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                  <text>111-The Dally Sentinel, Middiej,ort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,Sept. 17,19110

New _u nemployment claims decline· ,

Five families use contaminated water
because she said it looked funny,
DILLES BOTI'OM, Ohio (AP) that maybe some North American drinking the river water could mult
The families apparently had tapAs many as five families in this
officials knew Dilles Bottom in typhoid, cholera, hepatitis, and
southern Bebnont county com- ped into a fire fight!:1g water line
dysentery.
·
residents were drinking the water,
munity have been drinking con- from the river that was constructed
but said he was not aware of it.
Bebnont County commissioners
taminated water from the Ohio by the North American Coal Co. as a
No sickness has been reported · are Investigating the possibility of
River for an unknown number of public ilervice to the community.
among the families, some of whom constructing a fresh water line to the
North American Coal Co.
could have been drinking the water · homes from a well about 500 feet
yean.
Gerhard Stellrecht, an en· President Willliam Goddard said for up to 50. yean. Stellrecht said away.
viroqmental scientist for the Ohio , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ ; ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Environmental Protection Agency
who investigated the case, said this
is the first time he has seen home
owners drink river water "in some ·
instances without even knowing it."
"It's a bad news situation,"
Stellrecht S!lid.
About Hi other families in Dilles
Bottom have )leen using untreated
river water for toUet facilities,
showering and washing. The water
is contaminated wtth pollutants such
as raw sewage.
The problem came to light about
two weeks ago when a new resident
had her water checked by the
. Bebnont County Health Department

,.,
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WASHINGTON (AP) - New
cla1ms for unemployment insurance
di upped to a flve-inonth low in eatly
September, the government ~"~!porta,
providing yet another indication that
the nation's faltering economy may
be steadying at last.
"It's premature to say the
recession Is over, but the economy is
proving stronger than anyone anticipated," Labor Department
economist Nancy Barrett said Wednesday. "It could be a pause in the
recession or something more per·
manent. Wejustdon'tknowyet."

COMING SOON

J

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.'S

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Department officials said a
seasonally adjusted 493,000 people
filed new claims during the week ending Sept. 6, a drop of 20,000 from the
week before and the lowest figure
·since the first week of April.
And there were other deve!Qpo
ments bolstering the impression of a
recuperating economy.
The Federal Reserve Board reported Wednesday that U.S. manufacturers operated at 74.5 percent of
capacity in August, marking the fir·
st rise in that economic barometer In
llmonths.

The rate of utilization was only 0.1
percent above the July rate and still
far below the August 1979 level of
84.9 percent, however. The rate.was
12.7 percent under the last high, in
March 1979, and 5.5 percent above
the last low, which occurre!l during
the 1975 recession.
That report followed Tuesday's
announcement by the Federal
Reserve that producti.on from the
nation's factories and mines in·
creased by 0.5 percent in August af·
ter a six-month decline. ·
Those two reports indicate in-

Ran!ona.

..•

CoNFER - Richard H. Billman, n, 0. D., !Jackson, and Jan B.
Clark, receptionist and dispensing opticiall at the Bend Area Optometric
. Center in Pomeroy, confer on a patient matter at the center which is formerly the business of Dr. NorbertW. Compton.

WIC coupon schedule released by officials
Participants In the Meigs County
Department of Health WIC program
are to pick up October and Novem·
ber coiJpons at the health depart·
ment office from 9 to 11 and from 1to
3 p.m. as follows:
Friday, Sept. 19, A thru C; Monday, Sept. 22, D thru H; Tuesday,

. Sept. 23, I thruM; Wednesday, Sept.
24, Nthru R; ThUI"Ilday, Sept. 25, 9 to
U only, S thru 'r, and Friday, Sept.
26, Wthru V.
These are the only days that the
coupons can be picked up unless
prior arrangements have been
made.

Jaycees violate state accommodations law
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) The Jaycees violated the state's
public accommodations Jaw by
refusing to give women full voting
membership In its organization, a
state Superior Court judge has
ruled.
Women In Alaska are entitled to
full and equal rights as members of
the service agency, said Judge
Milton ~nt.or on_ Mondav. The
Jaycees restrict membership to men
between 18 and35yean of age . .
Four Anchorage women who
joined the organization In the mid-

.1970s under a three-year pilot
.program allowing women to enter as
trial members brought suit against
the meiHlnly rule. When the
program ended, the national
Jaycees voted against women as
permanent members.

Mrs. Edith Shain, M, formerly of
Pomeroy, died at the Walker
Memortal Hospital in Avon Park,
Fla., Tuesday.
Mrs. Shain was preceded in death
by her husband, Aten Shain, who
was executive vice preSident and .a
director of The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. In Pomeroy at the time
of hia death.
Surviving are a..daughfer, Angie
Miller, St. Petenburg, Fla.; two
granddaughters, Barbara Rice,

Emergency squad runs
Five runs were made by local
emergency units 'l)Jesday according
to the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services Headquarten.
They include Pomeroy, 4:16p.m.
to Peach, Fork Road for Lena
Heilman, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport
Unit, 2:34 p.m. for Sharon Jessie
from the office af Dr. James Conde
to office of Dr. Norman Ehlinger;
Middlport Unit, 9:24, Denver carman from Peach Fork to Holzer
Medical Center; Syracuse Unit,
11:31 a.m., Denver Carman from
Holzer Medical Center to his home;
Syracuse, 1:33 p.m., Syracuse Unit,
Frank Levacy from Veterans
Memorial Hospital to Pomeroy
Health Care Center. .

VOL 31

Winter Haven, Fla., and Patricia
Earnest, Butte, Mont.; a sister, Hattie Roush, Racine, and a brother,
Oliver Geary, Athens.
Mrs.Shain was a member of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church and
she was a 50 year member 11
Pomeroy Chapter Order of Eastern

Star.
Funeral services will be held at 11
a.m. Friday at the Pomeroy Baptist
Church with the Rev .David Mann
and the Rev .Burnell Stephenson of.
flciating.Burial will be in Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Ewtng Funeral Home anytime
after 1p.m. on ThUI"Ilday.

~~l

~G,

That's the only word
•
that ean be used
to deserlbe our
Beautiful selection ot
fine Jewelry, both
GARNET
Classic: and Modern. '149 WI Diamond

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
legislative committee wants more
inf&lt;mrlation about state employees
who may be sitting idle because of a
funding dilemma that virtually has
halted Ohio's highway construction
program.
Transportation Director David L.
Weir was asked Wednesday by Sen.
Thomas E. Carney, D-Girard, chairman of the Senate Highways and
Transportation Committee, to
prepare a report by November.
Weir appeared at Carney's
request to explain departmental
policies under whlch construction
workers and others were given new
duties when projects were halted.
Wer said that had been done in
some cases. But he said it was halted

village.

SPECIAL SALEI FOAMED BACK
MACHINE
WASHABLE

13 charged in fencing scheme
TOLEOO, Ohio - Pollee said they armted 13 penons Wednesday
and were seeking seven more as the result of an undercover 'sting'
operation. The phony fencing scheme waa the third such operation
successfully set up by pollee.
Lucas County Prosecutor Anthony Pizza said he presented 71 Indictments Wednesday to a grand jury convened to look into the
scheme.
The operation was known as Ideal Used Aricles. Police said It was
responsible for recovery of about $250,000 in stolen property and
drugs. Undercover officers ran the store from June to September !1
last year.
A sbnllar operation which was disclosed last October resulted In 62
arrests ani! 52 convictions.

NO IRONING
NEEDED

PROTECTS YOUR
FURNITURE

Cuban government returns hijackers
MIAMI - The Cuban govenunent said today It would return to the
United States two Cubans who forced a jet to Havana on Wednesday,
The government said it was taking the action to deter further
hijackings.
The announcement fallowed by two days a Cuban vow to get tough
on homesick exiles responsible for a spate of recent hijackings.
The hijacking was the loth In the United States In the past six weeks,
and authcriUes said most were cal'ried out by disgruntled Cuban
refugees who came to the United States this year In the "Freedom
Flotilla."
QuOting the newspaper Graruna, the offictal organ of the Cuban
Communist Party, Havana radio said: "With the purpose of definitely
ending these acts that may endanger the Uves pf hundreds of Innocent
peoples, our revolution has been forced to take the most drastic
decision."
_

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FOR STUDIO COUCHES·

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FOR HOllYWOOO IEDI

FOR DAYEIO HIDE.-ol ·

POUU I I U11

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NII-IIAll

FOIICAUTMLEI

REGuiAi •7A9 s1zi

FORCHAIIU

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·Former judge continues appeal

dl&gt;

OPALS
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.. W/Diomonu -

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Set

\n&amp;eKiace a no varr•ngs)

CANDY'S CLASSIC COLLECTIONS
IN- ---·- -INGEL'S FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd Ave.

6ox1o INCHEs •••••••••••·••••••••••• ~ •••• sALE.' 3 "

REGULAR '10.99 SIZE 70x90 INCHES ••••••••••• : •••••••••_••• SALE
BLACK
ONYX '145

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COLUMBUS, Ohio- ·Fonner Swiuntt County Judge James V. Barbuto will continue his appeal af two felony convictions from jail.
Barbuto had been free pending the appeal, but vcluntarUy began his
jail term Wednesday.
· .
His attorney, James L Burdon, said Barbuto's decision was personal. But the lawyer who proaecuted the case said he suspects the
move Is designed to lessen Barbuto's tenn.
,
The Conner probate judge began his one-to l.._year term on Wedneaday and will be ellglb1e for parole In 10 montha.

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-weather forecast ·

•

HOME FURNISHINGS- 1ST' FLOOR

EL'BERFELDS IN POMEROY

•

enttne
, FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1980
.

In August when an attorney
general's opinion said It was illegal
for a state agency to give .employees
duties not listed in their classified
job descriptions. ·
He said he would llke to see the
Legislature enact a new statute that
would give him more Oe:lrlbillty in
using the department's manpower.
Carney said he had heard that as
many.as 2,000 of the department's
8,600 to 6,800 employees had been af·
fected by the funding pinch.
Weir neither confirmed or
disputed that figUre, because the
work assignments are given by
deputy directors In the department's
10 divisions. He said records of the
types of Individual duties performed

were not kept.
Carney said he had heard of construction workers doing payroll
work, and of one case in which two
boUermakers were sitting idle
"because there is no boiler."
He asked 'Weir to obtain more
detailed informetion and report
back to the conunittee when state
lawmakers reconvene after the Nov.
4 general election.
ln a related matter, Weir announced cancellation of more than
$3 billion in construction projects
around the state because of lack of
funds.
The list appeared to be about the
same as one circulated earlier by
the department in a bid to win voter

support for the June bond issue.
Weir said "a total of 3%1 projects
which would require $3.17 bUllon to
complete planning and construction:
cannot be advanced with any real·
hope of completion until major, new'
funding can be provided to revive
them."
.
'
He said the cancellations do not include any projects "which involve .
safety, paving, rest areas, railroad :·
crossing protection or bridge:
replacements."
He said each district office·of the:
department has a list af cancelled ·
projects In its juriSdiction.
"Ohio's highway program was far
too large in compartaon with the .
number of dollars available to do :
such work," Weir said.

By The Associated Preas
School strikes continued today In
Boardman, Miamisburg and Edison
Local school districts and at a school
for the . mentally retarded in
Mahoning County, but a strike by
Hubbard teachel1l has ended.
A board of education spokesman
said negotiations throughout Wednesday ended .early this morning
when teachers ratified a new contract agreement and the school
board voted approval.
The board In Hubbard had
threatened to seek a court-issued injunction against the teachers for
ignoring a back-to-work order issued
Friday by Tnunbull County Common Pleas Judge David M. Griffith.

The strike by Hubbard's 161
teachers began Sept. 3 and affected
3,100 pupils,
In the settlement, base pay for
Hubbard teachers was increased
from$10,250to$11,t00. ·
In Boardman, talks resumed Wednesday at 1:31 p.m. and cOntinued
Into the earty moming hours today
with no significant projp- made
toward 'ending the eighklay teacher
strike, according to federal
mediator John Duffy.
Several non-economic issues are
being dlscua6ed, and the two sides
have been about ~ apart on
salary. The strike by 300 teachers af.
fects 5,300 pupils.
Astrike continues by teachen and

non-teaching employees 11 the
Leonard Kirtz School for the Mentally Retarded In Mahoning County.
About 290 students and 210 adult
cUenta are affcted by the strike that
began 11 days ago.
On strike 11gainst the county Mental Health Beard are 116 members of
the Professional Association of
Tralnabale Mentally Retarded and
38 members of the American
Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees Locall143.
·
No progress was reported Wednesday between the Edison Local
schocl board In Jefferson County
and striking non-teaching employees.
About 45 drivers in the · l'!lf'al

district refused to accept a ccintr!lct:
which was approved by other mem-'
hers of the district's chlipter of the
Ohio Association of Public SchOol
Employees. They walked off their.
jobs Friday.
The walkout affects about 4,000
pupils, who have to find other means
of transportation than school buses."
Union spokesman James Tukallne
sBid the drivers are trying to
establish a separate local of the
union.
The state's longest ongoing school
strike continues In the Miamisburg
district. The strike by about 240
teachers and 126-non-teaching employees began on Aug. 26 and affects
4,600 student,,

Oil hike results from OPEC's plan

FURNITURE THROWS

FORIIIFAS

which means about 8 mllllon people
are officially listed as unemployed
- until after the Nov. 4 election.
Only one more jobless report will be .
released before then, for September.
The October figum will not be
released unill Nov. 7.
ln another development, the CoJD.
merce Department reported thlit
housing starts rose 12 percent In
August- the third consecutive monthly rise. But economlats cautioned ·
that the housing recovery may l?e
stopped by rising interest rates.

Hubbard strike ends, others continue

SPECIAL PURCHASE AND SALE OF THESE POPULAR THROWS-QUANnTIES ARE UMITED.

'69

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT,OHIO

FAIR WEATHER- Workers of the Pomeroy Street Department
take advantage of the fair weather of fall to repaint Cl'O!IIIWalks in the

'

LINDY STAR ..

NO. 110

continue rising for several months.
The new Labor Department report
suggests the nation's unemployment
rate will be lower this fall than had
been expected, however - a boon to
President Carter at the height of the
election season. ·
Officially, the administration
forecasta an 8.5 percent rate by the
end of 1980, but economists doubt
unemployment will change much
fnm August's 7.6 percent level -

'

Funding dilemma facing state projects

FRINGED
ALL AROUND

~)'

ns that unemployment is likely to

_,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Area deaths
Edith Shain .

· · Associated with the newly named
Bend Area Optometric Center are R.
Keith King, O.D., Ripley, W.Va., a
graduate of the Univ~sity of In-.
diana; Richard I{. Billman, fi, 0. D.,
Jackson, a graduate of Ohio State
University; James L Schmoll, Middleport, a senior student in ?P" .
tometry at Ohio .State .University
who will be coming Into the practice
after graduation next year; Jan B.
Clark, Pomeroy, receptionist and
dispensing optician, and Mise Compo
ton, the owner.

growth in the third quarter, but war·

turning point In the recession that
has bogged down lhe nation's
economy most af the year.
But Ms. Barrett Warned that the
economy may be adjusting temporarUy from the second quarter,
"wben the bottom just di opped out,"
rather than · staging a lasting
recovery.·
Courtenay · M. Slater, chief
economist for ,the Commerce Depar·
tment, has Said she thinks the
recession ended in August, She eJt·
pects the economy will show modest

at

Will soon be held In their
newly constructed building.
$2,400 worth of furniture will
be given away. All you do
Is register during .the sale.
A II appliances and furniture will
be oHered at the best possible
price. Watch your newspaper f~r
the Grand Opening date to be
announced soon. Now the
countdown begins. This will ~-e
the largest sale ever oHered by
R·u tland Furniture Co.

(Continued from page 1)
efforts of ~ COiiiptons' daughter,

cre8Sed activity that eould'uk the

•

GRAND OPENING SALE

Family .

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Clear tonight. Lowa In the mi~. Partly cloudy Friday. Highs in
the upper 70s. Chance of rain 10 percent tonight and Friday. Winds
variable less than 10 mph tonight.
EsteadedObloForecut- SaturdaylhroughMonday:Achanceof
1showers each day. Highs 75-110 Saturday, warming to the low to mid80s Monday. Ovemlght Iowa In the upper 50s and lower 808.

.

VIENNA, Austria (AP) - OPEC
agreed Wednesday on a plan that
technically shaves its official oil ·
price but mulls In an overall increase because only Saudi Arabia,
which has been selling below the
new standard, is required to comply.
Rene Ortiz, secretary general !1
the oil cartel, said after a final
meeting af oil mlnisten that Saudi
Arabia - which accounts for more
than one-third of OPEC's dally
production of 'II million barrel• will raise its price from f2ll a barrel

to $30 and the price~~ charged by
other members will be frozen at
current levels. Those range up to
$37.
He said the plan, on whlch
agreement was unanimous, also
cuts the official OPEC benchmark
price from $32 to $30, as the Saudis
had asked. Since prices will not be
brought down to that level, however,
the net effect is an 1ocreUe of $2 a
barrel for the Saudi share of total
OPEC production.
Iranian oil minister All Akbar

Bridge worker
injured in fall
Dick Martin, 45, Parkersburg, is
reported to be in satisfactory condition after falllng approlimately 35
feet Wednesday at 2:39 p.m. while
working on the Ravenswood Bridge.
According to the sheriff's department Martin was setting pipe underneath the bridge when the scaf·
folding shifted causing him to fall.
Martin was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Syracuse
ER Unit. Hospital officlala reported
that Martin apparently has no
serious or Internal injuries.
No personal injuries were repor·
ted as a result of car-truck accident
that occurred Wednesday at 4:30
a.m. on SR 7 the sheriff's depart·
ment reported.
According to the report Vickie L
·Close, Lowell, was traveling north
on SR 7 when her vehlcle went left of
center and sideswiped a southbound
semi driven by Martin Chasteen, 25,
Vinton.
The Close vehicle continued
acroas the southbound land and went
off the highway on the left and
struck 8lld knocked down a mailbox
owned by Terry Warner.
Close was cited to court on
charges of left of center. There was
moderate damaKe to the truck and
trailer and severe damage to the
Close vehicle.
·

The sheriff's department was
notified by Ronnie Deem, Owl
Hollow, that one of hia hogs was
found butchered. The Incident Is un- .
der investigation.
Meanwhile, a houae owned by
Lester Shoemaker, Happy Hollow,
was destroyed by fire Wednellday at
9 p.m. according to the sheriff's

departinent. '
The Rutland Fire Department was
8WI1Dloned and was esejsted by the
Pomeroy Fire Department. Details
as to what caused the fire were not
available.

-Child satisfactory
A Minersville child was listed In
S!ltisfactory condition this morning
In Veterans Memorial Hospital after
being struck by a car Wednesday
morning.

.

Called to the scene on SR 124 in
MinerSville at 7:56 a.m., the GaillaMelgs Poet, ~y Patrol, reports
an auto operated by Sandra
Winebrenner, 24, Syracuse, waa
Wl8ble to stop wben four small
children crmed the road,way In
front of the vehicle.
Struck waa Charles 0. Landers
ID, age 8. He was transported to
Veterana Memorial Hospital by the
Syracuse Emergency Squad. No
eiWiGII was issued.

Molnfar, who had demanded a price
increase and tried to get the Saudis
to cut production because of the
world aU glut, said: "Our price will
remain at 35. We have come to some
compromise. We are happy."
Fellow price hawks Libya and
Algeria charge $37.
There was no indication Saudi
Arabia will cut production from the
current 9.5 mllllon barrels a day one million above its normal output
- that has contributed to the worldwtdeglut.
.
"We will keep our level of production as It ts," for the entire fourth
quarter, Saudi Oil Minister Ahmed
Zakl Yamanl told reporters earlier,
before the final session of aU
ministers from the 13-natlon
Organization af Petroleum Ex·
porting Countries.
The Impasse over production contributed to the breakup wednesday
of an extended Vienna gathering !1
oil, finance and foreign ministers
without agreement on a long'l!lought

Rally attracts 1,500
'
By Tbe Associated Press
A rally In support of what's
been called an illegal pyramid
scheme drew about 1,500 people
at a southeastern Ohio courthouse Wednesday night. Mean·
while, a grand jury in a nearby
county was Investigating an
alleged pyramid game, The rally at the Morgan County
Courthouse In McCOMelsville
was conducted by supporters of
the Businesa Ust Concept. The
Ohio attorney general's office
calls the concept an illegal
pyramid 9Cheme.

Speakers at the rally said It's
their right to put their money into
the games and charged that the
news media was giving their
cause a bad name.
About 31 to 40 unlforined pQllce
from four counties watched the
crowd, but no Incidents were
reported.

)

I

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OPEC strategy for automatic price
hikes every three months, joint
production controls and ald to the
Third World.
The Saudi price increase was seen
as a retreat. Yamani had said
earlier Wednesday his country
would not raise its price unless
militants In the au cartel lowered
theirs.
Ortiz told a midnight news conference the new price arrangement
will remain In effect at least until the
neJ:t regular OPEC meeting Dec.15
In Ball, Indonesia.
Yamanl was reported to have left
the meeting hours before the
decision, shortly after witnessing his
delegation's seconding af a Kuwaiti
proposal for a unified $30 official
price, which led to the final accord.
Venezuelan minister Humberto
Calderon-Berti said: "We want to
unify the price. U we can achieve
this, we can apply the long-tenn formula."

1

Persons entering the game pay
a set fee and receive money back
for bringing others into it.
Agrand jury In Hocking COunty
recessed Its probe Into alleged
pyramid games Wednesday
without returning indictments,
but more testimony Is planned.
About 20 periiOil8 were subpoenaed to testify about the
games In proceedingB Tuesday
and Wednesday.
County Proaecutor Chrta Veldt
said most of thole who testified
took the Fifth Amendment. He
refused comment about the
nature of the testimony by those
witnesses who did answer ,
questions.
Veldt said the panel will convene wtthin two or three weeks to
hear further testimony. He said
10 to 15 more periiOil8 may be sub-.
poenaed.

�2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 18, 1980 ·

_3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.,Thunday, Sept. 18, 1980

_ Mara~der

_Meet the .Meigs -Maraud~rs
- ·-

Opinions &amp;
Comments

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The Melp Junior ~ai'Sity football
squad displayed a stingy defense In
route to an impressive 1~ shut out
victory over Belpre. Meigs also
pounded out a significant total of of·
fense.
Led by linebackers Greg Taylor

8!1

'~

.andChrlsBurdette,_the~eigsdefen·
se kept the Eagles mtheir own part
of the field for nearly the entire

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~

game. Taylor recovered a fumble
and Intercepted a pass.
Meigs' defensive line really dug In
during crucial plays and held its
groWJd, practically eliminating
Belpre's Inside rwmlng game. Terry .
Wayland and Dennis Thornton, both
tackles, helped anchor the line and
were credited with playing a fine

'~~
'&lt;· '
( J.

Robert WiqeU
RGI&gt;ortHoeflleh

The secondary was just as tough .
with an Interception and tight
coverage limiting Belpre's passing
game to only a few receptiom, none
of which were really significant.
Offensively, the Uttle Marauders
mounted two scoring drives and
gained yardage all evening long,
especlally when it COWited. The
Mell!l offensive unit controlled the
ball with consistency limiting
Belpre's offense to just a few
·minutes of playing time.
-·
' and

C.r[G~a

:Fed policy criticized
. Cleveland Mayor George .Voinovich has told a House
;subconunittee that contradictory federal policies on the
:use of Ohio coal "complicate our life and cost jobs."
: "We've g~t the .Environmental Protection Agency
:pushing for stringent air pollution controls while the
:Energy Department is telling companies to abandon the
:cleaner, bnported oil and return to dirtier coal," Voinovich
:told the hearing on urban revitalization and industrial
:policy Tuesday.
: He suggested a three-year freeze on environmental stan'dards at existing levels. "This will allow us to gather more
:technical data and bnprove environmental controls so that .
-we can become both safe and economically sound," he
:said.
:. Voinovich said the cost of pollution controls virtually
:wiped out the foundry industry in Cleveland.
-: Between the cost of anti-pollution equipment and the
strain of foreign competition, "it's the steel companies
Who could be the next to fall,'' he said.
.: Voinovich called for protective tariffs, saying they "will
allow us to buy some tbne, to make some capital investments to catch up."
. He alao asked the government to reverse its "subsidies
of Sunbelt devel~ment" and adopt policies to help nor·
them industrial cities.
Industrialist Fletcher L. Byrom testified that U.S. tax
policies inhibit investment in new plant and equipment by
industry.
.
"We've been liquidating the capital base of this nation
catastrophically'' as a result, he said.
Byrom, who is chairman of both the Koppers Co., cen·
tered in Pittsburgh, and the Conunittee for Economic
Development, said much of the decline in investment by
American industry can be blamed on "a tax system which
acts as a disincentive ... especially in a period of inflation."
.
"Unless we move quickly in the direction of a tax system
less biased against investment in plant and equipment,
future employment growth and productivity improvement
in many industrial sectors and regions of the country will
be further threatened," Byrom said.
Among Byrom's recommendations were increased
depreciation writeoffs.
"If Koppers knew that two years from now there would
be increased depreciation schedules, we would start spending money today,'' he said.
He said that in devel~ing a national industrial policy,
Congress should also consider reducing the regulatory
burden on industry and taking a new approach to antitrust
policy.
.
Byrom said that present antitrust policies prevent some
industries from benefiting from advantages that could be
provided by their size.
In particular, he cited coke ovens, which he said now
require $45 million in equipment to pay for environmental
controls.
·
To build a coke oven battery large enough to justify that
kind of expenditure would require a consortium of several
companies, he said, but said there is no basis under
present antitrust laws under which such a consortium
could get together.

Today 1.s Thursday, Sept. 18, the
262nd day of 1980. There are 194 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On Sept. 18, 1793, President
George Washington laid the cornerstone of the Capitol In
Wuhlngton.
On this date:

In 1759, the French surrendered
Quebec to the British.
In 1810, Chile declared Independence from Spain.
In 1850, Congress passed .the

l&gt;-7,1361be.
Freabman Wingback

Eastern's ·] V's'
·romp Miller, 37-6
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Eagle reserve foozball squad under
coach Dennis Eichinger handily

The country's champion bellweather county
ByRoberU. Wlpn"
(Firat of two related eoiiUIIIII)
EMMETSBURG, Iowa (NEA) Emmetsburg and surrounding Palo
Alto County are a Hollywood director's vision of a small Midwestern
fanning community. Located In northwestern Iowa, the area contains
some of the richest farmland and
friendliest people to be found anywhere.
But the COWlty has a fame greater
than ItS corn, soybeans and pork.
That fame l.s political, for Palo Alto
County has voted for the winning
presidential candidate in every
presidential election since 1886. It ls
the country's champion bellwether
. county.
In 1m, for instanCe, Iowa went for
Gerald Ford. But true to tradition,
Palo Alto County gave Jlnlmy Carter 3,181 of its votes to a mere 2,618
for Ford. The county's votes had
gone to winners WW!am McKinley,
Teddy Roosevelt (in 1904), Wl!fuun
H. Taft (In 1900), Woodrow Wilson,
Wlll1'en Harding, Calvin Coolidge,
Herbert Hoover (in 1928), Franklin
Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Dwight

Eisenhower, John Kennedy, Lyndon
Johnson and Richard Nixon in the 20
previous presidential elections.

Not only has Palo Alto County
traditionally voted for winning
presidential candidates, but those
candidates' victory lllll'Rlns in the
county have clOIIely resembled their
victory margins natioowide. Thus,
the tightest race locally was the
Kennedy·Nixon contest in 1960.
There may be mroe to this
phenomenon than Jpst coincidence.
Despite Its agricultural orientation,
this community may reflect with
surprising accuracy the concerns of
the nation as a whole.

Palo Alto County Ia almost unique
ammg Midwestern farming cominunities In Its etlmlc makeup. Settled by sb Irish families from
Chicago, the county today ls
strongly Irish and strongly Catholic.
M08t such regions are populated
more heavily by Protestants of
Engii8h, German and Scandinavian
stock.

In fact, Emmetsburg, which has
established Itself as the "silter city"
of Dublin, ls named after Irish
patriot Robert Emmet. The town
square in front of the courthOuse
· The county has about 14,000 corrtalns his statue and a piece of the
residents, some 4,500 of them llvtng Blilmey stone. The town is said to
in Emmetsburg, the county seat. have the best St. Patrick's Day
The rest live on farms or in smaller , celebration west of New York City.
towns like Ruthven or CyUnder or
Another factor that differentiates
Mallard. (Town motto: "We're as Palo Alto County from the typical
friendly 8ll duclra.")
rural community Is that almclet 50
Wilen fann prices are high, as percent of Ita adult c;itizena have atthey are currently, this Ia a very tended college. That Ia lligniflcantly
pnJSperous community. But when above average for such areas.
prices are low, as they were J8st
Politically, the community
summer ·and into this spring, the mirrors the nation. Of the county'a
economy of · the county suffers. 7,160 regiatered voters, 2,548 call
CUrrently, about 000 county residen- themselves DemOCl'llta and 1,494 call
ts receive some fonn of federal or themselves Republicans while the
state welfare assistance; that J.n. remaining 3,118 l.lat themselves u
eludes about 500 who get food stam- independenta.
The community Ia very serious
PII·

defeated Miller's JV's, 37~.
The Eagles cranked out 250 total
yards offensively, and according to
Coach Eichinger, the defense "put
forth a very good effort." Miller had .
only one first downs to exemplify
Eastern's effectiveness on defense .
One of the first downs came on a
penalty.
Offensively the Eagll!ll were
nearly unstoppable. Quilrterback
Roger BisseU led the offense by connecting on two 40 yard touchdown
passes, and rushing for two more.
Bissell first bounded over the goal
line on a one yard quarterback
sneak attempt and then used the
aneall play to set up a 30 yard touch-

about Its politics. In llrnl, 85 percent
of the registered voters went to the
polls.

Wilen local businessmen and farmers gather at Dutch's Diner for
moming coffee, at the Redwood 1M
for IWlch or at the Hop Breath
Lounge for late-aftemoon or evening
drinka, the talk usually turna to crop
prices and poliUCB.
Jane Whitmore, editor of Emmetsburg 's
twice-weekly
newspaper, !1)'11 that Palo Alto
County realdenta follow naUonal
politics very cl011ely. "Quite a few
people here subecribe to newspapers
like the Chicago Tribune or New
York Times or Wall Street Journal,"
she notes. "THey are both well-read
and serious about politics. Maybe
our voting nlCOI'd Ia just luck or
maybe we do reflect the nation as a
whole. But whatever It Ia, It keePII
working every four years."

down run.

Eastern Fullback Troy Guthrie
played a good game, rushing for a
touchdown and 45 yards on six

••

By Don Graff
Well, Abbie Hoffman Is back
among us.
Although as It turns out, be never
really was away. The clown prince
of the radical '60s spent his underground '70s crusading for the environment, testifying before·
COIIgl'e88ional committees, being appointed to federal conunls.sions, tending his tomato garden In full view .
up upstate New York neighbors and
getting acquainted with middle age.
The fOWider of the Youth Jn.
temational Party Is now 43.
It just goes to show where a little
plastic surgery and a lot of gall can
get you.
And as If all this weren't enough to
keep a fugitive busy, Abbie also
fmmd time to keep in touch with the
family. He got together regularly
'with his brother Jack, often at
baseball games. It seems he has an
establishment weaknesa - he's a
RedSoxfan.
For lister PhyUls, the wife of a
Mexican government official, there
was less fun In the rendezvous game.
On ooe attempt, she had to shake ber.
bodYguards before meeting at a
theater.
It was a harrowing experience,

she confided in a UPI report: "No
one (in Mexico) goes.to tlle movies

by themselves ... 'Psast," a man
whispers to me. I didn't know If the
guy was coming on .to me or If It was
Abbie. I wu so scared that I left."
Throughout the six underground
years, Abbie was aliJo available for
Interviews at the drop of a news-persoo's suggestloo to his numerous
aboveground contacts. In one of the
last, a pre-surrender outpouring to
the Washington Post, be made It
clear that the nOlle might be new but
otherwise he wsa the same old Abo
ble.

drugs. And three years of dickering ,

at a distance on surrender conditiom apparently have given him
some hope of drawing leas than the
15 yean to life conviction could
bring.
A1ao he has a new book out, ripe
for promotion.
Talk about your full lives. And
with so much of It still ahead of him,
one wonders what Abbie can
possibly do for an encore.
Maybe his book provides a clue.
It's titled "Soon to Become a Major
Motion Picture."

SOME ECHANTED
"I'm very very upset about the
myth of the (figure from the) .60s .. .
who went cynical in the '80s ... I want
people to know I'm not coming back
embracing the system ... I'm
coming back fighting .....
If be aays so. Still, fighting spirit
seems to bave less to do with his
surrender to New York state
authorities oo narcotics and balljumping charges than sense of

~bble ~ It, the times they

have a-changed. Vietnam Is Btill a
sensitive but no longer an Inflamed
.Issue. There Ia less hysterta about .

DISTANCE

There's news from Ubya and for a
change it Ia not connected with Billy
Carter.
That COWitry'a live-wire leader,
Col. Muammar Qaddaft, has called
for union with Syria, which has accepted in principle. Never mind that
they are lleJIIII'IIted by a thouaand
miles of Mediterranean.
The lnunedlate motivation Is to·
strengthen the hard-linen' front
agalnat Israel, but the impulle Ia in a
long Arab tradition. Syria, u a matter of fact, has just broken off an
engagement with Iraq and a few

-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Development of a p~ high
speed passenger train system in ·
· Oblo has -~ .to JN111S muSter with
v~. -~ : ·'backers
' already
. studying how the railroad could be
extended to Michigan.
Ohio lawmakers, prodded by Rep.
Arthur Wllkowald, [).Toledo, ha:ve
been looking at the possible con,structlon of an electrically-powered
rail network linking the state's
major cities. If built, the trains
would zip along at speeds of 150
miles per hour and could be In
operation by the year 2,000.
Wilkowski has introduced a

are

'

@

1i80Df NEAinc:.

..

~
.

"And there's MORE good news/ Our /stest poll
shows thst you hsve pul/6" ::JfltJBd of Ruls Lensksln 'credibility'."

~

reaolution wlilch, il "the . Gelierif brancli oi the- hlgii speed .raii net-.
Aslembly approves, would Ilk
work was extended from Toledo to ·
:voten to okay a 1-cent 1ncreue In Detroit.
. the state's 4-cent.fl.oQ-the--dollar ·
Tile $12,500 study wu conducted .
-. - tU to- pay fOr -iiiilldiiig- the by Employment Research
railroad.
Asaoclates, t.na!ng, Mich.
Supporters of the plan say conIt says half the new job! would be'
generated over a ~year period with.
struction of the network would
revitalize the state's economy, . construction of the link and the ·
especlaDy 118 steel and coal J.n. · manufacture · of rail can,
dilltrles, and generate thoulanda of : IDCm\Citlvet and slgnalllng equipnewjobe.
·
ment. An additional 400 job! would
Meanwhile, the Joint Housebe needed to operate and maintain
Senate Rail Overslglrt CoJnmlttee
the link after It Is in operation, the .
has released a report showing more
studyaaya.
. 1
than 88,000 new jobs would be
In addition, ~rs say the ·
created in Ohio and Michigan If a
34,000 new jobs in Obio an!l Michigan

Brluztnle
w,mlbe."
FreebmaD Center

'Thomas, Rick ChanCey, Nick Riggs,
Jolm Perrin, Dave Iannarelll, M.lke .
Jackson, Todd Fife, Mille Willford,
Dave Follrod Chrl.s Burdette Marly
Spangler; G~ Taylor, B~ Speno
cer, Andy Iaruuirelll, Dennis Thorn. ton, Dave Barr, Brian lhtJe, Matt
Van Vranken, Jay Evans, Mark
Boyd, Bobby Southern, Terry
Wayland, Scott Pickens, Troy
Bauer, Randy Stewart, Dave Hoffman and Eddy Bishop
- ____.__·-

SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE . OUR
MATERIAL AT REASONABLE1',RICES. _

SPORTS QUF3110N

Peal to?

Mobue Home Trades Welcome
Show Models

year shop

the excellent
selections at

decades back It was actually united
with Egypt. That was the United
Arab Republic, called off when It
turned out to be mroe Egyptian than
Arab.
As for the Egyptlana, since the
break up with Syria they have talked
union with Sudan and that aame
Ubya now courting the Syrians.
A8 they work out, Arab unions are
a lot like HollyWood marriages eventually everyone geta II'OWid to
trying everyone else.
In this present Instance, Qaddafl's
proposal was not unconditional.
Should unioo with Syria not go
through, be vowed to carry the battle to Iarael alone: "I ahall go to Upper Galllee as a comrilando myself
with my rifte."

a reasonable

CONCERN:
Purtuant to the '*(Uir.rrw'lll of
S.CUon 41011.11 of tht Ohio ~IMd
Code. onto Power eom ..., _ ,
GIYM notloe that on June 30, 1910,
It tiled with the Publtc 1.1\lllt'" Com-

mi.Ston of OhiO an IPPMcauon lor
euh)t!U.tiOft to ltNftCI and to lncr.ue
IIUblt~ntllily all of Its tl'-d tlflffl and
t.ml lind GondltiOnl of .-viC:. fhdng
rate~ and charges tOf llectt1clty.
are no rete chengM proposed, other than In the t~rttla
apecltledy retefNrCI to In tN fOikWtlr.g
of the rwritlonl

TERMS AND CONDITIONS
OF SERVICE

==

tor,.,

"'llctlon "·,., ........ a cutlomet
wtlll:lt OIWDed . . .
dl~
Chlcll f'IOihecl 1ft ~t of • bill

tt..ty,

"J.: ~..:~~~~

and

outalde or normal

""'*"'

~ftO

hOUri II lnci'MMCI from IZU5 to
$211.25. TM ctwve tor psyment of

BAHR CLOTHIERS
N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 011.

amounts to a Company
•optorea parformlnt 1 dleconntetlon
It Inc~ hom IUO to 11.25.

ditlnq..-nt

TARIFF A.B. IRE81DENTIAL
ELECTRIC SERVICE)
TN motittlty

CUll~ Cl~

minimum bill . . tnc:nued by

11.110. "'"

tnc......t

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS
IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE

That might explain the quick
Syrian acceptance, overlooking
practical e:~~perience In these matters. DamascUB may find It
preferable to keep Qadd•fi salel,y
distant in Tripoli In JICIDinll partnership rather than rilli: his running
around with a loaded weapon near
118 own border.
'ftlere are some situations that
make even a Billy Carter connection
look good.

MEIGS COUNTY
BOARD
----- -OF ELECTIONS · '· ', , •
-·

MASONIC TEMPL-E BUILDING
..,.
P.O. Box 488, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ·
;
Phone 992· 2691
Regular Hours- 8:3G-4:30 Mondays.through Fridays. "'':

aboUt t4'1ft,(V~ lnctuatna tuM crt~).

11M afti6RIItty of thla leriH to fanna
11 Nmlttd to too. haYing no more
1llldtowMII ot oonneotld .e.otrk;al
toed outlldt 1t1e retldrtnol.

t..,.

.,.

.
The report, prepared by Marlon ·

Anderson and Laura TavorminB, !
said conatructlon of such a rail
syatem in Ohio linked to nelghborlilg
state. would provide a major ·
economic stimulus

. "*''"

ThllncNUM per ICWH pf'OpCIHO

~:
.
For tM ftttt 100 KWMtt uMd I *
rrom 2.30 oantt per
KWH t~ 2.1!10 aenl:a J* KWH.
!lor thll nallit 100 KWHrt uMd per
month from 2.00 cents per
KWH to 2.20 oenlt per KWH .
For all OYW 1eaa I&lt;WHrt uNd per
month from l-11 oen11 I *
~to Ull conto por KWH .

"" ~ ..,.., •••' n~•·
ao,........ ~­
- onc1 m-um
bin l n o - bY
credit II cMnglldto O..MIIIf(WH.
The Inc,..... per KWH ~

. . . . ~ottawa:

.
For all energy uMd duma Oft&lt;PMk
bflllna ll*lodl from f .ll o.nl•

oor

KWH

KWH.

I

..

The ..,.,.... block or 3()00 KWH
within thl "1!10 Uinn KW" step II
eliminated, reducing liM num• of
energy blookl from tour to three.
"The pf'tiPOMd lncJHHI are 11

follows:
KWHrt aqual to ftf'lt 50 tliMI KW
ol monthly bl"lng demand

from 5.21 canta per KWH to
4.87 eMil C* KWH .

KWHrt equll to nellit 1!50 tlmel
KW of monthly ~I ling demand
from 3.W ctntt per MWHr
(llrtl 3000 ICWMf'l) and 2.!58
cenlt per KWHr (afl ower 3000
KWHrll) to 3.8S ctnlt per
""'KWHr (Ill KWHrt).

KWMrt In t)ICHI or :200 limes KW
of monthly ~llnCJ Cltmlnd
from 1.13 ctnll per KWHr
to 1.87 cents per KWHr.
1M energy ch.,-gea ar• modlft.d
and flatttntd such that, lnoludlng ttoe
chlnge In cuttotMr cherQt, tiM ewer~~ II
lncf'MM 11 approllilmalely 11% (8%
Including fuel cherau). The! equipment
credit, minimum cllarge tor w,ktert,
* ~ lnd

TARIFF E.H.Q. IELECTRIC
HEATING GENERAL)
Thlt terlft remalna In procnt o f
ellmlnetton •nd limited to •dating
. .......... Tho lltot lwO ~' blool&lt;l
...,. repllelcl by a cuatomer ch1rge ot
atU1 anC1 t lingle energy Olock. The
ovarall 1tva1 of cttargea w11 lncreaud
by t•¥. (liMo Including lue! chlurgaa) .
The orooOHd lnCI'IIMI P11 KWH
...... tofloWt:
For the flrtt 7000 I&lt;WHrt uNCI per
month from 4.71 cent• per
KWMr (llrtl 200 KWMfl) and
2.33 cen11 per KWHr (ne•t
eB00 KWHrt) to 2.82 centa per
KWMr.
FOf ell ov..- 7GOO I&lt;WHrt uNCI per
month from 2.10 c•nte per
KWHr to 1.115 oant1 per KWHr.
For demand In IKCMI Ol 30 KW
added charatl ltom 12.11 for
HCh KW ~ monthly demand
In I XCIII Of 30 KW tO 12.C8 lOt
eecft KW ot monthly demllnd
In ••ceu of 30 KW.
·

TARIFF L.P. (LAROE POWERI
The ratll, curqntty contlsllng or
docllnlno blod&lt; -.v •..,_
~ on houra UN ot KVA damend, Ia
NPIIICad with a customer charge, •
ling.. .demlftd
per KVKWAHindTho
......
.,.,... ~3:
_ _ por
. 1
mlrilmum bllrlt CftanQMI from a charge
per KVA to the c.-omer charge plus •
ctwge per KVA of monthly billing
damaftd. The overall llftl of cl\argea,

the tCiulpment credits, •••
~~~ from 22 oentt per KVA of
monthly bllllnt dtmenG to 21 centa per
K\JA for detiYary wlt~~g~a of 2 300 to
12,000, 1nd trom 31 centt per KiJA to 41
otntt PI" KV A on all wort1Q11 t11112'3.000.
ThiOW'IIIIIMiofehargll ... ~
lnckdng fuol-1
The CUffel'll and propoatd rat.. In
thll tartH '"' u tonowe:
C.rront
Ptlmo&lt;yPortlon'
ICWMra kl an amount IQUIII to
the produc;t of the f tret 30
limN the KVA of monthly

Including

..--t'" ....

bllltncl demand
KWMr.
BlconOII'y

to 1.12 - . por

~ - · ·Prlmertly
.... Oollonolfol .. AHIRnoet
Hellld by

Eleclrtottr DfOWIIOt'l .,.

ell lnotMHd

1l.l"'. The liN OlfiOdl f t
nidlf!nld u R*ng local ftrne rtttwr
ttwu Eutem Standard nme.
by .rM&gt;ut

ThthAAI Ill *KWH · ~

...... tottow.:

~-CIIolgo

, ........

~ ~~~~ ~=-":~"'£\'.:::.\"&amp;.::
dlrMnd

t.--.. --

' IN mcwutftt, billing

tram

o• oentt 1* KWHr to

Fot thoel KWHN ueed ctwrlng the
-

F«
IOotltM
oortod:
nm eoa f(WHre ffOt'ft 3.00
oen.. I * KWHr to 3.41 cent•

per KWHr.

POl' .., CMr 1100 KWHrt ttom 2.40

Por 111 addlltonll KWHrt UNCI
Clut1nt the month from 1.20

oent:=

KWHr to 1.31 oente

Tha Pf.,.rt.Mntal Tlme-ot-O.y

o...,_ ara oftMttd t~
........... 1ft "" Load MaRirQimenl
nmHt-ooy_....
.
TARifFQ.S.
(QIHRAL SERVICE)
PRWiaton

eenta

....

-Old

Customer Charge
Dem1nd Charge
Energy Charge

2.3 · MKV

Culton'ilf Charge
Dllmlnd Charge
E,.rgy Charge

b4111ng demand It PfOPOMd.

TARIFF L.P.O.,LAROE
POWI!R OPT ONS)
Thll tartH I• ~ wttl'ldrawn and

...,.IOICI by Wlft I .P• •

TARIFF H.L.P. IHIQH
LOAD PACTOR IIOWI!R)
-

lltltt to ..... wlt11drown
torin '·' ·

of the CommiNkMI;

(b) Accept the appiiCitlon and
uhlbltl tor filing;

(c) Approw. tiM form of thla

138 KY or Higher
$8,0M.OO
S.U!i IKVA
0.2051: IKWH

A ouatomer chlrQI le Included In

the rata 1rtd In the mlnlmum monthly

charge. The ov.rell

1~ ol cftar_
g_ll
lnc:ru,std by abOUt 21 'It (7%
Including fuel charges).
The pfOJ!OMd lncftiUII ,,. 11
follow a:
Cuttomer ch•roe from none to
11051!1 per month.
For each KW Ol rnont"ly billing
ttamartd from 11.21 per KW to

wu

13.82 pair KW .

For uch kllow•r of lftllglng KVAR
ttamalld In ucea~ ol ~% or

ti'HI KW btlllng demand fOf
each month ffom 10.430 par

KYAR to 10.507 par KVAR.
For the total KWHrs taktn 0.525
c.111 per KWHr to 0.206 een11
per KWHr.
.
.
A month~ minimum bUt equal to
-.oe&amp;.OO plut 13.112 per KW of
monthly billing dem•nd It
oont1lned In the ltrl lf.

TARIFF 8.8.
(SCHOOL SERVICE)

21" '"" lnclucllng tuol C..fliOit.

The propoead rnc,.... In KWH It

.

For the flrtt 300 KWHrt uttd Ptr
month lor each 1000 ~quara
fMI or encfoted .,.. from
3.91 eMil
KWHr 10 :UO

'*

can II. per KWHf'.

For the "-!anca ol KWHrsliMd Plf
month from 1.0&amp; c«~tl ,...
KWHr to 2.21 Genii per KWHr.

TARIFF O.L.
IOUTDOOR LIOHTINOI
.Tho_..

....,

clroullt, pot111, end. undereround
wiling ..... ~~ by • IUbltlnt..lly
gi'Mtlf I)MentiQI than 11'11 chatDN
fof lunpa.
I
~ Inc,_... In O.L ratM
l f l U fOIIOWI:
7,000 1umen mercury . from te.tl
. . ~th to 17.15

l* I

••mt:
Approve

(g)

••Make
.,........
1.,...
such new achtdulll

the flllnQ at UM
new ICP'ttclu• In thtl form

tfttctW. u

toOn U It II
prtctlcal ahd IIWful to do 10.

The propoMd

a~Mnded

IChldltlat

tftlll ewly In all ~tenet Nf'qd
by Ohio-POwer.
tt It llllmllttd that h rwp~Menla·
11'1'8 ,...&lt;Mnt•l cuttomer'a bill will be
lnc;f"MIId annually, baNd on the eatendar yew 11110, by 8%; lhll ~tl'te
commeroltl customer's bill by 1% ; end
the ,....,tattwe lnduttrtat customer's

"'"""""·

All percentactH preeent.:~ In ttllt
notice ara approxlm•t• and biiMd on
....,. c.tOUTIIrt. lrdhidual cuttomen
may ••~ rtle adlutlmtfltl dlf·
~Ytraget

pruenttcl In

tf'llt not~• ·

A copy ol till 'fpUc atlon It t¥111·
able fOf lnft)~Ctlon • the otftce ot Ohio
_eom..., ·-todot30t

~

Ave. S.W., C.n-ton, Ohio 44102.

A copy of thl lppllc:atlon mey 01
lntpectec:t by lnteqsttd partl" • t tt.

OfllR• ol lhlu Commlul0nlo37&amp; South
High Streit, Columbul, Oh .
Recommendation• w~l c h cUll•'
from the application rMJ be rNide by
tiM Staff ot the Public Vtllltlll Com·
mltllon or bY Intervening PI, ... and
may be ._,,. . by tM Commluktn.

Tht Company I• unlbte to ~

..........

-~"""'·tn
amount Of" term~be maoe b't n
PubliC_
UIIIIU..
.-on ot Ditto
.....
__
lho~

11 uneblt to Pflldlct whit, It any,
ltnl*l eucto modlffcatlona may hlv.

upon outtomen bllllnal.

Tht 4Mfltl ...., of CI\Wgee WU
lncu =~about 33' (1~ tncturdlnCI

.....

(f)

terant lrorn thl

Ttllt tartlf r.nuolnt tn pi'OCIP ot
•llmlnlllon and llmllad til u:lttlng
customera. A cualomar ctwga of 111.113
11 Included In the rate tnd thlu two
energy btocklarelfgnlftcutly tlatttnad.
The minimum chargelt 'made eqUal to
thl oUitorntt ehlrge. TM O¥er•ll 1...1
ot ch•ron wu tnc......ct by abOut

llfOIIQWt:

notice;
Flrld thet lha prnent r•tn ,,.
lnsuftlclant to )1eld f'MIO:'IIb't
compenutlon for ttl• MrVICe
rendered and are un)utt end
unreuonablt;
(I) Find thlt the lnei'MIIId rttn
and charges •nd amended
t.-rr. and ooncltlona ot ~
propoNd In Ohio Power't
Ap~llcatlon ere Jutl and
I'HIOnablt and appro¥e tha

(d)

TARIFF I.R.P.
(INTERRUPTIILE POWER)

11J:UO " ' month

A month/J mtillmum charge ot
t113.00 plus • .11 Plf KVA ol rnoflthly

0.2841 JKWH

$4.112/KVA
0.2241 /KWH

td

E""T.ioC:::S: por KWH

PRAYER
The Prayer of tt'll ~plication
rtqutltl the PubliC utllltiN Commluk)n
01 Ohio to do the follow ing:
!•) Find that the application and
lllhlbltl . . Iliad In ICOOidanCt
with S.Ctlon 40G.11. Ohio
Ae\IIMCI Code , and the Nita

2.3 · 12KV
$1,151 .CO
$!5.34 /KVA

12,41&amp;00

minimum of f,2.03 PM" KVA of monthly

. . ., peJli.VA ·

Thlt t1rtll It being wlthdrewn.

per KVA -ol .monthly bllllflQ
demand · 10.0060 per KWMr .

for tht ftnt 200,000 kwhrt •
1. t 2 otntl per tlwhr
For ..1 0\'ef aoo,ooo kwtn ·
0.11 oent• per kwftr
Tbll tatiH contllnl a monthly

b611ng......m.
,, ;

ISTREET LIQHTINO)

secondary Portion:
Energy In t:ICIU of 300 KWMrt

~

Rtmllndar or entrGY u.,.:t
111'1'11 month In I XOHS of the

sa.ee

undet' Tarttfl LP.O. and H.L.P. which
.,.. propoud to be allmlnattd.
The prO'olltlon cunently In Tariff I.P.
permUting customers having multll)lt
plant• to also reeelve MrVIce 11_plants
hiiYing demandt u small u 3000 KVA OICompony:
20,000 lumtn UMrCury lloodftvhl
under thltllrltt It propoeecl to be limited
from 110.2&amp; PI' lamp per
to the cuttofMfl and specific: plantlto
month to '12.30 PM lamp per
ttrved on thl eH.ctlve dlle of ttM
month .
...,lledtaulll.
.
50.000 lumen IMfCU'Y floodlight
The preHnt L.P.O.,.t.P. and H.L.P .
!rom '115 .30 per lamp ~
"'" contain mYitlple demlnd ttepa
month to 118.40 par lamp per
which alto Include vanoua ltwla of
month.
energy cha~t. teperale, single or
W'*'
Mrvlce unnot .,. supplied
muttrple energy tteps lor energy not
Included In ihtt demand ChlrgH, e from an • • lttlna pole of tiM Company
.-..ctlve t*nand charge In the tut of carrying a aecondary circuit, II"
H.L.P., and an equipment crtcllt In tl'lt Company wHI lnttell one pole an&lt;IJOt
0111 of LP.O. The PfOCIC)8Id rata oona6l1t one apan of MCOndary circuit or not
ol I CUtlomtr cUrRt, a lingle KVA ~r 1!KJ fMI tor '" Mldllkm•l ch•rg•
demend charat •ncf a llngHt energy of $1 .80 jMr month, •n Increase from
chetgt tor eacto o1 ttne deltverv volt~g~~ 10.110.
POST TOP LIOHTINQ SERVICE
leYel• (llrlmery 2.3 • 12 KV; ."-'blrantFor aach 7000 lumen mercury
mlialon 23 · II KV; Trantmlltlon 138
KV or hlghtf'). The minimum charge Ia lamp on 12 foot post from 17.20 per
made equal to liM custornef charge montto to 18.86 per montP't.
When • cuatomer require• an
plut the dem•nd ch•roe. rtlher thin
ttmply tfte dtmlnd c"harge, and, In underground circuit long• thlln 30
thl elM of LP.O. and I.P., the minimum . f•t for Poel·top lighting servt~;e, he may
1 Pay to tha Compeny In .:tvance
billing demand It lncnaued from flO%
• charge of $2 .75 per loot for
tel 87% of the contract capacity. The
the length of underground
ov.rtll leW"el of chargea for thoee
circuit In t)ICIU o f 30 fMt, or
CUitOmtrl WU Increased by tboul
2 . Ply • monthly tocllltloo 18% (8% Including tuetcharQfl).
of 8.t centelor Nch 2!5 fMt (or
the current 1nd propoNCI rat .. In
lrtctlon thereof) or under·
lftll lartrl ll"e II IOIIowt:
ground circuli In IIICIH or 30
Current
fHI, lnetMMCI from $1 .!fJi 1nd
Prtm.ry Portion: ·
rNPtCII.,.Iy.
$.47
For the f lrtt 15,000 KVA of
Cuttomart ~ulrlng ~tJNICI whirl
monthly bll!lr.g demand as
rock or other ad¥erM 1011 conditions
detarmlntd below · S&lt;t .u
lrt ancount•ract will be fumlthtd
.. , KVA.
Mf'41ce
prOYidtd the ellic... cost of
For 111 O'lel" 15,[0) KVA o f
monthly billing demand
_ • $3.83 trenching and beckttlllng (coal In
• llictta ol BOIIIoot of the total trench
porKVA.
The Cuttom.rtlhall bl altowed length) Ia paid to the Company by the
300 KWHrt fOf Mch I&lt;.VA of c uaton~er, lncreaNd from 45tltoot.
monthly billing demand billed
In accordlnct wttft t!'\11 .eltOn.
TARIFF S.L.

_........_ _
c.m--- 1.10 oentl per kwhr
Exoeu Portion:

~--=·· onc1-"'

I

e.n

INSTALLATIONS:
2,!JOO Iuman lncanatcent hom
s.us per lamp per montft to
$!5.ecl J* tamp per monuo.
a,OOO lull)lll lncandatcent from
per lamp per month to
16.116 por Oomp por month.
For t1ch lamp with UoodHghllng
lumlnalrt, controUtd by photoel.ctrlc
rel1y, wt1ert ..,.,k:tl Ia aupplltc:l from
an aKitttno po1t and HCOndar'y tacllltiM

TARIFF I.P.

~NDUSTRIAL POWERI
The 1\ltllablllty of lhll tat1tl It
modlflld to that lt It alto lblt to
accommodlte 111 cuatomera now Ml\'ld

PortiOn:

KWMrt In an amount equel to
the product of ttoe next 170
timet the KYA or monthly
bllllno-ond:
For thll flrtt 2,000 ltwhrt ·
3.11 oenta per kwftr
For thl next 1,000 kwhrt ·
3.13 centt per kwftr
For the na.. 10,000 kwhrt •
2.33 oents per kwhr
For all over 100,000 kwtn ·

bllllna DMtoc~• from UO cents
~KWH

mtnmum ct\ltDII tor CUIIOmlnl

hlivlng other IOU~ of •nergy aupply
. . tnc,..Hd from 22 cents per KW to
2!1 canto por KW; ...., por KVA to
12.04 per ~VA; 1nd 124.50 to 127.13 per
month tor flrtll5 KW or fraction thereot
of contract demlnd and fTOm 13.52 to
13.80 par montl'l fOr NCh KW ot contrKt
tt.rnlnd ovar S KW, rMP~Ctlvely.

For all energy uMd durtna ott.pHk ·

~lltiNoflUOtot•~··

•

CUikmtfl whoM demand It not~~
of e•ceedlni 5 KW) lftd to 114.00
tor cuttom«&lt; I'IQUirlng a demlncl mtler..

·to 3.24 oonto por

oonto por KWHr oo 1.7honto
per KWttr.

ADDITIONAL- HOURS
;FOR REGISTRATION:
·Friday Evenings-Sept. 19, 26, Oct. 3
6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Saturdays- Sept. 20, 27, Oct. 4
. 9 a.m. to 12 noon
Monday-oct. 6, 9 a.m.-9 p. m.

ltaaya.

t-about
......,
...
Cl.2 ctnts Plf

by

man~g~m~nt

IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: Visit ·nui
Board's Office in person - OR - Phone the Board of
Elections- OR- Mall the Board a Card.
ALSO, if you MOVE you must notify the county of·
flee. Or if you are in doubt as to whether you are properly registered, phone the Board- 992·2697.

thole who build the railroad and Ita
equipment buy food, clothing,
houlea and aervtcea.
"The )llitrOOs of the- lliik are
estimated to spend between PU i
million and $411.9 million annually in '
the Detroit metropolitan &amp;rei and
$13.8 million In the Toledo ,
metropolitan area in the year 2000," :

•uo

to •eo •tonG wtth tncr.~a~ ol
liUf
Ito loU'Ito lnU.onorgy...._. Tllo
oonMf'flllon and 10M ·

BY OCTOBER 6TH

WOUld create another 34,000 joiiii as

arw:l
10

~~~"tat;:'n: ~rrr:r:1

NOVEMBER 4TH GENERAL ELECTION
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED

.

00 to 3:00 ·

Ia changed to M .OO lor customan not
requiring a dtmand meter (defined ••

TO WHOM 'IT MAY

In I!Jtotton 21, o.ntal or Ot.contlnuanoe of lervlct, the r.conntetlon
ctlarQH dut1ng normal working t\ourt II
lncreued trom 112.50 to 111.110,

price at:

.

NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
OF OHIO FOR AN INCREASE IN ELECTRIC RATES

made under
oolotlna. IMIIfa.
In S.Ctlon 13, Extenelon of Rural
· LlrtN, the rural liN rnlntmum cfttrge
PI'. CUIIOfMf' undet the optiOnal piton
It Inc:,_.., by 38t;a from 1&amp;3.11 to
151.40 per month lor up to !118 ol I
mitt and from 117.50 to 123.71 per
mon\h for MCh addltkw\tl 118 mi.~ Of
fraot~ theNot. TM minimum . ., .
Dill of IUCh Cl'llfOitl fol IICh 11M II
rncfHMd ·ttom 1110.00 to 11110.00 per
month PI' tina. No minimum charge
oholl b o - tllonlel.40 por month. or
IM,.... from MS.Je. The QI'ON annfltl
.....n~~t trom all cullomert on • line
necetHtY to ellmlnlte all minimum
CharJH uncser tftll ttrlfl Ia lnefQMd
rrom $4200 to 1&amp;100 per mt...
In ltetlon 14, Tempomy 8trYica,
tht 1000 ldtowatl mulmum Ollf)ACity
limitation haa Men deMI:td. Tha f lllied
ctwro- lo.- f'Mdlng-ln and I'Mdlng.out
an exllllnu f"Nter It lnct'HMd from
110.00 to •12.21. and thll ctllrge tor
single phuAt 12CfQ.ta 'IOit H!'¥tce from
ptti'NMnl eouroe, up tq 100 am'*'
=~ Ia Inc,__ frOm te&amp;.DO to

wear this

Middleport, 0.

.

0Hn: 7:jl0to 5:40MOn. tliru Fri.

"For the First In Manufacutea "ousmg"
.
• Main
992·7034
Pomeroy, 0.

enor. A M.IO ctwot I•

fall and winter

,

992·.2709 "' 9f2-6611

.

DfODOMld In the Compeny'a eppllcatiOI'I

For the finest

923 s;·3rd·Ave.

.KINGSBURY
HOME SALES &amp; SERVICE
.

iu flied on .fuM 30, 1M, It u followt:

so;wfio are the voten of Palo Alto
County supporting· thla year? in
1980, will It again be "as Palo Alto
County goes, 110 goes the nation?"
We will explore these quesUons
between now and Election Day In a
series of vislta with local residenta
that will begin with the next colWJUI.

WE
DELIVER

ALLEY
BER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

FHA 265·VA·Conventlonal f1n. avaol .

n..

FALL FASHIONS

PRICES. QUALIT'f

CASH&amp;CARRV
PRICES

Gov. nslsted loans lor qu•!lflecl buyers-

Only members having establlsbed
handicaps for the year are eligible
and players will be placed In flights
according to handicap. All players
will tee off before 10:30 a.m. and
trophies will be awarded In all
filghts for winners and runners-ups.

II both of liS are seeking divine
guidance, who does the referee ap-

bnfldtngmaciJ'I•Ja

MODULAR
'HOMES

carries. Eastern had secured a victory quite handUy by halftime
8Ithough Miller scored on a 64 yard
JN111S intercepU9n before the half.
BEGINS SUNDAY
The first 36 hole championship
tournament consl.sting of 18 holes
this Sunday and 18 on Sunday, Sept.
28 will be held by the Jaymar Men's
Golf Assn.

ancl

BUILDING OR REMODELING?

'*~.ua..t.na.

Abbie Hoffman: he was never really gone

Filgltive Slave Act, allowing slave
owners to reclaim slaves who had
escaped to other states.
In 1961, United Nations Secretary
General Dag Hammarskjold was
kllled in a plane crash in Rhodesia.
Ten yean ago, Israel freed more
than 400 Arab hostages who had
been seized in occupied territory.
Five years ago, fugitive Patricia
Hearst was apprehended by the FBI
in San Francisco, along with two
confederates in the Symbionese
Uberatlon Army.

'

Ricbard Dean
~. ZO%lbe.
Senior Tackle

SbawnEada

Ohio's proposed high speed -train system

\

Jackson scored touchdowns of U!;ee
and 60 yards respectively. Quar·
terhacks Rick Edwl!rds and Nick
Riggs scored PAT's on option runs
·and pass plays to give _the yoWJg
MarauderS the sh11t out Wlli.
Meigs, now 1-1·1, will seek another
victoryonMonday, September22,at
Galllpolls with game time set at 5:15
p.m.
Members of the junior varsity
are :
Sean
Rick
G':!g_

game.

Dale Rotbleb, Jr.

Today in history.

reserves post win··:

h.

from10110.»
_.Z,!Br.--IN
20.000.. ._...

~---AND ARE
NOT AYAILA&amp;IPOftt NEW

·"IIi

ANY

PERSON, FlAM, CORPORA·

TlON OR ASIIOCIATIOM MAY AL~

PUAIUANT TO SECTION . . .. II Q,.
THE OHIO REVIlED CODE, AN
OIJI!CTtoN TO THE INCAEA8E8
I'IIOI'OIIED IY OHIO ~WHICH
M~Y ALLEGE THAT THE
""NY'S

AI'I'IJCAIION CONTAI. . I'IIOPOIAUI

THAT ARE UNJUST AND DIICAIMtN,t,.
TOAY OR UNIIIEASONAILE.
The form ot thlt nottoe has t.en
approved by the Public UUIIUII
Commllllon of Otito. ·

-·

OHIO POW!A COM'ANY

llr C.A. l&lt;ollor

�2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 18, 1980 ·

_3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.,Thunday, Sept. 18, 1980

_ Mara~der

_Meet the .Meigs -Maraud~rs
- ·-

Opinions &amp;
Comments

"...

~11»:31iG~T. clMMl',
~ie\W~I~

"&lt;&gt;

v

"&lt;:::.

.tJ

fJ

p

.....

~liTllte!

,t)

~

~

"' ...,
... ,1

)

The Melp Junior ~ai'Sity football
squad displayed a stingy defense In
route to an impressive 1~ shut out
victory over Belpre. Meigs also
pounded out a significant total of of·
fense.
Led by linebackers Greg Taylor

8!1

'~

.andChrlsBurdette,_the~eigsdefen·
se kept the Eagles mtheir own part
of the field for nearly the entire

' I)
~

game. Taylor recovered a fumble
and Intercepted a pass.
Meigs' defensive line really dug In
during crucial plays and held its
groWJd, practically eliminating
Belpre's Inside rwmlng game. Terry .
Wayland and Dennis Thornton, both
tackles, helped anchor the line and
were credited with playing a fine

'~~
'&lt;· '
( J.

Robert WiqeU
RGI&gt;ortHoeflleh

The secondary was just as tough .
with an Interception and tight
coverage limiting Belpre's passing
game to only a few receptiom, none
of which were really significant.
Offensively, the Uttle Marauders
mounted two scoring drives and
gained yardage all evening long,
especlally when it COWited. The
Mell!l offensive unit controlled the
ball with consistency limiting
Belpre's offense to just a few
·minutes of playing time.
-·
' and

C.r[G~a

:Fed policy criticized
. Cleveland Mayor George .Voinovich has told a House
;subconunittee that contradictory federal policies on the
:use of Ohio coal "complicate our life and cost jobs."
: "We've g~t the .Environmental Protection Agency
:pushing for stringent air pollution controls while the
:Energy Department is telling companies to abandon the
:cleaner, bnported oil and return to dirtier coal," Voinovich
:told the hearing on urban revitalization and industrial
:policy Tuesday.
: He suggested a three-year freeze on environmental stan'dards at existing levels. "This will allow us to gather more
:technical data and bnprove environmental controls so that .
-we can become both safe and economically sound," he
:said.
:. Voinovich said the cost of pollution controls virtually
:wiped out the foundry industry in Cleveland.
-: Between the cost of anti-pollution equipment and the
strain of foreign competition, "it's the steel companies
Who could be the next to fall,'' he said.
.: Voinovich called for protective tariffs, saying they "will
allow us to buy some tbne, to make some capital investments to catch up."
. He alao asked the government to reverse its "subsidies
of Sunbelt devel~ment" and adopt policies to help nor·
them industrial cities.
Industrialist Fletcher L. Byrom testified that U.S. tax
policies inhibit investment in new plant and equipment by
industry.
.
"We've been liquidating the capital base of this nation
catastrophically'' as a result, he said.
Byrom, who is chairman of both the Koppers Co., cen·
tered in Pittsburgh, and the Conunittee for Economic
Development, said much of the decline in investment by
American industry can be blamed on "a tax system which
acts as a disincentive ... especially in a period of inflation."
.
"Unless we move quickly in the direction of a tax system
less biased against investment in plant and equipment,
future employment growth and productivity improvement
in many industrial sectors and regions of the country will
be further threatened," Byrom said.
Among Byrom's recommendations were increased
depreciation writeoffs.
"If Koppers knew that two years from now there would
be increased depreciation schedules, we would start spending money today,'' he said.
He said that in devel~ing a national industrial policy,
Congress should also consider reducing the regulatory
burden on industry and taking a new approach to antitrust
policy.
.
Byrom said that present antitrust policies prevent some
industries from benefiting from advantages that could be
provided by their size.
In particular, he cited coke ovens, which he said now
require $45 million in equipment to pay for environmental
controls.
·
To build a coke oven battery large enough to justify that
kind of expenditure would require a consortium of several
companies, he said, but said there is no basis under
present antitrust laws under which such a consortium
could get together.

Today 1.s Thursday, Sept. 18, the
262nd day of 1980. There are 194 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On Sept. 18, 1793, President
George Washington laid the cornerstone of the Capitol In
Wuhlngton.
On this date:

In 1759, the French surrendered
Quebec to the British.
In 1810, Chile declared Independence from Spain.
In 1850, Congress passed .the

l&gt;-7,1361be.
Freabman Wingback

Eastern's ·] V's'
·romp Miller, 37-6
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Eagle reserve foozball squad under
coach Dennis Eichinger handily

The country's champion bellweather county
ByRoberU. Wlpn"
(Firat of two related eoiiUIIIII)
EMMETSBURG, Iowa (NEA) Emmetsburg and surrounding Palo
Alto County are a Hollywood director's vision of a small Midwestern
fanning community. Located In northwestern Iowa, the area contains
some of the richest farmland and
friendliest people to be found anywhere.
But the COWlty has a fame greater
than ItS corn, soybeans and pork.
That fame l.s political, for Palo Alto
County has voted for the winning
presidential candidate in every
presidential election since 1886. It ls
the country's champion bellwether
. county.
In 1m, for instanCe, Iowa went for
Gerald Ford. But true to tradition,
Palo Alto County gave Jlnlmy Carter 3,181 of its votes to a mere 2,618
for Ford. The county's votes had
gone to winners WW!am McKinley,
Teddy Roosevelt (in 1904), Wl!fuun
H. Taft (In 1900), Woodrow Wilson,
Wlll1'en Harding, Calvin Coolidge,
Herbert Hoover (in 1928), Franklin
Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Dwight

Eisenhower, John Kennedy, Lyndon
Johnson and Richard Nixon in the 20
previous presidential elections.

Not only has Palo Alto County
traditionally voted for winning
presidential candidates, but those
candidates' victory lllll'Rlns in the
county have clOIIely resembled their
victory margins natioowide. Thus,
the tightest race locally was the
Kennedy·Nixon contest in 1960.
There may be mroe to this
phenomenon than Jpst coincidence.
Despite Its agricultural orientation,
this community may reflect with
surprising accuracy the concerns of
the nation as a whole.

Palo Alto County Ia almost unique
ammg Midwestern farming cominunities In Its etlmlc makeup. Settled by sb Irish families from
Chicago, the county today ls
strongly Irish and strongly Catholic.
M08t such regions are populated
more heavily by Protestants of
Engii8h, German and Scandinavian
stock.

In fact, Emmetsburg, which has
established Itself as the "silter city"
of Dublin, ls named after Irish
patriot Robert Emmet. The town
square in front of the courthOuse
· The county has about 14,000 corrtalns his statue and a piece of the
residents, some 4,500 of them llvtng Blilmey stone. The town is said to
in Emmetsburg, the county seat. have the best St. Patrick's Day
The rest live on farms or in smaller , celebration west of New York City.
towns like Ruthven or CyUnder or
Another factor that differentiates
Mallard. (Town motto: "We're as Palo Alto County from the typical
friendly 8ll duclra.")
rural community Is that almclet 50
Wilen fann prices are high, as percent of Ita adult c;itizena have atthey are currently, this Ia a very tended college. That Ia lligniflcantly
pnJSperous community. But when above average for such areas.
prices are low, as they were J8st
Politically, the community
summer ·and into this spring, the mirrors the nation. Of the county'a
economy of · the county suffers. 7,160 regiatered voters, 2,548 call
CUrrently, about 000 county residen- themselves DemOCl'llta and 1,494 call
ts receive some fonn of federal or themselves Republicans while the
state welfare assistance; that J.n. remaining 3,118 l.lat themselves u
eludes about 500 who get food stam- independenta.
The community Ia very serious
PII·

defeated Miller's JV's, 37~.
The Eagles cranked out 250 total
yards offensively, and according to
Coach Eichinger, the defense "put
forth a very good effort." Miller had .
only one first downs to exemplify
Eastern's effectiveness on defense .
One of the first downs came on a
penalty.
Offensively the Eagll!ll were
nearly unstoppable. Quilrterback
Roger BisseU led the offense by connecting on two 40 yard touchdown
passes, and rushing for two more.
Bissell first bounded over the goal
line on a one yard quarterback
sneak attempt and then used the
aneall play to set up a 30 yard touch-

about Its politics. In llrnl, 85 percent
of the registered voters went to the
polls.

Wilen local businessmen and farmers gather at Dutch's Diner for
moming coffee, at the Redwood 1M
for IWlch or at the Hop Breath
Lounge for late-aftemoon or evening
drinka, the talk usually turna to crop
prices and poliUCB.
Jane Whitmore, editor of Emmetsburg 's
twice-weekly
newspaper, !1)'11 that Palo Alto
County realdenta follow naUonal
politics very cl011ely. "Quite a few
people here subecribe to newspapers
like the Chicago Tribune or New
York Times or Wall Street Journal,"
she notes. "THey are both well-read
and serious about politics. Maybe
our voting nlCOI'd Ia just luck or
maybe we do reflect the nation as a
whole. But whatever It Ia, It keePII
working every four years."

down run.

Eastern Fullback Troy Guthrie
played a good game, rushing for a
touchdown and 45 yards on six

••

By Don Graff
Well, Abbie Hoffman Is back
among us.
Although as It turns out, be never
really was away. The clown prince
of the radical '60s spent his underground '70s crusading for the environment, testifying before·
COIIgl'e88ional committees, being appointed to federal conunls.sions, tending his tomato garden In full view .
up upstate New York neighbors and
getting acquainted with middle age.
The fOWider of the Youth Jn.
temational Party Is now 43.
It just goes to show where a little
plastic surgery and a lot of gall can
get you.
And as If all this weren't enough to
keep a fugitive busy, Abbie also
fmmd time to keep in touch with the
family. He got together regularly
'with his brother Jack, often at
baseball games. It seems he has an
establishment weaknesa - he's a
RedSoxfan.
For lister PhyUls, the wife of a
Mexican government official, there
was less fun In the rendezvous game.
On ooe attempt, she had to shake ber.
bodYguards before meeting at a
theater.
It was a harrowing experience,

she confided in a UPI report: "No
one (in Mexico) goes.to tlle movies

by themselves ... 'Psast," a man
whispers to me. I didn't know If the
guy was coming on .to me or If It was
Abbie. I wu so scared that I left."
Throughout the six underground
years, Abbie was aliJo available for
Interviews at the drop of a news-persoo's suggestloo to his numerous
aboveground contacts. In one of the
last, a pre-surrender outpouring to
the Washington Post, be made It
clear that the nOlle might be new but
otherwise he wsa the same old Abo
ble.

drugs. And three years of dickering ,

at a distance on surrender conditiom apparently have given him
some hope of drawing leas than the
15 yean to life conviction could
bring.
A1ao he has a new book out, ripe
for promotion.
Talk about your full lives. And
with so much of It still ahead of him,
one wonders what Abbie can
possibly do for an encore.
Maybe his book provides a clue.
It's titled "Soon to Become a Major
Motion Picture."

SOME ECHANTED
"I'm very very upset about the
myth of the (figure from the) .60s .. .
who went cynical in the '80s ... I want
people to know I'm not coming back
embracing the system ... I'm
coming back fighting .....
If be aays so. Still, fighting spirit
seems to bave less to do with his
surrender to New York state
authorities oo narcotics and balljumping charges than sense of

~bble ~ It, the times they

have a-changed. Vietnam Is Btill a
sensitive but no longer an Inflamed
.Issue. There Ia less hysterta about .

DISTANCE

There's news from Ubya and for a
change it Ia not connected with Billy
Carter.
That COWitry'a live-wire leader,
Col. Muammar Qaddaft, has called
for union with Syria, which has accepted in principle. Never mind that
they are lleJIIII'IIted by a thouaand
miles of Mediterranean.
The lnunedlate motivation Is to·
strengthen the hard-linen' front
agalnat Israel, but the impulle Ia in a
long Arab tradition. Syria, u a matter of fact, has just broken off an
engagement with Iraq and a few

-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Development of a p~ high
speed passenger train system in ·
· Oblo has -~ .to JN111S muSter with
v~. -~ : ·'backers
' already
. studying how the railroad could be
extended to Michigan.
Ohio lawmakers, prodded by Rep.
Arthur Wllkowald, [).Toledo, ha:ve
been looking at the possible con,structlon of an electrically-powered
rail network linking the state's
major cities. If built, the trains
would zip along at speeds of 150
miles per hour and could be In
operation by the year 2,000.
Wilkowski has introduced a

are

'

@

1i80Df NEAinc:.

..

~
.

"And there's MORE good news/ Our /stest poll
shows thst you hsve pul/6" ::JfltJBd of Ruls Lensksln 'credibility'."

~

reaolution wlilch, il "the . Gelierif brancli oi the- hlgii speed .raii net-.
Aslembly approves, would Ilk
work was extended from Toledo to ·
:voten to okay a 1-cent 1ncreue In Detroit.
. the state's 4-cent.fl.oQ-the--dollar ·
Tile $12,500 study wu conducted .
-. - tU to- pay fOr -iiiilldiiig- the by Employment Research
railroad.
Asaoclates, t.na!ng, Mich.
Supporters of the plan say conIt says half the new job! would be'
generated over a ~year period with.
struction of the network would
revitalize the state's economy, . construction of the link and the ·
especlaDy 118 steel and coal J.n. · manufacture · of rail can,
dilltrles, and generate thoulanda of : IDCm\Citlvet and slgnalllng equipnewjobe.
·
ment. An additional 400 job! would
Meanwhile, the Joint Housebe needed to operate and maintain
Senate Rail Overslglrt CoJnmlttee
the link after It Is in operation, the .
has released a report showing more
studyaaya.
. 1
than 88,000 new jobs would be
In addition, ~rs say the ·
created in Ohio and Michigan If a
34,000 new jobs in Obio an!l Michigan

Brluztnle
w,mlbe."
FreebmaD Center

'Thomas, Rick ChanCey, Nick Riggs,
Jolm Perrin, Dave Iannarelll, M.lke .
Jackson, Todd Fife, Mille Willford,
Dave Follrod Chrl.s Burdette Marly
Spangler; G~ Taylor, B~ Speno
cer, Andy Iaruuirelll, Dennis Thorn. ton, Dave Barr, Brian lhtJe, Matt
Van Vranken, Jay Evans, Mark
Boyd, Bobby Southern, Terry
Wayland, Scott Pickens, Troy
Bauer, Randy Stewart, Dave Hoffman and Eddy Bishop
- ____.__·-

SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE . OUR
MATERIAL AT REASONABLE1',RICES. _

SPORTS QUF3110N

Peal to?

Mobue Home Trades Welcome
Show Models

year shop

the excellent
selections at

decades back It was actually united
with Egypt. That was the United
Arab Republic, called off when It
turned out to be mroe Egyptian than
Arab.
As for the Egyptlana, since the
break up with Syria they have talked
union with Sudan and that aame
Ubya now courting the Syrians.
A8 they work out, Arab unions are
a lot like HollyWood marriages eventually everyone geta II'OWid to
trying everyone else.
In this present Instance, Qaddafl's
proposal was not unconditional.
Should unioo with Syria not go
through, be vowed to carry the battle to Iarael alone: "I ahall go to Upper Galllee as a comrilando myself
with my rifte."

a reasonable

CONCERN:
Purtuant to the '*(Uir.rrw'lll of
S.CUon 41011.11 of tht Ohio ~IMd
Code. onto Power eom ..., _ ,
GIYM notloe that on June 30, 1910,
It tiled with the Publtc 1.1\lllt'" Com-

mi.Ston of OhiO an IPPMcauon lor
euh)t!U.tiOft to ltNftCI and to lncr.ue
IIUblt~ntllily all of Its tl'-d tlflffl and
t.ml lind GondltiOnl of .-viC:. fhdng
rate~ and charges tOf llectt1clty.
are no rete chengM proposed, other than In the t~rttla
apecltledy retefNrCI to In tN fOikWtlr.g
of the rwritlonl

TERMS AND CONDITIONS
OF SERVICE

==

tor,.,

"'llctlon "·,., ........ a cutlomet
wtlll:lt OIWDed . . .
dl~
Chlcll f'IOihecl 1ft ~t of • bill

tt..ty,

"J.: ~..:~~~~

and

outalde or normal

""'*"'

~ftO

hOUri II lnci'MMCI from IZU5 to
$211.25. TM ctwve tor psyment of

BAHR CLOTHIERS
N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 011.

amounts to a Company
•optorea parformlnt 1 dleconntetlon
It Inc~ hom IUO to 11.25.

ditlnq..-nt

TARIFF A.B. IRE81DENTIAL
ELECTRIC SERVICE)
TN motittlty

CUll~ Cl~

minimum bill . . tnc:nued by

11.110. "'"

tnc......t

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS
IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE

That might explain the quick
Syrian acceptance, overlooking
practical e:~~perience In these matters. DamascUB may find It
preferable to keep Qadd•fi salel,y
distant in Tripoli In JICIDinll partnership rather than rilli: his running
around with a loaded weapon near
118 own border.
'ftlere are some situations that
make even a Billy Carter connection
look good.

MEIGS COUNTY
BOARD
----- -OF ELECTIONS · '· ', , •
-·

MASONIC TEMPL-E BUILDING
..,.
P.O. Box 488, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ·
;
Phone 992· 2691
Regular Hours- 8:3G-4:30 Mondays.through Fridays. "'':

aboUt t4'1ft,(V~ lnctuatna tuM crt~).

11M afti6RIItty of thla leriH to fanna
11 Nmlttd to too. haYing no more
1llldtowMII ot oonneotld .e.otrk;al
toed outlldt 1t1e retldrtnol.

t..,.

.,.

.
The report, prepared by Marlon ·

Anderson and Laura TavorminB, !
said conatructlon of such a rail
syatem in Ohio linked to nelghborlilg
state. would provide a major ·
economic stimulus

. "*''"

ThllncNUM per ICWH pf'OpCIHO

~:
.
For tM ftttt 100 KWMtt uMd I *
rrom 2.30 oantt per
KWH t~ 2.1!10 aenl:a J* KWH.
!lor thll nallit 100 KWHrt uMd per
month from 2.00 cents per
KWH to 2.20 oenlt per KWH .
For all OYW 1eaa I&lt;WHrt uNd per
month from l-11 oen11 I *
~to Ull conto por KWH .

"" ~ ..,.., •••' n~•·
ao,........ ~­
- onc1 m-um
bin l n o - bY
credit II cMnglldto O..MIIIf(WH.
The Inc,..... per KWH ~

. . . . ~ottawa:

.
For all energy uMd duma Oft&lt;PMk
bflllna ll*lodl from f .ll o.nl•

oor

KWH

KWH.

I

..

The ..,.,.... block or 3()00 KWH
within thl "1!10 Uinn KW" step II
eliminated, reducing liM num• of
energy blookl from tour to three.
"The pf'tiPOMd lncJHHI are 11

follows:
KWHrt aqual to ftf'lt 50 tliMI KW
ol monthly bl"lng demand

from 5.21 canta per KWH to
4.87 eMil C* KWH .

KWHrt equll to nellit 1!50 tlmel
KW of monthly ~I ling demand
from 3.W ctntt per MWHr
(llrtl 3000 ICWMf'l) and 2.!58
cenlt per KWHr (afl ower 3000
KWHrll) to 3.8S ctnlt per
""'KWHr (Ill KWHrt).

KWMrt In t)ICHI or :200 limes KW
of monthly ~llnCJ Cltmlnd
from 1.13 ctnll per KWHr
to 1.87 cents per KWHr.
1M energy ch.,-gea ar• modlft.d
and flatttntd such that, lnoludlng ttoe
chlnge In cuttotMr cherQt, tiM ewer~~ II
lncf'MM 11 approllilmalely 11% (8%
Including fuel cherau). The! equipment
credit, minimum cllarge tor w,ktert,
* ~ lnd

TARIFF E.H.Q. IELECTRIC
HEATING GENERAL)
Thlt terlft remalna In procnt o f
ellmlnetton •nd limited to •dating
. .......... Tho lltot lwO ~' blool&lt;l
...,. repllelcl by a cuatomer ch1rge ot
atU1 anC1 t lingle energy Olock. The
ovarall 1tva1 of cttargea w11 lncreaud
by t•¥. (liMo Including lue! chlurgaa) .
The orooOHd lnCI'IIMI P11 KWH
...... tofloWt:
For the flrtt 7000 I&lt;WHrt uNCI per
month from 4.71 cent• per
KWMr (llrtl 200 KWMfl) and
2.33 cen11 per KWHr (ne•t
eB00 KWHrt) to 2.82 centa per
KWMr.
FOf ell ov..- 7GOO I&lt;WHrt uNCI per
month from 2.10 c•nte per
KWHr to 1.115 oant1 per KWHr.
For demand In IKCMI Ol 30 KW
added charatl ltom 12.11 for
HCh KW ~ monthly demand
In I XCIII Of 30 KW tO 12.C8 lOt
eecft KW ot monthly demllnd
In ••ceu of 30 KW.
·

TARIFF L.P. (LAROE POWERI
The ratll, curqntty contlsllng or
docllnlno blod&lt; -.v •..,_
~ on houra UN ot KVA damend, Ia
NPIIICad with a customer charge, •
ling.. .demlftd
per KVKWAHindTho
......
.,.,... ~3:
_ _ por
. 1
mlrilmum bllrlt CftanQMI from a charge
per KVA to the c.-omer charge plus •
ctwge per KVA of monthly billing
damaftd. The overall llftl of cl\argea,

the tCiulpment credits, •••
~~~ from 22 oentt per KVA of
monthly bllllnt dtmenG to 21 centa per
K\JA for detiYary wlt~~g~a of 2 300 to
12,000, 1nd trom 31 centt per KiJA to 41
otntt PI" KV A on all wort1Q11 t11112'3.000.
ThiOW'IIIIIMiofehargll ... ~
lnckdng fuol-1
The CUffel'll and propoatd rat.. In
thll tartH '"' u tonowe:
C.rront
Ptlmo&lt;yPortlon'
ICWMra kl an amount IQUIII to
the produc;t of the f tret 30
limN the KVA of monthly

Including

..--t'" ....

bllltncl demand
KWMr.
BlconOII'y

to 1.12 - . por

~ - · ·Prlmertly
.... Oollonolfol .. AHIRnoet
Hellld by

Eleclrtottr DfOWIIOt'l .,.

ell lnotMHd

1l.l"'. The liN OlfiOdl f t
nidlf!nld u R*ng local ftrne rtttwr
ttwu Eutem Standard nme.
by .rM&gt;ut

ThthAAI Ill *KWH · ~

...... tottow.:

~-CIIolgo

, ........

~ ~~~~ ~=-":~"'£\'.:::.\"&amp;.::
dlrMnd

t.--.. --

' IN mcwutftt, billing

tram

o• oentt 1* KWHr to

Fot thoel KWHN ueed ctwrlng the
-

F«
IOotltM
oortod:
nm eoa f(WHre ffOt'ft 3.00
oen.. I * KWHr to 3.41 cent•

per KWHr.

POl' .., CMr 1100 KWHrt ttom 2.40

Por 111 addlltonll KWHrt UNCI
Clut1nt the month from 1.20

oent:=

KWHr to 1.31 oente

Tha Pf.,.rt.Mntal Tlme-ot-O.y

o...,_ ara oftMttd t~
........... 1ft "" Load MaRirQimenl
nmHt-ooy_....
.
TARifFQ.S.
(QIHRAL SERVICE)
PRWiaton

eenta

....

-Old

Customer Charge
Dem1nd Charge
Energy Charge

2.3 · MKV

Culton'ilf Charge
Dllmlnd Charge
E,.rgy Charge

b4111ng demand It PfOPOMd.

TARIFF L.P.O.,LAROE
POWI!R OPT ONS)
Thll tartH I• ~ wttl'ldrawn and

...,.IOICI by Wlft I .P• •

TARIFF H.L.P. IHIQH
LOAD PACTOR IIOWI!R)
-

lltltt to ..... wlt11drown
torin '·' ·

of the CommiNkMI;

(b) Accept the appiiCitlon and
uhlbltl tor filing;

(c) Approw. tiM form of thla

138 KY or Higher
$8,0M.OO
S.U!i IKVA
0.2051: IKWH

A ouatomer chlrQI le Included In

the rata 1rtd In the mlnlmum monthly

charge. The ov.rell

1~ ol cftar_
g_ll
lnc:ru,std by abOUt 21 'It (7%
Including fuel charges).
The pfOJ!OMd lncftiUII ,,. 11
follow a:
Cuttomer ch•roe from none to
11051!1 per month.
For each KW Ol rnont"ly billing
ttamartd from 11.21 per KW to

wu

13.82 pair KW .

For uch kllow•r of lftllglng KVAR
ttamalld In ucea~ ol ~% or

ti'HI KW btlllng demand fOf
each month ffom 10.430 par

KYAR to 10.507 par KVAR.
For the total KWHrs taktn 0.525
c.111 per KWHr to 0.206 een11
per KWHr.
.
.
A month~ minimum bUt equal to
-.oe&amp;.OO plut 13.112 per KW of
monthly billing dem•nd It
oont1lned In the ltrl lf.

TARIFF 8.8.
(SCHOOL SERVICE)

21" '"" lnclucllng tuol C..fliOit.

The propoead rnc,.... In KWH It

.

For the flrtt 300 KWHrt uttd Ptr
month lor each 1000 ~quara
fMI or encfoted .,.. from
3.91 eMil
KWHr 10 :UO

'*

can II. per KWHf'.

For the "-!anca ol KWHrsliMd Plf
month from 1.0&amp; c«~tl ,...
KWHr to 2.21 Genii per KWHr.

TARIFF O.L.
IOUTDOOR LIOHTINOI
.Tho_..

....,

clroullt, pot111, end. undereround
wiling ..... ~~ by • IUbltlnt..lly
gi'Mtlf I)MentiQI than 11'11 chatDN
fof lunpa.
I
~ Inc,_... In O.L ratM
l f l U fOIIOWI:
7,000 1umen mercury . from te.tl
. . ~th to 17.15

l* I

••mt:
Approve

(g)

••Make
.,........
1.,...
such new achtdulll

the flllnQ at UM
new ICP'ttclu• In thtl form

tfttctW. u

toOn U It II
prtctlcal ahd IIWful to do 10.

The propoMd

a~Mnded

IChldltlat

tftlll ewly In all ~tenet Nf'qd
by Ohio-POwer.
tt It llllmllttd that h rwp~Menla·
11'1'8 ,...&lt;Mnt•l cuttomer'a bill will be
lnc;f"MIId annually, baNd on the eatendar yew 11110, by 8%; lhll ~tl'te
commeroltl customer's bill by 1% ; end
the ,....,tattwe lnduttrtat customer's

"'"""""·

All percentactH preeent.:~ In ttllt
notice ara approxlm•t• and biiMd on
....,. c.tOUTIIrt. lrdhidual cuttomen
may ••~ rtle adlutlmtfltl dlf·
~Ytraget

pruenttcl In

tf'llt not~• ·

A copy ol till 'fpUc atlon It t¥111·
able fOf lnft)~Ctlon • the otftce ot Ohio
_eom..., ·-todot30t

~

Ave. S.W., C.n-ton, Ohio 44102.

A copy of thl lppllc:atlon mey 01
lntpectec:t by lnteqsttd partl" • t tt.

OfllR• ol lhlu Commlul0nlo37&amp; South
High Streit, Columbul, Oh .
Recommendation• w~l c h cUll•'
from the application rMJ be rNide by
tiM Staff ot the Public Vtllltlll Com·
mltllon or bY Intervening PI, ... and
may be ._,,. . by tM Commluktn.

Tht Company I• unlbte to ~

..........

-~"""'·tn
amount Of" term~be maoe b't n
PubliC_
UIIIIU..
.-on ot Ditto
.....
__
lho~

11 uneblt to Pflldlct whit, It any,
ltnl*l eucto modlffcatlona may hlv.

upon outtomen bllllnal.

Tht 4Mfltl ...., of CI\Wgee WU
lncu =~about 33' (1~ tncturdlnCI

.....

(f)

terant lrorn thl

Ttllt tartlf r.nuolnt tn pi'OCIP ot
•llmlnlllon and llmllad til u:lttlng
customera. A cualomar ctwga of 111.113
11 Included In the rate tnd thlu two
energy btocklarelfgnlftcutly tlatttnad.
The minimum chargelt 'made eqUal to
thl oUitorntt ehlrge. TM O¥er•ll 1...1
ot ch•ron wu tnc......ct by abOut

llfOIIQWt:

notice;
Flrld thet lha prnent r•tn ,,.
lnsuftlclant to )1eld f'MIO:'IIb't
compenutlon for ttl• MrVICe
rendered and are un)utt end
unreuonablt;
(I) Find thlt the lnei'MIIId rttn
and charges •nd amended
t.-rr. and ooncltlona ot ~
propoNd In Ohio Power't
Ap~llcatlon ere Jutl and
I'HIOnablt and appro¥e tha

(d)

TARIFF I.R.P.
(INTERRUPTIILE POWER)

11J:UO " ' month

A month/J mtillmum charge ot
t113.00 plus • .11 Plf KVA ol rnoflthly

0.2841 JKWH

$4.112/KVA
0.2241 /KWH

td

E""T.ioC:::S: por KWH

PRAYER
The Prayer of tt'll ~plication
rtqutltl the PubliC utllltiN Commluk)n
01 Ohio to do the follow ing:
!•) Find that the application and
lllhlbltl . . Iliad In ICOOidanCt
with S.Ctlon 40G.11. Ohio
Ae\IIMCI Code , and the Nita

2.3 · 12KV
$1,151 .CO
$!5.34 /KVA

12,41&amp;00

minimum of f,2.03 PM" KVA of monthly

. . ., peJli.VA ·

Thlt t1rtll It being wlthdrewn.

per KVA -ol .monthly bllllflQ
demand · 10.0060 per KWMr .

for tht ftnt 200,000 kwhrt •
1. t 2 otntl per tlwhr
For ..1 0\'ef aoo,ooo kwtn ·
0.11 oent• per kwftr
Tbll tatiH contllnl a monthly

b611ng......m.
,, ;

ISTREET LIQHTINO)

secondary Portion:
Energy In t:ICIU of 300 KWMrt

~

Rtmllndar or entrGY u.,.:t
111'1'11 month In I XOHS of the

sa.ee

undet' Tarttfl LP.O. and H.L.P. which
.,.. propoud to be allmlnattd.
The prO'olltlon cunently In Tariff I.P.
permUting customers having multll)lt
plant• to also reeelve MrVIce 11_plants
hiiYing demandt u small u 3000 KVA OICompony:
20,000 lumtn UMrCury lloodftvhl
under thltllrltt It propoeecl to be limited
from 110.2&amp; PI' lamp per
to the cuttofMfl and specific: plantlto
month to '12.30 PM lamp per
ttrved on thl eH.ctlve dlle of ttM
month .
...,lledtaulll.
.
50.000 lumen IMfCU'Y floodlight
The preHnt L.P.O.,.t.P. and H.L.P .
!rom '115 .30 per lamp ~
"'" contain mYitlple demlnd ttepa
month to 118.40 par lamp per
which alto Include vanoua ltwla of
month.
energy cha~t. teperale, single or
W'*'
Mrvlce unnot .,. supplied
muttrple energy tteps lor energy not
Included In ihtt demand ChlrgH, e from an • • lttlna pole of tiM Company
.-..ctlve t*nand charge In the tut of carrying a aecondary circuit, II"
H.L.P., and an equipment crtcllt In tl'lt Company wHI lnttell one pole an&lt;IJOt
0111 of LP.O. The PfOCIC)8Id rata oona6l1t one apan of MCOndary circuit or not
ol I CUtlomtr cUrRt, a lingle KVA ~r 1!KJ fMI tor '" Mldllkm•l ch•rg•
demend charat •ncf a llngHt energy of $1 .80 jMr month, •n Increase from
chetgt tor eacto o1 ttne deltverv volt~g~~ 10.110.
POST TOP LIOHTINQ SERVICE
leYel• (llrlmery 2.3 • 12 KV; ."-'blrantFor aach 7000 lumen mercury
mlialon 23 · II KV; Trantmlltlon 138
KV or hlghtf'). The minimum charge Ia lamp on 12 foot post from 17.20 per
made equal to liM custornef charge montto to 18.86 per montP't.
When • cuatomer require• an
plut the dem•nd ch•roe. rtlher thin
ttmply tfte dtmlnd c"harge, and, In underground circuit long• thlln 30
thl elM of LP.O. and I.P., the minimum . f•t for Poel·top lighting servt~;e, he may
1 Pay to tha Compeny In .:tvance
billing demand It lncnaued from flO%
• charge of $2 .75 per loot for
tel 87% of the contract capacity. The
the length of underground
ov.rtll leW"el of chargea for thoee
circuit In t)ICIU o f 30 fMt, or
CUitOmtrl WU Increased by tboul
2 . Ply • monthly tocllltloo 18% (8% Including tuetcharQfl).
of 8.t centelor Nch 2!5 fMt (or
the current 1nd propoNCI rat .. In
lrtctlon thereof) or under·
lftll lartrl ll"e II IOIIowt:
ground circuli In IIICIH or 30
Current
fHI, lnetMMCI from $1 .!fJi 1nd
Prtm.ry Portion: ·
rNPtCII.,.Iy.
$.47
For the f lrtt 15,000 KVA of
Cuttomart ~ulrlng ~tJNICI whirl
monthly bll!lr.g demand as
rock or other ad¥erM 1011 conditions
detarmlntd below · S&lt;t .u
lrt ancount•ract will be fumlthtd
.. , KVA.
Mf'41ce
prOYidtd the ellic... cost of
For 111 O'lel" 15,[0) KVA o f
monthly billing demand
_ • $3.83 trenching and beckttlllng (coal In
• llictta ol BOIIIoot of the total trench
porKVA.
The Cuttom.rtlhall bl altowed length) Ia paid to the Company by the
300 KWHrt fOf Mch I&lt;.VA of c uaton~er, lncreaNd from 45tltoot.
monthly billing demand billed
In accordlnct wttft t!'\11 .eltOn.
TARIFF S.L.

_........_ _
c.m--- 1.10 oentl per kwhr
Exoeu Portion:

~--=·· onc1-"'

I

e.n

INSTALLATIONS:
2,!JOO Iuman lncanatcent hom
s.us per lamp per montft to
$!5.ecl J* tamp per monuo.
a,OOO lull)lll lncandatcent from
per lamp per month to
16.116 por Oomp por month.
For t1ch lamp with UoodHghllng
lumlnalrt, controUtd by photoel.ctrlc
rel1y, wt1ert ..,.,k:tl Ia aupplltc:l from
an aKitttno po1t and HCOndar'y tacllltiM

TARIFF I.P.

~NDUSTRIAL POWERI
The 1\ltllablllty of lhll tat1tl It
modlflld to that lt It alto lblt to
accommodlte 111 cuatomera now Ml\'ld

PortiOn:

KWMrt In an amount equel to
the product of ttoe next 170
timet the KYA or monthly
bllllno-ond:
For thll flrtt 2,000 ltwhrt ·
3.11 oenta per kwftr
For thl next 1,000 kwhrt ·
3.13 centt per kwftr
For the na.. 10,000 kwhrt •
2.33 oents per kwhr
For all over 100,000 kwtn ·

bllllna DMtoc~• from UO cents
~KWH

mtnmum ct\ltDII tor CUIIOmlnl

hlivlng other IOU~ of •nergy aupply
. . tnc,..Hd from 22 cents per KW to
2!1 canto por KW; ...., por KVA to
12.04 per ~VA; 1nd 124.50 to 127.13 per
month tor flrtll5 KW or fraction thereot
of contract demlnd and fTOm 13.52 to
13.80 par montl'l fOr NCh KW ot contrKt
tt.rnlnd ovar S KW, rMP~Ctlvely.

For all energy uMd durtna ott.pHk ·

~lltiNoflUOtot•~··

•

CUikmtfl whoM demand It not~~
of e•ceedlni 5 KW) lftd to 114.00
tor cuttom«&lt; I'IQUirlng a demlncl mtler..

·to 3.24 oonto por

oonto por KWHr oo 1.7honto
per KWttr.

ADDITIONAL- HOURS
;FOR REGISTRATION:
·Friday Evenings-Sept. 19, 26, Oct. 3
6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Saturdays- Sept. 20, 27, Oct. 4
. 9 a.m. to 12 noon
Monday-oct. 6, 9 a.m.-9 p. m.

ltaaya.

t-about
......,
...
Cl.2 ctnts Plf

by

man~g~m~nt

IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: Visit ·nui
Board's Office in person - OR - Phone the Board of
Elections- OR- Mall the Board a Card.
ALSO, if you MOVE you must notify the county of·
flee. Or if you are in doubt as to whether you are properly registered, phone the Board- 992·2697.

thole who build the railroad and Ita
equipment buy food, clothing,
houlea and aervtcea.
"The )llitrOOs of the- lliik are
estimated to spend between PU i
million and $411.9 million annually in '
the Detroit metropolitan &amp;rei and
$13.8 million In the Toledo ,
metropolitan area in the year 2000," :

•uo

to •eo •tonG wtth tncr.~a~ ol
liUf
Ito loU'Ito lnU.onorgy...._. Tllo
oonMf'flllon and 10M ·

BY OCTOBER 6TH

WOUld create another 34,000 joiiii as

arw:l
10

~~~"tat;:'n: ~rrr:r:1

NOVEMBER 4TH GENERAL ELECTION
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED

.

00 to 3:00 ·

Ia changed to M .OO lor customan not
requiring a dtmand meter (defined ••

TO WHOM 'IT MAY

In I!Jtotton 21, o.ntal or Ot.contlnuanoe of lervlct, the r.conntetlon
ctlarQH dut1ng normal working t\ourt II
lncreued trom 112.50 to 111.110,

price at:

.

NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
OF OHIO FOR AN INCREASE IN ELECTRIC RATES

made under
oolotlna. IMIIfa.
In S.Ctlon 13, Extenelon of Rural
· LlrtN, the rural liN rnlntmum cfttrge
PI'. CUIIOfMf' undet the optiOnal piton
It Inc:,_.., by 38t;a from 1&amp;3.11 to
151.40 per month lor up to !118 ol I
mitt and from 117.50 to 123.71 per
mon\h for MCh addltkw\tl 118 mi.~ Of
fraot~ theNot. TM minimum . ., .
Dill of IUCh Cl'llfOitl fol IICh 11M II
rncfHMd ·ttom 1110.00 to 11110.00 per
month PI' tina. No minimum charge
oholl b o - tllonlel.40 por month. or
IM,.... from MS.Je. The QI'ON annfltl
.....n~~t trom all cullomert on • line
necetHtY to ellmlnlte all minimum
CharJH uncser tftll ttrlfl Ia lnefQMd
rrom $4200 to 1&amp;100 per mt...
In ltetlon 14, Tempomy 8trYica,
tht 1000 ldtowatl mulmum Ollf)ACity
limitation haa Men deMI:td. Tha f lllied
ctwro- lo.- f'Mdlng-ln and I'Mdlng.out
an exllllnu f"Nter It lnct'HMd from
110.00 to •12.21. and thll ctllrge tor
single phuAt 12CfQ.ta 'IOit H!'¥tce from
ptti'NMnl eouroe, up tq 100 am'*'
=~ Ia Inc,__ frOm te&amp;.DO to

wear this

Middleport, 0.

.

0Hn: 7:jl0to 5:40MOn. tliru Fri.

"For the First In Manufacutea "ousmg"
.
• Main
992·7034
Pomeroy, 0.

enor. A M.IO ctwot I•

fall and winter

,

992·.2709 "' 9f2-6611

.

DfODOMld In the Compeny'a eppllcatiOI'I

For the finest

923 s;·3rd·Ave.

.KINGSBURY
HOME SALES &amp; SERVICE
.

iu flied on .fuM 30, 1M, It u followt:

so;wfio are the voten of Palo Alto
County supporting· thla year? in
1980, will It again be "as Palo Alto
County goes, 110 goes the nation?"
We will explore these quesUons
between now and Election Day In a
series of vislta with local residenta
that will begin with the next colWJUI.

WE
DELIVER

ALLEY
BER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

FHA 265·VA·Conventlonal f1n. avaol .

n..

FALL FASHIONS

PRICES. QUALIT'f

CASH&amp;CARRV
PRICES

Gov. nslsted loans lor qu•!lflecl buyers-

Only members having establlsbed
handicaps for the year are eligible
and players will be placed In flights
according to handicap. All players
will tee off before 10:30 a.m. and
trophies will be awarded In all
filghts for winners and runners-ups.

II both of liS are seeking divine
guidance, who does the referee ap-

bnfldtngmaciJ'I•Ja

MODULAR
'HOMES

carries. Eastern had secured a victory quite handUy by halftime
8Ithough Miller scored on a 64 yard
JN111S intercepU9n before the half.
BEGINS SUNDAY
The first 36 hole championship
tournament consl.sting of 18 holes
this Sunday and 18 on Sunday, Sept.
28 will be held by the Jaymar Men's
Golf Assn.

ancl

BUILDING OR REMODELING?

'*~.ua..t.na.

Abbie Hoffman: he was never really gone

Filgltive Slave Act, allowing slave
owners to reclaim slaves who had
escaped to other states.
In 1961, United Nations Secretary
General Dag Hammarskjold was
kllled in a plane crash in Rhodesia.
Ten yean ago, Israel freed more
than 400 Arab hostages who had
been seized in occupied territory.
Five years ago, fugitive Patricia
Hearst was apprehended by the FBI
in San Francisco, along with two
confederates in the Symbionese
Uberatlon Army.

'

Ricbard Dean
~. ZO%lbe.
Senior Tackle

SbawnEada

Ohio's proposed high speed -train system

\

Jackson scored touchdowns of U!;ee
and 60 yards respectively. Quar·
terhacks Rick Edwl!rds and Nick
Riggs scored PAT's on option runs
·and pass plays to give _the yoWJg
MarauderS the sh11t out Wlli.
Meigs, now 1-1·1, will seek another
victoryonMonday, September22,at
Galllpolls with game time set at 5:15
p.m.
Members of the junior varsity
are :
Sean
Rick
G':!g_

game.

Dale Rotbleb, Jr.

Today in history.

reserves post win··:

h.

from10110.»
_.Z,!Br.--IN
20.000.. ._...

~---AND ARE
NOT AYAILA&amp;IPOftt NEW

·"IIi

ANY

PERSON, FlAM, CORPORA·

TlON OR ASIIOCIATIOM MAY AL~

PUAIUANT TO SECTION . . .. II Q,.
THE OHIO REVIlED CODE, AN
OIJI!CTtoN TO THE INCAEA8E8
I'IIOI'OIIED IY OHIO ~WHICH
M~Y ALLEGE THAT THE
""NY'S

AI'I'IJCAIION CONTAI. . I'IIOPOIAUI

THAT ARE UNJUST AND DIICAIMtN,t,.
TOAY OR UNIIIEASONAILE.
The form ot thlt nottoe has t.en
approved by the Public UUIIUII
Commllllon of Otito. ·

-·

OHIO POW!A COM'ANY

llr C.A. l&lt;ollor

�5-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 18, 1980

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 18, 1980

Southern tries to regroup
against White Falcon squad

Ready _to cook Eagles
seek third grid: win
.,

DeSpite giving up 18 points the
BY SCOTr WOLFE
Eagle
defense was also very strong.
After a sluggish, but successful
Federal
Hocking managed onty 53
start, Coach Buddy Moore's Eastern
total
yards.
In fact only one Lancer
Eagles exploded against the Federal
while three backs
gained
yardage
Hocking Lancers to post an imran
for
an
average
of -4.3 yards per
pressive 37-18 victory. Last week's
Two
of
Federal's
TD's came
carry.
outstanding performance boosted
on
kickoff
returns
late
in
the
game.
the Eagles to a 2-1 mark.
This
week
the
Eagles
will
try
their
During pre-season practices
balanced attack against a strong
Coach Moore was confident his team
would COme around as the season Parkersburg C;itholic squad. The
progressed. He suggested the Crusaders are 1·2, but are much bet·
Eagles needed some time to adjust ter than the record shows. Last
week, the Crusaders handily
to new plays and patterns .
Last week's victory was a classic . defeated Southern, 35-6.
The Crusaders have a great aerial
example of a team adjusting and
attack led by highly touted quardoing it well.
The Eagles pounded out 301 total terback Eric Blumburg. Last week
yards in their attack: 'J:J7 yards he passed for 'JJJ7 yards.
Wess Poole and Greg Knlska led
rushing and 64 yards due to a sharp
the
rushing department.
aerial attack.
Defens!Vely,
the Crusaders are
Offensively Jolm Riebel, David
very
physical.
They are strong,
Durst, and Quarterback Greg Wigal
overpowering,
and
quick with a
shared a balanced running attack
with 88, 81 and 45 yards respectively. natural tendency to sort out the
Wigal also p8ssed for 64 more yar· ballcarrier.
According to assistant Coach
ds and a touchdown.
Through the first three games, Eichinger, "Our (Eastern's) offense
Is just starting to cook." ·
~ has showed steady lm·
Game time is 8 p.m. at Eastern
provement and have proven them·
selves a capable threat to any op- High School.
ponents •

·...

,...~I

..•
'
••
"~-

••.
••
••

.'··,,
,.I '
f •

.,.

"'w
'

...

j

l i

B

.,'"
~

lol

...~l'

."'.,b
~

. MHS golfers whip Belpre

.,

PLAYER OF THE WEEK,Brian Swan bas been named the
Meigs High School Player of the
Week by the Meigs County
Jaycees for bls performance for
the Marau~ers In a losing effort
agaiDBI Barbours\'llle last Friday
olgbt. The sealor end led . aD
receivers In the game with 78 yards and also made a spectacular
diving Interception on defense.

'-4

LOGAN - The Meigs Marauder

,.,
.......

~J

;
,,-..
"
Cl

:. 1

'

'" .
",..'"'
;· ~

'

". . .

golf team returned to the winning
column with a narrow victory over
Belpre and Nelsonville-York in high
school golf action..
· Meigs invaded the Hocking Hills
Golf Club and came away the victor
to even its record at 6-6 overall, with
a 3-4 SEOAL mark.
As a team Meigs recorded a 172,
Belpre a 174, and Nelsonville-York a
189. Although Belpre's Steve Long
won medallst honors J. R. Wamsley
again came through with another
good stroke to shoot a 40 and lead his
club to victocy. lndividual scores:
·Meigs 172 - J. R. Wamsley

:- :

40 ;

Tony Jewell 43; Brian Wil! 44; Fred

Young 45; Scott Harrison 50.
Belpre 174 - Steve Legg 36; Rhett
·• Stidham 43; Tony Ellopolus 47; Mike

~:

Lewis 48; Dave West SO.

••

.".

.·••~ :
'...
'·

..•'
.•'
....• '
·:~ -

..

Nelsonville· York 189 - Dave Koon
Jeff Sparks .18; Greg Wooten 49;
Matt Odenthal 50; Mike Holtel52.
Meigs record 6·6; SEOAL record

40 ;

3·4.

Next match - Thursday, Sept. 18.
. Meigs vs. Trimble and New

Lexington at Bishopville, Ohio.

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP)
Edgewood Cavan won the $1,000
featured pace mile Wednesday in
the eighth race at Lebanon by It·
lengths and paid $4.40, $2.20 and
$2.20.
Don Parsons was second, $3.20 and
$2.40, and Maid To Dazzle, the show
horse, $2.80.
.
Cruwford and Andy Bear combined 7-8 in the double for $38.80 and
the crowd of 1,192 bet $118,137.

::..!

Baltimore
Boston

B7

58

Detroit

76 00
77 69
74 70
74 71

Toronto

61

Milwaukee

GB
.639 10
0
1i
.5Z7
16

.:S

·514
.510

83

.m

90

56

Oakland

74

73

.616

Texas
Minnesota

70 ,75
&amp;5 80

Chicago

61

83

california

oo

~

a-Kansas

WEST

City

Seattle
53
x.-clinched division tiUe

.Sill
.483
.448
.t2t
.410
.366

H

18

18"2
31

-181;
191;

Zll&gt;

Z8
3IJ

361;

Wednnday's Gamet1
~7

Kansas City !M, california

Mlnnesata 3-6, Milwaukee 2-1
BalUmore 9, Detroit 3
Cleveland 6, Booton 5, 11 innings
Toronto !i, New York 3, 9t lnnlngs,
pet'lded, rain.

! 11.!-

O&amp;kland 6, Teus 4

Seattle 4, Chicago 0

,
Tbundly's Games

MlnneliOta (ZallJl 111-18 and Redfern &amp;&lt;I
or D.Jackson 9-8) at Milwaukee (Caldwell
1.1-10 and Sorensen 1M), 2, (1.-n)
Cleveland
(Garland S-8)
a.t

(Crawfonl

(n)

~).

Detroit (WilCOI 13-10)
(McGregor 16-7), (nl

at

Boston

Ba11lrnore

at Kansu Ctty

FrtdaftGames
Toronto at Baltlmore,.,( n)
Cleveland at Detroit, (n)

mw

at

Oakland

Kansas

City, (n)

Chicago at Minnesota; (n }

-NATIONAL LEAGUE
.

Montreal
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh

St. Louls
New York

MEN'S, WOMEN'S
BOYS' AND JR. SIZES

Chicago

Los Angel es
Houston
Cincinnati

Fromt899to ' 2 6 9 9

EAST

If, L
81 &amp;:;

POl.

79 66
76 70

.515 1\0
.521
5
.452 15

.555

il6

80

6Z
56

84
BY

.425

WFSr
83 62
82 63
79 ~

.57Z

Atlanta

76

69

San

Francisco

69

76

San

Diego

GB

HI

.386 2-t',i

.566
.511
.521
. t 76

IH 12
Wedlttlday'1Games

-

1
41;
7
14

.438 19\l

st.IAui! 8, Chicago 5
Philadelphia 5, Pitt.bmgh 4, 11 Inning•
New York 5, Montreal 2
ctnclnnaU 7, Houston o
Los Angeles 2, San Diego 1
San Francisco 2, Atlanla 0
HOUlton

(Pastore

TbW'Iday'tGames
(K.Forsdi 11·12) al

11~ )

ClncinnaU

Atlanta (Matula 10.12) a t San Francisco

(MonlaiWJCO f&gt;.S )

· San Diego {Wise ~7 )
(Welch 1!,-9), ( n )
Only games scheduled

DOES YOUR
PHARMACY ....

•

Atlanla

•ACCEPT 3rd PARTY RX"s SUCH AS:
-

-

-

-

-

Ohio Medicaid, w. va. Medicaid, United Mine
Workers, PCS, PAID, W. Va . &amp; Ohio Compensa·
tion. Medimet.
.

· - -- ----

at

hopesthat.
the losses
nuikeinstead
the team
try
much will
harder
of

r:::===:::;;;:;;,::=~

havinganegativeeffect.
Coach Bill Jewell's club is .
described by many teams' scouting
reports as "big, strong, and quick."
The offensive line averages 183
pounds while the backfield weighs in ,
at a 176 average. The defense weighs
in at a "very big" 19l average with
the secondary at 170.
The White Fal~ns are not only

part
the Tornado
offense, the
mainly
calledofupon
to bull through
line
· for yardage in tight situations.
Despite the losses, team spirit has
been good, and according to CDcoach Howie Caldwell the Tornadoes
have had a "good week of practice."
C()oC()llch Mick Winebrenner said,
"We really have our backs against
the wall. This game will give us (the
Tornadoes) a chance to show what
they're made of."
After last week's absence, c. T.
Chapman will return to the line up at
tackle. Tackle Jeff Sopher will
return to the line up on offense after
having an appendectomy several
days before the start of the season.
With the doctor's approval, Sopher's
return will be a plus for Southern.
As it looks now, Southern will
display a new backfield led by
Senior running back Robin FortWle.

THISTI..EDOWNS
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) Retentionlst, ridden by Antonio
Graell, won the featured eighth race
at Thistledown oo Wednesday,
covering the mile and 70 yards in
1:46.
The winner paid $23.20, $10.80 and
$5.40.
Castle Mar finished second and
returned $7.60 and $4, and Ocean
Ridge paid $4.20 for coming in third.

MULCH WITH MONEY
Our neighbor says he's going to
mulch his lawn with paper currency
and save the effort of carrying all
that high-priced lawn food home
with him.

·PH. 992·2644
3S2 E. Main, Pomeroy

Your FTD Florist

NOW IN PROGRf$·$

All UVING ROOM SUITES REDUCED
3uNIIto TO CELEBRAJE OUR 30TH YEAR
IN BUSINESS.
0

Mason, W. Va .

Herman Grate, Owner

.•.•

POSITION PAPER
ISSUED FOR

OHN C.
REPUBLICAN

•...

Sept. lt, lM
Contact.s made socially this coming year will
prove very helpful to you in other areu. Mingle
with people wOO have good reputations in their
p~~rticu.lar fields .

VIRGO (Aq. Z3&amp;pt. !2 ) An unexpected In-

vitation or a chance meetlng today could develop
into an excepUonally fortunate t iJ)erience. Look

• •
• ..

•.•
: ' :

CANDIDATE FOR

MEIGS CO•
SHERIFF

By M)'111e Clad; BDd Amde Moon
EFNEP Nutrition Aides
Meigs COUDty Cooperative
Enenaioa Service
Breakfast means to "break the fast." To fast means to go without
--"'1 f09d. More than 12 hours pass between supper and brellkfast. Having a
I good breakfast has two major advantages. One is that It generally
provides nutrients, especially vitamin C, calcium, and riboflavin, that
may not be present in adequate amounts by the foods. typically conswned at other meals. Breakfast aliiO gives the body needi!d energy af.
ter a complete night without food.
Breakfast is Important before school for children. Children were
compared in their own work at school when they ate breakf81lt every
day and when they skipped breakfast every day. AU the children who
had eaten breakfast did better work. The children were stesdler and
less tired. They could think better and could work and play better.
Skipping breakfast may impair your health, upset your disposition,
and lower your vitality.
.
No certain foods need be served at breakfast. Foods which make a
nutritious lunch or supper may also be served at breakfast. To plan
and serve a nutritious breakfast, select combinations of foods from the
basic four food groups.
Bailie Four Food GtvaPfl
Milk Group - Provides calcium and riboflavin. Adults need milk
as well as children.
Fruit and Vegetable Group - Supplies vitamins and i:ninerals.
Fruits or beverages rich in vitamin C are often served in the morning
to be sure we get them esch day.
Meat Group - Provides protein to build our bodies.
Bread and Cereal Group - Contains high energy foods, minerals,
and vitamins. Breads and cereals also help to supply some prutein,
especially if they are served with milk, meat, or cheese.
About one-fourth of the day's total food intake Is typically .consumed at breakfast. Calories are important to provide energy for the
body. Try to avoid snack breakfasts such as doughnuts and sweet cof·
fee, as they do not provide the nutrients that are needed by the body.
To help wake you up in the morning, serve one hot food or beverage.

'••

SCORPIO. (()et. H-N•v· ZZI Don't be hesitant
to tackle bil Idea• today, especially U they Inelude dealinc with older or vastly eaperienced
penms. 1hings.should work out great
SA.GmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtt. U) Today you
wW be compenaated more handsomely than
usual for well-4irected effort,. Focu.s on projects
that c•n mean U:w: most to you flna ncialfy or
Ollterially.
CAPI\ICORN (0... ZWu. lti Mediocrit y I!
.ameth.lng no one can acrose you of today.

,• ,

You're aeeUlingwilhambltionandbig plana,and

•,
•,
•,
, ',

•
•
•
•

,
••
' •

r

~~ •lnm;~ria~~~;!:.~t :r:Y
;u~~

larJewhenyou develop things your way.

,

,.

for aomething pt'&lt;lfllblntllo come of 11. Find out
more of what Ues ahead for you in the )'e"Mr
foUowillt " W- birthday by sending for your copy
of ~ ·-r' " · Mail fl for each to Astro-G raph ,
8oK 419, Radi o City Station, N. Y. 10019. Be s ure
tospecUybh1hdal&lt;.
.
LIIIRA !Sept. ZWI&lt;t. Zl) Follow your lnstincta

Calling upon his experience as a Columbus Pollee of·
ficer and as an Ohio State Highway Patrolman. John
Welsh pledges to create an efficient, responsive and pro·
fessionally administered Sheriff's Department for
Meigs County. He offers a five-point law-and·order im·
provement program for the county :

senseless destruction, John Welsh will assign deputies in cruisers to
, the four corners of the county. Deputies will no longer sit In the office
in Pomeroy awaiting your call for help ... they will be In the field , an·
tlcipating your needs.

PARTY MONDAY
at the Meigs School for the Mentally
Retarded Monday from 1 to 3 p.m.
Twenty-five percent of all proceeds
from the party will go into the school
fWld.

We remind our many customers to stop in the
bank

and notify us of their choice of

''The Economy Account", ''The Balance Account;'
or the "Combined Statement Account." It is .

. LEASING
..,EQUIPMENT

possible that you may also qualify for a free

~TO BUSINESS, INDUSTRY,

checking accounl

-AND THE PROFESSIONS

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY,N.A

BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA.

!-----~:::::::::::::::::_

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

__J~~~~~~!'!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

dividual effort. Pick the proper cohort to meet
your.particular nt'eds.

ARIES (Marth .Zl·Aprllll)

Adva~nt

America's Largest
Antenna Manufacturer

IOiha

or

sJ)eeial benefits are within your reaeh today, so

direct your efforts accordingly. Work and career

area.s are espedaUy favored.
TAURUS !April ZO.Moy 101 The lmpreSJion
you make today i.'l o.cellent alld wW have a tq.
lasUng effect. Get out and mingle In the right circles or places.
GEMINI (May ti.JUDe 1111 A shared inlarelt
you' re involved in looks except.lonally ~
today becauae of the buic sincerity- and gooil
lri1l of the parties concerned.
CANCER tJuell.JIIly 2!) Any arra ngements

or agreements that Y0\1 make today, either in
verbal or wntten ftmn 1 should stand the l.eat of
~ . Lock thinu up now.
LEO (July ~Aq . !!)

won. or oervic. done

weU today wm benefit you ror a long time to
come. Those who could do you good will be so
pleased they won't easily forget.

ANTENN

seen
on TV

To further increase protection

without increa sing ta xes, John Welsh will create an active Sheriff's

Auxiliary of volunteer deputies, along with a Sheriff Mounted Posse.

Volunteer ism is at the heart of government in America. It works In
' tire protection. It can work In law enforcement.

COMPARES
ANTENNAS
COSTING

DRUG ABUSE EDUCATION - As sheriff, John Welsh will recru it

a Women's Auxiliary to become the vanguard Of a drug abuse educa·
tlon program in the schools of Meigs county . Auxiliary members will
be pr ofessional ly trained to become an effective force in

THIS IS THE LAST WEEKEND
TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF
THIS GREAT SALE.

demonstrating the dangers of illega l drugs to the children of the coun·
ty, A rigorous enforcement program will be Initiated to compliment
the educational program.
HOMICIDE lNVESTIGATION - During the past five years there
have been three murders In Meigs County ... three unsolved murders.
As sheriff, John Welsh will recruh an expert homicide investigator to
Insure you that history will not be repeated during the ne•t four years.
Pd. Pol. Adv.

REDUCEQ

20%

~

T0 50%
MOREl

,d~

JEWELRY.

lAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS

All
14 K GOLD BANDS

FROM THE

Reg. $119.95 Save $50.00

Off

lADIES' DIAMOND
Q.USTER

DIAMOND CROSS
NECKLACE

$}1goo

'9800

~HAVE

pan1a aa well aa
sklrta . We have a
wide alze range .

Heavy Man's
Diamond Solitaire

SAVE.WJ1.75

PLAIN NOTES

ROll- 12,.00

collection are

•99

150.00

Ladles Dlamona
WATCH

priced well below
Others you've

ea ·lack·

• Brown
eGray
eNavy
eWine ·

MANY STYLES

14 KGold Mountings

•7991

SAVES12S.OO

''

Rq . 1164.91 SAVE 561.00

DIAMOND EARRINGS

•5oo•

aeen .

· WAS 5155.00
SAVE $36.00
DIAMOND
WEDDl NG SETS

95

95
'179
SAVE

OPEN

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For Clearest Reception
Arch•rotort!

95

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from every TV or FM ~t
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mlzes signal strength,
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Requires 3-wlre
cable. 11·1224 .

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. 102 E. Main
Middleport, Ohio

lU CourtS!.,

Check Your Phone Book lor the ~le

88

NOW
ONLY

ONLY

WMPO

Ma,guerite Shoes

UP

ILLUSION HEAD
DIAMOND SOLITAIRE

Beat of all pumps
are being shown with

8 til Noon

OF AGE OR OLDER.

A public jewelry party will be held

as

Rq. 1151.75

SATURDAYS

PERSONS WHO ARE 65 YEARS

COAL CO.

It In I Wide ChOICe of
colors artd your
favori te heel height .

WE DOl~

ON CHECKING ACCOUNTS TO

SOUTHERN OHIO

•HAVE A FILM PROCESSING SERVICE?
.
(Check Our Prices)

Casey Kasem

"NO SERVICE CHARGE"

..,BANK QNE,"-.....

AQUARIUS (Ju. 2:0-Feb. 111 You're very
you'reluckywtththingslargelnscope.
adrolt
today at being able to puU rabbits out o{
the hat. 'l'hrotJih ruourcefulness yoo' Uextricate
yourae.lffrom sticky situations.
PISCES (Fe•. _,., 211 You function best
today u a team player, rather than through in-

sheriff can be a tremendous asset in cutting the crime rate.

Nothing worka as well aa
a plain pump. Jolene does

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

Badge work was discussed and the
girls also reported on their par·
tlcipation in the Meigs CoWlty fair

WE ARE CONTINUING OUR POLICY OF

with project work. Charlene Cadle
and Kathy Thomas served refreshments.
Mrs. Joy Clark is the leader and
her helpers are Susie Stewart,
Cherry Cadle, Barbara Phillips and
Tamra Clark.

614/992·2133

OPEN ADMINISTRATION - John Welsh will reorganize lhe
Sheriff's Department to make it more efficient and responsive to lhe
needs of Meigs Countians. The Sheriff's Off ice door will be open to all
the people. A free flow of Information between the people and lhe

COLLECTION

.

ATTENTION
SENIOR CITIZENS

OF

20%

LOW PRESCRIPTION PRICES?

ths.

.

FAMILY OUTING

John Welsh wi ll launch a program of crime prevention, inspection and
education . To further help us protect our farms and homes against

-

'

The Middleport Girl Scout troop
1039 met Tuesday evening to
organize for the fall program.
Elected patrol leaders were Lisa
Whltington, Tammy Hawley; and
Kathy Thomas. Mindy Spencer and
.Teresa Whittington were named to
the refreshment conunittee, Elise
Meier as . attendance taker, and
Samantha Rousb as the due collector. They will serve for three mon-

phrey, Bernice Randolph, opal Ran·
dolph, Lucille Smith, Grace Weber,
Teresa Smith, Mabel Hetzer,
Lorraine Wigal, Peg Buckley, Frances and Rhonda Holsinger, -carol
Richardson Betty and Shelia
'
guchanan, Ruth Toothman, Pauline
Myers, Leona and Ernest Ruth,
Robin Douglas.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20TH
UNTIL 5 J".M.

PLRIN NOTES

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

Whitehead, Diane, Tom and Stanley
White, Shirley Johnson, Kip and
Rita Reed, Marilyn ·Coulson, Violet
and Dee Smith, Helen Archer, Cliff
' New!Wl, Chester. Buckley family,
Ullian Pickens, Phyllis Reed, Marjorie Brewer, Mildred White, Ita
Osborne, Ida and Gene Cowdery,
Pete Randolph family, Mae Hum-

PARK RESERVED

CRIME PREVENTION - To reduce vandalism and burglary,

SHERIFF'S AUXILIARY -

Virginia Walton, . Sue Cowdery,
Pearl Baker, Connie Bowman,
Grace and Bonnie Chevalier, Sandy
Roberts, Rose Niday, Juanita
Medling, Florence Bay, Mamie
Buckley, Sue and Carrie Chevalier,
Darlene Barton, Rosemary Young,
Frances Reed, Elizabeth Smith, Sue
Douglas, Thelma and Jody Smith,
Alberta Edwards, Ruth Ann Balder·
son, Verna Rose, Vivian Humphrey,
Susie Soulsby, Susie Abbott, Travis
Abbott, Mary Wells and Nell Wilson .
Sending gifts were : Nola Young,
Hazel Barton, Dorthy Cashdollar,
Jean Watson, Frank Jones family,
Donna Griffin, Mrs. Ed Chevalier,
Scott and Jeff Chevalier, Maxine

Girl scouts meet, organize fall program

- - ASTROGRAPH--

•' -

Meigs girls
defeat SHS
The Meigs Marauder
gals put together a fine team effort
to defeat Southern's Tornadoes in a
non-league volleyball match here
Wednesday. The yoWlg, but inexperienced Marauders began to take
form as the evening progressed
posting wins of 1s-6 and 1!&gt;-12 in only
two games.
Southern, also facing a lack of ex·
perience, took a ~ lead before
Meigs' netters regained composure,
holding Southern to just one more
point the entire glime in a 1s-6 victory. In the second and final game
Meigs burst into a torrid 11·2 hot
streak, but Southern came back
within two points before faltering ll).
12.
Southern's tough reserve squad
won their match in two games, ll)-2,
ls-6 respectively. The younger Tor·
nado gals have shown continuous
improvement all year long playing
at a peak against Meigs' reserves.
Meigs hosts Athens tonight while
Southern hosts Eastern and North
Gallia in a tri-angular SVAC match.

FLORIST

30TH ANNIVERSARY SALE

773 -5592

A bridal shower was held recently
at the-fire house in Reedsville for
Carla Cowdery; bride-eleCt of
Patrick Soulsby. Hostesses for the
evening were Kim Reed, Kay
Balderson, Violet Satterfield,
Marlene Putman, Darlene Reed and
Pat Marti!'.
Darlene Barton and Conni e
Bowman won the games and
Virginia Walton won the door prize.
Cake (baked by Mrs. Marlene Put·
man), punch, mints and nuts were
served to the following guests:
Abigail, Allison and Margaret
Cauthorne, Paula, Jenny and Sandy
Cowdery, Sibyl Foster, Cindy Randolph, Mary Bise, Erika Boring,

How to plan ·nutritious meal

Your " Extra Touch"
Florist Since 1957

MASON fUR NITU RE CQ

Miss .Cowdery honored by bridal fare recently

.Food for Thought

r;.!I~!B~,~bu~t~ar~e~als~o~v~e:ry::stro~n=g~.-~The~y~~~~-~-=·~-~~~·;:;~~

thenuandhasbeenunsbletoattend
practice as we)! as schooL
Terry Patterson, a sophomore
fullback is also very questionable at
this point. Patterson Is an integral

San Diego, (n)

Cincinnati at Los Angeles, (n )
Houston at San Franctsco, (n)

·• GIVE A 10%_SEN_IO~ CITIZENS DISCOUNT
ON ALL RX's?
.

Los Angeles

Friday's Games

•HAVE FREE PARKING
',

at

Philadelphia at Chicago
New York a\ Pittsburgh, (n)
Montreal at st.Louis, (n)

•KEEP FAMILY RESCRIPTION RECORDS?

White
F8lcons.
Wahame,
coming off a 37~ defeat
to Trimble, will entertain Southern
!Ill its ·homecoming guests. Southern
fell to Parkersburg Catholic, 35-6,
last week.
Both teams, 2-1, will renew what
has developed into a mild rivalry
over the years.
The Tornadoes are regrouping, or
perhaps rebulldlng their offense af·
ter last week's devastating loss.

RACINE -

Boston at
York, (n)
Seattle at Milwaukee, (n )
California at Te:l&amp;!, (n)

'

.
'

Vl

Cleveland

Po&lt;.

L

If.

New York

1·14), (n)

These Styles
-Nylon Quilt
-Poly Cotton
-Brown Duc;k
-Denim w/Sherp;~ lining

.·

EAST

CaUiornio (Martinez &amp;&lt;I)

VEST

· try to control the game by consistently del
running. Wahama plays a
s-:lorl)-2
G
timense.
· scheduled for 8 p
arne 1 e IS
.m.
and halftime
wllh ear y pre-game
t f the hom....nmino
festivities. se or
--···-.,.
ceremorues.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

(Martin 11-91 , (n)
Olicago (Trout 8-14) at Seattle (Parrott

With A New

Sophomore John Porter will take
ove.r at quarterback, Senior Danny .
••) will move to fullback,
Talbott (1 ""
Zane Beegle will
Sophomore
and
ck.
Wingba
OVer
at
take
--rn
·
•s team spirit is
-outhe
Although S
.still high, Southern's coaching staff

Teaford, a valuable offensive component as well as a defensive
stronghold, left last week's game on
a stretcher and has been under a
doctor's care all week.
ooensive wingback and secon·
dary man, Terry McNickle also has

Toronto (Stieb 12-12} at New York
(John 21-7), 2, (n), lst game COOipletion
of wednesday's suspended game.
O&amp;kland (McCatty 1!,-13) at Teus (Clay
Z-2), (n)

OfT RfADY- fOR fAU.

BY SCOTl' WOLFE
RACINE - After being set back
by the flu, injuries, and a very tough
Parkersburg Catholic squad, the
Southern Tornadoes try to regroup
in preparation for tomorrow's nonleague contest against the Wa hame

Three year lettennan
and senior
quarterback,
Dale Teaford
is
definitely gone from the line up.

STANDINGS

lol

"'.
..'.," .

•

Mast not
included

Replace your worn-out antenna now and see all the excitement
you've been missing! 60' wide-swept elements capture all the
available signal on every channel and pull in stronger FM rad io
signals, too! Factory preassembled - just snap open the
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/haek

3

99
Value

Store or Dealer Neare•t You

A DIVISION OF TANDY CO~PORATI()N
M,t,Y.YARV AT

I

I

�5-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 18, 1980

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 18, 1980

Southern tries to regroup
against White Falcon squad

Ready _to cook Eagles
seek third grid: win
.,

DeSpite giving up 18 points the
BY SCOTr WOLFE
Eagle
defense was also very strong.
After a sluggish, but successful
Federal
Hocking managed onty 53
start, Coach Buddy Moore's Eastern
total
yards.
In fact only one Lancer
Eagles exploded against the Federal
while three backs
gained
yardage
Hocking Lancers to post an imran
for
an
average
of -4.3 yards per
pressive 37-18 victory. Last week's
Two
of
Federal's
TD's came
carry.
outstanding performance boosted
on
kickoff
returns
late
in
the
game.
the Eagles to a 2-1 mark.
This
week
the
Eagles
will
try
their
During pre-season practices
balanced attack against a strong
Coach Moore was confident his team
would COme around as the season Parkersburg C;itholic squad. The
progressed. He suggested the Crusaders are 1·2, but are much bet·
Eagles needed some time to adjust ter than the record shows. Last
week, the Crusaders handily
to new plays and patterns .
Last week's victory was a classic . defeated Southern, 35-6.
The Crusaders have a great aerial
example of a team adjusting and
attack led by highly touted quardoing it well.
The Eagles pounded out 301 total terback Eric Blumburg. Last week
yards in their attack: 'J:J7 yards he passed for 'JJJ7 yards.
Wess Poole and Greg Knlska led
rushing and 64 yards due to a sharp
the
rushing department.
aerial attack.
Defens!Vely,
the Crusaders are
Offensively Jolm Riebel, David
very
physical.
They are strong,
Durst, and Quarterback Greg Wigal
overpowering,
and
quick with a
shared a balanced running attack
with 88, 81 and 45 yards respectively. natural tendency to sort out the
Wigal also p8ssed for 64 more yar· ballcarrier.
According to assistant Coach
ds and a touchdown.
Through the first three games, Eichinger, "Our (Eastern's) offense
Is just starting to cook." ·
~ has showed steady lm·
Game time is 8 p.m. at Eastern
provement and have proven them·
selves a capable threat to any op- High School.
ponents •

·...

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••
••

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lol

...~l'

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~

. MHS golfers whip Belpre

.,

PLAYER OF THE WEEK,Brian Swan bas been named the
Meigs High School Player of the
Week by the Meigs County
Jaycees for bls performance for
the Marau~ers In a losing effort
agaiDBI Barbours\'llle last Friday
olgbt. The sealor end led . aD
receivers In the game with 78 yards and also made a spectacular
diving Interception on defense.

'-4

LOGAN - The Meigs Marauder

,.,
.......

~J

;
,,-..
"
Cl

:. 1

'

'" .
",..'"'
;· ~

'

". . .

golf team returned to the winning
column with a narrow victory over
Belpre and Nelsonville-York in high
school golf action..
· Meigs invaded the Hocking Hills
Golf Club and came away the victor
to even its record at 6-6 overall, with
a 3-4 SEOAL mark.
As a team Meigs recorded a 172,
Belpre a 174, and Nelsonville-York a
189. Although Belpre's Steve Long
won medallst honors J. R. Wamsley
again came through with another
good stroke to shoot a 40 and lead his
club to victocy. lndividual scores:
·Meigs 172 - J. R. Wamsley

:- :

40 ;

Tony Jewell 43; Brian Wil! 44; Fred

Young 45; Scott Harrison 50.
Belpre 174 - Steve Legg 36; Rhett
·• Stidham 43; Tony Ellopolus 47; Mike

~:

Lewis 48; Dave West SO.

••

.".

.·••~ :
'...
'·

..•'
.•'
....• '
·:~ -

..

Nelsonville· York 189 - Dave Koon
Jeff Sparks .18; Greg Wooten 49;
Matt Odenthal 50; Mike Holtel52.
Meigs record 6·6; SEOAL record

40 ;

3·4.

Next match - Thursday, Sept. 18.
. Meigs vs. Trimble and New

Lexington at Bishopville, Ohio.

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP)
Edgewood Cavan won the $1,000
featured pace mile Wednesday in
the eighth race at Lebanon by It·
lengths and paid $4.40, $2.20 and
$2.20.
Don Parsons was second, $3.20 and
$2.40, and Maid To Dazzle, the show
horse, $2.80.
.
Cruwford and Andy Bear combined 7-8 in the double for $38.80 and
the crowd of 1,192 bet $118,137.

::..!

Baltimore
Boston

B7

58

Detroit

76 00
77 69
74 70
74 71

Toronto

61

Milwaukee

GB
.639 10
0
1i
.5Z7
16

.:S

·514
.510

83

.m

90

56

Oakland

74

73

.616

Texas
Minnesota

70 ,75
&amp;5 80

Chicago

61

83

california

oo

~

a-Kansas

WEST

City

Seattle
53
x.-clinched division tiUe

.Sill
.483
.448
.t2t
.410
.366

H

18

18"2
31

-181;
191;

Zll&gt;

Z8
3IJ

361;

Wednnday's Gamet1
~7

Kansas City !M, california

Mlnnesata 3-6, Milwaukee 2-1
BalUmore 9, Detroit 3
Cleveland 6, Booton 5, 11 innings
Toronto !i, New York 3, 9t lnnlngs,
pet'lded, rain.

! 11.!-

O&amp;kland 6, Teus 4

Seattle 4, Chicago 0

,
Tbundly's Games

MlnneliOta (ZallJl 111-18 and Redfern &amp;&lt;I
or D.Jackson 9-8) at Milwaukee (Caldwell
1.1-10 and Sorensen 1M), 2, (1.-n)
Cleveland
(Garland S-8)
a.t

(Crawfonl

(n)

~).

Detroit (WilCOI 13-10)
(McGregor 16-7), (nl

at

Boston

Ba11lrnore

at Kansu Ctty

FrtdaftGames
Toronto at Baltlmore,.,( n)
Cleveland at Detroit, (n)

mw

at

Oakland

Kansas

City, (n)

Chicago at Minnesota; (n }

-NATIONAL LEAGUE
.

Montreal
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh

St. Louls
New York

MEN'S, WOMEN'S
BOYS' AND JR. SIZES

Chicago

Los Angel es
Houston
Cincinnati

Fromt899to ' 2 6 9 9

EAST

If, L
81 &amp;:;

POl.

79 66
76 70

.515 1\0
.521
5
.452 15

.555

il6

80

6Z
56

84
BY

.425

WFSr
83 62
82 63
79 ~

.57Z

Atlanta

76

69

San

Francisco

69

76

San

Diego

GB

HI

.386 2-t',i

.566
.511
.521
. t 76

IH 12
Wedlttlday'1Games

-

1
41;
7
14

.438 19\l

st.IAui! 8, Chicago 5
Philadelphia 5, Pitt.bmgh 4, 11 Inning•
New York 5, Montreal 2
ctnclnnaU 7, Houston o
Los Angeles 2, San Diego 1
San Francisco 2, Atlanla 0
HOUlton

(Pastore

TbW'Iday'tGames
(K.Forsdi 11·12) al

11~ )

ClncinnaU

Atlanta (Matula 10.12) a t San Francisco

(MonlaiWJCO f&gt;.S )

· San Diego {Wise ~7 )
(Welch 1!,-9), ( n )
Only games scheduled

DOES YOUR
PHARMACY ....

•

Atlanla

•ACCEPT 3rd PARTY RX"s SUCH AS:
-

-

-

-

-

Ohio Medicaid, w. va. Medicaid, United Mine
Workers, PCS, PAID, W. Va . &amp; Ohio Compensa·
tion. Medimet.
.

· - -- ----

at

hopesthat.
the losses
nuikeinstead
the team
try
much will
harder
of

r:::===:::;;;:;;,::=~

havinganegativeeffect.
Coach Bill Jewell's club is .
described by many teams' scouting
reports as "big, strong, and quick."
The offensive line averages 183
pounds while the backfield weighs in ,
at a 176 average. The defense weighs
in at a "very big" 19l average with
the secondary at 170.
The White Fal~ns are not only

part
the Tornado
offense, the
mainly
calledofupon
to bull through
line
· for yardage in tight situations.
Despite the losses, team spirit has
been good, and according to CDcoach Howie Caldwell the Tornadoes
have had a "good week of practice."
C()oC()llch Mick Winebrenner said,
"We really have our backs against
the wall. This game will give us (the
Tornadoes) a chance to show what
they're made of."
After last week's absence, c. T.
Chapman will return to the line up at
tackle. Tackle Jeff Sopher will
return to the line up on offense after
having an appendectomy several
days before the start of the season.
With the doctor's approval, Sopher's
return will be a plus for Southern.
As it looks now, Southern will
display a new backfield led by
Senior running back Robin FortWle.

THISTI..EDOWNS
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) Retentionlst, ridden by Antonio
Graell, won the featured eighth race
at Thistledown oo Wednesday,
covering the mile and 70 yards in
1:46.
The winner paid $23.20, $10.80 and
$5.40.
Castle Mar finished second and
returned $7.60 and $4, and Ocean
Ridge paid $4.20 for coming in third.

MULCH WITH MONEY
Our neighbor says he's going to
mulch his lawn with paper currency
and save the effort of carrying all
that high-priced lawn food home
with him.

·PH. 992·2644
3S2 E. Main, Pomeroy

Your FTD Florist

NOW IN PROGRf$·$

All UVING ROOM SUITES REDUCED
3uNIIto TO CELEBRAJE OUR 30TH YEAR
IN BUSINESS.
0

Mason, W. Va .

Herman Grate, Owner

.•.•

POSITION PAPER
ISSUED FOR

OHN C.
REPUBLICAN

•...

Sept. lt, lM
Contact.s made socially this coming year will
prove very helpful to you in other areu. Mingle
with people wOO have good reputations in their
p~~rticu.lar fields .

VIRGO (Aq. Z3&amp;pt. !2 ) An unexpected In-

vitation or a chance meetlng today could develop
into an excepUonally fortunate t iJ)erience. Look

• •
• ..

•.•
: ' :

CANDIDATE FOR

MEIGS CO•
SHERIFF

By M)'111e Clad; BDd Amde Moon
EFNEP Nutrition Aides
Meigs COUDty Cooperative
Enenaioa Service
Breakfast means to "break the fast." To fast means to go without
--"'1 f09d. More than 12 hours pass between supper and brellkfast. Having a
I good breakfast has two major advantages. One is that It generally
provides nutrients, especially vitamin C, calcium, and riboflavin, that
may not be present in adequate amounts by the foods. typically conswned at other meals. Breakfast aliiO gives the body needi!d energy af.
ter a complete night without food.
Breakfast is Important before school for children. Children were
compared in their own work at school when they ate breakf81lt every
day and when they skipped breakfast every day. AU the children who
had eaten breakfast did better work. The children were stesdler and
less tired. They could think better and could work and play better.
Skipping breakfast may impair your health, upset your disposition,
and lower your vitality.
.
No certain foods need be served at breakfast. Foods which make a
nutritious lunch or supper may also be served at breakfast. To plan
and serve a nutritious breakfast, select combinations of foods from the
basic four food groups.
Bailie Four Food GtvaPfl
Milk Group - Provides calcium and riboflavin. Adults need milk
as well as children.
Fruit and Vegetable Group - Supplies vitamins and i:ninerals.
Fruits or beverages rich in vitamin C are often served in the morning
to be sure we get them esch day.
Meat Group - Provides protein to build our bodies.
Bread and Cereal Group - Contains high energy foods, minerals,
and vitamins. Breads and cereals also help to supply some prutein,
especially if they are served with milk, meat, or cheese.
About one-fourth of the day's total food intake Is typically .consumed at breakfast. Calories are important to provide energy for the
body. Try to avoid snack breakfasts such as doughnuts and sweet cof·
fee, as they do not provide the nutrients that are needed by the body.
To help wake you up in the morning, serve one hot food or beverage.

'••

SCORPIO. (()et. H-N•v· ZZI Don't be hesitant
to tackle bil Idea• today, especially U they Inelude dealinc with older or vastly eaperienced
penms. 1hings.should work out great
SA.GmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtt. U) Today you
wW be compenaated more handsomely than
usual for well-4irected effort,. Focu.s on projects
that c•n mean U:w: most to you flna ncialfy or
Ollterially.
CAPI\ICORN (0... ZWu. lti Mediocrit y I!
.ameth.lng no one can acrose you of today.

,• ,

You're aeeUlingwilhambltionandbig plana,and

•,
•,
•,
, ',

•
•
•
•

,
••
' •

r

~~ •lnm;~ria~~~;!:.~t :r:Y
;u~~

larJewhenyou develop things your way.

,

,.

for aomething pt'&lt;lfllblntllo come of 11. Find out
more of what Ues ahead for you in the )'e"Mr
foUowillt " W- birthday by sending for your copy
of ~ ·-r' " · Mail fl for each to Astro-G raph ,
8oK 419, Radi o City Station, N. Y. 10019. Be s ure
tospecUybh1hdal&lt;.
.
LIIIRA !Sept. ZWI&lt;t. Zl) Follow your lnstincta

Calling upon his experience as a Columbus Pollee of·
ficer and as an Ohio State Highway Patrolman. John
Welsh pledges to create an efficient, responsive and pro·
fessionally administered Sheriff's Department for
Meigs County. He offers a five-point law-and·order im·
provement program for the county :

senseless destruction, John Welsh will assign deputies in cruisers to
, the four corners of the county. Deputies will no longer sit In the office
in Pomeroy awaiting your call for help ... they will be In the field , an·
tlcipating your needs.

PARTY MONDAY
at the Meigs School for the Mentally
Retarded Monday from 1 to 3 p.m.
Twenty-five percent of all proceeds
from the party will go into the school
fWld.

We remind our many customers to stop in the
bank

and notify us of their choice of

''The Economy Account", ''The Balance Account;'
or the "Combined Statement Account." It is .

. LEASING
..,EQUIPMENT

possible that you may also qualify for a free

~TO BUSINESS, INDUSTRY,

checking accounl

-AND THE PROFESSIONS

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY,N.A

BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA.

!-----~:::::::::::::::::_

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

__J~~~~~~!'!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

dividual effort. Pick the proper cohort to meet
your.particular nt'eds.

ARIES (Marth .Zl·Aprllll)

Adva~nt

America's Largest
Antenna Manufacturer

IOiha

or

sJ)eeial benefits are within your reaeh today, so

direct your efforts accordingly. Work and career

area.s are espedaUy favored.
TAURUS !April ZO.Moy 101 The lmpreSJion
you make today i.'l o.cellent alld wW have a tq.
lasUng effect. Get out and mingle In the right circles or places.
GEMINI (May ti.JUDe 1111 A shared inlarelt
you' re involved in looks except.lonally ~
today becauae of the buic sincerity- and gooil
lri1l of the parties concerned.
CANCER tJuell.JIIly 2!) Any arra ngements

or agreements that Y0\1 make today, either in
verbal or wntten ftmn 1 should stand the l.eat of
~ . Lock thinu up now.
LEO (July ~Aq . !!)

won. or oervic. done

weU today wm benefit you ror a long time to
come. Those who could do you good will be so
pleased they won't easily forget.

ANTENN

seen
on TV

To further increase protection

without increa sing ta xes, John Welsh will create an active Sheriff's

Auxiliary of volunteer deputies, along with a Sheriff Mounted Posse.

Volunteer ism is at the heart of government in America. It works In
' tire protection. It can work In law enforcement.

COMPARES
ANTENNAS
COSTING

DRUG ABUSE EDUCATION - As sheriff, John Welsh will recru it

a Women's Auxiliary to become the vanguard Of a drug abuse educa·
tlon program in the schools of Meigs county . Auxiliary members will
be pr ofessional ly trained to become an effective force in

THIS IS THE LAST WEEKEND
TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF
THIS GREAT SALE.

demonstrating the dangers of illega l drugs to the children of the coun·
ty, A rigorous enforcement program will be Initiated to compliment
the educational program.
HOMICIDE lNVESTIGATION - During the past five years there
have been three murders In Meigs County ... three unsolved murders.
As sheriff, John Welsh will recruh an expert homicide investigator to
Insure you that history will not be repeated during the ne•t four years.
Pd. Pol. Adv.

REDUCEQ

20%

~

T0 50%
MOREl

,d~

JEWELRY.

lAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS

All
14 K GOLD BANDS

FROM THE

Reg. $119.95 Save $50.00

Off

lADIES' DIAMOND
Q.USTER

DIAMOND CROSS
NECKLACE

$}1goo

'9800

~HAVE

pan1a aa well aa
sklrta . We have a
wide alze range .

Heavy Man's
Diamond Solitaire

SAVE.WJ1.75

PLAIN NOTES

ROll- 12,.00

collection are

•99

150.00

Ladles Dlamona
WATCH

priced well below
Others you've

ea ·lack·

• Brown
eGray
eNavy
eWine ·

MANY STYLES

14 KGold Mountings

•7991

SAVES12S.OO

''

Rq . 1164.91 SAVE 561.00

DIAMOND EARRINGS

•5oo•

aeen .

· WAS 5155.00
SAVE $36.00
DIAMOND
WEDDl NG SETS

95

95
'179
SAVE

OPEN

Automatic Antenna .
For Clearest Reception
Arch•rotort!

95

59

Turns your antenna I_~ 3'
steps for best receptiOn
from every TV or FM ~t
tion within range . Ma
mlzes signal strength,
minimizes ghosts .and
interference. Lrletrmelubricated motor.
Requires 3-wlre
cable. 11·1224 .

.

. 102 E. Main
Middleport, Ohio

lU CourtS!.,

Check Your Phone Book lor the ~le

88

NOW
ONLY

ONLY

WMPO

Ma,guerite Shoes

UP

ILLUSION HEAD
DIAMOND SOLITAIRE

Beat of all pumps
are being shown with

8 til Noon

OF AGE OR OLDER.

A public jewelry party will be held

as

Rq. 1151.75

SATURDAYS

PERSONS WHO ARE 65 YEARS

COAL CO.

It In I Wide ChOICe of
colors artd your
favori te heel height .

WE DOl~

ON CHECKING ACCOUNTS TO

SOUTHERN OHIO

•HAVE A FILM PROCESSING SERVICE?
.
(Check Our Prices)

Casey Kasem

"NO SERVICE CHARGE"

..,BANK QNE,"-.....

AQUARIUS (Ju. 2:0-Feb. 111 You're very
you'reluckywtththingslargelnscope.
adrolt
today at being able to puU rabbits out o{
the hat. 'l'hrotJih ruourcefulness yoo' Uextricate
yourae.lffrom sticky situations.
PISCES (Fe•. _,., 211 You function best
today u a team player, rather than through in-

sheriff can be a tremendous asset in cutting the crime rate.

Nothing worka as well aa
a plain pump. Jolene does

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

Badge work was discussed and the
girls also reported on their par·
tlcipation in the Meigs CoWlty fair

WE ARE CONTINUING OUR POLICY OF

with project work. Charlene Cadle
and Kathy Thomas served refreshments.
Mrs. Joy Clark is the leader and
her helpers are Susie Stewart,
Cherry Cadle, Barbara Phillips and
Tamra Clark.

614/992·2133

OPEN ADMINISTRATION - John Welsh will reorganize lhe
Sheriff's Department to make it more efficient and responsive to lhe
needs of Meigs Countians. The Sheriff's Off ice door will be open to all
the people. A free flow of Information between the people and lhe

COLLECTION

.

ATTENTION
SENIOR CITIZENS

OF

20%

LOW PRESCRIPTION PRICES?

ths.

.

FAMILY OUTING

John Welsh wi ll launch a program of crime prevention, inspection and
education . To further help us protect our farms and homes against

-

'

The Middleport Girl Scout troop
1039 met Tuesday evening to
organize for the fall program.
Elected patrol leaders were Lisa
Whltington, Tammy Hawley; and
Kathy Thomas. Mindy Spencer and
.Teresa Whittington were named to
the refreshment conunittee, Elise
Meier as . attendance taker, and
Samantha Rousb as the due collector. They will serve for three mon-

phrey, Bernice Randolph, opal Ran·
dolph, Lucille Smith, Grace Weber,
Teresa Smith, Mabel Hetzer,
Lorraine Wigal, Peg Buckley, Frances and Rhonda Holsinger, -carol
Richardson Betty and Shelia
'
guchanan, Ruth Toothman, Pauline
Myers, Leona and Ernest Ruth,
Robin Douglas.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20TH
UNTIL 5 J".M.

PLRIN NOTES

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

Whitehead, Diane, Tom and Stanley
White, Shirley Johnson, Kip and
Rita Reed, Marilyn ·Coulson, Violet
and Dee Smith, Helen Archer, Cliff
' New!Wl, Chester. Buckley family,
Ullian Pickens, Phyllis Reed, Marjorie Brewer, Mildred White, Ita
Osborne, Ida and Gene Cowdery,
Pete Randolph family, Mae Hum-

PARK RESERVED

CRIME PREVENTION - To reduce vandalism and burglary,

SHERIFF'S AUXILIARY -

Virginia Walton, . Sue Cowdery,
Pearl Baker, Connie Bowman,
Grace and Bonnie Chevalier, Sandy
Roberts, Rose Niday, Juanita
Medling, Florence Bay, Mamie
Buckley, Sue and Carrie Chevalier,
Darlene Barton, Rosemary Young,
Frances Reed, Elizabeth Smith, Sue
Douglas, Thelma and Jody Smith,
Alberta Edwards, Ruth Ann Balder·
son, Verna Rose, Vivian Humphrey,
Susie Soulsby, Susie Abbott, Travis
Abbott, Mary Wells and Nell Wilson .
Sending gifts were : Nola Young,
Hazel Barton, Dorthy Cashdollar,
Jean Watson, Frank Jones family,
Donna Griffin, Mrs. Ed Chevalier,
Scott and Jeff Chevalier, Maxine

Girl scouts meet, organize fall program

- - ASTROGRAPH--

•' -

Meigs girls
defeat SHS
The Meigs Marauder
gals put together a fine team effort
to defeat Southern's Tornadoes in a
non-league volleyball match here
Wednesday. The yoWlg, but inexperienced Marauders began to take
form as the evening progressed
posting wins of 1s-6 and 1!&gt;-12 in only
two games.
Southern, also facing a lack of ex·
perience, took a ~ lead before
Meigs' netters regained composure,
holding Southern to just one more
point the entire glime in a 1s-6 victory. In the second and final game
Meigs burst into a torrid 11·2 hot
streak, but Southern came back
within two points before faltering ll).
12.
Southern's tough reserve squad
won their match in two games, ll)-2,
ls-6 respectively. The younger Tor·
nado gals have shown continuous
improvement all year long playing
at a peak against Meigs' reserves.
Meigs hosts Athens tonight while
Southern hosts Eastern and North
Gallia in a tri-angular SVAC match.

FLORIST

30TH ANNIVERSARY SALE

773 -5592

A bridal shower was held recently
at the-fire house in Reedsville for
Carla Cowdery; bride-eleCt of
Patrick Soulsby. Hostesses for the
evening were Kim Reed, Kay
Balderson, Violet Satterfield,
Marlene Putman, Darlene Reed and
Pat Marti!'.
Darlene Barton and Conni e
Bowman won the games and
Virginia Walton won the door prize.
Cake (baked by Mrs. Marlene Put·
man), punch, mints and nuts were
served to the following guests:
Abigail, Allison and Margaret
Cauthorne, Paula, Jenny and Sandy
Cowdery, Sibyl Foster, Cindy Randolph, Mary Bise, Erika Boring,

How to plan ·nutritious meal

Your " Extra Touch"
Florist Since 1957

MASON fUR NITU RE CQ

Miss .Cowdery honored by bridal fare recently

.Food for Thought

r;.!I~!B~,~bu~t~ar~e~als~o~v~e:ry::stro~n=g~.-~The~y~~~~-~-=·~-~~~·;:;~~

thenuandhasbeenunsbletoattend
practice as we)! as schooL
Terry Patterson, a sophomore
fullback is also very questionable at
this point. Patterson Is an integral

San Diego, (n)

Cincinnati at Los Angeles, (n )
Houston at San Franctsco, (n)

·• GIVE A 10%_SEN_IO~ CITIZENS DISCOUNT
ON ALL RX's?
.

Los Angeles

Friday's Games

•HAVE FREE PARKING
',

at

Philadelphia at Chicago
New York a\ Pittsburgh, (n)
Montreal at st.Louis, (n)

•KEEP FAMILY RESCRIPTION RECORDS?

White
F8lcons.
Wahame,
coming off a 37~ defeat
to Trimble, will entertain Southern
!Ill its ·homecoming guests. Southern
fell to Parkersburg Catholic, 35-6,
last week.
Both teams, 2-1, will renew what
has developed into a mild rivalry
over the years.
The Tornadoes are regrouping, or
perhaps rebulldlng their offense af·
ter last week's devastating loss.

RACINE -

Boston at
York, (n)
Seattle at Milwaukee, (n )
California at Te:l&amp;!, (n)

'

.
'

Vl

Cleveland

Po&lt;.

L

If.

New York

1·14), (n)

These Styles
-Nylon Quilt
-Poly Cotton
-Brown Duc;k
-Denim w/Sherp;~ lining

.·

EAST

CaUiornio (Martinez &amp;&lt;I)

VEST

· try to control the game by consistently del
running. Wahama plays a
s-:lorl)-2
G
timense.
· scheduled for 8 p
arne 1 e IS
.m.
and halftime
wllh ear y pre-game
t f the hom....nmino
festivities. se or
--···-.,.
ceremorues.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

(Martin 11-91 , (n)
Olicago (Trout 8-14) at Seattle (Parrott

With A New

Sophomore John Porter will take
ove.r at quarterback, Senior Danny .
••) will move to fullback,
Talbott (1 ""
Zane Beegle will
Sophomore
and
ck.
Wingba
OVer
at
take
--rn
·
•s team spirit is
-outhe
Although S
.still high, Southern's coaching staff

Teaford, a valuable offensive component as well as a defensive
stronghold, left last week's game on
a stretcher and has been under a
doctor's care all week.
ooensive wingback and secon·
dary man, Terry McNickle also has

Toronto (Stieb 12-12} at New York
(John 21-7), 2, (n), lst game COOipletion
of wednesday's suspended game.
O&amp;kland (McCatty 1!,-13) at Teus (Clay
Z-2), (n)

OfT RfADY- fOR fAU.

BY SCOTl' WOLFE
RACINE - After being set back
by the flu, injuries, and a very tough
Parkersburg Catholic squad, the
Southern Tornadoes try to regroup
in preparation for tomorrow's nonleague contest against the Wa hame

Three year lettennan
and senior
quarterback,
Dale Teaford
is
definitely gone from the line up.

STANDINGS

lol

"'.
..'.," .

•

Mast not
included

Replace your worn-out antenna now and see all the excitement
you've been missing! 60' wide-swept elements capture all the
available signal on every channel and pull in stronger FM rad io
signals, too! Factory preassembled - just snap open the
elements. Gold Alod izedt&gt; finish fights corrosion. t5·t7ot

Signal Splitter Included
Separates UHF/VHF/
FM signals at the set.
Only one down lead
required.

/haek

3

99
Value

Store or Dealer Neare•t You

A DIVISION OF TANDY CO~PORATI()N
M,t,Y.YARV AT

I

I

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 18, 1980

t

Meigs Council on

'

cONSTITIJTION WEEK, Sept. 17-23, Ill being observed by Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews signed a proclamation Wednesday
before Mrs. Gene Yost, Chapter regent, and Miss Eleanor Smith, chairman of the observance, left. Posters have been placed in the schools and
other public buUdinj!s and a contest on the Constitution and the Bill of
Rights is being carried out at !he Chester Elementary School sixth grade.

minister.

Rev. James Corbitt reported that
the Food Ce&gt;op has resumed twice
monthly deliveries. The Social Concerns Committee is planning three
seminars in November: The subjects to be considered are Juvenile
DelinqueQcy, Alcoholism, and Concerns of the Elderly. Places will he
announced for each cluster. The
TERRI PULLINS, winner of the home environment award at the
Ohio State Fair, is pictured here with Dr. George R. Gist, Associate
• Director of Agriculture, Ohio State University, following the awards
breakfast.

Terri Pullins honored
:::at Ohio State Fair
-

Terri Pullins of Meigs County was
one of over 50 4-H members honored
:· at the 4-H Recognition Day Break. fast Aug. 18 in the Rhodes Center at
: :t he Ohio State Fair.
;-. : Terri was named winner of the
·: home environment award given by
_ the S. and H. Foundation. In addition
~ to the honorary breakfast for the
· winners and their parents, this
award included a trip to the National
4-H Congress in Chicago, ill.
Terri has been a member of the
Merry ~ers_4-H Club in the Eagle ·

Ridge-Bashan area for 11 years. She
has taken projects in clothing, foods,
home environment, conservation,
and Hower gardening, and has served ..as president, vice president,
secretary, treasurer, junior leader,
junior fair committee members; 4-H
advisory committee members, and
was the outstandinj! 4-H girl in 1980.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
Pullins, Terri and her family reside
at 48838 Eagle Ridge Road, Long
Bottom.

September reunion reported
The descendants

of the

late
George and Elsie Roush Brown of
Minersville, held a reunion Sept. 7 at
•· the Rising Parkin Lancaster.
A picnic dinner was held at noon
- with Victor Brown giving the table
. _ grace. Games and rides were enjoyed during the afternoon by the
younger set while others visited,
took pictures, reminisced, and some
'biked to the large rock on top of the
hill which overlooks Lancaster.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
- Haymond Brown, Reynoldsburg;
: Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hannon, Laura
- and Steve, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Strawser, Michael, Jr., Julie,
Mathew, and Mark, Reynoldsburg;
'Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reinhart, New
· Marshfield; Allgela and Krista
Meek, Nelsonville; Dennis Reinhart,
Jackson; Mrs. Bobbie Lee, Athens;
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thomas,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Bobbie Lee, Athens;
Mr· ·and Mrs. Edgar Thomas,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Zana Yilhcoubian,
·- Christiana and Georgia, Grove City;
· Mr. and Mrs. Jack CUmmins, Todd,
Michelle and Tassica, Racine; Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Williams and Holly,
Pomeroy.
• Victor Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Danny Brown, Joe and Robert; Mrs.
7mta Withrow, Minersville. Guests
were Miss Peggy Neigler and Mias
Beth Hoffman, Racine, Cindy
Evans, Portland. The oldest at·
- • - sERVICE CHANGE NOTED
Services for Christian Fellowship
Church, 383 N. Second Ave., Middleport (old Jimmie's Pastry Shop)
have been changed from Friday,
Sept. 19, to Thursday, Sept. 18, 7:30
p.m. due to conflict of schedules.
This change Ill for this week only. All
other services remaln the same.

tending was Mrs. Zana Withrow with
the youngest being Krista Meek.

'
E

Glanta

. CAPTAIN EASY

school.
Officers
to be elected.
7:30 p.m.
Thursday
at the Plans.
high
for the school year. Special in-

~~:=:::

7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. Ella
Smith. Georgia Watson to have
devotions.
MIDDLEPORT Child Conservation League, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the home of Mrs. Susie Abbott. Devotions by Mrs. Abbott,
traveling prize by Nancy Morris.
Peggy Houdashelt and Peggy Harris
to be co-hostesses.
' ANNuAL MEETING of Meigs·
County Unit, American Cancer
sOciety, 8
Thursday at East-

8:30

I'LL 1\/PI.ITI!! VOU A FULL
PI.EPOPI.T LATEPI.~ GET
IIIOVING:

I.UCI&lt;V IT'S THE
SIE!ITA HOUR-OF.
WHATE!V!!'Il TH&amp;Y
&lt;:ALL IT HE~e 11.1
TH!! SPANISH
&amp;AHARA!

THI&amp; ISUY'S
THE ONLY R!1AL
085TACLE I'VE;
RUN INTO, SO
FAll.~

HOW'&amp; THAT FOil.

LUCKf A JEePJUST WHeN we
NEED TRI\N!7PORT

FOR A c&gt;HAWA'f I

8:68
7:00

heritage house
N. 2nd AYI,

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

WU..Bf'R~, CW'T 'bJ
~ All'frMIIJ(o f.BOUT
·llit=- C.IVIL. ~ ~

HOO AM l SlJfftlSW 1D i'UJW AeOI.JT

~~THI~0 THA.T ~A~D ~!
I).JAS BOR~ !?

l

1979 VOLKSWAGEN
RABBIT
Local, one owner, .of speed,
Michelin radials, cloth In terior.

'5495

I

Luxury Plus - Deluxe velour
cloth Interior, loaded, road
wheels
ANNIE

'5995

1977 ·PLYMOUTH
- ARROW GT
Llftbaci, A-C. automatic, 1111
wheel, 4 cylinder

'3995

1979 PONTIAC
GRAN PRIX LJ

198.0

~ THE

GOVERNMENT
HAGANALIAS PR06RAH··
THEY'LL RE LOCAlE YOU.. .
PROVIIlE DOCUMENTS FOR
AHE'll IDENTiTY"'

1\\o'!. l.l.

CAMARO Z·28
T-top, A -C, till wheel, AM· FM'
tape, power windows &amp; locks,
aluminum wheels, ~log_ger

l'M GURE i"R.
6ARR \'IOOLil
MAKE SURE
'ltllYRE SAFE,
MAY...

ER .• ACTUALlY, I CAN'T WElL, REALLY!
GUARAHTEE IT ... THE YOO'RE HELPLESS
PROGRAM HAGN'T AGAINST ORGANIZED
EXACTLY BEEN A CRIME- YOU CAN'T
SCREAMING
INoUffE MY SAFETY·"
5UCCEG5, BUr ...

football coach with muftlpleaclaroale, Amerlca'e tougheat bouncer
competition, and a VI !tit to the 'don-

t'O OfFEI'ISE, 'rOU DO!.- AND 50 DOEG
BUT ... ~HO
THE COUHTR'r'! 1'1 E'RE
NEEDS '(OU?! DEDICATED MEN, AND l'iE
COULD &amp;EAT T~E fo'OB, IF

key derby doya' In Colorado . (60
mlno.)
.
ClJ MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
(I) IIDYIE o(COIIEDV-FANTASV)

ONLY THEY UNTIED OUR.
HAHDG!

(I) (J2). IIORK AND II INDY
tiCI)(l§)HQWBUGSBUNNYWON
THE WEST Buga Bunny and hla
ale barroom confrontation , a train
robbery, and aeveral wild chaaea

$AVE

before the WaatcanreaaonabiVbe
conaldared won. ·
Cll U.S. CHRONICLE
illJ
EVERY FOUR YEARS
Corraepondent Howard K. Smith

1979 AMC CONCORD Hatch_b-ack .................. !4595

examinee Praaldantlal power and

J979 MEICURY BOBCAT Wagon .................. ~.4995

the 'personality politics' of televl·
aion. (eo mlna.)
8:30 (]) DR. JACK VAN IMPE
C!liiOVIEo(ADVENTURE)" "G•

AU.EYOOP

tor" 1878
(I)(J2)e ANGE Tholougha oro on

HURRY,OOP!

IMJN'T THIS THING

Anglawh~nthaaHractlvemotherof

GO AN'r' FASTER?'

one of Brad'a patient• atarta mak·
lng appointments aYarytlma her
~Jnll J!!eazoa. (Repeat)
(J) llJI) BPI!CIAL MOYI! Pll!·
SENTATlON 'A. Ploco Of Tho Ao·
llon'1977 Storo: SldnoyPolller,BIII
Cooby.
·
FOR THE RECORD
8:5S
NEWS UPDATE
8 CZl SHOGUN A Portugeoo
rlval navigator ~alia to aeee..inate
Blackthorna, who later finds the
eurvlvore of his crew living In
equator, and Toranaga Ia outraged
whtnBiaokthomoaokohlrntogront
Marlko 1 dhtorca eo that they can
marry. Stare: Richard Chamber·
loin , Toahlro Mlfune. {Pt. IV. of 1
flve ·part
drama ;
2
hra.)

I

1975 FORD MUSTANG V-6 .......................... ~1995
. (2) 1976 HONDA CI~ICS ................... ... ..... ;$AVE

e:oo

riat~~;;~~U;ru;·;on;Ha;;il;·;E;·;M;ain~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~

~

~q=:g~~onod)

(i) (fl).

CATASTROPHE: NO
FE PLACE
.
TRJ.NSIT1DNS
8:30
GOOD NEIGHBORS
(jJ) CAMERA THREE 'Tho Playw·
dahl Dlrocto' (Cio11d Copflonld)
10:00 llJ TBS EVENING NEWS

Weekend At Meio_s
Inn
lil_

~

fRIDAY NIGHT $ PECIAL 5 !IL Jjl_

(I)(J2). 20-20

C1J

AUSTIN CITY LIMITS 'Moo
Brandy and Joe Stampley plua
Marty Robblno' (Cioaed Cap·
!J2ntd)(eo mlna.)
Wl NEWS
10:28~ NEWSUPDAT!
NORMAN VINCENT PULE
10:30
8TANDINGROOMONLY:8URL!8QUI! USA Rod Buttona hoall
ttHaaplcy,atar•atuddedproductlon
that Ia a aalute to lht boggy panfo
comedlana, alapstlck sketchet
and elaborate muelcal dance
numbera of the vaudeville era.
illJ OVER EASY 'Sex ondtlloOfdtr
Peraon' Host: Hugh Downa .
oald Capflonld)
10:118
NEIOUPDATE

.rr,••

MENU
Tomato Juice
Tossed Sai~d
6 oz. White Fish
- -· Choice of Potato
Vegetable
Dessert

WINNIE

11:oo

~•

i

m me

CIJ t1DI (J2) •

~OHN ANKERBERG SHOW

NIOHT GALLERY
DAVI! AlLENATLARGE
DICKCAYITTSHOWGuoot:G.
Gordon Liddy. Part II
11:28 ClJ NEWS UPDAT!
11:30 (1)8 CZl THE TONIGHT SHOW
Gueat: Tim Conway. (80 mine.)

Coffee, Tea, Milk

ClJ ADSS BAGLEY SHOW
C1J MOVIE o(COMI!DY-IIIIAIIA)
••~ 1Mf~!Mm..."1182
C1J (J2) •
ABC NEWS
11

IIIGHTUNI!

•m
cas LAT! MOVIE 'Tho Jof·
fare one: Jefferson va Jefferson'

,HARNEY

AOiriiSSION EVERY TUESDAY $1.50
531..W::KSON PI&lt;E · AI.35 NORTH · Phone

NIGHT

9

til 1
All LEGAL

SUNRISE.
3 PC. GROUP
WITH VOCAL'

. FROM _AlHENS, OHIO

You must be 21 or accomp~nled by parents or-iegalguardian.

THE MEIGS INN
. Pomeroy, 0.

When the Jtfteraone celebrate
their wed~lng annlver11ry the mar·
riage nearly cornea to 1 halt
becauee George lneltta lhet
Loulaollo forhlrn. (Rtpool) 'MoMII·
ian and Wife ~ Te"or Timet Two'
Stare: Rock Hudson, Suaan Saint ·
Jamoo. (Ropoal)
.
(J) ABC CAPT10NI!D NEWS
i1DIIIOVIE-(DRAIIA-8USPENSEI
11
•••
1oeton Strangler" 1188
11:50 Cll CHARU!'SANOELS-POLICE
WOMAN
Charllo'a
Angelt··' CounterfeltAngtlt' Whsn
three beautiful women pull a aeriee
of crimoo poalng aa Cha~lo') An·
volo; Sabrina;
and Krlo find
themtelvee wantld by the police .
Poiloo Woman--·wamlng All
Wlvee' Pepptr and Crowlty go un·
derco11er to tolve 1 aerlea of
murdera Involving pttlente at a
neorbyhoopltai.(R-t;21n., 15

Keny

BEVERAGES SOLD

Phone 992-3629

LIKE FATHER
LIKE SON

IT AIN'T MUCH, MAW,
BUT THIS LITTLE
PATCH OF LAND
15 MINE,ALL MINE

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

448· 4~

I

Prlntanswerhem; THE(

I XXX)( XXj

IJ

l (Answers tomorrow)

I Jumbles : WAKEN

Yesui rday·s

VALET MAINLY SOLACE
Answer : How to ra ise money for a communtty social
teni -"C ANVAS" THE TOWN

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Pure Brobdingnagian play

I

NO, BUT I
REMEMBER !-IER

12:00

12:30
12:18
1:00
1:30

~~~ CHARUE'SA~GI!L8

i]S POOTBALL: INIIIIII! TH1 lfFL
Hoata Len Dawson end Nick Buon·
loon II are back to bring you w-ly
action hlghllghtl, antlyeee end
tlonelrom the gridiron.
TOMORROW
NI!WS
N!WIUPDAT!
KOINONIA
ONLOCATlON'RoblnWIIIiama:
Qlt tho Woll '
ClJ
RDaERT
SCHUlLER
ICAPTlONI!DI

ll

preempt. South was not going
to be shut out and bid his
clubs, whereupon the bidding
continued with East and West
eventually playing six or sev·
en diamonds doubled. They
were down three if pushed to
seven; only down two if
allowed to play at six.
The bidding when Seymon
sat South ancf World Champi·
on Bobby Goldman North is
shown in the box.
It wasn't any strain for Sermon to bid four clubs at h1s
first turn. West raised to four
diamonds and Bobby bid five
diamonds as one of those gen·
era! cue bids.
At this stage of the proceedings East made one of those
silly doubles. It gav.e Seymon
a chance to pass and see what
Bobby was going to do.
Bobby passed the buck back
to his partner by redoubling.
This gave Seymon a chance

NORTH
9-18-80
.AQ1083
.AKQS

.,

tQ

•tou
WEST
.J97SI2

... .

EAST

•s74

• , 2

tK742

tAJIOI8651
.Q6

SOUTH

.....

+K

• J 10 9 3

•• "Brau Bottle" tH4

friends become involved In a claa- ·

'

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JIJST $ UO

HOW THE MA55EU~
~U61!ED H/M.
Now arrange the circled letters ,to ·
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

;I

(J) JOKER'S WILD
DICKCAYETTSHOWGuoot:G.
Gordon Liddy. Part II
$100,000NJ.METHATTUNI!
MACNEILolEI:IRER REPORT
• FACE THE MUSIC
7:68
!tEWSUPDATE
S:OO
.(Z) GAllES PEOPLE PLAY
Tonight'e program will feature a
heart-warmlnglookatahlghachool

1977 DODGE CRESTWOOD 'Wagon .................. :~l-195

•

7:30

0

KJ I

~UNTRYROADS

1978 PINTO WAGON A/C .......................... ~3895

#

ABCNEWS
ZOO II
; 3,2·1 CONTACT
• CZl NBC NEWS
ClJ MUSIC
Cll BOB NEWHART SHDW
C1J CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
eCIJI)D) CBS NEWS
CIJ MAINSTAEAIIING
illJ OYER EASY 'SoxandthoOider
Person' Host: Huoh Downs .
Clooad Captioned)
eJ.BCNEWS
.!tEWS UPDJ.TE
• P.II.IIAGAZINE
COllE TO THE WATER
ALLINTHEFJ.MILY
FJ.CE THE MUSIC
LUCY SHOW
C1J TIC TJ.C DOUGH
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
NEWS
illJ DICK CAYETTSHOWQueet:G.
Gordon Liddy. Port II
FAMILYFEUD
BULLSEYE '
ZOLALEVITT
FOOTBAU: .INSIDE THE NFL
Hoetalen Dawson and Nick Buon·
.lcontlare bac~ to bring you weekly
action highlights, analyaea and
dlotlono from the gridiron.
SANFORD AND SOH
INSEARCHDF

I I I tJ
I LAWRBb
I KI

I

OF SHOES

197,9 AMC CONCORD 2 Dr . ..... ... .................1.3795

West dining room of Veterans
Memorial Hospital with Dr. Wilma
Mansfield as guest speaker; area
director and division representatives will be present and awards
presented to key volunteers.
MEIGS COUNTY Democrat Ceotral Committee, 8 p.m. this evening

.

(!) MOYIE ·(ROIIANCI!) ' ' '
jjDr•amar11 1071
(J) BASI!BALL (CONTINUED)
Atlanta Bravea va San FrancisCo

Sentinel Social Calendar
THURSDAY
GRACE EPISCOPAL . Church
Women luncheon meeting, 12:30
p.m. Thursday at rectory.
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
.Club, I : 15 p.m. Thursda y, horne of
Mrs. Jpdy Humphreys.
MEIGS GIRl..'&gt; Athletic Boosters,

aJ:~:~ilQi(l!)g NEWS

byHenriAmoldandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one tatter to eaCh square, to fof'm
four ordinary words.

EVENING
8:00

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~~

SI!PT. 1S, 1880

t

dates are: November 5, November
12, and November 19.
Mrs. Maxine Goeglein of the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation presented an overview
of the board's work with the mentally retarded. There is a need for
assistance with the kitchen
program. Donations toward this
project are welcomed. Individuals
or groups may make checks payable
to: "Board of Mental Retardation
Special Gifts," and may be sent to
Mrs. Goeglein, 35610 Flatwoods
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Visitors
are welcome to viSit the school.
Carol
Layh,
administrative
assistant, is available to speak to
groups. For further details, call 9926025.
Vernon Nease reported for the
United Methodist Men. He read a
thank you card from the family of
the late Rev. Wilbur HUt. The United
Methodist Men will not meet in September. There was a good response
for the ice cream social, with
proceeds going to the educational
fund for county student pastors. The
next nien's meeting will be at
Bethany U. M. Church on October
27.
.
New addresses are needed to
upgrade the mailing list for the Contact newsletter; according to Rev.
Florence Smith, communications
secretary. Also the names of shutins and non-resident members are
helpful.
Rev. Robert Robinson, camping
coordinator, !lllllounced that the new
truck for Camp Otterbein has been
acquired through the help of Meigs
United Methodist individuals and
churches. He expressed appreciation to all who helped with the
project in any way.
Rev. Richard Thomas reminaed
the group of the Day on the District
October 7 from 4-9 p.m. at First U.
M. Church, Athens.
The next County Council meeting
will he October 13 at the Salem Center United Methodist Church.
Foilowing adjournment, the South
Bethel women served refreshments
in the Sunday School annex. Among
the 38 present were seven 'pastors :
Sydenstricker, Smith, Flynn, Corbitt, McGee, Robinson, and Thomas.

'illlliNl ID1t

Television
Viewing

ic

Ministries meets Monday
The Meigs County Council on
Ministries of the United Methodist
Churches held their September
meeting Monday evening at the
South Bethel United Methodist Church w.;th 38. persons in attendance.
Pastor Duane Sydenstricker opened
the meeting with group singing and
devotions based on Matthew 20:2934.
Mrs. Fay Sauer, council president,
was in charge of the business
session. The secretary's report was
distributed by Mrs. Dorothy Smith.
The treasurer's report was presented by the Rev. Florence Smith.
Parish coordinator Richard
Thomas distributed cooperative
parish evaluation forms, which were
·completed by those present. The information gathered will he presented at the October meeting.
The Rev. Robert McGee reminded
the group of the upcoming CountyWide Revival to be held September
21·27 at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. The Rev. Paul
Hawks, fonnerly of Gallipolis, will
speak September 21-26. The Rev.
Benjamin Edwards, Athens District
Superintendent, wiil speak on Sepo
!ember 27. Local churches and county pastors will provide music and
devotions for the services nighUy.
A County-Wide School on religion .
is planned for October 21-24 at the
Chester United Methodist Church.
Five classes are available: Dr.
Hughey Jones, The Book of
Discipline; Rev. David Toon, The
Sacraments; Dr. William Smith,
Comparative Religion; Rev. Arthur
Lund, Death and Dying; and Jim
Muntaine, Alcohol and Drugs
Among Youth. Classes will be held
from 7-9:30 p.m. each evening.
Registration, $4 for those attending
Meigs County United Methodist
Churches; ($10 for other persons or
United Methodists outside Meigs
County) . For further information,
contact any United Methodist

_7~~~e~~~~ntmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 18, 1\1110

+AKJ98751.

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

w...
4t
Pass
6t

Pass
Pass

,.7.

East
3t

North

st

Db!.

Pass

Redbl.

7t

Pass

Soutb

4+
Pass
s•
Pass
Pass

to use some real imagination.

Opening lead:+ 2
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Soutag
Seymon Deutsch of Laredo,
Tex., played a lot of bridge
some 2&amp; years ago. He started
again recenUy. Here he is in
action in the open pairs at the
recent .Texas Regionals in
Austin.
At every table East opened
·with some sort of diamond

He knew that a five-heart bid
could do no , harm. Bobby
would know that his partner
would have bid it one round
earlier with a decent heart
suit. Bobby raised five hearts
to six. East bid seven diamonds and Seymon made his
second brilhant bid . He
passed to tell Bobby that he
could take the first diamond
trick.
Bobby went on to the cinch
seven for a real top score
since no one else haij found
that heart fit.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE.ASSN .)

~.··~til"
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
38 "The 1 Competent
Strikes Back"
5 Looking
39 Spirit lamp
40 Chemical
or spy 10 Popular
salt
·musical
41 Length
11 Prepare
of fUm
to shave
DOWN
13 Formerly
1 Greetings,
14 On land
mate!
Yesterday's Answer.
15 Guffaw
2 Ordinary
16 Subways 3 Do with gusto 9 Thoughtful 25 - into
for Sleeping" 4 Before
12 Treat
(attack)
17 Peruke
5 Looked
sumptuously 27 Big basket
" 18 Lumberjack
daggers
16 Indian city 29 French
20 Tibetan
6 Powerful
19 Challenge
composer
beam
22 Painful
30 Glistened
beast
21 Aromatic
7 Belgian ·
23 Counter
34 Soviet lake
commune
sign
36 Small violin
plant
22 Disem8 Have class
24 Harmful
37 Chalice veil
bodied
spirit
.23 Russian
lake
25 Baggy
26 Win by a
27 Partner
of fast
28 Thus,
said Caesar
29 Diamond
features
31 Powdered
lava
32 Wooden
core
33Gotcha!
3S Research
37 Hebrew
lyre

.,.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here"s how to work It :
AXYDLBAAXR.
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A · Ia
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apo1trophes, the length and formation of the worda are
hiuls. E1&lt;h day the code letters are different.
CR.YPTOQUOTES

•n

EGVE

VXEWAY

WR

DBAXMBQR

EGQ

GVDDWYQRR

LAB

HQRE

UGWXG

TBQVEQRE
EGQ

TBQVE-

QRE YMSHQBR.- LBVYXWR GMEXGQRAY
Yell&amp;erday'l Cryploq110le: WHAT IS LOVELY NEVER DIES,
BUT PASSES INTO OTHER LOVELINESS.-THOMAS
BAILEY ALDRICH

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 18, 1980

t

Meigs Council on

'

cONSTITIJTION WEEK, Sept. 17-23, Ill being observed by Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews signed a proclamation Wednesday
before Mrs. Gene Yost, Chapter regent, and Miss Eleanor Smith, chairman of the observance, left. Posters have been placed in the schools and
other public buUdinj!s and a contest on the Constitution and the Bill of
Rights is being carried out at !he Chester Elementary School sixth grade.

minister.

Rev. James Corbitt reported that
the Food Ce&gt;op has resumed twice
monthly deliveries. The Social Concerns Committee is planning three
seminars in November: The subjects to be considered are Juvenile
DelinqueQcy, Alcoholism, and Concerns of the Elderly. Places will he
announced for each cluster. The
TERRI PULLINS, winner of the home environment award at the
Ohio State Fair, is pictured here with Dr. George R. Gist, Associate
• Director of Agriculture, Ohio State University, following the awards
breakfast.

Terri Pullins honored
:::at Ohio State Fair
-

Terri Pullins of Meigs County was
one of over 50 4-H members honored
:· at the 4-H Recognition Day Break. fast Aug. 18 in the Rhodes Center at
: :t he Ohio State Fair.
;-. : Terri was named winner of the
·: home environment award given by
_ the S. and H. Foundation. In addition
~ to the honorary breakfast for the
· winners and their parents, this
award included a trip to the National
4-H Congress in Chicago, ill.
Terri has been a member of the
Merry ~ers_4-H Club in the Eagle ·

Ridge-Bashan area for 11 years. She
has taken projects in clothing, foods,
home environment, conservation,
and Hower gardening, and has served ..as president, vice president,
secretary, treasurer, junior leader,
junior fair committee members; 4-H
advisory committee members, and
was the outstandinj! 4-H girl in 1980.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
Pullins, Terri and her family reside
at 48838 Eagle Ridge Road, Long
Bottom.

September reunion reported
The descendants

of the

late
George and Elsie Roush Brown of
Minersville, held a reunion Sept. 7 at
•· the Rising Parkin Lancaster.
A picnic dinner was held at noon
- with Victor Brown giving the table
. _ grace. Games and rides were enjoyed during the afternoon by the
younger set while others visited,
took pictures, reminisced, and some
'biked to the large rock on top of the
hill which overlooks Lancaster.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
- Haymond Brown, Reynoldsburg;
: Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hannon, Laura
- and Steve, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Strawser, Michael, Jr., Julie,
Mathew, and Mark, Reynoldsburg;
'Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reinhart, New
· Marshfield; Allgela and Krista
Meek, Nelsonville; Dennis Reinhart,
Jackson; Mrs. Bobbie Lee, Athens;
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thomas,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Bobbie Lee, Athens;
Mr· ·and Mrs. Edgar Thomas,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Zana Yilhcoubian,
·- Christiana and Georgia, Grove City;
· Mr. and Mrs. Jack CUmmins, Todd,
Michelle and Tassica, Racine; Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Williams and Holly,
Pomeroy.
• Victor Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Danny Brown, Joe and Robert; Mrs.
7mta Withrow, Minersville. Guests
were Miss Peggy Neigler and Mias
Beth Hoffman, Racine, Cindy
Evans, Portland. The oldest at·
- • - sERVICE CHANGE NOTED
Services for Christian Fellowship
Church, 383 N. Second Ave., Middleport (old Jimmie's Pastry Shop)
have been changed from Friday,
Sept. 19, to Thursday, Sept. 18, 7:30
p.m. due to conflict of schedules.
This change Ill for this week only. All
other services remaln the same.

tending was Mrs. Zana Withrow with
the youngest being Krista Meek.

'
E

Glanta

. CAPTAIN EASY

school.
Officers
to be elected.
7:30 p.m.
Thursday
at the Plans.
high
for the school year. Special in-

~~:=:::

7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. Ella
Smith. Georgia Watson to have
devotions.
MIDDLEPORT Child Conservation League, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the home of Mrs. Susie Abbott. Devotions by Mrs. Abbott,
traveling prize by Nancy Morris.
Peggy Houdashelt and Peggy Harris
to be co-hostesses.
' ANNuAL MEETING of Meigs·
County Unit, American Cancer
sOciety, 8
Thursday at East-

8:30

I'LL 1\/PI.ITI!! VOU A FULL
PI.EPOPI.T LATEPI.~ GET
IIIOVING:

I.UCI&lt;V IT'S THE
SIE!ITA HOUR-OF.
WHATE!V!!'Il TH&amp;Y
&lt;:ALL IT HE~e 11.1
TH!! SPANISH
&amp;AHARA!

THI&amp; ISUY'S
THE ONLY R!1AL
085TACLE I'VE;
RUN INTO, SO
FAll.~

HOW'&amp; THAT FOil.

LUCKf A JEePJUST WHeN we
NEED TRI\N!7PORT

FOR A c&gt;HAWA'f I

8:68
7:00

heritage house
N. 2nd AYI,

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

WU..Bf'R~, CW'T 'bJ
~ All'frMIIJ(o f.BOUT
·llit=- C.IVIL. ~ ~

HOO AM l SlJfftlSW 1D i'UJW AeOI.JT

~~THI~0 THA.T ~A~D ~!
I).JAS BOR~ !?

l

1979 VOLKSWAGEN
RABBIT
Local, one owner, .of speed,
Michelin radials, cloth In terior.

'5495

I

Luxury Plus - Deluxe velour
cloth Interior, loaded, road
wheels
ANNIE

'5995

1977 ·PLYMOUTH
- ARROW GT
Llftbaci, A-C. automatic, 1111
wheel, 4 cylinder

'3995

1979 PONTIAC
GRAN PRIX LJ

198.0

~ THE

GOVERNMENT
HAGANALIAS PR06RAH··
THEY'LL RE LOCAlE YOU.. .
PROVIIlE DOCUMENTS FOR
AHE'll IDENTiTY"'

1\\o'!. l.l.

CAMARO Z·28
T-top, A -C, till wheel, AM· FM'
tape, power windows &amp; locks,
aluminum wheels, ~log_ger

l'M GURE i"R.
6ARR \'IOOLil
MAKE SURE
'ltllYRE SAFE,
MAY...

ER .• ACTUALlY, I CAN'T WElL, REALLY!
GUARAHTEE IT ... THE YOO'RE HELPLESS
PROGRAM HAGN'T AGAINST ORGANIZED
EXACTLY BEEN A CRIME- YOU CAN'T
SCREAMING
INoUffE MY SAFETY·"
5UCCEG5, BUr ...

football coach with muftlpleaclaroale, Amerlca'e tougheat bouncer
competition, and a VI !tit to the 'don-

t'O OfFEI'ISE, 'rOU DO!.- AND 50 DOEG
BUT ... ~HO
THE COUHTR'r'! 1'1 E'RE
NEEDS '(OU?! DEDICATED MEN, AND l'iE
COULD &amp;EAT T~E fo'OB, IF

key derby doya' In Colorado . (60
mlno.)
.
ClJ MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
(I) IIDYIE o(COIIEDV-FANTASV)

ONLY THEY UNTIED OUR.
HAHDG!

(I) (J2). IIORK AND II INDY
tiCI)(l§)HQWBUGSBUNNYWON
THE WEST Buga Bunny and hla
ale barroom confrontation , a train
robbery, and aeveral wild chaaea

$AVE

before the WaatcanreaaonabiVbe
conaldared won. ·
Cll U.S. CHRONICLE
illJ
EVERY FOUR YEARS
Corraepondent Howard K. Smith

1979 AMC CONCORD Hatch_b-ack .................. !4595

examinee Praaldantlal power and

J979 MEICURY BOBCAT Wagon .................. ~.4995

the 'personality politics' of televl·
aion. (eo mlna.)
8:30 (]) DR. JACK VAN IMPE
C!liiOVIEo(ADVENTURE)" "G•

AU.EYOOP

tor" 1878
(I)(J2)e ANGE Tholougha oro on

HURRY,OOP!

IMJN'T THIS THING

Anglawh~nthaaHractlvemotherof

GO AN'r' FASTER?'

one of Brad'a patient• atarta mak·
lng appointments aYarytlma her
~Jnll J!!eazoa. (Repeat)
(J) llJI) BPI!CIAL MOYI! Pll!·
SENTATlON 'A. Ploco Of Tho Ao·
llon'1977 Storo: SldnoyPolller,BIII
Cooby.
·
FOR THE RECORD
8:5S
NEWS UPDATE
8 CZl SHOGUN A Portugeoo
rlval navigator ~alia to aeee..inate
Blackthorna, who later finds the
eurvlvore of his crew living In
equator, and Toranaga Ia outraged
whtnBiaokthomoaokohlrntogront
Marlko 1 dhtorca eo that they can
marry. Stare: Richard Chamber·
loin , Toahlro Mlfune. {Pt. IV. of 1
flve ·part
drama ;
2
hra.)

I

1975 FORD MUSTANG V-6 .......................... ~1995
. (2) 1976 HONDA CI~ICS ................... ... ..... ;$AVE

e:oo

riat~~;;~~U;ru;·;on;Ha;;il;·;E;·;M;ain~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~

~

~q=:g~~onod)

(i) (fl).

CATASTROPHE: NO
FE PLACE
.
TRJ.NSIT1DNS
8:30
GOOD NEIGHBORS
(jJ) CAMERA THREE 'Tho Playw·
dahl Dlrocto' (Cio11d Copflonld)
10:00 llJ TBS EVENING NEWS

Weekend At Meio_s
Inn
lil_

~

fRIDAY NIGHT $ PECIAL 5 !IL Jjl_

(I)(J2). 20-20

C1J

AUSTIN CITY LIMITS 'Moo
Brandy and Joe Stampley plua
Marty Robblno' (Cioaed Cap·
!J2ntd)(eo mlna.)
Wl NEWS
10:28~ NEWSUPDAT!
NORMAN VINCENT PULE
10:30
8TANDINGROOMONLY:8URL!8QUI! USA Rod Buttona hoall
ttHaaplcy,atar•atuddedproductlon
that Ia a aalute to lht boggy panfo
comedlana, alapstlck sketchet
and elaborate muelcal dance
numbera of the vaudeville era.
illJ OVER EASY 'Sex ondtlloOfdtr
Peraon' Host: Hugh Downa .
oald Capflonld)
10:118
NEIOUPDATE

.rr,••

MENU
Tomato Juice
Tossed Sai~d
6 oz. White Fish
- -· Choice of Potato
Vegetable
Dessert

WINNIE

11:oo

~•

i

m me

CIJ t1DI (J2) •

~OHN ANKERBERG SHOW

NIOHT GALLERY
DAVI! AlLENATLARGE
DICKCAYITTSHOWGuoot:G.
Gordon Liddy. Part II
11:28 ClJ NEWS UPDAT!
11:30 (1)8 CZl THE TONIGHT SHOW
Gueat: Tim Conway. (80 mine.)

Coffee, Tea, Milk

ClJ ADSS BAGLEY SHOW
C1J MOVIE o(COMI!DY-IIIIAIIA)
••~ 1Mf~!Mm..."1182
C1J (J2) •
ABC NEWS
11

IIIGHTUNI!

•m
cas LAT! MOVIE 'Tho Jof·
fare one: Jefferson va Jefferson'

,HARNEY

AOiriiSSION EVERY TUESDAY $1.50
531..W::KSON PI&lt;E · AI.35 NORTH · Phone

NIGHT

9

til 1
All LEGAL

SUNRISE.
3 PC. GROUP
WITH VOCAL'

. FROM _AlHENS, OHIO

You must be 21 or accomp~nled by parents or-iegalguardian.

THE MEIGS INN
. Pomeroy, 0.

When the Jtfteraone celebrate
their wed~lng annlver11ry the mar·
riage nearly cornea to 1 halt
becauee George lneltta lhet
Loulaollo forhlrn. (Rtpool) 'MoMII·
ian and Wife ~ Te"or Timet Two'
Stare: Rock Hudson, Suaan Saint ·
Jamoo. (Ropoal)
.
(J) ABC CAPT10NI!D NEWS
i1DIIIOVIE-(DRAIIA-8USPENSEI
11
•••
1oeton Strangler" 1188
11:50 Cll CHARU!'SANOELS-POLICE
WOMAN
Charllo'a
Angelt··' CounterfeltAngtlt' Whsn
three beautiful women pull a aeriee
of crimoo poalng aa Cha~lo') An·
volo; Sabrina;
and Krlo find
themtelvee wantld by the police .
Poiloo Woman--·wamlng All
Wlvee' Pepptr and Crowlty go un·
derco11er to tolve 1 aerlea of
murdera Involving pttlente at a
neorbyhoopltai.(R-t;21n., 15

Keny

BEVERAGES SOLD

Phone 992-3629

LIKE FATHER
LIKE SON

IT AIN'T MUCH, MAW,
BUT THIS LITTLE
PATCH OF LAND
15 MINE,ALL MINE

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

448· 4~

I

Prlntanswerhem; THE(

I XXX)( XXj

IJ

l (Answers tomorrow)

I Jumbles : WAKEN

Yesui rday·s

VALET MAINLY SOLACE
Answer : How to ra ise money for a communtty social
teni -"C ANVAS" THE TOWN

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Pure Brobdingnagian play

I

NO, BUT I
REMEMBER !-IER

12:00

12:30
12:18
1:00
1:30

~~~ CHARUE'SA~GI!L8

i]S POOTBALL: INIIIIII! TH1 lfFL
Hoata Len Dawson end Nick Buon·
loon II are back to bring you w-ly
action hlghllghtl, antlyeee end
tlonelrom the gridiron.
TOMORROW
NI!WS
N!WIUPDAT!
KOINONIA
ONLOCATlON'RoblnWIIIiama:
Qlt tho Woll '
ClJ
RDaERT
SCHUlLER
ICAPTlONI!DI

ll

preempt. South was not going
to be shut out and bid his
clubs, whereupon the bidding
continued with East and West
eventually playing six or sev·
en diamonds doubled. They
were down three if pushed to
seven; only down two if
allowed to play at six.
The bidding when Seymon
sat South ancf World Champi·
on Bobby Goldman North is
shown in the box.
It wasn't any strain for Sermon to bid four clubs at h1s
first turn. West raised to four
diamonds and Bobby bid five
diamonds as one of those gen·
era! cue bids.
At this stage of the proceedings East made one of those
silly doubles. It gav.e Seymon
a chance to pass and see what
Bobby was going to do.
Bobby passed the buck back
to his partner by redoubling.
This gave Seymon a chance

NORTH
9-18-80
.AQ1083
.AKQS

.,

tQ

•tou
WEST
.J97SI2

... .

EAST

•s74

• , 2

tK742

tAJIOI8651
.Q6

SOUTH

.....

+K

• J 10 9 3

•• "Brau Bottle" tH4

friends become involved In a claa- ·

'

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JIJST $ UO

HOW THE MA55EU~
~U61!ED H/M.
Now arrange the circled letters ,to ·
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

;I

(J) JOKER'S WILD
DICKCAYETTSHOWGuoot:G.
Gordon Liddy. Part II
$100,000NJ.METHATTUNI!
MACNEILolEI:IRER REPORT
• FACE THE MUSIC
7:68
!tEWSUPDATE
S:OO
.(Z) GAllES PEOPLE PLAY
Tonight'e program will feature a
heart-warmlnglookatahlghachool

1977 DODGE CRESTWOOD 'Wagon .................. :~l-195

•

7:30

0

KJ I

~UNTRYROADS

1978 PINTO WAGON A/C .......................... ~3895

#

ABCNEWS
ZOO II
; 3,2·1 CONTACT
• CZl NBC NEWS
ClJ MUSIC
Cll BOB NEWHART SHDW
C1J CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
eCIJI)D) CBS NEWS
CIJ MAINSTAEAIIING
illJ OYER EASY 'SoxandthoOider
Person' Host: Huoh Downs .
Clooad Captioned)
eJ.BCNEWS
.!tEWS UPDJ.TE
• P.II.IIAGAZINE
COllE TO THE WATER
ALLINTHEFJ.MILY
FJ.CE THE MUSIC
LUCY SHOW
C1J TIC TJ.C DOUGH
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
NEWS
illJ DICK CAYETTSHOWQueet:G.
Gordon Liddy. Port II
FAMILYFEUD
BULLSEYE '
ZOLALEVITT
FOOTBAU: .INSIDE THE NFL
Hoetalen Dawson and Nick Buon·
.lcontlare bac~ to bring you weekly
action highlights, analyaea and
dlotlono from the gridiron.
SANFORD AND SOH
INSEARCHDF

I I I tJ
I LAWRBb
I KI

I

OF SHOES

197,9 AMC CONCORD 2 Dr . ..... ... .................1.3795

West dining room of Veterans
Memorial Hospital with Dr. Wilma
Mansfield as guest speaker; area
director and division representatives will be present and awards
presented to key volunteers.
MEIGS COUNTY Democrat Ceotral Committee, 8 p.m. this evening

.

(!) MOYIE ·(ROIIANCI!) ' ' '
jjDr•amar11 1071
(J) BASI!BALL (CONTINUED)
Atlanta Bravea va San FrancisCo

Sentinel Social Calendar
THURSDAY
GRACE EPISCOPAL . Church
Women luncheon meeting, 12:30
p.m. Thursday at rectory.
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
.Club, I : 15 p.m. Thursda y, horne of
Mrs. Jpdy Humphreys.
MEIGS GIRl..'&gt; Athletic Boosters,

aJ:~:~ilQi(l!)g NEWS

byHenriAmoldandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one tatter to eaCh square, to fof'm
four ordinary words.

EVENING
8:00

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~~

SI!PT. 1S, 1880

t

dates are: November 5, November
12, and November 19.
Mrs. Maxine Goeglein of the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation presented an overview
of the board's work with the mentally retarded. There is a need for
assistance with the kitchen
program. Donations toward this
project are welcomed. Individuals
or groups may make checks payable
to: "Board of Mental Retardation
Special Gifts," and may be sent to
Mrs. Goeglein, 35610 Flatwoods
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Visitors
are welcome to viSit the school.
Carol
Layh,
administrative
assistant, is available to speak to
groups. For further details, call 9926025.
Vernon Nease reported for the
United Methodist Men. He read a
thank you card from the family of
the late Rev. Wilbur HUt. The United
Methodist Men will not meet in September. There was a good response
for the ice cream social, with
proceeds going to the educational
fund for county student pastors. The
next nien's meeting will be at
Bethany U. M. Church on October
27.
.
New addresses are needed to
upgrade the mailing list for the Contact newsletter; according to Rev.
Florence Smith, communications
secretary. Also the names of shutins and non-resident members are
helpful.
Rev. Robert Robinson, camping
coordinator, !lllllounced that the new
truck for Camp Otterbein has been
acquired through the help of Meigs
United Methodist individuals and
churches. He expressed appreciation to all who helped with the
project in any way.
Rev. Richard Thomas reminaed
the group of the Day on the District
October 7 from 4-9 p.m. at First U.
M. Church, Athens.
The next County Council meeting
will he October 13 at the Salem Center United Methodist Church.
Foilowing adjournment, the South
Bethel women served refreshments
in the Sunday School annex. Among
the 38 present were seven 'pastors :
Sydenstricker, Smith, Flynn, Corbitt, McGee, Robinson, and Thomas.

'illlliNl ID1t

Television
Viewing

ic

Ministries meets Monday
The Meigs County Council on
Ministries of the United Methodist
Churches held their September
meeting Monday evening at the
South Bethel United Methodist Church w.;th 38. persons in attendance.
Pastor Duane Sydenstricker opened
the meeting with group singing and
devotions based on Matthew 20:2934.
Mrs. Fay Sauer, council president,
was in charge of the business
session. The secretary's report was
distributed by Mrs. Dorothy Smith.
The treasurer's report was presented by the Rev. Florence Smith.
Parish coordinator Richard
Thomas distributed cooperative
parish evaluation forms, which were
·completed by those present. The information gathered will he presented at the October meeting.
The Rev. Robert McGee reminded
the group of the upcoming CountyWide Revival to be held September
21·27 at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. The Rev. Paul
Hawks, fonnerly of Gallipolis, will
speak September 21-26. The Rev.
Benjamin Edwards, Athens District
Superintendent, wiil speak on Sepo
!ember 27. Local churches and county pastors will provide music and
devotions for the services nighUy.
A County-Wide School on religion .
is planned for October 21-24 at the
Chester United Methodist Church.
Five classes are available: Dr.
Hughey Jones, The Book of
Discipline; Rev. David Toon, The
Sacraments; Dr. William Smith,
Comparative Religion; Rev. Arthur
Lund, Death and Dying; and Jim
Muntaine, Alcohol and Drugs
Among Youth. Classes will be held
from 7-9:30 p.m. each evening.
Registration, $4 for those attending
Meigs County United Methodist
Churches; ($10 for other persons or
United Methodists outside Meigs
County) . For further information,
contact any United Methodist

_7~~~e~~~~ntmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 18, 1\1110

+AKJ98751.

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

w...
4t
Pass
6t

Pass
Pass

,.7.

East
3t

North

st

Db!.

Pass

Redbl.

7t

Pass

Soutb

4+
Pass
s•
Pass
Pass

to use some real imagination.

Opening lead:+ 2
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Soutag
Seymon Deutsch of Laredo,
Tex., played a lot of bridge
some 2&amp; years ago. He started
again recenUy. Here he is in
action in the open pairs at the
recent .Texas Regionals in
Austin.
At every table East opened
·with some sort of diamond

He knew that a five-heart bid
could do no , harm. Bobby
would know that his partner
would have bid it one round
earlier with a decent heart
suit. Bobby raised five hearts
to six. East bid seven diamonds and Seymon made his
second brilhant bid . He
passed to tell Bobby that he
could take the first diamond
trick.
Bobby went on to the cinch
seven for a real top score
since no one else haij found
that heart fit.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE.ASSN .)

~.··~til"
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
38 "The 1 Competent
Strikes Back"
5 Looking
39 Spirit lamp
40 Chemical
or spy 10 Popular
salt
·musical
41 Length
11 Prepare
of fUm
to shave
DOWN
13 Formerly
1 Greetings,
14 On land
mate!
Yesterday's Answer.
15 Guffaw
2 Ordinary
16 Subways 3 Do with gusto 9 Thoughtful 25 - into
for Sleeping" 4 Before
12 Treat
(attack)
17 Peruke
5 Looked
sumptuously 27 Big basket
" 18 Lumberjack
daggers
16 Indian city 29 French
20 Tibetan
6 Powerful
19 Challenge
composer
beam
22 Painful
30 Glistened
beast
21 Aromatic
7 Belgian ·
23 Counter
34 Soviet lake
commune
sign
36 Small violin
plant
22 Disem8 Have class
24 Harmful
37 Chalice veil
bodied
spirit
.23 Russian
lake
25 Baggy
26 Win by a
27 Partner
of fast
28 Thus,
said Caesar
29 Diamond
features
31 Powdered
lava
32 Wooden
core
33Gotcha!
3S Research
37 Hebrew
lyre

.,.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here"s how to work It :
AXYDLBAAXR.
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A · Ia
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apo1trophes, the length and formation of the worda are
hiuls. E1&lt;h day the code letters are different.
CR.YPTOQUOTES

•n

EGVE

VXEWAY

WR

DBAXMBQR

EGQ

GVDDWYQRR

LAB

HQRE

UGWXG

TBQVEQRE
EGQ

TBQVE-

QRE YMSHQBR.- LBVYXWR GMEXGQRAY
Yell&amp;erday'l Cryploq110le: WHAT IS LOVELY NEVER DIES,
BUT PASSES INTO OTHER LOVELINESS.-THOMAS
BAILEY ALDRICH

�9-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 18, 1980

.

~&amp;--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,
0 ., Thursday, Sept. 18,1980
.

TO END MARRIAGES
Two suits for divorce have been
filed in Meigs COWlty Conunon Pleas
Court.
.
Filing for divorce were Dawana
Bush, Rt. I, Langsville, against
Donald Bush, Rt. 1, Langsville; Jim
Pierce, Rt. I, Middleport, against
Dottie Lou Pierce, Minersville.

MEETING POSTPONED
A meeting of Past Matrons of Middleport Chapter 172, Order of
Eastern Star, scheduled for Friday
evening at tile home of Mrs. Earl
Knight has been postponed until
Friday night, Sept. 26, at 7:30p.m. at
tile same location.

'

REVIVAL SLATED

The Rutland Church of God an-·
nounces a revival Friday, Saturday, :
and Sunday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
with tile Rev. James Lesll!! of Portsmouth as speaker. The public is
invited.

Small investment, large
returns, ·Sentinel Want Ads
-

-

"

.

.

WANT ADJNFORMATION

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

PHONE 992-2156
ibe left are Rev. Robert McGee, Rev. Robert RobinsOn,

NEW CAMP TRUCK - Keys and necessary
papers were turned over to Camp Otterbein, Logan,
Ohio representatives Wednesday afternoon for a truck
which is being given to the camp. Camp Otterbein is a
United Methodist Church Camp and serves some 600
churches in Ohio. Some $850 for the truck was contributed by members of Meigs · COunty United
Methodist Churches and friends. The truck Will be used
for maintenance, equipment transportation and camp
ground traveling. Pictured at the presentation from

Rev. David Harris, Rev. Richard Thomas, Rev.
Florence Smith, all MeiCJI COunty United Methodist
ministers; James Ia!!!heR, Otterbein site director;
David Schar, director of Camp Otterbein; Rev. Benjamin Edwards, district superintendent of tile United
Methodist Churches; Tom Rue, owner, and Roger
Davidson, salesman, of the Rue Motor CO. in Middleport, who arranged for the vehicle for the camp.

Safety course offered
Area residents are reminded tha~

Area deaths

tllere a hWJters safety course will be
beld Sept.' 30, Oct. I, and 2, at the
Meigs Cotinty Coonhunter's building
at the Meigs County Fairgrounds
from6p. m. to9p.m.
Those Interested ·1n attending the
sessions (all three are required) are
asked to contact tile sheriff's office
at 992-3889 and give name, date of
birth and address.
Keith Wood of the sheriff's department Is tile certified lnatructor.
Anyone wider 14 years of age must
be accompanied by an adult.
CARVANDAJJZED
Pomeroy Pollee report that the
sides and hood of a car owned by
Carol Hubbard, E. Malri St., were
damaged .apparently with a sharp
object sometime between 10 p.m.
Wednesday and 8:30 a.m. Thursday.
The car was parked at tile residence.
Police also report that warning
notices are being sent to owners of
abandoned and inoperable motor
vehicles· about the community.
Owners wl1l have 72 hours to comply
with lnatiuctions in the letters for
the removal of tile vehicles. Those
falling to ,comply will face further
action, police said.

Wilma Davis and Jennie Wise, and a
brother, John T. Thompson.
Surviving are a sister, -Mrs.
Miss Martha Marjorie Harris, 73,
Mildred Beeson, Pomeroy; four
formerly of Middleport, died Thur- nieces, Mrs. Harry (Jane) Stover,
sday morning in Columbus.
Middleport; Mrs. William (Betty)
Miss Harris was born July 16, 1907 ·
and Mrs. James (Mildred An·
in Middleport, a daughter of the late Brown
ne) Souders, both of Florida, and
Robert and Lyda Harris. She was an
Mrs. Jo Ann Thompson Hershey;
:administrative assistant for the two nephews, Roscoo C. Wise, Mid,ederal government for 34 years. She
dleport, and J ohli Thompson, Tuc·
moved from Alexandria, Va., to Sun
son, Arizona ; a lrother-in-law,
City, Arizona, in 19'12.
Roscoe Wise, Florida, and several
: Surviving are three brothers,
great nieces, great nephews and
:Robert and Gordon Harris, both of
cousins.
.A:olumbus, and Eugene of Pleasant
Thompson was a veteran of
Hill, Calif. and several nieces and theMr.
U. S. Anny, World War ll, and
pephews.
was a member of Feeney-Bennett
Memorial services will be held at Post 128; American Legion. He at'10:30 a.m. Saturday at the Deyotended the Middleport Presbyterian
·Davls Funeral Home in Columbus Church and before his retirement
;with Dr. Eugene Frazer officiating.
worked at the Marietta Plant in
: The family requests in lieu of Point Pleasant and on the Ohio
:nowers that friends may conRiver.
tributions to their favorite charities.
Funeral services will be beld at 2
Griffith E. Thompson p.m. Saturday at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home with
Griffith E. (Griff) Thompson, 79, the Rev. W. H. Perrin officiallng.
Middleport, died Wednesday at Burial will be in Middleport Hill
Ve.terans Memorial Hospital.
.
Cemetery. Friends may call at tile
· He was born Feb. 1, 1901, a son of funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
the late Edward N. and Lizzie p.m. Friday. · Graveside milltary
Michael Thompson. He was also rites Will be held by Feeney-Bennett
preceded in death by two s,isters, Post.

)\1artha M. Harris

'.
''
~:

t•

..'

;

HYMN SING SET

A hymn sing Will be held at 7:30
p.m. Saiurday at the Flatwoods
.
United Methodist Church.

v.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS·

eRENTALS

J- Card of Thenks

u-Housnlor AHt

~-In Mtmortam

3-Armovncements

42-MoiHit Hom II
liM'" • .,.,

4-GIVIIWIY

44-AJIMment for runt

5-HappyAds

U --FilOOml

t-Lost and Pound

..,_s.,.ce lor Rent
47-WaniH to Rent

7-Yard Sale
f-PIJbllc Sale

• 11-•qulpmant lor Rent

&amp;Auction
~WanledloBII1.

s1-ttor.mhokl Good•
52-CB, TV, RICIIO •qulpmonl
SJ-AntiQvtl

•'-"''Pwanted
12-$1tv.JIMI Wanted

.M-Miac. M.,-ch•ndl••

I)-Insurance

5f--lullcllng l\olppUoa

14-lviiMtl Tralnlnt

.M-Pot1. for S.lt

•eFARM SUPPLIES

1s-SchOoll lnstructlan
16RHia,TV

&amp;LIVESTOCK
,,_.
........,.,...,.,

&amp;CIRep~lr

lt-Wantecl To

a.

ti-W•ntld to IY't
n-Trutlls tot latt
· 4!-Livestock

e FINANCIAL
21-

IIUIInHI
OppOrtt.lnlty
22-Man•r to L~n

.._Hay &amp; Gr•ln

•s-sted&amp; Fmlllror

2l--Pr0ftulonal

Strvlcts

eTRANSPORTATION
71-Autostor Salt
n-vans&amp;4W. D.

eREALESTATE
11 -HomH for S•le•
Jl-Molllle.._mea

74-Mottrcyc ..•

7$-

for Silo
ll-F•rma tor l•te

,..utoParts

&amp; ACCHIOf"ltiJ
71-AYtoR .... Ir

M-BUIJIRft, BlllltllltfS
U-LohiA4:rH. . .

,._R••tEst•towa ....
» - Realtors

eSERVICES
11-Homolm,ro'ltmo~fl

want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

·

12-Piumttlftl &amp; E•uvttlftl

t

tor MOIMII't

M-Etectrlcal
IJ-OIMt'll HIYIIftl
M-M.H. le,.lr
11-Upftelltoty

Rates and Other lnformat;on
IS Worcll w UIMMr
... y
2daya
311•ya

CMr90

........
1.10

6daya
Each word

....

c....

YARD SALE women's.
men's, children's clothing,
misc. Items, househpld.
goods. From 9·7 September.
16·19 on CR 10 Dexter
' Road. 742·2668.
'

YARD SALE 17, 18, 19. 3.
miles below Middleport on·
p~~[I~~T~~N
. old Rt. 7 near Meigs·Gallia
James E. Husk, whose line .
Richard
Fink.
last knOwn address was 201 Residence .
South Union Slreel, Galion,
--------Oh·io
and
whose whereabouts are unknown. FLEA MARKET. 1 mile·
will take notice . that on South of Tuppers Plains. 20'
August 6h 1980, Gwen l?c• &amp;21.1frain27&amp;28.
'
Husk, w ose address i!i
General
Del4very,
F 1 &amp; s•+t
Hemlock Grove, Oh 10 PATIO SALE . r ·
a ·
45738, filed h.er Complaint 19·20. 9:30·5. Little boys &amp;'
for Divorce against him in adults clothes, men's goocf
the court at· &lt;..ommon PleiS. pants, size 42w. 301., shirts~
of Mei9s Counr-v. Ohio, 16·17'h coats, antique h'lll'
demandmg a Judgment table, polled plants, 11hree.
D:Ocur~j5 0 f 1gro~~v~:~l~ct ~ tier 24 compartment Mar··
11
lin bird house &amp; many·
uty and her.
extreme
crue Y other Items. 606 Main St.,,
towards
temporary
and permanent custody of Racine, Teafords ,
the minor children born as
issue of this marriag ~. tern·
porary and permanent YARD SALE . At Ben Ebllnchi ld support and for all resldence located next t,o:
Union Ave. bridge. Good.
ther and t"u rther relief as
knick
s Lust and equitable.
• clothing, tools,
The Detendanl is hereby
knacks, some antiques,
noti.fied that he is required
Thurs., Fri .. Sat. 10·6. Also
to answer said Complaint 1970 Cadillac .
within 28 days alter the last
publica tion of this notice.
YARD SALE. Fri. 19, 9-5.;
SOUTHEASTERN
9'12·6058. Flatwoods Rd .
.
OHIO LEGAL
SERVICES
YARD SALE at Starling.
Patrick C. McGee,
Massar above Eastern
Attorney
for
High School. Carpel, chal~
Plaintiff
24 1/:l West Uni on
backs, seats, clothing, etc.
Street Sept. 18, 19. 9·5.
Athens, Ohio45701
Phone (614) 590558
TWO FAMILY vard sale,(8) 14, 21 ' 28, (9) 4, 11 , 18, Barb Talbott's residence In,
61C
Portland, just two miles off.
route 124 close to Curtis
_,. '
Grocery .
LOIS of OOOd.
children's &amp; ' adult's
clothing &amp; household Items,
a)so houseplants &amp; hardy,
mums, locally grown by.
3
·Announcements
Talbol1 Growers. Thur ..
1 PAY highest prices sday. Friday, Saturday,,
poSsible for gold and silver September 18,19,20, from.
coins. rlnos, jewelry, etc. 10·5.
Conlacl Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
CARPORT SALE, Thur·
sday, Friday, September.
Plano Tuning · Lane 18·19 •;, mile off Route 7
Daniels 742·2'1511 Tuning bypass on Leading Creek
clnd Repair Service since Road.
Clothing, dishes,.
1965. If no answer phon1! toys, misc . Rain or shine. 9·
9'12-2082.
5.

.. ........................
..... ·-· . . ... .

P-EJIICIV8tlnt
&amp; Refr~Wor•tl"on

2:30P.M. Diilly

n Noon Se"'rV¥

....
1.25

2.2!

us

the minimum IS words It 4 ctttts pH werd ll'tr day.
Adl runnlrtt other th•n cOnaocullvo da-r·a will be chlreH at ttto I Uy
o~~er

1

rate.
In momol""y, C•rd of Thllnk" and ObUu•ry : 1 centa per wonl , u .oe
minimum. Cash lnHvann .

MASON HOME .REPAIR
heating end air con ditioning furnace cleaning,
plumbing, repair, reslden·
tial electric wiring, sales
service and installation.
9'12·2J6.1.

MHIIt "Omt talll and Y:trd tltll lriiCC.,ttd Of! IV WI ttl Calli Wlttl
order. 25 cent cMr11 for ads urrylnt lox N-.miMr In Ctrt of TIM

Sentlntl.

SHOOTING MATCH at
Corn Hollow In Rutland.
Every sunday starting at
noon.
Proceeds being
donated to the Boy Scout
Troop 249. 12 gauge factory
choke gun only!
GUN SHOOT . Racine Gun
Club. Every Sunday star·
tlng 1 p.m. Factory choked
guns only.
PRE · SEASON
SALE ··
S649.00··Moblle home wood
burning systems, the only
HUD &amp; UL approved wood
burner tor mobile homes.
Unit cornes complete with
wall vent 'stack. See them
at Kingsbury Homes Parts
&amp; accessories at Route 12~,
Minersville, Ohio.
Or
phone 992· 5587.

OFC.9SAVINGS
1aate
TOOTHPASTE

Prices Good

JONES Meat Packing--slaughtering, custom
processing, retail meat.
Washington Co. Rd. 248, .
Lillie Hocking, OH . 6476133.

70Z.
REG.
$2.42
Good

ONLY

Through Mf:mday

$139

News Economy
Pack
7 Disposable

SPECIAL

'129

1 Gallon
SPECIAL

'799

POSH PUFFS

BIC LIGHTERS

125 Tissue&lt;

Package of2

~lights

Pecan

HUMIDIFIER .

RAZORS.

BIC PENS
Package of 5
I

TODDLER

. 12'•
ONLY

'179

CORTAID CREAM
For the
temporary
rel ief of skin Irritation,
itching and rashes.

v.oz.

S1.45Value
SPECIAL ·

ONLY

PAMPERS

•,-lJf'NHD-i
· .:· ·' WE~TCLOX
.. T.

.ALAR.M'CLOCKS

25 %

69e
,

Notebook!
Paper
.
I
10'1&gt; ln. x &amp;ln.
200 Shl!ets

.
e
69
I

·oFF

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
Kennfltl McCull_,n, I .Pill.
'Ctlarln Ill Hit, I .Pft.
RONid H.nlnt. I . Ph .
MMI . lhrt• S.I.I:IDII .m, tof jll, m,
Sund•y I Dill to 12 1J0 lind J to f ,m, th 2tSS
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . llrl.,..tr S.rvlco
E.MIIIt

)
)
}
)

Reg.$1.os

PNLY

'

NOTEBooKS
'

Wanted
For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

6

good
c loth ing,
misc .
Something for everyone,
lots of goodies for .25 cents.
Rain cancels.

B
Public Sale
_ ____,&amp;
=-c.
Ac=u.oc
ct"io
'" 'n- ' - - OSSIE 'S AUCTION House,
20 N. 2nd Street, Mid·
dleporl, Ohio. We sell one
piece or entire households . .
New, used, or antiques, In·
eluding homes, farms, or
liquidation sales. Gel topl
dollar. List with the mall'
who has over 25 years In
the new, used and antique
furniture business.
We
take consignments. For in·
formation and pickup ser,,
vice, call 9'12·6370 or In
West V lrglnia 77.3·5471. Sale
every Friday night at 7
.p.m. Auctioneer Howard
Beasley, apprentice auc·
tloneer, Osby A . Marlin.
(no junk)

·

ONE while ball
Reward. 9'12·62'18.

34.
35.

11 ln.~8'12 ln.
100 'heels

'
Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
Box 729

I.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

THE MEIGS Co .. Health
Department Is now ac·
cepllng applications for a
Public Health Staff Nurse.
Applicant must be a
Registered Nurse. Benefits
five (5) day work week, all
paid Holidays, pleasant
working conditions with a
chance to meet and help
the publlc.sQuallfled, In·
terested persons should
contact the Meigs Co.
Health Department at the
Multi· Purpose Health Cen·
ler, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 9'12·
6426.
PART TIME Bar lender.
Apply In person. No exp.
necessary. Meigs Inn.
SIDING APPLICATORS.
Experienced with tools.
Steady work, good pay .
Also helpers. 992 ·3283
10a.m. ·10 p.m .

Gold, sliver or . foreign
coins or any gold or silver
Items. Antique furniture,
glass or china, will pay top;
dollar, or complete estates.
No Item
too prices
large befor
or too
small.
Check
41
selling. Also do appraising;
Osby IOssleJ Marlin. 992··
6370. ·
•

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

wilh Major Hoople

NEW 3 bedroom home for
sale. Built-In kitchen,
d i ning
room ,
large
recreation room, firePlace,
lots of storage, 2'h baths,
garage, 1 acre lot. 9'12·~.
ED
BARTELS,Loan
Representative, 1100 East
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh.
Mortgage
money
available. All types home
financing,
new,
old,
refinancing, and 2nd mortgages. Phone 9'12· 7000 or
992-5732.

Insurance

IN·
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been can ·
your
celled?
Lost
operator' s license? Phone
9'12·2143.

Homos for S.lo

r

..

ROOM House. Bath &amp;
shower, full baS4!ment,
aluminum siding, storm
windows &amp; door' big porch,
large lot, metal building,
partiallY fenced ln. 9'12·

7453.
.FOR SALE: CALL after 5
p.m.. Modern two story ·
countrv home with double
car ~age x .breez:eway, ,
four
room, living room,
ldtchen, dining room, bath,
alumlnum ·l/lnyl siding,
new shingled roof. Nice
frontage with redwood ten·
ce. southern Local School
Olstrlct, 4 1/o mile on Co.
Rd. 28, from Roclne off 124
on black top road has 1.33 ·
aci'es. Phone 614·949·2830.

Vlny 1
Aluminum Siding
elnsul•llon
e Storm Ooors
• storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee .
Ph •. 992·2772
9. 10. 1 mo.

VINYL SIDING

.SERVICES"

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

CAR~NTIR
-Addonund
remOdeling
-Rooting and gul1er
work
-concrete work
-Piumlllng and
electric• I work
fFree Estlm1ltsl

V.C. YOUNG II

992-6215 or992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

~=========~:===========~========~
ALL STEEL
Vinyl and Aluminum
B&amp;D
rooms, coNe.
1'12 ·baths,
2 car1 r~~~~~~~E~T~~i~~~~E~i Is.
Phone
9'12·$434.
Exc.
HousE.
3 AND
4 RM
turnlshed •~&gt;-

garage, ex c. neighbor, 31
Homes lor Sale
good location In Mi.d- BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom
dleporl, close to schools. ranch brick home In Baum HOME
IN Salisbury .
Ready
to
move
Into.
992Addition.
With
new
garage
~~:~t~~~gvea~7~r
bl ·~~::
6051
5
after p.m.
&amp; genie door. Gas heat, home with 3 bedrooms, 2~
newly Installed central air - baths, large family room
NEW HOME In Khester conditioning, family room with fireplace, fully car·
three bedroom·, two baths, &amp; stone fireplace, ap· peled. Large sundeck &amp;
dining room. living room. pllances builtin, newly In· patio . Within walking
family room with fireplace. stalled electric breaker distance of schools. 9'12·
Central air, gas heal, fully system,
attractively 7132 .
carpeted, 1700 !quare foot decorated basement, 2
of living area, al1ached baths, tully carpeted withgarage. $47,500.00. Jack most attractive drapes. 32
Mobile Homes
Ginther 985-4349.
Call985-3814 or992·2571 .
----~tor,_,s,a~le,__ _
3 or 4 BEDROOM HOUSE. VERY NICE home In Mid·
All electric with wood bur- dleport. New roof, new ·e)(·
ning stove &amp; fireplace. 2 terlor &amp; Interior paint, new
car garage . 21h acres land, carpeting &amp; draperies, full
St. Rl. 7.985·3934.
basement, good location.
-=-==::-:-:::.=
-=:-.:---~ 9'12-5792 or 992·2606.

1990 COLONADE By Fair·
mont . Ux70 with expando,
central air, J bedrooms, Ph
baths. Moving out of state.
742-3030 or 742·2728.
1970 CHAMPION 12x60
trailer for sale. 11 has 3
bedrooms &amp; Is equipped
with washer, dryer, range,
refrigerator. air con·
dllloner &amp; curtains. Price
$4,500. 9'12·26MI.

ATE

1973 EAGLE 12x6S 2
bedroom. 11h baths, exc.
cond. Furnished, 2 a.c.,
10x20 patio and porch, un·
derpinning. 9'12·725.5 .
YOUR CHANCE to buy. A
home you can alford, good
location In Racine. Mobile
home &amp; lot. Exc. buy tor
young couple or retired
couple.
10 x 5!; Elcona completely
furnished, washer, dryer,
underpinned ¥fllh patio lop.
Excellent condition call
992·2721 after S p.m.

MIDDLEPORT - Energy efficient with Insulated
aluminum siding. Verv comfortable three bedroom,
2 bath home, full basement. $.40,000.00.

Ca II Bill Childs, Mgr. 992-2342
Rodney Downing, Broker
Real Estate

General

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OH.~.¥~!~

35

Loll &amp; Acreage

SUITABLE LOT for mobile
home . Easv terms, close to
town. 9'12·5786 or 9'12·252'1.
REAL ESTATE for sale:
corner lot on main high·
way; over 250 foot of Iron·
tage; 95 percent financing
to qualified church group,
·organization, or successful
business management.
9'12-5786 or 9'12·2529.

J. BEDROOM APT. All
electric, maximum 2 per·
sons. 992·2094.

9 NEW LISTINGS- WE HAVE THE HOME FOR
YOU I
NEW LISTING - ALMOST 6 ACRES - of nice
quiet country living . The 3 bedrooms, Jiving room,
dining room, and bath were recently remodeled and
are georgeous. Has a nice fenced yard and an area
fenced for farm animals. Quick sale price.
$28,500.00.
NEW LISTING SOUTHERN DISTRICT ABOUT AN ACRE OF YARD - goes wllh this one
story home that has a large rec. room with
fireplace, glassed In sun porch, utility room, and 3

bedrooms. Also central air, 61!2 acres, a large barn,

storage building. Jusl$39,900.00.
NEW LISTING - Cozv 2 bedroom house, with large
living room, kitchen has nice cabinets with mat·
chlng stove and ref., utility room and bath, all
carpeld. Real nice for $24,900.00.
NEW LISTING ACREAGE EASTERN
DISTRICT - 10 acres with road frontage tor a
building site - $6,000.00 - Also 23 acres with a
building site, has bOttomland, approx. 10 acres
limber, slream, plenty of wildlife. $18,000.00.
NEW LISTING SERVICE STATION RESTAURANT, BIG HOUSE, LITTLE HOUSE The big house has 5 bedrooms, lots of closets enclos·
ed sun porch, house shows e•cellent care. 3 car
garage, the small hOLJSe has 2 bedrooms, good con·
dlton, all on over an acre of land. Will consider sub·
dividing or all3 places can be yours for $58,000.00.
NEW LISTI'NG - SOUTHERN DISTRICT - NO
NOISY TRAFFIC - You will rest easy In lhls 2
bedroom home with full basement that has wood·
burner to supplement forced air heal. Dishwasher
In kitchen, carpel. Also storage building. $29,900.00.
NEW LISTING- NEEDS SOME WORK - House
has 2 bedrooms on 13.76 acres with road frontage for
2-3 building sites . Some fruit trees, some lllable and
pasture land, located near Apple Grove. $11,200.00.
NEW LISTING- 5 ACRES - 5 minutes from new ,
bridge. Very good ~ bedroom, 2 story house, com·
plelely remodeled, all carpeted, many extras like
dishwasher, stove, bar, nlce 1 kitchen and dining
room, extra large living room with heatolater
fireplace. Large pond could easily be buill. Call for
moredelalls. Priced only $45,000.00.
NEW LISTING - HERE IT lSI Gravel Hillin Mid·
dleport. This post card home can be yours. 3
bedroms, 2 full baths, kitchen, dining area, large
living room, screened rear sun porch, private side ;
silting porch, full basement, large lot, plus a garage
apartment !furnished and rented), plus a nice
garage and workshop, manv features Including an
equipped kllchen adn fireplace. ALL FOR
$53,000.00.
fOR .A SONG - This 3 bedroom house has a large
llvihg room and Is In walking distance to town.
Could be yours for not more than a song . Call today I
$8,000.00.
REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr. -992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
992·5692
OFFICE 992-2259

46

Space tor Rent

•New Homes • ex·
tensilie remodeling
•Electrical work
• Roofing work

2 TRAILER LOTS tor rent.
Call 742-3122.

12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush

47

wanted to Rent

house In the country, to
responsibleTO
couple
withnice
one
WANTED
RENT:
c~lld .
Very clean, have
references. Prefer utilities
paid. Call 9'12·5126 after 5
p.m.

...... .....
, ........
....
'" ... .. .. .
51

Housellold GOOdS

STOVES -,
We
ha
fireplace lnS4!rts, free stan·
ding stoves, warm air fur·
nace adapters, mobile
home wood heaters, and
· triple wall chimneys. Outdoor Equipment Sales, Jet.
Rts. 7 &amp; 35. Gallipolis, Ph.
.W.·3670.
AOMIRAL Console TV,
Colonial cabinet, needs piclure tube. $150. 992·5126.

RIGGSCREST Manor $275.
month .
Call
Cleland
Realty. 9'12·2259.
RIGGSCREST Manor $275.
month.
Call
Cleland
Really. 9'12·2259.
HOUSE FOR rent, four
rooms with bath, fully car·
peted, nice &amp;. clean, ready
10 move Into. S17S.OO a mon·
th, deposit requited. Phone
9'12-3090. ·

Utility Buldiles
Sizes from 4X61o 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Call tor Free Siding
Estimate, '49-2101 or
9~9-2160 .
No Sunday
calls.
9·14·1 mo.

Pet Potholders

All types of roof work,
now or repair gutters
and -spouts, "'"'r
cleaning and painting. '
All work guarontHCI.
Free 'Estlmar..
Reasonable Prices
Call Htiward
949-2162
949-2160
1
1·22·«c

mo.

Rl. 3, Box 54
Reclne,Oh.
Ph. 614·163-2591
6·15·1fc

FINANCIAL
REAL EsTATE LOANS
Federal Housing
Veterans
Administration
107 sycamore
Pomeroy'
Office 992-7544
Home 992·6191

~~~~~~~~~~+~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~~,~
~:;:~~=====::;.
-· · ..........
.... ..
......
H

51

h ld Good
5
ouse 0

THREE rooms of fur·
nlture, poster bedroom
suite, bookcase. bedroom
suite, etc., can be seen at
106 Union Avenue ,
Pomeroy.
USED APPLIANCES
1 Like New Se1rs
Coldspot Side Dy
Side Combo ..... $40G
1 Good Used Frigidaire Refrigerator ........,. 5150
1 Good Used Gibson
Coppertone Com·
blnotlon Refrigerator ......... 5225
POMEROY

~;;;;;;;ii LAf!~~ARK
E. Main 51.,

53

Pomeroy

Antlgues

ATTENTION : . (IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
tor antiques and collec·
tlbles or ·entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 5.57·3.411.
54

Misc. Mercllanlu

HEATING 01 L. Buy now at
Summer Prices. Excelsior
.co. 614-992-2205.

Phone
614 l -992-3325

Houses for Rent

Ph. 992·7583
9·14·1

1----------..., 9.,._

MATERNITY
lingerie
reduced 25% Maternity
jeans SIS.OO, Fall mater·
nlty tops &amp; lumpers. sizes
6·18. The Walermlllon Patch, 5th St., New Haven,
W.Va.

__
... . .
-.............
·~·.'

61

F1rm Equipment

1 row cornplcker No. 7.
New Idea. Asking SJSO. or
trade for beef of equal
value. 949·212'1.

.

1978 JD 450C Dozer, 6 way
blade, winch, canopy limb
risers, 1700 hrs. exc. cond.
$28,000. Aller 5 p.m. 752.2372.
i 62
Wlntedto Buy

TRY USl
Complete Dry Cleaning
and Laundry
ecarpet
• Draperies
· • Furniture
·CHIP WOOD. P9les max.
c"We're
diameter .10" on largest ..
Service &amp; Ou1olilv"
end. S12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
· to Ohio Pallet .Co., Rl. 2, 72
Truckstor Slit
Pomeroy 9'12·2689.
1979 ONE. TON Chevy flatbed truck In good condition
OLD COINS, pocket wat- with low mileage. Phone
ches, class rings, wedding 446·0762 Gallipolis.
banos, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest 1976 CHEVY Suburban,
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592· three seats, good gas
mileage, priced low. Philip
6462 .
Werry
985-4255.
63
Livestock
5 YARD NON Registered
Appaloosa mare. 15 hands.
nice blanket over hips,
Used ln~·H. 992·3126 .
TEN YEAR old registered
appaloosa mare, gentle,
broke, ' good disposition.
$450.00. Also, registered 18
month old appaloosa colt,
'lo quarter, good blood
lines. good conformation,
call alter 4 p.m. 593·7390.
3
REGISTERED
Corrledale rams. $125.
· each. 7-12·2753.

. ... ...
..... . . . .... ........
'"

73

vans&amp;4W.D.

1978
DODGE
RAMCHARGER. A.C., am·fm
casseHe, carpeted, 1200
tires. Reese hitch. $4,200.
9'12-6288.
1978 Scout, 3C),j automatic,
prlmered, lour wheel
drive, 25,000 actual miles,.
S3,700.00. Call m-n1o ask·
for Roger .
·
74
1973

Motorcycl"
KAWASAKI

KZ«&lt;I.

SJSO. Call lifter~. 593·7390.

1977 G.S. 550 SUZUKI In
good condition. $900.00.

71

Autos for Sale

.

Phone 9'12· 56ofll.

1972

Maverick 6 cyl.
1976 KAWASKI KD 17S In
.8 FT. DOUBLE duly meat
•utomatlc,
new tires, new
case, stainless ste,l ex- ·
good condition. 949·~
terlor, $100. 8 ft. showcase, battery. $300. 247·3594 or . anytime.
glass front, top, and sliding 949·2773.
doors, $40. 8 fl. counter,
7$
Boatsand
197~ OLDS. Cutlass 442 .
shelves on front and back,
Motors for Sole
$500. or best offer. 247 ·359~ .
$20. Call nl-9151 .
or 949·2773.
1979 BAJA Trl ·16flberglass
boat. curtains. top, 115 h.p.
GREEN BEANS . Pick
outboard motor. Tenn.
your own . George Hill,
1978 AMC GREMLIN . ~
trailer. $5,900.992-6288.
Riverside Farm. Letart cyl .. 4 speed, blue, good gas
mileage. 985·4398.
Falls.

Reach for rour fa10rile pet
whe11 there's a hoi pot at hand.
lnesislible bazaar sellers are
in.,pen~ve Ia whip up! Use colorful scraps-prinls, checks,
plaids-for bird, lurtle, pup and
puss polholders. Pattern 7032:
lransfer of pattern pieces.
$1.75 lor each pattern . Add 501
each pattern for lirst-class air·
mail and handlin1. Sewtl ID:

Alice ....
Nwdltcnlt o.,t.

34?

·The Daily 'Seiitiiiei

·a. 1&amp;3, Old Cltlhu $11., New

YaR, IY 10113. Prilll IIMt,
Addrt11, Zip, Plltlm llo111Mr.
Catch on to the croft boom! Send
lor our NEW 1981 NHOLECRAFT
CATALOG. Over 172 desi&amp;n~ 3 ·
free patterns in~de. $1.00

All tufT BOOKS. .$1.75 lld1
133-fllllllll ..... Qllltlq
132-QIIIt OriaiiiiS

131-Mfl I llicl QIIIIJ

41

CONSTRUtnON

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route JJ, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
9'12-7479.

214 E . Second Street

HeadqtJilrters

Phone949-2414
·· - Tio··l mo. pd. ·

Slz"
.. From 30X30"
SMALL

ln·~-~~~~~~~~~~t.~~~;~~~~~~~~~=--=·-:::·==~
ROUSH
PARK

eluded, I bedroom
from
Middleport.
All utilities
$170. Special rates for
Senior Citizens. Equal Opportunity Housing. VIllage
Manor Apts. Call 992·7787
for. appointment.

Housing

Ho11sing

TV, CB &amp; HAM

INCREOIBLEI Fully car·
peted apts. In downtown

Real Estate- General

HUNTING CABIN, Has 2 bedrooms, elec .
baseboard heat, and 79
acres oi land In good
hunting country and
panoramic view .
'ACREAGE
Nice
piece of land that would
make a retrlcled sub·
division. Water and
electricity available.
31 .5 acres. A firm
$53,000.
NEW LISTING- You'll
have the best years of
your life In this
renovated house. Room
tor pond, lots of woods.
Near Chesler. For only
S37,500.
NEW LISTING - Nice
.home of 3 bedrooms on
one floor. 3 bedrooms,
step·saver kitchen for
mom . Garage and 31ots.
Want$45,000.
· . NEW LISTING
Building or trailer lot on
hard road near Mid·
dleport. Leading Creek
water and electricity
avallable ... Only $6,500.
INCOME - Over $6,000
a year. Will sell tor only
$35,000.
. BRICK
New
carpeting, new kitchen
and bath fixtures. 4
bedrooms, 2 porches,
basement and well
worth $38,500.
NO TIME LIKE NOW
TO
LIST
WITH
TEAFORD,
FOUR
FULL TIME SALES·
PEOPLE.
CALL
992- 3325
OR
2ND
992-3176.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

INSTAlATIONS .

AVAILABLE OCT. 1. 2
bedroom furnished apt. In
Racine. $150. month plus
utilities. No pels, one child.
949·287S.

Farm Buildings

Siding

TOWERS &amp;
ANTENNAS

130-S..... F. . . .$111131-H
12t-Cllicll 'rt Ea1r T-"n
121-tlllllllpt ,.• • • QIIIIJ
127-At;.s 'a' 111111111
12S-1'11riflr CAftt Flanrs
IH-f'llll 011111
124-Ealr Clfls 'o' o.-11
lU.Stildl 'o' Plldl 011111
122-St.H 'o' hfl Ollis
121-PIIIaw Sl1ew-OIIs
II U., Alt tl FloiNI Cnld1tl
115-llftr flltr Qlilb
:115-EIIr Alt t1 llpplt Crodtet
113-CIItiplltl GiffW

110.11 lilly=
I
a..s. + K•lt llllictillll•lndl
IM-I•IIrll

112·11-• Qlllts
IGI-Qolt lnl Cotlllclioa I

POTATOES. Red Pontiac
&amp; Kennebec . US West Bed··
ford Township Rd. Cecil
Toban.

1977 PONTIAC SUNBIRD.
Sun roof, auto .• good gas
mileage, exc. cond. 985·
3596.

FEDERAL
Electronic
siren with
100 w·a lt
speaker. $225. firm. 7~2·
2236.

1973
OLDSMOBILE
Toronado. Good cond. 985·
4225.

54

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
lndoor·ouldoor facilities.
Also AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614·446-7795 .
HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
and ponies and riding
lessons.
Everything
Imaginable In horse equip·
mont. Blankets, belts,
boots, etc. English and
Western. Ruth Reeves
(614) 698-3290 .
GET A Nice soil lovable
kitten from \'our Humane
Society . Shots &amp; wormed.
Donation required . 992·
6260. Hours 12-7 dally,
closed Tues . Tabby's,
tigers, &amp; a pure black; all

males.

57

1968 NOVA Super Sport.
Needs motor, make good
drag prospect. $400. 593·
7390 alter 4 p.m.
1974 DODGE Challenger,
runs good, good tires,
needs front tender. First
S400. 1akeslt. 9'12·7675.
1972
BELAIRE.
1967
Toyota. Coon hound pup·
pies. 992·7263 before3 p.m.
1978 MUSTANG Ghla, am·
tm radio, air conditioning,
four speed, 15,000 miles, excellent condition. SJ,OOO.OO.
992·7689.

- - - - - - -1

1972 PLY MOUTH Satellite·
Sebring. P.S., air •. QOOd'
cond. $675. 247·2192 .
72

Musical
1nstrumenl1

Trucks for Sale

1973 CHEVY PICKUP. V·8
engine. $800. 773·5971.

WANTED : Responslbl~
party to lake over low mon· 1972 Chevy pick up, flat
thly payments on spinet bed, 350 VB In excellent
mechanical
condition .
plano. Can be seen locally.
Write credit manager : s55o.oo. Call 9'12-7770 ask
P.O. Box 537 Shelbyville, . for Roger.
Ind. 46176.
1967 CHEVY Pickup.
USED cla~lnetln good con· Rebuilt engine. Exc, cond.,
dillon. SJs.oo. Phone 992· everything works. $800.
5786.
9'12·2080:
-~----

\

"YOUNGS

plelely furnished.
44
Apartment
for Rent

H

WILL DO babysitting In
your home live days a
week; any hours. Contact
949·2516 after 10 a.m .

INSUlATION
· ·
.
&amp;

TWO BEDROOM mobile
home with utilities paid.
Adults
only .
Deposit
required . 992-3647. Com-

RACINE, OH. 6 rooms.
hardwood floors, storm
windows, needs updating;
hobby shed, work shed,
garden. 1-614·235·6569 or
write 2974 Castlewood Rd .,
Columbus, Oh . .Q209.

,

QOI NG OUT of town a day
Qr two for an all night par·
W? Will babysit In mv
home, ages 2·8, references,
I)O hourly sitting. 9'12-5264 .

J&amp;L BUMN

I BEDROOM, Furnished.
utllllles paid, deposit
required. 9'12·7~79.

t~!~~~w,

WILL do odds &amp; ends,
paneling, floor tile, ceiling
tile. Call Fred Miller at992·
6338.

ll

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Headquarters

WILL care for one or two
elderly women In my
home. Experience. Phone
843·469.4.

Business Services

HOUSE NEAR Racine, 5
rooms &amp; bath. 9'12-5858 .

TWO bedroom mobile
home in Racine. Deposit
required. Phone367-7811 .

Situations Wanted

13

Houses for Rent

MOBILE HOME for rent,
kitchen furnished, adults
preferred. No pets. Deposit
requ·lred1 992·2749.

Medical L~b TeChnician
full or part ume positions aval!able tor MT,
MLT, RCLA, Salary
commensurate with experience. Please contact the Lab Supervisor
at Veterans Memorlil
Hospital,
Mulberry
Hgll .• Pomeroy, Ohio at
1614) 9?2-2104 Ext. 55 .
Equal Opportunity
Employer

n

41

42

992-2259

.PIANO . LESSONS Begin·
ner 5 , advanced, · adults.
send
name,
address,
telephone number to vera ,
Jane Holliday, Box 224, 1
Rutland, OhiO 4577S.
;

spike,

Homes for Sale

TRUCK DRIVER needed
Immediately, must be 21
and have experience. Ap·
ply In person at Pomeroy
Landmark on East Main
Street in Pomeroy.

Thurs., Fri., Sat. Lots Of

1·;-=======:..L.:::::::::::::::::::j''·
I
I

THE POSITION of teacher
for the multl ·handlcapped
Is now aballable at the
Meigs Co. Board of Mental
Retardation. This person
should have MSPR Cer·
llflcallon and be available
for
Immediate
em·
ploymenl. Please send
resume to Meigs Co. Board
of Mental Retardation, 36
East Main St., Pomeroy,
Oh. oi5769 . Resumes will be
accepted until sept. 21,
1980.

YARD SALE. 18, 19, 20 . In·
side city limits of Rutland
above the Church of God.

Lost and Found

-===;::::;::;:;;::===

33.

OFFICE MANAGER. Must
have the following skills.
Typing,
filing,
bookkeeping . Ability to
meet people &amp; pleasant
telephone manner. Send
resume of background In·
formation to Box 242,
Pomeroy Oh. 45769.

15 . Schools I nstructlon

22--------1
LOST 1 while baseball
23
1 shoe. Brand name, Brooks.
1 Reward . 9'12·62'18 or after 5
24·
·
I . p.m. 992·3231 .
25. - - - - - - - - I
26.
7Yard Sale
27.:
= = = = = = = 1 ANOTHER big sale at
1
28 .
1 Bo5o's Great Bend, Sep·
29·- - - - - - - - 1 tember 19,20,21 . Don't miss
30
thlsone. l!argalnsgalore.
31 .
I
32.
I

.

PART-TIME RN for 7·3:30
a.m. shift. Call Mr. Zldlan,
Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
ler. 9'12·6606.
·

CARPORT SALE. Bob
Black residence. Sept. 19,
9·4. 2 miles out New Lima
Rd . Rutland . Boys clothes,
6·12.

These cash rates
Include discount

I
I
I
11. _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
I
18.
I
. 19.
I
20.
I
21 .
1

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a sen·
llnel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 9'12·
2156 or 992-2157 .

LARGE YARD Sale at 527
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport.
All day Fri. 19 &amp; Sal. 20. All ·
kinds of bargains :
Everything will be priced:
very cheap.

- -- - --

&amp;OZ. ONLY
REG. $2.80

I

ONLY

SHOOTING
MATCH .
American Legion, Rutland,
Oh . 12 :00 noon.Sundays.

Russell Stover

REXALLCOOLSPRAY

Yard Sale

~

eMERCHolNDISE

e EMPLOYMENT .
SERVICES

7

James E. Husk,
Defendant.
Case No. 17577

or Write Daily sentinel Classifi9&lt;1 Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero.,., 0., 45769

WANTED
TO BUY :
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
SoLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. EO
B'U RKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO 992·3476.

-.

-

c~N'."o:!!ti!C
ce~. ·-· -.!.P~u'!'b!'.!li~

31

Wanted to Buy

&amp;ep
11

It'!!'

Home
I mprovomenll

s &amp; G carpet· Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned.
Free
estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scolchguard. 9926309or 7~2· 2211 .

13

Excavating

J X F BACKHOE SER·
VICE llscensed and bon·
ded, septic tank In·
stallallon, water and gas
lines. Excavating work and
transit layout. 992·7201.
EXCAVATING Wanted.
Dozer work or limber 10
CUI. 985·3567 or992·3208.
M

Electrical
&amp; Retrlprallon

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
makes1 992·2284, The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
...ulhorlzed Singer Sales
and Service. we sharpen
Scissors.
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all smell
appllancos. Lawn mower.
Next to State Hlghwey
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
APPLIAFCE service, ell

makes washers, drYers,

ranges,
dish
washers,dlsposals, water
tanks. Call Ken Young 915·
3561 before 9a.x. or alter 6
p.m.

'

!

'

�9-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 18, 1980

.

~&amp;--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,
0 ., Thursday, Sept. 18,1980
.

TO END MARRIAGES
Two suits for divorce have been
filed in Meigs COWlty Conunon Pleas
Court.
.
Filing for divorce were Dawana
Bush, Rt. I, Langsville, against
Donald Bush, Rt. 1, Langsville; Jim
Pierce, Rt. I, Middleport, against
Dottie Lou Pierce, Minersville.

MEETING POSTPONED
A meeting of Past Matrons of Middleport Chapter 172, Order of
Eastern Star, scheduled for Friday
evening at tile home of Mrs. Earl
Knight has been postponed until
Friday night, Sept. 26, at 7:30p.m. at
tile same location.

'

REVIVAL SLATED

The Rutland Church of God an-·
nounces a revival Friday, Saturday, :
and Sunday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
with tile Rev. James Lesll!! of Portsmouth as speaker. The public is
invited.

Small investment, large
returns, ·Sentinel Want Ads
-

-

"

.

.

WANT ADJNFORMATION

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

PHONE 992-2156
ibe left are Rev. Robert McGee, Rev. Robert RobinsOn,

NEW CAMP TRUCK - Keys and necessary
papers were turned over to Camp Otterbein, Logan,
Ohio representatives Wednesday afternoon for a truck
which is being given to the camp. Camp Otterbein is a
United Methodist Church Camp and serves some 600
churches in Ohio. Some $850 for the truck was contributed by members of Meigs · COunty United
Methodist Churches and friends. The truck Will be used
for maintenance, equipment transportation and camp
ground traveling. Pictured at the presentation from

Rev. David Harris, Rev. Richard Thomas, Rev.
Florence Smith, all MeiCJI COunty United Methodist
ministers; James Ia!!!heR, Otterbein site director;
David Schar, director of Camp Otterbein; Rev. Benjamin Edwards, district superintendent of tile United
Methodist Churches; Tom Rue, owner, and Roger
Davidson, salesman, of the Rue Motor CO. in Middleport, who arranged for the vehicle for the camp.

Safety course offered
Area residents are reminded tha~

Area deaths

tllere a hWJters safety course will be
beld Sept.' 30, Oct. I, and 2, at the
Meigs Cotinty Coonhunter's building
at the Meigs County Fairgrounds
from6p. m. to9p.m.
Those Interested ·1n attending the
sessions (all three are required) are
asked to contact tile sheriff's office
at 992-3889 and give name, date of
birth and address.
Keith Wood of the sheriff's department Is tile certified lnatructor.
Anyone wider 14 years of age must
be accompanied by an adult.
CARVANDAJJZED
Pomeroy Pollee report that the
sides and hood of a car owned by
Carol Hubbard, E. Malri St., were
damaged .apparently with a sharp
object sometime between 10 p.m.
Wednesday and 8:30 a.m. Thursday.
The car was parked at tile residence.
Police also report that warning
notices are being sent to owners of
abandoned and inoperable motor
vehicles· about the community.
Owners wl1l have 72 hours to comply
with lnatiuctions in the letters for
the removal of tile vehicles. Those
falling to ,comply will face further
action, police said.

Wilma Davis and Jennie Wise, and a
brother, John T. Thompson.
Surviving are a sister, -Mrs.
Miss Martha Marjorie Harris, 73,
Mildred Beeson, Pomeroy; four
formerly of Middleport, died Thur- nieces, Mrs. Harry (Jane) Stover,
sday morning in Columbus.
Middleport; Mrs. William (Betty)
Miss Harris was born July 16, 1907 ·
and Mrs. James (Mildred An·
in Middleport, a daughter of the late Brown
ne) Souders, both of Florida, and
Robert and Lyda Harris. She was an
Mrs. Jo Ann Thompson Hershey;
:administrative assistant for the two nephews, Roscoo C. Wise, Mid,ederal government for 34 years. She
dleport, and J ohli Thompson, Tuc·
moved from Alexandria, Va., to Sun
son, Arizona ; a lrother-in-law,
City, Arizona, in 19'12.
Roscoe Wise, Florida, and several
: Surviving are three brothers,
great nieces, great nephews and
:Robert and Gordon Harris, both of
cousins.
.A:olumbus, and Eugene of Pleasant
Thompson was a veteran of
Hill, Calif. and several nieces and theMr.
U. S. Anny, World War ll, and
pephews.
was a member of Feeney-Bennett
Memorial services will be held at Post 128; American Legion. He at'10:30 a.m. Saturday at the Deyotended the Middleport Presbyterian
·Davls Funeral Home in Columbus Church and before his retirement
;with Dr. Eugene Frazer officiating.
worked at the Marietta Plant in
: The family requests in lieu of Point Pleasant and on the Ohio
:nowers that friends may conRiver.
tributions to their favorite charities.
Funeral services will be beld at 2
Griffith E. Thompson p.m. Saturday at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home with
Griffith E. (Griff) Thompson, 79, the Rev. W. H. Perrin officiallng.
Middleport, died Wednesday at Burial will be in Middleport Hill
Ve.terans Memorial Hospital.
.
Cemetery. Friends may call at tile
· He was born Feb. 1, 1901, a son of funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
the late Edward N. and Lizzie p.m. Friday. · Graveside milltary
Michael Thompson. He was also rites Will be held by Feeney-Bennett
preceded in death by two s,isters, Post.

)\1artha M. Harris

'.
''
~:

t•

..'

;

HYMN SING SET

A hymn sing Will be held at 7:30
p.m. Saiurday at the Flatwoods
.
United Methodist Church.

v.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS·

eRENTALS

J- Card of Thenks

u-Housnlor AHt

~-In Mtmortam

3-Armovncements

42-MoiHit Hom II
liM'" • .,.,

4-GIVIIWIY

44-AJIMment for runt

5-HappyAds

U --FilOOml

t-Lost and Pound

..,_s.,.ce lor Rent
47-WaniH to Rent

7-Yard Sale
f-PIJbllc Sale

• 11-•qulpmant lor Rent

&amp;Auction
~WanledloBII1.

s1-ttor.mhokl Good•
52-CB, TV, RICIIO •qulpmonl
SJ-AntiQvtl

•'-"''Pwanted
12-$1tv.JIMI Wanted

.M-Miac. M.,-ch•ndl••

I)-Insurance

5f--lullcllng l\olppUoa

14-lviiMtl Tralnlnt

.M-Pot1. for S.lt

•eFARM SUPPLIES

1s-SchOoll lnstructlan
16RHia,TV

&amp;LIVESTOCK
,,_.
........,.,...,.,

&amp;CIRep~lr

lt-Wantecl To

a.

ti-W•ntld to IY't
n-Trutlls tot latt
· 4!-Livestock

e FINANCIAL
21-

IIUIInHI
OppOrtt.lnlty
22-Man•r to L~n

.._Hay &amp; Gr•ln

•s-sted&amp; Fmlllror

2l--Pr0ftulonal

Strvlcts

eTRANSPORTATION
71-Autostor Salt
n-vans&amp;4W. D.

eREALESTATE
11 -HomH for S•le•
Jl-Molllle.._mea

74-Mottrcyc ..•

7$-

for Silo
ll-F•rma tor l•te

,..utoParts

&amp; ACCHIOf"ltiJ
71-AYtoR .... Ir

M-BUIJIRft, BlllltllltfS
U-LohiA4:rH. . .

,._R••tEst•towa ....
» - Realtors

eSERVICES
11-Homolm,ro'ltmo~fl

want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

·

12-Piumttlftl &amp; E•uvttlftl

t

tor MOIMII't

M-Etectrlcal
IJ-OIMt'll HIYIIftl
M-M.H. le,.lr
11-Upftelltoty

Rates and Other lnformat;on
IS Worcll w UIMMr
... y
2daya
311•ya

CMr90

........
1.10

6daya
Each word

....

c....

YARD SALE women's.
men's, children's clothing,
misc. Items, househpld.
goods. From 9·7 September.
16·19 on CR 10 Dexter
' Road. 742·2668.
'

YARD SALE 17, 18, 19. 3.
miles below Middleport on·
p~~[I~~T~~N
. old Rt. 7 near Meigs·Gallia
James E. Husk, whose line .
Richard
Fink.
last knOwn address was 201 Residence .
South Union Slreel, Galion,
--------Oh·io
and
whose whereabouts are unknown. FLEA MARKET. 1 mile·
will take notice . that on South of Tuppers Plains. 20'
August 6h 1980, Gwen l?c• &amp;21.1frain27&amp;28.
'
Husk, w ose address i!i
General
Del4very,
F 1 &amp; s•+t
Hemlock Grove, Oh 10 PATIO SALE . r ·
a ·
45738, filed h.er Complaint 19·20. 9:30·5. Little boys &amp;'
for Divorce against him in adults clothes, men's goocf
the court at· &lt;..ommon PleiS. pants, size 42w. 301., shirts~
of Mei9s Counr-v. Ohio, 16·17'h coats, antique h'lll'
demandmg a Judgment table, polled plants, 11hree.
D:Ocur~j5 0 f 1gro~~v~:~l~ct ~ tier 24 compartment Mar··
11
lin bird house &amp; many·
uty and her.
extreme
crue Y other Items. 606 Main St.,,
towards
temporary
and permanent custody of Racine, Teafords ,
the minor children born as
issue of this marriag ~. tern·
porary and permanent YARD SALE . At Ben Ebllnchi ld support and for all resldence located next t,o:
Union Ave. bridge. Good.
ther and t"u rther relief as
knick
s Lust and equitable.
• clothing, tools,
The Detendanl is hereby
knacks, some antiques,
noti.fied that he is required
Thurs., Fri .. Sat. 10·6. Also
to answer said Complaint 1970 Cadillac .
within 28 days alter the last
publica tion of this notice.
YARD SALE. Fri. 19, 9-5.;
SOUTHEASTERN
9'12·6058. Flatwoods Rd .
.
OHIO LEGAL
SERVICES
YARD SALE at Starling.
Patrick C. McGee,
Massar above Eastern
Attorney
for
High School. Carpel, chal~
Plaintiff
24 1/:l West Uni on
backs, seats, clothing, etc.
Street Sept. 18, 19. 9·5.
Athens, Ohio45701
Phone (614) 590558
TWO FAMILY vard sale,(8) 14, 21 ' 28, (9) 4, 11 , 18, Barb Talbott's residence In,
61C
Portland, just two miles off.
route 124 close to Curtis
_,. '
Grocery .
LOIS of OOOd.
children's &amp; ' adult's
clothing &amp; household Items,
a)so houseplants &amp; hardy,
mums, locally grown by.
3
·Announcements
Talbol1 Growers. Thur ..
1 PAY highest prices sday. Friday, Saturday,,
poSsible for gold and silver September 18,19,20, from.
coins. rlnos, jewelry, etc. 10·5.
Conlacl Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
CARPORT SALE, Thur·
sday, Friday, September.
Plano Tuning · Lane 18·19 •;, mile off Route 7
Daniels 742·2'1511 Tuning bypass on Leading Creek
clnd Repair Service since Road.
Clothing, dishes,.
1965. If no answer phon1! toys, misc . Rain or shine. 9·
9'12-2082.
5.

.. ........................
..... ·-· . . ... .

P-EJIICIV8tlnt
&amp; Refr~Wor•tl"on

2:30P.M. Diilly

n Noon Se"'rV¥

....
1.25

2.2!

us

the minimum IS words It 4 ctttts pH werd ll'tr day.
Adl runnlrtt other th•n cOnaocullvo da-r·a will be chlreH at ttto I Uy
o~~er

1

rate.
In momol""y, C•rd of Thllnk" and ObUu•ry : 1 centa per wonl , u .oe
minimum. Cash lnHvann .

MASON HOME .REPAIR
heating end air con ditioning furnace cleaning,
plumbing, repair, reslden·
tial electric wiring, sales
service and installation.
9'12·2J6.1.

MHIIt "Omt talll and Y:trd tltll lriiCC.,ttd Of! IV WI ttl Calli Wlttl
order. 25 cent cMr11 for ads urrylnt lox N-.miMr In Ctrt of TIM

Sentlntl.

SHOOTING MATCH at
Corn Hollow In Rutland.
Every sunday starting at
noon.
Proceeds being
donated to the Boy Scout
Troop 249. 12 gauge factory
choke gun only!
GUN SHOOT . Racine Gun
Club. Every Sunday star·
tlng 1 p.m. Factory choked
guns only.
PRE · SEASON
SALE ··
S649.00··Moblle home wood
burning systems, the only
HUD &amp; UL approved wood
burner tor mobile homes.
Unit cornes complete with
wall vent 'stack. See them
at Kingsbury Homes Parts
&amp; accessories at Route 12~,
Minersville, Ohio.
Or
phone 992· 5587.

OFC.9SAVINGS
1aate
TOOTHPASTE

Prices Good

JONES Meat Packing--slaughtering, custom
processing, retail meat.
Washington Co. Rd. 248, .
Lillie Hocking, OH . 6476133.

70Z.
REG.
$2.42
Good

ONLY

Through Mf:mday

$139

News Economy
Pack
7 Disposable

SPECIAL

'129

1 Gallon
SPECIAL

'799

POSH PUFFS

BIC LIGHTERS

125 Tissue&lt;

Package of2

~lights

Pecan

HUMIDIFIER .

RAZORS.

BIC PENS
Package of 5
I

TODDLER

. 12'•
ONLY

'179

CORTAID CREAM
For the
temporary
rel ief of skin Irritation,
itching and rashes.

v.oz.

S1.45Value
SPECIAL ·

ONLY

PAMPERS

•,-lJf'NHD-i
· .:· ·' WE~TCLOX
.. T.

.ALAR.M'CLOCKS

25 %

69e
,

Notebook!
Paper
.
I
10'1&gt; ln. x &amp;ln.
200 Shl!ets

.
e
69
I

·oFF

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
Kennfltl McCull_,n, I .Pill.
'Ctlarln Ill Hit, I .Pft.
RONid H.nlnt. I . Ph .
MMI . lhrt• S.I.I:IDII .m, tof jll, m,
Sund•y I Dill to 12 1J0 lind J to f ,m, th 2tSS
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . llrl.,..tr S.rvlco
E.MIIIt

)
)
}
)

Reg.$1.os

PNLY

'

NOTEBooKS
'

Wanted
For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

6

good
c loth ing,
misc .
Something for everyone,
lots of goodies for .25 cents.
Rain cancels.

B
Public Sale
_ ____,&amp;
=-c.
Ac=u.oc
ct"io
'" 'n- ' - - OSSIE 'S AUCTION House,
20 N. 2nd Street, Mid·
dleporl, Ohio. We sell one
piece or entire households . .
New, used, or antiques, In·
eluding homes, farms, or
liquidation sales. Gel topl
dollar. List with the mall'
who has over 25 years In
the new, used and antique
furniture business.
We
take consignments. For in·
formation and pickup ser,,
vice, call 9'12·6370 or In
West V lrglnia 77.3·5471. Sale
every Friday night at 7
.p.m. Auctioneer Howard
Beasley, apprentice auc·
tloneer, Osby A . Marlin.
(no junk)

·

ONE while ball
Reward. 9'12·62'18.

34.
35.

11 ln.~8'12 ln.
100 'heels

'
Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
Box 729

I.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

THE MEIGS Co .. Health
Department Is now ac·
cepllng applications for a
Public Health Staff Nurse.
Applicant must be a
Registered Nurse. Benefits
five (5) day work week, all
paid Holidays, pleasant
working conditions with a
chance to meet and help
the publlc.sQuallfled, In·
terested persons should
contact the Meigs Co.
Health Department at the
Multi· Purpose Health Cen·
ler, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 9'12·
6426.
PART TIME Bar lender.
Apply In person. No exp.
necessary. Meigs Inn.
SIDING APPLICATORS.
Experienced with tools.
Steady work, good pay .
Also helpers. 992 ·3283
10a.m. ·10 p.m .

Gold, sliver or . foreign
coins or any gold or silver
Items. Antique furniture,
glass or china, will pay top;
dollar, or complete estates.
No Item
too prices
large befor
or too
small.
Check
41
selling. Also do appraising;
Osby IOssleJ Marlin. 992··
6370. ·
•

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

wilh Major Hoople

NEW 3 bedroom home for
sale. Built-In kitchen,
d i ning
room ,
large
recreation room, firePlace,
lots of storage, 2'h baths,
garage, 1 acre lot. 9'12·~.
ED
BARTELS,Loan
Representative, 1100 East
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh.
Mortgage
money
available. All types home
financing,
new,
old,
refinancing, and 2nd mortgages. Phone 9'12· 7000 or
992-5732.

Insurance

IN·
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been can ·
your
celled?
Lost
operator' s license? Phone
9'12·2143.

Homos for S.lo

r

..

ROOM House. Bath &amp;
shower, full baS4!ment,
aluminum siding, storm
windows &amp; door' big porch,
large lot, metal building,
partiallY fenced ln. 9'12·

7453.
.FOR SALE: CALL after 5
p.m.. Modern two story ·
countrv home with double
car ~age x .breez:eway, ,
four
room, living room,
ldtchen, dining room, bath,
alumlnum ·l/lnyl siding,
new shingled roof. Nice
frontage with redwood ten·
ce. southern Local School
Olstrlct, 4 1/o mile on Co.
Rd. 28, from Roclne off 124
on black top road has 1.33 ·
aci'es. Phone 614·949·2830.

Vlny 1
Aluminum Siding
elnsul•llon
e Storm Ooors
• storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee .
Ph •. 992·2772
9. 10. 1 mo.

VINYL SIDING

.SERVICES"

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

CAR~NTIR
-Addonund
remOdeling
-Rooting and gul1er
work
-concrete work
-Piumlllng and
electric• I work
fFree Estlm1ltsl

V.C. YOUNG II

992-6215 or992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

~=========~:===========~========~
ALL STEEL
Vinyl and Aluminum
B&amp;D
rooms, coNe.
1'12 ·baths,
2 car1 r~~~~~~~E~T~~i~~~~E~i Is.
Phone
9'12·$434.
Exc.
HousE.
3 AND
4 RM
turnlshed •~&gt;-

garage, ex c. neighbor, 31
Homes lor Sale
good location In Mi.d- BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom
dleporl, close to schools. ranch brick home In Baum HOME
IN Salisbury .
Ready
to
move
Into.
992Addition.
With
new
garage
~~:~t~~~gvea~7~r
bl ·~~::
6051
5
after p.m.
&amp; genie door. Gas heat, home with 3 bedrooms, 2~
newly Installed central air - baths, large family room
NEW HOME In Khester conditioning, family room with fireplace, fully car·
three bedroom·, two baths, &amp; stone fireplace, ap· peled. Large sundeck &amp;
dining room. living room. pllances builtin, newly In· patio . Within walking
family room with fireplace. stalled electric breaker distance of schools. 9'12·
Central air, gas heal, fully system,
attractively 7132 .
carpeted, 1700 !quare foot decorated basement, 2
of living area, al1ached baths, tully carpeted withgarage. $47,500.00. Jack most attractive drapes. 32
Mobile Homes
Ginther 985-4349.
Call985-3814 or992·2571 .
----~tor,_,s,a~le,__ _
3 or 4 BEDROOM HOUSE. VERY NICE home In Mid·
All electric with wood bur- dleport. New roof, new ·e)(·
ning stove &amp; fireplace. 2 terlor &amp; Interior paint, new
car garage . 21h acres land, carpeting &amp; draperies, full
St. Rl. 7.985·3934.
basement, good location.
-=-==::-:-:::.=
-=:-.:---~ 9'12-5792 or 992·2606.

1990 COLONADE By Fair·
mont . Ux70 with expando,
central air, J bedrooms, Ph
baths. Moving out of state.
742-3030 or 742·2728.
1970 CHAMPION 12x60
trailer for sale. 11 has 3
bedrooms &amp; Is equipped
with washer, dryer, range,
refrigerator. air con·
dllloner &amp; curtains. Price
$4,500. 9'12·26MI.

ATE

1973 EAGLE 12x6S 2
bedroom. 11h baths, exc.
cond. Furnished, 2 a.c.,
10x20 patio and porch, un·
derpinning. 9'12·725.5 .
YOUR CHANCE to buy. A
home you can alford, good
location In Racine. Mobile
home &amp; lot. Exc. buy tor
young couple or retired
couple.
10 x 5!; Elcona completely
furnished, washer, dryer,
underpinned ¥fllh patio lop.
Excellent condition call
992·2721 after S p.m.

MIDDLEPORT - Energy efficient with Insulated
aluminum siding. Verv comfortable three bedroom,
2 bath home, full basement. $.40,000.00.

Ca II Bill Childs, Mgr. 992-2342
Rodney Downing, Broker
Real Estate

General

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OH.~.¥~!~

35

Loll &amp; Acreage

SUITABLE LOT for mobile
home . Easv terms, close to
town. 9'12·5786 or 9'12·252'1.
REAL ESTATE for sale:
corner lot on main high·
way; over 250 foot of Iron·
tage; 95 percent financing
to qualified church group,
·organization, or successful
business management.
9'12-5786 or 9'12·2529.

J. BEDROOM APT. All
electric, maximum 2 per·
sons. 992·2094.

9 NEW LISTINGS- WE HAVE THE HOME FOR
YOU I
NEW LISTING - ALMOST 6 ACRES - of nice
quiet country living . The 3 bedrooms, Jiving room,
dining room, and bath were recently remodeled and
are georgeous. Has a nice fenced yard and an area
fenced for farm animals. Quick sale price.
$28,500.00.
NEW LISTING SOUTHERN DISTRICT ABOUT AN ACRE OF YARD - goes wllh this one
story home that has a large rec. room with
fireplace, glassed In sun porch, utility room, and 3

bedrooms. Also central air, 61!2 acres, a large barn,

storage building. Jusl$39,900.00.
NEW LISTING - Cozv 2 bedroom house, with large
living room, kitchen has nice cabinets with mat·
chlng stove and ref., utility room and bath, all
carpeld. Real nice for $24,900.00.
NEW LISTING ACREAGE EASTERN
DISTRICT - 10 acres with road frontage tor a
building site - $6,000.00 - Also 23 acres with a
building site, has bOttomland, approx. 10 acres
limber, slream, plenty of wildlife. $18,000.00.
NEW LISTING SERVICE STATION RESTAURANT, BIG HOUSE, LITTLE HOUSE The big house has 5 bedrooms, lots of closets enclos·
ed sun porch, house shows e•cellent care. 3 car
garage, the small hOLJSe has 2 bedrooms, good con·
dlton, all on over an acre of land. Will consider sub·
dividing or all3 places can be yours for $58,000.00.
NEW LISTI'NG - SOUTHERN DISTRICT - NO
NOISY TRAFFIC - You will rest easy In lhls 2
bedroom home with full basement that has wood·
burner to supplement forced air heal. Dishwasher
In kitchen, carpel. Also storage building. $29,900.00.
NEW LISTING- NEEDS SOME WORK - House
has 2 bedrooms on 13.76 acres with road frontage for
2-3 building sites . Some fruit trees, some lllable and
pasture land, located near Apple Grove. $11,200.00.
NEW LISTING- 5 ACRES - 5 minutes from new ,
bridge. Very good ~ bedroom, 2 story house, com·
plelely remodeled, all carpeted, many extras like
dishwasher, stove, bar, nlce 1 kitchen and dining
room, extra large living room with heatolater
fireplace. Large pond could easily be buill. Call for
moredelalls. Priced only $45,000.00.
NEW LISTING - HERE IT lSI Gravel Hillin Mid·
dleport. This post card home can be yours. 3
bedroms, 2 full baths, kitchen, dining area, large
living room, screened rear sun porch, private side ;
silting porch, full basement, large lot, plus a garage
apartment !furnished and rented), plus a nice
garage and workshop, manv features Including an
equipped kllchen adn fireplace. ALL FOR
$53,000.00.
fOR .A SONG - This 3 bedroom house has a large
llvihg room and Is In walking distance to town.
Could be yours for not more than a song . Call today I
$8,000.00.
REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr. -992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
992·5692
OFFICE 992-2259

46

Space tor Rent

•New Homes • ex·
tensilie remodeling
•Electrical work
• Roofing work

2 TRAILER LOTS tor rent.
Call 742-3122.

12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush

47

wanted to Rent

house In the country, to
responsibleTO
couple
withnice
one
WANTED
RENT:
c~lld .
Very clean, have
references. Prefer utilities
paid. Call 9'12·5126 after 5
p.m.

...... .....
, ........
....
'" ... .. .. .
51

Housellold GOOdS

STOVES -,
We
ha
fireplace lnS4!rts, free stan·
ding stoves, warm air fur·
nace adapters, mobile
home wood heaters, and
· triple wall chimneys. Outdoor Equipment Sales, Jet.
Rts. 7 &amp; 35. Gallipolis, Ph.
.W.·3670.
AOMIRAL Console TV,
Colonial cabinet, needs piclure tube. $150. 992·5126.

RIGGSCREST Manor $275.
month .
Call
Cleland
Realty. 9'12·2259.
RIGGSCREST Manor $275.
month.
Call
Cleland
Really. 9'12·2259.
HOUSE FOR rent, four
rooms with bath, fully car·
peted, nice &amp;. clean, ready
10 move Into. S17S.OO a mon·
th, deposit requited. Phone
9'12-3090. ·

Utility Buldiles
Sizes from 4X61o 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Call tor Free Siding
Estimate, '49-2101 or
9~9-2160 .
No Sunday
calls.
9·14·1 mo.

Pet Potholders

All types of roof work,
now or repair gutters
and -spouts, "'"'r
cleaning and painting. '
All work guarontHCI.
Free 'Estlmar..
Reasonable Prices
Call Htiward
949-2162
949-2160
1
1·22·«c

mo.

Rl. 3, Box 54
Reclne,Oh.
Ph. 614·163-2591
6·15·1fc

FINANCIAL
REAL EsTATE LOANS
Federal Housing
Veterans
Administration
107 sycamore
Pomeroy'
Office 992-7544
Home 992·6191

~~~~~~~~~~+~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~~,~
~:;:~~=====::;.
-· · ..........
.... ..
......
H

51

h ld Good
5
ouse 0

THREE rooms of fur·
nlture, poster bedroom
suite, bookcase. bedroom
suite, etc., can be seen at
106 Union Avenue ,
Pomeroy.
USED APPLIANCES
1 Like New Se1rs
Coldspot Side Dy
Side Combo ..... $40G
1 Good Used Frigidaire Refrigerator ........,. 5150
1 Good Used Gibson
Coppertone Com·
blnotlon Refrigerator ......... 5225
POMEROY

~;;;;;;;ii LAf!~~ARK
E. Main 51.,

53

Pomeroy

Antlgues

ATTENTION : . (IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
tor antiques and collec·
tlbles or ·entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 5.57·3.411.
54

Misc. Mercllanlu

HEATING 01 L. Buy now at
Summer Prices. Excelsior
.co. 614-992-2205.

Phone
614 l -992-3325

Houses for Rent

Ph. 992·7583
9·14·1

1----------..., 9.,._

MATERNITY
lingerie
reduced 25% Maternity
jeans SIS.OO, Fall mater·
nlty tops &amp; lumpers. sizes
6·18. The Walermlllon Patch, 5th St., New Haven,
W.Va.

__
... . .
-.............
·~·.'

61

F1rm Equipment

1 row cornplcker No. 7.
New Idea. Asking SJSO. or
trade for beef of equal
value. 949·212'1.

.

1978 JD 450C Dozer, 6 way
blade, winch, canopy limb
risers, 1700 hrs. exc. cond.
$28,000. Aller 5 p.m. 752.2372.
i 62
Wlntedto Buy

TRY USl
Complete Dry Cleaning
and Laundry
ecarpet
• Draperies
· • Furniture
·CHIP WOOD. P9les max.
c"We're
diameter .10" on largest ..
Service &amp; Ou1olilv"
end. S12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
· to Ohio Pallet .Co., Rl. 2, 72
Truckstor Slit
Pomeroy 9'12·2689.
1979 ONE. TON Chevy flatbed truck In good condition
OLD COINS, pocket wat- with low mileage. Phone
ches, class rings, wedding 446·0762 Gallipolis.
banos, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest 1976 CHEVY Suburban,
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592· three seats, good gas
mileage, priced low. Philip
6462 .
Werry
985-4255.
63
Livestock
5 YARD NON Registered
Appaloosa mare. 15 hands.
nice blanket over hips,
Used ln~·H. 992·3126 .
TEN YEAR old registered
appaloosa mare, gentle,
broke, ' good disposition.
$450.00. Also, registered 18
month old appaloosa colt,
'lo quarter, good blood
lines. good conformation,
call alter 4 p.m. 593·7390.
3
REGISTERED
Corrledale rams. $125.
· each. 7-12·2753.

. ... ...
..... . . . .... ........
'"

73

vans&amp;4W.D.

1978
DODGE
RAMCHARGER. A.C., am·fm
casseHe, carpeted, 1200
tires. Reese hitch. $4,200.
9'12-6288.
1978 Scout, 3C),j automatic,
prlmered, lour wheel
drive, 25,000 actual miles,.
S3,700.00. Call m-n1o ask·
for Roger .
·
74
1973

Motorcycl"
KAWASAKI

KZ«&lt;I.

SJSO. Call lifter~. 593·7390.

1977 G.S. 550 SUZUKI In
good condition. $900.00.

71

Autos for Sale

.

Phone 9'12· 56ofll.

1972

Maverick 6 cyl.
1976 KAWASKI KD 17S In
.8 FT. DOUBLE duly meat
•utomatlc,
new tires, new
case, stainless ste,l ex- ·
good condition. 949·~
terlor, $100. 8 ft. showcase, battery. $300. 247·3594 or . anytime.
glass front, top, and sliding 949·2773.
doors, $40. 8 fl. counter,
7$
Boatsand
197~ OLDS. Cutlass 442 .
shelves on front and back,
Motors for Sole
$500. or best offer. 247 ·359~ .
$20. Call nl-9151 .
or 949·2773.
1979 BAJA Trl ·16flberglass
boat. curtains. top, 115 h.p.
GREEN BEANS . Pick
outboard motor. Tenn.
your own . George Hill,
1978 AMC GREMLIN . ~
trailer. $5,900.992-6288.
Riverside Farm. Letart cyl .. 4 speed, blue, good gas
mileage. 985·4398.
Falls.

Reach for rour fa10rile pet
whe11 there's a hoi pot at hand.
lnesislible bazaar sellers are
in.,pen~ve Ia whip up! Use colorful scraps-prinls, checks,
plaids-for bird, lurtle, pup and
puss polholders. Pattern 7032:
lransfer of pattern pieces.
$1.75 lor each pattern . Add 501
each pattern for lirst-class air·
mail and handlin1. Sewtl ID:

Alice ....
Nwdltcnlt o.,t.

34?

·The Daily 'Seiitiiiei

·a. 1&amp;3, Old Cltlhu $11., New

YaR, IY 10113. Prilll IIMt,
Addrt11, Zip, Plltlm llo111Mr.
Catch on to the croft boom! Send
lor our NEW 1981 NHOLECRAFT
CATALOG. Over 172 desi&amp;n~ 3 ·
free patterns in~de. $1.00

All tufT BOOKS. .$1.75 lld1
133-fllllllll ..... Qllltlq
132-QIIIt OriaiiiiS

131-Mfl I llicl QIIIIJ

41

CONSTRUtnON

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route JJ, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
9'12-7479.

214 E . Second Street

HeadqtJilrters

Phone949-2414
·· - Tio··l mo. pd. ·

Slz"
.. From 30X30"
SMALL

ln·~-~~~~~~~~~~t.~~~;~~~~~~~~~=--=·-:::·==~
ROUSH
PARK

eluded, I bedroom
from
Middleport.
All utilities
$170. Special rates for
Senior Citizens. Equal Opportunity Housing. VIllage
Manor Apts. Call 992·7787
for. appointment.

Housing

Ho11sing

TV, CB &amp; HAM

INCREOIBLEI Fully car·
peted apts. In downtown

Real Estate- General

HUNTING CABIN, Has 2 bedrooms, elec .
baseboard heat, and 79
acres oi land In good
hunting country and
panoramic view .
'ACREAGE
Nice
piece of land that would
make a retrlcled sub·
division. Water and
electricity available.
31 .5 acres. A firm
$53,000.
NEW LISTING- You'll
have the best years of
your life In this
renovated house. Room
tor pond, lots of woods.
Near Chesler. For only
S37,500.
NEW LISTING - Nice
.home of 3 bedrooms on
one floor. 3 bedrooms,
step·saver kitchen for
mom . Garage and 31ots.
Want$45,000.
· . NEW LISTING
Building or trailer lot on
hard road near Mid·
dleport. Leading Creek
water and electricity
avallable ... Only $6,500.
INCOME - Over $6,000
a year. Will sell tor only
$35,000.
. BRICK
New
carpeting, new kitchen
and bath fixtures. 4
bedrooms, 2 porches,
basement and well
worth $38,500.
NO TIME LIKE NOW
TO
LIST
WITH
TEAFORD,
FOUR
FULL TIME SALES·
PEOPLE.
CALL
992- 3325
OR
2ND
992-3176.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

INSTAlATIONS .

AVAILABLE OCT. 1. 2
bedroom furnished apt. In
Racine. $150. month plus
utilities. No pels, one child.
949·287S.

Farm Buildings

Siding

TOWERS &amp;
ANTENNAS

130-S..... F. . . .$111131-H
12t-Cllicll 'rt Ea1r T-"n
121-tlllllllpt ,.• • • QIIIIJ
127-At;.s 'a' 111111111
12S-1'11riflr CAftt Flanrs
IH-f'llll 011111
124-Ealr Clfls 'o' o.-11
lU.Stildl 'o' Plldl 011111
122-St.H 'o' hfl Ollis
121-PIIIaw Sl1ew-OIIs
II U., Alt tl FloiNI Cnld1tl
115-llftr flltr Qlilb
:115-EIIr Alt t1 llpplt Crodtet
113-CIItiplltl GiffW

110.11 lilly=
I
a..s. + K•lt llllictillll•lndl
IM-I•IIrll

112·11-• Qlllts
IGI-Qolt lnl Cotlllclioa I

POTATOES. Red Pontiac
&amp; Kennebec . US West Bed··
ford Township Rd. Cecil
Toban.

1977 PONTIAC SUNBIRD.
Sun roof, auto .• good gas
mileage, exc. cond. 985·
3596.

FEDERAL
Electronic
siren with
100 w·a lt
speaker. $225. firm. 7~2·
2236.

1973
OLDSMOBILE
Toronado. Good cond. 985·
4225.

54

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
lndoor·ouldoor facilities.
Also AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614·446-7795 .
HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
and ponies and riding
lessons.
Everything
Imaginable In horse equip·
mont. Blankets, belts,
boots, etc. English and
Western. Ruth Reeves
(614) 698-3290 .
GET A Nice soil lovable
kitten from \'our Humane
Society . Shots &amp; wormed.
Donation required . 992·
6260. Hours 12-7 dally,
closed Tues . Tabby's,
tigers, &amp; a pure black; all

males.

57

1968 NOVA Super Sport.
Needs motor, make good
drag prospect. $400. 593·
7390 alter 4 p.m.
1974 DODGE Challenger,
runs good, good tires,
needs front tender. First
S400. 1akeslt. 9'12·7675.
1972
BELAIRE.
1967
Toyota. Coon hound pup·
pies. 992·7263 before3 p.m.
1978 MUSTANG Ghla, am·
tm radio, air conditioning,
four speed, 15,000 miles, excellent condition. SJ,OOO.OO.
992·7689.

- - - - - - -1

1972 PLY MOUTH Satellite·
Sebring. P.S., air •. QOOd'
cond. $675. 247·2192 .
72

Musical
1nstrumenl1

Trucks for Sale

1973 CHEVY PICKUP. V·8
engine. $800. 773·5971.

WANTED : Responslbl~
party to lake over low mon· 1972 Chevy pick up, flat
thly payments on spinet bed, 350 VB In excellent
mechanical
condition .
plano. Can be seen locally.
Write credit manager : s55o.oo. Call 9'12-7770 ask
P.O. Box 537 Shelbyville, . for Roger.
Ind. 46176.
1967 CHEVY Pickup.
USED cla~lnetln good con· Rebuilt engine. Exc, cond.,
dillon. SJs.oo. Phone 992· everything works. $800.
5786.
9'12·2080:
-~----

\

"YOUNGS

plelely furnished.
44
Apartment
for Rent

H

WILL DO babysitting In
your home live days a
week; any hours. Contact
949·2516 after 10 a.m .

INSUlATION
· ·
.
&amp;

TWO BEDROOM mobile
home with utilities paid.
Adults
only .
Deposit
required . 992-3647. Com-

RACINE, OH. 6 rooms.
hardwood floors, storm
windows, needs updating;
hobby shed, work shed,
garden. 1-614·235·6569 or
write 2974 Castlewood Rd .,
Columbus, Oh . .Q209.

,

QOI NG OUT of town a day
Qr two for an all night par·
W? Will babysit In mv
home, ages 2·8, references,
I)O hourly sitting. 9'12-5264 .

J&amp;L BUMN

I BEDROOM, Furnished.
utllllles paid, deposit
required. 9'12·7~79.

t~!~~~w,

WILL do odds &amp; ends,
paneling, floor tile, ceiling
tile. Call Fred Miller at992·
6338.

ll

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Headquarters

WILL care for one or two
elderly women In my
home. Experience. Phone
843·469.4.

Business Services

HOUSE NEAR Racine, 5
rooms &amp; bath. 9'12-5858 .

TWO bedroom mobile
home in Racine. Deposit
required. Phone367-7811 .

Situations Wanted

13

Houses for Rent

MOBILE HOME for rent,
kitchen furnished, adults
preferred. No pets. Deposit
requ·lred1 992·2749.

Medical L~b TeChnician
full or part ume positions aval!able tor MT,
MLT, RCLA, Salary
commensurate with experience. Please contact the Lab Supervisor
at Veterans Memorlil
Hospital,
Mulberry
Hgll .• Pomeroy, Ohio at
1614) 9?2-2104 Ext. 55 .
Equal Opportunity
Employer

n

41

42

992-2259

.PIANO . LESSONS Begin·
ner 5 , advanced, · adults.
send
name,
address,
telephone number to vera ,
Jane Holliday, Box 224, 1
Rutland, OhiO 4577S.
;

spike,

Homes for Sale

TRUCK DRIVER needed
Immediately, must be 21
and have experience. Ap·
ply In person at Pomeroy
Landmark on East Main
Street in Pomeroy.

Thurs., Fri., Sat. Lots Of

1·;-=======:..L.:::::::::::::::::::j''·
I
I

THE POSITION of teacher
for the multl ·handlcapped
Is now aballable at the
Meigs Co. Board of Mental
Retardation. This person
should have MSPR Cer·
llflcallon and be available
for
Immediate
em·
ploymenl. Please send
resume to Meigs Co. Board
of Mental Retardation, 36
East Main St., Pomeroy,
Oh. oi5769 . Resumes will be
accepted until sept. 21,
1980.

YARD SALE. 18, 19, 20 . In·
side city limits of Rutland
above the Church of God.

Lost and Found

-===;::::;::;:;;::===

33.

OFFICE MANAGER. Must
have the following skills.
Typing,
filing,
bookkeeping . Ability to
meet people &amp; pleasant
telephone manner. Send
resume of background In·
formation to Box 242,
Pomeroy Oh. 45769.

15 . Schools I nstructlon

22--------1
LOST 1 while baseball
23
1 shoe. Brand name, Brooks.
1 Reward . 9'12·62'18 or after 5
24·
·
I . p.m. 992·3231 .
25. - - - - - - - - I
26.
7Yard Sale
27.:
= = = = = = = 1 ANOTHER big sale at
1
28 .
1 Bo5o's Great Bend, Sep·
29·- - - - - - - - 1 tember 19,20,21 . Don't miss
30
thlsone. l!argalnsgalore.
31 .
I
32.
I

.

PART-TIME RN for 7·3:30
a.m. shift. Call Mr. Zldlan,
Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
ler. 9'12·6606.
·

CARPORT SALE. Bob
Black residence. Sept. 19,
9·4. 2 miles out New Lima
Rd . Rutland . Boys clothes,
6·12.

These cash rates
Include discount

I
I
I
11. _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
I
18.
I
. 19.
I
20.
I
21 .
1

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a sen·
llnel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 9'12·
2156 or 992-2157 .

LARGE YARD Sale at 527
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport.
All day Fri. 19 &amp; Sal. 20. All ·
kinds of bargains :
Everything will be priced:
very cheap.

- -- - --

&amp;OZ. ONLY
REG. $2.80

I

ONLY

SHOOTING
MATCH .
American Legion, Rutland,
Oh . 12 :00 noon.Sundays.

Russell Stover

REXALLCOOLSPRAY

Yard Sale

~

eMERCHolNDISE

e EMPLOYMENT .
SERVICES

7

James E. Husk,
Defendant.
Case No. 17577

or Write Daily sentinel Classifi9&lt;1 Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero.,., 0., 45769

WANTED
TO BUY :
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
SoLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. EO
B'U RKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO 992·3476.

-.

-

c~N'."o:!!ti!C
ce~. ·-· -.!.P~u'!'b!'.!li~

31

Wanted to Buy

&amp;ep
11

It'!!'

Home
I mprovomenll

s &amp; G carpet· Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned.
Free
estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scolchguard. 9926309or 7~2· 2211 .

13

Excavating

J X F BACKHOE SER·
VICE llscensed and bon·
ded, septic tank In·
stallallon, water and gas
lines. Excavating work and
transit layout. 992·7201.
EXCAVATING Wanted.
Dozer work or limber 10
CUI. 985·3567 or992·3208.
M

Electrical
&amp; Retrlprallon

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
makes1 992·2284, The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
...ulhorlzed Singer Sales
and Service. we sharpen
Scissors.
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all smell
appllancos. Lawn mower.
Next to State Hlghwey
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
APPLIAFCE service, ell

makes washers, drYers,

ranges,
dish
washers,dlsposals, water
tanks. Call Ken Young 915·
3561 before 9a.x. or alter 6
p.m.

'

!

'

�lt-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tllursday; Sept. !8, 1980

.

Massive :nlanhunt hegins for Somoza killers
ASUNCION, Paraguay (AP)
l'lrapayan authorities pressed a
IDUIIve. manhunt today for the
guerrilla aquad that assassiNited
ouated Nicaraguan dictator
llnt*•to SomOia In a hail ot
IIIICIIine-Cun and bazooka fire so
devutaUng his mlBti'ess could Identify tbe body only through his wristwttcb.
Somclll's financial adviser and
chauffeur also died In the Wed~Y morning . attack in the
Paraguayan capital.
Police clll!ed the Asuncion airport
and sealed the country's borders
-.rith ArgenUna and Bra#! in an effort to keep the attackers from
leaving the country. Paraguayan
autborlties say they think six people
.• IQok ll8rl in the fusilade that left the
K-Y8aMM Scmaza riddled with
some two dozen bullets and his
1lmoulllne demoll.sbed.
Authorities say Somoza' s
bodyguard~, who returned the at·
tacllen fire from a car trailing the
OUited atronpnan'slimosine, wounded ooe of the •!W!IIants. The goverIIIII8nt baa called on citizens to
report anyone seeking medical at•
tentt.on for a bulljlt wound.
..
· Tbe ·right-wing government of
~·&lt;'~: :. . :· Paraguayan President Alfredo
· ~"". ·· su-ner, the friend who granted
Somclll uylum after his ouster by
Nlcaragua'a Sandini8ta guerrillas in
1J'I9, dlatributed photographs of a
man and a woman believed to have
taken part In the ambuah. The two,
identified as Hugo Alfredo Irurzun
and Silvia Mercedes Hodgers, were
delcrlbed as members of the
Peoples Revolutionary Army, a leftwing Argentine guerrilla group.
Offlclala offered a reward of
ftQ,OOO for lnforn\ation leading to the
capture of the two, whoae photos
were picked out of police files by wit~ to the alaylng . .
Police aald ~ persons had
been arrested for "investigation in
cmnectlon with the •!W!•sfNition."
Tiley gave no details.
Interior Minister Augusto Montanaro described the alaying as "a
crhnlna1 attack almost certainly
pe.pea aled by a group of foreign'
terrorists heavily armed with
ba•ookas; automatic · rifles and
platolll of U.S. fabrication."
In Washington, the Carter ad- ·
mlntstration, accused by Somaza of
contrlbaUng to his downfall by
faWDg to provide suppofl, reacted
with cauUon. "Naturally we deplore
any e•ee•"naU.oo no matter where lt
occurs or who is affected," said ·
· apr*emwnJobnTrattner-.
NlcaraguanB by the thousands
gretJted JleW8 of Somaza's death by
pouring Into the streets for
celelnti0119. Violet&amp; Chamorro, the
,pdow of Blain joumallst Joaquin
Olamorro, said: "Sooner or later
God had to do justice." Chamorro's
· deatli, blamed on Somoza's governrilent, sparked the final, bloody
upr1a1na which toppled Somaza In
July lfl9 and ended a years of
Sclmola family rule in Nicaragua.
· Sclm.u'a mangled body was taken
from a holpital to the villa where he
had lived with his mistress, Dinorah

Sampson - a Nicaraguan - and an
undetermined number of bodyguar-ds. Tile woman was taken to the
hospital to identify the body, but was
Wl&amp;ble to recognize it, .,Ollce said.
She identified on his ann a wristwatch he custOmarily wore:
1be .Paraguayan government
identified the other. men killed as
driver--bodyguard Cesar Gallardo, a
Nicaraguan, and financial adviser
Joaeph Peittner, a Colombian.
Sources said Somoza' s son
Anastaaio, a fotmer colonel in the
Nic,raguan National Guard, would
arrive in the Paraguayan capital
today. They would not discount the
possibility that he would take his
father's body to Miami for burial.
Somoza first fied Nicaragua for
Miami, where he owned considerable real estate, but left the
United States to avoid the possibility
of enradition.
The attack occurred at 10 a.m.
time as Somaza, Pelttner and
Gallardo followed by three
bodyguards in an escort car, left the
walled villa on a trip to downtown
Asuncion some 15 to 20 minutes
away.
The two cars had gone only seven
blocks when they were Intercepted
by a Chevrolet pickup with three occupants who opened fire with
automatic weapons at Somoza's
vehicle, police said.
·
The bodyguards in the escort car
Immediately retumed the fire, but
Somoza's car suddendly ·exploded,
PTA MEETS TONIGHT
The BradburY PTA will meet at
7:30 this evening with Principal Don
Hanning to speak pn school policies.
Teachers will he introduced during
the open house observance.

hit by a bazooka shell fired from a
nearby house, pollee and witnesses
said.
Several more explosions were
heard, witnesses said, and the
pickup sped out of sight. The vehicle
was found abandoned several blocks
away. It contained ·a bazQC1ka,

· several submachine guns and
pistols, wigs . and jackets, pollee
said.
Three attackers who had fired
from the house ran to a nearby
avenue and stopped at gunpoint a
car driven by Julio Carbone, an
Argentine architect wllo lives in

SHOP EL·BERFELDS.

FRIDAY, SEPT. 19th and SATURDAY, SEPT. 20th.

For These Special Values
OPEN FRIDA

NIGHT
- TILL - 8
-

Four out of 12 questions de;~it with that, prompting
C.arter to say he does not consider Reagan a racist and
to reject any assertion that he is running a m~an campaign . .
"I think my campaign is very moderate in its tone,"
hesaid.
.
But what concerned the Reagan camp was the
opening statement. Reagan's campaign director,
William Casey, called. it "an obvious partisan annoWicement" and asked that the Republican be given
equal time Wider the Federal Communications Act.
Network news executives seemed concerned, too.
CBS News President William' Leonard said the ·
statement was "preity obviously self-serving. I was a
little bit shaken, frankly."
And David Burke, vice president of ·ABC News, said
it "did not distinguish the press conference in the
traditional sense, And we will keep that in mind when
requests are made In the future."
The ·equal-time law specifies that broadcasters who
permit candidates to "use" their stations must give an
equal opportwtity to other candidates for the same of-

•

e

'

WRANGLER $1995

For the Cool Mornings! Evenings
CHILDREN'S
-

BLUE DENlM
JEANS ./

JACKET SALE
sweat shirt jackets- windbreakers ·
lined jackets· unlined jackets.

:voL3t

at

NO Ill

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

lice. An exception is coverage of "bona fide news even.
ts."
Despite the opening statement, the president's 59th
news conference since taking office was dominated by
Carter's campaign conduct.
Itl Atlanta on Tuesday - two weeks after Reagan
had mentioned the Klan - Carter told a partisan
audience of black sPutherners that the campaign has
seen '.'the stirrings of hate and the rebirth of c~e words like 'states rights"' and the Klan.
"Hatred has no place in this coljlltry," Carter added.
"Racism has no place in this COWltry."
But when pressed on the dlatter Thurtday, the
president said he did not believe Reagan was " running'
a campaign of racism or hatred and I think my campaign is very moderate in its tone."
" I did not raise the issue of the Klan nor did I raise
the issue of states' rights," he said. " And I believe it's
best to leave these words, which are code words to
many people in our COWitry who suffered from
discrimination in the past, out of the election this
year."

Terry. cotton/polyester, nylon, popl in and

enttne
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1980

Band assistant still sought

Tie vote blocks
hiring motions

NfW SHIPMENT

10 hurt in missile silo explosion

METAL CABINETS

=~c~t

your aportswear

-

Todoy'J octive ,patsweo looks
stat a1 YOU! lee!.
AnC:I Hush,Pupples • sport Vices ·
prom 'l lt more lhon just CO$meties. Durable poriOI'monce
1eofUf95 01'9 1r0rilf01'med
inlo l!ghtwelgrot . comrortoble CCJUOI5. Mck91he
mo5t ~~ o1 vos word!Cbe ol a comlcrtobiiJ
prjce.

I

DAMASCUS, Ark. - An explosion rocked an underground Titan II
missile silo early today, sh~ting flames into the sky and injuring at
least 10 maintenance workers, the Air Force said. The Strategic Air
Corrunand would not say whether the missile carried a nuclear
warhead.
Gov. Bill Clloton said Air Force officials told him that no nuclear explosion had occurred and that one could not have occurred.
It was not Immediately known whether the missile ltseH or only fuel
exploded. The silo, covered by concrete doors, was " just a big rubble
inside" after the blast, Clinton said.
The explosion occurred as a maintenance crew tried to neutralize a
fuel leak In the first-stage of the missile, said SAC spokesman CoL
Richard Kline.
·

WARDROBES - UTILITY
CABINETS - CHINA CABINETS
BASE CABINETS

Hlilh

-Baked Enamel Finish
-Heavy Steel Construction
-Many Uses Throughout the Home

"

I

Cuban hijackers returned to U.S.

-

a&gt;LUMBIA, S.C . ....: With the cooperation of the Cuban govenunent,
• two disenchanted Cuban refugees are back in the United States - held

on $750,000 bond each - to face trial on air piracy charges and a

SAVE 20%
·ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
.

I like
the service.
I like
tlte peotle.
That's why
hank at

SALE

Wrangler and Mr. Leggs Brands
Two pockets · long tails. Colorful
plaids. small (14· 14112), medium (1515'12), large (16·16'h) and extra large
( 17·17'1•). Friday &amp; Saturday Special
Price.

99

$

SLACKS -SKIRTS ,
. ~ BLAZERS
·-

-

-

All .of our boys'- leans Included for this
sale - Corduroys• - blue denims .
painters leans.

REG. $14.00.... SALE $11.20
REG. s17.00 .... SALE $13.60
REG. s22.00.... SALE s11.60
\RLQo $28.00 .. " SALE $22,40

CHAIR SALE
· Lay-Away for Christmas at
these Special Sale Prices.
Swivel
rockers,
rocker/ recllners, wall-away recliners
&amp; recliners.
Large variety of styles and
fabrics.

Regular sizes 8 to 18 - slims and huskies. Plus :
student sizes 26 to 30, lengths 28 to 36.
Basic and fashion styles In straight legs and boot ,
flares.

BOYS $9.95 JEANS •.•• • •• , •• , • $8.15
BOYS $12.95 JEANS ••••••.•• • $10.60
BOYS $14.95 JEANS ..• • .••••• $12.20
BOYS $15.95 JEANS ••• , •• , ••. $13.00
FRIDA

RDAY
SALE .

.

CARHARn

BROWN DUCK

carhartt WORK

underw~y

CHARDON, Ohio - Jury deliberations were to begin today on two
ebarges of theft In office against Geauga County·Sheriff Carl E. Hen-

BOYS' JEANS

-·-

WARDER, Ethiopia - Charred tanks, spent shells and rotting
bodies litter the landscape around this tiny oasis, symbols of what
Ethiopia claims is its ongoing war with ethnic Somali rebels and
Somali regular troops fighting for control of the Ogadeil wilderness.
Warder, a commwtity of 1,300 dwellings, boasts one of the few water
sources io the spraw)ing Ogaden wasteland. It was a major batUeground in the 1977-78 Ogaden war between Ethiopia and Somalia.
Ethiopia won the war, with the help of Soviet aid and Cuban troops,
bat it claims this oasis and other towns and military strongpoints in
the Ogaden remain targets of rebels of the Western Somali Liberation
·
Front.

Jury deliberations
TWO DAY SALE I

\ Misses Sizes B to 20.

possible life prtson sentence.
The two men are accused of hijacking a Delta Air Unes Boeing 7'll
headed from Atlanta to Columbia on Wednesday with Ill people
aboard. It was the loth hijacking In six weeks in the United States.
Most of tbem were carried out by disgruntled refugees.
The hijacking came two days. after the Cuban government announced that Cubans who left the COWitry in the "Freedom Flotilla"
this year made " one-way trips" and wamed that hijackers would be
severely punished or sent back to the United States.

Area filled with bodies, tanks

MEN'S
FLANNEL
SPORTSWEAR SPORT SHIRTS

$A.VE 20%

CLOTHES

Save these two days on our entire•
selection of Carbartt Brown Ducks.
!lib overalls - Insulated coveralls •
blanket and quilt lined lackets · snap·
on hoods - vests. R~gulilr and extre~
large sizes. All arranged for your easy
selection.. ___ _
·

PRICES
_ _ OPEN SATURDAY 9:30. TO 5 P.M.
Furniture Dept-3rd Floor

JRD ~T .• RACINE, OH.
MembP.r FDIC
) .

~-

$995

DOnY MANN
IIIDDUI'DRT, Ollll

- -

POMEROY, OHIO

MECHANIC STREET

The Shoe Box

FIFTEEN CENTS

-- ·-

5 66

REG. $6.00 ............ SALE $4.79 .
REG. $8.00 ............ SALE $6.39
REG. $11.00 ••• , •• ;, •.. SALE $8.79
REG. $17.00 ••....•.•• SALE $1,3.59'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

When it was pointed out that Ca~r' s secretary of
Health and Human Services, Patricia Roberts Harris,
first questioned Reagan's endorsement by the Ku Klux
Klan - an endorsement that Reagan already had
rejected at the time - the president said:
"I am not blaming Governor Reagan. That is
precisely the point. The press seems to be raising this
point.''
He also said: "I do not indulge in attacking the per-sonal integrity of my opponents and hope I never
shalL"
While his campaign director was concerned about
getting ,equai time, Reagan still was trying to get Carter to join the League of Women VoterS-spo1180red
debate Sunday night between him and independeJ1t
candidate Anderson.
The fanner California governor, in a statement, said
the news conference was "Jimmy Carter's desperate
attempt to fill the empty chair at SWiday night's
debate."
" It is time for Mr. Carter to stop hiding in the Rose
(Continued on pagelo )

•

STRAIGHT LEG or BOOT LEG
Sizes 27 to -42 waist, lengths 30
through 36. Pre-washed 14112 oz:
No Fault denim. True western
styles.
,
Friday and · . ,
Saturday Only.

satin.
Sizes: 12mos. to24mos., 2to4,.,.o6x, 7to14.

Beautiful fall colors
in easy-care and
fashionable
poly ester/acrylic.

_I

. WASHINGTON · (AP) - President Carter's
: nationally broadcast news conference raised not only
: I!OIIle expected ire from his Republican opponent ...,.
• whose aides called the performance a "political com: miercia\" - but also some surprt.ing concern by
· ' televisio..network executives.
·
: Carter, who has refused to take part in a televised
· debate Sunday between ·presidential candidates
: Ronald Reagan and John Anderson, held sway before
, the 'IV cameras Thursday for about 30 minutes, four of
: them devoted to an opening statement·in which he gave
: a ''load news" report on his admint.tration.
He talked about the admint.tration's bfforts on
: Mideast negotiations, the economy, noimallzation with
: China, the h~ges in Iran, autp imports, energy, and
: nuclear arms talks with the SoVIets.
• When it got down to questions, the preamble was
· liiOIItly dropped and the president was asked
: repeatedly about recent campaign statements In which
: he linked Republican nominee Reagan's pronoun: cements on states' rights and the Ku Klux Klan with
· racism and hatred.

-·

.

.

I

rented only a feW days ago, neigh-:\.
bors said, to five pe1'80118 believed to: .
be Argentines l!fld Uruguayans and;,
including at least one woman.
.
Pollee said blood waa found Inside
the house, leading to the belief that
at least one guerrilla had been woun- ·
ded.

Asuncion. He was ordered out and
the gunmen sped away in the car.
Carbone later told police that the
gunmen had been fair-skinned and
had spoken with definite Argentine
or Uruguayan accents.
The house from which the bazooka
was fired had been vacant bat was

President's conference upsets GOP

clenon.
Visiting Cuyahoga County Conunon Pleas Judge James J. McMonagle told the jury he would instruct it on legal aspects of the case
when Prosecutor John F. Norton and defense attorney Lawrence J .
Dolan finish their concluding ·remarks today.
Henderson has been sheriff in the COWity for seven years but was
defeated for a third tenn in the Republican primary election io June.

Medicaid recipients won't pay
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Ohio lawmakers have decided against
requiring Medicaid recipients to pay part of the cost for prescription
drugs and eyeglasses.
The payment provision was eliminated Thursday as the Legislature
completed work on a catchall bill covering a variety of unrelated
,
topics.
Sen. Harry Meshel, (}.Youngstown, said a section under which
Medicaid recipients would have to pay at least 50 cents for prescriptions and $1 for eyeglasses and frames should be cut. He said it could
place a hardship on elderly people and nursing home patients.
. The biU appropriated $10 million in capital improvements money to
tJie state Natural Resources Department.

Professor feels other debates out
CLEVELAND - President Carter's refusal to be part of a three-way
debate in Baltimore Sunday could kill the chances for other presidential debates this year, says a Cleveland State University professor.
Sidney Kraus, who has written books on the 1960 and 1976 presiden- ·
tlal debates, said independent candidate John B. Anderson might
blmefit from Carter's absence.

.

..
'

Weather forecast

' .)Clear tonight. Lows near 60. Mostly siumy Saturday. Highs 80-8S.
Cblnce of rain near zero percent tonight and 10 ~.rcent Saturday.
Winds southerly near 10 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Forec•st- SWiday through Tuesday: Fair Sundsy.

&lt;h!nce of showers Monday and Tuesday. Highs from the mid-70s to
·~ow IMls. Lows from

the mid-50s to low 60s.
I

NEW FACE - This Pomeroy structure, built in 1891, and now an annex for the Elberfeld Department Store, E. Main St., Pomeroy, is taking
on restored beauty thanks to the efforts of the Meigs County Jaycees. The
facelifting is being provided by the Jaycees who are permitted to use the
second floor of the structure for their headquarters. During the work
processes, it has been found that some of the accent points of the 1891
structure, originally a jewelry store, are made of metal.

Three districts
still on strike
By The Associated Press
Classes resumed in Hubbard
schools and buses hegan running in
the Edison l..Qcal district Thursday,
but three strikes continued to
disrupt classes for more than 10,000
Ohio students.
.T!Je walkoutt continued in Boardman and Miamisburg and at a
school for the mentally retarded in
Mahooing County.
The 161 striking teachers in Hubbard began returning to their
classrooms after ratifying a new
contract early Th~y following a
late-night bargaining session. Base
pay under the ·agreement was
boosted from $10,280 to $11,400.
The walkout, which affected 3,100
students, began on Sept. 3. Teachers
ignored a back-to-work order from
Trwnbull County Common Pleas
Judge.David Griffith and the school
board had threatened to seek an injWiction.
A tentative contract agreement
was reached with bus drivers in the
Edison Local district in Jefferson
CoWity oo Thursday, ending a
walkout that began last Friday.
Superintendent Harry Swartzlander said virtually ail of the 4,100
students in the largely rural district
ride buses to school.
He said all issues between the
district and Ohio Association of
Public School Employees Chapter 35
have been settled.
Details of the tentative agreement
were not released, but Swartzlander

said it would be with the full chapter,
not only the bus drivers. The chapter
also includes cooks, custodians and
other non-teaching personnel.
In the statement, Swartzlander
implied that the 46 bus drivers and
mechanics lost their bid to become a
separate bargaining wtit apart from
the full chapter. H.ll said that was the
·only issue in the walkout.
Talks continued Thursday in Boardman between school officials and
about 300 striking teachers. A wtion
spokeswoman said talks resumed at
1:30 p.m. after breaking off at midnight.
She said the Boardman Education
Association accepted two of four
counter-proposals from the board on
non-economic issues and was
waiting for offers on three other
issues. Salary demands have been
about $500 apart.
The 9-day-old strike has affected
5,300 students.
_

Lottery winner
CLEVELAND (AP) -The winning numbers selected Thursday
night lo the Ohio Lottery's daily
game "Tbe Number" and Its weekly
"Pyramid" and "Lucky Buck"
games are:
lbeNumber- 298
Pyramid-01; 539 ; 2874
Lucky Buck- 21; 969; 9508 ; 04320;
951994
The lottery reported earnlogs of
$439,233 from the money wagered on
the dally number drawing.

Two persons injured in accident
Two persons were injured during a a tree, continued over an embankment and overturned.
o:~e-vehiele accident ivnestigated
Schevalier and a passenger, Klare•
Thursday by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Kimes, 16, Reedsville, claimed inHighway Patrol.
Called to the scene in Meigs Coun- jury and were transported by
ty on TR 'l/4 at 7:15p.m., officers private vehicle to Veterans
report a north bound auto operated Memorial Hospital for treatment.
by Maurice S. Schevalier, 18, Reed- , Schevalier was cited on a charge
sville, went ou~ of control passed off ·of excessive speed.
the right side of the roadway, struck

I

BY BOB HOEFUCH
Two motions to hire an assistant
band director were blocked by a tie
2-2 votes when the Meigs Local
School District Board of Education .
met In special session Thursday
night.
At Monday's meeting the board
could not come up with an
agreement on hiring an assistant
director, hence the special session
was called.
At last night's meeting, Superintendent David Gleason told the
board approximately 20 persons attending that the district is financially unable to employ a full-time
assistant band instructor. Gleason
said the district has $150,000 less iri
its operational budget than it
believed several weeks ago. The
problem, the SuPerintendent said,
revolves around the purchase of
$150,000 worth of certificates of
deposit in 1970.71. The certificates
were sold in 1979 to pay for a new
roof on the high school building.
Gleason reported that former
district clerk, L. W. McComas, met
with the board in executive session
recently to explain \hal the $150,000
was being · carried in the general
fund accounts. The bonrd and administrators were not aware WIUI
then that the $150,000 in certificates
was being carried in the total
general fund accoWits, Gleason
stated.
As a result the district has $150,000
less than it was believed several
months ago. Gleason said efforts
must be made to curtail spending.
A lengthy discussion was held with
some parents and with Ed Harkless,
vocal music instructor; and Douglas

Hill, new hand director, on the employment of an assistant, at last
night's meeting.
Needed repairs for some of the
district buildings were discussed by
Gleason who pointed out there is not
no\v money to make the needed
repairs.
Gleason said Charles Hollidsy,
who is serving as principal · of the
Salem Center School, could be
named to the assistant's post for an
additional $475 a year on hill present
salary.
However, parents and the music
instructors complained that
Holli~y could not leave the Salem
Center School in time to be of service
to the band in the evenings.
On a motion to name Holliday to
the post, Dr. Keith Riggs and Carol
Pierce voted yes while board members, Richard Vaughan and Bob
Snowden voted against his being
named to the position.
Snowden then moved that Jeff
Myers-a music major recom·
mended by Harkless and Hill-be
named to the position. Again a tie
vote evolved with Snowden and
Vaugluln voting in favor of Myers
while Dr. Riggs and Pierce voted · :
against Myers. The fifth board
member, Larry Powell, was not
present for the meeting.
The board accepted the
resignation of Diana Williams, a
jwtior high teacher, effective immediately. J'yirs. Williams will accepted a position in a talented and
gifted program in Florida.
Kitty Cassell and Bonnie Sue Cantrell were added to the substitute
teachers list and Diane Crosby and
Brian Windon were added to the substitute bus drivers list.
·

Assassin suspect
killed by police
ASUNCION, Paraguay (AP) Police shot and killed a leftist
guerrilla sought in the assassination
of Anastasio Sonioza and arrested
anPther. The remilins of the ousted
Nicaraguan dictator were flown
early today back to the United
States, the country he felt abandoned him in his hour of need.
Police identified the slain man as
Hugo Alfredo lrurzWI, and said he
was killed In a shootout Thursday
night in the Asuncion suburb of Lambare after he opened fire on security
forces coming to search the house in
which he was hiding. Police said
they were tipped off to Irurzun's

presence by a businessman who
recognized him from a photograph
shOwn on television.
Pollee reported the arrest of
another guerrilla suspected of
taking part in the assassination. He
was not identified. They also sai!J.
one of Iruzun's cohorts escaped
during the exchange, and that the
suburb, about nine miles south of the
capital, was sealed off.
Authorities said Irur:zun was a
member of the Argentine People's
Revolutionary Anny. The government had distributed photographs of
him and a female member of the
(Continued on page 10 )

Three youths tace B&amp;E charges here
Three Rutland area juveniles have
·been charged in Meigs County
Juvenile Court with the breaking
and entering of the Rutland
American Legion Post last Sunday
morning.
Taken from the building was a
microphone, pop an~ candy. The
juveniles were released to the
custody of their parents according to
the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
The department investigated a
minor accident Thursday evening
that occurred on private property.
Mrs. Howard Barber, Rt. I, Reed·
sville, backed her car into the right
I

side of a pickup truck owned by Clioton Holsinger, Rt. I, Reedsville. Tile
Holsinger truck was parked in the
Barber driveway.
Traffic was tied up on SR 7 south
of Chester for a short time Thursday
evening while a wrecker was attempting to move a loaded ensllage
wagon that had rolled over a steep
embankment from a cornfield on the
east side of SR 7.
The departm:ent was notified WednesdaY · that fqur medallions from
hubcaps were taken from a vehicle
owned by Fred Kessinger, Reedsville while parked at the S)t;ate-AWay.

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