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                  <text>· Shou~d benefit Meigs County

Commission approves ·soil survey
,

BY KATIE CROW
evaluation, drainage improvements, Soil Conservation Service, United
Commissioners have agreed to a and other public works.'
States Department of Agriculture
· soU S\II'Vey of Meigs County that,
The area to be surveyed is the
for the progressive soU survey.
when completed, could prove very . total land area within the boundaries
1be agreement was given to the
: beneficial to county residents.
d. Meigs County totsling ap- . Prosecuting Attorney Fred W. Crow
, Meeting with commissioners proximately 278,720 acres.
II for study before it is signed by the
Tuesday were representatives of the
Design maps will be compiled.
commissioners. The .conunissioners
Ohio Soils Inventory Board who The project is to ,get underway on
earlier passed a resolution to
discussed the survey to be conducted April I, 1984.
proceed with the prelimary work on
in Meigs County over a five year .
It was indicated that aerial maps
the soil survey.
Period.
will cost approximately $8,000. The
Meeting with the conunissioners
Anticipated cost is $298,00 with
coi!pty. wiU be provided with 50
regarding !he soil survey were
Meigs County's share to be $54,505,
cop1es of the soU survey while state
James Roush, Divison of Soil and
payable over a five year period.
representatives wiU he supplied with
Water, Ohio Department of Natural
The soU survey is needed for
1,000 copies.
Resouces; Boyd A. Ruth and Byron
·adequate comprehensive land use
Representatives meeting with the
:I'hompsun, Soil Conservation Serplanning by the collllDissioners,
commissioners r.equested a
vice; Carol Costanzo and Archie
agricultural programs, soil and
c90perative agreement be signed Stegal of Farmers Home Adwater conservation programs, land
between the commissioners and the
ministration; Thereon Johnson.

'

DAILY 9-9; SAT.

'

SALE ENDS SATUR

SUN. 1.-6

'

•

.e
VOL 31 NO. 75

supervisor of Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District; Crow, Philip
Roberts, county engineer; Pete
Shields, retired employe of ASCS;
Charles Blakeslee, Meigs County
Regional Planning ColllJIIission ;
Keith Huffman, Soil Conservation
Service; Richard B. Jones, Ohio
Divison Lands and Soil, and George
F. Hale, Ohio Agricultural Research
and Development Center.
In other business, Manning Wei;
ster, 169 Board Chairman and Chris
Layh, administrator of Mental
Retardation, discussed operating
costs of the Mental Retardation
school for the 1980-411 school year.
Webster reported that school will
be starting in five weeks at the for-

at y
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

merPomeroyJuniorHighBuilding.
road project between Union Ave.,
Layh said the second stage of the
and · the Multi-Purpose Health
schematic-design of the new school
facility,
and workshop to be located in
Page presented ·the final design
Syracuse, was completed and the arplans and stated that the plans will
chiteet was preparing specifications
be reviewed by FHA by Aug. 4.
and bid fonns.
The access road project is ex·
The project in Syracuse is expeeled to be ready to go to bid by the
peeled to be ready to bid by early
middle of AuguSt.
September it was indicated.
Bob Bailey, EMS coordinator, told
County Engineer, Philip Roberts,
the commissioners that the emegendiscuss~ a slip oq county road 75,
cyvehiclewhichcoughtonfirecould
hospital hlll, and presented an
be repaired.
estimate for the necessal)' repair ~ · Attending in addiUon to those
work.
named were Richard Jones
Upon Roberts' reconunendation
president•.Henry Wells and Cheste;
the boa.rd agreed·to proceed as soon
Wells, commissioners, Mary Hobas posSJble on an emergency basis.
stetter, clerk, and Martha ChamJim Page, consulting engineer,
hers.
reviewed progress of the access

•

enttne
FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1980

Orlando hit
by violence
escapees ca1:&gt;tured
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Police lobbed tear gas canisters into a
laltefront house early today and captured three condemned killers who
had walked out of Georgia's maximum security prison. 1be fourth
escapee was found dead, floating in a river in the next county.
FBI Agent Cecil Moses said the dead man, found in the Catawba
River in Gaston County, had been identified as Troy Leon Gregg, 32, of
York;S.C.
.
He said the cause of death had not been established.
1be capture of the three other escal&gt;ees came after officials issued a
nationwide alert for the prisoners, who were described as "extremely
dangerous" men with "nothing to lose." .

Injuri~

\ ,

1. llrttloll hont diK b~Gi.e pod• D!l.d llnlnt• o n re01 r

WASHINGTON - An Ohio teen-ager died here Tuesday from injuries received in an automobile accident Monday night.
. Police in suburban Prince Gearge'a County, Md., said C'.athe!'ine
Ahlborn, 17, d. 21159 Blue Rock Drive in Xenia, Ohio, was riding in a car
that cruhed into a telephorie pole and fence.
The driver of the car, John Frederick Vance, 16, of Cllnton, Md., told
·pollee that he crashed after avoiding a car that had swerved into his
lane.
.
Ms. Ahlbom was flown by helicopter to the Washington Hospital
Center following the accident. She died of internal injuries Tuesday
evening, police said.
Vance and two other passengers in the car, Richard LeeGunnell,19,
and Linda Ragimo, l6, both of Cllnton, received only minor injuries.

Save on
Disc/Drum
Brake Special

\

Carter will visit Cleveland

whNI1

2. leturlalo dr~o~mt and hv o rAton
S. l.,sp.ct hont c ollpers ~
• · lellulhl roar wh-1 t ~ l lnd.:,. , II pou.lblo;
ropiA&lt;o , If n.~;onary , at addiUvnal pGrh c:otl IM•
wh..J qllndor
l . lepa~lt lnnorond oo.tt.. 'earlng1
6. lnap.c:.t malfor crllndtl

7. ltoplac;o front gr•a•• t •
I , loUII h droullc ,,,.,.,...

claim Ohio teenager

Save on disc/drum brake job for
many U.S. cars. Additional parts
and services which may be needed
are at eKtra cost. Shop at K mart for
your automotive needs.

CLEVELAND - The White House has confirmed that President
Carter will visit Cleveland to attend a Democratic fund-raiser next
Monday.
The event will be a $2,5t)G.a-couple dinner at the home of Milton Wolf
in suburban Shaker Heights. Wolf is former U.S. ambassador to
Austria.
The White House said the president also wiU visit New York Aug. 6 to
address the Urban League.
Jerry Alilltin, who was Ohio coordinator for Carter's primary campaign, said Tuesday,that Carter aides are CO!lSidering also having a
smaller fund-raiser in Cleveland for those who cannot afford the
Shaker Heights affair. But the pbins are stiU tentative. Austin said
such an event would be somethi!)g like a $!().a-person party before the
Wolf dinner.

Spy naming now costly venhire

··~. 59.88
Hydraulic

F~oor

Jack

1V.-tori capacity with 5-15"1ifllhg range.
360"swiveieaddla. For home,~

WASHINGTON- The Senate Intelligence Committee gave 12-(lapproval Tuesday night to a bill that calls for jailing or fining Americans
who publicly identify U.S. secret agents . .
The action, aimed at professional spy-exposers and at agents who
have turned against the CIA, foUows close on the heels of the House Intelligence Committee's approval of.slmilar legislation last week.
CIA officials and a number of legislators contend the legislation is
needed to protect the lives of American spies and. to keep U.S. intellige.nce operations running. The bill got a boost earlier this month
wben gunmen fired into the home of a man recenUy alleged to be
"station chief" for CIA operations in Jamaica.

South Korean ship still missing
MANILA, Philippines- A South Korean ore ship with a crew of 29
has been missing off the central Philippines for a week and searchers

fear It may have sunk in Typhoon Kim, the ship's agent said today.
The agent said the bulk carrier Haedangwh8 left Dlimpier,
Australia, July 17 for Pohang, South Ko~. and w~ last heard from
Wednesday. It reported then it was about 185 miles south of the
tyuhoon. He said the ship was carrying 98,000 tons of iron ore.

ORLANDO, Fla. (APJ - Police
removed most barricades and rush. hour traffic moved without incident
today through a predominantly
black Orlando neighborhood wbere
sporadic violence broke out in the
pre-dawn hours.
But four blocks of one street
remained sealed off in the heart of
the area where an angry crowd of
about 100 people pelted police and
passers-by with rocks and bottles
and some stores were looted.
The violence erupted after police
arrested a rqbbery suspect at Sister
Reed's bar in the central part of the·
city, according to police spokesman
Rick deTreville.
At least one car was set on fire, but
firemen were forced to withdraw
from the arll!!J!Ild~ a. hail of rocks,
pOlice said.
At least six people were arrested,
deTreville said, including 11\ree
people arrested at the Sister Reed's
bar.
It was the thjrd. Fiorida city
rocked by racial disturbances since
the Miami riots In May left 18'people
dead. In the wake of the Miami riots,
gangs of black youths prowled the
streets of Tampa several nights,
tO&amp;Sing rocks and bottles. Then,
earlier this month, violence erupted
again in the predominantly black
Liberty Cty section of Miami. .
In Orlando, four ministers walked
the streets of the troubled neighborhood helping restore order.
Ministers ted by the Rev. W.D.
Judge, a leader in the Orlando black
community, . walked through the
area and urged young blacks to stay
calm. The ministers said a general
community meeting would be held
today to allow blacks to air their
grievance(!.
1be incident began when police attempted to arrest two robbery
suspects, Nursey said. One suspect
resisted arrest, drawing an angry
crowd of 100 to 150 people who threw
rocks and bottles at .officers, the
chief said. ,
crowd broke up into smaller
groups and roalited the area, police
said.
· Two Orlando police officers were
slightly injured wben they were
struck by flying bottles, said Nur·
sey. One was hit in the back by a bottle while another suffered a cut on
his arm.
As the violence broke out, Orlando
police caUed ill reinforcements from
the Orange County Sherifrs Department and the Florida Highway
Patrol to guard the sealecklff area.
, Police permitted no one but the
ministers and a few reporters to enter.

:fhe

Six die in Communist attack
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - About 50 communist insurgents attacked a patrol of civilians and police guarding a roa!l. construction
project in northern Thailand, klUed six men in the patrol and wounded
12 the Thai Military Supreme Command reported today.
·rebels escaped into the jungle with the dead patrolmen's
automatic rifles apd ammunition, a spokesman sald.
1be occurred in the Umpang district of Tak province, 2.io miles north of Bangkok,.a spokesman said.

· irhe

I

Weather forecast _
Clear tonight. Lows in the upper 60s. Increasing cloudiness Thursday. Highs near 90. Chance of rain near zero percent tonight and 20
. percent Thursday. Winds variable.10 mph or less tonight.
EJ:Ielllled Ohio For~ast Friday through Sunday:Scattered
showers and thunderstonns·Friday. Fair Saturday and Sunday. Highs
In the low to mid-l!Os. Lows in the 608.
.
f

I

Rhodes asks for
extra relief funds
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes has asked for extra disaster relief for fanners who
S\lffered extensive crop damage
during severe storms in southwest
and central Ohio July 12.
Rhodes wrote to James Wahner,
regional !~!rector of the Federal .
Emergency ~nagement Agency In
Chicago, asking for a review of the
damage and emergency aid .
. Rhodes made the request Tuesday
because he said assistance from the
Farmers Home Administration wiU
not adequately meet the needs of
tarmers in the affected areas.
r

SEMINAR - Twenty-eight participants in the
the sessions. Receiving an explanation from the iwo inMeigs County Commissioners CETA Program atstructors are four participants, I to r, Terry Stobart,
tended a two-day readiness semiQar Monday and_ , Paul G~~lrl!u:Y. B~y - aa.d , Floy!l 0b1iJ!w.
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn. Standing are Peg Thomas
Another seminar will be held later for the other 28 parand John Malacos, counselors at Rio Grande College
ticipants in the program . .
and Rio Grande Conununity College, who conducted

Hoffa case remains mystery
despite FBI's 5-year probe
DETROIT (AP) - Five years ago
today, Jimmy Hoffa vanished after
leaving a suburban Detroit
restaurant, and thus began one of
the FBI's most famous unsolved
cases.
And while .the government's
strategy to snare the presumed
killers of the former Teamsters boss
hasn't worked, authorities haven't
changed their tlieory on who is
behind Hoffa's disappearance.
·
They believe he w.as the target in a
contract murder arranged by
organized crime bosses to protect
what federal investigators say are
long-standing business arrangements with the Teamsters.
"We're no more hopeful now than
we were two years ago," \!IIYS 0.
Franklin Lowie, head of the Detroit
FBI office. · "We're no more
pessimistic either. The case is open
but unsolved. We're still working on

it. "

Among the government's efforts
to solve. the highly publicized case
was a barrage of criminal
prosecutions ;in the hope .of persuading a suspect to trade testimony
for a light sentence and protective
·custody.
Four reputed underworld figures
and their associates were convicted
of a dozen crimes, but the FBI has
been unable to implicate them in the
disappearance of Hoffa; who at the
time of his disappearance was plan·
ning a campaign to oust Frank Fitzsimmons as president of the ·
nation's largest labor union.
Judges meted out more than 80
years in sentences including one of
life imprisonment, but most of the
suspected Hoffa. case figures are
eligible for parole in a few years. AU
are appealing their convictions, a

few are free on bond and one has served his sentence.
Hoffa was last seen getting In a
car with several men outside the
Machos Red Fox Restaurant in
Bloomfield Township.
FBI agents believe fonner New
Jersey Teamsters boss Anthony
Provenzano, 63, wanted Hoffa out rl
the way and reputed northeastern
Pennsylvania crime boss Russell
Bufalino, 76, approved a killing.
Reputed Detroit underworld
figure Anthony Giacalone and his
brother Vito, federal agents believe,
lured their friend Hoffa to the
restaurant on the pretext of settling
an old feud between Hoffa and
Provenzano.
Provenzano, Bufalino, . and the
Giacalone brothers are all serving
jail terms, convicted of charges
unrelated to the Hoffa case.

Heavy rains drench I;Jelawarf!. area,
'

sizzling heat evident in Oklahoma
By Tbe Associated Press
Record downpours drenchl!d parts
of the Northeast with much-needed
rain, swamping streets and homes,
triggering power failures In New
York and wreaking havoc on city
transportation systems.
But in the "heat zone," Oklahoma
residents were sizzling under the
hottest temperatures of the year 108 degrees in. Oklahoma City on
Tuesday.
•
·
Delaware's Lake Como, swollen
with 5.1 inches of rain, overflowed
and covered U.S. Route 13 with up to
4 feet of water Tuesday. But sandbagging saved the Lake Como
bridge from collapsing and prevented more flooding.
The highway was to reopen later
today, said State Highway DireCtor
Robert Bewick.
Flood waters isolated a soda shop

in Smyrna, Del., sweeping away
parts of its parking lot and leaving a
comer of the building hanging 15
feet above an eroded pit.
High water also knocked out a
sewage pumping station, halting
service to many of the town's 1,500
homes.
·
..OSmage estima.tes were not immediately available.
New York rains stalled Manhattan's morning commuters in the air,
on the roads and in~ subways. The
deluge forced thrf!l highways to
close for several hours, and New
York's LaGuardia airport and
Newark airport .in New Jersey
reported two-hOur delays.
. Underground, some subway trains
were delayed and others halted as
water cascaded from the streets into
subway stations.·
Manhattan got a record 3.47 inches
.of rain, according to the Nation~ I

Weather Service. 1be old record for
July 29 was 1.40 inches, set in 1930.
Consolidated Edison reported
wide power outages throughout the
day, but almost all service was
restored by Tuesday evening. Roads
were back to nonnal by the evening
rush hour.
In New Jersey, highways were
flooded and traffic inched along in
poor visibility. Transit off4cials
reported delays of up to an hour on
trains originating in Philadelphia,
where downed trees and power lines
cut off power.
Weather service officials said 1.93
inches of rain fell on Newark, with
1.87 inches coming in one hour
Tuesday morning.
New Jersey farmers, meanwhile,
welcomed the rain as a salvage for
crops that had been suffering und~
several weeks of hot, dry weather.

�2- The DailYSentinel, Middleport-~omeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 30, 1980

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesmcy, July 30, 1980
;

Opinions &amp;
Comments

...

I

'5l'EPOOE.: Hij(E ~YOO
.HAVE AOCco.AWD 5TURDY
eR® ~R\).
. A.' KNIGtrr
CM!NOT mf.Cf TO aJ.¥
~~~5 wrrn A. fRA.~l~
SWORD.
mt.PlVJO: W~W't'OIJR
"11\'U51Y. 'NE~.

'mE DAILY SENTINEL
(USPS 165-Me)
DEVOTED'ro111E
INTEREST OF

..

MEIGS-MASON AREA

Jet•

;

Letter~ o1 oplaloD are welfomett. Tllty du~ald be
&amp;baD 310 words loo1 Ior llllbject to mtutdoa by lbe ecllor) aDd auul be .11ped wttb the tlpte'l addrnl. Names 111111 be wlthbrld gpoa
... publbti... However, oa re~~uest, llllmea will he dbcbed. LrUen: etwuld be lD gGOd ta1te, ad-

• drnola(l'-t, DOipcnoaollll&lt;s.
Pu.bUibttl ct.Uy ncept S.tarday by Tile Oblo VaUey P'Ublilb1Dg Compally· Mllltlmedla, IDe. ,
111 Ceart St, PMI!eroy, ObJo U7• • BwiiDell Office PboDetn- 2151. EdJtorlal PlloDt ft2..!1i7.

SetODd clut po1~1e p.Jd at Pomeroy, Ob.lo.
Nattoul advertlliq repreteatltlve, t..Ddoo Aaaoclltn, Slll Euclid Ave., Clnrland, Ob.u
• 14115.
~ Tbe A11ocll&amp;ed Prest II n:clusively eotiU..t to tbe lltt for pubUcttltlll of aU oeft dlspatchet
• d'ecUted to the DtWII~prl' . .d also the local DeWIJ publJtllecf'herebJ..
'
: PubllaMr
·
Robert Wla,ett
• Q!DeniMif. 6CIIyEdttor
RebertHodUcb
.. Newt EdJtor
·
·
Dale R4tthgeb Jr.
• Adv. Maaagcr
·~l&amp;!m'?.
Carl Gb.ea
~15' r"'T'"L.....L...""'T""I ~ c:::llii=P=I

...
•

.

Major League Baseball
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

W L

Pittsburfh
Mootre.
Philadelphia

PORTSMOUTH TIMES: "Until Pope John Paul II made
:: his journey to Brazil earlier this month, that most im·
.• portant of South American countries had not been much in
:: the news. Located outside the world's broad arc of crisis,
:: Brazil has been largely outside the world's concern.
;: "Such negligence is an unfortunate distortion of reality
;: because this emerging giant with a population of 120
;:.• million is surely destined to exert considerable influence
.• for good or bad on the Western Hemisphere ...
~·
"Brazil is a stirring colossus. Its booming automobile in·
:: dustry is one of the world's largest. In addition to its legen·
;: dary c.offee exports, it supplies more than 8.5 percent of
;: tlie world's orange juic~ ...
.
;: "If the democratization now under way in Brazil suc;·,: ceeds, it will be a constructive force Uiroughout Latin
· America. Clearly, the nurturing of this process ought to be
:: one of America's highest foreign policy prioritieS."
;. NEW PIDLADELPIDA TIMES..REPORTER: "Sam
.;; Clutchpoll had a pretty chilling nightmare. He dreamed
;: that the current work stoppage by movie and television
:: people had gotten out of hand.
·
;, "Television was showing only test pattern~ and the
r'
r'
,: movie houses closed their doors .because .no one was
;; making the R·rated and X-rated money-makers. Everyone
~; wound up with nothing to do ...
r; "It sound.Sbad, all right, but would it be? Granted, there
;( would be a day or two of painful withdrawal symptoms ;:. notknowingwhoshotJ.R. Ewing ...
;:: "But think of the possibilities should people start to
:: grasp the idea that reality is what's all round them, not
~ .what they see on a rectangular screen .. . Given that ·
' possibility, the strike by the actors' union is no big deal, ex·:. :cept for the wealthy group itself.
:;: · "But back to Sam's nightmare of a top-to-bottom
:{ walkout in the entertainment industry - the strike only
5 lasted a week or so."

..

..

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44

New Yoik

Chicago

17

51

"39

5I
56

WEST

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.566
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56

Los Angeles
Clncirinou
San Francisco
AUanta

Pet. GB
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St. Louis

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Tuesday's Games

.495

7

....
.430

10

$4
53
49
46

. ~25

21'&lt;
4

Baltimore t , Texas J
Wednesday's Games
•
Oakland (Langfard9-9 ) at Taronto(Stieb 10..7 ),
(n)
.
.
Seattle (Abbott Ul "at Clevel.and (Waits 7-9 ),
.
Califom la
(Ta naM 5-9) at Detroit. ( Sc•·
' "" •-••'""'.r:uo:r

(n)

&amp;&lt;l ), ( n)

13 ~

Mon~ 4, Cincinnati 1

Philadelphia 9, Houston 6
New York 2, AUant.a 1
San DiegoS, Chicago 1
lno Ang,..10, Pittsburgh 2

Milwa~e e (ClevelandS-:.tl at Chicugo {Ho}1 J.
o)", tn )
New York (Underwood 8-7 ) at Minnesota
(Koosman 8-9), {n)
Boston (Renko 5-4 ) al Kansas City (Splittorff 871. ( n )
Baltimore (Palmer 9-8) at Texas (Jenkins 8--9),

( n}

.

SanFra~4,St . Louis]

AtlAnta (Boggs 5-5 ) at New York ! Zachry S.S )
St. Louis (Fulgham 1:..1) Hl San Francisco

Today in

(KnepperS.I2J
Clnctnnatl IMoskau 7-JJ at Montreal (Rogers

11-6), ( n )
Houston (Ryan S-7) at Philadelphi a (Ruthven

~7), (n)

Oticago (McGlothen B-7) alSan Diego ~ Wise 35) , ( n)

Pittsburgh (Candelaria 7·9) at Loo Angeles
11H), (n(
AMERICAN IJl AGUE

( ReUBB

EAST

New York

BaiUmore

Milwaukee
Detroit
Bo8too

Cleveland

Toronto

Ka.nsas City
Oakland
Texas

Minnesota
Chicago
Seattle
California

GOP needs to tap ·pool of potential voters
By Robert J. Wagman
WASIDNGTON (NEA)- With the .
polls showing tha' less than 20 per·
cent of the electorate considers itself
Republican, conunon sense dictates
that the Grand Old Party find and
recruit new voters to its call!le. So,
there was much discussion among
party strategists at the recent
Republican National Convention
about finding and tapping into new
constituencies of previously
apoliticai Americans.
Of the various untapped pools of
potential vdters, one of those most
talked about in Detroit was youth.
Research was cited sbowing that
few young people are registering
and voting in comparison with the
rest of the population. One study
much in evidence in Detroit predicted participation that used to ~c:ur
as people reached their mid- to late20s is no longer apparent.
So~ given the shj!er numbers of
y non-voters within the 18-50-30
age group, it's no wonder the
Republicans are taUdng about an
all-i&gt;utcampaign to attract the youth

vote in November.
• The Republicans may also be en·
couraged by studies clearly showing
that toda}"s young people are considerably more conservative than
their counterparts of 10 or 15 years
ago. Former Yippie Jerry R1,1bin,
now 40, recently.changed his famous
slogan of "Never trust anyone over
30" to "Never trust anyone under 30
- they're too conservative."
This GOP effort to woo young
voters started in Deiroit, where the
2,000 . members of the "Reagan
Youth Delegation" were much in
evidence. Their job was to appear on
television as often as possible to con·
vince any young TV viewer that
youth is behind . 6\}.year-old Ronald
Reagan. Their wild "impromptu"
floor demonstrations featured
legions of freshly scrubbed young
faces, all carefully coached ana
choreographed by Reagan staffers
(all of whom seemed to be in their
late 40s and addicted to three-piece
suits even in the sununer heat) to
stream through the entrances and

WASIDNGTON (AP) The except possibly to those militants
return of deposed Shah Mohammad out of touch with reality - that the
Reza Pahlavi was ·the principal United States had no intention of
demand of Iranian militants holding returning the terminally ill shah for
52 American hostages, but not the trial as a war criminal.
only demand.
Over the last several months, the
The militants also wanted his for- administration focused.its hopes for
tune re!ID1led, claiming he had plun- the hostages' eventual release on a
dered their country. And they wan· new Majlis, or parliament. From the
ted an abject ~pology from the start of the crisis, efforts · at
United States for supporting him. So negotiating a settlement had stilit is unlikely that the shah's death fered from the lack .of a partner at
will resolve the crisis.
the Tehran end.
It's inconceivable the Pahlavi
Last month, registering this
family will, turn any money over to frustration, Secretary of State Ed·
the Khomeini regime.
mund S. Muskie said "authority is
An American apology Is also, in ail not yet concentrated in Iran in such
probability, out of the que~tion . . a way as to give' anybody, or any '
President Carter has said he won't group, control over the final
apologize for U.S. ·support of the decisions, e~cept maybe Khomeini
shah; .the closest he and other u.s. himself."
officials have come is to forswear in·
In the long run, the parliament
tervention in Iranian affairs.
and the selection of a prime minister
It seemed clear from the start - not the shah's death- may offer

NEW YOR)&lt; (AP) - Political at·
tempts to convince the American
public that the worst of the recession
is over is like trying to polish the
floor without washing it first.
Maybe some people, for a day or
so, did see the light of encouragement in statements from the
White House and its advisers, but
now Americans are again forced to
look at the deep, tlark and dirty
realities.
The unemployment rate, wl!ich

remained under 6 percent in July
despite forecasts it would be much
higher, is now being viewed as a
statistical aberration resulting from
a poorly designed seasonal adjustment factor.
The increase in June retail sales
!night have been a one-month affair
that won't be repeated in coming
months, various analysts are now
saying. And, with money getting
tighter again in some areas, some
doubts are arising about the staying

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FOOTBALL
N~ttional FootbHlll..ectgue

DENVE R BRONCOS ' Announced that Mark
Nichols, linebacker ; Jerry Hollo"&amp;)', aafetyi
Mike O'Rourke, offensive tackle, and Steve
Senlni, wide receiver, have left the club 'Vol~
buily.
HOUSTON OILERS: Signed Mike Barber,
tight end, to a series of one-year contracts .
l.OS ANGELES RAM&amp; AnnounC&lt;&gt;I the
retirement o( Dave Elmendorf, defensive back.
OAKLAND RAIDERS : Waived Darryl Swanson, defensive back.

ducted by l Uck Davis, national field
director of the College Republican
National Committee, for young par·
ty operatives who will work· college
campuses this fall on Reagan's
behalf.
Noting that perha(l! 9 million
potential voters attending the
nation's colleges and junior colleges
will not cast ballots in November,
Davis offered some practical advice
to those who will be promoting
Reagan on campus : ''Don't admit
you are a Republican unless
pressed. You won't win too many
friends saying what party you
belong to."·
Given this perception even among
young party leaders, it seems
unlikely that the Reagan-Bush ticket
will attract enough young voters io
influence the November outcome. In
fact, as the campaign moves into the
fall and money becomes tighter, the
party's efforts to woo young people
may well be reduced to mere
tokenism.

Since the abortive rescue mission
three months ago, the ad·
ministration has counted on quiet
diplomacy to win the release oHhe
American hostages.
Publicity fell off with Carter's
emergence from the Rose Garden
and the banning ri American
television reporters.and others from
Tehran. Carter has shifted the focus
of the natidn frorp the hostages'
detention and so have the news
media.
But the muting of the 263-day
crisis has not brought the hostages
home. And the few officials willing
lately to discuss the situation give no
indication a breakthrough i:. inr
minent.
They are operating on the theory
that Iranian authorities ultimately
will reach the conclusion that
holding the Americans hurts Iran
badly.

MIDDLEPORT - In MeigsMason pony league action Eastem's
Indians posted an extra inning victory over host Middleport, lo-5.
Middleport jumped out to an early
3-1 lead before the Indians tied' the
score in the top of the seventh.
In the first extra inning of play
Eastern rallied for two runs in the
top of that inning.
With their backs against the wall
Middleport came back to again lock
the score at 5-5. Eastern then scored
five times on two walks, three
singles. and two costly ·errors that
put them on top to stay.
Mark Holter went seven innings
fanning 11 and walking only one.
allowing only six hits.

Jerry Larkins came in to pick up
the win working two innings,
striking out six, and walking two.
Larry Cowdery led the winners
with two singles, Jay Carpenter a
double, and Jinuny Carter, Mark
Holter, Jerry Larkins, and Tom
Everett each a sing!.
Chris Burdette went seven innings
for the Middleport Squad fanning 18
Eastern hatters, but walking 10.
Burdette gave up only two hits
before E. Bishop came in and suf·
fered the loss with three KO's and
three . walks. D. Follrod and E.
Bishop had two singles for Mid·
dleport, while Alan King tripled, D.
Thomas doubled, and Burdette
singled. Eastern is now 8-11.

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Waverly Adios, driven by Brad
Farrington, pulled to a half length
victory .over J. C. Coaltown to pay
$9.20, $6.60 and $4 at Scioto Downs
Tuesday night.
J .C. Coal town paid $17.20 and $6.40
in the featured eighth race. Third
was Aaron Yorktown, to pay $3.40.
In the first race trifecta, the numbers &amp;-10-4 paid $8,960.10. A total of
4,160 persons wagered $306,11811
Tuesday.

LATONIA RESULTS
FLORENCE, Ky . (AP) -:- Embassy Express won the featured
eighth race Tuesday at Latonia.
The horse paid $7.40, $4.60 and
$3.40. Second finisher Southland
Lady paid $5.40
and $4.60, and Miss
.'
Zero came m at$2.60 for show.
The 7-2 combination of Mystics
Choice and Hurry Scurry paid a $28
daily double.
.
. A crowd of 1,219 wagered$90,903.

j

And I say MY candidate makes YOUR candi·
date look more foolish than YOURS makes
MINE look:"
'

power of the housing recovery.
On the same .day last week,
Consumer prices seJm to be rising General Mot,rs, the world's largest
again. June prices rose a full! per· manufacturer, reported a $412
cent compared with 0.9 percent in million loss for the second quarter,
April and May. And now food prices' ts biggest quarterly loss ever.
may be heading up, especially for American Motors lost $85 million in
beef and grains.
e same quarter, and that too was il.s
It appears also that wholesale largest quarterly loss in history.
price increases, after shrinking, will
If the industry's woes were a con·
explode again, fueling even further sequence only of buyer resistance to
. incr.eases in the consumer price in· prices, or buyw hesitation because
dex and assu[ing 1\mericans of stiff · of the recession, there wouldn't be
inflation for months to come.
much to worry about. Such problems
Business Week magazine quotes correct themselves .
Donald J . RalajCZI!k of George State
The automobile industry 's
University as expecting the July problems are deeper than that,
figure will show an 18.2 percent an- however. · Its reputation for
nual rate, , compared · with just 6.4 reliability has been undermined,
percent for the second quarter.
and its styling decisions in recent
That figure, coupled with higher years have been rejected.
jobless figures, can lie· expected to
Many potential buyers also are
give such a dose of reality to financially overextended, and thus
Americans that political promises are reluctant or unable to add fur-) '
will be seen for what they are. . ther credit problems. And their ·
Reality is the present, and it is grim. reluctance to buy. isn't diminished ,
Many econolllists think the im- by high gasoline prices and taxes.
mediate future - for the rest of the
The economic floor is very dirty,
year, anyway - isn't much brighter. and most(Americans know It. They .
The car mdustry especially is in bad know it because, unlike . some
shape, and that automatically politicians who seem to float above
means certain other industries are
realities in this political year, they
too.
arc standing in the dirt on that floor.

ALL MODELS
Jeep Pickup

GREATLY REDUCED

.catch us with.

our prices
,d own!
nJeep8

•

We wrote the book on 4-~heel drive.

Riverside Jeep
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446-9800

Gallipolis, Ohio

•

•

'-._ ·
•

feature: Stotts's Oldsmobile; Carr's Ford; Fairchild, Thurman; GaryLewis, Gallipolis; Dano King, Rutland; Flem Meade, Bidwell; Roil
Costilow and Robert Kilgour, Jackson ; and Dean Roof, Oak Hill. Nearly
4,000 spectators lined the course to witness the derby. (Tribune photo)

•

•

Jones ·defeats Cubs;
Montreal whips Reds

learance Sal

".

I

'VERNON FAIRCIULD (Car No. 77, right) , plows into a trunk during
the first heat of Monday's demolition derby at the Gallia Cowtty Junior ·
Fair. The feature was captured by Chuck Scotts of Pomeroy,owhile David
Carr, The Plains, finished second. Stotts collected $275 of the $500 purse.
Nine cars survived the three-heat preliminaries to advance to the

. 4'8P

Inflation: deep, dark and diny_·realities

;f

,

whatever hope exists for liberating
the Americans.
So ' the naming of a new prime
minister and the organizing of the
parliament that coincided with the
shah's death may provide . the
authority Muskie found lacking.
And yet, Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini, the spiritual force behind
the revolution that toppled the shah,
is Wlquestionably in charge of the
hostage issue.
Strong-willed and righteous, he
has resisted · compromise. In late
May, it is understood, he vetoed a
potential deal on the hostages.
The U.S. government's statemenl
on the shah's death was carefully
phrased to avoid provoking the
authorities in Iran. It overlooked the
nearly four decades of support the
shah gave the United States and had
merely a few sympathetic words for
his family.

62

0

history~ • •

- In 1916, before the U.S. entered
·World War I, German saboteurs
blew, up a munitions plant on Black
Tom Island near Jersey City. N.J.
- In 1942, President Franklin
Roosevelt signed a bill creating 1the
Waves, a women's auxiliary agency
in the U.S. Navy.
-Ten years ago: A federal court
in Montgomery, Ala., ordered seven
r•, China.
.
.Alabama state agencies to stop
~ ·..
.,
-In 1909, the .U.S. government discriminating against blacks in
:~ bought its first airplane, a Wright hiring practi ces.
c'•liipltne, costing $31,~.

onto the convention floor at just the
right moment.
,
Despite all the talking and all the
demonstrating, however, the
Republican Party seems woefully
unable to attract young voters.
In public, leaders of the Young
Republican . National Federation
speak confidently about GOP gains
among young voters in November.
But in private, they are much less
optimistic.
·
Many of th~m fear their party's
stances on such issues as abortion
and the Equal Rights Amendment
will destroy its changes among
young voters. Said one Young
Republican political operative in a
moment of candor. "This party is on
the wrong side of every issue that is
important to young people except
draft · registration. (Independent
candidate John B.) Anderson, is on
the right side of everything. If he's
on enough ballots in November, he'll
kill us among voters under 30."
The GOP's likely difficulties in attracting young people were demonstrated '!I a Detroit workshop con- .

W L

Tuesday's Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
. MINNESOTA TW1NS: Reactivated Glenn
Adams, ouUielder, and placed Mike Cubbage, in·
fi elder, on the 21-day disabled List.
· National League
NEW YORK METS : Removed Phil
Mankowski , infielder, from the l ~y disabled
lis t ami placed him on the 60-day disabled l.iat.
BAS~B4LL
.
National Basketball AssoctaUon
PHOENIX SUNS : Signed Jotm Campbell, cen-

Summer league action

Unlikely shah's death will resolve crisis

::; Today is Wednesday, July 30, the
~· 212th day of 1980. There are !54 days
left in the year.
;~ Today's highlight in history:
.; On this dale in 1619, the first
;; representative assembly in America
f. convened at Jamestown, Va.
~· On this date:
1,; .-In 1907, R~ia and Japan
~~ reached agreement regarding

l

a

56

Tuesday's Games
Oakla nd 6, Toronto~. J2 innin~s
Cleveland 7, Seattle 2
Ca lifornia 7, DetroitO
Milwaukee S, Chi cago 1
Minnesota 3, New York 2
Kansas City 9, Boston 8

Wednesday's Game!!

·'~

• • '(

.

.

.. ./

Here is editorial comment from Qhio newspapers during
)he past week:
• Cl..EVELAND PLAIN DEALER: "The econonli.c
:weather is bad and getting worse; the Carter ad·
:ministration admitted in its midyear budget review. But
:'·the Carter team rejects any quick-fix tactic such as a
: hasty tax cut.
·
·
&gt; ~ ·Republicans and their presidential candidate, Ronald
;:Reagan, are calling for a $36 billion tax cut ... slashing in.:dividual income tax rates an average 10 percent and
·giving business faster. investment write-offs. The Carter
administration correctly says no to that package ...
· "In 1976, Carter was criti~;izing the Republicans for accepting recessions and high unemployment as ways to
slow inflation. Carter promised instead ... to increase ...
jobs, to curb inflation, to quicken economic output and to
reduce the federal deficit.
,. . ·"Now he is doing exactly what he blamed the
::;Republicans for doing. He is acknowledging high and
~ : rising joblessness and a greatly enlarged deficit ... in order
;;. :to combat inflation.
·
~ : "We agree with Carter when he says}lo tax cut. But we
::: :are far from apprqving his economic policies, which have
:::been ineffective in easing the present recession ... "
·~: DAYTON' JOURNAL HERALD: "If John Anderson can
:::do it, so can Wesley Wells.
·
: ~ : "That is Wells' theqry behind his decision to run as an in· ,
:.::dependent candidate for the Montgomery Cowity Com·
:;:mission in the November general election. l'f you follow
: :Federal District Judge Robert M. Duncan's logic, that's
:-;··true. Duncan was the judge who ruled that Ohio's March
;: filing deadline was arbitrary and thus unconstitutional.
~
"Certainly, Ohio's Democratic. and Republican
~ legislators.intended to protect the two-party system when
:,: they approved the requirement ... Lawmakers, however,
;: also should be concerned with easy access to(tfiieif'tli&amp;llat..,
:: From that perspective, requiring candidates to file almost
;~ eight months prior to the election does seem excessive.
~;
"Nonetheless, it is the Legislature's prerogative to set
:: ·deadlines. It would have been better, however, if
:~ lawmakers had been given '8 mandate fi:om voters rather
~ thanajudge."
·

"-.

•••••
••
•••••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

Ohio ed. comment'

..
..:f
......

•••••••
•••••

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jerry Coleman plays a strange
kind of numbers game- but for once the numbers.added up to a win for
Randy Jones.
"Jones was one-third of our offense and 108 percent of our defen·
se," Coleman, the San Diego
Manager, observed Tuesday night
after the one-time ace of the Padres'
staff ended a personal seven-game
losing streak by scattering eight
Chicago hits and beating the Cubs 3l.

Jones, indeed, was one-third of the
offense, getting one of San Diego's
three hits. All three runs against
Doug Capilla were unearned as the
Cubs commitfed four errors.
"When the season started, I had
visions of a 20-win season," said
Jones, the 1976 Cy Young Award
winner who hasn't had a winning
season since then.
"The impact of the seven losses in
a row plus the injury (to a rib which
sidelined him for a month) really
hurt me," he added.
Elsewhere in the National League
it was Los Angeles 10, Pittsbuegh 2;
Pl;liladelphia 9, Houston 6; Montreal
4, Cincinnati 1; New York 2, Atlanta
I, and San Francisco 4, St. Louis l.
Jones; who struck out two batters
and didn't walk any, zipped through
the game in I hour, 59 minutes.
The only run off Jones came in the
seventh when Cliff Johnson hit the
second of his three doubles and
scored on Mike Vail's single.

Dodgers 10, Pirates 2
If Jones was vital to both the offense and defense of the Padres,
Burt .Hooton was even · more instrwnental in the · success of the
Dodgers.
He pitched a seven-hitter for his ·
seventh straight wi'n and ove in
four runs, three with ·a ho er, as Los
Angeles battered the Pirat
Eight of LA's hits went for
bases, three of them by Ron Cey,
who doubled twice aqd homered.
Hooton's first RBI came in the sixth inning on a squeeze bunt. And in
the eighth, after Cey doubled and
Steve Yeager was walked in·
tentionally, l'Iooton hit . his third
career major league homer and first
since 1975. " When you hit only three,
of course it's a thrill ," he said.

Williams.
Warren Cromartie, Andre Dawson
and Gary Carter had RBI singles for
Montreal.

WE'RE THE
EXPERTS
NOW'S THE
TIME TO FIX UP,

Phfllies 9, Astros 6

" We came back, we 've got to be
proud, " said Phillies Manager
Dallas Green. "We could have
cracked several times and we
didn't."
Instead, Philadelphia pulled even
with Houston in the seventh inning
when Mike Sclunidt cracked a tw()o
run homer, then Lonnie Smith broke
the tic with an eighth-inning single
and Bake McBride added a tw()orun
single. McBride had five singles and
drove in three runs for the Phils.
Expos 4, Reds I
Rookie Bill Gullickson muffled
Cincinnati wit)l a six-hitter, striking
out 10 Reds for a team high this year
and personal career high. "That's as
fine a perfonnance as we've had this
year,". said Expos Manager Dick

CLEAN UP AND
PAINT UP.
SEE US BEFORE
YOU BUY
AND SAVE!

ELECTRICAL
WE-CARRY
A COMPLETE

·Indians win seventh
straight game, 7-2.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Th e
Cleveland Indians are adding to the
Seattle Mariners' woes .
The 7-2 Indians victory' over the
Mariners Tuesday night made Seattle 4-15 since the All.Star break. The
Marin"ers .are 1-5 on their current
road trip.
By contrast, Cleveland has now
won seven in a row.
Mike Hargrove slanuned two
home runs and Dan Spillner and Sid
Monge combined on an eight-hitter
to lead Cleveland's latest victory.
Spillner, 8-8, worked 6 1·3 innings,
yielding both Seattle runs before
Monge allowed one hit in 2 2·3 in·
nings for his eighth save.
Rick Honeycutt, 8-10, lost Jor the
loth time in his last 12 decisions af·
ter a !H) season start.
"BaebaU is a game of cycles,"
said Hargrove in a message the
slumping Mariners might 'consider.
" You've got to weather the bad ones
and hope the good ones outlast the
1&gt;ad."
'
The Cleveland first baseman hit 10
homers last season after he was
acquired from the San Diego
Padres.
"Hitting home runs is a lot of fun
- two in one game is a tremendous
satisfaction , and to hit them off a
\.

good lefthander-like Honeycutt adds
to that," Hargrove said.
Cleveland scored single runs in
each of the first three innings off
Honeycutt. Miguel Dilone opened
the bpttom of the first with a double ,
beat the throw to third on Tony
Harrah's grounder and scored on a
grounder by Bo Diaz.

'

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�2- The DailYSentinel, Middleport-~omeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 30, 1980

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesmcy, July 30, 1980
;

Opinions &amp;
Comments

...

I

'5l'EPOOE.: Hij(E ~YOO
.HAVE AOCco.AWD 5TURDY
eR® ~R\).
. A.' KNIGtrr
CM!NOT mf.Cf TO aJ.¥
~~~5 wrrn A. fRA.~l~
SWORD.
mt.PlVJO: W~W't'OIJR
"11\'U51Y. 'NE~.

'mE DAILY SENTINEL
(USPS 165-Me)
DEVOTED'ro111E
INTEREST OF

..

MEIGS-MASON AREA

Jet•

;

Letter~ o1 oplaloD are welfomett. Tllty du~ald be
&amp;baD 310 words loo1 Ior llllbject to mtutdoa by lbe ecllor) aDd auul be .11ped wttb the tlpte'l addrnl. Names 111111 be wlthbrld gpoa
... publbti... However, oa re~~uest, llllmea will he dbcbed. LrUen: etwuld be lD gGOd ta1te, ad-

• drnola(l'-t, DOipcnoaollll&lt;s.
Pu.bUibttl ct.Uy ncept S.tarday by Tile Oblo VaUey P'Ublilb1Dg Compally· Mllltlmedla, IDe. ,
111 Ceart St, PMI!eroy, ObJo U7• • BwiiDell Office PboDetn- 2151. EdJtorlal PlloDt ft2..!1i7.

SetODd clut po1~1e p.Jd at Pomeroy, Ob.lo.
Nattoul advertlliq repreteatltlve, t..Ddoo Aaaoclltn, Slll Euclid Ave., Clnrland, Ob.u
• 14115.
~ Tbe A11ocll&amp;ed Prest II n:clusively eotiU..t to tbe lltt for pubUcttltlll of aU oeft dlspatchet
• d'ecUted to the DtWII~prl' . .d also the local DeWIJ publJtllecf'herebJ..
'
: PubllaMr
·
Robert Wla,ett
• Q!DeniMif. 6CIIyEdttor
RebertHodUcb
.. Newt EdJtor
·
·
Dale R4tthgeb Jr.
• Adv. Maaagcr
·~l&amp;!m'?.
Carl Gb.ea
~15' r"'T'"L.....L...""'T""I ~ c:::llii=P=I

...
•

.

Major League Baseball
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

W L

Pittsburfh
Mootre.
Philadelphia

PORTSMOUTH TIMES: "Until Pope John Paul II made
:: his journey to Brazil earlier this month, that most im·
.• portant of South American countries had not been much in
:: the news. Located outside the world's broad arc of crisis,
:: Brazil has been largely outside the world's concern.
;: "Such negligence is an unfortunate distortion of reality
;: because this emerging giant with a population of 120
;:.• million is surely destined to exert considerable influence
.• for good or bad on the Western Hemisphere ...
~·
"Brazil is a stirring colossus. Its booming automobile in·
:: dustry is one of the world's largest. In addition to its legen·
;: dary c.offee exports, it supplies more than 8.5 percent of
;: tlie world's orange juic~ ...
.
;: "If the democratization now under way in Brazil suc;·,: ceeds, it will be a constructive force Uiroughout Latin
· America. Clearly, the nurturing of this process ought to be
:: one of America's highest foreign policy prioritieS."
;. NEW PIDLADELPIDA TIMES..REPORTER: "Sam
.;; Clutchpoll had a pretty chilling nightmare. He dreamed
;: that the current work stoppage by movie and television
:: people had gotten out of hand.
·
;, "Television was showing only test pattern~ and the
r'
r'
,: movie houses closed their doors .because .no one was
;; making the R·rated and X-rated money-makers. Everyone
~; wound up with nothing to do ...
r; "It sound.Sbad, all right, but would it be? Granted, there
;( would be a day or two of painful withdrawal symptoms ;:. notknowingwhoshotJ.R. Ewing ...
;:: "But think of the possibilities should people start to
:: grasp the idea that reality is what's all round them, not
~ .what they see on a rectangular screen .. . Given that ·
' possibility, the strike by the actors' union is no big deal, ex·:. :cept for the wealthy group itself.
:;: · "But back to Sam's nightmare of a top-to-bottom
:{ walkout in the entertainment industry - the strike only
5 lasted a week or so."

..

..

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44

New Yoik

Chicago

17

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Los Angeles
Clncirinou
San Francisco
AUanta

Pet. GB
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St. Louis

~Inego

-

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4

.480

.u9

sn
nn

.411

15

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13 57
Tuesday's Games

.495

7

....
.430

10

$4
53
49
46

. ~25

21'&lt;
4

Baltimore t , Texas J
Wednesday's Games
•
Oakland (Langfard9-9 ) at Taronto(Stieb 10..7 ),
(n)
.
.
Seattle (Abbott Ul "at Clevel.and (Waits 7-9 ),
.
Califom la
(Ta naM 5-9) at Detroit. ( Sc•·
' "" •-••'""'.r:uo:r

(n)

&amp;&lt;l ), ( n)

13 ~

Mon~ 4, Cincinnati 1

Philadelphia 9, Houston 6
New York 2, AUant.a 1
San DiegoS, Chicago 1
lno Ang,..10, Pittsburgh 2

Milwa~e e (ClevelandS-:.tl at Chicugo {Ho}1 J.
o)", tn )
New York (Underwood 8-7 ) at Minnesota
(Koosman 8-9), {n)
Boston (Renko 5-4 ) al Kansas City (Splittorff 871. ( n )
Baltimore (Palmer 9-8) at Texas (Jenkins 8--9),

( n}

.

SanFra~4,St . Louis]

AtlAnta (Boggs 5-5 ) at New York ! Zachry S.S )
St. Louis (Fulgham 1:..1) Hl San Francisco

Today in

(KnepperS.I2J
Clnctnnatl IMoskau 7-JJ at Montreal (Rogers

11-6), ( n )
Houston (Ryan S-7) at Philadelphi a (Ruthven

~7), (n)

Oticago (McGlothen B-7) alSan Diego ~ Wise 35) , ( n)

Pittsburgh (Candelaria 7·9) at Loo Angeles
11H), (n(
AMERICAN IJl AGUE

( ReUBB

EAST

New York

BaiUmore

Milwaukee
Detroit
Bo8too

Cleveland

Toronto

Ka.nsas City
Oakland
Texas

Minnesota
Chicago
Seattle
California

GOP needs to tap ·pool of potential voters
By Robert J. Wagman
WASIDNGTON (NEA)- With the .
polls showing tha' less than 20 per·
cent of the electorate considers itself
Republican, conunon sense dictates
that the Grand Old Party find and
recruit new voters to its call!le. So,
there was much discussion among
party strategists at the recent
Republican National Convention
about finding and tapping into new
constituencies of previously
apoliticai Americans.
Of the various untapped pools of
potential vdters, one of those most
talked about in Detroit was youth.
Research was cited sbowing that
few young people are registering
and voting in comparison with the
rest of the population. One study
much in evidence in Detroit predicted participation that used to ~c:ur
as people reached their mid- to late20s is no longer apparent.
So~ given the shj!er numbers of
y non-voters within the 18-50-30
age group, it's no wonder the
Republicans are taUdng about an
all-i&gt;utcampaign to attract the youth

vote in November.
• The Republicans may also be en·
couraged by studies clearly showing
that toda}"s young people are considerably more conservative than
their counterparts of 10 or 15 years
ago. Former Yippie Jerry R1,1bin,
now 40, recently.changed his famous
slogan of "Never trust anyone over
30" to "Never trust anyone under 30
- they're too conservative."
This GOP effort to woo young
voters started in Deiroit, where the
2,000 . members of the "Reagan
Youth Delegation" were much in
evidence. Their job was to appear on
television as often as possible to con·
vince any young TV viewer that
youth is behind . 6\}.year-old Ronald
Reagan. Their wild "impromptu"
floor demonstrations featured
legions of freshly scrubbed young
faces, all carefully coached ana
choreographed by Reagan staffers
(all of whom seemed to be in their
late 40s and addicted to three-piece
suits even in the sununer heat) to
stream through the entrances and

WASIDNGTON (AP) The except possibly to those militants
return of deposed Shah Mohammad out of touch with reality - that the
Reza Pahlavi was ·the principal United States had no intention of
demand of Iranian militants holding returning the terminally ill shah for
52 American hostages, but not the trial as a war criminal.
only demand.
Over the last several months, the
The militants also wanted his for- administration focused.its hopes for
tune re!ID1led, claiming he had plun- the hostages' eventual release on a
dered their country. And they wan· new Majlis, or parliament. From the
ted an abject ~pology from the start of the crisis, efforts · at
United States for supporting him. So negotiating a settlement had stilit is unlikely that the shah's death fered from the lack .of a partner at
will resolve the crisis.
the Tehran end.
It's inconceivable the Pahlavi
Last month, registering this
family will, turn any money over to frustration, Secretary of State Ed·
the Khomeini regime.
mund S. Muskie said "authority is
An American apology Is also, in ail not yet concentrated in Iran in such
probability, out of the que~tion . . a way as to give' anybody, or any '
President Carter has said he won't group, control over the final
apologize for U.S. ·support of the decisions, e~cept maybe Khomeini
shah; .the closest he and other u.s. himself."
officials have come is to forswear in·
In the long run, the parliament
tervention in Iranian affairs.
and the selection of a prime minister
It seemed clear from the start - not the shah's death- may offer

NEW YOR)&lt; (AP) - Political at·
tempts to convince the American
public that the worst of the recession
is over is like trying to polish the
floor without washing it first.
Maybe some people, for a day or
so, did see the light of encouragement in statements from the
White House and its advisers, but
now Americans are again forced to
look at the deep, tlark and dirty
realities.
The unemployment rate, wl!ich

remained under 6 percent in July
despite forecasts it would be much
higher, is now being viewed as a
statistical aberration resulting from
a poorly designed seasonal adjustment factor.
The increase in June retail sales
!night have been a one-month affair
that won't be repeated in coming
months, various analysts are now
saying. And, with money getting
tighter again in some areas, some
doubts are arising about the staying

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FOOTBALL
N~ttional FootbHlll..ectgue

DENVE R BRONCOS ' Announced that Mark
Nichols, linebacker ; Jerry Hollo"&amp;)', aafetyi
Mike O'Rourke, offensive tackle, and Steve
Senlni, wide receiver, have left the club 'Vol~
buily.
HOUSTON OILERS: Signed Mike Barber,
tight end, to a series of one-year contracts .
l.OS ANGELES RAM&amp; AnnounC&lt;&gt;I the
retirement o( Dave Elmendorf, defensive back.
OAKLAND RAIDERS : Waived Darryl Swanson, defensive back.

ducted by l Uck Davis, national field
director of the College Republican
National Committee, for young par·
ty operatives who will work· college
campuses this fall on Reagan's
behalf.
Noting that perha(l! 9 million
potential voters attending the
nation's colleges and junior colleges
will not cast ballots in November,
Davis offered some practical advice
to those who will be promoting
Reagan on campus : ''Don't admit
you are a Republican unless
pressed. You won't win too many
friends saying what party you
belong to."·
Given this perception even among
young party leaders, it seems
unlikely that the Reagan-Bush ticket
will attract enough young voters io
influence the November outcome. In
fact, as the campaign moves into the
fall and money becomes tighter, the
party's efforts to woo young people
may well be reduced to mere
tokenism.

Since the abortive rescue mission
three months ago, the ad·
ministration has counted on quiet
diplomacy to win the release oHhe
American hostages.
Publicity fell off with Carter's
emergence from the Rose Garden
and the banning ri American
television reporters.and others from
Tehran. Carter has shifted the focus
of the natidn frorp the hostages'
detention and so have the news
media.
But the muting of the 263-day
crisis has not brought the hostages
home. And the few officials willing
lately to discuss the situation give no
indication a breakthrough i:. inr
minent.
They are operating on the theory
that Iranian authorities ultimately
will reach the conclusion that
holding the Americans hurts Iran
badly.

MIDDLEPORT - In MeigsMason pony league action Eastem's
Indians posted an extra inning victory over host Middleport, lo-5.
Middleport jumped out to an early
3-1 lead before the Indians tied' the
score in the top of the seventh.
In the first extra inning of play
Eastern rallied for two runs in the
top of that inning.
With their backs against the wall
Middleport came back to again lock
the score at 5-5. Eastern then scored
five times on two walks, three
singles. and two costly ·errors that
put them on top to stay.
Mark Holter went seven innings
fanning 11 and walking only one.
allowing only six hits.

Jerry Larkins came in to pick up
the win working two innings,
striking out six, and walking two.
Larry Cowdery led the winners
with two singles, Jay Carpenter a
double, and Jinuny Carter, Mark
Holter, Jerry Larkins, and Tom
Everett each a sing!.
Chris Burdette went seven innings
for the Middleport Squad fanning 18
Eastern hatters, but walking 10.
Burdette gave up only two hits
before E. Bishop came in and suf·
fered the loss with three KO's and
three . walks. D. Follrod and E.
Bishop had two singles for Mid·
dleport, while Alan King tripled, D.
Thomas doubled, and Burdette
singled. Eastern is now 8-11.

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Waverly Adios, driven by Brad
Farrington, pulled to a half length
victory .over J. C. Coaltown to pay
$9.20, $6.60 and $4 at Scioto Downs
Tuesday night.
J .C. Coal town paid $17.20 and $6.40
in the featured eighth race. Third
was Aaron Yorktown, to pay $3.40.
In the first race trifecta, the numbers &amp;-10-4 paid $8,960.10. A total of
4,160 persons wagered $306,11811
Tuesday.

LATONIA RESULTS
FLORENCE, Ky . (AP) -:- Embassy Express won the featured
eighth race Tuesday at Latonia.
The horse paid $7.40, $4.60 and
$3.40. Second finisher Southland
Lady paid $5.40
and $4.60, and Miss
.'
Zero came m at$2.60 for show.
The 7-2 combination of Mystics
Choice and Hurry Scurry paid a $28
daily double.
.
. A crowd of 1,219 wagered$90,903.

j

And I say MY candidate makes YOUR candi·
date look more foolish than YOURS makes
MINE look:"
'

power of the housing recovery.
On the same .day last week,
Consumer prices seJm to be rising General Mot,rs, the world's largest
again. June prices rose a full! per· manufacturer, reported a $412
cent compared with 0.9 percent in million loss for the second quarter,
April and May. And now food prices' ts biggest quarterly loss ever.
may be heading up, especially for American Motors lost $85 million in
beef and grains.
e same quarter, and that too was il.s
It appears also that wholesale largest quarterly loss in history.
price increases, after shrinking, will
If the industry's woes were a con·
explode again, fueling even further sequence only of buyer resistance to
. incr.eases in the consumer price in· prices, or buyw hesitation because
dex and assu[ing 1\mericans of stiff · of the recession, there wouldn't be
inflation for months to come.
much to worry about. Such problems
Business Week magazine quotes correct themselves .
Donald J . RalajCZI!k of George State
The automobile industry 's
University as expecting the July problems are deeper than that,
figure will show an 18.2 percent an- however. · Its reputation for
nual rate, , compared · with just 6.4 reliability has been undermined,
percent for the second quarter.
and its styling decisions in recent
That figure, coupled with higher years have been rejected.
jobless figures, can lie· expected to
Many potential buyers also are
give such a dose of reality to financially overextended, and thus
Americans that political promises are reluctant or unable to add fur-) '
will be seen for what they are. . ther credit problems. And their ·
Reality is the present, and it is grim. reluctance to buy. isn't diminished ,
Many econolllists think the im- by high gasoline prices and taxes.
mediate future - for the rest of the
The economic floor is very dirty,
year, anyway - isn't much brighter. and most(Americans know It. They .
The car mdustry especially is in bad know it because, unlike . some
shape, and that automatically politicians who seem to float above
means certain other industries are
realities in this political year, they
too.
arc standing in the dirt on that floor.

ALL MODELS
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•

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'-._ ·
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feature: Stotts's Oldsmobile; Carr's Ford; Fairchild, Thurman; GaryLewis, Gallipolis; Dano King, Rutland; Flem Meade, Bidwell; Roil
Costilow and Robert Kilgour, Jackson ; and Dean Roof, Oak Hill. Nearly
4,000 spectators lined the course to witness the derby. (Tribune photo)

•

•

Jones ·defeats Cubs;
Montreal whips Reds

learance Sal

".

I

'VERNON FAIRCIULD (Car No. 77, right) , plows into a trunk during
the first heat of Monday's demolition derby at the Gallia Cowtty Junior ·
Fair. The feature was captured by Chuck Scotts of Pomeroy,owhile David
Carr, The Plains, finished second. Stotts collected $275 of the $500 purse.
Nine cars survived the three-heat preliminaries to advance to the

. 4'8P

Inflation: deep, dark and diny_·realities

;f

,

whatever hope exists for liberating
the Americans.
So ' the naming of a new prime
minister and the organizing of the
parliament that coincided with the
shah's death may provide . the
authority Muskie found lacking.
And yet, Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini, the spiritual force behind
the revolution that toppled the shah,
is Wlquestionably in charge of the
hostage issue.
Strong-willed and righteous, he
has resisted · compromise. In late
May, it is understood, he vetoed a
potential deal on the hostages.
The U.S. government's statemenl
on the shah's death was carefully
phrased to avoid provoking the
authorities in Iran. It overlooked the
nearly four decades of support the
shah gave the United States and had
merely a few sympathetic words for
his family.

62

0

history~ • •

- In 1916, before the U.S. entered
·World War I, German saboteurs
blew, up a munitions plant on Black
Tom Island near Jersey City. N.J.
- In 1942, President Franklin
Roosevelt signed a bill creating 1the
Waves, a women's auxiliary agency
in the U.S. Navy.
-Ten years ago: A federal court
in Montgomery, Ala., ordered seven
r•, China.
.
.Alabama state agencies to stop
~ ·..
.,
-In 1909, the .U.S. government discriminating against blacks in
:~ bought its first airplane, a Wright hiring practi ces.
c'•liipltne, costing $31,~.

onto the convention floor at just the
right moment.
,
Despite all the talking and all the
demonstrating, however, the
Republican Party seems woefully
unable to attract young voters.
In public, leaders of the Young
Republican . National Federation
speak confidently about GOP gains
among young voters in November.
But in private, they are much less
optimistic.
·
Many of th~m fear their party's
stances on such issues as abortion
and the Equal Rights Amendment
will destroy its changes among
young voters. Said one Young
Republican political operative in a
moment of candor. "This party is on
the wrong side of every issue that is
important to young people except
draft · registration. (Independent
candidate John B.) Anderson, is on
the right side of everything. If he's
on enough ballots in November, he'll
kill us among voters under 30."
The GOP's likely difficulties in attracting young people were demonstrated '!I a Detroit workshop con- .

W L

Tuesday's Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
. MINNESOTA TW1NS: Reactivated Glenn
Adams, ouUielder, and placed Mike Cubbage, in·
fi elder, on the 21-day disabled List.
· National League
NEW YORK METS : Removed Phil
Mankowski , infielder, from the l ~y disabled
lis t ami placed him on the 60-day disabled l.iat.
BAS~B4LL
.
National Basketball AssoctaUon
PHOENIX SUNS : Signed Jotm Campbell, cen-

Summer league action

Unlikely shah's death will resolve crisis

::; Today is Wednesday, July 30, the
~· 212th day of 1980. There are !54 days
left in the year.
;~ Today's highlight in history:
.; On this dale in 1619, the first
;; representative assembly in America
f. convened at Jamestown, Va.
~· On this date:
1,; .-In 1907, R~ia and Japan
~~ reached agreement regarding

l

a

56

Tuesday's Games
Oakla nd 6, Toronto~. J2 innin~s
Cleveland 7, Seattle 2
Ca lifornia 7, DetroitO
Milwaukee S, Chi cago 1
Minnesota 3, New York 2
Kansas City 9, Boston 8

Wednesday's Game!!

·'~

• • '(

.

.

.. ./

Here is editorial comment from Qhio newspapers during
)he past week:
• Cl..EVELAND PLAIN DEALER: "The econonli.c
:weather is bad and getting worse; the Carter ad·
:ministration admitted in its midyear budget review. But
:'·the Carter team rejects any quick-fix tactic such as a
: hasty tax cut.
·
·
&gt; ~ ·Republicans and their presidential candidate, Ronald
;:Reagan, are calling for a $36 billion tax cut ... slashing in.:dividual income tax rates an average 10 percent and
·giving business faster. investment write-offs. The Carter
administration correctly says no to that package ...
· "In 1976, Carter was criti~;izing the Republicans for accepting recessions and high unemployment as ways to
slow inflation. Carter promised instead ... to increase ...
jobs, to curb inflation, to quicken economic output and to
reduce the federal deficit.
,. . ·"Now he is doing exactly what he blamed the
::;Republicans for doing. He is acknowledging high and
~ : rising joblessness and a greatly enlarged deficit ... in order
;;. :to combat inflation.
·
~ : "We agree with Carter when he says}lo tax cut. But we
::: :are far from apprqving his economic policies, which have
:::been ineffective in easing the present recession ... "
·~: DAYTON' JOURNAL HERALD: "If John Anderson can
:::do it, so can Wesley Wells.
·
: ~ : "That is Wells' theqry behind his decision to run as an in· ,
:.::dependent candidate for the Montgomery Cowity Com·
:;:mission in the November general election. l'f you follow
: :Federal District Judge Robert M. Duncan's logic, that's
:-;··true. Duncan was the judge who ruled that Ohio's March
;: filing deadline was arbitrary and thus unconstitutional.
~
"Certainly, Ohio's Democratic. and Republican
~ legislators.intended to protect the two-party system when
:,: they approved the requirement ... Lawmakers, however,
;: also should be concerned with easy access to(tfiieif'tli&amp;llat..,
:: From that perspective, requiring candidates to file almost
;~ eight months prior to the election does seem excessive.
~;
"Nonetheless, it is the Legislature's prerogative to set
:: ·deadlines. It would have been better, however, if
:~ lawmakers had been given '8 mandate fi:om voters rather
~ thanajudge."
·

"-.

•••••
••
•••••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

Ohio ed. comment'

..
..:f
......

•••••••
•••••

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jerry Coleman plays a strange
kind of numbers game- but for once the numbers.added up to a win for
Randy Jones.
"Jones was one-third of our offense and 108 percent of our defen·
se," Coleman, the San Diego
Manager, observed Tuesday night
after the one-time ace of the Padres'
staff ended a personal seven-game
losing streak by scattering eight
Chicago hits and beating the Cubs 3l.

Jones, indeed, was one-third of the
offense, getting one of San Diego's
three hits. All three runs against
Doug Capilla were unearned as the
Cubs commitfed four errors.
"When the season started, I had
visions of a 20-win season," said
Jones, the 1976 Cy Young Award
winner who hasn't had a winning
season since then.
"The impact of the seven losses in
a row plus the injury (to a rib which
sidelined him for a month) really
hurt me," he added.
Elsewhere in the National League
it was Los Angeles 10, Pittsbuegh 2;
Pl;liladelphia 9, Houston 6; Montreal
4, Cincinnati 1; New York 2, Atlanta
I, and San Francisco 4, St. Louis l.
Jones; who struck out two batters
and didn't walk any, zipped through
the game in I hour, 59 minutes.
The only run off Jones came in the
seventh when Cliff Johnson hit the
second of his three doubles and
scored on Mike Vail's single.

Dodgers 10, Pirates 2
If Jones was vital to both the offense and defense of the Padres,
Burt .Hooton was even · more instrwnental in the · success of the
Dodgers.
He pitched a seven-hitter for his ·
seventh straight wi'n and ove in
four runs, three with ·a ho er, as Los
Angeles battered the Pirat
Eight of LA's hits went for
bases, three of them by Ron Cey,
who doubled twice aqd homered.
Hooton's first RBI came in the sixth inning on a squeeze bunt. And in
the eighth, after Cey doubled and
Steve Yeager was walked in·
tentionally, l'Iooton hit . his third
career major league homer and first
since 1975. " When you hit only three,
of course it's a thrill ," he said.

Williams.
Warren Cromartie, Andre Dawson
and Gary Carter had RBI singles for
Montreal.

WE'RE THE
EXPERTS
NOW'S THE
TIME TO FIX UP,

Phfllies 9, Astros 6

" We came back, we 've got to be
proud, " said Phillies Manager
Dallas Green. "We could have
cracked several times and we
didn't."
Instead, Philadelphia pulled even
with Houston in the seventh inning
when Mike Sclunidt cracked a tw()o
run homer, then Lonnie Smith broke
the tic with an eighth-inning single
and Bake McBride added a tw()orun
single. McBride had five singles and
drove in three runs for the Phils.
Expos 4, Reds I
Rookie Bill Gullickson muffled
Cincinnati wit)l a six-hitter, striking
out 10 Reds for a team high this year
and personal career high. "That's as
fine a perfonnance as we've had this
year,". said Expos Manager Dick

CLEAN UP AND
PAINT UP.
SEE US BEFORE
YOU BUY
AND SAVE!

ELECTRICAL
WE-CARRY
A COMPLETE

·Indians win seventh
straight game, 7-2.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Th e
Cleveland Indians are adding to the
Seattle Mariners' woes .
The 7-2 Indians victory' over the
Mariners Tuesday night made Seattle 4-15 since the All.Star break. The
Marin"ers .are 1-5 on their current
road trip.
By contrast, Cleveland has now
won seven in a row.
Mike Hargrove slanuned two
home runs and Dan Spillner and Sid
Monge combined on an eight-hitter
to lead Cleveland's latest victory.
Spillner, 8-8, worked 6 1·3 innings,
yielding both Seattle runs before
Monge allowed one hit in 2 2·3 in·
nings for his eighth save.
Rick Honeycutt, 8-10, lost Jor the
loth time in his last 12 decisions af·
ter a !H) season start.
"BaebaU is a game of cycles,"
said Hargrove in a message the
slumping Mariners might 'consider.
" You've got to weather the bad ones
and hope the good ones outlast the
1&gt;ad."
'
The Cleveland first baseman hit 10
homers last season after he was
acquired from the San Diego
Padres.
"Hitting home runs is a lot of fun
- two in one game is a tremendous
satisfaction , and to hit them off a
\.

good lefthander-like Honeycutt adds
to that," Hargrove said.
Cleveland scored single runs in
each of the first three innings off
Honeycutt. Miguel Dilone opened
the bpttom of the first with a double ,
beat the throw to third on Tony
Harrah's grounder and scored on a
grounder by Bo Diaz.

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedi.esday, July 30, 1980

:&gt;--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 30, 1980

Elizabeth Hills or Hingham,
Mass., captain of the women's
rowing team, said Tuesday the
athletes are opposed to attending the
ceremonies because they "don't
want to appear lo be &gt;Upporiing
what he has done this year."
usoc officials, who are footing
the $950,000 bill tor the five.day
salute which ended today, said they
believe the dissenting athletes are in
the minority.

NaUon honors its Olympians today
'

.

WASIDNGTON (AP) -The U. S.
Olympians, prevented from going to
Moscow for the Summer Games are
honored by the nation today ~hen
they receive special com·
memmorative gold medals
authorized by Congress and dine at

the White House with President and
Mrs. Carter.
A small group of the some 350
athletes, specifically the rowers,
said they would stay away from the
ceremonies on Capitol Hill and the
White House Mea use of the presence

of Carter.
The president called for the
boycott of the Games to protest the
Soviet military presence in
Afghanistan, much to the chagrin of
the athletes who did not think it was
the correct decision.

" I doubt that very many athletes
believe that," said USOC President
Robert Kane.' "We expected all
along that he (Carier) would be part
of the ceremonies.
David Kines of Monterey Park,
Calif., captain or the shooting team,
said all the athletes he knows will attend the ceremonies.
"For many of us, this is a
recognition day," said Kines. ;,This

will help keep us aUve until the
Olympics in Los Angeles in four
years.''

Leslie Klein of Concord, Mass., ~
captain of the kayakers-canolsts,
said a major reason for attending
the ceremonies "is to forget what's
happened and look forward, with the
American people and the government, to an increased interest In
amateur sports.

•

a..

NEW CAMARO - Hilton Wolfe, Jr.' Racine, has
new Howe Calnaro this year wlii$ he races at local

Speedways. Wolle drives an ~ahge, white, and purple
number 41 poweret!' by a 427 c;,u~ic inch big block

.

·' .

.

.

I

.

Chewolet engine. Wolfe, who is a local school teacher
and coach is often known as "Big Fooze." His car is
. mechaniced by Dave Shain, Barney Shain, and Scott
Wolfe.

• FATHER.SON TEAM - The father and son racing

ted red and white and car,.Ying the familiar humber

team of Bob "Hot Rod" Adams, Jr. (le(t) and Bob

MS. His car is powered by a 454 big Block Chevrolet

"Bobby Joe" Adams, Sr. (right) have been enjoying a
very good racing season this year. The Adams. team
races b9th locally and throughout the Midweilt. Bob,
Junior dri:ves a Long BrotQer's Chassis Camara pain-

engine. Bob Adams, Sr. drives .a blue and white number 55 Camaro which is a Howe chassis. His ~ar is a
new lightweight. model powered by a 355 Chevrolet
engine. Frank Britton and Dick Dugan are the main
· men in the pit.s.

SAYI UP '10 40% ON

soo•••
cosT cun•••
COIPUEI TO OTIEIIIAIIDS" AT llOCEI.
Ill£ SIIIIP£1 CIIT

-

.
~·

.'

10 OTIII

II£ STICI£1.

tAOVERTISED ITEM POLICY
IC!ven.ed . tltml

11

requwtd

If)

bo

tOt ute tn Mch t(,roger StOtt , IJitePI M
I 'fiLII; ~ " fhl.t. " M do f\111 OUI olin ~Nd
lttm . ......,. ._.,. oftlf Y()u your chotce of a cc:JfnJ*Ibll item.

l.edity

''

.VIIill)li

.,._, h . . . . .. rtftecl"''iJ lhe ume IIVIngl or 1 r11nch«:lr
~h W'l entitlf vou 10 purehaM lhl tdvert.-1 tttm 1t• :~j

ldvtrtllld priCe 'Mtf'Mn X) dlvt.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

Kroger

E....,.,htng 'fOU bY'i at K.rogtt 11 gu.ranteed. fOf yOur total
lltcfec:I!Of'l reg.r~ of tn~nufKturtf If you 1re not MilS·
fted. Kroget Wll reollce VO\If
With the llfT'IIInnd or 1
c:on"'petati6e bfand or refund yOUf purch.IM pnce

1-.m

'.

powered by a small bl~ck Chevy engine. The car is a
1973 model Camar~ and races in the Semi-Late Model
division. Ben~wns and maintains his own car with ;
help from his dad, Bob Hickle. '
..

AvonHit
__ ....
2t·o• .
P-11 .. . Con

·-

CONSISTENT. FINISHES
of
' Syracuse in his third year of driving has been making
consistent finishes this year with one fealur\! win to his
credit. Adkins drives a purple and «ange numl;ler I

'•' ' • .

Ford Maverick powered by a 351 cubic inch Ford·
Clevellind engine. Adkins and his brothers, Michael
and Randy, help prepare the car and built the chas$is
themselves. Aill&lt;ins .races in the Serru-Late- Model
(iivision.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

I
I

e:

.

:; Drivers, flJlls enjoy fine season
•

&lt;

•

Bond's Speedway in. Stewart

.opening .and consistently makes

•": Friday evenings for local race

has also been doing well, winning
trophies in the mid-season cham·

,:seems to be "where the actlo1J11" on · ·· very Cl!ffipetitive finishes. His father

f-: .drivers as well as area racing fans.

t··

,
pionsl\ip races. Also in the ·late
model division are Gene Adkins and
Hilton "Big Fooz" Wolfe, Jr., both ci
Racine who are doing quite well.
In the semi-late division Roger
Adkins, Syracuse, and Benny
Hickle, .Pomeroy, have placed very .
well. Many Meigs countians have
helped make the speedway a success
and continue to make it tlie place to
be on Friday.

Bob "Bobby Joe" Adams, Bob
! ; Adams, Jr.; Gene and Roger Adkinlt,
r 1 ·Benny Hickle, ·and Hilton Wolfe, Jr. ,
Baby gorilla
~~ all of Meigs .County compete weekly
;- at the ~way with ~e of the · taken from mother
'! Midwest's fmest drivers.
After a couple storms that c.iusedt . COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A baby
·; delays and leit the clay ovalin rough gorilla born Saturday in the Colum• •:condition, the track surface has been
bus Zoo was taken from it.s mother
~ : reworked into an ueellent racing l)lecause _she _was n_ot nursjng and
·surface which _provides for great . washol~ghim~s1dedown.
.
r racingandexcitementforthefans: &lt; .. ZAlci_D1~ector Jack-Haf!Da sa1d,
\ : The Late Model sloi:k cars slid
W.(didn t want to do 1t, but we felt
BECOMES AD TOO
_.· side by side into the high banked tUP." • we eithe~ take the bab~ away and
TIFFIN, Ohio (AP) - John
,. ns at speeds approaching 1oo MPH have a ruce healthJ. gorilla or wait
"Spezz" Spezzaferro, Heidelberg
• ·battling all wt to the checkered flag
for the ~other to take.care of it and
College's football coach, is assuming
·. Racine's Bob Adams Jr one oi' risk the i!han~ of losing tlie baby.
the area's mosi talf!~ted .,drivers Under those circumstances; we felt • the additional duties of athletic
director at the Ohio ·Conference
· f drove his number A55 ·eamaro to weshouldtakeitaway."
school.
victory in the Speedway's grand
The ·4-pound, 4-ounce gorilla's
Spezzaferro replaces Jim Getz
parents are harned Oscar and Toni:
who
quit as Heidelberg athleti~
LB:!t year, Toni set a world record by
"'' ·- ~
director-earlier
this-monttrto go into
giving birth to anollier gorilla. That
private
business.
He has served as
made the Columbus Zoo the only zoo
t~e
Student
Princes'
football coach
:with four generations of gorillas in
since1978.
captivity.
·-·-·---"--" _

:·
t

Men$ tournament

The Tuppers Plains Tigers plated
nine runs in the fourth inning to
defeat the Middleport Indians 1U to
take the championship of the third
. annual Powell's Uttle League tournament.
Brian Durst was the winning pit·
cher as he went the distance striking
outfivnnd walking three. .
Rick Wille took the loss for the Indians as he, Scott Gheen, and Brian
Decker ~ombined to strike out five
· . and walk seven,
· Leading hl~rs for l'uppers Plains
were Brent Blsslill foUl! singles,
Royce Bissell two doubles and one
:single, Larry Spencer two singles,
~evin Barber one double, Eddie
. Collins one doubl-e, and Brian Durst
· one single.
,
· For Middleport, J .- R. Kitct.en had
a double and two singles, Scott
Gheen one double and one single,
Eric Johnson two singles, Rick Wise
one double, Jeff Hood one single and
Rrian Decker one sing.e
In the consolation game for the

third and fourth place spots, the
Pomeroy Pirates defeated Powell's
Giants 6-5 in extra innings.
Although outhit by the Giants, the
Pirates managed to push across the
winning run in the top of the eighth
inning.
Hiley Eason picked up the win as
he relievedRodd
Harrison
the bOt·
tom
of the seventh
inning.inTogether
~ey

I

tamed up to strike out 10 white·

wa~s~ .

Brian Korn took the toss as he
relieved Rodney Roush in the top &lt;tf
the seve11th inning. Together they
fanned 10 while walking nine.
The Giants had a rally stopped in
the first inning when the Pirates
pulled off a triple play following a
~.:e::~. hit to first baseman Brian
Rodd Harrison, Joe Fields and
Rex Haggy each had singles for the

·•

KiLLED IN 1435
" King Rldltard III of England was
killed in 1485 at the Battle of Bosworth, endi_ng the War of the Roses.

aa
· nquet

..

Fried Chicken

~~ ~ ..(&gt;

IN THE

,.
i

If

;;;t
.W1eners .........
IN THE ,IICI kiOGER

:
,.

FROZEN KROGER SHOES fliNG

lt .

lt
:
,._

FBroROZEN KIIOIG"ERSpe

si
~·
"'

CITY' UMilS :
DRIVE 'JHRU . :

·:~u N. 1nd St.

M i ddleport, 0.

~

•

I

Pkga .

,:~::,s

i;'d';~
Blue Plums .... .,"·

25'

- ADOLPH'S
.
DAIRY VALLEY

gc
5

2
Nedarines ............ lb~ .

FRESH

Q92·25S6
570 W. Main
0.

FRESH _

-

_

-

Blueberries ....... ... . Pint
FRESH

Cauliflower.......... Head

sf-

Stewart, OH .

,r.-;"');~:;,::~ Every Fri. Night

BALLARD'S

I

, .

Located 20 Minutes East of Athens,
35 Minutes West of Parkersburg
on
so -·at cry. Rd. 53
_
PHONES: Track (614) 662-4111
H'o me614·667-3478

.

$ 1 09

COUNTIY 0\IEN

AngeiFood ,..... ·

Coke ....... "•·

=~~~!~\=~··
o

.

HlllCIIST DIV

,..... $119

Roasted
Peanuts
QUARTERS

69C
ggc

Avondale 0
Catsup. ... I~"

OLE CAROLINA

Jo•

-

2'lo·Gel99

Kroger

22c

26·01 .

Salt ....... •. ...

l·lb.$1

,kga .

Jiff Y

C

$199

Baking
40· 01 .
•
M11 ......... ....
klOGEit

.1

~ake

Mix .... ..

S1

KROGER

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola

a$

R.!

99c
99c

Avondale
(lVItiDllliW "'IUJ
-

"'V"'

4 · 01 .

ROLL-ON

. Ban Deo dorant .. ..

2.5·01. $ 1 4 9
at!.

64o•
ltl.

$139

$197

· ·

a.... .
It I.

KIOGII

C:ONTIUN5 l2·PIECES
READY TO EAT

Wishbone
Fried Chicken
Each

ssss

Grapefruit " -o•.
Juict .
INCLUDES :

3 THIGHS
3WIHGS
lltEASTS &amp;
OI'UMSTtCIU

GOLD CREST

Manh ·

mallows . . 'i!~
THANK YOU

Cherry Pie
F'll'
I tng .....

Deli"Style
Ham

21 -o•
Con

CHAMP lA llON

Table Talk
Apple Pit
Frash Baked

2•"•·•··9·9c
99c

Dog .

Foocl ..

25 ...~~- $369

Kaiser Rolla ... .. . ~~~:
lOLLS AVAILAIU=O~N~lY:A~t~~~

U ·oa.

I

Awo1Jclale 17-cn .
Ptaf ... , .. Co•

us

•

89c
79c

-~-~···

..... c."
•

-

. .. Can

Angle
-Broom ... :-...... each
'

12SlZE

California
Cantaloupe

Cracked Wheat16·01.
Bread............... loaf
6·oi $1
ESprl'"t yogy.rf.....-- :3 Ctnr;.
HOME ,.IDE

9

..

·39e

Pick '0' Chix ........... :. lb.
Pork Sausage.. ..... l·lb.
Roll , •
7
9
C
Sliced Baco" .... ...... ~~=:

'..l/ ,~
) Westside

Margarine 1_1• .
Quarters . . POg .

~~getable '~.~~ $149

'

ICE CREAM sANDWICH

'

ClOVER YAUlV

RETURNAJILE

KROGER

'

Speedway ·

Time Trials 7 PM
Racing 8:00 PM

lb.

2 i~~ $499

.t.VONDALE

Paper or
Pltatlc Ctn.

BOND'S

Guaranteed Purse
Adults S4.00
Children under 12 free

... . . . .. .

Gal.

•

TOP DIRTRACKERS

&amp;9

Embany
Coffee .

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.D.A .INSPECTED GRADEA$129

KROGERFRESH

·.
~~~----------~~~--~-~---~--~-- --~----~---~---------~~~--~r

-

,14-LI.AVG.

Buttermilk ........ ...... .... em.
•
.
Gal.
J
0. range UIC8 ............. ctn.

• dates announced

i

VAC PAK

INTO ONI CONVI!'IIlNT TAKI HOMI PACUGI

KROGER

SPECIAL

Fleece . . Slngl•
Towels .. .. ••"

$119

26e
44e

$1

~

,,
'·

\If-SHEETS PU IOU

sLIClD
...,

:

2!1·01 .
Pks•·

~

A class B and C men's Softball
:Tournament sponsored by the
: Racine United Methodist Church
' ; Will be held August 22, 23 and 24. The
, ~ 24 team single elimination Slow pit· ·
':~ tourney will he played m
, Southern's high school and junior
•_high fields in Racine.
· Entry fee. is $50 plus two
• regulation softballs. All checks
:should be made payable to ttie
: Racine United Methodist Church
rand must be received along with a 20
:man roster by August 17.
·
A
team
representative
must
also
·
·
'
be named and his address given.
~ ~Teadl trophies, IndiVidual tto,.Ues,
.and special recognition tropHies will
"be awarded.
• AU rosters and entry fees {lre
) •-:!'referred to be . mailed in to the
Jollowing address: Softball Tour·
nament', Attn : Box 181, Racine, Ohio
\} -:15771.
• For further information contact
'Rev. David Harris at 949-2741 after
j ,Aug. 6, or 949-2045 any time a£ter .8:00 II" weekdays. All entries are
welcome.
'

Con

C

·&lt;',

"
'

AND

14· 11-LI. AVG .

16 ·01 .

S499

1O·o1.$1 09

·Potatoes .. .. .. .. .. ...

"/

THIS WEEK'S

ICE CREAM BAR

COUNTRY CLUI

c
89

2
ars .
2
..

16.S·OI ,
con

S119

I

Meat Bologna .. ... ... lb .

'ruESDAYS . 1HURSI1AYS :
p .M . to
12 Mldnlghr

Corn ..

1-lb . g g
Pkg.

~~'*******,..*'**
·**"*'::~
·
sjsi·ii
»It DRAFT
LADIES •
:
NITE
NITE :
,

Avondale

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED. FRO-lEN

- - l l l l l i JIHIIICHIIIIN

lllliCIII .... IUILIIIIIIILICII lUll

1

WHOU KIINll 01
CltEAM STHE

~---···---···-···-·

r::~~:;.;;;.;;i;i~;;;-;;;

P.M. to
Midnight
12

A llEND OF IEEF I HYDRATED TEXTuRED
VEGET AILE PROTEIN KRO~ER'S PRO

SLICIO

.I

Cocktail· . . ~:

=n·~:!~1~ston ... ... $199

Beef Patty Mix .. .... .- ..... lb.
canne dH am.... ....... .. J Can
·lb.
I SAVE
I
. .
1 70'
-lb.
••anN
Whole Fresh Pork Loin lb.
~ IZ LIJ.~·g~~~~r~~~~~~~!:: .I .H( . :
flU

Pirates.
. For the Giants, Gerald Moore had
two doubles and a single; Gary
Coleman, Rodney Roush, and Lee
Powell each with a double; . fames
Nprma n. Bryan Korn, and Kevin
Mowery each had singles.

,

I
I
I
I
II
I
1

***************'*"*
r------:-----.....1_ _;___--;------

GIRlS' TOURNAMENT

Agirls' double elimination softball
tournament will be held' at Point
· Pldsant, Aug. 8-10. All · teams
wishing to participate are to call67:..
24-lO for further details. Entry fee is
'$3S-and the age group is nine tl!rough
12.

~

. ~. . . l

1[!]·2 $ 99

Tuppers Plains
Tigers take
.
Powell's LL tournament

familiar number one with- the "pink 'Papther"
trademark is yellow triniziled in purpfe. AdkinS competes locally along with his brother Roger. ¥!kills
drives, owns and maintains his own car. Adkins races
in the Late Model division.
- ,
.
.
.

Fruit
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE , IEif QtUCK AIIM,

TODI~UI$ .

:

PINK PANTHERS - Gene Adkinii, Racine, has
.been doing a good job in his 302 cubic inch Ford
.Mustang ll. Adkins and his brothers bullt his Late
Model racer which is a Howe Copy chassis. The

A\IONOA,U

Wll15flt\IIE lHIE liGHT TO liMIT QUANTITtiE5 . NONIE SOLO

.
-Roger Adkins

_

Con

YELlOW C~ING

CO,YIIGNl 1tl0 . THI KIOGU CO . ITIM5 -'NO PltiCU
GOOO SUNOAY . JULY 27 THill SAlU.DAY . AUCUSl 2.
I... IN POMEROY ANDGALLIPOLISSTORES.'

BENNY IDCKLE FORMERLY OF NEW HAVEN,
W. Va., now living in Pomeroy, has j_ust finished his
new "Tiger Tom" Pistone chassis and hQs placed in the
money in his initial outings. Hickel's Red number 51 is ·

16 _0 ,

Applesauce

�..

-

.

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedi.esday, July 30, 1980

:&gt;--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 30, 1980

Elizabeth Hills or Hingham,
Mass., captain of the women's
rowing team, said Tuesday the
athletes are opposed to attending the
ceremonies because they "don't
want to appear lo be &gt;Upporiing
what he has done this year."
usoc officials, who are footing
the $950,000 bill tor the five.day
salute which ended today, said they
believe the dissenting athletes are in
the minority.

NaUon honors its Olympians today
'

.

WASIDNGTON (AP) -The U. S.
Olympians, prevented from going to
Moscow for the Summer Games are
honored by the nation today ~hen
they receive special com·
memmorative gold medals
authorized by Congress and dine at

the White House with President and
Mrs. Carter.
A small group of the some 350
athletes, specifically the rowers,
said they would stay away from the
ceremonies on Capitol Hill and the
White House Mea use of the presence

of Carter.
The president called for the
boycott of the Games to protest the
Soviet military presence in
Afghanistan, much to the chagrin of
the athletes who did not think it was
the correct decision.

" I doubt that very many athletes
believe that," said USOC President
Robert Kane.' "We expected all
along that he (Carier) would be part
of the ceremonies.
David Kines of Monterey Park,
Calif., captain or the shooting team,
said all the athletes he knows will attend the ceremonies.
"For many of us, this is a
recognition day," said Kines. ;,This

will help keep us aUve until the
Olympics in Los Angeles in four
years.''

Leslie Klein of Concord, Mass., ~
captain of the kayakers-canolsts,
said a major reason for attending
the ceremonies "is to forget what's
happened and look forward, with the
American people and the government, to an increased interest In
amateur sports.

•

a..

NEW CAMARO - Hilton Wolfe, Jr.' Racine, has
new Howe Calnaro this year wlii$ he races at local

Speedways. Wolle drives an ~ahge, white, and purple
number 41 poweret!' by a 427 c;,u~ic inch big block

.

·' .

.

.

I

.

Chewolet engine. Wolfe, who is a local school teacher
and coach is often known as "Big Fooze." His car is
. mechaniced by Dave Shain, Barney Shain, and Scott
Wolfe.

• FATHER.SON TEAM - The father and son racing

ted red and white and car,.Ying the familiar humber

team of Bob "Hot Rod" Adams, Jr. (le(t) and Bob

MS. His car is powered by a 454 big Block Chevrolet

"Bobby Joe" Adams, Sr. (right) have been enjoying a
very good racing season this year. The Adams. team
races b9th locally and throughout the Midweilt. Bob,
Junior dri:ves a Long BrotQer's Chassis Camara pain-

engine. Bob Adams, Sr. drives .a blue and white number 55 Camaro which is a Howe chassis. His ~ar is a
new lightweight. model powered by a 355 Chevrolet
engine. Frank Britton and Dick Dugan are the main
· men in the pit.s.

SAYI UP '10 40% ON

soo•••
cosT cun•••
COIPUEI TO OTIEIIIAIIDS" AT llOCEI.
Ill£ SIIIIP£1 CIIT

-

.
~·

.'

10 OTIII

II£ STICI£1.

tAOVERTISED ITEM POLICY
IC!ven.ed . tltml

11

requwtd

If)

bo

tOt ute tn Mch t(,roger StOtt , IJitePI M
I 'fiLII; ~ " fhl.t. " M do f\111 OUI olin ~Nd
lttm . ......,. ._.,. oftlf Y()u your chotce of a cc:JfnJ*Ibll item.

l.edity

''

.VIIill)li

.,._, h . . . . .. rtftecl"''iJ lhe ume IIVIngl or 1 r11nch«:lr
~h W'l entitlf vou 10 purehaM lhl tdvert.-1 tttm 1t• :~j

ldvtrtllld priCe 'Mtf'Mn X) dlvt.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

Kroger

E....,.,htng 'fOU bY'i at K.rogtt 11 gu.ranteed. fOf yOur total
lltcfec:I!Of'l reg.r~ of tn~nufKturtf If you 1re not MilS·
fted. Kroget Wll reollce VO\If
With the llfT'IIInnd or 1
c:on"'petati6e bfand or refund yOUf purch.IM pnce

1-.m

'.

powered by a small bl~ck Chevy engine. The car is a
1973 model Camar~ and races in the Semi-Late Model
division. Ben~wns and maintains his own car with ;
help from his dad, Bob Hickle. '
..

AvonHit
__ ....
2t·o• .
P-11 .. . Con

·-

CONSISTENT. FINISHES
of
' Syracuse in his third year of driving has been making
consistent finishes this year with one fealur\! win to his
credit. Adkins drives a purple and «ange numl;ler I

'•' ' • .

Ford Maverick powered by a 351 cubic inch Ford·
Clevellind engine. Adkins and his brothers, Michael
and Randy, help prepare the car and built the chas$is
themselves. Aill&lt;ins .races in the Serru-Late- Model
(iivision.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

I
I

e:

.

:; Drivers, flJlls enjoy fine season
•

&lt;

•

Bond's Speedway in. Stewart

.opening .and consistently makes

•": Friday evenings for local race

has also been doing well, winning
trophies in the mid-season cham·

,:seems to be "where the actlo1J11" on · ·· very Cl!ffipetitive finishes. His father

f-: .drivers as well as area racing fans.

t··

,
pionsl\ip races. Also in the ·late
model division are Gene Adkins and
Hilton "Big Fooz" Wolfe, Jr., both ci
Racine who are doing quite well.
In the semi-late division Roger
Adkins, Syracuse, and Benny
Hickle, .Pomeroy, have placed very .
well. Many Meigs countians have
helped make the speedway a success
and continue to make it tlie place to
be on Friday.

Bob "Bobby Joe" Adams, Bob
! ; Adams, Jr.; Gene and Roger Adkinlt,
r 1 ·Benny Hickle, ·and Hilton Wolfe, Jr. ,
Baby gorilla
~~ all of Meigs .County compete weekly
;- at the ~way with ~e of the · taken from mother
'! Midwest's fmest drivers.
After a couple storms that c.iusedt . COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A baby
·; delays and leit the clay ovalin rough gorilla born Saturday in the Colum• •:condition, the track surface has been
bus Zoo was taken from it.s mother
~ : reworked into an ueellent racing l)lecause _she _was n_ot nursjng and
·surface which _provides for great . washol~ghim~s1dedown.
.
r racingandexcitementforthefans: &lt; .. ZAlci_D1~ector Jack-Haf!Da sa1d,
\ : The Late Model sloi:k cars slid
W.(didn t want to do 1t, but we felt
BECOMES AD TOO
_.· side by side into the high banked tUP." • we eithe~ take the bab~ away and
TIFFIN, Ohio (AP) - John
,. ns at speeds approaching 1oo MPH have a ruce healthJ. gorilla or wait
"Spezz" Spezzaferro, Heidelberg
• ·battling all wt to the checkered flag
for the ~other to take.care of it and
College's football coach, is assuming
·. Racine's Bob Adams Jr one oi' risk the i!han~ of losing tlie baby.
the area's mosi talf!~ted .,drivers Under those circumstances; we felt • the additional duties of athletic
director at the Ohio ·Conference
· f drove his number A55 ·eamaro to weshouldtakeitaway."
school.
victory in the Speedway's grand
The ·4-pound, 4-ounce gorilla's
Spezzaferro replaces Jim Getz
parents are harned Oscar and Toni:
who
quit as Heidelberg athleti~
LB:!t year, Toni set a world record by
"'' ·- ~
director-earlier
this-monttrto go into
giving birth to anollier gorilla. That
private
business.
He has served as
made the Columbus Zoo the only zoo
t~e
Student
Princes'
football coach
:with four generations of gorillas in
since1978.
captivity.
·-·-·---"--" _

:·
t

Men$ tournament

The Tuppers Plains Tigers plated
nine runs in the fourth inning to
defeat the Middleport Indians 1U to
take the championship of the third
. annual Powell's Uttle League tournament.
Brian Durst was the winning pit·
cher as he went the distance striking
outfivnnd walking three. .
Rick Wille took the loss for the Indians as he, Scott Gheen, and Brian
Decker ~ombined to strike out five
· . and walk seven,
· Leading hl~rs for l'uppers Plains
were Brent Blsslill foUl! singles,
Royce Bissell two doubles and one
:single, Larry Spencer two singles,
~evin Barber one double, Eddie
. Collins one doubl-e, and Brian Durst
· one single.
,
· For Middleport, J .- R. Kitct.en had
a double and two singles, Scott
Gheen one double and one single,
Eric Johnson two singles, Rick Wise
one double, Jeff Hood one single and
Rrian Decker one sing.e
In the consolation game for the

third and fourth place spots, the
Pomeroy Pirates defeated Powell's
Giants 6-5 in extra innings.
Although outhit by the Giants, the
Pirates managed to push across the
winning run in the top of the eighth
inning.
Hiley Eason picked up the win as
he relievedRodd
Harrison
the bOt·
tom
of the seventh
inning.inTogether
~ey

I

tamed up to strike out 10 white·

wa~s~ .

Brian Korn took the toss as he
relieved Rodney Roush in the top &lt;tf
the seve11th inning. Together they
fanned 10 while walking nine.
The Giants had a rally stopped in
the first inning when the Pirates
pulled off a triple play following a
~.:e::~. hit to first baseman Brian
Rodd Harrison, Joe Fields and
Rex Haggy each had singles for the

·•

KiLLED IN 1435
" King Rldltard III of England was
killed in 1485 at the Battle of Bosworth, endi_ng the War of the Roses.

aa
· nquet

..

Fried Chicken

~~ ~ ..(&gt;

IN THE

,.
i

If

;;;t
.W1eners .........
IN THE ,IICI kiOGER

:
,.

FROZEN KROGER SHOES fliNG

lt .

lt
:
,._

FBroROZEN KIIOIG"ERSpe

si
~·
"'

CITY' UMilS :
DRIVE 'JHRU . :

·:~u N. 1nd St.

M i ddleport, 0.

~

•

I

Pkga .

,:~::,s

i;'d';~
Blue Plums .... .,"·

25'

- ADOLPH'S
.
DAIRY VALLEY

gc
5

2
Nedarines ............ lb~ .

FRESH

Q92·25S6
570 W. Main
0.

FRESH _

-

_

-

Blueberries ....... ... . Pint
FRESH

Cauliflower.......... Head

sf-

Stewart, OH .

,r.-;"');~:;,::~ Every Fri. Night

BALLARD'S

I

, .

Located 20 Minutes East of Athens,
35 Minutes West of Parkersburg
on
so -·at cry. Rd. 53
_
PHONES: Track (614) 662-4111
H'o me614·667-3478

.

$ 1 09

COUNTIY 0\IEN

AngeiFood ,..... ·

Coke ....... "•·

=~~~!~\=~··
o

.

HlllCIIST DIV

,..... $119

Roasted
Peanuts
QUARTERS

69C
ggc

Avondale 0
Catsup. ... I~"

OLE CAROLINA

Jo•

-

2'lo·Gel99

Kroger

22c

26·01 .

Salt ....... •. ...

l·lb.$1

,kga .

Jiff Y

C

$199

Baking
40· 01 .
•
M11 ......... ....
klOGEit

.1

~ake

Mix .... ..

S1

KROGER

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola

a$

R.!

99c
99c

Avondale
(lVItiDllliW "'IUJ
-

"'V"'

4 · 01 .

ROLL-ON

. Ban Deo dorant .. ..

2.5·01. $ 1 4 9
at!.

64o•
ltl.

$139

$197

· ·

a.... .
It I.

KIOGII

C:ONTIUN5 l2·PIECES
READY TO EAT

Wishbone
Fried Chicken
Each

ssss

Grapefruit " -o•.
Juict .
INCLUDES :

3 THIGHS
3WIHGS
lltEASTS &amp;
OI'UMSTtCIU

GOLD CREST

Manh ·

mallows . . 'i!~
THANK YOU

Cherry Pie
F'll'
I tng .....

Deli"Style
Ham

21 -o•
Con

CHAMP lA llON

Table Talk
Apple Pit
Frash Baked

2•"•·•··9·9c
99c

Dog .

Foocl ..

25 ...~~- $369

Kaiser Rolla ... .. . ~~~:
lOLLS AVAILAIU=O~N~lY:A~t~~~

U ·oa.

I

Awo1Jclale 17-cn .
Ptaf ... , .. Co•

us

•

89c
79c

-~-~···

..... c."
•

-

. .. Can

Angle
-Broom ... :-...... each
'

12SlZE

California
Cantaloupe

Cracked Wheat16·01.
Bread............... loaf
6·oi $1
ESprl'"t yogy.rf.....-- :3 Ctnr;.
HOME ,.IDE

9

..

·39e

Pick '0' Chix ........... :. lb.
Pork Sausage.. ..... l·lb.
Roll , •
7
9
C
Sliced Baco" .... ...... ~~=:

'..l/ ,~
) Westside

Margarine 1_1• .
Quarters . . POg .

~~getable '~.~~ $149

'

ICE CREAM sANDWICH

'

ClOVER YAUlV

RETURNAJILE

KROGER

'

Speedway ·

Time Trials 7 PM
Racing 8:00 PM

lb.

2 i~~ $499

.t.VONDALE

Paper or
Pltatlc Ctn.

BOND'S

Guaranteed Purse
Adults S4.00
Children under 12 free

... . . . .. .

Gal.

•

TOP DIRTRACKERS

&amp;9

Embany
Coffee .

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.D.A .INSPECTED GRADEA$129

KROGERFRESH

·.
~~~----------~~~--~-~---~--~-- --~----~---~---------~~~--~r

-

,14-LI.AVG.

Buttermilk ........ ...... .... em.
•
.
Gal.
J
0. range UIC8 ............. ctn.

• dates announced

i

VAC PAK

INTO ONI CONVI!'IIlNT TAKI HOMI PACUGI

KROGER

SPECIAL

Fleece . . Slngl•
Towels .. .. ••"

$119

26e
44e

$1

~

,,
'·

\If-SHEETS PU IOU

sLIClD
...,

:

2!1·01 .
Pks•·

~

A class B and C men's Softball
:Tournament sponsored by the
: Racine United Methodist Church
' ; Will be held August 22, 23 and 24. The
, ~ 24 team single elimination Slow pit· ·
':~ tourney will he played m
, Southern's high school and junior
•_high fields in Racine.
· Entry fee. is $50 plus two
• regulation softballs. All checks
:should be made payable to ttie
: Racine United Methodist Church
rand must be received along with a 20
:man roster by August 17.
·
A
team
representative
must
also
·
·
'
be named and his address given.
~ ~Teadl trophies, IndiVidual tto,.Ues,
.and special recognition tropHies will
"be awarded.
• AU rosters and entry fees {lre
) •-:!'referred to be . mailed in to the
Jollowing address: Softball Tour·
nament', Attn : Box 181, Racine, Ohio
\} -:15771.
• For further information contact
'Rev. David Harris at 949-2741 after
j ,Aug. 6, or 949-2045 any time a£ter .8:00 II" weekdays. All entries are
welcome.
'

Con

C

·&lt;',

"
'

AND

14· 11-LI. AVG .

16 ·01 .

S499

1O·o1.$1 09

·Potatoes .. .. .. .. .. ...

"/

THIS WEEK'S

ICE CREAM BAR

COUNTRY CLUI

c
89

2
ars .
2
..

16.S·OI ,
con

S119

I

Meat Bologna .. ... ... lb .

'ruESDAYS . 1HURSI1AYS :
p .M . to
12 Mldnlghr

Corn ..

1-lb . g g
Pkg.

~~'*******,..*'**
·**"*'::~
·
sjsi·ii
»It DRAFT
LADIES •
:
NITE
NITE :
,

Avondale

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED. FRO-lEN

- - l l l l l i JIHIIICHIIIIN

lllliCIII .... IUILIIIIIIILICII lUll

1

WHOU KIINll 01
CltEAM STHE

~---···---···-···-·

r::~~:;.;;;.;;i;i~;;;-;;;

P.M. to
Midnight
12

A llEND OF IEEF I HYDRATED TEXTuRED
VEGET AILE PROTEIN KRO~ER'S PRO

SLICIO

.I

Cocktail· . . ~:

=n·~:!~1~ston ... ... $199

Beef Patty Mix .. .... .- ..... lb.
canne dH am.... ....... .. J Can
·lb.
I SAVE
I
. .
1 70'
-lb.
••anN
Whole Fresh Pork Loin lb.
~ IZ LIJ.~·g~~~~r~~~~~~~!:: .I .H( . :
flU

Pirates.
. For the Giants, Gerald Moore had
two doubles and a single; Gary
Coleman, Rodney Roush, and Lee
Powell each with a double; . fames
Nprma n. Bryan Korn, and Kevin
Mowery each had singles.

,

I
I
I
I
II
I
1

***************'*"*
r------:-----.....1_ _;___--;------

GIRlS' TOURNAMENT

Agirls' double elimination softball
tournament will be held' at Point
· Pldsant, Aug. 8-10. All · teams
wishing to participate are to call67:..
24-lO for further details. Entry fee is
'$3S-and the age group is nine tl!rough
12.

~

. ~. . . l

1[!]·2 $ 99

Tuppers Plains
Tigers take
.
Powell's LL tournament

familiar number one with- the "pink 'Papther"
trademark is yellow triniziled in purpfe. AdkinS competes locally along with his brother Roger. ¥!kills
drives, owns and maintains his own car. Adkins races
in the Late Model division.
- ,
.
.
.

Fruit
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE , IEif QtUCK AIIM,

TODI~UI$ .

:

PINK PANTHERS - Gene Adkinii, Racine, has
.been doing a good job in his 302 cubic inch Ford
.Mustang ll. Adkins and his brothers bullt his Late
Model racer which is a Howe Copy chassis. The

A\IONOA,U

Wll15flt\IIE lHIE liGHT TO liMIT QUANTITtiE5 . NONIE SOLO

.
-Roger Adkins

_

Con

YELlOW C~ING

CO,YIIGNl 1tl0 . THI KIOGU CO . ITIM5 -'NO PltiCU
GOOO SUNOAY . JULY 27 THill SAlU.DAY . AUCUSl 2.
I... IN POMEROY ANDGALLIPOLISSTORES.'

BENNY IDCKLE FORMERLY OF NEW HAVEN,
W. Va., now living in Pomeroy, has j_ust finished his
new "Tiger Tom" Pistone chassis and hQs placed in the
money in his initial outings. Hickel's Red number 51 is ·

16 _0 ,

Applesauce

�. I

&amp;,-The
. . Daily Sentinel,.Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 30, 19110

Helen Help Us
.
One too many girls means
having to say you ' re sorry

.-Health .
:Review

.
:

1 •

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:
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:
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:
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.By Robert G. Slockmal,
.
D.O., Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
of Famlly Medicine
Ohlo Uolversity CoDege
of Osleopatblc Medicine
QUESTION: My bowels weren't
moving everyday so I've been laking
a daily laxative. ls there anything
wrong with this?
ANSWER: There are many, normal bowel patterns and your bowels
need not move everyday.
Your diet ha~ a major influence on
frequency. Tile partially digested
food leaves the stomach and enters
the srnaD bowel where the useful
parts of the food are extracted. Tbe
remaining material passes on to the
large bowel where water is reabsorbed, thereby concentrating the
waste material. If your diet is low in
bulk there may not be much residual
for your bowels to expel.
QUESTIO~: Can laxatives be harmful?
.J
ANSWER; Yes, if used in excess
or inappropriately.
Laxatives fall into five general
categories. Let's look at each of
these in more detaiL Stimulant ·
laxatives act as irritants that increase the propulsive contractions
(peristalsis) of the . !,'Olon and
thereby produce a bowel movement ·
in six to eight hours. Cascara, senna,
danthron are in one subtype and
bisacodyl and phenolphthalein are in
another (chebk the labels for active
ingredients). Prolonged use can
result in denervation and reduction
of muscle in the large bowel.
Salt laxatives act by drawing
water Into the bowl producing a
fuUness, stimulating peristalsis. The
major products contain magnesium
or sodiwn salts (e.g., magnesium
sulfate; milk of magnesia, sodium
phosphate, sodium sulfate) . With
poor kidney function excess
magnesium may accwnulate. and
cause an imbalance in the body's
natural salts (electrolytes). High
sodium laxatives can be harmful to
people on low sodium diets. Excess
use can sometimes cause diarrhea
leading to excess loss of fluids and
electrolytes.
·
Stool softners are sulfosucclnates
which act by helping water
penetrate and soften the feces.
These may .decrease the amount of
stomach secretions and reduce
protein digestion.
Mineral oil is an example of a
lubricant type of laxative. Constant
use can interfere with absorption of
fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K) .
Large doses can cause rectal itching
and other rectal problems. In stroke
patients and others who have difficulty swallowing, small amounts of
oil may be inhaled producing lipoid
pneumonia.
·
Tbe last group - caDed bulk
laxatives- mixed with food and forms space-occvpying gels, much like
the natural bulk foods of the d(el.
They are eXtracts of psyllium seed
or ceDulose. Tbey should be taken
with generous amounts of water.
QUESTION: How can l reestablish natural regularity?
ANSWER! Eat regular nieals and
include bulk producing foods such .
as:
- whole cooked or stewed fruit,
- green leafy vegetables (lettuce,
spinach, celery),
- root vegetables (carrots, turnipS,' potatoes) .
- cooked high residue vegetables
(cabbage),
- and whole grain bread.
An adequate fluid intake is also

$300 for CANCER - ' Mrs. Ruby Vaughan of

Vaughan's Cardinal in Middleport presented a check'
for $300 to Mrs. Mary O'Brien, Crusade chairman for
the Meigs Unit of the American Cancer Society. The
check represented a percentage of sales at Cardinal on
Grocers' Cancer Day. This sbecial fund taising event is

an annual project for the Vaughans. The same day,
Mrs. O'Brien and other volunteers held a baked goods
sale outside the.store. The sale was a success and the
Crusade chairman ejctends her thanks to all who contributed baked goods.

BY HELEN AND SUE BOTTEL
, Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN:
I was going great this last school
year. My girlfriend Marty went to a
private school and my girlfriend
Donna attended the . public hlgh
school where I go.
I told one I worked evenings, Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays,
and told the other I worked
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays,
which gave me Fridays to play the
field. l saw each girl on my "nonwork' ~ night. They're both pretty
serious about me, and lllon't want to
lose either.
Well, Marty tells me she's transferring to our high school this faD! I
know she'll meet Donna: they both
take ~rama and hope to be in school
· plays. What will I do? DESPERATE
P.S. Please print this in July as
they'D be away on vacation and
won't~ead the newspaper.
DEAR DES:
(Let's hope our colwnn doesn't
run in· newspapers where tlie girls
are vacationing!)
There's only one way to go: Tell
the truth and take the consequences.
- HELEN
P.S. FROM SUE: And start
looking for another girl!
HElEN AND SUE:
· My husband and I both work full
time. He wants us to have a baby,
. and I like the idea - that is, if we
share equally in raising it. He says
"No problem," but I'm afraid he'll
backslide.
Would it be too crass if I drew up a
contract for us both to sign, outlining
duties? For example, one week he'll
do the washing and feeding while I
dress and diaper the ,baby and take
him to the sitter. Tbe next week, we
exchange jobs, and so on.
Since you're a career woman with
a small child, Sue, how do you and
your husband manage the baby

I r
*

Hundreds and hundreds

A BOOK FOR A DIME of books are on sale for a dime at the Middleport Public
· Library. The bqok sale began Monday and will continue for another week. There are all kinds of books
and magazines for sale and residents are invited to

visit the library and browse through the book sale sections. Here Brian Bauer of Middleport, who for the past
two years has been working at the Library in the Youth
Employment Training Program, adds a few more
· books to the already well-filled shelves.

•
important: Exercise daily to your
tolerance. Promptly answer the
"urge" for a bowel movement.
Check with your physician for a
detailed plan. ·

MOTHER:
Beginning with natural child birth
classes, Cliff and I have shared
equally .in raising our son, Aaron,
but we don't wri~ rules or dole out
daily duties. One of us is simply
"there" when the other isn't, doing
necessary jobs, enjoying our child,
and always surrounding l)im with
love. 1
'·
·--, _
We have a terrific older sitter for
the times neither of us can be home
(which aren't many because we
work different hours) . . What with
combined mothering, fathering, and
grandmotherly sitting, plus fotir
grandparents living close by, Aaron
thrives, believe me! - SUE

COUNTRY
4 OUNCE
INSTANT

Reports on foreign missionary
projects were given at the recent
meeting of the Ruth Missionary Circle of the Racine Baptist Church
held at the home of Mrs. Marjorie
Grinun.
Money will be sent to India for
bandages since they can not be sent
into the country by decree of the
government. A letter was read cOncerning bandages for the White
CrosS program of the Ohio Baptist
Convention. It was noted that
sweaters have been sent by the
group to Thailand. More are to be
sent later. An offering of $11.20 was
taken in addition to the regular love
gift.
Tbe Ruth Circle will host a
meeting of the Bertha M. Sayre
Soci~!&gt;: in _August. Cards were
· signed for Mrs. Helen Slack and Bill
Cozart. Marie Walker opened the
meeting with prayer. Each member
answer~ roll call by giving a verse

REUNION SUNDAY
T!]ere will be a reunion of the
descendants of Martin and Emma
Roush Sayre at the Racine Shrine
Park Sunday, Aug. 3.

.PENS

PAPER

69~EACH
•••
•

EACH

I

7

LIMIT 6
QUARTS

120 PAGE
3 SUBJECT •

99~
I

WOVEN

OUART

EVEREADY

THEME BOOK
79~
. EACH

BATTERIES

••••••••••••••••••••
.
.

4

TOA
PKG.

69

~

.,

----------------·-------- .

.

...

-

I

I

I
L

FOR SUPER SAVINGS!
TRASH BAGS

SALE

THE FABRIC SHOP

69~
,~'nlf 110 I

........................
I I I II! I I I I I

a a a a a a a • a_I

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

992-2244

"IF YOU LIKE" BRAND
ASK TOWED
A marriage license was issued to

Rodney Keith White, 22, Long Bottom, and Kimberly Jeap Ward, 19,
Portland.
'

$139

SEEKS SUPPORT
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court the State of Ohio and Rise D.
Sup:ace filed for support un~er the
Reciprocal Agreement Act against ·
Ronald Jeffers.

MANAGEMENT
TRAINEE
Learn· a
pr.ofesslon at
McDonald's
Restaurant
'
1715 Eastern Ave.
GalliiiOiis, Ohio .
GOOD PAY,
FRINGE BENEFITS
PROMOTIONS
.

CANDY'S CLASSIC COLLECTION.
INGEL'S FUR~I~RE .&amp; JEWELRY
'

'

Middleport, Ohio

PRACTICE MONDAY
The Southern High School Band
will start practice sessions at9 a.m.
Monday in the band rootn. This is for
,tudents in grades seven through 12.

I

All . you · need .. is
desire and interest.
Apply in Person

• Parts Plus

autoato...

NPROFEIIIONAL
PARTS

PEOPLE
Your Choice

With
Coupon

Price WithouT coupon $1.33
Offer Expires 8·3·80

_

.

115 W. 2nd

I

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON
10 I:OUNT · 30 GAL.

OTHER' FALL SEWING MATERIALS
-CORDUROY- DENIMS- KETTLE
I: LOTH- PLAIDS &amp; STRIPE PERM PRESS
DOGWOOD - The singing group, Dogwood, Will appear Thursday·
evening at the Jesus in· '80 album for the group, "Ordinary Man" is
currently iisted at the top of the contemporary Christian charts. Ticke.ts
may be purchased at the gate.

I

NEW SHIPMENT

601NCH
VELOUR

)

95
Our diamond cluster gives t~e big d.iamond look. Raised above the mountmg
the look is even bigger. And the stylish
twltt in the lllounting adds an ~xc l tlng matching wedding
touch of fashion. Carelully craf1ed ... band available
with 7 ouaHty diar&lt;1onds. White or yellow
gold. Priced to fit your budget

'

.I

-GREAT FOR BACK TO SCHOOL
-GREAT FOR FALL SEWING

•

Diamond ClUster
With a New Look of FashiQO

••
•

'MOTOR OIL

HOLLAND

ICE CREAM

·······'J~~~

QUAKER STATE
SUPER BLEND

1f2 GA.LLON

r••

lWI NOR FULL SliE

'10

FI.LLER

PKG.

••
•

••••••••••••••••• II I l l •••

,\~ .

.BEDSPREADS

BIC
~ -·

of scripture.
The program consisted of
readings by the members. Mrs.
Walker read "A Prayer Away,"
Mrs. Garnet Ervine, "Millions .
Haven't Heard," Mrs. Nondus Hendricks, " Life Has No Reverse ,"
Mary Kay Yost, "Trust in Your·
self," Martha Lou Beegle, " Castor
Oil, Ugh!", Emma Adams,
"Relaxing in Jesus."
.'
Mrs: Doris Hensler read "Out of
Darkness," Mrs. Barbara Gheen,
"Are We Thankful"; Mrs. Grinun,
"My Saviour," will host the August
meeting. Refreshments were served
by the hostess.

............. ····-·-·........

200 COUNT

3 COUNT PKG.

77~LP.

16 oz.

FOLGER'S
COFFEE

\00% TEA

(GOT A PROBlEM? Or a subject
for discussion, two-generation style 1
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Bottel - or both, if you
want a combination motherdaughter answer - in care of this
newspaper.)

BACON

3 lBS.

NESTEA

••

·JONES BOYS

137
GALLIPOLIS,
OHIO
. PINE ST.,
-700 W. MAIN ST•• POMEROY, OHIO
GOOD

DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
This is to women whose men break
off with them because (they say) "!
love you too much and I'm not good
for you." What they reaDy mean is,
"You are getting too serious and I'm
losing interest."
.
And this is to men who say that:
Why can't you turkeys tell the truth?
- TIRED OF EASY LETDOWNS
DEAR TIRED:
... Because it would make them
feel guilty. Besides, why be cruel
when a white lie helps preserve a
woman's self-ilsteem? - HElEN
AND SUE

EARI.Y BIRD
SPECIAL.

28.

•

'

FOODSJ'AMP
ORDERS
' WELCOMED!

I

NO AUGUST MEETING
Mary Shrine, White Shrine of
Jerusalem, .wilJ' not hold a meeting
in August due to the Meigs County
Fair. The next regular meeting will
be held on Sept. 12 and practice for
inspection at Gallipolis on Oct. 3 will
~held at 2 p.m. on Sept. 21 and Sept.

For~An Old Favorite
'

-

_BR_EAD

detail ? - SOMETIME MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER:
A contract is no better than the
persons who sign it. If your hus~J'I(l
is a willing sharer, a written
agreement isn't necessary, and if
he's pot, then it's worthless. l.et's
hope be's like our son-in-law, Cliff.
-HElEN

·Reports heard on projects

·A New- Twist

. I

JONES BOYS
16 OUNCE

.

1

.

7-Tbe Daily
0 .. Wednesday, July 30, 1!8!
. Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy;
.

SHAMPOO

r~~

•

�. I

&amp;,-The
. . Daily Sentinel,.Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 30, 19110

Helen Help Us
.
One too many girls means
having to say you ' re sorry

.-Health .
:Review

.
:

1 •

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•
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.By Robert G. Slockmal,
.
D.O., Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
of Famlly Medicine
Ohlo Uolversity CoDege
of Osleopatblc Medicine
QUESTION: My bowels weren't
moving everyday so I've been laking
a daily laxative. ls there anything
wrong with this?
ANSWER: There are many, normal bowel patterns and your bowels
need not move everyday.
Your diet ha~ a major influence on
frequency. Tile partially digested
food leaves the stomach and enters
the srnaD bowel where the useful
parts of the food are extracted. Tbe
remaining material passes on to the
large bowel where water is reabsorbed, thereby concentrating the
waste material. If your diet is low in
bulk there may not be much residual
for your bowels to expel.
QUESTIO~: Can laxatives be harmful?
.J
ANSWER; Yes, if used in excess
or inappropriately.
Laxatives fall into five general
categories. Let's look at each of
these in more detaiL Stimulant ·
laxatives act as irritants that increase the propulsive contractions
(peristalsis) of the . !,'Olon and
thereby produce a bowel movement ·
in six to eight hours. Cascara, senna,
danthron are in one subtype and
bisacodyl and phenolphthalein are in
another (chebk the labels for active
ingredients). Prolonged use can
result in denervation and reduction
of muscle in the large bowel.
Salt laxatives act by drawing
water Into the bowl producing a
fuUness, stimulating peristalsis. The
major products contain magnesium
or sodiwn salts (e.g., magnesium
sulfate; milk of magnesia, sodium
phosphate, sodium sulfate) . With
poor kidney function excess
magnesium may accwnulate. and
cause an imbalance in the body's
natural salts (electrolytes). High
sodium laxatives can be harmful to
people on low sodium diets. Excess
use can sometimes cause diarrhea
leading to excess loss of fluids and
electrolytes.
·
Stool softners are sulfosucclnates
which act by helping water
penetrate and soften the feces.
These may .decrease the amount of
stomach secretions and reduce
protein digestion.
Mineral oil is an example of a
lubricant type of laxative. Constant
use can interfere with absorption of
fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K) .
Large doses can cause rectal itching
and other rectal problems. In stroke
patients and others who have difficulty swallowing, small amounts of
oil may be inhaled producing lipoid
pneumonia.
·
Tbe last group - caDed bulk
laxatives- mixed with food and forms space-occvpying gels, much like
the natural bulk foods of the d(el.
They are eXtracts of psyllium seed
or ceDulose. Tbey should be taken
with generous amounts of water.
QUESTION: How can l reestablish natural regularity?
ANSWER! Eat regular nieals and
include bulk producing foods such .
as:
- whole cooked or stewed fruit,
- green leafy vegetables (lettuce,
spinach, celery),
- root vegetables (carrots, turnipS,' potatoes) .
- cooked high residue vegetables
(cabbage),
- and whole grain bread.
An adequate fluid intake is also

$300 for CANCER - ' Mrs. Ruby Vaughan of

Vaughan's Cardinal in Middleport presented a check'
for $300 to Mrs. Mary O'Brien, Crusade chairman for
the Meigs Unit of the American Cancer Society. The
check represented a percentage of sales at Cardinal on
Grocers' Cancer Day. This sbecial fund taising event is

an annual project for the Vaughans. The same day,
Mrs. O'Brien and other volunteers held a baked goods
sale outside the.store. The sale was a success and the
Crusade chairman ejctends her thanks to all who contributed baked goods.

BY HELEN AND SUE BOTTEL
, Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN:
I was going great this last school
year. My girlfriend Marty went to a
private school and my girlfriend
Donna attended the . public hlgh
school where I go.
I told one I worked evenings, Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays,
and told the other I worked
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays,
which gave me Fridays to play the
field. l saw each girl on my "nonwork' ~ night. They're both pretty
serious about me, and lllon't want to
lose either.
Well, Marty tells me she's transferring to our high school this faD! I
know she'll meet Donna: they both
take ~rama and hope to be in school
· plays. What will I do? DESPERATE
P.S. Please print this in July as
they'D be away on vacation and
won't~ead the newspaper.
DEAR DES:
(Let's hope our colwnn doesn't
run in· newspapers where tlie girls
are vacationing!)
There's only one way to go: Tell
the truth and take the consequences.
- HELEN
P.S. FROM SUE: And start
looking for another girl!
HElEN AND SUE:
· My husband and I both work full
time. He wants us to have a baby,
. and I like the idea - that is, if we
share equally in raising it. He says
"No problem," but I'm afraid he'll
backslide.
Would it be too crass if I drew up a
contract for us both to sign, outlining
duties? For example, one week he'll
do the washing and feeding while I
dress and diaper the ,baby and take
him to the sitter. Tbe next week, we
exchange jobs, and so on.
Since you're a career woman with
a small child, Sue, how do you and
your husband manage the baby

I r
*

Hundreds and hundreds

A BOOK FOR A DIME of books are on sale for a dime at the Middleport Public
· Library. The bqok sale began Monday and will continue for another week. There are all kinds of books
and magazines for sale and residents are invited to

visit the library and browse through the book sale sections. Here Brian Bauer of Middleport, who for the past
two years has been working at the Library in the Youth
Employment Training Program, adds a few more
· books to the already well-filled shelves.

•
important: Exercise daily to your
tolerance. Promptly answer the
"urge" for a bowel movement.
Check with your physician for a
detailed plan. ·

MOTHER:
Beginning with natural child birth
classes, Cliff and I have shared
equally .in raising our son, Aaron,
but we don't wri~ rules or dole out
daily duties. One of us is simply
"there" when the other isn't, doing
necessary jobs, enjoying our child,
and always surrounding l)im with
love. 1
'·
·--, _
We have a terrific older sitter for
the times neither of us can be home
(which aren't many because we
work different hours) . . What with
combined mothering, fathering, and
grandmotherly sitting, plus fotir
grandparents living close by, Aaron
thrives, believe me! - SUE

COUNTRY
4 OUNCE
INSTANT

Reports on foreign missionary
projects were given at the recent
meeting of the Ruth Missionary Circle of the Racine Baptist Church
held at the home of Mrs. Marjorie
Grinun.
Money will be sent to India for
bandages since they can not be sent
into the country by decree of the
government. A letter was read cOncerning bandages for the White
CrosS program of the Ohio Baptist
Convention. It was noted that
sweaters have been sent by the
group to Thailand. More are to be
sent later. An offering of $11.20 was
taken in addition to the regular love
gift.
Tbe Ruth Circle will host a
meeting of the Bertha M. Sayre
Soci~!&gt;: in _August. Cards were
· signed for Mrs. Helen Slack and Bill
Cozart. Marie Walker opened the
meeting with prayer. Each member
answer~ roll call by giving a verse

REUNION SUNDAY
T!]ere will be a reunion of the
descendants of Martin and Emma
Roush Sayre at the Racine Shrine
Park Sunday, Aug. 3.

.PENS

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FOR SUPER SAVINGS!
TRASH BAGS

SALE

THE FABRIC SHOP

69~
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........................
I I I II! I I I I I

a a a a a a a • a_I

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

992-2244

"IF YOU LIKE" BRAND
ASK TOWED
A marriage license was issued to

Rodney Keith White, 22, Long Bottom, and Kimberly Jeap Ward, 19,
Portland.
'

$139

SEEKS SUPPORT
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court the State of Ohio and Rise D.
Sup:ace filed for support un~er the
Reciprocal Agreement Act against ·
Ronald Jeffers.

MANAGEMENT
TRAINEE
Learn· a
pr.ofesslon at
McDonald's
Restaurant
'
1715 Eastern Ave.
GalliiiOiis, Ohio .
GOOD PAY,
FRINGE BENEFITS
PROMOTIONS
.

CANDY'S CLASSIC COLLECTION.
INGEL'S FUR~I~RE .&amp; JEWELRY
'

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Middleport, Ohio

PRACTICE MONDAY
The Southern High School Band
will start practice sessions at9 a.m.
Monday in the band rootn. This is for
,tudents in grades seven through 12.

I

All . you · need .. is
desire and interest.
Apply in Person

• Parts Plus

autoato...

NPROFEIIIONAL
PARTS

PEOPLE
Your Choice

With
Coupon

Price WithouT coupon $1.33
Offer Expires 8·3·80

_

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115 W. 2nd

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JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON
10 I:OUNT · 30 GAL.

OTHER' FALL SEWING MATERIALS
-CORDUROY- DENIMS- KETTLE
I: LOTH- PLAIDS &amp; STRIPE PERM PRESS
DOGWOOD - The singing group, Dogwood, Will appear Thursday·
evening at the Jesus in· '80 album for the group, "Ordinary Man" is
currently iisted at the top of the contemporary Christian charts. Ticke.ts
may be purchased at the gate.

I

NEW SHIPMENT

601NCH
VELOUR

)

95
Our diamond cluster gives t~e big d.iamond look. Raised above the mountmg
the look is even bigger. And the stylish
twltt in the lllounting adds an ~xc l tlng matching wedding
touch of fashion. Carelully craf1ed ... band available
with 7 ouaHty diar&lt;1onds. White or yellow
gold. Priced to fit your budget

'

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-GREAT FOR BACK TO SCHOOL
-GREAT FOR FALL SEWING

•

Diamond ClUster
With a New Look of FashiQO

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.BEDSPREADS

BIC
~ -·

of scripture.
The program consisted of
readings by the members. Mrs.
Walker read "A Prayer Away,"
Mrs. Garnet Ervine, "Millions .
Haven't Heard," Mrs. Nondus Hendricks, " Life Has No Reverse ,"
Mary Kay Yost, "Trust in Your·
self," Martha Lou Beegle, " Castor
Oil, Ugh!", Emma Adams,
"Relaxing in Jesus."
.'
Mrs: Doris Hensler read "Out of
Darkness," Mrs. Barbara Gheen,
"Are We Thankful"; Mrs. Grinun,
"My Saviour," will host the August
meeting. Refreshments were served
by the hostess.

............. ····-·-·........

200 COUNT

3 COUNT PKG.

77~LP.

16 oz.

FOLGER'S
COFFEE

\00% TEA

(GOT A PROBlEM? Or a subject
for discussion, two-generation style 1
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Bottel - or both, if you
want a combination motherdaughter answer - in care of this
newspaper.)

BACON

3 lBS.

NESTEA

••

·JONES BOYS

137
GALLIPOLIS,
OHIO
. PINE ST.,
-700 W. MAIN ST•• POMEROY, OHIO
GOOD

DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
This is to women whose men break
off with them because (they say) "!
love you too much and I'm not good
for you." What they reaDy mean is,
"You are getting too serious and I'm
losing interest."
.
And this is to men who say that:
Why can't you turkeys tell the truth?
- TIRED OF EASY LETDOWNS
DEAR TIRED:
... Because it would make them
feel guilty. Besides, why be cruel
when a white lie helps preserve a
woman's self-ilsteem? - HElEN
AND SUE

EARI.Y BIRD
SPECIAL.

28.

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FOODSJ'AMP
ORDERS
' WELCOMED!

I

NO AUGUST MEETING
Mary Shrine, White Shrine of
Jerusalem, .wilJ' not hold a meeting
in August due to the Meigs County
Fair. The next regular meeting will
be held on Sept. 12 and practice for
inspection at Gallipolis on Oct. 3 will
~held at 2 p.m. on Sept. 21 and Sept.

For~An Old Favorite
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_BR_EAD

detail ? - SOMETIME MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER:
A contract is no better than the
persons who sign it. If your hus~J'I(l
is a willing sharer, a written
agreement isn't necessary, and if
he's pot, then it's worthless. l.et's
hope be's like our son-in-law, Cliff.
-HElEN

·Reports heard on projects

·A New- Twist

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JONES BOYS
16 OUNCE

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7-Tbe Daily
0 .. Wednesday, July 30, 1!8!
. Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy;
.

SHAMPOO

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8- Tho: Daily Sentinel,

Pauline Atkins ta~es top awards in
'Summer Weather' flower show recen!ly

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RUTLAND - Mrs. Pauline Atkins
took both the " ~t of show" and the
"reserve best of show" in artistic
arrangements at the ·:summer
Weather" flower show of the
Rulliu\d Garden Club staged recently at the Rutland United Methodist
Church.
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis was
general chairman for the sliow
which featured several special
displays of native wild flowers, garden leaflets from the Meigs ExtensioQ office, and books and
ma)!azines from members of the
clitb along with two handbooks supplied by Mrs. Anna Turner and Mrs.
Reva Snowden.
Mrs. Susie Carpenter, an accredited judge of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs, judged
the show awarding ribbons in four
place~ .

WINNER~

Mrs. Pauline Atkins won both the "Best of Show" and
the "Reserve Best of Show" in the Rutland Garden Club's show, "Swnmer Weather! '

•

Area goings on noted
I

VARIAN LOSES
MOST WEIGHT
Barbara Varian recorded the most
lost weight at the Monday night ·
meeting of the Mason Slinderella
Diet Class, with June Pickens as
runner-up. At the Tuesday morning
Mason class three new members
were ~!corned and Connie Thompson was recognized for having lost
the most weight.
Cathy Spencer and Ruth Smith
were the best losers at the Middleport Class, wlu'le at Chester
Joyce Ritchie lost the most weight,
and Melissa Barker and Virgene
Elberfeld were nmners-up. ln·
fonnation on classes may he olr
tained from JoAnn Newsome.
BIBLE SCHOOL BEGINS
· Daily Vacation Bible School at the

Bradford Church of Christ will begin
Monday and .continue through Aug.
8, 9 a.m . . to 11:30 a.m. each day.
" Jesus, I Beleve in You" will he the
theme with classes for all children.

In the artistic arrangements
classes, the winners, wereu:
" 100 in the Shade,'' featuring hot
colors, Mrs. Pearle Canaday, blue;
Mrs. Eva Robson, red ; Mrs. Pauline
Atkins, yellow; and Mrs. Margaret
Ella Lewis, white .

" Hail Storm," interpretive
Robin Harder, and·the white to Jeff
design : Mrs, Anna Turner, blue;
Birchfield.
Mrs, Binda Diehl, red; Mrs.
HORTI&lt;;UL11JRE
Canaday, yellow and Mrs. Robson,
First, second, third, and fourth
white. •
place winners in the horticulture
"Windy arid Cooler," showing
division, listed respectively, were:
motion: Mrs. Robson, blue; Mrs.
Hybrid roses: Mrs, Robson, Mrs.
Diehl , red; Mrs, Pauline Atkins,
Lewis, Mrs. Marie Bishop, and Mrs.
yellow; and Mrs. Snowden, white.
Robson.
"Sunny .Pays," including some
Roses other than hybrid tea: Mrs.
garden produce : Mrs. Atkins, blue;
Snowden, yellow (no other ribbons
Mrs. Turner, red; Mrs. Diehl,
awarded).
•
yellow, and Mrs. Robson, white.
· Gladiolus: Mrs. Snowden, Mrs.
"Thimder Storm," water showing
Bishop, red and yellow, and Mrs . ..
as a part of the design : Mrs. AtkinS,
Robson.
blue; Mrs. Robson, red; Mts. TurZinnia: Mrs. Snowden, Mrs. Rotr
per, yellow, and Mrs. Neva
son, Mrs. Bishop, Mrs. Snowden.
Nichoison, white.
·
Marigolds: Mrs. ' Bishop, Mrs.
"Lightning Strikes," including
Robson, Mrs. Bishop, Mrs. Snowden.
wealher wood: Mrs. Robson, blue;
Dahlias: Mrs. Snowden, red; Mrs.
Mrs. Nicholson, red ; Mrs. Pauline
Erlewine, yellow and white.
Atkins, yellow, and Mrs. Canaday,
Foliage plants: Mrs. Diehl, Mrs.
white.
Nicholson, Mrs. Snowden and Mrs.
"Cloudy Skies," tall line: Mrs.
Turner.
Atkins, Mrs. Nicholson, Mrs. TurBlooming flowers : Mrs. Turner,
ner, and Mrs. Snowden.
M:rs. Snowden, Mrs. Robson, Mrs.
In the junior division, "Long
Bishop.
Evenings," a favorite design, the
Cactus: Mrs. 'Snowden, Mrs.
blue ribbon went to Amy Eskew, the ... Nicholson, Mrs. Snowden, Mrs. Rotr
red ' to Beth Eskew, the yellow to · son.

Polly's Pointers ·

Bugs, Bugs everywhere

By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - To rid your
Special correspondent
home of silverfil\h line shelves,
GUEST SPEAKER SUNDAY
DEAR POI,LY - I do hope you
dresser drawers, etc. with
Joe Robinson, fonner minister at
can help me as I am desperate.
newspaper. The little varmints seem
the Bradford Church of Christ, will
Silverfish used to be just in my
to hate printer's ink. I started doing
be guest stieaker at the Sunday morbasement but now I see them up- · this 20 years ago and have not seen
ning worship service ·at the church
stairs and have used borax but it
one since.- I;tUBY
on Aug. 10, 10:30 a.m. Mr. Robinson
does not seem to help. - MARDEAR POLLY .- Before discaris' now a· teacher at the College of
JORIE
ding an old pin cushion open it up
Scripture in Louisville, Ky.
and you might discover a treasure rl.
DEAR MARgood needles that have worked their
MEETING POSTPONED .
JORIE
(arrd
way inside and .out of sight. After
A meeting of the Meigs County
JOANNA who has
years of accusing my family of
Salon 710, Eight and Forty,
the
same
losing all my good needles I opened
scheduled for Monday evening has
problem) - Some
an old one before throwing it away
been· postponed until AUg: 18. The ' authorities re~o­
·and was amazed to discover about 80
place will he announced later. Inmmend that fresh
perfectly good needles.- MARY
stallation of new officers will be held pyrethrwn powdDEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is
at that mee~g.
er be dusted
with the style of so many pop cans on
around . the in·
I
today's market. No matter how
festect places.
careful one is the pop stlll splatters
all over when a can is opened. What
This has to be repeated often and a sticky me!lS it is.
·
works best as a follow-up for a good
I save all bits and pieces of soap
insect spray. Perhaps the next two until I have a cupful. Then I grate
nation, we have had citizens who felt
Pointers from readers will also help. them on my hand-held cheese grater
the need to care for their fellow
1
POLLY
and mix the soap bits with just
citizens. Today it has sunk into the ·
DEAR POLLY - To get rid of enough warm water so I can form a
depths of selfish greed and to "The
silverfish I mix equal parts of boric ball. Let it dry and have a nice round
Government Owes Me,'' or "I Have
acid and sugar and sprinkle in the ball of soap that floats. A child can
Rights" and other garbage such as
cracks and crevices or wherever the do it and it is so economical. -SAN·
this. No True American can be so
silverfish
are, I also find this is good DY
selfish as not to consider the rights
•
for roaches.
Polly will send you one of her
only of others and in one's self, only
Try using rubbing alcohol orr signed thank-you newSpaper coupon
"My" responsibilities. ·
clothes that have ballpoint ink clippers if she uses your favorite
In July, the Patriotic Month, or at
least the time we should deeply con- · stains. Use full strength and then Pointer, Pe,ve, or Problem in her
rub with a clean clotjl before column. Write POLLY'S POINsider our Herita'ge, we need to turn
washing as usual.- FRANCES
TERS in care of this newspaper.
our thoughts and· energies to our
great REPUBLIC and the 200 years
of consideration in the hearts of
Americans of "I have my duty, my
country, my God and my responDAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Stripping a lot of gall,'' she said. "But I
sibilities. Never dare we only think
off one's T-shirt in a crowded shop- thought ' why not?"'
of self. Never dare we overlook the
ping .area. to show off a suntan or·
Bible truth that made America
dinarily
would be grounds for arrest.
great. The Truth God would have us
But
things
were different Saturday
love and learn is, "My Neighbor ·
at
the
Dayton
Mall.
comes before me." I know ·of no
About
1,000
whistling, hooting,
American who dare say "I have
gasping
spectators
gathered at the
rights. '' Never does ''An American''
mall
to
watch
45
men
and wo'Ven
have ·rights. An Amedcan only has
bare
their
bodies
for
a
chance at
responsibilities. These respon$1,000
in,
prizes,
sibilities are God, Country, NeighThe occasion was a "Show Us
bors and Family. Always Americans
Your
Tan" contest sponsored by
must first, last and always consider
WDJX
radio in Xenia.
their responsibilities. I Love
They gathered to watch the conAmerica and want her to remain a
testants
show the contrast between
nation to have pride in, where we
parts
of
their
bodies exposed to the
serve only others and not self. sun
and
areas
which usually would
Rev . William Middleswarth,
be
covered.
Lutheran Churc~. Meigs County.
Station general manager Geoff
Vargo said aoout 150 people applied
to take part in the ' contest and the
station accepted 55 entrants, some of
whom did not show up Saturday.
Twelve of tlie contestants were men.
10 a fine edge today. Find productive ouUela t&lt;l
A panel of Dayton-area media ·
put the~ t&lt;l good uses.
representatives·
judged the par·
TAurus IAprllZO.Moy 101 ThingallUiy get off
to a slow !tart today, but dorll let that
ticipants
on
the
basis
of front, back
discourage you. You can accompllshlall Y9U hope

Sun worshippers show off. .

ASTROGRAPH -Thonday, July 11

Things shouJd work out a lot smoother for yOu
thl.s coming ye~:~r than you iniUal!y Delieve they
will. In fact , you wiU have opportWtitles lo
develop some new areas because Of how easily
you for ge ahead.
LEO ~Jaly ZS.Aug. !%) A situation may pop up

today sbnilar to one where you made a ml!lllke
in the past. .OOO't let it disturb yw, however,
becawe you won't repeat old errors. Find out
more of whitt lies ahead for you in the year
f~Uowtng your birthday by sending for your copy
of NltroGraph. Mail $1 for each to Astra-Graph.
Box 489, Rsdio City Station, N. Y. 10019. Be sure
to speci.fy birth date.
VIRGO (Aug. !J.Sept. %2) Today may be

rather unique In that friends could both make
- and cost you money. Fortunately, the good
should far outweig h the bad.
LIBRA ISept. %).()ct. %3) Don't act lmpulslvely
upon your first Ideas today . They cou~ ge t you
off ta a false start Once you review matters,
you'll ct1me up with the rights~wer.
SCORPIO (Oct. H-Nov. 22) Be a doer today
and not jU5t a thinker. Onceyouget"upa full head
of steam, the correct way to accomplish your
piU1)0i5e wijl W1fold.
·
SAGMTARlUS !Nov. !3-Dec. 211 Some deeprooted fears about dealing with people may s ur·
face today , but they should disappear the minute
. you. bear all the nice compliments others pay

you.

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CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-JII.IL ltl You may be
plea.Yntly perturbed at youfself wMn you find
out UlOSe you thought were belng uncooperative
areactuaUy giving yOu more than you hoped for.
AQUARIUS (Jao. !0-Feb. 19) Once you get
past the early tension caused by your negative
thinkin ~. it will be :-~mooth sai\in~;: fur yuu the rest
ur the dliy .
PISCES ~Feb. ZO.Marclt 20) Thl: bt!st. Wily to
I!C l over amy' WlpleiiSant though~ ptaguinl! )'()U
toW!y is t() bury yourself In your wurk . The
salisfucllon you'll rctdve will make you smile
again.
• ARIF.S I·M11rllh 21·AP.ril 19) Vour l ea d ~ rshjp
qualitie.!l ami ort~anlliU!Uonal abifi·.;t!li &lt;If&lt;' lltXIt!d

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to, if you keep plodding along.

GEMINI IMI)' JI-Jue Zll) Thil is a good day

to launch new projects or enterpriaes, even
though you are afraid tci take the gamble. If you
don'tbegln now, you may suffer further delays.
CANCER (Juae 21·Jily !2)· Things relating to
your mkterlal security ha've more pouibUitles
than you msy realize. Don't let llmJ.ted or
unimagina tive thlnklng deter you.

FORMED AT AMSTERDAM
The World Council of Churches,
embracing churches from every
part of the world., was fo~ed ~t
, Amsterdam in 1948. By .&amp;he ttme tt
held its second-world assembly in
1954 it represented 163 churches
,fro~ 48 countries. The council has
no power over the churches but is a
means of initiating common
discussion an~ action. .
REFRIGERA~R COOKIES

For perfectly shaped refrigerator .
cookies, pack the .dough in greased ·
juice tins. When chilled, remove the
bottom of the tin and use to push out •
thedou~h.

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Store Hours:
Mo11.-Sat 8 am-10 pm ·

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Sunday 10 am-10 pm

--298 SECOND ST.
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POMEROY, 0.
SPEAKER - Benny H1mt will
he speaker Saturday evening for
the Je~~us In '80 program al Vill·ceot. Tbe program begins today
aDd exteods through Aug. 2 with
teachers and singers on hand
from 9 a.m. each morning until
about 10 p.m. each night. Others
attending will he the Latinos, Joe
"'· Beasley, Lenny Anderson, Ken
Gaub and Etemlty Express,
I,
Brian Rudd, George .Baker, Ron
DePriest, Capt. Hoole, .jJlm
Hodes, Higher Grouod, Taml
Chere, Jesse DuPlanlis,
Dogwood, Daniel Rlspress, Teen
Challenge and Tbe Dalleys. For
mote lnformatiou call or write
Faith Fellowship of Ohio, Jesus
In '80, Route 1, Box 131A1 Uttle
Ohio 45742; phones, 98~
c Hocking,
2024 or 678-8088. The meetings are
•• ootdoors and those attending "ire
•• to take lawn chairs or blankets lo
•• sit on.

PRICES EFFECTIVE lltRU SATURDAY, AUG. 2, 1980

HOMEMADE
..
.

ESTABLISHED 1N 1864
The International Red Cross was
established at Geneva in 11164. The
association owes its inception to the
Swiss banker Jean Henri Dunant,
who was so moved by the suffering
at the Battle of Solferino in 1859 tl)at
he urged the formation of voluntary
aid societies to help the wounded of
war. The Red Cross since has expanded throughout the world· to aid ·
the afflicted in peace as well as in
war.

and ''contrast'' views.

The winner, Clarice Colombo, 23,
of New Carlisle, already had left for
her job as a nurse .at the Dayton
Children's Medical Center when she
was announced as the victor. ·
'one of the older coQtestants, 3~
year-old Betty Enl.x of Englewood, a
secretary, said she Wfll! nervous
while waiting for her turn. "It takes

1726 LATROBE STRE.E T
Pafkersburg, w. va. 2601
TELEPHONE 485·5484
.
TRY US!
We're new in the Middleport·
Pomeory area . We specialize in
Quality Dry Cleaning, Laundry,
carpet &amp; Furniture Clean!ng,
Wedding Gown Preservation,
Suede Cleaning, Draperies, and

Shirts.

Bring your cleaning needs to

Carousel Confections, 317 N. Se-

ABSORBS ODORS
Eggs absorb odors easily beCause ·
of the .porous nature of their shells.
They should be stored away from
strongly-flavored foods ,

cond· Ave., Middleport.
Shecule your carpet &amp; furniture

cleaning there also, or call A,rea
Code 304· 48H48S. for more In·
formation on our Steamway
Cleaning Process.
"We're No.1 in
&amp;Qua

wear.,_.

Spoldolldonlloon help you puttholopoolal
oooaslon Into a memorobl•
that can
bewom all yearlong. Thllr~~arwover'•Oifvl•

rneuag•

trom which to chooM, lor'hlm and lorh1r.

e?Z~
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c-:

••
•••
~

LB.

•

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USDA BONEliSS BOITOM

:_•

Round

ol •

••

~

.,,'
~

Amber Colmer

I•

•••

::,. honors child

Eckricn 1 lb . Packaged

WJENERS••••••·••••••••••••••••••~~~. $1.59

Oniq Colby

$} 98

Longhorn

CHEESE •• ~!.·.. •

~~

B

NEW APPLES .........~~. 97'
RED

PLUMS ........~~:

New

79'
,

CABBAGE....... 2 lb. For 49'

CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP. ....... 3/8!r~~
.

TOILET TISSUE•••••••••••••••••• :.~~·. 9!r
SUGAR CRISP- CEREAL ••••••~::. $1.09
.

14 oz.

!

•

29

Watermelons.. ~£ ~.

1:

AJAX POWDERED CWNSER•••••• ~a.n.2/7!r
Batli Size Safeguard

TOILET SOAP.;••••••••••••••••••••.2/8!r
12 oz. canned LunchMeat

ARMOUR TREET. ...............~::.'1.49
10 oz. Vienna

PORK·
BARBECUE.~ •••••••••••~:~. '1.29
1s oz. Arm-our

CoRNED
BEEF HASH •••••• ~ •••••~~~ 9!r
21 oz. Thank You
PEACH .PIE FILLING .•••• ~ •••••• :f::.8!r

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'•
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GRADE A MEDIUM

Eggs ••••••••••••••••••••••
QOZ.

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KRAFT MIRACLE .

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Social Calendar

WEDNESDAY .
:
MEETING OF Southern Local
: School District OAPSE 1 7:30 p.m.
• Wedneaday at high school..
•t
PAST COMMANDERS and
·~ Trustees of Drew Webster Post 39,
,. American Legion, meeti!ll! Wed:; n~y nigbt with dinner to be_ ser:. ved at 7 ,followed by busmess
"' session.
WEDNESDAY
Community
Assn. meeting_8 p.m. this evening in
:' community building; public invited.
:··
TIIURSDAY
:
MEIGS LOCAL Band students in·
eluding flags, rifles and majorettes ·
. ~: report to high school ban!! room at 6
~- p.m. Thursday. Band camp a'nd fair .
• informatlontobedlstributed; baiUIL
.,
"" ce for band camp may be paid at' this
: 1 time.
•
FRIDAY
~.
ALL SOUTHERN High School
, girls, ninth through twelfth grades,
1.; interested in volleyball thY! fall
: · please attend meeting at 6 p.m.
,: Friday in high sChool cafeteria.

99

••

:

oz. Campbells
4 Roll Pack Waldorf '

•; A birthday swinuning party wsa
;: held honoring Amber Dinielle
Colmer at the home of her grand: • parents, Barbara and Jerry Colmer.
•: Amber's parents, Shari Colmer and
~ Mike Hindy hosted the party. ·
:, Games were played with prizes
' t ging to Ricky Farley, Shawn Whitte(: kind, Melissa Dailey, Jimmy
Pullins, Tracy Collins. Trina
,·: Bachtel won the door pr~e .
~'- A giant chocolate chip cookie in
•i the shape of a cookie monster was
~l served along with cake, chips, and
: Kool-Ald, All of the children were
~: given party favors. For htir birth~: day, Amber's parents presen~ed her
with an electric motorcycle.
, • Others attending were April and
:: Kari Miiler, Melinda Dailey, Sarah
··. ; Pullins, Candy Bachtel, Cindy
~: Mayle and daughter, Kiniberlee,
:. nancy Whittekind and Daniel, Shanr~ non Hindy, Tammy Johnson, Paulet: te Farley, Billy and Tinuny Colmer,
· Patricia Hindy, paternal grand:; mother, and Mamie .Stephenson,
~ maternal great-grandmother.
- :· '--··-·- . . . .
·--- .

Rump Roast ......... ~ ..
BUCKET
$
Cube Steak. ...........~..

29

t:

PQJAJQ_ES .........':I.~~. 11.89
New

$

f:

HAM SALAD••••••••••••••••••••~~;. $1.19

~ARGARINE 2/97~

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USDA CHOICE BONELESS

BOILED HAM •••••••••••••••••• ~~~. $2.69

3 lb. Bag Lodi

$ .·gg
Roast ........ ~;~. ·

.•

,.1:·

$ 29

Loin •••••••••••••••••

E
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Superior and Danzi9,

10 lb. o::un•rn

PKG•

c

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:f•• Swimming party

t lb. Teen Queen

120Z.

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Homemade

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Prices Effective thru Saturday, Aug. 2nd

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Phone 742-2100

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DEPARTMENT
STORE

_w·-teners
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RUTLAND

I

'·FRENCH CITY .

,••

••

12 oz. Post

A Blr1hdc:n1 rt*eoge 1o
'rcurid.

lli~MIIO,.........

.

1\eslei"SOn

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·. s~ndwich Spread~
......
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Today's Sermonette
July is almost over. The month we
can most surely celebrate our love
for country and our patriotism. A
time to take pride in those who have
gone before us. In the late 1700s men
and women were bully forqling our
republic and many giving up home,
property, wealth and even their
· ·- -li~es . They·wallted something better
for themselves and their families. A
land where one would be able to
work and live in freedom. They all
felt a sense of responsibility to
family and future generations. For
ove.r 300 years men and women have
struggled and worked and. fought
and suffered and died so that future
generations could have a land of
freedom in which to build homes and
raise families. Most of these people
prayed to God that their labor,
wealth and lives would not be
wasted, To a great extent this has
been true. The Bible truth of man
working and dying for the bet·
terment of neighbor dare not ever be
overlooked. The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of
the United States are docwnents
founded on needS and responsibilities of fbmily and fellowman
who would be comfug after.
Today. many Americans have per·
verted the thoughts and ideas of
those millions who have gone before
us into selfish, greedy, unamerican
"Rights." ·Over the .200 years of the
United States of America as a

African VIolets: Mrs. Erlewine,
all four places.
In the junior division, the winners
in dish gardens were Chuck Simpkins blue; Candi Eskew, red; J:ay
Car~nter, yellow; and M~ie 1
Snowden, white. In field or roadside
materials Candi Eskew won all four
'
.
places.
Committees for the show included
. Mrs. Snowden, ways and means;
Mrs. Marcia Denison, Mrs.
Margaret Parsons, registration ;
Mrs. ·Ethel CIJapman, Mrs. Judy
Titus, Mrs. Everett Colwell, Mrs. C.
E:· Bishop, and Mrs. Lawrence
Milhoan, hospitality; Mrs. Turner,
Mrs. Diehl and Mrs. Nicholson,
ptibliclty; Mrs, Dorothy ~oodard,
Mrs. Margaret B. Weber, Mrs.
Pauline Atkins, Mrs. Erlewine
assisted by Mrs. Kate Jarrell,
·
judge's clerks.
Eva Robson and Ann Webster had
charge of the horticulture division,
Mrs. Erlewine1and Mrs. Canaday,
the staging, and Mrs. Euuna Ledlie,
Mrs. Roberta Wilson, and Mrs.
Edith Williamson, placement.

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NESTEA

Instant ea............. .. ..· ••IT£ ....
KRAFT
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$
09
Barbeque Sauce.:. . . ·tee Cream..•.~ .....~..
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COUPON

L_ C::OUPI ' " J

. MAXWELL HOUSE

COUNTRY nME

INSTANT COFFEE

· .~~ ·:.10 · :u~
~ (d.
1

$399· ' ·, ..:''
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BOLD
EWT

I"''PP

840l

.

L.'i m it 1 Per Customer

$259

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
2, 1980

Go~fl Only At Pow ell's

Offer Expires Aug. 2, 1980

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8- Tho: Daily Sentinel,

Pauline Atkins ta~es top awards in
'Summer Weather' flower show recen!ly

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RUTLAND - Mrs. Pauline Atkins
took both the " ~t of show" and the
"reserve best of show" in artistic
arrangements at the ·:summer
Weather" flower show of the
Rulliu\d Garden Club staged recently at the Rutland United Methodist
Church.
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis was
general chairman for the sliow
which featured several special
displays of native wild flowers, garden leaflets from the Meigs ExtensioQ office, and books and
ma)!azines from members of the
clitb along with two handbooks supplied by Mrs. Anna Turner and Mrs.
Reva Snowden.
Mrs. Susie Carpenter, an accredited judge of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs, judged
the show awarding ribbons in four
place~ .

WINNER~

Mrs. Pauline Atkins won both the "Best of Show" and
the "Reserve Best of Show" in the Rutland Garden Club's show, "Swnmer Weather! '

•

Area goings on noted
I

VARIAN LOSES
MOST WEIGHT
Barbara Varian recorded the most
lost weight at the Monday night ·
meeting of the Mason Slinderella
Diet Class, with June Pickens as
runner-up. At the Tuesday morning
Mason class three new members
were ~!corned and Connie Thompson was recognized for having lost
the most weight.
Cathy Spencer and Ruth Smith
were the best losers at the Middleport Class, wlu'le at Chester
Joyce Ritchie lost the most weight,
and Melissa Barker and Virgene
Elberfeld were nmners-up. ln·
fonnation on classes may he olr
tained from JoAnn Newsome.
BIBLE SCHOOL BEGINS
· Daily Vacation Bible School at the

Bradford Church of Christ will begin
Monday and .continue through Aug.
8, 9 a.m . . to 11:30 a.m. each day.
" Jesus, I Beleve in You" will he the
theme with classes for all children.

In the artistic arrangements
classes, the winners, wereu:
" 100 in the Shade,'' featuring hot
colors, Mrs. Pearle Canaday, blue;
Mrs. Eva Robson, red ; Mrs. Pauline
Atkins, yellow; and Mrs. Margaret
Ella Lewis, white .

" Hail Storm," interpretive
Robin Harder, and·the white to Jeff
design : Mrs, Anna Turner, blue;
Birchfield.
Mrs, Binda Diehl, red; Mrs.
HORTI&lt;;UL11JRE
Canaday, yellow and Mrs. Robson,
First, second, third, and fourth
white. •
place winners in the horticulture
"Windy arid Cooler," showing
division, listed respectively, were:
motion: Mrs. Robson, blue; Mrs.
Hybrid roses: Mrs, Robson, Mrs.
Diehl , red; Mrs, Pauline Atkins,
Lewis, Mrs. Marie Bishop, and Mrs.
yellow; and Mrs. Snowden, white.
Robson.
"Sunny .Pays," including some
Roses other than hybrid tea: Mrs.
garden produce : Mrs. Atkins, blue;
Snowden, yellow (no other ribbons
Mrs. Turner, red; Mrs. Diehl,
awarded).
•
yellow, and Mrs. Robson, white.
· Gladiolus: Mrs. Snowden, Mrs.
"Thimder Storm," water showing
Bishop, red and yellow, and Mrs . ..
as a part of the design : Mrs. AtkinS,
Robson.
blue; Mrs. Robson, red; Mts. TurZinnia: Mrs. Snowden, Mrs. Rotr
per, yellow, and Mrs. Neva
son, Mrs. Bishop, Mrs. Snowden.
Nichoison, white.
·
Marigolds: Mrs. ' Bishop, Mrs.
"Lightning Strikes," including
Robson, Mrs. Bishop, Mrs. Snowden.
wealher wood: Mrs. Robson, blue;
Dahlias: Mrs. Snowden, red; Mrs.
Mrs. Nicholson, red ; Mrs. Pauline
Erlewine, yellow and white.
Atkins, yellow, and Mrs. Canaday,
Foliage plants: Mrs. Diehl, Mrs.
white.
Nicholson, Mrs. Snowden and Mrs.
"Cloudy Skies," tall line: Mrs.
Turner.
Atkins, Mrs. Nicholson, Mrs. TurBlooming flowers : Mrs. Turner,
ner, and Mrs. Snowden.
M:rs. Snowden, Mrs. Robson, Mrs.
In the junior division, "Long
Bishop.
Evenings," a favorite design, the
Cactus: Mrs. 'Snowden, Mrs.
blue ribbon went to Amy Eskew, the ... Nicholson, Mrs. Snowden, Mrs. Rotr
red ' to Beth Eskew, the yellow to · son.

Polly's Pointers ·

Bugs, Bugs everywhere

By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - To rid your
Special correspondent
home of silverfil\h line shelves,
GUEST SPEAKER SUNDAY
DEAR POI,LY - I do hope you
dresser drawers, etc. with
Joe Robinson, fonner minister at
can help me as I am desperate.
newspaper. The little varmints seem
the Bradford Church of Christ, will
Silverfish used to be just in my
to hate printer's ink. I started doing
be guest stieaker at the Sunday morbasement but now I see them up- · this 20 years ago and have not seen
ning worship service ·at the church
stairs and have used borax but it
one since.- I;tUBY
on Aug. 10, 10:30 a.m. Mr. Robinson
does not seem to help. - MARDEAR POLLY .- Before discaris' now a· teacher at the College of
JORIE
ding an old pin cushion open it up
Scripture in Louisville, Ky.
and you might discover a treasure rl.
DEAR MARgood needles that have worked their
MEETING POSTPONED .
JORIE
(arrd
way inside and .out of sight. After
A meeting of the Meigs County
JOANNA who has
years of accusing my family of
Salon 710, Eight and Forty,
the
same
losing all my good needles I opened
scheduled for Monday evening has
problem) - Some
an old one before throwing it away
been· postponed until AUg: 18. The ' authorities re~o­
·and was amazed to discover about 80
place will he announced later. Inmmend that fresh
perfectly good needles.- MARY
stallation of new officers will be held pyrethrwn powdDEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is
at that mee~g.
er be dusted
with the style of so many pop cans on
around . the in·
I
today's market. No matter how
festect places.
careful one is the pop stlll splatters
all over when a can is opened. What
This has to be repeated often and a sticky me!lS it is.
·
works best as a follow-up for a good
I save all bits and pieces of soap
insect spray. Perhaps the next two until I have a cupful. Then I grate
nation, we have had citizens who felt
Pointers from readers will also help. them on my hand-held cheese grater
the need to care for their fellow
1
POLLY
and mix the soap bits with just
citizens. Today it has sunk into the ·
DEAR POLLY - To get rid of enough warm water so I can form a
depths of selfish greed and to "The
silverfish I mix equal parts of boric ball. Let it dry and have a nice round
Government Owes Me,'' or "I Have
acid and sugar and sprinkle in the ball of soap that floats. A child can
Rights" and other garbage such as
cracks and crevices or wherever the do it and it is so economical. -SAN·
this. No True American can be so
silverfish
are, I also find this is good DY
selfish as not to consider the rights
•
for roaches.
Polly will send you one of her
only of others and in one's self, only
Try using rubbing alcohol orr signed thank-you newSpaper coupon
"My" responsibilities. ·
clothes that have ballpoint ink clippers if she uses your favorite
In July, the Patriotic Month, or at
least the time we should deeply con- · stains. Use full strength and then Pointer, Pe,ve, or Problem in her
rub with a clean clotjl before column. Write POLLY'S POINsider our Herita'ge, we need to turn
washing as usual.- FRANCES
TERS in care of this newspaper.
our thoughts and· energies to our
great REPUBLIC and the 200 years
of consideration in the hearts of
Americans of "I have my duty, my
country, my God and my responDAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Stripping a lot of gall,'' she said. "But I
sibilities. Never dare we only think
off one's T-shirt in a crowded shop- thought ' why not?"'
of self. Never dare we overlook the
ping .area. to show off a suntan or·
Bible truth that made America
dinarily
would be grounds for arrest.
great. The Truth God would have us
But
things
were different Saturday
love and learn is, "My Neighbor ·
at
the
Dayton
Mall.
comes before me." I know ·of no
About
1,000
whistling, hooting,
American who dare say "I have
gasping
spectators
gathered at the
rights. '' Never does ''An American''
mall
to
watch
45
men
and wo'Ven
have ·rights. An Amedcan only has
bare
their
bodies
for
a
chance at
responsibilities. These respon$1,000
in,
prizes,
sibilities are God, Country, NeighThe occasion was a "Show Us
bors and Family. Always Americans
Your
Tan" contest sponsored by
must first, last and always consider
WDJX
radio in Xenia.
their responsibilities. I Love
They gathered to watch the conAmerica and want her to remain a
testants
show the contrast between
nation to have pride in, where we
parts
of
their
bodies exposed to the
serve only others and not self. sun
and
areas
which usually would
Rev . William Middleswarth,
be
covered.
Lutheran Churc~. Meigs County.
Station general manager Geoff
Vargo said aoout 150 people applied
to take part in the ' contest and the
station accepted 55 entrants, some of
whom did not show up Saturday.
Twelve of tlie contestants were men.
10 a fine edge today. Find productive ouUela t&lt;l
A panel of Dayton-area media ·
put the~ t&lt;l good uses.
representatives·
judged the par·
TAurus IAprllZO.Moy 101 ThingallUiy get off
to a slow !tart today, but dorll let that
ticipants
on
the
basis
of front, back
discourage you. You can accompllshlall Y9U hope

Sun worshippers show off. .

ASTROGRAPH -Thonday, July 11

Things shouJd work out a lot smoother for yOu
thl.s coming ye~:~r than you iniUal!y Delieve they
will. In fact , you wiU have opportWtitles lo
develop some new areas because Of how easily
you for ge ahead.
LEO ~Jaly ZS.Aug. !%) A situation may pop up

today sbnilar to one where you made a ml!lllke
in the past. .OOO't let it disturb yw, however,
becawe you won't repeat old errors. Find out
more of whitt lies ahead for you in the year
f~Uowtng your birthday by sending for your copy
of NltroGraph. Mail $1 for each to Astra-Graph.
Box 489, Rsdio City Station, N. Y. 10019. Be sure
to speci.fy birth date.
VIRGO (Aug. !J.Sept. %2) Today may be

rather unique In that friends could both make
- and cost you money. Fortunately, the good
should far outweig h the bad.
LIBRA ISept. %).()ct. %3) Don't act lmpulslvely
upon your first Ideas today . They cou~ ge t you
off ta a false start Once you review matters,
you'll ct1me up with the rights~wer.
SCORPIO (Oct. H-Nov. 22) Be a doer today
and not jU5t a thinker. Onceyouget"upa full head
of steam, the correct way to accomplish your
piU1)0i5e wijl W1fold.
·
SAGMTARlUS !Nov. !3-Dec. 211 Some deeprooted fears about dealing with people may s ur·
face today , but they should disappear the minute
. you. bear all the nice compliments others pay

you.

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CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-JII.IL ltl You may be
plea.Yntly perturbed at youfself wMn you find
out UlOSe you thought were belng uncooperative
areactuaUy giving yOu more than you hoped for.
AQUARIUS (Jao. !0-Feb. 19) Once you get
past the early tension caused by your negative
thinkin ~. it will be :-~mooth sai\in~;: fur yuu the rest
ur the dliy .
PISCES ~Feb. ZO.Marclt 20) Thl: bt!st. Wily to
I!C l over amy' WlpleiiSant though~ ptaguinl! )'()U
toW!y is t() bury yourself In your wurk . The
salisfucllon you'll rctdve will make you smile
again.
• ARIF.S I·M11rllh 21·AP.ril 19) Vour l ea d ~ rshjp
qualitie.!l ami ort~anlliU!Uonal abifi·.;t!li &lt;If&lt;' lltXIt!d

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to, if you keep plodding along.

GEMINI IMI)' JI-Jue Zll) Thil is a good day

to launch new projects or enterpriaes, even
though you are afraid tci take the gamble. If you
don'tbegln now, you may suffer further delays.
CANCER (Juae 21·Jily !2)· Things relating to
your mkterlal security ha've more pouibUitles
than you msy realize. Don't let llmJ.ted or
unimagina tive thlnklng deter you.

FORMED AT AMSTERDAM
The World Council of Churches,
embracing churches from every
part of the world., was fo~ed ~t
, Amsterdam in 1948. By .&amp;he ttme tt
held its second-world assembly in
1954 it represented 163 churches
,fro~ 48 countries. The council has
no power over the churches but is a
means of initiating common
discussion an~ action. .
REFRIGERA~R COOKIES

For perfectly shaped refrigerator .
cookies, pack the .dough in greased ·
juice tins. When chilled, remove the
bottom of the tin and use to push out •
thedou~h.

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Store Hours:
Mo11.-Sat 8 am-10 pm ·

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Sunday 10 am-10 pm

--298 SECOND ST.
I

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POMEROY, 0.
SPEAKER - Benny H1mt will
he speaker Saturday evening for
the Je~~us In '80 program al Vill·ceot. Tbe program begins today
aDd exteods through Aug. 2 with
teachers and singers on hand
from 9 a.m. each morning until
about 10 p.m. each night. Others
attending will he the Latinos, Joe
"'· Beasley, Lenny Anderson, Ken
Gaub and Etemlty Express,
I,
Brian Rudd, George .Baker, Ron
DePriest, Capt. Hoole, .jJlm
Hodes, Higher Grouod, Taml
Chere, Jesse DuPlanlis,
Dogwood, Daniel Rlspress, Teen
Challenge and Tbe Dalleys. For
mote lnformatiou call or write
Faith Fellowship of Ohio, Jesus
In '80, Route 1, Box 131A1 Uttle
Ohio 45742; phones, 98~
c Hocking,
2024 or 678-8088. The meetings are
•• ootdoors and those attending "ire
•• to take lawn chairs or blankets lo
•• sit on.

PRICES EFFECTIVE lltRU SATURDAY, AUG. 2, 1980

HOMEMADE
..
.

ESTABLISHED 1N 1864
The International Red Cross was
established at Geneva in 11164. The
association owes its inception to the
Swiss banker Jean Henri Dunant,
who was so moved by the suffering
at the Battle of Solferino in 1859 tl)at
he urged the formation of voluntary
aid societies to help the wounded of
war. The Red Cross since has expanded throughout the world· to aid ·
the afflicted in peace as well as in
war.

and ''contrast'' views.

The winner, Clarice Colombo, 23,
of New Carlisle, already had left for
her job as a nurse .at the Dayton
Children's Medical Center when she
was announced as the victor. ·
'one of the older coQtestants, 3~
year-old Betty Enl.x of Englewood, a
secretary, said she Wfll! nervous
while waiting for her turn. "It takes

1726 LATROBE STRE.E T
Pafkersburg, w. va. 2601
TELEPHONE 485·5484
.
TRY US!
We're new in the Middleport·
Pomeory area . We specialize in
Quality Dry Cleaning, Laundry,
carpet &amp; Furniture Clean!ng,
Wedding Gown Preservation,
Suede Cleaning, Draperies, and

Shirts.

Bring your cleaning needs to

Carousel Confections, 317 N. Se-

ABSORBS ODORS
Eggs absorb odors easily beCause ·
of the .porous nature of their shells.
They should be stored away from
strongly-flavored foods ,

cond· Ave., Middleport.
Shecule your carpet &amp; furniture

cleaning there also, or call A,rea
Code 304· 48H48S. for more In·
formation on our Steamway
Cleaning Process.
"We're No.1 in
&amp;Qua

wear.,_.

Spoldolldonlloon help you puttholopoolal
oooaslon Into a memorobl•
that can
bewom all yearlong. Thllr~~arwover'•Oifvl•

rneuag•

trom which to chooM, lor'hlm and lorh1r.

e?Z~
'

•

c-:

••
•••
~

LB.

•

.,• .
~ '

USDA BONEliSS BOITOM

:_•

Round

ol •

••

~

.,,'
~

Amber Colmer

I•

•••

::,. honors child

Eckricn 1 lb . Packaged

WJENERS••••••·••••••••••••••••••~~~. $1.59

Oniq Colby

$} 98

Longhorn

CHEESE •• ~!.·.. •

~~

B

NEW APPLES .........~~. 97'
RED

PLUMS ........~~:

New

79'
,

CABBAGE....... 2 lb. For 49'

CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP. ....... 3/8!r~~
.

TOILET TISSUE•••••••••••••••••• :.~~·. 9!r
SUGAR CRISP- CEREAL ••••••~::. $1.09
.

14 oz.

!

•

29

Watermelons.. ~£ ~.

1:

AJAX POWDERED CWNSER•••••• ~a.n.2/7!r
Batli Size Safeguard

TOILET SOAP.;••••••••••••••••••••.2/8!r
12 oz. canned LunchMeat

ARMOUR TREET. ...............~::.'1.49
10 oz. Vienna

PORK·
BARBECUE.~ •••••••••••~:~. '1.29
1s oz. Arm-our

CoRNED
BEEF HASH •••••• ~ •••••~~~ 9!r
21 oz. Thank You
PEACH .PIE FILLING .•••• ~ •••••• :f::.8!r

-----,1
'•
'~:.-_ ,•

GRADE A MEDIUM

Eggs ••••••••••••••••••••••
QOZ.

t.

.

'

.

KRAFT MIRACLE .

.

Social Calendar

WEDNESDAY .
:
MEETING OF Southern Local
: School District OAPSE 1 7:30 p.m.
• Wedneaday at high school..
•t
PAST COMMANDERS and
·~ Trustees of Drew Webster Post 39,
,. American Legion, meeti!ll! Wed:; n~y nigbt with dinner to be_ ser:. ved at 7 ,followed by busmess
"' session.
WEDNESDAY
Community
Assn. meeting_8 p.m. this evening in
:' community building; public invited.
:··
TIIURSDAY
:
MEIGS LOCAL Band students in·
eluding flags, rifles and majorettes ·
. ~: report to high school ban!! room at 6
~- p.m. Thursday. Band camp a'nd fair .
• informatlontobedlstributed; baiUIL
.,
"" ce for band camp may be paid at' this
: 1 time.
•
FRIDAY
~.
ALL SOUTHERN High School
, girls, ninth through twelfth grades,
1.; interested in volleyball thY! fall
: · please attend meeting at 6 p.m.
,: Friday in high sChool cafeteria.

99

••

:

oz. Campbells
4 Roll Pack Waldorf '

•; A birthday swinuning party wsa
;: held honoring Amber Dinielle
Colmer at the home of her grand: • parents, Barbara and Jerry Colmer.
•: Amber's parents, Shari Colmer and
~ Mike Hindy hosted the party. ·
:, Games were played with prizes
' t ging to Ricky Farley, Shawn Whitte(: kind, Melissa Dailey, Jimmy
Pullins, Tracy Collins. Trina
,·: Bachtel won the door pr~e .
~'- A giant chocolate chip cookie in
•i the shape of a cookie monster was
~l served along with cake, chips, and
: Kool-Ald, All of the children were
~: given party favors. For htir birth~: day, Amber's parents presen~ed her
with an electric motorcycle.
, • Others attending were April and
:: Kari Miiler, Melinda Dailey, Sarah
··. ; Pullins, Candy Bachtel, Cindy
~: Mayle and daughter, Kiniberlee,
:. nancy Whittekind and Daniel, Shanr~ non Hindy, Tammy Johnson, Paulet: te Farley, Billy and Tinuny Colmer,
· Patricia Hindy, paternal grand:; mother, and Mamie .Stephenson,
~ maternal great-grandmother.
- :· '--··-·- . . . .
·--- .

Rump Roast ......... ~ ..
BUCKET
$
Cube Steak. ...........~..

29

t:

PQJAJQ_ES .........':I.~~. 11.89
New

$

f:

HAM SALAD••••••••••••••••••••~~;. $1.19

~ARGARINE 2/97~

·.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

BOILED HAM •••••••••••••••••• ~~~. $2.69

3 lb. Bag Lodi

$ .·gg
Roast ........ ~;~. ·

.•

,.1:·

$ 29

Loin •••••••••••••••••

E
.. .•.

Superior and Danzi9,

10 lb. o::un•rn

PKG•

c

'·.

:f•• Swimming party

t lb. Teen Queen

120Z.

'

"

•
'•

Homemade

.

... ~

I,

Prices Effective thru Saturday, Aug. 2nd

·

-,,•

•
•

Phone 742-2100

..

E

I:

DEPARTMENT
STORE

_w·-teners
.. ...................7

.:

p

,.

RUTLAND

I

'·FRENCH CITY .

,••

••

12 oz. Post

A Blr1hdc:n1 rt*eoge 1o
'rcurid.

lli~MIIO,.........

.

1\eslei"SOn

.

·. s~ndwich Spread~
......
!!·.
,.

.....

Today's Sermonette
July is almost over. The month we
can most surely celebrate our love
for country and our patriotism. A
time to take pride in those who have
gone before us. In the late 1700s men
and women were bully forqling our
republic and many giving up home,
property, wealth and even their
· ·- -li~es . They·wallted something better
for themselves and their families. A
land where one would be able to
work and live in freedom. They all
felt a sense of responsibility to
family and future generations. For
ove.r 300 years men and women have
struggled and worked and. fought
and suffered and died so that future
generations could have a land of
freedom in which to build homes and
raise families. Most of these people
prayed to God that their labor,
wealth and lives would not be
wasted, To a great extent this has
been true. The Bible truth of man
working and dying for the bet·
terment of neighbor dare not ever be
overlooked. The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of
the United States are docwnents
founded on needS and responsibilities of fbmily and fellowman
who would be comfug after.
Today. many Americans have per·
verted the thoughts and ideas of
those millions who have gone before
us into selfish, greedy, unamerican
"Rights." ·Over the .200 years of the
United States of America as a

African VIolets: Mrs. Erlewine,
all four places.
In the junior division, the winners
in dish gardens were Chuck Simpkins blue; Candi Eskew, red; J:ay
Car~nter, yellow; and M~ie 1
Snowden, white. In field or roadside
materials Candi Eskew won all four
'
.
places.
Committees for the show included
. Mrs. Snowden, ways and means;
Mrs. Marcia Denison, Mrs.
Margaret Parsons, registration ;
Mrs. ·Ethel CIJapman, Mrs. Judy
Titus, Mrs. Everett Colwell, Mrs. C.
E:· Bishop, and Mrs. Lawrence
Milhoan, hospitality; Mrs. Turner,
Mrs. Diehl and Mrs. Nicholson,
ptibliclty; Mrs, Dorothy ~oodard,
Mrs. Margaret B. Weber, Mrs.
Pauline Atkins, Mrs. Erlewine
assisted by Mrs. Kate Jarrell,
·
judge's clerks.
Eva Robson and Ann Webster had
charge of the horticulture division,
Mrs. Erlewine1and Mrs. Canaday,
the staging, and Mrs. Euuna Ledlie,
Mrs. Roberta Wilson, and Mrs.
Edith Williamson, placement.

.

NESTEA

Instant ea............. .. ..· ••IT£ ....
KRAFT
.
. ..
;&gt;\) , •. .
.·
..
$
09
Barbeque Sauce.:. . . ·tee Cream..•.~ .....~..
'.

:&lt;; · · ·

. · ·

'

COUPON

L_ C::OUPI ' " J

. MAXWELL HOUSE

COUNTRY nME

INSTANT COFFEE

· .~~ ·:.10 · :u~
~ (d.
1

$399· ' ·, ..:''
.

BOLD
EWT

I"''PP

840l

.

L.'i m it 1 Per Customer

$259

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
2, 1980

Go~fl Only At Pow ell's

Offer Expires Aug. 2, 1980

J

'

'

'

�•

.u-

.

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesrlay, July 30, 1980

U. S. Steel earnings dip
· PITTSBURGH (AP) - U.S. Steel
Corp., the nation's largest steel
maker, says the sagging economy
pulled its second-quarter earnings
down nearly 26 percent over the
same period in 1979.
The dip in profits follows similar
announcements by other producers,
including National Steel, Inland
Steel, Republic Steel and WheelingPittsburgh Steel. All blamed the
economic slowdown.
U.S. Steel said Tuesday it earned
$lll.5 mlllion, or $1.Z8 a share, on
sales of $3.1 billion in the latest quarter versus income of $150.4 million,
or . $1.75 a share, on sales of $3.6
billion last year.
"All industry segments reported
second quarter operating profits
despite most businesses being ad·
versely affected by lower volumes,"
said Chainnan David Roderick.
Roderick said steel shipments for
the half were down by 24 percent
compared to 1979. "Without the substantial improvements realized

'

I

from programs initialed last year, 1979.
steel manufacturing would have
Steel product shipments for the ·
been unprofitable," he said.
second quarter were 4.2 million ions,
Roderick was referring to U.S. compared to six million tons last
·Steel's massive retrenchment which year. For the half, shipments totaled
closed more !,han a dozen facilities 9.1 niillion tons versus 11 .5 million
with a loss of about 13,00o jobs late 1 tons in !979.
last year.
Roderick said steel order volume
"During l!le second quarter, both at the end of the second quarter was
our steel and nonsteel businesses almgst 50 per~ent below the peak
reacted quickly to the economic reached in early March.
downturn through downdrafting
"This low level of order volume
operations and tighter cost con- ·will adversely impact steel shiptrols," Roderick said, noting that ments and related profits in the third
about . 25,000 employees. in steel qliarter. In addition, the deepening
opera tions were on layoff at the end
recession will hurt most of our nonof June and about 3,500 salaried steel business," Roderick said.
workers were on short work weeks. •
"Despite the recession and the imFirst half income amounted to pact it is having on our businesses,
$237.5 million on $6.3 billion of sales we expect 1980 to be the foundation
versus $287.7 million of income on for future progress," he said.
$6.7 billion of sales for the same 1979 . "First half results would not ha~e
period.
been possible without productivity
Results for the first six months
Improvements - .especially in steel.
were increased by $100.3 million tc
We are confident that when the
reflect changes in accounting prineconomy turns upward, the benefits
ciples made in the fourth quarter of
from past actions ·will become incr~asingly apparent," he said.

1983.
W.S. White Jr., board chairman
and chief executive officer for AEP,
said Tuesday that the structure will
be located in downtown Columbus
near the Scioto River. He announced
!be bullding project at a news conference with Gov. Jall)es A. Rhodes
and Colwnbus Mayor Tom Moody.
The company, which recently

acquired Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co., is moving its main offices to Ohio from New York City.
Ground is to be broken ·next spring
on a 5.3-acre. site, White said. The
structure initially will house 800 to
900 AEP wo~kers, he said.
Until then, employees temporarily
will be housed in the Borden
Bullding in downtown Columbus.
Although construction costs have
not yet been determined, the com-·
pany plans ·to ask for competitive
bids, White said. The land was

•

.

1980
975
2,061
750

Bedford
Chestet
Columbia
Lebanon
Letart
Olive
Orange
Rutland Twp.
RutlandVU.

823

779
1,658
858

2,395
612
957
7,986
2,930
2,683
1,021
3,029 '
679

.Salem

Middleport
P&lt;Kneroy
Scipio
Sutton
Racine
. Syracuse

Four deficits
reported COJ.:rected
COLUMBUS; Ohio (AP) ---' State
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson sa)IS
the Stark County city of LouiSville
ended last year with deficits totaling
$228,848 in six funds ,
City Finance Director Joseph T.
Picher! Jr. 8aid four of·the deficits
have been corrected and the other
two will be eliminated this'month.
The deficits ranged from
$1 2ll,~. 75 in the income tax fund to
$1,667.87 in a sahitary sewer fund. ·
Oilier deficits were in the street
vehicle ~?x, revenue sharing, and
commumty development block
grant funtls.

u Wednesday July30 1non .
. ' .,
'
' """

HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) - A
Butler County judge has barred
three men from using their former
employer's trade secrets in competitive bidding.
Saying honest dealing is "the very
life and spirit of the commercial
world," Common Pleas Judge John
Moser granted a preliminary injunction Tuesday restricting three
former employees of Komylak Corp.
from marketing a vertical conveyor
system.
His ruling stems from a $3 million

acquired from Nationwide Developmemt Co. for $4 million, he said.
At first, AEP employees will occupy only half the bullding, with the
rest rented out, White said, But
because the company "is growing
and 'dynamic," the entire structure
eventually may be occupied only by
AEP workers, he said.
Rhodes praised the company for
its decision to move intc Ohio,
saying it would boost the state's and
city's sagging economies.
"If you are going to whip

Depression, you have tc start with
construction, •' he said.
In response to other questions at
the news conference, Rhodes said 'he
and Gov. Jim Thompson of Illinois
plan tc promote an economic
program for the Great Lakes states
during the National Governors Conference in Denver next week.
The program involves accelerated
depreciation and other tax breaks to
assist industries which are locating
or expanding to provide jobs in inner
cities.

Amoco continues to be the
heaviest contributor, paying an
&amp;ssessment of $123 million this month compared to $94.2 million last
month.
Marathon Oil Co. was assessed
$7.2 million last month and $11.2
million this month.
The entitlements program was
established by DOE to equ~lize
crude oil costs between refiners who
have access tc price-&lt;:ont~olled
domestic oil and those dependent on
higher-priced imported oil.
Alaskan North Slope oil was included in the same category with imported oil to encourage development '
of new. wells and to compensate lor
transportation costs.
_
DOE said distortions in the
program caused by a surge in imported oil prices last year gave North Slope oil users a $7.50 a barrel cost
advantage over other refiners.

914

583
684

~ ~ ~~ "'

TE'LEVISION·
VIEWING

byHenriArnoldandBobLoe

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

one lener to eaCh square. to form
four ordinary words.

JULY3o, 1tSo

'
EVENING

·I I I

8:oo

FIDUL

I I I

CAPTAIN EASY
OtcA'M?O l'M t&gt;JO

Sm~ 50R~ l MADE

'

WHAI50Me

\ -'T"II\'!"""7 ' 1, KIJEW
DfREK WOU LD
FILM US At.ID
P&amp;DPl-S: •HIS TI D·
&amp;IT TO THE ME DIA-

6!NTLEMAt&gt;J ~ l'M

A PIJ&amp;LIC SPECTACLE
OF 115 Ot&gt;J TV ~

Fl6l,J~E5 A~E.

tYAHNTSI

) KJ

ACTUAI-I-'&gt;' I T~
PRICEl-ESS

Percentage
1970
750
1,573
619
782
854
1,405
707
1,874
683
696
7,303
2,784
2,672
641
2,595

.

fi'fl~rul fii}'ft ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

APLLE

PUISLICITY! n -,.=1

Answerhere: " [

30.0
31.0
21.2
5.2
-ll.3
18.0
21.4
27.8
-7.7
37.5
8.3
5.2
.4
59.3
16.7
16.5
33.6

0

Now arrange .the circled leners to

form the ~urprise answer, as sug·

geated by the ._bOVe cartoon.

liXl]-( l XlJ"
(Answers lomorrow)

Vesterday.·s

I

Jumbles: IGLOO BIRCH NUANCE GROTTO
Answer She said she would marry a millionaire or
nothing-and this Is what .she gotA BIG "NOTH ING"

'''

BORN LOSER

Pa: ~'&lt;oo! IJO Ol.l~
I~

I-ll? RICMT MIIJD
IAO.LD CJ:Wa 10 li-IIS

BRIDGE

~'{

Oswalq Jacoby and Alan Sontag

rn
emeCI5®liDl• NfWS
(l) ROSSIIAGLEYHOUR(JOIIIED

IN PROGRESS)
I]) MOYIE -(MUSICAL) 000 "lkltPepper•a Lonel, He•rte (:lub
Band" 11177
'(I) ANDY GRIF.FITH SHOW
I]) ABC NEWS
l])(jj) ZOOM
8:30 (]) 8 (!) NBC NEWS
I]) I LOVE LUCY
I])
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
D Cil®l CBS NEWS
Cll . WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(jj) VILLA ALEGRE
il2lfll ABC NEWS
8 :88 ~ NEWS UPDATE
7 :00
G CROSS WITS
BIBLE BOWL
I]) HOGA,N'S HEROES
1Ilil2lm FACE THE MUSIC
ffi LUCYsHOW
D Cil TICTACDOUGH
Cll MACNEIL·LEHRER R_EPORT
@)NEWS
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 (]) 8 COUNTRY ROADS
CIJ AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
C1J ALLIN THE FAMILY
(j) MATCH GAME
(!) WILD KINGDOM 'Myateriee of
tho Wild'
•
D Cil JOKER'S WILD
(J) DICK CAVI!TT SHOW
@) THE JUDGE
(jj) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
IJ2lGI FAMILY FEUD
7:58 .(l) NEWS UPDATE
11:00 (])8(!) REALPEOPLETheUnk·
nown Comic Ia unmaaked, Felicia,

the toilet-trained cat returns, and
senior cltiz.ena participate in the
· Golclen Age Olympics In Florida .
(Repeat;
60
mine.)

Crafty en!d play maneuver

suit flied by Kornylak against
Homer Barger of Fairfield and Randall Smith and Verle Doty, both of
Cincinnati. The suit claimed the men
quit . Komylak and formed Alpha
Teclmical SerVices.
Kornylak alleged that the three
workers used confidential ·information that they had learned as
employees to market parts for the
conveyor system. That violated a
confidentiality agreement signed by
the men when Kornylak hired them,
the lawsuit contended.
The corporation went to court
when Alpha Technical Services
made a lower bid for a contract with
the U.S. Defense Logistics Agency.

Ford Motor
losses at
$468 million

NORTH

The pact was for replacement parts
on a vertical store conveyor system
developed and manufactured by
Kornylakand used by the U.S. Navy.
In a 16-page ruling, Moser said
"fair and unrestricted competition"
is the "very foundation of our
capitalistic society."
" However, also necessary and
basic to our capitalistic society is the
maintenance of certain commercial ·
ethics imd the encouragement of invention," he said. "The necessity of
good faith and honest and fair
dealil)g is the very life and spirit of
the .commen!ial world."
Moser. found that the three IJ\I!n
had used Kornylak's trade secrets in
bidding for the contract. Th&lt;!Sf
secrets were protected by the confidentiality agreement which the
workers had signed, he said.
•
The preliminary injunction
prevents Alpha Teclmical Services
from bidding for any contracts Jo
replace parts of conveyor systems
built by Komylak. It also forbids the
three men to use any confidential
data which they had learned at Kornylak.
In his ruling, Moser did not specify
the trade secrets.
_
"We arc not precluding (Alpha
Technical Services) from entering
into competition with KD'rnylak in
the manufacturing of vertical conveyors, only from utilizing Kornylak
trade secrets in doing so," he said.
"As to what these various and sundry other trade secrets might be,
may very well have to be, unfortunately, reserved for determination in future litigation," he
said.

'liE WEREN'T VERY

... MR. 6ANGAVEL AHD I

HOPEFUL. THANK
YOO FOR

WERE JUST TALKING,

TR'l'IN6.

AHD SUDDENLY··· IH
THE MIDDLE OF A
SENTENCE ...

MMM "' TH15
WI LL SOUND

UNFEELIH6,
MRS. FLOWER5 ...

"· BUT WITH BANGAVEL
DEAD·· WHO'S 601N6
TO IWN THE COMPANY?

•u

tAQJ93

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

AU.EYOOP

North

East

PU8

4t

Pasa

Opening lead:+ J

By Olwlld Jacoby
ud Alu Soata1

Pessimist Pete studied the
dummy for a while and noted
that if everything went wrong,
be could lose two hearts, one
diamond, one club, and be
down one. On the other ftand,

if WI!!! held the ace of hearts,
king of diamonds and queen of
clubs there would be just two
losers.
Then Pete worked Olit a
way to make his game with
ev~rything wro"g. He started
br playing dummy's queen of
dtamonli'l. East produced the
king and Pete started' pre&gt;ceedings by. holding up the
ace.

This bold-up was CSilCntial
to Pete's plan to handle the
bad things he e:rpected. Pete
wanted to develop an end play
against East and be had to
keep West out of the lead.
East led a second diamond.
Pete took his ace, ruffed the
last diamond and drew
trumps, Then the · end play
was ready.
He led his deuce of hearts
and played dummy's I 0 after
West flayed low. Then Pete
sprea his hand and claimed
all tricks but one.
It didn't matter what East
did or where the East-West
cards were. If East Ielr'tlie· ;-..··
ace of hearts .it would set up
dummy's king for a . club
discard. If be led a club, it
would tate the club finesse
for South. If be led a diamond,
South would ruff in dummy
and discard bls last heart.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

GASOUNE: AILEY

It would be

You don't

eas"' to check
with the bank!

wamic&gt;
keep

· You'd sleep

'

bet-ter. Joel!

~~a1M1Haf

the

WINNIE
WHATTAYA GONNA
PO WHEN YOU GE1

..

.
•

OUT OF HERE, VIXEN?
WORK IN A

roN'T
)()(J WeRRY
AI30UT~

I HAVEN 'T WASTEI7
MY TIME tiERE LIKE
THE REST OF YOU f

rvE BEEN
MAKING PLAN S...

816 PLANS ! ANI7
71fl5 TIME (JHfY'Rf
GOING TO WORK!

TRIXIE .

LA/JNPRY? HA!

.•

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 t.va source
1 Gorge
31 Tacky
5 stage acenery to Tatum '1 dad
It Old oath
DOWN
n Signore!
1 Bear anns
1% Ubertlne
2 Moreover
13 Brought out 3 Go on the
14 "Lawagon
En Rose"
t Dutch town
15 Indian !We
5 Dlspoaed of
16 Sheep lick
i AWJSie bird
17 Board
7 Eliot's
a sleeper
"1be - "
19 Nautical
8 Cyclopean
chain
9 BlU!hel
zo Moiety
11 Letter CI'Oil8
Z1 French city
stroke
2Z Thorax
24 Domestics
25 Ribbed
fabric
2C Vo11: popull,

Yesterday's Answer
15 Wisdom
21 Not verse
symbol
%8 Wee
18 Flle
!9 Sports setting
21 Unruffled 30 Ch8lr
!2 Wrinkles 35 Sheep
23 Greek
disease
24 Lament
38 Jujube

sampling

Z7 Old draper's
meuure
%8 "The.Vir-

ELVINEV LET ME
TASTE HER SECRET-.
RECIPE
TODAY, PAW

HOW
WUZ IT,
MAW?

THAT 'S ONE SECRET
SHE OUGHT TO KEEP
""'"'~'..::::.....
TO HERSELF

character
31 Knlgbt's .
quaff ·
3%~poch
33 Famlllat

verb
at Marsh
plants

37~d
locomotive
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE :- Here's how to
II

I

wo
l rk

1\:

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply 1tandl for another: in this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the twti O's, etc. Single letter&amp;,
ap01trophea, the length and formation of the word1 are all
hint1. Each day the rode letters are dill'erent.

'

6ETWEE~ RACK OF
A~D

MEIGS CO. MEDICAL CLINIC.

LAMB

BEEF 60RDELA15E

CRYPTOQVOTES 1

CK
SJV

LBX

MFC

LBX · TV

RKON

S ~G KT

BR
-

WBS

EFLVR

,G B R R: V N N
N K T V N N
. Yesterday's CrypiOquote:A SYMPATHIZER IS A FELLOW
mAT'S FOR YOU AS H&gt;NG .. AS IT DOESN 'T COST HIM
ANYTHING.-KIN HUBBARD

THIS WEEK ONLYl

7

CLUB

min~.
I
(!) THE FACTS OF UFE
Cll IRISHTliEASURESThiopro-

11:110 (])

gram focuses on the Boston Mu·
aeum of Fine Arts ' exhibit oflrlah
maaterplecea, the moat eJCtenalve
ever &amp;llembled In the United
Sleloa.
10:00 (])8CIJ OUINCYWhenOulncy·a
vacation backup -- an attractive
female docto'r··uncovara evidence
. ofhol"icldolnthodealholapromln·
ant politician, the medical
examiner cuts hla holiday ehort.
much to her chaGrin, to aeaiatlnthe
Investigat ion. (Repeat; 80 mine.)
I]) BASEBALL: RACE FOR THE
PENNANT This weekly baseball
serlea alepa up to bat for Ita third
season . Len Berman and Maury
Willa recap the week's baseball
action and summarize the critical
Pl,!lvs and players. ·
W TBS EVENING NEWS
ClltHJa VEGAS Don Tonne. given
20 hours to live. desperately tracks
a maniac bent on revenge who In·
jected him with a de~dl~ venom for
which there Is no antidote.(Repeat;
80 mlna.) (Ciooed·Captlonod)
1tJ MUNINOS OF MODERN A""
'Now York : Capitol of tho Avant·
Garda' This eplaode focuaea on
Marcel Duchamp'a and France a
Plcabla'a lnlpact on the New Yortt
art world, and the clkn!lt&amp; that re·
oultod. (60 mlna.)
I]D NEWS '
10:28 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
10:30 (l) MAX MORRIS
I])
HOUDINI NEVER DIED
Houdini's legacy lives on throUgh
The Amazing Randi, Doug Henning,
Bill McQueen and other gr&amp;at
magicians and maatara ~feacape .
Thev recreate some of his moat
, tamoue teata in thia exclusive.
Burgeaa Meredith narratea. ·
I]D OVER EASY ' Monopauae:
t.Mha and Medical Facto' Hoot:
H•gh Downa. (Ciooed Captioned)
10:011 (l) IWS UPDATE
1 1:oo
(J)
®J
NEWS
.
C1J JEWISH VOICE
I]) MOVIE -(DRAMA) 00 \io "Lady
In Red" 1979"
I]) LAST OF THE WILD
Cll DAVE ALLEN A'T LAROE
® DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:28 I]) NEWSUPOATE
11:30 C2l8CIJ THE TONIGHT SHOW
Holt:Johnny Caraon.Gueat:Met l8·
aa Manchester. (90 mlns.)
I]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
I]) MOVIE -(COMEDY)
"You're N•+•r Too Young"

m• m w •

.

_____ 1.1__ ·- -

'

•

ABC NEWS
NIGHTUNE
a Cll CIIS LATE MOVIE 'THE
SAINT: Reluctant Revolution' The ·
Saint Intervenes when , during a trip
to South America , he diacovera
that a te"'ale traveling companion
Ia plotting the aaalliaainatlon of I
powerful govemmeru t1uure. 'GUN·
FIGHTINBLACKHORSECANVON'
1981 Sfara : Dale Robertaon. Ellen
Bur~tyn.
· ·
. Cll ABC CAPTIONED N£W8
&lt;liJ MDVII! •(IIIYSTI!RY) ""'"'
"Ttia Thin Men" 1834
11 :80 Cll ·LOVI! BOAT-..BARETTA Love
Boat··'TooHotToHandle' Ahoney ·
mooning coupte Is plagued by un roma ntic
.
Calamities .
Baratta·· 'Gune And Brothe"' After
giving the Locker brothtire a
eecondchance ~ Barenaie rruetrat
od to lind that one of tham hao
become • paychopathlc criminal.
(Repeat: 2 hro .. 15 mlno.)
4

'

'

'

CHARUE'SANGEL8Tho
Angololnvado tho elegant world of
an exclualve heahh apa where Tlf·
lany loopardlzoo her health by
becoming a nurae to ' plaatlc aur·
geonundertheguntodoacomplete
factal tranaformat ion on an lntama·
tlonel crime figure. (Repeat; 80

1855
(J) iJ2l

AXYDLBAAXa

. EVENING HOURS AT THE

"Paper Moon" 1173

(]) MOVIE -(HORROR) 00 "StepfordWiwea" 1175
I]) iJ2l fD EIGHT IS ENOUGH
Nicholas decides to become a
grade school dropout when a
teacher rldiculae him lor letting
dOwn the Bradlorda' ac:holaa11c
atandarda. (Repeat; 60 mlna .)
(Cioood·Captloned)
DCil&lt;lll BROTHERS Two adopt·
td and unlikely broth en, one of
Jewieh and the otlier of Irish an·
c11try, pick up their llvoo together
In San Franclaco attar many yHra
ol bolng ao~rated .
Cll ® OREAT PERFORMANCE&amp;
'Sarah' The turbulent life of legen·
da~ actreea Sarah Bernhardt, the
toast of twO continenti during the
1Qth.century, ia portrayed In Cletoll
b~ Tony Award winner Zoe Cald·
well. (90 mlna.)
8:30 (l) PRESENCE OF 000
0 ClliBJ 8PECIAL MOYIE PRI!SENTATION 'FourDayoln Dallaa'
1976 Stare: Michael Lerner.
Frederic Forreat.
8:011 • • • UPDATE
11:00
(lJ DIFF'AENT STliOKI!S

••l'o

31 Engend~ed

WE WOUU~ LIKE TO
GIVE L{OU A CHOICE

(l) FOCUSONTHEFAMILY
ffi MOVIE -(COMEDY) ""'

m

eUWIJI"

_HARNEY

NOTICE-----THERE WILL BE NO

- -·

w..t
Pass

.

.

t K 10 7 6 4
.K104
tQ6
tKJ7
WEST
EAST
+&amp;2
t5
.J83
.AQ975
tJ1097
tK832
+10842
tQ95
SOUTH

a

'

7-SHO

t A 54
tA63

DETROIT (AP) - In its worst
quarter ever, Ford Motor Co. lost
$41!8 million and pushed losses by the
notion's four biggest automakers to
$1.5 billion for the period from March through June.
The loss, almost triple Ford's first-quarter deficit, came to $3.89 per
common share, the ']1/o. 2 automaker
said Tuesday.
marginal benefits for an irunate,
Ford blamed plummeting car and
with ministers generally exercising truck sales, "weaker economic conmore influence, the newspaper said. ditions" and higher sales of imports
One parolee tcld the paper, however, for the deficit.
, that he asked a prison chaplain not
No. I General Motors Corp. last
WET GRASS
to testify about his religious con- week reported loss of $412 million
An
acre
of
grass released about
version because parole board mem- - $791 million before tax credits 2,400
ga
llons
of
water on a summer's
bers are thought to be suspicious of and American Motors Corp. said it
day,
through
evaporation
and transsuch an act.
·
lost $85 million.
piration,
and
provides
the
cooling efStill, the gut reactions of parole
Chrysler Corp., which has not
fect of a·7tl-ton air conditioner.
board members -·and no specific reported tc its stockholders, has told
guidelines - at one time 1&gt;rovided the federal government it lost $555
the basis for individual cases, Tom
million in the second quarter, the inKowalkski, a former Ohio Parole dustry low-water mark so far.
Pomeroy Elementary
Board member, tcld the Dispatch.
Volkswagen of America reports only
PTA Presents
"We'd have great disparities bet- tc its German ·parent company but is
Walt Disney's
ween 'people voting what they felt,"
believed to be marginally profitable.
he told the newspaper. "They would
SNOWBALL EXPRESS
Without tax breaks, the collective .
FRI., AUG. i
.
vote their personal prejudices on the setback to the four battered u.s.nature of the crime.
owned carmakers would have been
7:30P.M.
"Some people would have bad $2 billion for the quarter.
,
At The
feelings about child molesters. Now - "The largest quarterly loss in
., Pomeroy Elementary
child molesters are not nice people, American corporate hiStory was
Admission $1.00 For All
but does that mean you keep them $561.7 million reported by U.S. Steel
Supervised - chaperonecj
all20years?"
Corp..in the fourth quarter last year.
by adults. _ __
Many prisoners, watching the
Ford said It would have lost $564
Refreshments of
erratic record of the parole board, million for the quarter except for tax
Pop-Popcorn-Pizza
a~ume ·the key to the door is concredits. Last year, it earned $520
Available
nections or bribes, the Dispatch iJiillion or$4.28 per share.
said. The new.spaper said ·it uncovered no hard evidence of bribery,
however. And it said criminal
lawyers termed . such stories as
groundless. ·
BA~IN MltTfNEES ON SAT .S SUN
ALL SEATS JUST S 1.60
"No parole board member would
trust an inmate," said Alfred Mack,
an ex~on who later worked as a
parole officer, to the newspaper.
"They (irunates) are not mentally
, equipped tc keep a secret. Afew pills
and they'd te11 everything they
know.''

•

••

.

Trade sec7;ets protected by judge

Clark told the newspaper that an in- mate may have on parole, enmate's crime and pattern of dorsements from politicians, judges,
criminal behavior are the most im- prosecutors and businessmen seem
portant factors in parole con- to have more clout, the Dispatch
sideration. But other things - such reported.
as prison behavior, completion of
" If a man shows an ability to
rehabilitation programs and letters reach a legislator and convince him
of farhily support - are studied, too, · to stick his nec)t out, that should
he said.
·
carry some weight," Rep. Thomas
Although family letters inay M. Bell, D-Cleveland, told the ·
reflect what type of assistance an in- Dispatch.
Attcrneys often provide only

large assessment "that may not be
possible in today'smarket."
That would mean trimming the
profit margin on gasoline to absorb
part of the cost increase.
Sohio, which owns 53 percent of
the Alaskan North Slope crude oil
production , has been one of 'the
major beneficiaries of the entitlements program.
The biggest beneficiary this month is Ashland Oil, which wjll receive
$36.7 million. Last month Ashland
received $26.5i millio~.

"''•"uuw~porL-t'Omerov

(Closed-Captioned)

Sohio assessed huge amount
WASHINGTON (AP) - After
three years of enjoying the benefits
of special compensation for bringing
oil down from Alaska 's North Slope,
Standard Oil Co. (Ohio), has been hit
with a $23.89 million assessment for
May oil production.
That represents a $58.49 million
swing from the preceding month,
when Sohio received $34.6 million
under the Department of Energy's
entitlements program. For March,
Sohio received $46.8 million, a $70.69
million shift when compared to.the
May assessment, which must be
paid this week. .
Sohio customers can expect a
price increase as a result of the big
assessment. · Until last month the
company had the lowest gasoline
prices in the nation. 'Sohio has
already increased prices 11 cents a
gallon in anticipation of losing its en·
tillement benefits.
·
Tom Liberti, a Sohio public
relations spokesman, said he did not
know how much more of an increase :
could be expected.
He said a company vice president,
. Paul D. Phillips, told ;i. news conference recently that.I3 or 14 cents a
gallon might better illustrate theimpa c t of the loss of entillementsbenefits. That would
mean an .additional 2 or 3 cents a
gallon In price.
Under federal regulations, oil
, companies can pass on crude oil rost
increases to their customers.
• However; Liberti' said with such a

~uw

.

'

. Population

Township

:R easons ·for inmaie's paroles sketchy
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - No one
outside of .the Ohio Parole Board
system - and few inside- claims to
know exactly why some inmates are
released while others are not, a~
cording to published reports.
"It's a crap shoot," parole officer
Pat Stuhldreher tcld The Columbus
Dispatch ln the fourth of an eightpart series on the parole board.
- Parole Board Chairman Clarence

•

SAYS TRACY.
BE CAL.L.ING SOON,
WANT
BE !-!ERE- ''

Meigs County's population rose 17.2 pe!cent from 1970 to lsSo according to preliminaf)t·~~es
f om the latest census.
.' · .
' In 1970 the county's population was placed at 19,799 while this year's cenSUS sets the.populatton
at 23,212. The greatest increase in percentage took place in ~ipio Township which gamed 59.3 percent during the 10 years between t he last census.
.
.
.
According to the initial figures, Middleport Village increased 5.2 percent, growmg from 2,784 to
2,930 while Pomeroy gained only .4 of one percent, from 2,6?2 to 2,683. .
·.
Racine gained 16.5 percent while Syracuse Village gained a whoppmg 33.6 percent m the 10 years.
Rutland Village was down 7. 7 percent from the last ~ensus . Letart Township also showed a loss,
8.3 percent.
.
The table below shows each township and village and the 1980 count compared to the 1970 count.

New skyscraper to be completed in 83
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A new
32-story skyscraper will serve as
corporate headquarters for
American Electric Power Co. when
the bullding is completed in mid-

-

Sali!!btuy

this morning."
"Really, the only service that is
· Bay brushed off the remark by universally'lost is refuse collection,"
Kurtz, saying the city has been in he said. "And beyond that, our water
constant comm'Unication with union and sewer plarit supervisory people
negotiators.
are working without any strain."
Union m~mbers rejected an offer
Bay also said there have been no
Sunday that would have given them problems with the emergency sera 44cent an hour raise the first year vices.
and 50 cents an hour the second year
If the city does issue an nltimatum
with a reopener clause in the thifd to return to work, Kurtz said he
year.
would "have to deal with it at the
Salaries now range from $5.14 to time."
$9.31 an hour.
"We would want some safeguards
The two sides appear very close, and conditions, because I'm not
according to Bay, who said Sunday's going to pull my people off the street
yote was relatively close.
and find the city wants to to bargain
"So our assumption is that it in bad fajth," he explained. "Our
seems to be quite close, although . people are out there. They want a
·
we're not able to get any kind of in- contact."
dication as to how precise the vote
A source close to the negotiations,
was," he added.
however, said the strike has not
The strike is not adversely af- reached a point where both sides
fecting city services, Bay said.
were drawing battle lines.

.

Meigs County's. p(!pulation
.
.
.,
up· accordzng to · 80 census

No progress made in strike
SPRINGFIELO, Ohio (AP) City Manager Thomas M. Bay today
denied he told striking nonuniformed city employees that contract negotiations would end if they
refused tc return to work.
"The city's personnel director will
be meeting with union leaders today
in an effort to resolve the strike," he
said, as the walkout by 200 city
workers moved into its fourth day.
Although reports had surfaced
that negotiations would end if
picketing continued, Allen W. Kurtz,
president of Local !Goa of the
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, also
said he kne~\. of no such ultimatum
from Bay.
"We will negotiate anytime," he
said. "We've made all the contacts.
They've (the city) not made any contact. Hopefully, we'll get one set up

tuciJctU"

DICK TRACY

�•

.u-

.

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesrlay, July 30, 1980

U. S. Steel earnings dip
· PITTSBURGH (AP) - U.S. Steel
Corp., the nation's largest steel
maker, says the sagging economy
pulled its second-quarter earnings
down nearly 26 percent over the
same period in 1979.
The dip in profits follows similar
announcements by other producers,
including National Steel, Inland
Steel, Republic Steel and WheelingPittsburgh Steel. All blamed the
economic slowdown.
U.S. Steel said Tuesday it earned
$lll.5 mlllion, or $1.Z8 a share, on
sales of $3.1 billion in the latest quarter versus income of $150.4 million,
or . $1.75 a share, on sales of $3.6
billion last year.
"All industry segments reported
second quarter operating profits
despite most businesses being ad·
versely affected by lower volumes,"
said Chainnan David Roderick.
Roderick said steel shipments for
the half were down by 24 percent
compared to 1979. "Without the substantial improvements realized

'

I

from programs initialed last year, 1979.
steel manufacturing would have
Steel product shipments for the ·
been unprofitable," he said.
second quarter were 4.2 million ions,
Roderick was referring to U.S. compared to six million tons last
·Steel's massive retrenchment which year. For the half, shipments totaled
closed more !,han a dozen facilities 9.1 niillion tons versus 11 .5 million
with a loss of about 13,00o jobs late 1 tons in !979.
last year.
Roderick said steel order volume
"During l!le second quarter, both at the end of the second quarter was
our steel and nonsteel businesses almgst 50 per~ent below the peak
reacted quickly to the economic reached in early March.
downturn through downdrafting
"This low level of order volume
operations and tighter cost con- ·will adversely impact steel shiptrols," Roderick said, noting that ments and related profits in the third
about . 25,000 employees. in steel qliarter. In addition, the deepening
opera tions were on layoff at the end
recession will hurt most of our nonof June and about 3,500 salaried steel business," Roderick said.
workers were on short work weeks. •
"Despite the recession and the imFirst half income amounted to pact it is having on our businesses,
$237.5 million on $6.3 billion of sales we expect 1980 to be the foundation
versus $287.7 million of income on for future progress," he said.
$6.7 billion of sales for the same 1979 . "First half results would not ha~e
period.
been possible without productivity
Results for the first six months
Improvements - .especially in steel.
were increased by $100.3 million tc
We are confident that when the
reflect changes in accounting prineconomy turns upward, the benefits
ciples made in the fourth quarter of
from past actions ·will become incr~asingly apparent," he said.

1983.
W.S. White Jr., board chairman
and chief executive officer for AEP,
said Tuesday that the structure will
be located in downtown Columbus
near the Scioto River. He announced
!be bullding project at a news conference with Gov. Jall)es A. Rhodes
and Colwnbus Mayor Tom Moody.
The company, which recently

acquired Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co., is moving its main offices to Ohio from New York City.
Ground is to be broken ·next spring
on a 5.3-acre. site, White said. The
structure initially will house 800 to
900 AEP wo~kers, he said.
Until then, employees temporarily
will be housed in the Borden
Bullding in downtown Columbus.
Although construction costs have
not yet been determined, the com-·
pany plans ·to ask for competitive
bids, White said. The land was

•

.

1980
975
2,061
750

Bedford
Chestet
Columbia
Lebanon
Letart
Olive
Orange
Rutland Twp.
RutlandVU.

823

779
1,658
858

2,395
612
957
7,986
2,930
2,683
1,021
3,029 '
679

.Salem

Middleport
P&lt;Kneroy
Scipio
Sutton
Racine
. Syracuse

Four deficits
reported COJ.:rected
COLUMBUS; Ohio (AP) ---' State
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson sa)IS
the Stark County city of LouiSville
ended last year with deficits totaling
$228,848 in six funds ,
City Finance Director Joseph T.
Picher! Jr. 8aid four of·the deficits
have been corrected and the other
two will be eliminated this'month.
The deficits ranged from
$1 2ll,~. 75 in the income tax fund to
$1,667.87 in a sahitary sewer fund. ·
Oilier deficits were in the street
vehicle ~?x, revenue sharing, and
commumty development block
grant funtls.

u Wednesday July30 1non .
. ' .,
'
' """

HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) - A
Butler County judge has barred
three men from using their former
employer's trade secrets in competitive bidding.
Saying honest dealing is "the very
life and spirit of the commercial
world," Common Pleas Judge John
Moser granted a preliminary injunction Tuesday restricting three
former employees of Komylak Corp.
from marketing a vertical conveyor
system.
His ruling stems from a $3 million

acquired from Nationwide Developmemt Co. for $4 million, he said.
At first, AEP employees will occupy only half the bullding, with the
rest rented out, White said, But
because the company "is growing
and 'dynamic," the entire structure
eventually may be occupied only by
AEP workers, he said.
Rhodes praised the company for
its decision to move intc Ohio,
saying it would boost the state's and
city's sagging economies.
"If you are going to whip

Depression, you have tc start with
construction, •' he said.
In response to other questions at
the news conference, Rhodes said 'he
and Gov. Jim Thompson of Illinois
plan tc promote an economic
program for the Great Lakes states
during the National Governors Conference in Denver next week.
The program involves accelerated
depreciation and other tax breaks to
assist industries which are locating
or expanding to provide jobs in inner
cities.

Amoco continues to be the
heaviest contributor, paying an
&amp;ssessment of $123 million this month compared to $94.2 million last
month.
Marathon Oil Co. was assessed
$7.2 million last month and $11.2
million this month.
The entitlements program was
established by DOE to equ~lize
crude oil costs between refiners who
have access tc price-&lt;:ont~olled
domestic oil and those dependent on
higher-priced imported oil.
Alaskan North Slope oil was included in the same category with imported oil to encourage development '
of new. wells and to compensate lor
transportation costs.
_
DOE said distortions in the
program caused by a surge in imported oil prices last year gave North Slope oil users a $7.50 a barrel cost
advantage over other refiners.

914

583
684

~ ~ ~~ "'

TE'LEVISION·
VIEWING

byHenriArnoldandBobLoe

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

one lener to eaCh square. to form
four ordinary words.

JULY3o, 1tSo

'
EVENING

·I I I

8:oo

FIDUL

I I I

CAPTAIN EASY
OtcA'M?O l'M t&gt;JO

Sm~ 50R~ l MADE

'

WHAI50Me

\ -'T"II\'!"""7 ' 1, KIJEW
DfREK WOU LD
FILM US At.ID
P&amp;DPl-S: •HIS TI D·
&amp;IT TO THE ME DIA-

6!NTLEMAt&gt;J ~ l'M

A PIJ&amp;LIC SPECTACLE
OF 115 Ot&gt;J TV ~

Fl6l,J~E5 A~E.

tYAHNTSI

) KJ

ACTUAI-I-'&gt;' I T~
PRICEl-ESS

Percentage
1970
750
1,573
619
782
854
1,405
707
1,874
683
696
7,303
2,784
2,672
641
2,595

.

fi'fl~rul fii}'ft ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

APLLE

PUISLICITY! n -,.=1

Answerhere: " [

30.0
31.0
21.2
5.2
-ll.3
18.0
21.4
27.8
-7.7
37.5
8.3
5.2
.4
59.3
16.7
16.5
33.6

0

Now arrange .the circled leners to

form the ~urprise answer, as sug·

geated by the ._bOVe cartoon.

liXl]-( l XlJ"
(Answers lomorrow)

Vesterday.·s

I

Jumbles: IGLOO BIRCH NUANCE GROTTO
Answer She said she would marry a millionaire or
nothing-and this Is what .she gotA BIG "NOTH ING"

'''

BORN LOSER

Pa: ~'&lt;oo! IJO Ol.l~
I~

I-ll? RICMT MIIJD
IAO.LD CJ:Wa 10 li-IIS

BRIDGE

~'{

Oswalq Jacoby and Alan Sontag

rn
emeCI5®liDl• NfWS
(l) ROSSIIAGLEYHOUR(JOIIIED

IN PROGRESS)
I]) MOYIE -(MUSICAL) 000 "lkltPepper•a Lonel, He•rte (:lub
Band" 11177
'(I) ANDY GRIF.FITH SHOW
I]) ABC NEWS
l])(jj) ZOOM
8:30 (]) 8 (!) NBC NEWS
I]) I LOVE LUCY
I])
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
D Cil®l CBS NEWS
Cll . WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(jj) VILLA ALEGRE
il2lfll ABC NEWS
8 :88 ~ NEWS UPDATE
7 :00
G CROSS WITS
BIBLE BOWL
I]) HOGA,N'S HEROES
1Ilil2lm FACE THE MUSIC
ffi LUCYsHOW
D Cil TICTACDOUGH
Cll MACNEIL·LEHRER R_EPORT
@)NEWS
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 (]) 8 COUNTRY ROADS
CIJ AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
C1J ALLIN THE FAMILY
(j) MATCH GAME
(!) WILD KINGDOM 'Myateriee of
tho Wild'
•
D Cil JOKER'S WILD
(J) DICK CAVI!TT SHOW
@) THE JUDGE
(jj) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
IJ2lGI FAMILY FEUD
7:58 .(l) NEWS UPDATE
11:00 (])8(!) REALPEOPLETheUnk·
nown Comic Ia unmaaked, Felicia,

the toilet-trained cat returns, and
senior cltiz.ena participate in the
· Golclen Age Olympics In Florida .
(Repeat;
60
mine.)

Crafty en!d play maneuver

suit flied by Kornylak against
Homer Barger of Fairfield and Randall Smith and Verle Doty, both of
Cincinnati. The suit claimed the men
quit . Komylak and formed Alpha
Teclmical SerVices.
Kornylak alleged that the three
workers used confidential ·information that they had learned as
employees to market parts for the
conveyor system. That violated a
confidentiality agreement signed by
the men when Kornylak hired them,
the lawsuit contended.
The corporation went to court
when Alpha Technical Services
made a lower bid for a contract with
the U.S. Defense Logistics Agency.

Ford Motor
losses at
$468 million

NORTH

The pact was for replacement parts
on a vertical store conveyor system
developed and manufactured by
Kornylakand used by the U.S. Navy.
In a 16-page ruling, Moser said
"fair and unrestricted competition"
is the "very foundation of our
capitalistic society."
" However, also necessary and
basic to our capitalistic society is the
maintenance of certain commercial ·
ethics imd the encouragement of invention," he said. "The necessity of
good faith and honest and fair
dealil)g is the very life and spirit of
the .commen!ial world."
Moser. found that the three IJ\I!n
had used Kornylak's trade secrets in
bidding for the contract. Th&lt;!Sf
secrets were protected by the confidentiality agreement which the
workers had signed, he said.
•
The preliminary injunction
prevents Alpha Teclmical Services
from bidding for any contracts Jo
replace parts of conveyor systems
built by Komylak. It also forbids the
three men to use any confidential
data which they had learned at Kornylak.
In his ruling, Moser did not specify
the trade secrets.
_
"We arc not precluding (Alpha
Technical Services) from entering
into competition with KD'rnylak in
the manufacturing of vertical conveyors, only from utilizing Kornylak
trade secrets in doing so," he said.
"As to what these various and sundry other trade secrets might be,
may very well have to be, unfortunately, reserved for determination in future litigation," he
said.

'liE WEREN'T VERY

... MR. 6ANGAVEL AHD I

HOPEFUL. THANK
YOO FOR

WERE JUST TALKING,

TR'l'IN6.

AHD SUDDENLY··· IH
THE MIDDLE OF A
SENTENCE ...

MMM "' TH15
WI LL SOUND

UNFEELIH6,
MRS. FLOWER5 ...

"· BUT WITH BANGAVEL
DEAD·· WHO'S 601N6
TO IWN THE COMPANY?

•u

tAQJ93

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

AU.EYOOP

North

East

PU8

4t

Pasa

Opening lead:+ J

By Olwlld Jacoby
ud Alu Soata1

Pessimist Pete studied the
dummy for a while and noted
that if everything went wrong,
be could lose two hearts, one
diamond, one club, and be
down one. On the other ftand,

if WI!!! held the ace of hearts,
king of diamonds and queen of
clubs there would be just two
losers.
Then Pete worked Olit a
way to make his game with
ev~rything wro"g. He started
br playing dummy's queen of
dtamonli'l. East produced the
king and Pete started' pre&gt;ceedings by. holding up the
ace.

This bold-up was CSilCntial
to Pete's plan to handle the
bad things he e:rpected. Pete
wanted to develop an end play
against East and be had to
keep West out of the lead.
East led a second diamond.
Pete took his ace, ruffed the
last diamond and drew
trumps, Then the · end play
was ready.
He led his deuce of hearts
and played dummy's I 0 after
West flayed low. Then Pete
sprea his hand and claimed
all tricks but one.
It didn't matter what East
did or where the East-West
cards were. If East Ielr'tlie· ;-..··
ace of hearts .it would set up
dummy's king for a . club
discard. If be led a club, it
would tate the club finesse
for South. If be led a diamond,
South would ruff in dummy
and discard bls last heart.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

GASOUNE: AILEY

It would be

You don't

eas"' to check
with the bank!

wamic&gt;
keep

· You'd sleep

'

bet-ter. Joel!

~~a1M1Haf

the

WINNIE
WHATTAYA GONNA
PO WHEN YOU GE1

..

.
•

OUT OF HERE, VIXEN?
WORK IN A

roN'T
)()(J WeRRY
AI30UT~

I HAVEN 'T WASTEI7
MY TIME tiERE LIKE
THE REST OF YOU f

rvE BEEN
MAKING PLAN S...

816 PLANS ! ANI7
71fl5 TIME (JHfY'Rf
GOING TO WORK!

TRIXIE .

LA/JNPRY? HA!

.•

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 t.va source
1 Gorge
31 Tacky
5 stage acenery to Tatum '1 dad
It Old oath
DOWN
n Signore!
1 Bear anns
1% Ubertlne
2 Moreover
13 Brought out 3 Go on the
14 "Lawagon
En Rose"
t Dutch town
15 Indian !We
5 Dlspoaed of
16 Sheep lick
i AWJSie bird
17 Board
7 Eliot's
a sleeper
"1be - "
19 Nautical
8 Cyclopean
chain
9 BlU!hel
zo Moiety
11 Letter CI'Oil8
Z1 French city
stroke
2Z Thorax
24 Domestics
25 Ribbed
fabric
2C Vo11: popull,

Yesterday's Answer
15 Wisdom
21 Not verse
symbol
%8 Wee
18 Flle
!9 Sports setting
21 Unruffled 30 Ch8lr
!2 Wrinkles 35 Sheep
23 Greek
disease
24 Lament
38 Jujube

sampling

Z7 Old draper's
meuure
%8 "The.Vir-

ELVINEV LET ME
TASTE HER SECRET-.
RECIPE
TODAY, PAW

HOW
WUZ IT,
MAW?

THAT 'S ONE SECRET
SHE OUGHT TO KEEP
""'"'~'..::::.....
TO HERSELF

character
31 Knlgbt's .
quaff ·
3%~poch
33 Famlllat

verb
at Marsh
plants

37~d
locomotive
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE :- Here's how to
II

I

wo
l rk

1\:

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply 1tandl for another: in this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the twti O's, etc. Single letter&amp;,
ap01trophea, the length and formation of the word1 are all
hint1. Each day the rode letters are dill'erent.

'

6ETWEE~ RACK OF
A~D

MEIGS CO. MEDICAL CLINIC.

LAMB

BEEF 60RDELA15E

CRYPTOQVOTES 1

CK
SJV

LBX

MFC

LBX · TV

RKON

S ~G KT

BR
-

WBS

EFLVR

,G B R R: V N N
N K T V N N
. Yesterday's CrypiOquote:A SYMPATHIZER IS A FELLOW
mAT'S FOR YOU AS H&gt;NG .. AS IT DOESN 'T COST HIM
ANYTHING.-KIN HUBBARD

THIS WEEK ONLYl

7

CLUB

min~.
I
(!) THE FACTS OF UFE
Cll IRISHTliEASURESThiopro-

11:110 (])

gram focuses on the Boston Mu·
aeum of Fine Arts ' exhibit oflrlah
maaterplecea, the moat eJCtenalve
ever &amp;llembled In the United
Sleloa.
10:00 (])8CIJ OUINCYWhenOulncy·a
vacation backup -- an attractive
female docto'r··uncovara evidence
. ofhol"icldolnthodealholapromln·
ant politician, the medical
examiner cuts hla holiday ehort.
much to her chaGrin, to aeaiatlnthe
Investigat ion. (Repeat; 80 mine.)
I]) BASEBALL: RACE FOR THE
PENNANT This weekly baseball
serlea alepa up to bat for Ita third
season . Len Berman and Maury
Willa recap the week's baseball
action and summarize the critical
Pl,!lvs and players. ·
W TBS EVENING NEWS
ClltHJa VEGAS Don Tonne. given
20 hours to live. desperately tracks
a maniac bent on revenge who In·
jected him with a de~dl~ venom for
which there Is no antidote.(Repeat;
80 mlna.) (Ciooed·Captlonod)
1tJ MUNINOS OF MODERN A""
'Now York : Capitol of tho Avant·
Garda' This eplaode focuaea on
Marcel Duchamp'a and France a
Plcabla'a lnlpact on the New Yortt
art world, and the clkn!lt&amp; that re·
oultod. (60 mlna.)
I]D NEWS '
10:28 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
10:30 (l) MAX MORRIS
I])
HOUDINI NEVER DIED
Houdini's legacy lives on throUgh
The Amazing Randi, Doug Henning,
Bill McQueen and other gr&amp;at
magicians and maatara ~feacape .
Thev recreate some of his moat
, tamoue teata in thia exclusive.
Burgeaa Meredith narratea. ·
I]D OVER EASY ' Monopauae:
t.Mha and Medical Facto' Hoot:
H•gh Downa. (Ciooed Captioned)
10:011 (l) IWS UPDATE
1 1:oo
(J)
®J
NEWS
.
C1J JEWISH VOICE
I]) MOVIE -(DRAMA) 00 \io "Lady
In Red" 1979"
I]) LAST OF THE WILD
Cll DAVE ALLEN A'T LAROE
® DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:28 I]) NEWSUPOATE
11:30 C2l8CIJ THE TONIGHT SHOW
Holt:Johnny Caraon.Gueat:Met l8·
aa Manchester. (90 mlns.)
I]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
I]) MOVIE -(COMEDY)
"You're N•+•r Too Young"

m• m w •

.

_____ 1.1__ ·- -

'

•

ABC NEWS
NIGHTUNE
a Cll CIIS LATE MOVIE 'THE
SAINT: Reluctant Revolution' The ·
Saint Intervenes when , during a trip
to South America , he diacovera
that a te"'ale traveling companion
Ia plotting the aaalliaainatlon of I
powerful govemmeru t1uure. 'GUN·
FIGHTINBLACKHORSECANVON'
1981 Sfara : Dale Robertaon. Ellen
Bur~tyn.
· ·
. Cll ABC CAPTIONED N£W8
&lt;liJ MDVII! •(IIIYSTI!RY) ""'"'
"Ttia Thin Men" 1834
11 :80 Cll ·LOVI! BOAT-..BARETTA Love
Boat··'TooHotToHandle' Ahoney ·
mooning coupte Is plagued by un roma ntic
.
Calamities .
Baratta·· 'Gune And Brothe"' After
giving the Locker brothtire a
eecondchance ~ Barenaie rruetrat
od to lind that one of tham hao
become • paychopathlc criminal.
(Repeat: 2 hro .. 15 mlno.)
4

'

'

'

CHARUE'SANGEL8Tho
Angololnvado tho elegant world of
an exclualve heahh apa where Tlf·
lany loopardlzoo her health by
becoming a nurae to ' plaatlc aur·
geonundertheguntodoacomplete
factal tranaformat ion on an lntama·
tlonel crime figure. (Repeat; 80

1855
(J) iJ2l

AXYDLBAAXa

. EVENING HOURS AT THE

"Paper Moon" 1173

(]) MOVIE -(HORROR) 00 "StepfordWiwea" 1175
I]) iJ2l fD EIGHT IS ENOUGH
Nicholas decides to become a
grade school dropout when a
teacher rldiculae him lor letting
dOwn the Bradlorda' ac:holaa11c
atandarda. (Repeat; 60 mlna .)
(Cioood·Captloned)
DCil&lt;lll BROTHERS Two adopt·
td and unlikely broth en, one of
Jewieh and the otlier of Irish an·
c11try, pick up their llvoo together
In San Franclaco attar many yHra
ol bolng ao~rated .
Cll ® OREAT PERFORMANCE&amp;
'Sarah' The turbulent life of legen·
da~ actreea Sarah Bernhardt, the
toast of twO continenti during the
1Qth.century, ia portrayed In Cletoll
b~ Tony Award winner Zoe Cald·
well. (90 mlna.)
8:30 (l) PRESENCE OF 000
0 ClliBJ 8PECIAL MOYIE PRI!SENTATION 'FourDayoln Dallaa'
1976 Stare: Michael Lerner.
Frederic Forreat.
8:011 • • • UPDATE
11:00
(lJ DIFF'AENT STliOKI!S

••l'o

31 Engend~ed

WE WOUU~ LIKE TO
GIVE L{OU A CHOICE

(l) FOCUSONTHEFAMILY
ffi MOVIE -(COMEDY) ""'

m

eUWIJI"

_HARNEY

NOTICE-----THERE WILL BE NO

- -·

w..t
Pass

.

.

t K 10 7 6 4
.K104
tQ6
tKJ7
WEST
EAST
+&amp;2
t5
.J83
.AQ975
tJ1097
tK832
+10842
tQ95
SOUTH

a

'

7-SHO

t A 54
tA63

DETROIT (AP) - In its worst
quarter ever, Ford Motor Co. lost
$41!8 million and pushed losses by the
notion's four biggest automakers to
$1.5 billion for the period from March through June.
The loss, almost triple Ford's first-quarter deficit, came to $3.89 per
common share, the ']1/o. 2 automaker
said Tuesday.
marginal benefits for an irunate,
Ford blamed plummeting car and
with ministers generally exercising truck sales, "weaker economic conmore influence, the newspaper said. ditions" and higher sales of imports
One parolee tcld the paper, however, for the deficit.
, that he asked a prison chaplain not
No. I General Motors Corp. last
WET GRASS
to testify about his religious con- week reported loss of $412 million
An
acre
of
grass released about
version because parole board mem- - $791 million before tax credits 2,400
ga
llons
of
water on a summer's
bers are thought to be suspicious of and American Motors Corp. said it
day,
through
evaporation
and transsuch an act.
·
lost $85 million.
piration,
and
provides
the
cooling efStill, the gut reactions of parole
Chrysler Corp., which has not
fect of a·7tl-ton air conditioner.
board members -·and no specific reported tc its stockholders, has told
guidelines - at one time 1&gt;rovided the federal government it lost $555
the basis for individual cases, Tom
million in the second quarter, the inKowalkski, a former Ohio Parole dustry low-water mark so far.
Pomeroy Elementary
Board member, tcld the Dispatch.
Volkswagen of America reports only
PTA Presents
"We'd have great disparities bet- tc its German ·parent company but is
Walt Disney's
ween 'people voting what they felt,"
believed to be marginally profitable.
he told the newspaper. "They would
SNOWBALL EXPRESS
Without tax breaks, the collective .
FRI., AUG. i
.
vote their personal prejudices on the setback to the four battered u.s.nature of the crime.
owned carmakers would have been
7:30P.M.
"Some people would have bad $2 billion for the quarter.
,
At The
feelings about child molesters. Now - "The largest quarterly loss in
., Pomeroy Elementary
child molesters are not nice people, American corporate hiStory was
Admission $1.00 For All
but does that mean you keep them $561.7 million reported by U.S. Steel
Supervised - chaperonecj
all20years?"
Corp..in the fourth quarter last year.
by adults. _ __
Many prisoners, watching the
Ford said It would have lost $564
Refreshments of
erratic record of the parole board, million for the quarter except for tax
Pop-Popcorn-Pizza
a~ume ·the key to the door is concredits. Last year, it earned $520
Available
nections or bribes, the Dispatch iJiillion or$4.28 per share.
said. The new.spaper said ·it uncovered no hard evidence of bribery,
however. And it said criminal
lawyers termed . such stories as
groundless. ·
BA~IN MltTfNEES ON SAT .S SUN
ALL SEATS JUST S 1.60
"No parole board member would
trust an inmate," said Alfred Mack,
an ex~on who later worked as a
parole officer, to the newspaper.
"They (irunates) are not mentally
, equipped tc keep a secret. Afew pills
and they'd te11 everything they
know.''

•

••

.

Trade sec7;ets protected by judge

Clark told the newspaper that an in- mate may have on parole, enmate's crime and pattern of dorsements from politicians, judges,
criminal behavior are the most im- prosecutors and businessmen seem
portant factors in parole con- to have more clout, the Dispatch
sideration. But other things - such reported.
as prison behavior, completion of
" If a man shows an ability to
rehabilitation programs and letters reach a legislator and convince him
of farhily support - are studied, too, · to stick his nec)t out, that should
he said.
·
carry some weight," Rep. Thomas
Although family letters inay M. Bell, D-Cleveland, told the ·
reflect what type of assistance an in- Dispatch.
Attcrneys often provide only

large assessment "that may not be
possible in today'smarket."
That would mean trimming the
profit margin on gasoline to absorb
part of the cost increase.
Sohio, which owns 53 percent of
the Alaskan North Slope crude oil
production , has been one of 'the
major beneficiaries of the entitlements program.
The biggest beneficiary this month is Ashland Oil, which wjll receive
$36.7 million. Last month Ashland
received $26.5i millio~.

"''•"uuw~porL-t'Omerov

(Closed-Captioned)

Sohio assessed huge amount
WASHINGTON (AP) - After
three years of enjoying the benefits
of special compensation for bringing
oil down from Alaska 's North Slope,
Standard Oil Co. (Ohio), has been hit
with a $23.89 million assessment for
May oil production.
That represents a $58.49 million
swing from the preceding month,
when Sohio received $34.6 million
under the Department of Energy's
entitlements program. For March,
Sohio received $46.8 million, a $70.69
million shift when compared to.the
May assessment, which must be
paid this week. .
Sohio customers can expect a
price increase as a result of the big
assessment. · Until last month the
company had the lowest gasoline
prices in the nation. 'Sohio has
already increased prices 11 cents a
gallon in anticipation of losing its en·
tillement benefits.
·
Tom Liberti, a Sohio public
relations spokesman, said he did not
know how much more of an increase :
could be expected.
He said a company vice president,
. Paul D. Phillips, told ;i. news conference recently that.I3 or 14 cents a
gallon might better illustrate theimpa c t of the loss of entillementsbenefits. That would
mean an .additional 2 or 3 cents a
gallon In price.
Under federal regulations, oil
, companies can pass on crude oil rost
increases to their customers.
• However; Liberti' said with such a

~uw

.

'

. Population

Township

:R easons ·for inmaie's paroles sketchy
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - No one
outside of .the Ohio Parole Board
system - and few inside- claims to
know exactly why some inmates are
released while others are not, a~
cording to published reports.
"It's a crap shoot," parole officer
Pat Stuhldreher tcld The Columbus
Dispatch ln the fourth of an eightpart series on the parole board.
- Parole Board Chairman Clarence

•

SAYS TRACY.
BE CAL.L.ING SOON,
WANT
BE !-!ERE- ''

Meigs County's population rose 17.2 pe!cent from 1970 to lsSo according to preliminaf)t·~~es
f om the latest census.
.' · .
' In 1970 the county's population was placed at 19,799 while this year's cenSUS sets the.populatton
at 23,212. The greatest increase in percentage took place in ~ipio Township which gamed 59.3 percent during the 10 years between t he last census.
.
.
.
According to the initial figures, Middleport Village increased 5.2 percent, growmg from 2,784 to
2,930 while Pomeroy gained only .4 of one percent, from 2,6?2 to 2,683. .
·.
Racine gained 16.5 percent while Syracuse Village gained a whoppmg 33.6 percent m the 10 years.
Rutland Village was down 7. 7 percent from the last ~ensus . Letart Township also showed a loss,
8.3 percent.
.
The table below shows each township and village and the 1980 count compared to the 1970 count.

New skyscraper to be completed in 83
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A new
32-story skyscraper will serve as
corporate headquarters for
American Electric Power Co. when
the bullding is completed in mid-

-

Sali!!btuy

this morning."
"Really, the only service that is
· Bay brushed off the remark by universally'lost is refuse collection,"
Kurtz, saying the city has been in he said. "And beyond that, our water
constant comm'Unication with union and sewer plarit supervisory people
negotiators.
are working without any strain."
Union m~mbers rejected an offer
Bay also said there have been no
Sunday that would have given them problems with the emergency sera 44cent an hour raise the first year vices.
and 50 cents an hour the second year
If the city does issue an nltimatum
with a reopener clause in the thifd to return to work, Kurtz said he
year.
would "have to deal with it at the
Salaries now range from $5.14 to time."
$9.31 an hour.
"We would want some safeguards
The two sides appear very close, and conditions, because I'm not
according to Bay, who said Sunday's going to pull my people off the street
yote was relatively close.
and find the city wants to to bargain
"So our assumption is that it in bad fajth," he explained. "Our
seems to be quite close, although . people are out there. They want a
·
we're not able to get any kind of in- contact."
dication as to how precise the vote
A source close to the negotiations,
was," he added.
however, said the strike has not
The strike is not adversely af- reached a point where both sides
fecting city services, Bay said.
were drawing battle lines.

.

Meigs County's. p(!pulation
.
.
.,
up· accordzng to · 80 census

No progress made in strike
SPRINGFIELO, Ohio (AP) City Manager Thomas M. Bay today
denied he told striking nonuniformed city employees that contract negotiations would end if they
refused tc return to work.
"The city's personnel director will
be meeting with union leaders today
in an effort to resolve the strike," he
said, as the walkout by 200 city
workers moved into its fourth day.
Although reports had surfaced
that negotiations would end if
picketing continued, Allen W. Kurtz,
president of Local !Goa of the
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, also
said he kne~\. of no such ultimatum
from Bay.
"We will negotiate anytime," he
said. "We've made all the contacts.
They've (the city) not made any contact. Hopefully, we'll get one set up

tuciJctU"

DICK TRACY

���14-TheDailySentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Julv 30. I!IM

Mayor's Court
Eight defend11nts forfeited bonds
and five others were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hof·
fma!l Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Nonnan Staats,
Langsville, $25, improper exhaust;
Randall K. Bowles, Middleport,
$170, causing physical harm; Randall Grady, Shade, $50, intoxication;
Nicky C. Smith, Rio Grande, spin·
nlng tires, $25; John Swartz,
Coolville, $27, speeding; James D.
Webster, Pomeroy, $25, failure to
maintain control; Bush Bruce
Douglas, Gallipolis, $36, speeding,
and Daniel E. Shestina, Pomeroy,
$50, disorderly manner.
Fined were Ricky W. Wilson,
Reedsville, $25 and costs, illegal .
registration; $10 and costs, stop sign
violation, and $10 and costs, spinning
tires; Michael W. Marcwn, Mid·
dleport, $25 and costs, failure to
maintain control; '\Ifred Evans,
Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly
manner;- James Alfred Will, •Jr.,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, destruction of property, and Dan Jenkins,
Pomeroy; $25 and costs, !repassing.

......
0•

NEW EMPWYE - Carol Costanzo began her duties Tuesday with
the Fanners Home Admini.atration, Pomeroy, as assistant county super·
visor. Mrs. Costanzo Is replacmg Lorence Bess who has been transferred
to Gallla County. She was formerly employ!!!! by the Tri-County Community Action Agency. The Farmers Home Administration is located on
the second floor of the Farmel'S Bank and Savings Co., Second Street,
Pomeroy. Archie Stegal of the FHA reported that they are presently
p~g loans and grants for low and moderate income families for
home repair. Grants are available for persons over 82 who ovin their
home that Is In need .of repair._Mrs. Costanzo's hpnd, John, is a
teaCher In Souther Lo&amp;i School District. They reside19' Portland Road,

Rac!lne.

Effort made to
block rationing law
WASHINGTON (AP) - A plan
giving the president the powe~ to or·
der gBSO!ine rationing in a severe
shol1age without seeking prior
congressional approval is on the
. veFge of becoming law.
The program, which could lead to
gas coupon rationing on a pervehicle basis in a petroleum shor·
tage of 20 percent or greater, takes
affect at midnight tonight unless
both tile House and Senate vote
today to block it.
' Their time fast running out,
rationing opponents vowed a last·
ditch effort to stop the plan drafted
by the Carter adrnlnistcation. But
their chances of succeeding seemed
slim.
On Tuesday, the HOUlle Commerce
Committee turned back, on a 22 to 20
vote, a Republican-led effort to kill
theplan.
.
Rep. Clarence Brown, R..Qhio,
ranklng Republican on the committee and leader of the anti·
rationing forces, Indicated he will
try to get the full House to reverse
the comnilttee vote today.
But those trying 11:. kill the
raUorilng measure were
Oil"
timlstlc.
Even If they succeeded in the
House, the Senate would have to

George W. Reed, 75, Route I, Reedsville, a former Olive Township
Tnlltee, died Wednesday morning
at the General Hospital In Ma'rion
following an extended illness.
Mr.Reed was a son of the late
Elmer and lAlla Pullins Reed and
was al8o preceded in death by his
wife, Delcla Windon Reed in 19'111,
three brothers and two sisters.
Surviving are a son and daughterm..law, Wilbur V. and Euta Reed,
Marion; four sisters, Mrs. Vern
Reed and Mrs. Shirley Paugh,
Phoenix, Ariz.; Mrs. Hattie
Calaway, Coolville, and Mrs. Hobart
Smalley, Weirton, W. Va.; three
grandChildren, Wilbur '1{. Reed, Jr.,

··.

• Silverstone cooking surface

Sensa-temp ®
fully automatic heat control remov~s for
immersible cleaning

~

Great for breakfast, lunch and dinner...
prepare all your favorites quickly, easily!
New space-saving size is ideal for table

$5 995
.

preparation. .

WE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY THURSDAY,
JULY 31st FOR INVENlORY
:
:;;;;::::: :::
::::::::: :::::n n
:n:::::::::::
CHECK THURSDAY'S PAPERS FOR SIDEWALK
SALE- BEG'llliNlNG FRIDAY, AUG. 1ST.

•'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

PUS/IICMIJ
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Mansfield; Mrs. Thomas (Carllene J
Jett and Mrs. Timothy (Arlene)
Wisebaker, Marion, and three great·
grandchildren, Joshua Reed, Eric
Jett and Aaron Wisebaker.
Reed attended the Joppa United
Methodist Church and was a former
employe of the Ohio Valley
Manufacturing Co. in addition to
having serving as an Olive Township
Trustee.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Friday at the White Funeral
Home in Coolville with the ·Rev.
Walter ·Carney officiating. Burial
will be In the Hiney Cemetery,
Coolville.
Friends may call at the funeral ·
tiome anytime after 2 p.m. Thur·
sday.

A78x13 Whiteall , Reg.
· $30.80, Now S23.00
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Steel cord ·belts for
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stress dlalrNlutlofll
lltii&gt;S prolonc tire lfe

Sizes
..
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B78x13 ·
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sldewtll tor even

Sizes
D78xl4
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F78~14

G78xl5
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H78x14 .
G7Bx14
H78x14
L78x15

Plus F.E.T. and Coppable
Casings

Auto, Fire, Uability Etc. since 1954
Hartford Steam Boiler
Standard Fire 'lnsurance.
w~stern surety , .
Comp~te Brokerage Service

Charles B. Mullen and Don E. Mullen
·

Pomeroy, Oh.

t'

MEIGS Tl RE CENTER, INC~
·o.

John Fultz, Mgr.

700.E. Main
Next

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Signs
of the economic recession finally
have emerged in an analysis of Ohio
payrolls, where the bottom line
reflects a 3 percent drop in June
from a year ago.
Much of the decline was blamed on
. the troubled auto industr)i.
For the first six months _of 1980,
payrolls were down 2 percent from
the first half of 1979, according to \he
Center for Business and Economic
lfesearch at Ohio State University.
The state's employment in June
fell 8 percent from a year ago, the
center said. During the same period,
the number of man-hours worked
slid 9 percent, compared to June
1979.
Omitted from the data was
agriculture, government, education
or public institutions.
Meanwhile, the state· Bureau of
Employment Services said em·
ployment nearly held its own in the
latest week·t&lt;»-week comparison.
Preliminary reports showed there

were 245,000 old or continuing
claimants for unemployment compensation In Ohio during the week
ending July 26. That compares to
245,193 actual claimant&amp; for the
previous week, and a weekly
average in July 1979 of 97,464
claimants who were jobless for at
least one week.
Among the newly unemployed those making claims for the first
time - the bureau reported 34,772
claimants during the week ending
July 26, up from 30,463 the previous
week. That compares to an average
in July 1979 of21,171 new claimants.
Many people making first'tim~
claims do not show up in subsequent
records because some find jobs and
others learn they are not eligible for
compensation, the bureau said.
In the June-to-June payroll comparison, the largest drop in payrolls
appeared in automotive industry,
which sunk 42 percent over the year.
Thirty-seven percent of the decline

came during the first six months of
1980.
The research center said payroll
· for workers making rubber products
dropped 'tl percent last month from
a year ago. It also reported a 15 percent detline in payrolls for rnanufac·
turers ·of metal products and a 12
· percent loss for makers of lumber
products.
A 12 percent payroll gain over the
coinparable 1979 and 1980 months
was repOrted for workers in mines
and quarries, while construction
payrolls were up 9 percent.
Geographically, payrolls in Sum·
mit County rose 1 percent last month
from June 1979, while those In
Franklin County climbed 7 percent.
That was more than offset,
however, by payroll losses in such
major counties as Stark, down 5 per·
cent; Hamilton, down 6 percent;
CUyahoga, down 8 perco:nt; Mon·
tgomery, down 7 percent, and
Lucas, down 14 percent.

Springfield strike continues
• SPRINGFIELD, Ohio- Negotiators for 200 striking city employees
say they will co11tinue their four-day old strike until the city agrees toraise wages.
.
Allen Kurtz, president of Locall608 of the American Federation of
State, County and Municipal Employees, said both sides talked by
phone Wednes&lt;lay for several hours, but failed to reach agreement.
The non-uniformed city workers struck after rejecting a contract
Sunday afternoon. According to Kurtz, the oniy issue is money. The
union had been pushing for a 50 to 59 cents an hour increase, but dropped the figqre to 44 cents an hour. Wages now range from$5.14 to $9.31
an hour .
So far, the strike has disrupted garbage collection in this city of
70,000.
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Veteran Rep. William L. Mallory, who sold
"stock" in himself to lobbyists and other supporters, was found in·
nocent of violating the Ohio House ethics code.
· But he still was reprimanded for his "imprudent actions" by the
chamber's ethics conunittee Wednesday following a public hearing
and two hours of closed deliberations.
If it had the authority - which it doesn't - the panel said it would
have required the 47-year-old lawmaker to return the money he collected. That totaled about $270 in "non-negotiable" certificates of $10
denominations.
'
Mallory raised the money to pay his way as a delegate to the
Democratic National Convention starting Aug. 11 in New York City.

.Reagan visits throat specialist
WS ANGELES - !{epublican presidential nominee Ronald
Reagan Wednesday visited a throat specialist for the second time in
three days as he prepared to film, television conurtercials for his fall
campaign.
·
·
.
. .
• Reagan told reporters tpat the had no serious ailment, " just a lit·
tie horseness,:' a problem he has beeo complaining of for more than
two week&amp;now.

·weJJther forecast

.................................~~
9'12·33'1

ORLANDO, Fla. - Rocks and bottles were tossed on police and
motorists late Wednesday and sporadic looting broke out in a
predominanUy black neighborhood where disturbances previollily
had erupted before dawn, police said.
At least four people, including a television reporter, were injured
as gangs of black youths roamed the area, tossing rocks and brealling
into stores. The reporter was kicked and beaten and e other three
people were treated for minor injuries, officials said.

Llnvmaker found innocent
SAVE '23.20

F.E.T. .

12.12
24 .94

Power Stre•k ·Biem
dr Radial RWL
Cruiser
Polysteel XNW Blem

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1 . 50~~tltl T

t .00/ 1,1j
1.00:c 1s

49 . 10

'

SAVE ON BLEMISHED TIRES
' ODDS &amp; ENDS, AND MORE •
SIZE
A6t-1l
811· 13

1.10
9. 25
1. 70
• . to
1.45
9.10

1.00.- JSLT
1. 00~~t15LT

4UO

cord belts

64.99 11:t.os

PI'I·UA 1.S

Life Insurance Since 1950

SAVE ON LIGHT TRUCK &amp; ltV TIRE$/
'7.80

-·

Vwlence -erupts again in Orlando

GATU!'iBURG, Tenn. - A seU-employed surveyor was arrested
and charged with murder Wednesday in the strangulation slayings of
two teeiHige Kentucky girls vacationing in th ara.
The bodies of Tanya Jane Roberts, 16, and Jennifer Lynn
Stephens,17, both of Crestwood, were discovered Tuesday morning at
the Holiday Inn here. They had left home Friday for a visit with Miss
Roberts' relative in Knoxville and a vacation trip to Gatlinburg, a
resort town in the Smoky Mountains.
District Attorney General AI Schmutzer Jr. said Allen Wayne
Hughes, 25, of nearby Sevierville, Tenn., was arrested at the home of
his aunt arid uncle, with whom l)e had been living.

dtslln tor crlp In
mud or snow; plus
quilt rucllway riOI
• Gts·snlnJ rldlll
construction
I

village residents. Cost of the truck included the truck and equipment.
It contains a 1,000 gallon tank which pumps 1,000 gallons of water a
minute. Shown with the new vehicle is Jeff Darst; fire chief.

WASIDNGTON (AP)- Billy Car"
ter told federal inve~tigators he got
State Department cables· about his
trip to Ubya from his brother, the
president. Jimmy Carter says he
· discussed the cables with Billy but
doesn't recall giving them to him.
Now the Justice Department is
trying to find out who is right, what
cables Billy Carter has, whether·
they are classified and who gave
them to him.
Beyond any legal questions, the
latest development raises new doUbts about the president's seU·
described arm's length role in his
brother's Libyan connection.
Meantime, a top JustiC!! Depart·
ment investigator said the govern·
ment has no plans to prosecute Billy
Carter for lying about when he first
got money from Ubya.
President
C11rter's
acknowledgement late Wednesday
that he discussed the cables with his
brother had not been Included in a
statement Issued last week by the

Economic recession·signs
emerge from Ohio payrolls

Man charged in teenagers' deaths

• All suson tread

~u::~::::

FIFTEEN CENTS

Cable stories
don't match

he a
resistant
- handle/legs

Sl1e

r
;

entine
In Billygate ·saga

Pl55180R 13 whitewall,
Reg . S58.20 now $36.00
plusFET. notrade
needed. THE ORIGINAl
AU SEASON
RADIAl

STEEL BELTED
CUSTOM
POLY STEEL
RADIAL

at

POMEROY·MIDDCEP.ORT, OHIO THURSDAY, JULY 31, 1980

VOL. 31 NO. 76

MEIGS TIRE CENTER HAS BEEN SERVING THE
TRI-COUNTY AREA FOR 8 YEARS. AND WE'RE
STARTING THE NEXT 8 OFF RIGHT WITH SUPER
"
TIRE SAVINGS NOW THROUGH AUGUST
8, 1980

VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMISSION8-MarjoiR Kestel"
soo. RuUaod; Mlllie McGrath, LoDg
Bottom; Larry E. Bailey, Middleport; Jesse Swan, Lallgsvllle;
Frances Howery, Albany.
DISCHARGES···Naocy Eber·
sbacb, Curtis Rousb, Mllile Perry,
Hazel Maler, Helen Warren.

I

113 E. 2nd

e

•

i 3529)

EMERGENCY RUNS
The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Headquarters
reports four runs by local units on
Tuesday.
·
At 8:49 a.m., the Rutland Unit
went to Route 1for Janet Green who
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
The Pomeroy Unit transferred
Robert Clonch, Uberty Ave., to
Riverside Hospital In Columbus at
9:59. The, Middleport Unit tran·
sferred Elizabeth Deeds froln
Veterans Memorial to St. Joseph
Hospital and then returned her to
Veterans Memorial at IO a.sp. and at
2:44 p.m. took Stella Ebersbach
from the Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
ter to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Herinan Haddox, Mid· ·
dleport; Opal Cremeans, Coolville;
Tony Gilkey, Shade; Stella Eber·
sbach, Pomeroy; Amanda Murray,
Middleport; Andrew Fields, New
Haven.
'
Discharged-Bradley Pooler, Wjn..
nie Dailey, Ruth Lutheran.

Mullen Insurance Agency~ Inc.

Aetna Life &amp; Casualty
Aetna· Life lnsurallce
qranteMutuafCi:asuatty
G.rangt Mutual Life Insurance

.'

MIDDLEPORT HAS NEW FIRE TRUCK - Middleport Fire
Department received its new fire truck Tuesday. Proceeds to pur·
chase the
. $95,335.45 vehicle came from a one mill levy .approved by

FR1b1~

~

•
•

thick,
heavy gauge
aluminum for
even heating

The Meigs County Emergency
Services report the following runs
made by local units Monday.
Pomeroy at 12:04 p.m. , Rodney
Clonch, Hill Street, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
Pomeroy at 7:55 a.m.,Virginia
·J.ones, WoUe Pen Road was taken to .
Pleasant Valley Hospital; Rutland
at 3:46 p.q~., Clyde Ferrell, Hysell
Run Road, to Veterans Memorial ·
Hospital; Rutland at 10:45 p.m. to
. Beech Grove Road for Kathieen
Peyton who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
8:43 a.m. Frances Qualls from
Chester to Holzer Medical Center
then back home; Tuppers Plains at
12:35 p.m., Helen Mier from
Veterans Memorial Hospital to Me·
Dowell Road, Columbus.

WORK SESSION
There will be a work session at
Eastern Football field Saturday
Aug. 2, from 9 a.m. until noon.
Parents of players , members of the
Athletic Boosters or other persons
interested in helping are asked to at·
· tend. For additional information
persons may contact coach Buddy
Moore at 985-4357.

Area deaths
George W. Reed

convenient, carefree
cooking ... for ant
occasion!

Days .stated in Pomeroy, Friday &amp; Saturday

.

not

SEEK DISSOWTION
1n Meigs County· Common Pleas
Court Gloria Darlene McClure,
Rutland, and Jimmy · Blaine McClure, Pomeroy, filed for dissolution
of marriage . .

. . whe re c ra ft smen sl ill ca re "

MEETING CHANGED
The regular meeting of the
Salisbury Township Trustees, nor·
rnally scheduled for Aug. 1, has been
changed to Aug. 8.

follow suit today. Sen. Charles Percy
said late Tuesday that he would
initiate a move similar to that.in the
House, if the move to kill the plan
succeeds in the House.
The mechanism under which the
standby plan takes effect at mid·
night was itseU a· compromise bet·
ween Congress and the White House
after previous efforts by President
Carter to get a rationing plan
·
through Congress failed.

-~

Meigs emergency runs

'

S~dewalk

~
electric
WESTBEND® GRIDDLE.

live muffler ; Terry Ferguson, West
Columbia, $28, speeding; Patrick
Owens, Pomeroy, $50, squealing
tires; William Hendric!q;, Pomeroy,
$29, speeding, and Robert Boston,
Huntington, $26, speeding.

Two defendants were fined and six
others forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Fined were Roy Jack Neff,
Pomeroy, intoxication, $50 and
costs, and Terry Stobart, Pomeroy,
$30 and costs, disturbing the peace.
Forfeiting were Daniel Taylor,
Middleport, $30, left of center; Jef·
. frey Patterson, Pomeroy, $30, defec·

:

ELBERFELD$

Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstonn.s through
. Friday. Highs Friday in 1the low 90s and lows tonight In the low 70s.
Chance of rain 30 percent tonight and Friday. Winds westerly to southwesterly 1~20 mph tonight.
Exteaded f\blo Forecast - Saturday through Monday: Fair Satur·
day. Chance of showers Sunday. Fair Monday. Highs in the 80s and
lows in the 60s.

Gas rationing authority received
WASIDNGTON (AP) - President
Carter now has the authority he has
long sought from Congress to order
gasoline rationing in an emergency.
But it could take months, 20,000 employees and $464 million to actually
put the standby plan into motion.
The plan became law at !2:01a.m.
EDT today after surviving last·
minute challenges Wednesday by
margins of ~31 in the Senate and
209-205 in the !-louse.
·
That does not necessarily mean
the nation will have gas rationing,.
only that the president now has the
power to order.it if gasoline supplies
drop by 20 percent over a 30-day
period.
Arid even then, su~h an order
could later be vetoed by either house
of Congress.
•
But an Energy Department report
submitted to Congress during
deliberations on the legislation
claimed that if rationing is invoked
by the presid,ent, it would take three
months to get it going ..
Running the plan would require an
estimated 5,000 federal and 15,000
state and· local employees and cost
$484 million for the three-month
start·up period.
If rationing went beyond three
months, it would _cost another -$474 -million for every additional three
months of operation, energy officials
told Congress.
The law allows the goverment to '
recoup some of the cost by imposing
a two-cent-a-gallon gasoline fee.
And that's not ,all. Before the
president can even make use of his
new rationing powers, some 5 billion
rationing coupons must be printed
and a national vehicle registration

in both houses.
file compiled. The preparatory work
Sen. Bennett Jolmston, J).La.,
could take up to a year and cost $103
argued that despite ita complexities
million, according to the Energy
and weaknesses, the standby ptan
Department estimate.
should be allowed to go Qn the
Sen. Charles Percy, R·IIl., an opnation's energy shelf because it
ponent of the plan, said these and
might be needed "should the crunch
other complications suggest that it
·
Come.''
might take 14 months to implement
"This Is the only one we've got. We
a rationing plan instead of the three
.
should
keep it in place," he said.
claimed by the administration.
·
Since
the Senate voted first on
"By th~ time the coupons were
Wednesday,
its rejection ended the
distributed, they could easily be
attempt
of
opponents
to kill the plan.
worthless," he said. Arid even If the
The . House later cast its vote,
administration could put the plan m..
narrowly in suppo!1 of the president,
to effect in three moonths, "I am not
but by·then the issue was moot.
sure we could afford to wait even
If the standby plan were Invoked,
that long during a real emergency,"
gasoline
would be rationed by
Percy said.
'
coupons
with the amount of the
Carter submitted the plan under a
fuel
to
be
rationed
depending on the
1979 Ia w that gave Congress until
of
the
shortage.
severity
midnight July 30 to reject it by votes

Accident ends police ·chase ·
A Chillicothe man was arrested in Pomeroy Police.
Pomeroy at I :38 a.m. Thursday af·
As a result of the accident there
ter wrecking his car following a
was an Ohio Power Co. outage for
chase by the Mason Police Depart- somne 125 customeni living in the
ment.
Butternut Ave. and Uncoln Hill
Pomeroy Police said that Franklin areas. Power was off"for_some
Prater, 18, Chillicothe, had crossed hours.
the Pomeroy-Mason bridge while
It also caused the Pomeroy Fire
be1ng chased ey the- Mason Police. · Depal'lment -.t/J be called tO ihe
He headed upriver and attempted a
General Telephone Co. building on
lett turn from Main St. onto But. West Main St., about 2:S5 a.m. Fire
ternut Ave., when he hit a-utility Chief Charles Legar said that a
pole. He was arrested and Is chl!rged motorist had noticed what appeared
w1th driving while intoxicated and
to be smoke coming from the roof ct.
wit)! fleeing a police officer.
the building. However; investigation
The' car w~eavily damaged ami. disclosed that it wa~ not _smoke but a
Prater was taken to Veterans
vapor created whe~ equipment at
Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
the company converted over to a,gas
Emergency Squad. He was treated
operated motor when the electricity
for minor Injuries and returned to
went off as a result of the accident.

two

White I;Jouse purporting&gt; to describe
all its involvement in the affair.
Joel Usker, head of th~ Justice
Department's foreign agents
registration section, told The
Associated Press on Wedneilday 'that
Billy Carter indicated in an in·
terview at his Georgia home Jan. 16
he had State Department cables
about his Ubyan trip.
Usker said · that during the IDterviex&lt; be had in his briefcase nonclassified State Department ca,bles
about the trip.
According to Usker: "Billy looked
over at my cables and said, 'Oh, I've
got those.'
'.'1 said, 'Who gave thelfl to you?'
"He said, 'Jimmy."' ·
Usker said he was certain Jlilly
Carter meant the president "and not
his friend Jimmy who runs the hotel
down there." But Usker added, "It's
hard to tell what llilly means. Billy
is nota precise person."
Lisker said the president's brother
-could not have known exactly what
cables were in' the briefcase. " I
didn't see his cables and I'm not sure
who actually gave them to !Jim,"
lliker said.
He said there would be no violation
of law if someone In government
gave Billy Carter unclassified
cables, but that he is investigating to ·
see what cables the president's
brother has and who gave them to
him.

White House spokesman Ray
Jenkins said later Wednesday that
President Carter's "best recollec·
lion ts that the only S!Jte Depart,
ment cables he has ever discussed
with Billy Carter are low·
1Continued on page 8)

Trio nabbed
·after chase
Three West Virginia men have
been apprehended following a high
speed· chase which nccurred
Tuesday night according to the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
Arrested were Michael R. Barker,
35, David L. Ong, 32, and Elvin L.
Anderson, 51, all of Charleston.
Charges will be filed against the
three men today in Meigs County
Court.
Barker,driver of the vehicle, will
be charged with fleeing and eluding
and various charges will be filed by
Division of Wildlife stemming from
an illegal deer kill which occurred
the same evening.
The department was answering a'
reported armed robbery caU at a
private residence . which upon investigation proved to be false.
The investigation of the robbery .
report led Deputy Keith Wood into a
high speed chase. The three men
were apprehended by Deputies Ran·
dy Forbes, and Jimmer Soulsby and
Syracuse Police Chief Milton
Varian,
Also assiting in the chase were
units from Middelport and Pomeroy
Police 'Departments, Ohio State
Patrol, Vinton County Sheriff' s
Department and Athens County
Sheriff's Department.
The department also reported a
breaking and entering at Forked
Run Park. The back door knob of the
sales building was broken off to gain
entry. Taken were cigarettes,
lighters, silver dollar necklace and ·
an Evenrude outboard motor. The
motor was chained to a boat and the
chain had been cut. Forced entry
was also made into a storage
building. Nothing was reported
inlssing, however. ·
·
The sheriff also reported that
several items taken from the Erma
Keyes residence, Salem Township
have been recovered and Tracy
· Davidson, 28, 7 Ewington, and ·Rick
Ashburn, Salem Township area appeared before Commdn Pleas Judge
John C. Bacon .· and both were
released U!ltil pre-sentence in·
vestlgation Is made.
The department also reported the
discovery and confiscation of 89
marijuana plants in Scipio Town·
ship.The sheriff reported that the tip
came from a citizen who spotted.the
plants while flying cli.ter the area.
, I

'J

l

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