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WINTHROP
11

•

'

b Dick Cava

.

HAIL, FELLON, WEa.,.L ME~

e
VOL 31

NO. 10

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO,

I

•

enttne

l'

MONDAY, Afi.RIL 28. 1980_

FIFTEEN CENTS

JONAil-IAN 6WIFT:

AL.L DIR'lY .ANDWEr: .."

From the Associated Press

Americans support rescue attempt
11

50ME ARE BORN

Dl R"T'Y, 50V\t=. ACH 11:\IE:

.

DIRTINE66 ...

~' .. AND SOME ._,~VE DIRTlN£:65

NEW YORK - Americans overwhelmingly approve of the military
effort to free the hostages in Iran, and they say President Carter
waited too long to use military force to try to end the months-long
crisis, an Associated Press-NBC News poll says.
The public also thinks another military effort to free the more than
50 Americans should be considered, although that now seems unlikely
with the militants' decision to scatter the hostages to various cities
outside Tehran.
Howver,-even with the strong support for the aborted rescue effort,
Americ,ns' rating of Carter's handling of the Iranian crisis has slipped another notch.

'YOU DON'T .HAVS TO

!55: CLEAN 10 ·BE:

THRU5T UR:JN "'l'HE;M . 11
· WILLIAM 5HAKe?~.'

WE:LL- READ.

•

Prison uprising ends today
MICIDGAN CITY, Ind.- Rebellious prisoners at the Indiana State
Prison early today ended an uprising and released four hostages after
heavily armed state police officers entered the prison, Corrections
Department Commissioner Gordon Faulkner said.
The hostages, who were not harmed, were the last of seven taken by
some 35 ilunates during the incident that began about noon Sunday.
Their peaceful release ended the tense incident about 16 hours after
it began.

Captors 'spaced out teeny hoppers'

Ed Sulliva·n
WHAT WA'S WHAT ?

HOMESTEAD AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. -U.S. Ambassador Diego
Asencio, freed after 61 days as a hostage in Colombia, called his
guerrilla captors a "bunch of spaced-out teeny-boppers" and said he
nearly dissuaded some of them from Marxism.
An exuberant Asencio told a State Department spokesman he could
have converted a few of the leftists to capitalism if he'd had more time
with them in the Dominican Republic Embassy at Bogota.
Asencio, who was freed in Havana on Sunday along with 11 other
captive diplomats, arrived here 20 pounds lighter and with a bushy
graybeard.

THE.RE
IT liS

I !A)N'T HEAR

AGAIN.'

ANYTHING'

Cuban refugees sr.troive furious storm

-

KEY WEST, Fla . - The week-old Cuban boatlift that has ferried
3,500 refugees to freedom in defiance of U.S. government warnings
survived a furious storm that swept the Florida Straits with hurricaneforce winds.
But the U.S. Coast Guard, which received 29 rescue calls in one fiveminute period alone Sunday, reported no deaths or serious injuries.

..
\

Five people perish in trailer fire
KENTON, Ohio - Ulcas County authorities planned to begin the
process today of identifying two of five people who died Sunday when
fire swept through a mobile home.
Three of the victims were identified Sunday as Brent Osbun, 25, of
Kenton, the owner of the home, Steven Boyer, 29, of Jenera, and
Daniel Shafer, 26, of Bluffton.
The bodies of the other victims were taken Jrom Hardin County to
the Lucas County coroner's office where attempts to positively iqentify them were to begin today.

I V'l V', IT, POP. I LEAR'NEI/
f-JON TO WHISTLE WITH

WHAT DO l..rOU

SUPPOSE IT

TWO F='INGE;RS .'

I??

Weather

Occasional light rain or drizzle likely tonight and Tuesday. Lows
tonight from the upper 30s to the low 40s. Highs Tuesday in the mid 505.
The chance of precipitation is 60 percent tonight and 70 percent

:Delegates chosen for
•Buckeye Boys' State

"GUESS .WHAT! MY PSYCH lATFIIST SAYS HE
THINKS I'M MAKING YOU UPI'-' ;

"WHEN I WAS A BOY WE WENT TO SCHOOL e/eN IF WE
WERE OUT OF SHAMPOO AND CONDITIONEAI"

Kevin Jl;ugene Smith, a junior at selected for the All Conference
. Meigs High School, and Michael SVAC football team. Shoemaker is
. Shoemaker, a junior at the Kyger president of the choir at Kyger
Creek High School, have been selec- Creek. Shoemaker was also selected
ted delegates to Buckeye Boys' State · for the All-Gallia County Choir. He is
. by the American Legion of Feeney- in the Latin Club, the Industrial Arts
Bennett Post 128, Middleport.
Club, the Kyger Creek Key Club, and
Boys' State will be held in June at has been on the scholarship team for
• Bowllng Green State University.
the past three years. He attended the
: Smith, son of the late Clyde and OHio State Key Club convention on
: Kathem Smith, is enrolled in the April 12 and 13 in Columbus.
Active in 4-H, Shoemaker is a
college preparatory course at Meigs
High. He plans to attend Ohio member and past president of the
University. He resides with his gran- LitUe Kyger Valley Boys 4-H Club
: dparents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert and the Rio Wranglers Horse 4-H
Club, and the 4-H Junior Leadership
· Roush, Bailey Run Road.
: Kevin is a member of the Varsity Club. He also served as a member on
· M. Club and has bene active in the Junior Fair Board, was selected
basketball for three years, track for to attend 4-H Club Congress at Ohio
· two years, and football for one year. State University, and enjoys
: Shoemaker, son of Mr. and Mrs. showing hogs, sheep and riding hor· Paul Shoemaker, Route 1, Cheshire, ses. He is a member of the Cheshire
: has played football at Kyger Creek Baptist Church.
· for the past three years. He was
'

"IT WAllO EMBAFIAA881NQI THE NEW DOOTOR {WefT1TO
TUANED OUT TO BE ABOY I USED TO ~V·81T F0AI'

YOU'LL HAVE,TO PULL TOMORROW! YOU'VE
GOT THE ODD DAYS!"

'1

KEVIN E. SMITH

I .

•

MIKE SHOEMAKER

..

NOTHING LEFT - An undetennlned explosion leveled the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Fields located on SR 160, south of Ewington early
Sunday morning. Luckily, no one was at home at the time of the ex-

plosion. The State Fire Marshal's Office and other special investigators
have been called in to assist Gallia County Sheriff's deputies with the inv~stigation.

Explosion confuses officials
Authorities rem..!n confused today structure could be seen hanging
aboUt the cause of the Sunday mor· from trees in a pine grove a quarterning explosion which leveled the
mile from the house.
home IX Grover Fields, Ewington.
The Vinton department used less
Residents within miles of the than 500 gallons of water to ex·
structure were awakened at ap-. tlnquish two minor spot fires in the
proximately 4:27 a.m. by a shat- basement area.
tering blast which ripped through
"Things were moving too damn
the home turning it and the contents fast to burn," State Fire Marshal
into shredded rubble. ·
Frank Eisnaugle said later in the
A neighbor, Mrs. Garland (Ezell) day; "there was one hell of a
Ward, was the first to get a call vacuum created here."
through to Vinton Volunteer Fire
Two homes located near the Fields
Chief Harry Smathers.
residence Incurred damages as the
Arriving at the site on SR 160, just result of the explosion.
Across 160, set back in a field a few
south of Ewington, the Vinton depar·
tment Wscovered a scene resem- hWldred yards from the state highbling a battle zone.
way, window and door sills in the
Wreckage from the early morning home of Robert Saunders were
blast was scattered for thousands of pushed in-most of the windows were
feet in all directions. Portions of the

blown in, or out, as the force of the
explosion and the resulting rush of
air back into the vacuum passed
through the immediate area.
'The windows of a home owned by
Hazel Fields, located near the
Fields' residence were broken. Objects in both homes were pulled from
shelfs. The refrigerator in the Saunders home was opened by the force
of the vacuum.
Loss to the homes will exceed
$60,000, a spokesman for the Gallia
Coimty Sheriff's Department said
today.
Fire Marshal Eisnaugle was
called in by the Gallia Department
to aid in the investigation of what
Deputy R.L. Wiseman described as
" the damndest thing I ever saw."

Aconcrete slab, which had served
as the porch, was discovered several
yards from its original location.
Deputies estimated the slab weighed
several thousand pounds. The
home's bathtub was found across 160
turned inside out.
11

Every

situation

is

unique,"

Eisnaugle said Sunday, "but, this is
a highly unusual incident."
Adepartment spokesman said this
morning a number of possible explanations are under investigation,
but added that, as of now, there were
no definitive leads as to the cause of
the blast.
The State Fire Marshal's Office is
expected to send special in·
vestigators to investigate the incident, the department spokesman
added.

Iranian leaders to surrender bodies
By The ..Usoclated Press
oe 60 miles south of the Soviet borThe bodies of the U.S. conunandos der, while another group was sent to
killed in the abortive operation to Qom, the Shiite Moslem holy city 100
rescue the American hostages in miles south of Tehran, the militants
Iran will be handed over to represen- occupying the embassy announced
tatives of Pope John Paul U, the In- Sunday .
They said some of the militants
ternational Red Cross and the Swiss
government, Tehran Radio reported were accompanying each group and
that control of the hostages was to be
today.
shared
with the people of each city .
The timing of the turnover was not
"We
decided to keep the spies in
known. The eight bodies were taken
to Tehran's morgue after they were
various cities so that we won't be
displayed in plastic bags SWlday on forced to kill the spies if the U.S.
the ground at the U.S. Embassy and government repeats foolish acreporters and TV camera crews tions,'' the militants said.
On Saturday they said the
were· called in to see them and
hostages would be dispersed to foil
photograph them.
The Swiss ambassador, the Red
another U.S. rescue attempt.
The militant did not say how many
Cross respresentative in Tehran and
the · papal representative were not of their 50 captives were transferred
available inunediately for com· or where and when the others might
be moved. But three senior U.S.
ment. .Switzerland represents U. S.
interests in Iran since Washington diplomats held ·at the Foreign
Ministry in Tehran since the embroke diplomatic relations.
Meanwhile, some of the hostages bassy takeover Nov. 4 were not
were reported transferred from the moved, a ministry official said.
The bodies of eight American serembassy in Tehran to the former
vicemen
killed in the aborted rescue
U.S. consulate in the northern city of
mission
Friday were laid out in
Tabriz and the holy city of Qom,
plastic
bags
on the ground at the emsouth of the Iranian capital.
"As there is no guarantee that the bassy and reporters and TV camera
U.S. administration .wilL return the crews were called in to see them and
bodies of the Americans killed in the
abortive operation to their families,
we decided to hand them over to Check minor accident
representatives of Pope John Paul
II the International Red Cross
A smg
'
le car accident was in'
' Swedish gover- __yestigated Saturday at 5:30p.m. by
Organization
and the
nment," the broadcast said, citing a the Meigs County Sheriff's Departstatement from the office of ment. No personal injuries were
President Abolhassan Bani..SSdr.
reported.
The bodies of eight American ser·
Keith L. Lee, 37, Chillicothe, was
vicemen killed in the failed rescue traveling east on CR 24 when his
mission Friday were displayed at vehicle ran off the right side of the
the embassy Sunday. An attempt to higllway to avoid hitting an ondemand &lt;!'llnsom for the bodies was coming vehi,cle that was left of cenindlcated, but the Carter Ad- ter.
minlstrationsaiditwon'tpay.
The Lee vehicle struck an emMeanwhile, a group of the hankment. There was moderate
hostages arrived in Tabriz, the
damage. No description of the
restive capital of Azerbaijan provinsecond vehicle was obtained.

photograph them.
President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr
said Saturday the bodies should be
returned "with no conditions attached." But the newspaper of the
hBrd-tine Islamic Republican Party,
Jomhori Islami, said President Carter shoUld be made to ransom them
by releasing the $8 billion in Iranian
assets he froze in November in
retaliation for the hostage seizure.
Ayatollah Mohammad Beheshti,
the party's head and the secretary of
the ruling Revolutionary Council,
said the coWJcil should decide what
to do with the bodies.
Defense Secretary Harold Brown

ruled out bartering for the bodies.
"This is something in which we do
not propose to erogage." he said on
CBS-TV's "Face The Nation."
"We're not in the body-buying
business," said Zbigniew Brzezinski, Carter's national security
adviser, on ABC-TV's "Issues And
Answers.''
~yatoUah Sadegh Khaikhali, who
presided at the display of the bodies
at the embassy, said nine bodies
were recovered, and at least 20 more
commandos died in the raid "but
their bodies are powder now." But
Pentagon officials insisted only
eight Americans were killed.

Ohio records
10 traffic deaths
By Associated Press
Ten persons died in weekend traffic accidents around Ohio during the
weekend, including two people in
separate accidents in Cleveland and
an Ohio University student who was
struck by a car as he,. walked across
a bridge in Athens,' the Highway
Patrol said.
'The patrol counts weekend traffic
deaths from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight Sunday.
'i'he dead:
SUNDAY
ST. MARYS - Wanda N. Stombaugh, 28, of Lima, a passenger, in
an accident on an Auglaize County
road.

NEW lEXINGTON- Clifford R.
Nisly, 20, of New Lexington, in a tw~
car accident on a Perry County
road.

CLEVELAND - Danny Thomas,
59, o! Cleveland, in a one-car acci,nt on a Cleveland city street.

~

CLEVELAND
Deborah
Donovan, 21, of Cleveland, in a onecar accident on a Cleveland city
street.
SATURDAY
ATHENs-Timothy Scalia, 19, of '
Perrysburg, a pedestrian struck by
a car on an Athens city street.
BOWUNG GREEN - Alvin Mar·
senburg, 25, of Fostoria, in a one-car
accident on U.S. 6 in Wood County.
CANTON - Martin E. Kelp, 25, IX
Canton, in a one-ear accident on a
Canton city street.
MAYFIELD HEIGHTS - Nick
Pistillo, 72, of Mayfield Heights, in a
tw~ar . accident on a Mayfield
Heights city street.
ELYRIA - Leonard A. Cusano,
41, of Elyria, in a one-car accident
on an Elyria city street.
LISBON - David N. .CalheU, fl,
of Wellsville, ~hen his motorcycle
crashed on a Columbiana County
road.

�I

I

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, April 28, 1980

The Daily Sentinel

-Opinions.
&amp; Comments

2- Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, April28, 1980 '

WELL,T\-\c CAMPA\6N ~~ GETTING

11lE DAILY SENTINEL

.
·
·
•
:

,

(USPSl-)
DEVOTED T0111E
IN'I'EI\ESr OF
MElGHWION AREA
Lttten ofQIIIDkla are welcomed.._, tboald be letl tho 110 w~ IODJ (or tubjed to re41actloa by lbe ed.J.tor) ud mu1t be dped wttb the 1Jpee'1 addrnl. Names may be 11t'ttMteld upoa
pu.bUCidoa. H~ver, OD request.. .. mel wW be diltl01ed. Unen llleald be Ia lood llll.t, a~
lkallq iuu&lt;I,DOipe.....Utlet.
PubU.bed daily ex,.pt S.illrday by 'l1le Oblo Valley PubUablog c.mp..y- Malllmedlo, Ia&lt;.,
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Obk UW. Bulaett Offlee Pboae tf!.. UK. Edltort.l Pboae tn-!117.
~ clau poltlige paid at Pomeroy, Oblo.
Nadoaal adverdllq repre~eatadve, Laadoa AUOtlatet , 1111 Eut!lld Ave., OevelaDd, OllJo
H115.
Tbt A..oda&amp;ed Prnl II adulvely eatltle4 to tbe uae for pu.bUcadoa ol all DCWI dils-tchel
cndJ.t.ed ta tbeDCWipilper ud allo the local DtWI pu.bUJbed berela.
Publlsber
.
Robert Wtagett

. Genera! Mgr. •cuy Editor
New• Editor
~,...-"'Adv . M&amp;n~~ltr
~

tS:mOSJ

~~

By Tbe Associated Press
"That was as great an eldllbition
of defense as you'll see," said Los
Angeles Dodger right-hander Don
Sutton alter watching his outfielders
take away two seemingly sure-fire
hits SUilday from San Diego's Gene
Te1111ce.
Den-el Thomas made a leaping
catch of Tenace's vicious line drive
to left center in the second inning,
and Dusty Baker robbed Tenace of a
homer in the fourth when he reached
over the bullpen gate in left to snare
the ball.
.
Those two defensive gems, plus
some timely Sutton pitching, gave

UGl."l .• ,

6U~H AN~ CAR"TER HEA~UA~ t ER'i
A1"TACKEt'.,, AN~ NOW MERE'S A

REFORT OF A LAU"'~R'i

Dodgers post eight ·straight wins

BREAK-IN.~,

RobertHoeflkb
Dale Rotllgeb, Jr.

the streaking Dodgers their eighth
straight victory with a 3-1 triwnph
over the Padres.
..
Sutton struck out only three,· but
he also gave up only four hits in
seven innings. Charlie Hough
finished up for the National
League's hottest team, recording his
first save since Aug. 24,1978.
Cardluals 10, Pbillles 1
Keith Hernandell cracked five
hits, drove in three runs and scored
two, and Bob Forsch pitched a six·
hitter for his first victory of the
season as St . Louis beat
Philadelphia.
Braves 6, Expos 3

C.riGbeea

~._
-roi"'T"'&amp;!! c::loo=o

Old library
A building which Andrew
Carnegie donated to Gallipolis in
1903 is no longer used for a library.
&lt;:arnegie scattered his wealth na·
fionwide to build hundreds of structures to house libraries. One local
Mdow, Mrs. Samuel L. Boss::rd, sreepted the advice of her attorney,
Hamlin King, and bestowed the
wealth that she and the doctor a~
~wnulated to construct a building to
house a library.
• But we come to use library and
lluilding as synonyms, and
Carnegie's stood us in good stead for
three score years. When they were
younger, folk found the long stairs to
!he entrance a challenge; but as
they grew old, they found those
same steps a barrier to worlds
lieyond.
; As the "library" grew, the
building didn't grow. The board
oought additional room to let the
Uuilding grow, and members of the
qoard beseeched local government
for that extra room. It became clear
that growth of the building was not
ll!}ssible. As difficult as it was, the
board had to search for a larger
P,.sture to locate the building to
liouse the " li~rary," which the die·
tjonary defines as a collection of
~.
manuscripts, maga2ines,

films, and whatever elSe one needs
to read.
Departure from our old friend-the
building at Third and State-came
with regret, but also with anticipa·
tion that friends of yesterday could
once more enter the "library" and
explore the worlds from which they
hadbeencutoff.
In 1903 the board agreed that if the
library ceased to house the
"library", it would return to the
owners, the Gallia Academy Foun·
dation, members of which (the
assignees) are once again the
holders of Third and State. No longer
can the library board come to the aid
of its friend, the former ''library" at
Third and State. To expend one far·
thing for upkeep of someone else's
building would evoke a scowl and
worse from Ohio.
As it stands today, the old library
is not in our hands - "our" referr-

ing to the library board's hands.
As a reward for the years she has
served the people, we hope and pray
that someone can infuse new life into
this ancient edifice so that once
again it can serve the people of
Gallipolis and Gallia County through
the decision of the Gallia Academy
Foundation.

Letters to the editor
Law Day U.S.A.
Dear Editor:
; May 1 is Law Day U.S.A. The task
of-law is to adjust relations between
gqvemment and the people, and to
order conduct between individuals
sii as to give the most effect to the
whole scheme of expectations of
tiumans in a civilized society with a
ririnimwn of friction and waste.
::It is worthwhile from time to time
!Q: remind ourselves, why it is, that
la'W, Ia wyers and a profession of
lawyers have come to be developed
in. all civilized societies and have
maintained themselves so persistently. In conjunction with
training and experience, in order to
be a help to the courts, and an aid to
the administration of jlJStice, in or·
der to insure that the machinery of
justice is not perverted, those who
operate the machinery must not
merely know how to operate, they
need the guiding restraint of the
professional spirit to prevent misuse
of the machinery, to prevent waste
of public time in useless wrangling,
to·promote proper treatment of wit·
nesses and victims, so that wit·
nesses will be willing to come for·
ward to testily. They need a

professional spirit to inspire confidence on the part of the courts, in
being able to rely upon what counsel
represents to them. Lawyers have a
function of preventing controversy,
preventing the needless resort · to
the courts, and keeping undertaking
once they are in the courts to the
straight paths prescribed by law.
While in all walks of life, one must
bear in .mind the gaining · of a
livelihood, there is much more in the
professional law than the gaining of
a livelihood. The legal profession
refers to a group of men and wome(l
pursuing a learned art as a coming
calling in the spirit mf public service
because it may incidentally be a
means of livelihood. The legal
profession aims at the exercise of
powers beneficial to hwnankind.
The challenge of the 80s to law and
lawyers is to live, think and serve
the ideals and principles of the legal
profession, and strive to advance
and improve the basic aim of the
legal profession, to be of service to
hwnankind.
Very truly yours, Sara J. Harper,
Judge, Cleveland Municipal Court.

Christians march

To all people concerned for our
nation :
According to II Chronicles 7:14,
there will be a united plea sent forth
to the Creator of our great nation, on
April29, 1980 for healing of our land.
There has been sent out a call for one
million Christians to gather together
in Washington, D. C. not to protest or
rally against anything, but to pray
and fast and lift up Jesus Christ as
the only answer for our troubles
nation.
Many buses are being chartered
from around the country to bring
people to Washington for this event,
and there has been one chartered for
Christians from our own surroun-

our area that are not going to
Washington on April 29, to please
unite in prayer and fasting on that
day, seek God to help tum America
back to " one nation under God." Individual prayer groups from each
church or united times of prayer
throughout the day are being planned.
Pastors and leaders, please
remember this day and encourage
your congregations to pray for the
leaders of our country.
" Righteousness exalteth a nation :
but sin is a reproach to any people."
Proverbs 14:34.
Fellow Christian from Meigs
~ounty ·Name omitted on request.

din~area.

We are askin~ for all Christians in

Supporters thanked
Dear Editor,
In my last letter to you I neglected
to mention those who gave me moral
and or financial support. Ged'e Oiler
and Local1886 United Mine Workers
of All)erica; John Guzek, President
of District 6 United Mine Workers of
America; Gene Coleman; Jim Rick·
man; Ted Reed and another banker
who wishes to remain anonymous;
United Mine Workers Supporters
Club; a Commissioner; Rick Crow,
Prasecuting Attorney; Larry Spencer; John S. Codner; Bill Swatzel;
Vern Weber; Roger Davis; Dale
Dutwn; Okey Kiser; · Ruth and
Stanley Sterns; Hilton Wolfe, Jr.;
Bob File; Jim Fortune; Larry May;
Larry and Nancy Holsinger; and
Reverend Bill Perrin who gave me

,

an uplift when my moral was at a
low ebb.
Lru!t, but most important, my wile
who is my life and in my time 01 need
gave me words of love and support,
and my children who somehow understand why I am drlven in this.
The NOW endeavor is not of
myself as an individual, but of the
people of this country, men, women
and children. Therein lies the pride
they have in their towns, themselves
and their country. To these people
'Thanks' for the pride, honor and
determination you have in yourself
and your country and in my endeavor. Keep the faith, as without
your moral and financial support I
would be nothing.
fulspectfi!IIY, Bill Foster.

)

ti-rA~::::r..!:
1-tUtMf

f-01tf

woftm ~lf~e:G~ N.E.A.fo

Buyer confidence polls at all-time low
NEW YORK (AP) - It isn't surprising that the buyer confidence
polls are plodding along at all-time
lows. There is little for the ordinary
American to cheer about, except
perhaps those big income tax refun·
ds.
Having gone through a winter of
high fuel bills, he now faces a swnmer of high gasoline prices. His rent
is rising, his paycheck buys less, he
cannot save and he no longer dares
to borrow even if he could. ·
If vacation plans haven't already
been cut back they probably will be,
because the consensus now is that
we are headed for a recession if we
aren't already in it. A recession of
higher prices and fewer jobs.
, Other dreams have been snuffed
out too. The new house, for one.
WherP no you get the down
payment'! Ana if you have it, where
do you find a mortgage? And after
that, how do you afford to carry the

billion larger than nonnal. ·
Inflation obviously is making it
difficult to meet expenses, but in a
less observable way it is eating
away at financial foundations of
American households, like termites
on a picnic in the main beam.

Business mirror
Payments of that sort leave little
money for other things, including
reduction of credit card loans,
paying the heating b~, financing
the family car, meeting the tax
demands and putting food on the
table.
In fact, some economists wonder if
loan delinquency rates wouldn't
already be rising if it weren't for extraordinarily high income tax refunds, estimated to be about $11.5

Little wonder then that elements
of consumer confidence - present
financial condition, expected finan·
cia I condition in a year, expected
business conditions next 12 months
-have been falling.
The one major part of the various
conswner confidence measurements that hasn't been falling sharply is
that referring to whether it's a good
time to buy large household goods.
Many families continue to think the

time is propitious. Why? Because
prices will be higher later.
The consumer confidence
measurements are often used by
companies to forecast sales. Some
companies swear by the evidence
and even gear their production to
meet what they see as foolproof
evidence.
In a sense, these companies UBe
the dats as a doctor might use a
psychiatric study of his patient - to
know him, to understand him, to
predict his reactions. Some go further; they try to exploit him.
But there is another use that immediately comes to mind, and that is
in reassuring the consumer that he
is acting in a perfectly rational and
understandable way. If he is
depressed, there's reason for it.
The conswner doesn't have a
psychiatric problem. The economy
does.

Washington today

Reserve Boards rates slow economy
WASlllNGTON (AP) -For all the
Carter administration's talk about
taking a tough stand against in·
Dation, the tough stand is at the
Federal Reserve Board, not the
White House.
It's the board's high interest rates
that are slowing the economy and
bringing on a recession.
The president has recently given
his wholehearted support to the high
interest rate policy and has taken
steps of his own to tighten credit.
Bilt
the
presiden
t has criticized high interest rates in
the past and could decide to do so
again. It's a matter for worry in the
marble halls of the Fed at the
moment.
There is worry that if the White

House backs away from supporting
the policy, there could be a loud
public outcry against the Fed that
would reverberate in Congress. And
that could force the Fed to
backtrack and release its restraints
on money and credit.
In the view of one high official,
such a development could be
disastrous becaUBe inflation finally showing the first signs of
slowing down - could easily explode
anew to ever more serious levels.
The official, who did not want to be
identified, said the chief focus of
policy must remain on inflation.
The worry that there could be calls
soon for lower interest rates and
looser credit was fueled recently
when Treasury Secretary G.

William Miller said in an interview
with The Associated Press he thinks
people soon will be more worried
about the recession than about inflation.
However, a policy of high interest
rates and tight credit involves real
pain and sacrifice by large segments
of the American public and the of·
ficial who asked not to be identified
is not sure people are aware of this. ·
But he adds that such an awareness
could develop quickly if a large num·
ber of personal and corporate
bankruptcies occur.
"I have this feeling that things
that are being sold now as an acceptable remedy are likely to result
in a lot of unhappiness when people
find out how much pain is involved,"

he said.
Therefore, he said it is vital that
Congress and the White House continue to support ~ Fed in its actions
by helping fend off public pressure
for a reversal.
"The worst thing that could happen would be a relatively brief, mild
rlownturn, with only a moderate
easing of wages and prices, followed
by a strong recovery that could let
wages and prices go up again," said
the official.
Inflation dropped to 4.8 percent at
the depth of the last recession before
starting up again. Prior to the spurt
of inflation that spawned that
recession, inflation had been l"WIning at about 3 percent.

High roller in the debt department
By Robert Walters
WASIDNGTON (NEA) ·The few
remaining big spenders who still
don't appreciate the virtues of a
balanced federal budget ought to
take a close look at the government
agency headed by a Bismarck, N.D.,
native named Hubert J. Hintgen.
Hintgen's title is commissioner of
the public debt. His agency, the
Bureau of the Public Debt, is respon·
sible for administering the legacy of
years of deficit spending.
The gross public debt currently
exceeds $857 billion. That's more
than $3,850 for every man, woman
and child now living in the United

States. It grows every day and
sometime in the mid-1980s (probably
in 1984) will pass the $1 trillion
mark.
Only six months ago, at the beginning of the current fiscal year, the
debt stood at $833.8 billion. But six
months from now, at the end of the
fiscal year, it is expected to total
$892.8 billion.
But those bonds are issued in
denominations up to only $5,000. The
real action is in marketable
securities issued in denominations
ranging up to $1 million apiece and
known as
Treasury Bonds,

Treasury Notes and Treasury Bills.
During every week of the year,
billions of dollars • worth of those
loans are scheduled for repayment.
But the government, already
operating at a substantial deficit in
the current fiscal year, obviously
doesn't have the money to payoff
even a small portion of the massive
debt accumulated in prior years.
So Hintgen's agency is involved in
an elaborate high-stakes robbingPeter-to-pay aul operation in which
it constantly "rolls over" the public
debt. It Issues new bonds, notes and

(

2,500 people to receive, store, issue,
redeem, audit and account for all ci
its bonds, notes and bills.
Those people have to be paid and
provided with offices and supplies, .
so the Bureau of the Public Debt
must have ils own operating budget
- $1116 million this year and almost
$199 million next year.
Finally, there's the interest that
must be paid to induce individuals
and institutions to constantly loan
money to a debt-riddled government. Interest last yenr amounted to '
$59.8 billion, but this year it will soar

Washington perspective
bills, then uses the proceeds from
those sales to pay off the securities
that are about to come due.
On one typical day recently, the
Treasury Department sold more
than $6 billion worth of 37-day "T· ·
bills" and $3.5 billion worth of twoyear "T-notes." On the same day, it
announced plans to sell $4 billion
worth of one-year bills, $5 billion
worth of 83-day bills and S1.5 billion
worth of 1$-yenr bonds.
Those transactions require a great
deal of paperwork, so the Bureau of
the.Public Debt employs more than

'
)'

mortgage?
.
To buy a new. home at todBy's
prices and interest rates would consume about '!/ percent of the or·
dinary family's disposable income.
Some owners pay 35 percent, even
50, to cover operating expenses.

•

to$73.3 billion.
Those who aren't convinced of the
need to balance the budget tO reduce ,
the debt might consider this what.
might-have-been alternative to
years of deficit spending!
If one item - interest paid on the
public debt - were eliminated from
this year's budget, the country could
enjoy the benefits of all the domestic
social · programs yearned for by
liberals, the balanced budget ·
cherished by conservatives and
biUions of dollars worth of talt cuts
for its citizenry.
·

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Frank
Pastore wasn't much of a relief pitcher in his first big league stint. But
oh, what a starter he Is the SllCO!ld
time around.
The 22-year-old right-hander has
become one of the aces of the Cin·
cinnati Reds pitching staff with a 3-1
record, three complete games and a
sparkling 2.17 earned run average.
His latest triumph came Sunday
against San Francisco Giants when
Pastore pitched a four-hitter in a 3-1
victory by the Western Division
leaderS:
That was a sharp contrast with
last year when he made the Reds in
the spring, was used in relief, and
wound up getting crushed by the
Dodgers for 10 runs and five homers
in less than three Innings one May
night before being sent back to In·
disnapolis.
"I learned a lot then," the California-born Pastore admitted. "Against the Dodgers I was pitching before
my hometown fans and I got mad
when I began getting hit. It was like
in Little League, when you say, 'Oh,
yah, well try and hit this one.' And,
of course, they did.
"!learned if they hit your fastball,
you don't throw the next one harder .
right down the pipe."
Pastore spent several months in
Indianapolis last season before
coming back up in August in time for
the Reds' division-winning drive as a

starter. He's now finnly implanted
in the Cincinnati rotation ,
"Basically he just challenged us,"
said San Francisco's Jack Clark,
whose second-inning 'homer was the
only run off Pastore Sunday. "His
fastball just explodes."
Pastore faced only 30 Giant bat·
ters - three above the miniwn and only Clark and Marc Hill, who
doubled, got past first base. He
walked no one.
Rival pitcher Ed Whitson did
almost as well as Pastore, giving up
six hiU! and one walk in eight in·
nings. But a two-run, wind-blown
home run by Ray Knight in the four-

Howe by losing pitcher Neil Allen, G3, and scored Cedeno and pinchrtUUler Terry Puhl.
Blue Jays 8, Brewers 2
The high-flying Toronto Blue Jays

Baseball roundup

completed a three-game sweep of
hard-hitting Milwaukee, s-2.
The surprising Blue Jays are the
only team in the American League
East playing better than .500. Sunday's victory gave them an ~
record- 5-0 against Milwaukee.
Twins ZO, A's 11
Minnesota scored 10 runs in the
first inning, including two-run
singles by Glenn Adams and Jose
Morales and a two-run triple by John
· Castino although the A's actually
outhit them 22·20 in a wild offensive
display.
th and a misplayed fly-ball triple by
Dave Concepcion in the sixth did
him in.
THISTLEDOWNS RESULS
" I thought this was my best
NORTII
RANDALL, Ohio (AP) game," said Whitson, who has now
Heriberto
Rivera
rode Nano Second
lost his first four,decisions. "I really
to
victory
in
the
featured Banquet
thought today was the day I was
Bell
Stakes
at
Thistledown
Sunday,
going to get that first one. But when
running
the
six
furlongs
in
1:10
1-5.
you are in a slwnp like we are, that's
The winner paid "'.60, $4 and $3.20.
how things go. You just have to keep
L&lt;lvin Lass, who challenged Nano
working until you come out of It."
Second in the stretch, finished
The Reds, who lost the first two
second and returned $4.20 and $3.20.
games of the series to the Giants,
Favored Plenty Smart was third
are now 13-4, the best record in
and paid $2.80.
baseball. The Giants, who have lost
In the final race trilecta, the commore games than anyone so far, are
bination
of 1-1G-4 returned $2,005.00.
6-12.
The crowd of 6,171 bet $852,1l46.

Pastore great starter

REM€MSER WHEN J0\1N RNPE~ON
. SAlt&gt; ~E 1 t&gt; RV.N At; LONG Afi ~\S
C\..EAN CLOTHES 1-\ELt&gt; OUT?

--...:

Dale Murphy slugged a two-run
homer and an RBI single, helping
left-bander Larry McWilliams to his
first victory of the season, as Atlanta
beat Montreal.
Provided with a three-run cushion
by his teammates in the first inning,
McWilliams, 1·2, held th~ E~tpos at
bay until the ninth, when Montreal
scored twice.
Astros·4, Meta3
Jeff Leonard drilled a two-run
single in the 12th inning to lead
Houston over New York. Leonard's
hit followed a walk to Cesar Cedeno,
a double by Alan Ashby, and an intentional walk to pinch-hitter Art

two runs with a single aiKI a homer,
Yankees 1, White Sox 0
Tommy John scattered slx hits in and Steve Kemp hit a pair ri
blanking Chicago for the second sacrifice rues, helping Dave Rozema
pick up his second successive viCtime this season, and Willie Randolph singled home a fifth-inning run tory.
Boston's Carl Yastnemskl bad
following singles by Gralg Nettles
and Rick Cerone and Fred Stanley's two hits, moving ahead of Lou Brock
into 13th place on the all·tlme llst
sacrifice.
Royals 3, Orioles Z
with3,023.
Kansas City came from behind af.
ter being held hitless for 5¥.. innings . - - - - - - - - - - - by Dennis Martinez. John Wathan
NOW OPIN
tripled and scored the winning run
on a seventh-inning single by Jamie
FOR SPRING SEASON
Quirk.
Complete line of bedding
Martoen 7, Angels 3
and vegetable plants.
Dan Meyer drove in. three runs,
Plus blooming hanging
two with his first home run of the
baskets &amp; foliage.
season, to back Glenn Abbott's
"Season Special"
eight-hit pitching, whlch included
Bedding PI ants
home runs by Joe Rudi and Bobby
90c In Dozen Paks
Grieb.
Tlgen 8, Red So 5
Detroit's Alan Tranunell drove in
Ph. 992-571~
Syracuse, OH.

Hubbard's Greenhouse
Or&gt;_en o_aily 91o 5 &amp; Sun. 1 to 5

Living Room Suite Sale At Mason Furniture

NFL
draft
Tuesday
NEW YORK (AP) - Somewhere
in the United States, there is a foot·
hall player who, about 24 hours from
now, will experience·what is known
as mixed emotions. He will be selec·
ted by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the
first round of the National Football
League draft.
He'll be joining a four-time Super
Bowl winner, a dynasty of sorta.
Very nice. The only problem is,
what's he going to do when he gets
there?
.
The Steelers have an all-pro
player at virtually every position,
which leads to · a Jot of lounging
around for the rookies. Last year's
No. 1 pick, for example, was Greg
Hawthorne, a rurming back. He
carried the ball all of 28 times for 123
yards in 1979 - not much more than
a routine game for Franco Harris.
Not that being a No. I draft choice
by the Steelers is a ticket to oblivion, •
mind you. Far from it. Consider, if
you will that among Pittsburgh's first-round selections since 1969 are
Harris, linebacker Robil) Cole, tight
end Bennie Cunningham, wide
receiver Lynn SwaM, quarterback
TerrY Bradshaw and . defensive
tacldeJoeGreene.
An educated guess is that the
Steelers unless they trade to improve their drafting position (28th,
last in each round) or to pick up a
veteran in exchange for their first·
round pick, will come away with a
defensive lineman. AmOIII! the CI!Rdidates are ends JaC9b Green
(Texas A&amp;MJ, Jim Stuckey (Clemson), Rulon Jones (Utah state) and .
tackles Bruce Clark (Penn State)
and Doug Martin (Washington)·
A few hours before the Steelers
complete the first round, the Detroit
Lions will start it. Also barring a
trade they'll be taking Billy Sims,
the
running back. In the
past few weeks, Sims' agent, a for-,
mer HouSton dentist named Jerry
Argovitz, has been talking about extracting' something in the neighborhood of f750,000 a year from the
Lions' bank account to get Sims'
name on a contract. 'l11e Lions have
been mentlonlni numbers about
one-tbird that size.

oidahoma

There Is A DIHerence In Furniture!
WE ARE HAVING OUR LARGEST LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE IN THE HISTORY OF OUR STORE. THE ABOVE 7 PIECE GROUP INCLUDES
SOFA, ROCKER, CHAIR &amp; OTTOMAN, 2 END TABLES, COFFEE TABLE, YOU MUST SEE THIS LIVING ROOM SUITE TO APPRECIATE THE
QUALITY OF IT.

A Real Good Inexpensive 3 Place Group •
SOFA, CHAIR &amp; LOVE SEAT, IN HERCULON COVER WITH VINYL STRAP ARMS. REAL 'NICE FOR ~.V. ROOM OR DEN.
All 3 Pieces Juit•••••••••••••••

!.288°

0

In aU, there will be 12 rounds
covering two days of . drPfUng,
wheeling and dealing.

. '

I.

\·

�I

I

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, April 28, 1980

The Daily Sentinel

-Opinions.
&amp; Comments

2- Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, April28, 1980 '

WELL,T\-\c CAMPA\6N ~~ GETTING

11lE DAILY SENTINEL

.
·
·
•
:

,

(USPSl-)
DEVOTED T0111E
IN'I'EI\ESr OF
MElGHWION AREA
Lttten ofQIIIDkla are welcomed.._, tboald be letl tho 110 w~ IODJ (or tubjed to re41actloa by lbe ed.J.tor) ud mu1t be dped wttb the 1Jpee'1 addrnl. Names may be 11t'ttMteld upoa
pu.bUCidoa. H~ver, OD request.. .. mel wW be diltl01ed. Unen llleald be Ia lood llll.t, a~
lkallq iuu&lt;I,DOipe.....Utlet.
PubU.bed daily ex,.pt S.illrday by 'l1le Oblo Valley PubUablog c.mp..y- Malllmedlo, Ia&lt;.,
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Obk UW. Bulaett Offlee Pboae tf!.. UK. Edltort.l Pboae tn-!117.
~ clau poltlige paid at Pomeroy, Oblo.
Nadoaal adverdllq repre~eatadve, Laadoa AUOtlatet , 1111 Eut!lld Ave., OevelaDd, OllJo
H115.
Tbt A..oda&amp;ed Prnl II adulvely eatltle4 to tbe uae for pu.bUcadoa ol all DCWI dils-tchel
cndJ.t.ed ta tbeDCWipilper ud allo the local DtWI pu.bUJbed berela.
Publlsber
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Robert Wtagett

. Genera! Mgr. •cuy Editor
New• Editor
~,...-"'Adv . M&amp;n~~ltr
~

tS:mOSJ

~~

By Tbe Associated Press
"That was as great an eldllbition
of defense as you'll see," said Los
Angeles Dodger right-hander Don
Sutton alter watching his outfielders
take away two seemingly sure-fire
hits SUilday from San Diego's Gene
Te1111ce.
Den-el Thomas made a leaping
catch of Tenace's vicious line drive
to left center in the second inning,
and Dusty Baker robbed Tenace of a
homer in the fourth when he reached
over the bullpen gate in left to snare
the ball.
.
Those two defensive gems, plus
some timely Sutton pitching, gave

UGl."l .• ,

6U~H AN~ CAR"TER HEA~UA~ t ER'i
A1"TACKEt'.,, AN~ NOW MERE'S A

REFORT OF A LAU"'~R'i

Dodgers post eight ·straight wins

BREAK-IN.~,

RobertHoeflkb
Dale Rotllgeb, Jr.

the streaking Dodgers their eighth
straight victory with a 3-1 triwnph
over the Padres.
..
Sutton struck out only three,· but
he also gave up only four hits in
seven innings. Charlie Hough
finished up for the National
League's hottest team, recording his
first save since Aug. 24,1978.
Cardluals 10, Pbillles 1
Keith Hernandell cracked five
hits, drove in three runs and scored
two, and Bob Forsch pitched a six·
hitter for his first victory of the
season as St . Louis beat
Philadelphia.
Braves 6, Expos 3

C.riGbeea

~._
-roi"'T"'&amp;!! c::loo=o

Old library
A building which Andrew
Carnegie donated to Gallipolis in
1903 is no longer used for a library.
&lt;:arnegie scattered his wealth na·
fionwide to build hundreds of structures to house libraries. One local
Mdow, Mrs. Samuel L. Boss::rd, sreepted the advice of her attorney,
Hamlin King, and bestowed the
wealth that she and the doctor a~
~wnulated to construct a building to
house a library.
• But we come to use library and
lluilding as synonyms, and
Carnegie's stood us in good stead for
three score years. When they were
younger, folk found the long stairs to
!he entrance a challenge; but as
they grew old, they found those
same steps a barrier to worlds
lieyond.
; As the "library" grew, the
building didn't grow. The board
oought additional room to let the
Uuilding grow, and members of the
qoard beseeched local government
for that extra room. It became clear
that growth of the building was not
ll!}ssible. As difficult as it was, the
board had to search for a larger
P,.sture to locate the building to
liouse the " li~rary," which the die·
tjonary defines as a collection of
~.
manuscripts, maga2ines,

films, and whatever elSe one needs
to read.
Departure from our old friend-the
building at Third and State-came
with regret, but also with anticipa·
tion that friends of yesterday could
once more enter the "library" and
explore the worlds from which they
hadbeencutoff.
In 1903 the board agreed that if the
library ceased to house the
"library", it would return to the
owners, the Gallia Academy Foun·
dation, members of which (the
assignees) are once again the
holders of Third and State. No longer
can the library board come to the aid
of its friend, the former ''library" at
Third and State. To expend one far·
thing for upkeep of someone else's
building would evoke a scowl and
worse from Ohio.
As it stands today, the old library
is not in our hands - "our" referr-

ing to the library board's hands.
As a reward for the years she has
served the people, we hope and pray
that someone can infuse new life into
this ancient edifice so that once
again it can serve the people of
Gallipolis and Gallia County through
the decision of the Gallia Academy
Foundation.

Letters to the editor
Law Day U.S.A.
Dear Editor:
; May 1 is Law Day U.S.A. The task
of-law is to adjust relations between
gqvemment and the people, and to
order conduct between individuals
sii as to give the most effect to the
whole scheme of expectations of
tiumans in a civilized society with a
ririnimwn of friction and waste.
::It is worthwhile from time to time
!Q: remind ourselves, why it is, that
la'W, Ia wyers and a profession of
lawyers have come to be developed
in. all civilized societies and have
maintained themselves so persistently. In conjunction with
training and experience, in order to
be a help to the courts, and an aid to
the administration of jlJStice, in or·
der to insure that the machinery of
justice is not perverted, those who
operate the machinery must not
merely know how to operate, they
need the guiding restraint of the
professional spirit to prevent misuse
of the machinery, to prevent waste
of public time in useless wrangling,
to·promote proper treatment of wit·
nesses and victims, so that wit·
nesses will be willing to come for·
ward to testily. They need a

professional spirit to inspire confidence on the part of the courts, in
being able to rely upon what counsel
represents to them. Lawyers have a
function of preventing controversy,
preventing the needless resort · to
the courts, and keeping undertaking
once they are in the courts to the
straight paths prescribed by law.
While in all walks of life, one must
bear in .mind the gaining · of a
livelihood, there is much more in the
professional law than the gaining of
a livelihood. The legal profession
refers to a group of men and wome(l
pursuing a learned art as a coming
calling in the spirit mf public service
because it may incidentally be a
means of livelihood. The legal
profession aims at the exercise of
powers beneficial to hwnankind.
The challenge of the 80s to law and
lawyers is to live, think and serve
the ideals and principles of the legal
profession, and strive to advance
and improve the basic aim of the
legal profession, to be of service to
hwnankind.
Very truly yours, Sara J. Harper,
Judge, Cleveland Municipal Court.

Christians march

To all people concerned for our
nation :
According to II Chronicles 7:14,
there will be a united plea sent forth
to the Creator of our great nation, on
April29, 1980 for healing of our land.
There has been sent out a call for one
million Christians to gather together
in Washington, D. C. not to protest or
rally against anything, but to pray
and fast and lift up Jesus Christ as
the only answer for our troubles
nation.
Many buses are being chartered
from around the country to bring
people to Washington for this event,
and there has been one chartered for
Christians from our own surroun-

our area that are not going to
Washington on April 29, to please
unite in prayer and fasting on that
day, seek God to help tum America
back to " one nation under God." Individual prayer groups from each
church or united times of prayer
throughout the day are being planned.
Pastors and leaders, please
remember this day and encourage
your congregations to pray for the
leaders of our country.
" Righteousness exalteth a nation :
but sin is a reproach to any people."
Proverbs 14:34.
Fellow Christian from Meigs
~ounty ·Name omitted on request.

din~area.

We are askin~ for all Christians in

Supporters thanked
Dear Editor,
In my last letter to you I neglected
to mention those who gave me moral
and or financial support. Ged'e Oiler
and Local1886 United Mine Workers
of All)erica; John Guzek, President
of District 6 United Mine Workers of
America; Gene Coleman; Jim Rick·
man; Ted Reed and another banker
who wishes to remain anonymous;
United Mine Workers Supporters
Club; a Commissioner; Rick Crow,
Prasecuting Attorney; Larry Spencer; John S. Codner; Bill Swatzel;
Vern Weber; Roger Davis; Dale
Dutwn; Okey Kiser; · Ruth and
Stanley Sterns; Hilton Wolfe, Jr.;
Bob File; Jim Fortune; Larry May;
Larry and Nancy Holsinger; and
Reverend Bill Perrin who gave me

,

an uplift when my moral was at a
low ebb.
Lru!t, but most important, my wile
who is my life and in my time 01 need
gave me words of love and support,
and my children who somehow understand why I am drlven in this.
The NOW endeavor is not of
myself as an individual, but of the
people of this country, men, women
and children. Therein lies the pride
they have in their towns, themselves
and their country. To these people
'Thanks' for the pride, honor and
determination you have in yourself
and your country and in my endeavor. Keep the faith, as without
your moral and financial support I
would be nothing.
fulspectfi!IIY, Bill Foster.

)

ti-rA~::::r..!:
1-tUtMf

f-01tf

woftm ~lf~e:G~ N.E.A.fo

Buyer confidence polls at all-time low
NEW YORK (AP) - It isn't surprising that the buyer confidence
polls are plodding along at all-time
lows. There is little for the ordinary
American to cheer about, except
perhaps those big income tax refun·
ds.
Having gone through a winter of
high fuel bills, he now faces a swnmer of high gasoline prices. His rent
is rising, his paycheck buys less, he
cannot save and he no longer dares
to borrow even if he could. ·
If vacation plans haven't already
been cut back they probably will be,
because the consensus now is that
we are headed for a recession if we
aren't already in it. A recession of
higher prices and fewer jobs.
, Other dreams have been snuffed
out too. The new house, for one.
WherP no you get the down
payment'! Ana if you have it, where
do you find a mortgage? And after
that, how do you afford to carry the

billion larger than nonnal. ·
Inflation obviously is making it
difficult to meet expenses, but in a
less observable way it is eating
away at financial foundations of
American households, like termites
on a picnic in the main beam.

Business mirror
Payments of that sort leave little
money for other things, including
reduction of credit card loans,
paying the heating b~, financing
the family car, meeting the tax
demands and putting food on the
table.
In fact, some economists wonder if
loan delinquency rates wouldn't
already be rising if it weren't for extraordinarily high income tax refunds, estimated to be about $11.5

Little wonder then that elements
of consumer confidence - present
financial condition, expected finan·
cia I condition in a year, expected
business conditions next 12 months
-have been falling.
The one major part of the various
conswner confidence measurements that hasn't been falling sharply is
that referring to whether it's a good
time to buy large household goods.
Many families continue to think the

time is propitious. Why? Because
prices will be higher later.
The consumer confidence
measurements are often used by
companies to forecast sales. Some
companies swear by the evidence
and even gear their production to
meet what they see as foolproof
evidence.
In a sense, these companies UBe
the dats as a doctor might use a
psychiatric study of his patient - to
know him, to understand him, to
predict his reactions. Some go further; they try to exploit him.
But there is another use that immediately comes to mind, and that is
in reassuring the consumer that he
is acting in a perfectly rational and
understandable way. If he is
depressed, there's reason for it.
The conswner doesn't have a
psychiatric problem. The economy
does.

Washington today

Reserve Boards rates slow economy
WASlllNGTON (AP) -For all the
Carter administration's talk about
taking a tough stand against in·
Dation, the tough stand is at the
Federal Reserve Board, not the
White House.
It's the board's high interest rates
that are slowing the economy and
bringing on a recession.
The president has recently given
his wholehearted support to the high
interest rate policy and has taken
steps of his own to tighten credit.
Bilt
the
presiden
t has criticized high interest rates in
the past and could decide to do so
again. It's a matter for worry in the
marble halls of the Fed at the
moment.
There is worry that if the White

House backs away from supporting
the policy, there could be a loud
public outcry against the Fed that
would reverberate in Congress. And
that could force the Fed to
backtrack and release its restraints
on money and credit.
In the view of one high official,
such a development could be
disastrous becaUBe inflation finally showing the first signs of
slowing down - could easily explode
anew to ever more serious levels.
The official, who did not want to be
identified, said the chief focus of
policy must remain on inflation.
The worry that there could be calls
soon for lower interest rates and
looser credit was fueled recently
when Treasury Secretary G.

William Miller said in an interview
with The Associated Press he thinks
people soon will be more worried
about the recession than about inflation.
However, a policy of high interest
rates and tight credit involves real
pain and sacrifice by large segments
of the American public and the of·
ficial who asked not to be identified
is not sure people are aware of this. ·
But he adds that such an awareness
could develop quickly if a large num·
ber of personal and corporate
bankruptcies occur.
"I have this feeling that things
that are being sold now as an acceptable remedy are likely to result
in a lot of unhappiness when people
find out how much pain is involved,"

he said.
Therefore, he said it is vital that
Congress and the White House continue to support ~ Fed in its actions
by helping fend off public pressure
for a reversal.
"The worst thing that could happen would be a relatively brief, mild
rlownturn, with only a moderate
easing of wages and prices, followed
by a strong recovery that could let
wages and prices go up again," said
the official.
Inflation dropped to 4.8 percent at
the depth of the last recession before
starting up again. Prior to the spurt
of inflation that spawned that
recession, inflation had been l"WIning at about 3 percent.

High roller in the debt department
By Robert Walters
WASIDNGTON (NEA) ·The few
remaining big spenders who still
don't appreciate the virtues of a
balanced federal budget ought to
take a close look at the government
agency headed by a Bismarck, N.D.,
native named Hubert J. Hintgen.
Hintgen's title is commissioner of
the public debt. His agency, the
Bureau of the Public Debt, is respon·
sible for administering the legacy of
years of deficit spending.
The gross public debt currently
exceeds $857 billion. That's more
than $3,850 for every man, woman
and child now living in the United

States. It grows every day and
sometime in the mid-1980s (probably
in 1984) will pass the $1 trillion
mark.
Only six months ago, at the beginning of the current fiscal year, the
debt stood at $833.8 billion. But six
months from now, at the end of the
fiscal year, it is expected to total
$892.8 billion.
But those bonds are issued in
denominations up to only $5,000. The
real action is in marketable
securities issued in denominations
ranging up to $1 million apiece and
known as
Treasury Bonds,

Treasury Notes and Treasury Bills.
During every week of the year,
billions of dollars • worth of those
loans are scheduled for repayment.
But the government, already
operating at a substantial deficit in
the current fiscal year, obviously
doesn't have the money to payoff
even a small portion of the massive
debt accumulated in prior years.
So Hintgen's agency is involved in
an elaborate high-stakes robbingPeter-to-pay aul operation in which
it constantly "rolls over" the public
debt. It Issues new bonds, notes and

(

2,500 people to receive, store, issue,
redeem, audit and account for all ci
its bonds, notes and bills.
Those people have to be paid and
provided with offices and supplies, .
so the Bureau of the Public Debt
must have ils own operating budget
- $1116 million this year and almost
$199 million next year.
Finally, there's the interest that
must be paid to induce individuals
and institutions to constantly loan
money to a debt-riddled government. Interest last yenr amounted to '
$59.8 billion, but this year it will soar

Washington perspective
bills, then uses the proceeds from
those sales to pay off the securities
that are about to come due.
On one typical day recently, the
Treasury Department sold more
than $6 billion worth of 37-day "T· ·
bills" and $3.5 billion worth of twoyear "T-notes." On the same day, it
announced plans to sell $4 billion
worth of one-year bills, $5 billion
worth of 83-day bills and S1.5 billion
worth of 1$-yenr bonds.
Those transactions require a great
deal of paperwork, so the Bureau of
the.Public Debt employs more than

'
)'

mortgage?
.
To buy a new. home at todBy's
prices and interest rates would consume about '!/ percent of the or·
dinary family's disposable income.
Some owners pay 35 percent, even
50, to cover operating expenses.

•

to$73.3 billion.
Those who aren't convinced of the
need to balance the budget tO reduce ,
the debt might consider this what.
might-have-been alternative to
years of deficit spending!
If one item - interest paid on the
public debt - were eliminated from
this year's budget, the country could
enjoy the benefits of all the domestic
social · programs yearned for by
liberals, the balanced budget ·
cherished by conservatives and
biUions of dollars worth of talt cuts
for its citizenry.
·

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Frank
Pastore wasn't much of a relief pitcher in his first big league stint. But
oh, what a starter he Is the SllCO!ld
time around.
The 22-year-old right-hander has
become one of the aces of the Cin·
cinnati Reds pitching staff with a 3-1
record, three complete games and a
sparkling 2.17 earned run average.
His latest triumph came Sunday
against San Francisco Giants when
Pastore pitched a four-hitter in a 3-1
victory by the Western Division
leaderS:
That was a sharp contrast with
last year when he made the Reds in
the spring, was used in relief, and
wound up getting crushed by the
Dodgers for 10 runs and five homers
in less than three Innings one May
night before being sent back to In·
disnapolis.
"I learned a lot then," the California-born Pastore admitted. "Against the Dodgers I was pitching before
my hometown fans and I got mad
when I began getting hit. It was like
in Little League, when you say, 'Oh,
yah, well try and hit this one.' And,
of course, they did.
"!learned if they hit your fastball,
you don't throw the next one harder .
right down the pipe."
Pastore spent several months in
Indianapolis last season before
coming back up in August in time for
the Reds' division-winning drive as a

starter. He's now finnly implanted
in the Cincinnati rotation ,
"Basically he just challenged us,"
said San Francisco's Jack Clark,
whose second-inning 'homer was the
only run off Pastore Sunday. "His
fastball just explodes."
Pastore faced only 30 Giant bat·
ters - three above the miniwn and only Clark and Marc Hill, who
doubled, got past first base. He
walked no one.
Rival pitcher Ed Whitson did
almost as well as Pastore, giving up
six hiU! and one walk in eight in·
nings. But a two-run, wind-blown
home run by Ray Knight in the four-

Howe by losing pitcher Neil Allen, G3, and scored Cedeno and pinchrtUUler Terry Puhl.
Blue Jays 8, Brewers 2
The high-flying Toronto Blue Jays

Baseball roundup

completed a three-game sweep of
hard-hitting Milwaukee, s-2.
The surprising Blue Jays are the
only team in the American League
East playing better than .500. Sunday's victory gave them an ~
record- 5-0 against Milwaukee.
Twins ZO, A's 11
Minnesota scored 10 runs in the
first inning, including two-run
singles by Glenn Adams and Jose
Morales and a two-run triple by John
· Castino although the A's actually
outhit them 22·20 in a wild offensive
display.
th and a misplayed fly-ball triple by
Dave Concepcion in the sixth did
him in.
THISTLEDOWNS RESULS
" I thought this was my best
NORTII
RANDALL, Ohio (AP) game," said Whitson, who has now
Heriberto
Rivera
rode Nano Second
lost his first four,decisions. "I really
to
victory
in
the
featured Banquet
thought today was the day I was
Bell
Stakes
at
Thistledown
Sunday,
going to get that first one. But when
running
the
six
furlongs
in
1:10
1-5.
you are in a slwnp like we are, that's
The winner paid "'.60, $4 and $3.20.
how things go. You just have to keep
L&lt;lvin Lass, who challenged Nano
working until you come out of It."
Second in the stretch, finished
The Reds, who lost the first two
second and returned $4.20 and $3.20.
games of the series to the Giants,
Favored Plenty Smart was third
are now 13-4, the best record in
and paid $2.80.
baseball. The Giants, who have lost
In the final race trilecta, the commore games than anyone so far, are
bination
of 1-1G-4 returned $2,005.00.
6-12.
The crowd of 6,171 bet $852,1l46.

Pastore great starter

REM€MSER WHEN J0\1N RNPE~ON
. SAlt&gt; ~E 1 t&gt; RV.N At; LONG Afi ~\S
C\..EAN CLOTHES 1-\ELt&gt; OUT?

--...:

Dale Murphy slugged a two-run
homer and an RBI single, helping
left-bander Larry McWilliams to his
first victory of the season, as Atlanta
beat Montreal.
Provided with a three-run cushion
by his teammates in the first inning,
McWilliams, 1·2, held th~ E~tpos at
bay until the ninth, when Montreal
scored twice.
Astros·4, Meta3
Jeff Leonard drilled a two-run
single in the 12th inning to lead
Houston over New York. Leonard's
hit followed a walk to Cesar Cedeno,
a double by Alan Ashby, and an intentional walk to pinch-hitter Art

two runs with a single aiKI a homer,
Yankees 1, White Sox 0
Tommy John scattered slx hits in and Steve Kemp hit a pair ri
blanking Chicago for the second sacrifice rues, helping Dave Rozema
pick up his second successive viCtime this season, and Willie Randolph singled home a fifth-inning run tory.
Boston's Carl Yastnemskl bad
following singles by Gralg Nettles
and Rick Cerone and Fred Stanley's two hits, moving ahead of Lou Brock
into 13th place on the all·tlme llst
sacrifice.
Royals 3, Orioles Z
with3,023.
Kansas City came from behind af.
ter being held hitless for 5¥.. innings . - - - - - - - - - - - by Dennis Martinez. John Wathan
NOW OPIN
tripled and scored the winning run
on a seventh-inning single by Jamie
FOR SPRING SEASON
Quirk.
Complete line of bedding
Martoen 7, Angels 3
and vegetable plants.
Dan Meyer drove in. three runs,
Plus blooming hanging
two with his first home run of the
baskets &amp; foliage.
season, to back Glenn Abbott's
"Season Special"
eight-hit pitching, whlch included
Bedding PI ants
home runs by Joe Rudi and Bobby
90c In Dozen Paks
Grieb.
Tlgen 8, Red So 5
Detroit's Alan Tranunell drove in
Ph. 992-571~
Syracuse, OH.

Hubbard's Greenhouse
Or&gt;_en o_aily 91o 5 &amp; Sun. 1 to 5

Living Room Suite Sale At Mason Furniture

NFL
draft
Tuesday
NEW YORK (AP) - Somewhere
in the United States, there is a foot·
hall player who, about 24 hours from
now, will experience·what is known
as mixed emotions. He will be selec·
ted by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the
first round of the National Football
League draft.
He'll be joining a four-time Super
Bowl winner, a dynasty of sorta.
Very nice. The only problem is,
what's he going to do when he gets
there?
.
The Steelers have an all-pro
player at virtually every position,
which leads to · a Jot of lounging
around for the rookies. Last year's
No. 1 pick, for example, was Greg
Hawthorne, a rurming back. He
carried the ball all of 28 times for 123
yards in 1979 - not much more than
a routine game for Franco Harris.
Not that being a No. I draft choice
by the Steelers is a ticket to oblivion, •
mind you. Far from it. Consider, if
you will that among Pittsburgh's first-round selections since 1969 are
Harris, linebacker Robil) Cole, tight
end Bennie Cunningham, wide
receiver Lynn SwaM, quarterback
TerrY Bradshaw and . defensive
tacldeJoeGreene.
An educated guess is that the
Steelers unless they trade to improve their drafting position (28th,
last in each round) or to pick up a
veteran in exchange for their first·
round pick, will come away with a
defensive lineman. AmOIII! the CI!Rdidates are ends JaC9b Green
(Texas A&amp;MJ, Jim Stuckey (Clemson), Rulon Jones (Utah state) and .
tackles Bruce Clark (Penn State)
and Doug Martin (Washington)·
A few hours before the Steelers
complete the first round, the Detroit
Lions will start it. Also barring a
trade they'll be taking Billy Sims,
the
running back. In the
past few weeks, Sims' agent, a for-,
mer HouSton dentist named Jerry
Argovitz, has been talking about extracting' something in the neighborhood of f750,000 a year from the
Lions' bank account to get Sims'
name on a contract. 'l11e Lions have
been mentlonlni numbers about
one-tbird that size.

oidahoma

There Is A DIHerence In Furniture!
WE ARE HAVING OUR LARGEST LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE IN THE HISTORY OF OUR STORE. THE ABOVE 7 PIECE GROUP INCLUDES
SOFA, ROCKER, CHAIR &amp; OTTOMAN, 2 END TABLES, COFFEE TABLE, YOU MUST SEE THIS LIVING ROOM SUITE TO APPRECIATE THE
QUALITY OF IT.

A Real Good Inexpensive 3 Place Group •
SOFA, CHAIR &amp; LOVE SEAT, IN HERCULON COVER WITH VINYL STRAP ARMS. REAL 'NICE FOR ~.V. ROOM OR DEN.
All 3 Pieces Juit•••••••••••••••

!.288°

0

In aU, there will be 12 rounds
covering two days of . drPfUng,
wheeling and dealing.

. '

I.

\·

�.r, _4-!he Daily Sentinel. Mid(lleport-Pomeror, o., Monday, April :&gt;J!,t!iao

I)-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, April28, 1980

~

I

iI

•

·•' ..
'

.'.
' ..

I.

PRICES EFFECTIVE

....•

MONDAY
THRU
SATURDAY
'

MEIGS VARSITY SOFTBALL TEAM is currently
1~. Members are, front row, 1-r, Beth Perrin, Natalie
-Lambert, Pam Crooks, April Crooks, Cindy Crooks,

~.t

""'
""
~

Paula Horton, Kris Snowden. Back row - Cherie
lightfoot, Sonia Ash, Beth Bartram, Susan Zirkle,
Tonia Ash, Terri Wilson, Cindy Thompson, and Coach
Rita Slavin.

row - Coach John Arnott, Jeff Wayland, Jimmy
Boyer, Dave Hysell, Cliff Kennedy, Steve Ohlinger, J,
R. Wamsley, Terry Wayland, Jerry Fields, and Head
Coach Dale Harrison.

MEIGS VARSITY BASEBALL TEAM - Members
are, front row, l-r, Roger Kovalchik, Robin Herald and
Kenda Brawt, bat girls; Mark Friendly, Troy Brooks,
Tom Owens, Dave Demoskey, and Mike Miller. Back

SUPERIOR NO. 1

SUPERIOR SLICED

BACON

BOILED HAM

12 Ol

99~

PKG.

Banquet honors SVAC all-league players

'119

LB.

FRESH LEAN

QUARTER PAK

'f'

:t

.~

;
..

::;

~
~

~

1
~

;:
..
:'

RIO GRANDE - Hannan Trace
and Southern are the proud owners
~ cbampionsblp hardware today after receiving the football and basketball title trophies to highlight Saturday's ninth annual Southern Valley
Athletic Conference FootballBasketball awards dinner at
Buckeye Hlll5 Career Center.
Hannan Trace Head Football
Coach Larry Cremeens, who piloted
the Wildcats to their first-ever grid ·
championship in hi8 fourth season
and Southern Basketliall Mentor

Carl Wolfe, who gUided the Tornadoes to their fourth straight cage
title and the first appearance in the
state tournament by an SVAC member, respectively watched six and
two of their charges receive their
All-8VAC first-team honors.
In addition, junior Wildcat rwtning back Todd Sibley, who paced
the league in rushing and cranked
out 1,069 yards of real estate for the
season with second-team Associated
Press All-District laurels, picked up

.,.·t~ 1-------------------------------------------~

'f

his Gallipolis Daily Tribunil-WJEH
Radio award for Most Valuable
Back.
Senior Jack Duffy of Southern,
receiving first-team All-Qhio honors
while averaging 19.4 Tornado points
per game, received his honors for
Most Valuable Player while seniors
Jim Barnes of North Gallia and
Greg Hayman of Eastern picked up
their Co-Most Valuable Lineman
awards.
Barnes was a first-team aUdistrict offensive line performer

while Hayman and Eagle teanunate
Brian Bissell cracked the secondteam aU-district defensive wall.
All of the above are first-team
league members.
The All-8VAC grid lineup also included juniors Greg Wigal and Mark
Norton of Eastern; seniors Tim
Wright, Jay Bray, Kerry Ours, Ar·
chie Meadows and Tim Beaver of
Hannan Trace; seniors Paul
Lassiter, Chris Elliott, Greg Smith
and junior Mike Shoemaker of

Torooto
New York

I I .500 I

Boston

1

Milwaukee

'

.500

l 'h·

.m
.m

3
3

81 .1292

Ba!tlmon&gt;

s 10

Detroit
Cleveland

6

WEST

Chicago

ro

59 .3573

11 S .1111
10 7 .SM I~
9 7 .563 2
9 7 .563 2
.52!1 211
9989 .500 3
7 8 .&lt;67 311

Oakland
Kanaaa City
Tel.&amp;!

SeatUe
Calllomla

S.banlay'• GuDr:.

Saa4.av'• Gam~
1~,

Pl1lladelphia

Booton 94. Philadelphia

leada ll!ries 4-1
Wntera Coafereaee Ftnal
BetHf-8ne11
TU.esday,AprOZZ

Seattle lOll, Los Anaele! 107
Wedaac~Ay I Aprll Z3
Los Angeles 1011, Se.aWe ~

Friday's Game
Los Angeles UM, Seattle 100
SUaday'• Game
Los Angeles 98, Seattle 93, Ws Angeles
leads series 3-1
Wedoesday'a Game
Sea We at Los Angeles

Ff1day, May z

Loe Angeles at Sea tUe, if necessary
Swldoy. Mal' 4
SeatUe at Los Angelea. if necessary

Booton 12, Detroit 7
Baltimore 4, Kansas CityO

Weelead Sport. 1'ranudf01111
BASEBAlL
Na~oaol Leogue

Cleveland II, Tew 7

-5,0altlandl
Toronto 4, Milwaukee 0

PHILADELPHIA PHILIJES - Placed
Ma.My Trillo, second baseman, on the
disabled liat. Recalled Ramon Aviles, ill"

Chicaron, New York 7,IZ innings
Calllomla 7, SeaWe6
Saaday'• Gamet
DetroiU B&lt;lltoo5
New y(;k l , Chicago a
Cleveland 7, TeUJ 4
Minnesota 20, Oakland II
Toronto a, Milwaukee 2

fielder, from Okl.ahcma City of the American
Association.
Ji'OOTBAIL
NaUoul FootbiU League

Kansu City 3, Baltimoro 2
SuiUe 7, CaUfomla 3
Moaday't Gamel
SeatUe (Honeycutt :H) at Minnesota
(Feltoo 6-2)
Kansas City (Leonard 0-2) at ToronlO
(Ciancy6-l ), n
New Vorlt (Griffin 0.1) at Baltimore

CJnCAGO BEARS - Placed Tommy
Hart, defensive end, on waivers.
UOCI&lt;EY
S1riat1Leaguo
H. C. DAVOS - Announced thai Herb
Brooks had agreed to a two-year contract as
head coach.

(Palmor2-l),n

Boston

(Stanley

1-1)

(Bawnranen I~ l. n
Oakland (Norris 2-0)
(Tanana 1·1), 11
Only eames .tehe&lt;luled

at
at

Chicago

NATIONAL LEAGUE

EAST
W. L.Pct. GB

Pitt. burgh
OUcago
Montreal
l'lllladelphlo

9 5 .643

7
I
6
I

st. Loula

New York

Atlanta

5 .~ 1
7 ,j62 211
7 ,j62 211

I .4211 3

59 .3$74

ClncinnaU
HOUI1oll
Loa Angeles
San otego
Son Francioco

12 • .750

10 5 .!67
10 7 ,l8(!
6 10 .m
Ill .333
5 10 .333
Satllrdly't Gaael

Ill
211
1

611
Ill

Pltllburgh u, Chicaao2
Son Francloco I, Cincinnati I
Phlladelohia 7, St. LoulaO
Montreal f. Atlanta!

LosArureles4. SanDietZo3
Sou!doT• llama
St. Loula 10 Philadelphia I

(IIJortinezl·l), n
.
,
Atlanta (Matllla 2.4) ot San lllqo (Jones
'1·2), tl
Onlygameosdleduled

_
_
-=··,_
_,,_
Pia,..,.
..

RBI : J. Cruz, Houston, 16 ; Garvey, Loe
Chicago, 15; R .
Smith, La! Mgt! lea, 15; winfield, San Diego,
~ties, 16; Klngman"·

1!.
IDTS : R. Smith, l..al Angeles, 26; Parker,
Pl.tbbwJh, ll: Reitz, St. Louis, 21; Hendt1ck, St. Loul.s, 21; Cabell, Houston, 21;
Law LosAAgeles,21.
DOUBLES; Sl&lt;ama, New York, 7;
Ptrrilh, Montreal, 6; G. Maddoi,
PhllldelDhla, 8; Tavet'Bll, New Vor:t. ~; M':'"
Bride, PhJiadelphia, 5; Knight, CinCIMaU,
~ ; Baker, Los Angeles, 5; Stennett, San
Ji'ranclJco, ~ .
TRIPLES ; McBride, PhiladelolU, 2; K.
Hernandez, Sl Loub, 2; llorxb, St. r.ow., 2;
Angelet,2; May, San ~rancisco, 2.
tiOME RUNS : Kingman, Chicago, 6;

Parrish, Montreaf. 4; Schmidt,
PhlladelolU, 4; I.uzlnskl, Pl!JladetolU. 4:
a.unblfas, Atlanta, 4; FoSter, ~1\. 4;
R. Sm.Jth, Loa Angeles, 4; Wlnfield, San
U!qo, 4.
·
STOLEN BASES; t.sw,. Loo Angel.,, 9;
Moreno, Pllllburl&lt;h, I; t&lt;l&gt;&lt;111, Son Frandlco, 7; LeFlore, !.lonb'eai,G; Mazzilli, New
York, 8; Cedeno, Houston, B; 0 : Smith, San
lliqo,6.

.710, 2.11; Vuckovicb, St. Loula, 3!, .710, 2.411;
LoCooa, CinclnnaU, 3-1, .750, 2.70; Pastore,
Cincinnati, 3-I, .750,1.!7; Lamp, O!lcago, 21, .fi81 , 7.13; ReUJChel, Chicago, 2-1, .6117,
3.70.

,....,..• o...

STRIKEOIITO:

tl
-.
.t'Pi;~'f!.l"
NewTon--

Richard, Houstoo, 411:

Bly1even, Pltt.burgh, 26; P. Nlelcrv, Atlanta,
Ill; Carlton, Phlladelphia, 21 ; Ryan,
""""""· 31; Sutton, U.S Angeles, 20.

llaftaloatNewYark 1el• 1el"''
PNio4eiJ)hlo a t -

._.,,r.r.,a

AMERICAN LEAGUE

u

, _ . , lla_,,Ma It
Buffalo at New
lalanders, if

v:l

Tollfty,MoyU
ot Phllodelphla, ilneceuary
New YOI"k blanden at Bufftlo, if

Baiting (35 at bata) : Staub, Teus, .411;
Yow.t, Milwaukee, ..00; Summers, Detrolt,
.381; Boehle, SeaWe, .381; L. Jobmon,
O!lcago, .SI3.
RUNS: Kemp, Detroit, 15; Willa, Texas,
13; RJvers, TeUJ, 13; 7 Tied With 12.
1181 : 1- Jollns&lt;lo, Chicago, 17; Gamble,
New York, 16; Parrlab, Detroit, II; Kemp,
Detro!~ II; Rudl, C.lllomiB, 14; Smalley,
'Mlnneda, 14; Boclrte, SeaWe, 14:· Oliver,
Teua, 14.

~~~-~~~
;;:_1;

Hf'I'S: - ·
L.

TOP BASKETBAU. PLAYER- Jack Duffy, Senior southpaw, was
given the league's Most Valuable Player Trophy Saturday night by his
coach, Carl Wolfe. Duffy averaged 19.4 points during the regular season
while pacing the Tornadoes to their fourth straight SVAC championship,
fourth straight Class A Sectional Tournament, second straight District
title and first regional crown. The MVP trophy was co-sponsored by the
Swtday Times-8entinel and Radio Station WJEH.

Kentucky Derby
slated Saturday

By The Associated Preos
Julius Erving wants to play a
team with an injured center. Lionel
Hollins wants to play Seattle so the
Philadelphia 76ers will have the
home-court advantage.
But BiU Fitch doesn't think it matters a whole Jot.
"They'll go aU the way," the
Boston Celtic.s coach said aftel; the
76ers disposed of the team with the
best regular-season record in the
National Basketball .Association.
The 76ers were awesome in sending the Celtlcs to the sidelines by
winning the best-ill-seven Eastern
Conference final playoff series in
five games.
The clincher carne Sunday at the
Boston Garden as Philadelphia
never trailed after Darryl Dawkins'
free throw tied the score 18-18 with
4: 11 to go in the first period. The
76ers rolled to a 1~94 triumph.
Hollins led aU scorers with 24 points and handed out seven assists,
while Erving scored 14 points and
took only 10 shots.
The bread and butter of the Boston
offense, penetration and moving tiie
ball quickly to the open man, crumbled in the face of the 76ers' team
defense.

HOME RUNS: Rudl. CalllomiB, 6;
8molley1 Mlnneoot.a, &amp;; Murray, Baltimore,
4; Sine-. Baltlmoro, 4; 1- Jolwon,
Chicogo,4.

STOlEN. BASES: WU1I, Tau, 1: Hen6enon. Oioldand, 7; Wlllon, Kans.u City, 6; .
Bumbry, 8aiUmare. S; RITm. Teus, 5.

PORK LOINS

WUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Pieces
of this year's Kentucky Derby puzzle
in the form of owners, trainers,
jockeys and horses were still
missing from Churchill Downs on a
rainy Swtday, but It was shaping up
as an intriguing one.
There was no strong favorite, a
role which probably will fall either
Plugged Nickle, winner of the
Florida Derby and Wood Memorial,
or Rockhill Native, winner of the
Blue Grass Stakes.
"We might win, we might lose,"
was aU Tommy KeUy, trainer of
Plugged Nickle, would say.
Herb Stevens, trainer of Rockhill
Native, was still at Keeneland, 80
miles away in l.Alxington, and so was
Rockhill Native. They were
scheduled to arrive here sometime
todsy for the Rwt for the Roses
Saturday, as was Rumba, the runnerup in the Santa Anita and
Hollywood derbies who was to fly in
from California.
While there.is no clear~ut favorite
for the Derby, there are several interesing story lines:
- Jaklin Klu~n is co-owned by
·Jack Klugman, who played sports
writer . Oscar Madison in the
television series "The Odd Couple"
and currently stars as Dr. Quincy.
The other owner is John Dominguez,
a iandscape architecht.
Jaklin Klugman prepped for 'the
Derby by winning the one-mile Step-

ping Stone Purse by four lengtlis
over Execution's Reason, another
Derby probable, on opening day
Saturday at the Downs.
-Rockhill Native and Execution's
Resson are geldings. Only seven
geldings have won the Derby, the
last being Clyde VanDusen in 1929.
-Genuine Risk, a filly arrived
here Saturday, and tra.iner Leroy
JoUey was quoted in New York as
saying she wasn't being sent for the
Kentucky Oaks, a prestigious filly
stakes the day before Derby.
11
1bat's out," said Jolley. "We're
going for the big one."
Only one lilly has won the Derby,
Regret in 1915, and none has raced in
It since 1959 when Silver Spoon
finished fifth. Genuine Risk won the
first six races of her career before
finishing third in the Wood
Memorial.
'• - This Derby also will be a "what
if" race. What if Superbity, the
Flamingo winner, had not been injured? What If Codex, the Sarita
Anita and Hollywood Derby winner,
had been nominated? He waan't
beciluse of an oversight. The Derby
does not accept supplemental
nominations, as do the Preakness
and Belmont Stakes.
Other probable Derby starters Include Tonka Wakhan, Degnerate ·
Jon, Super Moment, Iiold 'n Ruling,
and Gold. Stage.

GROUND BEEF

LB.

,,,39

LB.

NEW YORK BONELESS

BETSY ROSS

STRIP STEAK

In compiling a 61-21 regularseason record, the Celtics were held
to fewer than 100 points just nine
times and never lost more than two
in a row. But the 76ers kept them
below 100 in aU five playoff games
and won the last three.
Laters 98, Soalcs t3
The Seattle SuperSonics' reign as
National Basketball Association
champions is tottering .
"The Sanies say they like to play
with their backs to the wall," said
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar. "At this
point, they're about to go over the
wall."

SWEET
ROLLS

$ 39

LB.

8

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LOAF

vacation, April 26
thru May 6.

More sports
page 10

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May the 7th

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or poid weekly meetings
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ALL FLAVORS
SAVE 20•

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We will

Clncfnnati, 2; Knight, Cln-

cimatl,· 2; Griffey, Cinctnnati, 2; Law, Los

H, 1.000, O.M; Carlton, Philadelphia, 3--1,

-N.,. York lalanden
atl'lllladelphla
oiBIIflolo

-~lphlo a t - . if neceoury

Anieles. 14: FoU, Plttaburgh, 13; Parker,
Pidsbuqjh, 13; Conce!X'ion, Cincinnati, 13;
Law, Los Angeles, 13.

PITCHING (3 De&lt;l•lons ): Richard ,
Hou.ston,3-0,1.000,1.71; Reuss, Los Angeles,

Na-a..a,._

BullalootN... York 1s1an&lt;1en
1'l1l1o&lt;lelphla at Mt..'l'loonday May I
- a t Pl1lladeJPhla, ilnecwary
New Yon l.llanden at Bulfolo,

LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BAmNG 135 .11t bat.) : Reitz, St. looi.J,
.396; Buckner, Chicago, .392; Kingman ,
Oti.cago, .335; R. Smith, Los Angeles, .382;
Martin, Chicago, .370.
RUNS ; J . Cruz, Houstoo, t6 ; Lopes, Los

~Jon,

Atlant.aiMOIIIrul3
H - 4 New York3
Lo1Anplea3 San IJ(qo I
Clnciruiatl3 San Frandoco I
Pltbllursh at Cbtcaao. ppcl, rain
M-y'la.Chic:ago (Hemandez 6-1) ot St. Loula

-

TODAY'S
MAJOR LEAGUE

California

The second-team cage quintet Is
made up of John WesUall of KC,
D8le Newberry of Southwestern, Joe
Peck of North Gallia, Greg Webb of
Hannan Trace and Gene Cole of
Eastern. The third team Is Howell,
Bissell, Potter, Smith and Kent
Wolfe of Southern.
W~bb and Wolfe are sophomores
whire Newberry Is a junior.
This year's guest speaker waa
Brian Burke, who enters his second ·
season as head football coach of the
Ohio University Bobcats.

Sixers, Lakers
for championship?

Scoreboard
Maj«Lapelluel&gt;oll
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. LPel GB
I I .i11

Kyger Creek; seniors Tim Howell
and Jim Cains of North Gallia;
juniors Dale Teaford and Danny
Talbot of Southern and senior Sher·
man Potter and junior Scott Russell
of Southwestern.
The first-team basketball outfit includes Southern's senior Dave
Foreman and Teaford, Hannan
Trace's Carlos Campbell, North
Gallia 's Mark Miller and Southwestern's Todd Baker. Teaford and
Baker are the lone returnees next
season.

I

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Pizzas ~ FRENCH FRIES l
oz.
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LIMIT 1

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;:· 1 39C

Exp. Sat., May 3

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l

Ex~ ~· May 3

I
·

1

L.-~--.!!~~...G.!'!!,I!., __ ~
i.

�.r, _4-!he Daily Sentinel. Mid(lleport-Pomeror, o., Monday, April :&gt;J!,t!iao

I)-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, April28, 1980

~

I

iI

•

·•' ..
'

.'.
' ..

I.

PRICES EFFECTIVE

....•

MONDAY
THRU
SATURDAY
'

MEIGS VARSITY SOFTBALL TEAM is currently
1~. Members are, front row, 1-r, Beth Perrin, Natalie
-Lambert, Pam Crooks, April Crooks, Cindy Crooks,

~.t

""'
""
~

Paula Horton, Kris Snowden. Back row - Cherie
lightfoot, Sonia Ash, Beth Bartram, Susan Zirkle,
Tonia Ash, Terri Wilson, Cindy Thompson, and Coach
Rita Slavin.

row - Coach John Arnott, Jeff Wayland, Jimmy
Boyer, Dave Hysell, Cliff Kennedy, Steve Ohlinger, J,
R. Wamsley, Terry Wayland, Jerry Fields, and Head
Coach Dale Harrison.

MEIGS VARSITY BASEBALL TEAM - Members
are, front row, l-r, Roger Kovalchik, Robin Herald and
Kenda Brawt, bat girls; Mark Friendly, Troy Brooks,
Tom Owens, Dave Demoskey, and Mike Miller. Back

SUPERIOR NO. 1

SUPERIOR SLICED

BACON

BOILED HAM

12 Ol

99~

PKG.

Banquet honors SVAC all-league players

'119

LB.

FRESH LEAN

QUARTER PAK

'f'

:t

.~

;
..

::;

~
~

~

1
~

;:
..
:'

RIO GRANDE - Hannan Trace
and Southern are the proud owners
~ cbampionsblp hardware today after receiving the football and basketball title trophies to highlight Saturday's ninth annual Southern Valley
Athletic Conference FootballBasketball awards dinner at
Buckeye Hlll5 Career Center.
Hannan Trace Head Football
Coach Larry Cremeens, who piloted
the Wildcats to their first-ever grid ·
championship in hi8 fourth season
and Southern Basketliall Mentor

Carl Wolfe, who gUided the Tornadoes to their fourth straight cage
title and the first appearance in the
state tournament by an SVAC member, respectively watched six and
two of their charges receive their
All-8VAC first-team honors.
In addition, junior Wildcat rwtning back Todd Sibley, who paced
the league in rushing and cranked
out 1,069 yards of real estate for the
season with second-team Associated
Press All-District laurels, picked up

.,.·t~ 1-------------------------------------------~

'f

his Gallipolis Daily Tribunil-WJEH
Radio award for Most Valuable
Back.
Senior Jack Duffy of Southern,
receiving first-team All-Qhio honors
while averaging 19.4 Tornado points
per game, received his honors for
Most Valuable Player while seniors
Jim Barnes of North Gallia and
Greg Hayman of Eastern picked up
their Co-Most Valuable Lineman
awards.
Barnes was a first-team aUdistrict offensive line performer

while Hayman and Eagle teanunate
Brian Bissell cracked the secondteam aU-district defensive wall.
All of the above are first-team
league members.
The All-8VAC grid lineup also included juniors Greg Wigal and Mark
Norton of Eastern; seniors Tim
Wright, Jay Bray, Kerry Ours, Ar·
chie Meadows and Tim Beaver of
Hannan Trace; seniors Paul
Lassiter, Chris Elliott, Greg Smith
and junior Mike Shoemaker of

Torooto
New York

I I .500 I

Boston

1

Milwaukee

'

.500

l 'h·

.m
.m

3
3

81 .1292

Ba!tlmon&gt;

s 10

Detroit
Cleveland

6

WEST

Chicago

ro

59 .3573

11 S .1111
10 7 .SM I~
9 7 .563 2
9 7 .563 2
.52!1 211
9989 .500 3
7 8 .&lt;67 311

Oakland
Kanaaa City
Tel.&amp;!

SeatUe
Calllomla

S.banlay'• GuDr:.

Saa4.av'• Gam~
1~,

Pl1lladelphia

Booton 94. Philadelphia

leada ll!ries 4-1
Wntera Coafereaee Ftnal
BetHf-8ne11
TU.esday,AprOZZ

Seattle lOll, Los Anaele! 107
Wedaac~Ay I Aprll Z3
Los Angeles 1011, Se.aWe ~

Friday's Game
Los Angeles UM, Seattle 100
SUaday'• Game
Los Angeles 98, Seattle 93, Ws Angeles
leads series 3-1
Wedoesday'a Game
Sea We at Los Angeles

Ff1day, May z

Loe Angeles at Sea tUe, if necessary
Swldoy. Mal' 4
SeatUe at Los Angelea. if necessary

Booton 12, Detroit 7
Baltimore 4, Kansas CityO

Weelead Sport. 1'ranudf01111
BASEBAlL
Na~oaol Leogue

Cleveland II, Tew 7

-5,0altlandl
Toronto 4, Milwaukee 0

PHILADELPHIA PHILIJES - Placed
Ma.My Trillo, second baseman, on the
disabled liat. Recalled Ramon Aviles, ill"

Chicaron, New York 7,IZ innings
Calllomla 7, SeaWe6
Saaday'• Gamet
DetroiU B&lt;lltoo5
New y(;k l , Chicago a
Cleveland 7, TeUJ 4
Minnesota 20, Oakland II
Toronto a, Milwaukee 2

fielder, from Okl.ahcma City of the American
Association.
Ji'OOTBAIL
NaUoul FootbiU League

Kansu City 3, Baltimoro 2
SuiUe 7, CaUfomla 3
Moaday't Gamel
SeatUe (Honeycutt :H) at Minnesota
(Feltoo 6-2)
Kansas City (Leonard 0-2) at ToronlO
(Ciancy6-l ), n
New Vorlt (Griffin 0.1) at Baltimore

CJnCAGO BEARS - Placed Tommy
Hart, defensive end, on waivers.
UOCI&lt;EY
S1riat1Leaguo
H. C. DAVOS - Announced thai Herb
Brooks had agreed to a two-year contract as
head coach.

(Palmor2-l),n

Boston

(Stanley

1-1)

(Bawnranen I~ l. n
Oakland (Norris 2-0)
(Tanana 1·1), 11
Only eames .tehe&lt;luled

at
at

Chicago

NATIONAL LEAGUE

EAST
W. L.Pct. GB

Pitt. burgh
OUcago
Montreal
l'lllladelphlo

9 5 .643

7
I
6
I

st. Loula

New York

Atlanta

5 .~ 1
7 ,j62 211
7 ,j62 211

I .4211 3

59 .3$74

ClncinnaU
HOUI1oll
Loa Angeles
San otego
Son Francioco

12 • .750

10 5 .!67
10 7 ,l8(!
6 10 .m
Ill .333
5 10 .333
Satllrdly't Gaael

Ill
211
1

611
Ill

Pltllburgh u, Chicaao2
Son Francloco I, Cincinnati I
Phlladelohia 7, St. LoulaO
Montreal f. Atlanta!

LosArureles4. SanDietZo3
Sou!doT• llama
St. Loula 10 Philadelphia I

(IIJortinezl·l), n
.
,
Atlanta (Matllla 2.4) ot San lllqo (Jones
'1·2), tl
Onlygameosdleduled

_
_
-=··,_
_,,_
Pia,..,.
..

RBI : J. Cruz, Houston, 16 ; Garvey, Loe
Chicago, 15; R .
Smith, La! Mgt! lea, 15; winfield, San Diego,
~ties, 16; Klngman"·

1!.
IDTS : R. Smith, l..al Angeles, 26; Parker,
Pl.tbbwJh, ll: Reitz, St. Louis, 21; Hendt1ck, St. Loul.s, 21; Cabell, Houston, 21;
Law LosAAgeles,21.
DOUBLES; Sl&lt;ama, New York, 7;
Ptrrilh, Montreal, 6; G. Maddoi,
PhllldelDhla, 8; Tavet'Bll, New Vor:t. ~; M':'"
Bride, PhJiadelphia, 5; Knight, CinCIMaU,
~ ; Baker, Los Angeles, 5; Stennett, San
Ji'ranclJco, ~ .
TRIPLES ; McBride, PhiladelolU, 2; K.
Hernandez, Sl Loub, 2; llorxb, St. r.ow., 2;
Angelet,2; May, San ~rancisco, 2.
tiOME RUNS : Kingman, Chicago, 6;

Parrish, Montreaf. 4; Schmidt,
PhlladelolU, 4; I.uzlnskl, Pl!JladetolU. 4:
a.unblfas, Atlanta, 4; FoSter, ~1\. 4;
R. Sm.Jth, Loa Angeles, 4; Wlnfield, San
U!qo, 4.
·
STOLEN BASES; t.sw,. Loo Angel.,, 9;
Moreno, Pllllburl&lt;h, I; t&lt;l&gt;&lt;111, Son Frandlco, 7; LeFlore, !.lonb'eai,G; Mazzilli, New
York, 8; Cedeno, Houston, B; 0 : Smith, San
lliqo,6.

.710, 2.11; Vuckovicb, St. Loula, 3!, .710, 2.411;
LoCooa, CinclnnaU, 3-1, .750, 2.70; Pastore,
Cincinnati, 3-I, .750,1.!7; Lamp, O!lcago, 21, .fi81 , 7.13; ReUJChel, Chicago, 2-1, .6117,
3.70.

,....,..• o...

STRIKEOIITO:

tl
-.
.t'Pi;~'f!.l"
NewTon--

Richard, Houstoo, 411:

Bly1even, Pltt.burgh, 26; P. Nlelcrv, Atlanta,
Ill; Carlton, Phlladelphia, 21 ; Ryan,
""""""· 31; Sutton, U.S Angeles, 20.

llaftaloatNewYark 1el• 1el"''
PNio4eiJ)hlo a t -

._.,,r.r.,a

AMERICAN LEAGUE

u

, _ . , lla_,,Ma It
Buffalo at New
lalanders, if

v:l

Tollfty,MoyU
ot Phllodelphla, ilneceuary
New YOI"k blanden at Bufftlo, if

Baiting (35 at bata) : Staub, Teus, .411;
Yow.t, Milwaukee, ..00; Summers, Detrolt,
.381; Boehle, SeaWe, .381; L. Jobmon,
O!lcago, .SI3.
RUNS: Kemp, Detroit, 15; Willa, Texas,
13; RJvers, TeUJ, 13; 7 Tied With 12.
1181 : 1- Jollns&lt;lo, Chicago, 17; Gamble,
New York, 16; Parrlab, Detroit, II; Kemp,
Detro!~ II; Rudl, C.lllomiB, 14; Smalley,
'Mlnneda, 14; Boclrte, SeaWe, 14:· Oliver,
Teua, 14.

~~~-~~~
;;:_1;

Hf'I'S: - ·
L.

TOP BASKETBAU. PLAYER- Jack Duffy, Senior southpaw, was
given the league's Most Valuable Player Trophy Saturday night by his
coach, Carl Wolfe. Duffy averaged 19.4 points during the regular season
while pacing the Tornadoes to their fourth straight SVAC championship,
fourth straight Class A Sectional Tournament, second straight District
title and first regional crown. The MVP trophy was co-sponsored by the
Swtday Times-8entinel and Radio Station WJEH.

Kentucky Derby
slated Saturday

By The Associated Preos
Julius Erving wants to play a
team with an injured center. Lionel
Hollins wants to play Seattle so the
Philadelphia 76ers will have the
home-court advantage.
But BiU Fitch doesn't think it matters a whole Jot.
"They'll go aU the way," the
Boston Celtic.s coach said aftel; the
76ers disposed of the team with the
best regular-season record in the
National Basketball .Association.
The 76ers were awesome in sending the Celtlcs to the sidelines by
winning the best-ill-seven Eastern
Conference final playoff series in
five games.
The clincher carne Sunday at the
Boston Garden as Philadelphia
never trailed after Darryl Dawkins'
free throw tied the score 18-18 with
4: 11 to go in the first period. The
76ers rolled to a 1~94 triumph.
Hollins led aU scorers with 24 points and handed out seven assists,
while Erving scored 14 points and
took only 10 shots.
The bread and butter of the Boston
offense, penetration and moving tiie
ball quickly to the open man, crumbled in the face of the 76ers' team
defense.

HOME RUNS: Rudl. CalllomiB, 6;
8molley1 Mlnneoot.a, &amp;; Murray, Baltimore,
4; Sine-. Baltlmoro, 4; 1- Jolwon,
Chicogo,4.

STOlEN. BASES: WU1I, Tau, 1: Hen6enon. Oioldand, 7; Wlllon, Kans.u City, 6; .
Bumbry, 8aiUmare. S; RITm. Teus, 5.

PORK LOINS

WUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Pieces
of this year's Kentucky Derby puzzle
in the form of owners, trainers,
jockeys and horses were still
missing from Churchill Downs on a
rainy Swtday, but It was shaping up
as an intriguing one.
There was no strong favorite, a
role which probably will fall either
Plugged Nickle, winner of the
Florida Derby and Wood Memorial,
or Rockhill Native, winner of the
Blue Grass Stakes.
"We might win, we might lose,"
was aU Tommy KeUy, trainer of
Plugged Nickle, would say.
Herb Stevens, trainer of Rockhill
Native, was still at Keeneland, 80
miles away in l.Alxington, and so was
Rockhill Native. They were
scheduled to arrive here sometime
todsy for the Rwt for the Roses
Saturday, as was Rumba, the runnerup in the Santa Anita and
Hollywood derbies who was to fly in
from California.
While there.is no clear~ut favorite
for the Derby, there are several interesing story lines:
- Jaklin Klu~n is co-owned by
·Jack Klugman, who played sports
writer . Oscar Madison in the
television series "The Odd Couple"
and currently stars as Dr. Quincy.
The other owner is John Dominguez,
a iandscape architecht.
Jaklin Klugman prepped for 'the
Derby by winning the one-mile Step-

ping Stone Purse by four lengtlis
over Execution's Reason, another
Derby probable, on opening day
Saturday at the Downs.
-Rockhill Native and Execution's
Resson are geldings. Only seven
geldings have won the Derby, the
last being Clyde VanDusen in 1929.
-Genuine Risk, a filly arrived
here Saturday, and tra.iner Leroy
JoUey was quoted in New York as
saying she wasn't being sent for the
Kentucky Oaks, a prestigious filly
stakes the day before Derby.
11
1bat's out," said Jolley. "We're
going for the big one."
Only one lilly has won the Derby,
Regret in 1915, and none has raced in
It since 1959 when Silver Spoon
finished fifth. Genuine Risk won the
first six races of her career before
finishing third in the Wood
Memorial.
'• - This Derby also will be a "what
if" race. What if Superbity, the
Flamingo winner, had not been injured? What If Codex, the Sarita
Anita and Hollywood Derby winner,
had been nominated? He waan't
beciluse of an oversight. The Derby
does not accept supplemental
nominations, as do the Preakness
and Belmont Stakes.
Other probable Derby starters Include Tonka Wakhan, Degnerate ·
Jon, Super Moment, Iiold 'n Ruling,
and Gold. Stage.

GROUND BEEF

LB.

,,,39

LB.

NEW YORK BONELESS

BETSY ROSS

STRIP STEAK

In compiling a 61-21 regularseason record, the Celtics were held
to fewer than 100 points just nine
times and never lost more than two
in a row. But the 76ers kept them
below 100 in aU five playoff games
and won the last three.
Laters 98, Soalcs t3
The Seattle SuperSonics' reign as
National Basketball Association
champions is tottering .
"The Sanies say they like to play
with their backs to the wall," said
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar. "At this
point, they're about to go over the
wall."

SWEET
ROLLS

$ 39

LB.

8

89°

PACK

r;;::=========~
NOTICE

THE STAFF OF

STORCK'S

LAY'S RUFFLES

HILLBILLY

POTATO
CHIPS

BREAD

CAROL'S COIFFURES
Are announcing they
will be closed for

200l.
LOAF

vacation, April 26
thru May 6.

More sports
page 10

re-open on
May the 7th

t

JOIN

NOW~~SAV€
~s12
ON
P€GISTP.ATJON
ffiST
~ 14

'10lJI.

AI()

ME6TN3 ~

,----cou DIET

PLUS SA~ IJ&gt;TO i8 WOP£ WITH.DISCOUNT COUPONS!

RC or

As o member of Weight Watchers ==:;;;;;;~=.;:===il;l:b:tt
you will receive o book
· 1r
of 12 Slim Tkkercoupons
worrh
00 thor ore
redeemable by you
or poid weekly meetings
in June. July ond August 1980.

16

sa.

GALLIPOLIS
Sllbulo catholic Cllun:h
91 Slate St.
Tues. e Jo pm

I

Offer valid In classts
Jlste_ll
-·

CALL TOLL FREE

The most successful wl'lghtloss program In rhe wo~d.
e \.f(IGfft'W.t.TCHtM IMT lirK

'I

RITE coLA
8 PACK oz. BTL CTN.
•

·

1-100-512·1638 .

WEIGHT WATCHERS
t9&amp;00...,N(" OF TH£

FARM

LIMIT 1
CARTON WITH

cou::.

99C

Sat., May 3

Twin City Gateway
~-----------------

r
1

SUPERIOR FRANKIE

:

I

11

WIENERS i, ~
oz. 69C I !
LI~~G-2
II
12

.
Exp. Sat., May 3
.~, ____ !!~£!~~~!'

I 1 '.

___ _!

160Z.990

LOAVES

PRODUCE

BAKING POTATOES

-'129

GAREWAY

WIENER oR SANDWICH

BUNS
8 PACK
LIMIT 1

Exp.

45 c
Sat~ May 3·

!_ _____T!~~-~~'!, ___ J

'149

10 LB.

BAG
FRESH

CELERY HEARTS
BliND!
49~

GREEN ONIONS
2 BUNCHES
39~

~WEIGHT
}WATCHERS

BREAD

- 79~

FRESH

..... ~

GATEWAY

STRAWBERRIES
QUART

~:~

FRESH BAKED

IDAHO

Rill

Flori"" Mark

&amp;.ow Price

FRESH CALIFORNIA

"What the
WEIGHT WATCHERS'
Program taught me
I can help teach you!
,. IF I CAN DO IT...
YOU CAN DO IT."
~

70l.
PKG.

FRESH

SEE YOU THEN.

Everyday

ALL FLAVORS
SAVE 20•

69°

We will

Clncfnnati, 2; Knight, Cln-

cimatl,· 2; Griffey, Cinctnnati, 2; Law, Los

H, 1.000, O.M; Carlton, Philadelphia, 3--1,

-N.,. York lalanden
atl'lllladelphla
oiBIIflolo

-~lphlo a t - . if neceoury

Anieles. 14: FoU, Plttaburgh, 13; Parker,
Pidsbuqjh, 13; Conce!X'ion, Cincinnati, 13;
Law, Los Angeles, 13.

PITCHING (3 De&lt;l•lons ): Richard ,
Hou.ston,3-0,1.000,1.71; Reuss, Los Angeles,

Na-a..a,._

BullalootN... York 1s1an&lt;1en
1'l1l1o&lt;lelphla at Mt..'l'loonday May I
- a t Pl1lladeJPhla, ilnecwary
New Yon l.llanden at Bulfolo,

LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BAmNG 135 .11t bat.) : Reitz, St. looi.J,
.396; Buckner, Chicago, .392; Kingman ,
Oti.cago, .335; R. Smith, Los Angeles, .382;
Martin, Chicago, .370.
RUNS ; J . Cruz, Houstoo, t6 ; Lopes, Los

~Jon,

Atlant.aiMOIIIrul3
H - 4 New York3
Lo1Anplea3 San IJ(qo I
Clnciruiatl3 San Frandoco I
Pltbllursh at Cbtcaao. ppcl, rain
M-y'la.Chic:ago (Hemandez 6-1) ot St. Loula

-

TODAY'S
MAJOR LEAGUE

California

The second-team cage quintet Is
made up of John WesUall of KC,
D8le Newberry of Southwestern, Joe
Peck of North Gallia, Greg Webb of
Hannan Trace and Gene Cole of
Eastern. The third team Is Howell,
Bissell, Potter, Smith and Kent
Wolfe of Southern.
W~bb and Wolfe are sophomores
whire Newberry Is a junior.
This year's guest speaker waa
Brian Burke, who enters his second ·
season as head football coach of the
Ohio University Bobcats.

Sixers, Lakers
for championship?

Scoreboard
Maj«Lapelluel&gt;oll
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. LPel GB
I I .i11

Kyger Creek; seniors Tim Howell
and Jim Cains of North Gallia;
juniors Dale Teaford and Danny
Talbot of Southern and senior Sher·
man Potter and junior Scott Russell
of Southwestern.
The first-team basketball outfit includes Southern's senior Dave
Foreman and Teaford, Hannan
Trace's Carlos Campbell, North
Gallia 's Mark Miller and Southwestern's Todd Baker. Teaford and
Baker are the lone returnees next
season.

I

1

TOTINO'S

I
1

GARDEN DEUGHT FROZEN
CRINKLE

cuT

'I

~ · Frozen
Pizzas ~ FRENCH FRIES l
oz.
I

I
l

I

12
SIZE
LIMIT 1

89C !I LIMIT
;:· 1 39C

Exp. Sat., May 3

l_ ____T!!~-G~~I!_____

l

Ex~ ~· May 3

I
·

1

L.-~--.!!~~...G.!'!!,I!., __ ~
i.

�6--The DallY.Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Monday, April28, 1980

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, April 28, 1980

Engagement

LUNCH MEATS SLICED
TO YOUR ORDER
U.s:o .A. CHOICE CENTER CUT

announced

STEA S• •••••••••••••

...

'

....".
.•

(

s

"'•

......

,'

Roush again demonstrates
cake decoratio.n expertise

_,
.~

niPPERS PLAINS- Mrs. Nancy
Roush, Tuppers Plains, again
demonstrated her expertise in cake
decorating at the annual show of the
Parkersburg Cake Club held last
weekend at the Grand Central Mall
Vienna, W.Va.
'
Mrs. Roush won three first place
plaques, two second place rosettes
and walked away with a silver bowl
for the best of show. Her best of show
cake was to demonstrate her ability
in foreign technique and carried out

a baby christening theme. Tiny pink
flowers on white accented the cake
which was topped with a detailed
baby replica in a bassinet.
Besides winning the first place
and best of show Mrs. Roush won firsts with decorated sugar cubes,
super hero cup cakes and second
places in ice cream cone sculpturing
and a second in the winners' circle
with a Bambi cake. The winners' circle was composed of cakes which
had won first place honors at other

shows. Mrs. Roush is president of
the Parkersburg club.
Winners of the Wilton Medalions in
the show which had over 100 entries
were Diana Bumgarner, Parkersburg, children's and youth division;
Martha Harris, Big Bend, w. Va.,
non-professional; Jennifer Stillman
Brantford, Ontario, professionai
division. Judges were Jan Wrobel
and Georgins Johnson, both of
Canada.

·•

...

.E

,

.

i

!

•

The Middleport High School Alumni Association banquet and dance
will be held on May 24.
The dinner will be served at 6:30 p.
m. in the Middleport Elementary
School by Evangeline Chapter,
Order of Eastern Star, and the dance
will follow from 9 p. m. to I a. m. in
the Meigs Junior High School
building with the Upper Arlington
High School Dance Band providing
the music. "Ginny" Guinther is the
din!ctor of the band.
Toastmaster for the banquet will
be Don Grneser, class of 1960, and
entertainment at the banquet will be
by the Meigs High School Jazz Band
under the direction of Alan Hunt.
The Susan G. Park Scholarship
will be awarded to the son or
daughter of a MHS graduate with
applications to be obtained from
Mildred Bailey, Lois McElhinny, or
Nan Moore.
Reunions will be held for the
following classes: 10, 1970; 15th

.za

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

~·

-~:,· ~

.

' ..
•

......•

"'
'

*

Bernice Bede Osol

••

MONDAY
STOP SMOKING CIJNIC, first
., session Monttay, 7:30p.m. to 9 p.m.
~ at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
• east-west dining room. Or. Lewis
Telle will be the speaker.
REVIVAL now in progress at
,;: Rutland Church of Christ, Rutland,
through May 2 at 7:30p.m. nighUy,
Sonny Furrow evangelist and Neil
~
Proudfoot song evangelist. Public
~
Invited.
~
APRIL MEETING, Meigs County
" United Methodist Men, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at Chester United Methodist
Church with Rev. Arthur Ouhl,
Athens, retired Methodist minister,
a&amp; speaker.
TUESDAY
LODGE 363 F AND AM Tuesday
7:30 p.m. at Middleport Masonie
Temple. Work in apprentice degree.
All master masons Invited.
DRUG AWARENESS meeting
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., at Modern
Woodmen Hall in Burlingham.
Refreshments will be served; public
Invited.

,t;

'\bur

•

'Birthday

$

I

·'

f

::
BOOSTERS MEET TONIGHT
: There will be a meeting of the
; Southern Athletic Boosters at 8 p. 'II·
, ' tonight (Monday) at the high schooL
' : Plans will be finalized for the
; 1 basketball banque1 to be held May 7.
• ~ The meeting will be a the high school
: ' and aU Interested individuals are
; : urged to attend.
·

,,

AprO 29, 19110
This coming year of£e"' you the opportunity to

meet many new and excllitlg ~le . Judiciously
choc:ee the ones whose friendships )'01} care to
cultivBte. An unwiBe choice could dilute

your

happineu.
TAURUS (AprU zt.May ZO) Your friends may be
backing you up in an adversary situation today
but that doesn't mean you are right. Tum ~
coin over and klok at the other side. Romance,
travel, luck, reSOW'ces, poBSible piUalls and
career for the coming months are all disctmed
In your AstrG-Graph Letter, wtuch begifll'l with
your t».rthday. Mail $1 for each to A.Jtro.Graph
fklx 489, Radio City Station, N. Y. 10019. Be M
to
birth date.
•
GEMIN (May 21-J~~~tt !01 Get your broom alld
be ready to go to work. That rug you've Deen
sweq)lng everything under iJ about to be lifted
and you 'll be Ita~ in a cloud of dust.
'

spe&lt;Ul

CANCER (Jue !hJwy !!I CompllcaUons could

arise today when one who thinks he can gel away
with it may lry to manipulate you through clever
pressure tactics.

AQUARRJS (JIUI . tt-Feb. lt) Your image is

fragile today, so don't be intimidated by the
arrogance of llllother and stoop to hi5 or her level
by respondlnlln kind .
PISCES l Feb. f.t.M.arch t:l) Cu elessness in
re&lt;~pectin g others' oplnions could get you tnto hot
waler today. Hold them in proper regard If you
want the same treatment.
ARIES (MIIr:th !l·Aprtlltl Review your firumcial picture realistically before committing
yourself to a situation you can't affotd. You
could blow that surplllll you just acqui red,

Youth Association plans to stage dance
The Rutland Youth Association
will stage a dance at the RuUand
American Legion hall on Beach
Grove Road, Friday night beginning
at 7 P• m. Blitz Krieg will provide the
music and refreshments will be sold.
Charg,e will be $2 per person for
those over 12, and $1 for those 12 and
under. The public is invited to attend. The dance will be supervised
by adults.
On Sunday a~ the RuUand Park
from I to 5 p. m. there will be games
sponsored by the Youth Association

MONARCH

4B· oz

.

$

14· oz.

Bonloo

6 %- oz .
Can

MONARCH

BAVARIA

VEGETABLES~

r.Jtto rr

YO~.tf

R e pl a c e me r~t

5 4.99

THE ONE

LACE TABLECLOTH

523.95

5 5.96

$17.99

3 TABLECLOTH
LINERS

511 70

s 2.71 s 8 99

CAIIIIED FOODS

510.00

5 3 01

56 99

CREAMER

511.75

5 2.76

s 899

SUGAR BOWL
w/COVER

Sl3.75

5 3 76

5 9.99

SALT &amp; PEPPER SET

515.00

510 .99

VEGETABLE BOWL

516.75

s 4.01
s 276

4SALAD PLATES

520 00

5501

51499

SERVING PLAMR

S21 75

5 5 76

$1599

4 SOUP OISHES

$24 00

S 601

$1799

DINNER BELL

524 75

S576

51899

GRAVY BOAT

S26 75

5 676

51999

LARGE PLAffiR

528 50

s 751

s 2099

BEVERAGE SERVER

52 9 75

S676

522.99

CASSEROLE

531.50

5751

$23.99

CANDLE SET

$33 50

s 8.51

5 24.99

CORDLESS CLOCK

535.00

S9 01

52599

_ _ _ _ _ __

16. 01 _ SLICED . 16 ·oz . WHOL.E

QUART

I._ _____________ ..:..JI

-

I
I
I
I

_

.....

.

$} 09

U. 5. No. 1 MAINE

I
I

CARDINAL SOFT

MARGARINE •••••••••••••••••~~~~~.~. 59'

ORA_NGE JUICE

GRADE A MEDIUM

~(i(i~••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~P~ ••

59'

GARVIN'S

1

COTTAGE CHEESE ............ :.~!:. 89'

POTATOES

10

LB. BAG

_

LS

'

WITH 35' OFF

•

.

.' '
:I''
'

..

'.•
•

GOLDEN .YELLOW

CORN...........................

5

FROSTY ACRES FROZEN PEAS, CORN OR
MIXED VEGETABLES

VEGETABLES ....................2•0·~~ •• &amp;gc
FROSTY ACRES BROCCOLI
FROZEN
CUTS or CAULIFLOWER.~~?~.S.~?.~ 7gc

89~

TIDE·

WESTERN ROAN

BANQUET CSUPPER~L...... 2 !:~ $149

SPRITE, TAB OR

CAULIFLOWER ............... ~r!.~~··· s1 19
PINEAPPLE
.....................
~~.~~
........
79~
•
'.''
'. APPLES.............................. 33lb.B~g s1 09
•I

_.._~~····-~~-~~:.~~~... 59'

TURKEY . SALISBURY STEAK . BEEF N NOODLES

IEVEifAGI BUY

MEXICAN

_

89'

1 ~~~-

FROZEh

FROSTY ACRES

TE

--------J
_~-------------------------...

TAIL

YOUGART •••••••••••••••• 2 FOR

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

18 _01 _

GAY MONT ASST. FRUIT FLAVORS

VAUGHAN'S CARDIN •.~.

I ~.o=o"'RE"'ss,-------':__..- ~

MONARCH TOMATO SAUCE OR

STRAWBERRIES

Ci l Y·--- - - - - - - Phone.___ _ __ __

I

(

FRESH CALIFORNIA

Add reSS·- -- - - -- - - - - - - --,--

I ~~~::::::::::~1
•
1

$ 00

MONARCH POTATOES ..........3 c••• 89 STEW TOMATOES.....2 can• 791
MONARCH MUSHROOMS ....2 ~-::; $1 00

513.99

_

1 ~~~Z-

• Cut wax beans
• Tomatoes
• Pork and beans, Sauerkraut
• Lt. red kidney beans, Mixed vegetables

Na m•·--------~-----Please tell me more about the

16-oz.
Cans

DAIR~

4 COASTER
ASHTRAYS

Pattern Selected _ _

-------------- 1I

COFFEE

Cans

MONARCH

o ~ anht y

Pr ic e

MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT

• Cream style golden corn
• Whole kernal golden corn
• Cut green beans

Ordtr

Di H Ol.ll"l !

Pr1ce

s 2 01

•• -

5 LB. BAG 89~
FLOUR •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

,
17
COOKING OIL ...................... ......... J•• .
3 $1 00
TO CATSUP ............... ....

PROMOTION ENDS 5/3/80

PHO NE

M

PILLSBURY

MONARCH

s 7 00

N AME

LB CAN

COFFEE ................................... ~ ....... ' 2

SALE DATES:
APRIL 28 •
MAY 3, 1980

4 DINNER NAPKINS

I

SALTINE CRACKERS···········~;.~~ ... 59$
HUNGRY JACK
16 OZ. BOX
INSTANT POTATOES ................... 99$

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

BIGGEST IARGAINS IN TOWN

It Could Be

SERIES ONE Business Polley.

16 oz. can

FOLGER'S

GERMANY

1
I

~

)~lNG Pl ll1o

FRIINDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN

and the Community Mental Health
Center. In the event of rain the
games. will be cancelled. The pUblic •
is invited to the free games activity.
TO MEET TUESDAY
The Ladies Golf Association will
meet at 9 a. m. Tuesday at the newly
remodeled clubhouse at the Jaymar
Golf Course. All golfers and those interested in learning to play are in·
vited to join the group. The meeting
will be fOllowed by playing golf.

2/89
PEACHES
·.

~:J\ ~

.

Do you own or operate a
small or medium-size
retail store, office, apart·
mentor church?
Then- you may qualify
for State Auto Mutual's
SERIES ONE Business
Policy ... a modern-as·
tomorrow package plan
that combines an array of
broad property and liabili·
ty coverages required to '
safeguard your opera·
. tions. All for avery attrac·
tive, affordable premium .
Let us explain the
superior
features
of
SERIES ONE ... the short
time we spend together
could prove Interesting
and rewarding to you.
Just give us a call or
mail the handy coupon .
DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE

thoae days when it'sbest to pleau the majority.

~ ~Qn~r

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN
BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

Insurance Package
For You

depe~ent , but not to the point where It meets
with disapprGVal by your peen . 1lLis is one ur

ch

MONARCH .
SLICED OR HALVES

MONARCH

..

CAPRICORN (Dec. %%-Ju. lt) Il 's good to be in-

M

HAM SANDWICHES
WITH CHEESE
6Pk.
gge
Reg. $1.19
.
LB. 51.39

- ~

ITEM

todar.

IIRCHSILE

Middleport, Olllo

1920, and 65th, 1915.
Deadline for making reservations
is May 17. Reservations are to be
made with Marilyn Wilcox,
treasurer, MHS Alumni Association,
37240 St. Rt. 124, Middleport, Ohio
45760.

i..F..O IJllly U.AIJI. 2!) If the stand you take
on an lssue doesn 't meet with majority approva
be prepared to start running. The pack will ~
nipping at your heels.
VIRGO (Aug. %3-&amp;pl ZZ) Try not tc get Into a
debate with an opinionated penon today. Ea ch
of you could say things you might regret saying
later.
LIBRA (Stpt. ~L !3) CKulion i.'l esse nUalin
the ha.ndling of any financial situation today. If
you can put UtJngs off until another day, do so.
SCORPIO (Oct. U.Nov. I! ill would be fooli&gt;h to
let another make an important decision for you
today. If he or she makes 11 mistake, you're the
one who' ll be held accountable .
SAGITlARIUS INov. Zl-Oee. %1) Don 't count on
anytlne elae to carry any share of your workload
today. They wouldn't come through, 11nd you 're
~ o n e who will shoulder aU the consequences.

LB•

VAUGHAN'S

Please indicate your name, address, phone num ber, and pattern selected. Present to our cashier
or our courtesy desk. Items not available from store
mventones w1ll be ordered for you and you will be
notified on their arrival.
'

ASTRO•GRAPH

PARTS

oz.., 09

STORE MADE

Middleport, Ohio

THIS IS YOUR FINAL OPPORTUNITY to obtain
Johann Haviland fine china service pieces and
accessories at DISCOUNT PRICES!

Social Calendar

12

BEEF CUBE STEAKS ............... ~; ••••2 19

VAUGHAN'S

. McGee, 992-2507.

,.,.

WIENERS

Lb.

SL ED BA

Barbara Persons and james Harris

1965; 20th, 1960; 25th, 1955; 30th,
1950; 35th, 1945; 40th, 1940; 45th,
1935; 50th, 1930; 55th, 1925; 60th,

the hospitaL Shown ae one of two groups that toured
the hospitaL Mrs. Collins explained the type of equipment used in the physical therapy department. The
lour, which will become an annual event, is sponsored
by the Riverview PTO.

ECKRICH

FRYER
·
.

~

;

TO MEET TUESDAY
There will be a meeting Tuesday
evening at 7:30 at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church for the
purpose of forming a county-wide
church slow pitch softball league.
Anyone interested in having a team
in either the league or the tournament should attend the meeting.
There is also interest in a women's
league and those representing
women's teams are also asked to attend. Further information may be
obtained from the Rev. Robert

EDUCATIONAL FIELD TRIP - riurd grade
students at Riverview Elementary School were taken
on an educational field trip Thursday. They toured
Veterans Memorial Hospital with Teresa Collins,
director of nurses, explaining the various operations of

CRISPY SERVE

MIXED

} :oil:

'I

$169

LB.

..."'••t

'

"! ·. :.

Alumni Association
plans May banquet

NANCY ROUSH is pictured-with her best of show cake and the awards she won at the Parkersburg Cake
Club show held last weekend.

SAlAME, PICKLE OR
OUVE LOAF

~

)

'1"

LB.

LB.

~

f •

PEPPER, NEW ENGlAND,
BOILED HAM OR HONEY LOAF

49

POMEROY - The Rev. and Mrs.
Robert L. Persons are announcing
the approaching marriage of their
daughter, Barbara Sue, to James
Dexter Harris, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Mayford Harris, Long Bottom.
Both are seniors 11t Eastern High
School . The wedding will be an event
ol May 4 at I p.m. at the United
Methodist Church in Tuppers Plains
with the father of the ·bride of·
ficiating. The couple invites all
friends and relatives to the open
church wedding.

••

I•

Jumbo
Roll

DETERGENT

~BEL

·COKE
PACK
$119
16 oz.

84 -oz.
' Box

59

8'

WITH DEPOSIT
~ALUABlE

COUPON

NABISCO CHIPS AHOY

COOKIES .
Um lt ooe with coupon
one eo~o~pon p•r l• mlly

13·0l .
Pkg.

Ears

'

•'

�6--The DallY.Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Monday, April28, 1980

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, April 28, 1980

Engagement

LUNCH MEATS SLICED
TO YOUR ORDER
U.s:o .A. CHOICE CENTER CUT

announced

STEA S• •••••••••••••

...

'

....".
.•

(

s

"'•

......

,'

Roush again demonstrates
cake decoratio.n expertise

_,
.~

niPPERS PLAINS- Mrs. Nancy
Roush, Tuppers Plains, again
demonstrated her expertise in cake
decorating at the annual show of the
Parkersburg Cake Club held last
weekend at the Grand Central Mall
Vienna, W.Va.
'
Mrs. Roush won three first place
plaques, two second place rosettes
and walked away with a silver bowl
for the best of show. Her best of show
cake was to demonstrate her ability
in foreign technique and carried out

a baby christening theme. Tiny pink
flowers on white accented the cake
which was topped with a detailed
baby replica in a bassinet.
Besides winning the first place
and best of show Mrs. Roush won firsts with decorated sugar cubes,
super hero cup cakes and second
places in ice cream cone sculpturing
and a second in the winners' circle
with a Bambi cake. The winners' circle was composed of cakes which
had won first place honors at other

shows. Mrs. Roush is president of
the Parkersburg club.
Winners of the Wilton Medalions in
the show which had over 100 entries
were Diana Bumgarner, Parkersburg, children's and youth division;
Martha Harris, Big Bend, w. Va.,
non-professional; Jennifer Stillman
Brantford, Ontario, professionai
division. Judges were Jan Wrobel
and Georgins Johnson, both of
Canada.

·•

...

.E

,

.

i

!

•

The Middleport High School Alumni Association banquet and dance
will be held on May 24.
The dinner will be served at 6:30 p.
m. in the Middleport Elementary
School by Evangeline Chapter,
Order of Eastern Star, and the dance
will follow from 9 p. m. to I a. m. in
the Meigs Junior High School
building with the Upper Arlington
High School Dance Band providing
the music. "Ginny" Guinther is the
din!ctor of the band.
Toastmaster for the banquet will
be Don Grneser, class of 1960, and
entertainment at the banquet will be
by the Meigs High School Jazz Band
under the direction of Alan Hunt.
The Susan G. Park Scholarship
will be awarded to the son or
daughter of a MHS graduate with
applications to be obtained from
Mildred Bailey, Lois McElhinny, or
Nan Moore.
Reunions will be held for the
following classes: 10, 1970; 15th

.za

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

~·

-~:,· ~

.

' ..
•

......•

"'
'

*

Bernice Bede Osol

••

MONDAY
STOP SMOKING CIJNIC, first
., session Monttay, 7:30p.m. to 9 p.m.
~ at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
• east-west dining room. Or. Lewis
Telle will be the speaker.
REVIVAL now in progress at
,;: Rutland Church of Christ, Rutland,
through May 2 at 7:30p.m. nighUy,
Sonny Furrow evangelist and Neil
~
Proudfoot song evangelist. Public
~
Invited.
~
APRIL MEETING, Meigs County
" United Methodist Men, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at Chester United Methodist
Church with Rev. Arthur Ouhl,
Athens, retired Methodist minister,
a&amp; speaker.
TUESDAY
LODGE 363 F AND AM Tuesday
7:30 p.m. at Middleport Masonie
Temple. Work in apprentice degree.
All master masons Invited.
DRUG AWARENESS meeting
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., at Modern
Woodmen Hall in Burlingham.
Refreshments will be served; public
Invited.

,t;

'\bur

•

'Birthday

$

I

·'

f

::
BOOSTERS MEET TONIGHT
: There will be a meeting of the
; Southern Athletic Boosters at 8 p. 'II·
, ' tonight (Monday) at the high schooL
' : Plans will be finalized for the
; 1 basketball banque1 to be held May 7.
• ~ The meeting will be a the high school
: ' and aU Interested individuals are
; : urged to attend.
·

,,

AprO 29, 19110
This coming year of£e"' you the opportunity to

meet many new and excllitlg ~le . Judiciously
choc:ee the ones whose friendships )'01} care to
cultivBte. An unwiBe choice could dilute

your

happineu.
TAURUS (AprU zt.May ZO) Your friends may be
backing you up in an adversary situation today
but that doesn't mean you are right. Tum ~
coin over and klok at the other side. Romance,
travel, luck, reSOW'ces, poBSible piUalls and
career for the coming months are all disctmed
In your AstrG-Graph Letter, wtuch begifll'l with
your t».rthday. Mail $1 for each to A.Jtro.Graph
fklx 489, Radio City Station, N. Y. 10019. Be M
to
birth date.
•
GEMIN (May 21-J~~~tt !01 Get your broom alld
be ready to go to work. That rug you've Deen
sweq)lng everything under iJ about to be lifted
and you 'll be Ita~ in a cloud of dust.
'

spe&lt;Ul

CANCER (Jue !hJwy !!I CompllcaUons could

arise today when one who thinks he can gel away
with it may lry to manipulate you through clever
pressure tactics.

AQUARRJS (JIUI . tt-Feb. lt) Your image is

fragile today, so don't be intimidated by the
arrogance of llllother and stoop to hi5 or her level
by respondlnlln kind .
PISCES l Feb. f.t.M.arch t:l) Cu elessness in
re&lt;~pectin g others' oplnions could get you tnto hot
waler today. Hold them in proper regard If you
want the same treatment.
ARIES (MIIr:th !l·Aprtlltl Review your firumcial picture realistically before committing
yourself to a situation you can't affotd. You
could blow that surplllll you just acqui red,

Youth Association plans to stage dance
The Rutland Youth Association
will stage a dance at the RuUand
American Legion hall on Beach
Grove Road, Friday night beginning
at 7 P• m. Blitz Krieg will provide the
music and refreshments will be sold.
Charg,e will be $2 per person for
those over 12, and $1 for those 12 and
under. The public is invited to attend. The dance will be supervised
by adults.
On Sunday a~ the RuUand Park
from I to 5 p. m. there will be games
sponsored by the Youth Association

MONARCH

4B· oz

.

$

14· oz.

Bonloo

6 %- oz .
Can

MONARCH

BAVARIA

VEGETABLES~

r.Jtto rr

YO~.tf

R e pl a c e me r~t

5 4.99

THE ONE

LACE TABLECLOTH

523.95

5 5.96

$17.99

3 TABLECLOTH
LINERS

511 70

s 2.71 s 8 99

CAIIIIED FOODS

510.00

5 3 01

56 99

CREAMER

511.75

5 2.76

s 899

SUGAR BOWL
w/COVER

Sl3.75

5 3 76

5 9.99

SALT &amp; PEPPER SET

515.00

510 .99

VEGETABLE BOWL

516.75

s 4.01
s 276

4SALAD PLATES

520 00

5501

51499

SERVING PLAMR

S21 75

5 5 76

$1599

4 SOUP OISHES

$24 00

S 601

$1799

DINNER BELL

524 75

S576

51899

GRAVY BOAT

S26 75

5 676

51999

LARGE PLAffiR

528 50

s 751

s 2099

BEVERAGE SERVER

52 9 75

S676

522.99

CASSEROLE

531.50

5751

$23.99

CANDLE SET

$33 50

s 8.51

5 24.99

CORDLESS CLOCK

535.00

S9 01

52599

_ _ _ _ _ __

16. 01 _ SLICED . 16 ·oz . WHOL.E

QUART

I._ _____________ ..:..JI

-

I
I
I
I

_

.....

.

$} 09

U. 5. No. 1 MAINE

I
I

CARDINAL SOFT

MARGARINE •••••••••••••••••~~~~~.~. 59'

ORA_NGE JUICE

GRADE A MEDIUM

~(i(i~••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~P~ ••

59'

GARVIN'S

1

COTTAGE CHEESE ............ :.~!:. 89'

POTATOES

10

LB. BAG

_

LS

'

WITH 35' OFF

•

.

.' '
:I''
'

..

'.•
•

GOLDEN .YELLOW

CORN...........................

5

FROSTY ACRES FROZEN PEAS, CORN OR
MIXED VEGETABLES

VEGETABLES ....................2•0·~~ •• &amp;gc
FROSTY ACRES BROCCOLI
FROZEN
CUTS or CAULIFLOWER.~~?~.S.~?.~ 7gc

89~

TIDE·

WESTERN ROAN

BANQUET CSUPPER~L...... 2 !:~ $149

SPRITE, TAB OR

CAULIFLOWER ............... ~r!.~~··· s1 19
PINEAPPLE
.....................
~~.~~
........
79~
•
'.''
'. APPLES.............................. 33lb.B~g s1 09
•I

_.._~~····-~~-~~:.~~~... 59'

TURKEY . SALISBURY STEAK . BEEF N NOODLES

IEVEifAGI BUY

MEXICAN

_

89'

1 ~~~-

FROZEh

FROSTY ACRES

TE

--------J
_~-------------------------...

TAIL

YOUGART •••••••••••••••• 2 FOR

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

18 _01 _

GAY MONT ASST. FRUIT FLAVORS

VAUGHAN'S CARDIN •.~.

I ~.o=o"'RE"'ss,-------':__..- ~

MONARCH TOMATO SAUCE OR

STRAWBERRIES

Ci l Y·--- - - - - - - Phone.___ _ __ __

I

(

FRESH CALIFORNIA

Add reSS·- -- - - -- - - - - - - --,--

I ~~~::::::::::~1
•
1

$ 00

MONARCH POTATOES ..........3 c••• 89 STEW TOMATOES.....2 can• 791
MONARCH MUSHROOMS ....2 ~-::; $1 00

513.99

_

1 ~~~Z-

• Cut wax beans
• Tomatoes
• Pork and beans, Sauerkraut
• Lt. red kidney beans, Mixed vegetables

Na m•·--------~-----Please tell me more about the

16-oz.
Cans

DAIR~

4 COASTER
ASHTRAYS

Pattern Selected _ _

-------------- 1I

COFFEE

Cans

MONARCH

o ~ anht y

Pr ic e

MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT

• Cream style golden corn
• Whole kernal golden corn
• Cut green beans

Ordtr

Di H Ol.ll"l !

Pr1ce

s 2 01

•• -

5 LB. BAG 89~
FLOUR •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

,
17
COOKING OIL ...................... ......... J•• .
3 $1 00
TO CATSUP ............... ....

PROMOTION ENDS 5/3/80

PHO NE

M

PILLSBURY

MONARCH

s 7 00

N AME

LB CAN

COFFEE ................................... ~ ....... ' 2

SALE DATES:
APRIL 28 •
MAY 3, 1980

4 DINNER NAPKINS

I

SALTINE CRACKERS···········~;.~~ ... 59$
HUNGRY JACK
16 OZ. BOX
INSTANT POTATOES ................... 99$

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

BIGGEST IARGAINS IN TOWN

It Could Be

SERIES ONE Business Polley.

16 oz. can

FOLGER'S

GERMANY

1
I

~

)~lNG Pl ll1o

FRIINDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN

and the Community Mental Health
Center. In the event of rain the
games. will be cancelled. The pUblic •
is invited to the free games activity.
TO MEET TUESDAY
The Ladies Golf Association will
meet at 9 a. m. Tuesday at the newly
remodeled clubhouse at the Jaymar
Golf Course. All golfers and those interested in learning to play are in·
vited to join the group. The meeting
will be fOllowed by playing golf.

2/89
PEACHES
·.

~:J\ ~

.

Do you own or operate a
small or medium-size
retail store, office, apart·
mentor church?
Then- you may qualify
for State Auto Mutual's
SERIES ONE Business
Policy ... a modern-as·
tomorrow package plan
that combines an array of
broad property and liabili·
ty coverages required to '
safeguard your opera·
. tions. All for avery attrac·
tive, affordable premium .
Let us explain the
superior
features
of
SERIES ONE ... the short
time we spend together
could prove Interesting
and rewarding to you.
Just give us a call or
mail the handy coupon .
DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE

thoae days when it'sbest to pleau the majority.

~ ~Qn~r

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN
BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

Insurance Package
For You

depe~ent , but not to the point where It meets
with disapprGVal by your peen . 1lLis is one ur

ch

MONARCH .
SLICED OR HALVES

MONARCH

..

CAPRICORN (Dec. %%-Ju. lt) Il 's good to be in-

M

HAM SANDWICHES
WITH CHEESE
6Pk.
gge
Reg. $1.19
.
LB. 51.39

- ~

ITEM

todar.

IIRCHSILE

Middleport, Olllo

1920, and 65th, 1915.
Deadline for making reservations
is May 17. Reservations are to be
made with Marilyn Wilcox,
treasurer, MHS Alumni Association,
37240 St. Rt. 124, Middleport, Ohio
45760.

i..F..O IJllly U.AIJI. 2!) If the stand you take
on an lssue doesn 't meet with majority approva
be prepared to start running. The pack will ~
nipping at your heels.
VIRGO (Aug. %3-&amp;pl ZZ) Try not tc get Into a
debate with an opinionated penon today. Ea ch
of you could say things you might regret saying
later.
LIBRA (Stpt. ~L !3) CKulion i.'l esse nUalin
the ha.ndling of any financial situation today. If
you can put UtJngs off until another day, do so.
SCORPIO (Oct. U.Nov. I! ill would be fooli&gt;h to
let another make an important decision for you
today. If he or she makes 11 mistake, you're the
one who' ll be held accountable .
SAGITlARIUS INov. Zl-Oee. %1) Don 't count on
anytlne elae to carry any share of your workload
today. They wouldn't come through, 11nd you 're
~ o n e who will shoulder aU the consequences.

LB•

VAUGHAN'S

Please indicate your name, address, phone num ber, and pattern selected. Present to our cashier
or our courtesy desk. Items not available from store
mventones w1ll be ordered for you and you will be
notified on their arrival.
'

ASTRO•GRAPH

PARTS

oz.., 09

STORE MADE

Middleport, Ohio

THIS IS YOUR FINAL OPPORTUNITY to obtain
Johann Haviland fine china service pieces and
accessories at DISCOUNT PRICES!

Social Calendar

12

BEEF CUBE STEAKS ............... ~; ••••2 19

VAUGHAN'S

. McGee, 992-2507.

,.,.

WIENERS

Lb.

SL ED BA

Barbara Persons and james Harris

1965; 20th, 1960; 25th, 1955; 30th,
1950; 35th, 1945; 40th, 1940; 45th,
1935; 50th, 1930; 55th, 1925; 60th,

the hospitaL Shown ae one of two groups that toured
the hospitaL Mrs. Collins explained the type of equipment used in the physical therapy department. The
lour, which will become an annual event, is sponsored
by the Riverview PTO.

ECKRICH

FRYER
·
.

~

;

TO MEET TUESDAY
There will be a meeting Tuesday
evening at 7:30 at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church for the
purpose of forming a county-wide
church slow pitch softball league.
Anyone interested in having a team
in either the league or the tournament should attend the meeting.
There is also interest in a women's
league and those representing
women's teams are also asked to attend. Further information may be
obtained from the Rev. Robert

EDUCATIONAL FIELD TRIP - riurd grade
students at Riverview Elementary School were taken
on an educational field trip Thursday. They toured
Veterans Memorial Hospital with Teresa Collins,
director of nurses, explaining the various operations of

CRISPY SERVE

MIXED

} :oil:

'I

$169

LB.

..."'••t

'

"! ·. :.

Alumni Association
plans May banquet

NANCY ROUSH is pictured-with her best of show cake and the awards she won at the Parkersburg Cake
Club show held last weekend.

SAlAME, PICKLE OR
OUVE LOAF

~

)

'1"

LB.

LB.

~

f •

PEPPER, NEW ENGlAND,
BOILED HAM OR HONEY LOAF

49

POMEROY - The Rev. and Mrs.
Robert L. Persons are announcing
the approaching marriage of their
daughter, Barbara Sue, to James
Dexter Harris, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Mayford Harris, Long Bottom.
Both are seniors 11t Eastern High
School . The wedding will be an event
ol May 4 at I p.m. at the United
Methodist Church in Tuppers Plains
with the father of the ·bride of·
ficiating. The couple invites all
friends and relatives to the open
church wedding.

••

I•

Jumbo
Roll

DETERGENT

~BEL

·COKE
PACK
$119
16 oz.

84 -oz.
' Box

59

8'

WITH DEPOSIT
~ALUABlE

COUPON

NABISCO CHIPS AHOY

COOKIES .
Um lt ooe with coupon
one eo~o~pon p•r l• mlly

13·0l .
Pkg.

Ears

'

•'

�~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, April28, 1980

.

9-The Daily Sen_tlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, April28,1980
DICKTR:ACY

Introducing Catnbridse Box:

Television
Viewing
MUNDAY, APR IL l8, 1980
3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Face the Music 6,13; News 10;
~ ove, Amer ica n Style 15; Sa n·
ford &amp; Son 17; Dick Cavett 20.
7: 30- That Nas h vil le Mus ic 3;
Muppet Show 6 ; Joker's Wild 8;
Dick Cavett 33; Family Feud
tO, lJ; Nas ~v llle On The Road 15;
All In The Fam ily 17; Mac Neil Lehrer Report 20 .
8:00-Little House on the Prairie
3, 15 ; That' s Incred ible 6 ,13;
. WKRP In Cincinnati 8, 10; Song
by Song 20,33; Movie " Ulysses"
17.
8:30-Stocka rd Channing e,10.
9: 00-Pollce Story 3,15; Movie " All
God's Children" 6, 13; Mash 8,10;
American Short Story 20,33.
9:30-F io8,10; 10 :00-Lou Grant 10;
Billy Graham : The Inside Story
8; Three Appeals 33; Baseball
17; News 20.
10:3()-{)ver Easy 20; 11 :00-News
3,6,8,1 0,13, 15; Dick Cavett 20;
Dave Allen at Large 33.
11 :30-Tonlght 3,15; ABC News6,tl;
Harry 0 e; ABC Captioned News
33; Movie "Cass Tlmberlane" .10.
11 :5()...-Barney Miller 6,13; 12 :25-Police Woman 6,13; 12 :30-News
17.
12 :35--Movle "The Assassin" 17;
12 :40-McCioud
8;
I : 00Tomorrow 3; News 15.
13;
2 :35:_Movle
1:35- News
" Passage West" 17; 4: 1S.- World
at Large 17 ; 4:3D-Open Up 17.
7 : ~ross-W its

I KI

O~Y. ~0 CA~~

T'GET RILED, MA'AM •
H~ GET RIGHT T' THE- POINT.... '
t CAME HERE .

.J. P. Mc:.I&lt;ES..

AH, Yl!!!t--l' VE HSI\RD OF THAT
IILOATeP FINAIIJCIAL P IH05AUR ! .. ,
9,FDU~T'f- Et_, I'II!L~ . CAPTAI~ FL5J:ZY. OR WHAT• - ~.,..?C-E..:.
V.::_ER
:_:_ YOUR NAM! 15 PReSIPENT

1

T'CHECI&lt; OUT THIS.
MINE F'OR MY 80551

16

r~f5"'~PN~~

CL05ED: AWO YOU
CAN TE:~~ YOUR:
a055 IT'S GOING ·
TO STAY
CLOSE/1!

KJ

I VIDDIE j
I I r I

CER'iAINL.Y
CAN''T e&gt;LEEP
THR'OUeH "THIS!

tlAMORN±
J I K )

"""nge

Now
~ circled ltttllfa to
form the surprise answer, as aug·
gested by the above car10on.

Print answer here: (

I I I I XI, XJ

.
\Answer~~ tomorrow)
Saturday's ! J umbles: SUMAC IMBUE ATIAIN CROTCH
Answer: What happened to the bubble dancer's

careeJ when the jOint was raided ?-IT BURST
Jumbl• ~No. 14, cont1lnlng 110 puzdt1, II IYIIIibJt Iori I .75 pottpakt
Irom Jumblt ,cJolhll newtpeper, Box M. Norwood, N.J.07NI.Includtyour
ntme, 1ddre11, zip COde end mtkt cMckl Pl}'lblt to N•••P•~• ·

I CAIJ'T
66LI8ve;; IT... A

~VAI.JI,T ~

- ~~UI~

~L.:{

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

ro:JIX.I'DI~~

TAL.I'-1~

PAAROr

BRIDGE

0RUM ~ITI'O

'?HMAT~I&lt;$

FQ2.

_D ubious double stands up

fN.ATl.KO DXl3

ts!

MU~IK~

bridge since they risk a tremendous point loss, but in
match points the doubler is
betting a top against a
bottom."
+A Q 10 7 3
+KQ6
Oswald: "Such doubles frequently win tournaments
~T
EAST
when they work. They lose
+K5 2
+A9
them when they misfire."
.72
.AQJ96l
Alan: "East's double of
• 864
three spades is an example of
+A 10 8 7 3
+J954
this double at its worst. East
SOUTH
hoped to scrounge five tricks
+Q!0764
and get that magic 200 points.
.K 105
He got them, too."
+KJ92
Oswald: "It wasn't quite as
+2
bad a double as it lookS. After
Vulnerable : North-South
all West bad bid a notrump
Dealer: West
earlier in the bidding and
· West certainly didn't have his
Weal North Eallt Soot~
values. In any event East took
Pass 1+
1•
1+
bis ace of hearts at trick one
tNT 2+
3.
3+
and returned his singleton
Pass Pass Db!.
Pass
diamond.
South won in dumPass
Pass
my and led the three of
spades."
Alan: "When you make desOpening lead:• 7
perate bids you must make
exceptional plays . East
hopped with his ace of trumps
and led a club. West took his
ace and led a diamond. East
By Oswald Jacoby
ruffed for the fourth defensive
and Alan Soatag
trick and West set the band
with bis king of trumps."
Oswald: "One of the many
Oswald: "As Shakespeare
differences between match said, 'All's well that ends
poiut duplicate and regular well.'"
bridge is the so-called match (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
point double."
Alan: '"Ibis is a double of a
(For a copy of JACOBY
vulnerable opponent's part- MODERN, send $1 to: "Win at
score bid iD order to inflict a Bridge, " csre of this nswspsone-trict penalty and score a per, P.0 . Box 489, Radio City
200-point plus. Such doubles Station, New York, N. Y:
1()() 19.)
are dOW!U'Igllt silly Ill rubber
NORTH
+J83

t -28-80

•aa

~ TH'

LAWFTY..

BRASSIE BILL? BUT
GEE· GENATOR
LAWFTY HAD
HOTHIH' T' 00
l'iiTH IT •·

NO*BUT HE'S RIGHT
IH SAYING THAT HIS
N A~E l'iiLL HELP TO
6ET IT Pf\SGED..,

STILL .. HE

I ... ER- COOGIDEREO TELLING

MI5Kf'VE HIM THAT- BUT I DIDN'T
WANT TO WRECK MY CHANCES
OF 6ETTIN6 ON HIS
COMMITTEE ! l'iELL~
GEE Ya.J
LATER, ANNIE!

WELL, YOU l'iERE
RIGHT, HUCKlE!
SENATOR LAWFTY
DID TAKE CREDIT
FOR SENATOR
STAN'S BILL!

GURE!~ LAWFTY

KNOI'iG THE FIRST
RULE Cf POWER!

IF YOJ 0011'T USE
IT.

YOO LOSE IT!

~~dl:M~td'

-....-ambridge

by THOMAS JOSEPH

You

~ ~z:::lll\1

~
~

9
~

WINNIE
10NI6 HT I
CA N -6 0 TO
YOUR A PARTMENT ... IF
YOU LI KE .

th' fool
drums
crooked!

ft Colored

Item

battle gear

n Erase

3 u.s. Coast

U Auslen novel Guard motto
14 Obsessed
4 At 1i One kind
(bewildered)
5 Less common
ol music
6 Put together
•• '!brow
7 Ma)l's name
17Age
18
the sack 8 Mercouri
flbn
Z8Teaae
9 Aseptic
21 Cuff
Z2 Vox populi 12Empower
•• Pitchsampling
23 Popular

Ynt.erda:r'• Auwer
19 Yam
%! Versifier

30 Swann

23 Bovary's
tiUe

Murray
ftlm role
35 Caused to be

u Calif.

31 Don

city
37 Here:
25 Anesthetize
Fr.
29 stallion
38 Recipe word

,_..,.,..-~.,..,...-

street name
25Bequest

getter
27 Matter,
In law
28 Women's org.
29 Imprison
32 Doctors' org.

33- out
(clothe)
34 Beak

~~-ambridge

BARNEY

5HUX··I JUST
RAN OUT OF
CLOTHt:!:IL.I\VI;;

Box: Less than OJ ms tar.

38 Specialty;
forte
38 City In Judah
39 Brought
forth

b-+--+--

4tVaUey
41 Apart from

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

Less than
0.1 mg tar

Is

Phill p Mon l1 1~. 1910

Box: Less than. 0.1m(!a( 0.01 mg nico~ine-Soft Pack: 1mg "tar;' 0.1mg
mcoune-1 00 s: 4 mg tar, 0.4 mg mcotme av.per Cigarette by FTC Method.

CRYPTOQUOO'ES

•·...PEANVTS

,,

Also available' in ultra low ·1 mg Soft Pack, 4 mg 100's.

.

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
' hints. Eaeh day the eode letters are different.
C

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

.

' &amp;At~Ud:~
?f'd
I n ;tv
• .
: '1/r;. .+
.£,wo,I
I

OWGAA
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HPYA

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ANNACOPUHN

WUXXPCANN
UGA

6 : ~oncerns

PC

NESAOWPC!I

OWPN
OE

TE ,

NE. SAOWPCB

OE

HEDA

UCT

NESAOWPCB

OE

WEXA

YEG
- QENAXW
UTTPNEC
Yesterdlty't Crypioquot.e : I DISCOvERED THE SECRET OF
LIFE. IT'S BEING ABLE TO PUT ONE FOOT IN FRONT OF
THE OTHER.-ROD STEIGER

&amp;

Comments

10;

News 17; 6:4.S--Mornlng Report
J; A.M. Weather 33; 6:50-Good
Morning , West VIrginia 13;
6:55--News 13.
7:00-Today 3.15 : Good Morning
America 6, 13; Tuesday Morning
8; Batman 10; Three StoogesLittle Rascals 17.
7:30-Hogan's Heroes 10; 7 :55-Chuck While Reports I o.
8:00-Capl. Kangaroo 8,10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame St. 33; 8 :30Romper Room 17.
9:00-Bob Braun 3: Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies e: Jeffersons
10; Phi l Donahue 13,15; Fam ily
Affair 17 .
9:30--Bob Newhart 8; One Day AI A
T ime 10; Green Acres 17.
10 : ~ard Sharks 3,15; Edge of.
Night 6; Jeffersons 8; Joker's
Wild 10; Morn ing Magazine 13;
Movie "Task Force" 17.
10:30- Hollywood Squares l .1S;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
10:55--C BS News 6; House Call
10.
11 :00-High Rollers l .IS; Lave rne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price is Right 6,10 .
11 :30- Wheel of .Fortune 3,15;
Family Feud 6,13 ; Sesame St. 20.
12:00-Newscenter J; News 8,1 0,13;
Health Fie ld 15.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10,· Password Plus
15; Movie " Commanche" 17;
E lee. Co. 20,33.
I :00-Days of Our Lives 3, IS; All My
Children 6,13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8,10.
2:00-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:25--News 17.
2: 30-Another World 3,15; I Love
~ucy

DOWN
1 Keep in 2 Early

Zl Winls : Lat.

~

=&gt;
--.......
--- ·
--------

stack

ACROSS
1 Back talll
S Auguries
II Arboretum

mt

Discover Cambridge contentment.
The very special satisfaction of knowing
that with Cambridge Box you're getting
the lowest tar cigarette ever made,
yet still enjoying the unique pleasures
of smoking.

~

·~

TUESDAY, APRILl9,1980
5:45--Farm Report 13; 5:5()...-PTL
Club 13.
6 :00-PTL Club 15 ; 700 Club 6,9;
Health Field 10.

17.

3 : DO-Ge neral
Hospital
6,13;
Gu iding Light 9,10; Banana
Splits 17; Art Conference 20.
3: 30-FIIntstones 17; As We See II
20; Over Easy JJ.
4 : DO-S pecial Treat 3,15; Merv
Griffin 6; Petticoa t Junction 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Brady Bunch
10; Real McCoys 13; Spectreman
17.
4:30-Gomer Pyle8.10; Tom&amp; Jerry
13; Gilligan' s Is . 17 .
S : ~arol Burnell 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Merv Griffin 15 ; My Three Sons
17 ; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33 .
5: 30-Mash 3; News 6; P lay the
Percentages 9; Elec. Co , 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again IJ; 1
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33 .
6 :00-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett 17; Zoom 20; 3·
2·1 Contact 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News e. 10; Bob Newhart 17;
Over Easy 20; Wild Wild World
of Animals 33 .
7:00-Cross-Wits 3; Ti c Tac Dough
8; Face the Music 13; MacNell~ehrer Report 33; News 10;
~ove, American Style 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17 ; Dick Cavett 20 .
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Sha Na
Na 6; Joker ' s Wild 8; Dick
Cavett 33; Hollywood SQ&lt;Jares
10; Sha Na Na 13; TV Honor
Society 15; All In The Family 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20 .
8:00-Speak Up America, II 3,15;
Happy Days 6, 13; White Shadow
tO; Billy Graham In Music City,
U.S.A. 6; Evening at Pops 20,33;
Movie " Chuka" 17.
8:30--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,t3; 9 :00- .
Big Show 3,15; Three' s ~ompany
6.13 ; Movie "Gauguin the
Savage" 8,10.
9:30-Taxl 6,13; 10:00-ABC News
6,13; Baseball 17; News 20; City
Notebook 33.
.
10 :30- Unlled Slates 3,15; Over
Easy 20; Camera Three 33.
11 :00-News 3,6,13,15; Dick Cavett
20; Dave Allen at Large 33.
11 :30-Tonight 3,15; AB.C News 6,13;
News8,10; ABC Captioned News
33.
11 :5()...-Soap 6,13; 12 :'00-Barnaby
Jones 8; Movie "Imitation of
Life" 10.
12: 25- Movle " Diamonds " 6,13;
t2 :30-News 17; 12:35-Movle
" The One That Got /&gt;,way" 17.
1:00-Tomorrow 3; News15; 1 :10Movle "Whispering Death" a.
3 :00- News
13;
3:05--Movle
"Bombardier "
17;
5: 10Maverlck 17.

�~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, April28, 1980

.

9-The Daily Sen_tlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, April28,1980
DICKTR:ACY

Introducing Catnbridse Box:

Television
Viewing
MUNDAY, APR IL l8, 1980
3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Face the Music 6,13; News 10;
~ ove, Amer ica n Style 15; Sa n·
ford &amp; Son 17; Dick Cavett 20.
7: 30- That Nas h vil le Mus ic 3;
Muppet Show 6 ; Joker's Wild 8;
Dick Cavett 33; Family Feud
tO, lJ; Nas ~v llle On The Road 15;
All In The Fam ily 17; Mac Neil Lehrer Report 20 .
8:00-Little House on the Prairie
3, 15 ; That' s Incred ible 6 ,13;
. WKRP In Cincinnati 8, 10; Song
by Song 20,33; Movie " Ulysses"
17.
8:30-Stocka rd Channing e,10.
9: 00-Pollce Story 3,15; Movie " All
God's Children" 6, 13; Mash 8,10;
American Short Story 20,33.
9:30-F io8,10; 10 :00-Lou Grant 10;
Billy Graham : The Inside Story
8; Three Appeals 33; Baseball
17; News 20.
10:3()-{)ver Easy 20; 11 :00-News
3,6,8,1 0,13, 15; Dick Cavett 20;
Dave Allen at Large 33.
11 :30-Tonlght 3,15; ABC News6,tl;
Harry 0 e; ABC Captioned News
33; Movie "Cass Tlmberlane" .10.
11 :5()...-Barney Miller 6,13; 12 :25-Police Woman 6,13; 12 :30-News
17.
12 :35--Movle "The Assassin" 17;
12 :40-McCioud
8;
I : 00Tomorrow 3; News 15.
13;
2 :35:_Movle
1:35- News
" Passage West" 17; 4: 1S.- World
at Large 17 ; 4:3D-Open Up 17.
7 : ~ross-W its

I KI

O~Y. ~0 CA~~

T'GET RILED, MA'AM •
H~ GET RIGHT T' THE- POINT.... '
t CAME HERE .

.J. P. Mc:.I&lt;ES..

AH, Yl!!!t--l' VE HSI\RD OF THAT
IILOATeP FINAIIJCIAL P IH05AUR ! .. ,
9,FDU~T'f- Et_, I'II!L~ . CAPTAI~ FL5J:ZY. OR WHAT• - ~.,..?C-E..:.
V.::_ER
:_:_ YOUR NAM! 15 PReSIPENT

1

T'CHECI&lt; OUT THIS.
MINE F'OR MY 80551

16

r~f5"'~PN~~

CL05ED: AWO YOU
CAN TE:~~ YOUR:
a055 IT'S GOING ·
TO STAY
CLOSE/1!

KJ

I VIDDIE j
I I r I

CER'iAINL.Y
CAN''T e&gt;LEEP
THR'OUeH "THIS!

tlAMORN±
J I K )

"""nge

Now
~ circled ltttllfa to
form the surprise answer, as aug·
gested by the above car10on.

Print answer here: (

I I I I XI, XJ

.
\Answer~~ tomorrow)
Saturday's ! J umbles: SUMAC IMBUE ATIAIN CROTCH
Answer: What happened to the bubble dancer's

careeJ when the jOint was raided ?-IT BURST
Jumbl• ~No. 14, cont1lnlng 110 puzdt1, II IYIIIibJt Iori I .75 pottpakt
Irom Jumblt ,cJolhll newtpeper, Box M. Norwood, N.J.07NI.Includtyour
ntme, 1ddre11, zip COde end mtkt cMckl Pl}'lblt to N•••P•~• ·

I CAIJ'T
66LI8ve;; IT... A

~VAI.JI,T ~

- ~~UI~

~L.:{

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

ro:JIX.I'DI~~

TAL.I'-1~

PAAROr

BRIDGE

0RUM ~ITI'O

'?HMAT~I&lt;$

FQ2.

_D ubious double stands up

fN.ATl.KO DXl3

ts!

MU~IK~

bridge since they risk a tremendous point loss, but in
match points the doubler is
betting a top against a
bottom."
+A Q 10 7 3
+KQ6
Oswald: "Such doubles frequently win tournaments
~T
EAST
when they work. They lose
+K5 2
+A9
them when they misfire."
.72
.AQJ96l
Alan: "East's double of
• 864
three spades is an example of
+A 10 8 7 3
+J954
this double at its worst. East
SOUTH
hoped to scrounge five tricks
+Q!0764
and get that magic 200 points.
.K 105
He got them, too."
+KJ92
Oswald: "It wasn't quite as
+2
bad a double as it lookS. After
Vulnerable : North-South
all West bad bid a notrump
Dealer: West
earlier in the bidding and
· West certainly didn't have his
Weal North Eallt Soot~
values. In any event East took
Pass 1+
1•
1+
bis ace of hearts at trick one
tNT 2+
3.
3+
and returned his singleton
Pass Pass Db!.
Pass
diamond.
South won in dumPass
Pass
my and led the three of
spades."
Alan: "When you make desOpening lead:• 7
perate bids you must make
exceptional plays . East
hopped with his ace of trumps
and led a club. West took his
ace and led a diamond. East
By Oswald Jacoby
ruffed for the fourth defensive
and Alan Soatag
trick and West set the band
with bis king of trumps."
Oswald: "One of the many
Oswald: "As Shakespeare
differences between match said, 'All's well that ends
poiut duplicate and regular well.'"
bridge is the so-called match (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
point double."
Alan: '"Ibis is a double of a
(For a copy of JACOBY
vulnerable opponent's part- MODERN, send $1 to: "Win at
score bid iD order to inflict a Bridge, " csre of this nswspsone-trict penalty and score a per, P.0 . Box 489, Radio City
200-point plus. Such doubles Station, New York, N. Y:
1()() 19.)
are dOW!U'Igllt silly Ill rubber
NORTH
+J83

t -28-80

•aa

~ TH'

LAWFTY..

BRASSIE BILL? BUT
GEE· GENATOR
LAWFTY HAD
HOTHIH' T' 00
l'iiTH IT •·

NO*BUT HE'S RIGHT
IH SAYING THAT HIS
N A~E l'iiLL HELP TO
6ET IT Pf\SGED..,

STILL .. HE

I ... ER- COOGIDEREO TELLING

MI5Kf'VE HIM THAT- BUT I DIDN'T
WANT TO WRECK MY CHANCES
OF 6ETTIN6 ON HIS
COMMITTEE ! l'iELL~
GEE Ya.J
LATER, ANNIE!

WELL, YOU l'iERE
RIGHT, HUCKlE!
SENATOR LAWFTY
DID TAKE CREDIT
FOR SENATOR
STAN'S BILL!

GURE!~ LAWFTY

KNOI'iG THE FIRST
RULE Cf POWER!

IF YOJ 0011'T USE
IT.

YOO LOSE IT!

~~dl:M~td'

-....-ambridge

by THOMAS JOSEPH

You

~ ~z:::lll\1

~
~

9
~

WINNIE
10NI6 HT I
CA N -6 0 TO
YOUR A PARTMENT ... IF
YOU LI KE .

th' fool
drums
crooked!

ft Colored

Item

battle gear

n Erase

3 u.s. Coast

U Auslen novel Guard motto
14 Obsessed
4 At 1i One kind
(bewildered)
5 Less common
ol music
6 Put together
•• '!brow
7 Ma)l's name
17Age
18
the sack 8 Mercouri
flbn
Z8Teaae
9 Aseptic
21 Cuff
Z2 Vox populi 12Empower
•• Pitchsampling
23 Popular

Ynt.erda:r'• Auwer
19 Yam
%! Versifier

30 Swann

23 Bovary's
tiUe

Murray
ftlm role
35 Caused to be

u Calif.

31 Don

city
37 Here:
25 Anesthetize
Fr.
29 stallion
38 Recipe word

,_..,.,..-~.,..,...-

street name
25Bequest

getter
27 Matter,
In law
28 Women's org.
29 Imprison
32 Doctors' org.

33- out
(clothe)
34 Beak

~~-ambridge

BARNEY

5HUX··I JUST
RAN OUT OF
CLOTHt:!:IL.I\VI;;

Box: Less than OJ ms tar.

38 Specialty;
forte
38 City In Judah
39 Brought
forth

b-+--+--

4tVaUey
41 Apart from

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

Less than
0.1 mg tar

Is

Phill p Mon l1 1~. 1910

Box: Less than. 0.1m(!a( 0.01 mg nico~ine-Soft Pack: 1mg "tar;' 0.1mg
mcoune-1 00 s: 4 mg tar, 0.4 mg mcotme av.per Cigarette by FTC Method.

CRYPTOQUOO'ES

•·...PEANVTS

,,

Also available' in ultra low ·1 mg Soft Pack, 4 mg 100's.

.

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
' hints. Eaeh day the eode letters are different.
C

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

.

' &amp;At~Ud:~
?f'd
I n ;tv
• .
: '1/r;. .+
.£,wo,I
I

OWGAA
OE

HPYA

BGUCT

ANNACOPUHN

WUXXPCANN
UGA

6 : ~oncerns

PC

NESAOWPC!I

OWPN
OE

TE ,

NE. SAOWPCB

OE

HEDA

UCT

NESAOWPCB

OE

WEXA

YEG
- QENAXW
UTTPNEC
Yesterdlty't Crypioquot.e : I DISCOvERED THE SECRET OF
LIFE. IT'S BEING ABLE TO PUT ONE FOOT IN FRONT OF
THE OTHER.-ROD STEIGER

&amp;

Comments

10;

News 17; 6:4.S--Mornlng Report
J; A.M. Weather 33; 6:50-Good
Morning , West VIrginia 13;
6:55--News 13.
7:00-Today 3.15 : Good Morning
America 6, 13; Tuesday Morning
8; Batman 10; Three StoogesLittle Rascals 17.
7:30-Hogan's Heroes 10; 7 :55-Chuck While Reports I o.
8:00-Capl. Kangaroo 8,10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame St. 33; 8 :30Romper Room 17.
9:00-Bob Braun 3: Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies e: Jeffersons
10; Phi l Donahue 13,15; Fam ily
Affair 17 .
9:30--Bob Newhart 8; One Day AI A
T ime 10; Green Acres 17.
10 : ~ard Sharks 3,15; Edge of.
Night 6; Jeffersons 8; Joker's
Wild 10; Morn ing Magazine 13;
Movie "Task Force" 17.
10:30- Hollywood Squares l .1S;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8, 10;
10:55--C BS News 6; House Call
10.
11 :00-High Rollers l .IS; Lave rne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price is Right 6,10 .
11 :30- Wheel of .Fortune 3,15;
Family Feud 6,13 ; Sesame St. 20.
12:00-Newscenter J; News 8,1 0,13;
Health Fie ld 15.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10,· Password Plus
15; Movie " Commanche" 17;
E lee. Co. 20,33.
I :00-Days of Our Lives 3, IS; All My
Children 6,13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8,10.
2:00-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:25--News 17.
2: 30-Another World 3,15; I Love
~ucy

DOWN
1 Keep in 2 Early

Zl Winls : Lat.

~

=&gt;
--.......
--- ·
--------

stack

ACROSS
1 Back talll
S Auguries
II Arboretum

mt

Discover Cambridge contentment.
The very special satisfaction of knowing
that with Cambridge Box you're getting
the lowest tar cigarette ever made,
yet still enjoying the unique pleasures
of smoking.

~

·~

TUESDAY, APRILl9,1980
5:45--Farm Report 13; 5:5()...-PTL
Club 13.
6 :00-PTL Club 15 ; 700 Club 6,9;
Health Field 10.

17.

3 : DO-Ge neral
Hospital
6,13;
Gu iding Light 9,10; Banana
Splits 17; Art Conference 20.
3: 30-FIIntstones 17; As We See II
20; Over Easy JJ.
4 : DO-S pecial Treat 3,15; Merv
Griffin 6; Petticoa t Junction 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Brady Bunch
10; Real McCoys 13; Spectreman
17.
4:30-Gomer Pyle8.10; Tom&amp; Jerry
13; Gilligan' s Is . 17 .
S : ~arol Burnell 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Merv Griffin 15 ; My Three Sons
17 ; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33 .
5: 30-Mash 3; News 6; P lay the
Percentages 9; Elec. Co , 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again IJ; 1
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33 .
6 :00-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett 17; Zoom 20; 3·
2·1 Contact 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News e. 10; Bob Newhart 17;
Over Easy 20; Wild Wild World
of Animals 33 .
7:00-Cross-Wits 3; Ti c Tac Dough
8; Face the Music 13; MacNell~ehrer Report 33; News 10;
~ove, American Style 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17 ; Dick Cavett 20 .
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Sha Na
Na 6; Joker ' s Wild 8; Dick
Cavett 33; Hollywood SQ&lt;Jares
10; Sha Na Na 13; TV Honor
Society 15; All In The Family 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20 .
8:00-Speak Up America, II 3,15;
Happy Days 6, 13; White Shadow
tO; Billy Graham In Music City,
U.S.A. 6; Evening at Pops 20,33;
Movie " Chuka" 17.
8:30--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,t3; 9 :00- .
Big Show 3,15; Three' s ~ompany
6.13 ; Movie "Gauguin the
Savage" 8,10.
9:30-Taxl 6,13; 10:00-ABC News
6,13; Baseball 17; News 20; City
Notebook 33.
.
10 :30- Unlled Slates 3,15; Over
Easy 20; Camera Three 33.
11 :00-News 3,6,13,15; Dick Cavett
20; Dave Allen at Large 33.
11 :30-Tonight 3,15; AB.C News 6,13;
News8,10; ABC Captioned News
33.
11 :5()...-Soap 6,13; 12 :'00-Barnaby
Jones 8; Movie "Imitation of
Life" 10.
12: 25- Movle " Diamonds " 6,13;
t2 :30-News 17; 12:35-Movle
" The One That Got /&gt;,way" 17.
1:00-Tomorrow 3; News15; 1 :10Movle "Whispering Death" a.
3 :00- News
13;
3:05--Movle
"Bombardier "
17;
5: 10Maverlck 17.

�('&gt;

ID- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Apri128, 1980

•

11- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, f\pril28, 1980

•

l2

Six Meigs boxers post VICtones
SIX local young men won their
respective bouts Saturday rught at
Larry Morrison Gymnasiwn when
the Me1gs Jaycees sponsored the1r
second boxing program of the year.
Local wmners were Scott Ne1gler,
Brill King, James Acree, Bnan
WilliS, Randy Stewart, and Roger

CotteriU. There were 20 matches
dunng the evening w1th contestants
commg from as far away as Zanesville, Chillicothe, Logan and Ripley.
In the first bout, nme-year old
Scott Ne1gler defeated John Den3""" nf nlniJ....ter. Ten-vear old Matt
ones from Voshocton lost to Tram-

Dus Hill of Parkel"'burg.
Bud Falrrow from Chillicothe won
over John Gibson in the 12·13 year
class as did Rick Hatcher of Ripley
over Jimmy Hutson of Parkersburg
Two ten-year olds, D111DY McKee
of Glouster and Brian Tannehill of
Meigs, fought it out with McKee
coming up the winner. Fourteenyear old BnU King of Meigs won
over Doug Fluarty of Zanesville.
James Acree won over Charley
Hatcher of Ripley, both 13-year olds.
Bnan Willis, 12, won over Bnan Har·
per, J2, of Zanesville Tony JarreU,
15, beat John Crey, 14, of Glouster.
Randy Stewart, 14, downed Buck
Gaut1er, 16, from Zanesville. Jack
Naguckl, 23, lost to Tommy Barnett,

Congress faces
filih
us ter

19, from Chillicothe. Calvin Hill, 17,
beat Eddie Banik,l6
Mike Thomas, 16, of Crooksville,
outdid Charles Whittington, 16, l'l.
Me1gs. Roger Cotterill, 21 and 160
pounds of Meig$, beat Byron
Greene, 21, of Albany
Don Hurt of Chillicothe beat
Robert Barber, 22, of Meigs. Russell
Wood, 19, of Glouster, 1st to Kenny
Rider, 20, of Chillicothe. Jay
Barrett, 14, of Glouster, lost to Jeff
Reed, 16, of Zanesville.
Chuck Stevens, 16, of Logan, beat
Mark Williamson, 17, of Chillicothe.
In the final bout, Danny Clarkson of
Ripley, 15, beat Jun Bush, 19, of
Logan.

COITERIIL WINS- Roger Cotterill, Meigs County, left, scored a
VIctory over Byron Greene, nght, of Albany durmg Saturday's boXIng
showat Larry R. Mornson Gym, Me1gs High School.

•

WASHINGTON (AP) -Congress
returns to work Monday with the
budget and a states' rights filibuster
on Jts hands, but wtth U.S. hostages
beavily on 1ts mmd
Less than a week after tbe attempt
to rescue American hostages failed
m Iran, congressional investigations
are being planned mto what happened, why it happened and why
Congress was kept m the dark.
The House IS also reswning debate

spending over a fixed period of time
in seven basic categories: food,
housing, transportation, medical,
clothing, entertainment and
ffilSCellaneous Do not mclude income taxes, Social Security, life in·
surance, gifts or any type of savings.
Add up the bills and f1gure out
what portion of the total went for
each category .It's easier if you have
a calculator, but you can work 1t out
With a penc1l and paper if you must.
Sunply divide each category by the
total swn to get the percentage.
Suppose, for elt8lllple, you spent
$3,000 mthe hrst quarter of the year.
Assume $600 went for food, $1,450 for
housmg, $400 for transportation, $200

NOTICE OF
PROPOSED
BANKMERGER
Not 1ce 1s hereby given
fhat applicatiOn has been
made to the Comptroller of
the Currency, Washington,
D C • 20219 for hiS consent
to a merger of Pomeroy
NatiOnal Bank, Pomeroy,
OhiO and Bank One 01
Pomeroy , N A , Pomeroy,
Oh1o Th1s apphcat 10n was
accepted for filtng on Mar
ch 25, 1980
11 1S contemplated that
all Olf1ces of the above
named banks will continue
tobeoperated
This not1ce is published
pursuant to sect ton 18 (c} of
the Federal De!!QSII In
surance Act and Part 5 of
the Regulations ofthe Com
ptroller of the Currency 112
CFR5) .

PubliC Notice
are herebv approved and
adopted
SECTION
II
The
tollowmg sect1on and chap
ters are herebv added,
amended or repealed as
r espectively mdicated 1n
order to comply With
current State law
SECTION Ill ThiS Or
d1nance sha ll take effect
and be 1n force from and af
fer Apnl14, 19BO

PubliC NOtiCe

Public Not1ce

FOR SALE

on painful and complex plans to
bring next year's national budget Into balance.

Count1es, Oh10, on various
DAVIDL.WEIR
locatiOns, by applying
DIRECTOR
retrof lectonzed polyester
Rev 8·17 73
compound for centerfltnes,
lane lines and channellzmg
IN THE
lines
COMMON PLEAS
The OhtO Department of
COURT, MEIGS
Transportation
hereby
COUNTY, OHIO
nolif1es all bidders that 1!
IN THE MATTER OF THE
will affirmative ly 1nsure
FORECLOSURE
OF
that 1n any confract en
L 1ENS
FOR
tered 1nto pursuant to thiS
L-AN 0
0 e L 1NQ u E NT
advert1sement, mtnor.ty
TAXES.
bus1ness enterpnses will be
cases Nos. 78-DLT-20
Passed the 141h day of
afforded full opportun ,ty to
&amp;O·DLT· 27
A~rlll980
subm1t b1ds .n response to
SO·DLT- 28
~o~e~tuck
this 1nV1taiiOn and Will nol 90·DLT·2'1
Clerk
be d1scnmmated agamst
80-DLT-30
M L K 11
on the grounds ol race,
80·DLT·31
Prestden~o~
color, or nat1ona l ongtn .n
80-DLT 32
council
cons1derat 1on
for
an
award
NOTICE OF SALE UN·
" M1n1mum wage rates
DER JUDGMENT OF
14 ) 21. 28 , 21c
for thiS pro1ect have been
FOR E C L 0 SURE
0 F
predeterm'"ed as requ~red
LIENS
FOR
NOTfCETO
bylawandaresetforthln
DELINQUENT
LAND
CONTRACTORS
the b1d proposal "
TAXES.
March31,1980
STATE OF OHIO
" The date set for com ·
Whereas 1udgment has
DEPARTMENT OF
plet1on of thts work shall be
been rendered aga1nst cer
POMEROY
TRANSPORTATION
set forth '" the btddtng
ta.n parcels of real estate
NATIONAL BANK
ColumbtJs, Ohto
proposal "
for taxes, assessments,
Pomerov , Oh lo
Apr1111 , 1980
Each btdder shall be
costs and charges as
Contract Sales Legal
reQutred to file wtth h1s b1d
follows
BANK ONE OF
Copy No. 80 140B
a cert1f1ed check or
CASE NO. 78-DLT-20,
POMEROY, N A
UNIT PRICE
cash1er' s check for an
Parcel No PV 02, t1tled 1n
Pomeroy, Ohio
CONTRACT
amount equal to ftve perthe name of Cathertne
!ISSUE NO 1)
cent of h1s b1d, but 1n no
Ebersbach
(3) 31, 14) 7, 14, 21 , 28 29,
SOS·5301( 11
event more than fifty
S1tuate 1n the Village of
6lc
Sealed proposals will be
thousand dollars, or a bond
Pomeroy, County of Me1g~1
rece1ved at the Offtce of the
for ten percent of hts b1d,
State of Oh 10 Sttuate In l ou
D1rector of the Oh10 Depar
payable to the Director
acre lot no 1225, Town 2,
ORDINANCE
tment of Transportation,
Bidders must apply, on
Range 13 Be1ng 21ots40 x B
NO 1096•80
Columbus Ohio, unt11 10 00
the proper forms, for
feet
An ordmance 10 REPEAL
AM . Oh10 Standartl Time,
qualification at least ten
A lso that part of 160 acre
PROHIBITION AGAINST
Tuesday, May 13,1980. for
days pnor to the date set
lot.nS W Sl deofabove lots
for openm~ b1ds in ac , be.ng20x80feet
EMPLOYEE BECOM I NG 1mprovementS1n
Me1gs County , Oh10, on
cordancew1th Chapter 5525
Deed Reference Vol 80,
A
CANDIDATE
FOR
Pa~e Slreet m the Vollage
Oh1oRev1sedCode
~age 391 , Meogs County
PUBLICOFFICE
of
ddl
t
b
d
PI
d
f
t
eedRecords
Be 1t ordamed by the
1 epor , Y gra 109,
ans an spec1 tea tons
council of the Vtllage of drammg and pavmg Wlfh
are on f1le m the Depart
Judgment $589 90 plus
Middlep ort , OhiO as asphalt concrete on a
mentofTransportattonand
accrued taxes, assess
follows
b1tumtnous
aggregate
the off1ce of the D1stnct
ments, penalttes and costs
of actton
base
Deputy D1rector
1
Sec I That Section 53 02
Pavement W1dth 20
The D1rector reserves
CASE NO. &amp;O~ DLT-27,
of th e Ord1nance of th1s 1
p
1
T
11 d
Village be and It IS hereby
eel
the nghl to re1ect any and
arce No RU 10, tl e
repealed
Pro1ect
Length
al l b1ds
tn the name of Allen E
SectiOn II BE IT FUR
2,49649feetor0472mlle
OAVIOL WEIR
Braley,dec
THER ORDAINED lhatan fee\)'~~\ ~m:me- 2.609 49
Rev 8 17 73
DIRECTOR
T~~~~:g~ M~~gs Rc"d~~ry~
emerl,1ency extsts and thiS
The OhiO Department of ,___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,OhiO Bemg 9 9"4 acres In
TransportatiOn
hereby r
Fract 1on 31, Townsh 1p 6,
Ord1nance shall become ef
fect1ve at the earliest date notifieS all bidders that 1t
NOTICE TO
Range 14
prOVIded
byThiS
law Ordinance W I II aIf 1rma t 1ve I y msure
CONTRACTORS
Deeel R ef erence
V o1
'
Se ' 111
thal 1n any contract en
STATE OF OHIO
118, page 1691 Me1gs county
shall take effect and be'" tered 1nto pursuant to thiS
DEPARTMENT OF
Deed Recoros
TRANSPORTAtiON
Judgment $59 03 plus ac
force from and after Apnl advertiSement, mmonty
14 • 1980
bus1ness enterprtses Will be
ColtJmbus, Oh10
crued taxes, assessments,
Passed th e 141 h day 01 afforded full opportun1ty to
Apr~ 1St1, 1980
pena l ties and costs of ac
subm1t btds m response to
Contrac 1 a 1 es Legal
tion
A~n l 1980
thiS lnV1lat10n and will not
C'rny No 80· 160
CASE NO • . 80-DLT 28,
~o~e~~ck
be d1S&lt;r~m1nated agamsl
NIT PRICE
Parcel No 01 011 017, tilled
4
0
on the grounds of race,
C NTR 1"' T
1n the name of Hazel M
color , or national ongm In
FRI -OOOR(L61
Dunlavy
Clerk-Treasurer
1
for
an
FR ·O!&gt;ORI17.,
Si tuated 1n Bedford
PMre' sL1d·eKn•.'' 0Y
1 consideration
award
SR~OORCtl l
Townsh1p, Me1gs County,
'' Minlmumhlghratesfor
Seated proposals Will be OhiO Containing 10 acres
Covnctl
141 21. 28. 2tc
th1s protect have been
recetved at the office of the
more or less in Sect Jon 11,
-----------1 predeferm1ned as requ 1red
Town 3, Range 13, o c p
D1rector of the Oh10 Depar
bv taw and are set forth m
tment of Transportation,
Deed Reference
Vol .
the b1d proposal ..
Columbus. Oh10. unt1IIO 00 258, page 171, Me1gs county
' The date set tor com
A M, Oh1o Standard Time, Deed Records
plel1on of th1s work shall be
Tuesday, May 3, 1980, for
Judgement $35 50 plus
set forth m the btddtng
Improvements in
accrued taxes. assesments,
proposal."
Athens, Gallla, Hocktng, penalt1es and costs of ac·
Each bidder shall be
MeiQS, Monroe, Morgan, tion
requ~redtofllewlthhiSbld
Noble.
Vinton
and
CASE NO. 80·DLT·29,
a certified check or
W-3Shlngton Counties, Ohio,
Parcel Nos 05 016 012, 05·
ORDINANCE
cash 1er's check. for an
by applv1ng pa1nt to lane 016 013, t1tled m the name
NO. 1093·80
amount equal to five per
lmes, center lmes and edge of Ernest Adams, aka
An Ordmance to AP
1mes
cent of h1s btd, but m no
Joseph E Adams
PROVE_. ADOPT AND
event more than fiftY
The Oh10 Department of
Slluated in V1ilage of An·
ENAC 1
THE
1980
thousand dollars, or a bond
Transportation
hereby tlqu lty, Letart Township,
REPLACEMENT PAGES
for ten per cent of his bod,
notifieS all btdders that It Metgs County, Oh iO Being
TO THE CODIFIED OR ·
wilt affirmatively insure that part of Lot No lf.
OINANCES TO REPEAL
pa~rd~;;~ t~~~ir;~~~;, on
that m any contract en
Town of Anttqu•tv East Of
ORDINANCES IN CON
the proper forms, for
tered • ~rsuant to thiS public road Also be1no that
FLICT THEREWITH. TO
qualification at least ten
adviliC:f't, m1nonty part 75 fet of South part of
PUBLISH THE ENACT
d
th
bus' §s terpnses will be
Lot No 11
MENTOF NEW MATTER
ays pnor 1o e date set
affo
:ull opportunity to
Deed Reference
Vol
for opentn~ b1ds m ac
b 11 1d 1
t
WHEREAS,
certa1n
w1th
Chapter
5525
su
m
s
response
o
124,
page
224,
Me1gs
County
cordance
n
~rovlstons
wlthtn the
OhiO Revised Code
th1s .nv1tat1on and will not
Deed Records
Codified Ordinances should
be dlscnmmaged agamst
Judgment $154 38 plus
be amended to conform
on the grounds Of race, accrued taxes, assessf
Plans and speclf1cat10ns
w1th current State laws as
are on ft le tn the Depart
color 1 or nat1onal or.gtn 1M
ments, penalt1es and costs
required by the Ohio Con
ment ot Transportation and
constderat1on
for
an
of action
stifutlons and
the Off1ce of the DIStrict
award
CASE NO. 80·DL T 30,
WHEREAS, var.ous or
Deputy Dtrector
"Minimum wage rates
Parcel No POMV 06, t1tled
dmances of a general and
The D~rec tor reserves
for this pro,ect have been
In the name of Edward
permanent nature have
the
nght
to
retect
any
and
predetermmed
as
requ1red
Bowen, et al
been passed by Council
all btds
by law and are set forth '"
Sttuated 1n the C1tv of
which should be mcludedln
DAVIDL WEIR
the bid proposal"
Pomeroy, county of Me 1gs
the Codified Ordmances,
Dl RECTOR
"The date set for com·
and State of Oh10 Con·
and
talnmg 3 acres Being Lot
plet1on of thiS work shall be
Rev 8 17 73
WHEREAS, CounCil has
set lorth 1n the b1ddlng
No 307 and 308. C1fy of
heretofore entered Into a
c4l 21 28 10
Pomeroy
proposal '
contract w1th the Walter H t - - - · -·_2_
_ _ _ _ _--l
Each bidder shall be
Deed Reference
Vol
Drane Co to prepare and
requ~red to file w1th his b1d
228, page96~ Me1gs County
publish such rev/s1on: and
Deed Recoras
a cert1f1ed check or
WHEREAS,
the
NOTICE TO
cash1er's check for an
Judgment $108 53 plus
CONTRACTORS
cotlclatlon of such or·
amount eqtJal to hve per
accrued ta'xes. assess
STATE
OF
OHIO
dlnances, together with the
cent of hiS bid, but 1n no
ments, penalt1es and costs
DEPARTMENT OF
new matter to be adopted,
event more than fifty
of action
TRANSPORTATION
the m•tters to be amended
thousand dollars, or a bond
CASE NO. 80· DLT·31,
Columbus. Ohio
and those to be repealed
for ten percent of his bid,
Parcel No POMV ·07, t1tled
Aprll11
1990
are belqre the Council.
payable to the Director
1n the name of Henry
Contract Sales Legal
now, therefore
Btdders must apply, on
Krautter, deceased
Copy No. 80 114B
Be II orda .ned by the
the proper; forms , for
S1tuated in the Village of
UNIT PRICE
Counc/ 1 of the V 111age of
QUalifiCation at least ten
Pomero'( , County of Me1gs,
CONTRACT
Middleport as Follows:
days prior to the date set
State o Ohto Being on
PMS·OOOSI173l
SECTION I
The or·
for opening bids in acwest side Of Nye Street
Sealed proposals Will be
dl~ances of the Village of
cordance wfth Chapter 5525
Deef Reference Vol 116,
received at the off/'ce of the
Middleport, Ohio, of a
Oh 10 ReviSed Code
gage 503, Meigs County
Director Qf the Oh o Oepar·
genera l and permanent
Plans and speclflcaiiOns
Deed Re~ords
tment of Transportation
nature,
as
revised,
are on file 1n the Depart
Judgmenl $314 30 plus
ment Of Transportation and
accrued taxes, assess
recodlfiedl rearranged •nd Columbus, Oh1o, untll10.00
the office of the Distnct
ments, pena1t1es and costs
consollda ed into &lt;om · A.M , Ohio Standard Time,
Tuesday, May 13, 1980, for, Deputy Director.
of actton.
ponent codes, titles, chap·
improvements
The
Director
reserves
CASE NO 80 DL T· 32, Par·
ters and sections within the
Athens, Gallla, Hocking,
the right to refect any and
eel Nos SYRV 01. SYRV ·
1990 Replacement Plages
O:.t . fttled m the name of
all bids
to the COdified Ordinances Me1~s and Washington

t-----7------1

-----------l

Shop Sentinel
Classifieds

3

Public Not1ce

By Sealed Bids on~ to be

GOLD,
SILVER
OR
James A Rast
FOREIGN COINS, OR
S1tuated in the V1ilage of
Syracuse, County of Metgs,
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
State of Oh10 Be1ng Lot 36,
SI LVER ITEMS ALSO,
25 x so feet s end Also ANTIQUE FURNITURE
bemg Lot 37, W side Apple
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
Street 50 x 50 feet
ITEMS WILL PAY TOP
Deed Reference
Vol
DOLLAR CHECK WITH
160, page 640, Me1gs County
OSBY IOSSIEI MARTIN
Deed Records
Judgment $128 45 plus
BEFORE
SELLING
accrued taxes, assess
PHONE 992.. 6370 ALSO
ments, penalt1es and costs
DO APPRAISING
Of act1on
Whereas, such 1udgmen
ts order sa1s real property
P1cklng up an Easy play
to be sold by the un
organ In your area
ders1gned to sat1sfy the
Looking for a responsible
total amount of such
party to take over pay men •
iUdgment
ts Call credit manager
Now, therefore, public
collect . 614· 592 5122
nohce Is hereby gtven that
1, James J Proff/tthShenfl
of Meigs County, o 10, will
sel l such real property at
public auction, for cash to
the highest bidder of an
amount sufflc1ent to sattsfy
the iUdgment agamst each '
parcel begmning at 10 00
by
Randy
car·
a m at the front door of the
penter,
factory
Me1gs County Court House,
1n Pomeroy, Ohto on the
trained
frontend
31st day of May, 1980, and
alignment
spe·
contmu.ng thereafter from
day to day, 1f any parcel
cia It st.
.does not recetve a suf·
f1C1ent b1d, '' shall be of
fered for sale, under the
same terms and condtttons
of the 11rst sale and at the
same t1me of day at the
Call (6141992-9932
same p lace on the 14th day
Pomeroy, 0 .
of June, 1980, for an
amount suff1c1ent to satisfy
the 1udgment aga1nst the
7
Yard Sale
parcel
Yard Sale Large select1on
James J Proff1tt
children 's, men's clothing
Sheriff
of
Me1gs
Thurs L Fr1 2. Sat 3 Ted
County, Oh10
Russell res1dence, Rt 124
M1nersv11 1e.
(4)28, 151 5, 12, 3tc

FRONT END
AUGNMEHTS

lANDMARK

SERVICE STATION

.. ........ .....

.. ...

~.

~ ····· · · · ·· ·-- -- ·· ·--··--

Card of Thanks
The fam11y of Catherine
French wishes to extend
the1r s.ncere apprec1at ton
to all the neighbors,
relatives and friends for
the• r kmdness extended
during her recent tllness
and death
l

Announcements

GUN
SHQOT
Ractne
Vo lunteer Fire
Dept
Every Saturday 6:30 p m
At their bulid1ngin Bashan
Factory choke guns only .
1 PAY highest prices
poss1ble lor gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport
ATTENTION· Baseball,
businesses, organizations,
politicians, Custom Print
T shirts 6 to an order
Even'"gs or weekends 949
2358

Mov1ng Sell1ng a 1971 car,
chest
freezer ,
16mm
pro1ector, a coal or wood
burning King stove, house
plants, bookcases, dresser
Wtth mtrror, nite stand,
desk, telephone stand, goat
stand. Call247·2624
8

Bea Wood 35707 Loop Rd ,
Rutland, OH. 742·2790. New
Shaklee Distributor In the
Rend area , All natural
vitamins All natural per
sonal pr oducts and organic
cleaners

GET VALUABLE traln.ng
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
tenel route earner Phone
us right away and get on
the e11g1blllty hst at 992·
2156or992 2157
Full time and part t1me RN
or LPN 11 7 Contact Mr.
Z1d1an at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Fr~day 9 5
Mature Babysitter needed
5 days a week 1n my home
References required . Send
toM . St Clair, 22 Railroad
St., Middleport, OH 45760.
Someone needed to mow
grass In me Mulberry
Avenue area, 992·3367
Gr~ll cook w•nted Apply In
person
Craw' s
Steak
House

12

S1tuatlons Wanted

Will clean house Call 667·
3423 or 667·6373.
Will care for elderly person
in my private home Call
992 6022.
Wdl do paintmg, roof work,
repaer
work
houses
Noth1ng too big 992 3941 or
992 7008.
Roof Painting and tr~m
work Free estimates 992
3627

To G1ve Away, 7 week old
k1tten Call n3·5356

Iron and brass beds, old
furntture, desks, gold
rings, 1ewe1ry, silver
dollars, sterlmg, etc , wood
Ice boxes, ant1ques, etc
Complete
households
Write M . D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, 0 HI or ca II 992·
7760
13

Insurance

Carpenter work
Floors,
doors. ce111ngs, paneling
992 2759
13

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN
,SU RANCE
been
can·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992 2143.

DOWNING-atiLDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
SERVING SOUntEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868'
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR All YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

992-?342

'

DCMNING-atiLDS AGENCY, INC.
MIDDI.£PORT, OHIO
9

Wonted lo Buy

10 kerat, 14 karat, 19 karat,
gold Dental gold and gold
ear pins 675·3010.
Gold, silver or foreign
co1ns or any gold or silver
items Antique furniture,
glass or china, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No item too large or too
sm•ll Check prices before
selling Also do appraising.
Osby IOsslel Martin 992
6370

Large attracttve home on
exceptionally nice acre lot
Syracuse. Modern kitchen,
2 baths, basement, garage.
Many extras 992 7727.

Room House, corner

22

Money lo Lo•n

Mortgage
Money
Available. New homes, old
homes, and refinancing.
your present home. CON
VENTIONAL 5 Pet. down,
SECOND MORTGAGES
VA· IIto down payment,
FHA·Low down payment,
FHA 245·Graduated pavm·
ent program, FHA·265·
Subsidy progr•m. Call S92·
3051. Ireland Mortgage Co,
77 E State St., Athens, OH

of

Carroll
and 3rd St ,
Syracuse, OH Ut1hty room
and garage 992 5205
House, 2 bedroom, lull
basement 30x40 Forced air
furnace, garage 2 acres.
$26,000 Near Reedsville,
Oh 378·6276
Mobile Homes
for Sale
14x65

2

bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3
bdr. bath 112
1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT PLEASANT,
wv. 304·675 «24

Wdl do odds and ends panel .ng, floor tile, ceiling
tile 992 6338

9

Wantecllo Buy

.._

Fairpoint,

COUNTRY HOME With
stocked pond for swimming
or fiShtng, 9 rooms, bath ,
carpeted 3 to 17 acres
ava1lable Located approx
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt 7 or 33 446 2359 after 6.

Lots &amp; Acreage

Land lor Sale St Rt 7 and
Bradbury Rd I acre lot,
sewer and water and gas
992 6069

41
Real Estate

General

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr
Broker 992 5739

BriCk,
ranch style, • 3
bedroom ,
21/~
bath ,
fireplace, full basement w
family room, a c, 2 car
garage,
Baum Addn ,
Meigs Co Call after 6 p .m
985 4169

1973

Farms lor Sale

PHONE 742-2003

Homes for Sale

32

POMEROY, OHIO 45769
33

INVESTMENT PRO
PERTY 2 lovely ,
modern homes S1tuated
on 10 acres L1ve m one
and rent the other ON
L Y $87 ,500 00 for both ' '
BEAUTIFUL - Bnck
b1 level Famll \' room
w 1th f.replace All wood
hand statned Qual1ty
throughou t
Amen1t1es
too numerous to men
t1on Call tOday Sells tor
S69 ,000 00 S1tuated on 4
acres
RANCH STYLE home
w 1th 3 bedrooms , 2
ba ths, family room w1th
f 1rep1ace K 1tchen 1S ex
tra modern, 1nctudes
m1 cro wave Sttuated tn
Chester Selling pr 1ce
$58,000 00
START OUT m thiS 2
bedroom home N tce lot
W1lh garden space Only
$23,000 00
TOTAL ELECTRIC - 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, k 1t
chen and d1n1ng area 1h
basement w1 th wood
burner and workshop
Close to Me1gs H1gh On
IY $39,900 00
2 ACRES - W1th lovely
3 bedroom home Has
e)(tra water tap Sells
lor $39,900 00
PRICE REDUCED - 3
bedroom home WIth
d1shwasher and gar
bage disposal S1luated
on a l1ttle over an acre
Pr1ce
reduced
to
$43 ,000 00
30 ACRES - Pnced to
sell Only $15,000 00
MODERN
HOME
s1tuated on ntce stze lot
1n
Hutchtson
Sub
d 1V1Son
See to ap
prec 1ate
A full t•me Real Estate
Agency Call day or
even.ng.
•
Velma Ntc1nsky, Assoc
Phone 742 3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742 2003

LIMESTONE ,

gravel,

calcium

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu Bestfor
apple butter Call 669 3785,
F1tzpatnck Orchard, SR
689

RALPH GRAVES
8 LINCOLN TERRACE

35

Misc. Merchanlse

sand,

Submit bids to:

..... . ...·---.............

31

ATTENTION
(IM
PORTANT TO YOU ) W1ll
p~y cash or cert•f•ed check
fOr ant1ques and collec
t•bles or entire estates
Nothing too large Also,
guns, POCket watches and
com collect•ons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

chlonde, fertilizer, dog
food, and all types of salt
Excelsior Salt Works, 1nc ,
E Main St , Pomeroy, 992
3891

any or all bids.

Wanted lo Do

.,

Antiques

----'-===-- -

COAL ,

We reserve the right to refuse

Give p1ano lessons to begin
ners and advanced student
In my home Also teach
chord1ng and transposing If
Interested call992 5403

6

Someone to stay with
elderly lady Call after 5
p.m . 992 3498

GUN SHOOT EVERY
FRIDAY NIGHT 7·30 P.M.
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY
RACINE GUN CLUB

Plano Tun1ng
Lane
Daniels 742 2951 Tuning
and Repair Serv1ce s1nce
1965 If no answer phone
992·2082

Help Wanted

BRADFORD, Auct1oneer.
Complete Service Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000 racine,
Oh1o, Critt Bradford

Letart Falls Cemetery fees
are p•yable now $10 per lot
of four graves, $5 for half
lot or two graves Money to
be sent to the sexton,
Clarence I Norris, 23262
Rd .. Racine 45771

SELL YOUR SILVER
COINS ,
STERLING
SILVER , GOLD. ETC , TO
BROWN'S
IN
Ml 0 ·
DLEPORT FOR
TOP
DOLLAR PHONE 6U 992·
5113

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

11

Sl

54

received by May 151 1980.

Complaining about federal Inthey want to
kill the measure which would grant
clear federal authority to file suits
against alleged abuse in state Institutions Legislation on inmate
rights has been passed by both the
House and Senate in slightly dif·
ferent fonn but now Is 'being recon·
sldered by the Senate and will be
looked at again by the House.
Voting to cut off the filibuster IS
scheduled for Monday and, If
necessary, Tuesday, with 60 votes
necessary to end debate m the I~
member Senate.
Meanwhile, the failed rescue at·
tempt - which cost eight lives will stiil dommate Capitol conversations this week

Announcements

56

Sugar Run School Building.

Some Senate leaders are about
ready for formal budget debate on
the1r side, too. But conservatives Including Sen. Strom Thunnond, RS. C., an old band at trying to delay
bills to death, have vowed to tie up
the Sena~ with marathon "debate"
on an irunate-rights bill.

18

12x60 2 bedroom mobile
home GOOd cond., mostly
furnished. SS,OOO or best of
fer 742 2898

Busmess Buildings

trusiOn in state affairs,

for clothing, $125 for medical care,
$75 for entertauunent and $150 for all
other goods and services.
Your percentages or personal
we1ghts are: Food, 20 percent;
housing, 48 percent; transportation,
13 percent; clothing, 7 percent;
medical care, 4 percent; en·
tertainment, 3 percent; and other, 5
percent.
(The approximate nat10nal
averages for urban consumers, according to the Labor Department,
are: Food, 18 percent; housing, 44
percent; transportation, 18 percent;
clothing, 6 percent; medical costs, 5
percent; entertainment, 4 percent;
and other, 5 percent.)

;';;:;;;;;.:;-__::
3ji2----,M..-;;;b;;;1,;
o 1• Homes

for S•le

1911 Zimmer trailer 12X60
1972 Buddy Trailer 12x60
992 5304

It Pays To Advertise. • .Advertise Where It Pays. • •
Pubhc NoiiCe

tor Sale

•

Inflation war--a winner or loser
By Associated Press
Are you winning or losmg the war
agamst inflatiOn?
One way to figure out where you
stand IS to calculate your own lllflation rate and compare 1t to the
government's Consumer Pr1ce Index. You 'U be able to tell at a, glance
which areas of your budget are
rising faster than average and
where you need to cut spending.
Econonusts at Citibank developed
a step-by-step method conswners
can use to detenrune their "Per·
sonal Price Index." Here's how it
works
Start by detennirung your spen·
ding patterns. Collect receipts for

Mobile Homes

Houses for Rent

Needed Room Mate to
share expenses Children
accepted 367 0410
For Rent Three rooms and
bath, furniShed, UtilitieS
pa1d, no pets 2 sleeping
rooms for rent See John
Sheets, l lf2 miles south of
M1ddleport on Rt 7

IN STOCK for immediate
deltvery . various sizes of
pool kits Do •t· yourself or
let us 1nsta11 for you. 0
Bumgl!lrdner Sates, Inc
992 5724
Harley-Davidson Yamaha
Super Deals Super Service
G1ant Accessory Selectton,
$250,000 Inventory Athens
Sport Cycles, 20 W St1mson
Ave., Athens, OH . 592 1692

Apartment
for Rent

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap
ts Phone 992 5434.
RENTER'S assistance tor
Sen1or Citizens In Village
Manor apts Call992·7787 .
45

Furnished Rooms

Board, room, laundry
Retired person. $150 mo
9926022
46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route JJ, North ot
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992-7479
47

wanted to Rent

Furnished apt., house or
trailer. Needed by first of
May for two workIng g~rls
In
Middleport.
Have
references 7-42·2790

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

Drive for show, putt for
dough Improve your short
game with a new putter
John Teaford 614·985 3961
Lad1es all leather western
boots Va lues to $79 95 Our
pnce $40 95
Bailey's
Shoes, Middleport. OH
Lad1es sandals,
F~rst
Ed tt tons, values to $22 Our
pnce $3 88 pr Bai ley's
Shoes, Middleport, OH
Beautiful select,on of
flowers for Memorial Day
Faye's Gilt Shop, Powell
St, Middleport, OH
Reduce safe and fast with
GoBese Tablets and E Vap
"water pi ll s" Nelson Drug
Vegetable pl. ants. cab
bage, broccoli, cauliflower,
lettuce, ce lery, beets,
green peppers. chill pep
pers, p1m1entos, Hungarian
wax, sweet banana, egg
plant, large selectiOn bed
d ing an nua ls, hanging
baskets, pots at flowers and
vtnes Clel and Greenhouse,
Geraldtne
Cleland,
Rac1ne, OH
Gilbert electr.c train. tran
sformer and allthe ac
cessorles Women's golf
bag 992 2961

,

Antiques

ATTENTION
(IM
PORTANT TO YOUI Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec
t1bles or entire estates
Nothing too large Also,
guns, pocket watcbes and
co 1n collections Cal l 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding, all breeds Clean
Indoor outdoor facllit 1es
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans 614 446 7795
HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a homeless pet
Healthy , shots, wormed.
DonatiOns required 992
6260, noon 7 p m
HOOF HOLLOW Horses
and pon1es and riding
lessons
Everything
imagmable in horse eqUIP
ment
Blankets , belts,
boots, etc English and
Western
Ruth Reeves
1614) 698 3290
Humane Soct~tv ' s Pet
Adoption Servi ce Healthy,
shots, wormed 992 6260. 1
coon hound, Chesapeake
Bay Retriever, German
Shepherd, Beagle. Fox
Hound, Weimaraner type,
small Lab, 2 Beagle Collie
types, Shepherd border
Collie type w1th puppy
Several cats and k1ttens

Shaklee Organ1c products
White vanilla medicated
vapour
spray,
black
diamond
l1n1ment
Rawleigh products Joyce
Sautes 992 7825

P1Ck1ng up a ptano 10 your
area Looking for a respon
s1ble party to take over
payments. Call cred1t
manager collect 614 592
5122

Business Services

Goats 2 yr oLd ma le $25. 2
m•lk•ng goats and 1 bred
female $6Q ea 8 mo old
female $45 , 6 k1ds males
20
30
$
females
$ · Shade, ,~~.:MXIICH:IOOCH:MXIICIICH:IOO-.IIMXIICN::ICIOOCH:MXXN::.-ICIC
OH• (614)
696 1234

11

62

1977 Prem•er Vol are 4 door,
a~r,

am fm Tape, speed con

CHIP WOOD Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton Bundled
slab $10 per ton Oehvered
to Ohio Pallet co, Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 2699
ANTIQUES,
FUR
NITURE, glass, china,
anything See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N
2nd, Mldc(leport, OH 992
3161
OLD COl NS, pocket wat
ches, class rings, wedding
bands. d1amonds Gold or
s1lver Call J A Wamsley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH 592·
6462
GOLD
AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS,
JEWELRY,
STERL ING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP·TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OH 10. OR CALL 992 3476

and Corporattons
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

1977

Chevrolet

Capnce

Class•c, 3 seater, st wgn,
p s, p b, a1r, ltlw mileage

Curves Ahead!
4888

Quality constructton at
reasonable rates

Trucks lor Sate

1979 Jeep Wagoneer. 4 dr ,
fully equipped, exc cond
$7 ,500 742 3117 alter 5 p m

1978 Ford Bronco, P s ,
P B , A C , AM FM stereo
992 6130 after 5 p m
Van Conversion by Jayco
1978 2979 See them at Cod
ners Campers 614·843 3011

Free Est1mates
Reasonable Pnces
c.,.JJ Howard
'19 2862
949·2160

Guaranteed Work
Free Esttmates
After 5 P M 992 5547
3·261mo

Harley oav1dson Yamaha
Super Deals Super Serv ice
Giant Accessory Select1on,
$250,000 Inventory Athens
Sport Cycles, 20 W Stl mson
Ave , Athens, OH 592 1692
75

Boatsand
Motors for Sale

Must Sell! 77 Starcraft 16'
open bow, 85 h p. Mere S
S
prop
canvas top
Sterhng tra 1ler
$2,800
Phone alter 5 p m 992 2791
like sears
new, ftberglass
$230 l~rm canoe
Pad
17'
dies and earner extra . 773
5008

Free Estimates
Ph . : (304) 773·5131
or&lt; 304) 882-2276

Holley Dommator Intake
Manifold and 600 CFM
Holley Carburetor Com
puter designed for per
formance and economv
Fits 351 Cub1c Inch Ford
W1ndsor eng1ne
Never
used. 2 new 4.35X18 and 1·
3.000x21 CarliSle Knobby
motorcycle ttres. Battery
operated fence charger
Cal l alter 4 30. 992· 7291

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
eV -CHISEL
PLOW

SEWING ClASSES
Starting Soon
Call for Registra·
tion

l£0

992-5320

For all
needs

your

sewing

MORRIS

THE

Rutland, 0 .
Ph . 742·2455

SEWING CENTER

M•ddleport, 0
4 18 1 mo

4 14 1 mo

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

GOLF
LESSONS

Ohio Valley Roofing
All types of roofmg, new
and repa1r, gutters,
downspouts, commer·
eta I &amp; restdentlal
949·2160 Pomeroy
797 2432 Alhens
Tom Hosk1ns or
Gerald Clark
21 vears expenence. All
work guaranteed
Free Est1mate
4 24 1 mo

Family Plan
Available

V. C. YOUNG Ill

John Teaford
Phone :
( 614) 985· 3961

POMEROY, 0.
99262150
992-7314 r

CONSTRUCTION

Farm Buildings

"Fros~z:~xJO"

ROOfiNG

Utility Buildings
S1tes From 4d to 12ll:40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Free Estimates
388·9759

Rt 1, BoxS4
Rac1ne, Oh.
Ph 614-843·2591
3 30 1 mo

2 14 tfc

I

:1_16

E ~d StrMt Phone

1-(614)·992-332~

COAL MINERS DE ·
LIGHT Attract1ve
home high on a h1ll with
5 2 acres
Has 3
bedrooms and 2 baths
Total electric on Ohio
Power Lead1ng Creek
water and landscaPed
yard Unusual !tyle for
the unusal man for 1ust
$47,500.
BUILOING LOT$ - 2
ntce partla I cleared,
restr1cted bu1ld1ng lots
near Route 33 with
water
and electric
available.
NEW LISTING 17
acres In Pomeroy Has
city water and electr.c
available. Sewer IS close
by
NEW LISTING - A fix
11 with 3 lots 6 rooms, Cl
ty water, natural gas,
e1ectr1c, and 2 porches
Only S5,500
MODERN- Nice home
with tall trees and
bramblmg brook Has 3
bedrooms, 1'12 baths
central heattng, and
rural water Going for
$29,500
IF YOU LIVED HERE
- You could enjoy all
the room of a large
home Has large garden
space and nice back
patio. Also has a garage
apartment and business
building. All this tor
$25,000.
INCOME
Large
return from this that
c•n pay off In lust a few
years $6,600 • veer In·
come I nvestlgete this
now.

Housmg
Headquarters

608 E

'4C.IH

PONIIER01','0
992-2259

1

BOB'S

NEW LISTING - Close
tn, J bedrooms w11h full
basement, garage on
60x250 lot $28,500 .00
NEW LISTING
TIRED OF WORKING
FOR OTHERS? Own
your own bus.ness mak
lng truss ~alters Ap
orox 1 acre. building,
enough tools &amp; a truck to
run the busmess Owner
w1ll assist tn learn tnQ of
QUSiness $28,000 00
NEW LISTING - LIKE
TO CAMP? 2 room cot
tage on Shade R1ver
wtth approx 5 acres of
land $8,800.00
NEW LISTING 12
acres with mob1lehome,
2 4 bedrooms, 1'12 baths
$72,300 00
NEW LISTING
BUILDING SITES Approx
10
acres
cleared &amp; level land.
w111
subd l v1de
$11,500 00
FIVE POINTS 3
bedroom
ranch on
200x100 lot $30.500 00
FARM - 4-4 acres w1th 4
bedroom modular, other
buildings, extra tra1ler
hook·up $42,000 00.
REDUCED
3
bedroom. 1'/2 balhs In
town on a sox80 lot .
$38,000 00
BRINGING BUYER TO
SELLER THAT'S
OUR BUS I NESSI! I
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland Jr1
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean nussei1949·2660
Dottle &amp; Roger Turner
742-2474
Office Phone 992-2259

9-WantedtoBuy .

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessor. es
Slldtng back gl as s for
truck 18 months old Exc
cond After 5 p m 992 2679

11_titlp wanted
12-Situalecl Wtnttcl
1] - I nsuranet
14- Butlnetl Training
1!-Schoolsln&amp;trucllon
16Recllo, TV
I Cl RtPIIr
1.-w.niH To Oo

a81

eFARM SU PPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
61-Farm EC!\IIpmtnl
n-want.ct to lu~
12-Trucks for S.lt
U - LIIItstock
"'-Hty&amp;Oraln
u- Sttd &amp; FertiiiJtr

eFINANCIAL
21-

Phone __________________

s1-Hov•tttotcl Goocls
S2-CI, TV, R.dto E11111pmen1
n-Anttq\ltl
M-Misc Mtrchancllu
n-lulldlnt Supplies
S6-Pet1 for Salt

IUIIfttU

Opportunity

22- Monty to loan
U- Proftulonal
Strvlctl

)
l
)
l

eTRANSPORTATION
7!-AUtot fOr Slit
13-VInl &amp; f W D

e REAL ESTATE
11-Hamtl for Slit
32- Mobile+tom••
tar Sillt
n - Farmt tor Slit
M-lutlntu luildlngs
U - lolt I Acr111t
»-Rtll Etlttt Wtnttcl

cu .. es ahead - long , lean
strearnhned curves that stream
lme yout w"st and h1ps ThiS
Slmpl..seammg sundress has a

74-Motoreyclts
1sAuto Plrts
&amp;Aectuorltl
17-Auto RtPt~lr

squate necklme back and fron t

]7-ftetlton

Pnnted Pattern 4888 MISses
S11es 8, 10, 12 14 16, 18 S1ze
12 (bust 34) lakes 211 )atds
45 lOCh fabriC
Sl.75 fat utb palltm Add 504
fat each patleln fat fi11t class

eSERVICES

Wont· Ad Advertising
Deadlines

11-Homtlmprovtmtnll
11- Phtmblrq &amp; E11uvat1n1
IJ-EiiLUYiflng
M-I!IKtrlc:.l
I Refrlttratton

n-o.,..,.., Hnllnt

4 P M Dlllly

12 Noon 51turdiY
tor Mondty

M-M H

oillftlil and bandlona. Send

Atp.~lr

11- Upttolstery

to

Anne Adllll$
PoHero Dtpl

'fUtes and Other Information
15 Words or Undtr

c....

100
,,.

1 day
2 •• .,..
l clays

....,.

"'
"'

The Dally Seotlnel
Chartt

"'
'"
"'
lTl

Each word over the minimum 15 worasls4 ctl'lfl per word per-.s.y
4CU running oRMr than consec:ullvt dtys wilt be ctlartH •t the I day

raft

'

In memory, Caret of Thanll'\ lnd Obltutry 'c:ents per word IJ GO
mlnlmvm C•sh in ecllvenet
MDIIIIt Home Ull•s •nd Yllrd s•ttl ar• •cctptlld only With UIPtWIIPt
ordtr 25 Ctflt c=Nrge for tdt urrylnt loa NumMr II\ Cart of The
Stntlntl

243 W..l 17 Sl, New Tart, NY
10011 Pnnt NAME, AOOI!ESS,
ZIP, SIZE, 1nd STYL£ NUMBER
Busy women the fastest to-sew
fash1ons

are'" our NEW SPRING

SUMMER PATIERN CATALOG'
Dresses. tops, jackets. pants
Plus Sl 75 free patlern coupon
Send $1 lor CalaiiJi

!27·Aif1M 'n' Dollies

$1.50
129.0Uid/Elsy Ttonsfors $1.5Cl
UO.Swoatodlres IS 56 $1.5Cl
m~ill
$1.5Cl

o,;,.,•.

1

2
3
4

5
6

Wanted
For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

Home
Improvements

S &amp; G Carpet Clean.ng
Steam
cl eaned
Free
est1mate
Rea sonable
rates
Scotchguar d 992
6309 or 742 2211
WALL PAPERIN G
pamtmg 742 23 28

These cash rates
1nclude d1scount

17
18
19

20
21
22
23
24
25
26
26

8
9
10

29

11
12
13
14
15
16

32

31

a nd

CARPENTER \YORK
complete remodel 1ng by AI
Tromm, 742 2328 Referen
ces

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

----- )

----- 1

Call After 5 P . M .
992·6323
4 27 pd

Roof1ng, s1dtng, room ad
d1t1ons,alt types of general
repairs , 25 years ex
penence 992 3406
83

84

Electr1cat
&amp; Refngerat1on

SEWING
MACHINE
Repa1rs , serv1ce ,
all
makes
992 2284
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Authonzed S1nger Sa les
and Serv1ce We sharpen
SCISSOrS
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, 1rons, all small
appliances Lawn mower
Ne xt to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985
3825
M1ller E lectncal Service
Res1dent and Business
Reliable and Expenenced
742 3195
85

General Hauling

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel Also, hme hauling
and spread.ng Leo Morris
Truck1ng Phone 742 2455.
87

Excavatmg

L1mestone for dnveways
Pomeroy Mason area 367
7101

Upholstery

A&amp;H Upholstering, across
from the Texaco Station In
Syracuse Ph 992 3752 or
992 3743

-----:~~====~~~~==~~
_____ I
Rutland Furniture's

- -11
______

27 - - - --

7

- vmvl s1dmg
~GtJtter work
-Soft1t
-Garages
- Carports
- Room aCid1t1ons

James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
J 'io 1 mo

Address. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.._

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

Vinyl &amp;
Alum'"um S1d1ng
nsulatton
• Storm Doors
• Storm Wmdows
• Replacement
Wtndows
Free Estimate

I

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Pnnt one word tn each
space below Each .n
tha t or group of f1gures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number 1f used
You ' ll get better results
1f you descnbe fully,
g1ve pnce The Sent.nel
reserves the nght to
class1fv . ed1t or re1ect
any ad Your ad wtll be
put 1n the proper
claSS1ftcat1on 1f you ' ll
check the proper box
below

0

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Wnte your own ad and order bv mall w1th th1s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

41-HOUitl for Atfll
42- Moblle tiomu
for Rtnl
44-Apartmtnf for R tnt
4!-FRaom•
4t-!ipact tor liltflt
47-Wanttd to A tnt
' 4t--Eqvlprntnllor Atnt

*New homes
extens1ve remodel·
ing
* Electricla work$
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

SMALL

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
built-up
roof
and
home
repair.

76

1- Cud of ThinkS
2- ln Mtmorl•m
l-AnnMinetrnenll
4-0iveewu
!-HIPPY Adl
t-lotUncl Found
J- Yircl Siilt
t-Publle Salt
&amp; A\lctlc.n

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
worlt,
walks
and
dnveways
!FREE ESTIMATES)

~~=:;:;:;::;~;==~~~~~~~·~·~·~l~m=o=~~==~~~~1~28~1~m~o~
GEORGE'S
ALL STEEL
ROUSH

Curb Inflation.
Pay Ca sh for
Classifleds and
Savell I

PHONE 992-2156

eRENTALS

4 9 (pd I

f

2

~

Aulo Parts
&amp; Accessories

WANT AD INFORMAnON

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

-CONCRETE

Motorcycles

74

1

Real Estate- General

-ROOFING
-PAINTING
-REMODELING

f~=:;~§[t~~~~=~rr~~~~~::::::'~
~2~t~c~~~~~~~~===~
~-~

Vans &amp; 4 W.D.

I

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

Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore St .

All types of roof work,
new or repa1r 'gutters
and downspouts, gutter
clean1ng and patntmg
All work guaranteed .

Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Bnck Work
Block Work
Concrete F1ntsh1ng

r----------------------,

RISING STAR Kennel
Boardmg Call367 ·02'12

992· 3795
tfc
42

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

N. L CONSTRUCTION

1978 Camero, p s , p b, atr ,
new ttres, S-4,700 cs rad1o
992 2124

L1vestock

Leghorn Hens lor sale at
50c apiece Call W S
M1chael 995 4237 or 985
3956.

Loans, No Down Payment Federal Houseng
Loans 3% down on
S25,ooo , 5% down on
balance FHA 2&amp;5 Subsody Program FHA 245
Gradual Paymenl Mort
OpenM W-F9:00io 1:00
~ther T1mes by

t~========~========~~============~~==~~==~P~o~m§e~r§o~y=,~O~H~==~

Reg retail $3,600 Sale
$2 795 GOOd COnd , lUSt
nght for vacat1on Ingels
Furn1ture, Middleport, OH

loaded with extras 446
1979 Ford Pickup, 6ft bed,
1552 Call afer 5 p.m

,~ mercy, Oh.

618 E. Main

tr~afEstate Loons
14% lnterest-30 Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA AutomatiC

Appo~~~~:~~2 7544

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

Jeeps $59 50, Cars $37,
Trucks $159 Call 615·779
3235 Ext 814

76

Pets for Sale

Business-Farms-PartnershipS

trol New tires Exc cond
Don Foglesong, Mason
773 5274

1979 Ford 150 4X4, auto,
p s • p b , topper PoSitive
tract1on front and rear 985
4339

Wan led 10 Buy

63

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

Autos for Sale

73

nted Pattern
56

L1vestock

72

MUSICal
lns1ruments

Decorated Cakes, charac
ter cakes or sheet cakes
992-6342 or 992·2583

-" ·

53

63

POODLE GROOMING
J udy Taylor 614 367 7220

57

'
44

Pe ts tor Sale

1

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33. _ _ _~-34 _ _ _ __

,.,,

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box ,729
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

-· "Drive A Little Save A Lot"

SHOPISFUL~YSTOCKED
BEDROOM
LIVING ROOM

KITCHEN GARPET
Rubber$895
Backed

CARPET

sq.

$_9!5 Ana up

yd.

I
II

35 _ _ _ _ __

CARPET SHOP

I
I
I
I
1
1
I
I

-----------------------~1

Padd'"g &amp; Cfrpet lnstauea Free
/with Purchase

Nice Selection of Remnants
A II Sizes - Good Prices
~

~---

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Main St.

Z42:22.U

'

�('&gt;

ID- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Apri128, 1980

•

11- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, f\pril28, 1980

•

l2

Six Meigs boxers post VICtones
SIX local young men won their
respective bouts Saturday rught at
Larry Morrison Gymnasiwn when
the Me1gs Jaycees sponsored the1r
second boxing program of the year.
Local wmners were Scott Ne1gler,
Brill King, James Acree, Bnan
WilliS, Randy Stewart, and Roger

CotteriU. There were 20 matches
dunng the evening w1th contestants
commg from as far away as Zanesville, Chillicothe, Logan and Ripley.
In the first bout, nme-year old
Scott Ne1gler defeated John Den3""" nf nlniJ....ter. Ten-vear old Matt
ones from Voshocton lost to Tram-

Dus Hill of Parkel"'burg.
Bud Falrrow from Chillicothe won
over John Gibson in the 12·13 year
class as did Rick Hatcher of Ripley
over Jimmy Hutson of Parkersburg
Two ten-year olds, D111DY McKee
of Glouster and Brian Tannehill of
Meigs, fought it out with McKee
coming up the winner. Fourteenyear old BnU King of Meigs won
over Doug Fluarty of Zanesville.
James Acree won over Charley
Hatcher of Ripley, both 13-year olds.
Bnan Willis, 12, won over Bnan Har·
per, J2, of Zanesville Tony JarreU,
15, beat John Crey, 14, of Glouster.
Randy Stewart, 14, downed Buck
Gaut1er, 16, from Zanesville. Jack
Naguckl, 23, lost to Tommy Barnett,

Congress faces
filih
us ter

19, from Chillicothe. Calvin Hill, 17,
beat Eddie Banik,l6
Mike Thomas, 16, of Crooksville,
outdid Charles Whittington, 16, l'l.
Me1gs. Roger Cotterill, 21 and 160
pounds of Meig$, beat Byron
Greene, 21, of Albany
Don Hurt of Chillicothe beat
Robert Barber, 22, of Meigs. Russell
Wood, 19, of Glouster, 1st to Kenny
Rider, 20, of Chillicothe. Jay
Barrett, 14, of Glouster, lost to Jeff
Reed, 16, of Zanesville.
Chuck Stevens, 16, of Logan, beat
Mark Williamson, 17, of Chillicothe.
In the final bout, Danny Clarkson of
Ripley, 15, beat Jun Bush, 19, of
Logan.

COITERIIL WINS- Roger Cotterill, Meigs County, left, scored a
VIctory over Byron Greene, nght, of Albany durmg Saturday's boXIng
showat Larry R. Mornson Gym, Me1gs High School.

•

WASHINGTON (AP) -Congress
returns to work Monday with the
budget and a states' rights filibuster
on Jts hands, but wtth U.S. hostages
beavily on 1ts mmd
Less than a week after tbe attempt
to rescue American hostages failed
m Iran, congressional investigations
are being planned mto what happened, why it happened and why
Congress was kept m the dark.
The House IS also reswning debate

spending over a fixed period of time
in seven basic categories: food,
housing, transportation, medical,
clothing, entertainment and
ffilSCellaneous Do not mclude income taxes, Social Security, life in·
surance, gifts or any type of savings.
Add up the bills and f1gure out
what portion of the total went for
each category .It's easier if you have
a calculator, but you can work 1t out
With a penc1l and paper if you must.
Sunply divide each category by the
total swn to get the percentage.
Suppose, for elt8lllple, you spent
$3,000 mthe hrst quarter of the year.
Assume $600 went for food, $1,450 for
housmg, $400 for transportation, $200

NOTICE OF
PROPOSED
BANKMERGER
Not 1ce 1s hereby given
fhat applicatiOn has been
made to the Comptroller of
the Currency, Washington,
D C • 20219 for hiS consent
to a merger of Pomeroy
NatiOnal Bank, Pomeroy,
OhiO and Bank One 01
Pomeroy , N A , Pomeroy,
Oh1o Th1s apphcat 10n was
accepted for filtng on Mar
ch 25, 1980
11 1S contemplated that
all Olf1ces of the above
named banks will continue
tobeoperated
This not1ce is published
pursuant to sect ton 18 (c} of
the Federal De!!QSII In
surance Act and Part 5 of
the Regulations ofthe Com
ptroller of the Currency 112
CFR5) .

PubliC Notice
are herebv approved and
adopted
SECTION
II
The
tollowmg sect1on and chap
ters are herebv added,
amended or repealed as
r espectively mdicated 1n
order to comply With
current State law
SECTION Ill ThiS Or
d1nance sha ll take effect
and be 1n force from and af
fer Apnl14, 19BO

PubliC NOtiCe

Public Not1ce

FOR SALE

on painful and complex plans to
bring next year's national budget Into balance.

Count1es, Oh10, on various
DAVIDL.WEIR
locatiOns, by applying
DIRECTOR
retrof lectonzed polyester
Rev 8·17 73
compound for centerfltnes,
lane lines and channellzmg
IN THE
lines
COMMON PLEAS
The OhtO Department of
COURT, MEIGS
Transportation
hereby
COUNTY, OHIO
nolif1es all bidders that 1!
IN THE MATTER OF THE
will affirmative ly 1nsure
FORECLOSURE
OF
that 1n any confract en
L 1ENS
FOR
tered 1nto pursuant to thiS
L-AN 0
0 e L 1NQ u E NT
advert1sement, mtnor.ty
TAXES.
bus1ness enterpnses will be
cases Nos. 78-DLT-20
Passed the 141h day of
afforded full opportun ,ty to
&amp;O·DLT· 27
A~rlll980
subm1t b1ds .n response to
SO·DLT- 28
~o~e~tuck
this 1nV1taiiOn and Will nol 90·DLT·2'1
Clerk
be d1scnmmated agamst
80-DLT-30
M L K 11
on the grounds ol race,
80·DLT·31
Prestden~o~
color, or nat1ona l ongtn .n
80-DLT 32
council
cons1derat 1on
for
an
award
NOTICE OF SALE UN·
" M1n1mum wage rates
DER JUDGMENT OF
14 ) 21. 28 , 21c
for thiS pro1ect have been
FOR E C L 0 SURE
0 F
predeterm'"ed as requ~red
LIENS
FOR
NOTfCETO
bylawandaresetforthln
DELINQUENT
LAND
CONTRACTORS
the b1d proposal "
TAXES.
March31,1980
STATE OF OHIO
" The date set for com ·
Whereas 1udgment has
DEPARTMENT OF
plet1on of thts work shall be
been rendered aga1nst cer
POMEROY
TRANSPORTATION
set forth '" the btddtng
ta.n parcels of real estate
NATIONAL BANK
ColumbtJs, Ohto
proposal "
for taxes, assessments,
Pomerov , Oh lo
Apr1111 , 1980
Each btdder shall be
costs and charges as
Contract Sales Legal
reQutred to file wtth h1s b1d
follows
BANK ONE OF
Copy No. 80 140B
a cert1f1ed check or
CASE NO. 78-DLT-20,
POMEROY, N A
UNIT PRICE
cash1er' s check for an
Parcel No PV 02, t1tled 1n
Pomeroy, Ohio
CONTRACT
amount equal to ftve perthe name of Cathertne
!ISSUE NO 1)
cent of h1s b1d, but 1n no
Ebersbach
(3) 31, 14) 7, 14, 21 , 28 29,
SOS·5301( 11
event more than fifty
S1tuate 1n the Village of
6lc
Sealed proposals will be
thousand dollars, or a bond
Pomeroy, County of Me1g~1
rece1ved at the Offtce of the
for ten percent of hts b1d,
State of Oh 10 Sttuate In l ou
D1rector of the Oh10 Depar
payable to the Director
acre lot no 1225, Town 2,
ORDINANCE
tment of Transportation,
Bidders must apply, on
Range 13 Be1ng 21ots40 x B
NO 1096•80
Columbus Ohio, unt11 10 00
the proper forms, for
feet
An ordmance 10 REPEAL
AM . Oh10 Standartl Time,
qualification at least ten
A lso that part of 160 acre
PROHIBITION AGAINST
Tuesday, May 13,1980. for
days pnor to the date set
lot.nS W Sl deofabove lots
for openm~ b1ds in ac , be.ng20x80feet
EMPLOYEE BECOM I NG 1mprovementS1n
Me1gs County , Oh10, on
cordancew1th Chapter 5525
Deed Reference Vol 80,
A
CANDIDATE
FOR
Pa~e Slreet m the Vollage
Oh1oRev1sedCode
~age 391 , Meogs County
PUBLICOFFICE
of
ddl
t
b
d
PI
d
f
t
eedRecords
Be 1t ordamed by the
1 epor , Y gra 109,
ans an spec1 tea tons
council of the Vtllage of drammg and pavmg Wlfh
are on f1le m the Depart
Judgment $589 90 plus
Middlep ort , OhiO as asphalt concrete on a
mentofTransportattonand
accrued taxes, assess
follows
b1tumtnous
aggregate
the off1ce of the D1stnct
ments, penalttes and costs
of actton
base
Deputy D1rector
1
Sec I That Section 53 02
Pavement W1dth 20
The D1rector reserves
CASE NO. &amp;O~ DLT-27,
of th e Ord1nance of th1s 1
p
1
T
11 d
Village be and It IS hereby
eel
the nghl to re1ect any and
arce No RU 10, tl e
repealed
Pro1ect
Length
al l b1ds
tn the name of Allen E
SectiOn II BE IT FUR
2,49649feetor0472mlle
OAVIOL WEIR
Braley,dec
THER ORDAINED lhatan fee\)'~~\ ~m:me- 2.609 49
Rev 8 17 73
DIRECTOR
T~~~~:g~ M~~gs Rc"d~~ry~
emerl,1ency extsts and thiS
The OhiO Department of ,___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,OhiO Bemg 9 9"4 acres In
TransportatiOn
hereby r
Fract 1on 31, Townsh 1p 6,
Ord1nance shall become ef
fect1ve at the earliest date notifieS all bidders that 1t
NOTICE TO
Range 14
prOVIded
byThiS
law Ordinance W I II aIf 1rma t 1ve I y msure
CONTRACTORS
Deeel R ef erence
V o1
'
Se ' 111
thal 1n any contract en
STATE OF OHIO
118, page 1691 Me1gs county
shall take effect and be'" tered 1nto pursuant to thiS
DEPARTMENT OF
Deed Recoros
TRANSPORTAtiON
Judgment $59 03 plus ac
force from and after Apnl advertiSement, mmonty
14 • 1980
bus1ness enterprtses Will be
ColtJmbus, Oh10
crued taxes, assessments,
Passed th e 141 h day 01 afforded full opportun1ty to
Apr~ 1St1, 1980
pena l ties and costs of ac
subm1t btds m response to
Contrac 1 a 1 es Legal
tion
A~n l 1980
thiS lnV1lat10n and will not
C'rny No 80· 160
CASE NO • . 80-DLT 28,
~o~e~~ck
be d1S&lt;r~m1nated agamsl
NIT PRICE
Parcel No 01 011 017, tilled
4
0
on the grounds of race,
C NTR 1"' T
1n the name of Hazel M
color , or national ongm In
FRI -OOOR(L61
Dunlavy
Clerk-Treasurer
1
for
an
FR ·O!&gt;ORI17.,
Si tuated 1n Bedford
PMre' sL1d·eKn•.'' 0Y
1 consideration
award
SR~OORCtl l
Townsh1p, Me1gs County,
'' Minlmumhlghratesfor
Seated proposals Will be OhiO Containing 10 acres
Covnctl
141 21. 28. 2tc
th1s protect have been
recetved at the office of the
more or less in Sect Jon 11,
-----------1 predeferm1ned as requ 1red
Town 3, Range 13, o c p
D1rector of the Oh10 Depar
bv taw and are set forth m
tment of Transportation,
Deed Reference
Vol .
the b1d proposal ..
Columbus. Oh10. unt1IIO 00 258, page 171, Me1gs county
' The date set tor com
A M, Oh1o Standard Time, Deed Records
plel1on of th1s work shall be
Tuesday, May 3, 1980, for
Judgement $35 50 plus
set forth m the btddtng
Improvements in
accrued taxes. assesments,
proposal."
Athens, Gallla, Hocktng, penalt1es and costs of ac·
Each bidder shall be
MeiQS, Monroe, Morgan, tion
requ~redtofllewlthhiSbld
Noble.
Vinton
and
CASE NO. 80·DLT·29,
a certified check or
W-3Shlngton Counties, Ohio,
Parcel Nos 05 016 012, 05·
ORDINANCE
cash 1er's check. for an
by applv1ng pa1nt to lane 016 013, t1tled m the name
NO. 1093·80
amount equal to five per
lmes, center lmes and edge of Ernest Adams, aka
An Ordmance to AP
1mes
cent of h1s btd, but m no
Joseph E Adams
PROVE_. ADOPT AND
event more than fiftY
The Oh10 Department of
Slluated in V1ilage of An·
ENAC 1
THE
1980
thousand dollars, or a bond
Transportation
hereby tlqu lty, Letart Township,
REPLACEMENT PAGES
for ten per cent of his bod,
notifieS all btdders that It Metgs County, Oh iO Being
TO THE CODIFIED OR ·
wilt affirmatively insure that part of Lot No lf.
OINANCES TO REPEAL
pa~rd~;;~ t~~~ir;~~~;, on
that m any contract en
Town of Anttqu•tv East Of
ORDINANCES IN CON
the proper forms, for
tered • ~rsuant to thiS public road Also be1no that
FLICT THEREWITH. TO
qualification at least ten
adviliC:f't, m1nonty part 75 fet of South part of
PUBLISH THE ENACT
d
th
bus' §s terpnses will be
Lot No 11
MENTOF NEW MATTER
ays pnor 1o e date set
affo
:ull opportunity to
Deed Reference
Vol
for opentn~ b1ds m ac
b 11 1d 1
t
WHEREAS,
certa1n
w1th
Chapter
5525
su
m
s
response
o
124,
page
224,
Me1gs
County
cordance
n
~rovlstons
wlthtn the
OhiO Revised Code
th1s .nv1tat1on and will not
Deed Records
Codified Ordinances should
be dlscnmmaged agamst
Judgment $154 38 plus
be amended to conform
on the grounds Of race, accrued taxes, assessf
Plans and speclf1cat10ns
w1th current State laws as
are on ft le tn the Depart
color 1 or nat1onal or.gtn 1M
ments, penalt1es and costs
required by the Ohio Con
ment ot Transportation and
constderat1on
for
an
of action
stifutlons and
the Off1ce of the DIStrict
award
CASE NO. 80·DL T 30,
WHEREAS, var.ous or
Deputy Dtrector
"Minimum wage rates
Parcel No POMV 06, t1tled
dmances of a general and
The D~rec tor reserves
for this pro,ect have been
In the name of Edward
permanent nature have
the
nght
to
retect
any
and
predetermmed
as
requ1red
Bowen, et al
been passed by Council
all btds
by law and are set forth '"
Sttuated 1n the C1tv of
which should be mcludedln
DAVIDL WEIR
the bid proposal"
Pomeroy, county of Me 1gs
the Codified Ordmances,
Dl RECTOR
"The date set for com·
and State of Oh10 Con·
and
talnmg 3 acres Being Lot
plet1on of thiS work shall be
Rev 8 17 73
WHEREAS, CounCil has
set lorth 1n the b1ddlng
No 307 and 308. C1fy of
heretofore entered Into a
c4l 21 28 10
Pomeroy
proposal '
contract w1th the Walter H t - - - · -·_2_
_ _ _ _ _--l
Each bidder shall be
Deed Reference
Vol
Drane Co to prepare and
requ~red to file w1th his b1d
228, page96~ Me1gs County
publish such rev/s1on: and
Deed Recoras
a cert1f1ed check or
WHEREAS,
the
NOTICE TO
cash1er's check for an
Judgment $108 53 plus
CONTRACTORS
cotlclatlon of such or·
amount eqtJal to hve per
accrued ta'xes. assess
STATE
OF
OHIO
dlnances, together with the
cent of hiS bid, but 1n no
ments, penalt1es and costs
DEPARTMENT OF
new matter to be adopted,
event more than fifty
of action
TRANSPORTATION
the m•tters to be amended
thousand dollars, or a bond
CASE NO. 80· DLT·31,
Columbus. Ohio
and those to be repealed
for ten percent of his bid,
Parcel No POMV ·07, t1tled
Aprll11
1990
are belqre the Council.
payable to the Director
1n the name of Henry
Contract Sales Legal
now, therefore
Btdders must apply, on
Krautter, deceased
Copy No. 80 114B
Be II orda .ned by the
the proper; forms , for
S1tuated in the Village of
UNIT PRICE
Counc/ 1 of the V 111age of
QUalifiCation at least ten
Pomero'( , County of Me1gs,
CONTRACT
Middleport as Follows:
days prior to the date set
State o Ohto Being on
PMS·OOOSI173l
SECTION I
The or·
for opening bids in acwest side Of Nye Street
Sealed proposals Will be
dl~ances of the Village of
cordance wfth Chapter 5525
Deef Reference Vol 116,
received at the off/'ce of the
Middleport, Ohio, of a
Oh 10 ReviSed Code
gage 503, Meigs County
Director Qf the Oh o Oepar·
genera l and permanent
Plans and speclflcaiiOns
Deed Re~ords
tment of Transportation
nature,
as
revised,
are on file 1n the Depart
Judgmenl $314 30 plus
ment Of Transportation and
accrued taxes, assess
recodlfiedl rearranged •nd Columbus, Oh1o, untll10.00
the office of the Distnct
ments, pena1t1es and costs
consollda ed into &lt;om · A.M , Ohio Standard Time,
Tuesday, May 13, 1980, for, Deputy Director.
of actton.
ponent codes, titles, chap·
improvements
The
Director
reserves
CASE NO 80 DL T· 32, Par·
ters and sections within the
Athens, Gallla, Hocking,
the right to refect any and
eel Nos SYRV 01. SYRV ·
1990 Replacement Plages
O:.t . fttled m the name of
all bids
to the COdified Ordinances Me1~s and Washington

t-----7------1

-----------l

Shop Sentinel
Classifieds

3

Public Not1ce

By Sealed Bids on~ to be

GOLD,
SILVER
OR
James A Rast
FOREIGN COINS, OR
S1tuated in the V1ilage of
Syracuse, County of Metgs,
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
State of Oh10 Be1ng Lot 36,
SI LVER ITEMS ALSO,
25 x so feet s end Also ANTIQUE FURNITURE
bemg Lot 37, W side Apple
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
Street 50 x 50 feet
ITEMS WILL PAY TOP
Deed Reference
Vol
DOLLAR CHECK WITH
160, page 640, Me1gs County
OSBY IOSSIEI MARTIN
Deed Records
Judgment $128 45 plus
BEFORE
SELLING
accrued taxes, assess
PHONE 992.. 6370 ALSO
ments, penalt1es and costs
DO APPRAISING
Of act1on
Whereas, such 1udgmen
ts order sa1s real property
P1cklng up an Easy play
to be sold by the un
organ In your area
ders1gned to sat1sfy the
Looking for a responsible
total amount of such
party to take over pay men •
iUdgment
ts Call credit manager
Now, therefore, public
collect . 614· 592 5122
nohce Is hereby gtven that
1, James J Proff/tthShenfl
of Meigs County, o 10, will
sel l such real property at
public auction, for cash to
the highest bidder of an
amount sufflc1ent to sattsfy
the iUdgment agamst each '
parcel begmning at 10 00
by
Randy
car·
a m at the front door of the
penter,
factory
Me1gs County Court House,
1n Pomeroy, Ohto on the
trained
frontend
31st day of May, 1980, and
alignment
spe·
contmu.ng thereafter from
day to day, 1f any parcel
cia It st.
.does not recetve a suf·
f1C1ent b1d, '' shall be of
fered for sale, under the
same terms and condtttons
of the 11rst sale and at the
same t1me of day at the
Call (6141992-9932
same p lace on the 14th day
Pomeroy, 0 .
of June, 1980, for an
amount suff1c1ent to satisfy
the 1udgment aga1nst the
7
Yard Sale
parcel
Yard Sale Large select1on
James J Proff1tt
children 's, men's clothing
Sheriff
of
Me1gs
Thurs L Fr1 2. Sat 3 Ted
County, Oh10
Russell res1dence, Rt 124
M1nersv11 1e.
(4)28, 151 5, 12, 3tc

FRONT END
AUGNMEHTS

lANDMARK

SERVICE STATION

.. ........ .....

.. ...

~.

~ ····· · · · ·· ·-- -- ·· ·--··--

Card of Thanks
The fam11y of Catherine
French wishes to extend
the1r s.ncere apprec1at ton
to all the neighbors,
relatives and friends for
the• r kmdness extended
during her recent tllness
and death
l

Announcements

GUN
SHQOT
Ractne
Vo lunteer Fire
Dept
Every Saturday 6:30 p m
At their bulid1ngin Bashan
Factory choke guns only .
1 PAY highest prices
poss1ble lor gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport
ATTENTION· Baseball,
businesses, organizations,
politicians, Custom Print
T shirts 6 to an order
Even'"gs or weekends 949
2358

Mov1ng Sell1ng a 1971 car,
chest
freezer ,
16mm
pro1ector, a coal or wood
burning King stove, house
plants, bookcases, dresser
Wtth mtrror, nite stand,
desk, telephone stand, goat
stand. Call247·2624
8

Bea Wood 35707 Loop Rd ,
Rutland, OH. 742·2790. New
Shaklee Distributor In the
Rend area , All natural
vitamins All natural per
sonal pr oducts and organic
cleaners

GET VALUABLE traln.ng
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
tenel route earner Phone
us right away and get on
the e11g1blllty hst at 992·
2156or992 2157
Full time and part t1me RN
or LPN 11 7 Contact Mr.
Z1d1an at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Fr~day 9 5
Mature Babysitter needed
5 days a week 1n my home
References required . Send
toM . St Clair, 22 Railroad
St., Middleport, OH 45760.
Someone needed to mow
grass In me Mulberry
Avenue area, 992·3367
Gr~ll cook w•nted Apply In
person
Craw' s
Steak
House

12

S1tuatlons Wanted

Will clean house Call 667·
3423 or 667·6373.
Will care for elderly person
in my private home Call
992 6022.
Wdl do paintmg, roof work,
repaer
work
houses
Noth1ng too big 992 3941 or
992 7008.
Roof Painting and tr~m
work Free estimates 992
3627

To G1ve Away, 7 week old
k1tten Call n3·5356

Iron and brass beds, old
furntture, desks, gold
rings, 1ewe1ry, silver
dollars, sterlmg, etc , wood
Ice boxes, ant1ques, etc
Complete
households
Write M . D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, 0 HI or ca II 992·
7760
13

Insurance

Carpenter work
Floors,
doors. ce111ngs, paneling
992 2759
13

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN
,SU RANCE
been
can·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992 2143.

DOWNING-atiLDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
SERVING SOUntEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868'
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR All YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

992-?342

'

DCMNING-atiLDS AGENCY, INC.
MIDDI.£PORT, OHIO
9

Wonted lo Buy

10 kerat, 14 karat, 19 karat,
gold Dental gold and gold
ear pins 675·3010.
Gold, silver or foreign
co1ns or any gold or silver
items Antique furniture,
glass or china, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No item too large or too
sm•ll Check prices before
selling Also do appraising.
Osby IOsslel Martin 992
6370

Large attracttve home on
exceptionally nice acre lot
Syracuse. Modern kitchen,
2 baths, basement, garage.
Many extras 992 7727.

Room House, corner

22

Money lo Lo•n

Mortgage
Money
Available. New homes, old
homes, and refinancing.
your present home. CON
VENTIONAL 5 Pet. down,
SECOND MORTGAGES
VA· IIto down payment,
FHA·Low down payment,
FHA 245·Graduated pavm·
ent program, FHA·265·
Subsidy progr•m. Call S92·
3051. Ireland Mortgage Co,
77 E State St., Athens, OH

of

Carroll
and 3rd St ,
Syracuse, OH Ut1hty room
and garage 992 5205
House, 2 bedroom, lull
basement 30x40 Forced air
furnace, garage 2 acres.
$26,000 Near Reedsville,
Oh 378·6276
Mobile Homes
for Sale
14x65

2

bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3
bdr. bath 112
1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT PLEASANT,
wv. 304·675 «24

Wdl do odds and ends panel .ng, floor tile, ceiling
tile 992 6338

9

Wantecllo Buy

.._

Fairpoint,

COUNTRY HOME With
stocked pond for swimming
or fiShtng, 9 rooms, bath ,
carpeted 3 to 17 acres
ava1lable Located approx
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt 7 or 33 446 2359 after 6.

Lots &amp; Acreage

Land lor Sale St Rt 7 and
Bradbury Rd I acre lot,
sewer and water and gas
992 6069

41
Real Estate

General

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr
Broker 992 5739

BriCk,
ranch style, • 3
bedroom ,
21/~
bath ,
fireplace, full basement w
family room, a c, 2 car
garage,
Baum Addn ,
Meigs Co Call after 6 p .m
985 4169

1973

Farms lor Sale

PHONE 742-2003

Homes for Sale

32

POMEROY, OHIO 45769
33

INVESTMENT PRO
PERTY 2 lovely ,
modern homes S1tuated
on 10 acres L1ve m one
and rent the other ON
L Y $87 ,500 00 for both ' '
BEAUTIFUL - Bnck
b1 level Famll \' room
w 1th f.replace All wood
hand statned Qual1ty
throughou t
Amen1t1es
too numerous to men
t1on Call tOday Sells tor
S69 ,000 00 S1tuated on 4
acres
RANCH STYLE home
w 1th 3 bedrooms , 2
ba ths, family room w1th
f 1rep1ace K 1tchen 1S ex
tra modern, 1nctudes
m1 cro wave Sttuated tn
Chester Selling pr 1ce
$58,000 00
START OUT m thiS 2
bedroom home N tce lot
W1lh garden space Only
$23,000 00
TOTAL ELECTRIC - 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, k 1t
chen and d1n1ng area 1h
basement w1 th wood
burner and workshop
Close to Me1gs H1gh On
IY $39,900 00
2 ACRES - W1th lovely
3 bedroom home Has
e)(tra water tap Sells
lor $39,900 00
PRICE REDUCED - 3
bedroom home WIth
d1shwasher and gar
bage disposal S1luated
on a l1ttle over an acre
Pr1ce
reduced
to
$43 ,000 00
30 ACRES - Pnced to
sell Only $15,000 00
MODERN
HOME
s1tuated on ntce stze lot
1n
Hutchtson
Sub
d 1V1Son
See to ap
prec 1ate
A full t•me Real Estate
Agency Call day or
even.ng.
•
Velma Ntc1nsky, Assoc
Phone 742 3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742 2003

LIMESTONE ,

gravel,

calcium

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu Bestfor
apple butter Call 669 3785,
F1tzpatnck Orchard, SR
689

RALPH GRAVES
8 LINCOLN TERRACE

35

Misc. Merchanlse

sand,

Submit bids to:

..... . ...·---.............

31

ATTENTION
(IM
PORTANT TO YOU ) W1ll
p~y cash or cert•f•ed check
fOr ant1ques and collec
t•bles or entire estates
Nothing too large Also,
guns, POCket watches and
com collect•ons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

chlonde, fertilizer, dog
food, and all types of salt
Excelsior Salt Works, 1nc ,
E Main St , Pomeroy, 992
3891

any or all bids.

Wanted lo Do

.,

Antiques

----'-===-- -

COAL ,

We reserve the right to refuse

Give p1ano lessons to begin
ners and advanced student
In my home Also teach
chord1ng and transposing If
Interested call992 5403

6

Someone to stay with
elderly lady Call after 5
p.m . 992 3498

GUN SHOOT EVERY
FRIDAY NIGHT 7·30 P.M.
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY
RACINE GUN CLUB

Plano Tun1ng
Lane
Daniels 742 2951 Tuning
and Repair Serv1ce s1nce
1965 If no answer phone
992·2082

Help Wanted

BRADFORD, Auct1oneer.
Complete Service Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000 racine,
Oh1o, Critt Bradford

Letart Falls Cemetery fees
are p•yable now $10 per lot
of four graves, $5 for half
lot or two graves Money to
be sent to the sexton,
Clarence I Norris, 23262
Rd .. Racine 45771

SELL YOUR SILVER
COINS ,
STERLING
SILVER , GOLD. ETC , TO
BROWN'S
IN
Ml 0 ·
DLEPORT FOR
TOP
DOLLAR PHONE 6U 992·
5113

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

11

Sl

54

received by May 151 1980.

Complaining about federal Inthey want to
kill the measure which would grant
clear federal authority to file suits
against alleged abuse in state Institutions Legislation on inmate
rights has been passed by both the
House and Senate in slightly dif·
ferent fonn but now Is 'being recon·
sldered by the Senate and will be
looked at again by the House.
Voting to cut off the filibuster IS
scheduled for Monday and, If
necessary, Tuesday, with 60 votes
necessary to end debate m the I~
member Senate.
Meanwhile, the failed rescue at·
tempt - which cost eight lives will stiil dommate Capitol conversations this week

Announcements

56

Sugar Run School Building.

Some Senate leaders are about
ready for formal budget debate on
the1r side, too. But conservatives Including Sen. Strom Thunnond, RS. C., an old band at trying to delay
bills to death, have vowed to tie up
the Sena~ with marathon "debate"
on an irunate-rights bill.

18

12x60 2 bedroom mobile
home GOOd cond., mostly
furnished. SS,OOO or best of
fer 742 2898

Busmess Buildings

trusiOn in state affairs,

for clothing, $125 for medical care,
$75 for entertauunent and $150 for all
other goods and services.
Your percentages or personal
we1ghts are: Food, 20 percent;
housing, 48 percent; transportation,
13 percent; clothing, 7 percent;
medical care, 4 percent; en·
tertainment, 3 percent; and other, 5
percent.
(The approximate nat10nal
averages for urban consumers, according to the Labor Department,
are: Food, 18 percent; housing, 44
percent; transportation, 18 percent;
clothing, 6 percent; medical costs, 5
percent; entertainment, 4 percent;
and other, 5 percent.)

;';;:;;;;;.:;-__::
3ji2----,M..-;;;b;;;1,;
o 1• Homes

for S•le

1911 Zimmer trailer 12X60
1972 Buddy Trailer 12x60
992 5304

It Pays To Advertise. • .Advertise Where It Pays. • •
Pubhc NoiiCe

tor Sale

•

Inflation war--a winner or loser
By Associated Press
Are you winning or losmg the war
agamst inflatiOn?
One way to figure out where you
stand IS to calculate your own lllflation rate and compare 1t to the
government's Consumer Pr1ce Index. You 'U be able to tell at a, glance
which areas of your budget are
rising faster than average and
where you need to cut spending.
Econonusts at Citibank developed
a step-by-step method conswners
can use to detenrune their "Per·
sonal Price Index." Here's how it
works
Start by detennirung your spen·
ding patterns. Collect receipts for

Mobile Homes

Houses for Rent

Needed Room Mate to
share expenses Children
accepted 367 0410
For Rent Three rooms and
bath, furniShed, UtilitieS
pa1d, no pets 2 sleeping
rooms for rent See John
Sheets, l lf2 miles south of
M1ddleport on Rt 7

IN STOCK for immediate
deltvery . various sizes of
pool kits Do •t· yourself or
let us 1nsta11 for you. 0
Bumgl!lrdner Sates, Inc
992 5724
Harley-Davidson Yamaha
Super Deals Super Service
G1ant Accessory Selectton,
$250,000 Inventory Athens
Sport Cycles, 20 W St1mson
Ave., Athens, OH . 592 1692

Apartment
for Rent

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap
ts Phone 992 5434.
RENTER'S assistance tor
Sen1or Citizens In Village
Manor apts Call992·7787 .
45

Furnished Rooms

Board, room, laundry
Retired person. $150 mo
9926022
46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route JJ, North ot
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992-7479
47

wanted to Rent

Furnished apt., house or
trailer. Needed by first of
May for two workIng g~rls
In
Middleport.
Have
references 7-42·2790

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

Drive for show, putt for
dough Improve your short
game with a new putter
John Teaford 614·985 3961
Lad1es all leather western
boots Va lues to $79 95 Our
pnce $40 95
Bailey's
Shoes, Middleport. OH
Lad1es sandals,
F~rst
Ed tt tons, values to $22 Our
pnce $3 88 pr Bai ley's
Shoes, Middleport, OH
Beautiful select,on of
flowers for Memorial Day
Faye's Gilt Shop, Powell
St, Middleport, OH
Reduce safe and fast with
GoBese Tablets and E Vap
"water pi ll s" Nelson Drug
Vegetable pl. ants. cab
bage, broccoli, cauliflower,
lettuce, ce lery, beets,
green peppers. chill pep
pers, p1m1entos, Hungarian
wax, sweet banana, egg
plant, large selectiOn bed
d ing an nua ls, hanging
baskets, pots at flowers and
vtnes Clel and Greenhouse,
Geraldtne
Cleland,
Rac1ne, OH
Gilbert electr.c train. tran
sformer and allthe ac
cessorles Women's golf
bag 992 2961

,

Antiques

ATTENTION
(IM
PORTANT TO YOUI Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec
t1bles or entire estates
Nothing too large Also,
guns, pocket watcbes and
co 1n collections Cal l 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding, all breeds Clean
Indoor outdoor facllit 1es
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans 614 446 7795
HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a homeless pet
Healthy , shots, wormed.
DonatiOns required 992
6260, noon 7 p m
HOOF HOLLOW Horses
and pon1es and riding
lessons
Everything
imagmable in horse eqUIP
ment
Blankets , belts,
boots, etc English and
Western
Ruth Reeves
1614) 698 3290
Humane Soct~tv ' s Pet
Adoption Servi ce Healthy,
shots, wormed 992 6260. 1
coon hound, Chesapeake
Bay Retriever, German
Shepherd, Beagle. Fox
Hound, Weimaraner type,
small Lab, 2 Beagle Collie
types, Shepherd border
Collie type w1th puppy
Several cats and k1ttens

Shaklee Organ1c products
White vanilla medicated
vapour
spray,
black
diamond
l1n1ment
Rawleigh products Joyce
Sautes 992 7825

P1Ck1ng up a ptano 10 your
area Looking for a respon
s1ble party to take over
payments. Call cred1t
manager collect 614 592
5122

Business Services

Goats 2 yr oLd ma le $25. 2
m•lk•ng goats and 1 bred
female $6Q ea 8 mo old
female $45 , 6 k1ds males
20
30
$
females
$ · Shade, ,~~.:MXIICH:IOOCH:MXIICIICH:IOO-.IIMXIICN::ICIOOCH:MXXN::.-ICIC
OH• (614)
696 1234

11

62

1977 Prem•er Vol are 4 door,
a~r,

am fm Tape, speed con

CHIP WOOD Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton Bundled
slab $10 per ton Oehvered
to Ohio Pallet co, Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 2699
ANTIQUES,
FUR
NITURE, glass, china,
anything See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N
2nd, Mldc(leport, OH 992
3161
OLD COl NS, pocket wat
ches, class rings, wedding
bands. d1amonds Gold or
s1lver Call J A Wamsley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH 592·
6462
GOLD
AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS,
JEWELRY,
STERL ING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP·TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OH 10. OR CALL 992 3476

and Corporattons
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

1977

Chevrolet

Capnce

Class•c, 3 seater, st wgn,
p s, p b, a1r, ltlw mileage

Curves Ahead!
4888

Quality constructton at
reasonable rates

Trucks lor Sate

1979 Jeep Wagoneer. 4 dr ,
fully equipped, exc cond
$7 ,500 742 3117 alter 5 p m

1978 Ford Bronco, P s ,
P B , A C , AM FM stereo
992 6130 after 5 p m
Van Conversion by Jayco
1978 2979 See them at Cod
ners Campers 614·843 3011

Free Est1mates
Reasonable Pnces
c.,.JJ Howard
'19 2862
949·2160

Guaranteed Work
Free Esttmates
After 5 P M 992 5547
3·261mo

Harley oav1dson Yamaha
Super Deals Super Serv ice
Giant Accessory Select1on,
$250,000 Inventory Athens
Sport Cycles, 20 W Stl mson
Ave , Athens, OH 592 1692
75

Boatsand
Motors for Sale

Must Sell! 77 Starcraft 16'
open bow, 85 h p. Mere S
S
prop
canvas top
Sterhng tra 1ler
$2,800
Phone alter 5 p m 992 2791
like sears
new, ftberglass
$230 l~rm canoe
Pad
17'
dies and earner extra . 773
5008

Free Estimates
Ph . : (304) 773·5131
or&lt; 304) 882-2276

Holley Dommator Intake
Manifold and 600 CFM
Holley Carburetor Com
puter designed for per
formance and economv
Fits 351 Cub1c Inch Ford
W1ndsor eng1ne
Never
used. 2 new 4.35X18 and 1·
3.000x21 CarliSle Knobby
motorcycle ttres. Battery
operated fence charger
Cal l alter 4 30. 992· 7291

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
eV -CHISEL
PLOW

SEWING ClASSES
Starting Soon
Call for Registra·
tion

l£0

992-5320

For all
needs

your

sewing

MORRIS

THE

Rutland, 0 .
Ph . 742·2455

SEWING CENTER

M•ddleport, 0
4 18 1 mo

4 14 1 mo

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

GOLF
LESSONS

Ohio Valley Roofing
All types of roofmg, new
and repa1r, gutters,
downspouts, commer·
eta I &amp; restdentlal
949·2160 Pomeroy
797 2432 Alhens
Tom Hosk1ns or
Gerald Clark
21 vears expenence. All
work guaranteed
Free Est1mate
4 24 1 mo

Family Plan
Available

V. C. YOUNG Ill

John Teaford
Phone :
( 614) 985· 3961

POMEROY, 0.
99262150
992-7314 r

CONSTRUCTION

Farm Buildings

"Fros~z:~xJO"

ROOfiNG

Utility Buildings
S1tes From 4d to 12ll:40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Free Estimates
388·9759

Rt 1, BoxS4
Rac1ne, Oh.
Ph 614-843·2591
3 30 1 mo

2 14 tfc

I

:1_16

E ~d StrMt Phone

1-(614)·992-332~

COAL MINERS DE ·
LIGHT Attract1ve
home high on a h1ll with
5 2 acres
Has 3
bedrooms and 2 baths
Total electric on Ohio
Power Lead1ng Creek
water and landscaPed
yard Unusual !tyle for
the unusal man for 1ust
$47,500.
BUILOING LOT$ - 2
ntce partla I cleared,
restr1cted bu1ld1ng lots
near Route 33 with
water
and electric
available.
NEW LISTING 17
acres In Pomeroy Has
city water and electr.c
available. Sewer IS close
by
NEW LISTING - A fix
11 with 3 lots 6 rooms, Cl
ty water, natural gas,
e1ectr1c, and 2 porches
Only S5,500
MODERN- Nice home
with tall trees and
bramblmg brook Has 3
bedrooms, 1'12 baths
central heattng, and
rural water Going for
$29,500
IF YOU LIVED HERE
- You could enjoy all
the room of a large
home Has large garden
space and nice back
patio. Also has a garage
apartment and business
building. All this tor
$25,000.
INCOME
Large
return from this that
c•n pay off In lust a few
years $6,600 • veer In·
come I nvestlgete this
now.

Housmg
Headquarters

608 E

'4C.IH

PONIIER01','0
992-2259

1

BOB'S

NEW LISTING - Close
tn, J bedrooms w11h full
basement, garage on
60x250 lot $28,500 .00
NEW LISTING
TIRED OF WORKING
FOR OTHERS? Own
your own bus.ness mak
lng truss ~alters Ap
orox 1 acre. building,
enough tools &amp; a truck to
run the busmess Owner
w1ll assist tn learn tnQ of
QUSiness $28,000 00
NEW LISTING - LIKE
TO CAMP? 2 room cot
tage on Shade R1ver
wtth approx 5 acres of
land $8,800.00
NEW LISTING 12
acres with mob1lehome,
2 4 bedrooms, 1'12 baths
$72,300 00
NEW LISTING
BUILDING SITES Approx
10
acres
cleared &amp; level land.
w111
subd l v1de
$11,500 00
FIVE POINTS 3
bedroom
ranch on
200x100 lot $30.500 00
FARM - 4-4 acres w1th 4
bedroom modular, other
buildings, extra tra1ler
hook·up $42,000 00.
REDUCED
3
bedroom. 1'/2 balhs In
town on a sox80 lot .
$38,000 00
BRINGING BUYER TO
SELLER THAT'S
OUR BUS I NESSI! I
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland Jr1
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean nussei1949·2660
Dottle &amp; Roger Turner
742-2474
Office Phone 992-2259

9-WantedtoBuy .

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessor. es
Slldtng back gl as s for
truck 18 months old Exc
cond After 5 p m 992 2679

11_titlp wanted
12-Situalecl Wtnttcl
1] - I nsuranet
14- Butlnetl Training
1!-Schoolsln&amp;trucllon
16Recllo, TV
I Cl RtPIIr
1.-w.niH To Oo

a81

eFARM SU PPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
61-Farm EC!\IIpmtnl
n-want.ct to lu~
12-Trucks for S.lt
U - LIIItstock
"'-Hty&amp;Oraln
u- Sttd &amp; FertiiiJtr

eFINANCIAL
21-

Phone __________________

s1-Hov•tttotcl Goocls
S2-CI, TV, R.dto E11111pmen1
n-Anttq\ltl
M-Misc Mtrchancllu
n-lulldlnt Supplies
S6-Pet1 for Salt

IUIIfttU

Opportunity

22- Monty to loan
U- Proftulonal
Strvlctl

)
l
)
l

eTRANSPORTATION
7!-AUtot fOr Slit
13-VInl &amp; f W D

e REAL ESTATE
11-Hamtl for Slit
32- Mobile+tom••
tar Sillt
n - Farmt tor Slit
M-lutlntu luildlngs
U - lolt I Acr111t
»-Rtll Etlttt Wtnttcl

cu .. es ahead - long , lean
strearnhned curves that stream
lme yout w"st and h1ps ThiS
Slmpl..seammg sundress has a

74-Motoreyclts
1sAuto Plrts
&amp;Aectuorltl
17-Auto RtPt~lr

squate necklme back and fron t

]7-ftetlton

Pnnted Pattern 4888 MISses
S11es 8, 10, 12 14 16, 18 S1ze
12 (bust 34) lakes 211 )atds
45 lOCh fabriC
Sl.75 fat utb palltm Add 504
fat each patleln fat fi11t class

eSERVICES

Wont· Ad Advertising
Deadlines

11-Homtlmprovtmtnll
11- Phtmblrq &amp; E11uvat1n1
IJ-EiiLUYiflng
M-I!IKtrlc:.l
I Refrlttratton

n-o.,..,.., Hnllnt

4 P M Dlllly

12 Noon 51turdiY
tor Mondty

M-M H

oillftlil and bandlona. Send

Atp.~lr

11- Upttolstery

to

Anne Adllll$
PoHero Dtpl

'fUtes and Other Information
15 Words or Undtr

c....

100
,,.

1 day
2 •• .,..
l clays

....,.

"'
"'

The Dally Seotlnel
Chartt

"'
'"
"'
lTl

Each word over the minimum 15 worasls4 ctl'lfl per word per-.s.y
4CU running oRMr than consec:ullvt dtys wilt be ctlartH •t the I day

raft

'

In memory, Caret of Thanll'\ lnd Obltutry 'c:ents per word IJ GO
mlnlmvm C•sh in ecllvenet
MDIIIIt Home Ull•s •nd Yllrd s•ttl ar• •cctptlld only With UIPtWIIPt
ordtr 25 Ctflt c=Nrge for tdt urrylnt loa NumMr II\ Cart of The
Stntlntl

243 W..l 17 Sl, New Tart, NY
10011 Pnnt NAME, AOOI!ESS,
ZIP, SIZE, 1nd STYL£ NUMBER
Busy women the fastest to-sew
fash1ons

are'" our NEW SPRING

SUMMER PATIERN CATALOG'
Dresses. tops, jackets. pants
Plus Sl 75 free patlern coupon
Send $1 lor CalaiiJi

!27·Aif1M 'n' Dollies

$1.50
129.0Uid/Elsy Ttonsfors $1.5Cl
UO.Swoatodlres IS 56 $1.5Cl
m~ill
$1.5Cl

o,;,.,•.

1

2
3
4

5
6

Wanted
For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

Home
Improvements

S &amp; G Carpet Clean.ng
Steam
cl eaned
Free
est1mate
Rea sonable
rates
Scotchguar d 992
6309 or 742 2211
WALL PAPERIN G
pamtmg 742 23 28

These cash rates
1nclude d1scount

17
18
19

20
21
22
23
24
25
26
26

8
9
10

29

11
12
13
14
15
16

32

31

a nd

CARPENTER \YORK
complete remodel 1ng by AI
Tromm, 742 2328 Referen
ces

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

----- )

----- 1

Call After 5 P . M .
992·6323
4 27 pd

Roof1ng, s1dtng, room ad
d1t1ons,alt types of general
repairs , 25 years ex
penence 992 3406
83

84

Electr1cat
&amp; Refngerat1on

SEWING
MACHINE
Repa1rs , serv1ce ,
all
makes
992 2284
The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Authonzed S1nger Sa les
and Serv1ce We sharpen
SCISSOrS
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, 1rons, all small
appliances Lawn mower
Ne xt to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985
3825
M1ller E lectncal Service
Res1dent and Business
Reliable and Expenenced
742 3195
85

General Hauling

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel Also, hme hauling
and spread.ng Leo Morris
Truck1ng Phone 742 2455.
87

Excavatmg

L1mestone for dnveways
Pomeroy Mason area 367
7101

Upholstery

A&amp;H Upholstering, across
from the Texaco Station In
Syracuse Ph 992 3752 or
992 3743

-----:~~====~~~~==~~
_____ I
Rutland Furniture's

- -11
______

27 - - - --

7

- vmvl s1dmg
~GtJtter work
-Soft1t
-Garages
- Carports
- Room aCid1t1ons

James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
J 'io 1 mo

Address. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.._

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

Vinyl &amp;
Alum'"um S1d1ng
nsulatton
• Storm Doors
• Storm Wmdows
• Replacement
Wtndows
Free Estimate

I

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Pnnt one word tn each
space below Each .n
tha t or group of f1gures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number 1f used
You ' ll get better results
1f you descnbe fully,
g1ve pnce The Sent.nel
reserves the nght to
class1fv . ed1t or re1ect
any ad Your ad wtll be
put 1n the proper
claSS1ftcat1on 1f you ' ll
check the proper box
below

0

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Wnte your own ad and order bv mall w1th th1s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

41-HOUitl for Atfll
42- Moblle tiomu
for Rtnl
44-Apartmtnf for R tnt
4!-FRaom•
4t-!ipact tor liltflt
47-Wanttd to A tnt
' 4t--Eqvlprntnllor Atnt

*New homes
extens1ve remodel·
ing
* Electricla work$
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

SMALL

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
built-up
roof
and
home
repair.

76

1- Cud of ThinkS
2- ln Mtmorl•m
l-AnnMinetrnenll
4-0iveewu
!-HIPPY Adl
t-lotUncl Found
J- Yircl Siilt
t-Publle Salt
&amp; A\lctlc.n

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
worlt,
walks
and
dnveways
!FREE ESTIMATES)

~~=:;:;:;::;~;==~~~~~~~·~·~·~l~m=o=~~==~~~~1~28~1~m~o~
GEORGE'S
ALL STEEL
ROUSH

Curb Inflation.
Pay Ca sh for
Classifleds and
Savell I

PHONE 992-2156

eRENTALS

4 9 (pd I

f

2

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Aulo Parts
&amp; Accessories

WANT AD INFORMAnON

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

-CONCRETE

Motorcycles

74

1

Real Estate- General

-ROOFING
-PAINTING
-REMODELING

f~=:;~§[t~~~~=~rr~~~~~::::::'~
~2~t~c~~~~~~~~===~
~-~

Vans &amp; 4 W.D.

I

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

Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore St .

All types of roof work,
new or repa1r 'gutters
and downspouts, gutter
clean1ng and patntmg
All work guaranteed .

Remodeling
Additions
Siding
Bnck Work
Block Work
Concrete F1ntsh1ng

r----------------------,

RISING STAR Kennel
Boardmg Call367 ·02'12

992· 3795
tfc
42

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

N. L CONSTRUCTION

1978 Camero, p s , p b, atr ,
new ttres, S-4,700 cs rad1o
992 2124

L1vestock

Leghorn Hens lor sale at
50c apiece Call W S
M1chael 995 4237 or 985
3956.

Loans, No Down Payment Federal Houseng
Loans 3% down on
S25,ooo , 5% down on
balance FHA 2&amp;5 Subsody Program FHA 245
Gradual Paymenl Mort
OpenM W-F9:00io 1:00
~ther T1mes by

t~========~========~~============~~==~~==~P~o~m§e~r§o~y=,~O~H~==~

Reg retail $3,600 Sale
$2 795 GOOd COnd , lUSt
nght for vacat1on Ingels
Furn1ture, Middleport, OH

loaded with extras 446
1979 Ford Pickup, 6ft bed,
1552 Call afer 5 p.m

,~ mercy, Oh.

618 E. Main

tr~afEstate Loons
14% lnterest-30 Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA AutomatiC

Appo~~~~:~~2 7544

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

Jeeps $59 50, Cars $37,
Trucks $159 Call 615·779
3235 Ext 814

76

Pets for Sale

Business-Farms-PartnershipS

trol New tires Exc cond
Don Foglesong, Mason
773 5274

1979 Ford 150 4X4, auto,
p s • p b , topper PoSitive
tract1on front and rear 985
4339

Wan led 10 Buy

63

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Bookkeeping
Service

Autos for Sale

73

nted Pattern
56

L1vestock

72

MUSICal
lns1ruments

Decorated Cakes, charac
ter cakes or sheet cakes
992-6342 or 992·2583

-" ·

53

63

POODLE GROOMING
J udy Taylor 614 367 7220

57

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44

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1

----- 1
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_ _ _ _ __
I
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33. _ _ _~-34 _ _ _ __

,.,,

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box ,729
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

-· "Drive A Little Save A Lot"

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sq.

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Nice Selection of Remnants
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~

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RUTLAND FURNITURE
Main St.

Z42:22.U

'

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy; 0., Monday, Apri128, 1980

Secretary Vance resigns

+fcc.~ Hd 1•w
B a Nditr'
DONATE BAKE GOODS - The newly formed 4-H
Riding Club, Hoof Hollow Bandits,. Harrisonville,
donated a portion of their baked goods to the Meigs
County Infirmary Saturday following a bake sale. Pi!."
lured front row, 1-r, Rhonda Haddox, Cathy Hobstetter,
Mildred Jacobs, superintendent of the Meigs County

Infirmary who accepted the baked goods, Beth Hobstetter who made the presentation, Charlene Patterson, and Doub Keitez; back, Unda Young, Joni
Reeves, Diane Belcher, Laure Belcher and Cindy
Crabtree.

.
orp.
Dana purchases General Ohio C
Dana Corporation and · General
for the acquisition by Dana of all ihe
Ohio S&amp;L Corp., Findlay, jointly an- · common shares of General Ohio.
nounced an agreement in principle
The Athens County Savings and
Loon Company is a subsidiary of

Area deaths
Russell Woltz
Rev . Russell Woltz, 88, a resident
of Wellstoo, died at 2:05a.m. Monday in Holzer Medical Center.
He was born in Hamden, Ohio in
1892, son of the late Amos and
Ziegler Woltz.
A retired Presbyterian minister,
Rev. Woltz was a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Wellston
and a 00-year member of the
Masonic Lodge in Wilkesville.
He taught school in the Wilkesville
area 19 years.
He is survived by his wife, Ella
Louise Ewing Thompson Woltz. One
step-son and two step-daughters survive, along with nine grand and
eight great-grandchildren. Three
sisters survive.
Funeral services will be held I
p.m. Tuesday at the Jenkins Funeral
Chapel, Wellston, with Rev. Joho
Taylor officiating . Burial will be in
Hamden Cemetery.
Friends may call at the chapel
from 2·9 p.m. Wednesday .

Mr. Rice was a professor at the
Mansfield Campus of Ohio University. He was born May 3, 1931.
Surviving are his mother, Mrs.
Mildred Rice Fisher of Pomeroy;
his father, Gerald J . Rice, Eufaula,
Okla. ; a grandmother, Mrs. Russell
Rice, Racine, and several aunts, un-

cles and cousins.
Memorial services will be held at
the Beech Grove Cemetery in
Pomeroy at a later date with the
Ewing Funeral Home in charge.

Milford Frederick

Milford Frederick, 71, Minersville, died Sunday · morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Frederick was born Nov. 30,
1908, a son of the late George and
Flora Frederick. He was also
preceded in death by a sister and a
brother.
Surviving are his wife, Hilda
Sarah Decker Frederick; a son,
Milford Frederick, Jr., Racine; two
daughters,
Doris Holley, MinerDarrell T alhot
sville, and Betty Moore, Pomeroy; a
Mrs. Zella Taylor, Racine, has daughter -in-law,
Rommine
received word of the death of her , Frederick, Racine ; two sons- in-law,
grandson, Darrell Talbot, 20, who Mitchell · Holley, MinersviUe, and
was serving with the U. S. Navy in Donald Moore, Pomeroy; a brother,
Tehran.
George Frederick, Waterford; two
According to the report young sisters, Lillian Frost, Columbus, and
Talbot was killed during an ex· Edna Damon, Washington, Pa. Also
plosion in Tehran. He is the son of surviving are 15 grandchildren and
Lewis and Sue Talbot, West Frank- 13 great-grand- children.
fort, Ill.
Mr. Frederick was a member of
Mrs. Talbot will fly to Illinois to at- the Hazel Community Church where
tend the funeral services.
he was superintendent and song
leader.
Funeral services will be held at 2
Gerald Bennett Rice
p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Gerald Bennett Rice, 43, ManHome with the Rev. Edsel Hart and
sfield, formerly of Pomeroy, died
the Rev. Don Walker officiating.
Sunday , evening at Veterans
Burial will be in Rock Springs
Memorial Hospital following a
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
lingering illness.
funeral home anytime.

•

Carter visits
wounded soldiers
WASHINGTON (AP) - President primary on Saturday, and word of
Carter broke out of his long, self· the presidential trip was relayed to
imposed isolation in the nation's Bexar County Democratic Chaircapital to make bedside visits today man Joyce Peters before it was conto the five American military men fll'llled at the White House late Suninjured in the ill-fated rescue day night.
mission in Iran.
Carter has said repeatedly he will
The president's trip to Texas was not hit the campaign trail until the 53
the first time since Oct. 29 - 182 American hostages in Tehran are
days ago- that he has ventured far- released.
tner than the presidential retreat at
But instead of marking the end of
near.by Camp David in Maryland's the crisis, today's trip was a journey
Catoctin Mountains.
born in the failure of last week's
Carter took off from Andrews Air dramatic rescue raid to bring the
Force Base late this morning in fog hostages home.
and drizzle. With him were Defense
Eight American military men died
Secretary Harold Brown; House when a helicopter and a transport
Majority Leader Jim Wright, 0- plane collided on the ground in the
Texas; and the president's darkness of the Iranian desert as the
congressional liaison, Frank Moore. rescue squad prepared to retreat af·
A White House spokesman, who ter the rrusston ~as scrubbed
asked not to be identified, said the because of mecharucal malfun!."
Texas trip was strictly a brief tions.
hospital visit to the injured commandos. No public appearances or
DINNER WEDNESDAY
political activities were scheduled There will he a dinner for the past
and Carter was to be accompanied commanders and trustees of Drew
by only a SII18li pool of reporters . Webster Post 39, American Legion,
The president was scheduled to at 7 p. m. Wednesday night at the
leave Washington at mid·J110rning hall.
and return in late afternoon.
But the trip comes at a time when
Carter, described by Senate
Democratic leader ~obert C. Byrd
OFFICER ELECI'ION
as 8 hostage to the Iranian situation • Election of officers will be held
himself Is under growing pressure when the Middleport PTA meets at
to abandon his stay-at-home politics. 7:30p.m. this evening at the elemenTexas holds ita Democratic tary school.

General Ohio S&amp;L Corporation.
General
Ohio
common
stockholders may receive Dana
conunon stock, cash, or a coiJloo
bination for their shares but the total
number of General Ohio Shares exchanged for cash may not exceed 45
percent of the total acquired. The
transaction is intended to be tax fee
to the General Ohio shareholders
receiving Dana stock.
Dana's aggregate cost for the
transaction will be approximately
$23 million. The transaction is subject to the execution of a definitive
merger agreement, regulatory approvals and General Ohio
shareholder approval.
Shareholders receiving cash will
be paid $17.50 for each share of
General Ohio. Shareholders exchanging for Dana shares will
receive between 0.625 and 0.800
Dana shares per share of General
Ohio. The exact number of shares,
subject to these limits, will be determined by dividing $17.50 by the
average closing price of Dana
shares during the 10 day period ending Dec.l2, 1980.
Commenting on the acquisition
Gerry Mitchell, Dana president,
said General Ohio's strong position,
good growth record, and strong
management make them a key addition to Dana's financial companies
group. This is in keeping with our
long,range growth plans in this area.
General Ohio Board Chairman, H.
Laird McGregor stated that the
acquisition will enhance the position
of General Ohio's savings and loan
affiliates in meeting the challenges
facing the industry in the 1980's.
"This affiliation", he added, "will
provide us additonal financial
strength and market exposure and
the ultimate beneficiaries of this will
be our depositors and customers."

Area squad runs
The Middleport Emergency Unit
was called to Hamilton St. at 9:30
a.m. Monday for Mrs. Herman Haddox who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 1:19 p.m.
Sunday the unit went to 344 Pearl St.
for Ahna Newell who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Condor ·St. at 12:33
a.m. Monday for Mrs. Kenneth
Manking who was laken to
O'Bleness Hospital in Athens. At
10:08 p.m. Sunday, the uiUt went to
Uncoin Heights for Freda Laudermilt who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
SQUAD CALLED
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport
Emergency Squad answered a call
to 623"&gt; Russell St., .at 10:22 p.m.
Friday for William Hurston, who ·
was iii. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by private
vehicle.
OAPSE MEETING

OAPSE Chapter 453 of the
Southern Local School District will
meet at the high school in Racine at
8 p.m. Tuesday. Election of officers
will he held.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions-None.
Saturday Discharges--Marge
Hunt, Jamie Schuler, Uoyd Jenkins,
Ronald Dailey, Russell Eshelman,
Nancy Cole, Patricia Johnston,
Richard Winebrenner, Harold Fetty.
Sunday Admissions--Freda
Laudermilt, Pomeroy; Doris Miller,
Racine.
Sunday Discharges-Ruby VanMeter, Hilda Frederick.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Cyrus R.
Vance, a tireless voice for
moderation and conciliation inside
the Carter admini!ltration, is quitting as secretary of state following
his solitary opposition to the ill-fated
attempt to rescue American
hostages in Iran.
Vance's resignation, confirmed
Sunday night by two high administration officials, came as a
shock even though he had planned to
leave at the end of President Carter's current term. It left a vacancy
in the management of U.S. foreign
policy at a time of considerable international turmoil, with the nation
embroiled in disputes involving
Iran, the failed rescue mission and
the Soviet move into Mghanistan.
One U.S. official, who dec tined to
be identified, said Vance was the ·
only member of the National
Security Council who opposed the
rescue operation as too risky. ''They
had a good relationship," the official
said of Vance and Carter, "but both
concluded it was impossible for him
to function as secretary of state."
Earlier, another official, who also
declined to be identified, said that
while Vance was troubled recently ·
with the flu and gout, he intended to
quit as a result qf policy
disagreements. "Anything can happen at the last minute, but that's the
way it looks now," the officlal said.
It was not known who would
replace Vance, but speculation centered on Warren Christopher, the
deputy secretary whose role grew as
Vance's declined.
Over the past 3t years Vance has
seen some of his priority projects,
including arms control and detante
with the Soviet Union, pushed to a
back burner as the administration
hardened its stance toward Moscow.
His principal antagonist in the
struggle for Carter's ear was
Zbigniew Brzezinski, the national
security adviser with pronounced
anti-&amp;viet views.
The disclosure that Vance
disagreed with the military rescue
attempt was, in itself, surprising.
Usually, once a presidential decision
is reached + particularly one that
doesn't work out + the ranks around
him close with no one
acknowledging disapproval.
CharacteriStically, Vance favored
in most overseas ventures a careful
approach based on compromise in
preference to confrontation. His attitude was shaped partly by his Wail
Street lawyer background and also
the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam
war, which Vance as deputy
secretary of defense first supported
and then began to doubt.
He was impassioned about a transition to black rule in Rhodesia, and
saw that fulfilled through with
British diplomatic intervention. But
his support of a new stretegic arms
limitation with the Soviet Union was
subsequently overshadowed by
renewed superpower tensions. The
treaty was signed but never submitted to the Senate for ratification.
Earlier this year, amid considerable political embarrassment,
Vance stepped forward to take
responsibility for a U.S. vote against
Israel in the United Nations. Carter
disavowed the vote, which was attributed to a mixup in com-

munications between Washington
and Ambassador Donald McHenry.
Vance, who put in long hours at his
7th floor desk at the State Department, has curbed his overseas
travels and Washington press conferences in the last several months.
And he was all-but-invisible
following the rescue attempt.
The night the failure became
known, Vance worked quietly in his
office overseeing the dispatch of
cables abroad and briefing key
congressional figuyres by telephone.
But Carter, Defense Secretary
Harold Brown and Br-zezinski were
up !root speaking for the administration on television. Briefings
at the State Department were conducted by others.
Vance's style of quiet diplomacy
appeared to be appreciated in allied
capitals abroad and also in the
Soviet Union, where he was seen as
more understanding than Br·

zezinski. 'lbe Ejuropean allies,
traditionally sensitive to U.S.
pressures, found in Vance one who
irley were confident would not forget
their individual problem.!l.
.
From the start, It was obvioUB
Vance could not approach the
celebrity status of his predecessor,
Henry Kissinger, a renowned intellectual and globs! strategist. But
Vance did not seem to mind and was
noted for his apparent lack of concern for publicity and acclaim.
warren Christopher, the deputy
secretary, has been increasingly
prominent in State Department affairs during recent months. He &amp;!."
companied Brzezinski on a
publicized mission to Pakistan after
the Soviets Intervened In
Mghanistan, and we11t to Europe
seeking allied support for sanctions
against Iran.

By The Auoebltecl Preu
Iran clatmed two carrier-based
U.S. fighter jets "started to shoot"
at an Iranian patrol plane over the
Gulf £!.Oman today In the first U.S.·
Iranl8n military confrontation since
the American hostages were seized
. nearly six months ago. The Pentagon denied there was any

shooting.

In Washington, the Defense
Department said: "Two F-14 aircraft from the aircraft earrler
Nimitz made a routine intercept of
an Iranian C-130 !lin:ra.ft near the
Stnilt of Hormuz. The u.s. atrcraft
. escorted the Iranian plane back to
Iranian air space. It was a routine
Intercept. There was no firing of
weapons."

Washington officials said the
Iranian airp_lane came within ap-

proximately 50 miles of the Nimitz
and the two F-lu were launched to
look it over. The Nimitz is one of
about 30 U.S. warships stationed in
the Indian Ocean following the
takeover of the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran last Nov. 4 by Iranian
mllltanta and the December Soviet
thrust into Mgllanlstan..
The official Iranian news agency
Pars quoted the Iranian army joint
staff as saying the two American
planes started to shoot at the Iranian
plane but four Iranian jets were sent
up and they "warded off the attack."
Pars quoted the army as saying the
U.S. planes "changed thetr direction
as the four Iranian jetflghters escor-

ted the patrol plane" back to Iran.
tempt in Kuwait, Iran's army
Tehran.Radio reported the Irantan
mobilized for a major offensive
army joint staff has warned the aragainst Kurdish rebels in Sanandaj,
med forces to " expect extensive acand a controversial churchman
tion by the U.S. Army" in the wake
arrived in Tehran to take charge of
of last week's abQrtlve attempt to
the bodies of the U.S. commandos
rescue the American hostages in
killed In the abortive U.S. hoetage
Iran.
rescue.
The Gulf of Oman, 350 miles long
Kuwait's news agency said a hail
and :m mil.es wide, lies on the
of bullets fired from at least two cars
southern shore of Iran and separates
hit a motorcade taking Ghotbzadeh
the Arabian Sea from Persian Gulf. to a meeting with Kuwait's ruler at
Iran has two major ports on the Gulf
Assalf Palace, slightly wounding a
of Oman, Jask and Chah Bahar, and Kuwaiti security guard. The palace
must use this body of water in exiB the home of Sheik Jaber AI·
porting its oil.
Ahmad, Kuwait's ruling emir. The
Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Kuwait Interior Ministry said police
Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh. located two cars used in the attack,
escaped unharmed from what ap- but made no mention of arrests.
peared to be an assassination atThe Iranian news agency Pars
said one of the cars was found out-

•

at y

ELBERFELD$ .
IN POMEROY

VOL 31 NO. 11

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO, TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1980

Baud wulst !lure

llarc ICI(,Icun
with uHrudl\'c

c mbruid·- red
rear t.iock· ( In
In HXJ% cutton

denim with San·
forsct® . Won't shrink
out of sl7.c, pm.·kc r o r
w rl n k k . Prcwushcd
tn c \·c.n sizes . \ '-neck
hiJ( top hus roll
sk.c \'C"", shirre d
shoulder Wid swcuh.: r
hotton1. Pol~·..:stcr,
{'olton knit in nun·,

blu&lt;·k, red. S-XL

KEY WEST, Fla. - Gov. Bob Graham declared a state of erpergency in counties struggling to cope with 3,500 Cuban refugees as Coast
Guard officials found dozens of deserted boats and two bodies and
feared more people may have died when a storm hit the "Freedom

Flotilla."
The Immlgratloo and Naturalization Service dispatched 100 more
llor!ler Patrol agents to deal with the sealift and customs agents
seized three s11rtq1p boata Monday, slapping heavy fines on the owners
who brought 507 Jai!gal aliena into the United States.

Great Dane mauls month old child
CHATSWORTH, Calif. -A newborn girl was fatally mauled by her
family's Great Dane after the dog forced open a sliding door, overturned the infant's businet and bit the bBby on the head, pollee said.
Four-week-old Nicole Kllngenbeck died at Nonbrldge Hospital three
houri attet the attack; Devunshlre division pollee rePorted Mooday.
Detective Joe Ritter said a ~ had given the lC..ye&amp;Mlld
dog to the Kllngenbecks a week before the babY was born.
Tbe animal had always been kept Ql!tldde, but managed to open the
door Swlday and enter the Chatsworth house unnoticed.

Jury returns murder indicbnent
OOVINGTON, Ky. -A murder indictment has been returned against Covington Patrolman Thomas O'Donnell, 31, In connection with the
fatal shooting of hia wife, Cynthia O'Donnell, 38.
Mrs. O'Donnell's body was found by the Ohio River floodwall Feb.
21. Pollee said the victim !lad been shot 25 times.
O'Oonnell hall been confined to a private mental hospital in Cincinnati since March 7, according to Don Suring, assistant Commonwealth Attorney.

Teenager's. trial delayed Monday
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The trial of a -teenager accused of shooting a
pollee officer was delayed Monday after his attorneys filed motions for
a hearing oo charges of alleged pollee misconduct and for a change of
ven~.

Tlie Farmers Bank
Growing
with
Pomeroy
and
Meigs County.

Ronald Leaf McClary, 18, Is charged with attempted murder and
carrying a concealed weapon in the December 18 shooting of officer

Thomas Hayes.
Attorney John Wolery said the charges should be dismissed because
of mbconduct by police and the prosecuting attorney's Office.

Ohioan's body pulled from river
CHARLESTON, W.Va.- The body of an Ohio man has been pulled
from the Kanawha River in Charleston, police said.
The victim was identified as Thomas Duffey, 23, of Akron.
Duffey's body, whiCh was pulled from the river Mooday, may have
been in the river for up to 14 days, according to the state medical
examiner's office.
Charleston pollee Sgt. John Cox said Duffey was last seen in the
Mootgomery area two weeks ago.
Authorities say the body
. showed.no signs of foul play.

EPA approves limits request
WASIUNGTON - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has
given tentative approval to a General Motors Corp. request for an increase in the llmlta on sulfur dioxide emissions at Ita Packard Electric
.
plant in Warren, Ohio.
General Moton! asked for the revision July 31, 1978, after It was
deterlllined that actual emissions were 10 percent higher than the
ilDilts already set.
The EPA said Monday It found that the proposed revision would not
jeopardize air quality standatrds in the Warren area.

lJengals select Anthony Munoz

,..

~ ·o IC

The Comn1unit , . Q,"·ncd Bank.....
,;

thwest.

Eight American conunandos were
killed in the failed hostage reseue
mission, and Greek Catholic archbishop Hilarioo Capudjl arrived in
Tehran today and said he would &amp;!."
company the bodies "to another
country and hand them over to ihe
International Red Cross for delivery
to their families."

FIFTEEN CENTS

Research project
undertaken here
Govemor declares emergency exists

Member

government uoops who have
deployed throughout the clty can
baiUe Kurdish rebels and "see to
these sinners once and for all. "
The Kurds have been batUing
Iran's central government for
autonomy off and on for montha, and
over the weekend hundreds of
gnerrillas anti troops were reported
killed in fierce fighting in Sanandaj
and Saqqez, 90 . miles to the nor-

~ --~--~--------------------------~--------~~--~----~~~------------------------~=-~~

From the Auoclatecl~

Farmers
Bank

side the Iraqi Embassy in Kuwait
and claimed " the passengers of the
car left the vehicle and entered the
Iraqi Embassy." Pars also said two
suspecta had been taken into
custody. There was no Kqwalti conrlrll18tion. Iran and Iraq have been
having a dispute along their border
in recent weeks.
Ghotbzadeh arrived in the oil-rich
Persian Gulf emirate Monday on a
tour to try to Improve his regime's
relations with Arab goverrunenta.
The Kuwaiti and other goverrunents
in the region are worried by Iran's
attempts to export its Islamic
revolutioo.
Tehran Radio said residents in
Sanandaj were told by bullhorn to
evacuate their homes today and
head to the army garrison so that

en tine

Embroidered
PocketJeun
anti
Big Top

Pomeroy, Ohio
HAVE SATURDAY GUESTS
Saturday guests of Reino Und
were Paul and Nancy Clift and son,
Joey, Bridgeman, Mich., and Mrs.
Lee Tyo, Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Pentagon denies ~hooting incident

CINciNNATI - The Cincinnati Bengals, picking third in the
National Football League college draft, today U!olr: 285-pound offensive
tackle AnthonY MIIIIOE of Southern California.
Mlllllli mt•....t almost all of the 19'19 seaaoo after undergoing his
third knee operation. Resaid be is tired oftalldnl! about his operation,
althougb he acknowledged he thought It might hurt his chances in the
~.
Cincinnati entered the draft in an effort to find help for Its offensive
Une and defensive backfield.

'Weather
forecast
imd
or

Varilable cloudiness
cool with a chance of light rain shtiwers
tonight and W~y. Lows tonight In the lower 4GB. Highs Wednesday frool the upper 50s to the low 60s. The chance of preclpltatioo Is
40 percent tonight and 30 percent Wednesday.

EllENDI!lD FORECAST

'11-ntlaJ tllnaP Satartlay: Falr'l'llanday aDd Friday. Acltaaee
allbelren 8a. . .y. HJalla tbnqla tile period Ill tile mid te upper ....
Lowl te the mid ... .

CHECK RECEIVED - A check for $200 was presented to the Meigs
County American Legion Baseball team Monday afternoon. Presenting
the check was Abe Grueser, of Aerie 2171, Fraternal Order of Eagles to
Jim Soulsby, business agent for the team. The American Legion Baseball
team iB co-sponsored by Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, and
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion.

Six Eastern students
hurt in accident
Additionally, Wells claimed Injury
and was transported to Vets for
treatment.
There was heavy damage to the
bus. The Wells vehicle was
demolished.
In further action, the patrol investigated a twG-vehicle accident in
Meigs County on SR 7, just north of
SR 218, at 12:50 p.m.
Officers report a south bound auto
operated by Bonnie Hutton, 56,
Gallipolis, had stopped in traffic. A
south bound vehicle driven by
George Kerns, 66, Gallipolis, failed
to stop and struck the Hutton auto in
the rear.
Kerns claimed injury, but was not
inunediately treated. He was cited
on a charge of assured clear distance.

Six students of the Eastern Local
School District were injured during
a school bus accident early Monday
oo TR 149, nine miles north of SR
124, in Meigs County.
Called to the scene at 7:15 a.m.,
the Gallia-Melgs Post, Highway
Patrol, reports an east bound
vehicle operated by David R. Wells,
29, Reedsville, and a west hound bus
operated by William Hannum, 57,
Long Bottom, collided head-oo in a

By Bob Hoefll~b
The Meigs County Regional Planning Commissioo Monday agreed to
work on a research project to
demonstrate the impact of expanding industry in cooperation with
the Ohio Agriculture and Research
Center at a meeting held at the Farmers Bank Building.
Meeting with the commission to
discuss Meigs County's participation was George Morse, a
research consultant with the center.
Compiling of a business direclory
will be the first step for the no cost
project which involves local groups.
Not only will the business directory be provided but information on
the impact that business expansion
could bring about will become
available.
It will take five weeks to get the
directory information so the commission will assist in that direction.
REVIEWS LAND STUDY
C. E. Blakeslee, executive director of the commission, discussed a
housing and land study carried out
by Jennings and Associates, Columbus.
Blakeslee, who was only recently
discharged from the hospital
following two operations, alsO reported oo the status of a study being
conducted by Jennings primarily!
through federal aid. The com-

Carter prepares
for appointment

WASHINGTON (AP) - Back
from a quick trip to express his personal thanks to the servicemen injured in an aborted attempt to
rescue American hostages in Iran,
President Carter is preparing to
name a secretary of state to replace
the one who quit in protest to the
mission.
'lbe man most commonly mentioned as the likely successor to
Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance
was his deputy, Warren Christopher.
Carter was expected to reveal his
choice to congressional leaders
before announclng it at a 9 p.m. EDT
nationally televised news conference from the East Room of the
White House.
Weeks before Vance resigned in a
rare public clash of views on the
failed rescue mission, Carter's top
national security a~r, Zbigniew
Brzezinski, said he expected Vance
to be replaced by Christopher early
department for questioning. The
next year. Brzezlnsld, long pictured
juvenile took Sgt. Randy Forbes and
Deputy Lou Osborne to the Laurel. as a Vance rival, said he did not
Cliff area and recovered the out- · want the job and reported that Carter was favorably inclined to
board motor.
Chrtstopher.
Mooday afternoon Mark Beegle,
'!'here have been various reports
Rt. 2, Racine, reported that his car
that
other offlclals would follow Vanwas parked at old Town Creek Sunce
and resign because they
day evening. Taken from the car
disagreed
with the rescue attempt,
was a cassette player and floor
but
White
House press secretary
mats.
Jody
Powell
sa ld Monday he would
Monday evening juvenile officer
try
to
talll;
them
out of ll
Carl Hysell and Captain Robert .
The
Iran
rescue
missloo wasn't
Beegle recovered the casette player
the
first
time
Vance
had expressed
and floor mats.
his
disagreement
with
Carter.
Both juveniles were released to
Earlier
this
year,
the
departing
the costody of their parents pending
setlretary
of
state
made
a
formal,
a hearing injuvenilecourt.
written diasent to Carter's intention
Deputies received a report frtlm
to ban food exports to Iran - a pian
William · E. Guinther, Syracuse,
that never was Implemented.
Monday at 5:30 p.m. that the winIn Texas after his hosplt81 visit to
dshield of his cpr was cracked when
the injured survivors of the rescue
gravel fell from a truck as he was
mbsion - the president's first trip
traveling east oo SR 124. The truck
outside the WasiJincton area since
driven by Willard Miller, Pomeroy
the hostage crisis beg~ Nov. 4 was weslbound.

curve.
The driver of the bus and six
passengers, Jim Harris, 17; Sheila
Harris, 15; Missy Hensley, 10; Chris
Wyatt, 10; Pamela Wyatt, 12, and
Ronnie Taylor, 10, were transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
where they were treated and
released.

Juveniles charged
Two juveniles have been charged
in Meigs County Juvenile Court with
the theft of an outboard motor,
cassette player and floor mala from
a parked car at Old Town Creek Sunday evening.
Jerry Powell, Tanners Run Raod,
Racine, notified the sherifrs depart·
ment late Sunday evening that hia
outboard motor had been taken from
his boat tied up at Old Town Creek
and two subjects had been seen at
the scene prior to the discovery of
the theft.
A description of the car and a
license plate number was obtained.
Deputies Lou Osborne and Manning Mohler were notified to be oo
the alert as well as Pomeroy
Patrolman Tom Werry.
Shortly after midnight the driver
of the vehicle was located near his
residence by Mohler and taken Into
custody.
.
Later a Middleport Juvenile was
picked up and taken to the sheriff's
'I

mission agreed to pay the Jennings
firm $300 a year to serve as the consulting firm of the commissioo.
Blakeslee reported that plat maps
have been completed for Bedford,
Letart and Lebanon Townships and
that work iB nearly completed on six
other townships and the other three
townships are started.
I!Meigs County Engineer, Meigs
County Commlssloners and CETA
for work in the development of the
plat mapa which were last done in
1928.
Jeff Burt of the Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional Development Commission presented a list of
projects for the county which are at
one stage or another as to status of
applications for funding.
Buckeye llli1s would accept also
suggestions for any additional
projects. Burt also spoke oo some effects thst might be encountered due
to budget cuts.
Greg Keller, also of Buckeye lllils,
was authorized to list the Meigs
County Regional Planning to receive
energy information.
Presiding over the meeting was
Thereoo Johnson, chairman. Attending were Blakeslee, Morse,
Chester Wells, Richard Jones, ·
Frank Petrie, E. F. Robinsoo, Burt, '
Keller, L. W. McComas, Fred Hoff~. Orien Roush and Henry Wells.

.,

Carter called Vance "a fine and
dedicated man who has served this
nation well."
But he said Vance's departure and the clrcumstances that prompted it- "could not have any adverse
effect at all on the efforts to rescue
the American hostages.... nor will it
have any impact on the future."
The White House said Carter was
acting as commander-in-chief on his
trip to San Antonio, and Powell said
he knew of no plans for Carter to
take up campaign travels as long as
the hostages remain in Iran.
However, Texas holds its
Democratic primary Saturday, and
the White House obvioUBly was not
unmindful of the political calendar.
The four-person press pool aboard
Air Force One for the trip was expanded to include reporters from the
two dally newspapers In Dallas.
U'Onlcally, Carter met with Air
Force Alnnan 1st Class William
Tootle, the least-hurt of the five survivors, at Wilford Hall Medical Center, the institutioo where the
deposed shah of Iran had last been
(Conllnued on page 16l

Family escapes
burning dwelling
A famUy of four escaped posalble
death early this morning at their
home on Nye St.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
Legar said Ronald Davis awoke .
around 1:42 a.m. and found the
family home on fire. He grabbed one
child and his wife grabbed thetr
other child. As the family escaped,
the house burst into flamea.
Loesee were set at $15,000 .
All of the furnlsiKngs and penonal ..
belongings It the family were
destroyed. Cause of the blaze was
not known.·

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