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ill-The Daily Sentinel, Middlcport-Pumeroy, 0 .. Tuesday , Sept. 2, 19110

Hoofs and Paws
. By Marion C. Crawford
Meigs County ;
Humane Society
II you read this column the past
couple of weeks and have seen the
pictures of animals I've had run in
the paper in addition I think you
have the right idea - we were up to
our ear lobes in dogs, cats , puppies
and kittens.
G!)Od news! Most are now in
responsible homes with new owners
who love them! We only fared badly
in one area aod that was with kit-

tens.
There are just too many being
born every day and as I 've said a
million times " not enough homes to
go around."
Would you believe that we had
something like 24 puppies, almost
that many kittens and a couijle of
adult cats not to mention about eight
adult dogs and thanks to.reaUy nice
- no - "great" people of Meigs
, county, we working members of the
Humane Society were able to let our
ulcers have a rest due their
placement.
One item I would like to dwell on
for a minute however. The Thrift
Shoppe in Middleport is strictly that
- a Thrift Shoppe. There are no
provisions or qualified help to care
for animals. If you have an animal
or come across one that needs our
assistance ple11se call our "animal
guardian angel," Mary Ann - at
99U280. She knows exactly what our
situation is, what you can do, what
we can do, and has at her fingertips
all the phone nUJI!bers and ad·
dresses of the veterinarians in and
near Meigs County,
If you've been careless and let
your animal breed and now you want
to know what to do - call her and
she will advise you. However, do not
assume that we take all animals sometimes we cannot - sometimes
that little Inn of ours gets pretty
filled up and tliere comes a time occasionally when we ask the public to
be patient. Our little "charges" take
a lot of work, time, and money to be
properly cared for and believe me,
folks, you can rest assured that
when your Humane SoCiety gets hold
of an aliXJDlimal it not only probably
lives better than it ever has in its
lifl!, but it gets lots of individual at·
tention and love in addition.
We have aU shed tears more than
once at losing an animal we've
grown to love in the short time we
keep them normally before finding
good homes for them. Our biggest
worry this summer has been the
number of poor sick cats we've come ·
across with upper respiratory
problems and both cats and. dogs
that have had distemper. Although

there are cases of Parvovirus in. the
area, we have not had any of ours
that have come to us with this new
virus going around ... thank good·
ness, Another type situation that has
come to us often - too, often - is
older dogs being dropped aU over the
county. Just when they need
someone most they are abandoned
and since older animals are very difficult to place, we have no choice but
to euthaniie the poor little things.
We are never without ailimals who
need you though, folks, and this
week we have a new Inn full that you
may call and make an appointment'
to see any day noon until 7 p.m. please, only emergencies on
Tuesdays. Donations are required in
order to continue our work with the
homeless animals and any of you
, just wishing to help us out, although
you don't need any more pets,
remember any contributions are tax
deductible - Meigs County Hwnane
Society, Box 682, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Available to get homes are: Calico
cat, a beauty with three brand new
tiny kittens (two white, one cream
colored). We will take the kittens
and place them when they are old
enough if you will give the young
momma a permanent home. We also
have a grey Tiger kitten and an
unusual Calico plus a coal black kit·
ten. Next, we have three really nice
little "Snoopy" • Beagle type puppies, two regular Beagle color and
one a really nice chocolate brown
with white - so cute ... all females.
We have a Spaniel type, small
male probably a little over a year
old, he's auburn colored and a sweet
little housebroken animal. And, we
have a sweet dispositioned Beagle
type female that would make a nice
companion for a senior citizen or a
pal to a very small child. And lastly
we have another ariimal that would
be great with children - a mixed
bree.l, medium size dog who is
brown and white and such a gentle
boy!
A special message to Gallia Countians: If you are looking for a lost pet
or want to give an animal a chance
at life that bas been abandoned please go to the GSI property there
in Gallipolis and look at the many
dogs and puppies they have that are
kept for only three days. If animals
are not claimed • in that state
required time period these animals
are destroyed and some are really
beauties. One word of advice though
- take any animal you get from
there straight to a vet and have it
given a health check. It won't cost
you but a few dollars and the.distem·
per shot should be given at the same
time.

Area deaths
Goldia· R. Denney
Goldia R. Denney, 116, Route I,
Langsville, died Monday at
Veterans Memorial Hospillll.
Mrs. Denney was born Aug. 21,
1894, at Wilkesville, a daughter of
the late Amer and Effie Hogg. She
was a homemaker all of her life. On
Jan. 10, 1914 she married Clesson
Denney who preceded her iii death
on Aug. 22, 1979. . She was also
~ed in death by an infant
daughter, Dorothy.
Surviving are a son-in-law and
'daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce (Donna) Morris, Route I, Langsville;
three grandchildren, Mrs. John
(Judy) Uoyd, Tampa, Fla.; Mrs.
Ron (Betty) Wright, Dublin, Va.,
and Larry Morris, Langsville, and
four great-grandchildren, David and
Chris Uoyd, Tampa, and Daniel and
Debbie Wright, Dublin.
· Mrs. Denney was the last living
graduate of the class of 1912 of the
Wilkesville Academy. She had been
a member of the Wilkesville United
· Methodist Church for over 50 years,
Graveside services will be held at
1 p.m. Thursday at the Salem Center
Cemtery with Mr. Gene Musser of·
ficiatihg. Friends may call at the
Walker Funeral Home in Rutland
anytime after 2 p.m. Wednesday untill2 noon on Thursday. The family
will receive friends on Wednesday
·from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
I

Helen K. Goett
Helen K. Cooper Goett, 87, 999
Caldwell Place, Columbus, a
frequent Meigs County visitor, died
Friday at Mt. Carmel- Hospital in
Columbus.
·
Among the survivors are a
daughter and son·inlaw, Mary {Peg)
and Lee Jackson, Columbus: grand·
daughterskj, Mrs. Richard (JoAnn )
Moore and Mrs. Delmar (V. Kay)
Sprague, and a nwnbet of great and
great-great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were held at 10
a.m.' Tuesday at the Jerry Spears
Funeral Home in Columbus. Burial
was·tn the Glen Rest Cemetery.

George W. Ha~es
George Waahington Hayes, 83, a
resident of Middleport, and a former
GIIWpolls resident, died Saturday in
Holzer Medical Center following an

Emergency runs

Area hospital news
Mullins, Delores Penix, C1&gt;nnie Pot·
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions.- Darlene ts, Garnette Proffitt, William Rice,
Johnson, Mason; Connie Mays, Doi.ald Roush, 'tathel'ine Rowlimd,
Reedsville.
· Barbara Scho0)craft, George
Saturday Discharges- Kenneth Shipley, Anthony Stewart, Lilliam
Matson, ura Largent, Wilbur Win· Stowers, Bev.erly Swain,·Mrs. Cecil
dland, Joan Carnahan, Gerald Ar· Van Meter and son, Sherry Vergilio,
mstrong, Adrienne French, Pamela Ludla Wetzel, Charles Wickline,
Alley, Allen Moore.
Mrs. Malachi Willis and sqn, Bart
Sunday Admissions-Kathy Robin· Wiseman, Vernon Woods.
son, Middleport; Monda Farra,
BIRTHS
Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. George Bush, S!t'l.
Sunday
Discharges--Ronald Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Geary
Richards, Jr. , Lil\ie Adams, Inez Caldwell; son, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie Cruse, daughter,
As.h.
Monday Admissions-Alice Mills, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Norman Mit·
Middleport; Daphne Cremeans, cheU Jr., daughter, Radcliff, Ky.
AUG. 31
Chester; Faye Dunlevy, Middleport.
Monday Discharges-Hubert Seth,
Mrs. Norman·Byler and daughter,
Joan Hiles, Virgene Smith, Hazel ' Clarence Campbell, Nina Cadill,
Curtis.
.
Mrs. Dale Collins and daughter,
·Roberta Halley, Mrs. Robert Linton
and son, Patricia Miller, · PaUl
Mullins Jr., Robert Rose, Harold
Smith, Albert Wowards, Lora
· Stevens, Mrs. Charles Wardell and
daughter, Andrea Williams, Wilson
Wolfe.
BIRTHS

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kingery,
,son, Crown City; Mr. and Mrs.
David Shuler, son, Rutland
.
SEP'l'.1
Roxanne Bush, Dana Canter, ,
Veda · Channell, Mrs. Orland
Cremeans and daughter, Raymond
George, Mrs. John Hopkins and son,
James Moore, Mrs. Joseph Powers
and son, Mrs. Stephen Roberts and
son, Michael Rouse II, Adam
Russell, Margaret Scurlock, Diana
Walton.

Columbus...

' Several emergency runs were
1Contin ued irom page 1)
made over Sunday and Monday by
his
parents
penQ!ng a hearing 41ter
local units, the Meigs County
in
Meigs
County
Juvenile Court.
·Emergency Medical Services.
Sunday
the
sheriff's
de!'Brtment
Headquarters reports.
was
notified
by
Danny
Walker,
Rt. I,
Sunday at 1:30 p.m., the Rutland
Rutland that sometime during the
Unit went to Route 325 for Eldon
night his one yeaNJ!d Doberman
Soesker , taken to Veterans
had been stolen. Speakers has also
Memorial Hospital; 8:50 a.m., the
been taken from his pickup truck.
Rutland Unit to near Meigs Mine ·I
A. F. Gainer, Rt. 1', R.eedsville,
for Barbara Hayes, taken to
reported
that sometime Friday
Veterall.!l Memorial Hospital ; Monevening a 16 foot log chatn, a 12 volt
day, Rutland Unit, 2:20 p.m., for
battery and other items had been
Larry M. Darst, Harrisonville,
taken
frun a jeep parked on his
taken to Holzer Medical Center:
property.
Pomeroy Unit,IO:06 a.m. for Watren
Mrs.. Opal Fitzpatrick, RD,
Reeves, from Veterans M~orial to
Albany,
said that within the last
Holzer Medical Center; 4:30 a.m.,
week
two
soeket sets, a digital watch
Pomeroy Unit for Carl Plantz from
22
Luger
and four wenches had
a
Veterans Memorial to Holzer
·
been
taken
from
a truck parked in
Medic~! Center, and 1:38 a.m. Tuptheir garage.
pers Plains Unit, Leonard M. Gill
Deputies are also investigating
from home on Hocking Lake Road to ·
valdalism
to mailboxes on Hysell
Camden- Clark Hospital, Parker·
RunRoad.
·
sburg.

Gallia Christian School, Gallipolis,
is now starting its fifth school year.
The school is non-denominational
and stresses a Christ· centered
academic education.
The school presently has students
enrolled from .kindergarten through

VOL. 31 NO. 99

Ohio records

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.
•

enrollment are taken 11ny Ume
throughout the year and more information can be obtained by calllng
446-3041 or 742-2442. Anyone interested in transportation from
Meigs County may call 743-2372.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SALE

-

(Cont inued f r om page 1)

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were issued to
Ross Edgar Stewart, 71, Middleport,
and Edna Mae Stewart, 57 ,
Pomeroy; Terry Gene McCarty, 28 ,
Gallipolis, and Cindy Lou Dorst, 20,
Shade; Harold Douglas Clark, 48,
Reedsville, and Peggy Sue Alkire,
28;Reedsville.
TO END MARRIAGE
An action for dissolution of
marriage was filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Sandra L.
Korn, Pomeroy, and George J .
Korn, Jr., Pomeroy.

ty.
TOLEDO- Kevin J. Fletcher, 25,
of Toledo, in one-car accident on
U.S. 20 in Fulton County.
AKRON - Jeffery Carber, 21 , of
Akron, a pedestrian struck by car on
a city street in Sununit County.
MARION - David A. Dudley, 19,
of Marion, in two-car accident on a
rural road in Marion County.
FRIDAYNIGIIT
WOOSTER - Larry R. Heiple, 41,
of Orrville, a pedestrian struck by a
car on U.S. 30 in Wayne County.
. MEETS WEDNESDAY
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM will
hold a regular meeting at 7:30p.m.
Wednesday. All Master Masons are
invited.

Save 20% on any suite in stock. Kroehler quality in a large selection of 2 and 3 piece suites.
Many different styles and fabrics .

.

Free Delivery .:.... Credit Terms Available

OFF TO SCHOOL '"" All Meigs County schools are
in session' today with Meigs and Southern joining
Eastern Local which began classes last week. A
familiar scene across the county this morning was
children hoarding school buses - sol)'le delighted to he
on their way, others not so happy. And then there were

the "first timers" - like J. Christopher Cremeans, a
Middleport kindergarten student, five-year old son of
Middleport Chief of Police and Mrs. J. J . Cremeans.
The nice thing lor J. Christopher is that his mother is
the bus driver.

Contract
ratified

20% OFF
ELBERFELDS I·N POMEROY
Teachers ignore court order ·
As teachers walked off their jobs in six other states, striking
teachers in Rochester, N.Y., pledged to ignore an injunction
prohibiting their walkout and remain on picket lines as schools
reopened for 34,600 students today.
In Philadelphia, contract talks resumed between striking teachers
and the school hoard in an effort to settle a contract in time for the
start of school Friday for 220,000 students.
Teachers also were striking in Michigan, Illinois, Ohio, Arizona and
Washington.
Rochester, N.Y., school offi cials said they would staff classrooms
today with substitute teachers and supervisors as children ended their
summer holidays and returned to studies.

cher officiating.
Burial will he in Providence
Cemetery, Gallia County. .
Friends may call at Miller's Home
for Funerals in Gallipolis from 2-4
and 7·9 p.m. Tuesday.
The body will lie in state at the
church one hour prior to services.

Four killed as fighting continues
BEIRUT, Lebanon - Palestinian guerrlllas and Shiite Moslem
militiamen battled for a third straight day today in the southern
Lebanese town of Ghaziyeh. Police reported four persons killed and 19
wounded.
· A police spokesman said the fighting was touched off Monday by a
traffic quarrel between a Palestinian patrol and a militiamen manning a Shiite checkpoint in Ghaziyeh, 30 miles south of Beirut.
The combatants have ignored ceasefire orders from their respective
commands in Beirut, the spokesman said.
,
Today's casualties brought the death toll to six.

Personal. It's an important word worth repea tin g. The Farm ers Bank is yo ur personal
bank. Consid ering today's trend toward treat·
ing peo ple as numbers you might have tho ugh t
perso nal banking wa s a t hing in the past.
But not at the Farmers Bank. From the
small est personal acco unt to the ·largest business
accoun t, we ma ke yo u feel welcome. We kno w
that each person 's financi al needs differ and
require special consideration. That's why the
Farmers Bank is your personal banker.

'

Police brace for possible violence
KAMPALA, Uganda - Police braced for possible violence in and
around this East African capital amid reports of a likely delay in
balloting scheduled for Sept. 30 - the nation's first elections since
1962.
Police set up roadblocks around the capital and searched travelers
and their vehicles for weapons, authorities said.
Uganda's Democratic Party, a major faction in the election contest,
said Tuesday it had learned from reliable sources that the ballotinf
would be delayed for one month. No reason was given for the reportet
delay.
·

SUNDER ELLA DIET" CLASSES

Wrongful death action filed

Monday Evening-7:30, p.m.-Mason, W.Va.
St. Joseph's Catholic Church ·
Tuesday Moming-10:30 a.m.-Mason, W.Va.
St. Joseph's .Catholic Church Tuesday Evening-7:30 p.m:-

Farmers

Middleport, Ohio - Heath United Methodist Church

Bank

Thursday Evening-7:3o p.m.-Chester, Ohio - Fire Station
',

JO ANN NEWSOME, LECTURER, at 992-3382 invites
all "Overweight Men and women" to join the classes
and eli joy losing weighl and eating ·balanced meals at
reasonable priced.

Pomeroy, Oh.

MrnltllrFDIC

The Community Owned Bank·

SPECIAL. . . . . . . . . . . . .. .
I,

FIFTEEN C~NT~

POMEROY-MIDDLEPO RT, OHIO WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3. 1980

the !!!nth grade. Applications for

liVING ·ROOM SUITES

en tine

'

Christian school begins fifth year

,--- ----------------------1

'
.____________ COUPON

.

a1 y

BIRTHS

Mrs. and Mrs. Mitchell Allen, son,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Bentley McCarty, daughter, Jackson; Mrs. and
Mrs. William Spangler, daughter,
Ripley, W. Va.

extended illness.
He was born Dec. 24, 1896, in Clay
County, w. Va., son of the late Jessie
and Menerva Johnson Hayes. He
was a coal miner for more than 39
years.
In 1952, he married Loretta Ar·
thur, of Gauley Bridge, W. Va. She
Mary Jane Stanley
survives, along with two daughters
Mary Jane Stanley, 55, Route I,
and one son: Ralph Hayes, TenShade, died Saturday night at the
nessee; Mrs. Ruby Kinder,
Blooming Grove, W. Va.; Mrs. Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Stanley was a daughter of the
Marie Dulcia, Jonesboro, Ga.; steplate
George Crawford and Bertha
children: Mrs. Kay Stanley Kincaid,
'Rawey,
1
w. va.; Mrs . 0ary1 Canter Van Hom She was also
Stanley, Stonestreet, Spencer, W. pr,ecedt;ed in death by a sister,
va.; J ames Stan!ey, Oak Hill, w. Marie Groves, and a brother,
William Van Horn.
Va.; several grandchildren survive.
Surviving are her husband, Henry
The Hayes family moved to
Stanley;
a daughter, Connie Ann, at
Gallipolis in 1952 and operated a
home;
a
brother, Glenn Van Horn,
truck stop restaurant in Eureka.
Springfield,
Ohio; two sisters,
They moved to Middleport three
Dorothy
Newcomb,
Chicago, and
years ago.
Grace Van Horn, Chicago, and a
He was a member of the United
stepmother, Clarice Berman, .
Mine Workers of America and was a
Chicago.
member and deacon of the Ash
Funeral services will be held at 1
Str t F
Will B tist Ch h 10
·
ee
ree
ap
urc
p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing
Middleport.
Funeral
Home with the Rev. Robert
Funeral services will be held 2
.
McGee
officiating.
Burial will be in
p.m. Wednesday at the Ash Street
Burlingham
Cemetery,
Friends may
Free Will Baptist Church, with Rev.
call
at
the
funeral
home
at anytime.
Raymond Fife and Rev. Ralph But·

l ..- -

-e

•

EUZABETHTOWN, Ky.- A $1 million wrongful death lawsuit has
been filed in Larue Circuit Court against the late Clyde Daniel
Graham.
·
Hodgenville attorney Larry Raikes said Tuesday he is bringing the
suit against the deceased Graham on behalf of Brenda Harris, the
widow of Kentucky State Trooper Eddie Harris, and the trooper's
three children.
Harris was shot to death Niw. 7 in Larue County after halting a car
on US 31 Wnear Hodgenville. Graham was shot to death by a Kentucky
state trooper before being brought to trial as the prime suspect in the
slaying.

Weather forecast
PaJ;tly cloudy tonight. L!&gt;ws in the mid to upper 60s. Variable
cloudiness, warm and humid Thursday with a chance of showers and
thunderstonns. Highs around 90. Chance of rain 20 Iiercent tonight and
40 percent Thursday. Winds southeasterly to southerly 10 mph or less
tonight.
• I
'
'
· ·· ~DiletfOblo Forecast- Friday through SUnday :A chance of
'showers ·or thunderstorms early Friday. Fair Saturday and Sunday.
Hig~ in the ~ow to mid-80s. L!&gt;ws in the low to mid~ Friday morning
and 10 the nud to upper 50s Saturday and Sunday mornings.

Meigs Local District schools
opened on schedule today following
a last. minute settlement with the
non-eertified employes (OAPSE)
Tuesday night.
·
Linda Morris representing the
classified employes said the vote
was 57·9 in favor of accepting the
agreement between the Board of
Education and the Meigs Chapter of
the Ohio Association Of Public
School Employes.
According to terms of the contract
for this year only, noiK:ertified em·
ployees will receive a 10 percent
salary increase effective Sept. 1.
The 12-month employes will receive
time and a half pay for their work at
the buildings on calamity days.
Negotiations have been underway
for sometilne in all three Meigs
County school districts, but were set·
tied only within the past two weeks.
Southern Local School District's
non-eertified employes received an
increase of seven percent, while
·those in the Eastern Local School
District received a nine percent pay
hike.

In Pomeroy Village

•

Police o zcer
gets reinstated
BYKATIECROW
Pomeroy Council Tuesday night
aired a problem in the police department
at great length with
Attorney Charles Knight which
resulted in the reinstatement of
suspended police officer Rar.dy Carpenter.
Knight explained that Carpenter,
a full time officer, had been suspende!l for three days and upon his
return to work he had been cut from
full time officer to zero hours. "
Knight said Carpenter was not
notified of the change in writing nor
any explanation had been given.
Knight observed that when Car·
penter filed for unemployment
benefits he was turned down
because he is an extra duty officer,
but at the same time is not working.
Carpenter, who was also present,
informed council he was notified by
phone not to report to duty.
Knight asked if Carpenter was still
employed as a full time officer?.
Mayor: Clarence Andrews said he
and Chief Charles McKinney had
received several complaints con·
cerning Carpenter's work thus the
officer was placed on three day
suspension.
Knight again emphasized Car·
penter never received a written
notice of his suspension.
·
The attorney said he felt it was an
improper dismissal and he plans to
rue a grieveance With the Bureau Of .
Employment Services and civil ser·
vice.
Most members felt proper
procedure was not used following
the three day suspension.
According to Rod Karr, COUD·
cllman, the procedure outlined by
village solicitor Fred Crow was not
followed. 'l'he procedure is that the
work schedule of officers is to be
made up by the chief. T'1e mayor and
the chief have the •" ~ht to suspend
an officer for a three day period.
Following the suspension the
problem is brought before coWICil.
Council also felt that full time employes should be given con·
sideration. Carpenter has been a
long time employe.
Chief McKinney was to make up
the schedule. However from in·
fonnation . given Tuesday night,
Mayor Andrews, has been making
up the schedule.
Larry Wehrung, councilman,
opinioned that evidently the department is having problems with man·
power scheduling and that things
are in shambles and getting worse
and worse. He suggested some sort
of system be set up. Wehrung felt
that ·the safety conunittee should
work out a solution to problems
within the department
Harold Brown, councilman, said it
should not be a devise of the
schedule.to eliminate employes, to
which Wehrung added, "We have a
problem in scheduling."

Bill Young, councilman, also ·
noted the Mayor and chief are not
following guidlines.
A motion was made to reinstate
Carpenter to a full time officer. The
motion failed as Betty BaroDick and
Wehrung abstained.
Wehrung said we must take a
stand as things are not any better
than they were several months ago,
Wehrung insisted that a meeting be
set up with the safety corrunlttee to
iron out the problems.
'
Before leaving Knight said he was
going to have Carpenter report for
work and if not given work would
consider him (CarJienter) fired.
Following a verY lengthy
discussion, council on a motion
made by Young and seconded by
Brown, agreed to reinstate · Car·
penter 'to a full time employe.
In other pollee matters, Chief
McKinney reported that he was not
paid $56 for two days he was off sick.
and another day when his wife was
offsick.
Since Chief McKinney is stU! on
probation council is unable to pay
for the time off since he has no sick
leave or vacation time available.
Council feh some provisions
should be made for salaried em·

ployes. It was agreed to study the
situation and make necessary
changes.
Also meeting with council was
Mrs. Isla Darnell concerning a
parking ticket which she claimed ·
she did not deserve since the meters
are not accurate and she was unable
to get to her car due to water standing on the parking area. She of.:
fered a payment of 25 cents for her
parking which council accepted.
Council added it wasr working on
a program that will offer designated
parking for downtowm employes.
Paul Gerard, president of the
Meigs County Jaycees, met with
council regarding village im-'
provements.
Gerard said he has a great interest
·in Pomeroy stating, "For anything
worthwhile aU persons must work
together."
"Pomeroy is a very special town
which we take for granted, we have
very special buildings, and there is a:
lot of thingS about Pomeroy which
are very special. We can't sell it to
others unless we sell ourselves"
Gerard commented.
'
He suggested that a memoriam be
placed in the vtllage in remeriliC ontinued on page 12)

One-half mill levy
sought for libraries
Meigs County Corrunlssioners
Tuesday agreed to place a one-half
mill levy Qn the November ballot for
the upgrading the Pomeroy and Middlejlort Libraries.
.
Meeting with the commissioners
concerning the levy were Pat Holter,
Wanda Eblin ,and Ted Reed, Meigs
County District Library Board of
Trustees and Ellen Bell, librarian.
Mrs. Holter outlined the intended
use of the additional funds, should
the levy pass.
She stated that the libraries would
be upgraded for use by the elderly
and handicapped and additional funds would be required to cover the
cost of upkeep on the buildings.
Tax dollors would also be used for
the salaries of a professional
librarian and assistants and would
provide for a five percent salary increase for other employes.
Reed said if the levy passes the
bookmobile will continue, if not, then
it could no longer operate.
Reed emphasized that the board
had no intention of moving the
libraries out of\ Pomeroy and Middleport.
Also meeting with the com·
missioners were James Hartzler
and Paul McNamee of John David
Jones and Associates, consultants
for the Tuppers Plains EPA
wastewater project.

They requested approval of
resolutions giving them authority to
make application to the EPA for a
grant for a facility plan to meet
federal and state
in order
to get the building ban lifted in the
Tuppers Plains area.
A motion was passed to adopt a
resolution of intent to meet the U. S.
EPA's minority business utilization
goal for the Tuppers Plains step I
facilities plan and to adopt a
resolution stating the intent of Meigs
County to Implement the Tupjlers
Plains facilities plan.
Phil Roberts, county engineer,
discussed needed repair to a bridge
on county road 45.
The engineer recommendeil that
bridge work be done by outside forces at an estimated cost of $20,000.
Commissioners approved the repair
work, subject to confirmation of the
cost.
The commission also agreed to advertise for bids on a ballot tabulating
system capable of processing 200 or
mo,re ballots per minute for use by
the board of elections, with bids to be
opened at 2 p.m. on Sept. 19.
A~nding were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells and Chester
WeUs, commissioners, Mary Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha Chambers.

guidlinea

•

Roush retires after 29 years service
' Brunton, State Director,
Wallace
Farmers Home Administration, an·
nounces the retirement of Milton E.
Roush of Syracuse.
Roush began his career with
FmHA April 15, 1951, as Assistant
County Supervisor at Batavia. He
served in that capacity in several of· ·
flees untU April 1954 when he was
promoted to county supervisor of the
Woodsfield office.
In August 1955, he was named as
one of five Area Supervisors. As '
Area Supervisor he did all real ,
estate appraisals and generally
supervised the FmHA loan program
in severla office~ in Southeastern
Ohio.
Due to budget cuts the nwnber of
area supervisors was gradually
reduced friXTI five to three. This
caused considerable travel in supervising the work in 33 counties in
Eastern Ohio from Ironton to
PLENTY OF SUNSH1NE
Plenty of sunshine and lower
humidity are in store for the
Buckeye state today. People in northern portions of Ohio should lind ihe
decrease in humidity most
noticeable.
This break will be rather short
lived, however. The temperature
and hwnidity will rise again on
Thursday as a warm front llll)ves
,across the state.

Cleveland. Therefore, when the
number of area supervisors was
reduced to two, he took a reduction
in grade to become .the County
Supervisor in the Athens Office.
During his tenure, many farm and
rural housing loans were made to
associations - Hollister, Bishopville, Le-Ax Water Distribution
·Corp., Margaret Creek, Sunday
Creek Water District, Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District and
Leading Creek Water District.
' These systems are continuously ex·
panding and they now provide good,
adequate and potable water to 6,150
customers, both to Individuals and
businesses. These systems cover
hundreds of rural miles and have
contributed a great deal to the
quality of family living with
business growth.
In April 1971 after serving as county supervisor for five years in the
Athens Office, Roush accepted ttMt
position of district governor in
Southeastern Ohio. His primary
duty was to provide guidance to
eight county offices serving 21 counties of Southeastern Ohio, par·
ticulariy assistance was given on
· processing of group type loans ..
Roush is a graduate of Wahama
High School, Mason, W. Va., Mountain State Business College, Parker·
sburg; W. Va., and Ohio University,
Athens, with . a degr ee in
Agriculture.

•

ROUSH RETIRES - Milton Roush, Syracuse, district director ,of
Farmers Home Administration, retired following 29 years of service.

�-

I

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 19110

3-'l'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1980

Playing time mak~s
•
Correll happy ~!:!!2~wif~:

Opinions &amp;
Comments

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Judging from
the box score, the Cincinnati-8L
Louis baseball game Monday was
nothing special.
But between the agate lines that
reduce the game's thrills and dlsappointments to mathematical expression, there hides a deep personal triumph for Reds catcher Vic
Correll.
The indestructible Reds catcher
beat tall medical·odds and played in
his first baseball game since tearing
an Achilles tendon last spring.
Correll, 34, was so happy to have his
name in a box score again, he was at
the verge of tears.
·
"It was the closest I ever came to
crying in this game," said Correll,
who caught the last three innings
Monday.
"

flEA~ fASTEN 'lOUR SEAT BEttS
AN~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ronald Reagan may have the best one-liners in
the business, but Jim Rhodes knows how to leave •em laughing, too.
.
The Republican presidential nominee and Ohio's governor displayed some
of that humor on the campaign trail last week.
''Jimmy Carter told us on television that he was going to get the Russians
out of Cuba," Reagan says. "Well, he didn't manage that so he got the
Cubans to pull out."
That line about the influx of Cuban refugees into the 1J.S. played well
before a Teamsters Union meeting, and it showed up again at a GOP fundralser.
.
Reagan also brought chuckles from the Republican faithful by taiking
about Democrata' attempts to paint a picture of l)llity following their disruptive national Convention in New York.
He described the post-acceptance speech handshake of President Carter
and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy this way: "I haven't seen a handshake like
that stnce the last Muhammed Ali-8onny Liston fight."
Reagan continued to poke fun at the current occupant of the White House
by offering the president some mock sympathy.
"It's bad enough when you have a brother who for three years makes a
national calamity of himself," Reagan said with a straight face. "But I
haven't heard Billy complain at all."
· Rhodes baa a knack of using humor to bring news conferences to a close.
But some reporters were wondering whether his effort along those lines at a
recent session were intentional, or whether ht'simply decided to leave after
the laughter started.
Rhodes had been fielding reporters' questions about his suggestion that
Reagan concentrete on economic Issues instead of matters that have beset
him recenUy, like the two China policy.
Someone asked him whether Reagan's policy toward Taiwan conflicted
· wlthRhodes' ·goalof expanding trade with China.
. "I didn't talk with him about that," Rhodes said.
"I want to help you out," he told reporters. " ... taking a survey today and
reported to me that the people lined up at the unemployment line didn't mention China. Nobody.''
Then he added: "It was foreign to them."

Letter to editor
Let's have good news
Dear Sir:
·In recent ·months, our headlines

have been dominated by "bad
news!' We have heard about violent
stonns, earthquakes, hurricanes,
Mt. St. Helens, inflation, and unemployment. The rePorting has been
excellent. We the readers feel we
have been truly informed.
Of course, no one would want a
newspaper to change the facts to
make the " bad news" into "good
news." In a real sense, this distinction is artificial anyway.
Realistically all we have is simply
"news" and "non-news."

get truly "Good News." And that's
In our local churches. In church, we
hear the greatest story ever told.
Wdall that's going on in the world
around us, let's march ourselves to
the Lord's House weekly, .and ask
His guidance in these IaUer days.
Let's quit moaning and complaining
and get down on our knees and thank
the dear Lord ~or all He's doing for
us. Our little preacher once said that
nothing grieves the.Lord more than
an ungrateful heart. Let's pause to
thank God for Who He is to us daily.
Sincerely, Amanda Bradley, 1)1ppers Plains, Ohio.

'lbere's one place where we can

Today in history.
. Today is Wednesday, Sept. 3, the
247th day of 1980. There are 119 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Sept. 3, 1783, the Revolutionary
War came to an official end With the
signing of the Treaty of Paris between the United States and Great
Britain.
.
.
On this date:
In 1916, after weeks of long and
dreary battle, the Allies finally turned back the Germans at Verdun,
'France, durtngWorld War I.
In 1939, . Britain and · France ·
declared war on Germany al the
start.ofWorld War II.
In 1967, IIVoll'ly 6 mjllion South
VIetnamese went to the polls and
elected Nguyen Van Thleu to a fouryear term as president.
In 1976, the V~ D spacecraft

• •

made a successful landing on-Mars.
Ten years ago, the United States
charged that Russia and Egypt had
violated the Mideast ceasefire.
Five years ago, a teachers' strike .
in Olicago kept nearly one million
students from returning to school.
Last year, Cuba's President Fidel
Castro launched a sununlt meeting
of the nonaligned movement with a
sweeping attack on America's
global policies.
Today's birthday: Former
baseball player and manager Eddie
Stanky is 63.
Thought for today: Soap and
education are not as sudden as a
massacre, but they are more deadly
in the long run. - Mark Twain (111361910).

Cbrls BurdeUe

SVACteams look
or second wins

Billygate: lapses remain
By Robert Wallers
WASHI\'IGTON fNEA) - A
curious trio of unusual delays in the
handling of the goverwnent's investigation into the relationship between Billy Carter and the Libyan
government demands explanation
before the issue can be laid to rest.
Despite the White House's
repeated professions of full
disclosure of all relevant information about the activities of
President Carter's brother in his
:-role as a foreign agent, these bothersome lapses remain to be resolved :
- As early as May 30 but no later
than June 2 of this year, Attorney
General Benjamin R, Civiletti
received from government intelligence sources ill(ol'l'liation indicatl.og !hat tha Ubyim government
had paid Billy Carter a substantial
amount of money in return for his
activities in its behalf.
But it was not until June 9, at least
one week later, that Civiletti passed
along the information to Joel S.
Usker, head of the Justice Department's foreign agent registration
unit and the man in charge of the investigation.
- The most detailed chronology of
events issued by the White House
shows that the Justice Department

demanded - and presumably
secured - final resolution of its
negotiations with Billy Carter in ·
early July.
But the department did not
publicly disclose the Billy CarterLibyan arrangement, by liling the

formally that Civiletti was in
possession of the information and·
specifically requesting access to it.
The chronology of the second
delay began on June 'n, when the
Justice Department set its first
deadline for resolving the case. That

Today 's --commentary
appropriate legal papers, until midJuly - almost two weeks later.
- Although a full-scale ·government probe of the case was launched
in early June by the Justice Department and Federal Bureau of Investigation, the White House insists
that neither the president nor
anyone on his staff knew of the
payments to Billy Carter until more
than one month later.
Civiletti's unexplained delay in
transmitting the intelligence information to Lisker is especially
disturbing · in light of earlier
revelations that the attorney general
engaged in what could be construed
as an attempt to curry favor with the
president.
Moreover, Lisker received the intelligence data only after hearing in-

Most Washington-based reporters
were in Detroit for that event, and ·
their newspapers, magazines and
broadcasts were likely to be
dominated by · convention news
throughout that week - leaving lit- '
tie space or time to devote to Billy
Carter's problems.
Finally, there is the president's
claim that he was unaware of the
Libyans' generosity toward his
brother during a period of at least a
month when dozens of federal employees - including cabinet members, FBI agents and secretaries were lully cognizant of the in-

deadline was postponed twice, first
to July I, and then to July 2, according to a detailed statement
prepared by Lloyd N. CuUer, coun- formation~
It's possible that everyone insel to the president.
volved
resisted the temptation to inCutler's report reflect.&gt; a flurry of
formally
tip off the president or a
intense activity in those final days of
member
of
his senior staff, but that
June and the first days of July,
explanation
strains credulity.
clearly indicating that the matter
was being resolved in that period.
But a mysterious gap followed
Although White House statements
during the first two weeks of July, · about virtually all other aspects of
with virtually no activity until the the case are unequivocal and
public disclosure on July 14. One categorical, the claims of Ignorance
possible explanation suggests that about the payments are carefully
the delayed release of the em- ·qualified by the phrase, "so far as
barrassing information could have we have been able to determine."
been manipulated to minimize news
That suggests the White House
coverage.
may be leaving the door open while
July 14 was the opening day of the awaiting the arrival of another emRepublican national Convention. barrassing disclosure.
'

Economic programs: means to appeasement
NEW YORK (AP) - It is difficult deficit of the sort we were told was a
to determine how many new threat to economic security.
economic programs President CarTimes change, we are told by
ter has introduced in the past 3 and Stuart Eizenstat, the president's
a-half years - the maximum seems chief economic aide. But three times
to be seven - but that isn't the im- in less than a year! A reversal of
portant point.
basic economic policy every few
Of more significance is what the months! Economics doesn't change
effect and perhaps the intention has
thatfast.
been, which is to take the public's
.mind off the precarious state of the
Minds do change, as we know, and
economy, and to delay dealing with sometimes polltics changes swiftly
its numerous crises.
too. And politics now calls for
You will . recall that just weeks measures that will take the public's
ago, in respoll8e to public outcries mind off the economic mess and
over inflation and big spending · project it lnto the land of
programs, the public was given the · ,daydreams.
"balanced budget" program, and so
Eve!')'thing moves forward in this
was appeased for the time being.
futureland, exactly opposite to the
Spending wasn'fcut, however. It stagnation of the present which
was raised instead, and now, five . erodes incomes, saddles the public
months later, the 1981 budget seems with taxes but produces no sQlutions,
headed for a $50 bUllon deficit, a and undercuts the standard of living.

What an awful existence people
must have had way !lack there in the
present! Somebody must have
fouled things up terribly, because
most of our programs here in
futureland are designed to correct
past errors.
The avowed and almost singleminded goal of futureland, in fact, is
to revitalize the. economy that had
deteriorated so badly. Futureland is
a happy land of great beginnings.
Everyone feels reborn, as in a
dream.

What is so wonderful in futureland
is that we don't look back in anger.
We don't blame anyone for the mess
that was. We don't even worry that
the ones who created our dream had
also created the earlier nightmare.
Futurelands of the sort now
proposed by all the political candidates might be effective political

"HELP/ I'M BEING HELO PRISONER IN A
CANNING, FREEZING ANO PRESERVING
FACTORY/"

By William Stelff
.
Suppose you wanted to build a
house and an agency of your state or
local government said: "OK, we'll
issue a tax-exempt bond, build the
house you want and rent it to you on
a long-term lease much more
cheaply than you can do it yourself.
And at the end of the lease you'll own
.the property."
Would you agree? Of course you
would.
But you, the individual, can't
operate that way. You've gut to go tu
a bank or savings and loan and
negtltlate your loan at co'mmercial
rates, which now run around 12 per·
ce11t. If you could knuck that down lo
8 percent, which is roughly what taxexempt bonds now pay (because the
bond owners don't pay taxes on
them), your cost of loving in thai

built-t.&gt;.order home would ' be a lot
lower. That's exactly how some ·
smart businesses are operating
today.
Result: Merchants in places like
Dalles, Ore., Hamilton, Mont., and.
Ottawa, Ohio, are about to see a
decline in their main-street
business. K-Mart is planning to·
move into new "shopping malls" on
the outskirts of those towns, just as
it's done in 40 to 50 other locations in
the past three years.
K-Marl isn't the only company
doing this. Holiday Inns, Burger
Kings, McDonald's, Pontiac dealers,
medical clinics, law offices and
dozens of other businesses are using
a financial instrument known as Industrial Development Bonds to get
cheap money. The lax-exempt bonds, known ~ s lDBs, are proliferating

like crazy In the 20 states that permit
them.
The idea behind IDBs, when they
first sprang up, was that they could
revitalize rundown areas, permitting state and local agencies (o
lure labor-intensive manufacturing
back to places with high unem-r
ployment. Abuses began in the mid1960s, and Congress cracked down,
limiting IDBs to no more than $5
million per issue in 1968. But in the'
1970s the limit was raised to $12
million per bond issue, and as· interest rates soared in the' alte 1970s,
the JOBs looked better and beter.
One lawyer's estimate is that a com_pany involved in a $1 million, 21}-year
!DB can save $300,000. ·
Early Congressional Budget Office research lound that IDBs tol
finance private industrial and com-:

Greg Taylor
5-10, 1471bs.
Sophomore center

Nick Riggs
5-9, 1261bs.
Freshman back

5-7,lt71bs.
Fresbman hack

ploys but they often die once the
need is passed, forcing everyone
back onto the rough rocks of reality.
Judging from the record, the
latest economic policy would seem
to have a lifespan of a few months ·
_before being supplanted by another.
Perhaps not, but there Is plenty
suspicion.

The Pr~?blems have dual political
parentage, with both Republicans
and Democrats contributing
theories and practices that didn't
work, often because winning politics
interfered with sound economics.
But the immediate Issues Involve
the present candidates, all of whom
have their political visions. And
while visions are necessary, can- 1
didates have to be assessed on how
their visions relate til reality.

How smart businesses are operating

'lL'

1

01SERVE THe NO SMOKING
SIGN~ ~UR\NG 'TAKE-OFF

mercia! investments more ·than
doubled from 1978 to 1979. In Ohio,
for example, there were 19 IDBs
totaling $26.9 million In 1978; foi-1979
there were 42 issues totaling $54.6·
million marketed. Banks just buy
these things and tuck them away,
The CBO, now doing an Intensive
inquiry, figures there Is a con·siderable federal tax loss. There's another loss, ·too, as small ;
merchants around the country can '
testify. A slick new shoppipg mall '
opens outside of town, and folks .
migrate there to shop. The downtown declines, merchallts go out of,
business and In some cases 1oWJ1!1 '
are forced to the wall becaUBe state
and local laws preclude paying taxes .
on municipality or county-owned
property.

The Southern Tornadoes and
Eastern Eagles head into the second
week of the 1980 football season with
opening-game victories under their
belts.
Friday's matchups involving
Southern Valey Athletic Conference
schools find Southern hosting
Federal Hocking and Eastern
traveling to Miller, while Hannan
Trace hosts Hannan, W. Va., Southwestern faces Southeastern Ross on
the road, Kyger Creek hosts
Wallama and North Gallia hosts
Huntington Ross.
It will be Hannan Trace and Kyger
Creek~s home openers,while the
Eagles play away from home for: the
first time.
Last Friday, Eastern held on for a
7~ victory over Waterford while
North Gallia defeated Paint Valley
31Hl, Kyger Creek overpowered
Federal Hocking 61~. Hannan Trace
rallied to defeat Synunes Valley 1812aupSouthwestern rolled up a 38-18
decision over Oak Hill.
Saturday at home, Southern snapped its 19-game non-winning streak
with a 3H verdict over Meigs'
junior varsity squad.
The last time Southern won was
during the final game of the 1977
season, 22-17 over Eastern.
Dennis Durst's 16-yard dash
across the goal during the third
quarter stood up to give Buddy
Moore his first coaching victory after a two-year retirement from the
sidelines.
Meanwhile, Southern received an
outstanding performance from
~quarterback Dale Teaford to make
the first varsity game of Co-Coaches
Mick Winebrenner and Howard
Caldwell a success. Teaford scored
twice and threw for two touchdowns.
The Tornadoes took an 18-0 halftime
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Wilzer
Peanut took the eighth feature race
at Scioto Downs TUesday over
Arrow Princess by one and onequarter lengths.
Driven by Sam Noble III, the horse paid $12.20, $5.40 and $3.40. Arrow
Princess paid $4.60 and $3.00 for
place. 'lbe third place horse,
Macadamia, paid $2.80.
The numbers 4 and 8 in the fifth
quinella connected for $81.00.
The attendance was 3,437. Bettors
wagered $284,958.

RF 19

6"

RF 11

3¥2''

Stewart, OH.

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Racing 8:00 PM

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TOP DIRTRACKERS

on
Cheryl, "l'm dOne."
"The depression, I think, was wor•
se than the pain," he said. " It was
the toughest thing to overcome. All
the things I heard were negative.
Nobody was positive. That worried
me to the point where I pushed thal
much harder.
.
·
':Lknew a horseman in Georgia,
good friend of mine, who told me
that a pulled tendon on a horse is as'
bad as a broken leg. You don't shoot
him but he can't run. :You just keep:
him around for breeding purposes." ·
Correll, an average hitter used as
back-up to Bench, signed a three
year contract less than three days
before tearing the tendon during all
infield drill. He said the mont!Y
never entered his mind once he was
hurt, only his longing to play again.:

PRE-SEASON
INSULATION SALE

advantage over the Marauders and yards and Dale Newberry made two
finished with 13 more points in the pass interceptions to lead the defense.
final12 minutes.
Kyger Creek erupted for 28 points
Eastern and Waterford battled
in
the first 12 minutes of play for its
m~ between the !()-yard lines on
the rain-soaked Eastern field. The fifth straight shutout. The Bobcats'
Eagles began a 7-3 season in 1979 scored their opening four touchwith a 28-12 victory over the same . downs on a pass from Rob Waugh to
Terry Porter, one of fullback Bill :
Wildcats.
Ross's two TDs on the ground, a
This season, each SAVC member
engages in three non-league contests Waugh blocked punt recovery (one
of his two TDs) .and a pass inbefore the start of loop play on Sept.
terception by Ken Coughenour.
19 (North Gallia at Southwestern).
Junior Kevin Parsons also scored
Eastern will have the latest league
twice
for the Bobcats. ·
start, Oct. 3 at home with Kyger
Federal
Hocking was held to
Creek. The other four league schools
mlnus-ll·yards
rushing.
will began SVAC play Sept. 26.
Wahama
was
led last week by
Keith Payne led the North Gallia
Peanut
Harris'
83
yards ;md two
offense last week with 137 yards and
touchdowns, including a 97-yard TD
three touchdowns to take the early
return. The White Falcons shut out
league scoring lead. Two of Payne's
Clay last week~six-pointers came on runs of 39 and
Hannan Trace's Todd Sibley
69 yards. The 69-yarder came on the
rushed for 119 on 14 carries to help .
game's first play from scrlnunage.
the Wildcats rally from a 12~ halfMeanwhile, the defensive unit held
time
deficit. .
the Bearcats to 54 total yards and
The
defending SVAC champions
just three first downs, with senior
tied
the
game on a 2-yard run by
Matt Queen in on 11 tackles plus a
Greg.
Webb
with T1 seconds left in
fumble recovery.
the
third
quarter
and a 4-yard run by
Huntington lost to Lucasville
Ronnie Myers with 10 minutes left in
Valley last week'by a~ count.
thegame.
.
Southwestern 1'Ul1i1ing back Scott
The winning touchdown came with
Russell gained 60 yards and scored
3:38 left on a 21}-yard scamper by
twice to lead the Highlanders, while
Tim Murphy.
quarterback Jay Burleson added 50

r,'""':~ri;=;.::~ E very Fri. Night

Correll said. "Just having the
satisfaction of doing something I
wastoldl'dneverbeabletodo. John
(Bench) didn't have to come out. It
was a show of friendship, a show of
•gratitude.
"That was probably as high as I
could've been. I was floating way up
there. I had gone across the rocky
road and came out on the smooth
pavement."
Correll's baseball career has been
an unending trip down the rocky
road. He's battled hack from knee
surgery, a broken leg, aild a variety
of nagging Injuries. His right leg
hurt so bad one season with Atlanta,
he had to crawl up three nights or'
stairs to getto his apartment.
His latest injury scared him the
most. When he woke up after
he looked down at the cast

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�-

I

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 19110

3-'l'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1980

Playing time mak~s
•
Correll happy ~!:!!2~wif~:

Opinions &amp;
Comments

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Judging from
the box score, the Cincinnati-8L
Louis baseball game Monday was
nothing special.
But between the agate lines that
reduce the game's thrills and dlsappointments to mathematical expression, there hides a deep personal triumph for Reds catcher Vic
Correll.
The indestructible Reds catcher
beat tall medical·odds and played in
his first baseball game since tearing
an Achilles tendon last spring.
Correll, 34, was so happy to have his
name in a box score again, he was at
the verge of tears.
·
"It was the closest I ever came to
crying in this game," said Correll,
who caught the last three innings
Monday.
"

flEA~ fASTEN 'lOUR SEAT BEttS
AN~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ronald Reagan may have the best one-liners in
the business, but Jim Rhodes knows how to leave •em laughing, too.
.
The Republican presidential nominee and Ohio's governor displayed some
of that humor on the campaign trail last week.
''Jimmy Carter told us on television that he was going to get the Russians
out of Cuba," Reagan says. "Well, he didn't manage that so he got the
Cubans to pull out."
That line about the influx of Cuban refugees into the 1J.S. played well
before a Teamsters Union meeting, and it showed up again at a GOP fundralser.
.
Reagan also brought chuckles from the Republican faithful by taiking
about Democrata' attempts to paint a picture of l)llity following their disruptive national Convention in New York.
He described the post-acceptance speech handshake of President Carter
and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy this way: "I haven't seen a handshake like
that stnce the last Muhammed Ali-8onny Liston fight."
Reagan continued to poke fun at the current occupant of the White House
by offering the president some mock sympathy.
"It's bad enough when you have a brother who for three years makes a
national calamity of himself," Reagan said with a straight face. "But I
haven't heard Billy complain at all."
· Rhodes baa a knack of using humor to bring news conferences to a close.
But some reporters were wondering whether his effort along those lines at a
recent session were intentional, or whether ht'simply decided to leave after
the laughter started.
Rhodes had been fielding reporters' questions about his suggestion that
Reagan concentrete on economic Issues instead of matters that have beset
him recenUy, like the two China policy.
Someone asked him whether Reagan's policy toward Taiwan conflicted
· wlthRhodes' ·goalof expanding trade with China.
. "I didn't talk with him about that," Rhodes said.
"I want to help you out," he told reporters. " ... taking a survey today and
reported to me that the people lined up at the unemployment line didn't mention China. Nobody.''
Then he added: "It was foreign to them."

Letter to editor
Let's have good news
Dear Sir:
·In recent ·months, our headlines

have been dominated by "bad
news!' We have heard about violent
stonns, earthquakes, hurricanes,
Mt. St. Helens, inflation, and unemployment. The rePorting has been
excellent. We the readers feel we
have been truly informed.
Of course, no one would want a
newspaper to change the facts to
make the " bad news" into "good
news." In a real sense, this distinction is artificial anyway.
Realistically all we have is simply
"news" and "non-news."

get truly "Good News." And that's
In our local churches. In church, we
hear the greatest story ever told.
Wdall that's going on in the world
around us, let's march ourselves to
the Lord's House weekly, .and ask
His guidance in these IaUer days.
Let's quit moaning and complaining
and get down on our knees and thank
the dear Lord ~or all He's doing for
us. Our little preacher once said that
nothing grieves the.Lord more than
an ungrateful heart. Let's pause to
thank God for Who He is to us daily.
Sincerely, Amanda Bradley, 1)1ppers Plains, Ohio.

'lbere's one place where we can

Today in history.
. Today is Wednesday, Sept. 3, the
247th day of 1980. There are 119 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Sept. 3, 1783, the Revolutionary
War came to an official end With the
signing of the Treaty of Paris between the United States and Great
Britain.
.
.
On this date:
In 1916, after weeks of long and
dreary battle, the Allies finally turned back the Germans at Verdun,
'France, durtngWorld War I.
In 1939, . Britain and · France ·
declared war on Germany al the
start.ofWorld War II.
In 1967, IIVoll'ly 6 mjllion South
VIetnamese went to the polls and
elected Nguyen Van Thleu to a fouryear term as president.
In 1976, the V~ D spacecraft

• •

made a successful landing on-Mars.
Ten years ago, the United States
charged that Russia and Egypt had
violated the Mideast ceasefire.
Five years ago, a teachers' strike .
in Olicago kept nearly one million
students from returning to school.
Last year, Cuba's President Fidel
Castro launched a sununlt meeting
of the nonaligned movement with a
sweeping attack on America's
global policies.
Today's birthday: Former
baseball player and manager Eddie
Stanky is 63.
Thought for today: Soap and
education are not as sudden as a
massacre, but they are more deadly
in the long run. - Mark Twain (111361910).

Cbrls BurdeUe

SVACteams look
or second wins

Billygate: lapses remain
By Robert Wallers
WASHI\'IGTON fNEA) - A
curious trio of unusual delays in the
handling of the goverwnent's investigation into the relationship between Billy Carter and the Libyan
government demands explanation
before the issue can be laid to rest.
Despite the White House's
repeated professions of full
disclosure of all relevant information about the activities of
President Carter's brother in his
:-role as a foreign agent, these bothersome lapses remain to be resolved :
- As early as May 30 but no later
than June 2 of this year, Attorney
General Benjamin R, Civiletti
received from government intelligence sources ill(ol'l'liation indicatl.og !hat tha Ubyim government
had paid Billy Carter a substantial
amount of money in return for his
activities in its behalf.
But it was not until June 9, at least
one week later, that Civiletti passed
along the information to Joel S.
Usker, head of the Justice Department's foreign agent registration
unit and the man in charge of the investigation.
- The most detailed chronology of
events issued by the White House
shows that the Justice Department

demanded - and presumably
secured - final resolution of its
negotiations with Billy Carter in ·
early July.
But the department did not
publicly disclose the Billy CarterLibyan arrangement, by liling the

formally that Civiletti was in
possession of the information and·
specifically requesting access to it.
The chronology of the second
delay began on June 'n, when the
Justice Department set its first
deadline for resolving the case. That

Today 's --commentary
appropriate legal papers, until midJuly - almost two weeks later.
- Although a full-scale ·government probe of the case was launched
in early June by the Justice Department and Federal Bureau of Investigation, the White House insists
that neither the president nor
anyone on his staff knew of the
payments to Billy Carter until more
than one month later.
Civiletti's unexplained delay in
transmitting the intelligence information to Lisker is especially
disturbing · in light of earlier
revelations that the attorney general
engaged in what could be construed
as an attempt to curry favor with the
president.
Moreover, Lisker received the intelligence data only after hearing in-

Most Washington-based reporters
were in Detroit for that event, and ·
their newspapers, magazines and
broadcasts were likely to be
dominated by · convention news
throughout that week - leaving lit- '
tie space or time to devote to Billy
Carter's problems.
Finally, there is the president's
claim that he was unaware of the
Libyans' generosity toward his
brother during a period of at least a
month when dozens of federal employees - including cabinet members, FBI agents and secretaries were lully cognizant of the in-

deadline was postponed twice, first
to July I, and then to July 2, according to a detailed statement
prepared by Lloyd N. CuUer, coun- formation~
It's possible that everyone insel to the president.
volved
resisted the temptation to inCutler's report reflect.&gt; a flurry of
formally
tip off the president or a
intense activity in those final days of
member
of
his senior staff, but that
June and the first days of July,
explanation
strains credulity.
clearly indicating that the matter
was being resolved in that period.
But a mysterious gap followed
Although White House statements
during the first two weeks of July, · about virtually all other aspects of
with virtually no activity until the the case are unequivocal and
public disclosure on July 14. One categorical, the claims of Ignorance
possible explanation suggests that about the payments are carefully
the delayed release of the em- ·qualified by the phrase, "so far as
barrassing information could have we have been able to determine."
been manipulated to minimize news
That suggests the White House
coverage.
may be leaving the door open while
July 14 was the opening day of the awaiting the arrival of another emRepublican national Convention. barrassing disclosure.
'

Economic programs: means to appeasement
NEW YORK (AP) - It is difficult deficit of the sort we were told was a
to determine how many new threat to economic security.
economic programs President CarTimes change, we are told by
ter has introduced in the past 3 and Stuart Eizenstat, the president's
a-half years - the maximum seems chief economic aide. But three times
to be seven - but that isn't the im- in less than a year! A reversal of
portant point.
basic economic policy every few
Of more significance is what the months! Economics doesn't change
effect and perhaps the intention has
thatfast.
been, which is to take the public's
.mind off the precarious state of the
Minds do change, as we know, and
economy, and to delay dealing with sometimes polltics changes swiftly
its numerous crises.
too. And politics now calls for
You will . recall that just weeks measures that will take the public's
ago, in respoll8e to public outcries mind off the economic mess and
over inflation and big spending · project it lnto the land of
programs, the public was given the · ,daydreams.
"balanced budget" program, and so
Eve!')'thing moves forward in this
was appeased for the time being.
futureland, exactly opposite to the
Spending wasn'fcut, however. It stagnation of the present which
was raised instead, and now, five . erodes incomes, saddles the public
months later, the 1981 budget seems with taxes but produces no sQlutions,
headed for a $50 bUllon deficit, a and undercuts the standard of living.

What an awful existence people
must have had way !lack there in the
present! Somebody must have
fouled things up terribly, because
most of our programs here in
futureland are designed to correct
past errors.
The avowed and almost singleminded goal of futureland, in fact, is
to revitalize the. economy that had
deteriorated so badly. Futureland is
a happy land of great beginnings.
Everyone feels reborn, as in a
dream.

What is so wonderful in futureland
is that we don't look back in anger.
We don't blame anyone for the mess
that was. We don't even worry that
the ones who created our dream had
also created the earlier nightmare.
Futurelands of the sort now
proposed by all the political candidates might be effective political

"HELP/ I'M BEING HELO PRISONER IN A
CANNING, FREEZING ANO PRESERVING
FACTORY/"

By William Stelff
.
Suppose you wanted to build a
house and an agency of your state or
local government said: "OK, we'll
issue a tax-exempt bond, build the
house you want and rent it to you on
a long-term lease much more
cheaply than you can do it yourself.
And at the end of the lease you'll own
.the property."
Would you agree? Of course you
would.
But you, the individual, can't
operate that way. You've gut to go tu
a bank or savings and loan and
negtltlate your loan at co'mmercial
rates, which now run around 12 per·
ce11t. If you could knuck that down lo
8 percent, which is roughly what taxexempt bonds now pay (because the
bond owners don't pay taxes on
them), your cost of loving in thai

built-t.&gt;.order home would ' be a lot
lower. That's exactly how some ·
smart businesses are operating
today.
Result: Merchants in places like
Dalles, Ore., Hamilton, Mont., and.
Ottawa, Ohio, are about to see a
decline in their main-street
business. K-Mart is planning to·
move into new "shopping malls" on
the outskirts of those towns, just as
it's done in 40 to 50 other locations in
the past three years.
K-Marl isn't the only company
doing this. Holiday Inns, Burger
Kings, McDonald's, Pontiac dealers,
medical clinics, law offices and
dozens of other businesses are using
a financial instrument known as Industrial Development Bonds to get
cheap money. The lax-exempt bonds, known ~ s lDBs, are proliferating

like crazy In the 20 states that permit
them.
The idea behind IDBs, when they
first sprang up, was that they could
revitalize rundown areas, permitting state and local agencies (o
lure labor-intensive manufacturing
back to places with high unem-r
ployment. Abuses began in the mid1960s, and Congress cracked down,
limiting IDBs to no more than $5
million per issue in 1968. But in the'
1970s the limit was raised to $12
million per bond issue, and as· interest rates soared in the' alte 1970s,
the JOBs looked better and beter.
One lawyer's estimate is that a com_pany involved in a $1 million, 21}-year
!DB can save $300,000. ·
Early Congressional Budget Office research lound that IDBs tol
finance private industrial and com-:

Greg Taylor
5-10, 1471bs.
Sophomore center

Nick Riggs
5-9, 1261bs.
Freshman back

5-7,lt71bs.
Fresbman hack

ploys but they often die once the
need is passed, forcing everyone
back onto the rough rocks of reality.
Judging from the record, the
latest economic policy would seem
to have a lifespan of a few months ·
_before being supplanted by another.
Perhaps not, but there Is plenty
suspicion.

The Pr~?blems have dual political
parentage, with both Republicans
and Democrats contributing
theories and practices that didn't
work, often because winning politics
interfered with sound economics.
But the immediate Issues Involve
the present candidates, all of whom
have their political visions. And
while visions are necessary, can- 1
didates have to be assessed on how
their visions relate til reality.

How smart businesses are operating

'lL'

1

01SERVE THe NO SMOKING
SIGN~ ~UR\NG 'TAKE-OFF

mercia! investments more ·than
doubled from 1978 to 1979. In Ohio,
for example, there were 19 IDBs
totaling $26.9 million In 1978; foi-1979
there were 42 issues totaling $54.6·
million marketed. Banks just buy
these things and tuck them away,
The CBO, now doing an Intensive
inquiry, figures there Is a con·siderable federal tax loss. There's another loss, ·too, as small ;
merchants around the country can '
testify. A slick new shoppipg mall '
opens outside of town, and folks .
migrate there to shop. The downtown declines, merchallts go out of,
business and In some cases 1oWJ1!1 '
are forced to the wall becaUBe state
and local laws preclude paying taxes .
on municipality or county-owned
property.

The Southern Tornadoes and
Eastern Eagles head into the second
week of the 1980 football season with
opening-game victories under their
belts.
Friday's matchups involving
Southern Valey Athletic Conference
schools find Southern hosting
Federal Hocking and Eastern
traveling to Miller, while Hannan
Trace hosts Hannan, W. Va., Southwestern faces Southeastern Ross on
the road, Kyger Creek hosts
Wallama and North Gallia hosts
Huntington Ross.
It will be Hannan Trace and Kyger
Creek~s home openers,while the
Eagles play away from home for: the
first time.
Last Friday, Eastern held on for a
7~ victory over Waterford while
North Gallia defeated Paint Valley
31Hl, Kyger Creek overpowered
Federal Hocking 61~. Hannan Trace
rallied to defeat Synunes Valley 1812aupSouthwestern rolled up a 38-18
decision over Oak Hill.
Saturday at home, Southern snapped its 19-game non-winning streak
with a 3H verdict over Meigs'
junior varsity squad.
The last time Southern won was
during the final game of the 1977
season, 22-17 over Eastern.
Dennis Durst's 16-yard dash
across the goal during the third
quarter stood up to give Buddy
Moore his first coaching victory after a two-year retirement from the
sidelines.
Meanwhile, Southern received an
outstanding performance from
~quarterback Dale Teaford to make
the first varsity game of Co-Coaches
Mick Winebrenner and Howard
Caldwell a success. Teaford scored
twice and threw for two touchdowns.
The Tornadoes took an 18-0 halftime
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Wilzer
Peanut took the eighth feature race
at Scioto Downs TUesday over
Arrow Princess by one and onequarter lengths.
Driven by Sam Noble III, the horse paid $12.20, $5.40 and $3.40. Arrow
Princess paid $4.60 and $3.00 for
place. 'lbe third place horse,
Macadamia, paid $2.80.
The numbers 4 and 8 in the fifth
quinella connected for $81.00.
The attendance was 3,437. Bettors
wagered $284,958.

RF 19

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on
Cheryl, "l'm dOne."
"The depression, I think, was wor•
se than the pain," he said. " It was
the toughest thing to overcome. All
the things I heard were negative.
Nobody was positive. That worried
me to the point where I pushed thal
much harder.
.
·
':Lknew a horseman in Georgia,
good friend of mine, who told me
that a pulled tendon on a horse is as'
bad as a broken leg. You don't shoot
him but he can't run. :You just keep:
him around for breeding purposes." ·
Correll, an average hitter used as
back-up to Bench, signed a three
year contract less than three days
before tearing the tendon during all
infield drill. He said the mont!Y
never entered his mind once he was
hurt, only his longing to play again.:

PRE-SEASON
INSULATION SALE

advantage over the Marauders and yards and Dale Newberry made two
finished with 13 more points in the pass interceptions to lead the defense.
final12 minutes.
Kyger Creek erupted for 28 points
Eastern and Waterford battled
in
the first 12 minutes of play for its
m~ between the !()-yard lines on
the rain-soaked Eastern field. The fifth straight shutout. The Bobcats'
Eagles began a 7-3 season in 1979 scored their opening four touchwith a 28-12 victory over the same . downs on a pass from Rob Waugh to
Terry Porter, one of fullback Bill :
Wildcats.
Ross's two TDs on the ground, a
This season, each SAVC member
engages in three non-league contests Waugh blocked punt recovery (one
of his two TDs) .and a pass inbefore the start of loop play on Sept.
terception by Ken Coughenour.
19 (North Gallia at Southwestern).
Junior Kevin Parsons also scored
Eastern will have the latest league
twice
for the Bobcats. ·
start, Oct. 3 at home with Kyger
Federal
Hocking was held to
Creek. The other four league schools
mlnus-ll·yards
rushing.
will began SVAC play Sept. 26.
Wahama
was
led last week by
Keith Payne led the North Gallia
Peanut
Harris'
83
yards ;md two
offense last week with 137 yards and
touchdowns, including a 97-yard TD
three touchdowns to take the early
return. The White Falcons shut out
league scoring lead. Two of Payne's
Clay last week~six-pointers came on runs of 39 and
Hannan Trace's Todd Sibley
69 yards. The 69-yarder came on the
rushed for 119 on 14 carries to help .
game's first play from scrlnunage.
the Wildcats rally from a 12~ halfMeanwhile, the defensive unit held
time
deficit. .
the Bearcats to 54 total yards and
The
defending SVAC champions
just three first downs, with senior
tied
the
game on a 2-yard run by
Matt Queen in on 11 tackles plus a
Greg.
Webb
with T1 seconds left in
fumble recovery.
the
third
quarter
and a 4-yard run by
Huntington lost to Lucasville
Ronnie Myers with 10 minutes left in
Valley last week'by a~ count.
thegame.
.
Southwestern 1'Ul1i1ing back Scott
The winning touchdown came with
Russell gained 60 yards and scored
3:38 left on a 21}-yard scamper by
twice to lead the Highlanders, while
Tim Murphy.
quarterback Jay Burleson added 50

r,'""':~ri;=;.::~ E very Fri. Night

Correll said. "Just having the
satisfaction of doing something I
wastoldl'dneverbeabletodo. John
(Bench) didn't have to come out. It
was a show of friendship, a show of
•gratitude.
"That was probably as high as I
could've been. I was floating way up
there. I had gone across the rocky
road and came out on the smooth
pavement."
Correll's baseball career has been
an unending trip down the rocky
road. He's battled hack from knee
surgery, a broken leg, aild a variety
of nagging Injuries. His right leg
hurt so bad one season with Atlanta,
he had to crawl up three nights or'
stairs to getto his apartment.
His latest injury scared him the
most. When he woke up after
he looked down at the cast

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6-:-The Daily Sentinel, Mlcldleport-Pc&gt;m

Cardinals whip Cincy

Ax falls on
more veterans

Hernandez gears up
against hot 'Reds,_
WUIS (AP) - Keith Hernandez is gearing up for a shot at
another batting title in the National
League, but some of the luster of the
crown appears to have rubbed off.
"It's too early to worry about it,''
the power-hitting firSt baseman of
the St. Louis Cardinals said Tuesday
night after boosting his average to
.323 with three hits.
"If it gets down to the final couple
of weeks, then I'll start thinking
about it,'' said Hernandez, the NL's
top hitter and co-Most Valuable
·Player in 1979 with a .344 mark. "It's
'never easy when your team's having
a bad year. Everything has to have
some meaning."
St. Louis, despite a near repeat by
Hernandez of some of the figures he
assembled a year ago, ranks as a
poJ~orontender in the NL East with
its58-72record.
ST.

The club's 12-4 romp Tuesday nandez' 13th home run in the first inning. Hernandez also doubled in the
riight over the Cincinnati Reds of.
third,
singled in the fifth .and af·
fered but momentary respite. It left
terward
delivered a sacrifice fly.
the.Cards still a dozen games back in
Had
he
tripled in the ninth, when
fifth .place, a percentage point
he was issued an intentional wallt
behind the fourth-place New York
before scoring his fourth run, Her-·
Mets.
nandez
would have hit fcir the cycle ·
"I'll be looking forward to Oct. 5, "
Herna11dez ;~dmitted. "But! can'tlet for the first time in his nu~jor league
the fact that we're having a bad year career.
"I hit for the cycle once in Triple-A
affect iny season.
in
Denver,'' he said. "But when you
"It's perseverance. Lou Brock put
get
up to the plate, you really don't
it all together in two words:
think
about it."
'professional pride,"' the 26-year-old
Items
the keds.chose later not to
'infielder said.
dwell
on
too beavily were the 17 hits
''I find that it's a lot more difficult
the
Cards
pounded out, including a
to play when you're playing for perdouble
and
triple by Ted Simmons
sonal goals. It's getting kind of tough
which
drove
in four runs.
right now·. "
Hernandez bad three RBis and St.
· If Hernandez' burden is growing
Louis tied a major-league mark with
heavy however, little evidence of it
seeped through against Cincinnati. . four sacrifice flles, two by Dane
lorg.
Tony Scott singled abead of Her-

PLAYER' OF THE WEEK_ Bob
AUiey, julor quarterback for the ·
Me1p Marauders bu been cbosen
lbe,Mei&amp;s COIIIIty Jaycees' Player of
&amp;he Weelt for bls performance agaJn.
at Belpre. Asbley connected 08 15 of
22 rials f 179 rds
ae
or ya •

Phils edge Giants, Blue 2·1
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Vida Blue was tough - the
Phii;Bdelphia Phillies were tougher.
" It took some grinding, but we did
it," said Philadelphia Manager
. Dallas Green after his Phillies
:scored a hard-earned 2-1 victory
: over the San Francisco Giants in 13
·innings Tuesday night.
· Philadelphia managed to win
despite a strong pitching per-

fonnance by Blue, who allowed but · ba8es with none out on a single, wallt
two hits and one run to the Phillies
and bunt single. The next two batover 10 innings.
ters, Milt May and Rennie Stennett,
"It was our best team effort of the
hit ground balls and the Phillies
year, by far," said Phillies reliever . threw home for forceouts.
Warren Brusstar. "It took
Brusstar fell behind 3-1 to pinch
everybody to win it."
hitter Joe Strain. Strain took a pitch
Brusstar created the most
for a strike·and fouled off three pitperilous situation of the game for the
ches before grounding 9UI.
Phillies and pitched out of It in the
The victory kept the Phillles In fil'
11th Inning. The Giants loaded the.

st place in the National League East
by percentage points over the Montreal Expos, 2-1 winners over San

Diego.

In other NL action, Los Angeles
beat New York ll&lt;i; Atlanta whipped
Qllcago lo-5; and St. Louis stopped
Cincinnati 12-4.
Manny Trillo started the Phillies'
13th with a double and later scored
the winning run on Keith Moreland's
saerlflce fly.
Blue retired 18 straight batters
before Bob Boone, leading off the
Philadelphia ninth, reached base on
a throwing error by third baseman
DaneU Evans. A sacrifice by
Ramon ·Aviles, pinch hitting for
runs in the first inning on a single by
Phlllles starter Larry Christenson,
AI Oliver and a sacrifice fly by
sent pinch runner Jay Loviglio to
Rusty Staub.
second, and Lonnie Smith drove in
Mike Richardt's bases-loaded
the game's first run with a one-out
single scored what proved to be the
single.
winning run In the sixth before
Dodgen 6, Mets 5
Toronto cut the lead to one with runs
Derrel Thomas singled home the
in he eighth and ninth Innings.
declalve run as Los Angeles Scored
TwiM 50 1ndta• 3
three times in the sixth and held on
Rick Sofield's two-run double in
to beat New York. The victory was
the sixth iDnlng snapped a 3-3 tie and
the Dodgers' sixth straight and 13th
llfted Minnesota past Cleveland.
In their last 15 games as they moved
Darrell Jackscll and Doug Corbett into a tie with idle Houston for first
·combined on a six-hitter for the place in the NL West.
Twins. Jackscll, 8.'1, struck out six
Dave Goltz, 7-7, Bobby Castillo
before he yielded to Corbett in the and Don Stanhouse pennltted only
eighth inning. Corbett earned his four New York hits. Stanhouse
15th save after escaping a IIese. hurled the final two innings for his
loaded jam in the ninth.
fourth save.
Braves 10, Cubs 5
Dale Murpby tripled with the
bases loaded and Jerry Royster hit a
pair
ol triples, leading Atlanta over
-HocKEY
Chicago for the surging Braves' 13th
TORONTO (AP) - Defenseman
victory in 16 games.
Vltezslav Duris, dropped earlier this
Doyle Alexander, 13-7, was the
year from .the Czedloslovaktan
winner, with Gene Garber working
national hockey team, defected to
the last few Innings. Mike Krukow,
Canada Tueltday with hopes of IH4, was the loser.
joining compatriot Jiri Cbra on the
Expo~! Z, Padres 1
Toronto Maple Leafs of the National
Andre Dawson scored one run and
Hockey League.
dro\te In another and rookie right·
Duris, 24; become the third meJDo
bander Charlie Lea hurled seven in·
ber of the Czech team to defect to
nlngs of four-hit ball as Montreal
Canada· in the last two weeks.
defeated San Diego. Lea Improved
Earlier, brothers Peter and Anton
his recory to s-5 will! rellef help in
Stastny defected and signed with
the eighth from Woodie Fryman,
Quebec Nordlques.
who posted his 18th save.
Duris and four other players were
Dawson's RBI·groundout in the
dropped from tbe Cuch national
filth$118pped a 1·1 tie and pinned the
team after 'ill poor showing at the · 101111111 Eric Rasmii8Sfll, 3-10.
Winter Olympics In Lake Placid.
llumusSert was given a 1-G lead In
BOWLING
the third on Broderick Perkins' RBI·
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - Bill
double. But Dawson led off the fourCOleman knocked off lo!Heeded
th with a single, stole second and
Wayne Webb In the finals of the
gave
the Expos a 1-1 tie when he
$100,000 Columbia 300 Open, winning
scoredonKenMacha'sdouble.
- the championship match 244-225
To get to the final match, Cole~
defeated Joe Berardi :lOS-198. Berardi had to beat out Roy Buckley 214Dl and John Handegard 245-204 to
f~ Coleman.
'
Berardi flniahed third Handegard
collected was fourth a'nd Buckley
came In fifth.

\Fidrych defeats White Sox

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Garcia each drove in two runs to
Mark "The Bird" Fidrych says he
help Jim Pjjhner to his 15th victory
.now can look forward to a future that
of the season. Palmer won his sixth
:many though! didn't exist as recengame in seven decisions with some .
tly as one month ago.
rellef help from Dave Ford.
: Fidf)'ch, the American League's
Red Sox 11, Aagels 2
top rookie in 1976, won his first game
Gle!UI Hoffman Jllld Rick aurlesn
for Detroit in nearly L years
each drove in a pair of runs to pace
Tuesday night, seven-hitting the
Boston to its ninth victory, in a row.
Chicago White Sox for an ll·2 vicThe victory kept Boston 6t-games
:tory in the first game of a
behind the Yankees.
;doubleheader. The Tigers swept the
Carlton Fisk and Larry Wolfe hit
twinbill, 6-1, behind Milt Wilcox's
consecutive homers in Boston's .
'eight-hitter in the nightcap.
three-run eighth, and Dave
"People were writing that I was
Stapleton capped the Inning with an
· finished, but I don't read the papers
RBI~ouble.
that much," Fidr)'ch said. "I don't
' Raugers 3, Blue Jays 2
hold anything against those guys.
Ferguson Jenkins tossed a six·
.That's part of life. They don't know . hitter, and Texas scored a pair of
what I was doing down in Evan'sville.
"This one moment just makes my
year happier," Fidrych said. "I
can't think about the past, now. I can
BASEBALL
only look to the future."
SEATTLE
(AP) - The Seattle
. The 26-year-old Fidrych was with
Mariners
suspended
outfielder Juan
:Evansville . of the American
Beniquez
for
five
days
without pay,
·Association when the 1980 season
effective
immediatley
a club ·
began, starting his fourth year on
spokesman
said.
one of the !&lt;ingest comeback trails in
After the Mariners' game against
baseball. He finally returned to the
Baltimore Monday night, manager
Tigers on Aug. 12, losing two
decisions before the long drought . Maury Wills Sl!id that when he asked
Beniquez to hit with one out and the
:came to an end.
tying run on second in the ninth in: "It really felt good to finally get a
ning, he refused.
win. The guys have been working
NEW YORK (AP) - Rookie outhard and scoring runs for. me, but ~
fielder
Joe Charboneau of the
haven't been doing my job,''
Cleveland
Indians has been chosen
Fidrych said. "I haven't had any
American
League Player of the
cOnsistency at all. I don't know why.
Week
for
the
the period ending Aug.
:.W I know is I like the way it came
31,
while
slugging
outfielder George
puttonigbt.
'
Foster
of
the
Cincinnati
Reds took
"It's been a long time since I've
the
honors
in
the
National
League.
been able to satisfy the fans in
Charboneau hit safely in seven InDetroit," Fidrych said.'
New York, meanwhile, defeated dians' games last week, compljlng a
.370 ave~ge. He drove In ll runs and
Oakland 6-1 and maintained a L·
scored
f1ve.
game lead over Baltimore in the AL
East. The Orioles thumped Seattle
Foster ba~d .423 w:hile. leading
1();4, Boston clobbered California 11}- the Reds to SIX victones 10 seven
2, Texas edged Toronto 3-2 and Min- games, ~luding a four-game sweep
of the Pittsburgh Pirates. He had 11
nesota downed Cleveland 1&gt;-3.
The only well-hit ball off Fidrych hits, including four doubles, one
.triple and two home runs, while
was Harold Baines' two-run homer.
driving in 10 runs and scoring five.
Champ Swruners, Alan Trammell
and Tim Corcoran hit homers for
Detroit in the first game: The Tigers rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj;-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit~
won the nightcap with four runs in
the fifth inning, ignited by John
Wockenfuss' tw~run single.
Yankees 6, A's!
Rudy May scattered six hits over
eight innings, and Bobby Brown
paced New York's !().hit attack with
a two-run homer.
. May, who came out of the bullpen
in midseason, earned his 12th vic~ry with ninth-inning relief help
from Rich Gossage. Gossage struck
out two of the three hitters he faced.
May lost his shutout when Tony Ar·
. mas cracked his 28th homer in the
seventh Inning.
'
In addition to his homer, Brown
scored two runs and stole a base to
lead New York to its fifth victory in
six games.
Orioles 11, Mariners 4
John Lowenstein and Dan Grahain
rapped consecutive homers In the
first inning to get Baltimore started
·against the Mariners. Lowenateiri's
homer, only his third of the year,
'
came with two aboard.
Graham, Rich Dauer and Kiko

STANDINGS

Sports briefs. • •

AMERICAN LEAGUE

EAST

-

Boltlmore

1C1

51

.611

78

ll2

.1180

1\!o

56

.513

8\;

82
114
113

.;27

II
Ill;
12

'12
69
70
68
M
WEST

' Dolr'Oit
Milwaukee
Clleveland

Turooto

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
played, but you still never know,"
Guard Mel Mitchell felt he finally McGriff said.
had made the National Football
The Los Angeles Rams announced
League. Today, be's on the outside Tuesday that their four star defenlooking for a job.
.
sive holdouts - end Jack
"I was· shocked, but then these Youngblood, tackle Larry Brooks,
things happen in football," the for- guard Dennis Harrah .aJ!d
mer Tennessee State guard said linebacker Jim Youngblood - will
Tuesday after being cut by the Min- rejoin the team. However,
nesota Vikings.
linebacker Bob Brodzinski, who also
Only last Saturday, following Min· has expressed unhappiness with his
nesota's 38-16 preseason victory contract, left the team.
over Cleveland, he was awarded the
In other camps, the Oakland
game ball for his play.
Raiders picked up place-kicker
'.'1 didn't think I had done anything Chris Bahr, who had been cut by the
wrong,'' Mitchell said. "I thought I Cincinnati Bengals, and the Tampa
had contributed. But the coaches Bay Buccaneers signed place-kicker
have to keep the guys they think will Garo Yepremian, cut by the New
be best for the team. And I'm sure Orleans Saints last week.
. Coach (Bud) Grant did what he
· The Pittsburgh Steelers placed
thought was bestfor the team."
veteran defensive end Dwight White
Mitchell, reportedly from a large on waivers. When no other team
family, sent home all of his money claimed him, the Steelers returned
except $5 each weelt while In him to the roster after putting rookie
training camp. He was a fourth- defensive end John Goodman on the
roWld draft choice of the Miami injured reserve list.
.
Dolphins in 1976, was released in
Several other veterans were put
1977 and signed by the Detroit Lions, on the injured reserved list, Inwho released him in 1978.
cluding center Jack Rudnay and
He signed again with the Dolphins takle Charlie Getty of the Kansas
last year and was cut again.
City Chiefs, running back Bubba
this time, though, was different. Bean of the · Atlanta Falcons,
Or so he thought.
fullback Roland Harper and tight
Grant had called Mitchell "the end Greg Latta of the Chicago
hardest working player I've ever Bears, and offensive tackle Jon
had."
Giesler of the Miami Dolphins.
"Behind his quiet exterior, Mel is
The Washington Redskins reduced
a very intense, very bright young their roster to the 4&amp;-player limit by
nu~n," Grant said after telling Mitcutting wide receiver Morris Owens,
chell be had been cut. "He didn't a five-year NFL v'eteran .who waa
cry. He understood. He's disap- obtained from Tampa Ilay during
pointed.
the off-season.
" It means a lot to anyone who gets
The New Orleans Saints placed
cut. The only difference is that he halfback Mike Strachan on injured
comes from a little tighter straights reserve and filled the spot with
than some other people."
Larry Coombs, a rookie from the
But the acquisition of veteran · University of Idaho.
tackle Nick Bebout from Seattle on
The Philadelphia Eagles claimed
Monday made Mitchell expendable safety Zak Henderson after the
as the Vikings got down to the NFL's defensive back was waived by Cin45-player limit.
cinnati.
" I'm not going to give up," said·
Mitchell. "I hope I can play
somewhere. I 'know I · can play. I
TENNIS
know I'll keep trying Willi they say,
NEW
YORK
(AP)
John
'Mel, don't try anymore."'
McEnroe
and
Jimmy
COnnors
Defensive lineman Ryan Mullaney
and receiver Steve GaWlty were also moved into the quarterfinals of the
released and the Vikings placed U.S. Open tennis championships,
while No.7 Harold Solomon and 13ththree players on injured reserve seeded
Brian Gottfried did not.
linebacker Dennis Johnson, defenSolomon
lost to lOth-seeded Ivan
sive linenu~n Ray Yakovonis and
Lend!
of
Czechoslovakia
G-1, 6-G, 6-0,
running back Sam Harrell.
and
Gottfried
lost
to
unseeded
Ellot
Like Mitchell, guard Tyrone
Teltscher
6-4,
6-2,
G-1.
McGriff is also stunned. The dif.
McEnroe, seeded second, beat
ference is that McGriff, the last
Pascal
Portes of France 6-2, 6-4, &amp;-2,
player picked in the 1980 NFL draft,
while
Connors, seeded third,
made the world champion Pit·
defeated
Bernie Mitton of South
tsburghSteelers.
.
Africa
7~, 6-4, 6-4.
McGriff, a fonner Florida A&amp;M
Among the women, No.8 Andrea
standout, was even a longer shot since be had been cut by the Hamilton Jaeger stopped Renata Tomanova of
Tiger Cats of the Canadian Football Czechoslovakia 6-3, IHJ ; No.!4 IvanLeague before he showed up at the na Madruga bested Candy Reynolds
&amp;-7, 6-3, 6-3, and unseeded Barbara
Steelers' training camp.
beat Lucia Romanov of
Hallquist
"I felt good about the way I had
Romania 6-3, 3-6, 6-3.

,

Won Loot Pet. GB

New York

IWloasctty
TeiUIII

Ill
68
116
118
56
51
47

Ookland

.~22
·.~19

n

"
II!
II&amp;

BootoolO, c.litomlal

.m

:J&amp;

.644

19

.101)

·489

16
Chl"''!O
74
California
79
SeoWe
114
'nlndiJ'•Game.
Detroilll~, Chicago 2.-1

-

31
31

.392
.319

33

Moo •.sat. 8 am-10 pm

:!II;

: Sundi, 10 am-10 pm '

_

Baltimore 10, SeoWe4
New York&amp;, Oakland l

.

Minnesota 5, Cleveland 3
Only gameascheduled
Wed.ad.y'•G•met
S..We (llreuler l-71 at BalUmore (Stone 21·
l),(n)
CaU!omla(Mart!nez Hi at llootDn iT..,... 8ll),( n)
Chl"''!o (8aUJ118arten:l-t) at Detroii(Pelry s-

7),(n)•

.

•

THE FABRIC SHOP

'

.

.

·Ookland (Kingman 7·11) at N.., Von (John

111-71 (n)
MllwauliH (Sorenson

H) at Kansas City
(L&lt;alardiH), (n)
, ·Cleveland (Splllner 1:14) ot Minnesota (Zahn
(1-17), (n )
Toronto (Stieb 11-10) at Texas (Figueroa WI

In)

'

. NATIONALIEAGUE
EAST
, Won Loot Pet. GB
70 eo
.1311 n 61 .1311 -

71

19
5I
~1

WEST
71
71

-!AioAngeles

llncln\UIU
~Ia

Son Frandsco
·Son oteso
,

12
67
116

l'l

.134

73
72
79

.44'1
448
.382

12
12
19

57
57

.5611
.5611

-

eo

Ill
1111
15 78
'heldi)"•Gama

.Hii
.iiOII

.1011
.414

\;

3
I

9

USDA T-BON E OR ·

3)1,1:

Atlanta 10, Chicago$

,St.Lou!J 12, ClnclnneU4
Montreal 2, Son otego I
!AioAntlelet8, New Vortl
Plltladelphlo 2, Son Francbco I, 13innlnas
Qlly gamoo ocheduled
Wedaesdly'a Galllel
AllaDia (Bogp H) at Chl(qo (McGlothen e.
10)
· Houoton (Ruhlo '-J)at Pittabwlh (Candelaria
Cincinnati IPostore 164) ot St. W. (Mor·
tlnoz44) , (n )
Moot!ul (NOI'I!Wl W I at Son Dle!Jo (Sblrley

f.IO), (o)

· NewYork!ZicllryH)atLooAnlel.. (Hootoo
IU), ( n )
Philadelphia (Ruthven IU ) at Son Fl'lnclsco
(Hipley 7-7), (n)

Cooper,

USDA

.360; DUone,
OeveLand, .~ ; Carew, California, .332; Riven,
Teua, .330.
RUNS , Wlbon, Kan3u City, 107; Yount,
Milwaukee, 1~ ; WWs, Teua, M; Bwnbry,

Milwaukee,

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Round _Roast .... ~~. .$ 98

Bl.ltimore,V3; Klvera, Teua, aa.
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101; Brett, Kansu City, 97; Re.Jacklon, New

YCI'k.M; Pera:,Bottm,IO.
HITS: Wlbon, Kan3u Clly, IIIII; Cooper,
Milwaukee, liS ; Riven, Teus, 112; Oliver,
Teus,IM; Bwnbr)',Baltlmore, 161.

Teu.s, 34; Lynn, Boltoa, 11.

'

TRIPlES: Grifftn, Tor.to, 15; WUion, KanIU City,l2; Youn~ Mllnullee, 10; Wlllhlnltoo.
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Annu, Ooldand, Sll ; MLII'I'IIy, Baltimore, :IS. · ·
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wu.on, 1tan1u atr, &amp;a; DUane, CSeveland, 41;
J.er.., SeoWe,SIIl ~· Baltia1on, !15.
PITCIDNG jll UOCIIICMII) ' O.rwin, Teus, ll·
t. ..... Ud; Stme, Baltimore, 21-5, .. ., 3.0&amp;;
Gun, Kanlu &lt;l\y, lW, .713, Ul; Jobn, New
Yon, tll-7, .7211, 1.13; R.Moy, New Ycrt, IU,
.IIlii, 2.4&lt;1; Mdlregor, Baltimore, 111-7, .IIIIIJ, 3.02;
M.Norrit, OHland, lN, .882, 2.st; QWienberry,
Unsu ctty, ll-6,.1111, 2.81. .
STRIKEOUTS, Bori!O&lt;, Clevelond, UO;
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NATIONAL LEAGUE

BAmNG (SiiO ol bot.o), Hendrick, St.Lou!J,
.314; Templeton, St.Louil, .323; K.Hemanda,
llt.Loul.o, .323 ; Trillo, Pl1llldelphla, .317; J .Cruz,
llouolan, .311.
RUNS : K.Hernanda, St.Lou.IJ, t3; IAFlore,
Mcllltreal, Ill; Murphy!...~~t,l6; Sclunldt,

1

Pl1ilodelphla, 84; Rooe, t'!UIIde,...., 83.
· RBI ' Hendrick, St.Loul.o, 16 ; Schmid~
· Pblladelphia, t4 ; Garvey, Lot AD&amp;elel, 93;
Baller, Los Angeles, • : K.Hemandea, st.l..oub,

••

IIJTS, Gorvey, lm An&amp;eleo, 162; Hendrick,
SU..adl, 1M; K. Hernandez, Sl.Louia, 154;

J.Cru&amp;, HOIIIIon, ll4; Rlcborda, Son oteao,IM.
DOUBLES, llooe, Philadelphia, 38; KnJsht ,

ctnclnnaU, 34; K.. Hernandez, St.Louil, S2;
Dowson, Montreo1, 31 ; or;_,, ctndnnotl, Sl.
TRIPLES, R.Scott, MOIIUul, ll ; McBride, .
· Pbllodolphla, 10; 0 . Moreno, Pillll&gt;urlh. 10;

LeF&amp;ore, MldtUI, I ; Temple&amp;on, st. LDul:a. 8.

HOME RUNS: Schmidt, Phitodelphla, IIi; HOI'
·w, Atlanta, 28; Baker, lAI Anples, Jll; Muro!IY. Atlanta, 25; He~ct_,St.Louis, :IS.

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24 prints
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14; R.Scott, Montreal, 14; Rlcbonla, Son Diego,
II.
PITCHING Ill Dedal0111l: Reua, !Aio
Anpleo, 111-4, .110, 2.14; Carltoo, Pl\ilodelphta,
U..f, .~. UO; Bibby, Ptttabur&amp;h, 15-6, .75Q,
Ul; Rlchllrd, Houaton, ICI-Ic;111, 1.10; Hooton,
too Anples, IH, .701, s.:ll: Wollt, Pllllodelphlo,
w..112, U7; Suttoo, !Aio Anpleo, ~ • .m, 2.21; ·
LICone, HOUltOn, ..... .fl7, 2.84.
STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, PIOlodelohla, Ill;

......

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BalAnce Due: St:I.OO

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1

�-4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1980

6-:-The Daily Sentinel, Mlcldleport-Pc&gt;m

Cardinals whip Cincy

Ax falls on
more veterans

Hernandez gears up
against hot 'Reds,_
WUIS (AP) - Keith Hernandez is gearing up for a shot at
another batting title in the National
League, but some of the luster of the
crown appears to have rubbed off.
"It's too early to worry about it,''
the power-hitting firSt baseman of
the St. Louis Cardinals said Tuesday
night after boosting his average to
.323 with three hits.
"If it gets down to the final couple
of weeks, then I'll start thinking
about it,'' said Hernandez, the NL's
top hitter and co-Most Valuable
·Player in 1979 with a .344 mark. "It's
'never easy when your team's having
a bad year. Everything has to have
some meaning."
St. Louis, despite a near repeat by
Hernandez of some of the figures he
assembled a year ago, ranks as a
poJ~orontender in the NL East with
its58-72record.
ST.

The club's 12-4 romp Tuesday nandez' 13th home run in the first inning. Hernandez also doubled in the
riight over the Cincinnati Reds of.
third,
singled in the fifth .and af·
fered but momentary respite. It left
terward
delivered a sacrifice fly.
the.Cards still a dozen games back in
Had
he
tripled in the ninth, when
fifth .place, a percentage point
he was issued an intentional wallt
behind the fourth-place New York
before scoring his fourth run, Her-·
Mets.
nandez
would have hit fcir the cycle ·
"I'll be looking forward to Oct. 5, "
Herna11dez ;~dmitted. "But! can'tlet for the first time in his nu~jor league
the fact that we're having a bad year career.
"I hit for the cycle once in Triple-A
affect iny season.
in
Denver,'' he said. "But when you
"It's perseverance. Lou Brock put
get
up to the plate, you really don't
it all together in two words:
think
about it."
'professional pride,"' the 26-year-old
Items
the keds.chose later not to
'infielder said.
dwell
on
too beavily were the 17 hits
''I find that it's a lot more difficult
the
Cards
pounded out, including a
to play when you're playing for perdouble
and
triple by Ted Simmons
sonal goals. It's getting kind of tough
which
drove
in four runs.
right now·. "
Hernandez bad three RBis and St.
· If Hernandez' burden is growing
Louis tied a major-league mark with
heavy however, little evidence of it
seeped through against Cincinnati. . four sacrifice flles, two by Dane
lorg.
Tony Scott singled abead of Her-

PLAYER' OF THE WEEK_ Bob
AUiey, julor quarterback for the ·
Me1p Marauders bu been cbosen
lbe,Mei&amp;s COIIIIty Jaycees' Player of
&amp;he Weelt for bls performance agaJn.
at Belpre. Asbley connected 08 15 of
22 rials f 179 rds
ae
or ya •

Phils edge Giants, Blue 2·1
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Vida Blue was tough - the
Phii;Bdelphia Phillies were tougher.
" It took some grinding, but we did
it," said Philadelphia Manager
. Dallas Green after his Phillies
:scored a hard-earned 2-1 victory
: over the San Francisco Giants in 13
·innings Tuesday night.
· Philadelphia managed to win
despite a strong pitching per-

fonnance by Blue, who allowed but · ba8es with none out on a single, wallt
two hits and one run to the Phillies
and bunt single. The next two batover 10 innings.
ters, Milt May and Rennie Stennett,
"It was our best team effort of the
hit ground balls and the Phillies
year, by far," said Phillies reliever . threw home for forceouts.
Warren Brusstar. "It took
Brusstar fell behind 3-1 to pinch
everybody to win it."
hitter Joe Strain. Strain took a pitch
Brusstar created the most
for a strike·and fouled off three pitperilous situation of the game for the
ches before grounding 9UI.
Phillies and pitched out of It in the
The victory kept the Phillles In fil'
11th Inning. The Giants loaded the.

st place in the National League East
by percentage points over the Montreal Expos, 2-1 winners over San

Diego.

In other NL action, Los Angeles
beat New York ll&lt;i; Atlanta whipped
Qllcago lo-5; and St. Louis stopped
Cincinnati 12-4.
Manny Trillo started the Phillies'
13th with a double and later scored
the winning run on Keith Moreland's
saerlflce fly.
Blue retired 18 straight batters
before Bob Boone, leading off the
Philadelphia ninth, reached base on
a throwing error by third baseman
DaneU Evans. A sacrifice by
Ramon ·Aviles, pinch hitting for
runs in the first inning on a single by
Phlllles starter Larry Christenson,
AI Oliver and a sacrifice fly by
sent pinch runner Jay Loviglio to
Rusty Staub.
second, and Lonnie Smith drove in
Mike Richardt's bases-loaded
the game's first run with a one-out
single scored what proved to be the
single.
winning run In the sixth before
Dodgen 6, Mets 5
Toronto cut the lead to one with runs
Derrel Thomas singled home the
in he eighth and ninth Innings.
declalve run as Los Angeles Scored
TwiM 50 1ndta• 3
three times in the sixth and held on
Rick Sofield's two-run double in
to beat New York. The victory was
the sixth iDnlng snapped a 3-3 tie and
the Dodgers' sixth straight and 13th
llfted Minnesota past Cleveland.
In their last 15 games as they moved
Darrell Jackscll and Doug Corbett into a tie with idle Houston for first
·combined on a six-hitter for the place in the NL West.
Twins. Jackscll, 8.'1, struck out six
Dave Goltz, 7-7, Bobby Castillo
before he yielded to Corbett in the and Don Stanhouse pennltted only
eighth inning. Corbett earned his four New York hits. Stanhouse
15th save after escaping a IIese. hurled the final two innings for his
loaded jam in the ninth.
fourth save.
Braves 10, Cubs 5
Dale Murpby tripled with the
bases loaded and Jerry Royster hit a
pair
ol triples, leading Atlanta over
-HocKEY
Chicago for the surging Braves' 13th
TORONTO (AP) - Defenseman
victory in 16 games.
Vltezslav Duris, dropped earlier this
Doyle Alexander, 13-7, was the
year from .the Czedloslovaktan
winner, with Gene Garber working
national hockey team, defected to
the last few Innings. Mike Krukow,
Canada Tueltday with hopes of IH4, was the loser.
joining compatriot Jiri Cbra on the
Expo~! Z, Padres 1
Toronto Maple Leafs of the National
Andre Dawson scored one run and
Hockey League.
dro\te In another and rookie right·
Duris, 24; become the third meJDo
bander Charlie Lea hurled seven in·
ber of the Czech team to defect to
nlngs of four-hit ball as Montreal
Canada· in the last two weeks.
defeated San Diego. Lea Improved
Earlier, brothers Peter and Anton
his recory to s-5 will! rellef help in
Stastny defected and signed with
the eighth from Woodie Fryman,
Quebec Nordlques.
who posted his 18th save.
Duris and four other players were
Dawson's RBI·groundout in the
dropped from tbe Cuch national
filth$118pped a 1·1 tie and pinned the
team after 'ill poor showing at the · 101111111 Eric Rasmii8Sfll, 3-10.
Winter Olympics In Lake Placid.
llumusSert was given a 1-G lead In
BOWLING
the third on Broderick Perkins' RBI·
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - Bill
double. But Dawson led off the fourCOleman knocked off lo!Heeded
th with a single, stole second and
Wayne Webb In the finals of the
gave
the Expos a 1-1 tie when he
$100,000 Columbia 300 Open, winning
scoredonKenMacha'sdouble.
- the championship match 244-225
To get to the final match, Cole~
defeated Joe Berardi :lOS-198. Berardi had to beat out Roy Buckley 214Dl and John Handegard 245-204 to
f~ Coleman.
'
Berardi flniahed third Handegard
collected was fourth a'nd Buckley
came In fifth.

\Fidrych defeats White Sox

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Garcia each drove in two runs to
Mark "The Bird" Fidrych says he
help Jim Pjjhner to his 15th victory
.now can look forward to a future that
of the season. Palmer won his sixth
:many though! didn't exist as recengame in seven decisions with some .
tly as one month ago.
rellef help from Dave Ford.
: Fidf)'ch, the American League's
Red Sox 11, Aagels 2
top rookie in 1976, won his first game
Gle!UI Hoffman Jllld Rick aurlesn
for Detroit in nearly L years
each drove in a pair of runs to pace
Tuesday night, seven-hitting the
Boston to its ninth victory, in a row.
Chicago White Sox for an ll·2 vicThe victory kept Boston 6t-games
:tory in the first game of a
behind the Yankees.
;doubleheader. The Tigers swept the
Carlton Fisk and Larry Wolfe hit
twinbill, 6-1, behind Milt Wilcox's
consecutive homers in Boston's .
'eight-hitter in the nightcap.
three-run eighth, and Dave
"People were writing that I was
Stapleton capped the Inning with an
· finished, but I don't read the papers
RBI~ouble.
that much," Fidr)'ch said. "I don't
' Raugers 3, Blue Jays 2
hold anything against those guys.
Ferguson Jenkins tossed a six·
.That's part of life. They don't know . hitter, and Texas scored a pair of
what I was doing down in Evan'sville.
"This one moment just makes my
year happier," Fidrych said. "I
can't think about the past, now. I can
BASEBALL
only look to the future."
SEATTLE
(AP) - The Seattle
. The 26-year-old Fidrych was with
Mariners
suspended
outfielder Juan
:Evansville . of the American
Beniquez
for
five
days
without pay,
·Association when the 1980 season
effective
immediatley
a club ·
began, starting his fourth year on
spokesman
said.
one of the !&lt;ingest comeback trails in
After the Mariners' game against
baseball. He finally returned to the
Baltimore Monday night, manager
Tigers on Aug. 12, losing two
decisions before the long drought . Maury Wills Sl!id that when he asked
Beniquez to hit with one out and the
:came to an end.
tying run on second in the ninth in: "It really felt good to finally get a
ning, he refused.
win. The guys have been working
NEW YORK (AP) - Rookie outhard and scoring runs for. me, but ~
fielder
Joe Charboneau of the
haven't been doing my job,''
Cleveland
Indians has been chosen
Fidrych said. "I haven't had any
American
League Player of the
cOnsistency at all. I don't know why.
Week
for
the
the period ending Aug.
:.W I know is I like the way it came
31,
while
slugging
outfielder George
puttonigbt.
'
Foster
of
the
Cincinnati
Reds took
"It's been a long time since I've
the
honors
in
the
National
League.
been able to satisfy the fans in
Charboneau hit safely in seven InDetroit," Fidrych said.'
New York, meanwhile, defeated dians' games last week, compljlng a
.370 ave~ge. He drove In ll runs and
Oakland 6-1 and maintained a L·
scored
f1ve.
game lead over Baltimore in the AL
East. The Orioles thumped Seattle
Foster ba~d .423 w:hile. leading
1();4, Boston clobbered California 11}- the Reds to SIX victones 10 seven
2, Texas edged Toronto 3-2 and Min- games, ~luding a four-game sweep
of the Pittsburgh Pirates. He had 11
nesota downed Cleveland 1&gt;-3.
The only well-hit ball off Fidrych hits, including four doubles, one
.triple and two home runs, while
was Harold Baines' two-run homer.
driving in 10 runs and scoring five.
Champ Swruners, Alan Trammell
and Tim Corcoran hit homers for
Detroit in the first game: The Tigers rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj;-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit~
won the nightcap with four runs in
the fifth inning, ignited by John
Wockenfuss' tw~run single.
Yankees 6, A's!
Rudy May scattered six hits over
eight innings, and Bobby Brown
paced New York's !().hit attack with
a two-run homer.
. May, who came out of the bullpen
in midseason, earned his 12th vic~ry with ninth-inning relief help
from Rich Gossage. Gossage struck
out two of the three hitters he faced.
May lost his shutout when Tony Ar·
. mas cracked his 28th homer in the
seventh Inning.
'
In addition to his homer, Brown
scored two runs and stole a base to
lead New York to its fifth victory in
six games.
Orioles 11, Mariners 4
John Lowenstein and Dan Grahain
rapped consecutive homers In the
first inning to get Baltimore started
·against the Mariners. Lowenateiri's
homer, only his third of the year,
'
came with two aboard.
Graham, Rich Dauer and Kiko

STANDINGS

Sports briefs. • •

AMERICAN LEAGUE

EAST

-

Boltlmore

1C1

51

.611

78

ll2

.1180

1\!o

56

.513

8\;

82
114
113

.;27

II
Ill;
12

'12
69
70
68
M
WEST

' Dolr'Oit
Milwaukee
Clleveland

Turooto

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
played, but you still never know,"
Guard Mel Mitchell felt he finally McGriff said.
had made the National Football
The Los Angeles Rams announced
League. Today, be's on the outside Tuesday that their four star defenlooking for a job.
.
sive holdouts - end Jack
"I was· shocked, but then these Youngblood, tackle Larry Brooks,
things happen in football," the for- guard Dennis Harrah .aJ!d
mer Tennessee State guard said linebacker Jim Youngblood - will
Tuesday after being cut by the Min- rejoin the team. However,
nesota Vikings.
linebacker Bob Brodzinski, who also
Only last Saturday, following Min· has expressed unhappiness with his
nesota's 38-16 preseason victory contract, left the team.
over Cleveland, he was awarded the
In other camps, the Oakland
game ball for his play.
Raiders picked up place-kicker
'.'1 didn't think I had done anything Chris Bahr, who had been cut by the
wrong,'' Mitchell said. "I thought I Cincinnati Bengals, and the Tampa
had contributed. But the coaches Bay Buccaneers signed place-kicker
have to keep the guys they think will Garo Yepremian, cut by the New
be best for the team. And I'm sure Orleans Saints last week.
. Coach (Bud) Grant did what he
· The Pittsburgh Steelers placed
thought was bestfor the team."
veteran defensive end Dwight White
Mitchell, reportedly from a large on waivers. When no other team
family, sent home all of his money claimed him, the Steelers returned
except $5 each weelt while In him to the roster after putting rookie
training camp. He was a fourth- defensive end John Goodman on the
roWld draft choice of the Miami injured reserve list.
.
Dolphins in 1976, was released in
Several other veterans were put
1977 and signed by the Detroit Lions, on the injured reserved list, Inwho released him in 1978.
cluding center Jack Rudnay and
He signed again with the Dolphins takle Charlie Getty of the Kansas
last year and was cut again.
City Chiefs, running back Bubba
this time, though, was different. Bean of the · Atlanta Falcons,
Or so he thought.
fullback Roland Harper and tight
Grant had called Mitchell "the end Greg Latta of the Chicago
hardest working player I've ever Bears, and offensive tackle Jon
had."
Giesler of the Miami Dolphins.
"Behind his quiet exterior, Mel is
The Washington Redskins reduced
a very intense, very bright young their roster to the 4&amp;-player limit by
nu~n," Grant said after telling Mitcutting wide receiver Morris Owens,
chell be had been cut. "He didn't a five-year NFL v'eteran .who waa
cry. He understood. He's disap- obtained from Tampa Ilay during
pointed.
the off-season.
" It means a lot to anyone who gets
The New Orleans Saints placed
cut. The only difference is that he halfback Mike Strachan on injured
comes from a little tighter straights reserve and filled the spot with
than some other people."
Larry Coombs, a rookie from the
But the acquisition of veteran · University of Idaho.
tackle Nick Bebout from Seattle on
The Philadelphia Eagles claimed
Monday made Mitchell expendable safety Zak Henderson after the
as the Vikings got down to the NFL's defensive back was waived by Cin45-player limit.
cinnati.
" I'm not going to give up," said·
Mitchell. "I hope I can play
somewhere. I 'know I · can play. I
TENNIS
know I'll keep trying Willi they say,
NEW
YORK
(AP)
John
'Mel, don't try anymore."'
McEnroe
and
Jimmy
COnnors
Defensive lineman Ryan Mullaney
and receiver Steve GaWlty were also moved into the quarterfinals of the
released and the Vikings placed U.S. Open tennis championships,
while No.7 Harold Solomon and 13ththree players on injured reserve seeded
Brian Gottfried did not.
linebacker Dennis Johnson, defenSolomon
lost to lOth-seeded Ivan
sive linenu~n Ray Yakovonis and
Lend!
of
Czechoslovakia
G-1, 6-G, 6-0,
running back Sam Harrell.
and
Gottfried
lost
to
unseeded
Ellot
Like Mitchell, guard Tyrone
Teltscher
6-4,
6-2,
G-1.
McGriff is also stunned. The dif.
McEnroe, seeded second, beat
ference is that McGriff, the last
Pascal
Portes of France 6-2, 6-4, &amp;-2,
player picked in the 1980 NFL draft,
while
Connors, seeded third,
made the world champion Pit·
defeated
Bernie Mitton of South
tsburghSteelers.
.
Africa
7~, 6-4, 6-4.
McGriff, a fonner Florida A&amp;M
Among the women, No.8 Andrea
standout, was even a longer shot since be had been cut by the Hamilton Jaeger stopped Renata Tomanova of
Tiger Cats of the Canadian Football Czechoslovakia 6-3, IHJ ; No.!4 IvanLeague before he showed up at the na Madruga bested Candy Reynolds
&amp;-7, 6-3, 6-3, and unseeded Barbara
Steelers' training camp.
beat Lucia Romanov of
Hallquist
"I felt good about the way I had
Romania 6-3, 3-6, 6-3.

,

Won Loot Pet. GB

New York

IWloasctty
TeiUIII

Ill
68
116
118
56
51
47

Ookland

.~22
·.~19

n

"
II!
II&amp;

BootoolO, c.litomlal

.m

:J&amp;

.644

19

.101)

·489

16
Chl"''!O
74
California
79
SeoWe
114
'nlndiJ'•Game.
Detroilll~, Chicago 2.-1

-

31
31

.392
.319

33

Moo •.sat. 8 am-10 pm

:!II;

: Sundi, 10 am-10 pm '

_

Baltimore 10, SeoWe4
New York&amp;, Oakland l

.

Minnesota 5, Cleveland 3
Only gameascheduled
Wed.ad.y'•G•met
S..We (llreuler l-71 at BalUmore (Stone 21·
l),(n)
CaU!omla(Mart!nez Hi at llootDn iT..,... 8ll),( n)
Chl"''!o (8aUJ118arten:l-t) at Detroii(Pelry s-

7),(n)•

.

•

THE FABRIC SHOP

'

.

.

·Ookland (Kingman 7·11) at N.., Von (John

111-71 (n)
MllwauliH (Sorenson

H) at Kansas City
(L&lt;alardiH), (n)
, ·Cleveland (Splllner 1:14) ot Minnesota (Zahn
(1-17), (n )
Toronto (Stieb 11-10) at Texas (Figueroa WI

In)

'

. NATIONALIEAGUE
EAST
, Won Loot Pet. GB
70 eo
.1311 n 61 .1311 -

71

19
5I
~1

WEST
71
71

-!AioAngeles

llncln\UIU
~Ia

Son Frandsco
·Son oteso
,

12
67
116

l'l

.134

73
72
79

.44'1
448
.382

12
12
19

57
57

.5611
.5611

-

eo

Ill
1111
15 78
'heldi)"•Gama

.Hii
.iiOII

.1011
.414

\;

3
I

9

USDA T-BON E OR ·

3)1,1:

Atlanta 10, Chicago$

,St.Lou!J 12, ClnclnneU4
Montreal 2, Son otego I
!AioAntlelet8, New Vortl
Plltladelphlo 2, Son Francbco I, 13innlnas
Qlly gamoo ocheduled
Wedaesdly'a Galllel
AllaDia (Bogp H) at Chl(qo (McGlothen e.
10)
· Houoton (Ruhlo '-J)at Pittabwlh (Candelaria
Cincinnati IPostore 164) ot St. W. (Mor·
tlnoz44) , (n )
Moot!ul (NOI'I!Wl W I at Son Dle!Jo (Sblrley

f.IO), (o)

· NewYork!ZicllryH)atLooAnlel.. (Hootoo
IU), ( n )
Philadelphia (Ruthven IU ) at Son Fl'lnclsco
(Hipley 7-7), (n)

Cooper,

USDA

.360; DUone,
OeveLand, .~ ; Carew, California, .332; Riven,
Teua, .330.
RUNS , Wlbon, Kan3u City, 107; Yount,
Milwaukee, 1~ ; WWs, Teua, M; Bwnbry,

Milwaukee,

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Bl.ltimore,V3; Klvera, Teua, aa.
RBI : Cooper, MUw•ube , 103; Oliver, Tezu,

101; Brett, Kansu City, 97; Re.Jacklon, New

YCI'k.M; Pera:,Bottm,IO.
HITS: Wlbon, Kan3u Clly, IIIII; Cooper,
Milwaukee, liS ; Riven, Teus, 112; Oliver,
Teus,IM; Bwnbr)',Baltlmore, 161.

Teu.s, 34; Lynn, Boltoa, 11.

'

TRIPlES: Grifftn, Tor.to, 15; WUion, KanIU City,l2; Youn~ Mllnullee, 10; Wlllhlnltoo.
·Konou City1!0_;, B...U, KanaaCity,l.
• HOME RuR3: Re.Jaeklon, Nn Yor11:, 15;

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Olllvie, MUW"aukee, D; 'l'hf.mu. Milwaukee, 32;

Annu, Ooldand, Sll ; MLII'I'IIy, Baltimore, :IS. · ·
STOLEN BASES: Hendenm, Oakland, 81;
wu.on, 1tan1u atr, &amp;a; DUane, CSeveland, 41;
J.er.., SeoWe,SIIl ~· Baltia1on, !15.
PITCIDNG jll UOCIIICMII) ' O.rwin, Teus, ll·
t. ..... Ud; Stme, Baltimore, 21-5, .. ., 3.0&amp;;
Gun, Kanlu &lt;l\y, lW, .713, Ul; Jobn, New
Yon, tll-7, .7211, 1.13; R.Moy, New Ycrt, IU,
.IIlii, 2.4&lt;1; Mdlregor, Baltimore, 111-7, .IIIIIJ, 3.02;
M.Norrit, OHland, lN, .882, 2.st; QWienberry,
Unsu ctty, ll-6,.1111, 2.81. .
STRIKEOUTS, Bori!O&lt;, Clevelond, UO;
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NATIONAL LEAGUE

BAmNG (SiiO ol bot.o), Hendrick, St.Lou!J,
.314; Templeton, St.Louil, .323; K.Hemanda,
llt.Loul.o, .323 ; Trillo, Pl1llldelphla, .317; J .Cruz,
llouolan, .311.
RUNS : K.Hernanda, St.Lou.IJ, t3; IAFlore,
Mcllltreal, Ill; Murphy!...~~t,l6; Sclunldt,

1

Pl1ilodelphla, 84; Rooe, t'!UIIde,...., 83.
· RBI ' Hendrick, St.Loul.o, 16 ; Schmid~
· Pblladelphia, t4 ; Garvey, Lot AD&amp;elel, 93;
Baller, Los Angeles, • : K.Hemandea, st.l..oub,

••

IIJTS, Gorvey, lm An&amp;eleo, 162; Hendrick,
SU..adl, 1M; K. Hernandez, Sl.Louia, 154;

J.Cru&amp;, HOIIIIon, ll4; Rlcborda, Son oteao,IM.
DOUBLES, llooe, Philadelphia, 38; KnJsht ,

ctnclnnaU, 34; K.. Hernandez, St.Louil, S2;
Dowson, Montreo1, 31 ; or;_,, ctndnnotl, Sl.
TRIPLES, R.Scott, MOIIUul, ll ; McBride, .
· Pbllodolphla, 10; 0 . Moreno, Pillll&gt;urlh. 10;

LeF&amp;ore, MldtUI, I ; Temple&amp;on, st. LDul:a. 8.

HOME RUNS: Schmidt, Phitodelphla, IIi; HOI'
·w, Atlanta, 28; Baker, lAI Anples, Jll; Muro!IY. Atlanta, 25; He~ct_,St.Louis, :IS.

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. SToLEN BASES: LDiore1.. Mootrul, 87;
O.Moreno, PituburJh, ICI; Cowna, Cincinnati,
14; R.Scott, Montreal, 14; Rlcbonla, Son Diego,
II.
PITCHING Ill Dedal0111l: Reua, !Aio
Anpleo, 111-4, .110, 2.14; Carltoo, Pl\ilodelphta,
U..f, .~. UO; Bibby, Ptttabur&amp;h, 15-6, .75Q,
Ul; Rlchllrd, Houaton, ICI-Ic;111, 1.10; Hooton,
too Anples, IH, .701, s.:ll: Wollt, Pllllodelphlo,
w..112, U7; Suttoo, !Aio Anpleo, ~ • .m, 2.21; ·
LICone, HOUltOn, ..... .fl7, 2.84.
STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, PIOlodelohla, Ill;

......

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BalAnce Due: St:I.OO

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SINGER SALE

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PRICES
EFFECTIVE THROUGH
SEPTEMBE~ 6,. 1980
.
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- . '.

1

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, Sept. 3, \980

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1980

In a show: Notre Dame over Purdue ·

TodJJy's
'

~ports

.

World

By WW Grlmlley
AP CGrreopGIIIleal

The teaser on the front rover of the
- sport, IIIOI!thlY magazine jarred you
: as if you were slapped across the
- face with a wetfish.
"TOIIUlly Jolm: The Yankee
Slicker Is a Lot Meaner Than You
Think," read the headline.
Thumbing quickly to page 54,
· one's . interest was· further
: heightened with this addenda: "Is
: He ...Or Isn't He ...the Meanest Pitcher In Baseball?"
'Ibis has to be an error, a misprint.
They certalnly coUldn't be talking
about our Tonuny, the freshest,
. ·most considerate, least arrogant of
• all the super stars In major league
~ baseball.

'.

• "True, all true," John said when
· he was interrupted from mowing his
front lawn of the family home in
Franklin Lakes, N.J. "I woke up this
morning, hit my wife aild bit the dog.
• Mywifehitback."
: Then came a hilarious roar.
: The headline was deceptive, just a
little appetizer for the prospective
reader; Our friend Malcolm Moran
put the record straight in what turned out to be a very objective
: manuscript.
·
- On the contrary, Pleasant John
: decries the outbreak of "head hun: ting" which has erupted this season.
· He thinks it is foolish and counterproductive.
That doesn't mean he Is an old sof. tie, as he WB.!l pictured earlier in his
~ career. He pitches aggressively. He
•Is not disinclined to use the entire
of the plate when he Is going af:ter a victory. In doing so, an inside
Pitch often may brush the batter

:area

back. .
· But take it from Tommy John he's not arutious to get into a headhunting war with anybody. It's not
his style.
The rangy, 37-year-old !ioosier,
plucked from the Los Angeles
Dodgers as a free agent two years
ago by ·the New York Yankees, has'
become the most consistent staple of
owner George Steinbrenner's goldplated but aging mound staff.
Tonight he goes after his 19th victory against Billy Martin's brash
and brassy Oakland A's and, if he
bas his way, he'd like to get by with
less than 100 pitches. He won't be
trying for a rash of strikeouts. And
he certainly wo.n 't be shooting at
anybody's head.
''The kind of game I like is the one
I had last time out," Jolm said,
referring to his 5-l victory over the
Seattle Mariners last Friday night in
which he allowed seven hits, struck
out three and walked none.
"I used only 80 pitches. I got
greater satisfaction out of that than
if I had had a dozen strikeouts. If you
are throwing bullets, really grinding
it out, you're necessarily going to
use 125 or more pitches.
"My idea is to try to get guys out
with fewest pitches possible....
"I never felt strikeouts were that
important," he says. "I always ad·
mired Whitey Ford. He never
seemed to be grinding it out. He let
the guys hit the ball. They hit them
where he wanted them to. It might
be a blast of 400 feet that a cen. terfielder put in his pocket."

Honeymoon underway
:in Cleveland camp
BEREA, Ohio (AP) ~ There's a
: honeymoon, of sorta, going on at the
· Cleveland BroWns training facility
~ atBaldwin-Walla~College.

: Pure happiness seems to be
pouring out of the coaching staff and

newly acquired offensive guard Joe
. DeLamlelleure.
The tHoot-3, ~ veteran of
~ seven seasons with the Buffalo Bills
• was traded to Cleveland on Monday
: aDd donned No. 64 for the Browns
workout Tuesday.
"The Browns are a tough team
: with a lot of offense," he said. "If
our defense comes around, who
: liiiOws what might happen? That's
• why I feel so good, so lucky to be
' here.

•

"I haven't worked out before
today, but I'm in great shape,
: maybe even better than If I had gone
: to training camp with Buffalo. I've
· dlllle more running and lifting than if
~ I had been in camp. I think I can
: play Sunday, but that'll be up to the

· coach."

DeLamielleure has played in the
Pro Bowl five times, including last

season when Browns center Tom
DeLeone also made the squad. ·
The Browns have veterans Bob
Jackson and Henry Sheppard at offensive guard positions. Coach Sam
Rutigliano would not be specific concerning whether the' newest player
on the team would beat out either of
the two regulars.
"That is something that will take
care of itself," Rutigliano said. "The
thing for Joe to do first Is get into the
swing of things.
"There's no doubt he'll make a
great addition to the fine group of offensive linemen we already have, ·
but for now I just want him to get his
feet wet. He's working in a triangle
with Jackson andShappard."
The Browns must yet release one
player to make room on the roster
for DeLamielleure. On Tuesday,
safety Rany Rich got his walking
papers.

feels .rl!serve
\·(ist cheating devise
CINCINNATI

(AP)

-

Mike

: of the Cincinnati Bengals, says it's
'- dishonest for a team to hold onto
: healthy players by putting them on
: the injured reserve list.

names on the list, Brown believes
= And, judging from the number of
· some teams might be doing just
: that.
Brown said he is suspicious that
. ·• some National Football League
: teams had as many as 12 players on
: the injured reserve list Tuesday.
The Bengals had nooe:
~ "The odds of one team having 12
players injured and our having none
: are prohibitive," Brown said. "It's
: hard for me to believe that they have
. 12 guys with certifiable serious ln• juries."
: Brown sUspected that some teams
• were using the injured reserve list to
· protect young prospects that
'couldn't make the 46-man regular
sea1011 rosters. Teams stW must pay
the injured reserve players, but
: they're at least temporarily protec- ·
: ted from being picked up by other

Court refuses to
lock up repeaters
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Juvenile court officials are refusing
to lock up repeated offenders and
gutting a strict juvenile curfew enforcement policy, police say.
Sgt. Charles Beeler said court officials refused to lock up a 14-yearold boy arrested Tuesday near Ohio
State University. It was the youth's
third curfew violation within a month, he said.
"This Is the first third-timer we've
got," said Juvenile Court Judge
Jolm Hill. Nobody expected any
arrests so quickly, he said.
mn refused to place the boy in a
detention center despite a tough enforcement policy announced last
month by police and court officials.
The curfew crackdown came after
public outcry following the fatal
stabbing of an II().year-old man.

SHIPMENTS OFF

·~ Brown

: Brown, assistant general manager

By Major Amos B. Hoople
Fearless Forecaster ·
Egad, friends , what a sterling
card we have for you.
One would think, from the caliber
of this week's matchups, that we're
already at mid-season rather than at
the bare beginning - um-kumph!
Leading the collegians into the
decade of the 1980s will be the day's
" piece de resi~tanc~ :" Nptre Dame
vs. Purdue, their 52nd engagement,
before a sell-out crowd in N. D.
Stadium - and an enormous TV
audience.
Other top games include Alabama
hosting Georgia Tech, their 48th
renewal; Stanford visiting Oregon,.
in an important pacific 10 clash;
Louisiana State hosting formidable
Florida State, in Baton Rouge; and
TenneSsee entertaining Georgia, in
\heir SEC Opener.
The Irish-Purdue encounter,
always a spectacular, takes on added significance this year. It marks
the beginning of Dan Devine's sixth
and last year as leader of theN. D.
aggregation. Departing at the end of
the season from the pressure-packed
Irish post for personal reasons,
Devine will go all out to run his
record against the Boilermakers to
4-2.
This week's clash promises to be a
sky show as both clubs can fill the
air with footballs. For Purdue it will
be passer deluxe Mark Herrmann
throwing to receiver Doug Young a duo that combined to give the Irish
fits last season in a 23-22 Boilermaker victory.
Notre Dame's trio of sure-handed
catchers - Tony Hunter, Dean
Mastzak and Pete Holohan - will be
running near and far, with the only
unanswered question being who will
be lofting theliall to them • The Irish
have a choice of five quarterbacks.
The Hoople hunch is that Devine's
squad will get off to a good start by
outlasting the 'Boilermakers, 31-28!
The Alabama-Georgia Tech confrontation will be the first surge of
Paul "Bear" Bryant's Crimson Tide

CLEVELAND (AP) - The Lake

Carriers Association says shipments .
of basic bulk commodities on the
Great Lakes during July was oU 4
million net tons from July a year
ago.

rouldhelpus,"Brownsaid. "l'mn&lt;t
saying that some of them are not
bona-!lde injuries, but when you get
to the last cut and there are a nwnber of high draft choices on Injured
reserve, it raises some doubts."

Shipments of such commodities as .
iron ore, coal and grain totaled
18,114,189 net tons, the association
reporta.
Aggregate volume for the three
commodities for the year to Aug. 1
was 76,848,432 net tons.

toward a second consecutive
national crown.
Leading . the Tide drive will be
super running back Major Ogilvie
and two defensive stalwarts, tackle
Byron Braggs (260 pounds) and
linebacker Thomas Boyd (215).
Unfortunately, it will be a rocky
debut for Tech coach Bill Curry in
his first assignment at his alma
mater. Make it: Alabama 27,
Georgia Tech 14.
The :Pac 10 - now the "Pac 5,"
with five teams set down for
academic violations - gets off to an
early stam. Knocked out of the conference title race and banned from
post-season competition are :
Arizona State,- Oregon, Oregon
State, UCLA and per.ennial Rose
Bowl contender Southern California.
(Despite the suspensions, the 1980
conference games will count in the
final standings.)
So it behooves the Stanford Cardinals to pay attention to the
bl,ISiness at hand in the opener at
Oregon. With rookie coach Paul
Wiggin (the ex-pro) on the sidelines
and quarterback John Elway on the
field, we see it 37-14 for Stanford.
Flooda State and Louisiana State,/
played·a real gem last year - with~
the Seminoles prevailing 24-19 en
route to a perfect season. Bobby
Bowden's charges will be out to
repeat this week. And we see Florida
State doing just that, 22-17 - hakkaff!
Georgia Is favored by most to take
Tennessee in the SEC lid-lifter. But
in the first Hoople Three-Star
Special of the year, we are going
with the Volunteers to pull an upset.
Jolmny Majors has spent three
years installing his system at Knoxville. And we look for it to pay off
with a 28-24 upending of the Bull·

dogs.
the Southwest Conference represenHopscotching around the country tatives. Watch for Texas A&amp;M to
- hell-heh - here are some other outscore Mississippi, 27-20, and
·Hoople goodies:
Texas Tech to outclass UTEP, .42-7
In the East, Penn State with Joe - har-rumph!
Paterno (W-131, Lr29, T-1) starting
Now go on with my forecast:
his 15th year, should have litUe
Akron 35 NE Missouri 6
trouble rolling over Colgate, 42-10.
Alabama 27 Georgia Tech 14
Down South; Wake Forest, one of
Appalachian 51. 36 Madison 21
the real surprise elevens in 1979, will
Boise St. 31 U!ah 21
Bowling Green 30 Ric,.mond 14
dump Virginia Tech, 36-20. Tulane,
BYU 40 New Mexico 14
an impressive Wee-point losesr to
cent. ·Michigan 30 BallS!. 21
Penn State in the 1979 Liberty Bowl, ·Citadel 31 Presbyterian 19
figures to edge a': fine Southern
Colorado St. 24 Air Force 12
Connecticut.29 N. Hampshire 12
Mississippi club,li}-'1:
Duke 24 E . Carolina 21
The· famed North Carolina
Florida 51 . 22 LSU 17
Fresno 51. 25 Fuller!on 51. 18
, educational triangle (DurhamHoly Cross 34 Rhode I stand 21
Raleigll-Chapel Hill) will see some
Illinois 33 Norlhwes!ern 15
-fine football this Saturday - as all
Indiana St. 38 Drake 8
Kentucky 28 U!ah 51. 14
three home teams win. At Durham,
Maryland 26 Villanova 18
Duke will vanquish visiting East Marshalll7
Morehead St. 18
. Carolina, 24-21; at Raleigh, North
McNesse 51.33 W. Texas 51. 13
Memphis 5!. 17 Miss. 5!. 15
Carolina State's Wolfpack will deck
Miami (Fla.) 34 Louisville 24
William and Mary, $-12, and at
N. Carolina 42 Furman 21
Chapel Hill, the North Carolins Tar · NC S!a!e 35 wm. &amp; Mary 12
New Mexico St. 14 SW La . 13
Heels will romp over Funnan, 42-21
N. Tex. St . 17 Tex. · Arlington 13
- hak-kaff!
Notre Daf"'e 31 Purdue 28
In the Bluegrass CoWl try, KenPenn Stale 42 Cotga!e 10
San Jose St. 22 Santa Clara 21
tucky's Wildcats will prove to be
5. Carolina 35 Pacific 14
rude hosts as they surprise the Utah
S. Illinois 27 Wichita St . 8
State Aggies, 21-14.,
Stanford 37 Oregon 14
Tennessee 28 Georgia 24
In the Western Athletic ConTenn· Chat. 45 Jacksonville 51. 13
ference opener, look for Brigham
Tekas A&amp;M 27 MissiS;sippi 20
Young University to continue its
Texas Tech 42 UTE P 7
winning ways with an impressive -IGTulane 10 S. Mississippi 7
Wake Foresl36, Va ; Tech 20
14 thumping of New Mexico.
West Carolina 27 VMI 21
A pair of night games worth your
West Mich. 28 Eas! Mich. 10
perusal will see winning efforts for
West Virginia 22 Cincinnati 14

STANDINGS

West Va . Mt . Boys

Prater Brothers
Bluegrass Strangers

Bluegrass Unlimited
Young Blades of Bluegrass

ADMISSION : 110 for all three d ay)
Team
W· L PF PA
NOAl.:OHOl
Uperday
F rc.e C amPing- •n · th ~· Rough
Eastern
1·0 7 0
IN
STAGE
AREA
Br ing Lawn Cha irs
lOCATED AT :
Hannan Trace
1·0 18 12
All DOGS ON LEASHE S
L ~wis Fuley' s Farm
Kyger Creek
1·0 61
0
•
On Fra nklin Twp. 2U
Nor!h Galli a
1-0 36 0
For Information Contact : Lewis Farley Rt 1 Box. 233 Jackson o·h·
Sou!hern
1-0, 31
6
45640 (614) 286·3527
. '
. '
'
'
10
Sou!hwestern
1·0 38 18
Last Week's Results
Eas!ern 7, Wa!erford 0
Hannan Trace 18, Symmes Val ley 1----------------------~-~
12
Kyger Creek 61, Federa l Hocking
0
Nor!h Gallia 36, Pain! Valley 0
Sou!hern 31, Meigs JV 6
Sou!hwestern 38, Oak Hill18
Friday' s Q-ames
Eastern at Miller
Hannan at Hannan Trace
Wahama a! Kyger Creek
Huntington Ross at North Gallia
Federal Hocking at Sou!hern
Southwestern
at
Ross

RUT LAND
DEPARTM ENT
STORE
Phone 742-2100

Southeastern

SEOAL
STANDINGS
Team
WL PF PA
Meigs
0· 1 20 28
Gallipolis
1·0 21
o
I ron!on
1·0 33 13
Logan
H 14 o
Wellston
1·0 37 7
0·1 o 25
Jackson
Waverly
O· t 1~ 33
A!hens
0·0 o o
Las! Week's Resul!s
Belpre 28, Meigs 20
Gallipolls21, Rock Hill o
1ron ton 33, Russell, Ky. 13
Logan 14, New Lexington 0
Wells!on 37, Alexander 7
Portsmouth 25, Jackson 0
Wheelersburg 33, Waverly 12
Morgan 14, A!hens o, game
suspended 3rd quarter
Friday's Games
Meigs at Pain! Pleasant
Athens at Lancas!er
Gallipolis a! Coal Grove
·Ashland, Ky . a! lron!on
Jackson at Wheelersburg

Effective Thru Saturday, September 6th
Eckrich

..

HAM AND ·CHEESE LOAF••••~~~. $1.97
Eckrich

OLD FASHION LOAF•••••••••••~~~.$1.97
Homemade

·HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••• ~~~.sl.l9
DAIRY

PRODUCE

I lb. Teen Queen
aAuaRrGters
M
ARINE

2/97e

Logan at Delaware Hayes
Por!smouth a! Waverly
Wells!on at Nelsonville· York .

Clearfield-Old &amp; Sharp

CELERY.........
Jib. Yelow

~~~.~~. ..3 f

ONIONS ......... ~~~.

103/4 Campbell's

CHICKEN VEGETABlE SOUP. •. 2/75$ ·
IMITATION VANILLA ••••••••••••••• 59$
16 oz. van Camp

:

PORK·N-BEANS •••••••••••••••••• 2/75'

en

.,

29 oz. Bartlett Del Monte

PEAR HALVES••••• ~ ••••••••••••• :.a."•• 89'.
0.21 oz. Regular

KOOL AID ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 6/89~ ·

MERCHANDISE MARKED DOWN AT OUR

3 oz. Armour

OPEN DOORS SALEI

POTTED MEAT••••• ,••••••••• ~···· 2/59c :

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO .
NIAIN ST.

.'42-};111

4 Pak Charm in

TO MEET WEDNESDAY

All members of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion are
to attend a meeting at 7:30
p.m. on. Wednesday, Sept. 10. The
special item of business to be voted ·
on will be changing Article 3,
paragraph 4, of the constitution and
by-laws.

Iurged

.

TOILET TISSUE ;~ •••••••••••• :.~~·}1.29

'

FORBES
VINTON - Mr. and Mrs. Paul
· Forbes, Jr., Vinton, announce the
: birth of their first child, a son, born
: Aug. 20. He weighed seven pounds,
: four oWJces, and was named Jeremy
· David.
: Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs . .
' John F. Colwell and Mr. and Mrs.
: Paul Forbes, Sr. Great: grandmothers are Mr. Grace
1
: ColweU, Mrs. Hazel Duffy and Mrs.
: Elsie Forbes.

ICE CREAM SOCIAL
SATURDAY
: · . An ice cream social will be held
: Saturday at the Trinity
· Congregational Chureh. All women
' are uked to have their cakes or pies
: there at 1 p.m. Serving in the chureh
: .basement will begin at 4:30p.m;

USDA CHOICE
MEATS
ARM
.lb.

ROAST

LB•

$189

are intriguing. Several colleges Maryland, Pennsylvania, Indiana
and Purdue universities, for example - have made or are contemplating use of television for
degree purposes, Lucas says, ad·
ding, however, "I don't think the
idea has been embraced by the cable
companies.''
One reason, of course, is mpney.
Fees paid by students for the classes
go to Metroversity,__not the cable
company. "It's not a revenue.
producing agent," Lucas says.
"Plus, it takes a lot of cooperation
by the cable agent. In essence,
you're giving away a channel."
But Lucas sees some positive,
reasons for a cable operator taking
part in a "cable college."
"First of all, it's a good public
relations tool because of the public
service," he says. "And you have to
look into whether people who curren·
Uy aren't on cable will subscribe
simply to get the college courses.
That could be a big factor if this
thing snowballs."

Sears
WESTERN
..
CATALOG

lb. $}99

BEEF STEW
Lean

29
lb. $ 2

CUBE STEAKS
Pork

GROUND BEEF
Cubed

39
lb. $ 1

SHOULDER STEAK
Frying Chicken

lb.

Red Skin
lb.

Piece

BOLOGNA

79~

f'ryi!'19 CHicken
LEGS
Superior Polish

$109

SAUSAGE

12 oz. 99~

Superior

Slab

BACON

.ONIONS

TAB, SPRITE OR

COKE

BUNCH

PEACHES
LB.

39~
MICHIGAN .

POTATOES

POTATO CHIPS

7oz.

20 $249

79~

LBS.

FLOUR

MRS. SMITH
~

Plain · Self-Rising·

APPLE
PIE

SLBS.

99$

MORTON

FAMILY
MEALS

32

oz.

CHEK DJ1/RY

-

.

5'1 o1

POTTED MEAT ....... ...... :.• ;. 4/ 11.00
TREET••.•••. •• •••• •. •• .... .••. .. !~ .o.~:. 89~
VIENNA SAUSAGES .......... ~.~~·.2/89'

IVORY LIQUID
32 oz. 139
DELTA

Ron 39'
ASSORTED
T0WELS ................
.
14 01. 2/79'
COMET ..•....•... ~ .•...........•....

TROPICANA O.RANGE JUICE .6... ?~~·. 1 1.39
OEL HAVEN

DEL . HAVEN

GRAP(JELLY .................. ~: .~ .. . 89'

1

TOMATOES ................. :~~~:. 3/ 1.00

101 W. MNN ST.

GREEN BEANS ................. :.l/ 11.00

SMOOTH

Del Haven Whole K . or c.s. '

' PEANUT BUTTER ..............~~?~:.99'

. Authorized Catalog Sales
PH. ft2·2l71

~erchant
POMEROY, OltiO

Ownatl anol ~,...tell loy Jack an&lt;l Jutly Wllll•thrv w~ t-5,
frl. 9-5, Sat. 9-2

16M

PANCAKE SYRUP............... ~~·. 79'
2
:.

tnspirtd by th• ucUint w•stern way ol 1111
•nd as n.tlled as a routl..,ldlng rl)d.o,...

·

1

DELHAVENCUT

I

WHAT ~ GIEAT WAY 10 OITAIN £mA SAVINGS.
HMEIIIIU !0\ OFF 111011 S£I'TDIIU liD 11

J

39~

CELERY

16oz . . $ .139
Btls.

ARMOUR

20% OFF

Sliced lb. $ 1

YELLOW

SWEETIE PIES ................':.~~·. 79'

will be

·,

19

2% MILK

1980·19.1
Stilting September 1 and
Continuin&amp; thiQU&amp;b
September 13, Ml)thina
in the Western Book

..

PORK STEAK

VALLEY BELL

•••Where- AiMrlle lhopo Por Value

ilb • . $179

Boneless

CHUCK ROAST

Superio~

.,39

ENGLISH ROAST

'

Boneless

FAS.~

•

CHUCK ROAST

•

:New arrivals
ROUSH
RACINE-Mr. and Mrs. Roger
· Roush, Racine, are announcing the
• birth of a second daughter, Jennifer ·
Lynn, on Aug. II at Pleasant Valley
. .Hospital.
: The baby weight seven pounds, lit
· · ounches and was l9t inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
,and Mrs. Charles Michael and pater·
: nal grandparenta are Mr. and Mrs.
· Herbert Roush, all of Racine. Great: grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
: Russell Findley, Mrs. Marie
: Michael and Mrs. Edna Roush, all of
· Racine. Mr. and Mrs. Roush have
: another daughter, Kimberly, 2.

USDA CHOICE CENTER CUT

AIR CONDITIONED

VISITS HERE
Phillip Raybur.n of Toledo spent
the weekend here with his mother, ·
'Mrs. Amanda Murray. Mrs. Dorothy
McCloud has been assisting in Mrs.
Murray's care since her return from
the hospital.

scribers can earn college credit sim·
ply by watching classes on
television.
The Louisville experiment offers
four Introductory courses, each worth three credit hours + business,
humanities, composition and a sur·
vey of Japanese history. Cable sub·scnbers who meet college entrance
requirements have only to pay a $105
semester fee, pick up the course
materials, and watch.
Using a CPI channel, Metrovel'
sity will broadcast the twice-weekly
classes at least 10 times a week at all
hours, to allow students to "attend"
classes any time they can .
At the end of each semester, final
examinations will be administered
in the traditional manner, with
students meeting on campus to take
the tests. Other arrangements will
be made for students who are unable
to come on campus for the final
examinations.
·
The TV-for-credit approach still is
in lts infancy, but the possibilities

•

6 oz. Durkee

NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS

LOUISVIIJ.E, Ky. (AP) - Could
. It be that someday folks will earn
college degrees simply by plugging
• in to coorses offered on television?
The Immediate response from
. educators generally is negative, but
, the possibility has at least been
raised with the advent of televised
: classes on a "college cable" channel
here.
"I can forsee a time when that will
· happen,' ' says Keith Lucas,
: Louisville-area vice president for
: CPI Inc., a cable television fran: chise that will help launch an am• bitlous college program here this
• fall.
"The most obvious appeal is to the
: handicapped person who is bedrid. den or confined to a house who can't
: get to a college campus. And there .
: are housewives and shift workers,
. too," Lucas says.
• With the rooperatiori of CPI and
: Kentucklana Metroverslty, a con: sortium of six coUeges in Louisville
: and southern Indiana, cable sub-

.n M-7, til 7; Sat. 9 til 9
5TH &amp;PEARL, RACINE, OH.

BREASTS

· Watch TV; earn a degree.

69'

INSTANT
POTATOES••••••••••••• 2/79$
-

Brown called for the league office

The Values Awareness Program,
in conjunction with the Southern
Ohio Regional Co un cil on
Alcoholism, is offering two free
workshops this fall, one for teas:hers
and one for family groups.
~ teachers' workshop is set-up
to be used as an in-service day. This
pncram includes alcohol and drug
abuae information, films, speakers,
and discussions of such. subjects as
values clarification, decision
making, · self esteem, and stress
management.
The family workshOJ?, called
"Enhancing Family Relations," Is
designed to help family members
communicate more effectively with
each other.
Parent-Teacher
Organizations, church groups, and
civic organizations are encouraged
to request this. program.
The Values Awareness Program is
funded by the Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration and the .
Ohio Department of Health. It is
housed with the Southern Ohio
Regional Council on Alcoholism,
207'k North Market Street, Waverly,
Ohio, 45690. To arrange for one of
these workshops, which are being offered at no charge, contact Mrs.
Dianne Chapman, Prevention
Project Coordinator, at (614) 9477723.

Michigan

8 oz. Idahoan

to take a stronger look at .the prac-

-

Carbohydrate- Provides energy for the body.
NtaCin- Needed to change food to energy that the body can·use.
Riboflavin- Needed to change food to e11ergy that the body can use.
Thiamin- Needed to change food to energy that the body can use.
Iron - Carries oxygen in the blood from the lungs to other parts of
the body.
Noddles, macat'oni, and spaghetti are not fattening, contrary to
what you may have heard. Pasta that h8.!l been cooked to the tender
stage has about :.m kilocalories per cup. Some people tend to eat pasta
In very large quantities and this is a fattening habit. Any food that you ·
eat too muclr of will cause a gain in weight. So, remember that when
pa8ta Is eaten in moderate quantities It will cause you to gain weight.
A typical serving of pasta Is between one-half and one.cup, depending
on whether the food Is being served as the main dish or a side dish.
PRICE OF MACARONI
PRODUCTS
Product, Price Per Pound, and Price Per CGoked Cup, are listed:
Spaghetti, 53 cents, 7 cents.
Noodles, 98 cents, 14 cents.
Macaroni, 62 cents, 8 cents.
Macaroni products with melted spread Is a simple side dish that
may be served for lunch or dinner. Ad din&amp; an animal protein such as
meat, poultry, fish, cheese or eggs to make a casserole Is a good idea
for two reasons. First, macaroni products can help to stretch the more
expensive food item in the casserole so that the meal Is less expensive.
Second, the animal protein complements the protein in the macaroni
product so that it is better used by the body to maintain good health.

Hocking Valley Grass Hiltbreed

1

.

body.

MUSIC

r-.;;;;;;;;;;;•••••;;;;;;•••••••••••••iiii••••iiii~ I CHEESE .
POTATOES ......... ~·. 49'
RUTLAND FURNITURE'S
NEWLY CONSTRUCTED STORE
.
WELCH'S GRAPE JUICE •••••• 2Pl.79

'

Allllle . . .

Di
f' , ,WAlda
...... c-l,yCoopetatlte
· Edeulvdenke
Macaroni, spaghetU and liN II an IGIIIelimes called pata
because that is the Italian word for "paste." All three foods are m.de
from paste or dough of flour and water. In America, macaroni,
spaghetti at\d noodles are frequently just called macaroni products.
·Macaroni and spaghetti are the same food, but with a different shape.
Noodles are made with eggs along with flour and water and have a flat
shape. There are over 170 different shaped macaroni products to
choose from in the United States.
Noodles, macarOni, and spaghetti are foods that belong in the breads
and cereal group of the Basic Ii'our Good Groups. Everyone should eat
at least four servings from the breads and cereal groups. Enril:hed
macaroni products are important for good health because they supply
protein, catbohydrate, niacin, riboflavin, thiamin, and iron. Following
is a chart that shows the functions of the main nutrients found in pasta.
THE MAIN NUTRIENTS
IN PASTA
Nutrient and FWlction are listed:
Protein - Part of el!Ch cell in the body. Provides energy for the-

-

. White Sweet

ALL

By Myrtle Clarhlld

5 Mile East of Jackson, Ohio, off Rl. 35

Stoned Mt. Boys

workshops
planned here

Macaroni--cheap
and nutritious

ADENA INDIAN
BLUEGRASS FESTIV

• teams.

tice, which he said could become
more cmunon If it's not slopped.
:. "WilY don'l we cheat? Anymore, '.
: that's getting to be a pretty good
: queltlon," Brown said. "We follow
• the rules because we agreed to
tMII.
"But if others who make the same
commlbnent we did don't fulfill,
. then we're stupid. lf you play by the
· rules, you're a chump."
: Brown said putUng healthy
, players on the injured reserve list
clriiB up the pool of players that
other 1eama could use.
'"nlen an probably any nwnber
of players
injured reterVe who

Food for Thought

SEPTEMBER 5, 6, 7, 1980

SVAC

Dual

. ,

CORN .•....••.••••.•..•• •.!~.~~;

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, Sept. 3, \980

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1980

In a show: Notre Dame over Purdue ·

TodJJy's
'

~ports

.

World

By WW Grlmlley
AP CGrreopGIIIleal

The teaser on the front rover of the
- sport, IIIOI!thlY magazine jarred you
: as if you were slapped across the
- face with a wetfish.
"TOIIUlly Jolm: The Yankee
Slicker Is a Lot Meaner Than You
Think," read the headline.
Thumbing quickly to page 54,
· one's . interest was· further
: heightened with this addenda: "Is
: He ...Or Isn't He ...the Meanest Pitcher In Baseball?"
'Ibis has to be an error, a misprint.
They certalnly coUldn't be talking
about our Tonuny, the freshest,
. ·most considerate, least arrogant of
• all the super stars In major league
~ baseball.

'.

• "True, all true," John said when
· he was interrupted from mowing his
front lawn of the family home in
Franklin Lakes, N.J. "I woke up this
morning, hit my wife aild bit the dog.
• Mywifehitback."
: Then came a hilarious roar.
: The headline was deceptive, just a
little appetizer for the prospective
reader; Our friend Malcolm Moran
put the record straight in what turned out to be a very objective
: manuscript.
·
- On the contrary, Pleasant John
: decries the outbreak of "head hun: ting" which has erupted this season.
· He thinks it is foolish and counterproductive.
That doesn't mean he Is an old sof. tie, as he WB.!l pictured earlier in his
~ career. He pitches aggressively. He
•Is not disinclined to use the entire
of the plate when he Is going af:ter a victory. In doing so, an inside
Pitch often may brush the batter

:area

back. .
· But take it from Tommy John he's not arutious to get into a headhunting war with anybody. It's not
his style.
The rangy, 37-year-old !ioosier,
plucked from the Los Angeles
Dodgers as a free agent two years
ago by ·the New York Yankees, has'
become the most consistent staple of
owner George Steinbrenner's goldplated but aging mound staff.
Tonight he goes after his 19th victory against Billy Martin's brash
and brassy Oakland A's and, if he
bas his way, he'd like to get by with
less than 100 pitches. He won't be
trying for a rash of strikeouts. And
he certainly wo.n 't be shooting at
anybody's head.
''The kind of game I like is the one
I had last time out," Jolm said,
referring to his 5-l victory over the
Seattle Mariners last Friday night in
which he allowed seven hits, struck
out three and walked none.
"I used only 80 pitches. I got
greater satisfaction out of that than
if I had had a dozen strikeouts. If you
are throwing bullets, really grinding
it out, you're necessarily going to
use 125 or more pitches.
"My idea is to try to get guys out
with fewest pitches possible....
"I never felt strikeouts were that
important," he says. "I always ad·
mired Whitey Ford. He never
seemed to be grinding it out. He let
the guys hit the ball. They hit them
where he wanted them to. It might
be a blast of 400 feet that a cen. terfielder put in his pocket."

Honeymoon underway
:in Cleveland camp
BEREA, Ohio (AP) ~ There's a
: honeymoon, of sorta, going on at the
· Cleveland BroWns training facility
~ atBaldwin-Walla~College.

: Pure happiness seems to be
pouring out of the coaching staff and

newly acquired offensive guard Joe
. DeLamlelleure.
The tHoot-3, ~ veteran of
~ seven seasons with the Buffalo Bills
• was traded to Cleveland on Monday
: aDd donned No. 64 for the Browns
workout Tuesday.
"The Browns are a tough team
: with a lot of offense," he said. "If
our defense comes around, who
: liiiOws what might happen? That's
• why I feel so good, so lucky to be
' here.

•

"I haven't worked out before
today, but I'm in great shape,
: maybe even better than If I had gone
: to training camp with Buffalo. I've
· dlllle more running and lifting than if
~ I had been in camp. I think I can
: play Sunday, but that'll be up to the

· coach."

DeLamielleure has played in the
Pro Bowl five times, including last

season when Browns center Tom
DeLeone also made the squad. ·
The Browns have veterans Bob
Jackson and Henry Sheppard at offensive guard positions. Coach Sam
Rutigliano would not be specific concerning whether the' newest player
on the team would beat out either of
the two regulars.
"That is something that will take
care of itself," Rutigliano said. "The
thing for Joe to do first Is get into the
swing of things.
"There's no doubt he'll make a
great addition to the fine group of offensive linemen we already have, ·
but for now I just want him to get his
feet wet. He's working in a triangle
with Jackson andShappard."
The Browns must yet release one
player to make room on the roster
for DeLamielleure. On Tuesday,
safety Rany Rich got his walking
papers.

feels .rl!serve
\·(ist cheating devise
CINCINNATI

(AP)

-

Mike

: of the Cincinnati Bengals, says it's
'- dishonest for a team to hold onto
: healthy players by putting them on
: the injured reserve list.

names on the list, Brown believes
= And, judging from the number of
· some teams might be doing just
: that.
Brown said he is suspicious that
. ·• some National Football League
: teams had as many as 12 players on
: the injured reserve list Tuesday.
The Bengals had nooe:
~ "The odds of one team having 12
players injured and our having none
: are prohibitive," Brown said. "It's
: hard for me to believe that they have
. 12 guys with certifiable serious ln• juries."
: Brown sUspected that some teams
• were using the injured reserve list to
· protect young prospects that
'couldn't make the 46-man regular
sea1011 rosters. Teams stW must pay
the injured reserve players, but
: they're at least temporarily protec- ·
: ted from being picked up by other

Court refuses to
lock up repeaters
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Juvenile court officials are refusing
to lock up repeated offenders and
gutting a strict juvenile curfew enforcement policy, police say.
Sgt. Charles Beeler said court officials refused to lock up a 14-yearold boy arrested Tuesday near Ohio
State University. It was the youth's
third curfew violation within a month, he said.
"This Is the first third-timer we've
got," said Juvenile Court Judge
Jolm Hill. Nobody expected any
arrests so quickly, he said.
mn refused to place the boy in a
detention center despite a tough enforcement policy announced last
month by police and court officials.
The curfew crackdown came after
public outcry following the fatal
stabbing of an II().year-old man.

SHIPMENTS OFF

·~ Brown

: Brown, assistant general manager

By Major Amos B. Hoople
Fearless Forecaster ·
Egad, friends , what a sterling
card we have for you.
One would think, from the caliber
of this week's matchups, that we're
already at mid-season rather than at
the bare beginning - um-kumph!
Leading the collegians into the
decade of the 1980s will be the day's
" piece de resi~tanc~ :" Nptre Dame
vs. Purdue, their 52nd engagement,
before a sell-out crowd in N. D.
Stadium - and an enormous TV
audience.
Other top games include Alabama
hosting Georgia Tech, their 48th
renewal; Stanford visiting Oregon,.
in an important pacific 10 clash;
Louisiana State hosting formidable
Florida State, in Baton Rouge; and
TenneSsee entertaining Georgia, in
\heir SEC Opener.
The Irish-Purdue encounter,
always a spectacular, takes on added significance this year. It marks
the beginning of Dan Devine's sixth
and last year as leader of theN. D.
aggregation. Departing at the end of
the season from the pressure-packed
Irish post for personal reasons,
Devine will go all out to run his
record against the Boilermakers to
4-2.
This week's clash promises to be a
sky show as both clubs can fill the
air with footballs. For Purdue it will
be passer deluxe Mark Herrmann
throwing to receiver Doug Young a duo that combined to give the Irish
fits last season in a 23-22 Boilermaker victory.
Notre Dame's trio of sure-handed
catchers - Tony Hunter, Dean
Mastzak and Pete Holohan - will be
running near and far, with the only
unanswered question being who will
be lofting theliall to them • The Irish
have a choice of five quarterbacks.
The Hoople hunch is that Devine's
squad will get off to a good start by
outlasting the 'Boilermakers, 31-28!
The Alabama-Georgia Tech confrontation will be the first surge of
Paul "Bear" Bryant's Crimson Tide

CLEVELAND (AP) - The Lake

Carriers Association says shipments .
of basic bulk commodities on the
Great Lakes during July was oU 4
million net tons from July a year
ago.

rouldhelpus,"Brownsaid. "l'mn&lt;t
saying that some of them are not
bona-!lde injuries, but when you get
to the last cut and there are a nwnber of high draft choices on Injured
reserve, it raises some doubts."

Shipments of such commodities as .
iron ore, coal and grain totaled
18,114,189 net tons, the association
reporta.
Aggregate volume for the three
commodities for the year to Aug. 1
was 76,848,432 net tons.

toward a second consecutive
national crown.
Leading . the Tide drive will be
super running back Major Ogilvie
and two defensive stalwarts, tackle
Byron Braggs (260 pounds) and
linebacker Thomas Boyd (215).
Unfortunately, it will be a rocky
debut for Tech coach Bill Curry in
his first assignment at his alma
mater. Make it: Alabama 27,
Georgia Tech 14.
The :Pac 10 - now the "Pac 5,"
with five teams set down for
academic violations - gets off to an
early stam. Knocked out of the conference title race and banned from
post-season competition are :
Arizona State,- Oregon, Oregon
State, UCLA and per.ennial Rose
Bowl contender Southern California.
(Despite the suspensions, the 1980
conference games will count in the
final standings.)
So it behooves the Stanford Cardinals to pay attention to the
bl,ISiness at hand in the opener at
Oregon. With rookie coach Paul
Wiggin (the ex-pro) on the sidelines
and quarterback John Elway on the
field, we see it 37-14 for Stanford.
Flooda State and Louisiana State,/
played·a real gem last year - with~
the Seminoles prevailing 24-19 en
route to a perfect season. Bobby
Bowden's charges will be out to
repeat this week. And we see Florida
State doing just that, 22-17 - hakkaff!
Georgia Is favored by most to take
Tennessee in the SEC lid-lifter. But
in the first Hoople Three-Star
Special of the year, we are going
with the Volunteers to pull an upset.
Jolmny Majors has spent three
years installing his system at Knoxville. And we look for it to pay off
with a 28-24 upending of the Bull·

dogs.
the Southwest Conference represenHopscotching around the country tatives. Watch for Texas A&amp;M to
- hell-heh - here are some other outscore Mississippi, 27-20, and
·Hoople goodies:
Texas Tech to outclass UTEP, .42-7
In the East, Penn State with Joe - har-rumph!
Paterno (W-131, Lr29, T-1) starting
Now go on with my forecast:
his 15th year, should have litUe
Akron 35 NE Missouri 6
trouble rolling over Colgate, 42-10.
Alabama 27 Georgia Tech 14
Down South; Wake Forest, one of
Appalachian 51. 36 Madison 21
the real surprise elevens in 1979, will
Boise St. 31 U!ah 21
Bowling Green 30 Ric,.mond 14
dump Virginia Tech, 36-20. Tulane,
BYU 40 New Mexico 14
an impressive Wee-point losesr to
cent. ·Michigan 30 BallS!. 21
Penn State in the 1979 Liberty Bowl, ·Citadel 31 Presbyterian 19
figures to edge a': fine Southern
Colorado St. 24 Air Force 12
Connecticut.29 N. Hampshire 12
Mississippi club,li}-'1:
Duke 24 E . Carolina 21
The· famed North Carolina
Florida 51 . 22 LSU 17
Fresno 51. 25 Fuller!on 51. 18
, educational triangle (DurhamHoly Cross 34 Rhode I stand 21
Raleigll-Chapel Hill) will see some
Illinois 33 Norlhwes!ern 15
-fine football this Saturday - as all
Indiana St. 38 Drake 8
Kentucky 28 U!ah 51. 14
three home teams win. At Durham,
Maryland 26 Villanova 18
Duke will vanquish visiting East Marshalll7
Morehead St. 18
. Carolina, 24-21; at Raleigh, North
McNesse 51.33 W. Texas 51. 13
Memphis 5!. 17 Miss. 5!. 15
Carolina State's Wolfpack will deck
Miami (Fla.) 34 Louisville 24
William and Mary, $-12, and at
N. Carolina 42 Furman 21
Chapel Hill, the North Carolins Tar · NC S!a!e 35 wm. &amp; Mary 12
New Mexico St. 14 SW La . 13
Heels will romp over Funnan, 42-21
N. Tex. St . 17 Tex. · Arlington 13
- hak-kaff!
Notre Daf"'e 31 Purdue 28
In the Bluegrass CoWl try, KenPenn Stale 42 Cotga!e 10
San Jose St. 22 Santa Clara 21
tucky's Wildcats will prove to be
5. Carolina 35 Pacific 14
rude hosts as they surprise the Utah
S. Illinois 27 Wichita St . 8
State Aggies, 21-14.,
Stanford 37 Oregon 14
Tennessee 28 Georgia 24
In the Western Athletic ConTenn· Chat. 45 Jacksonville 51. 13
ference opener, look for Brigham
Tekas A&amp;M 27 MissiS;sippi 20
Young University to continue its
Texas Tech 42 UTE P 7
winning ways with an impressive -IGTulane 10 S. Mississippi 7
Wake Foresl36, Va ; Tech 20
14 thumping of New Mexico.
West Carolina 27 VMI 21
A pair of night games worth your
West Mich. 28 Eas! Mich. 10
perusal will see winning efforts for
West Virginia 22 Cincinnati 14

STANDINGS

West Va . Mt . Boys

Prater Brothers
Bluegrass Strangers

Bluegrass Unlimited
Young Blades of Bluegrass

ADMISSION : 110 for all three d ay)
Team
W· L PF PA
NOAl.:OHOl
Uperday
F rc.e C amPing- •n · th ~· Rough
Eastern
1·0 7 0
IN
STAGE
AREA
Br ing Lawn Cha irs
lOCATED AT :
Hannan Trace
1·0 18 12
All DOGS ON LEASHE S
L ~wis Fuley' s Farm
Kyger Creek
1·0 61
0
•
On Fra nklin Twp. 2U
Nor!h Galli a
1-0 36 0
For Information Contact : Lewis Farley Rt 1 Box. 233 Jackson o·h·
Sou!hern
1-0, 31
6
45640 (614) 286·3527
. '
. '
'
'
10
Sou!hwestern
1·0 38 18
Last Week's Results
Eas!ern 7, Wa!erford 0
Hannan Trace 18, Symmes Val ley 1----------------------~-~
12
Kyger Creek 61, Federa l Hocking
0
Nor!h Gallia 36, Pain! Valley 0
Sou!hern 31, Meigs JV 6
Sou!hwestern 38, Oak Hill18
Friday' s Q-ames
Eastern at Miller
Hannan at Hannan Trace
Wahama a! Kyger Creek
Huntington Ross at North Gallia
Federal Hocking at Sou!hern
Southwestern
at
Ross

RUT LAND
DEPARTM ENT
STORE
Phone 742-2100

Southeastern

SEOAL
STANDINGS
Team
WL PF PA
Meigs
0· 1 20 28
Gallipolis
1·0 21
o
I ron!on
1·0 33 13
Logan
H 14 o
Wellston
1·0 37 7
0·1 o 25
Jackson
Waverly
O· t 1~ 33
A!hens
0·0 o o
Las! Week's Resul!s
Belpre 28, Meigs 20
Gallipolls21, Rock Hill o
1ron ton 33, Russell, Ky. 13
Logan 14, New Lexington 0
Wells!on 37, Alexander 7
Portsmouth 25, Jackson 0
Wheelersburg 33, Waverly 12
Morgan 14, A!hens o, game
suspended 3rd quarter
Friday's Games
Meigs at Pain! Pleasant
Athens at Lancas!er
Gallipolis a! Coal Grove
·Ashland, Ky . a! lron!on
Jackson at Wheelersburg

Effective Thru Saturday, September 6th
Eckrich

..

HAM AND ·CHEESE LOAF••••~~~. $1.97
Eckrich

OLD FASHION LOAF•••••••••••~~~.$1.97
Homemade

·HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••• ~~~.sl.l9
DAIRY

PRODUCE

I lb. Teen Queen
aAuaRrGters
M
ARINE

2/97e

Logan at Delaware Hayes
Por!smouth a! Waverly
Wells!on at Nelsonville· York .

Clearfield-Old &amp; Sharp

CELERY.........
Jib. Yelow

~~~.~~. ..3 f

ONIONS ......... ~~~.

103/4 Campbell's

CHICKEN VEGETABlE SOUP. •. 2/75$ ·
IMITATION VANILLA ••••••••••••••• 59$
16 oz. van Camp

:

PORK·N-BEANS •••••••••••••••••• 2/75'

en

.,

29 oz. Bartlett Del Monte

PEAR HALVES••••• ~ ••••••••••••• :.a."•• 89'.
0.21 oz. Regular

KOOL AID ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 6/89~ ·

MERCHANDISE MARKED DOWN AT OUR

3 oz. Armour

OPEN DOORS SALEI

POTTED MEAT••••• ,••••••••• ~···· 2/59c :

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO .
NIAIN ST.

.'42-};111

4 Pak Charm in

TO MEET WEDNESDAY

All members of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion are
to attend a meeting at 7:30
p.m. on. Wednesday, Sept. 10. The
special item of business to be voted ·
on will be changing Article 3,
paragraph 4, of the constitution and
by-laws.

Iurged

.

TOILET TISSUE ;~ •••••••••••• :.~~·}1.29

'

FORBES
VINTON - Mr. and Mrs. Paul
· Forbes, Jr., Vinton, announce the
: birth of their first child, a son, born
: Aug. 20. He weighed seven pounds,
: four oWJces, and was named Jeremy
· David.
: Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs . .
' John F. Colwell and Mr. and Mrs.
: Paul Forbes, Sr. Great: grandmothers are Mr. Grace
1
: ColweU, Mrs. Hazel Duffy and Mrs.
: Elsie Forbes.

ICE CREAM SOCIAL
SATURDAY
: · . An ice cream social will be held
: Saturday at the Trinity
· Congregational Chureh. All women
' are uked to have their cakes or pies
: there at 1 p.m. Serving in the chureh
: .basement will begin at 4:30p.m;

USDA CHOICE
MEATS
ARM
.lb.

ROAST

LB•

$189

are intriguing. Several colleges Maryland, Pennsylvania, Indiana
and Purdue universities, for example - have made or are contemplating use of television for
degree purposes, Lucas says, ad·
ding, however, "I don't think the
idea has been embraced by the cable
companies.''
One reason, of course, is mpney.
Fees paid by students for the classes
go to Metroversity,__not the cable
company. "It's not a revenue.
producing agent," Lucas says.
"Plus, it takes a lot of cooperation
by the cable agent. In essence,
you're giving away a channel."
But Lucas sees some positive,
reasons for a cable operator taking
part in a "cable college."
"First of all, it's a good public
relations tool because of the public
service," he says. "And you have to
look into whether people who curren·
Uy aren't on cable will subscribe
simply to get the college courses.
That could be a big factor if this
thing snowballs."

Sears
WESTERN
..
CATALOG

lb. $}99

BEEF STEW
Lean

29
lb. $ 2

CUBE STEAKS
Pork

GROUND BEEF
Cubed

39
lb. $ 1

SHOULDER STEAK
Frying Chicken

lb.

Red Skin
lb.

Piece

BOLOGNA

79~

f'ryi!'19 CHicken
LEGS
Superior Polish

$109

SAUSAGE

12 oz. 99~

Superior

Slab

BACON

.ONIONS

TAB, SPRITE OR

COKE

BUNCH

PEACHES
LB.

39~
MICHIGAN .

POTATOES

POTATO CHIPS

7oz.

20 $249

79~

LBS.

FLOUR

MRS. SMITH
~

Plain · Self-Rising·

APPLE
PIE

SLBS.

99$

MORTON

FAMILY
MEALS

32

oz.

CHEK DJ1/RY

-

.

5'1 o1

POTTED MEAT ....... ...... :.• ;. 4/ 11.00
TREET••.•••. •• •••• •. •• .... .••. .. !~ .o.~:. 89~
VIENNA SAUSAGES .......... ~.~~·.2/89'

IVORY LIQUID
32 oz. 139
DELTA

Ron 39'
ASSORTED
T0WELS ................
.
14 01. 2/79'
COMET ..•....•... ~ .•...........•....

TROPICANA O.RANGE JUICE .6... ?~~·. 1 1.39
OEL HAVEN

DEL . HAVEN

GRAP(JELLY .................. ~: .~ .. . 89'

1

TOMATOES ................. :~~~:. 3/ 1.00

101 W. MNN ST.

GREEN BEANS ................. :.l/ 11.00

SMOOTH

Del Haven Whole K . or c.s. '

' PEANUT BUTTER ..............~~?~:.99'

. Authorized Catalog Sales
PH. ft2·2l71

~erchant
POMEROY, OltiO

Ownatl anol ~,...tell loy Jack an&lt;l Jutly Wllll•thrv w~ t-5,
frl. 9-5, Sat. 9-2

16M

PANCAKE SYRUP............... ~~·. 79'
2
:.

tnspirtd by th• ucUint w•stern way ol 1111
•nd as n.tlled as a routl..,ldlng rl)d.o,...

·

1

DELHAVENCUT

I

WHAT ~ GIEAT WAY 10 OITAIN £mA SAVINGS.
HMEIIIIU !0\ OFF 111011 S£I'TDIIU liD 11

J

39~

CELERY

16oz . . $ .139
Btls.

ARMOUR

20% OFF

Sliced lb. $ 1

YELLOW

SWEETIE PIES ................':.~~·. 79'

will be

·,

19

2% MILK

1980·19.1
Stilting September 1 and
Continuin&amp; thiQU&amp;b
September 13, Ml)thina
in the Western Book

..

PORK STEAK

VALLEY BELL

•••Where- AiMrlle lhopo Por Value

ilb • . $179

Boneless

CHUCK ROAST

Superio~

.,39

ENGLISH ROAST

'

Boneless

FAS.~

•

CHUCK ROAST

•

:New arrivals
ROUSH
RACINE-Mr. and Mrs. Roger
· Roush, Racine, are announcing the
• birth of a second daughter, Jennifer ·
Lynn, on Aug. II at Pleasant Valley
. .Hospital.
: The baby weight seven pounds, lit
· · ounches and was l9t inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
,and Mrs. Charles Michael and pater·
: nal grandparenta are Mr. and Mrs.
· Herbert Roush, all of Racine. Great: grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
: Russell Findley, Mrs. Marie
: Michael and Mrs. Edna Roush, all of
· Racine. Mr. and Mrs. Roush have
: another daughter, Kimberly, 2.

USDA CHOICE CENTER CUT

AIR CONDITIONED

VISITS HERE
Phillip Raybur.n of Toledo spent
the weekend here with his mother, ·
'Mrs. Amanda Murray. Mrs. Dorothy
McCloud has been assisting in Mrs.
Murray's care since her return from
the hospital.

scribers can earn college credit sim·
ply by watching classes on
television.
The Louisville experiment offers
four Introductory courses, each worth three credit hours + business,
humanities, composition and a sur·
vey of Japanese history. Cable sub·scnbers who meet college entrance
requirements have only to pay a $105
semester fee, pick up the course
materials, and watch.
Using a CPI channel, Metrovel'
sity will broadcast the twice-weekly
classes at least 10 times a week at all
hours, to allow students to "attend"
classes any time they can .
At the end of each semester, final
examinations will be administered
in the traditional manner, with
students meeting on campus to take
the tests. Other arrangements will
be made for students who are unable
to come on campus for the final
examinations.
·
The TV-for-credit approach still is
in lts infancy, but the possibilities

•

6 oz. Durkee

NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS

LOUISVIIJ.E, Ky. (AP) - Could
. It be that someday folks will earn
college degrees simply by plugging
• in to coorses offered on television?
The Immediate response from
. educators generally is negative, but
, the possibility has at least been
raised with the advent of televised
: classes on a "college cable" channel
here.
"I can forsee a time when that will
· happen,' ' says Keith Lucas,
: Louisville-area vice president for
: CPI Inc., a cable television fran: chise that will help launch an am• bitlous college program here this
• fall.
"The most obvious appeal is to the
: handicapped person who is bedrid. den or confined to a house who can't
: get to a college campus. And there .
: are housewives and shift workers,
. too," Lucas says.
• With the rooperatiori of CPI and
: Kentucklana Metroverslty, a con: sortium of six coUeges in Louisville
: and southern Indiana, cable sub-

.n M-7, til 7; Sat. 9 til 9
5TH &amp;PEARL, RACINE, OH.

BREASTS

· Watch TV; earn a degree.

69'

INSTANT
POTATOES••••••••••••• 2/79$
-

Brown called for the league office

The Values Awareness Program,
in conjunction with the Southern
Ohio Regional Co un cil on
Alcoholism, is offering two free
workshops this fall, one for teas:hers
and one for family groups.
~ teachers' workshop is set-up
to be used as an in-service day. This
pncram includes alcohol and drug
abuae information, films, speakers,
and discussions of such. subjects as
values clarification, decision
making, · self esteem, and stress
management.
The family workshOJ?, called
"Enhancing Family Relations," Is
designed to help family members
communicate more effectively with
each other.
Parent-Teacher
Organizations, church groups, and
civic organizations are encouraged
to request this. program.
The Values Awareness Program is
funded by the Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration and the .
Ohio Department of Health. It is
housed with the Southern Ohio
Regional Council on Alcoholism,
207'k North Market Street, Waverly,
Ohio, 45690. To arrange for one of
these workshops, which are being offered at no charge, contact Mrs.
Dianne Chapman, Prevention
Project Coordinator, at (614) 9477723.

Michigan

8 oz. Idahoan

to take a stronger look at .the prac-

-

Carbohydrate- Provides energy for the body.
NtaCin- Needed to change food to energy that the body can·use.
Riboflavin- Needed to change food to e11ergy that the body can use.
Thiamin- Needed to change food to energy that the body can use.
Iron - Carries oxygen in the blood from the lungs to other parts of
the body.
Noddles, macat'oni, and spaghetti are not fattening, contrary to
what you may have heard. Pasta that h8.!l been cooked to the tender
stage has about :.m kilocalories per cup. Some people tend to eat pasta
In very large quantities and this is a fattening habit. Any food that you ·
eat too muclr of will cause a gain in weight. So, remember that when
pa8ta Is eaten in moderate quantities It will cause you to gain weight.
A typical serving of pasta Is between one-half and one.cup, depending
on whether the food Is being served as the main dish or a side dish.
PRICE OF MACARONI
PRODUCTS
Product, Price Per Pound, and Price Per CGoked Cup, are listed:
Spaghetti, 53 cents, 7 cents.
Noodles, 98 cents, 14 cents.
Macaroni, 62 cents, 8 cents.
Macaroni products with melted spread Is a simple side dish that
may be served for lunch or dinner. Ad din&amp; an animal protein such as
meat, poultry, fish, cheese or eggs to make a casserole Is a good idea
for two reasons. First, macaroni products can help to stretch the more
expensive food item in the casserole so that the meal Is less expensive.
Second, the animal protein complements the protein in the macaroni
product so that it is better used by the body to maintain good health.

Hocking Valley Grass Hiltbreed

1

.

body.

MUSIC

r-.;;;;;;;;;;;•••••;;;;;;•••••••••••••iiii••••iiii~ I CHEESE .
POTATOES ......... ~·. 49'
RUTLAND FURNITURE'S
NEWLY CONSTRUCTED STORE
.
WELCH'S GRAPE JUICE •••••• 2Pl.79

'

Allllle . . .

Di
f' , ,WAlda
...... c-l,yCoopetatlte
· Edeulvdenke
Macaroni, spaghetU and liN II an IGIIIelimes called pata
because that is the Italian word for "paste." All three foods are m.de
from paste or dough of flour and water. In America, macaroni,
spaghetti at\d noodles are frequently just called macaroni products.
·Macaroni and spaghetti are the same food, but with a different shape.
Noodles are made with eggs along with flour and water and have a flat
shape. There are over 170 different shaped macaroni products to
choose from in the United States.
Noodles, macarOni, and spaghetti are foods that belong in the breads
and cereal group of the Basic Ii'our Good Groups. Everyone should eat
at least four servings from the breads and cereal groups. Enril:hed
macaroni products are important for good health because they supply
protein, catbohydrate, niacin, riboflavin, thiamin, and iron. Following
is a chart that shows the functions of the main nutrients found in pasta.
THE MAIN NUTRIENTS
IN PASTA
Nutrient and FWlction are listed:
Protein - Part of el!Ch cell in the body. Provides energy for the-

-

. White Sweet

ALL

By Myrtle Clarhlld

5 Mile East of Jackson, Ohio, off Rl. 35

Stoned Mt. Boys

workshops
planned here

Macaroni--cheap
and nutritious

ADENA INDIAN
BLUEGRASS FESTIV

• teams.

tice, which he said could become
more cmunon If it's not slopped.
:. "WilY don'l we cheat? Anymore, '.
: that's getting to be a pretty good
: queltlon," Brown said. "We follow
• the rules because we agreed to
tMII.
"But if others who make the same
commlbnent we did don't fulfill,
. then we're stupid. lf you play by the
· rules, you're a chump."
: Brown said putUng healthy
, players on the injured reserve list
clriiB up the pool of players that
other 1eama could use.
'"nlen an probably any nwnber
of players
injured reterVe who

Food for Thought

SEPTEMBER 5, 6, 7, 1980

SVAC

Dual

. ,

CORN .•....••.••••.•..•• •.!~.~~;

�9-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepoll-Pom eroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1980
8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1980
NOTICE
· Me ;9s County . Com · viewed at t he Me;gs County Truck."
The Boa rd
FOR SALE OF
miss•oner-s, located In t he Sani tary LandfilL located

COUNTY ·OWN E O
VE H ICLE
Pu r suant to Sec t i on
307.12 O. R .C. the Mei s

courthou se, . P.om ero y,
Ohio.. with b•ds to be
opened at 2: 30 P.M.. and

rece i ve sea led b ids unti l 12
noon on Tuesday Sept 16
1980, in the offiCe of · th e

One 1972 , lntern atton al
Front L oadmg Ga rbage
T rue!&lt;
.
Sai d veh tc le m ay be

County Commissioners w~ll

read

a l qu~ ,

of

Meigs

Commi ss ioners
ott . State Rou te _143, in Cou nty
Salisbury Townshtp, be· r eserve the r ight to re ject
tween the hours of 7:JO any Or all b ids,
· M e igs county
A:M.and4 :30P.M.
.
Commissioners
_Tr uck to be sold , as .•s
Ma ry Hobsfetter,
w: •th no guarante~~- Sa!d
Clerk
btds to be .s ubmttted 1n
sea_led envelope marked (9 ) 3, 10, 21c
" B td on 197 2 Garbage

tor 1M sale of

the followmg vehtcle: .

I

CHECKING TIP
CLEVELAND (AP ) +Police have
begun investigating a tipster's story
that missing 2~year-old Denise Kay
Gravely entered an automobile
Thursday , the day she was reported
·
missing.
A man told police he was driving

reading newsaper i-eports of a sear·
ch for the 30-pound blonde girl.
Neighbors and police searched the
near we!lt side neighborhood and
went door to door Thursday, F riday '
and during the weekend in hopes of
finding the child .

behind a Buick with Michigan licen· ·
se plates and became irritated when
a couple in the car stopped in the
street to Rick up the little girl.
The .sffiall child seemed to get in
the car willingly, he told police.
Police said he tied what he saw
with the disa ppea rance after

PRICES IN EFFECT
NOW THRU SEPT. 14th.
.
.
·sHOP IN POINT PLEASANT OR MASONI

Super Savings

oo
$goo
7

sa~

-- ·-

AND

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
._
io

Eoc:h of
~ .,..,.. tor . . '" MCh

reQUired

l( rogtf Start,
dD ru'l cut of In

~~.~ ..HION

MENS LARGE

SOCKS

BANDANA
HDKF'S
RED OR BLUE

·s

50¢

.OUT
Y GO!
REGULAR 512 99

\

1

summer skirts go.
We're tired of looking ·at
them, so you get rea I
bargains. Hurry un ln .

7.95 Value!

PILLOW CASES

BLANKETS

180 thread count . F uII
· size. Polyester.cotton
blend. Good color
selection .
Irregulars.

$

..00
2

- - .

19
IN THE
FIOZIN

. PERFECT QUALITY! .

$

size 72x9o
70~Patterns
'U
Pair . 110.99 1n»ERFECT

'\~Y\\~:\0\~\\~i\\~ .
INDOOR
• OUTDOOR
.
24x60 CARPETS
'

WEATHER PROOF
SOLID-COLORS
Reg1,1lar 13.99

WOMENS
SEAMLESS
P.A NTY HOSE

.

•s

D00U NATURAL FLAVOII

6 COLORS
FITS§ · 11

47e

VINYL APPLIANCE COVERS
Not as pictured. Quilled vinyl covers In
several patterns. Mixer, toaster etc. Give
your kitchen a new fook .

Womens Newest Fall
SHORT SLEEVE TOPS
All the wanted fall colors and
styles at sale prices. Fabrics of
spun polyester, cotton blends and
polyester . Dozens of body styles.
Come on In and save.

·-

1HOUSEHOLDi
GADGETS
Includes slaw cutter, coin holder, S &amp; P
' Sha ke rs, soap d ish, coa sters, nylon
: spatula, multi server, magnlfy_l_n9. scan.
, scissors, sharpener, electric, cord reeler , ·
• memo no1aer s, pa per pla te holders,
scissors, sharpener, elec1rlc coro reeler,
mustard contai ner and more. 25 different
Items.

FOR

$100

CANNON SECONDS

WASH CLOTHS
OR _
DISH CLOTHS
·w oven 'dlsh · a othsl n solid col~rs
or stripes. Wash cloths are terry
cloth stripes, checks or solid
colors. Seconds.

4

FOR

$}UO

DECORATED
LAMINATED

PLACE
MATS
Many patterns ' .and
colors. Imperfects of
$1.00 values .

39~

I

1

Luncheon
Meat
.

•;, .Gal.

I.OD-SHIITS I'll lOll

TiIIIUt . ..... .... .

IIOGII

........ .
Pinto

SANDWICH 01 WIINII

:~~~·. . . . .. "·$J09
U.S.D.A.INirECTID,
4·7·LI. AVO. FROZEN

~ 25·$

-.•, ~)FF" · . I

~ $J79

.. .. 3953cc

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.D.A.INSPECTED

=~·~ ~~:

MIOGII

Wheilt
.._ __
............
. ....
..

Baking Hens ................lb. 59
PISCHIIMILDOIHOT
l·lb. 99c
Pork Sausage ..... .... Ron

$J79

C

KIOGU SILP·IISING

1~
Meal .. .. .. . i.i

Com

M•ah· l·lb.
mallowa .. . ...

KIOOII WIINII 01

12-Ct.

Buns ..... .... .... .. Pk,.
L•••• MUI.TI.QIAIN
2
l6
Kroger Bread .. .. .. . L~:~·
....

-kelhllletl
Oretle AA
Select

1
99
Lemonade Mix ....... eo"i:er

: (MAIIU 10-QUAITS) KIOOII
OLD FASHION

3l

$

. .•.. 99 c
9c
2

-

(ntiYUY LIW NICI)

PIOHNOIIIDA

Hash
2
·lb.
Browns .... .........,
PIOZIN 1(100111
Com·On·'111e-Cob ~ic';:
IXTIA STRINGTH
$111
Tylenollablets .. 'l'tf'·

.ru;;;, Baking ·~~~- S269
FAMOUS WISTStDI JUMIO
12 llll CALIFORNIA

49c

99c
Aqua-fresh ..........'t!:;·

21' OI'P LA IlL,
TOOTHF'ASTI

89C

Cantaloupe ............. Each
ftllt OF THI $EASON GOLDIN
.! 99 C
Delldous Apples . ao8

Fresh Glazed
Donuts

'Regula~

!~$129

Prices

Qlp

..,..

PIJitCIIIple
.
Jllct .... .·· Ceo

1110011

Potatoes .. ...... ao,
Fresh Carrots ...... i~8

ggc

GOLD CIIST IIGULAI
01 MINIATUII

111"-----. Sandwich

Grade A
Large Eggs ~""··_73c

Fleece Bath...· oR·

.

I

:Ice Cream.. .......... .. ''"·
111100111 COI.IY
10
$129
Longhorn Cheese . ..k;~·

$3
1::·
26c
ggc

10

FOR

ENTIRE STOCK ON SALE 4 DAYS
'

•

20

c

Avondtlle tU·••·
Com ... ... . con

$22 9
Boneless Round Steak . lb.
SEIVI 'N' SAVESLICED
$119

2 $1 oo·:

12"x17"·. Solid color or
prints. Dozens of uses. . .

39~

•

.

WHOll KIINIEL 0..
CIIIAM STYLI

U.S. GOV, GIADIDCHOICE .
FULLCUT
·

·;";;~Qt Butt
$119
Pork Roast .... .. ... 111.
·
ifOII f'ACIIAGID COUNTRY STYLE
SJ29
Bacon ............... lb.

SOFTORLON
BOOTIES

¢

PRICES IN. EFFECT J
WEDNESDAY 3 P.M.

LIMIT ONE COUPON I'll FAMILY
- - -. IIC.IUII. II"·· ·· ·
-liiiPIIICIIIIITilll LICIIIUU

legular 79'

Color sha des of taupe, beige,
cinnamon. One size Ills all. It' s
your chance to stoc k up for the '
fa ll season at saving s.
·

I
I

I

lZ

laatant
CoHee ....

: Beef Patty Mix .... ..... ... lb .

.If•••••••••••••••••••
I

KIOGD

$119

PROTIEN KIOGEi'S PRO

MEAT CASE •

RUG
BLOCKS

$~8

KIOGll

ToiMto 10 1. -oa.
Soup .. .. .. . . &lt;••

Any Size Pkg
139
Ground Beef ... .... .... lb.
I A BLEND OF IEEF AND HYDRATED.TEXTURED VEGETABLE

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

VALUES TO 16.99

-

\

-.Jif . . . . . .. ...

1

TOPS

WOMENS &amp;MISSES

PERCALE PRINTED

P...ut

Kreger Welcomes
Your Federal
Food Stamps

66~

Tan k lops , short sleeves ,
sleeveless. Every s ummer top
. reduced to move them out, Fast!
Most all &lt;l&gt;es. Great Buvs.

385 PAGES

ACRYLIC PRINTED

F111ct
1
TowtIa.. .. ......
1011

10 OIALIIS.

S PANTI
A one-time buy
of
Irregulars from our famous
brand. While and pastel
colors Includes stretch lace
nylon and nylon tricot.
$1.39 If perfect.
_,

~:~a,
Prices

11• IHIITS Pill lOll

' pQME ROY AND G ALLIPO L ISSTO RES.

rL.AYGIOUNO

lo~N~2oo

u.s.A.

Avontlale 7'/.-o&amp;.
Dinner ..... ...

HIPSTER AND BIKINE

%. - .. • •

12....

MACAIONII CHilli

WI RIIUVI THI RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIIS . NONI SOLD

F'JrC~;:Jse

-

19C·:
23c
44c:
·-- ...... age

Bit I

cornperab'e brand 01 rttund your purchae pdce.

' · t ... IN

Snecia!
'

"V'

..,.,.... c..

WOMENS SU-MMER

.

~II

-

I

.CROSSWORD
PUZZLE BOOK
.

(matH! LtW PIICY

you buy at Krog.r tt gu~r an teed tOt your tol.ll
•1ilf.ctl0n r~~ of ITIInuftcturtt. If VOU are not 11ti1·
r.d. Krllgllf wil r~• yOur it...-n With the 11me bfenQ or •

JUMBO SIZE!

WOMENS
SKIRTS

•Made 1n

..

COPYIIGHT .1910- THE KIOGII CO. ITIMS AND I'IICIS

·Your Ch1nce For Saving$
··2· .

to

t !IIOIP1 ..

0000 lUNDAY AUGUSTS\ THRU SAfUIOAY IIPTIMIIIII:

PULLOVER OR CARDIGANS

An klet le ngth .
Good
weight. Sizes 10 to U . You
would pay $2.99 If perfect .

MASON - Four birthdays were

~ng

BULKY CARDIGANS • V-NECKS
CREW NECKS • TURtLE NECKS

SOLE

BIRTHDAYS OBSERVED

TOTA,L SATIS FACTION GUARANTEE

·'

N SALE FOR 10 DAY

MENS WHITE

The honoree received many gifts
and two birthday cakes. Mrs.
Richard (Phyllis) Gilkey also
received a birthday cake, In observance of her recent birthday .

...,;....., rDIId in dW. .:1. tt .....
ldwrt:i.-::1
Rem , we Will after vou your ehOice of 1 comper-... item,
~ 1'4i11t161, rettechng tnt tame llllif\91 01 • rtinchlck
\llil'hCh wit! tntittl you to purchMt the .ow.rtilld itlt'l'l et h
ll:tvertiMd price Mthin JO dews.

SwEATERS
.

day .

Mason; Mr . and Mrs. Alburtice
Young , Clifton ; Miss Valerie VanMatre and Miss Melba Shank, both
of Point Pleasant; and hosts, Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Young, Mike and
Matt.
PICNIC HEIJ&gt;
MASON - The Helping Hand
Homemakers Club held an outing in
August at Mason's Park for an annual family picnic. Those attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Del Roberts, Mr .
and Mrs. Freddie Thabet, Mr. and
Mrs. Buddy Reynolds, Da!Uiy Sayre,

Regular 59'

Polyester·cotton blend light and
dark color tones . Sizes S-M-L-XL
Va lues to $15.99. lsi Quality and
seconds.

Regular 89'

Jackie and Dawn ; son and wife, Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Williams and
daughter, Cindy, of Indian Head,
Md.
Others attending included Mrs .
Ora Higgins , Pt. Pleasant ; Mrs.
Helen Williams, Clifton; Joho M!lDermitt, Pt. Pleasant; Straud McDermitt, West Columbia ; Mr. and
Mrs. Frank McDermitt, Letart; Bill
McDermitt, Letart; Mrs. Louise
Robinson, Joe, Ed, Mike and Kay,

Lois Young, Bessie Ingels, Lucy
Johnson, Janet Reed and Jill Bar·
ton,
Mason and area pe1'80118ls
Mrs. Joy Foreman has returned to
her home in Mason, after visiting
three weekS with her son, Lester
Foreman, at Savannah; Georgia.
Attending the three-day Bluegrass .
Festivai at Cox's Field, Walker, W.
Va. were Mr. and Mrs. Freddie
Thabet, Mr. and Mrs. Howard McClellan, Mr. ·and Mrs.. Buddy
Reynolds, Mr. a nd Mrs. Gordon
Powell.

Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Evelyn Stewart,

BUTANE
.LIGHTERS

WINDBREAKER .
JACKETS ·.

Size 3%" X61h''

By Alma Marshall
Special correspondent
SURPRISE DINNER HEIJ&gt;
CLIFTON - A surprise birthday
diriner was held on Sunday, for Mrs:
Clara Williams at the ·home of her
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
~s. ·Richard Gilkey and grandson,
Mark Gilkey.
Others helping with the surprise
were another daughter and husband,
Mr. and Mrs. Denver (Ann) Blake,

observed on August 16 with a bir·
thday cookout at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Young, Grandview
Heights, Point P leasant. The
honorees 'included Richard Young,
New Haven; Pa!ll Nicl)ols, Pt.
Pleasant; Ella Lowman, Hartford,
and Evelyn Stewart, Mason.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Young, New Haven ; Mr.
and Mrs . Paul Nichols, Noel and Andrew, Grandview Heights ; Mr. and
Mrs. David C. Lowman, Bill and
Ben, Hartford; Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
Lathey and Murph, 1Jud Chattin Rd.,

.DISPOSA8LE ;

MENS UN-LINED

BOX OF 100
ENVELOPES

Mason news notes

Clifton; Bob and'Arlene McDermitt ,
West Colwnbia; Sarah Willis, Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey, all of
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Scites ,
Dean and Austin, Letart; Melissa
and Scott Kea rns, Clifton. Mrs.
Janet McDermitt visited during the

AYOND All

Pinto
"·•·••· .
..... ... ... &lt;••
AVONDALIIID

lldntr

,•., ....

. . . . . ' " " ' c ••

·--' • ·· 25c
1,.:.,:::.e.""" ~-=~· 22c
MS:a•llt
69cc
.....·~~· ·g9
- . . 1 , , ,, ,, Con

OIL

•·lb.

h1111e1ra .. "'•·
OYIN

Cocilltl." .

lroatr ..... ,...
Gelatin
...,:

Chopped Ham

*151
••
•

. . . . ."

llltoCt

TH .... ......:

s:t:iy

Drt•a!na·

~"

38c
49°
$13 9

79

c

�9-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepoll-Pom eroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1980
8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1980
NOTICE
· Me ;9s County . Com · viewed at t he Me;gs County Truck."
The Boa rd
FOR SALE OF
miss•oner-s, located In t he Sani tary LandfilL located

COUNTY ·OWN E O
VE H ICLE
Pu r suant to Sec t i on
307.12 O. R .C. the Mei s

courthou se, . P.om ero y,
Ohio.. with b•ds to be
opened at 2: 30 P.M.. and

rece i ve sea led b ids unti l 12
noon on Tuesday Sept 16
1980, in the offiCe of · th e

One 1972 , lntern atton al
Front L oadmg Ga rbage
T rue!&lt;
.
Sai d veh tc le m ay be

County Commissioners w~ll

read

a l qu~ ,

of

Meigs

Commi ss ioners
ott . State Rou te _143, in Cou nty
Salisbury Townshtp, be· r eserve the r ight to re ject
tween the hours of 7:JO any Or all b ids,
· M e igs county
A:M.and4 :30P.M.
.
Commissioners
_Tr uck to be sold , as .•s
Ma ry Hobsfetter,
w: •th no guarante~~- Sa!d
Clerk
btds to be .s ubmttted 1n
sea_led envelope marked (9 ) 3, 10, 21c
" B td on 197 2 Garbage

tor 1M sale of

the followmg vehtcle: .

I

CHECKING TIP
CLEVELAND (AP ) +Police have
begun investigating a tipster's story
that missing 2~year-old Denise Kay
Gravely entered an automobile
Thursday , the day she was reported
·
missing.
A man told police he was driving

reading newsaper i-eports of a sear·
ch for the 30-pound blonde girl.
Neighbors and police searched the
near we!lt side neighborhood and
went door to door Thursday, F riday '
and during the weekend in hopes of
finding the child .

behind a Buick with Michigan licen· ·
se plates and became irritated when
a couple in the car stopped in the
street to Rick up the little girl.
The .sffiall child seemed to get in
the car willingly, he told police.
Police said he tied what he saw
with the disa ppea rance after

PRICES IN EFFECT
NOW THRU SEPT. 14th.
.
.
·sHOP IN POINT PLEASANT OR MASONI

Super Savings

oo
$goo
7

sa~

-- ·-

AND

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
._
io

Eoc:h of
~ .,..,.. tor . . '" MCh

reQUired

l( rogtf Start,
dD ru'l cut of In

~~.~ ..HION

MENS LARGE

SOCKS

BANDANA
HDKF'S
RED OR BLUE

·s

50¢

.OUT
Y GO!
REGULAR 512 99

\

1

summer skirts go.
We're tired of looking ·at
them, so you get rea I
bargains. Hurry un ln .

7.95 Value!

PILLOW CASES

BLANKETS

180 thread count . F uII
· size. Polyester.cotton
blend. Good color
selection .
Irregulars.

$

..00
2

- - .

19
IN THE
FIOZIN

. PERFECT QUALITY! .

$

size 72x9o
70~Patterns
'U
Pair . 110.99 1n»ERFECT

'\~Y\\~:\0\~\\~i\\~ .
INDOOR
• OUTDOOR
.
24x60 CARPETS
'

WEATHER PROOF
SOLID-COLORS
Reg1,1lar 13.99

WOMENS
SEAMLESS
P.A NTY HOSE

.

•s

D00U NATURAL FLAVOII

6 COLORS
FITS§ · 11

47e

VINYL APPLIANCE COVERS
Not as pictured. Quilled vinyl covers In
several patterns. Mixer, toaster etc. Give
your kitchen a new fook .

Womens Newest Fall
SHORT SLEEVE TOPS
All the wanted fall colors and
styles at sale prices. Fabrics of
spun polyester, cotton blends and
polyester . Dozens of body styles.
Come on In and save.

·-

1HOUSEHOLDi
GADGETS
Includes slaw cutter, coin holder, S &amp; P
' Sha ke rs, soap d ish, coa sters, nylon
: spatula, multi server, magnlfy_l_n9. scan.
, scissors, sharpener, electric, cord reeler , ·
• memo no1aer s, pa per pla te holders,
scissors, sharpener, elec1rlc coro reeler,
mustard contai ner and more. 25 different
Items.

FOR

$100

CANNON SECONDS

WASH CLOTHS
OR _
DISH CLOTHS
·w oven 'dlsh · a othsl n solid col~rs
or stripes. Wash cloths are terry
cloth stripes, checks or solid
colors. Seconds.

4

FOR

$}UO

DECORATED
LAMINATED

PLACE
MATS
Many patterns ' .and
colors. Imperfects of
$1.00 values .

39~

I

1

Luncheon
Meat
.

•;, .Gal.

I.OD-SHIITS I'll lOll

TiIIIUt . ..... .... .

IIOGII

........ .
Pinto

SANDWICH 01 WIINII

:~~~·. . . . .. "·$J09
U.S.D.A.INirECTID,
4·7·LI. AVO. FROZEN

~ 25·$

-.•, ~)FF" · . I

~ $J79

.. .. 3953cc

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.D.A.INSPECTED

=~·~ ~~:

MIOGII

Wheilt
.._ __
............
. ....
..

Baking Hens ................lb. 59
PISCHIIMILDOIHOT
l·lb. 99c
Pork Sausage ..... .... Ron

$J79

C

KIOGU SILP·IISING

1~
Meal .. .. .. . i.i

Com

M•ah· l·lb.
mallowa .. . ...

KIOOII WIINII 01

12-Ct.

Buns ..... .... .... .. Pk,.
L•••• MUI.TI.QIAIN
2
l6
Kroger Bread .. .. .. . L~:~·
....

-kelhllletl
Oretle AA
Select

1
99
Lemonade Mix ....... eo"i:er

: (MAIIU 10-QUAITS) KIOOII
OLD FASHION

3l

$

. .•.. 99 c
9c
2

-

(ntiYUY LIW NICI)

PIOHNOIIIDA

Hash
2
·lb.
Browns .... .........,
PIOZIN 1(100111
Com·On·'111e-Cob ~ic';:
IXTIA STRINGTH
$111
Tylenollablets .. 'l'tf'·

.ru;;;, Baking ·~~~- S269
FAMOUS WISTStDI JUMIO
12 llll CALIFORNIA

49c

99c
Aqua-fresh ..........'t!:;·

21' OI'P LA IlL,
TOOTHF'ASTI

89C

Cantaloupe ............. Each
ftllt OF THI $EASON GOLDIN
.! 99 C
Delldous Apples . ao8

Fresh Glazed
Donuts

'Regula~

!~$129

Prices

Qlp

..,..

PIJitCIIIple
.
Jllct .... .·· Ceo

1110011

Potatoes .. ...... ao,
Fresh Carrots ...... i~8

ggc

GOLD CIIST IIGULAI
01 MINIATUII

111"-----. Sandwich

Grade A
Large Eggs ~""··_73c

Fleece Bath...· oR·

.

I

:Ice Cream.. .......... .. ''"·
111100111 COI.IY
10
$129
Longhorn Cheese . ..k;~·

$3
1::·
26c
ggc

10

FOR

ENTIRE STOCK ON SALE 4 DAYS
'

•

20

c

Avondtlle tU·••·
Com ... ... . con

$22 9
Boneless Round Steak . lb.
SEIVI 'N' SAVESLICED
$119

2 $1 oo·:

12"x17"·. Solid color or
prints. Dozens of uses. . .

39~

•

.

WHOll KIINIEL 0..
CIIIAM STYLI

U.S. GOV, GIADIDCHOICE .
FULLCUT
·

·;";;~Qt Butt
$119
Pork Roast .... .. ... 111.
·
ifOII f'ACIIAGID COUNTRY STYLE
SJ29
Bacon ............... lb.

SOFTORLON
BOOTIES

¢

PRICES IN. EFFECT J
WEDNESDAY 3 P.M.

LIMIT ONE COUPON I'll FAMILY
- - -. IIC.IUII. II"·· ·· ·
-liiiPIIICIIIIITilll LICIIIUU

legular 79'

Color sha des of taupe, beige,
cinnamon. One size Ills all. It' s
your chance to stoc k up for the '
fa ll season at saving s.
·

I
I

I

lZ

laatant
CoHee ....

: Beef Patty Mix .... ..... ... lb .

.If•••••••••••••••••••
I

KIOGD

$119

PROTIEN KIOGEi'S PRO

MEAT CASE •

RUG
BLOCKS

$~8

KIOGll

ToiMto 10 1. -oa.
Soup .. .. .. . . &lt;••

Any Size Pkg
139
Ground Beef ... .... .... lb.
I A BLEND OF IEEF AND HYDRATED.TEXTURED VEGETABLE

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

VALUES TO 16.99

-

\

-.Jif . . . . . .. ...

1

TOPS

WOMENS &amp;MISSES

PERCALE PRINTED

P...ut

Kreger Welcomes
Your Federal
Food Stamps

66~

Tan k lops , short sleeves ,
sleeveless. Every s ummer top
. reduced to move them out, Fast!
Most all &lt;l&gt;es. Great Buvs.

385 PAGES

ACRYLIC PRINTED

F111ct
1
TowtIa.. .. ......
1011

10 OIALIIS.

S PANTI
A one-time buy
of
Irregulars from our famous
brand. While and pastel
colors Includes stretch lace
nylon and nylon tricot.
$1.39 If perfect.
_,

~:~a,
Prices

11• IHIITS Pill lOll

' pQME ROY AND G ALLIPO L ISSTO RES.

rL.AYGIOUNO

lo~N~2oo

u.s.A.

Avontlale 7'/.-o&amp;.
Dinner ..... ...

HIPSTER AND BIKINE

%. - .. • •

12....

MACAIONII CHilli

WI RIIUVI THI RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIIS . NONI SOLD

F'JrC~;:Jse

-

19C·:
23c
44c:
·-- ...... age

Bit I

cornperab'e brand 01 rttund your purchae pdce.

' · t ... IN

Snecia!
'

"V'

..,.,.... c..

WOMENS SU-MMER

.

~II

-

I

.CROSSWORD
PUZZLE BOOK
.

(matH! LtW PIICY

you buy at Krog.r tt gu~r an teed tOt your tol.ll
•1ilf.ctl0n r~~ of ITIInuftcturtt. If VOU are not 11ti1·
r.d. Krllgllf wil r~• yOur it...-n With the 11me bfenQ or •

JUMBO SIZE!

WOMENS
SKIRTS

•Made 1n

..

COPYIIGHT .1910- THE KIOGII CO. ITIMS AND I'IICIS

·Your Ch1nce For Saving$
··2· .

to

t !IIOIP1 ..

0000 lUNDAY AUGUSTS\ THRU SAfUIOAY IIPTIMIIIII:

PULLOVER OR CARDIGANS

An klet le ngth .
Good
weight. Sizes 10 to U . You
would pay $2.99 If perfect .

MASON - Four birthdays were

~ng

BULKY CARDIGANS • V-NECKS
CREW NECKS • TURtLE NECKS

SOLE

BIRTHDAYS OBSERVED

TOTA,L SATIS FACTION GUARANTEE

·'

N SALE FOR 10 DAY

MENS WHITE

The honoree received many gifts
and two birthday cakes. Mrs.
Richard (Phyllis) Gilkey also
received a birthday cake, In observance of her recent birthday .

...,;....., rDIId in dW. .:1. tt .....
ldwrt:i.-::1
Rem , we Will after vou your ehOice of 1 comper-... item,
~ 1'4i11t161, rettechng tnt tame llllif\91 01 • rtinchlck
\llil'hCh wit! tntittl you to purchMt the .ow.rtilld itlt'l'l et h
ll:tvertiMd price Mthin JO dews.

SwEATERS
.

day .

Mason; Mr . and Mrs. Alburtice
Young , Clifton ; Miss Valerie VanMatre and Miss Melba Shank, both
of Point Pleasant; and hosts, Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Young, Mike and
Matt.
PICNIC HEIJ&gt;
MASON - The Helping Hand
Homemakers Club held an outing in
August at Mason's Park for an annual family picnic. Those attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Del Roberts, Mr .
and Mrs. Freddie Thabet, Mr. and
Mrs. Buddy Reynolds, Da!Uiy Sayre,

Regular 59'

Polyester·cotton blend light and
dark color tones . Sizes S-M-L-XL
Va lues to $15.99. lsi Quality and
seconds.

Regular 89'

Jackie and Dawn ; son and wife, Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Williams and
daughter, Cindy, of Indian Head,
Md.
Others attending included Mrs .
Ora Higgins , Pt. Pleasant ; Mrs.
Helen Williams, Clifton; Joho M!lDermitt, Pt. Pleasant; Straud McDermitt, West Columbia ; Mr. and
Mrs. Frank McDermitt, Letart; Bill
McDermitt, Letart; Mrs. Louise
Robinson, Joe, Ed, Mike and Kay,

Lois Young, Bessie Ingels, Lucy
Johnson, Janet Reed and Jill Bar·
ton,
Mason and area pe1'80118ls
Mrs. Joy Foreman has returned to
her home in Mason, after visiting
three weekS with her son, Lester
Foreman, at Savannah; Georgia.
Attending the three-day Bluegrass .
Festivai at Cox's Field, Walker, W.
Va. were Mr. and Mrs. Freddie
Thabet, Mr. and Mrs. Howard McClellan, Mr. ·and Mrs.. Buddy
Reynolds, Mr. a nd Mrs. Gordon
Powell.

Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Evelyn Stewart,

BUTANE
.LIGHTERS

WINDBREAKER .
JACKETS ·.

Size 3%" X61h''

By Alma Marshall
Special correspondent
SURPRISE DINNER HEIJ&gt;
CLIFTON - A surprise birthday
diriner was held on Sunday, for Mrs:
Clara Williams at the ·home of her
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
~s. ·Richard Gilkey and grandson,
Mark Gilkey.
Others helping with the surprise
were another daughter and husband,
Mr. and Mrs. Denver (Ann) Blake,

observed on August 16 with a bir·
thday cookout at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Young, Grandview
Heights, Point P leasant. The
honorees 'included Richard Young,
New Haven; Pa!ll Nicl)ols, Pt.
Pleasant; Ella Lowman, Hartford,
and Evelyn Stewart, Mason.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Young, New Haven ; Mr.
and Mrs . Paul Nichols, Noel and Andrew, Grandview Heights ; Mr. and
Mrs. David C. Lowman, Bill and
Ben, Hartford; Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
Lathey and Murph, 1Jud Chattin Rd.,

.DISPOSA8LE ;

MENS UN-LINED

BOX OF 100
ENVELOPES

Mason news notes

Clifton; Bob and'Arlene McDermitt ,
West Colwnbia; Sarah Willis, Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey, all of
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Scites ,
Dean and Austin, Letart; Melissa
and Scott Kea rns, Clifton. Mrs.
Janet McDermitt visited during the

AYOND All

Pinto
"·•·••· .
..... ... ... &lt;••
AVONDALIIID

lldntr

,•., ....

. . . . . ' " " ' c ••

·--' • ·· 25c
1,.:.,:::.e.""" ~-=~· 22c
MS:a•llt
69cc
.....·~~· ·g9
- . . 1 , , ,, ,, Con

OIL

•·lb.

h1111e1ra .. "'•·
OYIN

Cocilltl." .

lroatr ..... ,...
Gelatin
...,:

Chopped Ham

*151
••
•

. . . . ."

llltoCt

TH .... ......:

s:t:iy

Drt•a!na·

~"

38c
49°
$13 9

79

c

�•

On the Light Side
GO FLY A KITE
MARBlEHEAD, Mass.' (AP) - Back in 19'16, when Marblehead's
fire departinent was looking for a way to get rid of thousands of
nesting starlings, they decided to take a shot with the Bicentennial
militia.
But the militia's musket fire had little effect.
Then the firemen decided to try hosing down the birds, but aside
from some wetfeathers, there were no visible results.
Even the tape-recorded, amplified screeches of birds of prey didn't
move the pesky starlings.
This year, fire Chief Edward Creighton decided to improve on the
birtklf-prey idea by sending up a falcon.
Well, actually it's a kite shaped to look like a falcon, and it's held up
by a helium balloon. But it works.
"Jt's doing the job," said Captain Stan Atkins. "A few of them snuck
back in, but it got most of the birds out of the area."
·
Unfortunately for the firefighters, the starlings simply found a new
nesting area- near the firehouse.

SHARE BIRTHDAYS- Becki Baloy of Pomeroy, her grandmother
Claudia aever of Johnsville, and Mrs. Baloy's niece, Destiny Lyru;
Nemeth, daughter of Sue and Hetil.a Nemeth of Mansfield, all share the
same birthday, Aug. 23. The three gathered at the Nemeth home soon af·
ter Destiny Lynn's birth.

HONESTY IN POLITICS
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - When Ernie Alloy decided to run for reelection as chief constable in Tucson's First precinct, he had to fill out
a form listing his campaign expenses and receipts.
Since he hadn't received or spent any money, he deeided to attach an
explanation.
"Used my old campaign signs frOJTilast election + ms," he wrote.
Pima County Treasurer Jim Kirk didn't have that problem. He
spent $59.89. And he didn't get very specific, either. In the column
labeled "purpose," to show what he spent the money on, he wrote, "To
I · win the election."

Polly's "Pointers
PUTI'ING VOTERS TOO SLEEP
DES MOINES, Iowa - Aqua Sleep Man may or may not be a real
person, but he's still on the ballot for U.S. Senator from Iowa.
State Attorney General Tom Miller announced Tuesday he is unable
to disqualify Aqua Sleep Man as an independent candidate.
Those who know Aqua Sleep man know him as the cartoon-figure ad·
vertising spokesman for Aqua Sleep World, a Des Moines waterbed
store.
And Miller recieved an objection from Garry De Young, another in·
dependent candidate for the seat now held by Sen. John Culver, a
Democrat.
"I am running a serious campaign for the United States ·Senate and
have worked very hard on very limited resources and do not feel that a
Senate campaign is anything frivolous or to be made a mockery of,"
De Young said in his letter to Miller.
But Joe Kolstad, owner of Aqua Sleep World, said the character is
"a very real person. He is 32 years old. He resides in Des Moines and
has lived in Des Moines all his life."
Kolstad said Aqua Sleep Man's identity will be revealed next week. ·
Miller said De Young's letter did not constitute·a valid objection to
Aqua Sleep Man's candidacy since it was not addressed to Secretary of
State Melvin Synhorst.

·Dolls ' lace yellowed
By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY- My daughter's
very beautiful doll ·collection is
display.ed on shelves in her room.
Many of the dolls are dressed in
satin, velvet and lace, and though I
keep them vacuumed to remove the
dust, the lace is turning yellow, Is
there any way to clean it, as the
dresses cannot he removed and
washed, as I fear water would ruin
them?- ANNA MAE
DEAR ANNA

MAE-lam
sorry I do not
have an answer
for you, as it
would
seem
almost impossible
to remove the
yellow from any
lace trimming .
without
the
danger of drips on
the fabric.

VE~

CRAMER

Doll collecting is very popular, so
hopefully one of our generous
readers will have a suggestion for
you. Your problem should serve as a
warning to others who display dolls
with no protection from the elements.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is

.
.·
··
:
:

most helpful during hot weather. Af.
ter using the oven I fill a large metal
container (such as a roasting pan)
with cold water, and place it inside
the oven. This absorbs the heat,
cooling the oven and kitchen, and
also gives me hot water to do the
dishes. - MARY H.
DEAR POLLY - When rolling
bread or cracker crumbs I put a handful of crushed crackers or dry
bread between two lightweight
paper plates, and then roll until fine,
with liWe fuss and bother of
cleaning up spilled crumbs. DEAR POLLY- When painting,
cut the lid from an old paint can in
half straight across the middle. Put
this half-lid on the can of paint you
are using, and each time you dip the
brush rub it against the cut edge
rather than the can. This prevents a
buildup of paint on the rim as the ex·
cess paint droQs into the can.
Th011e foam trays that meat comes
on make good trays to put In the cupboard under ~loWes of oil. They keep
shelves free of drips. -GRACE
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POIN·
TERS in care of this newspaper.

. Helen Help Us

When ·affair is over,
can they be friends?
BY HELEN BOTI'EL

:
.
:·

•

..
•'
::
. ··
·

:
:
·:
•
:
:

::

·
·
·

.•
,.

Special cetTelpondenl ·
DEAR HElEN:
We'd been in our new apartment
for a week when . I met a really
terrific woman on the tennis court
and we htt it off so well we decided to
get our husbands acquainted. TIJe
next evening we met for a foursome.
Untll then we'd known each other
only by first names.
When I introduced John (my
hUsband) and Jill (my new friend),
there was a surprised silence and
then they explained they'd worked
at the same office four years ago,
before any of us were married.
Later John told me they'd had a
brief affair that ended in six months
when she met her present husband.
He says he ·sees no reason why we
can't all be friends as · there's
nothing left of the old sparks. Jill
said the same when we talked next
day, though she hasn't told her
husband about John.
. Will it be safe for us four to get
compatible? We've got lots in common and really enjoy being together,
but can former lovers sllake down to
friends? -WORRIED
DEAR WORRIED:
Former lovers can easily become
just friends. It happens a lot these
days. The big question is: Can you
be comfortable with the situation? A
cue of the watchful worries could
cl011e down this foursome fut. But If
you trust John and truly like Jill, 1
doubt you'll have a problem.- H.
DEAR HElEN :
This is to Mrs. T. who was so
distraught about her hyperactive
child: Don't give up!
I am the proud mother of two
hyperactive daughters. I've taken
them to many doctors, who either
said it will all work out - they'll
outgrow it - or have prescribed
medicine that might tum them into

zombies.

Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talk it over
in her column if you write to Helen
Bottel, care of this newspaper.

A'I'I$NDGAME
Mr. and Mrs. Frank PaMell, the
fonner Debbie Wolfe, Belpre, and
her- grandmother, Mrs. Goldla
Wolfe, Chester, were in Pittsburgh,
Pa. for the game between the
Pirates and the Cincinnati Reds.

·

Then one of my friends suggested
, . the New York Institute for Child
Development, 205 Lexington Ave.,
N.Y., N. Y.10018.
.
Now, with a regimen of Dr. Ben·
jamin Feingold's diet (no food dyes,

•

. additives, very liWe sugar, he
described in his book "Why Your
Child is Hyperactive"), exercise and·
behavior therapy, you wouldn't
believe the change!
Untll recently, hyperactives were
Written off as slow learners,
problem kids or even mentally ill.
Now with new research and therapy
in many institutes aCI'OIIS the country, there's much hope.- FRIEND
DEAR HELEN:
We also have a hyper son and we
know what Mrs. T. is going through.
Luckily my sister works for the city
welfare and she heard of the government's Title VIB Early Diagnostic
Intervention Program. It has been a
godsend! I
My son Ia picked up and brought
home. He is with special children
and finally has friends. His teacher
is perfect. The children are encouraged to visit one another at
home, and parents are shown how to
cope in special workshops.
I must emphasize the importance
of diet. After our son eats sugary
sweets, he has the whole household
climbing walls again.
My advice to Mrs. T.: check with
the Board of Education in y11ur city
about what programs are available.
-SHEILA

'

Families get together
.

.

Watson reunion-= - - - - - - - The Watson-Wakely reunion was Tuppers Plains; Bill, Nancy and
held Sunday at the home of Bill and Gerald Watson, East Shade; Wilbur,
Marilyn, Lori and Lee Ann RobinDonna Robinson of Alfred.
Attending were Harold and Helen son, Greg WinebreMer, George,
Watson, Mike and Marianne Wat· Marlene and Michelle Donovan,
son, Roger and Connie Watson, Jim, Debbie and Chance Watson,
Athens; Alpheus and Maribeil Wat· . and Bill and Dorothy Robinson,
son and Donna Brooks, Belpre; Bill Alfred.
A basket dinner was held at noon
and Ruby Swain and Walter and
Fanny Watson, Parkersburg, W. with Roger Watson giving grace.
Va. ; Lester and Wilma Seaman, The afternoon was spent visiting,
Barlow; Martin Mollohan and playing horseshoe, and other games.
Reunion will be held next year on
daughters, Ethel and Pet of
Ewington; Phillip, Sharon, Joe and the last Sunday in June at the home
Brenda Boyles; Bill Deem, Elton,
of Roger and Connie Watson,
Joyce, Kenny and Jayne Ritchie, Athens.

Ka" reunion----------The Karr reunion was held Sunday
at the home of Mrs. Purley Karr in

Chester.
Preceding the potluck dinner
grace was given by Miss Marcia
Karr, the oldest member of the
family present. Footbljll, volleyball,
and horseshoe were enjoyed during
the afternoon.
Attending were Fred, Eleanor and
Carson Crow, Frederick m, Lynn
and Lowry Crow, Paul, Ruth and
David Karr, Horace, Dorothy and
Jane Ann Karr, Tom Karr, Ray
. . ·- ·-

.

Karr, Woodrow, Kathryn, Janei and
Judy Mora, Richard, Denise, and
Jennifer Mora, Altona Karr, Marcia
Karr, Bill, Twila, Jeremy; Ryan and
Brandon, Buckley, Marilyn, Ron,
Trisha and Donnie Spencer, Patrick,
Nancy, Tom and Carrie Morrissy,
Roger, Susie and Jessica Karr,
Steve, Jackie. Michael and Debbie
Frost, Greg Eblin, T&lt;Xn Hoschar,
Paula Jones, George Mora, the Greg
Mills family.
The birthday of Paul Karr was observed dilring the day.

Health Review
By Rohert G. StoCkmal,
D.O., Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of
Family Medicine
Oblo UDiversljy College
of Osteopathic Medicine .
QUESTION: How conunon is
rabies in the United States?
ANSWER: Rabies in humans has
decreased from an average of 22
cases per year in 1946 through 1950,
·to only one to five cases per year sin·
ce 1960. DOmestic ailimai cases have
also decreased ·in a similar manner.
For example, in 1956 there were
more than 8,000 cases of dog rabies.
comapred with only 122 cases in
1978. This decrease in domestic
animal rabies means that there is
much less chance of getting rabies
from dogs and cats (a direct result
of the veterinary immunization
programs ).
Wild animals, particularly
Skunks, foJ&lt;es, raccoons and bats account for more than 20 percent of
animal rabies and are the most
prevalent source of infection for
humans and domestic animals in the
U. S. Rodents (such as squirrels,
hamsters, guinea pigs, gerbils, chipmunks, rats and mice) as well as the
rabbit and hare family are rarely
found infected with rabies and have
not been known to cause human
rabies in the U. S.
QUESTION: What ~hould be done
when one is bitten and there is con·
cern about rabies?
ANSWER: I. Identify the animal.
If it is a rodent or rabbit don't worry
about rabies. If it is a healthy dog or
cat, isolate it and watch it for 10
days. If the animal beconies sick
have it evaluated by a veterinarian.
If signs of rabies develop, the animal
should be hwnanely killed and its
refrigerated head should be shipped
to a state department laboratory for
ei&lt;8IJlination (make arrangements
in advance ). Strays should be killed
and the head submitted for rabies
examination. This is also the case

the participation in the personal advocacy program.
The open meeting of the. Shade
Valley Council ofFioraiArtsonAug.
19 was announced as was the open
meeting of the Rutland Garden Oub
on Aug. ~.
A discussion was beld concerning
the flowering crabapple trees in
lower Middleport and the dogwood
trees at the Middleport Post Office.
Mrs. Dorothy Roller was appointed
to handle getting the trees pruned,
sprayed and taken care of before
winier.
"Beyond the Sunset" was the
program topic presented by Mrs.
Betty Dean, Mrs. Pat Holter, and
Mrs. Janet Koblentz. Mrs. Bowen
served n!freshments. Queen Anne's
lace, laurel, and goldenrod were
featured in the table decorations.

Parents Weekend at Morehead
to be observed Sept. 5-7

MOREHEAD, Ky . - Morehead
State University is observing its an·
nual Parents Weekend Sept. fl-7 with
several activities. including the
MSU·Marshall football game on
Saturday, Sept. 6. Parents are entitled to half-price tickets If accompanied by a son or daughter who
attend MSU. The kickoff is set for
1:30 p.m. at Jayne Stadium.
Parents may stay in campus
residence halls and take advantage
Cake Auction or if you want to just
of luncheon specials on Sept. 8 and 7
partake of the fun, join us at Expo · at the University Center cafeteria.
'80.
Activiti~s on Friday, Sept. 5, in·
There is no charge for admission
elude a concert featuring "LeRowc"
or parking. Everyone, regardless of
at 8 p.m. in Wetherby Gym and folk
age, is invited to attend. Picnic
and square dancing at the same hour
space is available, if not, a variety of
in Baird Music Hall.
sandwiches and soft drinks will be
President and Mrs. Morris L. Nor·
for sale.
fleet will host a continental break·
Senior Expo '80 serves as an outlet
fast for parents at 8:30 a.m. on
for people 5!i years and older to sell
Saturday, Sept. 6, and horsemanship
arts and handiworks or perhaps
students will present a riding
display treasures for all to enjoy.
Any profits realized remains that of
the vendor. The Area Agency on
Aging is a non-profit agency funded
thorugh the Older American's Act of
1965, as amended, with funds ad·
ministered through the Ohio Com·
mission on Aging.
For further information on Senior
Expo '80, contact the Area Agency
on Aging District 7, P.O. Box 978,
ll.io Grande College.

NOW

demonstration at 10 a.m. at Richardson Arena. MSU's new Energy
Research Laboratory will be
dedicated a Ill a.m.
"We extend a cordial invitaUon to
the parents of all of our students to
visit the C8111Pus for Parents
Weekend," said President Norfleet.

:

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:

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REV. RICHARD W. JAVMES
Evangelist

Revival ·
.to begin

.

Breast · seH·eKa.m inatiun,

.A regular feature, prepared by the that will stress the hea lth ad·
American Cancer Society, to keep . vantages· of quitting ·smoking and
not starting to smoke cigarettes. Tpe
you infonned about cancer.
Question: "Why did thE! American Society had formerly recorrunended
Cancer Society withdraw its recom- chest x-rays for heavy smokers and
mendation of anual chest J&lt;·ray fur others considered to be at high risk.
Question: "What is the American
the detection of lung cancer?"
ANSWERline: Data currently Cancer Society's view on ther·
available indicate that there's no mugraphy for early detection of canevidenc eo! a reduction of mortality .cer of the breast?"
ANSWERiine: The concept of
from lung cancer by having x-rays
identifying hidden cancer by
every year. However, in individual
situaions a physician might properly measuring variations in tissue temperatures is based on scientific prin·
see a need for periodic x-ray
examinatins and sputum cytology. ciples. However, thermography
techniques now in use tend to
The Society continues to emphasize
produce too many false negatives
programs of IW1g cancer prevention

mam·

mugraphy· and palpation are
generally more efficient at this lime.
Question: " How many teenage
smokers are. there in the United
Stales".
ANSWERline : AbOut 4,500,000.
There are still more boy smokers
than girl smokers, but unfortunately
the girls are rapidly catching up.
Teen-age smoking increased
significantly in the 1960's and early
1970's, but a recent government
study indicates that overall teenage
smoking may now be in decline. The
combined total of boy and girl
smokers between at ages of 12 and 18
dropped~ percent between 1974 and
1979.

Question: "Every once in a while
one hears of a 'miracle cancer cure'
performed by a faith heaier. ,Oues
the American Cancer Society

being in some patients who may in
be in need uf overcoming a
specific deficiency.
F'or further infonrlation call 992-

recognize such 'cures'?''

7531.

r.ct

ANSWERline: Faith healing is a
TO MEET FRIDAY
re]jgious matter, nut a medical one.
The Pomona Grange will meet at 8
Medical recurdds are usually not
p.m. Friday at the Rock Springs
available in such cases; so there's
Grange hall. Inspection will be held
no ay to pass judgement ~n their
and new officers will be elected. The
merit.
· national stuffed toy and handiwork
Question : "Are vitamins A, C and
contests will be held along with the
E useful in combating cancer?"
state contests. Laurel Grange will be
ASNWERline: Much has been said
host.
about vitamins ahnd cancer,
especially vitamin C. Solid research
TO RESuME MEETINGS
still is needed to clearly establish he
Meetings of the Oblo Eta Phi
valu.e of any vitamins for cancer Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
prevention or treatment. Properly will resume following the sununer
prescribed vitamins might conrecess on Tuesday at7:30 p.m. at the
tribute to an improved sense of well· Meigslnn.
·

The Rev. Richard W. Jaymes,
· evangelist, is the guest speaker at
. revival services now being held at
the Chester Church of the Nazarene.
Services are at 7:30 p.m. nightly and will be held through Sept. H.
. There will be special singing each
evening.
· The Rev. Jaymes, Mt. Vernon, is
an eider in the Church of the
Naza'rene who now is devoting full
time to the field of evangelism.
Born in Shirleysburg, Pa., he ser. ved in the army air corps during
World War II. He earned a bachelor
of theology degree from Olivet
· Nazarene College, Kankakee, ill.,
. graduating in 1950.
. He was the pastor of Churches of
the Nazarene in Laura and
Hamilton, Oh. before the decision to
. go into evangelism.
. Herbert Grate, pastor, invites.the
public to attend.

ROYAL CREST

COTTAGE .CHEESE

09
PRICES GOOD TODAY lltRU SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7

Sheryl Bush
celebrates 16th
birthday
Sheryl Bush, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Bush, Minersville,
celebrated her 16th birthday with a
skating party at the Chester Skate-aWay Rinkrecently.
Attending were Becky Eichinger,
Scott Hill, Becky Ambrose, Renee
and Rhonds Riebel, Melissa
Thomas, Randy Murray, Tina
~ver, Terre Wood, David Gaul,
Gary Ginther, Sherri Myers, Denise
and Kristi Gaddis; Lee Swain, Jeff
· Newell, &lt;llarlle Ritchie, Mike
· Bissell, Gene and Greg Cole, Rodney
Spurlock, Rob Smith, Dee Dailey,
Lori Hudson, Troy Gruthrie, Kevin
' Brooks, Dana, Denise, and Jim Ben. tz, Lori Grueser, Beth Teaford, Scott
: Vanmeter, Phillip Eagle, Tami
Samios, Rhonda Beard, Velvet
· Elkins, carolyn Bowen, Mike
McGuire, Donna an&lt;\ Robbie Jacks,
. Bryce Buckley, Mike Baker, Ray
Spencer, Brenda Bentz, and Shawn
Bush.

ROAST

Weight loss noted
Weight loss reports for the weekly
. classes of Slinderella have been
,· issued by Jo Ann Newsome, leeturer.
At the Mason Monday night class,
Beverly Rickard lost the most
weigpt and Barbara Varian was the
runner-up while at the morning claSI
on TUesday, Connie Thompson lost
the most weight and Etta O'Dell and
Barbara Zuspan tied for ruhner-up.
At the Middleport class, the one ·
losing. the most weight was Linda
'furley with Ruth Smith as the runner-up. Mace! Barton and Melissa
. Barker were the ones losing the
• most weight at the Chester class,
' and a 35 pound weight loss ribbon
'· and certificate were awarded. New
members were accepted at aU
classes.

GOLD MEDAL

RIPE JUICY

PEACHES
3LBi99~
EVEREADY
BATTERIES

·Social calendar.

~FG.

TIIURSDAY
REVIVAL now in' progress at the
Freewill Baptist Church, Ash St.,
Middleport, with Norman Taylor,
Evans, W. Va., as guest speaker.
Services through Sept. 6, at 7:30
p.m. nightly.
SHADE RIVER LODGE Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Work in master
mason degree.
FRIDAY
SALISBURY Township Trusleel.
Friday at 7 p.m. at the home of Wanda Eblin, Oerk, Laur~l Cliff Road.

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SOCIETY HONORS BROWN
WASHINGTON, (APJ - The
American Society of Psychologists
in Private Practice has named Ohio
Attorney General William J. Brown
as its 19110 "person of 'the year."
Bruce J. Rakay, first assistant at-·
tomey general, is to go to Montre.l,
Canada, to accept the award durinl
the group's aMual meeting.
The association said it chose
Brown for his continuing efforts to
inject more competiUon into the
• he81th care industry and his lonn
~ term efforts to stop tiM! rising costa
of health care,

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50 YEAR PINS

Fifty year pins will be presented
at a meeting Of Middleport Lodge
3113, FXAM, to be held at 7:30p.m.
thla evening. All Master MaSOill are
invited.

for wild animals.
2. Check the ' circumstances
relating to the bite. Rabid animals
are more apt to bite even If they are
unprovoked. The contact ·is considered to be provoked when the vic·
tim attempted to handle or feed a
strange animal.
3. Take care of the wound. Bites
are "dirty wounds" because of the
varied bacteria present in the mounts of animals (including man). The
rabies virus, if present, will be in the
saliva too. Open wounds can be contaminated by saliva and should be
immediately and thoroughly washed
with soap and water.
4. Seek medical assistance for ad·
ditional rabies protection, further
wound care and tetanus and bacterial infection protection. Because
rabies is an incurable disease once
the symptoms have appeared, it is
important to see a physician Immediately.
QUESTION : What are the shots
used in rabies protection?
ANSWER: There are two types of
shots: one contains antibodies
against ·rabies (rabies immunoglobulin) and the other contains killed rabies virus (rabies vac·
cine) that wil stlnlulate antibody
production in the recipient. The first
type is intended to provide imllleliiate protection and the second to
provide long-term protection. The
commonly-used duck embryo
prepared vaccine is given in 23 injections, usually one a day for 21
days with a booster at days 31 and
41. It is not unusual for there to be
some discomfort related to this
procedure. A new vaccine produced
in lnunan diploid cell culture
(H.D.C. vaccine) was released June
9, 1980 by the F.D.A. lt requires five
to si.J&lt; injections and has fewer side
effects. Unfortunately it is still in
short supply.
The decision to give shots will
depend greatly upon the cir·
cumstances of the bite.

Middleport Garden Club
elects new year's officers
Officers for the 198().81 year were
elected at the recent meeting of the
Middleport Garden Club held at the
home of , Mrs. David Bowen. The
meeting followed a picnic at the
Bowen home , Rustic Hills,
Syracuse.
Elected were Mrs. Mary Skinner,
president; Mrs. Louise Thompson,
vice president; Mrs. Ruth Anderson,
secretary; Miss Nellie Zirkle,
~easurer; and Mrs. Irene Davis,
scraphook.
Mrs. Nancy Hill was' welcomed as
a new member. Presented at the
nieeting was a certificate of appreciation from the Meigs Community Mental Health Center for the
picnic provided by the Middleport
Oub. Also presented was a cer·
tificate from the Gallia·Meigs·
Jackson· Center ill apprecia~~n for

and false positives to be practical for
screening of asymplomali~ patients.

Cancer ·AnswerLine

Rabies average low in U. S..

Senior Expo '80 planned

The Area Agency on Aging
District 7, Rio Grande, is again sponsoring Senior Expo '80 to be held on
Friday, Sept. 26, at the Scioto County
Fairgrounds in Lucasville from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m.
"The Creative Talents of Older
People of Southern Ohio" will be the
theme for this year's E1&lt;po '80.
There will be various displays of
crafts and art forms such as chair
caning, loom weaving, making apple
butter and much more . En·
tertainment ranging from banjo
strumming to kitchen bands will ail
add to the highlights of the day's
events.
Anyone having a special talent or
skill that is 5!i years or older is
welcome to show and sell their handicrafts or provide some entertaining prformances for the
crowd. There will be room for those
of you who have an element of competing in the
Contest and the

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. J, 1980

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On the Light Side
GO FLY A KITE
MARBlEHEAD, Mass.' (AP) - Back in 19'16, when Marblehead's
fire departinent was looking for a way to get rid of thousands of
nesting starlings, they decided to take a shot with the Bicentennial
militia.
But the militia's musket fire had little effect.
Then the firemen decided to try hosing down the birds, but aside
from some wetfeathers, there were no visible results.
Even the tape-recorded, amplified screeches of birds of prey didn't
move the pesky starlings.
This year, fire Chief Edward Creighton decided to improve on the
birtklf-prey idea by sending up a falcon.
Well, actually it's a kite shaped to look like a falcon, and it's held up
by a helium balloon. But it works.
"Jt's doing the job," said Captain Stan Atkins. "A few of them snuck
back in, but it got most of the birds out of the area."
·
Unfortunately for the firefighters, the starlings simply found a new
nesting area- near the firehouse.

SHARE BIRTHDAYS- Becki Baloy of Pomeroy, her grandmother
Claudia aever of Johnsville, and Mrs. Baloy's niece, Destiny Lyru;
Nemeth, daughter of Sue and Hetil.a Nemeth of Mansfield, all share the
same birthday, Aug. 23. The three gathered at the Nemeth home soon af·
ter Destiny Lynn's birth.

HONESTY IN POLITICS
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - When Ernie Alloy decided to run for reelection as chief constable in Tucson's First precinct, he had to fill out
a form listing his campaign expenses and receipts.
Since he hadn't received or spent any money, he deeided to attach an
explanation.
"Used my old campaign signs frOJTilast election + ms," he wrote.
Pima County Treasurer Jim Kirk didn't have that problem. He
spent $59.89. And he didn't get very specific, either. In the column
labeled "purpose," to show what he spent the money on, he wrote, "To
I · win the election."

Polly's "Pointers
PUTI'ING VOTERS TOO SLEEP
DES MOINES, Iowa - Aqua Sleep Man may or may not be a real
person, but he's still on the ballot for U.S. Senator from Iowa.
State Attorney General Tom Miller announced Tuesday he is unable
to disqualify Aqua Sleep Man as an independent candidate.
Those who know Aqua Sleep man know him as the cartoon-figure ad·
vertising spokesman for Aqua Sleep World, a Des Moines waterbed
store.
And Miller recieved an objection from Garry De Young, another in·
dependent candidate for the seat now held by Sen. John Culver, a
Democrat.
"I am running a serious campaign for the United States ·Senate and
have worked very hard on very limited resources and do not feel that a
Senate campaign is anything frivolous or to be made a mockery of,"
De Young said in his letter to Miller.
But Joe Kolstad, owner of Aqua Sleep World, said the character is
"a very real person. He is 32 years old. He resides in Des Moines and
has lived in Des Moines all his life."
Kolstad said Aqua Sleep Man's identity will be revealed next week. ·
Miller said De Young's letter did not constitute·a valid objection to
Aqua Sleep Man's candidacy since it was not addressed to Secretary of
State Melvin Synhorst.

·Dolls ' lace yellowed
By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY- My daughter's
very beautiful doll ·collection is
display.ed on shelves in her room.
Many of the dolls are dressed in
satin, velvet and lace, and though I
keep them vacuumed to remove the
dust, the lace is turning yellow, Is
there any way to clean it, as the
dresses cannot he removed and
washed, as I fear water would ruin
them?- ANNA MAE
DEAR ANNA

MAE-lam
sorry I do not
have an answer
for you, as it
would
seem
almost impossible
to remove the
yellow from any
lace trimming .
without
the
danger of drips on
the fabric.

VE~

CRAMER

Doll collecting is very popular, so
hopefully one of our generous
readers will have a suggestion for
you. Your problem should serve as a
warning to others who display dolls
with no protection from the elements.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is

.
.·
··
:
:

most helpful during hot weather. Af.
ter using the oven I fill a large metal
container (such as a roasting pan)
with cold water, and place it inside
the oven. This absorbs the heat,
cooling the oven and kitchen, and
also gives me hot water to do the
dishes. - MARY H.
DEAR POLLY - When rolling
bread or cracker crumbs I put a handful of crushed crackers or dry
bread between two lightweight
paper plates, and then roll until fine,
with liWe fuss and bother of
cleaning up spilled crumbs. DEAR POLLY- When painting,
cut the lid from an old paint can in
half straight across the middle. Put
this half-lid on the can of paint you
are using, and each time you dip the
brush rub it against the cut edge
rather than the can. This prevents a
buildup of paint on the rim as the ex·
cess paint droQs into the can.
Th011e foam trays that meat comes
on make good trays to put In the cupboard under ~loWes of oil. They keep
shelves free of drips. -GRACE
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POIN·
TERS in care of this newspaper.

. Helen Help Us

When ·affair is over,
can they be friends?
BY HELEN BOTI'EL

:
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•
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Special cetTelpondenl ·
DEAR HElEN:
We'd been in our new apartment
for a week when . I met a really
terrific woman on the tennis court
and we htt it off so well we decided to
get our husbands acquainted. TIJe
next evening we met for a foursome.
Untll then we'd known each other
only by first names.
When I introduced John (my
hUsband) and Jill (my new friend),
there was a surprised silence and
then they explained they'd worked
at the same office four years ago,
before any of us were married.
Later John told me they'd had a
brief affair that ended in six months
when she met her present husband.
He says he ·sees no reason why we
can't all be friends as · there's
nothing left of the old sparks. Jill
said the same when we talked next
day, though she hasn't told her
husband about John.
. Will it be safe for us four to get
compatible? We've got lots in common and really enjoy being together,
but can former lovers sllake down to
friends? -WORRIED
DEAR WORRIED:
Former lovers can easily become
just friends. It happens a lot these
days. The big question is: Can you
be comfortable with the situation? A
cue of the watchful worries could
cl011e down this foursome fut. But If
you trust John and truly like Jill, 1
doubt you'll have a problem.- H.
DEAR HElEN :
This is to Mrs. T. who was so
distraught about her hyperactive
child: Don't give up!
I am the proud mother of two
hyperactive daughters. I've taken
them to many doctors, who either
said it will all work out - they'll
outgrow it - or have prescribed
medicine that might tum them into

zombies.

Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talk it over
in her column if you write to Helen
Bottel, care of this newspaper.

A'I'I$NDGAME
Mr. and Mrs. Frank PaMell, the
fonner Debbie Wolfe, Belpre, and
her- grandmother, Mrs. Goldla
Wolfe, Chester, were in Pittsburgh,
Pa. for the game between the
Pirates and the Cincinnati Reds.

·

Then one of my friends suggested
, . the New York Institute for Child
Development, 205 Lexington Ave.,
N.Y., N. Y.10018.
.
Now, with a regimen of Dr. Ben·
jamin Feingold's diet (no food dyes,

•

. additives, very liWe sugar, he
described in his book "Why Your
Child is Hyperactive"), exercise and·
behavior therapy, you wouldn't
believe the change!
Untll recently, hyperactives were
Written off as slow learners,
problem kids or even mentally ill.
Now with new research and therapy
in many institutes aCI'OIIS the country, there's much hope.- FRIEND
DEAR HELEN:
We also have a hyper son and we
know what Mrs. T. is going through.
Luckily my sister works for the city
welfare and she heard of the government's Title VIB Early Diagnostic
Intervention Program. It has been a
godsend! I
My son Ia picked up and brought
home. He is with special children
and finally has friends. His teacher
is perfect. The children are encouraged to visit one another at
home, and parents are shown how to
cope in special workshops.
I must emphasize the importance
of diet. After our son eats sugary
sweets, he has the whole household
climbing walls again.
My advice to Mrs. T.: check with
the Board of Education in y11ur city
about what programs are available.
-SHEILA

'

Families get together
.

.

Watson reunion-= - - - - - - - The Watson-Wakely reunion was Tuppers Plains; Bill, Nancy and
held Sunday at the home of Bill and Gerald Watson, East Shade; Wilbur,
Marilyn, Lori and Lee Ann RobinDonna Robinson of Alfred.
Attending were Harold and Helen son, Greg WinebreMer, George,
Watson, Mike and Marianne Wat· Marlene and Michelle Donovan,
son, Roger and Connie Watson, Jim, Debbie and Chance Watson,
Athens; Alpheus and Maribeil Wat· . and Bill and Dorothy Robinson,
son and Donna Brooks, Belpre; Bill Alfred.
A basket dinner was held at noon
and Ruby Swain and Walter and
Fanny Watson, Parkersburg, W. with Roger Watson giving grace.
Va. ; Lester and Wilma Seaman, The afternoon was spent visiting,
Barlow; Martin Mollohan and playing horseshoe, and other games.
Reunion will be held next year on
daughters, Ethel and Pet of
Ewington; Phillip, Sharon, Joe and the last Sunday in June at the home
Brenda Boyles; Bill Deem, Elton,
of Roger and Connie Watson,
Joyce, Kenny and Jayne Ritchie, Athens.

Ka" reunion----------The Karr reunion was held Sunday
at the home of Mrs. Purley Karr in

Chester.
Preceding the potluck dinner
grace was given by Miss Marcia
Karr, the oldest member of the
family present. Footbljll, volleyball,
and horseshoe were enjoyed during
the afternoon.
Attending were Fred, Eleanor and
Carson Crow, Frederick m, Lynn
and Lowry Crow, Paul, Ruth and
David Karr, Horace, Dorothy and
Jane Ann Karr, Tom Karr, Ray
. . ·- ·-

.

Karr, Woodrow, Kathryn, Janei and
Judy Mora, Richard, Denise, and
Jennifer Mora, Altona Karr, Marcia
Karr, Bill, Twila, Jeremy; Ryan and
Brandon, Buckley, Marilyn, Ron,
Trisha and Donnie Spencer, Patrick,
Nancy, Tom and Carrie Morrissy,
Roger, Susie and Jessica Karr,
Steve, Jackie. Michael and Debbie
Frost, Greg Eblin, T&lt;Xn Hoschar,
Paula Jones, George Mora, the Greg
Mills family.
The birthday of Paul Karr was observed dilring the day.

Health Review
By Rohert G. StoCkmal,
D.O., Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of
Family Medicine
Oblo UDiversljy College
of Osteopathic Medicine .
QUESTION: How conunon is
rabies in the United States?
ANSWER: Rabies in humans has
decreased from an average of 22
cases per year in 1946 through 1950,
·to only one to five cases per year sin·
ce 1960. DOmestic ailimai cases have
also decreased ·in a similar manner.
For example, in 1956 there were
more than 8,000 cases of dog rabies.
comapred with only 122 cases in
1978. This decrease in domestic
animal rabies means that there is
much less chance of getting rabies
from dogs and cats (a direct result
of the veterinary immunization
programs ).
Wild animals, particularly
Skunks, foJ&lt;es, raccoons and bats account for more than 20 percent of
animal rabies and are the most
prevalent source of infection for
humans and domestic animals in the
U. S. Rodents (such as squirrels,
hamsters, guinea pigs, gerbils, chipmunks, rats and mice) as well as the
rabbit and hare family are rarely
found infected with rabies and have
not been known to cause human
rabies in the U. S.
QUESTION: What ~hould be done
when one is bitten and there is con·
cern about rabies?
ANSWER: I. Identify the animal.
If it is a rodent or rabbit don't worry
about rabies. If it is a healthy dog or
cat, isolate it and watch it for 10
days. If the animal beconies sick
have it evaluated by a veterinarian.
If signs of rabies develop, the animal
should be hwnanely killed and its
refrigerated head should be shipped
to a state department laboratory for
ei&lt;8IJlination (make arrangements
in advance ). Strays should be killed
and the head submitted for rabies
examination. This is also the case

the participation in the personal advocacy program.
The open meeting of the. Shade
Valley Council ofFioraiArtsonAug.
19 was announced as was the open
meeting of the Rutland Garden Oub
on Aug. ~.
A discussion was beld concerning
the flowering crabapple trees in
lower Middleport and the dogwood
trees at the Middleport Post Office.
Mrs. Dorothy Roller was appointed
to handle getting the trees pruned,
sprayed and taken care of before
winier.
"Beyond the Sunset" was the
program topic presented by Mrs.
Betty Dean, Mrs. Pat Holter, and
Mrs. Janet Koblentz. Mrs. Bowen
served n!freshments. Queen Anne's
lace, laurel, and goldenrod were
featured in the table decorations.

Parents Weekend at Morehead
to be observed Sept. 5-7

MOREHEAD, Ky . - Morehead
State University is observing its an·
nual Parents Weekend Sept. fl-7 with
several activities. including the
MSU·Marshall football game on
Saturday, Sept. 6. Parents are entitled to half-price tickets If accompanied by a son or daughter who
attend MSU. The kickoff is set for
1:30 p.m. at Jayne Stadium.
Parents may stay in campus
residence halls and take advantage
Cake Auction or if you want to just
of luncheon specials on Sept. 8 and 7
partake of the fun, join us at Expo · at the University Center cafeteria.
'80.
Activiti~s on Friday, Sept. 5, in·
There is no charge for admission
elude a concert featuring "LeRowc"
or parking. Everyone, regardless of
at 8 p.m. in Wetherby Gym and folk
age, is invited to attend. Picnic
and square dancing at the same hour
space is available, if not, a variety of
in Baird Music Hall.
sandwiches and soft drinks will be
President and Mrs. Morris L. Nor·
for sale.
fleet will host a continental break·
Senior Expo '80 serves as an outlet
fast for parents at 8:30 a.m. on
for people 5!i years and older to sell
Saturday, Sept. 6, and horsemanship
arts and handiworks or perhaps
students will present a riding
display treasures for all to enjoy.
Any profits realized remains that of
the vendor. The Area Agency on
Aging is a non-profit agency funded
thorugh the Older American's Act of
1965, as amended, with funds ad·
ministered through the Ohio Com·
mission on Aging.
For further information on Senior
Expo '80, contact the Area Agency
on Aging District 7, P.O. Box 978,
ll.io Grande College.

NOW

demonstration at 10 a.m. at Richardson Arena. MSU's new Energy
Research Laboratory will be
dedicated a Ill a.m.
"We extend a cordial invitaUon to
the parents of all of our students to
visit the C8111Pus for Parents
Weekend," said President Norfleet.

:

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REV. RICHARD W. JAVMES
Evangelist

Revival ·
.to begin

.

Breast · seH·eKa.m inatiun,

.A regular feature, prepared by the that will stress the hea lth ad·
American Cancer Society, to keep . vantages· of quitting ·smoking and
not starting to smoke cigarettes. Tpe
you infonned about cancer.
Question: "Why did thE! American Society had formerly recorrunended
Cancer Society withdraw its recom- chest x-rays for heavy smokers and
mendation of anual chest J&lt;·ray fur others considered to be at high risk.
Question: "What is the American
the detection of lung cancer?"
ANSWERline: Data currently Cancer Society's view on ther·
available indicate that there's no mugraphy for early detection of canevidenc eo! a reduction of mortality .cer of the breast?"
ANSWERiine: The concept of
from lung cancer by having x-rays
identifying hidden cancer by
every year. However, in individual
situaions a physician might properly measuring variations in tissue temperatures is based on scientific prin·
see a need for periodic x-ray
examinatins and sputum cytology. ciples. However, thermography
techniques now in use tend to
The Society continues to emphasize
produce too many false negatives
programs of IW1g cancer prevention

mam·

mugraphy· and palpation are
generally more efficient at this lime.
Question: " How many teenage
smokers are. there in the United
Stales".
ANSWERline : AbOut 4,500,000.
There are still more boy smokers
than girl smokers, but unfortunately
the girls are rapidly catching up.
Teen-age smoking increased
significantly in the 1960's and early
1970's, but a recent government
study indicates that overall teenage
smoking may now be in decline. The
combined total of boy and girl
smokers between at ages of 12 and 18
dropped~ percent between 1974 and
1979.

Question: "Every once in a while
one hears of a 'miracle cancer cure'
performed by a faith heaier. ,Oues
the American Cancer Society

being in some patients who may in
be in need uf overcoming a
specific deficiency.
F'or further infonrlation call 992-

recognize such 'cures'?''

7531.

r.ct

ANSWERline: Faith healing is a
TO MEET FRIDAY
re]jgious matter, nut a medical one.
The Pomona Grange will meet at 8
Medical recurdds are usually not
p.m. Friday at the Rock Springs
available in such cases; so there's
Grange hall. Inspection will be held
no ay to pass judgement ~n their
and new officers will be elected. The
merit.
· national stuffed toy and handiwork
Question : "Are vitamins A, C and
contests will be held along with the
E useful in combating cancer?"
state contests. Laurel Grange will be
ASNWERline: Much has been said
host.
about vitamins ahnd cancer,
especially vitamin C. Solid research
TO RESuME MEETINGS
still is needed to clearly establish he
Meetings of the Oblo Eta Phi
valu.e of any vitamins for cancer Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
prevention or treatment. Properly will resume following the sununer
prescribed vitamins might conrecess on Tuesday at7:30 p.m. at the
tribute to an improved sense of well· Meigslnn.
·

The Rev. Richard W. Jaymes,
· evangelist, is the guest speaker at
. revival services now being held at
the Chester Church of the Nazarene.
Services are at 7:30 p.m. nightly and will be held through Sept. H.
. There will be special singing each
evening.
· The Rev. Jaymes, Mt. Vernon, is
an eider in the Church of the
Naza'rene who now is devoting full
time to the field of evangelism.
Born in Shirleysburg, Pa., he ser. ved in the army air corps during
World War II. He earned a bachelor
of theology degree from Olivet
· Nazarene College, Kankakee, ill.,
. graduating in 1950.
. He was the pastor of Churches of
the Nazarene in Laura and
Hamilton, Oh. before the decision to
. go into evangelism.
. Herbert Grate, pastor, invites.the
public to attend.

ROYAL CREST

COTTAGE .CHEESE

09
PRICES GOOD TODAY lltRU SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7

Sheryl Bush
celebrates 16th
birthday
Sheryl Bush, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Bush, Minersville,
celebrated her 16th birthday with a
skating party at the Chester Skate-aWay Rinkrecently.
Attending were Becky Eichinger,
Scott Hill, Becky Ambrose, Renee
and Rhonds Riebel, Melissa
Thomas, Randy Murray, Tina
~ver, Terre Wood, David Gaul,
Gary Ginther, Sherri Myers, Denise
and Kristi Gaddis; Lee Swain, Jeff
· Newell, &lt;llarlle Ritchie, Mike
· Bissell, Gene and Greg Cole, Rodney
Spurlock, Rob Smith, Dee Dailey,
Lori Hudson, Troy Gruthrie, Kevin
' Brooks, Dana, Denise, and Jim Ben. tz, Lori Grueser, Beth Teaford, Scott
: Vanmeter, Phillip Eagle, Tami
Samios, Rhonda Beard, Velvet
· Elkins, carolyn Bowen, Mike
McGuire, Donna an&lt;\ Robbie Jacks,
. Bryce Buckley, Mike Baker, Ray
Spencer, Brenda Bentz, and Shawn
Bush.

ROAST

Weight loss noted
Weight loss reports for the weekly
. classes of Slinderella have been
,· issued by Jo Ann Newsome, leeturer.
At the Mason Monday night class,
Beverly Rickard lost the most
weigpt and Barbara Varian was the
runner-up while at the morning claSI
on TUesday, Connie Thompson lost
the most weight and Etta O'Dell and
Barbara Zuspan tied for ruhner-up.
At the Middleport class, the one ·
losing. the most weight was Linda
'furley with Ruth Smith as the runner-up. Mace! Barton and Melissa
. Barker were the ones losing the
• most weight at the Chester class,
' and a 35 pound weight loss ribbon
'· and certificate were awarded. New
members were accepted at aU
classes.

GOLD MEDAL

RIPE JUICY

PEACHES
3LBi99~
EVEREADY
BATTERIES

·Social calendar.

~FG.

TIIURSDAY
REVIVAL now in' progress at the
Freewill Baptist Church, Ash St.,
Middleport, with Norman Taylor,
Evans, W. Va., as guest speaker.
Services through Sept. 6, at 7:30
p.m. nightly.
SHADE RIVER LODGE Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Work in master
mason degree.
FRIDAY
SALISBURY Township Trusleel.
Friday at 7 p.m. at the home of Wanda Eblin, Oerk, Laur~l Cliff Road.

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SOCIETY HONORS BROWN
WASHINGTON, (APJ - The
American Society of Psychologists
in Private Practice has named Ohio
Attorney General William J. Brown
as its 19110 "person of 'the year."
Bruce J. Rakay, first assistant at-·
tomey general, is to go to Montre.l,
Canada, to accept the award durinl
the group's aMual meeting.
The association said it chose
Brown for his continuing efforts to
inject more competiUon into the
• he81th care industry and his lonn
~ term efforts to stop tiM! rising costa
of health care,

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50 YEAR PINS

Fifty year pins will be presented
at a meeting Of Middleport Lodge
3113, FXAM, to be held at 7:30p.m.
thla evening. All Master MaSOill are
invited.

for wild animals.
2. Check the ' circumstances
relating to the bite. Rabid animals
are more apt to bite even If they are
unprovoked. The contact ·is considered to be provoked when the vic·
tim attempted to handle or feed a
strange animal.
3. Take care of the wound. Bites
are "dirty wounds" because of the
varied bacteria present in the mounts of animals (including man). The
rabies virus, if present, will be in the
saliva too. Open wounds can be contaminated by saliva and should be
immediately and thoroughly washed
with soap and water.
4. Seek medical assistance for ad·
ditional rabies protection, further
wound care and tetanus and bacterial infection protection. Because
rabies is an incurable disease once
the symptoms have appeared, it is
important to see a physician Immediately.
QUESTION : What are the shots
used in rabies protection?
ANSWER: There are two types of
shots: one contains antibodies
against ·rabies (rabies immunoglobulin) and the other contains killed rabies virus (rabies vac·
cine) that wil stlnlulate antibody
production in the recipient. The first
type is intended to provide imllleliiate protection and the second to
provide long-term protection. The
commonly-used duck embryo
prepared vaccine is given in 23 injections, usually one a day for 21
days with a booster at days 31 and
41. It is not unusual for there to be
some discomfort related to this
procedure. A new vaccine produced
in lnunan diploid cell culture
(H.D.C. vaccine) was released June
9, 1980 by the F.D.A. lt requires five
to si.J&lt; injections and has fewer side
effects. Unfortunately it is still in
short supply.
The decision to give shots will
depend greatly upon the cir·
cumstances of the bite.

Middleport Garden Club
elects new year's officers
Officers for the 198().81 year were
elected at the recent meeting of the
Middleport Garden Club held at the
home of , Mrs. David Bowen. The
meeting followed a picnic at the
Bowen home , Rustic Hills,
Syracuse.
Elected were Mrs. Mary Skinner,
president; Mrs. Louise Thompson,
vice president; Mrs. Ruth Anderson,
secretary; Miss Nellie Zirkle,
~easurer; and Mrs. Irene Davis,
scraphook.
Mrs. Nancy Hill was' welcomed as
a new member. Presented at the
nieeting was a certificate of appreciation from the Meigs Community Mental Health Center for the
picnic provided by the Middleport
Oub. Also presented was a cer·
tificate from the Gallia·Meigs·
Jackson· Center ill apprecia~~n for

and false positives to be practical for
screening of asymplomali~ patients.

Cancer ·AnswerLine

Rabies average low in U. S..

Senior Expo '80 planned

The Area Agency on Aging
District 7, Rio Grande, is again sponsoring Senior Expo '80 to be held on
Friday, Sept. 26, at the Scioto County
Fairgrounds in Lucasville from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m.
"The Creative Talents of Older
People of Southern Ohio" will be the
theme for this year's E1&lt;po '80.
There will be various displays of
crafts and art forms such as chair
caning, loom weaving, making apple
butter and much more . En·
tertainment ranging from banjo
strumming to kitchen bands will ail
add to the highlights of the day's
events.
Anyone having a special talent or
skill that is 5!i years or older is
welcome to show and sell their handicrafts or provide some entertaining prformances for the
crowd. There will be room for those
of you who have an element of competing in the
Contest and the

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. J, 1980

FANCY
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l·-13-The
DICK TRACY
·
· - ' .,
'~, . ' """
-.
-

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 19110

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Hubbard teachers join picket line
By THOMAS RIZZO
Assoolated Press Writer
While the number of strike threats
against Ohio school systems in·
creases, teachers in another district
decided to start the new school year
on the picket line today instead of
behind their desks.
Members of the 100-member Hubbard Education Association voted
Tuesday to strike the Tnimbull
County district over a wage dispute.
Cathy Pollenich, chief negotiator for
the teachers, said the school board's
offer of an $11,200 basic rate of pay
was $200 too low. The starting salary

is now $10,300.

The opening of classes Thursday
Hubbard . school administrators
in
the Colwnbus school district may
were meeting late Tuesday to decide
be
marred by a strike by Ohio
whether classes in the 3,100-student
Associlltion
of Public School Emsystem would c011tinue during the
ployees.
strike.
The union represents about 1,300
A stalemate between the adof
2,600 bus drivers, food service perministration and more than 200
sonnel, maintenance and clerical
striking teachers and non-teaching
personnel In 139 schools in the
employees continued In the
district.
Miamisburg school district in MonNegotiationa between the two
tgomery County.
.
sides
resumed for several hOurs
An estimated 250 teachers
Tuesday
evening under the guidance
remained on strike in the Norof
federal
mediator Joseph Santatheastern Local district in Clark
Emma.
The
two main issues keeping
County.
the two sides from agreement were
the size of a proposed pay bike and
the length of the contract.
Member~ of the Columbus
Education Association were
scheduled to meet tonight to decide
whether they will honor OAPSE ·
picket lines. There is speculation
from various sources that teachers

Most popular senior

faces murder charges

BALTIMORE (AP) - Eighteenlike ·Ibis. It doesn't happen every
yeaHld Michael · &amp;hindler, once
day."
president and of bis high school class
The victims of the alleged murderaHd "most popular senior," was
for-hire plot were Marla Zisser, &amp;1, .
going to court today to face charges
and her 23-year-&lt;&gt;ld granddaughter,
of stabbing two women to death in
Mary Thompson, stabbed to death
what authorities say was a murder·
last Thanksgiving weekend.
for-bini scheme.
·
Mrs. Thompson's hilsband, AnHis arrest just before Christmas
thony Thompson, 28, was charged
stunned teachers and classmates at
with hiring Schindler and another
OBIOVAU.EY
Patapsco Senior High &amp;boo!, where
youth, David Robertson, to carry out
LIVESTOCK CO.
he was well-liked and highly regar·
the slayings. After pleading guilty to
M4RKET REPORT
ded.
All prices token r...... the wctioo a! Saturday'
conspiracy charges, he was sen- AugiUt
30, 1910. Tnndl : Feeder caWe lleady,
He has been held without bail on
tenced to two consecutive life tenns. cows $1 to$UG hiaber veal calves steady.
two counts of first'{!egree murder
1'o1al Hood •
Robertson, indicted on the same
Feeder steers (Cood and chotce) 1!10 to 300 lbl.
and related offenses.
~barges as Schindler, has not yet
751085; 300 tototrlbo. 71JOto12; 400to5001bo. 81
.. 78; 500 to 6t10 illo. 611 to 'n; 6t10 to 700 lbo.l4 to
Lawyer Willtam Zinman has enbeen tried.
76: 700 and over e:uo to 72.
tered a plea of innocent by reason of
In a statement made to police and
Feeder HeUen (lood ODd choice) Z5G to :1110
62.50tof1.$0; :100to4001hs. tiOtO ~; 400 to500
insanity on &amp;hindler's behalf. He
filed in Criminal Court, Schindler lbo.
lbo. 58 to 7%; iltiO to t100 lbo. 57 to 71; eeo to1110 lbo.
said a car accident involying Schinsaid he agreed to kill the women.
58.50 to 81; 700 and- 54.40 to 113.
Feeder Bulll (lood and choice 1 250 to 300 lbo.
dler six weeks before the slayings
Schindler's teachers and
" to 112; 300 to 1410 lbo. 10 to 79.50; 400 to 500 lbo.
would play a role in Ills defense. The
classmates were shocked by his 65.50to 75.50; iltiO toet101bo. l2 to 12; 6110 to1110 lbo.
58 to sa; 700andonr,..80to64.~.
youth sustained a head injury in that
arrest.
Sla1J8hler llelfonll.
accident.
Teachers called him "a natwill
Slalll!bler Bulla 11,000 lba. and over) 11.50 to
·57.25.
While in custody, Sclllndler unlead&amp;.''
. Slaughter Cows: Utilities 42.50 to 50.30; Clnderwent a psychiatric evaluation. '
"He ranks with the best senior . nen and CUtten 311 to 11.50;
Veals; C1ooice and Prime 63 to 96; Slandar&lt;b
Its results have been sealed.
class presidents I've seen," school andMediwns
56to74.
Extensive publicity · surrounding
principal David Driver said after
HOGS
No. I Barrows and GUts 2!WOOibo.llto47.50.
the case before Judge Joseph Pines
Schindler's arrest.
BuldoerSows31to44.
also could be an issue in the trial,
ShorUy before the slayings, Schin· ' Boon 38.10 to 311.75.
Pip by the head~ to"'·
Zinman said Tuesday. "Around here
dler's classmates voted him "most
11110 state Gra&lt;lod Feocler CaU ConsiiiiiJ!lOnt
it's a cause celebre, which causes us
popular senior" and "the senior with Sale dates .r. Sept. 24, Oct. 8, Oct. 15, Oct. 22.
Sale time Ill p.m.
some problems. You know you're
the most school and class spirit."
going to get Ibis when you get a case
1

Police officer
o

rC~ntin~ed tram Page
berance Qf the hostages. Other

Granen, ()"lice diSpatcher, to attend
poliCe adJ AIJ. All e:rpemes will be
suggestions were to fixup and paid through the CETAprogram.
Webrung commended the street
cleanup of th_e village; plant trees
·department
for hosing down the
along Main Street; make a bike
path; complete the mini-park and streets and suggested it be done
possibly close Court Street and every two weeks. Wehrung also
commended the work of the
make a small plaza.
. . Gerard asked council consider cemetery trustees for their work at
some of his suggestions for future Beech Grove Cemetery.
The Mayor's report showed
Consideration.
Gerard also noted that the Meigs receipts in the amount of $3,187 for
County Jaycees would clean up the the month of August. Tbe Chief's
senior high building that was used report showed that the department
by the ·Jaycees for the Haunted made 87 arrests, issued 1,786 tickets,
coUected $2,027 from the parking
House during llalloween.
Council gave permission for the meters and drove 5,200 miles. Both
Jaycees to again ilse the building for reports were accepted by council.
The meeting was opened by
the Halloween season.
.
Roger Davidson told council he is prayer by Mayor Andrews. At·
having a drainage problem with tending were Mayor Andrews, Jane
water and sewage coming off Lin- Walton, clerk, Baronick, Wehrung,
coln Hill and High Street onto his Karr, Young and Brown, council
property. Donnie Ward of the street members, Carpenter, Knight,
department is to look into the. Gerard, Harry Evans, Henry Werry
and Donnie Ward.
situation.
Council gave approval for Pam

A111ENS IJVEBTOCK SALEs
S.&amp;unlly,A.ug.•, ...
CAmE PRICES:
Feeder StMn (tood and choice) 30Q.,lOO lbo.
16.7WI.75; 5110o1110 bo.ti0.7WUO,
Feeder HeUen '(llood and choice) 30Q.,lOO lbo.
81.Z.7UO; IIOO-'/Vtllilo.47.5HI.
Feeder Bulla &lt;cood lnd cboicel 30Q.,lOO lbo.
lllUI0-75; lt0-700lbo. .25.
SlaU8- Bulll ( OYOri,OOO lbo.) 52. ~ . 75.
SlaU8hter Cows UUUUes 47·4tm; Canners and

CUiten-.10.

Cow aod CaU Polrs: (by the Wlit) llo.&amp;'lll.
Veals (cOOtcund prime) 12..
Baby Calves(by.tll!ehead)IH'.l.

HOG PRICES:

Hop (No.I, Barrows and GUts) 100-230 lbo. 47·
47 .60.
BulcherSowo34.--50Feeder Pip (by the head) 10-27.

SHEEP PRICES:

Sloughter IAmb! 58 .~ .50.

won't fully support the strike, partly
due to the economic situation.
"1 don't think there will be large
numbers of teachers involved in the
strike, primarily becailse a good
number of them - about 70 percent
-l!re on a pay plan the same as the
school year. In other words, they
haven't had a check since June,"
said one knowledgable source.
Superllltendent Joseph Davis
vowed classes would be held as long
u tile · ~ety of students or staff
weren't threatened.
Elsewbere, a federal mediator
wu scheduled to meet with today
with .negotiators representing the
ManSfield Board of E!(ucation and
the member Mansfield Teachers
Ast!ociatlon. ·
The . a.tSociation membership,
abotit 46&amp; 'teachers, has authorized
its leadership to eall a strike in the
7,906-pupil system which began

classes Aug. 26.
Negotiations were also scheduled
to begin today in the Richmond
Heights district in Cuyahoga County
in an effort to prevent a threatened
strike Thursday. The system has 950
students and 58 teachers.
Classes were scheduled to begin
today in the :iS:Hltudent Fairport
Harbor system in Lake County
where a threatened job action was
narrowly averted.
The system's 35 teachers Tuesday
night approved an increase in base
payto$11,825 from$ll,OOO.
In Athens County, discussions
were continuing between members
of the Nelsonville-York school board

e
NEWS

they expected, Prather said.
But patrol officers believe in·
terviews conducted lzy a third party
may be more effective.
"We feel perhaps the cadets will
talk a little more candidly with
someone not directly connected with
~ -- academy or the highway
patrol," Prather said.
Federal funds will be used to pay
for the study.
"You're too hard on them, are
you?" asked Rep. Myrl H.
Shoemaker, D-BourneviUe.
"That's what we'd like to find
out," Prather replied.
Controllers approved a second law
enforcement-related
program
Tuesday, a survey of what Ohioans
think about crime, criminal justice
and -&lt;;rinle prevention. Detailed in~rvlaws with 1,2000hloans are to be
COIJduded under the $25,000 contract
with the University of Cincinnati's
Belilwloral Science Laboratory.
The ~partment of economic and
community development said
operations of the criminal justice
system are infiuenced by per-

"'tiY. PAHL.tiiiG L
.I'I.I!!NO!P OF

WHAT PO WE&gt;

~v.•~~"'~!:!

DISAST~Wi.JS I

I L05T
SH6el" OF AD-!..19&gt;!

"Love Htppy" 1MQ
(I) &lt;Ill Gl EIGHT IS ENOUGH
(I) REAL PEOPLE A look at a car
~~EH

BAH6A\a ~so WITHOOT
KICKEO OFF, "'IU
KHOI'flll6 IT·
WERE THE OtiLY
PVE &amp;EEH THE
OlfE ¥/HO KNEW
KIH6PIH • OR 15
THE COPf.'.'
IT QUffiiPII1- ~
Ok6NtiZED CRIME'?

OK~ ¥/ELL,
KIHGPIH· OUEEHPIH~
YOU WERE 50 600D
1 ALWAYS
AT IT, YOU PRAGTICALLY HAVE
RUIHED THE OTHER
TENDED TO
.CRIME FAMILIE5.
8E EfFICIEnT~

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

YOU'RE NOT 6KA61'1116

THI5 ! THE

M~

WOW! AH' YOtJ

15 BIG IS ER WERE WORRIED

THAN MAHY COUNTRIES!
YOU'RE PRO!!A61.Y THE

A&amp;OUT RE•
ENTER lt16 TH'
.MOST POI'IEKFUL I'IOIWf JOB I'WIKET.'

ON fARTHI

8:30

.

8:58

11:00
'

' ALLEYOOP
BRING ON THE OPPOSITION? Japanese Prime Minister
Zeako Suzuki is well prepared to do battle wllb bis political
rivals. He Is a master of tbe tradllioaal martial art of
kendo, or Japanese feaclog.

IF 'T()U1LL

13 cases terminated
Eight defendants were fined and
five others forfeited bonds in the
court oi Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday ,Ught.
Fined were Glenn A. Boggs,
Athens, $100 and costs, possession of
marijuana; $100 and costs tlisorderly
manner; Rhonda K. Hager, Mid-

ceptions of public attitudes about
such matters as pollee patrol and
arrest patterns, location of halfway
houses and obscenity laws.
"It is necessary that decision
makers have an accurate understanding of those attitudes," the
agency said. .
On another matter, controllers
agreed to spend $1.03 million for
private attorneys to handle special
legal issues at 13 state-assisted
universities. The special counsel will
be paid an average of $50 to $70 per
hour, the attorney general's office
said in its request.
J'he largest single amount of
$270,000 went to Ohio State University to retain six law finns in Columbus for general counsel, patent,
trademark, copyright and OSU
hospital business.

dleport, $5.and costs, exiting on the
traffic side of a vehicle causing an
accident; Danny Darst, Rutland,
$100 and costs, fighting in public;
Michael Stanley, New Haven, $100
and costs, disorderly manner;
Charles R. Petre, New Haven, $100
and costs, disorderly manner;
David E. Davis, Rutland, $100 and
costs, fighting in public; Carolyn
Davidson, Middleport, $10 and costs,
distrobing the peace; Robert Dugan,
Middleport, $100 and costs, disorderly manner.
Forfeiting bonds were Richard T.
Friley, Pomeroy, $50, intoxication;
Russell Jenkins, Ripley, $40, open
flask ; Denzil Proctor, Middleport,
$50, discharging a firearm in the
village; Jackson L. Icard, Bidwell,
$50, open flask; Ronald E. Barr,
Gallipolis, $30, speeding.

11;30

with two front ends, a man who
plays a pocket calculator as a
musical Instrument, and a visit to
a Chicago nightclub that features
amateur talent. (Repeat; 80 mine.)
(Qioaed·Cytioned)
D Cll Ml BILLY GRAHAM
CRUSADE
C1J liD GREAT PERFORMANCES
'A Lite In the Theatre' David
Mamet'a two character play
centers on the lives of two actors,
as portrayed by Ellis Rabb and
Peter Evans. (Closed Captioned)
@ mlns.)
00 •
BASEBALL Cincinnati
Reds VI St. Louis Cardinals
Cll AGAPE
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
Cll ,700 CLUB
(]) "BASEBALL: RACE FOR THE
PENNANT This action-packed
sarles ia your scorecard to the
World Series as it recaps the
week's latest baseball exci·
lament. len Berman and M!U'Y
Willa co·hoat.
(]) &lt;Ill Gl
CHAIIUE'S
ANGELS
.
(I) DIFF'RENT STROKES
CJ C1J ®J GE THEATRE 'See .
How She Rune' The drama centera
on Betty Oulnn, a 4Q-ye8r-old
divorcee who, In defiance of her
predictable mlddle·aged axis·
tence, attempts to complete the
grueling B'oaton Marathon. Stars:
Joanne Woodward, Barnard
Hugheo. (2 hra.)
(]) MOVIE ·(COMEDY)

"Main Event" 1979

••\0

(I) NBC WHITE PAPER 'Cuba
And The Caribbean' NBC News
correspondent Marvin Kalb Is the
reporter tor this examinalion of
how, atter21 years in power, Fidei
caatro and hia particUlar brand of
Soviet-supported C'ommunlam
ha"Ve failed to solve Cuba's ser·
ioue__e:roblema. (90 mina.)

GASOLINE ALlEY

Didn't 40u ·

everqoto
school?

CIJ UtJ

SITCOM 'The Adlientureo
Garry Marsh&amp; II' In~ a revealing
behind the acenea look, this
documentary explores the world
of Garry K. MBrehall, producer of
auch ahows as 'Mark and Mindy',
'l:'lappy Days' and 'laverne and
Shirley' .
(I) TBS EVENING NEWS
(]) &lt;Ill Gl VEGAS
C1J WHEN RIVERS RUN DRY The
continual atruggle between nature
and man Ia chronicled lrt this film
reY'Iew of the history and ecology
of water in New MeJCico and
Arizona, from 300 B .C. to the
l!t•aent.
(11) NEWS
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
Cll MAX MORRIS
CIJ WATERMARKS The con·
troversy surrounding increased
tnduatrlal uae of the Apalachicola·
River, Florida's largeat, Ia
examined In thla study of tour
families living on Ita shores.
(fi) OVER EASY Guest: Author
Gore Vidal. Host: Hugh Oowna.
{Closed Capti~ed)
,
(I) NEWS UPDATE
(lJ • (J) Cil Ill (J) ~ CBIIII
NEWS
C1J JI!WISH VOICE
(I) NIGHT GALLERY
(]) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
iHI DICK CAVEn SHOW
(I) NEWS UPDATE
(]) •
(I)
THE TONIGHT
SHOW
(]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(]) THE GREATEST SCANDALS
OF THE CENTURY The greatest
scandala of the century are
revealed In this documentary·

""Of

10:00

. WINNIE
WENDY(S A LUCKY GIRL. IF
!MRRI.ES TIPPY1 SHE'LL
PROBABLY NEVER HAVE .

--------------:-----------1

i

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to form
lour ordinary words.

a

••\0

0=0

~H E

Area Deaths

TO COOK A MEAL .,...__-&lt;
At7 LONG A&amp;
BHE LIVES!

Minnie S. Stoltenberg
Minnie Stobart Stoltenberg, 80, of
Tipton, Iowa, died on Aug. 25.
Daughter of the late Wilbur and
Catherine Stobart of Meigs County,
she is survived by two sisters, Norma Stoltenberg, Tipton, Iowa, and
Ina Kautz, Pomeroy; one brother,
Robert Stobart, Tipton.
and one nephew, Dale ICautz,
Pomeroy. Funeral services were
held at Tipton on Aug. 28.

BY 11-iE WAY,. HERE
ARE n-tE AI"PL/ CATIONS FOR
n-tAT POSITION
WE ADVER-

10:28
10:30

TI~ED I

10:58

11:00

11:28
t 1:30

. .I TRIED
JU6HAID'S WART
THREE TIMES

HIIW HIIW •• ¥OU
AN' ¥ORE TOM·FOOL

A BEAN LEAF I
BUT IT DIDN'T

GO AWAY,

' ..

D

(()
I

ij .
." ,.
I

"2·2556
570W. Main ·

i.

I

0

'•

"Dte, Die ~ Dorine" 11165
(12) Ill
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
D CIJ U.S. OPEN TENNIS
UPDATE
(I) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
&lt;JD) MOYIE ·!ROMANCE-DRAMA) .
•'rS "love M.chlne" 1871
11:50 (])
&lt;Ill
ID
LOVE
BOIIT-BARETTA
Love
Boat··'leaac The Groupie' laat~c
falfa hopeleaety In love with a
glamorous star. Baretta·-'Theflre
Man' Baratta enliata the aid of a
friend who's an aJCpert arson
klveetigator when the mystery of
aavaral explosive fires remains
unoolved. (Repeat; 2 hra.. t6
mlna.l_
•
12:00 8 Cll CBS LATE MOVIE 'THE
SAINT: lnt'erlude In Ventce' A
young woman. the daughter of an
American attorney, ta11s afoul of
an Italian gangster who eaeks
reven;e upon the lawyer'stamily.
(Repeat) 'POCKET MONEY' t972
Stars: Paul Newman. Lee
Marvin.
12:30 . (]) MOVIE -(COMEDY) uy,
11
Sflama, Shame On Tha Bixby

(I)

)i'EANUTS

·'·

HE WOULDN'T HAVE NO WART
IN TH' FIRST
IF He'D
STOP
TOAD FROGS

affairs .
(I) MOVIE -(MYSTERY) ••y,

·THIS, WEEK'S
SPICIAL

SQUARE ····69~
WITH FRIES ••••••.

®l ifil

BIBLE BOWL
CAROL BURNEn AND
FRIENDS
(J) ABC NEWS
(J) (fi) ZOOM
8 ;30 00 8 Cil NBC NEWS
Cll MUSIC ' '
Cll BOB NEWHART SHOW
(])
CAROL BURNEn AND
FRIENDS
D (]) ®l CBS NEWS
C1J WILD WILD WORLD OF
' ANIMALS
liD OYER EASY Guest Author
Gore Vidal. Host: Hugh Downs.
ffiJOaed Captioned}
(J2) ID ABC NEWS
8:58 (]) NEWS UPDATE
7:00 00 • P.M. MAGAZINE
(])
PROGRAM
U_NANNOUNCED
(I) ALL IN THE FAMILY
(I) ljJ) ID FACE THE MUSIC
(I) LUCY SHOW .
llJ Cll TIC TAC DOUGH
C1J
MACNEtL·LEHRER
REPORT
®J NEWS
liD DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 00 8 BULLSEYE
(])
AT HOME WITH THE
BtBL£
(I) SANFORD AND SON
(J) MATCH GAME
(I) WILD KINGDOM
CJ Cll JOKER'S WILD
(]) DICK CAVETT SHOW
®l THE JUDGE
·
(fi)
MACNEIL•LEHRER
REPORT
.
ljJ) Gl STRAWBERRY SHORT·
CAKE It all happerts in Strawberryland where two characters
combine forces to save their land
of smiles from the Peculiar Purple
Pieman of Porcupine Peak .
7:58 Cll NEWS UPDATE
8:00 (lJ B REDSCENE
(I) FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
(]) ON LOCATION 'Robin Wll·
llomo: Off the Wall'
·
(I) MOVIE -(COMEDY)

~ C!J'TAINEASY

DOC

1981 AMC CARS
NOW IN STOCK ,

CD Ill til

byHenrlArnoldandBoblee

C1J

D

'

the physical demands are more than

EVENING

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

(I)

Emergency runs
The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service report the following
111111 made by local units Tuesday
and Wednesday morning.
Tuesday runs,Pomeroy Squad, at
8:49 p.m. Eva Bibbee, Pomeroy
Health Care Center, was taken to
Velm!ns Memorial Hospital; ll: 23
a.m. Chester Sexton, Middleport
llill, to Holzer Medical Center; at
·8:12 a.m. Denver Carman, Peach
Fork Road, taken to Holzer Medical
Cellter: Middleport unit, 9:28 a.m.
Dora Heaton, Locust St., Pomeroy,
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
10:18 a.m. Bonnie Proctor, Railroad
St., Middleport, to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 11:41 a.m.
Christy Laudetmilt, Beech St., Middleport, to Holzer Medical Center;
11:21 . p.m, Harry Hayman, Dean
Mans Curve, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital: Racine unit,
2:~ p.m. Velma Keller taken to
Medical Plaza, Gallipolis: Syracuse
unit, 10:22 a.m. Denver Cannan
taken-fr001 Holzer Medical Center to
Ills resldeilce; 12:35 p.m. Bessie
Bilmhart, Butternut Ave., taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital :
Rutland unit, 11:24 a.m. Jim Acre
taken from Meigs Mine with back in·
jury to Veterans Memorial Hospitl)l.,
Wednesday morning runs;
Rutland unit,- 3:06 a.m. David
Donahue, Apple Grove taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital :
Racine unit, 6:~ a.m. went to the
Miller residence, patient treated at
the llcene: Pomeroy unit, 9:01 a.m.
to the Lula Schaefer residence for
Sally Canter who was treated at the
scene: Syracuse unit, 9:37a.m. for
Unda M. Curtis, Racine, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

1080

e:oo 11l

m.L,WaL,MD HOW DtD
'boR ~1-1 eo'?

Highway Patrol seeks answer to
high resignation rate of cadets

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Highway Patrol is trying to find
out why so many new recruits. are
dropping out of Its training academy
weeks after classes begin.
It has wm state Controlling Board
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
VETERANS MEMORIAL
approval
of a $25,350 contract with
DISCHARGES SEPT. Z
ADMISSIONS···Dora Heaton, Bilttelle CoiUIJibus Laboratories to
Elmer Acra, Maxine Arnold, Lin- Pomeroy; Bonnie Procter, Midda Ault, Linda Burris, Mrs. Jeary
dleport; George Oiler, Racine; Alva investigate underlying factors f.n..
Caldwell and son, Heidi CArruthers,
Myers, Reedsville; Louella Burson, Duencing the resignation rate of
. William Colmer, Elma Dement, Lori Shade; Jack Ginther, Chester; aeademy cadets.
An average 30 percent of those
: Hill, Stephen Howard, James MeBrandon Roush, Pomeroy; Fannle 1
who
have entered the academy's
: Combas Jr., Jeoffi'ey Penix, Nancy Aleshire, Racine; Eva Bibbee,
last
seven
classes has failed to com· Radabaugh, Jason Stanley, Edgar Pomeroy.
plete
the
course, said Capt. J.R.
· Trivette, Crystal Vaughan, David
DISCHARGEs-Glenad Lawson,
Prather
of
the patrol's planning and
·wallace.
Kathy Robinson.
research office to the board. Of the
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . : . . - - , 65 eadets who began training in the
current class, 42 are left.
"We're losing most of them in the
first few weeks of the academy,"
Prather said.
Departing tadets - who already
haVe met entrance, background and
physical tests before beginning
training - are questioned by patrol
officers before leaving. Some are attracted by higher paying jobs, some
object to the ~eparation from family
during the ·training and. others say

and non-teaching employees whose
contract expired 1\ug. 31.
"We're also meetirig with teachers
in the district, '' said .Mayor Wilbur
D. Mender, a member of the school
board. "I don't see why we should
have any _problems. As far as I •
know, both sides are still talking."
Negotiations were also underway
late Tuesday between representatives of OAPSE and the Liberty
Center school board inHenry County.
However, Superintendent Jack
Slagle said he did not forsee a work
stoppage in the 1,100-pupil school
system.

IEPT.~,

'ii'ftliN't ID1t

~ ~ ~~ ®

•

0

1

rx

IHURSTtY
I I
ITEMRIP~
I I r 0

I

form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

A( I

Prlntanswerhere:

}.

Now arrange the circled letters to

I I J [ I XX)
(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles : DITIO AWOKE DISCUS WHENCE
Answer: Might be drawn wi t ho ut paper or pencilA WINDOW SHADE

I

Yesterday's

BRIDGE
OsWald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Expertise ranges wildly
NORTH
t K 10 6 4

9-3-80

• A Q 10 I

• 10
+Q954
EAST
+J 8 5
.876&gt;2

.J

WEST

+A 73

tKQ862

+AJ87

t7
+toss 2
SOUTH
+Q92

.K93
tAJ9511
+K
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West

North

Pass

zt
Pass

E01t
Pass
Pass

Sooth

3NT

South jumped to t~ree
notrump to end the bidding.
At those three tables, West ·
opened the deuce of di~monds ..
Dummy's 10 held the trick.
One South player led the four
of spades to h1s nine. It forced
the ace. He had no furtber
problems and made an overtrick. Declarers two and three
also led a spade, but rose with
the queen. One West player
put on his ace and led the suit ·
back. East scored his jack and
shifted to a club, but declarer
had nine tricks at this point.
At the third table West
ducked the queen of spades.
South led back a s~ade and
finessed unsuccessfully. East
was in with the jack, shifted to
a club and declarer could only
get eight tricks: One spade,
four hearts, two diamondS and
a club to wind up with a big

loss.

Opening lead:t 2

What happened at the
fourth table? North was ready
to underbid. He started by
passing. Then he r.esponded ·
one heart to his partner's diamond opening and decided to
drop h1m at two diamonds
By Oswald Jacoby
when he rebid the suit.
and Alan Sontag
The unfortunate South proceeded
to bring the two-diaAt three of the four tables · mond contract
home by a
in the semi-finals, North series of fine P.lays, but he still
opened with a fancy two-dia- lost 11 IMP s to the same
mond bid to show a minimum scored at the' other table m his
opening with three four-card match.
suits and a singleton diamond. (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.!

~-~·tf
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACR&lt;l'IS
42 Sign light
1 Hemingway
DOWN .
nickname
l Ode
5 Big donor,
ZMosque deity
in politics (sl.) 3 Agglutinant
11 Evergreen
l Hatchet
genus
5 Instigate
12 Sleep-inducing 8 Sununit
agent
7 Small bird
Yesterday's Altswer
13 "Wnat8 Become
is new?"
fashioiUible ~ Egg-shaped28 Bear witness.
u Courage;
9 Address for Z3 Brief
Z7 Girl's name
pluck
Ted Turner
operatic 30 Scold
15 Gymnast's
10 Early
rendition 31 Popular
need
American !C Ronald
dance
16 Evil spell
home
i\eagan, 33 Weather word
17 Headgear
16 Deck or
at
35 Hammer end
18 Body-builder
farm home
37 Wallaba
zo Without (Ger.) 19 Bilttleship Z5 Famous 38 "Stout'
21 Hill dweller
to remember painter
hearted -" ·
22 Doone's
civic duty
23 Dry
ZSActress
Wynter
26 Irish
islands
Z7 Rested
28 Prong
2t Put in office
3% ~vateeye
33 -Lanka .
34 Luck
36 Hydrocarbon
38 "This Nearly
WaS-"
39 Trample
40 Flange
U Island lm·
mortallzedby
U.S. Marines L-..L......L-...r..._._.....t.-:"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'8 how to work It:
AltYDLIIAAltll
II , LONGFELLOW
One letter oimply otands lor another. In this iample A Ia
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letter!,
apo,trophes, the length and formation of the worda are •!I
hiDls. Each day the code letters are dllferent.
,
CRYPTOQUOTES
SEA VB
NM

NM

AZTS

XENST

F

EKL

SEA VB

UAMQEQVB

ZK L Z•

· QSL

HKTIZVVSL

M R K

VEQMA :

.X Z E A L ·Z

Yesterday's Cryptoquot'e: WHO SO CULTIVATES THE
GOLDEN MEAN AVOIDS THE PoVERTY OF A HOVEL AND
THE ENVY OF A PALACE.-HORACE

love" 187Q
C) 1810 King FNtur" Synelicate. Inc . .

\·

}
!
'

�Uatly lienttnet, MJOateport-Porneroy u Wednesday ·" -t 3 1... ,.
l·-13-The
DICK TRACY
·
· - ' .,
'~, . ' """
-.
-

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 3, 19110

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Hubbard teachers join picket line
By THOMAS RIZZO
Assoolated Press Writer
While the number of strike threats
against Ohio school systems in·
creases, teachers in another district
decided to start the new school year
on the picket line today instead of
behind their desks.
Members of the 100-member Hubbard Education Association voted
Tuesday to strike the Tnimbull
County district over a wage dispute.
Cathy Pollenich, chief negotiator for
the teachers, said the school board's
offer of an $11,200 basic rate of pay
was $200 too low. The starting salary

is now $10,300.

The opening of classes Thursday
Hubbard . school administrators
in
the Colwnbus school district may
were meeting late Tuesday to decide
be
marred by a strike by Ohio
whether classes in the 3,100-student
Associlltion
of Public School Emsystem would c011tinue during the
ployees.
strike.
The union represents about 1,300
A stalemate between the adof
2,600 bus drivers, food service perministration and more than 200
sonnel, maintenance and clerical
striking teachers and non-teaching
personnel In 139 schools in the
employees continued In the
district.
Miamisburg school district in MonNegotiationa between the two
tgomery County.
.
sides
resumed for several hOurs
An estimated 250 teachers
Tuesday
evening under the guidance
remained on strike in the Norof
federal
mediator Joseph Santatheastern Local district in Clark
Emma.
The
two main issues keeping
County.
the two sides from agreement were
the size of a proposed pay bike and
the length of the contract.
Member~ of the Columbus
Education Association were
scheduled to meet tonight to decide
whether they will honor OAPSE ·
picket lines. There is speculation
from various sources that teachers

Most popular senior

faces murder charges

BALTIMORE (AP) - Eighteenlike ·Ibis. It doesn't happen every
yeaHld Michael · &amp;hindler, once
day."
president and of bis high school class
The victims of the alleged murderaHd "most popular senior," was
for-hire plot were Marla Zisser, &amp;1, .
going to court today to face charges
and her 23-year-&lt;&gt;ld granddaughter,
of stabbing two women to death in
Mary Thompson, stabbed to death
what authorities say was a murder·
last Thanksgiving weekend.
for-bini scheme.
·
Mrs. Thompson's hilsband, AnHis arrest just before Christmas
thony Thompson, 28, was charged
stunned teachers and classmates at
with hiring Schindler and another
OBIOVAU.EY
Patapsco Senior High &amp;boo!, where
youth, David Robertson, to carry out
LIVESTOCK CO.
he was well-liked and highly regar·
the slayings. After pleading guilty to
M4RKET REPORT
ded.
All prices token r...... the wctioo a! Saturday'
conspiracy charges, he was sen- AugiUt
30, 1910. Tnndl : Feeder caWe lleady,
He has been held without bail on
tenced to two consecutive life tenns. cows $1 to$UG hiaber veal calves steady.
two counts of first'{!egree murder
1'o1al Hood •
Robertson, indicted on the same
Feeder steers (Cood and chotce) 1!10 to 300 lbl.
and related offenses.
~barges as Schindler, has not yet
751085; 300 tototrlbo. 71JOto12; 400to5001bo. 81
.. 78; 500 to 6t10 illo. 611 to 'n; 6t10 to 700 lbo.l4 to
Lawyer Willtam Zinman has enbeen tried.
76: 700 and over e:uo to 72.
tered a plea of innocent by reason of
In a statement made to police and
Feeder HeUen (lood ODd choice) Z5G to :1110
62.50tof1.$0; :100to4001hs. tiOtO ~; 400 to500
insanity on &amp;hindler's behalf. He
filed in Criminal Court, Schindler lbo.
lbo. 58 to 7%; iltiO to t100 lbo. 57 to 71; eeo to1110 lbo.
said a car accident involying Schinsaid he agreed to kill the women.
58.50 to 81; 700 and- 54.40 to 113.
Feeder Bulll (lood and choice 1 250 to 300 lbo.
dler six weeks before the slayings
Schindler's teachers and
" to 112; 300 to 1410 lbo. 10 to 79.50; 400 to 500 lbo.
would play a role in Ills defense. The
classmates were shocked by his 65.50to 75.50; iltiO toet101bo. l2 to 12; 6110 to1110 lbo.
58 to sa; 700andonr,..80to64.~.
youth sustained a head injury in that
arrest.
Sla1J8hler llelfonll.
accident.
Teachers called him "a natwill
Slalll!bler Bulla 11,000 lba. and over) 11.50 to
·57.25.
While in custody, Sclllndler unlead&amp;.''
. Slaughter Cows: Utilities 42.50 to 50.30; Clnderwent a psychiatric evaluation. '
"He ranks with the best senior . nen and CUtten 311 to 11.50;
Veals; C1ooice and Prime 63 to 96; Slandar&lt;b
Its results have been sealed.
class presidents I've seen," school andMediwns
56to74.
Extensive publicity · surrounding
principal David Driver said after
HOGS
No. I Barrows and GUts 2!WOOibo.llto47.50.
the case before Judge Joseph Pines
Schindler's arrest.
BuldoerSows31to44.
also could be an issue in the trial,
ShorUy before the slayings, Schin· ' Boon 38.10 to 311.75.
Pip by the head~ to"'·
Zinman said Tuesday. "Around here
dler's classmates voted him "most
11110 state Gra&lt;lod Feocler CaU ConsiiiiiJ!lOnt
it's a cause celebre, which causes us
popular senior" and "the senior with Sale dates .r. Sept. 24, Oct. 8, Oct. 15, Oct. 22.
Sale time Ill p.m.
some problems. You know you're
the most school and class spirit."
going to get Ibis when you get a case
1

Police officer
o

rC~ntin~ed tram Page
berance Qf the hostages. Other

Granen, ()"lice diSpatcher, to attend
poliCe adJ AIJ. All e:rpemes will be
suggestions were to fixup and paid through the CETAprogram.
Webrung commended the street
cleanup of th_e village; plant trees
·department
for hosing down the
along Main Street; make a bike
path; complete the mini-park and streets and suggested it be done
possibly close Court Street and every two weeks. Wehrung also
commended the work of the
make a small plaza.
. . Gerard asked council consider cemetery trustees for their work at
some of his suggestions for future Beech Grove Cemetery.
The Mayor's report showed
Consideration.
Gerard also noted that the Meigs receipts in the amount of $3,187 for
County Jaycees would clean up the the month of August. Tbe Chief's
senior high building that was used report showed that the department
by the ·Jaycees for the Haunted made 87 arrests, issued 1,786 tickets,
coUected $2,027 from the parking
House during llalloween.
Council gave permission for the meters and drove 5,200 miles. Both
Jaycees to again ilse the building for reports were accepted by council.
The meeting was opened by
the Halloween season.
.
Roger Davidson told council he is prayer by Mayor Andrews. At·
having a drainage problem with tending were Mayor Andrews, Jane
water and sewage coming off Lin- Walton, clerk, Baronick, Wehrung,
coln Hill and High Street onto his Karr, Young and Brown, council
property. Donnie Ward of the street members, Carpenter, Knight,
department is to look into the. Gerard, Harry Evans, Henry Werry
and Donnie Ward.
situation.
Council gave approval for Pam

A111ENS IJVEBTOCK SALEs
S.&amp;unlly,A.ug.•, ...
CAmE PRICES:
Feeder StMn (tood and choice) 30Q.,lOO lbo.
16.7WI.75; 5110o1110 bo.ti0.7WUO,
Feeder HeUen '(llood and choice) 30Q.,lOO lbo.
81.Z.7UO; IIOO-'/Vtllilo.47.5HI.
Feeder Bulla &lt;cood lnd cboicel 30Q.,lOO lbo.
lllUI0-75; lt0-700lbo. .25.
SlaU8- Bulll ( OYOri,OOO lbo.) 52. ~ . 75.
SlaU8hter Cows UUUUes 47·4tm; Canners and

CUiten-.10.

Cow aod CaU Polrs: (by the Wlit) llo.&amp;'lll.
Veals (cOOtcund prime) 12..
Baby Calves(by.tll!ehead)IH'.l.

HOG PRICES:

Hop (No.I, Barrows and GUts) 100-230 lbo. 47·
47 .60.
BulcherSowo34.--50Feeder Pip (by the head) 10-27.

SHEEP PRICES:

Sloughter IAmb! 58 .~ .50.

won't fully support the strike, partly
due to the economic situation.
"1 don't think there will be large
numbers of teachers involved in the
strike, primarily becailse a good
number of them - about 70 percent
-l!re on a pay plan the same as the
school year. In other words, they
haven't had a check since June,"
said one knowledgable source.
Superllltendent Joseph Davis
vowed classes would be held as long
u tile · ~ety of students or staff
weren't threatened.
Elsewbere, a federal mediator
wu scheduled to meet with today
with .negotiators representing the
ManSfield Board of E!(ucation and
the member Mansfield Teachers
Ast!ociatlon. ·
The . a.tSociation membership,
abotit 46&amp; 'teachers, has authorized
its leadership to eall a strike in the
7,906-pupil system which began

classes Aug. 26.
Negotiations were also scheduled
to begin today in the Richmond
Heights district in Cuyahoga County
in an effort to prevent a threatened
strike Thursday. The system has 950
students and 58 teachers.
Classes were scheduled to begin
today in the :iS:Hltudent Fairport
Harbor system in Lake County
where a threatened job action was
narrowly averted.
The system's 35 teachers Tuesday
night approved an increase in base
payto$11,825 from$ll,OOO.
In Athens County, discussions
were continuing between members
of the Nelsonville-York school board

e
NEWS

they expected, Prather said.
But patrol officers believe in·
terviews conducted lzy a third party
may be more effective.
"We feel perhaps the cadets will
talk a little more candidly with
someone not directly connected with
~ -- academy or the highway
patrol," Prather said.
Federal funds will be used to pay
for the study.
"You're too hard on them, are
you?" asked Rep. Myrl H.
Shoemaker, D-BourneviUe.
"That's what we'd like to find
out," Prather replied.
Controllers approved a second law
enforcement-related
program
Tuesday, a survey of what Ohioans
think about crime, criminal justice
and -&lt;;rinle prevention. Detailed in~rvlaws with 1,2000hloans are to be
COIJduded under the $25,000 contract
with the University of Cincinnati's
Belilwloral Science Laboratory.
The ~partment of economic and
community development said
operations of the criminal justice
system are infiuenced by per-

"'tiY. PAHL.tiiiG L
.I'I.I!!NO!P OF

WHAT PO WE&gt;

~v.•~~"'~!:!

DISAST~Wi.JS I

I L05T
SH6el" OF AD-!..19&gt;!

"Love Htppy" 1MQ
(I) &lt;Ill Gl EIGHT IS ENOUGH
(I) REAL PEOPLE A look at a car
~~EH

BAH6A\a ~so WITHOOT
KICKEO OFF, "'IU
KHOI'flll6 IT·
WERE THE OtiLY
PVE &amp;EEH THE
OlfE ¥/HO KNEW
KIH6PIH • OR 15
THE COPf.'.'
IT QUffiiPII1- ~
Ok6NtiZED CRIME'?

OK~ ¥/ELL,
KIHGPIH· OUEEHPIH~
YOU WERE 50 600D
1 ALWAYS
AT IT, YOU PRAGTICALLY HAVE
RUIHED THE OTHER
TENDED TO
.CRIME FAMILIE5.
8E EfFICIEnT~

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

YOU'RE NOT 6KA61'1116

THI5 ! THE

M~

WOW! AH' YOtJ

15 BIG IS ER WERE WORRIED

THAN MAHY COUNTRIES!
YOU'RE PRO!!A61.Y THE

A&amp;OUT RE•
ENTER lt16 TH'
.MOST POI'IEKFUL I'IOIWf JOB I'WIKET.'

ON fARTHI

8:30

.

8:58

11:00
'

' ALLEYOOP
BRING ON THE OPPOSITION? Japanese Prime Minister
Zeako Suzuki is well prepared to do battle wllb bis political
rivals. He Is a master of tbe tradllioaal martial art of
kendo, or Japanese feaclog.

IF 'T()U1LL

13 cases terminated
Eight defendants were fined and
five others forfeited bonds in the
court oi Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday ,Ught.
Fined were Glenn A. Boggs,
Athens, $100 and costs, possession of
marijuana; $100 and costs tlisorderly
manner; Rhonda K. Hager, Mid-

ceptions of public attitudes about
such matters as pollee patrol and
arrest patterns, location of halfway
houses and obscenity laws.
"It is necessary that decision
makers have an accurate understanding of those attitudes," the
agency said. .
On another matter, controllers
agreed to spend $1.03 million for
private attorneys to handle special
legal issues at 13 state-assisted
universities. The special counsel will
be paid an average of $50 to $70 per
hour, the attorney general's office
said in its request.
J'he largest single amount of
$270,000 went to Ohio State University to retain six law finns in Columbus for general counsel, patent,
trademark, copyright and OSU
hospital business.

dleport, $5.and costs, exiting on the
traffic side of a vehicle causing an
accident; Danny Darst, Rutland,
$100 and costs, fighting in public;
Michael Stanley, New Haven, $100
and costs, disorderly manner;
Charles R. Petre, New Haven, $100
and costs, disorderly manner;
David E. Davis, Rutland, $100 and
costs, fighting in public; Carolyn
Davidson, Middleport, $10 and costs,
distrobing the peace; Robert Dugan,
Middleport, $100 and costs, disorderly manner.
Forfeiting bonds were Richard T.
Friley, Pomeroy, $50, intoxication;
Russell Jenkins, Ripley, $40, open
flask ; Denzil Proctor, Middleport,
$50, discharging a firearm in the
village; Jackson L. Icard, Bidwell,
$50, open flask; Ronald E. Barr,
Gallipolis, $30, speeding.

11;30

with two front ends, a man who
plays a pocket calculator as a
musical Instrument, and a visit to
a Chicago nightclub that features
amateur talent. (Repeat; 80 mine.)
(Qioaed·Cytioned)
D Cll Ml BILLY GRAHAM
CRUSADE
C1J liD GREAT PERFORMANCES
'A Lite In the Theatre' David
Mamet'a two character play
centers on the lives of two actors,
as portrayed by Ellis Rabb and
Peter Evans. (Closed Captioned)
@ mlns.)
00 •
BASEBALL Cincinnati
Reds VI St. Louis Cardinals
Cll AGAPE
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
Cll ,700 CLUB
(]) "BASEBALL: RACE FOR THE
PENNANT This action-packed
sarles ia your scorecard to the
World Series as it recaps the
week's latest baseball exci·
lament. len Berman and M!U'Y
Willa co·hoat.
(]) &lt;Ill Gl
CHAIIUE'S
ANGELS
.
(I) DIFF'RENT STROKES
CJ C1J ®J GE THEATRE 'See .
How She Rune' The drama centera
on Betty Oulnn, a 4Q-ye8r-old
divorcee who, In defiance of her
predictable mlddle·aged axis·
tence, attempts to complete the
grueling B'oaton Marathon. Stars:
Joanne Woodward, Barnard
Hugheo. (2 hra.)
(]) MOVIE ·(COMEDY)

"Main Event" 1979

••\0

(I) NBC WHITE PAPER 'Cuba
And The Caribbean' NBC News
correspondent Marvin Kalb Is the
reporter tor this examinalion of
how, atter21 years in power, Fidei
caatro and hia particUlar brand of
Soviet-supported C'ommunlam
ha"Ve failed to solve Cuba's ser·
ioue__e:roblema. (90 mina.)

GASOLINE ALlEY

Didn't 40u ·

everqoto
school?

CIJ UtJ

SITCOM 'The Adlientureo
Garry Marsh&amp; II' In~ a revealing
behind the acenea look, this
documentary explores the world
of Garry K. MBrehall, producer of
auch ahows as 'Mark and Mindy',
'l:'lappy Days' and 'laverne and
Shirley' .
(I) TBS EVENING NEWS
(]) &lt;Ill Gl VEGAS
C1J WHEN RIVERS RUN DRY The
continual atruggle between nature
and man Ia chronicled lrt this film
reY'Iew of the history and ecology
of water in New MeJCico and
Arizona, from 300 B .C. to the
l!t•aent.
(11) NEWS
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
Cll MAX MORRIS
CIJ WATERMARKS The con·
troversy surrounding increased
tnduatrlal uae of the Apalachicola·
River, Florida's largeat, Ia
examined In thla study of tour
families living on Ita shores.
(fi) OVER EASY Guest: Author
Gore Vidal. Host: Hugh Oowna.
{Closed Capti~ed)
,
(I) NEWS UPDATE
(lJ • (J) Cil Ill (J) ~ CBIIII
NEWS
C1J JI!WISH VOICE
(I) NIGHT GALLERY
(]) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
iHI DICK CAVEn SHOW
(I) NEWS UPDATE
(]) •
(I)
THE TONIGHT
SHOW
(]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(]) THE GREATEST SCANDALS
OF THE CENTURY The greatest
scandala of the century are
revealed In this documentary·

""Of

10:00

. WINNIE
WENDY(S A LUCKY GIRL. IF
!MRRI.ES TIPPY1 SHE'LL
PROBABLY NEVER HAVE .

--------------:-----------1

i

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to form
lour ordinary words.

a

••\0

0=0

~H E

Area Deaths

TO COOK A MEAL .,...__-&lt;
At7 LONG A&amp;
BHE LIVES!

Minnie S. Stoltenberg
Minnie Stobart Stoltenberg, 80, of
Tipton, Iowa, died on Aug. 25.
Daughter of the late Wilbur and
Catherine Stobart of Meigs County,
she is survived by two sisters, Norma Stoltenberg, Tipton, Iowa, and
Ina Kautz, Pomeroy; one brother,
Robert Stobart, Tipton.
and one nephew, Dale ICautz,
Pomeroy. Funeral services were
held at Tipton on Aug. 28.

BY 11-iE WAY,. HERE
ARE n-tE AI"PL/ CATIONS FOR
n-tAT POSITION
WE ADVER-

10:28
10:30

TI~ED I

10:58

11:00

11:28
t 1:30

. .I TRIED
JU6HAID'S WART
THREE TIMES

HIIW HIIW •• ¥OU
AN' ¥ORE TOM·FOOL

A BEAN LEAF I
BUT IT DIDN'T

GO AWAY,

' ..

D

(()
I

ij .
." ,.
I

"2·2556
570W. Main ·

i.

I

0

'•

"Dte, Die ~ Dorine" 11165
(12) Ill
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
D CIJ U.S. OPEN TENNIS
UPDATE
(I) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
&lt;JD) MOYIE ·!ROMANCE-DRAMA) .
•'rS "love M.chlne" 1871
11:50 (])
&lt;Ill
ID
LOVE
BOIIT-BARETTA
Love
Boat··'leaac The Groupie' laat~c
falfa hopeleaety In love with a
glamorous star. Baretta·-'Theflre
Man' Baratta enliata the aid of a
friend who's an aJCpert arson
klveetigator when the mystery of
aavaral explosive fires remains
unoolved. (Repeat; 2 hra.. t6
mlna.l_
•
12:00 8 Cll CBS LATE MOVIE 'THE
SAINT: lnt'erlude In Ventce' A
young woman. the daughter of an
American attorney, ta11s afoul of
an Italian gangster who eaeks
reven;e upon the lawyer'stamily.
(Repeat) 'POCKET MONEY' t972
Stars: Paul Newman. Lee
Marvin.
12:30 . (]) MOVIE -(COMEDY) uy,
11
Sflama, Shame On Tha Bixby

(I)

)i'EANUTS

·'·

HE WOULDN'T HAVE NO WART
IN TH' FIRST
IF He'D
STOP
TOAD FROGS

affairs .
(I) MOVIE -(MYSTERY) ••y,

·THIS, WEEK'S
SPICIAL

SQUARE ····69~
WITH FRIES ••••••.

®l ifil

BIBLE BOWL
CAROL BURNEn AND
FRIENDS
(J) ABC NEWS
(J) (fi) ZOOM
8 ;30 00 8 Cil NBC NEWS
Cll MUSIC ' '
Cll BOB NEWHART SHOW
(])
CAROL BURNEn AND
FRIENDS
D (]) ®l CBS NEWS
C1J WILD WILD WORLD OF
' ANIMALS
liD OYER EASY Guest Author
Gore Vidal. Host: Hugh Downs.
ffiJOaed Captioned}
(J2) ID ABC NEWS
8:58 (]) NEWS UPDATE
7:00 00 • P.M. MAGAZINE
(])
PROGRAM
U_NANNOUNCED
(I) ALL IN THE FAMILY
(I) ljJ) ID FACE THE MUSIC
(I) LUCY SHOW .
llJ Cll TIC TAC DOUGH
C1J
MACNEtL·LEHRER
REPORT
®J NEWS
liD DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 00 8 BULLSEYE
(])
AT HOME WITH THE
BtBL£
(I) SANFORD AND SON
(J) MATCH GAME
(I) WILD KINGDOM
CJ Cll JOKER'S WILD
(]) DICK CAVETT SHOW
®l THE JUDGE
·
(fi)
MACNEIL•LEHRER
REPORT
.
ljJ) Gl STRAWBERRY SHORT·
CAKE It all happerts in Strawberryland where two characters
combine forces to save their land
of smiles from the Peculiar Purple
Pieman of Porcupine Peak .
7:58 Cll NEWS UPDATE
8:00 (lJ B REDSCENE
(I) FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
(]) ON LOCATION 'Robin Wll·
llomo: Off the Wall'
·
(I) MOVIE -(COMEDY)

~ C!J'TAINEASY

DOC

1981 AMC CARS
NOW IN STOCK ,

CD Ill til

byHenrlArnoldandBoblee

C1J

D

'

the physical demands are more than

EVENING

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

(I)

Emergency runs
The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service report the following
111111 made by local units Tuesday
and Wednesday morning.
Tuesday runs,Pomeroy Squad, at
8:49 p.m. Eva Bibbee, Pomeroy
Health Care Center, was taken to
Velm!ns Memorial Hospital; ll: 23
a.m. Chester Sexton, Middleport
llill, to Holzer Medical Center; at
·8:12 a.m. Denver Carman, Peach
Fork Road, taken to Holzer Medical
Cellter: Middleport unit, 9:28 a.m.
Dora Heaton, Locust St., Pomeroy,
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
10:18 a.m. Bonnie Proctor, Railroad
St., Middleport, to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 11:41 a.m.
Christy Laudetmilt, Beech St., Middleport, to Holzer Medical Center;
11:21 . p.m, Harry Hayman, Dean
Mans Curve, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital: Racine unit,
2:~ p.m. Velma Keller taken to
Medical Plaza, Gallipolis: Syracuse
unit, 10:22 a.m. Denver Cannan
taken-fr001 Holzer Medical Center to
Ills resldeilce; 12:35 p.m. Bessie
Bilmhart, Butternut Ave., taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital :
Rutland unit, 11:24 a.m. Jim Acre
taken from Meigs Mine with back in·
jury to Veterans Memorial Hospitl)l.,
Wednesday morning runs;
Rutland unit,- 3:06 a.m. David
Donahue, Apple Grove taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital :
Racine unit, 6:~ a.m. went to the
Miller residence, patient treated at
the llcene: Pomeroy unit, 9:01 a.m.
to the Lula Schaefer residence for
Sally Canter who was treated at the
scene: Syracuse unit, 9:37a.m. for
Unda M. Curtis, Racine, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

1080

e:oo 11l

m.L,WaL,MD HOW DtD
'boR ~1-1 eo'?

Highway Patrol seeks answer to
high resignation rate of cadets

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Highway Patrol is trying to find
out why so many new recruits. are
dropping out of Its training academy
weeks after classes begin.
It has wm state Controlling Board
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
VETERANS MEMORIAL
approval
of a $25,350 contract with
DISCHARGES SEPT. Z
ADMISSIONS···Dora Heaton, Bilttelle CoiUIJibus Laboratories to
Elmer Acra, Maxine Arnold, Lin- Pomeroy; Bonnie Procter, Midda Ault, Linda Burris, Mrs. Jeary
dleport; George Oiler, Racine; Alva investigate underlying factors f.n..
Caldwell and son, Heidi CArruthers,
Myers, Reedsville; Louella Burson, Duencing the resignation rate of
. William Colmer, Elma Dement, Lori Shade; Jack Ginther, Chester; aeademy cadets.
An average 30 percent of those
: Hill, Stephen Howard, James MeBrandon Roush, Pomeroy; Fannle 1
who
have entered the academy's
: Combas Jr., Jeoffi'ey Penix, Nancy Aleshire, Racine; Eva Bibbee,
last
seven
classes has failed to com· Radabaugh, Jason Stanley, Edgar Pomeroy.
plete
the
course, said Capt. J.R.
· Trivette, Crystal Vaughan, David
DISCHARGEs-Glenad Lawson,
Prather
of
the patrol's planning and
·wallace.
Kathy Robinson.
research office to the board. Of the
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . : . . - - , 65 eadets who began training in the
current class, 42 are left.
"We're losing most of them in the
first few weeks of the academy,"
Prather said.
Departing tadets - who already
haVe met entrance, background and
physical tests before beginning
training - are questioned by patrol
officers before leaving. Some are attracted by higher paying jobs, some
object to the ~eparation from family
during the ·training and. others say

and non-teaching employees whose
contract expired 1\ug. 31.
"We're also meetirig with teachers
in the district, '' said .Mayor Wilbur
D. Mender, a member of the school
board. "I don't see why we should
have any _problems. As far as I •
know, both sides are still talking."
Negotiations were also underway
late Tuesday between representatives of OAPSE and the Liberty
Center school board inHenry County.
However, Superintendent Jack
Slagle said he did not forsee a work
stoppage in the 1,100-pupil school
system.

IEPT.~,

'ii'ftliN't ID1t

~ ~ ~~ ®

•

0

1

rx

IHURSTtY
I I
ITEMRIP~
I I r 0

I

form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

A( I

Prlntanswerhere:

}.

Now arrange the circled letters to

I I J [ I XX)
(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles : DITIO AWOKE DISCUS WHENCE
Answer: Might be drawn wi t ho ut paper or pencilA WINDOW SHADE

I

Yesterday's

BRIDGE
OsWald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Expertise ranges wildly
NORTH
t K 10 6 4

9-3-80

• A Q 10 I

• 10
+Q954
EAST
+J 8 5
.876&gt;2

.J

WEST

+A 73

tKQ862

+AJ87

t7
+toss 2
SOUTH
+Q92

.K93
tAJ9511
+K
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West

North

Pass

zt
Pass

E01t
Pass
Pass

Sooth

3NT

South jumped to t~ree
notrump to end the bidding.
At those three tables, West ·
opened the deuce of di~monds ..
Dummy's 10 held the trick.
One South player led the four
of spades to h1s nine. It forced
the ace. He had no furtber
problems and made an overtrick. Declarers two and three
also led a spade, but rose with
the queen. One West player
put on his ace and led the suit ·
back. East scored his jack and
shifted to a club, but declarer
had nine tricks at this point.
At the third table West
ducked the queen of spades.
South led back a s~ade and
finessed unsuccessfully. East
was in with the jack, shifted to
a club and declarer could only
get eight tricks: One spade,
four hearts, two diamondS and
a club to wind up with a big

loss.

Opening lead:t 2

What happened at the
fourth table? North was ready
to underbid. He started by
passing. Then he r.esponded ·
one heart to his partner's diamond opening and decided to
drop h1m at two diamonds
By Oswald Jacoby
when he rebid the suit.
and Alan Sontag
The unfortunate South proceeded
to bring the two-diaAt three of the four tables · mond contract
home by a
in the semi-finals, North series of fine P.lays, but he still
opened with a fancy two-dia- lost 11 IMP s to the same
mond bid to show a minimum scored at the' other table m his
opening with three four-card match.
suits and a singleton diamond. (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.!

~-~·tf
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACR&lt;l'IS
42 Sign light
1 Hemingway
DOWN .
nickname
l Ode
5 Big donor,
ZMosque deity
in politics (sl.) 3 Agglutinant
11 Evergreen
l Hatchet
genus
5 Instigate
12 Sleep-inducing 8 Sununit
agent
7 Small bird
Yesterday's Altswer
13 "Wnat8 Become
is new?"
fashioiUible ~ Egg-shaped28 Bear witness.
u Courage;
9 Address for Z3 Brief
Z7 Girl's name
pluck
Ted Turner
operatic 30 Scold
15 Gymnast's
10 Early
rendition 31 Popular
need
American !C Ronald
dance
16 Evil spell
home
i\eagan, 33 Weather word
17 Headgear
16 Deck or
at
35 Hammer end
18 Body-builder
farm home
37 Wallaba
zo Without (Ger.) 19 Bilttleship Z5 Famous 38 "Stout'
21 Hill dweller
to remember painter
hearted -" ·
22 Doone's
civic duty
23 Dry
ZSActress
Wynter
26 Irish
islands
Z7 Rested
28 Prong
2t Put in office
3% ~vateeye
33 -Lanka .
34 Luck
36 Hydrocarbon
38 "This Nearly
WaS-"
39 Trample
40 Flange
U Island lm·
mortallzedby
U.S. Marines L-..L......L-...r..._._.....t.-:"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'8 how to work It:
AltYDLIIAAltll
II , LONGFELLOW
One letter oimply otands lor another. In this iample A Ia
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letter!,
apo,trophes, the length and formation of the worda are •!I
hiDls. Each day the code letters are dllferent.
,
CRYPTOQUOTES
SEA VB
NM

NM

AZTS

XENST

F

EKL

SEA VB

UAMQEQVB

ZK L Z•

· QSL

HKTIZVVSL

M R K

VEQMA :

.X Z E A L ·Z

Yesterday's Cryptoquot'e: WHO SO CULTIVATES THE
GOLDEN MEAN AVOIDS THE PoVERTY OF A HOVEL AND
THE ENVY OF A PALACE.-HORACE

love" 187Q
C) 1810 King FNtur" Synelicate. Inc . .

\·

}
!
'

�1

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom eroy, 0 , Wednesday, Sept 3,1980

14-The Oa tly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Wednesday, Sept 3, 1980

Americans spending more on cooking
WASHINGTO N
(AP )
Americans have been s pending
more of their food dollars for home
cooking In the last 18 months as mflation and the recesston limit thetr
disposable mcome, the Agnc ulture
Department says.
And the decline m dining out has
had a mixed Impact on farmers
1 Domestic demand for some commodlties has slowed, USDA analysts
say, while demand has lllCreased for
other crops
Figures compiled by the depart·
ment show that real sales at grocery
stores rose 3.8 percent In the first
half of 1980 over the same pertod a
year earlier, after posting a 0.4 per·
cent Increase ml979
Meanwhile, real sales m eating
and drinking establishments dropped 1.4 percent durmg the first stx
months this year after falling 1 2
percent In 1979, the first decline m
sales for food away from home smce
1975. Americans have been spending
about a third of thetr food budget
dining out
" Factors contributing to these
declines are reductions m real
disposable mcome, a cutback In
nonessential drlvmg caused by
rapidly ruing gasoline pnces and a
higher rate of Increase for pr1ces on
the menu than on the grocery shelf,"
the ahalysts wd
Fnrn June 1979 through this June,
grocery store pnces rose Jess than
5.9 percent while restaurant pnces
jwnped nearly 10 percent
"Inasmuch as there IS a decline m
the purchase of food away from
home, people would purchase more
at the grocery stores," satd Mike
Vandress, a food and marketing
ahalyst
"So tn terms of total conswnption,

the re shouldn't be too much dif.
ference," Vandress satd " But m
terms of spectal commodities there
could be an effect "
Vanous government studies have
shown that the components of homecooked meals and meals eaten out
are Significantly different Vandress
satd meals eaten away from home
a r e wetghted towa rd deep-fned
foods, hamburgers and r olls, " so
farmers who spectali1e m mls and
such things could be hurt" by the
shift
Meals prepared at home mclude
more hqUtd mtlk, frutt a nd
vegetables, he satd.
other analysts say that among the
commodities most affected by
changes m eatmg patterns are mls
and fats, and the reduction m meals
Americans are eating out appears to
have slowed the demand for com·
modities like soybean oil, a maJor
mgredient m many restaurant
meals
" Generally, less eating away from
home does translate mto Jess
demand for fats and otis," one
ahalyst satd
The department's latest report on
domestic demand for soybean oil m
the 1979-80 marketing year shows
that while use was up 2 percent
durmg the ftrst etght months, consumption for the entire year will actually fall below that of 1973-79
It ts only because of expected
record exports that American oil
producers wtll not see the overall
market for that conunodity fall off,
the analysts say The USDA
estimates that soybean oil exports
for 1979-1980 will Jwnp 10 percent
over the preVIous marketing year
WASHINGTON (AP) - Texas
livestock producers, hit hard by a

perststent drought, have recetved
more than half of a ll the Agr tculture
Department's emergency feed aid
program payments m the ftrst 10
months of flscal1980
Department ftgures show that of
$19.5 nullion patd nattonwtde bet·
ween last Oct I and July 31, Texas
recetved about $11 6 mtllion m feed
at d.
The emerg ency feed program
authoriZes aid to farmers when a
natural disaster reduces the amount
of feed usually produced on their far·
ms, forcmg them to make above·
average feed purchases
The
WASHINGTON (AP)
Agnculture
Department has
released from regulabon mne
eastern atrports prevtously deter·
mmed to be mfested wtth Japanese
beetles
Asststant Agnculture Secretary
P R. Snuth satd beetle populations
at the atrports have been controled
and there ts no longer any threat of
the beetles spreading to other areas
vta departing atrplanes
The atrports affected are
McGwre Air Force Base m New Jer·
sey, DoverAir Force Base m
Delaware, Balbmore-Washmgton
Internabonal , Phtladelphla In·
ternational, Douglas Muntctpal and
Greensboro-Htgh Pomt Regwnal m
North Carolina, Quonset State m
Rhode Island, Port Columbus International m Ohio and Greater CtncmnatilnternatiOnal
WASHINGTON (APJ The
Agnculture Department ts asking
for comment on proposed changes m
the grade standards for frozen green
and wax beans
Under the proposal, smgle-letter

grades would apply Curre ntly, dual
titles - US Grade A (US Fancy)
- are used The manner m which
~rades are deternuned would also

change if the proposal IS adopted
Comments on the proposa l,
pubbshed m the Aug 29 Federal
Regtster and available at mos t

10
14 karat, Bu
18 ykarat
' karat,
Wanted-to
gold De ntal gold and gold
ea r pins. 675 3010

from Abscam, the 14-month unde rcover mvestigation that has
y telded mdtctments aga mst SIX
membersofCongressandl3others
The ftrst Abscam trtal, m federal
court m New York Ctty, endedSatur·
day, when jurors convtcted Rep
Michael " Ozzte" Myers, !).Pa , and
three other men of brtbery and consptracy. All four say they wtll appeal
Attorneys on both Sides m the
Jenrette case, and the others to
follow, saw the Myers trial as a

llbrartes, will be accepted until Sept
30, 1981,and should be sent to Annie
J ohnson, room 3807-5, FSQS , USDA ,
Washington, 0 C , 20250.

crucial test of Jury reaction to the
government's undercover tactics,
1ts VIdeotaped evtdence and one of
1ts key w1tnesses, convicted swm·
dler Mel Wemberg, who helped FBI
agents carry out the unde rcover
"sting"
As part of the mvestigation,
codenamed Abscam for Abdul E n·
terprtses, FBI agents posed as
representatives of a fictitious Arab
sheik willing to pay bnbes for help
With inunlgration problems and for
other favors

Common Cause has birthday
WASHINGTON (AP) - Common
Cause, born at the dawn of an era
filled With political scandal, turns 10
this weekend But to the self-styled
cttizens' lobby, which has wrought
sweepmg changes m the Amencan
political system, the last decade has
nothing on the future
To Conunon Cause, at stake IS no
less than the SUfVIval of democratic
government
"We don't have• a government
nght now that can function as a
representative mstitution," says
Fred Wertheimer, semor vtce
prestdent of the 225,IJOO.member
assoctation, which celebrates tis
loth anruversary this weekend wtth
parties, ptcrucs and a senous study
of the problems of today and

tomorrow
The founder of Common Cause,
John Gardner, agrees wtth Wer·
theuner
" Really, the paralysiS over the
energy questton and inflation has
sa1d something very unportant to us
m the last two or three years" Gardner, now senu-retired, satd m an an·
ruversary mtervtew
When Gardner launched h ts
crusade m the fall of 1970, the coun·
try was rocked With protests and
great scandals were near Now
sweepmg election reform laws aiL
on the books, government meetings
have been opened; offtce holders
and hopefuls must make fmanctal
disclosures and there are limits on
political contributions

SHALLOW well p ump and
'I• ton Ford picKup, must be
In good shape a nd Priced
resonably or would trade a
1978 Ford F1esta, g1ve or
take the d ifference 9~9
201 3

11

HelpWanted

Announcements

3

Announcements

3

MASON HOME REPAIR

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice Is hereby g1ven
that on Saturday, September 6th, 1980 at 10 oo

a pubhc sale wtll be

AM

held at lOS Un1on Avenue,
Pomeroy, Oh1o, to sell for
cash the following
collateral to wit
1977 Chevrolet PiCkup
Truck
Serial
No
CKR247F451761
The Farmers Bank and
sav1ngs
Company ,
Pomeror· Ohio, reserves
the righ to bi~ at th1s sale
and to withdraw the above

r
r

I

menttoned vehtcle pnor to

the sale Further, The Far

mers Bank and Savings
Company reserves the

rtght to re1ect any or all
bids submitted

.r

(9) 3, 4, s, 3tc

,•

._ __,C::a rd of Thanks
ZANA &amp; ORVY Gainer,
Hebron, Oh1o, formerly of
Me1gs Co wish to thanK
everyone for the.r good
Wishes &amp; g11ts for their 50th
weddmg ann1versary Aug

14

IN LOVING MEMORY of
El1zabeth R1ebel who
passed away s years ago
Sept 1, 1975
M1ssed bY all Husband,

Elber,

children,
Roger &amp;

Leo
Children

1 PAY highest P"Ces
poss1ble for gold ~nd sliver

heateng and air con
dlttontng furnace clean1n g,
plumbing, repatr, res1den
ttal electr. c w1nng, sales
servtce and tnstallat1on

co1ns

E1leen,

grand

'

992 2364

CANDY SUP PLIES on
sale
Ann s
Cak e
Decorating Supp1 1es, 50716

P1ano Tunmg
Lane
Dan1els 742 2951 Tun1ng
and Repa1r Serv1ce s1nce

Osborn

Curb lnflatiGn.
'Pay Cash for
Classlflads and
Saveff J

iI .f
'

' . :fI

i
I

f

1

l
II
•I

WILL
YOUR
House
Withstand another hard

Rods, reels, t ac kl e boxes
manne suppt1es, lures No
lawaway on sa le 1tems

wmter? How about that
roof and barn, that snow

Ope n 9 to 6 da ll y The
TacKle Box, Sr
12 4,
Syrac use, Oh 991 6193

gets pretty heavy' Let us
do any genera l ma1n
tanence work tor you. pam
hng, gutter repa.r, patch
work, odds and ends so you

M1ddlepor~Oh~

II•

I
I
(
(

I
I
I
I

) Wanted
) For Sale
) Announceme nt
) For Rent

e ANNOUNCEMENTS
1- C•rd ot Ttt..nu
2-1n Mtmortam
)-Annownctment•

2
3

1

1
1

I

$2 00
deta11s

Call 991 6342 for

GUINEA P IG 991 7395
MIN IATURE

5

someone out of town Good

watch dog Also a white
pet mouse 992 3789
FREE pupp1es pari beag le
pa rt collie Call afle r 6 p m
742 2040
KI TTE NS &amp; CATS
5635

7

8

11
12
t3
14
15
t6

sl- Housttlotd GGOd1
n - ca. TV, Radio Equipment
53- Anflques
14--MI I C M.•rchandiU
SS- IUIIGing SupplitJ
$6--Ptts lor Sale

11- Httpw 1 nttd
12- sttuaM wanttcl
1l -lnJuranct
14--luslntsJ Tr•lning

1s-Scltootslnslructltn

16--

These cash rates

mclude discount

'eFARMSUPPLlES

Radio TV
&amp;Cifltptlr

1~Want.d

&amp; LIVESTOCK

To Do

7_ _ ___"!ard Sale ___ _

I

't- weniiCI to luy

21 -

12- TrucklfDr Sa ..

IUslnHs

U - LIYtiiOCit
..- H•y&amp;Gnln
U - Sttd &amp; Ferllllltr

2l -ProfeSJional
Strvicts

I
I
I
I

eTRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE

J1-Autos tor s•t•

li - HOft'ltJ for hl•l
3Z- Moblltof4omtl

1l- Vans &amp;4W D

for Slit

nol.uto Parts
I Acctuorln
n - Auto AtHir

11- F~rmJior

7 4-Mottrc~cl •s

S.lt

J4-lulln•u lu lkllnp
U - LotJ &amp; ot.crt•lt
,._ltt•l E•t•'- W•nftd

3 FAMILY Yard Sale Sat
&amp; Sun 6 &amp; Sun at Charles
(Gus) F1lch's, Portland on
Rt 124 2 m1 S of Port land
par k 10 6
Dmette se t,
dr apes, c oats,
st e r eo
games, lots of ntce cloth ing

of all s1z es Held by ChucK
Evans &amp; Jea n F1tch

THURSDAY onl y, from 9 4
M1lo HutchiSOn residence,

Sep

Want-Ad Advertismg
Deadlines
z 30 J:t M Oally
forMond•Y

sal e Bose s Great Bend
Sepl 4 7, 11 till darK

LARGE
L eon a

1,

PAT IO

s a le ,

St e wart s

on

Mulb e rry
He ight s,
Pome r oy
Fr iday Se p
!embe r S from 9 5
Women's clothtng, large
dresser , and lots of other
th.ngs

d1shes toys, tools, s11ver
stone, pots &amp; pans, Avon,
sm all appliances, Chn st
m as tnmm1ng lots off
mi SC

bust er ,

tots

more

Phone 742 26-48

eSERVICES

12 Noon S•turd-v

SEVERAL FAMILY Ya rd

13- EJ~,c•vatlnt

14- Eitctrlcal
&amp; fl•lrlgtretiGn
u - oenenl Hauling

YARD SALE Thursday,
F"day, Saturday on the

16-M H Rt.,.lr

17- Upholstery

'

15 WOtcfl Of
T day

.,deys
1

icUys

...

Undtr

PUBLIC AUCTION
HOCKINGPORT, OHIO
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1980
TIME: 10:00 AM

,,.

t he
Rod e r ic k
Gr1mm
r esidenct on Broadway
Street 10 Ra e me

Chartt

'"
,,
"'
'"" '"
per word per day
110
110

Elch wo1'41 owtr ttlt minimum 15 warct1 11 4 cents
Acta runnlnt other titan constcullve days will be chartttlat tht 1day

,

In mtmtr¥ C•rd of Tll•nll" and Obiluart 'Ctl'lft per word, 13 oo
minimum C•sh ~ •avanct
MOitlle HOmt Nits anld Y.ud s•les •re•ccepttd only wlttl cath with
ord•r H. cent chilrtt for tds carrying ltiC Nt,lmbtr In Cart of Tilt

sentinel

DIRECTIONS Turn Off Rt 50 &amp; 7 onto Rl 124 al
L1ttle Hock•ng, OhiO or turn on Rt 144 at Coolvlle
Turn off Rt 124 at end of new brtdge 10 Hockingport
Watch for s1gns

DU E TO ILL HEALTH AND RE T IRE MENT , WE
WILL SEL L TH E FO LLOWING AT PUBLIC AU C
TION
1973 Dodge 1 lon dua l wheel truck w1lh 11 ft ul 11ily
bed - 318 v 8 engme and 4 speed tr ansm•ss •on m
very good cond 1f1on , 1970 Ford :J;• ton tru ck w1th 351
V 8 engine , automa11 c transmiSSion and 8 fl utility
bed 300 amp L incoln g as welder'" very goOd cond1
f1 0n 200 amp L 1ncoln gasoline w elder 1n good cond1
300 a mp GE

el e c tr~c

we lder (3 phase )

Weld1 ng equ1 pment of all k10ds sever al feet of
weldmg leads, acet ylene cutting ouff1ts, hoses and
gauges ex tens1on cords all kinds of heavy duty
hand tool s power tools, socket se ts, '12' dnve lm
pact wrench, lf2 drtl , Stde grmder , large v1 se, hvd
1acks, hy d bumper tack on wheels, chains, bmd ers,

come a long, hyd pump, hyd 1aak for wood spille r,
100 It 1 ' a ~r hose, 200 fl 1 a" hose, 6 cyl MavencK
engme w1th 48 000 actual mtles, 302 For:d eng1ne
w1th automat1c transm1ss1on and rad •ator C1n ex
cellent cond1hon), set of 21 ft pontoons, hang 1ng
overhead gas space heater , new Sears cement mtx
er w•th electnc motor (m1 xed -4 bags of mortar),
1965 lnternattonal TO 9 d1esel dozer w1fh ~ a 10 ft

angle bl a de (This dozer 1s 1n excell ent condition )

TWO FAM ILY yard sal e,
September 3 4 All s1zes of
cl othmg
Upper end ot
M ason nex t to the old dr.ve
mn Ra in or sh ine

YARD SALE 123 ParK Dr,
PI Pleasant Tues Sat
Sepl 2 6 8 3 La rge cloth's

8. c h1ldren s c lothes

TH IS Wl t L BE AN EXCEPT IONALLY GOOD
AUCTION OF SHOP AND WELDING l'OOLS AND
EQUIPM E NT
INS P ECTION ON FRIDA Y,
SEPTE MBER 5, F ROM 12 NOON TO 4 PM
TERMS DF SALE

Cash or check w1th pos1t1ve

1denhf1Ci1t10n

SEE YOU SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6
EVEIIYOI!jE WELCOME
Sale located bes1de Ray Rose Farm
E L "Red" Mlller.. Aucfloneer
Mr Hubert Btrt, Owner

NOr RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

MODULAR HOME Must
relocate, 3 bedroom , 2 full
bath s, ga rden t ub 1n
maste r bed room , fully
eq u,pped mode rn kitchen
dinmg, livmg &amp; fam1 1y

tn Bashan, approx•m ately
ten m1les from Pomeroy

ner , gas availabl e, one car
gar age on t hr ee acr es, one

ADDRESSE~S

doors, storm wmdows, 2

pet 1ng througho ul, central
7342

Alum1num

Immediately'

WANTED
Work at

home no
experten c e
necessary excellent pay
Wrtte Amer1can Serv1ce,

8350 ParK Lane, Su1te 127,
Dallas, TX 75131
STEWARDESSES (18 32)
for Dick Drost' s Jetliner
Relocate to Ind1ana Call
(219) 345 2000 Write Drost
Enterpnses , Box 2000,
Roselawn, lnd1ana 46372
FULL TIME person lo be
both the soc1al worker &amp;
activity coord1nator at
Pomeroy Health Care Cen
ter

Degree

perlence

w1th

ex

preferred

room, kttch en, c arpet
throughout, laundry room,
a half basement, natur al
gas furna ce, drilled water
well new l;l lock chlmeny
fo r wood burner , cha1n lmk
fe nce, new sept1c system,

also large bulldmg with
new roof and aluminum
Std.ng goes With If
Ap
pro x1 mate ly 34 acres

$29,()()() 1 614 949 2042

a

1nside t o apprec 1ate Wtll
take a m1n1 home or ptckup
truck as partial payment

843 2971

SA LE

on

Mr Zid1an for appomtment

BASEMENT SA LE Sep
tembe r 4 S at the Coa te s
res1dence, ftve m1les north
of Chester F1ve famt l1es

We want to get r~d of th iS
s tuff Will barga1n
8
Public Sale
_____,&amp; Auc" 't"-'lo,_,n,___~
"BRADFORD, AuCtiOnee r,
Complete Servtc e Phone
949 2-487 or 949 2000 rac me ,

Oh1o, Cntt Bradford

OSSIE 'S AUCTION House
20 N 2nd Street, M1d
dle port, Oh10 We se ll one

piece or ent~re households
New, used, or ant1ques, jn
eluding homes, f arms, 'or
1tqu1dafton sales Get top

dollar

L1st With the man

who has over 25 years 1n
th e new, used and anhque
furn1 ture busmess
We
tak e cons1gnm ents For tn
formatton and pickup ser

v1ce c all 992 6370 or 1n
West Vtrgm1a 773 5471 Sal e
every Frtday n1ght at 7
P m Aucttoneer Howard
Beasley, apprentice auc

tloneer, Osby A Marlin
rno1unk J
9

Wan!edtoB~
u k-__

I RON AND BRASS BED S,
old furniture, desks, gold
nngs , 1ewelry , s ilve r
dollars, sterlmg , etc, wood

Ice boxes,,ars antiques,
etc Complete households
Wr~te M 0 Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992
7760
Gold, Sliver or foreign
coins or a ny gold or sliver
Items Antique turn1ture,
glass or china , Will pay top
dollar, or complele estates
No Item too large or 100
small Check prices before
selling Also do appraising
Os by (Oss1e I Martin 992
6370

m1 1e outs 1de Rac me 949

VINYL SIDING

2706

1-I~:::::::=:;:~::~:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::~ -----~----NEW 3 bedroom home for
sal e
Bu 1lt tn kitch en ,
d1n1ng
room ,
l a rg e
r ecreat1on room , f.replac e,
lots of storage, 2lh baths,

garage, 1 acre lot 992 3454

31 - -Homes tor5aie------ - - 7 ROOM HOU SE for sa le

32

By owner Good 1oca t1 on '"

1975 Weste rn Ma nst on 14 x

M1dd le porl Low $40 s 991
3341
BEAUTI F UL 3 bedroom
ranch bnck home m Baum

Addit1on W1lh ne w gara ge
BARTEL S, Loan

Representat1ve, 1100 East

Ma1n St,

Pomeroy, Oh

Mortgage

money

ava1lable All types home
t 1nanc 1n g,
new,
ol d,
r efmanCi ng, and 2nd mar

&amp; gent e door Gas heat,
newly mstall ed central a1r
cond1t1onmg, fam11 y r oom
&amp; stone fir epl ace
ap
pl tances built 10 new ly 1n
stFtlled electn c brea ker
s vst e m ,
a tt rac t1 ve l y
decor a te d base m ent, 2
bath s, full y carpet ed w1th
most attract1ve dr apes

Mobtle Homes

for Sale

---------

70 three bedroom
Cameron

1971

x 64 two

14

bedroom 1971 L1berly, 14 x
65 two bed room
1968
Atlan tiC,
12 x 60 two
1968 Ne w
b edroom

REALTY

Cassady Realty
Belpre, Oh.

my home Any 11 me Have

ChiilfiH M

TUPPERS PLAINS -

WILL DO House c lean1ng
742 2431

make

New elegant bnck to

Insurance

LARGE UPRIGHT com
pressor, 220 volts up to 180
PSI, $375 00 King cast ~ron
wood burning cook or heat
never

proud

H•~e5

Realtor

Neacil E C•rsey Br Mgr
Ph 992 24U or H'2 2710

bedrooms, formal dtn
.ng , k1tchen has aiJ
built tns, tam
rm
w / ftrepla ce
2
garage

used

tor

$100 00 991 2849
Real Estate - General

acre~

FOR SALE

FIVE YEAR OLD
81-LEVEL HOME
bedrooms, 22f.J
baths, large fam1ly
room with l1rtplace, lui·
ly cupeted . Large
sundeck and paho.

Three

Within walk1ng d1stance

of schools

sets on 11h acre $21,500

BUILDING SITES on
Rt

DILLON

7 below

Eastern
H1gh School, l'h to 2'12
acreeach $7,500

Phone Vtrgm1a Hayin;m
'S5·4197

992-7132

REAL ESTATE
3 BDRM HOME 1o1
Syracuse Paneled and
c arpeted throughout.
alumtnum Sldtng, 2 n1ce
porches, on a level lot

2 BEDROOM FRAME
close to Middleport
schools, park &amp; shopp
1ng $12,500 oo
2 STORY
FRAME
DUPLEX - 2 bedroom
apt

down, 1 bedroom

apt up Re nt will pay
for home
2 BEDROOM HOME 2 acres of land, 2 miles
from Middleport Also
some fru1t trees

4 BEDROOM frame on
Rt 7 tn Pomeroy Large
modern eat 1n kttchen

7 ROOMS and BATH

(a_,. S. Hobltetter Jr.

601 E.
MAIN
POMEROY, O

at:!*tr
A, .tca .. A

'192·1259
NEW LISTING - Fa rm
lor country 11vlng• Ap
prox 23 A of land and a
home w1th 7 rooms 5
bedrooms, full base
ment ,

large

storage

building $«,500 00
NEW LISTING
HOUSE PINCHING?
Th 1s 4 bedroom home
will give you space and
comfort Has a large
famly room plus ul 1llty
Other bulld1ngs for ex

tra storage $26,900 oo
NEW LISTING
WHERE YOU'LL Ll\IE
TOMORROW!
A

beauf1ful budd.ng s1te

w1th approx 1 acre land
Wllh utilities available
Located on the old
Chesler Golf Course
$6,000 00
SEE MOM'S EYES
SHINE
A very
unusual

k1tchen

w1th

bar This 6 room home
has 2 baths and 1S
located on approx 1
acre level land Storage
buildings $36,900 oo
ADD SOME PAINT
AND LOVE Alld
watch your 1nvestment

grow A 7 room house on
East MaiO Street 3
bedrooms a nd fam1ly
room Pari basemen!
$26,500 00
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
- 3 bedroom home with
new furnace, front and

rear porches on approx
1/• acre lot $14,500 00
BUSINESS
M1d
dl~port lunchroom - All
equipment and licenses,
and Inventory Quick
sale pnce $11 ,000 00
OFFICE
HOURSMONDAY
THRU
SATUADAY , 9·5
ALSO MONDAY AND
FR 1DAY EVENINGS
UNTIL&amp; P.M

REALToR-

Henry I! Cleland, Jr
9f2-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell '49· 2660

R0111r 1 Ott!ltCrlll!lllr
9fH692
OFFICE PHONE

9f2-2259

&amp;_tl

~ ~~Q~~~Omer
2

A\.HES

-

OR 3 BEDROOM
frame house on Broad

Lovely 2 story home, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 11v

way St In Middleport
Close to pool, parK &amp;

through

m~

mg room with stone see

fireplace

to

birch library, formal
dmmg room, large

modern k1tchen. utilitY
room &amp; cellar Patio
w1th

tnvihng

sw1mm1ng

1A' x28 '

pool

24

stores

Newlv pa1nted

de &amp; out
FAYE MANLEY

CALl 992-2598
DAY OR NIGHT

Rutland,
room

large

w1th

living

fireplace

dlnmg room, K1tchen
utility and double car
garage
ASKing
$35,000 00
POMEROY - Lovely 2
story home w1th
beautiful woodwork on

Mulberry Ave , llvmg
room
with
n1ce
f.replace, dm lng room,

familY
room ,
3
bedrooms, l'h baths
n1ce modern Kitchen
and garage Call for
appl
ACREAGE - 5 acres on
Hysell
Run
Rd ,
bu1ld1ng s1te &amp; some
timber, $7,000 00
HYSELL RUN RD Approx 8 acres W1lh 2
bedroom home Askmg
$2l ,500 00
CONOOR ST
3
bedroom home,
room, kitchen,

742 3030 or 742 2728

All

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • ex·
tens1ve remodeling
• E lectrica 1work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992-7583
8 7 1 mo

Complete Ory Cleaning
and Laundry
ecarpet
•Drapenes
• Furn1ture

c" We' re

1 tn

PARK'
FINANCIAL

All types of roof work,
new or repa.r gutters

and downspouts, gutter

REAL ESTATE -LOA.ISI
F e deral Housmg
VPteran s
Admtmstratwn
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy
OffiCe 992·7544
Home 992·6191

cleanmg and pa1nhng.

All work guaranteed.

----------

35_ _ Lots &amp; Acreage

Free Estimates
Reasonable Pr~ces
Call Howard

home Easy t erm s, c lose to

949·2862
949·2160

town 992 5786 or 991 2529

BELL

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

House Painting

THE POOL PEOPLE

INSIDE &amp;OUT

31111 NOble Sum1t Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
992-5724

Call After 5 P.M.

843-2803

PTIC TANKS (~alha
nty
Cert1fled)
beds, water

short walk from th e
stores 1 A good 2 stor y
hom e w1t h 4 bedroom s, 2
baths, formal dmmg
r oom , m odern k 1tc hen
bu1lt 1n rang e, hot wa ter
heat, full ba sement and
2 n1 ce por ches

PRIVATE - 3 bedroom
bnck. v eneer , bath, niCe
c lo se t s, car p et1ng ,
equ1pped m odern k. 1t
chen, full basem ent w1th
bar fa m 1ly room ut1 11 ty
roo m and 2nd b ath on
large tot Last house on
the end of the road m
Pomeroy
Go, n g f o r

$47 ,500
NEW LISTING

-

2

bed r oo m s bath, new
natural gas fo rced a tr
furn ace
c1t y wate r
large basem ent 2 par
ches and ex tra lot In
Syracuse close to pool
INCOME - S rentals
w 1th 1ncome of $550 00

pe r m onlh Space for 2
more Good for wnte off
and add1t1 onal 1ncom e
Qu•ck sale pn ced at on

ly $35,000

Housing
Headquarters

U N F URN IS HED
be droom house 992 7395

2

HOUSE

53

Two

bedroom w1th stove &amp;
r efr ioerator fu rn1shed 992

3090
Mobtle Homes

m obi l e

co1n coll ectiOns Call 614
767 3167 or 551 3411

hom e

from

ap

11ve

Pomeroy

m11es

or

54

TWO BE DROOM m obile

WINTER
POTATOES
Charles R Hams 843 1693

home, r ea l nice Brown 's
Trader Park 992 3324

TWO BEDROOM mObile
Ra c 1ne

Call

992 5858
TR AIL E R one adu lt only
992 3181

sz•

ment, 1n town locatton, many extra s Pn ced to sell

$39,000

OVER 100 ACRES - All m 1nera l n ghls go w1th pro
perty Water lmes close, t1 mber r ea dy to cut, dnll ed
gas well Call fo r mor e tnf o

TWO BE DROOM m0b1 le
home f or r ent

Racl ne

10

On b1g qu1el lot Depos1l
requ ired 367 7811
Apartment
tor Rent

44

r:;-?,. _

PoMEROY •

..

BUilding SupplieS

well1 nsulated A ll fh1s and much more, $57,500

RENTER S ass 1stance for

NEW LISTING - Sma ll 2 BR home needs worK on
ly$8 ()()()

Manor a pts Call992 7787

Summ1t Rd , Middleport,
OH 992 5724

TO SELL? GIVE US ACALL! !
NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949·2591 Leave Message
or 949·1654

m

V1llage

APART
FU RNI SHED
ME NT 4 rooms &amp; bath
Adults on ly, no pels 992
3874
APT

Mason 2 bedroom ,

furn 1shed a .r cond ltt omng,

ut i1111 es pa 1d 304 882 3356
46

REAL ESTATE

Spacefor Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
ParK, Route 33, North 01
Pome roy Large lots Call
992 7479

Merebandlse

FENDER STRATOCAST

1970 VOLKSWAGON cam
per, pop top, four speed,

tact Gary F1fe 992 2581

May st1cker, some new
parts, 93,000 mtles tor

E R Peavy electnc gu1tars,
ltke new Great buy Con

$1100 00
New heater fan
K1t
for
type
two
volkswagen $25 00 Phone
173 5008
61

Farm Equ1pment

FARMALL

"A "

New

motor ,
new
hydrauliC
E xc

ttr e s ,
cond
Mower, cult1vators &amp; plow

61
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD Poles max
d1a meler 10 on largest
e nd $11 p er lon Bundled
slab SlOper ton Delive red
to OhiO Pallet Co , Rt 2,
Pomeroy 99 2 2689

55

Bumgardner Sales, Noble

56

Pels for Sa ,l_,e_ _

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220
HILLC REST KENNEL S
Board1ng, all breeds Clea n
mdoor outdoor faC1Itt1es
Al so
AKC
re g1stered

Dobe rm ans 61 4 ~46 7795
HOOF HO LLOW Hor ses
a nd pon1es and rtdtng
l ess on s

Everythtng

1mag mable In horse equip
m e n! Blan Kets , be lts,
boots, etc E nglis h a nd
Weste r n
Ru th Ree ves
(614) 698 3290

OLD COIN S pocket wal
c hes, class r~ngs, wedd1ng
bands , d1amonds Gold or
s1lver Call J A Wamsley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Com Shop, Athens, OH 592
6462
GOLD AND
SILVER
COIN S OF TH E WORLD
RING S
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
R EC ORD
HIGH ,
HIGHE ST UP TO DATE
P R ICE S CONTACT ED
BURK E TT
BARBER
SHO P , M IDDLEPORT,
OH 10 OR CALL992 3476

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

pertone, double oven, lik e

new $325 843 1031
REFR IGE RATOR
good $25 992 7395
Ml DDL.E PORT - Energy eff iC ient w1th tnsu lated
alu m mum stdlno Very comfortable three bed r oom

2 bath home, full basement $40,000 00

CALL BILL CHILDS 992·2342
RODNEY OOWNINGJ._BROKER

Runs

TWIN SIZE ma ple bed w1 lh
&amp;

mgs $100 00

bo x

Antique

te SIX drawer dr esser
m•rror $80 00 Tw.n

te

M e1 g s

County

Huma ne Soc1ety Wormed
Two ger
shots 992 6260
man shepherd elK hounds
male , four lovely puppies,

USE D 30 elec lr~ c range
Good cond $75 992 591 9
m at t ress

PUT A cold nose 1n your
fu t ure

let bedspread

pretty brown s hepherd
type dog, severa l lovely
cats and k1ttens

PUT A cold nose In your
future I Shots,

worm ed

Me 1gs County Humane
Soc1ely 992 6260 Hours 12
7 da1 ly Open on Tuesdays
•or emergen c 1es only
span1el
type
Coc ke r

tem er type,

th re~

beagle

71

17 foot Sears f1berglass
canoe like new $225 oo 773
5008
1971 PROWLER camper
trailer, e1ghteen foot long

~

51
_!IEuse_!lo_I_~G~odj' ~­
EL ECTRIC RAN GE Cop

Camp1ng
Equ1pment

77

MUSICal
Instruments

E. Main St 1'9meroy, o .'

3/ 8 mch rebar- 17c per foot
by 20 ft sect1on only D

Senior Ctt1zens

S1

742·2211

--

949 2037

3 AND 4 RM turn1 shed ap
Is Phone 992 5434

BEAUTIFUL - Well Ke pi home has 3 BR s, could
be more, famtly r oom &amp; den, l'h bath, 2 car g arage,

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Main St.

~ LAtiDMARK

'

Sq. Yd .

Nice Selection of Carpet Remnants and
Linoleum Remnants at Big Discounts.

M1sc Merchan1se

lftD APPLIANCES
f Good Used Fr~gldolr
Refr~geratqr
$150
1 Good Used Whirlpool ,
Refr~t!'lrator
$1 Z5
1 Good Used Sears Co~
dspot combination
Refngerator
$175
1 Good USed Gibson,
Coppertone Combma·
lion
Refrlgerafor
I Good Used UIOICO
Large
Ch.osl Free•er
SZOO

•9"

Cash &amp; carry

SEPTEMBER SALE
GIGANTIC SAVINGS ON ALL CARPET
Any regular carpet tobs Installed w1th free pad

Mid

d leport 992 5858

home nea r

stalationl

pay ca sh or cert1fted check
for ant1ques and collec
ttbles or enttre estates

2253

A 1 cond1l10n, 3 BR , full ba se

cprtce"boes Not
Include In

Nothing too la rge Also
guns pocket watches and

prox1m a tely

Sq Yd
Rea. S5 9

Anhques

__ -- ~r___R e~'---- ,
T HREE
BED R 0 0 M

CARPET
W/Pad
Installed

'3"

ATTENTION
(IM
PORTANT TO YOU) Woll

FURNI SHED two bedroom

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

"Dr1ve A LtHle Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED

E LEC TRIC RANGE Good
worK ing cond 992 7395

42

CARPET SHOP

bu1ld1ngs
and

HOUSE NEAR Rac 1ne 5
rooms &amp; ba th 992 5858
FOR re nt

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

lme, electnc

2 BEDROOM Furnished
house 992 5434 or 992 5914

large living room, large

formal dining room, ex
Ira n1ce family room &amp;
kitchen combined, l'h
baths
Sells
lor
$26,500 OOGROCERY
BUSINESS - St. Route
124, Rutland, Bldg In
eludes equipment and
rental
apartment
$21 ,200 00
COUNTRY COMFORT
2'1• acres with 3
bedroom
Hollypark
mob1le home with large
family room, double car
garage Has extra sep
tic tank and water hook
up N1ce 32' x12' barn
PRICE REDUCED $47,500 00
I
\Ieima Nlclnsky, Assoc.
Phone 742·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742 3171

8 1 ~ 1 mo pd

ROOFING

only $1 2,000
RESTFUL - And !USi a

hv1no
some

furniture Would maKe
good rental property
Asklng$13,500 00
POMEROY - N1ce 3
bedroom brick home,

992 •2478

H. L WHITESEL

tr ail er, no pets depos11
requ 1r ed no ch1ldren 949

NEW LISTING -

ex-raence.

'
~work guaranteed
Free Estimate
8 U 1 mo

Mobile Home Sales

PI Pleasanl W VA
675 4424

bedroom home on cor
ner lot nea r shopp1ng
Has bath, natural gas,
c1ty wa ter, f ull base
ment and ex tra lot f or

woods All minerals go
Call for your appt
NEW LISTING 3
home ,

21 wears

bolh fa r iUSI $11,000
BARGAIN - Handy 2

acres, halt clear ed, r est

bedroom

Gerald Clark
797 4..7

1 1ed equipment
rea

HMMMM 5 room ,
bath, nat ural gas, flu e
tor woodburner , c1ty
water , can be used as a
hom e or a bus• ness or

Shade

797 2432 Athens
Tom Hosk1nsor

•Alloump Trucks

Phone

Real Estate - General

w.

el Dozers

1-(614) ·992·3325

for

CreeK running through
Includes mineral r~ghts
$14,000
FORKED RUN LAKE
AREA - Sm ret"e
menl home 10 yrs old
block w1th c ity water,

'49 2160 Pomeroy

VIRGILB SR n.a. 1 0~
216 E Second Street

thl$ farm -th several
poss1ble sections

$39,500
(2) 5 acre bU1Id1ng s1te
for $5 000
(3 1 75 acres, f~nc ed, all
useable for l]ay or plan
ling lg barn and 2
ponds for $525 pr acre
60 ACRES for hunlmg
and f1Sh1ng Plenty of

excavator hoe

••

yd

Serv1ce &amp;

SUITABLE LOT for mob1le

General

and repa i r , 1u11ers ,
downspouts, commer·
cull &amp; res•dent• al

EAFORDm

84 ACRE FARM Portland, Oh10 Co Rd
31 Owner Wi lling to spl1l

garage on 4

Real Estate

8 18 1 mo pd

Housing
Headquarters

2

( 11 7 yr old house and

Miscellaneous

stove

you

992 5792 or 991 2606

POMEROY, O.

references 742 3116

13

dlepor t New roof, new ex
t enor &amp; tnfertor pamt new
carpetmg 8. drape rt es, tun
basement, good locati on

HAYES

12
Situahons Wanted
WILL DO Babys1tt10g 1n

Mid

(614) 843· 3322

12 x 50, 2 bedroom
B&amp; S

VER Y NICE home

In

ROOFING
REMODELING
ServiDg your area
for 25 years. Call
now for large sav·
mgs.
For
Free
Estimate Call
Eugene Long

M oon, 12 x 60 w1th expando
two bedroom , 19'67 Buddy,

WANTED lady or g"l to
live In to help w1th
houseworK 992 2686

SALE

2016

electrt c

mon t 14x 70 w1th exp ando,
centra l a1r, 3 bedrooms Ph
ba th s M ov1ng out of sta te

56

per boil er
many more
1tem s Ra1n ca nce ls 992

MII&lt;,.,.ND,.._, JU DdE• ., .,

carpet ed,

All types of roofing, new

Expenenced Operators
a vailable tor local wo rk
el rubber ttr e backhoes

Rl 3, Box 54
Rac•ne, Oh.
Ph 614 843 . 2591
6 15 lfc

1980 COLON ADE By Fa 1r

la undr y mat Seple mbe r 4

YARD SALE Septembe r 4
5 •n Burlingham wa tch f or
s 1gns Clothes, shoes, cop

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Cai198S 3814 or 992 257 1

Th"d

left at lhe railroad trac Ks
at Chesh1 re on Route 7

Si zes from 4x6 to 12x40

992 6606, 9 5 Tues Thurs

Street in Ra cme nex t to the

YARD

I~•E•~D HIM H IS

tgages Phone 992 7000 or
992 5732

Call

A venue, Middleport, Oh10

YARD

tull y

ED

2 BEDROOMS 1112 baths,
garden, fru1t trees Must be

Utility Buildings

FOUR YEAR old seven
room house w1th 1 '12 ba ths,

S1d 1n g, storm

baths, livmg room, d1n1ng

SMALL

acres $52 000 Ca ll R T
Stewa rt 742 3006

a ~r &amp; heat 992

....a·
C3tat:lng

Sizes
"From 30.:30"

apar tment over top Cellar
pat1 0, other bull d1ngs 17

OHIO v···
rv
nu£l
ROOFING

Ex

Farm Buildings

l ront porc h, garage w1lh

ca r

Pullns

ALL STEEL

ba t h
k 1tch en
utll •t y ,
dm1ng, 11vmg room, &amp; 2
other smal l rooms Bu1 lt 1n

baseboa rd heat, wood bur

YARD SALE Friday &amp;
Saturday at 830 South 3rd

comp lete ro ll bar cab and heavy duty winch with on

Streets 1n Rutland Phone
742 2233
Ma t e rn1ty
cloth ing K1ds clothmg, lots
F IV E FAMILY extra large
ya rd sale Seplembe r 4 S at

Cuh

Public Sale

~::::::::::::::::;;;&amp;;A~u~c;t;'o:n;;;::;::;:::::::;;i
I

lion

Don t m1ss th1 s whale of
sale

good clean cl othes of all
SIZes good school c lothes
teans of all s1zes, n 1ce wm
BUFFALO BILL
ter coa t s, n ick nack s
Buffalo Btll Cody died In 1917 so
m ethmg tor everyone
Septe mbe r 4 S 6 7 at Ma r y
Layne F1r~t hou se on the

ly 2 950 hours, large tool box w1th 10 drawers and top

}

Rates and Other lnformat1on

pong

Come

get your school clothes

LARGE

lock shelf, 2 Wtsconsin a.r cooled eng.nes (need
repair ) complete se t of bol t d• es electn c motors,
generatmg plant w1th Wlsconsm engtne &lt;needs t1m
ed) 1o-1s fl 1oonls of 2 aluinmum pipe, several
1omts of g alvanized P•Pe roll of faiYantze, 1-4 sheet s
of new enameled tin, large stack of -4 ft and 7 ft
mel a I bu1ld lng panels, 10inl 10" pipe 5 fl long, small
boom and wmch for truck mount, lf2 drum hyd 011
2- 3 ft by 6ft steel doors Many 1tems not listed

more

30

2d•y•

In the ftrst edttton of the
"Encylopedta Bntanmca"
- pubbshed betwee n 1768
and 1771 - an art1cle on the
curmg of diseases m horses
ran for 39 pages, whtle t11e
entry for " woma n" stated
s tmply " t he fem a le of

Locust

corner of College

SIZE S OF CLOTHING
Three fam1ly , we re loaded

THE LONG AND SHORT

1-----------;~--~~~:-:-:-------------..J

Foll ow the

PORCH
SALE , We d
nesday Thursday, Friday,
on North Main In Rutland
Clothmg, home lOgge r ,

11-Hom•lmprovemtnts
12- PtumDing 1 E)lcnatlng

P~ng

tab le, good clothes gu1tar ,
ten speed b1cycle, m1sc

s•gns to great bargam s

dust

J7- Reelton

29

!~-;.---~--- ......--~;.....;. .. _________ _

SALE

J OHNSON

down w 1th good tes

_____

YardSa ~
le

8

YARD SALE 810 S Second
51 , M1ddl eporl Se pt 1 6
L1nens, c loth1ng beddmg,

•1- F e rm Equlpmtnl

eFlNANClAL
Opportunity
22-Money lo L~H~n

---- ~ ,

Mall This Coupon with Rem•ttance
The Da11y Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

992

much more

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

35-. _ _ _ _ __

992

DO RDTHY

res•dence Antique bottles,
d1shes, bedspreads cur
ta1ns, drapes, toys
ALL

ch for s1gns

Fe w L1ma Rd

41 - Houaes lor Rent

• 41--c Equipment lor Rent

9-Wanled to Buy

- -----j '

6

to

th Street 1n Ra c1ne at the

new, vanous art1cles to
numerous to ment1on Wat

new pa1nt1ng supp11es, good

47-W•nttcllo Rtnt

1-,.wbllc hi•
I Auction

18
19
20

col li e,

YARD
SAL E
WE D
NES DAY
THUR SDAY
FRIDAY from 9 4 at Four'

across from the Both of
You Beau ty Sa lon Lots of
very good c1oth1ng, some

7

glass doors to pat1o, gas

Paneling &amp;

lil~===:::=:;:::=;:::::~r;~::~::=~=~~~T;~~=::===:::::~

patiO, $52
olher
Idmgs
17
acres
000bUICa
ll R T
5
742 3006
1':':'_.,_. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
TWO ST ORY, 3 bedroom,

heat, central a c , ex1ra
la rge double ga rage 985
3543

rooms

Business Services

TWO ST ORY, 3 bedroom,
ba th , kit che n, ut111t y,
d1n1 ng hv 1ng room, &amp; 2
other small room s Bu11 t tn
fr onttment
porc h,
garage
w 1th
apar
over
top Cell
ar

large hvmg room, d 1n1ng
room , panel ed fa mil y
room, w ith stone ftreplace,
pt cture w1ndow &amp; slid1ng

ptnes for cabm

butld1ng on lef t above the
F " e De pt &amp; d " ectl y

992 6342

school c lothmg, toys and

4J-FRooms
4...,._51NCttor Rent

7- YardSal•

- - --'11

II 9
I, II 10 ·----~~--~
-

I
•I

cl asses beg•nnmg soon at
the c arou sel Confect•onary
m Middleport
Beg1nner
mter med1ate , advanc es
also
mtnt
c las s
1n
decorat1ng novelty ca kes
Call or come 1n for det a 11 s
NEW 111 Rent a pan ser
v ice Rent the novelty c ake
pan of you r ch01ce for only

Cloth1ng cam eras d• shes
draper y tor glass slldtng
door, grate &amp; m ise

AUTUMN SALE Sept 4 &amp;
s frorn 9 4 Loca led on St
Rt 124 1n Syrac use, 4th

DECORAT I NG

eRENTALS
tor Rent
44- Ap•rtment for R tnt

4- Givt•w•y

21 - -- - - I I
22 - - c : - - -- , I'
13 - - - -li
2A
25
26 ----~...J ''
27
28

if ~

1

CAKE

GARAGE SALE 541 H1gh
Sf
Mlddleporl, COllin S
r es1dence Sept 4 5, 6 9 -4

TWO Fam1ly Ya rd Sale
HutchiSOn Sub diVI SIOn
Thurs &amp; Fr~

Barbara s School of Dance
Syr ac use 992 3281

Off Route 7 bypass on ol d
route 143 south of J acK s

42- Moblle Homes

s-H•ppy ol.ds
t-LGII and Found

17

fa ll

Caf e Rea sonable pr JCes on

Addres-.,1·- - - - - - - - 1

I

II
,I

now for

tember 1 5 from 9 5 located

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

phone number II used
You'll get better results
If you descnbe fully,
give price The Sent inel
reserves the nght to
clasSify, edit or re1ect
any ad Your ad will be
put In the proper
classification If you 11
I IChecK the proper box
IL~Iow

·II

UP

cl asses of tap and 1azz

KITTEN S &amp; CATS
5635

or Wr1te Datly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero"f, 0., 45769

counts as a word Count
name and address or

• !I

SIGN

Yard Sa le

7

0 130 "

PHONE 992-2156

Pnnt one word In each
space below Each In
lllal or group of ligures

,1,

(6141 837· 8182

WANT AD INFORMimON

Phoae~------------~~.

I

Announcement s

GARAGE

,I

t
I
I

or Columbus

upon request

I

,I

SUPERMA K"'•
8300 Sqoa Ftl
For Sale or Lease
Call Middleport '9261'4

and we II come and g1ve
you a free est1mate
References are pr ov1d ed

II

II

J

4 _ _ _G1ve ~~.t.__ _ _

not have to worry Call992
3941 ,992 3519, or 992 5126

Write pour own ad and order by ma11 w1lh this
coupo~, Cancel your od by phone when you get
results Money nol refundable

'I
I
I
I

Reedsville,

SAL E 20% off a ll f1shm g
tacKle Aug 25 to Sept 7

warm f 1r e th 1s wln1er and

'

Rd

Oh 667 6485

can s1t bacK 1n front 01 that

~------------~~~~-~~~-~--·-·-·-··-···--~--·~

nngs, 1eWelry, etc

contact Ed BurKett Barber
Shop, M1ddl eporl

1965 If no answer phone
992 2082

In Memonam

2

Announcem ents
-----------

lot, 3 bedrooms. 2'h baths,

S,l l fe

NI CE 3 or 4 bedroom home

17

- -Public
- Nohce

1

Homes tor

GET VALUABL E tra lmng
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great g1fls a s a Sen
tlnel route carrier Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility li st at 992
2156 or 992 1157

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SU RANCE been can
celled•
Lost
your
operators hcense? Phone
992 2143

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
----:~=--=·:--­

rO~U~R~B~O~A~R~D~I~N~G~H~O~U~S~E~!~~w~l;th~M a~IO~rlH~o~o~p~le~

Home on large landscaped

Second Ahscam trial opens
WASHINGTON (AP) - Wtth one
convtction on the books, the govern·
ment IS la unching mto the second
Abscam trtal as Jury selection
begtns m the case of Rep John
J enrette
The three-term South Carolina
Democrat and his frtend and cod efendant , busmes sman J ohn
Stowe, mstst they are mnocent of the
federal charges Jenrette was ID·
dieted on one count of consptra cy
and two counts of brtbery; Stowe
was charged wtth conspira cy a nd
wtth atding and abetting bnbery.
Assistant U.S Attorney John
Kotelly and defense attomeys were
preparmg to question about 100
prospecttve Jurors U S Dtstnct
Judge John Garrett Penn, expecting
to seat a jury today, scheduled the
prosecution case to begm Thursday
For observers, the trtal pronuses
sharp contrasts between Kotelly,
constdered cool and low-keyed In the
courtroom, and Jenrette's attorney,
Kenneth M Robtnson, a flamboyant
South Carohna nattve whose
emotion-packed arguments have led
I
to acqwttals m a strmg of tough
cases
For J enrette, the trtal IS a ftght
"for my polittcal life a nd a great
part of my other life " The 44-year·
old congressman ts seeking r eelection after a narrow vtctory m the
Democratic prunary nm-off vote m
June
The tr1al IS the second stenurung

31
Homes for Sa le
P LEAS ANT COUN TRY
Llv 1ng Ba um Add 1t 1on

31

Autos for Sale

1973 VW SUP E R Beetle
Pr~ ce $1,300 Call 614 949
2s•o afte r s p m

w1th new 8000 BTu a" con
d1f1oner Call992 5853

serw lees
81

Home
Improvements

S &amp; G Carpel Clean1ng
Steam
c leaned
Free
esttmate

Reasonable

rates Scotchguard
6309 or 742 2211

992

83
Excavating
J X F BACKHOE SER
VICE lisce nsed and bon
ded , sept ic tanK 1n
stallatlon, water and gas
lines E )(cavat1ng work and

trans1t layout 992 7201
EXCAVA T ING Wanted
Dozer worK or t1mber to
cut 985 3567 or 991 3208
84

Electncal
&amp; Refngerat1on

SEWING
MACHINE
Repa irs . service , all
makes
99 2 1284
The
Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy
Author~ zed
Smger Sales
and Servtce
SCISSOrS

E LWOOD
REPAIR

We sharpen

BOWERS
Sweepers,

1962 FORD FALCON
FUTURA
converl1bl e
Powe r lop, partly restored
Collectors Item Make an
offe r 949 201 3

appliances Lawn mower
Next to Stale H1ghway ,

Trucks for Sale
---------1979 FORD F2SO 29,000
moles $300 &amp; taKe over
payments 843 2032

makes

71

types, hound dog, several
cats, k1ttens. w 1th long or 1 1965 FORD pi ckup $250 00
short ha1r
992 7645

toasters, .rons, all small
Garage on Route 7, 985

3825
APPLIANCE serVICe, all
washers,

ranges,
washers,dlsposals,

dryers,

dish
water

tanks Call Ken Young 985
3561 before 9a m or after 6
pm

�1

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom eroy, 0 , Wednesday, Sept 3,1980

14-The Oa tly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Wednesday, Sept 3, 1980

Americans spending more on cooking
WASHINGTO N
(AP )
Americans have been s pending
more of their food dollars for home
cooking In the last 18 months as mflation and the recesston limit thetr
disposable mcome, the Agnc ulture
Department says.
And the decline m dining out has
had a mixed Impact on farmers
1 Domestic demand for some commodlties has slowed, USDA analysts
say, while demand has lllCreased for
other crops
Figures compiled by the depart·
ment show that real sales at grocery
stores rose 3.8 percent In the first
half of 1980 over the same pertod a
year earlier, after posting a 0.4 per·
cent Increase ml979
Meanwhile, real sales m eating
and drinking establishments dropped 1.4 percent durmg the first stx
months this year after falling 1 2
percent In 1979, the first decline m
sales for food away from home smce
1975. Americans have been spending
about a third of thetr food budget
dining out
" Factors contributing to these
declines are reductions m real
disposable mcome, a cutback In
nonessential drlvmg caused by
rapidly ruing gasoline pnces and a
higher rate of Increase for pr1ces on
the menu than on the grocery shelf,"
the ahalysts wd
Fnrn June 1979 through this June,
grocery store pnces rose Jess than
5.9 percent while restaurant pnces
jwnped nearly 10 percent
"Inasmuch as there IS a decline m
the purchase of food away from
home, people would purchase more
at the grocery stores," satd Mike
Vandress, a food and marketing
ahalyst
"So tn terms of total conswnption,

the re shouldn't be too much dif.
ference," Vandress satd " But m
terms of spectal commodities there
could be an effect "
Vanous government studies have
shown that the components of homecooked meals and meals eaten out
are Significantly different Vandress
satd meals eaten away from home
a r e wetghted towa rd deep-fned
foods, hamburgers and r olls, " so
farmers who spectali1e m mls and
such things could be hurt" by the
shift
Meals prepared at home mclude
more hqUtd mtlk, frutt a nd
vegetables, he satd.
other analysts say that among the
commodities most affected by
changes m eatmg patterns are mls
and fats, and the reduction m meals
Americans are eating out appears to
have slowed the demand for com·
modities like soybean oil, a maJor
mgredient m many restaurant
meals
" Generally, less eating away from
home does translate mto Jess
demand for fats and otis," one
ahalyst satd
The department's latest report on
domestic demand for soybean oil m
the 1979-80 marketing year shows
that while use was up 2 percent
durmg the ftrst etght months, consumption for the entire year will actually fall below that of 1973-79
It ts only because of expected
record exports that American oil
producers wtll not see the overall
market for that conunodity fall off,
the analysts say The USDA
estimates that soybean oil exports
for 1979-1980 will Jwnp 10 percent
over the preVIous marketing year
WASHINGTON (AP) - Texas
livestock producers, hit hard by a

perststent drought, have recetved
more than half of a ll the Agr tculture
Department's emergency feed aid
program payments m the ftrst 10
months of flscal1980
Department ftgures show that of
$19.5 nullion patd nattonwtde bet·
ween last Oct I and July 31, Texas
recetved about $11 6 mtllion m feed
at d.
The emerg ency feed program
authoriZes aid to farmers when a
natural disaster reduces the amount
of feed usually produced on their far·
ms, forcmg them to make above·
average feed purchases
The
WASHINGTON (AP)
Agnculture
Department has
released from regulabon mne
eastern atrports prevtously deter·
mmed to be mfested wtth Japanese
beetles
Asststant Agnculture Secretary
P R. Snuth satd beetle populations
at the atrports have been controled
and there ts no longer any threat of
the beetles spreading to other areas
vta departing atrplanes
The atrports affected are
McGwre Air Force Base m New Jer·
sey, DoverAir Force Base m
Delaware, Balbmore-Washmgton
Internabonal , Phtladelphla In·
ternational, Douglas Muntctpal and
Greensboro-Htgh Pomt Regwnal m
North Carolina, Quonset State m
Rhode Island, Port Columbus International m Ohio and Greater CtncmnatilnternatiOnal
WASHINGTON (APJ The
Agnculture Department ts asking
for comment on proposed changes m
the grade standards for frozen green
and wax beans
Under the proposal, smgle-letter

grades would apply Curre ntly, dual
titles - US Grade A (US Fancy)
- are used The manner m which
~rades are deternuned would also

change if the proposal IS adopted
Comments on the proposa l,
pubbshed m the Aug 29 Federal
Regtster and available at mos t

10
14 karat, Bu
18 ykarat
' karat,
Wanted-to
gold De ntal gold and gold
ea r pins. 675 3010

from Abscam, the 14-month unde rcover mvestigation that has
y telded mdtctments aga mst SIX
membersofCongressandl3others
The ftrst Abscam trtal, m federal
court m New York Ctty, endedSatur·
day, when jurors convtcted Rep
Michael " Ozzte" Myers, !).Pa , and
three other men of brtbery and consptracy. All four say they wtll appeal
Attorneys on both Sides m the
Jenrette case, and the others to
follow, saw the Myers trial as a

llbrartes, will be accepted until Sept
30, 1981,and should be sent to Annie
J ohnson, room 3807-5, FSQS , USDA ,
Washington, 0 C , 20250.

crucial test of Jury reaction to the
government's undercover tactics,
1ts VIdeotaped evtdence and one of
1ts key w1tnesses, convicted swm·
dler Mel Wemberg, who helped FBI
agents carry out the unde rcover
"sting"
As part of the mvestigation,
codenamed Abscam for Abdul E n·
terprtses, FBI agents posed as
representatives of a fictitious Arab
sheik willing to pay bnbes for help
With inunlgration problems and for
other favors

Common Cause has birthday
WASHINGTON (AP) - Common
Cause, born at the dawn of an era
filled With political scandal, turns 10
this weekend But to the self-styled
cttizens' lobby, which has wrought
sweepmg changes m the Amencan
political system, the last decade has
nothing on the future
To Conunon Cause, at stake IS no
less than the SUfVIval of democratic
government
"We don't have• a government
nght now that can function as a
representative mstitution," says
Fred Wertheimer, semor vtce
prestdent of the 225,IJOO.member
assoctation, which celebrates tis
loth anruversary this weekend wtth
parties, ptcrucs and a senous study
of the problems of today and

tomorrow
The founder of Common Cause,
John Gardner, agrees wtth Wer·
theuner
" Really, the paralysiS over the
energy questton and inflation has
sa1d something very unportant to us
m the last two or three years" Gardner, now senu-retired, satd m an an·
ruversary mtervtew
When Gardner launched h ts
crusade m the fall of 1970, the coun·
try was rocked With protests and
great scandals were near Now
sweepmg election reform laws aiL
on the books, government meetings
have been opened; offtce holders
and hopefuls must make fmanctal
disclosures and there are limits on
political contributions

SHALLOW well p ump and
'I• ton Ford picKup, must be
In good shape a nd Priced
resonably or would trade a
1978 Ford F1esta, g1ve or
take the d ifference 9~9
201 3

11

HelpWanted

Announcements

3

Announcements

3

MASON HOME REPAIR

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice Is hereby g1ven
that on Saturday, September 6th, 1980 at 10 oo

a pubhc sale wtll be

AM

held at lOS Un1on Avenue,
Pomeroy, Oh1o, to sell for
cash the following
collateral to wit
1977 Chevrolet PiCkup
Truck
Serial
No
CKR247F451761
The Farmers Bank and
sav1ngs
Company ,
Pomeror· Ohio, reserves
the righ to bi~ at th1s sale
and to withdraw the above

r
r

I

menttoned vehtcle pnor to

the sale Further, The Far

mers Bank and Savings
Company reserves the

rtght to re1ect any or all
bids submitted

.r

(9) 3, 4, s, 3tc

,•

._ __,C::a rd of Thanks
ZANA &amp; ORVY Gainer,
Hebron, Oh1o, formerly of
Me1gs Co wish to thanK
everyone for the.r good
Wishes &amp; g11ts for their 50th
weddmg ann1versary Aug

14

IN LOVING MEMORY of
El1zabeth R1ebel who
passed away s years ago
Sept 1, 1975
M1ssed bY all Husband,

Elber,

children,
Roger &amp;

Leo
Children

1 PAY highest P"Ces
poss1ble for gold ~nd sliver

heateng and air con
dlttontng furnace clean1n g,
plumbing, repatr, res1den
ttal electr. c w1nng, sales
servtce and tnstallat1on

co1ns

E1leen,

grand

'

992 2364

CANDY SUP PLIES on
sale
Ann s
Cak e
Decorating Supp1 1es, 50716

P1ano Tunmg
Lane
Dan1els 742 2951 Tun1ng
and Repa1r Serv1ce s1nce

Osborn

Curb lnflatiGn.
'Pay Cash for
Classlflads and
Saveff J

iI .f
'

' . :fI

i
I

f

1

l
II
•I

WILL
YOUR
House
Withstand another hard

Rods, reels, t ac kl e boxes
manne suppt1es, lures No
lawaway on sa le 1tems

wmter? How about that
roof and barn, that snow

Ope n 9 to 6 da ll y The
TacKle Box, Sr
12 4,
Syrac use, Oh 991 6193

gets pretty heavy' Let us
do any genera l ma1n
tanence work tor you. pam
hng, gutter repa.r, patch
work, odds and ends so you

M1ddlepor~Oh~

II•

I
I
(
(

I
I
I
I

) Wanted
) For Sale
) Announceme nt
) For Rent

e ANNOUNCEMENTS
1- C•rd ot Ttt..nu
2-1n Mtmortam
)-Annownctment•

2
3

1

1
1

I

$2 00
deta11s

Call 991 6342 for

GUINEA P IG 991 7395
MIN IATURE

5

someone out of town Good

watch dog Also a white
pet mouse 992 3789
FREE pupp1es pari beag le
pa rt collie Call afle r 6 p m
742 2040
KI TTE NS &amp; CATS
5635

7

8

11
12
t3
14
15
t6

sl- Housttlotd GGOd1
n - ca. TV, Radio Equipment
53- Anflques
14--MI I C M.•rchandiU
SS- IUIIGing SupplitJ
$6--Ptts lor Sale

11- Httpw 1 nttd
12- sttuaM wanttcl
1l -lnJuranct
14--luslntsJ Tr•lning

1s-Scltootslnslructltn

16--

These cash rates

mclude discount

'eFARMSUPPLlES

Radio TV
&amp;Cifltptlr

1~Want.d

&amp; LIVESTOCK

To Do

7_ _ ___"!ard Sale ___ _

I

't- weniiCI to luy

21 -

12- TrucklfDr Sa ..

IUslnHs

U - LIYtiiOCit
..- H•y&amp;Gnln
U - Sttd &amp; Ferllllltr

2l -ProfeSJional
Strvicts

I
I
I
I

eTRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE

J1-Autos tor s•t•

li - HOft'ltJ for hl•l
3Z- Moblltof4omtl

1l- Vans &amp;4W D

for Slit

nol.uto Parts
I Acctuorln
n - Auto AtHir

11- F~rmJior

7 4-Mottrc~cl •s

S.lt

J4-lulln•u lu lkllnp
U - LotJ &amp; ot.crt•lt
,._ltt•l E•t•'- W•nftd

3 FAMILY Yard Sale Sat
&amp; Sun 6 &amp; Sun at Charles
(Gus) F1lch's, Portland on
Rt 124 2 m1 S of Port land
par k 10 6
Dmette se t,
dr apes, c oats,
st e r eo
games, lots of ntce cloth ing

of all s1z es Held by ChucK
Evans &amp; Jea n F1tch

THURSDAY onl y, from 9 4
M1lo HutchiSOn residence,

Sep

Want-Ad Advertismg
Deadlines
z 30 J:t M Oally
forMond•Y

sal e Bose s Great Bend
Sepl 4 7, 11 till darK

LARGE
L eon a

1,

PAT IO

s a le ,

St e wart s

on

Mulb e rry
He ight s,
Pome r oy
Fr iday Se p
!embe r S from 9 5
Women's clothtng, large
dresser , and lots of other
th.ngs

d1shes toys, tools, s11ver
stone, pots &amp; pans, Avon,
sm all appliances, Chn st
m as tnmm1ng lots off
mi SC

bust er ,

tots

more

Phone 742 26-48

eSERVICES

12 Noon S•turd-v

SEVERAL FAMILY Ya rd

13- EJ~,c•vatlnt

14- Eitctrlcal
&amp; fl•lrlgtretiGn
u - oenenl Hauling

YARD SALE Thursday,
F"day, Saturday on the

16-M H Rt.,.lr

17- Upholstery

'

15 WOtcfl Of
T day

.,deys
1

icUys

...

Undtr

PUBLIC AUCTION
HOCKINGPORT, OHIO
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1980
TIME: 10:00 AM

,,.

t he
Rod e r ic k
Gr1mm
r esidenct on Broadway
Street 10 Ra e me

Chartt

'"
,,
"'
'"" '"
per word per day
110
110

Elch wo1'41 owtr ttlt minimum 15 warct1 11 4 cents
Acta runnlnt other titan constcullve days will be chartttlat tht 1day

,

In mtmtr¥ C•rd of Tll•nll" and Obiluart 'Ctl'lft per word, 13 oo
minimum C•sh ~ •avanct
MOitlle HOmt Nits anld Y.ud s•les •re•ccepttd only wlttl cath with
ord•r H. cent chilrtt for tds carrying ltiC Nt,lmbtr In Cart of Tilt

sentinel

DIRECTIONS Turn Off Rt 50 &amp; 7 onto Rl 124 al
L1ttle Hock•ng, OhiO or turn on Rt 144 at Coolvlle
Turn off Rt 124 at end of new brtdge 10 Hockingport
Watch for s1gns

DU E TO ILL HEALTH AND RE T IRE MENT , WE
WILL SEL L TH E FO LLOWING AT PUBLIC AU C
TION
1973 Dodge 1 lon dua l wheel truck w1lh 11 ft ul 11ily
bed - 318 v 8 engme and 4 speed tr ansm•ss •on m
very good cond 1f1on , 1970 Ford :J;• ton tru ck w1th 351
V 8 engine , automa11 c transmiSSion and 8 fl utility
bed 300 amp L incoln g as welder'" very goOd cond1
f1 0n 200 amp L 1ncoln gasoline w elder 1n good cond1
300 a mp GE

el e c tr~c

we lder (3 phase )

Weld1 ng equ1 pment of all k10ds sever al feet of
weldmg leads, acet ylene cutting ouff1ts, hoses and
gauges ex tens1on cords all kinds of heavy duty
hand tool s power tools, socket se ts, '12' dnve lm
pact wrench, lf2 drtl , Stde grmder , large v1 se, hvd
1acks, hy d bumper tack on wheels, chains, bmd ers,

come a long, hyd pump, hyd 1aak for wood spille r,
100 It 1 ' a ~r hose, 200 fl 1 a" hose, 6 cyl MavencK
engme w1th 48 000 actual mtles, 302 For:d eng1ne
w1th automat1c transm1ss1on and rad •ator C1n ex
cellent cond1hon), set of 21 ft pontoons, hang 1ng
overhead gas space heater , new Sears cement mtx
er w•th electnc motor (m1 xed -4 bags of mortar),
1965 lnternattonal TO 9 d1esel dozer w1fh ~ a 10 ft

angle bl a de (This dozer 1s 1n excell ent condition )

TWO FAM ILY yard sal e,
September 3 4 All s1zes of
cl othmg
Upper end ot
M ason nex t to the old dr.ve
mn Ra in or sh ine

YARD SALE 123 ParK Dr,
PI Pleasant Tues Sat
Sepl 2 6 8 3 La rge cloth's

8. c h1ldren s c lothes

TH IS Wl t L BE AN EXCEPT IONALLY GOOD
AUCTION OF SHOP AND WELDING l'OOLS AND
EQUIPM E NT
INS P ECTION ON FRIDA Y,
SEPTE MBER 5, F ROM 12 NOON TO 4 PM
TERMS DF SALE

Cash or check w1th pos1t1ve

1denhf1Ci1t10n

SEE YOU SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6
EVEIIYOI!jE WELCOME
Sale located bes1de Ray Rose Farm
E L "Red" Mlller.. Aucfloneer
Mr Hubert Btrt, Owner

NOr RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

MODULAR HOME Must
relocate, 3 bedroom , 2 full
bath s, ga rden t ub 1n
maste r bed room , fully
eq u,pped mode rn kitchen
dinmg, livmg &amp; fam1 1y

tn Bashan, approx•m ately
ten m1les from Pomeroy

ner , gas availabl e, one car
gar age on t hr ee acr es, one

ADDRESSE~S

doors, storm wmdows, 2

pet 1ng througho ul, central
7342

Alum1num

Immediately'

WANTED
Work at

home no
experten c e
necessary excellent pay
Wrtte Amer1can Serv1ce,

8350 ParK Lane, Su1te 127,
Dallas, TX 75131
STEWARDESSES (18 32)
for Dick Drost' s Jetliner
Relocate to Ind1ana Call
(219) 345 2000 Write Drost
Enterpnses , Box 2000,
Roselawn, lnd1ana 46372
FULL TIME person lo be
both the soc1al worker &amp;
activity coord1nator at
Pomeroy Health Care Cen
ter

Degree

perlence

w1th

ex

preferred

room, kttch en, c arpet
throughout, laundry room,
a half basement, natur al
gas furna ce, drilled water
well new l;l lock chlmeny
fo r wood burner , cha1n lmk
fe nce, new sept1c system,

also large bulldmg with
new roof and aluminum
Std.ng goes With If
Ap
pro x1 mate ly 34 acres

$29,()()() 1 614 949 2042

a

1nside t o apprec 1ate Wtll
take a m1n1 home or ptckup
truck as partial payment

843 2971

SA LE

on

Mr Zid1an for appomtment

BASEMENT SA LE Sep
tembe r 4 S at the Coa te s
res1dence, ftve m1les north
of Chester F1ve famt l1es

We want to get r~d of th iS
s tuff Will barga1n
8
Public Sale
_____,&amp; Auc" 't"-'lo,_,n,___~
"BRADFORD, AuCtiOnee r,
Complete Servtc e Phone
949 2-487 or 949 2000 rac me ,

Oh1o, Cntt Bradford

OSSIE 'S AUCTION House
20 N 2nd Street, M1d
dle port, Oh10 We se ll one

piece or ent~re households
New, used, or ant1ques, jn
eluding homes, f arms, 'or
1tqu1dafton sales Get top

dollar

L1st With the man

who has over 25 years 1n
th e new, used and anhque
furn1 ture busmess
We
tak e cons1gnm ents For tn
formatton and pickup ser

v1ce c all 992 6370 or 1n
West Vtrgm1a 773 5471 Sal e
every Frtday n1ght at 7
P m Aucttoneer Howard
Beasley, apprentice auc

tloneer, Osby A Marlin
rno1unk J
9

Wan!edtoB~
u k-__

I RON AND BRASS BED S,
old furniture, desks, gold
nngs , 1ewelry , s ilve r
dollars, sterlmg , etc, wood

Ice boxes,,ars antiques,
etc Complete households
Wr~te M 0 Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992
7760
Gold, Sliver or foreign
coins or a ny gold or sliver
Items Antique turn1ture,
glass or china , Will pay top
dollar, or complele estates
No Item too large or 100
small Check prices before
selling Also do appraising
Os by (Oss1e I Martin 992
6370

m1 1e outs 1de Rac me 949

VINYL SIDING

2706

1-I~:::::::=:;:~::~:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::~ -----~----NEW 3 bedroom home for
sal e
Bu 1lt tn kitch en ,
d1n1ng
room ,
l a rg e
r ecreat1on room , f.replac e,
lots of storage, 2lh baths,

garage, 1 acre lot 992 3454

31 - -Homes tor5aie------ - - 7 ROOM HOU SE for sa le

32

By owner Good 1oca t1 on '"

1975 Weste rn Ma nst on 14 x

M1dd le porl Low $40 s 991
3341
BEAUTI F UL 3 bedroom
ranch bnck home m Baum

Addit1on W1lh ne w gara ge
BARTEL S, Loan

Representat1ve, 1100 East

Ma1n St,

Pomeroy, Oh

Mortgage

money

ava1lable All types home
t 1nanc 1n g,
new,
ol d,
r efmanCi ng, and 2nd mar

&amp; gent e door Gas heat,
newly mstall ed central a1r
cond1t1onmg, fam11 y r oom
&amp; stone fir epl ace
ap
pl tances built 10 new ly 1n
stFtlled electn c brea ker
s vst e m ,
a tt rac t1 ve l y
decor a te d base m ent, 2
bath s, full y carpet ed w1th
most attract1ve dr apes

Mobtle Homes

for Sale

---------

70 three bedroom
Cameron

1971

x 64 two

14

bedroom 1971 L1berly, 14 x
65 two bed room
1968
Atlan tiC,
12 x 60 two
1968 Ne w
b edroom

REALTY

Cassady Realty
Belpre, Oh.

my home Any 11 me Have

ChiilfiH M

TUPPERS PLAINS -

WILL DO House c lean1ng
742 2431

make

New elegant bnck to

Insurance

LARGE UPRIGHT com
pressor, 220 volts up to 180
PSI, $375 00 King cast ~ron
wood burning cook or heat
never

proud

H•~e5

Realtor

Neacil E C•rsey Br Mgr
Ph 992 24U or H'2 2710

bedrooms, formal dtn
.ng , k1tchen has aiJ
built tns, tam
rm
w / ftrepla ce
2
garage

used

tor

$100 00 991 2849
Real Estate - General

acre~

FOR SALE

FIVE YEAR OLD
81-LEVEL HOME
bedrooms, 22f.J
baths, large fam1ly
room with l1rtplace, lui·
ly cupeted . Large
sundeck and paho.

Three

Within walk1ng d1stance

of schools

sets on 11h acre $21,500

BUILDING SITES on
Rt

DILLON

7 below

Eastern
H1gh School, l'h to 2'12
acreeach $7,500

Phone Vtrgm1a Hayin;m
'S5·4197

992-7132

REAL ESTATE
3 BDRM HOME 1o1
Syracuse Paneled and
c arpeted throughout.
alumtnum Sldtng, 2 n1ce
porches, on a level lot

2 BEDROOM FRAME
close to Middleport
schools, park &amp; shopp
1ng $12,500 oo
2 STORY
FRAME
DUPLEX - 2 bedroom
apt

down, 1 bedroom

apt up Re nt will pay
for home
2 BEDROOM HOME 2 acres of land, 2 miles
from Middleport Also
some fru1t trees

4 BEDROOM frame on
Rt 7 tn Pomeroy Large
modern eat 1n kttchen

7 ROOMS and BATH

(a_,. S. Hobltetter Jr.

601 E.
MAIN
POMEROY, O

at:!*tr
A, .tca .. A

'192·1259
NEW LISTING - Fa rm
lor country 11vlng• Ap
prox 23 A of land and a
home w1th 7 rooms 5
bedrooms, full base
ment ,

large

storage

building $«,500 00
NEW LISTING
HOUSE PINCHING?
Th 1s 4 bedroom home
will give you space and
comfort Has a large
famly room plus ul 1llty
Other bulld1ngs for ex

tra storage $26,900 oo
NEW LISTING
WHERE YOU'LL Ll\IE
TOMORROW!
A

beauf1ful budd.ng s1te

w1th approx 1 acre land
Wllh utilities available
Located on the old
Chesler Golf Course
$6,000 00
SEE MOM'S EYES
SHINE
A very
unusual

k1tchen

w1th

bar This 6 room home
has 2 baths and 1S
located on approx 1
acre level land Storage
buildings $36,900 oo
ADD SOME PAINT
AND LOVE Alld
watch your 1nvestment

grow A 7 room house on
East MaiO Street 3
bedrooms a nd fam1ly
room Pari basemen!
$26,500 00
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
- 3 bedroom home with
new furnace, front and

rear porches on approx
1/• acre lot $14,500 00
BUSINESS
M1d
dl~port lunchroom - All
equipment and licenses,
and Inventory Quick
sale pnce $11 ,000 00
OFFICE
HOURSMONDAY
THRU
SATUADAY , 9·5
ALSO MONDAY AND
FR 1DAY EVENINGS
UNTIL&amp; P.M

REALToR-

Henry I! Cleland, Jr
9f2-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell '49· 2660

R0111r 1 Ott!ltCrlll!lllr
9fH692
OFFICE PHONE

9f2-2259

&amp;_tl

~ ~~Q~~~Omer
2

A\.HES

-

OR 3 BEDROOM
frame house on Broad

Lovely 2 story home, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 11v

way St In Middleport
Close to pool, parK &amp;

through

m~

mg room with stone see

fireplace

to

birch library, formal
dmmg room, large

modern k1tchen. utilitY
room &amp; cellar Patio
w1th

tnvihng

sw1mm1ng

1A' x28 '

pool

24

stores

Newlv pa1nted

de &amp; out
FAYE MANLEY

CALl 992-2598
DAY OR NIGHT

Rutland,
room

large

w1th

living

fireplace

dlnmg room, K1tchen
utility and double car
garage
ASKing
$35,000 00
POMEROY - Lovely 2
story home w1th
beautiful woodwork on

Mulberry Ave , llvmg
room
with
n1ce
f.replace, dm lng room,

familY
room ,
3
bedrooms, l'h baths
n1ce modern Kitchen
and garage Call for
appl
ACREAGE - 5 acres on
Hysell
Run
Rd ,
bu1ld1ng s1te &amp; some
timber, $7,000 00
HYSELL RUN RD Approx 8 acres W1lh 2
bedroom home Askmg
$2l ,500 00
CONOOR ST
3
bedroom home,
room, kitchen,

742 3030 or 742 2728

All

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • ex·
tens1ve remodeling
• E lectrica 1work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992-7583
8 7 1 mo

Complete Ory Cleaning
and Laundry
ecarpet
•Drapenes
• Furn1ture

c" We' re

1 tn

PARK'
FINANCIAL

All types of roof work,
new or repa.r gutters

and downspouts, gutter

REAL ESTATE -LOA.ISI
F e deral Housmg
VPteran s
Admtmstratwn
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy
OffiCe 992·7544
Home 992·6191

cleanmg and pa1nhng.

All work guaranteed.

----------

35_ _ Lots &amp; Acreage

Free Estimates
Reasonable Pr~ces
Call Howard

home Easy t erm s, c lose to

949·2862
949·2160

town 992 5786 or 991 2529

BELL

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

House Painting

THE POOL PEOPLE

INSIDE &amp;OUT

31111 NOble Sum1t Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
992-5724

Call After 5 P.M.

843-2803

PTIC TANKS (~alha
nty
Cert1fled)
beds, water

short walk from th e
stores 1 A good 2 stor y
hom e w1t h 4 bedroom s, 2
baths, formal dmmg
r oom , m odern k 1tc hen
bu1lt 1n rang e, hot wa ter
heat, full ba sement and
2 n1 ce por ches

PRIVATE - 3 bedroom
bnck. v eneer , bath, niCe
c lo se t s, car p et1ng ,
equ1pped m odern k. 1t
chen, full basem ent w1th
bar fa m 1ly room ut1 11 ty
roo m and 2nd b ath on
large tot Last house on
the end of the road m
Pomeroy
Go, n g f o r

$47 ,500
NEW LISTING

-

2

bed r oo m s bath, new
natural gas fo rced a tr
furn ace
c1t y wate r
large basem ent 2 par
ches and ex tra lot In
Syracuse close to pool
INCOME - S rentals
w 1th 1ncome of $550 00

pe r m onlh Space for 2
more Good for wnte off
and add1t1 onal 1ncom e
Qu•ck sale pn ced at on

ly $35,000

Housing
Headquarters

U N F URN IS HED
be droom house 992 7395

2

HOUSE

53

Two

bedroom w1th stove &amp;
r efr ioerator fu rn1shed 992

3090
Mobtle Homes

m obi l e

co1n coll ectiOns Call 614
767 3167 or 551 3411

hom e

from

ap

11ve

Pomeroy

m11es

or

54

TWO BE DROOM m obile

WINTER
POTATOES
Charles R Hams 843 1693

home, r ea l nice Brown 's
Trader Park 992 3324

TWO BEDROOM mObile
Ra c 1ne

Call

992 5858
TR AIL E R one adu lt only
992 3181

sz•

ment, 1n town locatton, many extra s Pn ced to sell

$39,000

OVER 100 ACRES - All m 1nera l n ghls go w1th pro
perty Water lmes close, t1 mber r ea dy to cut, dnll ed
gas well Call fo r mor e tnf o

TWO BE DROOM m0b1 le
home f or r ent

Racl ne

10

On b1g qu1el lot Depos1l
requ ired 367 7811
Apartment
tor Rent

44

r:;-?,. _

PoMEROY •

..

BUilding SupplieS

well1 nsulated A ll fh1s and much more, $57,500

RENTER S ass 1stance for

NEW LISTING - Sma ll 2 BR home needs worK on
ly$8 ()()()

Manor a pts Call992 7787

Summ1t Rd , Middleport,
OH 992 5724

TO SELL? GIVE US ACALL! !
NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949·2591 Leave Message
or 949·1654

m

V1llage

APART
FU RNI SHED
ME NT 4 rooms &amp; bath
Adults on ly, no pels 992
3874
APT

Mason 2 bedroom ,

furn 1shed a .r cond ltt omng,

ut i1111 es pa 1d 304 882 3356
46

REAL ESTATE

Spacefor Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
ParK, Route 33, North 01
Pome roy Large lots Call
992 7479

Merebandlse

FENDER STRATOCAST

1970 VOLKSWAGON cam
per, pop top, four speed,

tact Gary F1fe 992 2581

May st1cker, some new
parts, 93,000 mtles tor

E R Peavy electnc gu1tars,
ltke new Great buy Con

$1100 00
New heater fan
K1t
for
type
two
volkswagen $25 00 Phone
173 5008
61

Farm Equ1pment

FARMALL

"A "

New

motor ,
new
hydrauliC
E xc

ttr e s ,
cond
Mower, cult1vators &amp; plow

61
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD Poles max
d1a meler 10 on largest
e nd $11 p er lon Bundled
slab SlOper ton Delive red
to OhiO Pallet Co , Rt 2,
Pomeroy 99 2 2689

55

Bumgardner Sales, Noble

56

Pels for Sa ,l_,e_ _

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220
HILLC REST KENNEL S
Board1ng, all breeds Clea n
mdoor outdoor faC1Itt1es
Al so
AKC
re g1stered

Dobe rm ans 61 4 ~46 7795
HOOF HO LLOW Hor ses
a nd pon1es and rtdtng
l ess on s

Everythtng

1mag mable In horse equip
m e n! Blan Kets , be lts,
boots, etc E nglis h a nd
Weste r n
Ru th Ree ves
(614) 698 3290

OLD COIN S pocket wal
c hes, class r~ngs, wedd1ng
bands , d1amonds Gold or
s1lver Call J A Wamsley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Com Shop, Athens, OH 592
6462
GOLD AND
SILVER
COIN S OF TH E WORLD
RING S
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
R EC ORD
HIGH ,
HIGHE ST UP TO DATE
P R ICE S CONTACT ED
BURK E TT
BARBER
SHO P , M IDDLEPORT,
OH 10 OR CALL992 3476

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

pertone, double oven, lik e

new $325 843 1031
REFR IGE RATOR
good $25 992 7395
Ml DDL.E PORT - Energy eff iC ient w1th tnsu lated
alu m mum stdlno Very comfortable three bed r oom

2 bath home, full basement $40,000 00

CALL BILL CHILDS 992·2342
RODNEY OOWNINGJ._BROKER

Runs

TWIN SIZE ma ple bed w1 lh
&amp;

mgs $100 00

bo x

Antique

te SIX drawer dr esser
m•rror $80 00 Tw.n

te

M e1 g s

County

Huma ne Soc1ety Wormed
Two ger
shots 992 6260
man shepherd elK hounds
male , four lovely puppies,

USE D 30 elec lr~ c range
Good cond $75 992 591 9
m at t ress

PUT A cold nose 1n your
fu t ure

let bedspread

pretty brown s hepherd
type dog, severa l lovely
cats and k1ttens

PUT A cold nose In your
future I Shots,

worm ed

Me 1gs County Humane
Soc1ely 992 6260 Hours 12
7 da1 ly Open on Tuesdays
•or emergen c 1es only
span1el
type
Coc ke r

tem er type,

th re~

beagle

71

17 foot Sears f1berglass
canoe like new $225 oo 773
5008
1971 PROWLER camper
trailer, e1ghteen foot long

~

51
_!IEuse_!lo_I_~G~odj' ~­
EL ECTRIC RAN GE Cop

Camp1ng
Equ1pment

77

MUSICal
Instruments

E. Main St 1'9meroy, o .'

3/ 8 mch rebar- 17c per foot
by 20 ft sect1on only D

Senior Ctt1zens

S1

742·2211

--

949 2037

3 AND 4 RM turn1 shed ap
Is Phone 992 5434

BEAUTIFUL - Well Ke pi home has 3 BR s, could
be more, famtly r oom &amp; den, l'h bath, 2 car g arage,

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Main St.

~ LAtiDMARK

'

Sq. Yd .

Nice Selection of Carpet Remnants and
Linoleum Remnants at Big Discounts.

M1sc Merchan1se

lftD APPLIANCES
f Good Used Fr~gldolr
Refr~geratqr
$150
1 Good Used Whirlpool ,
Refr~t!'lrator
$1 Z5
1 Good Used Sears Co~
dspot combination
Refngerator
$175
1 Good USed Gibson,
Coppertone Combma·
lion
Refrlgerafor
I Good Used UIOICO
Large
Ch.osl Free•er
SZOO

•9"

Cash &amp; carry

SEPTEMBER SALE
GIGANTIC SAVINGS ON ALL CARPET
Any regular carpet tobs Installed w1th free pad

Mid

d leport 992 5858

home nea r

stalationl

pay ca sh or cert1fted check
for ant1ques and collec
ttbles or enttre estates

2253

A 1 cond1l10n, 3 BR , full ba se

cprtce"boes Not
Include In

Nothing too la rge Also
guns pocket watches and

prox1m a tely

Sq Yd
Rea. S5 9

Anhques

__ -- ~r___R e~'---- ,
T HREE
BED R 0 0 M

CARPET
W/Pad
Installed

'3"

ATTENTION
(IM
PORTANT TO YOU) Woll

FURNI SHED two bedroom

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

"Dr1ve A LtHle Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED

E LEC TRIC RANGE Good
worK ing cond 992 7395

42

CARPET SHOP

bu1ld1ngs
and

HOUSE NEAR Rac 1ne 5
rooms &amp; ba th 992 5858
FOR re nt

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

lme, electnc

2 BEDROOM Furnished
house 992 5434 or 992 5914

large living room, large

formal dining room, ex
Ira n1ce family room &amp;
kitchen combined, l'h
baths
Sells
lor
$26,500 OOGROCERY
BUSINESS - St. Route
124, Rutland, Bldg In
eludes equipment and
rental
apartment
$21 ,200 00
COUNTRY COMFORT
2'1• acres with 3
bedroom
Hollypark
mob1le home with large
family room, double car
garage Has extra sep
tic tank and water hook
up N1ce 32' x12' barn
PRICE REDUCED $47,500 00
I
\Ieima Nlclnsky, Assoc.
Phone 742·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742 3171

8 1 ~ 1 mo pd

ROOFING

only $1 2,000
RESTFUL - And !USi a

hv1no
some

furniture Would maKe
good rental property
Asklng$13,500 00
POMEROY - N1ce 3
bedroom brick home,

992 •2478

H. L WHITESEL

tr ail er, no pets depos11
requ 1r ed no ch1ldren 949

NEW LISTING -

ex-raence.

'
~work guaranteed
Free Estimate
8 U 1 mo

Mobile Home Sales

PI Pleasanl W VA
675 4424

bedroom home on cor
ner lot nea r shopp1ng
Has bath, natural gas,
c1ty wa ter, f ull base
ment and ex tra lot f or

woods All minerals go
Call for your appt
NEW LISTING 3
home ,

21 wears

bolh fa r iUSI $11,000
BARGAIN - Handy 2

acres, halt clear ed, r est

bedroom

Gerald Clark
797 4..7

1 1ed equipment
rea

HMMMM 5 room ,
bath, nat ural gas, flu e
tor woodburner , c1ty
water , can be used as a
hom e or a bus• ness or

Shade

797 2432 Athens
Tom Hosk1nsor

•Alloump Trucks

Phone

Real Estate - General

w.

el Dozers

1-(614) ·992·3325

for

CreeK running through
Includes mineral r~ghts
$14,000
FORKED RUN LAKE
AREA - Sm ret"e
menl home 10 yrs old
block w1th c ity water,

'49 2160 Pomeroy

VIRGILB SR n.a. 1 0~
216 E Second Street

thl$ farm -th several
poss1ble sections

$39,500
(2) 5 acre bU1Id1ng s1te
for $5 000
(3 1 75 acres, f~nc ed, all
useable for l]ay or plan
ling lg barn and 2
ponds for $525 pr acre
60 ACRES for hunlmg
and f1Sh1ng Plenty of

excavator hoe

••

yd

Serv1ce &amp;

SUITABLE LOT for mob1le

General

and repa i r , 1u11ers ,
downspouts, commer·
cull &amp; res•dent• al

EAFORDm

84 ACRE FARM Portland, Oh10 Co Rd
31 Owner Wi lling to spl1l

garage on 4

Real Estate

8 18 1 mo pd

Housing
Headquarters

2

( 11 7 yr old house and

Miscellaneous

stove

you

992 5792 or 991 2606

POMEROY, O.

references 742 3116

13

dlepor t New roof, new ex
t enor &amp; tnfertor pamt new
carpetmg 8. drape rt es, tun
basement, good locati on

HAYES

12
Situahons Wanted
WILL DO Babys1tt10g 1n

Mid

(614) 843· 3322

12 x 50, 2 bedroom
B&amp; S

VER Y NICE home

In

ROOFING
REMODELING
ServiDg your area
for 25 years. Call
now for large sav·
mgs.
For
Free
Estimate Call
Eugene Long

M oon, 12 x 60 w1th expando
two bedroom , 19'67 Buddy,

WANTED lady or g"l to
live In to help w1th
houseworK 992 2686

SALE

2016

electrt c

mon t 14x 70 w1th exp ando,
centra l a1r, 3 bedrooms Ph
ba th s M ov1ng out of sta te

56

per boil er
many more
1tem s Ra1n ca nce ls 992

MII&lt;,.,.ND,.._, JU DdE• ., .,

carpet ed,

All types of roofing, new

Expenenced Operators
a vailable tor local wo rk
el rubber ttr e backhoes

Rl 3, Box 54
Rac•ne, Oh.
Ph 614 843 . 2591
6 15 lfc

1980 COLON ADE By Fa 1r

la undr y mat Seple mbe r 4

YARD SALE Septembe r 4
5 •n Burlingham wa tch f or
s 1gns Clothes, shoes, cop

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Cai198S 3814 or 992 257 1

Th"d

left at lhe railroad trac Ks
at Chesh1 re on Route 7

Si zes from 4x6 to 12x40

992 6606, 9 5 Tues Thurs

Street in Ra cme nex t to the

YARD

I~•E•~D HIM H IS

tgages Phone 992 7000 or
992 5732

Call

A venue, Middleport, Oh10

YARD

tull y

ED

2 BEDROOMS 1112 baths,
garden, fru1t trees Must be

Utility Buildings

FOUR YEAR old seven
room house w1th 1 '12 ba ths,

S1d 1n g, storm

baths, livmg room, d1n1ng

SMALL

acres $52 000 Ca ll R T
Stewa rt 742 3006

a ~r &amp; heat 992

....a·
C3tat:lng

Sizes
"From 30.:30"

apar tment over top Cellar
pat1 0, other bull d1ngs 17

OHIO v···
rv
nu£l
ROOFING

Ex

Farm Buildings

l ront porc h, garage w1lh

ca r

Pullns

ALL STEEL

ba t h
k 1tch en
utll •t y ,
dm1ng, 11vmg room, &amp; 2
other smal l rooms Bu1 lt 1n

baseboa rd heat, wood bur

YARD SALE Friday &amp;
Saturday at 830 South 3rd

comp lete ro ll bar cab and heavy duty winch with on

Streets 1n Rutland Phone
742 2233
Ma t e rn1ty
cloth ing K1ds clothmg, lots
F IV E FAMILY extra large
ya rd sale Seplembe r 4 S at

Cuh

Public Sale

~::::::::::::::::;;;&amp;;A~u~c;t;'o:n;;;::;::;:::::::;;i
I

lion

Don t m1ss th1 s whale of
sale

good clean cl othes of all
SIZes good school c lothes
teans of all s1zes, n 1ce wm
BUFFALO BILL
ter coa t s, n ick nack s
Buffalo Btll Cody died In 1917 so
m ethmg tor everyone
Septe mbe r 4 S 6 7 at Ma r y
Layne F1r~t hou se on the

ly 2 950 hours, large tool box w1th 10 drawers and top

}

Rates and Other lnformat1on

pong

Come

get your school clothes

LARGE

lock shelf, 2 Wtsconsin a.r cooled eng.nes (need
repair ) complete se t of bol t d• es electn c motors,
generatmg plant w1th Wlsconsm engtne &lt;needs t1m
ed) 1o-1s fl 1oonls of 2 aluinmum pipe, several
1omts of g alvanized P•Pe roll of faiYantze, 1-4 sheet s
of new enameled tin, large stack of -4 ft and 7 ft
mel a I bu1ld lng panels, 10inl 10" pipe 5 fl long, small
boom and wmch for truck mount, lf2 drum hyd 011
2- 3 ft by 6ft steel doors Many 1tems not listed

more

30

2d•y•

In the ftrst edttton of the
"Encylopedta Bntanmca"
- pubbshed betwee n 1768
and 1771 - an art1cle on the
curmg of diseases m horses
ran for 39 pages, whtle t11e
entry for " woma n" stated
s tmply " t he fem a le of

Locust

corner of College

SIZE S OF CLOTHING
Three fam1ly , we re loaded

THE LONG AND SHORT

1-----------;~--~~~:-:-:-------------..J

Foll ow the

PORCH
SALE , We d
nesday Thursday, Friday,
on North Main In Rutland
Clothmg, home lOgge r ,

11-Hom•lmprovemtnts
12- PtumDing 1 E)lcnatlng

P~ng

tab le, good clothes gu1tar ,
ten speed b1cycle, m1sc

s•gns to great bargam s

dust

J7- Reelton

29

!~-;.---~--- ......--~;.....;. .. _________ _

SALE

J OHNSON

down w 1th good tes

_____

YardSa ~
le

8

YARD SALE 810 S Second
51 , M1ddl eporl Se pt 1 6
L1nens, c loth1ng beddmg,

•1- F e rm Equlpmtnl

eFlNANClAL
Opportunity
22-Money lo L~H~n

---- ~ ,

Mall This Coupon with Rem•ttance
The Da11y Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

992

much more

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

35-. _ _ _ _ __

992

DO RDTHY

res•dence Antique bottles,
d1shes, bedspreads cur
ta1ns, drapes, toys
ALL

ch for s1gns

Fe w L1ma Rd

41 - Houaes lor Rent

• 41--c Equipment lor Rent

9-Wanled to Buy

- -----j '

6

to

th Street 1n Ra c1ne at the

new, vanous art1cles to
numerous to ment1on Wat

new pa1nt1ng supp11es, good

47-W•nttcllo Rtnt

1-,.wbllc hi•
I Auction

18
19
20

col li e,

YARD
SAL E
WE D
NES DAY
THUR SDAY
FRIDAY from 9 4 at Four'

across from the Both of
You Beau ty Sa lon Lots of
very good c1oth1ng, some

7

glass doors to pat1o, gas

Paneling &amp;

lil~===:::=:;:::=;:::::~r;~::~::=~=~~~T;~~=::===:::::~

patiO, $52
olher
Idmgs
17
acres
000bUICa
ll R T
5
742 3006
1':':'_.,_. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
TWO ST ORY, 3 bedroom,

heat, central a c , ex1ra
la rge double ga rage 985
3543

rooms

Business Services

TWO ST ORY, 3 bedroom,
ba th , kit che n, ut111t y,
d1n1 ng hv 1ng room, &amp; 2
other small room s Bu11 t tn
fr onttment
porc h,
garage
w 1th
apar
over
top Cell
ar

large hvmg room, d 1n1ng
room , panel ed fa mil y
room, w ith stone ftreplace,
pt cture w1ndow &amp; slid1ng

ptnes for cabm

butld1ng on lef t above the
F " e De pt &amp; d " ectl y

992 6342

school c lothmg, toys and

4J-FRooms
4...,._51NCttor Rent

7- YardSal•

- - --'11

II 9
I, II 10 ·----~~--~
-

I
•I

cl asses beg•nnmg soon at
the c arou sel Confect•onary
m Middleport
Beg1nner
mter med1ate , advanc es
also
mtnt
c las s
1n
decorat1ng novelty ca kes
Call or come 1n for det a 11 s
NEW 111 Rent a pan ser
v ice Rent the novelty c ake
pan of you r ch01ce for only

Cloth1ng cam eras d• shes
draper y tor glass slldtng
door, grate &amp; m ise

AUTUMN SALE Sept 4 &amp;
s frorn 9 4 Loca led on St
Rt 124 1n Syrac use, 4th

DECORAT I NG

eRENTALS
tor Rent
44- Ap•rtment for R tnt

4- Givt•w•y

21 - -- - - I I
22 - - c : - - -- , I'
13 - - - -li
2A
25
26 ----~...J ''
27
28

if ~

1

CAKE

GARAGE SALE 541 H1gh
Sf
Mlddleporl, COllin S
r es1dence Sept 4 5, 6 9 -4

TWO Fam1ly Ya rd Sale
HutchiSOn Sub diVI SIOn
Thurs &amp; Fr~

Barbara s School of Dance
Syr ac use 992 3281

Off Route 7 bypass on ol d
route 143 south of J acK s

42- Moblle Homes

s-H•ppy ol.ds
t-LGII and Found

17

fa ll

Caf e Rea sonable pr JCes on

Addres-.,1·- - - - - - - - 1

I

II
,I

now for

tember 1 5 from 9 5 located

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

phone number II used
You'll get better results
If you descnbe fully,
give price The Sent inel
reserves the nght to
clasSify, edit or re1ect
any ad Your ad will be
put In the proper
classification If you 11
I IChecK the proper box
IL~Iow

·II

UP

cl asses of tap and 1azz

KITTEN S &amp; CATS
5635

or Wr1te Datly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero"f, 0., 45769

counts as a word Count
name and address or

• !I

SIGN

Yard Sa le

7

0 130 "

PHONE 992-2156

Pnnt one word In each
space below Each In
lllal or group of ligures

,1,

(6141 837· 8182

WANT AD INFORMimON

Phoae~------------~~.

I

Announcement s

GARAGE

,I

t
I
I

or Columbus

upon request

I

,I

SUPERMA K"'•
8300 Sqoa Ftl
For Sale or Lease
Call Middleport '9261'4

and we II come and g1ve
you a free est1mate
References are pr ov1d ed

II

II

J

4 _ _ _G1ve ~~.t.__ _ _

not have to worry Call992
3941 ,992 3519, or 992 5126

Write pour own ad and order by ma11 w1lh this
coupo~, Cancel your od by phone when you get
results Money nol refundable

'I
I
I
I

Reedsville,

SAL E 20% off a ll f1shm g
tacKle Aug 25 to Sept 7

warm f 1r e th 1s wln1er and

'

Rd

Oh 667 6485

can s1t bacK 1n front 01 that

~------------~~~~-~~~-~--·-·-·-··-···--~--·~

nngs, 1eWelry, etc

contact Ed BurKett Barber
Shop, M1ddl eporl

1965 If no answer phone
992 2082

In Memonam

2

Announcem ents
-----------

lot, 3 bedrooms. 2'h baths,

S,l l fe

NI CE 3 or 4 bedroom home

17

- -Public
- Nohce

1

Homes tor

GET VALUABL E tra lmng
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great g1fls a s a Sen
tlnel route carrier Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility li st at 992
2156 or 992 1157

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SU RANCE been can
celled•
Lost
your
operators hcense? Phone
992 2143

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
----:~=--=·:--­

rO~U~R~B~O~A~R~D~I~N~G~H~O~U~S~E~!~~w~l;th~M a~IO~rlH~o~o~p~le~

Home on large landscaped

Second Ahscam trial opens
WASHINGTON (AP) - Wtth one
convtction on the books, the govern·
ment IS la unching mto the second
Abscam trtal as Jury selection
begtns m the case of Rep John
J enrette
The three-term South Carolina
Democrat and his frtend and cod efendant , busmes sman J ohn
Stowe, mstst they are mnocent of the
federal charges Jenrette was ID·
dieted on one count of consptra cy
and two counts of brtbery; Stowe
was charged wtth conspira cy a nd
wtth atding and abetting bnbery.
Assistant U.S Attorney John
Kotelly and defense attomeys were
preparmg to question about 100
prospecttve Jurors U S Dtstnct
Judge John Garrett Penn, expecting
to seat a jury today, scheduled the
prosecution case to begm Thursday
For observers, the trtal pronuses
sharp contrasts between Kotelly,
constdered cool and low-keyed In the
courtroom, and Jenrette's attorney,
Kenneth M Robtnson, a flamboyant
South Carohna nattve whose
emotion-packed arguments have led
I
to acqwttals m a strmg of tough
cases
For J enrette, the trtal IS a ftght
"for my polittcal life a nd a great
part of my other life " The 44-year·
old congressman ts seeking r eelection after a narrow vtctory m the
Democratic prunary nm-off vote m
June
The tr1al IS the second stenurung

31
Homes for Sa le
P LEAS ANT COUN TRY
Llv 1ng Ba um Add 1t 1on

31

Autos for Sale

1973 VW SUP E R Beetle
Pr~ ce $1,300 Call 614 949
2s•o afte r s p m

w1th new 8000 BTu a" con
d1f1oner Call992 5853

serw lees
81

Home
Improvements

S &amp; G Carpel Clean1ng
Steam
c leaned
Free
esttmate

Reasonable

rates Scotchguard
6309 or 742 2211

992

83
Excavating
J X F BACKHOE SER
VICE lisce nsed and bon
ded , sept ic tanK 1n
stallatlon, water and gas
lines E )(cavat1ng work and

trans1t layout 992 7201
EXCAVA T ING Wanted
Dozer worK or t1mber to
cut 985 3567 or 991 3208
84

Electncal
&amp; Refngerat1on

SEWING
MACHINE
Repa irs . service , all
makes
99 2 1284
The
Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy
Author~ zed
Smger Sales
and Servtce
SCISSOrS

E LWOOD
REPAIR

We sharpen

BOWERS
Sweepers,

1962 FORD FALCON
FUTURA
converl1bl e
Powe r lop, partly restored
Collectors Item Make an
offe r 949 201 3

appliances Lawn mower
Next to Stale H1ghway ,

Trucks for Sale
---------1979 FORD F2SO 29,000
moles $300 &amp; taKe over
payments 843 2032

makes

71

types, hound dog, several
cats, k1ttens. w 1th long or 1 1965 FORD pi ckup $250 00
short ha1r
992 7645

toasters, .rons, all small
Garage on Route 7, 985

3825
APPLIANCE serVICe, all
washers,

ranges,
washers,dlsposals,

dryers,

dish
water

tanks Call Ken Young 985
3561 before 9a m or after 6
pm

�\

16- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1980

OEA gearing for
November eleciion.·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) President Carter has the · inside
track on other presidential contenders when it comes to financing
education, says the chief lobbyist for
the Ohio Education Association.
· John Hall, the OEA's statehouse
lobbyist, ·said Carter's record on
education matters differ significantly from GOP presidential nominee
Ronald Reagan arid· independent
candidate John Anderson, an Illinois
congressman.
"President Carter has a longtime
record of improving the financing of
education," Hall said. "The (U.S.)
House of Representatives last week
moved an appropriations bill and the
funding in it is up over last fiscal
year. To my knowledge, education
and defense were the only two areas
where funding is up. "
Hall described Anderson and
Reagan as having negative records
on education financing.
"Anderson has voted (in the past)

to return to committee ap·
propriation bills that increased
education funding, " he said. "He
consistently voted to sustain vetoes
of education fund increases."
While Reagan was governor of
California, he eliminated the state
paying for tuitions - "a program
that had been in effect since colleges
and universities first started in the
state," Hall said.
"There were only two states in the
nation - California and New York that had such a program," he said.
"Students in California now have to
pay tuition."
The 82,()(J().member OEA will circulate "rather lengthy reports" on
the positions each candidate has
held over the years on education
matters, Hall said.
"The possibility of mandatory
Social Security is the hottest issue
among Ohio teachers right now, hotter in this state than any other
because our state retirement

Chamber opposes
BY KATIE CROW
Pomeroy's Chamber of Commerce Tuesday went on record opposing OPIC's proposed Issue Two
that will be on the November ballot.
Meeting with chamber members
during a noon luncheon Tuesday at
the Meigs Inn was Mark Hirth,
representative for Ohioans for fair
taxation.
Hirth explained that Ohio voters
will be confronted with a proposed
change in Ohio law which would be
the most far"reaching tax measure
in the history of the state.
Proposed Issue Two, (by the Ohio
Public Interest Campaign, OPIC,) ·
according to Hirth, would increase
taxes in Ohio rather than decrease
taxes as OPIC contends.
According to Hirth the OPIC bill
mandates tax increases more than
five times as great as the relief it
proviqes. Instead . of increasing
taxes on individual taxpayers directly, the OPIC tax bill conceals the
tax increases by levying them
primarily on Ohio's employers.
Average Ohioans will pay the bill
in the form of higher prices for electricity, food, clothing, housing, autos
and other consumer goods, Hirth ex-

. plained. There would be a decrease
in property taxes but an increase in
business or corporate taxes which in
tum would cost taxpayers more
money.
Speaking out against the tax
proposal were Ted Reed, president
of the Farmers Bank and Savings
and Phil Kelly, owner of Kelly Mfg.
Co.
Reed made the motion to go on
record in opposition to the proposed
tax, Issue Two. The motion, seconded ·· by Kelly, was passed
unanimously.
According to Hirth Issue Two
, would increase taxes in Ohio by
more than $5 for every dollar it offers in tax relief. He also stated it
would endanger the jobs of Ohio
working men and women by levying
punishing taxes on· the purchase of
mOdern machinery and equipment.
Hirth·said it would stop growth of
industry either by expansion or
·relocation. He also said it would
decrease the total ~evenue coming
into Meig&amp;County.
Hirth suggested the chamber appoint a liaison officer to educate
county . residents regarding the
proposal. The chamber will appoint

program is funded - not bankrupt,''
he said.
Most states don't have retirement
programs that are adequately funded, according to Hall.
" But the Ohio system is well funded and Ohio teachers woUld rather
stay with the program they built and ·
paid for," he said, noting that
techers across the state have paid 8
percent of their salary into the
retirement program.
"Carter took a very hard line in '67
against requiring teachers to pay into Social Security, but it's still a
threat," he said.
Hall said Reagan and Anderson
have no record or position on the
issue at this point as far as he's
aware.

He's confident the OEA will have
an impact on the November election.
"The power that any group has is
based 'on their knowledge and their
conunltment and the. issues involved," he said.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
THURSDAY, SEPT. 4th, 9:30 to 5 PM
FRIDAY, SEPT; 5th, 9:30 to 8 PM
SATURDAY. SEPT. 6th, 9:30 to 5 PM
REALLY SAVE THESE THREE .DAYS

WESTERN
SHIRTS
Sizes S, M, L, a nd XL. -

REUNION SEPT. 14
The annual Wood reunion will be
hilld on Sept. 14 at the Forest Acres
Park near Rutland. A basket dinner
will be held at noon. All friends and
relatives of the family are invited to
attend.

Sh ~r t s

519 .95 Wes tern S h1rt s . . $15.96

2nd FLOOR COSMETIC DEPT.

521.95 Wes tern Shi r1s . . $11.56

WOMEN'S

RED HEART '1.49

Reg. $14.00
Reg. $17.00
Reg. $21.00
~eg. $23.00

JUNIOR .
•·

JEANS

There was a time when one checking plan could fit just
abo ut everyone's banking needs. But today that's simply no
longer true. That's why, begi nning September 1at Central
Trust, we'll offer yo u a choice in checking pl~ns.

And the right choice can save you money.
For those who write only a few checks each month and
prefer to maintain a small balance, we recommend the Economy
Account. T he service charge is only 7 5&lt;1 per month, plus 6'1
for eac h check paid.
If you write quite a few checks each month and maintain
a larger average checking balance, you'll want the Balance
Account. The service charge is d etermined by your average
monthly balance, and there are no additional charges, no matter
how many checks you write. The absolute maximum charge
is $3.00 per month, but if you maintain an ;~verage monthly
balance of only $400 there will be no service charge for
that month.
,
And one of the best things about checking at Central
Trust is that with both the Eco1,1omy Account and the Balance
Account, you can eliminate all checking service charges just
by keeping a minimum balance of $1,000 in a regular Cenr:al
Trust savings account.
:
.
.
Come in to any Central Trust off1ce and p1ck the plan
that's right for you. A choice in checking. lt's just one more better
banking service from Central Trust.

Better Banking Service. That's
the Centralldea.
,

rnE
CENTRAL 1RUSf

COMPANY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL 31 NO. 100

50% Cotton 50% Creslan
Acrylic . Sizes
S (34·36 ) •· M
·. (38·40) L (42·44) XL (46·48).
Slipover style - Fleece lined Solid colors.

'

t

GIRLS'

BOYS' SPRINGFOOT

DRES.S SALE

$5 SWEATSHIRTS
95

Sizes S (6·8) M ( 10· 121 L ( 14· 161
an~ XL ( 18-20) .

Bea uti ful fa ll colors and sty les
in
dr esses,
skirts · a nd

jumpers .
Sizes 2·4
4-6x

50% Cotton , 50%
Kad e l
Polyester. Fleece lined - Crew
nec k - Solid colors .

7· 14

•4••

Reg. 58 .00 . . , . . , . SALE S6.80
Reg. Sll.OO , . . , . . SALE S9 .3$
Reg . Sl6 .00 . . .. . SALE S13 .60
Reg .S2 1.00 ..... SALES17 .85

.......

BRA SALE

WHILE THEY
LAST!

•s•• THROW RUGS

•2 I I

MEN &amp; BOYS'

'1 39 TUBE SOCKS

Size 24x40 inches - Tweed look
and solid colors Limited
quantity - While they last.

Springfoot brand - White with
color trim - Many sc hool col ors - Also white . Me n' s sizes 9
to 15 - Boys Sizes 7 to 11 .

CHILDREN'S
.

WINTER SLEEPWEAR

KNIT SHIRTS
Buy tor sc hool wear now and save Velours - All cot ton - Cotton poly
blends - Numbers a nd footb a ll s hirts
included.

; IZES8 to20

Take advantage- of this sa le and buy the
sleepwear you'l l need th is winter .
Gowns, r obes and pa jamas t or little
boys and girl s in sizes Newbor n t o Size
14.

Boys 57 .95 Shirts .... . .• . .. . , .. . S6.70
Boy s S9 .9S Shirts . , .... , .... . . .. S8 .40
Boy s 510.95 Shirts .. .. ...... . .... S9.30
Boys S12.95.Shir1s .. .. • . .. ..... s 11.00

Reg. ss.oo . .. . . . ... .. .. , ... Sale S4 .2S
Reg. SI .OO ..... ,,, ......... Sale$5.95
Reg. S9.00 .. . .. . . .......... SaleS/ .65
Reg. S12.00 , . . .. . • , .. , .... Sale$10.20

FOR THIS SALE

..

FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1980

PANTY HOSE

BED BLANKETS

control Top and Extra Control
Top Sa ndal Foot or reenforced heel and toe sty les in

Ou r entire stock of blanke ts
sale pr iced . Includes electric
blankets - s heet blanke ts Use our layaway plan if you
like.

sheer or support styles.
Reg. SJ.OO
Reg . S3.9S
Reg. S5.95
:. Reg. S6.95

20%

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

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

S2.39 ·
S3.19
S4.79
SS.59

WRANGLER
'18.95
-- ,
DENIM WESTERN

MEN'S BLUE DENIM

FASHION JEANS

SHIRTS

Most all-are pre·wasned -~n
excel len1 select ion of fashion

100% Cotton - Pre·shrunk
Extra long tails - Snap front - '
Snaps on pockets and .c uffs. Excellent shirt for wel~ers . Neck
Sizes 14'12 to 20 Sleeve
lengths 32 to 35 inches.

denims i n fl a r e leg and
straight leg st yles ~ Wa ist
sizes 1.7 to 42 . Leng ths JOt o 36 .

I

S11. 9S F as hion J eans .. 514. 79

. , Sl$.59
.. $1~ . 39
.. $17. 19
. . $17.99

.,

69

~~----~~~----~--~~~~~~---,~·-·.--·~·--~~--~~~~"w~

ELBERFE DS ·IN POM

I

Body exhumation hearing Friday
FORT WORm, Texas - A state district judge will hold a hearing
Friday on exhwnlng the body in the grave of accused presidential
aMRssin Lee Harvey Oswald.
Judge James E. Wright decided Wednesday to retain partial
jurisdiction in a lawsuit brought by Oswald's brother. He said he
would hear Robert Oswald's case against Rose Hill Cemetery and
British author Michael Eddowes, who wants to dig up the body to
prove his claims that it actually is that of a Soviet agent.
The suit abo named DallaS County Medical Examiner Dr. Charles
Petty, but that part of the case will be moved to a Dallas court, Wright
ruled.
Petty had agreed to examine the body. Wright said he did not know
when Petty's portion of the lawsuit might be put on the docket In
Dallas.

WARSAW, Poland - In a new move to quiet Poland's restive labor
force, the communist government aMounced it would impose price
controls to check the rising ·cost of living as striking miners in the
southern coal fields of Upper SUesla returned to work today.
The official news agency PAP said coal miners went back to work in
all areas of Silesia and ''life is returning to normal in all the coal mine
areas.''
M~while, a coal mine strike leader arrested Tuesday In the
southern city of Katowice said he was released by authorities after
being held for 48 hours with a warning against trying to organize independent unions.

General Motors has massive recall
DETROIT - More than 1 mJlllon General Motors Corp. cars will be
recalled to fix a pollution control device, the automaker has announced.
GM said Wednesday it will ask owners of 1,034,000 Chevrolet, Pontiac, Buick and Oldsmobile models produced in the 1!m. and 1978
model years to take the cars to dealers and have exhaust recirculation
valves fixed.
The cars affected were GM's entire production in those two years
with the 3.&amp;-Uter, or 232-cubic inch, V-6 engine. It was GM's largest
recall to fi% a pollution problem, though not an industry record. Ford
Motor Co. once recalled 1.4 mJlllon cars for a slmllar reason.
Tests by the U.S. Envirorunental Protection Agency showed exCessive nitrogen oxide emlsaions because the valves get clogged with
exhllust deposits, GM said.

Officials fear dysentery outbreak

PLAYTEX

SAVE 20%

Sl8. 95 Fa sh1on J eans
Sl9.9S Fash1on J eans
U0.9S Fash10n Jean s
S21.95 Fashion Jean s

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

entine

Price controls to be imposed

REG. $3.79
Best Form Silver Saver
Bras and Action Comfort Bras. Double up
lift for fuller figures.

T••

.

at y

~

•a••

Sale Prices Start·

REG . $2.59
Bes lform Silver Saver
Bra. Double Knit, Cross
Over Style. Broken
Sizes.

•

-.....
--~

MEN'S WRANGLER

c lu~ed!

..

OAPSE is pressing for a H-month contract retrOactive to July 1 which
would include a 95-&lt;:ent-an-hour raise in pay. The school board has countered
with a two-year contract with the same raise staggered in three steps. School
administrators also proposed a three-year pact with an additional 56-centsan-hour increase and dental coverage.
The Columbus Board of Education was expected to meet in a special
session this morping, presumably to discuss seeking a temporary
restraining order and later a permanent injunction aimed at forcing the,
strikers back to their jobs:
A strike threat cllntinued iri Mansfield, but Assistant Superintendent Bart
Cromer said enough J&gt;rogress was made at a Wednesday night meeting for
both the board and the Mansfield Education' Association to agree to a
another meeting Friday afternoon.
.
The MEA membership authorized a strike last week following a decision
by an arbitra'tor to accept the school board's $681,550 pay package instead of
the $5.35 mJlllon plan proposed by the teachers.
A strike was averted today in the ~pupil Richmond Heights district in
Cuyahoga County. Pickets were on the scene at the schools this morning, but

superintendent George Bowdourls said agreement was reaclled at 6:50.a.m.
after a night-long negotiating session, The district's 61 teachers voted last
week to strike today if no agreement had been reached on a base salary Increase.
A possible strike was delayed today In the Madison Local school system
when teachers agreed to work pending a 4 p.m. meeting with the board of
education in that Lake County school district.
A strike by 171 teachers at the 4,000-pupil Northeastern Local schooll in
Clark County continued, as well as a walkout by 260 teachers in the
Miamisburg city schools in Montgomery County.
Schools in Trumbull County remained .opened deaplte a two.day old strike
by 160 members of the Hubbard Education Association, and teac)Jers in the
Leonard Kirtz School for the Mentally Retarded in Youngljtown stayed out of
their classrooms. ·
There were also indications that members of the Boardman Education
Association may .strike next week if negotiations with the school board aren't
successful.
Members of the OAPSE at the Nelsonville-York school district in Athel15 ·
County agreed to work on a day-to-day basis although their contract expired
August 31. A union representative warned that a strike was possible next
week if a settlement wasn't reached.

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·LAST!

ployees and the school board broke off early Wednesday when federal
mediator Joseph Santa-Enuna said there were no re11sons to continue them.

JEANS

WINTUK
KNITTING YARN

At On

The ·strikers also didn 't have the muscle. of the system's 4,500 teachers
behind them after members of the Columbus Education Association voted
1,01&amp;-269 Wednesday night to croas picket lines to teach, Se~enteen teachers
abstained In the voting.
·
Among the reasons the CEA membership gave for not supporting the
walkout by the system's bus drivers, maintenance and food service employees was that striking members of the Ohio Association of Public School
· Employees did not honor CEA picket lines during a strike five years ago,
Contract negotiations between representatives of the non-teaching em-

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514.95 Wes te rn

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Columbus schoolchildren !ind teachers crossel! picket lines Thursday, on
the first day of fall classes and the first day of a strike by some of the
system's non-teaching employees.
'
Picket lines were set up at bt,1s compounds and schoo)lj throughout the city,
but no major problems were reported.
Columbus schools have a staggered start, with studenta in some grades
returning Thursday and the remainder of the system's 73,000 students returning Friday. School officials won't have opening day totals until noon,
although observers reported unconfirmed estimates of about two-thirds the
city's high school students attending.

ACCESSORY
BAGS

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•
ISSUe
such a person following further
study.
In other business, Paul Simon,
president, announced directors
recently elected were Pat O'Brien,
Katie Crow, Bob Miller and Phil
Kelly. The board of directors will
meet Tuesday, Sept. 9, at noon at
Meigs Inn.
Simon also reported the cilllmber
will sponsor a·goH tournament Sept.
11 , at Jaymar GoH Course,
Pomeroy, beginning at 1 p.m. Entry
fee is $20. Winner of the event will be
presented a set of Wilson 1200 goH
clubs. Refreshments will also be served.
Attending were Simon, Kelly, .
Reed, Leo Vaughan, Scott Lucas,
Bruce Teaford, Bill Quickel, Hank
Cleland, John Anderson, Joe Clark
and Jinna Arnott, secretary.

Cqlumbus schools hit by strike

.SEPTEMBER SALE DAYS

HAMILTON, Ohio - Butler County health officials fear an outbreak
of contagioWI dystentery could spread with children returning to ·
school.
Health Commissioner Robert Lerer said 21 cases of dysentery, a
severe stomach disorder caused by bacteria, were reported in the
county by the ena of AUgWit.
Lerer said eounty statistics for 1979 were not available, bUt no cases
were reported to Hamilton health officials last sununer.
No dysentery outbreaks have been reported in neighboring counties,
but health officials worry the disease could spread in schools, It can be
transmitted by direct contact, Lerer said.
·
Symptoms include high fever, abdominal pains and severe diarrhea,
Lerersaid.

Manufacturers prepare for trial
NEWPORT, Ky. - A group of about 40 product manufacturers is
preparing for trial in the latest development to the Beverly Hills Supper Club fire litigation.
·
The defendants were expected at a pre-trial hearing today with
Campbell Circuit Judge John Diskin. He has yet to set a trial date for
the group.
These defendants, who have not settled or gone to trial, include
manufacturers and distributors ~ rubber latex products, urethane
foam and other products Wled at the club.
Attorneys for the estatea of 165 dead and about 50 injured in the May
28, 1977, fire claim the pi'Oducts cOntributed to the casualties. The
night club was In Southgate, Ky,

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy, warm and hwnld with a chance of showers and thunderstorms through Fnday. Lows tonight near 70. Highs Friday In the
. mid to upper lOs. Chance of rain 30 percent tonight, 40 percent Friday.
Winds aoutherly to southwesterly around 10 mph tonight.
Exteaded.Oblo Forecut- Saturday through Monday: Fair Saturday. Chance of showers or thunderstorms Saturday night and Sunday.
Fair Monday. Highs in the mid-709 tolow80sSaturday, wannlngto the
low to mlcHIOs by Monday. Lo.ws In the mid to upper 50s early Saturday
and In the upper 50s to lower 60s by early Monday.

.

'

WILL VISIT AREA - One of the world's best known steamboats, the
Delta Queen with its calliope sounding loud and clear will be docking in
Gallipolis from 1:30 to 4 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 10. Although no an-

nouncements have been made regardlni tours, in past appearances, the
general public was permitted to go on board and view the majestic vessel.
The boat animal tours s~h river cities as Pittsburgh, St.Loula, New
Orleans, and of course, its home~. Cincinnati.

Jail explosion suit enters third .day
The third day of testimony began
thl8 morning in the $850,000 civil suit
brought by Bruce D. and Gloria
Wallace, Lancaster, as a result of
the March 2, 1976 explosion that
destro~ed the Mason County J aU.
The suit, with Mrs. Elvin E.
Wedge, administratrix of the estate
of Elvin E. Wedge, ·deceased: as
defendant,' is being heard in the
United States District Court at Huntington.
Wallace, former Middleport
resident, an Ohio Highway
Patrobnan at the time of the jail explosion, lost a leg in the blast.
Wedge, Mason County sheriff when

the explosion occurred, died In the
Anson ·and Or. Young I. Chol who
line of duty.
treated Wallace upon his arrival at
The jail was blown up after Bruce · Pleasant Valley Hospital following
Sisk forced his way into his wife's
the explosion.
cell with a sawed off ·shotgun and a
Wallace had been riding with West
suitcase full of dynamite. Sisk's wife
Virginia State Pollee Trooper Uoyd
was being held on a murder charge
Akers when officers we~e sumresulting from the death of the moned to the jail after Sisk had forcouple's young child.
·
ced his way into the jail cell at gunKilled in the explosion in addition
point.
· to Sheriff Wedge were Deputies KenAnson was on the witoess stand
neth Love and Ernest Hesson and
most of Wednesday, He was the
theSisks.
dispatcher whom Sisk held the gun
The only witnesses called to the and forced him (Anson) to let him instand during the first two dpys of the to the cell with his wife.
trial were State Trooper M. . E.
According to · testimony given
Smith, former jail dispatcher Keith Tuesday afternoon by West Virginia

State Trooper Michael S. Smith,
Wallace rode to the jail and then
asked the sheriff If he'd like him to
leave. Sheriff Wedge reportedly told
Wallace to stick around.
During AnsOn's testimony Wednesday, he said he could see Sl8k's
wife on the monitor in his office but
not Sisk when he was first at the jail.
He said when Sisk returned with a
sawed-off shotgun he led Sisk down
the stairs to the lower level where
his wife :was jailed, opened the door
and locked the pair Inside.
Anson then reported the incident
to the state police, deputies and
Sheriff Wedge,

Teacher walkouts spread to 10
23,000 teachers and other school emBy Tbe Associated Press
Administrators in Rochester, , ployees expired Monday.
The union is demanding the
N.Y., closed nearly half of the city's
rehiring of 2,300 teachers ·laid off
58 public schools Wednesday as
leafher walkouts spread to 10 states, over the sununer, a pay increase
affecting more than half a million · and a maximum class size of 33
students, the National Education pupils.
Qtherlabornegotiations :
Association said.
- In Rhode Island, some 15,700
All eight of Roehester's high '
schools and a junior high were students were out of school.
cl09ed after officials said they did Teachers in Woonsocket and Cumnot have enough substitute teachers berland walked off the job, while in
to conduct classes. Seventeen the North Providence school
elementary schools were · also district, union janitors struck and,
cl09ed.
teachers honored their picket line.
Membirs of the Rochester . -Teachers in Newark, N.J ., voted
Teachers' Association picketed Wednesday to shut down the district
peacefully in defiance of a court in- - the state's largest - on Thursday.
junction ordering the 2,300 teachers The strike would affect more than
back to work. The walkout affects 60,700. pupils. Teachers are deman:
some 34,600 students.
ding a 10 percent across-the-board
The NEA, in an informal survey,
salary boost and a 15 percent cost of
living increase.
said there were some 60 ongoing
- In Sierra Vista, Arlz., teachers
teacher strikes, involving about
550,000 students in Arizona, Illinois-, . set uti picket lines outside the
Iowa, Michigan, NeW Jersey, New district's six schools Wednesday, but
York, Ohio, Pehnsylvania, Rhode doors were kept open as substitutes
kept the classrooms staffed. Some
Island and Washington.
Teachers and school officials con- 5, 700 pupils were affected by the
tinued negotiations in Philadelphia,
walkout.
·where school opens Friday for 110me
- Nearly 11,000 students were af220,000 students. The contract for
fected by a strike in the Wheaton-

Warrensville District west of
Chicago, the largest walkout in
Illinois. Classes were disrupted for
about 30,000 students in the state.
- In Washington, four districts,
with more than 30,000 students, were
closed.
- A walkout by bus. drivers, food
service persoMel, maintenance and
clerical personnel could close 139
schools in Columbus, Ohio on Thursday, Some 72,000 students would be

st~tes

affected.
The 160-member Hubbard
Education Association, also in Ohio,
struck the 3,100-studentsystem Wednesday but classes were held
anyway.
- About 86,000 students · in ·
Michigan were idle, as teachers in 23 ·
communities, including Bay City
and Mount Pleasant, continued their
walkouts.

-Jury indicts Middleport man
Meigs County's Grand Jury met
Wednesday for the first session of Its
September term and returned an indictment of vehicular homicide
a~ainst Edward Neece, 31, Rt. I,
Middleport.
The charge came as a result of an
incident which occurred on Aug. 22,
at Langsville In which Terry Rathburn; 8, was struck and killed by a
ca r driven by Neece.
Veh icular homicide Is a
misdemeanor oi the first degree
with a possible penalty of six months
in the county jail and a fine of up to
$1,000,

No other Indictments were returned by the grand jury.
Grand jury members u a part of
their duties were given the opportunity to Inspect the facilities and
conditions at the Meigs CountY Jail.
They found all to be in compliance
with the rules set down by the court
for the operation of the jail,
·
Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge John C. Bacon outlined the
duties and responsibllitia of the
grand jury. Prolecutlng attorney
Fred w. Crow, m,. presented the
case for the state of Ohio.

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