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                  <text>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

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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.·

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy·Middleport, 0., Tuesday, Aprll29,1tll0

Opinions
&amp; Comments

3- The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-MiddlePort, 0., Tuesday, Apr1129,1980

YR'ODUCTION \t;) LRG6\NG IN FOOt',
ClOTHING, Al'PL.IANCEC5, MACHINE

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100L.CS, HOUSING •..•
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NOTHING. TO BUY

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MIN loST~

MINI~ie'lt

Of=

Rescue effort:
world editorials
Here is a sampling of editorial reaction from the nation's
newspapers on the attempted rescue of the U.S. hostages
in Iran:
WASHINGTON POST:
"Sorrow at the death of eight military men and heartbreak at the failure of the mission are just about the only
uncomplicated reactions Americans can have at this
moment to Jimmy Carter's rescue effort in Iran. Too little
is known, and from only one - official - point of view to
permit much more than tentative conclusions ... Still, our
first reaction is that it was a reasonable thing to try to do."
BALTIMORE SUN:
"Mr. Carter's first duty to the nation is to present as
detailed and candid an accounting of the incident as the
safety of the hostages in Tehran permits. An essential will
be some explanation of how a mission obviously authorized
and planned at hi~hest level could turn into such a logistics
disaster. Until this matter is resolved, public faith in the
military and intelligence establishments will be sorely
tried."
"The administration's lack of consultation, either with
U.S. allies or members of Congress, is another major matter that ought to be examined dispassionately.''
DALLAS TIMES HERALD :
"The Iranians are now on notice that there is a stiffening
backbone in the White House, that patience has run out,
that the hosta~es must be freed.
" ...What will happen in the dangerous days ahead
remains a mystery ... It is a time for all Ameriicans to .,
unite in concern for our fellow citizens still held in Tehran
and in appreciation for the bold attempt to free them."
DETROIT FREE PRESS: "Was it wrong to contemplate (the rescue attempt) at this time? ... For our
part, we certainly do not feel that a rescue operation
should ever have been ruled out totally."
" ... If there is any ~ood at all to come from the aborted
mission, perhaps it will be in a heightened sense of urgency in the world community and an awareness that the
United States has been pushed to the point of taking risky
actions."
LOS ANGELES HERAlD EXAMINER: "Let's not
j~p on the president before we know all the facts and
have some time to evaluate them. To paraphrase a saying
frequently invoked by the late President Kennedy, 'Success has many fathers, but failure is always an orphan'." ·
'
Jt

Here is a sampling of editorial reaction from foreign
newspapers on the attempted rescue of the U.S. hostages
· iniran:
INDIA: The Times oflndia (Independent): "Are the top
policymakers in tlie United States so daft or naive as to
believe they could have pulled off the kind of rescue
operation they had planned?"
"Altogether the U.S. fiasco in Iran bespeaks of utter
bankruptcy and incompetence at the highest level in
Washington."
JAPAN : Japan Times: "The news about the aborted U.S.
attempt to rescue the hostages ... was ... saddening and
disturbing. Saddening because, for all our disapproval of
the continued Iranian refusal to set the captives free, the
failed U.S. gambit hurt - and hurt deeply - any confidence the American ~ople and U.S. allies might have
had in President Carter s ability in crisis management."
BRAZIL: Jornal do Brasil: "All that can be done now is
to lament the fact that it failed and wish the United States
better luck on its next move."
KUWAIT: AI Qabas: "Had the mission succeeded it
could have resulted in the outbreak of a world war. Carter
now has only two choices, either to resign or declare his
withdrawal from the presidential election. Actin~ otherwise would mean that the misassessment of the situation
· by the White House crazy gang has reached its peak."
· SOVIET UNION: Pravda: "The Carter administration
. · is engaged in an irres~nsible game ... an end should be put
· . to such recklessness.'
.. KENYA: Sunday Nation: "Carter led the United States
. .into a day of disgrace...Carter should now simply pack his
bags and go home to Plains, Georgia, for having_made
· America look like a nation of 50 citizens and not a major
power."
.
ENGLAND: The Guardian (liberal): "For fiVe months
the presidency has been racked by the fate of 50 diplomats
corraled in a foreign capital. Fifty lives •.. Those lives were
· ·put at greater risk than at any previous time. So were a
~reat many more lives. So, at only a few leaps of
.unagination, was the whole tottering framework of in. ternational stability."

Today Is Tuesday, April 29, the

left in the year. ·
Today's higbiight in history:
On April29, 19t5, some 32,000 Nazi
victims at the Dachau concentration
camp were liberated by Americans
in World Warn.
On this date:
.In 1429, Joan of Arc entered
Orleans and won a victoNn inquest

i

~

report was released that questioned
Sen. Edwan:l Kennedy's truthfulness
in his accou,nt of the accident that
ldlll!ll a young woman on Chappaquiddlck l~d.
Five years ago, the United States
ei11led two decades of involvement In
Vietnam with the evacuation of
nearly 1,000 Americans and 5,000
South Vietnamese from Saigon .

W££Kty W

...._,...._

10 W££K PRINN£Rs
· OGftAM

£,..-,-.......-,

ECURITY
MINI~ OF"

CUSA

WEEPS TAKE

Capital punishment pending in Senate
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Here is
the status of legislation pending in
the 113th Ohio General Assembly:
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT- Reinstates death penalty in Ohio. Passed
House. Pending in Senate Judiciary
Conunittee.
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT
- Eannarks portion of state liquor
profits for loans and grants to retain
Ohio Industry. Passed both houses
and sent to Gov. James A. Rhodes.
MENTAL HEALTH - Splits state
Mental Health and Mental Retardation Department into separate
agencies. Passed House and Senate.
Sent to governor for hill signature.

LOTTERY - Strengthens
management of the Ohio Lottery and
provides for legislative oversight.
Passed both chambers. Awaiting
governor's signature.

conference conunittee.
PRODUCT LIABILITY
Restricts lawsuits against mamifacturers and sellers resulting from .
claims of negligence. Passed the

Capital-at-a-glance
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS $841 million construction budget for
projects throughout the state.
Passed House and Senate In dlf- ·
ferent fonns . No hearings set by

Senate. Awaiting House vote June
11.

UTIER - Imposes 0.3 percent
tax on manofacturers and retailers
to finance . statewide anti-litter

program. Different versions passed
by both chambers. House decision
on concurrence with or rejection of
Senate amendments delayed until
post-primary session.
HAZARDOUS WASTES Regulates and controls hazan:lous
waste sites. Passed in different forms by Senate an~t House. Pending in
joint conference committee.
TAXES - Initiative petition bill to
revise state's personal and corporate taxes. Pending in Senate
Ways and Means Conunittee.
NURSING HOMES - Strengthens
nursing home regulation. Passed
Senate, awaiting House floor vote.

FABULOUS
LAS VEGAS~

to expire.
The house, of course, is the
nation's most famous residence -

the White House.
Although Congress annually appropriates millions of dollars to employ a large housekeeping staff,
landscape the elaborate grounds
(technically a national park) and
provide routine maintenance for the
building, little public money ever
has been available to build a permanent collection of furnishings.
Until the middle of this century,
most presidential familieS brought
their own furniture and art objects
with them. When they departed, a
few selected pieces remained behind
as a gift to the nation but most of the
furnishings quite naturally were
carried away to the family's new
house.
Congress has, on rare occasions,
provided funds for extraordinary
acquisitions or big refurbishing
programs, but the first major reconstruction in modern times did not occur until the administration of
President IJ8rry S. Truman.
Even at that time, the White
House was furnished with reproductions rather than authenti.c
Americana appropriate for display
in the mansion that stands as a sym-

bol of the collective cultural heritage
of the nation's people.
Not until the early 1960s did the first sustained effort begin to assemble
a permanent collection of antiques
that would provide an elegant yet
tasteful display of American art and
craftsmanship.
But even that effort has been forced to rely in the ensuing two
decades upon sporadic special fundraising campaigns, varying degrees
of support from a series of presidential wives and the detennination of
White House Curator Clement E.
Conger to "beg, borrow or steal" the
appropriate furnishings.
Tile current colleciton, for example, includes 60 pieces of furniture,
140 paintings, 39 decorative objects
and six pieces of sculpture on loan
from musewns, art galleries or
generous individuals.
Tile art collection lacks adequate
representation from the South and
West. In addition, paintings of four
fonner presidents - John Adams,
James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson
and William McKinley - are
missing from the portrait collections
of fonner chief executives.
More than 1.5 million visitors an-

nually take advantage of the fact
that the White House is the only
residence of a chief of state any
where in the world open for public
tours on a regular basis without
charge.
But that conslant flow of tourists
leads to the inevitable deterioration
of draperies, upholsteries, rugs and
wall coverings that must be
regularly refurbished, repaired or
replaced.

servative Political Action Committee.
For conservatives like Dolan, control means a net gain of nine seats
for the Republican Party in 1980's
Senate elections.

"'Do you have anything to do with that X-rated
missile '~ ''

I

I

lMWI-·W--

I

The huiel that offers you e~!
iiiDT UIUI. . n·e 1Dr •1-"
IIE•Pt- e 1•
.
lll.anll'll.i .
Ju$t to~

._
.........

a few. · ·'

.

1M

USE JUST UKI! REAL MONI!Y WHI!N PURCHASING ANY MERCHANDISE OR SERVICE, AT ANY OF
. l)fE PARTICIPATING BUSINESSES •
.

To resolve those problems, a nongovernmental, non-profit, nonpartisan organization - the White
House Preservation Fund - now has
been established to seek financial
support fonn public-spirited individuals, corporations 8nd foun·
dations.
With a goal of $25 million to build
and maintain a permanent White
House collection, the fund obviously
needs large gifts - but it also emphasizes its desire to receive small,
tax-deductible donations from all
Americans who want to share in the
heritage and tradition ri "the
president's house." It's a truly noble
cause.

Conservative uprising in U. S. Senate
By JullaD Bond
"I am convinced we can actually
seize control of the United States
Senate! "
Tile speaker is Jolm T. Dolan,
chainnan of the National Con-

..

U.S. SA s
ECURJTY
·
WEEPSTAKES
'
CRIP
TOTAL $500.00

The White House: an unpredictable dwelling
By Robert Walte111
WASffiNGTON (NEA) - Every
household worries about replacing
worn carpet, finding curtains to
match the wallpaper or buying a
new end table for the living room.
But the Carter family bere has an
unusual problem in furnishing its
home.
It's an elegant house, but much of
the furniture has been borrowed
from others, left behind by previous
occupants or donated by generous
friends. No self-respecting family is
happy with loaned paintings or
hand-me-down chairs.
Even if the Carters had enough
money to fix up the place, it
probably wouldn't be a very wise investment because they have an unpredictable landlord whp could force
them to vacate before they'r' reaUy
ready to move.
Tile previous occupants, the Fords, had to leave less than 18 months
after they moved in. The Nixons
lived there earlier, but they had to
hastily vacate the place almost I 'h
years before they expected the lease

.TM

IPEU IIIII, 4 ..... ~. . ~ 111
IF YIII·UFE IT TIE ISU
.;_

2 VACATIONS TO

In Washington

TodJJy in history. • •
~day of Ul80. There are 246 days

ADULTS ONLY

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C'USA

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paigns aimed at driving them from ;:
Here's how that control would
office.
translate: South Carolina's Strom
Thurmond would become Chairman
Mea~while, hard-line rights :
of the Senate Judiciary Committee;
groups m every state are gearing up ·
for massive, single-issue campaigns ·
North Carolina's Jesse Helms would
to replace members of bot!t houses
head Agriculture; Utah's Jake Gam
would become chairman Of the
of Congress who don't measure up to
their standards of political purity.
Banking Conunittee, and Texas'
John Tower would chair the Anned
Groups opposed to ratification of
Services Conunittee.
the Panama C!mai treaties, to gain
control, school busing and school inTile rapid rise of Ronald Reagan
tegration, aborttoo and the Equal
to certain nomination by the Grand
Old Party in July makes these conRights Amendment can be expected
servative shifts a real possibility.
to help mainline conservatives who
Since 1975, the Republicans have
want to see the ideological balance
gained five Senate seats, giving con- of the Congress tip sharply to the
servatives 24 of the 48 seats in states right.
west of the Mississippi River.
Other vaJnerable Democratli
The nation's shift to the right has
Birth Bayh of Indiana, Jolm c.
encouraged party strategists to· Culver of Iowa, John A. Durkin ri
believe they can capture 111 least . New Hampshire and Patrick J.
four more In hoUy contested Leahy of Vennont. ~ch was elected
Western contests this November with less than 54 percept of the vote.
the seats now held by Alaska's Mike Each is rated highly by the llberal
Gravel, Idaho's Frank Church, Americans for Democratic Action
Colorado's Gary Hart and South and poorly by ADA's eounterpa~
Dakota's George McGovern.
oo the right - Americans for ConThese four Democrats have stitutional Action and the United
already become the target of cam- States Chamber of Conunerce.

Reg ister at the Businesses
shown on the fol lowi ng pages

OFFICIAL 'SECURITY SWE EPSTAKES ' RULES

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THIS ONE IS COMPLIMENTS OF
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NAI IO NAl i.U R~

LIAIII'&gt;!(J'lt UO. l oi.•I OMol.

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jA,J Each week the lollowlr.v will be awarded.

a. SSO.OO In S.C:ufity SweePttakta' Serip. (Total ol' $500.00 !Of
P!C)Qram_) All WIMflra must redHm thla scrip t 110 .. ,.,than 7 d.l.,..

alter the oll1d 11 enCI ol thiS Program

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5 THERE WILl BE RANDOM DRAWINGS EACH WEEK OF THIS 1ClWEEK PROGRAM.

1. YOU .ARE ENCOURAGED TO VISIT , as often as ~u w1sh. the areas
PiiiiiCIP&amp;IInQ Ous1neu 's dosptayon~ the 'SECURITY SWEEPSTA~ES ' banner
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from OrawhlQs durlr1Q the 5tn week nd atao the 10th WMk of t iM
program. (All wmne,.. mlJat use these 'IIC.tiOI'Ia wilnln 3 rnor~ths aft•
lhfl end of the Program.) Reservatiotlamuslbe rnadettteut JO dl'tlln

N O PUR C H ASE NECESSARY. You must be an adult Entrlfls one llm 1ted 10
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EN TER OFTEN. There wtlf be Wlnrtt~rs each wee~ 1he odds ol w 1nrn rllol
depends on the number ol entnes SoN:e th os program,, s tnc lly tocilm nature

advance. and are subj~tto

the oods are more fa vorable than a comparable Statewide 01 Na t mnwu:t~

prog1am

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EACH ENTRY must be on thfl 'OFFICIAL ENTR'( FORM' 11 OI'Owoded lnd
mull be legibly wutten or hand prlntea Mach ine duPiicallon or m.&lt;:hlnic.,lly
reproduced entnes w111 be delca, ed v01d

* AL L WINNERS WILL BE LISTED IN T HIS NEWSPA PER EACH WEEK .

P'IOt cort~mitmen t a.

Each Vacation Wfnner w ill receive • generou s foo d alloMnc:
while In U.S v-eu, 1110 a rou nd ·trlp ~}rUne u c:tcet.
IC liN ADDITION . TH€ WINNERS OF THE SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
HIIIClt&lt;l l rom draWings duri ng the

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* ALL WINNER~ MUST CLAIM THEIR PRIZES WON BY APPEARING AT THE Q,FICE OF THI
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*WINNERS ARE NOT NOTIFIED. Winners names will be published every week in the store's advertisement
where they won. You must read the ads every Tuesday_to find out if you ha~e won. If you are a winner your
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�2- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy·Middleport, 0., Tuesday, Aprll29,1tll0

Opinions
&amp; Comments

3- The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-MiddlePort, 0., Tuesday, Apr1129,1980

YR'ODUCTION \t;) LRG6\NG IN FOOt',
ClOTHING, Al'PL.IANCEC5, MACHINE

'

100L.CS, HOUSING •..•
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'

'

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NOTHING. TO BUY

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MIN loST~

MINI~ie'lt

Of=

Rescue effort:
world editorials
Here is a sampling of editorial reaction from the nation's
newspapers on the attempted rescue of the U.S. hostages
in Iran:
WASHINGTON POST:
"Sorrow at the death of eight military men and heartbreak at the failure of the mission are just about the only
uncomplicated reactions Americans can have at this
moment to Jimmy Carter's rescue effort in Iran. Too little
is known, and from only one - official - point of view to
permit much more than tentative conclusions ... Still, our
first reaction is that it was a reasonable thing to try to do."
BALTIMORE SUN:
"Mr. Carter's first duty to the nation is to present as
detailed and candid an accounting of the incident as the
safety of the hostages in Tehran permits. An essential will
be some explanation of how a mission obviously authorized
and planned at hi~hest level could turn into such a logistics
disaster. Until this matter is resolved, public faith in the
military and intelligence establishments will be sorely
tried."
"The administration's lack of consultation, either with
U.S. allies or members of Congress, is another major matter that ought to be examined dispassionately.''
DALLAS TIMES HERALD :
"The Iranians are now on notice that there is a stiffening
backbone in the White House, that patience has run out,
that the hosta~es must be freed.
" ...What will happen in the dangerous days ahead
remains a mystery ... It is a time for all Ameriicans to .,
unite in concern for our fellow citizens still held in Tehran
and in appreciation for the bold attempt to free them."
DETROIT FREE PRESS: "Was it wrong to contemplate (the rescue attempt) at this time? ... For our
part, we certainly do not feel that a rescue operation
should ever have been ruled out totally."
" ... If there is any ~ood at all to come from the aborted
mission, perhaps it will be in a heightened sense of urgency in the world community and an awareness that the
United States has been pushed to the point of taking risky
actions."
LOS ANGELES HERAlD EXAMINER: "Let's not
j~p on the president before we know all the facts and
have some time to evaluate them. To paraphrase a saying
frequently invoked by the late President Kennedy, 'Success has many fathers, but failure is always an orphan'." ·
'
Jt

Here is a sampling of editorial reaction from foreign
newspapers on the attempted rescue of the U.S. hostages
· iniran:
INDIA: The Times oflndia (Independent): "Are the top
policymakers in tlie United States so daft or naive as to
believe they could have pulled off the kind of rescue
operation they had planned?"
"Altogether the U.S. fiasco in Iran bespeaks of utter
bankruptcy and incompetence at the highest level in
Washington."
JAPAN : Japan Times: "The news about the aborted U.S.
attempt to rescue the hostages ... was ... saddening and
disturbing. Saddening because, for all our disapproval of
the continued Iranian refusal to set the captives free, the
failed U.S. gambit hurt - and hurt deeply - any confidence the American ~ople and U.S. allies might have
had in President Carter s ability in crisis management."
BRAZIL: Jornal do Brasil: "All that can be done now is
to lament the fact that it failed and wish the United States
better luck on its next move."
KUWAIT: AI Qabas: "Had the mission succeeded it
could have resulted in the outbreak of a world war. Carter
now has only two choices, either to resign or declare his
withdrawal from the presidential election. Actin~ otherwise would mean that the misassessment of the situation
· by the White House crazy gang has reached its peak."
· SOVIET UNION: Pravda: "The Carter administration
. · is engaged in an irres~nsible game ... an end should be put
· . to such recklessness.'
.. KENYA: Sunday Nation: "Carter led the United States
. .into a day of disgrace...Carter should now simply pack his
bags and go home to Plains, Georgia, for having_made
· America look like a nation of 50 citizens and not a major
power."
.
ENGLAND: The Guardian (liberal): "For fiVe months
the presidency has been racked by the fate of 50 diplomats
corraled in a foreign capital. Fifty lives •.. Those lives were
· ·put at greater risk than at any previous time. So were a
~reat many more lives. So, at only a few leaps of
.unagination, was the whole tottering framework of in. ternational stability."

Today Is Tuesday, April 29, the

left in the year. ·
Today's higbiight in history:
On April29, 19t5, some 32,000 Nazi
victims at the Dachau concentration
camp were liberated by Americans
in World Warn.
On this date:
.In 1429, Joan of Arc entered
Orleans and won a victoNn inquest

i

~

report was released that questioned
Sen. Edwan:l Kennedy's truthfulness
in his accou,nt of the accident that
ldlll!ll a young woman on Chappaquiddlck l~d.
Five years ago, the United States
ei11led two decades of involvement In
Vietnam with the evacuation of
nearly 1,000 Americans and 5,000
South Vietnamese from Saigon .

W££Kty W

...._,...._

10 W££K PRINN£Rs
· OGftAM

£,..-,-.......-,

ECURITY
MINI~ OF"

CUSA

WEEPS TAKE

Capital punishment pending in Senate
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Here is
the status of legislation pending in
the 113th Ohio General Assembly:
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT- Reinstates death penalty in Ohio. Passed
House. Pending in Senate Judiciary
Conunittee.
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT
- Eannarks portion of state liquor
profits for loans and grants to retain
Ohio Industry. Passed both houses
and sent to Gov. James A. Rhodes.
MENTAL HEALTH - Splits state
Mental Health and Mental Retardation Department into separate
agencies. Passed House and Senate.
Sent to governor for hill signature.

LOTTERY - Strengthens
management of the Ohio Lottery and
provides for legislative oversight.
Passed both chambers. Awaiting
governor's signature.

conference conunittee.
PRODUCT LIABILITY
Restricts lawsuits against mamifacturers and sellers resulting from .
claims of negligence. Passed the

Capital-at-a-glance
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS $841 million construction budget for
projects throughout the state.
Passed House and Senate In dlf- ·
ferent fonns . No hearings set by

Senate. Awaiting House vote June
11.

UTIER - Imposes 0.3 percent
tax on manofacturers and retailers
to finance . statewide anti-litter

program. Different versions passed
by both chambers. House decision
on concurrence with or rejection of
Senate amendments delayed until
post-primary session.
HAZARDOUS WASTES Regulates and controls hazan:lous
waste sites. Passed in different forms by Senate an~t House. Pending in
joint conference committee.
TAXES - Initiative petition bill to
revise state's personal and corporate taxes. Pending in Senate
Ways and Means Conunittee.
NURSING HOMES - Strengthens
nursing home regulation. Passed
Senate, awaiting House floor vote.

FABULOUS
LAS VEGAS~

to expire.
The house, of course, is the
nation's most famous residence -

the White House.
Although Congress annually appropriates millions of dollars to employ a large housekeeping staff,
landscape the elaborate grounds
(technically a national park) and
provide routine maintenance for the
building, little public money ever
has been available to build a permanent collection of furnishings.
Until the middle of this century,
most presidential familieS brought
their own furniture and art objects
with them. When they departed, a
few selected pieces remained behind
as a gift to the nation but most of the
furnishings quite naturally were
carried away to the family's new
house.
Congress has, on rare occasions,
provided funds for extraordinary
acquisitions or big refurbishing
programs, but the first major reconstruction in modern times did not occur until the administration of
President IJ8rry S. Truman.
Even at that time, the White
House was furnished with reproductions rather than authenti.c
Americana appropriate for display
in the mansion that stands as a sym-

bol of the collective cultural heritage
of the nation's people.
Not until the early 1960s did the first sustained effort begin to assemble
a permanent collection of antiques
that would provide an elegant yet
tasteful display of American art and
craftsmanship.
But even that effort has been forced to rely in the ensuing two
decades upon sporadic special fundraising campaigns, varying degrees
of support from a series of presidential wives and the detennination of
White House Curator Clement E.
Conger to "beg, borrow or steal" the
appropriate furnishings.
Tile current colleciton, for example, includes 60 pieces of furniture,
140 paintings, 39 decorative objects
and six pieces of sculpture on loan
from musewns, art galleries or
generous individuals.
Tile art collection lacks adequate
representation from the South and
West. In addition, paintings of four
fonner presidents - John Adams,
James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson
and William McKinley - are
missing from the portrait collections
of fonner chief executives.
More than 1.5 million visitors an-

nually take advantage of the fact
that the White House is the only
residence of a chief of state any
where in the world open for public
tours on a regular basis without
charge.
But that conslant flow of tourists
leads to the inevitable deterioration
of draperies, upholsteries, rugs and
wall coverings that must be
regularly refurbished, repaired or
replaced.

servative Political Action Committee.
For conservatives like Dolan, control means a net gain of nine seats
for the Republican Party in 1980's
Senate elections.

"'Do you have anything to do with that X-rated
missile '~ ''

I

I

lMWI-·W--

I

The huiel that offers you e~!
iiiDT UIUI. . n·e 1Dr •1-"
IIE•Pt- e 1•
.
lll.anll'll.i .
Ju$t to~

._
.........

a few. · ·'

.

1M

USE JUST UKI! REAL MONI!Y WHI!N PURCHASING ANY MERCHANDISE OR SERVICE, AT ANY OF
. l)fE PARTICIPATING BUSINESSES •
.

To resolve those problems, a nongovernmental, non-profit, nonpartisan organization - the White
House Preservation Fund - now has
been established to seek financial
support fonn public-spirited individuals, corporations 8nd foun·
dations.
With a goal of $25 million to build
and maintain a permanent White
House collection, the fund obviously
needs large gifts - but it also emphasizes its desire to receive small,
tax-deductible donations from all
Americans who want to share in the
heritage and tradition ri "the
president's house." It's a truly noble
cause.

Conservative uprising in U. S. Senate
By JullaD Bond
"I am convinced we can actually
seize control of the United States
Senate! "
Tile speaker is Jolm T. Dolan,
chainnan of the National Con-

..

U.S. SA s
ECURJTY
·
WEEPSTAKES
'
CRIP
TOTAL $500.00

The White House: an unpredictable dwelling
By Robert Walte111
WASffiNGTON (NEA) - Every
household worries about replacing
worn carpet, finding curtains to
match the wallpaper or buying a
new end table for the living room.
But the Carter family bere has an
unusual problem in furnishing its
home.
It's an elegant house, but much of
the furniture has been borrowed
from others, left behind by previous
occupants or donated by generous
friends. No self-respecting family is
happy with loaned paintings or
hand-me-down chairs.
Even if the Carters had enough
money to fix up the place, it
probably wouldn't be a very wise investment because they have an unpredictable landlord whp could force
them to vacate before they'r' reaUy
ready to move.
Tile previous occupants, the Fords, had to leave less than 18 months
after they moved in. The Nixons
lived there earlier, but they had to
hastily vacate the place almost I 'h
years before they expected the lease

.TM

IPEU IIIII, 4 ..... ~. . ~ 111
IF YIII·UFE IT TIE ISU
.;_

2 VACATIONS TO

In Washington

TodJJy in history. • •
~day of Ul80. There are 246 days

ADULTS ONLY

THE
DAILY
SENTINEL

CUIA

C'USA

*

50.00 SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
BE A WINNER!

*

--.
'

.

paigns aimed at driving them from ;:
Here's how that control would
office.
translate: South Carolina's Strom
Thurmond would become Chairman
Mea~while, hard-line rights :
of the Senate Judiciary Committee;
groups m every state are gearing up ·
for massive, single-issue campaigns ·
North Carolina's Jesse Helms would
to replace members of bot!t houses
head Agriculture; Utah's Jake Gam
would become chairman Of the
of Congress who don't measure up to
their standards of political purity.
Banking Conunittee, and Texas'
John Tower would chair the Anned
Groups opposed to ratification of
Services Conunittee.
the Panama C!mai treaties, to gain
control, school busing and school inTile rapid rise of Ronald Reagan
tegration, aborttoo and the Equal
to certain nomination by the Grand
Old Party in July makes these conRights Amendment can be expected
servative shifts a real possibility.
to help mainline conservatives who
Since 1975, the Republicans have
want to see the ideological balance
gained five Senate seats, giving con- of the Congress tip sharply to the
servatives 24 of the 48 seats in states right.
west of the Mississippi River.
Other vaJnerable Democratli
The nation's shift to the right has
Birth Bayh of Indiana, Jolm c.
encouraged party strategists to· Culver of Iowa, John A. Durkin ri
believe they can capture 111 least . New Hampshire and Patrick J.
four more In hoUy contested Leahy of Vennont. ~ch was elected
Western contests this November with less than 54 percept of the vote.
the seats now held by Alaska's Mike Each is rated highly by the llberal
Gravel, Idaho's Frank Church, Americans for Democratic Action
Colorado's Gary Hart and South and poorly by ADA's eounterpa~
Dakota's George McGovern.
oo the right - Americans for ConThese four Democrats have stitutional Action and the United
already become the target of cam- States Chamber of Conunerce.

Reg ister at the Businesses
shown on the fol lowi ng pages

OFFICIAL 'SECURITY SWE EPSTAKES ' RULES

*

THIS ONE IS COMPLIMENTS OF
l OlA PRODUCTIO NS

NAI IO NAl i.U R~

LIAIII'&gt;!(J'lt UO. l oi.•I OMol.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

jA,J Each week the lollowlr.v will be awarded.

a. SSO.OO In S.C:ufity SweePttakta' Serip. (Total ol' $500.00 !Of
P!C)Qram_) All WIMflra must redHm thla scrip t 110 .. ,.,than 7 d.l.,..

alter the oll1d 11 enCI ol thiS Program

Ne~~;soape r

b

One $25.00 U.S. S..,ings Bond ('To{aJ of $250.00 In Bond at or t ~
Program)

2

YO U'LL FIND EXCE PTION AL VALU ES,
~D YO U M AY BE O N E OF TH E
~
MANY WIN NE RS!

5 THERE WILl BE RANDOM DRAWINGS EACH WEEK OF THIS 1ClWEEK PROGRAM.

1. YOU .ARE ENCOURAGED TO VISIT , as often as ~u w1sh. the areas
PiiiiiCIP&amp;IInQ Ous1neu 's dosptayon~ the 'SECURITY SWEEPSTA~ES ' banner
Clearly pnn.t your Soc1al Se cyrrty Number name and aCidtess on the 'Otl 1c 1at
Entry Form provided by eac h par11(.;•Pa tong busmess and th1s

'

3

(8 I IN ADDITI ON, THE LASVEOASVACATIO NWI ~ NERSwillbeH!ected
from OrawhlQs durlr1Q the 5tn week nd atao the 10th WMk of t iM
program. (All wmne,.. mlJat use these 'IIC.tiOI'Ia wilnln 3 rnor~ths aft•
lhfl end of the Program.) Reservatiotlamuslbe rnadettteut JO dl'tlln

N O PUR C H ASE NECESSARY. You must be an adult Entrlfls one llm 1ted 10
one oer adult · per YISII Emotoyeesol U\IS N111wspaper are not ehgoble to p!Jiy.

EN TER OFTEN. There wtlf be Wlnrtt~rs each wee~ 1he odds ol w 1nrn rllol
depends on the number ol entnes SoN:e th os program,, s tnc lly tocilm nature

advance. and are subj~tto

the oods are more fa vorable than a comparable Statewide 01 Na t mnwu:t~

prog1am

"

EACH ENTRY must be on thfl 'OFFICIAL ENTR'( FORM' 11 OI'Owoded lnd
mull be legibly wutten or hand prlntea Mach ine duPiicallon or m.&lt;:hlnic.,lly
reproduced entnes w111 be delca, ed v01d

* AL L WINNERS WILL BE LISTED IN T HIS NEWSPA PER EACH WEEK .

P'IOt cort~mitmen t a.

Each Vacation Wfnner w ill receive • generou s foo d alloMnc:
while In U.S v-eu, 1110 a rou nd ·trlp ~}rUne u c:tcet.
IC liN ADDITION . TH€ WINNERS OF THE SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
HIIIClt&lt;l l rom draWings duri ng the

wt• be

6. NO SUB~ OF PRlZES ALLOWED. Uncl•lmed prizes win N,, b4
awardltd. All entnes become !he pt"Operty of thi1 Newspaper, 11\d none will be
fel urnt&lt;J.

* ALL WINNER~ MUST CLAIM THEIR PRIZES WON BY APPEARING AT THE Q,FICE OF THI
. AFTER THE PUBUCATIOf&lt; OF THEIR RESPECTIVE NAMES. All PRIZES ARE FOR WINNERS

ON~Y.~~=~NO~TR:ER~E~

DAYS

1lt WIN NERS MIJST CLAIM ANO UTILI ZE THEIR PRIZES WITH IN THE TI M E SPECIF I ED .

Clip and Deposit at any of the par·
ticipating businesses.

* Register at the participating businesses shown on the following pages as many times as you like. No purchase
.necessary to win. You must be 18 yrs. of age or older to win.
*WINNERS ARE NOT NOTIFIED. Winners names will be published every week in the store's advertisement
where they won. You must read the ads every Tuesday_to find out if you ha~e won. If you are a winner your
I
,, name and address will.,. appear in the advertisement \ and you have four days to \&gt;notify The Dai~ Sentinel.

-'

\

'

�5-

GREEN UP
YOUR lAWN
WI1H

,_

lHESE

W.EED VEX

Both

Smith-Nelson Motors
We Want to.
Drive you CRAZY!
We Want to
Drive you HAPPY!

•

high

•n•lvsla lewn

!?=""""

fertlliter and 1
brotdleat WHd

control .

Yow

can· WHd and
feed In one pen
of the tPrtdr\

CDrjtrolt dahdellon, plantain,

cl'llckweecL
knotweed. lag

SHOW MOM YOUR LOVE:
IS GROWING

vtlleteblltt

COVtrl 7,500 lq .

2J lb. btt

Hlb. b.g

$795
1978 FAIRMONT FUTURA 2 DR $4195
1974 CHEV. C.lO PICKUP

CUBE STEAK

V -8, P .S., P. B .• Aula . trans.

6 cy l. auto trans., air cond., radio, low mileage,
local owner .

1976 MUSTANG II COBRA

Boston

Butt Style

ARMOUR

. V-6, 4 speed

.$2995

tra~s. , P. S.• P . B.

Vienna Sausage
Vapex Interior and Exterior and Aqua·
Satin Latex Enamel only.
rEFI='ECTfVE THROUGH MAY 8,1980

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

0.

•

lR I

Where else can you get so
much in a small economy car?
Bring the family in for a
Fiesta test drive. And make
sure you get our price. There
may never be a better time to
buy than right now!

•Upto40MPG
•Front wheel drive
• Rack and pinion steering
•MacPherson front suspen·
sion
•Michelin steel -belted radial
tires
•1.6 liter engine with 4·speed
manual transmission,
and more!

Well loaded .

1M MaNn Countl•"
Mlln ltrwt
'omen
ltortHIUr'll ltiCittiiM
.liCk W. ClfltY, M1r.
p=
MIUCioMCtatlzMII.M.
• .
, . , m·t111

'2495

'34991
MOD£L
ASM7A2K
24,000 BTU

. FURNITURE &amp; .JEWELRY
MIDDLEPORT OHIO '

orester

.lung- Mfg.

&amp;SERVICE, INC.

BY BUTTERICK

We have a complete line of
water heaters, w/h elements,
window parts, doors, windows,
cabinet doors and drawer fronts,
hitch balls, wide load signs,
faucets, interior and exterior
lights, steps, roof coating,
mobile home screwdrivers,
awnings, skirting, anchors, etc.,
plus a wide range of items
available through our catalog.

SLAB BACON
59
·
e
LB.
,
'

WHOLE
SLAB

___

The semi-wedge heel adds extra co mfort.

99~

With Coupon In Monday's Paper

WESTERN WEAR -

support and styli ng.

10 til 5 M.f·f

10 til 12Th.
10 til 2 Sat.

.

WORK SHOES -

WE STERN WJ:.-\B -

BELTS

SHOES, INC.
"'MIINie Ctf ttM UIIIPtf

o.·M.~S.t.

Bloc•"
Pom.,.oy, 0 .

IOOTI\s
Fri . y111

~a11's

$a11's 03oot 5~of

BELTS

Middleport, Ohio
(614 ) 1M -

45760

shoe repair shop

5gop

03oot

Avenu~

· Middleport, Ohio

45760

(814J · 992 - SSM

s...

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
OO.IT·YOURSELF
HARDWARE HEADQUARTERS

SPECIALS .

....o~

FOR ALL YOUR
DO-IT-YOURSELF
HOME IMPROVEMENT
SUPPLIES SEE
CROSS HARDWARE

SEE OUR EXCITING
COLLECTION OF DRESSES,

•HOUSEWARES
eWALLPAPER
•PAINTS
e ELECTRICAL SU~PLIES
• PLUMBING SUPPLIES

BLOUSES, SKIRTS, tUNICS, .

PANlS &amp;SPORlSWEAR.

42".Ford Rotary Mower FREE will!
new Ford Lawn and Garden
=Tractor Pll'chase!

401

1

You save
t~r

lilt l i ne aGiti iSOH on

o~tcn n e

,11

11-..n 4Mg,.oe n tflct o• *'' '1~0 "'O"'f' 1

DIET
RITE
AND

SUPERIOR
E·Z.f.ARVE
BONElESS

RC HAMS
8 PACK 16 OZ. BTLS.
lor your SILAOIUMe class ring. In add~on to your name
and favorite activity, you get these extra features !mf to

34" Ford Rotary Mower
FREE with Ford Ll-80

personalize your ring.

Lawn Tramr Purchase!
You save

Winning $50.00 Script Money
Ruth Farmer
Middleport, 0.

262

1

p

~ u r tr-,: ~'r ~rdrt''l&lt;l ll ~ un ~ ~rrlrl)r
nll.l flrt1 1 ' 0 ~~~-~ tMA'N I

PLUS •••

See~Sew
.,_

Yousave

-

124

1

29
Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 5
Sat. 9to4
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
992·3831

992-5567

MAIN ST. ·

•

1

n'uu

,

M .. TII . . f., .. F . ti•IS
Wtd . l!il I

s•''"''1

INITI.o.L INLAIO
INTO THE STONE

SU~&lt;tUTE

298 2nd St, POMEROY, OHIO
·STORE HOURS:
MON-SAT. 8 AM TO 10 Phl
10 AM TO 10 PM

'

STONE

SILAOIUM class rings are ma~ frOm a fine j8weJMs
stainless metal that is stronger, lighter and more durable
than gotd. lts brilliant lustre lasts forever .. Bring in this ad for
yourspeclai price on SILADIUM class n~s by ArtCarved1

W•nter events on one Side. summer on the olhe1.

DALE HILL FORD TRACTOR, ·JNC.
HIW Ma•n
f'()m r rov. 0 .

"RE&amp;URST
STONE

A ful l-color "Guide to the 1980 Olympics."'

1

Be read)' to go AND mow on a new Ford . .. These
are /Jm/ft.•CI time offers. so come in soon to

l*oT

W.SCOJ
LINOfR STONE

FREE

Grass Catcher FREE wilh new
Ford Riding Mower Tractor!

STRAWBERRIES
.,

WORK SHOES -

318 North Second

318 North Second Avenue

FRESH CALIFORNIA

FULL QUART

*" 53081

~y. - - · Wloc
Winning A sso Bond
Roy A. Ellis
Rutland, 0 .

-&lt;:omprete shoe repair shop;

Tina
N- 6- 10, M-5-1 0

RC or DIET RITE COLA
8 PACK

~ousA. s1oco raa2. JU_·-··--'

Tina . An all-na t ural look in brown llo;ahor

New Haven, W. VI.

HOME SALES

• No convers ion

INGELS

Helping you say it right

0

OPEN:

kit neederl
Reg. Price S56?
NOWS499

PH •. 992-264-t 01 M2-6291

TINA

SEE &amp; SEW
PATTERNS

Reg. Price 549!1 NOW

Portables

f&gt;LENTY OF FRfE PA~KtNG

......., ' - " ' · -

405 5th St.

ACCESSORIES

· All Convertible· '

'1•:1. 1. rtAtN • Pot'IIAOY, OtiiO ..., . .

ONLY

GREEN'S SALES ·

PARTS &amp;

·

OHIO

I~

natural comfort

Model
AC053A7A
S,OOOBTU
Only $179.95

AT:

this one won 't last long.

PH. 992-2174
500 E. MAIN POM

CONDITIONERSi

COMPLETE FLORIST

4 cyl. automatic. Hurry

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS

ROOM AIR

'53995

Middleport, Ohio

Li tt e r Bin~ ·

CHEVETIE

8,000 BJU

KINGSBURY

Door

V6 Turbo-charged . VB
power, V6 economy .

PROMPT DELIVERY

MODEL
AK085A1

OF SHOES

• Exclusive

1977 CHEVROLET

-==--=·=
··

heritage
house

All Trash
Compactors

'4695

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

ONLY

• Buy it today.
Use rl
ton ight.

automatic.

You 'll be sending her fresh carnations for the times
you lost your shoes. Daisies for the times you lost
yoursel f. And an e~c l usive FTD hand-decorated
Posy Paii TM for the times you forgot to re member.
can or visit us today. We can send the Big Hug •·
iust about anywhere ... the FTD way.

Mod"l
.A C083AIA
5.000 BTU
,Only $29.95

Whtte or Black Patent

All Front·
Loading
Portables

motor,

'4395

'WJWh~;

FRONT WHEEL DRIVE FORD Fl ESTA
AT PAT HILL FORD.
"YOU'LL LIKE IT!"

V6

1978 BUICK REGAL

"hnl... -011111

·

1979 PONTIAC
PHOENIX 2 DR
A.C. low mileage.

•2795

1299
Pomeroy Landmark .

Mrs . Millard VanMeter
Ph. 992· 2039
106 Butternut Ave.
Or992·5721
Pomeroy, Ohio
We accept all major credit cards and we
wire flowers everywhere.

ThomMcAn.

KltchenAid Is
dOSing OUt their
• Mu lti -level
CUrrent
was h lets you
dishwasher line.
load -as-vou·hke .H
urry.1 l'1m1"ted Su

6 cyl. aula., A.C. AM·
FM . The cle anest.

85

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

new higher heels. A Thorn Girl is a
sophisticatc'd lady in City Slickers by

All
Built-Ins

1976 FORD GRANADA

SERVICE,
"LOW PRICES, TOO"
VISIT THE FOLKS. AT:

•Hydrangeas
•Azaleas
•Combination Pots
•Cut Flowers
•Potted Mums
•Hanging Planters
•Corsages
• PermanP.nt Flowers

City Slickers are the perfect shoes foi'(loing out
on the town. Unique fashion uppers on the

N. 2nd Ave.

FOR FRIENDLY, FAST,
TOP _QUALITY

There' s no one quite li ke Mom and we think she
deserves somethi ng sensational on "her" day .
That's why our lovely bouquet announces "You' re
The Greatest." It can be delivered anywhere in this
ar ea or almost anywhere in the world thr ough our
affiliated florists. Send thiS bOuquet ahd you ca n
make this Mother' s Day one of the "Greatest" ever!

'1HE WAY AMERICA SENDS LOVE"

TRY ITJ ·

20% OFF

'4.25
'7,99

M:Q.tl. .

5 oz. 39~
79c LB.
WAID CROSS'
SONS GROCERY

City Slickers by ~"'-cAn:

YOUR BUICK, PONTIAC AND
GMC DEALER. LET US ORDER
. YOU A NEW CAR TODAY.

lawns.

(29·503S-7)

'I~

HER 'S DAY
IS MAY 11 .

· trHS,

": p•·»cs•

MOTHER'S DAY· SUNDA'C MAY 11

.,

�5-

GREEN UP
YOUR lAWN
WI1H

,_

lHESE

W.EED VEX

Both

Smith-Nelson Motors
We Want to.
Drive you CRAZY!
We Want to
Drive you HAPPY!

•

high

•n•lvsla lewn

!?=""""

fertlliter and 1
brotdleat WHd

control .

Yow

can· WHd and
feed In one pen
of the tPrtdr\

CDrjtrolt dahdellon, plantain,

cl'llckweecL
knotweed. lag

SHOW MOM YOUR LOVE:
IS GROWING

vtlleteblltt

COVtrl 7,500 lq .

2J lb. btt

Hlb. b.g

$795
1978 FAIRMONT FUTURA 2 DR $4195
1974 CHEV. C.lO PICKUP

CUBE STEAK

V -8, P .S., P. B .• Aula . trans.

6 cy l. auto trans., air cond., radio, low mileage,
local owner .

1976 MUSTANG II COBRA

Boston

Butt Style

ARMOUR

. V-6, 4 speed

.$2995

tra~s. , P. S.• P . B.

Vienna Sausage
Vapex Interior and Exterior and Aqua·
Satin Latex Enamel only.
rEFI='ECTfVE THROUGH MAY 8,1980

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

0.

•

lR I

Where else can you get so
much in a small economy car?
Bring the family in for a
Fiesta test drive. And make
sure you get our price. There
may never be a better time to
buy than right now!

•Upto40MPG
•Front wheel drive
• Rack and pinion steering
•MacPherson front suspen·
sion
•Michelin steel -belted radial
tires
•1.6 liter engine with 4·speed
manual transmission,
and more!

Well loaded .

1M MaNn Countl•"
Mlln ltrwt
'omen
ltortHIUr'll ltiCittiiM
.liCk W. ClfltY, M1r.
p=
MIUCioMCtatlzMII.M.
• .
, . , m·t111

'2495

'34991
MOD£L
ASM7A2K
24,000 BTU

. FURNITURE &amp; .JEWELRY
MIDDLEPORT OHIO '

orester

.lung- Mfg.

&amp;SERVICE, INC.

BY BUTTERICK

We have a complete line of
water heaters, w/h elements,
window parts, doors, windows,
cabinet doors and drawer fronts,
hitch balls, wide load signs,
faucets, interior and exterior
lights, steps, roof coating,
mobile home screwdrivers,
awnings, skirting, anchors, etc.,
plus a wide range of items
available through our catalog.

SLAB BACON
59
·
e
LB.
,
'

WHOLE
SLAB

___

The semi-wedge heel adds extra co mfort.

99~

With Coupon In Monday's Paper

WESTERN WEAR -

support and styli ng.

10 til 5 M.f·f

10 til 12Th.
10 til 2 Sat.

.

WORK SHOES -

WE STERN WJ:.-\B -

BELTS

SHOES, INC.
"'MIINie Ctf ttM UIIIPtf

o.·M.~S.t.

Bloc•"
Pom.,.oy, 0 .

IOOTI\s
Fri . y111

~a11's

$a11's 03oot 5~of

BELTS

Middleport, Ohio
(614 ) 1M -

45760

shoe repair shop

5gop

03oot

Avenu~

· Middleport, Ohio

45760

(814J · 992 - SSM

s...

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
OO.IT·YOURSELF
HARDWARE HEADQUARTERS

SPECIALS .

....o~

FOR ALL YOUR
DO-IT-YOURSELF
HOME IMPROVEMENT
SUPPLIES SEE
CROSS HARDWARE

SEE OUR EXCITING
COLLECTION OF DRESSES,

•HOUSEWARES
eWALLPAPER
•PAINTS
e ELECTRICAL SU~PLIES
• PLUMBING SUPPLIES

BLOUSES, SKIRTS, tUNICS, .

PANlS &amp;SPORlSWEAR.

42".Ford Rotary Mower FREE will!
new Ford Lawn and Garden
=Tractor Pll'chase!

401

1

You save
t~r

lilt l i ne aGiti iSOH on

o~tcn n e

,11

11-..n 4Mg,.oe n tflct o• *'' '1~0 "'O"'f' 1

DIET
RITE
AND

SUPERIOR
E·Z.f.ARVE
BONElESS

RC HAMS
8 PACK 16 OZ. BTLS.
lor your SILAOIUMe class ring. In add~on to your name
and favorite activity, you get these extra features !mf to

34" Ford Rotary Mower
FREE with Ford Ll-80

personalize your ring.

Lawn Tramr Purchase!
You save

Winning $50.00 Script Money
Ruth Farmer
Middleport, 0.

262

1

p

~ u r tr-,: ~'r ~rdrt''l&lt;l ll ~ un ~ ~rrlrl)r
nll.l flrt1 1 ' 0 ~~~-~ tMA'N I

PLUS •••

See~Sew
.,_

Yousave

-

124

1

29
Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 5
Sat. 9to4
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
992·3831

992-5567

MAIN ST. ·

•

1

n'uu

,

M .. TII . . f., .. F . ti•IS
Wtd . l!il I

s•''"''1

INITI.o.L INLAIO
INTO THE STONE

SU~&lt;tUTE

298 2nd St, POMEROY, OHIO
·STORE HOURS:
MON-SAT. 8 AM TO 10 Phl
10 AM TO 10 PM

'

STONE

SILAOIUM class rings are ma~ frOm a fine j8weJMs
stainless metal that is stronger, lighter and more durable
than gotd. lts brilliant lustre lasts forever .. Bring in this ad for
yourspeclai price on SILADIUM class n~s by ArtCarved1

W•nter events on one Side. summer on the olhe1.

DALE HILL FORD TRACTOR, ·JNC.
HIW Ma•n
f'()m r rov. 0 .

"RE&amp;URST
STONE

A ful l-color "Guide to the 1980 Olympics."'

1

Be read)' to go AND mow on a new Ford . .. These
are /Jm/ft.•CI time offers. so come in soon to

l*oT

W.SCOJ
LINOfR STONE

FREE

Grass Catcher FREE wilh new
Ford Riding Mower Tractor!

STRAWBERRIES
.,

WORK SHOES -

318 North Second

318 North Second Avenue

FRESH CALIFORNIA

FULL QUART

*" 53081

~y. - - · Wloc
Winning A sso Bond
Roy A. Ellis
Rutland, 0 .

-&lt;:omprete shoe repair shop;

Tina
N- 6- 10, M-5-1 0

RC or DIET RITE COLA
8 PACK

~ousA. s1oco raa2. JU_·-··--'

Tina . An all-na t ural look in brown llo;ahor

New Haven, W. VI.

HOME SALES

• No convers ion

INGELS

Helping you say it right

0

OPEN:

kit neederl
Reg. Price S56?
NOWS499

PH •. 992-264-t 01 M2-6291

TINA

SEE &amp; SEW
PATTERNS

Reg. Price 549!1 NOW

Portables

f&gt;LENTY OF FRfE PA~KtNG

......., ' - " ' · -

405 5th St.

ACCESSORIES

· All Convertible· '

'1•:1. 1. rtAtN • Pot'IIAOY, OtiiO ..., . .

ONLY

GREEN'S SALES ·

PARTS &amp;

·

OHIO

I~

natural comfort

Model
AC053A7A
S,OOOBTU
Only $179.95

AT:

this one won 't last long.

PH. 992-2174
500 E. MAIN POM

CONDITIONERSi

COMPLETE FLORIST

4 cyl. automatic. Hurry

SMITH-NELSON
MOTORS

ROOM AIR

'53995

Middleport, Ohio

Li tt e r Bin~ ·

CHEVETIE

8,000 BJU

KINGSBURY

Door

V6 Turbo-charged . VB
power, V6 economy .

PROMPT DELIVERY

MODEL
AK085A1

OF SHOES

• Exclusive

1977 CHEVROLET

-==--=·=
··

heritage
house

All Trash
Compactors

'4695

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

ONLY

• Buy it today.
Use rl
ton ight.

automatic.

You 'll be sending her fresh carnations for the times
you lost your shoes. Daisies for the times you lost
yoursel f. And an e~c l usive FTD hand-decorated
Posy Paii TM for the times you forgot to re member.
can or visit us today. We can send the Big Hug •·
iust about anywhere ... the FTD way.

Mod"l
.A C083AIA
5.000 BTU
,Only $29.95

Whtte or Black Patent

All Front·
Loading
Portables

motor,

'4395

'WJWh~;

FRONT WHEEL DRIVE FORD Fl ESTA
AT PAT HILL FORD.
"YOU'LL LIKE IT!"

V6

1978 BUICK REGAL

"hnl... -011111

·

1979 PONTIAC
PHOENIX 2 DR
A.C. low mileage.

•2795

1299
Pomeroy Landmark .

Mrs . Millard VanMeter
Ph. 992· 2039
106 Butternut Ave.
Or992·5721
Pomeroy, Ohio
We accept all major credit cards and we
wire flowers everywhere.

ThomMcAn.

KltchenAid Is
dOSing OUt their
• Mu lti -level
CUrrent
was h lets you
dishwasher line.
load -as-vou·hke .H
urry.1 l'1m1"ted Su

6 cyl. aula., A.C. AM·
FM . The cle anest.

85

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

new higher heels. A Thorn Girl is a
sophisticatc'd lady in City Slickers by

All
Built-Ins

1976 FORD GRANADA

SERVICE,
"LOW PRICES, TOO"
VISIT THE FOLKS. AT:

•Hydrangeas
•Azaleas
•Combination Pots
•Cut Flowers
•Potted Mums
•Hanging Planters
•Corsages
• PermanP.nt Flowers

City Slickers are the perfect shoes foi'(loing out
on the town. Unique fashion uppers on the

N. 2nd Ave.

FOR FRIENDLY, FAST,
TOP _QUALITY

There' s no one quite li ke Mom and we think she
deserves somethi ng sensational on "her" day .
That's why our lovely bouquet announces "You' re
The Greatest." It can be delivered anywhere in this
ar ea or almost anywhere in the world thr ough our
affiliated florists. Send thiS bOuquet ahd you ca n
make this Mother' s Day one of the "Greatest" ever!

'1HE WAY AMERICA SENDS LOVE"

TRY ITJ ·

20% OFF

'4.25
'7,99

M:Q.tl. .

5 oz. 39~
79c LB.
WAID CROSS'
SONS GROCERY

City Slickers by ~"'-cAn:

YOUR BUICK, PONTIAC AND
GMC DEALER. LET US ORDER
. YOU A NEW CAR TODAY.

lawns.

(29·503S-7)

'I~

HER 'S DAY
IS MAY 11 .

· trHS,

": p•·»cs•

MOTHER'S DAY· SUNDA'C MAY 11

.,

�•
&amp;-The Dally Sentinel, F\me.'Oy·Middleport, 0., Tueaday,Aprl129,1980

7- The-Daily Sentinel. Pomerov-Middleoort. 0 .. Tuesdav. Aoril29, 1980

Golf carts go where lizards fear to tread
PALM DESERT, Calif. (AP) Wilbur Mayhew ~lands
a rocky
little lmoll. At Ids back stretcbes the
flat, brown desert - miles and miles
Ill it - a barren landscape sliced by
sanc!;y stream)wls, dotted by dull·
sreen thorny shrubs.
In front of him lies a goU course manicured greens with flags nuttaring on 18 grassy fairways lined
with pabn trees and ringed by lakes.
Elec:tric ·carts dash about like the
lizards that once scampered over•
nearbyiiB!Iddunes.
"That's what they're doing to the
Great American Desert," aald
Mayhew, &amp;G-year-old desert rat,
professor of zoology at the UniversJty of California-Riverside and ex·
pert on a little creature called the
fringe-toed lizard.
Mayhew said the goU course once

on

looked like the rest of the desert.
"And I expect that when the water
table gets too low for Irrigation, that
It'll look that way again. In another
100 years, or 1,0110."
But until then, the desert pays for
the goU courses and modem cities
that sprout beside interstate highways throughout the Southern
Califomla desert + a surprisingly
diverse region the size Ill Ohio.
"rt gives the appearance of being
very, very rugged," Mayhew !!Bid.
"lnJuly(whentemperaturescanhit
125 degrees or more), you'd swear It
can take anything. But It can't. The
desert 15 very fragile. It takes a long,
longtirneforthedeserttorecover."
Mayhew Ia the wildlife expert on a
citizens committee that worked
three years with the U.S. Bureau of
Land Management to mold a

NOTICE OF

FOR INCimASES AND
ADJUSI'MENTS IN
RATES AND CHARGES

!-party fla.t, 2-party flat or 1-party measured exchange service in representative
commumhes are shown below. (Monthly allowances and the charge for additional
local messages over the allowances for measured service are not being changed.)
Rate
Band
1
1

Washington
Court House

2
2

Zanesville

3
3

Springfield

4
4

charges for telecommunications

Martins Ferry

4
5

Youngstown

5
5

Canton

5
6

Akron. Toledo
Dayton

6
6
6
7

Columbus

7

8
Cleveland
(

9
10

1Denotes Decrease

Tariff

(P.U.C.O.
No. 4)

Dataphone Digital
Service}'ariff

(P.U.C.O.
No. I )

Mobile Telephone
Service Tariff

(P.U.C.O.
No. 2)

Facilities for
Other Common
Carriers Tariff

(Pending)

Message Toll
Telephone Service
. Tariff
'

(P.U.C.O.
No. 7)

· Wide Area Tele·

(P.U.C.O.
No. I)

oommunications

Service Tariff
Private·Une
Service Tariff

(P.U.C.O.
No.2)

Any penon, firm, corporation or
association may file, pursuant to
Sectloa 4909J9 the Ohio Revised
Code, objedloru to the proposed

or

. Increases and adjustments in rates
· and charges, and to the proposed
daao..,.lo reguiotlom and pradices
affedln&amp; the same. The objections
may aUege that such application
oontalns proposab that lire unjust
and dlocmninotory or ................
Recommendations which differ
frGm the application may be made
by.the staff of the Public UtUities
Commliaion of Ohio or by Inter·
venin&amp; putles and may be adopted
by the Commission.

0

2·Party
Flat
6.95
8 .80
26.6%
7.15
8 .80
23.1%
7.25
8 .80
21.4%
7.50
8.80
17.3%
7.50
9.40
25.3%
8.10
9.40
16.1%
8.10
9.65
19.1%
8.35
9.65
156%
8 .35
10.10
20.1%
8.50
10.30
21.2%
9.40
11.30
20.2%

1-Party
Measured
5.50
6 .00
9.1%
5.70
6.00
5.3%
6.00
6.00

4%
6.30
6.00
(5.0%)
6 .30
6.30

4%
6.95
6.30
(9.4%)
6.95
6.95

or

thus raising or lowering the rates
charged for basic serviCes when

the number of telephones which
customers can call toll-free exceeds
or drops below established limits
for a specified period of lime.

OJYTIONAL EQUIPMENT
&amp; SER~CES
Rates and charges for mosi optional equipment and services would
be increased . For example, the
monthly charge for a residence extension would increase from the
presen t rate of $1.20 to $1.45.
Varying increases also would affect
such·options as Princess ~ Trimline ~
and Design Line• telephones;
Touch-A-Malic® phones; Custom
Calling features; Touch-Tone• ser·
vice; additional directory listings,
and non-publi shed service.
The monthly customer cTedit for

7.30
6.95
(5.0%)
7.30
7.30

4%

creased. However, these elements

generally do not apply when resi·
dence customers usc an Ohio Bell
PhoneCentcr Store.

4%
8.75
8.75

PRE WIRING
Appropriate charges would be
applied at the time or installation
of inside wire in residential dwellin~. Such work, commonly known

4%

T?e ave~age percentage increases in monthly rates for business customers
for 1,-l,me, l~lme rotary or PBX trunk measured service in representative com-

mumlles are shown below. (Monthly allowances and the charge for additional local
messages over the allowances are not being ~hanged .)

as "prewiring;· is done only if the
inside wall covt!ring and ceilinR;
covering are not yet in place-.

(Current ly, charges for such wiring are applied on a per-set basis
at the time telephone service is

installed.)
Rate
Band
1
1

1·llne
Measured Measured
Measured• Rotary Line PBX Trunk
Aberdeen
Present
13.05
15.05
18.05
Proposed
17.15
19.95
19.95
%IncreaSe 31 .4%.
32.6%
10.5%
Washington
2
Present
13.35
15.40
18.35
Court House
2
Proposed
17.15
19.95
19.95
%Increase 28.5%
2~ . 6%
87%
Zanesville
3
Present
' 13.65
15.75
18.65
3
Proposed
17.15
19.95
19.95
%Increase 25.6%
26.7%
70%
Springfield
4
Present
13.95
16.10
18.95
4
Proposed
17.15
19.95
19.95
%Increase
22.9%
23.9%
5.3%
Martins Ferry 4
Present
13.95
16.10
18.95
5
Proposed
17.80
20.60
20.60
%Increase 27.6%
28.0%
8.7%
Youngstown
5
Present
14.60
16.85
19.60
5
Proposed
17.80
20.60
20.60
%Increase 21 9%
22.3%
5.1%
Canton
5
Present
14.60
1685
19.60
6
Proposed
18.05
2085
20.85
%Increase 236%
23.7%
6.4%
Akron. Toledo 6
Present
14.85
17 15
19.85
8
Proposed
18.05
20.85
20.85
%Increase 216%
21 .6%
5.0%
Dayton
6
Present
14.85
17.15
19.85
7
Proposed
18.70
21 .50
21 .50
%Increase 25.9%
25 .4%
8.3%
Columbus
7
Present
15.20
17 .55
20.20
8
Proposed
19.15
21.95
21 .95
%Increase 26.0%
25.1%
87%
Cleveland
9
Present
18.45
18.95
21.45
10
Proposed
20.75
23.55
23.55
%Increase 26.1%
24.3%
98%
• Same rates apply lor semi-public coin service.

No further installations for Cen-

MESSAGE TOLL
SER~CE

(INTRASTATE LONG
DISTANCE)
Charges for many long distance
calls within Ohio would be reduced ,
especially those dialed direct by
customers without operator assis·
lance. The customer-dialed day
rate would be discounted 30 parcent during the evening hours and
40 pereent during the night and
weekend time periods. Charges for
operator-handled calls and person·
to-person ca lls generally would be
increased .

WATS
The number of hours included in
the basic rate for Full Business Day
Wide Area Telecommunicalions

Service (WATS) would be reduced
from 240 to 200. The·olle would
remain the same for outward WATS
and would be increased from $945 to
Sl,040 for inward WATS (~nown
as the 800 Service). For ten-hour
measured WATS, the rates would

pending upon the type of

te ms in service or scheduled for

installation would continue to be
furnished, added to or rearranged
only if they remain in service at
the same location.
The monthly rates for Centrex
S41 for the 12-key position and
$49 for the 30-key ·position. The
monthly rate for Centrex stations
would increase in~ r:angc o( $1.35

to S3 .15. depending on the exchange rate band, the number of
stations and whether the system
is CU or CO, Type I or Type II .

PRIVATE BRANCH
EXCHANGE
(PBX) SERVICES
Most manual and electromechanical dial PBX's now offered by the
Company are no longer manufactured . Therefore, no new installa-

tions would be made. Such PBXs in
service will be furnished to existing
customers as long as they remain in
place at the same location. Electromechanical dial PBXs also are
provided with the Private System
Service offering and this provision
would apply to that service as weU.
Rates for most manual and electromechanical PBXs would be increased substantially. For example,
increases in the monthly rate for
the common equipment associated
with such PBX's would be : $133
for a 756 PBX, 155 for a 701 PBX
and Sl95 for a series IOOB PBX.
Rates and charges for the
Dimension• PBX generally would
be increased, although some decreases also are proposed and some
rates and charges would not change,
Significant increases are also proposed in installation charges and
service establishment charges for
these PBX's.

Rates and charges for the Com
Key• telephone systems would
generally be increased. For key
telephone sets, proposed changes
in monthly rates range from a decrease of 50 cents to an increase
of 13.25 per set,dependingon the
number of keys in use. Increases
also are proposed for most optional
features and equipment associated
with these systems and sets.

MISCELLANEOUS
PRODUCTS&amp;
SER~CES
The following items are iUustrative of changes in rates and
charges for some of the miscclla·
neous products and services. Rates
and charges for other products and
services may be found in the Com·
. pany proposed tariff sheets.
• For various equipment items
associated with Telephone An-

s

swering Service, increases in

For Manual Mobile Telephone

for a minimum-load machine

Service, proposed increases for

to 1368 for a medium-load
s~stem.

Business exchange service will continue to be limited to measured service
only; no flat rate business basic exchange service will be offered.
Charges for one-way optional Extended Area Service ~nd for Community
Calling Service would generally be changed in line with related basic exchange
and toll services.

equipment range from S7 to $l2
for monthly rates and from $1.80
lo 128 for non-recurring charges,
depending upon the item. the exchange access line furnished lor
all Mobile Telephone Service would

The incremental charges and zone rates, which some customers pay in

receive the same increases as the

addition to their basic rates, would be eliminated.
Specific rates depend on the rate band applicable to a specific location. In
various locations the number of telephones which customers can call toll·free has
increased, placing them in the next higher rate band where higher monthly rates
apply. In addition, the rates in the four smallest rate bands wiD be raised to the
same level in order to simplify the overall rate band structure.
Services not being changed:
• Monthly allowances for local calls under measured service and the
charge for additional local calls over the allowances.
• Monthly aUowances .for calls to Directory Assistance and. the
charges for additional calls over the allowances.
• Local coin telephone calls.

business individual line rates in the
appropriate exchange rate band.

PRIVME LINE SERVICE)

(SPECIAL CIRCUITS)
Substantial increases are proposed in rates and charges for
special circuits lurnished for COn·
linUOU&lt; and DOIK'OOtinUOUS property,
foreign exchange and foreign cen·
tral oHke service. Increases also
are proposed for private line channels and associated equipment.

,,
I

FLEXIBLE PRICING
(MINIMUM LEVEL
.
PRICING) The Company is proposing
minimum level pricing for certain

communications systems and equipmen I . For such systems and equipment , rates and charges will be
identified a&gt; a minimum level only.
The maximum level of such rates
and charges would be two times
the minimum level. The applicable
rates and charges which may be
anywhere within the range or the
minimum and the maximum levels
would be covered in a price list
furnished to the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
Not less than twenty days prior
to the effective date or any changes
in the rates and charges for such
systems and equipment, the Company would furnish lo the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio a new
price list reflecting such changed
rates and charges.

TAX ADJUSTMENT
The Company also is requesting permission to adjust its rates

and charges when its expenses
change as a result or changes in
its total annual local, state and
federal (except federal excise tax)
tax expense that is allocated to
intrastate service.

The lax expense would be com·
puled each year on March 1 and
the tax adjustment would apply
only if changes in tax rates resulted
in cumulative increases or decreases
in tax expense of more than $2
million. If applicable, new rates
would be put into effect 20 days
after being filed with the Commission.
~·1bdem•rll

of AT6-T )

KEY TELEPHONE
SYSTEMS &amp; EQUIPMENT

MOBILE
TELEPHONE SER~CE

vice and be reduced for outwar.d
service.

recurring charge options, deequipment.

• The flat rate for interconnecting each mobile unit of miscellaneous common carriers with
the telecommunications net;
work would .increase 35 cents
per month.
• The monthly rates for Exhibi·
lion Hall Service would increase
for both management and exhibitor stations.
• Increases are proposed in rates
for Airport Service, including
non-restricted and semirestricted stations, PBX trunk
lines and interconnecting lines.
• Proposed increases for data
tra~smitting an.d receiving
eqwpment range from IOcents
to $56 in monthly rates, from $2
~-~53 in OOO'recurring ~

The prayer of the Application
requests the Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio to do the following:
(al Find that the Companys present rates and charges and the
regulations and practices affecting
the same are unjust , unreasonable
and insufficient to yield reason
able compensation for the service.
rendered ;
(b) Find that the rates and charges
and regulations and practices proposed are just and reasonable and
will provide not more than a fair
and reasonable rate of return on
the value of the Company's property
actually used and useful for the
convenience of the public;
(c) Approve the filing of the proposed schedule sheets contained
in Schedule &amp;I of the Application
modified to reflect such revisio.;
thereof as may become effective,
pursuant to orders of the Commission,during the interim between
the filing of the Application and
the date upon which the schedule
sheets become effective;
(d) Order that the proposed
schedule sheets become effective
forthwith ;
(el Approve the withdrawal 0 (
the present schedule sheets contained in Schedule E·2 of the
Application;
(fl Grant such other and furiher
relief as the Company is reasonably entitled to in the premises.
The fonn of this notice has been
approved by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.

TilE OmO BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY

Helen Help Us

Collegian complains
roommate no playboy
BY HELEN AND SUE BOTl'EL
Special eorreapoadeata
Dear Helen and Sue:
r have a roommate problem. He
cramps my lifestyle. The jerk thinks
college is for studying, not lor fun.
He insists on gotng to bed before
11 :30 every single night. He COOlplains when my stereo is on .after
that. He gets upset when I have
women friends over after his IJed.
time.
Whenever I have the most
minuscule trace ol alcohol In the
room he insists on airing It out so the
fumes won't infest his clothes.
There's a definite rule against
smoking, of course, even by friends.
He won't listen to reason. What's a
guy to do?
CONFUSED
COlLEGIATE
DEAR CON. COL. :
Make a change: either of roommate or lifestyle. You two have as
much in common as Guideposts and
Playboy magazine. - HELEN AND

and fr&lt;lm S2 lo S369 in non·

trex CU service and for Centrex

monthly rates would range up
to $34.lncreases in non-recurring charges would range from
$5 to 142.
• Increases in monthly rates for
Automatic Announcement Service would range from $4.50

remain the same for inward ser-

this much will always be natural,"
he !!Bid.
Deep Canyon contains about 101
species of plants, from the delicate
desert lavender to creosote busblll
older than written history. And 200
animal apecies from desert bigbonl
sbeep to sidewinder rattlesnakes to
hummingbinlshavebeelllpotted.
Mayhew spends several days a
week trying to catalog their number
and variety. One ol Ids route&amp;
followsadrystreambed-arelative
oasis that wtnda through the
scrublands.
Mayhew describes the brush as he
goes: a gray-green brittle bush that
seems to grow out ol solid rock and
promises a butst of yellow flowers In
the spring; pale green chUpBrO!!B
with long red buds; cheesebush,
with pale flowers and fragile greeit
stems.

CO service in locations served by
No. 5 Crossbar electmmechanica~
central offices would be made. Sys-

attendant positions would increase

vided by a customer instead of by
Ohio Bell would be increased from
the present rate of 65 cents to 90
cents.
Some elements of the basic
installation charge would be in-

7.50
7.50

· CENTREX

The Company is proposing to·
systematically reclassifr an ex·
change, assigning it automatically
to the higher or lower rate band ,

each telephone instrument pro-

4%

BUSINESS

charges for telecommunications

Cenernl Exchange

Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change

1·Party
Flat
8 .70
10.80
24.1%
8 .90
1080
21.4%
9 .20
10.80
174%
9 .50
1080
13.7%
9 .50
11 .45
20.5%
10.15
11 .45
12 .8%
10.15
11 .80
16.3%
10.50
11 .80
12.4%
10.50
12.30
17.1%
10.70
12.65
18.2%
11 .95
13.90
16.3%

"They bulldozed them to make a
trsilerpark."
So It goes. Wiry little mesquite
trees are dying because the water
table that fed them for centuries has
fallen below the tap roots that reach
· deep into the earth.
Mayhew said the wells that quench the thirst, water the lawns and fill
the swimming pool5 of desert
residents are depleting the desert's
most precious commodity: water.
"When I bring my students out
here, they think they see a Jot rl
animals," Mayhew said. "But
they're not seeing 10 percent of what
I used to see when I first came here.
Twenty years ago, aU this was
naturaJ and I thought it would
alwaysbethatway."
UO.Riverslde owns
controls
l!D,OOO acres near Palm Desert called
the Deep Canyon R$Se. "At least

SYSTEMATIC
RECLASSIFICATION

The average percentage changes in monthly rates for residence customers for

Pursuant to the requirements of
Section 4909.19 of the Ohio Revised
Code, The Ohio Bell Telephone
Company hereby gives notice that
on February 29, 1980,it filed with
the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio an Application (PUCO Docket
No. 79-1184-TP-AIR) for authority
to incre.ase and adjust its rates and

services to all customers or the
Ohio BeD Telephone Company and,
in addition, affects the rates and
charges for Message Toll Service.
(Intrastate Long Distance Service)
and certain other services governed
by concurrences of other telephone
companies serving all other subscribers in the State of Ohio.
The affocted Ohio BeD Telephone
Company tariffs are:
Exchange Rate
(P.U.C.O.
'}'ariff
No.3)

=

RESIDENCE

Aberdeen

services and to change its regula·
tions and practices affecting the
same.
This notice contains the subsiBnce and prayer of the Application.
However, any interested party de·
siring oomplete detailed infonnation
with respect to aU affected rates,
charges, regulations and practices
should inspect a copy of the Application and all attached schedules
at the office of the Commission,
180 East Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio. A. copy of the application
and the proposed tariff sheets is
also available for inspection during
oonnal business hours at any public
business office or PhoneCenter
Store of Ohio Bell. ln addition,lhe
proposed tariffs were mailed to
the mayors and legislative authorities of all municipalities in Ohio
on November 27, 1979, as part of
the Comnany's notification of its
intent to file.
This application affects rates and

Califomla desert. A series ol public
hearings on the proposal concludes
In Los Angeles on Wednesday.
"Thla desert plan is the only chance we've got," he said. "You just
can't bave everybody out here dotng
as they damn please, not anymore.
There's so many people that they
just love the desert to death."
Mayhew sees major battles In the
offing: "There's going to be blood on
thefioorbeforethisthtng'ssettled."
Conlpetinginterests-fromseekers
of solitude to dune buggy drivers,
miners to subdividers - aU are
demanding shares In the desert.
"There are some really B1lliiZing
thinplin this world," Mayhew said.
A lot ol them, like the fringe-toed
lizard, are found In the California
desert. Indeed, sU the fringe-toed

LOCALEXCHANGESER~CE

APPUCATION
OF TilE omo BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY

lizards In the world live on the windblown Sand dunes of the Coachellll
VaUey.
The ~inch lizard has spiny fringes
on its back feet, giving the reptile a
pair of "snowshoes" when It dashes
over the Sand on Its hind legs. When
danger threatens, the lizard dives
headlong into the Sand where it can
breathe because of complex equl~
ment In its eyes, nose and f!lOUth.
But the little lizard, so perfectly
adaptedhe for the Sand, can survive
now re el5e- "If you eliminate
~dy al'e&amp;!l, you eliminate .
arumals. They can't live on the
golf course."
Ma he tells of the
sandYd.:es on the :-:o:~
bustllngdeserttownrlPalmDesert.
"I thought those dunes would be
there for 1,0110 years," he said.

pt"C!p08ed Jand.use plan for the

Mock wedding teaches of marriage, divorce

SUE

the left, Tonia Ash, Jenell Kelly, Tauuny Nutt, Jeannie Roush, bridesmaids; and Todd Morrison, Chris Wouds, Eric Scites, Kyle Rupe, and Bob
Evans, groomsmen; with Lee Lewis, minister, behind the bridesmaids.

CONNIE MOSSMAN was the bride, Randy Osborne, the groom, In
the Meigs mock wedding Monday. The attenilants seated front were
Melinda Demosky, aid of honor, and Jerry Howard, best man, and from
Meigs High School was the scene
of a wedding Monday.
... a mock wedding, that is.
It was a part of the course in
family living taught by Mrs. Karen
Goins and designed to give students
a realistic look at what it's like to be
married and have a family.
Students discussed and decided on
the type of wedding they would like
to have, and then went into the com.
munity to ·check costs. They found
tbat tuxedos, wedding gowns,
bridesmaids gowns, tiered · cakes,
photos, flowerS, and ail the incidentals such as paying the
minister, renting the church, and
providing gifts for the attendants ad·
ded up to lots of money. It was a
lesson In economics.
They studied wedding protocol,
the rules of etiquette, the ceremony,
and the mock wedding was carried
out in popular tradition.
The music room at Meigs was
transformed into a church scene and
featured a "stained glass" window
created by some of the students. The
altar Dowers were lawn variety dandelions and violets - in a green

pitcher, and the pews were marked
with crepe paper bows.
Guests were the students of the
claas and they were escorted to their
seats by the ushers. Pre-nuptial
music was provided by Unda Eason
at th~ piano and Lynetta Whitttngn,

And then tnere were ptctures.
Now that the wedding is over, Mrs.
Goins will begin the study of life In
the family situation and parenting
along with the satisfactions and
frustrations.
In mid-May, the issue of divorce
will be presented since, as pointed

vocalist.

The minister, Lee Lewis, per·
formed that traditional Cl)remony
with the exchange of vows and rings.
The bride was Connie Mos,sman, the
groom Randy Osborne. Their honor
attendants were Melinda Demoskey
and Jerry Howard. Bridesmaids
were Tonia Ash, Jenell KeUy, Tammy Nutt, and Jearme Roush, and the
groomsmen were Todd Morrison,
Chris Wouds, Eric Scites, Kyle Rupe
and Boh Evans.
And just like in a real wedding, the
groom kl5sed the bride at the con·
elusion of the ceremony.
At the reception held in the
cafeteria for the wedding party and
their guesta, the bride and groom cut
the traditional tiered wedding cake
bak:ed In a home economics claas by
Susan Swan and Mrs. Goins. The
cake was
with punch.
. served
..
.

r--

I

- -·

Mason County

News Notes ·I·

out by Mrs. Goins, about 50 percent
of all marriages end in divorce. A
lawyer will he Invited to discuss the
legal ramifications of divorce, and
there will be a panel of divQrced men
and women to talk to the students
about the · emotional problems of
divorce.

TOPS elects officers

· Officers were elected when the
TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly)
Club OH 1363, met recently at
Help!Dg Hands meet
Cheshire.
MASON - The Helping Hand
Elected were Freda Henderson,
members met at the home of Carol
leader; Edith Gardner, weight
Alexander on April 9. Mrs. Lucy
recorder; Helen Spears, assistant
Johnson presented devotions. Her
weight recorder; Mamie Stephentheme was taken from Psalm 6. Lois
Young gave ~o readings, "A . son, secretary; and Mrs. Spears,
treasurer. They were installed by
Prayer for Peeling Potatoes" and
Shari
Colmer.
"Showing My Age." Joy Foreman
Pam
Nitz was the best loser for the
shared a reading taken from Robie
month
of March with a loss of sill
Robinson's colwnn, "I Was Cross
pounds.
She was sung to by the club
With the Children."
members
and given a gift. A report
·President, Mrs. Earl Ingels anon club contests was given.
nounced tbat the Spring Luncheon is
Following their meeting the group
to be held at the Holiday Inn in
went to the home of Mrs. Hendef'S01l
Gallipolis.
for a diet lunch. Plans were made
The May meeting is to be held at
for a float in the Regatta Parade.
the Historical Center with a potluck
There will be a "Miss Firecracker"
dinner and election of officers. •
contesHn July. Two new members
The club members were saddened
were welcomed. Information on
at the death or Addle Brown. A Silent
at an earlier stage," Michael said.
joining the club can be obtained
Prayer was offered in remembrance
The latest information on cancer's
from Mrs. henderson, 992-7350,
of Maggie Johnson and Addie.
detection, diagnosis and treatment
Pomeroy, or Mrs. Gardner, 367-7602.
The lesson, "How Food, Nutrients
is provided to health professionals
Weigh-in
takes place every Monday
and Drugs Interact" was taught by
through the Society's journals and
morning
between
10 and 10:30 a.m.
Mary Thabet. Mary said, "It is imconferences.
For
the
mOI'Ith
of
March there was
portant to know which medicines are
Direct patient and community serloss
in
weightof21
pounds.
a
total
to be taken with food or on an empty ·
vice used nearly 18 cents of each
stomach such as penicillin. Antacids ·
dollsr In 1979. "The Society's service
should not be taken with ora.nge
and rehabilitation programs help to
TIE FOR QUEEN
juice or col;ls. Tetracycline is not to
improve the quality of life for cancer
Jo
Ann
Eads and Marcia Barrett
be taken with milk. Water pills or
patients and ease the heavy burden
tied
for
"Queen
for the Week" at the
diet pills are not to be taken when
cancer imposes on them and their
meeting
of
TOPS
OH 1456, Rutland,
drinking alcQhol.
families," Michael said.
last
week.
Runner-up
was Beulah
Gladys Reynolds wQn the door
" Close to a dime (9.4 cents) was
Wright.
.
prize.
used lor the national programs of
Mrs. Barrett read Information on
Members present were Gladys
cancer education and service to
state recognition day to be held May
Reynolds, Gladys Riley, Lucy Johncoordinate what is done locally with
9 and 10 in Akron. All chapter reporson, Bessie Ingels, Joy Foreman,
the overall cancer control effort,"
ts were given. The weight recorder
Doris Roberts, Lois Young, Mary
Michael said.
reported
a net loss for the chapter
Thabet, Coral Alexander, and a
"Tight control was held on lund.
and
members
were reminded to take
guest, Catherine Haynes.
raising costs this year despite the inQne Item fQr the fun money auction
fiationary spiral the country is ex·
to be held at the next meeting. PerUMWMEETS
pecting," Michael said. "Our fund.
sons
Interested in visiting or
MASON - The Mason United
raising costs were kept at an acbecoming
a member of the chapter
Metliodist Women met last Monday
cepteble 16.3 percent in 1979 and the
are
asked
to telephone 742-2126 for
evening at the church with Mrs. Ray
administration costs at a low 5.790."
information.
Proffitt, president, presiding.
" By keeping our costs low and our
It was announced that the May
output to the community high we can
Fellowship meeting for Methudist
continue to reach, teach and help
churches will be held on May 2 at
people in the light against cancer.
Aprll., lJIO
White Church.
Bonds of frtendahip and/or your marriage will be
We shall continue to do so only with
A book study, "Parables of Jesus"
Wengthened this coming year. For those of you
the generosity of the people of Meigs
is held prior to the group's monthly who are unwed, there Lsa good chance you'll find
your one and only.
County. Your help is needed," sa)'ll
meeting. Lois Test was lesson leader TAURUS
(AprO 21-MaJ ZO) If a aituatioo ari3es
Michael.
today to put you ln the position where you must
for April.
take a aide, support your IonS-Ita~ pall, no
Attending the meeting were Sarah matter
how awliward It appean. Find out m&lt;ft
Spencer, Maxine Arnold, Helen Bar- ol what Ues ahead for you in lhe year loUowtng
yoor birthday by sendini for your copy ol A.otn&gt;
ton, Lois Test, Earlene Bumgard· Graph
Letter. MaU $1 for each to A.moG111ph,
ner, Joyce Carson, Lilah Zerkle, Box 139, Rodio City StaUon, N. Y. 10019. Be
TUESDAY
GEMIN1 (May 21-June 20) Tackle all thole unLODGE 363 F AND AM Tuesday Ctaudls Kirton, Margaret Pickens, rlnilllod projecta you've got lying around lhe
hoult. 1l&gt;t llaylng power needecf to complete
7:30 p.m. at Middleport Masonic
Gladys Riley, Evelyn Proffitt, Juiie lhemlswlthyoutodoy.
·
Temple. Work In apprentice degree.
VanMatre, Catherine Smith and · CANCER (JIIDI! Zl..Jaly !Z) lt may tab courage,
but tOO.Iy b the day you nUaht find Jt in ~r to
All master masons Invited.
Ramona Sydenstricker.
say IOIIlOIIllni difllcult l&lt;l allierld.
Mason
Penonals
LEO (Jalyls-Aay; IZ) A way may open toct.yto
DRUG AWARENESS meeting
acquire something you've been wanting for a
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Freddie
Thabet
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., at Modern
long time. Take advantq:e of it. OJancea are tt
visited In Beckley recently with his : won't be there tomorrow.
Woodlilen Hall In Burlingbam.
VIRGO (A... %3o&amp;!pt. IZI It Will mal:e thin.&lt;•
sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. euler
Refreshments will be served ; public
If you can see the humor ln a welahly
Asaff Rahal! and his two nephews sltw!Uon. to tact, ll could help I...., Ita ((l'lvltY.
invited.
LIBRA (Sept, Ill You might llnaUy oee
and families, Mr. and Mrs. Louis some
materl.al satns today from a ProJect on
' SOtl'mERN CHAPTER 453 of
RahaU and Congressman and Mrs. ·which you've wCM'ked. Your reward will be worOAPSE meeting, Southern High
thy olall your efforta.
Nick Joe Rahall.
SCORPIO 10&lt;1. M-Nov. 1!1 Tllo practical
School, 8 p.m . Tuesday to elect of· ·
Mrs. NickQI5 (Gail) Waseman and avenues you take to develop an Idea today w:W be
ficers.
the reason for the IUCCeSI of your project. Thoee
daughter, Amanda, visited for some down-to-tarth
wayaare winners.
WEDNESDAY
time with her grandparents, Mr. and SAGrrrARIIJll (Nft. Zlolloc:. !II You'll 1et
STOP SMOKING CUNIC, second
Mrs. Chester Oliver at Clifton. Gall's much further today by staytne behind the ll'tnel
session, Wednesday In east-west mother, Mrs. Joan Bennett, came and letting ........., with experience take lhe
reins - and the taocl oft your ahouldera.
dining room at Veterans Memorial and accompanied her daughter, CAPRICORN (De&lt;. JWu. Ill An older
Hospital 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Speaker Gail, and granddaughter to Fort oc:quatntance may c:une into the plclure todoy
and show you !low to find the answers to a puz·
will be Dr. Arnold Sattler.
Riley, Kansas, where Mrs. d.ing situation:. Follow hill or her Hdvit'l!! to the letter.
·
Waseman's husband is stationed. AQUARII!S IJaa. ..Feb. Ul Tllo fruita ol yOW'
Voouleld
Mrs. Bennett also visited her paren· tabormaybereadyl&lt;lharvesttoct.y.
will be in proporilon to the slze ol the lleld you
TOSEUFLOWERS
ts, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Oliver.
plowed and the nwnber.of aeells .you sowed.
The Ladles AUXiliary of the
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Williams l&gt;ll!CI!S !Feb. zt.Morchztl BephltOII&lt;lplllc.olond
Rutland Fire Department will be and son, Jeff, of Indian Head, Md. take the long-range view if you have a problem,
things wUI work out very well today. 1be
selling flowers for Mothers Day at visited several days with Mr. and
~rd. cola fact&amp; will show you the way.
the firehouse daily, May 5, through Williams' mother, Mrs. Clara AR.IE8 (\lardiii·Apr1111) Joint J&gt;U11Cj&gt;IIUOII la
the way to conquer any difficuft project that
May 10. A variety ol flowers and Williams and family.
might be confrontiM you. Cc:mblnlnl your talenta with another's male~ short work Ol the talk. ·
hanging baskets will be available.

I
I

By Aim• M•roh•ll

'Bellringers' named
The following !lave been named
Mental Health Bellringer Chairpersons for the May fund raising
campaign, announced Dudley F.
Briggs, M.D., president of the Mental Health Association of Ohio:
Margaret Neaselroad, for Chester;
Mrs. Dorothy M. Sayre, Letart
Falls; Steven Story, Middleport;
Mrs. Patty Gluesencamp, Portland;
Mrs. Alleyne Rees, Racine; Mrs.
Loren Benedum, Reedsville;
Margaret Edwards for Rutland, and
Mrs. Unda Ferrell, for Syracuse.
"The Bellringer campaign will
take place this year during May,
which is Mental Health Month,"
Briggs said. "Mental Health Month
Is an annual time to . focus on increasing awareness and un·
derstanding of mental health," he
added "and the Bellrtnger drive
will ~~~ tn with this effort.': Funds
raised in the Bellringer campsign
support the association's statewide
work in pubUc education about mental bealth and mental illneSS, and Its
advocacy efforts on he~ of the
mentally 111 and their families.
\,

.

Libra may see gains

Social Calendar

.

.

1.,

DEAR RAP:
HllW did our family cope with an
alcoholic (and terribly cruel and
dangerous) father? I couldn't stand
my mother being beaten more so I
took hia gun and told him to get out
or I'd shoot him. He thought I didn't
mean lt. The bullet went through bla
left shoulder and I have never been
sorry - ~cepl that it wasn't farther
down.
At the trial it all came out. My
lawyer pleaded self-defense and no
one blamed me.
Now Mlllll and u.s kids are In
another city and,into a good new !Ue.
I only wish we'd escaped sooner.
Some alcoholics can't be changed they use booze to excu.se their mean.
ness. - ALMOST A MURDERER
ATAGE15
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
TeD "Anonymous" there can be a
happy eudtng. For five years I hardly ever saw either of my parent&amp;
without a drink in their hands. They
were "mellow drunks" (eveningB
and weekend&amp;) but they functioned
fairly well at work.
One night my little brother
sneaked a bottle of vodka and drank
so much he almoet died. I guesa tbat
woke up Mom. They joined A.A. and
have been drY for sill montha. I know
they won't sUp. I just llnow It!

CARLIE

I

Cancer;where the money goes
· "People are always wondering
where their money g6es these days,
and the American Cancer Society
can t~ll them with pride that 78 cents
of every doUar contributed to the
Society in 1979 in Ohio was iilvested
directly in cancer control," said S.
Michael, public infonnation chairman of the American Cancer
Society, Meigs County Unit.
She was commenting on the start
of the Educational and Fund Raising
Cancer Crusade in Meigs County
which continues throughout the
month of April.
More thlin 31 cents or every doUar
contributed funded cancer researc~
nationally with $1.5 million su~
porting researchers in seven Ohio institutions. Twenty-two cancer
research projects in Ohio are
currently receiving funding by the
American Cancer Society.
Public and professional education
received 19 cents of each doUar.
Programs to teach people how to
·look for and recognize cancer's
signals and to understand the importance of early detection help to
increase people's chances of finding
cancer at the most treatable stages
- the beginning. "With present
medical knowledge we could be ser·
vtng about 131,000 more persons this
year if their cancers were detected

HELEN AND SUE :
Thl8 is to "Anonymous," the u;..
year-old whose father has a
problem. I hope it helpa.
I'm 17. My dad has been drinking
ever since I can remember, and it
gets worse sU the time, so I know
where she's coming from.
If there's an Alateen in her town,
she should go. I went toone meeting,
but Dad found out and forbade me.
Nonnally this would not stoP me, but
It was In the next town and I had no
transportation.
A friend you can really talk to
helpa lots. My best girlfriend and I
have the same problem. In fact our
fathers are "drinking buddies."
When we get low or upset, we give

each other a call or vl8it and let
everything spill out.
Remember, alcoholism 15 a
disease. The way to ever cure II ts
for the father to admit he needs help.
Until then, "Anon" and her famlly
can only try to understand him
Sometimes tbat's awfully hard.
H.I.H.

Polly's Pointers

Panels look dull.

• •

DEAR POLLY- When I need my
husband's help with something
around the bouse I nag just a little
and then when he bas tl(fiile free time
I begin to do it myself. Soon he ts
helping me because he cannot stand
to see me "botch" up a job. He enjoys the CJppOI'twlity to build Ids ego
by showing me bow It abould be done
and his CllftSCience will not let blm
stand by and see me do it alone. Thla
works, but maybe it Ia just because
my husband 15 the greatest. - A
READER
DEAR POLLY (and Barbera who
wants to get bloOd slains off rl her
husband's jacketl - I have had
wonderful luck using Jlydrogen
peroxide. I just pour It on a ~ blood
sf.ai!t and let It dry and then repeat
until the stain ts gone. I would try it
first someplace wbere It will not
show in case it changes the color of
the fabric. It Is best to be safe.
·
I have al5o read that such a stain
can be removed with llieat
tenderizer that is made into a paste
with cold water. Leave this on 11).30
mtnutea and then sponge with cool
water. Good luck! -MELODY B.
PoUy will send you one rl her signed thank-you newspaper • coupon
clippers if !!he uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
colum. Write Polly's Pointers In
care of this newspsper.

By PoUy Cramer
Special Coorespoudenl
DEAR POLLY - '!be panelling in
our house is about liD years old. It
looks dull and has several nicks in it.
What can we do to revive it? CHERYL
DEAR CHERYL- Your infOI'Illll·
tlo.n Is rather
sparse but I am
assuming this is
wood panelling
with a natural
wood finish. If
that Ia correct I
would go over it sU · a commerc;tal scratch remover polish. Wipe it
ir. and off, and small area at a time.
.Dip a cotton swab, such as baby
uses, In this poJlah and you can get it
Into the nicks and holes so they are
not so obvious.
Another method is to use the proper shade of brown paste shoe
polish, rub it in well and buff to a
luster Both these work well on furntaure that has suffered from daily
wear and tear.- POLLY
·DEAR POLLY- My Pointer is for
those ladles · who use electric bair
curlers. Fold a square of toilet tissue
in haU and Wrap it around the curler
before rolling the bair. It will not get
overheated to cause brittleness and
also seems to have an extra bounce.
- BETH

Square dance planned
to benefit Cancer Society
On Sunday afternoon fnm U p.m.
a benefit Western Square Dailce will
be conducted on behaH of the Gallia
County Unit of the American Cancer
Society by the Gallla Twirlers, a
local Western Square Dance group.
Four csllers will be active in the
dance to be held in the Activity Center of the Gallipolis Developmental
Center. They are Kim Briggs of Barboursville, W. Va.; Bill Adkins from
South Ceredo, W. Va.; John Waugh
and Billy Gene Evans, both of
Gallipolis.
Chairing the event for the Gallla
Twirlers is Roberta Vangundy,
assisted by Irene paullen and Laura
Wade, along with Joe Dobbins, the
president of the Gallla Twirlers.
One of the features will be a Cake
Walk. Baking the cakes for the
program will be Veronica Ritter and
Francie IAnmls.
A number rl door prizes will be
given away and others will be a part
of an auction to raise funds for the
Gallia County Unit of the ACS.
The ACS wishes to thank the 18
local lllt•1-ses that contributed to
the Gallla Twirlers (or this Swlday
afternoon fund ral5tng event. They
include the Promenade Shop, Jack
and Jill's, Milstead's, McDonald's, ·
COrivenlent Food Mart, Enchanted
Mirror, Dl's Candy and Cake s~
ply, Smeltzer Garden Center, the
Shake Shoppe, Flowerland Floriat
Crafts and GUts, the J - Boys,
\..

Shoney's Big Boy, Larry's Wayside,
Clark's Jewelry Store, Paul Davies
Jewelers, Dan Thomas Shoe Store,
Murphy'sandLongJohnSilver's.
Admission to thla benefit western
square dance 15 t3 per couple.
Square dancers and llqll8l'e dance
groupe from the entire area ate
urged to attend for a great afternoon
ol square dancing. Refnshments
will be served. ·
All proceeds will go to the local
unit or the American Cancer Society.
\

LAMAZE CLASSES
ARE OFFERED
ATHENS - A series rl I•ma•e
Childbirth Prapsratioo Cluaes,
sponsored by O'Ble- Memorial
Hospital, will begin on Monday, May
12, 1980. Thla c1us .ts for coup1eB
whose expected date Ill' delivery II
prior to July 13.
Clasa participanta will leam

breathing and reluatiCII tecbniques
for first stage labor, effective ex·
pulsion technique for second 11tqe
labor, phyaical and emotimwl ~
ts rl the birth :;::.... and bodyconditioning ex
to pr mnot.e
comfort during pregiii!IIC1 and poet.
partwn.
The fee for the series ts .-. To
pre-register for thts aeries, Ill' to
request a IChedule of future cJe 11,
contact Pamela Colllei', 20 Woodllde
Drive, Athenl, OH 46701, or CIJl •

ao49.

'

�•
&amp;-The Dally Sentinel, F\me.'Oy·Middleport, 0., Tueaday,Aprl129,1980

7- The-Daily Sentinel. Pomerov-Middleoort. 0 .. Tuesdav. Aoril29, 1980

Golf carts go where lizards fear to tread
PALM DESERT, Calif. (AP) Wilbur Mayhew ~lands
a rocky
little lmoll. At Ids back stretcbes the
flat, brown desert - miles and miles
Ill it - a barren landscape sliced by
sanc!;y stream)wls, dotted by dull·
sreen thorny shrubs.
In front of him lies a goU course manicured greens with flags nuttaring on 18 grassy fairways lined
with pabn trees and ringed by lakes.
Elec:tric ·carts dash about like the
lizards that once scampered over•
nearbyiiB!Iddunes.
"That's what they're doing to the
Great American Desert," aald
Mayhew, &amp;G-year-old desert rat,
professor of zoology at the UniversJty of California-Riverside and ex·
pert on a little creature called the
fringe-toed lizard.
Mayhew said the goU course once

on

looked like the rest of the desert.
"And I expect that when the water
table gets too low for Irrigation, that
It'll look that way again. In another
100 years, or 1,0110."
But until then, the desert pays for
the goU courses and modem cities
that sprout beside interstate highways throughout the Southern
Califomla desert + a surprisingly
diverse region the size Ill Ohio.
"rt gives the appearance of being
very, very rugged," Mayhew !!Bid.
"lnJuly(whentemperaturescanhit
125 degrees or more), you'd swear It
can take anything. But It can't. The
desert 15 very fragile. It takes a long,
longtirneforthedeserttorecover."
Mayhew Ia the wildlife expert on a
citizens committee that worked
three years with the U.S. Bureau of
Land Management to mold a

NOTICE OF

FOR INCimASES AND
ADJUSI'MENTS IN
RATES AND CHARGES

!-party fla.t, 2-party flat or 1-party measured exchange service in representative
commumhes are shown below. (Monthly allowances and the charge for additional
local messages over the allowances for measured service are not being changed.)
Rate
Band
1
1

Washington
Court House

2
2

Zanesville

3
3

Springfield

4
4

charges for telecommunications

Martins Ferry

4
5

Youngstown

5
5

Canton

5
6

Akron. Toledo
Dayton

6
6
6
7

Columbus

7

8
Cleveland
(

9
10

1Denotes Decrease

Tariff

(P.U.C.O.
No. 4)

Dataphone Digital
Service}'ariff

(P.U.C.O.
No. I )

Mobile Telephone
Service Tariff

(P.U.C.O.
No. 2)

Facilities for
Other Common
Carriers Tariff

(Pending)

Message Toll
Telephone Service
. Tariff
'

(P.U.C.O.
No. 7)

· Wide Area Tele·

(P.U.C.O.
No. I)

oommunications

Service Tariff
Private·Une
Service Tariff

(P.U.C.O.
No.2)

Any penon, firm, corporation or
association may file, pursuant to
Sectloa 4909J9 the Ohio Revised
Code, objedloru to the proposed

or

. Increases and adjustments in rates
· and charges, and to the proposed
daao..,.lo reguiotlom and pradices
affedln&amp; the same. The objections
may aUege that such application
oontalns proposab that lire unjust
and dlocmninotory or ................
Recommendations which differ
frGm the application may be made
by.the staff of the Public UtUities
Commliaion of Ohio or by Inter·
venin&amp; putles and may be adopted
by the Commission.

0

2·Party
Flat
6.95
8 .80
26.6%
7.15
8 .80
23.1%
7.25
8 .80
21.4%
7.50
8.80
17.3%
7.50
9.40
25.3%
8.10
9.40
16.1%
8.10
9.65
19.1%
8.35
9.65
156%
8 .35
10.10
20.1%
8.50
10.30
21.2%
9.40
11.30
20.2%

1-Party
Measured
5.50
6 .00
9.1%
5.70
6.00
5.3%
6.00
6.00

4%
6.30
6.00
(5.0%)
6 .30
6.30

4%
6.95
6.30
(9.4%)
6.95
6.95

or

thus raising or lowering the rates
charged for basic serviCes when

the number of telephones which
customers can call toll-free exceeds
or drops below established limits
for a specified period of lime.

OJYTIONAL EQUIPMENT
&amp; SER~CES
Rates and charges for mosi optional equipment and services would
be increased . For example, the
monthly charge for a residence extension would increase from the
presen t rate of $1.20 to $1.45.
Varying increases also would affect
such·options as Princess ~ Trimline ~
and Design Line• telephones;
Touch-A-Malic® phones; Custom
Calling features; Touch-Tone• ser·
vice; additional directory listings,
and non-publi shed service.
The monthly customer cTedit for

7.30
6.95
(5.0%)
7.30
7.30

4%

creased. However, these elements

generally do not apply when resi·
dence customers usc an Ohio Bell
PhoneCentcr Store.

4%
8.75
8.75

PRE WIRING
Appropriate charges would be
applied at the time or installation
of inside wire in residential dwellin~. Such work, commonly known

4%

T?e ave~age percentage increases in monthly rates for business customers
for 1,-l,me, l~lme rotary or PBX trunk measured service in representative com-

mumlles are shown below. (Monthly allowances and the charge for additional local
messages over the allowances are not being ~hanged .)

as "prewiring;· is done only if the
inside wall covt!ring and ceilinR;
covering are not yet in place-.

(Current ly, charges for such wiring are applied on a per-set basis
at the time telephone service is

installed.)
Rate
Band
1
1

1·llne
Measured Measured
Measured• Rotary Line PBX Trunk
Aberdeen
Present
13.05
15.05
18.05
Proposed
17.15
19.95
19.95
%IncreaSe 31 .4%.
32.6%
10.5%
Washington
2
Present
13.35
15.40
18.35
Court House
2
Proposed
17.15
19.95
19.95
%Increase 28.5%
2~ . 6%
87%
Zanesville
3
Present
' 13.65
15.75
18.65
3
Proposed
17.15
19.95
19.95
%Increase 25.6%
26.7%
70%
Springfield
4
Present
13.95
16.10
18.95
4
Proposed
17.15
19.95
19.95
%Increase
22.9%
23.9%
5.3%
Martins Ferry 4
Present
13.95
16.10
18.95
5
Proposed
17.80
20.60
20.60
%Increase 27.6%
28.0%
8.7%
Youngstown
5
Present
14.60
16.85
19.60
5
Proposed
17.80
20.60
20.60
%Increase 21 9%
22.3%
5.1%
Canton
5
Present
14.60
1685
19.60
6
Proposed
18.05
2085
20.85
%Increase 236%
23.7%
6.4%
Akron. Toledo 6
Present
14.85
17 15
19.85
8
Proposed
18.05
20.85
20.85
%Increase 216%
21 .6%
5.0%
Dayton
6
Present
14.85
17.15
19.85
7
Proposed
18.70
21 .50
21 .50
%Increase 25.9%
25 .4%
8.3%
Columbus
7
Present
15.20
17 .55
20.20
8
Proposed
19.15
21.95
21 .95
%Increase 26.0%
25.1%
87%
Cleveland
9
Present
18.45
18.95
21.45
10
Proposed
20.75
23.55
23.55
%Increase 26.1%
24.3%
98%
• Same rates apply lor semi-public coin service.

No further installations for Cen-

MESSAGE TOLL
SER~CE

(INTRASTATE LONG
DISTANCE)
Charges for many long distance
calls within Ohio would be reduced ,
especially those dialed direct by
customers without operator assis·
lance. The customer-dialed day
rate would be discounted 30 parcent during the evening hours and
40 pereent during the night and
weekend time periods. Charges for
operator-handled calls and person·
to-person ca lls generally would be
increased .

WATS
The number of hours included in
the basic rate for Full Business Day
Wide Area Telecommunicalions

Service (WATS) would be reduced
from 240 to 200. The·olle would
remain the same for outward WATS
and would be increased from $945 to
Sl,040 for inward WATS (~nown
as the 800 Service). For ten-hour
measured WATS, the rates would

pending upon the type of

te ms in service or scheduled for

installation would continue to be
furnished, added to or rearranged
only if they remain in service at
the same location.
The monthly rates for Centrex
S41 for the 12-key position and
$49 for the 30-key ·position. The
monthly rate for Centrex stations
would increase in~ r:angc o( $1.35

to S3 .15. depending on the exchange rate band, the number of
stations and whether the system
is CU or CO, Type I or Type II .

PRIVATE BRANCH
EXCHANGE
(PBX) SERVICES
Most manual and electromechanical dial PBX's now offered by the
Company are no longer manufactured . Therefore, no new installa-

tions would be made. Such PBXs in
service will be furnished to existing
customers as long as they remain in
place at the same location. Electromechanical dial PBXs also are
provided with the Private System
Service offering and this provision
would apply to that service as weU.
Rates for most manual and electromechanical PBXs would be increased substantially. For example,
increases in the monthly rate for
the common equipment associated
with such PBX's would be : $133
for a 756 PBX, 155 for a 701 PBX
and Sl95 for a series IOOB PBX.
Rates and charges for the
Dimension• PBX generally would
be increased, although some decreases also are proposed and some
rates and charges would not change,
Significant increases are also proposed in installation charges and
service establishment charges for
these PBX's.

Rates and charges for the Com
Key• telephone systems would
generally be increased. For key
telephone sets, proposed changes
in monthly rates range from a decrease of 50 cents to an increase
of 13.25 per set,dependingon the
number of keys in use. Increases
also are proposed for most optional
features and equipment associated
with these systems and sets.

MISCELLANEOUS
PRODUCTS&amp;
SER~CES
The following items are iUustrative of changes in rates and
charges for some of the miscclla·
neous products and services. Rates
and charges for other products and
services may be found in the Com·
. pany proposed tariff sheets.
• For various equipment items
associated with Telephone An-

s

swering Service, increases in

For Manual Mobile Telephone

for a minimum-load machine

Service, proposed increases for

to 1368 for a medium-load
s~stem.

Business exchange service will continue to be limited to measured service
only; no flat rate business basic exchange service will be offered.
Charges for one-way optional Extended Area Service ~nd for Community
Calling Service would generally be changed in line with related basic exchange
and toll services.

equipment range from S7 to $l2
for monthly rates and from $1.80
lo 128 for non-recurring charges,
depending upon the item. the exchange access line furnished lor
all Mobile Telephone Service would

The incremental charges and zone rates, which some customers pay in

receive the same increases as the

addition to their basic rates, would be eliminated.
Specific rates depend on the rate band applicable to a specific location. In
various locations the number of telephones which customers can call toll·free has
increased, placing them in the next higher rate band where higher monthly rates
apply. In addition, the rates in the four smallest rate bands wiD be raised to the
same level in order to simplify the overall rate band structure.
Services not being changed:
• Monthly allowances for local calls under measured service and the
charge for additional local calls over the allowances.
• Monthly aUowances .for calls to Directory Assistance and. the
charges for additional calls over the allowances.
• Local coin telephone calls.

business individual line rates in the
appropriate exchange rate band.

PRIVME LINE SERVICE)

(SPECIAL CIRCUITS)
Substantial increases are proposed in rates and charges for
special circuits lurnished for COn·
linUOU&lt; and DOIK'OOtinUOUS property,
foreign exchange and foreign cen·
tral oHke service. Increases also
are proposed for private line channels and associated equipment.

,,
I

FLEXIBLE PRICING
(MINIMUM LEVEL
.
PRICING) The Company is proposing
minimum level pricing for certain

communications systems and equipmen I . For such systems and equipment , rates and charges will be
identified a&gt; a minimum level only.
The maximum level of such rates
and charges would be two times
the minimum level. The applicable
rates and charges which may be
anywhere within the range or the
minimum and the maximum levels
would be covered in a price list
furnished to the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
Not less than twenty days prior
to the effective date or any changes
in the rates and charges for such
systems and equipment, the Company would furnish lo the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio a new
price list reflecting such changed
rates and charges.

TAX ADJUSTMENT
The Company also is requesting permission to adjust its rates

and charges when its expenses
change as a result or changes in
its total annual local, state and
federal (except federal excise tax)
tax expense that is allocated to
intrastate service.

The lax expense would be com·
puled each year on March 1 and
the tax adjustment would apply
only if changes in tax rates resulted
in cumulative increases or decreases
in tax expense of more than $2
million. If applicable, new rates
would be put into effect 20 days
after being filed with the Commission.
~·1bdem•rll

of AT6-T )

KEY TELEPHONE
SYSTEMS &amp; EQUIPMENT

MOBILE
TELEPHONE SER~CE

vice and be reduced for outwar.d
service.

recurring charge options, deequipment.

• The flat rate for interconnecting each mobile unit of miscellaneous common carriers with
the telecommunications net;
work would .increase 35 cents
per month.
• The monthly rates for Exhibi·
lion Hall Service would increase
for both management and exhibitor stations.
• Increases are proposed in rates
for Airport Service, including
non-restricted and semirestricted stations, PBX trunk
lines and interconnecting lines.
• Proposed increases for data
tra~smitting an.d receiving
eqwpment range from IOcents
to $56 in monthly rates, from $2
~-~53 in OOO'recurring ~

The prayer of the Application
requests the Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio to do the following:
(al Find that the Companys present rates and charges and the
regulations and practices affecting
the same are unjust , unreasonable
and insufficient to yield reason
able compensation for the service.
rendered ;
(b) Find that the rates and charges
and regulations and practices proposed are just and reasonable and
will provide not more than a fair
and reasonable rate of return on
the value of the Company's property
actually used and useful for the
convenience of the public;
(c) Approve the filing of the proposed schedule sheets contained
in Schedule &amp;I of the Application
modified to reflect such revisio.;
thereof as may become effective,
pursuant to orders of the Commission,during the interim between
the filing of the Application and
the date upon which the schedule
sheets become effective;
(d) Order that the proposed
schedule sheets become effective
forthwith ;
(el Approve the withdrawal 0 (
the present schedule sheets contained in Schedule E·2 of the
Application;
(fl Grant such other and furiher
relief as the Company is reasonably entitled to in the premises.
The fonn of this notice has been
approved by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.

TilE OmO BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY

Helen Help Us

Collegian complains
roommate no playboy
BY HELEN AND SUE BOTl'EL
Special eorreapoadeata
Dear Helen and Sue:
r have a roommate problem. He
cramps my lifestyle. The jerk thinks
college is for studying, not lor fun.
He insists on gotng to bed before
11 :30 every single night. He COOlplains when my stereo is on .after
that. He gets upset when I have
women friends over after his IJed.
time.
Whenever I have the most
minuscule trace ol alcohol In the
room he insists on airing It out so the
fumes won't infest his clothes.
There's a definite rule against
smoking, of course, even by friends.
He won't listen to reason. What's a
guy to do?
CONFUSED
COlLEGIATE
DEAR CON. COL. :
Make a change: either of roommate or lifestyle. You two have as
much in common as Guideposts and
Playboy magazine. - HELEN AND

and fr&lt;lm S2 lo S369 in non·

trex CU service and for Centrex

monthly rates would range up
to $34.lncreases in non-recurring charges would range from
$5 to 142.
• Increases in monthly rates for
Automatic Announcement Service would range from $4.50

remain the same for inward ser-

this much will always be natural,"
he !!Bid.
Deep Canyon contains about 101
species of plants, from the delicate
desert lavender to creosote busblll
older than written history. And 200
animal apecies from desert bigbonl
sbeep to sidewinder rattlesnakes to
hummingbinlshavebeelllpotted.
Mayhew spends several days a
week trying to catalog their number
and variety. One ol Ids route&amp;
followsadrystreambed-arelative
oasis that wtnda through the
scrublands.
Mayhew describes the brush as he
goes: a gray-green brittle bush that
seems to grow out ol solid rock and
promises a butst of yellow flowers In
the spring; pale green chUpBrO!!B
with long red buds; cheesebush,
with pale flowers and fragile greeit
stems.

CO service in locations served by
No. 5 Crossbar electmmechanica~
central offices would be made. Sys-

attendant positions would increase

vided by a customer instead of by
Ohio Bell would be increased from
the present rate of 65 cents to 90
cents.
Some elements of the basic
installation charge would be in-

7.50
7.50

· CENTREX

The Company is proposing to·
systematically reclassifr an ex·
change, assigning it automatically
to the higher or lower rate band ,

each telephone instrument pro-

4%

BUSINESS

charges for telecommunications

Cenernl Exchange

Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change
Present
Proposed
%Change

1·Party
Flat
8 .70
10.80
24.1%
8 .90
1080
21.4%
9 .20
10.80
174%
9 .50
1080
13.7%
9 .50
11 .45
20.5%
10.15
11 .45
12 .8%
10.15
11 .80
16.3%
10.50
11 .80
12.4%
10.50
12.30
17.1%
10.70
12.65
18.2%
11 .95
13.90
16.3%

"They bulldozed them to make a
trsilerpark."
So It goes. Wiry little mesquite
trees are dying because the water
table that fed them for centuries has
fallen below the tap roots that reach
· deep into the earth.
Mayhew said the wells that quench the thirst, water the lawns and fill
the swimming pool5 of desert
residents are depleting the desert's
most precious commodity: water.
"When I bring my students out
here, they think they see a Jot rl
animals," Mayhew said. "But
they're not seeing 10 percent of what
I used to see when I first came here.
Twenty years ago, aU this was
naturaJ and I thought it would
alwaysbethatway."
UO.Riverslde owns
controls
l!D,OOO acres near Palm Desert called
the Deep Canyon R$Se. "At least

SYSTEMATIC
RECLASSIFICATION

The average percentage changes in monthly rates for residence customers for

Pursuant to the requirements of
Section 4909.19 of the Ohio Revised
Code, The Ohio Bell Telephone
Company hereby gives notice that
on February 29, 1980,it filed with
the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio an Application (PUCO Docket
No. 79-1184-TP-AIR) for authority
to incre.ase and adjust its rates and

services to all customers or the
Ohio BeD Telephone Company and,
in addition, affects the rates and
charges for Message Toll Service.
(Intrastate Long Distance Service)
and certain other services governed
by concurrences of other telephone
companies serving all other subscribers in the State of Ohio.
The affocted Ohio BeD Telephone
Company tariffs are:
Exchange Rate
(P.U.C.O.
'}'ariff
No.3)

=

RESIDENCE

Aberdeen

services and to change its regula·
tions and practices affecting the
same.
This notice contains the subsiBnce and prayer of the Application.
However, any interested party de·
siring oomplete detailed infonnation
with respect to aU affected rates,
charges, regulations and practices
should inspect a copy of the Application and all attached schedules
at the office of the Commission,
180 East Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio. A. copy of the application
and the proposed tariff sheets is
also available for inspection during
oonnal business hours at any public
business office or PhoneCenter
Store of Ohio Bell. ln addition,lhe
proposed tariffs were mailed to
the mayors and legislative authorities of all municipalities in Ohio
on November 27, 1979, as part of
the Comnany's notification of its
intent to file.
This application affects rates and

Califomla desert. A series ol public
hearings on the proposal concludes
In Los Angeles on Wednesday.
"Thla desert plan is the only chance we've got," he said. "You just
can't bave everybody out here dotng
as they damn please, not anymore.
There's so many people that they
just love the desert to death."
Mayhew sees major battles In the
offing: "There's going to be blood on
thefioorbeforethisthtng'ssettled."
Conlpetinginterests-fromseekers
of solitude to dune buggy drivers,
miners to subdividers - aU are
demanding shares In the desert.
"There are some really B1lliiZing
thinplin this world," Mayhew said.
A lot ol them, like the fringe-toed
lizard, are found In the California
desert. Indeed, sU the fringe-toed

LOCALEXCHANGESER~CE

APPUCATION
OF TilE omo BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY

lizards In the world live on the windblown Sand dunes of the Coachellll
VaUey.
The ~inch lizard has spiny fringes
on its back feet, giving the reptile a
pair of "snowshoes" when It dashes
over the Sand on Its hind legs. When
danger threatens, the lizard dives
headlong into the Sand where it can
breathe because of complex equl~
ment In its eyes, nose and f!lOUth.
But the little lizard, so perfectly
adaptedhe for the Sand, can survive
now re el5e- "If you eliminate
~dy al'e&amp;!l, you eliminate .
arumals. They can't live on the
golf course."
Ma he tells of the
sandYd.:es on the :-:o:~
bustllngdeserttownrlPalmDesert.
"I thought those dunes would be
there for 1,0110 years," he said.

pt"C!p08ed Jand.use plan for the

Mock wedding teaches of marriage, divorce

SUE

the left, Tonia Ash, Jenell Kelly, Tauuny Nutt, Jeannie Roush, bridesmaids; and Todd Morrison, Chris Wouds, Eric Scites, Kyle Rupe, and Bob
Evans, groomsmen; with Lee Lewis, minister, behind the bridesmaids.

CONNIE MOSSMAN was the bride, Randy Osborne, the groom, In
the Meigs mock wedding Monday. The attenilants seated front were
Melinda Demosky, aid of honor, and Jerry Howard, best man, and from
Meigs High School was the scene
of a wedding Monday.
... a mock wedding, that is.
It was a part of the course in
family living taught by Mrs. Karen
Goins and designed to give students
a realistic look at what it's like to be
married and have a family.
Students discussed and decided on
the type of wedding they would like
to have, and then went into the com.
munity to ·check costs. They found
tbat tuxedos, wedding gowns,
bridesmaids gowns, tiered · cakes,
photos, flowerS, and ail the incidentals such as paying the
minister, renting the church, and
providing gifts for the attendants ad·
ded up to lots of money. It was a
lesson In economics.
They studied wedding protocol,
the rules of etiquette, the ceremony,
and the mock wedding was carried
out in popular tradition.
The music room at Meigs was
transformed into a church scene and
featured a "stained glass" window
created by some of the students. The
altar Dowers were lawn variety dandelions and violets - in a green

pitcher, and the pews were marked
with crepe paper bows.
Guests were the students of the
claas and they were escorted to their
seats by the ushers. Pre-nuptial
music was provided by Unda Eason
at th~ piano and Lynetta Whitttngn,

And then tnere were ptctures.
Now that the wedding is over, Mrs.
Goins will begin the study of life In
the family situation and parenting
along with the satisfactions and
frustrations.
In mid-May, the issue of divorce
will be presented since, as pointed

vocalist.

The minister, Lee Lewis, per·
formed that traditional Cl)remony
with the exchange of vows and rings.
The bride was Connie Mos,sman, the
groom Randy Osborne. Their honor
attendants were Melinda Demoskey
and Jerry Howard. Bridesmaids
were Tonia Ash, Jenell KeUy, Tammy Nutt, and Jearme Roush, and the
groomsmen were Todd Morrison,
Chris Wouds, Eric Scites, Kyle Rupe
and Boh Evans.
And just like in a real wedding, the
groom kl5sed the bride at the con·
elusion of the ceremony.
At the reception held in the
cafeteria for the wedding party and
their guesta, the bride and groom cut
the traditional tiered wedding cake
bak:ed In a home economics claas by
Susan Swan and Mrs. Goins. The
cake was
with punch.
. served
..
.

r--

I

- -·

Mason County

News Notes ·I·

out by Mrs. Goins, about 50 percent
of all marriages end in divorce. A
lawyer will he Invited to discuss the
legal ramifications of divorce, and
there will be a panel of divQrced men
and women to talk to the students
about the · emotional problems of
divorce.

TOPS elects officers

· Officers were elected when the
TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly)
Club OH 1363, met recently at
Help!Dg Hands meet
Cheshire.
MASON - The Helping Hand
Elected were Freda Henderson,
members met at the home of Carol
leader; Edith Gardner, weight
Alexander on April 9. Mrs. Lucy
recorder; Helen Spears, assistant
Johnson presented devotions. Her
weight recorder; Mamie Stephentheme was taken from Psalm 6. Lois
Young gave ~o readings, "A . son, secretary; and Mrs. Spears,
treasurer. They were installed by
Prayer for Peeling Potatoes" and
Shari
Colmer.
"Showing My Age." Joy Foreman
Pam
Nitz was the best loser for the
shared a reading taken from Robie
month
of March with a loss of sill
Robinson's colwnn, "I Was Cross
pounds.
She was sung to by the club
With the Children."
members
and given a gift. A report
·President, Mrs. Earl Ingels anon club contests was given.
nounced tbat the Spring Luncheon is
Following their meeting the group
to be held at the Holiday Inn in
went to the home of Mrs. Hendef'S01l
Gallipolis.
for a diet lunch. Plans were made
The May meeting is to be held at
for a float in the Regatta Parade.
the Historical Center with a potluck
There will be a "Miss Firecracker"
dinner and election of officers. •
contesHn July. Two new members
The club members were saddened
were welcomed. Information on
at the death or Addle Brown. A Silent
at an earlier stage," Michael said.
joining the club can be obtained
Prayer was offered in remembrance
The latest information on cancer's
from Mrs. henderson, 992-7350,
of Maggie Johnson and Addie.
detection, diagnosis and treatment
Pomeroy, or Mrs. Gardner, 367-7602.
The lesson, "How Food, Nutrients
is provided to health professionals
Weigh-in
takes place every Monday
and Drugs Interact" was taught by
through the Society's journals and
morning
between
10 and 10:30 a.m.
Mary Thabet. Mary said, "It is imconferences.
For
the
mOI'Ith
of
March there was
portant to know which medicines are
Direct patient and community serloss
in
weightof21
pounds.
a
total
to be taken with food or on an empty ·
vice used nearly 18 cents of each
stomach such as penicillin. Antacids ·
dollsr In 1979. "The Society's service
should not be taken with ora.nge
and rehabilitation programs help to
TIE FOR QUEEN
juice or col;ls. Tetracycline is not to
improve the quality of life for cancer
Jo
Ann
Eads and Marcia Barrett
be taken with milk. Water pills or
patients and ease the heavy burden
tied
for
"Queen
for the Week" at the
diet pills are not to be taken when
cancer imposes on them and their
meeting
of
TOPS
OH 1456, Rutland,
drinking alcQhol.
families," Michael said.
last
week.
Runner-up
was Beulah
Gladys Reynolds wQn the door
" Close to a dime (9.4 cents) was
Wright.
.
prize.
used lor the national programs of
Mrs. Barrett read Information on
Members present were Gladys
cancer education and service to
state recognition day to be held May
Reynolds, Gladys Riley, Lucy Johncoordinate what is done locally with
9 and 10 in Akron. All chapter reporson, Bessie Ingels, Joy Foreman,
the overall cancer control effort,"
ts were given. The weight recorder
Doris Roberts, Lois Young, Mary
Michael said.
reported
a net loss for the chapter
Thabet, Coral Alexander, and a
"Tight control was held on lund.
and
members
were reminded to take
guest, Catherine Haynes.
raising costs this year despite the inQne Item fQr the fun money auction
fiationary spiral the country is ex·
to be held at the next meeting. PerUMWMEETS
pecting," Michael said. "Our fund.
sons
Interested in visiting or
MASON - The Mason United
raising costs were kept at an acbecoming
a member of the chapter
Metliodist Women met last Monday
cepteble 16.3 percent in 1979 and the
are
asked
to telephone 742-2126 for
evening at the church with Mrs. Ray
administration costs at a low 5.790."
information.
Proffitt, president, presiding.
" By keeping our costs low and our
It was announced that the May
output to the community high we can
Fellowship meeting for Methudist
continue to reach, teach and help
churches will be held on May 2 at
people in the light against cancer.
Aprll., lJIO
White Church.
Bonds of frtendahip and/or your marriage will be
We shall continue to do so only with
A book study, "Parables of Jesus"
Wengthened this coming year. For those of you
the generosity of the people of Meigs
is held prior to the group's monthly who are unwed, there Lsa good chance you'll find
your one and only.
County. Your help is needed," sa)'ll
meeting. Lois Test was lesson leader TAURUS
(AprO 21-MaJ ZO) If a aituatioo ari3es
Michael.
today to put you ln the position where you must
for April.
take a aide, support your IonS-Ita~ pall, no
Attending the meeting were Sarah matter
how awliward It appean. Find out m&lt;ft
Spencer, Maxine Arnold, Helen Bar- ol what Ues ahead for you in lhe year loUowtng
yoor birthday by sendini for your copy ol A.otn&gt;
ton, Lois Test, Earlene Bumgard· Graph
Letter. MaU $1 for each to A.moG111ph,
ner, Joyce Carson, Lilah Zerkle, Box 139, Rodio City StaUon, N. Y. 10019. Be
TUESDAY
GEMIN1 (May 21-June 20) Tackle all thole unLODGE 363 F AND AM Tuesday Ctaudls Kirton, Margaret Pickens, rlnilllod projecta you've got lying around lhe
hoult. 1l&gt;t llaylng power needecf to complete
7:30 p.m. at Middleport Masonic
Gladys Riley, Evelyn Proffitt, Juiie lhemlswlthyoutodoy.
·
Temple. Work In apprentice degree.
VanMatre, Catherine Smith and · CANCER (JIIDI! Zl..Jaly !Z) lt may tab courage,
but tOO.Iy b the day you nUaht find Jt in ~r to
All master masons Invited.
Ramona Sydenstricker.
say IOIIlOIIllni difllcult l&lt;l allierld.
Mason
Penonals
LEO (Jalyls-Aay; IZ) A way may open toct.yto
DRUG AWARENESS meeting
acquire something you've been wanting for a
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Freddie
Thabet
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., at Modern
long time. Take advantq:e of it. OJancea are tt
visited In Beckley recently with his : won't be there tomorrow.
Woodlilen Hall In Burlingbam.
VIRGO (A... %3o&amp;!pt. IZI It Will mal:e thin.&lt;•
sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. euler
Refreshments will be served ; public
If you can see the humor ln a welahly
Asaff Rahal! and his two nephews sltw!Uon. to tact, ll could help I...., Ita ((l'lvltY.
invited.
LIBRA (Sept, Ill You might llnaUy oee
and families, Mr. and Mrs. Louis some
materl.al satns today from a ProJect on
' SOtl'mERN CHAPTER 453 of
RahaU and Congressman and Mrs. ·which you've wCM'ked. Your reward will be worOAPSE meeting, Southern High
thy olall your efforta.
Nick Joe Rahall.
SCORPIO 10&lt;1. M-Nov. 1!1 Tllo practical
School, 8 p.m . Tuesday to elect of· ·
Mrs. NickQI5 (Gail) Waseman and avenues you take to develop an Idea today w:W be
ficers.
the reason for the IUCCeSI of your project. Thoee
daughter, Amanda, visited for some down-to-tarth
wayaare winners.
WEDNESDAY
time with her grandparents, Mr. and SAGrrrARIIJll (Nft. Zlolloc:. !II You'll 1et
STOP SMOKING CUNIC, second
Mrs. Chester Oliver at Clifton. Gall's much further today by staytne behind the ll'tnel
session, Wednesday In east-west mother, Mrs. Joan Bennett, came and letting ........., with experience take lhe
reins - and the taocl oft your ahouldera.
dining room at Veterans Memorial and accompanied her daughter, CAPRICORN (De&lt;. JWu. Ill An older
Hospital 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Speaker Gail, and granddaughter to Fort oc:quatntance may c:une into the plclure todoy
and show you !low to find the answers to a puz·
will be Dr. Arnold Sattler.
Riley, Kansas, where Mrs. d.ing situation:. Follow hill or her Hdvit'l!! to the letter.
·
Waseman's husband is stationed. AQUARII!S IJaa. ..Feb. Ul Tllo fruita ol yOW'
Voouleld
Mrs. Bennett also visited her paren· tabormaybereadyl&lt;lharvesttoct.y.
will be in proporilon to the slze ol the lleld you
TOSEUFLOWERS
ts, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Oliver.
plowed and the nwnber.of aeells .you sowed.
The Ladles AUXiliary of the
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Williams l&gt;ll!CI!S !Feb. zt.Morchztl BephltOII&lt;lplllc.olond
Rutland Fire Department will be and son, Jeff, of Indian Head, Md. take the long-range view if you have a problem,
things wUI work out very well today. 1be
selling flowers for Mothers Day at visited several days with Mr. and
~rd. cola fact&amp; will show you the way.
the firehouse daily, May 5, through Williams' mother, Mrs. Clara AR.IE8 (\lardiii·Apr1111) Joint J&gt;U11Cj&gt;IIUOII la
the way to conquer any difficuft project that
May 10. A variety ol flowers and Williams and family.
might be confrontiM you. Cc:mblnlnl your talenta with another's male~ short work Ol the talk. ·
hanging baskets will be available.

I
I

By Aim• M•roh•ll

'Bellringers' named
The following !lave been named
Mental Health Bellringer Chairpersons for the May fund raising
campaign, announced Dudley F.
Briggs, M.D., president of the Mental Health Association of Ohio:
Margaret Neaselroad, for Chester;
Mrs. Dorothy M. Sayre, Letart
Falls; Steven Story, Middleport;
Mrs. Patty Gluesencamp, Portland;
Mrs. Alleyne Rees, Racine; Mrs.
Loren Benedum, Reedsville;
Margaret Edwards for Rutland, and
Mrs. Unda Ferrell, for Syracuse.
"The Bellringer campaign will
take place this year during May,
which is Mental Health Month,"
Briggs said. "Mental Health Month
Is an annual time to . focus on increasing awareness and un·
derstanding of mental health," he
added "and the Bellrtnger drive
will ~~~ tn with this effort.': Funds
raised in the Bellringer campsign
support the association's statewide
work in pubUc education about mental bealth and mental illneSS, and Its
advocacy efforts on he~ of the
mentally 111 and their families.
\,

.

Libra may see gains

Social Calendar

.

.

1.,

DEAR RAP:
HllW did our family cope with an
alcoholic (and terribly cruel and
dangerous) father? I couldn't stand
my mother being beaten more so I
took hia gun and told him to get out
or I'd shoot him. He thought I didn't
mean lt. The bullet went through bla
left shoulder and I have never been
sorry - ~cepl that it wasn't farther
down.
At the trial it all came out. My
lawyer pleaded self-defense and no
one blamed me.
Now Mlllll and u.s kids are In
another city and,into a good new !Ue.
I only wish we'd escaped sooner.
Some alcoholics can't be changed they use booze to excu.se their mean.
ness. - ALMOST A MURDERER
ATAGE15
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
TeD "Anonymous" there can be a
happy eudtng. For five years I hardly ever saw either of my parent&amp;
without a drink in their hands. They
were "mellow drunks" (eveningB
and weekend&amp;) but they functioned
fairly well at work.
One night my little brother
sneaked a bottle of vodka and drank
so much he almoet died. I guesa tbat
woke up Mom. They joined A.A. and
have been drY for sill montha. I know
they won't sUp. I just llnow It!

CARLIE

I

Cancer;where the money goes
· "People are always wondering
where their money g6es these days,
and the American Cancer Society
can t~ll them with pride that 78 cents
of every doUar contributed to the
Society in 1979 in Ohio was iilvested
directly in cancer control," said S.
Michael, public infonnation chairman of the American Cancer
Society, Meigs County Unit.
She was commenting on the start
of the Educational and Fund Raising
Cancer Crusade in Meigs County
which continues throughout the
month of April.
More thlin 31 cents or every doUar
contributed funded cancer researc~
nationally with $1.5 million su~
porting researchers in seven Ohio institutions. Twenty-two cancer
research projects in Ohio are
currently receiving funding by the
American Cancer Society.
Public and professional education
received 19 cents of each doUar.
Programs to teach people how to
·look for and recognize cancer's
signals and to understand the importance of early detection help to
increase people's chances of finding
cancer at the most treatable stages
- the beginning. "With present
medical knowledge we could be ser·
vtng about 131,000 more persons this
year if their cancers were detected

HELEN AND SUE :
Thl8 is to "Anonymous," the u;..
year-old whose father has a
problem. I hope it helpa.
I'm 17. My dad has been drinking
ever since I can remember, and it
gets worse sU the time, so I know
where she's coming from.
If there's an Alateen in her town,
she should go. I went toone meeting,
but Dad found out and forbade me.
Nonnally this would not stoP me, but
It was In the next town and I had no
transportation.
A friend you can really talk to
helpa lots. My best girlfriend and I
have the same problem. In fact our
fathers are "drinking buddies."
When we get low or upset, we give

each other a call or vl8it and let
everything spill out.
Remember, alcoholism 15 a
disease. The way to ever cure II ts
for the father to admit he needs help.
Until then, "Anon" and her famlly
can only try to understand him
Sometimes tbat's awfully hard.
H.I.H.

Polly's Pointers

Panels look dull.

• •

DEAR POLLY- When I need my
husband's help with something
around the bouse I nag just a little
and then when he bas tl(fiile free time
I begin to do it myself. Soon he ts
helping me because he cannot stand
to see me "botch" up a job. He enjoys the CJppOI'twlity to build Ids ego
by showing me bow It abould be done
and his CllftSCience will not let blm
stand by and see me do it alone. Thla
works, but maybe it Ia just because
my husband 15 the greatest. - A
READER
DEAR POLLY (and Barbera who
wants to get bloOd slains off rl her
husband's jacketl - I have had
wonderful luck using Jlydrogen
peroxide. I just pour It on a ~ blood
sf.ai!t and let It dry and then repeat
until the stain ts gone. I would try it
first someplace wbere It will not
show in case it changes the color of
the fabric. It Is best to be safe.
·
I have al5o read that such a stain
can be removed with llieat
tenderizer that is made into a paste
with cold water. Leave this on 11).30
mtnutea and then sponge with cool
water. Good luck! -MELODY B.
PoUy will send you one rl her signed thank-you newspaper • coupon
clippers if !!he uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
colum. Write Polly's Pointers In
care of this newspsper.

By PoUy Cramer
Special Coorespoudenl
DEAR POLLY - '!be panelling in
our house is about liD years old. It
looks dull and has several nicks in it.
What can we do to revive it? CHERYL
DEAR CHERYL- Your infOI'Illll·
tlo.n Is rather
sparse but I am
assuming this is
wood panelling
with a natural
wood finish. If
that Ia correct I
would go over it sU · a commerc;tal scratch remover polish. Wipe it
ir. and off, and small area at a time.
.Dip a cotton swab, such as baby
uses, In this poJlah and you can get it
Into the nicks and holes so they are
not so obvious.
Another method is to use the proper shade of brown paste shoe
polish, rub it in well and buff to a
luster Both these work well on furntaure that has suffered from daily
wear and tear.- POLLY
·DEAR POLLY- My Pointer is for
those ladles · who use electric bair
curlers. Fold a square of toilet tissue
in haU and Wrap it around the curler
before rolling the bair. It will not get
overheated to cause brittleness and
also seems to have an extra bounce.
- BETH

Square dance planned
to benefit Cancer Society
On Sunday afternoon fnm U p.m.
a benefit Western Square Dailce will
be conducted on behaH of the Gallia
County Unit of the American Cancer
Society by the Gallla Twirlers, a
local Western Square Dance group.
Four csllers will be active in the
dance to be held in the Activity Center of the Gallipolis Developmental
Center. They are Kim Briggs of Barboursville, W. Va.; Bill Adkins from
South Ceredo, W. Va.; John Waugh
and Billy Gene Evans, both of
Gallipolis.
Chairing the event for the Gallla
Twirlers is Roberta Vangundy,
assisted by Irene paullen and Laura
Wade, along with Joe Dobbins, the
president of the Gallla Twirlers.
One of the features will be a Cake
Walk. Baking the cakes for the
program will be Veronica Ritter and
Francie IAnmls.
A number rl door prizes will be
given away and others will be a part
of an auction to raise funds for the
Gallia County Unit of the ACS.
The ACS wishes to thank the 18
local lllt•1-ses that contributed to
the Gallla Twirlers (or this Swlday
afternoon fund ral5tng event. They
include the Promenade Shop, Jack
and Jill's, Milstead's, McDonald's, ·
COrivenlent Food Mart, Enchanted
Mirror, Dl's Candy and Cake s~
ply, Smeltzer Garden Center, the
Shake Shoppe, Flowerland Floriat
Crafts and GUts, the J - Boys,
\..

Shoney's Big Boy, Larry's Wayside,
Clark's Jewelry Store, Paul Davies
Jewelers, Dan Thomas Shoe Store,
Murphy'sandLongJohnSilver's.
Admission to thla benefit western
square dance 15 t3 per couple.
Square dancers and llqll8l'e dance
groupe from the entire area ate
urged to attend for a great afternoon
ol square dancing. Refnshments
will be served. ·
All proceeds will go to the local
unit or the American Cancer Society.
\

LAMAZE CLASSES
ARE OFFERED
ATHENS - A series rl I•ma•e
Childbirth Prapsratioo Cluaes,
sponsored by O'Ble- Memorial
Hospital, will begin on Monday, May
12, 1980. Thla c1us .ts for coup1eB
whose expected date Ill' delivery II
prior to July 13.
Clasa participanta will leam

breathing and reluatiCII tecbniques
for first stage labor, effective ex·
pulsion technique for second 11tqe
labor, phyaical and emotimwl ~
ts rl the birth :;::.... and bodyconditioning ex
to pr mnot.e
comfort during pregiii!IIC1 and poet.
partwn.
The fee for the series ts .-. To
pre-register for thts aeries, Ill' to
request a IChedule of future cJe 11,
contact Pamela Colllei', 20 Woodllde
Drive, Athenl, OH 46701, or CIJl •

ao49.

'

�! - The Dally SenUnel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Tuesday, April29, 1900

9- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Tuesday, April29, 1980

Sparky welcomed home to Cincinnati
••

CINCINNATl (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds fans cheered wildly for former
Manager Sparky Anderson then watched as the Reds defeated his
Detroit Tigers in exhibition, 4-2 Monday night.
"1bis l.s the first time I'll get
recognized and the last time. No
matter what happens, that's the only
time the feeling will be thl.s way,"
Anderson said.
Anderson was fired by Reds

President Dick Wagner after the
1978 season. In nine years, The Reds
Wider Anderson· won two World
Championships, four National
League Pennants and five Western
Division lilies.
"Cincinnati bas always been like
home. I've spent more time here in
the last 10 years than any other
place. I'll never wear nwnber '10'
again (his Reds unlfonn nwnber),
no matter how long I'm in baseball

because thl.s park always meant a
lotto me," he.said.
"Some things you keep. Some
things in life can't be taken away,"
Anderson said of the Reds pictures
and trophies still . in his home at
Tbou.sand Oaks, Calif.
"I'll never agree with the move
(firing), but he felt it W!!S a decision
he had to make. Dick Wagner was
fair. He fiew to California, looked

me right in the eye and fired me. I'U
never agree with the move, but I can
WJderstand It," Anderson said
Talking about hl8 new team, Anderson said, "I was looking forward
to tonight, but we've really been
having it rough. I've got a good hitting club but throwing and catching
(defense J Is a problem.
Ron Oester scored and drove in
the winning rWJ for Cincinnati. The

Reds cored twice in the third inning
on two walks and a aingle by Cesar
Gerollimo. Two more runs came In
the seventh on singles by Junior
Kennedy, Oester and Cesar
Gertnomlo and a walk to winning pitcher Paul MOI!Itau.
The Tigers taiJied in the fourth on
a alngle by Kirk Gibson, who stole
second and came borne on an inlleld
oul In the sixth inning, Dave

ning.

That preserved a 1·1 tie and It
remained that way until the ninth
when Kingman slapped a pitch from
Bob Sykes into center field for a tiebreaking RBI single that triggered a
three-run uprising as the Cubs
defeated the Cardinals 4-2.
"He's the complete ballplayer
now,' ' Manager Preston Gomez said
of Kingman. "He beats you with hiB
bat, he can run, he can throw and he

can field."
Only three games were played in
the majors while four were rained
out + Atlanta-Ban Diego in the
National League and New YorkBaltimore, Boston-Chicago and Kansas City-Toronto in the American.
In AL action, the Oakland A's
made it f&gt;.for-5 over California by
blanking the Angels ~ Whi,le the
Seattle Mariners defeated the Minnesota Twins 6-4.

As usual, Kingman wasn't
available to the media but other
Cubs didn't mind talking about him.
"When the game's on the line and
he's up, you better watch him," said
relief ace Bruce Sutter, who picked
· up his sixth save. "When he first
came up, he used to swing at
everything. He's cut down on his
strike zone. He knows what he wants
up there now."
Ivan DeJesus opened the Cubs'

Sonics on verge of elimination from playoffs
tni ANGELES (AP) - The Los

Ang~les Lakers aren't counting

defending National Basketball
Association champion Seattle out of
the Western Conference title series,
but realistlcally the SuperSonics
don't seem to have much of a chance.
The Sonics are down 3-1 in the
best-of-seven series, with Game 5
scheduled at the Forwn in suburban
Inglewood Wednesday night. A
sellout crowd ci 17,505ls assured for
the nationally televised affair, which
begins at 11:30 p.m., EDT.
The Lakers are 4-1 against the
Sonics at the Forum this season the only loss being a 108-107 setback
in Game 1 last week. Overall thl.s
year, Los Angeles has a 41-6 record
on its home court and bas won 29 of
its last 31 games there.

Even if the Sonics win Wednesday
night, they would still have to win at
horne Friday night and trlwnph at
the Forum again SWJday afternoon
toget an opportunity to defend their
NBAtiUe.
"You can never count Seattle
out," said Los Angeles forward
Jamaal Wilkes, who scored 24 points
and pulled down 13 reboWJds in the
Lakers' come-from-behind 98-93 victory in Game 4 Sunday. "But right
now, I feel great. They're the defending champions and I want very
badly to beat them in Los Angeles
before our fans."
The Lakers overcame a 21-point
deficit midway in the third quarter
SWJday for a sweep of the two games
in Seattle, which were played at Hec
EdmWJdson Pavilion at the University of Washington because the

Klngdonie and the Seattle Collsewn
were booked previously.
"Yeah, I'm joyed," said Los
Angeles rookie Ear'vin "Magic"

son'ssing)e.
Whllll Anderson was gracious
about the Red3, outfielder Champ
Swnmers couldn't hide his feelings.
The former Reds plnchhltter Ia now
8

regular with~

"Dick Wagner made me feel that
no one in baseb811 wanted me. I
knew better and from the first day I
was in Detroit I began to believe in

myself," Swnmers said.
"I believe Sparky sees in the
Detroit team the same thing he saw
in Clnclnnatlsil! years ago. We bave
great young talent," Swnmers said.

Dave Kingman big man·for Cubs in victory
By The Associated Press
Dave Kingman didn't hit any
home runs Monday night but he was
a big man for the Chicago Cubs
anyway ...and not just because he
stands IHoot-9.
The tall left fielder, known for his
towering homers and wild-swinging
strikeouts, threw out St. Louis'
speedy Garry Templeton trying to
score from second base on a single
by Keith Hernandez in the third in-

Stegman tripled and scored on Glb-

ninth With a walk and Bill Buckner
bunted safely before Kingman
singled. Jerry Martin then greeted
Donnie Moore with an RBI double
and Tim Blackwell added a sacrifice
fiy.
A'18,Ailgela8

Tony, Annas, Dwayne Murphy and
Dave Revering homered Monday
night to support the Rick Langford's
seven-hitter. Langf!lrd, ~. was
making or1ly his secood start of the
season and struck out four.

NOW QPIN
FOR SPRING SEASON

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Syracuse, OH.
Open_paily 9 to 5 &amp; Sun. 1 to 5

Johnson, "but not overjoyed. 1bis
doesn't crush 'em. We still have one
more to go. They're the cbainps and
they're capable of corning back."

Is Your .Business
AdequaWJ- PJOtededt
Are( ycu .

waiting money. wltfi

. marly cammerclaf pol lei"", ....,
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· COST. S.. us' feW all ycjur ·cam·

at

merclal or .busf,...,

·r;w.~

.REUTER BROGAN
INSURANCE SERVICE
214 E. Main
Pomeroy

992-5131
or
992-5739

Lori Pickett, Cindy Parker, and Lori Maynard. Back
row, Coach Kim Grueser, Kathy Blake, Natalie Lambel'!, Wendy Tillis, Sherry Holtz, Diane Ross, Betsy
Herald, and Tina East.

MEIGS RESERVE SOFTBALL TEAM members
are, left to right - Front row, Melanie DiJlard, Paula
Horton, Kris Snowden, Cindy Crooks, Beth Gloeckner,

NEW YORK (AP) - " .. .and the
Detroit Lions, with the No. 1 selecti draft "
on,
....
The moment National Football
League Commissioner Pete Rozelle
cleared his throat and completed
. that sentence today, another bumofmilli. ·
per crop
onaires was bo rn.
Itwasn'talwaysthatway,ofcourse.Ba k
c before the Earl Campbells
and Terry Bradshaws of this era, the
0 J S.
·
. 110psons and Roman Gabnels
of. the
·
d
d
previous eca e and even the
Tom Harmons' and Paul HornWJgs of ·
bygone days, there was Jay Berwanger.
H
·
e started 1t all...or, more accurately, he nearly started it all He
·
·
· ·
was thehy first wmn
1 e~ of the HeiS.man
Trop , emb ematic of the fmest
coUegiate football player in the land.

· m
· the
And he was the No. I choice
first draft in the National Football
League.
.
But he never played a mmute of
pro ball.
Philadelphia a~y had the No.I
choice in that No.I draft and, on Feb.
8, 1936, the Eagles selected Berwanger, a halfback out of the
University of · Chicago. They then
tra ded the negotiation r1'ghts to
George Halas' Chicago Bears.
The " negotiation"lasted less time
thaRl't tak es to wave goodbye ·
"I read in the paper that I'd been
drafted," Berwanger said. "That's
all I knew about it. Then I met
Geo
·
hotel I bb one ru'ght
rge m a
.o Y
. •
We were both gomg to a SOCial
he introd ed
etonghis~gewlfment. Afte
d 1 rm·trod ceduchimmteo
e an
u
my friend, he said, 'What do you

· 'How about
want?' and I sa1d,
$25,000 for two years, no cut?' and he
· Ifnen
· d• 'N'1ce to meet
sa1'd t o my glf
you,' and to me he said, 'Jay, I'U see
you around.' That was the last I saw
of him.
"We in the NFL didn't look like a
· · future beeause they
very promiSmg
weren't paying any money in those
days - $100, maybe $150 a game,''
Berwanger sa td . "They couldn't afford it. They didn't have television;
they weren •t a b'1g drawmg
· card at
the gate , and the COWltry was l'ust
cOining out of the depression.
'
"I'd said $25,000 facetiously," he
said, "but I did have other Oj)'
rt 'ti ( 'tin · f the Chi
po uru es wn g or
cago
Daily News for a year, being freshh
th u ·
1
f
maChin coacmakinat e ruhesvers tyd o
cago,
g speec
an endo.rsing products, among other

Hinsdale, Ill., and heads a company
which bears biB name. It manufactures and represents manofacturers
of Industrial rubber for gaskets.
The management of the Cleveland
Browns entered today's National
Football League draft of college
.
.
players with an open nund
but 1t
was no secret that the tea'm was
looking for help on the defensive line
. end.
- preferably at defensive
The draft was to begin at 10 a.m.
. 15th m
.'
with Cleveland slated to p1ck
·
the first roWJd.
The Browns said they were interested in selecting one of three
linemen but refused to name the
•
players before the draft.
However the three were probably
'
included in a crop of four defende~
who were rated highest among this
year's college prospects. They are:

from.Texas A&amp;M ·
- Jun Stuckey, a 6-5, 24f..poWJder
from Clemson.
.
d
- c;::;ushiGreer, a 6-4 , 24frpoWJ er
fr: . c ga~it!HI
t d t .
m;;!/n dr ft ' our ratie 0 ~prove
Ir toa . mkg nlposfl ont.. e
Browns
were
.
, ·
·p1cds o Y our unes
m~y,ss;:rr~ : hed .
d
18
1
fifthevedan reth qws d dr ftsehc~n '
c oiCes
. anst seven
d Is roun · a that
the
Bm pa
eat ' mdeatruhng
t'
rowns .th
en th
ere lik lihood
e se 1ec Ion
...
process
WI
e
e
o1Iagra..,.
b'
nl thr . f th t
m~ Y ee 0 e op 100 P yers
mAfteco~try .
.
lecti th
r, elf oped runhg se toon, e
Browns secon c mce was come
in the third round and would be the
rd
ti
Th . third
73 se1ec on avera11 . e1r
choice, in the fourth roWJd , would be
th 99th Ia drafted
e
P yer
·

Bengals
Paul
Brown
is General
satisfied Manager
with Munoz'
health but maintains Cincinnati will
still go•for the best available players
in the l2-round draft.
Brown also likes Penn State defensive tackle Bruce Clark and
Nebraska tight end Junior Miller.
Those four players "have been put
up there as the supers by the
scouting combines " Brown said
• to pick Sims.
·
Detroit is expected
"A lot is dependent on wbat San
Francisco does I don't think they
·
know themselves
what they're
doing. 1 honestly think they're
hoping for a deal. And there are
some people who could make a deal
to get MWJoz, Miller or Clark," said
Brown There have been reports that
·
the Lions might be willing to give up
Sims in a trade.
Brown said that if Cincinnati picks

The Cincinnati Bengals were
looking for help in their offensive

Miller, the Bengals might have to
consider a two-tight-end offense.

future
." days, Berwanger lives in
These

- Bruce Clark, a 6-3, 261-pounder
from Penn State.
- Jacob Green, a 6-3, 237·pounder

that made me s~me money
ii-~---~~~;;;!J!I!"M"-I!!!;;;;w~~~~~~~~·iill things)
and also helped me build for my

BASEBALL

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'399

A·C, AM. FM Stereo, spoke
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Natiooal
HOUSTON ROCKETS - Sijjned Ray Pat·
tersoo, general manager, to a new three-

While, 2 DR Sedan, local, one
owner, vinyl top, A-C, power

steering, spoke road wheels.

'6495.

'3195.

1972 DODGE

1977 FORD

DART

THUNDERBIRD

year contract.
Natiooal

Football lngue
ST. LOUIS CARDINAL - Nullified last
week's trade with the K.arusas City Chiefs for
Walter White, tight end, because White
railed to report for a phy:5ical.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS - Acquired
Charles Young , tight end, and one of Lcs

Houston (Forsch 2-D) at Cincinnati
(Leibrandt 1-1} , n
Chicago ( R~lOChel 2-l l at St. Louis (MarUnez 1-1 ), n
Atlanta (Matula Z-0) at San Diego (Jones
1-J), n

Los Angeles (Goltz 1-2) at San Francisco
(Montefusco l-2), n
·
WtdDnday'• Gamea

footbaU coach.
SOUTH CAROUNA STATE -

aa .lOOI
a .467 t "'-

BOWMAN BEST IN NHL

1

s a
6 10
s 10

Baltimore

.UII 2
. 37~ 3

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Scotty
Bowman, who guided the Buffalo
Sabres to a 47-17-16 record, was
named the National Hockey
League's executive of the year by
The Sporting News.
Bowman, the Saj)res' coach and
general manager, edged
Philadelphia General Manager
Keith Allen 13-11 ln the vote of 36
NHL executives.

.37~ 3
59 .3$7 3

Olicago
oaklAnd

II 5 .631
11 7 .611 l
9 7.5632

Kansas City
Texas

9 7 .~ 2
10 9 .526 2\;
i 9 .437 4
Minnesota
Mooday'1 Ga.mee
Boston at Chicago, ppd., rain
Kal\58S City at Toronto, ppd., rain
SeatUe 8, Mlnnesota 4
New YorkatBaWmore, ppd ., rain
Oakland a. California o

SeatUe

miles, AM.FM 8 track ,

Economy Special. This car is

16,000

local and is one of the cleanest

power drivers seat, A-C,
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==

1979 CHEVROLET
LUV 4x4

1980 JEEP
CJ-5 4x4

Only game. schedulod

4 cylinder. 4 speed trans., rear
. seat, AM-FM . casseHe, side
step, 1,700 miles only .

Seattle&amp;, MIMesota I
New York at Baltimore, ppd ., rain
Oakland a.California o
Only li!llffil'.!ll scheduled
Tbelday'aGamH
Teus (Comer 0-2) at Detroit {Morris 3-l 1
SeatUe {Bannister 2-0 ) at Minnesota

Kansa.1 City {Leonard D-! ) at Toronto
(OancyO-l), n
New York (Tiant 1·1) a t Balt!more
~

Milwaukee (Tnivers ().()) 11t Cleveland

-.-....

:rHE SAVING PLACE

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POLICE FORCE
NIGHT.
SALE
PRICE

'249

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wheels and all terrain tires, 4
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Many Other Models Are Available
Monte Carlo, Cutlass, Novi, Zephyr, Granada.

MASON FURNITURE

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONL

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Man., Tues., Wed ., Friday &amp; sat.
8 , 30 to s: oo Thursdav t ill12 Noon

RIVERSIDE
Upper River Rd .

ORA WS CROOKSVll.LE
The Eastern Eagles will play
Saturday afternoon at 3 p.m. on
Crabtree Field ln Nelsonville against Miller In roWJd one of the sectional
tournament. Preceding that game at
I p.m. Trimble will play Crooksville.
The winners will advance to the
finals, to be held Monday, May 5 at 4
p.m. at the same location.

DEMONWJNSATDOWNS
CINCINNATI (AP) - Juan Torres
took Bold Demon to the outside Monday and ran away with the $5,000
featured eighth race at River Downs
by eight lengths.
The winning time on the fast track
was 1:05 4-S for the St furlongs and
the payoff was $4.40, $:1 and $2.40 .
J x J Truble placed, $4.60 and $5, and
Trader Sam, third, $:1.

TntsdaJ' • Gama
Boston at Chicag o, ppd., rain
Kansu City at Toronto, ppd., rain

(Mc:GregorO..OJ, n

The Public Ut tlities Com ·
mission ol Ohto has set
tor public hearin g Case
No 79·234-EL·PAC Sub·
tile A. to review the luel
procu rement pr actices
and policies ol The Ohio
Power Company. the oper·
ation ot its Fuel Cosl
Ad justment Clause. and
related maners . Th1s hejlr·
ing 1s sc heduled to begin
at 1 00 p m on Tuesday.
May 27. t980 at the Ctty
Council Ollice. 2t8 Cleve·
land Ave . SW . Canton .
Ohio 44702.
All interested pa r1 1es will
be gtven an opportumty
to be heard Further 1nlor·
mation may be obtamed
by contacttng the Com ·
mtSSIOn .
THE PUBLI C UT ILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By David M. Polk ,
Secretary

Named

Johnny Jooes head basketbaU coach.
TULANE - Named Vince Gibson, head
football coach, and signed him loa four-yea r
contract.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pel GB
I ! .571

llostoo
Milwaukee

LEGAL NOTIC E

picks in Tuesday 's NFL drafl for the 19ers
third-round pick in the draft plus an undUclosed future choice.
COLLEGE
LOUISVILLE - Named Bob Weber, head

Phila~elph.ia.at New \' ork , n
Houston at Crncinnati, n
Atlanta at San OiegG, n
Los Angeles at San Francisco,n

Toronto
New York

National Football League college
draft began today.
Cincinnati, which had a 4-12
record last year, selects third behind
the Detroit Lions and the San Fran·
cisco49ers.
The Bengals have expressed a
strong interest in Southern CaWor·
nia offensive tackle Anthony Munoz.
Munoz, who · Widerwent knee
surgery, said he is tired of talking
about his operation, although
acknowledging that it might hurt his
chances in the dtaft.

Angeles' third-round and fourUH-ound draf t

Chicago at St. Uluis
Montreal at Pittsburgh, n

Detroit

'1495.

BalkelbaU AIIOCJatiOII

Mootreai iRogers 2·21 at Pitt.burgh 1Bil&gt;-

CleveLand

around.

BASKETBALL

by2-0) , rt
Philadelphia (Lereh 0.2 ) at New Yori:
rBomback l~ l. n

VOLARE

2.0) at California

Moodly'•
Sports Tranaau:t101111

'l'ucldly'sGamn~

4x4 RANGER XLT

Chicago

line and defensive backfield as the

Oakland at Calilornia , n

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AUBnta at San Diego, ppd., rain
· Only garne:3 scheduled·

1977 PlYMOUTH

1·1 ) at

Texas at Detroit
Seattle at Minnesota
New York at Baltimote, n
Kan.sas City at Toronto, n
Milwaukee at Cleveland. n
Boston at ChicHgo, n

. Chicago4 , St.I.J&gt;uis2

1978 FORD BRONCO

{Stanley

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RIVERSIDE

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.

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San Fnmcisco

DUE TO UNSURPASSED NEW CAR SALES, WE NOW
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Our Sale
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Major League 8aJebaiJ
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L.PcL GB

SUPERIOR
FRANKIES

sity baseball team. They are, left to right, Tom Owens,
Dave HyseU and Cliff Kennedy .

More sports millionaires to he made today

II I
Cut-Up
Chickens

SENIOR DIAMOND PLAYERS - Three seniors
are playhing this season for the Meigs Marauder var-

Ohio

. 773-SS92

'

Mason, W. Va; ·

--

~

----==--==:.-

-

·
-•

.

-

-

.. 185 UPPER RIVER ROAD. GALLIPOLIS

�! - The Dally SenUnel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Tuesday, April29, 1900

9- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Tuesday, April29, 1980

Sparky welcomed home to Cincinnati
••

CINCINNATl (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds fans cheered wildly for former
Manager Sparky Anderson then watched as the Reds defeated his
Detroit Tigers in exhibition, 4-2 Monday night.
"1bis l.s the first time I'll get
recognized and the last time. No
matter what happens, that's the only
time the feeling will be thl.s way,"
Anderson said.
Anderson was fired by Reds

President Dick Wagner after the
1978 season. In nine years, The Reds
Wider Anderson· won two World
Championships, four National
League Pennants and five Western
Division lilies.
"Cincinnati bas always been like
home. I've spent more time here in
the last 10 years than any other
place. I'll never wear nwnber '10'
again (his Reds unlfonn nwnber),
no matter how long I'm in baseball

because thl.s park always meant a
lotto me," he.said.
"Some things you keep. Some
things in life can't be taken away,"
Anderson said of the Reds pictures
and trophies still . in his home at
Tbou.sand Oaks, Calif.
"I'll never agree with the move
(firing), but he felt it W!!S a decision
he had to make. Dick Wagner was
fair. He fiew to California, looked

me right in the eye and fired me. I'U
never agree with the move, but I can
WJderstand It," Anderson said
Talking about hl8 new team, Anderson said, "I was looking forward
to tonight, but we've really been
having it rough. I've got a good hitting club but throwing and catching
(defense J Is a problem.
Ron Oester scored and drove in
the winning rWJ for Cincinnati. The

Reds cored twice in the third inning
on two walks and a aingle by Cesar
Gerollimo. Two more runs came In
the seventh on singles by Junior
Kennedy, Oester and Cesar
Gertnomlo and a walk to winning pitcher Paul MOI!Itau.
The Tigers taiJied in the fourth on
a alngle by Kirk Gibson, who stole
second and came borne on an inlleld
oul In the sixth inning, Dave

ning.

That preserved a 1·1 tie and It
remained that way until the ninth
when Kingman slapped a pitch from
Bob Sykes into center field for a tiebreaking RBI single that triggered a
three-run uprising as the Cubs
defeated the Cardinals 4-2.
"He's the complete ballplayer
now,' ' Manager Preston Gomez said
of Kingman. "He beats you with hiB
bat, he can run, he can throw and he

can field."
Only three games were played in
the majors while four were rained
out + Atlanta-Ban Diego in the
National League and New YorkBaltimore, Boston-Chicago and Kansas City-Toronto in the American.
In AL action, the Oakland A's
made it f&gt;.for-5 over California by
blanking the Angels ~ Whi,le the
Seattle Mariners defeated the Minnesota Twins 6-4.

As usual, Kingman wasn't
available to the media but other
Cubs didn't mind talking about him.
"When the game's on the line and
he's up, you better watch him," said
relief ace Bruce Sutter, who picked
· up his sixth save. "When he first
came up, he used to swing at
everything. He's cut down on his
strike zone. He knows what he wants
up there now."
Ivan DeJesus opened the Cubs'

Sonics on verge of elimination from playoffs
tni ANGELES (AP) - The Los

Ang~les Lakers aren't counting

defending National Basketball
Association champion Seattle out of
the Western Conference title series,
but realistlcally the SuperSonics
don't seem to have much of a chance.
The Sonics are down 3-1 in the
best-of-seven series, with Game 5
scheduled at the Forwn in suburban
Inglewood Wednesday night. A
sellout crowd ci 17,505ls assured for
the nationally televised affair, which
begins at 11:30 p.m., EDT.
The Lakers are 4-1 against the
Sonics at the Forum this season the only loss being a 108-107 setback
in Game 1 last week. Overall thl.s
year, Los Angeles has a 41-6 record
on its home court and bas won 29 of
its last 31 games there.

Even if the Sonics win Wednesday
night, they would still have to win at
horne Friday night and trlwnph at
the Forum again SWJday afternoon
toget an opportunity to defend their
NBAtiUe.
"You can never count Seattle
out," said Los Angeles forward
Jamaal Wilkes, who scored 24 points
and pulled down 13 reboWJds in the
Lakers' come-from-behind 98-93 victory in Game 4 Sunday. "But right
now, I feel great. They're the defending champions and I want very
badly to beat them in Los Angeles
before our fans."
The Lakers overcame a 21-point
deficit midway in the third quarter
SWJday for a sweep of the two games
in Seattle, which were played at Hec
EdmWJdson Pavilion at the University of Washington because the

Klngdonie and the Seattle Collsewn
were booked previously.
"Yeah, I'm joyed," said Los
Angeles rookie Ear'vin "Magic"

son'ssing)e.
Whllll Anderson was gracious
about the Red3, outfielder Champ
Swnmers couldn't hide his feelings.
The former Reds plnchhltter Ia now
8

regular with~

"Dick Wagner made me feel that
no one in baseb811 wanted me. I
knew better and from the first day I
was in Detroit I began to believe in

myself," Swnmers said.
"I believe Sparky sees in the
Detroit team the same thing he saw
in Clnclnnatlsil! years ago. We bave
great young talent," Swnmers said.

Dave Kingman big man·for Cubs in victory
By The Associated Press
Dave Kingman didn't hit any
home runs Monday night but he was
a big man for the Chicago Cubs
anyway ...and not just because he
stands IHoot-9.
The tall left fielder, known for his
towering homers and wild-swinging
strikeouts, threw out St. Louis'
speedy Garry Templeton trying to
score from second base on a single
by Keith Hernandez in the third in-

Stegman tripled and scored on Glb-

ninth With a walk and Bill Buckner
bunted safely before Kingman
singled. Jerry Martin then greeted
Donnie Moore with an RBI double
and Tim Blackwell added a sacrifice
fiy.
A'18,Ailgela8

Tony, Annas, Dwayne Murphy and
Dave Revering homered Monday
night to support the Rick Langford's
seven-hitter. Langf!lrd, ~. was
making or1ly his secood start of the
season and struck out four.

NOW QPIN
FOR SPRING SEASON

complete line of bedding
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Plus blooming hanging
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"Season Special"
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Po~en

90c In

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Ph. 992-5776
Syracuse, OH.
Open_paily 9 to 5 &amp; Sun. 1 to 5

Johnson, "but not overjoyed. 1bis
doesn't crush 'em. We still have one
more to go. They're the cbainps and
they're capable of corning back."

Is Your .Business
AdequaWJ- PJOtededt
Are( ycu .

waiting money. wltfi

. marly cammerclaf pol lei"", ....,
you could have. ONE
LESS
· COST. S.. us' feW all ycjur ·cam·

at

merclal or .busf,...,

·r;w.~

.REUTER BROGAN
INSURANCE SERVICE
214 E. Main
Pomeroy

992-5131
or
992-5739

Lori Pickett, Cindy Parker, and Lori Maynard. Back
row, Coach Kim Grueser, Kathy Blake, Natalie Lambel'!, Wendy Tillis, Sherry Holtz, Diane Ross, Betsy
Herald, and Tina East.

MEIGS RESERVE SOFTBALL TEAM members
are, left to right - Front row, Melanie DiJlard, Paula
Horton, Kris Snowden, Cindy Crooks, Beth Gloeckner,

NEW YORK (AP) - " .. .and the
Detroit Lions, with the No. 1 selecti draft "
on,
....
The moment National Football
League Commissioner Pete Rozelle
cleared his throat and completed
. that sentence today, another bumofmilli. ·
per crop
onaires was bo rn.
Itwasn'talwaysthatway,ofcourse.Ba k
c before the Earl Campbells
and Terry Bradshaws of this era, the
0 J S.
·
. 110psons and Roman Gabnels
of. the
·
d
d
previous eca e and even the
Tom Harmons' and Paul HornWJgs of ·
bygone days, there was Jay Berwanger.
H
·
e started 1t all...or, more accurately, he nearly started it all He
·
·
· ·
was thehy first wmn
1 e~ of the HeiS.man
Trop , emb ematic of the fmest
coUegiate football player in the land.

· m
· the
And he was the No. I choice
first draft in the National Football
League.
.
But he never played a mmute of
pro ball.
Philadelphia a~y had the No.I
choice in that No.I draft and, on Feb.
8, 1936, the Eagles selected Berwanger, a halfback out of the
University of · Chicago. They then
tra ded the negotiation r1'ghts to
George Halas' Chicago Bears.
The " negotiation"lasted less time
thaRl't tak es to wave goodbye ·
"I read in the paper that I'd been
drafted," Berwanger said. "That's
all I knew about it. Then I met
Geo
·
hotel I bb one ru'ght
rge m a
.o Y
. •
We were both gomg to a SOCial
he introd ed
etonghis~gewlfment. Afte
d 1 rm·trod ceduchimmteo
e an
u
my friend, he said, 'What do you

· 'How about
want?' and I sa1d,
$25,000 for two years, no cut?' and he
· Ifnen
· d• 'N'1ce to meet
sa1'd t o my glf
you,' and to me he said, 'Jay, I'U see
you around.' That was the last I saw
of him.
"We in the NFL didn't look like a
· · future beeause they
very promiSmg
weren't paying any money in those
days - $100, maybe $150 a game,''
Berwanger sa td . "They couldn't afford it. They didn't have television;
they weren •t a b'1g drawmg
· card at
the gate , and the COWltry was l'ust
cOining out of the depression.
'
"I'd said $25,000 facetiously," he
said, "but I did have other Oj)'
rt 'ti ( 'tin · f the Chi
po uru es wn g or
cago
Daily News for a year, being freshh
th u ·
1
f
maChin coacmakinat e ruhesvers tyd o
cago,
g speec
an endo.rsing products, among other

Hinsdale, Ill., and heads a company
which bears biB name. It manufactures and represents manofacturers
of Industrial rubber for gaskets.
The management of the Cleveland
Browns entered today's National
Football League draft of college
.
.
players with an open nund
but 1t
was no secret that the tea'm was
looking for help on the defensive line
. end.
- preferably at defensive
The draft was to begin at 10 a.m.
. 15th m
.'
with Cleveland slated to p1ck
·
the first roWJd.
The Browns said they were interested in selecting one of three
linemen but refused to name the
•
players before the draft.
However the three were probably
'
included in a crop of four defende~
who were rated highest among this
year's college prospects. They are:

from.Texas A&amp;M ·
- Jun Stuckey, a 6-5, 24f..poWJder
from Clemson.
.
d
- c;::;ushiGreer, a 6-4 , 24frpoWJ er
fr: . c ga~it!HI
t d t .
m;;!/n dr ft ' our ratie 0 ~prove
Ir toa . mkg nlposfl ont.. e
Browns
were
.
, ·
·p1cds o Y our unes
m~y,ss;:rr~ : hed .
d
18
1
fifthevedan reth qws d dr ftsehc~n '
c oiCes
. anst seven
d Is roun · a that
the
Bm pa
eat ' mdeatruhng
t'
rowns .th
en th
ere lik lihood
e se 1ec Ion
...
process
WI
e
e
o1Iagra..,.
b'
nl thr . f th t
m~ Y ee 0 e op 100 P yers
mAfteco~try .
.
lecti th
r, elf oped runhg se toon, e
Browns secon c mce was come
in the third round and would be the
rd
ti
Th . third
73 se1ec on avera11 . e1r
choice, in the fourth roWJd , would be
th 99th Ia drafted
e
P yer
·

Bengals
Paul
Brown
is General
satisfied Manager
with Munoz'
health but maintains Cincinnati will
still go•for the best available players
in the l2-round draft.
Brown also likes Penn State defensive tackle Bruce Clark and
Nebraska tight end Junior Miller.
Those four players "have been put
up there as the supers by the
scouting combines " Brown said
• to pick Sims.
·
Detroit is expected
"A lot is dependent on wbat San
Francisco does I don't think they
·
know themselves
what they're
doing. 1 honestly think they're
hoping for a deal. And there are
some people who could make a deal
to get MWJoz, Miller or Clark," said
Brown There have been reports that
·
the Lions might be willing to give up
Sims in a trade.
Brown said that if Cincinnati picks

The Cincinnati Bengals were
looking for help in their offensive

Miller, the Bengals might have to
consider a two-tight-end offense.

future
." days, Berwanger lives in
These

- Bruce Clark, a 6-3, 261-pounder
from Penn State.
- Jacob Green, a 6-3, 237·pounder

that made me s~me money
ii-~---~~~;;;!J!I!"M"-I!!!;;;;w~~~~~~~~·iill things)
and also helped me build for my

BASEBALL

SOUD WOOD BEDROOM SUITES.
MANY CHOICES

SCOREBOARD

'100 OFF

•

BUTTER·
)MILK

ICE CREAM

••

•

'

•

••
•
•
••

.

'139

'lz GALLON

'lz GAllON

VALlEY BELL

ALL STAR DAIRY

VITAMIN D

2% MILK

••

t179

GAllON

RC &amp; DIET RITE
16 OZ. 8 PAK
ALL
WEEK

TENDER1EAF

COFFEE-MATE .....................................~~.~.~~. '139 •
HYLAND

25 LB. BAG

. THURS.
ONLY

'399

A·C, AM. FM Stereo, spoke
wheels, radial tires, power
rear window, 2 tone

Natiooal
HOUSTON ROCKETS - Sijjned Ray Pat·
tersoo, general manager, to a new three-

While, 2 DR Sedan, local, one
owner, vinyl top, A-C, power

steering, spoke road wheels.

'6495.

'3195.

1972 DODGE

1977 FORD

DART

THUNDERBIRD

year contract.
Natiooal

Football lngue
ST. LOUIS CARDINAL - Nullified last
week's trade with the K.arusas City Chiefs for
Walter White, tight end, because White
railed to report for a phy:5ical.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS - Acquired
Charles Young , tight end, and one of Lcs

Houston (Forsch 2-D) at Cincinnati
(Leibrandt 1-1} , n
Chicago ( R~lOChel 2-l l at St. Louis (MarUnez 1-1 ), n
Atlanta (Matula Z-0) at San Diego (Jones
1-J), n

Los Angeles (Goltz 1-2) at San Francisco
(Montefusco l-2), n
·
WtdDnday'• Gamea

footbaU coach.
SOUTH CAROUNA STATE -

aa .lOOI
a .467 t "'-

BOWMAN BEST IN NHL

1

s a
6 10
s 10

Baltimore

.UII 2
. 37~ 3

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Scotty
Bowman, who guided the Buffalo
Sabres to a 47-17-16 record, was
named the National Hockey
League's executive of the year by
The Sporting News.
Bowman, the Saj)res' coach and
general manager, edged
Philadelphia General Manager
Keith Allen 13-11 ln the vote of 36
NHL executives.

.37~ 3
59 .3$7 3

Olicago
oaklAnd

II 5 .631
11 7 .611 l
9 7.5632

Kansas City
Texas

9 7 .~ 2
10 9 .526 2\;
i 9 .437 4
Minnesota
Mooday'1 Ga.mee
Boston at Chicago, ppd., rain
Kal\58S City at Toronto, ppd., rain
SeatUe 8, Mlnnesota 4
New YorkatBaWmore, ppd ., rain
Oakland a. California o

SeatUe

miles, AM.FM 8 track ,

Economy Special. This car is

16,000

local and is one of the cleanest

power drivers seat, A-C,
cruise control, rear defroster.

radials.

'4295.

MEADOW GOLD

COKE

.,49

16 OZ. 8 PAK

POPSIC_LES
12 PAK
99'

==

1979 CHEVROLET
LUV 4x4

1980 JEEP
CJ-5 4x4

Only game. schedulod

4 cylinder. 4 speed trans., rear
. seat, AM-FM . casseHe, side
step, 1,700 miles only .

Seattle&amp;, MIMesota I
New York at Baltimore, ppd ., rain
Oakland a.California o
Only li!llffil'.!ll scheduled
Tbelday'aGamH
Teus (Comer 0-2) at Detroit {Morris 3-l 1
SeatUe {Bannister 2-0 ) at Minnesota

Kansa.1 City {Leonard D-! ) at Toronto
(OancyO-l), n
New York (Tiant 1·1) a t Balt!more
~

Milwaukee (Tnivers ().()) 11t Cleveland

-.-....

:rHE SAVING PLACE

JOIN YOUR
POLICE FORCE
NIGHT.
SALE
PRICE

'249

Black paint with white spoke
wheels and all terrain tires, 4
cylinder, 4 speed friln smission.

SHOP

MASON FURN_ITURE

'6395.

" FOR THE BEST DIIALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

Many Other Models Are Available
Monte Carlo, Cutlass, Novi, Zephyr, Granada.

MASON FURNITURE

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONL

446-9800

Herman lirate

G~llipolis ,

The new Bearcat®210 is a scallning marvel. You can pro·
gram any 10 local public service frequencies by pushing
a few buttons. Push another button and search out unknown frequencies within a band. Push another and lockout those frequencies not of int~rest. See what you are
hearing on the large lighted digital display. The new Bearcol 210is scanning like you've never seen or heard before.

Man., Tues., Wed ., Friday &amp; sat.
8 , 30 to s: oo Thursdav t ill12 Noon

RIVERSIDE
Upper River Rd .

ORA WS CROOKSVll.LE
The Eastern Eagles will play
Saturday afternoon at 3 p.m. on
Crabtree Field ln Nelsonville against Miller In roWJd one of the sectional
tournament. Preceding that game at
I p.m. Trimble will play Crooksville.
The winners will advance to the
finals, to be held Monday, May 5 at 4
p.m. at the same location.

DEMONWJNSATDOWNS
CINCINNATI (AP) - Juan Torres
took Bold Demon to the outside Monday and ran away with the $5,000
featured eighth race at River Downs
by eight lengths.
The winning time on the fast track
was 1:05 4-S for the St furlongs and
the payoff was $4.40, $:1 and $2.40 .
J x J Truble placed, $4.60 and $5, and
Trader Sam, third, $:1.

TntsdaJ' • Gama
Boston at Chicag o, ppd., rain
Kansu City at Toronto, ppd., rain

(Mc:GregorO..OJ, n

The Public Ut tlities Com ·
mission ol Ohto has set
tor public hearin g Case
No 79·234-EL·PAC Sub·
tile A. to review the luel
procu rement pr actices
and policies ol The Ohio
Power Company. the oper·
ation ot its Fuel Cosl
Ad justment Clause. and
related maners . Th1s hejlr·
ing 1s sc heduled to begin
at 1 00 p m on Tuesday.
May 27. t980 at the Ctty
Council Ollice. 2t8 Cleve·
land Ave . SW . Canton .
Ohio 44702.
All interested pa r1 1es will
be gtven an opportumty
to be heard Further 1nlor·
mation may be obtamed
by contacttng the Com ·
mtSSIOn .
THE PUBLI C UT ILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By David M. Polk ,
Secretary

Named

Johnny Jooes head basketbaU coach.
TULANE - Named Vince Gibson, head
football coach, and signed him loa four-yea r
contract.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pel GB
I ! .571

llostoo
Milwaukee

LEGAL NOTIC E

picks in Tuesday 's NFL drafl for the 19ers
third-round pick in the draft plus an undUclosed future choice.
COLLEGE
LOUISVILLE - Named Bob Weber, head

Phila~elph.ia.at New \' ork , n
Houston at Crncinnati, n
Atlanta at San OiegG, n
Los Angeles at San Francisco,n

Toronto
New York

National Football League college
draft began today.
Cincinnati, which had a 4-12
record last year, selects third behind
the Detroit Lions and the San Fran·
cisco49ers.
The Bengals have expressed a
strong interest in Southern CaWor·
nia offensive tackle Anthony Munoz.
Munoz, who · Widerwent knee
surgery, said he is tired of talking
about his operation, although
acknowledging that it might hurt his
chances in the dtaft.

Angeles' third-round and fourUH-ound draf t

Chicago at St. Uluis
Montreal at Pittsburgh, n

Detroit

'1495.

BalkelbaU AIIOCJatiOII

Mootreai iRogers 2·21 at Pitt.burgh 1Bil&gt;-

CleveLand

around.

BASKETBALL

by2-0) , rt
Philadelphia (Lereh 0.2 ) at New Yori:
rBomback l~ l. n

VOLARE

2.0) at California

Moodly'•
Sports Tranaau:t101111

'l'ucldly'sGamn~

4x4 RANGER XLT

Chicago

line and defensive backfield as the

Oakland at Calilornia , n

(KoomwtH )

SPRITE &amp; TAB

•139

68 ,4293
68 .429 3
$ 10 .333 4\io

AUBnta at San Diego, ppd., rain
· Only garne:3 scheduled·

1977 PlYMOUTH

1·1 ) at

Texas at Detroit
Seattle at Minnesota
New York at Baltimote, n
Kan.sas City at Toronto, n
Milwaukee at Cleveland. n
Boston at ChicHgo, n

. Chicago4 , St.I.J&gt;uis2

1978 FORD BRONCO

{Stanley

Wedaesday'1 Gam~

_

6 12 .333 7'r.t
MoD4ay'J Gamfll

RIVERSIDE

HOLSUMKING SIZE BREAD................;.~.. 39'
TEA BAGS..........................~.~.~.,,,

.

~

7 9 .4333

San Fnmcisco

DUE TO UNSURPASSED NEW CAR SALES, WE NOW
HAVE ONE OF THE FINEST SELECTIONS OF QUALITY
USED CARS IN OUR AREA.
Our Sale
Ins Include

GALLON

"•

85 .615

6 II .353 7

V .W.-AMC-Jeep-Renault

MILK

••

•

89 e

Chicago

Sl. Louis
Man !.real
Philadelphia
New York

II 5 .688 1"2
11 7 .622 2~
6 10 .375 61;

•

BROUGHTON

g 5 .843

13 4 .7&amp;.;

LB.

BROUGHTON
TOP QUAUTY

Pittsburgh

Boston

(Bawngarten Hl) , n
Oakland INorri.s
(Tanana 1·1) , n

WEST

USED CAR SALE

.•'

(OwchlnkoO..l ), n

Major League 8aJebaiJ
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L.PcL GB

SUPERIOR
FRANKIES

sity baseball team. They are, left to right, Tom Owens,
Dave HyseU and Cliff Kennedy .

More sports millionaires to he made today

II I
Cut-Up
Chickens

SENIOR DIAMOND PLAYERS - Three seniors
are playhing this season for the Meigs Marauder var-

Ohio

. 773-SS92

'

Mason, W. Va; ·

--

~

----==--==:.-

-

·
-•

.

-

-

.. 185 UPPER RIVER ROAD. GALLIPOLIS

�- Tbe ~Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Tuesday, April2.9, 19Sl
Dl~•at
TRAcY

10- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Tuesday, April29, 1980

'i} fi~N} fj}'i} ~ THATSCIIAIIBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ e
byHonrtAmoldandBoblH

Loyalty Day held at Mason Fire Station

Unacr~~mblo theM

lo&lt;lr Jumblea,
one letter to each square. to lorm
tour ordinary worda.

TIARE

.. _

'··

•

~ txE)Liil

'

.JU•T ON&amp; ?MAL.J.. PO noli

'!'OU'RI!

WHATEOI/ER I,,.

O~L.OOt&lt;;iiJG,

TO WORK THIS
MttJe, YOU A'-10

Ml65 PI!At-J ... Ir\Y 6095
HOLD~ A 99-YEAR
J..!ASE OIJ THIS
MilliE!

McKEE WILL FIRST
HAVF. TO 131:T
INrO ITl

TUESDAY, APRIL 29, lfiO

r

I I

&gt;

t

tF YOU CA'-1 JUMP ALl- THe
WA'f FROM THE ROAD 1'-ITO
THE MltJS TUNNEl- --FIN E!
SUT IF YOU
S&amp;T OloJS FOOT
OtJ MY PROP&amp;RTIIYOU'Ll.. FIIJD YOU.
6ELF CHEI/IIIN(J
LEIIP!- YOU
5AVVYf

IT'6 MADE OF
SLIT A~AR'6
TO BE M05TL.Y

~OPE

IWHOANYt
(

I

)

"TWINE."

)

fojow arr~ the circled lotte,. to
lorm the ourprioe anawer, as tug·
geotod by t h e - cartoon.

.

Print answer here:

D (0) D (0)( I I ]

Yesterday's! Jumbles: MUSTY LINGO

(Anawere tomotrow)
DIVIDE NORMAL

Answer: Certainly can't sleep through thlai-

INSOMNIA

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
:
MEMBERS OF TilE MASON VFW led the
town's Loya lty Day parade Saturday. Despite
threatening spurts of rain throughout the afternoon

Loyalty Day activities went on as scheduled with the
kickoff parade at 2 p.m. followed by a program
featuring Harry Miller of New Haven as the master of
ceremonies.

TilE WAHAMA HIGH SCHOOL marching
band provided a lively beat for Saturday's Loyalty
Day parade in Mason as well as the patriotic music
during the program at the Mason Volunteer Fire

Zatezalo said meetings resembling pep rallies have been held in
northwest, north and east-&lt;:entral
Ohio to entice people into buying the
"Business Concept List.:'
"People are investing a lot of
money in this," said Mansfield

Police Capt. Kenneth L. Long, adding that some people are going to
be hurt by it. He blamed its
popularity on people wanting to
make a free dollar.
The get-rich-quick plan, also
known as pyramid sales, involves
selling a list of 12 names with the
buyer paying the seller $00 and then
sending another $00 to the person at
the top of the list.
The buyer adds his name to the
bottom of the list. Theoretically, the
buyer's name rises to the top after
the list makes several rounds. When
that happens, thousands of new
buyers will each begin sending $00.
Zatezalo said the plan is being
promoted as a way to reap up to
$204,000 with a $100 investment.
The P,lan is popular in the Newark
area , where residents wearing "I'm

on the List" sweatshirts demonstrated outside the offices of the
Newark Advocate after the paper
ran a series of stories critical of the
plan.
In Tuscarawas County , a
Strasburg man reported making
$350 in two weeks, and said a friend
made $12,000 in four months. In
Zanesville, police reported the city
has been saturated with not only the
$100 list, but atso other lists costing
$20 and $000.
Zatezalo said buyers at the beginning of the scheme make most of the
money. "When numbers become so
great so the maximwn number of
people become involved, the scheme
will break down,'' he said.
Even though the U.S. mail is not
involved, Zatezalo said the plan is
illegal in Ohio.
" What disturbs me is that some

~'II~T

'IOU SflY AW, GRO!I UP, AHHIE!
ABaJT CONGRESS l.OO&lt;•M'I HOMETO\'iN
JUST DOESN'T SEEM PAPER ~Ot-l PAGE 3
RIGHT, HUCKlE ••
THEY PU6USHED
RECORD CK Ot€ OF
OUR SENATORS ••

RICHARD OHLINGER, post commander of the VFW Post 9926 of
Mason, speaks to those in attendance at Saturday's Loyalty Day program
at the Mason Volunteer Fire Department. Also speaking were William
Smith, VFW state senior vice commander; Conunander Stan Blake of the
American Legion Post 140 of New Haven; Conunander Miles Epling of
the American Legion Post 23 of Point Pleasant; Ed Hotscalaw
re presenting the office of Secretary of State A. James Manchin; Mason
County Commissioner Mickey Whalen and Blue Cap Legionaire of the
Year Richard Danbury of New Haven. Laura Smith, VFW Auxiliary
state chaplain gave the invocation while Chaplain Bernard Nuetzling of
the Mason VFVf gave the benediction.
·

~~.lH'd'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
at Relembllng
1 Gaelic
41 Lingo
5 Film critic, U Encounter

Federal government may end food stamp program June ·I
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ ~ State ' meeting .of the seven-member State
officials are concerned about the imControlling Board.
pact the proposed abolition of the
Sen. William F. Bowen, 0federal food stamp program would
Cincinnati, noted that the federal
have on more than 872,000 lowgovernment is to make a final
decision by June I on whether to conincome Ohioans.
Tile issue surfaced Monday at a
tinue the program, and said the state

should be thinking about contingency plans.
Thomas McDowell, who heads the
food stamp division in the state
Welfare Department, and other officials indicated there would be little

the state could do because the
coupons cost about $33 million a
month and are underwritten entirely
with federal funds .
But McDowell said he plans to
meet with federal officials in
Chicago later this week to try to

learn more about the program's
fate.
Some members of Congress and
the U.S. Department of Health,
Education and Welfare say the
program should be reduced or

Christian religious rally attracts thousands
WASIUNGTON (AP) ~ Tens of
thousands of people were converging today for a religious rally
that has been criticized by some
organized churches for its political
overtones, but which plamers say is
an attempt at "calling the national
leadership back to God.''
The rally has been spearheaded by
some of the leading television
evangelists in the country. By late
Monday , organizers were
estimating between 200,000 and
500,000 persons would attend.
More than 60 speakers were
scheduled to take the microphone

during 12 hours of prayer and fasting
on the National Mall, the same site
where 175,000 persons attended a
Catholic Mass celebrated by Pope
John Paullllast October.
Tbe Rev. John Gimenez, an
evangelist from Virginia City, Va.,
who conceived the idea for the
Christian rally I 'hyears ago, denies
the aim is political. But he
acknowledged many of the rally
planners have strong views against
abortion, in favor of allowing prayer
in schools, opposition to the Equal
Rights Amendment, and against
homosexual conduct.

"We're not coming to denounce
anyone. We're coming to pray,"
Gimenez said. Another "Jesus for
Washington" official said although
the aim was to "humble before God
in repentance and prayer," some
participants are sure to "bring up
some of their pet issues ...
Among other sponsors of the daylong rally, which organizers said
could cost $1.2 million, are Jim
Bakker, president of the PTL
Televison; Ben Armstrong,
president of National Religious
Broadcasting; Bill Bright, founder
of Campus Crusade for Christ; M.G.

Ford loses $164 million
DETROIT (AP) ~Citing inflation
and the slwnping American car
market, Ford Motor Co. reported a
record $164 million first-quarter loss
and said high interest rates, increasing energy costs and the
weakening economy could cause
more problems later in 19110.
The No. 2 automaker said Monday
its second consecutive quarter in tbe
red resulted fl'OOI a $473 million
deficit in domestic operations, its
worst loss from North American
bUsiness ever.
That was about the loss some have
predicted for tottering Chrysler
Corp.,,which has yet to announce its
first quarter results, and was substantially more than industry
analysts had expected from Ford.
In last year's first quarter, Ford
earned $595 million, or ...97 a share
worldwide. Profits in that period
totaled $220 million in the United
States and $375 milli6n from foreign

lost $109 million worldwide. The
previous record loss from domestic
operations was $299 million in the
third quarter last year.
Lower volume, increased
marketing costs, more small
vehicles in the product mix and the
impact of inflation were responsible
for the record loss, Chairman Phillip
Caldwell and President Donald E.
Petersen said in a statement.
The small vehicles that have
become popular as gasoline prices
rise generally carry smaller profit
margins. In addition, domestic auto
sales were down 21 percent in the first three months of 1980 as compared .
to the year before.
other factors , including the
probable recession, are "expected to
aggravate Ford's losses at least in
the near term," Ford said.
Helping to offset the domestic loss
was a $309 million, or $2.58 per
share, profit in foreign operations.
But this was 17.9 percent below the
business.
The loss this quarter amounted to . same period in 1979, a decrease attributed to reduced sales. ·
$1.36 a share.
Revenue for the latest quarter fell
Ford's worst previous three24 percent to $9.61 billion from $12.6
month-period loss came in the fourth
quarter of 1979 when the automaker
I

billion in the same period last year.
Ford has closed two assembly
plants permanenUy this year and
imposed heavy layoffs, including
6,900 white-collar workers. Ford
said the actions, similar to those
taken by other U.S. automakers,
would result in annual savings ~
$1.5 billion by the end of 1981.
Ford is the third U.S. automaker
to report first-quarter results.
General Motors Corp. profits fell 85
percent from the first quarter of
1979, to $155 million. American
Motors Corp. earnings declined 98
percent to $1.2 million.
Ford's foreign profit in the latest ·
quarter was given a boost of $91
niillion from a tax treaty with Great
Britain that gave Ford a refund of
half the taxes paid on its behalf in
Britain since 1975.
Before the new treaty, Britain, to
avoid double taxation of profits,
gave refunds to British shareholders
for ~xes paid on their behalf by the
companies. OvefSFas shareholders
could not get refunds. Now, , overseas shareholders get a refund for
half the amount.

"Pat" Robertson, president of the
Christian Broadcasting Network;
and evangelist Rex Hwnbard.
Many organized religious groups,
which in the past have been critical
of the television evangelist
movement in general, have accused
the rally organizers of mixing
religion with politics.
In a statement aimed at the
" Jesus for Washington" rally,
representatives of 20 religious
organizations, including the 32member National Council of Churches, issued a statement accusing
the evangelists of trying to
"Christianize the govenunent."
" It is arrogant to assert that one 's
position on a political issue is
Christian and that all others are unChristian... irnmoral or sinful. There
is no 'Christian' vote or legislation,"
the statement said.
Many of the ·participants began

arriving in the nation's capital at the
beginning of the week and rally
leaders met with a number of
congressmen Monday. A prayer
vigil attracted an estimated 15,000
persons, most' of them young, at
Robert F. Kennedy Stadium Monday
night.
About three-fourths of the 55,000
seats in the rain-soaked stadium
were empty at the peak of the vigil,
but some participants remained
through the night. Rally organizers
rented special subway facilities to
take people from the stadium to the
Mall durtng the night.
At the vigil, speaker after speaker
denounced with words and song the
"moral decay" of society. Entertainers, including Pat Boone,
made brief appearances in the
steady rain. Outside the stadium, a
hawker sold umbrellas for $6 and
Bibles for $11.

Property Transfers
Mabel F . Arnett, Gladys V. Geyer,
Lawrence H. Cowdery, Nina G.
Cowdery, Harold D. Cowdery, Earl
K. Cowdery, Grace E. Kelly to
Eugene A. Singleton, Vivian D.
Singleton, 127.042 acres, Olive.
Virginia E. Hartley, Robert A.
Hartley formerly Virginia E.
Vltatoe t.o Kingsbury Homes Sales,
Ul53 acres, RuUand .
Thaddeus S. Dye, Linda G. Dye to
Energex Corp., Right of Way,
Columbia.
Catherine Althouse, Elmer J.
Althouse to Archie R. Stegall, Lupe
J. Stegall, .4011 acre, Scipio.
Madoline Worley Brown to A.
Worley Brown, J . Hyatt Brown,
Coal, Oil, Gas and other Minerals,
Lebanon- Chester.
Carui F. Pierce, Vivian Pierce to
Kinney L. Pierce, Barbara J. Pier-

'

4-2~·30

•n

people are going around saying that
because the list doesn't involve the
mails, that it's legal," he said, adding, "If the people used the mail to
pay their money, then I'm sure the
post office would be interested."
He said selling the list could be a
first degree misdemeanor if the sale
involved less than $150, or a fourth
degree felony if more than $150.
Zatezalo said his office is investigating a number of schemes
and last week obtained a
preliminary injunction against a
plan called "Financial Security
Program" operating out of
Harrisburg, a small town south of
Columbus.
He said other list sales schemes
popular in the last two years have
been known as "Circle of Gold" and
"Circle of Platinum."

. one club. North elected to
respond one diamond and
s
East 'ot into the business of
'K63
silly btdding with one heart.
tQH
South bid one notrump with
4K82
bts rock-bottom minimum.
Thts ended the auction.
WEST
EAST
You can't blame West for
+AQ873
+4
opening bts fourth-best spade.
.AI087
+62
tAKIOH
South won with the jack and
.Q 10 7 3
4J6 4
~;!ed bts queen ol hearts.
t took bts ace aod led the
SOUTH
seven of diamonds. Dummy's
.KJ 10
nine took that trick. South
'QJ9t
cashed dummy's king of
tJ83
hearts, continued by finessing
.A95
the nine in his band and cashVulnerable: North-South
ing the jack. Meanwbile, West
Dealer: South
had thrown the three of
Weot
spades so South knew that
East did not have a spade to
Pass
lead. Thus, South led a diaPua
mond to East who ran bts four
diamond tricks.
South discarded bts king-10
Opening lead:• 7
of spades and jettiSoned the
nine and silt of spades from
dummy while West, who was
n~:;.ing much attention,
pr&lt;
ed to throw the rest of
his spades in order to keep bts
queen of clubs guarded.
By O.wald Jacoby
South was able to make the
and Alu Soolag
II. last three tricks with the aceHere is a really silly bridge king of clubs and that lltUe
r.roblem. The question is: five of spades.
'How did South make two (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ABSN.)
notrump?" The defender did
not revoke and actually made
(For • copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send S I to: "Win Sf
just ooe real mistake.
South might well have Bridge, " care of this ri6WIPBper, P.O. Box 489, RBdlo City
~as dealer, but be was
· m a bidding mood and.opened Ststlon, New York, N. y,
10019.)
bts 12 balanced points with
NORm
• g6 2

Chain letter schemes 'worst ever'
in Ohio according to state official
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ The
chief fraud fighter in the Ohio Attorney General's office says Ohio's
faltering economy may be behind
the recent proliferation of chain letter sales schemes in the state.
" From what I've seen, this is the
worst it's ever been," said Michael
E. Zatezalo, head of the Consumer
Frauds and Crimes Section of the attorney general's office.
"Chain letters have been here for
a long time and continue to crop up,"
he said. " I guess it's the economy.
People are willing to take a chance."

Lucking out the hard way

Department which included addresses by William
Smith, VFW state senior vice commander, and
several local VFW and American Legion officials.

ce, 131.17 acres, Salem.
Alla·h Lambert to Homer Milts ,
Goldie Mills , Pt. Lot, Syracuse.
Charles Leo Eskew, Frances J.
Eskew to Roger Roush, Kathy
Roush, 2.01 acres, Salisbury.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Meigs Girts Athletic Boosters
will meet Thursday night at 7:30 in
Room 216 at Meigs High School.
Parents of ali girts in track and softball are urged to attend.
A'J1'END ATHENS MEETING
Mrs. Eva Dessauer and Mrs. Nettie Hayes of Theodorus Council 17
Daughters of America, attended ~
District Past Councilors Association
meeting held at the Ohio University
Inn, Athe~, Sunday. 1

scrapped as part of President Carter's efforts to cut down on federal
spending.
In Ohio, the nwnber of recipients
is increasing and probably will continue to grow if the program is
retained, due to industry shutdowns
and a growing number of layoffs, the
Welfare Department said.
The coupons cost $26.9 million last
July, compared with $33.2 million in
March 1980, officials said, adding
that the nwnber of Ohio recipients
could increase to 900,000 soon. Each
member of those families who meet '
the income and other criteria
receives $28 a month in coupons.
In other business, the board
authorized the state Enviromental
Protection Agency to fund U.hour
security at three hazardous waste
disposal sites, two in southwestern
Ohio and one in the Akron area. The EPA will award a contract,
without competitive bidding, for sur·
veUlance and monitoring at the
Summi t National site at Deerfield,
Chem-Dyne at Hamilton, and CerNewcoat Williamsburg.
Wx W Protection Agency,
Batavia, will use its own personnel
for the security work at Chem-Dyne
and Cer-Newco, and enter into a subcontract to provide the service at
Deerfield, the board was told.
Joseph Connelly, the EPA's senior
deputy director, said the company
has been providing the service on
what was expected to be a temporary basis.
He said it was anticipated that
citizen demands for it would subside
with the erection of waits and other
safeguards but that the EPA found
"citizens want surveillance at all
three sites."
. Tile contract with W&amp;W will cost
just under $1,000 a week ill each of
the sites, and the service will
dovetail with on-site, dally
monitoring by chemical analysts
working out of mobile laboratories,
Connelly said.
He explained that the analysts will
serve as monitors each weekday
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., with security
guards covering the remainder of
each 24-hour period as well aa
weekends and holidays:
In other business, the board
authorized Cleveland State University to spend $1,028,000 for slx land
acquisitions and construction
projects, for which funds have been
appropriated by the Legislature.

Judith ~

10 Adore
U Withdraw
13 William
Webster,
for one

DOWN

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· i Poet's
evening

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I Prepare
11 Roll of money 7 Where ~ at
17 German
8 Labor
article
unioo tactic
18 Peculiarity 9 Palm civet
20 Wood sorrel 12 Printing
%1 Hercules'
errors
captive
11 Cunning
22 Of which
11 Extlnct bird
Ruth was
the Sultan
Z3 Actress,
Jessica. %5 Cabal
Zl 'Therefore
27 Actress,

Got t' tie .

this rope

t'th' brace
ther: Rufus

• YES .. .YE&amp;..~T'b

/1XACTLY 'mE
I WANTED TO
CAPTURE!

Yesterday'• Alllwer
22 Elamite's
capital
Z3 Tempest
container
U Part of
the
U.S.S.R.
%5 Startle
27 Swnmer
TV fare

zt Musical

composition
:18 Unnatural
H Parkllig

lot
ml.!hap
31 Participial
ending

37 Sandwich
favorite

Katharine~

Z8Ilove: Lat.
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31 Apiece
3% Make a choice
33 Tape hue
b-+-+35Audrey

NIGHTY NIGHT.
LUKEV --I'LL SEE

'IOU FIRST THING
IN TH'MORNIN' .

I DON'T KNOW
IF I CAN
MAKE IT OR
NOT, SNUFFY-ME

'IEP·· I

CAN

MAKE IT

Hepburn film
37 Put on
1;--t--t-the payroll
33Mexlcan
selling
booth

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply •lands lor another. In this sample · A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sln&amp;le letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wordJ are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilferent.
CRYPTOQUOTBS

''EACH CONTESTANT MUST
FURNISH A NEW CAN
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THE WINNE~ Of EACH

MATe~

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WJ.lAT ABOUT

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Tf.IE LOSER 6ETS TO
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OVER THE FENCE AND
INTO THE WOODS !

Television;
Viewing
7:0()--(;ross-Wtts J; Tic Tac Dllutlh
8; Face the Music 13; Mic:Nell•
Lehrer Report 33; News 10;
Love, American Style 15; ·Senlord &amp; Son 17; Dick Cavett 20.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Sha Na
No 6; Joker'a Wild I; Dick
Cavett 33; Hollywood Squarn
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
10; Billy Graham In Music City;
U.S.A. 8; .Evening at Pops 20,33;
Movie °Chuke" 17.
8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; 9:00ljtg Show 3,15; Three's Company
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-Unlted States 3,15; Over.
Easy 20; Camera Three 33.
•
11 :00-News 3,6, 13, 15; Dick Cavett ·
20; Dave Allen at Large 33.
·
11 :JC&gt;-Tonlght3,15; ABC Naws6,13;
News 8, 10; ABC Captioned News

33 .
11 :50-Soap 6, 13; 12:00-BII'naby
Jones 8; Movie "lmltatlon of
Life" 10.

12 :25-Movle "Diamonds" 6,13;'
12 :30-News 17; 12 :35-Movle
"The One That Got Away" 17.
1:00-Tomorrowl; Newsl5; 1:111-Movle " Whispering Death" a.
J :DO-News
13 ;
3 :05-Movle
"Bombardier"
11;
5: 1o-...
M.~~~v..rlck

..

17.

·WEDNESDAY, APRIL30, lfiO
.'
#.ols-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13.
6 :00-PTL Club 15; 700 Club 6.1; ·
Health Field 10; 6: to-World at ..
Large 17.
6:30-Chrlstopher Closeup 10; News
17; 6:45--Mornlng Report 3;
A.M. Weather 33; 6:50-Good
Morning, WO!t VIrginia 13;
6:55--News 13 . .
7:00-Today 3.15; Good Morning ··
America 6,13; Wednesday
Morning 8; Batman 10: Thr"
Stooges.Little Rascals 17.
7:30-Hogan's Heroes 10; 7:55-- ·
Chuck White Reports 10.
8:00--&lt;:apt. Kangaroo 8,10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:30-Romper Room 17; 9:00-Bob .
Braun J; Big Valley 6; Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Jeflersons tO; Phil
Donahue 13, 15; Family Affair 17.
9: 30-Bob Newhart 8; One Day At A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.
,
IO:OG-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Jefferson• 8; Joker'a ·
Wild 10; Morning Magallne 13;
Movie "Interlude" 17.
10:3o-Hollywood Squares 3,15; •
$20,000 Pyramid 13: Whew 8, 10; .
Andy Griffith 6.
10:55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 : OD-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp; •
Shirley 6,13: Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :3G-Wheel of· Fortune 3, 15; ., •
Family FI!Ud 6,13; Sesame St.
20,33; 11 :55-News 17.
12 :0o-Newscenter
3:
News
6.8,10,13; Health Field 15; Low, '
American Style 17.
~
12 :»-Ryen's Hope 6,13; Search lor
Tomorrow 8,10; Password Plus
15; Movie "Meet Danny Wilson"
17: Elec. Co . 20,33.
I: OD-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6,13; Young a. the
Restless 8, 10.
2:00-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Llva
6, 13'; As The World Turns 8, 10; .
2:25-News 17.
2: »-Another World J, 15: I Love ·
Lucy 17.
Hospital 6,13 ;
J :00-Generel
Guiding Light 8, 10; Banana
Splits 17; Austin City Limits 20.
3 :30-FIIntstones 17; Over Easy 33. · ~.
~ : 00-Mister Cartoon 3; B!twltchad .,·
6; Petticoat Junction 8; Sesame
ST. 20,33; Brady Bunch 10; Real
McCoys 13; Lucy Show lS;
Spectreman 17.
~ : »-Lone Ranger 3; Afterschool
Special 6,13; Gomer Pyle 8,10; .,
Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's 11. 17. ~
5: 00--&lt;:arot Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My •
Three Sons I 7; Mister Rogers' • .
Neighborhood 20,33.
5:30-Mash J; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Elec. Co. ~
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33. ·
6 : DO-News 3,8, 10,13,15; Carol
Burnett 17: Zoom 20; 3-2-1
Contact 33.
6 :30-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News a, 10; Carol Burnett 6;
Bob Newhart 17; VIlla Al'!lre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:00--&lt;:ross-Wtts 3; Tic ·T ac Dough
8; Face the Music 6,13: MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 33; · NeW. 10;
Love, American Style 15; San.
lord &amp; Son 17: Dick Cavett 20.
"
7:3o-Country Roads 3; Match
Game PM 6: Joker' s Wild I; - .. ·
Dick Cavett 33; The Judge 10; '·
Family FI!Ud 13; Wild Kingdom
15; All In The Family 17;
MacNeil · Lehrer Report 20.
8:00-Real People 3,15; Eight Is .. ,.
Enough 6,13; Jimmy McNichol ,
!Special] 8, 10; Great Per-

..

formances 20,33; 'Movie *'The , ' ,

Man from Laramie" 17.
9:DO-Diff'rent Strokes 3,15;
Charlie' a Angels 6,13; Movie
' G'Ideon's Trumpet'' a, 10; Henry
Hudson's River: A Blogriphy
20,33.
Q LJ G 9:30-Hello, Larry 3,15; 10:00DXLKO
UKXHR
EX· CK
X
Qulncy 3, 15; V'!lll 6,13;
Baseball 17.
AKKO
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10:30-News 20; Peter JIIUI &amp;
Company 33;
11 :DO-Newt
UK 0,
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Dave Allen at Large 33.
OJAH 11:30-Tonlght3,15;
NXDDXHR
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ABC Ntws6,13;
NBA Playoff I; Movie' "MediiJQ
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REYNN
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11 :50-Love Boat 6,13; 12:30 NeWI
17;
12:35---Movlt
''Ride
EYOM
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WJSHNJH
Lonesome"
17.
Yeatertlay'a Cryptoqllote:THREE GRAND ESSENTIALS TO ·
HAPPINESS IN THIS LIFE ARE SOMETHING TO 00, 1:00-T-row 3; Brette 6,13;
News 15; 2: 10-Naws 13: Movie
SOMEmiNG TO WVE AND SOMETillNG TO HOPE FOil·
"Conflict" 17.
JOSEPH ADDISON
4:05-Movle "Knockout'' 17; 5:40C'l1910 Klnt PNtur91 Syndic.... lrte.
Love, American Style 17.

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�- Tbe ~Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Tuesday, April2.9, 19Sl
Dl~•at
TRAcY

10- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Tuesday, April29, 1980

'i} fi~N} fj}'i} ~ THATSCIIAIIBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ e
byHonrtAmoldandBoblH

Loyalty Day held at Mason Fire Station

Unacr~~mblo theM

lo&lt;lr Jumblea,
one letter to each square. to lorm
tour ordinary worda.

TIARE

.. _

'··

•

~ txE)Liil

'

.JU•T ON&amp; ?MAL.J.. PO noli

'!'OU'RI!

WHATEOI/ER I,,.

O~L.OOt&lt;;iiJG,

TO WORK THIS
MttJe, YOU A'-10

Ml65 PI!At-J ... Ir\Y 6095
HOLD~ A 99-YEAR
J..!ASE OIJ THIS
MilliE!

McKEE WILL FIRST
HAVF. TO 131:T
INrO ITl

TUESDAY, APRIL 29, lfiO

r

I I

&gt;

t

tF YOU CA'-1 JUMP ALl- THe
WA'f FROM THE ROAD 1'-ITO
THE MltJS TUNNEl- --FIN E!
SUT IF YOU
S&amp;T OloJS FOOT
OtJ MY PROP&amp;RTIIYOU'Ll.. FIIJD YOU.
6ELF CHEI/IIIN(J
LEIIP!- YOU
5AVVYf

IT'6 MADE OF
SLIT A~AR'6
TO BE M05TL.Y

~OPE

IWHOANYt
(

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)

"TWINE."

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fojow arr~ the circled lotte,. to
lorm the ourprioe anawer, as tug·
geotod by t h e - cartoon.

.

Print answer here:

D (0) D (0)( I I ]

Yesterday's! Jumbles: MUSTY LINGO

(Anawere tomotrow)
DIVIDE NORMAL

Answer: Certainly can't sleep through thlai-

INSOMNIA

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
:
MEMBERS OF TilE MASON VFW led the
town's Loya lty Day parade Saturday. Despite
threatening spurts of rain throughout the afternoon

Loyalty Day activities went on as scheduled with the
kickoff parade at 2 p.m. followed by a program
featuring Harry Miller of New Haven as the master of
ceremonies.

TilE WAHAMA HIGH SCHOOL marching
band provided a lively beat for Saturday's Loyalty
Day parade in Mason as well as the patriotic music
during the program at the Mason Volunteer Fire

Zatezalo said meetings resembling pep rallies have been held in
northwest, north and east-&lt;:entral
Ohio to entice people into buying the
"Business Concept List.:'
"People are investing a lot of
money in this," said Mansfield

Police Capt. Kenneth L. Long, adding that some people are going to
be hurt by it. He blamed its
popularity on people wanting to
make a free dollar.
The get-rich-quick plan, also
known as pyramid sales, involves
selling a list of 12 names with the
buyer paying the seller $00 and then
sending another $00 to the person at
the top of the list.
The buyer adds his name to the
bottom of the list. Theoretically, the
buyer's name rises to the top after
the list makes several rounds. When
that happens, thousands of new
buyers will each begin sending $00.
Zatezalo said the plan is being
promoted as a way to reap up to
$204,000 with a $100 investment.
The P,lan is popular in the Newark
area , where residents wearing "I'm

on the List" sweatshirts demonstrated outside the offices of the
Newark Advocate after the paper
ran a series of stories critical of the
plan.
In Tuscarawas County , a
Strasburg man reported making
$350 in two weeks, and said a friend
made $12,000 in four months. In
Zanesville, police reported the city
has been saturated with not only the
$100 list, but atso other lists costing
$20 and $000.
Zatezalo said buyers at the beginning of the scheme make most of the
money. "When numbers become so
great so the maximwn number of
people become involved, the scheme
will break down,'' he said.
Even though the U.S. mail is not
involved, Zatezalo said the plan is
illegal in Ohio.
" What disturbs me is that some

~'II~T

'IOU SflY AW, GRO!I UP, AHHIE!
ABaJT CONGRESS l.OO&lt;•M'I HOMETO\'iN
JUST DOESN'T SEEM PAPER ~Ot-l PAGE 3
RIGHT, HUCKlE ••
THEY PU6USHED
RECORD CK Ot€ OF
OUR SENATORS ••

RICHARD OHLINGER, post commander of the VFW Post 9926 of
Mason, speaks to those in attendance at Saturday's Loyalty Day program
at the Mason Volunteer Fire Department. Also speaking were William
Smith, VFW state senior vice commander; Conunander Stan Blake of the
American Legion Post 140 of New Haven; Conunander Miles Epling of
the American Legion Post 23 of Point Pleasant; Ed Hotscalaw
re presenting the office of Secretary of State A. James Manchin; Mason
County Commissioner Mickey Whalen and Blue Cap Legionaire of the
Year Richard Danbury of New Haven. Laura Smith, VFW Auxiliary
state chaplain gave the invocation while Chaplain Bernard Nuetzling of
the Mason VFVf gave the benediction.
·

~~.lH'd'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
at Relembllng
1 Gaelic
41 Lingo
5 Film critic, U Encounter

Federal government may end food stamp program June ·I
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ ~ State ' meeting .of the seven-member State
officials are concerned about the imControlling Board.
pact the proposed abolition of the
Sen. William F. Bowen, 0federal food stamp program would
Cincinnati, noted that the federal
have on more than 872,000 lowgovernment is to make a final
decision by June I on whether to conincome Ohioans.
Tile issue surfaced Monday at a
tinue the program, and said the state

should be thinking about contingency plans.
Thomas McDowell, who heads the
food stamp division in the state
Welfare Department, and other officials indicated there would be little

the state could do because the
coupons cost about $33 million a
month and are underwritten entirely
with federal funds .
But McDowell said he plans to
meet with federal officials in
Chicago later this week to try to

learn more about the program's
fate.
Some members of Congress and
the U.S. Department of Health,
Education and Welfare say the
program should be reduced or

Christian religious rally attracts thousands
WASIUNGTON (AP) ~ Tens of
thousands of people were converging today for a religious rally
that has been criticized by some
organized churches for its political
overtones, but which plamers say is
an attempt at "calling the national
leadership back to God.''
The rally has been spearheaded by
some of the leading television
evangelists in the country. By late
Monday , organizers were
estimating between 200,000 and
500,000 persons would attend.
More than 60 speakers were
scheduled to take the microphone

during 12 hours of prayer and fasting
on the National Mall, the same site
where 175,000 persons attended a
Catholic Mass celebrated by Pope
John Paullllast October.
Tbe Rev. John Gimenez, an
evangelist from Virginia City, Va.,
who conceived the idea for the
Christian rally I 'hyears ago, denies
the aim is political. But he
acknowledged many of the rally
planners have strong views against
abortion, in favor of allowing prayer
in schools, opposition to the Equal
Rights Amendment, and against
homosexual conduct.

"We're not coming to denounce
anyone. We're coming to pray,"
Gimenez said. Another "Jesus for
Washington" official said although
the aim was to "humble before God
in repentance and prayer," some
participants are sure to "bring up
some of their pet issues ...
Among other sponsors of the daylong rally, which organizers said
could cost $1.2 million, are Jim
Bakker, president of the PTL
Televison; Ben Armstrong,
president of National Religious
Broadcasting; Bill Bright, founder
of Campus Crusade for Christ; M.G.

Ford loses $164 million
DETROIT (AP) ~Citing inflation
and the slwnping American car
market, Ford Motor Co. reported a
record $164 million first-quarter loss
and said high interest rates, increasing energy costs and the
weakening economy could cause
more problems later in 19110.
The No. 2 automaker said Monday
its second consecutive quarter in tbe
red resulted fl'OOI a $473 million
deficit in domestic operations, its
worst loss from North American
bUsiness ever.
That was about the loss some have
predicted for tottering Chrysler
Corp.,,which has yet to announce its
first quarter results, and was substantially more than industry
analysts had expected from Ford.
In last year's first quarter, Ford
earned $595 million, or ...97 a share
worldwide. Profits in that period
totaled $220 million in the United
States and $375 milli6n from foreign

lost $109 million worldwide. The
previous record loss from domestic
operations was $299 million in the
third quarter last year.
Lower volume, increased
marketing costs, more small
vehicles in the product mix and the
impact of inflation were responsible
for the record loss, Chairman Phillip
Caldwell and President Donald E.
Petersen said in a statement.
The small vehicles that have
become popular as gasoline prices
rise generally carry smaller profit
margins. In addition, domestic auto
sales were down 21 percent in the first three months of 1980 as compared .
to the year before.
other factors , including the
probable recession, are "expected to
aggravate Ford's losses at least in
the near term," Ford said.
Helping to offset the domestic loss
was a $309 million, or $2.58 per
share, profit in foreign operations.
But this was 17.9 percent below the
business.
The loss this quarter amounted to . same period in 1979, a decrease attributed to reduced sales. ·
$1.36 a share.
Revenue for the latest quarter fell
Ford's worst previous three24 percent to $9.61 billion from $12.6
month-period loss came in the fourth
quarter of 1979 when the automaker
I

billion in the same period last year.
Ford has closed two assembly
plants permanenUy this year and
imposed heavy layoffs, including
6,900 white-collar workers. Ford
said the actions, similar to those
taken by other U.S. automakers,
would result in annual savings ~
$1.5 billion by the end of 1981.
Ford is the third U.S. automaker
to report first-quarter results.
General Motors Corp. profits fell 85
percent from the first quarter of
1979, to $155 million. American
Motors Corp. earnings declined 98
percent to $1.2 million.
Ford's foreign profit in the latest ·
quarter was given a boost of $91
niillion from a tax treaty with Great
Britain that gave Ford a refund of
half the taxes paid on its behalf in
Britain since 1975.
Before the new treaty, Britain, to
avoid double taxation of profits,
gave refunds to British shareholders
for ~xes paid on their behalf by the
companies. OvefSFas shareholders
could not get refunds. Now, , overseas shareholders get a refund for
half the amount.

"Pat" Robertson, president of the
Christian Broadcasting Network;
and evangelist Rex Hwnbard.
Many organized religious groups,
which in the past have been critical
of the television evangelist
movement in general, have accused
the rally organizers of mixing
religion with politics.
In a statement aimed at the
" Jesus for Washington" rally,
representatives of 20 religious
organizations, including the 32member National Council of Churches, issued a statement accusing
the evangelists of trying to
"Christianize the govenunent."
" It is arrogant to assert that one 's
position on a political issue is
Christian and that all others are unChristian... irnmoral or sinful. There
is no 'Christian' vote or legislation,"
the statement said.
Many of the ·participants began

arriving in the nation's capital at the
beginning of the week and rally
leaders met with a number of
congressmen Monday. A prayer
vigil attracted an estimated 15,000
persons, most' of them young, at
Robert F. Kennedy Stadium Monday
night.
About three-fourths of the 55,000
seats in the rain-soaked stadium
were empty at the peak of the vigil,
but some participants remained
through the night. Rally organizers
rented special subway facilities to
take people from the stadium to the
Mall durtng the night.
At the vigil, speaker after speaker
denounced with words and song the
"moral decay" of society. Entertainers, including Pat Boone,
made brief appearances in the
steady rain. Outside the stadium, a
hawker sold umbrellas for $6 and
Bibles for $11.

Property Transfers
Mabel F . Arnett, Gladys V. Geyer,
Lawrence H. Cowdery, Nina G.
Cowdery, Harold D. Cowdery, Earl
K. Cowdery, Grace E. Kelly to
Eugene A. Singleton, Vivian D.
Singleton, 127.042 acres, Olive.
Virginia E. Hartley, Robert A.
Hartley formerly Virginia E.
Vltatoe t.o Kingsbury Homes Sales,
Ul53 acres, RuUand .
Thaddeus S. Dye, Linda G. Dye to
Energex Corp., Right of Way,
Columbia.
Catherine Althouse, Elmer J.
Althouse to Archie R. Stegall, Lupe
J. Stegall, .4011 acre, Scipio.
Madoline Worley Brown to A.
Worley Brown, J . Hyatt Brown,
Coal, Oil, Gas and other Minerals,
Lebanon- Chester.
Carui F. Pierce, Vivian Pierce to
Kinney L. Pierce, Barbara J. Pier-

'

4-2~·30

•n

people are going around saying that
because the list doesn't involve the
mails, that it's legal," he said, adding, "If the people used the mail to
pay their money, then I'm sure the
post office would be interested."
He said selling the list could be a
first degree misdemeanor if the sale
involved less than $150, or a fourth
degree felony if more than $150.
Zatezalo said his office is investigating a number of schemes
and last week obtained a
preliminary injunction against a
plan called "Financial Security
Program" operating out of
Harrisburg, a small town south of
Columbus.
He said other list sales schemes
popular in the last two years have
been known as "Circle of Gold" and
"Circle of Platinum."

. one club. North elected to
respond one diamond and
s
East 'ot into the business of
'K63
silly btdding with one heart.
tQH
South bid one notrump with
4K82
bts rock-bottom minimum.
Thts ended the auction.
WEST
EAST
You can't blame West for
+AQ873
+4
opening bts fourth-best spade.
.AI087
+62
tAKIOH
South won with the jack and
.Q 10 7 3
4J6 4
~;!ed bts queen ol hearts.
t took bts ace aod led the
SOUTH
seven of diamonds. Dummy's
.KJ 10
nine took that trick. South
'QJ9t
cashed dummy's king of
tJ83
hearts, continued by finessing
.A95
the nine in his band and cashVulnerable: North-South
ing the jack. Meanwbile, West
Dealer: South
had thrown the three of
Weot
spades so South knew that
East did not have a spade to
Pass
lead. Thus, South led a diaPua
mond to East who ran bts four
diamond tricks.
South discarded bts king-10
Opening lead:• 7
of spades and jettiSoned the
nine and silt of spades from
dummy while West, who was
n~:;.ing much attention,
pr&lt;
ed to throw the rest of
his spades in order to keep bts
queen of clubs guarded.
By O.wald Jacoby
South was able to make the
and Alu Soolag
II. last three tricks with the aceHere is a really silly bridge king of clubs and that lltUe
r.roblem. The question is: five of spades.
'How did South make two (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ABSN.)
notrump?" The defender did
not revoke and actually made
(For • copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send S I to: "Win Sf
just ooe real mistake.
South might well have Bridge, " care of this ri6WIPBper, P.O. Box 489, RBdlo City
~as dealer, but be was
· m a bidding mood and.opened Ststlon, New York, N. y,
10019.)
bts 12 balanced points with
NORm
• g6 2

Chain letter schemes 'worst ever'
in Ohio according to state official
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ The
chief fraud fighter in the Ohio Attorney General's office says Ohio's
faltering economy may be behind
the recent proliferation of chain letter sales schemes in the state.
" From what I've seen, this is the
worst it's ever been," said Michael
E. Zatezalo, head of the Consumer
Frauds and Crimes Section of the attorney general's office.
"Chain letters have been here for
a long time and continue to crop up,"
he said. " I guess it's the economy.
People are willing to take a chance."

Lucking out the hard way

Department which included addresses by William
Smith, VFW state senior vice commander, and
several local VFW and American Legion officials.

ce, 131.17 acres, Salem.
Alla·h Lambert to Homer Milts ,
Goldie Mills , Pt. Lot, Syracuse.
Charles Leo Eskew, Frances J.
Eskew to Roger Roush, Kathy
Roush, 2.01 acres, Salisbury.
BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Meigs Girts Athletic Boosters
will meet Thursday night at 7:30 in
Room 216 at Meigs High School.
Parents of ali girts in track and softball are urged to attend.
A'J1'END ATHENS MEETING
Mrs. Eva Dessauer and Mrs. Nettie Hayes of Theodorus Council 17
Daughters of America, attended ~
District Past Councilors Association
meeting held at the Ohio University
Inn, Athe~, Sunday. 1

scrapped as part of President Carter's efforts to cut down on federal
spending.
In Ohio, the nwnber of recipients
is increasing and probably will continue to grow if the program is
retained, due to industry shutdowns
and a growing number of layoffs, the
Welfare Department said.
The coupons cost $26.9 million last
July, compared with $33.2 million in
March 1980, officials said, adding
that the nwnber of Ohio recipients
could increase to 900,000 soon. Each
member of those families who meet '
the income and other criteria
receives $28 a month in coupons.
In other business, the board
authorized the state Enviromental
Protection Agency to fund U.hour
security at three hazardous waste
disposal sites, two in southwestern
Ohio and one in the Akron area. The EPA will award a contract,
without competitive bidding, for sur·
veUlance and monitoring at the
Summi t National site at Deerfield,
Chem-Dyne at Hamilton, and CerNewcoat Williamsburg.
Wx W Protection Agency,
Batavia, will use its own personnel
for the security work at Chem-Dyne
and Cer-Newco, and enter into a subcontract to provide the service at
Deerfield, the board was told.
Joseph Connelly, the EPA's senior
deputy director, said the company
has been providing the service on
what was expected to be a temporary basis.
He said it was anticipated that
citizen demands for it would subside
with the erection of waits and other
safeguards but that the EPA found
"citizens want surveillance at all
three sites."
. Tile contract with W&amp;W will cost
just under $1,000 a week ill each of
the sites, and the service will
dovetail with on-site, dally
monitoring by chemical analysts
working out of mobile laboratories,
Connelly said.
He explained that the analysts will
serve as monitors each weekday
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., with security
guards covering the remainder of
each 24-hour period as well aa
weekends and holidays:
In other business, the board
authorized Cleveland State University to spend $1,028,000 for slx land
acquisitions and construction
projects, for which funds have been
appropriated by the Legislature.

Judith ~

10 Adore
U Withdraw
13 William
Webster,
for one

DOWN

1 Excitable
zCa98110va
S Constant sale
· i Poet's
evening

14 Parade time 5 Brinl!
lS Capital
into being
of Japan
I Prepare
11 Roll of money 7 Where ~ at
17 German
8 Labor
article
unioo tactic
18 Peculiarity 9 Palm civet
20 Wood sorrel 12 Printing
%1 Hercules'
errors
captive
11 Cunning
22 Of which
11 Extlnct bird
Ruth was
the Sultan
Z3 Actress,
Jessica. %5 Cabal
Zl 'Therefore
27 Actress,

Got t' tie .

this rope

t'th' brace
ther: Rufus

• YES .. .YE&amp;..~T'b

/1XACTLY 'mE
I WANTED TO
CAPTURE!

Yesterday'• Alllwer
22 Elamite's
capital
Z3 Tempest
container
U Part of
the
U.S.S.R.
%5 Startle
27 Swnmer
TV fare

zt Musical

composition
:18 Unnatural
H Parkllig

lot
ml.!hap
31 Participial
ending

37 Sandwich
favorite

Katharine~

Z8Ilove: Lat.
:It Describe
31 Apiece
3% Make a choice
33 Tape hue
b-+-+35Audrey

NIGHTY NIGHT.
LUKEV --I'LL SEE

'IOU FIRST THING
IN TH'MORNIN' .

I DON'T KNOW
IF I CAN
MAKE IT OR
NOT, SNUFFY-ME

'IEP·· I

CAN

MAKE IT

Hepburn film
37 Put on
1;--t--t-the payroll
33Mexlcan
selling
booth

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply •lands lor another. In this sample · A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sln&amp;le letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wordJ are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilferent.
CRYPTOQUOTBS

''EACH CONTESTANT MUST
FURNISH A NEW CAN
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THE WINNE~ Of EACH

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Television;
Viewing
7:0()--(;ross-Wtts J; Tic Tac Dllutlh
8; Face the Music 13; Mic:Nell•
Lehrer Report 33; News 10;
Love, American Style 15; ·Senlord &amp; Son 17; Dick Cavett 20.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Sha Na
No 6; Joker'a Wild I; Dick
Cavett 33; Hollywood Squarn
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
10; Billy Graham In Music City;
U.S.A. 8; .Evening at Pops 20,33;
Movie °Chuke" 17.
8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; 9:00ljtg Show 3,15; Three's Company
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-Unlted States 3,15; Over.
Easy 20; Camera Three 33.
•
11 :00-News 3,6, 13, 15; Dick Cavett ·
20; Dave Allen at Large 33.
·
11 :JC&gt;-Tonlght3,15; ABC Naws6,13;
News 8, 10; ABC Captioned News

33 .
11 :50-Soap 6, 13; 12:00-BII'naby
Jones 8; Movie "lmltatlon of
Life" 10.

12 :25-Movle "Diamonds" 6,13;'
12 :30-News 17; 12 :35-Movle
"The One That Got Away" 17.
1:00-Tomorrowl; Newsl5; 1:111-Movle " Whispering Death" a.
J :DO-News
13 ;
3 :05-Movle
"Bombardier"
11;
5: 1o-...
M.~~~v..rlck

..

17.

·WEDNESDAY, APRIL30, lfiO
.'
#.ols-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13.
6 :00-PTL Club 15; 700 Club 6.1; ·
Health Field 10; 6: to-World at ..
Large 17.
6:30-Chrlstopher Closeup 10; News
17; 6:45--Mornlng Report 3;
A.M. Weather 33; 6:50-Good
Morning, WO!t VIrginia 13;
6:55--News 13 . .
7:00-Today 3.15; Good Morning ··
America 6,13; Wednesday
Morning 8; Batman 10: Thr"
Stooges.Little Rascals 17.
7:30-Hogan's Heroes 10; 7:55-- ·
Chuck White Reports 10.
8:00--&lt;:apt. Kangaroo 8,10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:30-Romper Room 17; 9:00-Bob .
Braun J; Big Valley 6; Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Jeflersons tO; Phil
Donahue 13, 15; Family Affair 17.
9: 30-Bob Newhart 8; One Day At A
Time 10; Green Acres 17.
,
IO:OG-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Jefferson• 8; Joker'a ·
Wild 10; Morning Magallne 13;
Movie "Interlude" 17.
10:3o-Hollywood Squares 3,15; •
$20,000 Pyramid 13: Whew 8, 10; .
Andy Griffith 6.
10:55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 : OD-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp; •
Shirley 6,13: Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :3G-Wheel of· Fortune 3, 15; ., •
Family FI!Ud 6,13; Sesame St.
20,33; 11 :55-News 17.
12 :0o-Newscenter
3:
News
6.8,10,13; Health Field 15; Low, '
American Style 17.
~
12 :»-Ryen's Hope 6,13; Search lor
Tomorrow 8,10; Password Plus
15; Movie "Meet Danny Wilson"
17: Elec. Co . 20,33.
I: OD-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6,13; Young a. the
Restless 8, 10.
2:00-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Llva
6, 13'; As The World Turns 8, 10; .
2:25-News 17.
2: »-Another World J, 15: I Love ·
Lucy 17.
Hospital 6,13 ;
J :00-Generel
Guiding Light 8, 10; Banana
Splits 17; Austin City Limits 20.
3 :30-FIIntstones 17; Over Easy 33. · ~.
~ : 00-Mister Cartoon 3; B!twltchad .,·
6; Petticoat Junction 8; Sesame
ST. 20,33; Brady Bunch 10; Real
McCoys 13; Lucy Show lS;
Spectreman 17.
~ : »-Lone Ranger 3; Afterschool
Special 6,13; Gomer Pyle 8,10; .,
Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's 11. 17. ~
5: 00--&lt;:arot Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My •
Three Sons I 7; Mister Rogers' • .
Neighborhood 20,33.
5:30-Mash J; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Elec. Co. ~
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33. ·
6 : DO-News 3,8, 10,13,15; Carol
Burnett 17: Zoom 20; 3-2-1
Contact 33.
6 :30-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News a, 10; Carol Burnett 6;
Bob Newhart 17; VIlla Al'!lre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:00--&lt;:ross-Wtts 3; Tic ·T ac Dough
8; Face the Music 6,13: MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 33; · NeW. 10;
Love, American Style 15; San.
lord &amp; Son 17: Dick Cavett 20.
"
7:3o-Country Roads 3; Match
Game PM 6: Joker' s Wild I; - .. ·
Dick Cavett 33; The Judge 10; '·
Family FI!Ud 13; Wild Kingdom
15; All In The Family 17;
MacNeil · Lehrer Report 20.
8:00-Real People 3,15; Eight Is .. ,.
Enough 6,13; Jimmy McNichol ,
!Special] 8, 10; Great Per-

..

formances 20,33; 'Movie *'The , ' ,

Man from Laramie" 17.
9:DO-Diff'rent Strokes 3,15;
Charlie' a Angels 6,13; Movie
' G'Ideon's Trumpet'' a, 10; Henry
Hudson's River: A Blogriphy
20,33.
Q LJ G 9:30-Hello, Larry 3,15; 10:00DXLKO
UKXHR
EX· CK
X
Qulncy 3, 15; V'!lll 6,13;
Baseball 17.
AKKO
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DSK
RKDDXHR
10:30-News 20; Peter JIIUI &amp;
Company 33;
11 :DO-Newt
UK 0,
PXHHXY
JQ
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JZD
3,6.1, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20;
Dave Allen at Large 33.
OJAH 11:30-Tonlght3,15;
NXDDXHR
QXHYEEM
YHO
ABC Ntws6,13;
NBA Playoff I; Movie' "MediiJQ
EKGJHYOK
REYNN
AXDS y
X" 10.
11 :50-Love Boat 6,13; 12:30 NeWI
17;
12:35---Movlt
''Ride
EYOM
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WJSHNJH
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17.
Yeatertlay'a Cryptoqllote:THREE GRAND ESSENTIALS TO ·
HAPPINESS IN THIS LIFE ARE SOMETHING TO 00, 1:00-T-row 3; Brette 6,13;
News 15; 2: 10-Naws 13: Movie
SOMEmiNG TO WVE AND SOMETillNG TO HOPE FOil·
"Conflict" 17.
JOSEPH ADDISON
4:05-Movle "Knockout'' 17; 5:40C'l1910 Klnt PNtur91 Syndic.... lrte.
Love, American Style 17.

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�12 - The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Tuesday, April29, 1!180
I~- The

-.,._IIi
Machine 4 brake
~
Inspect wheel cyllnder·JI

60-Montb Battery
Fits many U.S.
cars and light
trucks. Save.

II pooalble
Inspect master cylinder

5.
6.

line

$269

58~!ce
4-wheel--lrake SerVice Special

7~00 BTU Air Cond~ioner
115 volt, 2 speed fan, 2 way air direction,
exhaust control, lnsta-Mount for fast installation.

For most U.S., foreign cars . Additional parts
and services at extra cost. Save at K mart.

Misses'
Sizes

Your Choice of 5'/4', model SIC620C; or 6x9",
model SK69·20C, Coaxlai"Speakers, pr . 24.88

29.68
A78x13

Cost

'1188 ~::O:B

$1 94

.

5

Our

ADJ-POS-l

. , Our Reg. 88.88 YO\JR CHO ICE

5,000 .BTU Air Conditioner

AM/FM With 8· Tr. or Cassette
AMIFM tndash radio with S-track or cassette
tape player. lnstattatibn extra. Save now.

Folding Scissor Jack

1112 ton, compact
jack has · folding
handle

61 Cat
Sale
Price

H ig h efficiency, 115 volt, 2 sp., exhaust
trol, comfort guard control.

1DW30 Motor Oil
Meets API , SAE requ ire ments . A ll·
weather brand. 1

23~!g.29.
8
8
T\Vo-person Durable Nylon Tent ·
SAVE$6

5'x7' floor area, 3W center height, with 18"x1 O"
inside zipper window. Save now!

.8'7.a!,

&amp;-pack Razors
Six Good- News ''
disposable razors .

].97

4'Days Only
· '!.'' Electric Drill
Slngle•speed drill .
2 - amps . 2500
RPMs. Save now!

2

FOR

$1

Ricker 5 Blade Shaver
5 Blade shaver. Extra safe.

6 3 !. 1.27
Super Glue!· 3
Bonds in seconds.
Super strong .. 10ozs." Save now!
' FI.ou.

con:

6 ~eprice

Sun Filter Visor

Oil. Lube, Filter Special

2.97

Clips to sun visor and
stops sun glare. Save.

12~ve!

8

Valvoline 10W30
or 10W40 oil

• Electric Curler
Bod y + Curl ,.
wand. brush . 1201
240V.
now.

Cost
After
Rebate

24x48" aluminum extruded top
f r ame with si mu la t ed wa l·
nut-g rain top. Fol ds for storing.

97.~ys

Picture Frames
Sx7" or 8x1 0" with
non-glare glass.

4!~eg 6.33

Toilet Seat
Baked enamel linish on wood. In
decorator colors .

36-position adjustment padded hea drest.

66 ~url.ll
Moth Balls

K i Its
c loth es
moths, leaves no
odor .
_16oz. (lib.)

Bright. co lorful stripes will be in view everywhere this year! Joining the fashion parade is
this charming polyesterl cotton top with new
side-tie bottom - great with pants , skirts or
Jeans! Choice of colors.

3~~-

· Less
. GE ·
· Rebate

i~:! 1494
•steam/dry
28 steam vents .
Wale r level window.

5297

Our 61 .47

Hoover Celebrity Ill

2~~g397 ~~~g 1. 97

Emblem Cap
Cotton with nylon
mesh. Adjustable .

Canister vacuum
w ith attachment.

Roii·UP Hat

Polyes ter I cotton
Prints and solids.

3~~

Terry Tops Soft 'N Easy
For Fashion Tank Tops

2!~g. 3. 97 2~!g3. 97
Men's Western Hat
In natural str~w.
contrasting band.

Po lyester/cotton
terry tops , with .
short sleeves and
V - neck styling .
Misses' S-M-L.

3-Prs. Gloves
Men 's . Vinyl-dot
cotton. Size fits all.

Striped tank tops of
spun polyester in
misses' sizes.

Save!

•n!?.

Our Reg . 9.97

Hand-held Calculator
Small 8-digit model adds up
to big value at 7.88 . L .C.D.
readout, memory, percentage keys.

"797

I

I U ' 1 5.97

New L.E.D .
Wristwatch 1
Stopwatch
Stopwatch functions
p l us di splay o'f
hours. minutes , sec onds , month and
date . Idea l lor
coaches , athletes
and sports enthusiasts . Save.
•

Save'

Our Reg. 9.97

L.C. D. Calculator
8-digit , automatic oower -olf .
Memory , percentage ,keys , clear.
Add , subtract, multiply, divide.

'

"Banana" lounger

Bright-Stripe Fashion Tops

Save on thrift packs of three briefs or T-shirts .
Knit of white com bed cotto n for extra durability.
absorbency and comfort. T-shirts have nonbinding elasticized waist. Men's sizes S-XL.
Our 3.38, Boys' Tees or Briefs, 3-pack, 2.97

15'12' square top of genuine
redwood wilh aluminum lock
legs. Set up in an instant lor
attractiy,e patio acce nt.

~~!E

5~~"'"

Pkg . of 3
Briefs

.

Men's Knit Underwear

Redwood Table

Coleman ' Gallon Insulated JuQ ... , . .. .. 6.44

Flat or low lustre
.paint. 1 gallon.

Navy blue or white deck shoes for women in
lightweight, durable canvas . Designed with a
spectal no-slip bottom , they're ideal lor boating
and many other su mmertime activities, too .
Shop now and save!

4 !5.47

4-gal. polyethylene
cooler. With locking handle. Save!

Fresh Look ·

" Quadrafle x" agita lion .
Bru she
edge-c leani ng , ad justable nozzle.

2

Oscar" Cooler

6 ~1.66·12.66

Women's Canvas Deck Shoes

P..?

88
7

Snow-Lite " model
with handles and
bottle opener.

Reg.
For
53' Ea. ·
Mighty Match •
Scripta • dispos able butane lighter.

897

1200W dryer Two
speeds, two heats.
Save at K mart

13~~
Folding Metal Table

3 ~~Our

Pkg. o13
T-Shirts

3.96

•Pro 1200

28!v~
13112-Gal. Cooler

9!~

3-speed
•Concept I''"
•EIE!ctri kbroom" Upright
Elect rik broom • rug
pil e dial nozzle adjusts for carpet heig ht
and bare floors .

.4 !?

Pair
Special Purchase

0

Less
,.,
Factory ~

2~!.

22

'

$2::•!

K mart ' l
Sale
Price

9~!1288

'5
-3194

IFLtees,Qsil~a ·
IRAeflbeartE

22!!.

Misses'
Sizes

Our Reg. $289

Whitewalls 2.88
More Each

No Trade-in Required.

!
rReg
12.96·13 96

New looks in cotton, cottonlpolyes1er or cottonlpolyesterll lax. Save.

Moclel ADJ -075-2

Plus F.E .T.
1.62 Each

Mounting Included -

8

New Pants
for Summer

wheel bearings
front grease

- --

KM 78 4-Piy
Polyester
Cord
~~~ Blackwalls

9

~-~~!(ii!!l1.
Install 4 aet quality
\ ..
brake shoes

63.88

Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Tuesday, April 29, 191Kl

2~~0zs.

Head &amp; Shoulders •
Lotion shampoo for
dandruff control.

9 1 s !el
7·oz.· Gleem ''·
Fluoride form ula .
Pleasant flavor.

~~~g. 2.07 " BBR~1.51
"UYI My Carpet" ®
Deodorizer to be
used with vacuum .
20 ozs. • Save now!

Fantlstlk® Spray
Hous11hold cleaner
with trigger spray.
32 ozs .• Savel

Is~

66s~e!

50 Tylenol '
Extra-slrength pain
relief capsules.

60 Band·Aid ® Strips
Family pack %"
plastic strips. '

69~

: 68£rReg.

Oun . 19·:

Ja.!litor In A Drum ''

All
purpos e
cleaner.
.;
32 azs.'Save

97'
4-oz." Creslan ~ Yam
4- p 1y acrylic knit·
ting worsted type.
' fMtM .

• Amtf!Ufl Cy•rwmld TM

I~

30 Marl Pads
Beltless protection .
30 Mini Pads 1.14

2

2
0~3.19
SCope Mouthwash
40

oz .

~~~

Arrid ~ Extra Ory '
4 ozs .• anti -per·
spirant deodorant. .

economy

size.

Elcellence• Color
Sha mpoo-i n hair
color. 1 application.

~r~,Save!

Jergens ® Soap
Deodorant lormuIa. 7-oz .'

' Net WI .

·~

2T~!at

or Fitted
lo-lron WIIHI Slleets
White polyester(·
cotton. 130 thread
per sq. in .

4f:la

Pkg.
6-pr. Men's Socks
Our 4.78, Boys '
Socks, 6-pr.

3.47

5!~.58

King Size Lunch Kit
Plastic workman' s
kit with Aladdin
thermos .

99~0t.

Your
Choice
Pickled Treats
Tasty garden salad
mix or vegetables.

' rwtwt.

Choice
Plmlc Houseware
Our 5.48 , 44·ql.
Waste Bin .. 2.88

I~

1S~!

7

8-oz. • Baby Bath '
Gently cleans ,
won 't irritate skin.

Baby Shampoo
" No-tears" baby
shampoo. 11 -oz."

"Fl. aza.

' Fl.

on.

20!!.97 2687:

Our 31.87 ·

20.1nth Fan
5 ' hard

plastic
blades, 3 speed.

3-Speed Fan

12" Oscill ating fan
With blue plastic
blades.
Our 2l.79 9" Fan

�12 - The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Tuesday, April29, 1!180
I~- The

-.,._IIi
Machine 4 brake
~
Inspect wheel cyllnder·JI

60-Montb Battery
Fits many U.S.
cars and light
trucks. Save.

II pooalble
Inspect master cylinder

5.
6.

line

$269

58~!ce
4-wheel--lrake SerVice Special

7~00 BTU Air Cond~ioner
115 volt, 2 speed fan, 2 way air direction,
exhaust control, lnsta-Mount for fast installation.

For most U.S., foreign cars . Additional parts
and services at extra cost. Save at K mart.

Misses'
Sizes

Your Choice of 5'/4', model SIC620C; or 6x9",
model SK69·20C, Coaxlai"Speakers, pr . 24.88

29.68
A78x13

Cost

'1188 ~::O:B

$1 94

.

5

Our

ADJ-POS-l

. , Our Reg. 88.88 YO\JR CHO ICE

5,000 .BTU Air Conditioner

AM/FM With 8· Tr. or Cassette
AMIFM tndash radio with S-track or cassette
tape player. lnstattatibn extra. Save now.

Folding Scissor Jack

1112 ton, compact
jack has · folding
handle

61 Cat
Sale
Price

H ig h efficiency, 115 volt, 2 sp., exhaust
trol, comfort guard control.

1DW30 Motor Oil
Meets API , SAE requ ire ments . A ll·
weather brand. 1

23~!g.29.
8
8
T\Vo-person Durable Nylon Tent ·
SAVE$6

5'x7' floor area, 3W center height, with 18"x1 O"
inside zipper window. Save now!

.8'7.a!,

&amp;-pack Razors
Six Good- News ''
disposable razors .

].97

4'Days Only
· '!.'' Electric Drill
Slngle•speed drill .
2 - amps . 2500
RPMs. Save now!

2

FOR

$1

Ricker 5 Blade Shaver
5 Blade shaver. Extra safe.

6 3 !. 1.27
Super Glue!· 3
Bonds in seconds.
Super strong .. 10ozs." Save now!
' FI.ou.

con:

6 ~eprice

Sun Filter Visor

Oil. Lube, Filter Special

2.97

Clips to sun visor and
stops sun glare. Save.

12~ve!

8

Valvoline 10W30
or 10W40 oil

• Electric Curler
Bod y + Curl ,.
wand. brush . 1201
240V.
now.

Cost
After
Rebate

24x48" aluminum extruded top
f r ame with si mu la t ed wa l·
nut-g rain top. Fol ds for storing.

97.~ys

Picture Frames
Sx7" or 8x1 0" with
non-glare glass.

4!~eg 6.33

Toilet Seat
Baked enamel linish on wood. In
decorator colors .

36-position adjustment padded hea drest.

66 ~url.ll
Moth Balls

K i Its
c loth es
moths, leaves no
odor .
_16oz. (lib.)

Bright. co lorful stripes will be in view everywhere this year! Joining the fashion parade is
this charming polyesterl cotton top with new
side-tie bottom - great with pants , skirts or
Jeans! Choice of colors.

3~~-

· Less
. GE ·
· Rebate

i~:! 1494
•steam/dry
28 steam vents .
Wale r level window.

5297

Our 61 .47

Hoover Celebrity Ill

2~~g397 ~~~g 1. 97

Emblem Cap
Cotton with nylon
mesh. Adjustable .

Canister vacuum
w ith attachment.

Roii·UP Hat

Polyes ter I cotton
Prints and solids.

3~~

Terry Tops Soft 'N Easy
For Fashion Tank Tops

2!~g. 3. 97 2~!g3. 97
Men's Western Hat
In natural str~w.
contrasting band.

Po lyester/cotton
terry tops , with .
short sleeves and
V - neck styling .
Misses' S-M-L.

3-Prs. Gloves
Men 's . Vinyl-dot
cotton. Size fits all.

Striped tank tops of
spun polyester in
misses' sizes.

Save!

•n!?.

Our Reg . 9.97

Hand-held Calculator
Small 8-digit model adds up
to big value at 7.88 . L .C.D.
readout, memory, percentage keys.

"797

I

I U ' 1 5.97

New L.E.D .
Wristwatch 1
Stopwatch
Stopwatch functions
p l us di splay o'f
hours. minutes , sec onds , month and
date . Idea l lor
coaches , athletes
and sports enthusiasts . Save.
•

Save'

Our Reg. 9.97

L.C. D. Calculator
8-digit , automatic oower -olf .
Memory , percentage ,keys , clear.
Add , subtract, multiply, divide.

'

"Banana" lounger

Bright-Stripe Fashion Tops

Save on thrift packs of three briefs or T-shirts .
Knit of white com bed cotto n for extra durability.
absorbency and comfort. T-shirts have nonbinding elasticized waist. Men's sizes S-XL.
Our 3.38, Boys' Tees or Briefs, 3-pack, 2.97

15'12' square top of genuine
redwood wilh aluminum lock
legs. Set up in an instant lor
attractiy,e patio acce nt.

~~!E

5~~"'"

Pkg . of 3
Briefs

.

Men's Knit Underwear

Redwood Table

Coleman ' Gallon Insulated JuQ ... , . .. .. 6.44

Flat or low lustre
.paint. 1 gallon.

Navy blue or white deck shoes for women in
lightweight, durable canvas . Designed with a
spectal no-slip bottom , they're ideal lor boating
and many other su mmertime activities, too .
Shop now and save!

4 !5.47

4-gal. polyethylene
cooler. With locking handle. Save!

Fresh Look ·

" Quadrafle x" agita lion .
Bru she
edge-c leani ng , ad justable nozzle.

2

Oscar" Cooler

6 ~1.66·12.66

Women's Canvas Deck Shoes

P..?

88
7

Snow-Lite " model
with handles and
bottle opener.

Reg.
For
53' Ea. ·
Mighty Match •
Scripta • dispos able butane lighter.

897

1200W dryer Two
speeds, two heats.
Save at K mart

13~~
Folding Metal Table

3 ~~Our

Pkg. o13
T-Shirts

3.96

•Pro 1200

28!v~
13112-Gal. Cooler

9!~

3-speed
•Concept I''"
•EIE!ctri kbroom" Upright
Elect rik broom • rug
pil e dial nozzle adjusts for carpet heig ht
and bare floors .

.4 !?

Pair
Special Purchase

0

Less
,.,
Factory ~

2~!.

22

'

$2::•!

K mart ' l
Sale
Price

9~!1288

'5
-3194

IFLtees,Qsil~a ·
IRAeflbeartE

22!!.

Misses'
Sizes

Our Reg. $289

Whitewalls 2.88
More Each

No Trade-in Required.

!
rReg
12.96·13 96

New looks in cotton, cottonlpolyes1er or cottonlpolyesterll lax. Save.

Moclel ADJ -075-2

Plus F.E .T.
1.62 Each

Mounting Included -

8

New Pants
for Summer

wheel bearings
front grease

- --

KM 78 4-Piy
Polyester
Cord
~~~ Blackwalls

9

~-~~!(ii!!l1.
Install 4 aet quality
\ ..
brake shoes

63.88

Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Tuesday, April 29, 191Kl

2~~0zs.

Head &amp; Shoulders •
Lotion shampoo for
dandruff control.

9 1 s !el
7·oz.· Gleem ''·
Fluoride form ula .
Pleasant flavor.

~~~g. 2.07 " BBR~1.51
"UYI My Carpet" ®
Deodorizer to be
used with vacuum .
20 ozs. • Save now!

Fantlstlk® Spray
Hous11hold cleaner
with trigger spray.
32 ozs .• Savel

Is~

66s~e!

50 Tylenol '
Extra-slrength pain
relief capsules.

60 Band·Aid ® Strips
Family pack %"
plastic strips. '

69~

: 68£rReg.

Oun . 19·:

Ja.!litor In A Drum ''

All
purpos e
cleaner.
.;
32 azs.'Save

97'
4-oz." Creslan ~ Yam
4- p 1y acrylic knit·
ting worsted type.
' fMtM .

• Amtf!Ufl Cy•rwmld TM

I~

30 Marl Pads
Beltless protection .
30 Mini Pads 1.14

2

2
0~3.19
SCope Mouthwash
40

oz .

~~~

Arrid ~ Extra Ory '
4 ozs .• anti -per·
spirant deodorant. .

economy

size.

Elcellence• Color
Sha mpoo-i n hair
color. 1 application.

~r~,Save!

Jergens ® Soap
Deodorant lormuIa. 7-oz .'

' Net WI .

·~

2T~!at

or Fitted
lo-lron WIIHI Slleets
White polyester(·
cotton. 130 thread
per sq. in .

4f:la

Pkg.
6-pr. Men's Socks
Our 4.78, Boys '
Socks, 6-pr.

3.47

5!~.58

King Size Lunch Kit
Plastic workman' s
kit with Aladdin
thermos .

99~0t.

Your
Choice
Pickled Treats
Tasty garden salad
mix or vegetables.

' rwtwt.

Choice
Plmlc Houseware
Our 5.48 , 44·ql.
Waste Bin .. 2.88

I~

1S~!

7

8-oz. • Baby Bath '
Gently cleans ,
won 't irritate skin.

Baby Shampoo
" No-tears" baby
shampoo. 11 -oz."

"Fl. aza.

' Fl.

on.

20!!.97 2687:

Our 31.87 ·

20.1nth Fan
5 ' hard

plastic
blades, 3 speed.

3-Speed Fan

12" Oscill ating fan
With blue plastic
blades.
Our 2l.79 9" Fan

�. t4 - The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Mi~Port. o., Tuesday, Apri129, t980
Announcements
.. t
Wlnlld 10 Buy
J2
;;:;;-- -M
= o"'b"lle--,
H'"o_
" m_o_s__
for Sale
SELL YOU R, SILVER 10 karat, U .karar, 18 karat,
S T E R L ING gold. Dental gold and gold 1971 Zimmer tr ailer 12x60.
CO INS ,
1972 BUddy Trailer 12x60.
SlLVE R, GOLD. ETC., TO ear pins. 675·3010.
992-SJ().j_
BRO WN ' S IN MID ·
DLE POR T FO R TOP
DOLLA R. PHONE 614-992·
1969 12x60 two bedroom
5113.
.
mobile home, good con·
dllion, nice features. buill
J

Pla no Tuning - L an e
Daniels 7 4 2 ~ 295 1. T uning
and Repair SerYice si nce
1965 . If no answer phone

992·2082.

in china

GET VA LUABLE lr ainlng
as a young business person
and earn good money plus

some great gifts as a Sen-

4

t i nel route carrier. Phone

Gi veawa y

Six Week old kittens. Give
to good home. 139 But·

us right away and get on
the eliQ ibll lty list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

ternu t, Pomeroy . ·
F ull ti me and part time RN

Yard Sale
Yard Sale. Lar ge select ion

7

children's, m en ' s cl othing.

Thurs. 1, Fr i. 2, Sat. 3. Ted

Russell res idence, Rt. 124
Minersvi ll e.
Moving-Selli ng a 1971 c ar,
chest
fr eezer ,
16mm
projec tor , a coal or woodburn ing King stove, house
p lants, bookcases, dresser
with mi rror, n~te stand,
desk, telep hone stand, goat

sta nd. Call 247·2624.

or LPN . 11 ·7. Contact Mr.

Large Yard Sale. Very
good clea n cloth ing,cur·
tains, bedspreads, and
rugs. Rebuilt garden rotot i Iter, dishes, something for
everyone. F ir st house on
left after you cross the
rai lr oad
t rac ks
at
Cheshir e. Mary Layne,

May 1·2·3-4th .

Porc h Sa le, 3 family at J . J .
Cre mea ns' home on Broad- .

way

St..

Middleport .

Ch ild r en ' s and ladies '
cl ot hi ng , wha tnots, extra
ni ce clean it e ms . All day

Wednesday .

May 1·2-3, 9:00 to ? Eight

tai ns, bedspreads, toys,
and m isc. Rain cancels.

Phone 992·2888, 294 Pearl
St., Middleport, OH .

Yard Sal e, May I and 2nd.

Thur sday and Friday, 9 :30
to 4 :00 . F ive f amilies on
College Road in Syrac use .
Clothing, c hi ldren' s and
adults. Dishes. furniture,
odds and ends. Stroller.
H igh c ha irs, and car seat.

8

BRADFO RD, Auctioneer,

toM. St. Clair, 22 Railroad
St., Middleport, OH . .S760.
Grill cook wanted . Apply in
person
House.

Crow ' s

949·2487 or-949-2000. racine.
Ohio, Cr itt Bradford.

7760.

Auto-body repa irman and

accepted . 367·0410.

$356.00 weekly guaranteed .

Two hours da ily at home.

For Rent : Three rooms and
bath, furnished, util ities
paid, no pets. 2 sleeping
rooms for rent. see John
Sheets, 3117 miles south of

R.

Middleport on Rt. 7.

c lean -up man .
ti me.992·7013.

Room Mate to

share expenses. Children

Full

Send for free brochure to

Neighbarger,

273

Edgewater Beach, Thorn -

Ville, OH .

Apartment

44

for Rent

12 Situations wanted
Will clean house .. Call ~7 3423 or ~7 - 6373 .

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone992-5-434.

Will do painting, roof work,
repair
work
houses.

Senior Citizens in Village

Nothing too big. 992-3941 or
992·7008.

Roof Pa inting and trim
work . Free estimates. 99236P.

tile. 992·6338.
SOmeone

to

stay

elder ly lady. Call
p.m. 992·3.S8.

w ith
after 5

Rawlelgh products. Joyce
Sautes 992· 7825.
Bench saw, iron mantel
piece, antique. walnut bed·
stead minus side rails. Call

992-2-433, 116 Lincoln Road,
POm!!roy, OH.

Pets lor Sale
RI SING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292.

56

HILLCREST

indoor.- outdoor

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
. Healthy, shots, wormed .
required.

992·

992 -2759.
13
Insurance
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SU RANCE been can celled?
Lost your

HOOF HOLLOW : HOrses
~nies

and

lessons .

and

riding

Everything

Imaginable In horse equip·
ment. Blankets, belts,
boots, etc. English and
Western ! Ruth Reeves

Humane Society's Pet
Adoption Service. 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
Coli ie type with puppy.
Musical
Instruments

Picking up a piano in your

area. Looking for a responsible party to take over

payments . Call

credit

manager collect. 614··592·

46
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7479.

17

Miscellaneous

Plants for Sale, Tomato

Shade Road. NO sunday
Sales . Phone 985·3838
Dwight Spencer.
18

wanted to Do

Give piano lessons to beginners and ad\lanced student

in my home. Also teach
tran~sing

If

Gold , si l ver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
it ems. Antique furniture,
glass or china , will pay top
dollar , or complete ·estates.

22

No· -Item too large or too

Mortgage

small . Check prices before

se lling . Also do appraising .
Osby (Oss ie) Martin. 992·
6370.
old

tran ·

s m issi o ns ,
batteries ,
eng ines, or scrap metals,

etc. Call245·9188.

Money

Available. New homes, old
homes, and refinancing
your pr~sent home . CON ·
VENTIONAL 5 Pet. down.
S!'COND MORTGAGES.
VA-No down payment,

turntable

speakers.

and

two

Excellent con -

dition . Call 992-5911.

--·.. --. ....... .

--····- - · · · ···· ··~

&amp; LhtSiHER

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

FHA ·Low down payment,

FHA -245-Graduated paym ent program. FHA-265Subsidy program. Call 5923051 , Ireland Mortgage Co. ,
17 E. Stale St., Athens, OH.

neal estate
31

Homes for Sale

Brick,
ranch -style,
3
bedroom.
2 111
bath ,

garage

on

your own business mak ing truss rafters. Ap·
prox . I acre, building,
enough tools &amp; a truck to
run the business. owner
wil l assist in learning of

buSiness. S28,QOO.OO.
NEW LISTING - LIKE
TO CAMP? 2 room cotRiver

with approx. 5 acres of
land. $8,800.00.
NEW LISTING - 12

acres with mobile home,
:;h 4 beOrooms, l lf2 baths.

$22,300.00.
NEW LISTING
BUILDING SITES Approx . 10 acres
cleared &amp; level land,
will '
subdivide.
$11 ,500.00.
FIVE POINTS - 3
on

200x100 lot. U0,500.00.
FAJlM - •4 acres with •
bedroom modular, other
buildings, extra trailer
hook-up. S42,QOO.OO .
REDUCED
3
bedroom, 1'12 baths In
town on a 50x80 lot.
S38,QOO.OO.
BRINGING RUY·I·
SELLER
OUR D~!~"~
Henry E.
992-61Pl,
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Dottie &amp; Roger Tumor
742·2474
Office Phone 992·:1259

silver. Call J . A. Wamsley,

Misc. Merchanlse

COAL,

LIMESTONE,

sand, gra'Jel, cal c ium
chloride, fertilizer, dog

food . and all types of salt.
E)(celsior Salt works, Inc.,

GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLO .
RINGS , JEWELRY ,
STERLi'NG SILVE~ AND
MISC. HEMS. PAYING
RECOR .D
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP-TO·DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL 992·3476.

E. Main St .. Pomeroy, 992·
3891.

'3

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu. Best for
apple butter. Call ~9-3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard. SR
689 .

female $60 ea . 8 mo. old
female S45; 6 kids-males

992·512-4.

985--169 .

$20, females $30. Shade,
OH. (61-4) 696·1234.

- ..,........
. . . .......
..........
...._. '_.

air.

am ~ fm

tape, speed con·

trol. New tires. Exc. cond.

Harley· Davidson Yamaha . Don Foglesong ,
Super Deals-Super Service. 773-5274.

House, 2 bedroom, full
basement 30x.O. Forced air

Mason.

$250,000 Inventory . Athens
Sport Cycles, 20 w. Stimson
Ave., Athens, OH . 592·1692.

S26,QOO. Near Reedsville,
Oh. 378·6276.
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale
1973 Fairpoint. Ux65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3
bdr .• balh 112
1971 Shakespear, Ux6S 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT, PLEASANT,
WV . 30H75·.U2•.

1977

Chevrolet

Caprice

Classic, 3 seater, sf. wgn .,
p.s., p,b., air, low mileage.
Reg. retail $3,600. Sale

fence

Dri ve for show, putt for
dough. Improve your short
game with a new puner,

right for vacation. Ingels
Furniture, Middleport, OH.

1978 Camero, p.s., p .b ., air,

new tires. $4.700. CB radio.
992·2124.

John Teaford. 61•·985·3961.

SHF'IIEES

81

Home

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned . Free

'

'

•'

'

21 years experience. All

WALL PAPERING and
pa inting . 742·2328.

4-24·1 mo.

CARPENTER WORK
complete remodeling by AI
Tromm, 742·2328. Referen·

repairs ,

25

Limestone for driveways.
Pomeroy--Mason area . 367-

7101.
84

makes.
-2284. The
Repairs, 992
service,
all
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer sales
we sharpen

~~~.~;.vice.
ELWOOD
REPAIR -

BOWERS
Sweepers,

farm Buildings
Sl1es
"FromJOx30"

SM.o.!..b

Roofing~
siding,
gutter,
built-up
-roof and home

Excavating

Electric;ll
&amp; Refrigeration
SEWING MACH IN E

ALL STEEL

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

ex -

years

perience. 992·3-406.
8J

Utifihl
-•v.. Buildines

Sizes From 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

repair.
Free Estimates
388·9759
2·1Hfc

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 9853825.

3-30·1 mo.

85
General Hauling
WILL HAUL• limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742·2.S5.

87
Upholstery
A&amp;H Upholstering, across
from the Texaco Station In
Syracuse. Ph. 992·3752 or
992·3U3.

!
1

n

Write your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results . Money not relundable.

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy&lt;~ 0 •• 45769

•ANNOUNCEMENTS

I

Addrau________________ I

eRENTALS
.t1-+t041111 for Rttlf
42-Mtblle Hom••
for Rtt~f
&lt;t4-ANr1ment f~M Rtt1f
n-FRooms

Phon•~---------------

.tJ- WutH to Rtnt
41--Cqulpment for Rent

1

eMERCHANDISE

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sl-Hovsthofd OOocls
52-(1, TV. Radio lqulpmllnt
SJ-Antlqun
M-Mit(. Mtrcttandl"

13- lnlunnc•
14- Buslntss Tr11n1n1

n--luUcllnl luppfles

H-Pttl fDr Slit

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
61- F1rm EQUIIM"tnf

n-w1ntt1 to auv
12- Tructll tor Salt

21 -

BUslntn
o,..ortunlry
H - Monev to Lo.n

u--LivtiiKk
14-Hay I Grain
u - snct&amp;PerUIIur

2J- Proftsl10ftal
5ervlct~

:ll-ll'arml tor lilt

( J Wanted

( l For Sale

( ) Announcement

( l For Rent

1. _ _ _ __
2. _ _ _ __

Want· Ad Advertising
Deadlines

3. _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ __

11- Homtlmprovtmttlfl
12-PIIImblq&amp; l:•c.v•llllt

s. _ _ _ __

ll-l:,cav•tlnt
1'-EIMtrltal -··

6. _ _ _ __

a ••rrtter•tlott

1,

1. _ _ _ __
8. _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ __

U-Oifttrll Ha11fln1 ,
N--M,H. lll:tNir
11- UPhOIItery

10- - - - - - -

Rates and Other Information

11 .
12.
13.
1-4.
15.
16.

1JWonlsorUndar
Cash

uav
2 dav•

1M
1.11

I dan
6Ny1

,.,,,

.,. ,.....,...,..., ,... otRllfttiV.

1M
2M

•ra wtn

Choroo
1.11
1.11

us

Ul

bt cftlr... at...,l•r

in lt'lemory, Carll of Thll'*" ·• • Obituary : ' ctflll ,.,. • .,.., ·u .ll
ml~imum. c ..h In •lllnnce.

Mt.DIII Home niK anc1 ~M'ciUits are •cc.,._. Oft IV wlttl caall.wfth
order. 2! CMI cr..rtt tor ads car...,.lnl lo• N11m1ttr In Care of TIM

Jtnthttl.

terview that 10 or more companies
made bids during the Taiwanese
swing through Arkansas, Tennessee,
Ohio and Wisconsin earlier this month.
Brerman said he was present at
only the meeting In Memphis, Tenn.,
on April 7 at which Taiwan announced "tenders" or offers to buy.
The companies included some of
the big multinational ouUits Uke

surance and freight ·charges to the
filial destination.
uIt Is sold "c and r• only, the commodity's cost and the transportation
to the destination are involved. If the
price Is "f.o.b." the commodity is
delivered to a U:S. port and put
aboard ship at a specified price.
Harvey said ocean freight rates
can vary but that In mid-April, as an
example, it cost about U.l4 a bushel
to ship soybeans to Taiwan.

Cargill, Continenta~ Bunge and
Dreyfus, and basically offered bids
based on two methods: c and I, and
f.o.b., hesaid.
Brennan said that in Memphis the
Taiwanese specified 27,000 metric
tons of soybeans for shipment next
Oct. 1-00 and a like amount for Oct.
10.21.
Philipp Brothers Grain Co. , New
York, N.Y., was the successful bid-

Arkansas, that "there is·a very good ·
chance those beans would be shi~
ped from Osceola, Ark." and that
the barge transportation to get them
to New Orleans might vary greatly
- depending on the time of the year
and other factors, between 10 cents
and tll cents a bushel. ·
Unlike an automobile, whose
manufacturer sets a price and each
middleman a~ds his share to cover
profits and costs, farm conunodities
work in reverse, he said.
"They're setting the price over- .
seas,'.' Brennan said. · ~This is what
they're willing to pay, you know
what. yoW' freight rates are, you've
got costs of going from a barge
thr~h the elevator into a boat.
"You've got, barge or railroad
freight back up into the Interior.
There, you have the local elevator
who also bas ... costs. And if both he
and the exporter are trying to make
a nickel or a dime a bushel as profit,
it just keeps getting backed off further down the road.
"The person who finally, I guess,
gets hurt by that is the U.S. farmer,''
he said.

.

These cash rates

I
I
I
I
I'
I '
I
I

Include discount

17.
18.
19.
20.

21 .
22.
23.
2•.

Carter tenn, including Robert
Strauss, former Democratic
national party cbainnan and now
Carter's campaign manager; Ambassador at Large Sol Linowitz; and
White House Counsel lloyd Cutler._
Carter gave no inunediate indication of what he intended to do in
response to Vance's resignation but
several officials, who asked not to be
identified, said it was logical
Christopher would be tapped for the
job.
Unlike other potential candidates,
Christopher is so well versed after
three years 88 Vance's top deputy he
needs no on-the-job training, the of.

ficials said.
Christopher was named acting
secretary after Vance resigned in
the wake of his opposition to the
abortive effort to rescue the
American hostages in Iran.
Christopher is said to have supported the mission but so far as is
known, Vance and Christopher see
essentially eye-to-eye on other
major policy issues.
State Department spokesman
Hodding Carter said Monday that he
expects the main thrust of American
foreign policy to remain the same as
it w11s Wider Vance.

Lo~gBottom

Hagan points to rules fight

News Notes

Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan were
in Colwnbus where they consulted
an eye specialist.
Mary Lovell and Robin, Pam
Bailey, Linda Queen Dye, Susie
Queen, Murl Galaway and Elizabeth
Jordan were guests at a shower held
for Becky DanielS at the home of
Mrs. Carl McCiure in Albany. Mrs.
Daniels is Mary Lovell's daughter.
Mrs. Walter Jordan and sons were
convention."
Sunday dinner guests at the home of
It specifies that delegates elected
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ciinton
to the national convention in 1980
and thereafter must support on the
Gilkey, Albany.
Frances Young, Harrisonville;
first convention ballot the candidate
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Welsh and son · they represented on their respective
and Jimmie, Byhalia; Mr. and Mrs . state ballots. After that, they could
Herb Hanaway, Amanda, and Mrs.
vote as they pleased.
Reece Prather, Westerville, were
Kennedy forces will seek to have
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith.
the rule rejected or amended to

allow freed0111 of choice on the first
ballot, Hagan said, adding It should
be that way, otherwise the primaries
would determine the nominee "and
there wouldn't be a need to have a

convention."
But Leahy said the effort will fall,
claiming that Carter now bas 1,250
delegates and expect.s to gamer
nearly all the '!Jrl remaining in the
south - North Carolina, Texas,
Arkansas, Kentucky, and Tennessee
- along with others he stands to win.
The Associated Press' figures
show Carter now bas 1,109 delegates
and Kennedy 639.
Leahy hinted he thinks President
Carter will have far in excess of the
1,666 delegates needed for the
nomination before the convention.
But Hagan said Carter delegates
might be convinced by campaign
developments prior to the- con-

vention to vote for the rule change.
"Alter June 3 (the date of the Ohio
primary 8lld also tbose In New Jersey and CaHfomla), If we've made
our case across the country, we'll go
to work on the Carter delegates," he
said, Indicating he woold try to per·
suade Ohio's 161 delegates to vote
for the rules chanlle.
Hagan said he tbiDiui Kennedy will
wind up witb the bulk of organized
labor's support, due to the
deteriorating ecornauy and the loss
of many thousands of jobs in the auto
and steeiiDdnatrles.
But Leahy Bald this was not the
case last net in the Michigan
ca1ICIISeS. ''Tbe Kennedy people
really expected him to overwhelm
Carter in Michigan. But they wound
up almost in a split, with Kennedy
gelling 71 delegates and Carter 70,"
Leahy said of the neighboring, No. 1
auto-manufacturing state.

Carmel News, By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Ables of Bald
Knobs were at the home r:J Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle on Sunday.
Margaret Ann JolmBon and
daughter, Sheryl Leann, called at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
JolmBon of Racine on Tuesday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Perry and
family and Mrs. Helen Perry, all of
Holland, Ohio visited with Mary Circle over the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Patterson and
son, RD Racine, called on Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle recently.

Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven, W. Va., were at the borne of
Mary Circle on Sunday.
Wllllam Carelton and daughter,
Angela Dawn, of Racine and Eunie
Brinker called at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Jolmson and family
and Betty Van Meter on SWlday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester Clllled at the Robert Lee
borne recently.
Bob Bill Lee was dinner guest of
his grandparents; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of Chester on Sunday.

By Melody Roberls
The Long Bottom Corrununity
Assoc. meets the last Wednesday of
every month. The next meeting will
take place one hour later due to the
summer time changes. The next
meeting is Wednesday, April 30, at 8
p.m. In the Community Building.
Mrs. Ruth Larkins, a lifelong
resident of Meigs County, passed
away last week after an extended
illness. She will be sadly missed by
all that knew and loved her.
Pearl Powell is a Stll'gical patient
of the Camden Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va. and Mrs. Ruth
Stethem.is a patient at the St. Joseph
Hospital in Parkersburg. Please try
to send them a cheery card.
Mrs. Marie Swan is back in Long
Bottom after being away for the winter. Welcome back, Marie'
Don't forget to send ' those
American Cancer Society con·
tributions in as this is their fund
drive month. For more information
call yoW' local Cancer Society II'
your local volunteer, which in the
Long Bottom area is Mrs. Tom
(Cathy) Spencer, or Mrs. Harlas
(Delores) Frank.

RESIGNATION ACCEPl'ED
- President Carter Monday accepted the resignation of
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance.
No reason was given for lbe
resignation except lbe fad that
Vance disagreed with Pre!lldent
Carter's decision last Friday to
attempt the rescue of U. S.
boetages In Iran.

To 'STAGE JAMBOREE
The Big Bend Citizens Band Radio
Ciub will stage "Jamboree '80" Sunday at the Rock Springs fairgrounds
from 10 a.m. to 5 !Y&gt;m.
The affair is open to the public.
There .will be ·free parking and
numerous door prizes awarded
throughout the day . The Charlie Lily
band will provide free entertainment. In addition to food stands
there will be a ceramic display,
engravtn8 by Stewart, a shell.
display, displays of crochet work,
leather goods and jewelry. Cookies,
candies and homemade cakes will
be on sale.
RUMMAGE SALE WEDNESDAY
Women of the Apple Grove United
Methodist Church will stage a rummage sale from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m. Wednesday and Thurs&lt;jay at the church.

LEMLEY MOVES
Robert J . ~miey bas moved to
Dublin where he bas accept employment with Rocky's on Bethel
Road.

Langsville News Notes
Mrs. Dorothy Woodard received
word of the death of Roger Savage,
age 68, of Lawrenceville, Ga. He was
formerly of Langsville, and the
Parker Run area. He is survived by
his wife, and three sons and a
brother, Don Savage of Charleston,
W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Morton Barnes and
son, Ryan, of Brazil, Ind. spent a
week visiting his mother, Dorothy
Woodard and other relatives at

Langsville and Mr. and Mrs. Manley
of Middleport.
Dorothy Woodard spent a SWlday
recently visiting with Mrs. Clarice
Ervin of Middleport. Other guests
were Mrs. Maxine Miller of Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Barr and
son called on his mother SWlday.
Dorothy Woodard spent Sunday,
AprilS, with her sister and husband,
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Danewood l'i
Syrapuse, 0.

---~ 1

- - -- 1

____ II

It Pays To Advertise•••Advertise Where It Pays •••

_ ____ I
25.
26. _ _ _ _ II
27.
- - - - I1
28.
---- 1
29.

____ ,,.

30.
31. _ _ _ __

32. _ _ _ __
33. _ _ _ __
3• . _ _ __

35. _ _,___

_

_

•
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,.

-11::

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------~

Public Notice

Public Notice

Mall This Coupon with Re~jttance ·
1-·:
The Daily Sentinel
1 •~
Box 729
·_,__J l '
' _ _ _ _ _ ___ _Pomeroy}
_ . . _ _ _ _ _ _45769
__

on.

Guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. R.
Ciine, local, were Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Ciine and his father, Chris Ciine, of
Columbus; Evelyn Rife, Rutland,
and William Flecker, Minersville.
A. R. Caster and daughter, Fontelle Spencer, Charleston, W. Va.,
spent a weekend here with his sister
and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Starkey, local, and their son-inlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs . Roy
Wiseman, Harrisonville, and at·
tended church services at Carpenter
Baptist Church.
Murl Galaway, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Crabtree, and Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Crabtree and Cindy were
dinner guests of Mrs. Rolland Crab-

ter, Christopher, who bad served as
Van~'s top deputy, suddenly found
himSelf as the lea~ candidate to
moueuptotheNo. 1 spot.
At first, Christopher occupied
Vance's 7th fioor offiee at the State
Department on an interim basis. B,_
most officials believed Carter would
moue quickly to make the appointment permanent and ask the
Senate to conflnn him as the
nation's 58th secretary of state.
Vance bad said all along that one
term as secretary was enough for
him. Other names have been mentioned to succeed him In a second

Kennedy strategy

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy's strategy to
win the 1980 Democratic presidential nomination over President Carter may. depend to a great extent on
a crucial fioor fight at the party's
national convention.
"That's the one you will be 1\'atchlng," Timothy F. Hagan, Kennedy's Ohio chairman, said Monday,
referring to an expected rules fight ·
in which Ohio could play a key role
at the Aug. 11-14 conclave.
J . Patrick'Leahy, executive director of Ohio Democratic Party
Headquarters, which supports Carter, said the Kennedy strategy Is impossible, because the nwnbers at the
convention will overwhelm the
Massachusetts senator.
With Kennedy n~ a virtually
unattainable 73 percent of the vote in
the nation's remaining primaries,
his only hope apparently restS in a
bid to allow convention delegates to
vote their free choice on the convention's first presidential ballot,
analysts said.
Hagan, who is Cuyahoga County
(Cievelsnd) Democratic cbainnan,
said the effort will come with coosideration of a proposed national
party rule coming out of the
Democrats' 1978 national "mini-

tree.

itial or group Of figures

counts as a word. Count
I name and address or
phone number If used.
I You'll get better results
I If you describe tully,
1 give price. The Sentinel
1 reser"es the r lght to
classify, edit or reject
any ad. Your ad will be
put in the proper
classification 11 you'll
check the proper box
below.

e TRANSPORTATION

32- Moblte .. ome•

I
I

Print one word In each
space below. Each in·

..-s,.u tor •ent

7- YerdSalt
1-Public Sate
&amp; Auction
9-WantedtoBuy

I '
I :;
I .
I11 •

II

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

.
J

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

I

PHONE ~."992-2156

1-C•nl or Ttlanlrt
2-ln Mamorlam
J-Anneuncemtnts
4-Giveaw•y
s-HappyAdl
.-Loll and '•und

Carpenter
Personals

r----------------------~

I

WANT AD INFORMAnON

forMond•v ·

ACTING SECRETARY William Christopher bas been
oamed actiDg Secretary of State
by President Jimmy , Carter.
Christopher bas served as UDdersecretary to Vance. Vaoce
resigned realgned Monday
following a dllagreement over
the ue of military Ioree In lbe
Inmlao crisis.

Busil1ess-Farms~Partnerships

. . . . . . . . . 0\l'ft',.. """Mimi II . . . . . . . . . . ,., . . ,.,.,.,

73
Vans &amp; 4 W.D.
1979 Ford 1.10 •x4, auto.,
p:s., p.b .. topper. Positive
tractlon front and rear. 985·
4339.

Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

~·· IIJLOCK. OFFICE LOCATION
618 E. Main
Pomeroy} Oh.
992-3795 1
•;2.;&amp;

seats,

fl. bed,

*

Call After 5 P.M.
992-6323
-4·27-pd.

brakes,

72
Trucks lor Sale
1979 Jeep Wagoneer, • dr.,
lul'ly equipped, exc. cond.
$7,500. 742·3117 after 5 p.m.

Ing
Electrlcla work$
*Masonry work
12 Years

Resident and Bus.iness.
Reliable and Experienced.
742·3195.

Miller Electrical Service.

cruise control, rear window
leather

-

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

eSERVICES

defogger,

homes

-Soffit
-Garages
-Carports
-Room additions

AcrHII
»-Rtal Eatate Want.ct
37- Rtallon
·

$2,200. 992·J886,

•New

extensive remodel-

P~~~~~~~;, 1

l~Lotsl

power

CONSTRUCTION

Rt. 1, Box 54

-Vinyl siding
-GuHerwork

M-BUIIftHI lultdints

steering,

der in Memphis for both quantities,
offering to provide the beans either
f.o.b. at a U.S. Gulf port for about
$249 a metric ton - about $6.78 a
bushel - or c and fat less than $287 a
ton 1r around $7.81 a bushel
delivered to Taiwan.
In Arkansas, soybean fanners
perhaps were getting less than $6 a
bushel.
Brerman said delivery dates and
other factors affect prices grain
companies offer. And they use the
futures market to hedge their transactions by buying an equivalent
amount of soybeans for delivery to '
themselves at a specified price.
" If the price of the cash market
goes up, say, to $12 a bushel (for
soybeans next fall) - they've sold it
for $7 - theoretically , if they
weren't hedged, they would have
lost $5 a bushel," he said.
" But because they hedge when
they make a cash sale, they also buy
futures and, theoretically, the
futures would appreciate as much as
the cash market."
Brerman said, as -a further example of Taiwan's soybean purchase in

'!'om Brennan of the American
Soybean Association's staff in St.
Louis, Mo., said In a telephone in-

On the Farm Scene

WASHINGTON (AP) - Warren
M. Christopher bad been touted fer
some time as a likely choice to succeed Cyrus R. Vance as secretary of
state, but rio one expected it to happen quite so soon.
Public attention began to focus on
Christopher when another potential
candidate, national security adviser
Zbigniew Brzezinski, declared a lew
weeks ago that be was not interested
in becoming secretary of state. To
the surprise of some, Brzezinski endorsed Christopher for the job.
When Vance resigned abruptly
because l'i a profoWld policy
disagreement with President Car-

ROUSH

~~~==i~~~~~~t;:;:~~=~~~~~~====:;::;~~~
BOB'S
~
~ ;, ' ·'
Tri-Counfy
GENERAL
.~ §t
BOOkkeeping
CONTRACilNG
~ tE!=:I
s~.rva·ce
..113t!!!i'~

toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.

• P .M. Dally
12 Noon Saturday

when fanners get upset after
reading Taiwan, Japan or some
other foreign customer bas paid substantially more for a coiiUilodity
than the fanner received.
One reason for • the millunderstandlng, he explained, is that it
is common practice in International
trading to quote prices In several
ways: c.i.f., c and f, and f.o.b., for
example.
When soybeans or another commodity Is sold c.l.f., it means the
price includes cost of the product, in-

Christopher likely choice
to succeed Secretary Vance

John Teaford
Phone:
(614) 985·3961
4·14·1 mo.

work guaranteed.
Free Estimate

forhle

'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

J

Tom Hoskins or
Gerald 'G:Iark

7:1-V•n•&amp;•w.D.
J4-Motorcydts
nAuto Ports
&amp; AccttiOr'IH
n - AutoltQIIr

.. .

I)(MNINGOIILDS AGENCY., !NC.

!

~·

949-2160 Pomeroy
797·2432 Athens

li-Homlllor Salt

~·

.. '

f-. •-

cial &amp; restdentiat.

est i mate .
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·2211 .

hardtop , beige, radio,
heater, air, 57,000 miles.

20 foot utility trailer·trl ·

-.!.~

..

All types of roofing, new
and repair, gutters,
downspouts, commer-

Improvements

1973 Dodge Polaro 2 door

Must Sell : 1976 Gran Prix
Pontiac. Call after 5 p.m.
30H82·3424.

FOR AU. YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS

. -~

metric ton and 36.7 Wsbels of
soybeans in each ton, that translates
Into approximately 3,963,600
bushels. It doesn't take much
calculating to figure out, based on
the reported figures, that Taiwan
paid U.S. grain companies an
average of about $7.57 a bushel fir
the beans.
And It doesn't require much of a
spark to ignite the anger of an
Arkansas fanner who maybe is get·
ling $5.50 a bushel or so for beans at
his IQCal elevator.
Why the difference? It's similar to
the "extras" on that new car. Also,
everybody along the line after
soybeans leave the farm bas to have
a profit. It also costs money to ship
the _beans by rai! 1 truck or barge +
sometimes all are used + from a
local elevator to the final overseas
destination.
When au the handling costs and
profit bites are added, the foreign
buyer of grain bas to pay much more
than the fanner initially received.
Gerald Harvey of the Agriculture
Department's Foreign Agricultural
Service says it is "not surprising"

Ohio Valley Roofing

71-Autos fDf' Salt

992·5574, $950 .00.

· ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU tfAVE THE COVERAGE?

._.1;,i,\~J_

MORRIS

e REAL ESTATE

Gilbert electric train, Iran·
sformer and allthe ac·
cessorles. Women's golf
bag. 992·2961.
axle. 742·2633.

H · (pd,)

- l£0

charger.

•FINANCIAL

992·63-C2 or 992-2583.

.

Free Estimates
Ph.: (304) 773·5131 1
or (304) 882·2276

Call after 4:30, 992-7291.

Decorated Cakes. charac- S2.795. Good cond., just

NG .sOOntEASTERN OHIO SiNCE 1868'

.

operated

ter cakes or sheet cakes.

AGENCY 'INC.
INSURANCE

...

Fits 351 Cubic Inch Ford ·
Windsor engine. Never
used. 2-new 4.35x18 and 13.000x21 carlisle Knobby
motorcycle tires. Battery

1s-SchoolslnstrUctlort
14-R•dlo, TV
&amp; Cl RtP~Ir
1t-W•nttel To Del

~--····i;jiiijiiiii~~~~~~~;~~~~ conditioning
1977 Cordoba, vinyl
top,
air
h
,
power

- .•.

puter designed for per·
formance and economy.

, ,_ Http wanted
12- Situttel W•nted

Giant Accessory Selection,

furnace, garage . 2 acres.

-CONCRETE

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
eV-CHISEL
, PLOW

Holley Dominator Intake
Manifold and 600 CFM
Holley Carburetor. com·

Livestock

let us install for vou . D. ' .!I_ _~A'!!u'-"to!:s.!t~or'-'S~a~l~e__
Bumgardner Sales, Inc. 1977 Premier Vol are • door,

garage, Baum Addn .,
Meigs Co. Call afler 6 p.m.

~ 19·2M2

; WASHINGTON (AP) - When
!!Oybean prices are mentioned, it's a
tilt Uke explaining the price of a new
qar to envious neighbors.
· Depending on the " extras" the
kindly salesman talked you into, the
vehicle might cost a mete $6 500 1r
perhaps as much 88$10,000. '
: Prices of soybeans - all farm
ciommodlties, for that matter - are
!)lore complicated than explaining
If"bat the Super Six with stereo, built·
in bar, silver-planted door handles
and all the rest actually cost.
• For example, a trade team from
'taiwan earlier this month visited ·
the the United States, buying nearly
$2 billion worth of goods, mainly tn&lt;\IJStrtal commodities but also sub~tial amounts of agricultural
i\e111S, including soybeans and com.
' In Arkansas, which ranked sixth
last year in U.S. soybean production
with about 144.2 million bushels of
total national output of nearly 2.3
bllllon, the Taiwanese made their
ll!rgest purchases of bean, some
1(18,000 metric tons for a reported
c\)SI of about $30 million.
Allowing about 2,205 pounds in a

-REMODWNG

949·2160

Goals : 2 yr. old male$25; 2
milking goats and 1 bred

delivery : various sizes of
pool kits. Do-it-yourself or

family room, a.c. . 2·car

6Qx250 lot . $28,500.00.
. NEW LISTING
TIREO OF WORKING
FOR OTHERS? Own

62
Wanted to Buy
29,000 BTU air condltoner. CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
Guaranteed to be in good diameter 10" on largest
"WOrking order . Call 742- end. $12 p·er ton. Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
2975.
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.
53
Antiques
ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
ATTENTION :
!IM· NITURE , glass. china,
PORTANT TO YOU ) Will anything. See or call Ruth
pay cl!lsh or certified check Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
for antiques and collec- 2nd, Mlddleporl, OH. 992·
tibles or entire estates. 3161.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and 'oLD COINS, pocket wat·
coin collections. Call 614· ches. class rings, wedding
767-3167 or 557·3411 .
bands, diamonds. Gold or

IN STOCK for immediate

fireplace, lull basement w·
NEW LISTING - Close
in, 3 bedroom s wi th full

Household Goods

54

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
C•ll Howard

Rooting, siding, room ad·
dillons,all types of general

In Middleport. Have
6.,_,1c__,_F_,a'-'rm=E='q,_,u"'ip.,m=e,_,_nt, __
references. 742-2790.
International hay baler, 55
P.T.O. $600.00. 3 h.p.
rototlller $100.00. Both
.., ..,
ready to be used . 698·6082.

767-3167 or 557·3411 .

-ROOFING
-PAJrtnNG

All types of roof work,
new or r-lr ·gutters
•uld downspoub, 1utt1r
cleaning onCI painting.
All work guaranteed.

1976 Suzuki motorcycle;
RM 250, good condition.
247·3861.

55 Wall Layfatte Receiver,

ATTENTION :
IIM - 742·2331 . Treasure Chest
PORTANT TO YOU) Will Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
pay cash or ~ertilied check M62.

Money to Loan

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

$250,QOO Inventory. Athens
Sport Cycles, 20 W. Stimson
Ave., Athens. OH. 592·1692.

ces.

Furnished apt .• house or
trailer . Needed by first of
May far two working girls.

for antiques and collectibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large _ Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections . Call 614-

Super Deals-Super Service.

Giant Ac ce ssory $etectl9n,

5122.

Wanted to Rent

51

Motorcycles

(614) 698--3290.

57

992-6022.

Soybean prices hard to explain

•

•..

fa c ilities.

AlSo AKC registered
Do.bermans. 614·4-46·1195 .

,Manor apts. Call992·7787.

Retired person . $150 mo.

Business Services

P.B., A.C.. AM·FM stereo.
992·6130 after 5 p.m.
74

I~; The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, April29, 1980

KENNELS.

Several cats and kinens.

45
Furnished Rooms
Board, room, laundry.

Vons &amp; 4 W. D.

Harley· Davldson Yamaha .

RENTER'S assistance for

47

Carpenter work. Floors,
doors, ceilings, paneling.

chording and

ranch

li n i ment .

Donations

ces required. 992-3242.

interested call 992-5.03.

bedroom

sewer and water and oas.
992·6069 .

41
Needed

cabbage and head lettuce
plants. Three mi les north
west of Chester on West

I ron and bra ss beds, old
f u rnit u r e, d es k s, gold
r i ng s, jewelry , si lver
dollars, sterl ing , etc., woOO
ic_e boxes, antiques, etc .
Co mp let e
hou seholds .
Wri te M . 0 . Miller, Rt. 4,
• Pomeroy, OHl or call 992·

Shade

d i amond

black

6260. noon-7 p.m.

plants, most varieties, also

Wanted to Buy

tage on

35
Lots &amp; Acreage
Land for Sale. St. Rl. 7 and
Bradbury Rd . 1 acre lol,

Steak

Complete Serv ice . Phone

ba sement ,

medicated

spray ,

Boarding, all breeds. Clean

992-2143.

&amp; Auction

WIL L BUY

stocked pond for swimm ing
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres

vanilla

operator's license? Phone

Public Sale

9

33
Farms lor Sale
COUNTRY HOME with

1978 Ford Bronco, P.S.,

vapour

Mature Babysitter needed

5 days a week In my home.
References required. Send

f am ily , glassware, dishes,
some depression glass, fur - · Wi II do odds and ends paneling, floor tile, ceiling
n i tur e, adult c lothing,

Children's clothing, cur-

bookcase, stepdown living
room , large master
bedroom, fully carpted,
gas heal. Must sell, moving
out of town. k&gt;OO or best of·
fer . 7•2-2898.

Whi te

POODL E GROOMING .
Judy Tay lor. 614·367·7220.

Need a part-time babysit·

Two Fa mily Ga rage Sale.

built·in

73

Zidian at Pomeroy Health
Located approx.
'are Center Monday thru · 7available.
miles from Pomeroy off
Friday 9·5.
Rt. 7 or 33. 4-46·2359 alter 6.

ter in my home. Referen-

May 2 and 3. A t th e corner
of FourTh and Pearl,
Raci ne. Toys, CB radio,
chain saw, book s, c loth ing,
dishes, etc .

c loset,

,,

Merchanlse
Shaklee Organic products.

~ ~J.sc .

,,

NOTICE OF
PROPOSED
BANK MERGER
Notice Is hereby given
that appllcallon has been
malle lo the Comptroller of
the Currency, Washington!
D. C., 2021f lor hiS consen ·
to 11 mtrQer of Pomeroy
National Bank, Pomeroy,
Ohio end Bank One ot
Pomeroy, N. A. Pomeroy,
Ohio. This application was
accepted for filing on Mar·
ch 25, 1980.
,
II Is contemplated that
all offices of the above·
named banks will continue
to be operated.
This notice Is published
pursuanttosectlon 18 (cl of
the Federal De~ll tn·
osurance Act and Part 5 of

ihe Regulations of the Com·
otroller of the currency ( 12
i; FR5) .
.
March 31, 1980
POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
Pomeroy, Ohio
BANK ONE OF
POMEROY, N. A.

Pomeroy, Ohio

(3) 31,

6tc

W 7, U , 21, 28 , 29,

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
The following described
llem will be offered .for
public sale to the highest

Public Notice

3

Announcements

I PAY highest prices
bidder on the 12th day of
possible for gold and silver
May, 1980, at 10 o'clock
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
a.m .
'
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
1978 Chevrolet If&gt;ton pick
Shop, Middleport.·
UP • X • Ser. No.
CK L1-18F398058
Sale of the security listed
above will be held on the
GOLD, SILVER OR
~remises of The City Loan
Company, 125 E. Main
FOREIGN COINS, OR
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
ANY OTHER GOLD OR Terms of Sale : Cash
SILVER I'I'E;MS. ALSO,
Seller reserves the right
ANTIQUE
FURNITURE
to bid and the right to
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
reject any and all bids.
IT.EMS. WILL PAY TOP
Prior to the date of sale,
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
arrangements may be
made to Inspect this mer· ' OSBY (OSSIEl MARTIN
chandlse by calling 992·2171
BEFORE
SELLING .
between the hours of 9 a.m.
PHONE 992--6370. ALSO
and 5p.m.
DOAPPRAIS[NG.
c•) 29, 1tc

·3

Announcements

Picking up an Easy play
organ in
your area .

3

Announcements

Letart Falls Cemetery lees
Looking for a responsible are payable now. S10 per lot
party to take over paymen - of four graves, $5 for half
ts. Call credit manager lot or two graves. Money to
be sent to the sexton,
collect. 61-1--592·5122.
Clarence 1. Norris, 23262
GUN SHOOT EVERY Rd ., Racine •5771.
FRIDAY NIGHT7 :30 P.M.
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY .
RACINE GUN CLUB.
SPECIAL : Mother's Day
Bea Wood 35707 Loop Rd ., Gifts. Priced for kids, some
Rutland, OH . r.2·2790. New under $1.00. Many under
Shaklee Distributor in the $2.00. New Shipment of
!lend area . All natural cratt supplies. Lowest
'lllamlns. All natural per- prices In town. Log Cabin,
sonal products and organic Gift Shop, Laureal Cliff.
Fri. and Sat. 10:00·3:00.
cleaners.

3

Announcements

There

will

organizational

be ' an

meet ing

about this year' s church

SOftball league
Meigs County
Plains Church of
Tuppers Plains,
May 2, 1980.

tor The
Tuppers
Christ, of
OH . 7:30

The Racine Volunteer Fire
DePartment' s gun shoots

are cancelled for the
season. They wlshto thank
everyone that helped to
make them successful . ·

A turkey's gizzard Is so
strong-walled It can easily
crushan unshelled walnut.

3--~Annou
_n
_c_
e_
m_
e_
nt
~s---

Rabbits

·a peSt

or ruhiiiiO

your garden? Tht llaak
Walton Leagu~ will
Hum,.nely trap them and •
release themln the wild
unharmed. Free. Phone
985·3505 or 992·2500.
DERBY TROPHY
Each year: the Kentucky
, Derby trophy is designed,
· in keeping With the 1921
• gold cup, for the owner of
. the winning bone. Silver
: repllcaa In smaller lbre
' are presented to the wlm1ng jockey and trainer. ·

a

�. t4 - The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Mi~Port. o., Tuesday, Apri129, t980
Announcements
.. t
Wlnlld 10 Buy
J2
;;:;;-- -M
= o"'b"lle--,
H'"o_
" m_o_s__
for Sale
SELL YOU R, SILVER 10 karat, U .karar, 18 karat,
S T E R L ING gold. Dental gold and gold 1971 Zimmer tr ailer 12x60.
CO INS ,
1972 BUddy Trailer 12x60.
SlLVE R, GOLD. ETC., TO ear pins. 675·3010.
992-SJ().j_
BRO WN ' S IN MID ·
DLE POR T FO R TOP
DOLLA R. PHONE 614-992·
1969 12x60 two bedroom
5113.
.
mobile home, good con·
dllion, nice features. buill
J

Pla no Tuning - L an e
Daniels 7 4 2 ~ 295 1. T uning
and Repair SerYice si nce
1965 . If no answer phone

992·2082.

in china

GET VA LUABLE lr ainlng
as a young business person
and earn good money plus

some great gifts as a Sen-

4

t i nel route carrier. Phone

Gi veawa y

Six Week old kittens. Give
to good home. 139 But·

us right away and get on
the eliQ ibll lty list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

ternu t, Pomeroy . ·
F ull ti me and part time RN

Yard Sale
Yard Sale. Lar ge select ion

7

children's, m en ' s cl othing.

Thurs. 1, Fr i. 2, Sat. 3. Ted

Russell res idence, Rt. 124
Minersvi ll e.
Moving-Selli ng a 1971 c ar,
chest
fr eezer ,
16mm
projec tor , a coal or woodburn ing King stove, house
p lants, bookcases, dresser
with mi rror, n~te stand,
desk, telep hone stand, goat

sta nd. Call 247·2624.

or LPN . 11 ·7. Contact Mr.

Large Yard Sale. Very
good clea n cloth ing,cur·
tains, bedspreads, and
rugs. Rebuilt garden rotot i Iter, dishes, something for
everyone. F ir st house on
left after you cross the
rai lr oad
t rac ks
at
Cheshir e. Mary Layne,

May 1·2·3-4th .

Porc h Sa le, 3 family at J . J .
Cre mea ns' home on Broad- .

way

St..

Middleport .

Ch ild r en ' s and ladies '
cl ot hi ng , wha tnots, extra
ni ce clean it e ms . All day

Wednesday .

May 1·2-3, 9:00 to ? Eight

tai ns, bedspreads, toys,
and m isc. Rain cancels.

Phone 992·2888, 294 Pearl
St., Middleport, OH .

Yard Sal e, May I and 2nd.

Thur sday and Friday, 9 :30
to 4 :00 . F ive f amilies on
College Road in Syrac use .
Clothing, c hi ldren' s and
adults. Dishes. furniture,
odds and ends. Stroller.
H igh c ha irs, and car seat.

8

BRADFO RD, Auctioneer,

toM. St. Clair, 22 Railroad
St., Middleport, OH . .S760.
Grill cook wanted . Apply in
person
House.

Crow ' s

949·2487 or-949-2000. racine.
Ohio, Cr itt Bradford.

7760.

Auto-body repa irman and

accepted . 367·0410.

$356.00 weekly guaranteed .

Two hours da ily at home.

For Rent : Three rooms and
bath, furnished, util ities
paid, no pets. 2 sleeping
rooms for rent. see John
Sheets, 3117 miles south of

R.

Middleport on Rt. 7.

c lean -up man .
ti me.992·7013.

Room Mate to

share expenses. Children

Full

Send for free brochure to

Neighbarger,

273

Edgewater Beach, Thorn -

Ville, OH .

Apartment

44

for Rent

12 Situations wanted
Will clean house .. Call ~7 3423 or ~7 - 6373 .

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone992-5-434.

Will do painting, roof work,
repair
work
houses.

Senior Citizens in Village

Nothing too big. 992-3941 or
992·7008.

Roof Pa inting and trim
work . Free estimates. 99236P.

tile. 992·6338.
SOmeone

to

stay

elder ly lady. Call
p.m. 992·3.S8.

w ith
after 5

Rawlelgh products. Joyce
Sautes 992· 7825.
Bench saw, iron mantel
piece, antique. walnut bed·
stead minus side rails. Call

992-2-433, 116 Lincoln Road,
POm!!roy, OH.

Pets lor Sale
RI SING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292.

56

HILLCREST

indoor.- outdoor

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
. Healthy, shots, wormed .
required.

992·

992 -2759.
13
Insurance
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SU RANCE been can celled?
Lost your

HOOF HOLLOW : HOrses
~nies

and

lessons .

and

riding

Everything

Imaginable In horse equip·
ment. Blankets, belts,
boots, etc. English and
Western ! Ruth Reeves

Humane Society's Pet
Adoption Service. 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
Coli ie type with puppy.
Musical
Instruments

Picking up a piano in your

area. Looking for a responsible party to take over

payments . Call

credit

manager collect. 614··592·

46
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7479.

17

Miscellaneous

Plants for Sale, Tomato

Shade Road. NO sunday
Sales . Phone 985·3838
Dwight Spencer.
18

wanted to Do

Give piano lessons to beginners and ad\lanced student

in my home. Also teach
tran~sing

If

Gold , si l ver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
it ems. Antique furniture,
glass or china , will pay top
dollar , or complete ·estates.

22

No· -Item too large or too

Mortgage

small . Check prices before

se lling . Also do appraising .
Osby (Oss ie) Martin. 992·
6370.
old

tran ·

s m issi o ns ,
batteries ,
eng ines, or scrap metals,

etc. Call245·9188.

Money

Available. New homes, old
homes, and refinancing
your pr~sent home . CON ·
VENTIONAL 5 Pet. down.
S!'COND MORTGAGES.
VA-No down payment,

turntable

speakers.

and

two

Excellent con -

dition . Call 992-5911.

--·.. --. ....... .

--····- - · · · ···· ··~

&amp; LhtSiHER

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

FHA ·Low down payment,

FHA -245-Graduated paym ent program. FHA-265Subsidy program. Call 5923051 , Ireland Mortgage Co. ,
17 E. Stale St., Athens, OH.

neal estate
31

Homes for Sale

Brick,
ranch -style,
3
bedroom.
2 111
bath ,

garage

on

your own business mak ing truss rafters. Ap·
prox . I acre, building,
enough tools &amp; a truck to
run the business. owner
wil l assist in learning of

buSiness. S28,QOO.OO.
NEW LISTING - LIKE
TO CAMP? 2 room cotRiver

with approx. 5 acres of
land. $8,800.00.
NEW LISTING - 12

acres with mobile home,
:;h 4 beOrooms, l lf2 baths.

$22,300.00.
NEW LISTING
BUILDING SITES Approx . 10 acres
cleared &amp; level land,
will '
subdivide.
$11 ,500.00.
FIVE POINTS - 3
on

200x100 lot. U0,500.00.
FAJlM - •4 acres with •
bedroom modular, other
buildings, extra trailer
hook-up. S42,QOO.OO .
REDUCED
3
bedroom, 1'12 baths In
town on a 50x80 lot.
S38,QOO.OO.
BRINGING RUY·I·
SELLER
OUR D~!~"~
Henry E.
992-61Pl,
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Dottie &amp; Roger Tumor
742·2474
Office Phone 992·:1259

silver. Call J . A. Wamsley,

Misc. Merchanlse

COAL,

LIMESTONE,

sand, gra'Jel, cal c ium
chloride, fertilizer, dog

food . and all types of salt.
E)(celsior Salt works, Inc.,

GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLO .
RINGS , JEWELRY ,
STERLi'NG SILVE~ AND
MISC. HEMS. PAYING
RECOR .D
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP-TO·DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL 992·3476.

E. Main St .. Pomeroy, 992·
3891.

'3

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu. Best for
apple butter. Call ~9-3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard. SR
689 .

female $60 ea . 8 mo. old
female S45; 6 kids-males

992·512-4.

985--169 .

$20, females $30. Shade,
OH. (61-4) 696·1234.

- ..,........
. . . .......
..........
...._. '_.

air.

am ~ fm

tape, speed con·

trol. New tires. Exc. cond.

Harley· Davidson Yamaha . Don Foglesong ,
Super Deals-Super Service. 773-5274.

House, 2 bedroom, full
basement 30x.O. Forced air

Mason.

$250,000 Inventory . Athens
Sport Cycles, 20 w. Stimson
Ave., Athens, OH . 592·1692.

S26,QOO. Near Reedsville,
Oh. 378·6276.
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale
1973 Fairpoint. Ux65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14x65 3
bdr .• balh 112
1971 Shakespear, Ux6S 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT, PLEASANT,
WV . 30H75·.U2•.

1977

Chevrolet

Caprice

Classic, 3 seater, sf. wgn .,
p.s., p,b., air, low mileage.
Reg. retail $3,600. Sale

fence

Dri ve for show, putt for
dough. Improve your short
game with a new puner,

right for vacation. Ingels
Furniture, Middleport, OH.

1978 Camero, p.s., p .b ., air,

new tires. $4.700. CB radio.
992·2124.

John Teaford. 61•·985·3961.

SHF'IIEES

81

Home

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned . Free

'

'

•'

'

21 years experience. All

WALL PAPERING and
pa inting . 742·2328.

4-24·1 mo.

CARPENTER WORK
complete remodeling by AI
Tromm, 742·2328. Referen·

repairs ,

25

Limestone for driveways.
Pomeroy--Mason area . 367-

7101.
84

makes.
-2284. The
Repairs, 992
service,
all
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer sales
we sharpen

~~~.~;.vice.
ELWOOD
REPAIR -

BOWERS
Sweepers,

farm Buildings
Sl1es
"FromJOx30"

SM.o.!..b

Roofing~
siding,
gutter,
built-up
-roof and home

Excavating

Electric;ll
&amp; Refrigeration
SEWING MACH IN E

ALL STEEL

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

ex -

years

perience. 992·3-406.
8J

Utifihl
-•v.. Buildines

Sizes From 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

repair.
Free Estimates
388·9759
2·1Hfc

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 9853825.

3-30·1 mo.

85
General Hauling
WILL HAUL• limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742·2.S5.

87
Upholstery
A&amp;H Upholstering, across
from the Texaco Station In
Syracuse. Ph. 992·3752 or
992·3U3.

!
1

n

Write your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results . Money not relundable.

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy&lt;~ 0 •• 45769

•ANNOUNCEMENTS

I

Addrau________________ I

eRENTALS
.t1-+t041111 for Rttlf
42-Mtblle Hom••
for Rtt~f
&lt;t4-ANr1ment f~M Rtt1f
n-FRooms

Phon•~---------------

.tJ- WutH to Rtnt
41--Cqulpment for Rent

1

eMERCHANDISE

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sl-Hovsthofd OOocls
52-(1, TV. Radio lqulpmllnt
SJ-Antlqun
M-Mit(. Mtrcttandl"

13- lnlunnc•
14- Buslntss Tr11n1n1

n--luUcllnl luppfles

H-Pttl fDr Slit

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
61- F1rm EQUIIM"tnf

n-w1ntt1 to auv
12- Tructll tor Salt

21 -

BUslntn
o,..ortunlry
H - Monev to Lo.n

u--LivtiiKk
14-Hay I Grain
u - snct&amp;PerUIIur

2J- Proftsl10ftal
5ervlct~

:ll-ll'arml tor lilt

( J Wanted

( l For Sale

( ) Announcement

( l For Rent

1. _ _ _ __
2. _ _ _ __

Want· Ad Advertising
Deadlines

3. _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ __

11- Homtlmprovtmttlfl
12-PIIImblq&amp; l:•c.v•llllt

s. _ _ _ __

ll-l:,cav•tlnt
1'-EIMtrltal -··

6. _ _ _ __

a ••rrtter•tlott

1,

1. _ _ _ __
8. _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ __

U-Oifttrll Ha11fln1 ,
N--M,H. lll:tNir
11- UPhOIItery

10- - - - - - -

Rates and Other Information

11 .
12.
13.
1-4.
15.
16.

1JWonlsorUndar
Cash

uav
2 dav•

1M
1.11

I dan
6Ny1

,.,,,

.,. ,.....,...,..., ,... otRllfttiV.

1M
2M

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Choroo
1.11
1.11

us

Ul

bt cftlr... at...,l•r

in lt'lemory, Carll of Thll'*" ·• • Obituary : ' ctflll ,.,. • .,.., ·u .ll
ml~imum. c ..h In •lllnnce.

Mt.DIII Home niK anc1 ~M'ciUits are •cc.,._. Oft IV wlttl caall.wfth
order. 2! CMI cr..rtt tor ads car...,.lnl lo• N11m1ttr In Care of TIM

Jtnthttl.

terview that 10 or more companies
made bids during the Taiwanese
swing through Arkansas, Tennessee,
Ohio and Wisconsin earlier this month.
Brerman said he was present at
only the meeting In Memphis, Tenn.,
on April 7 at which Taiwan announced "tenders" or offers to buy.
The companies included some of
the big multinational ouUits Uke

surance and freight ·charges to the
filial destination.
uIt Is sold "c and r• only, the commodity's cost and the transportation
to the destination are involved. If the
price Is "f.o.b." the commodity is
delivered to a U:S. port and put
aboard ship at a specified price.
Harvey said ocean freight rates
can vary but that In mid-April, as an
example, it cost about U.l4 a bushel
to ship soybeans to Taiwan.

Cargill, Continenta~ Bunge and
Dreyfus, and basically offered bids
based on two methods: c and I, and
f.o.b., hesaid.
Brennan said that in Memphis the
Taiwanese specified 27,000 metric
tons of soybeans for shipment next
Oct. 1-00 and a like amount for Oct.
10.21.
Philipp Brothers Grain Co. , New
York, N.Y., was the successful bid-

Arkansas, that "there is·a very good ·
chance those beans would be shi~
ped from Osceola, Ark." and that
the barge transportation to get them
to New Orleans might vary greatly
- depending on the time of the year
and other factors, between 10 cents
and tll cents a bushel. ·
Unlike an automobile, whose
manufacturer sets a price and each
middleman a~ds his share to cover
profits and costs, farm conunodities
work in reverse, he said.
"They're setting the price over- .
seas,'.' Brennan said. · ~This is what
they're willing to pay, you know
what. yoW' freight rates are, you've
got costs of going from a barge
thr~h the elevator into a boat.
"You've got, barge or railroad
freight back up into the Interior.
There, you have the local elevator
who also bas ... costs. And if both he
and the exporter are trying to make
a nickel or a dime a bushel as profit,
it just keeps getting backed off further down the road.
"The person who finally, I guess,
gets hurt by that is the U.S. farmer,''
he said.

.

These cash rates

I
I
I
I
I'
I '
I
I

Include discount

17.
18.
19.
20.

21 .
22.
23.
2•.

Carter tenn, including Robert
Strauss, former Democratic
national party cbainnan and now
Carter's campaign manager; Ambassador at Large Sol Linowitz; and
White House Counsel lloyd Cutler._
Carter gave no inunediate indication of what he intended to do in
response to Vance's resignation but
several officials, who asked not to be
identified, said it was logical
Christopher would be tapped for the
job.
Unlike other potential candidates,
Christopher is so well versed after
three years 88 Vance's top deputy he
needs no on-the-job training, the of.

ficials said.
Christopher was named acting
secretary after Vance resigned in
the wake of his opposition to the
abortive effort to rescue the
American hostages in Iran.
Christopher is said to have supported the mission but so far as is
known, Vance and Christopher see
essentially eye-to-eye on other
major policy issues.
State Department spokesman
Hodding Carter said Monday that he
expects the main thrust of American
foreign policy to remain the same as
it w11s Wider Vance.

Lo~gBottom

Hagan points to rules fight

News Notes

Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan were
in Colwnbus where they consulted
an eye specialist.
Mary Lovell and Robin, Pam
Bailey, Linda Queen Dye, Susie
Queen, Murl Galaway and Elizabeth
Jordan were guests at a shower held
for Becky DanielS at the home of
Mrs. Carl McCiure in Albany. Mrs.
Daniels is Mary Lovell's daughter.
Mrs. Walter Jordan and sons were
convention."
Sunday dinner guests at the home of
It specifies that delegates elected
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ciinton
to the national convention in 1980
and thereafter must support on the
Gilkey, Albany.
Frances Young, Harrisonville;
first convention ballot the candidate
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Welsh and son · they represented on their respective
and Jimmie, Byhalia; Mr. and Mrs . state ballots. After that, they could
Herb Hanaway, Amanda, and Mrs.
vote as they pleased.
Reece Prather, Westerville, were
Kennedy forces will seek to have
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith.
the rule rejected or amended to

allow freed0111 of choice on the first
ballot, Hagan said, adding It should
be that way, otherwise the primaries
would determine the nominee "and
there wouldn't be a need to have a

convention."
But Leahy said the effort will fall,
claiming that Carter now bas 1,250
delegates and expect.s to gamer
nearly all the '!Jrl remaining in the
south - North Carolina, Texas,
Arkansas, Kentucky, and Tennessee
- along with others he stands to win.
The Associated Press' figures
show Carter now bas 1,109 delegates
and Kennedy 639.
Leahy hinted he thinks President
Carter will have far in excess of the
1,666 delegates needed for the
nomination before the convention.
But Hagan said Carter delegates
might be convinced by campaign
developments prior to the- con-

vention to vote for the rule change.
"Alter June 3 (the date of the Ohio
primary 8lld also tbose In New Jersey and CaHfomla), If we've made
our case across the country, we'll go
to work on the Carter delegates," he
said, Indicating he woold try to per·
suade Ohio's 161 delegates to vote
for the rules chanlle.
Hagan said he tbiDiui Kennedy will
wind up witb the bulk of organized
labor's support, due to the
deteriorating ecornauy and the loss
of many thousands of jobs in the auto
and steeiiDdnatrles.
But Leahy Bald this was not the
case last net in the Michigan
ca1ICIISeS. ''Tbe Kennedy people
really expected him to overwhelm
Carter in Michigan. But they wound
up almost in a split, with Kennedy
gelling 71 delegates and Carter 70,"
Leahy said of the neighboring, No. 1
auto-manufacturing state.

Carmel News, By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Ables of Bald
Knobs were at the home r:J Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle on Sunday.
Margaret Ann JolmBon and
daughter, Sheryl Leann, called at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
JolmBon of Racine on Tuesday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Perry and
family and Mrs. Helen Perry, all of
Holland, Ohio visited with Mary Circle over the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Patterson and
son, RD Racine, called on Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle recently.

Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven, W. Va., were at the borne of
Mary Circle on Sunday.
Wllllam Carelton and daughter,
Angela Dawn, of Racine and Eunie
Brinker called at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Jolmson and family
and Betty Van Meter on SWlday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
Chester Clllled at the Robert Lee
borne recently.
Bob Bill Lee was dinner guest of
his grandparents; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of Chester on Sunday.

By Melody Roberls
The Long Bottom Corrununity
Assoc. meets the last Wednesday of
every month. The next meeting will
take place one hour later due to the
summer time changes. The next
meeting is Wednesday, April 30, at 8
p.m. In the Community Building.
Mrs. Ruth Larkins, a lifelong
resident of Meigs County, passed
away last week after an extended
illness. She will be sadly missed by
all that knew and loved her.
Pearl Powell is a Stll'gical patient
of the Camden Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va. and Mrs. Ruth
Stethem.is a patient at the St. Joseph
Hospital in Parkersburg. Please try
to send them a cheery card.
Mrs. Marie Swan is back in Long
Bottom after being away for the winter. Welcome back, Marie'
Don't forget to send ' those
American Cancer Society con·
tributions in as this is their fund
drive month. For more information
call yoW' local Cancer Society II'
your local volunteer, which in the
Long Bottom area is Mrs. Tom
(Cathy) Spencer, or Mrs. Harlas
(Delores) Frank.

RESIGNATION ACCEPl'ED
- President Carter Monday accepted the resignation of
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance.
No reason was given for lbe
resignation except lbe fad that
Vance disagreed with Pre!lldent
Carter's decision last Friday to
attempt the rescue of U. S.
boetages In Iran.

To 'STAGE JAMBOREE
The Big Bend Citizens Band Radio
Ciub will stage "Jamboree '80" Sunday at the Rock Springs fairgrounds
from 10 a.m. to 5 !Y&gt;m.
The affair is open to the public.
There .will be ·free parking and
numerous door prizes awarded
throughout the day . The Charlie Lily
band will provide free entertainment. In addition to food stands
there will be a ceramic display,
engravtn8 by Stewart, a shell.
display, displays of crochet work,
leather goods and jewelry. Cookies,
candies and homemade cakes will
be on sale.
RUMMAGE SALE WEDNESDAY
Women of the Apple Grove United
Methodist Church will stage a rummage sale from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m. Wednesday and Thurs&lt;jay at the church.

LEMLEY MOVES
Robert J . ~miey bas moved to
Dublin where he bas accept employment with Rocky's on Bethel
Road.

Langsville News Notes
Mrs. Dorothy Woodard received
word of the death of Roger Savage,
age 68, of Lawrenceville, Ga. He was
formerly of Langsville, and the
Parker Run area. He is survived by
his wife, and three sons and a
brother, Don Savage of Charleston,
W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Morton Barnes and
son, Ryan, of Brazil, Ind. spent a
week visiting his mother, Dorothy
Woodard and other relatives at

Langsville and Mr. and Mrs. Manley
of Middleport.
Dorothy Woodard spent a SWlday
recently visiting with Mrs. Clarice
Ervin of Middleport. Other guests
were Mrs. Maxine Miller of Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Barr and
son called on his mother SWlday.
Dorothy Woodard spent Sunday,
AprilS, with her sister and husband,
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Danewood l'i
Syrapuse, 0.

---~ 1

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____ II

It Pays To Advertise•••Advertise Where It Pays •••

_ ____ I
25.
26. _ _ _ _ II
27.
- - - - I1
28.
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29.

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30.
31. _ _ _ __

32. _ _ _ __
33. _ _ _ __
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35. _ _,___

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Public Notice

Public Notice

Mall This Coupon with Re~jttance ·
1-·:
The Daily Sentinel
1 •~
Box 729
·_,__J l '
' _ _ _ _ _ ___ _Pomeroy}
_ . . _ _ _ _ _ _45769
__

on.

Guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. R.
Ciine, local, were Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Ciine and his father, Chris Ciine, of
Columbus; Evelyn Rife, Rutland,
and William Flecker, Minersville.
A. R. Caster and daughter, Fontelle Spencer, Charleston, W. Va.,
spent a weekend here with his sister
and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Starkey, local, and their son-inlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs . Roy
Wiseman, Harrisonville, and at·
tended church services at Carpenter
Baptist Church.
Murl Galaway, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Crabtree, and Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Crabtree and Cindy were
dinner guests of Mrs. Rolland Crab-

ter, Christopher, who bad served as
Van~'s top deputy, suddenly found
himSelf as the lea~ candidate to
moueuptotheNo. 1 spot.
At first, Christopher occupied
Vance's 7th fioor offiee at the State
Department on an interim basis. B,_
most officials believed Carter would
moue quickly to make the appointment permanent and ask the
Senate to conflnn him as the
nation's 58th secretary of state.
Vance bad said all along that one
term as secretary was enough for
him. Other names have been mentioned to succeed him In a second

Kennedy strategy

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy's strategy to
win the 1980 Democratic presidential nomination over President Carter may. depend to a great extent on
a crucial fioor fight at the party's
national convention.
"That's the one you will be 1\'atchlng," Timothy F. Hagan, Kennedy's Ohio chairman, said Monday,
referring to an expected rules fight ·
in which Ohio could play a key role
at the Aug. 11-14 conclave.
J . Patrick'Leahy, executive director of Ohio Democratic Party
Headquarters, which supports Carter, said the Kennedy strategy Is impossible, because the nwnbers at the
convention will overwhelm the
Massachusetts senator.
With Kennedy n~ a virtually
unattainable 73 percent of the vote in
the nation's remaining primaries,
his only hope apparently restS in a
bid to allow convention delegates to
vote their free choice on the convention's first presidential ballot,
analysts said.
Hagan, who is Cuyahoga County
(Cievelsnd) Democratic cbainnan,
said the effort will come with coosideration of a proposed national
party rule coming out of the
Democrats' 1978 national "mini-

tree.

itial or group Of figures

counts as a word. Count
I name and address or
phone number If used.
I You'll get better results
I If you describe tully,
1 give price. The Sentinel
1 reser"es the r lght to
classify, edit or reject
any ad. Your ad will be
put in the proper
classification 11 you'll
check the proper box
below.

e TRANSPORTATION

32- Moblte .. ome•

I
I

Print one word In each
space below. Each in·

..-s,.u tor •ent

7- YerdSalt
1-Public Sate
&amp; Auction
9-WantedtoBuy

I '
I :;
I .
I11 •

II

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

.
J

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

I

PHONE ~."992-2156

1-C•nl or Ttlanlrt
2-ln Mamorlam
J-Anneuncemtnts
4-Giveaw•y
s-HappyAdl
.-Loll and '•und

Carpenter
Personals

r----------------------~

I

WANT AD INFORMAnON

forMond•v ·

ACTING SECRETARY William Christopher bas been
oamed actiDg Secretary of State
by President Jimmy , Carter.
Christopher bas served as UDdersecretary to Vance. Vaoce
resigned realgned Monday
following a dllagreement over
the ue of military Ioree In lbe
Inmlao crisis.

Busil1ess-Farms~Partnerships

. . . . . . . . . 0\l'ft',.. """Mimi II . . . . . . . . . . ,., . . ,.,.,.,

73
Vans &amp; 4 W.D.
1979 Ford 1.10 •x4, auto.,
p:s., p.b .. topper. Positive
tractlon front and rear. 985·
4339.

Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

~·· IIJLOCK. OFFICE LOCATION
618 E. Main
Pomeroy} Oh.
992-3795 1
•;2.;&amp;

seats,

fl. bed,

*

Call After 5 P.M.
992-6323
-4·27-pd.

brakes,

72
Trucks lor Sale
1979 Jeep Wagoneer, • dr.,
lul'ly equipped, exc. cond.
$7,500. 742·3117 after 5 p.m.

Ing
Electrlcla work$
*Masonry work
12 Years

Resident and Bus.iness.
Reliable and Experienced.
742·3195.

Miller Electrical Service.

cruise control, rear window
leather

-

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

eSERVICES

defogger,

homes

-Soffit
-Garages
-Carports
-Room additions

AcrHII
»-Rtal Eatate Want.ct
37- Rtallon
·

$2,200. 992·J886,

•New

extensive remodel-

P~~~~~~~;, 1

l~Lotsl

power

CONSTRUCTION

Rt. 1, Box 54

-Vinyl siding
-GuHerwork

M-BUIIftHI lultdints

steering,

der in Memphis for both quantities,
offering to provide the beans either
f.o.b. at a U.S. Gulf port for about
$249 a metric ton - about $6.78 a
bushel - or c and fat less than $287 a
ton 1r around $7.81 a bushel
delivered to Taiwan.
In Arkansas, soybean fanners
perhaps were getting less than $6 a
bushel.
Brerman said delivery dates and
other factors affect prices grain
companies offer. And they use the
futures market to hedge their transactions by buying an equivalent
amount of soybeans for delivery to '
themselves at a specified price.
" If the price of the cash market
goes up, say, to $12 a bushel (for
soybeans next fall) - they've sold it
for $7 - theoretically , if they
weren't hedged, they would have
lost $5 a bushel," he said.
" But because they hedge when
they make a cash sale, they also buy
futures and, theoretically, the
futures would appreciate as much as
the cash market."
Brerman said, as -a further example of Taiwan's soybean purchase in

'!'om Brennan of the American
Soybean Association's staff in St.
Louis, Mo., said In a telephone in-

On the Farm Scene

WASHINGTON (AP) - Warren
M. Christopher bad been touted fer
some time as a likely choice to succeed Cyrus R. Vance as secretary of
state, but rio one expected it to happen quite so soon.
Public attention began to focus on
Christopher when another potential
candidate, national security adviser
Zbigniew Brzezinski, declared a lew
weeks ago that be was not interested
in becoming secretary of state. To
the surprise of some, Brzezinski endorsed Christopher for the job.
When Vance resigned abruptly
because l'i a profoWld policy
disagreement with President Car-

ROUSH

~~~==i~~~~~~t;:;:~~=~~~~~~====:;::;~~~
BOB'S
~
~ ;, ' ·'
Tri-Counfy
GENERAL
.~ §t
BOOkkeeping
CONTRACilNG
~ tE!=:I
s~.rva·ce
..113t!!!i'~

toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.

• P .M. Dally
12 Noon Saturday

when fanners get upset after
reading Taiwan, Japan or some
other foreign customer bas paid substantially more for a coiiUilodity
than the fanner received.
One reason for • the millunderstandlng, he explained, is that it
is common practice in International
trading to quote prices In several
ways: c.i.f., c and f, and f.o.b., for
example.
When soybeans or another commodity Is sold c.l.f., it means the
price includes cost of the product, in-

Christopher likely choice
to succeed Secretary Vance

John Teaford
Phone:
(614) 985·3961
4·14·1 mo.

work guaranteed.
Free Estimate

forhle

'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

J

Tom Hoskins or
Gerald 'G:Iark

7:1-V•n•&amp;•w.D.
J4-Motorcydts
nAuto Ports
&amp; AccttiOr'IH
n - AutoltQIIr

.. .

I)(MNINGOIILDS AGENCY., !NC.

!

~·

949-2160 Pomeroy
797·2432 Athens

li-Homlllor Salt

~·

.. '

f-. •-

cial &amp; restdentiat.

est i mate .
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·2211 .

hardtop , beige, radio,
heater, air, 57,000 miles.

20 foot utility trailer·trl ·

-.!.~

..

All types of roofing, new
and repair, gutters,
downspouts, commer-

Improvements

1973 Dodge Polaro 2 door

Must Sell : 1976 Gran Prix
Pontiac. Call after 5 p.m.
30H82·3424.

FOR AU. YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS

. -~

metric ton and 36.7 Wsbels of
soybeans in each ton, that translates
Into approximately 3,963,600
bushels. It doesn't take much
calculating to figure out, based on
the reported figures, that Taiwan
paid U.S. grain companies an
average of about $7.57 a bushel fir
the beans.
And It doesn't require much of a
spark to ignite the anger of an
Arkansas fanner who maybe is get·
ling $5.50 a bushel or so for beans at
his IQCal elevator.
Why the difference? It's similar to
the "extras" on that new car. Also,
everybody along the line after
soybeans leave the farm bas to have
a profit. It also costs money to ship
the _beans by rai! 1 truck or barge +
sometimes all are used + from a
local elevator to the final overseas
destination.
When au the handling costs and
profit bites are added, the foreign
buyer of grain bas to pay much more
than the fanner initially received.
Gerald Harvey of the Agriculture
Department's Foreign Agricultural
Service says it is "not surprising"

Ohio Valley Roofing

71-Autos fDf' Salt

992·5574, $950 .00.

· ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU tfAVE THE COVERAGE?

._.1;,i,\~J_

MORRIS

e REAL ESTATE

Gilbert electric train, Iran·
sformer and allthe ac·
cessorles. Women's golf
bag. 992·2961.
axle. 742·2633.

H · (pd,)

- l£0

charger.

•FINANCIAL

992·63-C2 or 992-2583.

.

Free Estimates
Ph.: (304) 773·5131 1
or (304) 882·2276

Call after 4:30, 992-7291.

Decorated Cakes. charac- S2.795. Good cond., just

NG .sOOntEASTERN OHIO SiNCE 1868'

.

operated

ter cakes or sheet cakes.

AGENCY 'INC.
INSURANCE

...

Fits 351 Cubic Inch Ford ·
Windsor engine. Never
used. 2-new 4.35x18 and 13.000x21 carlisle Knobby
motorcycle tires. Battery

1s-SchoolslnstrUctlort
14-R•dlo, TV
&amp; Cl RtP~Ir
1t-W•nttel To Del

~--····i;jiiijiiiii~~~~~~~;~~~~ conditioning
1977 Cordoba, vinyl
top,
air
h
,
power

- .•.

puter designed for per·
formance and economy.

, ,_ Http wanted
12- Situttel W•nted

Giant Accessory Selection,

furnace, garage . 2 acres.

-CONCRETE

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
eV-CHISEL
, PLOW

Holley Dominator Intake
Manifold and 600 CFM
Holley Carburetor. com·

Livestock

let us install for vou . D. ' .!I_ _~A'!!u'-"to!:s.!t~or'-'S~a~l~e__
Bumgardner Sales, Inc. 1977 Premier Vol are • door,

garage, Baum Addn .,
Meigs Co. Call afler 6 p.m.

~ 19·2M2

; WASHINGTON (AP) - When
!!Oybean prices are mentioned, it's a
tilt Uke explaining the price of a new
qar to envious neighbors.
· Depending on the " extras" the
kindly salesman talked you into, the
vehicle might cost a mete $6 500 1r
perhaps as much 88$10,000. '
: Prices of soybeans - all farm
ciommodlties, for that matter - are
!)lore complicated than explaining
If"bat the Super Six with stereo, built·
in bar, silver-planted door handles
and all the rest actually cost.
• For example, a trade team from
'taiwan earlier this month visited ·
the the United States, buying nearly
$2 billion worth of goods, mainly tn&lt;\IJStrtal commodities but also sub~tial amounts of agricultural
i\e111S, including soybeans and com.
' In Arkansas, which ranked sixth
last year in U.S. soybean production
with about 144.2 million bushels of
total national output of nearly 2.3
bllllon, the Taiwanese made their
ll!rgest purchases of bean, some
1(18,000 metric tons for a reported
c\)SI of about $30 million.
Allowing about 2,205 pounds in a

-REMODWNG

949·2160

Goals : 2 yr. old male$25; 2
milking goats and 1 bred

delivery : various sizes of
pool kits. Do-it-yourself or

family room, a.c. . 2·car

6Qx250 lot . $28,500.00.
. NEW LISTING
TIREO OF WORKING
FOR OTHERS? Own

62
Wanted to Buy
29,000 BTU air condltoner. CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
Guaranteed to be in good diameter 10" on largest
"WOrking order . Call 742- end. $12 p·er ton. Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
2975.
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.
53
Antiques
ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
ATTENTION :
!IM· NITURE , glass. china,
PORTANT TO YOU ) Will anything. See or call Ruth
pay cl!lsh or certified check Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
for antiques and collec- 2nd, Mlddleporl, OH. 992·
tibles or entire estates. 3161.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and 'oLD COINS, pocket wat·
coin collections. Call 614· ches. class rings, wedding
767-3167 or 557·3411 .
bands, diamonds. Gold or

IN STOCK for immediate

fireplace, lull basement w·
NEW LISTING - Close
in, 3 bedroom s wi th full

Household Goods

54

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
C•ll Howard

Rooting, siding, room ad·
dillons,all types of general

In Middleport. Have
6.,_,1c__,_F_,a'-'rm=E='q,_,u"'ip.,m=e,_,_nt, __
references. 742-2790.
International hay baler, 55
P.T.O. $600.00. 3 h.p.
rototlller $100.00. Both
.., ..,
ready to be used . 698·6082.

767-3167 or 557·3411 .

-ROOFING
-PAJrtnNG

All types of roof work,
new or r-lr ·gutters
•uld downspoub, 1utt1r
cleaning onCI painting.
All work guaranteed.

1976 Suzuki motorcycle;
RM 250, good condition.
247·3861.

55 Wall Layfatte Receiver,

ATTENTION :
IIM - 742·2331 . Treasure Chest
PORTANT TO YOU) Will Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
pay cash or ~ertilied check M62.

Money to Loan

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

$250,QOO Inventory. Athens
Sport Cycles, 20 W. Stimson
Ave., Athens. OH. 592·1692.

ces.

Furnished apt .• house or
trailer . Needed by first of
May far two working girls.

for antiques and collectibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large _ Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections . Call 614-

Super Deals-Super Service.

Giant Ac ce ssory $etectl9n,

5122.

Wanted to Rent

51

Motorcycles

(614) 698--3290.

57

992-6022.

Soybean prices hard to explain

•

•..

fa c ilities.

AlSo AKC registered
Do.bermans. 614·4-46·1195 .

,Manor apts. Call992·7787.

Retired person . $150 mo.

Business Services

P.B., A.C.. AM·FM stereo.
992·6130 after 5 p.m.
74

I~; The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, April29, 1980

KENNELS.

Several cats and kinens.

45
Furnished Rooms
Board, room, laundry.

Vons &amp; 4 W. D.

Harley· Davldson Yamaha .

RENTER'S assistance for

47

Carpenter work. Floors,
doors, ceilings, paneling.

chording and

ranch

li n i ment .

Donations

ces required. 992-3242.

interested call 992-5.03.

bedroom

sewer and water and oas.
992·6069 .

41
Needed

cabbage and head lettuce
plants. Three mi les north
west of Chester on West

I ron and bra ss beds, old
f u rnit u r e, d es k s, gold
r i ng s, jewelry , si lver
dollars, sterl ing , etc., woOO
ic_e boxes, antiques, etc .
Co mp let e
hou seholds .
Wri te M . 0 . Miller, Rt. 4,
• Pomeroy, OHl or call 992·

Shade

d i amond

black

6260. noon-7 p.m.

plants, most varieties, also

Wanted to Buy

tage on

35
Lots &amp; Acreage
Land for Sale. St. Rl. 7 and
Bradbury Rd . 1 acre lol,

Steak

Complete Serv ice . Phone

ba sement ,

medicated

spray ,

Boarding, all breeds. Clean

992-2143.

&amp; Auction

WIL L BUY

stocked pond for swimm ing
or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres

vanilla

operator's license? Phone

Public Sale

9

33
Farms lor Sale
COUNTRY HOME with

1978 Ford Bronco, P.S.,

vapour

Mature Babysitter needed

5 days a week In my home.
References required. Send

f am ily , glassware, dishes,
some depression glass, fur - · Wi II do odds and ends paneling, floor tile, ceiling
n i tur e, adult c lothing,

Children's clothing, cur-

bookcase, stepdown living
room , large master
bedroom, fully carpted,
gas heal. Must sell, moving
out of town. k&gt;OO or best of·
fer . 7•2-2898.

Whi te

POODL E GROOMING .
Judy Tay lor. 614·367·7220.

Need a part-time babysit·

Two Fa mily Ga rage Sale.

built·in

73

Zidian at Pomeroy Health
Located approx.
'are Center Monday thru · 7available.
miles from Pomeroy off
Friday 9·5.
Rt. 7 or 33. 4-46·2359 alter 6.

ter in my home. Referen-

May 2 and 3. A t th e corner
of FourTh and Pearl,
Raci ne. Toys, CB radio,
chain saw, book s, c loth ing,
dishes, etc .

c loset,

,,

Merchanlse
Shaklee Organic products.

~ ~J.sc .

,,

NOTICE OF
PROPOSED
BANK MERGER
Notice Is hereby given
that appllcallon has been
malle lo the Comptroller of
the Currency, Washington!
D. C., 2021f lor hiS consen ·
to 11 mtrQer of Pomeroy
National Bank, Pomeroy,
Ohio end Bank One ot
Pomeroy, N. A. Pomeroy,
Ohio. This application was
accepted for filing on Mar·
ch 25, 1980.
,
II Is contemplated that
all offices of the above·
named banks will continue
to be operated.
This notice Is published
pursuanttosectlon 18 (cl of
the Federal De~ll tn·
osurance Act and Part 5 of

ihe Regulations of the Com·
otroller of the currency ( 12
i; FR5) .
.
March 31, 1980
POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
Pomeroy, Ohio
BANK ONE OF
POMEROY, N. A.

Pomeroy, Ohio

(3) 31,

6tc

W 7, U , 21, 28 , 29,

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
The following described
llem will be offered .for
public sale to the highest

Public Notice

3

Announcements

I PAY highest prices
bidder on the 12th day of
possible for gold and silver
May, 1980, at 10 o'clock
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
a.m .
'
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
1978 Chevrolet If&gt;ton pick
Shop, Middleport.·
UP • X • Ser. No.
CK L1-18F398058
Sale of the security listed
above will be held on the
GOLD, SILVER OR
~remises of The City Loan
Company, 125 E. Main
FOREIGN COINS, OR
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
ANY OTHER GOLD OR Terms of Sale : Cash
SILVER I'I'E;MS. ALSO,
Seller reserves the right
ANTIQUE
FURNITURE
to bid and the right to
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
reject any and all bids.
IT.EMS. WILL PAY TOP
Prior to the date of sale,
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
arrangements may be
made to Inspect this mer· ' OSBY (OSSIEl MARTIN
chandlse by calling 992·2171
BEFORE
SELLING .
between the hours of 9 a.m.
PHONE 992--6370. ALSO
and 5p.m.
DOAPPRAIS[NG.
c•) 29, 1tc

·3

Announcements

Picking up an Easy play
organ in
your area .

3

Announcements

Letart Falls Cemetery lees
Looking for a responsible are payable now. S10 per lot
party to take over paymen - of four graves, $5 for half
ts. Call credit manager lot or two graves. Money to
be sent to the sexton,
collect. 61-1--592·5122.
Clarence 1. Norris, 23262
GUN SHOOT EVERY Rd ., Racine •5771.
FRIDAY NIGHT7 :30 P.M.
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY .
RACINE GUN CLUB.
SPECIAL : Mother's Day
Bea Wood 35707 Loop Rd ., Gifts. Priced for kids, some
Rutland, OH . r.2·2790. New under $1.00. Many under
Shaklee Distributor in the $2.00. New Shipment of
!lend area . All natural cratt supplies. Lowest
'lllamlns. All natural per- prices In town. Log Cabin,
sonal products and organic Gift Shop, Laureal Cliff.
Fri. and Sat. 10:00·3:00.
cleaners.

3

Announcements

There

will

organizational

be ' an

meet ing

about this year' s church

SOftball league
Meigs County
Plains Church of
Tuppers Plains,
May 2, 1980.

tor The
Tuppers
Christ, of
OH . 7:30

The Racine Volunteer Fire
DePartment' s gun shoots

are cancelled for the
season. They wlshto thank
everyone that helped to
make them successful . ·

A turkey's gizzard Is so
strong-walled It can easily
crushan unshelled walnut.

3--~Annou
_n
_c_
e_
m_
e_
nt
~s---

Rabbits

·a peSt

or ruhiiiiO

your garden? Tht llaak
Walton Leagu~ will
Hum,.nely trap them and •
release themln the wild
unharmed. Free. Phone
985·3505 or 992·2500.
DERBY TROPHY
Each year: the Kentucky
, Derby trophy is designed,
· in keeping With the 1921
• gold cup, for the owner of
. the winning bone. Silver
: repllcaa In smaller lbre
' are presented to the wlm1ng jockey and trainer. ·

a

�•• •

, 16- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Apri129, 1980

'

·High school lo()kers
searched for drugs
Seeking drugs and drug rela~
paraphemalla, the flr!!t in a series of
aearches of county high school
lockers was staged this morning by
the GaDla County Sheriff's Depart. ment.
· Drug Investigator Preston
Mustard led a unit of three deputies
: to Hannan Trace High School in
· Mercerville where they were met, at
, IIJIPI'OZimately 8::.1 a.m., by Principal Paul Dillon.
Principal Dlllon opened each
lock«, which was in turn searched
by the deputies.
· Mustard said it had originally
been planned to use a dog specially
trained to snlff-11ut drugs, but-due to
the shortage of such animals within
the state and the current high
demand by law enforcement agen. cles In Ohio for their use-the Gallia
department was unable io schedule
the use of a dog.
· "The way for this type of search
· was cleared by a recent court
judgment that ruled school lockers
are owned by the local school board, ..
not the students," Mustard said.
" Sheriff James M. Montgomery,

'

who joined the HalU180 Trace search
while in progress, expressed
gratitude to the Gallia County Local
Board of Education and its administration for cooperating In the
effort.
"It is not our intention to harass
the students," Montgomery said,
"but we would like to ~uce, if not
eliminate, any drug problems our
local students may have."
" It is our intention to conduct such
searches at local high schools on a
periodic, unscheduled basis," Montgomery continued.
The Gallia sheriff said that unless ·
a large quantity of a controlled substance were found, it was his department's intention to simply speak
with the student and notify his or her

parents concerning any minor
amounts of marijuana or other
drugs found during the searches.
From Hannan Trace the drugsearch unit was scheduled to visit
Southwestern and North Gallia High
Schools today..
The program started today grew
out of a series of drug seminars condue~ by the sheriff's department
with area school teachers, and administrators.

Iran trip
still on

Bill Foster, Racine resident who

has vowed that he wlll go to Iran on

behalf of the American hostages,
reports his trip is still on despite the

DEADLINE NEARS
ncketa for the SO!Itbei'D IUgb
School Baseball Ballqaoet will
remain oa sale until 3:31 p.m.
Wednelday, April 30, at tbe blgb
school. About 50 tlcllet&amp; remain
aod DO tlckela will be sold after
,that date. Tlckell are H per persoo. Guest speaker wtll be AllAmerican Kyle Macy from the
Unlvenlty ol Keatutty. The
banquet wblcb wUI begin at 7 ·
p.m. May 7, will boiUlrtbls year's
hasltelhall team aDd recognlu
the 1933 team who both made
tripe to the state twmament.

Lending rate
drops to 18%
percent Monday

Special promotions

·Carter...

Area squads busy

WINNING TICKETS DRAWN- The winning tickets were drawn
Monday afternoon by Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews for the Sentinel
Security Sweepstakes: Pictured I to r are Carl Gheen, Jr.,' advertising
manager at the Sentinel, and Mayor Andrews, holding the two winning
tickets for thsi week. The winners wlll be announced in the participating
merchants advertisements today. The winners must notify the Sentinel ' ·
within four days to pick up their prizes. The prizes they wlll win are a $50
U. S. Savings Bond and $50 in Script-money, that can be spent at the participating merchants stores.

u-

' The Assoeiated Press
By
New doubts were cast today on the
transfer of the !X&gt;dles of the eight
American commandos as Iranian
President Abolhassan Bani-5adr
tried to line up an international
meeting to condemn the U.S. attempt to rescue the American
· hostages, now in their !79th day of
captivity.
Ayatollah Mohammad Beheshti,
secretary of the ruling
Revolutionary Council and Iran's
' justice mlniater, said the issue of
transferring the bodies "must be
· decided by the Imam or the

Revolutionary Council." The imam
is Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini ,
Iran's revolutionary leader.
Beheshti, who made a similar
statement over the weekend, said
Iran is not seeking money for the
bodies, but left the impressioll the
transfer was still. up in the alr
despite Banl-Sadr's plans to
repatriate the bodies with the help of
Greek Catholic Archbishop Hilarion
Capudji.
A Tehran newspaper said Saturday the hodles should not be handed
over until the U.S. govenunent

Kissinger calls CBS
program hatchet job .
NEW YORK (AP) -Calling it "a
hatchet job," fonner Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger has
threatened to sue "60 Minutes" if it
airs an upcoming segment about his
relationship with the deposed Shah
of Iran, CBS said.
In a statement released Monday,
CBS said Kissinger "reneged" on an
agreement to be interviewed by
reporter Dan Rather.
The fonner secretary of state was
not immediately available for comment.
"last Friday," Rather said In a
statement o! his own, "Henry
Kissinger agreed to be interviewejl
if I would postpone the '60 Minutes'
segment for one week. He personally
gave me his word. On the basis of his
word, I pulled the segment from
Sunday's lineup."
CBS said it planned to air the story
)'day 4; despite Kissinger's threat to
sue.
Kissinger was approached by the
network several weeks ago and
asked "If be would tullt" about his
relationship to the Shah of Iran. CBS
News said the former secretary of
state refused and they told him lt intended to pursue the story without
him.

"We called him back last week,"
the statement said, ''and told him we
had completed our story but would
still like to add an interview with
him to it."
Kissinger agreed to do the inVARIETY SHOW SLATED
There wil be a variety show at the
Letart Mountaineer Community
Center Saturday, May 3, at 7:30 p.m.
Members of the Cottagevllle Fire
Dept. will provide entertainment.
Admission wlll be $2 for adults, $1
for school age children and free for
pre-schoolers. Refreshments wlll be
served.
MEE'J'S WEDNESDAY
The Long Bottom Community
Association wlll meet Wednesday,
April M at 6 p.m. In the COIIIIIIunity
building. PI; ans for the variety show
and products party wlll be
discussed. All members are urged to
attend.

terview, providing he could get permission from NBC, to whom he IB under contract, and if "60 Minutes"
would postpone the story for a week,
CBS News said.
Mter the show hsd been pulled
from the Sunday spot, Kissinger
called "60 Minutes" Executive
ProdueeJ Don Hewitt Monday and
renged on the agreement.
The network said, "although be
(Kissinger) hsd gotten NBC's permission to appear, he had decided
not to be part of what he called 'a
hstchet job."'

· Auto

Insurance

From the Associated~~

Gunmen seize Iranian embassy
LONDON- Gunmen forced their way into the Iranian embassy OJ&gt;'
posite Hyde Park today, taking a police officer guarding the building
hostage, Scotland Yard reported. Shots were heard lnside.the building.
The police said two and possibly three gunmen were ~volyed and
they were believed to be Iranians. Witnesses said two gu'ls m headdresses ran out of the building.
About 50 policemen with firearms and bullet-proof vests, Including
sharpshooters and members of the crack anti-terrorist squad, quickly
surrounded the three-story embassy.
The Foreign Office said tbe mission has a diplomatic staff of about
25, plus an undisclosed number of noiHiiplomatic personnel.
Scotland Yard said the officer grabbed by the gunmen was a member ol the· Diplomatic Protection Group, which guards foreign
mi.saiona in London, and was armed with a revolver. He was not II&amp;
mediately identified.

Let's talk value.
Multiple car and other
available discounts can save
you as muc h as 15% on your
auto insurance.
A s an independent
m surance agency, we can
help you find the best value
for your insurance dollars.

DAVIS{lUICKEL
INSURANCE AGENCY
Bill Quickel
"Across from the
courthouse in Pomeroy"
992-6677

FEDERAL
KEMPER
INSURANCE
COMPANY

A Bouquet for Mom
Tum Mom's .presents into pretty floral bouquets
with gil\ wrap from Hallmark. Top each one .
with a Hallmark card to show how much you
care. For Mother's Day, May 11.

RECAPPED TIRES

MEIGS
TIRE
CE,NTER

enttne

at

FIFTEEN CENTS

New doubts cast on
U. S. body trans er

dates set
Registration for kindergarten and
new enrollees in the Meigs Local
School District wlll be held May 5, 6
and7.
Parents may register their
children according to the following
schedule:
Pomeroy Elementary, Monday,
May5, from8::.Ja.m. to4 p.m.
Middleport Elementary, Tuesday,
May6, from8::.Ja.m. to 4p.m.
Rutland Elementary, Wednesday,
May7, from8:Wa.m. to4p.m.
Kindergarten age students from
the Harrisonville, Salem Center, and
Rutland areas should register at
Rutland.
Any child whose fifth birthday
falls on or before September :.1, 1980,
may be registered for kindergarten
while any child whose sixth birthday
falls on or before September :.1, 1980,
may be registered for first grade.
Parents are to provide a record of
immunization (or DPT, 3 Polio
Sabin, l measles (Rubeola), 1
Rubella (Gennan Measles) and a
recent TB skin test (within one year
before entering school), along with
the child's birth certificate.
AU parents expecting to have
children enrolled in the fall as kindergarten students or as new
enrolled students In the first grade
are urged to register their children
next week.
Questions
concerning this
registration may be directed to the
principals' offices of the respective
schools:
Middleport Elementary - Rober!
Morris, 992.,'1387; Pomeroy Elementary - Robert Morris, 992-2710;
Harrisonville Elementary - Greg
McCall, 742-3000; Rutland Elementary - 742-2666, and S;llem Center
Elementary - Melvin Felts, ~423J13.

•

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 1980

.V..OL 31 NO. 12 .

Registration

FORMS AVAILABLE
Summer Baseball report forms • ill-fated rescue mission last week.
Foster said that he has received
are now available at the Sentinel
his
passport and wlll be leaving as
office. Coatbes are asked to pltk
soon
as the final $1425 needed for the
up these forms and use them for
trip
is
secured.
reporting their summer games.
The
Racine man, a victim of canPlease pick up only the number of
cer,
says
he is being sent to Iran by
forms needed.
the people of Meigs County and the
nation and vows that he wlll stand in
support of the American people and
HOSPITAL ~EWS
thehostagesiniran. Heiscriticalof
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Neal, Delores Nicholson, Johnny statements made by prior visitors to
DISCBARGES,APRIL25
Oldaker, Lora Rice, Ryan Salyers, the country.
"I have nothing to lose," Foster
Michael Annentrout, Stella Bass, Joyce Shroeder, Leva Sissler, Anna
Jeannette BlaZer, Jo Bolinger, Sisson, 0 Michsel Stewart, Jeina remarks.
Alolie Bosworth, Patrick Brown, Stumbo~ Madeline Sullivan, Pearl
Contributions can be sent to NOW,
Jackie Casto, Marion Olapman, Nora Wannan, Ricky Wheat.
PO Box 263, Racine, or may be made
BIRTII
directly to the Racine Home
Fern Clark, Freda Clark, Cassidy
Coffey, Hallie Coffman, Lolama
Mr. and · Mrs. Dirk Jackson,
National Bank, Foster reports.
Crouae, Tanunie Duniels, Mrs. Paul daughter, Pl. Pleasant.
Floyd and daughter, Mrs. Ron
DISCHARGES, APRIL 27
Fraley and son; Donna Harlan,
Sheila Cash, Joyce Chavers, GretGoldie Haskins, Lll!y Hester, John- ta Cole, Maggie Duncan, Lou Akins,
ny Hogan, Adam Hollanbaugh,
Andrew Ghilorli, Roy Grueser, Mrs.
Hazel Holley, Les8 Johnson, William Richard Harrington and daughter;
Matlack, Eula Morton, Melissa NanHarvey Hutchins, Helen Kinsel,
NEW YORK ( AP) - The prime
ce, Thelma Puckett, Iris Radcliff,
Mrs. Greg Land and son; Darthy
rate continued its descent from the
AnnSaunders,AmoldSecen,Cressa Montgomery, Mrs. Dale Ohm and
20 percent peak set earlier this monShane, Robert Simmons, Mrs.
son; Johnny Saunders, Gladys
th as Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. of
Robert Stewart and daughter; Mrs.
Sheets, Jerry Tucker, Mrs. Ken
New York, the nation's fiftlt.largest
Clyde Summers and son, Mary
Webb and daughter, and David
bank, dropped its rate a full perWright.
Thaler.
centage point Monday to 18\2 perBIRTII
BIRTII
cent.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brenneman,
Mr. and Mrs. Philip !son,
Morgan Guaranty declined to
daughter, Gallipolis.
daughter, Gallipolis.
comment on its move, but analysts
DISCHARGES, APRIL 28
DISCHARGES, APRIL i?li
said the unusually large jwnp was
Charles
Burris, Elizabeth Cloud,
Gladys Adkins, Dorothy Burke,
an indication of the recent decline in
Pauline Eblin, Frank Houck, Mrs.
. Mary Childers, Mary Davis, Ruby
banks' cost of gathering funds.
Phillip !son and daughter; Leonard
Hall, Kathleen Haley, James
For Instance, large !Mklay bank
Uvingston, Scott McGuire, John
Howell, Ann Hutton, William
certificates of deposit, quoted In
Mokas, Kelson Philips, Mary Smith,
Jackson, Mary Johnson, Thelma
early April at 18 percent, have fallen
Virginia Soul, and Kevin Ward.
Jorden, Mrs. David Keppler and
below 14 percent in recent days.
BIRTII
daughter, Stacey Mlcchem, Mrs.
These deposits are an important
Pomeroy and Middleport merMr. and Mrs. Brian Kearns,
Anthony Morgan and son, Delbert
chants are planning special spring
source of funds for banks.
daughter, Mason.
promotions this week.
Just 11 days ago, Morgan Guaranty
and
most
other
hanks
cut
their
Middleport merchants wlll be ~ .
VETERANS MEMORIAL
May Day beginning Thurserving
prime
rates
'f.z-polnt
to
1912
percent.
Admitted-Elizabeth Albright,
sday
with
special sales Thursday
did
not
iJn.
Other
major
banks
Albany; Virginia King, Pomeroy;
mediately
follow
Morgan
Guaranand Pomeroy
through
.
Saturday
Velvie McDonald, Langsville;
merchants
wlll
be
staging
sidewalk
ty's
latest
move,
preferring
to
(Conlinued from page!)
Caroline Gilmore, Minersville;
remain
at
rate
o(
either
19'f.z
percent
on
Friday
and
Saturday.
sales
Helen Knopp, New Haven; Goldie
lnat United States before taking
or 19 percent. A handful of smaller
Holman,
Racine.
refuge first In Panama and then In
banks, however, including National
Discharged-Clara Paulsen, Lora
Egypt. The Moslem militants ocREACH AGREEMENT
Bank
of Detroit, Bank of New York
Clelland, Jill Blake, Pearl UtUe.
eupylng the U.S. Embassy at Tehran
The
Steelworkers Union and
and Manufacturers Bank in Los
have41J1nanded the shah's return to
Kaiser
Aluminwn and C))emical
Angeles, moved from 19\2 percent to
Iran ilf"exchange for releasing the
Corp.
have
reached agreement on
18\2 percent.
lutages.
local
issues
for
a new contract, acSome analysts said they foresee
"I wanted you to know how proud
cording
to
reports.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad further declines in the prime,
we all are ol you," Carter told the
This marks the first time that the
was called to 270 W. Main St. at 11:02 possibly as much as another full perpaJama-dad Tootle. "You all did
union and the local plant have
p.m. Monday for Richard Winebren- centage point in the next week or
your part. You did it very well ....Can
resolved those issues before going
ner who was taken to Veterans two.
I do anything for you?''
into
national contract neogatiations.
The prime is the base rate banks
Memorial Hospital.
Those
negotiations are set to begin
"I'd like to go home," said Tootle.
At 7:30 a.m. Tuesday, the charge on loans to their largest and
next
week
In Miami.
"I haven't seen my family in a
emergency squad went to the comer most creditworthy corporate
Additional
details of the local
wbile."
customers, such as Exxon Corp. or
of Main and Locust Sts., where three
resolution
are
expected to be
Tootle sustained an inJured knee
General Motors Corp. Most
persons were injured in an accident.
released
Wednesday.
while four compatriots were badly
businesses typically pay a point or
Taken to Veterans Memorial
burned and eight others died in the · Hospital by the squad were Wllliam more above the prime rate for their
aecldental ground collision of a
loans.
NO QUORUM
T. Soulsby, Pomeroy; James
helicopter and a transport plane afThe prime is not tied to interest
Due to the tack of a quorum a
Koenig, Middleport, and William E.
ter the rescue mission was scrubbed
rates on consumer loans, but is conregular meeting li Middleport
Bowles, Point Pleasant.
becaUBe of mechanical maifuncsidered
an
accurate
barometer
of
inVillage
Council scheduled last night
Pomeroy Police report that an inU0118. He told Carter, "I just wish we
terest rate trends.
was not held.
vesttgatiOII is being conducted Into
could have gone through all the
the accident but that details were
way."
not known this morning.
~ the AnDy's top burn center at
Brooke Medical Center, Carter donThe Tuppers Plains Emergency
ned a sterile surgical mask and
went to Route 1 Reedsville at
Squad
gown to meet the other four military
2:35 a.m. this morning for Jesse
men. He shook hands with two of
Dodderer who was taken to Veterans
them but not the others because of
Memorial Hospital.
. their burns.
."Concratulati01111 to you," Carter
told Marine MaJ. James H. Schaefer
ON
The Middleport Emergency Squad
.Jr., ~. ol l.AJ8 Angeles, who w!ls
was called to Ash St. at 5: 14 p.m.
lilted In satisfactory con~tion. "We
M011day for Roxie Oiler who was
are ail especially proud of you
taken to Veterans Memorial
pilople."
ANY SIZE
Hospital. At 9:47 a.m. Monday the
'"l'bank you, sir," Schaefer
RECAPPED
TIRES
unit went to Route I, VInton, for
rtplled. "I'd do It again If needed."
Gladys Knotts who was treated on
Afterward, Carter told reporters:
"l 11111 overwhelmed with emotion the scene.
when I loot at and speak to these
men. And I'm fllled when a sense of
abbomlnce and borror at the acti01111
MEETS 11RJRSDAY
of lraniln offlctaiB In recent days
Plus: F.E.Tand
Meigs
Association for Retarded
wbo violated all principles of
Recappable
Tire
Citizens will meet Thursday at 7::.1
llumanlty and decency by exhibiting
All
Tires
Are
tlie bodies ol the fellow Americans of p.m. at the Meigs Inn. There wlll be
Regular Tread
Installation Of new officers. The uptlieae brave men In Iran.
coming hike bike wlll be discussed.
· '"l'bey (the Iranians) did not and
could not 'bring dlahonor on those
MEETS TONIGiff
Wbu fell in the perfonnance of their
Trustees
of the Meigs County
·duty," he added. "They only brought
Pioneer
and
Historical Society will
dilbonor 011 tbemielves, and they in•
meet
at
7:30
this evening at the
dicated by this lnhwnane act of
Meigs Museum. Up for discussion
dilpla)'ing
bodi~ the kind of
will the heritage Sunday, the history
100 S. Main, Pomeroy
~ with whom we have been
book
and a pew roof for the museum.
clllalinC to try to secure the fl'eedom All interested persons are invited.
al.oor fellow Americans.''

l

e

•

Muskie reflects Carter policy
WASIUNGTON - From the Panama Canal to Iran, EdmundS.
Muskie's Senate voting record shows few deviations from Wbite House
foreign policy positions.
Muskle, a 22-year senator from Maine who first came to ~tiona!
prominence as the Democratic vice presidential candidate m 1968,
President Jimmy Carter also chose a mwi more of political than
diplmlBtiC breeding.
·
. .
Although Muskie, 66, has concentrated on domestic aff81f8 m the
Senate and acknowledged that "! am not a foreign policy technician."
The president said Muskie and Warren Christopher, who wlll remain
as deputy secretary of state after being bypassed for the top job, " wlll .
provide continuity for our foreign policy."
.
Muskie supported Carter's decision to try to rescue the Amencan
hostages in Iran, the bold but unsuccessful move that prompted Cyrus
R. Vance to resign in protest Monday.

Puerto Rican governor dies
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico - Luis Munoz Marin, Puerto Rico's governor for 16 years and the architect of lts economic revolution, died early
today of a massive cardiac arrest, his doctor announced. He was 82.
· Munoz Marin, governor from 1948 to 1964, patriarch of the Popular
Democratic Party and founding father of the economic Operation
Bootstrap, had been hospitalized since Saturday after suffering a
heart attack.and a stroke.
A poet, philosopher, phrasemaker and politician, Munoz Marin
rallied his people to his economic revolution with the phrase: "We
must live like the angels and work like the devil."
It pulled Puerto Rico out of a one-crop, sugar econOillY to the
prosperity of a diversified Industrial economy.
Munoz Marin was born in San Juan on Feb. 18, 1898, and studied at
Georgetown Preparatory School and Georgetown University In
Washington.

Lance acquitted of fraud
ATLANTA- Former U.S. budget budget director Bert Lance was
acquitted today on nine CQunts of hank fraud after a !&amp;-week trial. A
mistrial was delcared on another three counts because the jury was
deadlocked.
Lance's attorneys asked U.S. District Judge Charles A: ~oye Jr. to
declare ~ verdicts of acquittal on the three remauung counts.
Moye said be was not ready to decide inunedlately, but called attorneYS for both sides into his chambers.
"We're delighted about the not guilty verdicts," Lance said. "It's
what we thought all along it would be. We're terribly delighted and
pleased.''
· · on charges
The Jury also acquitted or failed to come to a decJSion
against Lance's three co-defendants, Thomas Mitchell, Richard Carr,
and Jack Mullins.
Mitchell was the only defendant found innocent on all charges.
Lance was found Innocent on nine charges of nlisuing the funds of
two·Georgia banks he headed to make loans to his wife, son and three
friends.

Weather
c · 1980 Hallm8rk Cards Inc

forecas~

Parily cloudy tonight. Lows in the low to mid 40s. Sunny ThUrsday.
Highs 1n the mid 606. The chance of preclpitatiOII is 10 percent tonight
and Thilrsday.
EXTENDED FORECAST

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Friday tbniiP Saday: Fair Friday. A cbanee of showers Saturday. Fair Suacla:r. HJPI tbroaJb the period from the upper 50s to tbe
... Lon Ia tbe ....

,.

releases the $II bUllon in Iranian
assets it seized In retaliation for the
seizure of the 53 hostages Nov. 4.
Capudji said the bodies stlll had to
be prepared for transport and would
not be transferred for two or three
days. He and the papal representative in Iran, Monsignor Annibale
'sugnini, visited the Tehran morgue
today, where they said prayers and
sprinkled holy water on the remains.
A spokesman for the Swiss Embassy in Tehran said tbe bodies of
the eight American Marines and airmen kllled In the attempted rescue
of the hostages last Friday would be
flown to Zurich later this week, the
Swiss news agency reported.
The report said the Swiss ambassador In Iran, Eric Lang,
discussed the transfer with Greek
Catholic Archbishop Hllarion
Capudji. The prelate, a Syrian who
spent three years in an Israeli prison
for trying to smuggle guns to the
Palestinlan guerrillas, arrived in
Tehran Tuesday and said he would
accompany the bodies and tum
them over to the International Red
Cross for delivery to the families of
the men.
President Carter at a news con-

terence Tuesday night in
Washington defended his decision to
try to rescue the 53 Americans and
warned again he will take
"whatever steps are necessary and
feasible" to free them. But he said
he would "continue to try for a
peaceful solution" to the crisis.
The London Daily Telegraph's
defense correspondent reported that
.more than 100 American CIA agents,
Green Berets and Farsi-speaking
American students who were inflltra~ into Iran to assist in the
rescue were still In the country In
hiding. But The New York Times
said u.s. military officials In
Washington told it all the
paramilitary agents infiltrated into
Tehran to help in the rescue slipped
out of the country the same way they
eqtered, posing as European
businessmen.
On the Iranian domestic front, the
Kurdish rebels and the Iranian army
declared another one of the ceasefires that have periodically interrupted the revolutionary government's attempts to suppress the
Kurds' campaign for home rule in
northwest Iran, the official Pars
news agency reported.

Eastern board
hires personnel
Contracts were issued to certified
and non-certificated personnel
Tuesday night when the Eastern
Local School District Board of
Education met [!) regular session.
Non-ceJ:(ified persoruiel given contracts inclllde • Glenda Benedum,
Nancy Cole, Betty Osborne, two
years; Olarles Estep, Sheila Fields,
Barbara Hannwn, Clarestlne
Matheny, Herbert Matheny, Edgar
Pullins, Grace ~t, continuing.
Certified personnel given contracts Include Mary Price, nurse,
one year; Mike Abrahams, Nancy
Larkins, Carol Crow, Tim Simpson,
Leonard Gwlazdowsky, Debbie
Taylor, Steve Jewell and Nancy
Blake, two year contacts; Pat
Shrivers, Arch Rose, Joe Bailey,
Dennis Eichinger, Carol King,
Ralph Wigal, Christy Caldwell, John
Perine, Pam Daughitt, Rita Lincicome, three years.
Contracts not renewed included
those oi Richard Hornick, who
replaced Carol Crow who was on a
one year's leave of absence, and
Melanie Eggleston, not reemployed
due to a cutback inDPPF funds.
It was reported that an application
for thri!e buses applied for through
the State Department of Education
has been rejected.
The board decided to secure prices
011 a used bus which would replace
one which was damaged in an accident this week.
STATE FUNDING CUT
A discussion was held on
notification from the State Department of Education that two perCent
across the board i:uts may be forthcoming in Stale Foundation FlUIds. It was reported that the board
also has lost tf,OOO in DPPF funds

Registration
deadline near
Meigs Countians have only a few
days to register as voters for the upcoming June 3 primary .elections.
but the Meigs County Board of Elections through special hours is
rnaklni! registration easier.
The board office, located in the
Masonic Temple building, Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy, will maintain
special hours fonn 6 to 9 p.m. Friday
and from 9 a.m. to 12 noon Saturday
for the convenience li · voters
wishing to register. Monday, May 5,
ls the final day of registration and on
that day the board office will be open
from9a.m. to9p.in.
Normal hours of the board are
from 8:30a.m. to4::.lp.m., Monday
thrOugh Friday in addition to the
special hours.

To date, 11,159 Meigs Countians
are registered for the · June 3
primary elections. With the new annexation ol territory in Sutton '!'ownship to the village of Racine, Racine
Vlllage Precinct 111 this point bas 531
registered voters.

which were used for the elementary
library.
Mrs. Melanie Beegle was given a
one year leave of absence and
Thomas Gumpf and Jap1es Wilhehn
were given pennission to attend the
OES spring assembly in Columbus
Mayland2.
.
Mrs. Nancy Larkins was granted a
day of profesalonal leave to receive
~uter training at Parkersburg.
Mrs. Florrie Dill was named a
(Continued on page 18)

PROTEST CONDITIONS•- Kim Glass, left, and Barb Haley fan
petitions carrying names of 371 students of Meigs High School who allege
that sanitary conditions are not being maintained in the high school
cafeteria.

Petitions protest
cafeteria conditionij
;

Petitions signed by nearly half of
the student body of Meigs High
School complaining against alleged
sanitation violations at the high
school cafeterai are being
distributed to the district's board of
education.
Copies of the petitions were
delivered to Dick Vaughan, Meigs
Local Board of Education member,
Tuesday. He is to distribute them to
the other members of the board.
In their petitions , students
charge: " We are hereby making a
formal protest of the condition of the
Meigs High School Cafeteria. There
are several problems existing at the
present time. These problems include: dirty tables and floors, ob-.
jects in the food such as staples,
hairs, wonns, ticks, fleas, mold and
meial, all of which have been found
by various students.
"There is also a iremendous
problem with cockroaches .
Numerous people have seen these
cockroaches crawling across the

tables, floors, walls and even in the
food! These conditions more than
prove the serious, unhealthy
situation that the cafeteria is in.
Another problem is some of the
people that handle and serve the
food. Although it would not be right
to make someone do something
against their wlll, if students are
going to handle and serve the food,
they should be sanitary.
"For 60 cents a lunch for students
and $1.25 for teachers, it seems right
that the food in the cafeteria be
sanitary.
"We are trying to change this
situation in an adult and civilized
manner. However, if steps aren't
taken to improve this unhealthy
situation, we are willing to take
stronger measures to assure that
our lunches are fit to eat. "
Superintendent David Gleason
had no comment when contacted
concerning the situation this morning.

Residents seek assistanc·e
for Bedford Township .r oad
Larry Godfrey and Burl Walker from Ashland Petroleum Co., Shelly
Tuesday asked Meigs County Com- and Sands and Asphalt Materials.
missioners for assiStance from counThe board agreed to purchase
ty engineer Wesley Buehl regarding
needed mixing materials from
the condition ol township road 23 in Shelly and Sands for the month of
Bedford Township.
May and to settle the purchase of
Godfrey, spokesman, told com- dust control materials at the next
missioners that approximately 18 meeting.
school age children of :.1 families . Jim Page of Fleming, Page and
living in the area are being Stolte Engineers discussed the acpenalized because the school bus
cess road to the new Mulb-Purpose
will not travel the route due to the
Health Center.
two large humps in the road.
Page informed the board that he
Wesley Buehl, county engineer,
recently completed the field work
said he had personally examined the
which has met with the necessary
area and agreed that repait was
requirements for the FHBBA grant.
necessary. Buebl offered to assist
He told the board final approval
the township trustees in any way
that he could.
Richard Jones, prel!ident, pointed
oot that township roads are the sole
responsibility of the township
trustees and the commissioners
WASHINGTON (AP)- The third
have no jurisdiction over the the steepest monthly decline in history
road.
in the nation's index of economic inSince the school bus driver refuses
dicators was recorded in March, the
to travel the route children must
Commerce Department said today,
walk at least a half-mile to catch the
providing more evidence that the
bus.
" ·nation may face a deep recession.
Godfrey said he Will meet with the
The index fell2.8 percent last monBedfcird Township Trustees conth. It was the eighth decline In the
cerning the situation. Godfrey ex- past 12 months and the steepest for
pressedhis appreciation ol the help any month since September 1974
of Buehl and the advice of the comwhen it fell 3 percent as the economy
missiOIIers. It was stressed several was sinking into the 1974-1975
times that the trustees are ~b.l!! for
recession.
the repair.
"It means forces are very much
RECEIVE BIDS
til~ toward JeCesslon," said Fellks
Bids for bituminous materials for Tanun, a Commerce Department
the month of May were received

from FHA should be granted some
time in early May.
Prosecutor Rick Crow , Howard
Frank, county auditor, ands Bob
Bailey , EMS administrator
rev1~wec;J flnancmg of a new commurucations system for EMS. It was
agreed to contact the ~tral Trust
Co. of Middleport to negotiate a loa~.
The meeting was recessed ~~!'til
1:M p.m. today to mterv~~w
engmeers for the Tuppers Plains
sewage disposal proJect.
Attending were Jones, Henry
W~lls and Chester Wells, cornnuss10ners, and Mary Hobstetter,
clerk.

Indicators fell in March
analyst.
Tanun said there are many
similarities beween the behavior of
the index in recent months and its
behavior during the last recession,
although It does not yet give much
indication of the severity of the ex1
pected new downturn.
O'BRIEN APPOINTED
Governor James A. Rhodes
Tuesday appolnle!l Patrick H.
O'Brien of Pomeroy as Meigs
.COUDty Judge succeeding Cbarles
Knlgbt who resigned.

Board awards supplemental pacts
The Southern Local Board of
Education issued a number of ex-

tended service an4 supplemental
contracts at a recessed session
Tuesday night.
Issued extended service contracts
were Barbara Bailey, Echo advisor;
Sandra Boothe, Title IX compliance
officer; John Costanzo, Title I coordinator; James Lawrence, driver
education; Roberta Maidens,
variety show; Joyce Thoren, handicapped coordinator; Car.la Shuler,
DPPF coordinator; Joe Maiesick,
extra band activities.
Supplemental contracts issued In-

elude Carl Wolfe, head basketball
coach and athletic director; Connie
Enslen, head girls basketball, softball and volleyball coach; Hilton
Wolfe, Jr., head baseball coach;
Michael Winebrenner, varsity
assistant football coach; Howard
Caldwell III, assistant ·varsity
basketball c()Bch; Jim Adfm'l and
Jaml!ll Lawrence, Junior high
basketball coaches;
WllliamI Hen.
sler, freshmen basketball coach~
Sandra Hill resigned ' · as
cheerleader advisor.
It was noted that Paul Sellers has
a two year c011tract as a bus driver
~
.

rather than a continuing contract as
earlier reported.
The board increased the traveling
allowance for employes to 17 cents a
mile and the pay of substitute
· teacbers to $37.50 a day for the 191GB! school year.
.
Valerie Johnson Adams was employed for one year as a teacher.
Supplemental contracts were
given to, Larry Sinlth, special
education and kindergarten bus
driver, and Delbert Smith,
vocational educatiOII and ldndgarten ·
bull driver.

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