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10-The l;)aiJy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, .July 21, 1980

Tax measure to go on Ohio ballot

$6;000
tractor
•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
voters are assured of seeing at least
one tax. revision measure on the
Nov. 4 general election ballot
The House has completed
legislative action on a proposed con·
stitutional amendment which seeks
to head off property tax boosts that
result frominflationary increases in
real estate values.
Backers say it is d~gned to assist
owners of agricultural and residen·
tial property, whose value has shot
up at a faster rate than industrial
and commercial property. Opponents point .out that it will deal

•

miSSing

I

I

\'
l'

,,

/
GREG HINES

GD.JIERT CRAIG

NANALAMBHA

Pakistan, India and holds a Bachelor of Science in
Mechanical Engineering from Kurukshelia University
and a Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering
from Ohio University. His employment began in 1978
when he was hired as a Performance Engi.J)eer and
remained in that position until his promotion. The
Lambhas reside in Middleport. Hines was born in Cincinnati and holds a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical
Engineering from Ohio Northern University. Hines
was employed as a performance Engineer in 1977. The
Hines reside in Pomeroy.

SPORN PLANT PROMOTES THREE - Three
men were promoted at the Philip Sporn Plant in New
Haven, W.Va. E~fective March 1, Gilbert M. Craig l9S8
promoted to utility supervisor. On J.Jllle 1, Nand Lambha and Greg Hines were promoted to performance
engineering senior. Gilbert was born in Gallipolis and
graduated from Gallia Academy High School. He was
employed in 1973 as a utility worker B and then moved
into the operations department and held the positions
of u_tility operator, auxiliary equipment operator and
eqwment operator where he remained until his
promotion. Lamblia was born in Campbelpum, West

Iranians execute five officers
By The Associated Press
Five officers died in the first
executions of the inilltary p)9tters
against
Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini. Meanwhile, lhe new
Parliament elected a militant
Moslem cleric as its speaker, and
. Khomeini called on it to purge the
government of those who are not
"100 percent Islamic."
The five military men, a retired
brigadier general and four air force
officers, were executed at 1 a.m.
Sunday by firing squad at Tehran's
Evin prison, Radio Tehran reported.
The five were among some 500
Iranians, many of them military
.,men, who were rounded up a week
ago on charges of plotting to over\hrow the government.
Radio Tehran_ said a special
Islamic court convicted the five·men
Saturday of planning to ''establish
an American social-democratic
system and bring back the
treacherous fugitive Bakhtiar,
preparing 35 to 50 jet planes for the
operation and for bombarding the
Imam's (Khomeini's) reesidency,
bombarding other 5\lnsitive places
and highly populated areas, and
preparing printed material to be
distributed in various cities."
Shahpour Bakhtiar was the last
prime minister appointed by Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi before
Khomeini's revolution overthrew
him. Now an exile in Paris, he
escaped an assassination attempt
last Friday.
The new Parliament, or Majlis,
elected as its speaker Hojjatoleslam
Ali Akbar Rafsanjani, a leader of the

Revolutionary leader Ayatollah
powerful Islamic Republican Party
Ruhollah
Kbomeini, meanwhile,
which· controls the assembly. Many
urged
the
Parliament
to purge the
of the party's members want the 52
of
those
who
are not
government
American hostages, who today ·
"100 percent Islamic."
spend their 26lst day in captivity, to
And Pars, the government news
be tried as spies. .
The election of the speaker was · agency, tod&lt;IY reported a man convicted of "armed (evolt against the
the final organizlltional step for the
government," specifically blowing
Majlis, and it can now turn to such
up_ an education facility, was
business as the election of a prime
executed
late Sunday.
minister and members of his
The
Tehran
newspaper Eng~b
cabinet, such pressing matters as
Eslami
did
not
name or offer the
economic reconstruction · and the
ranks
of
the
latest
four condemned
fate of the hostages.
military
leaders.
Nor
did it say if
In an address to the nation,
they
had
been
shot.
Khomeini criticized the army and
The five who were executed Sungover:nment for "indecisiveness"
.
day,
including a retired brigadier
and told the it "must decide on a
general
and four air force officers,
government which is 100 percent
were
executed
at ~ a.m. at '['ehran's
Islamic and not accept any minister
Evin prison, Radio Tehran reported.
like some of the present ministers."
They are among some 500
"The Majlis should not accept
Iranians, many ot them inilltary
anybody with the slightest doubt of
men, who wet;e rounded up a week
his cOmmitment to Islam," the
ago on charges of plotting to over·
leader of the revolution said.
throw the government.
This was viewed as a call for a
cabinet of Moslem militants rather
ASK TOWED
than Westernized moderates
Marriage
licenses were issued to
favored by President Abothassn
the
following·
couples: Timothy
Bani-Sadr.
Hawthorne, 19, Long Botttm and
A firing squad executed five . Margaret Evelyn Riffle, 18, L&lt;mg
military officers convicted· of plot- Bottom; Charles Fortune, 18,
ting against Iran's revolutionary Louisville, Kentucky and Shelly Ann
government and a court today repor· Roilsh, 18; Pomeroy; Robert Klein,
tedly handed death penalties to four 18, Pomeroy, and Tammy Sue
Shuler, 18, Pomeroy.
others in the foiled coup.
On Sunday Iran's new Parliament
PICNIC nJESDAY
elected militant Moslem cleric as
The American Legion Auxiliary,
its speaker. He is.a leader of the con- Drew Webster Post 39, will hold a
servative and influential party that
picnic Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the
has a number of members lobbying
home of Dorothy Jenkins, 38 Hudson
to try the 52 U.S. hostages as spies.
St., Middleport.

a

You work liard
f~r your money.
~

Let it work
for you
•
ID a
Farmers Bank
•
savtngs account. ,

An International Cub tractor with
a five-foot mower·has been reported
stolen from the Temple Cemetery in
Columbia T.owt18hip jlll!t ~uth of the
Mei11s·Athens County line, ac·
cording to Meigs County sheriff's
deputies. ·
Roger VanDyke and Arthur Crabtree, trustees of the Cemetery
notified the Sheriff's Office Saturday
morning of the theft. ·
A pad lock had been knocked off ,
the tool shed at the cemetery. The
value of the tractor is listed at $6000.
The department also reports a
vehicle owned by George Hill,
Racine was destroyed by fire at Old
Town Crf!lk where he had parked at
11:16 p.m. Friday prior to crossing
the river to go to work.
The Racine Fire Department
responded but the 1978 Ford Thun·
derbird was destroyed.

Registration•••

ELBERFELD$
CLEARANCE SALE!

M.tolbw FDIC

Pomeroy, Oh.

The Community Owned Bank 1
1--~~_J -------~----~

REDUCED ·
30%

..

'I

'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
•,

Fl FTEEN CENTS

I

'
only three board members present, dismissed in late May.,Christmas
' Robert Snowden prevented the break would be !root December 24 to
January 5.
required three "yes" votes.
The board accepted resignations
Snowden said he was not voting
against the individual, but could not from Melvin Felts, Sharon Sturbois,
agree with the hiring of only one Delmar Haynes, Elaine Boucher
band director. Snowden explained and John Lehew. The resignation of
he was. under the impression that if · Ronald Logan as varsity basketball
this man was hired no one else would coach was also accepted. Logan will
. be added. Snowden said he would not coach girls' basketball.
A list of 39 teachers was approved
vote for "half a program."
for
substitutes for the 1980+81
The board tentatively scheduled a
school
year.
special meeting for August 4 to fill
Professional leave was granted to
other personnel vacancies. August 7
Karen Goins, Leda Kraeuter, Ben·
was set as an alternatetlate.
The board adopted the shortest of nita King and Mildred Bailey to atthree proposed calenders for the tend a Home Economics Convention
1980+81 school year. The approved in Columbus. A leave of absence
schedule calls for students to begin was approved for Connie Marcuin,
classes September 3 and be and the ·.board issued a continUing
contract to Charles Frecker.
The board accepted the-following
bids for the upcoming school year:
student accident insurance and fleet
insurance • Downing-Childs In·
surance 1-gency; tires and tubes for
school vehicles • Motyre, Inc.;
gasoline, oil, anti-freeze, fuel oil •
Ashland Oil Co.; milk and dairy
products - Broughton's; bread and
bakery goods - Betsy Ross Bakery ;
roof 1\(ork on three elementary
schools • Hackett Roofing Co. No bid
was received for coal.
From the Associated Press
The board decided to buy meat,
produce and dry goods on a monthto~s
to-month basis due to price flue·
tuations.
CINCINNATI - Prohibition was a hot political issue the last time
Tke board decided to let bids for
Cincinnatians numbered as few as 378,000. That was a few years after
three
new school buses and hired 10
the 1910 census.
persons for a three-day workshop to
Cincinnati is down to slightly larger than its 1910 size (363,591 perbe
held at Middleport and Pomeroy
sons ), according to preliminary figures from the U.S. Census Bureau.
Elementary
schools. ,
Cincinnati and Hamilton County officials said Monday they're going to
The
board
voted tq reimburse Mr.
fight the figures.
,
__
Mrs.
Kenneth
Matson for travel
and
Figures show the county has dropped from a population of 924,018 in
expenses
they
incurr
ed transporting
1970 to 830,675 in 1980.
1
students to the Ohio School for the
Deaf.
Upon the request of Meigs High
WASHINGTON -Sen. John GleiUl, D-Ohio, says poor procedures by
School
Principal James Diehl,
the Department of Energy have hampered the effectiveness of the
remaining funds in the treasuries of
health and safety program at the uranium enriclunent plant near
the graduating classes of 1976, 1977
Piketon, Ohio.
and 1979 were translered to the prinGleM said Monday his Senate energy and nuclear proliferation subcipal's fund. More than $150 left in
committee would investigate what needs to be done "to ensure
the treasury of the graduating class
adequate compliance of health and safety standards at the enriclunent
of 1978 will be donated to the high
facilities."
school cheerleaders in return for
Glenn released a report by the Gerieral Accounting Office which
clerical work the cheerleaders will
criticizes DOE's supervision of health and safety conditions at three
assist with during the summer.
uranium enrichment plants - Piketon, Pad~cah , Ky ., and Oak Ridge,
The meeting included an
TeiUl.
executive session during which the
board discussed progress in
negotiations with OAPSE and per·
HOLLYWOOD - Prime-time television actors joined the Screen A(}sonnel vacancies.
tors Guild strike today, and floodlights were doused on film stages
Present at the meeting were
from New York to Los Angeles to "Dallas."
Superintendent David Gleason,
The American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, which
board members o Carol Pierce,
represents most of the nation's prime-time TV acfors, joined the SAG
Robert Snowden and Larry Powell
walkout at 12:01 a.m., assuring a shutdown of film and TV production
and Treasurer Jane Wagner. Board
in this country and on American movie locations around the world.
members . Dr. Keith Riggs and .
If it lasts long enough, the walkout could send film and TV
Richal'6 Vaughan were on vacation.
executives scurrying for a substitute product - . and could prevent
Americans from finding out as sch; duled just who shot dastardly J.R.
Ewing.

By Lance Oliver
Three persons were approved and
one disapproved for employment
and a school calender was adopted
during a regular meeting · of the
Meigs Local Board of Education
Monday evening.
The board voted 3+ 0 to hire Carol
Crow and Debby Sebert. Larry
Bryans was employed pending certification.
Superintendent David Gleason
noted that Bryans would probably
serve as a wrestling coach if hired,
and listed Bryans' qualifications for
such a position.
Doug Hill was recommended as an
instrumental n\Usic teacher and •
band dire.ctor, . but the recommendation was not approved. With

Cinciimati
. fights census

Poor procedures hurt effectiveness

TV actors join actors' strike

Weather forecast

Our entire stock of men' s
short sleeve knit sh irts and
tank tops Included. Good
selection of styles and col·
·· ors.
·

enttne

at y

WASHINGTON - Richard Queen says he felt "like Rip Van Winkle"
during the eight months he was held hostage by Iranian militants in
Tehran. Queen says he didn 't know until he was freed July 11 that a
U.S. military rescue effort had been mounted last April24.
After the raid, which was canceled before reaching Tehran and left
eight servicemen dead when a transport plane and a helicopter
collided in the Iranian desert, the militants threatened harm to the 53
hostages if any further rescue attempt was made. ·
Queen, although saying he didn't know the specifics of the raid until
he was ·freed, said he was vaguely aware of some event. He said the
hostages tbought the United States had " plaiUled something" and then
"called it off."

·KIIIT
SHIRTS

to !!ring Ohio into compliailce. with
federal clean air laws. It would
require the state to design a
program for testing cars to make
sure tlley comply with anti-pollution
laws.
· Sent to Rhodes by an 83-1 vote..w&amp;B
a bill creating a new state appeals
court district in southwest Ohio and
adding judges to the bench in five of
the 11 current districts.
Approved 78-5 was a bill to end
overlapping _jurisdiction and respon·
sibilities of county boards of mental
health and mental retardation.

•

•

Queen felt like 'Rip Van Winkle'

MEN'S

stimulate the depressed auto industry.
Riffe and Gov. iames A. Rhodes
say the tax break plan is needed.
Senate President Oliver Ocasek DAkron, opposes it.
'
A joint conference committee
headed by Sen. Harry Meshel, DYoungstown, begins meeting this
week in attempts to reach a compromise.
,
The House joined the Senate in accepting conference committee
repOrts on three other bills, sending
the measures to Rhodes.
Approved by a 54-30 vote was a bill

Three teachers hired
by Meigs Local Board

Heat wave

squad runs

property tax amendment by a 76--8
vote Monday. It then joined the
Senate in a summer recess that
could last until September.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, said members·
could be called back earlier if
agreement is reached on a budget
austerity plan.
Passage of the package i,s needed
to help offset most of a projected
$266 million ·defiCit in the state's
budget. The Senate-passed bill was
amended in the House to include,
among other things, a sales tax
break for new car buyers to help

POMERUY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1980

VOL 31 NO. 69 ·

HONEST BOYS - There are fine honest young men in this country of
ours a!ld Mark and Jeff Elliott, l·r, proved it Friday. The two boys, Mark,
age 12 and Jeff, age 16, sons of Marvin and Julia Monk, Mulberry Ave. ,
Pomeroy, Friday foW1d a lady's pocketbook on the sidewalk below Crow's
Family Restaurant. They inunediately took the purse to the sheriff's
department and the purse was returned to its owner. Jeff is a member of
the DeMolay and Mark hopes to join soon. There was over $50 in the purse.

'

.

reform proposa1.
The Ohio Public Interest Campaign is mounting a petition drive to
give voters the chance tb lower taxes
for those earning less than $30,000
annually, while raising the amount
paid by other taxpayers.
Placement of the measure on the
ballot was challenged in federal
court by the Ohio Manulacturers'
Ass~iation in the latest of a series of
lawsuits. The court dismissed the
suit Mohday, saying it lacked
jurisdiction.
.
The Ohio House approved a con•
ference conunitlee version of the

e.

(Continued from page 1)
Court by fall with a decision late this
HOSPITAL NEWS
year or early in 1981.
.
In explaining his Order, Brennan
VETERANS MEMORIAL Wilbur, Willie Wise.
indicated the Supreme Court could
HOSPITAL
BffiTHS
go eilher way in the case. But he said
SATURDAY ADMISSION&amp;-Alice
Mr. and Mrs: John Beckett, son,
a failure to proceed with registration
in the meantime could cause foreign Plantz, Middleport; Walter Bentz, Chapmansville, W. Va. ; Mr. and
policy and rnllitary problems, while Pomeroy; Dennis Clark, Langsville; Mrs. Carl DeWitt, son, Bidwell; Mr.
the government could always just James Alley, Racine; Mona Neal, and Mrs. Kevin Jewell, -daughter,
Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs. Jan\es
destroy the computerized in· Middleport.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES-Do- Nichols, son, Wilkesville.
formation it has collected if the law
DISCHARGES 19
eventqally is found to be un· nnie Collins, Cindy King, Virginia
Oiler, Connie Casci, Victor Nelson,
Donald Arthur, Shirley Black·
constitutional.
Sara Seyler, Malcolm Ingraham. ·
burn, Rosalee Bostic; Wendell ChapDraft critics said Sunday the con·
SUNDAY ADMISSJON&amp;-Donald man, Ora Cochran, Rees Dinsmore,
fusion arising from the legal
maneuvers, and to ~me extent Laudermilt, Rutland ; Thelma Albert Evans, Juanita Griffiths,
problems the Selective Service has Chase, Albany; Amanda Buchanan, Mrs. Earl Ireland and daughter,
Long Bottom; Ethel· Koenig, Mid· Susan Jayjohn, Patricia Jewett,
been having in promoting the plan,
· dleport; Tannie Gilland, Racine; CariB McClure, Charlotte MCGlone,
will cause 88 many as a half million
Leonard Bass, Syracuse; James Mary Pearson , Jeremy Potts, Wade
young men not to take part.
"The (Philadelphia) case and Pickens, Racine; Raymond Cundiff, Rogers, ' Naomi Shaver, Misty
Pomeroy; Earl Denny, Pomeroy.
Smith, Robert Steele, Edgar
Brennan's stay just guaran~ that
SUNDA,Y DISCHARGES-KeMe- Thomas, Mrs. H.L. Webb and son,
this. registration will be a fiasco,"
Mrs. Mason Wood and son.
said the Rev. Barry Lynn, chairman th Smarr, Walter Bentz, Mary
Lawhorn,
Judith
Isaacs,
James
.BffiTHS .
of the National Conunittee Against Alley.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Richard McGhee,
Registration and the Draft. Lynil,
daughter,
Oak
Hill;
Mr .. and Mrs.
whose group urges peqple to register
Scott
Napper,
daughter,
Langsville.
only under protest, said 1980 "could
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES20
be the year registration began and
DISCHARGFEJULY i8
Mary Baker, Bernice Childers,
the year it ended."
Maxwell Barn, ·J;M Bocook,
Donald Brown, Leona Buroughs; Mina Eubanks, Uoyd Harris, Mary
Hood, Imogene Miller, Tina
Kentworth Butler, Deward Clagg,
Newsome, Mrs. David Rainey aod
Shawn Clark, Clar.ence CLine, Lewis
daughter,
Don Rayburn, Darus
(Continued from page 11
Elkins, Martha Elkins, Odessa
Mrs.
John Smith and
Scragg,
on fire hydrants for relief from heat. Hysell, Shannon Isreal, Roger Johndaughter,
Amber
.Staton, Jewell
Pollee said they received thousands son, Ruth Karr, Bernard La Valley,
Strong,
Liz
Walker,
Madison
Wilson.
of calls complaining of open fire Barbara Lawson, ,Harley Long, Erin
Bmms
hydrants and little or no water Miller, Barbara Murray, Milton
Mr. and Mrs. Larry. Ruter,
pressure in homes.
Nelson, Lynn Oliver, Martisha
daughter,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs.
Temperatures were also scor· Ousley, Mrs. Daniel Polcyn and son,
Anthony
Wau gh, daught er ,
ching parts of the Midwest which Jason Rankin, Kathy Roseberry,
Wellston.
have been sizzling since the heat Roy see, Delpha Shilot, Mary Smith,
wavebeganJune22.
Evelyn Tredway, Norman Van
Twenty-three heat-related deaths Matre, George Voreh, Margaret
were reported Sunday in Kansas
city, Mo. That brought the total for Eme•~-nncy
the city to 111, making it the hardest.
• 1 ~
hit city in the country. The statewide
The Meigs County E~ergency
total was 235, which led the total for
Memorial Hospital ; at 1:01 p.m. the
s~:onal Guard troops drove , Medical Service report the following squad went to county road 20 for
around Kansas City passing out fans
runs made by local units over the Waller Bentz who was taken to
weekend.
·
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
to residents without air conditioners.
In st. Louis, National Guardsmen
Saturday, Middleport, 9:02 a.m.
Sunday,' Pomeroy was called at
went door-to-door looking for elderly for Allee Plantz, who was taken to 9:51a.m. for Thelma Chase who was
people soffering from the heat.
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Mid· taken to Veterans Memorial
ln Oklahoma, state residents dleport, 2.43 p.m. for Chuck Clark Hospital; Pomeroy at 4:24 p.m. to
who was taken to Veterans
prayed for rain at the urging of Gov. Memorial Hospital; Middleport at Portland for DoMa Mullins who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
George Nigh. Dr. Bailey Smith,
pastor of the First Southern Baptist 5:31 p.m. for Bill Stone who was Hospital; Pomeroy at 8 p.m. for
Church in Del City, said 3,000 people taken to Veterans Memorial Mrs. Harry Davis who was taken to
ended a three-week religious Hospital; Rutland at 2:43p.m. for
Holzer Medical Center ; Middleport
d
Ray Rouse was taken to Holzer at 2: 29 p.m. for James Alley who
crusa e by joining hands aod Medical Center·, Rutland at 4:41 was taken from Veterans Memorial
praying for rain. ·
In Houston, it w88 too hot even to p.m. for Dick Fetty who was taken to Hospital to Holzer Medical Center·
swim. More than 100 children who Holzer Medical Center.
.
Tuppers Plains .at 8:INI p.m . for'
Pomeroy's squad at 7:117 a.m. Shirley Myer -who was taken to St.
entered a neighborhood swim meet
Saturday had to be treated for heal· went to county road 25 for John Joseph Hospital.
related illnesses and the meet was Gilland who was· taken to Veterans .
halted.
.

Farmers·
"Bank

only with future increases, not those
which have .occurred as a result of
property reapprajsals $lee 1975.
"I think this is , a half-baked
proposal and is misleading," said
Rep. Matthew J. Hatchadorian, R·
Cleveland. He said tax bills later this
year will not be lowered as a result
of the proposal.
If the measure is approved by
voters, details of lhe restrictions on
tax incf1'a'lf'S would have to be
worked out by the.Legislature In im·
plementing legislation.
Heading for the ballot by a dil·
ferent route is a more sweeping tax

Mostly clo~dy with a chance of a lingering shower tonight. Lows 4J
the low to nud 60s. Considerable cloudiness Wednesday. Highs in the
upper 70s to low 80s. Chance of rain 40 percent tonight and 20 percent
Wednesday. Southwesterly wmds 5-10 mph tonight. Winds briefly ·
. higher ill some thunderstorms. ·
· Elliended' Oblo Forecast--Thursday through Saturday: Fair Thursday and Friday. A chance of thunderstorms Saturday. Highs in the'.
80s Thursday, watpting t_o the low to mid-90s by Saturday. Lows In the
upper 50s through the 60s.
.

r L---------------------------~--------~

New Haven gets
$634,580 grant

New Haven has been awarded a
$634,500 grant from the Department
of Natural Resources for the c.on·
struction of sewage treatment
facilities in the conununity.
·
Announcement of ·the award was
made by the fedeal department's
water resources qivision.

NEW MINING JOBS were created by the signing
of this contract, which Governor RockefeUer oHidaW
with Nicholas Camicla, chairman of Pittston Coal
Company, left, and Pete White, chairman of American ·

Pomeroy council approves
increases in cemetery fees
Harry Evans, financial advisor,
what you have done.''
BYKATIECROW
suggested
that $40,000 be invested in
Wiles,
on
behalf
of
the
members
of
Upon the recommendation of
the
Pomeroy
First
Baptist
Church
money·
market
certificates. Evans
Beech Grove Cemetery Trustees,
reported
that
the
village will have-an
extended
thanks
for
the
excellent
Pomeroy Village Council Monday
done
by
the
village
cleanup
additional $10,000 by the end of the
night approved rate increases for
following the Regatta.
year do to interest made from inlots and grave digging.
vestments.
·
It was agreed to place 20 to 25 adOrval Wiles, Jack Seidenabel, and
ditional trash drums throughout the
The mayor's report showed
Trell Schoenleb, cemetery trustees,
cemetery.
receipts_in the amount of $6,278.75
recommended that single graves be
Lou Osborne suggested that counfor the month of Jun~. Counc'J acincreased from $50 to $100 plus $75 a
cil consider designating a parking . cepted the report.
..
grave thereafter.
area for all persons who work in the
Bill Young suggested that Mayor
· They also recommended that
village of Pomeroy.
Andrews investigate the possibility
opening 11nd closing of graves' be in·
Osborne felt that if persons elll:
of placing a gas tank on the senior
creased from $75 to $100 on week·
played
in
the
village
would
park
in
a
high property in order to save the
days and after 3:30 p.m.' an ad·
would
allow
designated
area,
it
village additional funds . It was alao
ditional $75 would be added.
more
·convenient
parking
·
lor
suggested that the mini-park be
On Saturday, Sunday and holidays
customers.
patrolled more frequently.
grave openings and closings would
Osborne suggested that perhaps
Larry Wehrung suggested that a
be increased to $200. Cremation
collection point for Cable TV
burisl was recommended to be in· _ employes would purchase parking
pennits. Parking permits are $75 for
payments be located in the area.
creased to $15. Council approved the
one year.
The suggestion ct
Before recessing council went into
recommendations.
designating a certain parking area
executive SllSSion.
Wiles said there is no perpetual
was referred to the safety com·
The meeting was opened by
care at Beech Grove and he was not
mittee
which
will
report
at
the
next
prayer
by Lou Osborne. Attending
going to teU the public there is per·
of
coimcil.
were
Brown,
Betty Baronick,
regular
meeting
petual care when none exists. Wiles
In
other
business,
council
asked
Wehrung
,
Rod
Karr,
Young and
noted, that perhaps next year, perOsborne council members, Jane
that reports for the months of May
petual care could be offered. '
Walton, clerk, Chief McKinney, DonThe .trustees noted that progress · and June on parking meter collections be mailed to each member by nie Ward, Randal Carpenter, EdiUi
has been !fl8de at the cemetery and
Wednesday.
Sisson and Pam Granen.
commended Donnie Ward and members of his crew for the work that h88
been accompished.
The trustees ·further recom·
mended that only two baskets of ar·
tifical flowers be placed on each
grave near the headstone. They also
"counter-revolutionaries" were put
By The Associated Press
requested that live flowers be plan·
to death in Dezfoul, south of Tehran,
of
Ayatollah
Ruhollah
Supporters
ted next to the headstone. They
Khnmeini att..cked the Tehran office for importing anns, unauthorhed
believe that this in itself would save
of Iran's communist party, shouting crossing into Iraq, armed resistanconsiderable mowing tilile.
"Death to Russia" and "Long Live ce, maintaining" linkS with subPie trustees also recommended
Afghanistan." Meanwhile, 10 more versive groups and bombing railway
that no pels be bUried ii\ B~ch
crQSSings and oll pipelines.
executions. were reported, and four
Grove to which councll agreed.
Pars also · reported an anti·
more officers were sentenced to die
Harold Brown, president, who
Khomeini
terrorist was executed in ·
for the , military plot a gainst
presided in the absence of Mayor
Tehran
for
bombing a school aod
Clarence Andrews, wbo is ill, Khomeini.
three
drug
smugglers
were shot by a
About 200 ·young Iranians scaled
thanked the trustees for their efforts
the wall around the offices of the firing squad in Urumiyeh, in norand stated "council appreciates
pro-Moscow communist Tudeh Par- thwestern Iran.
The Tehran newsvaper Enghlab
ty on Monday, smashed furniture
Eslami
said four more inilltary of·
and windows and occupied the
!icers
were
sentenced to death after
building. Apparently no one was
being
convicted
oftaking part in 11M! ·
hurt, witnesses said.
with him and receive the petitions
big
anti-Khomeini
plot reported last
The attack followed a strong anti·
although a specific date has not been communist address by Hojatoleslam
week."
set. James said he would try to Hadi Ghafilrl, a member of !ran'
It was the secQnd trial of persons
bring the ,heild of the Ohio Depart- new Parliament who supports
accused of taking part in the conment. of Transportation Mr. Weir ·. Khomeini's campaign · to purge
spiracy. Five officers were executed
with him, according to DeLuz. ·
Sunday , Radio 'Tehran reported
Iranian life of Marxist influences
DeLuz would like as many in- and build a society along strictly
earlier.
te~ested persons as possible _
to ac- Islamic lines. ·
At least 500 people have beeri
company him when he meets with
reported under arrest in connection
The number of executions Sunday
the stale officials . Anyone in· and Monday rose to 15 as the official
with the plot.
terested may call De~uz at 843-4871.
Pars news agency reported six

Executions continue in Iran

Signature campaign nets 1,200 names
Approximately 1,zori names have
been ~ollecled so far by Louis DeLuz
in ·his effort to persuade .state of·
ficials to build a new road to the
bridge constructed at Ravenswood.
The exact number of signers Is not
known as some petitions have not
yet been collected and one is being
Circulated at an area plant.
·
DeLilz I!Bid State Representative
Ron James has promised to meet

Electric Power Company, right. The $41 million contract between the two groups will create 400 new mining jobs in Logan County to produce coal for Appalachian's New Haven power plant.

\

•

�•
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., '!'ueSday, July 22, I9110

• $.-.The Daily SenUnel, Middleport· Pomeroy, ell, Tu~sday, July 22, 1980

Legion squad
still alive

Opinions &amp;
Comments

.·U.S. manpower

\,

'

mobilization .

,.

'

While youths are registering for a possible w~e
draft, the Pentagon is moving to e;xpand voluntary enlist.ments in a reserve manpower pool that would be tapped
1 for combat strength early in a crisis. 'd.
hat th mili'tary
,
If it succeeds, the plan would proVl e w · e
.
'1 ··: calls "pre-trained" m~n to bring ~Y. regular, N!ltional
· Guard and reserve wuts to full wartime strength and to
I · provide replacements for:: combat casualties in th~ first
offighting.
.
.
I· months
So far the idea has been tested .on a very limited scale.
But offi~ials say they believe that, in a full-scale e~ort,
they can enroll as many as 10,000 young men a year direc.J tly into the Individual Ready Reserve.
. .
1
sinee they woul? have ~ompleted ~sic training, these
individual reserviSts would be available for overseas
deployment in a war much mor~ quickly than dr{lftees,
who are required by law to receive at least 12 weeks of
such training after induction.
While draft registration was reswning today, Congr~ss
would have topass separate legislation to actually remstitute the draft. ·
. .
.
.\
Young men would sign up for a six-year hitch~ the Individual Ready Reserve.
. .
.
. . .
After three months of peacetime active duty for baste
ttaiiling .they would spend the remaining five years and
I nine mo~ths at their nonnal civiliari pursuits; They would
1
be obligated to undergo two brief periods of refresher
training, but would not be required to drill regular~y as is
the case with members of the Guard and reserve wuts.
.i Some critics question whether this sparse training would
produce useful combat soldiers when needed;
·
"it's a lot better than having nobody to call when we
• need individual fillers and replacements in a crunch," said
I one Pentagon official who asked to remain anonymous.
I
The plan for expanded volun~ry enlistme~~ into the Individual Ready .Reserve carnes no proviSIOn f?r a~y
bonuses. So far as can be detennined, no other tangible m'1 centives are offered.
·
•
The Individual Ready Reserve, or manpower pool, has
shrunk from a peak of almost 1.6 million before the draft
ended in mid-1973. In those days, youths finishing two
years as conscripts were placed on the rea~y reserv~ .rolls
for an additional four years to complete a siX-year military
obligation.
,
Since the end of the Vietnam War, the armed forces have
t · been reduced substantially and men serve mininnqn
enlistments of ~ee years: This led to a steep drop in the
reserve manpower pool, which totaled only about 396,000 .
last October.
: ·.
Pentagon officials considered prop?sing a t'!o-y~ar extension of the six-year overall ~ta~ obli~at~o~ for
future recruits as one way of repleDIShing the mdividual
reserve pool. But they dropped the idea because, as one of.t ficial said, "it places the burden on those who've serv~."
So defense manpower specialists turned to other options,
including
a $600 bonus for re-e~W,ent in the ~ndividual
i
'• Ready Reserve by men whose obligation has expired.

I

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!.--------------,-------,
·! Berry's World
&gt;

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George Bush: . the luckiest of losers

SYRACUSE - Action .continued · HQOd two singles, Eric J olmso.n a
Monday evening in the Syracuse Ut· single and James Keesee, a double. ·
tie League Tournament as the Mid· MiddleJiort broke the game wide
dleport Indians, Middleport Braves open In the third with six big nms led
and Glouster-Mathews Ins. posted by Wise's home run. Matt Thompson
victories.
was the Red hurler with nine
In the opening contest, Mid· strikeouts and four walks.
dleport's Indians handily defeated
Todd Pethel and Mike Wolfe
New Haven's Reds IG-4. Scott Gheen singled.
picked up the win with the aid of
In the second game, the Mid·
Brian Decker. They combiried for dleport Braves scored a very strong
six strikeouts but gave up 10 free 16-5 win ·over Pomeroy Powell's
passes while yielding only two hits.
Giants. Nick Bush wsa the winning
The hard·hittini! Indians collected hurler relieved by Jeff Nelson. They
eight hits ' led by Rick Wise with a fanned seven and walked five.
long home run and single, Steve
For the winriers Trey Cassell
Crow a home run ·and single, Jeff

TodJJy's commentary
a

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRE'IS
Pete Mackanin singled off Tippy
The perfect pitching staff in the Martinez in the lith inning while
American League these days would John Verhoeven scattered seven hits
have Steve Stone starting and Dan over 82-31nnings of relief for his first
Quisenberry finishing.
major league victory. The Orioles
Stone, who has become the ace of blew a 5-1 lead on Minnesota home
the Baltimore staff ahead of a couple runs by Ken Landreaux, Roy
of Cy Young winners, POSted his 13th Smalley and Hosken Powell. on and
consecutive triumph Monday night one outWhite Sox 1 tired Lamar
as the Orioles defeated the Min·. Johnson Chicago relief ace Ed Far·
nesota Twins 12-0 in the nightcap of a mer with a ·tie-breaking bases·
doubleheader after dropping the loaded sin,gle in the seventh inning
opener 11-7 in 11 innings.
and Dennis as 19.
Meaanwhile, Kansas City's
Ironically, Quisenberry was war·
Quisenberry took over the league ned before the game for fraternizing
lead with his 20th save as the Royals with Fanner.
edged the Chicago White Sox 2-1.
"I guess I might get fined," he
Elsewhere, the Milwaukee said. ."I was standing there talking
Brewers trlnuned the New York to him while the White Sox were
Yankees 7-4, the Detroit Tigers clob- taking bat AL lead over Farmer,
bered the California Angels 14-3, the ires sent a messenger to tell me to
Texas Rangers downed the Boston stop. I like Ed Fanner. I wasn't
thinking about taking the lead . in
Red Sox f&gt;-3, the Toronto Blue Jays
nipped the Oakland A's 1..0 and the saves.''
Brewers 7, Yankees 4
Seattle Mariners blanked the
Cleveland Indians 7..0.
Ben Ogilvie had three hits and
Stone blanked the Twins until the drove in three nms and Cecil Cooper
eighth iruting, when they scored five added four hits and an RBI to help
times, three on a double by Ron second·place Milwaukee reduce the
Jackson. By that time the Orioles
Yankees' lead in the AL East to 7t
had a lU lead as Dan Graham games, . Mike Caldwell beat the
drove in six nms with a grand slam Yankees for the eighth time in nine·
homer and a single and Eddie career decisions but lasted only five
Murray, who hit a solo homer in the innings before giving way to Bob
opener, added a three-run shot.
McClure. Milwaukee took a 3-0 first·
"It's tough to be a star In a
lniling iead .when Paul Molitor,
rotation that Includes a three-time
Robin Yount and Cooper. the first
three
batters, all singled, with
Cy Young winner in Jim Palmer and
~e Flanagan, who was last year's
Cooper's hit scoring Molitor. Oglivie
Cy Young winner," said Stone, who . scored Yount with a sacrifice fly and
hasn't lost since May 5. "At the start Sixto Lezcano tripled Cooper borne.
'tigers 14, Angels 3
of the season I was ticketed to be the
fifth starter. This. is absolutely the
Steve Kemp hit two homers and
best I've ever pitched."
drove in four runs, Richie Hebner hit
The Twins won the opener when
a three-run blast to cap a seven·run
John ~Uno, B11tch Wynegar and sixth Inning and Champ Swruners

Carter looking forward to economic recovery
•
The truth is that no turning point . week that the turnaroWld he S!lid he
has been reached, no matter how of· saw was far, far in the distance.
ten or how effective are attempts to
Almost contradicting himseU, be
sweeten the bitter facts.
forecast ."a slow, slow recovery."
The Carter administration isn't He placed the time of that recovery
the only one that bas sought to cover in "next year," which seems to be a
the evidence in a pile of hope.
forecast of conUnued recession this
Fresh in the memory, for exam· year.
pie, is the performance of Herbert
Stein, Schultze's counterpart in the
administration of Richard M. Nixon,
Those who are inunersed in this·
who month after mopth sought to recession should recall that when
compromise the political impact of the Cartet administration first conrising inflation by telling Americans ceded the likellbood of a recession
that the worst was now behind them. they were assured It would be brief
and mild. The president sald so.
And now that it is being suggested ·
It wasn't, of course, and It isn't to them that the worst is over they
now. Even Schultze, who, like Stein, should seek to separate economics
seeks to emphasize the pasitive in from politics. The economics are not
the mldst of disaster, conceded last that encouraging.

.I
I.
•··~

~ESS

IS

. ,.a~~T

-

LEVELEit
-~---&gt;-'·

.

'l\l

@ 1980 by NE~ . Int.

•

t

,.

I

(

tagged for a two-run homer by
Dwight Evans in the ninth .
Blue Jays 1, A's 0
Toronto's Dave Stieb pitched his
second consecutive shutout, a sevenhitter, and AI Woods hit a fifth·
inning home run . Stieb struck out
four in pitching his seventh con·
secutive complete game and his
fourth shutout.
Mariners 7, lndlaos 0
Tom Paciorek and Bruce Boehle
each drove in three nms to b3ck the
five-hit pitching of Glenn Abbott.
Boehle laced a run-scoring single in
Seattle's three-rWI first inning and
added a two-run double in the filth.
He also doubled in the third.
Paciorek contributed an RBI single
in the first and belted his 12th
homer. a two-run shot in the fifth .

Sports briefs.

• •

BASEBALL
and Wider.
NEW YORK (AP) - Pitcher Larry
McWilliams of the Atlanta Braves
TENNIS
was named the National League
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Martina
Player of the Week for pitching two · Navritalova beat Duk Hee Lee of
complete game victories during the
South Korea 6-1, 6-1 in her opening
week, beaUng New York 5-2 and• match of the $100,000 women's tennis
Philadelphia 3-2.
tournament in Richmond.
GOLF
In other matches: No. 8 seed Bar·
WATERLOO, Iowa fAP) - Laurie
bara Potter beat Kate Latham :Hl, 7Rinker of Stuart, Fla., fired a 1·
5, 6-2; No. 6 seed Terry Holladay
under·par 72 to lead the quatiliers at
beat Pettra Delbess of Switzerland
the Women's Western Golf
3-6, 6-4, 6-2 ; Stacy Margolin bell!
Association J unlor Tournament.
Peanut Louie 6-1, 6-4; Rosalyn Fair·
Joanne Pacillo·of Standford CaUl.,
bank of South Africa beat Leslie
was in second place at 75. Three
Allen Hi,'&amp;-3, 7-5; Mary Lou Piatek
golfers were tied at . 76: Sherri
.beat T~:ey Lewis6-l, 2-6,6-2, and Bt;t·
Steinhauer of Madison, Wis.; Nancy
sy Nagelsen beat Paula Smith 6-4, 6- ·
Ballard of Pontiac, Mich., and Nan·
1. ,
cy Ledbetter of Lake Zurich, lll,, In
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP ) - First·
the tournament 'tor golfers ages 17
seeded Susan Mascarln of Gross
Pointe Shores, Mich., beat Lauri~
Anne MacGill of Baltimore 6-2, 6-0 in
second,round action in the National
Girls 16s Clay Court tennis cham·
pionships.
NEW YORK (APJ - Two years
which leads the American League 'every year. Yet, the comparison Is
·· In other matches: second-seeded
ago, Ron Guidry was virtually in- East byllt games. "Guidry will pitch inescapable. Last season, he was 18Zina Garrison of Houston beat Ginny
vincible. His powerful left ann Friday. in Kansas City. 1'!11 not 8 with a league-best ERA of 2. 78, and
Dickinson of Winter Park, Fla ., 6-0,
worred about Guidry."
earned the New York Yankees to a
rriany thought it was an "off"
6- i; third-deeded Carol Heynen of
pennant and a world championship.
But the conce'nsus in the New York season.
•
Long Beach, Calif., beat Charlotte
Today, the 29-year-old Guidry is a clubhouse was that' .a soWld per·
"Everyone keeps asking me about
Haberstroh, of Salisbury, Md., 6-1,6troubled man despite a 1().6 record fonnance by Guidry over the final2t
1978," said Yankee pitching coach
1; Fourth-seeded Barbara Gerken of
· and 3.89 earned run average ..
montha of the season is vital to the Stan Williams, "and I wasn't hete In
Thousand Oaks, CaUl:, beat Alice
In his · last two starts for the team's chances of maintaining Its 1978. I don't know anything about
Reen, 7-6, 6-2; unseeded Mary DinYankees, Guidry bas allowed 20 hits .dominance in the AL East. ·
it."
neon of Winter Park toppled lithand 12 runs In nine Innings. Over his
"Let's face It," said Johnny Oates, · But Howser was a Yankee coach
seeded Linda Gatess of
last n ouUngs, the lithe lefty bas a :;.
who caught Guidry Sunday, "we that. season, wh~n the Yankees
Hillsborough, Calif. , 2-6, 7-ll, 8-6~ and
6 record and an ERA of4.92. His first need him to win it."
defeated the Boston Red Sox in a
Wlseed~d Amy Holton of Sarasota,
· nine games, by contrast, showed a 5In 1978, Guidry was 25-3 with a 1.74 one-game playoff
Fla., ousted ninth-seeded Laurie Mc0markanda2.78ERA.
ERA, leading the majors in vic- for the · AL East title. The man·
Neil of Houston 6-1,6-3.
"I think I know what the problem tories, shutouts, winning percentage
ager said, "It's not the slider he had
BOWLING
I
is," sald Guidry alter being knocked and ERA. He set a Yankee club in 178, II
tuCSON; Ariz: (AP) - Mike Aulby
out In the second 1nn1ng by Ka1198,'1 mark with 248 strikeouts and won
"We're going to look at some
brought his match play record to 2I·
City SWlday as the R.oyals1outed the the Cy Young Award.
slides and some films,' ' said
3 and cruised to the top-sla!ed
Yankees, 14-3. · He declliled to
During the closing stages of that Williams, " and see .what we can
position by, 599 pins going into the
season
- and In the time since - ~ find." Both Wi!Uams and Howser irrelaborate.
finals ' of the $85,000 Tucson Open.
New York Manager Dick Howser · Guidry repeatedly cautioned anyone · dicated that they think Guidry may
Aulby averaged 232 for 42 games.
has tried hjs best to minimize the who would listen against expecting be "overthrowing" or throwing too
Dennis Lane won the second seed
·~
problem and its impact on the team that kind of performance from him hard on his slider.
PoSition:

House could ·pick next Pres.i dent

Today in history. .

hit a solo homer in the ninth as the
Tigers routed California. Kemp
homered in the fourth inning and
delivered again with two runners on
base to wrap up a four-run fifth inning. Hebner connected off Dave
Lemanczyk, who was charged with
six of the seven runs in the sixth in·
ning, all of which were unearne&lt;j_as
a. result of a tw&lt;Hlut etror by shor·
tst~p Fred Patek.
Raogers 5, Red Sox 3
Jon Matlack and Danny Darwin
combined for a seven-bitter as the
Rangers rOde. a 14-hit attack and
pasted a three-game winning streak
for the first time since mid-April.
Matlack blanked Boston on two
singles for six innings before losing
his shutout bid on Carlton Fisk's 12th
homer in the seventh. Darwin was

Yankee ace, a troubled man

•

·r

.

-

&gt;
- ----. ··~-

...

--·~··

•• ••
•••

Sl.l.oak, ZS; Sleuu, New York, U; llelU,

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
Montreal .
Pittsburgh
Philadelphia

L

Houston
Los An@eles

~

39.
40

.562
.560

47

42

.$28

3

.183

7

ll

l7
51

.125

WEST
52 40

.565

Cincinnati
San Francisco
Atlanta

51
48
45
l2

San Diego

38

-

.~

:;o

. :rl

101&gt;

.

-

Headl1c., St.LoaiB, 2:1; ~, Moatreal, II;
Garvey, Lot Aqelet, JJ;: Babr, 1M

GrHiey. Cilldtmatl, I; Clarll; Su Fruetoco, ·

12

.516

II&gt;
II&gt;

.489

7

.402
.413

91&gt;
ll

.Mil

42

e

TRIPLES: LeF.ore, Molltreal, I;
o.MctrenO, ~ttlbargb, 7; LaldetUJ',
H'""loa, 7; R.S.OU, Mealnol, I; Me-,
Pbladelpblo, I; Templellll, SLI-, I; .

GB

50
51

«

New York:
St. Louis
Chicago

51.~23.

Pet.

47
lll
&amp;4

Monday's Games

SoD Diego, II.
. PITCHING II lloc;ll-)o Bibby, J'D.

San Francisco 0, Chicago 0, 12 innings ,
game suspended

Mootreal8, AUanta6
CinCinnati 5, Philadelphia 4

Houshm 3, New York :z
St.Louis 5, Los Angeles 2
Tuesday's Games
San. Franciaco at Chicago, completion of
:"~uspended

game

San Francisco (BordJey

2-0 )

at Chicago

(l..amp~).scheduledgame

.

.

.

(Solo :14). (nl

New· York (Pacella

3-0)

(J.Niekru IIHI), (n)
Los Angeles
(n)

IIborlb. 11·1. .tl7, 3.10; G.Jo~ J'D.
tlbor~b
, 1-%,
.IM, 2.15; Carltoa,
Phlbo
, 15-l, .711, Z.ll; - . , C.
~ ·!, :m, Ul; Sa&amp;WI, 1M .u,e~e~, 72, ~om. tu; ae., ~ AJ~adel, 1w, ..,.,
1.6; llootoo. Loo Aqdeo, H, .711, I.IZ;
Rlcllanl, Hoootoo,IH, .714,1.".
: Carltu.. P'C ~
..... Ill; 1!,.., _...,
Ill; Blyle1eo. PlttobarP, lfl; P.NINr9,

~~-

.

at Houston

(Sutton 7·2) at St.Louis (Kaat

. Plttaburg)l (Bibby IJ.l) at san Diego
(Lucas:h'i) , In I
.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W

Milwaukee

51
_, 48
49

Detroit
Baltimore

32

..o·

Pet.
GB
.644 .561
.558
.537

311
l2

46 «
41 47
39 II
WEST
56 36

Bostoo
Cleveland
Toronto
Kansas City

Tens

L

58

·

45

46

43

lll
lll

«

08ltland .
Minnesota

7'ril
8
91&gt;

AMERICAN LEAGUE

BATTING (225 at bata)o Cooper,
Milwaukee, .352; Wilaon, Kanau City, .331;
Dilone, Cleveland, .335; B.Bellt Tau, .331;
Oglivie, Milwaukee, .3216.
RUNS' Wilson, Ra"""' Cily, '15; Y-~
Mil}VP.ukee, 73; Willi, 'i'eu~, ";Trammell,
Detroit, $7; Bumbry, Baltimore, II.
RBI: Re.J~, New York, '13; Oliftl',
Tex.as, 72; Oglivie, Milwaukee, 71; Pera,
a..ton, 70; Hebner, lletn&gt;R, 811; Cooper,
Milwaukee, IMi; Anil.u,Oakland.IS.
HITS ' Wilson, Ransu CRy, 137; Cooper,
MUw8ulet!, 121; · Riven, Texas; 120; Bumbry,Baltlmore,l14; Burlesoo,Balton,llO. ·
DOUBLES: Yo.u nt, Milwaukee, 28;
Morrison, Chicago, 28; ~cRae. Kanau City,

23; D.Garcla, Tgronto, 22; Bochte, Seattle,
22; Oliver, Texas, %2.
TRIPLESo Griffin, Torooto,. 8; Wlloon,
KaniU City, 8; Bwnhcy, Balt!mcre, 7;

.609
.484
.473

.voant, Milwaukee, 7; Wash.fnBton,

12~

.467

13

-

10~

.451 14~
ll 00
38 53
.115 171&gt;
33 57
.387 Z!
Monday'8Games
Minne:lola lh\, BalUrnor&lt; 7·12, 1st game 11

Texas5, Boston 3

.....

.511 . 12
.466 IJl
.«.!'' Ul

Chicago
Seattle ·
California

iflnint!!

I

Adu.ta, 113.

~I.

New York

'
.
HOME RUNS! Sdmildt, phl.......ta, II;

Aqeleo, 19.
. ·
lll'OLEN BA!IESo LeFlore, -m.l, 17;
O.MoreDOJ Plttabaqla. U; ~ ClaciDDatl, 10; a.s..u. M..,~rto~, 15; - ·

Mo,ltreal(Lee :14) at Atlanta IP .Nlekro 7·

Oriole ace records 13th straight win

•• •••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

Philadelphia (Carlton IH) at C'"cumati

'

Take unemployment, for example.
Courtenay Slater, chief eConomist ot
the Commerce Qepartment, expects
that joblessness could rise to as
much as 8.5 percent to 9 percent
from recent levels of j~ under 8
percent.
And in inflation. One of the most
discouraging aspects of the latest
quarterly report is .that during the
second-quarter economic collapse,
the rate of price increases rose in·
stead of declining, as expected.

slatruned a borne run and single,
Glouster's one run lead, then
Shawn Baker also a home run and . Glouster iced the win with a five run
fourth inning.
single. Nick Bilsh two. singles, Don·
Pitchirig ace Cbuckie Davis was
nie Becker a single and double, and
again impressive in picking up the
Tim Cassell a double. .
A nine run third inning broke the
win with 14 strike outs and two
somewhat close game wide open as
walks. Davis gave up only three hits
the Braves rolled on ; to victory. with another excellent outing.
Brian Kom was the Pomeroy pit· Mecwn doubled and singled, Evan
cher with eight strike outs and five
Smith tripled and singled, Davis a
walks. Kom had two triples, James double and triple, Robbie Wilson a
Nonnan a double, and Gerald MOQre home run and single. Scott Wickline
a single.
·.
suffered the loss, relieved by Jay
The evening came to a close with Bostick. They fanned 12 and wal)!ed
Glouster dwnping Racine H. A four seven. Tracy Cleland, Matt Jewell,
run . third inning .pvercame and Brian Diehl singled for Racine.

.

ho111e run. Chock Norris had a hoD!e
run for McArth\lf.
·
Meigsthen.beat New Lexington lf4 after It broke the gl!llle open In tile
first when King walked, Little
doubled, Wolle singled, Fields
singled and Foglestrom cam;e
through with a siitgle. .·
· ;
Roger Kovalchik picked up tbe
win. Wolfe banged three single&amp;,
King two .singles, Little a doubl~,
Fields a triple and double, Brown a
single, double and triple. Kennedy,
Rogie Gaul, and Ko~alchik eac)l
singled. Chuvalas doutiled for New.
Lexington.
.
Meigs plays Wellston 111 5:30 p.m.
Friday night at the West State field.
Meigs must stay alive arid win
every game in hopes of winning the
tournament. In the winilers' bracket
Athens plays Lan~r at 5:30p.m.
on the Athens high schoollield.

•••
•• ••
•••••

12), (n)

Business mirror

"I think the reces8ion will slow down
shortly and will turn around."
The impresilion left by these subjective views is that the worst of the
country's economic troubles are
· behind it when, in fact, the worst
may still be ahead.

Wayland, Phil King, Kent Wolfe, and Cliff Kennedy. Back row, Coach
George Nesselroad, Greg Wigal, Tom Owens, Jerry F1elds, Kenny
Brown, Art ("oglestrom, Steve Little, Bob Foster: Randy Murray, Te':'fY
Wayland, and Coach Homer Smith. Absent from p1cture were CoachMike
Neselroad and scorekeeper Allen Stobart who are both very act1ve m the
Legion program.
·

W

DETROIT (AP) - George Bush obliquely in his climactic speech to
presidential nomination In 1984:
servative enough, and they object to
ha$ to be one of the luckiest. loser8 the . Republican National Con·
Should the Republicans lose this · his ties to the northeastern GOP
ever.
vention:
·time, Bush almost surely would run establlshment.
He lost a two-year campaign for
"There are those who question the . again for the nomination four years
the Republican presidential
way we choose a president, who say
hence, in what probably would be a
Bush was the last survivor among
nomination, bu~ he's suddenly in bet· that our process impases difficult
wide-open rae!\.
•
seven Republicans who contested
ter shape than any other prospect to and exhausting burdens on those
At s!i, Bush bas plenty of political Reagan for the nomination. He was
claim it another year.
who seek the office. I have notfourtd mileage ahead of him.
the only · one among them who
That's what irks the critics, and
it SO. II •
So ardent conservatives, groups managed to defeat the former
would-be rivals, who didn't want
Catilornia governor during the
him on Ronald Reagan's ticket For
presidential primary election
as the 1980 R~publican vice
season, and that didn't happen often.
presidential nominee, Bush is going
He was out of the running by
to be a formidable figure in GOP
Memorial Day and pled~ed his suppresidential campaigns for years to
. port to Reagan.
come.
The Republican primary election
Reagan is 69 years old and will be
His health is fine, and he has
like Young Americans for Freedom score reads like a one-sided football
70 shortly after the next president is • shown ~hat he can campaign as
and the Fund for
Conservative
game: Reagan30, Bush6.
Inaugurated. ~e's the oldest man 'aggri!SSively - and more sueMajority, already are saying they'll
But Bush won his points in states
ever to wm maJor-party nonuna~on · cessfully - than far younger .rivals.
do what they can to block Bush in · the Reagan ticket badly needs,
for the White House. The late Dwight . Bush was one of them.
1984 or 1988.
states like PeMSylvania, Michigan,
D. Eiseooower was 66 when he won
Still, if Reagan is elected, he
Despite a generally c.onservative
Connecticut and Massachusetts.
re-election.
.
might choose to make his a one-term
record, and a finn pledge to support That's the kind of territory in which
Agehasn'lbeenasignificantissue 'presidency. Andas the b«ltom haif
the conservative Republican plat· he is to be campaign point man for
In the Reagan . campaign. Th.e of a winning ticket, Bush would be
form, Bilsh is suspect to the hard the ticket: the NO\'Iheast and the uppresidential nommee addressed It the top prospe&lt;;t for the R\!publlcan
right. They don't think he's con- per Midwest.

NEW YORK (AP) -Some of the
same people whose policies brought
us an Wlexpectedly severe recession
are now trying to convince us that
the worst is over.
CiUng a partial recovery of a huge
loss in housing starts - one tlu)t still
leaves that indilstry in a depression
- President Carter said be is
looking forward to economic
recovery.
And simultaneously with news
that the gross national prOduct
shrank at an almost unprecedented
annual rate of 9.1 percent in the
April..June quarter, the president's
chief economic adviser forecast a
turnabout.
Charles L. Schultze, uhairman of
the CoWlcil of Economic Advisers,
said in the midst of the bad news that

ATHENS - After suffering first
round.IOSll to Athe.ns Friday, Meigs• ·
American Legion squad boWlded
back to post a couple of wins In
district. eight competition. Friday
Meigs lost a )().9 heartbreaker in. ex·
tra innings. Bush picked up the win
for Athens, while Kenny Brown,
going all the way, suffered the loss.
In Saturday's first game, Meigs
defeated McArthur 9-4 in the double
elimination tournamenf. Chock
Norris was the losing hurler while
Oney relieved in the fourth. ·
Meigs broke the game wide open ·
in the third when Kent Wolfe walked,
stole second then rode home with
Brown on Art Foglestrom's single.
Cliff Kennedy then tripled and
scored on an error. Steve Little led
Meigs with two singles, while Jerry
Fields hit a tremendous shot for a

·--~

Three more teams ousted from torirne

WASHINGTON (AP) - In this
With an eye to the possibility of the
ways to win - or retain, In the case In the House goes on to the White
period between the Republican and election going to the House, both the
of the Democrats- majority control House;
Democratic conventions, political Democratic, an!! Republican parties of26 state delegations in the House.
In the current Congress,
strategists oil Capitol Hill are begin- are developing strategies for the
For, unlike a bill that requires 11 Democrats control 29 House
ning to ponder seriously the prospect I980 congressional elections.
simple majority of those voting a\ delegations and the RepubliC8111 ·
that the ~ext president may be
The Congress sea ted .. next the lime in the 435-member House, control 12. The remaining nine are
chosen by the House of Represen· January, not the present one, would each state gets to cast only a single equally divided.
tatives.
be the one that would decide vote when it comes to picking a
So the congressmen from singleWith three candidates expected to following the meeting of the Elecpresident.
member states like Delaware, Ver·
be llsted on most state ballots in · !oral College In early January.
Thus, whichever candidate among mont and Wyoming individually
November, all it would take to
.Both parties are trying to map
the top three finishers gets 26 votes • . would bave as much clout as, for Inbypass the Electoral College ·and
- - - - - - - - ' - - - ' - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - stance, the 42 members from
' tass the election into the House
California.
.• would be for none of the three to
Even if they fall to win majority
receive 50 percent of the electoral
control
of the Holise, Republicans
vote.
·
•
r
•
could
gain
control of a maj :rity of
And.the stronger independent canToday is Tuesday, July· 22, the and killed the notorious John state delegations by pi~ up .28
didate Rep. John Anderson, R·Ill.,
204th day of 1980. There are 162 days · Dillinger. ·
. carefully targeted seats.
' 1
gets in the polls, the greater seern8
Ten years ago, floods in India
left in the year.
..,
There
are
now
27fi.
Democrats
and
the likelihood of this happening.
swept more than 500 Hindu pilgrims 179 Republicans In the House, with
Today's highlight in history:
House and Senate leaders, who
On
July 22, 1933, Wiley Post com- ~ Into a river In the Himalayan one vacancy. So picking up those 28
have .seen Congress nearly
'
pleted · . the · first niund·the-world fOQthills.
apecif.ied seats could .be · acparalyzed in recent times by com.Five years ago, Robert E. Lee . compllshed with Republicans,;
flight in his plane, the Winnie May.
paratively simple energy and
poStwnously won his final skinnish remalnlng the minority party,
On th!s date:
economic bills, shudder at the
In 1798, French forces under of the Civil War when Congress
But that's just the beg!nnlng. The
thought of having the weight .of such Napoleon Bonaparte were oc- voted to'restore his citizenship.
Senate
gets to pick the vice
presi!lential and vice presidential cupying the Egyptian city of Cairo.
Last year, Israeli planes bombed president from ~e top two finl$ers ·
decisions on their shoulders. ,
In 1812, English .~oops under the · three .Lebanese towns and 15 people by simple majority vote. And the
And the political fireworks that , . Dul&lt;e of Wellinglon defeated the
were reported kill~. ·
. .
.vice president would become acting
would .be set off would more than Frerich at the battl'e of Salamanca in
Tod!ly's birthday: Rose Kennecjy, presid~nt in the event that none of
make liP for any lack of drama at Spain.
· mother of the late President John F. the three contenda-s gets 26 votes In
llils sununer's political conventions.
Keniledy, is 90.
In 1934, f'.BI agents in Chicago shot
the House~- _

•

II

· STILL IN Rl.JNNING - Meigs' American Legion baseball team
despite an opening loss last Friday to Athens remains alive in the Legion
tournament after weekend victories over McArthur and New Lexington.
Meigs will battle Wellston at 5:30 p.m. Friday at West State Field in
Athens. Team members are, front row, left to right, Roger Kovalchik,
Nick Leonard, Jr., John Beaver, Rogie Gaul, .Joe Bob Hemsley, Jeff

·

I

I

..

'

.

.

.

Milwaukee 7, New York 4
Kansas City 2, Chl.cago 1
Detroit 14, California 3
Toronlo I, Oakland 0
Seattle 7, ClevelandO
Tuesday's Gamea
Milwaukee (Travers 9-4 and Soremen 7-:1)
atNe,-:York: (John 14-Jand M.ay7-4), 2
Texas {Perry ~71 at Boston (1~udor 3-1),

(nJ
Baltimore (Flanagan H ) at Minnesota
(Erickaon:H ), (n )
Chicago (Trout 1-101 at Kansas City

City,7.

!lOME RUNS: Re.jactJoo, New York, •;
Oglivie,Mllwautee, 24;; ,t.nnas, Oakland,U;
Thomas. Milwaukee, Ul; Mayben'y, TOI'GOlo,l7._
~ .....
STOLEN BASESo HendenQn, ~ ...
43; Wilson, KansU City, U; ~one,
aeveland, 31; Wllla, Texas, rt; J.Crui,SeatUe,?S.
PlTCHING (9 DeclsiON)o Darwin, T - .
B-1, .889, 2.30; Stone, Baltimore, 15-3, .IS3,
3.19; John, New York, 14-3. 824, 2.Di Corbett. Mlnnesola, 7-2, .'1'18, l.IH; Gura,
City, l:H, .750. 2.011; Hainey, - · w.
:rn, us; Lopez, Detroit, 1-3, :100, Ut;
Trayers, Milwaukee, 9-4, .5!11, 2.&amp;5.
.
STRIKEOUTS: Guidry, New YOI1t, 107;
M.N~ Oakland 103; Haas, MUwaube1
91; KeOugh, Oaltland,90; F.BaMlster,Seat--

a-

Ue,89.

Moadl)''tSportl~

i Busby~J.In)

Detroit (Morris 11~) at CaWornia (Knapp
2·71, (n)
Toronto (Mirabella 4-8 and Jelferson U)
at Oakland (Norris IU and Keough •o-9 ), 2,

~

.

BASEBAlL
NoUoaal Leope

Texasat Boston, {n)
Milwaukee at New York, (n)

ST. LOUIS CARDINAUi - Plaoed Bobby
Bonds, outfielder on the liklay dlaabled llot.
Called up Terry Landnon from the
Sprirudleld Redbirds of the. American
Assoclatlon.
·
BASKETBALL
NoUoaaiBul&lt;elllollAIIodoLOS ANGELES !..AKERS- Slaned Bodo~!
Carter, guard-forward, to a mulfl..year eon-

Chicago at Kansas City, (n)
Baltimore at Minnesota, (n)
Detroit at California, In )
' Cleveland at Seattle, (n)

FOOTIIAlJ. .
Natklul Foutt.II Leq1ae
BUFFALO . BILLS - Waived WUUe

(n)

Cleveland (Barker

~7)

at Seattle (Ban-

rlister&amp;-7), (n)
Wednesday'sGames

Toronto at Oakland

tract.

Parker, center.

TODAY.'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONALLEAGUE
•

BATTING (225 at ball): Trillo,
Pblladejpi,IO, .333; R.Smllb, Loo Aqeleo,
329· Heodrtcll; SLLoula, .:JZ$; Temple!oa,
St. Louts; .S%4; K.Hellla;ld~. SLLoull, .318.
RUNS: LeFlore, Mootreal,l3; Templetou,

St.Leull, "83; K. Heruaodn, St.Loull, tz;
Rclle, PbUadebJhia. tl; Colllnl, Cinctn-.tl,

·&amp;I; Clark, SoD i&gt;nulcla..,11.
RBI : HtDdrlck, SlJ..oalt, 71; Garvey, 1M
Amcekt. 74;.Carter, Meatreal, A; Schmidt,
Phlbodelpbll, IZ; Baker, Loo Aqeleo, II.
HITS: Templeloll, SLIAall; .1311; uaney,
Lot Angelet, 1'15; Headrkk. SLIAUI, 114;
K.Hel'D&amp;Ddel, St.Loall, lot; Cnlmartle:,
Mootrea1 1 185; Richardi, San ~0, 105.

DOUBLES: Roee; pbn
pNa, Jt;
KnlgbL Cbieluatl, 18; R. Het'11011de1,

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS - Waived CUrtll
defensive endj Eric Darby and
WUbert 11aslip, runninli bod&lt;s; AI Jellrl..
and CUrtb Antrum, delena!ve enda: Ed
'Lenagh ond Mark Iwanow!ki, Iicht endo;
.Bob Jahn, wide receiver; Kurtis Jaoker,
tackle; Rob Preston, quarterback; Stepllet1
Anderso~l

Rose,

defensive . back; Matt Loa&amp;,

-

-

•
,
·
•
:
t

linebacker. Placed Charlie Taylor, .,use .
retelver, ootheinjured reserve list,
•
DOLPHI:NS - Signed Bob Martin, ·
lin
r. Placed Steve Dovla, linebocbr, :

URGH STEELEHS -" .,
that Ken Fritz, center: Rick Jone, oftenlive .

lineman; and Ned ParriJh, linebacker, had ·

leltoamp.

'

SEA'IT!E SEAHAWRS - AnnounCed !hot ·
Bill Gregory; defensive Olld, haa agreed to 1
series o! cootracts ..tending throo&amp;b 1111. .
'•

RULE OF TilE THUMB
CHICAOO ( AP ) - Bruce Sutter,
the crack · relief • pitcher of the
Chicago Cubs and 1979 Cy YoWlg
Award' winner in the National
League, throws a pitch that has been
called. a refined version· of the

\.

forkball.
.
Sutter points out that his pitch Is
somewhat different, however, froin ·
the forkball that Elroy Face made
famous at Pittsburgh in' the 1~
.and 1960s. Sutter's delivery is called
a split-fingered fastball.
·

--BANK-ONE ..-· -.....

.

LEASING .·

·--EQUIPMENT

--TO BUSINESS. INDUSTRY.
. . .. .AND THE PROFESSIONS .
6F POMEROY: NA
614/992·2133 .. .
BANK Of:lE

..'

�•
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., '!'ueSday, July 22, I9110

• $.-.The Daily SenUnel, Middleport· Pomeroy, ell, Tu~sday, July 22, 1980

Legion squad
still alive

Opinions &amp;
Comments

.·U.S. manpower

\,

'

mobilization .

,.

'

While youths are registering for a possible w~e
draft, the Pentagon is moving to e;xpand voluntary enlist.ments in a reserve manpower pool that would be tapped
1 for combat strength early in a crisis. 'd.
hat th mili'tary
,
If it succeeds, the plan would proVl e w · e
.
'1 ··: calls "pre-trained" m~n to bring ~Y. regular, N!ltional
· Guard and reserve wuts to full wartime strength and to
I · provide replacements for:: combat casualties in th~ first
offighting.
.
.
I· months
So far the idea has been tested .on a very limited scale.
But offi~ials say they believe that, in a full-scale e~ort,
they can enroll as many as 10,000 young men a year direc.J tly into the Individual Ready Reserve.
. .
1
sinee they woul? have ~ompleted ~sic training, these
individual reserviSts would be available for overseas
deployment in a war much mor~ quickly than dr{lftees,
who are required by law to receive at least 12 weeks of
such training after induction.
While draft registration was reswning today, Congr~ss
would have topass separate legislation to actually remstitute the draft. ·
. .
.
.\
Young men would sign up for a six-year hitch~ the Individual Ready Reserve.
. .
.
. . .
After three months of peacetime active duty for baste
ttaiiling .they would spend the remaining five years and
I nine mo~ths at their nonnal civiliari pursuits; They would
1
be obligated to undergo two brief periods of refresher
training, but would not be required to drill regular~y as is
the case with members of the Guard and reserve wuts.
.i Some critics question whether this sparse training would
produce useful combat soldiers when needed;
·
"it's a lot better than having nobody to call when we
• need individual fillers and replacements in a crunch," said
I one Pentagon official who asked to remain anonymous.
I
The plan for expanded volun~ry enlistme~~ into the Individual Ready .Reserve carnes no proviSIOn f?r a~y
bonuses. So far as can be detennined, no other tangible m'1 centives are offered.
·
•
The Individual Ready Reserve, or manpower pool, has
shrunk from a peak of almost 1.6 million before the draft
ended in mid-1973. In those days, youths finishing two
years as conscripts were placed on the rea~y reserv~ .rolls
for an additional four years to complete a siX-year military
obligation.
,
Since the end of the Vietnam War, the armed forces have
t · been reduced substantially and men serve mininnqn
enlistments of ~ee years: This led to a steep drop in the
reserve manpower pool, which totaled only about 396,000 .
last October.
: ·.
Pentagon officials considered prop?sing a t'!o-y~ar extension of the six-year overall ~ta~ obli~at~o~ for
future recruits as one way of repleDIShing the mdividual
reserve pool. But they dropped the idea because, as one of.t ficial said, "it places the burden on those who've serv~."
So defense manpower specialists turned to other options,
including
a $600 bonus for re-e~W,ent in the ~ndividual
i
'• Ready Reserve by men whose obligation has expired.

I

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!.--------------,-------,
·! Berry's World
&gt;

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•'

George Bush: . the luckiest of losers

SYRACUSE - Action .continued · HQOd two singles, Eric J olmso.n a
Monday evening in the Syracuse Ut· single and James Keesee, a double. ·
tie League Tournament as the Mid· MiddleJiort broke the game wide
dleport Indians, Middleport Braves open In the third with six big nms led
and Glouster-Mathews Ins. posted by Wise's home run. Matt Thompson
victories.
was the Red hurler with nine
In the opening contest, Mid· strikeouts and four walks.
dleport's Indians handily defeated
Todd Pethel and Mike Wolfe
New Haven's Reds IG-4. Scott Gheen singled.
picked up the win with the aid of
In the second game, the Mid·
Brian Decker. They combiried for dleport Braves scored a very strong
six strikeouts but gave up 10 free 16-5 win ·over Pomeroy Powell's
passes while yielding only two hits.
Giants. Nick Bush wsa the winning
The hard·hittini! Indians collected hurler relieved by Jeff Nelson. They
eight hits ' led by Rick Wise with a fanned seven and walked five.
long home run and single, Steve
For the winriers Trey Cassell
Crow a home run ·and single, Jeff

TodJJy's commentary
a

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRE'IS
Pete Mackanin singled off Tippy
The perfect pitching staff in the Martinez in the lith inning while
American League these days would John Verhoeven scattered seven hits
have Steve Stone starting and Dan over 82-31nnings of relief for his first
Quisenberry finishing.
major league victory. The Orioles
Stone, who has become the ace of blew a 5-1 lead on Minnesota home
the Baltimore staff ahead of a couple runs by Ken Landreaux, Roy
of Cy Young winners, POSted his 13th Smalley and Hosken Powell. on and
consecutive triumph Monday night one outWhite Sox 1 tired Lamar
as the Orioles defeated the Min·. Johnson Chicago relief ace Ed Far·
nesota Twins 12-0 in the nightcap of a mer with a ·tie-breaking bases·
doubleheader after dropping the loaded sin,gle in the seventh inning
opener 11-7 in 11 innings.
and Dennis as 19.
Meaanwhile, Kansas City's
Ironically, Quisenberry was war·
Quisenberry took over the league ned before the game for fraternizing
lead with his 20th save as the Royals with Fanner.
edged the Chicago White Sox 2-1.
"I guess I might get fined," he
Elsewhere, the Milwaukee said. ."I was standing there talking
Brewers trlnuned the New York to him while the White Sox were
Yankees 7-4, the Detroit Tigers clob- taking bat AL lead over Farmer,
bered the California Angels 14-3, the ires sent a messenger to tell me to
Texas Rangers downed the Boston stop. I like Ed Fanner. I wasn't
thinking about taking the lead . in
Red Sox f&gt;-3, the Toronto Blue Jays
nipped the Oakland A's 1..0 and the saves.''
Brewers 7, Yankees 4
Seattle Mariners blanked the
Cleveland Indians 7..0.
Ben Ogilvie had three hits and
Stone blanked the Twins until the drove in three nms and Cecil Cooper
eighth iruting, when they scored five added four hits and an RBI to help
times, three on a double by Ron second·place Milwaukee reduce the
Jackson. By that time the Orioles
Yankees' lead in the AL East to 7t
had a lU lead as Dan Graham games, . Mike Caldwell beat the
drove in six nms with a grand slam Yankees for the eighth time in nine·
homer and a single and Eddie career decisions but lasted only five
Murray, who hit a solo homer in the innings before giving way to Bob
opener, added a three-run shot.
McClure. Milwaukee took a 3-0 first·
"It's tough to be a star In a
lniling iead .when Paul Molitor,
rotation that Includes a three-time
Robin Yount and Cooper. the first
three
batters, all singled, with
Cy Young winner in Jim Palmer and
~e Flanagan, who was last year's
Cooper's hit scoring Molitor. Oglivie
Cy Young winner," said Stone, who . scored Yount with a sacrifice fly and
hasn't lost since May 5. "At the start Sixto Lezcano tripled Cooper borne.
'tigers 14, Angels 3
of the season I was ticketed to be the
fifth starter. This. is absolutely the
Steve Kemp hit two homers and
best I've ever pitched."
drove in four runs, Richie Hebner hit
The Twins won the opener when
a three-run blast to cap a seven·run
John ~Uno, B11tch Wynegar and sixth Inning and Champ Swruners

Carter looking forward to economic recovery
•
The truth is that no turning point . week that the turnaroWld he S!lid he
has been reached, no matter how of· saw was far, far in the distance.
ten or how effective are attempts to
Almost contradicting himseU, be
sweeten the bitter facts.
forecast ."a slow, slow recovery."
The Carter administration isn't He placed the time of that recovery
the only one that bas sought to cover in "next year," which seems to be a
the evidence in a pile of hope.
forecast of conUnued recession this
Fresh in the memory, for exam· year.
pie, is the performance of Herbert
Stein, Schultze's counterpart in the
administration of Richard M. Nixon,
Those who are inunersed in this·
who month after mopth sought to recession should recall that when
compromise the political impact of the Cartet administration first conrising inflation by telling Americans ceded the likellbood of a recession
that the worst was now behind them. they were assured It would be brief
and mild. The president sald so.
And now that it is being suggested ·
It wasn't, of course, and It isn't to them that the worst is over they
now. Even Schultze, who, like Stein, should seek to separate economics
seeks to emphasize the pasitive in from politics. The economics are not
the mldst of disaster, conceded last that encouraging.

.I
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•··~

~ESS

IS

. ,.a~~T

-

LEVELEit
-~---&gt;-'·

.

'l\l

@ 1980 by NE~ . Int.

•

t

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I

(

tagged for a two-run homer by
Dwight Evans in the ninth .
Blue Jays 1, A's 0
Toronto's Dave Stieb pitched his
second consecutive shutout, a sevenhitter, and AI Woods hit a fifth·
inning home run . Stieb struck out
four in pitching his seventh con·
secutive complete game and his
fourth shutout.
Mariners 7, lndlaos 0
Tom Paciorek and Bruce Boehle
each drove in three nms to b3ck the
five-hit pitching of Glenn Abbott.
Boehle laced a run-scoring single in
Seattle's three-rWI first inning and
added a two-run double in the filth.
He also doubled in the third.
Paciorek contributed an RBI single
in the first and belted his 12th
homer. a two-run shot in the fifth .

Sports briefs.

• •

BASEBALL
and Wider.
NEW YORK (AP) - Pitcher Larry
McWilliams of the Atlanta Braves
TENNIS
was named the National League
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Martina
Player of the Week for pitching two · Navritalova beat Duk Hee Lee of
complete game victories during the
South Korea 6-1, 6-1 in her opening
week, beaUng New York 5-2 and• match of the $100,000 women's tennis
Philadelphia 3-2.
tournament in Richmond.
GOLF
In other matches: No. 8 seed Bar·
WATERLOO, Iowa fAP) - Laurie
bara Potter beat Kate Latham :Hl, 7Rinker of Stuart, Fla., fired a 1·
5, 6-2; No. 6 seed Terry Holladay
under·par 72 to lead the quatiliers at
beat Pettra Delbess of Switzerland
the Women's Western Golf
3-6, 6-4, 6-2 ; Stacy Margolin bell!
Association J unlor Tournament.
Peanut Louie 6-1, 6-4; Rosalyn Fair·
Joanne Pacillo·of Standford CaUl.,
bank of South Africa beat Leslie
was in second place at 75. Three
Allen Hi,'&amp;-3, 7-5; Mary Lou Piatek
golfers were tied at . 76: Sherri
.beat T~:ey Lewis6-l, 2-6,6-2, and Bt;t·
Steinhauer of Madison, Wis.; Nancy
sy Nagelsen beat Paula Smith 6-4, 6- ·
Ballard of Pontiac, Mich., and Nan·
1. ,
cy Ledbetter of Lake Zurich, lll,, In
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP ) - First·
the tournament 'tor golfers ages 17
seeded Susan Mascarln of Gross
Pointe Shores, Mich., beat Lauri~
Anne MacGill of Baltimore 6-2, 6-0 in
second,round action in the National
Girls 16s Clay Court tennis cham·
pionships.
NEW YORK (APJ - Two years
which leads the American League 'every year. Yet, the comparison Is
·· In other matches: second-seeded
ago, Ron Guidry was virtually in- East byllt games. "Guidry will pitch inescapable. Last season, he was 18Zina Garrison of Houston beat Ginny
vincible. His powerful left ann Friday. in Kansas City. 1'!11 not 8 with a league-best ERA of 2. 78, and
Dickinson of Winter Park, Fla ., 6-0,
worred about Guidry."
earned the New York Yankees to a
rriany thought it was an "off"
6- i; third-deeded Carol Heynen of
pennant and a world championship.
But the conce'nsus in the New York season.
•
Long Beach, Calif., beat Charlotte
Today, the 29-year-old Guidry is a clubhouse was that' .a soWld per·
"Everyone keeps asking me about
Haberstroh, of Salisbury, Md., 6-1,6troubled man despite a 1().6 record fonnance by Guidry over the final2t
1978," said Yankee pitching coach
1; Fourth-seeded Barbara Gerken of
· and 3.89 earned run average ..
montha of the season is vital to the Stan Williams, "and I wasn't hete In
Thousand Oaks, CaUl:, beat Alice
In his · last two starts for the team's chances of maintaining Its 1978. I don't know anything about
Reen, 7-6, 6-2; unseeded Mary DinYankees, Guidry bas allowed 20 hits .dominance in the AL East. ·
it."
neon of Winter Park toppled lithand 12 runs In nine Innings. Over his
"Let's face It," said Johnny Oates, · But Howser was a Yankee coach
seeded Linda Gatess of
last n ouUngs, the lithe lefty bas a :;.
who caught Guidry Sunday, "we that. season, wh~n the Yankees
Hillsborough, Calif. , 2-6, 7-ll, 8-6~ and
6 record and an ERA of4.92. His first need him to win it."
defeated the Boston Red Sox in a
Wlseed~d Amy Holton of Sarasota,
· nine games, by contrast, showed a 5In 1978, Guidry was 25-3 with a 1.74 one-game playoff
Fla., ousted ninth-seeded Laurie Mc0markanda2.78ERA.
ERA, leading the majors in vic- for the · AL East title. The man·
Neil of Houston 6-1,6-3.
"I think I know what the problem tories, shutouts, winning percentage
ager said, "It's not the slider he had
BOWLING
I
is," sald Guidry alter being knocked and ERA. He set a Yankee club in 178, II
tuCSON; Ariz: (AP) - Mike Aulby
out In the second 1nn1ng by Ka1198,'1 mark with 248 strikeouts and won
"We're going to look at some
brought his match play record to 2I·
City SWlday as the R.oyals1outed the the Cy Young Award.
slides and some films,' ' said
3 and cruised to the top-sla!ed
Yankees, 14-3. · He declliled to
During the closing stages of that Williams, " and see .what we can
position by, 599 pins going into the
season
- and In the time since - ~ find." Both Wi!Uams and Howser irrelaborate.
finals ' of the $85,000 Tucson Open.
New York Manager Dick Howser · Guidry repeatedly cautioned anyone · dicated that they think Guidry may
Aulby averaged 232 for 42 games.
has tried hjs best to minimize the who would listen against expecting be "overthrowing" or throwing too
Dennis Lane won the second seed
·~
problem and its impact on the team that kind of performance from him hard on his slider.
PoSition:

House could ·pick next Pres.i dent

Today in history. .

hit a solo homer in the ninth as the
Tigers routed California. Kemp
homered in the fourth inning and
delivered again with two runners on
base to wrap up a four-run fifth inning. Hebner connected off Dave
Lemanczyk, who was charged with
six of the seven runs in the sixth in·
ning, all of which were unearne&lt;j_as
a. result of a tw&lt;Hlut etror by shor·
tst~p Fred Patek.
Raogers 5, Red Sox 3
Jon Matlack and Danny Darwin
combined for a seven-bitter as the
Rangers rOde. a 14-hit attack and
pasted a three-game winning streak
for the first time since mid-April.
Matlack blanked Boston on two
singles for six innings before losing
his shutout bid on Carlton Fisk's 12th
homer in the seventh. Darwin was

Yankee ace, a troubled man

•

·r

.

-

&gt;
- ----. ··~-

...

--·~··

•• ••
•••

Sl.l.oak, ZS; Sleuu, New York, U; llelU,

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
Montreal .
Pittsburgh
Philadelphia

L

Houston
Los An@eles

~

39.
40

.562
.560

47

42

.$28

3

.183

7

ll

l7
51

.125

WEST
52 40

.565

Cincinnati
San Francisco
Atlanta

51
48
45
l2

San Diego

38

-

.~

:;o

. :rl

101&gt;

.

-

Headl1c., St.LoaiB, 2:1; ~, Moatreal, II;
Garvey, Lot Aqelet, JJ;: Babr, 1M

GrHiey. Cilldtmatl, I; Clarll; Su Fruetoco, ·

12

.516

II&gt;
II&gt;

.489

7

.402
.413

91&gt;
ll

.Mil

42

e

TRIPLES: LeF.ore, Molltreal, I;
o.MctrenO, ~ttlbargb, 7; LaldetUJ',
H'""loa, 7; R.S.OU, Mealnol, I; Me-,
Pbladelpblo, I; Templellll, SLI-, I; .

GB

50
51

«

New York:
St. Louis
Chicago

51.~23.

Pet.

47
lll
&amp;4

Monday's Games

SoD Diego, II.
. PITCHING II lloc;ll-)o Bibby, J'D.

San Francisco 0, Chicago 0, 12 innings ,
game suspended

Mootreal8, AUanta6
CinCinnati 5, Philadelphia 4

Houshm 3, New York :z
St.Louis 5, Los Angeles 2
Tuesday's Games
San. Franciaco at Chicago, completion of
:"~uspended

game

San Francisco (BordJey

2-0 )

at Chicago

(l..amp~).scheduledgame

.

.

.

(Solo :14). (nl

New· York (Pacella

3-0)

(J.Niekru IIHI), (n)
Los Angeles
(n)

IIborlb. 11·1. .tl7, 3.10; G.Jo~ J'D.
tlbor~b
, 1-%,
.IM, 2.15; Carltoa,
Phlbo
, 15-l, .711, Z.ll; - . , C.
~ ·!, :m, Ul; Sa&amp;WI, 1M .u,e~e~, 72, ~om. tu; ae., ~ AJ~adel, 1w, ..,.,
1.6; llootoo. Loo Aqdeo, H, .711, I.IZ;
Rlcllanl, Hoootoo,IH, .714,1.".
: Carltu.. P'C ~
..... Ill; 1!,.., _...,
Ill; Blyle1eo. PlttobarP, lfl; P.NINr9,

~~-

.

at Houston

(Sutton 7·2) at St.Louis (Kaat

. Plttaburg)l (Bibby IJ.l) at san Diego
(Lucas:h'i) , In I
.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W

Milwaukee

51
_, 48
49

Detroit
Baltimore

32

..o·

Pet.
GB
.644 .561
.558
.537

311
l2

46 «
41 47
39 II
WEST
56 36

Bostoo
Cleveland
Toronto
Kansas City

Tens

L

58

·

45

46

43

lll
lll

«

08ltland .
Minnesota

7'ril
8
91&gt;

AMERICAN LEAGUE

BATTING (225 at bata)o Cooper,
Milwaukee, .352; Wilaon, Kanau City, .331;
Dilone, Cleveland, .335; B.Bellt Tau, .331;
Oglivie, Milwaukee, .3216.
RUNS' Wilson, Ra"""' Cily, '15; Y-~
Mil}VP.ukee, 73; Willi, 'i'eu~, ";Trammell,
Detroit, $7; Bumbry, Baltimore, II.
RBI: Re.J~, New York, '13; Oliftl',
Tex.as, 72; Oglivie, Milwaukee, 71; Pera,
a..ton, 70; Hebner, lletn&gt;R, 811; Cooper,
Milwaukee, IMi; Anil.u,Oakland.IS.
HITS ' Wilson, Ransu CRy, 137; Cooper,
MUw8ulet!, 121; · Riven, Texas; 120; Bumbry,Baltlmore,l14; Burlesoo,Balton,llO. ·
DOUBLES: Yo.u nt, Milwaukee, 28;
Morrison, Chicago, 28; ~cRae. Kanau City,

23; D.Garcla, Tgronto, 22; Bochte, Seattle,
22; Oliver, Texas, %2.
TRIPLESo Griffin, Torooto,. 8; Wlloon,
KaniU City, 8; Bwnhcy, Balt!mcre, 7;

.609
.484
.473

.voant, Milwaukee, 7; Wash.fnBton,

12~

.467

13

-

10~

.451 14~
ll 00
38 53
.115 171&gt;
33 57
.387 Z!
Monday'8Games
Minne:lola lh\, BalUrnor&lt; 7·12, 1st game 11

Texas5, Boston 3

.....

.511 . 12
.466 IJl
.«.!'' Ul

Chicago
Seattle ·
California

iflnint!!

I

Adu.ta, 113.

~I.

New York

'
.
HOME RUNS! Sdmildt, phl.......ta, II;

Aqeleo, 19.
. ·
lll'OLEN BA!IESo LeFlore, -m.l, 17;
O.MoreDOJ Plttabaqla. U; ~ ClaciDDatl, 10; a.s..u. M..,~rto~, 15; - ·

Mo,ltreal(Lee :14) at Atlanta IP .Nlekro 7·

Oriole ace records 13th straight win

•• •••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

Philadelphia (Carlton IH) at C'"cumati

'

Take unemployment, for example.
Courtenay Slater, chief eConomist ot
the Commerce Qepartment, expects
that joblessness could rise to as
much as 8.5 percent to 9 percent
from recent levels of j~ under 8
percent.
And in inflation. One of the most
discouraging aspects of the latest
quarterly report is .that during the
second-quarter economic collapse,
the rate of price increases rose in·
stead of declining, as expected.

slatruned a borne run and single,
Glouster's one run lead, then
Shawn Baker also a home run and . Glouster iced the win with a five run
fourth inning.
single. Nick Bilsh two. singles, Don·
Pitchirig ace Cbuckie Davis was
nie Becker a single and double, and
again impressive in picking up the
Tim Cassell a double. .
A nine run third inning broke the
win with 14 strike outs and two
somewhat close game wide open as
walks. Davis gave up only three hits
the Braves rolled on ; to victory. with another excellent outing.
Brian Kom was the Pomeroy pit· Mecwn doubled and singled, Evan
cher with eight strike outs and five
Smith tripled and singled, Davis a
walks. Kom had two triples, James double and triple, Robbie Wilson a
Nonnan a double, and Gerald MOQre home run and single. Scott Wickline
a single.
·.
suffered the loss, relieved by Jay
The evening came to a close with Bostick. They fanned 12 and wal)!ed
Glouster dwnping Racine H. A four seven. Tracy Cleland, Matt Jewell,
run . third inning .pvercame and Brian Diehl singled for Racine.

.

ho111e run. Chock Norris had a hoD!e
run for McArth\lf.
·
Meigsthen.beat New Lexington lf4 after It broke the gl!llle open In tile
first when King walked, Little
doubled, Wolle singled, Fields
singled and Foglestrom cam;e
through with a siitgle. .·
· ;
Roger Kovalchik picked up tbe
win. Wolfe banged three single&amp;,
King two .singles, Little a doubl~,
Fields a triple and double, Brown a
single, double and triple. Kennedy,
Rogie Gaul, and Ko~alchik eac)l
singled. Chuvalas doutiled for New.
Lexington.
.
Meigs plays Wellston 111 5:30 p.m.
Friday night at the West State field.
Meigs must stay alive arid win
every game in hopes of winning the
tournament. In the winilers' bracket
Athens plays Lan~r at 5:30p.m.
on the Athens high schoollield.

•••
•• ••
•••••

12), (n)

Business mirror

"I think the reces8ion will slow down
shortly and will turn around."
The impresilion left by these subjective views is that the worst of the
country's economic troubles are
· behind it when, in fact, the worst
may still be ahead.

Wayland, Phil King, Kent Wolfe, and Cliff Kennedy. Back row, Coach
George Nesselroad, Greg Wigal, Tom Owens, Jerry F1elds, Kenny
Brown, Art ("oglestrom, Steve Little, Bob Foster: Randy Murray, Te':'fY
Wayland, and Coach Homer Smith. Absent from p1cture were CoachMike
Neselroad and scorekeeper Allen Stobart who are both very act1ve m the
Legion program.
·

W

DETROIT (AP) - George Bush obliquely in his climactic speech to
presidential nomination In 1984:
servative enough, and they object to
ha$ to be one of the luckiest. loser8 the . Republican National Con·
Should the Republicans lose this · his ties to the northeastern GOP
ever.
vention:
·time, Bush almost surely would run establlshment.
He lost a two-year campaign for
"There are those who question the . again for the nomination four years
the Republican presidential
way we choose a president, who say
hence, in what probably would be a
Bush was the last survivor among
nomination, bu~ he's suddenly in bet· that our process impases difficult
wide-open rae!\.
•
seven Republicans who contested
ter shape than any other prospect to and exhausting burdens on those
At s!i, Bush bas plenty of political Reagan for the nomination. He was
claim it another year.
who seek the office. I have notfourtd mileage ahead of him.
the only · one among them who
That's what irks the critics, and
it SO. II •
So ardent conservatives, groups managed to defeat the former
would-be rivals, who didn't want
Catilornia governor during the
him on Ronald Reagan's ticket For
presidential primary election
as the 1980 R~publican vice
season, and that didn't happen often.
presidential nominee, Bush is going
He was out of the running by
to be a formidable figure in GOP
Memorial Day and pled~ed his suppresidential campaigns for years to
. port to Reagan.
come.
The Republican primary election
Reagan is 69 years old and will be
His health is fine, and he has
like Young Americans for Freedom score reads like a one-sided football
70 shortly after the next president is • shown ~hat he can campaign as
and the Fund for
Conservative
game: Reagan30, Bush6.
Inaugurated. ~e's the oldest man 'aggri!SSively - and more sueMajority, already are saying they'll
But Bush won his points in states
ever to wm maJor-party nonuna~on · cessfully - than far younger .rivals.
do what they can to block Bush in · the Reagan ticket badly needs,
for the White House. The late Dwight . Bush was one of them.
1984 or 1988.
states like PeMSylvania, Michigan,
D. Eiseooower was 66 when he won
Still, if Reagan is elected, he
Despite a generally c.onservative
Connecticut and Massachusetts.
re-election.
.
might choose to make his a one-term
record, and a finn pledge to support That's the kind of territory in which
Agehasn'lbeenasignificantissue 'presidency. Andas the b«ltom haif
the conservative Republican plat· he is to be campaign point man for
In the Reagan . campaign. Th.e of a winning ticket, Bush would be
form, Bilsh is suspect to the hard the ticket: the NO\'Iheast and the uppresidential nommee addressed It the top prospe&lt;;t for the R\!publlcan
right. They don't think he's con- per Midwest.

NEW YORK (AP) -Some of the
same people whose policies brought
us an Wlexpectedly severe recession
are now trying to convince us that
the worst is over.
CiUng a partial recovery of a huge
loss in housing starts - one tlu)t still
leaves that indilstry in a depression
- President Carter said be is
looking forward to economic
recovery.
And simultaneously with news
that the gross national prOduct
shrank at an almost unprecedented
annual rate of 9.1 percent in the
April..June quarter, the president's
chief economic adviser forecast a
turnabout.
Charles L. Schultze, uhairman of
the CoWlcil of Economic Advisers,
said in the midst of the bad news that

ATHENS - After suffering first
round.IOSll to Athe.ns Friday, Meigs• ·
American Legion squad boWlded
back to post a couple of wins In
district. eight competition. Friday
Meigs lost a )().9 heartbreaker in. ex·
tra innings. Bush picked up the win
for Athens, while Kenny Brown,
going all the way, suffered the loss.
In Saturday's first game, Meigs
defeated McArthur 9-4 in the double
elimination tournamenf. Chock
Norris was the losing hurler while
Oney relieved in the fourth. ·
Meigs broke the game wide open ·
in the third when Kent Wolfe walked,
stole second then rode home with
Brown on Art Foglestrom's single.
Cliff Kennedy then tripled and
scored on an error. Steve Little led
Meigs with two singles, while Jerry
Fields hit a tremendous shot for a

·--~

Three more teams ousted from torirne

WASHINGTON (AP) - In this
With an eye to the possibility of the
ways to win - or retain, In the case In the House goes on to the White
period between the Republican and election going to the House, both the
of the Democrats- majority control House;
Democratic conventions, political Democratic, an!! Republican parties of26 state delegations in the House.
In the current Congress,
strategists oil Capitol Hill are begin- are developing strategies for the
For, unlike a bill that requires 11 Democrats control 29 House
ning to ponder seriously the prospect I980 congressional elections.
simple majority of those voting a\ delegations and the RepubliC8111 ·
that the ~ext president may be
The Congress sea ted .. next the lime in the 435-member House, control 12. The remaining nine are
chosen by the House of Represen· January, not the present one, would each state gets to cast only a single equally divided.
tatives.
be the one that would decide vote when it comes to picking a
So the congressmen from singleWith three candidates expected to following the meeting of the Elecpresident.
member states like Delaware, Ver·
be llsted on most state ballots in · !oral College In early January.
Thus, whichever candidate among mont and Wyoming individually
November, all it would take to
.Both parties are trying to map
the top three finishers gets 26 votes • . would bave as much clout as, for Inbypass the Electoral College ·and
- - - - - - - - ' - - - ' - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - stance, the 42 members from
' tass the election into the House
California.
.• would be for none of the three to
Even if they fall to win majority
receive 50 percent of the electoral
control
of the Holise, Republicans
vote.
·
•
r
•
could
gain
control of a maj :rity of
And.the stronger independent canToday is Tuesday, July· 22, the and killed the notorious John state delegations by pi~ up .28
didate Rep. John Anderson, R·Ill.,
204th day of 1980. There are 162 days · Dillinger. ·
. carefully targeted seats.
' 1
gets in the polls, the greater seern8
Ten years ago, floods in India
left in the year.
..,
There
are
now
27fi.
Democrats
and
the likelihood of this happening.
swept more than 500 Hindu pilgrims 179 Republicans In the House, with
Today's highlight in history:
House and Senate leaders, who
On
July 22, 1933, Wiley Post com- ~ Into a river In the Himalayan one vacancy. So picking up those 28
have .seen Congress nearly
'
pleted · . the · first niund·the-world fOQthills.
apecif.ied seats could .be · acparalyzed in recent times by com.Five years ago, Robert E. Lee . compllshed with Republicans,;
flight in his plane, the Winnie May.
paratively simple energy and
poStwnously won his final skinnish remalnlng the minority party,
On th!s date:
economic bills, shudder at the
In 1798, French forces under of the Civil War when Congress
But that's just the beg!nnlng. The
thought of having the weight .of such Napoleon Bonaparte were oc- voted to'restore his citizenship.
Senate
gets to pick the vice
presi!lential and vice presidential cupying the Egyptian city of Cairo.
Last year, Israeli planes bombed president from ~e top two finl$ers ·
decisions on their shoulders. ,
In 1812, English .~oops under the · three .Lebanese towns and 15 people by simple majority vote. And the
And the political fireworks that , . Dul&lt;e of Wellinglon defeated the
were reported kill~. ·
. .
.vice president would become acting
would .be set off would more than Frerich at the battl'e of Salamanca in
Tod!ly's birthday: Rose Kennecjy, presid~nt in the event that none of
make liP for any lack of drama at Spain.
· mother of the late President John F. the three contenda-s gets 26 votes In
llils sununer's political conventions.
Keniledy, is 90.
In 1934, f'.BI agents in Chicago shot
the House~- _

•

II

· STILL IN Rl.JNNING - Meigs' American Legion baseball team
despite an opening loss last Friday to Athens remains alive in the Legion
tournament after weekend victories over McArthur and New Lexington.
Meigs will battle Wellston at 5:30 p.m. Friday at West State Field in
Athens. Team members are, front row, left to right, Roger Kovalchik,
Nick Leonard, Jr., John Beaver, Rogie Gaul, .Joe Bob Hemsley, Jeff

·

I

I

..

'

.

.

.

Milwaukee 7, New York 4
Kansas City 2, Chl.cago 1
Detroit 14, California 3
Toronlo I, Oakland 0
Seattle 7, ClevelandO
Tuesday's Gamea
Milwaukee (Travers 9-4 and Soremen 7-:1)
atNe,-:York: (John 14-Jand M.ay7-4), 2
Texas {Perry ~71 at Boston (1~udor 3-1),

(nJ
Baltimore (Flanagan H ) at Minnesota
(Erickaon:H ), (n )
Chicago (Trout 1-101 at Kansas City

City,7.

!lOME RUNS: Re.jactJoo, New York, •;
Oglivie,Mllwautee, 24;; ,t.nnas, Oakland,U;
Thomas. Milwaukee, Ul; Mayben'y, TOI'GOlo,l7._
~ .....
STOLEN BASESo HendenQn, ~ ...
43; Wilson, KansU City, U; ~one,
aeveland, 31; Wllla, Texas, rt; J.Crui,SeatUe,?S.
PlTCHING (9 DeclsiON)o Darwin, T - .
B-1, .889, 2.30; Stone, Baltimore, 15-3, .IS3,
3.19; John, New York, 14-3. 824, 2.Di Corbett. Mlnnesola, 7-2, .'1'18, l.IH; Gura,
City, l:H, .750. 2.011; Hainey, - · w.
:rn, us; Lopez, Detroit, 1-3, :100, Ut;
Trayers, Milwaukee, 9-4, .5!11, 2.&amp;5.
.
STRIKEOUTS: Guidry, New YOI1t, 107;
M.N~ Oakland 103; Haas, MUwaube1
91; KeOugh, Oaltland,90; F.BaMlster,Seat--

a-

Ue,89.

Moadl)''tSportl~

i Busby~J.In)

Detroit (Morris 11~) at CaWornia (Knapp
2·71, (n)
Toronto (Mirabella 4-8 and Jelferson U)
at Oakland (Norris IU and Keough •o-9 ), 2,

~

.

BASEBAlL
NoUoaal Leope

Texasat Boston, {n)
Milwaukee at New York, (n)

ST. LOUIS CARDINAUi - Plaoed Bobby
Bonds, outfielder on the liklay dlaabled llot.
Called up Terry Landnon from the
Sprirudleld Redbirds of the. American
Assoclatlon.
·
BASKETBALL
NoUoaaiBul&lt;elllollAIIodoLOS ANGELES !..AKERS- Slaned Bodo~!
Carter, guard-forward, to a mulfl..year eon-

Chicago at Kansas City, (n)
Baltimore at Minnesota, (n)
Detroit at California, In )
' Cleveland at Seattle, (n)

FOOTIIAlJ. .
Natklul Foutt.II Leq1ae
BUFFALO . BILLS - Waived WUUe

(n)

Cleveland (Barker

~7)

at Seattle (Ban-

rlister&amp;-7), (n)
Wednesday'sGames

Toronto at Oakland

tract.

Parker, center.

TODAY.'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONALLEAGUE
•

BATTING (225 at ball): Trillo,
Pblladejpi,IO, .333; R.Smllb, Loo Aqeleo,
329· Heodrtcll; SLLoula, .:JZ$; Temple!oa,
St. Louts; .S%4; K.Hellla;ld~. SLLoull, .318.
RUNS: LeFlore, Mootreal,l3; Templetou,

St.Leull, "83; K. Heruaodn, St.Loull, tz;
Rclle, PbUadebJhia. tl; Colllnl, Cinctn-.tl,

·&amp;I; Clark, SoD i&gt;nulcla..,11.
RBI : HtDdrlck, SlJ..oalt, 71; Garvey, 1M
Amcekt. 74;.Carter, Meatreal, A; Schmidt,
Phlbodelpbll, IZ; Baker, Loo Aqeleo, II.
HITS: Templeloll, SLIAall; .1311; uaney,
Lot Angelet, 1'15; Headrkk. SLIAUI, 114;
K.Hel'D&amp;Ddel, St.Loall, lot; Cnlmartle:,
Mootrea1 1 185; Richardi, San ~0, 105.

DOUBLES: Roee; pbn
pNa, Jt;
KnlgbL Cbieluatl, 18; R. Het'11011de1,

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS - Waived CUrtll
defensive endj Eric Darby and
WUbert 11aslip, runninli bod&lt;s; AI Jellrl..
and CUrtb Antrum, delena!ve enda: Ed
'Lenagh ond Mark Iwanow!ki, Iicht endo;
.Bob Jahn, wide receiver; Kurtis Jaoker,
tackle; Rob Preston, quarterback; Stepllet1
Anderso~l

Rose,

defensive . back; Matt Loa&amp;,

-

-

•
,
·
•
:
t

linebacker. Placed Charlie Taylor, .,use .
retelver, ootheinjured reserve list,
•
DOLPHI:NS - Signed Bob Martin, ·
lin
r. Placed Steve Dovla, linebocbr, :

URGH STEELEHS -" .,
that Ken Fritz, center: Rick Jone, oftenlive .

lineman; and Ned ParriJh, linebacker, had ·

leltoamp.

'

SEA'IT!E SEAHAWRS - AnnounCed !hot ·
Bill Gregory; defensive Olld, haa agreed to 1
series o! cootracts ..tending throo&amp;b 1111. .
'•

RULE OF TilE THUMB
CHICAOO ( AP ) - Bruce Sutter,
the crack · relief • pitcher of the
Chicago Cubs and 1979 Cy YoWlg
Award' winner in the National
League, throws a pitch that has been
called. a refined version· of the

\.

forkball.
.
Sutter points out that his pitch Is
somewhat different, however, froin ·
the forkball that Elroy Face made
famous at Pittsburgh in' the 1~
.and 1960s. Sutter's delivery is called
a split-fingered fastball.
·

--BANK-ONE ..-· -.....

.

LEASING .·

·--EQUIPMENT

--TO BUSINESS. INDUSTRY.
. . .. .AND THE PROFESSIONS .
6F POMEROY: NA
614/992·2133 .. .
BANK Of:lE

..'

�.

4.- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.,

WED. THRU SAT. SALE

OPEN DAILY 10·9; SUNDAY 1·6
Out Hrm lntfftllon 11 to h..,. eve-ry

l

ldveriiHclltern In ttock on our 1Mive1.

II an IIChtriiMd 1'-rn 11 notewaU1ble for

purcn... di.Je to an~ untorHHn
rueon, It m1rt wm tMue 1 Rtln Cheek
on reqwat tor the. merchandM to be
purchaMd al th• •&amp;II pdce Wheneftf
nal..blt or will HM you 1 compar1ba.

K mart ®'KM78'

4-Piy ·Polyester .Cord
Whitewall Tires

quality lltm 1t 1 compareble rHuctlon

.W. price. Our policy It to give our
CUllom.,_ uU UtfKtlon

..

Our Reg . 37 .76
A78xl3

2876

P-lu s 1.62
F.E.T. Ea.
·7 multi-s iped
tread ribs, '78 series tread design .

$~Our
Reg .
.t} 4.96

3~~4.96

Wide-sweep
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Knit Fashion
Slip-Ons

Trousseau-qua I ity
wide -sweep nylon
gowns in moonbeam
colors . 1 size fits all.

Fash ion necklines
in solid colors or
patterns. Aery I ic
knit.
S-M-L.

8

Reg .

6.96

-.Men's Jeans
With Fortrel"*

Men's Ban-Lon"*
Sport Shirts

Our Cha ll enger'"
jeans of pre washed Celanese •
Fortrel"• polyes·ter/
cottan .
r~~~~iii
® 'fortrel h a••'ll · TM offlbe&lt; lndu•trlfl ,

Bon-Lon" • knit
shirts of Mon sonto " nylon .
Popu lar. V -plack et collar.Sove.

9988

44~

J0.

&gt;IDaysOnly

Gas-powered XL" 12" Chain Saw

Pkg .
80 Plates
· SO Cups
9" . white po - Pla stic foam ,
per plates.
6 .4-oz. size

• Black &amp;.Decker" 5%" Circular Saw

Lightweight saw with 12" cutting bar.

Double insulated. designed for home use.

SAVE

96
Ou412.96

I

-----

Woven Slacks

1

Stretch
act ion _
100% polyester.
popular colors.
SAVE $4

@' hnlon Marketin g Corp
TM

t._.

tublld lory of Celonete Cc;~rp.

58(,

94~
100' Wrap
Clear plastic
freezer wrap.

$SOur

$90urReg .
-10.97

Our Re_g. 1.68

.97-.·-.

97

13!r~g.
16.
6
6
Arrow• Heavy-duty Staple Gun

Our 2.97

40 Trash Can Linets

.7 mil plastic 2ft. 6" x 3ft. liners.

_____-_
.

-

-

~-

J9o!!g.26.97

Uses a range of staple sizes. Save.

Solldox" SOOO Welding Torch Kit
Deluxe kit brazes, welds , cuts, solders .
SERVICES INCLUDE:

1. Align front end
2. K mart safety

6!!eg.

I

~.97

.

"Pre-washed"
Teen'" Jeans

8.97

Westem-style
Teen'" Shirts

Front Alignment

Our 7.97·8.97 ,
Boys' Reg . . Slim,
Husky Sizes, $6
Our 6.47, Junior
Boys' 4-7 Regular
or Slim ...... $5

Carry-out Price

Heavy-Duty Shock

For many U.S. cars. For many U.S. cars .

Pre-washed -look
polyesterl cotton . _

Plaid polyester I
cotton shirts .
Our7.97, Boys'
Sizes .. ; ... 5.88
Our 6.97, Jr.
Boys' 4·7, 4.88

50

14~!Price 5!?

$70urReg .

6

66Sove$4
Flat
Our 10.66Gol.

234~!s0nly

1~6Sove$4

Semi -gloss
Our 11.66Gol.

8· Yr .Interior Latex Wall Paint
Flat or semi -glo~s in white, cu~tom tints .

• Kodak" Handle 2 Instant Camera

Our 12.77Ga[.,..

Save $4
. Gloss
,.,, ___ 12.77 Gal.

11
.

8· Yr. Exterior Latex House Paint
Flat finish or gloss house and trim point .

Fixed -locus lens and exposure control.

our14.77

.

Gloss AlkYd House &amp; Trim Paint

5 year duraoillty, use on exterior wood,
.meta l, masonry .

Our Reg .

10.96-11 .96

Installation and
additional parts
at extra c;ost

Fashion Blouses
Soft 'polyester blouses with flip tie ,
delicate ly embroidered . Neutral
shades in misses' sizes.

·•

3ll!~Only
AC/DC*CasseHe Recorder/ AM/FM

Portable Color Television Set

Radio with push-button cassette recorder .
' lattarl•• nallndwdacl

Our
Reg.

6~~s

9v!~hoice
• Steam I Dry Iron Or Toast"r

4 Days Ony,
Take-.with Price

Our Reg . 5. 97

Lil' Oscar• 2-gal. Picnic Cooler

First Aid Kit For Sportsmen

Polyethylene case , dr ink hold e r in lid.

Assorted first aid ite ms .

Sold In Sporting Goods Dept .

10W40 or 10W30 oil.

For many U.S. cars.

Marine ri Swim Goods
lnd~ •

lngrahm

l~~ze-4
Savel Protec:tlve Mattress Pads
Days

5&amp;!ays0nly

4-Roll Pkg. Bathroom nssue
5&lt;!0, 1 ply 4112x4112" sheets per roll. Save .

3

.

88 . -~

Our Reg . 5-4.88-Save 14.91

3-Persan Nylon Camping Tent

Your Choice - Our 5.27-5 ,97

5' center , 7x7' floor plus screen door .

Save On Brand Name Alarm Clocks

Eviilution Fabric. polyester tilted, elasTic
band.

•

'htmg acCSII'ies,

Jilit~ oatS, vinyl boals,

I!~Reg.

sw1m fins, Ntes, masks.
SHi)p HeM·AND SAVE!

2.77

12· VSealed Beams
Upper or lower.
6014 HI/ Lo Beams 2.27

Choice of hand -w ind or electric styles .

13!~9. 88
Digital Clock.

Easy installation .

7'h
Oz.•

1SCope
~~3.27
40 oz. mouthwash
and gargle.

.
Cafeteria Special

Tune-Up Kits

Ollr
Reg. Price
.:.,,...

Misses' Skirts

Wed.-Thurs.-

Arrestor'" Muffler
Many U.S. cars , tr ucks.

:20% OFF

Limit 2
Pkgs .

14.96·
18.96

Styli sh sk irts in popular wool
blends.' Pleated . wraps , A-lin es
ana more! In solids or plaids.
•Wool/acrylic/polyester/other Fabrics

Kmart• Motor Oil

Sold In Sporting Goods Dopt.

29-vent iron . Automatic 2' s lice toaster.

linytron Plus" system for reliable color.
C1385. With Remote Control ....• $368

Kmart• Air Filter
Sizes for many cars.

,7
1

,J,

Llmlt2

Your Choice
• Head &amp; ShoUlders•
11 -o•.• lotion or
7-az ... tube. Save. ·

J?!ys
w.u.~ w m
16-az. • instant
hair conditioner.

..

J56

4 Days
1 DO lxcedrtn•
Extra strength to
. help relieve pain.

84~DAYS
7 oz. Crest
Toothpaste
fluristan.

with

1-Lb. • Con
Our Reg . 1.57

Sliced Bacon

844!ays
vo~ s ·

Celebrity" imported
from Hungary .

Hair Spray

8-oz .• reaular -or
unscente spray .
. ,.. o:&amp;.

tl.,¢~~;

7tJ

Pkg.
3-Pkg. Dishcloths
Polyester / cotton.
Each 12x14" size.

"Net ... .

•"

ou,
1.07 ,.
Pair
Mtn'1 Crew Socb
Orion• ocryllc / ny·
Fit 10-13.
®.......... .

~'B
12-oz. • sprayer
or 24-oz. • refill.

.......

.

-

- -

son. Pack of 2.

DINNER

--

--

ROLL &amp; BUTIER, SMALL COKE.

-'

$99

• AM/ FM Selector

Our Reg .
128.88

• Tone Control

• Local/ Distance

AM/FM/B·Tr. lndash e 5 AM/ FM Pushbutton•
For many cars. Save!

J!~eg.2.72
Insect IIIIer
Automatic in door room logger .

.......

'

DELICIOUS MEAT WAF WITH CREAMY WHIPPED
POTATOES, RICH BEEF GRAVY, -8U.TI'ERED VEGETABLE,

Reg.
1.12 .

·
- ·without
Tl'lpS pol Kills

Friday-Saturday

MEAT LOAF -

fOur

• Stereo Light

SAVE 29.88

Cafeteria Special

J97

FISH
PLATTER

TASTY FISH FILLET WITH TARTAR SAUCE, FRENCH FRIES,
I

CRISP COLE SlAW, ROllS AND BUTTER, SMALL COKE
TASTE TEMPTING!

'·'

�.

4.- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.,

WED. THRU SAT. SALE

OPEN DAILY 10·9; SUNDAY 1·6
Out Hrm lntfftllon 11 to h..,. eve-ry

l

ldveriiHclltern In ttock on our 1Mive1.

II an IIChtriiMd 1'-rn 11 notewaU1ble for

purcn... di.Je to an~ untorHHn
rueon, It m1rt wm tMue 1 Rtln Cheek
on reqwat tor the. merchandM to be
purchaMd al th• •&amp;II pdce Wheneftf
nal..blt or will HM you 1 compar1ba.

K mart ®'KM78'

4-Piy ·Polyester .Cord
Whitewall Tires

quality lltm 1t 1 compareble rHuctlon

.W. price. Our policy It to give our
CUllom.,_ uU UtfKtlon

..

Our Reg . 37 .76
A78xl3

2876

P-lu s 1.62
F.E.T. Ea.
·7 multi-s iped
tread ribs, '78 series tread design .

$~Our
Reg .
.t} 4.96

3~~4.96

Wide-sweep
Waltz Gowns

Knit Fashion
Slip-Ons

Trousseau-qua I ity
wide -sweep nylon
gowns in moonbeam
colors . 1 size fits all.

Fash ion necklines
in solid colors or
patterns. Aery I ic
knit.
S-M-L.

8

Reg .

6.96

-.Men's Jeans
With Fortrel"*

Men's Ban-Lon"*
Sport Shirts

Our Cha ll enger'"
jeans of pre washed Celanese •
Fortrel"• polyes·ter/
cottan .
r~~~~iii
® 'fortrel h a••'ll · TM offlbe&lt; lndu•trlfl ,

Bon-Lon" • knit
shirts of Mon sonto " nylon .
Popu lar. V -plack et collar.Sove.

9988

44~

J0.

&gt;IDaysOnly

Gas-powered XL" 12" Chain Saw

Pkg .
80 Plates
· SO Cups
9" . white po - Pla stic foam ,
per plates.
6 .4-oz. size

• Black &amp;.Decker" 5%" Circular Saw

Lightweight saw with 12" cutting bar.

Double insulated. designed for home use.

SAVE

96
Ou412.96

I

-----

Woven Slacks

1

Stretch
act ion _
100% polyester.
popular colors.
SAVE $4

@' hnlon Marketin g Corp
TM

t._.

tublld lory of Celonete Cc;~rp.

58(,

94~
100' Wrap
Clear plastic
freezer wrap.

$SOur

$90urReg .
-10.97

Our Re_g. 1.68

.97-.·-.

97

13!r~g.
16.
6
6
Arrow• Heavy-duty Staple Gun

Our 2.97

40 Trash Can Linets

.7 mil plastic 2ft. 6" x 3ft. liners.

_____-_
.

-

-

~-

J9o!!g.26.97

Uses a range of staple sizes. Save.

Solldox" SOOO Welding Torch Kit
Deluxe kit brazes, welds , cuts, solders .
SERVICES INCLUDE:

1. Align front end
2. K mart safety

6!!eg.

I

~.97

.

"Pre-washed"
Teen'" Jeans

8.97

Westem-style
Teen'" Shirts

Front Alignment

Our 7.97·8.97 ,
Boys' Reg . . Slim,
Husky Sizes, $6
Our 6.47, Junior
Boys' 4-7 Regular
or Slim ...... $5

Carry-out Price

Heavy-Duty Shock

For many U.S. cars. For many U.S. cars .

Pre-washed -look
polyesterl cotton . _

Plaid polyester I
cotton shirts .
Our7.97, Boys'
Sizes .. ; ... 5.88
Our 6.97, Jr.
Boys' 4·7, 4.88

50

14~!Price 5!?

$70urReg .

6

66Sove$4
Flat
Our 10.66Gol.

234~!s0nly

1~6Sove$4

Semi -gloss
Our 11.66Gol.

8· Yr .Interior Latex Wall Paint
Flat or semi -glo~s in white, cu~tom tints .

• Kodak" Handle 2 Instant Camera

Our 12.77Ga[.,..

Save $4
. Gloss
,.,, ___ 12.77 Gal.

11
.

8· Yr. Exterior Latex House Paint
Flat finish or gloss house and trim point .

Fixed -locus lens and exposure control.

our14.77

.

Gloss AlkYd House &amp; Trim Paint

5 year duraoillty, use on exterior wood,
.meta l, masonry .

Our Reg .

10.96-11 .96

Installation and
additional parts
at extra c;ost

Fashion Blouses
Soft 'polyester blouses with flip tie ,
delicate ly embroidered . Neutral
shades in misses' sizes.

·•

3ll!~Only
AC/DC*CasseHe Recorder/ AM/FM

Portable Color Television Set

Radio with push-button cassette recorder .
' lattarl•• nallndwdacl

Our
Reg.

6~~s

9v!~hoice
• Steam I Dry Iron Or Toast"r

4 Days Ony,
Take-.with Price

Our Reg . 5. 97

Lil' Oscar• 2-gal. Picnic Cooler

First Aid Kit For Sportsmen

Polyethylene case , dr ink hold e r in lid.

Assorted first aid ite ms .

Sold In Sporting Goods Dept .

10W40 or 10W30 oil.

For many U.S. cars.

Marine ri Swim Goods
lnd~ •

lngrahm

l~~ze-4
Savel Protec:tlve Mattress Pads
Days

5&amp;!ays0nly

4-Roll Pkg. Bathroom nssue
5&lt;!0, 1 ply 4112x4112" sheets per roll. Save .

3

.

88 . -~

Our Reg . 5-4.88-Save 14.91

3-Persan Nylon Camping Tent

Your Choice - Our 5.27-5 ,97

5' center , 7x7' floor plus screen door .

Save On Brand Name Alarm Clocks

Eviilution Fabric. polyester tilted, elasTic
band.

•

'htmg acCSII'ies,

Jilit~ oatS, vinyl boals,

I!~Reg.

sw1m fins, Ntes, masks.
SHi)p HeM·AND SAVE!

2.77

12· VSealed Beams
Upper or lower.
6014 HI/ Lo Beams 2.27

Choice of hand -w ind or electric styles .

13!~9. 88
Digital Clock.

Easy installation .

7'h
Oz.•

1SCope
~~3.27
40 oz. mouthwash
and gargle.

.
Cafeteria Special

Tune-Up Kits

Ollr
Reg. Price
.:.,,...

Misses' Skirts

Wed.-Thurs.-

Arrestor'" Muffler
Many U.S. cars , tr ucks.

:20% OFF

Limit 2
Pkgs .

14.96·
18.96

Styli sh sk irts in popular wool
blends.' Pleated . wraps , A-lin es
ana more! In solids or plaids.
•Wool/acrylic/polyester/other Fabrics

Kmart• Motor Oil

Sold In Sporting Goods Dopt.

29-vent iron . Automatic 2' s lice toaster.

linytron Plus" system for reliable color.
C1385. With Remote Control ....• $368

Kmart• Air Filter
Sizes for many cars.

,7
1

,J,

Llmlt2

Your Choice
• Head &amp; ShoUlders•
11 -o•.• lotion or
7-az ... tube. Save. ·

J?!ys
w.u.~ w m
16-az. • instant
hair conditioner.

..

J56

4 Days
1 DO lxcedrtn•
Extra strength to
. help relieve pain.

84~DAYS
7 oz. Crest
Toothpaste
fluristan.

with

1-Lb. • Con
Our Reg . 1.57

Sliced Bacon

844!ays
vo~ s ·

Celebrity" imported
from Hungary .

Hair Spray

8-oz .• reaular -or
unscente spray .
. ,.. o:&amp;.

tl.,¢~~;

7tJ

Pkg.
3-Pkg. Dishcloths
Polyester / cotton.
Each 12x14" size.

"Net ... .

•"

ou,
1.07 ,.
Pair
Mtn'1 Crew Socb
Orion• ocryllc / ny·
Fit 10-13.
®.......... .

~'B
12-oz. • sprayer
or 24-oz. • refill.

.......

.

-

- -

son. Pack of 2.

DINNER

--

--

ROLL &amp; BUTIER, SMALL COKE.

-'

$99

• AM/ FM Selector

Our Reg .
128.88

• Tone Control

• Local/ Distance

AM/FM/B·Tr. lndash e 5 AM/ FM Pushbutton•
For many cars. Save!

J!~eg.2.72
Insect IIIIer
Automatic in door room logger .

.......

'

DELICIOUS MEAT WAF WITH CREAMY WHIPPED
POTATOES, RICH BEEF GRAVY, -8U.TI'ERED VEGETABLE,

Reg.
1.12 .

·
- ·without
Tl'lpS pol Kills

Friday-Saturday

MEAT LOAF -

fOur

• Stereo Light

SAVE 29.88

Cafeteria Special

J97

FISH
PLATTER

TASTY FISH FILLET WITH TARTAR SAUCE, FRENCH FRIES,
I

CRISP COLE SlAW, ROllS AND BUTTER, SMALL COKE
TASTE TEMPTING!

'·'

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ..

·Nadia Comaneci not havi.n g un
MOSCOW (AP)"- For an athlete
whose sheer perfection has given so
much 'joy to the world, N11dia
Comaneci sure doesn't seem to be
having any fun.
.
There she was again Monday,
being told that nobody could do it
better because how do you top perfection? And what did Nadia do? She
didn't crack a smile after her
flawless trip over the balance beam.
She remained expressionless af~r
the perfect 10.0 was_flashed on the
scoreboard.
It wasn't until her Romanian
coaches crowded around .. her, offering congratulations, that she
allowed a smile - Short and sweet and then it was back to the business
at hand.
The business Monday was compulsory maneuvers on the balance
beam, vault, uneven parallel bars
and. the Ooor exercises - the first
half of the two-day team competition
that also serves as qualifying for the
individual all-around titie later this
week at the 1980 Swruner Olympi!:i.
Watching Comanecl perform, one
is struck by the intensity.of her concentration. There is no roc:m. for
emotion when all that inner strength
is directed toward the perf~ performance. It's been said that other
special athletes, Ted Williams and
Ben Hogan, had that same icy
demeanor- and that same quest for
perfection.
One slip of that steely deter·
mination, and her last four years of
practice and sacrifice will seem unfuJfilled. One little mistake, and
there's always someone waiting to
talle your place at the top of the
sport. There's always somebody.
Comaneci knows. She' &amp; been
tliere. Four years ago at the Montreal Olympics, when she was 14, she
replaced Olga Korbut of the Soviet
Union as the sport's superstar. Now,
maybe it's Natalia Shaposbniltova
as heir aJll!!lrent. Comaneci did her
littie miss perfect act on the balance
beam, chipped in with 9.95s oil the
other three apparatus - and she still
.
couldn't shake Shaposhnikova. ·
The 1!1-yeai'-Old Soviet star, who
like Cofuaneci was injured for the •
19'19 wotld championships, also was
perfect. She picked up a 10.0 in the
vault, added 9.95s on the other pieces
of equipment and tied Comaneci
with 39.85 out of a possible 40.0
"Such high marks are unheard of
in international competition," said a
Soviet gymnastics expert. "It has
happened. in national meets but
never at the Olympics or world
championships.''
Nelli Kiin, the Eurasian from the

'

Soviet Union who was supposed to he
Comaneci's main rival here, slipped
to fQurth in the compuisories behind
Maxi Gnauck of East Gennany. But
the depth of the Soviets was.evident
as they totalled 197.75 points. East
Germany was second at 196.80 and
Romania one-tenth of a point further
behind.
The women's free exercises
deciding the .team medals will be
held Wednesday-.
The men returned to gymnastics
competition · today, bidding for
medals with the second half of the
team competition. The $Dviets, with
a commanding lead, were expected
to Win the gold on the strength of per·
formances from all·aroWld cham·
pion Alexander Dltyatin and Nikolai
Andrianov, a quadruple gold medal
four years ago who seems to have
recovered from last year's chest in-

Jury.

who confounded the experts as well
ners Steve Ovett and Sebastian Coe Afgha~." he said.
as himself in winning the 100-meter
continued with Ovett due to arrive · At least two members of the
backstroke in 56.53 + more than one
here today.
Afghan team have made repeated
second faster than his lifetime f!e.§.t.
Coe had his time with newsmen overtures tO western newsmen,
"I would never have thought I
Monday, confirming he would run in saying they wanted asylum in the
could win an Olympic gold medal, at
both the lllll, in which he holds the American or British embassies.
least not here and today," Baron
world record of 1:42.4, and the 1,500,
The Olympics continued to be a
in which he shares the world mark of forwn for all sorts of people to exsaid.
'
Krause's world record .was was . 3:32.1 with Ovett.
press themselves and gain attention
one of three that fell Monday, the
from the roving journalists and the
other two coming in weightiifting.
"I'm feeling very well at the onmipresent Soviet security forces.
Daniel Munez of Cuba won the 56 kilo
Soviet police seized an Italian gay
moment. .. ! think I'm approaching a
class with a world record total lift of
peak,". Coe said. "My feelngs are activist who waa tryillg to handcuff
'115 kilos. Yurik Sarkisian of the
betier and the times are better If you himself to a fence nw the mliltiSoviet Union won the silver but set a
colored St. Basil's Cathedral in Red
compate them with last season."
world record of 157.5 kilos in the jerk
·The Olympic team from Square. They also detained three
portion of the event.
Afghanistan remained in the western reporters for periods of up
Karoly -varga of Hungary and
spoilight, but not because of Its to one hour and confiscated film
Helifried Heilfort of East Germany
athletic abilities. In an Impromptu from four still photographers and
tied the world record with 599 points
news conference at the Olympic ·one television crew atter ·scuffling
in the prone position of the small·
Village, Afghan team leader with them at the
bore rifle event, but Heilfort was -«&lt;!olam Hassani disputed reports
Enso Franconce said he wanted to
placed second on a technicality.
call
attention to the Soviets' strict
that anybody on the 24-member
Meanwhile, the buildup toward the
laws
against homosexuality, and he
delegation wanted to defect to the
expected dueLs in the 800-and 1,500- West. "These men live in Afganistan wanted the release of two men immeter races between British run·
and will continue to Uve in prisoned on charges of

scene.

So far, the host Soviets have been
having the most fun at their Olympic
party with siX gold and 11 total
med8ls. East Germany actually hils
one more ·medal overall but three
less gold after two days of competition at the first Games in
modern history _ without an
American team.
These two East European sports
Beanball? A menace to baseball?
powers were expected to pick up
Don't talk nonsense. It's just a
more medals as swimming finals in
brushback pitch - and it has its purthe men's 1,500 freestyle, women's
pose. So says Dick Williams. And his
400 freestyle and men's 100 breastMontreal Expos and the Atlanta
stroke were to be contested today.
Braves offered a pretty convincing
1'he U.S. absence, due to lts
case Monday night.
boycott in response to the Soviet inIn that launching pad called Atiantervention in Afghanistan, has been
ta
Stadium, Gary Carter crashed a
felt the most at the swinuning pool.
grand-slam
home run in a siX-run
At Montreal, American men won 12
first
inning
and
a tw1&gt;-run homer in
of the 13 events, and !he U.S. women
while
the Braves
the
seventh
have held their own against the East
unloaded
five
home
runs
in their ~
Germans in the past two years.
loss.
Except for one Swedish-interloper,
"Now do you see why it's good to
the East Germans and Soviets have
use the brushback pitch a littie?"
taken all til(! gold medals in swimWilliams, the Expos' manager, ofming and diving.
fered after the fireworks had ended.
Barbara Krause, who set a world
"There are no more now than there
record in the 100-meter freestyle
have been in the last 105 yea~. The
SWlday, lowered .the mark again to
beanbaU ·isn't the ternJ. It's brush54.79 seconds in winning the event
back pitch."
Monday. "Yes, I am sure I am the
And, with a laugh, he added,
fastest female freestyler in the
"EvidenUy they didn't establish that
world today ;"she said.
tonight."
Teammate Ines Geissler won the
ELsewhere in the National League,
women's 200-meter butterfly in
Houston
edged New York 3-2, St.
Olympic record timeof2:10.44.
Louis
downed
Los Angeles 5-2 and
Sergei Kopliakov of the Soviet
shaded·
Philadelphia 5-4.
'Cincinnati
Union won the 200-meter freestyle in
Chicago and San Francisco played
an Olympic record 1:49.81 and coun12 scoreless innings before darkness
trywoman Irina Kalinina took the
gold medal in the springboard. suspended play. The game was to
resume todsy.
diving.
"It was probably one of the best
The biggest swimming surprise
nights I've had in the major
came from Bengt Baron nf Sweden,
leagues," Carter said. "But more ·
than anything else, I'm pleased we
won the game. I remember the. last
time we were in here, Larry Parrish
hit· three home runs and drove in
runs, and the final score was
seven
From Sept. I, 1980 Hunting License Required; Sept. I, Dog training perAtianta
8, Parrish 7.''
mitted on wildlife lands through April30; Sept. I, Good fall muskie fishing
Williams,
too, admitted he had to
through Nov. 1; Sept. 5, Squirrel season opens (private land) through Nov. 8;
hold
his
breath
a bit. "A few rockets
Sept 5, Squirrel season opens (public land) through Dec. 20; Sept. 10, Prime
yellow perch fishing in Lake Erie and Inland Upland Reservoirs through
Nov. 15; Sept. 30, Coho and chinook salmon runs in the Huron River through
Dec. l.
.
.
From Oct. 10, Grouse season opens through Feb. 28; Oct. 10, Deer
longbow season opens.through Jan. 17, 1981 ; Oct. 29, End of nighttime dog
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cintraining (12 midnight toNov. l3).
cinnati Bengal.s' No. I draft choice
Nov. 1, Fox Hunting season opens, through Jan. 17, 1981; Nov, 1, Fox
smiled broadly Monday when asked
· Trapping season opens through Jan. 17, 1981; Nov. I, Opossum, skunk, and
how it feels to be rich.
weasel trapping season opens through Jan. 17, 1981; Nov. I, Special Youth
The Bengals inserted a conHunt- selected wildlife areas through Nov. 8; Nov. 1, Rabbit season opens
fidentiality clause in Anthony
on certain public hunting areas, Nov. 8; Nov. 3, Prtrnitive Weapons Deer
Munoz's' contract and declined to
Hunting Season opens (three areas only - Shawnee Forest, Wildcat Hollow,
confirm speculation that the 6-foot-6,
and Salt Fork), bucks only through Nov. 8; Nov. 13, Raccoon; opossum,
286-pound rookie offensive tackle
, skunk and weasel hunting season opens through Jan. 7, 1981; Nov. 13, Racwill receive about U million on a
coon, mink, and muskrat trapping season opens through Jan. 17, 1981; Nov.
·
multi-year contract.
15, Pheasant and chukar partridge season opens (private land) through Dec.
The former Southern California
1~; Nov. 15, Pheasant and chukar partridge season opens (public land)
player reported for his first practice
through Jan. 17, 1981; Nov. 15, Rabbit season opens (private land) through
Monday
with some veterans and the
Jan.l7,1981; Nov. l7, Deer crossbow season opens, Jan.l7, 1981.
other rookies. The team opens its
Dec. 1, Deer Gun Season opens, Zone 3, buck or doe, One Day Only; Dec.
sununer camp July 25 at Wilmington
. 1, Deer Gun Season opens, Zone 2, buck only through Dec. 5; Dec. I, Deer
College.
• Gun Season opens, Zone I, buck only through Dec. 5; Dec. 1, Deer Gun
"That's all behind me. I'm signed.
Season opens, Zone 4, buck only, through Dec. 6; Dec. 2, Deer Gun Season
I'm here to pldy for the Lord. I am
'opens, Zone~. buck only through Dec. 5; Dec. 1, Beaver trapping season
obligated to play my best. It's not
opens throqgh Jan. 17, 1981; Jan. I, !!Mil, Crow season opens (Thursday,
cash
that motivates me. I'm here to
· Friday and Saturday each week) throU'gh March 21,1981; Jan. 6, Statewide
earn
it," Munoz said in rapid sucPrimitive Weapon Deer HWlting Season opens (buck or-doe).
cession.
April '11, Wild Bearded Turkey Season, lsi Segment (in selected counDespite his size, the towering
ties) through May 2, 1981.
·
tackle displayed the agility of a
May 4, Wild Bearded Turkey Season, 2nd Segment (in selected coW!ties)
much smaller man during the pass
through May 9,1981.
·
blocking drills.
June 11, Crow season, 2nd segment, Thursday, Friday and Saturday
each week through Dec. 26.
.
SPECIAL NOTICE : Hunting of all wild animals except deer and water·
fowl, during the daylight hours, is prohibited during the deer gun season in
all the deer gun zones and during the primitive weapons season on the three
prtrnitive weapons areas and during the Jan~ry primitive weapons deer
hunt. SWiday hunting is prohibited.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Doubles by
Ken Griffey and J ohimy Bench and
Dan Driessen's single gave ·Cincinnati two seventh-inning runs and
enabled the Reds to beat the
Philadelphia Phillies 5-4 Monday
night in a game delliyed twice by
rain.
Bench's two-out double to the
right-centerfield gap off Raitdy Ler·
ch, 3-12, barely beat a downpour that
1\alted the game for 56 minutes.
When play resumed, Driessen's
single sent Bench home.
Rain also delayed the game 14
minutes in the sixth inning.
The RBI gave Cincinnati a $-3lead
and enabled them to withstand
Larry Bowa's triple and Bake McBride's pinch double for the Phillies'
final run in the ninth.
Bench aLso contributed an RBI
single in the third. Charlie Leibrandt, ~. the second of-three Cincinnati
pitchers, threw one perfect inning
for the win and Tom Hume earned
his 15th save.
The Reds got a run in the first
when Dave Concepcion doubled,
moved up on Lerch's wild pitch and
scored on George Foster's sacrifice
Oy. Bench's sharp single to left

Munoz has big smile
"I get that from plaYing four years
of high school basketball. I was
bigger than anybody else and I had
to learn to be better than anybody
else. It's my theory that pass
blacking is mainly the same shuffle.
"That plus playing third base in
baseball from the time I \vas a little
kid."
Munaz said he's getting used to
Cincinnati humidity, and "right now
I'm hoping to survive this camp and
thepra ctices.
Munoz
said "I'm
he's sure
also the
looking
make
frieqds.
NFL to
is
like college ball with a lot of good
. guys. ·I want to make friends, the
kind you keep for years and years."
And he said he does not expect
problems learning the pro system.
"At Southern Cal, where they had
a big system, they discouraged popping off. I agree with that. I believe
in showing whilt you can do and not
talking about it ... but we all put our
pants on the·same way."

I

'

POMEROY,U.
992·5131 or 992·5739

Racing results

idle Pittsburgh in the East Division.
Winner Scott Sanderson allowed
homers by Glen Hubbard and pinchhitter Biff Pocoroba, then Chris
Chambliss, Bob Homer and Jeff
Burroughs jolted Montreal reliever
with seventh-inning homers.
Aotros 3, Melll2
Some guys would be nervous, standing at the pia" with the basesloaded, two outs and the score tied in
the bottom of the ninth. But not
Terry Puhl. He cahnly stroked the
single up the middle that gave the
Aslros their victory and widened
their NL West lead over the Dodgers
to It games.
"Pressure? I felt no pressure,"
Puhl said. "It was a rather calm
task."

Frank LaCorte, 6-0, got the victory
with two perfect innings, his first
since being sidelined last week by a
case of strep throat. "I don't think
I'llgethimsickanymore,''Manager
Bill Vlrdon joked.
CardlDala 5, Dodgen 2
A few good words of advice from
St. Louis Manager Whitey Herzog
woke up Dane Iorg's bat after 83
homerless games as his three-run
blast in the sixth inning carried the
Cardinals past Los Angeles.
"It was obvious by the way I
wasn't hitting that something was
wrong." said Iorg. "I just had to get
my weight back in my stance. I was
too much on my front foot."
Ted Simmons also homered for St.
Louis and Rick Monday homered for
the Dodgers.

CINCINNATI (AP) - ' Rugg~
Victory came fi-om off the pace and
won the six-fw;long featured race by
a length at iuver Downs Monday.
Rugged VIctory ran the $5,500
eighth race in 1:12 3--5 and paid
$10.60, ~.40 and$3,110.
p;:;:;;::;~;;;:;;:==.;
Scic!o Kid placed for ~-20,
and ·
Sankaty Light showed for $5.40.
KA
Crawfish Pie and Sea Axe combined for a 1-a daily double worth
$12.60.
Acrowd of3,712 bet$451,959.
An Admiral dihuriiidifier~ Can
make vour basement or other _
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Snuffles,
Mlt\11 area more comfortable by
taking the excess moisture out ot
driven by Sam Waller, breezed to a
the
air. 11 helps protect furniture
13-length victory In the feature trot
and woodwork from the damag·
at Scioto Downs l'd:mday night in
ing effects of constant dampness.
2:111-5 on a wet track. The winner ' It retards mildew, mold, musty
odorsand rust - gives your home
paid ~.110, $4.40 and $3.20.
more living area .
Kelly Burton finished second and
•
returned $30.80 and $10.60, while
third-place Noble Margi paid $fT.
Theninthracelrlfectaof8-3-1pald
$1,467.90.
The · crowd d. 3,412 wagered !
"""1113
Middleport, Ohio
..,,
, .

tG;

:-·sau:

ADMI.,. a- L-

DEHUMIDIFIERS

:Baker Furniture

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NOTICE I
EFFECTIVE AUGUST 1, 1980
Meigs Equipment Company will no
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·,

prices. If you wish to purchase any ·
Item from our' lnv•ntory or order

$1695~-lus ~eci.

Tax and Recappatlle
Trade-in

PASSENGER TREADS

. ·PLENTY·OF TIRES IN ·.STOCK
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3RD ST.. POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-2176 ,.

99

CUBE STEAK

'23!.

GIRL SCOUTS attending Day Camp~ and Craf·
ts at Camp Elbija on Mill Creek Road, were Sarah Simpson, Becky Bush, KathyB~be. Missy Kimmel, Annie
Valentine, and Tammy Elliott. Girls pictured were
members of the Munchkins (second year Brownies).

Their leader was Ann Bush, and· assistant leader was
Margie Skidmore. The Brownies are putting their
finishing touches oq the1r Rooster Mosa1c. Arts and
·c rafts leaders were Betty Edwards and Janet Thomas.

•

FRANKS

'15!

Local scouts attend Camp Elbija '
Girl Scouts in the Seal of Ohio Girl
Scout Council, recenUy had the opportunity to participate in Day
Camp activities. Brownie and Junior
Girl Scouts in Gallia CoWlty participated in Day Camp on Monday,
June 23, through Thursday, June 26,
at Camp Elblja on Mill Creek Road
in Gallipolis, and Friday, June '11, at
Raccoon Creek County Park, on Dan
jones Road. Cadette Girl Scouts
spent their five days at Raccoon
Creek County Park.
·
On Monday, the Girl Scouts had
training on Canoe Safety, by
representatives of the Wat_er
Divlslm ,, lllatu•al Resources. They
had a chauce to go canoeing at Raccoon Creek County Park on Friday.
On Wednesday, all celebrated
Christmas, with a visit from Santa '
Claus. Santa (Dave Mohler) presented everyone at camp with a gift.
Judy Ball, Day Carnp Director,
wishes to .thank all ~ontributors for
making tJils presentation possible.
The group sang Christmas carols,
made Christmas decorations and
trimmed a Christmas tree.

On Friday·, all participants met at
Raccoon Creek County Park to wind
up activities. Parents attended on
Frid!iy evening for a picnic supper
and for the presentation of Day
Camp patches, badges, and ribbons.
Judy Ball and Nanc~ Clark presented all Day Camp Leaders with a gift
of handmade crsfts. Special visitors
· on Friday were Christi Bird, field
director; and Myra Jamison, director of camping services.
Cadette Girl Scouts kept the par·
ticipants busy on Friday with games
and races. Ribbons for the races
were furnished by Josette Baker, at
Raccoon Creek County Park.
Winners of the Broad Jump were
Nichole Swain, first; LesUe Combs,
second; Kathy Getties, third; Mitzi
Mayes, foutth; and Michelle Sands,
honorable mention. All were mem·bers of Blrdland. Kevin Nott, first; ·
members of the Fruits and Nuts,
.Ann Valentine, se&lt;;ond; Tammy
Elliott, third; Sarah Sl!npkins, fourth; and Amy Roderick, honorable
mention. They were members of the
Munchkins Scott Blevins, first;

member of the Fruits and Nuts, were Sarah Simpson and Missy Kim·
Gina Rutan, second; member of the mel, first; J ody Sheets and Amy
Zoo, Randy Simpson, third; member Roderick , second; Kathy Beebe and
of the Fruits and Nuts, Andrea Annie Valentine, third; Ann Adkins
Rutan, fourth; and Janet Stiltner, and Tanuny Elliott, fourth; and Am·
honorable mention; .members of the ber Epling and Melissa Gooderham,
Zoo. Cindy Chapman, first; Beth honorable mention. Janet Stiltner
Blevins, second; Tiffal)i Swain, and Becky Price, first ; Scott Blevins
third; Michelle Harrison, fourth; and Randy Simpson, second; Missy
and Lori Richards, honorable men- Snyder and Amy Brown, third;
tion; all members of the Sunshine Laura Sayre and Jody Jones, foilrth;
Girls. ·
and Debby Ball and Andrea Rutan,
Winners of Basketbllll were Scott honorable mention. Cindy Chapman
Blevins, first; member of the Fruits and Angie Maynard, first; and
and Nuts, Jodi Jones, second; Janet Michelle Skinner and Jennifer Don·
Stiltner, third ; and Amy Brown, nally, second. Michelle Sands and
fourth. They were members of the Nichole Swain, first; Katherine Get·
Zoo. Honorable mention went to Ues and Leslie Combs, secqnd: TifRandy Simpson, member of the fiany Swain and Michelle Harrison,
Fruits and Nuts. Jody Slleets, first;
third; Amy Mills and U&gt;ri Richards,
fourth; and Beth Mills and Erin
Amy Roderick, seco~; Amber
~piing, third; Ann Valentine, four·
Rader, honorable mention.
th; and Tammy Elliott, honorable
Arts and Crafts made during the
mention. All members of the Mun- week were sand sculpture, mosaics,
chkins. Joy Skidmore, first; Leslie chenille bump Oowers, pinwheels,
tie dyeing, artisticks, caterpillars,
Combs, second; Mitzi Mayes, third;
and Amy Bush; fourth. They were friendship sticks, and Christmas
members of Birdland. Erin Rader:.. decorations. Craft leaders were Betfirst; Beth Blevins, second; Beth . ty Edwards and 'Janet Thomas.
mills, third; Tiffiany Swain, fourth ; Adult v.olunteers who served as unit
and Michelle Skinner, honorable leaders were Nancy Clark, Penny
mention. Members of the .Sunshine Simpson, Kim Canada,, Barbara
Girls. Others winning honorable Mills, Ann Bush, Kenny Clark, Barb
mention from the Munebkins were ·Epling, and Joan KimmeL Assisting
Melissa Gooderham, Missy Kinunel, were Marcella Wellman, Randy
Ann Adkins, Sarah Simpson, and Simpson, Karen Nott, Sue Ball,
Irene Clark, Debby Clark, Angie
Kathy Beebe.
Winners of the Wheelbarrow Race Maynard, and Margie Skidmore.
were Sarah Simpson and Kevin Nott, Business Manager was Sherri
first ; Amy Roderick and Melissa Foster. Nurse was Nancy Blevins.
Judy Ball, Day Camp Director,
Gooderham, second; Kathy Beebe
and Ann Valentine, third; Ann would like to thank everyone for
Adkins and Missy Kimmel, fourth ; their donations.
Judy BaU stated, "The purpose of
and Becky Bush and Amy Canaday,
Day
Camp is to learn outdoor skills,
honorable mention. Scott Blevins
make
new friends and _have fWl .
and Randy Simpson, first; · Jodi
Jones and L.....rl ::Syre, second; Camp offers an opportunity for girls
Gina Rutan and Jal}et Stiltt).er, and their leaders to grow in such
third; and Andrea RutanandDellbie skills as lashing, canoeing, arts and
Ball, honorable mention. Cindy crafts, songs, games, hiking, fire
Chapman and Angie May'nard, first ; building, outdoor cooking, knots,
MicheUe Skinner and Jeruiller Don· tent care and pitching, safety and
nally, second; Michelle .Harrison much more. Such skills as unand Amy Mills, third; Lori Richards derstanding, care, appreciation and
and Tiffiany Swain, foutth; and Erin awareness also grow in the Clpllp
·
Rader and Beth Mills, honorable setting."
Girl
Scouts
and
Leaders
from
mention.'
Winners of the Three-Legged Race Camp Elbija participated in the
Fourth of July Parade.

Carpenter Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McGuire, where Reverend Crabtree is pastor.
Columbus, spent several days at
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey, local,
their mobile home near here and and Mr. and Mrs. ·Roy Wiseman,
; v.i,'lited relatiyes in the area.
Harrisonville, atiended the Rupe
, Mr. and Mrs. George McKnight, . reunion in Athens at the Fairgroun: Rebecca and Terry, Columbus, ds.
• called on his uncle and aunt, Mr. and
· Mrs. Arthur Crabtree, recenUy and
: also visited other relatives here.
Ida Denison was a guest of Edith
Talbert near Salem Center for a few
LIBRARY PLANS PROGRAM
: days.
A special program on marbelized
Mr: and Mrs. Dorsey Jordan spent . painting will be held for school age
. a vacation in Akron where they were children at the Middleport Public
· guests of her aunt, Goldie Carsey, Library with Patty As beck .
. and cllusins, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hun- displaying her talent. The program
: sicker. They stopped In Columbus as will be Wednesday, July 23, 2 p.m.,
: they were enroute home to call on outside on the library grounds.
· their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. · P.arents are advised to send children
: and Mrs. Dennis Devine and his in old clothing. In case of rain, the
event will be cancelled.
: sister, Villa Rutherford.
· Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Facemeyer,
: Denny, Billy and Dawn, vacationed
: with relatives in Florida for a week.
: Mr. and · Mni. Walter Jordan,
· Joshua ·and Jeremy, visited Sea
: World and other places of l.Dterest
: near Cleveland. They were accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Nonnari
· ~haner, Jody and Kevin of Athens.
Columbia Grange will hold a joint
. meeting with Harrisonville Grange
• on Frlday'evening at Harrisonville.
: Cathy Curtis, Kathy Jordan ·and
' Leah Crabtree were amq thole
: from thla couununlty who helped
Reverend Arthlir Crabtree conduct
a successful Vacation Bible School
:at Mineral United Methodist Church

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1

VAU!Y BELL
BROUGHTON

Baby af!ives
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Keith Fisher
of Rio Grande_are proud to annoW!ce
the birth of their second child, Keith
Ashley, bornonJune'll.
He weighed nine pounds, and was
21 inches long.
·
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Walker of Thurman,
and paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. ruchard A. Fisher,
Gallipolis. Keith is welcomed home
by an 18-month old sister, Kelly
Sumnne.

~--- -S-oc-iai-C-ale-nd_a_r--.1
TUESDAY
AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, picnic;1
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at home of '
Dorothy Jenkins, Middleport.

'1~~

STORE
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HOME GROWN

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5 LB.

S} 99

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MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO., INC.

·MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

STEW MEAT

The serious-minded Soviet
security was evidentiy startled by
his presence.
"I don't think they've ever seen
anything like me· before," said the
noted publicity hound; whose real
name is Hollen Stewart and who
hails from Cle Elum, Wash. "They
don't know what to do with me."

REGiJ LAR and SNOW TREAD

REUTER BROGAN
214MAIN

scored Dave Collins in the third for a
~ lead, but Concepcion was thrown
out at the plate trying to score from
aecond on the play. The Reds had
loaded the bases on Collins' walk
and singles by Concepcion and Grif·
fey.
The Phillies tied it in the fourth on
Mike Schmidt's walk and Keith
Moreland's fourth homer of' the
season. They took the le,t;l in the six·
th when Garry Maddox singled, too~
setilnd m Mike LaCoss's wUd
pickoff throw, and raced holl\e .on
Bowa's bloop single to left. Junior
Kennedy doubled home Ray Knight,
who had singled and move&lt;~ up on
Driessen's walk, for the Reds' tying
run in the sixth.

BEEF

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we've been hitting the ball lately; I
,figured we had a chance."
Rick Matula gave up Carter's
grand slam end Gene Garber
allowed what proved to be his winning homer, enabling the Expos to
edge IW!J percentage points &amp;head of

OICE _BEEF

gate crasher "Rock 'N' RoDen, "

famous for his bushy, rainbowcoloNi&lt;l wig, was taken into custody
briefly by pollee when he appeared
in front of the Olympic press center.
His wild get-up,, often seen on
national television in the states
during major sporta .events, also included1 a T·shlrt which read:
"Believe in Jesus" and "Repent

, for -International Trucks. All existing .

~
-- SAlE.'·

INSURANCE I

'l1 outs left to score, and the way

Bench paces 5-4 win

Sportsman's schedule

11

homosexuality. The Soviet penal
code calls for up to five years in
prison for sexual relations between
two men.
On a less serious note, world-class

Purpose pitch big at Atlanta S~dium
out there tonight. Quite a few .. .It's a
good thing we had a six-run lead. I
felt pretty safe - except it didn't
work out that way."
.
His counterpart, Braves Manager
Bobby•Cox, added: "SiX runs down,
especially in the first inning. I
wasn't too worried because we had

NFLAnON

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�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ..

·Nadia Comaneci not havi.n g un
MOSCOW (AP)"- For an athlete
whose sheer perfection has given so
much 'joy to the world, N11dia
Comaneci sure doesn't seem to be
having any fun.
.
There she was again Monday,
being told that nobody could do it
better because how do you top perfection? And what did Nadia do? She
didn't crack a smile after her
flawless trip over the balance beam.
She remained expressionless af~r
the perfect 10.0 was_flashed on the
scoreboard.
It wasn't until her Romanian
coaches crowded around .. her, offering congratulations, that she
allowed a smile - Short and sweet and then it was back to the business
at hand.
The business Monday was compulsory maneuvers on the balance
beam, vault, uneven parallel bars
and. the Ooor exercises - the first
half of the two-day team competition
that also serves as qualifying for the
individual all-around titie later this
week at the 1980 Swruner Olympi!:i.
Watching Comanecl perform, one
is struck by the intensity.of her concentration. There is no roc:m. for
emotion when all that inner strength
is directed toward the perf~ performance. It's been said that other
special athletes, Ted Williams and
Ben Hogan, had that same icy
demeanor- and that same quest for
perfection.
One slip of that steely deter·
mination, and her last four years of
practice and sacrifice will seem unfuJfilled. One little mistake, and
there's always someone waiting to
talle your place at the top of the
sport. There's always somebody.
Comaneci knows. She' &amp; been
tliere. Four years ago at the Montreal Olympics, when she was 14, she
replaced Olga Korbut of the Soviet
Union as the sport's superstar. Now,
maybe it's Natalia Shaposbniltova
as heir aJll!!lrent. Comaneci did her
littie miss perfect act on the balance
beam, chipped in with 9.95s oil the
other three apparatus - and she still
.
couldn't shake Shaposhnikova. ·
The 1!1-yeai'-Old Soviet star, who
like Cofuaneci was injured for the •
19'19 wotld championships, also was
perfect. She picked up a 10.0 in the
vault, added 9.95s on the other pieces
of equipment and tied Comaneci
with 39.85 out of a possible 40.0
"Such high marks are unheard of
in international competition," said a
Soviet gymnastics expert. "It has
happened. in national meets but
never at the Olympics or world
championships.''
Nelli Kiin, the Eurasian from the

'

Soviet Union who was supposed to he
Comaneci's main rival here, slipped
to fQurth in the compuisories behind
Maxi Gnauck of East Gennany. But
the depth of the Soviets was.evident
as they totalled 197.75 points. East
Germany was second at 196.80 and
Romania one-tenth of a point further
behind.
The women's free exercises
deciding the .team medals will be
held Wednesday-.
The men returned to gymnastics
competition · today, bidding for
medals with the second half of the
team competition. The $Dviets, with
a commanding lead, were expected
to Win the gold on the strength of per·
formances from all·aroWld cham·
pion Alexander Dltyatin and Nikolai
Andrianov, a quadruple gold medal
four years ago who seems to have
recovered from last year's chest in-

Jury.

who confounded the experts as well
ners Steve Ovett and Sebastian Coe Afgha~." he said.
as himself in winning the 100-meter
continued with Ovett due to arrive · At least two members of the
backstroke in 56.53 + more than one
here today.
Afghan team have made repeated
second faster than his lifetime f!e.§.t.
Coe had his time with newsmen overtures tO western newsmen,
"I would never have thought I
Monday, confirming he would run in saying they wanted asylum in the
could win an Olympic gold medal, at
both the lllll, in which he holds the American or British embassies.
least not here and today," Baron
world record of 1:42.4, and the 1,500,
The Olympics continued to be a
in which he shares the world mark of forwn for all sorts of people to exsaid.
'
Krause's world record .was was . 3:32.1 with Ovett.
press themselves and gain attention
one of three that fell Monday, the
from the roving journalists and the
other two coming in weightiifting.
"I'm feeling very well at the onmipresent Soviet security forces.
Daniel Munez of Cuba won the 56 kilo
Soviet police seized an Italian gay
moment. .. ! think I'm approaching a
class with a world record total lift of
peak,". Coe said. "My feelngs are activist who waa tryillg to handcuff
'115 kilos. Yurik Sarkisian of the
betier and the times are better If you himself to a fence nw the mliltiSoviet Union won the silver but set a
colored St. Basil's Cathedral in Red
compate them with last season."
world record of 157.5 kilos in the jerk
·The Olympic team from Square. They also detained three
portion of the event.
Afghanistan remained in the western reporters for periods of up
Karoly -varga of Hungary and
spoilight, but not because of Its to one hour and confiscated film
Helifried Heilfort of East Germany
athletic abilities. In an Impromptu from four still photographers and
tied the world record with 599 points
news conference at the Olympic ·one television crew atter ·scuffling
in the prone position of the small·
Village, Afghan team leader with them at the
bore rifle event, but Heilfort was -«&lt;!olam Hassani disputed reports
Enso Franconce said he wanted to
placed second on a technicality.
call
attention to the Soviets' strict
that anybody on the 24-member
Meanwhile, the buildup toward the
laws
against homosexuality, and he
delegation wanted to defect to the
expected dueLs in the 800-and 1,500- West. "These men live in Afganistan wanted the release of two men immeter races between British run·
and will continue to Uve in prisoned on charges of

scene.

So far, the host Soviets have been
having the most fun at their Olympic
party with siX gold and 11 total
med8ls. East Germany actually hils
one more ·medal overall but three
less gold after two days of competition at the first Games in
modern history _ without an
American team.
These two East European sports
Beanball? A menace to baseball?
powers were expected to pick up
Don't talk nonsense. It's just a
more medals as swimming finals in
brushback pitch - and it has its purthe men's 1,500 freestyle, women's
pose. So says Dick Williams. And his
400 freestyle and men's 100 breastMontreal Expos and the Atlanta
stroke were to be contested today.
Braves offered a pretty convincing
1'he U.S. absence, due to lts
case Monday night.
boycott in response to the Soviet inIn that launching pad called Atiantervention in Afghanistan, has been
ta
Stadium, Gary Carter crashed a
felt the most at the swinuning pool.
grand-slam
home run in a siX-run
At Montreal, American men won 12
first
inning
and
a tw1&gt;-run homer in
of the 13 events, and !he U.S. women
while
the Braves
the
seventh
have held their own against the East
unloaded
five
home
runs
in their ~
Germans in the past two years.
loss.
Except for one Swedish-interloper,
"Now do you see why it's good to
the East Germans and Soviets have
use the brushback pitch a littie?"
taken all til(! gold medals in swimWilliams, the Expos' manager, ofming and diving.
fered after the fireworks had ended.
Barbara Krause, who set a world
"There are no more now than there
record in the 100-meter freestyle
have been in the last 105 yea~. The
SWlday, lowered .the mark again to
beanbaU ·isn't the ternJ. It's brush54.79 seconds in winning the event
back pitch."
Monday. "Yes, I am sure I am the
And, with a laugh, he added,
fastest female freestyler in the
"EvidenUy they didn't establish that
world today ;"she said.
tonight."
Teammate Ines Geissler won the
ELsewhere in the National League,
women's 200-meter butterfly in
Houston
edged New York 3-2, St.
Olympic record timeof2:10.44.
Louis
downed
Los Angeles 5-2 and
Sergei Kopliakov of the Soviet
shaded·
Philadelphia 5-4.
'Cincinnati
Union won the 200-meter freestyle in
Chicago and San Francisco played
an Olympic record 1:49.81 and coun12 scoreless innings before darkness
trywoman Irina Kalinina took the
gold medal in the springboard. suspended play. The game was to
resume todsy.
diving.
"It was probably one of the best
The biggest swimming surprise
nights I've had in the major
came from Bengt Baron nf Sweden,
leagues," Carter said. "But more ·
than anything else, I'm pleased we
won the game. I remember the. last
time we were in here, Larry Parrish
hit· three home runs and drove in
runs, and the final score was
seven
From Sept. I, 1980 Hunting License Required; Sept. I, Dog training perAtianta
8, Parrish 7.''
mitted on wildlife lands through April30; Sept. I, Good fall muskie fishing
Williams,
too, admitted he had to
through Nov. 1; Sept. 5, Squirrel season opens (private land) through Nov. 8;
hold
his
breath
a bit. "A few rockets
Sept 5, Squirrel season opens (public land) through Dec. 20; Sept. 10, Prime
yellow perch fishing in Lake Erie and Inland Upland Reservoirs through
Nov. 15; Sept. 30, Coho and chinook salmon runs in the Huron River through
Dec. l.
.
.
From Oct. 10, Grouse season opens through Feb. 28; Oct. 10, Deer
longbow season opens.through Jan. 17, 1981 ; Oct. 29, End of nighttime dog
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cintraining (12 midnight toNov. l3).
cinnati Bengal.s' No. I draft choice
Nov. 1, Fox Hunting season opens, through Jan. 17, 1981; Nov, 1, Fox
smiled broadly Monday when asked
· Trapping season opens through Jan. 17, 1981; Nov. I, Opossum, skunk, and
how it feels to be rich.
weasel trapping season opens through Jan. 17, 1981; Nov. I, Special Youth
The Bengals inserted a conHunt- selected wildlife areas through Nov. 8; Nov. 1, Rabbit season opens
fidentiality clause in Anthony
on certain public hunting areas, Nov. 8; Nov. 3, Prtrnitive Weapons Deer
Munoz's' contract and declined to
Hunting Season opens (three areas only - Shawnee Forest, Wildcat Hollow,
confirm speculation that the 6-foot-6,
and Salt Fork), bucks only through Nov. 8; Nov. 13, Raccoon; opossum,
286-pound rookie offensive tackle
, skunk and weasel hunting season opens through Jan. 7, 1981; Nov. 13, Racwill receive about U million on a
coon, mink, and muskrat trapping season opens through Jan. 17, 1981; Nov.
·
multi-year contract.
15, Pheasant and chukar partridge season opens (private land) through Dec.
The former Southern California
1~; Nov. 15, Pheasant and chukar partridge season opens (public land)
player reported for his first practice
through Jan. 17, 1981; Nov. 15, Rabbit season opens (private land) through
Monday
with some veterans and the
Jan.l7,1981; Nov. l7, Deer crossbow season opens, Jan.l7, 1981.
other rookies. The team opens its
Dec. 1, Deer Gun Season opens, Zone 3, buck or doe, One Day Only; Dec.
sununer camp July 25 at Wilmington
. 1, Deer Gun Season opens, Zone 2, buck only through Dec. 5; Dec. I, Deer
College.
• Gun Season opens, Zone I, buck only through Dec. 5; Dec. 1, Deer Gun
"That's all behind me. I'm signed.
Season opens, Zone 4, buck only, through Dec. 6; Dec. 2, Deer Gun Season
I'm here to pldy for the Lord. I am
'opens, Zone~. buck only through Dec. 5; Dec. 1, Beaver trapping season
obligated to play my best. It's not
opens throqgh Jan. 17, 1981; Jan. I, !!Mil, Crow season opens (Thursday,
cash
that motivates me. I'm here to
· Friday and Saturday each week) throU'gh March 21,1981; Jan. 6, Statewide
earn
it," Munoz said in rapid sucPrimitive Weapon Deer HWlting Season opens (buck or-doe).
cession.
April '11, Wild Bearded Turkey Season, lsi Segment (in selected counDespite his size, the towering
ties) through May 2, 1981.
·
tackle displayed the agility of a
May 4, Wild Bearded Turkey Season, 2nd Segment (in selected coW!ties)
much smaller man during the pass
through May 9,1981.
·
blocking drills.
June 11, Crow season, 2nd segment, Thursday, Friday and Saturday
each week through Dec. 26.
.
SPECIAL NOTICE : Hunting of all wild animals except deer and water·
fowl, during the daylight hours, is prohibited during the deer gun season in
all the deer gun zones and during the primitive weapons season on the three
prtrnitive weapons areas and during the Jan~ry primitive weapons deer
hunt. SWiday hunting is prohibited.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Doubles by
Ken Griffey and J ohimy Bench and
Dan Driessen's single gave ·Cincinnati two seventh-inning runs and
enabled the Reds to beat the
Philadelphia Phillies 5-4 Monday
night in a game delliyed twice by
rain.
Bench's two-out double to the
right-centerfield gap off Raitdy Ler·
ch, 3-12, barely beat a downpour that
1\alted the game for 56 minutes.
When play resumed, Driessen's
single sent Bench home.
Rain also delayed the game 14
minutes in the sixth inning.
The RBI gave Cincinnati a $-3lead
and enabled them to withstand
Larry Bowa's triple and Bake McBride's pinch double for the Phillies'
final run in the ninth.
Bench aLso contributed an RBI
single in the third. Charlie Leibrandt, ~. the second of-three Cincinnati
pitchers, threw one perfect inning
for the win and Tom Hume earned
his 15th save.
The Reds got a run in the first
when Dave Concepcion doubled,
moved up on Lerch's wild pitch and
scored on George Foster's sacrifice
Oy. Bench's sharp single to left

Munoz has big smile
"I get that from plaYing four years
of high school basketball. I was
bigger than anybody else and I had
to learn to be better than anybody
else. It's my theory that pass
blacking is mainly the same shuffle.
"That plus playing third base in
baseball from the time I \vas a little
kid."
Munaz said he's getting used to
Cincinnati humidity, and "right now
I'm hoping to survive this camp and
thepra ctices.
Munoz
said "I'm
he's sure
also the
looking
make
frieqds.
NFL to
is
like college ball with a lot of good
. guys. ·I want to make friends, the
kind you keep for years and years."
And he said he does not expect
problems learning the pro system.
"At Southern Cal, where they had
a big system, they discouraged popping off. I agree with that. I believe
in showing whilt you can do and not
talking about it ... but we all put our
pants on the·same way."

I

'

POMEROY,U.
992·5131 or 992·5739

Racing results

idle Pittsburgh in the East Division.
Winner Scott Sanderson allowed
homers by Glen Hubbard and pinchhitter Biff Pocoroba, then Chris
Chambliss, Bob Homer and Jeff
Burroughs jolted Montreal reliever
with seventh-inning homers.
Aotros 3, Melll2
Some guys would be nervous, standing at the pia" with the basesloaded, two outs and the score tied in
the bottom of the ninth. But not
Terry Puhl. He cahnly stroked the
single up the middle that gave the
Aslros their victory and widened
their NL West lead over the Dodgers
to It games.
"Pressure? I felt no pressure,"
Puhl said. "It was a rather calm
task."

Frank LaCorte, 6-0, got the victory
with two perfect innings, his first
since being sidelined last week by a
case of strep throat. "I don't think
I'llgethimsickanymore,''Manager
Bill Vlrdon joked.
CardlDala 5, Dodgen 2
A few good words of advice from
St. Louis Manager Whitey Herzog
woke up Dane Iorg's bat after 83
homerless games as his three-run
blast in the sixth inning carried the
Cardinals past Los Angeles.
"It was obvious by the way I
wasn't hitting that something was
wrong." said Iorg. "I just had to get
my weight back in my stance. I was
too much on my front foot."
Ted Simmons also homered for St.
Louis and Rick Monday homered for
the Dodgers.

CINCINNATI (AP) - ' Rugg~
Victory came fi-om off the pace and
won the six-fw;long featured race by
a length at iuver Downs Monday.
Rugged VIctory ran the $5,500
eighth race in 1:12 3--5 and paid
$10.60, ~.40 and$3,110.
p;:;:;;::;~;;;:;;:==.;
Scic!o Kid placed for ~-20,
and ·
Sankaty Light showed for $5.40.
KA
Crawfish Pie and Sea Axe combined for a 1-a daily double worth
$12.60.
Acrowd of3,712 bet$451,959.
An Admiral dihuriiidifier~ Can
make vour basement or other _
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Snuffles,
Mlt\11 area more comfortable by
taking the excess moisture out ot
driven by Sam Waller, breezed to a
the
air. 11 helps protect furniture
13-length victory In the feature trot
and woodwork from the damag·
at Scioto Downs l'd:mday night in
ing effects of constant dampness.
2:111-5 on a wet track. The winner ' It retards mildew, mold, musty
odorsand rust - gives your home
paid ~.110, $4.40 and $3.20.
more living area .
Kelly Burton finished second and
•
returned $30.80 and $10.60, while
third-place Noble Margi paid $fT.
Theninthracelrlfectaof8-3-1pald
$1,467.90.
The · crowd d. 3,412 wagered !
"""1113
Middleport, Ohio
..,,
, .

tG;

:-·sau:

ADMI.,. a- L-

DEHUMIDIFIERS

:Baker Furniture

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NOTICE I
EFFECTIVE AUGUST 1, 1980
Meigs Equipment Company will no
longer be stocking or ordering parts

·,

prices. If you wish to purchase any ·
Item from our' lnv•ntory or order

$1695~-lus ~eci.

Tax and Recappatlle
Trade-in

PASSENGER TREADS

. ·PLENTY·OF TIRES IN ·.STOCK
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bny Item we will be glad to serve
you until th01t date.

·

3RD ST.. POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-2176 ,.

99

CUBE STEAK

'23!.

GIRL SCOUTS attending Day Camp~ and Craf·
ts at Camp Elbija on Mill Creek Road, were Sarah Simpson, Becky Bush, KathyB~be. Missy Kimmel, Annie
Valentine, and Tammy Elliott. Girls pictured were
members of the Munchkins (second year Brownies).

Their leader was Ann Bush, and· assistant leader was
Margie Skidmore. The Brownies are putting their
finishing touches oq the1r Rooster Mosa1c. Arts and
·c rafts leaders were Betty Edwards and Janet Thomas.

•

FRANKS

'15!

Local scouts attend Camp Elbija '
Girl Scouts in the Seal of Ohio Girl
Scout Council, recenUy had the opportunity to participate in Day
Camp activities. Brownie and Junior
Girl Scouts in Gallia CoWlty participated in Day Camp on Monday,
June 23, through Thursday, June 26,
at Camp Elblja on Mill Creek Road
in Gallipolis, and Friday, June '11, at
Raccoon Creek County Park, on Dan
jones Road. Cadette Girl Scouts
spent their five days at Raccoon
Creek County Park.
·
On Monday, the Girl Scouts had
training on Canoe Safety, by
representatives of the Wat_er
Divlslm ,, lllatu•al Resources. They
had a chauce to go canoeing at Raccoon Creek County Park on Friday.
On Wednesday, all celebrated
Christmas, with a visit from Santa '
Claus. Santa (Dave Mohler) presented everyone at camp with a gift.
Judy Ball, Day Carnp Director,
wishes to .thank all ~ontributors for
making tJils presentation possible.
The group sang Christmas carols,
made Christmas decorations and
trimmed a Christmas tree.

On Friday·, all participants met at
Raccoon Creek County Park to wind
up activities. Parents attended on
Frid!iy evening for a picnic supper
and for the presentation of Day
Camp patches, badges, and ribbons.
Judy Ball and Nanc~ Clark presented all Day Camp Leaders with a gift
of handmade crsfts. Special visitors
· on Friday were Christi Bird, field
director; and Myra Jamison, director of camping services.
Cadette Girl Scouts kept the par·
ticipants busy on Friday with games
and races. Ribbons for the races
were furnished by Josette Baker, at
Raccoon Creek County Park.
Winners of the Broad Jump were
Nichole Swain, first; LesUe Combs,
second; Kathy Getties, third; Mitzi
Mayes, foutth; and Michelle Sands,
honorable mention. All were mem·bers of Blrdland. Kevin Nott, first; ·
members of the Fruits and Nuts,
.Ann Valentine, se&lt;;ond; Tammy
Elliott, third; Sarah Sl!npkins, fourth; and Amy Roderick, honorable
mention. They were members of the
Munchkins Scott Blevins, first;

member of the Fruits and Nuts, were Sarah Simpson and Missy Kim·
Gina Rutan, second; member of the mel, first; J ody Sheets and Amy
Zoo, Randy Simpson, third; member Roderick , second; Kathy Beebe and
of the Fruits and Nuts, Andrea Annie Valentine, third; Ann Adkins
Rutan, fourth; and Janet Stiltner, and Tanuny Elliott, fourth; and Am·
honorable mention; .members of the ber Epling and Melissa Gooderham,
Zoo. Cindy Chapman, first; Beth honorable mention. Janet Stiltner
Blevins, second; Tiffal)i Swain, and Becky Price, first ; Scott Blevins
third; Michelle Harrison, fourth; and Randy Simpson, second; Missy
and Lori Richards, honorable men- Snyder and Amy Brown, third;
tion; all members of the Sunshine Laura Sayre and Jody Jones, foilrth;
Girls. ·
and Debby Ball and Andrea Rutan,
Winners of Basketbllll were Scott honorable mention. Cindy Chapman
Blevins, first; member of the Fruits and Angie Maynard, first; and
and Nuts, Jodi Jones, second; Janet Michelle Skinner and Jennifer Don·
Stiltner, third ; and Amy Brown, nally, second. Michelle Sands and
fourth. They were members of the Nichole Swain, first; Katherine Get·
Zoo. Honorable mention went to Ues and Leslie Combs, secqnd: TifRandy Simpson, member of the fiany Swain and Michelle Harrison,
Fruits and Nuts. Jody Slleets, first;
third; Amy Mills and U&gt;ri Richards,
fourth; and Beth Mills and Erin
Amy Roderick, seco~; Amber
~piing, third; Ann Valentine, four·
Rader, honorable mention.
th; and Tammy Elliott, honorable
Arts and Crafts made during the
mention. All members of the Mun- week were sand sculpture, mosaics,
chkins. Joy Skidmore, first; Leslie chenille bump Oowers, pinwheels,
tie dyeing, artisticks, caterpillars,
Combs, second; Mitzi Mayes, third;
and Amy Bush; fourth. They were friendship sticks, and Christmas
members of Birdland. Erin Rader:.. decorations. Craft leaders were Betfirst; Beth Blevins, second; Beth . ty Edwards and 'Janet Thomas.
mills, third; Tiffiany Swain, fourth ; Adult v.olunteers who served as unit
and Michelle Skinner, honorable leaders were Nancy Clark, Penny
mention. Members of the .Sunshine Simpson, Kim Canada,, Barbara
Girls. Others winning honorable Mills, Ann Bush, Kenny Clark, Barb
mention from the Munebkins were ·Epling, and Joan KimmeL Assisting
Melissa Gooderham, Missy Kinunel, were Marcella Wellman, Randy
Ann Adkins, Sarah Simpson, and Simpson, Karen Nott, Sue Ball,
Irene Clark, Debby Clark, Angie
Kathy Beebe.
Winners of the Wheelbarrow Race Maynard, and Margie Skidmore.
were Sarah Simpson and Kevin Nott, Business Manager was Sherri
first ; Amy Roderick and Melissa Foster. Nurse was Nancy Blevins.
Judy Ball, Day Camp Director,
Gooderham, second; Kathy Beebe
and Ann Valentine, third; Ann would like to thank everyone for
Adkins and Missy Kimmel, fourth ; their donations.
Judy BaU stated, "The purpose of
and Becky Bush and Amy Canaday,
Day
Camp is to learn outdoor skills,
honorable mention. Scott Blevins
make
new friends and _have fWl .
and Randy Simpson, first; · Jodi
Jones and L.....rl ::Syre, second; Camp offers an opportunity for girls
Gina Rutan and Jal}et Stiltt).er, and their leaders to grow in such
third; and Andrea RutanandDellbie skills as lashing, canoeing, arts and
Ball, honorable mention. Cindy crafts, songs, games, hiking, fire
Chapman and Angie May'nard, first ; building, outdoor cooking, knots,
MicheUe Skinner and Jeruiller Don· tent care and pitching, safety and
nally, second; Michelle .Harrison much more. Such skills as unand Amy Mills, third; Lori Richards derstanding, care, appreciation and
and Tiffiany Swain, foutth; and Erin awareness also grow in the Clpllp
·
Rader and Beth Mills, honorable setting."
Girl
Scouts
and
Leaders
from
mention.'
Winners of the Three-Legged Race Camp Elbija participated in the
Fourth of July Parade.

Carpenter Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McGuire, where Reverend Crabtree is pastor.
Columbus, spent several days at
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey, local,
their mobile home near here and and Mr. and Mrs. ·Roy Wiseman,
; v.i,'lited relatiyes in the area.
Harrisonville, atiended the Rupe
, Mr. and Mrs. George McKnight, . reunion in Athens at the Fairgroun: Rebecca and Terry, Columbus, ds.
• called on his uncle and aunt, Mr. and
· Mrs. Arthur Crabtree, recenUy and
: also visited other relatives here.
Ida Denison was a guest of Edith
Talbert near Salem Center for a few
LIBRARY PLANS PROGRAM
: days.
A special program on marbelized
Mr: and Mrs. Dorsey Jordan spent . painting will be held for school age
. a vacation in Akron where they were children at the Middleport Public
· guests of her aunt, Goldie Carsey, Library with Patty As beck .
. and cllusins, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hun- displaying her talent. The program
: sicker. They stopped In Columbus as will be Wednesday, July 23, 2 p.m.,
: they were enroute home to call on outside on the library grounds.
· their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. · P.arents are advised to send children
: and Mrs. Dennis Devine and his in old clothing. In case of rain, the
event will be cancelled.
: sister, Villa Rutherford.
· Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Facemeyer,
: Denny, Billy and Dawn, vacationed
: with relatives in Florida for a week.
: Mr. and · Mni. Walter Jordan,
· Joshua ·and Jeremy, visited Sea
: World and other places of l.Dterest
: near Cleveland. They were accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Nonnari
· ~haner, Jody and Kevin of Athens.
Columbia Grange will hold a joint
. meeting with Harrisonville Grange
• on Frlday'evening at Harrisonville.
: Cathy Curtis, Kathy Jordan ·and
' Leah Crabtree were amq thole
: from thla couununlty who helped
Reverend Arthlir Crabtree conduct
a successful Vacation Bible School
:at Mineral United Methodist Church

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1

VAU!Y BELL
BROUGHTON

Baby af!ives
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Keith Fisher
of Rio Grande_are proud to annoW!ce
the birth of their second child, Keith
Ashley, bornonJune'll.
He weighed nine pounds, and was
21 inches long.
·
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Walker of Thurman,
and paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. ruchard A. Fisher,
Gallipolis. Keith is welcomed home
by an 18-month old sister, Kelly
Sumnne.

~--- -S-oc-iai-C-ale-nd_a_r--.1
TUESDAY
AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, picnic;1
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at home of '
Dorothy Jenkins, Middleport.

'1~~

STORE
SLICED

~

BROUGHTON

'

ALL STAR

PlASTIC GALLON

HOME GROWN

TOMATOES

5 LB.

S} 99

HOLSUM KING SIZE-

BREAD

KEEBLER

COOKIES·
CHOC. FUDGE • FRENCH VANILLA •
CHOC. GRAHAM

2 LOAVES

~

.-----------------.,..----..o.,.o.jll

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO., INC.

·MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

STEW MEAT

The serious-minded Soviet
security was evidentiy startled by
his presence.
"I don't think they've ever seen
anything like me· before," said the
noted publicity hound; whose real
name is Hollen Stewart and who
hails from Cle Elum, Wash. "They
don't know what to do with me."

REGiJ LAR and SNOW TREAD

REUTER BROGAN
214MAIN

scored Dave Collins in the third for a
~ lead, but Concepcion was thrown
out at the plate trying to score from
aecond on the play. The Reds had
loaded the bases on Collins' walk
and singles by Concepcion and Grif·
fey.
The Phillies tied it in the fourth on
Mike Schmidt's walk and Keith
Moreland's fourth homer of' the
season. They took the le,t;l in the six·
th when Garry Maddox singled, too~
setilnd m Mike LaCoss's wUd
pickoff throw, and raced holl\e .on
Bowa's bloop single to left. Junior
Kennedy doubled home Ray Knight,
who had singled and move&lt;~ up on
Driessen's walk, for the Reds' tying
run in the sixth.

BEEF

y~ursins,"

Inventory Is being sold at discount

BUY NOW FOR SUMMER AND WINTER

WE'D LIKE TO
BE YOUR
,SECURITY
BLANKO"

INSURANCE SERVICE

we've been hitting the ball lately; I
,figured we had a chance."
Rick Matula gave up Carter's
grand slam end Gene Garber
allowed what proved to be his winning homer, enabling the Expos to
edge IW!J percentage points &amp;head of

OICE _BEEF

gate crasher "Rock 'N' RoDen, "

famous for his bushy, rainbowcoloNi&lt;l wig, was taken into custody
briefly by pollee when he appeared
in front of the Olympic press center.
His wild get-up,, often seen on
national television in the states
during major sporta .events, also included1 a T·shlrt which read:
"Believe in Jesus" and "Repent

, for -International Trucks. All existing .

~
-- SAlE.'·

INSURANCE I

'l1 outs left to score, and the way

Bench paces 5-4 win

Sportsman's schedule

11

homosexuality. The Soviet penal
code calls for up to five years in
prison for sexual relations between
two men.
On a less serious note, world-class

Purpose pitch big at Atlanta S~dium
out there tonight. Quite a few .. .It's a
good thing we had a six-run lead. I
felt pretty safe - except it didn't
work out that way."
.
His counterpart, Braves Manager
Bobby•Cox, added: "SiX runs down,
especially in the first inning. I
wasn't too worried because we had

NFLAnON

7-UP
8 PAK 16 OZ.

'·

REG. $115

SAVE _26e

.___.

~,,

e

�8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 22, 19110

The ·Health Review

'Boomer' in Meigs??

Protein needed for good health

FIVE GENERATIONS- Jennifer Yeauger is the fifth generation of
the Elmer sayre family. Pictured, front, 1-r, Sylvia Cook, greatgrandmother, Elmer sayre, great-great-grand father holding Jennifer;
back, Ruth Ann Yeauger, grandmother and Christopher Yeauger, father.

A rea goings on·....
1t31 REUNION PLANNED
ths of July and August.
The class of 1931, Chester High,
will hold its annual reunion on July·
WILLING WORKERS TO MEET
'rl" at 12:30 p.m. at the Chester·
The Willing Workers class of the
Firehou.se. All class members, Enterprise Methodist Church will
teachers and schoolmates welcome.
meet July 24, 7:30p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Beatrice Buck.
BUCKLEY REUNiON SUNDAY

The 44th annual Buckley reunion
will be held Sunday, July 'rl, at
~e

Dam park, Reedsville,
with a poUuck lunch at noon.
DUES DUE
Members of Meigs Band who plan
to attend band camp must pay their
dues no later than Aug. 9. They may
pay Mrs. Ed Kitchen at the Middleport Pool any lime during pool
1
hours.

•

•
NEW ARRIVAL
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bing announce
the birth of a daughter, Nicole Ann,
on July 17, at Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed six pounds and
·seven ounces.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell Bing, Long Bottom; Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Smith, Middleport, and
Mr. and Mrs. lincoln Smith, Middleport.
Great-grandparents are Mrs. Mae
Spencer, Long Bottom, Mr. and Mrs.
William Fred Smith, Sr., Middleport.
REUNION SLATED
The 56th annual Hayes-YQIIDgRolidsy school reunion will be held
Aug. 3, on the old Holiday school
ground. Everyone is welcome.
WEAVER REUNION SUNDAY

HYMN SING SUNDAY
A hymn sing featuring the Holley
Family, Crown City, will be held
Sunday, July 'rl, 7 p.m. at the
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene.
The public is cordially invited to attend.
REVIVAL SLATED
There will be a weekend revival
July 25, 26 and 'rl at the South Bethel
Church, also known as the Silver
Ridge United Methodist Church,
with the Rev. Gilbert Spencer as
evangelist. Services will begin at
7:30 nighUy, with special singing
each evening. The church is located
one and. one-hillf J;niles west of
Eastern High School.
RETURNS HOME
Hilah Jones, South 11iliil St., Mid·
dleport, who has returned home
following a stay of one month in area
hospitals had as guests over the
weekend Charles Jones, McKees
Rock, Pa., Louise saylor, Leon, W.
Va., and Lois Smith, Columbus.
SHRlNE'ITES TO MEET
The Twin City Shrinettes will meet
Thursday,July24,at6:30p.m. at the
park in Mason near the levee. There
will be a cookout with refreshments
to be proVided.

The 22nd annu&amp;! Weaver reunion · - VISITORS 1N PATASKALA
Mr. and Mrs. Fielding Hawkins
New Haven roadside park, New visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Haven.
Jolm Hawkins, Pataskala. Jolm
Abasket dinner will be served at I Hawkins, brother of Fielding, has
p.m. Bring lawn chairs. New Haven returned nome after spending three
Park is located at the lower end of weeks in Grant Hospital.
New Haven on the right side of the
highway as you travel north on U.S.
MEMBERSHIP PICNIC
will be held on Sunday, Aug. 3, at the

···~

33.

SET

Betty Blackwood served as
h01tess when tbe Forest Run
U.M.W. met Tuesday evenlllg at the
church. Carolyn 8alser opened the
meetlug with devotions, readings,
andprayer. .
,
Kathleen Scott and Hilda Yeager
· had the prolll'lllll using the topic,
"Simpler lJfe Style." Readings
were given by all memben witb
Mary K. Roush recltlllg, "The
Special Assistance from Heaven."
II W&amp;l reported that 28 sick ealls
had been made. A dessert come
wu ·served to tbose named above
and Faye HamUton, Evelyn Hollon,
May Holter, Ulllan Napper, Naomi_
Wyatt, Mary Neue and Ann Wat-

The Meigs County Humane
Society annual membership picnic
will be held Sunday, July 'rl, at 3
p.m. at the home of Joyce Miller and
Marion Crawford, Hysell Run Road.
TO MEET TIIURSDAY
The July meeting of the board of
directors of the Gallia·Meigs Com·
munity Action Agency will be held
Thursdar, July 24, at 7:30p.m. at the
Guiding Hand School, Cheilhire.

FISH FRY SATURDAY
The Wilkesville Volunteer Fire
Department will hold its 24th aMual
fish fry on saturday, July 26.
· , Activities of the day include a bat·
Ue between the firemen at 2 p.m.
11011.
and a street dance from 9 p.m. until
midnight: Both men and women will
~EROFCOMMERCE
participate in the water batUes from
The Middleport Chamber of Com· area fire departments. Other games
merce will not meet during the moo- will also be held.

Civilian Conservation
Corps members ·to meet
RICHWOOD, W. Va. - Alunmi of
the Civilian Conservation eo.,;s, for· .
med during ,President Roosevelt's
11dmin\slration to create Jobs, construct needed roads, and to care for
park lsnd, will be gathering.in Richwood, W. Va., on August 9, for the.
Third Annual CCC reunion.
Last year .over 300 attended the
reunion near the site of two former
CCC eampa, Camp Cranberry and
Camp Woodbine. This year, the CCC
boys will be the guests of honor at
Richwood's Cherry River Festival,
. where they will march in the Grand ·,
Parade. Reunion-gpers are Invited
to come ¥r1Y and enjoy the other
evehll, which begin on August 5.
Reglatration will begin at 10 a.m.
at the . new Richwood City Hall

'

.

By Robert G. Stockmal,
the popular bread spreads, butter
D.O.,Pb.D.
and margarine.
Assistant Professor ·
QUESTION: What foods · should
of Family Medlcloe
sheeat? ·
Oblo University CoUege
ANSWER: Since quality protein is
of Osteopathic Medicine
most often omitted; I w~uld enQUESTION: My great-aunt was in
courage her to eat more red meats
1 the hospital for some time and lost
such as beef, veal, pork and lamb, 1111
quite a bit of weight. Now she is at
well as white meats such as poultry,
home and insists on eating candy,
fish and other sea foOds. Dairy
cookies, pastries and the like. Does
products, such as cheeses and milk
she get anough calories from this
are good too, and.an excellent source ·
jWlkfood?
of relatively ine:q&gt;ensive quality
ANSWER: "Enough calories" is
protein is eggs. l
not the major concern. What's more
Vegetables are also somewhat
important is that the calories come· neglected and they are the source of
from a proper balance of proteins,
vitamins, minerals and bulk.
carbohydrates and fats. A good diet
QUESTION: How many calorieS
~hould also contain sufficient
do you need a day?
vitamins, minerals and fluids.
ANSWER: Tiie dally cillorie
It is not unusual for older people
requirement is determined to a
with health problems, living alone
great extent by life style. If you are
on fixed incomes, to limit their diets
extremely active physically, you'll
to easily prepared, easily ·chewed require more calories than someone ·
convenience foods. These foods are
who is sedentary.
notoriously high in carbohydrates
A rough estimate for a sedentary
(starches and sugars) and low in individual would be 15 calories per
protein.
pouild of ideal body weight. Ideal
The body needs the right amount . body weight can be estimated based
of)&gt;rotein from the diet or it will take
on height: for males 106 pounds for
protein from its own muscles in · a the first five feet plus six pounds for
process called wasting. · Dietary each additional lunch; for females
protein must also be "quality" 100 pOunds for the first five feet then
protein, that is, it must contain all of five pounds for each additional inch.
the essential amino acid building
Precise tables, specific diet plans
blocks.
and general diet information are
Dietary fats are not usually a available through your family
problem because they improve the· physician. Please avail yourself of
flavor of most foods and are present this resource before starting on a
in shortening, i.cing, cooking oils and diet program for Your great-aunt or
yourself. ·

building on White Avenue. Refreshments will be served. All CCC boys
and tlleir families are invited to attend.
'
For more information write: CCC
Mailbag, Box 591, Richwood, WV
26261, or call (304) 846-2666.
'

GOLF MILLIONAIRES

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) - Two more players were added early this year to the list of
golfers who have reached ttie $1
million mark in earnings on the
links.
Long George Archer became !he
~rd man in PGA history to go that
high by finishing in a tie for seventh
place at t,he Glen Campbel! • ].,os
Angeles ,Open. He earned $6,292 and
boosted his earnings to $1,006,237.

FROG i\RT WINNERS - Terry Newsome, 10, (left) and Rodney
Newsome, 6, won first place ribbons and $5 each for the posters they drew
and entered in the Library Frog Art Contest. The boys were not pictured
with the other winners.
·

Civil service examination
offered in West Virginia
nesday, August 6, in order to be considered for this examination session.
' Interested. persons may obtain
complete information and application fonns from: any local Job
Service Office of the Department of
Employment Security or the· West
Virginia Civil Service System, by
calling 348-5946 or, toll free ~thin
West Virginia ,' l~902'1,.

The West Virginia Civil Service
System is currenUy accepting applications for the positions of "Employment Interviewer I" and "Intermittent Interviewer."
A written examination will be held
on saturday, Aug. 23, in various
locations throughout the State for
these positions. Applications must
be postmarked not later than Wed-

Mid-summer heat caused water in
the municipal pool here to become so
warm that operators gave free ad·
mission to swimmers who brought 10
pounds of lee Sunday.
Paul Coppel, assistant pool
manager, estimated 400 pounds of
ice was dumped into filter tanks of
the 650,000 gaUon pool.
At last 40 persons took the city up
on its ice-to-swim offer and while 489
others paid for their dip.
"The water temperture got over 85
degrees and the sun was taking
chlorine out of the pool faster than

*

fl

., ·

Generation Rap

Is '·Mr. ~ight' wong to want his freedom~

By Marlon Crawford
Is lt "Boomer" who visited Meigs County?
Now if this dog that was picked up by the Meigs County Humane
Society repesentative Marion Crawford (me) on WednesdaY wasn't
Boomer)I'will be mighty surprised. An euct replica of the famous TV
animal Willi reported as a stray, and in the absence of the usual agents
who Investigate cruelty and make the pick·upa, as the writer of "Hoofs
and Paws," I went on the run. ! returned with the animal. ·
He was so badly matted that' it was hard to tell what shape he wsa
actually in, but with all the problems that Boomer solves and trouble
that he gets into, It stands to reason that he would not have the time to
be groomed periodically, wouldn't it (or was it just a badly neglected
animal)~

JU!'T A MOME~r. MY GOOD MAIV!
PERHAP5 l'D. !!ETTER MAKE Ot&gt;JE
THIIVS ClfYt&gt;TifL ClEAR AT
T~E- $TART!
--

.

I toot him to Judy TI!Yior In Cheshire to see what could be done.
When "Boomer" Wilked into her grooming parlor - a room with a
concrete floor and' her necessary grooming equipment, he immediately "claimtd ierritory" - something male animals always do
when in a strang• enviromnent - whereupon the "celebrity" was ·
reprimlnded, but -.nt straight on and expressed his opinion of her
, srnoklnt! by "c~" her asytray that sat on the hearth - a dead
cannot restrain themselves when it comes to
shot. Well, some their diiapproval olllllOking. We all even know people like this, don't
we?
.
.
After an hour of srilping with the scissors (he was afraid of the clippers), poor Boomer-dldn'tlook so pretty, but golly, did he ever feel better! All the matted hair was cut away, the only hair left was on his
beautiful tall and tbat handsome head.
Anyone' who would Uke to give our very own Boomer a good home for
the remainder of his lifetime - and watch his long hair grow out again
- why not call the Huiuane Society and find out If you qualify to own
him? Aspecial home iii necessary for thia'dog- be has been neglected
enough by lrresponlible people. Call !192-ti260 any day noon until7 p.m.

lt&gt;J CA5E YOU'VE

FORGOTTE~ ••'IOU'i&lt;:E-

HEI!E TO WOif.K FOil
ME-UNDER5TA~D f!

AND ANY TIMIO
YOU'Re TOLD TO
CARRY OUT ONE OF
MY, ~UOTE, "$ILL.¥
I'IHIM5"-.YOU'LI. DO
SO! AM l G~TTINc;

LADY. WHE/\1 YOU

5AY

~MILE~ OR YOU'RE

THAT:

GONNA

6eT A LE550N THAT'5 ABOUT
TWENTY YEAR9 OVERDUE!

THROUGH'!!

BORN LOSER

AI\,6RDfllf.R ~PI't~.
II&gt;MDISWI&lt;Il€0
11\~T 'bJ c:.tiOSe

•

.,

Oll!fl,(,fl UST

b~DA'{

Polly's Pointers

DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Mom and Dad are giving
Roland and me a lovely wedding. But there's one thing
that bothers me. I read a little booklet on women's.rights
by Michelle Micale
("Women and Men, Moving
Forward in the '80s") and it
got me thinking. She writes,
"A father cannot give away
. that which he does not own.
The idea that he owns a
daughter then turns her river
to another man to own, is a
complete fallacy and it is
high time this custom was
laid to rest."
Dad expects to "give the

bride away." I'd rather this
part of the ceremony be
eliminated. What could we
use to replace it? I still want
Dad to walk down the aisle
with me. - DAUGHTER OF
TRADITIONAL PARENTS
DEAR DAUGHTER:
Why not ask the minister to
substitute " presents" for
"give" . when he asks the
traditional question?
HELEN
.
NOTE FROM SUE: And be
sure your father !llSponds
with "Her Mother and I do.".
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
What do you say to a fellow
who thinks he's such great
stuff that no one can cOmpare to him? He fools a few
people, but he's really obnoxious to most of us. He's
always been this way but is
getting worse. - ALMOST
FORMER FRIENDS .
DEARA.F.F.:
Why not tell him, ''He who
takes an ego trip walks a
lonely road? " - HELEN
AND SUE

Health

Picture needs cleaning
doubUess cause the embroidery
..,
By Polly Cramer .
wool to fuzz up and it would never
. Special correspondent
look
the same. Good luck. This is one
DEAR POLLY - I have a large
of
the
jobs that seems to have no cut
crewel embroidery picture that is
and
dried
answer so proceed with
wool embroidery on cotton (or linen)
care.POLLY
and Is framed with a heavy cardDEAR POLLY --'Over the past
board backing that Is partially glued
on to the picture. It has no glass over few years I have received some
it and has not been cleaned - only . beautiful embroidered pieces as gil·
vacuwned - in 10 years. It really ts. When I lise them I have often
needs cleaning. I have some dry wished I could recall who had given
cleaning fluid, siJ should I use this me each piece as that would make
them even more precious to me. Arand rub the material?- AGNES
tists initial their paintings and seamstresses
sew their labels in things
DEAl\. AGNES
they
make
so I would Uke to suggest
- The caroboard
that
people
embroider their initials
backing should
In the comer of each gift they make.
not get wet. It
After all, embroidery is an art, too.
seems it would
-UNDA
have to be
DEAR POLLY- This Is for the
removed and then
reader wl .., does not know how to get
it can be re-.
bubble gum off her husband's corattached. I would
duroy pants. My son got bubble gum
take the piece of
on his flannel paJamas and I bad difembroidery to a
ficulty
removing It until I combined
dry Cleaner and
the
peanut
butter and the Ice treat·
then re-frame it
ment.
I
rubbed
peanut butter into
after It ls·cleaned.
the fabric UNDER the gum, put the :
If you are sure all the colors used article in the freezer and left it overin the embroidery are fast colors the night, Tbe next day the gum scraped
piece might be carefully hand laWl- off easUy and without leaving the
dered (do not rub) In cold water with flannel "bald." Hope this helps. a liquid soap for woolens and fine E.S.
Polly will send you one of her
fabrics. Iron while partially damp
and with the wrong side up and on a signed thank-you newspaper coupon
Turkish towel so the embroidery will clippers if · she u.ses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
not be flattened.
Write POLLY'S POINcolumn.
Rubbing of any kind - with
TERS
in
care
of this newspaper.
cleaning Ould or whatever - would

•

Find cause of anemia

ANNIE
SINCE HE I'IA5 A
EXPERT,
HIS MURDER 5U66E5T5
HIGH-LEVEL

... MAYBE YOU'D
BETTER CHECK
THE COMPANY
ACCOUNTS, 5/f{,..

I DON'T GOTIA
CHECK ! NOBODY

YE5, MR. 6ARR ..
AND I THOU6 HT

STEALS NUTTIN'

I'D TRY GC.\'IE OF
THE CHEESE Wt

FROM BB.

EMSEZZW1ENT...

MAKE HERE ~BUT
17_.-=-.,,.,---~

THERE ISH'T

\ ..__,r--1

AHY...

~"'""''

~LEYOOP

,"

. GASOUNE ALLEY

JOel, ~ou were around when

·that old bus was scrapped!

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I'm
72 years of age and according
to my laboratory report my
blood count is 31. I've been
advised to eat liver but with a
high cholesterol, I'm not supposed to eat liver. Will you
please advise me what foods
are high in iron?
About 43 ye~rs ago r was·_
very iow but shots and pills
brought it up to normal. I had
a mastectomy eight months
ago ·which might have
brought my count down.
DEAR READER · _ I'm
not sure what blood count
you're .referring to but I
presume that ·you're talking
about your hematrocit, the
amount of red blood cells you
have. There are many different ways to do blood counts. That includes the nwnber
of red blood cells that are
present (a reading given in
the millions), the amount of
hemoglobin in grams and the
volwne of your blood that's
occupied by red blood counts.
In any case, if you are low in
iron you can take iron
tablets. For this purpose, you
could take one of the daily
vitamin tabletS that also con:
tains iron. Or you can ask
your doctor which iron

Ev~ning

ASTROGRAPH

mtaedike.·cine he would.like you to
There are several different
fonns of anemia. Some are
caused by inadequate
amounts of iron, others are
caused by failure of the bone
marow an~ st~ others are
c~msec,t by mabili~ to abs?rb
VItamin B-22. I m sending
you 'The Health Letter nwnber ~3, Understanding the
Anenua~. &lt;?ther readers who
want this ISsue can send 75 .
cents wit~ a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope .
Sentl yo~ request to me, in
care of this ne~~per, P: 0 ..
Box 1551, Radio C1ty Station,
New York, NY 10019.
I~ Y:OU have a vi~ ~-12
def1c1.ency. or ~rmc~ous
anenua,. ,Just . taking rron
alone JSo t gomg to solve
yo~ p~oblem.
.
It s IIJlportant to e~blish
the cause f?r an anerrua,. F~r
example, . 1f an anenua !S
ca~e~ by bleeding and IS
suff1c1ently severe, the blood
can be replaced.
DEAR DR. LAM':'i Recen~ly I rea~ m a
magazme that a vu:us had
been found to cause diabetes.
Does that mean that .they'll
soon hav,e a ;-accme to
prevent diabetes. Would yoo

8:00

your brow wmue it • rWltY.

CAPRICORN (0... ZWu. II) Be.,... aiiJ'
ponon to whom flllli'O'Ieal impor1ant facta today
can be lrulte&lt;f. The """'' typo could corry lale1

wbenyoudon'twantthemf.OgO.
,
AQUIIJIIUII (loa. .. Feb. It) The octloo or ••·
travqance of 1 frteod may draw you 1nto an n:·
perue you. didn't cuunt m today. Maintain~

1n&gt;1 ~your ol'llvtUet ond~.

PI8CEII !Fell. I/Niol:dl It) Don1 ..... 1D
you're li&lt;Aib1111lobout just bocoute 11
may be lliObele:!' woy to bondloll. The only per•onwho'U
.llllthoolhor.l!"l'.
AIIIE8 !Morell ll·Aorll It) Wilhflll 110nkinc
may boor yoor tplrtta, built will do Dille for tho
ICtUOl ot hand. Take off tho ~We-co~.....t
~ 01111 do yoor Job.
.
·
TAURUS (April 11-..y Ill Yoo hove o tor&gt;
doncy lodoy 1D dolude Y""""lf, oo be corei.l
when doolln8 '!rilh thooe who might toke odvontqe of you. Yoo could mlolnterpnt wbot
they're ollertn(.
GEMINI Jllloy II.J... IIJ Pa)'ln( too Utile otteoUon to WDIIy ~ caild ollow tile
emo 1D muollro&lt;m on you. Don't think
r If you Ignore them.
ll.Jllly Ill It may roqlliro
101110 mental dllctpUne 1D keep yoor mind on
wllot you are doiJIIlloday. Allendlns 'w tub
canlouly could pn&gt;ve cootly.

~-

: wrNNIE
®

YOU REALIZE, ANNE, I 'M
GOING THRO UGH A VER Y

i!rr~i:,.~~~

EXPERI ENCE.

WELL, WHEN I MET l71ETER,
I TOOK A LIKING TO HIM
RIGHT AWAY, &amp;JT I ACTIJALLY
SPENT MORE TIME W ITH
HI'S TWC.,IN,;:,;;;

Cll.aJOCil®iil1l8 NEWS
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

(lOINED IN PROGRESS) .
(]) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
(])ABC NEWS
(J) [jj) ZOOM
8:30 ill 1iJ ffi NBC NEWS
(]) I LOVE LUCY (I)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
llJCIJ®l CBS NEWS
(J)
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(fi) OVER EASY 'Death and Oylng'

60 NOW I'VE GOT TO
START ALL OVER AGAIN
ANI7 REALLY GET 70

KNOW P/ETER/ ·

Heat:

8:58
7:00

.BARNEY
7:30

I'LL BE GLAD WHEN
YOU L'ARN HOW TO
READ, TATER

\I
W.TINfiES ON Mr • 5VH
AU SEATS JUST .a t.tJO

8AIIOAA';

\

. ..

7:58
8:00

PEANUTS

&gt;GUESS WHAT... I THINK

I'M 601N6 TO A
SUMME~ MUSIC CAMP!

MASON FURNITURE

~E TROUBLE 15, I DON'T

KNOW HOW TO 6ET TJ.IERE ...
SHOULD I FL'r',OR TAKE
THE SUS OR WHAT?

~OU NEED

WHERE AM I
A TRAVEL GOING 10 FIND
AGENT
ONE AROVND
1-lERE?

ACE TRAVEL

Hugh

Downs.

"Volcea" 1i79

A6ENCI(

(IJMOVIE-(BIOGRAPHICAL)''I'o

"Evel Knlevel" 1971 ·.

llltHliD

HAPPY DAYS Chachl'o
errantly throw" apron Ianda on Ar·
nold'a grill and aoon the place Ia
ablaze··trappingRalph , Pot ale and
, the Fonz in the men· a room .

Mol!·• ;rues., wed., Fnday _&amp; S~t.

ffi•2!•!l
Ill liJ ®1

8:30 to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noon

THE WHITE SHADOW
Classroom theOry gives wly to
practical reality when· Coach
Reeves teaches a seJ-educatlon
claaa dealing with sexually trans·

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT O"'NLY
Iierman Grate
Mason, W.Va.

I

-'

8 :30

(Closed

Captioned)
il1lQI ABC NEWS
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CII&amp; CROSS WITS
CIJ PUPPETTREE GANG
CIJ HOGAN'S HEROES
Ciill2JID FACETHEMUSIC
ffi LUCY SHOW
Ill CIJ TIC TAC DOUGH
(J) MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
®NEWS
(llJ lliCK CAVETT SHOW
C2J U ®
HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES
Cil FAITHTHATLIVES
(]) BASEBAL1 'Race ForthaPen·
nant' This weekly baseball aeries
steps ,uP to bat for it&amp; third seuon.
leA Berman and Maury Willa recap
the week 's bsaebell action and
summarize the critica l playa and
~yera .
·
l1J ALL IN THE FAMILY
(]) LOSER TAKE ALL
I1J ABBOTT AND COSTELLO
(J) DICK CAVETT SHOW
(llJ MACNEIL•LEHRER REPORT
(j}). SHA NA NA
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CIJ Dffi TUESDAYNIGHTAT
THE MOVIES 'The Awakening
Lend : The To.wn ' 1977 Stars : ·
Elizabeth Montgomerv, Hal Hoi·
brook.
·
CIJ ORAL ROBERTS
CD MOVIE ·(ORAMA) " '

..

· coiiiiJlent about this?
DEAR READER - Yes,
there was a case reported of
Coxsackie virus causing
destruction of the islets of
Langerhans in the pancreas
and resulting in diabetes.
This has also been demonstrated in animals.
That's very important
research but you have to
keep in mind that it may not
be a frequent cause for
diabetes. The truth is that
diabetes can be caused by
anything which damages the
islets of. Langerhans in the
pancreas, They are tlie~ tiny
organs that produce insulin. '
Mwnps also has been identified as a possible factor in
diabetes in some people.
Not all fonns of diabetes
apparently are even related
to the pancreas but to certain
other complex metabolic
defects. There appear to be
several different types of
diabetes. Therefore, there
are probably many different
causes for diabetes. it may
well be that some of these
types of diabetes, if they are
proved to be related to virus
infections, could be prevented in the future. But we still
have a long way to go before
this can be done.

television listings

JULY 22, 1Q80

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
1 TRISTATE AREA

,··.

I.:
.
Whether you break up permanently or not, find other
friends! Don't make Jeff (or
any other man) your whole
life, or you'll end up very
lonely when he's gone. SUE

1

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE

that 21 is pretty young -for a
lifetime conunitment? If you
can't do this, then perhaps
you'd better let ~ go. HELEN

BY HELEN AND SUE BOTTEL
Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I've been going steady with
Jeff for two years. We're now
both 21. During that time
we've brok:en up and gone
back together, mostly'
because Jeff · wanted his
freedom and thought we
should date others. But we
always come back together
because we love each other.
Now things are going sour
again. He wants more time
for his friends - they seem
more important to him than I
do. Though he says he loves
me, he as~ "more space"
fora while.
My parents hate him for
the hurt .he's given me.
Should I hang on and keep
hoping he'll grow up? I.L.D.
DEAR I:
I suspect you're thinking
"marriage" while Jeff is
more turned to loving friendship. And so he periodically
breaks off because he's
afraid he'll end up a husband
before his time. .
Why not agree with him

wu:: 0/fill,

.

our equipment could put lt back "
said pool manager Charles Walla~.
We feared we would get algae in the'
water and have to shut the pool and
we started I'Wllling the chlorine
pumps'overnight.
·
"We just dwnped the ice into our
filtering system where it melted
before it was pwnped into the pool."
Cappel said the ice, plus the pwnping fresh water into the filtering
system helped reduce the water
temperature.
"The water is under 80 degrees
now," Cappel added. "I'm sure the
ice helped."

DICKTRACY

Melg1 Co. HUDUille Society
Speclal correapondent

Swimmers take ice for
admission to poo
. I...
CIDLLICOTHE, Ohio (AP) -

9- ·~ D!iily Sentinel, Middleport;Pomeroy

8 :58
Q:OO

t :30

10:00

milled diseases and one of hiabaa ·
kat ball players proves to have VO .
(fle.Q.eat; 60 mine .)
CJJ(11) NOVA 'Mr. Ludwig's Tropical
Ore a ml ana' The boldest capital en·
terprise of the century , fou nded by
a reclusive American billionaire, is
flourishing in a half million acre a of
Amazon rain forest . This program
examines the international con·
troYersy provoked by this project .
tCiosed Captio ned) (60 mins.)
CIJ GOOD NEWS
,
(J) LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY The
girls are.bec k as the most hilarious
WACs ever as they struggle
through a men vs . women aurvlvel
competition. (Repeat)
(j}) Gf THAT' S INCREDIBLE
Tonight' s show will feature spirits
returning from beyond the grave,
snake venom that may provide mir·
aclecurea instead of instant deatH .
and a man who has the powertoturn
ordinary objects into weapons of
destruction. (Repeat; 60 mins.)
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CIJ 700 CLUB
.
()) lHJ Gl THR£E' S COMPANY
Jack ~nd Chrissy devise an Ou·
trageous scheme to t ransform
Janet into a high·powered bomb •
shell inord er to co ot ol ft he am oroua
advances of Larry . (Repeat)
{Closed -Captioned)
llJCII® TUESDAYNIGHTMOVIE
' Night Moves ' 1975 Star s : Gene
Hackman, Melanie Griffith.
(J) (llJ FLAMBARDS ' Ledy Boun ·
tifu I' Christina fee Is responslb lefor
Di ck 's dismissal from Flembarda
and tries to help him and his family
by stealing food from the pantry .
(Closed Captioned) (60 mlns.)
C1J Cftl CD TAXI Mysterious love
messages toE Iaine a udae·nly begin
poppingup,andwhenahebecome s
intrigued, by the poet ic propoal·
lions, 8J couple of ca bbie s quickly
claim responsibility . (Repeat)
CD MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) " '

"Jawt 2"

(]) TBS EVENINCl'MEWS
CIJ il1l Gf HART TO HART Whan a
dying man passes them an ancient
Buddah statue. Jone.than and Jen·
nlfer are thrown int o an oriental
worldotdanger, wherethey.arepuraued by Ch inese .hen c hmen.
(Repeat : 60 mfns.)
til LORD MOUNTBATTEN: MAN
FOR"'THE CENTURY In this aecood
aplaoele Mountbalten tours India,
Burma, Ceylon and Japan and rlees
'• .........
lromuilortocommender'. (Ciond
Captioned) (80 mine .)
. (llJ NEWS
10:28 \!) HEWS UpDATE

.

10:30

lV

FAITH 20

CiD

OVER EASY 'OeathandOying'

Host: Hugh Downs . (Closed
Captioned)
10:59 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
11
CIJ
® lHl ,..
NEWS
(]) TODAY IN BI8LE PROPHECY
CIJ LAST OF THE WILD
C1J DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:28 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
11:30 ffi U ffi THE TONIGHT SHOW
'The Best Of Carson' (Repeat; 90
min a.)
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(]) MOVIE ~DRAMA)"\\ "WI,..

:oo m o

rn o oo

ner Take All" 1932
(j}) Gf
ABC

CIJ

NEWS
NIGHTLINE
Ill CII CBS LATE MOVIE
'C ANNON : Memo Froi'n A Dead
Man' Martin Sheen guest stars as a
youniJ attorney who calla on Can·
non when a recently deceased
client' a wi ll specifies that there be
an investigation int o hit death .
(Aepaat) ' BARNAB Y JONES :
Deadly Charade' Stars : Buddy Eb·
sen, David Hedison.
·til ABC C6PTIONED NEWS
®J MOVIE ·(I!USICAL.COMEDY)
... " Babet In Arms" 1939
11 :50 (I) (H) Gl SOAP The Tates gat a
new butler named Saunders ,
so mething terrible happens to Jes sica . and Billy tells leslie lt'a'over.
(Repeat)
12:00 {]) BASEBALL 'Race For the Pennant' This weekly baseball series
steps up to bat tor itsthlrdeeaaon .
Len Berman and Maury Wills recap
the week 's baseball act ion and
summarize the crillcal playa' and
~yera .

12!2Q. IJJ{H] .

TUESDAY MOVIE OF
tHE WEEK 'That Men Bolt' 1979
Stars: Fred Williamson , Teresa
Gravaa .
.
12::po CD MOVIE - ID~AMAI " ' " The

Champ"1171

1.;90, CIJ e

TOMORROW

·CIJ CHARISMA

.
. ffi NEWS
.1:30 CIJ OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
(]) NEWS
1:35 (])
MOVIE
· (SPECTACULAR·DRAMA)"I'o
' ' Sam•onandtheS.venMirttc~lll

otthe World" 1Q63

®J I BEUEVE
2: 2Q lHJ m NEWS
.
2:30 ® ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
3:10 @ MOVIE ~DRAMA!'" "I Weni
2:00

You" 1051
4 :00 (J) 700 CLUB
5:15 (() LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
5:30 CIJ JESUS IS THE ANSWER

'I

.
• I

�8- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 22, 19110

The ·Health Review

'Boomer' in Meigs??

Protein needed for good health

FIVE GENERATIONS- Jennifer Yeauger is the fifth generation of
the Elmer sayre family. Pictured, front, 1-r, Sylvia Cook, greatgrandmother, Elmer sayre, great-great-grand father holding Jennifer;
back, Ruth Ann Yeauger, grandmother and Christopher Yeauger, father.

A rea goings on·....
1t31 REUNION PLANNED
ths of July and August.
The class of 1931, Chester High,
will hold its annual reunion on July·
WILLING WORKERS TO MEET
'rl" at 12:30 p.m. at the Chester·
The Willing Workers class of the
Firehou.se. All class members, Enterprise Methodist Church will
teachers and schoolmates welcome.
meet July 24, 7:30p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Beatrice Buck.
BUCKLEY REUNiON SUNDAY

The 44th annual Buckley reunion
will be held Sunday, July 'rl, at
~e

Dam park, Reedsville,
with a poUuck lunch at noon.
DUES DUE
Members of Meigs Band who plan
to attend band camp must pay their
dues no later than Aug. 9. They may
pay Mrs. Ed Kitchen at the Middleport Pool any lime during pool
1
hours.

•

•
NEW ARRIVAL
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bing announce
the birth of a daughter, Nicole Ann,
on July 17, at Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed six pounds and
·seven ounces.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell Bing, Long Bottom; Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Smith, Middleport, and
Mr. and Mrs. lincoln Smith, Middleport.
Great-grandparents are Mrs. Mae
Spencer, Long Bottom, Mr. and Mrs.
William Fred Smith, Sr., Middleport.
REUNION SLATED
The 56th annual Hayes-YQIIDgRolidsy school reunion will be held
Aug. 3, on the old Holiday school
ground. Everyone is welcome.
WEAVER REUNION SUNDAY

HYMN SING SUNDAY
A hymn sing featuring the Holley
Family, Crown City, will be held
Sunday, July 'rl, 7 p.m. at the
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene.
The public is cordially invited to attend.
REVIVAL SLATED
There will be a weekend revival
July 25, 26 and 'rl at the South Bethel
Church, also known as the Silver
Ridge United Methodist Church,
with the Rev. Gilbert Spencer as
evangelist. Services will begin at
7:30 nighUy, with special singing
each evening. The church is located
one and. one-hillf J;niles west of
Eastern High School.
RETURNS HOME
Hilah Jones, South 11iliil St., Mid·
dleport, who has returned home
following a stay of one month in area
hospitals had as guests over the
weekend Charles Jones, McKees
Rock, Pa., Louise saylor, Leon, W.
Va., and Lois Smith, Columbus.
SHRlNE'ITES TO MEET
The Twin City Shrinettes will meet
Thursday,July24,at6:30p.m. at the
park in Mason near the levee. There
will be a cookout with refreshments
to be proVided.

The 22nd annu&amp;! Weaver reunion · - VISITORS 1N PATASKALA
Mr. and Mrs. Fielding Hawkins
New Haven roadside park, New visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Haven.
Jolm Hawkins, Pataskala. Jolm
Abasket dinner will be served at I Hawkins, brother of Fielding, has
p.m. Bring lawn chairs. New Haven returned nome after spending three
Park is located at the lower end of weeks in Grant Hospital.
New Haven on the right side of the
highway as you travel north on U.S.
MEMBERSHIP PICNIC
will be held on Sunday, Aug. 3, at the

···~

33.

SET

Betty Blackwood served as
h01tess when tbe Forest Run
U.M.W. met Tuesday evenlllg at the
church. Carolyn 8alser opened the
meetlug with devotions, readings,
andprayer. .
,
Kathleen Scott and Hilda Yeager
· had the prolll'lllll using the topic,
"Simpler lJfe Style." Readings
were given by all memben witb
Mary K. Roush recltlllg, "The
Special Assistance from Heaven."
II W&amp;l reported that 28 sick ealls
had been made. A dessert come
wu ·served to tbose named above
and Faye HamUton, Evelyn Hollon,
May Holter, Ulllan Napper, Naomi_
Wyatt, Mary Neue and Ann Wat-

The Meigs County Humane
Society annual membership picnic
will be held Sunday, July 'rl, at 3
p.m. at the home of Joyce Miller and
Marion Crawford, Hysell Run Road.
TO MEET TIIURSDAY
The July meeting of the board of
directors of the Gallia·Meigs Com·
munity Action Agency will be held
Thursdar, July 24, at 7:30p.m. at the
Guiding Hand School, Cheilhire.

FISH FRY SATURDAY
The Wilkesville Volunteer Fire
Department will hold its 24th aMual
fish fry on saturday, July 26.
· , Activities of the day include a bat·
Ue between the firemen at 2 p.m.
11011.
and a street dance from 9 p.m. until
midnight: Both men and women will
~EROFCOMMERCE
participate in the water batUes from
The Middleport Chamber of Com· area fire departments. Other games
merce will not meet during the moo- will also be held.

Civilian Conservation
Corps members ·to meet
RICHWOOD, W. Va. - Alunmi of
the Civilian Conservation eo.,;s, for· .
med during ,President Roosevelt's
11dmin\slration to create Jobs, construct needed roads, and to care for
park lsnd, will be gathering.in Richwood, W. Va., on August 9, for the.
Third Annual CCC reunion.
Last year .over 300 attended the
reunion near the site of two former
CCC eampa, Camp Cranberry and
Camp Woodbine. This year, the CCC
boys will be the guests of honor at
Richwood's Cherry River Festival,
. where they will march in the Grand ·,
Parade. Reunion-gpers are Invited
to come ¥r1Y and enjoy the other
evehll, which begin on August 5.
Reglatration will begin at 10 a.m.
at the . new Richwood City Hall

'

.

By Robert G. Stockmal,
the popular bread spreads, butter
D.O.,Pb.D.
and margarine.
Assistant Professor ·
QUESTION: What foods · should
of Family Medlcloe
sheeat? ·
Oblo University CoUege
ANSWER: Since quality protein is
of Osteopathic Medicine
most often omitted; I w~uld enQUESTION: My great-aunt was in
courage her to eat more red meats
1 the hospital for some time and lost
such as beef, veal, pork and lamb, 1111
quite a bit of weight. Now she is at
well as white meats such as poultry,
home and insists on eating candy,
fish and other sea foOds. Dairy
cookies, pastries and the like. Does
products, such as cheeses and milk
she get anough calories from this
are good too, and.an excellent source ·
jWlkfood?
of relatively ine:q&gt;ensive quality
ANSWER: "Enough calories" is
protein is eggs. l
not the major concern. What's more
Vegetables are also somewhat
important is that the calories come· neglected and they are the source of
from a proper balance of proteins,
vitamins, minerals and bulk.
carbohydrates and fats. A good diet
QUESTION: How many calorieS
~hould also contain sufficient
do you need a day?
vitamins, minerals and fluids.
ANSWER: Tiie dally cillorie
It is not unusual for older people
requirement is determined to a
with health problems, living alone
great extent by life style. If you are
on fixed incomes, to limit their diets
extremely active physically, you'll
to easily prepared, easily ·chewed require more calories than someone ·
convenience foods. These foods are
who is sedentary.
notoriously high in carbohydrates
A rough estimate for a sedentary
(starches and sugars) and low in individual would be 15 calories per
protein.
pouild of ideal body weight. Ideal
The body needs the right amount . body weight can be estimated based
of)&gt;rotein from the diet or it will take
on height: for males 106 pounds for
protein from its own muscles in · a the first five feet plus six pounds for
process called wasting. · Dietary each additional lunch; for females
protein must also be "quality" 100 pOunds for the first five feet then
protein, that is, it must contain all of five pounds for each additional inch.
the essential amino acid building
Precise tables, specific diet plans
blocks.
and general diet information are
Dietary fats are not usually a available through your family
problem because they improve the· physician. Please avail yourself of
flavor of most foods and are present this resource before starting on a
in shortening, i.cing, cooking oils and diet program for Your great-aunt or
yourself. ·

building on White Avenue. Refreshments will be served. All CCC boys
and tlleir families are invited to attend.
'
For more information write: CCC
Mailbag, Box 591, Richwood, WV
26261, or call (304) 846-2666.
'

GOLF MILLIONAIRES

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) - Two more players were added early this year to the list of
golfers who have reached ttie $1
million mark in earnings on the
links.
Long George Archer became !he
~rd man in PGA history to go that
high by finishing in a tie for seventh
place at t,he Glen Campbel! • ].,os
Angeles ,Open. He earned $6,292 and
boosted his earnings to $1,006,237.

FROG i\RT WINNERS - Terry Newsome, 10, (left) and Rodney
Newsome, 6, won first place ribbons and $5 each for the posters they drew
and entered in the Library Frog Art Contest. The boys were not pictured
with the other winners.
·

Civil service examination
offered in West Virginia
nesday, August 6, in order to be considered for this examination session.
' Interested. persons may obtain
complete information and application fonns from: any local Job
Service Office of the Department of
Employment Security or the· West
Virginia Civil Service System, by
calling 348-5946 or, toll free ~thin
West Virginia ,' l~902'1,.

The West Virginia Civil Service
System is currenUy accepting applications for the positions of "Employment Interviewer I" and "Intermittent Interviewer."
A written examination will be held
on saturday, Aug. 23, in various
locations throughout the State for
these positions. Applications must
be postmarked not later than Wed-

Mid-summer heat caused water in
the municipal pool here to become so
warm that operators gave free ad·
mission to swimmers who brought 10
pounds of lee Sunday.
Paul Coppel, assistant pool
manager, estimated 400 pounds of
ice was dumped into filter tanks of
the 650,000 gaUon pool.
At last 40 persons took the city up
on its ice-to-swim offer and while 489
others paid for their dip.
"The water temperture got over 85
degrees and the sun was taking
chlorine out of the pool faster than

*

fl

., ·

Generation Rap

Is '·Mr. ~ight' wong to want his freedom~

By Marlon Crawford
Is lt "Boomer" who visited Meigs County?
Now if this dog that was picked up by the Meigs County Humane
Society repesentative Marion Crawford (me) on WednesdaY wasn't
Boomer)I'will be mighty surprised. An euct replica of the famous TV
animal Willi reported as a stray, and in the absence of the usual agents
who Investigate cruelty and make the pick·upa, as the writer of "Hoofs
and Paws," I went on the run. ! returned with the animal. ·
He was so badly matted that' it was hard to tell what shape he wsa
actually in, but with all the problems that Boomer solves and trouble
that he gets into, It stands to reason that he would not have the time to
be groomed periodically, wouldn't it (or was it just a badly neglected
animal)~

JU!'T A MOME~r. MY GOOD MAIV!
PERHAP5 l'D. !!ETTER MAKE Ot&gt;JE
THIIVS ClfYt&gt;TifL ClEAR AT
T~E- $TART!
--

.

I toot him to Judy TI!Yior In Cheshire to see what could be done.
When "Boomer" Wilked into her grooming parlor - a room with a
concrete floor and' her necessary grooming equipment, he immediately "claimtd ierritory" - something male animals always do
when in a strang• enviromnent - whereupon the "celebrity" was ·
reprimlnded, but -.nt straight on and expressed his opinion of her
, srnoklnt! by "c~" her asytray that sat on the hearth - a dead
cannot restrain themselves when it comes to
shot. Well, some their diiapproval olllllOking. We all even know people like this, don't
we?
.
.
After an hour of srilping with the scissors (he was afraid of the clippers), poor Boomer-dldn'tlook so pretty, but golly, did he ever feel better! All the matted hair was cut away, the only hair left was on his
beautiful tall and tbat handsome head.
Anyone' who would Uke to give our very own Boomer a good home for
the remainder of his lifetime - and watch his long hair grow out again
- why not call the Huiuane Society and find out If you qualify to own
him? Aspecial home iii necessary for thia'dog- be has been neglected
enough by lrresponlible people. Call !192-ti260 any day noon until7 p.m.

lt&gt;J CA5E YOU'VE

FORGOTTE~ ••'IOU'i&lt;:E-

HEI!E TO WOif.K FOil
ME-UNDER5TA~D f!

AND ANY TIMIO
YOU'Re TOLD TO
CARRY OUT ONE OF
MY, ~UOTE, "$ILL.¥
I'IHIM5"-.YOU'LI. DO
SO! AM l G~TTINc;

LADY. WHE/\1 YOU

5AY

~MILE~ OR YOU'RE

THAT:

GONNA

6eT A LE550N THAT'5 ABOUT
TWENTY YEAR9 OVERDUE!

THROUGH'!!

BORN LOSER

AI\,6RDfllf.R ~PI't~.
II&gt;MDISWI&lt;Il€0
11\~T 'bJ c:.tiOSe

•

.,

Oll!fl,(,fl UST

b~DA'{

Polly's Pointers

DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Mom and Dad are giving
Roland and me a lovely wedding. But there's one thing
that bothers me. I read a little booklet on women's.rights
by Michelle Micale
("Women and Men, Moving
Forward in the '80s") and it
got me thinking. She writes,
"A father cannot give away
. that which he does not own.
The idea that he owns a
daughter then turns her river
to another man to own, is a
complete fallacy and it is
high time this custom was
laid to rest."
Dad expects to "give the

bride away." I'd rather this
part of the ceremony be
eliminated. What could we
use to replace it? I still want
Dad to walk down the aisle
with me. - DAUGHTER OF
TRADITIONAL PARENTS
DEAR DAUGHTER:
Why not ask the minister to
substitute " presents" for
"give" . when he asks the
traditional question?
HELEN
.
NOTE FROM SUE: And be
sure your father !llSponds
with "Her Mother and I do.".
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
What do you say to a fellow
who thinks he's such great
stuff that no one can cOmpare to him? He fools a few
people, but he's really obnoxious to most of us. He's
always been this way but is
getting worse. - ALMOST
FORMER FRIENDS .
DEARA.F.F.:
Why not tell him, ''He who
takes an ego trip walks a
lonely road? " - HELEN
AND SUE

Health

Picture needs cleaning
doubUess cause the embroidery
..,
By Polly Cramer .
wool to fuzz up and it would never
. Special correspondent
look
the same. Good luck. This is one
DEAR POLLY - I have a large
of
the
jobs that seems to have no cut
crewel embroidery picture that is
and
dried
answer so proceed with
wool embroidery on cotton (or linen)
care.POLLY
and Is framed with a heavy cardDEAR POLLY --'Over the past
board backing that Is partially glued
on to the picture. It has no glass over few years I have received some
it and has not been cleaned - only . beautiful embroidered pieces as gil·
vacuwned - in 10 years. It really ts. When I lise them I have often
needs cleaning. I have some dry wished I could recall who had given
cleaning fluid, siJ should I use this me each piece as that would make
them even more precious to me. Arand rub the material?- AGNES
tists initial their paintings and seamstresses
sew their labels in things
DEAl\. AGNES
they
make
so I would Uke to suggest
- The caroboard
that
people
embroider their initials
backing should
In the comer of each gift they make.
not get wet. It
After all, embroidery is an art, too.
seems it would
-UNDA
have to be
DEAR POLLY- This Is for the
removed and then
reader wl .., does not know how to get
it can be re-.
bubble gum off her husband's corattached. I would
duroy pants. My son got bubble gum
take the piece of
on his flannel paJamas and I bad difembroidery to a
ficulty
removing It until I combined
dry Cleaner and
the
peanut
butter and the Ice treat·
then re-frame it
ment.
I
rubbed
peanut butter into
after It ls·cleaned.
the fabric UNDER the gum, put the :
If you are sure all the colors used article in the freezer and left it overin the embroidery are fast colors the night, Tbe next day the gum scraped
piece might be carefully hand laWl- off easUy and without leaving the
dered (do not rub) In cold water with flannel "bald." Hope this helps. a liquid soap for woolens and fine E.S.
Polly will send you one of her
fabrics. Iron while partially damp
and with the wrong side up and on a signed thank-you newspaper coupon
Turkish towel so the embroidery will clippers if · she u.ses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
not be flattened.
Write POLLY'S POINcolumn.
Rubbing of any kind - with
TERS
in
care
of this newspaper.
cleaning Ould or whatever - would

•

Find cause of anemia

ANNIE
SINCE HE I'IA5 A
EXPERT,
HIS MURDER 5U66E5T5
HIGH-LEVEL

... MAYBE YOU'D
BETTER CHECK
THE COMPANY
ACCOUNTS, 5/f{,..

I DON'T GOTIA
CHECK ! NOBODY

YE5, MR. 6ARR ..
AND I THOU6 HT

STEALS NUTTIN'

I'D TRY GC.\'IE OF
THE CHEESE Wt

FROM BB.

EMSEZZW1ENT...

MAKE HERE ~BUT
17_.-=-.,,.,---~

THERE ISH'T

\ ..__,r--1

AHY...

~"'""''

~LEYOOP

,"

. GASOUNE ALLEY

JOel, ~ou were around when

·that old bus was scrapped!

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I'm
72 years of age and according
to my laboratory report my
blood count is 31. I've been
advised to eat liver but with a
high cholesterol, I'm not supposed to eat liver. Will you
please advise me what foods
are high in iron?
About 43 ye~rs ago r was·_
very iow but shots and pills
brought it up to normal. I had
a mastectomy eight months
ago ·which might have
brought my count down.
DEAR READER · _ I'm
not sure what blood count
you're .referring to but I
presume that ·you're talking
about your hematrocit, the
amount of red blood cells you
have. There are many different ways to do blood counts. That includes the nwnber
of red blood cells that are
present (a reading given in
the millions), the amount of
hemoglobin in grams and the
volwne of your blood that's
occupied by red blood counts.
In any case, if you are low in
iron you can take iron
tablets. For this purpose, you
could take one of the daily
vitamin tabletS that also con:
tains iron. Or you can ask
your doctor which iron

Ev~ning

ASTROGRAPH

mtaedike.·cine he would.like you to
There are several different
fonns of anemia. Some are
caused by inadequate
amounts of iron, others are
caused by failure of the bone
marow an~ st~ others are
c~msec,t by mabili~ to abs?rb
VItamin B-22. I m sending
you 'The Health Letter nwnber ~3, Understanding the
Anenua~. &lt;?ther readers who
want this ISsue can send 75 .
cents wit~ a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope .
Sentl yo~ request to me, in
care of this ne~~per, P: 0 ..
Box 1551, Radio C1ty Station,
New York, NY 10019.
I~ Y:OU have a vi~ ~-12
def1c1.ency. or ~rmc~ous
anenua,. ,Just . taking rron
alone JSo t gomg to solve
yo~ p~oblem.
.
It s IIJlportant to e~blish
the cause f?r an anerrua,. F~r
example, . 1f an anenua !S
ca~e~ by bleeding and IS
suff1c1ently severe, the blood
can be replaced.
DEAR DR. LAM':'i Recen~ly I rea~ m a
magazme that a vu:us had
been found to cause diabetes.
Does that mean that .they'll
soon hav,e a ;-accme to
prevent diabetes. Would yoo

8:00

your brow wmue it • rWltY.

CAPRICORN (0... ZWu. II) Be.,... aiiJ'
ponon to whom flllli'O'Ieal impor1ant facta today
can be lrulte&lt;f. The """'' typo could corry lale1

wbenyoudon'twantthemf.OgO.
,
AQUIIJIIUII (loa. .. Feb. It) The octloo or ••·
travqance of 1 frteod may draw you 1nto an n:·
perue you. didn't cuunt m today. Maintain~

1n&gt;1 ~your ol'llvtUet ond~.

PI8CEII !Fell. I/Niol:dl It) Don1 ..... 1D
you're li&lt;Aib1111lobout just bocoute 11
may be lliObele:!' woy to bondloll. The only per•onwho'U
.llllthoolhor.l!"l'.
AIIIE8 !Morell ll·Aorll It) Wilhflll 110nkinc
may boor yoor tplrtta, built will do Dille for tho
ICtUOl ot hand. Take off tho ~We-co~.....t
~ 01111 do yoor Job.
.
·
TAURUS (April 11-..y Ill Yoo hove o tor&gt;
doncy lodoy 1D dolude Y""""lf, oo be corei.l
when doolln8 '!rilh thooe who might toke odvontqe of you. Yoo could mlolnterpnt wbot
they're ollertn(.
GEMINI Jllloy II.J... IIJ Pa)'ln( too Utile otteoUon to WDIIy ~ caild ollow tile
emo 1D muollro&lt;m on you. Don't think
r If you Ignore them.
ll.Jllly Ill It may roqlliro
101110 mental dllctpUne 1D keep yoor mind on
wllot you are doiJIIlloday. Allendlns 'w tub
canlouly could pn&gt;ve cootly.

~-

: wrNNIE
®

YOU REALIZE, ANNE, I 'M
GOING THRO UGH A VER Y

i!rr~i:,.~~~

EXPERI ENCE.

WELL, WHEN I MET l71ETER,
I TOOK A LIKING TO HIM
RIGHT AWAY, &amp;JT I ACTIJALLY
SPENT MORE TIME W ITH
HI'S TWC.,IN,;:,;;;

Cll.aJOCil®iil1l8 NEWS
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

(lOINED IN PROGRESS) .
(]) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
(])ABC NEWS
(J) [jj) ZOOM
8:30 ill 1iJ ffi NBC NEWS
(]) I LOVE LUCY (I)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
llJCIJ®l CBS NEWS
(J)
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(fi) OVER EASY 'Death and Oylng'

60 NOW I'VE GOT TO
START ALL OVER AGAIN
ANI7 REALLY GET 70

KNOW P/ETER/ ·

Heat:

8:58
7:00

.BARNEY
7:30

I'LL BE GLAD WHEN
YOU L'ARN HOW TO
READ, TATER

\I
W.TINfiES ON Mr • 5VH
AU SEATS JUST .a t.tJO

8AIIOAA';

\

. ..

7:58
8:00

PEANUTS

&gt;GUESS WHAT... I THINK

I'M 601N6 TO A
SUMME~ MUSIC CAMP!

MASON FURNITURE

~E TROUBLE 15, I DON'T

KNOW HOW TO 6ET TJ.IERE ...
SHOULD I FL'r',OR TAKE
THE SUS OR WHAT?

~OU NEED

WHERE AM I
A TRAVEL GOING 10 FIND
AGENT
ONE AROVND
1-lERE?

ACE TRAVEL

Hugh

Downs.

"Volcea" 1i79

A6ENCI(

(IJMOVIE-(BIOGRAPHICAL)''I'o

"Evel Knlevel" 1971 ·.

llltHliD

HAPPY DAYS Chachl'o
errantly throw" apron Ianda on Ar·
nold'a grill and aoon the place Ia
ablaze··trappingRalph , Pot ale and
, the Fonz in the men· a room .

Mol!·• ;rues., wed., Fnday _&amp; S~t.

ffi•2!•!l
Ill liJ ®1

8:30 to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noon

THE WHITE SHADOW
Classroom theOry gives wly to
practical reality when· Coach
Reeves teaches a seJ-educatlon
claaa dealing with sexually trans·

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT O"'NLY
Iierman Grate
Mason, W.Va.

I

-'

8 :30

(Closed

Captioned)
il1lQI ABC NEWS
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CII&amp; CROSS WITS
CIJ PUPPETTREE GANG
CIJ HOGAN'S HEROES
Ciill2JID FACETHEMUSIC
ffi LUCY SHOW
Ill CIJ TIC TAC DOUGH
(J) MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
®NEWS
(llJ lliCK CAVETT SHOW
C2J U ®
HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES
Cil FAITHTHATLIVES
(]) BASEBAL1 'Race ForthaPen·
nant' This weekly baseball aeries
steps ,uP to bat for it&amp; third seuon.
leA Berman and Maury Willa recap
the week 's bsaebell action and
summarize the critica l playa and
~yera .
·
l1J ALL IN THE FAMILY
(]) LOSER TAKE ALL
I1J ABBOTT AND COSTELLO
(J) DICK CAVETT SHOW
(llJ MACNEIL•LEHRER REPORT
(j}). SHA NA NA
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CIJ Dffi TUESDAYNIGHTAT
THE MOVIES 'The Awakening
Lend : The To.wn ' 1977 Stars : ·
Elizabeth Montgomerv, Hal Hoi·
brook.
·
CIJ ORAL ROBERTS
CD MOVIE ·(ORAMA) " '

..

· coiiiiJlent about this?
DEAR READER - Yes,
there was a case reported of
Coxsackie virus causing
destruction of the islets of
Langerhans in the pancreas
and resulting in diabetes.
This has also been demonstrated in animals.
That's very important
research but you have to
keep in mind that it may not
be a frequent cause for
diabetes. The truth is that
diabetes can be caused by
anything which damages the
islets of. Langerhans in the
pancreas, They are tlie~ tiny
organs that produce insulin. '
Mwnps also has been identified as a possible factor in
diabetes in some people.
Not all fonns of diabetes
apparently are even related
to the pancreas but to certain
other complex metabolic
defects. There appear to be
several different types of
diabetes. Therefore, there
are probably many different
causes for diabetes. it may
well be that some of these
types of diabetes, if they are
proved to be related to virus
infections, could be prevented in the future. But we still
have a long way to go before
this can be done.

television listings

JULY 22, 1Q80

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
1 TRISTATE AREA

,··.

I.:
.
Whether you break up permanently or not, find other
friends! Don't make Jeff (or
any other man) your whole
life, or you'll end up very
lonely when he's gone. SUE

1

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE

that 21 is pretty young -for a
lifetime conunitment? If you
can't do this, then perhaps
you'd better let ~ go. HELEN

BY HELEN AND SUE BOTTEL
Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I've been going steady with
Jeff for two years. We're now
both 21. During that time
we've brok:en up and gone
back together, mostly'
because Jeff · wanted his
freedom and thought we
should date others. But we
always come back together
because we love each other.
Now things are going sour
again. He wants more time
for his friends - they seem
more important to him than I
do. Though he says he loves
me, he as~ "more space"
fora while.
My parents hate him for
the hurt .he's given me.
Should I hang on and keep
hoping he'll grow up? I.L.D.
DEAR I:
I suspect you're thinking
"marriage" while Jeff is
more turned to loving friendship. And so he periodically
breaks off because he's
afraid he'll end up a husband
before his time. .
Why not agree with him

wu:: 0/fill,

.

our equipment could put lt back "
said pool manager Charles Walla~.
We feared we would get algae in the'
water and have to shut the pool and
we started I'Wllling the chlorine
pumps'overnight.
·
"We just dwnped the ice into our
filtering system where it melted
before it was pwnped into the pool."
Cappel said the ice, plus the pwnping fresh water into the filtering
system helped reduce the water
temperature.
"The water is under 80 degrees
now," Cappel added. "I'm sure the
ice helped."

DICKTRACY

Melg1 Co. HUDUille Society
Speclal correapondent

Swimmers take ice for
admission to poo
. I...
CIDLLICOTHE, Ohio (AP) -

9- ·~ D!iily Sentinel, Middleport;Pomeroy

8 :58
Q:OO

t :30

10:00

milled diseases and one of hiabaa ·
kat ball players proves to have VO .
(fle.Q.eat; 60 mine .)
CJJ(11) NOVA 'Mr. Ludwig's Tropical
Ore a ml ana' The boldest capital en·
terprise of the century , fou nded by
a reclusive American billionaire, is
flourishing in a half million acre a of
Amazon rain forest . This program
examines the international con·
troYersy provoked by this project .
tCiosed Captio ned) (60 mins.)
CIJ GOOD NEWS
,
(J) LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY The
girls are.bec k as the most hilarious
WACs ever as they struggle
through a men vs . women aurvlvel
competition. (Repeat)
(j}) Gf THAT' S INCREDIBLE
Tonight' s show will feature spirits
returning from beyond the grave,
snake venom that may provide mir·
aclecurea instead of instant deatH .
and a man who has the powertoturn
ordinary objects into weapons of
destruction. (Repeat; 60 mins.)
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CIJ 700 CLUB
.
()) lHJ Gl THR£E' S COMPANY
Jack ~nd Chrissy devise an Ou·
trageous scheme to t ransform
Janet into a high·powered bomb •
shell inord er to co ot ol ft he am oroua
advances of Larry . (Repeat)
{Closed -Captioned)
llJCII® TUESDAYNIGHTMOVIE
' Night Moves ' 1975 Star s : Gene
Hackman, Melanie Griffith.
(J) (llJ FLAMBARDS ' Ledy Boun ·
tifu I' Christina fee Is responslb lefor
Di ck 's dismissal from Flembarda
and tries to help him and his family
by stealing food from the pantry .
(Closed Captioned) (60 mlns.)
C1J Cftl CD TAXI Mysterious love
messages toE Iaine a udae·nly begin
poppingup,andwhenahebecome s
intrigued, by the poet ic propoal·
lions, 8J couple of ca bbie s quickly
claim responsibility . (Repeat)
CD MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) " '

"Jawt 2"

(]) TBS EVENINCl'MEWS
CIJ il1l Gf HART TO HART Whan a
dying man passes them an ancient
Buddah statue. Jone.than and Jen·
nlfer are thrown int o an oriental
worldotdanger, wherethey.arepuraued by Ch inese .hen c hmen.
(Repeat : 60 mfns.)
til LORD MOUNTBATTEN: MAN
FOR"'THE CENTURY In this aecood
aplaoele Mountbalten tours India,
Burma, Ceylon and Japan and rlees
'• .........
lromuilortocommender'. (Ciond
Captioned) (80 mine .)
. (llJ NEWS
10:28 \!) HEWS UpDATE

.

10:30

lV

FAITH 20

CiD

OVER EASY 'OeathandOying'

Host: Hugh Downs . (Closed
Captioned)
10:59 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
11
CIJ
® lHl ,..
NEWS
(]) TODAY IN BI8LE PROPHECY
CIJ LAST OF THE WILD
C1J DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:28 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
11:30 ffi U ffi THE TONIGHT SHOW
'The Best Of Carson' (Repeat; 90
min a.)
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(]) MOVIE ~DRAMA)"\\ "WI,..

:oo m o

rn o oo

ner Take All" 1932
(j}) Gf
ABC

CIJ

NEWS
NIGHTLINE
Ill CII CBS LATE MOVIE
'C ANNON : Memo Froi'n A Dead
Man' Martin Sheen guest stars as a
youniJ attorney who calla on Can·
non when a recently deceased
client' a wi ll specifies that there be
an investigation int o hit death .
(Aepaat) ' BARNAB Y JONES :
Deadly Charade' Stars : Buddy Eb·
sen, David Hedison.
·til ABC C6PTIONED NEWS
®J MOVIE ·(I!USICAL.COMEDY)
... " Babet In Arms" 1939
11 :50 (I) (H) Gl SOAP The Tates gat a
new butler named Saunders ,
so mething terrible happens to Jes sica . and Billy tells leslie lt'a'over.
(Repeat)
12:00 {]) BASEBALL 'Race For the Pennant' This weekly baseball series
steps up to bat tor itsthlrdeeaaon .
Len Berman and Maury Wills recap
the week 's baseball act ion and
summarize the crillcal playa' and
~yera .

12!2Q. IJJ{H] .

TUESDAY MOVIE OF
tHE WEEK 'That Men Bolt' 1979
Stars: Fred Williamson , Teresa
Gravaa .
.
12::po CD MOVIE - ID~AMAI " ' " The

Champ"1171

1.;90, CIJ e

TOMORROW

·CIJ CHARISMA

.
. ffi NEWS
.1:30 CIJ OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
(]) NEWS
1:35 (])
MOVIE
· (SPECTACULAR·DRAMA)"I'o
' ' Sam•onandtheS.venMirttc~lll

otthe World" 1Q63

®J I BEUEVE
2: 2Q lHJ m NEWS
.
2:30 ® ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
3:10 @ MOVIE ~DRAMA!'" "I Weni
2:00

You" 1051
4 :00 (J) 700 CLUB
5:15 (() LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
5:30 CIJ JESUS IS THE ANSWER

'I

.
• I

�11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesctay,~~~1980~-_;_------------i cc----=.- .,-...,.--;...,.---56
Pels for S.le
Pu~llc Sale
11
Hetp Wanted
&amp; Auction
BRADFORD, A~clloneer, · REGISTERED N\JRSES.
complete Service. Ph&lt;!ne lmme.d iate opening for
· 949·2487 or 949·2000. racine, registereQ nurs e~ ex ·
pertenced In I.C.\.1 ., C.C.\.1 .
Ohio, Crill Bradford.

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 22, 1980_

•

This year's U.S. cotton crop could
be factor on future of world market
WASfUNGTON ..{AP)
ThlB
year's U.S. cotton crop, currently
being severely battered by the heat
wave in key producing areas, could
be the deciding factor in whether
world coiton trade increases or
declines in 1980-81.
Other factors will be the world
economy in general, China's import
requirements and the Soviet Union's
export slrate~y in the marketing
year that will begin on Aug, 1, the
department's Foreign Agricultural
Service said Monday.
Cotton production by the leading
countries was tentatively forecast in
a range of 64.1 million to 66.6 million
. bales, compared with the 1979-80
estimate of .65.5 million bales.
One resson for the wide range is
the uncertainy about U.S. productioll, which will not be officially
estimated by the Agriculture Department until next month. Based on
past trends, the crop could be 12.2
milllQII to 14.7 million bales, com-

1S THIS A stable or au art museum? Tbis sculpture by
Deborah Butterfield of a horse covered wilb sticks was
among the works on exhibit recently at the Snu Francisco
Museum of Modern Art.
.

pared with the 1979 harvest of more
than 14.6 million.
Foreign production was estimated
at 51.9 million bales in 1980-81, up
about one million bales from this
year, the report said.
"The largest production gains are
expected in China, Nicaragua and
India," the report said.
Tentatively, world cotton exports
. are expected to drop to leas than 21.1
million bales in the conllng year
from about 22.6 million in 1979-80.
Most of the decline could rl!llult from
reduced U.S. eli))Orts, it said.
· "Higher foreign production, some
of which is in conslllll!ng countries,
along with a soft world economy
coUld.reduce the world cotton export
demand," the report said . .
In any event, the report said, U.S.
cotton eli))Orts in 1980-81 "could be
llmited by the domestic situation"
that includes the prospective 1980
crop, currently under severe heat
stress in Texas, Oklahoma an~ other

Toledo leads in pay categories
CHICAGO (AP) - Federal labor

in Ohio, and Monroe County, Mich. It
statistics show Toledo was ahead of is based on information rei)Orted by
five other Ohio metropolitan areas 139 companies employing about
in wages paid to workers in four 74,200 workers. The businesses were
broad job clasSifiCations.
selected to represent 506 establlsh· The Labor Department study ments employing 120,000 persons.
The report showed .t hat average
showed Cleveland leading in one
category and tied with Akron in salaries of clerical workers in
another. None of the six Ohio areas greater Toledo were up 8.9 percent
examined came ciose to tletroit in from a year ago. Salaries for comany classification.
puter-related positions rose 10.3 per:
Statistics from Cleveland, Colwn- cent.
bus, Dayton, Toledo, Akron and CanWilliam E . Rice, regionaL comton were included in the study. The missioner for the Labor Department
report also included Detroit and in Chicago, said pay rate increases
Snginaw, Mich., ·and South Bend, for all five groups studied exceeded
Ind. It considered the job categories those of a year ago. He also said the
of office clerical, computer-related, increases were less than the rate of
skilled maintenance
and unskilled 1,. inflation as measured by the Con. .
p!ant;
.
sumer Price Index.
The report on Toledo listed
Average wages for unskilled plant
salaries for industrial nurses in a workers increased 11 percent, while
separate category. Unemployment, salaries for skilled maintenance
which has been increasing in Toledo, workers went up 10.9 percent. Inwas not a factor in the report. .
duStrial nurses experienced a 10.6
The survey showed that average percent average raise.
pay rates for the five job groups in
Weekly salaries for office
the Toledo metropolitan area in- positions ranged from averages of
creased by 8.9 to 11 percent during $157.50 for clerks to $343.50 for
the year ending last May.
secretaries working for top-level
executives. Jobs found most often
The survey covered Lucas,
Fulton, Ottawa, and Wood counties were secretaries', accounting clerks

and key entry operators.
,
Weekly salaries for secretaries
ranged from $257 to $343.50, while
those of accounting clerks ranged
from$201 to$259.
Average wages for computerrelated positions were between $192
and $488.50 per week.
Computer programmers' salaries
ranged from $322.50 to $398 weekly.

Drafters with comj!lex and often unprecedented assignments earned an
average of $364.50 per week.
Average earnings for skilled
maintenance trades varied from
~. 94 an hour for painters to $11.07
for machi!Je tool operators. Tool and
die rriakers got $10.80 per hour, and
mechani~s working on plant
machinery eamed$9.85.

Wanted to Buy
1ron and ·brass beds, old
furniture , desks , gold

9

NEW YORK (AP) - The

cost of

business borrowing dropped another
notch Monday as two big New York
banks cut their prime lending rates
one-half P.rcentage point to II percent.
Morgan Guaranty Trust Co., the
country's fifth-largest commercial
bank, started the latest round of rate
cuts. Bankers Trust Co., the nation's
eighth largest, quickly matched the
new rate, but most other banks
stayed at the prevailing 11.5 percent.
Manufacturers Bank of Los Angeles

..

Rain breaks heat spell
western Lake Erie.
Much cooler weather W!IS to
1 dominate the Ohio region .today.
' Cloudiness and the rain were exPected to hold down temperatures to
the mid 70s to low 80s.
After the front moves throUgh ·the
state tonight, the hwnidities should
also drop to more comfOrtable
levels .
Lows this morning were in the upper 60s into the 70s. Readings about
10 degrees cooler are likely tonight.
Wednesday's high temperatures will
ches.
The showers and thunderstorD]S . be about the same Qr a litUe warmer
than today's readings.
.
were touched off as a cold front
Looking
ahead
into
the
week,
warnosed toward Ohio overnight. At
mer temperatures will return by the
dawn the front was just northwest of
WO!ll\end.
Highs should be back into
the state. A line of thunderstorms ··
the
90s
by
Snturday. The next chanformed along the front and prompce for rain will be Snturday.
ted a special marine warning for

·r-------------~-------,

are predicting the prime will fall

year.

The prime is the rate banks
charge on loans to their best-risk
corporate customers. It alao serves
as a peg for many other commercial
and industrial loans but is not tied to
consumer loans.
The prime rate has not been below
11 percent since November 1978. After moving sharply upward last
February and March, the prime
peaked at20 percent in early April.

Curb Inflation.
Pay. Cash for

II

~1

:
·I
•I

'I

Write ,your own ad and order by mail with thi s
coupon·r Cancel your ad by phone when you get
r~sults. M one y not refundab le.

Address·----~----

Phon•--------------Print one word in eac h
space below. Each in·

q

'

;.: 1

1cll!ssifi cation

, IICheck lhe proper box
:· . !' below.

I

J

' ll
I
'I
,I
I It
r, , 1I
' :i II
'I

i.t

iVanted

J For Sa le

&gt; Announcemen t

) For Rent

6-Lostand Found
7- YardSIIt
1--Publlc Seta
&amp; Auction

These cash rates

incl ude discount

II .

9-WanledtoB•y

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

22.

~5.

25.
26.
27.
28.

D-Liv•tDck
.M-HIV &amp; Grain

eTRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE

71-A11N,'f0r Sale
7,_Vtnsl 4 W. D.

J:I-Moblltt41MIS

74-Mot6rcycl••

torUie
ll-Ftrms for Slit

n-

.SERVICES
11- Homtlmprovemenrs
12- P.(umlttrll &amp; .JICIYifiAI
IJ-I,.CIYitlftl

14-Effl:triCII

.&amp; llltlrlttrallon
lf-0.....,•1 H1ullng
. M-M.H. lt_,.lr
17-UptiOisttry

IorMand.., '

Rates and. Other Information
1S Wonls or Under

29.
2dey1

tclays

____

- - -' )(
33.-

_;

---'--=

'

C...

r,.

us

'·"

2.11

J.n

word"'

lacll.w~ OYtr the mlnknum 15 words Is 4 ctnts ,...
da.,..
Ads runnlnt other thin canucutiYI da.,.. will be cftarged at tttt 1 day
roto.
·
In mMnory, Card of Thank• ud"Obltuory: 4i ctnh ~~er word. u .to
mlnlmum.CIItllnadvance,
,.

~0..111! Httm.o aaies and Y11rd ..... ara eccopted en!.,. with CIISh wntl
order. 21 coni ctlor.. fOf' ads Clrrylnt ••• Number In Care tf TM

Sentinel.

Mail This Coupon with Remittance

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

Calli

' 1 dily

.

--

Dresses, tops, jackets, pants.
Plus $1.75 tree pattern coupon.
Send $1 tor Catalo~. ·
127-Af&amp;tt•ns 'n' Doilies ... $1.50
129-Quid/EISJ Trons,.rt. $1.50
130-Swiltm-Silll 31-56.$1.50
Simple sewing, maximum im.
132-Qt!ill Ori&amp;in•ts ...... $1.50 .
·pact' The diagonal shoulder
In Memoriam
drape gives top excitement to a l 2.
.
tun1c pouoed over sleek (elastic ·IN LOVINGMemoryofour
waist) pants. For jersey, crepe. , .mother, Katie Young, wno
Printed Pattern 4670: Misses 1passed away 6 years .ago
Sizes B, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size
July 22.
12 (bust 34) top, pants 311 yards 1 Please, God, forgive a
silent tear,
.
60-inch Iabrie.
..,
fervent wish our Mom 1
$1.75 t• uch palltm. ~dd 54M · IA
washere. ·
1
!Gr NCh pattlm tar fir~t-cl•
There are others, yes. we
1irm1il Md handlin~ Send to:
know,
...
But
she
was
ours,
we
love
:
Anne Adams
,her so.

Pllltorn Depl

Sadly missed
family . 1

(llltlrt 11m1 ot ,our IJiper)
·243 West 17 St New Ylllk NY
10011. Print NAME, ADOIW,
ZIP, SIZE, and STYLE NUMBER.

-3

ARMISTICE 1918
VIOLINIST
Violinist Fritz .Kreisler
Armistice talks to end
made his New York debllt · the First World War began ' Busy women, tne Tastest-lo-sew ·
lash ions aoe in our NEW SPRINGtfov. 8, 1918.
·
in 1888 at the age of 13.
SUMMER PATTERN CATAlOG'
-

by

-

her

-

Annou)lcements
1 PAY highest prices '
.possible for gold and sllv'"

coins, rings, jewelry, etc . ,

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
'

lor that last d mond.
Note that If West had led a
lrumg at trick one, East
woul be able to lead two
more trumps and there would ..
be no ruff.
Would a trump lead b~
West · have beaten dec:lorer .
Almoat surely, but If South
had
e~lng he
woul have fo
East to 1
unguard bls kina of hearts to
kee~ a diamond and still ·
rna e the hand.

/"iessed

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE AMN .)

-

-

~

·-

Announcements
3
Picking up and buylng·lunk
autos and bodies. Buying
clean copper 60c lb .,
radiators 40c ea.; yellow
brass JOe lb., aluminum 15c
lb. Riders Salvage, Rl. 4,
, 51. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phone 992·5468.

''Maggie's

Iran·

Upholstery''

Rebu ilding, Refinishing,
Reupholstery, Fabric and
vinyl samples. Call 7~2·
2852.

FIRST AD -

room,

recreation room , fireplace,

lOis of storage, 2_ baths,

garage, 1 acre lot. 992-~ .

63

on one acre and hard

JONES Meat Picking •

chen , por ch. uti lily bldg:
road. On ly $1~.900 .
FAMILY HOME - 4
bedrooms, 2 baths.fur-

nace, natural gas, din ·

position to start; possible

tng

room,

varnished

. CONSTRUCTION ':

NEW 3 Bedroom all elec·

carpeted, near Langsville
and mines.

.

Can be seen

anytime 9-9, 742-2819.

1975 western Mansion 14 K
70 lhree bedroom; 1971
Cameron, u x 64 two ' ONE PONY for sale. 843bedroom; 19)1 Liberty, 14 x · 2353
65 two bedroom; 1968
Allanllc,
12 x 60 two
'
bedroom; 1968 New
Moon, 12 x 60 wllh expando,
two bedroom ; 1967 Buddy,
12 x 50, 2 bedroom .
11
Autos for Sale
B&amp;S
1977 Pontiac . Sunblr(l,
Mobile Home Sales
Pt. Pleasant, W.VA.
sunroof, autometiC:, am·fm
675--1-124.
radio, excellent' condlllon.
good gas mileage: $3500.00.
or besl offer. Caii985-J596.

floors , 2 car garage, cor ·

ner lol and small 2 room
shop. Asking $35,000.
70 ACRES - Ni ce rott -

· .!hood of Southeast Ohio, 8
North Court St., Athens,
· Ohio 45701 . Must be post. ·marked no tater than July
.25, 19eo. An Equal opwrtunity Employer.

ing land for farming or
as a subdivision . Lots of
farm buildings, good old

10 room home with bath .
half fenced.
17 ACRES - Near city

'~!.bout

~ater ,

electric

and

sewer. Can be divided

NUCLt;:AR
POWER
TRAINING
We offer the only !rain-

b.ui 1dlng
Pomeroy .

into

lots

In

FIRSTAD - 4 Yrs. old,
3

bedroom

S yra c.use.

ing package of its kind
in the country . Qualified
a pplicants w ill get tree
medical care, earn 30
days' vacati on with pay
and will receive a $2,000
·bonus upon completion
of training . Ideal can·
o•dates will ha,v e high
school diploma and

carpeting,

home

in

Bath ,

baseboard

heal. patio, garage and

nice level lot . Can move

-·-. ......... .· .··· ...
.......

MONEY .- MONEY •
First

mortgagesJ

refinan
Call
ete
Mortgag
ervlces .
i
1-.IGalllipolis, Ohio a•
11::446-1517 for mor~
!~formation
and

in on signing of deed.

FIRST AO - 70 ACRES
on new 33. Plenty of sprIng water, barn, large

Lois &amp; Acreage
one acre gerund and lu ll
basemen!. Phone 667 -3826.

1970 CHEVY IMPALA 843·
2353

1 ACRE LOTS. Secluded ir.
lhe hearl.of Pomeroy. 992·
62791ifler 5 p.m.

1975
PLUMOUTH
VALIANT six cylinder, air
conditioning, low mileage,
two studded snaw tires extra . 992·7•15.
•.

block building, 2 frame
hOuses ,

nice

mobile

home with patio, and 3

above average math
and physics skills. Age

1.89 ACRES , city wale{,

c ar garage. Mostly fen c·

electric,

wi re. A ll minerals and

footers for a frailer.
Rutland . Cal l 1·304-773·
5373.

•ed with woven and barb

17 ·25 . CALL TOLL
FREE
I·800·282· I384
MON .·WED.
9AMio2 PM

some timber.
YOUR CHILDREN -

Will love this 11 room

hom e with 2 baths, ce n·

just outside of. town.
Large yard wilh shade
2 car
other

buildings. Call to see.
EVERYDAY SOME·
ONE CALLS US ON
OUR LISTINGS. IT
COU LO BE YOURS.
SOMETIMES A PRO·
PERTY BECOMES A
BURDEN, TRY US
FOR A SOLUTION.
OUR HOME SHIELD
WILL HELP SELL
YOUR PROERTY.
LINE ONE 9'12·3325,
Lt NE TWO 992-3876 .

POMEROY,O.
Now ListinG Pomerov nomt
Ave., -4 BR, 11/1
kltc;ht!n , l ull
carpeted, o~ nd
L11rge p11vec1 parking
ootbulldln~. a ttractive
tM!ry . Won' t last long. Call us

Housing
Headq uarters

an appointment ,

MAIN
POMEROY,O.,
992-l259

.

WANT TO .GET
. . AWAY FROM IT ALL?
Blh Acres Close To Town And
Schools In Mason. l'avea Roaa,
City Water, Large House In
Excellent Condition • .
.Offset· the high cost of your grocery
bill,- raise your own beef and gardens.
Also has a separate trailer hook up.
Priced To Sell At 65.ouu. uwner Will Consider jrade ln.
SEE MARY KEBLER ON THIS ONE.
I

I

.

NEW LISTING
CHESTER - 2 bedroom

Adults

mobile hemP 12x50 on

only .

Brown's

Trailer Court. Call992·3324.

approx. "rl'\\1) ·e laying

lot with •~ .. workshop

and garage . Other
buildings. $13,500.00.
NEW LISTING

1 BEDROOM Mobile
Home . Adults only 992·2598.

Trailer or homesite.
Close in and over one

44

Apartment
tor Rent
3 AN 0 4 RM furnished ap·
Is. Phone992·.5434.

acre. Util ities available.
$4,000,00.
.
CHESTER - A one
story frame house with
a tremendously large
yard and approx . 25
acres. Has a part basement · and has recently

spiral

staircase,

and

many more features .
$59,500.00.
LET US SHOW YOU
THESE NICE HOMES I
REALTOR
Henry E. Clel•nd, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dollie Turner
742·2474
Jean Trussell Mf·2660
OFFICE ff2 · 22~9

-Back hoe and . dump
All iypes of roof work,
new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting .

All wqrk guaranteed.

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

2600.

4;;,==;:spa=c:e:;f;or::R;;;e:;:n~t==

-Commercial plumtJ- -...
ing
.:
-Underground
fue l

storage installation

"992·7354

Custom
Print "" ·

-Shop
tor

shirts

~

novelly

politicians,

ball leams, business·or

indiYiduals.

. Shirts $4.00 Each
"We prinl ALMOST
anvt.hing on ALMOST
anyftt}ng!"

· Ph. 614·949·2358

E¥ening5 &amp; Weekends

&lt;

-·-·... _

J&amp;L BUMN

D. BUMGARDNER
SAliS
..

IN~~

THE POOL PEOPLE

Aluminum !Hifng
• lnsulatiaft. ~
• Storm OOiors

31711 Noble Sumil Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
992·5724

• Storm WlfidoWi, ..
• Replacement . .
Windows,

5·1·tlc

'
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes - ex.-

6itw'MsDtl"

t;:;::=:::======il
·ROUSH
tensi've remodeling
• Erect rica I work
• M•·sbnrv work ·
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
6·30·1 mo .

'1'·' ...~.:.

Free E~f~Nitt
JamesK. ..
Ph: 992-2_1'f1_
·.
· , \~''f'mo.

sales. service and sup- r
plies. In ground and
above ground pools.

6-16-tfc

.

;.,.,~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROIIS
DOWN
1lillbled,
1 Yerevan ta
u • rifle
its capital

z ReytJ•vllt ta

i Olrrier
and 181'196

Its capital
3 Soft (IDUI.)

Bonaparte

t Aclrell

Auto P'Mrts
BUI'Ityll
victory
&amp; Accessories
11 Latvian
5 Autocrat
1972 Monte Carlo body par· !&lt;!=====::::::::::::=:~ 1ZliSU8peCI
•. ASian river
Yeoto....,.a.un.
ts, one hood, two doots, one
(sl.)
7 Roman
11 Deep .
..,..... II
trunk lid, assorted front
L
11
a.-.
(abbr.)
goddela
cut
.•
ill capital
- . -end parts, ~ear gla!S. 992·

Farm Buildings
-·.

Homt.
tmprovemlilts
S a. G Carpel Cleaning.
Steam cleaned·. Free
estimate.
Rnsonable
rates. scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742-2211 ... -

HOME NEEOING painted? Gullers 1, need of
repair? Is !hal t'Oof begin·
nlng to leak? Call 992·3519,
992·3941, or 992·5n6.and get
things all fixed uf? lor thai
bad weather !hits on lis.
way. By the way, free
esllmales are "provided.

n

Anllques
ATTENTION'
(IM·
PDRTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or cerllfled check
for antiQues and collec·

Sizes

tibles or entire estates.

Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and .
coin collecllons. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3-111 .

Utlity Buildings
Sizes from 4x6 to 12x4f

.

-

....,.t

ornament

SMALL

11

I One of
IH "Tile - of ·• • . .
the Aliena
Bacc!G"
lfOIItl1o
11 Duty
t Olaroo's
a Ike's cltl1d- - .
17 Alfooso's nina CI'OeliQa
hood bome · ...nell
II Lear of TV 1t Seta .
tl Conllnued, ".' ...........
a Tr&lt;&gt;U
Vllue •
u uubaft"
!! Beverqe
lS Squ._
acrlpllon
, _tenD
!S EQptlan
the lrflpr • Duroc:ber'i ~.-: ........
stalemwl lt CompUion
middle Nllli' · ft..._.,ve
!I G•wt
:-'-!lr""1~!r"D Sltlnlo llmple
HBibllcal
II Spire

" From 30x30"

COUNTRY MOBILE Home .
'
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Laroe tols. Call doors
arid wiMG!Ws, also
Floorlng,.celllng,.panellng,
992-7479 .
painting. Call9f2·2759.

1

welding

~ .{,.l.·~. t49· 2160

and

~

portablo

- !'oncrele work

949-2862

T·shirl

and

~

ONE AND TWO bedroom
cabins, furnished, by week
or month . 773·5471 or 742·

1

tr!Jck service

- Shop

-Fiberglass. pools

Call Howard
· C!'

RENTER'S assistance for
senior Cllizens In Village
Manor apls. Call992·7787.

been
remodeled .
$38,953.00.
FREE PIANO - Goes
with this 2 story, full
-basemen! home. Large
·tot, 4 bedrooms, and has
tots
of closets.
$28,500.00,
WLKESVILLE - This 5

port. $18,000.00.
RANCH HOUSE - Wllh
5 beaullfut acres and In
excellent condlllon, only
J'h yrs. old. 3 bedrooms,
family room, and 1112
baths.S51,ooo.oo:
DON'T FENCE ME INI
NIce pl~ce for
children,
has J
bedrooms, outbuildings,
and 6 acres: Close ln.
Just $29,500.00.
SALEM CENTER «Jx60 business building
. with aP.prox.Y&gt; acr~ lot.
Could be used for a
. trailer or homeslle .
' $9,000.00.
TIRED OF THE
HEAT?- AIR CONDI·
TfONED - and IS
· georgeous. This regal
home has 4 bedrooms,

76

2779.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 3, Box 54
·:..:tt•cine, Oh.
JIH-43·2591 ·
. ,,·,
· 6·15-tfC •

,.h.

t~=~~~~~~~=·l

uceotral
· DUDe

lll.Giinl pace
IIHolpice

MACHINE
service,

all

992·2284. The
Pomeroy.
Stn·aer Soles
Service.
sharpen

a Macaw

II Word wllb
cen~c

or mania

II Elder
of golfdom
II Reporter's
talent
tZ Pinafore
GCub
"Raines

·orlA&gt;pn

Ghnctioned

Misc. Marchanlso
LADIES' beautiful high·
quality size i6 dresses,
brands: David Crystal,
Verona, Lilly Pulitzer. One
IS· 100% silk. SlO eacfl.
Never been worn . 992·3283&lt;
54

· (IDe lettei'r.lmply •ta.a. for
Died for the tbree L'o, XJ or
opootropheo, the len,th ~
lllDII. Ea&lt;h day the eodelottero

USED self·contalned •If
coridilloner. can be seen at
Kingsbury P•rk Sale11.
Minersville, Oh. $250.

~~v,TIIS

......

,.

c

THREE PIECE redWOO(
set, like new . Call afler 5.

; KWF

t~j

T U

,.

PZW

992·7352 .

MF'TWI;
55
Bulldlng'Supplles
J X F BACKHOE
VICE llscenSed
lt8 Inch rebor-17c P.r toot , ded
1
by 20 fl. secllon only. D.
Bumgardner Soles, NObl~
Summll Rd., ·Middleport,
OH . 992·5724.

Zl

z' w

T

r t : ..

LFTWJU
.

CT U

T

I P TI

NZHS

JUII' . '

t

QF. JLQF,
WTI!'ZHF
.
.~ .·: ~·
.
Veotenlloy~o Cryptequclte: POVERTY-THE ltiOI!If VitADLY
~D PREVALENT OF AU..DISE~.-EW!i:Nt~'NEILL
Clltll Klnt Pnturn SYf'lffc..._ 1ftc.

.·

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

1973 Oldsmobile- Tornado,
good dependabl~ tar, best
offer. 949·2732. .,

Mobllt Homes
for Rent
TWO bedroom trailer .

bedrooms and a car·

WEDGE REALTY

tank,·

42

on lots that are level.
Does need 51&gt;me repair,
but a !IOod bUY at
$16,500.00.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- 2 story older home
wtth a fireplace, 4

THURS. &amp; Fri., July 24/25
al Skate·A·Way Roller
Rink 9·4, small appliances,
electric guitar, baby llems,
drapes, many clothes, and
misc . Items.

septic

608 E .

room house Is situated

Yarct S•ie
THREE family yard sale.
Thurs. and Fri. , June 26
and 27. 9 a.m.· 5 p. m. on
right on lop of Chesler Hill.
Maple bar stools, house •
paint, toys, misc.

LiVHIOCk ·

s Iaughterlng, .....custom
processing, ret•n meat.
WashIngton Co. Rd . 248,
Lillie HOCking, . OH. 667·
6133.
...

tri c home, over 1 acre,
disposal and dishwasher,

.I

- - - - -,-

e2 Dozers
c.. ,
• Dump Trucks .;&lt;· ·
· All related tllllilll'!!ent.

large

Nice 2

7

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

yd.

kitc h~n,

Built·in

bedroom home with formi ca bath, shower in
tub , natural gas forced
air fur nace, large k"i1·

'

. • . . . -..J ..

din.ing

1-(614) -992·3~?~

7 WEEK 9LD collie lo goad
home. 949-2018 or 667·6·431
aller 6.

992-2342
IXMNINGsatllDS AGENCY, INC.

sale.

216 E. Second Street
Phone

. increase to 31• or full. Send
resume to Planned Paren·

Porch Sale, Wed . and
Thurs., July 23 and 24, 9
' a.m. lo 4 p.m., 256 South
Fourth Ave., Middleport.
. Clothing and miscellaneous
' items. Magnavox stereo
. $75, 13 Inch tires $10 for set. ·

•e1

NEW 3 bedroom nome for

Brownell Avenue, Mid·
dleporl, Phone 992·5204.

Real Estale - General

-

Three year old, five room
house wllh central air and
heat, ,carpet throughout, 2•
acres wtlh fruit trees .
Loca'led on Eagle Ridge
Rd . Phone 949·2793.

windOWS, aluminum ~idlng,
one c:ar garage. Located on

IMMEDIAT E opening for

Mora's.

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE ..NEEDS .
CALL us I

and

FIVE ROOM house, balh,
ulilily room, wall lo wall
carpet, storm doors and

5.

4
·Giveaway
-4 MALE PUPPIESthalftre
hall beagte,very cute. Call
985-4117 or see at Woodrow

ARE YOU PAvt.NG TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

down, VA-no down
paymenf, FHA·Iow down
payment, FHII: ~~5 gra.dualed payment
program, FHA 265 subsidy
per ~ent

Bankers. Call 992-7000 for
appointment.

ditions. Contact Mr. Zidian
al lhe Pomeroy Health
Care Center. 9n6606 Mon ·
day ihtough Friday from 9·

Main St.
Pomeroy 992-2181

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868

available, 'Conventional 5

Associated, Inc., Mortgage

c..-q .. M .. Htyts, Rta ltor
Nucll E. Carsey, &amp;r . Mvr.
Ph. "2 -240) or "t-2710

.

Beautiful large home. Low
ulltllles, brick ranch style,
3 bedrooms, 2112 baths,
fireplace , full basement,
family room, air con·
dlltoner, 3 car garao.e.
Baum Addition, Meigs
county. Call985·4169.

· MONEY

program ·2nd mortgages.

time. Good working con·

· --

t

MORTAGE

Cunningham

tre es, pi!ti o,
garage and

-·

·--~--- --·- ---'---..,.------

old

'

DOWNING CHilDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCt · .. . '

SER~ING

BUY

Needed ROor LPN for 11 to
· 7:30 s~lfl . Part-time or full ·

-POMEROY''·
lANDMARK

ace and another

lead another trumf, but there
Is still a trum~ lei In dummy

South should apply the
acronym ARCH In bls play of
this hand.
Allllyze the lead. It Is either
lromJ 10 i , K J IOorJ x.
Review tjle bidding. There
was no blddln&amp;
. 10 the oppo-

·1

.Auto .-uh

&amp; .t.ccflsorln
77- Auto Ill .,air

4 P .M. Dally
11 NOOft Sttwrd~

ld•ys

.

Pass

By Otwa" JaCol!y
ODd Alu Soatag

U- SMCI I FertUiltt'

l1- RNit0rt •

:JJ .

••

Pus

~

diam . East Willi and can
lead a trump, but it Is too late.
South Willi and lead! a third
diamond. Eul can win and

Opening lead:• J

JJ.-Lotl&amp; Acrutt

32. _ _ _ _ __

. 16 . . ~·-~---

Paa

s..~

Pus

I NT

3.,.

and

6Z- Wtntecl to Ivy
72-Trycks tor S.ll

Want· Ad Advertising
Deadlines

35. -

Pass

Pus

Jt--RHIIstttt wanttCI

~0·~------

1·5.

5:1-cl, TV, RadiO IC!r.lipment
s',_AnfiCIVel
54-Misc. Merchandise
S5-luUcllng Supplln

21-Homft for Still

24 .

U.

eMERCHANDISE
51-HouslftOHI GOOds

,, _ .,.,m lqvlpment

IUslnus
Op,ortunlty

23.

6.

•A
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Weal Norlll Eul

•
e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

34--lutlntn luUdln11

i8.
19.
20.

SOUTH
.AKilll
• 82
tAV63

• 41-Equlpmtnt for R tf'll

it to me. If diamonds

reak 3·3 there are just two
dfumond losers. Suppose dlamoods don't break and East
has the king of hearts? Can I
make it anyway? Yes, Ill can
ruff the last diamond In
dummh.
Soul sees that he can do
that if he starts on diamonds
immedlatelfieaso he riles with
the ace of
rts at trick one

KQJ 10
.Q7 2
t

• KJ 105!

47- Wtni.Oto .. .,,

Services

•1.
2.
3.

11 .
12.
13.

'I
i '

5-HappyAdl

22-Mont)' to Loan
23-ProftnkWitl

21.

I 7.
I 8. - - - - !I · 9.

i

..,._Apartmtnt.tor lhnt
41--,Rooms
......-..Spttt for Rent

21 -

I.

l

~lvtaWI'f

+I

42-MHUt Homes
tor Rtnl

eFINANCIAL

proper

if you'll

• S4

&amp; Cl Atpalr

classify, edil or· reject
the

41- Housnfor Rent

11-W•nttdTO Do

. I any ad . Your ad will be

in

• J IOH 3

.K 65

1-CardofThlnks
2-ln Mtmorlom
3- AnnOunctmtnts

eRENTALS

eANNOUNCEMENTS

~ive

Services

us right away and gel on
. the eligibility lis! at 992·
2156 or 992-2157.

With Any UN ICO
FREEZER PLUS:
$25 DISCOUNT
'
Stop in for Details

trick. The heart finesse will ·

t761

23

ICE CREAM

How · can I make this
contract? I have to win a lOth

EAST

selling. Also do appra ising.
Osby (Osslel Marlin. 992-

Socia I . Worker
wit·h
Bachelor's degree, experience in c:rlsis coun·
sellng ; based in Meigs
County, willing to travel to
neighboring counties. Must
be highly organized; will
have
di verse respan·
sibllities . Half time

FRE_~l .

have nine top winners and

•gu•

, · small. Check prices before

tral heat·, city water,

lour possible losen.

WEST

dollar, or complete estates.

' No llem too large or too

tinel route carrier . Phone

1965. If no answer phone
992-2082.

nents' hands should be fairly
well balanced.
Count winners and losers. I

t752

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

15--Schoolslnstructlon
,,.._
Radio. T\1

reserves the· r ight to

I put

'

foreign

some great gifts as a Sen-

and Repair Service since

Astute analysii triumphs
H2·10

or

as a young business person
and earn good money plus

Announcements
Piano Tuning . Lane
Daniels 742-2'151. Tuning

BRIDGE

NOkTH
.QIOO
.AQ7

AUTOMO ILE
IN ·
·SURANCE been can·
· coins or any gold or silver ce lled ? Lost your
: Items. Antique furniture, oper ator's license? Phone
•.; glass or chln.a, will pay lop 992·, 143 .
sliver

,. , Gold;

Help Wanted
. GET VALUABLE training

3

Oswald Jacob~ and Alan Sontag

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero.,.. 0 ., 4576'

ll-lnsuranct
14- Buslnns Trelnlnt

I You ' ll get lieller resulls
l I If. you · descr ibe fully,
t ' 1 give price. The Sentinel

Printed Pattern

PHONE 992-2156

I

11-SifUiltiCI Wlftttcl

phone number if used.

·I

WANT AD INFORMATION

1t - Htlp want.:~ ·

' 1· Ilia I or group of figures ·
.. 1 coUnts as a word . Count
, ; I name and address or

\
~

1,.

l
Classlfleds and ; :I
Savel II
1:

.f

-

Simply Sensational

ln1rance

13

11

The key lending rate started dropping this spring as the recession
tightened and open-market interest
rates plunged. Because the
recession's piJtch has caused many
companies to delay or reduce spending projects, banks' loan b\lsineas
has been sluggish this sununer.
·
The government says commercial
and industrial loans on the book of
the nation's major banks fell $379
million in the week ended July 9, the
latest period for which such
statistiCs are available.

below 10 percent by September and
to near 8.5 percent by the end of the

..

10 kcirat, 14 karat, 18 karat,

· gold . Denial gold and gold
ear pins. 67~-3010 .

Fischer lypewrller service
IBM plus most brands.
Contracts available. 797·
2401.
The Plains, Ohio
$32.50 fl at rate per call .

.,

'.

Miscellaneous
CANNING CORN, while
and yellow; Charles Harris
and Sons. 843-2693.

17

etc. Call 2-4.5-9188.

By The Associated Press
Needed raina fell over almost all
of Ohio late Monday and this morning. The heaviest totals were indicated by radar and satellite in the
eastern half of. the state.
·
Only a handful of actual reports of
rainfall totals had been recevled by
1
the National Weather Service at
. daybreak. Amounts generally were
less than a half an inch, but a few
spots reported rains in excess of an
inch. Columbus measured 1.57 In-

·-·-

-

Hospital , Pomeroy, Oh . 1·
614-992·2104.

Ice boxes, antiques, etc.
complete . households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, DH1 or call 992·
7760.

; WILL

Small investment, larg~ returns, Sentinel W aD:t_Ads
~·

tact Teresa Collins RN ,
Veterans
Memorial

. · smlssions , batteries ,
• · engines, or scrap metals,

.

was BR\Ong the smaller banks that
matched the 11 percent rate.
Just last Friday, Chase Manhattan Bank and First National Bank of
Chicago lowered their prime rates to
11.25 percent, the rate first .set one
week earlier by New York's
Citibank.
Analysts said they expect the 11
percel)t rate to spread throughout
the banking industry soon as the
recession continues to dampen loan
demand.
Some bank analysts on Wall Street

r ings, jewelry , si lver
dollars, sterl ing , etc .• wood

dut~ .
Salary com·
men~urale with exp. Cbn-

6370.

Cost of borrowing down
. another notch
.

Business Services

as well as general staff

Generally, the report said world
.cotton use in 198&amp;81 " is expected to
continue expanding, although at a
slower rate" than in the current
year.
Total use was projected in a range
of 64.Q million to 65.8 million bales,
compared with !hi! estimate of 64.9
milllon il)l979-80.
.
'
"Foreign 1980-81 consumption is
expected to be slighUy higher while
U.S. consumption will likely
decline," the report said. "The
leading cotton consuming countries
are Olina, the USSR, the United
States, India and Japan."

parts of the country.
The U.S. cotton reserve on Aug. 1
is expected to be arolUld 2.8 million
· bales, the smallest since the early
1950s.
If domest1t cotton use continues
strong and the crop tunis t)ut "in the
lower end" of the projected range of
12.2 million to 14.7 million bales, the
supply for export co~ld be
diminished sharply, the report said.
The Soviet Union's cotton crop,
second only to the U.S. harvest lilst
year, is currently estimated at about
13.1 million bales, which is
"basically unchanged" from 1979,
the report said.

'

'

�11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesctay,~~~1980~-_;_------------i cc----=.- .,-...,.--;...,.---56
Pels for S.le
Pu~llc Sale
11
Hetp Wanted
&amp; Auction
BRADFORD, A~clloneer, · REGISTERED N\JRSES.
complete Service. Ph&lt;!ne lmme.d iate opening for
· 949·2487 or 949·2000. racine, registereQ nurs e~ ex ·
pertenced In I.C.\.1 ., C.C.\.1 .
Ohio, Crill Bradford.

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 22, 1980_

•

This year's U.S. cotton crop could
be factor on future of world market
WASfUNGTON ..{AP)
ThlB
year's U.S. cotton crop, currently
being severely battered by the heat
wave in key producing areas, could
be the deciding factor in whether
world coiton trade increases or
declines in 1980-81.
Other factors will be the world
economy in general, China's import
requirements and the Soviet Union's
export slrate~y in the marketing
year that will begin on Aug, 1, the
department's Foreign Agricultural
Service said Monday.
Cotton production by the leading
countries was tentatively forecast in
a range of 64.1 million to 66.6 million
. bales, compared with the 1979-80
estimate of .65.5 million bales.
One resson for the wide range is
the uncertainy about U.S. productioll, which will not be officially
estimated by the Agriculture Department until next month. Based on
past trends, the crop could be 12.2
milllQII to 14.7 million bales, com-

1S THIS A stable or au art museum? Tbis sculpture by
Deborah Butterfield of a horse covered wilb sticks was
among the works on exhibit recently at the Snu Francisco
Museum of Modern Art.
.

pared with the 1979 harvest of more
than 14.6 million.
Foreign production was estimated
at 51.9 million bales in 1980-81, up
about one million bales from this
year, the report said.
"The largest production gains are
expected in China, Nicaragua and
India," the report said.
Tentatively, world cotton exports
. are expected to drop to leas than 21.1
million bales in the conllng year
from about 22.6 million in 1979-80.
Most of the decline could rl!llult from
reduced U.S. eli))Orts, it said.
· "Higher foreign production, some
of which is in conslllll!ng countries,
along with a soft world economy
coUld.reduce the world cotton export
demand," the report said . .
In any event, the report said, U.S.
cotton eli))Orts in 1980-81 "could be
llmited by the domestic situation"
that includes the prospective 1980
crop, currently under severe heat
stress in Texas, Oklahoma an~ other

Toledo leads in pay categories
CHICAGO (AP) - Federal labor

in Ohio, and Monroe County, Mich. It
statistics show Toledo was ahead of is based on information rei)Orted by
five other Ohio metropolitan areas 139 companies employing about
in wages paid to workers in four 74,200 workers. The businesses were
broad job clasSifiCations.
selected to represent 506 establlsh· The Labor Department study ments employing 120,000 persons.
The report showed .t hat average
showed Cleveland leading in one
category and tied with Akron in salaries of clerical workers in
another. None of the six Ohio areas greater Toledo were up 8.9 percent
examined came ciose to tletroit in from a year ago. Salaries for comany classification.
puter-related positions rose 10.3 per:
Statistics from Cleveland, Colwn- cent.
bus, Dayton, Toledo, Akron and CanWilliam E . Rice, regionaL comton were included in the study. The missioner for the Labor Department
report also included Detroit and in Chicago, said pay rate increases
Snginaw, Mich., ·and South Bend, for all five groups studied exceeded
Ind. It considered the job categories those of a year ago. He also said the
of office clerical, computer-related, increases were less than the rate of
skilled maintenance
and unskilled 1,. inflation as measured by the Con. .
p!ant;
.
sumer Price Index.
The report on Toledo listed
Average wages for unskilled plant
salaries for industrial nurses in a workers increased 11 percent, while
separate category. Unemployment, salaries for skilled maintenance
which has been increasing in Toledo, workers went up 10.9 percent. Inwas not a factor in the report. .
duStrial nurses experienced a 10.6
The survey showed that average percent average raise.
pay rates for the five job groups in
Weekly salaries for office
the Toledo metropolitan area in- positions ranged from averages of
creased by 8.9 to 11 percent during $157.50 for clerks to $343.50 for
the year ending last May.
secretaries working for top-level
executives. Jobs found most often
The survey covered Lucas,
Fulton, Ottawa, and Wood counties were secretaries', accounting clerks

and key entry operators.
,
Weekly salaries for secretaries
ranged from $257 to $343.50, while
those of accounting clerks ranged
from$201 to$259.
Average wages for computerrelated positions were between $192
and $488.50 per week.
Computer programmers' salaries
ranged from $322.50 to $398 weekly.

Drafters with comj!lex and often unprecedented assignments earned an
average of $364.50 per week.
Average earnings for skilled
maintenance trades varied from
~. 94 an hour for painters to $11.07
for machi!Je tool operators. Tool and
die rriakers got $10.80 per hour, and
mechani~s working on plant
machinery eamed$9.85.

Wanted to Buy
1ron and ·brass beds, old
furniture , desks , gold

9

NEW YORK (AP) - The

cost of

business borrowing dropped another
notch Monday as two big New York
banks cut their prime lending rates
one-half P.rcentage point to II percent.
Morgan Guaranty Trust Co., the
country's fifth-largest commercial
bank, started the latest round of rate
cuts. Bankers Trust Co., the nation's
eighth largest, quickly matched the
new rate, but most other banks
stayed at the prevailing 11.5 percent.
Manufacturers Bank of Los Angeles

..

Rain breaks heat spell
western Lake Erie.
Much cooler weather W!IS to
1 dominate the Ohio region .today.
' Cloudiness and the rain were exPected to hold down temperatures to
the mid 70s to low 80s.
After the front moves throUgh ·the
state tonight, the hwnidities should
also drop to more comfOrtable
levels .
Lows this morning were in the upper 60s into the 70s. Readings about
10 degrees cooler are likely tonight.
Wednesday's high temperatures will
ches.
The showers and thunderstorD]S . be about the same Qr a litUe warmer
than today's readings.
.
were touched off as a cold front
Looking
ahead
into
the
week,
warnosed toward Ohio overnight. At
mer temperatures will return by the
dawn the front was just northwest of
WO!ll\end.
Highs should be back into
the state. A line of thunderstorms ··
the
90s
by
Snturday. The next chanformed along the front and prompce for rain will be Snturday.
ted a special marine warning for

·r-------------~-------,

are predicting the prime will fall

year.

The prime is the rate banks
charge on loans to their best-risk
corporate customers. It alao serves
as a peg for many other commercial
and industrial loans but is not tied to
consumer loans.
The prime rate has not been below
11 percent since November 1978. After moving sharply upward last
February and March, the prime
peaked at20 percent in early April.

Curb Inflation.
Pay. Cash for

II

~1

:
·I
•I

'I

Write ,your own ad and order by mail with thi s
coupon·r Cancel your ad by phone when you get
r~sults. M one y not refundab le.

Address·----~----

Phon•--------------Print one word in eac h
space below. Each in·

q

'

;.: 1

1cll!ssifi cation

, IICheck lhe proper box
:· . !' below.

I

J

' ll
I
'I
,I
I It
r, , 1I
' :i II
'I

i.t

iVanted

J For Sa le

&gt; Announcemen t

) For Rent

6-Lostand Found
7- YardSIIt
1--Publlc Seta
&amp; Auction

These cash rates

incl ude discount

II .

9-WanledtoB•y

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

22.

~5.

25.
26.
27.
28.

D-Liv•tDck
.M-HIV &amp; Grain

eTRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE

71-A11N,'f0r Sale
7,_Vtnsl 4 W. D.

J:I-Moblltt41MIS

74-Mot6rcycl••

torUie
ll-Ftrms for Slit

n-

.SERVICES
11- Homtlmprovemenrs
12- P.(umlttrll &amp; .JICIYifiAI
IJ-I,.CIYitlftl

14-Effl:triCII

.&amp; llltlrlttrallon
lf-0.....,•1 H1ullng
. M-M.H. lt_,.lr
17-UptiOisttry

IorMand.., '

Rates and. Other Information
1S Wonls or Under

29.
2dey1

tclays

____

- - -' )(
33.-

_;

---'--=

'

C...

r,.

us

'·"

2.11

J.n

word"'

lacll.w~ OYtr the mlnknum 15 words Is 4 ctnts ,...
da.,..
Ads runnlnt other thin canucutiYI da.,.. will be cftarged at tttt 1 day
roto.
·
In mMnory, Card of Thank• ud"Obltuory: 4i ctnh ~~er word. u .to
mlnlmum.CIItllnadvance,
,.

~0..111! Httm.o aaies and Y11rd ..... ara eccopted en!.,. with CIISh wntl
order. 21 coni ctlor.. fOf' ads Clrrylnt ••• Number In Care tf TM

Sentinel.

Mail This Coupon with Remittance

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

Calli

' 1 dily

.

--

Dresses, tops, jackets, pants.
Plus $1.75 tree pattern coupon.
Send $1 tor Catalo~. ·
127-Af&amp;tt•ns 'n' Doilies ... $1.50
129-Quid/EISJ Trons,.rt. $1.50
130-Swiltm-Silll 31-56.$1.50
Simple sewing, maximum im.
132-Qt!ill Ori&amp;in•ts ...... $1.50 .
·pact' The diagonal shoulder
In Memoriam
drape gives top excitement to a l 2.
.
tun1c pouoed over sleek (elastic ·IN LOVINGMemoryofour
waist) pants. For jersey, crepe. , .mother, Katie Young, wno
Printed Pattern 4670: Misses 1passed away 6 years .ago
Sizes B, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size
July 22.
12 (bust 34) top, pants 311 yards 1 Please, God, forgive a
silent tear,
.
60-inch Iabrie.
..,
fervent wish our Mom 1
$1.75 t• uch palltm. ~dd 54M · IA
washere. ·
1
!Gr NCh pattlm tar fir~t-cl•
There are others, yes. we
1irm1il Md handlin~ Send to:
know,
...
But
she
was
ours,
we
love
:
Anne Adams
,her so.

Pllltorn Depl

Sadly missed
family . 1

(llltlrt 11m1 ot ,our IJiper)
·243 West 17 St New Ylllk NY
10011. Print NAME, ADOIW,
ZIP, SIZE, and STYLE NUMBER.

-3

ARMISTICE 1918
VIOLINIST
Violinist Fritz .Kreisler
Armistice talks to end
made his New York debllt · the First World War began ' Busy women, tne Tastest-lo-sew ·
lash ions aoe in our NEW SPRINGtfov. 8, 1918.
·
in 1888 at the age of 13.
SUMMER PATTERN CATAlOG'
-

by

-

her

-

Annou)lcements
1 PAY highest prices '
.possible for gold and sllv'"

coins, rings, jewelry, etc . ,

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
'

lor that last d mond.
Note that If West had led a
lrumg at trick one, East
woul be able to lead two
more trumps and there would ..
be no ruff.
Would a trump lead b~
West · have beaten dec:lorer .
Almoat surely, but If South
had
e~lng he
woul have fo
East to 1
unguard bls kina of hearts to
kee~ a diamond and still ·
rna e the hand.

/"iessed

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE AMN .)

-

-

~

·-

Announcements
3
Picking up and buylng·lunk
autos and bodies. Buying
clean copper 60c lb .,
radiators 40c ea.; yellow
brass JOe lb., aluminum 15c
lb. Riders Salvage, Rl. 4,
, 51. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phone 992·5468.

''Maggie's

Iran·

Upholstery''

Rebu ilding, Refinishing,
Reupholstery, Fabric and
vinyl samples. Call 7~2·
2852.

FIRST AD -

room,

recreation room , fireplace,

lOis of storage, 2_ baths,

garage, 1 acre lot. 992-~ .

63

on one acre and hard

JONES Meat Picking •

chen , por ch. uti lily bldg:
road. On ly $1~.900 .
FAMILY HOME - 4
bedrooms, 2 baths.fur-

nace, natural gas, din ·

position to start; possible

tng

room,

varnished

. CONSTRUCTION ':

NEW 3 Bedroom all elec·

carpeted, near Langsville
and mines.

.

Can be seen

anytime 9-9, 742-2819.

1975 western Mansion 14 K
70 lhree bedroom; 1971
Cameron, u x 64 two ' ONE PONY for sale. 843bedroom; 19)1 Liberty, 14 x · 2353
65 two bedroom; 1968
Allanllc,
12 x 60 two
'
bedroom; 1968 New
Moon, 12 x 60 wllh expando,
two bedroom ; 1967 Buddy,
12 x 50, 2 bedroom .
11
Autos for Sale
B&amp;S
1977 Pontiac . Sunblr(l,
Mobile Home Sales
Pt. Pleasant, W.VA.
sunroof, autometiC:, am·fm
675--1-124.
radio, excellent' condlllon.
good gas mileage: $3500.00.
or besl offer. Caii985-J596.

floors , 2 car garage, cor ·

ner lol and small 2 room
shop. Asking $35,000.
70 ACRES - Ni ce rott -

· .!hood of Southeast Ohio, 8
North Court St., Athens,
· Ohio 45701 . Must be post. ·marked no tater than July
.25, 19eo. An Equal opwrtunity Employer.

ing land for farming or
as a subdivision . Lots of
farm buildings, good old

10 room home with bath .
half fenced.
17 ACRES - Near city

'~!.bout

~ater ,

electric

and

sewer. Can be divided

NUCLt;:AR
POWER
TRAINING
We offer the only !rain-

b.ui 1dlng
Pomeroy .

into

lots

In

FIRSTAD - 4 Yrs. old,
3

bedroom

S yra c.use.

ing package of its kind
in the country . Qualified
a pplicants w ill get tree
medical care, earn 30
days' vacati on with pay
and will receive a $2,000
·bonus upon completion
of training . Ideal can·
o•dates will ha,v e high
school diploma and

carpeting,

home

in

Bath ,

baseboard

heal. patio, garage and

nice level lot . Can move

-·-. ......... .· .··· ...
.......

MONEY .- MONEY •
First

mortgagesJ

refinan
Call
ete
Mortgag
ervlces .
i
1-.IGalllipolis, Ohio a•
11::446-1517 for mor~
!~formation
and

in on signing of deed.

FIRST AO - 70 ACRES
on new 33. Plenty of sprIng water, barn, large

Lois &amp; Acreage
one acre gerund and lu ll
basemen!. Phone 667 -3826.

1970 CHEVY IMPALA 843·
2353

1 ACRE LOTS. Secluded ir.
lhe hearl.of Pomeroy. 992·
62791ifler 5 p.m.

1975
PLUMOUTH
VALIANT six cylinder, air
conditioning, low mileage,
two studded snaw tires extra . 992·7•15.
•.

block building, 2 frame
hOuses ,

nice

mobile

home with patio, and 3

above average math
and physics skills. Age

1.89 ACRES , city wale{,

c ar garage. Mostly fen c·

electric,

wi re. A ll minerals and

footers for a frailer.
Rutland . Cal l 1·304-773·
5373.

•ed with woven and barb

17 ·25 . CALL TOLL
FREE
I·800·282· I384
MON .·WED.
9AMio2 PM

some timber.
YOUR CHILDREN -

Will love this 11 room

hom e with 2 baths, ce n·

just outside of. town.
Large yard wilh shade
2 car
other

buildings. Call to see.
EVERYDAY SOME·
ONE CALLS US ON
OUR LISTINGS. IT
COU LO BE YOURS.
SOMETIMES A PRO·
PERTY BECOMES A
BURDEN, TRY US
FOR A SOLUTION.
OUR HOME SHIELD
WILL HELP SELL
YOUR PROERTY.
LINE ONE 9'12·3325,
Lt NE TWO 992-3876 .

POMEROY,O.
Now ListinG Pomerov nomt
Ave., -4 BR, 11/1
kltc;ht!n , l ull
carpeted, o~ nd
L11rge p11vec1 parking
ootbulldln~. a ttractive
tM!ry . Won' t last long. Call us

Housing
Headq uarters

an appointment ,

MAIN
POMEROY,O.,
992-l259

.

WANT TO .GET
. . AWAY FROM IT ALL?
Blh Acres Close To Town And
Schools In Mason. l'avea Roaa,
City Water, Large House In
Excellent Condition • .
.Offset· the high cost of your grocery
bill,- raise your own beef and gardens.
Also has a separate trailer hook up.
Priced To Sell At 65.ouu. uwner Will Consider jrade ln.
SEE MARY KEBLER ON THIS ONE.
I

I

.

NEW LISTING
CHESTER - 2 bedroom

Adults

mobile hemP 12x50 on

only .

Brown's

Trailer Court. Call992·3324.

approx. "rl'\\1) ·e laying

lot with •~ .. workshop

and garage . Other
buildings. $13,500.00.
NEW LISTING

1 BEDROOM Mobile
Home . Adults only 992·2598.

Trailer or homesite.
Close in and over one

44

Apartment
tor Rent
3 AN 0 4 RM furnished ap·
Is. Phone992·.5434.

acre. Util ities available.
$4,000,00.
.
CHESTER - A one
story frame house with
a tremendously large
yard and approx . 25
acres. Has a part basement · and has recently

spiral

staircase,

and

many more features .
$59,500.00.
LET US SHOW YOU
THESE NICE HOMES I
REALTOR
Henry E. Clel•nd, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dollie Turner
742·2474
Jean Trussell Mf·2660
OFFICE ff2 · 22~9

-Back hoe and . dump
All iypes of roof work,
new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting .

All wqrk guaranteed.

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

2600.

4;;,==;:spa=c:e:;f;or::R;;;e:;:n~t==

-Commercial plumtJ- -...
ing
.:
-Underground
fue l

storage installation

"992·7354

Custom
Print "" ·

-Shop
tor

shirts

~

novelly

politicians,

ball leams, business·or

indiYiduals.

. Shirts $4.00 Each
"We prinl ALMOST
anvt.hing on ALMOST
anyftt}ng!"

· Ph. 614·949·2358

E¥ening5 &amp; Weekends

&lt;

-·-·... _

J&amp;L BUMN

D. BUMGARDNER
SAliS
..

IN~~

THE POOL PEOPLE

Aluminum !Hifng
• lnsulatiaft. ~
• Storm OOiors

31711 Noble Sumil Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
992·5724

• Storm WlfidoWi, ..
• Replacement . .
Windows,

5·1·tlc

'
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes - ex.-

6itw'MsDtl"

t;:;::=:::======il
·ROUSH
tensi've remodeling
• Erect rica I work
• M•·sbnrv work ·
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
6·30·1 mo .

'1'·' ...~.:.

Free E~f~Nitt
JamesK. ..
Ph: 992-2_1'f1_
·.
· , \~''f'mo.

sales. service and sup- r
plies. In ground and
above ground pools.

6-16-tfc

.

;.,.,~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROIIS
DOWN
1lillbled,
1 Yerevan ta
u • rifle
its capital

z ReytJ•vllt ta

i Olrrier
and 181'196

Its capital
3 Soft (IDUI.)

Bonaparte

t Aclrell

Auto P'Mrts
BUI'Ityll
victory
&amp; Accessories
11 Latvian
5 Autocrat
1972 Monte Carlo body par· !&lt;!=====::::::::::::=:~ 1ZliSU8peCI
•. ASian river
Yeoto....,.a.un.
ts, one hood, two doots, one
(sl.)
7 Roman
11 Deep .
..,..... II
trunk lid, assorted front
L
11
a.-.
(abbr.)
goddela
cut
.•
ill capital
- . -end parts, ~ear gla!S. 992·

Farm Buildings
-·.

Homt.
tmprovemlilts
S a. G Carpel Cleaning.
Steam cleaned·. Free
estimate.
Rnsonable
rates. scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742-2211 ... -

HOME NEEOING painted? Gullers 1, need of
repair? Is !hal t'Oof begin·
nlng to leak? Call 992·3519,
992·3941, or 992·5n6.and get
things all fixed uf? lor thai
bad weather !hits on lis.
way. By the way, free
esllmales are "provided.

n

Anllques
ATTENTION'
(IM·
PDRTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or cerllfled check
for antiQues and collec·

Sizes

tibles or entire estates.

Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and .
coin collecllons. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3-111 .

Utlity Buildings
Sizes from 4x6 to 12x4f

.

-

....,.t

ornament

SMALL

11

I One of
IH "Tile - of ·• • . .
the Aliena
Bacc!G"
lfOIItl1o
11 Duty
t Olaroo's
a Ike's cltl1d- - .
17 Alfooso's nina CI'OeliQa
hood bome · ...nell
II Lear of TV 1t Seta .
tl Conllnued, ".' ...........
a Tr&lt;&gt;U
Vllue •
u uubaft"
!! Beverqe
lS Squ._
acrlpllon
, _tenD
!S EQptlan
the lrflpr • Duroc:ber'i ~.-: ........
stalemwl lt CompUion
middle Nllli' · ft..._.,ve
!I G•wt
:-'-!lr""1~!r"D Sltlnlo llmple
HBibllcal
II Spire

" From 30x30"

COUNTRY MOBILE Home .
'
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Laroe tols. Call doors
arid wiMG!Ws, also
Floorlng,.celllng,.panellng,
992-7479 .
painting. Call9f2·2759.

1

welding

~ .{,.l.·~. t49· 2160

and

~

portablo

- !'oncrele work

949-2862

T·shirl

and

~

ONE AND TWO bedroom
cabins, furnished, by week
or month . 773·5471 or 742·

1

tr!Jck service

- Shop

-Fiberglass. pools

Call Howard
· C!'

RENTER'S assistance for
senior Cllizens In Village
Manor apls. Call992·7787.

been
remodeled .
$38,953.00.
FREE PIANO - Goes
with this 2 story, full
-basemen! home. Large
·tot, 4 bedrooms, and has
tots
of closets.
$28,500.00,
WLKESVILLE - This 5

port. $18,000.00.
RANCH HOUSE - Wllh
5 beaullfut acres and In
excellent condlllon, only
J'h yrs. old. 3 bedrooms,
family room, and 1112
baths.S51,ooo.oo:
DON'T FENCE ME INI
NIce pl~ce for
children,
has J
bedrooms, outbuildings,
and 6 acres: Close ln.
Just $29,500.00.
SALEM CENTER «Jx60 business building
. with aP.prox.Y&gt; acr~ lot.
Could be used for a
. trailer or homeslle .
' $9,000.00.
TIRED OF THE
HEAT?- AIR CONDI·
TfONED - and IS
· georgeous. This regal
home has 4 bedrooms,

76

2779.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 3, Box 54
·:..:tt•cine, Oh.
JIH-43·2591 ·
. ,,·,
· 6·15-tfC •

,.h.

t~=~~~~~~~=·l

uceotral
· DUDe

lll.Giinl pace
IIHolpice

MACHINE
service,

all

992·2284. The
Pomeroy.
Stn·aer Soles
Service.
sharpen

a Macaw

II Word wllb
cen~c

or mania

II Elder
of golfdom
II Reporter's
talent
tZ Pinafore
GCub
"Raines

·orlA&gt;pn

Ghnctioned

Misc. Marchanlso
LADIES' beautiful high·
quality size i6 dresses,
brands: David Crystal,
Verona, Lilly Pulitzer. One
IS· 100% silk. SlO eacfl.
Never been worn . 992·3283&lt;
54

· (IDe lettei'r.lmply •ta.a. for
Died for the tbree L'o, XJ or
opootropheo, the len,th ~
lllDII. Ea&lt;h day the eodelottero

USED self·contalned •If
coridilloner. can be seen at
Kingsbury P•rk Sale11.
Minersville, Oh. $250.

~~v,TIIS

......

,.

c

THREE PIECE redWOO(
set, like new . Call afler 5.

; KWF

t~j

T U

,.

PZW

992·7352 .

MF'TWI;
55
Bulldlng'Supplles
J X F BACKHOE
VICE llscenSed
lt8 Inch rebor-17c P.r toot , ded
1
by 20 fl. secllon only. D.
Bumgardner Soles, NObl~
Summll Rd., ·Middleport,
OH . 992·5724.

Zl

z' w

T

r t : ..

LFTWJU
.

CT U

T

I P TI

NZHS

JUII' . '

t

QF. JLQF,
WTI!'ZHF
.
.~ .·: ~·
.
Veotenlloy~o Cryptequclte: POVERTY-THE ltiOI!If VitADLY
~D PREVALENT OF AU..DISE~.-EW!i:Nt~'NEILL
Clltll Klnt Pnturn SYf'lffc..._ 1ftc.

.·

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

1973 Oldsmobile- Tornado,
good dependabl~ tar, best
offer. 949·2732. .,

Mobllt Homes
for Rent
TWO bedroom trailer .

bedrooms and a car·

WEDGE REALTY

tank,·

42

on lots that are level.
Does need 51&gt;me repair,
but a !IOod bUY at
$16,500.00.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- 2 story older home
wtth a fireplace, 4

THURS. &amp; Fri., July 24/25
al Skate·A·Way Roller
Rink 9·4, small appliances,
electric guitar, baby llems,
drapes, many clothes, and
misc . Items.

septic

608 E .

room house Is situated

Yarct S•ie
THREE family yard sale.
Thurs. and Fri. , June 26
and 27. 9 a.m.· 5 p. m. on
right on lop of Chesler Hill.
Maple bar stools, house •
paint, toys, misc.

LiVHIOCk ·

s Iaughterlng, .....custom
processing, ret•n meat.
WashIngton Co. Rd . 248,
Lillie HOCking, . OH. 667·
6133.
...

tri c home, over 1 acre,
disposal and dishwasher,

.I

- - - - -,-

e2 Dozers
c.. ,
• Dump Trucks .;&lt;· ·
· All related tllllilll'!!ent.

large

Nice 2

7

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

yd.

kitc h~n,

Built·in

bedroom home with formi ca bath, shower in
tub , natural gas forced
air fur nace, large k"i1·

'

. • . . . -..J ..

din.ing

1-(614) -992·3~?~

7 WEEK 9LD collie lo goad
home. 949-2018 or 667·6·431
aller 6.

992-2342
IXMNINGsatllDS AGENCY, INC.

sale.

216 E. Second Street
Phone

. increase to 31• or full. Send
resume to Planned Paren·

Porch Sale, Wed . and
Thurs., July 23 and 24, 9
' a.m. lo 4 p.m., 256 South
Fourth Ave., Middleport.
. Clothing and miscellaneous
' items. Magnavox stereo
. $75, 13 Inch tires $10 for set. ·

•e1

NEW 3 bedroom nome for

Brownell Avenue, Mid·
dleporl, Phone 992·5204.

Real Estale - General

-

Three year old, five room
house wllh central air and
heat, ,carpet throughout, 2•
acres wtlh fruit trees .
Loca'led on Eagle Ridge
Rd . Phone 949·2793.

windOWS, aluminum ~idlng,
one c:ar garage. Located on

IMMEDIAT E opening for

Mora's.

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE ..NEEDS .
CALL us I

and

FIVE ROOM house, balh,
ulilily room, wall lo wall
carpet, storm doors and

5.

4
·Giveaway
-4 MALE PUPPIESthalftre
hall beagte,very cute. Call
985-4117 or see at Woodrow

ARE YOU PAvt.NG TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

down, VA-no down
paymenf, FHA·Iow down
payment, FHII: ~~5 gra.dualed payment
program, FHA 265 subsidy
per ~ent

Bankers. Call 992-7000 for
appointment.

ditions. Contact Mr. Zidian
al lhe Pomeroy Health
Care Center. 9n6606 Mon ·
day ihtough Friday from 9·

Main St.
Pomeroy 992-2181

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868

available, 'Conventional 5

Associated, Inc., Mortgage

c..-q .. M .. Htyts, Rta ltor
Nucll E. Carsey, &amp;r . Mvr.
Ph. "2 -240) or "t-2710

.

Beautiful large home. Low
ulltllles, brick ranch style,
3 bedrooms, 2112 baths,
fireplace , full basement,
family room, air con·
dlltoner, 3 car garao.e.
Baum Addition, Meigs
county. Call985·4169.

· MONEY

program ·2nd mortgages.

time. Good working con·

· --

t

MORTAGE

Cunningham

tre es, pi!ti o,
garage and

-·

·--~--- --·- ---'---..,.------

old

'

DOWNING CHilDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCt · .. . '

SER~ING

BUY

Needed ROor LPN for 11 to
· 7:30 s~lfl . Part-time or full ·

-POMEROY''·
lANDMARK

ace and another

lead another trumf, but there
Is still a trum~ lei In dummy

South should apply the
acronym ARCH In bls play of
this hand.
Allllyze the lead. It Is either
lromJ 10 i , K J IOorJ x.
Review tjle bidding. There
was no blddln&amp;
. 10 the oppo-

·1

.Auto .-uh

&amp; .t.ccflsorln
77- Auto Ill .,air

4 P .M. Dally
11 NOOft Sttwrd~

ld•ys

.

Pass

By Otwa" JaCol!y
ODd Alu Soatag

U- SMCI I FertUiltt'

l1- RNit0rt •

:JJ .

••

Pus

~

diam . East Willi and can
lead a trump, but it Is too late.
South Willi and lead! a third
diamond. Eul can win and

Opening lead:• J

JJ.-Lotl&amp; Acrutt

32. _ _ _ _ __

. 16 . . ~·-~---

Paa

s..~

Pus

I NT

3.,.

and

6Z- Wtntecl to Ivy
72-Trycks tor S.ll

Want· Ad Advertising
Deadlines

35. -

Pass

Pus

Jt--RHIIstttt wanttCI

~0·~------

1·5.

5:1-cl, TV, RadiO IC!r.lipment
s',_AnfiCIVel
54-Misc. Merchandise
S5-luUcllng Supplln

21-Homft for Still

24 .

U.

eMERCHANDISE
51-HouslftOHI GOOds

,, _ .,.,m lqvlpment

IUslnus
Op,ortunlty

23.

6.

•A
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Weal Norlll Eul

•
e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

34--lutlntn luUdln11

i8.
19.
20.

SOUTH
.AKilll
• 82
tAV63

• 41-Equlpmtnt for R tf'll

it to me. If diamonds

reak 3·3 there are just two
dfumond losers. Suppose dlamoods don't break and East
has the king of hearts? Can I
make it anyway? Yes, Ill can
ruff the last diamond In
dummh.
Soul sees that he can do
that if he starts on diamonds
immedlatelfieaso he riles with
the ace of
rts at trick one

KQJ 10
.Q7 2
t

• KJ 105!

47- Wtni.Oto .. .,,

Services

•1.
2.
3.

11 .
12.
13.

'I
i '

5-HappyAdl

22-Mont)' to Loan
23-ProftnkWitl

21.

I 7.
I 8. - - - - !I · 9.

i

..,._Apartmtnt.tor lhnt
41--,Rooms
......-..Spttt for Rent

21 -

I.

l

~lvtaWI'f

+I

42-MHUt Homes
tor Rtnl

eFINANCIAL

proper

if you'll

• S4

&amp; Cl Atpalr

classify, edil or· reject
the

41- Housnfor Rent

11-W•nttdTO Do

. I any ad . Your ad will be

in

• J IOH 3

.K 65

1-CardofThlnks
2-ln Mtmorlom
3- AnnOunctmtnts

eRENTALS

eANNOUNCEMENTS

~ive

Services

us right away and gel on
. the eligibility lis! at 992·
2156 or 992-2157.

With Any UN ICO
FREEZER PLUS:
$25 DISCOUNT
'
Stop in for Details

trick. The heart finesse will ·

t761

23

ICE CREAM

How · can I make this
contract? I have to win a lOth

EAST

selling. Also do appra ising.
Osby (Osslel Marlin. 992-

Socia I . Worker
wit·h
Bachelor's degree, experience in c:rlsis coun·
sellng ; based in Meigs
County, willing to travel to
neighboring counties. Must
be highly organized; will
have
di verse respan·
sibllities . Half time

FRE_~l .

have nine top winners and

•gu•

, · small. Check prices before

tral heat·, city water,

lour possible losen.

WEST

dollar, or complete estates.

' No llem too large or too

tinel route carrier . Phone

1965. If no answer phone
992-2082.

nents' hands should be fairly
well balanced.
Count winners and losers. I

t752

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

15--Schoolslnstructlon
,,.._
Radio. T\1

reserves the· r ight to

I put

'

foreign

some great gifts as a Sen-

and Repair Service since

Astute analysii triumphs
H2·10

or

as a young business person
and earn good money plus

Announcements
Piano Tuning . Lane
Daniels 742-2'151. Tuning

BRIDGE

NOkTH
.QIOO
.AQ7

AUTOMO ILE
IN ·
·SURANCE been can·
· coins or any gold or silver ce lled ? Lost your
: Items. Antique furniture, oper ator's license? Phone
•.; glass or chln.a, will pay lop 992·, 143 .
sliver

,. , Gold;

Help Wanted
. GET VALUABLE training

3

Oswald Jacob~ and Alan Sontag

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero.,.. 0 ., 4576'

ll-lnsuranct
14- Buslnns Trelnlnt

I You ' ll get lieller resulls
l I If. you · descr ibe fully,
t ' 1 give price. The Sentinel

Printed Pattern

PHONE 992-2156

I

11-SifUiltiCI Wlftttcl

phone number if used.

·I

WANT AD INFORMATION

1t - Htlp want.:~ ·

' 1· Ilia I or group of figures ·
.. 1 coUnts as a word . Count
, ; I name and address or

\
~

1,.

l
Classlfleds and ; :I
Savel II
1:

.f

-

Simply Sensational

ln1rance

13

11

The key lending rate started dropping this spring as the recession
tightened and open-market interest
rates plunged. Because the
recession's piJtch has caused many
companies to delay or reduce spending projects, banks' loan b\lsineas
has been sluggish this sununer.
·
The government says commercial
and industrial loans on the book of
the nation's major banks fell $379
million in the week ended July 9, the
latest period for which such
statistiCs are available.

below 10 percent by September and
to near 8.5 percent by the end of the

..

10 kcirat, 14 karat, 18 karat,

· gold . Denial gold and gold
ear pins. 67~-3010 .

Fischer lypewrller service
IBM plus most brands.
Contracts available. 797·
2401.
The Plains, Ohio
$32.50 fl at rate per call .

.,

'.

Miscellaneous
CANNING CORN, while
and yellow; Charles Harris
and Sons. 843-2693.

17

etc. Call 2-4.5-9188.

By The Associated Press
Needed raina fell over almost all
of Ohio late Monday and this morning. The heaviest totals were indicated by radar and satellite in the
eastern half of. the state.
·
Only a handful of actual reports of
rainfall totals had been recevled by
1
the National Weather Service at
. daybreak. Amounts generally were
less than a half an inch, but a few
spots reported rains in excess of an
inch. Columbus measured 1.57 In-

·-·-

-

Hospital , Pomeroy, Oh . 1·
614-992·2104.

Ice boxes, antiques, etc.
complete . households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, DH1 or call 992·
7760.

; WILL

Small investment, larg~ returns, Sentinel W aD:t_Ads
~·

tact Teresa Collins RN ,
Veterans
Memorial

. · smlssions , batteries ,
• · engines, or scrap metals,

.

was BR\Ong the smaller banks that
matched the 11 percent rate.
Just last Friday, Chase Manhattan Bank and First National Bank of
Chicago lowered their prime rates to
11.25 percent, the rate first .set one
week earlier by New York's
Citibank.
Analysts said they expect the 11
percel)t rate to spread throughout
the banking industry soon as the
recession continues to dampen loan
demand.
Some bank analysts on Wall Street

r ings, jewelry , si lver
dollars, sterl ing , etc .• wood

dut~ .
Salary com·
men~urale with exp. Cbn-

6370.

Cost of borrowing down
. another notch
.

Business Services

as well as general staff

Generally, the report said world
.cotton use in 198&amp;81 " is expected to
continue expanding, although at a
slower rate" than in the current
year.
Total use was projected in a range
of 64.Q million to 65.8 million bales,
compared with !hi! estimate of 64.9
milllon il)l979-80.
.
'
"Foreign 1980-81 consumption is
expected to be slighUy higher while
U.S. consumption will likely
decline," the report said. "The
leading cotton consuming countries
are Olina, the USSR, the United
States, India and Japan."

parts of the country.
The U.S. cotton reserve on Aug. 1
is expected to be arolUld 2.8 million
· bales, the smallest since the early
1950s.
If domest1t cotton use continues
strong and the crop tunis t)ut "in the
lower end" of the projected range of
12.2 million to 14.7 million bales, the
supply for export co~ld be
diminished sharply, the report said.
The Soviet Union's cotton crop,
second only to the U.S. harvest lilst
year, is currently estimated at about
13.1 million bales, which is
"basically unchanged" from 1979,
the report said.

'

'

�12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 22, 1980

Draft registration begins
quietly in Buckeye State
By Tbe Associated Press
Peaceful demonstrations took
place on the first day of draft
registration in Ohio as hundreds of
young men marched to local post offices to sign up.
.
The most serious incident reported took place in .Columbus, where
seven anti-draft protestors were
arrested after handcuffing themselves to a makeshift coffin they
placed in ihe lobby of the Federal
Building, The building houses a

branch of the U.S. Postal Service,
where the draft registrations were
taking place.
"rhe protestors, all of whom were
men ranging in age from 21 to 26,
poured what they claimed was
human blood over old draft
registration cards. Police arrived
and used wire cutters to sever the
handcuffs. Some of the protesters
then dropped to the floor and had to
be carried out to police vans.
Police say the seven orotesters

Rising temperatures
• •
•
cause rzszng
przces
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Hot
weather is not for chickens.
They get off their feed, drink too
much, don't gain weight like they
should, and don't lay as many eggs,
and the roosters lose interest in sex.
That's the report from broiler
growers around Ohio who say the
heat is costing them money. One
poultry fann owner said he lost
more than $6,000 in less than a week.
Some producers saY the heat
causes dressed fowl to lose as much
as 30 pecent of their weight. One egg
farm operator said production by his
hens, who lay a half-million eggs
daily, is offl to 2 percent.
·
The Ohio Market News Service
reports that ·egg prices jumped from
a June average of $56.77 per case to
$69.74 at the start of this week.
Small-lot egg sales rose from an
average of _69.3 cents per dozen in
June to82.5 cents this week.
Ken Jones of Ekleberry Poultry
Co. in Bucyrus said the hatching
rate for eggs is off 5 to 20 percent.
"In the houses with roosters and
hens, most of them mate in the afternoon/' he said. "The reason our
hatchability is.not as good is that the
roosters are not chasing the hens
because it's Just too hot."
Ed Brown, head of Lancaster
Poultry Co. in Lancaster, estimates
his business lost 5,000 to 6,000 birds
from a flock of 80,000 between
Tuesday and Sunday night.
He estimated the loss to. .his
dressed poultry business at $1.20 'i&gt;er
biM. Brown said his . company
bought more than $1,500 worth of
fans recently to keep the air moving
around his chickens.
Frederick Graves of Clear Creek

Food, Inc. of Amanda has trouble
keeping temperatures in his hen
houses below 80 degrees.
"We ventilate the buildings, but
the incoming air is so hot it doesn't
provi!le much relief," Graves said.
"The birds eat less and this affects
the number of eggs, so we are kind of
hoping for rain.
"Broilers are usually ready for
slaughter at seven weeks, and we
lose more broilers in the six-to-seven
week age because they get so
crowded in the houses. And ... they
drink more water. So instead of getting a 4-pound chick in seven weeks,
we get some less than 3 pounds
because they just don't eat &lt;in hot
weather.
.
Charles and Margaret Brinlanan
run an egg fann that has 44,000
IBying hens near Bucyrus. Mrs.
Brinkman said the fann lost more
than 100 hens in one night from the
heat. The size of the eggs is down by
about one grade, because when hens
drink more water and eat I~ feed,
they don't have the calcium in their
system to make finn shells.
"The egg shells just don't stand up
in the restaurants and. stores
because of this," Mrs. Bri1ikman
said:
Graves' company ships 3.5 million
dozen eggs a year. He estimates that
production is down 2 to 3 percent, or
70,000 dozen eggs a year.
"The rule of thumb economists
use is that for each 1 percent loss in
egg production, consumers pay 7
percent· more in price," he said.
"We've had a 21-percent increase in
prices in Ohio during the last 10 to 12
days."

Carter meeting~
•'
rru.se $700,000
.

DALLAS (AP) - For $10, you get
to stand up for more than three
hours in a shoulder-to-shoulder
crowd waiting for the president of
the United States to promise "peace
through strength" and recite the
concerns of his " party of compassion.''
If you can fight your way through
the mob, you can buy a plate of
cheese nachqs with hot peppers and
refried beans for another $1.50. But
at least it's air conditioned.
Foc $500, you get to stand in
stifling heat under a yellow-andwhite-striped carny tent, eat Kentucky-style barbeq~_~tand fresh corn
and hear the preside~ of the United
States boast about his party of compassion and promise to try and keep
the peace.
And for $2,500, you get a buffet dinner of salmon mousse with dill
dressing, hot crab souffl~_overtoast,
molded chicken tureen and a variety
of hors d'oevres served on a
flagstone terrace surrounding the
pool outside a Texas mansion. And
you can hear the president of the
Uni\ed States talk a_bout a compassionate party committed to the
needs of its people.
It was all In a day's fundraising for
. President Carter, who ran thfough
his litany three times at separate
political events Monday to help the
national and state Democratic parties net an estimated $700,000 for the
upcoming fall campaign. But for the
pllying guests, it was a chance to
show their faith and shake the
president's hand.
At his first stop, In Henderson,
Ky., Carter attempted to return to
an issue he. had pounded /lard early .
In the primary season. ·
"I thank God that during this tenn
of mine," he boasted, ·"we've not
had a single young American lose
his life in combat, and I pray God,
when I go out of office tn the White
House, will keep that record."
' Carter IJad stopped referring to
that record after ,eight men were
killed In the aborted commando raid
he ·ordered In an attempt to free the
American hostages held in Iran. He
didn't mention it again untn ,Monday.
.
And when he reached Dallas, after
several reporte~ traveling with him ·

'

asked White House officials whether
the president would claim the eight
were not on a combat mission, Carter altered his line.
"I would lik~ to point out to you,"
he said, "that with the exception of
eight brave Americans who gave
their lives in an accident in the
desert of Iran, we have not had a
single American life lost in combat
since I have been president, and I
pray God we will keep it that way. ''
The president made one stop billed
as "official" on the otherwise
political journey when he visited the
drought-stricken 2,000-acre farm of
Olen Range of Justin, Tex., who
agriculture officials said stands to
lose $100,000 in crop damage this
year.
.
Carter noted that the administration already has agreed to
make emergency loans available to
victinis of the month-long heat wave
that has swept Texas and much of
the South, Southwest and Midwest...,

Committees chosen
for 1981 pageant
Southeast Ohio Jilnior Miss, Inc.,
has announced committees for the
1981 Meigs County and Vinton County Junior Miss programs scheduled
·Saturday, OCtober 18, at Southern
High School, Racine. ·
'
Conunittees include: contestal!ts,
Janis Carnahan and j{im Taylor;
program - tickets • finance, Calista
Searls; Joyce Qulllen, and Pauline
Reuter; awards, Mindy Hill, Calista
Searls and Kim Taylor; production
and staging, Nancy Carnahan, Janls
Carnahan, Joyce Quillen and Mindy
Hill; publicity, Nancy Carnahan and
Ralph Werry; judges, Ralph Werry
and Kim Taylor; special events,
Pauline . Reuter, Janis Carnahan,
Calista Searls.
The firs~ orientation meeting for
all interested high 'school senior girls
of Meigs and Vinton CounUes will be
held Sunday, Aug. 24, at 2 p.m. at the
M9igs Inn, Pomeroy. .
Hlgh school senior girls, class of
'81, interested in the Junior Miss
program · should contact Southeast
Ohio Junior Miss, Inc., P. 0. Box 104,
Pomeroy, 45769. ·

BARGAIN .PRlC£5
AT ALL

STIFFL£R'S STOR£S.

were members of the Mid.Ohio Life
Community, a pacifist group._They
were arrested at around 4:30 p.m.
and charged with criminal
trespassing. They were to appear
today in Milnicipal Court.
Protesters in Cleveland burned
blank draft cards in a relatively
quiet demonstration that drew little
attention from downtown lunchtime
passers-by. A noontime protest also
was reported in Cincinnati. Leaflets
were distributed in Akron.
In other cities, chapters of the
Conunittee Against Registration
and the Draft demonStrated. The
groups represented several anti-war
organizations. ·
· "The demontration - today is a ·
symbolic gesture," said John
Perera, a protester in Columbus.
"They are obviously not going to
stop registration, but this is a symbol of public objection to the draft,
war, registration, and conscription.
We are. trying to keep our children
fro!n killing other people's
children."
A group of 25 to 30 men and women
carried signs and marched near the
entrance of Toledo's main post office.
"We had some demonstrators,"
said Toledo Postmaster James Brzezinski. "But it was a peaceful
thing. People were carrying signs
condemning the draft."
For the most part, Brzezinski said
things went smoothly, and as of 4
p.m. Monday, 675 young men had
registered. Brzezinski said his 2&amp;
year-old son James will be among
those signing up today.
About 210,000 men aged 19 and 20
are expected to register for the draft
in the next two weeks.
Few protests were reported in less
populated areas of Ohio.
''We've had no problems what'· soever," said Lancaster Postmaster
Paul Rider. "We had expected between 70 and 100 people to sign up
each day: We had 90 today ( Monday)."
.
Rider wasn't ruling out the
possibility of futJife protests.
"When word gets around that it's
been smooth, someon~ might try to,
make something out of it," he said.
In Newark, 112 men registered
Monday. Postmaster Ed Wheeler
said his regular clerks were passing
out and accepting registration forms .
without incident.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGESJULY2l
Mrs. Jolm Beckett and son, Cecil
Bennett, Mrs. James Bing and
daughter, Richard Dickerson,
Flossie Dyer, Gladyil Foster, Melvin
Gilbert, Marvin Hall, Mrs. Harry
Hussell ll!ld son, Glenna Jayjohn,
Mrs. Earl Kuff Jr. and son, Shirley
McCarty, Rooney Ramsey, Jean
Rzenpoluch, Bernice Sorrells, Dale
Snyder, Lora White.
BIRTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. James Jewett,
daughter, Albany; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Pyles Jr., son, Bidwell.

.
.
VETERANS MEMORIAL

ADMISSIONs-Ruth Lutneran,
Racine· Dana Howell, Pomeroy;
Effie 'Pyle, Coolville; Velvia
Purkey, Mason; Dennis Eynon, ·
Racine; Arva Will, Pomeroy; Helen
Carpenter, Middleport.
DISciiARGES--Otis Casto, Ar·
thur Barr, Grace Gardner, Mona
Neal, lthmer Neal, Hobert Burson,
Maude Brooks, Thelma Hysell, Anna Crislip.

. SUPPLEMENT TO THE: .
Madison Press, Sentinl!l, Shopper's Review,
Pt. Plea$ant Register; Daily Sentinel

WAtK
p

81G
OAYS!
THE BICYCLE 'PLAYS a major rol~ in "Breaking Away," a new ABC-TV series Inspired
by tbe 1979 film of tbe same name. Starrlug as four frienas growing !IP in an Indiana
college town are (from left) Tom Wiggins, Tbom Bray, Sbaun Cassidy and Jackie Earle
Haley.

SALE
STARTS
THURSDAY,
JULY 24th
'

Controllers bail out 4 Ohio cities
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - State
controllers have released $595,000 in
emergency funds to pay for fiscal
supervision in Cleveland and three
small cities trying to get their finan·
cia! houses in order.
Under a new local government
bailout law, the state 111ust pay for
commissions to monitor and control
finances until a bankrupt local
governmen\'s fiscal health is
restored.
That process is expected to take at
least two years in Cleveland's case.
Over · some objections, the con·
trolling ·board Monday released
$150,000 for Cleveland and $145,000
each for Niles, Norwood and
Plymouth. Officials say another
$200,000 may be necessary before
July 1981.
Some members agonized over the
payout because it reduces the state's
emergency funds to $889,!)00, with
more than 11 months remaining until the 1981 fiscal year ends next
July.
The fund originally was suppilsed
to be used to aid communities suf-

fering from natural and man-made
calamities. In reeent years, the
money has been used for everything
' from industrial development to local
bridge washouts.
Over the last few years, the
Legislature has been appropriating
about $20 million for the fund every
two years, with about half that total
being used in the second year of the
period.
Lawmakers could make· an additional appropriation for fiscal1981.
Because of the current state revenue
crunch, officials say that at this
point, they do not know where the extra money can be found.
In other action at a routine board
meeting, officials:
- Authorized the University of
Akron to proceed · with emergency
repair and renovation work totaling
$227,956.
.
- Permitted Youngstown State
University to award contracts
totaling $114,000 for. landscaping
projects.
- Released $1.2 million for construction of a Bureau &lt;i Em-

ployment Services building in Lima.
- Authorized the Natural Resources Department to spend~,OOO for
fishing platform· repairs at Gordon
Park-Cleveland Lakefront State
Park.

I

ELBERFELD$ ,

.

'

'

,

*

BRACHS
J

Emergency squad runs

The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service report the following
runs made by local ilnits Monday.
Pomeroy at 5: 17 jl.m. went to the
Emergency Medical Service office
for Norma 'Mills who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport
at 11:51 a.m. to Hysell Street for
Wayne .Jarvis w)lo was taken to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport
at 5:35 p.ni. to Ash St., for Bertha
Brickles who was taken .to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 7
p.m. to Hysell Street for Helen Carpenter who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine at 3:09
p.m. to Rt. I, Reedsville for Marjane Rood who was taken to Sl
Joseph Hospital; Rutland at 12:50
a.m. to Depot Street for Bernice
Searles who was taken to Hol2er
Medical Center. At 1:24 p.m.
Rutland went for Effie Pyle who was
transported from Pomeroy Health
Care to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 3: 1'1 p.m. tran·
sported Maude Brooks from
. Veterans Memorial Hospital to
Pomeroy Health Care Center.

ASK TOWED

Marriage licenses were issued to
the following couples: Mar~ Alan
O'Dell, 20, Rutland and Tracey Lee
Jeffers, 18, Pomeroy; James R. Hut·
ton, 21, Middieport and Sally Ann
Hayman, 17, Pomeroy; Arnold A.
Wilson, 18, Gallipolis and Phillis
May Eisenhuth, 20, Jamesville,
Wisconsin.
SEEKS DIVORCE
Daniel Roush, Portland has filed
for divorce from Frances Roush,
Portland in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.

See this fine quality old
fashioned stick candy and
all the other Brach can ·
dies.
.
Candy Dept. tst.EI.o.o.r:...

ELBERFELD$

IN
.POMEROY
•

..

WED.
JULY

'

MIDDLEPORT ,PARK
SHOWS 6 P.M. &amp; 8 P.M.
Sponsored by the Middleport Chamber

..

UifJUUU
,i£·YOU'RE
Lil~i·

A88U I

•

I

. .. of peace of mind when yo~o~ l'iave a
checking · accovnt. Whether it . be
personal or "business,' the records a
checking account gives·you can·help
make tax time or any time easier to
1ki\ow where you stand .' financiaUy.
Open M·W ., 91113

:rhurs. &amp; Sot. 9 Ill 12

F.rlday 91113 &amp; 51117

THE CENTRAL TRUST CO., NA.
1

·Member FDIC

MIDDLEPORT, OH .
Insured tos·100,000

.

.

._RUN . .
TO
OUR:•
•••

•••

•
•
•

!·:

�12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 22, 1980

Draft registration begins
quietly in Buckeye State
By Tbe Associated Press
Peaceful demonstrations took
place on the first day of draft
registration in Ohio as hundreds of
young men marched to local post offices to sign up.
.
The most serious incident reported took place in .Columbus, where
seven anti-draft protestors were
arrested after handcuffing themselves to a makeshift coffin they
placed in ihe lobby of the Federal
Building, The building houses a

branch of the U.S. Postal Service,
where the draft registrations were
taking place.
"rhe protestors, all of whom were
men ranging in age from 21 to 26,
poured what they claimed was
human blood over old draft
registration cards. Police arrived
and used wire cutters to sever the
handcuffs. Some of the protesters
then dropped to the floor and had to
be carried out to police vans.
Police say the seven orotesters

Rising temperatures
• •
•
cause rzszng
przces
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Hot
weather is not for chickens.
They get off their feed, drink too
much, don't gain weight like they
should, and don't lay as many eggs,
and the roosters lose interest in sex.
That's the report from broiler
growers around Ohio who say the
heat is costing them money. One
poultry fann owner said he lost
more than $6,000 in less than a week.
Some producers saY the heat
causes dressed fowl to lose as much
as 30 pecent of their weight. One egg
farm operator said production by his
hens, who lay a half-million eggs
daily, is offl to 2 percent.
·
The Ohio Market News Service
reports that ·egg prices jumped from
a June average of $56.77 per case to
$69.74 at the start of this week.
Small-lot egg sales rose from an
average of _69.3 cents per dozen in
June to82.5 cents this week.
Ken Jones of Ekleberry Poultry
Co. in Bucyrus said the hatching
rate for eggs is off 5 to 20 percent.
"In the houses with roosters and
hens, most of them mate in the afternoon/' he said. "The reason our
hatchability is.not as good is that the
roosters are not chasing the hens
because it's Just too hot."
Ed Brown, head of Lancaster
Poultry Co. in Lancaster, estimates
his business lost 5,000 to 6,000 birds
from a flock of 80,000 between
Tuesday and Sunday night.
He estimated the loss to. .his
dressed poultry business at $1.20 'i&gt;er
biM. Brown said his . company
bought more than $1,500 worth of
fans recently to keep the air moving
around his chickens.
Frederick Graves of Clear Creek

Food, Inc. of Amanda has trouble
keeping temperatures in his hen
houses below 80 degrees.
"We ventilate the buildings, but
the incoming air is so hot it doesn't
provi!le much relief," Graves said.
"The birds eat less and this affects
the number of eggs, so we are kind of
hoping for rain.
"Broilers are usually ready for
slaughter at seven weeks, and we
lose more broilers in the six-to-seven
week age because they get so
crowded in the houses. And ... they
drink more water. So instead of getting a 4-pound chick in seven weeks,
we get some less than 3 pounds
because they just don't eat &lt;in hot
weather.
.
Charles and Margaret Brinlanan
run an egg fann that has 44,000
IBying hens near Bucyrus. Mrs.
Brinkman said the fann lost more
than 100 hens in one night from the
heat. The size of the eggs is down by
about one grade, because when hens
drink more water and eat I~ feed,
they don't have the calcium in their
system to make finn shells.
"The egg shells just don't stand up
in the restaurants and. stores
because of this," Mrs. Bri1ikman
said:
Graves' company ships 3.5 million
dozen eggs a year. He estimates that
production is down 2 to 3 percent, or
70,000 dozen eggs a year.
"The rule of thumb economists
use is that for each 1 percent loss in
egg production, consumers pay 7
percent· more in price," he said.
"We've had a 21-percent increase in
prices in Ohio during the last 10 to 12
days."

Carter meeting~
•'
rru.se $700,000
.

DALLAS (AP) - For $10, you get
to stand up for more than three
hours in a shoulder-to-shoulder
crowd waiting for the president of
the United States to promise "peace
through strength" and recite the
concerns of his " party of compassion.''
If you can fight your way through
the mob, you can buy a plate of
cheese nachqs with hot peppers and
refried beans for another $1.50. But
at least it's air conditioned.
Foc $500, you get to stand in
stifling heat under a yellow-andwhite-striped carny tent, eat Kentucky-style barbeq~_~tand fresh corn
and hear the preside~ of the United
States boast about his party of compassion and promise to try and keep
the peace.
And for $2,500, you get a buffet dinner of salmon mousse with dill
dressing, hot crab souffl~_overtoast,
molded chicken tureen and a variety
of hors d'oevres served on a
flagstone terrace surrounding the
pool outside a Texas mansion. And
you can hear the president of the
Uni\ed States talk a_bout a compassionate party committed to the
needs of its people.
It was all In a day's fundraising for
. President Carter, who ran thfough
his litany three times at separate
political events Monday to help the
national and state Democratic parties net an estimated $700,000 for the
upcoming fall campaign. But for the
pllying guests, it was a chance to
show their faith and shake the
president's hand.
At his first stop, In Henderson,
Ky., Carter attempted to return to
an issue he. had pounded /lard early .
In the primary season. ·
"I thank God that during this tenn
of mine," he boasted, ·"we've not
had a single young American lose
his life in combat, and I pray God,
when I go out of office tn the White
House, will keep that record."
' Carter IJad stopped referring to
that record after ,eight men were
killed In the aborted commando raid
he ·ordered In an attempt to free the
American hostages held in Iran. He
didn't mention it again untn ,Monday.
.
And when he reached Dallas, after
several reporte~ traveling with him ·

'

asked White House officials whether
the president would claim the eight
were not on a combat mission, Carter altered his line.
"I would lik~ to point out to you,"
he said, "that with the exception of
eight brave Americans who gave
their lives in an accident in the
desert of Iran, we have not had a
single American life lost in combat
since I have been president, and I
pray God we will keep it that way. ''
The president made one stop billed
as "official" on the otherwise
political journey when he visited the
drought-stricken 2,000-acre farm of
Olen Range of Justin, Tex., who
agriculture officials said stands to
lose $100,000 in crop damage this
year.
.
Carter noted that the administration already has agreed to
make emergency loans available to
victinis of the month-long heat wave
that has swept Texas and much of
the South, Southwest and Midwest...,

Committees chosen
for 1981 pageant
Southeast Ohio Jilnior Miss, Inc.,
has announced committees for the
1981 Meigs County and Vinton County Junior Miss programs scheduled
·Saturday, OCtober 18, at Southern
High School, Racine. ·
'
Conunittees include: contestal!ts,
Janis Carnahan and j{im Taylor;
program - tickets • finance, Calista
Searls; Joyce Qulllen, and Pauline
Reuter; awards, Mindy Hill, Calista
Searls and Kim Taylor; production
and staging, Nancy Carnahan, Janls
Carnahan, Joyce Quillen and Mindy
Hill; publicity, Nancy Carnahan and
Ralph Werry; judges, Ralph Werry
and Kim Taylor; special events,
Pauline . Reuter, Janis Carnahan,
Calista Searls.
The firs~ orientation meeting for
all interested high 'school senior girls
of Meigs and Vinton CounUes will be
held Sunday, Aug. 24, at 2 p.m. at the
M9igs Inn, Pomeroy. .
Hlgh school senior girls, class of
'81, interested in the Junior Miss
program · should contact Southeast
Ohio Junior Miss, Inc., P. 0. Box 104,
Pomeroy, 45769. ·

BARGAIN .PRlC£5
AT ALL

STIFFL£R'S STOR£S.

were members of the Mid.Ohio Life
Community, a pacifist group._They
were arrested at around 4:30 p.m.
and charged with criminal
trespassing. They were to appear
today in Milnicipal Court.
Protesters in Cleveland burned
blank draft cards in a relatively
quiet demonstration that drew little
attention from downtown lunchtime
passers-by. A noontime protest also
was reported in Cincinnati. Leaflets
were distributed in Akron.
In other cities, chapters of the
Conunittee Against Registration
and the Draft demonStrated. The
groups represented several anti-war
organizations. ·
· "The demontration - today is a ·
symbolic gesture," said John
Perera, a protester in Columbus.
"They are obviously not going to
stop registration, but this is a symbol of public objection to the draft,
war, registration, and conscription.
We are. trying to keep our children
fro!n killing other people's
children."
A group of 25 to 30 men and women
carried signs and marched near the
entrance of Toledo's main post office.
"We had some demonstrators,"
said Toledo Postmaster James Brzezinski. "But it was a peaceful
thing. People were carrying signs
condemning the draft."
For the most part, Brzezinski said
things went smoothly, and as of 4
p.m. Monday, 675 young men had
registered. Brzezinski said his 2&amp;
year-old son James will be among
those signing up today.
About 210,000 men aged 19 and 20
are expected to register for the draft
in the next two weeks.
Few protests were reported in less
populated areas of Ohio.
''We've had no problems what'· soever," said Lancaster Postmaster
Paul Rider. "We had expected between 70 and 100 people to sign up
each day: We had 90 today ( Monday)."
.
Rider wasn't ruling out the
possibility of futJife protests.
"When word gets around that it's
been smooth, someon~ might try to,
make something out of it," he said.
In Newark, 112 men registered
Monday. Postmaster Ed Wheeler
said his regular clerks were passing
out and accepting registration forms .
without incident.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGESJULY2l
Mrs. Jolm Beckett and son, Cecil
Bennett, Mrs. James Bing and
daughter, Richard Dickerson,
Flossie Dyer, Gladyil Foster, Melvin
Gilbert, Marvin Hall, Mrs. Harry
Hussell ll!ld son, Glenna Jayjohn,
Mrs. Earl Kuff Jr. and son, Shirley
McCarty, Rooney Ramsey, Jean
Rzenpoluch, Bernice Sorrells, Dale
Snyder, Lora White.
BIRTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. James Jewett,
daughter, Albany; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Pyles Jr., son, Bidwell.

.
.
VETERANS MEMORIAL

ADMISSIONs-Ruth Lutneran,
Racine· Dana Howell, Pomeroy;
Effie 'Pyle, Coolville; Velvia
Purkey, Mason; Dennis Eynon, ·
Racine; Arva Will, Pomeroy; Helen
Carpenter, Middleport.
DISciiARGES--Otis Casto, Ar·
thur Barr, Grace Gardner, Mona
Neal, lthmer Neal, Hobert Burson,
Maude Brooks, Thelma Hysell, Anna Crislip.

. SUPPLEMENT TO THE: .
Madison Press, Sentinl!l, Shopper's Review,
Pt. Plea$ant Register; Daily Sentinel

WAtK
p

81G
OAYS!
THE BICYCLE 'PLAYS a major rol~ in "Breaking Away," a new ABC-TV series Inspired
by tbe 1979 film of tbe same name. Starrlug as four frienas growing !IP in an Indiana
college town are (from left) Tom Wiggins, Tbom Bray, Sbaun Cassidy and Jackie Earle
Haley.

SALE
STARTS
THURSDAY,
JULY 24th
'

Controllers bail out 4 Ohio cities
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - State
controllers have released $595,000 in
emergency funds to pay for fiscal
supervision in Cleveland and three
small cities trying to get their finan·
cia! houses in order.
Under a new local government
bailout law, the state 111ust pay for
commissions to monitor and control
finances until a bankrupt local
governmen\'s fiscal health is
restored.
That process is expected to take at
least two years in Cleveland's case.
Over · some objections, the con·
trolling ·board Monday released
$150,000 for Cleveland and $145,000
each for Niles, Norwood and
Plymouth. Officials say another
$200,000 may be necessary before
July 1981.
Some members agonized over the
payout because it reduces the state's
emergency funds to $889,!)00, with
more than 11 months remaining until the 1981 fiscal year ends next
July.
The fund originally was suppilsed
to be used to aid communities suf-

fering from natural and man-made
calamities. In reeent years, the
money has been used for everything
' from industrial development to local
bridge washouts.
Over the last few years, the
Legislature has been appropriating
about $20 million for the fund every
two years, with about half that total
being used in the second year of the
period.
Lawmakers could make· an additional appropriation for fiscal1981.
Because of the current state revenue
crunch, officials say that at this
point, they do not know where the extra money can be found.
In other action at a routine board
meeting, officials:
- Authorized the University of
Akron to proceed · with emergency
repair and renovation work totaling
$227,956.
.
- Permitted Youngstown State
University to award contracts
totaling $114,000 for. landscaping
projects.
- Released $1.2 million for construction of a Bureau &lt;i Em-

ployment Services building in Lima.
- Authorized the Natural Resources Department to spend~,OOO for
fishing platform· repairs at Gordon
Park-Cleveland Lakefront State
Park.

I

ELBERFELD$ ,

.

'

'

,

*

BRACHS
J

Emergency squad runs

The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service report the following
runs made by local ilnits Monday.
Pomeroy at 5: 17 jl.m. went to the
Emergency Medical Service office
for Norma 'Mills who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport
at 11:51 a.m. to Hysell Street for
Wayne .Jarvis w)lo was taken to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport
at 5:35 p.ni. to Ash St., for Bertha
Brickles who was taken .to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 7
p.m. to Hysell Street for Helen Carpenter who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine at 3:09
p.m. to Rt. I, Reedsville for Marjane Rood who was taken to Sl
Joseph Hospital; Rutland at 12:50
a.m. to Depot Street for Bernice
Searles who was taken to Hol2er
Medical Center. At 1:24 p.m.
Rutland went for Effie Pyle who was
transported from Pomeroy Health
Care to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 3: 1'1 p.m. tran·
sported Maude Brooks from
. Veterans Memorial Hospital to
Pomeroy Health Care Center.

ASK TOWED

Marriage licenses were issued to
the following couples: Mar~ Alan
O'Dell, 20, Rutland and Tracey Lee
Jeffers, 18, Pomeroy; James R. Hut·
ton, 21, Middieport and Sally Ann
Hayman, 17, Pomeroy; Arnold A.
Wilson, 18, Gallipolis and Phillis
May Eisenhuth, 20, Jamesville,
Wisconsin.
SEEKS DIVORCE
Daniel Roush, Portland has filed
for divorce from Frances Roush,
Portland in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.

See this fine quality old
fashioned stick candy and
all the other Brach can ·
dies.
.
Candy Dept. tst.EI.o.o.r:...

ELBERFELD$

IN
.POMEROY
•

..

WED.
JULY

'

MIDDLEPORT ,PARK
SHOWS 6 P.M. &amp; 8 P.M.
Sponsored by the Middleport Chamber

..

UifJUUU
,i£·YOU'RE
Lil~i·

A88U I

•

I

. .. of peace of mind when yo~o~ l'iave a
checking · accovnt. Whether it . be
personal or "business,' the records a
checking account gives·you can·help
make tax time or any time easier to
1ki\ow where you stand .' financiaUy.
Open M·W ., 91113

:rhurs. &amp; Sot. 9 Ill 12

F.rlday 91113 &amp; 51117

THE CENTRAL TRUST CO., NA.
1

·Member FDIC

MIDDLEPORT, OH .
Insured tos·100,000

.

.

._RUN . .
TO
OUR:•
•••

•••

•
•
•

!·:

�.

FINAL Utiiii'IAnlt.t

fiNAL CLEARANCE

36-INCH ASSORTED
COTTON PECALE

BATH

NT FABRICS

TGUJ~LS

'i .,.. 'i"i "'

Famous C4nnon brand large size cotton terry bath

~.;·~~i

Aeaorted mill lenglhs of 36·1nch
wide cotton fabric In attractive
prints and petterns for summ6r.
Buy now and save during Stiffler's
Final Summer Clearance Solei

"~·

Four to a package. Woven bamboo placemat sets In
natural color. Save during Stiffler's Final Summer

1

FOR .

FOR

PKGS.

SPECIAL PURCHASE
.4-ROLL PACK SOFT

.·SPORTSUJ~AR CHARMIN JISSU~

PLACE MATS

Clearance.

FINAL CLEARANCE

CL£~~RAIIC£

CHILDREN'S FAMOUS BRAND
SPRING AND SUMMER

PACKAGE OF FOUR .
WO.VEN BAMBOO

'CANNON' LARGE :SIZE
COTTON TERRY

FINAL CLEA,.ANCE

FINAL

';

Special clearance group of children's famous brands
spring and summer sportswaar. Assorted slyles and

sizes.

s 00

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE

Four roll package of C!larrhln bathroom tissue
Measurably fluffy, squeezably soft. Speclallo
I I .
lhls sale!
w pr ce or

fiNAL CLEA8ANCE

FINAL CLEARANCE

CLOSE-OUT GROUP
LADIES BETTER SUMM.ER

85 :SQUARE FOOT
JUMBO SIZE ROLL

FOOTUJEAR .

•DAN RIVER' BRAND
PERMANENT PRESS

BOUNTY TOWELS
No other paper IC?Wel Is made like this one. It absorbs
like magic. C.Onvenlenttumbo slze .. Speclal low price I

LIMIT

LIMIT

· OF 2

OF 4

IE HERE EARLY
FOR lEST SELECTION

FINAL CLEARANCE

WHIT£
Famous Dan
River brand per·
manent pres s
white sheels . Stock · up now
d.uring this Final '
Clearance Sale!

Each

DOORS OP~N ~AT 9 A.M.

QUANTITI'S AR' LIMITED

SH~ETS
···'

FULL SIZE

'499
MATCHING PILLOW

CASES

SALf STARTS THURSDAY, JULY 14th·.FOR N
STIFFL,R'S FINAL
WARANU ·
CLEARANCE GROUP-LARGE ASSORTMENT·
MEN'S AND BOYS SHORT SLEEVE DRESS AND

fiNAL CLEARANCE

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE
SPORT AND DRESS

.SHIRTS

FOR

MEN'S COTTON KNIT
SNEAKER PRINT

SHIRTS

Men's cotton knit toe shirts In sblld colors. Sizes S,
M, L, XL. Famous sport shoe brand names such as
'adldas' on the front.

SJ4!f
Each
fiNAL CLEARANCE

·BOY'S bENIM
'AUTOMATICK'

J~ANS

MAU£RICK

BOY'S COTTON TERRY .
SNEAKER PRINT

FINAL CLEARANCE

· MEN'S MAVERICK
STRAIGHT LEG &amp; FLARE

T££ SHIRTS

O~NIM J~ANS

Boy's 100% cotton ferry short sleeve shirts In assorted
. solid colors with famous sport shoe brand names such
as 'Nike' on the front. Sizes 8 to 16.

Men's Maverick 'Automatlck' denim jeans In flare and
straight leg styles. All alzes. Sanforized perma·press
and fit like a glove.

'

'1~'-'
I,

00

]

•••••••
CLEARANCE

FINAL CLEARANCE

BOY'S ·AMERICAN MADE
CANVAS TENNIS AND

'SPARTA'
NLLULL

I

I
I
Save 'on blankets
now! · " S'parta" full
bed size 72"x90"
nylon·polyester blend
needlewoven With
nylon binding In your
choice of solid col·
ors. Slightly Irregular.
~·

I
I

Men's 100% cotton terry short sleeve shins In assorted
solid colors with famous sport shoe brood names such
as 'Puma' on the front. Sizes S, M, L &amp; XL ·

1

00 ..·.....-

American mede gym or tennis oxfords with molded
soles and cu~hlon Insoles. Sturdy canvu uppers. Good
range of boy's sizes. Buy now and save during this sale.

Men's while tube socks with assorted color striped tops.
. two pair In a package. Sligh I Irregulars. Stock up now at
thla low price and savel

fiNAL CLEARANCE

I

SPECIAL PURCHASE
LARGE SIZE LANDERS

I
I

.TOIL£TRiiS

I

Take Your Choice. Balsam, Herbal, saby or Wheat Germ
and Honey Shampoo!!, Rose Scented 'Lotlon, Beauty Oil
Moisturizer, Bubble Belh or Conditioner.
I

1 J

'

\

CANNON 'ROYAL FAMILY'
PRINTED TERRY .

LADIES STRETCH NYLON
ONE-SIZE FITS All .

• LADIES .AMERICAN MADE
CANVAS SPORT

Sew and save twice as much at this low price on a large
assorlment of 60" wide mill lengths of single knits and
doubleknlts In patterns and solid colors.

KN~~-HI

HOS£·

One size fits all. Ladles' first quality stretch nylon knee·
hi hose. Comes In the season's best shades. Stock up
.
now. Final Summer Clearencel

90" WIDE-WHITE
COTTON POLYESTER .

QUILT SHE£TING

'Prlaclila' brand 90" wide, white quilting sheeting. 50% ·
cotton, 50% polyester. Cui from full boils. Stock up now
lor. winter quilling projects.
·

. AMERICA'S FAVORITE
RONALD McDONALD

·CLOWN DOLL ;: ·

Soli, huggable 21" tall doll with real yam hair. When hug.
gad he blowi his whiatle. Haa laesa that tie, •. a zipper
that zips. Regular $17.99. Buy now for Christmas!

-

00

. . fiNAL CLEARANCE

SPECIAL PURCHASE
BOXED TERRY CLOTH.

BABY~

'

99

Each

.

.

Set

·I
'

Ladles' first quality sneakers In your chocle of Navy or
White In sizes S lo 10. Sturdy duck uppers. Cushion In·
soles. Final Summer Clearance. Save now I ·

LADfES 'POM-POM'
CUSHIONED SOLE '

SPORT SOCKS

Ladies' co~fortable pom·pom trim low cut sport
socks with cushioned sole. 79% cotton, 21% nylon,
white. One size fits all.

s 00

Pair
FINAL CLEARANCE

FAMOUS 'BO$S' BRAND
, MEN'S HEAVY WHITE
Famous 'Bon' brand men's heavyweight white canvas
, gloves. Ideal for outdoor gardening and utility work. Buy
several p.alrs at this loW price!
I

77r!.

u•••••••~
CLEARANCE , . .· ·

~~

(9T

·: CHAIR THROWS :
•
•
•

I
•
•

FINAL tLURANCf

--___;·

Attractive 60"x70"
Chair Throws In
solid colors and
patterns . Quality
textured materl~l .
with foam back· :
lng. Save during
the Final Summer
Clearance Sale!

'

LADIES FIRST QUALITY
NYLON STRETCH ·

Ladles' first qualitY, stretch nylon panty hose. One size
flta all. ChOice of several shades. Seve now during Stlf·
fier's Final Summer Clearance Salol

.

._,,'DOLLY MADISON·, ,, ~
60"X70" FOAM BACK ..,-~

·

GIFT S£TS CANUAS GLOU£S . PANTY HOS£

Lovely boxed Infant Gift Sets by Cannon. Soft, absor·
benl cellon terry lowel, 2' wash clothe and bib. Some
with sponge novelly loy. Buy now and seve!

99 ·.

'SNEAKERS
99

Yard

FINAL CLEARAN(E

FINAL CLEARANCE

Pair

MILL ASSORTMENT
60" POLVESTER

Famous Cannon 'Royal Family' printed ferry cloth hand
towels In assorled colors. Stack up now and save during
Stiffler's Final Summer Clearance Sale I

We still have a good selection of popular terry
rompers in one and two piece styles. Assorted colors
and sizes.
·

SHIRT JA(KfTS

FINAL CLEARANCe

.KNIT FABRICS

ROMP~RS

TERRY

Popular short sleeve, two pocket style "Shirt Jacs" in
assorted colors and prints. Misses and Women's
sizes. Perfect top with slacks or jeans.

FINAL CLEARANCE

HAND TOUJ£LS

UI:Ai.l illnt\1:

MISSES POPULAR
ONE &amp; TWO PIECE STYLES

FOR

FOR

5
FINAL CLEARANCE

FINAL

] J 00

f

FOR

~

TANK TOPS

FINAL CLEARANCE

Pair

I
I

Each

MISSES AND WOMEN'S
SHORT- SLEEVE STYLE

FINAL CLEARANCE

59

I

MISSES AND WOMEN'S SUMMER
COTTON TERRY

]

Dozen

PKG. OF TWO PAIR-MEN'S
WHITE STRIPE TOP

'1'8

.,;

FINAL CLEARANCE

fiNAL CLEARANCE

Misses cool and comfortable couon ferry tank lops In
assorted colors . Good range of sizes. Stiffler's Final
Clearance Salol

FINAL CLEARANCE

tion.

R"ULAR

. Special price during Stlfiler's Final Clearance Sale on popular Soft-Care Birdseye
diapers made by Kendall. Soft, absorbent, easy to wash, fast drying. Stock up now and
·
a bundle.

TUBE SOCKS

•

I

Dozen

BIRDSEY~ DIAP~RS

SHIRTS

Large assortment of summer tops a~d blouses. Good
range of sizes and styles. Be here early lor best selec·

SPORTSUJ£AR

'

GYMOHFOROS

I

I

T£~

BLOUSES

CLEARANCE OF ENTIRE STOCK
·"lUft.loRs•MISSES•LADIES
. ·sPRlNG. AND"SUMMER ·

. KENDALL 27"X27"
SOFT AND ABSORBENT "SOFT CARE"

MEN'S COTTON
. . TERRY
SNEAKER PRINT

MISSES AND LADIES
'
SUMMER TOPS AND

Off

FOR

FOR

·1

Pau

: SEMI-ANNUAL
CURITY DIAPER
SALE

:· I

FINAL CLEARANCE

Famous brands In Misses; Juniors and ·women's spr·
lng and summer sportswear. Nice assortment of
slyles and colors. Panls, skirts, tops, shorts and
mora. Save one-half, buy two for the price of one!
Final Clearance !

FINAL CLEARANCE

FINAL CLEAI\ANCE

. Pair

OFF
R"ULAR
PRIC'

.. Take your choice ollhree famous Curlty dla~ers, 21 "x40" diapers, prefolded diapers and
1 regular S1retch diapers. Sleek up now at hi~ low price during our Summer Clearance
· Salol

R'GULAR
PRICE .

Boy's cottonipolyester denim jeans. Comfort fit and
styled for action. Flare an~ straight styles In regular
and slim sizes.

s ""

dresses. Popular styles and famous brands in
assorted styles, colors and sizes. Buy now and
save one half during this Final Summer
Clearance!
·

GAUl~ DIAP,RS·

OFF

Your choice of solid fashion colors in polyester
doubleknit slacks with elastic waist. Good range of
Misses and Women's sizes.

Clearance of ladles' spring and summer ·

FINAL SliMMER CLURANC'
21 "X40"-STRETCH·PRE-FOLD CURITY

Taka your choice of e, wide selection of men's and boy's
name· brand swim trunks and walking and jogging shorls.
Save one-half off t~e regular price during our Clearance
Sale!

SLACKS

ORfSSES .

FOR

·SUJIM T'RUN

·

.

l , 00

LARGE CLEARANCE GROUP
MEN'S AND BOY'S ASSORTED
WALKING AND JOGGING SHORTS AND

MISSES AND WOMEN'S
SUMMER FASHION

ENTIRE STOCK-lADIES
MISSES AND JUNIORS
.SPRING AND SUMMER

Take your .choice of I his bargain group of first quality plastic
-household Items. Clothes baskel, w~sle basket and dishpan, pall,
coland.el,.crlspar or baiter bowl, dust pan, and cutlery tray. Save dur·
lng Stlff.ter'a.Final Clearance Sale!

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE

fiNAL CLEARANCE

FINAL CLEARANCE

PLASTICWARE ·

Large claarance group of men's and boy's short sleeve sport and dress
shirts. Assorted styles, colors and sl.z n In lhe group Including knits, colton
blends, etc. Be here early for beat selection. save during Stillier's final
Summer Clearance Sale!

] sseo

CLURANU

STURilY ASSORTED HOUSEHOLD

SPORT SHIRTS

Men's short sleeve dness and aport shirts in assorted
styles and fabrics. Solid color~ and prints. Good
iange of sizes:

T~E

FINAL:~R

81G DAYS

: SAUE
: . NOW!
I
I

•
\

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