and sons, and Steve Hendricks, Logan; Mrs. Kay Rowe and
sons, Jason and Corey, Letart; Dorsel and Rosemary Randolph and
sons, D.J. and Mickey, Keno; Sam
and Polly Gibbs and son, · Kevi11;
Rutland; Pete and Diane Hendricks
and children, Shetla and Travis,
Pomeroy; Gene and Sheila Whaley,
Carla, Brian, Pam, Sandy and
Brent, Darwin; MiSil Denise Deem,
Syracuse: Jim and Ida Counts and
children, Jinuny, Carrie and Brett,
Pomeroy, and Joseph and Rita
While.

Kincaid reunion---------

-..

_ ..,.~ -

• •

'l

\

,

L...,_

e _ea t

If..' ·

w:tien•.you .

· g1ve Bl
;,11!

TRI·STATE 'RED CROSS BLOOD CENTER •

~ KEYsror&lt;E BLOOD Sue·CeNTER • PARKERS!' .. ~~·

SUCCESSFUL V!Str - One of the most successful
American Red Cross bloodmobile visits to Meigs Cunty
in many moons took place Wednesday when the unit as
at the new senior citizens center. A total of 100 pints of

blood were given by residents. Vernon Nease, county
blood program chairman for the past 14 years, points
out a catchy slogan on the unit truck which reads:
"The beat goes on, when you give blood."

Scouts
•
recezve
state fair
ribbons
Several Meigs County girl scouts
were !lffiOng the ribbon winners on
exhibits at the Ohio Stale Fair.
Receiving awards on the exhibits
taken to Columbus · by Mrs.
Margaret Parker and Mrs. Barbara
Fry were Lisa Pullins, four third
places and one honorable mention;
Valerie Simpson, two firSts, one
second; Sally Radford, one second,
one honorable mention; Sue Fry,
one third, four honorable mentions.
Ruth Fry, one second, one third,
two honorable mentions; Patty
Parker, two firsts, one honorable
mention; Kathy Parker, one second,
two honorable mentions, all of
Salisbury Junior Troop 1100; and
Amy Luckeydoo of Middleport
Brownie Troop 1254, three firsts, one
third, and one honorable mention.
The junior troop also received three
honoral)le mentions on troop activities.

RECENT GUESTS
Rev. and Mrs. Clare St. John of
Highland, Mich., were recent g~
of Mrs. Cora Grindley, Minersville.
Rev. St. John was fOrmerly the
pastor of the Syracuse Nazarene
Church and is currently pastor of the
Highland Nazarene Church.

Cancer AnswerLine

A regular feature, prepared by the
American Cancer Society, to help
save your life from cancer.
QUESTION: "Is there really a
risk of a non-smoker developing cancer from working in an office full of
cigarette smoke?"
Ruth Queen and Michael, Debbie
ANSWERline: We still don't know
Queen and Tammy, Mabel Brickles,
whether
exposure to second-band
Louise Queen, Janeth Beal, Lynn
smoke
results
in cancer or other
Osborne, S!!arrlet Queen, E;stella
diseases,
but
recent
studies indicate
McCallburn, Helen King, Yvonne
Sliloke-filled
rooms
are.far from
that
Youilg, Millie King, Monil Frecker,
healthy.
One
study,
reported
in the
Judy Carl, Jason Frecker, Lorraine
New England Journal of Medicine,
King.
involved more than 2,000 smokers
Sending gifts were Carla Lohrer ,.
and no,..smokers. Results showed
Colleen Ohlinger, Louise Harrison,
that the nonsmokers inhaling other
Helen Howett, Phil King, Diana
people's smoke bad the same lung
White, Bonnie Baird, Neva King,
damage as light smokers or smokers
Opal Sigler, Vona Gillenwater, Iona
who do not inhale. The damage afand Oenise Brickles, Todd and Steve
fected
the small airway passages or
Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
the
lung,
but the effect of that
Osborne, Marjorie Smlth, Donna
damage
to
a person's health is not
Hatfield, Mary Bats, Becky Smith
yet
known.
Lung
damage to average
and Brenda Roush.
and heavy smokers was far worse.
Another study showid that a smokeReligious film slated
filled room needs six times as much
air circulated per. hour as one
A color film, "City of the Bees",
without cigarette smoke, in order to
wtll be shown at the Cheshire Bapti5t
Church, Rt. ·2, Cheshire at 7:30p.m. , maintain the same amount of
oxygen.
on Sunday, August 31.
QUESTION: "I'm 23 years old and
According to Moody Institute of
one of my friends tells me it's imScience, "The Bees" city boasts air
portant for young women my age to
conditioning, pollee and sanitation
have regular Pap tests to check for
squads, nurseries, chemical
cervical cancer. I thought that canprocessing plants and an effective
cer affected only women over 35.
language that man has learned to
ANSWERiine: Your friend is
'read'. The men are struggling with
right. All women 20 years of age and
the problem &lt;t human behavior.
older, and younger women who are
This fitm reveals God's solution to
sexually active, are susceptible to
this age-old problem.
cervical cancer. You should get a
Rev. Bill Uber, pastor of Cheshire
Pap test at least every three years,
Bapti5t Church, utends a cordlal inonce you've had two initial negative
vitation for'everyone to attend.
tests one year apart. The Pap test is
important because it is extremely ·
accurate in detecting cervical cancer while the cancer is still in an
Gibbs, Beth Gooderham, James
early, localized stage. That's when
Griffith, James Hamilton, Mrs.
chances of cure are best. The other
Charles Heib and son, Geirge
form of uterine cancer - enHilend, Ernest Johnson, Connie
dometrial cancer - affects mainly
Kingery, Mary Kisor, John
older women. A special tissue samLawhorn, Betty Lemley, Harold
is recommended at
pling
Manring, Cora McGhee, Louise
menopause, as part of a complete
Morris, Melissa Nance, Kary Ann
pelvic exam. Also recommended is a .
Nibert, Elizabeth Ohlinger, Reba
pelvic examination every three ·
Oshel, Pamela Pasquale, Adam
years from age 20 to 40, and annually
Payne Jr., Ruth Price, Carrie Rice,
thereafter.
,
Ronnie Roach, Sandra Shirley,
· QUESTION: "Hind that when I'm 1
Eruana Thomas, Elizabeth Watts,
sitting lli front of the typewriter, I
Mrs. Henry Wilson and son.
simply must smoke. Would I be bet·
BIRntS
ler off smoking cigars or a pipe inMr and Mrs. Norman Byler,
stead
of cigarettes?"
·
daughter, Jac~son; Mr. and Mrs.
ANSWERiine:
That
depends
on
John Hopkins, _son, Cheshire; Mr.
how
you
smoke
them.
Naturally,
you
and Mrs. Robert Unto~~; son,
would be far better off if you stopped
Wellston: Mr. and Mrs. Orlando
smoking
altogether. Cigar and pipe :
Miller, son, Rio Grande; Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Powers, son, Pt. ' smokers - as a rule - inhale less •I
than cigarette smokers, so they have 1
Pleasant: Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
Roberts, son, Gallipolis Ferry; Mr. .less of a risk of smoke-induced lung ;
and Mrs. Charles Wardell, daughter, 'cancer, although they a~e still more .
likely to get it than nonsmokers.
Pt. Pleasant.
·

However, pipe and cigar smokers
are especially subject to cancer of
the lip, mouth. and nasopharynx
area. One problem of switching from '
cigarettes Is that smokers who ·
inhale usually continue doing so
even after taking up cigars or pipes.
Since cigar and pipe tobacco is
stronger, such smokers expose
themselves to even greater risk of
·lung cancer.

.

CAROLINA CANDLES
ASSORTED TABLE

FRI. &amp; SAT. Y2 PRICE
MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
99 MILL ST.

***************
Celebrate and Save at BURGER CHEF®

!

l D\YS CNIY!

Saturday- Sunday- Monday
Burger Chef celebrates the Labor Day weekend with a 3-day special
offer. You'll get even greater value with savings in your pocket.

FREE
- -- LARGE&lt;XKE

With the purchase ol a Top Shet • - the

burger with.the bacon ·"' - and a large
order ol fries a t the regular price.

SAVE 59¢

************
Celebrate the Labor Day Weekend with a
special deal on a special meal. Save at
698 we~ Main Street, Pomeroy

\
Not valid where other discounts apply.:

�l - The Daily Sen tine~ :ltiddleport-Pumeroy, 0 ., Fnday, Aug. 29, 1980

Gregg gets
Hoople says Alabama 'own'kick
.
er
will be tops in '80

Games of Sept. 1

- should be good enough tu capture
the SWC crown.
Pittsburgh's Panthers have all the
requisites lo be the top independent
club in the natioo a[ld round oul the
top hall of the Hoople Top Ten. Winners of their last 10 contests and with
50 returning lettermen, coach Jackie
Sherril's forces should sweep a
moderately tough schedule. Florida
State, Tennessee and Penn State are
among the possible stumbling
blocks.
The Hoople West Coast scouts look
for a change in the turmoil-ridden
Pacific Ten (or is that Five?)
pecking order - with Stanford
taking the loop title and Southern
Cal (ineligible for the Rose Bowl)
ftnishing second.
This would place them in the 6th
and 7th spots in OUr Top Ten.
The quarterback post is the big
difference in the two teams. Coach
Paul Wiggin of the Cardinals has
sophomore John Elway ready to go.
At the Trojan practice field, roach
John Robinson's biggest challenge is
to lind a replcement for All-America
Paul McDohnald. Not an ·enviable

By Major Amos B. Hoople
Peerless Prognosticator
Egad, friends, I'm back for 1980!
The old world of ours is spinning
around at such a wild and dizzying
pace these days that forecasting
almost anything is almost im- task'
Notre Dame's Irish should bounce
possible.
back
from a disappointing year.
. However, as sure as the sun will
Gone
is fantastic runner Vegas
· lise tomorrow morning, just as
Ferguson.
Back are three of the
surely will Alabama and Ohio State
finest
receivers
in the country be at the top of the polls when the
Dean
Masztak,
Tony
Hunter and
final ratings are posted some four
Pete
Holohan.
In
addition
to a bevy
months hence. Yas, dear readers,
of
returning
veterans,
the
Irish had
the Crimson Tide and Ohio State's
a
recruiting
se;~son
juSt
a notch
Buckeyes are loaded again and
below
those
of
Ohio
State
and
· teady to shoot down all foes!J
Alabama.
; • .And how about this for a switch to
Bobby Bowden has a rebuilding
:open the season? The Monday Night
!TV football shQw will feature those job to do with the Florida Stale
elong-time collegiate powers of the Seminoles. But any club with nose
:SOuthwest Conference - Arkansas guard Ron Simmons on its roster is
· going to win a lot of games. If the
! and Texas.
', More on that classic later, but now Seminoles get their new offensive
fto answer your annual requests for lineup clicking for their opener with
:the Hoople assessment of the rugged LSU, they will probably be
undefeated when they take on
:season's Top Ten.
powerful
Pitt on Oct. 11.
: Here is how we se~ 'em in '80; l.,
Rounding
out our Top Ten are the
-Alabama. 2., Oh10 State. 3.,
Houston
Cougars.
Bill Yeoman's
:Dklahoma. 4... Arkansas. 5., Pitclubs
have
represented
the SWC ln
·;tsburgh. 6., Stanford. 7., Southern
the
Cotton
Bowl
in
three
of the last
elifornia. 8., Notre Dame. 9.,
four
years.
And
they
well
couold be
;c&lt;·torida State. 10., Houston.
there
again
this
New
Year's
Day ~ Alabama, coming off a 1~ season
·
if
QB
Terry
Elston
and
running
'and winners of 21 in a row, is the
·Hoople choice to repeat as mythical backs Terald Clark and John
' national champ. 'Tis too bad we Newhouse play up to their potential.
Capable of moving into the Top
~ can't have a playoff for a real chamTen
before the season ends are Nor; pionship. Urn-kwnph!J
th
Carolina,
which boasts the count Paul (Bear) Bryant starting hiS
try's
nmost
explosive
runner, Amos
t, Zlrd year as head man at his alma
Lawrence;
Purdue,
whose quar• mater needs only 18 victories to top
terback,
Mark
Herrmann,
is
; famed Amos Atanzo Stagg's all-time
probably
the
best
pure
passer
in
the
~ ~ecord o( 314. A young 67 - heh-heh
• -the Bear is out to get most of them coUege ranks ; Nebraska, led by
another speedster, Jarvis Redwine;
: this year.
Auburn,
where the running tandem
: Giving Alabama a stiff battle for·
of
James
Brooks and George
; the top spot will be the ' bruising
Peoples
figures
to be just as good as
: Buckeyes. Earle Bruce, 11-1~ and
Brooks
and
the
graduated
Joe Crib• Coach of tW Year in his first season
l at his alma mater, had what all the bs, who combined lor a total of 2,328
! experts agree was the "best yards and 24 TDs a year ago; and
• recruiting year" in collegiate foot- the potent Missouri Tigers, under
: ball. Who says the rich don't get the leadership of yet another fine
field general, Phil Bradley, who won
; richer- humph!
: And the added talent Bruce dido 't all-Big Eight honors in '79.
There you hyave ll fans. A gold• really need. Leading a host of returplated
Hoople assessment. Harning vets is the incomparable junior
rumph!
, quarterback Art Schlichter, whose
Now to the season's first big con· passing and running accounted for
lest
- Arkansas vs. Texas, under
; 23 Buck TDs in 1979. 'Nul said 1
the
lights in the Longhorns'
; At Oklahoma, Billy Simms is
Memorial
Stadium.
:gone. But J .C. Watts is back. Watts'
Overall,
Texas holds a com! presence, either throwing the ball or
manding
46-1:Ml
lead in the historic
' lugging it for large gains, means
with
the
Razorbacks.
But in 16
series
! Oklahoma wil have naother top con: tender. The Sooners are big, tough of the last 21 renewals, the game has
helped to settle the Southwest Con· and fast.
: The Arkansas Razorbacks, with ference race.
This year it will be more of the
; amateur magician and maser of
same,
with Arkansas getting the
: one-liners Lou Holtz directing acHoople
nod to start off on the right
i tivities from the sidelines, could well
foot.
Fred
Akers' Texas club - led
' better last season's 111-2 recored by
Jam
Jones,
who clips off yardage
!which included a 24-91oss to national
lC»-plils
rate
- will give the
at
a
: chan\p Alabama in the Sugar Bowl.
Hogs
an
interesting
night but never• The Hogs running attack, led by a
theless
fall
by
a
21-17
count.
.:trio of speedster - Darryl Bowles,
This
one
will
be
worth
watching !
! Thomas Brown and Gary Anderson

!

'

WJLMJNUTON, Ohio (AP J Bengals Coach Forrest Gregg has
had his eye on place kicker Jan Sunter fur a long time - ever since he
coached him at Toronto tast season.
··When he was released by Toronto, I wanted to bring him in and at
the Same time New England was after him," Gregg said. ·'He's gut a
strong leg and he's an experienced
kicker."
The Bengals waived two place
kickers this week - veteran Chris
Bahr and rookie Sandro Vitiello and picked up Sunter, who was
released earlier in the week by the
New England Patriots.
" He was one of those guys who
always had his head in the game.
You didn 't have tolook for him and
say, 'Let's kick a field goal.' He had
agood knowledge of the gaJ!le."
General Manager Paul Brown
said Thursday he was impressed by
the distance Sunter gets on the kick
despite a rather short apProach.
" He has a very controlled cut at .
the ball," Brown said. "Vitiello had
a big backswing. Sandro was a
young guy and emotional. This guy

~~::s~~d.Forrestknowshim
The Dundee, Scotland, native said
he began kicking footballs when he
was 17 and two years tater kicked
the winning field goal in the Grey
Cup, Canada's equivalent to the
Super Bowl.
The Bengals are Sunter~s seventh
professional stop. He played three
years with the Canadian Football
League Hamilton Tiger-Ca.ts before
starting the 1976 season with the Buffalo Bills. He was released a(ter six
games. He then played far the
Detroit Lions and the Los Angeles
Rams before returning to Canada.
The 27-year-old kicker has made
135 of 234 career field-goal attempts
and was 21 of 32 for Gregg's.
Argonauts last season. He also
averaged 41.7 yards as a punter.
"The punting situation here is
pretty healthy," Sunter said. "If I
can help them in the kicking game,
I'll be more than healthy. I still need
a little work. Today was the first
time I worked on place kicking in a
month. At New England, all I did
was punt."
Sonier only punted twice for a 34.1&gt;yard average in three preseason
games with the Patriots. He said he
was surprised he wasn't waived until this week.
"! was grateful that the opportunity was still here," he said.
"It's quite often difficult to get
picked up. Needless to say, I was
hoping for a phone call, but I
couldn't count on it."

VeeCk remamS
• good
CIDCAGO (AP) _Chicago White
Sox President Bill Veeck remains in
.good condition in Illinois Masonic
Medical Center, a spokeswoman
said today.
Veeck, 66, was moved out of the intensive-care unit Wednesday but
continued receiving inhalation
therapy.
He has been hospitalized since
Sunday with respiratory problems.
Veeck was taken to Illinois
Masonic only two days after the
White Sox board of directors approved sale of the American Lague
baseball clul? to Edward J. DeBartolo Sr. of Youngstown, Ohio, for an
estimated $20 million.

BOWLING
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Kevin
Gillette of Florence, Ky., made his
ninth professional bowlers' tournament count with a 21-pin victory
over Mike Aulby of Indianapolis in
the Professional Bowlers
Association Canadian Open in
Hamilton, Ontario.
Competing in only his ninth
professional tournament, Gillette
earned the top-seed position in the
tourney after staying close to the top
thoughout. Gillette opened with a
spare and a six-strike surge in the
first seven frames ol the championship to open a JO.pin lead, which
he never relinquished.
Current PBA money leader Wayne
school and not practicing. Reggie
Webb
of Rehoboth, Mass., picked up
Echols hjls been moved from tackle
$2,050
for his 11th place finish in the
to middle guard to fill the ~acancy.
Canadian Open. For 'n tournaments
Freshman fullback Vaughn
Broadnax will be idle for seven to 10 Webb has stacked up $87,880 in priz~
days after pulling a hamstring . money. Mark Roth of Little SilverN.
J ., is second with $85,020 for 22 tourmuscle Wednesday.
naments.

lBruce shifts lineup
, COLUMBus; Ohio (AP) -

Coach
; Earle Bruce has made several
; defensive shifts as Ohio Stale
• prepares for 1ts Sept. 13 college foot' ball opener against Syracuse at Ohio
(Stadium.
.
t AI Washington has been moved
, from inside to outside right
linebacker in the Buckeyes' 3-4
, defensive allgnment to make room
; for sophomore Glen Cobb. Starter
. Keith Ferguson remains as left outrside linebacker' while sophomores
(Marcus Marek and Cobb are at the
!inside posts.
. Vince Skillings, who was a safety
jlast year, is back in that position af·ler being moved to left cornerback
llast spring. Rod Gorley replaces
;skillings at left cornerback.
; Bruce said the shift of Skllllngs
also would glve Bob Murphy some
'experience at cornerback. Murphy
;was a safety in the spring. Gorley,
;llkilllngs, Ray Ellis at right cor&lt;nerback and Todd Bell at rover are
'elqlecled to start in the defensive

j

"' iecondary.

; Middle guards Tim Sawicki and
;ftfark Sullivan are still in swnmer

PA.RK__~ESE_RVED
SATURDAY, AUGUST 30TH
UNTIL 4 P.M.
"FAMILY OUTING"
OF
CONSTRUCTION
&amp;GENERAL
LABORERS UNION
LOCAL NO. 1353
CHARLESTON

i&gt;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug. 29, 1980

Bringing families together.

'

Hendricks

reunion-~------

the Hendricks famlly reunion was
held Sunday a the Route 33 roadside
park north of Pomeroy, the first \n
many years.
the potluck dinner, the group
spent the afternoon reminiscing,
playing horseshoe and visiting. Pictures were taken.
Attending were Mrs. Alice White
Mrs. Verna Salser and children'
Mike and LaDonna, Sheffield Lake:
Mary Lou and AI Flack and Penny
Kuhn, Circleville; Pam and Don
Davis and children, Michelle and
~e, Blool!lingburg; Paity and
Kim Paullns, Oak Hill; Jerry
Paullns, Colwnbus; Mrs. Nondus

After

"-'-tJ~~

......

NO, THEY ARENT growiDg tbelr """' cbewiDg tobaceo. Pitcher Craig Swan (right) and

coacb Joe Pignatino of the New York Mets tend their vegetable patch in tbe Shea Stadium
ballpen. Tlull's cabbage in__!_~ loregroand.

Fans resnond
to home-town cut
'I'
CLEVELAND (APJ - Rarely has
the cutting of a player drawn the
negative reaction of fans like the
axing of running back Pat Moriarty
did in Cleveland this week.
Moriarty was the team's
hometown boy.
A Cleveland Browns' official, who
asked not to be identified, said, "We
got more calls about Moriarty than
we have about anything in a long
time, from both men and women."
Moriarty first became a wellknown football player in Cleveland
during his high school days, when he
was an all-state performer in football and track at Benedictine High
School. The single ~year-old went
to college at Georgia Tech, but he
now resides in Cleveland.
Last year he practiced with the
Browns during pre-season after he
signed as a free agent. He was
regardeil as a longshot to make the
squad, but he led the team in rushing
in pre-season games, going 175 yards in 37 carries.
In his rookie seasori in the
National Football League, Moriarty
was a reserve running back, gaini.ilg
just 14 yards in 11 carries in the entire season. He scored two touchdowns.
The &amp;-foot, l!l&gt;pounder knew he
faced stiff competition to retain his
reserve role this season, especially
when the Browns made Heisman
Trophy winner Charles White a
numberonedraftpick.
Even though he survived the first
two roste,r reductions, Moriarty said
he wasn t too surpnsed when his
P~k slip came Tuesday.
I apprec1ate all that Sam

employment. But he said he will acRutigliano did and tried to do for
me," he said. "Sam was fair with cept what comes. "I am not angry at
anybody, especiaUy the Browns," he
me right to the end.
" I know what. happened was not . said.
Meanwhile Cleveland fans may he
anti-Pat Moriarty, but rather pr()o
taking Moriarty's cut harder than
Charles White, pr&lt;&gt;Greg Pruitt and
pr()oDino Hall. It wasn't that Pat he.
A customer at Pat Joyce's tavern,
Moriarty wasn't good enough, it was
popular spot downtown among
a
that the other guys were very, very
football
fans, telephoned the
good and that's the way it should
Browns'
front
office and said, " The
be," he said.
flag
is
at
half
mast
and we're all getMoriarty said he hopes another
ting
drunk
in
sympathy
for our boy
NFL team will call and offer him
Pat."

GENERAL
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) Fonner stock car champion LeeRoy
Yarbrough was released from jail so
he can seek psychiatric treatment at
a private clinic in North Carolina.
Yarbrough, the 1969 NASCAR
driver of the year, had been confined
to the stale hospital in Chattahoochee since February after
being charged with attempted firstdegree murder of his mother and
battery of a hiw enforcement officer.

'

. .'

. 'QUIPMENT CO.
~orilerqy, 0.

Ph. f92·21~

Hours : I·SMon.-Fri.
1·12 Sot.
CJ.osed Sun_doy

International ·
H•r•ester

N.W ldN
Equipment

LABOR DAY FESTIVAL FUN!
IN ATHENS, OHIO

•ao
ARTS &amp; CRAFTS EX HI BITS

BARN RAISIN•
FOOD, MUSIC,

RE DANCING

1.00 ADULTS

1

SEPT. 1st

10 AM TIL 5 PM

50' STUDENTS

Sponsored by the Dairy
and the Citv. of Athens
Turn West on Dairy Lane/Off Richland Ave.
(Route SOl Beside The ou Inn

The annual reunion of the descendants of Newman E. and Florence
Hlll Kincaid was held in the
recreation hall at Royal Oak Park on
Aug.17.
A basket dinner was served at 1
p.m. with Jewell Kincaid asking the
blessing. The day was spent in
various games and renewing
aquaihntances.
The host family this year as Rubal
Kincaid Caldwell and sons, Howard
Caldwell, Jr. arid family and Jim
Caldwell and family. 'Gifts were
presented to the youngest, oldest,
farthest away and the family member with the most present and a door
prize was also awarded. A short
business meeting was held with
Hubal Kincaid Caldwell serving as
president.
Attending were: Frank and Jean
Bennett, Kathy, Beth and John,
Harry and Ala Madows, all of
Roseville; Eskey J . Hlll, Pomeroy:
Willoughby Hill, Long Bottom; Bob

''The phone

A layette shower honoring Mrs.
; Rodney (Debbie) Carl was held
: recently at the Carleto~t Church by
: Mrs. Eva King and Mrs. Judy Carl.
Games.ere played with prizes ging
to louise Queen, Mildred King,
Virginia Dean. The door prize was
won by Faye Pratt.
Pink, blue and white were
featured in the decorations for the
shower and were also carried out on
the gift and refreslunents table.
Cake, nuts, mints and punch were
served after Mrs. Carl opened her
gifts.
Attending were Bernice Riffle,
~I WUson, Faye Pratt, Elizabeth
Murray, Anita Dean, James and
Jeremy, Sadle Carl, Virginia Dean,

to begin at Irontori

phone
one.lt
.
•

for us .••••

-Phil Bowman, Vice Pre•ldent, Waterloo Coal Co., Oak BW

IRONTON - A new graduate
physical education program is to
. begin at Ohio University-Ironton this
, fall. The program is being designed
for teacben and coaches who are
currently working and caMot leave
their jobs to pursue a graduate
degree. The program can be completed in a two year period during
the evening.
All interested persons should plan
to attend the fecel!!jon at the South
Point Holiday Inn on Thursday,
Sept. 4, at .6:30 p.m. Enrollment is
limited.
For more information caU Scott
Howard at 614-532-9021 or 614-86737TI.

When is a emil company not a coal
company?
,
When it's also into trucking, farming and mine supply.
They're all parts of the Bowman family businesses, each with
its own phone system. But they
outgrew these systems, and
asked the General Telephone

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL

Communicati~sultantfor

help. We suggesteil a GTD120C computer-controlled system.
"Without Communications Consultant Esther Klinebriel, we wouldn't have
known what was available to save us time and
money," said Mr. Bowman. "Our new phone system handles calls for
all four companies. Yet each gets its own phone bills for accounting
purposes. The night-answer feature is very
important. Now we get after-hours calls at
home-these are almost always very important calls."
Our Communications Consultants
have only one job: to make your telecommunica'
'
tions better and better.
We have what you need .

HOSPITAL
, Admissions--Alan Moore,
Syracuse; Edward Deem, Portland,
Ronald Richards, Jr., Pomeroy;
Jared Armstrong, Middleport;
: · Steve Cremeans, Reedsville;
: · Ronald Russner, Columbus.
: . Discharge&amp;-Lucllle Lewis, Roy
· · Pierce, Melissa Collins, Jack Lunsford, Dwight Sayre, Steven
• LaValley, Murl Ours, Dwayne John: : son, Thomas Smith, Elmer Rutter,
: : Holly Green.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES AUG. Z8
George Bennett, Frances Blazer,
Christina Boggess, Patricia Botta,
Clyne Bnunfield, Deborah Bush,
Cheryl Clark, Harvey Collins, Opal
Conger, Heather· Cremeans,
Charlene Darst, Judy Darst, Teresa
Edwards, Mlllle folden, Thomas
TURSTEES TO MEET
Sutton Township Trustees will
·meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.

CAMDIN -.PARK
NGTON
SUNDAYANDLABORDAY

IIOOS'i'ERS TO MEET
The Southern High Scbool Band
•Booslen will meet Tuesday a 7:30
P:m. at the high sc'1.

-

•

and Janet Sheppard, Lisa and
Cheryl, Rosella Mayfield, of Akron;
Howard and Marvene Caldwell,
Reedsville; Bob and Terri Caldwell,
McArthur; Jim' and Sally Caldwell,
Jim, Jeff, Jodi, Howard and Hazel
Shumway, Roger and Dearina Shumway, Jill and Mark, Tom and
Dorothy Rausch, Chris and Tyler,
Raymond; Margaret Kincaid, Worthington: Jerry and Donna Kincaid,
Jeff and Mike, Dayton; Jim and
Carolyun Inciardi and Kristin,
Wilmington, Del.; Jewell and Zita
Kincaid, Lebanon; · Dorsal and
Genieve Kincaid, McConnelsville;
Deborah and Kim, Kincaid and Edward, Charles and Elizabeth Kincaid, Worthington; Frank Lee and
Geg Sutliff, Ecel Kincaid, Sutliff,
Warren; James M. and Ruth E. Kincaid, New Mexico; Tim and Martie
Baum, Chester; Howie and Christy
Caldwell, Roberta, Keri and Cynthia, Syracuse.

-Layette ~bower honors
:Mrs. Randy Hays here

Graduate P. E. program

systems
'big

Hendricks, Racine; Roy and
Rosemary Hendricks and daughter,
Cathy, and sons, and Steve Hendricks, Logan; Mrs. Kay Rowe and
sons, Jason and Corey, Letart; Dorsel and Rosemary Randolph and
sons, D.J. and Mickey, Keno; Sam
and Polly Gibbs and son, · Kevi11;
Rutland; Pete and Diane Hendricks
and children, Shetla and Travis,
Pomeroy; Gene and Sheila Whaley,
Carla, Brian, Pam, Sandy and
Brent, Darwin; MiSil Denise Deem,
Syracuse: Jim and Ida Counts and
children, Jinuny, Carrie and Brett,
Pomeroy, and Joseph and Rita
While.

Kincaid reunion---------

-..

_ ..,.~ -

• •

'l

\

,

L...,_

e _ea t

If..' ·

w:tien•.you .

· g1ve Bl
;,11!

TRI·STATE 'RED CROSS BLOOD CENTER •

~ KEYsror&lt;E BLOOD Sue·CeNTER • PARKERS!' .. ~~·

SUCCESSFUL V!Str - One of the most successful
American Red Cross bloodmobile visits to Meigs Cunty
in many moons took place Wednesday when the unit as
at the new senior citizens center. A total of 100 pints of

blood were given by residents. Vernon Nease, county
blood program chairman for the past 14 years, points
out a catchy slogan on the unit truck which reads:
"The beat goes on, when you give blood."

Scouts
•
recezve
state fair
ribbons
Several Meigs County girl scouts
were !lffiOng the ribbon winners on
exhibits at the Ohio Stale Fair.
Receiving awards on the exhibits
taken to Columbus · by Mrs.
Margaret Parker and Mrs. Barbara
Fry were Lisa Pullins, four third
places and one honorable mention;
Valerie Simpson, two firSts, one
second; Sally Radford, one second,
one honorable mention; Sue Fry,
one third, four honorable mentions.
Ruth Fry, one second, one third,
two honorable mentions; Patty
Parker, two firsts, one honorable
mention; Kathy Parker, one second,
two honorable mentions, all of
Salisbury Junior Troop 1100; and
Amy Luckeydoo of Middleport
Brownie Troop 1254, three firsts, one
third, and one honorable mention.
The junior troop also received three
honoral)le mentions on troop activities.

RECENT GUESTS
Rev. and Mrs. Clare St. John of
Highland, Mich., were recent g~
of Mrs. Cora Grindley, Minersville.
Rev. St. John was fOrmerly the
pastor of the Syracuse Nazarene
Church and is currently pastor of the
Highland Nazarene Church.

Cancer AnswerLine

A regular feature, prepared by the
American Cancer Society, to help
save your life from cancer.
QUESTION: "Is there really a
risk of a non-smoker developing cancer from working in an office full of
cigarette smoke?"
Ruth Queen and Michael, Debbie
ANSWERline: We still don't know
Queen and Tammy, Mabel Brickles,
whether
exposure to second-band
Louise Queen, Janeth Beal, Lynn
smoke
results
in cancer or other
Osborne, S!!arrlet Queen, E;stella
diseases,
but
recent
studies indicate
McCallburn, Helen King, Yvonne
Sliloke-filled
rooms
are.far from
that
Youilg, Millie King, Monil Frecker,
healthy.
One
study,
reported
in the
Judy Carl, Jason Frecker, Lorraine
New England Journal of Medicine,
King.
involved more than 2,000 smokers
Sending gifts were Carla Lohrer ,.
and no,..smokers. Results showed
Colleen Ohlinger, Louise Harrison,
that the nonsmokers inhaling other
Helen Howett, Phil King, Diana
people's smoke bad the same lung
White, Bonnie Baird, Neva King,
damage as light smokers or smokers
Opal Sigler, Vona Gillenwater, Iona
who do not inhale. The damage afand Oenise Brickles, Todd and Steve
fected
the small airway passages or
Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
the
lung,
but the effect of that
Osborne, Marjorie Smlth, Donna
damage
to
a person's health is not
Hatfield, Mary Bats, Becky Smith
yet
known.
Lung
damage to average
and Brenda Roush.
and heavy smokers was far worse.
Another study showid that a smokeReligious film slated
filled room needs six times as much
air circulated per. hour as one
A color film, "City of the Bees",
without cigarette smoke, in order to
wtll be shown at the Cheshire Bapti5t
Church, Rt. ·2, Cheshire at 7:30p.m. , maintain the same amount of
oxygen.
on Sunday, August 31.
QUESTION: "I'm 23 years old and
According to Moody Institute of
one of my friends tells me it's imScience, "The Bees" city boasts air
portant for young women my age to
conditioning, pollee and sanitation
have regular Pap tests to check for
squads, nurseries, chemical
cervical cancer. I thought that canprocessing plants and an effective
cer affected only women over 35.
language that man has learned to
ANSWERiine: Your friend is
'read'. The men are struggling with
right. All women 20 years of age and
the problem &lt;t human behavior.
older, and younger women who are
This fitm reveals God's solution to
sexually active, are susceptible to
this age-old problem.
cervical cancer. You should get a
Rev. Bill Uber, pastor of Cheshire
Pap test at least every three years,
Bapti5t Church, utends a cordlal inonce you've had two initial negative
vitation for'everyone to attend.
tests one year apart. The Pap test is
important because it is extremely ·
accurate in detecting cervical cancer while the cancer is still in an
Gibbs, Beth Gooderham, James
early, localized stage. That's when
Griffith, James Hamilton, Mrs.
chances of cure are best. The other
Charles Heib and son, Geirge
form of uterine cancer - enHilend, Ernest Johnson, Connie
dometrial cancer - affects mainly
Kingery, Mary Kisor, John
older women. A special tissue samLawhorn, Betty Lemley, Harold
is recommended at
pling
Manring, Cora McGhee, Louise
menopause, as part of a complete
Morris, Melissa Nance, Kary Ann
pelvic exam. Also recommended is a .
Nibert, Elizabeth Ohlinger, Reba
pelvic examination every three ·
Oshel, Pamela Pasquale, Adam
years from age 20 to 40, and annually
Payne Jr., Ruth Price, Carrie Rice,
thereafter.
,
Ronnie Roach, Sandra Shirley,
· QUESTION: "Hind that when I'm 1
Eruana Thomas, Elizabeth Watts,
sitting lli front of the typewriter, I
Mrs. Henry Wilson and son.
simply must smoke. Would I be bet·
BIRntS
ler off smoking cigars or a pipe inMr and Mrs. Norman Byler,
stead
of cigarettes?"
·
daughter, Jac~son; Mr. and Mrs.
ANSWERiine:
That
depends
on
John Hopkins, _son, Cheshire; Mr.
how
you
smoke
them.
Naturally,
you
and Mrs. Robert Unto~~; son,
would be far better off if you stopped
Wellston: Mr. and Mrs. Orlando
smoking
altogether. Cigar and pipe :
Miller, son, Rio Grande; Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Powers, son, Pt. ' smokers - as a rule - inhale less •I
than cigarette smokers, so they have 1
Pleasant: Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
Roberts, son, Gallipolis Ferry; Mr. .less of a risk of smoke-induced lung ;
and Mrs. Charles Wardell, daughter, 'cancer, although they a~e still more .
likely to get it than nonsmokers.
Pt. Pleasant.
·

However, pipe and cigar smokers
are especially subject to cancer of
the lip, mouth. and nasopharynx
area. One problem of switching from '
cigarettes Is that smokers who ·
inhale usually continue doing so
even after taking up cigars or pipes.
Since cigar and pipe tobacco is
stronger, such smokers expose
themselves to even greater risk of
·lung cancer.

.

CAROLINA CANDLES
ASSORTED TABLE

FRI. &amp; SAT. Y2 PRICE
MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
99 MILL ST.

***************
Celebrate and Save at BURGER CHEF®

!

l D\YS CNIY!

Saturday- Sunday- Monday
Burger Chef celebrates the Labor Day weekend with a 3-day special
offer. You'll get even greater value with savings in your pocket.

FREE
- -- LARGE&lt;XKE

With the purchase ol a Top Shet • - the

burger with.the bacon ·"' - and a large
order ol fries a t the regular price.

SAVE 59¢

************
Celebrate the Labor Day Weekend with a
special deal on a special meal. Save at
698 we~ Main Street, Pomeroy

\
Not valid where other discounts apply.:

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday., Au~:. ;!9, 19110

Several area clubs meet with
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
The annual open meeting of the · as a chainnan of the recent flower
Rutland Garden Club was held Monday night at the Rutland United

•

' Methodist Church with members of
seven Meigs County clubs attending.
Represented at the meeting were
· · the Rutland Friendly Gardeners, the
Star Garden Club, Middleport
Amateurs, Cheste~ Garden Club,
Fernwood Club,.'f'tldwood Club and
. the Shade Va!fe)' Council of Floral
· . Aats, alogg with one junior club
• ~ · by Donna Curtis. The
~~ were Mrs. Hazel Hilt,
. ,.'r-. ,,:~J.DlJrothy
Will and· Mrs. Octa
1\;o-• .. , ._.

. :; '. ,..,..•,u.

Mrs. Ralph Turner, president of
tiJe host club, extended a welcome
with Mrs. Carl Denison giving
devotions using poems from Ideals
; , . and a prayer. Mrs. Eugene Atkins
&lt;
gave a talk on garden helps for September and Mrs. Turner pre~~ nt.ed a
personal gift to Margaret Ella Lt wis
for her special work for the club and

show.
Arranger for the meeting was
Mrs. Betty Dean. Before starting
her demonstration, Mrs. Dean commented on the recent convention of
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs held in Columbus. She noted
that the association this year is emphasizing simple designs, vivid
colors, home-grown materials,
figurines showing sound or motion,
· and using what you have on hand
rather than going out to buy
something new.
Mrs. Dean used cut flowers from
her own garden in the demonstration
of 10 different designs. She showed
the traditional and modern nnadonna
in arrangements, Japanese
arrangements, weathered wood and
Its use, designs with unusual vases
many homemade, a dining table
arrangements, and one called
"Mother Love" usin~ a mother-child

On the Light Side
...
'

.

.'

,I

TANNING TOURNEY IS
BEYOND 11IE PALE
OCEAN CITY, N.J . (AP)- You may not have to be Italian to have a
good suntan but a nicely browned Terry Giovinazzo says it certaiitly
helps.
Miss Giovinazzo, 23, of Villanova, Pa., walked off Thursday with the
unofficial title of world's best suntan in the first Ocean City
Miscellaneous Sun Tanning Tournament.
The bronzed high school physical education teacher said the tan took
hours of application.
"The secret is baby oil and a lot of hours In the sun," Miss Giovinazzo confided. "And being Italian is also a very big factor."
The contest, Inspired by sun-worshiping Zonker Harris In the
popular ."Doonesbury" comic strip, offered honors In II categories,
some tan and some pal. The contest's official entry form especially
welcomed "narcissists, egomaniacs and exhibitionists."
Among the winners were Kelly Butler for the best left ann tan and
Wayne Horton for the whitest knuckles. Bald-headed Tony Scarillo
kept the official "Golden Dome" award.
Jim Nawrocki, 14, of Hudson, Ohio, paled the competition in the
"best under-aU tan" category offered especially for those "TV freaks
who never leave their air-conditioned family room during the swnmer."
COWlS NOT
BULLISH ON EVANSVILLE
EV ANSVJLLE, Ind. (AP) - EVansville policeman Bill Brown had a
· lot to beef about.
.
His beef Wednesday night had four legs, weigbed about 2,500 pounds
and left a noticeable impression on the left side of his police car.
"It must have moved my car six to eight feet when it hit me," a
somewhat shaken Brown reported. Then, he said, it walked across the
bood for good measure.
The culprit was a cow that apparently got loose while it was being
unloaded at the Evansville Union Stockyards. -In half an hour on the loose, the frightened animal led four
poli~en on a wild chase, bwnped several parked and moving
vehicles along the way and made a run at a young girl on a bicycle.
Brown satd the youngster had to jwnp onto a parked car to avoid being
pinned against the side of the vehicle.
·

,.L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . l

Bible classes conclude
ROCK SPRINGS
BmLESCHOOL

The Rock Springs United
Methodist Church daily vacation
Bible school concluded Sunday with
a program by the children during
the Sunday school.
On the last day fo the school there
was a picnic with Susie Pullins and
Susanne Richmond handling the
plans for that. Daily activities began
with the theme song, pledges to the
American and Christian flags, and .
the Bible, and devotions by Doosy
Dog, the puppet.
At the closing program the
children received certificates. Gift
and cards were presented by Marha
King, on behalf of the entire school,
to Judy Humphreys, director.
Enrolled in the school in the
various classes were the following
children:
Nursery : Thelma Jeffers,
teacher; Sally Pierce, Kim Eblin,
craft leaders, assisted by Christi
Blackston, Karen Sloan and Lenora
Leifhe!t with the children, Jeremy
Atkins, Christy Drake, Emily Kane,
Dorothy Leifheit; Patrick Young,
Jason Abbott, Jason Sheets, Melissa
Pierce, Brian Walker, Jinuny, Randy and Brandy Corbitt, John Jeffers, .
Misty Adkins, Chuckle Parker,
Michael Leifheit, Christy Sweeney,
Jamie Drake, Bradley Walker, JennHer Goins, Sharuton Brown, and
Darin Abbott.
Beginners: Pearl Carsey, teacher,
Helen Blackston, teacher of crafts,
Jenny Burdette, Tammy Adkins,
Megan Bartels, Dale Eblin, Chris
Sloan, Chris Atkins, Mandy Eblin,
Josh Bartels, Heather Goins, Leanna Henderson, Heather Kane, Nicole
Pickens and Misty Butcher.
Primary: Sharon Darst, teacher;
Helen Partlow, craft Instructor;
Tara Hwnphreys, Tina McGarth,
Roger Smith, Marsha King, Lisa
Darst, Michael Parker, Neil Richmond, Tracy Eblin, Stacey Young,
and Jay Humphreys.
Middler: 1 Judy .Humphreys,
. teacher; Dixie Eblin, a-aft instructor; Angie Sloan, Tim Jeffe~
Tammy Eblin, Deanna Henderson,
Beth Pierce, Joey Parker, Melissa
Marcinko, Mary Butcher, and
Tamara Vance.
·
Teens: Martha King, teacher;

Rita Eblin, crafts, Lisa Pullins,
Angela Pierce, Clarissa Pierce,
Rhonda Zirkle, Sally Radford, Anita
Smith, April Clark, Mark Corbitt,
Michael King and Tim Sloan.

Ministers urge voters to register
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - The Ohio
chapter of a· national organization
which says religion and politics do
mix plans to launch a statewide
voter registration drive in 1 000
churches beginning Sept. 7.
'
The Rev. Edward E. Holland and
colleagues across the state are
hoping to get hundreds of ministers
from ali denominations to support
the movement. Holland says his
,group, Moral Majority Inc. is "pr"'
life, pro-family, pr"'mor;lity and

modem figurine.
Introduced during the meeting
were Mrs. Pat Holter, regional
director; Miss Erma Smith, county
contact chairman; Mrs. Janet Bolin
a state officer and Mrs. Suzy Car:
penter, an accredited judge.
The fall regional meeting was announced for Oct. 18 at the Gallipolis pro-Americ'a. "
Holland is the group's Ohio
Grace Methodist Church. The counorganizer,
and the Rev .. Thomas
ty meeting will be held the last week
in September. An Invitation was · Tran:unel of Cincinnati's Deerpark
read from Mrs. Everett Colwell who Bapttst Church serves as its chairis planning an open house at the
church on Sept. 7, 2;30 to 4:30, in
celebration of her 90th birthday.
Mrs. Marvin Wilson, Mrs. Jack
Robson, Mrs. Harry Williamson
The Star Garden Club recently
Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. Colwell, and Mis~
held
a picnic at the Forest Acres
Edna Mae !jwick were hostesses.
Park
near Pomeroy. Devotions were
Yellow taprs and an arrangement
given by each member reciting her
of flowers in yellows, oranges and
bronze made by Mrs. Robert
Canaday were used on the refreshment table.

Trammel's of~ice in Cincinnati Is
Inviting 3,700 ministers of different
denominations to attend a voter
registration seminar in Columbus on
Sept. 4. They hope to get churches to
open up three days later to register
potential voters.
"Our overall objective Is to inform
the people on the key issues," said
Holland, pastor of the Canton Road
Baptist Church In Akron. ' 'We're attempting to, above an else, not
become affiliated with any party or
endorse candidates. We want to
examine the ·Bible-based issues and
inform the people concerning these
issues."
The national group is headed by
base."
The Rev. Jerry Falwell, a Lyn.
chburg, Va., Baptist pastor, who is
also a member of the board of directors of The Religiou.s Round-Table of
Arlington, Va.
favorite Bible verse, and for roll
That group earlier this month
call, each member named a place sponsored a national affairs briefing
she would like to visit.
in Dallas which drew 5,000 rnlnlsters
Mrs. Eugene Atkins reported ori a and 10,000 laymen from 41 states.
trip nnade to The Glass House at
Observers of the meeting said the
Stewart,.and several other members turnout indicates an increased
spoke on arrangmeents which they national political Involvement by
took to their respective churches.
conservative Christians.
Miss Ruby Diehl and Mrs. James
Holland said Moral Majority is
Nicholson gave a report on the State non-partisan.
Garden Club Convention, showing
"On the whole, fundamentalist
photographs of arrangements on Christians In this" country and
display there, and Mrs. Nicholson . throughout the country are disapalso spoke on the Shade Valley Gar- pointed" with President Carter, he
den Club meeting, where the topic said. Holland quickly added that he
was "Inspirational Symbols."
has made no decision on which canMrs. Worley Francis was a guest didate, if any, he'll support in
at the picnic.
November.
man. They say the nation needs
ministers and church congregations
to speak out on governmental issues.
The Washington-based group said
it has taken about a year to esta blish
the organization in 47 states.
Voter registration is a key goal of
Moral Majority, said one official,
who added that it eventually could
mean an injection of Bible-based
thinking into national politics.
" We're still in our infancy,"
Holland said. He said the response
from a cross-section of
denominations across the state u{.
dicates that " it will be a few more
months before we have a solid

Garden club hosts picnic

New arrivals

Social
calendar

FRIDAY
DANCE FOLLOWING the
Easterncwaterford game at Chester
Grade School for Eastern students,
guests and alumni, 10 to midnight,
tonight. Music by WXJL. Sponsored
by Eastern High cheerleaders.
SUNDAY
11IE DUNCAN FAMJLY will be
appearing at the Freedom Gospel
Mission for a hymn sing Wednesday,
beginning at 7:30 p.m. THe public is
Invited to attend.
THE CHESTER FIRE Department will be having a chicken barbecue Monday, beginning at II a.m
at the Chesler Fire House. A parade
will be held at I :30p.m.
HOMECOMING Sunday at North
Bethel United Methodist Church.
There will be a covered dish dinner
at noon with special speakers and
music In the afternoon. The public is
Invited.
CIDCKEN BARBECUE spon. sored by the Racine Fire Department will be held Sunday beginning
at II a.m. at the fire house. The
auxiliary will have homemade ice
cream for sale.
Infant Miller
TENT MEETING, beginning Sunday and lasting through Sunday,
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Sept. 7, will be held at the corner of
David (Pamela Vaughan) Miller of
bypass Route 7 and Union Ave.
Middleport are announcing the birth
Everyone is Invited to attend.
of their first child, a daughter, CanGOSPEL SING DOWN will be held
dace Nicole, Aug. I at O'Bleness
Sunday at 1:30 p.m. in the MidMef119rial , Hospital, Athens. She
dleport Park. Everyone is welcome.
weighed seven pounds, five ounces
OURS FAMJLY will have a
and was 20 inches long.
reunion
Sunday at the Rock Springs
Maternal grandparents are Mrs.
Fairgrounds.
There will be a basket
Reva Vaughan, Middleport, and
dinner
all
p.m.
and all relatives and
Frank Vaughan, Pomeroy. Paternal
friends
are
welcome.
grandparents are Mrs. Jane HuffJOHNSON FAMILY will have a
man and George Miller, Middleporl ·
Sunday at the Portland
reunion
Paternal great-grandparents are
Park.
Everyone
is invited to attend.
Mrs. Hilda Harris, Pomeroy, and
McELROY FAMILY will have a
Mfs. Juanita Miller, Middleport.
reunion at the Shrlners' Park in
Racine, Sunday, with a basket dinner at noon. Everyone is welcome.
HYMN SING SET
Ahymn sing featuring the Duncan
. Family, a gospel group from Tampa, Fla., will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Eagle Ridge Co~
munity Church. The public Is invited.

ST.PAULBIBLECLASS

The Rev. Richard Tbomas gave a
lesson on Second Corinthians, chapter 2 when the Adult Bible Class of
the St. Paul's United Methodist
Church met Monday night at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spencer
In Tuppers Plains. There were 29
persons in attendance.
The group sang several songs,
followed by prayer led by Rev.
Tbomas.
The business meeti.l!g was lea by
Mrs. Chester Gorrell, vice president
of the class. The minutes of the July
meeting and the treasurer's report
were given by Mrs. Mildred Books.
The class voted to buy additional
songbouks for use by the church
choir. It was recommended to
resume choir rehearsals following
Bible Study on Tuesday evenings.
Inspirational readings were given
by the following persons: Mrs. Hazel
Barnhill, Mrs. Gertrude Russell,
Mrs. Vercie Stout, Mr. John Arbaugh, and Mr. Floyd Stout. The
evening's entertainment consisted
of games and puzzles led by tiJe
bostess, Mrs. Guy Spencer.
1'he next meeting will be Sept. 30
at the borne of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Barnhill of 7 p.m Following grace,
the group enjoyed refreshments Including a cake baked in hOnor of
Rev. and Mrs. Thomas' anniversary.
Those In attendance were Mrs.
Gertrude Russell, Mr. and Mrs. cu:
Barnhill, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Stout,
Mrs. Harry Hannon, Mrs. Edith
Harper, Mrs. Mae Vineyard, Mrs.
Mildred Brooks, Mrs. Doris Koeing,
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Gorrell, Linda
Gorrell, Mr. James Stout and
daughter,' Terri Stout, Mrs. Keith .
Chaffee, Mr. and Mrs. John
Damewood, Kevin Damewood,
Angela Damewood, Mi'. and Mrs.
John Arbaugh, Rev. 11nd Mrs.
Richard Thomas, and the host and ·
hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spencer.
A grand evening has had by one and
aU attending.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug. 29,19110

Rev. Lawrence McDaniel
to preach at Portland
The Rev. H. Lawrence McDaniel
of Guysville
preach at Portland
United Methodist Church Sunday
night as the church celebrates · the
50th anniversary of the dedication of
the present building. The Rev. McDaniel, now retired, is a previous
pastor of the Portland CHurch.
· The events of the evening will
begin with a picnic at the Portland
park at 5:30p.m. In case of rain, the
meal will be served In the church
basement.
At 7 p.m. a special program will
review the last 50 years in Portland,
one decade at a time. Pictures will

will

NEW YORK (AP) - CBS had
seven of the week's IO·most-watched
shows, including No.1 "Circus of the
Stars" and back-(()oback episodes of
"Dukes of Hazzard," but ABC won
the prime-time competition for the
third week in a month, according to
' figures from the A.C. Nielsen Co.
ABC's triumph was by the
narrowest of margins + one-tenth of
one point. Limited to three of the
week's Top 10 sbows, including the
premiere episode of " Those
Amazing Animals" in second place,
ABC bounced back with seven of the
next!O.

ABC's rating for the week was 15,
to 14.9 for CBS and 11.3 for NijC. The
networks say that means in an
average prime-time minute during
the week, 15 percent tf the country's
TV-equipped homes were tuned to
CBS.
"Those Amazing Animals" was
one of two new prime-time series unveiled during the week. The ABC
show finished second to CBS' repeat
of "CirC!IS of the Stars," which
registered a rating o£ 22.2. Nielsen
says that means of all the homes in
the country with television, 22.2 percent saw atleast part of the show.
The other new show, NBC's
"Garnes People Play," finished the
week in 30th place.
As is common this time of the
year, the week was dominated by
reruns, and only a handful of
original shows were even
moderately successful in the
' · · ratings. "That's My Line" on CBS
was No. 35, "Nobody's Perfect" on
ABC finished 42nd, NBC's "Speak
Up America" was No. 45 and

be Included in this review.
The worship service·will begin at B
p.m. with the pastor of the church
presiding and the Rev. Me. McDaniel preaching.
On the first Sunday In September,
Sunday school and worship at the
Portland Church will return to the
fall schedule: the fanner will begin
at 6:30 each Sunday evening and the
latter will begin at 7:30 p.m. The
Rev. Mark Flynn is the pastor of the
church.

.

s . - ,, Aoc. » . -

Pto}ecta you crute, inaugurate or supervise
could ....,.. to be bill w!Mers in the months
ahead. Ooe )'OW' lmqinalicin and don't be afraid
to IIWtdl ventures on your own.
VIRGO IAoc. IHtpl. lZJ l'ro)e&lt;la that are
meanlniful and laqe in lH.'qiO .,... the ones oo
wh1cb )'9&amp;1 &amp;hould fCJCl.IS your attenUoo today. The

bta:er they 11"1, the better you do. Find out more
ol wllat Ueo ahead fer you in the year following
blrtllday by Je!ldlno fer YOW' copy o1 .Utr&lt;&gt;'
. Mailll for eadl Io ~rapn, Boz ~.
City Station, N. Y.l0019. Be sure to1pectfy

birthdale.

.

LIIIIU. (Sept. zs.oet. ZJ) Jotnt v.entures or
lltuaUona. you manace for others could prove to
be 1110re mrarding than usuall.oday. What you
gain for another you allogaJn for y......u.
SCORPIO COd. zt.N... lZl This should be a
vory pleasant day boca1110 yoo tmow ._to ckal
with per10111 from all "alb of life. Your actlons

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

FRIIAT
AUG2t 30

...

-IIMIIIo

SMOftEt'
..,

lff1IIMIIfE

...

PG

--,.,.

date,'' waS No. 60.

Here are the week'sTop IOshows :
"Circus of the Stars," with a
rating of 22.2 representing 16.9
million homes, CBS ; " Those
Amazing · Animals," 20.9 or 15.9
million, ABC; "M-A-s-H," 20.6 or
15.7 million, CBS; "Alice" and "The
Jeffersons," both 20.1 or 15.3 million,
both CBS; ''Dukes of Hazzard," 9
p.m., 19.8 or 15.1 million, CBS;
"Dukes of Hazzard," 10 p.m., CBS,
and "Three's Company," ABC, both
19.2 or 14.6 million; "60 Minutes," 19
or 14.5 million, CBS, and "Vega$, "
18.9 or 14.4 million, ABC.
The rest of the Top 20:
Movie-"Final Chapter-Walking
Tall," " Charlie's Angels," Movie"Heroes of Rock 'n' Roll, " ali ABC;
"House Calls," "Lou Grant" and
"Trapper John, M.D.," all CBS;
"T~xi" and " Hart to Hart," both
ABC, and "Love Boat" and "That's
Incredible," both ABC, tie.

will take a turn for the better today . The opportunity now exists to make past efforts pay off.
TAURUS (April ZO.May lt) Your teadenhip
qualiUeo wt11 be much in evidence today. Those
with whom you're involved will be glad this is so.
lead on and they ralb to your banner.
GEMINI (May !l.Jue ztl Persons you've
previously helped are eager to make your IGt ln
Ufeeasiertoday. AlthOugh you may not be aware
ci lhlo, the results wt11 speak for themselves.
CANCER IJ- ZJ.Joly lZI lleollngs with
club.!, &amp;J:'OilPI or OI'Janilationa today should
prove lucky for you ln !IOIIle llllique manner. Be

·u

p&lt;epand to • ..,..... "
U:O iJaly D-~q . lll You'ro at your best
today in challenging situations where there is
something of real value at stake. It could pertain
to your carftJ' or to a business v~ture .

DISSOLUTION ASKED
Lewis Van J'ohnson, Box 32, Outd
chtown Rd. , Minersville, an
Katherine Marlene Johnson, same
address, have filed for dissolution of
marriage in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court.

19n
aiEV. MALIBU 4 DR .................... ..S2495
350 V-B, automatic, power &amp; air.
1975 CHEV. IMPALA 4 DR......................$1495

MATINEE SUNDAY
ONE SHOW ONLY
2 P.M •

Aulonjalit, POwer &amp; air.

1975 MERaJRY MARQUIS ........... , ..........$1795
1974
AMC MATADOR ......... , ............. , .. }l595
Low mileage, auto .• air, 304 V-8

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
AI.L SEATS JUST$ 1.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESOAY

1977
CHRYSLER CORDOBA..................... $2795
Air. Sharp

531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt.35NORTH -Phone 446-4524

1978 PIN10 ......... :.... .......4.~~:'.~ ~~: ?~:~~: ... 12995
1974 OLOS CUTlASS SUPREME .............. $1295
1973 FORD STATIONWAOON .................. }1295
· No rust, s harp, 51,000 m i. $1295
1972 FORD Lm ······· •·•••
••··•· ········ ········· ·
1975
.DODGE DARt 4 Dll ......................
:s1295
Tcyf., auto., power ·

\\

IIOGSTERS TO
SELLSHmTS
Soutbern High School Athletic
Boosters will be selling purple vneck shirts at the football game
Saturday night. The sliirts come in
children's sizes, small to large, and
·adults, small to extra large. They
are :Sfl for children and Sfl.SO for

\I

\

11095
1973
aiEV.
CHEVELLE
...........................
_!'utomati:,_P.S.: P.B., 'h vinyl lop.

·1974
MERCURY COMET..........................
s1395
_6cyl ., aUtomatic &amp; power steer ing,
·

A~

natural love.

cm:em,ma

~F;i[Bl

work.''
Helen Sikora, like Mrs. Weaver,
said she's a size 14 and probably

A surprise buffet honoring Mrs.
Phyllis Clay who reached her Kops
In Waiting status with TOPS 1466,
Rutland was held at the Tuesday
night meeting.
Mrs. Clay reached the goal which
her doctor. had set 13 weeks ago and

teed).- WRITER

DEAR HELEN:
My husband had an affair and, to
get even, I had one too. Now I'm
pregnant, and I'm sure the other
man is the father. Well, not positive,
but guilt has convinced me.
Meanwhile, my husband and I patched things up. He doesn't know
about the affai,r. Actually, the baby
brought him back. He's ecstatic, and
he has been wonderful ever since he
heard. We're closer now than we've
been in six years ... Except I'm wondering how to ten him the awful
truth when he's so proud that he's
finally to be a father.
Maybe your readers could advise.
If anyone out there has faced this
situation, tell me, please, did you
keep your secret of if not, did
honesty hurt or help? -ARDENE
DEAR ARDENE:
While awaiting reader-advice and
comments, I'll offer my (unaskedfor) views:
Why borrow trouble? I'd say, keep
your secret and hope you'll never
have to tell. - R
AITENDSSEMINAR
Bill Quickel of the Davi&amp;Quickel
Insurance Agency In Pomeroy
recently attended a seminar on
Selling the Smaller Commercial Account, sponsored by the Professional
Insurance Agents Association of
Ohio.
The seniinar, held in Columbus on
Aug. Tl, was designed for the insurance agent who wants to write
more commercial insurance
business. The selnar was aimed at
the smaller commercial risk, common to most towns, such as
retailers, service risks and contractors.

'"'~ BROOKE SHIELDS
.. -.., CHRISTOPHER ATKINS

('

· SE:E.US.J:Oiit if. . .

~J

·--....... ,

;

·· ~

A·L'~ ·
1979 OI.DS CUTlASS SUPREME CPE ••••• f6295
1978 OLOS CUTlASS SUPREME CPE•••••• '4995
1978 OLDS 88 ROYALE CPE••••••••••••• s4495
1978 CHEV. NOVA 4 DR. SEDAN ••••••••• '3695
1977 CHEV. CAPRICE SEDAN.~ •••••••••• '3495
1980 AMC SPIRIT CPE. ••••••••••••••••• s4995
1979 CAD. DEVIUE CPE••••••••••••••••• '8795
1974 OLDS 98 4 DR. SEDAN •••••••••••• '1495
1976 OLOS VISTA CRUISER.•••••••••••••• 12795

1973 FORD LTD .. ~ .................................... '95
1973 VOLKSWAGEN "BUG'~.................... }1295
1971 OI.DS clm.Ass ................................SS95
1980 FORO -- -- . - --·
. CUSlOM F-250...................... '6495

1974 OLOS 98 SEDAN••••••••••••••••••• '1295
1975 OLOS ROYALE SEDAN•••••••••••••• '1295
1975 OLDS CUllASS SEDAN••••••••••••• ·52395.

1977

19)5 BUICK ESTATE WAGoN.•••••••••••• •1295

~~h:;'/~rive, ·4siieed trans ., AM-FM, too!. box_i n bed. Cost

6 cy! ., std.' Iran$.

-

F-100 PICKUP.:...................... -$2495

ASKED TOWED
Randall Ray Reeves, 21, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, and Angela Marie Dailey,
18, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
Randal Wayne Forbes, 24, Rl. I,
Minersville, and Melodie Dawn
Larkins, 23, 128 Lincoln Hill,
Pomeroy.
HOSPITAUZED
Bill Hubbard; Syracuse, is a
medical patient at Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant. ·Cards
.mav be sentto room 120.

has maintained it since that time. At
the buffet she was presented with
the ceremonial graduation white cap
and tassel and robe. She is now officialy a KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
Sensibly), the highest award
bestowed upon a TOPS member and
will have her membership dues
suspended as long as she maintains
her KOPS status.
Members presented Mrs. Clay
with individual gifts . . The buffet
table was draped in a yellow
tablecloth and centered with a
basket of pastel daisies. Mrs. Clay
was presented the flowers by Mrs.
Shorty Wright, leader, and Mrs.
Nellie Haggy, weight recorder. Mrs.
Clay is the dub's first KOPS.
During the business meeting Lynda Atkins was honored as the weekly
queen and Mrs. Clay her runner-up.

r-----------------------.:___

WITH 4 ·

FREE

BUY ANY OLYMPIC STAIN Oi
OVERCOAT AND RECEIVE 1 FREE
GALLON WIJ.H EVE.RY 4 GALLONS
BOUGHT.

BAUM TRUE VALUE

985-3301' - .

CHESTER 0

l · c:us!·omde!uxe pickup, 350 V·8, s td . s hift .

·

;

See One of These Courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh, George Harris

SIMMONS
- OLDS-CADILLAC INC.
"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"
. I

Clear Out
OF THE

1980's
.

"

MAKING WAY FOR THE '81's
•'

1980 Pinto
4 cyl. Eng., 4 s peed trans .. AM/FM Radio,
Oelu&gt;Ce bumper grovp, tinted glass, deluxe wheel

coverS, rear ¥Jindow defroster .

1980 Ford ,fiesta
AM/ FM Radio, tinted glass , PB , wsw Tires,
Ghia Option, rear window washer .

-

-

1980 FairmontF~~~:ss&amp;95
Auto Trans ., P S, PB, wsw Tires, radio, 4 cyl.
eng .

1980 T-Bird_

SS595

V-8, vinyl roof , ai r cond., AM/ FM, tinted glass,
wsw, rocker panel mig .• body s ide mig .

---- -

1977 atEVROI.ET C.10 .................. ~ .........12495.

;~dulls .

NAME OMJTrED
Twila Childs, clerical worker was
. from yesterday's account
' of
onutted
the Bloodmobile visit.

By HELEN BOOTEL
Special correspondent
DEAR HELEN:
My ex never )iked our children. He
treated them mean and made them
miserable from the time they were
born. Then he found another woman,
and that was the luckiest day of my
life.
I'm now married to a wonderful
man who wants to adopt my two
youngsters. Since .my ex only sends
child support when I threaten court
action, and has only seen them once
in three years, I figured he'd gladly
let hem go, but no!
He blew up when I mentioned
adoption. Says no one can claim
what he produced. We might win in a
legal fight but it would cost more
than we can afford.
Is there any way to change him?
- WANTS IDM EX-ED OUT
DEARWHEO:
A legal fight may be the only way
to win out over this stubborn man. If
you have a strong case, it might not
cost as much as you think.
However, since your ex doesn't
push fatherhood on his unwilling
kids (and you do receive child support when you holler loud enough) is
adoption really necessary? - H

could squeeze into a 12, but won't do
it.
"Most of my customers I tell about
it say they don't like the unif\)I'DlS.
They say when they come in to have
dinner, they are not interested In
looking at legs," said Mrs. Sikora.
She's worked for the company for 18
years.
The waitresses said they plan to
"work their last day Saturday and
aren't sure whether they'D accept
the transfers.
"If they were dissatisfied with our
weight, why didn 't they come to us
and say, 'Girls, you are too fat. You
have to slim down?"' Mrs. Miller
asked.
"No, they think because they have
a lot of money, they think they can
push people around," she said.
"They should know people have
rights."

Reaches KOPS in Waiting status

He dislikes his kids,
won't give them up

, .• , '.

2 Dr., white w / white vinyl top. Nice!

Sgt. and Mrs. Wayne L. Searls of
Sha'!: Air Force Base, Swnter, are
announcing the birth of a son
Michael Eric, June 23, at the ba~
hospital.
The infant weighed nine pounds ,
and was 21 inches long. Maternal
.grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Schoonover of Rutland, and
the paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Searls, also of
Rutland. Mr. and Mrs. Searls the
fonner Debbie Schoonover, have
another son, Chris, age three.

Helen Help Us

terprises also owns restaurants at
the Carrousel Inn and the Marriott
Inn in Cincinnati, said he was not
aware of the civil rights charges.
Harpenau said he had no intention
of harassing the waitresses and
described the transfers offered as
upgrading. He said the waitresses
will be working in supervisory
positions making three times as
much money as they d9 now. They
are being transferred from serving
dinners to banquet duty at another
restaurant.
"I think it's a dirty Irick," said
Thelma Miller, who wears a size 18.
"I weighed less than when they
hired me eight years ago. I just think
it is dirty that they don't care
anything about our ability to do the

..-

- ~ -~-· ·· - ·

Infant Searles

CINCINNATI (AP) - Three wears a size 14 dress and possibly
waitresses at a Cinc.in nati could squeeze into a size 12, but she
restaurant say they are being won't.
discriminated against because
The new uniforms" are not for serthey're unal)le to to squeeze into size ving dinner. I;d like to wear one
12 uniforms.
when I go out to dinner, but I cerThe waitresses, who work at the tainly would not wear one to serve
Windjammer Restaurant, have filed someone," she said.
complaints with the Ohio Civil
The waitresses said they were told
Rights Commission charging their that the uniforms are part of a new ·
employer with disCrimination.
slinuned-down, youthful look to
They said they were transferred ' provide customers with a little more
from the restaurant because they sex appeal.
couldn't wear the new uniforms.
Restaurant owner Robert HarThe new waitress wardrobe in- penau said he has his waitresses
cludes a body suit with a wrap- change unifonns two or three times
around skirt split up the side. The a year to keep pace with fashion
maXimum size available is 12.
trends.
Jessie Weaver said she has been
" We change carpeting and
with Harpenau Enterprises for 14 lighting just to keep up with the
years and was head waitress at the
trend," he explained. "You simply
Windjammer before the wardrobe
have to do this to keep up."
.dispute. Mrs. Weaver, 51, said she .
Harpenau, whose Harpenau En-

DEAR HELEN :
CAPRICORN /Dec. 2Wu. JJJ Tills Is •Rood
Here's another suggestion for
day
to ~with penons
those who wan t a dull pen pa 1s.
you hnen't_,
toorotaUonshipo
aiuch of lately.
liet oo the
pliooelllldolanoomelhlngacitlnc.
Those interested may write to lnAquAllills IJu. !JO.Feb. JJI You hove
ternational Frt'endship League, Pen
remarkable
ICaying power today and yoo'U get
tookler as time.....,. on, eopedally ~you' re a~
Pals Project, 22 Batteryrnarch St.,
~emp~~ng to conclllde .....thing of benefit to aU
Boston, Mass., 02109. The charge for
the=
GOSPELSINGSUNDAY
P
· !Feb.. !JO.Marcll 211 SituationS
.A gospel sing-down will be held
two names and addresses from over~taamworttl'OWdtum ..ttobeveryfo"'
seas
is $5 for adults and$3 for people
lunllleforyootoday. SooiiiUCharrangements.
Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at the Mid. AlliES l - I t-April JJJ Situations you lett
dleport Park. Everyone is welcome.
8 through 20. Send complete name,
...,._prot_lla_blt_but_l'OW_dn_tq_ui_te_,_et_•_ho_ndl_e" " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , address and zip code with your age
and preference as to sex and
nationality of the writer (though
countries can 'I always be guaranpll1anl&amp;llOI.....,.yourcareerls&lt;on&lt;oiiM!d.

. 11!11

"Friday Night Fights," also on
NBC, finished 47th.
Two movies, "Final ChapterWalking Tali," No. II for the week,
and " Heroes of Rock'n'roll" in 13th
place, scored for ABC. Two CBS
movies did not do as well - "Perfect
Gentlemen" in 36th place, and a first-run screening of "Islands in the
Stream" No. 39.
NBC listed three of the week's five
lowest-rated shows, including
'"Here's Boomer" in 58th place,"
"Man's Greatest Sports" 6lst and
"Buck Rogers In the 25th Century,"
No. 62. A "CBS Reports" presentation, "The Baby Makers," was No.
~. and an "ABC News Closeup"
called " The Killing Ground : An Up-

- . -ASTROGRAPH--

wllhrln you friends and allleo.
SAGnTARIOS IN,., ZS.Dec. Ill AlthouBh
olhenmay be oedJng rolalng dlverslmo today ,
you may hove an opportunity to ochleve an 1m-

GANG

What do you mean--it won 't fit???

ABC nudges top-heavy
CBS in ratings race

992-6614 POMEROY
Open Evenings 6:0G-til5:00 P.M. Sat.

PAT HILL FORD, INC.
t&gt;at Hili- Gen. Mgr.
461 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport, Oh.
·
' Phone
992•2196

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday., Au~:. ;!9, 19110

Several area clubs meet with
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
The annual open meeting of the · as a chainnan of the recent flower
Rutland Garden Club was held Monday night at the Rutland United

•

' Methodist Church with members of
seven Meigs County clubs attending.
Represented at the meeting were
· · the Rutland Friendly Gardeners, the
Star Garden Club, Middleport
Amateurs, Cheste~ Garden Club,
Fernwood Club,.'f'tldwood Club and
. the Shade Va!fe)' Council of Floral
· . Aats, alogg with one junior club
• ~ · by Donna Curtis. The
~~ were Mrs. Hazel Hilt,
. ,.'r-. ,,:~J.DlJrothy
Will and· Mrs. Octa
1\;o-• .. , ._.

. :; '. ,..,..•,u.

Mrs. Ralph Turner, president of
tiJe host club, extended a welcome
with Mrs. Carl Denison giving
devotions using poems from Ideals
; , . and a prayer. Mrs. Eugene Atkins
&lt;
gave a talk on garden helps for September and Mrs. Turner pre~~ nt.ed a
personal gift to Margaret Ella Lt wis
for her special work for the club and

show.
Arranger for the meeting was
Mrs. Betty Dean. Before starting
her demonstration, Mrs. Dean commented on the recent convention of
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs held in Columbus. She noted
that the association this year is emphasizing simple designs, vivid
colors, home-grown materials,
figurines showing sound or motion,
· and using what you have on hand
rather than going out to buy
something new.
Mrs. Dean used cut flowers from
her own garden in the demonstration
of 10 different designs. She showed
the traditional and modern nnadonna
in arrangements, Japanese
arrangements, weathered wood and
Its use, designs with unusual vases
many homemade, a dining table
arrangements, and one called
"Mother Love" usin~ a mother-child

On the Light Side
...
'

.

.'

,I

TANNING TOURNEY IS
BEYOND 11IE PALE
OCEAN CITY, N.J . (AP)- You may not have to be Italian to have a
good suntan but a nicely browned Terry Giovinazzo says it certaiitly
helps.
Miss Giovinazzo, 23, of Villanova, Pa., walked off Thursday with the
unofficial title of world's best suntan in the first Ocean City
Miscellaneous Sun Tanning Tournament.
The bronzed high school physical education teacher said the tan took
hours of application.
"The secret is baby oil and a lot of hours In the sun," Miss Giovinazzo confided. "And being Italian is also a very big factor."
The contest, Inspired by sun-worshiping Zonker Harris In the
popular ."Doonesbury" comic strip, offered honors In II categories,
some tan and some pal. The contest's official entry form especially
welcomed "narcissists, egomaniacs and exhibitionists."
Among the winners were Kelly Butler for the best left ann tan and
Wayne Horton for the whitest knuckles. Bald-headed Tony Scarillo
kept the official "Golden Dome" award.
Jim Nawrocki, 14, of Hudson, Ohio, paled the competition in the
"best under-aU tan" category offered especially for those "TV freaks
who never leave their air-conditioned family room during the swnmer."
COWlS NOT
BULLISH ON EVANSVILLE
EV ANSVJLLE, Ind. (AP) - EVansville policeman Bill Brown had a
· lot to beef about.
.
His beef Wednesday night had four legs, weigbed about 2,500 pounds
and left a noticeable impression on the left side of his police car.
"It must have moved my car six to eight feet when it hit me," a
somewhat shaken Brown reported. Then, he said, it walked across the
bood for good measure.
The culprit was a cow that apparently got loose while it was being
unloaded at the Evansville Union Stockyards. -In half an hour on the loose, the frightened animal led four
poli~en on a wild chase, bwnped several parked and moving
vehicles along the way and made a run at a young girl on a bicycle.
Brown satd the youngster had to jwnp onto a parked car to avoid being
pinned against the side of the vehicle.
·

,.L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . l

Bible classes conclude
ROCK SPRINGS
BmLESCHOOL

The Rock Springs United
Methodist Church daily vacation
Bible school concluded Sunday with
a program by the children during
the Sunday school.
On the last day fo the school there
was a picnic with Susie Pullins and
Susanne Richmond handling the
plans for that. Daily activities began
with the theme song, pledges to the
American and Christian flags, and .
the Bible, and devotions by Doosy
Dog, the puppet.
At the closing program the
children received certificates. Gift
and cards were presented by Marha
King, on behalf of the entire school,
to Judy Humphreys, director.
Enrolled in the school in the
various classes were the following
children:
Nursery : Thelma Jeffers,
teacher; Sally Pierce, Kim Eblin,
craft leaders, assisted by Christi
Blackston, Karen Sloan and Lenora
Leifhe!t with the children, Jeremy
Atkins, Christy Drake, Emily Kane,
Dorothy Leifheit; Patrick Young,
Jason Abbott, Jason Sheets, Melissa
Pierce, Brian Walker, Jinuny, Randy and Brandy Corbitt, John Jeffers, .
Misty Adkins, Chuckle Parker,
Michael Leifheit, Christy Sweeney,
Jamie Drake, Bradley Walker, JennHer Goins, Sharuton Brown, and
Darin Abbott.
Beginners: Pearl Carsey, teacher,
Helen Blackston, teacher of crafts,
Jenny Burdette, Tammy Adkins,
Megan Bartels, Dale Eblin, Chris
Sloan, Chris Atkins, Mandy Eblin,
Josh Bartels, Heather Goins, Leanna Henderson, Heather Kane, Nicole
Pickens and Misty Butcher.
Primary: Sharon Darst, teacher;
Helen Partlow, craft Instructor;
Tara Hwnphreys, Tina McGarth,
Roger Smith, Marsha King, Lisa
Darst, Michael Parker, Neil Richmond, Tracy Eblin, Stacey Young,
and Jay Humphreys.
Middler: 1 Judy .Humphreys,
. teacher; Dixie Eblin, a-aft instructor; Angie Sloan, Tim Jeffe~
Tammy Eblin, Deanna Henderson,
Beth Pierce, Joey Parker, Melissa
Marcinko, Mary Butcher, and
Tamara Vance.
·
Teens: Martha King, teacher;

Rita Eblin, crafts, Lisa Pullins,
Angela Pierce, Clarissa Pierce,
Rhonda Zirkle, Sally Radford, Anita
Smith, April Clark, Mark Corbitt,
Michael King and Tim Sloan.

Ministers urge voters to register
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - The Ohio
chapter of a· national organization
which says religion and politics do
mix plans to launch a statewide
voter registration drive in 1 000
churches beginning Sept. 7.
'
The Rev. Edward E. Holland and
colleagues across the state are
hoping to get hundreds of ministers
from ali denominations to support
the movement. Holland says his
,group, Moral Majority Inc. is "pr"'
life, pro-family, pr"'mor;lity and

modem figurine.
Introduced during the meeting
were Mrs. Pat Holter, regional
director; Miss Erma Smith, county
contact chairman; Mrs. Janet Bolin
a state officer and Mrs. Suzy Car:
penter, an accredited judge.
The fall regional meeting was announced for Oct. 18 at the Gallipolis pro-Americ'a. "
Holland is the group's Ohio
Grace Methodist Church. The counorganizer,
and the Rev .. Thomas
ty meeting will be held the last week
in September. An Invitation was · Tran:unel of Cincinnati's Deerpark
read from Mrs. Everett Colwell who Bapttst Church serves as its chairis planning an open house at the
church on Sept. 7, 2;30 to 4:30, in
celebration of her 90th birthday.
Mrs. Marvin Wilson, Mrs. Jack
Robson, Mrs. Harry Williamson
The Star Garden Club recently
Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. Colwell, and Mis~
held
a picnic at the Forest Acres
Edna Mae !jwick were hostesses.
Park
near Pomeroy. Devotions were
Yellow taprs and an arrangement
given by each member reciting her
of flowers in yellows, oranges and
bronze made by Mrs. Robert
Canaday were used on the refreshment table.

Trammel's of~ice in Cincinnati Is
Inviting 3,700 ministers of different
denominations to attend a voter
registration seminar in Columbus on
Sept. 4. They hope to get churches to
open up three days later to register
potential voters.
"Our overall objective Is to inform
the people on the key issues," said
Holland, pastor of the Canton Road
Baptist Church In Akron. ' 'We're attempting to, above an else, not
become affiliated with any party or
endorse candidates. We want to
examine the ·Bible-based issues and
inform the people concerning these
issues."
The national group is headed by
base."
The Rev. Jerry Falwell, a Lyn.
chburg, Va., Baptist pastor, who is
also a member of the board of directors of The Religiou.s Round-Table of
Arlington, Va.
favorite Bible verse, and for roll
That group earlier this month
call, each member named a place sponsored a national affairs briefing
she would like to visit.
in Dallas which drew 5,000 rnlnlsters
Mrs. Eugene Atkins reported ori a and 10,000 laymen from 41 states.
trip nnade to The Glass House at
Observers of the meeting said the
Stewart,.and several other members turnout indicates an increased
spoke on arrangmeents which they national political Involvement by
took to their respective churches.
conservative Christians.
Miss Ruby Diehl and Mrs. James
Holland said Moral Majority is
Nicholson gave a report on the State non-partisan.
Garden Club Convention, showing
"On the whole, fundamentalist
photographs of arrangements on Christians In this" country and
display there, and Mrs. Nicholson . throughout the country are disapalso spoke on the Shade Valley Gar- pointed" with President Carter, he
den Club meeting, where the topic said. Holland quickly added that he
was "Inspirational Symbols."
has made no decision on which canMrs. Worley Francis was a guest didate, if any, he'll support in
at the picnic.
November.
man. They say the nation needs
ministers and church congregations
to speak out on governmental issues.
The Washington-based group said
it has taken about a year to esta blish
the organization in 47 states.
Voter registration is a key goal of
Moral Majority, said one official,
who added that it eventually could
mean an injection of Bible-based
thinking into national politics.
" We're still in our infancy,"
Holland said. He said the response
from a cross-section of
denominations across the state u{.
dicates that " it will be a few more
months before we have a solid

Garden club hosts picnic

New arrivals

Social
calendar

FRIDAY
DANCE FOLLOWING the
Easterncwaterford game at Chester
Grade School for Eastern students,
guests and alumni, 10 to midnight,
tonight. Music by WXJL. Sponsored
by Eastern High cheerleaders.
SUNDAY
11IE DUNCAN FAMJLY will be
appearing at the Freedom Gospel
Mission for a hymn sing Wednesday,
beginning at 7:30 p.m. THe public is
Invited to attend.
THE CHESTER FIRE Department will be having a chicken barbecue Monday, beginning at II a.m
at the Chesler Fire House. A parade
will be held at I :30p.m.
HOMECOMING Sunday at North
Bethel United Methodist Church.
There will be a covered dish dinner
at noon with special speakers and
music In the afternoon. The public is
Invited.
CIDCKEN BARBECUE spon. sored by the Racine Fire Department will be held Sunday beginning
at II a.m. at the fire house. The
auxiliary will have homemade ice
cream for sale.
Infant Miller
TENT MEETING, beginning Sunday and lasting through Sunday,
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Sept. 7, will be held at the corner of
David (Pamela Vaughan) Miller of
bypass Route 7 and Union Ave.
Middleport are announcing the birth
Everyone is Invited to attend.
of their first child, a daughter, CanGOSPEL SING DOWN will be held
dace Nicole, Aug. I at O'Bleness
Sunday at 1:30 p.m. in the MidMef119rial , Hospital, Athens. She
dleport Park. Everyone is welcome.
weighed seven pounds, five ounces
OURS FAMJLY will have a
and was 20 inches long.
reunion
Sunday at the Rock Springs
Maternal grandparents are Mrs.
Fairgrounds.
There will be a basket
Reva Vaughan, Middleport, and
dinner
all
p.m.
and all relatives and
Frank Vaughan, Pomeroy. Paternal
friends
are
welcome.
grandparents are Mrs. Jane HuffJOHNSON FAMILY will have a
man and George Miller, Middleporl ·
Sunday at the Portland
reunion
Paternal great-grandparents are
Park.
Everyone
is invited to attend.
Mrs. Hilda Harris, Pomeroy, and
McELROY FAMILY will have a
Mfs. Juanita Miller, Middleport.
reunion at the Shrlners' Park in
Racine, Sunday, with a basket dinner at noon. Everyone is welcome.
HYMN SING SET
Ahymn sing featuring the Duncan
. Family, a gospel group from Tampa, Fla., will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Eagle Ridge Co~
munity Church. The public Is invited.

ST.PAULBIBLECLASS

The Rev. Richard Tbomas gave a
lesson on Second Corinthians, chapter 2 when the Adult Bible Class of
the St. Paul's United Methodist
Church met Monday night at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spencer
In Tuppers Plains. There were 29
persons in attendance.
The group sang several songs,
followed by prayer led by Rev.
Tbomas.
The business meeti.l!g was lea by
Mrs. Chester Gorrell, vice president
of the class. The minutes of the July
meeting and the treasurer's report
were given by Mrs. Mildred Books.
The class voted to buy additional
songbouks for use by the church
choir. It was recommended to
resume choir rehearsals following
Bible Study on Tuesday evenings.
Inspirational readings were given
by the following persons: Mrs. Hazel
Barnhill, Mrs. Gertrude Russell,
Mrs. Vercie Stout, Mr. John Arbaugh, and Mr. Floyd Stout. The
evening's entertainment consisted
of games and puzzles led by tiJe
bostess, Mrs. Guy Spencer.
1'he next meeting will be Sept. 30
at the borne of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Barnhill of 7 p.m Following grace,
the group enjoyed refreshments Including a cake baked in hOnor of
Rev. and Mrs. Thomas' anniversary.
Those In attendance were Mrs.
Gertrude Russell, Mr. and Mrs. cu:
Barnhill, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Stout,
Mrs. Harry Hannon, Mrs. Edith
Harper, Mrs. Mae Vineyard, Mrs.
Mildred Brooks, Mrs. Doris Koeing,
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Gorrell, Linda
Gorrell, Mr. James Stout and
daughter,' Terri Stout, Mrs. Keith .
Chaffee, Mr. and Mrs. John
Damewood, Kevin Damewood,
Angela Damewood, Mi'. and Mrs.
John Arbaugh, Rev. 11nd Mrs.
Richard Thomas, and the host and ·
hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spencer.
A grand evening has had by one and
aU attending.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Aug. 29,19110

Rev. Lawrence McDaniel
to preach at Portland
The Rev. H. Lawrence McDaniel
of Guysville
preach at Portland
United Methodist Church Sunday
night as the church celebrates · the
50th anniversary of the dedication of
the present building. The Rev. McDaniel, now retired, is a previous
pastor of the Portland CHurch.
· The events of the evening will
begin with a picnic at the Portland
park at 5:30p.m. In case of rain, the
meal will be served In the church
basement.
At 7 p.m. a special program will
review the last 50 years in Portland,
one decade at a time. Pictures will

will

NEW YORK (AP) - CBS had
seven of the week's IO·most-watched
shows, including No.1 "Circus of the
Stars" and back-(()oback episodes of
"Dukes of Hazzard," but ABC won
the prime-time competition for the
third week in a month, according to
' figures from the A.C. Nielsen Co.
ABC's triumph was by the
narrowest of margins + one-tenth of
one point. Limited to three of the
week's Top 10 sbows, including the
premiere episode of " Those
Amazing Animals" in second place,
ABC bounced back with seven of the
next!O.

ABC's rating for the week was 15,
to 14.9 for CBS and 11.3 for NijC. The
networks say that means in an
average prime-time minute during
the week, 15 percent tf the country's
TV-equipped homes were tuned to
CBS.
"Those Amazing Animals" was
one of two new prime-time series unveiled during the week. The ABC
show finished second to CBS' repeat
of "CirC!IS of the Stars," which
registered a rating o£ 22.2. Nielsen
says that means of all the homes in
the country with television, 22.2 percent saw atleast part of the show.
The other new show, NBC's
"Garnes People Play," finished the
week in 30th place.
As is common this time of the
year, the week was dominated by
reruns, and only a handful of
original shows were even
moderately successful in the
' · · ratings. "That's My Line" on CBS
was No. 35, "Nobody's Perfect" on
ABC finished 42nd, NBC's "Speak
Up America" was No. 45 and

be Included in this review.
The worship service·will begin at B
p.m. with the pastor of the church
presiding and the Rev. Me. McDaniel preaching.
On the first Sunday In September,
Sunday school and worship at the
Portland Church will return to the
fall schedule: the fanner will begin
at 6:30 each Sunday evening and the
latter will begin at 7:30 p.m. The
Rev. Mark Flynn is the pastor of the
church.

.

s . - ,, Aoc. » . -

Pto}ecta you crute, inaugurate or supervise
could ....,.. to be bill w!Mers in the months
ahead. Ooe )'OW' lmqinalicin and don't be afraid
to IIWtdl ventures on your own.
VIRGO IAoc. IHtpl. lZJ l'ro)e&lt;la that are
meanlniful and laqe in lH.'qiO .,... the ones oo
wh1cb )'9&amp;1 &amp;hould fCJCl.IS your attenUoo today. The

bta:er they 11"1, the better you do. Find out more
ol wllat Ueo ahead fer you in the year following
blrtllday by Je!ldlno fer YOW' copy o1 .Utr&lt;&gt;'
. Mailll for eadl Io ~rapn, Boz ~.
City Station, N. Y.l0019. Be sure to1pectfy

birthdale.

.

LIIIIU. (Sept. zs.oet. ZJ) Jotnt v.entures or
lltuaUona. you manace for others could prove to
be 1110re mrarding than usuall.oday. What you
gain for another you allogaJn for y......u.
SCORPIO COd. zt.N... lZl This should be a
vory pleasant day boca1110 yoo tmow ._to ckal
with per10111 from all "alb of life. Your actlons

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

FRIIAT
AUG2t 30

...

-IIMIIIo

SMOftEt'
..,

lff1IIMIIfE

...

PG

--,.,.

date,'' waS No. 60.

Here are the week'sTop IOshows :
"Circus of the Stars," with a
rating of 22.2 representing 16.9
million homes, CBS ; " Those
Amazing · Animals," 20.9 or 15.9
million, ABC; "M-A-s-H," 20.6 or
15.7 million, CBS; "Alice" and "The
Jeffersons," both 20.1 or 15.3 million,
both CBS; ''Dukes of Hazzard," 9
p.m., 19.8 or 15.1 million, CBS;
"Dukes of Hazzard," 10 p.m., CBS,
and "Three's Company," ABC, both
19.2 or 14.6 million; "60 Minutes," 19
or 14.5 million, CBS, and "Vega$, "
18.9 or 14.4 million, ABC.
The rest of the Top 20:
Movie-"Final Chapter-Walking
Tall," " Charlie's Angels," Movie"Heroes of Rock 'n' Roll, " ali ABC;
"House Calls," "Lou Grant" and
"Trapper John, M.D.," all CBS;
"T~xi" and " Hart to Hart," both
ABC, and "Love Boat" and "That's
Incredible," both ABC, tie.

will take a turn for the better today . The opportunity now exists to make past efforts pay off.
TAURUS (April ZO.May lt) Your teadenhip
qualiUeo wt11 be much in evidence today. Those
with whom you're involved will be glad this is so.
lead on and they ralb to your banner.
GEMINI (May !l.Jue ztl Persons you've
previously helped are eager to make your IGt ln
Ufeeasiertoday. AlthOugh you may not be aware
ci lhlo, the results wt11 speak for themselves.
CANCER IJ- ZJ.Joly lZI lleollngs with
club.!, &amp;J:'OilPI or OI'Janilationa today should
prove lucky for you ln !IOIIle llllique manner. Be

·u

p&lt;epand to • ..,..... "
U:O iJaly D-~q . lll You'ro at your best
today in challenging situations where there is
something of real value at stake. It could pertain
to your carftJ' or to a business v~ture .

DISSOLUTION ASKED
Lewis Van J'ohnson, Box 32, Outd
chtown Rd. , Minersville, an
Katherine Marlene Johnson, same
address, have filed for dissolution of
marriage in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court.

19n
aiEV. MALIBU 4 DR .................... ..S2495
350 V-B, automatic, power &amp; air.
1975 CHEV. IMPALA 4 DR......................$1495

MATINEE SUNDAY
ONE SHOW ONLY
2 P.M •

Aulonjalit, POwer &amp; air.

1975 MERaJRY MARQUIS ........... , ..........$1795
1974
AMC MATADOR ......... , ............. , .. }l595
Low mileage, auto .• air, 304 V-8

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
AI.L SEATS JUST$ 1.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESOAY

1977
CHRYSLER CORDOBA..................... $2795
Air. Sharp

531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt.35NORTH -Phone 446-4524

1978 PIN10 ......... :.... .......4.~~:'.~ ~~: ?~:~~: ... 12995
1974 OLOS CUTlASS SUPREME .............. $1295
1973 FORD STATIONWAOON .................. }1295
· No rust, s harp, 51,000 m i. $1295
1972 FORD Lm ······· •·•••
••··•· ········ ········· ·
1975
.DODGE DARt 4 Dll ......................
:s1295
Tcyf., auto., power ·

\\

IIOGSTERS TO
SELLSHmTS
Soutbern High School Athletic
Boosters will be selling purple vneck shirts at the football game
Saturday night. The sliirts come in
children's sizes, small to large, and
·adults, small to extra large. They
are :Sfl for children and Sfl.SO for

\I

\

11095
1973
aiEV.
CHEVELLE
...........................
_!'utomati:,_P.S.: P.B., 'h vinyl lop.

·1974
MERCURY COMET..........................
s1395
_6cyl ., aUtomatic &amp; power steer ing,
·

A~

natural love.

cm:em,ma

~F;i[Bl

work.''
Helen Sikora, like Mrs. Weaver,
said she's a size 14 and probably

A surprise buffet honoring Mrs.
Phyllis Clay who reached her Kops
In Waiting status with TOPS 1466,
Rutland was held at the Tuesday
night meeting.
Mrs. Clay reached the goal which
her doctor. had set 13 weeks ago and

teed).- WRITER

DEAR HELEN:
My husband had an affair and, to
get even, I had one too. Now I'm
pregnant, and I'm sure the other
man is the father. Well, not positive,
but guilt has convinced me.
Meanwhile, my husband and I patched things up. He doesn't know
about the affai,r. Actually, the baby
brought him back. He's ecstatic, and
he has been wonderful ever since he
heard. We're closer now than we've
been in six years ... Except I'm wondering how to ten him the awful
truth when he's so proud that he's
finally to be a father.
Maybe your readers could advise.
If anyone out there has faced this
situation, tell me, please, did you
keep your secret of if not, did
honesty hurt or help? -ARDENE
DEAR ARDENE:
While awaiting reader-advice and
comments, I'll offer my (unaskedfor) views:
Why borrow trouble? I'd say, keep
your secret and hope you'll never
have to tell. - R
AITENDSSEMINAR
Bill Quickel of the Davi&amp;Quickel
Insurance Agency In Pomeroy
recently attended a seminar on
Selling the Smaller Commercial Account, sponsored by the Professional
Insurance Agents Association of
Ohio.
The seniinar, held in Columbus on
Aug. Tl, was designed for the insurance agent who wants to write
more commercial insurance
business. The selnar was aimed at
the smaller commercial risk, common to most towns, such as
retailers, service risks and contractors.

'"'~ BROOKE SHIELDS
.. -.., CHRISTOPHER ATKINS

('

· SE:E.US.J:Oiit if. . .

~J

·--....... ,

;

·· ~

A·L'~ ·
1979 OI.DS CUTlASS SUPREME CPE ••••• f6295
1978 OLOS CUTlASS SUPREME CPE•••••• '4995
1978 OLDS 88 ROYALE CPE••••••••••••• s4495
1978 CHEV. NOVA 4 DR. SEDAN ••••••••• '3695
1977 CHEV. CAPRICE SEDAN.~ •••••••••• '3495
1980 AMC SPIRIT CPE. ••••••••••••••••• s4995
1979 CAD. DEVIUE CPE••••••••••••••••• '8795
1974 OLDS 98 4 DR. SEDAN •••••••••••• '1495
1976 OLOS VISTA CRUISER.•••••••••••••• 12795

1973 FORD LTD .. ~ .................................... '95
1973 VOLKSWAGEN "BUG'~.................... }1295
1971 OI.DS clm.Ass ................................SS95
1980 FORO -- -- . - --·
. CUSlOM F-250...................... '6495

1974 OLOS 98 SEDAN••••••••••••••••••• '1295
1975 OLOS ROYALE SEDAN•••••••••••••• '1295
1975 OLDS CUllASS SEDAN••••••••••••• ·52395.

1977

19)5 BUICK ESTATE WAGoN.•••••••••••• •1295

~~h:;'/~rive, ·4siieed trans ., AM-FM, too!. box_i n bed. Cost

6 cy! ., std.' Iran$.

-

F-100 PICKUP.:...................... -$2495

ASKED TOWED
Randall Ray Reeves, 21, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, and Angela Marie Dailey,
18, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
Randal Wayne Forbes, 24, Rl. I,
Minersville, and Melodie Dawn
Larkins, 23, 128 Lincoln Hill,
Pomeroy.
HOSPITAUZED
Bill Hubbard; Syracuse, is a
medical patient at Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant. ·Cards
.mav be sentto room 120.

has maintained it since that time. At
the buffet she was presented with
the ceremonial graduation white cap
and tassel and robe. She is now officialy a KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
Sensibly), the highest award
bestowed upon a TOPS member and
will have her membership dues
suspended as long as she maintains
her KOPS status.
Members presented Mrs. Clay
with individual gifts . . The buffet
table was draped in a yellow
tablecloth and centered with a
basket of pastel daisies. Mrs. Clay
was presented the flowers by Mrs.
Shorty Wright, leader, and Mrs.
Nellie Haggy, weight recorder. Mrs.
Clay is the dub's first KOPS.
During the business meeting Lynda Atkins was honored as the weekly
queen and Mrs. Clay her runner-up.

r-----------------------.:___

WITH 4 ·

FREE

BUY ANY OLYMPIC STAIN Oi
OVERCOAT AND RECEIVE 1 FREE
GALLON WIJ.H EVE.RY 4 GALLONS
BOUGHT.

BAUM TRUE VALUE

985-3301' - .

CHESTER 0

l · c:us!·omde!uxe pickup, 350 V·8, s td . s hift .

·

;

See One of These Courteous Salesmen
Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh, George Harris

SIMMONS
- OLDS-CADILLAC INC.
"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"
. I

Clear Out
OF THE

1980's
.

"

MAKING WAY FOR THE '81's
•'

1980 Pinto
4 cyl. Eng., 4 s peed trans .. AM/FM Radio,
Oelu&gt;Ce bumper grovp, tinted glass, deluxe wheel

coverS, rear ¥Jindow defroster .

1980 Ford ,fiesta
AM/ FM Radio, tinted glass , PB , wsw Tires,
Ghia Option, rear window washer .

-

-

1980 FairmontF~~~:ss&amp;95
Auto Trans ., P S, PB, wsw Tires, radio, 4 cyl.
eng .

1980 T-Bird_

SS595

V-8, vinyl roof , ai r cond., AM/ FM, tinted glass,
wsw, rocker panel mig .• body s ide mig .

---- -

1977 atEVROI.ET C.10 .................. ~ .........12495.

;~dulls .

NAME OMJTrED
Twila Childs, clerical worker was
. from yesterday's account
' of
onutted
the Bloodmobile visit.

By HELEN BOOTEL
Special correspondent
DEAR HELEN:
My ex never )iked our children. He
treated them mean and made them
miserable from the time they were
born. Then he found another woman,
and that was the luckiest day of my
life.
I'm now married to a wonderful
man who wants to adopt my two
youngsters. Since .my ex only sends
child support when I threaten court
action, and has only seen them once
in three years, I figured he'd gladly
let hem go, but no!
He blew up when I mentioned
adoption. Says no one can claim
what he produced. We might win in a
legal fight but it would cost more
than we can afford.
Is there any way to change him?
- WANTS IDM EX-ED OUT
DEARWHEO:
A legal fight may be the only way
to win out over this stubborn man. If
you have a strong case, it might not
cost as much as you think.
However, since your ex doesn't
push fatherhood on his unwilling
kids (and you do receive child support when you holler loud enough) is
adoption really necessary? - H

could squeeze into a 12, but won't do
it.
"Most of my customers I tell about
it say they don't like the unif\)I'DlS.
They say when they come in to have
dinner, they are not interested In
looking at legs," said Mrs. Sikora.
She's worked for the company for 18
years.
The waitresses said they plan to
"work their last day Saturday and
aren't sure whether they'D accept
the transfers.
"If they were dissatisfied with our
weight, why didn 't they come to us
and say, 'Girls, you are too fat. You
have to slim down?"' Mrs. Miller
asked.
"No, they think because they have
a lot of money, they think they can
push people around," she said.
"They should know people have
rights."

Reaches KOPS in Waiting status

He dislikes his kids,
won't give them up

, .• , '.

2 Dr., white w / white vinyl top. Nice!

Sgt. and Mrs. Wayne L. Searls of
Sha'!: Air Force Base, Swnter, are
announcing the birth of a son
Michael Eric, June 23, at the ba~
hospital.
The infant weighed nine pounds ,
and was 21 inches long. Maternal
.grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Schoonover of Rutland, and
the paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Searls, also of
Rutland. Mr. and Mrs. Searls the
fonner Debbie Schoonover, have
another son, Chris, age three.

Helen Help Us

terprises also owns restaurants at
the Carrousel Inn and the Marriott
Inn in Cincinnati, said he was not
aware of the civil rights charges.
Harpenau said he had no intention
of harassing the waitresses and
described the transfers offered as
upgrading. He said the waitresses
will be working in supervisory
positions making three times as
much money as they d9 now. They
are being transferred from serving
dinners to banquet duty at another
restaurant.
"I think it's a dirty Irick," said
Thelma Miller, who wears a size 18.
"I weighed less than when they
hired me eight years ago. I just think
it is dirty that they don't care
anything about our ability to do the

..-

- ~ -~-· ·· - ·

Infant Searles

CINCINNATI (AP) - Three wears a size 14 dress and possibly
waitresses at a Cinc.in nati could squeeze into a size 12, but she
restaurant say they are being won't.
discriminated against because
The new uniforms" are not for serthey're unal)le to to squeeze into size ving dinner. I;d like to wear one
12 uniforms.
when I go out to dinner, but I cerThe waitresses, who work at the tainly would not wear one to serve
Windjammer Restaurant, have filed someone," she said.
complaints with the Ohio Civil
The waitresses said they were told
Rights Commission charging their that the uniforms are part of a new ·
employer with disCrimination.
slinuned-down, youthful look to
They said they were transferred ' provide customers with a little more
from the restaurant because they sex appeal.
couldn't wear the new uniforms.
Restaurant owner Robert HarThe new waitress wardrobe in- penau said he has his waitresses
cludes a body suit with a wrap- change unifonns two or three times
around skirt split up the side. The a year to keep pace with fashion
maXimum size available is 12.
trends.
Jessie Weaver said she has been
" We change carpeting and
with Harpenau Enterprises for 14 lighting just to keep up with the
years and was head waitress at the
trend," he explained. "You simply
Windjammer before the wardrobe
have to do this to keep up."
.dispute. Mrs. Weaver, 51, said she .
Harpenau, whose Harpenau En-

DEAR HELEN :
CAPRICORN /Dec. 2Wu. JJJ Tills Is •Rood
Here's another suggestion for
day
to ~with penons
those who wan t a dull pen pa 1s.
you hnen't_,
toorotaUonshipo
aiuch of lately.
liet oo the
pliooelllldolanoomelhlngacitlnc.
Those interested may write to lnAquAllills IJu. !JO.Feb. JJI You hove
ternational Frt'endship League, Pen
remarkable
ICaying power today and yoo'U get
tookler as time.....,. on, eopedally ~you' re a~
Pals Project, 22 Batteryrnarch St.,
~emp~~ng to conclllde .....thing of benefit to aU
Boston, Mass., 02109. The charge for
the=
GOSPELSINGSUNDAY
P
· !Feb.. !JO.Marcll 211 SituationS
.A gospel sing-down will be held
two names and addresses from over~taamworttl'OWdtum ..ttobeveryfo"'
seas
is $5 for adults and$3 for people
lunllleforyootoday. SooiiiUCharrangements.
Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at the Mid. AlliES l - I t-April JJJ Situations you lett
dleport Park. Everyone is welcome.
8 through 20. Send complete name,
...,._prot_lla_blt_but_l'OW_dn_tq_ui_te_,_et_•_ho_ndl_e" " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , address and zip code with your age
and preference as to sex and
nationality of the writer (though
countries can 'I always be guaranpll1anl&amp;llOI.....,.yourcareerls&lt;on&lt;oiiM!d.

. 11!11

"Friday Night Fights," also on
NBC, finished 47th.
Two movies, "Final ChapterWalking Tali," No. II for the week,
and " Heroes of Rock'n'roll" in 13th
place, scored for ABC. Two CBS
movies did not do as well - "Perfect
Gentlemen" in 36th place, and a first-run screening of "Islands in the
Stream" No. 39.
NBC listed three of the week's five
lowest-rated shows, including
'"Here's Boomer" in 58th place,"
"Man's Greatest Sports" 6lst and
"Buck Rogers In the 25th Century,"
No. 62. A "CBS Reports" presentation, "The Baby Makers," was No.
~. and an "ABC News Closeup"
called " The Killing Ground : An Up-

- . -ASTROGRAPH--

wllhrln you friends and allleo.
SAGnTARIOS IN,., ZS.Dec. Ill AlthouBh
olhenmay be oedJng rolalng dlverslmo today ,
you may hove an opportunity to ochleve an 1m-

GANG

What do you mean--it won 't fit???

ABC nudges top-heavy
CBS in ratings race

992-6614 POMEROY
Open Evenings 6:0G-til5:00 P.M. Sat.

PAT HILL FORD, INC.
t&gt;at Hili- Gen. Mgr.
461 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport, Oh.
·
' Phone
992•2196

�9- Thc Datly Senhnel, Mu.ldlepurt· Pumcroy , 0 , Jo ttdd y, 1\ug. :llJ, 1'180

8-TheDallySentlnel,Mlddlepurt·Pilmel~roy,~O;;··;.F'n~·da~y,~A;ull;·;29~,1;;9110;_..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,._ _ _~~-.,.~--------r.----~~~-,

CIRJRCH

NEWS
TRINITY CHURCH , Rev. W H Pemn ,
pastor. Roy Moyer , Sunday Khool supt.
Church School. 9· 15 am. , worshtp sar.
v•c• lO 30 a m Choir rehearsal, Tu.,sdoy .
7:30p.m under direction of Al1ce Neosa
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
Corner Unton ond Mulberry Rev Cl'vda V

Henderson. pastor. Sunday school , 9 30
a .m., Glen McClung aupt . morntng war·
ship. 10.30 a .m.; even•ng serv1ce , 7:30;
m1d -week service, Wednesday , ?lOp m

-

'

GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH - 326 E.
Main St . Pomeroy . The Rev Robert B.
Groves, rector . Summer sch&amp;dule - Sunday services at 10 30 am. Holv Commu·
n1on to be celebrated July 30, Aug . 3,
Aug 17 and Sept. 1. Morn1ng Prayer and
sermon on all other Sundays No Church
School or nursery core provided durtng
summer montht. Coffee hour in the PariSh
Holl•mmedlately following the serv1ce.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST . 212 W .
Main St Nell Proudfoot, pastor, Bible
school, 9·30 o m ; morning worship , 10 30
a.m Youth meettngs , 6.30 p m .; even•ng
worshtp , 7 30 Wednesday ntght prayer
meeftng and Btble study , 7.30 p m .
THE SALVATION ARMY , 115 Butternut
Ave. , Pomeroy . Envoy and Mrs. Ray Win tng. offtcen In charge. Sunday -holiness
meettng, 10 a .m ., Sunday School. 10.30
a m Sunday school leader YPSM , Eloise
Adams, 7:30 p.m. , salvat1on meetmg,
various speaken and music spectals.
Thursdav- 10 a .m. to 2 p.m Ladtes Home
league, all women lnv•ted, 7.30 p m .
prayer meeting and 81ble studv Rev. Noel
Herman, teacher
BURliNGTON
SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
CHAPEl. Roulo 1, Shade- Pastor Bobby
Elkins. Sunday school, 5 p.m ; Sunday
worship, 5 -45 p .m .; Wednesday prayer
servtce, 7!30 p m .
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 200 W Main St , 992-5235 Vocol
musiC. Sunday worship 10 a.m. , B•ble
study 11 o.m : worshtp , 6 p m . Wednes·
day Boble study, 7 p.m.
OlD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH .
Rev .Rolph Smith, pastor Sunday school,
9 30
o.m
Mrs. Worley Francis,
superintendent. Preaching serv1ces ftrtt &amp;
third Sundavs following Sunday School.
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST .
Preaching 9.30 a m .. first and second Sun·
doys of eoch month: third and fourth Sundays each month, worship service at 7.30
p.m. Wednesday evenings Qt 7 30. Prayer
and Bible Study.
SEVENTH·DAV ADVENTIST , Mulberry
He1ghts Rood , Pomeroy. Pastor. Albert
Dlttes: Sabbath School Superintendent,
Rita While. Sabbath S&lt;haol, Saturday
afternoon at 2·00, wtth Worship Serv1ce
lollowlng at 3: 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHSister Harnett Worner , Supt. Sunday
School , 9:30 o m , morning worsh1p, 10.45
a.m .
THE HILAND CHAPEL , George Casto,
postor. Sunday School, 9 30a m ., evening
worship, 7 30 Thursday evening prayer
serv1ce, 7:30p.m .
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Dovod Monn,
m1n1ster, William Watson, Sunday school
supt Sunday sc11ool 9 30 a m .. morning
worsh1p '0:30a.m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. 282 Mulborry
Ave . , Pomeroy, Hershel McClure, Sundar
school superintendent Sunday schoo .
9.30 a.m. , morning worthlp, 10:30, even~ng worship, 7 00 p m. Midweek prayer
service, 7 00 p m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH. De•ter Rd , Rd , langsville Rev A A.
Hughes , Pastor. Sundav School 10 a.m.
Ser\IICes on Tuesdov . Thursday and Sunday , 7:30p.m .
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , Bolloy
Run Rood, Rev . Emmett Rowson, pastor.
Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday school , 10
a.m. Sunday eventnQ serv1ce 7 .30, Btble
teochmg, 7 30 p.m. Ttlursday.
DYESVIllE COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
Roger C Turner, pastor. Sunday school,
9:30 om.; Sunday morntng worsh1p,
10 30! Sundav evening service, 7·30
MIDDlEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. lawrence Manley,
pastor Mrs
Russell Young, Sunday
School Supt. Sundpy S&lt;haol 9 30 a m .
E\lenlng wonh1p, 7::10, Wednesdtly prayer
mee11ng, 7:30p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Rac1ne- Rev. James Satterfield. PQstor.
Morn1ng worship, 9';45 a.m., Sunday
school , 10.-45 a .m .. evening worship, 7.
Tuesday , 7:30 p . m, ladies prayer
meeting, Wednesday , 7:30pm . YPE.
MIDDlEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Corner
Shc.th and Palmer, the Rev. Mark McClung,
Sunday school, 9 15om. , Randy Hayes,
Don
Sunday School. auper~ntendent
Riggs asst. supt Morning Worship, 10•15
a.m. Youth meeting, 7·30 p.m . Wednesday. 1nduding wee tots, eager betwers,
tumor astronauts, and jun1or and senior
high BYF, choir pract1ce 8·30 p m
Wednesda.,. prayer meehng and Bible
study Wednesday , 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Middleport, 5th
and Main , Bob Melton , minister, Mike
Gerlach, tuperintendent . Bible school.
9 30 om .. morn•ng worship , 10 30 o.m :
youth group Sunday 6:30 p.m. evenmg
warsh1p , 7 00, prayer service, 7 00 p m
Wednesday .
MIDDlEPORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE, Rev. J1m Broome, pastor, B•ll
White , Sunday school supt
Sunday
school , 9:30a.m .; mormng worshtp , 10:30
a.m Sunday evangelistic meetmg, 7 00
p.m. Prayer meet1ng, Wednesday , 7 p.m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY, Owtght L. Zov1tz, dtrec·
tor.
HARRISONVIllE PRESBYTERIAN, Rev
Ernest Stricklin, pastor. Sunday church
school , 9 :30a .m., Mrs. Homer Lee, supt ,
morningwonhlp, 10.30.
MIDDLEPORT, Sunday school, 9 .30 a.m ,
Richard Vaughan , supt. Morning worshtp ,
10.30.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
Church. Wonhlpservlce9.30a m Sunday
School 10 30 a .m . Mrs. Sampson Hall
supt.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO . Rev . Bob·
by Porter, pas tor Sunday school, 10 a m ;
Sundoy worship, 11 a .m. : Sundav evemng
service, 7 p m ; Wednesdov Family Trolmg Hour. 7 p.m . Wednesday worshtp ser·
vice, 7 30 p m .
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH , Noor
long Bottom , Edsel Hart, pastor Sunday
school , 10 a.m.; Church, 7:30p.m •• prayer
meeting 7·30 p.m . Thursday
MIDDlEPORT
PENTECOSTAl,
T~ord
Ave . the Rev W1lliom Knittel postor
Thomas Kelly, Sunday SChool Supt. Sun
day school , 10 a .m. Classes for all ages:
eventng service , 7 30, Btble study,
Wednesday , 730 p.m , youth services ,
Froday. 7:30p.m .
MIDDlEPORT FREEWill BAPTIST, Co'"or
As~ and Plum, Rolph lutcher, pastor.
Saturday evening service, 7 30 p m Sun·
day S&lt;haol, I 0 :30a.m .
MEIGS
COOPER A liVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
Richard W Thomas, 01rector
POMEROY ClUSTER
Rev . Ro~rt McGee
Rev. James Corbitt
POMEROY, Sunday S&lt;hool 9 · 15 om.
Worship service 10.30 a.m. Choir rehear·
sal , Wedneldoy, 7 p.m Rev. Robert
McGee, paolor.
ENTERPRISE, Warship 9 a .m. Church
S&lt;hooiiO a.m .
ROCK SPRINGS, Church S&lt;haol 10 am .
Warship 10 a .m . UMYF 6 30 p m

a-. j;

EWU SOliS SOHIO

,t:,::t:.
S.rvtct

~

!IL.acull&amp;
llotch
m .9t2t Mlddloporf
- · .

-"'

F

• .

.

·~

MEIGS TIRE

CENTER, INC.
John F . Futh, Mgr .
J'h . .,,.,..,
Pomeroy

Attend The
Church of
Your Ch oice
·"''hiS'
· - ·
• ,

l~u.'S

faE~ANKU~
Mlddloporf, Ohio

Bnlwn's fu:e &amp;
Equipment

I
1

'

K&amp;C JEWELERS·

1:!

_
_

mE. Moln Stroot
m .l&gt;t5,_Pom..._ony
_ _

of YoUJ' Choice
This Sunday.

S,t,LE$ •nd SIIRY tC&amp;
Rull•nd. C)hlo 45775
J wm " 8111" arown. Owner
p~el"•l 10·1177

.-

lb
I

.-

FRENCH'S
SUNOCO
SERVICE
CENTERS

, P. _J._PAULEY,
AGEfiT

'• fbtloftwide Ins. Co.
ofColum-.,., 0 .
lf4W.Moln
tt2-1311 Pomeroy

212 W. Mlln

The Church

VIRGIL B.
' TEAFORD SR.

of Your Choice

[B

.

"Dtis S~day.

PIZZA SHACK
Eat In or

Carry Out

of Your Choice

t26 E. Moln

This Sunday.

'*"eray

·- ---·

DICK TRACY
sarvtce , 7 p.m., Youth meeting and B1ble
study Wednesday , 7 p .m.
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason , m . .t at
Un1ted Steel Workers Union Hall, Ra1lroad
Street, Maaon . Pastor . Rev Joy Mitchell .
Morning warship 9.45 am ., Sunday
School 10.30 a m. Prayer mNtlng
Wednesday . 7 .30p.m .
FOREST RUN IAPTIST Rev Nyle
Bord en j pastor. Cornelius Bunch ,
supermtendent. Sunday school. 9 30 a .m.;
second and fourth Sundays worship ser·
vtceot2 30p m .
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth ond
Main St . Midi:lleport. Rev. Calvin Minnis,
pastor. Mrs. Elv1n Bumgardner, supt. Sun·
day school 9 30 a.m .; worship service,
10:45o.m .
NORTH BETHEL United Melhodls t
Church, Rev. Charles Domtgan , pastor
Sunday School. 9.30 o .m .; Worship Service , 10:45 a .m .: Sunday Bible Study , 7.00
p m .. Wednesday prayer meeting, 7.30
p .m .
BURliNGHAM SOUTHERN
BAPliST
CHURCH, Route 1, Shade. Pastor Don
Black. Alflllated with Southern Boptlst
Convention Sunday school, I 30 p.m .,
Sunday worsh1p, 2.30 p.m Thursday
evening Bible study 7 p.m
PENTECOSTAL
ASSEM8l Y. Racine
Route 124 W•lllam Hoback. pastor. Sun·
day school, 10 a.m .; Sunoav evening ser·
vtce , 6 30 p .m . Wednesday een1ng ter·
VICe, 7.
1
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Rev. Freeland
Norrts, pastor. Don Cheadle, Supt. Sun·
day School. 9 30 a .m . Mcrmng Worshtp ,
10•30 a.m Prover Service, alternate Sun·
days.
NEASE SETTlEMENT FREE Will BAPTIST, •
Donald R Korr. Sr. , pastor , Friday even
mg serv1ce, 7 30 p m : Sunday school, 10
om

'TF'FTT--.::l=A"'1

eLAZI!!&gt;, YOU'RE R IGHT'!

AND THAT SURP GU'-1
I, tJO T'OY!

I THit.IK

HE~

I GATHEII: YOU'RE

GE~TU~I~G TO

U~

!7UPF'09ED TO SET'
FIRE TO THE 0 IL !

TO COM'f:

OU TS IDE!

,

I •;Ef ~1 Tl) rE !;UNNINu THAT

ENTIRE ~1 ULTI-NHTION AL Cc1 Mil1H~ ,
AHr 1 SEEM fO ~E rtUNNINl, (T
'HELL'·· I'll! I r'ONT REALLY HNOI'i
~HAl

.• ( COULD MAKE AMISffiKE
~I THOUT EVEN KNO!!ING
IT.ANr PUT ALL liiOSE !•').,..,PEOPLE OU Tt1F YIORK '

THE~E'S

I'M

Spending a week recenUy with
Mrs. Neva King was her sister, Mrs.
MARK VSTORE
Nora Cwnmins and son, James of
Reynoldsburg. Other guests were
Middlepot1
Monda !II
Rev. and Mrs. Clyde Hinton, ColumMIU.
441LOcUst
f Th.t11alomGru
Mlllwn
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Leo King, Coum5 1-8
C.biiiOIMollng
Middle pori
Labor Day
the traditional day hOnoring the labof' force of the
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Victor
TIU.ItbJ!II
syroc ... ~·Jm
'nation tt's a legal hOliday ~ worlllng poople across the country
IJ TINIHI.o.W.ru
Genhiemer.
like • one-day break on the firsl Monday In September
R 7 J7
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs
Wort has long baenviewed as the cu1e lormosl of the troubles of
-;-HEINER'S
Wll!'diU'6d#~
THE DAILY
hwoltd Honest andptOduettve work whiCh ooelnlel'lds to get done
Htbr-11!'Jolm A. Dean and Mr. and Mrs. Jolu
BAKERY
Is a teal blel86ng lor humans It keeps us mo111ng fo.ward and mak1ng
ti 9-19
SENTINEL
W. Dean, James and Jeremy were:
our days on this earth worth....nllo
Thun.Wr
Miss
Juanita Terrell, Mr. and Mrs.
l Pdrr~the paribteol the talents st»/s,God expecls us to do someMiddlepori1 J JJ
thing wllti our abltilies Draw trash inspiration lor your ltfe and work in
Garold
Gilkey of Athens, Mr. Walter
Pomeroy,O.
ycur house of worship th1s week
FnJ.,
Terrell,
Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs.
I PrterHobart Smalley of Mustago, Okla.
3 I 15
I
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King and
SWisHER _J LOHSE
David had as visitors of the weekend
PHARMACY
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Felts rl
Wo Fill Doctors'
Bucyrus, Mr. and Mrs. Obi Comer
PrescripfiDIII
m .2f55
and Debbie of Illinois, and Miss
PDmii"'y
Grace King of Mansfield.
Recent visitor of Mrs. Ruby Bur·
AttPnd The · Attend
nside was Thomas Burnside.
Church.
"flame'
$alii
Attend The Church
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Carl visited
Church of
lliiiiiiiiCe
,.~··
I uf
'
y
0~
Choice
her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
..,.
of Your t:hoice
~ SeMcei
·
Burnett
and attended the family
llloice
, This Sunday
e. Moln
214 E• .Uin
reunion
near
Colwnbus. Staying for
Tpie.Sunday
_m,JOJe
.m.mo
. . ofomoroy
This
a longer visit with their grafld..
parents were BreU, Randall, Danny
FLATWOODS. Church Sc~ool 10 a.m
communton , 10 30 am , Sunday worsh1p
~ Melodl carl.
7 30 p m
~ Pearl St. , Middleport. Rev O 'Dell
serv1ce, 7 p.m. Wednesday evenmg
Wontllp 11 o .m .
DEXTER CHURCH OF- C~.RIST , Charles- Manley. pastor Arthur Barr , Sunday
Miss Helen King has returned
MIDDlEPORT ClUSTER
prayer meetmg and Btble study, 7 p m
Russell , Sr. m1n1ster Rtck Macomber
school superintendent. Sunday school, home to spend some time with her
HEATH, Church School 9 30 am. Wor ST JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH, Pone
sup! Sunday school 9 30 o m , worsh1p 9 30 a m , evening worship 7 30 p.m
ship 10.30 a.m. UMYF 6 p m . Robert Grove The Rev . W1lltcm M1ddlesworth
serv1ce 10 30 am Btble Study , Tuesday
Prayer and praise service, Wednesday, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King
Robinson, Pastor
Pastor. Church serv1ces 9 30 a m Sunday
after spending the swmner at Mt.
7~pm
730pm .
RUTlAND, Churc~ School 9 30 o .m . S&lt;hool10 30 o m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
RUTlAND APOSTOliC CHURCH • OF Hope Bible Camp this summer,
Wonhip 10·30a m Wilbur Hilt Pastor
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Jerry
CHRIST OF lATTER DAY SAINTS Portland JESUS CHRIST . Elder Jame1 Moiler Boble
SALEM CENTER , Worship 9 a .m. Church Ptngley pastor Sunday school, 9 30 o m .
Ract ne Road W•ll•om Roush, pastor
study , Wednesday, 7 30 p.m , Sunday helping with Bible schools and

..

'. . . •.- biiter-BroPn
~:

The ;

SYRACUSE ClUSTER
Rev Stanley Mernfied . Mm1ster
FOREST RUN: Worshp 9 a m. Church
Sc:hooiiO a .m.
MINERSVIllE , Church School 9 o m .
Worship 10 a .m.
ASIURY. Church S&lt;haol9.:;o o.m. Wor ship 11 o .m . Bible Study 7 30 p m Thurs·
day UMW fill Tuesday
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev David Hams
Rev. Mark Flynn
R•v. Florence Sm•th
Hilton Wolfe
BETHANY, (Dorcas) , Worshop 9 00 a m .
Church SchoollO OOo.m.
CARMEL, Chruch S&lt;hool 9 ·30 a m. Wor
s~ip 10.30 a .m. 2nd and 4th Sundays
APPl.E GROVE, Sunday S&lt;hool9 30 o m .
Worship 1 30 p .m . 1st and 3rd Sundays
Prayer meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m.
Fellowship supper ftnt Saturday 6 p m.
UMW 2nd Tuesday 7·30 p .m .
EAST LET ART , Chruch S&lt;~aol 9 o m .
Wonhip service 10 a m Prayer meet1ng
7:30p.m. Wednesday UMW ~econd Tuesday7 30p.m
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday schoaiiO
am , worship, 11 am . Chotr practiCe ,
Thursday , 8 p m
LETART FALLS- Worship serv1ce 9 a m
Church S&lt;hool10o.m.
MORNING STAR , Worship 9 30 am .
Church S&lt;haol 10 30 o .m.
MORSE CHAPEL , Church School 9 ·30
a.m. Worship 11 am.
PORTLAND, Church Sc~ool 6 ·30 p m .
Evening Worship , 7:30 p.m. lfouth
Meeting, Tuesday evening
SUTTON , Church S&lt;hool 9:30 om . Wor
ship Island 3rd Sundays 10 30 o m
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Richard W Thomas
Duane Sydenstricker, Sr.
John W Douglas
Charles Dom1gan
JOPPA, Worship 9 00 a.m Church
S&lt;hool10 00 a .m .
CHESTER. Worship 9 a.m.
Church
School 10 a.m . Choir Rehearsal 7 p m ,
Thursdays. Bible Study . Thursdays .
7:30p.m
LONG BOTTOM . Sunday School at 9 30
a m. Evening Worshtp at 7:30 p.m. Thurs
day Bible Study, 7.30p.m.
REEDSVIllE: Sunday School 9 30 o m
Morning Worship 10:30 o.m Evening Wor·
shp 7 30 p m . Bible Study Wednesdays ot
7:30p.m .
ALFRED. Sunday School at 9 45 a m
Morning Worship at 11 a.m Youth. 6 30
p m ' Sundays Wednesday N 1ght Prayer
Meeting, 7!30 p.m.
ST PAUl, (Tuppers Plains) Sunday
School 9.00 o .m Morning Worship at
10:00 a .m Bible Study , 7·30 p m Tuesday
, SOUTH BETHEl (Sliver Ridge) : Sunday
School 9·00 a .m Morning Woship 10:00
a .m. Wednesday Bible Study, 7:30p.m .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Oliver
Swain, Superintendent. Sunday s . l':c nl
9·30 ewery week
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, Rev . Kelt~
Eblin, pastor Sunday School 9 :,0 a.m ,
leonard Gtlmore, first elder: evemng ser
wice , 7 30 p.m
Wednesday prayer
meeting, 7·30 p.m.
.
IEARWAllOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Ouelne Warden , m•mster. Bible
class. 9 30 a .m ., mornmg worshtp , 10 30
a.m. : evening worship , 6 lO p m .
Wednesday Bible study. 6 30 p m
, NEW
STIVERSVIUE
COMMUNITY
Church, Sunday School utr:vlce, 9 415 a m .
Worship service, 10:30, EvangeliStic Ser
Prayer
vice, 7;30 p .m . Wednesday
m. .ung. 7:30.
1
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST . Pomeroy- '
Harrisonville~ ld.: RoWrt Purtell , pastor;
Bill McElroy. Sundoy achool supt Sunday
school. 9·30 a.m. : mormng ~orship end

morn1ng worship, 10 30 a m Wednesday
evenmg serv•ce, 7·30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev Earl Shuler
pastor Sunday school 9 30 o .m ; Church
service , 7 p m . , youth meehng
6
p.m. Tuesday Bible Study , 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev John A. Coffman, pastor . Martha
Wolfe . Chairman of the Boord of Chr~st1an
ltfe Sunday School. 9 30 a.m , morn1ng
worship , 10 30. Sunday eventng worsh1p
7·30 p.m Prayer meet tng , Wednesday ,
730pm
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST , Don l Walker ,
Pastor Robert Smtih Sunday school
supt , Sunday school , 9.30 o m mornmg
worship , 10 40 om. Sunday evemng worship, 7 .30, Wednesday eventng 81ble
study 7 30
DANVIllE WESLEYAN , Rev
R D
Brown pastor Sunday School 9 30 o m
morn1ng worsh1p 10.45, youth serv1ce,
6 45 p .m. evemng worsh1p, 7 30 p.m .
prayer and pro1se Wednesday , 7 30 p m
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST Re• . Marvon
Morlon , pastor Steve L1ttle Sunday school
supt Sunday school 10 am . mormng
worsh1p , 11 a m . Sunday even1ng wor
shtp. 7 .30 Prayer meehng and B1ble
study, Thursday, 7 30 p m , youth servtce ,
6 p.m . Sunday
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD, Re v R. E
Robinson poster . Sunday school 9 30
a .m .; worsh1p service , 11 a m e11enmg
servtce, 7 00 youth serv1ce Wednesday
7 OOp.m
lANGSVIllE CHRISTIAN CHURCH .
Robert Musser. pastor Sunday school
9 30 a .m ., Roy S1gman , supt , mornmg
worsh1p 10 30 Sunday even tng serv1ce
7.30, mtd week servt ce , Wednesday . 7
pm
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev. James 8 K1ttle . pastor. Norman
Presley , Sunday School Supenntendent
Sunday school 9 ·30 a m mornmg wa r.
ship 10 45 a.m
evongel1stic service, 7
p m Prayer and Praise Wednesday 7
p.m ., youth meeting, 7 p.m. Mens prayer
meetmg, Saturday 7 p.m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST ,
Elden R Blake, pastor. Sunday School 10
a.m ., Robert Reed , supt , Mornmg ser
Sunday ntght serv1ces
mon. 11 a m
Chn stl an Endeavor 7 30 p m . , Song ser
v1ce, 8 p m , Preaching 8 30 p m
M1dweek Prayer meetmg Wednesday , 7
p m , Alvin Reed, loy leader
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, located at
Rutland on New l 1mo Rood , next to Forest
Acre Pork , Rev . Ray Rouse , pastor, Robert
Musser , Sunday School sup! Sunday
school, 10·30 am ; worsh1p 7 30 p m .B1
ble Study. Wednesday 7 30 p.m . Satur·
day ntght prayer serv1ce , 7.30 p m
HEMlOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN. Roger
Watson , pastor, Mtldred Z1egler , Sunday
school supt. Mornmg worshtp, 9 30 a .m .
Sundayschool , 10·30 o m evemng ser·
vice 7.30.
MT. UNION BAPTIST , Joe Sayre , Sunday
School Supermtenent Sunday school. 9,45
am , evemng worship. 7 30 p m Praye r
meet1ng , 7 30 p m . Wednesday.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST,
VIncent Waters , pastor, Howard Blo~rCol ·
well . supenntendent Sunday School 9 30
am.; mormng church , 10.30 o .m., Sunday
evening service 1 30 , Wednesday Bible
Study, 7 30 p m .
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE.
Rev . Herbert Grate , pastor Fronk R1ffl e,
supt Sunday School 9 30 a m Wor ship
serv1ce. 1l a .m and 7 30 p m Prayer
meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m
lAUREl CliFF
FREE METHODI ST
CHURCH Rev ~ Floyd F Shook pastor
Lloyd Wrtght O.rectar of Chnsttan Edvco
lion Sunday School 9 30 a !TI Mornmg
Worshtp , 10 30 a. m , Choir Proct1ce, Sun
day . 6 30 p m . Evening Worship 7 30
p m . Wednesday Praye r ond 81bl a Study

IL -.--i L,.I

WE ""-"KE IT rnROUGH
THIS "'RDEAL!' Y't&lt;EEP
lALI&lt;IN' ABOI:JT?

•
GASO I1 NE ALLEY

Ma4be a camp1ng
tnp is what
she needs!

Would ljOIJI like to qo
on a camp1nq tnp,
Gretchen?

. -...__

,.;,.,t

~

YoUr

S&lt;~ool9 45 a.m.

KiiialbuiJ

OriE LESS

HEY, EEHANEE! WAAT

,., ,

-

QUIET, SIINDY!
YOU'll BOTHE~
TH' NEIGHBORS.'

Kingsbury
News Notes

Phyll1s Stobart , Sunday School Supt Sun·
day School 9:30a.m : Morn1ng worshtp ,
10 30 a m Sunday evenmg serv1ce 7 p m
Wednesday evenmg prayer servtces , 7 30
p .m
BETIILEHEM BAPTIST , Rev. Earl Shuler,
pastor Wonhtp servtce, 9.30 a.m . Sunday
school, 10 30 a m Bible Study and prayer
serv1ce Thursday 7.30 p.m.
CARlETON CHURCH , Kingsbury Road
Gary Kmg . pastor Sunday school. 9 30
a m , Rolph Carl , supermtendent, evemng
worsh1p , 7 30 p m Prayer meehng ,
Wednesday , 7 30p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN .
Tom
R1choson, pastor 1 Wallace Damewood ,
Sunday School Supenntendent. Worsh 1p
serv1ce ot 9 om Bible School10 am .
HYSEll RUN HOLINESS CHURCH. Thurs·
day evenmg services 7 30, Ra\1. Cart, Sun·
day mo rmng serv1ces 9.30 and eventng
services 7 30 p m , Rev Durham
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob locofed on County Rood 31 R&amp;v.
Lawrence Gluesencamp pastor, Rev.
Roge r Wdltord , oss1stont poster
Preachmg servtces Sunday 7 30 p.m ,
prayer meetmg Wednesday , 7 30 p.m ,
Gary Grtfftth, leoder Youth groups, Sun·
day evemg 6 30 p m wtth Roger and
Violet Willford as leaders . Commun 1on
serv•ces f irst Su nday each month
WHITES CHAPEl , Cool voila RD . Rev. Roy
Deeter , pastor. Sunday school9·30 am ,
worsh1p ser v1ce, lO 30 a .m . 81ble study
and prayer serv1ce , Wednesday. 7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Brad
Henderson , pastor. Herb Elliott, Sunday
school supt. Sunday school, 9.30 o m ;
mornmg worship and comunton, 10 30
a m
RUJLANO BIBlE METHODIST CHURCH
Amos T1 lhs, pastor , Donny T1U1s , Sunday
Sc hool Supt Sunday School 9·30 0 m ,
fo llowed by morn1ng worsh1p. Sunday
evenmg serv1ce
7 00 p m
Prayer
meettng Wedne sday, 7 OOp m .
RUTL~ND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
Rev lloyd 0 Gnmm, Jr , pastor Sunday
school 9 30 a m .. worship service, 10 30
a m Broadcast l1ve over WMPO, young
people's servtce. 7 p.m Evangeltstic service, 7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce, 7·30
p m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Corner of Se cond and Anderson , Mason. Pastor Fronk
Lowther Sunday school, 9 ..45 a. i-n ; wor·
sh op se r voco, 11 a.m ond 7 30 p.m Week ly B1ble Study Wednesday , 7:30p.m
MASON CHURCH O F CHRIST. Millar St..
Mason , W Va Aurlce Mlck , pastor. Sun day Btble Study 10om., Worship 11 a .m .
and 1 p m Bible Study Wednesday 7 p.m. ,
Vocal muSIC
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOO , Dudding
Lone Mason , W Vo . Rev . Ronn1e B. Rose.
Pastor Sunday School9 45 o.m , Mornmg
Worsh1p 11 a .m . Evenin~ Service 7,30 '
p m Wednesday Women s Mtmstrles 9
a .m (meehng and prayer . Prayer and Bi·
ble Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev WtUiam
Campbell pastor. Sunday School 9 30
o m .. James Hughes supt evenln'g ser·
v1ce, 7·30 p.m Wednesday evening
proyer meetong . 7 30 p. m Youth prayer
servi ce each Tuesday.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, letart , W.
Vo , Rt 1, Mar k lrwtn , pastor . Worship
serv1cos', 9 30 a m . Sunday school, 11
a m . evening worsh1p , 7 30 p.m . Tuesday
,co ttag e pray er meet 1ng end B1ble stuJJy, ,
.9 30 o ~ Worsh1p serv1ce, Wednesday,
7 30 p m
•
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now located
on Pomeroy Pik e, County Road 25, near
Flatwood s Rev Blackwood, pastor Serv1ces on Sunday at 10 30 am . and 7.30
p m w1th Sunday school , 9 30 o. m 81ble
study , Wedn esday 7 JO p.m
INDEPENDENT HOliNESS CHURCH , INC.

School. IOa.m Sundaynlghtservice, 7 30 camp.
p m.
Sunday guest of Mr. and Mrs.
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS Homer
Bailey were Mr. and Mrs.
Harrtsonvllle Road ; Dewey K1ng , pastor;
Ed1son Weaver. ou•stont, Henry Ebltn, Roger Young, Yvette and Wesley.
Jr . , Sunday school 1upt. Sunday school,
Recent guests of Mrs. Hazel Ar·
9 30 a m , morning worahtp 11 om. Sun· nold were Mr. and Mrs. Lester Arday evening service, 7 30, prayer
nold, Bobby and Billy, Colwnbus.
meet1ng, Thursday, 7 30 p.m .
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD They all attended the Arnold reunion
Not Pentecostal , Rev . George Otler. held at the park on Route 33.
pastor Worship service Sunday , 9:45
Mr. and Mrs. Olen Harrison, Mr.
am. ; Sunday school , 11 o.m ., worship
service, 7·30 p m Thursday prayer and Mrs. Dale Harrison, Jodi and
meeting, 7 30 p ,m.
Scott, have returned home after
MT. HERMON United Brethren tn Chrisl
Church. Rev. Robert Sanders, po1tor. Don spending their vacation at Myrtle
W1ll . loy leader Locot&amp;d m Texas Com- Beach, Va. Joining them for a few
munoty ott CR 82 . Sunday school, 9 30 days on their way home from .
om , Morn1ng wonhip •ervice, 10 45
a.m .: even1ng preaching service second Florida 'Were Mr. and Mrs. Phil
and fourth Sundays , 7 30 p m Chri1t10n Harrison.
Er.deavor , first and thord Sundays , 7 30
p m Wednesday prayer meeting and 81·
ble study, 7:30p.m.
JEHOVAH 'S WITNESSES 1 m1le eost of
Rutland, junction of Route 12-4 and Noble
Summit Road (T- 17•) Sunday Bible leeture , 9 30 o.m ; Watchtower study, 10 30
am., Tuesday, Bible study. 7 and 8 15
p m .; Thursday, theocrat ic school, 7 30
Attendance at all
the
p m .• service meeting, 8 30 p m
RUTlAND FREEWILl BAPTIST Church Free Methodist Church Sunday,
Churck McP~•rson . pastor, Guy Priddy. ' Aug. 24 was 106. Special music was
superlnten ... •nt. Sunday .chool. 10 a .m .,
by the trio, Bob and Patty Barton
Sundar evemng and Wedne1day 1ervices,
and Pastor Shook.
7·30 p m .
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy , located
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Whitaker and.
on the 0 . J. White Rood oH highway 160.
llaby
son, Newark, visited over the
Sunday School 10 om Superintendent
weekend
with Pastor and Mrs. Floyd
John Loveday. Fint Wednesday n•ght of
ShOOk.
month CPMA services second Wodnes·
day WMB meettng , th~rd through ftfth
Saturday, Sept. 13 annual Sunday
youth service. George Croyle, pastor
picnic will be held at Royal Oak
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570Gront St. ,
Park.
Middleport. Rev . Don Bloke, pastor Sun·
dov school, 9 30 a .m., morning worship, .
Sunday mol'lllns, Sept. 21, Supt:
10.30 a .m • evening worship 7 p .m •
Wednesday evening Bible study and Ray Altman will be guest speaker. ·
prayer meeting, 1 p m . Affiliated with ,
Mrs. Virgll Rose, lonnerly a local
Southern Boptlst Convent1on.
t resident and has Uved In Akron for
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST- '
years, called on old friends here.
Eugene Underwood, pastor; HOrfY Hen· ,
recently.
,
dricks, superintendent . Sunday school,
9·30 om; morning worshtp , 10:30 a .m .,
Mrs. Francis Cline, Cocoa, Fla.;
evening worship, 7 p .m. Wednesday B1ble
·visited over the wekend with Mr.
swdy, 7 p m
JUBilEE CHRISTIAN CENTER - George's and Mrs. Roy Howell and Mrs. EmCreek Rood Rev . C J Lemley , pallor;
ma Fox.
John Fellure, superintendent. Church
Mr. and Mrs. Faye Cournbnan
school, 9·30 a.m ; morning worship, !
Greenfield,
spent the weekend
10:30; eventng service , 7 p.m. Youth
meehng Sunday, 6 p.m. Bible studv 10 . Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell.
depth , w•dnesdoy, 1 p.m. Clatses for oil
Mrs. Lenny Lyons and
ages . Nursery provided for worship ser1 spent a day with Mrs.
Fox.
v1ce.
ST. PAUL LUTHI!RAN CHURCH, Corner~
Pastor Floyd Shook was chaplain:
of Sycamore and Second Sfs., Pomeroy. , at the Veterans Memorial Hospital
The Rev . William Middlesworth, Pastor.
the past week.
Sunday School at 9
a .m. and Church
Service&amp; 11 a m.
A family gatherlnc was held Aug.
SACRED HEART, Rev, Father Paul D.
17 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Welton , pottor. Phone 992·2825 Saturday
birtbdays li
eventng Moll, 7:30; Sunday Mass, 8 and Alkire, Columbus.
10 o1m .. Confession Saturday 7-7:30 Mrs. Alldre and son Kevin, Mrs.
p.m.
James Ferguson and Mr. Cedric
VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N . 2nd St.
Parker, San Antonio, Texas, were
Mtddleport. James E. KMtee, pa1tor,
celebtated.
Also present were Mrs.
Sunday morning worship, 10 a .m ., even·
ing service, 7; Wednesday evening wor· Bertlui Parker, Miss Cleo Parker
ship, 1 p.m .. Visitation, Thursdo~ . 6 30 Mrs. Jerry Ferguson, Colwnbus:
p m.
·
TRINITY Christian Atiembly, Coolville 1 Mr. and Mrs. Herman Kaspa;,
Gilbert Spencer, pastor. Sunday Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Mike Carter
school, 9.30 a .m .; morning worahlp, 11 . and Mlu Lori P&lt;meroy, Colwnbus·
a.m. Sunday ev..,ing service, 7.30 p .m . ,
midweek prayer service Wednesday , 7 .30 and Mrs. Edna Howell, Columbus. '
p.m.
i Mr. and Mrs. Cedric Park~', sons,
MOUNT Olive Community Chu.rch, Ertc and David, San Antonio, spent a
lawrence Buth, pallor: Mo• ~lmer, Sr.
Superintendent. Sunday School and morn· week with Mr. Parker's mother
'
lng worship, 9 ·30 a .m . Sunday evening Mrs. Bertha Parker.

&amp;0 FAA. SO !BOOD NEffilEI&lt;
WINNIE NOR HER SECRETARY
RECOONIZED ME IN MY
NEW DIS6U 15EJ

AUO. 20. 111110
I!VENINQ

e·oo iJl e CIJIICIJiiQJIUldl NEWS

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

I 30

services -at

8 .18

7,00

7,30

with

childrerl
Emma

Ill (J) &lt;Jm WKRP IN CINCINNATl

Evening television listings

,
7:18

8'00

•s

The

CD STUFF
C1J CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
CIJ ABC NEWS
(J) (jJ} ZOOII
CIJ . Cl) NBC NEWS
CD MUSIC
C1J BOB NEWHART SHOW
(J)
CAROL BUANEn AND
F_ft:IENOS
. (J)&lt;Jm CBS NEWS
(J) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(jJ} SLIM CUISINE
ABC NEWS
(I) NEWS UPOATE
CIJ e CROSS WITS
CD THE STORY
C1) ALLINTH!FAMILY
())(Ill. FACE THE MUSIC
Cl) LUCY SHOW
IJ(J) TICTAC DOUGH
Cll iiACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
&lt;Jm NI!WS
(jJ} OICK CAVETT SHOW
CIJ . PRICE IS RIGHT
CD THElESSON
[J) SKY SPORTS SPECTACULAR
H1gh flying enterlamment aa the
sky It turned Into a giant &amp;porta
•rena during thla novel and taacln
atlnu a~r ahow Almost I t ,600 air
craft Irom 50 dllterent countries will
be on hand tor !he Oahkoah A1r
Show, thelargett aporta·avlatlon
avant in the ~ortd
C1J SANFORD AND SON
(]) SHA NA NA Gueat Lola
Fa lana
Cl) (Ill •
POP GO!S TH!
COUNTRY
(1) JOKER'S WILD
DICK CAVETT SHOW
FAIIILYFEUD
CIJ) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
(I) HEW&amp; UPDATE
CIJeCll HERE'8BOOIIER
CD IN TOUCH
(I) MOYIE ·(IIIIJSICAL) ••••
"Cab~ret" 1872
CD NIGHT OALL!RY
(J) THE NEIL SEDAKA TOUCH
Andy Gibb, the Cal)taln and Tenllle
and D•r• Sadaka join Neil In per·
tormlnQ.!Ome ot hla greatest !"Nil
D CJlMl THE INCR!DIBI.EHULJ&lt;
The audience thinks It •• pert ot the
atl l when the Hulk ruahea on tlage
to .. va a rock at•r'a life (Repeat
6Qmlna)
(J) (jJ} WA-OTON WE!K IN
REVIEW
Cfl1e BENSON Olaguited ae the
gueat ol honor. Benton at1enda a
levllh party. than dhacoVera one ol
tna gue111 Ia an ataauln

tm•

1

(1'!·~··1) .

8:30 lV • (I) NFL PRE·SEABON
FOOTBALL GAME
Saettle
s .. h.wka VII New England
Patriots
[)) BAIIIALL Atlanta Braves VI
Sf Louis Cardinal•
(J) Ill) WALL tTREET WEEK
' Making Economic Po li e~· Host
LOU II Rukheyser

(Ill . OOODTIIIE GIRLS Bolly
IUriiB a deaf ear toherfrlenda warnIng• when a theatrica l sgent
catches her act at the USO and
wants a large fee to launch her aa a
alnglng atar
8:88 ()) NIEWS UPDATE
8 :00 CD 700 CLUB
(J) (Ill. FRIDAY NIOHTIIOVIE
The Bermuda Depth a' 1976Stara
Julie W9.2daon , Burllvea
Ill (J) tlQJ THE DUKES OF HAZ·
ZARD A. Texas Aangerenllata trle
Dukea "helptotrackdownadanger
oua outlawhldlngmtheswamp (60
mlna)
Cl) MOVIIE -(DRAMA} ••• ''Crrthe
BelOved Country" 18S2
(H) OLDFRIENDS, NEWFRIENDS
'Henry John Heinz Ill' CCioeed
Caplloned)
8.30 (H) PAVAAOnt AT JUILLIARD
Tenor Luciano Pavaronl coaches
thr.. atuctenta Aonit Kallakv Sln~J·
lng Una VocePocofa', ZahaveGal
singing 'Vel Lalaae Couler Mea·
larmea', and Robart Brlgga Ringing
the aria 'Vecc hla Zlmarra tram U
Boheme
tO:OO [J) GREATEST SCANDALS OF
THE CENTURY The greateat ecan·
data of tha century i re revealed In
th is do cumentary · ta lea of au,
aples and suicide Rare tUm footage, e!lll photograph• and cour·
troomtaetlmonyaMhelplorecreata
thetlmea ol these uuty acandaloua
end..!P.l£1 allan
O llJU DALLASAaanewa11111
tent dlatriclattorna~ . CilftBarnea
Jumps at thacllancatoworkon tile
mvestlgatlon or !he body found at
Southtork (Repeat, 60 m1na )
Ill) NEWS
10'28 CD NEWS UPDATE
10:30 CD RICHARD HOGUE
(ID OVI!:R I!:ASV Gueat Ellen May
Goldberg columnist Hoe\ Hugh
Down a. (Cloud Captioned}
t0 '58 CD NEWS UPDATE
t1.00 CIJ . (J) Cll l l CD &lt;1m IHJID
N!WS
CD DAN GRIFFIN
(])MOYIE-(COMEDY)•• ~ "Meln
Evenl"1878
CD TIS EVENING NEWS
CIJ DAVI! ALLEN AT LARGE
Ill) DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:28 CD N!WSUPOATE
11' 30 CIJ e Cll THETONIOHTSHOW
CD ROI_SBAOLEYSHOW
(()(Ill . FRIDAYS
II CIJ U.S OPEN TENNIS UP..
DATEHighllgtltaoltheday'aactlon
ol the U S Open Tennis
Champlonahtpt
([) ABC CAPnONED NEWS
{II)MOVIE 'CarnlvaiOICrima• t96o4

JeanPierre Aumont, Allx Talton 2)
'Tile Witch' t970
t2:00 CD_ PRE-SEASON FOOTBALL
Allanta Falcona va Ballimore
CoUa
G (J) CBS LATE MOVIE 'THE
AVENGERS FiftyThoueandPound
Brealdut' A man with a stomach
full ol dtamondaia onty a ptlwn in a
largar scham elnvol\lmg a wealthy
lnduatrlallat. (Repeat) ' CRIME
KNOWS NO AGE ' 1973 Stare Mit·

'
chell Ryan Gary Croab)'

Cfl DA YIO SUSSKIND SHOW
12 •o ({) EMERGENCY
W ID $1.9SBEAUTYSHOW
t .00 (I) 8 W
THE MIDNIGHT
SPI!CIAL
(]) INSIGHT
@ IIOVIE -(SUSPENSE) "I&gt;
"Breaking Point" 1977
t . tO IHJ CD NEWS
1·30 (}) JIMMY SWAGGART
2·00 ®l l BELIEVE

\

B:30
000

2,30 Cll 8 NEWS
(]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(!) MOVIIE •(HORROR) •• e,s
" Ph•nt•~" 187g
3•00 (I)
ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBALL REPLAY
4'00 CD 700 CLUB
5.30 CD JUST PASSINO THRU
()) RAT PATROl

EVENING
800

iliD ®J NEWS

(!) MOVIE · (COMEDY I ... %

" Foul Pt1y" 1078
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
Cll GOD HAS THE ANSWER
D CIJ CONCERN
(J) CATCH33
{jj) EXTENSIONS
8 :30 CIJ . Cll NBC NEWS
())(Ill . NEWS
D C1J MUPPETS SHOW
(J) OLD FRIENDS,NEWFRIENDS
'Henry John Hbinz Ill (Closed
Capliooed }
~ CBS NEWS
(jJ} VICTORY GARDEN
7 :00
DANCE FEVER
CD BLACKWOOD BROTHERS
(I) • (I) HE! HAW Guaals
Barbara Mandrell, Sonny Jamea,
Jethro Burna, Charhe McCoy and
Naahvllle Edition (Repeat, 60
mine)
(!) LA WAI!:NCf WfLK SHOW
(Il EVENINQATPOPS PeteFountaln ' joint Harry Ellis Olckaon and
the Boston Popa Orchestra tor an
evenmg ol 0 1JIIeland aaunda (80
mlna)
&lt;Jm BUOSBUNNY
{jj) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
'Dominic The Brotherhood Barty
wanla the mlaalng wat ch to prove
that ' Lu c~· 111 Lord StAinton'aloat
granddaughter
CCio118d
Caf):tioned)
F!ELINGB
7,30 (I) . IN BIDE LOOK
CD THELUNDSTROIIS
(jJ} (l_ROUCHO
(Ill •
ltOO,OOO NAME THAT
TUNE
S'OO CIJ e CIJ BUCKROOERSINTHE
251h C!NTURY
CD 700CLUB
(]) MOVIE -(DRAMA) ''YI ''Wild
Horse Mink" 1080
CU BASEBALL Attanta Braves va
St Louis Catdlnala
'
(J) (Ill CD THE LOVE BOAT Three
vignettes ' Acc1dental Crui se'
Star a Soupy Sales . JoAnne Worley 'The Song Ia Ended' Stars fl1
cha rd Daw son, Julie t Milia
'Anol.lahka ' Stars Jill Whelan l oretta Sw1t (Repeal 90mlna)

CIJ

C1J .

li}).

,.

•

--BUT TllEY'D BETTER HURRY I'IHILE
STILL SOMEONE TO ELECT.1
EVERY TIME I TURN AROUNO

THERE'S

•

1·30

10·00

Andy Travia llaslmally solved the
tough problem ol fmdmg a re·
pt&amp;cement tor Or Johnny Faver on
the air when Johnny ahowa up In
Cmclnnat• agatn (Repeat}
(J) ALL CREATURES GREAT AND
SMALL "Hair oflheOog'
(fi) MASTERPIIECE THEATRE
' Ltllle America Eptaode IX From
her llrat da~ m Amer1 c a, L1llle Ia
cheered wherever aha goea • unlil
d11aater cloudathe opening other
play In New York (Closed Clip·
t loned) (60 min a}
lli CIJ®l Till CONWAY SHOW
[1) 8 (!) SATURDAY NIGHT AT
THIE MOVIES ' The People Thai
T1me Forgot t 977 Stars Doug
M cC tur e~atrtc k Wayne
Ill (I) lllV NFL PRE -SEASON
FOOTBALLPiltaburgh Steel era 'C8
D•llaa Cowboys
CIJ MOVIE ~MUSICAL.COIIEDY)
""" "UplnArmt"1~
(jJ} LORD MOUNTBATTEN' IIAN
FOR THE CENTURY Aa Viceroy ol
India, Mountbettan assumea the
reapon aibillty ol uniting the country
and aaaialtng In thatranaltlontrom
Brlliah rule to Independence
(Qioaed Captioned) (60 mlna )
(]) THI! L!SSON
CI&gt;MOYIE·(DAAMA)•••• ''Norme
Rae" 1&amp;78
·
(J)(!li CD FANTASYISLANDMr
Roarke and Tattoo pia~ hoet to an
av1d movie tan who wants to
be come a casting director and a
famous newswoman who believe&amp;
aha 's been curJ&amp;d becauae other
expose on tetiUJ.IC cutta (Repeat ,
90mlna)
(]) ROCK CHURCH

(jJ} JAZZ AT THE MAINTENANCE
SHOP De.11.ter Gordon Quartet'
Part Ill
t0:30 CD • Cll GOOD nME HAIIRY
When an old girlfriend divorcee her
gangaterhuaband and rekindle&amp;
her romance with Harry, the
aportawrlterbecom..thecenlerot
an urwutpecl'edcontroveray.
CD TBSEVENING NEWS
11 .00 [I) ~01..\ L!VITT
CJl(!)(!ll. NEWS
CJlREFL£CTIONSOFTHETHIRD
REICH 'The Germen Le"on'
(jJ}
HOCKING
VAI.U!Y
BLUEGRASS
1t.30 CD • Cll SATURDAY NIGHT
UVE
CD RICHARD HOGUE
ffiMOVIE-(WESTERN) ••• "True
Grtl" 1MII
CD
DICK IIAUR1C! AHD
COMPANY
(J) MOVIE~IIYSTERY)' "AClulot
Piece To Kill" 1173
(Ill. ABC NI!WS
1t.45 (Ill
•
MOVIE
-{1I1U
UNANNOUNCED)
12:00 CD HI DOUQ
G(J)IHJ NEWS
t2, t5 • (J) MOVI! ~MYST!RY) "
"L•dr Ice" 1173
12:30 (]) HOLIDAYATMELODYLAND
([) ROCK CONCERT Ounta Tha
Nitty Gritt)' Oirt Band, Linda Ron·
atadt. John Hartford, Steve
Martm
tJm MOVI! -(WESTERN, •• 111!•
COrt WMt" 1810
1:00 C2JeMOVIE-(DRAMA)" .. _
~eeh"1MS

C2J 700 CLUB (SPANISH)

lflflfNl fii)'fl

j'jlTHAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ~
byHenriAtnoldandBobL"

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

I HECKE I

t!i~IM VJtaf
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
5 Detenorate
I Quickly
I Bluster
6 Razor 7 Twitching
11 Guard or scheme 8 Tidy up

12 Ins1rwnent
for Duchin

outdoors
9 Once more
13 Texas
10 small
Gwnan's
opening
L'ilJ!~IB
greeting
14 Auctioned off "'
15 Travellinl! abbr. 18 Crowd; throng Yeaterday's Amwer
11 small amOWlt 19 Vibrant
17 ovme member zv Ritual

21 Cog~te
18 Wmg deslgn
afftrmation 31 Plethora
2t Muruch'snver %1 RomanHelios34 Motif
23 Cross out
%2 Blackbird
3S On the
27 Recipient's
Z4 Dutch
last rung
source
commune
34i Indones1Bn
Z9 Stipulation
Zli Golf gadget
ISland
:10 Hardy
Z6 Do wrong
37 SlroJJar
32 Slue
:13 Exhilarale
3S Desel1 robe
38 Tough wood
39 King (Fr.)
42 Fall lor
45 Martini
mgredient
41 Clergyman's
abade

39 Fume
tO Belgtwn
nver •

n Road,
to Caesar
C3 Holiday
brink

t4

Proh• ~1tion

47 Wasted
away

dWordo£
welcome
DOWN
I Be sore
2 Frostor a......,,-

hr+-+-f---,+-

3 - breve

4 MOWltaiD
pass

SUPEA

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :

I I I

II

TINCID

One letler simply standa

C:.OUI..D 'THEY' I&lt;I!I!P

I I I

'THE. 1-E6S W!l'fW,

INAPHORt
I rJ X)
Answer here.

AXVDLBAAXII
LONGFELLOW

IN WI N"T~MI!!:~
Now arrange the circled letters to
lorm the surpnse answer, as tug·
gested by the above cartoon

KI .X 1 J"[ 1 I I ]"

tor

another. In this aample A 11

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters ,
apo1trophes, the Jeneth and formation of the words are all
hmts Each day the code lelten are dUferent.

CRYPTOQUOTES
RLFX

MG IK

1\SLR

N

MHRHGX,

E LZ
LZT

RSX

KX

ESLZUX

DIH

PNOO

SI VX

RSX

BXZT

(MIWOfllomorraw)

Yesterdays

J"mblos EPOCH SLANT DRUDGE NOBODY
What the entertainer gave when he Wll
asked what he did for a livingA SONG &amp; A DANCE

I Answer

KX

KLT . - NBGLXO

QLZUPNOO

v..tenlay's Cryptoquole: t'HE HARDEST PART OF GIVING

ADVICE TO TEEN·AGERS IS FINDING SOMETHING THEY
DON'T ALREADY KNOW.-SHAUN CASSIDY
tJ ltiD Klflt F••h"H hlldluM. Inc

••

•

•

�9- Thc Datly Senhnel, Mu.ldlepurt· Pumcroy , 0 , Jo ttdd y, 1\ug. :llJ, 1'180

8-TheDallySentlnel,Mlddlepurt·Pilmel~roy,~O;;··;.F'n~·da~y,~A;ull;·;29~,1;;9110;_..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,._ _ _~~-.,.~--------r.----~~~-,

CIRJRCH

NEWS
TRINITY CHURCH , Rev. W H Pemn ,
pastor. Roy Moyer , Sunday Khool supt.
Church School. 9· 15 am. , worshtp sar.
v•c• lO 30 a m Choir rehearsal, Tu.,sdoy .
7:30p.m under direction of Al1ce Neosa
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
Corner Unton ond Mulberry Rev Cl'vda V

Henderson. pastor. Sunday school , 9 30
a .m., Glen McClung aupt . morntng war·
ship. 10.30 a .m.; even•ng serv1ce , 7:30;
m1d -week service, Wednesday , ?lOp m

-

'

GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH - 326 E.
Main St . Pomeroy . The Rev Robert B.
Groves, rector . Summer sch&amp;dule - Sunday services at 10 30 am. Holv Commu·
n1on to be celebrated July 30, Aug . 3,
Aug 17 and Sept. 1. Morn1ng Prayer and
sermon on all other Sundays No Church
School or nursery core provided durtng
summer montht. Coffee hour in the PariSh
Holl•mmedlately following the serv1ce.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST . 212 W .
Main St Nell Proudfoot, pastor, Bible
school, 9·30 o m ; morning worship , 10 30
a.m Youth meettngs , 6.30 p m .; even•ng
worshtp , 7 30 Wednesday ntght prayer
meeftng and Btble study , 7.30 p m .
THE SALVATION ARMY , 115 Butternut
Ave. , Pomeroy . Envoy and Mrs. Ray Win tng. offtcen In charge. Sunday -holiness
meettng, 10 a .m ., Sunday School. 10.30
a m Sunday school leader YPSM , Eloise
Adams, 7:30 p.m. , salvat1on meetmg,
various speaken and music spectals.
Thursdav- 10 a .m. to 2 p.m Ladtes Home
league, all women lnv•ted, 7.30 p m .
prayer meeting and 81ble studv Rev. Noel
Herman, teacher
BURliNGTON
SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
CHAPEl. Roulo 1, Shade- Pastor Bobby
Elkins. Sunday school, 5 p.m ; Sunday
worship, 5 -45 p .m .; Wednesday prayer
servtce, 7!30 p m .
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 200 W Main St , 992-5235 Vocol
musiC. Sunday worship 10 a.m. , B•ble
study 11 o.m : worshtp , 6 p m . Wednes·
day Boble study, 7 p.m.
OlD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH .
Rev .Rolph Smith, pastor Sunday school,
9 30
o.m
Mrs. Worley Francis,
superintendent. Preaching serv1ces ftrtt &amp;
third Sundavs following Sunday School.
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST .
Preaching 9.30 a m .. first and second Sun·
doys of eoch month: third and fourth Sundays each month, worship service at 7.30
p.m. Wednesday evenings Qt 7 30. Prayer
and Bible Study.
SEVENTH·DAV ADVENTIST , Mulberry
He1ghts Rood , Pomeroy. Pastor. Albert
Dlttes: Sabbath School Superintendent,
Rita While. Sabbath S&lt;haol, Saturday
afternoon at 2·00, wtth Worship Serv1ce
lollowlng at 3: 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHSister Harnett Worner , Supt. Sunday
School , 9:30 o m , morning worsh1p, 10.45
a.m .
THE HILAND CHAPEL , George Casto,
postor. Sunday School, 9 30a m ., evening
worship, 7 30 Thursday evening prayer
serv1ce, 7:30p.m .
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Dovod Monn,
m1n1ster, William Watson, Sunday school
supt Sunday sc11ool 9 30 a m .. morning
worsh1p '0:30a.m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. 282 Mulborry
Ave . , Pomeroy, Hershel McClure, Sundar
school superintendent Sunday schoo .
9.30 a.m. , morning worthlp, 10:30, even~ng worship, 7 00 p m. Midweek prayer
service, 7 00 p m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH. De•ter Rd , Rd , langsville Rev A A.
Hughes , Pastor. Sundav School 10 a.m.
Ser\IICes on Tuesdov . Thursday and Sunday , 7:30p.m .
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , Bolloy
Run Rood, Rev . Emmett Rowson, pastor.
Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday school , 10
a.m. Sunday eventnQ serv1ce 7 .30, Btble
teochmg, 7 30 p.m. Ttlursday.
DYESVIllE COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
Roger C Turner, pastor. Sunday school,
9:30 om.; Sunday morntng worsh1p,
10 30! Sundav evening service, 7·30
MIDDlEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. lawrence Manley,
pastor Mrs
Russell Young, Sunday
School Supt. Sundpy S&lt;haol 9 30 a m .
E\lenlng wonh1p, 7::10, Wednesdtly prayer
mee11ng, 7:30p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Rac1ne- Rev. James Satterfield. PQstor.
Morn1ng worship, 9';45 a.m., Sunday
school , 10.-45 a .m .. evening worship, 7.
Tuesday , 7:30 p . m, ladies prayer
meeting, Wednesday , 7:30pm . YPE.
MIDDlEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Corner
Shc.th and Palmer, the Rev. Mark McClung,
Sunday school, 9 15om. , Randy Hayes,
Don
Sunday School. auper~ntendent
Riggs asst. supt Morning Worship, 10•15
a.m. Youth meeting, 7·30 p.m . Wednesday. 1nduding wee tots, eager betwers,
tumor astronauts, and jun1or and senior
high BYF, choir pract1ce 8·30 p m
Wednesda.,. prayer meehng and Bible
study Wednesday , 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Middleport, 5th
and Main , Bob Melton , minister, Mike
Gerlach, tuperintendent . Bible school.
9 30 om .. morn•ng worship , 10 30 o.m :
youth group Sunday 6:30 p.m. evenmg
warsh1p , 7 00, prayer service, 7 00 p m
Wednesday .
MIDDlEPORT
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE, Rev. J1m Broome, pastor, B•ll
White , Sunday school supt
Sunday
school , 9:30a.m .; mormng worshtp , 10:30
a.m Sunday evangelistic meetmg, 7 00
p.m. Prayer meet1ng, Wednesday , 7 p.m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY, Owtght L. Zov1tz, dtrec·
tor.
HARRISONVIllE PRESBYTERIAN, Rev
Ernest Stricklin, pastor. Sunday church
school , 9 :30a .m., Mrs. Homer Lee, supt ,
morningwonhlp, 10.30.
MIDDLEPORT, Sunday school, 9 .30 a.m ,
Richard Vaughan , supt. Morning worshtp ,
10.30.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
Church. Wonhlpservlce9.30a m Sunday
School 10 30 a .m . Mrs. Sampson Hall
supt.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO . Rev . Bob·
by Porter, pas tor Sunday school, 10 a m ;
Sundoy worship, 11 a .m. : Sundav evemng
service, 7 p m ; Wednesdov Family Trolmg Hour. 7 p.m . Wednesday worshtp ser·
vice, 7 30 p m .
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH , Noor
long Bottom , Edsel Hart, pastor Sunday
school , 10 a.m.; Church, 7:30p.m •• prayer
meeting 7·30 p.m . Thursday
MIDDlEPORT
PENTECOSTAl,
T~ord
Ave . the Rev W1lliom Knittel postor
Thomas Kelly, Sunday SChool Supt. Sun
day school , 10 a .m. Classes for all ages:
eventng service , 7 30, Btble study,
Wednesday , 730 p.m , youth services ,
Froday. 7:30p.m .
MIDDlEPORT FREEWill BAPTIST, Co'"or
As~ and Plum, Rolph lutcher, pastor.
Saturday evening service, 7 30 p m Sun·
day S&lt;haol, I 0 :30a.m .
MEIGS
COOPER A liVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH
Richard W Thomas, 01rector
POMEROY ClUSTER
Rev . Ro~rt McGee
Rev. James Corbitt
POMEROY, Sunday S&lt;hool 9 · 15 om.
Worship service 10.30 a.m. Choir rehear·
sal , Wedneldoy, 7 p.m Rev. Robert
McGee, paolor.
ENTERPRISE, Warship 9 a .m. Church
S&lt;hooiiO a.m .
ROCK SPRINGS, Church S&lt;haol 10 am .
Warship 10 a .m . UMYF 6 30 p m

a-. j;

EWU SOliS SOHIO

,t:,::t:.
S.rvtct

~

!IL.acull&amp;
llotch
m .9t2t Mlddloporf
- · .

-"'

F

• .

.

·~

MEIGS TIRE

CENTER, INC.
John F . Futh, Mgr .
J'h . .,,.,..,
Pomeroy

Attend The
Church of
Your Ch oice
·"''hiS'
· - ·
• ,

l~u.'S

faE~ANKU~
Mlddloporf, Ohio

Bnlwn's fu:e &amp;
Equipment

I
1

'

K&amp;C JEWELERS·

1:!

_
_

mE. Moln Stroot
m .l&gt;t5,_Pom..._ony
_ _

of YoUJ' Choice
This Sunday.

S,t,LE$ •nd SIIRY tC&amp;
Rull•nd. C)hlo 45775
J wm " 8111" arown. Owner
p~el"•l 10·1177

.-

lb
I

.-

FRENCH'S
SUNOCO
SERVICE
CENTERS

, P. _J._PAULEY,
AGEfiT

'• fbtloftwide Ins. Co.
ofColum-.,., 0 .
lf4W.Moln
tt2-1311 Pomeroy

212 W. Mlln

The Church

VIRGIL B.
' TEAFORD SR.

of Your Choice

[B

.

"Dtis S~day.

PIZZA SHACK
Eat In or

Carry Out

of Your Choice

t26 E. Moln

This Sunday.

'*"eray

·- ---·

DICK TRACY
sarvtce , 7 p.m., Youth meeting and B1ble
study Wednesday , 7 p .m.
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason , m . .t at
Un1ted Steel Workers Union Hall, Ra1lroad
Street, Maaon . Pastor . Rev Joy Mitchell .
Morning warship 9.45 am ., Sunday
School 10.30 a m. Prayer mNtlng
Wednesday . 7 .30p.m .
FOREST RUN IAPTIST Rev Nyle
Bord en j pastor. Cornelius Bunch ,
supermtendent. Sunday school. 9 30 a .m.;
second and fourth Sundays worship ser·
vtceot2 30p m .
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth ond
Main St . Midi:lleport. Rev. Calvin Minnis,
pastor. Mrs. Elv1n Bumgardner, supt. Sun·
day school 9 30 a.m .; worship service,
10:45o.m .
NORTH BETHEL United Melhodls t
Church, Rev. Charles Domtgan , pastor
Sunday School. 9.30 o .m .; Worship Service , 10:45 a .m .: Sunday Bible Study , 7.00
p m .. Wednesday prayer meeting, 7.30
p .m .
BURliNGHAM SOUTHERN
BAPliST
CHURCH, Route 1, Shade. Pastor Don
Black. Alflllated with Southern Boptlst
Convention Sunday school, I 30 p.m .,
Sunday worsh1p, 2.30 p.m Thursday
evening Bible study 7 p.m
PENTECOSTAL
ASSEM8l Y. Racine
Route 124 W•lllam Hoback. pastor. Sun·
day school, 10 a.m .; Sunoav evening ser·
vtce , 6 30 p .m . Wednesday een1ng ter·
VICe, 7.
1
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Rev. Freeland
Norrts, pastor. Don Cheadle, Supt. Sun·
day School. 9 30 a .m . Mcrmng Worshtp ,
10•30 a.m Prover Service, alternate Sun·
days.
NEASE SETTlEMENT FREE Will BAPTIST, •
Donald R Korr. Sr. , pastor , Friday even
mg serv1ce, 7 30 p m : Sunday school, 10
om

'TF'FTT--.::l=A"'1

eLAZI!!&gt;, YOU'RE R IGHT'!

AND THAT SURP GU'-1
I, tJO T'OY!

I THit.IK

HE~

I GATHEII: YOU'RE

GE~TU~I~G TO

U~

!7UPF'09ED TO SET'
FIRE TO THE 0 IL !

TO COM'f:

OU TS IDE!

,

I •;Ef ~1 Tl) rE !;UNNINu THAT

ENTIRE ~1 ULTI-NHTION AL Cc1 Mil1H~ ,
AHr 1 SEEM fO ~E rtUNNINl, (T
'HELL'·· I'll! I r'ONT REALLY HNOI'i
~HAl

.• ( COULD MAKE AMISffiKE
~I THOUT EVEN KNO!!ING
IT.ANr PUT ALL liiOSE !•').,..,PEOPLE OU Tt1F YIORK '

THE~E'S

I'M

Spending a week recenUy with
Mrs. Neva King was her sister, Mrs.
MARK VSTORE
Nora Cwnmins and son, James of
Reynoldsburg. Other guests were
Middlepot1
Monda !II
Rev. and Mrs. Clyde Hinton, ColumMIU.
441LOcUst
f Th.t11alomGru
Mlllwn
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Leo King, Coum5 1-8
C.biiiOIMollng
Middle pori
Labor Day
the traditional day hOnoring the labof' force of the
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Victor
TIU.ItbJ!II
syroc ... ~·Jm
'nation tt's a legal hOliday ~ worlllng poople across the country
IJ TINIHI.o.W.ru
Genhiemer.
like • one-day break on the firsl Monday In September
R 7 J7
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs
Wort has long baenviewed as the cu1e lormosl of the troubles of
-;-HEINER'S
Wll!'diU'6d#~
THE DAILY
hwoltd Honest andptOduettve work whiCh ooelnlel'lds to get done
Htbr-11!'Jolm A. Dean and Mr. and Mrs. Jolu
BAKERY
Is a teal blel86ng lor humans It keeps us mo111ng fo.ward and mak1ng
ti 9-19
SENTINEL
W. Dean, James and Jeremy were:
our days on this earth worth....nllo
Thun.Wr
Miss
Juanita Terrell, Mr. and Mrs.
l Pdrr~the paribteol the talents st»/s,God expecls us to do someMiddlepori1 J JJ
thing wllti our abltilies Draw trash inspiration lor your ltfe and work in
Garold
Gilkey of Athens, Mr. Walter
Pomeroy,O.
ycur house of worship th1s week
FnJ.,
Terrell,
Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs.
I PrterHobart Smalley of Mustago, Okla.
3 I 15
I
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King and
SWisHER _J LOHSE
David had as visitors of the weekend
PHARMACY
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Felts rl
Wo Fill Doctors'
Bucyrus, Mr. and Mrs. Obi Comer
PrescripfiDIII
m .2f55
and Debbie of Illinois, and Miss
PDmii"'y
Grace King of Mansfield.
Recent visitor of Mrs. Ruby Bur·
AttPnd The · Attend
nside was Thomas Burnside.
Church.
"flame'
$alii
Attend The Church
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Carl visited
Church of
lliiiiiiiiCe
,.~··
I uf
'
y
0~
Choice
her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
..,.
of Your t:hoice
~ SeMcei
·
Burnett
and attended the family
llloice
, This Sunday
e. Moln
214 E• .Uin
reunion
near
Colwnbus. Staying for
Tpie.Sunday
_m,JOJe
.m.mo
. . ofomoroy
This
a longer visit with their grafld..
parents were BreU, Randall, Danny
FLATWOODS. Church Sc~ool 10 a.m
communton , 10 30 am , Sunday worsh1p
~ Melodl carl.
7 30 p m
~ Pearl St. , Middleport. Rev O 'Dell
serv1ce, 7 p.m. Wednesday evenmg
Wontllp 11 o .m .
DEXTER CHURCH OF- C~.RIST , Charles- Manley. pastor Arthur Barr , Sunday
Miss Helen King has returned
MIDDlEPORT ClUSTER
prayer meetmg and Btble study, 7 p m
Russell , Sr. m1n1ster Rtck Macomber
school superintendent. Sunday school, home to spend some time with her
HEATH, Church School 9 30 am. Wor ST JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH, Pone
sup! Sunday school 9 30 o m , worsh1p 9 30 a m , evening worship 7 30 p.m
ship 10.30 a.m. UMYF 6 p m . Robert Grove The Rev . W1lltcm M1ddlesworth
serv1ce 10 30 am Btble Study , Tuesday
Prayer and praise service, Wednesday, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King
Robinson, Pastor
Pastor. Church serv1ces 9 30 a m Sunday
after spending the swmner at Mt.
7~pm
730pm .
RUTlAND, Churc~ School 9 30 o .m . S&lt;hool10 30 o m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
RUTlAND APOSTOliC CHURCH • OF Hope Bible Camp this summer,
Wonhip 10·30a m Wilbur Hilt Pastor
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Jerry
CHRIST OF lATTER DAY SAINTS Portland JESUS CHRIST . Elder Jame1 Moiler Boble
SALEM CENTER , Worship 9 a .m. Church Ptngley pastor Sunday school, 9 30 o m .
Ract ne Road W•ll•om Roush, pastor
study , Wednesday, 7 30 p.m , Sunday helping with Bible schools and

..

'. . . •.- biiter-BroPn
~:

The ;

SYRACUSE ClUSTER
Rev Stanley Mernfied . Mm1ster
FOREST RUN: Worshp 9 a m. Church
Sc:hooiiO a .m.
MINERSVIllE , Church School 9 o m .
Worship 10 a .m.
ASIURY. Church S&lt;haol9.:;o o.m. Wor ship 11 o .m . Bible Study 7 30 p m Thurs·
day UMW fill Tuesday
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev David Hams
Rev. Mark Flynn
R•v. Florence Sm•th
Hilton Wolfe
BETHANY, (Dorcas) , Worshop 9 00 a m .
Church SchoollO OOo.m.
CARMEL, Chruch S&lt;hool 9 ·30 a m. Wor
s~ip 10.30 a .m. 2nd and 4th Sundays
APPl.E GROVE, Sunday S&lt;hool9 30 o m .
Worship 1 30 p .m . 1st and 3rd Sundays
Prayer meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m.
Fellowship supper ftnt Saturday 6 p m.
UMW 2nd Tuesday 7·30 p .m .
EAST LET ART , Chruch S&lt;~aol 9 o m .
Wonhip service 10 a m Prayer meet1ng
7:30p.m. Wednesday UMW ~econd Tuesday7 30p.m
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday schoaiiO
am , worship, 11 am . Chotr practiCe ,
Thursday , 8 p m
LETART FALLS- Worship serv1ce 9 a m
Church S&lt;hool10o.m.
MORNING STAR , Worship 9 30 am .
Church S&lt;haol 10 30 o .m.
MORSE CHAPEL , Church School 9 ·30
a.m. Worship 11 am.
PORTLAND, Church Sc~ool 6 ·30 p m .
Evening Worship , 7:30 p.m. lfouth
Meeting, Tuesday evening
SUTTON , Church S&lt;hool 9:30 om . Wor
ship Island 3rd Sundays 10 30 o m
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Richard W Thomas
Duane Sydenstricker, Sr.
John W Douglas
Charles Dom1gan
JOPPA, Worship 9 00 a.m Church
S&lt;hool10 00 a .m .
CHESTER. Worship 9 a.m.
Church
School 10 a.m . Choir Rehearsal 7 p m ,
Thursdays. Bible Study . Thursdays .
7:30p.m
LONG BOTTOM . Sunday School at 9 30
a m. Evening Worshtp at 7:30 p.m. Thurs
day Bible Study, 7.30p.m.
REEDSVIllE: Sunday School 9 30 o m
Morning Worship 10:30 o.m Evening Wor·
shp 7 30 p m . Bible Study Wednesdays ot
7:30p.m .
ALFRED. Sunday School at 9 45 a m
Morning Worship at 11 a.m Youth. 6 30
p m ' Sundays Wednesday N 1ght Prayer
Meeting, 7!30 p.m.
ST PAUl, (Tuppers Plains) Sunday
School 9.00 o .m Morning Worship at
10:00 a .m Bible Study , 7·30 p m Tuesday
, SOUTH BETHEl (Sliver Ridge) : Sunday
School 9·00 a .m Morning Woship 10:00
a .m. Wednesday Bible Study, 7:30p.m .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Oliver
Swain, Superintendent. Sunday s . l':c nl
9·30 ewery week
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, Rev . Kelt~
Eblin, pastor Sunday School 9 :,0 a.m ,
leonard Gtlmore, first elder: evemng ser
wice , 7 30 p.m
Wednesday prayer
meeting, 7·30 p.m.
.
IEARWAllOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Ouelne Warden , m•mster. Bible
class. 9 30 a .m ., mornmg worshtp , 10 30
a.m. : evening worship , 6 lO p m .
Wednesday Bible study. 6 30 p m
, NEW
STIVERSVIUE
COMMUNITY
Church, Sunday School utr:vlce, 9 415 a m .
Worship service, 10:30, EvangeliStic Ser
Prayer
vice, 7;30 p .m . Wednesday
m. .ung. 7:30.
1
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST . Pomeroy- '
Harrisonville~ ld.: RoWrt Purtell , pastor;
Bill McElroy. Sundoy achool supt Sunday
school. 9·30 a.m. : mormng ~orship end

morn1ng worship, 10 30 a m Wednesday
evenmg serv•ce, 7·30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev Earl Shuler
pastor Sunday school 9 30 o .m ; Church
service , 7 p m . , youth meehng
6
p.m. Tuesday Bible Study , 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev John A. Coffman, pastor . Martha
Wolfe . Chairman of the Boord of Chr~st1an
ltfe Sunday School. 9 30 a.m , morn1ng
worship , 10 30. Sunday eventng worsh1p
7·30 p.m Prayer meet tng , Wednesday ,
730pm
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST , Don l Walker ,
Pastor Robert Smtih Sunday school
supt , Sunday school , 9.30 o m mornmg
worship , 10 40 om. Sunday evemng worship, 7 .30, Wednesday eventng 81ble
study 7 30
DANVIllE WESLEYAN , Rev
R D
Brown pastor Sunday School 9 30 o m
morn1ng worsh1p 10.45, youth serv1ce,
6 45 p .m. evemng worsh1p, 7 30 p.m .
prayer and pro1se Wednesday , 7 30 p m
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST Re• . Marvon
Morlon , pastor Steve L1ttle Sunday school
supt Sunday school 10 am . mormng
worsh1p , 11 a m . Sunday even1ng wor
shtp. 7 .30 Prayer meehng and B1ble
study, Thursday, 7 30 p m , youth servtce ,
6 p.m . Sunday
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD, Re v R. E
Robinson poster . Sunday school 9 30
a .m .; worsh1p service , 11 a m e11enmg
servtce, 7 00 youth serv1ce Wednesday
7 OOp.m
lANGSVIllE CHRISTIAN CHURCH .
Robert Musser. pastor Sunday school
9 30 a .m ., Roy S1gman , supt , mornmg
worsh1p 10 30 Sunday even tng serv1ce
7.30, mtd week servt ce , Wednesday . 7
pm
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev. James 8 K1ttle . pastor. Norman
Presley , Sunday School Supenntendent
Sunday school 9 ·30 a m mornmg wa r.
ship 10 45 a.m
evongel1stic service, 7
p m Prayer and Praise Wednesday 7
p.m ., youth meeting, 7 p.m. Mens prayer
meetmg, Saturday 7 p.m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST ,
Elden R Blake, pastor. Sunday School 10
a.m ., Robert Reed , supt , Mornmg ser
Sunday ntght serv1ces
mon. 11 a m
Chn stl an Endeavor 7 30 p m . , Song ser
v1ce, 8 p m , Preaching 8 30 p m
M1dweek Prayer meetmg Wednesday , 7
p m , Alvin Reed, loy leader
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, located at
Rutland on New l 1mo Rood , next to Forest
Acre Pork , Rev . Ray Rouse , pastor, Robert
Musser , Sunday School sup! Sunday
school, 10·30 am ; worsh1p 7 30 p m .B1
ble Study. Wednesday 7 30 p.m . Satur·
day ntght prayer serv1ce , 7.30 p m
HEMlOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN. Roger
Watson , pastor, Mtldred Z1egler , Sunday
school supt. Mornmg worshtp, 9 30 a .m .
Sundayschool , 10·30 o m evemng ser·
vice 7.30.
MT. UNION BAPTIST , Joe Sayre , Sunday
School Supermtenent Sunday school. 9,45
am , evemng worship. 7 30 p m Praye r
meet1ng , 7 30 p m . Wednesday.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST,
VIncent Waters , pastor, Howard Blo~rCol ·
well . supenntendent Sunday School 9 30
am.; mormng church , 10.30 o .m., Sunday
evening service 1 30 , Wednesday Bible
Study, 7 30 p m .
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE.
Rev . Herbert Grate , pastor Fronk R1ffl e,
supt Sunday School 9 30 a m Wor ship
serv1ce. 1l a .m and 7 30 p m Prayer
meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m
lAUREl CliFF
FREE METHODI ST
CHURCH Rev ~ Floyd F Shook pastor
Lloyd Wrtght O.rectar of Chnsttan Edvco
lion Sunday School 9 30 a !TI Mornmg
Worshtp , 10 30 a. m , Choir Proct1ce, Sun
day . 6 30 p m . Evening Worship 7 30
p m . Wednesday Praye r ond 81bl a Study

IL -.--i L,.I

WE ""-"KE IT rnROUGH
THIS "'RDEAL!' Y't&lt;EEP
lALI&lt;IN' ABOI:JT?

•
GASO I1 NE ALLEY

Ma4be a camp1ng
tnp is what
she needs!

Would ljOIJI like to qo
on a camp1nq tnp,
Gretchen?

. -...__

,.;,.,t

~

YoUr

S&lt;~ool9 45 a.m.

KiiialbuiJ

OriE LESS

HEY, EEHANEE! WAAT

,., ,

-

QUIET, SIINDY!
YOU'll BOTHE~
TH' NEIGHBORS.'

Kingsbury
News Notes

Phyll1s Stobart , Sunday School Supt Sun·
day School 9:30a.m : Morn1ng worshtp ,
10 30 a m Sunday evenmg serv1ce 7 p m
Wednesday evenmg prayer servtces , 7 30
p .m
BETIILEHEM BAPTIST , Rev. Earl Shuler,
pastor Wonhtp servtce, 9.30 a.m . Sunday
school, 10 30 a m Bible Study and prayer
serv1ce Thursday 7.30 p.m.
CARlETON CHURCH , Kingsbury Road
Gary Kmg . pastor Sunday school. 9 30
a m , Rolph Carl , supermtendent, evemng
worsh1p , 7 30 p m Prayer meehng ,
Wednesday , 7 30p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN .
Tom
R1choson, pastor 1 Wallace Damewood ,
Sunday School Supenntendent. Worsh 1p
serv1ce ot 9 om Bible School10 am .
HYSEll RUN HOLINESS CHURCH. Thurs·
day evenmg services 7 30, Ra\1. Cart, Sun·
day mo rmng serv1ces 9.30 and eventng
services 7 30 p m , Rev Durham
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob locofed on County Rood 31 R&amp;v.
Lawrence Gluesencamp pastor, Rev.
Roge r Wdltord , oss1stont poster
Preachmg servtces Sunday 7 30 p.m ,
prayer meetmg Wednesday , 7 30 p.m ,
Gary Grtfftth, leoder Youth groups, Sun·
day evemg 6 30 p m wtth Roger and
Violet Willford as leaders . Commun 1on
serv•ces f irst Su nday each month
WHITES CHAPEl , Cool voila RD . Rev. Roy
Deeter , pastor. Sunday school9·30 am ,
worsh1p ser v1ce, lO 30 a .m . 81ble study
and prayer serv1ce , Wednesday. 7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Brad
Henderson , pastor. Herb Elliott, Sunday
school supt. Sunday school, 9.30 o m ;
mornmg worship and comunton, 10 30
a m
RUJLANO BIBlE METHODIST CHURCH
Amos T1 lhs, pastor , Donny T1U1s , Sunday
Sc hool Supt Sunday School 9·30 0 m ,
fo llowed by morn1ng worsh1p. Sunday
evenmg serv1ce
7 00 p m
Prayer
meettng Wedne sday, 7 OOp m .
RUTL~ND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
Rev lloyd 0 Gnmm, Jr , pastor Sunday
school 9 30 a m .. worship service, 10 30
a m Broadcast l1ve over WMPO, young
people's servtce. 7 p.m Evangeltstic service, 7 30 p m Wednesday serv1ce, 7·30
p m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Corner of Se cond and Anderson , Mason. Pastor Fronk
Lowther Sunday school, 9 ..45 a. i-n ; wor·
sh op se r voco, 11 a.m ond 7 30 p.m Week ly B1ble Study Wednesday , 7:30p.m
MASON CHURCH O F CHRIST. Millar St..
Mason , W Va Aurlce Mlck , pastor. Sun day Btble Study 10om., Worship 11 a .m .
and 1 p m Bible Study Wednesday 7 p.m. ,
Vocal muSIC
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOO , Dudding
Lone Mason , W Vo . Rev . Ronn1e B. Rose.
Pastor Sunday School9 45 o.m , Mornmg
Worsh1p 11 a .m . Evenin~ Service 7,30 '
p m Wednesday Women s Mtmstrles 9
a .m (meehng and prayer . Prayer and Bi·
ble Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev WtUiam
Campbell pastor. Sunday School 9 30
o m .. James Hughes supt evenln'g ser·
v1ce, 7·30 p.m Wednesday evening
proyer meetong . 7 30 p. m Youth prayer
servi ce each Tuesday.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, letart , W.
Vo , Rt 1, Mar k lrwtn , pastor . Worship
serv1cos', 9 30 a m . Sunday school, 11
a m . evening worsh1p , 7 30 p.m . Tuesday
,co ttag e pray er meet 1ng end B1ble stuJJy, ,
.9 30 o ~ Worsh1p serv1ce, Wednesday,
7 30 p m
•
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now located
on Pomeroy Pik e, County Road 25, near
Flatwood s Rev Blackwood, pastor Serv1ces on Sunday at 10 30 am . and 7.30
p m w1th Sunday school , 9 30 o. m 81ble
study , Wedn esday 7 JO p.m
INDEPENDENT HOliNESS CHURCH , INC.

School. IOa.m Sundaynlghtservice, 7 30 camp.
p m.
Sunday guest of Mr. and Mrs.
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS Homer
Bailey were Mr. and Mrs.
Harrtsonvllle Road ; Dewey K1ng , pastor;
Ed1son Weaver. ou•stont, Henry Ebltn, Roger Young, Yvette and Wesley.
Jr . , Sunday school 1upt. Sunday school,
Recent guests of Mrs. Hazel Ar·
9 30 a m , morning worahtp 11 om. Sun· nold were Mr. and Mrs. Lester Arday evening service, 7 30, prayer
nold, Bobby and Billy, Colwnbus.
meet1ng, Thursday, 7 30 p.m .
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD They all attended the Arnold reunion
Not Pentecostal , Rev . George Otler. held at the park on Route 33.
pastor Worship service Sunday , 9:45
Mr. and Mrs. Olen Harrison, Mr.
am. ; Sunday school , 11 o.m ., worship
service, 7·30 p m Thursday prayer and Mrs. Dale Harrison, Jodi and
meeting, 7 30 p ,m.
Scott, have returned home after
MT. HERMON United Brethren tn Chrisl
Church. Rev. Robert Sanders, po1tor. Don spending their vacation at Myrtle
W1ll . loy leader Locot&amp;d m Texas Com- Beach, Va. Joining them for a few
munoty ott CR 82 . Sunday school, 9 30 days on their way home from .
om , Morn1ng wonhip •ervice, 10 45
a.m .: even1ng preaching service second Florida 'Were Mr. and Mrs. Phil
and fourth Sundays , 7 30 p m Chri1t10n Harrison.
Er.deavor , first and thord Sundays , 7 30
p m Wednesday prayer meeting and 81·
ble study, 7:30p.m.
JEHOVAH 'S WITNESSES 1 m1le eost of
Rutland, junction of Route 12-4 and Noble
Summit Road (T- 17•) Sunday Bible leeture , 9 30 o.m ; Watchtower study, 10 30
am., Tuesday, Bible study. 7 and 8 15
p m .; Thursday, theocrat ic school, 7 30
Attendance at all
the
p m .• service meeting, 8 30 p m
RUTlAND FREEWILl BAPTIST Church Free Methodist Church Sunday,
Churck McP~•rson . pastor, Guy Priddy. ' Aug. 24 was 106. Special music was
superlnten ... •nt. Sunday .chool. 10 a .m .,
by the trio, Bob and Patty Barton
Sundar evemng and Wedne1day 1ervices,
and Pastor Shook.
7·30 p m .
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy , located
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Whitaker and.
on the 0 . J. White Rood oH highway 160.
llaby
son, Newark, visited over the
Sunday School 10 om Superintendent
weekend
with Pastor and Mrs. Floyd
John Loveday. Fint Wednesday n•ght of
ShOOk.
month CPMA services second Wodnes·
day WMB meettng , th~rd through ftfth
Saturday, Sept. 13 annual Sunday
youth service. George Croyle, pastor
picnic will be held at Royal Oak
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570Gront St. ,
Park.
Middleport. Rev . Don Bloke, pastor Sun·
dov school, 9 30 a .m., morning worship, .
Sunday mol'lllns, Sept. 21, Supt:
10.30 a .m • evening worship 7 p .m •
Wednesday evening Bible study and Ray Altman will be guest speaker. ·
prayer meeting, 1 p m . Affiliated with ,
Mrs. Virgll Rose, lonnerly a local
Southern Boptlst Convent1on.
t resident and has Uved In Akron for
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST- '
years, called on old friends here.
Eugene Underwood, pastor; HOrfY Hen· ,
recently.
,
dricks, superintendent . Sunday school,
9·30 om; morning worshtp , 10:30 a .m .,
Mrs. Francis Cline, Cocoa, Fla.;
evening worship, 7 p .m. Wednesday B1ble
·visited over the wekend with Mr.
swdy, 7 p m
JUBilEE CHRISTIAN CENTER - George's and Mrs. Roy Howell and Mrs. EmCreek Rood Rev . C J Lemley , pallor;
ma Fox.
John Fellure, superintendent. Church
Mr. and Mrs. Faye Cournbnan
school, 9·30 a.m ; morning worship, !
Greenfield,
spent the weekend
10:30; eventng service , 7 p.m. Youth
meehng Sunday, 6 p.m. Bible studv 10 . Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell.
depth , w•dnesdoy, 1 p.m. Clatses for oil
Mrs. Lenny Lyons and
ages . Nursery provided for worship ser1 spent a day with Mrs.
Fox.
v1ce.
ST. PAUL LUTHI!RAN CHURCH, Corner~
Pastor Floyd Shook was chaplain:
of Sycamore and Second Sfs., Pomeroy. , at the Veterans Memorial Hospital
The Rev . William Middlesworth, Pastor.
the past week.
Sunday School at 9
a .m. and Church
Service&amp; 11 a m.
A family gatherlnc was held Aug.
SACRED HEART, Rev, Father Paul D.
17 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Welton , pottor. Phone 992·2825 Saturday
birtbdays li
eventng Moll, 7:30; Sunday Mass, 8 and Alkire, Columbus.
10 o1m .. Confession Saturday 7-7:30 Mrs. Alldre and son Kevin, Mrs.
p.m.
James Ferguson and Mr. Cedric
VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N . 2nd St.
Parker, San Antonio, Texas, were
Mtddleport. James E. KMtee, pa1tor,
celebtated.
Also present were Mrs.
Sunday morning worship, 10 a .m ., even·
ing service, 7; Wednesday evening wor· Bertlui Parker, Miss Cleo Parker
ship, 1 p.m .. Visitation, Thursdo~ . 6 30 Mrs. Jerry Ferguson, Colwnbus:
p m.
·
TRINITY Christian Atiembly, Coolville 1 Mr. and Mrs. Herman Kaspa;,
Gilbert Spencer, pastor. Sunday Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Mike Carter
school, 9.30 a .m .; morning worahlp, 11 . and Mlu Lori P&lt;meroy, Colwnbus·
a.m. Sunday ev..,ing service, 7.30 p .m . ,
midweek prayer service Wednesday , 7 .30 and Mrs. Edna Howell, Columbus. '
p.m.
i Mr. and Mrs. Cedric Park~', sons,
MOUNT Olive Community Chu.rch, Ertc and David, San Antonio, spent a
lawrence Buth, pallor: Mo• ~lmer, Sr.
Superintendent. Sunday School and morn· week with Mr. Parker's mother
'
lng worship, 9 ·30 a .m . Sunday evening Mrs. Bertha Parker.

&amp;0 FAA. SO !BOOD NEffilEI&lt;
WINNIE NOR HER SECRETARY
RECOONIZED ME IN MY
NEW DIS6U 15EJ

AUO. 20. 111110
I!VENINQ

e·oo iJl e CIJIICIJiiQJIUldl NEWS

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

I 30

services -at

8 .18

7,00

7,30

with

childrerl
Emma

Ill (J) &lt;Jm WKRP IN CINCINNATl

Evening television listings

,
7:18

8'00

•s

The

CD STUFF
C1J CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
CIJ ABC NEWS
(J) (jJ} ZOOII
CIJ . Cl) NBC NEWS
CD MUSIC
C1J BOB NEWHART SHOW
(J)
CAROL BUANEn AND
F_ft:IENOS
. (J)&lt;Jm CBS NEWS
(J) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(jJ} SLIM CUISINE
ABC NEWS
(I) NEWS UPOATE
CIJ e CROSS WITS
CD THE STORY
C1) ALLINTH!FAMILY
())(Ill. FACE THE MUSIC
Cl) LUCY SHOW
IJ(J) TICTAC DOUGH
Cll iiACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
&lt;Jm NI!WS
(jJ} OICK CAVETT SHOW
CIJ . PRICE IS RIGHT
CD THElESSON
[J) SKY SPORTS SPECTACULAR
H1gh flying enterlamment aa the
sky It turned Into a giant &amp;porta
•rena during thla novel and taacln
atlnu a~r ahow Almost I t ,600 air
craft Irom 50 dllterent countries will
be on hand tor !he Oahkoah A1r
Show, thelargett aporta·avlatlon
avant in the ~ortd
C1J SANFORD AND SON
(]) SHA NA NA Gueat Lola
Fa lana
Cl) (Ill •
POP GO!S TH!
COUNTRY
(1) JOKER'S WILD
DICK CAVETT SHOW
FAIIILYFEUD
CIJ) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
(I) HEW&amp; UPDATE
CIJeCll HERE'8BOOIIER
CD IN TOUCH
(I) MOYIE ·(IIIIJSICAL) ••••
"Cab~ret" 1872
CD NIGHT OALL!RY
(J) THE NEIL SEDAKA TOUCH
Andy Gibb, the Cal)taln and Tenllle
and D•r• Sadaka join Neil In per·
tormlnQ.!Ome ot hla greatest !"Nil
D CJlMl THE INCR!DIBI.EHULJ&lt;
The audience thinks It •• pert ot the
atl l when the Hulk ruahea on tlage
to .. va a rock at•r'a life (Repeat
6Qmlna)
(J) (jJ} WA-OTON WE!K IN
REVIEW
Cfl1e BENSON Olaguited ae the
gueat ol honor. Benton at1enda a
levllh party. than dhacoVera one ol
tna gue111 Ia an ataauln

tm•

1

(1'!·~··1) .

8:30 lV • (I) NFL PRE·SEABON
FOOTBALL GAME
Saettle
s .. h.wka VII New England
Patriots
[)) BAIIIALL Atlanta Braves VI
Sf Louis Cardinal•
(J) Ill) WALL tTREET WEEK
' Making Economic Po li e~· Host
LOU II Rukheyser

(Ill . OOODTIIIE GIRLS Bolly
IUriiB a deaf ear toherfrlenda warnIng• when a theatrica l sgent
catches her act at the USO and
wants a large fee to launch her aa a
alnglng atar
8:88 ()) NIEWS UPDATE
8 :00 CD 700 CLUB
(J) (Ill. FRIDAY NIOHTIIOVIE
The Bermuda Depth a' 1976Stara
Julie W9.2daon , Burllvea
Ill (J) tlQJ THE DUKES OF HAZ·
ZARD A. Texas Aangerenllata trle
Dukea "helptotrackdownadanger
oua outlawhldlngmtheswamp (60
mlna)
Cl) MOVIIE -(DRAMA} ••• ''Crrthe
BelOved Country" 18S2
(H) OLDFRIENDS, NEWFRIENDS
'Henry John Heinz Ill' CCioeed
Caplloned)
8.30 (H) PAVAAOnt AT JUILLIARD
Tenor Luciano Pavaronl coaches
thr.. atuctenta Aonit Kallakv Sln~J·
lng Una VocePocofa', ZahaveGal
singing 'Vel Lalaae Couler Mea·
larmea', and Robart Brlgga Ringing
the aria 'Vecc hla Zlmarra tram U
Boheme
tO:OO [J) GREATEST SCANDALS OF
THE CENTURY The greateat ecan·
data of tha century i re revealed In
th is do cumentary · ta lea of au,
aples and suicide Rare tUm footage, e!lll photograph• and cour·
troomtaetlmonyaMhelplorecreata
thetlmea ol these uuty acandaloua
end..!P.l£1 allan
O llJU DALLASAaanewa11111
tent dlatriclattorna~ . CilftBarnea
Jumps at thacllancatoworkon tile
mvestlgatlon or !he body found at
Southtork (Repeat, 60 m1na )
Ill) NEWS
10'28 CD NEWS UPDATE
10:30 CD RICHARD HOGUE
(ID OVI!:R I!:ASV Gueat Ellen May
Goldberg columnist Hoe\ Hugh
Down a. (Cloud Captioned}
t0 '58 CD NEWS UPDATE
t1.00 CIJ . (J) Cll l l CD &lt;1m IHJID
N!WS
CD DAN GRIFFIN
(])MOYIE-(COMEDY)•• ~ "Meln
Evenl"1878
CD TIS EVENING NEWS
CIJ DAVI! ALLEN AT LARGE
Ill) DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:28 CD N!WSUPOATE
11' 30 CIJ e Cll THETONIOHTSHOW
CD ROI_SBAOLEYSHOW
(()(Ill . FRIDAYS
II CIJ U.S OPEN TENNIS UP..
DATEHighllgtltaoltheday'aactlon
ol the U S Open Tennis
Champlonahtpt
([) ABC CAPnONED NEWS
{II)MOVIE 'CarnlvaiOICrima• t96o4

JeanPierre Aumont, Allx Talton 2)
'Tile Witch' t970
t2:00 CD_ PRE-SEASON FOOTBALL
Allanta Falcona va Ballimore
CoUa
G (J) CBS LATE MOVIE 'THE
AVENGERS FiftyThoueandPound
Brealdut' A man with a stomach
full ol dtamondaia onty a ptlwn in a
largar scham elnvol\lmg a wealthy
lnduatrlallat. (Repeat) ' CRIME
KNOWS NO AGE ' 1973 Stare Mit·

'
chell Ryan Gary Croab)'

Cfl DA YIO SUSSKIND SHOW
12 •o ({) EMERGENCY
W ID $1.9SBEAUTYSHOW
t .00 (I) 8 W
THE MIDNIGHT
SPI!CIAL
(]) INSIGHT
@ IIOVIE -(SUSPENSE) "I&gt;
"Breaking Point" 1977
t . tO IHJ CD NEWS
1·30 (}) JIMMY SWAGGART
2·00 ®l l BELIEVE

\

B:30
000

2,30 Cll 8 NEWS
(]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(!) MOVIIE •(HORROR) •• e,s
" Ph•nt•~" 187g
3•00 (I)
ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBALL REPLAY
4'00 CD 700 CLUB
5.30 CD JUST PASSINO THRU
()) RAT PATROl

EVENING
800

iliD ®J NEWS

(!) MOVIE · (COMEDY I ... %

" Foul Pt1y" 1078
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
Cll GOD HAS THE ANSWER
D CIJ CONCERN
(J) CATCH33
{jj) EXTENSIONS
8 :30 CIJ . Cll NBC NEWS
())(Ill . NEWS
D C1J MUPPETS SHOW
(J) OLD FRIENDS,NEWFRIENDS
'Henry John Hbinz Ill (Closed
Capliooed }
~ CBS NEWS
(jJ} VICTORY GARDEN
7 :00
DANCE FEVER
CD BLACKWOOD BROTHERS
(I) • (I) HE! HAW Guaals
Barbara Mandrell, Sonny Jamea,
Jethro Burna, Charhe McCoy and
Naahvllle Edition (Repeat, 60
mine)
(!) LA WAI!:NCf WfLK SHOW
(Il EVENINQATPOPS PeteFountaln ' joint Harry Ellis Olckaon and
the Boston Popa Orchestra tor an
evenmg ol 0 1JIIeland aaunda (80
mlna)
&lt;Jm BUOSBUNNY
{jj) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
'Dominic The Brotherhood Barty
wanla the mlaalng wat ch to prove
that ' Lu c~· 111 Lord StAinton'aloat
granddaughter
CCio118d
Caf):tioned)
F!ELINGB
7,30 (I) . IN BIDE LOOK
CD THELUNDSTROIIS
(jJ} (l_ROUCHO
(Ill •
ltOO,OOO NAME THAT
TUNE
S'OO CIJ e CIJ BUCKROOERSINTHE
251h C!NTURY
CD 700CLUB
(]) MOVIE -(DRAMA) ''YI ''Wild
Horse Mink" 1080
CU BASEBALL Attanta Braves va
St Louis Catdlnala
'
(J) (Ill CD THE LOVE BOAT Three
vignettes ' Acc1dental Crui se'
Star a Soupy Sales . JoAnne Worley 'The Song Ia Ended' Stars fl1
cha rd Daw son, Julie t Milia
'Anol.lahka ' Stars Jill Whelan l oretta Sw1t (Repeal 90mlna)

CIJ

C1J .

li}).

,.

•

--BUT TllEY'D BETTER HURRY I'IHILE
STILL SOMEONE TO ELECT.1
EVERY TIME I TURN AROUNO

THERE'S

•

1·30

10·00

Andy Travia llaslmally solved the
tough problem ol fmdmg a re·
pt&amp;cement tor Or Johnny Faver on
the air when Johnny ahowa up In
Cmclnnat• agatn (Repeat}
(J) ALL CREATURES GREAT AND
SMALL "Hair oflheOog'
(fi) MASTERPIIECE THEATRE
' Ltllle America Eptaode IX From
her llrat da~ m Amer1 c a, L1llle Ia
cheered wherever aha goea • unlil
d11aater cloudathe opening other
play In New York (Closed Clip·
t loned) (60 min a}
lli CIJ®l Till CONWAY SHOW
[1) 8 (!) SATURDAY NIGHT AT
THIE MOVIES ' The People Thai
T1me Forgot t 977 Stars Doug
M cC tur e~atrtc k Wayne
Ill (I) lllV NFL PRE -SEASON
FOOTBALLPiltaburgh Steel era 'C8
D•llaa Cowboys
CIJ MOVIE ~MUSICAL.COIIEDY)
""" "UplnArmt"1~
(jJ} LORD MOUNTBATTEN' IIAN
FOR THE CENTURY Aa Viceroy ol
India, Mountbettan assumea the
reapon aibillty ol uniting the country
and aaaialtng In thatranaltlontrom
Brlliah rule to Independence
(Qioaed Captioned) (60 mlna )
(]) THI! L!SSON
CI&gt;MOYIE·(DAAMA)•••• ''Norme
Rae" 1&amp;78
·
(J)(!li CD FANTASYISLANDMr
Roarke and Tattoo pia~ hoet to an
av1d movie tan who wants to
be come a casting director and a
famous newswoman who believe&amp;
aha 's been curJ&amp;d becauae other
expose on tetiUJ.IC cutta (Repeat ,
90mlna)
(]) ROCK CHURCH

(jJ} JAZZ AT THE MAINTENANCE
SHOP De.11.ter Gordon Quartet'
Part Ill
t0:30 CD • Cll GOOD nME HAIIRY
When an old girlfriend divorcee her
gangaterhuaband and rekindle&amp;
her romance with Harry, the
aportawrlterbecom..thecenlerot
an urwutpecl'edcontroveray.
CD TBSEVENING NEWS
11 .00 [I) ~01..\ L!VITT
CJl(!)(!ll. NEWS
CJlREFL£CTIONSOFTHETHIRD
REICH 'The Germen Le"on'
(jJ}
HOCKING
VAI.U!Y
BLUEGRASS
1t.30 CD • Cll SATURDAY NIGHT
UVE
CD RICHARD HOGUE
ffiMOVIE-(WESTERN) ••• "True
Grtl" 1MII
CD
DICK IIAUR1C! AHD
COMPANY
(J) MOVIE~IIYSTERY)' "AClulot
Piece To Kill" 1173
(Ill. ABC NI!WS
1t.45 (Ill
•
MOVIE
-{1I1U
UNANNOUNCED)
12:00 CD HI DOUQ
G(J)IHJ NEWS
t2, t5 • (J) MOVI! ~MYST!RY) "
"L•dr Ice" 1173
12:30 (]) HOLIDAYATMELODYLAND
([) ROCK CONCERT Ounta Tha
Nitty Gritt)' Oirt Band, Linda Ron·
atadt. John Hartford, Steve
Martm
tJm MOVI! -(WESTERN, •• 111!•
COrt WMt" 1810
1:00 C2JeMOVIE-(DRAMA)" .. _
~eeh"1MS

C2J 700 CLUB (SPANISH)

lflflfNl fii)'fl

j'jlTHAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ~
byHenriAtnoldandBobL"

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

I HECKE I

t!i~IM VJtaf
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
5 Detenorate
I Quickly
I Bluster
6 Razor 7 Twitching
11 Guard or scheme 8 Tidy up

12 Ins1rwnent
for Duchin

outdoors
9 Once more
13 Texas
10 small
Gwnan's
opening
L'ilJ!~IB
greeting
14 Auctioned off "'
15 Travellinl! abbr. 18 Crowd; throng Yeaterday's Amwer
11 small amOWlt 19 Vibrant
17 ovme member zv Ritual

21 Cog~te
18 Wmg deslgn
afftrmation 31 Plethora
2t Muruch'snver %1 RomanHelios34 Motif
23 Cross out
%2 Blackbird
3S On the
27 Recipient's
Z4 Dutch
last rung
source
commune
34i Indones1Bn
Z9 Stipulation
Zli Golf gadget
ISland
:10 Hardy
Z6 Do wrong
37 SlroJJar
32 Slue
:13 Exhilarale
3S Desel1 robe
38 Tough wood
39 King (Fr.)
42 Fall lor
45 Martini
mgredient
41 Clergyman's
abade

39 Fume
tO Belgtwn
nver •

n Road,
to Caesar
C3 Holiday
brink

t4

Proh• ~1tion

47 Wasted
away

dWordo£
welcome
DOWN
I Be sore
2 Frostor a......,,-

hr+-+-f---,+-

3 - breve

4 MOWltaiD
pass

SUPEA

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :

I I I

II

TINCID

One letler simply standa

C:.OUI..D 'THEY' I&lt;I!I!P

I I I

'THE. 1-E6S W!l'fW,

INAPHORt
I rJ X)
Answer here.

AXVDLBAAXII
LONGFELLOW

IN WI N"T~MI!!:~
Now arrange the circled letters to
lorm the surpnse answer, as tug·
gested by the above cartoon

KI .X 1 J"[ 1 I I ]"

tor

another. In this aample A 11

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters ,
apo1trophes, the Jeneth and formation of the words are all
hmts Each day the code lelten are dUferent.

CRYPTOQUOTES
RLFX

MG IK

1\SLR

N

MHRHGX,

E LZ
LZT

RSX

KX

ESLZUX

DIH

PNOO

SI VX

RSX

BXZT

(MIWOfllomorraw)

Yesterdays

J"mblos EPOCH SLANT DRUDGE NOBODY
What the entertainer gave when he Wll
asked what he did for a livingA SONG &amp; A DANCE

I Answer

KX

KLT . - NBGLXO

QLZUPNOO

v..tenlay's Cryptoquole: t'HE HARDEST PART OF GIVING

ADVICE TO TEEN·AGERS IS FINDING SOMETHING THEY
DON'T ALREADY KNOW.-SHAUN CASSIDY
tJ ltiD Klflt F••h"H hlldluM. Inc

••

•

•

�10-

The Datly Sent mel Mtddlepurt Pomeroy 0 f nday Aug 29

19110
S1

:· Jury begins deliberation in Abscam case
~

NEW YORK ( AP) - Prosecutors
, - say Rep Michael My ers was
1
caught red handed
Defense
lawyers say he was play actmg
Today the JUry m the natton s f1rst
Abscam tnal was gmng to court to
begm dehberatmg the fate of Myers
and three other men accused of
sharmg a brtbe from undercover
FBI agents
The mne-woman three-man panel
was to begtn dehberatmg after
receiVIng mstrucltons from U S
Dtslrtct Judge George C Pratt
Myers bnbery-consptracy tnal,
whtch began tn Brooklyn on Aug 11
- Is the ftrst for stx congressmen m' dieted on charges stemnung from
the FBI s mvesttgahon code-named
Abscam The others wtll stand trtal
later this year
The Pennsylvama Democrat
Camden N J
Mayor Angelo

Errtcheltt Phtladclphta Ctly &lt;.:oun
ctlman Louts Johanson and
Phtladelphta attorney Howard
Cnden were accused of sharmg
$50 000 from undercover FBI agents
posmg as representatives of an Arab
shetk m return £or Myers prorruse to
help the shetk m trrurugratwn mat
ters
They were charged wtth bribery
consptracy and traveling m m
terstate commerce to commtt
bnbery The brtbery count mcluded
two subsectwns one carrymg a
posstble 15-year pnson term and a
lesset cnmmal gratmty offense
carrymg a posstble tw()-year term
The consptracy count earned a
posstble ftve-year term
Pratt ruled earlier that the JUry
must fmd Myers gmlty gf etther sulr
section or the brtbery statute m or
der to convtcl on the conspiracy and

mterstale travel cuunls
He alsu ruled lhat tf the JUry
acqutlled Myers tt had to clear the
other defendants If tt was play actmg for hun tt was play actmg--£or
everyone Pratt satd
The government argued that
videotapes and sound recordmgs
played m court showed Myers was
caught red handed and was m
need of a story In closmg remarks
federa l prosecutor Thomas P Puc
cto caUed ~pht personality non
sense Myers testlffiony that he had
been
play achng
when he
prollllsed to help the sheik
Myers testified he had no cnrrunal
In a 1952 NFL game the Los
Angeles Rams were losmg to Green
Bay 28-9 at the start of the fourth
quarter but rallied to wm 30-28

mtent when he took the money and
no plans to exert mfluence on the
shetk s behalf Hts lawyers argued
that no prrvate unrrugrat10n btll ever
was mtroduced and that there had
been no follow up by the government
after the payment
Myers satd he had been assured he
would never have to do anything for
the sheik PucciO scoffed Dtd he
believe an Arab sheik was gomg to
dole out $50 000 for domg absolutely
nothing?
The defense satd prorruses Myers
made m the play achng con
versahons came from coachmg by
Mel Wemberg the convtcted con
man credtted wtth settmg up the
stmg
Defense lawyers concentrated on
discreditmg Wemberg s testunony
and the government s swnmatton
was directed at Myers credibility

31

NEW 3 bedroom home tor
sa le
Butlt tn k tchen
d1n ng
room
large
recreation room ftrep ace
lots of storage 2 2 baths
garage 1 acre lot 992 3454

Fog blankets Ohio River Friday
By The Associated Press
A southerly now of warm, hurrud

atr over Ohto through the mght

producmg Widespread haze and con
stderable fog this mornmg The
heavtest fog was along the Ohio
River Valley
Temperatures early this mormng
were qu1te warm rangmg from the
rrud~s to the rrud 70s The coolest
was 65 degrees at Youngstown

Bob Waterfield of the Los Angeles
Rams was such a versatile player
that he was a star quarterback
place-ktcker and also a strong defenSIVe back

while the warmest was 74 at Dayton
A weak low pressure system will
move northeastward mto the lower
Ohio VaUey by Saturday morrung,
keepmg a southerly now of warm
and hurrud atr over Ohio through
Saturday Wtdely scattered thunderstorms will spread mto Ohio
from the southwest torught and
become more nwnerous Saturday

Elroy Crazy Legs Hirsch, one of
pro footbaU s great pass-recetvers
got his nickname because his left
foot pomted out farther than his
rtght

PUBLIC NOTICE
The tollow,ng documents
were rece ved or prepared
" py the Oh o Environmental
" Protect•an Agency dunng
the prev 1ous week The ef
~ect ve date of each t nal
~ •ct 1on IS stated
The
ssuance date of each
proposed act1on IS stated
Anyone aggneved or ad
versely affected by a f nal
act 1on to
ssue
deny

Public NOtiCe

Publtc Nollce

compltance shceoul e let
ters W1th1n 30 days of
publlcat on m a newspaper
n the affected county any
person may also ( 1) sub
m1t wr tten comments
relat ng
to
act•ons

PUBLIC NOTICE
Nott ce •s here by g ven
that on Sa turday August
30th 1980 at 10 00 AM a
publ c sa e w II be he d at
105
Un on
Avenue
Pomeroy Ohto to sell tor
cas h
the f o ll ow tn g
co llateral to w•t
1977 Ford TK MFR s
senal no F 15HN08836ll
The Farmers Bank and
Sav ng s
co mpan y
Pomeroy Oh o reserves
the nght to btd at th1S sa le
and tow thdraw any of the
above menttoned veh cles
prtor 1o the sale Further
The Farmers Bank and
Sav ngs Company reserves
the r ght to re1ect any or al l
b ds subm1tfed
(81 27 28 29 3tc

Safety pursuant to Sectton
4511 76 ot the Oh10 Rev1sed
Code and all other per
t nent proviston of law
Spectftcattons and
n
struct ons to btders may be
obta ned at the office ot the
Treasur e r
Mtddleport
OhiO
A cerl1t ed check payable
to the Treasurer of the
above board of eductton or
a satisfactory btd bond
executed by the b1dder and
t ile surety company n an
amount equal to ftve per
cent (5% 1 of the bid shall
be subm ttted w1th each b d
Sa d board of education
reserves the nght to watve
nformal t es to accept or
r e1ect any and all or part~
of any and all btds
No b ds can be w th
drawn for at least th rty
( 30 1 days
alter
the
scheduled clos tng t me for
r ece pt ot b ds
Metgs Local
Board of Educafton
Jane Wagner Treasurer
South Th1rd Avenue
M1ddJepor1 Ohoo 45760
(8)22 29(9)5 124tc

J

proposed act ens ver f ed
compl amts
enforcement
compliance schedule let
ters or prellmmary staff

determmattons on perm1ts
to mstall

(2)

request a

fnodlfy revoke or renew a

publtc meetmg regardmg

ce or to approve or d sap

proposed actions or on
prelim nar y staff deter

&gt; permtt ltcense or var an

prove
plans
and
;1
spectftc:at ons may ftle an
'l' appeal
wtth the En
~ v ronmental
Board of
t,.."'Rev 1ew Su te 123 240 Par
-:: sons Ave Columbus Oh o
43215 wtth.n thtrty (30)
days of the effect ve d ate
pursuant to Ohto Rev sed
Code Sect on 3745 07 unless
such t nal act10n was
preceded by the same or
substantially the same
proposed achon In ad
~ d liOn pursuant to Section
3745 04of the Rev sed Code
not 1ce of the ftltng of the ap
peal shall be flied w th the
o t
f the Oh 0 En
1
v ·~g~~~n~al
Prot~ct on
-J
Agency
361 E
Broad
Street
Columbus
OhiO
1 43216 w th n t hree (31 days
l..- after the appeal ts f1led
wtth the Envtronmental
.~'""1\oard of Rev ew All such
.&amp;'l'f1na l actions are so den
t fed Such persons may
n ad ud cat1on
t
reques
a
I
heanng before the Oh o
EPA on a proposed achon
to tssue deny modtfy
revokt:: or renew a permtt
license or\Janance orto
approve or d sapprove
plans and spec 1t cat 1ons
w1th n th rty (301 days of
the ssuance date ORC
3745 07doesnotprovtdefor
ad 1udtcat 1 on
hear 1ng
r,equests or appeals from
ord ers
vertf ted com
plamts
or enforcement

l

!

ii

l

mnatonsonperm•tsto n
stall and/or (3) request
not ce of furth er act ons or
proceedmgs All requests
for ad 1ud catton heanng
and public m etmg s nad
other commun ct ons con
cern ng pub I c meetmgs
ad 1ud•ca tton
hear.ngs
ver fted complamts and
regula! ons should be ad
dressedtotheLegaiRecor
ds Sect 1on Oh o EPA P 0
Box 1049 Columbus Oh 0
43216 (6141 466 6037 Unl es.
otherw se stated m pa r
t tcular nottces all other
co mmuntca ttons tncludmg
comments on proposed ac
ttons should be addressed
ether to the Dtvtston of
AuthorizatiOn a. Com
pi ance (Air) or Perm1t
and Approval Sect on
(Water) Wht chever s ap
propnate at the Ohio EPA
P 0 Box 1049 Columbus
0Hfo43216
APPROVAL OF PLANS
AND SPECIFICATIONS
Southern Ohto Coal Com
pany
Columb a Twp Oh
EffectveDateOS/21 / 80
Thts tmal act on not
preceded by proposed ac
t on and s appealable to
EBR Add tona l d scharge
potnt
at
sed men
ta fton / hold ng pond
n
refuse dtsposa l ara for
MetgsM ne No 2
{8) 29ltc

~-tr'----------·-•••••••·-·•--·-·-~~1

Curb lnflati"""n
]: Pay Cash for
:j Classifleds ancl
H
Savelll
d
?." II
~ I

:~' III

SIDE GLANCES

Public No11ce

V

Pubhc Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASEOFTHREE
SCHOOL BUSES FOR
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATION
Sealed proposals w 11 be
recetved by the Board of
Educat on of the Metgs
Loca l School Otstr ct of
Mtddleport Ohto at the
Treasurers Office unttl
12 00 Noon on September
15 1980 and at that hme
opened by the Treasurer ot
satd Board tabulated and
a report thereof made to
satd Board at tts next
regular
meet ng
as
provided by law for three
(31 65 passenger school
buses
according to
specJftcattons of satd board
of educaf ton
Separate
and
n
dependent btds w•11 be
rece ived w th respect to the
chass1s and body type and
w 11 state that the bus when
assembled and pror to
delivery comply wtth al l
school
dtstr ct
spec flcattons all safety
regulattons and current
Oh o M101mum Standards
for Schoo l Bus Con
structton of the Depart
men! ot Educat on adopted
by and w th the consent of
the D rector of H ghway

•

-•••••·•·on-. .. ,. .... , ...
• • ·•· ~·~•• - r..:r .• · · • ·• ·~~

Card of Thanks

1

THE FAMILY ol Emma 0
Johnson would lt ke to e&gt;&lt;
press the r s ncer e thanks
a nd apprec afton to our
f r ends and relattves for
the many beauttful flowers
cards and food Specta I
thanks to Dr Mahr Jr and
Dr Cha rl es Holzer J r and
staff at Holzer Hasp ta
GallipoliS Oh10 for t he
wonr:lerful tr ea t men t and
care of our mother Word s
a one cannot say enough
f or the wonderful comfort
Rev Earl Shu ler gave us n
our ttm e of sorr ow and
need M ay God Bless each
and eve ry one
The F am l y of Em m a D
Johnson

WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156

Wrtte your own ad and order by m all wtth th1s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

or Wrtte Dally Sentrnel Classtfled Dept
111 Court St, Pomero.,., 0 , 45769

...

\I

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

d

; 1 Address,_ _ _ _ ___,.___....,
~r

Phone·.~---------------~

'~ II

:,.,..

Pnnt one word n each
I space below Each n
1 ltlal or group of f1gures
1 counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number ,f used
~ '1 You II get better r esults
t 1f you descr be fully
1 give price The Sentmel
1 reserves the nght to
classify ed1t or retect
J any ad Your ad w1ll be
l put In the proper
I claSSiftca11on t you 11
1 check the proper box
I below

I
I c
,1. (

~

J wanted
J For Sale
( J Announcement

l ;""""'
lr

rI

13
t4

I 1s
1 16
I
1
J
1

4- GivtiWIY
5-Happr Ads

44-Apartmenllor Rent

u

•MERCHANDISE
n-ca TV RldloEqulpmen
53- AnUques
S4-Misc Merclllndise
SJ-Iht ldlnt Supp let

U - PetJior Slit

5--Schoolslnttr"'cllon
Radio TV
&amp; Cl RttNir

• FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
61 Far m Equ pmen1

a-wanted To Do

61'- WutH lo luy
12 Trucks for Slle
63-L vestodc
64-Hay &amp; Grain
IS- SeldA Fert Iller

•FINANCIAL
21- BUtlneu
Opporl..,nlty
~2-M oney to LNn
U-Proftst on11
Ser~rlu!

•TRANSPORTATION
71-Autos fOr Sl it

eREALESTATE

73

Vlnlli&amp;4W D

:It-Homes for Sllef
n-MoD le,..omes
tor hie
3:1 Farms forhle
:M-BuslnHt Buildings
lS- Lots &amp; Acruge

7._Mollrcycltt
75Auto P1rts
I. A.cceuoritlli
77-AutoRep,air

37-Realtors

•SERVICES

Want Ad Advertising
Deadlines
··
2 :JOf!ofJI Dilly

12 Noon S.turdft
tor~ ~11day

SIGN UP now tor fall
cl asses of tap and 1azz
Barbara s Sc hoo l of Da nce
Syracuse 992 3282
CAKE DECORAT NG
classes beg tnn ng soon at
the Carousel Contec ttonary
tn M dd leport
Beg nne r
tnt ermed tat e
adva n ces
also
m n
c l ass
h
decor at ng novelty cakes
Cali or come tn for deta Is
992 6342

Mlddlepo•~onoo

11- Homelmprovtments
12- Piumb ng &amp; EJUYatint

SUPERMA KST
8300 Sque Ft
Fodale or Lease
Call Middlepor1992619~
I
or Columbus
(614) 837 8182

n-E~clvatlnt

14- Eiectrlcal
&amp; Refrigeration

Is-General Haul nt
........M H Repair
17-Upllolstery

30
31 _ _

_ __

32 _ __ _ _

Rates and Other lnformatron
~

II Words or Under

33·, ~---34 _ _ _ __
35 _ _ _~-

1 day
2 dlyl

ld1rs
'days

Cllll
100

ISO
110
300

Chllr~tt

110
'"
'"
"'

E•ch wordov•r the minimum 11 words 1 4 cents ptr word per diY
Ads running o ller Ulln consecutive dayl will be charged at tt'lel diV

Mall Thts Coupon wtth Remrttance
The Da1ly Sentrnel

BOX 729
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

....

In memory C1rd of Thank, 1nd Obit..,ary • unts ptr word U OD
minimum Cash In advlnt:l!

Mobile Hom1111es •nd Y:.rd sales art accepted only w th c.uh with

order 2S cent charte for ads c.rrylng8o11 Number n Care of Tht
Sent
~---------------------·-'"'t'~liJ......:..:
_nel
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,:

I

BAKERS BUSY
BEE
CERA MI CS
Tuppers
Platns IS hav ng t he tr an
nual f ntshed ceramtc sale
on Sa turday August 30
from 9 5
Brmg your
Chnstmas g ft lists Very
resonable pn ces on lots of
m ce terns Also a green
ware sale same day at 30
percent off
Br ng your
own boxes for greenware
Pau ne Baker

NEW
Ren t a pan ser
v ce Rent t he novelly cake
pan of your cho ce for onl y
$2 00
Ca II 992 6342 lor
deta Is

H--Reat Elfllt wanr.ct

26
27
28
29

MASON HOME REPAIR
heat ng and a r con
d t on ng furn ace c lea n ng
plumb ng repa r res der1
ttal e ectr c w1nng sa es
serv ce a nd tn sta ll at on
992 2364

i

6--

24
15

3
Announcements
WILL
YO UR
Hou se
w t hst and another hard
w nter' How about that
roof and ba rn t ha t snow
gets pretty hea vy Let us
do any genera l ma•n
t anence work for you pa tn
t ng gutter repatr patch
work odds and end s so you
ca n s t back n fro nt of th at
warm f re th s w nter and
not have to worry Ca ll992
3941 992 3519 or 992 5126
and we 1 come a nd g ve
you a f ree est ma t e
References are prov ded
upon request

JI-Household OCKKis

Htlp wantld
2- SUuaiH WI niH
13- lnsunnce
14-&amp;uslntll Training

17
18
19
20

I~;::=:;:;:;:;:::;;;;~~::::r::=~:::;:;;~;;=:-j
_........_

SALE 20% off all l1shmg
tackle Aug 25 to Sept 7
Rods reels tackle boxes
mar ne suppl es lur es No
law?tway on sa le tems
Open 9 to o da ly The
Tackle Box
Sr
124
Syracuse Oh 992 6193

u,.-Fitoomlli

1 t-

These cash rates
nclude d1scount

Mob e Homes

...- space lor Rtn1
41-Wanted to Rent
41-Equipment lor Rent

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

to get Jason Interested In EST
but he s more Interested In ZZZI

Co

torR~t

~WanledtoBuy

22

to ·------

41- Houseslor Rent

7-YarCISate
I - Public Slit
&amp; Auction

23

I 4
I s
I
I 6
I 7
I 8
I 9
I
1
I 11
I 12

•RENTALS

I- Card Ol Tfllnkt
l - In Memor 1m
3-Announctmenls
6--Lo11t and Fauna

21

3

eANNOUNCEMENTS

.~,

THE ROYAL OAK
BALLROOM
DANCE
CLASSES

Wtll start Wednesday
Sept 3 at the Royal Oak
Park
Recreatton
Bu1ld1ng
Begmners Class 7 30
Second Class at 8 30
1nstructors
Mary &amp; Gerald Powell
For Into Ca II 992 2622
anytime

3-_
- __ A
_n_n_o_u~e me_n_
ts__
I PAY highest pr ces
posstble for go ld and s l ver
co ns r ngs ewe lry etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop M dd leporf

- - - - ---

P ana T un ng
Lane
Dan els 742 2951
Tun ng
and Repa r Serv tce s nee
1965 11 no answer phone
992 2082
CANDY SUPP L IES on
sale
Ann s
Cake
Decor a t ng Suppl es 50716
Osborn Rd
Reedsv lie
Oh 667 6485
SHOOT IN G
MATCH
Forked Run Spor l sma n
Club St art ng Aug 31 eac h
Sun t her e after Factory
choked g uns on ly
G~a v__

__

F VE PUPP I ES 6 weeks
old Ch huahua &amp; Terr er
m xed 985 4302

6_

-----~ ost and_Fou ~

LOST
Ch ld s g lasses
Brown frames Ether n
blue case or close to blue
case Chester El ementary
playground or close by 98~
3558 De~perately needed

--- - - -----------

7 _ _ _Yar d Sale _ __

2 FAM I LY PORCH Sa le
Aug 29 &amp; 30 • m 11e west ol
Forked Run State Park on
Route 124 Grant Young
BASEMENT SALE Sep
tem ber 2 4 from 9 4 at lOS
Wr ght Street Pomeroy
Th trd house on the nght
LA ST OF the greal yard
sa les Grea t fall barga ns
Aug ust 29 August 30 three
m l es east of Darw n
follow the s1g ns Clothes
cham saw ( husqua r na)
copper kettle v tdeoga m e
and many more un
be lt eva bl e good buys 992
7709 or 992 2016 Come on
out and see what 1ts about
GARAGE
SA L E
Se p
tember 1 5 from 9 5 loca t ed
off Route 7 bypass on old
ro ute 143 sou th of Jacks
Ca fe Reasonab le pr ces on
new pa nttng suppl es good
school c loth ng toys and
much more
Follow the
stgns to grea t barga ns
FRIDAy X
Sa tu rday
August 29 30 f rom 10 4
Se c ond
hou se
Sa lisbur y School
M sc
terns wh te un fo rms
cl othmg
4 FAMI L Y Yard Sale
Cloth ng di Shes drapes
r ugs terns to numerous to
ment on 207 S 2nd St
Middlepor t Rain Cancels

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctton

BRADFORD Aucttoneer
Complete Servtce Phone
949 2487 or 949 2000 racme
Oh1o Cntt Bradford

THREE FAMILY garage
sale Fndav August 29
from 9 2 On Route 33 at the
bottom of Rose Htll Watch
for stgns
Everythtng
cheap 992 2378

IRON AND BRASS BEDS
old furntture desks gold
nngs
1ewelry
Stiver
dollars sterling etc wood
tee bo)(es 1ars anttques
etc Complete households
Wr te M D M1ller Rt 4
Pomeroy OH 1 or carl 992•
7760

9_

Wanted to Buy

10 karat 14 karat 18 Karat
gold Dental gold and gold
ear pms 675 3010

SEVE RAL tamll es and
Presbyter an Church yard
sa e Saturday Au gust 30
at 10 00 a m on Wa ter
Street n Syrac use At
teht on
AVO N COLLEC
TOR S enttre Avon collec
ton sel mg chea p kntck
knacks depress on g lass
draper es
c loth ng

Gold
Stiver or foretgn
cons or any gold or St iver
tfems Ant que furntture
glass or chma wtl l pay top
dollar or complete estates
No tem too l arge or too
small Check pnces before
sellmg Also do appratstng
Osby (Qss1el Marhn 992
6370

baked goods
ten
speed bt cycle
No sales
pr or to day of sa le Ra n
date Labor Day LOts ot
mtscellaneous

SH ALLOW well pump and
" ton Ford p ckup must be
tn good shape and pnced
resonably or would trade a
1978 Ford F1esta g ve or
t ake the d !teren ce 94~
2013

1 ewe r y

YARD
SA LE
Sunday
August 31 back ot th e Jea n
Fredenck home tn Chester
on o tn case of ra n wtll be
,n the basement of Sum
merftelds Apartments
Lots of n ce ttems
Cather ne M I er Chester
OHIO
SEVERA L FAMILY Yard
sa le Boso s Great Bend
Sept 4 7 lit II dark
YA RD SALE at Nellie
Hy sell r es td ence on Happy
Ho llow Roa d August 28th
Septemb er 11 Lots of boys
1eans avon dolls bottles
m1sc 1tems Call 742 2991

--- --------4___

8

7
Yard Sale
YARD SALE Frday
Saturday August 29 30th at
the Paul Baer res dence on
Route 7 past the h ghway
garage Watch for the
s gns Clothes su 1table for
school Boys StZe 5 some 6
7 Curta.ns rugs and mtsc

YARD SALE Fn II. Sa t
278 Ash St M1ddleport 2
d nette
sets
p nball
mach ne baby c lothes lots
of m sc

PI CK NG UP a p a na tn
your area
Respons ble
party may take over low
monthly pay men ts
Cal l
cred t m anager at 773 5125
Gray s P ano and Organ

'I

by G11J

8

Public Sale
&amp; Aucfean

OSSIE S AUCTION House
20 N 2nd Stree t M1d
d epor t Oh o We se ll one
p ece or ent re households
New used or anttques tn
clud•ng homes farm s or
llqu dat on sales Get top
dollar L st w th the man
who has over 25 years tn
the new used and anttque
turn ture busmess
We
take constgnments For •n
formatiOn and ptckup ser
v ce ca 1 992 6370 or 1n
Wes t V~rg n1a 773 5471 Sale
ever y Fr day n 1ght at 7
p m Aucttoneer Howard
Beas ley apprent ce auc
t10neer Osby A Ma r ttn
( no 1unk l
SA TURDAY Aug 30 at 1
p m at the Former George
Reed restdence 4 mtles E
ot Tuppers P la 1n s 1 m1le
N E ot State Route 681 on
coo v lie Rd Follow s1gns
trom St Rt 681 W II sell
the follow ng 3 p1 ece biOI
de bedroom su tte wooden
post bed anttque dresser
odd dresser 2 p ece ltv ng
room sutte coffee and end
tables odd stands and
tables
5 p1ece d nette
glass door cupboard 3 an
ttque stratght chatrs
qutltmg f ra m e Ward s 30
tn electnc range 17 tt 2
door
Whtr lp ool
r efngerator freezer Man
arch upr ig ht free zer
Maytag wrmger washer
electnc dryer
electrtc
S.nger sew ng machtne 3
bar stools
porlable
kerosene heater dishes
pots pans etc a few hand
tools and a large amount
of mtsc ttems W Vernon
Reed Owner
0
Mac
M cC oy Auct1oneer
OSSIE S AUCTION House
Fnday 7 p m
Deep
Freezers
refrigerators
telev tstons reel ners all
new Ant ques &amp; many
mt sc tern s

AUCTION
(CLEARANCE SALE)
106 SOUTH HIGH ST GLOUSTER OHIO
SAT AUGJO - lOOOAM
We are over stock ed and must sell to make more
r oom Color TV s deep freezers all kmds of fur
n•ture auto and biCyc le accessories sporting equip
men I pamt toys tools all k ndsot mtscelfaneous
Not res pons ble tor acctdents
rerms Cash or check Wtfh pos1tl've 10
A UCT IONEER BILL BROWN

11

Help Wanted

GET VALUABLE tra n ng
as a young bust ness person
and earn good money pi us
some great g Its as a Sen
ttnel route earner Phone
us r ght away and get on
the el1g1b hty I sl at 992
2156 or 992 2157
ADDRESSERS WANTED
mmedtately' Work at
home no
expertence
necessa ry excellent pay
Wnte Amencan Servtce
8350 Park Lane Su1te 127
Dallas TX 75231
MEDICAL
labratory
techtn c1an full or par t
ttme postftons available tor
MT ML T or CLA sala ry
com mensurate wtth e&gt;&lt;
penence Please contact
the Labratory Supervtsor
at Veterans Memona l
H os ptta l
Mulberry
He1ghts Pomeroy Oh1o at
614 992 2104 est 55 Equal
Opportun ty Employer
PHONE SOLIC ITOR wan
ted fo r approx •mately one
month P 0 Box 26lltn Mtd
dleport Oh1o
An Equal
Opportun tv Employer
STANLEY HOME PrOduc
ts needs 3 lad es t serv•ce
customers tn thts area
Must have car &amp; be w•ll ng
to work Opportuntty for
tmmed ate advancement f
qual fled wr te Bo• 729
c o
Da ly
Senttnel
Pomeroy
Oh
Gt'Wtng
name complete address &amp;
phone number

c

STEWARDESSES (18 321
for Dtck Drost s Jetliner
Relocate to lnd1ana Call
(219) 345 2000 Write Drost
E nterpnses
Box 2000
Roselawn I ndtana 46372
12

Sotuatlons Wanted

SITUATIONS WANTED
famtly care for elderly per
son 992 6022
WILL DO Babys,ttmg 1n
my home Any t1me Have
references 742 3116
TYPIST des~res wcrk not
ftce
Fast accurate and
good Wtfh StaftSftCS 949
2202
13

4 BEDROOM Ce ntra l a ~ra.
hea t Located on Lincoln
St n M1dd eport $350 a
month 992 2394
FOUR

1975 Western Manston 14 )(
70 three bedroom
1971
came ron 14 x 64 two
bedroom 1971 L berty 14 x
65 two bedroom
1968
Atlant c
12 )( 60 two
bedroom
1968
New
M oon 12 x 60 w th expa ndo
lwo bedroom 1967 Buddy
12x50 2bedroom

ea. s

Mob le Hom e Sa les
Pt Pleasa nt w VA
675 4424

1970 CHAMPION mObil e
home 12 x 60
three
bedrooms equ pped w1th
washer
dry er
ra nge
ref rgerator and a r con
d t oner 992 2640

,_______

1970 MOBIL E HOM E 40 x
12 wtth new furmture 1
304 773 5131
1980 COLONADE By Far
mont 1Ax70 wtth expando
central atr l bed rooms l'h
ba ths Movtng out of state
742 3030

T RAILER SPACE lor r ent
1n Middleport $45 00 per
month 992 5349

AT TE N T 0 N
( M
PORTA NT TO YOU I W II
pay cash or ce r t f1ed check
for ant qu es and collec
t1 bles or ent re est ates
N th
t
I
A lso
guns pocket watches and
o mg oo arge
co n co ll ec t1ons Call 614
767 3167 or

ss7

pork liver ss 90

3411

Real Estate- General
POMEROY 0
Cha es M Hayes Rl!a tor
Neu IE Ciirll';' Br Mgr

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

608 E
MAIN
POMEROY 0

THREE
BEDROOM
mobile
h ome
ap
pro&gt;&lt; tm ate ly ftve mil es
tram Pomeroy or Mtd
dleport 992 5858
----~· ----

TWO BEDROOM m ob le
home near RaL .... Ca I
992 5856

REALTY
: PHONE 742·2003

one adu lt only

GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr
Bl:lller
N
SYRACUSE
one
bedroom tr ailer w th h de
a bed Uttltt es furmshed
Depos•t re qutred No pets
992 3269
Apartment
torRent

3 AND 4 RM tur n shed af)"
ts Phone 992 5434

RENTER S aSS IStance tor
Sentor C t•zens n V l lage
Manor apts Ca ll Y92 7787
FURN SHED
A PART
MENT 4 rooms a. bath
Adults on ly no pets 992
3874
Real Estate

General

Housing
Headquarters

TEAFORDrn

·~IRGIL B

SR ••

A

Q io'

216 E Second Street

Phone
1 (614) 992 3325
QUICK SALE - 6 room
home bath new torceo
atr furnace good drilled
well garden large front
porch uttltty room on
hard road tor only
$12 000
GOOD FARM 60
acres of n• ce lay ng
land 5 bedroom farm
home bath and lots of
outbutldtngs T P water
avatlable
MIDDLEPORT 3
bedrooms large bath
lots of carpeting Has
ut llty room equ pped
kttchen and near shopp
mg Only S16 500
2 LOTS - Old S room
house near Jones Boys
store Out of all flood s
Only S3 500
365 ACRES - Mostly
new barb w•re fence
tree gas dnlled well
and bottom land One
half mile w de and one
m le long 5 bedroom
renovated home with 2
baths
lots of nt ce
carpeting
rec room
d en
formal d nmg
Ia rge basement and 2
large porc hes S22S 000
Make
that
cnange
before school starts•
Low down payment
Want to sell Call us a1
992 U25 or ¥92 3876

Housing
Headquarters

Moscellaneous

FRESH
EGGS
and
rlngneck pheasants of
various ages Mrs Clifford
Lelfhe1t
Rockspr ngs
Road S R "'Sa Pomeroy
Ohio 992 3«6 or 1992 5836

I

ATHENA At•CI:S Lovely 2 story home 3
bedrooms 2 baths ltv
ng room wtth stone see
t hrough ftrepl ace to
btrch library formal
dtn ng room
large
I'TJOdern k tchen ut llty
room 8r cellar Pat•o
w th 1nv t 1ng 14 x2 8
swlmmmg pool
2.4
acres half cleared rest
woods Al l m nera l s go
Call for your appt
NEW LISTING 3
be droom
home
Rutlan d
large I v ng
room with f• replace
d ntng room k•t chen
uftltfY a nd double ca r
garage
Ask•ng
$35 000 00
POMEROY - Lovely 2
story
home w th
beaut fu I woodwork on
Mu lber ry Ave
I vtng
room
wtfh
nt ce
ftreplace dtn.ng room
fam ly
room
l
bedrooms 1 12 baths
n ce modern kttchen
and garage Call for
appt
ACREAGE - 5 acres on
H yse ll
Run
Rd
butldtng stte &amp; some
t mber S7 000 00
HYSELL RUN RD Approx 8 acres w1th 2
bedroom home Askmg
S2.1 500 00
CONDOR ST
3
bedroom home I VI ng
room
kttchen
some
furntture Would make
good rent a I property
Ask ng S13 500 00
POMEROY Nice 3
bedroom brick home
large I vmg room large
formal dtn ng room ex
tra nice tamtly room &amp;
kllchen combmed p;,
baths
Sells
tor
S26 500 OOGROCERY
BUSINESS - Sf Route
124 Rutland Bldg n
eludes equtpment and
rental
apartment
$21 200 00
COUNTRY COMFORT
2 " acres with 3
bedroom
Hollypark
mob1le home wtth large
tam1ly room double car
garage Has extra sep
ttc tank and water hook
up N1ce 32 x22 barn
PRICE REDUCED $~7 500 00
Velma N1censkv Assoc
Phone 742 3092
Cheryl Lemley Assoc
Phone 742 3171

NEW
LISTING
EASTERN
SCHOOL
DISTRICT - One floor
plan 2 bedroom home
w1th
a
Heatolator
firepla ce
lull base
ment and a large n ce
bu11t 10 kttchen Has ap
proxtmately 4 1" acres
$36 500 00
NEW LISTING WALK
TO THE MARKET - A
2 story frame home that
cou ld be a two fam1ly
Cou ld
use
some
remodel ng
tnstde
S6 200 00
NEW LISTING
BEAUTY SALON With S
rooms a. bath
1s 2
working stations ~ all
equ pm e nt
Also
a
mobtle home hookup
Ntce corner lot Put
yourself tn a bust ness of
your own for only
$24 900 00
NEW LISTING 90
acres of va cant land
near Long Bottom
$27 000 00
MOVE RIGHT IN - to
th1s NEW ranch style
home
that
has 3
bedrooms ut•l ty room
large one acre lof par
ttally fenced Super ntce
at $39 900 00
FARMERS HOME AP
PROVED - Approx 10
vr old house that has
new carpet new w n
dows and a new wood
burner on a 'h acre lot
Pr~ced
to
sell
at
$21 500 00
DON T BE A RENT
SLAVE - You can live
n thts house for less
than you can r ent It has
two--2 bedroom apart
ments that are n gOOd
c ond tton
Ju st
$13 300 00
MIDDLEPORT l'h
story bn ck home wtth
front &amp; rear porches and
approx 11!2 acres The
kttchen
has
nice
c abtnets
and
a
dtshwasher
Only
$20 000 00
PRIVATE RETREAT
Forget
about
everyth ng 10 th1s qu et
peaceful settmg
12
acres of n ce land plus a
mob le home that has 2
rooms bu 11 on the rear
Could be heated With
wood S22 300 00
WE ARE A FULL TIME
FULL SERVICE
REAL ESTATE COM
PANY
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland Jr
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949 2660
Rooer &amp; Dollie Turner
992 5692
OFFICE PHONE
992 2259

~[I

LARGE UPRIGHT com
pressor 220 volts up to 180
PSI S375 00 Kmg castlron
wood burning cook or heat
stove never used for
$100 00 992 28~9

REAL ESTATE

r

NANCY JASPERS ASSOCIATE
9~9 2591 Leave Message
or 949 2654

A l so
AKC
reg,stered
ndoor outdoor
factltf
Dobermans
614 446
7795 es

Stzes
From30K30
SMALL

Sizes from 4k6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3 Box 54
Racine Oh
Ph 61~ 843 2591
6 15 tf

- - --- --

31711 Noble sum II Rd
Middleport Ohio
992 5724
Sales servtce and supplies In ground ao;&gt;d
above ground pools
5 1 tic

All types of roofing new
and repa.r, gutters
downspouts
commer
ceal &amp; restdentlal
949 2160 Pomeroy
797 2432 Alnens
Tom Hoskens or
Gerald Clark
797 4147
21 years e)(pertence All
work guaranteed
Free Est1mate
8 u 1 mo

• Electncal work
• Masonry work
12 Years

Eshmate Call
Eugene Long
(614) 843 3322
8 18 1 rna pd

317 N
Mtddleport, Ohto
PH 992 6342
TRY US•

comp~~~e ~a'Jn~~~aning

Experrence
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583

• Carpet
eDraperoes
• Furm1ure
c were No 11n

8 7 1 mo

~~:::::::::~;~~~~~~~~~;h~~S~e~r~v~,c~e~&amp;~~~~~~
H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

p

FINANCIAL

All types of rool work
new or repair gutters
and downspouts gutter
cleaning aud painttng.
All work guaranteed

-Addonsand
remodeling
-Rooltng and gutter
work
-Concrete work
-Piumbtng and
electrical work
1Free Estimates)

REAL ESTATE
Federal Houstng
V41terans
Admtntstratron
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy
Offrce 992 7544
Home992 6191

Free Estimates
Reasonable Proces
Call Howard
949 2862
949 2160
1 22 tfc

V.C. YOUNG II
992 621Sor992 7314
Pomeroy Dh

r-------tr=::=J&amp;?l~BLOW====N=:==;ipiiililliiiiBELL
S7
MUSICal
Instruments

House p81fttiftg
••

INStJ1 A'fiON

BACH 51 LYE R trumpet
ltkenew onyusedtwocon
cer t seasons
Phone 742
2661 or742 2511

....

V1nyl&amp;
Alumrnum s 1d 1ng
•Insulation

INSIDE &amp; OUT

eStorm Doors
FENDER STRATOCAST
ER Peavy electnc gu1tars
I ke new Great buy Con
t act Garv F te 992 2582

•Storm Windows
eReplacement
Windows
Free Est1mate

Call After 5 P M

843-2803

James Keesee
Ph 992·2772

Rt I, Portland, Oh
8 13 1 mo

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

CARPET SHOP
Drrve A LrHie save A Lot '
SHOP IS FULLY STOCKED

CASE TRACTOR w t h Side
mount mower $795 949
2179
62

Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 10 on largest
end S12 p er ton Bundled
slab $10 per ton Delivered
to Oh10 Pallet Co Rt 2
Pomeroy 992 2689
OLD COINS pocket wat
ches class nngs wedd ng
bands dtamonds Gold or
s lver Call J A Wamsley
742 2331
Treasure Chest
Co1n Shop Athens OH 592
6462

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742 2211
71

GOLD
AND
SI LV ER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS
JEW E LRY
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAY NG
RECORD
H GH
HIGHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
MIDDL E PORT
OH 0 OR CALL 992 3476

4786

63

AdllM

491

The Dally Senhnel

Rodney Downing, Broker

for 25 years Call
now for large sav
tngs
For
Free

USED R 40 d1fch w t ch
wtth trenc her
1 614 694
7842

Polin Dlpt.

Call Bill Childs, Mgr. 992-2342

eNew Homes ex
tenstve remodelmg

6_l __Farm Equtpment

~nnt

on

8 14 1 mo pd

Prmted Pattern

$175 for ll(h pa1ttm Add SOt
lor liCit 111111m ftr flm-ctass
aumod and hlndlloc. S.n4 te:

MIDDLEPORT - L arge stately bnck ho me
a
corner lot only a block from shopping Three
bedrooms and bath upsta~rs F ve rooms and bath
downstatrs New furnace wtth central air condition I
tng One car garage with storage room up Full
basement Call tor an appo ntment -$59 000 00

992 2478

ROOFING
REMODELING
Servmg your area

TWO MALE pek ngese
pupp es Reg stered 949
2890

Wearable!

THE POOL PEOPLE

l·;=========c~f~==~~~====~~~;;=======;.
VINn SIDING
ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

AKC REGISTERED Old
Eng ltsh
sheep
dogs
Females 7 weeks old $200
SyearoldSIOO 3048953624

PUT A cold nose m your
future
Metgs County
Humane Soctety Wormed
shols 992 6260
Two ger
man shepherd elk hounds
mae f our l ovely pupptes
pretty brown shepherd
type dog severa l lovely
catsan dk ttens

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

OHIO VAlLEY
ROOFING

Expenenced Operators
avatlable for local work
• 2 rubber lire backhoes
el excavator hoe 11/4
yd
e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equ•pment

Ut1'lity Bu1ld1'ngs

HOOF HOL LOW Horses
and pontes and ndtng
essons
Everyth ng
m ag nable 1n horse equtp
ment
Blankets
be lts
bOots etc English and
Western
Ruth Reev es
(6141 698 3290

Talk about wearable then add
pleasurable and you have ru st
two of the abdtt es of lhts easy
casual Fltp collar loop-and
button closmg sltm lines
Pr nted Pattem 4786 Half
Sizes 10\l 12\l 14\l 16\\
18 \\ 10\\ Stze 14\\ (bust 37)
takes 3~ yatd s 45 mch fabr c

OVER 100 ACRES - All mmeral rights go with pro
perty Waler I nes clo se timber ready to cut dnlled
gas well Call tor more lnlo

ANT TO SELL? GIVE US A CALL! !

Farm Bulldmgs

POOD LE
G ROOM NG
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220
H L LCREST KENNELS
Boardmg all breeds Clean

Pullins
Excavating

ALL STEEL

Pet s for Sale

56

t.,-/h._ 41--~

NEW LISTING - A 1 co ndtf1on 3 BRfU II base
ment tn town locat ton many extras Priced to sell
S39 000

NEW LISTING - Small2 BR home needs work on
ry sa ooo

ss Butldmg Supplies
318 nch reba r-17c per foot
by 20 tt sect on only D
Bumgardner Sales Noble
Su mm't Rd Middleport
OH 992 5724

101f.t 201f.t

Real Estate - General

BEAUTIFUL - Well kept home has J BR s could
be more fam•IY room &amp; den 1h bath 2 ca r garage
well Insulated Al l thlsandmuch more $57 500

8 8 1 mo

9921UQ

TWO BEDROOM mob le
home rea n ce Brown s
Tra l er Park 992 3324

44

$9 90
10 lb hamburger
smoked sausage 1 nks
patt es$ 17 so 10 lb beet or

Bebutlts Repa•rs
Seal Jobs
Located 6 mtl es north of
Albany
Oho on 681
Norrn
22 Ye.-rs Expenence
Fully Guaranteed
Ph 664 6370
If no answer
Call 698 3113
7 31 1 mo pd

7421455

- M- EA-T - P
- a-ck_ n_g

WaShington Co Rd 248
L1ttle Hock ng Oh Phon e
nqu~res welcome 667 3133
10 lb beet cube steak
s2o 90 10 lb slab ba co n
So 90 10 lb whol e hog
sausage s6 90
10 lb

TRANSMISSION
SPECIALISTS

- Haul
Lemestone
gravel fill dtrt
- Agr1c lime spread1ng
- Backhoe work
- New and used farm
equtpment
- Mectlantcal work on
farm equtp
cars
truck s

TW N S ZE maple bed w th
mattress 4 box sp r ngs for
$100 00 A nt que wh te SIX
drawer
dresser
w•th
m rror for $80 00 Tw tn s•z e
wh te eyel et bedspread for

Ph 992 2403 or H:l 2710

42

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT &amp;
TRUCKING

a.

BEDROO M house

nace depostt and reteren
ces req Ui red
No pets
Ava lable the ttrst week of
October 949 2666

1

Mob•l e Homes
tor Sale

HEATING OIL Buy now at
Summer Pr ces Exce lstor
c o 614 9922205

LADlE COM PLET E 12 14
ward r obe
Cl ot hes are
J,b,rar&gt;d new most sftll have
tags on Reason for se lli ng
Don t f f ncludes Ltl 1 Ann
sutts
John Meyer
M anhatten blouses
Btll
Lt ce
des gner
robe
Ch r st an Otor d resses etc
992 3283

w th tw o baths gas fur

MODULAR HOME Must
re locate 3 bedroom 2 full
bath s
garden tu b
n
ma st er bedroom
f u ll y
equipped modern k tche n
dm ng livtng &amp; fam ly
rooms Panel ng &amp; car
pet ng throughout cen tr al
a r a. hea t 992 7342

32

Houses for Re nt

41

Business Services

54 ·--~M~
, s~c~M
~ ~an se

fw'ettbano.se
~=~~~-~~--=::-T~i~~~~~1
sJ~oo_Noo_E_s

PLEASANT COUNTRY
L vtng
Baum Add ton
Home on large landscaped
lot 3 bedrooms 2 h baths
lar,..e hvtng room dtnmg
room
paneled family
room wtth stone ftre pl ace
ptcfure w ndow &amp; sl d ng
g lass doors to pa11o gas
heat centra l a c ex.tra
arge double garage 985
3543

--------

ELECTRI C RANGE Cop
pe r tone double oven
ke
new SJ2S 843 2032

KENWOOD TAPE DECK
ampltf er
turntab l e
speakers S600 Less than 6
months old 992 6190

F VE TO F FT Y acres
Any amount on mat! route
and school bus r&lt;1utes
Eas tern School dtstr ct 1~6
Spac~or R
_e
~n_t__
$40 00 to $500 00 an acre
985 4185
COUN T RY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy L arge lot s Ca ll
992 7479

FIVE YEAR old b level
home Three bedroo m 211.1
baths large family room
w th f replace fully car
peted Large sun deck and
pat o
w th•n walk ng
01str Ct Of ShOOIS 992 7132

----

FEEI'll&lt;li IWE-HOTS
8T @VG«SA
CHANCE TO GeT
OW&lt; 1'\::lUeH &amp;ACI&lt;

REA L ESTATE lor sa le
corner lot on ma tn h gh
way over 250 foot of fran
t age 95 percent f nanc ng
to qual t ed c hurch group
orga n za tt on or successful
bustness management
992 5786 or 992 2529

OWNER MU ST SELL
New rustt c hom e surroun
ded by 7 5 acres of n ce
wood 2 bedrooms 1 2
baths
f replace
sp r a l
sfa trway
Wood decks
over l ook tng
fl a two ods
over I 400 ff ot I v ng
space 992 32 13

7 ROOM HOUSE tor sale
By Owner Good loca tt on n
M ddleporl Low $40 s 992
3341

A MOVI&amp; oH
TV I WANNA
CATCU 1!4EN
I SI&lt;OuCD

()lilT STAU.IN '
Nf:VS.R NUND 'THE

SUITABLE LOT tor mobi le
home Easy t erms close to
town 992 5786 or 992 2529

HOU SE FOR Sa le by
owner Good locatton n
M ddleport pnced r gh t
for sale Phone 992 5792 or
992 2917

2 BEDROOMS l /1 baths
garden fru t trees Must be
nstde to apprec tate Wtl l
take am n home or p ck up
truck as part a l payment
843 297 1

1!4~Re'S

ONE ACRE of good tron
tage tn the Ractne Dorcas
area 949 2890

TWO BEDROOM house
full basement fue l o I fur
nace
woodburner
Workshop W1fh attached
shed S29 500 Phone 949
2249

N CE 3 or 4 bedroom home
n Basha n approx m ately
ten m les fro m Pomeroy
Alum num s dtng storm
1oors storm w ndows 2
baths I v ng room d n ng
room
k t chen
car pe t
t hroughout laundry room
a hal f basement natural
gas furnace dr lied water
wei new bock ch tm eny
for wood burner c ha n I nk
~nee new sept c sys tem
also large bu ld ng w th
new roof a nd alumtnum
s dtng goes w1 th I
Ap
pro)( mcffe y
"
acres
$29 000 1 614 949 2042

W/EIEKl V c.MIG

l&gt;EAL- M~

our

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE
been can
cel l ed'
Lost
your
operator s hcense? Phone
992 2143
17

ED
BARTELS Loan
Representat ve 1100 East
Mam St
Pomeroy Oh
Mortgage
money
ava !able All types home
ftnanctng
new
ol d
ref nanc tng and 2nd mar
!gages Phone 992 7000 or
992 5732

!"ffZZLE PICFINO TH/E W!/IIIIERS
1/117118 FI?IE/IIOLV

Lots &amp; Acreage

35

BEAUT FUL 3 bedroom
ranch home m Baum Ad
d tton Gas and central atr
Fully ca rp e t ed w th
drapes fam ly room wtth
ftreplace Pnced to se I by
owner Due to employment
must move from area Ca ll
after 6 p m
985 3814
weekends anyttme

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Nottce

MOb le ho me R chardsun
two bedroom 50 &gt;c. 12 t or
$2 000
Good cond t on
good lot for S45 00 a month
New w ater heater
New
Haven W Va Rtcha rdsons
Tra, ler Park M II St 682
2216

Homes for Sale

Household Goods

243 Wost 17 ~J.~.ew Y"' NY
10011 Pnot ADOII(SS
ZIP SIZE 11d IDL£ IIUMIIf:R
Why put up wtth htgh pnces-,
save dol laos Ket beltet qualttyl
Send for our ~EW FAll WINTER
PATTERN CATALOG 94 patterns
Free Pattern Coupoo (worth
$1 75) Catalog $1 00
133-fllhton HomeQutltiol$1 75

130-SwNieos-StztS 38-56 Sl 75
IJt.Orlcl/EIIJ Tralllltn Sl 75
127..,._ 'n DoilltS $1 75

L1ves tock

LARGE Guernsey cow
Exc m lk cow sound S675
949 2179

1972 VOLKSWAGON
1 304 773 5131

72

81

Autos tor Sale
Call

Trucks for Sale

1979 FORD F 150 n ex
cellent cond tt ton wtth
custom str pe wheels top
per 20 000 m l es S4395 00
Phone 667 6143
1979 FORD F2SO 29 000
mtles $300 &amp;. take ov er
payments 643 2032
74

HOGS appro• m atel y 200
lb s SIOO 949 2179
Y OUNG HEAVY Lay ng
hens $2 00 ea 949 2179

...............
.......................
-~ ·

71

~· - · ·

Autos lor Sale

1973 NOVA SUPER sport
350 V 6 with standard tran
sm sst on
three speed
65 000 m1les Phone 742
2431
1973 VW SUPER Bee tle
Pnce Sl 300 Call 614 949
2540 after 5 p m

1979 HONDA HAWK 400 n
excellent cond tton must
sell lor S1700 00 Ca ll 992
5502
1976 HONDA 550 4 Exc
cond 965 3597 B II Osbor

ne

75

1969 FIBE RGLA SS In haul
boat 1969 Ev m r ude motor
w1th trailer Sk equop a.
lite tackets Sl 100 992
5382

77
Campong
--~ tpmen'' ---

1970 VOLKSWAGON ca m
per pop top tour speed
May st cker some new
paris
93 000 m les for
S1100 00
New hea ter fan
ktt
for
t ype
two
volkswagen S25 00 Phone
1972 PONTIAC L EMAN S 773 5008
w th G TO tront end Or
dered from factory t hts 17 loot Sears I bergl ass
way Red wtth whtte top canoe like new $225 00 773
runs rea l good 247 3514
5008
1962
FORD
FALCON
FUTURA
co nvert ble
Power top partly restored
Coll ec tors tern Make an
offer 949 2013

s a. G Carpet Cleanmg
Steam
cleaned
Free
esttmate
Reasonable
rates
Scotchguard 992
6309 or 742 2211
83

Excavahng

J X F BACKHOE SER
VICE hscensed and bon
ded
septtc
tank
•n
stallatton water and gas
ltnes Excavattng work and
transtt layout 992 7201

SEPTIC TANKS C~allla
County
Certoftedl
Leach beds water and
gas hne electroc lines
pole buildings Reese
Trencn'"g and Backhoe
Servoce 367 7560
84

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Home
1mprovements

E lec1rocal
&amp; Refngerateon

SEWI NG
MACHINE
Repa rs
servtce
all
makes
992 2284
The
Fabnc Shop
Pomeroy
Authonzed Smger Sales
and Serv ce We sharpen
Sc ssors
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers
toasters trans all small
appli ances Lawn mower
Next to State H1ghway
Ga rag e on Route 7 985
3825
APPLIANCE serv ce all
mal&lt;es washers
drvers
ranges
dish
washers dtsposals
wa ter
tanks Call Ken Young 98S
356 1 before 9a m, or after 6
pm

�10-

The Datly Sent mel Mtddlepurt Pomeroy 0 f nday Aug 29

19110
S1

:· Jury begins deliberation in Abscam case
~

NEW YORK ( AP) - Prosecutors
, - say Rep Michael My ers was
1
caught red handed
Defense
lawyers say he was play actmg
Today the JUry m the natton s f1rst
Abscam tnal was gmng to court to
begm dehberatmg the fate of Myers
and three other men accused of
sharmg a brtbe from undercover
FBI agents
The mne-woman three-man panel
was to begtn dehberatmg after
receiVIng mstrucltons from U S
Dtslrtct Judge George C Pratt
Myers bnbery-consptracy tnal,
whtch began tn Brooklyn on Aug 11
- Is the ftrst for stx congressmen m' dieted on charges stemnung from
the FBI s mvesttgahon code-named
Abscam The others wtll stand trtal
later this year
The Pennsylvama Democrat
Camden N J
Mayor Angelo

Errtcheltt Phtladclphta Ctly &lt;.:oun
ctlman Louts Johanson and
Phtladelphta attorney Howard
Cnden were accused of sharmg
$50 000 from undercover FBI agents
posmg as representatives of an Arab
shetk m return £or Myers prorruse to
help the shetk m trrurugratwn mat
ters
They were charged wtth bribery
consptracy and traveling m m
terstate commerce to commtt
bnbery The brtbery count mcluded
two subsectwns one carrymg a
posstble 15-year pnson term and a
lesset cnmmal gratmty offense
carrymg a posstble tw()-year term
The consptracy count earned a
posstble ftve-year term
Pratt ruled earlier that the JUry
must fmd Myers gmlty gf etther sulr
section or the brtbery statute m or
der to convtcl on the conspiracy and

mterstale travel cuunls
He alsu ruled lhat tf the JUry
acqutlled Myers tt had to clear the
other defendants If tt was play actmg for hun tt was play actmg--£or
everyone Pratt satd
The government argued that
videotapes and sound recordmgs
played m court showed Myers was
caught red handed and was m
need of a story In closmg remarks
federa l prosecutor Thomas P Puc
cto caUed ~pht personality non
sense Myers testlffiony that he had
been
play achng
when he
prollllsed to help the sheik
Myers testified he had no cnrrunal
In a 1952 NFL game the Los
Angeles Rams were losmg to Green
Bay 28-9 at the start of the fourth
quarter but rallied to wm 30-28

mtent when he took the money and
no plans to exert mfluence on the
shetk s behalf Hts lawyers argued
that no prrvate unrrugrat10n btll ever
was mtroduced and that there had
been no follow up by the government
after the payment
Myers satd he had been assured he
would never have to do anything for
the sheik PucciO scoffed Dtd he
believe an Arab sheik was gomg to
dole out $50 000 for domg absolutely
nothing?
The defense satd prorruses Myers
made m the play achng con
versahons came from coachmg by
Mel Wemberg the convtcted con
man credtted wtth settmg up the
stmg
Defense lawyers concentrated on
discreditmg Wemberg s testunony
and the government s swnmatton
was directed at Myers credibility

31

NEW 3 bedroom home tor
sa le
Butlt tn k tchen
d1n ng
room
large
recreation room ftrep ace
lots of storage 2 2 baths
garage 1 acre lot 992 3454

Fog blankets Ohio River Friday
By The Associated Press
A southerly now of warm, hurrud

atr over Ohto through the mght

producmg Widespread haze and con
stderable fog this mornmg The
heavtest fog was along the Ohio
River Valley
Temperatures early this mormng
were qu1te warm rangmg from the
rrud~s to the rrud 70s The coolest
was 65 degrees at Youngstown

Bob Waterfield of the Los Angeles
Rams was such a versatile player
that he was a star quarterback
place-ktcker and also a strong defenSIVe back

while the warmest was 74 at Dayton
A weak low pressure system will
move northeastward mto the lower
Ohio VaUey by Saturday morrung,
keepmg a southerly now of warm
and hurrud atr over Ohio through
Saturday Wtdely scattered thunderstorms will spread mto Ohio
from the southwest torught and
become more nwnerous Saturday

Elroy Crazy Legs Hirsch, one of
pro footbaU s great pass-recetvers
got his nickname because his left
foot pomted out farther than his
rtght

PUBLIC NOTICE
The tollow,ng documents
were rece ved or prepared
" py the Oh o Environmental
" Protect•an Agency dunng
the prev 1ous week The ef
~ect ve date of each t nal
~ •ct 1on IS stated
The
ssuance date of each
proposed act1on IS stated
Anyone aggneved or ad
versely affected by a f nal
act 1on to
ssue
deny

Public NOtiCe

Publtc Nollce

compltance shceoul e let
ters W1th1n 30 days of
publlcat on m a newspaper
n the affected county any
person may also ( 1) sub
m1t wr tten comments
relat ng
to
act•ons

PUBLIC NOTICE
Nott ce •s here by g ven
that on Sa turday August
30th 1980 at 10 00 AM a
publ c sa e w II be he d at
105
Un on
Avenue
Pomeroy Ohto to sell tor
cas h
the f o ll ow tn g
co llateral to w•t
1977 Ford TK MFR s
senal no F 15HN08836ll
The Farmers Bank and
Sav ng s
co mpan y
Pomeroy Oh o reserves
the nght to btd at th1S sa le
and tow thdraw any of the
above menttoned veh cles
prtor 1o the sale Further
The Farmers Bank and
Sav ngs Company reserves
the r ght to re1ect any or al l
b ds subm1tfed
(81 27 28 29 3tc

Safety pursuant to Sectton
4511 76 ot the Oh10 Rev1sed
Code and all other per
t nent proviston of law
Spectftcattons and
n
struct ons to btders may be
obta ned at the office ot the
Treasur e r
Mtddleport
OhiO
A cerl1t ed check payable
to the Treasurer of the
above board of eductton or
a satisfactory btd bond
executed by the b1dder and
t ile surety company n an
amount equal to ftve per
cent (5% 1 of the bid shall
be subm ttted w1th each b d
Sa d board of education
reserves the nght to watve
nformal t es to accept or
r e1ect any and all or part~
of any and all btds
No b ds can be w th
drawn for at least th rty
( 30 1 days
alter
the
scheduled clos tng t me for
r ece pt ot b ds
Metgs Local
Board of Educafton
Jane Wagner Treasurer
South Th1rd Avenue
M1ddJepor1 Ohoo 45760
(8)22 29(9)5 124tc

J

proposed act ens ver f ed
compl amts
enforcement
compliance schedule let
ters or prellmmary staff

determmattons on perm1ts
to mstall

(2)

request a

fnodlfy revoke or renew a

publtc meetmg regardmg

ce or to approve or d sap

proposed actions or on
prelim nar y staff deter

&gt; permtt ltcense or var an

prove
plans
and
;1
spectftc:at ons may ftle an
'l' appeal
wtth the En
~ v ronmental
Board of
t,.."'Rev 1ew Su te 123 240 Par
-:: sons Ave Columbus Oh o
43215 wtth.n thtrty (30)
days of the effect ve d ate
pursuant to Ohto Rev sed
Code Sect on 3745 07 unless
such t nal act10n was
preceded by the same or
substantially the same
proposed achon In ad
~ d liOn pursuant to Section
3745 04of the Rev sed Code
not 1ce of the ftltng of the ap
peal shall be flied w th the
o t
f the Oh 0 En
1
v ·~g~~~n~al
Prot~ct on
-J
Agency
361 E
Broad
Street
Columbus
OhiO
1 43216 w th n t hree (31 days
l..- after the appeal ts f1led
wtth the Envtronmental
.~'""1\oard of Rev ew All such
.&amp;'l'f1na l actions are so den
t fed Such persons may
n ad ud cat1on
t
reques
a
I
heanng before the Oh o
EPA on a proposed achon
to tssue deny modtfy
revokt:: or renew a permtt
license or\Janance orto
approve or d sapprove
plans and spec 1t cat 1ons
w1th n th rty (301 days of
the ssuance date ORC
3745 07doesnotprovtdefor
ad 1udtcat 1 on
hear 1ng
r,equests or appeals from
ord ers
vertf ted com
plamts
or enforcement

l

!

ii

l

mnatonsonperm•tsto n
stall and/or (3) request
not ce of furth er act ons or
proceedmgs All requests
for ad 1ud catton heanng
and public m etmg s nad
other commun ct ons con
cern ng pub I c meetmgs
ad 1ud•ca tton
hear.ngs
ver fted complamts and
regula! ons should be ad
dressedtotheLegaiRecor
ds Sect 1on Oh o EPA P 0
Box 1049 Columbus Oh 0
43216 (6141 466 6037 Unl es.
otherw se stated m pa r
t tcular nottces all other
co mmuntca ttons tncludmg
comments on proposed ac
ttons should be addressed
ether to the Dtvtston of
AuthorizatiOn a. Com
pi ance (Air) or Perm1t
and Approval Sect on
(Water) Wht chever s ap
propnate at the Ohio EPA
P 0 Box 1049 Columbus
0Hfo43216
APPROVAL OF PLANS
AND SPECIFICATIONS
Southern Ohto Coal Com
pany
Columb a Twp Oh
EffectveDateOS/21 / 80
Thts tmal act on not
preceded by proposed ac
t on and s appealable to
EBR Add tona l d scharge
potnt
at
sed men
ta fton / hold ng pond
n
refuse dtsposa l ara for
MetgsM ne No 2
{8) 29ltc

~-tr'----------·-•••••••·-·•--·-·-~~1

Curb lnflati"""n
]: Pay Cash for
:j Classifleds ancl
H
Savelll
d
?." II
~ I

:~' III

SIDE GLANCES

Public No11ce

V

Pubhc Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASEOFTHREE
SCHOOL BUSES FOR
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATION
Sealed proposals w 11 be
recetved by the Board of
Educat on of the Metgs
Loca l School Otstr ct of
Mtddleport Ohto at the
Treasurers Office unttl
12 00 Noon on September
15 1980 and at that hme
opened by the Treasurer ot
satd Board tabulated and
a report thereof made to
satd Board at tts next
regular
meet ng
as
provided by law for three
(31 65 passenger school
buses
according to
specJftcattons of satd board
of educaf ton
Separate
and
n
dependent btds w•11 be
rece ived w th respect to the
chass1s and body type and
w 11 state that the bus when
assembled and pror to
delivery comply wtth al l
school
dtstr ct
spec flcattons all safety
regulattons and current
Oh o M101mum Standards
for Schoo l Bus Con
structton of the Depart
men! ot Educat on adopted
by and w th the consent of
the D rector of H ghway

•

-•••••·•·on-. .. ,. .... , ...
• • ·•· ~·~•• - r..:r .• · · • ·• ·~~

Card of Thanks

1

THE FAMILY ol Emma 0
Johnson would lt ke to e&gt;&lt;
press the r s ncer e thanks
a nd apprec afton to our
f r ends and relattves for
the many beauttful flowers
cards and food Specta I
thanks to Dr Mahr Jr and
Dr Cha rl es Holzer J r and
staff at Holzer Hasp ta
GallipoliS Oh10 for t he
wonr:lerful tr ea t men t and
care of our mother Word s
a one cannot say enough
f or the wonderful comfort
Rev Earl Shu ler gave us n
our ttm e of sorr ow and
need M ay God Bless each
and eve ry one
The F am l y of Em m a D
Johnson

WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156

Wrtte your own ad and order by m all wtth th1s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

or Wrtte Dally Sentrnel Classtfled Dept
111 Court St, Pomero.,., 0 , 45769

...

\I

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

d

; 1 Address,_ _ _ _ ___,.___....,
~r

Phone·.~---------------~

'~ II

:,.,..

Pnnt one word n each
I space below Each n
1 ltlal or group of f1gures
1 counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number ,f used
~ '1 You II get better r esults
t 1f you descr be fully
1 give price The Sentmel
1 reserves the nght to
classify ed1t or retect
J any ad Your ad w1ll be
l put In the proper
I claSSiftca11on t you 11
1 check the proper box
I below

I
I c
,1. (

~

J wanted
J For Sale
( J Announcement

l ;""""'
lr

rI

13
t4

I 1s
1 16
I
1
J
1

4- GivtiWIY
5-Happr Ads

44-Apartmenllor Rent

u

•MERCHANDISE
n-ca TV RldloEqulpmen
53- AnUques
S4-Misc Merclllndise
SJ-Iht ldlnt Supp let

U - PetJior Slit

5--Schoolslnttr"'cllon
Radio TV
&amp; Cl RttNir

• FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
61 Far m Equ pmen1

a-wanted To Do

61'- WutH lo luy
12 Trucks for Slle
63-L vestodc
64-Hay &amp; Grain
IS- SeldA Fert Iller

•FINANCIAL
21- BUtlneu
Opporl..,nlty
~2-M oney to LNn
U-Proftst on11
Ser~rlu!

•TRANSPORTATION
71-Autos fOr Sl it

eREALESTATE

73

Vlnlli&amp;4W D

:It-Homes for Sllef
n-MoD le,..omes
tor hie
3:1 Farms forhle
:M-BuslnHt Buildings
lS- Lots &amp; Acruge

7._Mollrcycltt
75Auto P1rts
I. A.cceuoritlli
77-AutoRep,air

37-Realtors

•SERVICES

Want Ad Advertising
Deadlines
··
2 :JOf!ofJI Dilly

12 Noon S.turdft
tor~ ~11day

SIGN UP now tor fall
cl asses of tap and 1azz
Barbara s Sc hoo l of Da nce
Syracuse 992 3282
CAKE DECORAT NG
classes beg tnn ng soon at
the Carousel Contec ttonary
tn M dd leport
Beg nne r
tnt ermed tat e
adva n ces
also
m n
c l ass
h
decor at ng novelty cakes
Cali or come tn for deta Is
992 6342

Mlddlepo•~onoo

11- Homelmprovtments
12- Piumb ng &amp; EJUYatint

SUPERMA KST
8300 Sque Ft
Fodale or Lease
Call Middlepor1992619~
I
or Columbus
(614) 837 8182

n-E~clvatlnt

14- Eiectrlcal
&amp; Refrigeration

Is-General Haul nt
........M H Repair
17-Upllolstery

30
31 _ _

_ __

32 _ __ _ _

Rates and Other lnformatron
~

II Words or Under

33·, ~---34 _ _ _ __
35 _ _ _~-

1 day
2 dlyl

ld1rs
'days

Cllll
100

ISO
110
300

Chllr~tt

110
'"
'"
"'

E•ch wordov•r the minimum 11 words 1 4 cents ptr word per diY
Ads running o ller Ulln consecutive dayl will be charged at tt'lel diV

Mall Thts Coupon wtth Remrttance
The Da1ly Sentrnel

BOX 729
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

....

In memory C1rd of Thank, 1nd Obit..,ary • unts ptr word U OD
minimum Cash In advlnt:l!

Mobile Hom1111es •nd Y:.rd sales art accepted only w th c.uh with

order 2S cent charte for ads c.rrylng8o11 Number n Care of Tht
Sent
~---------------------·-'"'t'~liJ......:..:
_nel
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,:

I

BAKERS BUSY
BEE
CERA MI CS
Tuppers
Platns IS hav ng t he tr an
nual f ntshed ceramtc sale
on Sa turday August 30
from 9 5
Brmg your
Chnstmas g ft lists Very
resonable pn ces on lots of
m ce terns Also a green
ware sale same day at 30
percent off
Br ng your
own boxes for greenware
Pau ne Baker

NEW
Ren t a pan ser
v ce Rent t he novelly cake
pan of your cho ce for onl y
$2 00
Ca II 992 6342 lor
deta Is

H--Reat Elfllt wanr.ct

26
27
28
29

MASON HOME REPAIR
heat ng and a r con
d t on ng furn ace c lea n ng
plumb ng repa r res der1
ttal e ectr c w1nng sa es
serv ce a nd tn sta ll at on
992 2364

i

6--

24
15

3
Announcements
WILL
YO UR
Hou se
w t hst and another hard
w nter' How about that
roof and ba rn t ha t snow
gets pretty hea vy Let us
do any genera l ma•n
t anence work for you pa tn
t ng gutter repatr patch
work odds and end s so you
ca n s t back n fro nt of th at
warm f re th s w nter and
not have to worry Ca ll992
3941 992 3519 or 992 5126
and we 1 come a nd g ve
you a f ree est ma t e
References are prov ded
upon request

JI-Household OCKKis

Htlp wantld
2- SUuaiH WI niH
13- lnsunnce
14-&amp;uslntll Training

17
18
19
20

I~;::=:;:;:;:;:::;;;;~~::::r::=~:::;:;;~;;=:-j
_........_

SALE 20% off all l1shmg
tackle Aug 25 to Sept 7
Rods reels tackle boxes
mar ne suppl es lur es No
law?tway on sa le tems
Open 9 to o da ly The
Tackle Box
Sr
124
Syracuse Oh 992 6193

u,.-Fitoomlli

1 t-

These cash rates
nclude d1scount

Mob e Homes

...- space lor Rtn1
41-Wanted to Rent
41-Equipment lor Rent

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

to get Jason Interested In EST
but he s more Interested In ZZZI

Co

torR~t

~WanledtoBuy

22

to ·------

41- Houseslor Rent

7-YarCISate
I - Public Slit
&amp; Auction

23

I 4
I s
I
I 6
I 7
I 8
I 9
I
1
I 11
I 12

•RENTALS

I- Card Ol Tfllnkt
l - In Memor 1m
3-Announctmenls
6--Lo11t and Fauna

21

3

eANNOUNCEMENTS

.~,

THE ROYAL OAK
BALLROOM
DANCE
CLASSES

Wtll start Wednesday
Sept 3 at the Royal Oak
Park
Recreatton
Bu1ld1ng
Begmners Class 7 30
Second Class at 8 30
1nstructors
Mary &amp; Gerald Powell
For Into Ca II 992 2622
anytime

3-_
- __ A
_n_n_o_u~e me_n_
ts__
I PAY highest pr ces
posstble for go ld and s l ver
co ns r ngs ewe lry etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop M dd leporf

- - - - ---

P ana T un ng
Lane
Dan els 742 2951
Tun ng
and Repa r Serv tce s nee
1965 11 no answer phone
992 2082
CANDY SUPP L IES on
sale
Ann s
Cake
Decor a t ng Suppl es 50716
Osborn Rd
Reedsv lie
Oh 667 6485
SHOOT IN G
MATCH
Forked Run Spor l sma n
Club St art ng Aug 31 eac h
Sun t her e after Factory
choked g uns on ly
G~a v__

__

F VE PUPP I ES 6 weeks
old Ch huahua &amp; Terr er
m xed 985 4302

6_

-----~ ost and_Fou ~

LOST
Ch ld s g lasses
Brown frames Ether n
blue case or close to blue
case Chester El ementary
playground or close by 98~
3558 De~perately needed

--- - - -----------

7 _ _ _Yar d Sale _ __

2 FAM I LY PORCH Sa le
Aug 29 &amp; 30 • m 11e west ol
Forked Run State Park on
Route 124 Grant Young
BASEMENT SALE Sep
tem ber 2 4 from 9 4 at lOS
Wr ght Street Pomeroy
Th trd house on the nght
LA ST OF the greal yard
sa les Grea t fall barga ns
Aug ust 29 August 30 three
m l es east of Darw n
follow the s1g ns Clothes
cham saw ( husqua r na)
copper kettle v tdeoga m e
and many more un
be lt eva bl e good buys 992
7709 or 992 2016 Come on
out and see what 1ts about
GARAGE
SA L E
Se p
tember 1 5 from 9 5 loca t ed
off Route 7 bypass on old
ro ute 143 sou th of Jacks
Ca fe Reasonab le pr ces on
new pa nttng suppl es good
school c loth ng toys and
much more
Follow the
stgns to grea t barga ns
FRIDAy X
Sa tu rday
August 29 30 f rom 10 4
Se c ond
hou se
Sa lisbur y School
M sc
terns wh te un fo rms
cl othmg
4 FAMI L Y Yard Sale
Cloth ng di Shes drapes
r ugs terns to numerous to
ment on 207 S 2nd St
Middlepor t Rain Cancels

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctton

BRADFORD Aucttoneer
Complete Servtce Phone
949 2487 or 949 2000 racme
Oh1o Cntt Bradford

THREE FAMILY garage
sale Fndav August 29
from 9 2 On Route 33 at the
bottom of Rose Htll Watch
for stgns
Everythtng
cheap 992 2378

IRON AND BRASS BEDS
old furntture desks gold
nngs
1ewelry
Stiver
dollars sterling etc wood
tee bo)(es 1ars anttques
etc Complete households
Wr te M D M1ller Rt 4
Pomeroy OH 1 or carl 992•
7760

9_

Wanted to Buy

10 karat 14 karat 18 Karat
gold Dental gold and gold
ear pms 675 3010

SEVE RAL tamll es and
Presbyter an Church yard
sa e Saturday Au gust 30
at 10 00 a m on Wa ter
Street n Syrac use At
teht on
AVO N COLLEC
TOR S enttre Avon collec
ton sel mg chea p kntck
knacks depress on g lass
draper es
c loth ng

Gold
Stiver or foretgn
cons or any gold or St iver
tfems Ant que furntture
glass or chma wtl l pay top
dollar or complete estates
No tem too l arge or too
small Check pnces before
sellmg Also do appratstng
Osby (Qss1el Marhn 992
6370

baked goods
ten
speed bt cycle
No sales
pr or to day of sa le Ra n
date Labor Day LOts ot
mtscellaneous

SH ALLOW well pump and
" ton Ford p ckup must be
tn good shape and pnced
resonably or would trade a
1978 Ford F1esta g ve or
t ake the d !teren ce 94~
2013

1 ewe r y

YARD
SA LE
Sunday
August 31 back ot th e Jea n
Fredenck home tn Chester
on o tn case of ra n wtll be
,n the basement of Sum
merftelds Apartments
Lots of n ce ttems
Cather ne M I er Chester
OHIO
SEVERA L FAMILY Yard
sa le Boso s Great Bend
Sept 4 7 lit II dark
YA RD SALE at Nellie
Hy sell r es td ence on Happy
Ho llow Roa d August 28th
Septemb er 11 Lots of boys
1eans avon dolls bottles
m1sc 1tems Call 742 2991

--- --------4___

8

7
Yard Sale
YARD SALE Frday
Saturday August 29 30th at
the Paul Baer res dence on
Route 7 past the h ghway
garage Watch for the
s gns Clothes su 1table for
school Boys StZe 5 some 6
7 Curta.ns rugs and mtsc

YARD SALE Fn II. Sa t
278 Ash St M1ddleport 2
d nette
sets
p nball
mach ne baby c lothes lots
of m sc

PI CK NG UP a p a na tn
your area
Respons ble
party may take over low
monthly pay men ts
Cal l
cred t m anager at 773 5125
Gray s P ano and Organ

'I

by G11J

8

Public Sale
&amp; Aucfean

OSSIE S AUCTION House
20 N 2nd Stree t M1d
d epor t Oh o We se ll one
p ece or ent re households
New used or anttques tn
clud•ng homes farm s or
llqu dat on sales Get top
dollar L st w th the man
who has over 25 years tn
the new used and anttque
turn ture busmess
We
take constgnments For •n
formatiOn and ptckup ser
v ce ca 1 992 6370 or 1n
Wes t V~rg n1a 773 5471 Sale
ever y Fr day n 1ght at 7
p m Aucttoneer Howard
Beas ley apprent ce auc
t10neer Osby A Ma r ttn
( no 1unk l
SA TURDAY Aug 30 at 1
p m at the Former George
Reed restdence 4 mtles E
ot Tuppers P la 1n s 1 m1le
N E ot State Route 681 on
coo v lie Rd Follow s1gns
trom St Rt 681 W II sell
the follow ng 3 p1 ece biOI
de bedroom su tte wooden
post bed anttque dresser
odd dresser 2 p ece ltv ng
room sutte coffee and end
tables odd stands and
tables
5 p1ece d nette
glass door cupboard 3 an
ttque stratght chatrs
qutltmg f ra m e Ward s 30
tn electnc range 17 tt 2
door
Whtr lp ool
r efngerator freezer Man
arch upr ig ht free zer
Maytag wrmger washer
electnc dryer
electrtc
S.nger sew ng machtne 3
bar stools
porlable
kerosene heater dishes
pots pans etc a few hand
tools and a large amount
of mtsc ttems W Vernon
Reed Owner
0
Mac
M cC oy Auct1oneer
OSSIE S AUCTION House
Fnday 7 p m
Deep
Freezers
refrigerators
telev tstons reel ners all
new Ant ques &amp; many
mt sc tern s

AUCTION
(CLEARANCE SALE)
106 SOUTH HIGH ST GLOUSTER OHIO
SAT AUGJO - lOOOAM
We are over stock ed and must sell to make more
r oom Color TV s deep freezers all kmds of fur
n•ture auto and biCyc le accessories sporting equip
men I pamt toys tools all k ndsot mtscelfaneous
Not res pons ble tor acctdents
rerms Cash or check Wtfh pos1tl've 10
A UCT IONEER BILL BROWN

11

Help Wanted

GET VALUABLE tra n ng
as a young bust ness person
and earn good money pi us
some great g Its as a Sen
ttnel route earner Phone
us r ght away and get on
the el1g1b hty I sl at 992
2156 or 992 2157
ADDRESSERS WANTED
mmedtately' Work at
home no
expertence
necessa ry excellent pay
Wnte Amencan Servtce
8350 Park Lane Su1te 127
Dallas TX 75231
MEDICAL
labratory
techtn c1an full or par t
ttme postftons available tor
MT ML T or CLA sala ry
com mensurate wtth e&gt;&lt;
penence Please contact
the Labratory Supervtsor
at Veterans Memona l
H os ptta l
Mulberry
He1ghts Pomeroy Oh1o at
614 992 2104 est 55 Equal
Opportun ty Employer
PHONE SOLIC ITOR wan
ted fo r approx •mately one
month P 0 Box 26lltn Mtd
dleport Oh1o
An Equal
Opportun tv Employer
STANLEY HOME PrOduc
ts needs 3 lad es t serv•ce
customers tn thts area
Must have car &amp; be w•ll ng
to work Opportuntty for
tmmed ate advancement f
qual fled wr te Bo• 729
c o
Da ly
Senttnel
Pomeroy
Oh
Gt'Wtng
name complete address &amp;
phone number

c

STEWARDESSES (18 321
for Dtck Drost s Jetliner
Relocate to lnd1ana Call
(219) 345 2000 Write Drost
E nterpnses
Box 2000
Roselawn I ndtana 46372
12

Sotuatlons Wanted

SITUATIONS WANTED
famtly care for elderly per
son 992 6022
WILL DO Babys,ttmg 1n
my home Any t1me Have
references 742 3116
TYPIST des~res wcrk not
ftce
Fast accurate and
good Wtfh StaftSftCS 949
2202
13

4 BEDROOM Ce ntra l a ~ra.
hea t Located on Lincoln
St n M1dd eport $350 a
month 992 2394
FOUR

1975 Western Manston 14 )(
70 three bedroom
1971
came ron 14 x 64 two
bedroom 1971 L berty 14 x
65 two bedroom
1968
Atlant c
12 )( 60 two
bedroom
1968
New
M oon 12 x 60 w th expa ndo
lwo bedroom 1967 Buddy
12x50 2bedroom

ea. s

Mob le Hom e Sa les
Pt Pleasa nt w VA
675 4424

1970 CHAMPION mObil e
home 12 x 60
three
bedrooms equ pped w1th
washer
dry er
ra nge
ref rgerator and a r con
d t oner 992 2640

,_______

1970 MOBIL E HOM E 40 x
12 wtth new furmture 1
304 773 5131
1980 COLONADE By Far
mont 1Ax70 wtth expando
central atr l bed rooms l'h
ba ths Movtng out of state
742 3030

T RAILER SPACE lor r ent
1n Middleport $45 00 per
month 992 5349

AT TE N T 0 N
( M
PORTA NT TO YOU I W II
pay cash or ce r t f1ed check
for ant qu es and collec
t1 bles or ent re est ates
N th
t
I
A lso
guns pocket watches and
o mg oo arge
co n co ll ec t1ons Call 614
767 3167 or

ss7

pork liver ss 90

3411

Real Estate- General
POMEROY 0
Cha es M Hayes Rl!a tor
Neu IE Ciirll';' Br Mgr

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

608 E
MAIN
POMEROY 0

THREE
BEDROOM
mobile
h ome
ap
pro&gt;&lt; tm ate ly ftve mil es
tram Pomeroy or Mtd
dleport 992 5858
----~· ----

TWO BEDROOM m ob le
home near RaL .... Ca I
992 5856

REALTY
: PHONE 742·2003

one adu lt only

GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr
Bl:lller
N
SYRACUSE
one
bedroom tr ailer w th h de
a bed Uttltt es furmshed
Depos•t re qutred No pets
992 3269
Apartment
torRent

3 AND 4 RM tur n shed af)"
ts Phone 992 5434

RENTER S aSS IStance tor
Sentor C t•zens n V l lage
Manor apts Ca ll Y92 7787
FURN SHED
A PART
MENT 4 rooms a. bath
Adults on ly no pets 992
3874
Real Estate

General

Housing
Headquarters

TEAFORDrn

·~IRGIL B

SR ••

A

Q io'

216 E Second Street

Phone
1 (614) 992 3325
QUICK SALE - 6 room
home bath new torceo
atr furnace good drilled
well garden large front
porch uttltty room on
hard road tor only
$12 000
GOOD FARM 60
acres of n• ce lay ng
land 5 bedroom farm
home bath and lots of
outbutldtngs T P water
avatlable
MIDDLEPORT 3
bedrooms large bath
lots of carpeting Has
ut llty room equ pped
kttchen and near shopp
mg Only S16 500
2 LOTS - Old S room
house near Jones Boys
store Out of all flood s
Only S3 500
365 ACRES - Mostly
new barb w•re fence
tree gas dnlled well
and bottom land One
half mile w de and one
m le long 5 bedroom
renovated home with 2
baths
lots of nt ce
carpeting
rec room
d en
formal d nmg
Ia rge basement and 2
large porc hes S22S 000
Make
that
cnange
before school starts•
Low down payment
Want to sell Call us a1
992 U25 or ¥92 3876

Housing
Headquarters

Moscellaneous

FRESH
EGGS
and
rlngneck pheasants of
various ages Mrs Clifford
Lelfhe1t
Rockspr ngs
Road S R "'Sa Pomeroy
Ohio 992 3«6 or 1992 5836

I

ATHENA At•CI:S Lovely 2 story home 3
bedrooms 2 baths ltv
ng room wtth stone see
t hrough ftrepl ace to
btrch library formal
dtn ng room
large
I'TJOdern k tchen ut llty
room 8r cellar Pat•o
w th 1nv t 1ng 14 x2 8
swlmmmg pool
2.4
acres half cleared rest
woods Al l m nera l s go
Call for your appt
NEW LISTING 3
be droom
home
Rutlan d
large I v ng
room with f• replace
d ntng room k•t chen
uftltfY a nd double ca r
garage
Ask•ng
$35 000 00
POMEROY - Lovely 2
story
home w th
beaut fu I woodwork on
Mu lber ry Ave
I vtng
room
wtfh
nt ce
ftreplace dtn.ng room
fam ly
room
l
bedrooms 1 12 baths
n ce modern kttchen
and garage Call for
appt
ACREAGE - 5 acres on
H yse ll
Run
Rd
butldtng stte &amp; some
t mber S7 000 00
HYSELL RUN RD Approx 8 acres w1th 2
bedroom home Askmg
S2.1 500 00
CONDOR ST
3
bedroom home I VI ng
room
kttchen
some
furntture Would make
good rent a I property
Ask ng S13 500 00
POMEROY Nice 3
bedroom brick home
large I vmg room large
formal dtn ng room ex
tra nice tamtly room &amp;
kllchen combmed p;,
baths
Sells
tor
S26 500 OOGROCERY
BUSINESS - Sf Route
124 Rutland Bldg n
eludes equtpment and
rental
apartment
$21 200 00
COUNTRY COMFORT
2 " acres with 3
bedroom
Hollypark
mob1le home wtth large
tam1ly room double car
garage Has extra sep
ttc tank and water hook
up N1ce 32 x22 barn
PRICE REDUCED $~7 500 00
Velma N1censkv Assoc
Phone 742 3092
Cheryl Lemley Assoc
Phone 742 3171

NEW
LISTING
EASTERN
SCHOOL
DISTRICT - One floor
plan 2 bedroom home
w1th
a
Heatolator
firepla ce
lull base
ment and a large n ce
bu11t 10 kttchen Has ap
proxtmately 4 1" acres
$36 500 00
NEW LISTING WALK
TO THE MARKET - A
2 story frame home that
cou ld be a two fam1ly
Cou ld
use
some
remodel ng
tnstde
S6 200 00
NEW LISTING
BEAUTY SALON With S
rooms a. bath
1s 2
working stations ~ all
equ pm e nt
Also
a
mobtle home hookup
Ntce corner lot Put
yourself tn a bust ness of
your own for only
$24 900 00
NEW LISTING 90
acres of va cant land
near Long Bottom
$27 000 00
MOVE RIGHT IN - to
th1s NEW ranch style
home
that
has 3
bedrooms ut•l ty room
large one acre lof par
ttally fenced Super ntce
at $39 900 00
FARMERS HOME AP
PROVED - Approx 10
vr old house that has
new carpet new w n
dows and a new wood
burner on a 'h acre lot
Pr~ced
to
sell
at
$21 500 00
DON T BE A RENT
SLAVE - You can live
n thts house for less
than you can r ent It has
two--2 bedroom apart
ments that are n gOOd
c ond tton
Ju st
$13 300 00
MIDDLEPORT l'h
story bn ck home wtth
front &amp; rear porches and
approx 11!2 acres The
kttchen
has
nice
c abtnets
and
a
dtshwasher
Only
$20 000 00
PRIVATE RETREAT
Forget
about
everyth ng 10 th1s qu et
peaceful settmg
12
acres of n ce land plus a
mob le home that has 2
rooms bu 11 on the rear
Could be heated With
wood S22 300 00
WE ARE A FULL TIME
FULL SERVICE
REAL ESTATE COM
PANY
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland Jr
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949 2660
Rooer &amp; Dollie Turner
992 5692
OFFICE PHONE
992 2259

~[I

LARGE UPRIGHT com
pressor 220 volts up to 180
PSI S375 00 Kmg castlron
wood burning cook or heat
stove never used for
$100 00 992 28~9

REAL ESTATE

r

NANCY JASPERS ASSOCIATE
9~9 2591 Leave Message
or 949 2654

A l so
AKC
reg,stered
ndoor outdoor
factltf
Dobermans
614 446
7795 es

Stzes
From30K30
SMALL

Sizes from 4k6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3 Box 54
Racine Oh
Ph 61~ 843 2591
6 15 tf

- - --- --

31711 Noble sum II Rd
Middleport Ohio
992 5724
Sales servtce and supplies In ground ao;&gt;d
above ground pools
5 1 tic

All types of roofing new
and repa.r, gutters
downspouts
commer
ceal &amp; restdentlal
949 2160 Pomeroy
797 2432 Alnens
Tom Hoskens or
Gerald Clark
797 4147
21 years e)(pertence All
work guaranteed
Free Est1mate
8 u 1 mo

• Electncal work
• Masonry work
12 Years

Eshmate Call
Eugene Long
(614) 843 3322
8 18 1 rna pd

317 N
Mtddleport, Ohto
PH 992 6342
TRY US•

comp~~~e ~a'Jn~~~aning

Experrence
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583

• Carpet
eDraperoes
• Furm1ure
c were No 11n

8 7 1 mo

~~:::::::::~;~~~~~~~~~;h~~S~e~r~v~,c~e~&amp;~~~~~~
H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

p

FINANCIAL

All types of rool work
new or repair gutters
and downspouts gutter
cleaning aud painttng.
All work guaranteed

-Addonsand
remodeling
-Rooltng and gutter
work
-Concrete work
-Piumbtng and
electrical work
1Free Estimates)

REAL ESTATE
Federal Houstng
V41terans
Admtntstratron
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy
Offrce 992 7544
Home992 6191

Free Estimates
Reasonable Proces
Call Howard
949 2862
949 2160
1 22 tfc

V.C. YOUNG II
992 621Sor992 7314
Pomeroy Dh

r-------tr=::=J&amp;?l~BLOW====N=:==;ipiiililliiiiBELL
S7
MUSICal
Instruments

House p81fttiftg
••

INStJ1 A'fiON

BACH 51 LYE R trumpet
ltkenew onyusedtwocon
cer t seasons
Phone 742
2661 or742 2511

....

V1nyl&amp;
Alumrnum s 1d 1ng
•Insulation

INSIDE &amp; OUT

eStorm Doors
FENDER STRATOCAST
ER Peavy electnc gu1tars
I ke new Great buy Con
t act Garv F te 992 2582

•Storm Windows
eReplacement
Windows
Free Est1mate

Call After 5 P M

843-2803

James Keesee
Ph 992·2772

Rt I, Portland, Oh
8 13 1 mo

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

CARPET SHOP
Drrve A LrHie save A Lot '
SHOP IS FULLY STOCKED

CASE TRACTOR w t h Side
mount mower $795 949
2179
62

Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 10 on largest
end S12 p er ton Bundled
slab $10 per ton Delivered
to Oh10 Pallet Co Rt 2
Pomeroy 992 2689
OLD COINS pocket wat
ches class nngs wedd ng
bands dtamonds Gold or
s lver Call J A Wamsley
742 2331
Treasure Chest
Co1n Shop Athens OH 592
6462

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742 2211
71

GOLD
AND
SI LV ER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS
JEW E LRY
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAY NG
RECORD
H GH
HIGHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
MIDDL E PORT
OH 0 OR CALL 992 3476

4786

63

AdllM

491

The Dally Senhnel

Rodney Downing, Broker

for 25 years Call
now for large sav
tngs
For
Free

USED R 40 d1fch w t ch
wtth trenc her
1 614 694
7842

Polin Dlpt.

Call Bill Childs, Mgr. 992-2342

eNew Homes ex
tenstve remodelmg

6_l __Farm Equtpment

~nnt

on

8 14 1 mo pd

Prmted Pattern

$175 for ll(h pa1ttm Add SOt
lor liCit 111111m ftr flm-ctass
aumod and hlndlloc. S.n4 te:

MIDDLEPORT - L arge stately bnck ho me
a
corner lot only a block from shopping Three
bedrooms and bath upsta~rs F ve rooms and bath
downstatrs New furnace wtth central air condition I
tng One car garage with storage room up Full
basement Call tor an appo ntment -$59 000 00

992 2478

ROOFING
REMODELING
Servmg your area

TWO MALE pek ngese
pupp es Reg stered 949
2890

Wearable!

THE POOL PEOPLE

l·;=========c~f~==~~~====~~~;;=======;.
VINn SIDING
ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

AKC REGISTERED Old
Eng ltsh
sheep
dogs
Females 7 weeks old $200
SyearoldSIOO 3048953624

PUT A cold nose m your
future
Metgs County
Humane Soctety Wormed
shols 992 6260
Two ger
man shepherd elk hounds
mae f our l ovely pupptes
pretty brown shepherd
type dog severa l lovely
catsan dk ttens

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

OHIO VAlLEY
ROOFING

Expenenced Operators
avatlable for local work
• 2 rubber lire backhoes
el excavator hoe 11/4
yd
e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equ•pment

Ut1'lity Bu1ld1'ngs

HOOF HOL LOW Horses
and pontes and ndtng
essons
Everyth ng
m ag nable 1n horse equtp
ment
Blankets
be lts
bOots etc English and
Western
Ruth Reev es
(6141 698 3290

Talk about wearable then add
pleasurable and you have ru st
two of the abdtt es of lhts easy
casual Fltp collar loop-and
button closmg sltm lines
Pr nted Pattem 4786 Half
Sizes 10\l 12\l 14\l 16\\
18 \\ 10\\ Stze 14\\ (bust 37)
takes 3~ yatd s 45 mch fabr c

OVER 100 ACRES - All mmeral rights go with pro
perty Waler I nes clo se timber ready to cut dnlled
gas well Call tor more lnlo

ANT TO SELL? GIVE US A CALL! !

Farm Bulldmgs

POOD LE
G ROOM NG
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220
H L LCREST KENNELS
Boardmg all breeds Clean

Pullins
Excavating

ALL STEEL

Pet s for Sale

56

t.,-/h._ 41--~

NEW LISTING - A 1 co ndtf1on 3 BRfU II base
ment tn town locat ton many extras Priced to sell
S39 000

NEW LISTING - Small2 BR home needs work on
ry sa ooo

ss Butldmg Supplies
318 nch reba r-17c per foot
by 20 tt sect on only D
Bumgardner Sales Noble
Su mm't Rd Middleport
OH 992 5724

101f.t 201f.t

Real Estate - General

BEAUTIFUL - Well kept home has J BR s could
be more fam•IY room &amp; den 1h bath 2 ca r garage
well Insulated Al l thlsandmuch more $57 500

8 8 1 mo

9921UQ

TWO BEDROOM mob le
home rea n ce Brown s
Tra l er Park 992 3324

44

$9 90
10 lb hamburger
smoked sausage 1 nks
patt es$ 17 so 10 lb beet or

Bebutlts Repa•rs
Seal Jobs
Located 6 mtl es north of
Albany
Oho on 681
Norrn
22 Ye.-rs Expenence
Fully Guaranteed
Ph 664 6370
If no answer
Call 698 3113
7 31 1 mo pd

7421455

- M- EA-T - P
- a-ck_ n_g

WaShington Co Rd 248
L1ttle Hock ng Oh Phon e
nqu~res welcome 667 3133
10 lb beet cube steak
s2o 90 10 lb slab ba co n
So 90 10 lb whol e hog
sausage s6 90
10 lb

TRANSMISSION
SPECIALISTS

- Haul
Lemestone
gravel fill dtrt
- Agr1c lime spread1ng
- Backhoe work
- New and used farm
equtpment
- Mectlantcal work on
farm equtp
cars
truck s

TW N S ZE maple bed w th
mattress 4 box sp r ngs for
$100 00 A nt que wh te SIX
drawer
dresser
w•th
m rror for $80 00 Tw tn s•z e
wh te eyel et bedspread for

Ph 992 2403 or H:l 2710

42

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT &amp;
TRUCKING

a.

BEDROO M house

nace depostt and reteren
ces req Ui red
No pets
Ava lable the ttrst week of
October 949 2666

1

Mob•l e Homes
tor Sale

HEATING OIL Buy now at
Summer Pr ces Exce lstor
c o 614 9922205

LADlE COM PLET E 12 14
ward r obe
Cl ot hes are
J,b,rar&gt;d new most sftll have
tags on Reason for se lli ng
Don t f f ncludes Ltl 1 Ann
sutts
John Meyer
M anhatten blouses
Btll
Lt ce
des gner
robe
Ch r st an Otor d resses etc
992 3283

w th tw o baths gas fur

MODULAR HOME Must
re locate 3 bedroom 2 full
bath s
garden tu b
n
ma st er bedroom
f u ll y
equipped modern k tche n
dm ng livtng &amp; fam ly
rooms Panel ng &amp; car
pet ng throughout cen tr al
a r a. hea t 992 7342

32

Houses for Re nt

41

Business Services

54 ·--~M~
, s~c~M
~ ~an se

fw'ettbano.se
~=~~~-~~--=::-T~i~~~~~1
sJ~oo_Noo_E_s

PLEASANT COUNTRY
L vtng
Baum Add ton
Home on large landscaped
lot 3 bedrooms 2 h baths
lar,..e hvtng room dtnmg
room
paneled family
room wtth stone ftre pl ace
ptcfure w ndow &amp; sl d ng
g lass doors to pa11o gas
heat centra l a c ex.tra
arge double garage 985
3543

--------

ELECTRI C RANGE Cop
pe r tone double oven
ke
new SJ2S 843 2032

KENWOOD TAPE DECK
ampltf er
turntab l e
speakers S600 Less than 6
months old 992 6190

F VE TO F FT Y acres
Any amount on mat! route
and school bus r&lt;1utes
Eas tern School dtstr ct 1~6
Spac~or R
_e
~n_t__
$40 00 to $500 00 an acre
985 4185
COUN T RY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy L arge lot s Ca ll
992 7479

FIVE YEAR old b level
home Three bedroo m 211.1
baths large family room
w th f replace fully car
peted Large sun deck and
pat o
w th•n walk ng
01str Ct Of ShOOIS 992 7132

----

FEEI'll&lt;li IWE-HOTS
8T @VG«SA
CHANCE TO GeT
OW&lt; 1'\::lUeH &amp;ACI&lt;

REA L ESTATE lor sa le
corner lot on ma tn h gh
way over 250 foot of fran
t age 95 percent f nanc ng
to qual t ed c hurch group
orga n za tt on or successful
bustness management
992 5786 or 992 2529

OWNER MU ST SELL
New rustt c hom e surroun
ded by 7 5 acres of n ce
wood 2 bedrooms 1 2
baths
f replace
sp r a l
sfa trway
Wood decks
over l ook tng
fl a two ods
over I 400 ff ot I v ng
space 992 32 13

7 ROOM HOUSE tor sale
By Owner Good loca tt on n
M ddleporl Low $40 s 992
3341

A MOVI&amp; oH
TV I WANNA
CATCU 1!4EN
I SI&lt;OuCD

()lilT STAU.IN '
Nf:VS.R NUND 'THE

SUITABLE LOT tor mobi le
home Easy t erms close to
town 992 5786 or 992 2529

HOU SE FOR Sa le by
owner Good locatton n
M ddleport pnced r gh t
for sale Phone 992 5792 or
992 2917

2 BEDROOMS l /1 baths
garden fru t trees Must be
nstde to apprec tate Wtl l
take am n home or p ck up
truck as part a l payment
843 297 1

1!4~Re'S

ONE ACRE of good tron
tage tn the Ractne Dorcas
area 949 2890

TWO BEDROOM house
full basement fue l o I fur
nace
woodburner
Workshop W1fh attached
shed S29 500 Phone 949
2249

N CE 3 or 4 bedroom home
n Basha n approx m ately
ten m les fro m Pomeroy
Alum num s dtng storm
1oors storm w ndows 2
baths I v ng room d n ng
room
k t chen
car pe t
t hroughout laundry room
a hal f basement natural
gas furnace dr lied water
wei new bock ch tm eny
for wood burner c ha n I nk
~nee new sept c sys tem
also large bu ld ng w th
new roof a nd alumtnum
s dtng goes w1 th I
Ap
pro)( mcffe y
"
acres
$29 000 1 614 949 2042

W/EIEKl V c.MIG

l&gt;EAL- M~

our

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE
been can
cel l ed'
Lost
your
operator s hcense? Phone
992 2143
17

ED
BARTELS Loan
Representat ve 1100 East
Mam St
Pomeroy Oh
Mortgage
money
ava !able All types home
ftnanctng
new
ol d
ref nanc tng and 2nd mar
!gages Phone 992 7000 or
992 5732

!"ffZZLE PICFINO TH/E W!/IIIIERS
1/117118 FI?IE/IIOLV

Lots &amp; Acreage

35

BEAUT FUL 3 bedroom
ranch home m Baum Ad
d tton Gas and central atr
Fully ca rp e t ed w th
drapes fam ly room wtth
ftreplace Pnced to se I by
owner Due to employment
must move from area Ca ll
after 6 p m
985 3814
weekends anyttme

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Nottce

MOb le ho me R chardsun
two bedroom 50 &gt;c. 12 t or
$2 000
Good cond t on
good lot for S45 00 a month
New w ater heater
New
Haven W Va Rtcha rdsons
Tra, ler Park M II St 682
2216

Homes for Sale

Household Goods

243 Wost 17 ~J.~.ew Y"' NY
10011 Pnot ADOII(SS
ZIP SIZE 11d IDL£ IIUMIIf:R
Why put up wtth htgh pnces-,
save dol laos Ket beltet qualttyl
Send for our ~EW FAll WINTER
PATTERN CATALOG 94 patterns
Free Pattern Coupoo (worth
$1 75) Catalog $1 00
133-fllhton HomeQutltiol$1 75

130-SwNieos-StztS 38-56 Sl 75
IJt.Orlcl/EIIJ Tralllltn Sl 75
127..,._ 'n DoilltS $1 75

L1ves tock

LARGE Guernsey cow
Exc m lk cow sound S675
949 2179

1972 VOLKSWAGON
1 304 773 5131

72

81

Autos tor Sale
Call

Trucks for Sale

1979 FORD F 150 n ex
cellent cond tt ton wtth
custom str pe wheels top
per 20 000 m l es S4395 00
Phone 667 6143
1979 FORD F2SO 29 000
mtles $300 &amp;. take ov er
payments 643 2032
74

HOGS appro• m atel y 200
lb s SIOO 949 2179
Y OUNG HEAVY Lay ng
hens $2 00 ea 949 2179

...............
.......................
-~ ·

71

~· - · ·

Autos lor Sale

1973 NOVA SUPER sport
350 V 6 with standard tran
sm sst on
three speed
65 000 m1les Phone 742
2431
1973 VW SUPER Bee tle
Pnce Sl 300 Call 614 949
2540 after 5 p m

1979 HONDA HAWK 400 n
excellent cond tton must
sell lor S1700 00 Ca ll 992
5502
1976 HONDA 550 4 Exc
cond 965 3597 B II Osbor

ne

75

1969 FIBE RGLA SS In haul
boat 1969 Ev m r ude motor
w1th trailer Sk equop a.
lite tackets Sl 100 992
5382

77
Campong
--~ tpmen'' ---

1970 VOLKSWAGON ca m
per pop top tour speed
May st cker some new
paris
93 000 m les for
S1100 00
New hea ter fan
ktt
for
t ype
two
volkswagen S25 00 Phone
1972 PONTIAC L EMAN S 773 5008
w th G TO tront end Or
dered from factory t hts 17 loot Sears I bergl ass
way Red wtth whtte top canoe like new $225 00 773
runs rea l good 247 3514
5008
1962
FORD
FALCON
FUTURA
co nvert ble
Power top partly restored
Coll ec tors tern Make an
offer 949 2013

s a. G Carpet Cleanmg
Steam
cleaned
Free
esttmate
Reasonable
rates
Scotchguard 992
6309 or 742 2211
83

Excavahng

J X F BACKHOE SER
VICE hscensed and bon
ded
septtc
tank
•n
stallatton water and gas
ltnes Excavattng work and
transtt layout 992 7201

SEPTIC TANKS C~allla
County
Certoftedl
Leach beds water and
gas hne electroc lines
pole buildings Reese
Trencn'"g and Backhoe
Servoce 367 7560
84

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Home
1mprovements

E lec1rocal
&amp; Refngerateon

SEWI NG
MACHINE
Repa rs
servtce
all
makes
992 2284
The
Fabnc Shop
Pomeroy
Authonzed Smger Sales
and Serv ce We sharpen
Sc ssors
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers
toasters trans all small
appli ances Lawn mower
Next to State H1ghway
Ga rag e on Route 7 985
3825
APPLIANCE serv ce all
mal&lt;es washers
drvers
ranges
dish
washers dtsposals
wa ter
tanks Call Ken Young 98S
356 1 before 9a m, or after 6
pm

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepurt·Pomeruy , 0 ., Friday, Aug. 29, 1980

Both chambers to
return on same day

Carter plan criticized by Ohio,, R·epublicans
WASHINGTON (AP) - The sole
Republican among legislators on
hand lor the unveiling of President
Carter's plan for revitalizing the
economy was highly critical of the
proposal.
Rep. Clarence Brown, R-{)hio, a
member of the congressional Joint
Economic Committee, called Car·
ler's . proposals politica lly
motivated. He said they failed to attack long-range problems and
wouldn 't do anything about the
current recession .

"This plan is· typical of Carter's
handling of the economy," Brown
told newsmen following the White
Hou5e session· Thursday. "The
whole thing is social-and recession-

oriented rdther than aimed at
building the economy · after the
recession is over."

He said the president's proposed
tax cut would trim taxes by an
average of $68 next year. He called it
" a tiny tax cut that will not offset the
huge tax increases of the Carter
years."
The president is "dealing with the
current recession," but his tax

proposal "won't be felt by the tax·
payer until the following year,"
Brown said.
He said the tax cut proposed by
Republican presidential candidate
Ronald Rel!gan would provide an
average saving of $350 on each tax

return.
Cal'ler's plan as "tbe perfect 10 of
Brown said Carter's proposal fvr· tax: cuts," Brown quipped, ' 1 say
depreciation allowances for industry
this is nut Bo Derek. It's closer to
would add new ''regional dif·
Zasu Pitts."
ferences." He said this would result
Another Ohio congressman,
in " a complicated spider web (of Delbert Latta, ranking Republican
regull!lions), impossible to adon the House Budget Conunittee,
min1ster and extremely unfair."
said Carter's program amounted to
Brown said a nnajority of the
throwing money at the problem.
members of the House and Senate
" It was proven during the Great
favor the s&lt;&gt;-called 1().1)..3 proposal
Depression that doesn't work," Latfor depreciation allowances.
. la said in a House speech. He said
"The president has departed from
government spending programs
during the Depression failed.to bring
this proposal, which has bipartisan
approval, and has gone off on a difdown unemployment.
ferent scheme of his own," he said.
"The only thing .that brought
· Noting that an administration
double-digit unemployment down
economic adviser has referred to
was World War II," Latta said.
1

Non-teaching employees
•
zn Columbus may strike
By The Associated Press
Contract agreements· have been
reached in four more Ohio school
., districts, but non·te~ching em·~ · ployees in the Colwnbus school
system have voted to strike when
classes begin next week.
Members of the Ohio Association
of Public School Employees, which
. ~s it represents 1,550 of the 2,500
"'ilon-teaching employees in Colwn·
bus'llchools, voted 61111-275 in favor of
a strike Thursday.
Colwnbus schools will open on a
staggered basis on Sept. 4 and 5.
Superintendent Joseph L. Davis has
said previously that classes will
begin on time whether or not there is
a strike.
T~e OAPSE is seeking a 14-month
contract with a 95-cent-an-hour raise
and dental insurance.
Bob Whitacre of the Ohio
Education Association said Thursday that agreements were reached
this week in four Ohio school districts. They are the Fairless Local
district in Stark County, Wouster

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio House and senate will convene
on Sept. 9 for their first full sessions
since disagreements between their
leaders sparked an. abrupt adjournment in June.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, says the chamber will generally lake action on
reports of conference conunittees
working out differences on several
pending bills. He said the major
item to be resolved ill. a budget
austerity package which is needed to
help deal with a projected deficit of
at least$266 million,
The package was among the
casualties 'last June when
disagreements between Riffe and
Senate President Oliver Ocasek, DAkron, fell apart. Ocasek adjourned
the Senate, although Riffe had wanted the two chambers to work
another day and finish business for
the summer.
Each house has met once - on
separate days - since that incident,
although both have been conducting
"skeleton" sessions during the
period. Meanwhile, Riffe and
Ocasek have conducted a series of
private meetings since the
Democratic National Convention.
Ocasek had already said he planoed to call the upper chamber next
month to ·remaili in session until a
biU restoring Ohio's death penalty is
considered. He said the session
could continue for several weeks.
Riffe said he hopes representatives can wrap up their work
sooner. "I would say that, hopefully,
it will not be longer than two
weeks," he said.
The budget pack;ige pending in a
joint conference panel contains a
House provision suspending half \he
state sales tax on new car purchases
for 60 days in an attempt to boost
auto sales.
Ocasek is opposed to the idea
~ause Ohio has already had to cut
general fund spending by 3 percent
and employee layoffs continue to
remain a possibility.
Both leaders Thursday turned
down a suggestion from Minority
Leader Paul E. Gillmor, R-Port
Clinton, that they remove uncertainty over whether the tax break
would be approved by making it
retroactive.

Economic•••

schools in Wayne County, the Northstriking teachers and the school
Central Local district in Fulton
board.
County and Central Local schools in
Teachers in the Northeastern
Defiance County.
Local district in Clark County and
· The OEA · official also said
the Miamisburg district in Monteachers in the Alexander Local
tgomery County also-are on strike.
district in Athens County voted to exGary Courts, president of the
lend their contract to Sept. 16 while
Miamisburg Classroom Teachers
negotiations continue.
Association, said no new ·talks are
"The. thing we've found that
scheduled in that district. About 220
causes most stoppages is the
Miamisburg teachers, as weU as
frustration after months of
cooks, secretaries, maintenance
negotiations and absolutely no
workers and other employees, are
movement," Whitacre said.
off the job.
In Meigs County, where a strike
Courts said teachers have agreed
last year lasted for three months,
to an arbitrator's decillion saying
contract talks are continuing betthey should get an inunediate 9.4
ween the Meigs Local school board
percent wage increase, but have
and non-teaching employees. The
been . offered an inunediate pay
board has offered a 7 percent pay inboost of2.7 percent.
crease, while the workers want a 10 · Classes were' continuing in the
percent raise.
district, but no talks have taken
Walkouts continued in three Ohio
place since Monday.
school districts, including Warren
Teachers in the Cleveland suburb
Local in Washington County. Courtof Beachwood and in the central
ordered negotiations were under
Ohio city of Delaware say they're
way in the district Thursday night
ready to strike if current contract
between representatives of 140
talks are not successful.

!tontinued from page 1)
August, M1B (the broadest measure
of currency and checking accounts) .
soared by $21 billion," said Ian
McAvity, a Toront~&gt;-based market
commentator.
"To put this in what I consider the
most appropriate perspective, M1B
took 34 weeks to rise by $20 billion
last year- when it was consi~ered a
problem."
'
Richard B. Hoey, an economist for
Bache Halsey Stuart Shields Inc.,
said a growing money supply may
signal that economic activity will
pick up in the months ahead, but it
also could presage renewed inflationary problems.

Thirteen fined
in Meigs Court
Thirteen defendants were fined,
and four forfeited bonds in Wednesday's Meigs County Court,
presided over by Judge Patrick
O'Brien.
Fined were Mary Pritchard,
Athens, speeding, $25 and costs;
Michael E. Rinehart, Metropolis,
Ill., speeding, $21 and costs; Larry
Holsinger, Racine, failure to maintain assured clear distance, $10 and

Congressional Democrats debating =ng~a-~~e an~or~~:ts; ~~~:~
•
c
on h ow to rewnte arter package·
.

WASHINGTON (AP)
Congressional Democrats, while
defending President Carter's new
economic revival plan from partisan
Republican attacks, already are
debating how to rewrite the package
once it reaches Capitol Hill.
Carter, pressured from all sides to
develop a tax-cut plan before the
Nov. 4 election, Thursday unveiled a
proposal for m.s billion in tax
reductions for individuals and
business, effective in 1981.
The president said his proposal

·

would lead to "a more produCtive,
more competitive . and more
prosperous American economy,"
while not rekindling the fires of inflation. He claimed it would create 1
mlllion new jObs over two years.
But he said Congress should wait
until next year to enact the program
to avoid election-year pressures that
might result in economically unwise
tax cuts.
"I will not accept a pre-election
bill to cut taxes," he declared.
Key features of Carter's plan

Free vaccine will be
available on request
Ohio Health Director John H.
Ackerman, MD, today announced
that the Ohio Department of Health
(ODH ) wiil once again supply innuenza vaccine free of charge to
county and city health departments
requesting it.
Dr. Ackennan said the vaccine
~hould be used for persons having an
mcreased risk of serious health
problems resultng from influenza.
Persons in the high risk category include those 65 and older; those with
acquired or congenital heart
disease; persons with chronic disorders affecting pulmonary function ;
persons with chronic renal disease·
and people with diabetes or chroni~
severe anemia or .other conditions
which decrease immunity.

I

ODH has ordered 60,000 doses of
the vaccine and expects delivery in
early September. Dr. Ackerman
noted that the 1~1 preparation of
A/Brazil/78, A/Bangkok/79 and
B/Singapore/79 is the only me
which should be administered this
year.
Patients 28 years old and older
need only one dose of the new vaccine. Those under 28 and older than
12 require two doses spaced four or
more weeks apart uniess they had
the 19711-79 or 1979-aO vaccine. If they
received the earlier protection, one
dose of the 1980-81 vaccine is sufficient.
Persons should contact their local
health departments regarding administration of the vaccine.
.

-- . . .

.

Area deaths

Carl Barsotti

Carl (Sock) Barsotti, 59, Memphis, Tenn., formerly of Middleport,
died unexpectedly Wednesday night
in Memphis.
Mr. Barsotti was a graduate of
Middleport High School where he
was active in the athletic program .
He was a son of the late Leroy and
Nellie Barsotti, who were in
business in Middleport for many
years.
Surviving arew his wife, Kathryn;
a daughter, Sharon Yancy; a son,
Carl; four grandchildren; a brother,
Enzo, Fresno, Claif., artd a sister,
Dorothy of Middleport.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday in Memphis.

Marion Darnell ·
Funeral services for Marion Darnell will be held 2 p.m. Tuesday at
the Cheshire Bapitst Church. Rev.
William Uber will officiate. Burial
will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends nnay call at Miller's Home
for Funerals from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
MOnday.
Mr. Darnell was born Feb. 8, 1917,

:
!1

in Logan, Ohio, son of the late Lee
Altnnan Darell and Laura Frances
Gilkerson Darnell, 100, who survives
and resides in Colwnbus.
He was employed on WPA projects in Gallia County, and was an empioyee of the Marietta Manufacturing Co., Dodge Motor Co., Flint,
Mich., and with Kaiser Plant in
Ravenswood, W.Va.
Mr. Darnell was a World War II
veteran, having served with the
Seebees in the U.S. Navy.
He maried Mary Elizabeth
Thomas on Dec. 24, 1937, in
Cheshire. She survives. One s&lt;,t,
Thomas Lynn Darnell, Trenily,
N.C., survives. One grandson survives.
Three brothers and two sisters
survive: Ralph, Gallipolis; Wayne,
Columbus and Warren, New
Mexico; Virginia Frye, Gallipolis
and f{elen Gladfellon, Indianapolis.
Mr. Darnell was,a member of the
Cheshire Baptist Church,
Pallbearers will be Richrd Elliott,
Neil McMahon, Howard (Dutch)
Hill, Darrell Shoemaker, Mike
Allen, Tum Reese and Buster
Sprague.

would reduce 1981 income taxes to
offset the increase in Social .Security
taxes that will take effect Jan: 1. and
provide new incentives for business
to invest in moc!ern equipment.
. At the ~ time, however, it
would push the 1981 budget deficit to
more than $35 billion, a major break
from the president's March proposal
to balance the budget to fight inflation.
'
.
The plan was promptly denounced
by Republicans, who charged it was
an ill-conceived economic ploy intended to buy votes.
GOP presidential nominee Ronald
Reagan called the program a
"short-tenn political quick fix."
" If you analyze it carefully, it is
the first step into trying to help baH
out Social Security with general tax
funds," Reagan said in Middleburg,
Va. He said simply returning in one
tax what people pay in another "just
doesn't make sense. That just is not
a tax cut."
Reagan l:~s proposed an immediate $37 billion tax cut, including
a 10 percent across-the-board reduction for individuals.
Democrats, while ·praising . the
plan as a step in the right direction,
also said it needed improvement.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, DMass., who was Carter's chief rival
for the Democratic presidential
nomination, said the president's
proposal "offers real hope to
American workers and significant
prospects for economic renewal."
But Kennedy was clearly not fully
satisfied. "I will work to strengthen
and enact this program," he said.
Se'n. Uoyd Bentsen, D-Texas,
chainnan of the congressional Joint
Economic Conunittee and leading
advocate of tax cuts to spur business ·
·investment, was even more obvious
in his intention to revise Carter's
reconunendalions.
While praising them as "positive
proposals," Bentsen said :
"Frankly, !think he could have done
more."

Henry, V1enna, W. Va., speedlng,$25
and costs; Bobby J. Patterson,
Pomeroy, improper backil)g, $10
and costs; Clarence J. Williams,
Shade, stop sign violation, $10 and
costs; George D. Stobart, Racine,
parking vehicle on road, $20 and
costs; James D. Priddy, Rutland,
disorderly conduct, $20 and costs ;
James Council, Rutland, disorderly
conduct, $20 and costs; Mark Davis,
Syracuse, littering, $35 and costs,
and open container of alcohol in a
public place, $40 and costs; Ronald
. G. David, Mason, W.Va., littering,
$35 and costs, and open container of
alcohol in public area, $40 and costs;
Betty J. McClellan, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
reckless operation, $25 and rosts.
Forfeiting bonds were Michael L.
Dailey, Rt. I, Portland, improper
turning, $35.50; Linda I. Knittel,
Pomeroy, failure to display
registration, $35.50; Michael A.
Pierce, Rt. I, Middleport, improper
backing, $35.50; Leo Casto, Rt. 2,
Gay, W. Va., expired operator's
license, $35.50.

B'l--Jmobr'l.e. •

Rot~:er

I..uri Rupe, Becky Thomas, Patty Wamer, Mike
Gaul, Ola St. Clair:
MinenvlUe-C. D. Mcintyre, Stacy Arnold,

Robert L.
lr$0den,
Swi~,
Albert
Purker.

, M;)'X,t~l:;ma-Thomasii,Hoschar.

Racine-Debbie LaValley, Roland L. S.Jsor

HlljjhMartln.

In the 1950 NFL season, wide
receiver Tom Fears of the Los
Angeles Ram! caught 84 passes in 12
games, an average of seven per con- ;

test.

- - --

'

Dllvid A. HeMler, Effie E. Pickens, Paul Harris:
William H. Hobaci&lt;,Rhoo&lt;ia L. Dailey, BIUy J .
. Par!IOftS, Mark Matson,Diana Jhle Don Dudding, Martha Duddil11!.
'
Syracuse-Kim Wl"nebrenner, Alberta Hubband, Arlett.a J. Vanover, Deborah Pickens
Earl Pickens, Kathy D. Fry.
'
ReedsvUie-Macel Barton, Richard Bartoo
.

••

Thomas Smith from Veterans .
Memorial to Holzer at 12:33 p.m. At
12:38,theMiddleportunitwascalled
to 109 Park St., Middleport, to transport Jared Armstrong to the office
of Dr. James P. Conde. From there,
h.e was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and admitted at 1:50 p.m.
The Tuppers Plains squad transported Mrs. Hayward Netter to
V
eterans Memorial from her home
located on Owl Hollow Road, at 9:55.
At 10:34 p.m., the Racine unit was
caUed to the home of Ralph Rose on
Bashan Road. He was treated on the

scene.

ELIERPILDS
WARIHO USE

KITCHEN
SINKS

Prime rolled steel cabinet which is electrically welded for strength, protected against
rust by Dura Kote and finished In baked on
enam~l. . Sta,nless steel sink with chrome
plated faucet. Butcher block laminated top.

Rutland-Jeny Matson, Paul Malson Shorty
Wright, Mary E. Davidson, Donna M. Da~dson .
lAirlll Botlom-Haztlee· Reibel, Wenala Schmucker, Teresa Collintt, Hent)' Bahr, Howard E.
Parker, Ralph E. Trussell.
Alhenlt-Juanita FerreU.

Mlner"vllle-Roc:er Starcher.
Pviht PAea~anl-&amp;verly A. Black.
Lllntfsville-WIIllam ft. Myers, EWf E. Myei'J.
Muoo-PhylUJKnapp.

42 INCH SINGLE BOWL ........ ONLY '224.00

GalliptJLis-Tina Barnell, Nlla Wisniski.

._BANK ONE,.-....

54 INCH SINGLE BOWL •••••••• ONLY '261.00

--~~NT
=TO IUSINISS.INDUSTRY.

66 INCH DOUBLE BOWL •••••••• ONLY '285.00 .

AND 1111 PROFESSIONS

ELBERFEi.pS WAREHOUSE·.

BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA

614/992~2133

MECHANIC STREET IN POMEROY
,.' "'~
·. ..· ·•'
~

.

season. . .C-1-6

Local . _.......................... _...... . . A-3, E-2-8
Sta.te-naUonal ~ ....• . ........ . . ... ....... . .. . .... D-1

B-1

SJMJrts •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••• C-1-6
TV uide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . • . . . . . . . . . . . Insert

••

tltttS
,,

VOL 15 NO. 31

GAlLIPOLIS-POINT PlEASANT

SUNDAY, AUGUST 31, 1980

tntint
MIDDlEPORT- POMEROY

35 CENTS

GOP seeking support
from working people
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ronald
Reagan's campaign strategy i.s
keyed to 12 statesJinuny Carter won
in 1976 when he gained the White
House by defeating Gerald R. Ford.
It counts on holding nearly solid
support wl!st .of the Mississippi
River, cutting into Carter's southe':"
base a~d defeatmg the Democrattc
incwnbent in enough northern states
to give Reagan the 270 electoral
votes he needs for victory.
Edwin Meese Ill, Reagan's staff
chief, said the Republicans will aim
at drawing support from working
people, minorities, senior citizens.
"All were disadvantaged by Carter ·
ecOnomic policies,;, he says.
Geographically, the Reagan
strategy breaks down this way :
In defeating Ford in 1976, Carter
had 'Jffl electoral votes, most of them
east of the Mississippi. His base was
the South where Carter carried
every state but Virginia.
That won't be so easy against the
Reagan-George Bush ticket.
Reagan always has had strong

Meigs County Conunon Pleas
Court Jtldge John C. Bacon was: .
reported in satisfactory condition at
Veterans Memorial HQspitai this
morning as the result of injuries'
received when his motorcycle
collided with an automobile East
Main St., in Pomeroy.
According to reports, Judge Bacon
was traveling west on East Main St. ,
when his motorcycle collided with a
westbound car driven by Thomas·
Goett, Pomeroy, which was in front
of the motorcycle and was at-.
tempting a left turn.
Judge Bacon suffered multiple
abrasions to the back and right leg
and was expected to be hospitalized.
He was taken to the hospital at about
8:35 a.m. this morning by the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad,

· Grimm from Veterans Memorial to
Holzer.
Several emergency calls were an·
swered Thursday by the Meigs area
squads, according to the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service
Headquarters.
At 12:10 p.m., the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad was called to
Osborne St., where a motorcycle accident had left two injured. Ronald
Richards and William Coleman
were both taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 2:38 p.m.,
Coleman was transferred by the
Pomeroy squad to Holzer Medical
Center.
The Racine squad transferred

open.1980

Farm ............................... . ....... ... E-1
Lifestyle ..•.•..••.• ..•• ·• •..•. . •. .• • . •. .• • ••... B-1-8.

Judge Bacon
in good
condition

1

'

• 'l' .•

Appalachia.

Classified ... .. . .. . ... .. . . ..... . . . _........... ... D-2

laws. ~ '

rt:========================;;
-

Milklleport- Patricia K. Logan, Unda L.
Haley, Be"ie Fisher, Timothy King, Jean L. Edwards, Faye L. Wallace, James A. Thomas,
Juyce Bartrum, JWU. Qualls, Debra J. Carder,
Leall,V M. Chasteen, Carie Bearhs, Edward W.
n.nt, Sarah J . Fuwler, Robert V. Ktng,Ma.rta
1i. Blackwood, Carol Tannehill; Joe Chapman

Dr. Wilma Mansfield.
Cbester-Mirk Hall, Clarence C. Wolf.

Editorial ..•........................... ... ....... A-2

Gillmor had asked them to con.
sider such a step on Aug. 4, saying
indecision over the proposal was
seriously hurting car sales in Ohio as
potential buyers waited to see if the
tax suspension would be adopted.
After consulting several legal
sources, Ocasek and Riffe said they
believe such an approach would
violate part of the state constitution. ·
The section in ,question says, in part,
that "the General Assembly shaU
have no power to pass retroactive
Gillmor said he was disappointed
by their response because it did not
address the key question of how to
quickly remove the uncertainty
surrounding the issue.
· ~ It's nice that it took them 23 days
to respond to the urgent problem,"
Glllmor said.
"My point was whether we adopt
one or not it, was absolutely essential that we get this issue resolved
immediately."
Although agreeing that the tax
break could not be applied retroactively, Rille said he still supports lbe ·
plan which emerged from the House.

Area grid teamS

Area deaths ..... .. , .. . . . ........................ A-3

Meigs Local
District to
open Tueschy

EMS runs reported

The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service reports several
runs were made by area emergency
units Tuesday.
·
At 12:58 a.m., Middleport squad
transported Saodra Trayer from 795
South 3J:d st., Middleport, to .Holzer
Medical Center. The Pomeroy unit
took Patty Yeauger to Pleasant
Valley Hospital at 1, 23 a.m., and at
2:50 a.m., the squad was called to
603 Mill st., Middleport, for Freda
Mitch. She was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 10:15, Pomeroy transferred
Lester Hawk from Veterans
Memorial Hospital to Holzer
Medical Center, and at 4:45 p.m.,
returned Freda Mitch to her home
from Holzer. The Tuppers Plains
E
Sq
mergency
uad was called to.
IUQU
•
Rtedsville, State Route 681, for
!Continued from page 1)
Ronald Masters, who was trannadineMeierandAlictSirubie.
sported to Veterans Memorial
Donorsbycommw!lty Included :
H
Pomeroy-Mary Starcher, Home E. Hysell,
ospital, at approximately 5 =21 p.m.
Rubert M
. VauKhan, Louhe Myers, Lura R. The Syracuse squad was summoned
SWJKer, Rowena Va\lllllan, Leo Va~~t~han to c II
Charles M. Werry, Janealie R. Joluuon Patri.,;,;
o ege St., Syracuse, at 7:23p.m.
A.Imboden, Michael D. Oiler, Howard P.l.qjan, for Tony ChapeU, who was taken to
Homer G. Baxter, Lou J.Wyant Edna I v te
M
Triplet~ Billy J. Spencer, Kathy Lelie'w, c.roly~
e rans emorial.
Cllllries, GSmJeraid Rolll!ht, Charles Hassler
The Pomeroy unit transported
Robert v
th, Edward w. c..z.rt, Ma..Y
Mildred W If p
f
h
Snyder, PatriCia Coi'SI, Alice Wamley, Mary
0 e, omeroy, rom t e
Rilll!s. Virgil Wlnd1111, Jelly Wilson, Dr. James· . Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Witherell, Grea Hines, t.waine Venoy u.dio V te · M
.
.
Grover, Lours Harrtson, William Rodford,
e rans emonal Hospital at &amp;:33
GK~t_12ryn Wildennoth, Ida Mae Marlin, Carl V. p.m., and at 10:15, transferred Neva
·-n, MJchael NeutzUng, Dorothy Oliver .

Where It Is Inside .

Artists in

First Monday in September
our

We call it Labor Day but
practice is the opposite. It is a day not to
Ia bor but to rest.
And that is not the only paradox abut this particular holiday. Time
· and technological progress have taken us farther and farther from the
original significance.
It was the unskilled and semiskilled laboring man, the blu~ollar
legions of an industrial society in the making, that he first Monday of
each September initially was designated to honor.
Many first Mondays have. since been crossed off the calendars. The
nation that was building an industrial society has not only completed that
task but gone beyond. It is now deep into the age of computers and
automation, but at a price.
We have succeeded in tfuilding a society where much more than
muscle is necesary for the continuing advancement both of that society as
a whole and of the individuals comprising it. The result is increasing
demand for working people with some degree of technological com·
petence, and declining significance to society of those without it.
Still, the experience throughout history has been that while the initial
cost of technological advance can be painfully high in human tenns, in
the long run for every job lost through innovation more are created.
Although forecasts at this particular point are clouded by the uncertainties of an economy in recession and the deeper crises of most of
the major industries that have been its foundation, we have no reason to
doubt that our experience in the current period of transition will be essentially different.
In labor and its changing role in society, as in so many other respects,
the American experience is one of paradox. But if it were not, if all were
predictable and certain, would that experience be anywhere near so interesting?
·
Or so promising - still?

Eight injured
GALUPOLIS - Eight persons
were injured during a three-vehicle
accident investigated Fnday
evening in Bidwell by the GalliaMeigs post, Highway Patrol.
Called to the scene on SR 554 at
8:36 p.m., officers report a pickup
truck operated. by Anna Simpkins,
34, Gallipolis, fail~d to stop at themtersection of SR 554 and was struck
by an east bound auto driven by
Richard Rees Jr., 17, Rio Grande,
and a west bound vehicle operated
by Gregory James, 22, Bidwell.
According to an incomplete report
filed by the patrol, Rees claimed in-

~n

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
Local School District will open its
1980·~11 school year on Tuesday with
a teachers ' meeting at Meigs High
School, beginning at 9 a.m.
Classes will be in session ali day
Wednesday. Buses will run regular
schedules throughout the district
with several minor changes being
made over summer.
Changes include the· deletion of
buses running on Main St. in
Pomeroy between Sycamore and
Butternut for morning pickup.
StudentS living between Sycamore
and Lynn Streets should walk to the
intersection of Sycamore and
Second for pickup at 8 a.m. by bus
No, 35, Donna Daniels, for Pomeroy
Elementary and Junior High.
Students living between Lynn
Street and Moore's alley should walk •
to the Court House steps for pickup
by bus No. 35. All high school students in these two areas will ride bus
No. 13, David Chase, and will be
picked up about8 :10.
AU grades of students living bel·
ween Moore's alley and Butternut
will be picked up by bus No. 34, Faye
Manley, at the intersection of Butternut and Second Streets at 7: 45
(Continued on page A·3l

support in the South and his advisers
are convinced he can carry several
states in the region.
Deep South states where the
Reagan camp is confident are
Mississippi, Alabama, Lousiana and
South Carolina. Those four would
give the GOP challenger 34 electoral
votes. Subtract those 34 from Carter's 297 total in 1976, and he drops to
263, seven short of the 270 needed for
election.
But Reagan can't count on holding
every state Ford carried.
.
The weakest in that list is
Michigan, which Ford carried easily
with his appeal as a native son. But,
in 1980, Michigan looks more likely
to give its 21 electoral votes to Carter.
As the Reagan camp sees it, that
makes four northern and two
southern states, the real battleground. · They are Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois, New J ersey,
Texas and Florida. In 1976, Carter
carried Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas
and Florida.

But this year, the economy is a
major issue in the four northern
states. All but New Jersey have
Republican governors who have
pledged to go all out for Reagan.
A big question mark is New York
where John B. Anderson, the independent candidate, seeks endorsement by the Liberal Party.
Carter strategists fear Anderson
could damage Carter's chances of
winning the state's 41 electoral
votes.
Meese noted that Reagan doesn't
intend to take the West for granted,
another way of saying he'll keep an
eye on California to make certain
Carter doesn't pull an upset in
Reagan's backyard.
What the Reagan strategy comes
down to is, if he holds the Western
states Ford carried and picks up
Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi
and South Carolina, he can beat Carter by carrying three of the foUowing
five: Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois,
Michigan and Texas.

Board, OAPSE
hope to agree
MIDDLEPORT-Apparently an
agreement is being reached between
the Meigs Local School District
Board of Education and the Meigs
Chapter of the Ohio Association of
Public School Employes with
schools of the district to open for the
new year as scheduled Wednesday.
Meeting in special session Friday
night at . the Meigs Junior High
School in Middleport, the board approved the agreement the contents
of which were not disclosed. The
non-certified employes, however,
are to meet Tuesday evenin~ and it
was indicated that they are expected
to approve the agreement at that
time.
In other action Friday night, the
Meigs Local Board voted to place a
three and one-half mill, five year,
new tax levy before voters of the
district at the November election.
Proceeds from the levy would be
earmarked for buildings and groun·
ds.
The board accepted resignations
from Laura Fredrickson, Penny
Proffitt, Carol Evans, and Pam
Swartz! along with the resignation of
Charles Chancey as boys athletic
director. Sam Crow was recently .

named athletic director of both the
girls and buys on the high school
level. ,The board accepted the
resignation of Helen Dias who is
retiring. Clotine Blackwood and
Margaret Lewis were named to the
substitute teacher list. Ann Hayes
was given a leave of absence.
The board accepted Jane Ann
Williams as a tuition student. John
Arnott was named head teacher at ·
the Middleport Elementary School.
Employed were Bonnie Chapman,
elementary reading; Debora Hill,
elementary art; Diana Miller, learning disability; Donn.a French,
EMR, Roy Drexler, elementary;
Barbara Shultz, learning disability;
Robin Rehyl, elementary. Supl
David Gleason reconunended the
employment of Barbara Beegle as
junior high mathematics a nd
English instructor.
However, the board ·at a 3-2 vote
employed James Carpenter for the
position. Voting for the employment
of Carpenter were Dr. Keith Riggs, ·
Robert Snowden and Richard· .
Vaughan. Carol Pierce and Larry·
Powell voted against the em-. ·
ployment.

,_,

..

I
!

three car crash

jury and was transported to Holzer
Medical Center; Simpkins claimed
injury but was not inunediately
treated; and, James" displayed
visible signs of injury-there was no
report of treaiment. Additionally
five passengers-two in the Simpkins
vehicle, one in the Rees auto, and
two in the James vehicle-claimed or
displayed signs of injury. There
were no reports of treatment.
Simpkins was cited on a charge of
failure to yield. The accident
remains under investigation.
In further· aftion, one person was
injured and one driver cited as the
I

Extended forecast, .state weather
EXTENDED FORECAST - Sunday through Wednesday: Chance of
showers and thundershowers Monday. Fair Tuesday and Wednesday. H1ghs
in the mid to upper 80s, lows in the 60s.
·
Partly · cloudy warm and humid with a chance of showers and thun·
derstorms. Low~ tonight between 65 and 70. Highs today in the mid to upper
80s. The chance of rain is.30 percent Sunday.

result of two other Friday accidents
investigated · by the GaUia-Meigs
Post.
Officers were called to the scene of
a one-vehicle accident on FairfieldCentenary Rd., just south of SR 588,
at 2:40p.m.
The patrol reports a north bourld
auto operated by Timothy Roettker,
22, Gallipolis, swerved to avoid an
animal on the roadway, passed off
the left side of the pavement, struck
an embankment and overturned.
Roettker displayed visible signs of
injury, but was iiot inunediately
treated. There was severe damage
to the vehicle.
Officers investigated a twovehicle mishap on SR 553, just west
ofSR 7,al3:50p.m.
The patrol reports an east .bound
vehicle driven by Leslie Ray, 66,
Proctorville, had stopped for a
school bus discharging passengers.
An auto driven by Rudolf Webb, 42,
(Conti nued on page A·3J

VILLAGE SPREADS SAND - .Pomeroy village
workers were called to the Pomeroy parking Jut Friday
afternoon to spread sand over an oil spill, caused when

a tractor-trailer rig overflowed. Sand was used to
decrease' the possibility of fire , instead of nushing the
area with water, on the advice of Pomeroy Fire Chief
Charles Legar.

I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="174">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2764">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="58459">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="58458">
              <text>August 29, 1980</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3436">
      <name>barsotti</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3557">
      <name>darnell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
