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                  <text>14- The Daily Sentine1, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July23, 1980

Prison tactical team rees guard

Ohio legislature seeking 'relief'
on other 'big ticket' steel items
By ROBERT E. Mlll.ER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio's
Legislature may want to suspend the
state sales tax not only on cars, but
also on refrigerators and other "big
ticket" items made with steel.
Senate Finance Committee Chair·
nian Harry Meshel, !).Youngstown,
said Tuesday that he wants to knolf
more about how the move might
help Ohio's economy -and what the
resulting state revenue loss might
be. He is chairman of a SenateHouse·conference committee trying
to work out an agreement on a bill to
keep the 1979-1981 state budget in
~lance despite declining tax
revenues.
Backers of the lax suspension said
a further revenue loss might spur
auto sales, help dealers clear away
backed-up inventories and give tlle
state .a better economic picture in a
relatively short time.
Meshel Is chief sponsor of · the
House version of the Senate bill,
which would suspend half of the 4
percent tax for 60 days. That would

mean a savings of $160 on an $8,000
car.
The Senate wants to know whether
·it might be better to suspend all the
lax, perhaps for 30 days rather than
60, the Mahoning County senator
said. The upper house also wants to
find out whether the move should in- .
elude refrigerators, washers, dryers
and other products in which steel is ·
used. This could help the non-auto
steel industry, he said.
Senate and House conferees met
on the pending b.ill for abou.l four
hours Monday night, diScussing
House changes in the Senate version
without taking any action, MesheJ·

to get the program under way. He
Akron. It also would establish rules
thinks the money could be borrowed
and controls for future waste sites.
and later repaid with fees charged · Meshel and others are concern~d
by the state to those producing and . about the possible existence of many
getting rid of hazardous wastes at
abandoned sites which officials do
legitimate disposal ~tes.
not know about. They think the scope
The corrunittee will continue to . of health and, related prob)ems
work on the bill, Meshel said. He
created by those sites may be far
hopes to have a final draft ready for . more serious than many realize.
action when the full Legislature
The $5 million could be only a
returns on a date which has not been
small part of the amount that evenunspecified.
tually could be needed, Meshel said.
The bill, approved by both houses
The money would ·allow the. state to
in different forms, would order a
continue present cleanup efforts and
cleanup of existing hazardous waste
initiate other action pending the
sites, such as one at Deerfield near
collection of fees, he sard.

another joint conterence committee - meeting while
the Legislature was in recess agreed on a haUirdous waste control
bill. But it could not decide how to
get the money needed to implement
the measure.
•
Meshel, who also heads that panel
and is that measure's sponsor, expressed confidence that the
Legislature can find about $5 million

,ij _

sa~~while,

Consumer prices
(Continued fro'rrrpage l l

other consumer goods continued to
show moderate rates of increase - a
trend that began in April.
The Labor Department reported
this general breakdown for June:
·Home financing costs rose 4.6 percent.
- Rents jwnped 1.2 percent
~Auto finance charges, whiclt
rose at a monthiy rate of 4 percent
during the first five months of 1980,
declined 0.8 percent.
- Prices for sugar, soft drinks and
other prepared foods rnse substantially, but meat, · poultry, fish
and egg prices declined, although
not as much as In the previous 2
months.
-Restaurant meals rose 0.9 percent.
- Public transportation was up 1.1
percent, reflecting large increase in
airline and intercity train fares.
-Apparel and their upkeep was
tWhanged in price.
-Medical care increased 0.5 percent, the same as in May.
- Entertainment costs rose O.fo
percent, the same as in May.
The Gonswne~ Price Index, based .
on a figure of 100 in 1967, rose in June
to 247.6. This is not seasonally adjUSted, and it means that the same
goods and services that sold for $100
13 years ago would cost $247.60
today. The index is 14:3 percent
higher than the June 1979level.
The administration also estimates
that consumer prices will rise 12 percent between 1979's fourth quarter
and 1980's fourth quarter. This
means an average 8. 75 percent annual rate through the rest of this
year, says Charles Schultze, chairman of the president's Council of
Economic Advisers.

At the same time, Data Resources
'lnc. of Lexingto!l, Mass., predicts
that consumer prices will rise at an
annilal level only slightly above 8
percent through December,
Despite moderating prices, '
Federal Reserve · Chairmsn Paul
Volcker said Tuesday that monetary
policy will continue to be used to further curb inflation and warned that a
tax cut now · is "premature" and

Area deaths

Blanche Stanley
ffianche Dale Stanley, 93, died
Tuesday afternoon at the Russell
Nursing Home, Albany, following a
lingering illness. ,
Mrs. Stanley was born Dec . 30,
11186, daughter of the late Lewis and
Mina Dale, Webster City .Iowa. She
was also preceded in ·death. by her ;
husband, William Culbert -Stanley,
three brothers, two daughters, Norma Cuckler and Neva Markins, and
one son, Donald Stanley.
She is survived by three sons, Dale
and Denzle Stanley, Albany and
Duane Stanley, Rt. 4, Pomeroy; a
sister and brother, Gladys Dale and
Clifford Dale, Webster City, Iowa; a
granddaughter, Geraldine Cuckler
Ross, who was reared by Mr. and

BOISE, Idaho (AP) - A special
prison tactical team using tear gas
this morning freed a guard who had
been held hostage for nearly 18
hours by rioting prisoners at Idaho
State Penitentiary, ani! police closed
in to regain control of the
smoldering institution.
Corrections Dir~ctor C. W. "Bill"
Crowl said no shots were fired and
no one was injured in the five-minute
assault by about a dozen heavily armed prison guards.
,
Shortly after guard Lynart Orr
was freed about 5:30 a.m., inmates
were told over bullhorns to leave the
cell bouses and go to a nearby football field.
At sunrise about 200 law enforcement office'rs who had ringed
the facility closed in. Prison guards,

l

Gerald Tate

Gerald Tale, 56, a resident of Rt. 1,
Bidwell, died in Holzer Medical Center at 8 p.m. Tuesday.
He was born at Kyger July 22,
1923, son of the late Worthy and
Evelyn Darst Tate.
. .
Mr. Tate married IriS Frederick
on May 29, 1944, at Marysville, Calif.
She survives, alpng with one
daughter, Mrs. Robert (Helen) Lynch, Brookville, Ohio. Two brothers
and three sisters survive:
Donald Tate, Cleveland; Charles
Tate, Cheshire; Clarice Callicoat,
Gallipolis; Eloise and Lydia Smith,
both of Rutland.
One defendant was fined and 11
One grandchild survives.
others forfeited bonds in the court of
Mr. Tate was a retired employee
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
of Delco Loraine Corp., in Dayton.
Tuesdy night.
He was a member of the First
Fined was Wesley Smith,
United Methodist Church iD BrookPomeroy, $29 and costs, costs
ville.
suspe11ded, speed. · ....................,..... .,
Mr. Tate was a Worl&lt;l War II
Forfeiting bonds were, Ten'y
Brown, Pomeroy, Thomas Martin; · veteran.
Funeral services will be held 1f
. Pomeroy, Betty Moore, Pomeroy,
a.m.
Friday at McCoy-Moore
Gloria Buzzard, Letart, W.Va., John
Fll"eral
Home in Vinton with Robert
Anderson, Middleport, and Robert .
Ball
officiating.
Burtal will be in VinUtalan, West Columbia, $26 ,each,
.
ton
Memorial
Park.
,
speed; Austin Wolfe, Racine, $30,
Friends
may
call
at
the funeral
speed; Donald Jones, Reedsville,
home
on
Thursday
from
7 .until 9
$27, speed; Norian Rhodes, Ripley,.
p.m.
$33, speed; Michael Markum, Middleport, $30, speed; Gregory Becker,
Discounts available
Middleport, $31, speed.

e

"BE1N' A MOVIE STAR sure beato workln','' says
"outlaw" Willie Nelson, who plays his lint starring role In
tbe new film "Honeysuckle Rose." Nelson Is expected to
speDd some lime this fall campaigning for oae of his biggest fans - President Carter.

Emergency squad runs
The Meigs· County Emergency
Service report the following runs
made by local units Tuesday. '
Middleport, 12:15 p.m. to county
road one , auto accident, for John
Nicolozakez, who was taken to
O'Bleness Hospital. Middleport's
EMS went at 3:22p.m. to SR 124,
auto accident, for Lucy Swain who
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy's squad at 4:1K p.m.went
to Rayal Oak for Luther Brown who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:14 p.m. to
Cole Street for Osby Martin who was
taken fo Holzer Medical Center;
Rutiand at 9:51 p.m. to Mine Num~r One for James Powell who was
taken to, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Rutiand at 12:04 p.m. for Thelma
Grueser who was transferred from
Veterans Memorial to St. Joseph
Hospital then back to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

VOL 31 NO. 71

ASK TOWED
A marriage license was issued to
William D. Stewart, 23, Middleport
and Sharon Sue ~r, 26, Shade.

'

Soviet military increases activity

and wOOdWork trom the damag·

ing eUects of constaf't dampness.
It retards mildew, mold, musty

PEKING - Olina 's leading newspaper reported today that Soviet
warships and reconaissance planes based in Yietnam have been increasing military activities in the area of the South China Sea.
The People's Daily, quoting various sources, said the Soviets had increased the number of warships in Vietnamese ports this year with as
many as 20 at anchor at one time.
' The voice of the Communist Party Central Committee said the warships, as well as submarines and survey boats, were reported to have
set out from Kam Ranh Bay and Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saigon.

odors and rust - gives your home

.more living area .

·Baker Furniture

Parliament study impeachment
ROME (AP) - The Italian Parliament was to meet in joint session
today for a second day to consider impeaching Premjer Francesco
Cossiga, accused of. telling fellow Christian Democrat Carlo Donat
Catlin that police were seeking to arrest his son, Marco, on terrorist
charges.
The three parties in Cossiga's coalition - the Christian Democrats,
Socialists and Repuplicans·- appeared to have enough votes to clear
the premier, with 54 percent of the 952 seats in both houses.
Police sources say the younger Donat Catlin fled Italy after being
warned of the charges. The accusation is denied by both the elder
Donat Catlin and Cossiga, who would most likely have to resign if a
simple majority found he had violated any law.

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
FIGHT MOISTURE DAMAGE

WITH A

Tanker truck wreck blocks 1-74
WEST HARRISON, Ind. - A tanker truck carrying a corrosive
chemical overturned along Interstate 74 today and began leaking
some of the cargo, state pollee said.
·
The truck, en route from St. Louis to Cincinnati, went off the highway two miles west of the Ohio state line, police said. They said the
cargo, ammonium floride , will not cause a fire but fumes could make
people ill,
Investigators said the driver, James F. Ellis, was drenched with the
chemical and was taken to a Cincinnati hospital.
Police said State Board of Health officials advised that a limestone
dam and then an earthen dam would have to be built around the truck
to contain the spill.

Dehumidifier

Human torch recovering from stroke
ATLANTA - When doctors first tried to take Willie Jones' temperature, it rocketed off the scale. Hospital personnel called him "The
Human Torch." Now Jones is recovering from heat stroke-- and a
116.7-ilegree fever believed to be the highest anyone has ever survived.
" We can't really explain what helped save him, we just did all the
normal things," said Dr. Ga,il Anderson, who was in charge of the
Grady Memorial Hospital team that treated Jones.
It was 99 degrees on July 10, the height of this region 's heat-wave,
when neighbors found Jones, 51, in the cl&lt;)~-up apartment where he
lived alone.
,_
On Wednesday, less than two weeks later, he was out of the intensive
care unit and recuperating.

CAPACITY

WHY IT'S LIKE

·WALKING ON AIR

·weather forecast
Clear tonight. Lows in the lower 60s. Mostly sunny Friday. Higlis in .
the mid-ros. Chance of rain near zero percent tonight and 10 percent
Friday. Winds southerly to southeasterly 1-10 mph tonight.
Extended Olilo Forecast - Saturday through Monday :Showers or
thunderstorms possible Saturday and Sunday, ending Monday. Higbs
in the 80s Saturday and in the upper 70s tb low 80s Sunday and Monday.
Lows in the 60s Saturday and Sunday and in the upper 50s to low 60s
Monda .

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

@ mwhroonv.Like walking on air.

' &gt;

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Senate
leaders are pledging some kind of
congressional investigation into
Billy Carter's ties with the Ubyan
government, and President Carter's
chief spokesman says the White
House wants to be open and honest
about it.
But what form the probe and the
administration's response will take
has yet to be decided.
" In general, we are dedicated to
the proposition that we ought to be
as forthcoming and straightforward
in ·this matter as we possibly Clln
be," presidential pr~ss secretary
Jody Powell told reporters Wednesday.
Powell added, however, that he
could not say whether President
Carter's aides would be available to
testify before Congress concerning
the activities of the president's
younger brother.
Billy Carter registered under
protest last week as a foreign agent
for Ubya and said he had received
$220,000 in payments from the
Libyan government which he said
.• wer,!! the first installments of a
$500,000 loan.
On Tuesday, the White House announced that the president's
national secilritY adVISer' Zbigniew
Br:zezinski, used Billy Carter as an
intefl!lediary last fall in seeking
Ubyan assistance to free the
American hostages in Iran.
The Washington Post reported in
today's editions that President Carter met with the same Ubyan
diplomat as Br:zezinski about three
weeks later, on Dec. 6, to discuss a
stiff U.S. rebuke over the burning of
the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli four
days earlier.
However, the Post said there was
no suggestion that Billy Carter
helped arrange · the president's
meeting.
. At the Capitol, Senate leaders
agreed to continue their discussions
today in an effort to break an impasse over whether the matter
should be investigated by the
Judiciary Committee, by part of that
'committee or. by a special panel
drawn from several committees.
Whatever their decision, Majority
Leader Robert C. Byrd, ·D-W.Va.,
and Minority Leader Howard" H.
Baker Jr., R-Tenn., told reporters,
using Identical words, "There will
be an investigation." .
·
Republicans pushed for a Special
Senate committee, similar•to the one
that looked into the Watergate scandals of the Nixon administration.
Democrats resisted this and wanted
the investigation · done by the
Judiciary Committee or a panel
drawn from it.
At the White HoUse, Powell was
quick to assail any suggestion ihat
the Billy Carter case in any way
resembles Watergate.

EXTENSIVE EXTERIOR REMODEUNG Crow's Family Restaurant, West Main St., Pomeroy, is
undergoing extensive exterior remodeling. It will be a

a Kentucky Fried Chicken image biiilding. The
restaurant will offer the same menu that it has in the

past.

.

20 officers executed
By Tbe Associated Press
Twenty more officers and men of
the Iranian afl!ly and air force were
executed in Tehran at dawn today
for taking part in the military plot to
bomb Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini's hqme and overthrow his
revolutionary regime, Tehran Radio
reported.
·
Another man was put to death for
killing four persons because they
" were not prepared to renounce
their Islamic beliefs and embrace
Marxism," the Iranian government
radio said.
Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh conferred with Bani.SSdr
Wednesday afternoon. Later, he
denied rumors he had resigned but
said he did not intend to stay on in
the new administration appointed by
the prime minister. ·
"This government's period of office should end," Pars quoted him as
saying. "Of course, I will not take
pat! in the next government."
In Cairo, Egypt, the official Middle East News Agency reported
Wednesday that Iranian authorities
may free the hostages at the end of
the Moslem holy ~onth of
Ramadan, less than three weeks
from now.
Quoting AI ' Sharq AI Awsat, a
newspaper published in London, the
news agency said Khomeini now is
convinced the continued presence of
the hostages has become a " heavy
burden" and that the feast marking
the end of the dusk-to-dawn fasting
would be a "good occasion" for their
release. The news agency said the
newspaper based its information on
''well-informed Arab sources.' •
The executions brought the total in ·
Iran this week to 51, including 25
convicted of involvement in the conspiracy. At least 500 persons were
reported arrested for being part of
the plot, and death sentences are expected for most of them. ·

them air force pilots ; an air force
technician and army noncommissioned officers.
An Islamic revolutionary court
found them guilty of plotting a coup
against the Islamic republic, planning to bomb Khomeini's home in
northern Tehran and "mutinying
against the Islamic regime," the
broadcast said.
The plotters put to death on Sunday Included a retired brigadier
general and five air force officers,
Assault charges were filed ·against
and the announcement of their
two workers at the Dravo Hydro
execution said they were preparing
Project at the Racine Locks and
a fleet of 35 to 50 air force jets to
Dam following injury to a carpenter
bomb Khomeini's residence and
foreman.
other key points.
According to the Meigs County
The others executed this week·
sheriff's . department, Warren F.
were
convicted of other counter·
J ohnslon was transported to
revolutionary
activities and drug of·
Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
lenses.
Racine Emergency Squad for treatOn the political front, Iran's ofment of a dislocated shoulder,
ficial Pars news agency reported
numerous cuts and abrasions to the
that President Abolhassar) Baniface and nose. Posting bonds for
court appearances were Gary Sadr appeared to have 1 chosen
Mostafa Mir-Salim, the chief of the
Runyon, 39, Rt. 4, Ironton, and Jim
Cosner, 50, Rt. 3, Ironton. Both were state police and deputy interior
laborers working with the carpenter minister for political affairs, to be
the Iranian republic's first prime
crew.
In other action, 29 year-old minister.
The news agency said Bani.SSdr
Richard L. Bennett, Pl. Pleasant,
held
al) unusually long meeting with
who appeared in Meigs County Court
of Common Pleas. on a Bill of In- Mir-Salim on Wednesday, and when
reporters asked the police chief
fofl!l8tion on a bad check chsi'ge,
was transported Thursday morning whether he would be the president's ·
to th~ Ohi11 Pehal Reception and choice, he replied, "Anything could
Medical Center at Columbus to happe~ ."
Pars reported Mir-&amp;Jim has the
begin his tefl!l of six months to five
support of the lf!lamic Republican
years.
According to the sheriff's records, Party, the clergy-led, hard-line facBennett was arrested in West tion that , dominates the new
Virginia and waived his right of ex- , Parliament, or Majlis.
In the United States, meanwhile,
tradition proceedings and was returpolice
arrested two American Black
ned to Meigs County on July 21: He
Muslims
and were hunting for a
appeared in Common Pleas Court
July 22 and entered a guilty plea. He third one for the assassination on
was charged with issuing a check for Tuesday of Ali Akbar Tabatabai, the
the amount of $550 to Bob Fife on former press at41che of the Iranian
July 15, 1979, knowing that the check Embassy in Washington and a foe of
the Khomeinl regime.
would be dishonored.

Tehran Radio said the plotters
executed today included four captains ·and a first lieutenant, all of

Racine project
workers face

assault charges ..

I

New doctor joins VMH medical team

HARnEY'S SHOES, INC.

,

FIFTE,m ·GENTS

kept,,.honest

An Admi.ral dehumidifier can

·make vour basement or other
,diut1,l&gt; area mo•e comfortable by
taking the excess moisture out of .
the air. 11 helps protect turnnure

*30 PINT

Telephone directories mailed -~

en tine

•
wants Issue

CAPACITY

..

at y
White House

- IN STOCK* 15 PINT

Mushrooms:

noon Wednesday after guards con- inmates took the organ to gqardS.
confiscated contraband,'silid acting
ducted a shake-down of a medium
Fires also swept through mediwn
Warden L.D. Smith, but inniates
security cellhouse.
security areas, and the only building
said personal possessions, including
AU 400 inmates in the main prison to escape flames was the kitchen,
televisions and family photos, were
complex were at large, but not all Crowl said.
seized. Officials said only personal
Prisoners took two cars, a school
were involved in the riot, officials
possessions suspected of having ·
said.
bus from the body shop and a fork
been stolen were seized.
Some 71 inmates not involved in lift and were driving around the
Some 150 inmates took control of
the riot retre!lted to a fenced playing , yard knocking down 'fences, he said. the prison's four old mediumfield between the prison-controlled They also overturned a pickup truck security cell blocks and took Orr
and prisoner-controlled areas, and set it on fire.
· hostage about noon.
Crowl said.
Officials retained control of the
Two boors later, they took QVer a
At nightfall, smoke was billowing actrllnistration building, which con- new medium security cell block,
from the maximum security cell trols access to the prison yard and stofllling the glass-windowed conblock and the prison's auto-body
the cell blocks across the yard.
trol room and seizing May. They
Television reporter Bob Loy of next broke into the maximum
shop was in flames. Shortly after
midnight, the prison infirmary was
KBCI in Boise was allowed to tour
security-!:ellblock, freeing some 50
ablaze, and medical records apthe cellhouse and said many cells prisoners, . including David Allen
parently were destroyed.
were demolished and flooded.
Osborn, the only person on Idaho's
During the shakedown, guards death row.
. The chapel was set afire, but some

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO THURSDAY, JULY 24,1980

ADMIRAL
•
DEHUMIDIFIERS

should not be considered before late
this year or 1981.
"Neither the decline in interest
rates nor the removal of (credit controls) should be interpreted as an inMiddleport, Ohio ·
vitation to consumers or
businessmen to undertake incautious or imprudent borrowing
commitments," Volcker told the
.
.
Senate Banking Committee.
The Federal Reserve is prepared,
if necessary, to see the growth of
currency and all kinds of deposits
•
such as checking aceounts "fall
significantly short of the mid-point
of their· Specified ranges ~r the
year;" he said.
At the same time, Volcker said the
board's open In&lt;U'ket conlmlttee
plans to continue reducing the
growth of money and credit next
year, although no specific goals
have been set.
for senior. citizens.
In other economic news Tuesday: .
Five defendants were fined and
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ Senior
- Economist Michael Evans told
six
others
forfeited
bonds
in
the
citizens who buy their tickets in adthe Senate Budget Committee that
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hofvance can get general admission
the current recession will · hit the
•
tickets to this year's Ohio State Fair
Midwest and Southeast the hardest ' fman Tuesday night.
Fined were Gary Ii:ynon, 'Racine,
while leaving the Sun Belt, the West
for half the regular $3 price.
The discount, for persons 55 and
Coast and New England relatively $25 and costs, unruly prisoner, $25
and costs, disorderly manner; Bobover, will nQt be available at the fair
unscathed.
by Dill, Middleport, .$225 and costs,
- The Commerce Department
gates.
three
days confinement, DWI, $10
Senior citizen activities, sponreported that manufacturers'
sored by the Ohio Commission on
durable goods orders declined $1.9 and costs stop sign violation; Brenda Fry, Middleport, $25 and costs.
billion, or 2.8 percent, in June, the
Aging, will take place throughout.
disorderly manner; Charles Tyree,
fifth consecutive monthiy decline.
the fair at the Martin Janis Senior
Middleport, $100 and costs,
Center. A free shuttle bus service
trespassing; Steve Kalinowski, . will be available to take senior
Cheshire, $50 and. costs, dis9rderly
citizens to other areas of the
manner.
fairgrounds.
Forfeiting bonds were Donald L.
PLAYERS REPORT FRIDAY
Frymer, Middleport, $25, following
too close; Robert Brian Seeling,
Coach Charles Chancey announced today all Meigs varsity and
Pomeroy, $31, speed; Randall F.
freshman football players should
McMillan, New Martinsville, W.Va.
WHIRLPOOL AND
$25, improper exhaust; Thomas R.
report to the high school at 5:39 p.m.
Hunt, Thurman, $350, DWI, $200
Friday, July 25 to be. fittep for
WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE
leaving scene of accident; James D.
heimets. AU 7th and 8th grade
Gibbs, Letart, W. Va., $25, improper
players should report to the junior
QUALITY
Mushrooms are the revoluexhaust; Michael P. McCoy,
high football stadium in Middleport
tionary shoes made with the
. Gallipolis, $50, open container,
at 6:30p.m. Friday, July 25.
Moleculai r® Sole ... millions of
tiny air bubbles are trapped in·
side the sole so when you walk
they adjust to the natural contours of your feet as wen as to
MECHANIC ST. - POMEROY
the surface you ' re walking on
POMEROY - Some 6,000 phone not receivi.Dg a book by Aug. 6 should
( no matter how hard it is) . But
users in the Pomeroy-Middleport notify the business office.
... feeling is believing, so come
area , will begin receiving new . - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - telephone directories this week, 4ctake the Mushroom Walk . Of
cording to General Telephone Co. of
"
course, Mushrooms are avail "
Ohio.
able in lots of great looks.
Jilp L. Parker, district customer
service manager at Athens, said the
introductory pages of the phone book
have a new easier-to-read format. .
By reviewing the front section,
customers will find information on
various customer services including
local and long distance calling,
Black
cUBtomer-provided equipment and
Chocolate
the GTE Phone Mart.
Wine
" '{'he Phone Mart was opened at
Pomeroy last Nov.ember to provide
added convenience to customers in
Pomeroy, Racine and Rutland,"
said Parker. Phone Mart allows
phone users to shop for phones, take
them home aiJI plug_them into preinstalled jacks for instant service.
Parker noted that among the
listings on the introductory pages is
"Middle of Upper Block Pomeroy"
a separate nwnbel" for multi-line
Store Hours 9 to 5 Each' D~y
businesS cl!stomers. "By calJing the 1
'Open Fri. Night Ill a : Oo P.M.
number, business customers receive
specialized services to fit their
needS. ''
Directories/ are· being distributed
, to phone users in Letat;t Falls,
Pomeroy-Middleport, Portland,
Racine and Rutland. Any customer
,.

Mayor's court

•

'

Mrs. Stanley; 10 grandchildren and

14 great grandchildren.
Ftineral services will be held
t'riday at 10:30 a.m. at the BigonyJordan Funeral Home 'in Albany.
Burial will follow in Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
h~me from 2 to 4 and 7to 9 p.m.

"a wild drunk."
state and local 'police and sheriff's
The only other hostage taken in
deputies s!ofl!led into the prison.
the riot, guard Calvin May, was
lrunates began trickling out of the
released unhafl!led just before
cell houses, hands over their heads,
nightfall Wednesday. Efforts to fr~
moving toward the football field. At
Orr through negotiations failed
least one canister of tear gas was
when inmates refused to talk further
fired toward one of the buildings by
after dark.
police.
Nine prisoners have sought aid for
Ladders were used to put rifleinjuries suffered in the rioting, and
toting Ia w officers on t11p of buildings
in the compound.
one was hospitalized after being
The decision to send in the tactical · badly beaten on the face and ·arms
team came after inmates had bur- by other irimates, Crowl said .. The
others suffered smoke inhalation,
ned nearly everything in the prison
minor cuts and )Jruises.
compound and fears for the
Negotiations llroke down at dusk,
hostage's life grew, Crowl said. Only
the kitchen was spared the flames.
and the Idaho National Guard was
placed on standby. The inmates said
Crowl said . the inmates were
talks would resume at 1:30 p.m.
brewing a big batch. of homemade
whiskey and he feared that when it MDT.
The rioting began shortly before
was ready , the inmates would go on

\l

"POMEROY BEN FRAN"KLIN

I \

' l
JOINS VETERANS MEMORIAL STAFF -' Dr. Johnny A. Brawner,
a graduate of the University of the Philippines, recently joined the staff at
Veterans Memorial Hospital. He will be in general surgery.
~ .
i

'

Dr. Johnny A. Brawner recently ,
joined the medical staff of Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy. He
will be establishing a private practice in general surgery and will
pro.vide other medical services as
, required by the community.
The Ohio Valley Health Services
Foundation, Inc.,. of Athens, Ohio,
has been contracted to provide the
management services for Dr.
Brawner's practice.
A graduate of the University of the
Philfppines, Dr. Brawner completed
t

a two year residency in Obstetrics
and Gynecology at the Philippine
General Hospital before ocmpleting
a rota.ting internship at St. Vincent
Charity Hospital, Clevel~nd, Ohio.
Following this he served as a
Fellow · in graduate tr~ining in
General ·. Surgery at the Cleveland
Clinic wllere he eventually served as
Chief Resident. He then served an
additional year in the same institution as a Fellow in Gcleral
SurgJry .Research. In June of 1976,
he completed a year of fellowship in

Surgical Metabolism at Lutheran
Medical Center, Cleveland, Ohio,
devoting most of that time to research work in critical care medicine.
Dr. Brawner was awarded first
prize, Clinical Research Category,
in the yearly Surgical Research
Essay Contest sponsored by the
Cleveland Surgical Society. He is
licensed by the Ohio State Medical
Board and is certified by the
American Board of Surgery.
Dr. Brawner is married to the former Carol Scott from Pittsburgh, 1

Pa. They have two children, Jennifer and Johnny, Jr. Dr. Brawner's
family currently reside in Fairview
Park, where he has practiced for the
past three years, and will be' joining
him after the construction completion of their new home in Royal
, Oak Park, Chester Twp.
Dr. Brawner's office is located in
Veterans Memorial Hospital
P.OJ1!eroy; Ohio, with office h~
Monday through Friday, 9 a:m.-4
p.m.
&gt;

\

�3- The Daily Sentinel, ,'ofiddleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThursdaY, Julv 24. 1980
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 24, 19IKI

Opinions &amp;
Comments

The three commercial television networks once again
have managed to provide their promised "gavel-to-gavel"
coverage of a presidential nominating convention without
actually reporting much of the proceedings.
It isn't easy to fill an entire evening's program schedule
. with live convention coverage while simultaneously
. ignoring as much as hall of everything that occurs on the
• podium at the front of the hall.
.
But the networks' news divisions spared no expense to
divert their viewers' attention from the real business of the
· convention and exaggerate the importance of what few
· controversies they could find.
· ·
· In a perceptive analysis publisbed in the Political Scien. ce Quarterly, they note that television coverage of the 1972
Democratic National Convention was subject to criticism
because it "emphasized the sensational, the controversial
and the unusual."
The necessity of compressing and even exaggerating
events in an understandable if not justifiable product of
television news programs limited to 30 minutes.
But there's no excuse for mangling reality when special
convention broadcasts .are allocated four to six consecutive hours each evening-adquate time to provide accurate, complete and honest accounts of the pr~s.
Moreover, the presidential nominating conventions of
the two major political parties are SJ!pposed to be the
premier showcases for the network news divisions - the
special occasions every four years when they really can .
show off the talent of their personnel and the technical
wizardry of their equipment.
Ceaseless coverage of tt*iious speeches at the podium, .
man37 of them little more than political propaganda, isn't
the remedy for what ails television coverage of the conventions - but neither is repetition of the broadcast industry's penchant for oversimplified, melodramatic
.; . rep(Jrting.
·•.. .

..

''

.
.

Today in history. • •

Na~ Comaneclleamed the first lesson Wednesday when her individual
lead m team gymnastics slipped away in a .twnble from the uneven parallel
bars. Comaneci, who couldn't improve on her perfect routines at the 1976
Olympics imd here on Monday, finished fourth in the competition won by the
awesome Soviets.
But the acrobatic Romanian was to get a chance for redemption in the individualaU-aroun&lt;t event today.
The Moscow Olympics today will also begin to see If the second lesson is
true ~hen Sebastian Coil and Steve Ovett, two running Britons engaged in a
rwuung feud, embark on their collision course.
Among the events in today's opening Olympic irack and field session are
finals in the women's shot put; the men's 20-kllometer walk and the women's
pentathlon, plus the first heats for the men's BOO-meter race. Coe Is the world
record holder In this event (1 :42.4), with Ovett right on his heels. The
semifinals are Friday and the long-awaited final Saturday.
"I'd like to think I'm well-prepared," said Coe.
OvettpJ1!dicted his chance of winning the BOO is about 5ll percent.
U all goes :as planned and they meet in Saturday's final, then their next
confrontation would be next week In the 1,500 meters, in which they share the
world record of3:32.1.
·
Since no one has ever run a faster 1,500 than the two Britons, a case could
be made for them being the best middle-distance runners ofalltime. Throw

in the facts they don't take tea together and they've only raced twice against
each other, and you have a couple of "Races of the century" coming up.
Oops, there's that big buildup again.
"Well, better to wax hyperbolic about races than to write about the con·
ditions here at these first Games behind the Iron .Curtain. says Vladimir
Popov, vice president of the Moscow Olympic Organizing Committee.
On a day when sports- and not politics - managed to dominate, it wasPopov who raised the possibility of deporting journalists for negative repor·
ling. Popov was critical of western press coverage that has included stories
on the stringent Soviet security here and the police's inanhandling of an
Italian gay rights demonstrator.
"You may be sure that If the national dignity of the host country has been
offended, we shall demand that resolute sanctions should be taken against
these joumalists," Popov said through an interpreter at a news conference.
Citing the precedent .of two reporterS he ~id were sent packing from the
Mexico City Games In 1968, Popov said it could happen again if "journalists
have stepped beyond the limits of elementary decency and tact." But he said
such an ouater would have to be made by the International Olympic Com·
mittee, not the Soviets.
·
It isn't any exaggeration to report that the Soviets and their comrades
from East Germany are turning these Games into their personal playthings.
After WedneSday, the fourth day of competition, the Soviets led with 17 gold
and and 32 total medals. East Germany bad 26 medals, six of them gold.
Next was Hungary and Bulgaria, each with seven medals.

Three teams left
•• •• •••••••
• • •••••
•••
in LL tournament BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
~
;;

I

Evangelists enter political arena
By Robert J. Wagman
DETROIT (NEA) -Conservative
evangelistic Christians have
emerged this year as a major
political force. Led by television
preachers like the Rev. Jerry
Falwell and organizations like The
Moral Majority, they are planning to
spend piles of money' this fall to
mobilize millions of "Christian
voters" in support of candidates who
share their beliefs.
'
There is one candidate who almost
all these groups have united against: Jimmy Carter, who these fun·
«1aJllenbilists believe has abandoned
his born·again theology for that
devil liberalism. · Carter's support
for issues like the Equal Rights
Amendment has doomed him in the
eyes of these arciH:onservatlves.
Representatives of various
Christian grou!is came to the
Republican Conventions bere hoping
to enlist the aid of the regular party
and the Reagan campaign in a plan
to trap Carter. Their inission may
well turn out succesSfully.
Central to the fundamentalists '
plan is a biil that seeks to back·

handedly· resinstate voluntary
prayer in public schools, a practice
the Supreme Court has repeatedly
held unconstitutional.
Rather than trYing to posh a constitutional amendment through
Congress, Sen. Jesse Helms, R·N.C.,
introduced a measure that would
simply remove the subject of school
prayer from the scope of judicial
review. The bill has languished in
the House Judiciary subconunittee
on courts and civil liberties since its
passage by the Senate last October.
Carter has annOWiced he will veto
the bill if it reaches his desk because
he .believes it is a clearly un·
constitutional attempt to "let
emotion overrule federal law."
Fundamentalist leaders think
such a veto would be the last straw
for millions of their followers who
otherwise might still vote for Carter
in November. These leaders believe
they will guarantee Carter's defeat
If they force him to veto the school·
prayer bjll before the election. To do
this; however, they need Republican
help.
·
Rep. Robert Kas.teruneier, ·,the

Wisconsin Democrat who chairs the
known as The Religious Roundtable.
courts and civil liberties sub:• uwe can get the bill to the House
coliUIIiitee, is clearly attempting to
floor, we have more than enough
put off action on the legislation until
votes to psss it," says Chasey. "The
after the election. He has scheduled
problem is that many rt the.
initial hearings on the matter for the
congressmen who would vote for the
end of July. By the time the bill
measure will not sign Ute discharge
makes its way through sub·
petition just out of cOurtesy. We
coliUIIittee ahd full conunittet,
have liM&gt; signers so far and are about
Congress will have adjourned to 40 short.
campaign for re-election.
"If Reagan will put out the orders
In response, Rep. Phil Crane, R· · to his people to fall in behind the
m.' is circulating a discharge petition, we can pick . up the adpetition that if signed by 218 ditional signers we need."
representatives will re'quire an im·
mediate floor vote on the school·
Chasey has received a respecUul
prayer .bill. Because of
hearing from party leaders here.
ucongressional ·
courtesy,"
Reportedly, Reagan's political staff
discharge petitions seldom get the
thinks the plan could well result in a ·
requisite number of signatures. So,
major embarrasment to Carter. The
supporters of the measure came to
question now is whether they can
Detroit to enlist the aid of presideD·
convince their candidate to lean on
tlal candidate Ronald Reagan and
the Republican leadersliip in the
his fdr~ on behalf of the discharge
House to force through the discharge
petition.
petition.
Orchestrating the campaign to get
Says Chasey : "Within the next
the Helms bill to Carter's desk is Bill
couple of weeks, I think that you will
Chasey , a Washington·based
see some positive results of our work
political operative who is chief lobhere the last few days. I'm sure we'll
byist for a group of religious leaders get the signatures we need."

French, German alliance strained?

'

:. Today is Thursday, July 24, the
:: : ~day of 1-.. There are 160 days
~ left in the year.
: . Today's highlight in history:
:- , On July 24, 1870, the first railroad
.: car from the Pacific coast reached
:; New York City, ushering in tran:·: scontlnental train service.
On this date:
; In 1783, the Latin . American
~ patriot, Simon Bolivar, was born in
:: Caracas, Venezuela..
·• • In 1946, the United states made the
first underwater test of an atomic
bomb, setting off the explot!ion at
•'Blklnl atoll in the Pacific.
.; In 1973, President Richard Nixon
:: welcomed the Shah of Iran to the
:: White House and proclaimed a him
~ crucial friend Of the U.S. In the ¥1d, dleEaat.
~ In 1974, the Supreme Court ruled
•,
.,

t,hat Nixon must tum over White
By Don Graff
House docwnents subpoenaed for
For a moment there, it appeared
the Watergate cover-up trials.
that a little 9f the bloom was going
· Ten years ago, the U.S. offered the off the romance.
Soviet Union a package accord to
Helmwn Sclunidt in Bonn was no
curb missiles.
more enchanted than Jinuny Carter
Five years ago, the Apollo space in Washington when Valery Glscard
program ended when three d'Estaing slipped away from Paris
:&gt;
American astronauts safely landed in secrecy to meet Leonid Brezhnev
in the Pacific Ocean after a llnk·up in Warsaw. Sclunidt's own upmlasion with a Soviet spacecraft.
coming and fully publicized state
Last year, a federal district judge
visit to Moscow thereby being upruled that the government could staged by his own closest ally.
provide public access to the Nixon
Then there was the affair of the
White House tapes.
European Community budget.
Today's bitthdays: Theatrical Margaret Thacker's Britain had had
producer Alexander Cohen is 60. Ar· it with being the largest contributor
list Alex Katz is 53.
while realizing minor benefits, since
Thought for today: It is a great ' the bulk of the EC's funds went to
nuisance that knowledge can on1Y be subsidize fanners - mostly French
acquired by hard work- W. ~mer­ fanners.
setMaugham (1874-1965). .
Giscard's France was fully
prepared to bid adieu to the British
..'•
on the issue but Sclunidt's West Ger·
• r-----------------------------------------~--~ many moderated the confrontation
''
with the restilt that the British con.,
tribution has been reduced with
...
West Germany making up most af
•,
the dlffer~ce - and now itself com·
•.
plaining about the free-ride being

.
.

..•

Nadia slips, so does individual standings
MOSCOW (AP) - The problem with P\!rfectlon is you can only go down.
~~oblem with spectacular buildups ls that they rarely achieve ·any

Melodramatic TV

·

provides those farmers across the
other members of Uie alliance.
Rhine.
The FranroGennan relationship
To repeat, it looked as though the
is one of the wonders of the post-war
French-Gennan marriage which
era.· An ancient antagoni.'ll!l that
has dominated West European
ignited two world wars in this cenfamily affairs for two decades was,
tury has been converted into the
if not heading toward divorce, at
foundation of European stability.
least under some strain.
True, not all who benefit from that
But not to worry. Giscard's recent stability are completely at ease.
state visit to West Gennany has aU Smaller nations are only too aware
the appearances of having resolved
of how ocmpletely France and West
whatever genuine bad feeling Gennany dominate affairs. The
existed.and reafflnned the relation- ecopomies of the two, for one power·
ship of the two countries as best · ful example, account for more than
allies.
·
half the EC gross national product
For a number of very interested total.
observers - the aforementioned
By and large, however, the
Margaret Thatcher and Jinuny Car· relationship has worked .conter - that development is of interest structively not only for the two part·
for a nwnber of somewhat con· ners but for the interests .of their
tradictory reasons.
less-favored associates - with an
It means that calm and occasional exception in the case of
cooperation continue to prevail at
the British.
.
the very heat of the European alllan·
But · new tests of the 'Francoce, which is cause for relief. But it Gennan bonds are coming up. Now
also means that France and West that his treasury Is the 1major unGennany will continue to act almost derwriter, Schmidt is detennlned to
as one in pursuing policies that are press for long-ilverdue reforms to
at times out of sync with If not direc- reduce the excessive 70 percent of
tly contradictory ~those favored by the EC budget consumed by

agricultural subsidies. That means a
direct confrontation with French interests and as the French have so
demonstrated in the past, it is not
their way to quietly give way.
There is also the matter of the
Spanish and Portuguese ap·
plications for EC membership,
favored by the Gennans for, among
other reasons, the anticipated
strengthening of the two countries'
democratic developiJienl But opposed by the French because of the
competition their essentially
agricultural economies would ' pose
for - you guessed it - French farmers.
Recent history, however, suggests
that these and other differences may
strain but not rupture the relationship. Which not only the French and
Germans have reason to welcome.
France and Gennany acting In
concert may present difficulties for
the United States and Britain, to
name only two of what can be a
lengthy list of nations. But, as
history again demonstrates,
nowhere near those experienced'
when they are at odds.

GOP convention: a publicists dream

The end of the tournament trail is
drawing near with three finalists
remaining after Wednesday night's
action in the Syracuse little league
tournament.
Advancing were New Haven's
CubS, Middleport's Indians, and
Glouster Mathews Insurance. New
Haven will play Middleport tonight
7:30 with the winner going to the
championship game against
Glouster Friday at 7:30 p.m.
After a night off due to wet groun·
ds, action resllmed Wednesday night
with New Haven's Cubs taking a !1).2
win over Albany.
Todd Gress, the winning pitcher,
had seven strike outs and flve walks.
Gress received relief help from
Richie Clark.
Clark had a home run and two
singles to lead the winners, Bart
Davis two ~ingles, and singles by
Brad Smith, Doug Johnson, and
Paul Hesson.
Mark Chapman suff.ered the loss
for Albany. He had five strike outs
and six walks. Steve Grissett had
two doubles, Mike Chapman two
singles, and Tommy Farley a single.
In the second contest, Middleport's Indians went on the warpath with a convincing IU win over

Hannan Trace.

Rick Wise was the winner collecting 11 strike outs and five walks.
Junior Kitchen had a double and
triple, Wise a home run and .two
singles, Scott Gheen two singles,
Steve Crow a pair of home runs,
double and siligle with an outstanding night at the plate, and Eric
Johnson three singles, .Brian Decker
two singles, and James Keesee, Jeff
Hood singles.
·
Ronnie Parsell was the Hannan
Trace fireballer with eight strike
outs . and no walks. Adam Lewis
tripled, while Derrick Barnes and
Danny Beaver singled.
In the night cap, the unstoppable
Chuckle Davis pitched Glouster to a
4-0 shut out over a tough Middleport
Braves squad.
Davis fanned 11 and walked two.
Robbie Wilson had two long home
runs for Glouster and Scott Mecwn
had a single. Shawn Baker was the
Middleport hurler with a good outing
despite suffering the loss; He fanned
10 and walked five.
Donnie Becker single and doubled,
Baker, Trey Cassell, and Darren
Drenner singled. All six teams will
receive trophies Friday evening.
Ninety-six trophies will be given.

denon, Oakland, · 130; Rivers, Teua, 12S;

Major lei.gue Baseball

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W L Pd. GB
Newvort·
60 l3
.645 49 39
.5&amp;7
6\1
Detroit
52 42
.553 6\1
MilWaukee
.546 9
51 42
BalUmore
47 II
.511 12~
.478 1$\1
43 17
Cleveland
.140 19
Toronto
40 51

-

WEST

Kan!u City
Teas
Oololand
Chicago
·
Seattle

.60&amp;

-

.~

10~

,479

1:1

43
42

.457 14
.452 1111
.41» ' LB~

38
34

Cautornla

51
51

56
57

.371

%1 II

Wednesday's Games
Ooldand 6, Toronto 2
Boolonl2,Teua5
NewYork4, MilwaukeeD
KanJu ctt, t, Chicas" 2
Ba1Umor&lt;8, Mlnnaola7

Detroit 7. California 6
Clevelancl11, Seattle!, lllnnlnp
tbW'Iday'sGame
Chicago (Wortham . 4-4) o1 Kansas Cliy
(Spllttorf!7·7), (n)
Only game ocbedllied
NATIONAL LEAGUE

EAST
W L
52 11

Pitlaburah
Montreal
Philadelphia

50
41

45
43

NewYotk

St. Loula
ChiCBHO
HOUSIOII
U&gt;o Angeles
ctnclnnati

38

Pet:

.~

.549

41
4t

.lei -

53

San Francbco
Atlanta
San Diego

GB

tl
4t
411
51
52

51
50
41

14

.537
.5JII

45

. I~

411

48

I

.516
4
.4&amp;4
7
.457 91;
.422 121;

WEST

.1!3
. . u~

3t !!I
Wednesday's Games
San Frandaco 14, Chicago 6

wins junior event

·Salisbury (sponsored by Brickles
Construction) captured the cham·
· plonship in the Meigs-Mason Junior
Girls Softball Assocuitloo tour·
nament last weekend at Syracuse.
Salisbury's first victory was over
Pomeroy ~. -111-7 over Mason, and
13-5 over New Haven.
New Haven beat Syracuse 12-li,
Middleport 24·8. Pomeroy
eliminated Middleport, 21·11.
Syracuse ousted Mason I H 4 and
went on to defeat Pomeroy 17·9
leaving Syracuse in third. place.
Syracuse then played New Haven
and was ousted Jl.6.
The final game of the tournament
was New Haven coming back
through the losing bracket to face
unbeaten Salisbury.. Salisbury
defeated New Haven 3-1.
Barb HaUield was the pitcher for
Salisbury giving up three walks arid
two·strikeouts whileS. Flannery was
the losing pitcher giving up two

Transactions
Wedneldly'.11 Sporta Tra01111ctiona
FOOTBALL
NaUClllll FootbaD Loasue
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS - Reloued Bob
Jill)', defeN!ve bock, ond Sian Podolakl, defensive Uneilwl .
NEW YORK GIANTS - Rel..-1 Dmald
LeRoy, Ned Gonet, nm Travts ond Dick Blelakl
Jr., running blcU, and Gres AJeunder, defe~

stve t.ck .

NEW YORK JE'!S - AnnOIIIICOCI the
rettrement l...arr)' Keller lineblcker.
SAN FRANCISCO 4tERS - Releued Paul

Seal, ti!Jhtend .

walks and one strike out.

Trlcia Pratt of Salisbury
dominated the tournament with her
hitting chalking up three singles, one
double, two triples and three home
runs. Also hitting home runs In the
tournament were Mary Moore of
Salisbury, Miriam Sisslon of Mason
and Jarvin of New Haven.
The annual Meigs-Mason Senior
Girls tournament will be held
August 1 and 2, with the season's
wrap up of the 1980 All-Star game to
be played on August u ·at Syracuse.

Eastern scores
come-from-behind
4-2 league win
Eastern's Reds po!lted a 4-2 comefrom-behind victory over Mason in
Meigs-Mason pony league action.
Derron JeweU was the winning
hurler with seven strike outs and
only two walks before being reUeved
by Brian Well who fanned five and
walked none. Derron Jewett doubled
and singled for the winners while
Ray Maxson,' Brian · Well singled
twice, Jim Newell tripled and Paul
Harris, Leonard Koenig singled.
Lyons was the Mason hurler· who
suffered the loas.
Lyons fanned nine and walked
none. Bradley, Lyons, Laudennilt,
Johnson, and Kerwood collected hits
for Mason all of which were singles.
Eastern now owns a 4-9 record.

Cooper, Milwaukee,
BaiUmore, 118.
OOUBLES :

Yount,

122;

Bumbry,

Milwaukee,

29 ;

Morrison, Chicago, 29 ; McRae, Kansas City,
2" ; O.Garcia, Torontc, 23; Burleeon, Boston,

22; Lynn, Boston, 22; Boehle, Seattle, 22;
Oliver, TeiU, 21 .
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 9; Wiboo,
Kansu ctty, I; Bumbry, BalUmore, 7;
YOWl~

MUqukee, 7; Wuhington, KalliU

Clty67.

HI ME RUNS: Re .Jacbon,NewYork.~;

:17
46 . fl
411 50

57

211
311

6\1 •
B\1
14

Atlanta 6, Monlreal5

Sal~bury

•••

Cincinnati 7' Phil.odelphia 3

NewYork4,HOUiton 3

St.Louis 7, LoiAnseles 3

San Diego!, Pitll~h2
Thundly a Game

Pitlaburih (Biyleven HI at San Diego
(Shirley s:li), (n)
.
Only game !Cheduled

Ogilvie. MUwaukee, 21; Anna!, Oakland, 22;
ThDmllS, Mllwakee, 19; Mayberry, Toronto,

17.

STOLEN BASES : Henderson Oakland,
45; Wilsoo, Kansas City, G; DUone,
Oeveland, 31; Wills, Teus, 28; J.CnB, Seat·
Ue,26.
PITCHING (9Declslons) : Darwin, Teus,
9-1, .900, U~; Stone, Baltimore, 1~, .133,
3.19; John, New- York, 15--3, .133, 2.87; Corbett, Minnesota, 7-~ •.778, 1.91; Gura, Kanau
a!y, I:H, .765, 2.11 ; Rainey, Booton, IH,
:rn, us; Lopet:, Detroit, ~ . :rn, H8 ;
Travers, Milwaukee, 9-4, .892, 2.82;
STRIKEOUTS: B.Moore, Toronto, :s:ie;
Guidry, New York, 113; M. Norria, Oakland,
109; Keough. Oakland, 96; F llamtiatr, Seat·

Ue,95.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BAITING (225 at ball) ; Templelon,
St.Louil, .326; Hendrick, St.Louil, .~;
R.Smith, Los Angeles, .323; Trillo,

Philadelphia, .31.'1; Buckner, Chicago, .320.
RUNS: LeFlore, Mont.re&amp;l,85; Templeto11,
St.LouJa, 611 ; Rooe, Philadelphia, 63; K.ifet'.
nandez, St.Louis, 83; Clark, San Francisco,
63
.
RBI : Hendrick. St.Loui.o, 77; Garvey, Loo
Anceles. 75; Sclunidt, Philldelphia, 114; ea.ler, Mootreal, 63; Knlgh~ ClncinniiU, 59;
Bater, Los Angeles, 59.
HITS : Templeton,

St.l..&lt;luia.

133; Garvey,

L.); Angel£!1, 119; Hendrick, St.Loula, 116;
K.Hernandez. St.Louis, lll; Cnlmartie,
Montr.al, 109.
DOUBLES: Rooe, Phlladelobla, :11;
Knight, ' Cincinnati,

29; Klfernandez,

St.Louil, 31 ; steama, New Yort, 24; Reitz,

St. Louls,23.
•
TRIPLES: LeFlore, Montreal, 8; Templeton, St.LOuis, !; McBride, Philadelphia,
); O.Moreno, Pitlaburglt, 7: Lanootoy,

Soviet diver Aleksander Portnov won the springboard event, but he won't:
receive his gold medal until Friday because of a proteat that was tumec£
down by the International Swimming F~eration Wednesday night. Other:
divers had protested when PoJV~ov was allowed to repeat a dive after complaining that crowd noise distracted him on an earlier attempt.
·;
The Soviets were favored today in both the men's and women's all-around.
gymnastic events, while the East Germans and Soviets were solid choices In:
tonight's four swimming finals.
More than any 'Other area, the swinuning pool has felt the impact rJ. ~
boycotting Americans. The American men won 12 af the 13 swimming eventa:
contested four years ago at Montreal. Although the East Gennans anct,.
Soviets have powerful swimmitJg programs, an American presence
probalby would have cut into their pool domination.
:
lnfact, only three swimmers have cracked the Soviet-East German con-'
trol, and two of them got their scholastic swinuning training in the states. ,
Par Arvidsson of Sweden, who led the University of California to the NCAA.
championship this year, won the 100-meter butterfly In 54.92 seconds Wed-:
nesday. If he were an American, he said he would have been proud to sup-:
port Presi~nt Carter's boycott.
Earlier in the competition, Great Britain's Duncan Goodhew, who
three years for North Carolina State, and Bengt Baron of Sweden joined Ar-:·
vidsson as the only slvimming winners not from East Gennany or the Soviet·
Union.
The East German women won another swimming ·gold wben Rlna"
Heinisch lowered her world record in the 100-meter backstroke to 1:00.88.
But the flying frauleins' bid for aU llswimming gold medals waa foiled by a
Soviet sweep in tile 200-meter breaststroke, as Lina Kachushlte won in
2:29.54, ·an Olympic record considerably better than the best American time
of the year, Tracy Caulkins' 2:33.06 .
.But in gymnastics, nobody Is in the same league with the Soviets, who send
out waves of young tee!Higers who aU look like the girl next door, except that
they all can jwnp over the roof. Only their Eurasian beauty Nelli Kim, who
will turn 23 this month. But even though she only finished sixth behind two
So.viet teanunates
in ndividual scoring, Kim is the unmistaken team leader.I
.
'
When the triple gold medalist of the Montreal Games sealed the Soviet victory Wednesday with a 9.95 in the floor exercises, she was swept into the arlllll of her teanunates and began sobbing tears of joy.
Soviet Coach Aman Shaniyazov called Kim the captain of the squad. "She
helpa me in all points of training," he said. "She is veri friendly to the other
girls and teaches them in training ..The others regard her as a clot!e friend."
Kim, in tum, like many Soviet athletes, spreads the praise around. "The
success of the Soviet tewn can he explained by the socialist system and the
coaches we have," she says.
· Talent helps, and the Soviets are deep and powerfuL Led by Nat,alla
Shaposluilova, who finished second, the Soviets avenged their lot!IS to
Romania at the 1979 world championships by totaling 3!14.90 points and wJn.
ning the 01Y!11pic tewn title for the eighth consecutive time. Romania waa
second and East Germany took the bronze.
Comaneci, who won the aU-around gold medal and the uneven bars and
balance beam at Montreal, was the leJ~ding scorer by one-tenth of a point
over East Germany's Maxi Gnauck going into the eighth and final maneuver
of the two-day event. But the 111-year-i!ld with the weary eyes lot!lt her grip
while trying to filp from the higher to the lower bar and fell on her stomach.
Given only a 9.50 for the uneven bars, Comaneci finished in fourth p1aee for
the competition, which awards only tea!h medals. But only her pride was
hurt, and she still is a favorite in today's aU-around event for Individual

swam

medals.

The 1$-year-i!ld Gnauck was the top ·point·getter, ~g over Comanecl's
specialty by picking up a perfect 10 in the uneven bars. Two other young
gymnasts scored lOs Wednesday - 1$-~eilr-i!ld Melita Ruhn of Romania In
the vault and Ill-year old Yelena Davydova of the Soviet Union In the floor
exercises.
In other events, the Soviet men swimmers' aoo.meter freestyle relay team
won In 7 :23.50; Yanko Roussev of Bulgaria set a world record In the 149pound weightlifting class hoisting a combined total of 743 pounds, and
Vladimir Smirnov of the Soviet Union won the men's individual foil fencing.
In Qr~Roman wrestling, Gheorghi Raikov af Bulgaria woo in the 221).
pound division; Vakhtang Blagidze of the Soviet Union took the gold In the
114-pound class, and Ferenc Kocsis of llungary was declared the winner rJ.
the 163-pound class when Soviet defending champion Anatoly Bykov was
disqualified for passivity.

· HOUlton, 7.

HOME RUNS: Sclunidt, Phllodelpbia, 24;
Heoclrlck, St.Louis, 211; Homer, Allanta, 211;
Carter, Montreal, 19; Garvey, U&gt;o Anceles,
19; Baker, U. Angeles, 19; Clark, San tr~
cilco,19 .

SUMMER

.

SIOtEN BASES : LeFlore, Montreal, ~ ;

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATI1NG (225 at ball) : Brett, Kansu
City, .m; Hetldenon, Oakland, .3'15;
Cooper, Milwaull:ee, .343 ; Willon, Kanau
City, .337; B.BeU, Tuu, .332.
RUNS: Wlboo, Kamas Ci1y 1 n: Youn~
MUwauk.., 71; _BwnbrJ!1 I&gt;IJtirnore, 71;
Wllla, Te~. 70; uuuneu, Detroit, 11.

RBI: Peru.!. Bolton, 73; Re.Jacbon, New
Yorll:, 73; ullver, Tau, 72; Olllvle,
MUwaukee. 71; Annu, Oakland, 16.
IDTS: Wlboo, Kansas City, 139; H1!11·

CLEARANCE

O.Moreno, Pitlaburllh. 54; Collins, ClnclnnaU, 50; R.Scott,l.lonlreal, 35; Richards.
San Diego, 34.
PITCHING (9 Decisions): Bibby, Pit··

IN PROGRESS

ttburgh, 12--1, .,9'23, 2.8&amp;; G.Jacltson, Pitllbur&amp;h. 1-1, .100, 2.14; Mooi&lt;au, Clnc!Matl,
7·2,
3.91;
U&gt;o Angelea,IG-.1, .789,

.m,

SAVINGS OF

ne.....

2.11; Carlton, Pbiladelphia, 11&gt;-1, .750, 2.17;
H.....,, U&gt;o Angel.,, 1&gt;-3, .710, 3.12: Richard.
Hou.ston,IG-4, .714, 1.90; Sutton, Lo8 Angeles,
7-3, .700, 2.21.

STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Phlladelpbia,
173; Richard, Houatoo. 119; Ryan, Hlllllton,

114 ; P.Niekro, Atlanta, 109; Blyleven, Pit~

llburgh. t0'1.

Hartford Open begins today
WETHERSFIElD, Conn. (AP) Talk had it that scores at the 1980
Greater Hartford Open would be
very low this year, and some golfers
poln! to the excellent condition of the
course as the reason f.or their
opinions.
The$300,000tourn8ment, officially
known .as the ~ Davis Jr.·
Greater HartfordpPen, began today
at the Wetht!fS!ield Country club.
More than 150 professional golfers
will be shooting for the top prize of
$54,000 on the par·71 course.
· "The course Is very good," Hubert
Green said Wednesdily. Green, who
tied for .eighth in last year's GHO,
said he expects to do well in the tournament but stopped short of making
a prediction.
1
Defending champion Jerry McGee

. ,.

won the tournament With a17·underpar 267last year, but he said it would
take :!I).WJder to win this year. And
Lee Trevino, who won the GHO in
1972, agi-eed. ·
."l had been saying that an Illunder would · win here," Trevino
said, "but I think now it will take a
~.maybe even a 22 to win."
Trevino said he decided'to change ·
his prediction after playing in a raindelayed, nine-hole PrcrAm evenL
Trevino said the half·inch of rain
that feU Wednesday morning made
an already excellent course even
better.
"It will be jmpossible to hide the
flag now because of the rain,"
Trevino said. "You can stop. the ball
dead," which will improve scores,
he said.

20% to 70%
ON FINE
WEARING APPAREL
FOR. MEN AND WOMEN

BAHR
CLOTH.IERS

N. 2ND AVE. . MIDDLEPORT 0.

•

..•
·.'

"Erl How lOng hss this b66n going on ·our s/1/es putting
on 'Hold'?"

rou

DETROIT (NEA) - Is there a
publicist anywhere worth his or her
salt who does not lie awake nights
dre&amp;ming of having 8,000 jou'mallsts
·as· a captive audience? Those
dreams came true for many of them
at the · recent Republican Con·
vention.
An army of journalists was struck
in an unfamiliar city to cover a
relatively uneventful convention. In·
to this news vole stepped an army of
publicists seeking the rewards of
newspaper copy and television air,
time.
Since it was ·a political convention,
virtually every group espousing
some social cause sent Its flak, Prcr
ERA and anti-ERA, Gay Vote '00
and The American Family
Movement, Irish National Caucus
and Croatian Independence League,
all were anxious to teU their story to

any Interested journalist.
Of course, It was only natural that
. There were representatives of
Detroit's automobile companies
serious candidates like independent
were on hand to bemoan their finanJohn Anderson and Barry Comcial plight and push their new
moner of the Citizens Party. There
models. Both Ford and Chrysler
were also representatives of some made prototypes of their 1981 cars
not-so-serious candidates.
available for Inspection and test
Campaign materials were handed
drives. General Motors was only too
out by a professed supporter of Mark happy to send a bus by a reporter's
Twain for vice president; he was ac- hotel to take him or her on a tour of
tually an actor named . William an assembly plant or a test facility.
McLinn who makes his living por· GM even went Ford and Chrysler
!raying Twain In onti-man • shows. one better by throwing In a free lunAnd a full·blown "Betty B.oop for ch.
President" effort featured bwnper
carl · Byoir and Associalj!s, a
stickers, caml!algn buttons and a major public-relations finn, opened
small · marching l!and that was a big media reception center in Cobo ·
always turning up at downtown hotel • Mall adjoining Joe Louis Arena.
lobbies.
•
There a reporter could obtain free
The most Industrious publicists pizza, beer, soft ilrinks ..:. and more
during convention week were those infOQtJation than he or sbe could
promoting clients who have little or ever want any number af local Byoir
nothing to do with polit!cs.
clients.
'.
·
(

The ranks of the convention's
busiest publicists included • those
working for the news media lbielf.
Every day the networks put out
dozens of press released crowing
about the scoops they had scored.
Minutes after a reporter for ABC,
CBS or NBC got a good quote,
releases were delivered to all new&amp;papers and wire service in the hope
they would use the quote
Perhapa tile story of the con- ·
vention was the SCH:alled Great CBS
Tub Problem.
·It seems that pBS reserved one of
tiM! two "presidential" suites at ute ,
Pontchartraln, the luXUry hotel
nearest the convention site, for Its
chalnnan, Wllliam paley. To the net·
work's shock, .the ~-night suite ·
·turned out to have no bathtub, only a
shower stall. Arid Paley apparently
likes to soak In the tub.

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�3- The Daily Sentinel, ,'ofiddleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThursdaY, Julv 24. 1980
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 24, 19IKI

Opinions &amp;
Comments

The three commercial television networks once again
have managed to provide their promised "gavel-to-gavel"
coverage of a presidential nominating convention without
actually reporting much of the proceedings.
It isn't easy to fill an entire evening's program schedule
. with live convention coverage while simultaneously
. ignoring as much as hall of everything that occurs on the
• podium at the front of the hall.
.
But the networks' news divisions spared no expense to
divert their viewers' attention from the real business of the
· convention and exaggerate the importance of what few
· controversies they could find.
· ·
· In a perceptive analysis publisbed in the Political Scien. ce Quarterly, they note that television coverage of the 1972
Democratic National Convention was subject to criticism
because it "emphasized the sensational, the controversial
and the unusual."
The necessity of compressing and even exaggerating
events in an understandable if not justifiable product of
television news programs limited to 30 minutes.
But there's no excuse for mangling reality when special
convention broadcasts .are allocated four to six consecutive hours each evening-adquate time to provide accurate, complete and honest accounts of the pr~s.
Moreover, the presidential nominating conventions of
the two major political parties are SJ!pposed to be the
premier showcases for the network news divisions - the
special occasions every four years when they really can .
show off the talent of their personnel and the technical
wizardry of their equipment.
Ceaseless coverage of tt*iious speeches at the podium, .
man37 of them little more than political propaganda, isn't
the remedy for what ails television coverage of the conventions - but neither is repetition of the broadcast industry's penchant for oversimplified, melodramatic
.; . rep(Jrting.
·•.. .

..

''

.
.

Today in history. • •

Na~ Comaneclleamed the first lesson Wednesday when her individual
lead m team gymnastics slipped away in a .twnble from the uneven parallel
bars. Comaneci, who couldn't improve on her perfect routines at the 1976
Olympics imd here on Monday, finished fourth in the competition won by the
awesome Soviets.
But the acrobatic Romanian was to get a chance for redemption in the individualaU-aroun&lt;t event today.
The Moscow Olympics today will also begin to see If the second lesson is
true ~hen Sebastian Coil and Steve Ovett, two running Britons engaged in a
rwuung feud, embark on their collision course.
Among the events in today's opening Olympic irack and field session are
finals in the women's shot put; the men's 20-kllometer walk and the women's
pentathlon, plus the first heats for the men's BOO-meter race. Coe Is the world
record holder In this event (1 :42.4), with Ovett right on his heels. The
semifinals are Friday and the long-awaited final Saturday.
"I'd like to think I'm well-prepared," said Coe.
OvettpJ1!dicted his chance of winning the BOO is about 5ll percent.
U all goes :as planned and they meet in Saturday's final, then their next
confrontation would be next week In the 1,500 meters, in which they share the
world record of3:32.1.
·
Since no one has ever run a faster 1,500 than the two Britons, a case could
be made for them being the best middle-distance runners ofalltime. Throw

in the facts they don't take tea together and they've only raced twice against
each other, and you have a couple of "Races of the century" coming up.
Oops, there's that big buildup again.
"Well, better to wax hyperbolic about races than to write about the con·
ditions here at these first Games behind the Iron .Curtain. says Vladimir
Popov, vice president of the Moscow Olympic Organizing Committee.
On a day when sports- and not politics - managed to dominate, it wasPopov who raised the possibility of deporting journalists for negative repor·
ling. Popov was critical of western press coverage that has included stories
on the stringent Soviet security here and the police's inanhandling of an
Italian gay rights demonstrator.
"You may be sure that If the national dignity of the host country has been
offended, we shall demand that resolute sanctions should be taken against
these joumalists," Popov said through an interpreter at a news conference.
Citing the precedent .of two reporterS he ~id were sent packing from the
Mexico City Games In 1968, Popov said it could happen again if "journalists
have stepped beyond the limits of elementary decency and tact." But he said
such an ouater would have to be made by the International Olympic Com·
mittee, not the Soviets.
·
It isn't any exaggeration to report that the Soviets and their comrades
from East Germany are turning these Games into their personal playthings.
After WedneSday, the fourth day of competition, the Soviets led with 17 gold
and and 32 total medals. East Germany bad 26 medals, six of them gold.
Next was Hungary and Bulgaria, each with seven medals.

Three teams left
•• •• •••••••
• • •••••
•••
in LL tournament BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
~
;;

I

Evangelists enter political arena
By Robert J. Wagman
DETROIT (NEA) -Conservative
evangelistic Christians have
emerged this year as a major
political force. Led by television
preachers like the Rev. Jerry
Falwell and organizations like The
Moral Majority, they are planning to
spend piles of money' this fall to
mobilize millions of "Christian
voters" in support of candidates who
share their beliefs.
'
There is one candidate who almost
all these groups have united against: Jimmy Carter, who these fun·
«1aJllenbilists believe has abandoned
his born·again theology for that
devil liberalism. · Carter's support
for issues like the Equal Rights
Amendment has doomed him in the
eyes of these arciH:onservatlves.
Representatives of various
Christian grou!is came to the
Republican Conventions bere hoping
to enlist the aid of the regular party
and the Reagan campaign in a plan
to trap Carter. Their inission may
well turn out succesSfully.
Central to the fundamentalists '
plan is a biil that seeks to back·

handedly· resinstate voluntary
prayer in public schools, a practice
the Supreme Court has repeatedly
held unconstitutional.
Rather than trYing to posh a constitutional amendment through
Congress, Sen. Jesse Helms, R·N.C.,
introduced a measure that would
simply remove the subject of school
prayer from the scope of judicial
review. The bill has languished in
the House Judiciary subconunittee
on courts and civil liberties since its
passage by the Senate last October.
Carter has annOWiced he will veto
the bill if it reaches his desk because
he .believes it is a clearly un·
constitutional attempt to "let
emotion overrule federal law."
Fundamentalist leaders think
such a veto would be the last straw
for millions of their followers who
otherwise might still vote for Carter
in November. These leaders believe
they will guarantee Carter's defeat
If they force him to veto the school·
prayer bjll before the election. To do
this; however, they need Republican
help.
·
Rep. Robert Kas.teruneier, ·,the

Wisconsin Democrat who chairs the
known as The Religious Roundtable.
courts and civil liberties sub:• uwe can get the bill to the House
coliUIIiitee, is clearly attempting to
floor, we have more than enough
put off action on the legislation until
votes to psss it," says Chasey. "The
after the election. He has scheduled
problem is that many rt the.
initial hearings on the matter for the
congressmen who would vote for the
end of July. By the time the bill
measure will not sign Ute discharge
makes its way through sub·
petition just out of cOurtesy. We
coliUIIittee ahd full conunittet,
have liM&gt; signers so far and are about
Congress will have adjourned to 40 short.
campaign for re-election.
"If Reagan will put out the orders
In response, Rep. Phil Crane, R· · to his people to fall in behind the
m.' is circulating a discharge petition, we can pick . up the adpetition that if signed by 218 ditional signers we need."
representatives will re'quire an im·
mediate floor vote on the school·
Chasey has received a respecUul
prayer .bill. Because of
hearing from party leaders here.
ucongressional ·
courtesy,"
Reportedly, Reagan's political staff
discharge petitions seldom get the
thinks the plan could well result in a ·
requisite number of signatures. So,
major embarrasment to Carter. The
supporters of the measure came to
question now is whether they can
Detroit to enlist the aid of presideD·
convince their candidate to lean on
tlal candidate Ronald Reagan and
the Republican leadersliip in the
his fdr~ on behalf of the discharge
House to force through the discharge
petition.
petition.
Orchestrating the campaign to get
Says Chasey : "Within the next
the Helms bill to Carter's desk is Bill
couple of weeks, I think that you will
Chasey , a Washington·based
see some positive results of our work
political operative who is chief lobhere the last few days. I'm sure we'll
byist for a group of religious leaders get the signatures we need."

French, German alliance strained?

'

:. Today is Thursday, July 24, the
:: : ~day of 1-.. There are 160 days
~ left in the year.
: . Today's highlight in history:
:- , On July 24, 1870, the first railroad
.: car from the Pacific coast reached
:; New York City, ushering in tran:·: scontlnental train service.
On this date:
; In 1783, the Latin . American
~ patriot, Simon Bolivar, was born in
:: Caracas, Venezuela..
·• • In 1946, the United states made the
first underwater test of an atomic
bomb, setting off the explot!ion at
•'Blklnl atoll in the Pacific.
.; In 1973, President Richard Nixon
:: welcomed the Shah of Iran to the
:: White House and proclaimed a him
~ crucial friend Of the U.S. In the ¥1d, dleEaat.
~ In 1974, the Supreme Court ruled
•,
.,

t,hat Nixon must tum over White
By Don Graff
House docwnents subpoenaed for
For a moment there, it appeared
the Watergate cover-up trials.
that a little 9f the bloom was going
· Ten years ago, the U.S. offered the off the romance.
Soviet Union a package accord to
Helmwn Sclunidt in Bonn was no
curb missiles.
more enchanted than Jinuny Carter
Five years ago, the Apollo space in Washington when Valery Glscard
program ended when three d'Estaing slipped away from Paris
:&gt;
American astronauts safely landed in secrecy to meet Leonid Brezhnev
in the Pacific Ocean after a llnk·up in Warsaw. Sclunidt's own upmlasion with a Soviet spacecraft.
coming and fully publicized state
Last year, a federal district judge
visit to Moscow thereby being upruled that the government could staged by his own closest ally.
provide public access to the Nixon
Then there was the affair of the
White House tapes.
European Community budget.
Today's bitthdays: Theatrical Margaret Thacker's Britain had had
producer Alexander Cohen is 60. Ar· it with being the largest contributor
list Alex Katz is 53.
while realizing minor benefits, since
Thought for today: It is a great ' the bulk of the EC's funds went to
nuisance that knowledge can on1Y be subsidize fanners - mostly French
acquired by hard work- W. ~mer­ fanners.
setMaugham (1874-1965). .
Giscard's France was fully
prepared to bid adieu to the British
..'•
on the issue but Sclunidt's West Ger·
• r-----------------------------------------~--~ many moderated the confrontation
''
with the restilt that the British con.,
tribution has been reduced with
...
West Germany making up most af
•,
the dlffer~ce - and now itself com·
•.
plaining about the free-ride being

.
.

..•

Nadia slips, so does individual standings
MOSCOW (AP) - The problem with P\!rfectlon is you can only go down.
~~oblem with spectacular buildups ls that they rarely achieve ·any

Melodramatic TV

·

provides those farmers across the
other members of Uie alliance.
Rhine.
The FranroGennan relationship
To repeat, it looked as though the
is one of the wonders of the post-war
French-Gennan marriage which
era.· An ancient antagoni.'ll!l that
has dominated West European
ignited two world wars in this cenfamily affairs for two decades was,
tury has been converted into the
if not heading toward divorce, at
foundation of European stability.
least under some strain.
True, not all who benefit from that
But not to worry. Giscard's recent stability are completely at ease.
state visit to West Gennany has aU Smaller nations are only too aware
the appearances of having resolved
of how ocmpletely France and West
whatever genuine bad feeling Gennany dominate affairs. The
existed.and reafflnned the relation- ecopomies of the two, for one power·
ship of the two countries as best · ful example, account for more than
allies.
·
half the EC gross national product
For a number of very interested total.
observers - the aforementioned
By and large, however, the
Margaret Thatcher and Jinuny Car· relationship has worked .conter - that development is of interest structively not only for the two part·
for a nwnber of somewhat con· ners but for the interests .of their
tradictory reasons.
less-favored associates - with an
It means that calm and occasional exception in the case of
cooperation continue to prevail at
the British.
.
the very heat of the European alllan·
But · new tests of the 'Francoce, which is cause for relief. But it Gennan bonds are coming up. Now
also means that France and West that his treasury Is the 1major unGennany will continue to act almost derwriter, Schmidt is detennlned to
as one in pursuing policies that are press for long-ilverdue reforms to
at times out of sync with If not direc- reduce the excessive 70 percent of
tly contradictory ~those favored by the EC budget consumed by

agricultural subsidies. That means a
direct confrontation with French interests and as the French have so
demonstrated in the past, it is not
their way to quietly give way.
There is also the matter of the
Spanish and Portuguese ap·
plications for EC membership,
favored by the Gennans for, among
other reasons, the anticipated
strengthening of the two countries'
democratic developiJienl But opposed by the French because of the
competition their essentially
agricultural economies would ' pose
for - you guessed it - French farmers.
Recent history, however, suggests
that these and other differences may
strain but not rupture the relationship. Which not only the French and
Germans have reason to welcome.
France and Gennany acting In
concert may present difficulties for
the United States and Britain, to
name only two of what can be a
lengthy list of nations. But, as
history again demonstrates,
nowhere near those experienced'
when they are at odds.

GOP convention: a publicists dream

The end of the tournament trail is
drawing near with three finalists
remaining after Wednesday night's
action in the Syracuse little league
tournament.
Advancing were New Haven's
CubS, Middleport's Indians, and
Glouster Mathews Insurance. New
Haven will play Middleport tonight
7:30 with the winner going to the
championship game against
Glouster Friday at 7:30 p.m.
After a night off due to wet groun·
ds, action resllmed Wednesday night
with New Haven's Cubs taking a !1).2
win over Albany.
Todd Gress, the winning pitcher,
had seven strike outs and flve walks.
Gress received relief help from
Richie Clark.
Clark had a home run and two
singles to lead the winners, Bart
Davis two ~ingles, and singles by
Brad Smith, Doug Johnson, and
Paul Hesson.
Mark Chapman suff.ered the loss
for Albany. He had five strike outs
and six walks. Steve Grissett had
two doubles, Mike Chapman two
singles, and Tommy Farley a single.
In the second contest, Middleport's Indians went on the warpath with a convincing IU win over

Hannan Trace.

Rick Wise was the winner collecting 11 strike outs and five walks.
Junior Kitchen had a double and
triple, Wise a home run and .two
singles, Scott Gheen two singles,
Steve Crow a pair of home runs,
double and siligle with an outstanding night at the plate, and Eric
Johnson three singles, .Brian Decker
two singles, and James Keesee, Jeff
Hood singles.
·
Ronnie Parsell was the Hannan
Trace fireballer with eight strike
outs . and no walks. Adam Lewis
tripled, while Derrick Barnes and
Danny Beaver singled.
In the night cap, the unstoppable
Chuckle Davis pitched Glouster to a
4-0 shut out over a tough Middleport
Braves squad.
Davis fanned 11 and walked two.
Robbie Wilson had two long home
runs for Glouster and Scott Mecwn
had a single. Shawn Baker was the
Middleport hurler with a good outing
despite suffering the loss; He fanned
10 and walked five.
Donnie Becker single and doubled,
Baker, Trey Cassell, and Darren
Drenner singled. All six teams will
receive trophies Friday evening.
Ninety-six trophies will be given.

denon, Oakland, · 130; Rivers, Teua, 12S;

Major lei.gue Baseball

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W L Pd. GB
Newvort·
60 l3
.645 49 39
.5&amp;7
6\1
Detroit
52 42
.553 6\1
MilWaukee
.546 9
51 42
BalUmore
47 II
.511 12~
.478 1$\1
43 17
Cleveland
.140 19
Toronto
40 51

-

WEST

Kan!u City
Teas
Oololand
Chicago
·
Seattle

.60&amp;

-

.~

10~

,479

1:1

43
42

.457 14
.452 1111
.41» ' LB~

38
34

Cautornla

51
51

56
57

.371

%1 II

Wednesday's Games
Ooldand 6, Toronto 2
Boolonl2,Teua5
NewYork4, MilwaukeeD
KanJu ctt, t, Chicas" 2
Ba1Umor&lt;8, Mlnnaola7

Detroit 7. California 6
Clevelancl11, Seattle!, lllnnlnp
tbW'Iday'sGame
Chicago (Wortham . 4-4) o1 Kansas Cliy
(Spllttorf!7·7), (n)
Only game ocbedllied
NATIONAL LEAGUE

EAST
W L
52 11

Pitlaburah
Montreal
Philadelphia

50
41

45
43

NewYotk

St. Loula
ChiCBHO
HOUSIOII
U&gt;o Angeles
ctnclnnati

38

Pet:

.~

.549

41
4t

.lei -

53

San Francbco
Atlanta
San Diego

GB

tl
4t
411
51
52

51
50
41

14

.537
.5JII

45

. I~

411

48

I

.516
4
.4&amp;4
7
.457 91;
.422 121;

WEST

.1!3
. . u~

3t !!I
Wednesday's Games
San Frandaco 14, Chicago 6

wins junior event

·Salisbury (sponsored by Brickles
Construction) captured the cham·
· plonship in the Meigs-Mason Junior
Girls Softball Assocuitloo tour·
nament last weekend at Syracuse.
Salisbury's first victory was over
Pomeroy ~. -111-7 over Mason, and
13-5 over New Haven.
New Haven beat Syracuse 12-li,
Middleport 24·8. Pomeroy
eliminated Middleport, 21·11.
Syracuse ousted Mason I H 4 and
went on to defeat Pomeroy 17·9
leaving Syracuse in third. place.
Syracuse then played New Haven
and was ousted Jl.6.
The final game of the tournament
was New Haven coming back
through the losing bracket to face
unbeaten Salisbury.. Salisbury
defeated New Haven 3-1.
Barb HaUield was the pitcher for
Salisbury giving up three walks arid
two·strikeouts whileS. Flannery was
the losing pitcher giving up two

Transactions
Wedneldly'.11 Sporta Tra01111ctiona
FOOTBALL
NaUClllll FootbaD Loasue
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS - Reloued Bob
Jill)', defeN!ve bock, ond Sian Podolakl, defensive Uneilwl .
NEW YORK GIANTS - Rel..-1 Dmald
LeRoy, Ned Gonet, nm Travts ond Dick Blelakl
Jr., running blcU, and Gres AJeunder, defe~

stve t.ck .

NEW YORK JE'!S - AnnOIIIICOCI the
rettrement l...arr)' Keller lineblcker.
SAN FRANCISCO 4tERS - Releued Paul

Seal, ti!Jhtend .

walks and one strike out.

Trlcia Pratt of Salisbury
dominated the tournament with her
hitting chalking up three singles, one
double, two triples and three home
runs. Also hitting home runs In the
tournament were Mary Moore of
Salisbury, Miriam Sisslon of Mason
and Jarvin of New Haven.
The annual Meigs-Mason Senior
Girls tournament will be held
August 1 and 2, with the season's
wrap up of the 1980 All-Star game to
be played on August u ·at Syracuse.

Eastern scores
come-from-behind
4-2 league win
Eastern's Reds po!lted a 4-2 comefrom-behind victory over Mason in
Meigs-Mason pony league action.
Derron JeweU was the winning
hurler with seven strike outs and
only two walks before being reUeved
by Brian Well who fanned five and
walked none. Derron Jewett doubled
and singled for the winners while
Ray Maxson,' Brian · Well singled
twice, Jim Newell tripled and Paul
Harris, Leonard Koenig singled.
Lyons was the Mason hurler· who
suffered the loas.
Lyons fanned nine and walked
none. Bradley, Lyons, Laudennilt,
Johnson, and Kerwood collected hits
for Mason all of which were singles.
Eastern now owns a 4-9 record.

Cooper, Milwaukee,
BaiUmore, 118.
OOUBLES :

Yount,

122;

Bumbry,

Milwaukee,

29 ;

Morrison, Chicago, 29 ; McRae, Kansas City,
2" ; O.Garcia, Torontc, 23; Burleeon, Boston,

22; Lynn, Boston, 22; Boehle, Seattle, 22;
Oliver, TeiU, 21 .
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 9; Wiboo,
Kansu ctty, I; Bumbry, BalUmore, 7;
YOWl~

MUqukee, 7; Wuhington, KalliU

Clty67.

HI ME RUNS: Re .Jacbon,NewYork.~;

:17
46 . fl
411 50

57

211
311

6\1 •
B\1
14

Atlanta 6, Monlreal5

Sal~bury

•••

Cincinnati 7' Phil.odelphia 3

NewYork4,HOUiton 3

St.Louis 7, LoiAnseles 3

San Diego!, Pitll~h2
Thundly a Game

Pitlaburih (Biyleven HI at San Diego
(Shirley s:li), (n)
.
Only game !Cheduled

Ogilvie. MUwaukee, 21; Anna!, Oakland, 22;
ThDmllS, Mllwakee, 19; Mayberry, Toronto,

17.

STOLEN BASES : Henderson Oakland,
45; Wilsoo, Kansas City, G; DUone,
Oeveland, 31; Wills, Teus, 28; J.CnB, Seat·
Ue,26.
PITCHING (9Declslons) : Darwin, Teus,
9-1, .900, U~; Stone, Baltimore, 1~, .133,
3.19; John, New- York, 15--3, .133, 2.87; Corbett, Minnesota, 7-~ •.778, 1.91; Gura, Kanau
a!y, I:H, .765, 2.11 ; Rainey, Booton, IH,
:rn, us; Lopet:, Detroit, ~ . :rn, H8 ;
Travers, Milwaukee, 9-4, .892, 2.82;
STRIKEOUTS: B.Moore, Toronto, :s:ie;
Guidry, New York, 113; M. Norria, Oakland,
109; Keough. Oakland, 96; F llamtiatr, Seat·

Ue,95.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BAITING (225 at ball) ; Templelon,
St.Louil, .326; Hendrick, St.Louil, .~;
R.Smith, Los Angeles, .323; Trillo,

Philadelphia, .31.'1; Buckner, Chicago, .320.
RUNS: LeFlore, Mont.re&amp;l,85; Templeto11,
St.LouJa, 611 ; Rooe, Philadelphia, 63; K.ifet'.
nandez, St.Louis, 83; Clark, San Francisco,
63
.
RBI : Hendrick. St.Loui.o, 77; Garvey, Loo
Anceles. 75; Sclunidt, Philldelphia, 114; ea.ler, Mootreal, 63; Knlgh~ ClncinniiU, 59;
Bater, Los Angeles, 59.
HITS : Templeton,

St.l..&lt;luia.

133; Garvey,

L.); Angel£!1, 119; Hendrick, St.Loula, 116;
K.Hernandez. St.Louis, lll; Cnlmartie,
Montr.al, 109.
DOUBLES: Rooe, Phlladelobla, :11;
Knight, ' Cincinnati,

29; Klfernandez,

St.Louil, 31 ; steama, New Yort, 24; Reitz,

St. Louls,23.
•
TRIPLES: LeFlore, Montreal, 8; Templeton, St.LOuis, !; McBride, Philadelphia,
); O.Moreno, Pitlaburglt, 7: Lanootoy,

Soviet diver Aleksander Portnov won the springboard event, but he won't:
receive his gold medal until Friday because of a proteat that was tumec£
down by the International Swimming F~eration Wednesday night. Other:
divers had protested when PoJV~ov was allowed to repeat a dive after complaining that crowd noise distracted him on an earlier attempt.
·;
The Soviets were favored today in both the men's and women's all-around.
gymnastic events, while the East Germans and Soviets were solid choices In:
tonight's four swimming finals.
More than any 'Other area, the swinuning pool has felt the impact rJ. ~
boycotting Americans. The American men won 12 af the 13 swimming eventa:
contested four years ago at Montreal. Although the East Gennans anct,.
Soviets have powerful swimmitJg programs, an American presence
probalby would have cut into their pool domination.
:
lnfact, only three swimmers have cracked the Soviet-East German con-'
trol, and two of them got their scholastic swinuning training in the states. ,
Par Arvidsson of Sweden, who led the University of California to the NCAA.
championship this year, won the 100-meter butterfly In 54.92 seconds Wed-:
nesday. If he were an American, he said he would have been proud to sup-:
port Presi~nt Carter's boycott.
Earlier in the competition, Great Britain's Duncan Goodhew, who
three years for North Carolina State, and Bengt Baron of Sweden joined Ar-:·
vidsson as the only slvimming winners not from East Gennany or the Soviet·
Union.
The East German women won another swimming ·gold wben Rlna"
Heinisch lowered her world record in the 100-meter backstroke to 1:00.88.
But the flying frauleins' bid for aU llswimming gold medals waa foiled by a
Soviet sweep in tile 200-meter breaststroke, as Lina Kachushlte won in
2:29.54, ·an Olympic record considerably better than the best American time
of the year, Tracy Caulkins' 2:33.06 .
.But in gymnastics, nobody Is in the same league with the Soviets, who send
out waves of young tee!Higers who aU look like the girl next door, except that
they all can jwnp over the roof. Only their Eurasian beauty Nelli Kim, who
will turn 23 this month. But even though she only finished sixth behind two
So.viet teanunates
in ndividual scoring, Kim is the unmistaken team leader.I
.
'
When the triple gold medalist of the Montreal Games sealed the Soviet victory Wednesday with a 9.95 in the floor exercises, she was swept into the arlllll of her teanunates and began sobbing tears of joy.
Soviet Coach Aman Shaniyazov called Kim the captain of the squad. "She
helpa me in all points of training," he said. "She is veri friendly to the other
girls and teaches them in training ..The others regard her as a clot!e friend."
Kim, in tum, like many Soviet athletes, spreads the praise around. "The
success of the Soviet tewn can he explained by the socialist system and the
coaches we have," she says.
· Talent helps, and the Soviets are deep and powerfuL Led by Nat,alla
Shaposluilova, who finished second, the Soviets avenged their lot!IS to
Romania at the 1979 world championships by totaling 3!14.90 points and wJn.
ning the 01Y!11pic tewn title for the eighth consecutive time. Romania waa
second and East Germany took the bronze.
Comaneci, who won the aU-around gold medal and the uneven bars and
balance beam at Montreal, was the leJ~ding scorer by one-tenth of a point
over East Germany's Maxi Gnauck going into the eighth and final maneuver
of the two-day event. But the 111-year-i!ld with the weary eyes lot!lt her grip
while trying to filp from the higher to the lower bar and fell on her stomach.
Given only a 9.50 for the uneven bars, Comaneci finished in fourth p1aee for
the competition, which awards only tea!h medals. But only her pride was
hurt, and she still is a favorite in today's aU-around event for Individual

swam

medals.

The 1$-year-i!ld Gnauck was the top ·point·getter, ~g over Comanecl's
specialty by picking up a perfect 10 in the uneven bars. Two other young
gymnasts scored lOs Wednesday - 1$-~eilr-i!ld Melita Ruhn of Romania In
the vault and Ill-year old Yelena Davydova of the Soviet Union In the floor
exercises.
In other events, the Soviet men swimmers' aoo.meter freestyle relay team
won In 7 :23.50; Yanko Roussev of Bulgaria set a world record In the 149pound weightlifting class hoisting a combined total of 743 pounds, and
Vladimir Smirnov of the Soviet Union won the men's individual foil fencing.
In Qr~Roman wrestling, Gheorghi Raikov af Bulgaria woo in the 221).
pound division; Vakhtang Blagidze of the Soviet Union took the gold In the
114-pound class, and Ferenc Kocsis of llungary was declared the winner rJ.
the 163-pound class when Soviet defending champion Anatoly Bykov was
disqualified for passivity.

· HOUlton, 7.

HOME RUNS: Sclunidt, Phllodelpbia, 24;
Heoclrlck, St.Louis, 211; Homer, Allanta, 211;
Carter, Montreal, 19; Garvey, U&gt;o Anceles,
19; Baker, U. Angeles, 19; Clark, San tr~
cilco,19 .

SUMMER

.

SIOtEN BASES : LeFlore, Montreal, ~ ;

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATI1NG (225 at ball) : Brett, Kansu
City, .m; Hetldenon, Oakland, .3'15;
Cooper, Milwaull:ee, .343 ; Willon, Kanau
City, .337; B.BeU, Tuu, .332.
RUNS: Wlboo, Kamas Ci1y 1 n: Youn~
MUwauk.., 71; _BwnbrJ!1 I&gt;IJtirnore, 71;
Wllla, Te~. 70; uuuneu, Detroit, 11.

RBI: Peru.!. Bolton, 73; Re.Jacbon, New
Yorll:, 73; ullver, Tau, 72; Olllvle,
MUwaukee. 71; Annu, Oakland, 16.
IDTS: Wlboo, Kansas City, 139; H1!11·

CLEARANCE

O.Moreno, Pitlaburllh. 54; Collins, ClnclnnaU, 50; R.Scott,l.lonlreal, 35; Richards.
San Diego, 34.
PITCHING (9 Decisions): Bibby, Pit··

IN PROGRESS

ttburgh, 12--1, .,9'23, 2.8&amp;; G.Jacltson, Pitllbur&amp;h. 1-1, .100, 2.14; Mooi&lt;au, Clnc!Matl,
7·2,
3.91;
U&gt;o Angelea,IG-.1, .789,

.m,

SAVINGS OF

ne.....

2.11; Carlton, Pbiladelphia, 11&gt;-1, .750, 2.17;
H.....,, U&gt;o Angel.,, 1&gt;-3, .710, 3.12: Richard.
Hou.ston,IG-4, .714, 1.90; Sutton, Lo8 Angeles,
7-3, .700, 2.21.

STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Phlladelpbia,
173; Richard, Houatoo. 119; Ryan, Hlllllton,

114 ; P.Niekro, Atlanta, 109; Blyleven, Pit~

llburgh. t0'1.

Hartford Open begins today
WETHERSFIElD, Conn. (AP) Talk had it that scores at the 1980
Greater Hartford Open would be
very low this year, and some golfers
poln! to the excellent condition of the
course as the reason f.or their
opinions.
The$300,000tourn8ment, officially
known .as the ~ Davis Jr.·
Greater HartfordpPen, began today
at the Wetht!fS!ield Country club.
More than 150 professional golfers
will be shooting for the top prize of
$54,000 on the par·71 course.
· "The course Is very good," Hubert
Green said Wednesdily. Green, who
tied for .eighth in last year's GHO,
said he expects to do well in the tournament but stopped short of making
a prediction.
1
Defending champion Jerry McGee

. ,.

won the tournament With a17·underpar 267last year, but he said it would
take :!I).WJder to win this year. And
Lee Trevino, who won the GHO in
1972, agi-eed. ·
."l had been saying that an Illunder would · win here," Trevino
said, "but I think now it will take a
~.maybe even a 22 to win."
Trevino said he decided'to change ·
his prediction after playing in a raindelayed, nine-hole PrcrAm evenL
Trevino said the half·inch of rain
that feU Wednesday morning made
an already excellent course even
better.
"It will be jmpossible to hide the
flag now because of the rain,"
Trevino said. "You can stop. the ball
dead," which will improve scores,
he said.

20% to 70%
ON FINE
WEARING APPAREL
FOR. MEN AND WOMEN

BAHR
CLOTH.IERS

N. 2ND AVE. . MIDDLEPORT 0.

•

..•
·.'

"Erl How lOng hss this b66n going on ·our s/1/es putting
on 'Hold'?"

rou

DETROIT (NEA) - Is there a
publicist anywhere worth his or her
salt who does not lie awake nights
dre&amp;ming of having 8,000 jou'mallsts
·as· a captive audience? Those
dreams came true for many of them
at the · recent Republican Con·
vention.
An army of journalists was struck
in an unfamiliar city to cover a
relatively uneventful convention. In·
to this news vole stepped an army of
publicists seeking the rewards of
newspaper copy and television air,
time.
Since it was ·a political convention,
virtually every group espousing
some social cause sent Its flak, Prcr
ERA and anti-ERA, Gay Vote '00
and The American Family
Movement, Irish National Caucus
and Croatian Independence League,
all were anxious to teU their story to

any Interested journalist.
Of course, It was only natural that
. There were representatives of
Detroit's automobile companies
serious candidates like independent
were on hand to bemoan their finanJohn Anderson and Barry Comcial plight and push their new
moner of the Citizens Party. There
models. Both Ford and Chrysler
were also representatives of some made prototypes of their 1981 cars
not-so-serious candidates.
available for Inspection and test
Campaign materials were handed
drives. General Motors was only too
out by a professed supporter of Mark happy to send a bus by a reporter's
Twain for vice president; he was ac- hotel to take him or her on a tour of
tually an actor named . William an assembly plant or a test facility.
McLinn who makes his living por· GM even went Ford and Chrysler
!raying Twain In onti-man • shows. one better by throwing In a free lunAnd a full·blown "Betty B.oop for ch.
President" effort featured bwnper
carl · Byoir and Associalj!s, a
stickers, caml!algn buttons and a major public-relations finn, opened
small · marching l!and that was a big media reception center in Cobo ·
always turning up at downtown hotel • Mall adjoining Joe Louis Arena.
lobbies.
•
There a reporter could obtain free
The most Industrious publicists pizza, beer, soft ilrinks ..:. and more
during convention week were those infOQtJation than he or sbe could
promoting clients who have little or ever want any number af local Byoir
nothing to do with polit!cs.
clients.
'.
·
(

The ranks of the convention's
busiest publicists included • those
working for the news media lbielf.
Every day the networks put out
dozens of press released crowing
about the scoops they had scored.
Minutes after a reporter for ABC,
CBS or NBC got a good quote,
releases were delivered to all new&amp;papers and wire service in the hope
they would use the quote
Perhapa tile story of the con- ·
vention was the SCH:alled Great CBS
Tub Problem.
·It seems that pBS reserved one of
tiM! two "presidential" suites at ute ,
Pontchartraln, the luXUry hotel
nearest the convention site, for Its
chalnnan, Wllliam paley. To the net·
work's shock, .the ~-night suite ·
·turned out to have no bathtub, only a
shower stall. Arid Paley apparently
likes to soak In the tub.

~

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�&lt;

4-: ~Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, July 24,19111

Cards defeat Dodgers~
but lose Templeton
~y

f

,!

Joe Nolan
Four RBI night

John McNamara
Proud of Reds

Gary Templeton
Break~

left thumb

ASSOCIATED PRESS

For much of the season, the St.
Louis Cardinals have been waiting
for the breaks to come their way. On
WedneSday night they got the worst
kind of break - but it could be a big
break for Mike Phillips.
Garry Templeton, who tripled in
the first and second innings to raise
his batting average to .326 with 133
hits - both tops in the National
League - broke his left thumb in the
. third inning and will be sidelined for
perhaps four weeks.
"This is the worst lime .it could
have happened,"" said teammate
Ken Reitz, "just when we were
trying to make a bid for .500."
·
With their 7-3 triumph over Los
Angeles, ,their fourth consecutive
victory and Seventh in the last nine
games; the Cards are 43-61 and fifth
in the East, 9_ games out of first
place.
"We know we've got Mike• too •"
Reitz said of Phillips, a bench-rider
with a .171 average this year. "He'll
be able to do a good job. Phillips in
the past has always come in and
done a good job."
In fact, Phillips took over for six
games last year when Templeton
hurt his wrist and the Cards won five
of the six.
"I'll do my best," Phillips said. "U
things get off to a good start, we'll be
alright."
In Wednesday's other NL action, it
was Atlanta 6, Montreal 5; San
Francisco·14, Chicago 6; Cincinnati
7, Philadelphia 3; San Diego 3; Pittsburgh 2, and New. York ·4, Houston
3.
After Templeton's first-inning ·
triple, singles by Leon Durham, 'red
Simmons and George Hendrick
made it ~. And in the second, Ken
Oberkfell walked, Templeton
tripled, Durham walked, Keith Her·
nandez hit an RBI grounder and
Simmons doubled for another run.
Dane Iorg had a tw~run double in
the fourth as the Cards handed the
Dodi!ers their lOth loss' in 13 games.
Braves 6, Expos 5
· Gary Matthews pWiched a basesloaded single in the bottom of the
nirith inning to give the Braves their

McNamara proud of his club
CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati
manager John McNamara beamed
and said he was "proud" o( his ball
club.
Philadelphia · manager Dallas
Green picked at a plate of food and
shook his head.
Their reactions said plenty about
the Reds' 7-3 victory Wednesday
that completed a three-game sweep
of the Phillies. The game: ·
-saivdged a 7·7 split of the Reds'
14-game homestand after a
disastrous1-6 start.
-stretched the Phillies' losing

streak to six, their longest since·last
season, and ·ended their road trip
with a 3-7 record.
-Left the Phillies with an 8-31
regular season mark against the
Redsf'in ~verfront Stadium dating
back to the middle of 1974.
"I'm real proud of the guys," said
McNaffillra. "Remember, we lost
six of the first seven, and now come..
back toWin Six of the last seven (in
the homestand)."
The normally effusive Green had
trouble finding words for sportswriters about the latest Phillies

SVA.C has new coaches

.·

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Some familiar area faces will be wearing new hats when the
opening kickoff comes around for the 1980 football season Aug. 29.
One of the new faces, Kyger Creek's. Deryl Well, isn't exactly a
new face, but his position will ' be. Well moves up to replace Jim
Sprague as Bobcat head football coach.
·
·
KCHS has been the only school Well, a graduate of Rio Grande
College, ~ known during his 1~year career. After serving on the
faculty his f1rst year, Well moved into grid coaching as an assistant to
Dick Adams in 1971.
"I spent the first part of the season as a scout," Well said. "About
the rruddle of the season, I started working with the team and just
found outlliked it."
'
Following the 4+1 season, Adams left to rejoin the professional
playmg ranks With the Ottawa Roughriders of the Canadian Football
· League. Adams retired last season after seven years with the CFL
club, playing on special teams and some halfback. ·
·
When Spragl!e was promoted form an assistant at Fort Frye in
Washington County to the head post at KCHS Well moved into fulltime coaching duty, as defensive coordinator ~d of(ensive receiver
coach.
"I would have to say I learned a lot offootballfriXIl Jim" Well adds. "He concentrated a 16t on offense, but on the other hand there are
more ways t6 score with the defense.''
'
When Sprague, who led the Bobcats to five Southern Valley
Athletic C?nference titles and a 7-Z.l overall record last season, stepped down m April to accept the head coaching assignment at Class AA
Philo High School in MuskingWJ\ CoWity.
,The Bobc~ts were SVAC runnersup last season at 4-1, losing to
league champion Hannan Trace 14-8. II was Hannan Trace's first
SVAC football title.
"Jim built a good s~stem here," Well commented. "I never really
gave the head coaching job much thought until last month but when I
started thinking abQut it, I believe I have as good an ide~ of how the
program has been run as well as anyone,'' Well said.
"Basic~lly, we don't plan on making any major changes, but I
have a fewldeas of my own I'd like to implement. :We'll just take it one
step at a time."
At Eastern, former Gallia Academy coach Willard "Buddy"
Moore returns to the sidelines after a two-year absence to take charge
of the Eagles.
, "I missed coaching the first year I w.as out of it " Moore who was
also out of teaching, said. "Any lime y~'ve been ~OWid athletics for
a length of lime, it's a shock to your systam, especially when football came aroWid.
·
.
"But this ill a super program to step into," Moore a nalive of Middleport, feels. "Joe Mitchem and the people here did an outstanding
job, and I feel it's as good a program as any around. I'm looking forward to coming back this year."
Moore, who began his coaching career as a GAHS assistant to
Johnny E~ker in 1970, posted a 15-lrHl overall record with Gallipolis fm
1975-77. His Blue Devils finished with an 8-2 log in 1975 and second in
the Southeatern Ohio Athletic League at 5-2.
Mitchem, leading the Eagles to one SVAC championship in his
four years (1978), resigned earlier this year to enter private business.
Ron Janey will again be on the sidelines in the SEOAL but it will
be with the Logan Chieftains~
'
. Janey, ~ho he!ped the Jllue Devil tennis squad enjoy a 15-3 record
this past spnng, will take on the head baseball dutieS at logan.
"It's what I've been looking for," Janey corrunented after
rec~iving not!fication from· the school Tuesday. "I was up there
talking to thetr boys, and they're pretty excited about aetting star·
e
ted."
'
,
Janey, a graduate of Ohio University, compiled 15-3 and 18-3
records at North Gallia in 1975-76, with the 1975 Pirate team winning
the SVAC championship and the 1976 squad advancing to the district
finals before falling to Ironton St.Joe 7-6.
.~
Janey also beaded the freshman football program at. GAHS the
past three years, !~ding the locals to a 1-S overall record, 6-1 in each
of the past two seasons.
Janey, who replaces Werner Enunrich at Logan, also coached
freshman basketball one season at North Gallia, finishing 9-4.
Logan finished 5-15last season, 5-9 in the SEoAL.
The only SVAC football opening remains at Southwestern, where
Bob Ashley resigned two weeks ago, at the same Gallia County Local
School Board meeting Well and Myers were appointed.

.I

' ~~----------------~

loss.
"Boys, you'll just have to. write
what you saw," he said. "I've run
out of things to say."
The sportswriters and nearly
30,000 fans saw a come-from-behind
Reds' victory keyed by catcher Joe
Nolan's three RBI.
Nolan, signed on June 13 after
becoming a free agent from the
Atlanta Braves, rapped a two-run
double· in the fourth after Nino
Espinosa, 1-2, loaded the bases with
walks. Jw\.ior Kermedy's sacrifice
fly then put Cincinnati ahead, 4-3, for
good.
The Reds padded their lead on Ken
Griffey's two-run double in the
seventh and Nolan's sacrifice fly in
the eighth as rookie Bruce Berenyi,
~. went 7 1-3 innings in his fourth
major league start.
Nolan, who spent three years with
Atlanta, was acqwred to replace
second-string catcher Vic Correll,
disabled by a torn tendon.
"I .hadn't played for so long in
Atlanta that it was a struggle to just
get back into the game," said Nolan,
batting .275 in 19 games with the
Reds.

The left-handed hitting catcher
said he's thrilled to play on a con·
tending team in the National League
West.
"It puts so much importance on
each game," he said: "Everything's
changed because .you're going to be
ri~ht in the middle of the race.
"In years back (with Atlanta), in
July or August we'd be maybe 15 or
20 games out and there would be
maybe 2,000 people in the stands. It
was tough mentally."
Berenyi loaded the bases in the fir·
st inning on a single and two walks.
But he struck out Manny Trillo, who
started lbe game as .!he league's
leading hitter, to end the inning.
Mike Sclunidt's two-run homer in
the third, his 24th, tied him with Del
Ennis for the Phillies' all-time home
run r.ecord of 259.
"I was trying to keep from being
awed by the hitters I faced,"
Berenyi said. "It took me a while to
come out of'that."
111I.STLEDOWNS
NORTII RANDALL, Ohio (AP) With Benny Feliciano aboard, Spit
Spat raced to a first place finish in
the featured allowance race at
Thistledown.
. The winning horse went the six
furlongs Wednesday in 1:12 4-5 to
return $11.40 on a win ticket, $3.60 to
place and $2.40 to show. M and M's
Patch ran second and paid $2.80 and
$2.40, while the third horse, Doll's
Ahead, paid $3.20.
Acrowd of 4,695 wagered $S48,88a.

RIVERDOWNS
CINCINNATI (AP) - Papelote
came off the pace, took the lead at
the 16th pole and won the six-furlong
featured race by % length at River
Downs.
·
Ridden by Antonio Costa in 1: 12
four· fifths Wednesday, Papelote
paid $7 .80, $3.60 and $2.40. General
Ledger placed for $3.20 and $2.40,
and the show horse, Angle's
Request, paid$4.20.
Mist and Spanish Hope combined
for an 8-2 daily double that returned
$118.60.
Acrowd of 5,429 bet$652,439.
SCIOTO DOWNS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Bill
Riegel drove Confucius to a 3tlength victory in the feature pace at
Scioto Downs Wednesday night in
2:00 4-6. The winning horse paid
$6.60, $3.80 and $4.20.
Dolphin Gene was. second, retur·
ning $5.40 and $4.40. Third-place
Moka Money paid $4.20.
The first race trifecta of 6-1·2
returned $399.
. The crowd cl. 4,284 wagered
$347,704.

WHY IN THE WORLD

fifth victory in their last six games.
It appeared Jeff Burroughs had
driven in the Braves' winning run
with a three-run double In the eighth
inning. But Montreal tied it in the top
of the ninth on Jerry White's
sacrifice fly.
'
GlaDis i4, Cubs~
Jack. Clark's four ·RBis and Mike
. Ivie's three led a 21-hit San Fran·
cisco assault aggainst the Cubs.
"We were due. It was one of those
days when we were ready... said
Clark, whose three-run homer
highlighted a six-run third inning
against Doug Cap ilia, His
replacement in the fourth, Willie
Hernandez, didn't do much better,
giving up three runs, two on lvie's
double . .t,oe Pettini got his first ~ig·
league homer for the Giants in ~ir
three-run seventh.
. Padres 3, Pirates%

Plans have been completed for. the
open church wedding of Miss Tracey
Jeffers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
· Wendell Jeffers, !Did Mark O'Dell,
son mMr. and Mn. Roy O'Dell.
The wedding will lake place Satur·
day at 1 p.m. with the Rev. James
Corbitt performing the ceremony.
Music by Jane Wise will begin at
!2:30p.m.
Yield Hood will be the maid of
honor, and Gary O'Dell will serve 8ll
best man for !J!s brother. Charlene
Goeglein and Lori !Goes will register
theguests. ·
.
A reception will be held immediately following the wedding in
the cliurch social room.

r

Honor rolls announced
Solemc..terEiemetttory

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RIVERSIDE
V.W. AMC JEEP RENAUlT
SUPIR USID· CAR SPECIALS

1977 FORD
Lm WAGON

• The Langsville Christian Church
will host a 25th wedding anniversary

celebration in honor of their pastor
and his wife, the Rev. and Mrs.
: Robert Musser on Sunday, July 27,
: from 2 to 4 p.m. in the fellowship
: .room.
The couple were married July 22,

·

Family equipped, A.C., cruise
control, white with blue interior.
local one owner, low, low price.

'3995

Economical si&gt;&lt; cylinder engine ,
power steering, A.C., Radial
tires.

By Polly Cramer
Speclalcorrespoodent
DEAR POLLY - Cigarette ashes
fell on my IOO.percent polyester
dress and burned a small hole in it.
The hole would not really be
noticeable if the edges were not
black. Do you know of a way to
· remove this black? - ELLEN

1978 FORD

1978 MERCURY
'
ZEPHYR tJ

DEAR ELLEN
- I ·had the same
thing happen to a
pair of white
slacks and finally
used
the
manicure scissors
to trim away just

PINlO WAGON
4 cylinder, automatic trans .,
A.C., power steering, AM-FM

a

track, new Concord trade.

thebla~.

'3995

•3895

.,

IF YOU NEED A TRUCK
WE GOT 'EM
1977 DODGE ¥4 TON ..................... . .. 318 V·B
1976 CH EV. C-10 . . ......... ........ Air Conditioning
1975 CHEV. C-10 .......... . ............. Bed Topper
197 5 DODGE
'
t;. TON ........ . ........... , . Club Cab
1974 GMC '12 TON .•• ,', •.. , • •••• • . •• • ,.,. 38,000 miles
1974 JEEP CJ·5 ........... ........ ..... . Metal Cab

195 UPPER RIVER ROAD
GAlLIPOLIS, OHIO
1111c

·...._
--------

I was yery careful not to enlarge
the hole and then pressed a piece of
white iron-oo tape on the back under
the hole, which is less noticeable.
The slacks can be worn with a tunictype blouse. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - A wet nylon net
pot scrubber removes dried bugs
from the windshield and headlights
of a car. Also, use a snow brush to
remove bugs from the radiator. "
N.M.B.
DEAR POLLY - I save the cardboard cone from inside paper towels
and store extra candles in it. Then I
'

nonn

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~

Disability law
changes made
Important changes have been
made in the way benefits are figured
for workers who first become .entitled for social security disability
benefits after June 1980, Edwin
Peterson, social security branch
manager in Athens said recently.
People who are receiving benefits
before that date are not affected.
The new law limts the total
benefits payable to a disabled
worker and his or her family. Under
the old law, there were times when a
disabled worker and his or· her
family received more in benefits
than the worker received 'in takehome pay before becoming disabled.
As a result, there was less incentive
for the worker to return to work. The
new law limits family benefits to
smaller 1'fz times the worker's
benefit or 85 percent of his or her
average monthly ea!'fJings before
becoming disabled. The limit has no
effect on the worker's own benefit. •
More information about the
changes in the disability law can be
obtained at the Athens security office. The office is located at 221 'fz
Columbus Road and the telephone
number ill 592-4448. In Meigs County
ca11992-6622.

Health IS
Happiness

FOR BREAKFAST?

We're the pharmacists
you can depend on in
emergencies to fill all
of your health rieeds.
. We also have natural
vitamins! Come in!

I

Kon.,.,~· MtCuoiO.,h, R. Ph.

4-H'ERSToMEET
The Shade Valley 4-H Club
recently at the home of Pam Riebel
with seven members and one ad·
visor attending.
: The group discusSed what refresh-·
ments each member would bring to
the judging at their next meeting
which was July 20. Parents were in·
vited to the meeting.
A demonstration and report were
given by Tone Chapman on model
.rockets. The· next meeting will be
held at the Che~ter United Methodist
,Church.
·

Clllt:IOI RINit . R:

· 'Ronlld H1nnh'1. R. Ph · ·
Mon thruS.t . t :OOa.m. IOfp.m .
~und.r~y lO :lOto l'l : :JO and StQ •p .m .

PREsCRIPTIONS
,
.·
·
Frittndly Senice

PH. f'l2·2t.&gt;S

fd 19BOBOBEYANSFAA~ FOODS INC

·'

fl
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..,. l

'Foartl'l Grade- MiuJ Black· x, Laurie Shen- .
ll'ld .• x, Aiogle Wrtg)ot • x, Mlohael Wrtglot • 1,
Paul ·CouncU, Angel McDaniel, Margaret

llhod&lt;o. Ancell Shan&gt;. ElizabeUo ThOmtoo •.

Hay01, KriJiina Haynos • 1, David Hondrtcka,

1955, at the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene by the Rev. Lyndon Walls.
They are the parents m four
children, Jeffery Scott of Sparks,
Nevada, Robert Ray of Pomeroy,
Mrs. John (Anita Diane) Umbarger,
Pomeroy, and Maria Dawn at home.

put the cone and candles in a plastic
bag that the newsboy brings the
paper in on rainy days. - MRS.
R.B .H.
DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is
for those who use freezer containers.
First, put a plalltic bag inside the
container and then fill it with
whatever you wish to freeze. This
certainly saves a lot of scrubbing of
those containers.
Also by placing a sponge WI·
derneath pans you are washing .in
the sink you will save having to
scrub away many scuff marks in the
sirik.- MRS. B.
DEAR POLLY - I find my
sponges last much longer when I
keep them in a zippered plastic bag.
I add a bit of baking soda to keep
them smelling fresh.
When knee socks are beyond
repair !Jut the elastic i!l still good I
cut them off just above the ankle,
sew the ends back together and have
good dusting mitts or a pair of warm
. mittens for the children to play ln. NENA
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POIN·
TERS in care mthis newspaper.

~-- Social Calendar

I

TIIURSDAY
WILLING WORKERS CLASS of
Enterprise Methodist Church Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at home of Mrs.
Beatrice Buck.
TWIN CITY SHRINETIES Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at Mason Park new
levee. Refreshments will be
provided.
GALLIA · MEIGS COMMUNITY
Action Agency board m directors
Thursday 7:30p.m. at Guiding Hand
School, Cheshire.
SATURDAY
FISH FRY Saturday at
Wilkesville VolWiteer Fire dejlartment. There will be water battles,
which will include men and women
friXIl area fire departments, at 2
p.m. and a street dance from 9 p.m. ·
until midnight.

Tracy McKinney, BWy Osldin, Melilsa Rife,
Cltriltlnaliexlon, David Smtih.
Sixth Gfl&lt;\e- Ben Davies - x, Cindy Fetty,
TOIIIIIIY Gllliey • x, Chrlallo Ma)'llllrd, Mellisa
Primmer, VanetiiSII Rife, Cbarmel Turner.
l • Orenotel All AIs.
Salllbouy Elemeatary
Flnallmor roll fe&lt; lutlllx-weekl puiod :
Firat Grodo - Aaron Budo, Lisa Capohart,
Randy_ Coni, Tracy Eblln, David Fryrnyor,
Stove Glbbo, Lori Haya, Meta Looch, Illanna
McClelland, Terry Reuter, Amy Ro1.11e, Kristen
Slawter, Kristen Stanley, Jennifer Taylor, Amy
Warth, Pam Whaley.
Second Grade - Tracl Bortela. Melanie
Beegle, Helcll Caru-., Kelly DouawL Wally
Hallleld, Jay Hwnpl)reya, KrlaUn King, ueanna
Norris, ~ Parker, Brian Warner, Sandra
-ley.
ThinJ Grade - Wesler YOWl@, Michelle

Chester Community Bible School
was held June 16th through the 20th
at the Chester ·United Methodist
Church and Chester Grade School.
Five churches were involved with
the Bible School this year. They
were: Chester United Methodist,
Cheshire Church of the Nazarene,
Mt. Hermon, South Bethel and Keno
Church of Christ.
The ·directors were Karla
Chevalier and Melanie stethem,
secretary-treasurer, wll$ Sina Mur·
·phy, song leader, was Jenny Machir

Taylor, Jody T.lytor, Joan Slsoon, ~
Sauten, Rick King, Traey Ann Donaldson, Marc
Coni, Melodl Carl.
Four11o Grode - David Betgle, BW Brotlten,
Lisa Frymyer, Kevin V. King, Shannon Slavin,
Angela Sloin, TIIOU"8 Vare, Oarrin Warth.
Flftll Grode - Todd Cullwns, Phillip Ktni,
Sixth Grado - Jodi Harrison, Ralroey
llarriiGrl, DarTon Maya, Scott Pulllno, Tim
Sloan, Mila Smith.
MotpJ-IIiPSc:hool
Seventtl - l.1u AINey, Marta Averlon,
Mell.ua CCIUnl, Stne Crow, Brenda CUnnin8hlm. Soan Doidge Katrina !loDol&gt;ae, AmY
Erwin, David Fiaher, w.;;:.;ji Hacldo•, Frances
Hollman, Sandy Hoyt, llonnis Hy,.ll, !Iandy
JewelL C.thy Jones, G.qe Justia, Bnt Korn,
(lrq Latltey, Carl MoodlfP&amp;Uih. Linda Noel,
Jado Pelenon,- Roush, 5andn RuMII,
Dentae Sleaall, Alta. T&gt;unm, Ray TryaU, Tim

·

El&amp;hlh- SheiT)' Arnold, Eddie Bbhop, Olrla
Burdetto, MOflan Cole, &amp;toln Campboll1 .~
~. Tim r..-, Paal Janey, .._.,
Kennedy, V.lcki Lamp, Meliul MeMUUon, Mike
MOOII'1fin&amp;, Jonl'erTin, ~ Pratt, Nldo Riga ,
Mlchaol RuueU, Sharon Ro&amp;UeU, Len Sayr&lt;,
VafllhanSponeor, PIUiaSwlndell, Terri Thoma,
ntnt...,. ,.,,_ ..,. "'"".._ V•••Citutn .

Registration
b~gins today
Registration for pre-school
children who will be attending
Gingerbread House this fall wiD be
held July 24 throl!lft Aug. 19.
Thill school 1.1 designed to IIIISilt
children ages three to five to ex·
perlence activtUes that wlll help in
preparing them for kindergarten.
The school hours wiU be half day
sessions on Wedneaday and Friday
fnm 9 tol1 :30 a.m. and fr1Xll12:30
to 3 p.m. For additional information
contact Sandra Lulkeydoo at m ·
7177.
Those who have received applicaUons are to return them 8ll soon
8ll polllible to P. 0. Box 233, Middleport, Ohio 45760.

W.I.M. to meet
Thuraday, July 24, the W.I.M.
(Women for InfCII'IIled Mothering)
will meet.
Patrick McGee, •lawyer frcm the
Southeaat Ohio Legal Services, will
be the guest speaker beginning at
7:30 p.m. at the United Methodist
Church In Pomeroy. All the public Is
invited to attend and ask questions.
Beginning this month, lalfyers
from Athens Legal Services will be
seeing clients at the conference
room of the new Senior Citizen Center at the Multi-Purpose Health Cen·
ter in Pomeroy one time a month.
For further lnfonnation, please
call Pte legal aid office at 99Wf78.

and pianist was Amy Louks.
non. Middlers, Vicki Woods, Jackie
Teachers and helpers for the classes Frost, Mary Hunter. Juniors, Lois
were: Nursery, Carol Diddle, Jenny
Wilson, Esther Mays, Marilyn Spen·
Machir, Pat Keaton, Evelyn Well,
cer. Teenagers, Nanna Hawthorne,
Linda Well, Ann Diddle, Janet Hoff·
Jane Coates. Adults, Maxine Hoff·
man, Lila Van Meter, Roberta
man, Rev. Thomas, Rev. Grate.
Ridenour, Sharon Michael, Barbara
There·was ari average attendance".
Hoffman, Trena Riffle, Yvonne
of liB pupils. A program was held
Young. Beginnen;, Erica Grate,
Friday, June 20 at 7:30 p.m. at the
Sharon Hein, Tammie Barber, Sara
Chester United Methodist Church;
,Bailey, Gay Ann Clay, Margaret
The classes sang. songs and recit\!d
Tuttle. Primary, Linda King, Sharon
.verses. Crafts Were on display in thE(
Neutzling, Linda Fitch, Joy Bran· · social room of the church.

Point Pleasant theatre to present play soon

BnndaSinclalr. •

Wamolay, !ltbbio Weft)'.

•
ween $800 and $1,000 by donating their labor. Bob
Bailey, county coordinator of EMS agrees. " They're
doing a really great job," he says. Pictured above, left
to right are Frances Roush, Eva Dessauer, Bob Bailey
and Eliza E. PQw~ll.
.
.

Chester Community Bible School held recently

Fifth Grade- MiclwDe Barr • x, Jon BeU - 1,

TaJIU111- Gardner, Cbriltine Goble · Tabitha

Dress got burned...

Air conditoned, six cylinder eng.,
radial tires, power steering,
Railey sport striping .

'2995

Third Grode - Ben Bell, Sherrie Blair, Tara
Clarll, KelUo Hicka, Jody Lmnoatoo, Cindy
Ma)'llllnl. Moolca Turner, llo.oe' YoWfi.

Polly's Pointers

1978 CHEVROLET
NOVA HATCHBACK

LABOR DONATED - These women and several
other members of the Retired Senior VoiWiteers
Program have sewn and rolled thousands of bandages
for the Emergency Medical Services of the area.
Susan Oliver, administrative assistant of RSVP
estimates the volWiteers have saved the county bet·

BIUyWebb.
·
. Second Gr1de- Wendy GiDley, Miry Hale- 1:,
TIJM\)' Lambert, Jer\1\lfer Shad • x, Jerem)'
stone, Anne Wllliama, Mlehael Della vaDe.

Silver anniversary ·to
be hosted by church

l

.

Firat Grade- Dennll Eclrnilloo, Tina Molden,
April Napper, Jenny Peytoo, Richanl Peyton,

The Rev. and Mrs. Robert Musser

~~·~-;;r;,;-h~---., '
Jerry Mumphrey's second RBI 11
· Florist Since .1957
~
the game,a tie-breaking single in the .
eighth inning, enabled San Diego to .
break a three-gaine losing streak
and keep Pittsburgh from widening ·
it's one-game lead over Montreal in
FLORIST
the East.
I
PH.
992·2644
I
Gene Richards, who singled and ·
152 1=. Main, Pomeroy
I
scored one of the Padres' two first·
i
Your F'~D._..
Florist
~
inning runs on Mumphrey's groun·

TOA STEAK HOUSE

EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Wedding
plans made .

der, singled to open the ninth and
was bunted to seCond before Mumphrey drilled his game-winner up
the middle.
Meta 4, Altros 3
The Mei.s, who had won 11nly one of
eight games against Houston this
year, finally got a win. in ' the
Astrodome when Elliott Maddox
tripled in the ninth inning and scored
on pinch-hitter Jerry Morales'
sacrifice fly.
It also ended New :Vork's three·
game losing streak, handed relil!"er
Frank Lacorte his first loss after six
wins and left the Astros 2t games
ahead of second-place Los Angeles
in theWest. The Houston highlight of
the game was CeSar Cedeno's triple
in the eighth inning, his 1,500th
career hit, a club record. .

WOULD ANYONE GO
When it's a Bob Evans Steak House
that's reason enough!
Because at Bob Evans we serve great tasting
farm breakfasts you can't get anywhere else.
Fresh, fluffy hot biscuits with our own ·
sausage gravy.
Fried mush made from Vvtlolesome cornmeal
and served with delicious warm syrup .
How about an order of delicious farm fresh
Bob Evans&lt;~&gt; Saus1'!9e With ... yQu namr it... eggs,
hotcakes, waffles, french toast.
And everything is served with all the good
c.offee you t an drink. · ·
'
Of course, ifyou've·got the appetite you can
always order steak and eggs.
.
.
.
If you want a real hearty, old-fashioned farm
breakfast come to the Steak House. It's so good
you'll want to stay for lunch and dinner.

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 24, 1!1110

POINT PLEASANT - The
Theatre ·Arts Association of Mason
County has begun rehearsals for the
swrune( production, "The Hackberry Cavalier."
The dates of the play are August
14, 15, 16, and 21, 22, 23. The play is
being sponsored by the City of Point
Pleasant.
·
Dtrector:in-residence for the play
is Ms. Rhonda Wallace, a native of
Milton, W. Va., and a Marshall .
University graduate, who also directed "Oklahoma" held locally. Ms.
Wallace also directed such varied

plays as "MY. Fait Lady,"
"Brigadoon," and "Tiie Wizard of
Oz." She also has experience on the
stage performing In "Gypsy,"

Friday, Jaly !.1
Opportunities coul~ develop this coming year
that will enable you to acquire some of the

they would. Keep the fa1tn. There's·a bright light
al tne end of the twmel. ·
SAGriTARIUS jNov. ,23-Dec. 21) Focus your
attention and efforts today on· things that could
add to your resources or enhance your·materlal
security. The harder you work, the luckier you'll
go:t.- .

material thlnss you've always wanted. Fulfill

your desires without O'Yer-burdening yourself
financially.
LEO (July !3-Aq. !%) Tak~ pride in all tasks
you perform today and do your very best.
Rewards for wort well done cOUld be far larger
than UIUSI. Gettin~ along with other signs is one
d. the sectiOM you U enjoy In your Astro-GraDh,
which begin! with your birthday. Mall fl lor
each toA.stroGraph, BoJ: 489, Radio City Station, .
N. Y. I0019. Be sure to specify birth date .
VIRGO (Aq. zs.sept. Z:) You're not likely to
have 1 peer today when it cunes to organ.Wng or
manq:tng e«nplicated situation.!!. You'll know
exactly how to dclq:ate accordingly.
LIBRA (Sepl. %S-Od..Z3) Keep a positive vision
oftheendreaulta and things will work out to your
llting today. Leave no empty spaces for negative

fhout!hta lo enter.

SCORPIO (Ocl. Zt-N€W. 2!1 Conditions are

sbi!rting to tum fvr the better today. Things

. ahould begin to work out as you've been hoping

"Marne," "St. Joan," "Godspell,"

and "The Hackberry Cavalier," the
latter in' which she portrayed five
characters.
"The Hackberry Cavalier" is a
two act musical cllmedy concerning
the trayels of Edgar Selfridge portrayed by Mark Thompson, who
becomes involved with a wide
variety of earthy downhome characters. Some of these . are Frank
Copeland (Nick Salem), Doreen

CAPRICORN

2Z·Jaa.

(Dec.

; MERCHANDISE ·

( Dresses, shorts,
kirts, blazers, slac
joggers)

CaseyKasem
WMPO

MEMBERSHIP DUES DUE
·S ATUROA YS ·
Eli Denison Post 467, Rutland, announces that their membership dues
__
. 'Q_til N~on .
as a tuner.
for 1981 are payable now. The post is
•ceeptlng new members and in·
penwnsmay contact any .r-r:::::::::::::::;::;:::i;::::::::::::::::::::::i,
post member. Dances are sponsored
every Saturday night from 9 p.m.· I
a.m. at the post ball, with good bands and plenty of good times.
American flag kits are being sold by
the post members. These kits are 3 x
5 foot American made flags and may
be bought at the dances or at the
hall. The pond located on the post
grounds offers plenty of good
fishing, and is open to the public at a
AND
small charge.

~

•

WEEKLY SPECIA~
ALL

GARDNER"

PRINCESS GARDNER8

NaN

OFF.

CLEARANCE
SALE

ON All SUMMER
. - ... -

Be

philosophical regarding any problei'Tl.S you have
to C&lt;lntend with today. You'll be amazed at how
easy they are i! you believe you can do it.
AQUARIUS IJan. 20-Feb. IS) Don't be
deceived by outward appearances today.
Something tha.l seems Ullrewarding at flr:sl glance is just the opposite. _
PJSCD (Feb. %0-Mareb %0) One-to-one
relationships should prove very graWying today ~
You have a marvelous ability to mak€' those-you
are with seem special atld important.
ARI~ (Marcb 21·A.,ril 19) Ypur greiotest Opportunities today are m areas relating to your
work or career. Be sharp and alert so that you
can take 11dvantage of any breaks that develop.
' TAURUS (Aprl1 ZO.May zt)lnvo)'o·e yourself in
activities today that are run but challenging,
both mentally and physically. Move your
muscles as well as the gray matter.
GEMINI (May 2l·JUDe ZO) Thls C&lt;IUid be a
propitioWJ time to mBke a major change yoU've
CQntemplated. Make your move now if your logic
and intuition giv~ you the go signal.
CANCER IJUH %1-JoJy !Z) Today could prove
~o be very fortunate in dealings you have where
partners are involved. Work as a twOsonie, not

JULY

.. SAVE
20% to 30%

U)

.

Copeland (Debbie Smolenski), Fanny Whittacker (Anita Lee Roger),
Dave CasUeberry (Jerry Barkey),
Patience~ Whitcomb
(Paula
Barkey), Sadie Abernathy (Monica
Park), a gambler named Two-Deuce
(Bill Brady, Sr.), hotel proprietess;
Madam Oliva (Kathy Spencer), !(
Bible toting Bayou matriarch called
Granny (Lois Monroe), a mountaui
man with the befitting name of
Polecat (Greg Blair), Obbie Terry
(Pat Pethtel), July Yeager (Jackie
Wagner) and Bonnie Sears (Debbii
Smolenski).
•

0

· MOST

SUMMER STOCK
t.t.OUC)O TO

We have just received a
new
shipment
of
·Billfolds, Secretarys,
Key rings . These will
make great Christmas
gifts at great savings.

1h OR lh OFF

MEN'S-WOMEN'S-CHILDREN'.S

,,

lWO'S COM
DRESS SHOP

----------------~~----------------------------------------------~-~~------

•VISA

•MIC
•LAYAWAY

Hours:

M.-w . 9·5 •
Thur. 9· 12 ·
Fri. H

Sat. 9·5
992-705&lt;4

�&lt;

4-: ~Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, July 24,19111

Cards defeat Dodgers~
but lose Templeton
~y

f

,!

Joe Nolan
Four RBI night

John McNamara
Proud of Reds

Gary Templeton
Break~

left thumb

ASSOCIATED PRESS

For much of the season, the St.
Louis Cardinals have been waiting
for the breaks to come their way. On
WedneSday night they got the worst
kind of break - but it could be a big
break for Mike Phillips.
Garry Templeton, who tripled in
the first and second innings to raise
his batting average to .326 with 133
hits - both tops in the National
League - broke his left thumb in the
. third inning and will be sidelined for
perhaps four weeks.
"This is the worst lime .it could
have happened,"" said teammate
Ken Reitz, "just when we were
trying to make a bid for .500."
·
With their 7-3 triumph over Los
Angeles, ,their fourth consecutive
victory and Seventh in the last nine
games; the Cards are 43-61 and fifth
in the East, 9_ games out of first
place.
"We know we've got Mike• too •"
Reitz said of Phillips, a bench-rider
with a .171 average this year. "He'll
be able to do a good job. Phillips in
the past has always come in and
done a good job."
In fact, Phillips took over for six
games last year when Templeton
hurt his wrist and the Cards won five
of the six.
"I'll do my best," Phillips said. "U
things get off to a good start, we'll be
alright."
In Wednesday's other NL action, it
was Atlanta 6, Montreal 5; San
Francisco·14, Chicago 6; Cincinnati
7, Philadelphia 3; San Diego 3; Pittsburgh 2, and New. York ·4, Houston
3.
After Templeton's first-inning ·
triple, singles by Leon Durham, 'red
Simmons and George Hendrick
made it ~. And in the second, Ken
Oberkfell walked, Templeton
tripled, Durham walked, Keith Her·
nandez hit an RBI grounder and
Simmons doubled for another run.
Dane Iorg had a tw~run double in
the fourth as the Cards handed the
Dodi!ers their lOth loss' in 13 games.
Braves 6, Expos 5
· Gary Matthews pWiched a basesloaded single in the bottom of the
nirith inning to give the Braves their

McNamara proud of his club
CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati
manager John McNamara beamed
and said he was "proud" o( his ball
club.
Philadelphia · manager Dallas
Green picked at a plate of food and
shook his head.
Their reactions said plenty about
the Reds' 7-3 victory Wednesday
that completed a three-game sweep
of the Phillies. The game: ·
-saivdged a 7·7 split of the Reds'
14-game homestand after a
disastrous1-6 start.
-stretched the Phillies' losing

streak to six, their longest since·last
season, and ·ended their road trip
with a 3-7 record.
-Left the Phillies with an 8-31
regular season mark against the
Redsf'in ~verfront Stadium dating
back to the middle of 1974.
"I'm real proud of the guys," said
McNaffillra. "Remember, we lost
six of the first seven, and now come..
back toWin Six of the last seven (in
the homestand)."
The normally effusive Green had
trouble finding words for sportswriters about the latest Phillies

SVA.C has new coaches

.·

.

'

.

\,

'

'•

Some familiar area faces will be wearing new hats when the
opening kickoff comes around for the 1980 football season Aug. 29.
One of the new faces, Kyger Creek's. Deryl Well, isn't exactly a
new face, but his position will ' be. Well moves up to replace Jim
Sprague as Bobcat head football coach.
·
·
KCHS has been the only school Well, a graduate of Rio Grande
College, ~ known during his 1~year career. After serving on the
faculty his f1rst year, Well moved into grid coaching as an assistant to
Dick Adams in 1971.
"I spent the first part of the season as a scout," Well said. "About
the rruddle of the season, I started working with the team and just
found outlliked it."
'
Following the 4+1 season, Adams left to rejoin the professional
playmg ranks With the Ottawa Roughriders of the Canadian Football
· League. Adams retired last season after seven years with the CFL
club, playing on special teams and some halfback. ·
·
When Spragl!e was promoted form an assistant at Fort Frye in
Washington County to the head post at KCHS Well moved into fulltime coaching duty, as defensive coordinator ~d of(ensive receiver
coach.
"I would have to say I learned a lot offootballfriXIl Jim" Well adds. "He concentrated a 16t on offense, but on the other hand there are
more ways t6 score with the defense.''
'
When Sprague, who led the Bobcats to five Southern Valley
Athletic C?nference titles and a 7-Z.l overall record last season, stepped down m April to accept the head coaching assignment at Class AA
Philo High School in MuskingWJ\ CoWity.
,The Bobc~ts were SVAC runnersup last season at 4-1, losing to
league champion Hannan Trace 14-8. II was Hannan Trace's first
SVAC football title.
"Jim built a good s~stem here," Well commented. "I never really
gave the head coaching job much thought until last month but when I
started thinking abQut it, I believe I have as good an ide~ of how the
program has been run as well as anyone,'' Well said.
"Basic~lly, we don't plan on making any major changes, but I
have a fewldeas of my own I'd like to implement. :We'll just take it one
step at a time."
At Eastern, former Gallia Academy coach Willard "Buddy"
Moore returns to the sidelines after a two-year absence to take charge
of the Eagles.
, "I missed coaching the first year I w.as out of it " Moore who was
also out of teaching, said. "Any lime y~'ve been ~OWid athletics for
a length of lime, it's a shock to your systam, especially when football came aroWid.
·
.
"But this ill a super program to step into," Moore a nalive of Middleport, feels. "Joe Mitchem and the people here did an outstanding
job, and I feel it's as good a program as any around. I'm looking forward to coming back this year."
Moore, who began his coaching career as a GAHS assistant to
Johnny E~ker in 1970, posted a 15-lrHl overall record with Gallipolis fm
1975-77. His Blue Devils finished with an 8-2 log in 1975 and second in
the Southeatern Ohio Athletic League at 5-2.
Mitchem, leading the Eagles to one SVAC championship in his
four years (1978), resigned earlier this year to enter private business.
Ron Janey will again be on the sidelines in the SEOAL but it will
be with the Logan Chieftains~
'
. Janey, ~ho he!ped the Jllue Devil tennis squad enjoy a 15-3 record
this past spnng, will take on the head baseball dutieS at logan.
"It's what I've been looking for," Janey corrunented after
rec~iving not!fication from· the school Tuesday. "I was up there
talking to thetr boys, and they're pretty excited about aetting star·
e
ted."
'
,
Janey, a graduate of Ohio University, compiled 15-3 and 18-3
records at North Gallia in 1975-76, with the 1975 Pirate team winning
the SVAC championship and the 1976 squad advancing to the district
finals before falling to Ironton St.Joe 7-6.
.~
Janey also beaded the freshman football program at. GAHS the
past three years, !~ding the locals to a 1-S overall record, 6-1 in each
of the past two seasons.
Janey, who replaces Werner Enunrich at Logan, also coached
freshman basketball one season at North Gallia, finishing 9-4.
Logan finished 5-15last season, 5-9 in the SEoAL.
The only SVAC football opening remains at Southwestern, where
Bob Ashley resigned two weeks ago, at the same Gallia County Local
School Board meeting Well and Myers were appointed.

.I

' ~~----------------~

loss.
"Boys, you'll just have to. write
what you saw," he said. "I've run
out of things to say."
The sportswriters and nearly
30,000 fans saw a come-from-behind
Reds' victory keyed by catcher Joe
Nolan's three RBI.
Nolan, signed on June 13 after
becoming a free agent from the
Atlanta Braves, rapped a two-run
double· in the fourth after Nino
Espinosa, 1-2, loaded the bases with
walks. Jw\.ior Kermedy's sacrifice
fly then put Cincinnati ahead, 4-3, for
good.
The Reds padded their lead on Ken
Griffey's two-run double in the
seventh and Nolan's sacrifice fly in
the eighth as rookie Bruce Berenyi,
~. went 7 1-3 innings in his fourth
major league start.
Nolan, who spent three years with
Atlanta, was acqwred to replace
second-string catcher Vic Correll,
disabled by a torn tendon.
"I .hadn't played for so long in
Atlanta that it was a struggle to just
get back into the game," said Nolan,
batting .275 in 19 games with the
Reds.

The left-handed hitting catcher
said he's thrilled to play on a con·
tending team in the National League
West.
"It puts so much importance on
each game," he said: "Everything's
changed because .you're going to be
ri~ht in the middle of the race.
"In years back (with Atlanta), in
July or August we'd be maybe 15 or
20 games out and there would be
maybe 2,000 people in the stands. It
was tough mentally."
Berenyi loaded the bases in the fir·
st inning on a single and two walks.
But he struck out Manny Trillo, who
started lbe game as .!he league's
leading hitter, to end the inning.
Mike Sclunidt's two-run homer in
the third, his 24th, tied him with Del
Ennis for the Phillies' all-time home
run r.ecord of 259.
"I was trying to keep from being
awed by the hitters I faced,"
Berenyi said. "It took me a while to
come out of'that."
111I.STLEDOWNS
NORTII RANDALL, Ohio (AP) With Benny Feliciano aboard, Spit
Spat raced to a first place finish in
the featured allowance race at
Thistledown.
. The winning horse went the six
furlongs Wednesday in 1:12 4-5 to
return $11.40 on a win ticket, $3.60 to
place and $2.40 to show. M and M's
Patch ran second and paid $2.80 and
$2.40, while the third horse, Doll's
Ahead, paid $3.20.
Acrowd of 4,695 wagered $S48,88a.

RIVERDOWNS
CINCINNATI (AP) - Papelote
came off the pace, took the lead at
the 16th pole and won the six-furlong
featured race by % length at River
Downs.
·
Ridden by Antonio Costa in 1: 12
four· fifths Wednesday, Papelote
paid $7 .80, $3.60 and $2.40. General
Ledger placed for $3.20 and $2.40,
and the show horse, Angle's
Request, paid$4.20.
Mist and Spanish Hope combined
for an 8-2 daily double that returned
$118.60.
Acrowd of 5,429 bet$652,439.
SCIOTO DOWNS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Bill
Riegel drove Confucius to a 3tlength victory in the feature pace at
Scioto Downs Wednesday night in
2:00 4-6. The winning horse paid
$6.60, $3.80 and $4.20.
Dolphin Gene was. second, retur·
ning $5.40 and $4.40. Third-place
Moka Money paid $4.20.
The first race trifecta of 6-1·2
returned $399.
. The crowd cl. 4,284 wagered
$347,704.

WHY IN THE WORLD

fifth victory in their last six games.
It appeared Jeff Burroughs had
driven in the Braves' winning run
with a three-run double In the eighth
inning. But Montreal tied it in the top
of the ninth on Jerry White's
sacrifice fly.
'
GlaDis i4, Cubs~
Jack. Clark's four ·RBis and Mike
. Ivie's three led a 21-hit San Fran·
cisco assault aggainst the Cubs.
"We were due. It was one of those
days when we were ready... said
Clark, whose three-run homer
highlighted a six-run third inning
against Doug Cap ilia, His
replacement in the fourth, Willie
Hernandez, didn't do much better,
giving up three runs, two on lvie's
double . .t,oe Pettini got his first ~ig·
league homer for the Giants in ~ir
three-run seventh.
. Padres 3, Pirates%

Plans have been completed for. the
open church wedding of Miss Tracey
Jeffers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
· Wendell Jeffers, !Did Mark O'Dell,
son mMr. and Mn. Roy O'Dell.
The wedding will lake place Satur·
day at 1 p.m. with the Rev. James
Corbitt performing the ceremony.
Music by Jane Wise will begin at
!2:30p.m.
Yield Hood will be the maid of
honor, and Gary O'Dell will serve 8ll
best man for !J!s brother. Charlene
Goeglein and Lori !Goes will register
theguests. ·
.
A reception will be held immediately following the wedding in
the cliurch social room.

r

Honor rolls announced
Solemc..terEiemetttory

I

t

.

.

!

!

...______

!

____,

RIVERSIDE
V.W. AMC JEEP RENAUlT
SUPIR USID· CAR SPECIALS

1977 FORD
Lm WAGON

• The Langsville Christian Church
will host a 25th wedding anniversary

celebration in honor of their pastor
and his wife, the Rev. and Mrs.
: Robert Musser on Sunday, July 27,
: from 2 to 4 p.m. in the fellowship
: .room.
The couple were married July 22,

·

Family equipped, A.C., cruise
control, white with blue interior.
local one owner, low, low price.

'3995

Economical si&gt;&lt; cylinder engine ,
power steering, A.C., Radial
tires.

By Polly Cramer
Speclalcorrespoodent
DEAR POLLY - Cigarette ashes
fell on my IOO.percent polyester
dress and burned a small hole in it.
The hole would not really be
noticeable if the edges were not
black. Do you know of a way to
· remove this black? - ELLEN

1978 FORD

1978 MERCURY
'
ZEPHYR tJ

DEAR ELLEN
- I ·had the same
thing happen to a
pair of white
slacks and finally
used
the
manicure scissors
to trim away just

PINlO WAGON
4 cylinder, automatic trans .,
A.C., power steering, AM-FM

a

track, new Concord trade.

thebla~.

'3995

•3895

.,

IF YOU NEED A TRUCK
WE GOT 'EM
1977 DODGE ¥4 TON ..................... . .. 318 V·B
1976 CH EV. C-10 . . ......... ........ Air Conditioning
1975 CHEV. C-10 .......... . ............. Bed Topper
197 5 DODGE
'
t;. TON ........ . ........... , . Club Cab
1974 GMC '12 TON .•• ,', •.. , • •••• • . •• • ,.,. 38,000 miles
1974 JEEP CJ·5 ........... ........ ..... . Metal Cab

195 UPPER RIVER ROAD
GAlLIPOLIS, OHIO
1111c

·...._
--------

I was yery careful not to enlarge
the hole and then pressed a piece of
white iron-oo tape on the back under
the hole, which is less noticeable.
The slacks can be worn with a tunictype blouse. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - A wet nylon net
pot scrubber removes dried bugs
from the windshield and headlights
of a car. Also, use a snow brush to
remove bugs from the radiator. "
N.M.B.
DEAR POLLY - I save the cardboard cone from inside paper towels
and store extra candles in it. Then I
'

nonn

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~

Disability law
changes made
Important changes have been
made in the way benefits are figured
for workers who first become .entitled for social security disability
benefits after June 1980, Edwin
Peterson, social security branch
manager in Athens said recently.
People who are receiving benefits
before that date are not affected.
The new law limts the total
benefits payable to a disabled
worker and his or her family. Under
the old law, there were times when a
disabled worker and his or· her
family received more in benefits
than the worker received 'in takehome pay before becoming disabled.
As a result, there was less incentive
for the worker to return to work. The
new law limits family benefits to
smaller 1'fz times the worker's
benefit or 85 percent of his or her
average monthly ea!'fJings before
becoming disabled. The limit has no
effect on the worker's own benefit. •
More information about the
changes in the disability law can be
obtained at the Athens security office. The office is located at 221 'fz
Columbus Road and the telephone
number ill 592-4448. In Meigs County
ca11992-6622.

Health IS
Happiness

FOR BREAKFAST?

We're the pharmacists
you can depend on in
emergencies to fill all
of your health rieeds.
. We also have natural
vitamins! Come in!

I

Kon.,.,~· MtCuoiO.,h, R. Ph.

4-H'ERSToMEET
The Shade Valley 4-H Club
recently at the home of Pam Riebel
with seven members and one ad·
visor attending.
: The group discusSed what refresh-·
ments each member would bring to
the judging at their next meeting
which was July 20. Parents were in·
vited to the meeting.
A demonstration and report were
given by Tone Chapman on model
.rockets. The· next meeting will be
held at the Che~ter United Methodist
,Church.
·

Clllt:IOI RINit . R:

· 'Ronlld H1nnh'1. R. Ph · ·
Mon thruS.t . t :OOa.m. IOfp.m .
~und.r~y lO :lOto l'l : :JO and StQ •p .m .

PREsCRIPTIONS
,
.·
·
Frittndly Senice

PH. f'l2·2t.&gt;S

fd 19BOBOBEYANSFAA~ FOODS INC

·'

fl
-

..,. l

'Foartl'l Grade- MiuJ Black· x, Laurie Shen- .
ll'ld .• x, Aiogle Wrtg)ot • x, Mlohael Wrtglot • 1,
Paul ·CouncU, Angel McDaniel, Margaret

llhod&lt;o. Ancell Shan&gt;. ElizabeUo ThOmtoo •.

Hay01, KriJiina Haynos • 1, David Hondrtcka,

1955, at the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene by the Rev. Lyndon Walls.
They are the parents m four
children, Jeffery Scott of Sparks,
Nevada, Robert Ray of Pomeroy,
Mrs. John (Anita Diane) Umbarger,
Pomeroy, and Maria Dawn at home.

put the cone and candles in a plastic
bag that the newsboy brings the
paper in on rainy days. - MRS.
R.B .H.
DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is
for those who use freezer containers.
First, put a plalltic bag inside the
container and then fill it with
whatever you wish to freeze. This
certainly saves a lot of scrubbing of
those containers.
Also by placing a sponge WI·
derneath pans you are washing .in
the sink you will save having to
scrub away many scuff marks in the
sirik.- MRS. B.
DEAR POLLY - I find my
sponges last much longer when I
keep them in a zippered plastic bag.
I add a bit of baking soda to keep
them smelling fresh.
When knee socks are beyond
repair !Jut the elastic i!l still good I
cut them off just above the ankle,
sew the ends back together and have
good dusting mitts or a pair of warm
. mittens for the children to play ln. NENA
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POIN·
TERS in care mthis newspaper.

~-- Social Calendar

I

TIIURSDAY
WILLING WORKERS CLASS of
Enterprise Methodist Church Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at home of Mrs.
Beatrice Buck.
TWIN CITY SHRINETIES Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at Mason Park new
levee. Refreshments will be
provided.
GALLIA · MEIGS COMMUNITY
Action Agency board m directors
Thursday 7:30p.m. at Guiding Hand
School, Cheshire.
SATURDAY
FISH FRY Saturday at
Wilkesville VolWiteer Fire dejlartment. There will be water battles,
which will include men and women
friXIl area fire departments, at 2
p.m. and a street dance from 9 p.m. ·
until midnight.

Tracy McKinney, BWy Osldin, Melilsa Rife,
Cltriltlnaliexlon, David Smtih.
Sixth Gfl&lt;\e- Ben Davies - x, Cindy Fetty,
TOIIIIIIY Gllliey • x, Chrlallo Ma)'llllrd, Mellisa
Primmer, VanetiiSII Rife, Cbarmel Turner.
l • Orenotel All AIs.
Salllbouy Elemeatary
Flnallmor roll fe&lt; lutlllx-weekl puiod :
Firat Grodo - Aaron Budo, Lisa Capohart,
Randy_ Coni, Tracy Eblln, David Fryrnyor,
Stove Glbbo, Lori Haya, Meta Looch, Illanna
McClelland, Terry Reuter, Amy Ro1.11e, Kristen
Slawter, Kristen Stanley, Jennifer Taylor, Amy
Warth, Pam Whaley.
Second Grade - Tracl Bortela. Melanie
Beegle, Helcll Caru-., Kelly DouawL Wally
Hallleld, Jay Hwnpl)reya, KrlaUn King, ueanna
Norris, ~ Parker, Brian Warner, Sandra
-ley.
ThinJ Grade - Wesler YOWl@, Michelle

Chester Community Bible School
was held June 16th through the 20th
at the Chester ·United Methodist
Church and Chester Grade School.
Five churches were involved with
the Bible School this year. They
were: Chester United Methodist,
Cheshire Church of the Nazarene,
Mt. Hermon, South Bethel and Keno
Church of Christ.
The ·directors were Karla
Chevalier and Melanie stethem,
secretary-treasurer, wll$ Sina Mur·
·phy, song leader, was Jenny Machir

Taylor, Jody T.lytor, Joan Slsoon, ~
Sauten, Rick King, Traey Ann Donaldson, Marc
Coni, Melodl Carl.
Four11o Grode - David Betgle, BW Brotlten,
Lisa Frymyer, Kevin V. King, Shannon Slavin,
Angela Sloin, TIIOU"8 Vare, Oarrin Warth.
Flftll Grode - Todd Cullwns, Phillip Ktni,
Sixth Grado - Jodi Harrison, Ralroey
llarriiGrl, DarTon Maya, Scott Pulllno, Tim
Sloan, Mila Smith.
MotpJ-IIiPSc:hool
Seventtl - l.1u AINey, Marta Averlon,
Mell.ua CCIUnl, Stne Crow, Brenda CUnnin8hlm. Soan Doidge Katrina !loDol&gt;ae, AmY
Erwin, David Fiaher, w.;;:.;ji Hacldo•, Frances
Hollman, Sandy Hoyt, llonnis Hy,.ll, !Iandy
JewelL C.thy Jones, G.qe Justia, Bnt Korn,
(lrq Latltey, Carl MoodlfP&amp;Uih. Linda Noel,
Jado Pelenon,- Roush, 5andn RuMII,
Dentae Sleaall, Alta. T&gt;unm, Ray TryaU, Tim

·

El&amp;hlh- SheiT)' Arnold, Eddie Bbhop, Olrla
Burdetto, MOflan Cole, &amp;toln Campboll1 .~
~. Tim r..-, Paal Janey, .._.,
Kennedy, V.lcki Lamp, Meliul MeMUUon, Mike
MOOII'1fin&amp;, Jonl'erTin, ~ Pratt, Nldo Riga ,
Mlchaol RuueU, Sharon Ro&amp;UeU, Len Sayr&lt;,
VafllhanSponeor, PIUiaSwlndell, Terri Thoma,
ntnt...,. ,.,,_ ..,. "'"".._ V•••Citutn .

Registration
b~gins today
Registration for pre-school
children who will be attending
Gingerbread House this fall wiD be
held July 24 throl!lft Aug. 19.
Thill school 1.1 designed to IIIISilt
children ages three to five to ex·
perlence activtUes that wlll help in
preparing them for kindergarten.
The school hours wiU be half day
sessions on Wedneaday and Friday
fnm 9 tol1 :30 a.m. and fr1Xll12:30
to 3 p.m. For additional information
contact Sandra Lulkeydoo at m ·
7177.
Those who have received applicaUons are to return them 8ll soon
8ll polllible to P. 0. Box 233, Middleport, Ohio 45760.

W.I.M. to meet
Thuraday, July 24, the W.I.M.
(Women for InfCII'IIled Mothering)
will meet.
Patrick McGee, •lawyer frcm the
Southeaat Ohio Legal Services, will
be the guest speaker beginning at
7:30 p.m. at the United Methodist
Church In Pomeroy. All the public Is
invited to attend and ask questions.
Beginning this month, lalfyers
from Athens Legal Services will be
seeing clients at the conference
room of the new Senior Citizen Center at the Multi-Purpose Health Cen·
ter in Pomeroy one time a month.
For further lnfonnation, please
call Pte legal aid office at 99Wf78.

and pianist was Amy Louks.
non. Middlers, Vicki Woods, Jackie
Teachers and helpers for the classes Frost, Mary Hunter. Juniors, Lois
were: Nursery, Carol Diddle, Jenny
Wilson, Esther Mays, Marilyn Spen·
Machir, Pat Keaton, Evelyn Well,
cer. Teenagers, Nanna Hawthorne,
Linda Well, Ann Diddle, Janet Hoff·
Jane Coates. Adults, Maxine Hoff·
man, Lila Van Meter, Roberta
man, Rev. Thomas, Rev. Grate.
Ridenour, Sharon Michael, Barbara
There·was ari average attendance".
Hoffman, Trena Riffle, Yvonne
of liB pupils. A program was held
Young. Beginnen;, Erica Grate,
Friday, June 20 at 7:30 p.m. at the
Sharon Hein, Tammie Barber, Sara
Chester United Methodist Church;
,Bailey, Gay Ann Clay, Margaret
The classes sang. songs and recit\!d
Tuttle. Primary, Linda King, Sharon
.verses. Crafts Were on display in thE(
Neutzling, Linda Fitch, Joy Bran· · social room of the church.

Point Pleasant theatre to present play soon

BnndaSinclalr. •

Wamolay, !ltbbio Weft)'.

•
ween $800 and $1,000 by donating their labor. Bob
Bailey, county coordinator of EMS agrees. " They're
doing a really great job," he says. Pictured above, left
to right are Frances Roush, Eva Dessauer, Bob Bailey
and Eliza E. PQw~ll.
.
.

Chester Community Bible School held recently

Fifth Grade- MiclwDe Barr • x, Jon BeU - 1,

TaJIU111- Gardner, Cbriltine Goble · Tabitha

Dress got burned...

Air conditoned, six cylinder eng.,
radial tires, power steering,
Railey sport striping .

'2995

Third Grode - Ben Bell, Sherrie Blair, Tara
Clarll, KelUo Hicka, Jody Lmnoatoo, Cindy
Ma)'llllnl. Moolca Turner, llo.oe' YoWfi.

Polly's Pointers

1978 CHEVROLET
NOVA HATCHBACK

LABOR DONATED - These women and several
other members of the Retired Senior VoiWiteers
Program have sewn and rolled thousands of bandages
for the Emergency Medical Services of the area.
Susan Oliver, administrative assistant of RSVP
estimates the volWiteers have saved the county bet·

BIUyWebb.
·
. Second Gr1de- Wendy GiDley, Miry Hale- 1:,
TIJM\)' Lambert, Jer\1\lfer Shad • x, Jerem)'
stone, Anne Wllliama, Mlehael Della vaDe.

Silver anniversary ·to
be hosted by church

l

.

Firat Grade- Dennll Eclrnilloo, Tina Molden,
April Napper, Jenny Peytoo, Richanl Peyton,

The Rev. and Mrs. Robert Musser

~~·~-;;r;,;-h~---., '
Jerry Mumphrey's second RBI 11
· Florist Since .1957
~
the game,a tie-breaking single in the .
eighth inning, enabled San Diego to .
break a three-gaine losing streak
and keep Pittsburgh from widening ·
it's one-game lead over Montreal in
FLORIST
the East.
I
PH.
992·2644
I
Gene Richards, who singled and ·
152 1=. Main, Pomeroy
I
scored one of the Padres' two first·
i
Your F'~D._..
Florist
~
inning runs on Mumphrey's groun·

TOA STEAK HOUSE

EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Wedding
plans made .

der, singled to open the ninth and
was bunted to seCond before Mumphrey drilled his game-winner up
the middle.
Meta 4, Altros 3
The Mei.s, who had won 11nly one of
eight games against Houston this
year, finally got a win. in ' the
Astrodome when Elliott Maddox
tripled in the ninth inning and scored
on pinch-hitter Jerry Morales'
sacrifice fly.
It also ended New :Vork's three·
game losing streak, handed relil!"er
Frank Lacorte his first loss after six
wins and left the Astros 2t games
ahead of second-place Los Angeles
in theWest. The Houston highlight of
the game was CeSar Cedeno's triple
in the eighth inning, his 1,500th
career hit, a club record. .

WOULD ANYONE GO
When it's a Bob Evans Steak House
that's reason enough!
Because at Bob Evans we serve great tasting
farm breakfasts you can't get anywhere else.
Fresh, fluffy hot biscuits with our own ·
sausage gravy.
Fried mush made from Vvtlolesome cornmeal
and served with delicious warm syrup .
How about an order of delicious farm fresh
Bob Evans&lt;~&gt; Saus1'!9e With ... yQu namr it... eggs,
hotcakes, waffles, french toast.
And everything is served with all the good
c.offee you t an drink. · ·
'
Of course, ifyou've·got the appetite you can
always order steak and eggs.
.
.
.
If you want a real hearty, old-fashioned farm
breakfast come to the Steak House. It's so good
you'll want to stay for lunch and dinner.

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 24, 1!1110

POINT PLEASANT - The
Theatre ·Arts Association of Mason
County has begun rehearsals for the
swrune( production, "The Hackberry Cavalier."
The dates of the play are August
14, 15, 16, and 21, 22, 23. The play is
being sponsored by the City of Point
Pleasant.
·
Dtrector:in-residence for the play
is Ms. Rhonda Wallace, a native of
Milton, W. Va., and a Marshall .
University graduate, who also directed "Oklahoma" held locally. Ms.
Wallace also directed such varied

plays as "MY. Fait Lady,"
"Brigadoon," and "Tiie Wizard of
Oz." She also has experience on the
stage performing In "Gypsy,"

Friday, Jaly !.1
Opportunities coul~ develop this coming year
that will enable you to acquire some of the

they would. Keep the fa1tn. There's·a bright light
al tne end of the twmel. ·
SAGriTARIUS jNov. ,23-Dec. 21) Focus your
attention and efforts today on· things that could
add to your resources or enhance your·materlal
security. The harder you work, the luckier you'll
go:t.- .

material thlnss you've always wanted. Fulfill

your desires without O'Yer-burdening yourself
financially.
LEO (July !3-Aq. !%) Tak~ pride in all tasks
you perform today and do your very best.
Rewards for wort well done cOUld be far larger
than UIUSI. Gettin~ along with other signs is one
d. the sectiOM you U enjoy In your Astro-GraDh,
which begin! with your birthday. Mall fl lor
each toA.stroGraph, BoJ: 489, Radio City Station, .
N. Y. I0019. Be sure to specify birth date .
VIRGO (Aq. zs.sept. Z:) You're not likely to
have 1 peer today when it cunes to organ.Wng or
manq:tng e«nplicated situation.!!. You'll know
exactly how to dclq:ate accordingly.
LIBRA (Sepl. %S-Od..Z3) Keep a positive vision
oftheendreaulta and things will work out to your
llting today. Leave no empty spaces for negative

fhout!hta lo enter.

SCORPIO (Ocl. Zt-N€W. 2!1 Conditions are

sbi!rting to tum fvr the better today. Things

. ahould begin to work out as you've been hoping

"Marne," "St. Joan," "Godspell,"

and "The Hackberry Cavalier," the
latter in' which she portrayed five
characters.
"The Hackberry Cavalier" is a
two act musical cllmedy concerning
the trayels of Edgar Selfridge portrayed by Mark Thompson, who
becomes involved with a wide
variety of earthy downhome characters. Some of these . are Frank
Copeland (Nick Salem), Doreen

CAPRICORN

2Z·Jaa.

(Dec.

; MERCHANDISE ·

( Dresses, shorts,
kirts, blazers, slac
joggers)

CaseyKasem
WMPO

MEMBERSHIP DUES DUE
·S ATUROA YS ·
Eli Denison Post 467, Rutland, announces that their membership dues
__
. 'Q_til N~on .
as a tuner.
for 1981 are payable now. The post is
•ceeptlng new members and in·
penwnsmay contact any .r-r:::::::::::::::;::;:::i;::::::::::::::::::::::i,
post member. Dances are sponsored
every Saturday night from 9 p.m.· I
a.m. at the post ball, with good bands and plenty of good times.
American flag kits are being sold by
the post members. These kits are 3 x
5 foot American made flags and may
be bought at the dances or at the
hall. The pond located on the post
grounds offers plenty of good
fishing, and is open to the public at a
AND
small charge.

~

•

WEEKLY SPECIA~
ALL

GARDNER"

PRINCESS GARDNER8

NaN

OFF.

CLEARANCE
SALE

ON All SUMMER
. - ... -

Be

philosophical regarding any problei'Tl.S you have
to C&lt;lntend with today. You'll be amazed at how
easy they are i! you believe you can do it.
AQUARIUS IJan. 20-Feb. IS) Don't be
deceived by outward appearances today.
Something tha.l seems Ullrewarding at flr:sl glance is just the opposite. _
PJSCD (Feb. %0-Mareb %0) One-to-one
relationships should prove very graWying today ~
You have a marvelous ability to mak€' those-you
are with seem special atld important.
ARI~ (Marcb 21·A.,ril 19) Ypur greiotest Opportunities today are m areas relating to your
work or career. Be sharp and alert so that you
can take 11dvantage of any breaks that develop.
' TAURUS (Aprl1 ZO.May zt)lnvo)'o·e yourself in
activities today that are run but challenging,
both mentally and physically. Move your
muscles as well as the gray matter.
GEMINI (May 2l·JUDe ZO) Thls C&lt;IUid be a
propitioWJ time to mBke a major change yoU've
CQntemplated. Make your move now if your logic
and intuition giv~ you the go signal.
CANCER IJUH %1-JoJy !Z) Today could prove
~o be very fortunate in dealings you have where
partners are involved. Work as a twOsonie, not

JULY

.. SAVE
20% to 30%

U)

.

Copeland (Debbie Smolenski), Fanny Whittacker (Anita Lee Roger),
Dave CasUeberry (Jerry Barkey),
Patience~ Whitcomb
(Paula
Barkey), Sadie Abernathy (Monica
Park), a gambler named Two-Deuce
(Bill Brady, Sr.), hotel proprietess;
Madam Oliva (Kathy Spencer), !(
Bible toting Bayou matriarch called
Granny (Lois Monroe), a mountaui
man with the befitting name of
Polecat (Greg Blair), Obbie Terry
(Pat Pethtel), July Yeager (Jackie
Wagner) and Bonnie Sears (Debbii
Smolenski).
•

0

· MOST

SUMMER STOCK
t.t.OUC)O TO

We have just received a
new
shipment
of
·Billfolds, Secretarys,
Key rings . These will
make great Christmas
gifts at great savings.

1h OR lh OFF

MEN'S-WOMEN'S-CHILDREN'.S

,,

lWO'S COM
DRESS SHOP

----------------~~----------------------------------------------~-~~------

•VISA

•MIC
•LAYAWAY

Hours:

M.-w . 9·5 •
Thur. 9· 12 ·
Fri. H

Sat. 9·5
992-705&lt;4

�.•.
..

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, July 24, 1980

~ New arrivals -

POPE
,. Mr. · and Mrs. Douglas G. ·Pope,
: : American Navy Base, Cuba, an·
· no110ce the birth of a son, Jeremy
~ Alan. The infant weighed seven
: pounds.
• Maternal grandparents are Mr.
• and Mrs. Walter Gilbert of Florida.
· Paternal grandparents are Howell
: Pope of Pennsylvania and Nancy
·: Pope.
Great-grandparents are Mr. and
: Mrs. Hugo Zip!, Mrs. Ada Pope and
: Mr. and Mrs. C. W. BuckofRutland.
·····

RUTLAND TOPS MEETS
Twenty-three members weighed
in, showing a net weight loss of 24/
pounds, at the recent meeting of
TOPS OH570, Ruiland.
Grace Stout was the weekly queen,
with Imogene Dean as runner-up.
New KIW was Mary Roush, with the
club having nine KOPS.
The club announced two new con·
tests, that began July 22-August 26.
The Flmny Money Contest is one,
and The Pot of Gold Contest another ,
in which each member is to bring a
piece of jewelry. Two winners will
be announced, with those losing the
most weight winning the contests.
No meeting will be held August 12,
due to the Meigs County Fair. Per·
sons interested in joining TOPS may
call992-3319.

ELLJO'IT

CLARK
Steve and Penny Ciu. :. ,
: Welchtown Road, Pomeroy, an:: nounce the birth of a son, Jerrod
· • Steven on July 16. The infant
. weighed seven Pounds and 11 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Eblin, Mid·
dleport. Paternsl grandparents are
Gene Clark, Pomeroy, and Evelyn
Clark, Pomeroy.

BING
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bing (the for·
- mer Cindy Smith) announce the bir·
th of a daughter, Nicole o(\nn, on July
17 at HMC. The infant weighed six
pounds, seven ounces.
The baby was born on the bir·
thdate of her aunt, Joyce Bing,
Syracuse, alld of a cousin, Sally
Duckworth Zirllle, Warner-Robbins,
Ga.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell Bing, Long Bing; Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Smith, Middleport, and
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Smith, Mid·
dleport.
Great-grandparents are Mrs. Mae
Spencer, Long Bottom, Mr. and Mrs.
William Fred Smith Sr., Middleport.

Kingsbury
News Notes

Center.
Mr. ·and Mrs. Roger Young,
Wesley and Yvette, entertained l'·ith
a birthday dinrier honoring Mary
Perdas, Linda Well and John Perdas

Sayre · lost the most weight and
Rhonda Roush w~s the runner-up
with one new member being accepted, while the Chester class
received a 20 pound weight loss rilr
bon and Libby Sayre was the runnerup.
The Tuesday night Middleport
class will only be from 5:3(1.7 : 30 p.m.
next week due to the church holding
·
evening Bible School classes.

Alfred .UMW hears reviews
Alfred UMW met at the home of
Ruth Brooks July 15 with an attendance off 11, and 12 sick calls
reported.
.
During the business meeting, Nina
Robinson distributed the Food Co-op
price lists. A friendship card was
signed for Helen Woode. The group
voted to send $10 to the Meigs BlOO&lt;Imobile to help with office supplies.
Thelma Henderson had the prayer
calendar and chose Mildred L. Reitz
who is engaged in church development work in Panama. The group
signed a birthday card for her.
Mrs. Henderson reported on the
book, "Beginning to ,Pray," by An·
thony Bloom, saying .that his account of his early life fleeing from
the Communists was very . in·
formative.

.

and

1

The immigration service now
checks names on marriage-related
petitions to see if they match thoSe in
mail-i&gt;rder bridal magazines. The
task is .compUcated by the large
number of catalogs, he said.
Moyer said the practice of ordering a spouse out of a catalo_g is
~· not widespread, but I dim't want it
to become a popular thing." ·
The catalogs advertise the women
by giving such general information
asage, occupatioQ, weight,
measurements and reljgion. Men
also can submit their pictures.

Ohioans enjoy
pleasant weather

in-

mentioned

cidents from it.
The hostess served banana split
sundaes during t}le soc~! hour to the
group and guests, Debb1e and Uoyd
Brooks.
The next meeting will be at the
church August'l9 with Annie Thompson, program , leader, and Janet
Moore and Florence Ann Spencer as
hostesses.
Others present were Genevieve
Guthrie, Nellie Parker, June Stear·
ns, ()sie Mae Follrod and Clara
Foilrod.

DEHUMIDIFIERS

'

An Admiral dehumidifie·r can
make vour basement or other

We take s~ial care in filling all prescriptions to the
letter... for your own safety.
Rely
our competeqt staff.

.di.m.P area more comfortable by
taking the exce ss moisture out ot

the air.

It

helps protect furniture

By The ABioclated.Preu
Clear, cool and dry weather was
over Ohio during the night. Under
the clear skies and with light winds,
temperatures dropped into the mid
to upper 50s ln the north and into the
low lA&gt; mid~ in the south.
,
High pressure centered over lower
Michigan brought the fair, pleasant
weather to Ohio. The high was to
move slowly eastward across Ohio
today and be over eastern Pen·
llSylvanla tonight, then drop slowly
to the south on Friday.
This weather pattern was to bring
mild temperatures and sunny skies
to Ohio today and clear, pleasant
weather tonight.
A southwesterly flow of warm and
more hwnid air will develop over
Ohio behlnd the high Friday, but the
ski~ will contlnue to be mostly sun·

'

on

and woodwork from the da mag-

ing effects of constant dampness .
.11 retards mildew, mold , musty
odors and ru st - gives your home

VILLAGE

more living a rea .

'

Baker Furniture

PHARMACY

Middleport, Ohio

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ny.

due early next year
smUTHERS, Ohio (AP) - An
Ohio postal official says a new, ninedigit zip code planned for early next
year is designed to move mail more
efficiently, but one businesswoman
doesn't agree.
·
"The zip code . system almost 20
years ago was the salvation of the
postal system. This should do it,"
said Joseph Pruneski, the post.
master of Struthers. Pruneski will
coordinate the new system for
Warren and Youngstown.
The new codes are aimed at
tlfgeting mail to smaller areas and
will allow mechanization to do more
of the work. The four new Qigits will
be added to existing zip codes
following a hyphen.
The five-digit system has "been a
boon for the post office, but it's
reached its , limitation," Pruneski
said. "We had to add Oil to allow us
to handle increased volume without
· Increased costs."
Postal officials believe tile new
system will save money by in·
creasing the speed and accuracy of
delivery.
Bette Hamady, owner of the
Youngstown Letter Shop, which
deals in hundreds of thousands of
names and addresses, said the new
code will cause difficulties at first
for some businesses.
.
"It's going to be very costly for all
companies," she said. "It's going to
be very expensive for us." She said

.

'•
0

SAVE '560

LARGE SAVINGS
FROM THE ....
"LARGEST
FURNilURE
SlURE
IN THE

REGULAR 11560

SOFA &amp; lOVESEAT

'99995

REGULAR 1660

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PRICES
KIDS .

GRASSHOPPERS
40% OFF REG. PRICE

J·

AROUND

LANCER

BROOKWOOD

SOFA· CHAIR
·&amp;OTTOMAN

.

SAVE '500

All SUMMER MERCHANDISE
40% to 50% OFF

Regular
' $1099.95

BR

SOFA· CHAIR
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SAV~
Regular
$1199.95

0

heritage house
OF SHOES

SAVE •.00

o:

Regular ·
$1099.95

S&amp;9995

;:or

''
'

0

•'
'

·.

.·

0

'0
••
0'

When catastrophic
; illness or injury strikes,
high-level major m~cal ooverage is'vital to your
employees and their families. That's why your
Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans offer group
major medical with benefits up to a quarter of a
million dollars.
For qualified companies, Blue Cross and Blue
Shield Plans can package all their group benefit
needs. A package can include major medical,
along with coverages for hospital and doctors'
services, dental care, vision and hearing care
and prescription drugs.
And now group life insurance with accident
· benefits-for employees and dependents, along
with employee disability income protection, is
available. It can be designed right in to give you
a complete benefits program.
'
Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield representa·
tive can review all the options with you and help
you design a benefits package that best fits the
needs of your company.. . one that provides the
right balance betwee~ coverage and cost.

''

';

POW!~

-- - - -

l

.·

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·_·

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.

By Reallatlc

~

Connects.to your car ste1re&lt;&gt;l
for greatly improved sound.
40 watts RMS total output .
With underdash mtg. hardware. 12·1880
Not for hlgh·power equipment or
3-wlre (common ground) speakers
or swltcnes.

· Reg. 99.95

Packet

12·1852

_ _ _ _ _....:.,.
('-_ __

12·1851

An economical way to add fine stereo to
your car. Molded 3" surface-mounts and..
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even sub-compact cars.

T18..,1tllr

Coded signal alerts you and only you up to
'h-rillle away if your car is being tampered
with . FCC license
Batteries extra.

~
~

CHARGEIT
(MOST STORES/

TURN YOUR TELEPHONE INTO A MESSAGE CENTER
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Telephone Answerer with Voice By Radio Sheck
Actuation Message System

Save31o/o

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For value added to your benefits.
doll&lt;U", package your group benefits
with the leaders. Call your Blue Cross
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Boosts callsrs voice to room. filling volume for "hands-free"
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Midleport,

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tHROUGHOUT
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AND LOOK

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AUTO
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JUr'\T

TIME

24

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theater showing the star's latest hit · million. His first big international
The shoe' for today' s textured
"Being There;" had been inundated hit was "The Mouse that Roared," ln
clothing
. Sm.ooth anct . brain
with telephone calls, telegrams, 1959; his greatest success was as the ·
leather combination . · Elegant
~eta i llng . Supe rb craftsmanship.
flowers and cards from well-wishers bwnbling Inspector Clouseau in the
"
Pink
Panther"
series.
and fans.
Despite his lame, wealth, homes
Sellers had been scheduled to fly
on
two continents , private jet, yacht,
to Los Angelest oday to join his wife
cars and love life with '
expensive
for a vacation and her 26th birthday
beautiful
women,
he remalned ridFriday. But he collapsed in his hotel
dled
by
doubts.
Colors
suite Tuesday afternoon, and she
Brown
"I
have
no
personality
of
my
own
flew to umdon Wednesday. She said
Black
they had talked on the telephone whatsoever. No personality lA&gt; offer
Monday night and he was "air to the public. I cant't do anything
within myself. I have nothing to
solutely fine, really bubbling."
sellers suffered his first heart at· project. I've got so many inhibitions
tack in 1964, seven . weeks after thst I sometimes wonder whether I
marrying his ·second wife, Swedish · exist at all," he confessed.
The stonny jlassage of his four
actress Britt Ekland. He had
marriages
and other love affairs
·another major attack in 1977 and
made
constant
headlines. He
was fitted with a pacemaker. Last
married
Australian
actress Anne
May be was admitted to a hospital in
Howe
in
1951.
They
divorced
11 years
· Dublin after a mild attack
later
after
having
·two
children,
Miss Ekland brought their
daughter; Victoria, to London fro{D Michael and Sarah Jane. He
Stockholm Tuesday but did not her- married Miss Ekland in 1964 and
self yisit the hospital, saying Miss they divorced in 1969. In 1970 he
Frederick and not she should be with married socialite Miranda Quarry
and they ~votced in 1974. He
him.
Sellers made 54 movies over a married Lynn Frederick, with
Middleport, Ohio
period of 29 years and a fortune Said whom he had oilly just been united
in press reports to .total nearly $12 this year after a split.
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BOSTON (AP)·- A state Supreme
Court justice has issued an order
temporarily barring Massachusetts
from denying '' medically
necessary" abortions to welfare
recipients.
The order does not cover abortions

SHOES FOR EVERYONE

the new code will require "much
more sorting," indicating the costs
will ultimately revert to the con·
sumer.
Her business uses a system which
appears to accomplish the same
goals of the nine-digit code but
without the additional numbers.
Mrs. Hamady said her employees
now sort mail in packages that go to ·
individual carrier routes.
"So when we send them down to
the post office, they don't even have
to sort them," she explained. "The
rate is much cheaper. It's $67 a
thousand compared , to $84 a
thousand" for mail not sorted by
carrier routes.
The five-digit codes .speeded up
the process of getting mail to local
post offices or substations, but of·
ficials said there .were problems
when the mail was sorted.
The new program will be .strlcUy
voluntary in the beginning, said
Pruneski, who expects·the business
commuility to support it.
He said the general public will still
be able to milil first class parcels e
existing system, bot hopes the new
code will eventually be adopted.
"It's going to take a little while to
be fully implemented," Pruneski
said. "When we first started the zip
code prtJgram, it took a while to get
50 percent usage. Now .we have 95
percent."
·

your ·
with

.• NcM;
.

thst are not medically necessary.
The rullng issued by Justice Benjsmin Kaplan Wednesday is ill force
untll Aug. 1. But it is expected to be
extended until the full court can hear
the case. The court is in recess until
September, although it does convene
.periodically during the summer.
and Kirk Chevalier. Those helping
Kaplan's injunction prevents the
them celebrate were Mr. and Mrs. state from enforcing its anti·
Wayne Beal, Mr. and Mrs. Roy abortion law. The injunction
Salser of Coolville, Mr. and Mrs. specifically mandates that the state
John Perdas, Mary and Lisa of provide 1110ney to "pregnant women
Chambersburg, Pa., Mr. and Mrs. who desire abortions and whose
Russell Well and Heather, Mr. and
physicianS have determined thst
Mrs. Kirk Chevalier and Jessica, all abortion is medically necessary,
of Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Cullurils even though not necessary to
and son and Mr. and Mrs. Homer prevent their death."
Bailey.
State law allows public money to
Mr. and Mrs. Jolin !Jean were
fund abortions only if the mother's •
Fourth of July campers. at Great
life is threatened.
•
Bend as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dick
U.S. District ·Judge David S.
Harris. other campers were Mr. and
Nelson had ordered the state not to
Mrs. Robert Ried, Rodney and
enforce the 1979 law. But then the
.David, Pataskala, Mrs. Richard
U.S: Supreme Court ruled three
~th and Joshua of Nol'folk, Va.,
weeks ago in a separate case thst
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ried, Charles
the federal and state govenunents
and Robert of Shade, Mr. and Mrs. ·have the right to restrict public funKenneth Markins of Racine, Mr. and
ding of abortions.
Mrs. Garold Gilkey, Tammy and
Gov. Edward J. king said he
Amber, Athens, Linda Zitts and
would move immediately to see that
children, Carrie and Jimmy ri
the state statute was implemented.
Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs. ·John W.
The Civil Liberties Union of
Dean, James and Jeremy. On Sun·
Massachusetts then brought the acday the sixth birthday of• Jeremy
tion in state Supreme Court.
Dean was celebrated following a birThe case affects only women
thday dinner. Jeremy opened his
seeking public funds for abortions;
many gifts after which homemade . those who pay for the procedure
ice cream was made and swved
themselves are not involved.
with a birthday ca~e.

two of his three children by previous
marriages, · Victoria , 15, and
Michael, 26.
,~E very effort was made to keep
his heart going but it just did not
respond," a spokesman told repor;
ters. "There was a very rapid
deterioration. He had really had all
the drugs and all the machines,. it is
possible to have. His death was eiltirely due to natural' causes. His
heart just faded away."
The hospital, not far from a movie

Nine digit zip .code NATIONAL SECURITY
ADVISER ZblgaifW Brzezlu·
ski Is reportedly getting ou
better Wllb Sec!retary of
State Edmlllld Muskle tbau
-he did wltb Maslde's predecesspr, Cyras Vaace. ..1
detect Do dlffereuces
betweea Mr. Muskle and
myself oa uy major Issue,''
says .Brzezluskl, wbo
appears to kave retreated
from tbe spotlight sluce tbe
cllaage •I leadership at the
State Departmeul.

Medically necessary abortions
in upheave! in Massachusetts

Open
M-Sat. 9:30 til 5

LONDON (AP) - Comedian Peter
Sellers, British star of more than 40
hit' movies thst in 20 years made
countless millions roar with
laughter, died early today without
.regaining consciousness after a
heart attack. He was 54.
Sellers died at 12:28·a.m. in the in·
tensive care 'unit of London~ Mid·
• dlesex Hospital, 34 hours after suf·
fering his third major heart attack
in16years. ·
At his bedside were his fourth
wife, actress Lynne Frederick, and

ADMIRAL

Mrs. Henderson \vas leader of the
program "Battered Woman." The
group all took part in reading and
discussion. Some of the members
had viewed a recent TV movie,
"Battered,"

Heart attack claims actor Peter Sellers

Immigration .officials investigating frauds

CINCINNATI (AP)- The federal are simply seeking a way to gain enImmigration and Naturalization trance to the country, Moyer said. In
Service says several men may have the process, they 1are coinmitting
been bilked out of thousands of visa and marriage fraud , he said.
dollars they spent on mail-order · U.S. citizens occasionally will
brides who never arrived.
conunit fraud by conspiring with a
As part of the agency-'s nationwide person In another country to bring
investigation, lour men will meet him or her to America, he said. In
with immigration officials next such cases, the American marries
week to explain why they're. the alien but doesn't live with the
marrying Filipino women they've spouse.ZUELEWA SMITH
never met.
Aliens are violating federal law
HOSTS AUJQLIARY
"I don't want to say they're all unless they remain married to the
Mrs. Zuelelia Smith served as
sham marriages, but the indi~ation • same person lor at least two years,
hostess when the Lewis Manley unit · is it's not the best way to start a · Moyer said. ·
263, American Legion Auxiliary met marriage," said A.D. Moyer, deputy"
at the Meigs Inn recently.
director of the immigration serMrs. Ernest Bowles presided at
vice's Cincinnati offi~e .
the meeting which Opened in
The men to be interviewed filed
ritualistic form. Annual dues were · petitions with the immigration serpsid and a thank-you card was read
vice, asking to bring the women to
from Mrs. Lorrene Snyder, eighth
America so they can be married.
INVITATION EXTENDED
district president. A contribution, in
J\n invitation bas been extended to
Moyer said a fifth man has filed a
petition to marry a Honduran
any person interested in joining Slin· .memory of Mrs. Naomi Bently, was
derella Diet Classes by calling J o made to the National Child Welfare woman he has never met, and three
)
women have asked to marry men
Ann Newsome, instructor, at 992- program.
Mrs. Bowles appointed the they have never seen.
3382.
Immigrati9n officials believe the
A general topic, "Overeating and following . chairmen for 1981 :
the How's, When's, and Why's" was Americanism, Mrs. Campbell Har· men may have located the Filipino
per; children and youth, Mrs. · Ar· women through mail-i&gt;rder bride
discussed by all the classes this
catalogs circulating in the United
week, and tips were given on how to nold Richards; Veterans' affairs,
think and act more positive a bout . Mrs. Ruth Brown; community ser· States .
vice, Mrs. Lucille Saunders ;
If they don't show "extremely
yourdiet.
.
Barbara Varian lost the most legislation, Mrs. Allen Hampton; gQOd reason" why they're marrying
national security and poppy, Mrs. women they've never met, the imweight and Beverly Richard was
Zuelelia
Smith.
migration service has tile authority
runner-up when the Monday night
Mrs.
Hampton,
retiring
president,
to
refuse their request, Moyer said.
Mason class met. In the Tuesday
was
presented
with
a
past
Some women never intend to
morning Mason class Connie Thompresident's pin, by Mrs. Richards, marry men in the United States and
pson lost the most weight and Jane
past district president, while Mrs.
Johnson was runner-up.
Bowles
received a president's pin.
At the Middleport class Juanita

. Marsha and Herb ·Elliott announce
: the birth of a . daughter, Brandy
Kaye, on July 10. The infant weighed
• seven pounds and 13 ounces.
· Grandparents are Mrs. Velma
Weaver, BUffalo, and Iva Stewart,
·• Rutland. They are also the parents
: of three other daughters, Angela,
: Amy1e and Becky.·

Sunday dinner guests of Mrs.
Neva King were Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Williams, PortSmouth, Robert
and Paul Williams of Columbus, Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Bixler and
children of Fiorida, Mr. and' Mrs.
Virgil King and Grace King, David
King and Mrs. Jessie Carr.
Mrs. Murl Wood who is ill is
recovering slowly. .
'
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
John W. Dean were Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Watkins and family of
Massillon, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Smalley of Mustogee, Okla., and
Walter Terrell of Pataskala.
Mrs. Ruby Burnside spent the
Fourth of July with Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Thoma and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom McElroy and
son, Richard, of Zion, Ill., are spen·
ding a week with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Virgil King.
· An old-fashioned . belling took
place at the home ol Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil King for their daughter Judy
and husband, Obie, who had just
returned from Hawaii from their
honeymoon. Mr. and Mrs. Obie
Coomer (Judy King) spent a few
days with her parentS before returning to their home at Bourbonnais,
till.
Mrs. Eugene Smith, who has been
a patient at Veterans Memorial
· Hospital for the past two weeks, has
returned to her home and is im·
proving slowly.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Yoho haa as
recent visitors their son, Richard,
and family of Kansas, Mr. and Mrs.
· Charley Lyons from Florida and
their grandson, Bobby, who is here
from Illinois. Other vi.oitors were
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Lake of Mason,
W. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Steve Brickles
and sons.
Here visiting Mr. and Mrs. Owen
Smith is his brother from Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Carr of Akron
were recent visitors of Mrs. Neva
King.
Mrs. Ruby Burnside had as recent
guests her sister·ln·law, Mrs. Adria
Nelson of Marblehelld, Ohio, Mrs.
Brenda Bush and children, Janet
and Melinda from Elyria, Ohio.
Recenf visitors of Mrs. Hazel Arnold were Mr; and Mi-s. Lester Ar·
nold and sons, Columbua, Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald McNally and family of
Athens, Burdell Brafford and Pearl
Clark of Columbus, Mr .and Mrs.
Patrick Williams and ' family of
·McArthur.
Miss Debbie Coomer of Illinois
who spent two weeks ~r: and
Mrs. Virgll King reliuned ~home
Saturday.
Mr1and Mrs. Roger Swartz viSited
recently with his father, Gene Swartz, who is a patient at Holzer Medical

Mail-order brides

Area goings on noted

...

7- 'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 24, 1980

~ ·

- --'--

ATHENS OFFICE: Hl05 South State Street, Suite #4 , Alben·~ , Ohio 45701 (614) 592-627316232
SerVtng: Athens, Jackson, Gallia, Hockin&amp;. Lawrence,_Meigs, Morgan and Vinton Counties.

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6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, July 24, 1980

~ New arrivals -

POPE
,. Mr. · and Mrs. Douglas G. ·Pope,
: : American Navy Base, Cuba, an·
· no110ce the birth of a son, Jeremy
~ Alan. The infant weighed seven
: pounds.
• Maternal grandparents are Mr.
• and Mrs. Walter Gilbert of Florida.
· Paternal grandparents are Howell
: Pope of Pennsylvania and Nancy
·: Pope.
Great-grandparents are Mr. and
: Mrs. Hugo Zip!, Mrs. Ada Pope and
: Mr. and Mrs. C. W. BuckofRutland.
·····

RUTLAND TOPS MEETS
Twenty-three members weighed
in, showing a net weight loss of 24/
pounds, at the recent meeting of
TOPS OH570, Ruiland.
Grace Stout was the weekly queen,
with Imogene Dean as runner-up.
New KIW was Mary Roush, with the
club having nine KOPS.
The club announced two new con·
tests, that began July 22-August 26.
The Flmny Money Contest is one,
and The Pot of Gold Contest another ,
in which each member is to bring a
piece of jewelry. Two winners will
be announced, with those losing the
most weight winning the contests.
No meeting will be held August 12,
due to the Meigs County Fair. Per·
sons interested in joining TOPS may
call992-3319.

ELLJO'IT

CLARK
Steve and Penny Ciu. :. ,
: Welchtown Road, Pomeroy, an:: nounce the birth of a son, Jerrod
· • Steven on July 16. The infant
. weighed seven Pounds and 11 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Eblin, Mid·
dleport. Paternsl grandparents are
Gene Clark, Pomeroy, and Evelyn
Clark, Pomeroy.

BING
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bing (the for·
- mer Cindy Smith) announce the bir·
th of a daughter, Nicole o(\nn, on July
17 at HMC. The infant weighed six
pounds, seven ounces.
The baby was born on the bir·
thdate of her aunt, Joyce Bing,
Syracuse, alld of a cousin, Sally
Duckworth Zirllle, Warner-Robbins,
Ga.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Lowell Bing, Long Bing; Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Smith, Middleport, and
Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Smith, Mid·
dleport.
Great-grandparents are Mrs. Mae
Spencer, Long Bottom, Mr. and Mrs.
William Fred Smith Sr., Middleport.

Kingsbury
News Notes

Center.
Mr. ·and Mrs. Roger Young,
Wesley and Yvette, entertained l'·ith
a birthday dinrier honoring Mary
Perdas, Linda Well and John Perdas

Sayre · lost the most weight and
Rhonda Roush w~s the runner-up
with one new member being accepted, while the Chester class
received a 20 pound weight loss rilr
bon and Libby Sayre was the runnerup.
The Tuesday night Middleport
class will only be from 5:3(1.7 : 30 p.m.
next week due to the church holding
·
evening Bible School classes.

Alfred .UMW hears reviews
Alfred UMW met at the home of
Ruth Brooks July 15 with an attendance off 11, and 12 sick calls
reported.
.
During the business meeting, Nina
Robinson distributed the Food Co-op
price lists. A friendship card was
signed for Helen Woode. The group
voted to send $10 to the Meigs BlOO&lt;Imobile to help with office supplies.
Thelma Henderson had the prayer
calendar and chose Mildred L. Reitz
who is engaged in church development work in Panama. The group
signed a birthday card for her.
Mrs. Henderson reported on the
book, "Beginning to ,Pray," by An·
thony Bloom, saying .that his account of his early life fleeing from
the Communists was very . in·
formative.

.

and

1

The immigration service now
checks names on marriage-related
petitions to see if they match thoSe in
mail-i&gt;rder bridal magazines. The
task is .compUcated by the large
number of catalogs, he said.
Moyer said the practice of ordering a spouse out of a catalo_g is
~· not widespread, but I dim't want it
to become a popular thing." ·
The catalogs advertise the women
by giving such general information
asage, occupatioQ, weight,
measurements and reljgion. Men
also can submit their pictures.

Ohioans enjoy
pleasant weather

in-

mentioned

cidents from it.
The hostess served banana split
sundaes during t}le soc~! hour to the
group and guests, Debb1e and Uoyd
Brooks.
The next meeting will be at the
church August'l9 with Annie Thompson, program , leader, and Janet
Moore and Florence Ann Spencer as
hostesses.
Others present were Genevieve
Guthrie, Nellie Parker, June Stear·
ns, ()sie Mae Follrod and Clara
Foilrod.

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By The ABioclated.Preu
Clear, cool and dry weather was
over Ohio during the night. Under
the clear skies and with light winds,
temperatures dropped into the mid
to upper 50s ln the north and into the
low lA&gt; mid~ in the south.
,
High pressure centered over lower
Michigan brought the fair, pleasant
weather to Ohio. The high was to
move slowly eastward across Ohio
today and be over eastern Pen·
llSylvanla tonight, then drop slowly
to the south on Friday.
This weather pattern was to bring
mild temperatures and sunny skies
to Ohio today and clear, pleasant
weather tonight.
A southwesterly flow of warm and
more hwnid air will develop over
Ohio behlnd the high Friday, but the
ski~ will contlnue to be mostly sun·

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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due early next year
smUTHERS, Ohio (AP) - An
Ohio postal official says a new, ninedigit zip code planned for early next
year is designed to move mail more
efficiently, but one businesswoman
doesn't agree.
·
"The zip code . system almost 20
years ago was the salvation of the
postal system. This should do it,"
said Joseph Pruneski, the post.
master of Struthers. Pruneski will
coordinate the new system for
Warren and Youngstown.
The new codes are aimed at
tlfgeting mail to smaller areas and
will allow mechanization to do more
of the work. The four new Qigits will
be added to existing zip codes
following a hyphen.
The five-digit system has "been a
boon for the post office, but it's
reached its , limitation," Pruneski
said. "We had to add Oil to allow us
to handle increased volume without
· Increased costs."
Postal officials believe tile new
system will save money by in·
creasing the speed and accuracy of
delivery.
Bette Hamady, owner of the
Youngstown Letter Shop, which
deals in hundreds of thousands of
names and addresses, said the new
code will cause difficulties at first
for some businesses.
.
"It's going to be very costly for all
companies," she said. "It's going to
be very expensive for us." She said

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theater showing the star's latest hit · million. His first big international
The shoe' for today' s textured
"Being There;" had been inundated hit was "The Mouse that Roared," ln
clothing
. Sm.ooth anct . brain
with telephone calls, telegrams, 1959; his greatest success was as the ·
leather combination . · Elegant
~eta i llng . Supe rb craftsmanship.
flowers and cards from well-wishers bwnbling Inspector Clouseau in the
"
Pink
Panther"
series.
and fans.
Despite his lame, wealth, homes
Sellers had been scheduled to fly
on
two continents , private jet, yacht,
to Los Angelest oday to join his wife
cars and love life with '
expensive
for a vacation and her 26th birthday
beautiful
women,
he remalned ridFriday. But he collapsed in his hotel
dled
by
doubts.
Colors
suite Tuesday afternoon, and she
Brown
"I
have
no
personality
of
my
own
flew to umdon Wednesday. She said
Black
they had talked on the telephone whatsoever. No personality lA&gt; offer
Monday night and he was "air to the public. I cant't do anything
within myself. I have nothing to
solutely fine, really bubbling."
sellers suffered his first heart at· project. I've got so many inhibitions
tack in 1964, seven . weeks after thst I sometimes wonder whether I
marrying his ·second wife, Swedish · exist at all," he confessed.
The stonny jlassage of his four
actress Britt Ekland. He had
marriages
and other love affairs
·another major attack in 1977 and
made
constant
headlines. He
was fitted with a pacemaker. Last
married
Australian
actress Anne
May be was admitted to a hospital in
Howe
in
1951.
They
divorced
11 years
· Dublin after a mild attack
later
after
having
·two
children,
Miss Ekland brought their
daughter; Victoria, to London fro{D Michael and Sarah Jane. He
Stockholm Tuesday but did not her- married Miss Ekland in 1964 and
self yisit the hospital, saying Miss they divorced in 1969. In 1970 he
Frederick and not she should be with married socialite Miranda Quarry
and they ~votced in 1974. He
him.
Sellers made 54 movies over a married Lynn Frederick, with
Middleport, Ohio
period of 29 years and a fortune Said whom he had oilly just been united
in press reports to .total nearly $12 this year after a split.
~.:..:.-~..:.._ __:_ _ _..:_.:___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...J.._~...,....---.-----

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'

BOSTON (AP)·- A state Supreme
Court justice has issued an order
temporarily barring Massachusetts
from denying '' medically
necessary" abortions to welfare
recipients.
The order does not cover abortions

SHOES FOR EVERYONE

the new code will require "much
more sorting," indicating the costs
will ultimately revert to the con·
sumer.
Her business uses a system which
appears to accomplish the same
goals of the nine-digit code but
without the additional numbers.
Mrs. Hamady said her employees
now sort mail in packages that go to ·
individual carrier routes.
"So when we send them down to
the post office, they don't even have
to sort them," she explained. "The
rate is much cheaper. It's $67 a
thousand compared , to $84 a
thousand" for mail not sorted by
carrier routes.
The five-digit codes .speeded up
the process of getting mail to local
post offices or substations, but of·
ficials said there .were problems
when the mail was sorted.
The new program will be .strlcUy
voluntary in the beginning, said
Pruneski, who expects·the business
commuility to support it.
He said the general public will still
be able to milil first class parcels e
existing system, bot hopes the new
code will eventually be adopted.
"It's going to take a little while to
be fully implemented," Pruneski
said. "When we first started the zip
code prtJgram, it took a while to get
50 percent usage. Now .we have 95
percent."
·

your ·
with

.• NcM;
.

thst are not medically necessary.
The rullng issued by Justice Benjsmin Kaplan Wednesday is ill force
untll Aug. 1. But it is expected to be
extended until the full court can hear
the case. The court is in recess until
September, although it does convene
.periodically during the summer.
and Kirk Chevalier. Those helping
Kaplan's injunction prevents the
them celebrate were Mr. and Mrs. state from enforcing its anti·
Wayne Beal, Mr. and Mrs. Roy abortion law. The injunction
Salser of Coolville, Mr. and Mrs. specifically mandates that the state
John Perdas, Mary and Lisa of provide 1110ney to "pregnant women
Chambersburg, Pa., Mr. and Mrs. who desire abortions and whose
Russell Well and Heather, Mr. and
physicianS have determined thst
Mrs. Kirk Chevalier and Jessica, all abortion is medically necessary,
of Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Cullurils even though not necessary to
and son and Mr. and Mrs. Homer prevent their death."
Bailey.
State law allows public money to
Mr. and Mrs. Jolin !Jean were
fund abortions only if the mother's •
Fourth of July campers. at Great
life is threatened.
•
Bend as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dick
U.S. District ·Judge David S.
Harris. other campers were Mr. and
Nelson had ordered the state not to
Mrs. Robert Ried, Rodney and
enforce the 1979 law. But then the
.David, Pataskala, Mrs. Richard
U.S: Supreme Court ruled three
~th and Joshua of Nol'folk, Va.,
weeks ago in a separate case thst
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ried, Charles
the federal and state govenunents
and Robert of Shade, Mr. and Mrs. ·have the right to restrict public funKenneth Markins of Racine, Mr. and
ding of abortions.
Mrs. Garold Gilkey, Tammy and
Gov. Edward J. king said he
Amber, Athens, Linda Zitts and
would move immediately to see that
children, Carrie and Jimmy ri
the state statute was implemented.
Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs. ·John W.
The Civil Liberties Union of
Dean, James and Jeremy. On Sun·
Massachusetts then brought the acday the sixth birthday of• Jeremy
tion in state Supreme Court.
Dean was celebrated following a birThe case affects only women
thday dinner. Jeremy opened his
seeking public funds for abortions;
many gifts after which homemade . those who pay for the procedure
ice cream was made and swved
themselves are not involved.
with a birthday ca~e.

two of his three children by previous
marriages, · Victoria , 15, and
Michael, 26.
,~E very effort was made to keep
his heart going but it just did not
respond," a spokesman told repor;
ters. "There was a very rapid
deterioration. He had really had all
the drugs and all the machines,. it is
possible to have. His death was eiltirely due to natural' causes. His
heart just faded away."
The hospital, not far from a movie

Nine digit zip .code NATIONAL SECURITY
ADVISER ZblgaifW Brzezlu·
ski Is reportedly getting ou
better Wllb Sec!retary of
State Edmlllld Muskle tbau
-he did wltb Maslde's predecesspr, Cyras Vaace. ..1
detect Do dlffereuces
betweea Mr. Muskle and
myself oa uy major Issue,''
says .Brzezluskl, wbo
appears to kave retreated
from tbe spotlight sluce tbe
cllaage •I leadership at the
State Departmeul.

Medically necessary abortions
in upheave! in Massachusetts

Open
M-Sat. 9:30 til 5

LONDON (AP) - Comedian Peter
Sellers, British star of more than 40
hit' movies thst in 20 years made
countless millions roar with
laughter, died early today without
.regaining consciousness after a
heart attack. He was 54.
Sellers died at 12:28·a.m. in the in·
tensive care 'unit of London~ Mid·
• dlesex Hospital, 34 hours after suf·
fering his third major heart attack
in16years. ·
At his bedside were his fourth
wife, actress Lynne Frederick, and

ADMIRAL

Mrs. Henderson \vas leader of the
program "Battered Woman." The
group all took part in reading and
discussion. Some of the members
had viewed a recent TV movie,
"Battered,"

Heart attack claims actor Peter Sellers

Immigration .officials investigating frauds

CINCINNATI (AP)- The federal are simply seeking a way to gain enImmigration and Naturalization trance to the country, Moyer said. In
Service says several men may have the process, they 1are coinmitting
been bilked out of thousands of visa and marriage fraud , he said.
dollars they spent on mail-order · U.S. citizens occasionally will
brides who never arrived.
conunit fraud by conspiring with a
As part of the agency-'s nationwide person In another country to bring
investigation, lour men will meet him or her to America, he said. In
with immigration officials next such cases, the American marries
week to explain why they're. the alien but doesn't live with the
marrying Filipino women they've spouse.ZUELEWA SMITH
never met.
Aliens are violating federal law
HOSTS AUJQLIARY
"I don't want to say they're all unless they remain married to the
Mrs. Zuelelia Smith served as
sham marriages, but the indi~ation • same person lor at least two years,
hostess when the Lewis Manley unit · is it's not the best way to start a · Moyer said. ·
263, American Legion Auxiliary met marriage," said A.D. Moyer, deputy"
at the Meigs Inn recently.
director of the immigration serMrs. Ernest Bowles presided at
vice's Cincinnati offi~e .
the meeting which Opened in
The men to be interviewed filed
ritualistic form. Annual dues were · petitions with the immigration serpsid and a thank-you card was read
vice, asking to bring the women to
from Mrs. Lorrene Snyder, eighth
America so they can be married.
INVITATION EXTENDED
district president. A contribution, in
J\n invitation bas been extended to
Moyer said a fifth man has filed a
petition to marry a Honduran
any person interested in joining Slin· .memory of Mrs. Naomi Bently, was
derella Diet Classes by calling J o made to the National Child Welfare woman he has never met, and three
)
women have asked to marry men
Ann Newsome, instructor, at 992- program.
Mrs. Bowles appointed the they have never seen.
3382.
Immigrati9n officials believe the
A general topic, "Overeating and following . chairmen for 1981 :
the How's, When's, and Why's" was Americanism, Mrs. Campbell Har· men may have located the Filipino
per; children and youth, Mrs. · Ar· women through mail-i&gt;rder bride
discussed by all the classes this
catalogs circulating in the United
week, and tips were given on how to nold Richards; Veterans' affairs,
think and act more positive a bout . Mrs. Ruth Brown; community ser· States .
vice, Mrs. Lucille Saunders ;
If they don't show "extremely
yourdiet.
.
Barbara Varian lost the most legislation, Mrs. Allen Hampton; gQOd reason" why they're marrying
national security and poppy, Mrs. women they've never met, the imweight and Beverly Richard was
Zuelelia
Smith.
migration service has tile authority
runner-up when the Monday night
Mrs.
Hampton,
retiring
president,
to
refuse their request, Moyer said.
Mason class met. In the Tuesday
was
presented
with
a
past
Some women never intend to
morning Mason class Connie Thompresident's pin, by Mrs. Richards, marry men in the United States and
pson lost the most weight and Jane
past district president, while Mrs.
Johnson was runner-up.
Bowles
received a president's pin.
At the Middleport class Juanita

. Marsha and Herb ·Elliott announce
: the birth of a . daughter, Brandy
Kaye, on July 10. The infant weighed
• seven pounds and 13 ounces.
· Grandparents are Mrs. Velma
Weaver, BUffalo, and Iva Stewart,
·• Rutland. They are also the parents
: of three other daughters, Angela,
: Amy1e and Becky.·

Sunday dinner guests of Mrs.
Neva King were Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Williams, PortSmouth, Robert
and Paul Williams of Columbus, Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Bixler and
children of Fiorida, Mr. and' Mrs.
Virgil King and Grace King, David
King and Mrs. Jessie Carr.
Mrs. Murl Wood who is ill is
recovering slowly. .
'
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
John W. Dean were Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Watkins and family of
Massillon, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Smalley of Mustogee, Okla., and
Walter Terrell of Pataskala.
Mrs. Ruby Burnside spent the
Fourth of July with Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Thoma and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom McElroy and
son, Richard, of Zion, Ill., are spen·
ding a week with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Virgil King.
· An old-fashioned . belling took
place at the home ol Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil King for their daughter Judy
and husband, Obie, who had just
returned from Hawaii from their
honeymoon. Mr. and Mrs. Obie
Coomer (Judy King) spent a few
days with her parentS before returning to their home at Bourbonnais,
till.
Mrs. Eugene Smith, who has been
a patient at Veterans Memorial
· Hospital for the past two weeks, has
returned to her home and is im·
proving slowly.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Yoho haa as
recent visitors their son, Richard,
and family of Kansas, Mr. and Mrs.
· Charley Lyons from Florida and
their grandson, Bobby, who is here
from Illinois. Other vi.oitors were
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Lake of Mason,
W. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Steve Brickles
and sons.
Here visiting Mr. and Mrs. Owen
Smith is his brother from Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Carr of Akron
were recent visitors of Mrs. Neva
King.
Mrs. Ruby Burnside had as recent
guests her sister·ln·law, Mrs. Adria
Nelson of Marblehelld, Ohio, Mrs.
Brenda Bush and children, Janet
and Melinda from Elyria, Ohio.
Recenf visitors of Mrs. Hazel Arnold were Mr; and Mi-s. Lester Ar·
nold and sons, Columbua, Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald McNally and family of
Athens, Burdell Brafford and Pearl
Clark of Columbus, Mr .and Mrs.
Patrick Williams and ' family of
·McArthur.
Miss Debbie Coomer of Illinois
who spent two weeks ~r: and
Mrs. Virgll King reliuned ~home
Saturday.
Mr1and Mrs. Roger Swartz viSited
recently with his father, Gene Swartz, who is a patient at Holzer Medical

Mail-order brides

Area goings on noted

...

7- 'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 24, 1980

~ ·

- --'--

ATHENS OFFICE: Hl05 South State Street, Suite #4 , Alben·~ , Ohio 45701 (614) 592-627316232
SerVtng: Athens, Jackson, Gallia, Hockin&amp;. Lawrence,_Meigs, Morgan and Vinton Counties.

Extension Cord
With Duplex Jack
Modular plug . ~kes it
easy to plug your tele-

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a
modular

Check Your Phone Book for ·Your Nearest
VAR Y AT INDIVIDUAL STO RES

'

'

A DIVISION OF TAND Y C ORPORATION

• I

"

�·'
9- 1be Daily Sentinel, Middl.P.,rt-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday July 24 1980

8- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePort-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, July 24, 1980

DICKTRACY

'

•

Helen Help Us

Catholic Church calls for accounting
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) - The
Bolivian junta is trying ,to con·
solidate its power while the Roman
Catholic church, with the support of
foreign diplomats in La Paz, is
calling for an accounting of those
who have disappeared, including 11
priests.
~Church sources said the appeal
was made Wednesday by the papal
nuncio, the Vatican's ambassador tp
Bolivia, to the right-wing government of Gen. Luis Garcia Meza,
which seized power a week ago
today to avoid the anticipated in·
stallation of a leftist president.
"The govemlnent has not responded yet," said a church prelate. He
said the nuncio's efforts received the
backing of some 30 diplomats,
"representing virtually every embassy in La Paz," at a meeting Wed·
nesday night at the Japanese Embassy.
Earlier, a high-ranking church

have gone into hidipg, incl~ding for·
source said the government replied
mer President Hernan Siles Zuazo.
it would not recognize any r~uest
SUes won a plurality of the popular
until former President Lydia
vote in the June 29 presidential elecGueiler had left the nuncio's residention and appeared likely to capture
ce, where she sought asylum. Mrs.
the presidency in a congressional
Gueiler would leave shortly, the
runoff.
.
source said.
In a tape recorded message Wed·
The priests were reported
arrested in raids on several Catholic nesday .to news media, Siles called
again for an uprising and said " We
parishes soon after the coup, an apparent attempt by the milltar'y to are experiencing repression without
precedent in the history of barracks
rout out opponents to the junta, the
sources said. Those seized included revolts." Bolivia has had 190 coups
eight Jesuit priests, according to a in its 155 years since independence.
Meanwhile, · the· regjme's foreign
Bolivian bishop.
The gpverrune.nt, which has minister, Gen. Javier Cerruto, con·
refused to disclose the whereabPuts demned what he called ''unac·
of scores of people last seen being ceptable foreign intervention in
arrested, relea~~ed a casualty list Bolivian affairs."
No foreign govenunent has an·
Wednesday which gave no numbers
of dead and named three soldiers nounced recognition of the new
wounded " in clashes with ex- regime. The Carter administration
. condemned the takeover and called
. tremists."
Most politicians and union leaders for a ret~ to civilian rule; recalled
its ambassador to La Paz and halted

Should man tell friend she needs
plastic surgery to improve looks?

military and econoinic aid.
Downtown La Paz has returned to
normal during daylight hours.
Businesses are open and many
troops have been withdraW!I from
the city center. A 9 p.m.·t&lt;Hi a.m.
curfew remains in effect, along with
martial law, and sporadic night·
time gunfire continues.
In outlying areas of La Paz, most
factories remain closed in answer to
a general strike call by labor
leaders. "We are on strike indefinitely. We won't work while this
fascist government remains in
power," said one of the strikers at
the Said textile mill, the largest in
the La Paz area.
Opponents to the junta dynamited
the capital's waterworks Wednesday, reducing water pressure.
The government said its
"precautions" had caused the effort
to fail.

'

question which involved a
BY HELEN BO'ITEL
teen-ager's use of the
Special correspondent
telephone.
DEAR HELEN:
I still say conversations
My 5G-year old friend coUld
be limited to · three
should
be a striking woman, if she'd
get the sags and dewlaps minutes. After all, the
telephone company sets this
fixed .
, All she needs is a face lift, rule - or you pay more
and I'd be her willing slave. (long-distance).
The best formula in raising
I'm 55' and well-preserved,
and I don't want a dinner children is "Love, limit and
companion who might look help them achieve.' ' So I'll
older than me. Yet Ilove her continue to limit our girl's
talk to three minutes for each
. in every other way.
telephone
caller - and not
Should I suggest that she
many
per
evening. And I'll
luive plastic surgery? She
can afford it. _
AGE· still insist that boys should
call girls, not vice versa.
CONSCIOUS MAN
Pollsters will tell you that
DEARMAN:
for
every letter you get
No!
against
someone, 100 would
If your woman friemi
brings up the subject of face be for him, if they'd bother to
lifts, encourage , her, but write. My head . may be
don't "lead with her chin" or bloody, but it's still unbowed.
.
you may put this relationship ..:.. RALPH
DEAR
RALPH:
into a permanent sag. -H.
My readers were 100 percentaga~tyou,notbecause
DEAR HELEN:
of
your stand on telephone
This is "Ralph" who
conversations
and raising
stirred up such ·a hornet's
teen-agers
(though
they connest among women readers.
Let's get back to the original sidered you overly strict

I

BORN LOSER

High court says disahili~es triggered by

BRONZE STEELWORKERS TEST lbe coolenl of steel in
an open-bearlb furoace Ia Ibis oew work by George Segal.
Tbe sculptures - modeled afler two real steelworkers ~
were a recent gill to lbe steel clly of Youngslowo, Obio,
from tbe local arls council.

emotional st~ess not covered by Ohio laws

rv..::o01~

.. r

ttJ!J'T 14.W1 WHAT OOP.f;
c.At.l

ro WRDI~It&gt;

. Li'7T8t.l, 1-lDT!\II-llo IS SO
~0

THAT IT C.AI-l'T

-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Because of the alleged attack, Ms.
Ohio Supreme Court says Szymanski's counsel said she suffers
disabilities triggered by emotional "mental and physical distress ...
stress are not covered by state which resulted in her total disability
· workers compensation laws.
· from Feb. 12,1976, to April 12,1976."
The coUrt, in effect, denied the · Ms. Szymanski was described as
claim of a Cleveland woman who having a heart condition which
said she was unable to work after allegedly was aggravated by the
allegedly being abused verbally on verbal.abuse.
the job.
In the majority opinion, . Justice
In a 11-1 decision Wednesday, the Robert " E. · Holmes said such
court disallowed the workers' com· disabilities "are not compensable in·
pensation claim of Alicja Szyman- juries" under compensation laws.
ski, a sales clerk at Halle's DepartIn a dissenting opinion, however,
ment Store in Cleveland. The ruling Justice A. Willlam Sweeney said the
reversed a 9th Ohio District Court of law provides compensation for "any
Appeals decision which said the injury, whether caused by external
claim Should he granted.
accidental means or accidental in
Records show Ms. Szymaru;kl was character and result, reCeived in the
off from work for three months in course of, and arising out of, the in1976 after being "verbally attacked" jured employee's employment."
on Aprjl 7 by a cD-worker who
In another case Wednesday, the
allegedly humiliated her in front of court said lower courts supervisinR
colleagues and customers.
·

grand juries can require disclosure
of evidence presented to such jljries.
Tbe decision came out of a protracted battle stemming from the state's
efforts to recover an investment of a
decade ago that went sour.
In Wednesday's ruling, the high
cilurt remanded to the Franklin
County Court of Common Pleas a
case in which Arthur Andersen I Co.
sought release of grand jury
testimony received in 1970.
Records showed that ·the
requested evidence relates to $II
millioo in loans made through ·the
purchase of short-term notes by the
state to King Resources Co. The
company went bankrupt, and in
April 1972, the state filed a civil action to recover the $II million. An·
derson was named a defendant by
the state, which ·claimed the accounting flrm supplied information

about King which resulted in the
loans being made.
·
The state got back the $II million
when it sdld its allowed claim in
King to a Texas corporation in 1977.
Now the state is seeking amounts
lost in interest over the decade on
the $II million.
The court also affirmed adecision
by the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio which exempts schools from
measUred rate telephone service. In
effect, this gives them a lower
business rate. The County . Commissioners 'Association of Ohio had
sought similar treatment for county
governments, but the court ruled
against the group in a HI decision.
The court also ruled that the state
Environmental Protection Agency
must conduct hearings before acting
on requests for variances from compliance with clean air standards.

Dr. Lamb

.to do the job right!

~wrenches

• pliers
• electric
sanders
• nails and
screws ..

OSU researcher says half of
work force 'overeducated'
CINCINNATI (AP) - An Ohio
right. It's lith-grade stuff.
State University researcher says
"Being overeducated is better
half the American work force is
than being unemployed,'' he added.
overeducate!~, partially because
Terri SemprebPn, 26, also feels
people think education is the way to
dissatisfied. She holds a teaching
get ahead.
certificate, but waits on tables in a
"Today, you need more and more · Cincinnati restaurant.
education just, to stay in the same
"I've always wanted a superiority
place," said Russell Rumberger,
complex, but being overqualified for ·
senior resea~ch associate at the
a waitressing job isn't exactly what I
university's Center for Human
had in mind," she said.
Resource Research iri Columbus.
"There's no frustration like it,
"It's a myth that job skill deman- · being in a job where they not only
ds have increased much. I'm not don't want your creative energies,
convinced that society is requjring
your skills, your talents, but it acmore highly-skilled people," said tually bothers them that you have
Rumberger. He recently completed any. They (her employers) · know
a"bPok titled, "Overeducation in the I'm going to be out of here the very
U.S. Labor Market."
first opportunity I get,'' Ms. Sem·
"In fact, in some areas, it's "just prebon said. ..
.
the opposite," he said. "Take cash
Margaret Austin, 56, an English
registers that_do all the computing teacher for 15 years · and now a
·for you. You don't even have to be secretary· for Kenner · Products .in
able to add and subtract."
Cincinriati, is in a similar position. ·
Rumberger
said
job
Sbe feels that what's ahead is
overqualification
results
m "that horribly frustrating feeling of
dissatisfaction, mental health knowing you have skills - mine are
problems.. job turnover and writing and dealing with people declining productivity.
and not being able to use them.
Job dissatisfaction is a problem,
"And I don't use them abPut 85
but productivity isn't for Tim percent of the time," she said. "I
Brown, who has a master's degree ifi eould try to use them more, but they
bll!liness administration from Pen- (employers) resent it. They don't
nsylvania State University and is a want to he told by a secretary that a
research assistant to Rumberger.
rep,ort isn't organized well.
"My productivity doesn't soffer,'' Sometimes I have the wild deSire to
Brown said. "The tasks are so sim- jump up and scream, 'Hey, I'm a
ple and I have so much time to do reasonably intelligent human
them in, that it's hard not to do them ·being.'''

SHOP

Since the May 18 blast, which
leveled thousands of acres of forest
land and killed dozens of people, of·
ficials said tourist revenues in
Washington state dropped 10 percent
to 20 percent from last year, but ~rt
or all of that may· be due to the
national recession.
To combat the tourist scare, there
has been a national campaign
promoting the scenic Northwest.
"What if it happens again?'' asked
travel advertisements, referring to ·
the . suddenly famous mountain.
"While you're enjoytng some of the
finest country on earth, you may he
lucky enough to see the old girl go ·
off. And if there's a little more ash,
you can take some home, free."
A "truth squad" has been
outlining the good things to see and
do in Washington, Oregon and Idaho.
United Airlines took reporters from
around the country on a wine-and·
di1te tour of the region, and a $148,000
state ad campaign boasted: "Ex·
cept for our new totlrist ·attraction,
we're about the same' as last year."

Johnson, a Gifford Pinchot National
Forest receptionist who was called
back to work to help handle calls.
"There were cars lined up along the
roads wherever they-could park."
Officials are hoping the volcano
will become a tourist attraction, like
Idaho's Craters of the Moon,
Oregon's Crater Lake or Hawaii's
active.volcanos.
"If it erupts, and you're in the
area and you ~an collect some ash
that will be a topic of conversation 20
years to come," said Steve WUson,
of the Idaho Department of Visitors
Services.
"Many people go to Hawaii to see
the volc;anic activity there. Given
the right marketing, I think you'll
find it could be an attraction.''
Tbe enthusiasm over Tuesday's
eruption was partly because the
blast was less damaging than May's.
Pie ash fall was relatively light and
, missed major population centers.
And it consisted of lighter material
that traveled in a cloud and
dissipated over Canada. ·

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By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
inch bulge around the back
S~elal correspondent
can't be eliminated by simDEAR DR. LAMB - Fm . ply toning up muscles.
25 years old and weigh 145
For that reason I'd suggest
pounds, I'd like to weigh bet- you start a walking program
ween 125 and 130. I've been and develop the capacity to
on a diet but it seems I can walk a great deal each day.
only lose about seven poWlds I'm talking about three or
and then stop. I've also been __four miles at a minimum.
trying to flatten my stomach This you'll have to do
and reduce my waistline gradually. Then make an ef·
which has about three to four fort to increase your physical
inches of bulge around it. I activity in any other way that
have about two inches of fat fits in with your life style.
located in the middle part of
Using exercise to help you
my back. It's very un- lose weigh is going to be
comfortable and causes me slow, so you might as well
to slouch.
think of it in tenns of a yearI'd like to know your ad· long project. At the same
vice on flattening the time you can reduce your
stomach and reducing my calories a sensible amount to
waistline_, my weight trytohelpyouintheprocess.
problems and preventing
Yes, you can have lower
slouching of the back. Also, back problems because of
can too much weight cause a
being overweight. A large,
person to have problems in pendulous abdomen is a
their lower back?
significant factor. Poor abDEAR READER - I hate domina! muscle tone also
to tell you this but it doesn't contributes to this difficulty.
matter what kind of exer- Some exercises that you use
_ abdomen
cises you use, you cannot . to strengthen your
really reduce the waist . line
are good for your back. I'm
sending you The Health Letsignificantly unless you get
rid of excess fat. That twoter number 13-10, Backache

... ODD THAT THE COMPUTER
TECHNICIAN GMQULD BE
MURDERED RIGHT AFTER
THAT SPECIAL
A5516NMENT FOR
MR. 6AM6AVEL ...

• hammers
• saws

DEAR HELEN:
Ralph says we women are
uncreative : We create the
most wonderful thing on earth: life. Our bodies grow and
nurture babies. Can any of
man's accomplishments
compare · to that?
MOTHER
DEAR HELEN:
I'm a lifelong epileptic.
When my husband was alive,
he protected me and life was
good. Not that he's gone, ·
people shun me. They're
afraid of me, as if I were
crazy. ·
We epileptics · are people
too. ·We hardly ever commit
crimes. Please treat us like
hunuin beings.- J. J.
DEAR
READERS:
·
... Yes, please do. -H.

Excess offat has to go, doctgr_ says

: ANNIE

'Latest eruption .awes spectators
SEATilE (AJ') - Mount St.
.at billows of dust and moisture glin·
He!ens' devastating blast in May
ting in the settinli sun.
had tourists quaking and canceling
Drivers on Interstate 5 put on tire
their Northwest vacations, but the
brakes for the latest display, visible
latest eruption awed spectators with
as far south as C9rvallis, Ore.
!~mile-high plumes, and some of"It was like the Fourth of July .... It
ficials hope the volcano could bolster
was a gorgeous sig~t. it was in·
the shaky tourist trade. ,
credible," said Bill Wippel, who was
People more than 100 miles away
driving by.
scrambled to high spots in north
"There were gobs and gobs and
Seattle on Tuesday everiing to gaze · gobs of people," reported Barbara

•

here) but because you
downgraded women. When
you termed us Wlcreative,
unproductive, and otherwise
inferior to men you really got
the hornets buzzing.
Here's one last comment
on the subje'ct:
·

MEIGS INN
PH. 992-3629 .

C!J O @@®J Q) NEWS
Cil ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(,JOINED IN PROGRESS)
(!) COMEDY TONIGHT 'Here
Comas Summer' Swing into sum·
merwlth fa verite Me. rtin Mu ll.ln zany
sketches, this exclusive salutes
the funniest and sunniest days of
aummer.
C1J ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
CiJ ABC NEWS
C1J illJ ZOOM
rn e ffi NBC NEWS
C1J I LOVE LUCY
C1J CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
CI CIJ®J CBS NEWS
CIJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(fi) OVER EASY Guest: 'Stephene
Grappelli, jezz violinist. Host: Hugh
Downs. (Cklsed Captioned)
lllJ Q) ABC NEWS
Cil NEWS UPDATE .
m e CROSSWITS
Cil BACKYARD
(!) BOXING'SGREATESTCHAM·
PIONS
'Best
at
the
Middleweidhts'
CIJ HOGAN' S HEROES
CIJ(j}) Q) FACE THE MUSIC
ffi LUCY SHOW
CI CIJ TICTACDOUGH
C1J MACNEil-lEHRER REPORT
®J NEWS
illJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
m e HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
C1J ZOLA LEVITT
CIJ ALL IN THE FAMILY'
(]J IN SEARCH OF
ffi COUNTRY ROADS
Cl ()) JOKER'S WILD
C1J DICK CAVETT sHOW
®J $100,000NAMETHATTUNE
illl MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
(J}) Q) NASHVILLE ON THE
ROAD
'
Cil NEWS UPDATE
ffieBUCKROGERSINTHE251h
CENTU.RY Buck Rogers m1,1at help
an ellen athlete defect during t~e
26th century Olympi cs' before a
power1 uI explosive implanied in the
man's head is detonated. (Repeat:
60mins;)
Cil MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
(]) MOVIE •(WESTERN) ••~~o
"Poaae" 1975
Ill UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
CiJ(j})Q) MORKAND MINDYMork
end Mindy vie for the same Job with
Mindy'scousin, Nelson Flavor, who
hired them ea ca mp:~lgn wotkersln
his bid for City Co uncilman. before
realizing he can alford to keep only
one of them . (Repeat)
'
ffi JAMES ROBISON SPECIAL
0 CIJ ®J THE WALTONS ~ride,
male chauvinism and steep wagers
drive Mary Ellen and Erir-. into fie rce

•

a:30

8:58
11:00

il:30

co mp etition when they enter a
~elino race . {Repeat ; 60 mina.)
W BEN WATTENBERG'S 11180
' The Wlallh Weapon' Host Ben
Wattenberg visits a New England
factory and raisea some diftlcult
Questions abollt American businns dealings with the· Soviet
Union:is free enterprise helping the
enemies of free enterprise?
lllJ Bill MOYERS' JOURNAL
'Judge: The Law and Frank John·
son' Part I. (60 mins.)
C1J WAKE UP AMERICA
C1J (J}) II) BENSON No one allhe
mans io n ~c:J an belie11e Benson 's
behaviorwhenhefallsmadlyinlove
w ith a lady polilician. (Repeat)
(]) SNEAK PREVIEWS Co-hosts
R oger Ebert and Gene Siskel disc uss movies of the seventies that
were overlooked by the audiences,
Suches 'The Late Show' and 'Mean
Streets' .
Cil NEWS UPOATE
m 0 ffi THURSDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES 'Gold Ot The Amazo n
Women · 1979 Stars: Bo Svenson,
Anita Ekberg.
C1J 700CLUB
()) SOCCER Atlanta Chiefs vs
Tulsa Ro'!a._hnecks
()) l!aJ QJ .BARNEY MILLER
Captain Miller may lose one of his
men when lhe mayor orders all
policemen
to
wear
their
uniforms-- and Sgt. HarriS refuses .
(Repeat) (Closed-Captioned)
O CIJ®J BARNABY JONES A rou1inelnauran cel nv~stigation ot a
garment bu ilding tire that claimed
th e lite of one of its owners leads ·
barnaby on the lreil of arson and
murder. (Repeat: 60 mine.)
()) RIGHTEOUS APPLES Dealing
with I heedventuresof a high school
rock band, this is Public Talevi·
sian 's first Situation comedy. This
episode, 'Josh ' s Run '. finds the
band helping a on ce famous blues
man escape 1hed,pressing lite in a
l}!lfway house. ·
·
!llJ PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
(]) STMIDINGR.OOMONLY'lido
de Paris ' Vtewers are treated to a
dazzling Parisian nightclub performance starring ShirleyMa claine ,
Tom Jones and the famous French
c horus line, The Bluebell Girls. li 'a
an· uned ited extravaganza that's
trea magnifique.
()) NOBODY'S PERFECT•The
bumbling Roger Hart and his
partner check lntoaposh Sanfrancia co hotel to trap a suave cat burgla r whoHar1suspects is the perpetrator of a series ot jewel heists.
CIJ GOOD NEIGHBORS
lllJID 20-20
I

1o:oo ·Cilllll m 2o-2o

ID CIJ®J KNOTS LANDING Koren

and What to Do about It.
Other readers wbo want this
issue can send 75 cents with a
long,
stamped, selfaddressed envelope for it.
Send your request to me, in
care ofthis newspaper, P. 0.
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019.
Poor posture is often a
habit and it's sometimes a
symptom of weak trunk
muscles. The back exercises
which I suggested in The
Health Letter I'm sending
you will help you some in this
regarq.
To keep your shoulders
from rounding forward and
slouching, you may need to
do exercises that strengthen
the muscle between the
shoulder blades. The proper
movement for this is the
rotation of the anns back·
ward like a back stroke for
swirruning.
If there is a local health
club facility available to you,
you might want to use some
of their weight devices to
help work those muscles a lit·tle harder so they'll be
stronger and help you keep
your shoulders back.

listings
end Sid Fairgate become the t ar·

gets ole revenge ful motorcycle
gang when Karen Insists on filing
chargee against one of them after
be ing assaulted. (Repeat: 60
mins.)
C1J SOUNDSTAGE 'John Prine'
(Closed Captioned) (eo mins .)
illJ NEWS
10:28 Cil NEWS UPDATE
10:30 (l) NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
(!) MOVIE ·(BIOGRAPHY) ••I!.
"He•rtBe•t" 1980 .
(ll) OVER EASY Guest: Stephana
Grappelli. iazz violinist .Host: Hugh
Downs. (Closed Captioned)
10:58 (l) NEWS UPDATE
·
11:oo
®J
NEWS .
(l) JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
{l) TBSEVENINGNEWS
CIJ DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(IIJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
11 :28 (l) NEWS UPDATE
)1:30 (}) e ffi THE TONIGHT SHOW
Host : Johnny .Carson. Guests :
Charlton Heeton , Charlie Callas ,
Rosemary Clooney. {90mins.) ·
(l) ROSS B~GLEY SHOW
(I) l!aJ
ABC NEWS
NIGHTUNE
CICIJ CBS LATE MOVIE :TH£ JEF ·
FERSONS: Jenny 's Low ' Jenny
gives her brother an k:)l reception ·
when he suddenly appeara after a
two-year absence.
(Rpeat)
' RELENTLESS ' t977 Siers: Will
Sampson, Monte Markham.
C1J ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®) MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• • " Thirty
Second• Ov.r Tokyo" 1944
11 :50 C1J !Ill
CHARLIE'S
ANGELS··BAAETTA C harl ie ' s
Angela --'The Killing Kind ' The Angels lnv~stlgate the murder of a
magazine reporter in a health epa.
Baretle --' Walk Like You Talk' Baretta comes under close scrutiny by
an idealist ic police investigating
committee . (~epeat; 2 hi-s., 15
mins .)
12:00 ill MOVIE -(MUSICAL·DRAMA)
•••' "Caroueel" 185fS
12:30 (!) MOVIE ·(SCIENCE-FICTION)
• ••• " Mfaalon Galactic a : Cjlon
Attack" 1U7V
1:00 (l].
TOMORROW
CD KOINONIA
·ffi NEWS
1:30 CD ROB~RT SCHULLER
2:00 "@) I BELIEVE
2:Cle !Ill Gl NEWS
2 :30 CD ROSS BAGLEY SHOW .
CIJ NEWS
2:35 Ill MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) "
"Marina Aalders" 1M•
~ :00 Cil 700 CLUB
• :35 ill MOVIE -(CRIIIE·DRAMA) "I!.
" Shield for Murder" g54
5 :30 Cil SOUND OF THE SPIRIT

rn e oo rn e oo

wm

m

m

.

'

POMEROY, OHIO

..

I •

'·

�·'
9- 1be Daily Sentinel, Middl.P.,rt-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday July 24 1980

8- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePort-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, July 24, 1980

DICKTRACY

'

•

Helen Help Us

Catholic Church calls for accounting
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) - The
Bolivian junta is trying ,to con·
solidate its power while the Roman
Catholic church, with the support of
foreign diplomats in La Paz, is
calling for an accounting of those
who have disappeared, including 11
priests.
~Church sources said the appeal
was made Wednesday by the papal
nuncio, the Vatican's ambassador tp
Bolivia, to the right-wing government of Gen. Luis Garcia Meza,
which seized power a week ago
today to avoid the anticipated in·
stallation of a leftist president.
"The govemlnent has not responded yet," said a church prelate. He
said the nuncio's efforts received the
backing of some 30 diplomats,
"representing virtually every embassy in La Paz," at a meeting Wed·
nesday night at the Japanese Embassy.
Earlier, a high-ranking church

have gone into hidipg, incl~ding for·
source said the government replied
mer President Hernan Siles Zuazo.
it would not recognize any r~uest
SUes won a plurality of the popular
until former President Lydia
vote in the June 29 presidential elecGueiler had left the nuncio's residention and appeared likely to capture
ce, where she sought asylum. Mrs.
the presidency in a congressional
Gueiler would leave shortly, the
runoff.
.
source said.
In a tape recorded message Wed·
The priests were reported
arrested in raids on several Catholic nesday .to news media, Siles called
again for an uprising and said " We
parishes soon after the coup, an apparent attempt by the milltar'y to are experiencing repression without
precedent in the history of barracks
rout out opponents to the junta, the
sources said. Those seized included revolts." Bolivia has had 190 coups
eight Jesuit priests, according to a in its 155 years since independence.
Meanwhile, · the· regjme's foreign
Bolivian bishop.
The gpverrune.nt, which has minister, Gen. Javier Cerruto, con·
refused to disclose the whereabPuts demned what he called ''unac·
of scores of people last seen being ceptable foreign intervention in
arrested, relea~~ed a casualty list Bolivian affairs."
No foreign govenunent has an·
Wednesday which gave no numbers
of dead and named three soldiers nounced recognition of the new
wounded " in clashes with ex- regime. The Carter administration
. condemned the takeover and called
. tremists."
Most politicians and union leaders for a ret~ to civilian rule; recalled
its ambassador to La Paz and halted

Should man tell friend she needs
plastic surgery to improve looks?

military and econoinic aid.
Downtown La Paz has returned to
normal during daylight hours.
Businesses are open and many
troops have been withdraW!I from
the city center. A 9 p.m.·t&lt;Hi a.m.
curfew remains in effect, along with
martial law, and sporadic night·
time gunfire continues.
In outlying areas of La Paz, most
factories remain closed in answer to
a general strike call by labor
leaders. "We are on strike indefinitely. We won't work while this
fascist government remains in
power," said one of the strikers at
the Said textile mill, the largest in
the La Paz area.
Opponents to the junta dynamited
the capital's waterworks Wednesday, reducing water pressure.
The government said its
"precautions" had caused the effort
to fail.

'

question which involved a
BY HELEN BO'ITEL
teen-ager's use of the
Special correspondent
telephone.
DEAR HELEN:
I still say conversations
My 5G-year old friend coUld
be limited to · three
should
be a striking woman, if she'd
get the sags and dewlaps minutes. After all, the
telephone company sets this
fixed .
, All she needs is a face lift, rule - or you pay more
and I'd be her willing slave. (long-distance).
The best formula in raising
I'm 55' and well-preserved,
and I don't want a dinner children is "Love, limit and
companion who might look help them achieve.' ' So I'll
older than me. Yet Ilove her continue to limit our girl's
talk to three minutes for each
. in every other way.
telephone
caller - and not
Should I suggest that she
many
per
evening. And I'll
luive plastic surgery? She
can afford it. _
AGE· still insist that boys should
call girls, not vice versa.
CONSCIOUS MAN
Pollsters will tell you that
DEARMAN:
for
every letter you get
No!
against
someone, 100 would
If your woman friemi
brings up the subject of face be for him, if they'd bother to
lifts, encourage , her, but write. My head . may be
don't "lead with her chin" or bloody, but it's still unbowed.
.
you may put this relationship ..:.. RALPH
DEAR
RALPH:
into a permanent sag. -H.
My readers were 100 percentaga~tyou,notbecause
DEAR HELEN:
of
your stand on telephone
This is "Ralph" who
conversations
and raising
stirred up such ·a hornet's
teen-agers
(though
they connest among women readers.
Let's get back to the original sidered you overly strict

I

BORN LOSER

High court says disahili~es triggered by

BRONZE STEELWORKERS TEST lbe coolenl of steel in
an open-bearlb furoace Ia Ibis oew work by George Segal.
Tbe sculptures - modeled afler two real steelworkers ~
were a recent gill to lbe steel clly of Youngslowo, Obio,
from tbe local arls council.

emotional st~ess not covered by Ohio laws

rv..::o01~

.. r

ttJ!J'T 14.W1 WHAT OOP.f;
c.At.l

ro WRDI~It&gt;

. Li'7T8t.l, 1-lDT!\II-llo IS SO
~0

THAT IT C.AI-l'T

-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Because of the alleged attack, Ms.
Ohio Supreme Court says Szymanski's counsel said she suffers
disabilities triggered by emotional "mental and physical distress ...
stress are not covered by state which resulted in her total disability
· workers compensation laws.
· from Feb. 12,1976, to April 12,1976."
The coUrt, in effect, denied the · Ms. Szymanski was described as
claim of a Cleveland woman who having a heart condition which
said she was unable to work after allegedly was aggravated by the
allegedly being abused verbally on verbal.abuse.
the job.
In the majority opinion, . Justice
In a 11-1 decision Wednesday, the Robert " E. · Holmes said such
court disallowed the workers' com· disabilities "are not compensable in·
pensation claim of Alicja Szyman- juries" under compensation laws.
ski, a sales clerk at Halle's DepartIn a dissenting opinion, however,
ment Store in Cleveland. The ruling Justice A. Willlam Sweeney said the
reversed a 9th Ohio District Court of law provides compensation for "any
Appeals decision which said the injury, whether caused by external
claim Should he granted.
accidental means or accidental in
Records show Ms. Szymaru;kl was character and result, reCeived in the
off from work for three months in course of, and arising out of, the in1976 after being "verbally attacked" jured employee's employment."
on Aprjl 7 by a cD-worker who
In another case Wednesday, the
allegedly humiliated her in front of court said lower courts supervisinR
colleagues and customers.
·

grand juries can require disclosure
of evidence presented to such jljries.
Tbe decision came out of a protracted battle stemming from the state's
efforts to recover an investment of a
decade ago that went sour.
In Wednesday's ruling, the high
cilurt remanded to the Franklin
County Court of Common Pleas a
case in which Arthur Andersen I Co.
sought release of grand jury
testimony received in 1970.
Records showed that ·the
requested evidence relates to $II
millioo in loans made through ·the
purchase of short-term notes by the
state to King Resources Co. The
company went bankrupt, and in
April 1972, the state filed a civil action to recover the $II million. An·
derson was named a defendant by
the state, which ·claimed the accounting flrm supplied information

about King which resulted in the
loans being made.
·
The state got back the $II million
when it sdld its allowed claim in
King to a Texas corporation in 1977.
Now the state is seeking amounts
lost in interest over the decade on
the $II million.
The court also affirmed adecision
by the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio which exempts schools from
measUred rate telephone service. In
effect, this gives them a lower
business rate. The County . Commissioners 'Association of Ohio had
sought similar treatment for county
governments, but the court ruled
against the group in a HI decision.
The court also ruled that the state
Environmental Protection Agency
must conduct hearings before acting
on requests for variances from compliance with clean air standards.

Dr. Lamb

.to do the job right!

~wrenches

• pliers
• electric
sanders
• nails and
screws ..

OSU researcher says half of
work force 'overeducated'
CINCINNATI (AP) - An Ohio
right. It's lith-grade stuff.
State University researcher says
"Being overeducated is better
half the American work force is
than being unemployed,'' he added.
overeducate!~, partially because
Terri SemprebPn, 26, also feels
people think education is the way to
dissatisfied. She holds a teaching
get ahead.
certificate, but waits on tables in a
"Today, you need more and more · Cincinnati restaurant.
education just, to stay in the same
"I've always wanted a superiority
place," said Russell Rumberger,
complex, but being overqualified for ·
senior resea~ch associate at the
a waitressing job isn't exactly what I
university's Center for Human
had in mind," she said.
Resource Research iri Columbus.
"There's no frustration like it,
"It's a myth that job skill deman- · being in a job where they not only
ds have increased much. I'm not don't want your creative energies,
convinced that society is requjring
your skills, your talents, but it acmore highly-skilled people," said tually bothers them that you have
Rumberger. He recently completed any. They (her employers) · know
a"bPok titled, "Overeducation in the I'm going to be out of here the very
U.S. Labor Market."
first opportunity I get,'' Ms. Sem·
"In fact, in some areas, it's "just prebon said. ..
.
the opposite," he said. "Take cash
Margaret Austin, 56, an English
registers that_do all the computing teacher for 15 years · and now a
·for you. You don't even have to be secretary· for Kenner · Products .in
able to add and subtract."
Cincinriati, is in a similar position. ·
Rumberger
said
job
Sbe feels that what's ahead is
overqualification
results
m "that horribly frustrating feeling of
dissatisfaction, mental health knowing you have skills - mine are
problems.. job turnover and writing and dealing with people declining productivity.
and not being able to use them.
Job dissatisfaction is a problem,
"And I don't use them abPut 85
but productivity isn't for Tim percent of the time," she said. "I
Brown, who has a master's degree ifi eould try to use them more, but they
bll!liness administration from Pen- (employers) resent it. They don't
nsylvania State University and is a want to he told by a secretary that a
research assistant to Rumberger.
rep,ort isn't organized well.
"My productivity doesn't soffer,'' Sometimes I have the wild deSire to
Brown said. "The tasks are so sim- jump up and scream, 'Hey, I'm a
ple and I have so much time to do reasonably intelligent human
them in, that it's hard not to do them ·being.'''

SHOP

Since the May 18 blast, which
leveled thousands of acres of forest
land and killed dozens of people, of·
ficials said tourist revenues in
Washington state dropped 10 percent
to 20 percent from last year, but ~rt
or all of that may· be due to the
national recession.
To combat the tourist scare, there
has been a national campaign
promoting the scenic Northwest.
"What if it happens again?'' asked
travel advertisements, referring to ·
the . suddenly famous mountain.
"While you're enjoytng some of the
finest country on earth, you may he
lucky enough to see the old girl go ·
off. And if there's a little more ash,
you can take some home, free."
A "truth squad" has been
outlining the good things to see and
do in Washington, Oregon and Idaho.
United Airlines took reporters from
around the country on a wine-and·
di1te tour of the region, and a $148,000
state ad campaign boasted: "Ex·
cept for our new totlrist ·attraction,
we're about the same' as last year."

Johnson, a Gifford Pinchot National
Forest receptionist who was called
back to work to help handle calls.
"There were cars lined up along the
roads wherever they-could park."
Officials are hoping the volcano
will become a tourist attraction, like
Idaho's Craters of the Moon,
Oregon's Crater Lake or Hawaii's
active.volcanos.
"If it erupts, and you're in the
area and you ~an collect some ash
that will be a topic of conversation 20
years to come," said Steve WUson,
of the Idaho Department of Visitors
Services.
"Many people go to Hawaii to see
the volc;anic activity there. Given
the right marketing, I think you'll
find it could be an attraction.''
Tbe enthusiasm over Tuesday's
eruption was partly because the
blast was less damaging than May's.
Pie ash fall was relatively light and
, missed major population centers.
And it consisted of lighter material
that traveled in a cloud and
dissipated over Canada. ·

OPEN EVENINGS
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
'
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773·5592

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Evening
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AT THE
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KINGSBURY HOME .SALES &amp; SERVICE
"For the First in Manufacuted Housing"
1100 E. Main
992·7034
Pomeroy, o.

~elevision

JULY 2~. 1980

Ute Insurance Sin~e 1950

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FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TR1 STATE AREA

Mon ., Tues., Wed., Fric!ay &amp; Sat.
. 8:30 to' 5:00 Thursday till 12 Noon

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hardware

1--..,-----------------------

MASON. FURNITURE
MASON.- fURNITURE ·

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
inch bulge around the back
S~elal correspondent
can't be eliminated by simDEAR DR. LAMB - Fm . ply toning up muscles.
25 years old and weigh 145
For that reason I'd suggest
pounds, I'd like to weigh bet- you start a walking program
ween 125 and 130. I've been and develop the capacity to
on a diet but it seems I can walk a great deal each day.
only lose about seven poWlds I'm talking about three or
and then stop. I've also been __four miles at a minimum.
trying to flatten my stomach This you'll have to do
and reduce my waistline gradually. Then make an ef·
which has about three to four fort to increase your physical
inches of bulge around it. I activity in any other way that
have about two inches of fat fits in with your life style.
located in the middle part of
Using exercise to help you
my back. It's very un- lose weigh is going to be
comfortable and causes me slow, so you might as well
to slouch.
think of it in tenns of a yearI'd like to know your ad· long project. At the same
vice on flattening the time you can reduce your
stomach and reducing my calories a sensible amount to
waistline_, my weight trytohelpyouintheprocess.
problems and preventing
Yes, you can have lower
slouching of the back. Also, back problems because of
can too much weight cause a
being overweight. A large,
person to have problems in pendulous abdomen is a
their lower back?
significant factor. Poor abDEAR READER - I hate domina! muscle tone also
to tell you this but it doesn't contributes to this difficulty.
matter what kind of exer- Some exercises that you use
_ abdomen
cises you use, you cannot . to strengthen your
really reduce the waist . line
are good for your back. I'm
sending you The Health Letsignificantly unless you get
rid of excess fat. That twoter number 13-10, Backache

... ODD THAT THE COMPUTER
TECHNICIAN GMQULD BE
MURDERED RIGHT AFTER
THAT SPECIAL
A5516NMENT FOR
MR. 6AM6AVEL ...

• hammers
• saws

DEAR HELEN:
Ralph says we women are
uncreative : We create the
most wonderful thing on earth: life. Our bodies grow and
nurture babies. Can any of
man's accomplishments
compare · to that?
MOTHER
DEAR HELEN:
I'm a lifelong epileptic.
When my husband was alive,
he protected me and life was
good. Not that he's gone, ·
people shun me. They're
afraid of me, as if I were
crazy. ·
We epileptics · are people
too. ·We hardly ever commit
crimes. Please treat us like
hunuin beings.- J. J.
DEAR
READERS:
·
... Yes, please do. -H.

Excess offat has to go, doctgr_ says

: ANNIE

'Latest eruption .awes spectators
SEATilE (AJ') - Mount St.
.at billows of dust and moisture glin·
He!ens' devastating blast in May
ting in the settinli sun.
had tourists quaking and canceling
Drivers on Interstate 5 put on tire
their Northwest vacations, but the
brakes for the latest display, visible
latest eruption awed spectators with
as far south as C9rvallis, Ore.
!~mile-high plumes, and some of"It was like the Fourth of July .... It
ficials hope the volcano could bolster
was a gorgeous sig~t. it was in·
the shaky tourist trade. ,
credible," said Bill Wippel, who was
People more than 100 miles away
driving by.
scrambled to high spots in north
"There were gobs and gobs and
Seattle on Tuesday everiing to gaze · gobs of people," reported Barbara

•

here) but because you
downgraded women. When
you termed us Wlcreative,
unproductive, and otherwise
inferior to men you really got
the hornets buzzing.
Here's one last comment
on the subje'ct:
·

MEIGS INN
PH. 992-3629 .

C!J O @@®J Q) NEWS
Cil ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(,JOINED IN PROGRESS)
(!) COMEDY TONIGHT 'Here
Comas Summer' Swing into sum·
merwlth fa verite Me. rtin Mu ll.ln zany
sketches, this exclusive salutes
the funniest and sunniest days of
aummer.
C1J ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
CiJ ABC NEWS
C1J illJ ZOOM
rn e ffi NBC NEWS
C1J I LOVE LUCY
C1J CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
CI CIJ®J CBS NEWS
CIJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(fi) OVER EASY Guest: 'Stephene
Grappelli, jezz violinist. Host: Hugh
Downs. (Cklsed Captioned)
lllJ Q) ABC NEWS
Cil NEWS UPDATE .
m e CROSSWITS
Cil BACKYARD
(!) BOXING'SGREATESTCHAM·
PIONS
'Best
at
the
Middleweidhts'
CIJ HOGAN' S HEROES
CIJ(j}) Q) FACE THE MUSIC
ffi LUCY SHOW
CI CIJ TICTACDOUGH
C1J MACNEil-lEHRER REPORT
®J NEWS
illJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
m e HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
C1J ZOLA LEVITT
CIJ ALL IN THE FAMILY'
(]J IN SEARCH OF
ffi COUNTRY ROADS
Cl ()) JOKER'S WILD
C1J DICK CAVETT sHOW
®J $100,000NAMETHATTUNE
illl MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
(J}) Q) NASHVILLE ON THE
ROAD
'
Cil NEWS UPDATE
ffieBUCKROGERSINTHE251h
CENTU.RY Buck Rogers m1,1at help
an ellen athlete defect during t~e
26th century Olympi cs' before a
power1 uI explosive implanied in the
man's head is detonated. (Repeat:
60mins;)
Cil MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
(]) MOVIE •(WESTERN) ••~~o
"Poaae" 1975
Ill UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
CiJ(j})Q) MORKAND MINDYMork
end Mindy vie for the same Job with
Mindy'scousin, Nelson Flavor, who
hired them ea ca mp:~lgn wotkersln
his bid for City Co uncilman. before
realizing he can alford to keep only
one of them . (Repeat)
'
ffi JAMES ROBISON SPECIAL
0 CIJ ®J THE WALTONS ~ride,
male chauvinism and steep wagers
drive Mary Ellen and Erir-. into fie rce

•

a:30

8:58
11:00

il:30

co mp etition when they enter a
~elino race . {Repeat ; 60 mina.)
W BEN WATTENBERG'S 11180
' The Wlallh Weapon' Host Ben
Wattenberg visits a New England
factory and raisea some diftlcult
Questions abollt American businns dealings with the· Soviet
Union:is free enterprise helping the
enemies of free enterprise?
lllJ Bill MOYERS' JOURNAL
'Judge: The Law and Frank John·
son' Part I. (60 mins.)
C1J WAKE UP AMERICA
C1J (J}) II) BENSON No one allhe
mans io n ~c:J an belie11e Benson 's
behaviorwhenhefallsmadlyinlove
w ith a lady polilician. (Repeat)
(]) SNEAK PREVIEWS Co-hosts
R oger Ebert and Gene Siskel disc uss movies of the seventies that
were overlooked by the audiences,
Suches 'The Late Show' and 'Mean
Streets' .
Cil NEWS UPOATE
m 0 ffi THURSDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES 'Gold Ot The Amazo n
Women · 1979 Stars: Bo Svenson,
Anita Ekberg.
C1J 700CLUB
()) SOCCER Atlanta Chiefs vs
Tulsa Ro'!a._hnecks
()) l!aJ QJ .BARNEY MILLER
Captain Miller may lose one of his
men when lhe mayor orders all
policemen
to
wear
their
uniforms-- and Sgt. HarriS refuses .
(Repeat) (Closed-Captioned)
O CIJ®J BARNABY JONES A rou1inelnauran cel nv~stigation ot a
garment bu ilding tire that claimed
th e lite of one of its owners leads ·
barnaby on the lreil of arson and
murder. (Repeat: 60 mine.)
()) RIGHTEOUS APPLES Dealing
with I heedventuresof a high school
rock band, this is Public Talevi·
sian 's first Situation comedy. This
episode, 'Josh ' s Run '. finds the
band helping a on ce famous blues
man escape 1hed,pressing lite in a
l}!lfway house. ·
·
!llJ PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
(]) STMIDINGR.OOMONLY'lido
de Paris ' Vtewers are treated to a
dazzling Parisian nightclub performance starring ShirleyMa claine ,
Tom Jones and the famous French
c horus line, The Bluebell Girls. li 'a
an· uned ited extravaganza that's
trea magnifique.
()) NOBODY'S PERFECT•The
bumbling Roger Hart and his
partner check lntoaposh Sanfrancia co hotel to trap a suave cat burgla r whoHar1suspects is the perpetrator of a series ot jewel heists.
CIJ GOOD NEIGHBORS
lllJID 20-20
I

1o:oo ·Cilllll m 2o-2o

ID CIJ®J KNOTS LANDING Koren

and What to Do about It.
Other readers wbo want this
issue can send 75 cents with a
long,
stamped, selfaddressed envelope for it.
Send your request to me, in
care ofthis newspaper, P. 0.
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019.
Poor posture is often a
habit and it's sometimes a
symptom of weak trunk
muscles. The back exercises
which I suggested in The
Health Letter I'm sending
you will help you some in this
regarq.
To keep your shoulders
from rounding forward and
slouching, you may need to
do exercises that strengthen
the muscle between the
shoulder blades. The proper
movement for this is the
rotation of the anns back·
ward like a back stroke for
swirruning.
If there is a local health
club facility available to you,
you might want to use some
of their weight devices to
help work those muscles a lit·tle harder so they'll be
stronger and help you keep
your shoulders back.

listings
end Sid Fairgate become the t ar·

gets ole revenge ful motorcycle
gang when Karen Insists on filing
chargee against one of them after
be ing assaulted. (Repeat: 60
mins.)
C1J SOUNDSTAGE 'John Prine'
(Closed Captioned) (eo mins .)
illJ NEWS
10:28 Cil NEWS UPDATE
10:30 (l) NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
(!) MOVIE ·(BIOGRAPHY) ••I!.
"He•rtBe•t" 1980 .
(ll) OVER EASY Guest: Stephana
Grappelli. iazz violinist .Host: Hugh
Downs. (Closed Captioned)
10:58 (l) NEWS UPDATE
·
11:oo
®J
NEWS .
(l) JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
{l) TBSEVENINGNEWS
CIJ DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(IIJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
11 :28 (l) NEWS UPDATE
)1:30 (}) e ffi THE TONIGHT SHOW
Host : Johnny .Carson. Guests :
Charlton Heeton , Charlie Callas ,
Rosemary Clooney. {90mins.) ·
(l) ROSS B~GLEY SHOW
(I) l!aJ
ABC NEWS
NIGHTUNE
CICIJ CBS LATE MOVIE :TH£ JEF ·
FERSONS: Jenny 's Low ' Jenny
gives her brother an k:)l reception ·
when he suddenly appeara after a
two-year absence.
(Rpeat)
' RELENTLESS ' t977 Siers: Will
Sampson, Monte Markham.
C1J ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®) MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• • " Thirty
Second• Ov.r Tokyo" 1944
11 :50 C1J !Ill
CHARLIE'S
ANGELS··BAAETTA C harl ie ' s
Angela --'The Killing Kind ' The Angels lnv~stlgate the murder of a
magazine reporter in a health epa.
Baretle --' Walk Like You Talk' Baretta comes under close scrutiny by
an idealist ic police investigating
committee . (~epeat; 2 hi-s., 15
mins .)
12:00 ill MOVIE -(MUSICAL·DRAMA)
•••' "Caroueel" 185fS
12:30 (!) MOVIE ·(SCIENCE-FICTION)
• ••• " Mfaalon Galactic a : Cjlon
Attack" 1U7V
1:00 (l].
TOMORROW
CD KOINONIA
·ffi NEWS
1:30 CD ROB~RT SCHULLER
2:00 "@) I BELIEVE
2:Cle !Ill Gl NEWS
2 :30 CD ROSS BAGLEY SHOW .
CIJ NEWS
2:35 Ill MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) "
"Marina Aalders" 1M•
~ :00 Cil 700 CLUB
• :35 ill MOVIE -(CRIIIE·DRAMA) "I!.
" Shield for Murder" g54
5 :30 Cil SOUND OF THE SPIRIT

rn e oo rn e oo

wm

m

m

.

'

POMEROY, OHIO

..

I •

'·

�.

p;r~-;bQ~t;"'" result from producer cutback
',;.• ~

WASHINGTON (AP) - A senior
AgricultUJ'e Oeparbnent official
says the recent price boos~ for some
commodities, including hogs and
broiler chickens, are mainly the
result of producers cutting back, not
of the scorching weather that has
grippejl much of the nation. ,
Moreover, Howard W. Hjort, the
department's chief economist and
policy analyst, says this summer's
heat wave, although it has caused
extensive crop and livestock losS in
some areas, so far has not had much
effect on iood prices in general.
Even if the hot, dry weather hangs
on the rest of the summer, it.
probably would . not have much effect on food prices this year or in the
first half of 1981, Hjort told a news
conference Wednesday.
Despite recent price increases for
some items, Hjort said, "By and ···
large, farm prices for foods are stiil
below where they were a year ago."
Corn prices are now up 3 percent
from a year ago, hogs up 10 percent
- after . being severely depressed
last spring - slaUghter steers up 6
percent, eggs up 20 percent and
broilers up 50 percent, he said.
But farm prices of wheat are down
3 pereent from a year ago, soybeans
4 percent, slaughter cows 3 percent
and feeder cattle 16 percent.
Since last fall, the USDA has been
predicting retail food prices in 1980
would go up an average of 7 to 11 percent from 1979 levels, depending on
the weather, crop yields and ·the
generalecono01y.
"OUJ' current estimate is very
much within that range," Hjort said.
Further, he said, the mos1likely
increase still being · looked · at by
department experts is mthe range
of8 percent to 9 percent this year.
"That assessment · can ac- ·
commodate some rather wideranging scenarios with respect to
drought," Hjort said.
Pressed further, Hjort said USDA.
economists hav11 a "point estimate"
now that food prices may go up 8.4
percent. Before the drought it was
8.3 percent.
His comments followed a report
by the Labor Department that retail

foottpnces rose 0.5 percent in June,
allQting for seasonal adjiJll.bnent.
Tlie Agriculture Department uses
pnce figlll'es that
not seasonally
adjuted. For example, the June
food~ce increase on a unadjusted ·
baSil was 0.6 percent.
Ai he has before, Hjort said food
pricts - after showing only modest
increases in 11\e first half of this year .
- are expected to gain sharply in
the ·third quarter because of rilling
prices of some commodities, including cattle, hogs and broiler
chickens.
For e1&lt;8Jilp!e, Hjort said the July
food price index when it is issued a
montjl from now probably will sbow
a boost of arOWld 1.0 percent, almost
double the June rate.
For the entire July-september
quarter, Hjort said food prices may
go up at~ annual rate of 12 percent
to 13.percent, meaning that would be
the increase for the entir~ year if it
was maintained over four quarters.
But Hjort said a seasonally larger
supply of livestiick going to market
this fall will help hold price gains in
the fourth quarter to an annual rate
of around 5 percent.
·
Hjort said analysts feel food prices
in the first half of 1981 might rise at
an annual rate of 7 percent to 9 percent.
.
If the present drought situation
hangs on, it could add another 1 percent to 1981 food prices, he said.
The major factor in rising prices
of meat animals and poultry has
been a decision by producers to CUJ'b
production in response to depressed
market prices pr1or . to the dry
weather, Hjort said.
Some broiler chickens have died
because of heat, and some cattle
producers have been forced io sen
animals to slaughter plants because
of dried up pastUJ'es, he said,
.
Looking at the losses so far, Hjort
said broiler meat output could be
down by about 2.5 million pouilds in
the third quarter from what it otherwise might have been. Beef production, however, could rise by 100
mUllan pounds.
"These are very small adjustments that are being made in

.: '980;:.:._ -::===-==------

., . 11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, :.Jul::!.y:.24~,
.. 31
Homes for Sale
...,. Beautiful large home . Low
utilities, bri ~~ ranch style,

32

fireplace, full basement,
family room,
air coo• ditibner, 3 Ca r garage.
Baum Addit ion , M eigs

Cameron, 14 x 64 two
bedroom ; 1971 L ibertv , 14 x
65 two bedroom ; 1968
Atlantic,
12 x 60 f'No

3 bedrooms, 2'1&gt; balhs,

response to the drought,'' he said.
For e1&lt;8Jilple,. reports indicate
broiler losses·at between 4.5 milllon
and 8.0million birds.
Comparatively, Hjort said, "Each
week we slaughter 80 milllon birds"
for the consumer market. And the
addition of 100 million pounds to the
be!lf supply is a small share of the 21
billion pounds or so that is consumed
annually. •

are

••' NEW 3 bedrOQ.m home for
t

Savel I I

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Write .vour own ad and order by mail ~llh this I
coupon, cancel your ad by phone when you get 1
results. Money not refundable.
,
1,

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• lots of storage, 2_ baths,

FIVE ROOM house, bath,
utility room, wall to wall

dlepart, Phone 992-5204.

Racine·Social Events

daughters, Lisa and Erika, of Orlando Florida; Mrs. Kenda Chapman
and Kimberly.-Jlf. Pickerington;
Melissa and Kenneth Russell of
Charleston, W.Va.
.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Quinlin and
children, Carolyn, David, J~
and Tommy and a friend, John
Davis· of East Liverpool, visited
Mrs. Hazel Carnahan Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E~kersley
and sons, Doug of Hannibal, N. Y.
spent a week with her parents, Mr.
·and Mrs. Ralph Badgley and Mrs .
Bonnie Simpson and Lisa of
Baltimore spent the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. William Hayman
and Mrs. Grella Simpson spent the
weekend at Jonesboro, Tenn. with
Mr .and Mrs. Mike Hayman and
family . They brought Travis and
Tate with them to spend a vacation
with their grandparents.

delicious refreshments were served
by ti]e hostess.
Mt. Albert Hill is a pneumonia
patient in Holzer Medical Center,
Room436.
The Happy Hustlers Sunday
School class of the United Methodist
Church entertained Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Roush and grandson and
Mrs. LaUJ'a Watson of Columbus at
noon Thursday, honoring Mrs. Watson · who is a long-time member of
the chUJ'ch and class. She is now
living in Columbus with her son-inlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
RQush.
Mrs. Frances Roberts spent a
recent Sunday with her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Philip RQberts at Patriot.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Russell are Mrs. Aleta BUJ'Ion and

By Mn. Francis Morris
The July me~ting ·of the Esther
Circle was held in the First Baptist
Church Fellowship room with Mrs.
Grella Simpson, hostess. The
meeting opened with group singing
of "My Faith Looks Up to Thee"
followed with prayer. Scriptlll'e
reading was from Psalms. The
devotional topic by Mrs. Mildred
Hart was titled, "In quietness and
confidence." In the )lusiness session
it was voted to send a gift of money
to Kodiak Mission station in Alaska
and it was discuased about sending
Bibles. A program was presented by
Mrs. Florence Adams entitled,
"How much of my life is my own."
Readings included, "A Place Just
For You," "Redeem The Time," "I
Can't Make It, Lord," "Johnny Appleseed." In the fellowship hour

. ' E.D
B A R r ·E L S, Loan
' Representative , 1100 East
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh .
Mortgage
money
available . All types home
f i'n anc ing,
ne w ,
·Old ,
r efinancing, and 2nd mar·
tgages. Phone 992:7000 or

I
I
I

I
I

.._
,
~.

.

Address

lI

•

Phone

':-

I:
I
I

l-AMounctmtnts
11-GIYtiWI\'
s-Happy Ads
.-Loll and Found

1
I

7-YariiSIIt

FIRST AD -

I

chen, porch, utility bldg.

on on·e acre and hard

road . Only $18,900.
.FAMILY HOME -

C~unf

name and address or
I phone number if used.
I You' ll get better results
I if you describe fully,
1 give price. The Sentinel
I reserves the right to
classify. edit or reject
I any ad. Your ad will be
I put In the proper
I classification if yo\J'II
I ICheck the proper box
I '.below,

I

I ( ) Wanted
I • () Far Sale
1 ( ) Announcement
I ( ) Far Rent

I

:: 1

"17.

1.

23 .
24.

1
I

36-Rtallltatt Wanftcl

4 P.M. Dilly
12 NctOI'I Satur4.,.

8.

...

9.

30.

33

- - -- - -

·II
I

•

.,

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

'·"

selling. Aiso do appra ising.
Osby (Ossle) Martin. 992·
6370 .

'·"

WILL

lac:h word over lht minimum IS worcllll 4 ceittt per Word per day.
A.dt '"""'"'other ttt.n Ctnltcutlva clays will be chllrtH 11 ttM 1 Uy

1

•

Iran·

etc. Cal.l245·9188.

111 memory, card ol Think• I rid Obituary: 6 :Ciflts per ward, IJ.OG
J

old

smissions,
batteries,
engines, or scrap metals,

..... .

mlnlmum. Calhinictvance.

BUY

... ..........
..... ,. _ , , , _ , ,..,. .

_,,,,

It
· ;;;;~;:===-~~==;;;;;;;;;;~~
I• ~::••:•;•N~'~
·
•
Announcements
•

FREEb ·

Plano Tuning · Lane
Daniels 742·2951. Tuning

ICE CREAM..

and Repair Service since
·1965. If no answer phone

With Any UN ICO
FREEZER PLUS :
$25 Dl SCOU lilT
Stop in for Details

992·2082.

ONE YEAR OLD female
collie to good nome,
playfur good with children.
992·5094.

POMEROY .
lANDMARK
Main St.
Pomeroy 99N181

BLONDE Male three mon ·
th old-kitten.74N328.

nurses

ex-

614-992 · 210~ .

11
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training

FIRST AD - 4 Yrs. old,

main -

as a young business person

Local

School

pick les.992-30U.

BIG SAVINGS on name

room for fabulous new win -

ter line. Don't miss this
chance to expand your
summer

wardrobe

with

beautiful, first rate quality
BE ELl NE clothes. 992·
394].,

PQMEROY; 0.
CharlesM. Hayes, Reilltor
Neacil E . Cars.!y, Br. Mor.
PtU91·2toJor992-27IO

some great gifts as a Sen·
tinet r 'o ute carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

Here is a fairly standard
type hand. South rurfs the secand c~ub and sees t~at 1f diamonds are kind enough to
· break 3-3, or if the man with

comfortable Home - NR·51,
Close in. 6 rms., tull)l turnish_ed,
nice porch. )lard an~. garaQe .
Thls wan'tl asi long.

Gen•ral

32

~

at the Pomeroy Health
Care Center. 992·6606 Man·
day throu\m Friday from 9·

District.

Must have accounting and

secretarial skills. 985·4292.

12 Situations Wanted
WOULD Ll KE to do your
housework . Call anytime
992·3429.

'•

Rutland.

s.

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
SU RANCE been
celled?
Lost
operator's license?

Insurance

992·2143.

IN ·

can your

Phone

IXMNING CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
SERV.ING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ·SINCE 1868
ARE .YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US

992-2342
DOWNINGs.atllDS AGENC~, INC.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

A one

41

storv frame house with
a tremendously la rge

ya rd and approx. 25

&lt;

1-304·773·

$38,953 .00 .
FREE PIANO -

Houses for Rent

HOME

to

responsible partv, wi II rent
the entire house plus renter
has the option to sublease

acres. Has a part base·
men·t and has recently
b ee n
r emo deled .

the other apt. for sup.
plement income, large
yard, newly remodeled .

Goes

Contact 1·803·772-0237.

with th i s 2 story, full
.basement home. Large
lot , 4 bedrooms, and has
lots
of
c losets .

42

Mobile Hames

for Rent
TWO bedroom trailer .
Adults only . Brown ' s
Tra iler Court. Call992·3324.

$28,500.00.
WLKESVILLE - ThisS
room house is situated

on lots lhat are level.
. Does need some repair,

but a good buy at
$16,500.00 .
SOUTHERN DISTRICT

1 BEDR'OOM Mobil e
Home. Adults only 992·2598.

62.

-------~--

Society 992-6260.

uP.

today . 30HB5·217D.

ca lls

TWO BEOROOM trai ler an
main

street

Pomeroy. 742·3155.
44

in

2 stor v older home
with a fir ep lac e, 4
bed r ooms and a car ·

,Easy and Essential

part. $16 ,000.00 .
RANCH HOUSE - Wilh

far Rent

TWO

BEDROOM apart·

ment .in Middleport . 1·304-

682·2566
45
Furnished Rooms
ROOM AND Board for
working man only, $150.00
per month. 992·5007 .

'

46
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route .33, North of
Pomerov . Large lo1s. Call
992·7419.

47

references. Prefer Meigs,
Athens, or Vinton counties.
1-614·758·5613.

for

3

Just $29,500.00.
SALEM CENTER -

53
Antiques
ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

40X60 business building
with approx . lh ·acre lot .

Coul d be used tor a
homesite .

pay cash or certif ied check
for antiques and collec·
tib.les or entire estates.
Nothing too large,.. Also,
guns, pocket watcli·es and

$9,000.00.
TIRED OF THE
HEAT? - AIR CONDI ·
TIONED and is
georgeous. I his regal
home has 4 'bedrooms,
spira l st Bircase, and
niany more features .

coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .
54
Misc. Merchanise
LADIES' beautiful high·
quality size 16 dresses.
brands: Dav id Crystal,
Verona. Lilly Pulitzer. One
is 100% silk. $10 each .
Never been worn. 992·3283 .

$59,500.00 .
LET US SHOW YOU
THESE NICE HOMES!
REALTOR
Henry E. .Cieland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

742 ·2474

.

OFFICE 992-2259

conditioner. Can be seen at

Kingsbury Park Sales,
Minersvil le, Oh. $250.

JHREE PIECE redwood
~et , like new. Call aft.. 5;
992-7352.

4978
SIZES
8-20

Fischer typewriter servlae
1BM plus most brands:
Contracts available. 797 ·
2401.
The Plains, Ohio
$32.50 flat rate per call.

·~ases.

Call Com ~
lit lete
Mortgag It
• ervjces
I lli
*Gallipolis, Ohio a
, ~446-1517 for mor~
:Jt-lnformation an~
,~our appoio.trntnt~

i

~~**********":"I
31

Homes for Sale

Three bedroom, 2 bath ran·
ch style home wltn g·a raqe
and
storage,
loiN
utllities.lmmaculate con·
dillon, many extras, OVflr
_ acre corner lot. :
Reduced thousands under
appraslal(prevlous. inquiT·
es excluded) Syracuse

m·.

5704 .

I

small

2

wheel

trailers

$75.00 - . 1 reese trailer hit·
ch. $175.00 . Nate Vanaman
742·2761.

master ' Scorcher' . 985-4341

afler4 :30 p.m.
TOP PRIORITY JACKEI- sew ot
in linen , wool jersey, sweatery

~second mortgages · ~
1and . reflnanc It

1975 GMC 3~ TON TRUCK
$3,000. 1976 20 foot tag along
travel trailer.$3,500. 2·

BRAND NEW girls 10
speed bike, AMF road·

i MONEY - MONEf

mortgegesJ '

Gosney, antiques; 26 N.

2nd. Middleport, OH. 992·
3161 .

OLD COl NS. pocket wal·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A . Wamslev,

·

All types ol root work,

or repair gutt ers
ar d downspouts, guner
ch.·cJnll~&gt;] and paintulg .
A ll work guaranteed .

nt•.v

n ZHol
j ct· 210U

knit. tweed, crepe. But sew •t!
You 'll wear and wea• and love it
and the cloche with everylhong 1
Printed Pattern 4978: Misses
Sizes 8. 10. l1. 14. 16. lB. 20.
Hat, medium. Size 11 (bust 34)
jacket. hal 2 ~ yds. 6Q.in. • •
$1.75 for tllh pattern. Add 504
!01 eoc;h paUern for firsl·tlass
aiomail and handlina. Send to:
Anne Adams
1~1
· Poltton Dept.

:WEDGE REALTY
WANT TO GET AWAY FROM IT ALU
8~

Acres Close To Town And
Schools In M11on. P1ved Road,
City W1ter, uree House In
Excellent Condition.

'the Dally Sentihel

Of{set the hil!h c~st of your grocery
bill, raise your own beef and gardens.
Also has a separate trailer hook up.
Priced To Sill At 65,000, Owner
Will Consider Trade ln.
SEE MARY KIBLER ON THIS ONt

243 West 17 SL, New York, NY
10011. Point NAME, ,ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, and STYLE NUMBER.
Busy women, lhe taslest·to·sew
lash ions a1e in our NEW SPRING·
SUMM ER PATTERN CATALOG•
Dresses, lops, jackets. pants.
Plus $1./S .IIee pattern coupo~ .
Send $1 foo Catalog.
127·Aipans 'n' Doilies . .' .$1.50
129-QultliEHJ Transfers .$1.50
llO·Swuleos·Sizes 38-56 .$1.50 '
ll2·Quill Ooitinals .. . ... $1.50
\

Pullins
Excavating
.Experienced Operators
available for local work .
• 2 rubber tire backhoes
• 1 excavator hoe 11!•

yd.

e2 DOzers
• Dump Trucks
All related equipment.

Ph. (304)' 773-5131
or( . 304) 992·2276
6 30 1 mo .

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION
- Back hoe and dump
truck service
-S hop and portable
welding
-Concrete work
-Commercial plumb-

ong
-Underground
fuel
storage installation
- Fiberglass pools

F 1 ee ~ s timates
~ ·c.~son.lbl e tJrice s
~: all tiOWclrd

992-2478
7·17·1 mo . pd.

Real Estate Loans
1 Jl/2°'o ltlrerest-30 Yrs.

PARK FINANCIAL

&amp; V'A Automatic
Loans, No Down Pay·
111ent. Federal Housing
Loans, 3", down ori
S2S,OOD; 5% down on
biltance, FHA 265 Sub-Stdy Program . FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort.
VA

O~en

Office 992-7544

992-7354

Home 992-6191

107 Sycamore St.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
7·13·1 mo.

1 '':l
• ·tt c

M·W·F 9:00 to 1.:00

By Appointment

Pomeroy, OH,

!.-==========+==========~~=============
Custom
Print
Shop

63
Livestock
JONES Meat Packing
slaughtering,
custom
processing, retail meat.

Washington Co. Rd . 248,
Little Hocking, OH. 667·
6133.

T · shirt and novel1v
sh 1rts for politic1ans,
ban tea ms, business or
individuals.
Shirts-!i4.00 Each
" We prant ALMOST
ilnythtng on ALMOST
anyth&amp;ng!"
Ph. 614-949·235H
evenings &amp; Weekends

SEARS SEWING machine
with cabinet, exc ellent con·

beautiful

high

quality fashionable stacks, •
blouses, jackets, dresses,
robes. flobe and pajama

set by Odette Borsa. Lilli

Ann suits, etc . Some ~re
brand new others worn
very little. Size 10·12·14.
For more Information call

992·3283.

.,

Building Supplies
318 inch rebar- 17c per foot
by 20 fl. section only . 0.
Bumgardner Sales. Noble
55

Summit Rd ., Middleport,

OH . 992·5724.

HIL LCREST

ENGLISH

SHEPHARD

B·&gt;·1 rding, all breeds . Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .

Also AKC registered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795.

-----.-.----------

Vinyl&amp;
Aluminum Siding

THE POOL PEOPLE
31711 Noble

• l nsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Rep1.1cement
Windows ·

~u rn

i t Rd.
Middleporl, Ohtc

jYB /14

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992· 2772
6-2S 1 mo .

~ale s,

service and sup ~
plies . In ground and
rlbavre ground pools.

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Holland chopper. 949·2680.

.....................
'-'---'"===-=~­

1975
OLDSMOBILE
Omega. Call anytime 949·
2816.

Eugene long (614) 843-3322
Superior Vinyl Products

73
vans &amp; 4 W.O.
1976 CHEVY Custom Van .

Farm Buildings
S1zes
" From 30x30"

$1,700. 773·5077.

Utility Buildings

Auto Parts

1972 Monte Carlo body par·
ts, one hood, two dooPS, one

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rf. J, Box s·~~
Rac1ne, Oh .

Ph. 61 4· 843·25jl
6 IHi c ·

serdees

s &amp;

MPLETE
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE
Grading· Seeding

Home
Improvements
'&lt;

-

G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam
c leaned . Free
estimate .
Reasonable

rates . Scotchgu;ord. 992·
6309 or 742·2211. '
Flooring, ceili ng, paneling,
doors and windows, also

painting. Caii992·27S9.

5 Think more of with
11 On the road
4 Spot
12 Make ef·
5 Children
fervescent
of nature
13 Make tortes 6 All set?
11 Waiter
7 Gwn up

s'i zes from 4x6 to l2x40

trunk lid, assorted front
en d Parts, rear g"tass. 9922779 .

81

by THOMA5 JOSEPH
ACROS8
Z Drowning in
1 Domesticate
3 Corrununicate

SMALL

&amp; Accessories

15 Employ
18 Sul!ered frOJTI
11 Call it off
18 True grits
20 Gennan
article
21 Conveying
vehicles

Shrubbery

New
Driveways
Gravel or concrete.
Regrade driveways (&amp;
repair). Sidewalks and
Patios .
Complete

and transit layout. 992·7201.

author

23 Tooth (Fr.)
24 Noted Doe

capital

1...+-+- 1-+-+-

00WN

OAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
AXVDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G F .E L L 0 W

One letter simply s tands for another. In this sample A is
used' for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and format~on of the words are 11!
hints. Each day thf' code INters are dif!erent. •
,. ·

CRYPTOQUOTES

foot . See us also for free
estllll\ates on awrilngs, ca l[·
ports and skirting. We ar'e
your authorized dealer for
the best awnings on the

TKLUGOK

makts .

992· 2284 .

all

The market

Fabric Shop,
Po'meroy .
Authorizec:t Singer Sales
and Serv ice. We sharpen
!lcissors.

-----

~ -·-'-· -- --

by

Urban

1n..

dustries. Kingsbury Home

Sa les. 1100 E. Main Sl.,
Pomeroy. Ohio. Call 992 ~
7034.

workers'
union

36 Holm

84

service,

MDock·

34 Albanian

WBOPQBWULO

Repairs,

cucltoo

' island
31 Frost
32 Gennan city

foot; 12' wide, $1 .75 per
foot ; 10' wide, $1.50 per,

MACHINE

SSBlllclt

in Toulon
30 South Seas

---·--- ·, Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

:ll Persian

27 Choose
28 Title

3ll Dorniclllate
~Skin condition

NOW
preventive
main tenance-mobile home roof
coating,
labor
and
material : 14' wide, $2 per

theearUo

II $COlt ·
henolne

25 Swiss city

Ga~age

M. H. Repair ·
IS THE TIME for

building
28 Worked

22 Mixer
,.,.....,......,.,--,,.....

37 Balanced
38 German
art soog

Next to State Highway
an Route 7, 985·
3825.
85
General Hauling
WILL HAUL limestone and

Yestenla''• ~wer

23 Take
away .
from
24 Bore
25 Hat style
26 Front ola

26Dim

pumps and accessories.

ded , septic
tank in·
stallation, .water and gas
lines.
Excavating work

10 E..cute
16 Helpful
suggestion
19 "Tile Holy
Sinner' '

tqasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .

86

9 Of an EngUsh school

draw

Excavating
Water well drilling . Tom gravel . Also, lime hauling
Lewis .
304·895 ·3802. and spreading . Leo Morris
Seasonal discount on all Trucking. Phone 742·2455.

J X F BACKHOE SER ·
VICE liscensed and bon·

the works
8 Braved

22 Box office

mobile home hook·up.
HOME NEEDING pain·
Brush clearing work .
ted? Gutters in need of
CALL :
repair? Is thai roof begin·
992-6323 or 992-6011
nlng to leak?
Call 992·3519,
992·3941,
or 992·5126
and get \-~~~~~~7~·1~0·~1~m~a~.;j
things all fixed up for that 84
Electrical
bad weather thats on its
.• &amp; Refrigeration
way . By the way, free
estimates are provided . ELWOOD
BOWER S
REPAIR Sweepers,

83

7-10· 1 mo.

ALL STEEL

White, p .s., p .b ., air, radial
ti res, am -fm cassette .

76

• New Homes -.extensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
6·30·1 mo.

serving your area for 25 years
Cali Now for Large Savings
For Free Estimate Call

Autos for Sale

71

ROUSH
CONSTROCTION,

VINYL SIDING

farm puppies, ready to go
in 2 weeks, 1 806 diesel trac·
tor, si Iage wagon ; New

SE WIN G
KENNELS.

J&amp;LBI.DWN
INSUlATION

4346 .

dillon, stretch and design
do remodeling ,
stitches. $95.00 can be seen · Will
roofing , palritlng I elect.
at apartment 10 Pomeroy Free estimates. Call
Cliffs Apts, Union Avenue,
Charles Sinclair, 985·4121 .
Pomeroy, Ohio
LADIES

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

BRUDE SOW 14 months
5·1·11c
·
6·16·1fc
old approximately 425
pounds, Hampshire. · has
had one Iiiier. $175.00, 985· ~~---------+-----------t-----------

USED self·conlained air

Jean Trussell949-2660

Services
' " Maggie's Upholstery;•
Rebuilding, Refinishing,
Reupnolstery, Fabric and
vinyl samples. Call 74~ ·

*First

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

1975 OLDS OMEGA, good
dependable car, call
anytime 949·2816.

2852.

or Y"n· 7l14
Pomeroy , Oh.

~1 - 6215

D&amp;M
CONTRACTORS
·-DRY WALLING
-ROOFING
-REMODEL! NG
-CONCRETE
Free Estimates

7·13·1 mo ..

• .._. "'"' · ' . _..,_ ,. n •

bedrooms, outbuildings,
and 6 acres. Close in _

or

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass. china.
anything. See or call Ruth

Wanted to Rent

want farm to caretake in
exchange for rent. 8 years
experience
and
have

trai ler

Call tor Free Siding
Estimate, 949 -2801 or
Y4Y·2860. No Sunday
calls.

2600.

excellent condition, only
J1!2 yrs. old. 3 bedrooms,
fam ily room , and P/z

has

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

_
_
CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
en·d. $12 p-er · ton . Bundled
slab. $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2.
Pomerov992-2689.

STERLING
SILVER AND,
RINGS , JEWELRY
RENTER'S assistance for ·MISC.
ITEMS . PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
Manor apts. Call992·7787.
HIGHEST UP ·TO·DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
ONE AND TWO bedroom BURKETT
BARBER
cabins, furnished, by week SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
or month . 773·5471 or 742· OHIO, OR CALL 992·3476.

COUPLE WITH children

place

Wanted to Buy

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap · GOLD AND SILVER
ts. Phone 992·5434.
COINS OF THE WORLD.

5 beau tiful ac res and in

Nice

Vinyl and Alum inurn
Siding

742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 5926462.

Apartment

V.C. YOUNG II

992 -3795

1-;.----------+----------+----------

ALTO
SAXA PHONE,
$100.00. 985-4279 .

svracuse, Ohio, no pets, for
more information call 992-

Pomeroy, Oh .

4-:.Ht c

We are picking up several
repossessed and trade-in
pianos and organs in your
area . Prices from $250 and
Call credit manager

TRAILER ON large lot in

east

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
6ltiE.Maon

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Sunday

Farms- Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls profit and 105S statements •. all
led .. r.ol and st.ote torms .

Three

Musical
Instruments

--.-Addon.s ~n d ,
remodeling
- Rooting and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Plumbin') and
c lectric ..11 work
( Free Estimdtes)

s v, ness-

beautiful male shephards,
one white, a blue·tick type,
young irish setter, one
pomerlan type .

57

"YOUNGS ..
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

Reeves

PUT A COLD nose in your
futur e.
Shots, wormed,
healthv dogs of all sizes.
Meigs County Humane

(NEWSPAPER ENTER PRISE ASSN .)

3525, no
please.

Ruth

(614) 698 ·3290.

TRAILER LOT lor rent on
Kingsbury Road . 742·3122.

-

.~.
I

Against that division or the
East.West
would
have been cards
way there
to make
the
contract. 00

Western .

_..

Senior Citizens In Village

DUPLEX

I

•

Call

5373 .

Tr ai ler or
homesite.
Close in and over one
acre. Uti I ities available.

chi ldre n,

Housing
H eadquarters

. men!. Blankets, bells,
boots. etc . Engl ish and

42

electric , septic
tank,
footers for a t railer .

lal with . ~. workshop
an d garage . Other
buiJdings . $13,500.00 .
NEW LISTING -

MWs*i~
· ·.
13

MObile Homes
for Sale

Lots &amp; Acreage
35
1.69 ACRES, city water ,

mobile hOmP 12x 50 on
apprax. -.. ~\.\) ·e laying

ed with woven and barb
wire . Al l minerals and
some timber .

EVERYDAY SOME ·
ONE CALLS US ON
OUR LISTINGS. IT
COULD BE YOURS .
SOMETIMES A PRO·
PERTY BECOMES A
BURDEN, TRY US
FOR A SOLUTION.
OUR HOME SHI.ELD
WILL HELP SELL
YOUR
PROERTY .
LINE ONE 992·3325,
LINE TW0992·3876.

long diamonds makes a mistake and discards down to
three, there are .10 easy tricks.
Can South do anything to
handle a 4-2 diamond break?
He certainly can. All he has
to do is to play two rounds of
trumps .and then go af~er
diamonds. If the man w1th
just two diamonds was dealt
Only two trumps he ·won't be
able to ruff the third diamond
and South will have his cake
and eat it too.
East has two diamonds and
three trumps but this line of
play stiH brings in 10 tricks .
After the two rc.unds of
trumps So~th cashes dummy's
ace and king of diamonds and
leads a third one toward his
hand. If East ruffs, South is
left with the good queen of
diamonds and can discard one
of dummy's hearts on it which
will leave him with just one
heart loser instead of two.
If it turns out that East has
two trumps:. and four diamoods then West would get to
ruff t he queen &lt;Of diamonds.
South would aet to ruff his
small diamon 1ater on , but
would still be down one.

1•••••••••• 1----------..,.----------;

$4,000.00 .
CHESTE 'R -

Business Services

HOOF ponies
HOLLOW
.. _
and
and: Horses
riding 1
1·1 \ . - - . . . , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - r - - - - . . . . , - l essons . · Everyttling
Imaginable in hotse equip-

23

Needed RDor LPN lor 11 to
7:30 shill. Part-time or full ·
time. Good working con·
ditions. Contact Mr . Zidl an

,

By Oswald JocQby
aad A laD SoDtag

car g·arage . Mostly fen c·

home with 2. baths, cen ·
tral heat, city water,
j ust outside of town .
Large yard with shade
trees , patio , 2 ca r
garage a n_d other
buildings. Call to see.

coal stove used one year ;
also cucumbers and

and

••
11

balhs. $51 ,000 .00:. ·
DON'T FENCE ME IN!

YOUR CHILDREN Will love th is 11 room

FRANKLIN WOOD and

outfits

Bath ,

on new 33 . Pl enty of spr ·
·ing water,. barn, large
block building , 2 frame
houses, nice ,,,obile
home with patio and 3

CANNING CORN, While
and yellow; Charles Harr is
and Sons. 843·2693.

Se veral

in

FIRST AD - 70 ACRES

Mlscell•neous

separate pieces on hand,

home

car pe ting, ba seboard
heat, patio, garage and
ni ce level lot. Can move
in on signi ng of deed .

you a free estimate.

brand BEELINE clothes.
Assorted sizes, current
summer styles, all reduced
to unbelievable prices.

bedroom

, _ Syracuse.

not have lo·worry . Call 992·
3941, 992·5126, or 992·3519
and we' ll come and give
17

2 t . Pass
Pass Pass

It

OPening lead:+ K

and earn good money plus

13

1

Matllle HomtoultiiiMI V.lrd Ule11r1 acceptMontywlth Cllh with
order. u cft.t c!Yr.. tor Us nrrylnt ao• ..umber In care of Thll

registered

p6sition a·vailable, Eastern

small. Check Prices before

U5

sliver

Wanted to Buy

glass or china, will pay tqp
dollar. or complete estates.
No item too large or too

2.25

jewelrv,

ASSISTANT TO treasurers

Gold, silver or foreign

'd~ys

II
Public Notice
I I 742·2095. The Executor
.I
I
1 any
reserves the right to relecl
..
or all bids.
I
.. . .L
Joe M. Bolin,
~~~·------~-•JI'IIIl-----------~Executor,
Public Notice
Estate of
PuDiic '!!tlce
Essie Russell
NOTICE
estd1e consists of a two·
OfferS w ill be received at jstory frame dwelling with · (7) 23. 24, 25, 27, 28. 29. 61c
the office of Bernard V. ·10 rooms and 2 11aths. In ad·
Fultz, Bank one of dition, ther.e . is- a 3-room
3
Announcements
Pomeroy
buil~lng,
garage apartment over a
Pomerov, 1 Oh io, unttl 9:00 double garage On the real
PAY
higMst prices
1
O' Clock A.M., August 1, estale. Writtenzfers may
1980, tor The sale of the be submitted
anV. lime possible for gold and sliver,
Essie B. Russell residence unlil the tim.,let above. coins, rings, lewelry, etc.
situated at 244 North The property
y be seen contact Ed Burkett Barber
only, by Shop, Middleport.
Second Avenue, Mid· by a ppointm
dleport, Ohio. The reai calling the u,rslgned at
I

Veterans
Memorial
Hospital , Pomeroy , Oh. 1·

11- Uphols,.ry

3

reason for selling, to make

7760.

10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat.
gold . Dental gold and gold
ear pins. 675·3010.

lilly

Help Wanted

perienced in I.C .U., C.C.U.
as well as general staff
duty . Salary c om ·
mensurate with exp. Con·
tact Teresa Collins RN ,

ll--EJCUwttlnt
14-Eitc1rlcal
&amp; RtfrlttrlfiJNt
IJ--OIMI'•I Houllng
16-M.H. RttMir

CMrtt
1.21

11

dollars, sterling, etc., wood
ice boxes, antique.s, etc.
Complele
househ'blds.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992·

9

Ctlh

Wanted 10 Buy

9

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
BRADFORO, Auctioneer,

11-Homtlmprovtmtnts
11---Ptumblnl &amp; Excav•Ung

llllyl
liiiYS

1

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

I.

l-----------,.-----------1
rings,

949·248] or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford,

eSERvt'c Es

Jumbles: PANIC · HASTY MOHAIR WEAKEN
• at her - WI TH " AH '' I·
Answer: How men tooked

whitehouse on left.

Complete Service. Phone

&amp; ACCitSIOI'Itl
77-Auto Rtpelr

~

1!I Words or Under

1;

35.

15.

.Auto P1rts .

Rates and Other Information

I'
I!
lj

74---Motircycits

.
YesterdayS

Iron and brass beds, old REGISTERED NURSES.
furniture, desks, gold .Immed iate opening for

coins or any gold or silver
items. Antique furniture,

II

· l-4 .

11101 tor Slit

("n1wera torryorrow}

Points lurn left onto Flat·
wood Rd . Go 3110 mile to

8

n - ans&amp;4w .o.

lor MCMMIIY .

I·
I
1

.

e1:ANSPORTATION

Want· Ad Advertising
Deadlines

J'

Jl.
2
3 .

u- Steel &amp; FtrtiUatr

37---Rulton

1

I
' II
'I
.I
.1
:I

'I

.,.._Hoy&amp; Grain

n-

antiques" furpictures ,

glassware, books, fabr ic,

u-Livnhtelt

71

Now arr"nge the circled let1 .!.rs to
torm the surprise answer. as sug·
ge$ted by the allO\Ie canoon.

M id-

patterns, new slow cooker.
Lots of other nice things.
North on Rte. 7 to Five

"-IJarm ECI'IIpment
61-Wanr.l to IU'f
11- TI'I.ICkl for Slit

Opportunity
Monev to Lou

1
1
I
I'

cosmetics,
niture ,

'

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVI!iSTOCK

IIISIIIMS

li - Homtstor!lalel
32--Mobllt+ttmts
for Salt
lJ-,trml for Stle
l4-8uti11HIIIUIIIUROI
l5-LDt1 a Acratgt

I'

I
' II
25.
I'
I
26. - - - - - 1
21 .
.I
28.
1
2'1.
I

• J .16.

,._Ptfllor Sate

eREALESTATE

1·

18.
19.
20.

2.
3.

I 10:
I
I 11
I 12.'
:I
1 ll .
: I 14.

st-iuildlnt SUPftlts

Rep~lr

avenue,

winter? How about that
roof and barn, that snow

can sit back In front of that

? - ll'f

2 FAMILY Yard Sale star·
ling 9 a.m . F ro•., J u1Y 25 .
Lots of high quality
I
c o 'hi ng, E sI ee L au d er

St-Misc. Mtrctt.ncllto

222:1--Proreuhlnlll
S.nkts

.I

6.
1.

U-AnfiiiU"

eFINANCIAL

.1

5.

1J .... Htlpw 1 ntld

21 ....

2 t.
22.

4.

5I-H01.1Hhokl GOOds
52-CI, TV, Radio lqulpm_.,1

I Cl

I

dleport.

eMERCIIANDISE

lt-SCitOOIIIAifri.ICfiiMI
16--RlfiO, TV

These cash rates
lncludediscount

South 2nd

17 ACRES -

ting, gutter repair, patch
work, Odds and ends, so you

· I K] J
I RETIGO~
SiiC:K iO YOUR
DIET, AND YOU
I I r
Ml\SJHi LOeeI LEPPURj
I KI
Answer here: t I I X) K
XXXI X)
I

MOVING AWAY sale July
25,26,27. Baby things, avon
bottles. odds and ends. 11
a.m. until dark. 1041 I

&amp;-Wonted to Buy
e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

1t---W1nltd To Do

4

bedrooms, 2 baths, tur ·
nace, natural ga s, din ing room , varnished
floors , 2 car garage, cor - ·
.' ner lot and small 2 room

warm fire this winter and

lice In TuppersPiains.10·4.

47---Wantecl to Rent

12- Situlttcl WI ntH
ll-l_n surtnct
14-llullri•n Tralnlnl

Nice 2

bedroom home with tor mica bath, shower In
tub, natural gas forced
air furnace , lafge kit-

tanence work for you, pain·

":-.;.."':;:.!.-· ' - - ..

.....

General

NEW LISTING
CHESTER - 2 bedroom

Phone
1- ( 614) ·992·3325

ing land for farming or
as a subdivision . Lots of
farm bui ldings, good old
· 10 room home with bath .

general

Vulnerable: East·West
Dealer: South
Nor111 Eill
Scll.llb

bedroom, bulll·ln bunks,
48x 10 mabi le home. $2800,
land contract. $300 dawn.
Write J. Bowland. 15068
Empire Rd.. Thornville,
OH . 43076.

Situations Wanted

any

SOUTH

$500 down or will negotiate
cash
sale.
Also one

WILL YOUR HOUSE
withstand another hard

do

D

I KJ

m isc. Sponsored by Youth
of the South Bethel
Church across from post of-

• 41---lqui(IMntnt lor Rent

1-PI.tiMichlt
1 Auction

byHenriArrw;Kdan&lt;S.PoblH

• 10 5

.Q9"

MOBILE home for sale,
$6500, land contract with

Near city
~ater ,
electric and
seiker . Can be divided
into building lots in
Pomerov .

12

.Q98 6

••

REALTY

Real Estate

shop. Ask ing $35,000.
70 ACRES - Nice roll·

gets pretty heavy . Let us

class

eRENTALS

'[jl THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

unscramble the~ tour Jurnt»es,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

YARD AND bake sale
Friday 25 and Saturday,
26th. Lots of clothing and

••-Housn for • .nt
42-MOI)IIt Homes
lor Rtnt
t4-APIIrfmtnt ltr Rent
t5-FRooml
·
.u-s.,.u tor Rtnt

ffi\l

~ ~ ~~ s

cessories.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

I Print one word in each
I space below. Each in· ·
1 lila I or group of figures ·

1 counts as a Word.

'fl\ll}~

7
Yard Sale
THREE FAMILY yard
sale Friday and Saturday,
25 and 26 10·4, Riggscrest
Addition 1.2 miles above
Eastern High School. Baby
and toddler girls clothes,
household items. · mens
bawling ball a~d ac·

z

.AKJ104
• A74
• Q!4 2

HAYES

.. 992·5732.

1\bOul naif fenced .

or Write Daily .S entinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero'JI, 0., 45769

2-1r1 Mtmorllm

·

tric home, over 1 acre,
disposal and d ishwasher,
carpeted4 near Langsville
and mines . Can be Seen
anytime9·9, 742 ·2819. .

THIS VIEW FROM beneath the Ellfel Tower was captured by Academy Award·wlnn~r
Francis Thompson for his film "Living Planet." Tbe film recently opened at New York •
Radio City Music Hall, tbe first stop in a series of showings scheduled to take place across
tbe country.

EAST
• 93

Pus
Pass

NEW 3 Bedroom all elec·

PHONE 992-2156

eANNOUNCEMENTS

Real Estate

WEST

t7 6
.KJ 2
fJ96 3

.A KJS

3519.

.carpet, storm doors and
.. windows, aluminum siding,
one car garage_ Located on
Brownell Avenue, M id·

WASHINGTON (AP) - The public
is being asked to .submit written
comments on a proPosal that would
boost federal price supports to dairy
fanners on Oct. 1, an action the
Agriculllll'e Department says would
mean higher prices for milk in
grocery stores.
Under law, USDA is required to
adjus~ the support price each Oct. 1
and again on April 1 to renect
changes in production costs.
. Deputy Secretary Jim Williams
said Wednesday the formula, if applied as the~w
now requires, would
raise supports
around $12.73 per
100 pounds
· . sold to make butter, cheese and nonfat dry milk, an
increase of 66 cents.
"It could result in a I&gt;-to !kent per
gallon .increase in milk prices at the
retail level," the announcement
said.
Comments can be sent by Aug. 18
to: Director, Procurement and Sales
Division, Room 5741, South Building,
USDA, P.O. Box 2414, Washington,
D.C. 20013.

1- C•rct al Th•nks

larg e

~ garage, 1 acre l ot. 992 ·3454.

WANT AD INFORMATION

l·

located near ·Chester with
fi nished 8 x 1.4 room. Completelv set up and can be
rented on premises . 985·

room,

tQI S

. 108 6 3

·recreati on room, fireplace,

f dining

WASHINGTON (AP)- AgricultUJ'e
Department analysts say prospects
for the Soviet Union's 1980 grain
crop continues to look favorable.
"Current reports from the USSR
indicate that both winter and spring
grains are in gQod condition in most
areas of the country," the department's Foreign Agricltural Service
said Wednesday,. ·
Earlier this 100nth; the department forecast the total Soviet grain
harvest at about 215 mUllan metric
tons, up 20 percent from last year's
reduced output of 179.3 million. A
metric ton is about 2,205 pounds.

7· 24 -1 0

•tos 3

Pl. Pleasant, W.VA .
675-4424 .
UNFURN ISHED 12 x 60
BUDDY mobile home

Built· in

NORTH
t AK 7

kitchen,

" sale .

I

1:,

New

B&amp; S
Mobile Home Sa les

on Eagle Ridge ·
• Rd . Phone 949·2793.

·.,..---------------~-~---1'1h----------...!...---.-------,

I'
I' .

1968

Pets for Sale

POO DLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 6U-36nno.

Some •plits unmanageable

twa bedroom ; 1967 Buddy,
12 • 50, 2 bedroom .

~ocaled

&gt;

Curb Inflation.
I
.
:·I Pay Cash for
l Classlfleds arid

be droom ;

S6

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Moon , f2 x 60 with expando,

Small in:Yestment, large returns, ·Sentinel W~t Ads
f

70 three bedroom ; 1971

County. Call985·4169.

Three year old, five room
house with central air and
heat, carpet throughout, 24
acres w itt) fruit trees.

BRIDGE

Mobile Homes
for Sale
1975 Western Mansion 1-4 x

WJ
WJ

UB C

C P B ' J

OliKKN

JVKD

MPYYD

u~t,p a J

JVKD

MPYYD

U T PGJ

vK

C P B .' J

TKLUGOK

J

D.

OAKKN . - EYUBRAW. B · N .
UCUQO
Yesterday's Cryploquole: ALL RELIGIONS MUST BE
TOLERATED ... FOR ... EVERY MAN MUST GET TO HEAVEN
IN HIS 0.~ WAY.-FREDERICK THE GREAT

�.

p;r~-;bQ~t;"'" result from producer cutback
',;.• ~

WASHINGTON (AP) - A senior
AgricultUJ'e Oeparbnent official
says the recent price boos~ for some
commodities, including hogs and
broiler chickens, are mainly the
result of producers cutting back, not
of the scorching weather that has
grippejl much of the nation. ,
Moreover, Howard W. Hjort, the
department's chief economist and
policy analyst, says this summer's
heat wave, although it has caused
extensive crop and livestock losS in
some areas, so far has not had much
effect on iood prices in general.
Even if the hot, dry weather hangs
on the rest of the summer, it.
probably would . not have much effect on food prices this year or in the
first half of 1981, Hjort told a news
conference Wednesday.
Despite recent price increases for
some items, Hjort said, "By and ···
large, farm prices for foods are stiil
below where they were a year ago."
Corn prices are now up 3 percent
from a year ago, hogs up 10 percent
- after . being severely depressed
last spring - slaUghter steers up 6
percent, eggs up 20 percent and
broilers up 50 percent, he said.
But farm prices of wheat are down
3 pereent from a year ago, soybeans
4 percent, slaughter cows 3 percent
and feeder cattle 16 percent.
Since last fall, the USDA has been
predicting retail food prices in 1980
would go up an average of 7 to 11 percent from 1979 levels, depending on
the weather, crop yields and ·the
generalecono01y.
"OUJ' current estimate is very
much within that range," Hjort said.
Further, he said, the mos1likely
increase still being · looked · at by
department experts is mthe range
of8 percent to 9 percent this year.
"That assessment · can ac- ·
commodate some rather wideranging scenarios with respect to
drought," Hjort said.
Pressed further, Hjort said USDA.
economists hav11 a "point estimate"
now that food prices may go up 8.4
percent. Before the drought it was
8.3 percent.
His comments followed a report
by the Labor Department that retail

foottpnces rose 0.5 percent in June,
allQting for seasonal adjiJll.bnent.
Tlie Agriculture Department uses
pnce figlll'es that
not seasonally
adjuted. For example, the June
food~ce increase on a unadjusted ·
baSil was 0.6 percent.
Ai he has before, Hjort said food
pricts - after showing only modest
increases in 11\e first half of this year .
- are expected to gain sharply in
the ·third quarter because of rilling
prices of some commodities, including cattle, hogs and broiler
chickens.
For e1&lt;8Jilp!e, Hjort said the July
food price index when it is issued a
montjl from now probably will sbow
a boost of arOWld 1.0 percent, almost
double the June rate.
For the entire July-september
quarter, Hjort said food prices may
go up at~ annual rate of 12 percent
to 13.percent, meaning that would be
the increase for the entir~ year if it
was maintained over four quarters.
But Hjort said a seasonally larger
supply of livestiick going to market
this fall will help hold price gains in
the fourth quarter to an annual rate
of around 5 percent.
·
Hjort said analysts feel food prices
in the first half of 1981 might rise at
an annual rate of 7 percent to 9 percent.
.
If the present drought situation
hangs on, it could add another 1 percent to 1981 food prices, he said.
The major factor in rising prices
of meat animals and poultry has
been a decision by producers to CUJ'b
production in response to depressed
market prices pr1or . to the dry
weather, Hjort said.
Some broiler chickens have died
because of heat, and some cattle
producers have been forced io sen
animals to slaughter plants because
of dried up pastUJ'es, he said,
.
Looking at the losses so far, Hjort
said broiler meat output could be
down by about 2.5 million pouilds in
the third quarter from what it otherwise might have been. Beef production, however, could rise by 100
mUllan pounds.
"These are very small adjustments that are being made in

.: '980;:.:._ -::===-==------

., . 11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, :.Jul::!.y:.24~,
.. 31
Homes for Sale
...,. Beautiful large home . Low
utilities, bri ~~ ranch style,

32

fireplace, full basement,
family room,
air coo• ditibner, 3 Ca r garage.
Baum Addit ion , M eigs

Cameron, 14 x 64 two
bedroom ; 1971 L ibertv , 14 x
65 two bedroom ; 1968
Atlantic,
12 x 60 f'No

3 bedrooms, 2'1&gt; balhs,

response to the drought,'' he said.
For e1&lt;8Jilple,. reports indicate
broiler losses·at between 4.5 milllon
and 8.0million birds.
Comparatively, Hjort said, "Each
week we slaughter 80 milllon birds"
for the consumer market. And the
addition of 100 million pounds to the
be!lf supply is a small share of the 21
billion pounds or so that is consumed
annually. •

are

••' NEW 3 bedrOQ.m home for
t

Savel I I

:.!
·I

1'

1:

f.

I

:I
'I

1

Write .vour own ad and order by mail ~llh this I
coupon, cancel your ad by phone when you get 1
results. Money not refundable.
,
1,

I

I·

• lots of storage, 2_ baths,

FIVE ROOM house, bath,
utility room, wall to wall

dlepart, Phone 992-5204.

Racine·Social Events

daughters, Lisa and Erika, of Orlando Florida; Mrs. Kenda Chapman
and Kimberly.-Jlf. Pickerington;
Melissa and Kenneth Russell of
Charleston, W.Va.
.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Quinlin and
children, Carolyn, David, J~
and Tommy and a friend, John
Davis· of East Liverpool, visited
Mrs. Hazel Carnahan Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E~kersley
and sons, Doug of Hannibal, N. Y.
spent a week with her parents, Mr.
·and Mrs. Ralph Badgley and Mrs .
Bonnie Simpson and Lisa of
Baltimore spent the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. William Hayman
and Mrs. Grella Simpson spent the
weekend at Jonesboro, Tenn. with
Mr .and Mrs. Mike Hayman and
family . They brought Travis and
Tate with them to spend a vacation
with their grandparents.

delicious refreshments were served
by ti]e hostess.
Mt. Albert Hill is a pneumonia
patient in Holzer Medical Center,
Room436.
The Happy Hustlers Sunday
School class of the United Methodist
Church entertained Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Roush and grandson and
Mrs. LaUJ'a Watson of Columbus at
noon Thursday, honoring Mrs. Watson · who is a long-time member of
the chUJ'ch and class. She is now
living in Columbus with her son-inlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
RQush.
Mrs. Frances Roberts spent a
recent Sunday with her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Philip RQberts at Patriot.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Russell are Mrs. Aleta BUJ'Ion and

By Mn. Francis Morris
The July me~ting ·of the Esther
Circle was held in the First Baptist
Church Fellowship room with Mrs.
Grella Simpson, hostess. The
meeting opened with group singing
of "My Faith Looks Up to Thee"
followed with prayer. Scriptlll'e
reading was from Psalms. The
devotional topic by Mrs. Mildred
Hart was titled, "In quietness and
confidence." In the )lusiness session
it was voted to send a gift of money
to Kodiak Mission station in Alaska
and it was discuased about sending
Bibles. A program was presented by
Mrs. Florence Adams entitled,
"How much of my life is my own."
Readings included, "A Place Just
For You," "Redeem The Time," "I
Can't Make It, Lord," "Johnny Appleseed." In the fellowship hour

. ' E.D
B A R r ·E L S, Loan
' Representative , 1100 East
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh .
Mortgage
money
available . All types home
f i'n anc ing,
ne w ,
·Old ,
r efinancing, and 2nd mar·
tgages. Phone 992:7000 or

I
I
I

I
I

.._
,
~.

.

Address

lI

•

Phone

':-

I:
I
I

l-AMounctmtnts
11-GIYtiWI\'
s-Happy Ads
.-Loll and Found

1
I

7-YariiSIIt

FIRST AD -

I

chen, porch, utility bldg.

on on·e acre and hard

road . Only $18,900.
.FAMILY HOME -

C~unf

name and address or
I phone number if used.
I You' ll get better results
I if you describe fully,
1 give price. The Sentinel
I reserves the right to
classify. edit or reject
I any ad. Your ad will be
I put In the proper
I classification if yo\J'II
I ICheck the proper box
I '.below,

I

I ( ) Wanted
I • () Far Sale
1 ( ) Announcement
I ( ) Far Rent

I

:: 1

"17.

1.

23 .
24.

1
I

36-Rtallltatt Wanftcl

4 P.M. Dilly
12 NctOI'I Satur4.,.

8.

...

9.

30.

33

- - -- - -

·II
I

•

.,

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

'·"

selling. Aiso do appra ising.
Osby (Ossle) Martin. 992·
6370 .

'·"

WILL

lac:h word over lht minimum IS worcllll 4 ceittt per Word per day.
A.dt '"""'"'other ttt.n Ctnltcutlva clays will be chllrtH 11 ttM 1 Uy

1

•

Iran·

etc. Cal.l245·9188.

111 memory, card ol Think• I rid Obituary: 6 :Ciflts per ward, IJ.OG
J

old

smissions,
batteries,
engines, or scrap metals,

..... .

mlnlmum. Calhinictvance.

BUY

... ..........
..... ,. _ , , , _ , ,..,. .

_,,,,

It
· ;;;;~;:===-~~==;;;;;;;;;;~~
I• ~::••:•;•N~'~
·
•
Announcements
•

FREEb ·

Plano Tuning · Lane
Daniels 742·2951. Tuning

ICE CREAM..

and Repair Service since
·1965. If no answer phone

With Any UN ICO
FREEZER PLUS :
$25 Dl SCOU lilT
Stop in for Details

992·2082.

ONE YEAR OLD female
collie to good nome,
playfur good with children.
992·5094.

POMEROY .
lANDMARK
Main St.
Pomeroy 99N181

BLONDE Male three mon ·
th old-kitten.74N328.

nurses

ex-

614-992 · 210~ .

11
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training

FIRST AD - 4 Yrs. old,

main -

as a young business person

Local

School

pick les.992-30U.

BIG SAVINGS on name

room for fabulous new win -

ter line. Don't miss this
chance to expand your
summer

wardrobe

with

beautiful, first rate quality
BE ELl NE clothes. 992·
394].,

PQMEROY; 0.
CharlesM. Hayes, Reilltor
Neacil E . Cars.!y, Br. Mor.
PtU91·2toJor992-27IO

some great gifts as a Sen·
tinet r 'o ute carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

Here is a fairly standard
type hand. South rurfs the secand c~ub and sees t~at 1f diamonds are kind enough to
· break 3-3, or if the man with

comfortable Home - NR·51,
Close in. 6 rms., tull)l turnish_ed,
nice porch. )lard an~. garaQe .
Thls wan'tl asi long.

Gen•ral

32

~

at the Pomeroy Health
Care Center. 992·6606 Man·
day throu\m Friday from 9·

District.

Must have accounting and

secretarial skills. 985·4292.

12 Situations Wanted
WOULD Ll KE to do your
housework . Call anytime
992·3429.

'•

Rutland.

s.

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
SU RANCE been
celled?
Lost
operator's license?

Insurance

992·2143.

IN ·

can your

Phone

IXMNING CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
SERV.ING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ·SINCE 1868
ARE .YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US

992-2342
DOWNINGs.atllDS AGENC~, INC.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

A one

41

storv frame house with
a tremendously la rge

ya rd and approx. 25

&lt;

1-304·773·

$38,953 .00 .
FREE PIANO -

Houses for Rent

HOME

to

responsible partv, wi II rent
the entire house plus renter
has the option to sublease

acres. Has a part base·
men·t and has recently
b ee n
r emo deled .

the other apt. for sup.
plement income, large
yard, newly remodeled .

Goes

Contact 1·803·772-0237.

with th i s 2 story, full
.basement home. Large
lot , 4 bedrooms, and has
lots
of
c losets .

42

Mobile Hames

for Rent
TWO bedroom trailer .
Adults only . Brown ' s
Tra iler Court. Call992·3324.

$28,500.00.
WLKESVILLE - ThisS
room house is situated

on lots lhat are level.
. Does need some repair,

but a good buy at
$16,500.00 .
SOUTHERN DISTRICT

1 BEDR'OOM Mobil e
Home. Adults only 992·2598.

62.

-------~--

Society 992-6260.

uP.

today . 30HB5·217D.

ca lls

TWO BEOROOM trai ler an
main

street

Pomeroy. 742·3155.
44

in

2 stor v older home
with a fir ep lac e, 4
bed r ooms and a car ·

,Easy and Essential

part. $16 ,000.00 .
RANCH HOUSE - Wilh

far Rent

TWO

BEDROOM apart·

ment .in Middleport . 1·304-

682·2566
45
Furnished Rooms
ROOM AND Board for
working man only, $150.00
per month. 992·5007 .

'

46
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route .33, North of
Pomerov . Large lo1s. Call
992·7419.

47

references. Prefer Meigs,
Athens, or Vinton counties.
1-614·758·5613.

for

3

Just $29,500.00.
SALEM CENTER -

53
Antiques
ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

40X60 business building
with approx . lh ·acre lot .

Coul d be used tor a
homesite .

pay cash or certif ied check
for antiques and collec·
tib.les or entire estates.
Nothing too large,.. Also,
guns, pocket watcli·es and

$9,000.00.
TIRED OF THE
HEAT? - AIR CONDI ·
TIONED and is
georgeous. I his regal
home has 4 'bedrooms,
spira l st Bircase, and
niany more features .

coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .
54
Misc. Merchanise
LADIES' beautiful high·
quality size 16 dresses.
brands: Dav id Crystal,
Verona. Lilly Pulitzer. One
is 100% silk. $10 each .
Never been worn. 992·3283 .

$59,500.00 .
LET US SHOW YOU
THESE NICE HOMES!
REALTOR
Henry E. .Cieland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

742 ·2474

.

OFFICE 992-2259

conditioner. Can be seen at

Kingsbury Park Sales,
Minersvil le, Oh. $250.

JHREE PIECE redwood
~et , like new. Call aft.. 5;
992-7352.

4978
SIZES
8-20

Fischer typewriter servlae
1BM plus most brands:
Contracts available. 797 ·
2401.
The Plains, Ohio
$32.50 flat rate per call.

·~ases.

Call Com ~
lit lete
Mortgag It
• ervjces
I lli
*Gallipolis, Ohio a
, ~446-1517 for mor~
:Jt-lnformation an~
,~our appoio.trntnt~

i

~~**********":"I
31

Homes for Sale

Three bedroom, 2 bath ran·
ch style home wltn g·a raqe
and
storage,
loiN
utllities.lmmaculate con·
dillon, many extras, OVflr
_ acre corner lot. :
Reduced thousands under
appraslal(prevlous. inquiT·
es excluded) Syracuse

m·.

5704 .

I

small

2

wheel

trailers

$75.00 - . 1 reese trailer hit·
ch. $175.00 . Nate Vanaman
742·2761.

master ' Scorcher' . 985-4341

afler4 :30 p.m.
TOP PRIORITY JACKEI- sew ot
in linen , wool jersey, sweatery

~second mortgages · ~
1and . reflnanc It

1975 GMC 3~ TON TRUCK
$3,000. 1976 20 foot tag along
travel trailer.$3,500. 2·

BRAND NEW girls 10
speed bike, AMF road·

i MONEY - MONEf

mortgegesJ '

Gosney, antiques; 26 N.

2nd. Middleport, OH. 992·
3161 .

OLD COl NS. pocket wal·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A . Wamslev,

·

All types ol root work,

or repair gutt ers
ar d downspouts, guner
ch.·cJnll~&gt;] and paintulg .
A ll work guaranteed .

nt•.v

n ZHol
j ct· 210U

knit. tweed, crepe. But sew •t!
You 'll wear and wea• and love it
and the cloche with everylhong 1
Printed Pattern 4978: Misses
Sizes 8. 10. l1. 14. 16. lB. 20.
Hat, medium. Size 11 (bust 34)
jacket. hal 2 ~ yds. 6Q.in. • •
$1.75 for tllh pattern. Add 504
!01 eoc;h paUern for firsl·tlass
aiomail and handlina. Send to:
Anne Adams
1~1
· Poltton Dept.

:WEDGE REALTY
WANT TO GET AWAY FROM IT ALU
8~

Acres Close To Town And
Schools In M11on. P1ved Road,
City W1ter, uree House In
Excellent Condition.

'the Dally Sentihel

Of{set the hil!h c~st of your grocery
bill, raise your own beef and gardens.
Also has a separate trailer hook up.
Priced To Sill At 65,000, Owner
Will Consider Trade ln.
SEE MARY KIBLER ON THIS ONt

243 West 17 SL, New York, NY
10011. Point NAME, ,ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, and STYLE NUMBER.
Busy women, lhe taslest·to·sew
lash ions a1e in our NEW SPRING·
SUMM ER PATTERN CATALOG•
Dresses, lops, jackets. pants.
Plus $1./S .IIee pattern coupo~ .
Send $1 foo Catalog.
127·Aipans 'n' Doilies . .' .$1.50
129-QultliEHJ Transfers .$1.50
llO·Swuleos·Sizes 38-56 .$1.50 '
ll2·Quill Ooitinals .. . ... $1.50
\

Pullins
Excavating
.Experienced Operators
available for local work .
• 2 rubber tire backhoes
• 1 excavator hoe 11!•

yd.

e2 DOzers
• Dump Trucks
All related equipment.

Ph. (304)' 773-5131
or( . 304) 992·2276
6 30 1 mo .

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION
- Back hoe and dump
truck service
-S hop and portable
welding
-Concrete work
-Commercial plumb-

ong
-Underground
fuel
storage installation
- Fiberglass pools

F 1 ee ~ s timates
~ ·c.~son.lbl e tJrice s
~: all tiOWclrd

992-2478
7·17·1 mo . pd.

Real Estate Loans
1 Jl/2°'o ltlrerest-30 Yrs.

PARK FINANCIAL

&amp; V'A Automatic
Loans, No Down Pay·
111ent. Federal Housing
Loans, 3", down ori
S2S,OOD; 5% down on
biltance, FHA 265 Sub-Stdy Program . FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort.
VA

O~en

Office 992-7544

992-7354

Home 992-6191

107 Sycamore St.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
7·13·1 mo.

1 '':l
• ·tt c

M·W·F 9:00 to 1.:00

By Appointment

Pomeroy, OH,

!.-==========+==========~~=============
Custom
Print
Shop

63
Livestock
JONES Meat Packing
slaughtering,
custom
processing, retail meat.

Washington Co. Rd . 248,
Little Hocking, OH. 667·
6133.

T · shirt and novel1v
sh 1rts for politic1ans,
ban tea ms, business or
individuals.
Shirts-!i4.00 Each
" We prant ALMOST
ilnythtng on ALMOST
anyth&amp;ng!"
Ph. 614-949·235H
evenings &amp; Weekends

SEARS SEWING machine
with cabinet, exc ellent con·

beautiful

high

quality fashionable stacks, •
blouses, jackets, dresses,
robes. flobe and pajama

set by Odette Borsa. Lilli

Ann suits, etc . Some ~re
brand new others worn
very little. Size 10·12·14.
For more Information call

992·3283.

.,

Building Supplies
318 inch rebar- 17c per foot
by 20 fl. section only . 0.
Bumgardner Sales. Noble
55

Summit Rd ., Middleport,

OH . 992·5724.

HIL LCREST

ENGLISH

SHEPHARD

B·&gt;·1 rding, all breeds . Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .

Also AKC registered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795.

-----.-.----------

Vinyl&amp;
Aluminum Siding

THE POOL PEOPLE
31711 Noble

• l nsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Rep1.1cement
Windows ·

~u rn

i t Rd.
Middleporl, Ohtc

jYB /14

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992· 2772
6-2S 1 mo .

~ale s,

service and sup ~
plies . In ground and
rlbavre ground pools.

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Holland chopper. 949·2680.

.....................
'-'---'"===-=~­

1975
OLDSMOBILE
Omega. Call anytime 949·
2816.

Eugene long (614) 843-3322
Superior Vinyl Products

73
vans &amp; 4 W.O.
1976 CHEVY Custom Van .

Farm Buildings
S1zes
" From 30x30"

$1,700. 773·5077.

Utility Buildings

Auto Parts

1972 Monte Carlo body par·
ts, one hood, two dooPS, one

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rf. J, Box s·~~
Rac1ne, Oh .

Ph. 61 4· 843·25jl
6 IHi c ·

serdees

s &amp;

MPLETE
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE
Grading· Seeding

Home
Improvements
'&lt;

-

G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam
c leaned . Free
estimate .
Reasonable

rates . Scotchgu;ord. 992·
6309 or 742·2211. '
Flooring, ceili ng, paneling,
doors and windows, also

painting. Caii992·27S9.

5 Think more of with
11 On the road
4 Spot
12 Make ef·
5 Children
fervescent
of nature
13 Make tortes 6 All set?
11 Waiter
7 Gwn up

s'i zes from 4x6 to l2x40

trunk lid, assorted front
en d Parts, rear g"tass. 9922779 .

81

by THOMA5 JOSEPH
ACROS8
Z Drowning in
1 Domesticate
3 Corrununicate

SMALL

&amp; Accessories

15 Employ
18 Sul!ered frOJTI
11 Call it off
18 True grits
20 Gennan
article
21 Conveying
vehicles

Shrubbery

New
Driveways
Gravel or concrete.
Regrade driveways (&amp;
repair). Sidewalks and
Patios .
Complete

and transit layout. 992·7201.

author

23 Tooth (Fr.)
24 Noted Doe

capital

1...+-+- 1-+-+-

00WN

OAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
AXVDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G F .E L L 0 W

One letter simply s tands for another. In this sample A is
used' for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and format~on of the words are 11!
hints. Each day thf' code INters are dif!erent. •
,. ·

CRYPTOQUOTES

foot . See us also for free
estllll\ates on awrilngs, ca l[·
ports and skirting. We ar'e
your authorized dealer for
the best awnings on the

TKLUGOK

makts .

992· 2284 .

all

The market

Fabric Shop,
Po'meroy .
Authorizec:t Singer Sales
and Serv ice. We sharpen
!lcissors.

-----

~ -·-'-· -- --

by

Urban

1n..

dustries. Kingsbury Home

Sa les. 1100 E. Main Sl.,
Pomeroy. Ohio. Call 992 ~
7034.

workers'
union

36 Holm

84

service,

MDock·

34 Albanian

WBOPQBWULO

Repairs,

cucltoo

' island
31 Frost
32 Gennan city

foot; 12' wide, $1 .75 per
foot ; 10' wide, $1.50 per,

MACHINE

SSBlllclt

in Toulon
30 South Seas

---·--- ·, Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

:ll Persian

27 Choose
28 Title

3ll Dorniclllate
~Skin condition

NOW
preventive
main tenance-mobile home roof
coating,
labor
and
material : 14' wide, $2 per

theearUo

II $COlt ·
henolne

25 Swiss city

Ga~age

M. H. Repair ·
IS THE TIME for

building
28 Worked

22 Mixer
,.,.....,......,.,--,,.....

37 Balanced
38 German
art soog

Next to State Highway
an Route 7, 985·
3825.
85
General Hauling
WILL HAUL limestone and

Yestenla''• ~wer

23 Take
away .
from
24 Bore
25 Hat style
26 Front ola

26Dim

pumps and accessories.

ded , septic
tank in·
stallation, .water and gas
lines.
Excavating work

10 E..cute
16 Helpful
suggestion
19 "Tile Holy
Sinner' '

tqasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .

86

9 Of an EngUsh school

draw

Excavating
Water well drilling . Tom gravel . Also, lime hauling
Lewis .
304·895 ·3802. and spreading . Leo Morris
Seasonal discount on all Trucking. Phone 742·2455.

J X F BACKHOE SER ·
VICE liscensed and bon·

the works
8 Braved

22 Box office

mobile home hook·up.
HOME NEEDING pain·
Brush clearing work .
ted? Gutters in need of
CALL :
repair? Is thai roof begin·
992-6323 or 992-6011
nlng to leak?
Call 992·3519,
992·3941,
or 992·5126
and get \-~~~~~~7~·1~0·~1~m~a~.;j
things all fixed up for that 84
Electrical
bad weather thats on its
.• &amp; Refrigeration
way . By the way, free
estimates are provided . ELWOOD
BOWER S
REPAIR Sweepers,

83

7-10· 1 mo.

ALL STEEL

White, p .s., p .b ., air, radial
ti res, am -fm cassette .

76

• New Homes -.extensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
6·30·1 mo.

serving your area for 25 years
Cali Now for Large Savings
For Free Estimate Call

Autos for Sale

71

ROUSH
CONSTROCTION,

VINYL SIDING

farm puppies, ready to go
in 2 weeks, 1 806 diesel trac·
tor, si Iage wagon ; New

SE WIN G
KENNELS.

J&amp;LBI.DWN
INSUlATION

4346 .

dillon, stretch and design
do remodeling ,
stitches. $95.00 can be seen · Will
roofing , palritlng I elect.
at apartment 10 Pomeroy Free estimates. Call
Cliffs Apts, Union Avenue,
Charles Sinclair, 985·4121 .
Pomeroy, Ohio
LADIES

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

BRUDE SOW 14 months
5·1·11c
·
6·16·1fc
old approximately 425
pounds, Hampshire. · has
had one Iiiier. $175.00, 985· ~~---------+-----------t-----------

USED self·conlained air

Jean Trussell949-2660

Services
' " Maggie's Upholstery;•
Rebuilding, Refinishing,
Reupnolstery, Fabric and
vinyl samples. Call 74~ ·

*First

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

1975 OLDS OMEGA, good
dependable car, call
anytime 949·2816.

2852.

or Y"n· 7l14
Pomeroy , Oh.

~1 - 6215

D&amp;M
CONTRACTORS
·-DRY WALLING
-ROOFING
-REMODEL! NG
-CONCRETE
Free Estimates

7·13·1 mo ..

• .._. "'"' · ' . _..,_ ,. n •

bedrooms, outbuildings,
and 6 acres. Close in _

or

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass. china.
anything. See or call Ruth

Wanted to Rent

want farm to caretake in
exchange for rent. 8 years
experience
and
have

trai ler

Call tor Free Siding
Estimate, 949 -2801 or
Y4Y·2860. No Sunday
calls.

2600.

excellent condition, only
J1!2 yrs. old. 3 bedrooms,
fam ily room , and P/z

has

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

_
_
CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
en·d. $12 p-er · ton . Bundled
slab. $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2.
Pomerov992-2689.

STERLING
SILVER AND,
RINGS , JEWELRY
RENTER'S assistance for ·MISC.
ITEMS . PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
Manor apts. Call992·7787.
HIGHEST UP ·TO·DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
ONE AND TWO bedroom BURKETT
BARBER
cabins, furnished, by week SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
or month . 773·5471 or 742· OHIO, OR CALL 992·3476.

COUPLE WITH children

place

Wanted to Buy

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap · GOLD AND SILVER
ts. Phone 992·5434.
COINS OF THE WORLD.

5 beau tiful ac res and in

Nice

Vinyl and Alum inurn
Siding

742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 5926462.

Apartment

V.C. YOUNG II

992 -3795

1-;.----------+----------+----------

ALTO
SAXA PHONE,
$100.00. 985-4279 .

svracuse, Ohio, no pets, for
more information call 992-

Pomeroy, Oh .

4-:.Ht c

We are picking up several
repossessed and trade-in
pianos and organs in your
area . Prices from $250 and
Call credit manager

TRAILER ON large lot in

east

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
6ltiE.Maon

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Sunday

Farms- Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls profit and 105S statements •. all
led .. r.ol and st.ote torms .

Three

Musical
Instruments

--.-Addon.s ~n d ,
remodeling
- Rooting and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Plumbin') and
c lectric ..11 work
( Free Estimdtes)

s v, ness-

beautiful male shephards,
one white, a blue·tick type,
young irish setter, one
pomerlan type .

57

"YOUNGS ..
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

Reeves

PUT A COLD nose in your
futur e.
Shots, wormed,
healthv dogs of all sizes.
Meigs County Humane

(NEWSPAPER ENTER PRISE ASSN .)

3525, no
please.

Ruth

(614) 698 ·3290.

TRAILER LOT lor rent on
Kingsbury Road . 742·3122.

-

.~.
I

Against that division or the
East.West
would
have been cards
way there
to make
the
contract. 00

Western .

_..

Senior Citizens In Village

DUPLEX

I

•

Call

5373 .

Tr ai ler or
homesite.
Close in and over one
acre. Uti I ities available.

chi ldre n,

Housing
H eadquarters

. men!. Blankets, bells,
boots. etc . Engl ish and

42

electric , septic
tank,
footers for a t railer .

lal with . ~. workshop
an d garage . Other
buiJdings . $13,500.00 .
NEW LISTING -

MWs*i~
· ·.
13

MObile Homes
for Sale

Lots &amp; Acreage
35
1.69 ACRES, city water ,

mobile hOmP 12x 50 on
apprax. -.. ~\.\) ·e laying

ed with woven and barb
wire . Al l minerals and
some timber .

EVERYDAY SOME ·
ONE CALLS US ON
OUR LISTINGS. IT
COULD BE YOURS .
SOMETIMES A PRO·
PERTY BECOMES A
BURDEN, TRY US
FOR A SOLUTION.
OUR HOME SHI.ELD
WILL HELP SELL
YOUR
PROERTY .
LINE ONE 992·3325,
LINE TW0992·3876.

long diamonds makes a mistake and discards down to
three, there are .10 easy tricks.
Can South do anything to
handle a 4-2 diamond break?
He certainly can. All he has
to do is to play two rounds of
trumps .and then go af~er
diamonds. If the man w1th
just two diamonds was dealt
Only two trumps he ·won't be
able to ruff the third diamond
and South will have his cake
and eat it too.
East has two diamonds and
three trumps but this line of
play stiH brings in 10 tricks .
After the two rc.unds of
trumps So~th cashes dummy's
ace and king of diamonds and
leads a third one toward his
hand. If East ruffs, South is
left with the good queen of
diamonds and can discard one
of dummy's hearts on it which
will leave him with just one
heart loser instead of two.
If it turns out that East has
two trumps:. and four diamoods then West would get to
ruff t he queen &lt;Of diamonds.
South would aet to ruff his
small diamon 1ater on , but
would still be down one.

1•••••••••• 1----------..,.----------;

$4,000.00 .
CHESTE 'R -

Business Services

HOOF ponies
HOLLOW
.. _
and
and: Horses
riding 1
1·1 \ . - - . . . , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - r - - - - . . . . , - l essons . · Everyttling
Imaginable in hotse equip-

23

Needed RDor LPN lor 11 to
7:30 shill. Part-time or full ·
time. Good working con·
ditions. Contact Mr . Zidl an

,

By Oswald JocQby
aad A laD SoDtag

car g·arage . Mostly fen c·

home with 2. baths, cen ·
tral heat, city water,
j ust outside of town .
Large yard with shade
trees , patio , 2 ca r
garage a n_d other
buildings. Call to see.

coal stove used one year ;
also cucumbers and

and

••
11

balhs. $51 ,000 .00:. ·
DON'T FENCE ME IN!

YOUR CHILDREN Will love th is 11 room

FRANKLIN WOOD and

outfits

Bath ,

on new 33 . Pl enty of spr ·
·ing water,. barn, large
block building , 2 frame
houses, nice ,,,obile
home with patio and 3

CANNING CORN, While
and yellow; Charles Harr is
and Sons. 843·2693.

Se veral

in

FIRST AD - 70 ACRES

Mlscell•neous

separate pieces on hand,

home

car pe ting, ba seboard
heat, patio, garage and
ni ce level lot. Can move
in on signi ng of deed .

you a free estimate.

brand BEELINE clothes.
Assorted sizes, current
summer styles, all reduced
to unbelievable prices.

bedroom

, _ Syracuse.

not have lo·worry . Call 992·
3941, 992·5126, or 992·3519
and we' ll come and give
17

2 t . Pass
Pass Pass

It

OPening lead:+ K

and earn good money plus

13

1

Matllle HomtoultiiiMI V.lrd Ule11r1 acceptMontywlth Cllh with
order. u cft.t c!Yr.. tor Us nrrylnt ao• ..umber In care of Thll

registered

p6sition a·vailable, Eastern

small. Check Prices before

U5

sliver

Wanted to Buy

glass or china, will pay tqp
dollar. or complete estates.
No item too large or too

2.25

jewelrv,

ASSISTANT TO treasurers

Gold, silver or foreign

'd~ys

II
Public Notice
I I 742·2095. The Executor
.I
I
1 any
reserves the right to relecl
..
or all bids.
I
.. . .L
Joe M. Bolin,
~~~·------~-•JI'IIIl-----------~Executor,
Public Notice
Estate of
PuDiic '!!tlce
Essie Russell
NOTICE
estd1e consists of a two·
OfferS w ill be received at jstory frame dwelling with · (7) 23. 24, 25, 27, 28. 29. 61c
the office of Bernard V. ·10 rooms and 2 11aths. In ad·
Fultz, Bank one of dition, ther.e . is- a 3-room
3
Announcements
Pomeroy
buil~lng,
garage apartment over a
Pomerov, 1 Oh io, unttl 9:00 double garage On the real
PAY
higMst prices
1
O' Clock A.M., August 1, estale. Writtenzfers may
1980, tor The sale of the be submitted
anV. lime possible for gold and sliver,
Essie B. Russell residence unlil the tim.,let above. coins, rings, lewelry, etc.
situated at 244 North The property
y be seen contact Ed Burkett Barber
only, by Shop, Middleport.
Second Avenue, Mid· by a ppointm
dleport, Ohio. The reai calling the u,rslgned at
I

Veterans
Memorial
Hospital , Pomeroy , Oh. 1·

11- Uphols,.ry

3

reason for selling, to make

7760.

10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat.
gold . Dental gold and gold
ear pins. 675·3010.

lilly

Help Wanted

perienced in I.C .U., C.C.U.
as well as general staff
duty . Salary c om ·
mensurate with exp. Con·
tact Teresa Collins RN ,

ll--EJCUwttlnt
14-Eitc1rlcal
&amp; RtfrlttrlfiJNt
IJ--OIMI'•I Houllng
16-M.H. RttMir

CMrtt
1.21

11

dollars, sterling, etc., wood
ice boxes, antique.s, etc.
Complele
househ'blds.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992·

9

Ctlh

Wanted 10 Buy

9

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
BRADFORO, Auctioneer,

11-Homtlmprovtmtnts
11---Ptumblnl &amp; Excav•Ung

llllyl
liiiYS

1

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

I.

l-----------,.-----------1
rings,

949·248] or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford,

eSERvt'c Es

Jumbles: PANIC · HASTY MOHAIR WEAKEN
• at her - WI TH " AH '' I·
Answer: How men tooked

whitehouse on left.

Complete Service. Phone

&amp; ACCitSIOI'Itl
77-Auto Rtpelr

~

1!I Words or Under

1;

35.

15.

.Auto P1rts .

Rates and Other Information

I'
I!
lj

74---Motircycits

.
YesterdayS

Iron and brass beds, old REGISTERED NURSES.
furniture, desks, gold .Immed iate opening for

coins or any gold or silver
items. Antique furniture,

II

· l-4 .

11101 tor Slit

("n1wera torryorrow}

Points lurn left onto Flat·
wood Rd . Go 3110 mile to

8

n - ans&amp;4w .o.

lor MCMMIIY .

I·
I
1

.

e1:ANSPORTATION

Want· Ad Advertising
Deadlines

J'

Jl.
2
3 .

u- Steel &amp; FtrtiUatr

37---Rulton

1

I
' II
'I
.I
.1
:I

'I

.,.._Hoy&amp; Grain

n-

antiques" furpictures ,

glassware, books, fabr ic,

u-Livnhtelt

71

Now arr"nge the circled let1 .!.rs to
torm the surprise answer. as sug·
ge$ted by the allO\Ie canoon.

M id-

patterns, new slow cooker.
Lots of other nice things.
North on Rte. 7 to Five

"-IJarm ECI'IIpment
61-Wanr.l to IU'f
11- TI'I.ICkl for Slit

Opportunity
Monev to Lou

1
1
I
I'

cosmetics,
niture ,

'

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVI!iSTOCK

IIISIIIMS

li - Homtstor!lalel
32--Mobllt+ttmts
for Salt
lJ-,trml for Stle
l4-8uti11HIIIUIIIUROI
l5-LDt1 a Acratgt

I'

I
' II
25.
I'
I
26. - - - - - 1
21 .
.I
28.
1
2'1.
I

• J .16.

,._Ptfllor Sate

eREALESTATE

1·

18.
19.
20.

2.
3.

I 10:
I
I 11
I 12.'
:I
1 ll .
: I 14.

st-iuildlnt SUPftlts

Rep~lr

avenue,

winter? How about that
roof and barn, that snow

can sit back In front of that

? - ll'f

2 FAMILY Yard Sale star·
ling 9 a.m . F ro•., J u1Y 25 .
Lots of high quality
I
c o 'hi ng, E sI ee L au d er

St-Misc. Mtrctt.ncllto

222:1--Proreuhlnlll
S.nkts

.I

6.
1.

U-AnfiiiU"

eFINANCIAL

.1

5.

1J .... Htlpw 1 ntld

21 ....

2 t.
22.

4.

5I-H01.1Hhokl GOOds
52-CI, TV, Radio lqulpm_.,1

I Cl

I

dleport.

eMERCIIANDISE

lt-SCitOOIIIAifri.ICfiiMI
16--RlfiO, TV

These cash rates
lncludediscount

South 2nd

17 ACRES -

ting, gutter repair, patch
work, Odds and ends, so you

· I K] J
I RETIGO~
SiiC:K iO YOUR
DIET, AND YOU
I I r
Ml\SJHi LOeeI LEPPURj
I KI
Answer here: t I I X) K
XXXI X)
I

MOVING AWAY sale July
25,26,27. Baby things, avon
bottles. odds and ends. 11
a.m. until dark. 1041 I

&amp;-Wonted to Buy
e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

1t---W1nltd To Do

4

bedrooms, 2 baths, tur ·
nace, natural ga s, din ing room , varnished
floors , 2 car garage, cor - ·
.' ner lot and small 2 room

warm fire this winter and

lice In TuppersPiains.10·4.

47---Wantecl to Rent

12- Situlttcl WI ntH
ll-l_n surtnct
14-llullri•n Tralnlnl

Nice 2

bedroom home with tor mica bath, shower In
tub, natural gas forced
air furnace , lafge kit-

tanence work for you, pain·

":-.;.."':;:.!.-· ' - - ..

.....

General

NEW LISTING
CHESTER - 2 bedroom

Phone
1- ( 614) ·992·3325

ing land for farming or
as a subdivision . Lots of
farm bui ldings, good old
· 10 room home with bath .

general

Vulnerable: East·West
Dealer: South
Nor111 Eill
Scll.llb

bedroom, bulll·ln bunks,
48x 10 mabi le home. $2800,
land contract. $300 dawn.
Write J. Bowland. 15068
Empire Rd.. Thornville,
OH . 43076.

Situations Wanted

any

SOUTH

$500 down or will negotiate
cash
sale.
Also one

WILL YOUR HOUSE
withstand another hard

do

D

I KJ

m isc. Sponsored by Youth
of the South Bethel
Church across from post of-

• 41---lqui(IMntnt lor Rent

1-PI.tiMichlt
1 Auction

byHenriArrw;Kdan&lt;S.PoblH

• 10 5

.Q9"

MOBILE home for sale,
$6500, land contract with

Near city
~ater ,
electric and
seiker . Can be divided
into building lots in
Pomerov .

12

.Q98 6

••

REALTY

Real Estate

shop. Ask ing $35,000.
70 ACRES - Nice roll·

gets pretty heavy . Let us

class

eRENTALS

'[jl THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

unscramble the~ tour Jurnt»es,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

YARD AND bake sale
Friday 25 and Saturday,
26th. Lots of clothing and

••-Housn for • .nt
42-MOI)IIt Homes
lor Rtnt
t4-APIIrfmtnt ltr Rent
t5-FRooml
·
.u-s.,.u tor Rtnt

ffi\l

~ ~ ~~ s

cessories.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

I Print one word in each
I space below. Each in· ·
1 lila I or group of figures ·

1 counts as a Word.

'fl\ll}~

7
Yard Sale
THREE FAMILY yard
sale Friday and Saturday,
25 and 26 10·4, Riggscrest
Addition 1.2 miles above
Eastern High School. Baby
and toddler girls clothes,
household items. · mens
bawling ball a~d ac·

z

.AKJ104
• A74
• Q!4 2

HAYES

.. 992·5732.

1\bOul naif fenced .

or Write Daily .S entinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero'JI, 0., 45769

2-1r1 Mtmorllm

·

tric home, over 1 acre,
disposal and d ishwasher,
carpeted4 near Langsville
and mines . Can be Seen
anytime9·9, 742 ·2819. .

THIS VIEW FROM beneath the Ellfel Tower was captured by Academy Award·wlnn~r
Francis Thompson for his film "Living Planet." Tbe film recently opened at New York •
Radio City Music Hall, tbe first stop in a series of showings scheduled to take place across
tbe country.

EAST
• 93

Pus
Pass

NEW 3 Bedroom all elec·

PHONE 992-2156

eANNOUNCEMENTS

Real Estate

WEST

t7 6
.KJ 2
fJ96 3

.A KJS

3519.

.carpet, storm doors and
.. windows, aluminum siding,
one car garage_ Located on
Brownell Avenue, M id·

WASHINGTON (AP) - The public
is being asked to .submit written
comments on a proPosal that would
boost federal price supports to dairy
fanners on Oct. 1, an action the
Agriculllll'e Department says would
mean higher prices for milk in
grocery stores.
Under law, USDA is required to
adjus~ the support price each Oct. 1
and again on April 1 to renect
changes in production costs.
. Deputy Secretary Jim Williams
said Wednesday the formula, if applied as the~w
now requires, would
raise supports
around $12.73 per
100 pounds
· . sold to make butter, cheese and nonfat dry milk, an
increase of 66 cents.
"It could result in a I&gt;-to !kent per
gallon .increase in milk prices at the
retail level," the announcement
said.
Comments can be sent by Aug. 18
to: Director, Procurement and Sales
Division, Room 5741, South Building,
USDA, P.O. Box 2414, Washington,
D.C. 20013.

1- C•rct al Th•nks

larg e

~ garage, 1 acre l ot. 992 ·3454.

WANT AD INFORMATION

l·

located near ·Chester with
fi nished 8 x 1.4 room. Completelv set up and can be
rented on premises . 985·

room,

tQI S

. 108 6 3

·recreati on room, fireplace,

f dining

WASHINGTON (AP)- AgricultUJ'e
Department analysts say prospects
for the Soviet Union's 1980 grain
crop continues to look favorable.
"Current reports from the USSR
indicate that both winter and spring
grains are in gQod condition in most
areas of the country," the department's Foreign Agricltural Service
said Wednesday,. ·
Earlier this 100nth; the department forecast the total Soviet grain
harvest at about 215 mUllan metric
tons, up 20 percent from last year's
reduced output of 179.3 million. A
metric ton is about 2,205 pounds.

7· 24 -1 0

•tos 3

Pl. Pleasant, W.VA .
675-4424 .
UNFURN ISHED 12 x 60
BUDDY mobile home

Built· in

NORTH
t AK 7

kitchen,

" sale .

I

1:,

New

B&amp; S
Mobile Home Sa les

on Eagle Ridge ·
• Rd . Phone 949·2793.

·.,..---------------~-~---1'1h----------...!...---.-------,

I'
I' .

1968

Pets for Sale

POO DLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 6U-36nno.

Some •plits unmanageable

twa bedroom ; 1967 Buddy,
12 • 50, 2 bedroom .

~ocaled

&gt;

Curb Inflation.
I
.
:·I Pay Cash for
l Classlfleds arid

be droom ;

S6

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Moon , f2 x 60 with expando,

Small in:Yestment, large returns, ·Sentinel W~t Ads
f

70 three bedroom ; 1971

County. Call985·4169.

Three year old, five room
house with central air and
heat, carpet throughout, 24
acres w itt) fruit trees.

BRIDGE

Mobile Homes
for Sale
1975 Western Mansion 1-4 x

WJ
WJ

UB C

C P B ' J

OliKKN

JVKD

MPYYD

u~t,p a J

JVKD

MPYYD

U T PGJ

vK

C P B .' J

TKLUGOK

J

D.

OAKKN . - EYUBRAW. B · N .
UCUQO
Yesterday's Cryploquole: ALL RELIGIONS MUST BE
TOLERATED ... FOR ... EVERY MAN MUST GET TO HEAVEN
IN HIS 0.~ WAY.-FREDERICK THE GREAT

�Carter promises full cooperation

Administration won't turn
around to seek tax slice
•

TRUSTEES ELE~D - Donald Robinson of
Gallipolis, left, manager of Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative, Inc., extends congratulations to Betty
Stewart, second left, of Patriot, who was elected by
members to her first six•year term on the
Cooperative's board of trustees, and to Robert Mattox

of AlbanY, second right, also elected to a first six·year
term. Incumbent Trustees Howard Lemon of Oak Hill,
right, and William Smith, not pictured, were re-elected
during the Cooperative's Annual Meeting, held.Satur·
day, July 19 at the Buckeye Hills Career Center, north
of Rio Grande. More than 135 members attended.

Malpractice suit .filed Wednesday
A malpractice suit has been filed
in Meigs COWJty Common Pleas
Court by Douglas A Carver, Athens,
against Rankin R. Pickens, D, 0. ,
Middleport.
Plaintiff alleges that on Feb. 6,
19'19 the plaintiff, Carver, accidently
fell on the ice and suffered a severe
fracture to his left forearm. The
plaintiff was provided emergency
treatement at O'Bleness Hospital,
Athens.
On Feb. 7, 1979 the plaintiff yisited
the defendant, Pickens, for
definitive treatment of his fracture.
The ~intiff alleges that the

evaluation and treatlnent afforded
the plaintiff by Dr. Pickens was
negligent, fell below accepted stan.
dards of care, skill and dilignece for
physicians ili Middlport, and similar
communities and amounted to
medical malpractice.
The plaintiff also alleges , according to the entry, as a proxilruite
resulfof the negligence of the defe!Joo ·
dant the plaintiff suffers a severe
deformity of the distal left forehand
and arm with severe loss of function
and physical imp&amp;innent.
Plaintiff also alleges he has suf·
fered lost ilicome. Plaintiff demands

.
I

Area deaths
William T. Kernau
Word has been received of the
death of William T. Kernan, Jr., 57,
who diedJuly4 in Baltimore, Md.
Mr. KernanwasbornJan. 29,1923.
He was a ve.teran of the U. S. Army
having served with Merrill's
Marauders in ~urma and also in the
Korean Conflict. He was preceded
ili death by his mother, Anna E. Ker·
nan and three grandsons.
Surviving are his father, W. T.
Kernan, Sr., two daughters, Mrs.
Sharon Bailey of Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Judy Tompkins, Wolcott, Conn.; five
grandchlldren, Amy and Beth, Con·
nectlcut, and Brian, Brenda and
Melanie, Ohio; two sisters, Mrs. ·
Catherine Jarbor and Mrs.
Genevieve Porter, Maryland; and a
brother, Jim, California.
Funeral services were held at the
Christ the King Catholic Church in
Silver Spriligs, Md., and burial was
In the Gate of Heaven Cemetery
there.

.
.

Post 140, the New Haven Fire Dept.
Rescue Squad, Clifton Lodge
AFXAM, and Easter Star of Cot·
tageville, w. Va.
He was born March 11, 1930 in
Huntington to the Lillian M.
Wheatley, Letart, and the late John
W.Smith.
Smith was to be married in August
to Florence J. Hart, New Haven.
Funeral services will be Saturday
at 1 p.m. with the Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. George C.
Weirick and the Rev. Kenneth Nolan
officiatilig.
Burial will be in Cedar Hill
Cemetery, Broad Run, New Haven.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from ·2-4 p.m. and from 7·9
p.m. Friday.

'

Charles Herman Smith, 50, New .
Haven, was dead on arrival Wed·
nesday at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital. •
·
·
A former two-term mayor. of New
HAven, Smith had also served on the
COWicil at NewJiaven.
·
He was a U.S. Air. Force veteran ·
servilig In the Korean Conflict and
was employed as a pipefitter.
Smith was a member of the
Pipefitters' Union Local 521 , Hun·
tlngton, and the St. Paul Lutheran
Church.
·
He was also a member of the
SmitiJ.Capehart Ainerican Legion
.

.

:
:
·

:
'

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Winnie Dailey, Racilie; .
Barry Stewart, Middleport; Helen :
Slack, Racine; Beatrice Rairden, ·
Hartford; Elizabeth Deeds, Long ·
Bottom; Warren Johnston, Racine; :
Paul Hudson, Pomeroy; Seth
Wehrung, Pomeroy; Betty Theiss, ·
Racine.
Discharged-Eli White, James
Thomas, Cora Folmer, Brady
Knapp, Ethel Koenig, Carrie .
Snyder, Callie Matheny.

NO RETURNS OR REFUNDS, PLEASE

ALL SALES FINAL - -

WOMEN'S WEAR
l

COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR •••• ~··············~ •. SAVE 40%
ALL' SUMMER .DRESSES ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
40% .OFF
.
JUNIOR SUMMER SLACKS ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAVE 30%
SUMMER HANDBAGS •••••••••••• :•••• ~ •••••• REDUCEO 20%
WOMEN'S TOPS AND SHORTS •••••••••••••••••• .FROM 5378
GOWNS AND ROBES. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SAVE 30%
JUNIOR TOPS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·•••••••••••• 25% OFF
EXTRA SIZE SPORTSWEAR •••••••••••••••••• REDUCED 40%

CUT-OFFS AND SHORTS
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ..lh PRICE
.
BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS •••••••••••~ ••••••••••• .FROM ONLY 5340
MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS ••••••••••
SAVE 30%
MEN'S DRESS SLACKS ••••••••••••• ;••••••••••••• .fROM s7•
MEN'S
KNIT SHIRTS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 30% OFF
'
BOYS' JACKETS •••••••••••••••••••••••'•••• ~ ••. AS LOW AS 5819
MEN'S CAPS &amp; HATS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~% PRICE
MEN'S·SUMMER JACKETS••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••• SAVE 30%
0

.

Save-By-Mail

&amp;
Pay-By-Check

.

.

CHILDREN'S WEAR

l

Meigs County

People

~~~A.CINE

HOME NATIONAL

BANK .
; Racine, Oh ...

W e pl an to in·
vestigate ... anything that (Billy )
Carter may have done while
representing a foreign nation that
may have had impact on the policy
of this country," Bayh said. "We
plan to investigate the propriety or
lack thereof and what the govern· .
mental response has Heen to that underlaking."
He called on White House aides
and Billy Carter to testify volun·
tarily, rather than under subpoena.
Bayh said he hoped it " would not
be necessary" to call the president
as a witness, but Powell would not
rule out the possibilitY of testimony
byCarter or his wife, Rosalynn.
Powell said the president would
"respond fully .. An accordance with
mutually acceptable procedures
consistent with the responsibilities •
and time constraints of his office."

•

un what he has described as a
$500,000 loan.
Both the White House and the
Justice Department insist there was
no collaboration during the depart·
ment's investigation of Billy.
"The department has nothing
whatsoever to hide with regard to
this investigation," said Attorney
General Benjamin Civiletti. He said
there were no pending investigations
of Billy Carter.
Shortly after~ Senate created
the special panel Thursday, Powell
told reporters the White House will
·J?rovide any information sought by
the committee about Billy Carter's
ties to the Libyan goverriinent and
about his contacts with the White
House staff and the Justice De~art·
men!.
" We believe, the president
believes, that we wiU come out all
right in the end because we have
behaved in a proper manner in
regard to this issue and the best way
to make that clear to the American

at y

people is to provide the maximum Rosalyn Carter call was first.
possible information," he said.
Billy set up a meeting between
After ordering a search of White him, Brzezinski and the Libyan
House files and recor$, and tallr'.,,g charge d'affaires, Ali Houderi, on
to White House aides who deal' with Nov. 27. Shortly afterward the
Billy on the Libya issue, Po,.,11 · Libyan government. urged Iranian
release\~ new information 11bout
revolutionary leader Ayatollah ·
White House meetings that had not RljbQllah Khomieni to free the
been included in a statement issued hostPges.
just two days before. ·
Powell also said that at the
He said Rosalynn Carter had president's request Brzezinski
telephoned Billy Carter from the . arranged a meeting between .
presidential retreat at Camp David, President Carter, Houderi and :
Md., last November to ask "whether Brezezinski on Dec. 6. At that
he thought he might be helpful" in meeting, Carter· registered his
gaining release of the American strong protest over the burning of
hostages In Iran.
the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli, a su~
Powell did not say when the call ject discussed by Brzezinski and
was made, but said he believed Br· Houderi again on Dec. 12, Powell
zezinski already had spoken to Billy said.
Carter about becoming an in·
Billy Carter received his first
termediary to enlist Libya's help in payment from Libya of $20,000 about
securing release of the hostages. a month after the Dec. 6 meeting,
However, the New York Times; in but Powell cautioned reporters
today's editions, quoted an unlden· Thursday against assUming
tified "individual familiar with the wrongdoing from " the way events
arrangements" as saying . the are juxtaposed."

•

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1980

Fl FTEEN CENTS

ALL CHILDREN'S TOPS .................................lh OFF
CHILDREN'S SWIMWEAR ••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••• 50% OFF
SHORTS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• REDUCED ¥3
GIRLS' ORESSEs·•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .l/2 PRICE
·CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR •••••••••••••••••••••••••• l/2 PRICE
INFANTS SUMMER,HATS •••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••SAVE 50%
SUNSUITS &amp; SETS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• REDUCED 14
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- -

SHOP FRIDAY 9:30 TO 8:00, SATURDAY 9:30 10 5:00

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

industrial, . predominantly black an estimated black population of 35
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP) Tactical police teams shot out Alton Park area where the ambush percent.
occurred.
"We're goilig to aU the project
streetlights and cordoned off a
predominantly black housing · But there were reports of scat· areas tonight, trying to talk to the
tered sniper fire ili other areas and people,. tryilig to cool them down,"
project after eight officers received
reports of at least two firebombiligs.
Hill said before the shootings eruP"
minor gunshot wounds In the worst
Mayor Charles "Pat" Rose said ted. "Everybody's startilig to go off
of three nights of violence in this
his curfew order probably would
now ...and everybody's making the
racially tense city.
continue through tonight.
wrong moves - right down to the
The shooting occurred about two
It was the latest eruption of violen· curfew. We're trying to avoid the
hours after a dusk·t&lt;Hiawn curfew
ce that began in Chattanooga's funerals. We had some people die
took effect Thursday, closing all
streets Tuesday night. Trouble here in '71."
retail businesses in this southeast
began a few hours after an all·white
In May 1971, four nights of race
Tennessee city of 170,000. The cur·
jury
acquitted
two
.Kiansmen
and
rioting
brought National Guardsmen
few was imposed after two nights of
convicted
a
third
on
reduced
curfew
to this city.
and
a
firebombings, lootings and rock·
charges
in
the
April
19
shotgun
One of the WOWJded officers,
throwing that followed a jury's
woundings of four black women.
Patrolman John Bodkin, returned to
acquittal of two Ku Klux Klansmen
The city's black leaders, among the scene after being treated at
in the shootilig of four black women.
them Harry Hill, a spokesman for Erlanger Hospital and released.
At sunrise today, polic~
spokesman Bob Gill said 26 people the Youth Coalition, said the Klan Hospital officials said six other of·
had .been arrested and jailed over· verdict was just one element ili the fleers were treated for superficial
night for violating the curfew and six explosive mix including poor injuries and released, while two of·
people had been taken ilito custody housing and unemployment that fleers refused treatment.
in connection with the police sparked the violence in a city with
shootings. No charges had been
filed , Gill said.
·
PLAN FAIR PROGRAM - A "Salute to Sunday Sunday School movement. Members of area churches
During
the
night,
there
were at
School" will be presented on the opening night of the will participate in the event. The choir of the I,aurel
· least 10 firebombings and one arson
Meigs County Fair, Aug. 11, at 7:30p.m. at the grand- Cliff Free Methodist Church will be featured. Skits will
fire, Gill said. He said the damage
stand by the Meigs County Miliisterial Association. be presented rather than a sermon. Making plans for
citywide was tentatively set at
This year marks the 200th anniversary of the modern the program Thursday were Pastors William Mid·
,29,000.
·.
dles~arth, Albert Dittes and Floyd Shook.
All eight police officers were hit in
one burst as police attempted to get
people.off the streets. A ninth officer
cut his hand while trying to rescue
comrades who were in the Une of
The breaking and enterings iJ&gt;. down by Haggerty's son ; Del Shinn
Nine breakilig and enterings,
fire.
eluded Ellis Sohio, Middleport, on residence on Oct. 5, 1977, intruder
three of which occurred iri 1977, have
The streets .were generally empty
March 29, 1980, when between ~ ran when surprised ; Margaret Mar·
been cleared with the arrest of a 17Thursday night in the city's heavily
~ar old Pomeroy junvenile as a
and $900 was taken ; Century Bar, tin residence entered on Oct. 20,
MOSCOW - A Vietnamese spaceman and his Soviet partner sped
Pomeroy, April 19, 1980, watches 1977, $1,500 takeri.
result of a joint investigation by
WARNING
ISSUED
toward
a Unkup Thursday with the Salyut 6 space station, where they
and
knives
taken;
French's
Sunooo,
The
Sheriff's
department
was
Sheriff James J. ·Proffitt and Mid·
Persoos
either
pay
old
fines
or
be
will
join
two other Russian cosmonauts who have been circling the
Middleport,
May
29,
1980,
$130
notified
Wednesday
evening
that
six
dleport Police Chief J. J . Cremeans.
arrested
tills
Is
.that
Pomeroy
Earth
for
3_ months.
taken;
Lou's
Ashland,
Pomeroy,
black Angus heifers were missing
The youth who has given
PoUce
Chief
Charles
McKUmey
WBI"'
Russian flight colnmander Viktor Gorbatko and Vietnamese air fol"'
June 2, 1980, undetermined amount ·from the field at the Eddie Silva
statements to officers, appeared In
ned today.
of money; Pomeroy Sunoco, June 26, residence, RD, Albany.
ce Lt. Col. Pham Tuan, the first Asian in space, were hurtled aloft
Meigs County Juvetiile Court and
McKinney reported that penoos
aboard the Soyuz 37 shuttle craft Wednesday from the Balkonur
Persons having any information
1980,$160 taken; Pomeroy Gun Club,
was sentenced to the Ohio Youth
have been notHied and they must
cosmodrome in Soviet Central Asia.
Corrunission. He is presently CO!Joo
July 11, 1980, 30 cans of beer and a on the cattle are to notify the
either make arraagemepts lo pay
The 3J.yearooQ!d Tuan is credited with being the first Vietnamese
bottle of whiskey taken; Aug. 26 , sheriff's department. Silva reported
fined to the juvenile section of the
the fines or warrants will be Issued
1977, Bob Haggerty residenc, in· that the did not know if the cattle had
fighter pilot to shoot down an American IH2 bomber during the VietcoWJty jail. Additional arrests are
lor their arrest.
nam War.
)
.
!ruder was surprised when knocked stolen or strayed !rom the fields.
anticipated.
Chief McKinuey also warned thBt
The launch Wednesday night was part of the Intercosmos program,
If penoos conUnue to violate slop
in which astronauts from six other nations thus far - Poland,
signs they too wUI be arrested .
Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Bulgaria and Vietnam have accompanied Soviet commanders into space.
Iran 's official Pars news agency
degrees.
,
KUWAIT (AP) •Iranian
said there were four hijackers
Pars said the hijacked plane was
President Abolhassan · Bani-Sadr
aboard the plane and that they idenrefueled and provided with drinkilig
closed Tehran's ' airport today to
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio - Jurors in the arson·murder trial of Gerald
tified themselves as Palestinians. water, was ready to take off for an
prevent the landilig of a hijacked
Willey failed. to reach a verdict Thursday for the second straight day
Abadan Radio said two passengers undisclosed destination, and that
Kuwaiti jetliner with about 40 people
and resumed deliberations this morning.
were released ili the oil refining city negotiations between the Iranian
aboard, Pars news agency said.
Membership tickets for the annual
The jury has deliberated for more than 16_ hours. The panel
and taken to a hospital after feeling and Kuwaiti authorities were
The aircraft flew to the Iranian
Meigs County Fair, Aug. 12·16, are
discussed the case for 12 hours and listened to rereading of testimony
sick.
proceeding "at the request o! the
capital from Ahadan, the oil refining
now on sale at $5 each and can be
for 4_ hours.
This
left
the
hijackers,
35
hijackers."
city in southwestern Iran, the o!·
purchased at a number of local
Guernsey County Prosecutor James Scott said Thursday night that
passengers and four crew aboard
Kuwait's director genetal of
ficial news agency said.
busiliesses.
he wasn't surprised the jury was taking so long.
the plane, parked at the airport in security, Col. Mohammed Kabandi,
After Bani·Sadr ordered
Membership tickets entitle the
The panel began discussing the case Wednesday at noon after
Abadan, where temperatures at this on Thursday said there were two
Mehrabad , Airport closed, the
purchaser to gate admission and
hearing three days of testimony.
time of year soar to well over 100 . hijackers aboard the plane. He iden·
hijacked plane was reported circling
free
parking
for
the
entire
fair
and
Following a meal break, the jury resumed deliberations at 5:05p.m.
•
over Iranian airspace in the vicinity
tified them as brothers Youssef and · also to vote or !ile for the board of
Thursday.
of Tehran, Kuwait airport sources
Khalaf Ahmed"Moufleh, and said
directors of the Meigs County
they were Jordanians. ·
said.
Agricultural Society.
lea~
They were deported from Kuwait
The aircraft spent some · seven
These tickets may be purchased at
LOS ANGELES - Comedian Richard Pryor, who was given a onelast year for issuing bad checks, and
hours on the ground in Abadan, the
the.New York Clothilig House, Green
in·three
chance of survival after a freak accident melted his polyester
are demanding $7po,ooo allegedly
state radio repofled.
Lantern, Sugat Run Flour. ' Mill,
shirt over his body last month, walked unassisted·from a hospital and
owed them by a Kuwaiti,merchant in
The Arab hijackers, who have for·
Swish·er·Lohse · Pharmacy, Five
said, "I feel like God has given me a second chance at life."
ced the plane to make four landings
return for nileasing the plane,
Points Grill, Gloeckner's
There was no visible sign that he had undergone three skin graft
Kabandi added.
in two days, ·were reported to have
Restaurant in Pomeroy; Middleport
operations
in the six weeks silice police found him badly burned and
The Kuwait Airlines Boeing 737
threatened to blow . up the plane
Department• Store,
Miller Brothers'
I
down
the streets of a Los Angeles neighborhood. He had suf·
running
was hijacked Thursday while on a
unleSs they get $750,000 they claim a
Grocery, Rutlimd; Waid Cross Sons,
CLEVELAND
(AP)The
will"
fered
thirtklegree
burns over the upper haU of his body.
flight from Beirut, Lebanon, to
Kuwaiti merchant owes them.
Racine ; Baum Lumber Co .,
olog
numbers
selected
Thursday
·in
Fabna Faqih, a Kuwaiti journalist
Kuwait. It landed in Kuwait and
Chester; Nita Jean Rit&lt;;hi~. Tuppers
during a !JO.minute stop, the
among 37 women and children the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The
Plains; Duncan's Grocery, Darwin;
hijackers released all 37 women and
released by the hijackers in Kuwait Number" and Its weekly " Pyramid"
Gaul's Shake Haven, Chester, and
Ghildren aboard.
Thursday night wrote in her game are:
Helen Baer, Minersville,
Partly cloudy tonight' and Saturda/ with a chance of showers or
The Number-375.
The plane then flew to Bahrain,
newspaper Al·Anbaa that the
thunderstorms Saturday. Lows tonight in mi~ . Highs Saturday in
Daily general admi,.ion is $3 and
PyramJd...:.73; 5U; 9862
refueled there, flew back to Kuwait
hijackers said they would !ree the
the price includes free grandstand
mid.aos. Chance pf rain 10 percent tonight and 30 percent Saturday.
Tbe lottery reported -earuings of for a second tirne, then took off for
passengers and crew ~till he!d by
Southerly to southwesterly winds f&gt;.1p mph tonighl.
shnws and free rides. Those pur·
·
Abadan, 60 miles north of Kuwait
them then blow up the aircraft if $156,254.50 on the number game. The
chasing membership tickets have
earnings came on sales of across the I cp of the Persian 'Gulf
Extended Ohio Forecast - Sunday through Tuesday: A chance of
·their demands are not met.
free grandstand attractions and can
$5441,618.50,
while
holden
of
winning
showers
or thunderstorms each day. Highs.mainly in the 80s and lows
and
the
site
of
the
world's
largest
o.
i
l
Miss Faqih and the other released
· ride by paying an additional $2
llekets
are
entitled
to
share
a
total
of
in
the
60s.
·
·
refinery.
passengers Sllid the hijackers were
charge each day that they want to
$390,362,
lottery
officials
said.
armeo w1tn pistols and grenades.
ride.

Youth's arrest solves nine B&amp;E's,

! •••••••••••••••••

•

may."

Gerald R: Ford, who appeared
before a House Judiciary su~
committee in 1974 to discilss his par·
don of former President Richard M.
Nixon, is the only president to testify
publicly before a congressional com·
rnittee.
Presidential counsel Lloyd Cutler
told the Public Broadcasting System
that it had not been decided whether
Carter, if asked, would testify before
the special Senate committee, an·
swer written questions or convene a
.meeting at the White House. ·
Like other presidential aides,
Cutler took pains to discourage any
comparison with Watergate, saying
he was "confident nothing remotely
resembling the obstruction of jlistice
of the Watergate period could have
happened."
" Billy Carter registered under
protest last week as a foreign agent
for Libya's leftist government to
avoid a full grand jury investigation.
He has acknowledged receiving
from Libya $220,000 in installments

Officers wounded in racial
disturbance at Chattanooga ·

'

Save Gasoline

Sen. Birch ·Bayh, D-Ind., chairman of the special panel, vowed to
"pursue the truth wherever it may
lead and let the chips fall where they

e

NEVILLE REUNION
SATURDAY
The annual Neville reunion will be
Saturday, July 26, at Krodel Park,
PoilitPieasant, W.Va.

MEN'S &amp; BOYS WEAR

'

Charles Smith

chasing too few goods. The iJI..
dividual relief would be felt almost
immediately, putting more money
into consumer hands. But, because it
would take much longer for the
business tax incentive to show ef·
fects, the supply of goods could not
keep up with the increased demand,
he said.

. VOL 31 NO. 72

Emergency squad runs

John Vinson Martin
John Vinson Martili, 60, died Wednesday at the home of his brother,
Osby, 2Coal St., Pomeroy.
Mr. Martin was born Dec. 5, 1919,
a son of the late John and Mary
Blankenship Martin. He was also
preceded ili death by three brothers,
Charles, Eugene and Herbert and a
sister, Marilyn.
Surviving are a son, Donald, Ten·
nessee; six brothers, Robert, Colum·
bus; Ralph, Beaver, Albert, all of
~r; Eddie and Osby, both of
Pomeroy; six sisters, Mrs. Thomas
(Louise) Mitchell and Mrs. Floyd
(Sylvia) George and Mrs. Everett
(Edna) See, all of Columbus; Mrs.
Richard (Carolyn) Rummell,
Nebraska; Mrs. Jack (Connie) Mat·
thews and Mrs. Lowell (Janice)
Thompson, Chesapeake, and several
nieces and nephews.
·
Mr. Martili was a veteran of World
War n having served with the U. S.
Marine Corps ili the South Pacicic.
He was a plwnber. Mr. Martin
belonged to the Rutland Pentecostal
Church.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Mr. Robert Melton of,
ficiating. Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 ·
p.m. Friday.

0

WASHINGTON (AP) - Treasury Board, and the current chairman,
Secretary G. William Miller, tpld Paul A. Volcker.
that the Senate probably will pass a
The Democratic-controlled comtax cut this year, says the ad· mittees scheduled the hearings after
ministration is not about to reverse congressional Republicans and their
itseU and pretend that today's per· presidential candidate, Ronald
sistent inflation has become ac· Reagan,. began presting for an imceptable.
mediate vote on a·$$-billion tax cut
But that's exactly what would be that would take effect next year.
required for the administration to
Republicans say the reduction endorse a Rept~blican plan calling 90 percent of which would go to ·iJ&gt;.
for Congress to vote immediately on dividuals - is necessary to offset
a tax cut to take effect Jan.l, Miller part of the tax increase caused by in-told the Senate Finance Committee flation and to revitalize American
on Wednesday.
·
business.
He pleaded for the committee to
Inflation for the first six months of
delay action on any tax cut until 1900 measured an annual rate of 14.8
early next year, saying a premature . percent. The Labor Department said
vote might undo all the govern· ~ednesday that consumer prices in
ment's recent efforts to slow in· June rose 1 percent, an annual rate
flation by restricting credit and of 12.4 percent - a faster pace than
federal spending.
durilig the previous two months but
The conunittee, which seems in· administration officials insisted that
cUned to reject Miller's recom· falling mortgage rates will help keep
mendation, sought advice today inflation below double-digit levels
from several private economists.·
for the last half of the year.
The House Ways and Means ComNevertheless, Miller told the
mittee, meanwhile.. arranged to Finance Committee the GOP
hear from Arthur Burns, former proposal would fuel another round of
chaiiman of the Federal Reserve classic inflation : too much money

judgment against defendant for all
amounts to which he is entitled.
Raymond E. Whaley and Dorothy
Whaley, Shade filed suit in the
amount of $2,'soo against Cletus
Dalton, Albany.
The plaintiffs demand judgment
for an accounting from the defen·
dant for ali timber cut, removed
and sold by the defendant.
The marriage of Carolyn Sat·
terfield and Jack Satterfield was
dissolved.
·

The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services Headquarters
reports a number of runs by units on
Wednesday. They include: Racine
Unit, 4:43p.m. to the hydro plant for
Warren Johnston, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Syracuse Unit,
12:58 p.m., to Letart Falls for Helen
Slack, taken to Veterans Memorial
HOSI)ital; Rutland, 7 a.m., to Meigs
Mine I for John Ator, taken to
O'Bleness Hospital, Athens;
Rutland unit, 9:43 p.m. to Beech
· Grove Road for Archie McKinney,
taken to Holzer Medical Center;
Racine, 9::t6 a.m., for Callie
Matheny, taken to Pomeroy Health
Care Center from Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 10:38a.m., Ruth
Carr taken from Leading Creek
Road home to Camden·Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg; Racine
unit, 2:45 p.m., Freda Duffy,
Syracuse, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment
and returned to her home.

-

WAsHINGTON (AP) - President
Carter is promising full White House
cooperation, perhaps even his own
testimony if necessary, in the
special Senate ilivestigiltion of his
brother Billy's Libyan connections.
Presidential.press secretary Jody
Powell said Thursday that Carter
·did not expect to invoke executive
privilege for either himself or his
aides to keep them from testifying or
providing information. He will in·
struct his staff io cooperate fully,
Powell said.
The Senate Judiciary Committee
was meeting today to discuss details
of the probe by a nine-member panel
- five Democrats and .four
Republicans - into the Billy Carter·
Libyan ties and whether the White
House irinuenced a Justice Depart·
ment investigation of the president's
younger brother.
Hearings are expected to start
nexf week, and the committee is un·
der orders to produce a report a
month to the day before the Nov. 4
election.

,

Spaceman, heads toward hook-up

Iranian President closes ·airport

Fair membership

Arson jury fails to reach verdict

tickets on sale

Smiling Pryor

Weather forecast ·

I

bums center

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