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                  <text>•
14-The Dai1y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, April 16, 1980

•

Iran's fighting
unit vying for Hussein's ouster
.
Hussein, speaking Tuesday night
By The Associated Press
in
the Iraqi city of Mosul, again
Iran's government radio ancalled
Khomeini a "sllah wearing a
nounced formation of an " Islamic
turban"
and said, " If this collision
Revofutionary Army for the
becomes
a national duty, then Iraq
Uberation r:J.Iraq" and called for a
will
do
batUe
in all its lonns."
holy war, or jtllad, to overthrow the
The
Iraqi
le&amp;der
said the two coun·secular Iraqi government vying with
tries
could
reconcile
their difAyatollah Ruhollah Kbomeini for
ferences
only
if
Iran
.
meets
three
dominance of Ute Persian Gulf.
demands
:
reaffirmation
of
Iraqi
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
Iraq's
navigation
rights
in
the
Shalt
lashed back, calling on tbe Iranian
al Arab, an estuary betwi!On the two
people to oust " the rotten
countries
that is Iraq's waterway to
Khomeini" and Iranian President
the Persian Gulf; withdrawal from
Abolhassan Bani-Sadr.
In Beirut, Lebanon, Shiite sup- · the three smaU islands at the entrance to the gulf whicll Iran seized
porters of Khomeini and. pr~Iraqi
in 1971 and fortified, and recognition
Palestinians batUed with guns and
of the Arab nationality of the nonmortars for the second straight day,
Persian majority in Iran's . oiland authorities said four persoru;
producing province of Khuzestan,
were believed killed. A bomb
across the Shattal Arab from Iraq.
wrecked the Beirut office of the
The manifesto broadcast by Radio
Iranian airline, apparently in
Tehran thundered charges at Iraq's
retaliation for bomb attacks earlier
ruling Baath Socialist Party and apthis week on the Iraqi commercial
pealed for an uprising against it. But
center sod the Iraqi airline's office
it
gave no information about the
In the Lebanese capital.

)

Mayor~s

court
Three defendants forfeited honds,
aU posted on speeding charges, and
two others were fined in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarenctl Andrews
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds of $30 each were
George Freeland, Syracuse; Jay
Warner, Middleport, and Lowell
Kegley, Sandy Hook, Ky.
Fined were Marvin Craig, no address recorded, $50 and costs, disturbing the peace~ and Dwayne Priddy,
Rutland, $50 and costs, on an open
flask charge.
TO END MARRIAGES
Filing for divorce in Gallia County
Common Pleas Court Monday was
Karen J . Harrington from Edward
Lee Harrington.
FUing for dissolution of marriage
Tuesday were Pamela L. Skidmore
and Duane M. Skidmore.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
has delayed tw&lt;rthirds of its highway construction, maintenance,
safety and bridge projects this year
because of federal fund cutbacks,
state transportation director David
L. Weir said Tuesday.
President Carter has withheld a
total of $1.5 billion in federal Highway Trust Fund money from all the
staies In an attempt to trim federal
spending and curb inflation, Weir
said.
As a result, Ohio was forced to
delete projects valued at about $120
million from its fiscal year 19al
plans.
Those projects will be assigned a
top priority when additional federal
funds are available Oct. 1, the start
of the new federalliscal year, Weir
--------~

Area deaths •• •
Mide G. McKnight, 83, Hartlord,
died Tuesday in the Holzer Medical
Center.
Born Nov. 5, 1896, in New Haven,
she was the daughter of the late
George and Mattie Brown Ginther.
She was a member of the Hartlord
United Methodist Church and the
Julia Bryant Sewing Club.
Survivors Include her husband,
James T. McKnight; a son, Charles
T., Atwater, Ohio; six grandchildren, one great-grandchild, and
several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by a
son, GeorgeG.,In 1966.
Funeral services will be conducted Friday, I p.m., at the
Foglesong Funeral Home, with the
Rev. William Dawson officiating.
Burial will follow in the Graham
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Thursday from 2 to 4 p.m. and
7to9p.m.

Chase reduces
prime rate
NEW YORK (AP) "Chase
Manhattan Bank today reduced its

prime lending rate from the record
3&gt; percent to 191'• percent, becoming
the first major bank to lower the
rate since December.
In announcing the move, Chase
said it reflected a widespread
decline in interest rates In recent
days, but cautioned the rate still
might rise in the future, depending
on market conditions.
~ reduction was the first by
ChaSe, the nation's third-largest
bank, since Nov. 'ZI, when it reduced
Its rate from 151'• percent to 151'• per·

cent.
A few banks reduced the rate to 15
percent In December, but after tllat
it ro5e steadily until it reached 20
percent two weeks ago.
The prime lending rate is the rate
banks charge on loans to their most
credit-worthy corporate customers,
with most other corporate and industrial customers paying more. ·
Rates rose sllarply in recent mon·
ths as the Federal Reserve tightened
credit and as loan business
remained relatively strong. But the
economy has weakened In recent
weekB and some economists think it
may bave entered a recession.

ASK TOWED

••

Marriage licenses were issued to
Brian David Harnllton, 20, Rt. 1,
Minersville, and Gerri .Ann Rought,
23, Pomeroy; Douglas Elmo Cundiff 18, Minersville, and Abra
~ Slmmennan, 18, Colwnbus;
Gecqe Franklin Pickens, 22, Long
BottiiD and Deborah Sue Dawson,
25, Long Bottom.

.•

With the Iranian armed forces in a
state of impotence since the overthrow of the sllah and the purge of
his officers and the Iranian government beset by rivalries, disunity,
lnefficience and unrest among the
ethnic minorities, the Iraqi government apparently is bent on replacing
Iran as the dominant power in the
Persian GuH.
So far, however, the reported
hostilities have been confined to artillery exchanges across the border
in which the Iranians claim the
destruction of Iraqi border posts,
some air activity ·in which no
casualties have been reported, the
expulsion of 15,800 Iranians from
Iraq and the escalating war of wordS, mostly from the Iranian side.
Iraq has isSued no reports of
military action.
Meanwhile, the families of the 50
American hostages in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran received messages
which the captives gave to the two

Cutbacks in federal funds
delay Ohio road programs

r--------------------------..
Mide G. McKnight

leaders of the rebel force or whether
it had any men under arms yet.
_
"We have a firm belief in the victory of our nation in its armed
struggle against the Baath mercenaries, and we call all the people
to an Islamic jihad.... Let us all rise
up to save our country which has
been occupied by Eastern (Soviet)
and Western (American ) imperialism and Zionism," said \be
salvo in the war of words between
the two neighbors at the head of the
gulf.
It accused President Saddam
Hussein's Baath regime of turning
Iraq into "a prison for the believer
and the faithful and a graveyard for
freedom."
"Every day the fascist party increases its criminal and tyrannical
acts, kills scores of revolutionary
believers and fills its jails with free
men of our beloved Iraq," the broadcast charged.

Emma M. Zimmerman
Mrs. Emma M. Zimmerman, 83,
North Main St., Rutland, died
Tuesday night at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs. Zimmerman was born Jan. I,
1897 in Vinton County, a daughter of
the late Cook and Marget Allen Van
Bibber. She was a homemaker all of
her life.
Surviving are her husband, Cash
Zimmerman; a daughter, Mrs. Alice
Northrup, Zanesville; four grandchldren, 12 great-grandchildren, six
great-great-grandchildren and
several nieces, nephews and
cousins. She was preceded in death
·by two daughters, Marget Tyler
and Macia Harrison, two brothers
and two sisters.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Friday at the Walker Funeral
Home with the Rev. Lloyd D.
Grimm, Jr., officiating. Burial will
be in Meigs Memory Garden. Friends may call at the funeral home
anytime after 2 p.m. Thursday until
time of the services on Friday. The
family will receive friends at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday.

said.
But "that pushes everything off into the future ," he told a press conference.
And the costs of the deferred
projects will probably increase as a
result of inflation during the six·
month period, he said.
Some of the deleted projects are
for safety upgrading , bridge
rehabilitation and replacement,
major reconstruction, grade
crossing protection devices, slips,
drainage and earthwork.
About 75local government projects in counties around the state are
also affected.
In addition, 36 bridge repair
projects worth $4.9 million and 71
grade crossing pavement projects
costing $3.1 million will be delayed.

New sanctions
page
.
State Department spokesman
(C ont inued from

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MAY.

SHOWSFD..M
Afilm was shown by Mai-y Voss at
the recent meeting of the Willing
Workers Missionary Society of the
First Church of God, Syracuse. The
Rev. George Oiler opened the
meeting with prayer.
Alice Loomis read St. Mark 1,
1:&gt;-35 for devotions, and each
member told what the resurrection
meant to her. A report was given on
the recent rummage sale. A white
elephant sale was held at the
meeting. Mrs. Loomis llad the closing prayer, and Joy Clark served
refreshments.
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency Unit
went to 'E ast Main St., at .6:07 p.m.
Tuesday' for Doris Miller who was
llavlng chest pains. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Ho~pital.

f

.U.S. recesszon begins
WASHINGTON (AP) - After
months of fits and starts, the
nation's economy apparently is
flnaUy moving into a long-predicted
recession - its seventh since World
War n. A range of economic indicato.rs, from housing to -jobs, say
the downturn lias begun.
.
"While there was a brief period of
doubt earlier this year about which .
direction the economy was going,
the preponderance of evidence in the
last several weeks all seems to point
toward the fact that a recession is .
now setting In," said William Cox,
deputy chief economist at the Commerce Department.
Most analysts, including those for
the Carter administration, predict
the downturn will be mild. But they
admit that before It's over, as many
as 1 million or 2 million persons
could lose their jobs.
A recession traditionally has been
defined as two consecutive quarters
of declining national output. Government statistics due for release
Friday are expected to show that the
economy continued to grow in the
first quarter, leaving the "official"

sta.rt of the downturn for the secondquarter - April through June.
But Nancy Teeters, a member of
the Federal Reserve Board, told a
gathering of bankers Wednesday
that. she thinks the recession lias
aiready started, probably in March
or early April.
"I personally think the peak of the
last cycle is behind us," she said,
referring to the period of economic
growth since the last recession In
1974-75.
There are many reasons for the
current recession, which is expected
to last six to nine months. They
range fron\ the rapid increase In
world Q.i) p(ices - which is diverting
money from non-fuel USes - to high
interest rates engineered by the
Federal Reserve in an effort to get a
tighter rein on money and credit.
The auto and housing industries
began slumping lrult year. Drop-offs
in those Industries have increased,
and signs now point to problems In
other sectors.
While unemployment will be the
cost of this slowdown, the benefit
could be some relief from inflation,
which has been soaring at an 18 per-

From the Associated Press

Industry, religion won't change
' SAUSBURY, Rhodesia - Marxist Prime Ministe~ ~rt Mugabe
pledged to keep his hands off private iridustry and re~g1on a~ RhodeslB
prepared to become independent Zimbabwe at nu~ght torught. ..
Mugabe, raised as a Roman Catholic, said he believed CatholiciSm
and Marxism could c~xist.
.
.
Mugabe was c~leader of the Patriotic Front guerrilla alliance
which fought for seven years to establish black majonty rule in this
.--southern African nation. Civil war ended early this year under a
cease-fire and constitution Britain helped negotiate.

marathon negotiations on self-government for 1.2 million Palestinian
Arabs, ''some progress" toward easing Israel's security co~cerns. ,
Begin refused to be specific before discussmg the ISSUe wtth Egypt s
President Anwar Sadat.

Third planeload ·o f refug

.

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica - A third planeload of 157 Cuban refugees
from the Peruvian Embassy In Havana arrived today, and some of
them claimed they were heckled, mobbed and robbed by supporters of
President Fidel Castro before they left.
A fourth planeload with about as many is expected later. in the day,
leaving about 9,700 still waiting to leave Castro's communist country,
according to the Peruvian government's count.
.

Five football divisions created
COLUMBUS Ohio (AP) - The .Ohio High School Athletic
Association ~rd of control voted today to approve five divisions for
its football playoffs starting next fail .
.
The vote was f&gt;-2ln favor of enlarging the playoffs from the current
three classes to the five divisions. That would create 40 playoff berths
starting with the 1980 season.
Voting in favor of the proposal were Jack Schmidt of Gahanna, Gene
Watkins of Steubenville, Jerry Copley of Peebles, Fred Durkle of the
Twin Valley school, and Larry Morrison of Sylvania.

Delegation heading to Washington
CLEVF;LAND- The United Auto Workers, faced with new waves of
layoffs and plant closings, plans to send a ~ive delegation to
washington next month to push for government action.
uAw President Douglas A. Fraser said Wednesday that 800 key
local union leaders will be sent to Washington on May 8. They're to ask
. the government to put pressure on Japanese automakers to follow
Volkswagen's eumple of creating car Industry jobs in the Uruted
States.

W~R. Ohlo- The chainnan of Ohio's task force on acid rain
says there's some indication of acid effects on some lakes In the northeastern United States, but none on land areas. .
. ..
..
T.C. Weidensaul, appointed to head the Ohio Scientific AdVISory
Task Force on Acid Rain, questions whether any real cause for concem aboutacld rain in Ohio exists.

Murder suspect getting new trial

M,UlYVOSS

HAMILTON, Ohio - A Hamilton man accused ln conn~Uon with
the slaylngs of 11 members of his family will get a new trial m a different county.
Visiting Judge A~ Ross Siverling of Ashland County granted the
change of venue to Hancock County for James U. Ruppert, 44.
Siverling mailed his opinion from Ashland to the BuUer County Common Pleas Court Wednesday. Siverling said exterudve news .covera~e
d. the deaths and first trial would preclude selection of an unpartial
juryinBuUerCounty.

INGELS
FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
"TWO IN ONE STORE''
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

FIFTEEN CENTS.'

•

Acid rain affects some lakes

Built In Models Do
Not Qualify

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1980

WASHINGTON- Israeli ~e Minister Menachem Begin says his
talks with President Carter produced, in addition to agreement for

examiner
BOARDMAN, Ohio (AP) - A
driver's license examiner in Board·
man was charged Tuesday with
bribery and dismissed from his
position.
The state Highway Patrol alleges
tllat Salvatore Cua, lili, of Boardman, accepted money to complete
license applications for persons who
did not take the examinations. Cua,
a license examiner for the patrol for
the past fiv~ years, was fired after
the arrest.
Charges against him were filed In
the Mahoning County Common
Pleas Court.

NO. 3

Ta1ks produce other benefits too

Driver;s licens·e
dismissed from post

VOL 31

•

at

EMERAUDE
~e~

~ounces

animal. All animals taken to the
clinic must be restrained in some
way. Each animal vaccinated will
receive a certificate.
Anyone with a question about the
clinic should contact the health
department at 99U626.

-

•

e

1)

Hodding Carter repeated a warnif18
to Iran Tuesday, saying that nation
"faces real dangers from Ute Nortil," as well as from its dispute with
Iraq, its Internal sepa~atlsf.
movements, and its "sllattere4
economy." He said contlnue4
holding of the hostages "plays Into
the llands of these enemies."
•
The Soviets Invaded Iran on~
before, in 1946, occupying much r:J.
the northern Iranian province of
Azerbaijan before withdrawing un:
der heavy Western pressure.
•

Highway resurfacing will take
precedence over new construction,
Weir said.
. Ahout 600 miles of state highways
will he paved this summer, com_pared to 1,170 last year. About 1,900
miles should be resurfaced each
year, he added.
Weir characterized the funding
delay as "an exercise in false
economy" which will not save
money because trust fund revenue
cannot be spent on anything else.
He also questioned the equality of
the cutbacks, charging an analysis
shows the cuts appear to have been
Inordinately heavier in Ohio than
elsewhere.
"Ohio has been cut more than
many other states," Weir said.

Rabies clinic slated May 1
The Meigs County Health Department has arranged for a rabies
clinic at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds Thursday, May 1, from
3to6p.m.
Dr. Alan Boster of Gallia County
wiU administer the vaccine at $3 per

Swiss representatives of the International Red Cross who in·
terviewed them in the embassy Mon·
day. The families said Ute messages
indicated the hostages were ln good
condition despite their long captivity, which today went into the
165thday.
The messages were brought to the
Red Cross headquarters In Geneva,
Switzerland, by Dr. Bernard
Liebesklnd, one of the two officials
who Interviewed the Americans.
From there, they were telexed to the
American Red Cross In New York
and then telephoned to Ute families.
A Red Cross spokeswoman said
the original handwritten messages
were being mailed to the families
from Geneva.
Liebeskind and Harald Sclunid de
Gruneck, the Red Cross represen·
tative in Tehran said they spoke
with "all the hostages." Although
they said they agreed not to say how
many Americans were being held,
the State Department said it was
now confident that tbe total of 50 was
correct.

•

weather

Swmy today, with highs near GO. Partly clpudy tonight and Friday.
U.ws tonight arOI,llld 40. Highs tomorrow around 70. The chance of
precipllation is 10 percent today and 20 percent tonight and Friday.
OHlO EXTENDED OliTLOOK
By the Associated Press
'Saturday through Moaday: Mos!ly fair, with a wa~g trend.
Hl&amp;lit 111 the upper 50s to mid . . Saturday, riling to the upper 80s to
mid 7811 by Moaclay. Ulw! in the mid 308 to low 40s Saturday mol'lliog,
mebllll tbe mid to upper 40s by Moaday morning.

,,

cent annual rate in recent months.
Treas!!I'Y Secretary G. .William
Miller tOld a Senate Finance subcommittee Wednesday that he expects the rate of increase in consumer prices to drop to an annual
rate of 10 percent or less by· early
next year.
Among the signs tllat recession is
finally at hand: HOUSING: The
Commerce Department reported
Wednesday that construction of new
homes fell22 percent from February
to March - to an annual rate of
1,041,000 units. That was 42 percent
below the annual rate of 1,800,000
housing starts reported in March
1979 and the lowest construction
level since the 1974-75 recession.
INDUSTRIAL ACTIVITY: The
nation's factories operated at only 83
percent of capacity last .month, the
Federal Reserve reported Wed·
nesday. That is down nearly a full
percentage point from February and
is the lowest level since March 1978.
Earlier this week, the Fed said
production at the nation's factories
fell a sharp 0.8 percent in March
following a 0.2 percent drop in
February. "Reductions in output
(were) widespread," the report
said.
RETAIL SALES: Sales at retail
stores - a key measure of consumer
spending - slumped for the,second
consecutive month iJi March, the
(;ommerce Department reported
late lrult week. March sales of $77.2
billion were 1.3 percent below'
February sales, which, in turn, had
been down 1.6 percent from January

sales.
AliTOS: Industry figures released
Tuesday showed domestic car sales
got off to the worst start for an April
since the recession year of 1975 and
were down 25 percent from a year
ago. Ford Motor Co. announced
Tuesday that it was closing three
plants and reducing work at four
other locations, eliminating about
15,000 jobs. More than 200,000 auto
workers already are on layoff
because of poor sales. Then on Wednesday, General Motors announced
12,000 layoffs.
INTEREST RATES: The bond
market, which had been depressed
for weeks, rallied Wednesday after
Henry Kaufman, chief economist of
the investment banking firm of
Salomon Brothers, said he thought
the peak in Interest rates had been
reached as the economy was on the
uprecipice of another recession."
As bond rates plunged, the Chase
Manhattan Bank' lowered its prime
lending rate from 20 percent to 19o/•
percent in the first reduction by a
major bank since December. Some
smaller banks reduced their prime
rates to as low as 18o/• percent.
EMPLOYMENT: Labor Department figures released earlier this
month showed unempldyment rose
to 6.2 percent in March from
February's 6 percent. The ominous
signs were a drop In the total number of jobs in the economy and an in·
crease in unemployment among
adult males, which hints of trouble
in the construction and manufacturing industries.

Wilkesville resident
faces dumping charge
WUbum R. Gunnoe, 25, Wilkesville
has been cited to Meigs County
Court on a charge of illegal dumping
on a Rutland Township Road off CR
12 near Langsville, Wednesday.
Sheriff James J. Proffitt reports
his department has ·been receiving
complaints concerning illegal dumping in the vicinity of old Wadley
Mill near Langsville. Wednesday
at 2 p.m. the department received a
call that a truck loaded with trash
had just gone up CR 12.
Deputies Dave Ohlinger and Jimmer Soulsby responded to the call
and located the vehicle. Gunnoe had
just finished unioading his truck
when officers arrived.
The department investigated a hitskip that occurred Wednesday at approximately I: 30 p.m. at Bradbury .
According to the report Karen D.
Hysell, Rt. 1, Middleport, was
traveling north on SR 7, attemplng
to make a !eft hand turn onto CR 5
when a northbound vehicle passed
striking her left front fender. The
vehicle failed to stop. The incident is
under investigation.
Deputies are investigating a

breaking and entering d the
American Painting Co., Rt. 1, Middleport, Hobson, that occurred
Tuesday.
Taken were wrenches valued at
$1,000.
Henry Bahr, Rt. 1, Ulng Bottom,
reported that sometime Tuesday
night or Wednesday morning an
unknown vehicle ran off the road
and struck and damaged five
newspaper tubes.

By The Aosoclated Press
An Iranian firing squad today
executed four alleged saboteurs, one
of them a woman, after they were
convicted in a string of bombings
and attacks on officials in Iran's oilrich southwest, Tehran Radio reported. Iranian authorities cllarged
they had been trained In Iraq.
The Revolutidnary Court of
Khuzestan province llanded down
the sentence Wednesday, the same
day that six persons were killed and
31 others were injured in the latest
attack in the province, a bombing in
the refinery city of Abadan, on the
Iraqi border.
Iran and Iraq are locked in a tense
border confrontation, but the government radio did not say immediately whether Wednesday's
bombing, which destroyed several
shops, was believed t9 be the work of
supporters of Iraq.
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's
revolutionary
regime has
repeatedly accused Iraq of fomenung unrest among the Arabs who
comprise the majority In Khuzestan
province.
Tehran Radio said the four "gang
members" executed today had been
trained as guerrillas ln Iraq, llad
blQwn up oil pipelines and made
other attacks on oil·industry installations and llad tried to
assassinate an official of the
revolutionary guards in the
Khuzestan city of Khorramshahr.
The small-sc~le border warfare
and the war of words between Iraq
and ·Iran continued, with Radio
Tehran reporting an I rantan border
police post attacked and sporadic

:•

Bridge condition
upsets residents
Resi.dents of New Haven are
charging that promises of repairs to
the delapidated bridge on old US 33
are just" a political move by Governor Jay Rockefeller" to soothe the
ruffled feathers of his constituents.
Gary Chernenko, spokesman for
Ute West Virginia Department of
Highways, said earlier this week
plans lor the structure's repair
should should be completed in May
but the DOH is holding off on accepting bids for the work until it can
see if federal funding can be obtained.
. " I can't give any other date except
wben the plans will be completed,"
Chernenko said. " Some envirorunental questions still must be
answered,". He also Indicated a

public hearing might be held in May.
Meanwhile, a letter has been written to Governor Rockefeller by
Jerry Arnold, a resident of Mayo
Dr., New Haven, on behalf of himself and residents of the l'!ew Haven
area.
In his letter, Arnold cited recent
train derailments ln the New Haven
community and how those accidents
could have been affected residents
that live between the railroad
crossing at Midway Drive and the
bridge.
Arnold in closing his letter said,"
New Haven has a. first class volunteer fire department and emergency
squad composed of dedicated people
but they cannot get across the bridge
on a promise ! . We need a bridge."

Announce Page Street hid opening
MARIETIA - The Ohio Depart·
ment of Transportstion will open
bids In Columbus May 13 for
widening and improving Page St., In
Middleport
Programmed estimate for right r:J.
way, engineering and construction is
$350,000. The project will be financed
with federal-aid safer off systems
roads program, Issue No. 1 and
Meigs County funds.

exec~te

Iranians

CONDEMNED BRIDGE - The West Virginia Department of Highways has placed a load limit and condemned use of the dilapidated bridge
on old U.S. 33 near New Haven. Community residents are upset that no
action has been taken by the Rockefeller administration to repair the
structure.

No ODOT funds will be used to
finance the improvement.
The project will extend from
Powell St. to the Leading Creek
Marina entrance on Railroad St.
Plans call for new 20-foot
pavement between combination
curb and gutter from Powell St. to
Elm St. and 20 and 22-foot pavement
with four foot berms from Elm St. to
the end of the improvement.

Replacement sidewalks,
necessary drainage and water work,
pavement marklns and signing are
also included In the improvement.
Through traffic will be routed
around Elm St. to Powell St. construction over Elm St. and Broad·
way St.
Estimated completion date of the
project is Oct. 31.

4 alleged sab9teurs

cwhes continuing along the frontier. No casualties were reported.
But heavy fighting was reported
between government forces and the
rebellious Kurds of northwest Iran
who have been fighting for
autonomy ever since the overthrow
of the shah 14 months ago.
Pars, the official Iranian news
agency, reported three batUes. It
said three revolutionary guardsmen
were wounded near Paveh; four
soldiers were killed and 25 were
wounded In an army assault that inflicted heavy casualties on the
rebels in Ute Qasernlu Valley, and
six troops were killed and 20 wounded in Ourmyieh.
Turkey's largest independent
newspaper, · Hurriyet of Istanbul,
reported on Wednesday that Iranian
troops killed at least 500 Kurds In
recent fighting. But no such largescale actions were reported by
Iran 's
government-controlled
media.
Foreigu Minister Sadegh Ghot~
zadeh was Iran's big gun ln the war
of words today. Radio Tehran said
he had written the Arab ·govern·
ments asking their help in the
"rescue and liberation" of Ayatollah
Mohammad Bagher Sadr, a pr&lt;r
Iranian Iraqi religious leader who
has been arrested by the Iraqi
government.
. Echoi ng previous calls from
Khomeini and President Abolhassan
Bani-&amp;dr for the Iraqi people to
overthrow the Baath Socialist go~er·
nment . of President Sadda,m
ilussein, Ghotbzadeh said: "It is
now lir.Ie for the destruction of the
Baathist Iraqi regime, anQther pup-

im·

perialism."

prisoners at the Iranian Foreign Of.
fice.

Meanwhile, a senior U.S . official
said President Carter might announce new sanctions against I ran
today in the campaign to force the
release of the e 50 Americans held
hostage at the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran since Nov. 4 and the three
American diplomats who are

The official did not say what the
sanctions might be, but it was
,,,,umed the embargo on U.S. ex·
ports to Iran would be extended to
food and medicines, the only items
exempted from the trade ban ordered April 7.

pet

of

world-devouring

Some FmHA interest
rates forced upward
Interest rates on some loans made
by the Farmers Home Administration were increased April
·14, Wallace D. Brunton, State Director for Ohio, said today.
Interest rates for farm operating
loans went from II to 12.5 percent;
for economic and disaster elJlergency loans 13 to 14 percent; for long
term real estate loans ll to 12 percent, and ll to 13 percent for un·
subsidized loans for home owner·
ship, rural rental housing and rural
housing site development, Brunton
said.
"Formulas used in setting interest
rates for Farmers Home and other

government lenders ·arc prescribed
bv law and are closely tied to the
c~st of federal borrowing and
prevailing private ma rket interest
rates for similar maturities," Brun·
ton said.
He added that jnterest rates have
been forced up, reflecting increased
costs. of borrowing for the funding of
FmHA programs.
Farmers Home Interest rates increased to .14 percent for economic
and disaster emergency loans for
farmers, except that actual loss
disaster emergency loans will
remain at 5 percent as preiloribed by
law.

CHAIN SAW FOUND
Carl R. Hysell reports he has
found a chain saw along SR 124. If
the saw can be identified it will be
given to the owner. Call Hysell at
992-.3tl96 or 992·3371.

cfiiLD INJURED
The Middleport EmergencY Squad
answered a call to the Middleport
Elementary School at 10:01 a.m.
Tueylay for .Learma Plants, 10, who
llad fallen. She W8S' taken to
Veterans Memorial 'HO&amp;pital.

..

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April17, 1980

.: 2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aprill7,1980

Opinions
&amp; Comments

.·

GOI

M~ lt.JCOME

TAlC MAILED
JUST
IW TIME!

LIJE
I-lOPE TO
GEl A
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IT'S
LIKE GE1'rl~'
A CA~E
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YOURSELF.

' .
HOLDS RUNNER ON - Southwestern's Dale Newberry (15) takes
the bag to hold Tornado Terry McNickle close in Wednesday's SVAC contest at Southern. The Tornadoes scored a come-from-behind iH seventh
inning victory.

Expanded authority
for 'hot' arrests
The Ohio Senate passed last week a bill which would
specifically authorize law enforcement officials, other
than State Highway Patrolmen, to pursue a person outside
of their jurisdiction and to arrest that person without a
warrant if the officer could have made the arrest within
the bOundaries of the jurisdiction in which he serves.
Currently the Ohio courts have said that a _law enforcement official in "hot" or "fresh" pursuit of a felon or
suspected felon can make an arrest without a warrant if he
catches the person outside of his territorial jurisdiction.
However, the courts have also said that in the case of a
misdemeanor an arrest outside of the jurisdiction is not
pennitted unless a warrant has been obtained.
S.B. 355 would correct this situation and pennit a law enforcement official to make a warrantless arrest outside of
his jurisdiction for either a felony or misdemeanor offense
as long as the police officer had been in "hot" or ."fresh"
pursuit.

Carter on move
WASIDNGTON (AP) - WUI the corning weekend find President
Carter visiting Pennsylvania, just a couple of days before Democrats
there hold their key primary?
The Washington rumor mill has been generating speculation that
the president will find some "nonpolitical" reason to go to the
Keystone State in advance of the balloting.
One rumor has it tbat Carter, who is expected to spend the weekend
at Camp David, Md., will go to Pennsylvania to do some fishing.
Such an outing would not be out of character. An ardent angler, Carter left Camp David unannounced on a number of occasions last year
to fish in Pennsylvania waters, just a few miles removed from his
Maryland hideaway.
White House press secretary Jody Powell was asked about a
possible pre-primary fishing expedition.
"I think I could probably guarantee you," Powell said, "that if the
president went fishing be would probably fail to inform the press this
time as he did last time - which would avoid any implication that this
was a politically motivated fishing trip."
Powell went on to volunteer that his boss "might even go to meet in
somebody's house without telling the press."
Reporters recaU that the president last year left Camp David for
unannounced trips to private homes in both Pennsylvania and West
Virginia. His ostensible purpose was to test public sentiment as be
wrestled with a Cabinet shakeup and efforts to set his administration
on a new course.

c
•

'·

When Carter ordered the abrupt break in diplomatic relations with
Iran, U.S. law enforcement officers immediately sealed off the
Iranian Embassy here and made a thorough search of the premises.
There was speculation that Ayatollah Ruhollab Khomeini's envoys
had cached an arsenal of weapons on the premises.
One of Carter's top aides was asked wliat the police really found.
Referring to the ban on alcohol observed by Islamic fundamentalists
- and harking back to the much-publicized destruction of the booze
and wine stocks maintained by the former shah's ambassador here the White House official said:
" There were some backsliders there. They hadn't thrown out all the
Chivas Regal."
·
,.
,·

Berry's World

1••·.,J •
•
.
•
''---'l
'
~

, l

1

~-~ l

By Scott Wolfe
R,o\CINE - Southern's Tornadoes
pulled out another two come-from
behind victory in the seventh inning
last night to defeat the Southwestern
Highlanders li-4 in an important
SVAC contest.
The Tornadoes are now 4-ll overall
with all the victories corning over
league foes. Southwestern falls to ~3
with two of those losses coming
within the league.
Southern jumped out to an early
lead in the flrst inning when Terry
McNickle walked, stole second and
third, then scored on one rl.
Southern's patented squeeze plays
as John Pape layed down a perfect

'Honor days' compete for attention
NEW YORK (AP) - Yesterday
"even disgrace."
was "a national day of shame."
One group, however, -disagrees,
Tomorrow is "anti-big business
said Iaber, and that group, made
day" to some, "economic growth
up of Ralph Nader followers, is sponday" to others. This week is soring "Big Business Day," during
"private property week." Next week
which they hope to emphasize corwe honor secretaries.
porate crime, pollution and priceEconomic declaration, protest and . fixJng.
counter-protest are elbowing each
Some big-business executives
other for time in the sun, competing
have decided to ignore the event, but
with each other and with the usual
others are ready to fight. Calling it
seasonal rites: annual meetings,
"anti-big business day," they hope
reunions,
weddings
and
to counter it by proclaiming the
graduations.
benefits corporations bestow.
Angry about federal waste, overThe Business Roundtable, for
spending and taxation, Richard
example, has distributed position
wher, National Chamber of Compapers that talk of business as a
merce president, recently
source of jobs, as a taxpayer, as an
christened April 15, tax deadline
agent of social justice, as a source of
'•y, as a national day of shame,

physical and financial security.
The table, made up solely of men
who bead the nation's biggest companies, seeks to convince people that
business is the source of the nation's
wealth and that it should be preserved not destroyed.
Economic growth day, a day
closely related in spirit as well as
date, is being observed by the
National Coalition for Growth, an offshoot of the Heritage Foundation, a
pr&lt;&gt;-business think tank.
Growth day seeks to undermine
the popularity of the notion that no
growth, the antithesis of business
philosophy, is the only possible
response to conservation and envirorunental preservation.
Private property week is spon-

sored by the National Association of
Realtors, which is quite upset about
what it sees as threats to private
property rights guaranteed by the
5th and 14th ammendments.
These ammendments, the
Realiors say, protect Americans in
' owning, using and disposing of
private property without undue
government intereference. But, It
leaders maintain, interference is
growing.
But how, you ask, does national
secretaries week rate as an
economic issue? The answer
becomes evident. on asking your
secretary or any other if she is paid
commensurate with her skUls and
responsibilities.

The Eastern Eagles pounded out
17 bits last night while taking two
games from. visiting Miller, ~ and
8-5.
The ~ win was the completion of
a. suspended game that ended IHi
after nine innings at Miller last
week.
In that first game, Steve Chrisman
poundeJ out five singles and
sophomore Mike Bissell slanuned
two doubles and had fiv.e runs batted
in as the Eagles plated three runs in
the top of the tenth inning.
_
In that outburst, Gary Griggs led
things off with a single, winning pitcher Greg Wigal then walked to set
the stage for a tw.,.run double by
Bissell.
Chrisman then lashed a single to
score Bissell.
Other hitters for the winners were
Brian Bissell, Wigal, Rob Smith, and
Gene Cole who each got a single.
Wigal got the win in relief as he and
two other Eagle hurlers combined
for eleven strikeouts and just one
walk.
Simmons was tagged with the loss
as he wimt all the way, fanning five
and walking four. Joe Imler led the
Falcon hitting with three singles.

Carter's reluctant return to politics
copingwith the hostages in Iran,
Soviet troops in Mghanistan and
various other global crisis.
But only one day after losing to
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, )).Mass.,
in the Democratic presidential
primaries held iri New York and
Connecticut, Carter found time to
address the annual Democratic Congressional Dinner.
His staff insisted that it really
wasn't a political appearance, but
that explanation lacks credibility
when the president stands before a
room fUled with feUow Democrats to
proclaim: "I'm detennined that we
will win in November ... We .
Democrats wUI deserve to win."
Carter surely isn't going to win,
however, on the basis of the tedious,
uninspired speech be offered to
those who paid $1,000 per person to
attend the dinner at a downtown
Washington hotel.
A feeble effort to joke about his
current political predicament included, for example, a reference to
the site of this summer's
Democratic National Convention in

New York City : "We're thinking
about changing the name of Madison
Square Garden to Madison Square
Rose Garden."
The body of Carter's speech was a
torpid rehash of the same address he
has been giving for years, replete
with his1976 campaign promise of
"competence and compassion in
government" and a string of cliches
about "the challenge of inflation,"
the energy crisis and similar
"responsibilities on my shoulders
(that) are sometimes very heavy."
The applause ranged from
respectful to tepid, and the postspeech assessments of the political
professionals present were universally negative.
One of the most thoughtful comments came from Joyce Kravitz, a
former employee of the Democratic
National Committee and a longtime
party activist. "1980," she said
wistfully, "would have been Hubert
Humphrey's year."
For almost two decades beginning
in 1960, Humphrey repeatedly
sought the presidency, the one prize
denied to him during a long and sue-

cessful political career. He died in
early 1978 without ever attaining the
position be cherished.
If he were still alive, be probably
already would have been drafted by
the Democrats who find themselves
. increasingly frustrated by the
political necessity of making a
"least worst" choice between Carter
and Kennedy.
Virtually every survey of voter attitudes in New York and Connecticut, for example, shows that Kennedy won the primaries in those
states not on the basis of any positive
attraction but because be was viewed as less unappealing thana president who once again is rapidly losing
the trust and confidence of the electorate.
The . crucial question the
Democrats must consider is not
whether Remedy can capture the
required,number of convention votes
to deny renomination to Carter but
rather whether either man can attain even a semblance of respect
within his own party.

By Don Graff

•·
'

..' ·

.·-••'
"Just like 1feel about Iran. "

to be along any minute.
Proliferating schemes for bringing the federal accounts Into
balance have become Washington's
newest growth industry, with a
cluster of rival power centers busily
working infinite variations on the
same inflation-fighting theme.
And in the process, the moneysaving purpose of it all sometimes
tends to be forgotten, or takes a
distincUy second place to other considerations.
The Senate Budget Committee
provided an illuminating example
the other day on its way to approving
a $812.9 billion revised budget for
fiscal 1981, which must now be
reconciled with a somewhat leaner
House version and the original White
House recommendations.
As The Washington Post reported

Business mirror
the proceedings, the senators had no
!lifficulty at all shifting deliberations
fromthe immediate special problem
of inflation to long-term preoccupations with special interests.
The initial issue was defense spending, which the senators rather
quickly decided should not only not
be trimmed but increased $5.8
billion over adrninistraliOI! requests.
And·as an afterthought, they tossed
in an additional $300 million in funding for water projects dear to the
political hearts of the westerners
among them.
When attention momentarily
returned to saving rather than spending money, it focused on something
&lt;lear to Chairman Edmund S.
Muskie, environmental protection,
with South Carolina's Ernest F.
Hollings suggesting that con-

Hollings' argument, although there
might well have been.
The World Health Organization is
just out with a study that predictably
indicts smoking as a global health
menace but also takes a critical look
at tobacco economics.

. siderable savings might be realized
from $8 billion previously allocated
for clean-water projects.
Muskie had a word for that suggestion - "nuts" -and several enIn terms of dollars spent and
virorunentaUy oriented ·allies proreturned, it puts revenues derived
mptly counterattacked by proposing
from tobacco levies by all levels of
elimination of tobacco price supgovernment in the United States at
ports, cutrenUy $200 mllllon annualsome $8 billion, many times over the
ly from the federal treasury.
subsidization of growers. However,
That got Hollings where It really
that does not take into account other
hurt and he rose to the defenae of the
associated costs. Medical expentobacco industry as nothing less
ditures alone WHO, citing American
than the support of the government.
Cancer Society statistics, puts at '15
Thousands of small fanns .depend ·· billion.
upon the program and, he asserted,
Then there is the question of
return to the public·coffers far more
whether tobacco growing makes
in taxes and other benefits than they
good agricultural sense. It Is a soildraw in subsidies.
exhausting crop with hel!vy ferThe tobacco supports, along with -tilizer and pesticide requirements,
uie cienn-water funds, remained in preempting land that very often
the b'•rl~el without further debate of
could be put to more beneficial uses.
t

Simmons and Owens each slammed
a double and single.
In the regular scheduled contest,
winning Eagle hurler Charlie Ritchie got relief help from Chris Allen
and Wigal as the hosts picked up
their second win in six outings.
The Eagles raced across the plate
for six big runs in the second inning
and the Falcons just couJdn:t catch

up.
In that big second, Griggs again
led things off with a double. Smith
drew a free pass and then the
Falcons committed two straight errors. Brian BisseU then singled
home two runs. MiUer then committed another miscue to set the stage
for a run-scoring Mike BisseU single.
The winners added single runs in the
fourth and sixth innings.
Those three Eastern hurlers combined to strike out seven Falcons
and walk five.
Mike Bissell again carried the big

allowing just one Southern hit and 4-2.
John Pape again worked the coWlt
striking out 10. Sizemore was pitto
3-2. With a full count again, the
ching a near perfect game until the
Southern
baserunners took off as
seventh inning when he began to tire
Pape
hit
a
grounder to the second
in the cool spring weather.
baseman
who bobbled, then
c. T. Chapman led off the
recovred only to throw wide at first.
Southern rally with a walk.
In the mad scramble for the ball
Sizemore regained his form to strike
Southern scored the tying run and
out the next two batters.
Mter Chapman was replaced at · Joe Bob Hemsley rounded third ·and
sprinted home with the winning run.
first by pinch runner Jack Duffy,
The win was Southern's third
Jay Rees walked, then Terry
come-from-behind
victory in the last
McNickle went to a 3-2 count before
inning this year in four games.
drawing a walk to load the bases.
For Southwestern Wayne
Joe Bob Hemsley, a left hand bat·
Sizemore
had a double and a single:
ter, then worked Sizemore to
while
Keith
Sizemore and Scott
another full count before walking to
Russell
had
two
singeIs each.
force hom Duffy, cutting the score
Coach Hilton Wolfe, Jr. said "We
played poorly, except for our pitching, but we were fortunate enough
that they gave our four runs back!
Their only error cost them the
game."
stick at the plate as be knocked in
Southern committed four errors
four runs. Griggs slammed a double
while Southwestern had only one.
and single and Brian BisseU socked
Unescore:
two·singles.
Southern
100 000 4- 5 I 4
Simmons again was tagged with
s.w.
004 000 11-4 6 1
the loss, fanning six and walking
Batteries- Kent Wolf, John Pape,
four . Kacey Cook led the Falcon hit·
Jeff Sopher (WP) and Paul Cardone,
ting with a double and single while
Jay Rees 4th. Keith Sizemore and
Curt Imier and Owens each had a
Scott Russell.
single.
Eastern entertains North Gallia
tonight and Warran Friday. Saturday FOI'I Frye comes in for a twinbiU .
beginning all p.m.
Linescore:
E.
010 230 000 3- 9 12

OOUBLEJEOPARDY ·
ARLINGTON, TEX. (AP)
Basketball coaches are usually annoyed when a foul is called against
one of their players, but in a recent
game Coach Bob LeGrand of TexasArlington was doubly disturbed.
It was over an infraction called
against his top scorer, Melvin Polk:
It seems that Polk lost a couple ri
teeth after running into another
player's elbow.

MEADOWLANDS CUP

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . (AP)
- The Meadowlands race meeting,
beginning Sept. 2, will have a $2
million stakes program tbat will
reach its climax with the $300,000
Meadowlands Cup Oct. 16.
LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Boozer
Byrd, a 26-1 lorigshot, took th~ lead
in the last 50 feet Wednesday rught to
win the ,1,000 featured pace mile at
l.ebanon and pay $53.411, $10.60 and
$4.20.
Showem Joe placed, paying $4.80
and $3.80. Brandy Mountain was
third to pay $3.20.
Silo Wend! combined Hi with
Diamond M. Skipper in the double
for $29. The crowd of 1,136- bet
$131,036.

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TIIISTLEDOWNS
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) Heriberto Rivera Jr. rode home
three winners Wednesday at
Thistledown, including Ben's FlaJn.
lieau in toe featured eighth allowance.
Ben's Flambeau covered a mile in
I :39 4-S to return $5.40, $3.80 and
$3.60.
Phil was second and paid $4.20 and
$7.60, while Ohio Hickory paid $4.80
for a third-place finiSh.
A crowd of 4,189 bet$568,653.

Budget cutting schemes proliferate
If you don't care for any of the
budget-cutting plans now m the
boards, hold on a bit. Aothet is likely

bunt. Mter the squeezf play,
Southern got one hit, a double by
Kent Wolfe.
.
Southwestern took conunimd in
the thirq inning scoring four times
on three Southern miscues and
singles by Wayne and Keith
Sizemore. It was in that inning that
southpaw Kent Wolfe burt his arm.
he was replaced by John Pape who
came in to pitch 2 1/3 innings of
shutout baseball.
Jeff Sopher picked up the victory
in relief by hurling two scoreless inn·
ings. They combined for four walks
and eight strikeouts.
Southwestern fireballer Keith
Sizemore pitched a great game,

Eastern captures twinbill

Campaign '80

By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Mter
more than 4'h months of selfimposed sequestration, President
Carter reluctantly bas returned to
the political circuit.
But if the president's long-delayed
1980 debut as a campaigner was a
harbinger of future performances,
be would be well advised to return to
the splendid isolation of the White
House.
With the exception of weekend
trips to Camp David in Maryland's
Catoctin Mountains, Carter has
refused to leave the District of Columbia since the diplomats at the
United States embassy in Tehran
were taken hostage in early
November.
· The president has made occasional forays to various Washington
hotel ballrooms to address meetings
of assorted civic, labor, agricultural
. and business organizations, but all
of those events were technically nonpolitical.
Carter's aides claimed he couldn't
afford to fritter away his time on
mere political matters while be was

FIRES ONE-ffi'ITER - Despite hurling a one-hitter at Southern
Wednesday ngbt, senior righthander Keith Sizemore of Southwestern
went home with a heartbreaking li-4 loss. Sizemore handcuffed league
leading Southern until tiring in the final inning. The loss resulted from a
two base throwing error with the bases loaded.

Seventh inning rally gives
Tornadoes 5-4 SVAC triumph

,.. r
' .
)l l

DEUVERS PITCH - Starting Southern pitcher lefty Kent Wolfe, .
who was forced to leave Wednesday's SVAC contest against Southwestern with an injury, delivers a pitch in this Scott Wolfe action shot.

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�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April17, 1980

.: 2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aprill7,1980

Opinions
&amp; Comments

.·

GOI

M~ lt.JCOME

TAlC MAILED
JUST
IW TIME!

LIJE
I-lOPE TO
GEl A
'REI=UWD.

IT'S
LIKE GE1'rl~'
A CA~E
l'ACKAGE
H~OM

YOURSELF.

' .
HOLDS RUNNER ON - Southwestern's Dale Newberry (15) takes
the bag to hold Tornado Terry McNickle close in Wednesday's SVAC contest at Southern. The Tornadoes scored a come-from-behind iH seventh
inning victory.

Expanded authority
for 'hot' arrests
The Ohio Senate passed last week a bill which would
specifically authorize law enforcement officials, other
than State Highway Patrolmen, to pursue a person outside
of their jurisdiction and to arrest that person without a
warrant if the officer could have made the arrest within
the bOundaries of the jurisdiction in which he serves.
Currently the Ohio courts have said that a _law enforcement official in "hot" or "fresh" pursuit of a felon or
suspected felon can make an arrest without a warrant if he
catches the person outside of his territorial jurisdiction.
However, the courts have also said that in the case of a
misdemeanor an arrest outside of the jurisdiction is not
pennitted unless a warrant has been obtained.
S.B. 355 would correct this situation and pennit a law enforcement official to make a warrantless arrest outside of
his jurisdiction for either a felony or misdemeanor offense
as long as the police officer had been in "hot" or ."fresh"
pursuit.

Carter on move
WASIDNGTON (AP) - WUI the corning weekend find President
Carter visiting Pennsylvania, just a couple of days before Democrats
there hold their key primary?
The Washington rumor mill has been generating speculation that
the president will find some "nonpolitical" reason to go to the
Keystone State in advance of the balloting.
One rumor has it tbat Carter, who is expected to spend the weekend
at Camp David, Md., will go to Pennsylvania to do some fishing.
Such an outing would not be out of character. An ardent angler, Carter left Camp David unannounced on a number of occasions last year
to fish in Pennsylvania waters, just a few miles removed from his
Maryland hideaway.
White House press secretary Jody Powell was asked about a
possible pre-primary fishing expedition.
"I think I could probably guarantee you," Powell said, "that if the
president went fishing be would probably fail to inform the press this
time as he did last time - which would avoid any implication that this
was a politically motivated fishing trip."
Powell went on to volunteer that his boss "might even go to meet in
somebody's house without telling the press."
Reporters recaU that the president last year left Camp David for
unannounced trips to private homes in both Pennsylvania and West
Virginia. His ostensible purpose was to test public sentiment as be
wrestled with a Cabinet shakeup and efforts to set his administration
on a new course.

c
•

'·

When Carter ordered the abrupt break in diplomatic relations with
Iran, U.S. law enforcement officers immediately sealed off the
Iranian Embassy here and made a thorough search of the premises.
There was speculation that Ayatollah Ruhollab Khomeini's envoys
had cached an arsenal of weapons on the premises.
One of Carter's top aides was asked wliat the police really found.
Referring to the ban on alcohol observed by Islamic fundamentalists
- and harking back to the much-publicized destruction of the booze
and wine stocks maintained by the former shah's ambassador here the White House official said:
" There were some backsliders there. They hadn't thrown out all the
Chivas Regal."
·
,.
,·

Berry's World

1••·.,J •
•
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By Scott Wolfe
R,o\CINE - Southern's Tornadoes
pulled out another two come-from
behind victory in the seventh inning
last night to defeat the Southwestern
Highlanders li-4 in an important
SVAC contest.
The Tornadoes are now 4-ll overall
with all the victories corning over
league foes. Southwestern falls to ~3
with two of those losses coming
within the league.
Southern jumped out to an early
lead in the flrst inning when Terry
McNickle walked, stole second and
third, then scored on one rl.
Southern's patented squeeze plays
as John Pape layed down a perfect

'Honor days' compete for attention
NEW YORK (AP) - Yesterday
"even disgrace."
was "a national day of shame."
One group, however, -disagrees,
Tomorrow is "anti-big business
said Iaber, and that group, made
day" to some, "economic growth
up of Ralph Nader followers, is sponday" to others. This week is soring "Big Business Day," during
"private property week." Next week
which they hope to emphasize corwe honor secretaries.
porate crime, pollution and priceEconomic declaration, protest and . fixJng.
counter-protest are elbowing each
Some big-business executives
other for time in the sun, competing
have decided to ignore the event, but
with each other and with the usual
others are ready to fight. Calling it
seasonal rites: annual meetings,
"anti-big business day," they hope
reunions,
weddings
and
to counter it by proclaiming the
graduations.
benefits corporations bestow.
Angry about federal waste, overThe Business Roundtable, for
spending and taxation, Richard
example, has distributed position
wher, National Chamber of Compapers that talk of business as a
merce president, recently
source of jobs, as a taxpayer, as an
christened April 15, tax deadline
agent of social justice, as a source of
'•y, as a national day of shame,

physical and financial security.
The table, made up solely of men
who bead the nation's biggest companies, seeks to convince people that
business is the source of the nation's
wealth and that it should be preserved not destroyed.
Economic growth day, a day
closely related in spirit as well as
date, is being observed by the
National Coalition for Growth, an offshoot of the Heritage Foundation, a
pr&lt;&gt;-business think tank.
Growth day seeks to undermine
the popularity of the notion that no
growth, the antithesis of business
philosophy, is the only possible
response to conservation and envirorunental preservation.
Private property week is spon-

sored by the National Association of
Realtors, which is quite upset about
what it sees as threats to private
property rights guaranteed by the
5th and 14th ammendments.
These ammendments, the
Realiors say, protect Americans in
' owning, using and disposing of
private property without undue
government intereference. But, It
leaders maintain, interference is
growing.
But how, you ask, does national
secretaries week rate as an
economic issue? The answer
becomes evident. on asking your
secretary or any other if she is paid
commensurate with her skUls and
responsibilities.

The Eastern Eagles pounded out
17 bits last night while taking two
games from. visiting Miller, ~ and
8-5.
The ~ win was the completion of
a. suspended game that ended IHi
after nine innings at Miller last
week.
In that first game, Steve Chrisman
poundeJ out five singles and
sophomore Mike Bissell slanuned
two doubles and had fiv.e runs batted
in as the Eagles plated three runs in
the top of the tenth inning.
_
In that outburst, Gary Griggs led
things off with a single, winning pitcher Greg Wigal then walked to set
the stage for a tw.,.run double by
Bissell.
Chrisman then lashed a single to
score Bissell.
Other hitters for the winners were
Brian Bissell, Wigal, Rob Smith, and
Gene Cole who each got a single.
Wigal got the win in relief as he and
two other Eagle hurlers combined
for eleven strikeouts and just one
walk.
Simmons was tagged with the loss
as he wimt all the way, fanning five
and walking four. Joe Imler led the
Falcon hitting with three singles.

Carter's reluctant return to politics
copingwith the hostages in Iran,
Soviet troops in Mghanistan and
various other global crisis.
But only one day after losing to
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, )).Mass.,
in the Democratic presidential
primaries held iri New York and
Connecticut, Carter found time to
address the annual Democratic Congressional Dinner.
His staff insisted that it really
wasn't a political appearance, but
that explanation lacks credibility
when the president stands before a
room fUled with feUow Democrats to
proclaim: "I'm detennined that we
will win in November ... We .
Democrats wUI deserve to win."
Carter surely isn't going to win,
however, on the basis of the tedious,
uninspired speech be offered to
those who paid $1,000 per person to
attend the dinner at a downtown
Washington hotel.
A feeble effort to joke about his
current political predicament included, for example, a reference to
the site of this summer's
Democratic National Convention in

New York City : "We're thinking
about changing the name of Madison
Square Garden to Madison Square
Rose Garden."
The body of Carter's speech was a
torpid rehash of the same address he
has been giving for years, replete
with his1976 campaign promise of
"competence and compassion in
government" and a string of cliches
about "the challenge of inflation,"
the energy crisis and similar
"responsibilities on my shoulders
(that) are sometimes very heavy."
The applause ranged from
respectful to tepid, and the postspeech assessments of the political
professionals present were universally negative.
One of the most thoughtful comments came from Joyce Kravitz, a
former employee of the Democratic
National Committee and a longtime
party activist. "1980," she said
wistfully, "would have been Hubert
Humphrey's year."
For almost two decades beginning
in 1960, Humphrey repeatedly
sought the presidency, the one prize
denied to him during a long and sue-

cessful political career. He died in
early 1978 without ever attaining the
position be cherished.
If he were still alive, be probably
already would have been drafted by
the Democrats who find themselves
. increasingly frustrated by the
political necessity of making a
"least worst" choice between Carter
and Kennedy.
Virtually every survey of voter attitudes in New York and Connecticut, for example, shows that Kennedy won the primaries in those
states not on the basis of any positive
attraction but because be was viewed as less unappealing thana president who once again is rapidly losing
the trust and confidence of the electorate.
The . crucial question the
Democrats must consider is not
whether Remedy can capture the
required,number of convention votes
to deny renomination to Carter but
rather whether either man can attain even a semblance of respect
within his own party.

By Don Graff

•·
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"Just like 1feel about Iran. "

to be along any minute.
Proliferating schemes for bringing the federal accounts Into
balance have become Washington's
newest growth industry, with a
cluster of rival power centers busily
working infinite variations on the
same inflation-fighting theme.
And in the process, the moneysaving purpose of it all sometimes
tends to be forgotten, or takes a
distincUy second place to other considerations.
The Senate Budget Committee
provided an illuminating example
the other day on its way to approving
a $812.9 billion revised budget for
fiscal 1981, which must now be
reconciled with a somewhat leaner
House version and the original White
House recommendations.
As The Washington Post reported

Business mirror
the proceedings, the senators had no
!lifficulty at all shifting deliberations
fromthe immediate special problem
of inflation to long-term preoccupations with special interests.
The initial issue was defense spending, which the senators rather
quickly decided should not only not
be trimmed but increased $5.8
billion over adrninistraliOI! requests.
And·as an afterthought, they tossed
in an additional $300 million in funding for water projects dear to the
political hearts of the westerners
among them.
When attention momentarily
returned to saving rather than spending money, it focused on something
&lt;lear to Chairman Edmund S.
Muskie, environmental protection,
with South Carolina's Ernest F.
Hollings suggesting that con-

Hollings' argument, although there
might well have been.
The World Health Organization is
just out with a study that predictably
indicts smoking as a global health
menace but also takes a critical look
at tobacco economics.

. siderable savings might be realized
from $8 billion previously allocated
for clean-water projects.
Muskie had a word for that suggestion - "nuts" -and several enIn terms of dollars spent and
virorunentaUy oriented ·allies proreturned, it puts revenues derived
mptly counterattacked by proposing
from tobacco levies by all levels of
elimination of tobacco price supgovernment in the United States at
ports, cutrenUy $200 mllllon annualsome $8 billion, many times over the
ly from the federal treasury.
subsidization of growers. However,
That got Hollings where It really
that does not take into account other
hurt and he rose to the defenae of the
associated costs. Medical expentobacco industry as nothing less
ditures alone WHO, citing American
than the support of the government.
Cancer Society statistics, puts at '15
Thousands of small fanns .depend ·· billion.
upon the program and, he asserted,
Then there is the question of
return to the public·coffers far more
whether tobacco growing makes
in taxes and other benefits than they
good agricultural sense. It Is a soildraw in subsidies.
exhausting crop with hel!vy ferThe tobacco supports, along with -tilizer and pesticide requirements,
uie cienn-water funds, remained in preempting land that very often
the b'•rl~el without further debate of
could be put to more beneficial uses.
t

Simmons and Owens each slammed
a double and single.
In the regular scheduled contest,
winning Eagle hurler Charlie Ritchie got relief help from Chris Allen
and Wigal as the hosts picked up
their second win in six outings.
The Eagles raced across the plate
for six big runs in the second inning
and the Falcons just couJdn:t catch

up.
In that big second, Griggs again
led things off with a double. Smith
drew a free pass and then the
Falcons committed two straight errors. Brian BisseU then singled
home two runs. MiUer then committed another miscue to set the stage
for a run-scoring Mike BisseU single.
The winners added single runs in the
fourth and sixth innings.
Those three Eastern hurlers combined to strike out seven Falcons
and walk five.
Mike Bissell again carried the big

allowing just one Southern hit and 4-2.
John Pape again worked the coWlt
striking out 10. Sizemore was pitto
3-2. With a full count again, the
ching a near perfect game until the
Southern
baserunners took off as
seventh inning when he began to tire
Pape
hit
a
grounder to the second
in the cool spring weather.
baseman
who bobbled, then
c. T. Chapman led off the
recovred only to throw wide at first.
Southern rally with a walk.
In the mad scramble for the ball
Sizemore regained his form to strike
Southern scored the tying run and
out the next two batters.
Mter Chapman was replaced at · Joe Bob Hemsley rounded third ·and
sprinted home with the winning run.
first by pinch runner Jack Duffy,
The win was Southern's third
Jay Rees walked, then Terry
come-from-behind
victory in the last
McNickle went to a 3-2 count before
inning this year in four games.
drawing a walk to load the bases.
For Southwestern Wayne
Joe Bob Hemsley, a left hand bat·
Sizemore
had a double and a single:
ter, then worked Sizemore to
while
Keith
Sizemore and Scott
another full count before walking to
Russell
had
two
singeIs each.
force hom Duffy, cutting the score
Coach Hilton Wolfe, Jr. said "We
played poorly, except for our pitching, but we were fortunate enough
that they gave our four runs back!
Their only error cost them the
game."
stick at the plate as be knocked in
Southern committed four errors
four runs. Griggs slammed a double
while Southwestern had only one.
and single and Brian BisseU socked
Unescore:
two·singles.
Southern
100 000 4- 5 I 4
Simmons again was tagged with
s.w.
004 000 11-4 6 1
the loss, fanning six and walking
Batteries- Kent Wolf, John Pape,
four . Kacey Cook led the Falcon hit·
Jeff Sopher (WP) and Paul Cardone,
ting with a double and single while
Jay Rees 4th. Keith Sizemore and
Curt Imier and Owens each had a
Scott Russell.
single.
Eastern entertains North Gallia
tonight and Warran Friday. Saturday FOI'I Frye comes in for a twinbiU .
beginning all p.m.
Linescore:
E.
010 230 000 3- 9 12

OOUBLEJEOPARDY ·
ARLINGTON, TEX. (AP)
Basketball coaches are usually annoyed when a foul is called against
one of their players, but in a recent
game Coach Bob LeGrand of TexasArlington was doubly disturbed.
It was over an infraction called
against his top scorer, Melvin Polk:
It seems that Polk lost a couple ri
teeth after running into another
player's elbow.

MEADOWLANDS CUP

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . (AP)
- The Meadowlands race meeting,
beginning Sept. 2, will have a $2
million stakes program tbat will
reach its climax with the $300,000
Meadowlands Cup Oct. 16.
LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Boozer
Byrd, a 26-1 lorigshot, took th~ lead
in the last 50 feet Wednesday rught to
win the ,1,000 featured pace mile at
l.ebanon and pay $53.411, $10.60 and
$4.20.
Showem Joe placed, paying $4.80
and $3.80. Brandy Mountain was
third to pay $3.20.
Silo Wend! combined Hi with
Diamond M. Skipper in the double
for $29. The crowd of 1,136- bet
$131,036.

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WMPO
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Smith, Ritchie (4), Wigal (7, WP )
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M.
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TIIISTLEDOWNS
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) Heriberto Rivera Jr. rode home
three winners Wednesday at
Thistledown, including Ben's FlaJn.
lieau in toe featured eighth allowance.
Ben's Flambeau covered a mile in
I :39 4-S to return $5.40, $3.80 and
$3.60.
Phil was second and paid $4.20 and
$7.60, while Ohio Hickory paid $4.80
for a third-place finiSh.
A crowd of 4,189 bet$568,653.

Budget cutting schemes proliferate
If you don't care for any of the
budget-cutting plans now m the
boards, hold on a bit. Aothet is likely

bunt. Mter the squeezf play,
Southern got one hit, a double by
Kent Wolfe.
.
Southwestern took conunimd in
the thirq inning scoring four times
on three Southern miscues and
singles by Wayne and Keith
Sizemore. It was in that inning that
southpaw Kent Wolfe burt his arm.
he was replaced by John Pape who
came in to pitch 2 1/3 innings of
shutout baseball.
Jeff Sopher picked up the victory
in relief by hurling two scoreless inn·
ings. They combined for four walks
and eight strikeouts.
Southwestern fireballer Keith
Sizemore pitched a great game,

Eastern captures twinbill

Campaign '80

By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Mter
more than 4'h months of selfimposed sequestration, President
Carter reluctantly bas returned to
the political circuit.
But if the president's long-delayed
1980 debut as a campaigner was a
harbinger of future performances,
be would be well advised to return to
the splendid isolation of the White
House.
With the exception of weekend
trips to Camp David in Maryland's
Catoctin Mountains, Carter has
refused to leave the District of Columbia since the diplomats at the
United States embassy in Tehran
were taken hostage in early
November.
· The president has made occasional forays to various Washington
hotel ballrooms to address meetings
of assorted civic, labor, agricultural
. and business organizations, but all
of those events were technically nonpolitical.
Carter's aides claimed he couldn't
afford to fritter away his time on
mere political matters while be was

FIRES ONE-ffi'ITER - Despite hurling a one-hitter at Southern
Wednesday ngbt, senior righthander Keith Sizemore of Southwestern
went home with a heartbreaking li-4 loss. Sizemore handcuffed league
leading Southern until tiring in the final inning. The loss resulted from a
two base throwing error with the bases loaded.

Seventh inning rally gives
Tornadoes 5-4 SVAC triumph

,.. r
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DEUVERS PITCH - Starting Southern pitcher lefty Kent Wolfe, .
who was forced to leave Wednesday's SVAC contest against Southwestern with an injury, delivers a pitch in this Scott Wolfe action shot.

WALLSI

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�4--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport,Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April17, 1980
.-··

Marauder gkls take-fourth
captured two firsts. The 1800 meter
relaytewmcomposedofRupe,Ruth
Blake, Kristin Anderson, and Laura
Smith took a second.
Other Meigs finishers were Terri
Wilson and Smith, third and sixth in
the discus; An~ Riggs, fifth it the
high jump; DeBord, sixth in the long
jump; Drehel, third in the 100 meter

The Meigs High Girls track team
finished fourth out of a field of 14
teams at last weekend's Oak Hill Invitational. Taking lint place was
Jackson with 67 points, second went
to Zane-Trace with 54 points, and
third place to Valley with 51 points.
The 400 meter and 800 meter relay
teams of Lori Rupe, Nancy Wallace,
Vicky DeBord, and Shari Drehel

Boxing card set April 26

TAKES FIRST PLACE - The Meigs girls' track
team captured first place in the 400 meter relay and 800

•

meter relay in a meet last weekend against Oak Hill.
Team members left to right, Shari Drehel, Lori Rupe,
Vicky DeBord and Nancy Wallace.

The Meigs Jaycees will sponsor
the second boxing program of 1980 at
Meigs High School Gym 1\jpril 26 at
7:30p.m.
Boxing clubs from Glouster,
Logan, Chillicothe and Meigs County
will participate. Other clubs from
Ripley and Parkersburg, W.Va. as
well as from Zanesville are expected, too.
Awards include trophies for the
winners of each bout, for the best
boxer in three age groups and sportsmanship.
Proceeds from the event will be
used to cover expenses of the event
and to purchase equipment for the
Meigs Boxing Club.
Ali adult tickets are $3 and student
tickets $2. Seating is on the first
come first serve basis.

WORK DAY SLATED
.The Pomeroy Youth League announces that a work day which was
planned for last Saturday, but was
rained out has been rescheduled for
this Saturday, starting at 8:30 a.m.
The league urges that the fathers of
players and all interested persons
make an effort to attend.

'.

•

too many bases ·away. Ironton's
probably the best-hitting team to .
come up against us so far.
"They 're not the kind of team you
can strike out 12 or 13 times a game
- yciu have to make the plays on
them!'
The bottom of the Tiger batting order caused the biggest damage to
starting pitcher Brown in breaking a
1-1 tle with two third-inning runs.
Roberts and Steve Sutton - Ironton's fifth and sixth batters walked to load the bases with one
out. David Clay cashed Ainsworth's
leadoff single in for a run with a
towering sacrafice fly to center
while Roberts scored on a balk move
by Brown.
Left-fielder Ted Adams kept a
single by No. 8 hitter Randy Johnson
from causing further damage by
nailing Sutton at the plate.

Mter Ironton took a I~ lead in the
first, Weiher reached-on a tw&lt;&gt;obase
error and tallied on Eutsler's single
through the left-center hole to open
the home half of the second.
The Tigers collected four walks
and three hits off Brown before
Weiher came on to allow four hits
and strike out two during his fourinning stint to pick up hiS second

MEIGS GIRLS SCHEDULE
OPP06mON
at Gallipolb with lrooton, Wellllon
April!?
•t Rotary Relays
Apri119
at Athen! with Belpre • J•ckson
April22
at Trimble with Logan
April24
DATE

at MWord Relays

Aoril29
M.yt

at Belpre with Martella

MBy3
MBy6
MBy6
MBy II
Moyl7

at Marietta Relay!'!
at South Point lnvitaUonal ,
SEOAL Meet at Athens
atEutem
Sectional Meet at Ironton
District Meet al Bello Ire

It Wtlllton

May 2.1-2f

Complete line of bedding
and vegetable plants.
Plus blooming hanging
baskets &amp; foliage.
"Season Special"
Bedding Plants
90c In Dozen Pa ~s_

DAN DRIESSEN

Meigs gals
have 3-1
.
diamond mark

.,

~
:;

The Meigs girls softball team now.
sports a nifty 3-1 record after two
weeks of play.
The gals of Coach Rita Slavin own
victories over Warren 11·9
Waverly, &amp;4, and Gallipolls, u.a:
Their only loss was a tough 11-6
defeat in the opener against Parkersburg.
In that opening contest, Parkersburg scored twice in the sixth inning to take the win although Meigs
outhit the winners 11-6. Terri Wilson
took the loss while Dailey got the
win.
Cherie LighUoot led the Meigs hitting with a single and double while
Pam Crooks and Sonia Ash each had
two singles .
Against Warren, Meigs came from
behind with seven runs in the third
inning and held on for that 11-9 victory.
Cherie LighUoot had the big bat as
she stroked a single and double and
had three RBI's in that third frame.
Beth Bartrum and Wilson shared the
mound chores ror the locals.
Against Waverly, the big inning
proved again to be the main
ingredient against a tough league
foe as Meigs plated six runs in the
third inning for the win.
Beth Bartrum went the distance
for Meigs as she faruled seven and
walked only four Waverly hitters.
Tonia Ash pounded a double and
triple to lead the Meigs attack. The
triple was a three-run blast in the

•:,,'•

P1rkerburg

Hubbard's Greenhouse
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Open Daily 9 to 5 &amp; Sun. I to

Boston 138, Houston 121, Boston wins series 4-0
Tunday'1 GAme
·
Philadelphll! IIlii, AUanta 100, Philadelphia
wi.ns series 4-l
Western Confti'Uiee SemJJID&amp;h
Tuaday, AprilS
Seattle ll4 , Milwaukee 113, OT
lAo Angeles lit, Phoenl:l: liD
Wedoetday,Aprlll
Milwaukee 114, Suttle 112, OT
Lui Angele~~l31, Phoenix 128, OT

Friday, April II
Milwaukee~. SeatUe91
lAs Angeles 101, P!toenix 105
liwlday, Aprtl U
Seattle 112, Milwaukee 107, series tied2--2
Phoenix 127, LO'i Angeles 101 , LoB Anse1es

leadssertes~l

TUe.clly'• Gamt1
Mihnukee l~, SeatUe '11 , Milwaukee leads
se ries l-2
lai Angelea 12fi, Phoenix 101, Uls Angeles wins
se ries 4-1
Fr1dly'• Game
Seatue&amp;t Milwaukee, (n)
Milwaukee at Seattle, U necessary

•

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OFFER ENDS
TH I S WEE KENO

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Aug .-Perido t
May-Emerald
June -Aie)landrlle

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Sept. -Sapphire
Oct .-Opal
Nov.-Topaz
Dec .-Biue Zircon

New York I.!larxlen 2, Boston 1, OT, N.Y.
Islanders leads sertes 1..0
Philadelphia 2, New York Ranger! I,
Philadelphia lead.! series H)
Buffalo$, Chicago 0, Buffalo leads series 1..0

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Chicago at Buffalo, (n)

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Baseball notes from Riverfront
CINCINNA'I'I (AP) - Leftover
notes and nuggets from the Cincinnati Reds' first home stand:
Brutol Rememben
San Francisco Giants Manager
Dave Bristol managed the Cincinnati Reds for four seaaona, beginning in 1966, and was in the club's
minor league organization a long
time before that. He said he still
feels it's like coming home to bring a
team to Cincinnati.
Junior's Streak
Junior Kennedy banged out at
least a hit a game, but always
seemed more comfortable retiring
to the players' lounge in the
clubhouse afterward, rather than

BASEBALL
NEW YORK (AP) -lAmar Johnson, who helped the Chicago White

talking about his streak.
SPEEDBALL WERNER
Backup catcher Don Werner
caught two day games during the
home stand and did a respectable
job deefensively. But he surprised
even himself when he suddenly
became a basestealing threat in
Wednesday's game.
He dutilully sprinted toward
second on the next pitch, however,
beating the throw and then going on
to third when the errant throw rolled
into shallow center field - pretty
good runniiJg for a guy who had
limited knee surgery during spring
training.

23.4002
2 .f .333 2~

Sox post three victories over the
league champion Baltimore Orioles
with a .600 batting average, was
named the American League's first
player of the week for 1980
Your "Ext~a Touch"
l;'lorist Since 1957'

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ancinnati5, SanFnmcisco3
Philadelphia a, St. Louis 3

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Chicago at Pi.ttaburRh. ppd ., cold
LosAngeleslO. Sanbiegot

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New York (Hausman 0.0) at Chicago (n.a u..ow

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Cincinnati ('Booham 114) at Atlanta (Matula

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(Ouly-l&lt;h&lt;chdo4)
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trid.sy'l Gamel
• Pbiladelphia at Montreal
~• St. Louis at Pittsburgh, (n)
Cincinnati at Atlanta, (n)
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Hoostma at Las Angeles, (n)
San Diegg Ht San Francisco, ( n)
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New Vorl&lt; (Grtlfln M) al Clicago lllotaon
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Tex&lt;t!l ot Boston

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ENTERTAINMENT·
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ·
NIGHT

Steve Garvey's first homer of the
season, a three-run shot that
highlighted a four.run third inning,
lifted Los Angeles to only its second
victory in seven games. Dave Lopes
also homered and Ron Cey had three
hits and two RBI for the Dodgen.

MIKE LaCOSS

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Jerry Morales' two-run singled
capped a three-run third inning and
New York held on to beat Montreal
as Neil Alien recorded hiS third save
in the ·Mets' third victory. The

PhUUes 8, Cards 3

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Bartrwn and 1lrkle

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Steve Carlton, ~. had a shutout
going into the bottom of the ninth,
but needed relief help when St. Louis
scored all its runs.

211 102 1)....3 6 2
021 030 0--4 lJ 4

Warren

lo

9-5

MENU

Hush
lliPn!£H~

17-year history- 2,052- braved 48degree weather at Shea Stadium.

c:::llr-~

win.

"Brownie was just out of synch,"
Osborne pointed out. "When I talked
to him after the third inning, I told
him he could struggle it out the rest
of the game or come back ready for
Meigs.
"We went with Tony to try and win
it with him. It worked out, so we'll
have Brownie (also 2~) ready to go.
(The SEOAL contest will be played
at Meigs )

sinanest home crowd in the team's

inning.

WilaonandS. Ziritle

Fri.
Sal.

Pomeroy

highlighted a decisive six-run ninth

Dalley and Everett

~

Hours
Thurs.

·baseball," said McNamara, who
can't remember this kind of a start
by any of his teams - even in the
minor leagues - in 17 years of
managing.
·
While the Reds have had
everybody healthy so far this
season, Mike !vie has missed all but
the opener for the Giants because of
an ankle injury, and Bill North and
Jack Clark have been less than 100
percent.
The Reds got two quick runs Wednesday on a first-inning, basesloaded single by Dan Driessen, then
added one in the third on a home run
by Dave Concepcion, his second of
the season.
San Francisco evened the score in
the fourth on an RBI single by Rennie stennett and a tw&lt;&gt;-run double by
Milt May.
"I thought we were going to get to
(Mike) LaCosa, Uien he got stronger
as the game went on," Bristol said.
Driessen drove in two more runs
in the fifth with hiS first homer of the
season, and LaCoss regained control
to retire 12 batten in order.
"I kind of loot a little bit or my
composure in the fourth inning,"
said LaCoss, ~. "I didn't watch
what I was doing and before I knew
It, they had three runs."
I...osq John Montefusco, 6-2, gave
up all five Reds~·

third.

•' • "'-eigs

Mon.-Wed .

CINCINNATI (AP) - The. dif.
ference between the 7~ Cincinnati
Reds and the I~ San Francisco
Giants in their just-eompleted series
was that the Reds could do no wrong
and the Giants could do little right.
San Francisco Manager Dave
Bristol said not only does his club
have problems, but solving those
problems won't be easy.
"It's no fun, to say the least,"
Bristol said after the Reds edged the
Giants 5-3 Wednesday. "I knew
when I hired
(late last season)
it wouldn't be easy, but we'll keep
trying. We have to do everything to
the maximum to be any kind of
decent ballclub."
The Reds, meanwhile, have been
able to do whatever is necessary to
win - sometimes scoring early to
win going away and sometimes
coming from behind in the bottom of
the ninth with two outs.
· "It's a very nice feeling," said
Cincinnati Manager John Me·
Namara. "Our guys are picking one
another up from day to day, and
"!e've ~~ getting good pitching,
timely hitting - and the moot 1111portant thing - we ~ven't been
making mistakes.''
Cincmnati has committed three
errors and given up 15 runs in seven
games. The Reds have scored 44
runs, and opponents have committed ll errors.
"We're just very happy we've
been playmg good, fundamental

an

'' .

NOW OPfN
FOR SPRING SEASON

won't do.......

Mondly'• Game

Ironton pitcher Brent Wilcoxen
was two outs away from handing the
Gallia Academy Blue Devils their
first loss of the season Wednesday
afternoon after retiring the leadoff
hitter in the bottom of the the seventh inning.
After the leadoff man went
through a second time, the Blue
Devils went past the Tigers for the
first time at Memorial Field in five
years.
Chuck Derifield walked to force in
the sixth run of the stanza and cap
the Blue Devils' third straight comefrom-behind triumph of the season
in a most unusual way, H .
"In ~some years - and I'm
going all the way back to my littleleague days - I've never seen
anything like this," GAHS Coach
Jim Osborne said after watching
nine straight Blue Devils climb
aboard on six walks, a hit batsman
and singles from sophomore Phi I
King and Greg Eustler.
The peculiar haU-inning, which ·
started with Ironton holding a &amp;-1 advantage, stunned Osborne about as
much as it did the faithful who endured the freezing wind to witness it.
"It's a nice gift," he offered. "I
told the kids afterwards maybe one
was owed to them because of all the
games that got away from them in
the past."
Wilcoxen coaxed Derifield to
ground out his first trip, but King
lashed his second single of the game
to left while Kenny_Brown and Bob
Foster walked to load the bases and
knock Wilcoxen out of the box.
Reliever Adam Ainsworth's first
pitch found Tony Weiher's left arm
and brought in the first run.
Then, pinch-hitter Jay Saxton, Ted
Adams, Craig Mason and Derifield
began a 22-pitch procession around
the bases' after Eutsler delivered his
se&lt;!()nd run-producing single on Ainsworth's third offering.
Saxton, Adams and Mason worked
Ainsworth to 3-2 counts before getting their passes while Derifield
stood in and watched four straight
balls go past to push across Saxton's
game winner.
The victory lifted GAHS'
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
mark tO 3-j) and overall mark to W .
The next victory will match the Blue
Devils' 1979 win total.
Home runs from Charlie Roberts
and Scott Donohue off Weiher
almost put Ironton out of reach.
Roberts lofted a left-field fly into
Chickamauga Creek with one on and
one away in the fifth and Donohue
poked a first-pitch solo shot to left·
center in the sixth after Weiher
retired the fint two Tigers.
"It all evened out becaus~ of the
walks they gave us, " he addcti, "but
for the first tim~ this year, we gave

meter dash.
Meigs pli!YS tonight in a
quadrangular match at Gallipolis
with Ironton and Wellston.
The remaining Meig s track
schedule follows :

when diamonds alooe

liwlday, April l
Philadelphia 10'1 , AUanta 104
Wodaelday,AprUI
Philadelphia 99, Atlanta 9'2
&amp;stoo 119, Houston 101
ThiU'Idoy, Apr1110
Allanta IIlii, Philadelphia 93
Friday, April II
Boston 95, How:ton 7$
.
Sllllday, AprU lJ
&amp;ston 100, Houston II
Phlladephta 1117, Atlanta 83, Philadelphia leads
series 3-l

Gallipolis takes comeback
victory over Ironton, 7-6

m

r---....,..---------....L-~"----------

Eatttra Coufernce Stmiftnall

team composed of Laura Smith, Lori Rupe, Ruth Blake
and Kristin Anderson.

run and Wallace, fourth in the
'

•
WID

Reds doing things.right, post 7th

.'

~sh; smith, fifth in \he 800 meter

April26

A bigger and greater program is
expected compared to the January
program and a large turnout of boxing fans is expected to be on hand to
support their hometown . club.
Tickets are being sold before the
event by Jaycee members, but
tickets can be purchased at the box
office.

Basketball

- , SECOND PLACE TEAM - Taking second place in
the recent Oak Hili track meet was Meigs' Mile Relay

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aprill7, 1980

Cultivated

TOP SOIL

�4--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport,Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April17, 1980
.-··

Marauder gkls take-fourth
captured two firsts. The 1800 meter
relaytewmcomposedofRupe,Ruth
Blake, Kristin Anderson, and Laura
Smith took a second.
Other Meigs finishers were Terri
Wilson and Smith, third and sixth in
the discus; An~ Riggs, fifth it the
high jump; DeBord, sixth in the long
jump; Drehel, third in the 100 meter

The Meigs High Girls track team
finished fourth out of a field of 14
teams at last weekend's Oak Hill Invitational. Taking lint place was
Jackson with 67 points, second went
to Zane-Trace with 54 points, and
third place to Valley with 51 points.
The 400 meter and 800 meter relay
teams of Lori Rupe, Nancy Wallace,
Vicky DeBord, and Shari Drehel

Boxing card set April 26

TAKES FIRST PLACE - The Meigs girls' track
team captured first place in the 400 meter relay and 800

•

meter relay in a meet last weekend against Oak Hill.
Team members left to right, Shari Drehel, Lori Rupe,
Vicky DeBord and Nancy Wallace.

The Meigs Jaycees will sponsor
the second boxing program of 1980 at
Meigs High School Gym 1\jpril 26 at
7:30p.m.
Boxing clubs from Glouster,
Logan, Chillicothe and Meigs County
will participate. Other clubs from
Ripley and Parkersburg, W.Va. as
well as from Zanesville are expected, too.
Awards include trophies for the
winners of each bout, for the best
boxer in three age groups and sportsmanship.
Proceeds from the event will be
used to cover expenses of the event
and to purchase equipment for the
Meigs Boxing Club.
Ali adult tickets are $3 and student
tickets $2. Seating is on the first
come first serve basis.

WORK DAY SLATED
.The Pomeroy Youth League announces that a work day which was
planned for last Saturday, but was
rained out has been rescheduled for
this Saturday, starting at 8:30 a.m.
The league urges that the fathers of
players and all interested persons
make an effort to attend.

'.

•

too many bases ·away. Ironton's
probably the best-hitting team to .
come up against us so far.
"They 're not the kind of team you
can strike out 12 or 13 times a game
- yciu have to make the plays on
them!'
The bottom of the Tiger batting order caused the biggest damage to
starting pitcher Brown in breaking a
1-1 tle with two third-inning runs.
Roberts and Steve Sutton - Ironton's fifth and sixth batters walked to load the bases with one
out. David Clay cashed Ainsworth's
leadoff single in for a run with a
towering sacrafice fly to center
while Roberts scored on a balk move
by Brown.
Left-fielder Ted Adams kept a
single by No. 8 hitter Randy Johnson
from causing further damage by
nailing Sutton at the plate.

Mter Ironton took a I~ lead in the
first, Weiher reached-on a tw&lt;&gt;obase
error and tallied on Eutsler's single
through the left-center hole to open
the home half of the second.
The Tigers collected four walks
and three hits off Brown before
Weiher came on to allow four hits
and strike out two during his fourinning stint to pick up hiS second

MEIGS GIRLS SCHEDULE
OPP06mON
at Gallipolb with lrooton, Wellllon
April!?
•t Rotary Relays
Apri119
at Athen! with Belpre • J•ckson
April22
at Trimble with Logan
April24
DATE

at MWord Relays

Aoril29
M.yt

at Belpre with Martella

MBy3
MBy6
MBy6
MBy II
Moyl7

at Marietta Relay!'!
at South Point lnvitaUonal ,
SEOAL Meet at Athens
atEutem
Sectional Meet at Ironton
District Meet al Bello Ire

It Wtlllton

May 2.1-2f

Complete line of bedding
and vegetable plants.
Plus blooming hanging
baskets &amp; foliage.
"Season Special"
Bedding Plants
90c In Dozen Pa ~s_

DAN DRIESSEN

Meigs gals
have 3-1
.
diamond mark

.,

~
:;

The Meigs girls softball team now.
sports a nifty 3-1 record after two
weeks of play.
The gals of Coach Rita Slavin own
victories over Warren 11·9
Waverly, &amp;4, and Gallipolls, u.a:
Their only loss was a tough 11-6
defeat in the opener against Parkersburg.
In that opening contest, Parkersburg scored twice in the sixth inning to take the win although Meigs
outhit the winners 11-6. Terri Wilson
took the loss while Dailey got the
win.
Cherie LighUoot led the Meigs hitting with a single and double while
Pam Crooks and Sonia Ash each had
two singles .
Against Warren, Meigs came from
behind with seven runs in the third
inning and held on for that 11-9 victory.
Cherie LighUoot had the big bat as
she stroked a single and double and
had three RBI's in that third frame.
Beth Bartrum and Wilson shared the
mound chores ror the locals.
Against Waverly, the big inning
proved again to be the main
ingredient against a tough league
foe as Meigs plated six runs in the
third inning for the win.
Beth Bartrum went the distance
for Meigs as she faruled seven and
walked only four Waverly hitters.
Tonia Ash pounded a double and
triple to lead the Meigs attack. The
triple was a three-run blast in the

•:,,'•

P1rkerburg

Hubbard's Greenhouse
svracose,

Ph. 992-5776
OH .
Open Daily 9 to 5 &amp; Sun. I to

Boston 138, Houston 121, Boston wins series 4-0
Tunday'1 GAme
·
Philadelphll! IIlii, AUanta 100, Philadelphia
wi.ns series 4-l
Western Confti'Uiee SemJJID&amp;h
Tuaday, AprilS
Seattle ll4 , Milwaukee 113, OT
lAo Angeles lit, Phoenl:l: liD
Wedoetday,Aprlll
Milwaukee 114, Suttle 112, OT
Lui Angele~~l31, Phoenix 128, OT

Friday, April II
Milwaukee~. SeatUe91
lAs Angeles 101, P!toenix 105
liwlday, Aprtl U
Seattle 112, Milwaukee 107, series tied2--2
Phoenix 127, LO'i Angeles 101 , LoB Anse1es

leadssertes~l

TUe.clly'• Gamt1
Mihnukee l~, SeatUe '11 , Milwaukee leads
se ries l-2
lai Angelea 12fi, Phoenix 101, Uls Angeles wins
se ries 4-1
Fr1dly'• Game
Seatue&amp;t Milwaukee, (n)
Milwaukee at Seattle, U necessary

•

•
••

Whether it's her birth ·
day, a special occasion,
or just want to tell her
how special she is ...
thrill her with a dia ·
mond surrounded by
d.azzli ng birthstones.

.er Birthstones
nd Diamond

OFFER ENDS
TH I S WEE KENO

Qurierflaalllaomd
llai&lt;IS....
WtdDetdly'1 Gam~

"'
"••
~

..
~

~

•'
"•'

•
~

,,..t'

Reg. $14?.95 Save $50.00

J uly-Ruby
Aug .-Perido t
May-Emerald
June -Aie)landrlle

...•-~

Sept. -Sapphire
Oct .-Opal
Nov.-Topaz
Dec .-Biue Zircon

New York I.!larxlen 2, Boston 1, OT, N.Y.
Islanders leads sertes 1..0
Philadelphia 2, New York Ranger! I,
Philadelphia lead.! series H)
Buffalo$, Chicago 0, Buffalo leads series 1..0

.,
,.

all the diamond encircled by birthstones.

J-an.-Garnet
Feb.-Amythest
Mar.·Aquamarine
A pr.-;&gt;iamond

Hockey

•

•rl

(Apr . .stightly higher)

W~Utave

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Minnesota 3, Mootr.al D, Minnesota leads
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New York Islanders at Boston, (n)
New York R-angers at Philadelphia, (nl
Chicago at Buffalo, (n)

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Baseball notes from Riverfront
CINCINNA'I'I (AP) - Leftover
notes and nuggets from the Cincinnati Reds' first home stand:
Brutol Rememben
San Francisco Giants Manager
Dave Bristol managed the Cincinnati Reds for four seaaona, beginning in 1966, and was in the club's
minor league organization a long
time before that. He said he still
feels it's like coming home to bring a
team to Cincinnati.
Junior's Streak
Junior Kennedy banged out at
least a hit a game, but always
seemed more comfortable retiring
to the players' lounge in the
clubhouse afterward, rather than

BASEBALL
NEW YORK (AP) -lAmar Johnson, who helped the Chicago White

talking about his streak.
SPEEDBALL WERNER
Backup catcher Don Werner
caught two day games during the
home stand and did a respectable
job deefensively. But he surprised
even himself when he suddenly
became a basestealing threat in
Wednesday's game.
He dutilully sprinted toward
second on the next pitch, however,
beating the throw and then going on
to third when the errant throw rolled
into shallow center field - pretty
good runniiJg for a guy who had
limited knee surgery during spring
training.

23.4002
2 .f .333 2~

Sox post three victories over the
league champion Baltimore Orioles
with a .600 batting average, was
named the American League's first
player of the week for 1980
Your "Ext~a Touch"
l;'lorist Since 1957'

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ancinnati5, SanFnmcisco3
Philadelphia a, St. Louis 3

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Chicago at Pi.ttaburRh. ppd ., cold
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ENTERTAINMENT·
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ·
NIGHT

Steve Garvey's first homer of the
season, a three-run shot that
highlighted a four.run third inning,
lifted Los Angeles to only its second
victory in seven games. Dave Lopes
also homered and Ron Cey had three
hits and two RBI for the Dodgen.

MIKE LaCOSS

44 ~ur

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Garry Maddox and Manny Trillo
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.••~:.
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DRESS
SANDALS

Jerry Morales' two-run singled
capped a three-run third inning and
New York held on to beat Montreal
as Neil Alien recorded hiS third save
in the ·Mets' third victory. The

PhUUes 8, Cards 3

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ll 5 6

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Steve Carlton, ~. had a shutout
going into the bottom of the ninth,
but needed relief help when St. Louis
scored all its runs.

211 102 1)....3 6 2
021 030 0--4 lJ 4

Warren

lo

9-5

MENU

Hush
lliPn!£H~

17-year history- 2,052- braved 48degree weather at Shea Stadium.

c:::llr-~

win.

"Brownie was just out of synch,"
Osborne pointed out. "When I talked
to him after the third inning, I told
him he could struggle it out the rest
of the game or come back ready for
Meigs.
"We went with Tony to try and win
it with him. It worked out, so we'll
have Brownie (also 2~) ready to go.
(The SEOAL contest will be played
at Meigs )

sinanest home crowd in the team's

inning.

WilaonandS. Ziritle

Fri.
Sal.

Pomeroy

highlighted a decisive six-run ninth

Dalley and Everett

~

Hours
Thurs.

·baseball," said McNamara, who
can't remember this kind of a start
by any of his teams - even in the
minor leagues - in 17 years of
managing.
·
While the Reds have had
everybody healthy so far this
season, Mike !vie has missed all but
the opener for the Giants because of
an ankle injury, and Bill North and
Jack Clark have been less than 100
percent.
The Reds got two quick runs Wednesday on a first-inning, basesloaded single by Dan Driessen, then
added one in the third on a home run
by Dave Concepcion, his second of
the season.
San Francisco evened the score in
the fourth on an RBI single by Rennie stennett and a tw&lt;&gt;-run double by
Milt May.
"I thought we were going to get to
(Mike) LaCosa, Uien he got stronger
as the game went on," Bristol said.
Driessen drove in two more runs
in the fifth with hiS first homer of the
season, and LaCoss regained control
to retire 12 batten in order.
"I kind of loot a little bit or my
composure in the fourth inning,"
said LaCoss, ~. "I didn't watch
what I was doing and before I knew
It, they had three runs."
I...osq John Montefusco, 6-2, gave
up all five Reds~·

third.

•' • "'-eigs

Mon.-Wed .

CINCINNATI (AP) - The. dif.
ference between the 7~ Cincinnati
Reds and the I~ San Francisco
Giants in their just-eompleted series
was that the Reds could do no wrong
and the Giants could do little right.
San Francisco Manager Dave
Bristol said not only does his club
have problems, but solving those
problems won't be easy.
"It's no fun, to say the least,"
Bristol said after the Reds edged the
Giants 5-3 Wednesday. "I knew
when I hired
(late last season)
it wouldn't be easy, but we'll keep
trying. We have to do everything to
the maximum to be any kind of
decent ballclub."
The Reds, meanwhile, have been
able to do whatever is necessary to
win - sometimes scoring early to
win going away and sometimes
coming from behind in the bottom of
the ninth with two outs.
· "It's a very nice feeling," said
Cincinnati Manager John Me·
Namara. "Our guys are picking one
another up from day to day, and
"!e've ~~ getting good pitching,
timely hitting - and the moot 1111portant thing - we ~ven't been
making mistakes.''
Cincmnati has committed three
errors and given up 15 runs in seven
games. The Reds have scored 44
runs, and opponents have committed ll errors.
"We're just very happy we've
been playmg good, fundamental

an

'' .

NOW OPfN
FOR SPRING SEASON

won't do.......

Mondly'• Game

Ironton pitcher Brent Wilcoxen
was two outs away from handing the
Gallia Academy Blue Devils their
first loss of the season Wednesday
afternoon after retiring the leadoff
hitter in the bottom of the the seventh inning.
After the leadoff man went
through a second time, the Blue
Devils went past the Tigers for the
first time at Memorial Field in five
years.
Chuck Derifield walked to force in
the sixth run of the stanza and cap
the Blue Devils' third straight comefrom-behind triumph of the season
in a most unusual way, H .
"In ~some years - and I'm
going all the way back to my littleleague days - I've never seen
anything like this," GAHS Coach
Jim Osborne said after watching
nine straight Blue Devils climb
aboard on six walks, a hit batsman
and singles from sophomore Phi I
King and Greg Eustler.
The peculiar haU-inning, which ·
started with Ironton holding a &amp;-1 advantage, stunned Osborne about as
much as it did the faithful who endured the freezing wind to witness it.
"It's a nice gift," he offered. "I
told the kids afterwards maybe one
was owed to them because of all the
games that got away from them in
the past."
Wilcoxen coaxed Derifield to
ground out his first trip, but King
lashed his second single of the game
to left while Kenny_Brown and Bob
Foster walked to load the bases and
knock Wilcoxen out of the box.
Reliever Adam Ainsworth's first
pitch found Tony Weiher's left arm
and brought in the first run.
Then, pinch-hitter Jay Saxton, Ted
Adams, Craig Mason and Derifield
began a 22-pitch procession around
the bases' after Eutsler delivered his
se&lt;!()nd run-producing single on Ainsworth's third offering.
Saxton, Adams and Mason worked
Ainsworth to 3-2 counts before getting their passes while Derifield
stood in and watched four straight
balls go past to push across Saxton's
game winner.
The victory lifted GAHS'
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
mark tO 3-j) and overall mark to W .
The next victory will match the Blue
Devils' 1979 win total.
Home runs from Charlie Roberts
and Scott Donohue off Weiher
almost put Ironton out of reach.
Roberts lofted a left-field fly into
Chickamauga Creek with one on and
one away in the fifth and Donohue
poked a first-pitch solo shot to left·
center in the sixth after Weiher
retired the fint two Tigers.
"It all evened out becaus~ of the
walks they gave us, " he addcti, "but
for the first tim~ this year, we gave

meter dash.
Meigs pli!YS tonight in a
quadrangular match at Gallipolis
with Ironton and Wellston.
The remaining Meig s track
schedule follows :

when diamonds alooe

liwlday, April l
Philadelphia 10'1 , AUanta 104
Wodaelday,AprUI
Philadelphia 99, Atlanta 9'2
&amp;stoo 119, Houston 101
ThiU'Idoy, Apr1110
Allanta IIlii, Philadelphia 93
Friday, April II
Boston 95, How:ton 7$
.
Sllllday, AprU lJ
&amp;ston 100, Houston II
Phlladephta 1117, Atlanta 83, Philadelphia leads
series 3-l

Gallipolis takes comeback
victory over Ironton, 7-6

m

r---....,..---------....L-~"----------

Eatttra Coufernce Stmiftnall

team composed of Laura Smith, Lori Rupe, Ruth Blake
and Kristin Anderson.

run and Wallace, fourth in the
'

•
WID

Reds doing things.right, post 7th

.'

~sh; smith, fifth in \he 800 meter

April26

A bigger and greater program is
expected compared to the January
program and a large turnout of boxing fans is expected to be on hand to
support their hometown . club.
Tickets are being sold before the
event by Jaycee members, but
tickets can be purchased at the box
office.

Basketball

- , SECOND PLACE TEAM - Taking second place in
the recent Oak Hili track meet was Meigs' Mile Relay

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aprill7, 1980

Cultivated

TOP SOIL

�j

-

•
6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April17, 1980

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April17, 1960

Food for Thought
By: Nyrtle Clark and Annie Moon
EFNEP Notrltlon Aides
Meigs County Cooperative Esteosloo Service
SpeclaJ to the Seutlnel
Eggs May be prepared In different ways to be served as appetizers or
salads. Eggs are used In the preparation of breads, sandwiches, salad
dressing, and casseroles. Desserts such as cakes, pastries, cookies, and
custards also need to be made with eggs. As you can see, eggs play an important role In many different parts of a meal.
Eggs should be refrigerated with the large end turned up to maintain
good quality. They may be stored for several months, but cooking quality
decreases as the length of storage time increases. If an egg becomes
cracked, it should be used at once In foods that will be completely cooked,
such as casseroles or quick breads. Hard cooked eggs inay be kept In the
refrigerator for seven or 10 days in the shell, or they may be peeled and
wrapped in plastic wrap.
Angelfood and sponge cakes, meringues, and omelets are leavened
with eggs. The egg yolk and white are divided and the white is beaten so
that air is trapped inside the white. When the ingredients of the dish are
heated, the air expands and the product is leavened, or increases in size.
Puffy omelet is a cooked food that is a good example of how eggs can supply leavening.
PUFFY OMELET
6eggwhites
6tablespoons water
6eggyolks
1'.! teaspoon salt
dash pepper
I tablespoon spread
Combine egg whites and water. Beat with electric mixer, egg beater
or fork until peaks form in foam. Combine egg yolks, salt, and.pepper.
Beat until yolks have a lemon color. Gently fold yolk mixture ito beaten
whites. Be careful not to over·mix. Grease a cake pan or' casserole dish.
Pour egg mixture into pan. Place In oven and bake at 350 degrees F until
top of omelet springs back when touched (about 15 mil\lltes). Fold onehalf of omelet over ther half and serve immediately. Omelet may be filled
with tomato chunks, cheese, jelly or pieces of meat. Serves three.
For more infonnation, contact the Meigs County Coopperative Ex·
tension Service at ~96.
All educational programs and activities .conducted by the Meigs
County Cooperative Extensiqn Service are available to all potential
clientele on a no1Hlisc$1inatory basis without regard to race, sex, color,
national origin, or religious affiliation.

STUDENT DIRECTORS - Teresa Hannum, left, and Sheryl Bush,
are the student directors for the Eastern High School Drama Depart·
ment's presentation of " See How They Run" Friday and Saturday
evenings at 7:30 p.m.
·

British farce to be
presented by EHS this
friday and Saturday
Humphrey, played by Kevin Brooks,
who planned only to attend a morning service but finds himself in the
midst of the comedy capers.
Adding to the complications, Corporal Clive Winton, played by Rogie
Gaul, appears at the vicarage gate
seeking his old sweetheard,
Penelope. An escaped convict,
played by Cluis Allen, and a wacky
English sergeant, played by Mark
Smith, round out the cast.
The production is stag&lt;! and
directed by Eastern High School
faculty member, B. Gale Douthitt.
Student assistants are Teresa Hannum and Sheryl Bush. Technical
posts are being filled by members of
the drama class.
Tickets may be purchased at the
door for $2 for adults and $1 for
students. There is no charge for preschool age children.

Bob Barton PTA president
· Officers for the 1~1 school year
:were elected at the Monday night
meeting of the Pomeroy PTA.
The new officers are Bob Barton,
president; Mrs. Joan Anderson, first
.vice president; Mrs. Sharon Wright,
:second vice president; Mrs. Debbi
;Buck, corresponding secretary;
·Mrs. Judy Werry, recording
'secretary; Mrs. Darla Hawley,
treasurer; Mrs. Anita Dean, ways
and means chairman, and Mrs.
Delores Hawk, membership chair·
man.
; Elected delegates to the Meigs
PJunty Council of Parents and
JI'eachers were Norma Baker and
:Jean Powell, delegates; and Sharon
Mattox and Rita Fields, alternates.
A field day was discussed and
committees will be organized to plan
the activities. Ribbons for the field
!laY and trophies for the school
patrol will be ordered. The decision
to buy gym equipment was tabled
imtil prices can be confirmed.

Prices will also be obtained on book
shelves and fence for a part of the
playground. Further action on a spr·
ing carnival was also postponed un·
til next month.
Mrs. Dina Gryszka presided at the
meeting and welcomed the past
presidents, Mrs. Eleanor BlaeUnar,
Mrs. Linda Mayer, Jim Soulsby, and
Mrs. Dorothy Roach. The flag salute
was led by Beth Mayer of the
Pomeroy Junior Scout Troop. The
second grade won the room count.
Mrs. Margar:et Johnson reported
on the .country jamboree aand ex·
tended thanks to Harry Clark.
John Arnott extended an invitation
to the movie, "See No Evil" which
will be shown to the public Friday
evening at the Pomeroy Elementary
School. Admission will be $1 and proceeds will go toward the school
patrol trip.
The program was presented by the
high school jazz band. Refreshments
were provided by the PTA officers.

Sentinel
Social Calendar
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRrNGS BEITER Health
Club, I :15 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Beuna Grueser. Frances Goeglein to
have the program, Louise Folmer, ·
the contest.
llfiDDLEPORT CHilD Conserva·
tion League, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Athe!IS County Savings and Loan
Co., Meigs Branch, Riverboat
Room. Eloise White, devotions,
Peggy Harris, to take traveling
prize, and Thehna Osbome and
Helen Blackston to be hostesses.
REVIVAL now in progress at
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness Church, SR 143. Evangelist ts the Rev.
Nadine Fetterman. Pastor is the
Rev. Dewey King. Public invited.
WUJJNG WORKERS Class of En· .
terprise United Methodist Church at
parsonageat7:30p.m. Thursday.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80 Royal
Arch Masons Thursday 7:30 p.m.
Work in the most excellent degree.
All companions urged to attend.
MAGNOUA CLUB Thursday 7:30
p.m. home of Edna Slusher. Ellen
Couch in charge of devotions. Mem. bers to make Easter bonnets and
bring a gift. There will be old world
product demonstration.

MEETS THURSDAY

Meigs Jazz
Band Festival
May 3

Eggs, an invaluable asset

The Eastern High School Drama
Department will present "See How
They Run", a British farce in three
acts by Phillip King at 7:30 p.m.
Friday and Saturday in the high
school auditorium.
"See How They Run" is a comedy
revolving around the events in the
lives of the Rev. and Mrs. Lionel
(Penelope) Toop, portrayed by Mike
Hauber and Traci Sayre. The setting
is the Toop home in the late fall of
1930.
; lda (Penelope's maid), played by
Alison Cauthorn, is a plain but
likeable village girl who has seen
one to many American movie. The
prudist, Miss Sl91lon (played by
Tina Beaver) comes visiting to
gossip to Rev. Toop every morning,
fliid for the first time tastes ·Jiquor;
this experience starts the action.
: The audience willeet a bishop,
played by Jim Osborne, and Rev.

Mother-daughter fare
planned by Heath UMW

The Meigs County Democrat Central Committee will meet at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at Carpenter's Hall,
East Main St., Pomeroy.

The Mf.igs Band Boosters will hold
The Second Annual Meigs Jazz Band
Festival on Saturday, May 3 in
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium at
Meigs High School.
Competition will begin at 10 a.m.
and continue throughout the day
with 19 bands from OhiQ and West
Virginia participating. Admission is
$2 for adults and $1 for children 12
and under. THe Meigs Jazz Band under the direction of Alan Hunt will be
the host band.
Refreshments will be sold.

Several spring activities including
a mother-daughter potluck to be
held on May 12 at the Heath United
Methodist Church were planned during a meeting of the United
Methodist Women held Monday
nlghtlit the church.
·
May Fellowship Day to be held by
Church Women United of Meigs
County on ·May 2 at the Lutheran
Church In Pomeroy was &amp;Mounced
BB was a retreat to be lleld May 2 and
3 at Camp otterbein.
It was also noted that A Day Apart
will be held at Heath Cburch on June
25 with the district vice president to
be the speaker. A school of missions
will be held on July 28 to Aug. 1 at
Ohio Northem.
Mrs. Betty Fultz welcomed the
members foUowing a plano prelude
by Mrs. Beulah Jones. A poem,
"Daffodils" was read by Mrs. Fultz
and members signed a card for Mrs.

Combines
VIBRATING BRUSH '
AGITATION and
powerful
STEAM EXTRACriON
CLEANING

NAMED TO DEAN'S LIST
Muskingum Area Technical
College (MATC) has aMounced the
Dean's List for Winter Quarter. To
be placed on the Dean's List, a
student must attain a minimum
grade point average of 3.50 for the
quarter. Students named to the
Dean's List from the Pomeroy area
include: Randall L. Arnold, Miner·
sville; Richard T. Hovatter, Middleport.

to loosen, dissolve

and extract
deep-seated dirt and

residues.
Gets carpets
cleaner . Faster! And
it's easy to operate

loo.

Cecile Kincaid.

NO LIFTIN G!
ClEANING WAND
EQUIP PED WITH

A cross, lilies and an open Bible
were used on the worship table. Mrs.
Mae Lambert was devotional
leader, and Mrs. Kathryn Knight,
the program leader. Mrs. Lambert

WHEELS
HANDL£ S LIKE
AIIACUUM

SWEEPER

LA YETrE SHOWER TUESDAY
A layette shower will be held
Tuesday, April29, at 7 p.m. at Rock
S~rings Grange Hall for Sue Kelly,
wife of Dave Kelly, Evangelist, of
theCamers.

_..ar#'':"l

Holsinger named
as chainnan for
show committee

STAR SUPPLY
Racine, 0.

- ·

Geraldine Holsinger was named to
serve as chairman of a committee to
plan a variety show to be presented
later at the school when the River·
view PTO met recently.
The sho~ will be co-sponsored by
the Riverview PTO and the · Long
Bottml Community Organization.
Educational trips for the school
children to be sponsored by the PTO
were discUssed. Mrs. Grace Weber,
principal, installed the new officers,
Mrs. Marlene Putman, president;
Mrs. Lucille Kimes, vice president;
Mrs. Yvonne Sisson, secretary; and
Mrs. Nola Young, treasurer.
The meeting opened with the
pledge to the flag and a reading,
"The Resurrection" by Patty MarUn. Reports were given by the
auditing committee as well as the
nominating committee. Mrs.
Shriver's third grade class had the
highest perCentage of parents In at-

GRADS. • •
RECEIVE

20% OFF

TOPSNAMEWEEKLYQUEEN
Marcia Barrett was namned
"Queen of the Week" at the recent
meeting of TOPS No. OH 1456,
Rutland. The runner-up was 1
Mryville Brown.
Mrs. Barrett, president, read an
article on backsliders. She ex·
pressed the importance of exercise
while dieting. Calorie charts were
made available to all members. All
chapter reports were read and approved.

TO ALL
GIRL OR BOY
SENIORS
GRADUATING
IN THE

ClASS OF '80
Stop In today and toke advantage
of thla great savings.

PLAN BffiLE SCHOOL

herlt~ge . house

A Bible school planning session
will be held this evening at 7:30p.m.
at·the Apple Grove United Methodist
Church. Churches participating will
be East Letart, Letart Falls and Apple Grove. All interested persons are
asked to attend.

tendance.

OF SHOES

BlAKFSLEE HOSPITAIJZED
C. E. Blakeslee, retired Meigs
Agricultural Agent and executive
secretary of the Meigs County
Reglooal Planning Commission, Is
Cllnfined to the Holzer Medical Center wbere he has undergone surgery.
He ts expected to be confined for at
least another week. The room num-

Middleport, 0.

N. 2nd Ave.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
..
..

FUEL SAVINGS
; PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - A
· ~ey to gas savings Is a well-tuned
engine.
According to Frarh Corp., a
manu,facturer of auto products, a
typical untuned car may travel
12,000 mi!es a year, get 15 miles per .
gallon and consume 800 gallons of
(Del. rt kept in proper tune, however,
the same car may average 16.8 mpg
and consume 714 gallons of fuel.
This 86-gallon fuel savings could
translate into $129 if gas prices
reach $1.50, as experts predict-io
Jl'¥ back the cost of a tune-•.

8-TRACK

TAPES

PUFPS
FACIAL

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200's

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AND DIET PIAN

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28 TIME CAPSULES

Mon. thru Sat.
':JOtoi:OO
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$1

44

REG. '1.95

,,30 to S:ot

KIDDIE SHOPPE

OIILY

POMEROY OHIO

·----------------------------~

Garden Clubs, spring meeting to be
held Saturday on the campus. The
first tour will take place at 9:15a.m.
preceding the ~ning of the
meeting.

$279

ALARM ·
CLOCKS

30%

OFF

SUPER
PLENAMINS
EXTRA
STRENGTH
TRIAL SIZE
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REG.49'

and Balancing"
Plus Relreadable
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casings

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and present high interest rates make It a blue

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BOYS' SHORTS &amp; SHIRTS
2T to 14 YRS.
-·
INFANlS' SUMMERWEAR
3 to 24 MO.

ADDfflONAL TOUR SCHEDULED
An additional tour of the Ohio
University greenhouse has been
scheduled for those attending the
Region 11, Ohio Association of

Topics pres~nted by Rio Grande
College personnel will include
Financial Planning by Joseph Mat·
thews and Taxes'and Regulations by
Lawrence McGraw.
The " Keys" workshop or the May
12 session may he ~n for college
credit or continuing education units.
Before college credit will be award·
ed, individuals must submit addi·
tiona! written material attesting to
the understanding of the material ·
presented.
Registration can be made by calling the Rio Grande Department of
Business Administration, 245-5353,
ext. 205.

RETREAD
_$PECIAL

\

\

Jividen hosts sewers

GIRlS' SUMMER
SHORTS &amp; lOPS
2T to 14 YRS.

GROUP HEARS ZIMMERMAN
Alpha Epsilon Chapter of Alpha
Delta Kappa met Tuesday night in
the Riverboat Room of the Athens
County Savings and Loan Co., Meigs
Branch with Robert Zimmerman of
the Ohio Developmental Mental PrDgram as speaker.
Zlrrunerman conducted a question
and answer session on the trallling of
the program children. Each of the 17
members a !tending served a
favorite dessert and furnished the
recipe for the others attending. Next
meeting will be a dinner at the Meigs
rnn on May 2ll.

ministration.
Attorney Donald Cox will present
"The Skeleton Key", a look at legal
organizations; Ron Atkinson of the
Gallipolis Parts Warehouse will
speak on Business Records in "The
Control Key", Business lnsurance
will be "The Protection Key", a
presentation by Howard Baker
Saunders, Saunders and Evans rnsumce; "The Vault Key" will be the
Iaiit on Sources of Capital by Jeff
Smith, Ohio Valley Bank.

Rev. Lamar O'Bryant will be the pastor.
evangelist for revival services of the
Rev. Don Black, pastor of Hope
Hope Baptist Chapel April:!l}-2&amp;.
Baptist Church, invites the public to
Rev. O'Bryant ts a native of Smyr· attend these servies. The services
na, Ga., and Is currently pastor of will begin at 7 p.m. nightly. On Tuesthe Sharon Baptist Church of [rondJIY at 6 p.m., aU children from
ton.
· &amp;rade six and younger are invited
Rev. O'Bryant came to Ironton for hotdogs and punch. At 6 p.m.
during the spring of 1969 to IM:gin a Thursday, pizza and punch Will be
new Southern Baptist work after served to all youth in junior and
many earlier attempts had failed.
senior high school. There is special
The new work for several yeanJ held
music planned every night and a
services in a number of schoola unW
nursery will be provided.
they wre able to build UJe first wing
of their building In 1973. The church
The church is located at 570 Grant
has been growing steadily and now
Street in Middleport and is affiliated
has a membership of over 21Ml. Rev.
with the Southem Baptist ConvenO'Bryant is serving his lith year as
tion . .

Reg. 59.95 Each

\

•

FRIDAY
TEEN msco dance, Orchid
Room, 8 to 11:30 p. m. Friday. Sponsored by Music . Unlimited;
chaperones will be present.

FOR THIS &lt;SUMMER, WE HAVE AGOOD SUPPLY OF:

gave a reading on the resurrection of
Christ followed by Sharon Hawley
singing "Christ Arose" with Mrs.
Jones at the piano.
Mrs. Knight told of the women's
visit to the tomb and of their rejoicing when they found it empty. The
traditions of Easter were noted by
the program leader who told of the
origin of the sunrise service in
Bavaria and its beginning in
Ame.rica .in 1909 in the Hollywood
Bowl in California. She also told the
legend of thedogwood tree, the.
Easter Parade on Fifth Avenue in
New York, and the egg rolling which
takes place on the White House
Lawn.
To conclude the presentation, Mrs.:·
Knight spOtlighted a portrait of
Christ and told of his life on earth.
Mrs. Lambert had the closing
prayer.
Mrs. Euvetta Bechtle, Mrs. Max·
ine Philson, Mrs. Martha Chambers,
Mrs. Lettie Young served a salad
course using a spring motif in the
table decorations. Fifty.five shutin
visits were reported by members.

ruo GRANDE - The second in a
series of three onEXlay workshops
for sffiau business owners and
oeprators, offered at Rio Grande
College and Community College will
take place Tuesday, April22.
The workshop; " Keys to Business
Su&lt;:eess", is sponsored by the United
States Small Business Administra·
lion, the Gallipolis Chamber of Com·
merce, the Department of Business
Administration at Rio Grande Col·
lege and Community College and the
Cwperative Extension Service of
Ohio State University.
Krishna Kool, . chairman of the
Department of Business Ad·
ministration at Rio Grande, an·
nounced today that there are still
openings for this workshop as well
as the May 12 workshop on "Human
Relations Management."
All workshops will be conducted in
the E. E . Davis Career Center and
will begin at 8:30a.m. and continue
until3:15 p.m.
Lunch is Included in the $12 per
workshop registration fee.
The workshop will feature
Douglas Sweazy from the U. S.
Department of SmaU Business Ad· ..

Revival services slated

berls228.

...
...
.

MErGS COUNTY Democratic
Central Committee, 7:30 p. m. this
evening at Carpenter's Hall, E.
Main St., Pomeroy.

WILL SOON BE HEREIII

-

Spaces still available
for two RBC workshops

Refreshments were served.

lOOTABLETS
: Mrs. Edith Jividen hosted the
')'uesday afternoon meeting of the
#oily Bunch Sewing Club at her Middleport home.
· Mrs. Margaret Bell Weber presid·
ed at the meeting attended by 12
111embers. Plans were made to piece
a quilt for a money·rnaking project.
Mrs. Jividen received the traveling
prize and was also presented hostess
gifts. The game prizes were won by
Mrs. Evelyn Grueser, Mrs. Lillian
Smith, Mrs. Jane Gilkey, and Mrs.
Weber.
: A dessert course was served by
lhe hostess to those named and Mrs.
.Marjorie Mi!1Jaon, ·Mrs. Rhoda
Hackett, Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs.
~race Johlison, Mrs. Nora Mills,
Mrs. Freda Mitch and Mrs. Helen
lteyno!ds.

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•
6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April17, 1980

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, April17, 1960

Food for Thought
By: Nyrtle Clark and Annie Moon
EFNEP Notrltlon Aides
Meigs County Cooperative Esteosloo Service
SpeclaJ to the Seutlnel
Eggs May be prepared In different ways to be served as appetizers or
salads. Eggs are used In the preparation of breads, sandwiches, salad
dressing, and casseroles. Desserts such as cakes, pastries, cookies, and
custards also need to be made with eggs. As you can see, eggs play an important role In many different parts of a meal.
Eggs should be refrigerated with the large end turned up to maintain
good quality. They may be stored for several months, but cooking quality
decreases as the length of storage time increases. If an egg becomes
cracked, it should be used at once In foods that will be completely cooked,
such as casseroles or quick breads. Hard cooked eggs inay be kept In the
refrigerator for seven or 10 days in the shell, or they may be peeled and
wrapped in plastic wrap.
Angelfood and sponge cakes, meringues, and omelets are leavened
with eggs. The egg yolk and white are divided and the white is beaten so
that air is trapped inside the white. When the ingredients of the dish are
heated, the air expands and the product is leavened, or increases in size.
Puffy omelet is a cooked food that is a good example of how eggs can supply leavening.
PUFFY OMELET
6eggwhites
6tablespoons water
6eggyolks
1'.! teaspoon salt
dash pepper
I tablespoon spread
Combine egg whites and water. Beat with electric mixer, egg beater
or fork until peaks form in foam. Combine egg yolks, salt, and.pepper.
Beat until yolks have a lemon color. Gently fold yolk mixture ito beaten
whites. Be careful not to over·mix. Grease a cake pan or' casserole dish.
Pour egg mixture into pan. Place In oven and bake at 350 degrees F until
top of omelet springs back when touched (about 15 mil\lltes). Fold onehalf of omelet over ther half and serve immediately. Omelet may be filled
with tomato chunks, cheese, jelly or pieces of meat. Serves three.
For more infonnation, contact the Meigs County Coopperative Ex·
tension Service at ~96.
All educational programs and activities .conducted by the Meigs
County Cooperative Extensiqn Service are available to all potential
clientele on a no1Hlisc$1inatory basis without regard to race, sex, color,
national origin, or religious affiliation.

STUDENT DIRECTORS - Teresa Hannum, left, and Sheryl Bush,
are the student directors for the Eastern High School Drama Depart·
ment's presentation of " See How They Run" Friday and Saturday
evenings at 7:30 p.m.
·

British farce to be
presented by EHS this
friday and Saturday
Humphrey, played by Kevin Brooks,
who planned only to attend a morning service but finds himself in the
midst of the comedy capers.
Adding to the complications, Corporal Clive Winton, played by Rogie
Gaul, appears at the vicarage gate
seeking his old sweetheard,
Penelope. An escaped convict,
played by Cluis Allen, and a wacky
English sergeant, played by Mark
Smith, round out the cast.
The production is stag&lt;! and
directed by Eastern High School
faculty member, B. Gale Douthitt.
Student assistants are Teresa Hannum and Sheryl Bush. Technical
posts are being filled by members of
the drama class.
Tickets may be purchased at the
door for $2 for adults and $1 for
students. There is no charge for preschool age children.

Bob Barton PTA president
· Officers for the 1~1 school year
:were elected at the Monday night
meeting of the Pomeroy PTA.
The new officers are Bob Barton,
president; Mrs. Joan Anderson, first
.vice president; Mrs. Sharon Wright,
:second vice president; Mrs. Debbi
;Buck, corresponding secretary;
·Mrs. Judy Werry, recording
'secretary; Mrs. Darla Hawley,
treasurer; Mrs. Anita Dean, ways
and means chairman, and Mrs.
Delores Hawk, membership chair·
man.
; Elected delegates to the Meigs
PJunty Council of Parents and
JI'eachers were Norma Baker and
:Jean Powell, delegates; and Sharon
Mattox and Rita Fields, alternates.
A field day was discussed and
committees will be organized to plan
the activities. Ribbons for the field
!laY and trophies for the school
patrol will be ordered. The decision
to buy gym equipment was tabled
imtil prices can be confirmed.

Prices will also be obtained on book
shelves and fence for a part of the
playground. Further action on a spr·
ing carnival was also postponed un·
til next month.
Mrs. Dina Gryszka presided at the
meeting and welcomed the past
presidents, Mrs. Eleanor BlaeUnar,
Mrs. Linda Mayer, Jim Soulsby, and
Mrs. Dorothy Roach. The flag salute
was led by Beth Mayer of the
Pomeroy Junior Scout Troop. The
second grade won the room count.
Mrs. Margar:et Johnson reported
on the .country jamboree aand ex·
tended thanks to Harry Clark.
John Arnott extended an invitation
to the movie, "See No Evil" which
will be shown to the public Friday
evening at the Pomeroy Elementary
School. Admission will be $1 and proceeds will go toward the school
patrol trip.
The program was presented by the
high school jazz band. Refreshments
were provided by the PTA officers.

Sentinel
Social Calendar
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRrNGS BEITER Health
Club, I :15 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Beuna Grueser. Frances Goeglein to
have the program, Louise Folmer, ·
the contest.
llfiDDLEPORT CHilD Conserva·
tion League, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Athe!IS County Savings and Loan
Co., Meigs Branch, Riverboat
Room. Eloise White, devotions,
Peggy Harris, to take traveling
prize, and Thehna Osbome and
Helen Blackston to be hostesses.
REVIVAL now in progress at
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness Church, SR 143. Evangelist ts the Rev.
Nadine Fetterman. Pastor is the
Rev. Dewey King. Public invited.
WUJJNG WORKERS Class of En· .
terprise United Methodist Church at
parsonageat7:30p.m. Thursday.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80 Royal
Arch Masons Thursday 7:30 p.m.
Work in the most excellent degree.
All companions urged to attend.
MAGNOUA CLUB Thursday 7:30
p.m. home of Edna Slusher. Ellen
Couch in charge of devotions. Mem. bers to make Easter bonnets and
bring a gift. There will be old world
product demonstration.

MEETS THURSDAY

Meigs Jazz
Band Festival
May 3

Eggs, an invaluable asset

The Eastern High School Drama
Department will present "See How
They Run", a British farce in three
acts by Phillip King at 7:30 p.m.
Friday and Saturday in the high
school auditorium.
"See How They Run" is a comedy
revolving around the events in the
lives of the Rev. and Mrs. Lionel
(Penelope) Toop, portrayed by Mike
Hauber and Traci Sayre. The setting
is the Toop home in the late fall of
1930.
; lda (Penelope's maid), played by
Alison Cauthorn, is a plain but
likeable village girl who has seen
one to many American movie. The
prudist, Miss Sl91lon (played by
Tina Beaver) comes visiting to
gossip to Rev. Toop every morning,
fliid for the first time tastes ·Jiquor;
this experience starts the action.
: The audience willeet a bishop,
played by Jim Osborne, and Rev.

Mother-daughter fare
planned by Heath UMW

The Meigs County Democrat Central Committee will meet at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at Carpenter's Hall,
East Main St., Pomeroy.

The Mf.igs Band Boosters will hold
The Second Annual Meigs Jazz Band
Festival on Saturday, May 3 in
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium at
Meigs High School.
Competition will begin at 10 a.m.
and continue throughout the day
with 19 bands from OhiQ and West
Virginia participating. Admission is
$2 for adults and $1 for children 12
and under. THe Meigs Jazz Band under the direction of Alan Hunt will be
the host band.
Refreshments will be sold.

Several spring activities including
a mother-daughter potluck to be
held on May 12 at the Heath United
Methodist Church were planned during a meeting of the United
Methodist Women held Monday
nlghtlit the church.
·
May Fellowship Day to be held by
Church Women United of Meigs
County on ·May 2 at the Lutheran
Church In Pomeroy was &amp;Mounced
BB was a retreat to be lleld May 2 and
3 at Camp otterbein.
It was also noted that A Day Apart
will be held at Heath Cburch on June
25 with the district vice president to
be the speaker. A school of missions
will be held on July 28 to Aug. 1 at
Ohio Northem.
Mrs. Betty Fultz welcomed the
members foUowing a plano prelude
by Mrs. Beulah Jones. A poem,
"Daffodils" was read by Mrs. Fultz
and members signed a card for Mrs.

Combines
VIBRATING BRUSH '
AGITATION and
powerful
STEAM EXTRACriON
CLEANING

NAMED TO DEAN'S LIST
Muskingum Area Technical
College (MATC) has aMounced the
Dean's List for Winter Quarter. To
be placed on the Dean's List, a
student must attain a minimum
grade point average of 3.50 for the
quarter. Students named to the
Dean's List from the Pomeroy area
include: Randall L. Arnold, Miner·
sville; Richard T. Hovatter, Middleport.

to loosen, dissolve

and extract
deep-seated dirt and

residues.
Gets carpets
cleaner . Faster! And
it's easy to operate

loo.

Cecile Kincaid.

NO LIFTIN G!
ClEANING WAND
EQUIP PED WITH

A cross, lilies and an open Bible
were used on the worship table. Mrs.
Mae Lambert was devotional
leader, and Mrs. Kathryn Knight,
the program leader. Mrs. Lambert

WHEELS
HANDL£ S LIKE
AIIACUUM

SWEEPER

LA YETrE SHOWER TUESDAY
A layette shower will be held
Tuesday, April29, at 7 p.m. at Rock
S~rings Grange Hall for Sue Kelly,
wife of Dave Kelly, Evangelist, of
theCamers.

_..ar#'':"l

Holsinger named
as chainnan for
show committee

STAR SUPPLY
Racine, 0.

- ·

Geraldine Holsinger was named to
serve as chairman of a committee to
plan a variety show to be presented
later at the school when the River·
view PTO met recently.
The sho~ will be co-sponsored by
the Riverview PTO and the · Long
Bottml Community Organization.
Educational trips for the school
children to be sponsored by the PTO
were discUssed. Mrs. Grace Weber,
principal, installed the new officers,
Mrs. Marlene Putman, president;
Mrs. Lucille Kimes, vice president;
Mrs. Yvonne Sisson, secretary; and
Mrs. Nola Young, treasurer.
The meeting opened with the
pledge to the flag and a reading,
"The Resurrection" by Patty MarUn. Reports were given by the
auditing committee as well as the
nominating committee. Mrs.
Shriver's third grade class had the
highest perCentage of parents In at-

GRADS. • •
RECEIVE

20% OFF

TOPSNAMEWEEKLYQUEEN
Marcia Barrett was namned
"Queen of the Week" at the recent
meeting of TOPS No. OH 1456,
Rutland. The runner-up was 1
Mryville Brown.
Mrs. Barrett, president, read an
article on backsliders. She ex·
pressed the importance of exercise
while dieting. Calorie charts were
made available to all members. All
chapter reports were read and approved.

TO ALL
GIRL OR BOY
SENIORS
GRADUATING
IN THE

ClASS OF '80
Stop In today and toke advantage
of thla great savings.

PLAN BffiLE SCHOOL

herlt~ge . house

A Bible school planning session
will be held this evening at 7:30p.m.
at·the Apple Grove United Methodist
Church. Churches participating will
be East Letart, Letart Falls and Apple Grove. All interested persons are
asked to attend.

tendance.

OF SHOES

BlAKFSLEE HOSPITAIJZED
C. E. Blakeslee, retired Meigs
Agricultural Agent and executive
secretary of the Meigs County
Reglooal Planning Commission, Is
Cllnfined to the Holzer Medical Center wbere he has undergone surgery.
He ts expected to be confined for at
least another week. The room num-

Middleport, 0.

N. 2nd Ave.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
..
..

FUEL SAVINGS
; PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - A
· ~ey to gas savings Is a well-tuned
engine.
According to Frarh Corp., a
manu,facturer of auto products, a
typical untuned car may travel
12,000 mi!es a year, get 15 miles per .
gallon and consume 800 gallons of
(Del. rt kept in proper tune, however,
the same car may average 16.8 mpg
and consume 714 gallons of fuel.
This 86-gallon fuel savings could
translate into $129 if gas prices
reach $1.50, as experts predict-io
Jl'¥ back the cost of a tune-•.

8-TRACK

TAPES

PUFPS
FACIAL

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TISSUES
200's

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HOT WEATHER

WESTCLOX
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CONTROL
CAPSULES
AND DIET PIAN

tlours:

28 TIME CAPSULES

Mon. thru Sat.
':JOtoi:OO
Frldoly

2nd ST.

$1

44

REG. '1.95

,,30 to S:ot

KIDDIE SHOPPE

OIILY

POMEROY OHIO

·----------------------------~

Garden Clubs, spring meeting to be
held Saturday on the campus. The
first tour will take place at 9:15a.m.
preceding the ~ning of the
meeting.

$279

ALARM ·
CLOCKS

30%

OFF

SUPER
PLENAMINS
EXTRA
STRENGTH
TRIAL SIZE
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REG.49'

and Balancing"
Plus Relreadable
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and present high interest rates make It a blue

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992·7034
Pomeroy, 0.

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BOYS' SHORTS &amp; SHIRTS
2T to 14 YRS.
-·
INFANlS' SUMMERWEAR
3 to 24 MO.

ADDfflONAL TOUR SCHEDULED
An additional tour of the Ohio
University greenhouse has been
scheduled for those attending the
Region 11, Ohio Association of

Topics pres~nted by Rio Grande
College personnel will include
Financial Planning by Joseph Mat·
thews and Taxes'and Regulations by
Lawrence McGraw.
The " Keys" workshop or the May
12 session may he ~n for college
credit or continuing education units.
Before college credit will be award·
ed, individuals must submit addi·
tiona! written material attesting to
the understanding of the material ·
presented.
Registration can be made by calling the Rio Grande Department of
Business Administration, 245-5353,
ext. 205.

RETREAD
_$PECIAL

\

\

Jividen hosts sewers

GIRlS' SUMMER
SHORTS &amp; lOPS
2T to 14 YRS.

GROUP HEARS ZIMMERMAN
Alpha Epsilon Chapter of Alpha
Delta Kappa met Tuesday night in
the Riverboat Room of the Athens
County Savings and Loan Co., Meigs
Branch with Robert Zimmerman of
the Ohio Developmental Mental PrDgram as speaker.
Zlrrunerman conducted a question
and answer session on the trallling of
the program children. Each of the 17
members a !tending served a
favorite dessert and furnished the
recipe for the others attending. Next
meeting will be a dinner at the Meigs
rnn on May 2ll.

ministration.
Attorney Donald Cox will present
"The Skeleton Key", a look at legal
organizations; Ron Atkinson of the
Gallipolis Parts Warehouse will
speak on Business Records in "The
Control Key", Business lnsurance
will be "The Protection Key", a
presentation by Howard Baker
Saunders, Saunders and Evans rnsumce; "The Vault Key" will be the
Iaiit on Sources of Capital by Jeff
Smith, Ohio Valley Bank.

Rev. Lamar O'Bryant will be the pastor.
evangelist for revival services of the
Rev. Don Black, pastor of Hope
Hope Baptist Chapel April:!l}-2&amp;.
Baptist Church, invites the public to
Rev. O'Bryant ts a native of Smyr· attend these servies. The services
na, Ga., and Is currently pastor of will begin at 7 p.m. nightly. On Tuesthe Sharon Baptist Church of [rondJIY at 6 p.m., aU children from
ton.
· &amp;rade six and younger are invited
Rev. O'Bryant came to Ironton for hotdogs and punch. At 6 p.m.
during the spring of 1969 to IM:gin a Thursday, pizza and punch Will be
new Southern Baptist work after served to all youth in junior and
many earlier attempts had failed.
senior high school. There is special
The new work for several yeanJ held
music planned every night and a
services in a number of schoola unW
nursery will be provided.
they wre able to build UJe first wing
of their building In 1973. The church
The church is located at 570 Grant
has been growing steadily and now
Street in Middleport and is affiliated
has a membership of over 21Ml. Rev.
with the Southem Baptist ConvenO'Bryant is serving his lith year as
tion . .

Reg. 59.95 Each

\

•

FRIDAY
TEEN msco dance, Orchid
Room, 8 to 11:30 p. m. Friday. Sponsored by Music . Unlimited;
chaperones will be present.

FOR THIS &lt;SUMMER, WE HAVE AGOOD SUPPLY OF:

gave a reading on the resurrection of
Christ followed by Sharon Hawley
singing "Christ Arose" with Mrs.
Jones at the piano.
Mrs. Knight told of the women's
visit to the tomb and of their rejoicing when they found it empty. The
traditions of Easter were noted by
the program leader who told of the
origin of the sunrise service in
Bavaria and its beginning in
Ame.rica .in 1909 in the Hollywood
Bowl in California. She also told the
legend of thedogwood tree, the.
Easter Parade on Fifth Avenue in
New York, and the egg rolling which
takes place on the White House
Lawn.
To conclude the presentation, Mrs.:·
Knight spOtlighted a portrait of
Christ and told of his life on earth.
Mrs. Lambert had the closing
prayer.
Mrs. Euvetta Bechtle, Mrs. Max·
ine Philson, Mrs. Martha Chambers,
Mrs. Lettie Young served a salad
course using a spring motif in the
table decorations. Fifty.five shutin
visits were reported by members.

ruo GRANDE - The second in a
series of three onEXlay workshops
for sffiau business owners and
oeprators, offered at Rio Grande
College and Community College will
take place Tuesday, April22.
The workshop; " Keys to Business
Su&lt;:eess", is sponsored by the United
States Small Business Administra·
lion, the Gallipolis Chamber of Com·
merce, the Department of Business
Administration at Rio Grande Col·
lege and Community College and the
Cwperative Extension Service of
Ohio State University.
Krishna Kool, . chairman of the
Department of Business Ad·
ministration at Rio Grande, an·
nounced today that there are still
openings for this workshop as well
as the May 12 workshop on "Human
Relations Management."
All workshops will be conducted in
the E. E . Davis Career Center and
will begin at 8:30a.m. and continue
until3:15 p.m.
Lunch is Included in the $12 per
workshop registration fee.
The workshop will feature
Douglas Sweazy from the U. S.
Department of SmaU Business Ad· ..

Revival services slated

berls228.

...
...
.

MErGS COUNTY Democratic
Central Committee, 7:30 p. m. this
evening at Carpenter's Hall, E.
Main St., Pomeroy.

WILL SOON BE HEREIII

-

Spaces still available
for two RBC workshops

Refreshments were served.

lOOTABLETS
: Mrs. Edith Jividen hosted the
')'uesday afternoon meeting of the
#oily Bunch Sewing Club at her Middleport home.
· Mrs. Margaret Bell Weber presid·
ed at the meeting attended by 12
111embers. Plans were made to piece
a quilt for a money·rnaking project.
Mrs. Jividen received the traveling
prize and was also presented hostess
gifts. The game prizes were won by
Mrs. Evelyn Grueser, Mrs. Lillian
Smith, Mrs. Jane Gilkey, and Mrs.
Weber.
: A dessert course was served by
lhe hostess to those named and Mrs.
.Marjorie Mi!1Jaon, ·Mrs. Rhoda
Hackett, Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs.
~race Johlison, Mrs. Nora Mills,
Mrs. Freda Mitch and Mrs. Helen
lteyno!ds.

-

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TUSSY
CREAM
DEODORANT
20Z.
ONLY

59*

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Reg. 89.95

A !fome Bank
For

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,

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April17, 1980

Bud:-A-niON IN

PORTLAND SATURDAY

Library

t&lt;i"'~~··
,.,.,.,.,.\,
..,.t·

..

~

... t·~ ·

f, . .

.

Letters

LI

"
R

A

"''"""~'

..,.,...

"',,~

R
Apri!J6_. J980

Dan Morris, Curriculum Supervisor
Meigs Local School District
South Third Avenue
Middleport, OH 45760

RACINE APPEARANCE-This happy group of
graduate students in acting, directing and production
design at Ohi~ University will be at Southern High
School, Racine, Friday offering a public performance

~stage

in the evening. They are front, I tor, Lee C. Harrison,
Judith Dorrell, Brian A. KaUfman, Herbert Mark
Parker; back, I to r, Ken Bright, Ed Vicol and Pam
Burnett. The Southern Drama Club is sponsoring the
group's visit to the high school.

III' to appear locally

The drama club of Southern High
School in Racine is sponsoring
"Stage III," the Ohio University
SChool of Theater Touring Company
in residence at the high school Friday.
Stage III is comprised of third
year graduate studeuts in the professional training programs in acting,
directing and production design at
. - Ohio University. Stage Ill is made
possible with the support of the Ohio
Arts Council.

While at Southern High School, the
group will offer a variety of performance and performance-related
activities including special classes
and theater workshops. Their spring
tour includes two one-act Checkhov
plays, "The Marriage Proposal"

preparing to' perionn on opening
night; this will be presented for the
student body Friday morning. The
comedies, "The Boor" and "The
Marriage Proposal" will be
presented to the public at 7:30p.m.
Friday in the high school
auditorium. The public is cordially
invited by the drama club.
Tickets for the evening perfoi1ll&lt;!nCe are $2 for adults and $1 for
students. Don Salmons is faculty advisor of the drama club.

and "The Boor"; William Luce's
"The Belle o( Amherst" and "Speak

the Speech: An Actor's Approach to
Shakespear".
"Speak the Speech" offers a
backstage look at what a'ctors do in

Mary Shrine installs officers

Sarah Jo Saltz

..

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mayer entertained with a dinner on Easter Sunday honoring their granddaughter,
Sarah Jo, on her second birthday.
She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Saltz of New Martinsville,
W. Va.
Joining the Mayers for dinner
were Mrs. Bill Perrin, Beth·and Jon,
Mrs. Jenny Meinhart, Miss Erma
Smith, Mrs. Marie Hauck, Mrs. Donna Carr and Lesley Dawn, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Mayer, Bethany Jo and
Michael, Don Snyder, and Sarah
Jo's great-grandmother, Mrs. Lillie
Hauck. Unable to attend due to illness·was the Rev. W. H. Perrin.
Afternoon visitors were Mrs. Bill
Mayer and Rick and Sarah Jo's
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Kuhi.
Gifts were presented to the
honored guest and included a Little
Dutch Girl quilt pieced and quilted
by her grandmother, Mrs. Kuhi .

Installation of new officers for
Mary Shrine, White Shrine of
Jerusalem, was held recently at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Installed were Ann Blake, worthy
high priestess; Thomas Edwards,
watchman of shepherds; Margie
Cartwright, noble prophetess;
Wesley Buehl, associate watchman
of shepherds ; Erma Yoho, worthy
scribe; Phyllis Gilkey, worthy
treasurer; Ann Hemsley, worthy
chaplain; Jean Yoho, worthy
shepherdess; Judy Jewell,. worthy
guide; Stella Atkins, worthy herald;
Jess Brinker, first wiseman; Donald
May, second wiseman; Oscar Casto,
third wiseman; Ernest Wingett,
king, Maxine Wingett, queen; Carol
Workman, first handmaid; Trudy
Andrews, second handmaid; Ruby
Diehl, third handmaid; Edna
Slusher, · worthy organist; Nellie
Casto, worthy guardian; and 'Donald
Yoho, worthy guard.
Honorary officers installed were
Vivian May, flagbearer; Evelyn
Murray, Clara Belle \ Riley, flag
escorts; Jean Wallace, banner
bearer; Carrie Atkinson and Clara
White, .banner escorts, Janet
McDennitt, Madona; Naomi Reed
and Nancy Van Meter, angels;
Midge Abbott, courier; Barbara
Dugan, flower girl, and James
Soulsby, soloists.
The matrons of honor are Helen
Reynolds, Mary Hughes, and Pearl
Reynolds. The queen's attendants
are Marie Hawkins, Evelyn
Grueser, Kay Logan, Elsie Roush,
Arline Davis, Bonnie Miller, Bernice
Winn , Farie Kennedy, Clara Adams,
and Paulind Atkins, and theking's
attendants are Naoma Brinker, Fer·
man Moore, James Wallace, Glenn
Atkinson, Margaret Neuman, Donna
Stewart, Helen Pickens, Lillian
Moore, Allen Hughes, and Clara
Soulsby. Pauline Atkins and Marie
Hawkins are the prompters.
Inviting officers for the installation were Vivian May, worthy high
priestess; Thomas Edwards, watclunan of shepherds; Janet McDermitt, inviting herald, and Margaret

Newnan. The installing· officer was
Naoma Brinker with Marie
Hawkins, installing chaplain; Barbara Dugan, herald, Bernice Winn,
scribe; Margaret Neuman,
organist; Arline'Davis, guardian ;
Midge Abbott, color bearer; Jeffery
Williams, vocalist; and Jackie and
Dawn Blake, special escort for the
worthy high priestess. The meeting
opened with Vivian May, worthy
high priestess, ·and Thomas Edwards, watchman of shepherds, being escorted to the East by Mrs.
McDennitt and Mrs. Newman.
Distinguished guests and past worthy high priestesses presenied were
Esta Reese, Lafayette Shrine
Gallipolis; Marie Hawkins, special
obituary; Maxine Wingett, special
fraternal relations; Naoma Brinker,
Mrs. Abbott, Mrs. Dugan, Mrs.
Winn, and Mrs. Casto, Jesse
Brinker, deputy supreme watclunan
of shepherds; Ernest Wingett, past
watchman of Shepherds, Mary
Shrine; Maria McQuaid, ·worthy
high priestess of Lafayette Shrine,
Gallipolis.
The pledge was given in unison
and Jeffery Williams sang "The
L&lt;lrd's Prayer" with Mrs. Newman
at the organ along with "I Asked the
Lord" as Mrs. Blake, worthy high
priestess, was escorted around the
cross by her two daughters, Jackie
and Dawn, and "Til the Stann
Passes by" as Thomas Edwards,
watchman of shepherds was
escorted to his station.
The worthy high priestess
presented gifts to her installing of.
ficers and the past worthy high
priestess presented gifts to all of her
line officers. Mrs. Abbott presented
the junior past worthy high priestess
with a gift from members of the
Shrine and Mrs. Winn presented a
gift to the junior past watchman of
shepherds from the Shrine
members.
Visitors were from Clifton and
New Haven, W. VA. and Gallipolis.
The worthy high priestess introduced her family and thanked those who
came. The tables were decorated in

THIS IS

NATIONAL BABY WEEK
• I

Melissa Wh,aley
Mr. and Mrs. Donald (Eddie)
.Whaley, Route 1, Shade, recently
.hosted a party for their daughter,
• Melissa who observed her first birtlr
. , day on April15.
r A Bugs Bunny and Cookie Monster
' cake baked by Mrs. Whaley was
:S.rved with ice cream, potato chips
1 Zimd other refreshments to Mr. and
':Mrs. Anthony Corsi, Marc and Ran, dy, Mrs. Sheila Whaley, Sandra,
Pailllili and Brent, Mrs. Jo Ann
Scarbrough and Bill, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Whaley, Aaron and Amy,
'Margaret Corsi, Elaine Corsi, and
Patricia Co~.
.
Ullllble to attend were Mr. ~nd
,. lofrs. Herbert Whaley and Nancy, '
Mrs. Terry Neece and Chri~tma ,
Mrs. Brenda Cogar ~nd Angel~.
I

•

YISit our baby department for baby gifts.
We have a large selection.
Free Gift Wrapping.

-BlANKETS -DIAPERS -GOWNS
-SWEATERS -SHAWLS -KIMONOS
-BOOTIES -SHOES

A bike-a-than will be conducted in
the Portland area Saturday on
behalf of cystic fibrosis and under
the chairmanship of Larry Wolfe,
principal of the Portland Elementary School.
Those taking part will leave the
school at 9 a.m. and will travel the
highway into what is known as "Old
Portland". Signs wil be posted along
the route and there will be prizes for
the winners. Dave Diles has donated
four copies to his book on Archie
Griffith for inclusion in tbe prizes.
Assisting Wolfe with the event will
be John Costanzo, Joyce Ann Ritchie
and Linda Ward. Funds for cystic
fibrosis will be raised through
money paid by sponsors of riders.

Dear Dan,
I'm sorry I won't be able to attend the second meeting of the Meigs Local
School District paren\8 advisory council on talented and gifted children. I
have missed a couple of Rutland Youth Assn. meetins because • was substitute teaching in Adult Basic Education, and I need to be at the next few
meetings to make sure we are aU set for a day of New Games in May.
One of the questions people have asked me, which we discussed at the
advisory council's first meeting, is, "How can I tell if my child is gifted?" I
ran across an article from "Woman's Day'' magazine which provides some
guidance.
Dorothy Sisk, of the Office of the Gtfted and Talented, gave these clues to
watch for :
I. Does my child use a more advanced vocabulary than most children
his/her age?
·
2. Does my child ask questions which are hard to answer?
3. Does my child have a very good memory?
4. Does my child have very good powers of concentration?
5. Does my child have a wide range of interests?
6. Can my child understand complicated ideas and relationships?
7. Does my child question authority or critirue himseU/berself?
8. Is my child different, independent, mischievious, or very sensitive?
9. Does my child show special abilities in math, language, sports, science, history, art, music, dance?
10.Does my child have a highly developed sense of humor?
11. Is my child very popular?
Parents who can answer yes to one or more of these questions may have
a gifted child. If they are in the Meigs Local School District, they should
meet with you on Tuesday, April 22, at the Meigs High School library at 7:3{)
p. m. Anyone outside the Meigs Local district (or .inside the district but not
able to get to the meeting) should contact me at 992-5813. I am getting
together a list of parents and friends of the talented and gifted so that we can
more easily exchange information and ideas and perhaps even convince
school administrators that there are enough talented and gifted children to
be worth spendin~ a little money on a program for the talented and gifted.
Very truly yours,
Ellen Bell, Librarian
Serving all of Meigs County
OPEN HOUSE AT
VETERANS HOSPITAL
Area high school girls, freshmen
through seniors, are invited to an
open house at Veterans Memorial
Hospital from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday to
learn about the hospital's Candystriper organization.
Hospital personnel, members of
the hospital's board of trustees and
school administrators wil be present
for the event which is designed to
outline the work of the organization
members at the hospital and the
rules involved in the work. Parents
or guardians of the girls interested
are also invited to attend.
The session will be infonnal and
girls and their parents may attend at
anytime during the 2 to 4 p.m. time
slot. Anyone having questions about
the organization may call Rhonda
Dailey, R.N., at the hospital,
992-2104.

Fork Over The Spoons Folb
NEW YORK (AP) - Nobody's
sure why, but stolen silver keeps
coming back to the Waldori-Astoria
from conscience-stricken souvenir
hounds.
The hotel said it received lour
more demitasse spoons i,n the mail
Wednesday, bringing the total to 33
since a New Jersey woman began
the silver rush by sending back six
spoons in a moment of remorse.
In the 2 ~ months since, the hotel
has received two silver candlesticks,
a silver champagne bucket, a silver
oyster fork and four more demitasse
.

spoons.

60-D
·~RICE GOOO SUNDAY AI'RIL 13 THRU SAT. Ar!IL 19, 1910
•WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QILINIIIIES
•WE Gl.IDI.T ACCm USDA COVT. FOOD STAMPS
•WE ARE 1101 RESI'ONSIBII FOR l"II'OGRAPHICAI. UROIIS

Open Sun.

10

to 8

Picnics

round C

REGULARITHICK ITHIN

Boneless
.huck Roast

~·1··

Picnics

S~d

GRADE A POULTRY
Whole Chicken Legs
COUNTRY PRIDE · FRESH GRMIE A

wlribs.

Chicken Breasts

COUNTRY STTLE CUBED BEEf

89C

Lb.

Bucket Steaks

.,09

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Bnls. Sh11ulder Roast

89C

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IIOIIMEL

ltlck Pepperoni

lb.

USDA CliOICE BEEF

FROZEN

Chicken Livers

79$

USDA CHOICE BEEF

COUNTRY PRIDE • FRESH GRADE A

Lb.

USDA CI'OICE BEEF

Bnls. Top Blade Steaks

lb.

Lb.

PACKAGED MEATS

., ..
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FRESH

Pork Sausage
FRESH

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SwiFTS

Pre... lum Welners
TENDERBEST SLICED

.,09

I Lb.
Pk~

MIXED CENIU CUT . JUMI!() PIC

Pork Chops

•217

2Lb.

Pk1.

Bnls. lwlssSteaks

89C

12 Dl.
Pk1.

Lb.

FRESH · GRAll£ A COUNTRY PRIDE

Chicken Drumsticks

Lb.

.,59
'209
.,09

EXTRR LEAN

Bnls. Stewing Bttf

HOW

lb.

USDA CHOICE BEEr SHOULDER · IUMI!() ~IC

I Lb.
Pk1.

Lunch Meat

LEAN

Regu larly Up 1b $18.00•

Chopped llrloln

Lb.

$11.79
Famous Amity top-grain.
leather Body Billfolds and
other styles at a special
once-a-year sale price. Your
choice of three, super~sort
eye-catching leathers. All
are attractively gift boxed.

momo · REG.tDIEI

Soft Drinks

$1
7
12 oz.

VILLAGE
PHARMACY
'

cans

Middleport, Ohio

...
·'.
•'

Cleanser

••.',

50' Off UBEL

COMET 4' Off USEL

'·

Stze

20' Off UBEL

Mr. Clean

•••

the theme of "blue birds of happiness", along in pink, silver, blue
and green with vases of spring
flowers.
The closing ode and prayer by
Mrs. Hemsley closed the meeting.
Potluck refreshments were served
in the dining room.

14,0z. 35c

Splc&amp;Span
20' Off LABEL

-

J27
·

Btl.

21' Off UBEL

-·

Btl.

128.0z. $569

Wlsk

..

28 Oz. $

Box

28 Oz. $
811.

Top Job

hln Spaghetti

54 Oz.$ )65

CoHtt Creamer
FIRESIDE

WALDORF

Toilet Tlssue~:~~~a9

)27

Honer lrahams

MUSSELMAN

Butter

79c
280z. 79c
~~~··
1..

•

~

McDonald's of Gallipolis
First Anniversary
Celebration.
McDonald's .25th Anniversary Worldwide

* Balloon Nights - (Free balloons to children under 12)

Tuesday, April 22 &amp;29
Hotcakes and Sausage Nights
(All the
hotcakes you can eat with the
- -- --purchase of a hotcakes~al_l~_sausage entree)
Wednesday, April 23, 30 ·
C..dlelight Dinner - lhuiSday, April. 24
Premium Night - (A free- premium
to·- all kids
-under 12) April 18, 5 pm to 9 pm
25c Sundae Sunday - April 20
McHappy Day- - Sunday, April 27

*

FARMS

Butter Split Wheat Bread
Variety Cake Donuts

*

.

*
*

MU

Florida Oranges
5 Lb.

Bag

Sha•poo

gga:

TIBLETS

811.
OfU

Sino-off
AGREE

Cr-e RlnH

llh.
Size

YOUR

CHOICE

•
'•
'.

.
•

Milk
59

\

..

•••

••'

-&lt;

'1

.

*

Juicy

SUNBEAM · EITRA URGE

..•.

~

.'

'•

dot .

'

65C

80z.$119
Pka.

~

5 Ct.
Tube

lolls

•'

STRAWBERRIES •••••••••••••••• ~~·•• 99~
SJittd fur,IJ,
Slllk,
Chicken 'n Dum,tinp
1
Chk:klll 11 llloodlti
S.llsbu~

OT. 99~
TOMATOES •••••••••••••••••••••••
,

...

•

Fresh

Vine Ripe

••
•

-~- -

.

Buy a Big Mac on Sunday, April 27 and .
McDonalds will donate 25' to Gallipolis
Area Scouts

49c.

Crisp Q'unchy

Lb. ·Bol

IANQIIET - MAC l CHEESE ·.

CARROTS ••••••••••••••••. 5

lb. bag

99c

New Texas

Buffet Supper

Orange

Twin Pik$1

SWEn O .. IONS •••••••••••• 5·lb•. 99~

FlliSCI!MMRS

Pkg. ot
12

Golden .

Egg Beaters

Gillop

-

.

.

SWEn CORN•••••••••••••• 6 ears. 99~

DE lAMP

'

"

I

Fish Stlclis
. FILL

· Nobodvcan do it ·
like Mcifonakfs can ..

r

- ---

STORE HOURS

Mon. thru Sat. 8 to 10

••

1&amp;0z.
Pkg.

99c

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April17, 1980

Bud:-A-niON IN

PORTLAND SATURDAY

Library

t&lt;i"'~~··
,.,.,.,.,.\,
..,.t·

..

~

... t·~ ·

f, . .

.

Letters

LI

"
R

A

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R
Apri!J6_. J980

Dan Morris, Curriculum Supervisor
Meigs Local School District
South Third Avenue
Middleport, OH 45760

RACINE APPEARANCE-This happy group of
graduate students in acting, directing and production
design at Ohi~ University will be at Southern High
School, Racine, Friday offering a public performance

~stage

in the evening. They are front, I tor, Lee C. Harrison,
Judith Dorrell, Brian A. KaUfman, Herbert Mark
Parker; back, I to r, Ken Bright, Ed Vicol and Pam
Burnett. The Southern Drama Club is sponsoring the
group's visit to the high school.

III' to appear locally

The drama club of Southern High
School in Racine is sponsoring
"Stage III," the Ohio University
SChool of Theater Touring Company
in residence at the high school Friday.
Stage III is comprised of third
year graduate studeuts in the professional training programs in acting,
directing and production design at
. - Ohio University. Stage Ill is made
possible with the support of the Ohio
Arts Council.

While at Southern High School, the
group will offer a variety of performance and performance-related
activities including special classes
and theater workshops. Their spring
tour includes two one-act Checkhov
plays, "The Marriage Proposal"

preparing to' perionn on opening
night; this will be presented for the
student body Friday morning. The
comedies, "The Boor" and "The
Marriage Proposal" will be
presented to the public at 7:30p.m.
Friday in the high school
auditorium. The public is cordially
invited by the drama club.
Tickets for the evening perfoi1ll&lt;!nCe are $2 for adults and $1 for
students. Don Salmons is faculty advisor of the drama club.

and "The Boor"; William Luce's
"The Belle o( Amherst" and "Speak

the Speech: An Actor's Approach to
Shakespear".
"Speak the Speech" offers a
backstage look at what a'ctors do in

Mary Shrine installs officers

Sarah Jo Saltz

..

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mayer entertained with a dinner on Easter Sunday honoring their granddaughter,
Sarah Jo, on her second birthday.
She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Saltz of New Martinsville,
W. Va.
Joining the Mayers for dinner
were Mrs. Bill Perrin, Beth·and Jon,
Mrs. Jenny Meinhart, Miss Erma
Smith, Mrs. Marie Hauck, Mrs. Donna Carr and Lesley Dawn, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Mayer, Bethany Jo and
Michael, Don Snyder, and Sarah
Jo's great-grandmother, Mrs. Lillie
Hauck. Unable to attend due to illness·was the Rev. W. H. Perrin.
Afternoon visitors were Mrs. Bill
Mayer and Rick and Sarah Jo's
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Kuhi.
Gifts were presented to the
honored guest and included a Little
Dutch Girl quilt pieced and quilted
by her grandmother, Mrs. Kuhi .

Installation of new officers for
Mary Shrine, White Shrine of
Jerusalem, was held recently at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Installed were Ann Blake, worthy
high priestess; Thomas Edwards,
watchman of shepherds; Margie
Cartwright, noble prophetess;
Wesley Buehl, associate watchman
of shepherds ; Erma Yoho, worthy
scribe; Phyllis Gilkey, worthy
treasurer; Ann Hemsley, worthy
chaplain; Jean Yoho, worthy
shepherdess; Judy Jewell,. worthy
guide; Stella Atkins, worthy herald;
Jess Brinker, first wiseman; Donald
May, second wiseman; Oscar Casto,
third wiseman; Ernest Wingett,
king, Maxine Wingett, queen; Carol
Workman, first handmaid; Trudy
Andrews, second handmaid; Ruby
Diehl, third handmaid; Edna
Slusher, · worthy organist; Nellie
Casto, worthy guardian; and 'Donald
Yoho, worthy guard.
Honorary officers installed were
Vivian May, flagbearer; Evelyn
Murray, Clara Belle \ Riley, flag
escorts; Jean Wallace, banner
bearer; Carrie Atkinson and Clara
White, .banner escorts, Janet
McDennitt, Madona; Naomi Reed
and Nancy Van Meter, angels;
Midge Abbott, courier; Barbara
Dugan, flower girl, and James
Soulsby, soloists.
The matrons of honor are Helen
Reynolds, Mary Hughes, and Pearl
Reynolds. The queen's attendants
are Marie Hawkins, Evelyn
Grueser, Kay Logan, Elsie Roush,
Arline Davis, Bonnie Miller, Bernice
Winn , Farie Kennedy, Clara Adams,
and Paulind Atkins, and theking's
attendants are Naoma Brinker, Fer·
man Moore, James Wallace, Glenn
Atkinson, Margaret Neuman, Donna
Stewart, Helen Pickens, Lillian
Moore, Allen Hughes, and Clara
Soulsby. Pauline Atkins and Marie
Hawkins are the prompters.
Inviting officers for the installation were Vivian May, worthy high
priestess; Thomas Edwards, watclunan of shepherds; Janet McDermitt, inviting herald, and Margaret

Newnan. The installing· officer was
Naoma Brinker with Marie
Hawkins, installing chaplain; Barbara Dugan, herald, Bernice Winn,
scribe; Margaret Neuman,
organist; Arline'Davis, guardian ;
Midge Abbott, color bearer; Jeffery
Williams, vocalist; and Jackie and
Dawn Blake, special escort for the
worthy high priestess. The meeting
opened with Vivian May, worthy
high priestess, ·and Thomas Edwards, watchman of shepherds, being escorted to the East by Mrs.
McDennitt and Mrs. Newman.
Distinguished guests and past worthy high priestesses presenied were
Esta Reese, Lafayette Shrine
Gallipolis; Marie Hawkins, special
obituary; Maxine Wingett, special
fraternal relations; Naoma Brinker,
Mrs. Abbott, Mrs. Dugan, Mrs.
Winn, and Mrs. Casto, Jesse
Brinker, deputy supreme watclunan
of shepherds; Ernest Wingett, past
watchman of Shepherds, Mary
Shrine; Maria McQuaid, ·worthy
high priestess of Lafayette Shrine,
Gallipolis.
The pledge was given in unison
and Jeffery Williams sang "The
L&lt;lrd's Prayer" with Mrs. Newman
at the organ along with "I Asked the
Lord" as Mrs. Blake, worthy high
priestess, was escorted around the
cross by her two daughters, Jackie
and Dawn, and "Til the Stann
Passes by" as Thomas Edwards,
watchman of shepherds was
escorted to his station.
The worthy high priestess
presented gifts to her installing of.
ficers and the past worthy high
priestess presented gifts to all of her
line officers. Mrs. Abbott presented
the junior past worthy high priestess
with a gift from members of the
Shrine and Mrs. Winn presented a
gift to the junior past watchman of
shepherds from the Shrine
members.
Visitors were from Clifton and
New Haven, W. VA. and Gallipolis.
The worthy high priestess introduced her family and thanked those who
came. The tables were decorated in

THIS IS

NATIONAL BABY WEEK
• I

Melissa Wh,aley
Mr. and Mrs. Donald (Eddie)
.Whaley, Route 1, Shade, recently
.hosted a party for their daughter,
• Melissa who observed her first birtlr
. , day on April15.
r A Bugs Bunny and Cookie Monster
' cake baked by Mrs. Whaley was
:S.rved with ice cream, potato chips
1 Zimd other refreshments to Mr. and
':Mrs. Anthony Corsi, Marc and Ran, dy, Mrs. Sheila Whaley, Sandra,
Pailllili and Brent, Mrs. Jo Ann
Scarbrough and Bill, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Whaley, Aaron and Amy,
'Margaret Corsi, Elaine Corsi, and
Patricia Co~.
.
Ullllble to attend were Mr. ~nd
,. lofrs. Herbert Whaley and Nancy, '
Mrs. Terry Neece and Chri~tma ,
Mrs. Brenda Cogar ~nd Angel~.
I

•

YISit our baby department for baby gifts.
We have a large selection.
Free Gift Wrapping.

-BlANKETS -DIAPERS -GOWNS
-SWEATERS -SHAWLS -KIMONOS
-BOOTIES -SHOES

A bike-a-than will be conducted in
the Portland area Saturday on
behalf of cystic fibrosis and under
the chairmanship of Larry Wolfe,
principal of the Portland Elementary School.
Those taking part will leave the
school at 9 a.m. and will travel the
highway into what is known as "Old
Portland". Signs wil be posted along
the route and there will be prizes for
the winners. Dave Diles has donated
four copies to his book on Archie
Griffith for inclusion in tbe prizes.
Assisting Wolfe with the event will
be John Costanzo, Joyce Ann Ritchie
and Linda Ward. Funds for cystic
fibrosis will be raised through
money paid by sponsors of riders.

Dear Dan,
I'm sorry I won't be able to attend the second meeting of the Meigs Local
School District paren\8 advisory council on talented and gifted children. I
have missed a couple of Rutland Youth Assn. meetins because • was substitute teaching in Adult Basic Education, and I need to be at the next few
meetings to make sure we are aU set for a day of New Games in May.
One of the questions people have asked me, which we discussed at the
advisory council's first meeting, is, "How can I tell if my child is gifted?" I
ran across an article from "Woman's Day'' magazine which provides some
guidance.
Dorothy Sisk, of the Office of the Gtfted and Talented, gave these clues to
watch for :
I. Does my child use a more advanced vocabulary than most children
his/her age?
·
2. Does my child ask questions which are hard to answer?
3. Does my child have a very good memory?
4. Does my child have very good powers of concentration?
5. Does my child have a wide range of interests?
6. Can my child understand complicated ideas and relationships?
7. Does my child question authority or critirue himseU/berself?
8. Is my child different, independent, mischievious, or very sensitive?
9. Does my child show special abilities in math, language, sports, science, history, art, music, dance?
10.Does my child have a highly developed sense of humor?
11. Is my child very popular?
Parents who can answer yes to one or more of these questions may have
a gifted child. If they are in the Meigs Local School District, they should
meet with you on Tuesday, April 22, at the Meigs High School library at 7:3{)
p. m. Anyone outside the Meigs Local district (or .inside the district but not
able to get to the meeting) should contact me at 992-5813. I am getting
together a list of parents and friends of the talented and gifted so that we can
more easily exchange information and ideas and perhaps even convince
school administrators that there are enough talented and gifted children to
be worth spendin~ a little money on a program for the talented and gifted.
Very truly yours,
Ellen Bell, Librarian
Serving all of Meigs County
OPEN HOUSE AT
VETERANS HOSPITAL
Area high school girls, freshmen
through seniors, are invited to an
open house at Veterans Memorial
Hospital from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday to
learn about the hospital's Candystriper organization.
Hospital personnel, members of
the hospital's board of trustees and
school administrators wil be present
for the event which is designed to
outline the work of the organization
members at the hospital and the
rules involved in the work. Parents
or guardians of the girls interested
are also invited to attend.
The session will be infonnal and
girls and their parents may attend at
anytime during the 2 to 4 p.m. time
slot. Anyone having questions about
the organization may call Rhonda
Dailey, R.N., at the hospital,
992-2104.

Fork Over The Spoons Folb
NEW YORK (AP) - Nobody's
sure why, but stolen silver keeps
coming back to the Waldori-Astoria
from conscience-stricken souvenir
hounds.
The hotel said it received lour
more demitasse spoons i,n the mail
Wednesday, bringing the total to 33
since a New Jersey woman began
the silver rush by sending back six
spoons in a moment of remorse.
In the 2 ~ months since, the hotel
has received two silver candlesticks,
a silver champagne bucket, a silver
oyster fork and four more demitasse
.

spoons.

60-D
·~RICE GOOO SUNDAY AI'RIL 13 THRU SAT. Ar!IL 19, 1910
•WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QILINIIIIES
•WE Gl.IDI.T ACCm USDA COVT. FOOD STAMPS
•WE ARE 1101 RESI'ONSIBII FOR l"II'OGRAPHICAI. UROIIS

Open Sun.

10

to 8

Picnics

round C

REGULARITHICK ITHIN

Boneless
.huck Roast

~·1··

Picnics

S~d

GRADE A POULTRY
Whole Chicken Legs
COUNTRY PRIDE · FRESH GRMIE A

wlribs.

Chicken Breasts

COUNTRY STTLE CUBED BEEf

89C

Lb.

Bucket Steaks

.,09

Lb.

Bnls. Sh11ulder Roast

89C

Lb.

IIOIIMEL

ltlck Pepperoni

lb.

USDA CliOICE BEEF

FROZEN

Chicken Livers

79$

USDA CHOICE BEEF

COUNTRY PRIDE • FRESH GRADE A

Lb.

USDA CI'OICE BEEF

Bnls. Top Blade Steaks

lb.

Lb.

PACKAGED MEATS

., ..
'229

'239

FRESH

Pork Sausage
FRESH

Pork Sausage
SwiFTS

Pre... lum Welners
TENDERBEST SLICED

.,09

I Lb.
Pk~

MIXED CENIU CUT . JUMI!() PIC

Pork Chops

•217

2Lb.

Pk1.

Bnls. lwlssSteaks

89C

12 Dl.
Pk1.

Lb.

FRESH · GRAll£ A COUNTRY PRIDE

Chicken Drumsticks

Lb.

.,59
'209
.,09

EXTRR LEAN

Bnls. Stewing Bttf

HOW

lb.

USDA CHOICE BEEr SHOULDER · IUMI!() ~IC

I Lb.
Pk1.

Lunch Meat

LEAN

Regu larly Up 1b $18.00•

Chopped llrloln

Lb.

$11.79
Famous Amity top-grain.
leather Body Billfolds and
other styles at a special
once-a-year sale price. Your
choice of three, super~sort
eye-catching leathers. All
are attractively gift boxed.

momo · REG.tDIEI

Soft Drinks

$1
7
12 oz.

VILLAGE
PHARMACY
'

cans

Middleport, Ohio

...
·'.
•'

Cleanser

••.',

50' Off UBEL

COMET 4' Off USEL

'·

Stze

20' Off UBEL

Mr. Clean

•••

the theme of "blue birds of happiness", along in pink, silver, blue
and green with vases of spring
flowers.
The closing ode and prayer by
Mrs. Hemsley closed the meeting.
Potluck refreshments were served
in the dining room.

14,0z. 35c

Splc&amp;Span
20' Off LABEL

-

J27
·

Btl.

21' Off UBEL

-·

Btl.

128.0z. $569

Wlsk

..

28 Oz. $

Box

28 Oz. $
811.

Top Job

hln Spaghetti

54 Oz.$ )65

CoHtt Creamer
FIRESIDE

WALDORF

Toilet Tlssue~:~~~a9

)27

Honer lrahams

MUSSELMAN

Butter

79c
280z. 79c
~~~··
1..

•

~

McDonald's of Gallipolis
First Anniversary
Celebration.
McDonald's .25th Anniversary Worldwide

* Balloon Nights - (Free balloons to children under 12)

Tuesday, April 22 &amp;29
Hotcakes and Sausage Nights
(All the
hotcakes you can eat with the
- -- --purchase of a hotcakes~al_l~_sausage entree)
Wednesday, April 23, 30 ·
C..dlelight Dinner - lhuiSday, April. 24
Premium Night - (A free- premium
to·- all kids
-under 12) April 18, 5 pm to 9 pm
25c Sundae Sunday - April 20
McHappy Day- - Sunday, April 27

*

FARMS

Butter Split Wheat Bread
Variety Cake Donuts

*

.

*
*

MU

Florida Oranges
5 Lb.

Bag

Sha•poo

gga:

TIBLETS

811.
OfU

Sino-off
AGREE

Cr-e RlnH

llh.
Size

YOUR

CHOICE

•
'•
'.

.
•

Milk
59

\

..

•••

••'

-&lt;

'1

.

*

Juicy

SUNBEAM · EITRA URGE

..•.

~

.'

'•

dot .

'

65C

80z.$119
Pka.

~

5 Ct.
Tube

lolls

•'

STRAWBERRIES •••••••••••••••• ~~·•• 99~
SJittd fur,IJ,
Slllk,
Chicken 'n Dum,tinp
1
Chk:klll 11 llloodlti
S.llsbu~

OT. 99~
TOMATOES •••••••••••••••••••••••
,

...

•

Fresh

Vine Ripe

••
•

-~- -

.

Buy a Big Mac on Sunday, April 27 and .
McDonalds will donate 25' to Gallipolis
Area Scouts

49c.

Crisp Q'unchy

Lb. ·Bol

IANQIIET - MAC l CHEESE ·.

CARROTS ••••••••••••••••. 5

lb. bag

99c

New Texas

Buffet Supper

Orange

Twin Pik$1

SWEn O .. IONS •••••••••••• 5·lb•. 99~

FlliSCI!MMRS

Pkg. ot
12

Golden .

Egg Beaters

Gillop

-

.

.

SWEn CORN•••••••••••••• 6 ears. 99~

DE lAMP

'

"

I

Fish Stlclis
. FILL

· Nobodvcan do it ·
like Mcifonakfs can ..

r

- ---

STORE HOURS

Mon. thru Sat. 8 to 10

••

1&amp;0z.
Pkg.

99c

�10-lbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy' 0 ., Thursday rApril17 I 1980

Five Methodist appointments ·set

EASTERN CAST - These Eastern High School
students are in the roles of a comedy, " See How They
Run", to be presented Friday and Saturday nights in
the hi!Ut school auditorium. They are, front, l to r,

. COLUMBUS (Special) - United
Methodist Bishop Dwight E. Loder
announced today his intenUon to
make five changes in mlnlstertaJ appointments in the Athens District
They are among 113 anticipated
changes for the 19fl0.31 conference
year across the West Ohio Conference.
Athens will begin the new conference year June 15 with a new
district superintendent, the Rev.
Benjamin Edwards, whose appointment was announced by Bishop
Loder earlier. The Rev. Mr. Edwards succeeds the Rev. Wesley
Clarke who was appointed executive
director of Wesley Glen, the United
Methodist ReUrement Center at 5155
N.lnghSt., Columbus.
Appointments are " fixed" of·
ficially at the annll8l conference
which this year is June H2 at
Lakeside. They becom:e effective
June 15. Appointments made in the
interim will be announced by Bishop
Loder at the conference.
Ministers not involved in changes
will return to their present appointments for the coming year,
Bishop Loder said. The district includes 182 local churches in Athens,
Washington, Gallia, Hocking,
Morgan, Perry, Vinton, Meigs and
Fairfield Counties.
The intended chilnges are:

Rog.ie Gaul, Traci Sayre, Mike Hauber; back, l to r,
Allison Cauthorn, Kevin Brooks, Jim OSborne and Tina
Beaver. Curtain time is 7:30p.m. both nights. See Page
6 for details and another picture.

Rio hosts recent workshop.
RIO GRANDE- Representatives
of Rio Grande College and Com·
munity College and ,administrators
of a number of vocational schools
participated in a workshop here
recently.
Dean Brown, director of ad·
missions and records, said purpose
of the meeting was "To discuss the
relationship between college level
technical education ant the
educational goals of vocational high
schools."
" We feel," Brown added, "that
:this kind of articulation better
acquaints our technical faculty with
the goals and philosophy of
vocational education."
Representing hi gh school
vocational programs were John

Longley, director of guidance,
Buckeye Hills Vocational Center;
Charles Beard, director of student
se rvic es, Lawrence County
Vocational School; Claretta Boder,
Eastland Joint
co unse lor,
Vocational School, Columbus.
Other college representatives included Ron Easley, associate dean
of technical . education; Randy
Nicewonder, assistsnt director of
admissions; Paul Shoemaker, coor·
dlnator of business education; Anita
Sigmond, coordinator of food service
management; Ralph Rogers, coor·
dlnator of electronics; Tapin Bakst,
coordinatorofminetechnology; Ron
Cornelius, coordinator of industrial
technology, and Diana Carsey and
Jenny Weaver, admissions

Soisson
promoted

County personnel get new contracts

Lawrence S. "Bud" Soisson has
been promoted to maintenance
superintendent at Ohio Valley Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek
Station, effective May 1. This was
announced today by L. R. Ford, Jr.,
plant manager.
Soisson began his career in the
electric utility field in 1945 with the
Ohio Edison Company at Akron. In
19M he joined OVEC as a maintenance supervisor. In 1975, he was
promoted to plant engineer • maintenance. ,
Soisson served three years in the
U. S. Navy during World War II. He
and his wife, Leona, reside on
Bulaville Rd., Gallipolis, and are the
parents of two daughters, Brenda
and Bonita.

Mayor's court
Eight defendants forfeited bonds
and three others were fined in the
court of Middleport Msyor Fred Hof·
!man Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Roy Estep,
Mason, $25, posted on an illegal
exhaust charge; James B. Pettit,
Middleport, $33, speeding; Dennis
D. Coldiron, Preston, Ky., $25, improper starting and backing;
Clarence Molden, Pomeroy, $25,
speeding; William A. Readdick,
Gallipolis, $27, speeding; Anna L.
Frank, Racine, $27, speeding;
James E. Ferrell, Gallipolis, $27,
speeding, and Jeffrey A. McKinney,
Pomeroy, $27, speeding.
Fined were Charles Tyree III,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, wrong way
on a one way street; Diana L. Pope,
Middleport, $50 and costs, 110 .
operator's lieense, and George McDaniel, Middleport, $50 and costs,
disorderly manner.

~

Mrs. Amanda Jane Smith, 85,
Route.l, Racine, died Wednesday at
St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg,
W. Va.
Mrs. Smith was a daughter of the
late William and Ocella OSborne
Chaney. She was also preceded in
death by her husband, Clyde A.
Smith, five children, three brothers
and three sisters.
Surviving are three daughters,
Linnie Taylor, Racine ; Geraldine
Hart, Parkersburg, and Mabel Jef·
fers, Shade; two sons, Horace E.,

RECEIVE FUNDS
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson reported that April
distribution of fl,ffJ3,'Jtfl.77 in local
government fund money to Ohio's 88
counties and 425 cities and villages
levying local income taxes. Meigs
Cowlty received $12,500.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Donald Buchanan,
Reedsville; Diana Pope, Mid·
dleport; Salem Yates, Racine .
Discharges-Howard Newland,
Jermie Williamson, Nettie Neece,
Emily LewiS, · Franklin Whaley,
Edith Reid, Lois Reltmlre, Harry
Smith, Pamela Pennington. L)'dla
Johnson, Ida $medley, Martha
Faso.

l!oool&lt;frmn M.u-o1UC&lt;OedlngGary WIIUama

who moves to Harden~ New Hope, Olyton NOrth
Dtalrtct.

G.Wpolta' Ouiat - To be suooUecl.
G.Wpolta' Gnee wociate.::. 'robe •uoollod.
l.cun Pariah: Betbanr, FeiJowshJp, 6tlerbeln

and Orevwe - To be a~pplltd : Andrew Strider

Llli'E!LIE!R THAN THIS
F'ARKIN&lt;5 LOTNO CARS HAVE LE!FT
HERE SINCE THE
PARTY SIARTEO.

G....-, C!JictMatl, ,.....,... Wendell G.
StuUer . wbo moves to wnu
5 t~'t Charge,

P'lcltaw•r Courtly.

one lener to each square, to form
tour ordinary words .

1

IBLAURTj
AFTER LANDIN6

AT THf ~EAREST
AIRPORT IIJ COL·

6VER HEAR. OF
A RANC.H CALLE:D
THE D·E!IAR.
~PREAD'

ORADO•• EASY
HEADS. FOR THE
MINE IN A RI!NTeP

UNDE'RSTAIJD
IT'S OW'-IED &amp;Y

SOMEO'-IE NAMED
CORY D!iAI-J,. WHAT
KI NDA PE!RSON
ltr OEAIH

Yeste rday' s

r 1 II II I I

Middleport, 0.

jump tO six clu bs was a rea-

EAST

., 4 3

and ventured six hearts.

his magnificent distribution
West passed , conventi onal-

+K Q965

ly, he thought, to show first·

+ AQ9 73 2

East, especiaily at rubber
bridge, should have taken out

... .

some insurance a nd bid seven

clubs which only goes down
one. However. out of piq ue, he
doubled, undoubted ly hopi ng
for an unusual (spade) lead.
West led a club which was
ruffed by declarer. At trick
two South led a trump which
West won. The contract could
still be beaten, but West
qui ck ly swit c hed to a
diamond. How could South

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer:West

BETTER

West

North

East

South

t+
Pass '
Pass

Obi

6+
Db\.

6'1'
Pass

Pass
Pass

FOR OUR

PURPOSES,
THEN!

Opening lea d:+ J

have a six-card spade St'it?

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

"'"u''D'-t: COUPON WORTH IS.OO
AUEYOOP

BEVERAGE SERVER WITH COVER
Our Reg . Discount Pr ic e . .... $22.99

Coupon Sa'Jings

MUST BE SOME
WAY T'GET AWAY FROM
'THIS PLACE!

THERE

5 00

Your Price {with coupon) $17.99

COME IN, MR. FLAKEMYER.!
I'M ELBERT WONMUG!

In tile pattern of your choice
COUPON GOOD THRU 4/ 19/ 80

Wildly distributional hands
frequently lead to eq ually
unusual auctions and results.
Today's hand does not come
from

certain who was bidding to
make his contrac t a nd who
wa s bidding as a sacrifice.

North 's light takeout double

FRYERS
Joel! We can't
let Melba
do

CARDINAL

'Th' man's
riqht,

Rufus!

this!

G~159
CASSEROLE W/COVER
WINNlE
HE.I3fl0l.6HT ME FlDWEIZS .. .We HAD
A MARVELOUS t:&gt;INNER ...AN D
TiiEN HE DI&lt;OPPED ME OFF1

' I.. .I. HAPPENED TO
BE: LOOKIN6 OUT

1./Kt=A HOT
POTA 'TO/

MY WINt?OW ... I.
SAW YOU AND YOUR

.,.L,,,.BLE COUPON · WORTH S4.QO ·

DINNER BELL
$18 99
4 00

In tile pattern of your choice

shown up with two hearts.

Consequ ently, declarer played
East for a spade void and
racked up his doubled slam .
(NEWSPAPER i::NTE RPHI SI:i: AS.."iN)

(For a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 ro: ' Win ar
Bridge,'' care of this newspa p er, P. 0. Box 489. Radio c,ty
Station. New York . N Y.
100 79.)

VALUABLE COUPON WORTH 15.00
TOWARD THE PURCHAIE Of

TlfiS WE£11'1

FUTUIEO ITEM

CASSEROLE WITH COVER
Our Reg . Discount Price :
Coupc...n Savings .

$23 99
5 00

Your Price {with coupon) $18.99

BARNEY

GLORY BE!! vou

In tile pattern of your choice
-coupon Good thru 4/ 19/ 80 '

SHOULD A·SEEN TH'
WHOPPER THAT BUSTED
UNK 5NUFFV'5 POLE,
AUNT LOWEEZY

BRAKE SERVICE

ACROSS
7 Right
1 Weill's "for the job
of Jenny"
8 Clarinetist's
5 - Boothe
purchase
9 AdditionLuce
10 Region ; essay ally
12 Insurgent
11 Dread
13 Theatrically It English river
amused
18 State: Fr.
Yesterday's Answer
15 Put aside
19 Average
16 Nigerian
20 Viva
26 Three
35 Tennille
city
matador!
times : Lat. 37 Of great
17 Saved
21 Resident
28 Vote
scope
the trudging
of : suffix 30 Catcher's
i18 Annadillo
19 Venom
22 Bargain
glove
39 Evening,
23 Perfectiy
event
32 Billiard
in Florence
27 Ritual site
24 Fragment
shot
40 Streetcar
za Vermont city 25 "Chances 33 Concerning
in London
29 Virginia's
"·
34 Karate
42 Skin
dance?
Mathis song
blow
problem
30 Importance
31 Actor
Jannings
33 Statute
36 Minimally
t1 Boffo act
43 Musical
sounds
f4 Papal
headdress
45 Think
t6 Stuff
DOWN
1 Be in motion
2 Eng. musician
3 Mob's artillery 1:7-t-~5Emulated
Johnny Ray
6 French
article

SMALLEST SCRATCH
OR COMPLETE PAINT JOB

ill"I"Str;, phts, t he lC&gt;ngth and formation of the words are all
hl!'!ts . Each d;~ y the code letters are different .

CRVPTOQUOTES
Stop By and Get Free Estimate

VE5, M/&gt;:AM , I

Ask tor BILLY WILLIAMSON

REALIZE THAT
l

SIMMONS OLDs-cADILLAC INC.
242

!
i
I

w. Main St.

•

Ph. 993·6614

Pomeroy, Ohio

I

0

•

.t

•

I GOT TI-lE LOWEST
SCORE IN THE CLA55

I 6LIES5 I CAME IN
LAST PLACE

DO I GET FIRST

QR

QWEPY

ROUND 17RAFT CHOICE?

DTZW

BRNDU

QYWO

QR

,BYTPY

Maverick

17 ;

5: 40- Lo ve ,

Am e rican Sty le 17.

FRIDAY,APRlllB, 1980
,
5:45- Farm Re port 13; 5: 5D--PTL ·
Club 13.
6:D0-700 Cl ub 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Hea llh Field 10; 6 10-World al
La rge 17 .
6·3D-- Kidsworld 10; News 17; 6:45A. M . Wea ther 33; Morn ing
Re por t 3; 6:5o--Good Morning.
Wes t Virg in ia 13; 6:55-News 13.
7· oo- Today

3, 15; Good Morning

America 6, 13; Friday Mor ning 8;

Batman 10; Three Stooges-Little
Rascals 17.

. •

3D--Fam ily Affair 10; 7:55-Chuck
While Reports 10.
8:0D--Capf. Kangaroo 8,10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:3D--Rom per Room 17; 9;0D--Bob
Braun 3; Big Valley 6; Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons 10; Phil
Donahue 13, 15; Family Affair 17.
9:3D--Bob Newhart 8; One Day AI .A
7

Time 10; Green Acres 17.

IO:DO-Card Sharks 3.15; Edge of
Nighf 6; Jeflersons 8; Joker's
Wild 10; Morning Magazine 13;
Mov ie " Three Men on a Horse"
17.
10 :30- Hollywood Square s 3, 15 ;

$20,000 Pyra mid 13; Whew.! 8,10;
Andy Grilfilh 6.
10:55--CBS News 8; House Call. 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,15; Pri ce is
Right 8.10; Elec. Co. 20.
11:30- Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 ;
Family Feud 6.13; Sesame St .
20,33 ; 11 :55-News 17 .
12 ·00- Newscenter

3;

News

6.8.10.13 ; Heallh Field 15; Love
A m e r i can Style 17.

12:30- Ryan ·s Hope .6, 13; Search for
Tom orrow 8,10; Password Plu s
15 ; Movie " The Birds &amp; the

2:25- News 17.
2:3D--Another World 3,15; 1 Love
Lucy 17.
3:00- Ge neral Hospital 6, 13;
Guiding Light 8, 10 ; Bana na
Splits 17; Ups1a irs, Dow nstair s

10.

3:3D- Fiintstones 17; Over E asy 33.
4 00 - M is ter Car t oon J ;. M erv
Gr iff in 6 : Pettico a t Junction ij ;

. Sesame Sf. 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13; Liffle
Ra scal s 15; Spectreman 17.
4 31)-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8, ·
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; J err y
13; Merv Griffin IS; Gilliga n's Is.

17 .

5:0()-(aro/ Burne1t 3,· Sanford &amp;

Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three So ns 17; M ister Roger s'

Neighborhood 20,33.
5:3D--Mash 3; News 6; Play lhe
Pe rcentages 8; E lec. Co. '20 :

Mash 10; Happy Days Aga in 13;
Doctor Who 33; I Dream of
Jeannie 17 .

6:00- News 3,8,10, 13, 15 ; ABC News
6; Ca rol Bu rnett 17 ; Zoom 20; 3.
1.1 Conlacf 33 .
6:30- NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS Ne ws 8,10: Carol Bur neff 6;
Bob Newhart 17; Vil la Alegre 20;
Wi ld Wild World of Ani ma ls 33.
7:DO-Cross -Wj fs 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Face Ihe Mus ic 6, 13 ; Mac.
Neii.Lehrer Report 33 ; New s 10;.
Love, American Style 15; San.
ford &amp; Son 17; Dick Cavett 20. ·
7 30-Price is Right 3; Sha Na Na 6;
Jol&lt;er ' s Wild 8;· Dick Caveff 33;
Fam ily Feud 10; Pop Goes Th e
Country 13,15; All in The Fam ily
17 ; MacNeil -lehrer Report 20.
8:DO-Friday Games 3,15; Thai 's
Incredible ! 6,13; Incredible Hul k
8.10 ; Washington Weel&lt; In
Preview 20,33; Movie "House on

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
AXVDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One lett er si mply stands for another. In this sam ple A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.

PAINT&amp;. BODY WORK

2:1D--News 13.
ID--Movie "Fort Ti" 17 ; 4: 4D--

2:DO-Doctors 3,15; One U'fe to L ive
6, 13 ; As Th e World Turns 8. 10 :

t Throb

BUFF &amp; WAX

a t Large 33.

Bees" 17 ; Elec. Co. 33 .
1·DO-Daysof0ur Lives3,15; All My
Children 6, 13 ; Young &amp; th e
Reslless 8,10.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

GASOIJNE ALLEY

UMIT 4 PLEASE·

DINNER BELL

South won the diamond,
drew another round of trump
and finessed West for both the
king and jack of spades .
Declarer thought East's vu l·
nerable leap to six clubs must
have been predicated on great
distribution. East had already

~

39!

Coupon Good thru
4/19/80

a com pu ter dealt-out

tournament dea l, but from a
rubber bridge game where the
players shuffl e their own
cards.
In the auction, nobody was

WHOLE

3:

round heart control.

+A

All~n

8; 1:'15--News 17.

sonable gamble .
South, of course. had no
desire to defend six cl ubs with

... .

6,13; 12 :0D-ABC Captioned New s 33; 12 :3D-Oave

was normaL He only had II
high-card points, but his dis·
tribution was idea l East' s

4· 17 ·80

'I'J I087 62

•• ALL THE

the M e rr ier " 17.

1.40- Movie " Drums of Tahiti " 17;

+J B7
+K J1086 5

HI, SENATOR STAN! MRS.
SCRUBBS FIXED UP A.
TRAY FOR YOU• I'LL
GET IT.' ... DID 5E~TOR
LMIFTY LIKE YOUR

" Foo l's

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

A

BEVERAGE SERVER W/COVER

M ovie

Parade " 10; Mo vi e " The More

BRIDGE

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN

MILK

Co l umbo 8;

l :OQ- Tomorrow 3; Baretta 6, 13;
New s 15 ; 1: 15- Mary Hartman

+KH

SUPER MARKElS

2%

Ca vett 20; Austin City Limits 33 .

11:30- Tonight3,1 5; ABC News 6,13;

11 :5o--Charl ie's Angels

••

WEST

Caraina\

~

IJ

What was the "out come." of the quarrel
a mong the ast ro nauts?- THE " UPSHOT"

'I'K Q95
• 10 4 3 2

'I'

Your Price (wilh coupon) $14.99

COOLING SYSTEM SERVICE

I Answer

NORTH
+A Q 10 B

BAHR CLOTHIERS

CHECK THESE BUYS

20.
11:00- Ne ws 3,6,8,10 ,13 .15; Di c k

(Answers tomorrow )

SEE THE FINE
SELECTION AT

•

San Francisco : Ji News 20.
17 ; Over Easy

10 : 30~ Ame r i cans

Jumbles DUCAT POISE ASSURE CHORU S

-AND MUCH MORE

Prices
Good
Thru Ajpril19

6, 13; Contender 8, 10: Oper a fro m

gested by the above cartoon

Prlnranswerhere : A

Cam e r a

Three 20; Sports : Close Up 33.
10:00- Rockford Files 3,15; 20·20

Now arrange the circled Jet1ers to

~IJ

CAR1

-SWIM SUITS

M··-·-

Previe w s 20,33.

9:30- A s sociates 6 , 13 ;

form the surprise answer. as sug·

+ 9 75432

Our Reg. Discount Price .
Coupon Sen1ings .

AUTO. TRANS. SERVICE

IROOVEDI

T'MATCH!

SOUTH

~

Barne y Miller 6,13; Hagen 10.
Ba ilie lor Afr ica 8; Sneak

RECOVERY.

•·

VAUGHAN'S

8, 10; Bi ll Moyers Journal 20;
Mov ie "S uppose T hey Gave a
War and Nobody Came?" 17;
PursJJit of Excellence 33.
8:3D- Be nson 6,13; Quincy 3,15;

IH 15 DOl!; CAN
MAKE A &lt;5-00D

THE KII-JD WITH

FLAMIN' R~D HAIIl,
.. AND A Tt:lt\Pt:R

-KNIT TOPS
-BLOUSES

TOWARD THE PURCHASE Of THIS WEEK'S FEATURED ITEM

LUBE, OIL CHANGE &amp; FILTER

THURSDAY , APRIL 17, 1980

I I [ IJ

DATE PUL UP...

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC INC.

\

Rogers 3,15; Mork &amp;
Mindy 6,13; Palmerslown U.S.A

-SHORTS

N. 2nd Ave.

again , Sport!

H : OO~ Buck

JANTZEN
SPORTSWEAR

A1bany Parish: Weaver Chapel - To be supplled; DarreU Clart moves to secularwork.
Coolvllle Parish' Coolville and Hocltinl&lt;oort - •

We'll soOn be hunting

I I I

WITH

reilmnenthome.

·Television
Viewing

byHenriAmoldar10BobLee

LERED

Tarlton · SOUth Perry - Emelt L. Tnlcy from
We.otem New Yorio Cool""'""", aue&lt;eedlnl
Rnmond Welch who-.._
Vinton County Mlnlstry ' ~•- To be
.mpplied; O.vid Tiller n!lums toaecullr wort.

AT

CLEAN UP -

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

SPRING COMFORT

wards 11'001 Ltnwortll United Me\hodlst Church,
succeedini Wesley Clarke who wu appointed
eaecuUve dln!clor of Wt!ley Glen, ~nc;., it56 N.
lfilh St., Colwnt:m, a United methodiat

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ .,

HOPE YOUR PARTY'S

- Stanley W. Mmilield from M.u-o ,..,.
c.edlnc Harvey Koch """ at Ansonia •
Jloubura, O..ytoo North Dlatrlct.
NelloovWe: Dennis T. Di~ (ram auoc181te,

GET REAbY FOR SUMMER

TUNE UP
MINOR FIRE DAMAGE
· The Racine Fire Department was
called Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. to SR
338 above the Racine Legion Hall.
where the wiring on a pickup truck
driven by Jack Cummins was on
fire. There was minor dainage. Ten
men and three trucks were at the ,
scene.

New Hooe: ~ Tp; be supplied ; John GIJck. ·~
pOOlted t.o \VuhiJtgt.on Ave., Columbus.
lllff: Fairytew,.lliff and Saltillo -Jlnuny M.

ft ~~~N} \&amp;)ft

·

SyroCUM, Albury, FCiftSI Run and !llnerwvllle

TOWARD THE PURCHASE Df THIS III££K'S ffATURED ITEM

Athens, and Richard of Reedsville;
22 grandchildren, 32 greatgrandchildren and two great-great.
grandchildren; a sister, Mary J .
Woods, ~ster, W. Va.; a brother,
William Chaney, Florida, and
several nieces and nephews.
Mrs. Smith was a member of the
Reedsville Church of Christ.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Friday at the Ewing FUJleral
Home with the Rev. Don Walker of·
ficiating. Burial will be in Rushville
Cemetery at Reedsville. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today .

Amanda Jane Smith

·

BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

tract of Sandra Jackson,
psychologist, because the board has
not been assured funds for ·a second
psychologist.
Bus driver certificates were
issued to Patricia Pape, Flossie Dill,
James Williams and Sarah Blake.
The next meeting was "!!I for Monday, Msy 12, at 7 p. m.
·
Attending were Superintendent
Robert Bowen and board members,
Harold Roush, Harold Lohse,
George Perry, Bob Burdette and
Oris Smith.

Area deaths. • •

ference.

returN \0 aeeullr w&lt;rt.

District Supenntenaenl - .l::lenJamln T. Ed-

representatives.
.
Two statistics shared were 64
of all high school students take some
type of vocational education and 15
of the vocational ·high school
graduates are going on for some
higher education.
" This means that the high school
student is beginning to realize the
basic worth of technic81 education
and, that high school gradUates are
noting a positive return on the investment of higher education," said
Brown.
Boder indicated that the present
economy will probably increase the
percentage of students going on to
higher education. She said that
placement calls for her students are
significanUy down from last year.

Meigs County's Board of
Education Tuesday night renewed
the contracts of Sandy Sayre, speech
therapist for· two years; Mary
Bacon, work study coordinator, one
year; James Rogers, psychologist;
three years and Shelia Crouch, of·
fice secretary, one year.
The board accepted the
resignation rl Carol Spangler,
speech therapist, who has secured
employment closer to her home
area.
The
board
did
.
·- not renew the. con- ·

Gary E. Peck, from le&lt;tllar wort, ~
Timothy Snyder wiH&gt; tranalm1 to Eut Ohio Con-

VTPY

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OWEK

FTSW

T C

OWK

WKHRI

QR

0 R K WI

UTZZtPNDQ,

ECX
E BE I,
QR

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DWECQ . - DT
DTB'WKF
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE ONE THING MORE DlF·
FICULT THAN FOLLOWING A RF:GIMEN IS KEEPING
FROM IMPOSING IT ON OtHERS.- MARCEL PROUST
ft'l lfiO ICing FNturu iyrwnc.... Inc .

'

Gree n Apple Road " 17.
8:30-Wall Street Week 20,33; 9 :00Movie "The Ivory Ape" 6, 13;
Dukes of _Ha zzard 8,10; Non
Fiction Television 20; Movie
"Breaking the Sound Barrier"
33.
10 :00- Misadvenfures of Sherlft
Lobo 3,15; Dallas 8,1 0; News 20. ·
10 :3D-- Perspecfive on Greatness 17;
Over Easy 20.

11 :00- News 3,6,8,10, 13, 15 ; Dick
Cavett 20; Dave Allen at Large
33 .
11 :3D--Tonighf 3,1 5; Fridays 6.13;
NBA Playoff 8; ABC Captioned
~ews 33; Movie

11

Berserkl " 10;

Movie " The ARe" 17:
12:DO-Davld Susskind 33; 12 :40-Emergency One 6; Six Mill ion
Dollar Man 13. .
1:00-Midnlghf SReclal 3, 15; Movie
. " Nol of This Earth" 10; 1:40-N·ews 13; 1:45--News 17.
. '
2:05--Movle " The Beast wlfh Five
· Fingers" 17 ; 2:31&gt;-'-News 3.
' '00-·Movle "Sherlock Holmes &amp;
Ihe Voice of Terror" 17; 5:25-- ·
Love , Ame rica·n Style 17.

,.

�10-lbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy' 0 ., Thursday rApril17 I 1980

Five Methodist appointments ·set

EASTERN CAST - These Eastern High School
students are in the roles of a comedy, " See How They
Run", to be presented Friday and Saturday nights in
the hi!Ut school auditorium. They are, front, l to r,

. COLUMBUS (Special) - United
Methodist Bishop Dwight E. Loder
announced today his intenUon to
make five changes in mlnlstertaJ appointments in the Athens District
They are among 113 anticipated
changes for the 19fl0.31 conference
year across the West Ohio Conference.
Athens will begin the new conference year June 15 with a new
district superintendent, the Rev.
Benjamin Edwards, whose appointment was announced by Bishop
Loder earlier. The Rev. Mr. Edwards succeeds the Rev. Wesley
Clarke who was appointed executive
director of Wesley Glen, the United
Methodist ReUrement Center at 5155
N.lnghSt., Columbus.
Appointments are " fixed" of·
ficially at the annll8l conference
which this year is June H2 at
Lakeside. They becom:e effective
June 15. Appointments made in the
interim will be announced by Bishop
Loder at the conference.
Ministers not involved in changes
will return to their present appointments for the coming year,
Bishop Loder said. The district includes 182 local churches in Athens,
Washington, Gallia, Hocking,
Morgan, Perry, Vinton, Meigs and
Fairfield Counties.
The intended chilnges are:

Rog.ie Gaul, Traci Sayre, Mike Hauber; back, l to r,
Allison Cauthorn, Kevin Brooks, Jim OSborne and Tina
Beaver. Curtain time is 7:30p.m. both nights. See Page
6 for details and another picture.

Rio hosts recent workshop.
RIO GRANDE- Representatives
of Rio Grande College and Com·
munity College and ,administrators
of a number of vocational schools
participated in a workshop here
recently.
Dean Brown, director of ad·
missions and records, said purpose
of the meeting was "To discuss the
relationship between college level
technical education ant the
educational goals of vocational high
schools."
" We feel," Brown added, "that
:this kind of articulation better
acquaints our technical faculty with
the goals and philosophy of
vocational education."
Representing hi gh school
vocational programs were John

Longley, director of guidance,
Buckeye Hills Vocational Center;
Charles Beard, director of student
se rvic es, Lawrence County
Vocational School; Claretta Boder,
Eastland Joint
co unse lor,
Vocational School, Columbus.
Other college representatives included Ron Easley, associate dean
of technical . education; Randy
Nicewonder, assistsnt director of
admissions; Paul Shoemaker, coor·
dlnator of business education; Anita
Sigmond, coordinator of food service
management; Ralph Rogers, coor·
dlnator of electronics; Tapin Bakst,
coordinatorofminetechnology; Ron
Cornelius, coordinator of industrial
technology, and Diana Carsey and
Jenny Weaver, admissions

Soisson
promoted

County personnel get new contracts

Lawrence S. "Bud" Soisson has
been promoted to maintenance
superintendent at Ohio Valley Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek
Station, effective May 1. This was
announced today by L. R. Ford, Jr.,
plant manager.
Soisson began his career in the
electric utility field in 1945 with the
Ohio Edison Company at Akron. In
19M he joined OVEC as a maintenance supervisor. In 1975, he was
promoted to plant engineer • maintenance. ,
Soisson served three years in the
U. S. Navy during World War II. He
and his wife, Leona, reside on
Bulaville Rd., Gallipolis, and are the
parents of two daughters, Brenda
and Bonita.

Mayor's court
Eight defendants forfeited bonds
and three others were fined in the
court of Middleport Msyor Fred Hof·
!man Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Roy Estep,
Mason, $25, posted on an illegal
exhaust charge; James B. Pettit,
Middleport, $33, speeding; Dennis
D. Coldiron, Preston, Ky., $25, improper starting and backing;
Clarence Molden, Pomeroy, $25,
speeding; William A. Readdick,
Gallipolis, $27, speeding; Anna L.
Frank, Racine, $27, speeding;
James E. Ferrell, Gallipolis, $27,
speeding, and Jeffrey A. McKinney,
Pomeroy, $27, speeding.
Fined were Charles Tyree III,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, wrong way
on a one way street; Diana L. Pope,
Middleport, $50 and costs, 110 .
operator's lieense, and George McDaniel, Middleport, $50 and costs,
disorderly manner.

~

Mrs. Amanda Jane Smith, 85,
Route.l, Racine, died Wednesday at
St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg,
W. Va.
Mrs. Smith was a daughter of the
late William and Ocella OSborne
Chaney. She was also preceded in
death by her husband, Clyde A.
Smith, five children, three brothers
and three sisters.
Surviving are three daughters,
Linnie Taylor, Racine ; Geraldine
Hart, Parkersburg, and Mabel Jef·
fers, Shade; two sons, Horace E.,

RECEIVE FUNDS
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson reported that April
distribution of fl,ffJ3,'Jtfl.77 in local
government fund money to Ohio's 88
counties and 425 cities and villages
levying local income taxes. Meigs
Cowlty received $12,500.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Donald Buchanan,
Reedsville; Diana Pope, Mid·
dleport; Salem Yates, Racine .
Discharges-Howard Newland,
Jermie Williamson, Nettie Neece,
Emily LewiS, · Franklin Whaley,
Edith Reid, Lois Reltmlre, Harry
Smith, Pamela Pennington. L)'dla
Johnson, Ida $medley, Martha
Faso.

l!oool&lt;frmn M.u-o1UC&lt;OedlngGary WIIUama

who moves to Harden~ New Hope, Olyton NOrth
Dtalrtct.

G.Wpolta' Ouiat - To be suooUecl.
G.Wpolta' Gnee wociate.::. 'robe •uoollod.
l.cun Pariah: Betbanr, FeiJowshJp, 6tlerbeln

and Orevwe - To be a~pplltd : Andrew Strider

Llli'E!LIE!R THAN THIS
F'ARKIN&lt;5 LOTNO CARS HAVE LE!FT
HERE SINCE THE
PARTY SIARTEO.

G....-, C!JictMatl, ,.....,... Wendell G.
StuUer . wbo moves to wnu
5 t~'t Charge,

P'lcltaw•r Courtly.

one lener to each square, to form
tour ordinary words .

1

IBLAURTj
AFTER LANDIN6

AT THf ~EAREST
AIRPORT IIJ COL·

6VER HEAR. OF
A RANC.H CALLE:D
THE D·E!IAR.
~PREAD'

ORADO•• EASY
HEADS. FOR THE
MINE IN A RI!NTeP

UNDE'RSTAIJD
IT'S OW'-IED &amp;Y

SOMEO'-IE NAMED
CORY D!iAI-J,. WHAT
KI NDA PE!RSON
ltr OEAIH

Yeste rday' s

r 1 II II I I

Middleport, 0.

jump tO six clu bs was a rea-

EAST

., 4 3

and ventured six hearts.

his magnificent distribution
West passed , conventi onal-

+K Q965

ly, he thought, to show first·

+ AQ9 73 2

East, especiaily at rubber
bridge, should have taken out

... .

some insurance a nd bid seven

clubs which only goes down
one. However. out of piq ue, he
doubled, undoubted ly hopi ng
for an unusual (spade) lead.
West led a club which was
ruffed by declarer. At trick
two South led a trump which
West won. The contract could
still be beaten, but West
qui ck ly swit c hed to a
diamond. How could South

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer:West

BETTER

West

North

East

South

t+
Pass '
Pass

Obi

6+
Db\.

6'1'
Pass

Pass
Pass

FOR OUR

PURPOSES,
THEN!

Opening lea d:+ J

have a six-card spade St'it?

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

"'"u''D'-t: COUPON WORTH IS.OO
AUEYOOP

BEVERAGE SERVER WITH COVER
Our Reg . Discount Pr ic e . .... $22.99

Coupon Sa'Jings

MUST BE SOME
WAY T'GET AWAY FROM
'THIS PLACE!

THERE

5 00

Your Price {with coupon) $17.99

COME IN, MR. FLAKEMYER.!
I'M ELBERT WONMUG!

In tile pattern of your choice
COUPON GOOD THRU 4/ 19/ 80

Wildly distributional hands
frequently lead to eq ually
unusual auctions and results.
Today's hand does not come
from

certain who was bidding to
make his contrac t a nd who
wa s bidding as a sacrifice.

North 's light takeout double

FRYERS
Joel! We can't
let Melba
do

CARDINAL

'Th' man's
riqht,

Rufus!

this!

G~159
CASSEROLE W/COVER
WINNlE
HE.I3fl0l.6HT ME FlDWEIZS .. .We HAD
A MARVELOUS t:&gt;INNER ...AN D
TiiEN HE DI&lt;OPPED ME OFF1

' I.. .I. HAPPENED TO
BE: LOOKIN6 OUT

1./Kt=A HOT
POTA 'TO/

MY WINt?OW ... I.
SAW YOU AND YOUR

.,.L,,,.BLE COUPON · WORTH S4.QO ·

DINNER BELL
$18 99
4 00

In tile pattern of your choice

shown up with two hearts.

Consequ ently, declarer played
East for a spade void and
racked up his doubled slam .
(NEWSPAPER i::NTE RPHI SI:i: AS.."iN)

(For a copy ol JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 ro: ' Win ar
Bridge,'' care of this newspa p er, P. 0. Box 489. Radio c,ty
Station. New York . N Y.
100 79.)

VALUABLE COUPON WORTH 15.00
TOWARD THE PURCHAIE Of

TlfiS WE£11'1

FUTUIEO ITEM

CASSEROLE WITH COVER
Our Reg . Discount Price :
Coupc...n Savings .

$23 99
5 00

Your Price {with coupon) $18.99

BARNEY

GLORY BE!! vou

In tile pattern of your choice
-coupon Good thru 4/ 19/ 80 '

SHOULD A·SEEN TH'
WHOPPER THAT BUSTED
UNK 5NUFFV'5 POLE,
AUNT LOWEEZY

BRAKE SERVICE

ACROSS
7 Right
1 Weill's "for the job
of Jenny"
8 Clarinetist's
5 - Boothe
purchase
9 AdditionLuce
10 Region ; essay ally
12 Insurgent
11 Dread
13 Theatrically It English river
amused
18 State: Fr.
Yesterday's Answer
15 Put aside
19 Average
16 Nigerian
20 Viva
26 Three
35 Tennille
city
matador!
times : Lat. 37 Of great
17 Saved
21 Resident
28 Vote
scope
the trudging
of : suffix 30 Catcher's
i18 Annadillo
19 Venom
22 Bargain
glove
39 Evening,
23 Perfectiy
event
32 Billiard
in Florence
27 Ritual site
24 Fragment
shot
40 Streetcar
za Vermont city 25 "Chances 33 Concerning
in London
29 Virginia's
"·
34 Karate
42 Skin
dance?
Mathis song
blow
problem
30 Importance
31 Actor
Jannings
33 Statute
36 Minimally
t1 Boffo act
43 Musical
sounds
f4 Papal
headdress
45 Think
t6 Stuff
DOWN
1 Be in motion
2 Eng. musician
3 Mob's artillery 1:7-t-~5Emulated
Johnny Ray
6 French
article

SMALLEST SCRATCH
OR COMPLETE PAINT JOB

ill"I"Str;, phts, t he lC&gt;ngth and formation of the words are all
hl!'!ts . Each d;~ y the code letters are different .

CRVPTOQUOTES
Stop By and Get Free Estimate

VE5, M/&gt;:AM , I

Ask tor BILLY WILLIAMSON

REALIZE THAT
l

SIMMONS OLDs-cADILLAC INC.
242

!
i
I

w. Main St.

•

Ph. 993·6614

Pomeroy, Ohio

I

0

•

.t

•

I GOT TI-lE LOWEST
SCORE IN THE CLA55

I 6LIES5 I CAME IN
LAST PLACE

DO I GET FIRST

QR

QWEPY

ROUND 17RAFT CHOICE?

DTZW

BRNDU

QYWO

QR

,BYTPY

Maverick

17 ;

5: 40- Lo ve ,

Am e rican Sty le 17.

FRIDAY,APRlllB, 1980
,
5:45- Farm Re port 13; 5: 5D--PTL ·
Club 13.
6:D0-700 Cl ub 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Hea llh Field 10; 6 10-World al
La rge 17 .
6·3D-- Kidsworld 10; News 17; 6:45A. M . Wea ther 33; Morn ing
Re por t 3; 6:5o--Good Morning.
Wes t Virg in ia 13; 6:55-News 13.
7· oo- Today

3, 15; Good Morning

America 6, 13; Friday Mor ning 8;

Batman 10; Three Stooges-Little
Rascals 17.

. •

3D--Fam ily Affair 10; 7:55-Chuck
While Reports 10.
8:0D--Capf. Kangaroo 8,10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:3D--Rom per Room 17; 9;0D--Bob
Braun 3; Big Valley 6; Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons 10; Phil
Donahue 13, 15; Family Affair 17.
9:3D--Bob Newhart 8; One Day AI .A
7

Time 10; Green Acres 17.

IO:DO-Card Sharks 3.15; Edge of
Nighf 6; Jeflersons 8; Joker's
Wild 10; Morning Magazine 13;
Mov ie " Three Men on a Horse"
17.
10 :30- Hollywood Square s 3, 15 ;

$20,000 Pyra mid 13; Whew.! 8,10;
Andy Grilfilh 6.
10:55--CBS News 8; House Call. 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,15; Pri ce is
Right 8.10; Elec. Co. 20.
11:30- Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 ;
Family Feud 6.13; Sesame St .
20,33 ; 11 :55-News 17 .
12 ·00- Newscenter

3;

News

6.8.10.13 ; Heallh Field 15; Love
A m e r i can Style 17.

12:30- Ryan ·s Hope .6, 13; Search for
Tom orrow 8,10; Password Plu s
15 ; Movie " The Birds &amp; the

2:25- News 17.
2:3D--Another World 3,15; 1 Love
Lucy 17.
3:00- Ge neral Hospital 6, 13;
Guiding Light 8, 10 ; Bana na
Splits 17; Ups1a irs, Dow nstair s

10.

3:3D- Fiintstones 17; Over E asy 33.
4 00 - M is ter Car t oon J ;. M erv
Gr iff in 6 : Pettico a t Junction ij ;

. Sesame Sf. 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13; Liffle
Ra scal s 15; Spectreman 17.
4 31)-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8, ·
Brady Bunch 10; Tom &amp; J err y
13; Merv Griffin IS; Gilliga n's Is.

17 .

5:0()-(aro/ Burne1t 3,· Sanford &amp;

Son 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; My
Three So ns 17; M ister Roger s'

Neighborhood 20,33.
5:3D--Mash 3; News 6; Play lhe
Pe rcentages 8; E lec. Co. '20 :

Mash 10; Happy Days Aga in 13;
Doctor Who 33; I Dream of
Jeannie 17 .

6:00- News 3,8,10, 13, 15 ; ABC News
6; Ca rol Bu rnett 17 ; Zoom 20; 3.
1.1 Conlacf 33 .
6:30- NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS Ne ws 8,10: Carol Bur neff 6;
Bob Newhart 17; Vil la Alegre 20;
Wi ld Wild World of Ani ma ls 33.
7:DO-Cross -Wj fs 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Face Ihe Mus ic 6, 13 ; Mac.
Neii.Lehrer Report 33 ; New s 10;.
Love, American Style 15; San.
ford &amp; Son 17; Dick Cavett 20. ·
7 30-Price is Right 3; Sha Na Na 6;
Jol&lt;er ' s Wild 8;· Dick Caveff 33;
Fam ily Feud 10; Pop Goes Th e
Country 13,15; All in The Fam ily
17 ; MacNeil -lehrer Report 20.
8:DO-Friday Games 3,15; Thai 's
Incredible ! 6,13; Incredible Hul k
8.10 ; Washington Weel&lt; In
Preview 20,33; Movie "House on

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
AXVDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One lett er si mply stands for another. In this sam ple A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.

PAINT&amp;. BODY WORK

2:1D--News 13.
ID--Movie "Fort Ti" 17 ; 4: 4D--

2:DO-Doctors 3,15; One U'fe to L ive
6, 13 ; As Th e World Turns 8. 10 :

t Throb

BUFF &amp; WAX

a t Large 33.

Bees" 17 ; Elec. Co. 33 .
1·DO-Daysof0ur Lives3,15; All My
Children 6, 13 ; Young &amp; th e
Reslless 8,10.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

GASOIJNE ALLEY

UMIT 4 PLEASE·

DINNER BELL

South won the diamond,
drew another round of trump
and finessed West for both the
king and jack of spades .
Declarer thought East's vu l·
nerable leap to six clubs must
have been predicated on great
distribution. East had already

~

39!

Coupon Good thru
4/19/80

a com pu ter dealt-out

tournament dea l, but from a
rubber bridge game where the
players shuffl e their own
cards.
In the auction, nobody was

WHOLE

3:

round heart control.

+A

All~n

8; 1:'15--News 17.

sonable gamble .
South, of course. had no
desire to defend six cl ubs with

... .

6,13; 12 :0D-ABC Captioned New s 33; 12 :3D-Oave

was normaL He only had II
high-card points, but his dis·
tribution was idea l East' s

4· 17 ·80

'I'J I087 62

•• ALL THE

the M e rr ier " 17.

1.40- Movie " Drums of Tahiti " 17;

+J B7
+K J1086 5

HI, SENATOR STAN! MRS.
SCRUBBS FIXED UP A.
TRAY FOR YOU• I'LL
GET IT.' ... DID 5E~TOR
LMIFTY LIKE YOUR

" Foo l's

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

A

BEVERAGE SERVER W/COVER

M ovie

Parade " 10; Mo vi e " The More

BRIDGE

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN

MILK

Co l umbo 8;

l :OQ- Tomorrow 3; Baretta 6, 13;
New s 15 ; 1: 15- Mary Hartman

+KH

SUPER MARKElS

2%

Ca vett 20; Austin City Limits 33 .

11:30- Tonight3,1 5; ABC News 6,13;

11 :5o--Charl ie's Angels

••

WEST

Caraina\

~

IJ

What was the "out come." of the quarrel
a mong the ast ro nauts?- THE " UPSHOT"

'I'K Q95
• 10 4 3 2

'I'

Your Price (wilh coupon) $14.99

COOLING SYSTEM SERVICE

I Answer

NORTH
+A Q 10 B

BAHR CLOTHIERS

CHECK THESE BUYS

20.
11:00- Ne ws 3,6,8,10 ,13 .15; Di c k

(Answers tomorrow )

SEE THE FINE
SELECTION AT

•

San Francisco : Ji News 20.
17 ; Over Easy

10 : 30~ Ame r i cans

Jumbles DUCAT POISE ASSURE CHORU S

-AND MUCH MORE

Prices
Good
Thru Ajpril19

6, 13; Contender 8, 10: Oper a fro m

gested by the above cartoon

Prlnranswerhere : A

Cam e r a

Three 20; Sports : Close Up 33.
10:00- Rockford Files 3,15; 20·20

Now arrange the circled Jet1ers to

~IJ

CAR1

-SWIM SUITS

M··-·-

Previe w s 20,33.

9:30- A s sociates 6 , 13 ;

form the surprise answer. as sug·

+ 9 75432

Our Reg. Discount Price .
Coupon Sen1ings .

AUTO. TRANS. SERVICE

IROOVEDI

T'MATCH!

SOUTH

~

Barne y Miller 6,13; Hagen 10.
Ba ilie lor Afr ica 8; Sneak

RECOVERY.

•·

VAUGHAN'S

8, 10; Bi ll Moyers Journal 20;
Mov ie "S uppose T hey Gave a
War and Nobody Came?" 17;
PursJJit of Excellence 33.
8:3D- Be nson 6,13; Quincy 3,15;

IH 15 DOl!; CAN
MAKE A &lt;5-00D

THE KII-JD WITH

FLAMIN' R~D HAIIl,
.. AND A Tt:lt\Pt:R

-KNIT TOPS
-BLOUSES

TOWARD THE PURCHASE Of THIS WEEK'S FEATURED ITEM

LUBE, OIL CHANGE &amp; FILTER

THURSDAY , APRIL 17, 1980

I I [ IJ

DATE PUL UP...

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC INC.

\

Rogers 3,15; Mork &amp;
Mindy 6,13; Palmerslown U.S.A

-SHORTS

N. 2nd Ave.

again , Sport!

H : OO~ Buck

JANTZEN
SPORTSWEAR

A1bany Parish: Weaver Chapel - To be supplled; DarreU Clart moves to secularwork.
Coolvllle Parish' Coolville and Hocltinl&lt;oort - •

We'll soOn be hunting

I I I

WITH

reilmnenthome.

·Television
Viewing

byHenriAmoldar10BobLee

LERED

Tarlton · SOUth Perry - Emelt L. Tnlcy from
We.otem New Yorio Cool""'""", aue&lt;eedlnl
Rnmond Welch who-.._
Vinton County Mlnlstry ' ~•- To be
.mpplied; O.vid Tiller n!lums toaecullr wort.

AT

CLEAN UP -

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

SPRING COMFORT

wards 11'001 Ltnwortll United Me\hodlst Church,
succeedini Wesley Clarke who wu appointed
eaecuUve dln!clor of Wt!ley Glen, ~nc;., it56 N.
lfilh St., Colwnt:m, a United methodiat

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ .,

HOPE YOUR PARTY'S

- Stanley W. Mmilield from M.u-o ,..,.
c.edlnc Harvey Koch """ at Ansonia •
Jloubura, O..ytoo North Dlatrlct.
NelloovWe: Dennis T. Di~ (ram auoc181te,

GET REAbY FOR SUMMER

TUNE UP
MINOR FIRE DAMAGE
· The Racine Fire Department was
called Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. to SR
338 above the Racine Legion Hall.
where the wiring on a pickup truck
driven by Jack Cummins was on
fire. There was minor dainage. Ten
men and three trucks were at the ,
scene.

New Hooe: ~ Tp; be supplied ; John GIJck. ·~
pOOlted t.o \VuhiJtgt.on Ave., Columbus.
lllff: Fairytew,.lliff and Saltillo -Jlnuny M.

ft ~~~N} \&amp;)ft

·

SyroCUM, Albury, FCiftSI Run and !llnerwvllle

TOWARD THE PURCHASE Df THIS III££K'S ffATURED ITEM

Athens, and Richard of Reedsville;
22 grandchildren, 32 greatgrandchildren and two great-great.
grandchildren; a sister, Mary J .
Woods, ~ster, W. Va.; a brother,
William Chaney, Florida, and
several nieces and nephews.
Mrs. Smith was a member of the
Reedsville Church of Christ.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Friday at the Ewing FUJleral
Home with the Rev. Don Walker of·
ficiating. Burial will be in Rushville
Cemetery at Reedsville. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today .

Amanda Jane Smith

·

BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

tract of Sandra Jackson,
psychologist, because the board has
not been assured funds for ·a second
psychologist.
Bus driver certificates were
issued to Patricia Pape, Flossie Dill,
James Williams and Sarah Blake.
The next meeting was "!!I for Monday, Msy 12, at 7 p. m.
·
Attending were Superintendent
Robert Bowen and board members,
Harold Roush, Harold Lohse,
George Perry, Bob Burdette and
Oris Smith.

Area deaths. • •

ference.

returN \0 aeeullr w&lt;rt.

District Supenntenaenl - .l::lenJamln T. Ed-

representatives.
.
Two statistics shared were 64
of all high school students take some
type of vocational education and 15
of the vocational ·high school
graduates are going on for some
higher education.
" This means that the high school
student is beginning to realize the
basic worth of technic81 education
and, that high school gradUates are
noting a positive return on the investment of higher education," said
Brown.
Boder indicated that the present
economy will probably increase the
percentage of students going on to
higher education. She said that
placement calls for her students are
significanUy down from last year.

Meigs County's Board of
Education Tuesday night renewed
the contracts of Sandy Sayre, speech
therapist for· two years; Mary
Bacon, work study coordinator, one
year; James Rogers, psychologist;
three years and Shelia Crouch, of·
fice secretary, one year.
The board accepted the
resignation rl Carol Spangler,
speech therapist, who has secured
employment closer to her home
area.
The
board
did
.
·- not renew the. con- ·

Gary E. Peck, from le&lt;tllar wort, ~
Timothy Snyder wiH&gt; tranalm1 to Eut Ohio Con-

VTPY

QR

OWEK

FTSW

T C

OWK

WKHRI

QR

0 R K WI

UTZZtPNDQ,

ECX
E BE I,
QR

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DWECQ . - DT
DTB'WKF
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE ONE THING MORE DlF·
FICULT THAN FOLLOWING A RF:GIMEN IS KEEPING
FROM IMPOSING IT ON OtHERS.- MARCEL PROUST
ft'l lfiO ICing FNturu iyrwnc.... Inc .

'

Gree n Apple Road " 17.
8:30-Wall Street Week 20,33; 9 :00Movie "The Ivory Ape" 6, 13;
Dukes of _Ha zzard 8,10; Non
Fiction Television 20; Movie
"Breaking the Sound Barrier"
33.
10 :00- Misadvenfures of Sherlft
Lobo 3,15; Dallas 8,1 0; News 20. ·
10 :3D-- Perspecfive on Greatness 17;
Over Easy 20.

11 :00- News 3,6,8,10, 13, 15 ; Dick
Cavett 20; Dave Allen at Large
33 .
11 :3D--Tonighf 3,1 5; Fridays 6.13;
NBA Playoff 8; ABC Captioned
~ews 33; Movie

11

Berserkl " 10;

Movie " The ARe" 17:
12:DO-Davld Susskind 33; 12 :40-Emergency One 6; Six Mill ion
Dollar Man 13. .
1:00-Midnlghf SReclal 3, 15; Movie
. " Nol of This Earth" 10; 1:40-N·ews 13; 1:45--News 17.
. '
2:05--Movle " The Beast wlfh Five
· Fingers" 17 ; 2:31&gt;-'-News 3.
' '00-·Movle "Sherlock Holmes &amp;
Ihe Voice of Terror" 17; 5:25-- ·
Love , Ame rica·n Style 17.

,.

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aprill7, 1980

Japan's rice big threat to U. S producers

*

13-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April17, 1

.

'

"Classified Ads Do More Things For More People Than Any Other
Form Of Advertising."
Join Us In Celebration 0/ International Classified

'·

)

WASIDNGTON (AP) - It would
be better for all concerned if Japan
would donate its surplus rice to
needy countries rather than pursuing a policy of dumping it on tbe
world market, says Agriculture
Secretary Bob Bergland.
Bergland said Japan's surplus
rice stockpile of about 6 million
metnc tons poses a threat to U.S.
producers who depend greatly on
sales overseas.
" It would be "awful for everybody,
mcluding the Japanese, if they
would just simply dump that 6
million tons on the market and break
everything down," he said Wed·
nesday.
The world rice market can affect
more than just that crop. For example, wheat is a food grain that com·
petes with rice In many markets,
meaning U.S. wheat producers also
can suffer when the rice supply and
prices are out of line.
Bergland's remarks came in a
telephone interview with a group of
farm broadcasters. He was asked
about the concerns of Arkansas rice
growers, some of whom believe
Jap~n . may
b'\ VIolating
multmational trade rules against
dumping.
Arkansas is the leading U.S. rice
producer, but the crop also is un·

porlant m California, Louisiana,
~arm
Mississippi, Missouri and Texas.
" We agree with their general
JC
assertion that Japan rrught be In
Jl&lt;l'\ition where this thing can't conviolation .of tlnr. .. rules, ·and so we
have a delegation in Japan this week .._ tlml~
discussing the entire matter with
Bergland said he could not
them, " Bergland said.
speculate what might happen.
" The fact is, the Japanese rice
"But I do know that we are recomprice support policies are,. i_n our
merrding, strongly urging _ inOlet.._
VJew, f~~ them an unrrutigated
some might say, insisting+ that the Japanese direct that rice only mto a
disaster, he sa1d.
"They have a $1,100 a ton farm·
Food-for-Peace kind of effort
donatmg rice to persons wbo cannot
gate price support for rice, and by
the time it's ,finished and ready for
buy.
the market 1t s $1,300 or $1,400 a ton.
"And there are millions of people
That's about $1,000 more than •ts
in this world who can't buy rice from
worlh · "
.
.
.
Arkansas or any other place because
Comparatively, the U.S. ncepnce
theydon'tbavemoney,"hesaid
support for the 1979 crop was $6.79
per 100 pounds or hundredweight,
WASHINGTON (AP) The
theunitusedforricedomestically.A
metric ton is about 2,205 pounds.
government's price support rate and
Thus, the U.S. price support was
purchase price for J!JI!(krop honey
about $151l a ton last year.
will be an average 51l.3 cents a
" They've got rice coming out of
pound, up6.4centsfromlastyear.
their ears," Bergland said. "None of
Agnculture Department officials
1t will sell at those levels. They've
said Wednesday that the increase
-~ot to change their riCe policy, and
was required under a formula that
they know it and we know it, and I
provides honey supports to be hiked
guess the world knows it.
to be in line with production ex"But the rice producers (in
penses.
Japan) won't let go, and they've got
political clout, and they're just
WASHINGTON
( AP)
holding that government in a
Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland

On the

SCene

$1.39 million trial continuing
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - A former
Ford Motor Co. employee was to
take the stand today m a $1 .39
million lawsUit similar to the Ford
Pinto trial in Indiana earlier this
year.
The farruly of Walter Meier, killed
in a fiery rear-end collision m a Ford
Maverick in 1974, is suing two at·
tomeys for negligence in connection
With the accident.
The family's attorney, Peter Bar·
bara of Detroit, said even though
Ford is not listed as a defendant, the
company's " reckless indifference"
also would be an issue m the case.
Barbara said Meier was killed
when the Maverick he was dnving
was struck from behind. The auto
burst into flames after Meier stopped it on a city street.
Meier's widow, Evelyn,· is sulng
lawyers Frank Cubbon Jr. and
David Goldberg, who used to practice for the law firm of Cubbon and
Goldberg. They now practice law
separately.
The swt charges that the two men
failed to process a lawsuit against

Ford and the driver of the colliding
car within the time period allowed
by state law. Barbara said VISiting
Judge Richard McQuade Jr. ruled
Wednesday that there was negligence in not filing a lawsuit within the
specified time.
Barbara saul the next issue in the
case is "establiShing causation and
damages. We also have to establish
punitive damages agamst Ford."
Barbara expects to spend two
days questioning former Ford
automotive designer Robert Pautsch. Pautsch worked for Ford bel·
ween 1960 and 1971, Barbara said.
Barbara also plans to introduce
Ford documents and crash test film
to establish that it was decided to put
the Maverick gas tank below the
tnmk of the car, even though testing
bad shown the auto would be less
prone to fuel leakages in rear-end
collisions 1f the tank were placed
over the rear axle, he said. The
change would have cost Ford about
$9.85 per vehicle, he added.
Attorney Jamile Jamra, representing Cubbon and Goldberg, said the
case will involve exactly what the

estate lost by the negligence of the
attorneys. Jamra said the Cubbon
and Goldberg firm first became in·
volved with the Meier claim in September 1976.
The family originally bad retained
another attorney, John Celusta, to
bnng actions against Ford and the
driver of the other car. But five days
before the case was scheduled for
trial, Celusta enlisted the services of
the Cubbon and Goldberg firm.
The law finn was granted a continuance, but Judge Robert Franklin
refused in November 1976 to grant
another delay. As a result, the finn
withdrew the smt with th·e intention
of refiling it, Jamra said.
When the suit was being prepared
for refiling on Nov. 29, 1976, it was
discovered that the two-year statute
of limitations bad expired, Jamra
said. Regardless, the suit was
reflled m I'm and dismissed.
Earlier this year, Ford Motor Co.
was acquitted of criminal charges in
Indiana in the deaths of three teenagers who died when tlieir Pinto was
struck from behind and burst mto
flames.

says com farmers "really have a
powerful tool" to use lor boosting
grain pni:es.
·
Bergland referred to an expanded
grain reserve program authorized
by Congress- and being put into ef·
feet this week - that enables far·
mers wbo did not participate in the
1979 feedgrain set-aside program to
store com in the reserve.
In that way, com will be removed
from the market and result in higher
prices, he said.
Bergland was asked Wednesday in

a telephone interview with a group
of farm broadcasters about the ex·
panded reserve program and its ef·
feels.
uTime will tell," he said. " The
growers really have a powerful tool
in their hands and have the opportunity now to substantially increase the pnce of com. Whether
they'll use it ... I guess we won't
know for a couple or three weeks."
But he added that if fanners add
200 miUion to 300 mili1on bushels of
com to the reserve - about 800

million is already stored - thai
should be enough "to really tigh~·
up the 'free' com stocks and brinf.
about an increase in the price."
•..
aergland said procedures are
being sent now to county offices of
the Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation Service and that "by
Friday and Monday, we'll be it\
business to take into reserve com"
that previously was not eligible for
the program.
" This is really a do-it-yourself kit,
and we hope it works," he said.

18

31

Give piano lessons to beginners and advanced student
in my home. Also teach
chording and transpasing if

interested call992-5&lt;103.
FIR3REI3!

Money to Loan

22

Mortgage
Money
Available. New homes. old

Product bill near passage

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's
consumers will be adversely af·
feeted by a bill restricting liability
lawswts based on claims of defective products, according to some
lawmakers and consumer advocates.
House Insurance Chairman
Michael Stinziano, ().Columbus, and
others referred Wednesday to a
product liability bill which is near
passage after four years.
It restricts strict liability - or implied warranty - lawsuits which
can be filed against the makers and
sellers of products blamed for the injury or death of persons usmg them.
The number of such lawsuits
skyrocketed in the mid·1970s, and
astronomical jury awards bad made
it difficult for manufacturers and
. retailers to afford or even get
liability insurance.
A special House conunittee on
product liability virtually completed
its deliberations on the Senatepassed measure Wednesday night.
But Stinziano, who also serves on
that panel, said it devastated the
proposal. "If it was bad when it
came from the Senate, it's three
times as bad now," he said.
The coiiUilittee, in effect, limited
filing product liability lawsuits
against manufacturers and sellers
to 10 years after the sale of the
product. An amendment that would
have knocked down the !(}.year
provision was not approved by the
conunittee.
Limiting actions to that time ef·
fectlvely wipes out protection against many types of mechanical and
other items of long tenn use, stinziano and others asserted.
He also complained about the
committee's deletion of another con·
troversial provision. It said legal ac-

lions resulting from exposure to
toxic substances would not be
restricted by the H)-year statute of
limitations.
"There just are not enough proconsumer votes on that coiiUilittee.
They have gone along with the
manufacturers on every (amendment) vote," he charged.
The committee waded through
dozens of proposed amendments,
but delayed a vote until Monday to
give bill drafters time to incorporate
the approved changes.
Specifically, the bill says a case
based on strict liability, or so-called
implied warranty, has to be brought
Within 10 years after the product was
sold
Rep. Joseph J. Vukovich, whose
amendment would have deleted the
!().year statute of limitations, called
the provision "one of the most objectionable parts of the statute." But
1tfailedona 3-7 vote.
There currently is no general
statute of limitations on product
liability lawsuits, but actions for
wrongful death must be brought
within two years after the death occurs.
Sponsoring Sen. Kenneth R. Cox,
D-Barberton, defended the bill as
one "that attempts to bring about a
balance in a legally complex area."
Although it places a time limit on
suits based on implied warranties,
the measure would not infringe on
suits based on a breach of warranty
or manufacturer's negligence, he
said.
Cox said the toxic substance
amendment was an 11th hour Senate
addition to the bill on which no supporting testimony was heard.
Meanwhile, the bill continued to
draw sharp criticism from consumer advocates.

homes,

3051, I ret and Mortgage co.,

71 E. Slate Sf. Athens, OH.

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE

The fo·tJowing described
items wi II be offered for
publ!c sale to the highest

bidder on the 26th day of
April , 1980, at 10 o'c lock

a.m .
Norge washer mod No

LWAI825
AM349869

ser

No

zen1th
23 "
co l or
television
Amana refngerator ser

No. 00003030103
Sale of the secur1 ty listed
above Wtll be held on the
prem1ses of The City Loan
and Guaranty Company,
125 E. Ma 1n Street,

Pomeroy ,, Ohio
Terms of Sale Cash
I terns may be sold 1n
un1ts or 1n parcels . Seller
reserves the right to bid
and the right to reject any
and all bids Prior to the
date of sa le, arrangements
may be made to 1nspect
this
merchand 1se
by
calling between the hours
of 9 o' clock am and 5
o'clock p .m
(4)

17, IIC

--~=~==-:--- _-c:-'P
ccu,_,b,_,l~ic:eN
~o"-'t~ic~e'--

PUBLIC NOTICE

Sealed bids will be
received 1n the office of the
VIllage Clerk, Pomeroy ,
Ohio, until 12 :00 noon on

21, 1980 on the
following proposals
l. For the purchase by

caution light
Btdder must transfer
spreader bo)( and controls
and tank from 73 1nternat1onal

2 For sale by the Vdlage

of Pomeroy 1ts 1973 International tru ck The b1d
der may state e1ther what
he w11l g1ve for the 1973 In
ternat1onal truck or what
amount he will allow as a
trade 10 for the new truck
descr ibed above
Each bidder may b1d for
e1 th er the purchase of the
1973 Internat 1onai or tor th e

sale to the Vi llage of

Pom eroy of a new truck
descr1bed above or both
Ea ch bid must conta1n the
fu l l name of every person

or com pany Interested tn

the sa m e. and the b1d must
be accompa nied by a check
or bond 1n the sum of
$100.00 to the sat1sfact1on of•
the V11lage counc11 as a
guarantee that 1f the b1d 1 ~;
accepted, contra ct will bf'
entered 1nto and 1ts per
proper ly
f ormance
secured These checks or
bonds will be returned at
once to all except the sue
cessful b1dder His check or
bohd wtll be held unt1l the
contract or b10 ts properly
e&gt;&lt;ecuted by h1m . 90 days
de1t11ery date .
The r1ghf is r eserved t c.

7,000

lb front Ax le
minimum
17,000 lb. 2 speed rear
axle, rat to 6 50 :1
.

Factory
re enforced
frame
S speed transmission -

Dlrecl ln f1fth
All types of engtne will be
considered but b1d must

specify
cubic
1n c h
diSplacement, number of
cy~mders, etc ., minimum ,

350 CU. InCh.
Heavy duty front and
rear springs w1th overlaods

on rear
2 speed electric wipers ...,..
windshield washers

Signal lights with hazard
switch
Heater and Defroster

900

X 20 tires. mud and
snow on rear - cast spoke

wheels
Power Steering
Heavy duty brakes
Heavy duty clutch
Heavy duty batlery
Heavy duty bumper
Heavy duty Alteroator
West Coast Mtrrors
Mud flaps

2 front tow hoQkS - rear
tow loop Including dump

bed
·
·Color : Yellow
Add a rotating yellow

'

1

Novel Fold-overs!

Card ofThanks

7085
I w 1sh to extend my thanks
and appreciation to all my
fr iends , neighbors and
rela t 1ves tor all thei r kind ness and prayers dunng
my recent stay 10 the

hosp 1fal.

For

all

Bernice Bede Osol

~~our

~ 'Birthday
AprO 18, 1980
The urge to travel will be very

strong tltis coming year and could
lead lo some excltmg experiences
and fnend s!Tips Take care,
however, that you don't neglect your
work.
ARIES fMircb U-Aprfl lt) You'll be

held accounl.able for an~ng you
say today. 80 lf there are things lhat
must be said, don't try lo
camouflage the truth Fmd out more
of wtultlles ahead for you m the year
followmg your birthday by sendmg
for your copy of Astr()-(iraph Letter
Mctil 11 for e&lt;tch to A3tro-Graph, Box
489, fLnllo City StaUon, N V 10019. .
Be .sure to specify birth date
TAURUS ( April 10-May %0)
Something r:J value could be lost
today, unless you keep your mind on
whltt you a redoing at all times when
deHiing wit h rruaterlal or lirllmL'ia l
n»~ttf:rs

GEMINI

!May %1-Juae .!t) C&lt;&gt;m-

J)llnlOfUI can be responsible for en·
coura~g in~ yoo into de-ceiving your·
l!W{ out Of a fllmily IS.!lUtt Don't be

led mrlrllf by wr~Jng thmklng
CANCER !June 21·J•Iy HI C'h&lt;ln· t

SHOOT .

Volunteer

Fire

Every Saturday. 6:30 p.m.

the

Hollow

Gun

Picking up an Easy play
organ
in
your area .
Looking for a responsible

party to take over paymen

ts

•

manager

Beginner Cake Decorating

doubts m your head and stdetrack
you before you reach a goal you've
set Follow the tnul you blaze for
ThiS btrd·tn·hand makes tf
yourself
stmple to grasp hoi pots
UBRA t&amp;!pt. 23-0tt Z3J It'll
fold-oveJ holders are every·
possible tQ muk e some unfortunate
body"s favontes Use bnght
altcratiOJUJ In your plans tDday
becal.l!:lt you may place more
scraps for easy apphque. add
credence In the tt.!eas of others Uutn
embroidery !ouches. catch all
they deserve
eyes
Pattern 7085 pattern
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. !!) AvOJd
p~eces for 3 potholders. ditec
tryhinS to pull another's chestnuts
out or lhe hre today (f you become I ·$1.75 for each pattern Add 501
Involved m such an ende11vor, you
each pattern for f1rst-class ait·
mjght be the real loser

w1lh a d1:dortctl tnmsm!:ssioo

credit

GUN SHOOT EVERY
FR IDAY NIGHT7 ·30PM
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY .
RACINE GUN CLUB

than(ace fttds Becart!ful
VIRGO lAug 23-Sept. 22)
Someone who means well might put

talk 'I' ill be pll1yed OOck

Call

collect. 614-·592-5122.

ces cu e the pr".Jiems you'll helVe to
contend with today w1ll be of your
own mak.lng keep this m mmd and
you can avotd trouble
LEO lJuJy %3-Aus. %2) Usually you
ca n tell when others are not bcmg
strat ghtforwltrd with you, but today
1t rrught be easter to believe them

Wi ~t y , I ~

9

Club,

GOLD. SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, DR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
DSBY IOSSIEl MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992--6370 ALSO
DO APPRAISING .

SELL YOUR SILVER
STE RLING
COI NS .
SILVER, GOLD. ETC , TO
BROWN 'S IN MID
DLEPORT FOR TOP
DOLLAR PHONE 614-992
5113

AQI,JAJUUS (Jan. to-Feb 19! 1\
stumbllnHblock could be ~hrown 1n
your pulh todu) by one who ts
jectlous v( your IIChievementa. Avoid
persoru who clln't cut 1l on thc1r
own.
PISCES I Feb, 20-Man.•h ztll Adv1s~
e~ ll hou~Whold membt!rs lo keep cortruJcntlal mutter~ Wllflln llle rllml)y

Oh1o, Crill Bradford.

marl and handhng Send fiX
1Aiict tlraob
Netdltcratt DeDL
'( The Dally Sentinel
1
,801 In, Old Chehu Sll., New
~orl, NY 10011. Print Name,
Addr111, lip, Pattern Numbtr.
EXCITING' New 1980 NHOLE·
CRAFT CATALOG wrth over tiO
destgns rn great vanety of crafts
3 free paherns mside: Send Sl 00
l32.(11rilt Ori11nals. ~ ... $1.50
131-Add a BlGck Qurlts .. SUO
130-Swutors-Sizos 38-56 .$1.50
129-Quiel/EISJ Transfers .$1.50
128.faldiwort Quills . ... $1.50
127-Aflfians 'n' Doilies .$1.50
126-Cratty F~ers . . . $1.50

classes starting soon . Call
Carousel Cnfect1onary,
Middleport for details, 992-

6342.

P1ano Tuning
Lane
Dan1els 742 -2951. Tuning
and Repair Service since
1965 If no answer phone

992-2082.

Complete
Write M

households .

D Miller 1 Rt 4,

Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992·
7760
10 karat, 14 karat. 18 karat,

4

Giveaway

Baby high

cha1r

recovered 985 3951.

Needs

German Shepherd mother
and 8 puppies 2 mont ns

old . 742-2480 after 6 p.m

gold Dental gold and gold
ear pins. 675·3010.
Gold, sliver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
1tems. Antique furniture,

glass or china, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No Item too large or too

-To g1ve away, Wooden
storage building to tear
down and haut away 359

Pearl St .• Middleport.

1 Female Terner pup. 9

weeks old. 992-7768

small. Check prices before

sell mg . Also do appraising .

Osby (Ossie) Martin. 992·
6370.
WILL

BUY

old

tran-

SmiSS t ons ,
batteries,
engines, or scrap metals,

etc. Call245-9188.

Full It me and part time Rl'i
Mr ~

Zidtan at Pomeroy Health,

Care Center Monday thru-.
Friday 9·5.
'
Growing Tow-- Boat Com·:
pany
seeking
chief
engineer,
ass i stant:
engineer. E&gt;&lt;perience with'

645· E5EMD

and

living room. full basement.
$25,000. 100 percent finan ·
cing at 11 percent interest.
II mterested call698·7331 in
Pagetown .
6- rooms, W2 baths and
shower, carpeted, paneled,

finished basement w bar,
garbage disposal, storm

. windows, doors see to appreciate . Reasonable 992"5566.
'House for sale.

6

Lost and Found

Lost in Pomeroy , German
Shepherd female name

" Sam" Phone 992-7378 or
992-5962

Found . One pair of men's

Wanted : Homemade items
on consignment. Log Cabm

Gifts-Supplies. 985-4133,
985 3951 or 985-4327

cia 1m.

Carroll and 3rd St .
Syracuse, OH Ut ility room
and garage. 992-5205.
Real Estate- General

Yard Sale

Yard Sale · Satuday, April

19, 10 til J at rne Roger
Black residence on Ma in at

the lower end of Rutland.

Yard Sa le: Fri. and Sat.,
Aipril 18 and 19, 10-4.

Riggscrest Manor, one and
two-tenth mL from Eastern

High School on Co Rd . 28.
985 3573 .

Big Yard Sale, 295 Wright

SL Pomeroy . Fri. and SFlf
9· ? Rain or Shine. Collec tors albums , c loth es,
glassware, kitchen tfems ,
etc .

tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

I

the eligibility list at 9922156 or 992·2157.

You 'II
tra.ct it down
IIUCh faster

• I th a

WANT AD

New L1sllng - NR 53, New
level home , 11h baths, J
bedrooms basebo11rd elec tric heat , 1hermopane w.n ·

to

split

dows, plus a 2

car

~ ara~e

Approx 1''• acre Tuppers
Pla ins, Ohio Only W.OOO
chMits M. Hayu, Rttlti.r

We

have

you

barn for $20,000.00.
NEW LISTING - On
Rt . 33, 2 bedroom home

on l!lppro)(. 1 acre, elec-

tric neat. utlllfy room.
ref . and range, detached
garage. Just $17,200.00.
NEW LISTING - MID·
OLEPORT - 5 room

Real Estate- General

home with ,. ... n. al air,
new g. ~-u :e, 2
bedroor .. , carpeted,
paneling, garage. for

only $19,900.00.
NEW LISTING- MID·
DLEPORT LUNCH ·
ROOM, business, all
equipment, licenses, In·
ventory .

1 Pay Cash for
l1 Classlfleds and
Savell I
Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

Phan•-----------------Print one word 1n each

Situations Wanted

3423 or 667-6373.

V.A. no down payment.

Will care for the elderly In•
my home Tra ined and e)(-;
cy. 992·73U

··

- - - -- - ·

Will care for elderly person:

tn my pnvate nome. Call'
992-6022
I

ting . Arc and Gas 992 2535"

- - - - - -.
Will take eare ot
elderly ~

men at night in your home •

Have reference. Call 992
5740 or 992-6008.

I"PUf

AUTOMOBILE
IN -~
SURANCE been can ~
celled?
Lost you r •
operator' s license? Phone ,
992·2143.
18
Wanted to Do
I
Give plano lessons to begin··

ners and advanced student:
in my home Also teactr

, chording and transposing it
1nterested call992-5403.

- - - - - - ---

-·i

the

l'
l
I.
I,
l.
I
l

I Wanted
1 For Sale

) Announcement
) For Rent

3.

I 4. - - - -1. s.
1 ; 6. - - - - -

1 7. - - - - 1 8.
9

1 - 10. - - - - -

1'
t n ,.
I 12.
I 13.
I 14
II 15.
I , 16.

t
L
I
I
I

These cash rates
1nclude discount

• ANNOUNCEMENTS
1-(trd of Thanlu
1-IIIMitmorltm
J-AnnMnttmtnts
4-0IVNWI'(
5-Ha,yAdl
t-Lost tnd Found
7-Yard hit

Antiques

ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOUJ Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tlbles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767 3167 or 557-3411.

1lbles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .
54
Misc. Merchanl••
Decorated Cakes, character cakes or sheet cakes.
992-6342 or 992·2583.
APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu. Bestlor
apple butter. Call 669-3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchord, SR
689.

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery various sizes of
pool kits. Do· II· yourself or
let us lnstalf for you 0
Sales,

Inc.

===;1

23
24

25
26
27.
28

Jt- Homllforhle

,,_ Mobllt-Homu

tor Stlt

~l-Porm1

for lata

14-luslnus lulldl"fl
15-LOts &amp; Acr....
36-IINIIIfl .. Wtnted "'
J7- llealten

4 P,M. Oolly
12 Noon SohlrOIY
ltrMoMIY

29

33. _ _ __ __

45-FIIIoonu

34. _ __ _ __
35 _ _ _ __

86

::: ~eating

stove. coal
orwood.$75. 992-5501 .

All types of roof work,
new or repair gutters

BISSELl
SIDING CO,

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

and downspouts, gutter
cle1ning and plinteng,

All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

eMERCHANOfSE

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

~ 19 " 2862

B~~.-E!,

.llm!li'_ -

62-WtntM! to luy

fi-Tru~lhrltlo

61-LIMitedl
M-Hay &amp; Grain
u- SMd &amp; fl!"'littr

eTRANSPORTATION
7l-A"t9t fOr ....
7s-Vanl &amp; 4 W.O.
74-MetorcycMs
71-

.a..to,.....

BOOkkeeping
Serv•·ce

..

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
618 E. Main

Pomeroy, Oh.

PREGNANT?

-ROOFINt
-PAINTING
-REMODELING
-CONCRETE

Pet• for 5ale
RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292

Free Estimates
Ph.: (304) 773-5131
or (3041 882-2276

5th St.
New Haven, W. Va.
3·17·1 mo

4-9· (pd.)

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
eV-CHISEL
PLOW

1.10

I.M

liiYI

1.11 '

6days

1.00

I .U

'·"

J.U

, us

rttt .
tn mtlflory, Carll of Trt.altll• aM Obituary : l CMH Jolr wen!. U .M
mlrtlmu"' ' Cll~ madvtn&lt;e.
Mottllt Home Mletartd V.1rd soltstre occ.,.tH .,..., witt! CII,.Wiftl
..-der, u ctnt c:hlrlt for HI ctrrth'll h• NwmMr In tift ef TIM
Stntlnal

Appointment
Office 992-7544
Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, OH.

N. L CONSTRUCTION
Quality construction at
reasonable rates.
Remodeling
Additions
Siding
BrickWork
Block Work
Concrete Finishing
Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
After 5 P.M. 992-5547
3·26·1 mo.

Rutland, 0 .
Ph. 742·2455
4 - 1~- 1

mo.

ALL STEEL

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

GOLF

Farm BuHdings
Size•

USSONS

SMALL

Family Plan
Available

"From 3Gx3G"

Roofing, siding,
gutter,
lluilt·up
roof and home
repair.

Utiity Buildilg5
Sites From 4x6 to 12ll40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Free Estimates
388·9759

John Teaford
Phone :

Rt. I, Box S4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 611·143·7591

2·14-lfc

(614) 985·3961

4-14-1 mo .

J-30-1 mo.

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

- ... .. .--&amp; . . .. . .....
--·~

._ ._...
..--···-·
..., ...... ._.....

Farm Equipment

Farmall400 gas live P.T.O.
2 way hydraulic w·2 point
fast hitch draw bar. Good
15 5x38 tires, w-·bolt on
hubs and duals, also I John
Deere No.8 mower, w-7 ft.
cycle. Kirk Chevalier 985·
BUILDINGS! ! Lost Chan·
ce at These Prices .. All
steel clear span bulfdlngs.
(Major Mfg ) 20'x24'xl0'
tor $2,896; 30'x48'x12' for
$3,886; 40' x48'x14' for
$4,807; 48'x72' x14 ; for
56,897. F.O.B. Factory. Call
collect Today 614·· 2'14·2675
1118 p m
Wanted to Buy

sliver. Call J . A. Wamsley,

c......

Open M-W·F 9:00 to I :00

MORRIS

5122.

OLD COINS, pocket watches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or

....

balance. FHA 265 Subsidy Program. ~HA 245

LEO

DOB OBEDIENCE classes
beginning now. 367·0550.

ANTtQUt;S,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything. see or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992·
3161 .

17-Upttolstery

ea sta e Loans -~
14% lnterest-30 Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic

Other Times by

PATQt

boots, etc. English and
Western. Ruth Reeves
(614) 698--3290.

62

u-l,covou. .
14-llktrkllt
&amp; Rtfrlfttlttoft ,
IJ-GtMrll H•uU. .
16-M.H. .... Ir

~~~~Of!

extensive remodel·
lng
* Electricla workS
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
. ·80

Gradual Pavment Mort.

belts,

AAcciUOr6ft

n-PiumDiq &amp; l.c...ollnl

J

WATERMELON

62
wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. S12 p·er ton. Bundled
slab. SIO per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689.

73

Vons &amp; 4 W.O.
1~9 Ford 150 4x4, auto.,
p.s., p.b., topper. Positive

4339.

Gutter

1978 Ford Bronco, P.S.,
P.B., A.C., AM·FM stereo.
1192-6130 alter 5 p.m.

71

74

full power, crYise control,

Harley·Davldson Yamaha.
Super Deals-Super service .
Giant Accessory Selection,
$250,000 1nventory. Athens
Sport Cycles, 20 W. Stimson
Ave., Athens, OH . 592·1692.

Autos for Sale
1972 Chevy 4 Dr. sedan,
p.b., p.s .• auto. $350. 1~2
Plymouth Stationwagon,

radial tires. S.2S Both In
good cond. 992 7675.

742·2331. Treasure Chest
Col n Shop, A!hens, OH . .592·
6462.

GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS, JEWELRY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP-TO-DATE
·•RICES. CONTACT ED
BURI'ETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OH 10, OR CALL. 992·3476.

p.s., p.b., air, CB radio,

$4,700 firm. 992-6330 alter 6
p.m.
Truck• for Sole
1979 Jeep Wagoneer, 4 dr.,
fully equipped, exc. cond.
$7,500. 742-3117 after 5 p.m.
1l

1979 Ford Pickup, 6ft. bed,
loaded with extras. 446··
1552. Callafer 5 p m.
1975 Ford

Pickup,

302

engine, p.s., auto., a.s., am·
fm radio, CB,
low

miles, runs
992·7841.

good .

$2,150.

73
Vans a 4 w. D.
197'1 JEEP CJ-·7, power
steering, Levi Interior, 3
speed, Ill! steering wheel.
10,000 mlles. S5600. Call 992·
314'1 or 992·2705.

work, Gown

spouts, some concrete
wortt, walks 1nd
driveways.

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YO.UNG Ill

Motorcycles

1977 Toyota Cel1ca GT 5·
Bootund
speed. a.c.. new radial n
Motors for Sate
tires. Asking $4.100. Exc ..
cond. 992 7201.
Mark Twain V hull 1970 16
ft. 1978 Mercury. 175 h.p.
1970 Pontiac GTO 455 4· outboard motor . 992·2528
speed. 12 bolt positive trac· after 5.
tlon. seoo. Good cond. 992·
5487 .
1975 Thunder Craft
Magnun 160 SS 116 ft.) 75
1978 Mustang. p.s., e .c .• h.p. Johnson. Sterling tilt·
am·fm, 4 speed, 11.000 bed trailer. $1,550. 992·5174.
miles. Exc. cond. $3,900.
992-76119.
1978 Camaro, A.S,OOO miles,

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

traction front and rear. 985-

77-Auto•...,.lr

eSERVICES

eStorm Doors

eStorm Windows
• Replacement
Wlnctows
_ Free Estimat.e
James"keesee
:
Ph 992 2772
·
·,-;a,., rr. :

Loans, No Down Pay~ent. Federal Housing
Loans 3% down on
$25,000; S% down on

HOOF HOLLOW: Horses
and ponies and riding
lessons.
Everything
imaginable in horse equip·

kittens. 992 -6260.
57
Musical

'

nsulltion

See Us First for All
of Your Maternity
Needs.
Tops-Pants
Jumpers· Dresses

HUMANE SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed
Donations required . 9926260, noon-7 Q.m.

Blankets,

992·3795-

o-tii:

56

ment.

INSULATION

1

r~;;::======±~~~~~====~~~~~~~~~~~
~
- .' • . ~ · Tri-County
ROUSH

sears s n.p. go-cart. Like
newcond. Ca11992·6115.

3510.

11 -P•r"' lt~UI,ment

Call for a Free Siding
Edlmete, 949·2101 or
949 "2860 · No Sunday
call•.
3 21 _1 mo.

949"2110 . .ffc
1 22

E lectrlc typewriter used 1
year. Gd. cond. $100. Elec·
tric Singer sewing machine
In case, model 775, Touch
and Sew, 2 yrs.old, will
sacrifice $225. 1965 Mon·

985-3856.

Eocllwltnlonrtht mtnlmvm IIWWdiii4CMfii'Ofwonl ,.r ..y.

L-~---- - ---------------~

Modei97S Freeze King, soft
dual head. Very good cond.
serve ice cream machine.

J. 0 . .li row corn planter _

Aeft nmnlnt other Ihen c:onse&lt;utlve Nn will Itt cNreH at tM 1 4ty

Mail This ·coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 129
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Drive for show, putt for
dough. Improve your short
game with • new putter.
John Teaford 614·985·3961.

One B foot wheel dtsc. One

......s,.ce fw " " '

47-Wihtldto Rtnt
...._Eqlllpment for • .,,

Rates and Other Information
lday
tdays

old

w·dry ferttllzer and water
attachment. 247-2852. Andrew Cross, Letart Falls.
OH.

30.

31 . _ _ _ __ _
32. _ _ _ __

proj~tor ,

Transplanter PowelL 2 row

11-ttom•lm,....vemenh

Want;Ad Advertising
Dead nne•

16mm sound

but nice, $100. 2 Linear 1mamplifiers. 1-500 watt, 1·200
watt, tube type, both $175.
Glen Bissell949·2801

61

WRtnt
44-A.ptrtMHf fM RMt

ss--lullcllnl hHiiel
M-,atl fw hlo

eREAL ESTATE

J&amp;L BUMN

manager collect. 614-·592·

tt-MeiNit Namn

1)-lnavrtnce
14-luslnnl Trtl"lng

lervlcts

hydrated lime. 992·3891.
Excelsior Salt Works, Inc.,
Pomeroy. OH.

Picking up a plano In your
area. Looking for a responsible party to take over
payments. Call credit

41-Hwlt'l for Rtnt

M-Mitc. Mer'Cflu41se

18.
19.
20.

Vinyt and Aluminum
Siding

and

Instruments

eRENTALS

12-Sifutttcl Wtnttcl

2J-PrOfHslonat

Agricultural

Humane Society Pet Adop·
lion Service, healthy,
Harley-Davidson Yamaha. shots, wormed . PlotSuper Deals·Super Service. Hound, Beegle, Beegle·
Giant Accessory Selection, Terrier. Retriever type,
$250,000 Inventory. Athens Chlwhawha, and puppies,
Sport Cycles, 20,!Y· Stimson Border Collie type ,
Ave .. Athens, On[ 592·1692. Weineroner type, cats and

P-Anflcjvtl

OPIJtrtunlty
22-MOIIt't to LUll

tlllzer.

-.

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

SPECIAL · Plant life fer -

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all br,eeds. Clean
Indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC registered
Dobermans 614·446·7795

Bumgardner

.

3891.

for antiques and collec·

Jl-Htlp Wtflfecl

11- ... tlneu

Excelsior Salt Works, Inc.,
E. Maln St., Pomeroy, 992 ·

POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.

992-5724.

Business Services

calcium

ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check

51-MtuiMokl Ooodl
S2-CI, TV, RHIOaqulpment

eFINANCIAL

gravel,

chloride, fertilizer, dOll
food, and all types Of salt.

ts, $100. 1970 Triumph Spittire MK Ill. Asking $200
with parts. Sylvia carman,
35675 Long Hollow Rd.,
Pomeroy.

, ,.. ,

53

sand,

terey Mercury. Gd . for par-

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

l7

22.

1·' 2. - - - --

1

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

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

lt-Wtnttcl To Do

21
I

looking for place to rent in

country In Meigs county .
Call after 6 p.m. 742·3146.

or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0., 45769

l,_Scttoblllnlfructlon

proper

1check the proper box
1 below.
I

47
Wanted to Rtnl
Young working couple

PHONE 992-2156

1'RICIIO, T"
&amp; Clllle,alr

J .ciassificatlon 1f you ' ll

I

Insurance

in

Furnished Rooms.
Sleeping Room for working
man. Call 992·6022.

&amp; AutliOII

reserves the right to
classify. edit or re1ect
any ad. Your ad will be

':

Unfurnished Apt. for rent.
$150 Call 992-7511 or 9926130.

WANT AD INFORMATION

9-WantedtoBuy

phone number if used . Words
You' ll get better results --l--1----l~-l--!
if you descnbe fully, ·
give price. The Sentinel

'

Furnished apt. 3 rooms,
bath, utilities poid. No
drunks, no pets Sleeping
Roomfor REnt . John
Sheets, 3'h miles south
Middleport, Rt. 7.

~=~~====~~~=~======~·

t-Publlc Slit

it1al or group of figures
counts as a word. Count
.flame and address or

Babysitting in my home
Racine area. References •

949-2779.

below. Each in·

sale

CALL TODAY.
REALTOR
Henry cteland, Jr.
99 ,_. 191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742 . 2474
Jean Trusse11 94 ,.2 660
Office Phone 992-7759

Name----------

Addreu ________________

Quick

price at $11,000.00.
WE HAVE BUYERS
FOR YOUR PROPERTY - FINANCING AT
14%, up to 30 years, 3%
down on 1st $25,000.00.

r----------------------,
I Curb Inflation. 1
I·

financing

acres wit" ft room
house, ,. nl.Nrooms,
equippel~:nen, small

'E:E:;;.,

~-~;~·:;'

Nucll
Ph. "2-1403

mines,

available with $3500.00
down at 11% Interest for
15 yers. Monthly payment of $245.32. Selling
price $24,500.00
NEW LISTING - 22

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.
Wilt clean house. Call 667 ·

13

Pomeroy,

Ave ,

Ot'l Owner w•ll help finance
to re$pofl$1ble parly

992-2342
IXMNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

~pace

Car Cleaning. Wosh jobs:
and ijX jobs Mon ·,
saturday. 992-7768.

and earn good money plus

Mulberry

approx . 5 acres land for

$58,700.00.
NEW LISTING -6 oom
house on approx . 6 A , 3
bedrooms. carpeting,
equipped kitchen, close

FOR AU YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

PI ICitons will be accepted.
until Wed , April23, 1980

RENTER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens In VIllage
Manor apts. Callll92-7787.

metal pole butlding, on

ba!&gt;emeot. well ln:iUiilled,
re asonable u1111ty tliiiS,
lo c ate~
on two lots,

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

Townsh1p will acept , ap.;
PI ICaflons for truck dnver ·
and back hoe operator. Ap- •

evenings.

some great gifts as a Sen-

ly remode led, new (arpet.

SERVING SOUntEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868

-------.
The Trustees of Rutland

day .

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person

Pomeroy, 0 .
Executive L•st•ng- NR 51, ,
J ~droom home , com ple te

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

Barge Line . P.O. Box 610,•
Jefferson. Ind .. 47130
·

All

electric brick split level

Commr c ial 1

General welding and cut :

It

2

Apartmont
for Rent
3 AN 0 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone992 - ~ .

44

=-J 45

992-2259
NEW LISTING

Misc. Merchanlse
COAL, LIMESTONE.

S4

46
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBII,.E Home
Park, Route 33, No~th of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479.

6 room house, corner of

ALCo:

$ casns tor junk cars.
Frye's 742·2081 . Open 9-5.
Closed Sunday and Mon-

eyeglasses. Vicln&gt;fY of
Powell's Parklnglot and
Mental Health Center. Stop
bY Mental Health Center to

a rooms ,

Qafhs. Good garden Call
61H85-J526. Chester, OH .

ce up to $128 per day. Con·•
fact Guy E. Bing c·o'

12

--::R::e::a::l
E:s:t:":at=•=~G:e:n;er:a:l
r

home with 3 bedrooms,
den, birch cabinets in
kitchen, full basement,
garage, carport, 3
greenhouses,
large

Diesel engines. Weoes
, commensurate W·experien ~
American

1971 Zimmer tratler 12x60.
1972 Buddy Trailer l2x60.
992-5304.

acres of land In Pomeroy

Only $7,000. 992·3886.

bedrooms, kitchen, 2 baths,

....
-.

or LPN 11 -7. Contact

35
Lots &amp; Acreage
Property For Sale. Over 3

Southern District -

•••

perienced. Have a vacl!ln·4

1

12Hetlf Quilts ...... $1.50
124-Gifts 'n' Ornaments .. $1.50
123-Stitch 'n' Patch Quilts$1.50
122-Stulf 'n' full Qljlts .. $1.50
121-PriiDw Show.o!fs .. . .$1.50
117-EIS} Needlepoint . .$1.50
116-NifiJ FifiJ Quills . . .$1.50
115-Ripple Crochet .... $1.50
lll·lnstont Gifts .
$1.50
110.16 Jiffy Rup .... .$1.50
109-S.. &amp; Knit . . . . . $1.50
10S·Instont MKrame . . . $1.50
t 116-lnstont Fl&amp;hion ..... $1.50
•05-lnsf&gt;ot Crochet. . $1.50
103-15 Qu~ts for Today . . $1.50
~OJ -Quilt Calledior. . . $1.50

Wanted to Buy

1 ron and brass beds, old
turn1ture, desks, gold
rings, jewelry , silver
dollars, sterl mg, etc., wood
ice boxes. antiques, etc

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport

Announcements

J:tre CHpable of domg Tend your own
~tore
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. ft.Jart. 19) If
you w11nt to accomplish whut you set
out to do toda y, bem" timid has no
plltce In your actions Be hold and '
forthr1~ht w1lhout ~ ! na r.eck!t&gt;_'\S

Complete Service. Phone
949-2487 or 949 -2000 racine,

I PAY highest prices
poSSible for gold and Sliver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc

McGu~re .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. UJ
Even those utremely fond of you
ha ve hmttat1ons, so It's not wise to
expect more from them than they

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,

At thetr buildmgin Bashan .
Factory choke guns only .

1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
19611 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES. PT . PLEASANT.
wv . 304-675-4424

House for Sale. Large lot,
completely remodeled 3

'.•

&amp; Auctton

Dept

bedroom

Ave., Middleport. 992-5204.

'.

Help wanted

carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
and garage. 992·5205
available Located approx.
32
Mobile Homes
7 mlies t rom Pomeroy off
tor Sale
Rt 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6
1973 Fatrpolnt, 14x65 2
bedroom
36 Acre Farm, 11h story
1971 cameron. 14x65, 2 house. Full basement,
barn. buildings, mineral
bedr
1971 Fleetwood. 14x65 3 rights, good land. S77 ,000.
992 7559.
bdr ., bath 'h
1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2

House for Sale on Brownell

;~

11

Public Sale

8

Ractne

Rutland. Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249.

ane Walton, Cler~
Vi llage of Pomero1
14) 10, 11 , 2tc

ASTRO·GRAPH

GUN

Corn

beautiful flowers and ca rds
sent to me . A special
thanks to Dr . Montrie and
Dr . Boonsue and staff and
nurses at Pleasant Valley
Hosp1tal Your prayers and ,
thoughtfulness was greatly
appreciated .
Thanks,
Mrs
Bet t1e

3

Announcements

3

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Factory choke only.

rej ect an'J. and all b1ds

Apnl

the Village of Pomeroy of a
new 1980 truck of the
followmg description and
spec1f1cations :
24.000 minimum GVW
84 inch Cab to Axle

ABHUliEIEements

or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,

basement and garage.
College Rd . Syracuse, OH .
992-5133 or 992-3981 .

The Ohio Academy of Tril!l
Lawyers blasted the measure as
''anti-consumer,
anti-worker
legislation of the worst kind."
"Senate Bill frl severely restrict~&gt;
the constitutional rights of any person - rich, poor, old, young - to
recover for injuries caused by a
defective product," said Jason A.
Blue, academy president, m a letter
to the committee.
·
A similar charge was leveled by
consumer advocate Ralph Nader
during an appearance at Wright
State University on Tuesday night. ··
Nader said it's "a full-scale
assault by big business on the long·
established health and safety rights
of Ohio consumers and workers."
The proposed legislation would
"diminish, or in many cases, com~
pletely destroy legal pressures on
companies to make their products
and workplace envirorunents safe,"
headded.
.~
Nader sa1d if the !().year provision
bad been law in Kentucky, the vi~
tims and survivors of the Bever~
Hills Supper Club fire in !977 co~
have been precluded from brin~
suits against the builders and a~
chitects.
•
Suits would have been barred eveti
if the fire was caused by faul~
wiring or if the victims suffoca!ell
because of inadequate exit doors, tW

-

Syracuse, OH . Utility room

9 Room House. l lh baths,

conunittee.

- Put Classifieds To Work!

33
Farms for Sale
COUNTRY
HOME With
6 room house, corner of
Carro ll and 3rd St., stocked pond lor swimming

31

•

Plan Spring Profits

refinancing

your present nome. CON VENTIONAL 5 Pet down,
SECOND MORTGAGES.
VA-No down payment,
FHA·Low down payment.
FHA-245 Graduated paym ent program, FHA·265
Subsidy program. Call 592-

The American Civil Uberties
Union of Ohio urged the panel to oppose any drafts of the bill "which
would significantly diminish access
of the people to their courts."
"The general thrust of most versions of this legislation is to take
from the many their right of remedy
for the benefit of the very few," said
the group's executive director, Benson A. Wolman, in a memo to the

added.

and

Homes for Sale

POMEROY,O.
992·6215 or
992-7314
1·28-1 mo.

14

Eltclrlcat

I Refrlteraflon

SEWING MACHINE
Repairs. service, all
makes. 992·2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Sing"" Sales
and Service. we sharpen
Scissors.
BOWERS
ELWOOD
REPAIR - Sweepers,
toesters, Irons, all small

appliances. Lawn mower.

Home
t mprovements
S &amp; G Carpet . Cleaning.
Steam cleaned. Free
Reasonable
estimate.
rates. Scotchguard. 992·
630'1 or 742-2211 .
II

WALL PAPERING and
palnflfl9. 742·2328.
CARPENTER WORK
complete remodeling by AI
Tromm, 742-2328. References.
Roofing, Siding, room ad·
dltlons,all typas of general
repairs. 25 years ex perience. 992·3406.
•
Excavatlnt
Limestone for driveways .
Pomeroy··Mason area. 3677101.

ll

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 9853825.
Reynolds Electric, 651
Beech St., Middleport, OH.
Rewind and Repair electric
motors. 992-2356.
Miller Electrical Service.
Resident and Business.
Reliable and Experienced.
742·3195.
G-ral Hlullnt
WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455.
IS

Upholstery
A&amp;H Upholstering: across
from 1M Texaco Station tn
Syracuse. Ph. 992-3752 or
992-3743.

17

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aprill7, 1980

Japan's rice big threat to U. S producers

*

13-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, April17, 1

.

'

"Classified Ads Do More Things For More People Than Any Other
Form Of Advertising."
Join Us In Celebration 0/ International Classified

'·

)

WASIDNGTON (AP) - It would
be better for all concerned if Japan
would donate its surplus rice to
needy countries rather than pursuing a policy of dumping it on tbe
world market, says Agriculture
Secretary Bob Bergland.
Bergland said Japan's surplus
rice stockpile of about 6 million
metnc tons poses a threat to U.S.
producers who depend greatly on
sales overseas.
" It would be "awful for everybody,
mcluding the Japanese, if they
would just simply dump that 6
million tons on the market and break
everything down," he said Wed·
nesday.
The world rice market can affect
more than just that crop. For example, wheat is a food grain that com·
petes with rice In many markets,
meaning U.S. wheat producers also
can suffer when the rice supply and
prices are out of line.
Bergland's remarks came in a
telephone interview with a group of
farm broadcasters. He was asked
about the concerns of Arkansas rice
growers, some of whom believe
Jap~n . may
b'\ VIolating
multmational trade rules against
dumping.
Arkansas is the leading U.S. rice
producer, but the crop also is un·

porlant m California, Louisiana,
~arm
Mississippi, Missouri and Texas.
" We agree with their general
JC
assertion that Japan rrught be In
Jl&lt;l'\ition where this thing can't conviolation .of tlnr. .. rules, ·and so we
have a delegation in Japan this week .._ tlml~
discussing the entire matter with
Bergland said he could not
them, " Bergland said.
speculate what might happen.
" The fact is, the Japanese rice
"But I do know that we are recomprice support policies are,. i_n our
merrding, strongly urging _ inOlet.._
VJew, f~~ them an unrrutigated
some might say, insisting+ that the Japanese direct that rice only mto a
disaster, he sa1d.
"They have a $1,100 a ton farm·
Food-for-Peace kind of effort
donatmg rice to persons wbo cannot
gate price support for rice, and by
the time it's ,finished and ready for
buy.
the market 1t s $1,300 or $1,400 a ton.
"And there are millions of people
That's about $1,000 more than •ts
in this world who can't buy rice from
worlh · "
.
.
.
Arkansas or any other place because
Comparatively, the U.S. ncepnce
theydon'tbavemoney,"hesaid
support for the 1979 crop was $6.79
per 100 pounds or hundredweight,
WASHINGTON (AP) The
theunitusedforricedomestically.A
metric ton is about 2,205 pounds.
government's price support rate and
Thus, the U.S. price support was
purchase price for J!JI!(krop honey
about $151l a ton last year.
will be an average 51l.3 cents a
" They've got rice coming out of
pound, up6.4centsfromlastyear.
their ears," Bergland said. "None of
Agnculture Department officials
1t will sell at those levels. They've
said Wednesday that the increase
-~ot to change their riCe policy, and
was required under a formula that
they know it and we know it, and I
provides honey supports to be hiked
guess the world knows it.
to be in line with production ex"But the rice producers (in
penses.
Japan) won't let go, and they've got
political clout, and they're just
WASHINGTON
( AP)
holding that government in a
Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland

On the

SCene

$1.39 million trial continuing
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - A former
Ford Motor Co. employee was to
take the stand today m a $1 .39
million lawsUit similar to the Ford
Pinto trial in Indiana earlier this
year.
The farruly of Walter Meier, killed
in a fiery rear-end collision m a Ford
Maverick in 1974, is suing two at·
tomeys for negligence in connection
With the accident.
The family's attorney, Peter Bar·
bara of Detroit, said even though
Ford is not listed as a defendant, the
company's " reckless indifference"
also would be an issue m the case.
Barbara said Meier was killed
when the Maverick he was dnving
was struck from behind. The auto
burst into flames after Meier stopped it on a city street.
Meier's widow, Evelyn,· is sulng
lawyers Frank Cubbon Jr. and
David Goldberg, who used to practice for the law firm of Cubbon and
Goldberg. They now practice law
separately.
The swt charges that the two men
failed to process a lawsuit against

Ford and the driver of the colliding
car within the time period allowed
by state law. Barbara said VISiting
Judge Richard McQuade Jr. ruled
Wednesday that there was negligence in not filing a lawsuit within the
specified time.
Barbara saul the next issue in the
case is "establiShing causation and
damages. We also have to establish
punitive damages agamst Ford."
Barbara expects to spend two
days questioning former Ford
automotive designer Robert Pautsch. Pautsch worked for Ford bel·
ween 1960 and 1971, Barbara said.
Barbara also plans to introduce
Ford documents and crash test film
to establish that it was decided to put
the Maverick gas tank below the
tnmk of the car, even though testing
bad shown the auto would be less
prone to fuel leakages in rear-end
collisions 1f the tank were placed
over the rear axle, he said. The
change would have cost Ford about
$9.85 per vehicle, he added.
Attorney Jamile Jamra, representing Cubbon and Goldberg, said the
case will involve exactly what the

estate lost by the negligence of the
attorneys. Jamra said the Cubbon
and Goldberg firm first became in·
volved with the Meier claim in September 1976.
The family originally bad retained
another attorney, John Celusta, to
bnng actions against Ford and the
driver of the other car. But five days
before the case was scheduled for
trial, Celusta enlisted the services of
the Cubbon and Goldberg firm.
The law finn was granted a continuance, but Judge Robert Franklin
refused in November 1976 to grant
another delay. As a result, the finn
withdrew the smt with th·e intention
of refiling it, Jamra said.
When the suit was being prepared
for refiling on Nov. 29, 1976, it was
discovered that the two-year statute
of limitations bad expired, Jamra
said. Regardless, the suit was
reflled m I'm and dismissed.
Earlier this year, Ford Motor Co.
was acquitted of criminal charges in
Indiana in the deaths of three teenagers who died when tlieir Pinto was
struck from behind and burst mto
flames.

says com farmers "really have a
powerful tool" to use lor boosting
grain pni:es.
·
Bergland referred to an expanded
grain reserve program authorized
by Congress- and being put into ef·
feet this week - that enables far·
mers wbo did not participate in the
1979 feedgrain set-aside program to
store com in the reserve.
In that way, com will be removed
from the market and result in higher
prices, he said.
Bergland was asked Wednesday in

a telephone interview with a group
of farm broadcasters about the ex·
panded reserve program and its ef·
feels.
uTime will tell," he said. " The
growers really have a powerful tool
in their hands and have the opportunity now to substantially increase the pnce of com. Whether
they'll use it ... I guess we won't
know for a couple or three weeks."
But he added that if fanners add
200 miUion to 300 mili1on bushels of
com to the reserve - about 800

million is already stored - thai
should be enough "to really tigh~·
up the 'free' com stocks and brinf.
about an increase in the price."
•..
aergland said procedures are
being sent now to county offices of
the Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation Service and that "by
Friday and Monday, we'll be it\
business to take into reserve com"
that previously was not eligible for
the program.
" This is really a do-it-yourself kit,
and we hope it works," he said.

18

31

Give piano lessons to beginners and advanced student
in my home. Also teach
chording and transpasing if

interested call992-5&lt;103.
FIR3REI3!

Money to Loan

22

Mortgage
Money
Available. New homes. old

Product bill near passage

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's
consumers will be adversely af·
feeted by a bill restricting liability
lawswts based on claims of defective products, according to some
lawmakers and consumer advocates.
House Insurance Chairman
Michael Stinziano, ().Columbus, and
others referred Wednesday to a
product liability bill which is near
passage after four years.
It restricts strict liability - or implied warranty - lawsuits which
can be filed against the makers and
sellers of products blamed for the injury or death of persons usmg them.
The number of such lawsuits
skyrocketed in the mid·1970s, and
astronomical jury awards bad made
it difficult for manufacturers and
. retailers to afford or even get
liability insurance.
A special House conunittee on
product liability virtually completed
its deliberations on the Senatepassed measure Wednesday night.
But Stinziano, who also serves on
that panel, said it devastated the
proposal. "If it was bad when it
came from the Senate, it's three
times as bad now," he said.
The coiiUilittee, in effect, limited
filing product liability lawsuits
against manufacturers and sellers
to 10 years after the sale of the
product. An amendment that would
have knocked down the !(}.year
provision was not approved by the
conunittee.
Limiting actions to that time ef·
fectlvely wipes out protection against many types of mechanical and
other items of long tenn use, stinziano and others asserted.
He also complained about the
committee's deletion of another con·
troversial provision. It said legal ac-

lions resulting from exposure to
toxic substances would not be
restricted by the H)-year statute of
limitations.
"There just are not enough proconsumer votes on that coiiUilittee.
They have gone along with the
manufacturers on every (amendment) vote," he charged.
The committee waded through
dozens of proposed amendments,
but delayed a vote until Monday to
give bill drafters time to incorporate
the approved changes.
Specifically, the bill says a case
based on strict liability, or so-called
implied warranty, has to be brought
Within 10 years after the product was
sold
Rep. Joseph J. Vukovich, whose
amendment would have deleted the
!().year statute of limitations, called
the provision "one of the most objectionable parts of the statute." But
1tfailedona 3-7 vote.
There currently is no general
statute of limitations on product
liability lawsuits, but actions for
wrongful death must be brought
within two years after the death occurs.
Sponsoring Sen. Kenneth R. Cox,
D-Barberton, defended the bill as
one "that attempts to bring about a
balance in a legally complex area."
Although it places a time limit on
suits based on implied warranties,
the measure would not infringe on
suits based on a breach of warranty
or manufacturer's negligence, he
said.
Cox said the toxic substance
amendment was an 11th hour Senate
addition to the bill on which no supporting testimony was heard.
Meanwhile, the bill continued to
draw sharp criticism from consumer advocates.

homes,

3051, I ret and Mortgage co.,

71 E. Slate Sf. Athens, OH.

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE

The fo·tJowing described
items wi II be offered for
publ!c sale to the highest

bidder on the 26th day of
April , 1980, at 10 o'c lock

a.m .
Norge washer mod No

LWAI825
AM349869

ser

No

zen1th
23 "
co l or
television
Amana refngerator ser

No. 00003030103
Sale of the secur1 ty listed
above Wtll be held on the
prem1ses of The City Loan
and Guaranty Company,
125 E. Ma 1n Street,

Pomeroy ,, Ohio
Terms of Sale Cash
I terns may be sold 1n
un1ts or 1n parcels . Seller
reserves the right to bid
and the right to reject any
and all bids Prior to the
date of sa le, arrangements
may be made to 1nspect
this
merchand 1se
by
calling between the hours
of 9 o' clock am and 5
o'clock p .m
(4)

17, IIC

--~=~==-:--- _-c:-'P
ccu,_,b,_,l~ic:eN
~o"-'t~ic~e'--

PUBLIC NOTICE

Sealed bids will be
received 1n the office of the
VIllage Clerk, Pomeroy ,
Ohio, until 12 :00 noon on

21, 1980 on the
following proposals
l. For the purchase by

caution light
Btdder must transfer
spreader bo)( and controls
and tank from 73 1nternat1onal

2 For sale by the Vdlage

of Pomeroy 1ts 1973 International tru ck The b1d
der may state e1ther what
he w11l g1ve for the 1973 In
ternat1onal truck or what
amount he will allow as a
trade 10 for the new truck
descr ibed above
Each bidder may b1d for
e1 th er the purchase of the
1973 Internat 1onai or tor th e

sale to the Vi llage of

Pom eroy of a new truck
descr1bed above or both
Ea ch bid must conta1n the
fu l l name of every person

or com pany Interested tn

the sa m e. and the b1d must
be accompa nied by a check
or bond 1n the sum of
$100.00 to the sat1sfact1on of•
the V11lage counc11 as a
guarantee that 1f the b1d 1 ~;
accepted, contra ct will bf'
entered 1nto and 1ts per
proper ly
f ormance
secured These checks or
bonds will be returned at
once to all except the sue
cessful b1dder His check or
bohd wtll be held unt1l the
contract or b10 ts properly
e&gt;&lt;ecuted by h1m . 90 days
de1t11ery date .
The r1ghf is r eserved t c.

7,000

lb front Ax le
minimum
17,000 lb. 2 speed rear
axle, rat to 6 50 :1
.

Factory
re enforced
frame
S speed transmission -

Dlrecl ln f1fth
All types of engtne will be
considered but b1d must

specify
cubic
1n c h
diSplacement, number of
cy~mders, etc ., minimum ,

350 CU. InCh.
Heavy duty front and
rear springs w1th overlaods

on rear
2 speed electric wipers ...,..
windshield washers

Signal lights with hazard
switch
Heater and Defroster

900

X 20 tires. mud and
snow on rear - cast spoke

wheels
Power Steering
Heavy duty brakes
Heavy duty clutch
Heavy duty batlery
Heavy duty bumper
Heavy duty Alteroator
West Coast Mtrrors
Mud flaps

2 front tow hoQkS - rear
tow loop Including dump

bed
·
·Color : Yellow
Add a rotating yellow

'

1

Novel Fold-overs!

Card ofThanks

7085
I w 1sh to extend my thanks
and appreciation to all my
fr iends , neighbors and
rela t 1ves tor all thei r kind ness and prayers dunng
my recent stay 10 the

hosp 1fal.

For

all

Bernice Bede Osol

~~our

~ 'Birthday
AprO 18, 1980
The urge to travel will be very

strong tltis coming year and could
lead lo some excltmg experiences
and fnend s!Tips Take care,
however, that you don't neglect your
work.
ARIES fMircb U-Aprfl lt) You'll be

held accounl.able for an~ng you
say today. 80 lf there are things lhat
must be said, don't try lo
camouflage the truth Fmd out more
of wtultlles ahead for you m the year
followmg your birthday by sendmg
for your copy of Astr()-(iraph Letter
Mctil 11 for e&lt;tch to A3tro-Graph, Box
489, fLnllo City StaUon, N V 10019. .
Be .sure to specify birth date
TAURUS ( April 10-May %0)
Something r:J value could be lost
today, unless you keep your mind on
whltt you a redoing at all times when
deHiing wit h rruaterlal or lirllmL'ia l
n»~ttf:rs

GEMINI

!May %1-Juae .!t) C&lt;&gt;m-

J)llnlOfUI can be responsible for en·
coura~g in~ yoo into de-ceiving your·
l!W{ out Of a fllmily IS.!lUtt Don't be

led mrlrllf by wr~Jng thmklng
CANCER !June 21·J•Iy HI C'h&lt;ln· t

SHOOT .

Volunteer

Fire

Every Saturday. 6:30 p.m.

the

Hollow

Gun

Picking up an Easy play
organ
in
your area .
Looking for a responsible

party to take over paymen

ts

•

manager

Beginner Cake Decorating

doubts m your head and stdetrack
you before you reach a goal you've
set Follow the tnul you blaze for
ThiS btrd·tn·hand makes tf
yourself
stmple to grasp hoi pots
UBRA t&amp;!pt. 23-0tt Z3J It'll
fold-oveJ holders are every·
possible tQ muk e some unfortunate
body"s favontes Use bnght
altcratiOJUJ In your plans tDday
becal.l!:lt you may place more
scraps for easy apphque. add
credence In the tt.!eas of others Uutn
embroidery !ouches. catch all
they deserve
eyes
Pattern 7085 pattern
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. !!) AvOJd
p~eces for 3 potholders. ditec
tryhinS to pull another's chestnuts
out or lhe hre today (f you become I ·$1.75 for each pattern Add 501
Involved m such an ende11vor, you
each pattern for f1rst-class ait·
mjght be the real loser

w1lh a d1:dortctl tnmsm!:ssioo

credit

GUN SHOOT EVERY
FR IDAY NIGHT7 ·30PM
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY .
RACINE GUN CLUB

than(ace fttds Becart!ful
VIRGO lAug 23-Sept. 22)
Someone who means well might put

talk 'I' ill be pll1yed OOck

Call

collect. 614-·592-5122.

ces cu e the pr".Jiems you'll helVe to
contend with today w1ll be of your
own mak.lng keep this m mmd and
you can avotd trouble
LEO lJuJy %3-Aus. %2) Usually you
ca n tell when others are not bcmg
strat ghtforwltrd with you, but today
1t rrught be easter to believe them

Wi ~t y , I ~

9

Club,

GOLD. SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, DR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS . WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR . CHECK WITH
DSBY IOSSIEl MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE 992--6370 ALSO
DO APPRAISING .

SELL YOUR SILVER
STE RLING
COI NS .
SILVER, GOLD. ETC , TO
BROWN 'S IN MID
DLEPORT FOR TOP
DOLLAR PHONE 614-992
5113

AQI,JAJUUS (Jan. to-Feb 19! 1\
stumbllnHblock could be ~hrown 1n
your pulh todu) by one who ts
jectlous v( your IIChievementa. Avoid
persoru who clln't cut 1l on thc1r
own.
PISCES I Feb, 20-Man.•h ztll Adv1s~
e~ ll hou~Whold membt!rs lo keep cortruJcntlal mutter~ Wllflln llle rllml)y

Oh1o, Crill Bradford.

marl and handhng Send fiX
1Aiict tlraob
Netdltcratt DeDL
'( The Dally Sentinel
1
,801 In, Old Chehu Sll., New
~orl, NY 10011. Print Name,
Addr111, lip, Pattern Numbtr.
EXCITING' New 1980 NHOLE·
CRAFT CATALOG wrth over tiO
destgns rn great vanety of crafts
3 free paherns mside: Send Sl 00
l32.(11rilt Ori11nals. ~ ... $1.50
131-Add a BlGck Qurlts .. SUO
130-Swutors-Sizos 38-56 .$1.50
129-Quiel/EISJ Transfers .$1.50
128.faldiwort Quills . ... $1.50
127-Aflfians 'n' Doilies .$1.50
126-Cratty F~ers . . . $1.50

classes starting soon . Call
Carousel Cnfect1onary,
Middleport for details, 992-

6342.

P1ano Tuning
Lane
Dan1els 742 -2951. Tuning
and Repair Service since
1965 If no answer phone

992-2082.

Complete
Write M

households .

D Miller 1 Rt 4,

Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992·
7760
10 karat, 14 karat. 18 karat,

4

Giveaway

Baby high

cha1r

recovered 985 3951.

Needs

German Shepherd mother
and 8 puppies 2 mont ns

old . 742-2480 after 6 p.m

gold Dental gold and gold
ear pins. 675·3010.
Gold, sliver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
1tems. Antique furniture,

glass or china, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No Item too large or too

-To g1ve away, Wooden
storage building to tear
down and haut away 359

Pearl St .• Middleport.

1 Female Terner pup. 9

weeks old. 992-7768

small. Check prices before

sell mg . Also do appraising .

Osby (Ossie) Martin. 992·
6370.
WILL

BUY

old

tran-

SmiSS t ons ,
batteries,
engines, or scrap metals,

etc. Call245-9188.

Full It me and part time Rl'i
Mr ~

Zidtan at Pomeroy Health,

Care Center Monday thru-.
Friday 9·5.
'
Growing Tow-- Boat Com·:
pany
seeking
chief
engineer,
ass i stant:
engineer. E&gt;&lt;perience with'

645· E5EMD

and

living room. full basement.
$25,000. 100 percent finan ·
cing at 11 percent interest.
II mterested call698·7331 in
Pagetown .
6- rooms, W2 baths and
shower, carpeted, paneled,

finished basement w bar,
garbage disposal, storm

. windows, doors see to appreciate . Reasonable 992"5566.
'House for sale.

6

Lost and Found

Lost in Pomeroy , German
Shepherd female name

" Sam" Phone 992-7378 or
992-5962

Found . One pair of men's

Wanted : Homemade items
on consignment. Log Cabm

Gifts-Supplies. 985-4133,
985 3951 or 985-4327

cia 1m.

Carroll and 3rd St .
Syracuse, OH Ut ility room
and garage. 992-5205.
Real Estate- General

Yard Sale

Yard Sale · Satuday, April

19, 10 til J at rne Roger
Black residence on Ma in at

the lower end of Rutland.

Yard Sa le: Fri. and Sat.,
Aipril 18 and 19, 10-4.

Riggscrest Manor, one and
two-tenth mL from Eastern

High School on Co Rd . 28.
985 3573 .

Big Yard Sale, 295 Wright

SL Pomeroy . Fri. and SFlf
9· ? Rain or Shine. Collec tors albums , c loth es,
glassware, kitchen tfems ,
etc .

tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

I

the eligibility list at 9922156 or 992·2157.

You 'II
tra.ct it down
IIUCh faster

• I th a

WANT AD

New L1sllng - NR 53, New
level home , 11h baths, J
bedrooms basebo11rd elec tric heat , 1hermopane w.n ·

to

split

dows, plus a 2

car

~ ara~e

Approx 1''• acre Tuppers
Pla ins, Ohio Only W.OOO
chMits M. Hayu, Rttlti.r

We

have

you

barn for $20,000.00.
NEW LISTING - On
Rt . 33, 2 bedroom home

on l!lppro)(. 1 acre, elec-

tric neat. utlllfy room.
ref . and range, detached
garage. Just $17,200.00.
NEW LISTING - MID·
OLEPORT - 5 room

Real Estate- General

home with ,. ... n. al air,
new g. ~-u :e, 2
bedroor .. , carpeted,
paneling, garage. for

only $19,900.00.
NEW LISTING- MID·
DLEPORT LUNCH ·
ROOM, business, all
equipment, licenses, In·
ventory .

1 Pay Cash for
l1 Classlfleds and
Savell I
Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

Phan•-----------------Print one word 1n each

Situations Wanted

3423 or 667-6373.

V.A. no down payment.

Will care for the elderly In•
my home Tra ined and e)(-;
cy. 992·73U

··

- - - -- - ·

Will care for elderly person:

tn my pnvate nome. Call'
992-6022
I

ting . Arc and Gas 992 2535"

- - - - - -.
Will take eare ot
elderly ~

men at night in your home •

Have reference. Call 992
5740 or 992-6008.

I"PUf

AUTOMOBILE
IN -~
SURANCE been can ~
celled?
Lost you r •
operator' s license? Phone ,
992·2143.
18
Wanted to Do
I
Give plano lessons to begin··

ners and advanced student:
in my home Also teactr

, chording and transposing it
1nterested call992-5403.

- - - - - - ---

-·i

the

l'
l
I.
I,
l.
I
l

I Wanted
1 For Sale

) Announcement
) For Rent

3.

I 4. - - - -1. s.
1 ; 6. - - - - -

1 7. - - - - 1 8.
9

1 - 10. - - - - -

1'
t n ,.
I 12.
I 13.
I 14
II 15.
I , 16.

t
L
I
I
I

These cash rates
1nclude discount

• ANNOUNCEMENTS
1-(trd of Thanlu
1-IIIMitmorltm
J-AnnMnttmtnts
4-0IVNWI'(
5-Ha,yAdl
t-Lost tnd Found
7-Yard hit

Antiques

ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOUJ Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tlbles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767 3167 or 557-3411.

1lbles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .
54
Misc. Merchanl••
Decorated Cakes, character cakes or sheet cakes.
992-6342 or 992·2583.
APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu. Bestlor
apple butter. Call 669-3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchord, SR
689.

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery various sizes of
pool kits. Do· II· yourself or
let us lnstalf for you 0
Sales,

Inc.

===;1

23
24

25
26
27.
28

Jt- Homllforhle

,,_ Mobllt-Homu

tor Stlt

~l-Porm1

for lata

14-luslnus lulldl"fl
15-LOts &amp; Acr....
36-IINIIIfl .. Wtnted "'
J7- llealten

4 P,M. Oolly
12 Noon SohlrOIY
ltrMoMIY

29

33. _ _ __ __

45-FIIIoonu

34. _ __ _ __
35 _ _ _ __

86

::: ~eating

stove. coal
orwood.$75. 992-5501 .

All types of roof work,
new or repair gutters

BISSELl
SIDING CO,

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

and downspouts, gutter
cle1ning and plinteng,

All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

eMERCHANOfSE

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

~ 19 " 2862

B~~.-E!,

.llm!li'_ -

62-WtntM! to luy

fi-Tru~lhrltlo

61-LIMitedl
M-Hay &amp; Grain
u- SMd &amp; fl!"'littr

eTRANSPORTATION
7l-A"t9t fOr ....
7s-Vanl &amp; 4 W.O.
74-MetorcycMs
71-

.a..to,.....

BOOkkeeping
Serv•·ce

..

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
618 E. Main

Pomeroy, Oh.

PREGNANT?

-ROOFINt
-PAINTING
-REMODELING
-CONCRETE

Pet• for 5ale
RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292

Free Estimates
Ph.: (304) 773-5131
or (3041 882-2276

5th St.
New Haven, W. Va.
3·17·1 mo

4-9· (pd.)

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
eV-CHISEL
PLOW

1.10

I.M

liiYI

1.11 '

6days

1.00

I .U

'·"

J.U

, us

rttt .
tn mtlflory, Carll of Trt.altll• aM Obituary : l CMH Jolr wen!. U .M
mlrtlmu"' ' Cll~ madvtn&lt;e.
Mottllt Home Mletartd V.1rd soltstre occ.,.tH .,..., witt! CII,.Wiftl
..-der, u ctnt c:hlrlt for HI ctrrth'll h• NwmMr In tift ef TIM
Stntlnal

Appointment
Office 992-7544
Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, OH.

N. L CONSTRUCTION
Quality construction at
reasonable rates.
Remodeling
Additions
Siding
BrickWork
Block Work
Concrete Finishing
Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
After 5 P.M. 992-5547
3·26·1 mo.

Rutland, 0 .
Ph. 742·2455
4 - 1~- 1

mo.

ALL STEEL

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

GOLF

Farm BuHdings
Size•

USSONS

SMALL

Family Plan
Available

"From 3Gx3G"

Roofing, siding,
gutter,
lluilt·up
roof and home
repair.

Utiity Buildilg5
Sites From 4x6 to 12ll40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Free Estimates
388·9759

John Teaford
Phone :

Rt. I, Box S4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 611·143·7591

2·14-lfc

(614) 985·3961

4-14-1 mo .

J-30-1 mo.

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

- ... .. .--&amp; . . .. . .....
--·~

._ ._...
..--···-·
..., ...... ._.....

Farm Equipment

Farmall400 gas live P.T.O.
2 way hydraulic w·2 point
fast hitch draw bar. Good
15 5x38 tires, w-·bolt on
hubs and duals, also I John
Deere No.8 mower, w-7 ft.
cycle. Kirk Chevalier 985·
BUILDINGS! ! Lost Chan·
ce at These Prices .. All
steel clear span bulfdlngs.
(Major Mfg ) 20'x24'xl0'
tor $2,896; 30'x48'x12' for
$3,886; 40' x48'x14' for
$4,807; 48'x72' x14 ; for
56,897. F.O.B. Factory. Call
collect Today 614·· 2'14·2675
1118 p m
Wanted to Buy

sliver. Call J . A. Wamsley,

c......

Open M-W·F 9:00 to I :00

MORRIS

5122.

OLD COINS, pocket watches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or

....

balance. FHA 265 Subsidy Program. ~HA 245

LEO

DOB OBEDIENCE classes
beginning now. 367·0550.

ANTtQUt;S,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything. see or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992·
3161 .

17-Upttolstery

ea sta e Loans -~
14% lnterest-30 Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic

Other Times by

PATQt

boots, etc. English and
Western. Ruth Reeves
(614) 698--3290.

62

u-l,covou. .
14-llktrkllt
&amp; Rtfrlfttlttoft ,
IJ-GtMrll H•uU. .
16-M.H. .... Ir

~~~~Of!

extensive remodel·
lng
* Electricla workS
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
. ·80

Gradual Pavment Mort.

belts,

AAcciUOr6ft

n-PiumDiq &amp; l.c...ollnl

J

WATERMELON

62
wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. S12 p·er ton. Bundled
slab. SIO per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689.

73

Vons &amp; 4 W.O.
1~9 Ford 150 4x4, auto.,
p.s., p.b., topper. Positive

4339.

Gutter

1978 Ford Bronco, P.S.,
P.B., A.C., AM·FM stereo.
1192-6130 alter 5 p.m.

71

74

full power, crYise control,

Harley·Davldson Yamaha.
Super Deals-Super service .
Giant Accessory Selection,
$250,000 1nventory. Athens
Sport Cycles, 20 W. Stimson
Ave., Athens, OH . 592·1692.

Autos for Sale
1972 Chevy 4 Dr. sedan,
p.b., p.s .• auto. $350. 1~2
Plymouth Stationwagon,

radial tires. S.2S Both In
good cond. 992 7675.

742·2331. Treasure Chest
Col n Shop, A!hens, OH . .592·
6462.

GOLD AND SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS, JEWELRY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP-TO-DATE
·•RICES. CONTACT ED
BURI'ETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OH 10, OR CALL. 992·3476.

p.s., p.b., air, CB radio,

$4,700 firm. 992-6330 alter 6
p.m.
Truck• for Sole
1979 Jeep Wagoneer, 4 dr.,
fully equipped, exc. cond.
$7,500. 742-3117 after 5 p.m.
1l

1979 Ford Pickup, 6ft. bed,
loaded with extras. 446··
1552. Callafer 5 p m.
1975 Ford

Pickup,

302

engine, p.s., auto., a.s., am·
fm radio, CB,
low

miles, runs
992·7841.

good .

$2,150.

73
Vans a 4 w. D.
197'1 JEEP CJ-·7, power
steering, Levi Interior, 3
speed, Ill! steering wheel.
10,000 mlles. S5600. Call 992·
314'1 or 992·2705.

work, Gown

spouts, some concrete
wortt, walks 1nd
driveways.

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YO.UNG Ill

Motorcycles

1977 Toyota Cel1ca GT 5·
Bootund
speed. a.c.. new radial n
Motors for Sate
tires. Asking $4.100. Exc ..
cond. 992 7201.
Mark Twain V hull 1970 16
ft. 1978 Mercury. 175 h.p.
1970 Pontiac GTO 455 4· outboard motor . 992·2528
speed. 12 bolt positive trac· after 5.
tlon. seoo. Good cond. 992·
5487 .
1975 Thunder Craft
Magnun 160 SS 116 ft.) 75
1978 Mustang. p.s., e .c .• h.p. Johnson. Sterling tilt·
am·fm, 4 speed, 11.000 bed trailer. $1,550. 992·5174.
miles. Exc. cond. $3,900.
992-76119.
1978 Camaro, A.S,OOO miles,

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

traction front and rear. 985-

77-Auto•...,.lr

eSERVICES

eStorm Doors

eStorm Windows
• Replacement
Wlnctows
_ Free Estimat.e
James"keesee
:
Ph 992 2772
·
·,-;a,., rr. :

Loans, No Down Pay~ent. Federal Housing
Loans 3% down on
$25,000; S% down on

HOOF HOLLOW: Horses
and ponies and riding
lessons.
Everything
imaginable in horse equip·

kittens. 992 -6260.
57
Musical

'

nsulltion

See Us First for All
of Your Maternity
Needs.
Tops-Pants
Jumpers· Dresses

HUMANE SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed
Donations required . 9926260, noon-7 Q.m.

Blankets,

992·3795-

o-tii:

56

ment.

INSULATION

1

r~;;::======±~~~~~====~~~~~~~~~~~
~
- .' • . ~ · Tri-County
ROUSH

sears s n.p. go-cart. Like
newcond. Ca11992·6115.

3510.

11 -P•r"' lt~UI,ment

Call for a Free Siding
Edlmete, 949·2101 or
949 "2860 · No Sunday
call•.
3 21 _1 mo.

949"2110 . .ffc
1 22

E lectrlc typewriter used 1
year. Gd. cond. $100. Elec·
tric Singer sewing machine
In case, model 775, Touch
and Sew, 2 yrs.old, will
sacrifice $225. 1965 Mon·

985-3856.

Eocllwltnlonrtht mtnlmvm IIWWdiii4CMfii'Ofwonl ,.r ..y.

L-~---- - ---------------~

Modei97S Freeze King, soft
dual head. Very good cond.
serve ice cream machine.

J. 0 . .li row corn planter _

Aeft nmnlnt other Ihen c:onse&lt;utlve Nn will Itt cNreH at tM 1 4ty

Mail This ·coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 129
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Drive for show, putt for
dough. Improve your short
game with • new putter.
John Teaford 614·985·3961.

One B foot wheel dtsc. One

......s,.ce fw " " '

47-Wihtldto Rtnt
...._Eqlllpment for • .,,

Rates and Other Information
lday
tdays

old

w·dry ferttllzer and water
attachment. 247-2852. Andrew Cross, Letart Falls.
OH.

30.

31 . _ _ _ __ _
32. _ _ _ __

proj~tor ,

Transplanter PowelL 2 row

11-ttom•lm,....vemenh

Want;Ad Advertising
Dead nne•

16mm sound

but nice, $100. 2 Linear 1mamplifiers. 1-500 watt, 1·200
watt, tube type, both $175.
Glen Bissell949·2801

61

WRtnt
44-A.ptrtMHf fM RMt

ss--lullcllnl hHiiel
M-,atl fw hlo

eREAL ESTATE

J&amp;L BUMN

manager collect. 614-·592·

tt-MeiNit Namn

1)-lnavrtnce
14-luslnnl Trtl"lng

lervlcts

hydrated lime. 992·3891.
Excelsior Salt Works, Inc.,
Pomeroy. OH.

Picking up a plano In your
area. Looking for a responsible party to take over
payments. Call credit

41-Hwlt'l for Rtnt

M-Mitc. Mer'Cflu41se

18.
19.
20.

Vinyt and Aluminum
Siding

and

Instruments

eRENTALS

12-Sifutttcl Wtnttcl

2J-PrOfHslonat

Agricultural

Humane Society Pet Adop·
lion Service, healthy,
Harley-Davidson Yamaha. shots, wormed . PlotSuper Deals·Super Service. Hound, Beegle, Beegle·
Giant Accessory Selection, Terrier. Retriever type,
$250,000 Inventory. Athens Chlwhawha, and puppies,
Sport Cycles, 20,!Y· Stimson Border Collie type ,
Ave .. Athens, On[ 592·1692. Weineroner type, cats and

P-Anflcjvtl

OPIJtrtunlty
22-MOIIt't to LUll

tlllzer.

-.

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

SPECIAL · Plant life fer -

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all br,eeds. Clean
Indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC registered
Dobermans 614·446·7795

Bumgardner

.

3891.

for antiques and collec·

Jl-Htlp Wtflfecl

11- ... tlneu

Excelsior Salt Works, Inc.,
E. Maln St., Pomeroy, 992 ·

POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.

992-5724.

Business Services

calcium

ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check

51-MtuiMokl Ooodl
S2-CI, TV, RHIOaqulpment

eFINANCIAL

gravel,

chloride, fertilizer, dOll
food, and all types Of salt.

ts, $100. 1970 Triumph Spittire MK Ill. Asking $200
with parts. Sylvia carman,
35675 Long Hollow Rd.,
Pomeroy.

, ,.. ,

53

sand,

terey Mercury. Gd . for par-

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

l7

22.

1·' 2. - - - --

1

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

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

lt-Wtnttcl To Do

21
I

looking for place to rent in

country In Meigs county .
Call after 6 p.m. 742·3146.

or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0., 45769

l,_Scttoblllnlfructlon

proper

1check the proper box
1 below.
I

47
Wanted to Rtnl
Young working couple

PHONE 992-2156

1'RICIIO, T"
&amp; Clllle,alr

J .ciassificatlon 1f you ' ll

I

Insurance

in

Furnished Rooms.
Sleeping Room for working
man. Call 992·6022.

&amp; AutliOII

reserves the right to
classify. edit or re1ect
any ad. Your ad will be

':

Unfurnished Apt. for rent.
$150 Call 992-7511 or 9926130.

WANT AD INFORMATION

9-WantedtoBuy

phone number if used . Words
You' ll get better results --l--1----l~-l--!
if you descnbe fully, ·
give price. The Sentinel

'

Furnished apt. 3 rooms,
bath, utilities poid. No
drunks, no pets Sleeping
Roomfor REnt . John
Sheets, 3'h miles south
Middleport, Rt. 7.

~=~~====~~~=~======~·

t-Publlc Slit

it1al or group of figures
counts as a word. Count
.flame and address or

Babysitting in my home
Racine area. References •

949-2779.

below. Each in·

sale

CALL TODAY.
REALTOR
Henry cteland, Jr.
99 ,_. 191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742 . 2474
Jean Trusse11 94 ,.2 660
Office Phone 992-7759

Name----------

Addreu ________________

Quick

price at $11,000.00.
WE HAVE BUYERS
FOR YOUR PROPERTY - FINANCING AT
14%, up to 30 years, 3%
down on 1st $25,000.00.

r----------------------,
I Curb Inflation. 1
I·

financing

acres wit" ft room
house, ,. nl.Nrooms,
equippel~:nen, small

'E:E:;;.,

~-~;~·:;'

Nucll
Ph. "2-1403

mines,

available with $3500.00
down at 11% Interest for
15 yers. Monthly payment of $245.32. Selling
price $24,500.00
NEW LISTING - 22

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.
Wilt clean house. Call 667 ·

13

Pomeroy,

Ave ,

Ot'l Owner w•ll help finance
to re$pofl$1ble parly

992-2342
IXMNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

~pace

Car Cleaning. Wosh jobs:
and ijX jobs Mon ·,
saturday. 992-7768.

and earn good money plus

Mulberry

approx . 5 acres land for

$58,700.00.
NEW LISTING -6 oom
house on approx . 6 A , 3
bedrooms. carpeting,
equipped kitchen, close

FOR AU YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

PI ICitons will be accepted.
until Wed , April23, 1980

RENTER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens In VIllage
Manor apts. Callll92-7787.

metal pole butlding, on

ba!&gt;emeot. well ln:iUiilled,
re asonable u1111ty tliiiS,
lo c ate~
on two lots,

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

Townsh1p will acept , ap.;
PI ICaflons for truck dnver ·
and back hoe operator. Ap- •

evenings.

some great gifts as a Sen-

ly remode led, new (arpet.

SERVING SOUntEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868

-------.
The Trustees of Rutland

day .

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person

Pomeroy, 0 .
Executive L•st•ng- NR 51, ,
J ~droom home , com ple te

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

Barge Line . P.O. Box 610,•
Jefferson. Ind .. 47130
·

All

electric brick split level

Commr c ial 1

General welding and cut :

It

2

Apartmont
for Rent
3 AN 0 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone992 - ~ .

44

=-J 45

992-2259
NEW LISTING

Misc. Merchanlse
COAL, LIMESTONE.

S4

46
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBII,.E Home
Park, Route 33, No~th of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479.

6 room house, corner of

ALCo:

$ casns tor junk cars.
Frye's 742·2081 . Open 9-5.
Closed Sunday and Mon-

eyeglasses. Vicln&gt;fY of
Powell's Parklnglot and
Mental Health Center. Stop
bY Mental Health Center to

a rooms ,

Qafhs. Good garden Call
61H85-J526. Chester, OH .

ce up to $128 per day. Con·•
fact Guy E. Bing c·o'

12

--::R::e::a::l
E:s:t:":at=•=~G:e:n;er:a:l
r

home with 3 bedrooms,
den, birch cabinets in
kitchen, full basement,
garage, carport, 3
greenhouses,
large

Diesel engines. Weoes
, commensurate W·experien ~
American

1971 Zimmer tratler 12x60.
1972 Buddy Trailer l2x60.
992-5304.

acres of land In Pomeroy

Only $7,000. 992·3886.

bedrooms, kitchen, 2 baths,

....
-.

or LPN 11 -7. Contact

35
Lots &amp; Acreage
Property For Sale. Over 3

Southern District -

•••

perienced. Have a vacl!ln·4

1

12Hetlf Quilts ...... $1.50
124-Gifts 'n' Ornaments .. $1.50
123-Stitch 'n' Patch Quilts$1.50
122-Stulf 'n' full Qljlts .. $1.50
121-PriiDw Show.o!fs .. . .$1.50
117-EIS} Needlepoint . .$1.50
116-NifiJ FifiJ Quills . . .$1.50
115-Ripple Crochet .... $1.50
lll·lnstont Gifts .
$1.50
110.16 Jiffy Rup .... .$1.50
109-S.. &amp; Knit . . . . . $1.50
10S·Instont MKrame . . . $1.50
t 116-lnstont Fl&amp;hion ..... $1.50
•05-lnsf&gt;ot Crochet. . $1.50
103-15 Qu~ts for Today . . $1.50
~OJ -Quilt Calledior. . . $1.50

Wanted to Buy

1 ron and brass beds, old
turn1ture, desks, gold
rings, jewelry , silver
dollars, sterl mg, etc., wood
ice boxes. antiques, etc

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport

Announcements

J:tre CHpable of domg Tend your own
~tore
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. ft.Jart. 19) If
you w11nt to accomplish whut you set
out to do toda y, bem" timid has no
plltce In your actions Be hold and '
forthr1~ht w1lhout ~ ! na r.eck!t&gt;_'\S

Complete Service. Phone
949-2487 or 949 -2000 racine,

I PAY highest prices
poSSible for gold and Sliver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc

McGu~re .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. UJ
Even those utremely fond of you
ha ve hmttat1ons, so It's not wise to
expect more from them than they

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,

At thetr buildmgin Bashan .
Factory choke guns only .

1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
19611 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES. PT . PLEASANT.
wv . 304-675-4424

House for Sale. Large lot,
completely remodeled 3

'.•

&amp; Auctton

Dept

bedroom

Ave., Middleport. 992-5204.

'.

Help wanted

carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
and garage. 992·5205
available Located approx.
32
Mobile Homes
7 mlies t rom Pomeroy off
tor Sale
Rt 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6
1973 Fatrpolnt, 14x65 2
bedroom
36 Acre Farm, 11h story
1971 cameron. 14x65, 2 house. Full basement,
barn. buildings, mineral
bedr
1971 Fleetwood. 14x65 3 rights, good land. S77 ,000.
992 7559.
bdr ., bath 'h
1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2

House for Sale on Brownell

;~

11

Public Sale

8

Ractne

Rutland. Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249.

ane Walton, Cler~
Vi llage of Pomero1
14) 10, 11 , 2tc

ASTRO·GRAPH

GUN

Corn

beautiful flowers and ca rds
sent to me . A special
thanks to Dr . Montrie and
Dr . Boonsue and staff and
nurses at Pleasant Valley
Hosp1tal Your prayers and ,
thoughtfulness was greatly
appreciated .
Thanks,
Mrs
Bet t1e

3

Announcements

3

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Factory choke only.

rej ect an'J. and all b1ds

Apnl

the Village of Pomeroy of a
new 1980 truck of the
followmg description and
spec1f1cations :
24.000 minimum GVW
84 inch Cab to Axle

ABHUliEIEements

or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,

basement and garage.
College Rd . Syracuse, OH .
992-5133 or 992-3981 .

The Ohio Academy of Tril!l
Lawyers blasted the measure as
''anti-consumer,
anti-worker
legislation of the worst kind."
"Senate Bill frl severely restrict~&gt;
the constitutional rights of any person - rich, poor, old, young - to
recover for injuries caused by a
defective product," said Jason A.
Blue, academy president, m a letter
to the committee.
·
A similar charge was leveled by
consumer advocate Ralph Nader
during an appearance at Wright
State University on Tuesday night. ··
Nader said it's "a full-scale
assault by big business on the long·
established health and safety rights
of Ohio consumers and workers."
The proposed legislation would
"diminish, or in many cases, com~
pletely destroy legal pressures on
companies to make their products
and workplace envirorunents safe,"
headded.
.~
Nader sa1d if the !().year provision
bad been law in Kentucky, the vi~
tims and survivors of the Bever~
Hills Supper Club fire in !977 co~
have been precluded from brin~
suits against the builders and a~
chitects.
•
Suits would have been barred eveti
if the fire was caused by faul~
wiring or if the victims suffoca!ell
because of inadequate exit doors, tW

-

Syracuse, OH . Utility room

9 Room House. l lh baths,

conunittee.

- Put Classifieds To Work!

33
Farms for Sale
COUNTRY
HOME With
6 room house, corner of
Carro ll and 3rd St., stocked pond lor swimming

31

•

Plan Spring Profits

refinancing

your present nome. CON VENTIONAL 5 Pet down,
SECOND MORTGAGES.
VA-No down payment,
FHA·Low down payment.
FHA-245 Graduated paym ent program, FHA·265
Subsidy program. Call 592-

The American Civil Uberties
Union of Ohio urged the panel to oppose any drafts of the bill "which
would significantly diminish access
of the people to their courts."
"The general thrust of most versions of this legislation is to take
from the many their right of remedy
for the benefit of the very few," said
the group's executive director, Benson A. Wolman, in a memo to the

added.

and

Homes for Sale

POMEROY,O.
992·6215 or
992-7314
1·28-1 mo.

14

Eltclrlcat

I Refrlteraflon

SEWING MACHINE
Repairs. service, all
makes. 992·2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Sing"" Sales
and Service. we sharpen
Scissors.
BOWERS
ELWOOD
REPAIR - Sweepers,
toesters, Irons, all small

appliances. Lawn mower.

Home
t mprovements
S &amp; G Carpet . Cleaning.
Steam cleaned. Free
Reasonable
estimate.
rates. Scotchguard. 992·
630'1 or 742-2211 .
II

WALL PAPERING and
palnflfl9. 742·2328.
CARPENTER WORK
complete remodeling by AI
Tromm, 742-2328. References.
Roofing, Siding, room ad·
dltlons,all typas of general
repairs. 25 years ex perience. 992·3406.
•
Excavatlnt
Limestone for driveways .
Pomeroy··Mason area. 3677101.

ll

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 9853825.
Reynolds Electric, 651
Beech St., Middleport, OH.
Rewind and Repair electric
motors. 992-2356.
Miller Electrical Service.
Resident and Business.
Reliable and Experienced.
742·3195.
G-ral Hlullnt
WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455.
IS

Upholstery
A&amp;H Upholstering: across
from 1M Texaco Station tn
Syracuse. Ph. 992-3752 or
992-3743.

17

�'

.
•

1~The Daily Sentinel,

0.,

-

17,1980

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY (
)

FRIDAY, APRIL 18TH AND SATURDAY, APRIL 19TH
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
MEN'S HANES

BLUE JEANS

POCKET T-SHIRTS

Wrangler l4 oz. No Fault Blue Denim
prewashed . Sizes 28 to 42 wai st , lengths to 36

100 per cent cotton, crew neck, sizes S 13061, M 138-40), L
142·44) and XL 146· 48 ) . Pre-shrunk, good selection of sol id
co lors . Reg. pri ces$3.99 .

inches. l" rue w estern sty l ing . Straight leg or
boot fl ar e sty le.

Reg. $15.00 ........ ... . Sale $11.99
Reg. $18.00 . . - .. - •••••• Sale $14.3.9
Reg. $22.00 ••• . •• - .. - . . Sale $17.59

FROM ONLY

TWO DAY SALE

15% OFF

MECHANIC ST. WAREHOUSE

MEN'S '13.95 BLUE DENIM

TWO DAY SALE

MEN'S '7.95

WORK
DUNGAREES

CANNON
SHEETS

SWEAT
SHIRTS

s1 39 TUBE SOCKS
Sizes for men and boys,
good selection of colors.

Sizes 28 to 42, 100 per cent cotton,
preshrunk, made with hammer loop and
rule pocket.

Our entire stock of Cannon fine qualify sheets and

pillow cases. Filled or flat in fulL twin, king and

queen sizes. Pillow cases to match. Solid colors,
white and patterns.

TWO DAY SALE

MEN'S s5 UMBRELLAS
LARGE SIZE. BLACK.

Bl B OVERALLS

DRESS SOCKS

Pre·shrunk blue denim, 100%
cotton . Sizes 28 to 42 lengths,
28 to 34 inches. Style as pictured .

One size fits 10 to 13. Choose banlon·panet
or bulky knit orion. Big selection of solid
colors.

•4..

One group of 2 piece living .room suites.
Early American styling in nylon covers.
Tweeds and prints. Reg. $739.00 to
$889.00.

YOUR CHOICE ONLY

MEN'S PARIS

SALE WOMEN'S

SALE GIRLS'

DRESS BELTS

JEANS

TOPS AND BLOUSES

Prices $5.00 to $10.00. Sizes 32 to

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

1f2 PRICE
MEN'S BWE CHAMBRAY

Knit tops, blouses, tanks,

hi!lfers, capes and

sweaters. Sizes 6 months to 24 months, 2 to 4, 41o6x,
7 to 14.

$14.00
517.00
$21.00
526.00

....... , .•• , ..
.... , .. . ..• . ..
....... . ......
.... . . .. . , .. . .

SALE $11.19
SALE 513.59
SALE $16.79
SALE $20.79

REG. $2.75
REG. $3.75
REG. $5.00
REG. 59.00

MEN'S JEWELRY SALE

WESTERN SHIRTS

Special Sale Prices On

Zodiac Necklaces, Reg . ss.oo

, ............ , ..
..... .. .........
.. . .............
- ...............

$2.33
$3.18
$4.25
$7.65

$14.95 western Chambrays •••• ;sate 511.81
$16.95 Western Chambrays ......... $13.41

These highly decorated watches make great
Father's Day gifts . Layaway now for Father' s Day
in June.

'7

SWEAT
.SHIRTS

REG. $5.00 ....... . .. .. ... ; SALE $4.29
REG. $7,00 . . ....... . ...... SALE $5.99
REG. $9,00 ........... . .... SALE $7.69
REG. $13.00 , .. .... . ... . .. SALE $11.09
RE!G. $17.00 . .......... . .. SAI:E $14.49

Crew neck style by Springfoot,
polyester/cotton blend, fleece lined, solid
co tors, in sizes S (6·8), M (1 0·12) , L
(14· 16), XL (18).

are

Sizes 29 to 44 waist, choice of five solid
colors, polyester/cotton blends, permanent press.

•&amp;"
$8.95 Matching Long Sleeve Shirt.... $7.99
$7.95 Matching Short Sleeve Shirt .... $6.99

DINING ROOM SETS

I-TRACK

STRETCH DENIM JEANS

washable and non·iron . Prints, checks

and pal1erns, 12 to 20 and 14'12 to 24'12.

WORK PANTS

SALE

Sizes 29 fo 38, 78 per cent cotton , 22 per cent nylon for

-Sturdy construction
- Washable vinyl covering
-24 tape capac lty.
Reg. s9.95 and $11.95

YOUR CHOICE

CARPENTER JEANS
100 per cent co11on, naturof color, straight
leg style wllh hammer loop and rule

pocket,

comfortable fit. Pre·washed . Stock up now.

.Reg.$7.00 .............. Sale$5.59
Reg. $9.00 ............. Sale$7.19
Reg . $13.00 . .... .... _,.Sale $10.39
Reg. $17 .oo ............ Sale 513.59

'15

69

$10.95 Sizes 8 to 16
Slims and Regulars ......... $8.99
s12: 95 Student
Sizes 26 to 30 waist.... , ..... $10.99

' SATURDAY HOURS
. 9:30 TO 5 PM

ELBERFELD$ ·IN POM ROY

'7U

FIFTEEN CENTS

President
considers
military
•
opttons
I

From the Associated Press

Explosion mars celebration
SALISBuRY, Zimbabwe - Rhodesia became independent Zimbabwe today in celebrations marred by a grenade explosion that killed
. two persons and injured 'n and a jailbreak by some 60 prisoners from
' Salisbury's central prison.
The grenade was thrown into a group of black youths in Mufakose
Township, six miles west of the city.
The prisoners, some of them considered highly dangerous, broke out
shortly after the arrival of independent at nnldnight Thursday for the
second time in 15 years.

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica- Fidel Castro's goverrunent authorized 10
flights from Costa Rica over the next five days but Costa Rica hopes to
double the number to speed the evacuation of nearly 10,000 anticommunist refugees from the Peruvian Embassy in Havana, a
Foreign Ministry official said.
The official, Carlos Aguilar, said only one plane, a ~. left San
Jose for Havana Thursday night and that it was likely it would be the
orily one returning to San Jose today. But he said the Cubans have
agreed to two flights daily through Tuesday and he hoped they would
raise the number to four.

Cutbacks may lead to naore layoffs
NORWOOD, Ohio - Residents may have to carry their own trash
cans to the street, with the city collecting them just once a week instead of two because of layoffs at the General Motors. Assembly
Division plant.
Mayor Donald Prues said the city may have to lay off some garbage
men since the layoffs of some 3,000 assembly line workers will cut an
estimated $400,000 from its earnings tax.
·
General Motors ordered the cutback in workers at the Hamilton
County plant because it's overstocked with Chevrolet Camaros and
Pontiac Firebirds made there.

Major banks reduce prime rate
NEW YORK - Major banks today reduced their prime lending
rates to 191'lpercent, continuing a decline In interest rates that accelerated this week as it appeared the economy may have entered a
recession.
Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. of New York, the nation's fifth-largest
bank, cut the rate from 20 percent, the record level reached early this
month.
The move came two days after Chase Manhattan Bank, the nation's
third-largest bank, cut its rate at 19% percent. Chase today matched
the cut to 191'. percent as did No.6 Chennlcal Bank.

Navy airmen, civUians die in crash
PAGO PAGO, American Samoa- Six U.S. Navy ainnen and three
civilians were killed when a U.S. Navy plane taking part in a Flag Day
celebration crashed and burned the old wing of the Rainlllaker Hotel,
where Somerset Maugham stayed before writing his famous story
about the preacher and the prostitute, Miss Sadie Thompson.
'llhe names of the ainnen killed in the crash Thursday morning were
withheld pending notification of relatives, and the nationalities of the
civilians were not immediately available. Another civilian, a
Japanese tourist, was critically burned in the accident and flown to
Tripier Air Force Base in Honolulu, along with the dead.

Judge refuses to issue injunction ,

TAPE CASES

BOYS' WRANGLER

MEN'S •17.95 WRANGLER
machine

'6.95 BlACK
1¥.4 INCHEfWIDE.. .............15.89

SALE

Reg. $234.85 Drop-leaf table, 2 side chairs
in maple or. pine ...... _........ Sale $188.00
Reg. $33.00 36 inch round table, 4 arrow
back chairs in maple or pine Sale 5166.00
Reg. 5415.00 42 inch round table, 6 mate
chairs in maple or pine .... __ .. Sale $332.00
Reg. $475.00 42 inch round table, 6 arrow
back chairs in maple ........... Sale$380.00

DAYTIME DRESSES

15.95 BROWN OR BLACK
.
5
1~ INCHES WIDE .............. 4.89

MEN'S '9.95

Waltz length gowns and robes of POIY/ Col1on blends.
P.ermanent press. new summer styles and colors
S•zes S, M, L, XL, XXL.
,

BOYS' '5.95

WOMEN'S

Sizes 32 to so
Full Grain, Cowhide Bridle Leather

GOWNS AND ROBES

Sale ,4.00

Wrangler, Campus, Mr . Leggs in sizes s,
M, L and XL . Snap front, two pockets,
snaps at wrists, polyester cotton blends.
Some styles with embrt&gt;idery trim .

Poly/ cotton blends

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

MEN'S LEATHER
WORK BELTS

SALE WOMEN'$

Men's Monogram Necklaces
Reg. ,3.00
Sale " .40
Men's gold or silver neck chains
Reg. ,4.50 and .00
Sale U .60 and $5.60
Men' s Giovani styled necklaces
Reg. ,8.00
Sale 56.40
Men's 17 iewel fancy pocket watches with chain
Reg. 534.50 and 552.00
Sale 528 .00 and 541.00

iJ

•55500

FREE DELIVERY

44, discontinued.

•

UVING ROOM SUITES
SUPER SPECIAL

MEN'S '1.25

Lon~ Time Friend and Wrangler brands. Numerous
styles in pre-washed denim. Something for
evervone. Sizes 6 to 20 and extra sizes .

en tine

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO, FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 1980

Hopes to speedup refugee airlift

'7 .95 SWEAT PANTS ........... SALE '6.88

MEN'S '16.95

AUTOMATIC SELF OPENING.
100 PER CENT NYLON.

Solid colors In sizes 34 to 46. Fleece ·
lined, long sleeves, Sprlngfoot
brand.

SAU '6.88

20% OFF
95

at

percent in the final three months of
cut the rate from 20 percent to 191&gt;
1979. '
percent.
'
The slide in the housing industry is
But New York's Citibank, the
continuing in the current quarter,the
nation's second-largest bank, cut its
result of record high interest rat!"! · rate only to 19lf•percent.
whi ch are disco uraging both
Two days ago, Chase Manhattan
homebuying and homebuilding.
Bank, the nation 's third-largest
Housing starts were off more than 22
bank, cut its rate to 19+ percent.
percent in March.
. Chase today matched the cut to 191&gt;
The Commerce Department percent as did No. 6 Chennlcal Bank.
measurement of inflation is called
The prime lending rate is charged
the fix-weighted price index.
by banks on loans to their most
Meanwhile, the decline in prime credit-worthy corporate customers,
lending rates continued today as with most other commercial and inMorgan Guaranty Trust Co. of New dustrial borrowers paying more.
York, the nation's fifth·largest bank.

Complete selection of sizes and
types. Stock up now and save.

SAVE 20%

FOR THIS SALfl

NO. 4

•

tions'' during the economic slide.
The nation 's economy expanded
during all of 1979 by an average of 1
percent, but the administration is
predicting a decline of 0.4 percent
this year because of the recession.
The Commerce Department attributed the weaker economic
growth in the first quarter to a
slowdown in the growth of consumer
spending and to a decline In the
housing industry.
It said total sales in the economy
increased only I.S percent in the
quarter, less than haU the gain of 3.6

CAMERA
FILM

China c~binets, utility cabinets, wardrobes and
base cabmets. All are quality constructed, built to
last. Great for extra storage In kitchens, bedrooms,
basements and garages.

$233

VOL 31

although he predicted it would he
short and mild.
The GNP measures the total output of goods and services in the
economy and a decline in output for
two consecutive quarters is considered a recession. If the recession
has started, it wouldn 'I show up in
the GNP statistics until the second
quarter report, which will be issued
in July.
However, Carter said Americans
don't need to wait for statistics to tell
them when times are bad. He said
many will face "pain and ... disrup-

KODAK AND POLAROID

METAL CABINETS

Special sate of tanks, placket fronts,
dress shirts, sweaters and knit tops.
Months sizes 6 to 24, 2 to 7.

e

Quality Wrangler ind Lord Isaacs' denim
jeans in fashionable style!".

WAREHOUSE SALE

SUMMER SHIRTS
AND KNIT TOPS

a 9.4 percent rate in the fourth. This
inflation measurement is different
than the Consumer Price Index,
which has shown an 18 percent rate
of Increase.
The first quarter GNP report
showed the economy was sinking
toward recession levels, although it
hadn't yet started. But it provided
support for recent predictions that a
recession Jllay have started in late
March or early April.
President Carter said at a news
conference Thursday that a
recession has probably started,

JUNIOR JEANS

SALE '3 35
2-DA Y SALE LlnLE BOYS

Growth slowdown indicates new recession
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Growth of
the nation's economy slowed sharply
In the first three months of 1980, apparently setting the stage for the
beginning of a new recession, goverrunenl figures showed today,
' The Commerce Department
report said the gross national
product grew at an annual rate of 1.1
percent from January through March, down from a 2 percent rate of
growth 'in the fourth quarter of 1979.
It also said there was a worsening
of inflation to an annual rate of 11.4
percent in the first quarter, up from

SPECIAL s·ALE PRICES
MEN'S WRANGLER 117.95

•

HACKENSACK, N.J. - Penthouse magazine called Eastman
Kodak Co. "the high priests of morality," and the photography finn
labeled the slides of Penthouse's "Pet of the Year" lewd.
But a Superior Court judge, who agreed the dispute nised legal
issues with "novel im[ilications.' ' refused on Thursday to issue a
prellminary order forcing Kodak to return the slides - and Penthouse
promised to pursue the case.
Judge Sherwin D. Lester, who is holding the controversial color
slides In his chambers, said Penthouse International Ud. would not
Suffer immediate damage if the slides of "Pet of the Year" Cheryl
Rlxon were withheld llntif the suit Is resolved.

Plush high lise hit by fire today
CINCINNATI - A five-alarm blaze swept through a plush high rise
apartment building in the city's Hyde Park area early today, fire of·
ficials said.
The fire broke out at the Regency Apartments at about 1:19 a.m.
The building was evacuated, officials said. It was IKit immediately
known whether ally injuries occurred.

Weather

J

.

· MosUy &amp;unny today and Saturday. Higha today from 60 to 65. Higha
Saturday from 65 to 70. Generally clear tonight, with lows near 4ll. The
chance of rain ls 10 percent today, near zero tonight and 10 percert
'Saturday.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday tbreugb TuHday: Fair, with highs from 65 to 70. Lows Ia the

....

WASIDNGTON (AP) - With all
peaceful options nearly exhausted,
President Carter is approaching extremely delicate decisions on the use
of military force to win release of the
hostages in Iran.
Declaring bluntly that "the
American hostages must be freed,"
the president said Thursday that
military action is the only step he
has left after playing out the final
economic sanctions.
man of the county conunittee, presented pins and cer·
ASC HONOREES - Two long-time members of
"The authorities in Iran should
tificates to Reed Jeffers, center, a 4G-year conunittee
both the corrununity and county Agricultural
realize ... that the availability of
member, of Carpenter, and Virgil King, of Kingsbury
Stabilization and Conservation Service committees
peaceful measures, like the patience
Road.
were honored Thursday. Clarence Price, left, chairof the American people, is running
out,'' Carter said.
A senior White House official, who
asked not to be identified by name,
said an embargo on shipments ri
food and medicine was "a sure next
. .
step" and the only non-military option remaining.
At a White House news conference, the president said he was:
- Barring any financial transactions with anyone in Iran, except
almost all the undecided votes to
On the other side of Capitol Hill,
WASHINGTON ( AP)
those involved in journalism;
meanwhile,
the Senate Armed Serprevail
in
the
House.
Congressional leaders predict the
- Banning U.S. imports frcm
vices manpower subcommittee
In the view of many critics of
House will · approve draft
Iran;
registration of men, but a White registration, the best chance of · voted in a closed-door session again-Prohibiting Americans other
st authorizing registration of than journalists from traveling to
House poll shows the outcome is not killing it is in the Senate, where
women.
yet certain and that opponents have Republican Mark Hatfield of Oregon
Iran without specific pernnlssion
Sources said the panel, for the from the State Department or athas
vowed
to
wage
a
filibuster.
a slinn chance of stopping the
second year in a row, also
The vote by the full House comprogram.
torney general;
authorized
registration
of
men,
even
nnlttee
overturned
the
decision
of
an
- Ordering the freeing for
The House Appropriations Comthough
Carter
already
has
legal
Appropriations
subcomnnlttee
seven
American
use or sale the impounded
nnlttee voted 26-23 Thursday to apto
carry
out
a
male-only
authority
weeks
ago
to
approve
funds
only
for
military
equipment
purchased by
prove spending $13.3 million to begin
registration program and only needs
a
standby
system
in
which
Iran.
registering young men this summer.
money from Congress to begin it.
Carter said he would ask Congress
That cleared the way for the mat- registration would not start until the
president ordered mobilization in an
for authority to pay reparations to
ter to be debated in the full House
In rejecting registration of
emergency.
the hostages and their families out of
next week, probably Tuesday.
women, the subcomnnlttee approved
Twice during its deliberations, the
the more than $8 biltion in Iranian
a set of findings to justify their ex·
"I .would be surprised if it were lull committee shouted down
assets he froze in November.
elusion on grounds there is no
defeated," said House Speaker proposals to register women along
military need to draft women and
with men, as suggested by President
Thomas P. O'Neill, 0-Mass.
that women do not belong in combat.
O'Neill revealed that a White Carter at one point.
In a related development, a SelecBut the comnnlttee's vote a!&gt;"
House poll of House members !ound
tive
Service spokeswoman said 1~
proving money for registration of
206 representatives supporting
and
2().year-old men will begin
registration, 86 1:4&gt;posed and the men was a key victory for Carter,
registering
during the last two
remainder of the 435 members un- wllo has called his program a signal
weeks in June if the bill before
to the Soviet Union of U.S. strength
decided. .
Congress is sent to Carter for his
and resolve to protect American inIf that count is accurate, O!&gt;"
signature.
ponents would have to pick up terests.

Draft registration not yet
certain·, -national poll shows

Carter, Reagan keep on rolling
conventi.on, wtth one going to Bush
to lose.''
By The Associated Pret~s
and
four unconunitted.
Lose he did, however, in Idaho's
President Carter and Ronald
At the same time, Bush gained the
Reagan scored more victories in district caucuses. Carter gained 48
support of six Arkansas delegates to
party skirmishes In the West, but as percent of the vole to Kennedy's 30,
politics goes, it also was a day with with 22 percent uncomnnltted. That · the Republican National Convention
who previously had jleen unsomething for everyone. Well, would give Carter eight of Idaho's 17
delegates
to
the
Democratic
comnnltted
or pledged to candidates
almost.
Convention,
and
Kennedy
National
no
longer
in
the race. Their switch
Carter came out on top Thursday
five.
Four
would
go
as
unconunitted
U.N. ambassador
gave
the
former
in the Idaho Democratic caucuses,
of
that
state's
19 delegates.
eight
delegates.
and Reagan won at North Dakota's
Reagan
picked
up
12
delegates
at
Reagan
has
nine,
and
two still are
state Republican convention. That
the
North
Dakota
state
Republican
uncomnnltted.
added to their large delegate leads
over party rivals.
But Reagan's chief GOP rival,
George Bush, also picked up some
delegates In Arkansas.
A 16-year old eighth grade student unable to go to the school but notified
And John Anderson's supporters at Racine Junior High School was the sheriff's department.
got the glHihead to put him on the adnnltted to Veterans Memorial
The youth had been taken to the
ballot in Massachusetts as an in- Hospital Thursday due to over hospital by his parents.
dependent, with the Illinois medication according to Carl Hysell,
Hysell reported that he and a 14congressman clearly leaning more
year old have been cited to court for
juvenile officer.
and more toward making a run outHysell was summoned to Racine posession of a controlled substance.
side the two-party system. ·
Junior High School by principal Jen- They will appear next week before
And Edward M. Kennedy ? Well,
Judge Robert E. Buck.
nings Beegle.
President Carter's chief opponent
Hysell, on his way to Athens was
got to hear the famous fable of how
the tortoise, by dint of perPublic hearing Monday
serverance, finally passed by the
provernents in the Page St. area.' In
A public hearing will be held on
rabbit who, perhaps grinning, took
an early lead in the race but then
(donday, April28, 1980at 7:30p.m. in the original application ~.ooo was
poopedout.
'
the Village council chambers in Mid- allocated for highway use.
All interested residents are invited
Kennedy gtinned himseU as he sat dleport for the purpose of obtaining
to attend and express their opillions.
cramped in a liny desk lilitehing to
citizen input for a proposed amend·
Written conunents lllliY be sent to
the moral of the story . in a
ment to the village community
the Jllayor's office, 237 -Race St.,
Philadelphia elementary sch~l development block grant.
. _
Middleport, Ohio 45760. Comments
It Is oroposed that $60,000 of block
classroom. He later told an mmust be received by 4 p.m. April29.
terviewer: "I didn't get Into the race grant funds be used for highway im-

Overdose victim hospitalized

$145,900
•
proJeCt
underway

Installation of additional callhandling equipment for growth in
the Pomeroy exchange of General
Telephone Co. of Ohio is underway.
Jim L. Parker, Athens customer
service manager, said the $145,900
project will provide equipment for
600 new customer lines.
The added equipment will increase calling paths between
Pomeroy and Athens, Chester,
Columbus, Gallipolis, Letart Falls,
Racine and Rutland.
The expansion of lines and terminals required is based on
forecasts and should provide foc
growth of service needs in the
Pomeroy exchange through 1983,
Parker said.
The Pomeroy exchange serves
more than 3,900 customers in a 84square-mile area of Meigs County.

omo LOTI'ERY NUMBERS ..
Pyramid

, Twollllft-0!
'lbreeDipt-Mt
Four Digit- 31J7

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  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="47848">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="47847">
              <text>April 17, 1980</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
