<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14887" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14887?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T05:32:22+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47664">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/beabf29a470fb93859a772dd71ee8fc3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>29f9947e709e2d5ec53e90f3966d8c3a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="47861">
                  <text>Ohio's unemployment rate goes up

Plant Stand

-...-.. .-1 1 1 1_····----------111&lt;·.....

2 GREAT

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) 11\ouaands of jobless Ohioans have
pu.!!bed the state's unemployment
rate to at least 6.6 percent, up froot 6
percent last year.
In March, the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services reported that
324,000 Ohioans were out c. work,
23,000 more than a year ago.
And the outlook isn't bright according to William Papier, di~tor
of research and statistics for the
bureau.
· "Continued lack of orders In
automotive and related industries
and reduced consumer purchasing
power as the inflation rate markedly
exceeds wage-rate gains offer little
basis for optimism," he said.
The northeastern portion of the
state is the hardest hit by the sudden
belt-tightening, especially the steel
and tire and auto industries. The

central Ohio area appears to be
TalkS are Wider way between
fairly stable, however, with an en- union and company officials on
viable future for jobs and growth.
possible steps to 1\eep the plants io
In YoWJgstown, the Ohio Works of
operation, but Leon Brodeur,
the U.S. Steel Corp. was heing 11\Clth- president rl Firestone's North
American Tire Division, said the
balled, while the McDonald Works is
to cl~ by mid-summer. The shutdown decision is " irreversible."
closings mean the loss of 3,500 jobs.
Firestone, which reported a $13.8
million first~uarter loss this year,
In Akron, Firestone Tire &amp;Rubber
noted the closings were part of a
Co. recently annQUDced plans to
padlock five tire-rilaking plants. The
"restructuring" of Brodeur's
company blamed tile shutdowns on a
division.
lack of demand for bias-ply tires,
Fires.tone said the cost of the
closings . will amoWJt to about. $82
saying that motorists were switmillion after taxes. The company
ching to radial tires. The toll- 2, 700
also is providing job-hunting
jobs In Ohio and 8,500 throughout the
assistance for employees facing
country.
layoff.
Curt Brown . United Rubber
In Toledo, low public demand has
.Workers public relations director,
said the union negotiated "some · forced the American Motors Jeep
plant to suspend assembly
protection" last year for plants hit
operations. This week, the company
by the closings and "it's a damn
laid off 3,500 assembly workers, with
good th!"g we have it."

~

ECLINER VALUES~
lo. ,

•

Both Feature Dual Control HEATER-VIBRATOR
Ideal to Ease Tension and Smooth

e

• • •

VOL 31

•

at

1,700 who already were on indefinite
suspension. But the company is
moving all its Jeep production to
Toledo, which should put many of
those furloughed back to work later
this year.
Elsewhere, the situation fluctuated.
General Motors' Lordstown plant
bas 1,400 workers on layoff. GM's
Fisher Body plant in Ontario, near
Mansfield, will be laying off a small
number of employees aroWJd May l.
GM said the layoffs are part of its
latest furlough aMowiced last week
in Detroit of 12,000 production
workers due to a nearly year-long
sales slump.
Public employees' jobs apl"'ar
more secure than those in many
areas of the private sector. But the
failure of government revenues to
keep up with rising costs is resulting

in some layoffs.
Mansfield Mayor Edward Meehan
expects to lay off about 30 city employees by the end of the month as
part of.a plan to bring general fund
expenditures in line with anticipated
revenues.
Meehan said the furloughs would
affect such areas as police, fire ,
engineering codes and permits and
utilities collections.'
"These are the revenue sources
available to us," he said. "l feel
we're going to have to lay of! more
people. I don't see where the
revenue is going to come from."
ln Cleveland, Mayor George
Voinovich has a!Uiounced pi s to
cut persons from the city's work
ce of 10,000. '!'be move is part of an
austerity program in the city'
three-year financial recovery
program~ Vo!novich noted that some

•

of the cutbacks will be accomplished
through attrition.
Cleveland officials alsO said expiration of federal CETA funds will
mean 150 layoffs. CETA funds have
run out for 585 persons, but 435 were
absorbed Wider the city's general
fWJd. At the end of March, 70
workers got layoff notices, while
another 80 are to be laid off the end
of JWJe.
Meanwhile in Columbus, city of·
fi&lt;:ials don't anticipate reducing !be
payroll.
"No employee on the city payroll
bas been laid off this year," said
deputy service director Ron Rotaru.
"There are no plans to lay anybody
off. In fact, we've increased
authorization for new police and fire
training classes."
There also have been no layoffs in
1Continued on page 141

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1980

NO.7

FIFTEEN CENTS

YOUR CHOICE

$

I'i:'om tbe A1180Claled Prell&amp;

Allies order token Iranian action

9••

Use it as a. plant stand ·
or candle stand ... In
fact, Its uses are limited
only by your imagina"
lion ... Rich Fruitwood
finish ... 36 inches high.

WALL HUGGER
.This e!lsy-gllde ·recliner is d$·
signed to sit 9nly Inches from
the wall, even In full reclining
position . . . Covered In new
butter-soft vinyl . . . Convenient
side pocket for magazines.

Controls
for heat
and vib1·atictn

ROCKER-REQINER · A large scale iounger with smooth
rocking action ..• Upholstered In
durable 100% nylon fabric ... Has
'extra tlllck foam seat ·tushions and
a useful magazine pouch ..• A real
value for the money. -

America's major European allies ordered token action against Iran
now andjhreatened strong sanctions May 17 if the release of the 53
U.S. hostages is not in sight by then.
The foreign ministers of the nine Common Market coWJtries annoWJced after a two-day meeting in Luxembourg Tuesday their goverrunents were banning new eryort and service contracts with Iran ~d
all military sales to ·Iran, were reducing their diplomatic staffs m
Tehran were cutting Iran' 3n diplomatic staffs in their capitals, and
reim~ing visa require-ne.,ts for Iranians traveling to their countries.

887 survivors rescued from sea
MANILA, Philippines - A Philippine oil tanker n' mmed and sank
an int,er-island ferry-freigllter with at least 960 pe~ons aboard m the
centrM Phllippinell, but the commander of the PhiliP! •lne coast guard
said tanker and other craft rescued 887 survivors.
Commodore Simeon Alejandro reported H bodies were recovered
and 59 persoos were missing following the sinking Tuesday r i.ght of the
1,3'12-ton motorshlp Don Juan.

Resident may have set fire
SAINT-JEAN-DE-LOSNE, France - &lt;Ale of the retidents may have
set Ule fire that killed 22 bedridden pensioners and seriously Injured 19
others in an old peoples' home in this small eastern French toWn,
police said Tuesday.
·
The victimil, invalids ranging in age fnm 74 to 96, were trapped in
their beds when the fire broke out shortly after 9 p.m Monday in the
Hospice de Salnt..Jean-de-Losne. \

Guardsmen join firefighters
National Guardsmen and volWJteers joined professional firefighters
in the upper Midwest Tuesday trying to head off hundreds of fires that
were kindled in a heat wave and have destroyed thousands of acres of
timberland and some fanns and homes.
But strong winds and sizzling temperatures stoked many of the fires
out of control with no rain in sight. The thermometer climbed to 100
degrees in Fargo and Grand Forks, N.D., on Monday for the first time
in any Aprtl and reached into the 90s in parts of Minnesota and WISConsin.

Ju~

denies newspaper's request

COVINGTON, Ky.- A federal judge bas denied a newspaper's formal request for a transcript of his interviews with jurors in a civU trial
stenuning from the Beverly Hills Supper Club fire.
The Enquirer bad sought a transcript of Rubin's post-trial interviews with jurors after they foWJd that a group of alwninum, wiring
and electricaf device manufacturerJ were not liable for the fire.
The May 28, 1977, fire at the Southgate nightclub resulted in the
deaths of 165 persons and injuries to 50 others.

AN AFD PROMOTION

Phannacist relinqUishes license
NASIMLLE, Tenn. - An ailing Memphis pharmacist who dispensed nearly 10,000 pills and injections for the late rock 'n' roll king Elvis
Presley agreed Tuesday to give up his state license rather than face a
hearing.
Appearing before the state Board of Pharmacy at his request, Irving
Jack Kirsch agreed to an order revoking his Ucense as a pharmacist
and the Ucense of his pharmacy, The Prescription House. The
agreement puts him out of business.

Reestablishing horse senice

I

COVINGTON, Ky.- Aplan to reestablish horse carriage service after half a century here was referred to City Manager Wally Pagan for
further study.
The' Covington City Commission took the plan Wider advisement
Tuesday night after lawyer Ed Winterberg outlined a proposal.
Winterberg told the commission that the downtown service would be
an attraction for the city's downtown redevelopment program and
help fight the energy crisis.

Weather ·
Partly cloudy and windy today, with a chance of a thWJderstonn.
Highs in the upper 70s and low 80s, then dropping to the 60s. Partly
cloudy tonight, with lows In the upper 30s and low 40s. Mostly cloudy
Thursday, with a chance of showers. Highs In the upper 40s to low 50s.
The chance of rain Is 30 percent today, 00 percent tonight and 30 percent ThursdaY.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK

Friday througb Suoday: A chance of al!owel'll Friday and Satur. day.FairSunday. Hlgbs In tbeupper50saod low lOa. Lowa1Dtbe44111.

I.

SPRING CONCERT- Members of the Meigs Hlgh School Choir, WI· t
der the direction ofT. Edwin Harkless, practice for their spring concert
slated Friday evening at 8 p.m. at the Larry Morrison Gym. Admission

will be $1 for adults and children under 12, free . Some of the selections include '•ABroken Hearted Me,'' ''Yesterday,'' ''Now Christ is Risen,'' and

"Adoramuste, Christe."

•

Kennedy, Bush Pennsylvania wznners
PHILADELPIDA (AP) - Sen.
Edward M. Kermedy squeaked past
President Carter early today to capture a Pennsylvania presidential
primary so close that the winner and
the loser woun&lt;l up aimost evenly
splitting the state's Democratic
nominating votes.
George Bush beat Ronald RA!agan,
li4 percent to 45 percent, in the
Republican primary and said of his
catchup campaign: "It's working."
Reagan said he couldn't envision circumstances that would enable Bush
to overtake him now.
The victory was crucial for Kennedy to nurse along his shaken, bigstate strategy in the cbaUenge to
Carter. Even White House press
secretary Jody Powell said it would
"certainly be a boost to him."
But the margin - Kennedy bad 47
percent of the vote, Carter 45 percent - did nothing to shake the
president's finn command in the
competition that coWJts most - for
delegates. Kennedy got 94 Pennsylvania delegates; Carter 91.
Carter emerged from Pen·
nsylvania with 1,038 rl the 1,666
votes it . will take to win the
Democratic nomination. o KeMedy
bad569.
Kennedy's slender victory was
built in Philadelphia: almost
everywhere else, Carter was the
leader.

RA!agan called the Republican
preferential prln)ary primary "a
meaningless horse race." The former ·eawomia governor said he won
what he sought, nominating
delegates.
Reagan's managers claimed he
picked up at least 50 of the state's 83
GOP delegates, but they could identity only 24 firm supporters. Rep.
William Goodling, state chainnan
for Bush, scoffed at the claim,
saying all. delegates will go to the
convention WJcommitted.
Bush, trailing by a margin of more
than 4-to-1 in total delegates, said he
doesn't believe RA!agan is too far
ahead to be beaten.
The fonner U.N. ambassador said
his effort to contrast his views with
Reagan's is starting to register with
GOP voters. Bush said that will be
his strategy tonight, when he and
Reagan meet in a televised campaign debate in Houston.
At the White House, Powell said
KeMedy ,would have to capture
almost 70 percent of the remaining
Democratic delegates to .catch the
president.
Robert Strauss, Carter's campaign manager, said the president
would gain 80 of the 77 delegates
from Missouri, which held its
Democratic coWJty caucuses on
Tuesday.
ReMedY COWJtered by saying he

had scored "a very soUd victory" in
Vermont, where he led Carter in
Tuesday's installment of
Democratic caucuses that continue
through the end of the month. That
pointed to a reversal of the judgment
rendered when Carter won the

state's March 4 primary, which did
not bind delegates.

-

With 91 percent of the Democratic
precincts coWJted, the vote stood :
KeMedy 673,929 or 47 percent.
Carter 655,780 or 45 percent.

SS recipients to get raise
WASHINGTON (AP) - The J:i.2
million persons who get Social
Security will receive a 14.3 percent
cost~f-Uving increase in July that
will put $41 more in the average
retiree's monthly check and cost the
trust funds $16.8 billion.
· The automatic hike, triggered by
Tuesday's annoWJcement of the Consumer Price Index, will boost the
total payout for Social Security in
fiscal1981 to$136.5 billion.
It mirrors a 14.3 percent rise in the
average inflation rate from the first
quarter of 1979 through the first
quarter of 1980. The catch-up in·
crease will be a few months behind
inflation when it shows up in the
JWJe benefit checks that people will
get on July 3. ·
The 4.1 million poor aged, blind
and disabled persons getting SuP'
plemental Security Income, a
welfare grant, wiU also get a 14.3
percent increase on July I .

The Socia[· Secw:ity payroU tax
already is scheduled to jump from
6.13 to 6.65 percentin 1981, and it will
be levied on income up to $29,700, up
!rem $25,700 this year. This cost-of·
Uving increase will keep pressure on
Congress not to roll back that tax
hike.
The benefit increase will boost the
average retired worker's monthly
check from $289 to $330, the Social
Security Administration said.
The maximum individual benefit
for a worker retiring at age 65 this
year will jump !rem $572 to $653.80,
an $81.80 hike.
That worker's annual Social
Security benefit will jump to
$7,845.60 a year. With an elderly
spouse getting an extra 50 percent
share, the maximum couple's
benefit will be $11,768.40.
When Social Security begln
paying benefits In 1940, the
lnaximum check for a retiree was
$41.00 a month.

·c ommissioner Jones dislikes hiring procedure
By Katie Crow
Meigs County Commission
President Richard Jones voiced
·disapproval with the procedure used
in hiring of CETA persoMel during a
meeting Tuesday with Naoma
Brinker CETA administrator.
Jones 'said he bad been contacted
by one of the applicants and was told
she bad submitted an application for
employment with CETA. Jones infanned the applicant that her application had not been presented to
the commissioners.
The applicant told Jones she was
told at the CETA office that her application had been submitted to the
conunissioners.
All three commissioners said they
had never seen the application.
Tuesday was the first time it bad
been presented to the commissioners.
Mrs. Brinker Indicated that the
application bad been misplaced.
Jones alsO said two other all'
plicants had been hired illegally since their applications had not been

A motion was made by Henry
Wells to readvertise.
Also discussed was the quality of
patching material being used by the
county highway department.
Buehl and the commission agreed
there was too much sand In the mix
missioners for review", Jones em·
however, Buehl stated that he could
pbasized.
live with it.
Also meeting with the comThe possibility of adding an admissioners was Wesley Buehl, coWJty engineer, concerning the highway ditional screen therefore
eliminating the problem was
department and aggregate bids
discussed.
.
which bad been received.
Conunissioners felt that it would
BIDS REJECTED
be better to do the work at the gravel
Following a lenghty discussion on
pit in Apple Grovel'ather than haul
the bids, Jones stepped doWll as
the
material to the county
chairman and moved to reject the
bid of Dravo Corp. because it did not ' garage.The board felt the operation,
if done at the gravel pit, would be
comply with specifications section
less costly. However, Buehl was not
allowing_ for the purchaSes by the
in full agreement.
townships at the same prices and to
alsO reject the bid of Richards and
Buehl said the material could be
processed at the county garage and
Son because the bid did not comply
with specifications In that it did no~ If too much sand was in the mix em- ·
ployes could add additiooal gravel.
specify a time period to April!, 1981.
Commissioners stressed the fact
The motion was seconded by Henry
there must be the right proportions _
Wells with all voting yea.
approved by commissioners. "I just
don't think it is fair" Jones commented.
"I don't want anyone placed on
CETA payroll until aU applications
are brought before the board of com-

and sizes of agregate mixed with the
bituminous material in order to obtain a good patching material.
No agreement was reached and it
was decided to obtain costs on both
procedures and discuss the issue at
the next meeting.
The bid of Culligan Co., for installatiOn of a water softener at a
cost•of $2,995 for the Multi-Purpose
building was accepted.
A letter was read by Mary Hobstetter, clerk, that bas been signed
by 45 citizes of Bedford Township
requesting township road 243 be
prepared for a school bus route.
Engineer Buehl is to view the area.
The corrlmissioners will not hold
an evening session Tuesday, April
29, due to a meeting in Atheos. The
meeting was recessed WJtil Friday
at2p.m. .
Attending were Jones, Henry
Wells and Chester Wells, · commissione!'S, Mary Hobstetter and
Martha Chambers •

�-

_2- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Po:ueroy, 0., Wednesday, Apr!l23, 19110

r

3- ~ Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport..Pculeroy, 0., Wednesday, April 23, 19110

Opinions
&amp; Comments

"·
) '

'•

'

_E astern, .S outhwestern, Kyger Creek post SVAC wins
'

.-------------------------·•
'

i.

runs.
Southern scored Its lone nm in the
fourth when John Pape doubled and
Bryan Wolfe singled, after an
Eastern miscue, to drive in the run.·
Brtan Bissell had a perfect night

Balanced budget
vs. turf protecting

Today is Wednesday, Aprll23, the
11~th day of 1980. There are 252 days
left in the year.
.· :roday's higbllght in history:
On this date in 1564, William
Sllakespeare was born at StratfordOftAvon in England. He died on the
·same date 52 years later.
:Aillo on this date:
Jn 1789, President-elect and Mrs.
George Washington moved into the
fulst presidential mansion at the corru!r of Franklin and Cherry streets in
New York City.
In 19ot, the United States acquired
the property' of a French company
which had tried to build the Panama
Canal.
In 1969, a Loll Angeles jury sentenced the convicted assassin of Sen.
Robert Kennedy, Sirhan Sirhan, to
death in the gas chamber. The sentence was later changed to life in
prison.
In 1971, thousands of demonstrators gathered in Washington ~

•

protest the Vietnam War.
Ten years ago: A grand jury on
Martha's Vineyard investigated the
drowning of Mary Jo Kopechne, who
!lied when Sen. Edward Kennedy's
car plunged off a bridge on nearby
Chappaqulddlck Island.
Five years ago: The SoUth Vietnamese cabinet resigned as panic
gripped Saigon, and U.S. President
Gerald Ford declared the Vietnam
War was over.
One year ago: President Carter
accused certain interests of trying to
tuin his "windfaU profits" tax into a
"charade" by givilig the money
back to the oil companies to pay for
exploration.
Today's Birthdays: Fonner child
star and U.S. diplomat Shirley Temple Black ts 52.
Thought For Today: Critics are
the men who have failed in literature
and art - Benjamin Disraeli (181M1881).

1Ucounts.
The double Kyger victory
narrowed Sou~rn's SVAC lead to
!'fll!-half game. The Tornadoes' first
league loss sets their overall mark
at5-2.
·
l{yger Creek improved to 5-2 in the
SV AC and 5-3 tn all ~ames.

In other SVAC action Tuesday, the
Southwesl.!!rn Highlanders posted
six runs in the fourth inning against
North GaWa and held on to notch
their first victory of the season, 1211. Southwestern moves to 1-4 in the
league while North Gallls falls to 1-2

Score·b oard

Eastern

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Greg Wigal fashioned a sevenhitter while Brtan Bissel slashed
four hits to lead the Eastern Eagles
to a 6-1 victory over the Southern
Tornadoes Tuesday and tighten the
Southern Valley Athletic Con{erence
baseballchase.
/
Meanwhile, the Kyger Creek Bobcats erupted for big first innings tn
sweeping a doubleheader from the
Hannan Trace Wildcats by 15-4 and

in SVAC play. Hannan Trace has yet

Class A area wrapup

EAST
W. L.PcL GB

a

Pitu~&gt;urgh

Chlcago

3

.m

63.1e71
I I .100 211
4 a .400 311

Philadelphia
Montreal

NewYori:
St. l.iJuili

47 .3644

47 .3644

Cinc!Muti

II 2
a4
6 6
87
t 9
29

Houston

San Diego

Lo:l Angeles

San FrancLsco
Atlanta

.146
.667 211
.100 411
.4621
.:Mil 7
.2228

Chicago, l ; Cromartie, Montreal, 3; Easler, Ptt-tabur&lt;h, 3.
ST6LEN BASES : Law, lllo Angeles I ;
M.......,, PltUburgh, 6; R. Scott, Monlreal, !; 0 .
SMith,San Diego, 5; 6 Tied With 4.
.

PITCIIING (!llecisi011S): LaC&lt;loa, ClncinnaU,
l.GOO, U l; Lamp, Chicago, Z.O, 1.000, 4.71;
Sosa, Montreawl, t-0, 1.000, 0.00; Bibby, Pittaburgh, M , 1.1100, ,5.3; Jackaon, Plttsburot)l, :HI,
1.000, U5; Rooker, Pittsburgh, 2-41, 1.0110, 0.7t;
3-(),

Tomlin, Cincinnati, 2-G, l.IXU, 3.815; Forscb.,
H..,ton, :HI, 1.1100, 3.29.

STRIKEOUTS;

Richard, H...too. 32; P.

Niekro, Atlanl.il, 20; Bly&amp;even, Pittsburgh, 19 ;

Sutton, Los Angeles, 17; Mont.efu.aco, San Franciscil,l1.

n.tlday'1 GUIH

to win in four attempts.
Eastern plated ali the runs they
needed in the third Inning when
Blssel followed a safety by Roger
G~ and two Southern errors with a
llne-dr,lve slnf!le to clear the bases.
Sou.ihern's lone run came In the
top half of the fourth when losing pitcher John Pape doubled and came
home on a Bryan Wolfe single.
Pape allowed just six hits, but
seven errors led to the Tornadoes'
downfall. Pape allowed just one earned run while striking out five and
walking four.
Eastern was guilty of four errors,
but Wigal made up for those miscues
by allowing no base on ballll. ·
Wolfe and Dale Teaford each led
Southern's hitting attack with a pair
of singles.
Terry Porter's twc.-RBI double
and run-producing singles off the
bats d. John Westfall, Jack Minor,
Paul Lassiter and Woody Burnett
got the Bobcats off to a ~ advantage after the opening stanza of
the first contest, while six singles,
three walks and a twc.-RBI double

Pitullurgh ~. Montreal!

IWIEBALL

Weclaaday'• Games
PIIUI&gt;urgh ( ~lyleven I).J ) at Montreal (Rogers
St. LouJs (MartinezG-1) at Chicago (Krukow 1·

"I'm sorry, Mrs. Hickle, we'll have to commit your husband until the present
rate of inflation subsides.''

Reagan camp considers primaries over
ByRobertJ. Wagman

WASHINGTON (NEA) - As far
as the Reagan camp is concerned,
the primaries are over. Ronald
Reagan may suffer several more
setbacks along the way to Detroit,
but the nomination is his, say his
followers.
This means they now can tum
their attention to November and
Jimmy Carter and they believe they
will win that election. Here ts how:
In the 1976 general election,
Gerald Ford came within a whisker
of remaining in the Oval Office. Jimmy Carter got '1!¥1 electoral votes by
winning most of the states east of the
Mississippi plus Texas, while Ford
tallied 241 electoral votes by taking
every state in the West, ' save
Hawaii, and also winning Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and New Jersey.
Had the vote turned around in just a
few states, Ford would be in the
White House still.
Basically, the Reagan forces
believe they can win in November by
holding most of those states won by
Ford and then adding a few be narrowly lost.
Among those states that went to
Carter in 1976, the Reagan forces are
already· confident they can take
Texas with its 26 electoral votes and
several states in the Deep South and
alonl! the Mason-Dixon line, such as
Alalllll!l8, Mississippi, Tennessee,
North Carolina, West Virginia and

more eonservative and Is extremely
Nominally, it iB a Democratic state.
susceptible to economic Ills.
In the last statewide vote, hoWever,
while Jerry Brown was being 1-e- · Because 1.he ~n0111&gt;: will form the
'.
basis for the Reagan cllaiienge;liiB
people say they have better than a
fighting chance in New Jersey.
Michigan: This, too, Is a
Democratic stronghold. It probably
Thus, if they can hold those states
went to Ford In 111'16 only because be
elected, Mike Curb, a RepubliCJIIl
running for lieutenant govelilor,
is a native-son: But Reagan's protecthat went Republican in 1976, thil!
tionlst trade· ar8wnenta/ ''let them
shift of about 45 electoral votes· received more votes than Bro)VIl. . ·
would be enough to ·give Reagan a
Reagan never had much trouble
(the JapaDese) sit on iJie,docks d.
carrying the state tn his races for
Yokohama, 'In their Toyotils and
victory.
But can they hold the Ford states?
governor and no state has been
watch their Sonn,"·will win·a lot of
Reagail's people say the key lies harder hit by the current economic points with those in the auto industry
with four states: California, New
problems. Reagan's people say that,
(~Y if a third of the workers
Jersey, Mlchigari and Indiana. If of the four CaJifornla will be .\(he are laldloff by Novemb!lri'as some
they can bold three of these, they say
easiest to ~ld. •
' ·, " ' :'i PfedlCt).o~ ~· ~rd. have
great hopes for Michigan, but admit
they can put together a winning
Indiana: Again, nominally a
it will be an uphill flgbt.
margin.
Democratic state. But the politicl tn
'rhe Reagan people lillY they are
As they now see It, the Ford state
aware their choi~lv~;~ mate
they ' most likely will not hold Is n- Indiana are becoming progressl~ly
might make the difference·in some
linois. While they are far from ready . more conservative and the state did
of the swing states. Foc. instance,
to concede the state to Carter, they elect a Republican senator • in
. , • ..
Howald B8ker on. the J;ICitet' could
admit lllinols will be a long uphill Richard Lugar.
Reagan's strategists say ~. ~on­
battle.
deliver :Tennessee; fJ --~ ~t went
for Carter 1n 19'181"JU¥1' m,ate a big
But, if they pick up Texas it would servative politics will aweW, .•
difference 'fu '!ever'al either border
be an even trade with lllinois (both many In Indiana who call
he
50, thiiY' sa:r. they will choose
themselves
Democrats
and
that
states.
have 26 electoral votes). So, if three
a
running
ll)ate·very carefully.
will
hold
the
state.
.
d. the "Big 4" could be held, then the
New
Jersey:
Thia
may
well
Most
of
Reljgan's
~-ey'.advisl!rs are
expected gains in the SOIIthem and
chomping,··at the bit, to ~et started
become a critical state for Reag!!!!
border states would be enough.
with the ~· The)' say they
But can Reagan bold these four tn November. Ford carried It b): le~~~~
know the press 'wllflabel'Reagan a
states? All are traditionally than 1 percent in 1976. While the
big un&lt;terdog. But they also say they
Democratic. Let's look at them one state ts solidly Democratic, haviilg
can win and they believe they know
re-elected Brendan Byrne as tta
by one:
just, holf, to go about it. They can
California : The biggest election governor two years ago despite a
hardly ~alt.
prize with 45 electoral votes. very spotty record, it Is becoming
Missouri. Their own polls shOw
Reagan doing very well against
~r in these states.

Campaign '80 ..

w,

Ohio perspective

Highway bond issue heads to defeat ,
about the shape the roads are in,
Weir said.
Part of that may be due to the mild
winter the state has enjoyed and the
relatively small crop of potholes this
spring.
The economy IBn 't helping matters, either.
Supporters of the bond Issue·have
said the money It raised could be
used to match federal highway.
,.
But the plan lias run into a stone.. dollars.
But attempts to curb inflation by
wall of opposition from the Ohio
balancing the budget resulted in
AFlrCIO.
fewer of those dollars flowing Into
"Ohio voters in the past have
Ohio this year than expected.
proved to be skeptical of such financing schemes and there's no reason ·' That sent Weir before reporters
last week to announce that twc.to expect them to be taken tn by the
thirds of his 1980 plallll had to be
snake oil salesmen on this one," the
delayed
unW the start of the new
union said tn Its April newsletter.
federal
fiscal
year Oct. 1.
In addition, there appears to be no
But
legislative
leaders and the
groundswell of public complainta

time," David L. Weir, uansportation department director,
said.
·
"I am going to continue to talk
about what we can and cannot do"
with available funds, he said. "It's
up to me to carry the ball."
Weir has forecast layoffs and service cuts for his agency if the
proposal does nC?t pass.

governor, who proposed the constitutional amendment-bond issue in
lieu ol a tax Increase to fund highway rejlalrs, have found some SliP'
port from the Ohio Chamber d. Commerce.
"Recognizing the urgent need for
ad\lltional highway and bridge construction funds, the Ohio Chamber
Bo8rd of Dlre!:tors recommends
that O,CC mepjber8 support S\ate
Issue ~ m the June ballot," the
groupAald.
It pointed out that the boild i.s8ues
would ' be finanCt!CI with revenue
generated by the highway use tu oo
·trucks BR!I one cent d. the state's 7
cents per gal1oo tu oo guollne.
· "No increaae In highway wrer
,taxes iB . bontemplated under this'
proposal, "it said.

...
WASHINGTON (APY- The Carter administration would consider
providing tax incentives as rewards
for holding down wages and prices,
but only after the federal budget ,Is
bltlanced, the , president'~ chief lnflatlbn-fight.er said today.
Alfred E. Kahn, chairman of the
president's Council on Wage and
Price Stability, also predicted the
Consumer Price Index, which has
. been climbing at an 18 percent an-.
nual rate, will drop to around 10 per-centby the end ofihe year.
• Kahn and the council director
Robert Russell, appeared before tl!

·Banking eornnilttee seeking Sllpport.
for their request for a bigger bqdget
and larger staff that would allow the
council to expand its prtce and wage

•• . ·•

In Washington
.13.

~-

- "

Congreu.
' ! Vlbe.,!ime bu,come ... to recon'·'sider' 'liD'' IncetitMia for wage and•

prtce behavior," Kahn said. "But I
don't have an optimll'tlc feeUng
-- 8boiit Cbancea' ill getting tbat ri8li

''away." ' . ·""'" '

Sen. Willlarn Proxmlre, O.Wls.,·
chalnnan of the committee, aaked . · The adJDinistration Is nploring ·
whether tax lncenUves might be of- :the palllibillty, fie added, but 11 CGII1
fered to workers who hold down . ~~about the CCIIIt r1. aucb a
their wage demands. One such plan J •;· ,plln ·.tn· terms.. .11. •balllncing the
for "wage insurance" -that would
budget.

w

New York (Bomback G-0) at Ptu!Bdelphia

( Chrute"""'l~), n

San Diego (Jones 1-1) at Atlanta (Matula 1.(1),

n

Cindnnati (Leibnmdt 1-1) at Houston (K. Forset! 2-&lt;1), n
San Francisco (Whitson G-2) 11t Los Angeles
(Goltl 0-2), n
nunc&amp;.y' • Gamn

San Diego at AUanta, n
San Francisco ~t Los Angelezi, n

Cruz,
.Ryan lead
.
.
Astros' 8-0 win
~

'

ISears I

FOOTBALL
Natloul Poolhall Lcape
ATLANTA~
· ALCONS - Announced tho
retirement of,
Brezina, linebacker:

KANSAS
Clemenb, ~uii. .
year contracts. ··

COlLEGE
';.

comrniasioner.'

MUw.11ukee

8 4 .800

llo:itoo
New York

1'.......

8 5 .ll:i 11
68.1001
15.54101

&amp;ltimore

57.U72

Delro1t
Cleveland

39 .2504
28.2004

Oakland
Chicago

9 4 .692

Teus

8 4 .le'l 11
8 8 .571 111
6 6 .5410 %11

Seattle

Kanaa, City

Minne.soto

NatiGul Hoekey Loque
PloyGfh

Qurterfblllllloud

BaloiSeveo
T'llelday'a Gamet

New York Islanders 4, Boston 2, Islanders win
series,H
Montreal&amp;, Minnesota 2, Montrealleada series

141167~

~2

Philadelphia 3, New Yorit Rangers
Phlladelphia w1n8 series 4-1
TbiU'Iday's Game

f

. THI FLEA SAG

street
Midd1epcirt, 0.
..MONDAY NIGHT IS SiNGLES NiGHT

309 North Front

WEDNESDAY NIGHT lS SUDS·NIGHT
() en Mon.-Sat. Hl:30 a.m. To l.:OO, ~.m., Closed Sunda !
•

1,

MontrealatMinneaota
Suday'• Game

6 7 .482 3

47 .3644

CllWomia

CHIEFS - Signed Tom
ck, to a series of five one-

... 'tt'~L...P.~ GB

Minnesota at Montreal , if necessary

'helday'• Games
&lt;llicago 2, BoolooO
Minnesota!, California 1
Mi.lwaukee 8, Cleveland 4
New York 5, Baltimore 4
Detrolt2, Te!WO

Eadem Coafereace Flul
Bett-el&amp;vea
Weae.day's Gamt

Kansas City 7, Toronto2

·

Seattle 5, Oakland 4
Wedlleldliy' a Game~
Chicago (Dolson H) a1llo:itoo (Stanley HI)
California (Klson ._Z) al Minne.soto (Felton I·

Cleveland (Paxton r .4J or Spillner ().1) at '
Milwaukee (Hlu&amp;s 1-1), n
Balllmore (Palmer 2~) at New York (Tian1 1·
I), n
Detroit (Morrill Z.l) at Texu (ComerO.l), n
Toronto (Clancy G-1 ) at Kan!l.u City (l.A!on.ard

._2&gt;n

Oakland (Norris :HI) at Seattle (Bannister Z0), n · ,
'lbunday'a Gaines

No gaine! scheduled

and then scored on Cabell's triple to
the right field comer.
AMEIIJCAN LEAGUE
BAITING (Zii at bats) : Staub, Teu.s, .412;
"I've just been lucky," Cruz said, S-rg.
TO!lW, .U ; Boehle, SeatUe, .llll;
winking. "Bull hope I stay lucky all
MoUtor, Milwaukee, .4J5: Nordhagen, etucago,
.400.
year."
RUNS: McRae, Kansas City, lJ i Bochte, SeatCruz' "lucky" streak helped
Ue, 11 ; Molitor, MilwaUkee, 10; Yount,
Milwaukee, 10; Murph)', Oakland, 10; OUver,
rnllllOJH!ollar-per-year Nolan Ryan T!xu,
10.
notch his first victory as an Astro
RBI: Smalley, MIMeo&lt;lta, I!; Gamble New
Y~Z; L. JohMoo, Cbicago, 12; 7 Tied With 10.
pitcher with seven Innings on the
tun: Bochte, SeatUe, 20; Watson, New Yorlt,
mound. Ryan struck out seven and Ul; Rtvers, Teus,l&amp;; MoUtor, Milwaukee, 17; L
Chiclgo,l7; Meyer,Se1We,17.
walked six and threw 1.S pitches John.ul,
season.
.DOUBlES: Morriaon, Chicago, 6; Yount,
Milwaukee, 5; D. Garcia, Toronto, 5; Baines,
"I don't go up to the plate to take over his seven-lnnl.ng stretch and
Olicago, 5; McRMe, Kanaas City, 5; Cralg, Seatsaid
afterward
he's
getting
better.
any pitches if the ball is over the
tle, 5; 11. BeU, Teu.s,5; OUver, Texas,:..
"Thia Is a typical start for me,"
TRIPLES : Powell, Mlnnesola, 3; YOWit,
plate," said Cruz, whose three-run
Mllwaukee, 2; Wilaon, Kansas City, 2; Castino,
triple and twc.-run double were all said Ryan, the American League
Minnesota, 2; Henderson, OUiand, 1.
HOME RUNS: Smalley, Minnesota, I;
the Astros needed to subdue the red- strikeout·leader with the California
Slngletoo, Balllrncn, 4: 8 Tied With 3.
Angela
last
season.
"I'm
getting
bethot Reds. "I'm surprised that
STOLEN BASES : WUsoo,Ka.nsasCity,G ; Henter each outing."
deraon, Oakland.._8; Willa, Texas, 5; Bumbry,
they've been walking Joe (Morgan)
Baltlmort, 4; J . ~,.;ruz,SeattJe, 4.
It was the first declson in three
to pitch tome.
PITCIUNG (2 Decisions); Keoogh, Oakland,~
starts for Ryan, who figures he's pit- o, 1.1100, 0.117; Honeycutt, Seattle, 3-0, 1.1100, 2.87;
"If that's what they want to do, I
Pabnor, Baltimore, :HI, 1.001!. 1.811; John, New
don't mind. I've always considered ching more on knowledge than
York, ld), 1.000, 2.16; Stleb, Toronto. 2-41, 1.000,
UO; BurtVJ, Chicago, 2-0, 1.000, 0.00; Wortham,
myself a good hitter. I'll take my talent.
Olicago, 2:0, 1.000, 0.00.
"I'm
not
as
aggressive
as
I
was
swings."
.
STRIKEOUTS; Redlern, Minneoota1 II;
MaU.o;k. Teus. 17; Guidry, New Yon&lt;, 16;
five years ago," be said. "I don't
Cruz took his first swing in the firKeough, Oakland, 15; Norris, Oakland, lt; Banst Inning after the Astros had loaded strike out as many, but I don't walk
nister, Seattle,14.
the bases on loser Frank Pastore, 2- . as many either. I hope I know more
NATIONAL LEAGUE
about pitching now. I think I pitched
BAmNG (Zii al bats): Buckner, Chicago,
~- . who yielded singles to Jef Leonard
..f62; Reitz, St. Loula, 4f7; Crcmartie, Montreal,
more on ability five Ye&amp;!'8 ago. Now I
and Craig Raynolds and walked
.436; KUwnan, Ch.lcago, 4011; R. Smith, Loll
pitch more on knowledge."
Denny Walling. Cruz emptied the
Ange1es,.4&lt;111.
RUNS &lt; J. Crm. Houstoo, 13 ; Law, Lao
Ryan did not dominate the Reds,
bases with his triple.
Allgeles, 12; ' Foil, Pittl!!w1h, 11 ; Boncb, st.
allowing
runners
to
reach
third
base
l.iJuili, 11; Coocepclon, ClncmnaU, 11; Collins,
After Astros third baseman Enos
in each d. the first two Innings. And , CincinnaU, n .
. Cabell plated two more runs with
RBI : J . Croz,Houstoo. II: Klngmon, Chicago,
It was obvious that Ryan was tiring
13: Sclunldt. Philadelphia, 12; CObell, Houston,
sacrifice flies, Cruz came up again
G..,ey, Loo Angeles, 12; WWield, San
tn the fourth with a twiH'IIII double , in the seventh innnlng, when he 12;
Diego, 12.
walked two.
HITS ; R. Smith, Los Angeles, 2CI; Buckner,
Chicago, II; Law, Loo Angeles, 18; CromarUe,
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - , "I was ready to come out," Ryan
Monlroll, 17; R.lt., St. Louts, 17; Hendrick, St.
said. "If I had struggled through two
Louis,17; CabeU, Houston,17; J . Cru1t HOUlton,
more tnntngs, It might have jeopar- 17.
DOUBLES : SWirM , New Yort, I ; Parri&gt;h,
Authorized CATALOG
dized my next start. With an 8-0 lead,
Montreel, ~: McBride, PlilladelphJa, 5; KnJiht,
SALES MERCHANT
CincinnaU,5; Baker, Los Anceles,5.
there was no reason to stay in."
TRIPLES; McBride, Plliladelphla, 2; K. H..,.
"There's not too much to say, they
nancle%, St. Louts, 2; Bol1da, St. t:mia, Z; Knl&amp;hl.
CinclnnoU, Z: Griffey, Clnc!MuU, Z; Law, Loo
ju.st outplayed us," said Cincinnati
Angela,!; May, San Frondl&lt;o, I .
ManagerJobnMcNamars. "Ask the
HOME RUNS: Klll8man, Chicago, 5; Sclunldt,
players what they thougllt of Ryan, · Pllli&gt;delohla, 4; Lu:Unsld, Plilladelohla, I;
For~ter, CinclnnaU, 4; Foote, ChiCIII(], 3; MarUn,
PIIOneft2..217i
they're the ones who had to face
101 W. Meln St.
him.
Pomeroy, D.
OWNED AND OPERATED IIY
"There's no big secret what hap.
Jeck &amp; JUdy Wlllhlms
pened.
Our pitching wasn't as conOpen: Mon. tllru w.... H
sistent as it has been and we didn't
Thurs. 9·12. Fri. 9·5, Sat. H
get the timely hits. Let's give some
setlsfioctlon GuarantHCI
or Your MIIMY Back
ol the credit to Houston."

HOUSTON (AP) - Houston left
fielder Jose Cruz leads a Jekyl-Hyde
exlstt:nce depending on whether he
has a glove or bat in his hand.
Often booed by Astros fans for his
fielding blunders, Cruz was a hero
with the bat Tuesday night with five
runs batted tn on a triple a!lll double
as the Astros ahut out Cincinnati8.o
for the Reds' worst outing of the

assignment.

PACIFIC cQ)sT ATillE TIC ASSOClATION
- Nwned DefiWI.9 Farrell an assistant to the

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Marauder gals
remain unbeaten

May , pitther. Designated Jim Kaat, pitcher, for

ball coaclt.

Only games scheduled

EAST

CALIFORNAI ANGELS - PLaced Brian
llowniJ&gt;&lt;, catcher, on tho 15-&lt;lay diaabled list. A.,.
livated Merv Rettenmund, outfielder.
NEW YORK YANKEES - Activated R•dy

HOFSTRA - Nllllled Dick Berg, head basket. ·

I)

Wldm

creased to 637 next year.
Protect cov'~red
who ac- .
Kahn and Ruasell also denied •,,.cepted wage increUes r1. no Dl!ll'l! ,
published reports that they want to :_.: than,7 ~was p!'OpOIIed by Car- !·
leave the administration.
· tiir two years ago but rejected by '

------~
. ~ ---------

monitoring actiVIties.
The Carter administration has .
7 rnilUon for the council
aaked
this flscal year and ~ million for
the neld, which begins on Oct. 1.'11Ml·
council ~taff, now 237, would be In-

nlngs.
BY SCOIT WOLFE
Meigs ra1lled in the fourth for its
ATHENS- The Athens Bulldogs
two
runs when Jerry Fields was hit
defeated Meigs' Marauders, 16-2, In
by
a
pitch, followed by singles from
an SEOAL baseball contest here
Terry
and Jeff Wayland, a walk, and
Tuesday. Athens picked up its •
second win in as nlany nights In- a passed ball with Steve Ohlinger at
the plate.
creasing its record to 2-9. The young
Meigs pitchers combined for four
Meigs squad dropped to 2-1.
Bulldog pitcher Jeff Bush went the strike outs and nine walks while
distance, scattering four hits, fan- giving up 11 hits. Meigs conunltted
two errors .while Athens eollected
ning four and walking ju.st two Meigs
· four.
batters.
Athens was led in hitting by Greg
The game was even to the end with
Nuzum's
two singles, Jeff Bush's
the exception of a very devastating
two
doubles,
Chris Tenaglia's double
Ullrd inning when the Athens bats
and
single,
and
Cooksey's triple.
caught ftre and knocked starting pitMeig~~
hitters
were Fields, the
cher Tom Owens out of the box.
boys,
and
Tom Owens.
Wayland
Roger Kovalchik was called upon
Meigs
plays
W
ahama
Thursday
. to put out the fire, but when the
and Logan Friday.
smoke had finally cleared, Athens
Linescore:
had plated eight runs on five singles,
008 110 x-10 11 4
Athens
three walks, and a clinching blow by
Meigs
000 200 0-2 4 2
Jim Cooksey who slanuned a triple.
Batteries: Bush WP, and Fred
The nine walks given up by Meigs
Ross.
pitching led to its downfall. Several
Owens, Kovalchik, J. Wayland,
of those walks turned Into Bulldog
Dave
Demosky, and T. Wayland.
runs. Athens scored single runs for
insurance tn the fourth and fifth In-

0)

AmerlcaDLeope

Booton •1 Phlladelpblo

Frldl~'• Game

Booton at Philadelphia
SaDday'• Game

PHiladelphia at 8cBton
W"'-doy , Aptit:ll
llo:iton a1 Philadelphia, if neceosary
Friday, May!
Philadelphia at Boston if IW!C.'e!ISI.ry
Wa&amp;e111Coafereoee Ft..l

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
Marauders girls' softball squad
remained undefeated in the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
by downing Jackson 7-6 with a come
from behind victory Monday.
The Meigs girls were trailing HI in
the first two Innings of play, but then
erupted for four very important runs
in the third on run-scoring hits by
Pam Crooks, Terri Wilson, and
Sherri Ughtfoot.
Sonia Ash drove iii the fourth nm
of the inning on a deep sacrifice fly.
Sheri Ughtfoot smacked a solo
home run in the fifth inning for an Insurance run for the Marauders.
Meigs is now 7-1 overall and owns
a perfect~ mark within the league.
Ann Green led Jackson hitters With a
long home run and a double. Jack.son
dropped to 6-3 overall and 6-2 in the
SEOAL.
I..i.nescore :
Meigs
004 210 x-7 7 3
Jackson
100 002 ()...5 5 6
Batteries: Bartrum and Zirkle.
Fannin and Marek.

..-.s..e.

'hetdly'sGame
SeatUe 101, U. Angeles 107, Seattle luds
1.0

~rie:i

WtdDelday'a Game
SelttUeat Los Angeles
Friday's Game
LMAngeluatSeaWe
Sadly's Game
Los Angeles at SeatUe
Wedllel4ay,April.
Seattle at Los Angeles, lf necessary
Fri&lt;lay, May!
lA A.ngele.5 at SeaWe,lf necea&amp;lJ"Y

L·ong Bottoni
News Notes
BY MELODY ROBERTS
Mr. and Mrs. Red Crispin have
returned illlne after a week's
vacation with their daughter, Unda,
and family. Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Reyes, Moblle, Ala., and a week's
vacation with their daughter; Dee
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
O'Neill, Jacksonville, Fla.
Recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs.
Red Crispin have been their
daughter, Ann, and two children,
Jerry, Stockdale, Mr. and Mrs .
Ralph Bowman, Newark; Mr. and
Mn. John Brewer, Mr. and Mrs.
Gartltftmlth, Reedsville.
Guests of Mr. 1 and Mrs. Dorsal
· Larkins have been Mr. and Mrs. .
· Steve~ and sons, Gallipolis;
· Mike La
of Cheshire.
Callers I! ' the home of Mr. and
Mrs. PaullJauber have been Clyde
Adams,~
. ~ ; Dale Evans and
Tanya
end from Logan; Mr.
and Mrs. ' ' wrence Johnston and
Jeremy, Mr. and Mrs. David Dalley,
Rae Lynn, Portland; Ronnie Swain,
Reedsville; Cindy Thomas, local;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sinclair and
Mn, Ora Sinclair, Sumner Road;
Lucile Kimes and daughters, local.

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

·Administration considers tax incentives

, ·; "Didn't your mommy ever tell you It's not polite
to point?"

Tllcoday'o Spano TruoacUODI

Loo Angel.. a, San FlllllCiscvo

1·2)

.

.'

Atlanta i, San otego 2, 10 lnnings
HOIJ.'Itoo8, Cincinnati 0

Meigs loses 10-2

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - There
are increasing Indications around
the Statehouse that a highway bond
issue on the June 3 ballot is heading
down the road to defeat.
Voters will ultimately decide
whether borrowing $500 million over
the next five years thrQugh bond
sales ts the method that should be
used to repair some of ..the state's
highways and bridges. ·:
'They have rejected similar plans
proposed by Gov. Jam~~· Rhodes
twice before, although bQUl involved
much larger amounts of cash.
But those proposals failed despite
. expensive media adverti$1g blitzes
in their behalf, and backers reportedly aren't planning to wage a
similar effort this time around.
"There were complaints because
there was too much hard sell the last

Berry's World

.

leading the Ea~es with a double and
three singles, Steve Chrlsman a
singleandRogerGaulasingle.
Bryan Wolfe and Dale Teaford led
Sol,lthe[ll with two singles &amp;Qiece
while John Pape and Kent Wolfe
both doubled. Joe Bob Hemsley also
banged a single for Sou.thern.
Eastern pla)'s Southwestern tn an
SVAC . contest on Thursday.
Southern travels to Alexander Wednesday then on to Kyger Creek on
Thursday.
Llnescore:
Southern
000 100 0-1 7 7
000 300 CHI 6 4
Batteries: Greg Wigal WP, and
Brian Bissell.
John Pape LP, and Jay Rees.

Cbic•go 16, St. Loois 1%
Philade)phla 14, New York 8

The U.S. House of Representatives expects to settle a
crucial argument between its Budget Committee and most
·of its le~islative committee chairmen this week. At issue is
:.a question that is key to a balanced budget: Can committees be forced to cut b&amp;ck on their favored programs?
,. Sixteen committee chairmen have banded together to
, fight a directive proposed · by the House Budget Com·.mittee. They are angered that the committee has specified
•amounts that each of seven House committees should cut,
and that it is asking the full House of Representatives to
::endorse these cuts, which total more than $9 billion in
'.existin~ programs. The chairmen say the directive "in.fringes 'on the authority of the legislative committees.
: · No one believes that bringing more discipline to the
· budget process will be easy. Members of Congress may
talk like fiscal conservatives, but they are likely to vote
like high spenders.
Finance Committee Chairman Russell Long (D-La.)
spoke for many in Congress when he said, ''I could muster
the statesmanship to vote for almost anything that saves
money as long as it didn't affect my smte."
When it reaches a decision in Congress Ofl whether to order committees to hold to the budget resolution's program
ceilings, the public's insistence on a balanced budget will
run up against both the committee's tradition of protecting
their turf and interest groups' pressures against cuts in individual programs.
Congress should not-but, probably will-hold out a
resolution to the American voting public this spring, only
to take it away in the fall by failing to carry out its
promises.
·

Today in history. .

RACINE - Greg Wigal pitched
the Eastern Eagles to a 6-2 win over
the Southern Tornadoes bere
Tuesday night in SVAC baseball actlon. Wigal; who was never tn
serious trouble, scattered seven hits
allowing no walks while fanninR four
in gotng the distance for the Eagles.
Eastern is now 2-1 in the SVAC and 47 '!"erall, while Southern is 5-1 'in the
league, 5-2 overall.
Southern pitcher John Pape
hurled a fine game, but seven costly
errors led to his downfall as the
Southern infield literally fell apart
at crucial points in the game.
Pape walked four, hit one batter
and f~ed five in going the dlstan~
while the Eagles earnl!d just one run
off the Southern righthander.
The Eagles scored all the runs
they needed in the seCond inning on a
single off the bat of Roger Gaul, two
errors, and a line single by Brtan
Bissell to produce three Eastern

FiSH SQUARE •••••• 694
WITH FRIES •••• ••••$109
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
992-2556

570 w. Main
Parner'ftY. 0,

DRAFT
ftt_ITE
TUESDAYS
9 P.M. to
12

LADIES
.NIJE_.

THURSDAYS
9
· to

-

12

CITY
:, DRIVE THRU . .
IJ741 N, 2nd St. . Middleport, 0.

fi'OIII Bruce Gilmore staked Kyger to :
a 7.0 bulge after thecfirst frame fl. ·
theflnale.
·
The Bobcats sent 15 batters io the
_plate and added nine Dl!ll'l! tallles tn :
the second Inning d. the licinfter to :
support the two-hit pitching of win: ·
ner Gilmore and Steve Flint.
WUUe Noble went the first four in- . ·
nings of the second contest to recwd :

:=v::~r~~~ha~·:

three-run comeback bid tn the fifth. '
IITHS' Tim Beaver and Kelly :
Petrie, both knocked off the mound
after one tnntng, were charged with ,
the losses.
:
Smith pounded five hits in seven at
hats of the twin-bill while John Amos ..
and Gilmore collected three hits tn
five trips. WesUall added a triple .
and double In posting a 4-f~ effort. :
Beaver collected two Wildcat hits
In the second contest while Petrie,
Toby Sheets and Mike Waugh addecl
doubles to Hannan Trace's elglrt.-hl( ·
attack.
·
Scott R118Sell swatted a triple and
Todd Baker a twc.-RBI double to
higbllght Southwestern's six-nm
fourth.
The Highlanders gathered a run in
the first inning, three in the second
and two in the third to offset a fOUI'nm first by the Pirates.
Keith Sizemore picked up the vi~
tory with two Innings of relief won
for Russell. Wayne Sizemore came
on tn the sixth to record the save.
NGHS starter Don Shupe went tile
distance in taking U.: &amp;..:. . Shupe
pitched ahutout ball the last three
frames, walked seven and fanned
two.
Tim Howell, Barry Marcum and
John Church led the five-hit North
Gallls attaCk with doubles.
Jay Burleson, Russell and Keith
Sizemore each rapped a pair d. hits
for the winners, who had 11 hits.

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Com·
missiofl of Ohio has set for
public hearing Case No .
79-232-EL-FAC (Sub·
file A1 to review the fuel
procurement practices and
policies of Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
Company, the operation
of its Fuel Cost Adjust·
ment Clause, and related
matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at 9:30
a.m. on April 28, 1980, at
the Commission's Offices,
180 East Broad Street,
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
All interested persons will
be given an opportunity to
be heard . Further infor·
mation may be obtained
by contacting the Commis·
sien .

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By :
David M. Polk,

Secretary .

�-

_2- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Po:ueroy, 0., Wednesday, Apr!l23, 19110

r

3- ~ Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport..Pculeroy, 0., Wednesday, April 23, 19110

Opinions
&amp; Comments

"·
) '

'•

'

_E astern, .S outhwestern, Kyger Creek post SVAC wins
'

.-------------------------·•
'

i.

runs.
Southern scored Its lone nm in the
fourth when John Pape doubled and
Bryan Wolfe singled, after an
Eastern miscue, to drive in the run.·
Brtan Bissell had a perfect night

Balanced budget
vs. turf protecting

Today is Wednesday, Aprll23, the
11~th day of 1980. There are 252 days
left in the year.
.· :roday's higbllght in history:
On this date in 1564, William
Sllakespeare was born at StratfordOftAvon in England. He died on the
·same date 52 years later.
:Aillo on this date:
Jn 1789, President-elect and Mrs.
George Washington moved into the
fulst presidential mansion at the corru!r of Franklin and Cherry streets in
New York City.
In 19ot, the United States acquired
the property' of a French company
which had tried to build the Panama
Canal.
In 1969, a Loll Angeles jury sentenced the convicted assassin of Sen.
Robert Kennedy, Sirhan Sirhan, to
death in the gas chamber. The sentence was later changed to life in
prison.
In 1971, thousands of demonstrators gathered in Washington ~

•

protest the Vietnam War.
Ten years ago: A grand jury on
Martha's Vineyard investigated the
drowning of Mary Jo Kopechne, who
!lied when Sen. Edward Kennedy's
car plunged off a bridge on nearby
Chappaqulddlck Island.
Five years ago: The SoUth Vietnamese cabinet resigned as panic
gripped Saigon, and U.S. President
Gerald Ford declared the Vietnam
War was over.
One year ago: President Carter
accused certain interests of trying to
tuin his "windfaU profits" tax into a
"charade" by givilig the money
back to the oil companies to pay for
exploration.
Today's Birthdays: Fonner child
star and U.S. diplomat Shirley Temple Black ts 52.
Thought For Today: Critics are
the men who have failed in literature
and art - Benjamin Disraeli (181M1881).

1Ucounts.
The double Kyger victory
narrowed Sou~rn's SVAC lead to
!'fll!-half game. The Tornadoes' first
league loss sets their overall mark
at5-2.
·
l{yger Creek improved to 5-2 in the
SV AC and 5-3 tn all ~ames.

In other SVAC action Tuesday, the
Southwesl.!!rn Highlanders posted
six runs in the fourth inning against
North GaWa and held on to notch
their first victory of the season, 1211. Southwestern moves to 1-4 in the
league while North Gallls falls to 1-2

Score·b oard

Eastern

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Greg Wigal fashioned a sevenhitter while Brtan Bissel slashed
four hits to lead the Eastern Eagles
to a 6-1 victory over the Southern
Tornadoes Tuesday and tighten the
Southern Valley Athletic Con{erence
baseballchase.
/
Meanwhile, the Kyger Creek Bobcats erupted for big first innings tn
sweeping a doubleheader from the
Hannan Trace Wildcats by 15-4 and

in SVAC play. Hannan Trace has yet

Class A area wrapup

EAST
W. L.PcL GB

a

Pitu~&gt;urgh

Chlcago

3

.m

63.1e71
I I .100 211
4 a .400 311

Philadelphia
Montreal

NewYori:
St. l.iJuili

47 .3644

47 .3644

Cinc!Muti

II 2
a4
6 6
87
t 9
29

Houston

San Diego

Lo:l Angeles

San FrancLsco
Atlanta

.146
.667 211
.100 411
.4621
.:Mil 7
.2228

Chicago, l ; Cromartie, Montreal, 3; Easler, Ptt-tabur&lt;h, 3.
ST6LEN BASES : Law, lllo Angeles I ;
M.......,, PltUburgh, 6; R. Scott, Monlreal, !; 0 .
SMith,San Diego, 5; 6 Tied With 4.
.

PITCIIING (!llecisi011S): LaC&lt;loa, ClncinnaU,
l.GOO, U l; Lamp, Chicago, Z.O, 1.000, 4.71;
Sosa, Montreawl, t-0, 1.000, 0.00; Bibby, Pittaburgh, M , 1.1100, ,5.3; Jackaon, Plttsburot)l, :HI,
1.000, U5; Rooker, Pittsburgh, 2-41, 1.0110, 0.7t;
3-(),

Tomlin, Cincinnati, 2-G, l.IXU, 3.815; Forscb.,
H..,ton, :HI, 1.1100, 3.29.

STRIKEOUTS;

Richard, H...too. 32; P.

Niekro, Atlanl.il, 20; Bly&amp;even, Pittsburgh, 19 ;

Sutton, Los Angeles, 17; Mont.efu.aco, San Franciscil,l1.

n.tlday'1 GUIH

to win in four attempts.
Eastern plated ali the runs they
needed in the third Inning when
Blssel followed a safety by Roger
G~ and two Southern errors with a
llne-dr,lve slnf!le to clear the bases.
Sou.ihern's lone run came In the
top half of the fourth when losing pitcher John Pape doubled and came
home on a Bryan Wolfe single.
Pape allowed just six hits, but
seven errors led to the Tornadoes'
downfall. Pape allowed just one earned run while striking out five and
walking four.
Eastern was guilty of four errors,
but Wigal made up for those miscues
by allowing no base on ballll. ·
Wolfe and Dale Teaford each led
Southern's hitting attack with a pair
of singles.
Terry Porter's twc.-RBI double
and run-producing singles off the
bats d. John Westfall, Jack Minor,
Paul Lassiter and Woody Burnett
got the Bobcats off to a ~ advantage after the opening stanza of
the first contest, while six singles,
three walks and a twc.-RBI double

Pitullurgh ~. Montreal!

IWIEBALL

Weclaaday'• Games
PIIUI&gt;urgh ( ~lyleven I).J ) at Montreal (Rogers
St. LouJs (MartinezG-1) at Chicago (Krukow 1·

"I'm sorry, Mrs. Hickle, we'll have to commit your husband until the present
rate of inflation subsides.''

Reagan camp considers primaries over
ByRobertJ. Wagman

WASHINGTON (NEA) - As far
as the Reagan camp is concerned,
the primaries are over. Ronald
Reagan may suffer several more
setbacks along the way to Detroit,
but the nomination is his, say his
followers.
This means they now can tum
their attention to November and
Jimmy Carter and they believe they
will win that election. Here ts how:
In the 1976 general election,
Gerald Ford came within a whisker
of remaining in the Oval Office. Jimmy Carter got '1!¥1 electoral votes by
winning most of the states east of the
Mississippi plus Texas, while Ford
tallied 241 electoral votes by taking
every state in the West, ' save
Hawaii, and also winning Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and New Jersey.
Had the vote turned around in just a
few states, Ford would be in the
White House still.
Basically, the Reagan forces
believe they can win in November by
holding most of those states won by
Ford and then adding a few be narrowly lost.
Among those states that went to
Carter in 1976, the Reagan forces are
already· confident they can take
Texas with its 26 electoral votes and
several states in the Deep South and
alonl! the Mason-Dixon line, such as
Alalllll!l8, Mississippi, Tennessee,
North Carolina, West Virginia and

more eonservative and Is extremely
Nominally, it iB a Democratic state.
susceptible to economic Ills.
In the last statewide vote, hoWever,
while Jerry Brown was being 1-e- · Because 1.he ~n0111&gt;: will form the
'.
basis for the Reagan cllaiienge;liiB
people say they have better than a
fighting chance in New Jersey.
Michigan: This, too, Is a
Democratic stronghold. It probably
Thus, if they can hold those states
went to Ford In 111'16 only because be
elected, Mike Curb, a RepubliCJIIl
running for lieutenant govelilor,
is a native-son: But Reagan's protecthat went Republican in 1976, thil!
tionlst trade· ar8wnenta/ ''let them
shift of about 45 electoral votes· received more votes than Bro)VIl. . ·
would be enough to ·give Reagan a
Reagan never had much trouble
(the JapaDese) sit on iJie,docks d.
carrying the state tn his races for
Yokohama, 'In their Toyotils and
victory.
But can they hold the Ford states?
governor and no state has been
watch their Sonn,"·will win·a lot of
Reagail's people say the key lies harder hit by the current economic points with those in the auto industry
with four states: California, New
problems. Reagan's people say that,
(~Y if a third of the workers
Jersey, Mlchigari and Indiana. If of the four CaJifornla will be .\(he are laldloff by Novemb!lri'as some
they can bold three of these, they say
easiest to ~ld. •
' ·, " ' :'i PfedlCt).o~ ~· ~rd. have
great hopes for Michigan, but admit
they can put together a winning
Indiana: Again, nominally a
it will be an uphill flgbt.
margin.
Democratic state. But the politicl tn
'rhe Reagan people lillY they are
As they now see It, the Ford state
aware their choi~lv~;~ mate
they ' most likely will not hold Is n- Indiana are becoming progressl~ly
might make the difference·in some
linois. While they are far from ready . more conservative and the state did
of the swing states. Foc. instance,
to concede the state to Carter, they elect a Republican senator • in
. , • ..
Howald B8ker on. the J;ICitet' could
admit lllinols will be a long uphill Richard Lugar.
Reagan's strategists say ~. ~on­
battle.
deliver :Tennessee; fJ --~ ~t went
for Carter 1n 19'181"JU¥1' m,ate a big
But, if they pick up Texas it would servative politics will aweW, .•
difference 'fu '!ever'al either border
be an even trade with lllinois (both many In Indiana who call
he
50, thiiY' sa:r. they will choose
themselves
Democrats
and
that
states.
have 26 electoral votes). So, if three
a
running
ll)ate·very carefully.
will
hold
the
state.
.
d. the "Big 4" could be held, then the
New
Jersey:
Thia
may
well
Most
of
Reljgan's
~-ey'.advisl!rs are
expected gains in the SOIIthem and
chomping,··at the bit, to ~et started
become a critical state for Reag!!!!
border states would be enough.
with the ~· The)' say they
But can Reagan bold these four tn November. Ford carried It b): le~~~~
know the press 'wllflabel'Reagan a
states? All are traditionally than 1 percent in 1976. While the
big un&lt;terdog. But they also say they
Democratic. Let's look at them one state ts solidly Democratic, haviilg
can win and they believe they know
re-elected Brendan Byrne as tta
by one:
just, holf, to go about it. They can
California : The biggest election governor two years ago despite a
hardly ~alt.
prize with 45 electoral votes. very spotty record, it Is becoming
Missouri. Their own polls shOw
Reagan doing very well against
~r in these states.

Campaign '80 ..

w,

Ohio perspective

Highway bond issue heads to defeat ,
about the shape the roads are in,
Weir said.
Part of that may be due to the mild
winter the state has enjoyed and the
relatively small crop of potholes this
spring.
The economy IBn 't helping matters, either.
Supporters of the bond Issue·have
said the money It raised could be
used to match federal highway.
,.
But the plan lias run into a stone.. dollars.
But attempts to curb inflation by
wall of opposition from the Ohio
balancing the budget resulted in
AFlrCIO.
fewer of those dollars flowing Into
"Ohio voters in the past have
Ohio this year than expected.
proved to be skeptical of such financing schemes and there's no reason ·' That sent Weir before reporters
last week to announce that twc.to expect them to be taken tn by the
thirds of his 1980 plallll had to be
snake oil salesmen on this one," the
delayed
unW the start of the new
union said tn Its April newsletter.
federal
fiscal
year Oct. 1.
In addition, there appears to be no
But
legislative
leaders and the
groundswell of public complainta

time," David L. Weir, uansportation department director,
said.
·
"I am going to continue to talk
about what we can and cannot do"
with available funds, he said. "It's
up to me to carry the ball."
Weir has forecast layoffs and service cuts for his agency if the
proposal does nC?t pass.

governor, who proposed the constitutional amendment-bond issue in
lieu ol a tax Increase to fund highway rejlalrs, have found some SliP'
port from the Ohio Chamber d. Commerce.
"Recognizing the urgent need for
ad\lltional highway and bridge construction funds, the Ohio Chamber
Bo8rd of Dlre!:tors recommends
that O,CC mepjber8 support S\ate
Issue ~ m the June ballot," the
groupAald.
It pointed out that the boild i.s8ues
would ' be finanCt!CI with revenue
generated by the highway use tu oo
·trucks BR!I one cent d. the state's 7
cents per gal1oo tu oo guollne.
· "No increaae In highway wrer
,taxes iB . bontemplated under this'
proposal, "it said.

...
WASHINGTON (APY- The Carter administration would consider
providing tax incentives as rewards
for holding down wages and prices,
but only after the federal budget ,Is
bltlanced, the , president'~ chief lnflatlbn-fight.er said today.
Alfred E. Kahn, chairman of the
president's Council on Wage and
Price Stability, also predicted the
Consumer Price Index, which has
. been climbing at an 18 percent an-.
nual rate, will drop to around 10 per-centby the end ofihe year.
• Kahn and the council director
Robert Russell, appeared before tl!

·Banking eornnilttee seeking Sllpport.
for their request for a bigger bqdget
and larger staff that would allow the
council to expand its prtce and wage

•• . ·•

In Washington
.13.

~-

- "

Congreu.
' ! Vlbe.,!ime bu,come ... to recon'·'sider' 'liD'' IncetitMia for wage and•

prtce behavior," Kahn said. "But I
don't have an optimll'tlc feeUng
-- 8boiit Cbancea' ill getting tbat ri8li

''away." ' . ·""'" '

Sen. Willlarn Proxmlre, O.Wls.,·
chalnnan of the committee, aaked . · The adJDinistration Is nploring ·
whether tax lncenUves might be of- :the palllibillty, fie added, but 11 CGII1
fered to workers who hold down . ~~about the CCIIIt r1. aucb a
their wage demands. One such plan J •;· ,plln ·.tn· terms.. .11. •balllncing the
for "wage insurance" -that would
budget.

w

New York (Bomback G-0) at Ptu!Bdelphia

( Chrute"""'l~), n

San Diego (Jones 1-1) at Atlanta (Matula 1.(1),

n

Cindnnati (Leibnmdt 1-1) at Houston (K. Forset! 2-&lt;1), n
San Francisco (Whitson G-2) 11t Los Angeles
(Goltl 0-2), n
nunc&amp;.y' • Gamn

San Diego at AUanta, n
San Francisco ~t Los Angelezi, n

Cruz,
.Ryan lead
.
.
Astros' 8-0 win
~

'

ISears I

FOOTBALL
Natloul Poolhall Lcape
ATLANTA~
· ALCONS - Announced tho
retirement of,
Brezina, linebacker:

KANSAS
Clemenb, ~uii. .
year contracts. ··

COlLEGE
';.

comrniasioner.'

MUw.11ukee

8 4 .800

llo:itoo
New York

1'.......

8 5 .ll:i 11
68.1001
15.54101

&amp;ltimore

57.U72

Delro1t
Cleveland

39 .2504
28.2004

Oakland
Chicago

9 4 .692

Teus

8 4 .le'l 11
8 8 .571 111
6 6 .5410 %11

Seattle

Kanaa, City

Minne.soto

NatiGul Hoekey Loque
PloyGfh

Qurterfblllllloud

BaloiSeveo
T'llelday'a Gamet

New York Islanders 4, Boston 2, Islanders win
series,H
Montreal&amp;, Minnesota 2, Montrealleada series

141167~

~2

Philadelphia 3, New Yorit Rangers
Phlladelphia w1n8 series 4-1
TbiU'Iday's Game

f

. THI FLEA SAG

street
Midd1epcirt, 0.
..MONDAY NIGHT IS SiNGLES NiGHT

309 North Front

WEDNESDAY NIGHT lS SUDS·NIGHT
() en Mon.-Sat. Hl:30 a.m. To l.:OO, ~.m., Closed Sunda !
•

1,

MontrealatMinneaota
Suday'• Game

6 7 .482 3

47 .3644

CllWomia

CHIEFS - Signed Tom
ck, to a series of five one-

... 'tt'~L...P.~ GB

Minnesota at Montreal , if necessary

'helday'• Games
&lt;llicago 2, BoolooO
Minnesota!, California 1
Mi.lwaukee 8, Cleveland 4
New York 5, Baltimore 4
Detrolt2, Te!WO

Eadem Coafereace Flul
Bett-el&amp;vea
Weae.day's Gamt

Kansas City 7, Toronto2

·

Seattle 5, Oakland 4
Wedlleldliy' a Game~
Chicago (Dolson H) a1llo:itoo (Stanley HI)
California (Klson ._Z) al Minne.soto (Felton I·

Cleveland (Paxton r .4J or Spillner ().1) at '
Milwaukee (Hlu&amp;s 1-1), n
Balllmore (Palmer 2~) at New York (Tian1 1·
I), n
Detroit (Morrill Z.l) at Texu (ComerO.l), n
Toronto (Clancy G-1 ) at Kan!l.u City (l.A!on.ard

._2&gt;n

Oakland (Norris :HI) at Seattle (Bannister Z0), n · ,
'lbunday'a Gaines

No gaine! scheduled

and then scored on Cabell's triple to
the right field comer.
AMEIIJCAN LEAGUE
BAITING (Zii at bats) : Staub, Teu.s, .412;
"I've just been lucky," Cruz said, S-rg.
TO!lW, .U ; Boehle, SeatUe, .llll;
winking. "Bull hope I stay lucky all
MoUtor, Milwaukee, .4J5: Nordhagen, etucago,
.400.
year."
RUNS: McRae, Kansas City, lJ i Bochte, SeatCruz' "lucky" streak helped
Ue, 11 ; Molitor, MilwaUkee, 10; Yount,
Milwaukee, 10; Murph)', Oakland, 10; OUver,
rnllllOJH!ollar-per-year Nolan Ryan T!xu,
10.
notch his first victory as an Astro
RBI: Smalley, MIMeo&lt;lta, I!; Gamble New
Y~Z; L. JohMoo, Cbicago, 12; 7 Tied With 10.
pitcher with seven Innings on the
tun: Bochte, SeatUe, 20; Watson, New Yorlt,
mound. Ryan struck out seven and Ul; Rtvers, Teus,l&amp;; MoUtor, Milwaukee, 17; L
Chiclgo,l7; Meyer,Se1We,17.
walked six and threw 1.S pitches John.ul,
season.
.DOUBlES: Morriaon, Chicago, 6; Yount,
Milwaukee, 5; D. Garcia, Toronto, 5; Baines,
"I don't go up to the plate to take over his seven-lnnl.ng stretch and
Olicago, 5; McRMe, Kanaas City, 5; Cralg, Seatsaid
afterward
he's
getting
better.
any pitches if the ball is over the
tle, 5; 11. BeU, Teu.s,5; OUver, Texas,:..
"Thia Is a typical start for me,"
TRIPLES : Powell, Mlnnesola, 3; YOWit,
plate," said Cruz, whose three-run
Mllwaukee, 2; Wilaon, Kansas City, 2; Castino,
triple and twc.-run double were all said Ryan, the American League
Minnesota, 2; Henderson, OUiand, 1.
HOME RUNS: Smalley, Minnesota, I;
the Astros needed to subdue the red- strikeout·leader with the California
Slngletoo, Balllrncn, 4: 8 Tied With 3.
Angela
last
season.
"I'm
getting
bethot Reds. "I'm surprised that
STOLEN BASES : WUsoo,Ka.nsasCity,G ; Henter each outing."
deraon, Oakland.._8; Willa, Texas, 5; Bumbry,
they've been walking Joe (Morgan)
Baltlmort, 4; J . ~,.;ruz,SeattJe, 4.
It was the first declson in three
to pitch tome.
PITCIUNG (2 Decisions); Keoogh, Oakland,~
starts for Ryan, who figures he's pit- o, 1.1100, 0.117; Honeycutt, Seattle, 3-0, 1.1100, 2.87;
"If that's what they want to do, I
Pabnor, Baltimore, :HI, 1.001!. 1.811; John, New
don't mind. I've always considered ching more on knowledge than
York, ld), 1.000, 2.16; Stleb, Toronto. 2-41, 1.000,
UO; BurtVJ, Chicago, 2-0, 1.000, 0.00; Wortham,
myself a good hitter. I'll take my talent.
Olicago, 2:0, 1.000, 0.00.
"I'm
not
as
aggressive
as
I
was
swings."
.
STRIKEOUTS; Redlern, Minneoota1 II;
MaU.o;k. Teus. 17; Guidry, New Yon&lt;, 16;
five years ago," be said. "I don't
Cruz took his first swing in the firKeough, Oakland, 15; Norris, Oakland, lt; Banst Inning after the Astros had loaded strike out as many, but I don't walk
nister, Seattle,14.
the bases on loser Frank Pastore, 2- . as many either. I hope I know more
NATIONAL LEAGUE
about pitching now. I think I pitched
BAmNG (Zii al bats): Buckner, Chicago,
~- . who yielded singles to Jef Leonard
..f62; Reitz, St. Loula, 4f7; Crcmartie, Montreal,
more on ability five Ye&amp;!'8 ago. Now I
and Craig Raynolds and walked
.436; KUwnan, Ch.lcago, 4011; R. Smith, Loll
pitch more on knowledge."
Denny Walling. Cruz emptied the
Ange1es,.4&lt;111.
RUNS &lt; J. Crm. Houstoo, 13 ; Law, Lao
Ryan did not dominate the Reds,
bases with his triple.
Allgeles, 12; ' Foil, Pittl!!w1h, 11 ; Boncb, st.
allowing
runners
to
reach
third
base
l.iJuili, 11; Coocepclon, ClncmnaU, 11; Collins,
After Astros third baseman Enos
in each d. the first two Innings. And , CincinnaU, n .
. Cabell plated two more runs with
RBI : J . Croz,Houstoo. II: Klngmon, Chicago,
It was obvious that Ryan was tiring
13: Sclunldt. Philadelphia, 12; CObell, Houston,
sacrifice flies, Cruz came up again
G..,ey, Loo Angeles, 12; WWield, San
tn the fourth with a twiH'IIII double , in the seventh innnlng, when he 12;
Diego, 12.
walked two.
HITS ; R. Smith, Los Angeles, 2CI; Buckner,
Chicago, II; Law, Loo Angeles, 18; CromarUe,
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - , "I was ready to come out," Ryan
Monlroll, 17; R.lt., St. Louts, 17; Hendrick, St.
said. "If I had struggled through two
Louis,17; CabeU, Houston,17; J . Cru1t HOUlton,
more tnntngs, It might have jeopar- 17.
DOUBLES : SWirM , New Yort, I ; Parri&gt;h,
Authorized CATALOG
dized my next start. With an 8-0 lead,
Montreel, ~: McBride, PlilladelphJa, 5; KnJiht,
SALES MERCHANT
CincinnaU,5; Baker, Los Anceles,5.
there was no reason to stay in."
TRIPLES; McBride, Plliladelphla, 2; K. H..,.
"There's not too much to say, they
nancle%, St. Louts, 2; Bol1da, St. t:mia, Z; Knl&amp;hl.
CinclnnoU, Z: Griffey, Clnc!MuU, Z; Law, Loo
ju.st outplayed us," said Cincinnati
Angela,!; May, San Frondl&lt;o, I .
ManagerJobnMcNamars. "Ask the
HOME RUNS: Klll8man, Chicago, 5; Sclunldt,
players what they thougllt of Ryan, · Pllli&gt;delohla, 4; Lu:Unsld, Plilladelohla, I;
For~ter, CinclnnaU, 4; Foote, ChiCIII(], 3; MarUn,
PIIOneft2..217i
they're the ones who had to face
101 W. Meln St.
him.
Pomeroy, D.
OWNED AND OPERATED IIY
"There's no big secret what hap.
Jeck &amp; JUdy Wlllhlms
pened.
Our pitching wasn't as conOpen: Mon. tllru w.... H
sistent as it has been and we didn't
Thurs. 9·12. Fri. 9·5, Sat. H
get the timely hits. Let's give some
setlsfioctlon GuarantHCI
or Your MIIMY Back
ol the credit to Houston."

HOUSTON (AP) - Houston left
fielder Jose Cruz leads a Jekyl-Hyde
exlstt:nce depending on whether he
has a glove or bat in his hand.
Often booed by Astros fans for his
fielding blunders, Cruz was a hero
with the bat Tuesday night with five
runs batted tn on a triple a!lll double
as the Astros ahut out Cincinnati8.o
for the Reds' worst outing of the

assignment.

PACIFIC cQ)sT ATillE TIC ASSOClATION
- Nwned DefiWI.9 Farrell an assistant to the

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Marauder gals
remain unbeaten

May , pitther. Designated Jim Kaat, pitcher, for

ball coaclt.

Only games scheduled

EAST

CALIFORNAI ANGELS - PLaced Brian
llowniJ&gt;&lt;, catcher, on tho 15-&lt;lay diaabled list. A.,.
livated Merv Rettenmund, outfielder.
NEW YORK YANKEES - Activated R•dy

HOFSTRA - Nllllled Dick Berg, head basket. ·

I)

Wldm

creased to 637 next year.
Protect cov'~red
who ac- .
Kahn and Ruasell also denied •,,.cepted wage increUes r1. no Dl!ll'l! ,
published reports that they want to :_.: than,7 ~was p!'OpOIIed by Car- !·
leave the administration.
· tiir two years ago but rejected by '

------~
. ~ ---------

monitoring actiVIties.
The Carter administration has .
7 rnilUon for the council
aaked
this flscal year and ~ million for
the neld, which begins on Oct. 1.'11Ml·
council ~taff, now 237, would be In-

nlngs.
BY SCOIT WOLFE
Meigs ra1lled in the fourth for its
ATHENS- The Athens Bulldogs
two
runs when Jerry Fields was hit
defeated Meigs' Marauders, 16-2, In
by
a
pitch, followed by singles from
an SEOAL baseball contest here
Terry
and Jeff Wayland, a walk, and
Tuesday. Athens picked up its •
second win in as nlany nights In- a passed ball with Steve Ohlinger at
the plate.
creasing its record to 2-9. The young
Meigs pitchers combined for four
Meigs squad dropped to 2-1.
Bulldog pitcher Jeff Bush went the strike outs and nine walks while
distance, scattering four hits, fan- giving up 11 hits. Meigs conunltted
two errors .while Athens eollected
ning four and walking ju.st two Meigs
· four.
batters.
Athens was led in hitting by Greg
The game was even to the end with
Nuzum's
two singles, Jeff Bush's
the exception of a very devastating
two
doubles,
Chris Tenaglia's double
Ullrd inning when the Athens bats
and
single,
and
Cooksey's triple.
caught ftre and knocked starting pitMeig~~
hitters
were Fields, the
cher Tom Owens out of the box.
boys,
and
Tom Owens.
Wayland
Roger Kovalchik was called upon
Meigs
plays
W
ahama
Thursday
. to put out the fire, but when the
and Logan Friday.
smoke had finally cleared, Athens
Linescore:
had plated eight runs on five singles,
008 110 x-10 11 4
Athens
three walks, and a clinching blow by
Meigs
000 200 0-2 4 2
Jim Cooksey who slanuned a triple.
Batteries: Bush WP, and Fred
The nine walks given up by Meigs
Ross.
pitching led to its downfall. Several
Owens, Kovalchik, J. Wayland,
of those walks turned Into Bulldog
Dave
Demosky, and T. Wayland.
runs. Athens scored single runs for
insurance tn the fourth and fifth In-

0)

AmerlcaDLeope

Booton •1 Phlladelpblo

Frldl~'• Game

Booton at Philadelphia
SaDday'• Game

PHiladelphia at 8cBton
W"'-doy , Aptit:ll
llo:iton a1 Philadelphia, if neceosary
Friday, May!
Philadelphia at Boston if IW!C.'e!ISI.ry
Wa&amp;e111Coafereoee Ft..l

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
Marauders girls' softball squad
remained undefeated in the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
by downing Jackson 7-6 with a come
from behind victory Monday.
The Meigs girls were trailing HI in
the first two Innings of play, but then
erupted for four very important runs
in the third on run-scoring hits by
Pam Crooks, Terri Wilson, and
Sherri Ughtfoot.
Sonia Ash drove iii the fourth nm
of the inning on a deep sacrifice fly.
Sheri Ughtfoot smacked a solo
home run in the fifth inning for an Insurance run for the Marauders.
Meigs is now 7-1 overall and owns
a perfect~ mark within the league.
Ann Green led Jackson hitters With a
long home run and a double. Jack.son
dropped to 6-3 overall and 6-2 in the
SEOAL.
I..i.nescore :
Meigs
004 210 x-7 7 3
Jackson
100 002 ()...5 5 6
Batteries: Bartrum and Zirkle.
Fannin and Marek.

..-.s..e.

'hetdly'sGame
SeatUe 101, U. Angeles 107, Seattle luds
1.0

~rie:i

WtdDelday'a Game
SelttUeat Los Angeles
Friday's Game
LMAngeluatSeaWe
Sadly's Game
Los Angeles at SeatUe
Wedllel4ay,April.
Seattle at Los Angeles, lf necessary
Fri&lt;lay, May!
lA A.ngele.5 at SeaWe,lf necea&amp;lJ"Y

L·ong Bottoni
News Notes
BY MELODY ROBERTS
Mr. and Mrs. Red Crispin have
returned illlne after a week's
vacation with their daughter, Unda,
and family. Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Reyes, Moblle, Ala., and a week's
vacation with their daughter; Dee
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
O'Neill, Jacksonville, Fla.
Recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs.
Red Crispin have been their
daughter, Ann, and two children,
Jerry, Stockdale, Mr. and Mrs .
Ralph Bowman, Newark; Mr. and
Mn. John Brewer, Mr. and Mrs.
Gartltftmlth, Reedsville.
Guests of Mr. 1 and Mrs. Dorsal
· Larkins have been Mr. and Mrs. .
· Steve~ and sons, Gallipolis;
· Mike La
of Cheshire.
Callers I! ' the home of Mr. and
Mrs. PaullJauber have been Clyde
Adams,~
. ~ ; Dale Evans and
Tanya
end from Logan; Mr.
and Mrs. ' ' wrence Johnston and
Jeremy, Mr. and Mrs. David Dalley,
Rae Lynn, Portland; Ronnie Swain,
Reedsville; Cindy Thomas, local;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sinclair and
Mn, Ora Sinclair, Sumner Road;
Lucile Kimes and daughters, local.

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

·Administration considers tax incentives

, ·; "Didn't your mommy ever tell you It's not polite
to point?"

Tllcoday'o Spano TruoacUODI

Loo Angel.. a, San FlllllCiscvo

1·2)

.

.'

Atlanta i, San otego 2, 10 lnnings
HOIJ.'Itoo8, Cincinnati 0

Meigs loses 10-2

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - There
are increasing Indications around
the Statehouse that a highway bond
issue on the June 3 ballot is heading
down the road to defeat.
Voters will ultimately decide
whether borrowing $500 million over
the next five years thrQugh bond
sales ts the method that should be
used to repair some of ..the state's
highways and bridges. ·:
'They have rejected similar plans
proposed by Gov. Jam~~· Rhodes
twice before, although bQUl involved
much larger amounts of cash.
But those proposals failed despite
. expensive media adverti$1g blitzes
in their behalf, and backers reportedly aren't planning to wage a
similar effort this time around.
"There were complaints because
there was too much hard sell the last

Berry's World

.

leading the Ea~es with a double and
three singles, Steve Chrlsman a
singleandRogerGaulasingle.
Bryan Wolfe and Dale Teaford led
Sol,lthe[ll with two singles &amp;Qiece
while John Pape and Kent Wolfe
both doubled. Joe Bob Hemsley also
banged a single for Sou.thern.
Eastern pla)'s Southwestern tn an
SVAC . contest on Thursday.
Southern travels to Alexander Wednesday then on to Kyger Creek on
Thursday.
Llnescore:
Southern
000 100 0-1 7 7
000 300 CHI 6 4
Batteries: Greg Wigal WP, and
Brian Bissell.
John Pape LP, and Jay Rees.

Cbic•go 16, St. Loois 1%
Philade)phla 14, New York 8

The U.S. House of Representatives expects to settle a
crucial argument between its Budget Committee and most
·of its le~islative committee chairmen this week. At issue is
:.a question that is key to a balanced budget: Can committees be forced to cut b&amp;ck on their favored programs?
,. Sixteen committee chairmen have banded together to
, fight a directive proposed · by the House Budget Com·.mittee. They are angered that the committee has specified
•amounts that each of seven House committees should cut,
and that it is asking the full House of Representatives to
::endorse these cuts, which total more than $9 billion in
'.existin~ programs. The chairmen say the directive "in.fringes 'on the authority of the legislative committees.
: · No one believes that bringing more discipline to the
· budget process will be easy. Members of Congress may
talk like fiscal conservatives, but they are likely to vote
like high spenders.
Finance Committee Chairman Russell Long (D-La.)
spoke for many in Congress when he said, ''I could muster
the statesmanship to vote for almost anything that saves
money as long as it didn't affect my smte."
When it reaches a decision in Congress Ofl whether to order committees to hold to the budget resolution's program
ceilings, the public's insistence on a balanced budget will
run up against both the committee's tradition of protecting
their turf and interest groups' pressures against cuts in individual programs.
Congress should not-but, probably will-hold out a
resolution to the American voting public this spring, only
to take it away in the fall by failing to carry out its
promises.
·

Today in history. .

RACINE - Greg Wigal pitched
the Eastern Eagles to a 6-2 win over
the Southern Tornadoes bere
Tuesday night in SVAC baseball actlon. Wigal; who was never tn
serious trouble, scattered seven hits
allowing no walks while fanninR four
in gotng the distance for the Eagles.
Eastern is now 2-1 in the SVAC and 47 '!"erall, while Southern is 5-1 'in the
league, 5-2 overall.
Southern pitcher John Pape
hurled a fine game, but seven costly
errors led to his downfall as the
Southern infield literally fell apart
at crucial points in the game.
Pape walked four, hit one batter
and f~ed five in going the dlstan~
while the Eagles earnl!d just one run
off the Southern righthander.
The Eagles scored all the runs
they needed in the seCond inning on a
single off the bat of Roger Gaul, two
errors, and a line single by Brtan
Bissell to produce three Eastern

FiSH SQUARE •••••• 694
WITH FRIES •••• ••••$109
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
992-2556

570 w. Main
Parner'ftY. 0,

DRAFT
ftt_ITE
TUESDAYS
9 P.M. to
12

LADIES
.NIJE_.

THURSDAYS
9
· to

-

12

CITY
:, DRIVE THRU . .
IJ741 N, 2nd St. . Middleport, 0.

fi'OIII Bruce Gilmore staked Kyger to :
a 7.0 bulge after thecfirst frame fl. ·
theflnale.
·
The Bobcats sent 15 batters io the
_plate and added nine Dl!ll'l! tallles tn :
the second Inning d. the licinfter to :
support the two-hit pitching of win: ·
ner Gilmore and Steve Flint.
WUUe Noble went the first four in- . ·
nings of the second contest to recwd :

:=v::~r~~~ha~·:

three-run comeback bid tn the fifth. '
IITHS' Tim Beaver and Kelly :
Petrie, both knocked off the mound
after one tnntng, were charged with ,
the losses.
:
Smith pounded five hits in seven at
hats of the twin-bill while John Amos ..
and Gilmore collected three hits tn
five trips. WesUall added a triple .
and double In posting a 4-f~ effort. :
Beaver collected two Wildcat hits
In the second contest while Petrie,
Toby Sheets and Mike Waugh addecl
doubles to Hannan Trace's elglrt.-hl( ·
attack.
·
Scott R118Sell swatted a triple and
Todd Baker a twc.-RBI double to
higbllght Southwestern's six-nm
fourth.
The Highlanders gathered a run in
the first inning, three in the second
and two in the third to offset a fOUI'nm first by the Pirates.
Keith Sizemore picked up the vi~
tory with two Innings of relief won
for Russell. Wayne Sizemore came
on tn the sixth to record the save.
NGHS starter Don Shupe went tile
distance in taking U.: &amp;..:. . Shupe
pitched ahutout ball the last three
frames, walked seven and fanned
two.
Tim Howell, Barry Marcum and
John Church led the five-hit North
Gallls attaCk with doubles.
Jay Burleson, Russell and Keith
Sizemore each rapped a pair d. hits
for the winners, who had 11 hits.

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Com·
missiofl of Ohio has set for
public hearing Case No .
79-232-EL-FAC (Sub·
file A1 to review the fuel
procurement practices and
policies of Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
Company, the operation
of its Fuel Cost Adjust·
ment Clause, and related
matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at 9:30
a.m. on April 28, 1980, at
the Commission's Offices,
180 East Broad Street,
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
All interested persons will
be given an opportunity to
be heard . Further infor·
mation may be obtained
by contacting the Commis·
sien .

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By :
David M. Polk,

Secretary .

�.

••
••"'

..

4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Wednesday, April23, 1980

Can·Sugarbear Blank's make Atlanta fans forget Honter?
By Associated Press
Larvell (Sugarllear) Blanks, the
Atlanta Braves' new third baseman,
regards his job realistically.
Blanks made .his first start of the
season Tuesday, replacing the
bewildered and bewildering Bob
Homer, who was sent down to the
minors the day before,
Horner was the 1978 National
League rookie of the year and the
club's leading hitter last year, batting .314 with 33 homers, but he got
off to a 2-for-34 start at the plate this
year with seven errors.
The job fell to Blanks when the
Braves abruptly demoted Homer,
who responded by saying, "This is
incredible. It's beyond incredible,"
and then contemplated- refusing to
report to the minors.

Blanks, meanwhile, responded
with a leadoff homer in the bottom of
the lOth inning Tuesday night, giving
Atlanta only its second win in 11
games, a 3-2 decision over San
Diego.
Blanks said the farthest thing
from his mind was a home run.
"They always surprise me, to be
honest with you," said Blanks, who
hit only one homer last year with
TelCBS. "I don't try to be a long-ball
hitter. I just try to hit the ball, and if
it goes out, Amen."
And how long can he hold onto his
new job?
"Probably for the next 10 days,"
he said. That's the amount ' of time
Homer must spend in the minors, if
he reports.

Seven Reds on All-Smr ballot

DISCUSSES UNEUPS- Hilton Wolfe, Jr., left, head baseball coach
at Southern discusses the game's lineup with Jonathan Rees, the Tornado
team captain. Rees is as valuable to the team with his hu.Stling attitude as
with his bat and glove.
·

Base .h its could
help California
By Associilted ptess
What the devil is wrong with the
California Angels?
Probably nothing that a few more
base hits wouldn't cure.
The team that batted .282 and to~r
ped the majors with 866 runs en
route to the American League West
championship a year ago is flailing
away at a lethargic .233 clip after
W"opping its fifth game in a row
Tuesday, an 8-1loss to the Minnesota
Twins.
While tumbling into last place, the
Angels have scored only 35 runs in 11
games and 19 came in the first three
contests, 10 in the opener. They have
gone six games without a homer MVP Don Baylor hasn't hit one yet
- and the five-game skid has
produced a meager supply of eight

nms.

The reasons for the slump aren't
hard to find. AI Cowens is hitting you should pardon the expression .143, Joe Rudi .171, BobbyGrich .219,
Dan Ford .231, seven-time batting
champ Rod Carew .'J:.f7. The Angels
got a bad break Sunday when Brian
Downing suffered a broken ankle but
the league's top right-handed hitter
of a year ago was mired down at

. .r:m.

Elsewhere, the Seattle Mariners
ended Oakland's seven-game winning by defeating the A's 3-4, the
New York Yankees nipped the
Baltimore Orioles 5·4, the
Milwaukee Brewers clubbed the
Cleveland Indians 8-4, the Detroit
Tigers blanked the Texas Rangers 20, the Chicago White Sox shut out the
Boston Red Sox by the same score
and the Kansas City Royals downed
the Toronto Blue Jays 7-2.
Roy Smalley, Hosken Powell and
Ron Jackson sJammed home runs to
pace Minnesota over California in
the Twins' home opener. Minnesota's Geoff Zahn gave up a run in
the first inning, then retired 14 con·
secutive batters and finished with a .
six-hitter.
Mariners 5, A's 4
Bill Stein's tw&lt;rnm homer in the
bottom of the eighth inning lifted
Seattle over Oakland. Stein connected off Brian Kingman after a
walk to Bruce Boehle, · who also
homered lor the Mariners, as did
Jim Anderson. The homers enabled
Rick Honeycutt to boost his record to
3·0 with help from Byron
McLaughlin in the ninth.
Yankees S, Orioles 4
Bob Watson singled home the
tying run in the bottom of the ninth
and then scored on a single by Bobby
.Murcer as the Yankees came from
behind~ The Orioles had taken a 4-2
lead in the sixth when pinch hitter
Lee May drove in three runs with a
wind-blown pop fly double off the
glove of second baseman Willie Randolph. Ruppert Jones opened the
bottom of the ninth with a double
when right fielder Benny Ayala
misjudged his drive and then missed

a shoestring attempt. Watson
singled to tie the score and Murcer
delivered the game-winning hit after
neggie Jackson walked and Oscar
Gamble lined out.
Brewers 8, Indians 4
Robin Yount tripled and scored in
the third inning, then sparked a four·
run Milwaukee sixth inning with a
lw&lt;&gt;-run single and added a sacrifice
fly in the seventh. A single by Sixto
I..ezcano, a walk and a single by
Charlie Moore filled the bases with
one out in the sixth. Mike Paxton
relieved loser Len Barker and Paul
Molitor beat out a hit off the pitcher's glove to tie the score 4-4.
Yount followed with his tw&lt;rrun
single.
Tigers 2, Rangers 0
Rookie Kirk Gibson hit a tw&lt;&gt;-run
homer in the eighth inning to bacK
Dave Rozema's eight-hit pitching.
Gibson's one-out homer off
Ferguson Jenkins dropped over the
fence at the 37().foot mark in left·
cent~r. scoring Alan Trammell, who
opened the inning with a single.
Rozema struck out two and walked
aone as Detroit won tor only the
third time in 12 games.
White Sox 2, Red Sox 0
Britt ilurns and Mike Proly combined on a six-hitter. Burns blanked
the Red Sox on three singles until
Proly took over with two out in the
sixth. The White Sox scored off Mike
Torrez in the sixth on Claudell
Washington's double, Wayne Nor·
dhagen's single, a hit batsman and
Jim Morrison's double.
Royals 7, Blue Jays 2
John Wathan collected four hits
and drove in three runs in support of
Paul Splittorff's pitching. Splittorff
checked Toronto on three hits
through seven innings before the
Blue Jays broke through for two
nms in the eighth. Marty Pattin
worked the ninth.

CINCINNATI- Seven Cincinnati Reds players are on the ballot for
the 1980 All..Star game to be played in Los Angeles on July 8.
Voting for the All..Star teams begins May 9 and runs through June 25.
Catcher Johnny Bench is one of eight players who has been on the
ballot every year since the voting was returned to the fans in 1970. Bench has twice been the leading vote-getter in the All..Star elections.
Also on the ballot are outfielder George Foster, who was voted into
the starting lineup last year; shortstop Dave Concepcion; first
baseman Dan Driessen; third baseman Ray Knight; and outfielders
Dave Collins and Ken Griffey.
Both yollins and Knight are on the ballot lor the first time.

Athens' reserves top Meigs, 12-10
ATHENS - In girls' softball action the Athens reserves defeated
the Meigs reserves 23-10 here
Tuesday night.
In the first two innings Athens
jumped to a 9-1 lead, but the young
Meigs squad didn't give up and bat·
tied back to 9-6 in the third inning.
Meanwhile Meigs pitcher Natalie
Lambert quieted the Athens' bats
temporarily while Meigs tied the
score at 1}-9 in the top of the fourth.
In the bottom of that inning Athens
erupted lor eight runs to put the
game out of reach.
Athens' Jenny Jeffers and Kris
Kroner teamed up on the mound to
strike out three and walk three.

SUFFER SETBACK
The U.s. Army suffered a setback
in its Indian Wars when Chief Little
Turtle's warriors staged a predawn

Athens had seven errors while
giving up 10 hits. Meigs' Lambert
fanned six and walked 15 while
giving up 11 hits.
Jeffers led Athens with three hits,
Kroner and Mollica two hits, Karen
White, Jill Douglas, Margo McKinsty, and Katrina Zook all had
singles.
Cindy Parker led Meigs hitters ·
with three singles, Kris Snowden a ·
double and a single, Paula Horton a
triple, Mel Dillard, Cindy Crooks,
Beth Gloeckner, and Wendy Tillis
each with singles.
Linescore :

Athens
Meigs

540 842 x-23 10 7

105 301 0-10 10 11

Elsewhere in the NL, Pittsburgh
downed Montreal :&gt;-3, Chicago
defeated St. Louis 16·12,
Philadelphia whipped the New York
Mets 14-8, Houston blanked Cincinnati 8-0 . and Los Angeles
whitewashed San Francisco fl.{).
Pirates 5, El!POS 3
Unlikely Mike Easler provided
Pittsburgh's firepower with a pair of
home runs. Easler, who has hit only
four homers in the previous 118
games of his major league career,
hit a three-run shot in the first and
added a solo homer in the fifth.
Jim Bibby, 2~. carried a three..hit
shutout into the seventh when the
Expos rallied for three nms,
highlighted by Warren Cromartie's
tw&lt;rrun single. Scott Sanderson, 1-1,
was the victim of Easler's firstinning homer.
Cubs 16, Cards 1.2
Chicago pounded out 23 hits - including two homers, one a grand
slam, by Barry Foote - to outlast
St. Louis. Foote had four hits and
eight RBI and Ivan DeJesus also
homered for the Cubs, hitting lor the
cycle with the addition of a single, a
double and a triple.
Foote's first homer tied the game
12-12 in the eighth, and his slam
came with two out in the ninth.
The Cards pounded out 16 hits
themselves, including homers by
Bobby Bonds, Ken Reitz and pitcher
BobForsch.
Phlls 14, Mets 8
Mike Schmidt homered twice for
Philadelphia, one of them a grand

A British regiment serving in Nor·
them Ireland has been encouraged
to save money rather than spend it
on drink, gambling, etc. A Staf·
fordshire regiment • official said
troops had been advised to invest
money in building societies, deposit
accounts and savings bonds.
LONG WAIT
There are now 14 million motorists
in Britain and another 938,000 who
are waiting to take a road test.

·-a:

· "BOSTON BUn"

slam to seal the Mets' fate in the:
eighth inning. Schmidt,.who has f~
homers !hi season, gave the Phils
2-4lead with a tw()orun sbot In the 1U.::
st inning.
..,
Keith Moreland drove In the ac$.1'
tual winning runs .with a tw&lt;&gt;-~
double preceding Schmidt's ~
slam w crack an &amp;.a tie. KevlJI,:
Saucier got the win with three ~
nings of scoreless relief.
.:;
Dodgenf, GlaDIIO
1•
Los Angeles right-hander Don Su£.~
ton limited the Giants to fOif!:
singles, and Steve Garvey drove Iii!
lour runs as the Dodgers record!!!!:
their sixth straight victory over Sail;
Francisco.
,
The 35-year-old Sutton, who has 5I:
career shutouts, struck out eight~
walked one.
:
Among Garvey's RBI hits was ~
tw()orun homer in the fifth. He aJssi
singled in a run in the third ancl;
brought another home in the s~
with a sacrifice fly.
•

1

.

I
I
!'

••

FOODSTAMP •
ORDERS
•
WELCOMED!! 8

CCUHTltY STORES

·

••

We Reserve
The Right
To Limit
Quantities!!

LB.

:.-------~~:;~--------;;~~~
FOLGER'S
•

700 W. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

VIENNA

VALVOLINE
MOTOR OIL

FOR SPRING

'

Complete line
and vegetable plants.
Plus blooming hanging
baskets &amp; foliage.
"Season Special"
Bedding Plants
90c In Dozen Paks

SAUSAGE
5 OZ. CAN

QUART

Hubbard's
Greenhouse
Ph. 992-5776

-HOLY GHOST MIRACLE REVIVAL

BY lHE
PIECE

LIMIT 6 QUARTS

.•

Zebco• 202TM

Prayer for the sick in every services.' You can be helpe4.
God is moving by His Power! Come expecting YOUR

FISHING

•

II

•

SPONGE MOP-NYLON BROM
-YACHT MOP

REEL

_.._y~

•

DUPONT
====~;---~~~--~--·:
"EASY .CARE"
•

•

•

I Mirac~ .
I\_.._______________________
SERVICES STARTAT7:30_..P_____
. M.

•••

LB.

..

..•.

3 GREAT NIGHTS (APR. 25, 26, 27)
WITH EVANGELIST B. T. WESTON

•
••

.....

flAT
WHITE

YOUR
CHOICE!

LATEX

...........
GALLON

·····~·~··········

"',~'\'U I I I I II I I I I I I • • • •

THREAD
'h lb.

•••••eeeeeeeeeeeeee

$139

·~

9 PER SPOOL

I

French City
J

·

6 oz. Kraft Garlic Squeeze

72 ct.

ia

• ORANGES ........... ~4159'
89

Bas&amp;d on the tlx.-month (26-week)
cent ral Cer,t it lcate Interest
rate In eff ect fr om April 24 to April JO
which Is .11892. Federal regul allons
prohlblk the compounding of Interest
on these cert if icates .
•

maturlfy

n( rhit llut"r:mding ~avin~
11f"l!""'rf l lll 11Y 11,J:1y.
:Hiv:ll11 .ll!l'

STOP IN AND SEE
ONE OF OUR LOAN
OFFICERS FOR MORE

2 lb. New Yellow

Better Banking Service.That's The Central Idea.
"The fmndly Bsnk "

THE CENTRAL TRUST

COMPANY
.
..
.-:

Member: FDIC

SOUTHERN OHIO DIVISION

Oeposlls Insured

.

10$100,000

PAINT BRUSH

••
•

..

•·
·••

lie I a•

FOR SUPER .SAVINGS!

Quarters

-- - ----~ - -- --~--------~---~-~JONES BOYS

.

ONIONS ..........~~.~ .. 593 lb. Golden Delicious

lit! 1111111111 I • • I I I I I .

••••••lluai••••••••f//QU~
JONESBOYS
~
SUPER COUPON
.
~
"BLACK
&amp;
DECKER"
~
.
Modell/8206
~

APPLES.......... ~~~.: 89'

GRASS ftiMMER
$JQ8B
coupon

~~itOne

SUCED BACON

E

llb. $JOO~i't~Coupon:
Pkgs.
L1m1t 2
Per Customer
Price Witll'out Coupon 79c lb.'
Offer Expires 4·27·80

2

"

customer

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

Pringh~s

103/4 oz. Campbells

TURKEY NOODLE.SOUP••••••• 2/6f
15 oz.

EAlWELL MACKERAL ••••••••••••• 5'1
16 oz. Del Monte

' l l l l a 8 1 ill 1 1 • • • 111 1111111111""''""

·v~~"'••

8 oi.
With
coupon

99'

SPRAY
i.i mi't One
Per
customer

.023 oz. KOOL·AIDS .•••••• ~e.9~. 6/754
200 ct. WHite Puff

FACIAL TISSUE ......... ~ ••••• ~.~::. 7'1
Gal. Rich and Ready
·
·
ORANGE DRINK ..................$1.19

I I I I I I I I•J I I

•••

I I

••

..; ;

~~

·2

.,00
1 lb. Boxes

WR~NGLER

ssoo OFF

·--~f!J~

C:

JEANJ
Regular
Price

On Any One Pair of Jeans
Limit One Per customer
Offer Expires 4·27·80 .

.,,,,,,

..•

••

..

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

,

IIIIIIIIIIIIIM •••••• '

JONES BOY$
SUPER COUPON
JONES BOYS

••

•

·

HOMOGENIZED MILK .
Gallon
With
, coupon

SJ59 Limit One . 1
· Gallon
. ,
Per customer
.•

Price\vithout Coupon $2.09
Offer Expires 4·27·80 · '

·····~·.,..

.·

I I • • • • I .... I

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON
LADIES'

• ···~'l~i'Zf..l

. KRISPY
·CRACKERS

12oz. '
LimitOne
:
With
Per customer ;::
Coupon
,
::S
--;.}\. Price Withoufcoupon ~1.2) ~
Offer Expires 4-27·80 "'"~

_.,_,,,_,,-!l.:e.A!...!.!!..!t •••••••••• , ..,~

I I

NESTEA

it • • • • • • • • • I

SUI&gt;jSHINE

iONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON
NESTL.E 'S

$129

U

REGULAR
PRICE ON

••••••••••••••••••••••

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

Ulllllel II II II II II • a a • • • • • '! • . l'l~'ni'Zi

·. CHOCOLATE CHIPS

4 oz. Jar

:T.~,..,~'I AP.

With
coupon
Per Custo.mer
Price Without i;oupon 47c
Offer Exoires 4·27·80

· Price Without Coupon $2.29
Offer Expires 4· 27·80

OFF

$100

·

.

Limit I Jar Per Customer
Offer Expires 4·27·80

••
•

••

• .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • 111 I I I I I a " " ' ' '

CUT GREEN BEANS •••••••••••• 211'1

.

••

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

SUPER COU.PON
MISS BRECK

HAl~

s~
~
•

~~~"·'''''' 1111111111 • • • • • • • • • • •

••• •••JONES
•••••••••••••
•••
BOYS

PUMP

••

•

Price Without coupon 17.99
Offer Expirei 4-27·80

NTS MANWICH .••••••••••••••~~~- 1'1
4V2oz.
_
POTATO CHIPS ••••••••••••••••• :.a.n•• 5'1

~'''-:\' • • I I I I I I I I I I I I I I l l I I I I I I

~''

SUPER COUPON
"DAILY DE LITE"

...

.

DOAILS• .

Sulnt•nti•t internt pen• tty tor ..rly wlthclrawal.

NYLON

II

·I
I

$3000. WILL, BUY YOU A $10I 000
MONEY MARKn CERTIFICATE ~T
aNTRAL TRUST.

able to take ad va ma2c of h i~h yiciJ .
guaranteed 6 Month Mciney Markt't
rates, Central Trust h~ the plan for you .
We coli it the Central CcrtiAcote.
In order to qll~li~. nil you Jl('"("~ ~~
a minimum of S\.&lt;XX.l Ccntrnl Trust
will loan you the Oifferenct between
your initinl depo~~it :md :.1( .•"'00. At the
end nf th&lt;.' 2tl week prnoc.l. rwn rhml!~
happen Fi"t. you fl'c&lt;..•ivc yuur tnttc11
depoait back plus inter~t ~t the ht~-:h
money market rate on SIO,CXX), leu a
lban fee charged at a rate of I';t above
the money market rate on the amount

i11l I I I I I I I I I I . I I I

r ··

~

Roll

.MARGARINE·

borrowL.-d.· Second. the balance, of
the ccrtifiCO"ItC O"IUtom;uicOllly pays off
the lo.1n.
.
The high interest rrttes of Money
M01rkrr C.·rtific:ucsnrt now availnblc
to you with only a minimu m de~it of
$1,00J. t~nd nrc in!;urcd hy the Federnl
Deposit Insurance U,rporation. If you ·
h.wc M 1~·:-~~t $1.000. come in now. Take

e ••• 8 I! • .,r""

FREE Ill

I

.HAM SAlAD •••••••••••••.•.••• ~.8...

If you thou~ht you'd never he

~
,,~

I

Homemade

It's the new Central Certificate...
tre savings break )Olive been ':Y3iting for.

Buy One for 99c
Get One

I l l I l l 1111111 I I I I I • • • I • •

BULK WIENERS •••••••••••••~~•••.$1-...

CHEESE

BREAD

••
••

~

· 4 INCH'

"BETSY ROSS"
"HONEY MEAL"
SANDWICH

POLYESTER
SEWING

SMOKED HAM

••••
••
•
•

137 PINE STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

_f!!_O_W OPEN

COMING TO MIDDlfPORT AT
MEIGS JR. HIGH SCHOOL

I

•

ROAST~..,

PORK

attack on Gen. St. Clair's troops in
1791 near Cincinnati. Alter fighting
lor three hours, St. Clair's force of
1,400 fled the field. Nearly half of his
men were scalped.

HOMEO~QUAUFY

SAVE MONEY

' ••••••••••••••• ·······••rt••••llfU//~

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

lb. Blue Bonnet
Homeowners near London's two
big airports now qualify lor free
noise-proofing. About 31,000 homes
around Heathrow and Gatwick air·
ports will qualify lor grants that
cover the full cost of noise-proofing
two living rooms and all betlrooms.

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, April23, 1980..

...........

----}

29 .o z.

,.
OSAGE PEACHES ·········-·- 2/$~.39
.

'

-

\

-

�.

••
••"'

..

4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Wednesday, April23, 1980

Can·Sugarbear Blank's make Atlanta fans forget Honter?
By Associated Press
Larvell (Sugarllear) Blanks, the
Atlanta Braves' new third baseman,
regards his job realistically.
Blanks made .his first start of the
season Tuesday, replacing the
bewildered and bewildering Bob
Homer, who was sent down to the
minors the day before,
Horner was the 1978 National
League rookie of the year and the
club's leading hitter last year, batting .314 with 33 homers, but he got
off to a 2-for-34 start at the plate this
year with seven errors.
The job fell to Blanks when the
Braves abruptly demoted Homer,
who responded by saying, "This is
incredible. It's beyond incredible,"
and then contemplated- refusing to
report to the minors.

Blanks, meanwhile, responded
with a leadoff homer in the bottom of
the lOth inning Tuesday night, giving
Atlanta only its second win in 11
games, a 3-2 decision over San
Diego.
Blanks said the farthest thing
from his mind was a home run.
"They always surprise me, to be
honest with you," said Blanks, who
hit only one homer last year with
TelCBS. "I don't try to be a long-ball
hitter. I just try to hit the ball, and if
it goes out, Amen."
And how long can he hold onto his
new job?
"Probably for the next 10 days,"
he said. That's the amount ' of time
Homer must spend in the minors, if
he reports.

Seven Reds on All-Smr ballot

DISCUSSES UNEUPS- Hilton Wolfe, Jr., left, head baseball coach
at Southern discusses the game's lineup with Jonathan Rees, the Tornado
team captain. Rees is as valuable to the team with his hu.Stling attitude as
with his bat and glove.
·

Base .h its could
help California
By Associilted ptess
What the devil is wrong with the
California Angels?
Probably nothing that a few more
base hits wouldn't cure.
The team that batted .282 and to~r
ped the majors with 866 runs en
route to the American League West
championship a year ago is flailing
away at a lethargic .233 clip after
W"opping its fifth game in a row
Tuesday, an 8-1loss to the Minnesota
Twins.
While tumbling into last place, the
Angels have scored only 35 runs in 11
games and 19 came in the first three
contests, 10 in the opener. They have
gone six games without a homer MVP Don Baylor hasn't hit one yet
- and the five-game skid has
produced a meager supply of eight

nms.

The reasons for the slump aren't
hard to find. AI Cowens is hitting you should pardon the expression .143, Joe Rudi .171, BobbyGrich .219,
Dan Ford .231, seven-time batting
champ Rod Carew .'J:.f7. The Angels
got a bad break Sunday when Brian
Downing suffered a broken ankle but
the league's top right-handed hitter
of a year ago was mired down at

. .r:m.

Elsewhere, the Seattle Mariners
ended Oakland's seven-game winning by defeating the A's 3-4, the
New York Yankees nipped the
Baltimore Orioles 5·4, the
Milwaukee Brewers clubbed the
Cleveland Indians 8-4, the Detroit
Tigers blanked the Texas Rangers 20, the Chicago White Sox shut out the
Boston Red Sox by the same score
and the Kansas City Royals downed
the Toronto Blue Jays 7-2.
Roy Smalley, Hosken Powell and
Ron Jackson sJammed home runs to
pace Minnesota over California in
the Twins' home opener. Minnesota's Geoff Zahn gave up a run in
the first inning, then retired 14 con·
secutive batters and finished with a .
six-hitter.
Mariners 5, A's 4
Bill Stein's tw&lt;rnm homer in the
bottom of the eighth inning lifted
Seattle over Oakland. Stein connected off Brian Kingman after a
walk to Bruce Boehle, · who also
homered lor the Mariners, as did
Jim Anderson. The homers enabled
Rick Honeycutt to boost his record to
3·0 with help from Byron
McLaughlin in the ninth.
Yankees S, Orioles 4
Bob Watson singled home the
tying run in the bottom of the ninth
and then scored on a single by Bobby
.Murcer as the Yankees came from
behind~ The Orioles had taken a 4-2
lead in the sixth when pinch hitter
Lee May drove in three runs with a
wind-blown pop fly double off the
glove of second baseman Willie Randolph. Ruppert Jones opened the
bottom of the ninth with a double
when right fielder Benny Ayala
misjudged his drive and then missed

a shoestring attempt. Watson
singled to tie the score and Murcer
delivered the game-winning hit after
neggie Jackson walked and Oscar
Gamble lined out.
Brewers 8, Indians 4
Robin Yount tripled and scored in
the third inning, then sparked a four·
run Milwaukee sixth inning with a
lw&lt;&gt;-run single and added a sacrifice
fly in the seventh. A single by Sixto
I..ezcano, a walk and a single by
Charlie Moore filled the bases with
one out in the sixth. Mike Paxton
relieved loser Len Barker and Paul
Molitor beat out a hit off the pitcher's glove to tie the score 4-4.
Yount followed with his tw&lt;rrun
single.
Tigers 2, Rangers 0
Rookie Kirk Gibson hit a tw&lt;&gt;-run
homer in the eighth inning to bacK
Dave Rozema's eight-hit pitching.
Gibson's one-out homer off
Ferguson Jenkins dropped over the
fence at the 37().foot mark in left·
cent~r. scoring Alan Trammell, who
opened the inning with a single.
Rozema struck out two and walked
aone as Detroit won tor only the
third time in 12 games.
White Sox 2, Red Sox 0
Britt ilurns and Mike Proly combined on a six-hitter. Burns blanked
the Red Sox on three singles until
Proly took over with two out in the
sixth. The White Sox scored off Mike
Torrez in the sixth on Claudell
Washington's double, Wayne Nor·
dhagen's single, a hit batsman and
Jim Morrison's double.
Royals 7, Blue Jays 2
John Wathan collected four hits
and drove in three runs in support of
Paul Splittorff's pitching. Splittorff
checked Toronto on three hits
through seven innings before the
Blue Jays broke through for two
nms in the eighth. Marty Pattin
worked the ninth.

CINCINNATI- Seven Cincinnati Reds players are on the ballot for
the 1980 All..Star game to be played in Los Angeles on July 8.
Voting for the All..Star teams begins May 9 and runs through June 25.
Catcher Johnny Bench is one of eight players who has been on the
ballot every year since the voting was returned to the fans in 1970. Bench has twice been the leading vote-getter in the All..Star elections.
Also on the ballot are outfielder George Foster, who was voted into
the starting lineup last year; shortstop Dave Concepcion; first
baseman Dan Driessen; third baseman Ray Knight; and outfielders
Dave Collins and Ken Griffey.
Both yollins and Knight are on the ballot lor the first time.

Athens' reserves top Meigs, 12-10
ATHENS - In girls' softball action the Athens reserves defeated
the Meigs reserves 23-10 here
Tuesday night.
In the first two innings Athens
jumped to a 9-1 lead, but the young
Meigs squad didn't give up and bat·
tied back to 9-6 in the third inning.
Meanwhile Meigs pitcher Natalie
Lambert quieted the Athens' bats
temporarily while Meigs tied the
score at 1}-9 in the top of the fourth.
In the bottom of that inning Athens
erupted lor eight runs to put the
game out of reach.
Athens' Jenny Jeffers and Kris
Kroner teamed up on the mound to
strike out three and walk three.

SUFFER SETBACK
The U.s. Army suffered a setback
in its Indian Wars when Chief Little
Turtle's warriors staged a predawn

Athens had seven errors while
giving up 10 hits. Meigs' Lambert
fanned six and walked 15 while
giving up 11 hits.
Jeffers led Athens with three hits,
Kroner and Mollica two hits, Karen
White, Jill Douglas, Margo McKinsty, and Katrina Zook all had
singles.
Cindy Parker led Meigs hitters ·
with three singles, Kris Snowden a ·
double and a single, Paula Horton a
triple, Mel Dillard, Cindy Crooks,
Beth Gloeckner, and Wendy Tillis
each with singles.
Linescore :

Athens
Meigs

540 842 x-23 10 7

105 301 0-10 10 11

Elsewhere in the NL, Pittsburgh
downed Montreal :&gt;-3, Chicago
defeated St. Louis 16·12,
Philadelphia whipped the New York
Mets 14-8, Houston blanked Cincinnati 8-0 . and Los Angeles
whitewashed San Francisco fl.{).
Pirates 5, El!POS 3
Unlikely Mike Easler provided
Pittsburgh's firepower with a pair of
home runs. Easler, who has hit only
four homers in the previous 118
games of his major league career,
hit a three-run shot in the first and
added a solo homer in the fifth.
Jim Bibby, 2~. carried a three..hit
shutout into the seventh when the
Expos rallied for three nms,
highlighted by Warren Cromartie's
tw&lt;rrun single. Scott Sanderson, 1-1,
was the victim of Easler's firstinning homer.
Cubs 16, Cards 1.2
Chicago pounded out 23 hits - including two homers, one a grand
slam, by Barry Foote - to outlast
St. Louis. Foote had four hits and
eight RBI and Ivan DeJesus also
homered for the Cubs, hitting lor the
cycle with the addition of a single, a
double and a triple.
Foote's first homer tied the game
12-12 in the eighth, and his slam
came with two out in the ninth.
The Cards pounded out 16 hits
themselves, including homers by
Bobby Bonds, Ken Reitz and pitcher
BobForsch.
Phlls 14, Mets 8
Mike Schmidt homered twice for
Philadelphia, one of them a grand

A British regiment serving in Nor·
them Ireland has been encouraged
to save money rather than spend it
on drink, gambling, etc. A Staf·
fordshire regiment • official said
troops had been advised to invest
money in building societies, deposit
accounts and savings bonds.
LONG WAIT
There are now 14 million motorists
in Britain and another 938,000 who
are waiting to take a road test.

·-a:

· "BOSTON BUn"

slam to seal the Mets' fate in the:
eighth inning. Schmidt,.who has f~
homers !hi season, gave the Phils
2-4lead with a tw()orun sbot In the 1U.::
st inning.
..,
Keith Moreland drove In the ac$.1'
tual winning runs .with a tw&lt;&gt;-~
double preceding Schmidt's ~
slam w crack an &amp;.a tie. KevlJI,:
Saucier got the win with three ~
nings of scoreless relief.
.:;
Dodgenf, GlaDIIO
1•
Los Angeles right-hander Don Su£.~
ton limited the Giants to fOif!:
singles, and Steve Garvey drove Iii!
lour runs as the Dodgers record!!!!:
their sixth straight victory over Sail;
Francisco.
,
The 35-year-old Sutton, who has 5I:
career shutouts, struck out eight~
walked one.
:
Among Garvey's RBI hits was ~
tw()orun homer in the fifth. He aJssi
singled in a run in the third ancl;
brought another home in the s~
with a sacrifice fly.
•

1

.

I
I
!'

••

FOODSTAMP •
ORDERS
•
WELCOMED!! 8

CCUHTltY STORES

·

••

We Reserve
The Right
To Limit
Quantities!!

LB.

:.-------~~:;~--------;;~~~
FOLGER'S
•

700 W. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

VIENNA

VALVOLINE
MOTOR OIL

FOR SPRING

'

Complete line
and vegetable plants.
Plus blooming hanging
baskets &amp; foliage.
"Season Special"
Bedding Plants
90c In Dozen Paks

SAUSAGE
5 OZ. CAN

QUART

Hubbard's
Greenhouse
Ph. 992-5776

-HOLY GHOST MIRACLE REVIVAL

BY lHE
PIECE

LIMIT 6 QUARTS

.•

Zebco• 202TM

Prayer for the sick in every services.' You can be helpe4.
God is moving by His Power! Come expecting YOUR

FISHING

•

II

•

SPONGE MOP-NYLON BROM
-YACHT MOP

REEL

_.._y~

•

DUPONT
====~;---~~~--~--·:
"EASY .CARE"
•

•

•

I Mirac~ .
I\_.._______________________
SERVICES STARTAT7:30_..P_____
. M.

•••

LB.

..

..•.

3 GREAT NIGHTS (APR. 25, 26, 27)
WITH EVANGELIST B. T. WESTON

•
••

.....

flAT
WHITE

YOUR
CHOICE!

LATEX

...........
GALLON

·····~·~··········

"',~'\'U I I I I II I I I I I I • • • •

THREAD
'h lb.

•••••eeeeeeeeeeeeee

$139

·~

9 PER SPOOL

I

French City
J

·

6 oz. Kraft Garlic Squeeze

72 ct.

ia

• ORANGES ........... ~4159'
89

Bas&amp;d on the tlx.-month (26-week)
cent ral Cer,t it lcate Interest
rate In eff ect fr om April 24 to April JO
which Is .11892. Federal regul allons
prohlblk the compounding of Interest
on these cert if icates .
•

maturlfy

n( rhit llut"r:mding ~avin~
11f"l!""'rf l lll 11Y 11,J:1y.
:Hiv:ll11 .ll!l'

STOP IN AND SEE
ONE OF OUR LOAN
OFFICERS FOR MORE

2 lb. New Yellow

Better Banking Service.That's The Central Idea.
"The fmndly Bsnk "

THE CENTRAL TRUST

COMPANY
.
..
.-:

Member: FDIC

SOUTHERN OHIO DIVISION

Oeposlls Insured

.

10$100,000

PAINT BRUSH

••
•

..

•·
·••

lie I a•

FOR SUPER .SAVINGS!

Quarters

-- - ----~ - -- --~--------~---~-~JONES BOYS

.

ONIONS ..........~~.~ .. 593 lb. Golden Delicious

lit! 1111111111 I • • I I I I I .

••••••lluai••••••••f//QU~
JONESBOYS
~
SUPER COUPON
.
~
"BLACK
&amp;
DECKER"
~
.
Modell/8206
~

APPLES.......... ~~~.: 89'

GRASS ftiMMER
$JQ8B
coupon

~~itOne

SUCED BACON

E

llb. $JOO~i't~Coupon:
Pkgs.
L1m1t 2
Per Customer
Price Witll'out Coupon 79c lb.'
Offer Expires 4·27·80

2

"

customer

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

Pringh~s

103/4 oz. Campbells

TURKEY NOODLE.SOUP••••••• 2/6f
15 oz.

EAlWELL MACKERAL ••••••••••••• 5'1
16 oz. Del Monte

' l l l l a 8 1 ill 1 1 • • • 111 1111111111""''""

·v~~"'••

8 oi.
With
coupon

99'

SPRAY
i.i mi't One
Per
customer

.023 oz. KOOL·AIDS .•••••• ~e.9~. 6/754
200 ct. WHite Puff

FACIAL TISSUE ......... ~ ••••• ~.~::. 7'1
Gal. Rich and Ready
·
·
ORANGE DRINK ..................$1.19

I I I I I I I I•J I I

•••

I I

••

..; ;

~~

·2

.,00
1 lb. Boxes

WR~NGLER

ssoo OFF

·--~f!J~

C:

JEANJ
Regular
Price

On Any One Pair of Jeans
Limit One Per customer
Offer Expires 4·27·80 .

.,,,,,,

..•

••

..

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

,

IIIIIIIIIIIIIM •••••• '

JONES BOY$
SUPER COUPON
JONES BOYS

••

•

·

HOMOGENIZED MILK .
Gallon
With
, coupon

SJ59 Limit One . 1
· Gallon
. ,
Per customer
.•

Price\vithout Coupon $2.09
Offer Expires 4·27·80 · '

·····~·.,..

.·

I I • • • • I .... I

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON
LADIES'

• ···~'l~i'Zf..l

. KRISPY
·CRACKERS

12oz. '
LimitOne
:
With
Per customer ;::
Coupon
,
::S
--;.}\. Price Withoufcoupon ~1.2) ~
Offer Expires 4-27·80 "'"~

_.,_,,,_,,-!l.:e.A!...!.!!..!t •••••••••• , ..,~

I I

NESTEA

it • • • • • • • • • I

SUI&gt;jSHINE

iONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON
NESTL.E 'S

$129

U

REGULAR
PRICE ON

••••••••••••••••••••••

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

Ulllllel II II II II II • a a • • • • • '! • . l'l~'ni'Zi

·. CHOCOLATE CHIPS

4 oz. Jar

:T.~,..,~'I AP.

With
coupon
Per Custo.mer
Price Without i;oupon 47c
Offer Exoires 4·27·80

· Price Without Coupon $2.29
Offer Expires 4· 27·80

OFF

$100

·

.

Limit I Jar Per Customer
Offer Expires 4·27·80

••
•

••

• .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • 111 I I I I I a " " ' ' '

CUT GREEN BEANS •••••••••••• 211'1

.

••

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

SUPER COU.PON
MISS BRECK

HAl~

s~
~
•

~~~"·'''''' 1111111111 • • • • • • • • • • •

••• •••JONES
•••••••••••••
•••
BOYS

PUMP

••

•

Price Without coupon 17.99
Offer Expirei 4-27·80

NTS MANWICH .••••••••••••••~~~- 1'1
4V2oz.
_
POTATO CHIPS ••••••••••••••••• :.a.n•• 5'1

~'''-:\' • • I I I I I I I I I I I I I I l l I I I I I I

~''

SUPER COUPON
"DAILY DE LITE"

...

.

DOAILS• .

Sulnt•nti•t internt pen• tty tor ..rly wlthclrawal.

NYLON

II

·I
I

$3000. WILL, BUY YOU A $10I 000
MONEY MARKn CERTIFICATE ~T
aNTRAL TRUST.

able to take ad va ma2c of h i~h yiciJ .
guaranteed 6 Month Mciney Markt't
rates, Central Trust h~ the plan for you .
We coli it the Central CcrtiAcote.
In order to qll~li~. nil you Jl('"("~ ~~
a minimum of S\.&lt;XX.l Ccntrnl Trust
will loan you the Oifferenct between
your initinl depo~~it :md :.1( .•"'00. At the
end nf th&lt;.' 2tl week prnoc.l. rwn rhml!~
happen Fi"t. you fl'c&lt;..•ivc yuur tnttc11
depoait back plus inter~t ~t the ht~-:h
money market rate on SIO,CXX), leu a
lban fee charged at a rate of I';t above
the money market rate on the amount

i11l I I I I I I I I I I . I I I

r ··

~

Roll

.MARGARINE·

borrowL.-d.· Second. the balance, of
the ccrtifiCO"ItC O"IUtom;uicOllly pays off
the lo.1n.
.
The high interest rrttes of Money
M01rkrr C.·rtific:ucsnrt now availnblc
to you with only a minimu m de~it of
$1,00J. t~nd nrc in!;urcd hy the Federnl
Deposit Insurance U,rporation. If you ·
h.wc M 1~·:-~~t $1.000. come in now. Take

e ••• 8 I! • .,r""

FREE Ill

I

.HAM SAlAD •••••••••••••.•.••• ~.8...

If you thou~ht you'd never he

~
,,~

I

Homemade

It's the new Central Certificate...
tre savings break )Olive been ':Y3iting for.

Buy One for 99c
Get One

I l l I l l 1111111 I I I I I • • • I • •

BULK WIENERS •••••••••••••~~•••.$1-...

CHEESE

BREAD

••
••

~

· 4 INCH'

"BETSY ROSS"
"HONEY MEAL"
SANDWICH

POLYESTER
SEWING

SMOKED HAM

••••
••
•
•

137 PINE STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

_f!!_O_W OPEN

COMING TO MIDDlfPORT AT
MEIGS JR. HIGH SCHOOL

I

•

ROAST~..,

PORK

attack on Gen. St. Clair's troops in
1791 near Cincinnati. Alter fighting
lor three hours, St. Clair's force of
1,400 fled the field. Nearly half of his
men were scalped.

HOMEO~QUAUFY

SAVE MONEY

' ••••••••••••••• ·······••rt••••llfU//~

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

lb. Blue Bonnet
Homeowners near London's two
big airports now qualify lor free
noise-proofing. About 31,000 homes
around Heathrow and Gatwick air·
ports will qualify lor grants that
cover the full cost of noise-proofing
two living rooms and all betlrooms.

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, April23, 1980..

...........

----}

29 .o z.

,.
OSAGE PEACHES ·········-·- 2/$~.39
.

'

-

\

-

�--------6- lbe DeUySenUnel, Mlddleport.Pmleroy, 0 ., Wednesday, April23, 1980

REV. BETIY Skates and Mary Meyers, Springfield, will serve as
evangelists and singers for a revival to be held at the Danville Wesleyan
Church, April ~May 4. Services are at 7:30each evening and the Rev. R.
D. Brown, pastor, invites the public.

.Polly's Pointers

Wax got on slacks
By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY- I dropped some
candle wax on a pair of black knit
slacks. Can you tell me how to get it
out? ·MARGARET
DEAR MAR·
.GARET - Place
·the stained fabric
between paper
towels and press
' with a warm iron.
The heal should
transfer the wax
Cramer
:from the fabric to the towels.
Change when soiled and repeat if
necessary. If any stain remains
sponge with alcohol but do test the
effect on your slacks before pr()ceeding. ·POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I disagree with
'Mrs. G.H. who hangs a bug or pest
strip in her cabinet. I do nof think
'they should be hung around food.
She should check the package her
strip comes in. Somewhere on the
package it should say if it would be
harmful. I know they have a strong
odor and it could be absorbed by
:even packaged food. - MRS.J.V.
• · DEAR POLLY- I learned it pays

to read directions -the hard way. I
sprayed my oven with oven cleaner
and did not cover the floor with
paper as I should have done. The ex·
cess cleaner ran down on my fairly
new tile floor.
Mter a lot of work and tears I gave
up and put a throw rug over the
large ugly stains. Mter each mopping of the floor with annmonia and
water the stains lightened. and are
going away. Please tell the other
readers not to give up and think they
have to have a new floor when such a
situation arises. Mine looks almost
like new. - JEANNIE
DEAR POLLY- I am sure my
Pointer will calm many irate
husbands who do not like it when you
hammer nails in the wall for hang·
ing pictures. A needle tempered by
putting it in the freezing compart·
menl overnight and for several more
hours at least wiU hold up to 15
pounds in weight. No more ghastly
holes in the wall. - MRS. M. C.
Polly will send you one of her sign·
ed thank-you newspaper-coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
colwnn. Write Polly's Pointers in
care of this newspaper.

Helen Help Us
His wife is the dog-his dogs are his life
Speetal COI'mlpoodeal
DEAR HELEN :
If my husband had his way, I'd be
eating dog food and our dogs would
be eating steak.
Don't get me wrong. I too am an
animal lover, but within reason. My
husband even insists on letting the
dogs sleep with us.
What does a wife do when her man
loves his pets more than be loves
her? -CANINE COMPETITOR
DEARC.C.:
.
Surprising how often advice col·
umnists hear your complaint: pets
can churn up great jealousy among
people: but so too do careers, or
hunting, or sailboats, or racing cars,
or friends ·anything which makes a
mate feel less than Nwnber One in
the marriage.
How can you combat this feeling?
First, try to understand why your
husband lavishes affection on his
dogs : they give him unconditional
love; they obey him; they're totally
dependent on him, and they cause
few hassles; in short, to them he's a
king, and a man needs that.
Now for possible Rx's:
Tell your man, in a nOOH:ritical
way, that you need attention also.
Perhaps he's taking you for granted
because you 've allowed his wife to
be the dog while his dogs become his
life.
Compete. You've a lot more to of·
fer than a couple of pets.
Compromise. Enjoy the animals
with him, but insist on certain limits,
as in no canine bedroom privileges.

Racine PTO.installs
officers Tuesday eve
Officers for the 1980-31 year were
installed and the fifth graders of
Mrs. Vicl\i Hoback presented a ptay,
"Twelve Bright Trumpets" at the
Tuesday night meeting of the Racine
PTO.
.
Mrs. Shirley Carpenter presided
at the meeting and installed the new
officers, Nancy Yoachim, president;
Vicki Damron, vice president: Barbara Dugan, secretary; and Donna
Johnson,treasurer.
'
Taking part in the play were
Rachel Reiber, Matthew Jewell,

And if an else fails, try " hair of the
dog." Make so much over these
pooches that it will be his turn to feel
displaced.- H.
DEAR HELEN:
You asked if we readers knew
anyone else among the famous who
were born on February 29 (Leap
Year Day) .
The Marquis de Montcalm was
born February 29, 1712 in Nirnes,
France. A great soldier, it is unfortunate that he is remembered
mostly for his loss in 1759 to British
Gen. Wolfe oo the Plains of
Abraham, Quebec; a highly irnpor·
tant battle. It's been said that we
would all be speaking French today
if he bad won. Both Montcalm and
Wolfe were morially wounded in this
battle. -VIVIAN BISCHOFF
DEAR HELEN.
Another Leap Year Day person :
Morarji Desai was born February 29
over 80 years ago. He was prime
minister of India ,in early 1977 and
remained in office until July 1979. G.P.R.
DEAR HELEN.
As an opera buff, I seem to recall
that Giacchino Rossini was born
February 29, 1792. He wrote "The
Barber of Seville" and also the
"WiUiam Tell Overture," which was
the theme • music for the Lone
Ranger.- CHARlJE ANDERSON
DEAR HELEN:
If any of your readers have old
greeting cards ~ Christmas and
otherwise - please pass along this

idea: the Irvington, N.J ., chapter of
the American Association of Retired
Persons mounts them on construction paper, then binds them into •
booklets which we send to various
hospitals for the children to scan. S.M.B.

SALE PRICE

Aprtlll, 1111

ThlngB yw mlgllt have felt to be impooolble or
WV'el;chable last year could became a res.Uty
thia year. You're especlaUy fortunate in areas involving frt&lt;ndlhlpo and mnance.

TAURUSIAprtiiNiay ltJ Keep your eye onol&gt;
Jed!ves that ..uJ brine you hoppineoa, bec:.ause
l..ady UJdc Ia will! you allllle way today. Find out
more of whit lies at.e.d for you in the year
roD owing your birthday by sendins for Your copy
ci AstroGrapll Lotter. Mall II for ead&gt; to AstroGrapll, 1101 • · Radlo City Station, N. Y. 10019.
Be suro tospedfy birth dol&lt;.
GEMlNliM.oy ll.Juaell) Thlscooldtumoutto
be a pleasant day ror you when someol'lt to whcm
you've been tind cornea through fer you in a biB
way.
CANCER IJ... %!.July !2) A hope that isll't
necesaarily materiil hu •n excellent chanct Dl
becunlng a reality today. The more exposure
you have with others, the better your Odds.
LEO !July ZS.A111. Zll A pei'!OII •ho Ia In a
position t.o ~r your career or add to your income 1.! looting~: with favor today. Rewarcb lllat are due
t be forthcoming.
VIRGO IAq.
!2) It illl't likely you 'U
find any obstacles in your path today, because
Dame Fortune ill walklni In front ci you, picking
up allllle stwnbllng blocb.
.
LIBJU tiltpt zs.oet. DJ Larse benefits mlaht
be in Jtore for y~ today •ben someone invles
you lnt&lt; an extremely promlalng situlion.
SCORPIO iOc!t. ~... !2) Negot!allcins could
be takJni pia"" today Involving a new project
you're lnler&lt;sted In starlinll. You may be olfered
more than you espected.
SAGmAIIIUS !Nov. ZI-Dee. II) Yoo'"' iudry
today In lllat you mlgllt be standing In llle riglll
place at the right time, and be given an opportunlly to woril for something ci great

Tannmy Theiss, Tammy Wolfe,
Diana Slmpson, Usa Pape, Wendy
Wolfe, Legina Hart, Debbie Murphy,
Jamie Hensler, Greg Hoff, Anita
Smith, Mike Deem, and Craig
Brown. Brian Wanlen was the nar·.
rator, Carrie Beegle.the trumpeter,
and Damon Fisher, the stage hand.
Sarah Fisher assisted with the art '
work of the play.
During the meeting it was
reported that the soup labels were
being redeemed for two tether balls,
and models of the eye, ear and lungs.
Mrs. Rose, Mrs. Damron, and
Mrs. Carpenter were named to the '
auditing commlttee. Plans were announced for an art fair to be held at
the May 12 meeting of the PTO. The
pledge to the flag and the Lonl's
Prayer opened the meeting. Linda
Holter and Pam Diddle gave of.
ficers' reports.

'17995

NE
533.
• Free-arm with push-button
snap-in cloth plate.
• ·six built-in Fashion• and utility
stitches.
• Front drop-in bobbin.
• Self-threading take-up lever.
• Presser, bar pressure control for
all types of fabrics,
'v\cCALL'S "ONE FREE" SEWING SPREE

BUY 2 GET 1 FREE
At Store

FABRIC SHOP

raulta.

AIUE8 (Mardi ll·Aoril IJi C...ter your at·
tent1on m waya to lnlli:e money to get SOII'lething
u:pensiveyou'vebeen wanting. You're mort for"
bllllte today Ulan you maytlllnk,

115 W. 2nd

Pomeroy
992·2281

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS
'

In Order to Vote In the
June 3rd ·Primary Elections

prorruse.

'

YOU MUST BE REGISTERED

II

BY MAY 5TH
IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: VIsit the Board's OHice In
FOR
GRADUATION

penon - OR - Phone the Board of Elections the Board a Card.

20% DI$COUNT

If you are In doubt as to whether you are properly registered, ·
phone the Board.

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF ELECTIO.NS

SANDALS•••
AS PREnY AS A

--

That ' s how you ' ll
look wear i ng them,
too.
With
their

PICTURE I

medium

pleasure!

is

-

P. 0. Box. 488, PomeiOJ, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-2697
Regular HouJS_- _8:30-4:30 Mondays through Fridays

heights, walking in
these so simple, yet
so pretly
ankle·

straps

..... -

MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING

heel

pure

ADDITIONAL HOURS FOR REGISl HATION:
Friday Evenings- April IS, 25, May 2-6 p.m. to 9 p.m •.
Saturdays-April19, 26, May 3, 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
9 a.m. to9

CHAPMAN SHOES
"Next to Elberfelds in Pomeroy, 0.

French City ·

~~~ ....................... ~~. . ~! 09
Racine, 0.
STORE
F~iiCI St•mps
Fri~•Y

9:001117:00
5!11;;·ciay 9:00-9:00

CLOSED

SUNDAYS

vaniv ·ail 1

BOILED HAM
, Seve_ral varietie,s

lb.

.

TASTEE

$1.99
j$

29
. WISHBONE DRESSING ........~~:.2
.. 1
8

*Ert~

PIECE.:~.~..:. 69'

BACON ............ SUCED .~:~:. 79'

END CUT

M-•Y lhru

Mall

ALSO, If you MOVE you must notify the county oHice. Or

TO All 1980 GRADUATES

SLAB

We Gl•dr Accept Fed.

OR -

. . . . . . . . . . . .:. . ~~.~~:. .~l

z9

N~Yellow ·

ONIONS
z, Llk

·

59~

_Pi

Sweet Brier Black

GRAPEFRUIT
5 LB.

'99'

PEPP~R ........................ ~.?~:. &amp;gc
Luck's, Several varieties

BEANS...................~~-3.~~~~..

2/Br

, GE:-.. -1 Peas, Com, Gm. Beans.~~.~~: 211r
MM'.AimNI &amp;CHEESE......Z~~·.. 3/$100 Ha:A~P"P~LE:SH""~CA~B~BA~
Kratt

21- Mll.K. ........................'...... flJ9
·
Parkay
Tonev's A.l l variefle's
.
PIZZAS..............................'30' OFF
.. MARGARINE; ..•.•....... !~: .9.~~!:'.~~~.. ,59e , 31i

..,.eSiiiike

99'

LB.

15'

Stork

,

Reg.$1.19

SWE£fRou.s ................. :.~!: ..

News Notes

By Alma MoroltaU

THIS STYLIST*

comod, lllougll yoo may not be aware of n until
)'011 reflect 011 all the nice illll1f!ll that happen
today.
I
AQlJARIU8 fJu. IH'eb. IJI Tbrouoh you
- . . , good could happen today lila! would
have • Yerf beneficial effect upon you and your
family or other loved ones.
PI8CI!:S iF.._ It-Mardi It) You have good
......., to look obtirniJtically upon lhingJ today,
10 art accordingly. You'D produce the desired

r;;;~;::;::;::;::;::;::~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:11

CLASSPLANSPARTY
A picnic and swimming party at
the Barton home in June was planned when the Young Adults Class of
the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church met recenUy at the Meigs
:County lofirmary.
Bob Barton won the gift cer·
tificiate in the Bible quiz. Mrs. Doris
·Shook and Mrs. Mildred Jacobs
served refreshments to Mr. and
Mrs. Randy Hawley, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Barton, the Rev. and Mrs. Floyd
·Shook, Mrs. Mike Wright, Betty
:Wills, Leona Martin, Etta Ellis, and
:Ids Mae Martin.

P~IE'S

Mam CooniJ

Taurus told to keep eye on happiness

CAPRICORN iDec.IZ.Ju.IJ) Yoo'UeuUyout. poll othero where per.IDilAI pcl!lUlarity Ia coo-

SLINDER.ELLA MEETS
Reports on weight Joss and new
members to Slinderella during the
: past week were given today by Mrs.
: JoAnn Newsome, director.
• At the Mason Monday evening
class, Beverly Rickanllost the moot
weight and Barb Varian was runnerup. Six new members were welcomed into f;he class. At the Mason Tues·
. day morning class, one new member
: was welcomed and Nita Conde and
: Cloreen Lewis were honored for hav·
·ing lost the most, whUe at the Mid·
dleport class, Brenda Pettit lost the
most weight and Peggy Lewis was
runner·up. Information on the
classes may be obtained from Mrs.
Newsome at 992·3382.

7- The Dally Sentinel,

·- ,

sse

Speelal COI'I'elpondent

Homemaken dlacuss foodl
MASON - Mrs, Laurene LeWis
presented the lesson on bow foods

nutrients and drugs interact whe~
the Mason Enensioo Htmemakers
met on Tuesday evening at the
hlstoric Lewla Home with Mrs.

Store

Mrs, Wllllam
Zerkle aa hostesses. The lesscin
prepared by Dorothy Schustennan,
R.D. Extension Specialist Foods and
George Carson, and

Nutrition, sald in part "Americans.
have become a nation of 'Pill Poppers, • not only of prescribed
· medications but also of over-thecounter (OTC) drugs." Television,
with Its counUess competing com~rciala for Products to relieve
headaches, stomach upeets, sleepless nights, backaches, arthritis,
and tension, has replaced the 19th
century "medicine man" with his
one bottle cure lor every known
disease. Drugs' greatest danger
comes from: non discriminating use
of over-the-counter drugs, long tenn
use of prescribed drugs without
adequate .follow-up, disregarding
directions for taking the drug, in: teractlon of a number of drugs that
, one Individual takes; interactioo of
: foods, n11trients, and drugs, one per: son taking drugs prescribed for
: another person.
A few of the common lnteractions
: are aspirin and products that con- ·
, lain aspirin have been known to
: Irritate stomach lining, prolong '
· bleeding time, and increase the need
: for iron, ascorbic acid (vitamin C),
: and folic acid.
, Other common interactions
· described if taken constant over a
: long period of time lnclude antsclds.
: Mineral oil, still commonly used,
: decreases the absorption of the
• mineral calciwn and vitamins A, D,
; E, and K. Since the laxative in: terferes with absorptioo of vitamin
; K, long tenn use possibly could in, crease blood clotting time (the blood
; takes longer to clot).
; The lesson pointed out how foods
: :illteract with drugs - sometimes
· people will mix a drug with fruit
· juice or cola drinks to mask the
Oavor of the drug. This may not be a
good practice. Saine drugs dissolve
faster in acid and the result could be
Irritating to the stomach Uning.
Alcohol Is not really a food (though
It supplies seven calories a gram) .
Alcohol's effect on the absorption
and use of nutrients is not fully understood. It is known that It can
damage the liver which is the central organ for the metaboliam of
meat nutrients. It also has been
shown to affect the absorption of
some vitamins. Even small amounta
of Bicobolare known to interact with
many drugs, mainly antibiotics, anti-coagulants, sedatives, an·
tihistamine8, and blood pressure
drugs.
In conclusion the overall risk of
developing Iatrogenic malnutrition,
that is, malnutrition resulting from
long tenn adininistration of drugs,
depends on: length of tline oo the
drug; the body's reserve of nutrients:' the body's ability to afi!tpt to the
changes In absorption of nutrients
and the overall quality of diet. Mrs.
LewiB concluded the meeting with a
question and aJl'JW'er session pertaining to the Jesson.
At the opening Of the meeting the
devotional leader, Mrs. Lester John·son read Psalm 100, which followed
the Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag.
She read, Spring - one of Life's
Many Changes;
Mrs. John Marshall presided when
the group voted to have a Bake Sale·
oo May 10, and to hold the club's
Mother and Deughter Banquet oo
May 2, at 6:30 at l'tf~ Inn _(date ,
Ia~ waa changed to May 3). Mrs.
Albuttice Young was appointed to
get prizes and to make arrangements lor approximately 40 pel'!IOIIS.
Mrs. George Carson was ap- '
pointed to be In charge of the Bake
Sale. Durjng the business meeting
Mrs. Carson reported briefly on
Homemakers Week scheduled f&lt;r
May4-10.
Mrs. Landon Smith of the Citizen.
ship Committee told of a
Beautification Poster Contest to be
held in Mason, and West Colwnbta
Grade Schools. Prizes will be awar-

ded.
Mrs. Laurene

.
LewiB of

th~o ,.

nominating committee submitted
the slate of officers to be elected In
; May. Candldatea for president,
Sarah Spencer·and Catherine Smith;
vice president, Catherine Smith and
ROberta Young; secretary, Clara
' Wllllams and Joyce Carson; .
. treasurer. Ulah Zerkle.
!
' Mrs. Lester 'Jobnsoo of the I
Cultural Arts Committee reported :
: that aeveral club memben attended ,
' the musical Oklahoma.
• Mrs. Ray Proffitt waa welcomed
: as a new member ci the club.
;
: The May !Meting will ~ held at ·
: the honle ci Mrs. Landon smith with
• Mrs. Fred Spencer u CIHiolstess.
; Attending the meeting were Mrs.
: Ray Pnmtt, Mrs. Alburtice YAllllli,
: Mrs. John Marsball, Mrs. Laurene
• LewiB Mrs. Lester Johnson, Mrs.
; Evelvit Stewart, Mrs. Landon Smith
; and lloiltellllell, Mrs. Carson and Mrs.

'Zerkle.

Hours~

Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm ,
. Sunday 10 am-10 IH'1
(,

Z98 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY. 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE IHICOIJGI:I SAlURDAY, APRIL 26, 1980
.

$

BUCKET

29

CUBED STEAK......~•.
SUPERIOR FRANKIES
20

WI EN ERS........... ~ - !..
SUPERIOR

SLICED

USDA CHOICE

'

BACON:~z.~z..

$139

ARM ROAST. ........ ~·..

$J39

USDA CHOICE

CHUCK STEAK .....!!·•••
USDA CHOICE .
$ 69
CHUCK ROASI .....Lf·•••

U. S. NO. 1 WHITE

'

POTAT0Es ..............
1ii I.BS.

$

VALLEY BELL

59

2% MILK......... :~~c....

LIQUID DETERGENT

.·

$119

IVORY................ !~~~ ...

PORK&amp;aEANS~)t/$
~OUNTRY

TIME

·'

LEMONADE
. 31 ~z. - 179
10 OUART SIZE
.

s

·

.
L'lmit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's

CRISCO
J LB..

CAN
Limit 1'Per customer
Good Only
Powell's
26,

~R~N'S

•

BUTTERMILK....~.':':. 7
$

BORDEN'S ELSIE

09

ICE CREAM......~.G~····1
. · MUELLER'S .ELBO

GRAPE JELLY .
38

oz. . 99~ ·

Limit 1 Per customer
Good Only at Powell's

MACA,RONI
'

3 LB. ,
BOX.

.$,119 .

�--------6- lbe DeUySenUnel, Mlddleport.Pmleroy, 0 ., Wednesday, April23, 1980

REV. BETIY Skates and Mary Meyers, Springfield, will serve as
evangelists and singers for a revival to be held at the Danville Wesleyan
Church, April ~May 4. Services are at 7:30each evening and the Rev. R.
D. Brown, pastor, invites the public.

.Polly's Pointers

Wax got on slacks
By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY- I dropped some
candle wax on a pair of black knit
slacks. Can you tell me how to get it
out? ·MARGARET
DEAR MAR·
.GARET - Place
·the stained fabric
between paper
towels and press
' with a warm iron.
The heal should
transfer the wax
Cramer
:from the fabric to the towels.
Change when soiled and repeat if
necessary. If any stain remains
sponge with alcohol but do test the
effect on your slacks before pr()ceeding. ·POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I disagree with
'Mrs. G.H. who hangs a bug or pest
strip in her cabinet. I do nof think
'they should be hung around food.
She should check the package her
strip comes in. Somewhere on the
package it should say if it would be
harmful. I know they have a strong
odor and it could be absorbed by
:even packaged food. - MRS.J.V.
• · DEAR POLLY- I learned it pays

to read directions -the hard way. I
sprayed my oven with oven cleaner
and did not cover the floor with
paper as I should have done. The ex·
cess cleaner ran down on my fairly
new tile floor.
Mter a lot of work and tears I gave
up and put a throw rug over the
large ugly stains. Mter each mopping of the floor with annmonia and
water the stains lightened. and are
going away. Please tell the other
readers not to give up and think they
have to have a new floor when such a
situation arises. Mine looks almost
like new. - JEANNIE
DEAR POLLY- I am sure my
Pointer will calm many irate
husbands who do not like it when you
hammer nails in the wall for hang·
ing pictures. A needle tempered by
putting it in the freezing compart·
menl overnight and for several more
hours at least wiU hold up to 15
pounds in weight. No more ghastly
holes in the wall. - MRS. M. C.
Polly will send you one of her sign·
ed thank-you newspaper-coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
colwnn. Write Polly's Pointers in
care of this newspaper.

Helen Help Us
His wife is the dog-his dogs are his life
Speetal COI'mlpoodeal
DEAR HELEN :
If my husband had his way, I'd be
eating dog food and our dogs would
be eating steak.
Don't get me wrong. I too am an
animal lover, but within reason. My
husband even insists on letting the
dogs sleep with us.
What does a wife do when her man
loves his pets more than be loves
her? -CANINE COMPETITOR
DEARC.C.:
.
Surprising how often advice col·
umnists hear your complaint: pets
can churn up great jealousy among
people: but so too do careers, or
hunting, or sailboats, or racing cars,
or friends ·anything which makes a
mate feel less than Nwnber One in
the marriage.
How can you combat this feeling?
First, try to understand why your
husband lavishes affection on his
dogs : they give him unconditional
love; they obey him; they're totally
dependent on him, and they cause
few hassles; in short, to them he's a
king, and a man needs that.
Now for possible Rx's:
Tell your man, in a nOOH:ritical
way, that you need attention also.
Perhaps he's taking you for granted
because you 've allowed his wife to
be the dog while his dogs become his
life.
Compete. You've a lot more to of·
fer than a couple of pets.
Compromise. Enjoy the animals
with him, but insist on certain limits,
as in no canine bedroom privileges.

Racine PTO.installs
officers Tuesday eve
Officers for the 1980-31 year were
installed and the fifth graders of
Mrs. Vicl\i Hoback presented a ptay,
"Twelve Bright Trumpets" at the
Tuesday night meeting of the Racine
PTO.
.
Mrs. Shirley Carpenter presided
at the meeting and installed the new
officers, Nancy Yoachim, president;
Vicki Damron, vice president: Barbara Dugan, secretary; and Donna
Johnson,treasurer.
'
Taking part in the play were
Rachel Reiber, Matthew Jewell,

And if an else fails, try " hair of the
dog." Make so much over these
pooches that it will be his turn to feel
displaced.- H.
DEAR HELEN:
You asked if we readers knew
anyone else among the famous who
were born on February 29 (Leap
Year Day) .
The Marquis de Montcalm was
born February 29, 1712 in Nirnes,
France. A great soldier, it is unfortunate that he is remembered
mostly for his loss in 1759 to British
Gen. Wolfe oo the Plains of
Abraham, Quebec; a highly irnpor·
tant battle. It's been said that we
would all be speaking French today
if he bad won. Both Montcalm and
Wolfe were morially wounded in this
battle. -VIVIAN BISCHOFF
DEAR HELEN.
Another Leap Year Day person :
Morarji Desai was born February 29
over 80 years ago. He was prime
minister of India ,in early 1977 and
remained in office until July 1979. G.P.R.
DEAR HELEN.
As an opera buff, I seem to recall
that Giacchino Rossini was born
February 29, 1792. He wrote "The
Barber of Seville" and also the
"WiUiam Tell Overture," which was
the theme • music for the Lone
Ranger.- CHARlJE ANDERSON
DEAR HELEN:
If any of your readers have old
greeting cards ~ Christmas and
otherwise - please pass along this

idea: the Irvington, N.J ., chapter of
the American Association of Retired
Persons mounts them on construction paper, then binds them into •
booklets which we send to various
hospitals for the children to scan. S.M.B.

SALE PRICE

Aprtlll, 1111

ThlngB yw mlgllt have felt to be impooolble or
WV'el;chable last year could became a res.Uty
thia year. You're especlaUy fortunate in areas involving frt&lt;ndlhlpo and mnance.

TAURUSIAprtiiNiay ltJ Keep your eye onol&gt;
Jed!ves that ..uJ brine you hoppineoa, bec:.ause
l..ady UJdc Ia will! you allllle way today. Find out
more of whit lies at.e.d for you in the year
roD owing your birthday by sendins for Your copy
ci AstroGrapll Lotter. Mall II for ead&gt; to AstroGrapll, 1101 • · Radlo City Station, N. Y. 10019.
Be suro tospedfy birth dol&lt;.
GEMlNliM.oy ll.Juaell) Thlscooldtumoutto
be a pleasant day ror you when someol'lt to whcm
you've been tind cornea through fer you in a biB
way.
CANCER IJ... %!.July !2) A hope that isll't
necesaarily materiil hu •n excellent chanct Dl
becunlng a reality today. The more exposure
you have with others, the better your Odds.
LEO !July ZS.A111. Zll A pei'!OII •ho Ia In a
position t.o ~r your career or add to your income 1.! looting~: with favor today. Rewarcb lllat are due
t be forthcoming.
VIRGO IAq.
!2) It illl't likely you 'U
find any obstacles in your path today, because
Dame Fortune ill walklni In front ci you, picking
up allllle stwnbllng blocb.
.
LIBJU tiltpt zs.oet. DJ Larse benefits mlaht
be in Jtore for y~ today •ben someone invles
you lnt&lt; an extremely promlalng situlion.
SCORPIO iOc!t. ~... !2) Negot!allcins could
be takJni pia"" today Involving a new project
you're lnler&lt;sted In starlinll. You may be olfered
more than you espected.
SAGmAIIIUS !Nov. ZI-Dee. II) Yoo'"' iudry
today In lllat you mlgllt be standing In llle riglll
place at the right time, and be given an opportunlly to woril for something ci great

Tannmy Theiss, Tammy Wolfe,
Diana Slmpson, Usa Pape, Wendy
Wolfe, Legina Hart, Debbie Murphy,
Jamie Hensler, Greg Hoff, Anita
Smith, Mike Deem, and Craig
Brown. Brian Wanlen was the nar·.
rator, Carrie Beegle.the trumpeter,
and Damon Fisher, the stage hand.
Sarah Fisher assisted with the art '
work of the play.
During the meeting it was
reported that the soup labels were
being redeemed for two tether balls,
and models of the eye, ear and lungs.
Mrs. Rose, Mrs. Damron, and
Mrs. Carpenter were named to the '
auditing commlttee. Plans were announced for an art fair to be held at
the May 12 meeting of the PTO. The
pledge to the flag and the Lonl's
Prayer opened the meeting. Linda
Holter and Pam Diddle gave of.
ficers' reports.

'17995

NE
533.
• Free-arm with push-button
snap-in cloth plate.
• ·six built-in Fashion• and utility
stitches.
• Front drop-in bobbin.
• Self-threading take-up lever.
• Presser, bar pressure control for
all types of fabrics,
'v\cCALL'S "ONE FREE" SEWING SPREE

BUY 2 GET 1 FREE
At Store

FABRIC SHOP

raulta.

AIUE8 (Mardi ll·Aoril IJi C...ter your at·
tent1on m waya to lnlli:e money to get SOII'lething
u:pensiveyou'vebeen wanting. You're mort for"
bllllte today Ulan you maytlllnk,

115 W. 2nd

Pomeroy
992·2281

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS
'

In Order to Vote In the
June 3rd ·Primary Elections

prorruse.

'

YOU MUST BE REGISTERED

II

BY MAY 5TH
IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: VIsit the Board's OHice In
FOR
GRADUATION

penon - OR - Phone the Board of Elections the Board a Card.

20% DI$COUNT

If you are In doubt as to whether you are properly registered, ·
phone the Board.

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF ELECTIO.NS

SANDALS•••
AS PREnY AS A

--

That ' s how you ' ll
look wear i ng them,
too.
With
their

PICTURE I

medium

pleasure!

is

-

P. 0. Box. 488, PomeiOJ, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-2697
Regular HouJS_- _8:30-4:30 Mondays through Fridays

heights, walking in
these so simple, yet
so pretly
ankle·

straps

..... -

MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING

heel

pure

ADDITIONAL HOURS FOR REGISl HATION:
Friday Evenings- April IS, 25, May 2-6 p.m. to 9 p.m •.
Saturdays-April19, 26, May 3, 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
9 a.m. to9

CHAPMAN SHOES
"Next to Elberfelds in Pomeroy, 0.

French City ·

~~~ ....................... ~~. . ~! 09
Racine, 0.
STORE
F~iiCI St•mps
Fri~•Y

9:001117:00
5!11;;·ciay 9:00-9:00

CLOSED

SUNDAYS

vaniv ·ail 1

BOILED HAM
, Seve_ral varietie,s

lb.

.

TASTEE

$1.99
j$

29
. WISHBONE DRESSING ........~~:.2
.. 1
8

*Ert~

PIECE.:~.~..:. 69'

BACON ............ SUCED .~:~:. 79'

END CUT

M-•Y lhru

Mall

ALSO, If you MOVE you must notify the county oHice. Or

TO All 1980 GRADUATES

SLAB

We Gl•dr Accept Fed.

OR -

. . . . . . . . . . . .:. . ~~.~~:. .~l

z9

N~Yellow ·

ONIONS
z, Llk

·

59~

_Pi

Sweet Brier Black

GRAPEFRUIT
5 LB.

'99'

PEPP~R ........................ ~.?~:. &amp;gc
Luck's, Several varieties

BEANS...................~~-3.~~~~..

2/Br

, GE:-.. -1 Peas, Com, Gm. Beans.~~.~~: 211r
MM'.AimNI &amp;CHEESE......Z~~·.. 3/$100 Ha:A~P"P~LE:SH""~CA~B~BA~
Kratt

21- Mll.K. ........................'...... flJ9
·
Parkay
Tonev's A.l l variefle's
.
PIZZAS..............................'30' OFF
.. MARGARINE; ..•.•....... !~: .9.~~!:'.~~~.. ,59e , 31i

..,.eSiiiike

99'

LB.

15'

Stork

,

Reg.$1.19

SWE£fRou.s ................. :.~!: ..

News Notes

By Alma MoroltaU

THIS STYLIST*

comod, lllougll yoo may not be aware of n until
)'011 reflect 011 all the nice illll1f!ll that happen
today.
I
AQlJARIU8 fJu. IH'eb. IJI Tbrouoh you
- . . , good could happen today lila! would
have • Yerf beneficial effect upon you and your
family or other loved ones.
PI8CI!:S iF.._ It-Mardi It) You have good
......., to look obtirniJtically upon lhingJ today,
10 art accordingly. You'D produce the desired

r;;;~;::;::;::;::;::;::~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:11

CLASSPLANSPARTY
A picnic and swimming party at
the Barton home in June was planned when the Young Adults Class of
the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church met recenUy at the Meigs
:County lofirmary.
Bob Barton won the gift cer·
tificiate in the Bible quiz. Mrs. Doris
·Shook and Mrs. Mildred Jacobs
served refreshments to Mr. and
Mrs. Randy Hawley, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Barton, the Rev. and Mrs. Floyd
·Shook, Mrs. Mike Wright, Betty
:Wills, Leona Martin, Etta Ellis, and
:Ids Mae Martin.

P~IE'S

Mam CooniJ

Taurus told to keep eye on happiness

CAPRICORN iDec.IZ.Ju.IJ) Yoo'UeuUyout. poll othero where per.IDilAI pcl!lUlarity Ia coo-

SLINDER.ELLA MEETS
Reports on weight Joss and new
members to Slinderella during the
: past week were given today by Mrs.
: JoAnn Newsome, director.
• At the Mason Monday evening
class, Beverly Rickanllost the moot
weight and Barb Varian was runnerup. Six new members were welcomed into f;he class. At the Mason Tues·
. day morning class, one new member
: was welcomed and Nita Conde and
: Cloreen Lewis were honored for hav·
·ing lost the most, whUe at the Mid·
dleport class, Brenda Pettit lost the
most weight and Peggy Lewis was
runner·up. Information on the
classes may be obtained from Mrs.
Newsome at 992·3382.

7- The Dally Sentinel,

·- ,

sse

Speelal COI'I'elpondent

Homemaken dlacuss foodl
MASON - Mrs, Laurene LeWis
presented the lesson on bow foods

nutrients and drugs interact whe~
the Mason Enensioo Htmemakers
met on Tuesday evening at the
hlstoric Lewla Home with Mrs.

Store

Mrs, Wllllam
Zerkle aa hostesses. The lesscin
prepared by Dorothy Schustennan,
R.D. Extension Specialist Foods and
George Carson, and

Nutrition, sald in part "Americans.
have become a nation of 'Pill Poppers, • not only of prescribed
· medications but also of over-thecounter (OTC) drugs." Television,
with Its counUess competing com~rciala for Products to relieve
headaches, stomach upeets, sleepless nights, backaches, arthritis,
and tension, has replaced the 19th
century "medicine man" with his
one bottle cure lor every known
disease. Drugs' greatest danger
comes from: non discriminating use
of over-the-counter drugs, long tenn
use of prescribed drugs without
adequate .follow-up, disregarding
directions for taking the drug, in: teractlon of a number of drugs that
, one Individual takes; interactioo of
: foods, n11trients, and drugs, one per: son taking drugs prescribed for
: another person.
A few of the common lnteractions
: are aspirin and products that con- ·
, lain aspirin have been known to
: Irritate stomach lining, prolong '
· bleeding time, and increase the need
: for iron, ascorbic acid (vitamin C),
: and folic acid.
, Other common interactions
· described if taken constant over a
: long period of time lnclude antsclds.
: Mineral oil, still commonly used,
: decreases the absorption of the
• mineral calciwn and vitamins A, D,
; E, and K. Since the laxative in: terferes with absorptioo of vitamin
; K, long tenn use possibly could in, crease blood clotting time (the blood
; takes longer to clot).
; The lesson pointed out how foods
: :illteract with drugs - sometimes
· people will mix a drug with fruit
· juice or cola drinks to mask the
Oavor of the drug. This may not be a
good practice. Saine drugs dissolve
faster in acid and the result could be
Irritating to the stomach Uning.
Alcohol Is not really a food (though
It supplies seven calories a gram) .
Alcohol's effect on the absorption
and use of nutrients is not fully understood. It is known that It can
damage the liver which is the central organ for the metaboliam of
meat nutrients. It also has been
shown to affect the absorption of
some vitamins. Even small amounta
of Bicobolare known to interact with
many drugs, mainly antibiotics, anti-coagulants, sedatives, an·
tihistamine8, and blood pressure
drugs.
In conclusion the overall risk of
developing Iatrogenic malnutrition,
that is, malnutrition resulting from
long tenn adininistration of drugs,
depends on: length of tline oo the
drug; the body's reserve of nutrients:' the body's ability to afi!tpt to the
changes In absorption of nutrients
and the overall quality of diet. Mrs.
LewiB concluded the meeting with a
question and aJl'JW'er session pertaining to the Jesson.
At the opening Of the meeting the
devotional leader, Mrs. Lester John·son read Psalm 100, which followed
the Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag.
She read, Spring - one of Life's
Many Changes;
Mrs. John Marshall presided when
the group voted to have a Bake Sale·
oo May 10, and to hold the club's
Mother and Deughter Banquet oo
May 2, at 6:30 at l'tf~ Inn _(date ,
Ia~ waa changed to May 3). Mrs.
Albuttice Young was appointed to
get prizes and to make arrangements lor approximately 40 pel'!IOIIS.
Mrs. George Carson was ap- '
pointed to be In charge of the Bake
Sale. Durjng the business meeting
Mrs. Carson reported briefly on
Homemakers Week scheduled f&lt;r
May4-10.
Mrs. Landon Smith of the Citizen.
ship Committee told of a
Beautification Poster Contest to be
held in Mason, and West Colwnbta
Grade Schools. Prizes will be awar-

ded.
Mrs. Laurene

.
LewiB of

th~o ,.

nominating committee submitted
the slate of officers to be elected In
; May. Candldatea for president,
Sarah Spencer·and Catherine Smith;
vice president, Catherine Smith and
ROberta Young; secretary, Clara
' Wllllams and Joyce Carson; .
. treasurer. Ulah Zerkle.
!
' Mrs. Lester 'Jobnsoo of the I
Cultural Arts Committee reported :
: that aeveral club memben attended ,
' the musical Oklahoma.
• Mrs. Ray Proffitt waa welcomed
: as a new member ci the club.
;
: The May !Meting will ~ held at ·
: the honle ci Mrs. Landon smith with
• Mrs. Fred Spencer u CIHiolstess.
; Attending the meeting were Mrs.
: Ray Pnmtt, Mrs. Alburtice YAllllli,
: Mrs. John Marsball, Mrs. Laurene
• LewiB Mrs. Lester Johnson, Mrs.
; Evelvit Stewart, Mrs. Landon Smith
; and lloiltellllell, Mrs. Carson and Mrs.

'Zerkle.

Hours~

Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm ,
. Sunday 10 am-10 IH'1
(,

Z98 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY. 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE IHICOIJGI:I SAlURDAY, APRIL 26, 1980
.

$

BUCKET

29

CUBED STEAK......~•.
SUPERIOR FRANKIES
20

WI EN ERS........... ~ - !..
SUPERIOR

SLICED

USDA CHOICE

'

BACON:~z.~z..

$139

ARM ROAST. ........ ~·..

$J39

USDA CHOICE

CHUCK STEAK .....!!·•••
USDA CHOICE .
$ 69
CHUCK ROASI .....Lf·•••

U. S. NO. 1 WHITE

'

POTAT0Es ..............
1ii I.BS.

$

VALLEY BELL

59

2% MILK......... :~~c....

LIQUID DETERGENT

.·

$119

IVORY................ !~~~ ...

PORK&amp;aEANS~)t/$
~OUNTRY

TIME

·'

LEMONADE
. 31 ~z. - 179
10 OUART SIZE
.

s

·

.
L'lmit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's

CRISCO
J LB..

CAN
Limit 1'Per customer
Good Only
Powell's
26,

~R~N'S

•

BUTTERMILK....~.':':. 7
$

BORDEN'S ELSIE

09

ICE CREAM......~.G~····1
. · MUELLER'S .ELBO

GRAPE JELLY .
38

oz. . 99~ ·

Limit 1 Per customer
Good Only at Powell's

MACA,RONI
'

3 LB. ,
BOX.

.$,119 .

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Mi&lt;!dleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Apri123,1980

•

9-'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Apri123,1980

•

40 gart4n clu~ members in Athens

Forty members rJ. seven Meigs ,Rogers.
County· GarClubs were in Athens
Seisho Barbara Wilkie, teacher of
Saturday for the Region 11, Ohio
the Sogestu School of Ikebana (the
Association of G!ll'den Clubs, spring
art of Japanese flower arranging)
meeting held at Ohio University.
highlighted the program for the
Mrs. Pat Holter, Region 11 direcmeeting hosted by the Athens Countor, a member of the Chester Garden · ty Garden Clubs.
Club and the Shade VaUey Council of
Mrs. Wilkie's demonstration conFloral Arts, presided at the business
sisted of ten arrangements. She ex- ·
meeting announcing the Ohio
plained the components of arr.anging
Association of Garden Clubs' state
in the Japanese maMer, the .type of
CQnventlon to be held in Colwnbus
containers to use, the number of
during August, and Gardener's Day
flowers and the size of each . .
Out at King's Island in September.
The Shade VaUey Council of Floral
A tour of the Ohio University
Arts won a $20 prize for having the
Greenhouse and comments by Dr.
highest percentage of members atRichard Rypma was included on the
tending.
morning agenda. Clinics presented
included program books by Gezela
Thomas; publicity books, Mary Lou
Capps; fiower shows, Dorothy
Bender; horticulture, Bunny Kubl
and a slide presentation, MarY

....•
.......•

"~

....•• ..
......• '..•

Pomeroy
Personal Notes

..••t....•

....
.. .
... .
;;;

......
~

t

•

'

..•
I

~

••

""
•

~

•

•

........'
r

...

"'.•

..

~

...

'

.-.
-.

In extensive new testing, smokers compared leading high tar menthols
and low tar MERIT MENTHOL. The result: Ofthe 95%
stating a prderence, 3out of4 smokers chose the MERIT MENTHOL
low ta~;
taste combination when tar levels were revealed.

...

~

"'..,

"'

tory list was given. A thllnk you note
was read from I. Carson Crow for a
digital clock given to .him by Donna
Davidson following his talk at the
club recently.
Mrs. Catherine Welsh, Mrs. Rhonda Dailey, and Mrs. Jean WUI were
appointed to the nominating committee. Mrs. Wanda Eblin, Mrs.
grace Pratt and Mrs. Terrie Walker
were named to the auditing committee which will function after the closing of the books on May 31.
Mrs. Davidson aMounced a bake
sale to be held on May 10 at Krogers
beginning at 9 a.m. A report on the
heart fund tea was given by Mrs.

.

Mr. and Mrs. Keith Van Inwagen,
Powhattan, spent the weekend here
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Edgar Van lnwagen.
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Ash and
daughter, Carissa of Syracuse, and
Mrs. Thelma Hawley were weekend
visitors in Chillicothe with Mrs.
Hawley's daughter and her family .
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs were Jack Jacobs
and dau8hter, Christy Dawn, Clearwater, Fla. While here the first
birthday of Christy was celebrated.
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs returned home
Thursday after a several days' visit
in Columbus with her daughters,
Mrs. Wi!Uam Davis and Mrs •
Wjlliam Jacobs.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Whitacre of Columbus brought their 19 month old
daughter, Erin, here for a weekend
visit with her grandparents, the
Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Shook. The
Shooks returned her home Sunday
night.
Mr. and Mrs. Avery Logan and
son, Jerry, Topsham, Main, have
i)een ·• rP. since Sunday visiting
frlen.... .••d relatives. Their son,
Scott Logan, arrived Tuesday from
Southern California where he has
beenrJiving, and he will return to
Maine with his parents and brother
oo Thursday. They have been
· houseguests of Miss Bernice King,
HemlockGrove. ·
Mrs. Thelma GrUfin has returned
to her home in Sandusky after a visit
here with Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Logan, Rock Springs.

.

..

...~

.."'.
..
!

"...

...

......

Jr

""

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN
BIGGE~T BARGAINS IN

.

Comer

CONE EARLY
STAY UTE

wiallinl-.. hopirw
Puolnf lllrouch life, loc*li\g ..• IP"CJPPnnl
Un~toppy·-a

For one perbllhe)' Cdl)d lay claim to.
11'1 ...... to- them I'OIIlllloo-

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

Eal&lt;!b'lootlni Into I)'WU., meet

Phll!p Morrillnc , 1980

Kings &amp;lOO's
•

,,'

(

69~

69
5La$l

PIZZA &amp; POP

WHILE YOU SHOP ·
. .:STOP BY AID SAY HI
WE'LL
BE
GLAD
TO
SEE;
.
WI. HAVE THE ll&amp;HT Tli -UIIlT OUI1liiiS
kWE 10 DEALD SALES
• CUSTOMIIS.-Y
':
.
. .... .
·

BETSY ROSS

CRISPY SERVE

BREAD

11 P.M·MIDNIGHT
. '

ONLY

PEPSI

BACON

BUY 1

LB.

·GET 1 FREE

49~

8

PKG.
16 oz.

89~

PWS TAX &amp; DEP.

LIMIT 6

LIMIT 5

CARDINAL

MEDIUM

MARGARINE

EGGS

lB.
-·. •. --QUARltRS

All they-~~ one friendly lool&lt;
Only on nod ol recocnJUon.
Ia it 10 hard lor ua to aee
The lonelllleos of others!
Reach out your hand ... say ''Hello FrleDd •·
1Ptrhap!IIIYe IOII1eOM from a lonely bttter end
1blnk ... my fellow men ....
How it wculd be 11 It were you and me
To Uve 1n a wc:rld that never !lees
LonellnHiln our eyes .•. on our face
Or know the luppinel!o of ~'olove.

'.

12 oz

I ..·

llyMI.Letllecd

ll'oooud toloc:ethe_.ldalone
So many people Uve in 1 world d tbelr own

DOMINO

SUPERIORS

9 :P."N. • 12 MID. IGHT

,._no world-

Kings: 8 mg"tar:· 0.6 mg nicotine- lOG's Reg:.10 mg "tar:' 0.7 mg nicotine100's Man: 11 mg "tar;· 0.8 mg nicotine av.per cigarette .FTC Report Dec:79

'

TOWN

$}19

-

The Poet's

&amp; FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN

THURSDAy I APRI.L 24

MEETING RESCHEDULED
The Eastern Local Board of
-Education which was scheduled to
meet on April22 will meet instead at
7 p.m. on April29 in the high school.

•

LB.

WHilE THEY LAST

THURSDAY
MONTHLY MEETING, Southern
Hills District of Ohio Nurses' Assn.,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Ohio
Department of Health buUding,
Front St., Logan. Nancy Neaseloney
will speak on assertiveness for nurses. All registered nurses rJ.
Hoelting, Athens, Meigs and GaUia
Counties inl(ited.
·

_.r ,,

the initiation were new members
.
'
Bal;bara Roush, Mary McAngus
Freeman, and Nancy Cooper.
The treasurer's report showed a
balance of $79.62 and was filed for
audit. Mrs. Werner noted that Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds is ill and in Akron
· with relatives. Miss Ema Jesse was
reported improving foUowing the·
fall in which she receivjld a hip fraoture.
The membership committee provided refreshments in keeping with
tl)e yeUow and green colors of the
club. The traveling prize was won by
Grace Pratt. Genevieve Ward, sister
of Mrs. Robson, was a guest ,at the
meeting.

HAMS WIENERS SUGAR

IntereSted;

"--'"""":~----...,.-------------....1
C
":
. , . •&lt;
•

WHOLE
BONELESS

Middleport, Ohio

WEDNa»AY
OIUO VALLEY COMMANDERY
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46 R&amp;SM
WOrk in royal master and select
master degrees .
MIDDlEPORT UTERARY Club,
2 p.m Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Ben Philson, Racine. Mrs. !
Rlchilrd Owen to review "The Glass,
.the Shadow, the Fire" by Philip
Mason. Mrs. James Euler will have
readings from Kipling, and for roU 1
caU members are to name a Kipling ,
book.
.
POMEROY - MIDDlEPORT
Uons Club noon meeting at Meigs
Inn, Wednesday.
PARENTS OF Meigs High School. ·
juniors and seniors interested in
prllOl night activities asked to meet
with Mrs. Dorothy Oliver 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday in.schoollllll'ary. Those
but unable to attend, c8n
992-?Ji70 after school hourll.
K OF P Sisters will have a monthly meet, 7:30 p.m., all members ·
attend; atKofPhaU.
.

...••

Eva Robaon and Mrs. Korn, along
with the spring district meeting held
Sunday at the Ohio University IM in
Athens. Announced was the Lake At·
wood fun weekend to be held Sept
1~21. It was reported that dues will
increase to $4 on June I and
ml\lllbers wereurged to pay their
dues by May 10.
Mrs. Dailey and Mrs. Will were initiated into the club membership
with a ceremony on the emblem IJe.
ing conducted by Mrs. Alwilda
Werner, membership chainnan,
Mrs. Eblin, Mrs. Mary Kunzelman,
Mrs. Pratt and Mrs. Frances Louise
Davis, president. Unable to attend

BIGGEST SAVINGS

·Sentinel
Social Calendar

..•

:

The Pretty Baby and the Little
Miss and Mister Contest of the Meigs
County Fair will again this year be
handled by the Middleport Business
ami Professional Women's Club.
Meeting Monday night at the Colwnbia Gas Co. of Ohio offices in Middleport, the club members voted to
sponsor the contest and handle the
details as they have in the past.
It was suggested during the
meeting that the political debate
planned by the club be done for the
November general election instead
of the June Primary.
Mrs. Janet Korn reported on
medical equipment and the inven-

VAUGHAN'S

••

~

BPW to handle Little Miss, Mister contests

LIMIT 2

TONY'S CHOICE

Cheese,

P~p~ronl,

Sausage,

Supreme

BUY .l
, GET 1 FREE

'

..

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Mi&lt;!dleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Apri123,1980

•

9-'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Apri123,1980

•

40 gart4n clu~ members in Athens

Forty members rJ. seven Meigs ,Rogers.
County· GarClubs were in Athens
Seisho Barbara Wilkie, teacher of
Saturday for the Region 11, Ohio
the Sogestu School of Ikebana (the
Association of G!ll'den Clubs, spring
art of Japanese flower arranging)
meeting held at Ohio University.
highlighted the program for the
Mrs. Pat Holter, Region 11 direcmeeting hosted by the Athens Countor, a member of the Chester Garden · ty Garden Clubs.
Club and the Shade VaUey Council of
Mrs. Wilkie's demonstration conFloral Arts, presided at the business
sisted of ten arrangements. She ex- ·
meeting announcing the Ohio
plained the components of arr.anging
Association of Garden Clubs' state
in the Japanese maMer, the .type of
CQnventlon to be held in Colwnbus
containers to use, the number of
during August, and Gardener's Day
flowers and the size of each . .
Out at King's Island in September.
The Shade VaUey Council of Floral
A tour of the Ohio University
Arts won a $20 prize for having the
Greenhouse and comments by Dr.
highest percentage of members atRichard Rypma was included on the
tending.
morning agenda. Clinics presented
included program books by Gezela
Thomas; publicity books, Mary Lou
Capps; fiower shows, Dorothy
Bender; horticulture, Bunny Kubl
and a slide presentation, MarY

....•
.......•

"~

....•• ..
......• '..•

Pomeroy
Personal Notes

..••t....•

....
.. .
... .
;;;

......
~

t

•

'

..•
I

~

••

""
•

~

•

•

........'
r

...

"'.•

..

~

...

'

.-.
-.

In extensive new testing, smokers compared leading high tar menthols
and low tar MERIT MENTHOL. The result: Ofthe 95%
stating a prderence, 3out of4 smokers chose the MERIT MENTHOL
low ta~;
taste combination when tar levels were revealed.

...

~

"'..,

"'

tory list was given. A thllnk you note
was read from I. Carson Crow for a
digital clock given to .him by Donna
Davidson following his talk at the
club recently.
Mrs. Catherine Welsh, Mrs. Rhonda Dailey, and Mrs. Jean WUI were
appointed to the nominating committee. Mrs. Wanda Eblin, Mrs.
grace Pratt and Mrs. Terrie Walker
were named to the auditing committee which will function after the closing of the books on May 31.
Mrs. Davidson aMounced a bake
sale to be held on May 10 at Krogers
beginning at 9 a.m. A report on the
heart fund tea was given by Mrs.

.

Mr. and Mrs. Keith Van Inwagen,
Powhattan, spent the weekend here
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Edgar Van lnwagen.
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Ash and
daughter, Carissa of Syracuse, and
Mrs. Thelma Hawley were weekend
visitors in Chillicothe with Mrs.
Hawley's daughter and her family .
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs were Jack Jacobs
and dau8hter, Christy Dawn, Clearwater, Fla. While here the first
birthday of Christy was celebrated.
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs returned home
Thursday after a several days' visit
in Columbus with her daughters,
Mrs. Wi!Uam Davis and Mrs •
Wjlliam Jacobs.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Whitacre of Columbus brought their 19 month old
daughter, Erin, here for a weekend
visit with her grandparents, the
Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Shook. The
Shooks returned her home Sunday
night.
Mr. and Mrs. Avery Logan and
son, Jerry, Topsham, Main, have
i)een ·• rP. since Sunday visiting
frlen.... .••d relatives. Their son,
Scott Logan, arrived Tuesday from
Southern California where he has
beenrJiving, and he will return to
Maine with his parents and brother
oo Thursday. They have been
· houseguests of Miss Bernice King,
HemlockGrove. ·
Mrs. Thelma GrUfin has returned
to her home in Sandusky after a visit
here with Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Logan, Rock Springs.

.

..

...~

.."'.
..
!

"...

...

......

Jr

""

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN
BIGGE~T BARGAINS IN

.

Comer

CONE EARLY
STAY UTE

wiallinl-.. hopirw
Puolnf lllrouch life, loc*li\g ..• IP"CJPPnnl
Un~toppy·-a

For one perbllhe)' Cdl)d lay claim to.
11'1 ...... to- them I'OIIlllloo-

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

Eal&lt;!b'lootlni Into I)'WU., meet

Phll!p Morrillnc , 1980

Kings &amp;lOO's
•

,,'

(

69~

69
5La$l

PIZZA &amp; POP

WHILE YOU SHOP ·
. .:STOP BY AID SAY HI
WE'LL
BE
GLAD
TO
SEE;
.
WI. HAVE THE ll&amp;HT Tli -UIIlT OUI1liiiS
kWE 10 DEALD SALES
• CUSTOMIIS.-Y
':
.
. .... .
·

BETSY ROSS

CRISPY SERVE

BREAD

11 P.M·MIDNIGHT
. '

ONLY

PEPSI

BACON

BUY 1

LB.

·GET 1 FREE

49~

8

PKG.
16 oz.

89~

PWS TAX &amp; DEP.

LIMIT 6

LIMIT 5

CARDINAL

MEDIUM

MARGARINE

EGGS

lB.
-·. •. --QUARltRS

All they-~~ one friendly lool&lt;
Only on nod ol recocnJUon.
Ia it 10 hard lor ua to aee
The lonelllleos of others!
Reach out your hand ... say ''Hello FrleDd •·
1Ptrhap!IIIYe IOII1eOM from a lonely bttter end
1blnk ... my fellow men ....
How it wculd be 11 It were you and me
To Uve 1n a wc:rld that never !lees
LonellnHiln our eyes .•. on our face
Or know the luppinel!o of ~'olove.

'.

12 oz

I ..·

llyMI.Letllecd

ll'oooud toloc:ethe_.ldalone
So many people Uve in 1 world d tbelr own

DOMINO

SUPERIORS

9 :P."N. • 12 MID. IGHT

,._no world-

Kings: 8 mg"tar:· 0.6 mg nicotine- lOG's Reg:.10 mg "tar:' 0.7 mg nicotine100's Man: 11 mg "tar;· 0.8 mg nicotine av.per cigarette .FTC Report Dec:79

'

TOWN

$}19

-

The Poet's

&amp; FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN

THURSDAy I APRI.L 24

MEETING RESCHEDULED
The Eastern Local Board of
-Education which was scheduled to
meet on April22 will meet instead at
7 p.m. on April29 in the high school.

•

LB.

WHilE THEY LAST

THURSDAY
MONTHLY MEETING, Southern
Hills District of Ohio Nurses' Assn.,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Ohio
Department of Health buUding,
Front St., Logan. Nancy Neaseloney
will speak on assertiveness for nurses. All registered nurses rJ.
Hoelting, Athens, Meigs and GaUia
Counties inl(ited.
·

_.r ,,

the initiation were new members
.
'
Bal;bara Roush, Mary McAngus
Freeman, and Nancy Cooper.
The treasurer's report showed a
balance of $79.62 and was filed for
audit. Mrs. Werner noted that Mrs.
Pearl Reynolds is ill and in Akron
· with relatives. Miss Ema Jesse was
reported improving foUowing the·
fall in which she receivjld a hip fraoture.
The membership committee provided refreshments in keeping with
tl)e yeUow and green colors of the
club. The traveling prize was won by
Grace Pratt. Genevieve Ward, sister
of Mrs. Robson, was a guest ,at the
meeting.

HAMS WIENERS SUGAR

IntereSted;

"--'"""":~----...,.-------------....1
C
":
. , . •&lt;
•

WHOLE
BONELESS

Middleport, Ohio

WEDNa»AY
OIUO VALLEY COMMANDERY
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46 R&amp;SM
WOrk in royal master and select
master degrees .
MIDDlEPORT UTERARY Club,
2 p.m Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Ben Philson, Racine. Mrs. !
Rlchilrd Owen to review "The Glass,
.the Shadow, the Fire" by Philip
Mason. Mrs. James Euler will have
readings from Kipling, and for roU 1
caU members are to name a Kipling ,
book.
.
POMEROY - MIDDlEPORT
Uons Club noon meeting at Meigs
Inn, Wednesday.
PARENTS OF Meigs High School. ·
juniors and seniors interested in
prllOl night activities asked to meet
with Mrs. Dorothy Oliver 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday in.schoollllll'ary. Those
but unable to attend, c8n
992-?Ji70 after school hourll.
K OF P Sisters will have a monthly meet, 7:30 p.m., all members ·
attend; atKofPhaU.
.

...••

Eva Robaon and Mrs. Korn, along
with the spring district meeting held
Sunday at the Ohio University IM in
Athens. Announced was the Lake At·
wood fun weekend to be held Sept
1~21. It was reported that dues will
increase to $4 on June I and
ml\lllbers wereurged to pay their
dues by May 10.
Mrs. Dailey and Mrs. Will were initiated into the club membership
with a ceremony on the emblem IJe.
ing conducted by Mrs. Alwilda
Werner, membership chainnan,
Mrs. Eblin, Mrs. Mary Kunzelman,
Mrs. Pratt and Mrs. Frances Louise
Davis, president. Unable to attend

BIGGEST SAVINGS

·Sentinel
Social Calendar

..•

:

The Pretty Baby and the Little
Miss and Mister Contest of the Meigs
County Fair will again this year be
handled by the Middleport Business
ami Professional Women's Club.
Meeting Monday night at the Colwnbia Gas Co. of Ohio offices in Middleport, the club members voted to
sponsor the contest and handle the
details as they have in the past.
It was suggested during the
meeting that the political debate
planned by the club be done for the
November general election instead
of the June Primary.
Mrs. Janet Korn reported on
medical equipment and the inven-

VAUGHAN'S

••

~

BPW to handle Little Miss, Mister contests

LIMIT 2

TONY'S CHOICE

Cheese,

P~p~ronl,

Sausage,

Supreme

BUY .l
, GET 1 FREE

'

..

�10 - TheDallySentinel,Middleport· Puneroy, O., Wednesday, April23,1980

Racine'
Social Events
By Mn. Frucll
Merrb
·The April meeting of ·the Esther
arcle held in the Fellowship room at
First Baptist Church F riday 11f.
tem oon opened with devotions by
Mrs. Marie Roy. "Bring Them In"
was sung by the group followed with
prayer, scripture and a missionary
reading.
Mrs. Grella Simpson, chainnan,
presided at the business session. The .

May I. The Love GUt program was
by Mildred Hart using the hymn,
"WeGivetbee But '1'hine Own" with
offering and prayer. A program
titled, " The Resurrection" was
presented by Mrs. Wanda Powell.
"Christ Arose!" was sung. Scripture
was from Mark 28:.1-9 and prayer
was by Florence Adams. Readings
about the resurrection were by
members. Mter singing "He Uves"
the program cl011ed by Mrs. Powell
reading A Missionary's Morning
Prayer. Refreshments by Helen

report

nominating COOIIII!ttee
was
given : chainnan, Mrs. Mildred
Hart; vice chairman; Mrs. Gretta
Simpson; secretary • treasurer,
Mrs. Ullian Hayman; Love· Gift
chainnan, Mrs. F lorence Adams;
White Cross chairman, Mrs.
Dorothy Badgley; flower fund , Mrs.
Ora Hill; cards, Mrs. Wanda P owell.
The officers will be installed at the
Bertha M. Sayre Missionary Society

Simpson , h05tess, were served to
nine members.
Mrs. Lavinia Simpson and Florence arcle spent the afternoon April
with Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Circle.
Mr. and Mrs Rocki Young and two
children of Columbus spent Satur·
day with her father, Martin
Wilcoxen,
, ·
'
Mr. and Mrs. Dale McGraw have
returned home after spending the
winter In Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis of Lorain
and Mrs, Marcia Ann Wells of

Mrs. J o Ann Parsons of Toledo

Washington C. H. spent the weekend
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs.

a

spent several days with her aunt,

Mrs. Hazel CArnahan.

Harry Curtis. '

ftftl}f.\,0 fi;)'i} ~THAT SCRAIIIILED WORD G.U.o;
~ ~ ~~ s
byHenriAmoldandBobLee

Frances FCIIter and Hazel Carnahan spent Easter Sunday with

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland returned home after two weeks visit with
Mrs. Bessie Sines Smith and Mrs.

Unacramllfe ~.. lour Jumbles

one Jetter to each square, to torno\

/

I PLUI~

I Kin. .

MAKES DEBUT

o _::-.,.~- · --

Sergei Rachmaninoff made hlB
U.S, debut with a plano recital at
Smith College In Massachusetta In

RASEE

tJ

I K1

1009.

'OPEN'.
24 HRS.
ADAY*

IF THAT ~I&lt;: E 'rCH MAP DF McKEii'S
MEANS ANYTHING, IT S HOULD 8!:IJORTHWI!ST OF HERE. :

SU F"E.R:VIS ION OF= A

WHO lt.J iHUt.JPER 15
THAH! ... COR'f D I D~'T
S A)' NUTHI N' A!!OlJT

SAL L 6AME
~EQ UI ~ES

e)(PECTit.J' AW
VISITORS~

X] K

Now arrange the circled letters to

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

rI

Mswe!:

III J ( I I I I I J
(Answers tomorrow)

I JumDies : NAIVE

Yesterday's

"THte&gt;!

WELSH KETTLE BECKON

An swer: Where many a schoolboy used to ha ve a

dip- IN THE INKWELL

*Except Clolell S.t11dl' M....... Tilt• s.Miy

BRIDGE

•Ezcept Hilltoll, Wlllte S."llu , 7111. Awt.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

AN LAST 'V EAR

C!Mwltston &amp;

Television
Viewing

.....:--;.
· ---~~
Are ya blind or sOmep 'n?!

lour ordlnaoy words,

Mrs. Loe Tisdale at Buckeye Lake.

Marie Sines at ft. Worth, Texas. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis visited
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle on Saturday
evening a nd MlsB P atty Shain of Antiquity on Monday eveuing, Other
recent guests were Mr. and Mrs. Bill
McKenzie and Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Wells.

KROGER

'.H-~TheJ?all.rSentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., Wednesday, Apr!l23, 1seo
,,, 01""'TRACY
•"

Will••-

Wily play dupes declarer
KROGERCOSTCUTTERCOUPON
NORTH
+KH

.J

H S-80

"Q 5 2
t AJ 9 6

WEST

COPYitGHT 1910- IHl ICIOGII CO . lfEMS AND rtiCU
0000 SUNDAY Al'lll 20 THIU U.TUIIDAY APtll 26 , 1"'
IN pQM!;:_RQ_Y A!'IQ GALL_I POl, IS STORES,
~ wt'USUVl

lKIIIGHl TO LIMIT QUANTniES. NONI SOLO

HOLLY FAIIMS. U.5.D.A. INSf'ECTED
GlADE A

Frying
Chicken Thighs .... lb.
U.S.D.A.INSPECTED FIOZEN .
5·7·LI.AVG.
.

69c

Baking Hens ................ lb. 49

C

STOlE PACICAGED COUNTRY STYLE

C

,

Sliced Bacon ................ lb.
U.S. GOV"T GRADED CHOICE,

$ 199. c;:,i~~ Blade Cut $

7g·

129 : f'Cij!~1

Quck Roast ..... lb.
Ice Cream .. ctn.
$1 79
SUCISQ
fo
d
12·oa. $129
Pot
Roast ............... lb.
eese o ..... .. Pkg.
IIEGULAI 01 CHUI
SJ
"lk
ggc
Ground Beef .......... lb.
erm1 ........... ctn.
U.S. GOV"T GRADED CHOICE ,
liEF CHUCK IONILESS

qoGEIINDIVIDUALL Y WRAPPED

ANY SIZE PKG.

'lt ·Gal.

COUNTIY CLUI

Canned
Ham ..... ... .. ... 3

- - -.IID.lllllllll ... H.I*
...cl II IPPIJCIIIIITIII l liCil TUO

Kroger Meat Bolog11a

KROGER

Quarter Pork Loin ..... lb.

Peanut Butter I~

$119

Here is an apparently unin·
teresting hand, South is in a
perfectly normal three notrump contract - so nor·
mal that every South player in
a match point duplicate got
there. Every West player
opened the six of hearis. E ast
played the 10 and South was
m with the king.
South led a club to the jack
and another back to his king.

YnLOW CliNG

2

·'"·$1 JI

69C

Fresh ·
Broccoli ........ Bunch
:..berries
h
I·Pound$179
Green Cabbage ...... lb.19 c FMIESH
.Ul rooms ...... earton
~..........Jb.sgc
Asparagus ............... lb.ggc

l6

great

~erWhole
$ .
Kernel Corn .. ..
. ........... Quart
SJ77
Uster1ne
Btl.

3~.:~· 1

MOUTHWASH

310·SHEm PEl ROLL.
BATHROOM

Swansoft nssue •;'!tn

WINNIE

•

sgc

N01HI NG
"WRONG" WITH
YOU1 WENDY

89

w.

S
• ._1.................. ....
.....
......

BUT 'THIS WHOLE DATING IF YOU'RE TOO PASSIVE-'-71-IE
BIT IS A BIG GAME ...
GUY 'THINKS YOU 11&lt;E Nul
A 61/t=SSIN5 GAME I
INTEI&lt;E&amp;TED IN HI M. IF
YOU COME ON TOO
STRONG, YOU SCARE
HIM AWAY.

RITURNABI.. ~1m
MOUNTAIN DEW,

o_a

$
8

DIPOSn

bulldog

1&amp; carter's

Paper or
Plutlc Cttt.

Diet.Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola

I Love song
7 Island : Fr.
8 Bearing
9 "Beetle
Bailey"

film
15 Imminent

White
Bread ....

FROZEN

ALL I DID WA S
INVITE HIM UP
FOR A NIGHTCAP
... AN D ME TOOK
OFF! _.,.,

10 Hotbed
"Why14 Faithful
the Best"
18 Be at fault
17 French
18 Wicked
niiiJI!JI!r
2e Wooden core
U Scomful cry Zl Raci!o•s "ZZ Canadian
Harrigan"

zz Sham

statesman

ze Gallic love

4t Smooth
consonant
41 Wiblellsed
Wort unit

a

!l!Hang
Z!l Use up
31 Realize
3Z Greek letter
33 Shopper's need
38 Glorily
UMemorable
radio
feature

HManbplant

LYI .

4

&amp;?Overfed

ALL I NEED NOW
FER MY KITE
IS A TAIL

DOWN
1 Rodolfo's
beloved
zJack London's

''Martln _ ,,

h';:+-t-;-t-

KIOGII FROZEN

PIUH

All Meat
Bologna

Strawberry
Pie

iw.:.. U.b ................. ..Sl 89
H:. s.-•nd.......................S2t1
S3"
Wl••h• FrW Glck11.. - .
.

37 Short rests
38- podrtda
31 Newspaper :
slang

u Paring tool

20·oz.

Kroger
Pot Pies... ....
Glazed Donuts .....·~~~-

IIUSSII

IIADTfOIAT

35 Willing

Z4 Poet's
" unseal"
Z5 FIM!ng need
1:1 Mezican tree
31 Flog:~
33 Low
34 Fragrant
wood

r.-.,-:;--r.--r.:--r:r.-

DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work

II

WIICIIOfnetcnH.

Yesterday'• Alllwer

Z3 Droop

HHlts
the heights

ROUND TOP KIIOG3

Fresh Baked
Italian Bread

CBYPTOQUOTEB
H

ZHWHDLM

LA

H

KHW

DQHD

THURSDAY , APRil24, 19SO
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13; World at Large 17.
6 :0Q-700 Club 6,8; PiL Club 15'
,
Health Field' 10 .
•
6:3o- For Yo u .. .Bi ack Woman 10;·
News 17; 6:45-Morn ing Report:
3; A.M. Weather 33 ; 6: 50-Good
M orn in g, West V ir g i ni a 13;

6:55- News 13.
7:0Q-ioday 3,15;

1-

Cake.. ..... .. ......... ca. .

.

Colty Cheese ....:........,.... .. $271
(

DQO
GWO N

Etll Potato Salad .... ........... .69°

--oao--vn
,._ S3M
Ltnrtr

WE DON'T HAVE
ON 0\IR TEAM
ED ''LEFT'( "

ANI(ON&gt;"

YSOA

NQHD
PSUY
DQO

QO

NSJPY

DQLWGA
YS

Z H MD A

L Z

sz

QO
DQO

MHAO . ZLWPOR
FODOU
YJWWO
Yealerday'a Cr)'ploqiMite: . HE WHO KNOWS N~G IS
~R THE TRUTII THAN HE. WHOSE MIND IS FILLED

WITH FALSEHOODS AND ERRORS.- THOMA.S JEF·
FERSON

Good Morning

Ameri ca 6,13; Thur sday Mor-

ning 8; Batm an 10 ; 1"hree
Stooges·LIIIIe Ra scals 17,
7 :3o-Fa ml ly Altair 10; 7:55-Chuck
While Reports 10.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame St, 33; 8:3oRomper Room 17,
9 :DO-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Fa mily
•
Allalr 17,
9:30-Bob Newhart 8; One Day AI A·
Time 10; Green Ac res 17.
10:00-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge ot'
Night 6; J eflersons 6; Joker's
Wild 10; Morning Maga zi ne 13;
Movie "The Green Glove" 17,
10 :3o-Hollywood Squ are s 3,15; .
$20,000 Pyram id 13 ; Whew B. 10;
Ar.dy Grllfllh 6.
10 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 : DO-High Rollers 3,1 5; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8,10,
11 : 3o-Wheel ol Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6,13; , ~e~e St.
20; 11 : 55-News 17.
12:0Q-Newscenter 3; News 6,8, 10;
Heallh F ield 15; Love, American
Style 17.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Sea rch for
Tomorrow 8.10; Pa ssword Plus
15; Movie " The Monte Car lo
Story" 17; Elec , Co , 20,33.
I :DO-Days of Our Li ves 3, 15; All My
Ch ildren 6. 13; Yo ung &amp; lhe
Reslless 8, 10.
2:DO-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live
6,13; As The World Turns 8, 10;.
2:25-News 17.
2:30-Another World 3,15; I Love
Lucy 17,
3:00- Ge ne ral
Hospital
6, 13 ;
Guld~ ng Light 8, 10; Banana
Spills 17; Masterpiece Theat re
20,
3:3o-F II ntslones 17.
4:00- Misler Car too n 3; Mer v
Grlflln 6; Peltlcoal J un ct ion B;
Sesame ST. 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle
10; Litt le Rasca ls 15; Real
McCoys 13; Spectrem an 17.
C lO- Lone Ranger 3; Brad y Bunch
10; Gomer Pyl e 8; Tom &amp;. Jerry
13; Merv Grlllln 15; Gil ligan 's Is.:
17.

r

s :oo-Carol Burnell 3; Sanford &amp;:,
Son 8; Mary Tyle r Moore 10; MY"
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers~
"Neighborhood 20,33.
'
5: 30-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Elec, Co, 20;.'
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of · Jeann ie 17; Doctor

Who 33.
6:oo-News 3,8,10,13, 15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett 17; Zoom 20; 32· 1 Coni act 33.
6 :30-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 6.10; Carol Burnett 6; ,
Bob Newharl 17; Over Easy 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33 .'
7 :00-Cross· Wits 3; F ace the Music
6,13; Tic Tac Dough 8; MacNeil·
Lehrer Repor t 33; News \ 10;
love, Ameri can Slyle 15; San.
lord &amp; Son 17; Dick Cavett 20,
7: 30-Hollywood Squares 3; Prln·
cess 6; J oker's Wild 8; , Dick
Cavell 33; $100,000 Name That
Tune 10; Nashville On The ROlld
13; Country Roads 15; All In The
Family 17 ; MacNeil-Lehrer
Reporl 20,
8:DO-Buc k Rogers 3; Mork &amp;. Mindy
6, 13; Palmerstown , U.S.A, 8,10;
MX De ba tes 20,33;
Bill y ·
Graham : The Inside Story 15;
Movie " How Do I love Thee?"
17; 8:30-Benson 6, 13.
9 :00- Six O' Clock Follie s 3,15 ;
Baryshnlkov on Broadway 6,13;
Hagen 8, 10.
10 :0Q-Rockford Flies 3,15; 20·20
· 6, 13; Contender 8, 10; · News 20;
Auslln City Llmlls 33.
10: 15-Amerlcans 11; 10:30-&lt;&gt;ver
:
Easy 20,
11 :Oo-News 3,6,8,10, 13, 15; Dick·
Cavett 20; Dave Allen a t Large
33; 11 : 15-Love, American Style
1~

'

•

it :

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply atinda for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's. elc. Single letters.
apoatrophea, the length and formation of the worda are all
hinls, Each day the code !etten are dlfterent

-AYAUIII-TATYOWa¥Wt
-&amp;POP B I T - - '

·

old style

s Likewise

• "Plaza Suite"
playwright
11 Paragon
U Type style
13 Scorsese

2·:;.~·99c
~
..
$299
. s1s9
,Winesap ·

3 GratiiiY areu
4 Diet,

ACBOSS
1 Operatic

Pak

Yellow
Sweet Corn

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: " Win st
Brldgs, " csro of this ntiWSpaper, P,0 . Box 489, Radio City
Station , Naw York , N. Y
10019,)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

I

i:it Cocktail ....2'l:~· Sl
2
$11
Kroger Peaches c:~·· ,

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.}

!iD"'*"•r

c.

5..2 ·: .· $109

Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Vac Pak
Kroger _Cof~ee

KIOGI!I MULn..OU.IN 01

3 NT

Soalh
1 NT
Pass

I

KROGER

Grade A
Large Eggs

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Weot
Nortb Eaot

Opening lead:'l 6

-lb.

utCEIIAS AVAilAILE

.KQ 105

•

lb .

SLICED INTO CHOPS FRESH

.973 2
+AQ8
"K 7
• Q7 54

Pass
Pass

99 C

"A
10 4
t K8

SOUTH

COULD YOU?
IF HE'S WORRIED
GEHATOR Sll&lt;N'$ ABOUT HIS EIILL HE
GOT ENOUGH
HEEDI'I' T - IT'S
PRACTICALLY ASURE
T'WORRY
ABOUT WITHOUT
THIN6 .•

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

on1

IN THE PIECE

DOO'T YOU WANT TO
UP IH MATH?

LIMIT ONI COUI'ON !'II FAMilY

S4?~~

·lb.

Can
CANNED HAM S·LI. CAN •• • S7.t9

SORRY, HUCKlE- NO
MOVIE FOR ME T'HIGHT ...
I'VE REALLY GOT
T'CRACK TH OSE BOOKS/
THE MA'TH 15 KILLIHG
ME .

a$

PAK,

IIOGButtEI

- YOUR TUTOR IS
VERY UPSET, ANNIE ••

UIIT ZltU.S Will
Ul$7 .st
UIITIOUL "ICIUE (llCliiiiiC TIIS lltl)
1z
If

• J 10 6 2

•As

Single
Rolls .

Kroger Welcomes
Your Federal
Food Stamps

Gallon

EAST

+743
"J986 3
. t!O 3 2

TOOIAUIS.

eo......, aub

84

West played his ace a nd led
the jack of hearis .
A couple of decla rers
played low from dummy a nd
made three notrump for a tie
for top, The other South play·
ers decided that West was
underleadiog the ace and rose
with dummy 's queen, where·
upon East took the trick with
the ace, Every East but one
promptly led back tbe four
and West took his three
remaining hearis for a one·
trick set
The one exception was a
really great player.
He had carefully counted
the hand and kn~w that South
only had eight top tricks.
Three spades, one heart, one
diamond and three clubs. He
would need another diamond
to come to nine. So this East
led a cl~b back to South,
The unfortunate South saw
no danger. Obviously West
had led from a six-eard heart
suit and South could afford to
take a diamond finesse, If it
worked he could go about his
business of making the
contract If it failed East
would not be able to lead a
heart to his partner.
South took the finesse and
was down two when East produced the four of hearis,

WED NESDAY, APRil23, 19&amp;0
f :oo-\:ross-WIIs 3; Face the Mu~c
6, 13; News 10; Love American
Sty le 15; Sanford &amp;. Son 17 ; Dick
·Cavell 20 .
7 : 30- Country Roads 3; Mat ch
Game PM 6 ; J oker's Wild 8;
Dick Cavett 33; The Judge 10;
Family Feud 13; Wild Kingdom
15; Baseball 17; MacNeil-Lehrer
,; eport 20 ,
B:DO-Redscene 3; - . ~nt Is l:nough
6, 13; The Lion. the Witch &amp;. the
Wardrobe 8,10; Real People 15;
Shakes~are Plays 20,33 ,
8:30-Baseball 3; 9:DO-Charlle"s
Angels 6; Movie " A Circle ol
8, 10;
Difl ' renl
Chi ldren "
Strokes 15; Foc us 13 .
9: 30-Hello. La rry 15.
10:DO-ABC News 6, 13 ; Quincy 15;
Upstairs, Downstairs 17.
11 :DO-News 3,6,8, 10, 13,15,20; Last
ol lhe Wild 17 ; Dave Allen at
Large n
11 :3o-Tonlght 3, 15; ABC News 6, 13;
NBA Pl ayofl B; ABC Captioned
News 33; Mov ie " Carry on
Doctor " 10; Movie " The Lillie
Giant" 17; Dick Cavett 20,
11 : 50- Love Boat 6, 13 ; 1: 00Tomorrow 3; Baretta 6, 13; News.
15,17; 1 :05-Baseba ll 17,
2: 1o-News 13; 3:35-Movle " The:
Hard Man " 17 ; 5 : 20- Love, •
America n Style 17.
•

-

11 :30-Tonlght3,15; ABC News6,13;
Columbo&amp;; ABC Captioned News
33; Movie " Duffy" ·10; Movie
"Racket Bus1ers" 17; Sneak
Previews 20,
11 :Stf-Charlle' s Angels 6,13; ! :GOTomorrow 3; Baretta 6,13 ; News
15; I :05-News 17,
1 : lo-Movle "The Golden Hawk '
17; 1 : 15- Mary Hartman ~ ~
2;1o-News 13.
2:45-Movle "A Lawless Street" 17;

• : 1s-Movle "Aicatrar Express"
17,

�10 - TheDallySentinel,Middleport· Puneroy, O., Wednesday, April23,1980

Racine'
Social Events
By Mn. Frucll
Merrb
·The April meeting of ·the Esther
arcle held in the Fellowship room at
First Baptist Church F riday 11f.
tem oon opened with devotions by
Mrs. Marie Roy. "Bring Them In"
was sung by the group followed with
prayer, scripture and a missionary
reading.
Mrs. Grella Simpson, chainnan,
presided at the business session. The .

May I. The Love GUt program was
by Mildred Hart using the hymn,
"WeGivetbee But '1'hine Own" with
offering and prayer. A program
titled, " The Resurrection" was
presented by Mrs. Wanda Powell.
"Christ Arose!" was sung. Scripture
was from Mark 28:.1-9 and prayer
was by Florence Adams. Readings
about the resurrection were by
members. Mter singing "He Uves"
the program cl011ed by Mrs. Powell
reading A Missionary's Morning
Prayer. Refreshments by Helen

report

nominating COOIIII!ttee
was
given : chainnan, Mrs. Mildred
Hart; vice chairman; Mrs. Gretta
Simpson; secretary • treasurer,
Mrs. Ullian Hayman; Love· Gift
chainnan, Mrs. F lorence Adams;
White Cross chairman, Mrs.
Dorothy Badgley; flower fund , Mrs.
Ora Hill; cards, Mrs. Wanda P owell.
The officers will be installed at the
Bertha M. Sayre Missionary Society

Simpson , h05tess, were served to
nine members.
Mrs. Lavinia Simpson and Florence arcle spent the afternoon April
with Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Circle.
Mr. and Mrs Rocki Young and two
children of Columbus spent Satur·
day with her father, Martin
Wilcoxen,
, ·
'
Mr. and Mrs. Dale McGraw have
returned home after spending the
winter In Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis of Lorain
and Mrs, Marcia Ann Wells of

Mrs. J o Ann Parsons of Toledo

Washington C. H. spent the weekend
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs.

a

spent several days with her aunt,

Mrs. Hazel CArnahan.

Harry Curtis. '

ftftl}f.\,0 fi;)'i} ~THAT SCRAIIIILED WORD G.U.o;
~ ~ ~~ s
byHenriAmoldandBobLee

Frances FCIIter and Hazel Carnahan spent Easter Sunday with

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland returned home after two weeks visit with
Mrs. Bessie Sines Smith and Mrs.

Unacramllfe ~.. lour Jumbles

one Jetter to each square, to torno\

/

I PLUI~

I Kin. .

MAKES DEBUT

o _::-.,.~- · --

Sergei Rachmaninoff made hlB
U.S, debut with a plano recital at
Smith College In Massachusetta In

RASEE

tJ

I K1

1009.

'OPEN'.
24 HRS.
ADAY*

IF THAT ~I&lt;: E 'rCH MAP DF McKEii'S
MEANS ANYTHING, IT S HOULD 8!:IJORTHWI!ST OF HERE. :

SU F"E.R:VIS ION OF= A

WHO lt.J iHUt.JPER 15
THAH! ... COR'f D I D~'T
S A)' NUTHI N' A!!OlJT

SAL L 6AME
~EQ UI ~ES

e)(PECTit.J' AW
VISITORS~

X] K

Now arrange the circled letters to

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

rI

Mswe!:

III J ( I I I I I J
(Answers tomorrow)

I JumDies : NAIVE

Yesterday's

"THte&gt;!

WELSH KETTLE BECKON

An swer: Where many a schoolboy used to ha ve a

dip- IN THE INKWELL

*Except Clolell S.t11dl' M....... Tilt• s.Miy

BRIDGE

•Ezcept Hilltoll, Wlllte S."llu , 7111. Awt.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

AN LAST 'V EAR

C!Mwltston &amp;

Television
Viewing

.....:--;.
· ---~~
Are ya blind or sOmep 'n?!

lour ordlnaoy words,

Mrs. Loe Tisdale at Buckeye Lake.

Marie Sines at ft. Worth, Texas. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis visited
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle on Saturday
evening a nd MlsB P atty Shain of Antiquity on Monday eveuing, Other
recent guests were Mr. and Mrs. Bill
McKenzie and Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Wells.

KROGER

'.H-~TheJ?all.rSentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., Wednesday, Apr!l23, 1seo
,,, 01""'TRACY
•"

Will••-

Wily play dupes declarer
KROGERCOSTCUTTERCOUPON
NORTH
+KH

.J

H S-80

"Q 5 2
t AJ 9 6

WEST

COPYitGHT 1910- IHl ICIOGII CO . lfEMS AND rtiCU
0000 SUNDAY Al'lll 20 THIU U.TUIIDAY APtll 26 , 1"'
IN pQM!;:_RQ_Y A!'IQ GALL_I POl, IS STORES,
~ wt'USUVl

lKIIIGHl TO LIMIT QUANTniES. NONI SOLO

HOLLY FAIIMS. U.5.D.A. INSf'ECTED
GlADE A

Frying
Chicken Thighs .... lb.
U.S.D.A.INSPECTED FIOZEN .
5·7·LI.AVG.
.

69c

Baking Hens ................ lb. 49

C

STOlE PACICAGED COUNTRY STYLE

C

,

Sliced Bacon ................ lb.
U.S. GOV"T GRADED CHOICE,

$ 199. c;:,i~~ Blade Cut $

7g·

129 : f'Cij!~1

Quck Roast ..... lb.
Ice Cream .. ctn.
$1 79
SUCISQ
fo
d
12·oa. $129
Pot
Roast ............... lb.
eese o ..... .. Pkg.
IIEGULAI 01 CHUI
SJ
"lk
ggc
Ground Beef .......... lb.
erm1 ........... ctn.
U.S. GOV"T GRADED CHOICE ,
liEF CHUCK IONILESS

qoGEIINDIVIDUALL Y WRAPPED

ANY SIZE PKG.

'lt ·Gal.

COUNTIY CLUI

Canned
Ham ..... ... .. ... 3

- - -.IID.lllllllll ... H.I*
...cl II IPPIJCIIIIITIII l liCil TUO

Kroger Meat Bolog11a

KROGER

Quarter Pork Loin ..... lb.

Peanut Butter I~

$119

Here is an apparently unin·
teresting hand, South is in a
perfectly normal three notrump contract - so nor·
mal that every South player in
a match point duplicate got
there. Every West player
opened the six of hearis. E ast
played the 10 and South was
m with the king.
South led a club to the jack
and another back to his king.

YnLOW CliNG

2

·'"·$1 JI

69C

Fresh ·
Broccoli ........ Bunch
:..berries
h
I·Pound$179
Green Cabbage ...... lb.19 c FMIESH
.Ul rooms ...... earton
~..........Jb.sgc
Asparagus ............... lb.ggc

l6

great

~erWhole
$ .
Kernel Corn .. ..
. ........... Quart
SJ77
Uster1ne
Btl.

3~.:~· 1

MOUTHWASH

310·SHEm PEl ROLL.
BATHROOM

Swansoft nssue •;'!tn

WINNIE

•

sgc

N01HI NG
"WRONG" WITH
YOU1 WENDY

89

w.

S
• ._1.................. ....
.....
......

BUT 'THIS WHOLE DATING IF YOU'RE TOO PASSIVE-'-71-IE
BIT IS A BIG GAME ...
GUY 'THINKS YOU 11&lt;E Nul
A 61/t=SSIN5 GAME I
INTEI&lt;E&amp;TED IN HI M. IF
YOU COME ON TOO
STRONG, YOU SCARE
HIM AWAY.

RITURNABI.. ~1m
MOUNTAIN DEW,

o_a

$
8

DIPOSn

bulldog

1&amp; carter's

Paper or
Plutlc Cttt.

Diet.Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola

I Love song
7 Island : Fr.
8 Bearing
9 "Beetle
Bailey"

film
15 Imminent

White
Bread ....

FROZEN

ALL I DID WA S
INVITE HIM UP
FOR A NIGHTCAP
... AN D ME TOOK
OFF! _.,.,

10 Hotbed
"Why14 Faithful
the Best"
18 Be at fault
17 French
18 Wicked
niiiJI!JI!r
2e Wooden core
U Scomful cry Zl Raci!o•s "ZZ Canadian
Harrigan"

zz Sham

statesman

ze Gallic love

4t Smooth
consonant
41 Wiblellsed
Wort unit

a

!l!Hang
Z!l Use up
31 Realize
3Z Greek letter
33 Shopper's need
38 Glorily
UMemorable
radio
feature

HManbplant

LYI .

4

&amp;?Overfed

ALL I NEED NOW
FER MY KITE
IS A TAIL

DOWN
1 Rodolfo's
beloved
zJack London's

''Martln _ ,,

h';:+-t-;-t-

KIOGII FROZEN

PIUH

All Meat
Bologna

Strawberry
Pie

iw.:.. U.b ................. ..Sl 89
H:. s.-•nd.......................S2t1
S3"
Wl••h• FrW Glck11.. - .
.

37 Short rests
38- podrtda
31 Newspaper :
slang

u Paring tool

20·oz.

Kroger
Pot Pies... ....
Glazed Donuts .....·~~~-

IIUSSII

IIADTfOIAT

35 Willing

Z4 Poet's
" unseal"
Z5 FIM!ng need
1:1 Mezican tree
31 Flog:~
33 Low
34 Fragrant
wood

r.-.,-:;--r.--r.:--r:r.-

DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work

II

WIICIIOfnetcnH.

Yesterday'• Alllwer

Z3 Droop

HHlts
the heights

ROUND TOP KIIOG3

Fresh Baked
Italian Bread

CBYPTOQUOTEB
H

ZHWHDLM

LA

H

KHW

DQHD

THURSDAY , APRil24, 19SO
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13; World at Large 17.
6 :0Q-700 Club 6,8; PiL Club 15'
,
Health Field' 10 .
•
6:3o- For Yo u .. .Bi ack Woman 10;·
News 17; 6:45-Morn ing Report:
3; A.M. Weather 33 ; 6: 50-Good
M orn in g, West V ir g i ni a 13;

6:55- News 13.
7:0Q-ioday 3,15;

1-

Cake.. ..... .. ......... ca. .

.

Colty Cheese ....:........,.... .. $271
(

DQO
GWO N

Etll Potato Salad .... ........... .69°

--oao--vn
,._ S3M
Ltnrtr

WE DON'T HAVE
ON 0\IR TEAM
ED ''LEFT'( "

ANI(ON&gt;"

YSOA

NQHD
PSUY
DQO

QO

NSJPY

DQLWGA
YS

Z H MD A

L Z

sz

QO
DQO

MHAO . ZLWPOR
FODOU
YJWWO
Yealerday'a Cr)'ploqiMite: . HE WHO KNOWS N~G IS
~R THE TRUTII THAN HE. WHOSE MIND IS FILLED

WITH FALSEHOODS AND ERRORS.- THOMA.S JEF·
FERSON

Good Morning

Ameri ca 6,13; Thur sday Mor-

ning 8; Batm an 10 ; 1"hree
Stooges·LIIIIe Ra scals 17,
7 :3o-Fa ml ly Altair 10; 7:55-Chuck
While Reports 10.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Lucy
Show 17; Sesame St, 33; 8:3oRomper Room 17,
9 :DO-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeffersons
10; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Fa mily
•
Allalr 17,
9:30-Bob Newhart 8; One Day AI A·
Time 10; Green Ac res 17.
10:00-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge ot'
Night 6; J eflersons 6; Joker's
Wild 10; Morning Maga zi ne 13;
Movie "The Green Glove" 17,
10 :3o-Hollywood Squ are s 3,15; .
$20,000 Pyram id 13 ; Whew B. 10;
Ar.dy Grllfllh 6.
10 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 : DO-High Rollers 3,1 5; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8,10,
11 : 3o-Wheel ol Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6,13; , ~e~e St.
20; 11 : 55-News 17.
12:0Q-Newscenter 3; News 6,8, 10;
Heallh F ield 15; Love, American
Style 17.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Sea rch for
Tomorrow 8.10; Pa ssword Plus
15; Movie " The Monte Car lo
Story" 17; Elec , Co , 20,33.
I :DO-Days of Our Li ves 3, 15; All My
Ch ildren 6. 13; Yo ung &amp; lhe
Reslless 8, 10.
2:DO-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live
6,13; As The World Turns 8, 10;.
2:25-News 17.
2:30-Another World 3,15; I Love
Lucy 17,
3:00- Ge ne ral
Hospital
6, 13 ;
Guld~ ng Light 8, 10; Banana
Spills 17; Masterpiece Theat re
20,
3:3o-F II ntslones 17.
4:00- Misler Car too n 3; Mer v
Grlflln 6; Peltlcoal J un ct ion B;
Sesame ST. 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle
10; Litt le Rasca ls 15; Real
McCoys 13; Spectrem an 17.
C lO- Lone Ranger 3; Brad y Bunch
10; Gomer Pyl e 8; Tom &amp;. Jerry
13; Merv Grlllln 15; Gil ligan 's Is.:
17.

r

s :oo-Carol Burnell 3; Sanford &amp;:,
Son 8; Mary Tyle r Moore 10; MY"
Three Sons 17; Mister Rogers~
"Neighborhood 20,33.
'
5: 30-Mash 3; News 6; Play the
Percentages 8; Elec, Co, 20;.'
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of · Jeann ie 17; Doctor

Who 33.
6:oo-News 3,8,10,13, 15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnett 17; Zoom 20; 32· 1 Coni act 33.
6 :30-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 6.10; Carol Burnett 6; ,
Bob Newharl 17; Over Easy 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33 .'
7 :00-Cross· Wits 3; F ace the Music
6,13; Tic Tac Dough 8; MacNeil·
Lehrer Repor t 33; News \ 10;
love, Ameri can Slyle 15; San.
lord &amp; Son 17; Dick Cavett 20,
7: 30-Hollywood Squares 3; Prln·
cess 6; J oker's Wild 8; , Dick
Cavell 33; $100,000 Name That
Tune 10; Nashville On The ROlld
13; Country Roads 15; All In The
Family 17 ; MacNeil-Lehrer
Reporl 20,
8:DO-Buc k Rogers 3; Mork &amp;. Mindy
6, 13; Palmerstown , U.S.A, 8,10;
MX De ba tes 20,33;
Bill y ·
Graham : The Inside Story 15;
Movie " How Do I love Thee?"
17; 8:30-Benson 6, 13.
9 :00- Six O' Clock Follie s 3,15 ;
Baryshnlkov on Broadway 6,13;
Hagen 8, 10.
10 :0Q-Rockford Flies 3,15; 20·20
· 6, 13; Contender 8, 10; · News 20;
Auslln City Llmlls 33.
10: 15-Amerlcans 11; 10:30-&lt;&gt;ver
:
Easy 20,
11 :Oo-News 3,6,8,10, 13, 15; Dick·
Cavett 20; Dave Allen a t Large
33; 11 : 15-Love, American Style
1~

'

•

it :

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply atinda for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's. elc. Single letters.
apoatrophea, the length and formation of the worda are all
hinls, Each day the code !etten are dlfterent

-AYAUIII-TATYOWa¥Wt
-&amp;POP B I T - - '

·

old style

s Likewise

• "Plaza Suite"
playwright
11 Paragon
U Type style
13 Scorsese

2·:;.~·99c
~
..
$299
. s1s9
,Winesap ·

3 GratiiiY areu
4 Diet,

ACBOSS
1 Operatic

Pak

Yellow
Sweet Corn

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: " Win st
Brldgs, " csro of this ntiWSpaper, P,0 . Box 489, Radio City
Station , Naw York , N. Y
10019,)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

I

i:it Cocktail ....2'l:~· Sl
2
$11
Kroger Peaches c:~·· ,

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.}

!iD"'*"•r

c.

5..2 ·: .· $109

Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Vac Pak
Kroger _Cof~ee

KIOGI!I MULn..OU.IN 01

3 NT

Soalh
1 NT
Pass

I

KROGER

Grade A
Large Eggs

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Weot
Nortb Eaot

Opening lead:'l 6

-lb.

utCEIIAS AVAilAILE

.KQ 105

•

lb .

SLICED INTO CHOPS FRESH

.973 2
+AQ8
"K 7
• Q7 54

Pass
Pass

99 C

"A
10 4
t K8

SOUTH

COULD YOU?
IF HE'S WORRIED
GEHATOR Sll&lt;N'$ ABOUT HIS EIILL HE
GOT ENOUGH
HEEDI'I' T - IT'S
PRACTICALLY ASURE
T'WORRY
ABOUT WITHOUT
THIN6 .•

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

on1

IN THE PIECE

DOO'T YOU WANT TO
UP IH MATH?

LIMIT ONI COUI'ON !'II FAMilY

S4?~~

·lb.

Can
CANNED HAM S·LI. CAN •• • S7.t9

SORRY, HUCKlE- NO
MOVIE FOR ME T'HIGHT ...
I'VE REALLY GOT
T'CRACK TH OSE BOOKS/
THE MA'TH 15 KILLIHG
ME .

a$

PAK,

IIOGButtEI

- YOUR TUTOR IS
VERY UPSET, ANNIE ••

UIIT ZltU.S Will
Ul$7 .st
UIITIOUL "ICIUE (llCliiiiiC TIIS lltl)
1z
If

• J 10 6 2

•As

Single
Rolls .

Kroger Welcomes
Your Federal
Food Stamps

Gallon

EAST

+743
"J986 3
. t!O 3 2

TOOIAUIS.

eo......, aub

84

West played his ace a nd led
the jack of hearis .
A couple of decla rers
played low from dummy a nd
made three notrump for a tie
for top, The other South play·
ers decided that West was
underleadiog the ace and rose
with dummy 's queen, where·
upon East took the trick with
the ace, Every East but one
promptly led back tbe four
and West took his three
remaining hearis for a one·
trick set
The one exception was a
really great player.
He had carefully counted
the hand and kn~w that South
only had eight top tricks.
Three spades, one heart, one
diamond and three clubs. He
would need another diamond
to come to nine. So this East
led a cl~b back to South,
The unfortunate South saw
no danger. Obviously West
had led from a six-eard heart
suit and South could afford to
take a diamond finesse, If it
worked he could go about his
business of making the
contract If it failed East
would not be able to lead a
heart to his partner.
South took the finesse and
was down two when East produced the four of hearis,

WED NESDAY, APRil23, 19&amp;0
f :oo-\:ross-WIIs 3; Face the Mu~c
6, 13; News 10; Love American
Sty le 15; Sanford &amp;. Son 17 ; Dick
·Cavell 20 .
7 : 30- Country Roads 3; Mat ch
Game PM 6 ; J oker's Wild 8;
Dick Cavett 33; The Judge 10;
Family Feud 13; Wild Kingdom
15; Baseball 17; MacNeil-Lehrer
,; eport 20 ,
B:DO-Redscene 3; - . ~nt Is l:nough
6, 13; The Lion. the Witch &amp;. the
Wardrobe 8,10; Real People 15;
Shakes~are Plays 20,33 ,
8:30-Baseball 3; 9:DO-Charlle"s
Angels 6; Movie " A Circle ol
8, 10;
Difl ' renl
Chi ldren "
Strokes 15; Foc us 13 .
9: 30-Hello. La rry 15.
10:DO-ABC News 6, 13 ; Quincy 15;
Upstairs, Downstairs 17.
11 :DO-News 3,6,8, 10, 13,15,20; Last
ol lhe Wild 17 ; Dave Allen at
Large n
11 :3o-Tonlght 3, 15; ABC News 6, 13;
NBA Pl ayofl B; ABC Captioned
News 33; Mov ie " Carry on
Doctor " 10; Movie " The Lillie
Giant" 17; Dick Cavett 20,
11 : 50- Love Boat 6, 13 ; 1: 00Tomorrow 3; Baretta 6, 13; News.
15,17; 1 :05-Baseba ll 17,
2: 1o-News 13; 3:35-Movle " The:
Hard Man " 17 ; 5 : 20- Love, •
America n Style 17.
•

-

11 :30-Tonlght3,15; ABC News6,13;
Columbo&amp;; ABC Captioned News
33; Movie " Duffy" ·10; Movie
"Racket Bus1ers" 17; Sneak
Previews 20,
11 :Stf-Charlle' s Angels 6,13; ! :GOTomorrow 3; Baretta 6,13 ; News
15; I :05-News 17,
1 : lo-Movle "The Golden Hawk '
17; 1 : 15- Mary Hartman ~ ~
2;1o-News 13.
2:45-Movle "A Lawless Street" 17;

• : 1s-Movle "Aicatrar Express"
17,

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, April23, 1980

Agriculture Department has good,. had inflation news
mer actually declined by 2 2 percent
m March
But the departme nt's chief
econonus t , Howard W HJort, told
the farme r not to des pair. H1s turn IS
c onung
" By the time the pres1dent's (antimfla hon ) program IS s uccessful ,
food pnces will start takmg up the
s lack, " he noted wryly. HJort said
food pnces a ppear to be rUMmg
" countercyclical " to the overall
econom y.
·
HJort said there was a good chance food pr1ce' would clunb at a
s teeper rate than Inflation m general
by the end of 1980, with the farmer
def!mtely s harmg m the mcrease
Farm p1 1ces " are gomg to have to
catc h up And It w11l take place,' ' he
sa1d
HJOrt d e clined to estimate
spec1f1cally what food mcreases will
be hke by the end of the year But he
repeated his forecast that for all of
1980, they Will be m the range of 7
percent to 11 percent The overallmflatwn rate now IS runnmg around 18
percent annually
InflatiOn has been especially bitter
for fa rmers, they complam, because
th e1r costs are nsmg at a time when
they're gettmg less for their
produce The h1gh cost of borrowmg

WASHINGTON (AP )
The
Agn c ulture Department has both
good and bad mfla h on ne ws
From the consumer 's standpoint,
this month, 1t 's not so good. But to
the fa rmer, 1t could be reason to
snule
F ood pr1 ces have ha d a
mode rat mg influence on the na han 's
Jwnpy mfla tw n ra te fo r the last s tx
months While the cos t of energy,
housmg and borrowmg soar ever
highe r , grocer y bills have s tayed
fa1 rl y s teady
In fa ct, food cos ts rose hardly at
a ll durm g the firs t two m onths th1s
yea r
But gove rnm e nt economi s t s
d1sclosed Tuesday that food pnce
nses are catc hmg up w1th the rest of
the na twn 's econonuc trend They
moved up a full! perc ent for Ma rch ,
approac hmg the l 4 percent increase
for the econom y a s a whole last m onth
Tha t news IS certamly bad for cons ume rs But 11 ~Xn ' t necessanly good
for fa rmers
As the Ag n c ulture Department
expla med, the food pnce inCrea se
was d ue to marketmg cost s
pa c k ag m g , trans portatiOn and
energy W1th contmued abundant
food s uppli es, pnces pa1d to the far-

to pay for plantmg the next crop 1s a
particular irritant.
' 1-IJOrt said the answer to the
problem was not mcreased government credit for farmers, but higher
pnces for the1r goods, wh1ch he said
IS mevitable.
The Consumer Price Index
s howed that food pnces, although
s table m January and February,
rose at an annual rate of 4 3 percent
for the first quarter of 1980. Compared w1th the CP! of March 1979,
they stood 7.3 percent higher last
month
But retail pnces were still down
for the first quarter for eggs and
fresh frmts and vegetables, a nd increased only slightly for pork, fats
and mls
The big mcrease m March was for
sugar and sweets, which rose 5 4
percent, and those pnces are 15 2
percent higher than a year ago. The
Agnculture Department said that
was because of demand on the world
s ugar market and 1t predicted more
of the same m the m onths ahead
The department also forecast a
r1se m beef prices as the s upply
declmes m the current quarter.
Economists a lso noted that
poultry pnces rose Significantly m
the f1rst three months of 1980 desp1te

WASHINGTON (AP)- The government has shut down an anunal (ann
m Flonda that was operatmg
without a license .
The Agriculture Department sa1d
L.E . Thompson of ClewiSton, Fla.,
agreed to close down his busmess . In
return, the goverrunent reduced his
fme from $2,500 to $1,000.
The department sa1d on siX occasiOns m 1978, Thompson s hipped
and sold anunals while he was not
licensed. The ammals mcluded a
fox, otter, monkey, bobcats, opposwns, raccoofiS, skunks and wildcats.
Thompson was demed a license for
not m eetmg federal standards for
carmg for the arurnals, mcluding
adeq uate feeding, sarutat10n and
vetermary care.

WASHING TON ( AP ) -

31

water supplies are expected in much" ~
of the West this sununer, the ;
Agriculture Department reports.
_. ~
They should range from adequate: • to excellent for the area. But there :
IJUght be some trouble spots in the
Pacific Northwest and · northern ~
Rockies because of below-notmal J
runoff from meltmg snow.
The heaviest runoffs are expected •
m parts of Arizona, Utah, New •
MeXIco and Colorado, With a chance ~
of flooding in some parts of the :
••
regwn .
,
.,
Snow accu mulations provide
a bout 75 percent of the western ,.
water supply, and the latest
forecasts are based on normal ..
weather for t he rest ofthe spring.
•

The
department
predicted
defoliation w1U be down to 270,000
acres of forest land this year, from
650,000 acres m 1979.
The gypsy moth is found primarily
in the Northeast, With spraying
programs used to control its spread .
About 143,000 acres m New Jersey,
New · York and Pennsylvarda are to
be treated with chemical and
biOlogical msecticides this year .
There also are Isolated mfestahons m !Umois, Ohio, Virgm1a
and Michigan as the gypsy moths,
sometimes as eggs, hitchhike to
other parts of the country

Increased productiOn. The reason producer margms rose from a very
low last quarter of 1979

$25,000 100 percent flnan
Po'"eroy, O,
NI:W

WASHINGTON (AP) -The gypsy
moth IS on the run this year, the
government says.
Agnculture Department officials
said the leaf-eahng moth IS bemg
controlled and the results are expected to be noticed this year in a
reductiOn In tree defoliation.

=:Annoanceme n:ts=

Publtc Nottce

J

=-=-~ ~

GUN
platnts, or enforcement
compltance schedule let
ter s Wtth.n 30 days of
publtcafton •n a newspaper
•n the affected county, any
person may also ( 1 ) sub
mtt wr•tfen comments
r elatt n g
to
act to n s,
proposed act1ons, vertf ted
complatn t s, enforcement
compl1ance schedule let
ter s or preltmtnary staff
determmattons on permits

COUNTY MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE

Th e f ollowtng documents

were rece tve d or pur
chased by The Oh to En

vtronmental

Protectton

Ag enc y dunng th e prevtous
week The effec ttve date of
each frnal actron tS stated
The ts suance da te of each

proposed action ts staled

Anyone aggr teved or ad
ver sely affected by a fma l
act ton to tssue , deny ,

to tnstal l,

publtc meet•ng regardtng
proposed act 1ons or on
pr elim.nary staff deter
mt nat tons on permtts to tn

modif y, revoke, or re new a

permtt, l•cense, or var •an
ce , or to approve to d 1sap
pr ove
plans
a nd
spec•f•cattons, may ftle an

appeal

w olh

The

stall. and/ or (3) request

nottce of further act1ons or
proceedtn9s All requests
for ad1udtcat •on hearmgs
and publtc meetmgs, and
other communtcat tons con
ce rnm ~ public meetmgs,
ad1 ud tca tt on
heanngs,
ver tf ted compl atn ts, and
regulatiOns, should be ad

En

vtronmenta l Board of
Rev tew, Sutte 305, 395 E

Broad St , Columbus, Ohto
432 16, wtlhtn lhtrty (30)

days of the effect tve date,
pursuant to Ohto Revtsed

Code Seclton 3745 07, un less

such ftnal actton was
preceded by the same or
substan tt a lly the same

proposed actton

In

dressed

Age nc y, 361 E
Broad
Street , Columbus, Oh1o
43216, wt lhon three (3) days

after the appeal IS f•led
wtth The Env1ronmental
Board of Rev1 ew All such
ftna l act1ons are so •den
l if ted Such persons a may
request an adwd1 catton
hear tng before The Ohto
EPA on a proposed actton
to ISSue , deny , mod1#y ,
revoke , or ren ew a permtt ,
l tcense, or vartance , or to
approve or dtsapprove
plans and spec tf tcat •ons,

The

Sectron,

Lega l
Ohto

EPA, P 0
Box 1049,
Columbus. Ohto 43216,
(6 14 ) 466 6037
Unl ess

d1 t tton pursuant to Sec tt on

Env tronm ental Protect1on

to

Records

ad

3745 04 of The Revosed
Code , notoce of the f1itng of
the apeal shall be ftled w1th
The Otrector of the OhJO

(2 ) request a

otherw •se sta ted tn par
tt cular nottces, ali othe r
communicat •ons •nc lud1ng
com ments on propQsed ac
ttons should be addressed
etther to The Ot v tston of
Authon zatton and Com
pl tance (Atr) or Perm1t
and Approva I Sect ton
(Water) , whtchever ts ap
propnate, at The Ohto

Thomas ,

Reverend

Rtchard

Wtlhtn thtrly ( 30J days of
3745 07 does not provtde for

leachtng ttl e fteld for St

•ssuance date

ORC

a diUd• c at t on
heartng
r equests or a,P.peals from
orders , ver l fted
com

dtsfrtbutton

bo)(

Ractne

passe d away Apr 22, 1972

P1ck1ng up an Easy play
or gan
m
your area
Looktng for a respons •bl e
par t y to t ake over paymen
ts Call cr ed tt manager

Lov.ng ly and

col lec t 614 592 5122

Lonesome,

Leona
1

He lene Byrne Mullen- Oc
tober I , 1896 Apr 20, 1975 ,
Oaughter of Edwa rd and
Nett1e Byrne Preceded 1n
death by parents, brothers

Leo J

CTtnk l

Ausl tn E

Cl yde J
s1 ster Thurma
Vaughan , husband Charles
H , three mfant ch tl dren
and son, Char les J , M D ,
Sur vtved by Barbara , Dona
and H owa rd Mullen , five
gra ndcht ldren and ftve
great grandchtldren

G U N S HOOT EVERY
FRIDAY NIGHT 7 30 PM
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY
RACINE GU N CLUB
Bea wooc 35707 Loop Rd ,
Ru ll and . OH 742 2790 New
Shaklee Dtstrtbutor 1n th e
Bend area
All natural
v1tamtns All na tur al per
sonal products and organ 1c
clea ner s

ATTE NTION
bus •nesses,
polttt c tans ,
T shtrt s 6
Even tn gs or

organ•zat1ons,
custom Prtnt
to an ord er
weeKends 949

C4 12311 c

Amertean

Legton

Hall,

Mtddlepor l Frt , Apr 25, 8
11 Mu s tc by Stn ngdus ters
Admtss ton $1 00 adu lts
under

12

free

Refreshments wtll be sold

Yard Sale, __ _

11

J,UPPERS PLAINS ~RI!A
- NR·SI, llemodeled home

lin J acre• fe•turlntt trun
bt.lllt bern, pont
b)e trtllM lots Home hes
a mptete k itchen. den with
flr,place, J bedrooms, fore
ad air heat By aPPOintment
0111'( UJ,I)QQ
~~··we ll

QM'"'" M. H•y..,\Aul,..
-..Melli! C•ney, lr
Mtr

:.i
ELECTED TO TOP
SCHOLARSHIP FRATERNITY
•;
WINSTON.SALEM, N C. - , ,

Ph

GOLO, S ILV E R OR
FOREIGN CO IN S OR
ANY OTHER GO LD OR
Si LVER ITEM S ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEM S WILL PAY TOP
DOL LAR CHECK WITH
OS BY COSS IE J MARTIN
BEFORE
SE LLING
P HONE 992 6370 ALSO
OOAPPRA ISIN G

N£W LISTING
Comm. · 7 office rooms
lnh 1 bldg on the Main
st. of Rutland. use as
business or hOme &amp;
COIT)blnatton bus
2 StORY FRAME - 3
Bedroom, full base

Apr 24 a nd F rt , Apr 25

as a young bustness person
and earn good money plus
some grea t g tfts as a Sen
ttnel route earn er Phone
us nght away and get on

NKtnsky Res•dence, Hut
c h tson
SubdtVISto n ,
Rutland
Jeans, tops,
dresses,
bedspreads,
drapes, household ttems,

the el tgtblitty ltst at 992
2156 or 992 2157
Full t1me and par t t tme RN

4 Famtly Yard Sa l e Thurs
24 and Frt 25, 9 ttl 4 J

or LPN ~ 1 7 Conta ct M'"
Ztdoan at Pomeroy Heal th
Care Center Monda y thru
Frtday 9 5

motorcycles, portable TV,

8 lra ck tape playe r , some
ch tl dren' s clothes, tapes,
bedspreads, rugs, boat and
motor , adults, clothmg,
small app liances, many
other ttems Off Spn ng
Ave on Ftsher St Follow
stgns

lo I p m

Bakers

Bu sy

B ee

count ry 949 2728

c eram•cs, Tuppers Platns,
OH , Wtl l be ClOS ing for
bus mess May 15, due to Atr
Force tr ansf er E ff ec t tve
Apr 22 Classes will be hel d

Black

Spa n• e l ,
markmgs

Cocke r

some
whtte
on neck and

chest Smokey 992 61S9 or
992 2773 Lost on Mu lberry

on Tues 10 3 and 7 10 Wed
7 10, Thurs 10 3 and 7 10 so

Hetght s Area

everyone ca n compl ete
the tr tf ems
Everythtng

LOST T 1mex electrt c wat
ch, Stiver stre tch band w
turquotse ston es Lost m
Kroger Store
or lot
Reward
Melan1e Wert

1 PAY htg hest prtces
poss tble fo r gold and silver
co1 ns, nngs , 1ewe! ry , etc

Contact Ed Bu rkelt Barber
Shop, Mtddieport

Process
appltcat•ons and determme
e ltgtbt l tty
fo r
CETA
Program s
Gall1a M e1gs
Communtty Action Agen

SELL YOUR S ILVE R
CO IN S,
S TER L I NG
SIL VER , GOL D, ETC, TO
BROWN ' S
IN
M ID
DLEPORT FOR TOP
DOLLAR PHONE 614 992
5113
Ptano Tunmg
L ane
Da nt els 742 2951 Tuntng
and Repa.r Servtce st nce
1965 I f no answer phone

BR AD FORD , Aucltoneer,
Complete Servtce Phone
949 2487 or 9-49 2000 racme,
Ohto, Crt ft Bradf ord

9

cy, P 0 Box 272, Cheshtre,
OH 45680 367 7342 Gal ita ,
992 6629 Met gs Call or s top
tn for appltcattOn form The
Gal Ita Me1gs Commun tty
Act10n Agency IS an Equal

Wanted to Buy

992 3644

12

Wollte Goli, Chester 985
3335
Sma ll brown dog

Weanng co ll ar Last seen
tn Bashan ar ea P lease call
949 2354 after 3 JO

househ old s

Wrtte M 0 M tller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy , OHl or ca ll 992

10 ka rat, 14 kara t, 18 karat,
gold De ntal gold and gold
ea r ptns 675 301 0

7
Yard Sale
2 Famoly Yard Sale tn
Rustt c

H1ll s,

Sy r ac use

Frtday, Apr 25, 10 4 992
7891

!l::J-l 1JJ !JJJ'W !1.1~

!Jl!.llJ!J~~ .!ri1~:.·rJ:fi

REALTY

PHONE 742-20ii~

e tc Call245 9188
alumtnum

1
George 5. HObstetter Jr.
Broker 992·5739

ftshtng

boat 992 55S5

INVESTMENT PRO·
PERTY 2 lovely',

4

42" Ford Rotary Mower FREE with
new Ford Lawn and Garden
Tractor Purchase!
You save
' '

401

1

You save

262

You save

124

1

Be ready to go AND mo w on a new Ford
Th ese
are /1mrted t1me offers so come m soon to

DALE .HILL FORD TRACTOR, INC.

••

Pomt" oy 0

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS 5%
DOWN .

Zip, Pattern Number.
EXCITING' New 19BO NEEDLE·
CRAFT CATALOG w1th owe r 170
des1gns 1n 11eat wanety ol crafts
3 flee patterns 1ns1de Send Sl 00
132-Quilt Onpnals
131·Add 1 Block Quills $1.50
130.Swoaters-S•m 38-56 $1.50
129-Quicl!Easy Jransfen $1.50
IZB-Pakhwlllk Quills
$1.50
lZ7-AicJians 'n' Doi!ItS $1.50
IZ~ratty FlowtJS
$1.50
125-Pttal ~ills
$1.50
124-Giftl 'n Ornam111ts $1.50
123-Stitth 'n' Patch Qullts$1.50
122-Stutt 'n' run Quills $1.50
121·Plllew Show.olls
$1.50
llttJOChet a W11drobt $1,50
119-Flower Crochet
$1.50
Ill-Crochet wJth Squarn $1.50
116-Nifty f1fty Quills
$1.50
115-Ripple Crochet
$1.50
114-Compltte ~l&amp;fltns $1.50
lll·Prin Alahana
. $1.50
107-11111111 Stwin&amp; . ... $1 50
105'IIIItut Crtchet . $1.50
102-M..Um Quilts
$1.50
101-Quilt Collt!:ti011
$1.50

•uo

Grass Catcher FREE with new
Ford Riding Mower Tractor!

1)1 W M itlll

Go to town or for a walk tn the
woods 1n th1s cozy pullover
lean, long easy om sh1rt or
turtle neck beneath Crochet pull
over •n Simple shell stitches of
synthetic worsted Pattern 7271
d~rect1ons for SIZeS JB to 56
1ncluded
$1 75 for each pattern Add 501
each pattern fo1 lust-class "'
ma1f and handlmg Send to:
~hct Broob
J 1Needlecratt Deal
_
'

~ddtess,

PLUS ..•

'IE~P/

Centra I Realty Co.

York, NY 10011. Pnnt Name,

1

, , 2668

M

Tu , Th , fl 8111 5
W&amp;d 81111

Sat 1111 n

General

7271

The Daily Sentinel
Bol 163, Old ~lleise.l ~ta. , new

34" Ford Rotary Mower
FREE with Ford LT-80
Lawn Tractor Purchase!

m odern homes S1 tuated
on 10 acres Live tn one
and r ent the oth er ON
L Y $87,500 00 for both' •

NEW LISTING - Overlooking Ohto River &amp; Kaiser
Alum Plant 3 lg BR 's, plenty of closers, full base·
ment &amp; fam1iy room .- On 3 beauhful acres ASk1ng
$65,000 00
FINE ESTABLISHED restdent1al homes in Racine
This !wo story W1th fm1shed basement boasts of an
" up . to date'' eat m kitchen, formal dining area,
fa.m1ly room, 3 to 5 bedrooms •. 1'12 baths, thermo

wmdows, Cheavtly msutated), carpeted cJn all 3
levels, most drapes stay The exterior Is Real Per
ma Stone, has 21arge Inviting porches and a !wo car
garage All ofth1sand morefor$57,500
POMEROY - Good 3 bedrm house w1th kitchen,
d1ning &amp; bath Ctly water and septic Nt ce vinyl
stdmg Pnced at SU,900
LOTS ON Ll NCOLN HILL FOR SALE.
Sll,OOO - Traoler &amp; lot, 3 Br , all carpeted, front
porch, wooc underpmning, 1ncludes pool Anxtous to
sell
·TRAILER - 2 BR, on mce lot, small outbuildings
for storage, on quiet street $10,500 00
SYRACU-SE - 4 yrs. old, 3 BR, utility room, kltch~n
w·d!Shwasher, sliding glass doors to patJo from din·
lng room CMneted In beautiful taste S«.900 .
NEWLY LISTED - This brick &amp; alum sided home
welcomes you w1lh Its split entry hal l. Carpeted
throughout, 3 BR , ulil tty area, sliding glass door to
redwooc deck Only 4 yrs old lmmed. Poss.
$47,500
LOTS OF LOTS - From 1 to 7S acres, bordering
Pomeroy
REDUCED - 3 BR home tn nt ce development In
eludes famtly room , set up for wood burning stove

All carpe ted, partoally closed tn carport, storage
Priced to sell . $37,500.00 .

Want To Seii?-Give Us A Call
CALL JIMMY DEEM, .~SSOCIATES 949-2388
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949-2654 or ?49·2591

\'IRGIL B. SR.

216 r: Sef:.!"'d S!r"t
Phone

BEAUTIFUL - Bnck
b1 level Fam•lv room
wtth I .replace A~ wooc
hand slatned Quality
throughout Amenol1es

1

too numerous to men

lton Call today Sells for
$69,000 00 S1tuated on 4

1- ( 614 )·992-3325

acres

RANCH STYLE home
w1th J bedrooms, 2

COUNTRY
Midland mob1te
w1th 3 bedrooms
baths Peaceful
1
w tlh 7/8 acre Gomg
$16,500
TRAILER SPACES -

baths, fam ily room wtth
fireplace K1tchen is ex
tra modern, tncludes
mtcro· wave Sttuated tn

Chester Selltng pnce
$58,000 00
START OUT in lh1S 2
bedroom home N 1ce lot
w•lh garden space Only
$23,000 00 .
TOTAL ELECTRIC - 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, ktt·

hookups, "' acres, water,

electnc, and good loca·
lton on State Route
NEW LISTING
Renovated brick hom e,
new

carpeting,

new

bath, and new kitchen
cupboards Basement, 2

chen and dmmg area 'h
basement with wood

porches, n@ar stores

CHANCE

Of

burner and workshop
Close to Metgs Htgh On
ly $39,900 00.
2 ACRES - With lovely
3 bedroom home Has
extra water tap Sells
for $39,900 00 .
PRICE REDUCED - 3

a

residence or a business

or both Has a bath,
natural gas, flue for
woodburner and Ohio
Power Service. Ask·
lngonly $12,000
RUTLAND - Real nice
2 bedroom home with 4
los Has c1ty

bedroom home
d tshwasher and

water, cen

on a little over an acre
Pnce
reduced
to

.$43,000 00
30 ACRES - Priced to
sell Only $15,000 00
MODERN
HOME

paneling, natural gas,
c1ty water, 2 large lots,
basement and garage

s•tuated on n•ce s•ze lot
tn
Hutc h•s on
Sub
d tvJson
See to ap
prec1ate
f

2 ACRES - All coty con

ve nle nces,
.4
room
home, bath. natural gas
furnace, fireplace and

A full lime Real Estate
Agegcy . Call day or

Only

Housing
· Headquart,ers

gar

bage d•sposat Situated

frat heat tng, and Oh io
Power N lce economical
home for 1ust 525,000
RACINE - 3 bedroom
home with c arpeting,

n•ce ktfchen.
$20 000

wtth

eventng,
Velma Ntctnsky, Assoc

Phone'742·3092
Cheryl Lemley,

.

____,

Auoc .

Phooe 742·2003

For Sale, 13 acres ground

Hysell Run Rd , $12,000
Call992 6201

Many extras 992 7727 .

Rentals

Mobtle Homes

1973 Fatrpotnt, l4x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr
1971 Flee!wood, 14x65 3
bdr., bath •;,
1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr .
1968 Flee!wood 12x63, 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT PLEASANT,
wv 304 675·4424

41

1971 Ztmmer trailer 12x60
1972 Buddy Tratler 12x60
992 5304

basement, dnveway $200
per

42

Includes

-4

bedrooms plus pantry
area , Ioyer, enclosed
rear porch; large side
porch, F A gas furnace,
full basement, storage
bulding, all on approx
three fourths acre level
tot for $35,000 00
NEW LISTING
RustiC H1IIS SubdiVI
approx one·hall acre
lot, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
carpeted electnc B B.
heat, garage, storage
building, quality home
for 545,000 00
NEW LISTING- MJJ~- 1 1
DLEPORT 1977,
12x60 mobile home on
50x112 ft lot includes
bedroom suite, living
room furniture, ref and

range, hOOC, storage
bU1id1ng, carport. Looks
like new tor $14,000 00.
ACREAGE - Approx.
25 acres With 4 tots
surveyed for home sites,

water to property, etec·
trlc available
Ntce
wooded area for
$27,500 00.
Bnqk
REDUCED home on 1'12 acres wlth 3
bedrooms, bath, utility
room, some remOdeling

and carpeting. priced to
sell atS20,ooo.oo
TUPPERS PLAINS Ranch house on 1 acre
lot with 3 bedrooms,
bath, carpeting, etectnc
B B. heat, wood burnmg
stove, garage. A gooc
buy at$34,900.00.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- Recently remodeled
l 1J2 story, 7 rooms, 2
bedrooms down, 2 up,

I

chloride,

ferttltzer, dog
food, and all ty pes of salt

Excelsior Salt Works, 1 nc ,
E . Ma in St., Pomeroy, 992
3891
APPLES - ROME beauty
apples a t S4 per bu Best for
app le butter Call 669 3785,
Fltzpatnck Orchard, SR
689
IN STOCK for ommedta le
delivery . various stzes of

pool k1ts Do tf yourself or
te l us tnslall lor you 0
Bumgardner Sales, Inc
992 5724
Harley Dav•dson Yamaha
Super Deals Super Service
Gtant Accessory Selecflon,
5250,000 Inventory A I he ns
Sport Cycles, 20 W. Sit mson
Ave, Athens, OH. 592 1692

Ortve for show, putt for
dough Improve your short
game with a new putter

Apartment

ttltzer.

Plant ltfe fer

Agn cultural

1 Bedroom furntshed apt
w· wall to wall carpet tn
RActne No pels S12S mo
Call 423 8257 Belpre for ap·
potntment

m•neral

45

Furnished Rooms

Board, room,
Retired person
992 6022.

General

laundry .
$150 mo

start riding mower for sale

949 2666 for apt
46

BEAU TIFUL lull color
photographs of thiS year's
champtons'hip Southern
H1gh School basketball
team 8x10, $7 50, 5x7, $4 1n
folders SeM orders and
payment to The Photo
Place , 109 High Sf,
Pomeroy, OH Allow three
weeks for mat I delivery

Lad1es all leatl!er western
boots Values to 579 95. Our
prtce $40 95
Ba•ley' s
Shoes, Mtddleport, OH
Ladtes

sandals ,

Ftrst

Ed1t1ons, values to $22 Our
pnce S3 88 pr Ba•ley 's
Shoes, M•ddleport , OH

Used Btrch cab1nets, hood,

3333
Sears Kenmore Circulating
heater with fan, 50,000

BTU Used very shortt• me
992 3079
Vegetable plants, cabbage,

Ant1ques

53

broccoli, caul iflower, let
tuce, celery, beets, green

,_

peppers,

cht lt

peppers,

ATTENTION .
( IM
POP.TANT TO YOU) W1il
pay cash or cert1f1ed check

sweet banana , egg plant

for anttques and collec·
flbles or entire estates
Nothmg too large Al so,

Large se1ect1on bedd1ng
annuats, hangtng baskets,
pots of flowers and vines

guns, pocket watches and
coin collections Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

Cleland
Greenhouse ,
Geraldtne Cleland, Racine,
OH

p•mtentos, Hungartan wax,

8. _

_

'9

:10.------'
'• 11

•ol 2

:u
~ 14.

I
1
I
I
I
I
I

:15
! 16
:
'
,

41-HOUIH for Atilt

Z-ln Memart•m

n - MobUe Homes

:t-Annt~~ncements

for Rent
44-A,.rtmtnt fer Rent

t-WanledloBuy

Sl-Housebo~

Goods
52--CI, TV, Rad io lqulpmtnt

JJ-Htlp Wtftfld
n-Situetlcl W1ntt'd

S)-Antlqutl

H-Misc Mercttanellst
ss-lulldlnt Supplltt
U--P1ts tor SilO

1l-lnsurence
14-luslnul Trllftlllt

1J-Schclolslnstruc11on
16-Jlttllo, TV
&amp;CIIfiNIIr
l~Wanted To Do

These cash rates
Include discount

&amp;LIVESTOCK

62-War~ttd

eFINANCIAL

s.tvlc"

7$-

,.,Sale

14-luslnns lul'-lnts

77-Auto llt"lr

n-Loh &amp; Acrtttt
M-lttallstete Wtntft
17-RNitart

eSERVICES

4 PM. 0111¥

I
- - - - - 1'

_

_ __

:IS. ____ __

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Dallv Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

~

12 Noon S.tvrday

tor Monca.v '

1'
1:
I
I

'I
I,
II
I.
I,
I,
I
I

. !...~--- -- --·-·-··-·-·--·-·-··-·--,--~

11-,.tum~nt

a ••uvatlnt

1)-lllcavatlnl

UtilitY Buildings

LEO

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

MORRIS

Rt. 1, Box 54
Raclne,Oh.
Ph . 614-143-2591
3·30· 1 mo

lteafl!slate Loons
14% lnterest-30 Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA AutomatiC

Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing

-

Exc

76
Cllh

'"
"'
'"
'"
word

2dilyl
3411YI
6Uy1

lad! wonlover tM minimum 1J worth Is 4 clflts per

Chartt

'"
'·"

"'
"'

per daly
Ac11 runr~lnt otftrtr lh.lfl consec:unn dlyl wtllllll curtod at fltt 1dav
r•l•

In mtmory, Card ot TIYnll:\ and'~~tuary • unrs "'word, P to

minimum Cashin •dnnu

Mobile Noma uiM aiiCI n111 u~n•re ecceptldonlv wttft c11h with
orftr" u c"'t Chartt
corrylnt lox NllmMr 1111 Care of TIM
Sefttlnel

tor'"''

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Holley Dominator Inta ke
Manifold and 600 CFM
Holley Carburetor Com·
puler designed for per
formance

and

economy

Fits 351 Cubic Inch Ford
Wmdsor engine. Never
used 2 new 4.35x18 and 1l ooox21 Carlisle Knobby
motorcvcle fires

Battery

operated fence c harger.
Ca llofter 4 30, 992·7291

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

N. L CONSTRUCTION
Quality constructton at
reasonable rates
RemOdeling
Additions
Siding
Bnck Work
Block Work
Concrete Finlsh ln~

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
built-up '
roof
and
home
repair.

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
After 5 P .M 992·5547
3 26· 1 mo.

Free Estimates

388-9759
2·14 He

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

-ROORNG
-PAINTING
-REMODEUNG
-CONCRm

All types of roof work,
new or . repair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
ctean~ng and palnt'"g
All work guaranteed.

Free Estimates

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

Call Howard
949-2862
949-2160
1-22-tfc
84

Auto Repa~r

Electncal

ELWOOD
REPAIR -

BOWERS
Sweepers.

toasters, trons , all small
appltances Lawn mower

by

Randy
Carpenter,
factory
trained
frontend
alignment
spe-

c.au. fall

Next to State H tghway
Garage on Route 7, 985
3825
M ill er Electrical Servtce
Restdent and Bustness
Reliable and Expenenced

742 3195

--11011

9t2-SI20
85

&amp; Refngerahon

FRONT END
AUGNMENTS

78

• • 110'
IT-lOON

Reasonible Prices

4 9 (pd )

4-111 mo

General Hauling

WILL HAUL ltmestone and
gravel Also, ltme hauling
and spr eadtng Leo Morns

Truckmg Phone 742 2455
87

Upholstery

A&amp;H Upholstenng, across
from the Texaco StatiOn m

Syracuse
992 3743

Ph 992 3752 or

Rutland Furniture's

CARPET SHOP
"Drive A Little Save A Lot"
SHOPISFUL~~TO~KEP

Campmg
Equipment

19ft ca mpmg tratler Se lf
contained, gas and elec

refngerator, Mag1c Chef
cook stove and Shower,
forced ajr furnace, f ull
pressure wa ter system

882 22S5

Vans&amp; 4 W.O.

Rates and Other Information

....

.

II-~========~-U:!::=======~~:==_:~:::::::=:::~

Pomeroy, o.

$250,000 Inventory Athens
Sport Cycles, 20 W Sf1 mson
Ave., Athens, OH 592 1692

Umt.r

4:14· 1 mo.

Loans 3% down on
525,000; 5% down on
balance FHA 265 Subsidy Program. FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort
Open M·W· F 9•00 to I 00
Other Times by
Appointment
Office 992·7544
Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore 51.

Trucks tor Sale

1978 Kawasaki 650
cond 985 4133
1J Wonls"'

Rutland, 0.
Ph , 7~2-2455

1------------11----------+---- - - ----

SERVICE STAllON

Giant Accessory Selectton~

14-lltctrlcel
a Rttripratlon
15--0etttrol Heullnt
....._M N Repair
17- Upholltery

tY2-37"~
'.

Sizes From 4x4 to 12x40

trol New tires Exc cond
Don Foglesong, Mason
773 5274

Harley Davidson Yamaha
Super Oea ls· Super ServiCe

----

h.

SMALL

ciallANDMARK

Motorcycles

0

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
e V - CHISEL
PLOW

air, am fm tape, speed con

speed, ltll steering wheel
10,000 miles 55600 Call992
3149 or 992 2705

omeroy,

Sills

77

seen a1 Colontal Auto Body
Shop, w Ma tn , Pomeroy

am

.

"From 30x30"

Goats 2 yr old male $25, 2
m•lktng goats and 1 bred
female $60 ea 8 mo old
female $45; 6 k1ds males
S20, females S30 Shade,
OH (614) 696 1234

1976 Ptckup truck , can be

p

-618 E M
- ·

Farm Buildings

L1vestock

,

11- Homolmprov.mtnts

34. _

GOLD
0
SiLVER
COl
NS OFANTHE
WOR
LO
RINGS ,
JEWELRY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT EO
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDD LEPORT ,
OHIO, OR CALL 992 3476

74

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

Pomeroy, OH,

1978 Ford Bronco, P s ,
P B , A C , AM F M stereo
992 6130 after 5p m

Aute Parts

&amp;AccHsor~

»-flarmt for ltle

Payrolls, profit and loss statements, al.
_f~deral and state forms.

ALL STEEL

2nd, M•ddleport, OH 992
3161

steering, Levi 1nfenor, 3

e TRANSPORTATION

:n-Ham" for Sale
12-Moil .. +tomes

Business-Fa rms- Partnerships
and Corporations

:n:lo:.

N

1979 JEEP CJ · 7, power

7l-AUtos fOr liM
7J-Vans&amp;4WD.
7.-Motorc:ycln

eREALESTATE

23
24
25.
26
27.

to luv

72-Trudr;s tor Sal•
u-LI'flltocll
64-Hay &amp; Grelr~
u- SNCI &amp; fwtlll1or

Jl&amp;ltln"'

21-

:n- Money to LOin
U - ProftSSIOMI

33, ___ _ _-'--

Gosney, anttques, 26

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto ,
p s , p b , topper Positive
traclton front and rear 985
4339

61 -f'nm lqwlpm.nl

128- 1m~

=

ANTIQUES,
FUR
NITURE, glass, chma,
anythtng See or call Ruth

73

e FARM SUPPLIES

Opportur~lty

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

CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 10" on largest
end $12 p er ton Bundled
slab $10 per ton Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co, Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689

1979 Ford P1 ckup, 6ft bed,
loaded wtth extras 446
15S2 Ca ll afer 5 P m

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

'

20 1

Wanted lo Bu y

1979 Jeep Wagoneer, 4 dr ,
fully eqUipped, exc cond
$7,500 742 3117 after 5 p m

41-FRooms
....,..s.,.cetorRIIfll
47- Wenftil til Rlftt
4&amp;-lqulpment for Rlftt

~

~~======': ~~==============:::::==::::··="=~

pedals, e&gt;&lt;cellent

63

POMEROY,O.
992-6215 or
992-7314

(614) 985-3 961

'Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph, 992·2772

cond SSOO 992 5171 or 992
7206

62

V. C. YQUNG Ill_ ,

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

Call (614) 992-9932

eRENTALS

1-Cartl ofThanlu

1-Yar41 Salt

28
29.
30.

control

wor.,,
walks
and
driveways.
' (FREE ESTIMATES)

John Teaford
Phone:

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
nsulatton
eStorm Doors
• Storm Windows
eReplecement
Windows

Wurlt lze r Orga n Rylhmn

1977 Prem1er Vol are 4 door,

1-Publlc Salt
&amp;AuctiDn

22.

_ __

c red 1 t

C a II

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept,
Ill Court St., PomeroY', 0., 45769

t--Losland Found

21 .

'
t6

manager collect 614 592
5122
payments

PHONE 992·2156

J-Ha,y Ads

18.
19
20

:7. _ _ ___

P1ck.ng up a p1ano 1n your
area Looktng tor a respon
Soble par t Y Io t a ke over

1976 Monza 4 cylmder, 4
speed, 27 m p g S9,000
mt les 992-7060

4-Giveaway

17

.J- ~---, 4. - - -- - - 5. _ _ _ __

Musical
Instruments

72

r

_

DOB OBEDIENCE classes
begtnn.ng now 367 0550
57

Family Plan
Available

~NSULATION

1974 Gremlin, P S , A C,
$1,250 Glen BISSell, 949
2801

WANT AD INFORMAnON

Flrint one word in each
space below Each 1n
1!lal or group of f1gures
counts as a word. Count
n'ame and address or
Phone number If used.
You'll get better results
~~ you describe fully,
give price The Sentinel
r~serves the right to
classify, edit or reject

_ __

Reeves

(614) 698 3290

~::::~::::::::::~::t:::::~::::::::::::;j7~1~--~A~u~to~s~t~o~r~S~a~Ie~--

I1 . Phone~.---------------

, 2. _

Ruth

and

Stiver Ca ll J A. Wamsley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Alhe ns, OH 592
6462

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

'
:1

Western

Engltsh

Faye's Gift Shop, Powell
St, Middleport, OH

_ _ _ _ _ _ __

'

etc

down

work,

spouts, some concrete ,

J&amp;L BUMN

tmaglnable •n horse equ•p
ment
B lan kets, bel1s,

boots,

Gutter

I!

ndt ng

ches, class rl ngs, wedd1 ng
bands, dtamonds Gold or

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

1 1 Wanted
( 1 For Sale
• ( 1 Announcement
( 1 For Rent

and

Everylhtng

OLD COINS, pocket wat

$75. F1replacetrontandan
tlque brass andirons 520

~

~r "1n Yotu~e ad ;:i~~~
classification 1f you'll
check the proper box
below.

pontes

LESSONS

, \

l~::::::::::::::::·:·B=0~~::::::::::4:14::1:m:o::~~::::::::::::::::::~
Horses r

HOOF HOLLOW
and

992

Beautifu l selectton of
flowers for Memonal Day

cyltnder Chevy, motor and
transmission Phone 667

CAU US.

Add~eu

requ•red

smk., gas furnace 1955 SIX

Space tor Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992 7479
•

Write your own ad and order by mali with lh1s
coupon. cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

1

Donattons

6260, noon 7 p m

lind

Manor apts. Call992 7787

I

I

HUMANE
SOC I ETY.
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed

hydrated lime 992 3891
Excels tor Salt works, tnc ,
Pomeroy, OH

RENTER 'S assistance for

nghts, gooc land $77,000
992 7559

Curb Inflation.
! Pay Cash for
l Classlfleds and
!I
Savell T

extensive remodeling
* Electrlcla workS
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

No pets 949 22S3.

Senter Ci11zens 1n Vtllage

36 Acre Farm, 1'12 story
house
Full basement,

---

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boardtng, all breeds Clean
tndoor outdoor tactleftes
Also
AKC
reg1stered
Dobermans 614 446 779S

ADO ONS &amp;
REMODEUNG

GOLF

CONSTRlJCnON
•New homes

color and sound 247 2624

Ref required Huffy elec

some

carpeting, ref
and
range Included
at
$25,000 00
BUSINESS Mid.
dleport lunchroom, all
equlppment, licenses,
Inventory Quick sale at
$11,000.00.
POMEROY Ver~
neat 2 bedroom home
situated on 3 lots,
aluminum siding, In ·
ter lor freshly painted,
full basement, porch
with wrought Iron rail
ing. Only 525,000 00.
OFFICE HOURS MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
9 S, ALSO MON . AND
FRIDAY EVENINGS
UNTIL8 P.M.
REALTOR
Henr~ Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Rotor &amp; Dollie Turner
742·2474
Jean Trussell 949·2660

COAL,
LIMESTONE ,
sand, gravel, calciUm

ROUSH

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220

SPECIAL

3 AND 4 RM turntshed ap
Is Phone 992 5434

r ~------------------~--1 ~

I
I

Mtsc Merchan1se

RISING STAR Kennel
Boardtng Call 367 0292

Furnished 3 bedroom
trailer Deposit requ1red

for Rent

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I
I
I
I
I

guns, pocket watches and

cotn collections Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

s_

~L-~ts tor _,a,_,t,.
e _~

Ktmball Ptano like new
16mm movie pro,ector,

Sleepmo Rms for 3 men

I,

Also,

Business Services

992 6342 or 992·2523

John Teaford 614 985 3961

44

•

992-2259

Mobile Homes

mobile

FOR AU YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS

~

,;

months

2 bedroom lratle r Adults
only 992 3324

COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond tor swimmtng
or ftshlng, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted 3 to 17 acres
available Located approx.
7 m1les from Pomeroy off
Rl. 7 or 33 446 2359 after 6

bu •ldings,

s1x

for Rent

Farms for Sate

barn,

month,

lease. Deposit and referen
ce. 1633 Lmcoln Heights,
Pomeroy 992 3381

home Good cond , mostly
fu rniShed $5,000 or best of
fer 742 2898
33

Houses for Rent

Two Bedrooms FA fur
nace, storm wmdows ,

992-2342
· IDININGOtiLDS AGENCY, INC.

~

•
7

·-'

.,.

unftnlshed ,

Large attractive home on
except1onally nice acre lot
Syracuse . Modern k1tchen,
2 baths, basement, garage

12x60 2 bedroom

Nolhtng too large

Misc. Merch•niSe
LJecorated Cakes, char ac
ter c aKes or sheet cakes

lesso n s

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

~

s•on, 6 room ranch on

Iran

.'
l.
•

·•

•
"'•
"
...•

NEW LISTING - State
ly 2 story home with 7

Lots &amp; Acreage

Property For Sale Over 3
acres of la nd In Pomeroy
Only $7,000 992 3886

Me1gs Co Ca ll after 6 p m
98S 4169.

StRVLNG SOUTHE',ASTERN OHIO SINCE

~5~~·~/ei~~OJ~~tg~~~ ~~2 ~ ~

area 742 3063

35

fam 1ly room , a c , 2 car
garage, Baum Addn .,

INSURANCE

FHA 245 Graduated paym :
en l program, FHA 265- ,

rooms ,

Bnck, ranch sty le,
3
bedroom,
2112
bath,
ftreplace, full basement w·

-DOWN I

FHA Low down payment, ••

77 E StaleSt , Athens, OH .

busmess $22,000 Complete
grocery store, fully equtp
ped, carry out i1cense
59,500 Can lrade and ftnan ·
ce eas1 iy Call O' Bnen and
Crow Realty, 992 2720 or
992 35S9

baths Good garden Call
614 985 3526 Chester, OH .

Real Estate

VENTIONAL 5 Pet down, .l
SEC OND MORTGAGES. ~
VA No down payment, ,

15 year old boy would lt ke

s mtsstons .
batt e rt es,
eng1nes, or sc r .a p meta ls,

12 ft

1

Mortga ge
Money
Available New hotnes, old
homes , and reftnancmg,
your present home CON . • t

to mow lawns tn Rutland

488
Pa lmer St, Moddl eport 10

tx,AeuB~

Gtve plano lesso ns to hlegtn
ners and advanced studenf
tn my home Also teach :
chor dtng and transposmg it
tnte rested call992 5403.

Osby ( Oss•e J Marton 992
6370
Old

Wanted to Do

Situattons Wanted

J Famtly Ya rd Sale

Real Estate

18

Will care for elder l y person
1r:'l my pnvate home Ca ll
992 6022
_ ....,.,

992 2082
Real Eslale - General

992 2143

c y 992 7314

Gold Stiver or toret gn
corns or any gold or StiVer
1tems Anttque turmture,
glass or ch •n a, wtll pay top
doll ar , or com plete es tates
No ttem too large or too
small Check pnces before
se ll tng Al so do apprats•ng

BUY

can ,
your

operator 's license' Phone

Will ca r e for the elderly m
my home Tram ed and ex
penenced Have a vacan

7760

WILL

IN

Will clea n house Cal l 667
3423 or 667 6373

LOST Reward tor lost dog
Lar ge whtte col lie type
wtth brown and black fa ce
and tat I 8 mas old Chtld s
pet
N ame C h atn saw

A UTOMOBILE
SURA NCE
been
cel l e d '
Lost

Opportun tfy E mployer

Iron and brass beds, old
furntture , desks, gold
rtngs , rewelry,
silver
dollars, sterlmg, etc , wood
tee bO)(es, ant1ques, etc

Compl et e

LOST

Send

2 Inta ke Clerks

Lost and Found

LOS T

5 days

r es ume t o Da 1ly Sentme l,
P 0 Box 729 P, Pomeroy

Ktttens, K tttens, K tttens
All shapes and s1zes 992

Part Shepherd, part Co lloe

try side. 1 ""lftll Hoot
Owls. WI ~VI' minute
drive of P •• neroy. Pav·
ed street, all utilities.
1 ACRE 1'1 MIDDLEPORT - 4 room
collage, trailer hookup.
Reduced to $8,000.00
2 BDRM, HOME - 4
acres, walking distance
to Middleport
2 ~;~ BEDROOM COT·
TAGE Paneled &amp;
cal'fll!led throughout.
New furnace
Mid
dleport area . $10,500.
Hobart Dillon, Broker
Fay Mante~.
Branch Mgr.
J&gt;llolle m-2591

Part ttm e ott1ce work Of
ft ce tr am tn g af'\P ex
penence needed 8 30 a m

OH 45769

Needs a good home tn th e

Very clean, Racine
area Call for more Info
J ACRES of quiet coun·

pay cash or cert1fied check
for anttques and collec
tibles or ent•re estates

54

for Sale

Insurance

1J

GE T VALUABLE tratn tng

Gtveaway

4

Help Wanted

m 24CIUrm·2710
have
potenll
od you

ATTENTION
( IM
PORTANT TO YOU) W11i

Bus1ness Build1ngs

LIQUOr Ltcense, operattng

House for sale 8 rooms, 2

32

Gloria Beth Abels, Wake Forest' ··
Umvers1ty JUniOr from GallipoU&amp;
has been elected to Phi Beta Kapp,
the nation's top scholarship fraterruty for liberal arts students.
Miss Abels is the daughter of Dr.;:'
and Mrs. Gene H. Abels of 47'
Halliday Hts , Gallipolis She Is&gt;
maJormg in biOlogy.

3 Famtly Ya rd Sa le Thur s,

e tc

6

wtll have a ftnal greenware
and d1sque sa le, and l ar ge
ya rd sa te We also have
so m e molds fo r sa te
Please call 667 3252 f or a
copy to be sent to you
Paultne Baker

Paul 's Umted Methodtst
Chur ch tn Tuppers Platns

DA NCE

Basebal I,

must be ptcked up by May
20 Also on May 9, 10, 11 , we

and

SQUARE

7

20 18,992 6260

2358

Sizes 38-56!

Announcements

Children

You r e gone from stght and
from thts l1fe, Bu t never
from my h e~rt t love you,
Chuck , althoug h you re
gone and your memones
wtll never part

w,

Orange Twp , OH , Ef
fectove date 04 16 80
Appea labl e to NBR Two
1 000 gallon sspet tc tanks,

t he

In m emory of my husband ,
Ch arles H Hensl ey, who

EPA , P 0
Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohoo 43216
APP.roval ot plans a nd
spec tf• cat •ons

SHOOT

3

Volun t eer
F1re
Dept
Every Saturday 6 30 p m
At thetr bulldmgm Bashan
Factory choke guns only

In Memonam

2

Announcement_s

34

cmg at 11 percent Interes t
If Interested call698· 7331 m
Page town

(lnlyUS,OOO

It Pays To Advertise. • .Advertise Where It Pays. • •
P ublic Nottce

- - Ni·,i,

!:car gartge. ApprO)( w~
.ere, Tuppers Pla ins, Ohio

•
•
------------------------------------------------- ~
tamed Tuesday everung With a dinner honor.mg Mr. and Mrs. Avery
Logan, Jerry and Scott, of Topsham,
Maine. Other guests we re Bernice
Kmg, Mrs. Mabe l Taylor,
Millersport, Mr. and Mrs Wa yne
M1lhaon, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Ba1ley, Darwm, and Mr and Mrs
Guy Sargent, Krista and Jonathan,
Wolfe Pen Road

LlitlJNG

New split leVel home 1111
b"tths , l
bedrooms
.,_MboArd electric ~at ,
'therrnc»~M Windows, plus a

~

Mr. and Mrs. Dw1ght Logan enter-

all mmerals $70,000 742
2480 9fter 6 p m or weeken·
ds

ltvtng room, fu ll basement .

J

ENTERTAIN GUESTS

modern kitchen, fireplace,

patio, storms, fruit trees,

House tor Sale Large lot,
complete ly remodeled 3
bedrooms, kitchen, 2 baths,

l

Plentiful

1.50 acres with lovely view,
4 bedroom older home,

House for Sale on Brownell
Ave, Middleport . 992 5204

Ant1ques

SJ

33

KITCHEN CARPET
Rubber $895 SQ.

yd.

Bac~ed

Ana up

Padding &amp; Cvpef IMtalled Free
witn Purchase

Set 1 lees
81

Nice Selection of Remnants
_All Sizes - _ Ciood Prl~s

Home
Improvements

S &amp; G Carpet Cleanmg
esttmate
Reasonable
steam cleaned
Free
ra tes Scotchguard 992
6309 or 742 2211
WALL PAPERIN G
pa.nt.ng 742 2328

and

CARPENTER WORK complete remodeltng by AI
Tromm, 742 2328 Referen
ces..

RUTLAND JURNITUR£ __ _
~~~
~M~a~i~n~$.~t·~;;;;~~~~~ii~;;~7~~~~~

THEYoolfr COME
ANY TOUGHER.

Rool.ng, stdlng, room od·
di t 1ons,all types of general
repairs, 25 years ex
penence 992 3406

83

Excavaltng

L1mestone for driveways.
Pomerov Mason area 367

7101

84

Electrical
&amp; Refngeralion

SEWING
Repair s,

FREEl II

SO" mower when you

30" mower when

buy a riding tractor,

you buy a
walking mower.

MACHINE
servt ce,

all

makes
992 2284
The
Fabnc Shop, Pomerrf.
Aulhomed Singer Sale$
and service We sharpen
SCISSOrS

FREEl II

"Manning Roush -Owner"

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES.
210 Condor St. Ph. 992-2795 Pomeroy,

Oh. '

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, April23, 1980

Agriculture Department has good,. had inflation news
mer actually declined by 2 2 percent
m March
But the departme nt's chief
econonus t , Howard W HJort, told
the farme r not to des pair. H1s turn IS
c onung
" By the time the pres1dent's (antimfla hon ) program IS s uccessful ,
food pnces will start takmg up the
s lack, " he noted wryly. HJort said
food pnces a ppear to be rUMmg
" countercyclical " to the overall
econom y.
·
HJort said there was a good chance food pr1ce' would clunb at a
s teeper rate than Inflation m general
by the end of 1980, with the farmer
def!mtely s harmg m the mcrease
Farm p1 1ces " are gomg to have to
catc h up And It w11l take place,' ' he
sa1d
HJOrt d e clined to estimate
spec1f1cally what food mcreases will
be hke by the end of the year But he
repeated his forecast that for all of
1980, they Will be m the range of 7
percent to 11 percent The overallmflatwn rate now IS runnmg around 18
percent annually
InflatiOn has been especially bitter
for fa rmers, they complam, because
th e1r costs are nsmg at a time when
they're gettmg less for their
produce The h1gh cost of borrowmg

WASHINGTON (AP )
The
Agn c ulture Department has both
good and bad mfla h on ne ws
From the consumer 's standpoint,
this month, 1t 's not so good. But to
the fa rmer, 1t could be reason to
snule
F ood pr1 ces have ha d a
mode rat mg influence on the na han 's
Jwnpy mfla tw n ra te fo r the last s tx
months While the cos t of energy,
housmg and borrowmg soar ever
highe r , grocer y bills have s tayed
fa1 rl y s teady
In fa ct, food cos ts rose hardly at
a ll durm g the firs t two m onths th1s
yea r
But gove rnm e nt economi s t s
d1sclosed Tuesday that food pnce
nses are catc hmg up w1th the rest of
the na twn 's econonuc trend They
moved up a full! perc ent for Ma rch ,
approac hmg the l 4 percent increase
for the econom y a s a whole last m onth
Tha t news IS certamly bad for cons ume rs But 11 ~Xn ' t necessanly good
for fa rmers
As the Ag n c ulture Department
expla med, the food pnce inCrea se
was d ue to marketmg cost s
pa c k ag m g , trans portatiOn and
energy W1th contmued abundant
food s uppli es, pnces pa1d to the far-

to pay for plantmg the next crop 1s a
particular irritant.
' 1-IJOrt said the answer to the
problem was not mcreased government credit for farmers, but higher
pnces for the1r goods, wh1ch he said
IS mevitable.
The Consumer Price Index
s howed that food pnces, although
s table m January and February,
rose at an annual rate of 4 3 percent
for the first quarter of 1980. Compared w1th the CP! of March 1979,
they stood 7.3 percent higher last
month
But retail pnces were still down
for the first quarter for eggs and
fresh frmts and vegetables, a nd increased only slightly for pork, fats
and mls
The big mcrease m March was for
sugar and sweets, which rose 5 4
percent, and those pnces are 15 2
percent higher than a year ago. The
Agnculture Department said that
was because of demand on the world
s ugar market and 1t predicted more
of the same m the m onths ahead
The department also forecast a
r1se m beef prices as the s upply
declmes m the current quarter.
Economists a lso noted that
poultry pnces rose Significantly m
the f1rst three months of 1980 desp1te

WASHINGTON (AP)- The government has shut down an anunal (ann
m Flonda that was operatmg
without a license .
The Agriculture Department sa1d
L.E . Thompson of ClewiSton, Fla.,
agreed to close down his busmess . In
return, the goverrunent reduced his
fme from $2,500 to $1,000.
The department sa1d on siX occasiOns m 1978, Thompson s hipped
and sold anunals while he was not
licensed. The ammals mcluded a
fox, otter, monkey, bobcats, opposwns, raccoofiS, skunks and wildcats.
Thompson was demed a license for
not m eetmg federal standards for
carmg for the arurnals, mcluding
adeq uate feeding, sarutat10n and
vetermary care.

WASHING TON ( AP ) -

31

water supplies are expected in much" ~
of the West this sununer, the ;
Agriculture Department reports.
_. ~
They should range from adequate: • to excellent for the area. But there :
IJUght be some trouble spots in the
Pacific Northwest and · northern ~
Rockies because of below-notmal J
runoff from meltmg snow.
The heaviest runoffs are expected •
m parts of Arizona, Utah, New •
MeXIco and Colorado, With a chance ~
of flooding in some parts of the :
••
regwn .
,
.,
Snow accu mulations provide
a bout 75 percent of the western ,.
water supply, and the latest
forecasts are based on normal ..
weather for t he rest ofthe spring.
•

The
department
predicted
defoliation w1U be down to 270,000
acres of forest land this year, from
650,000 acres m 1979.
The gypsy moth is found primarily
in the Northeast, With spraying
programs used to control its spread .
About 143,000 acres m New Jersey,
New · York and Pennsylvarda are to
be treated with chemical and
biOlogical msecticides this year .
There also are Isolated mfestahons m !Umois, Ohio, Virgm1a
and Michigan as the gypsy moths,
sometimes as eggs, hitchhike to
other parts of the country

Increased productiOn. The reason producer margms rose from a very
low last quarter of 1979

$25,000 100 percent flnan
Po'"eroy, O,
NI:W

WASHINGTON (AP) -The gypsy
moth IS on the run this year, the
government says.
Agnculture Department officials
said the leaf-eahng moth IS bemg
controlled and the results are expected to be noticed this year in a
reductiOn In tree defoliation.

=:Annoanceme n:ts=

Publtc Nottce

J

=-=-~ ~

GUN
platnts, or enforcement
compltance schedule let
ter s Wtth.n 30 days of
publtcafton •n a newspaper
•n the affected county, any
person may also ( 1 ) sub
mtt wr•tfen comments
r elatt n g
to
act to n s,
proposed act1ons, vertf ted
complatn t s, enforcement
compl1ance schedule let
ter s or preltmtnary staff
determmattons on permits

COUNTY MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE

Th e f ollowtng documents

were rece tve d or pur
chased by The Oh to En

vtronmental

Protectton

Ag enc y dunng th e prevtous
week The effec ttve date of
each frnal actron tS stated
The ts suance da te of each

proposed action ts staled

Anyone aggr teved or ad
ver sely affected by a fma l
act ton to tssue , deny ,

to tnstal l,

publtc meet•ng regardtng
proposed act 1ons or on
pr elim.nary staff deter
mt nat tons on permtts to tn

modif y, revoke, or re new a

permtt, l•cense, or var •an
ce , or to approve to d 1sap
pr ove
plans
a nd
spec•f•cattons, may ftle an

appeal

w olh

The

stall. and/ or (3) request

nottce of further act1ons or
proceedtn9s All requests
for ad1udtcat •on hearmgs
and publtc meetmgs, and
other communtcat tons con
ce rnm ~ public meetmgs,
ad1 ud tca tt on
heanngs,
ver tf ted compl atn ts, and
regulatiOns, should be ad

En

vtronmenta l Board of
Rev tew, Sutte 305, 395 E

Broad St , Columbus, Ohto
432 16, wtlhtn lhtrty (30)

days of the effect tve date,
pursuant to Ohto Revtsed

Code Seclton 3745 07, un less

such ftnal actton was
preceded by the same or
substan tt a lly the same

proposed actton

In

dressed

Age nc y, 361 E
Broad
Street , Columbus, Oh1o
43216, wt lhon three (3) days

after the appeal IS f•led
wtth The Env1ronmental
Board of Rev1 ew All such
ftna l act1ons are so •den
l if ted Such persons a may
request an adwd1 catton
hear tng before The Ohto
EPA on a proposed actton
to ISSue , deny , mod1#y ,
revoke , or ren ew a permtt ,
l tcense, or vartance , or to
approve or dtsapprove
plans and spec tf tcat •ons,

The

Sectron,

Lega l
Ohto

EPA, P 0
Box 1049,
Columbus. Ohto 43216,
(6 14 ) 466 6037
Unl ess

d1 t tton pursuant to Sec tt on

Env tronm ental Protect1on

to

Records

ad

3745 04 of The Revosed
Code , notoce of the f1itng of
the apeal shall be ftled w1th
The Otrector of the OhJO

(2 ) request a

otherw •se sta ted tn par
tt cular nottces, ali othe r
communicat •ons •nc lud1ng
com ments on propQsed ac
ttons should be addressed
etther to The Ot v tston of
Authon zatton and Com
pl tance (Atr) or Perm1t
and Approva I Sect ton
(Water) , whtchever ts ap
propnate, at The Ohto

Thomas ,

Reverend

Rtchard

Wtlhtn thtrly ( 30J days of
3745 07 does not provtde for

leachtng ttl e fteld for St

•ssuance date

ORC

a diUd• c at t on
heartng
r equests or a,P.peals from
orders , ver l fted
com

dtsfrtbutton

bo)(

Ractne

passe d away Apr 22, 1972

P1ck1ng up an Easy play
or gan
m
your area
Looktng for a respons •bl e
par t y to t ake over paymen
ts Call cr ed tt manager

Lov.ng ly and

col lec t 614 592 5122

Lonesome,

Leona
1

He lene Byrne Mullen- Oc
tober I , 1896 Apr 20, 1975 ,
Oaughter of Edwa rd and
Nett1e Byrne Preceded 1n
death by parents, brothers

Leo J

CTtnk l

Ausl tn E

Cl yde J
s1 ster Thurma
Vaughan , husband Charles
H , three mfant ch tl dren
and son, Char les J , M D ,
Sur vtved by Barbara , Dona
and H owa rd Mullen , five
gra ndcht ldren and ftve
great grandchtldren

G U N S HOOT EVERY
FRIDAY NIGHT 7 30 PM
FACTORY CHOKE ONLY
RACINE GU N CLUB
Bea wooc 35707 Loop Rd ,
Ru ll and . OH 742 2790 New
Shaklee Dtstrtbutor 1n th e
Bend area
All natural
v1tamtns All na tur al per
sonal products and organ 1c
clea ner s

ATTE NTION
bus •nesses,
polttt c tans ,
T shtrt s 6
Even tn gs or

organ•zat1ons,
custom Prtnt
to an ord er
weeKends 949

C4 12311 c

Amertean

Legton

Hall,

Mtddlepor l Frt , Apr 25, 8
11 Mu s tc by Stn ngdus ters
Admtss ton $1 00 adu lts
under

12

free

Refreshments wtll be sold

Yard Sale, __ _

11

J,UPPERS PLAINS ~RI!A
- NR·SI, llemodeled home

lin J acre• fe•turlntt trun
bt.lllt bern, pont
b)e trtllM lots Home hes
a mptete k itchen. den with
flr,place, J bedrooms, fore
ad air heat By aPPOintment
0111'( UJ,I)QQ
~~··we ll

QM'"'" M. H•y..,\Aul,..
-..Melli! C•ney, lr
Mtr

:.i
ELECTED TO TOP
SCHOLARSHIP FRATERNITY
•;
WINSTON.SALEM, N C. - , ,

Ph

GOLO, S ILV E R OR
FOREIGN CO IN S OR
ANY OTHER GO LD OR
Si LVER ITEM S ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEM S WILL PAY TOP
DOL LAR CHECK WITH
OS BY COSS IE J MARTIN
BEFORE
SE LLING
P HONE 992 6370 ALSO
OOAPPRA ISIN G

N£W LISTING
Comm. · 7 office rooms
lnh 1 bldg on the Main
st. of Rutland. use as
business or hOme &amp;
COIT)blnatton bus
2 StORY FRAME - 3
Bedroom, full base

Apr 24 a nd F rt , Apr 25

as a young bustness person
and earn good money plus
some grea t g tfts as a Sen
ttnel route earn er Phone
us nght away and get on

NKtnsky Res•dence, Hut
c h tson
SubdtVISto n ,
Rutland
Jeans, tops,
dresses,
bedspreads,
drapes, household ttems,

the el tgtblitty ltst at 992
2156 or 992 2157
Full t1me and par t t tme RN

4 Famtly Yard Sa l e Thurs
24 and Frt 25, 9 ttl 4 J

or LPN ~ 1 7 Conta ct M'"
Ztdoan at Pomeroy Heal th
Care Center Monda y thru
Frtday 9 5

motorcycles, portable TV,

8 lra ck tape playe r , some
ch tl dren' s clothes, tapes,
bedspreads, rugs, boat and
motor , adults, clothmg,
small app liances, many
other ttems Off Spn ng
Ave on Ftsher St Follow
stgns

lo I p m

Bakers

Bu sy

B ee

count ry 949 2728

c eram•cs, Tuppers Platns,
OH , Wtl l be ClOS ing for
bus mess May 15, due to Atr
Force tr ansf er E ff ec t tve
Apr 22 Classes will be hel d

Black

Spa n• e l ,
markmgs

Cocke r

some
whtte
on neck and

chest Smokey 992 61S9 or
992 2773 Lost on Mu lberry

on Tues 10 3 and 7 10 Wed
7 10, Thurs 10 3 and 7 10 so

Hetght s Area

everyone ca n compl ete
the tr tf ems
Everythtng

LOST T 1mex electrt c wat
ch, Stiver stre tch band w
turquotse ston es Lost m
Kroger Store
or lot
Reward
Melan1e Wert

1 PAY htg hest prtces
poss tble fo r gold and silver
co1 ns, nngs , 1ewe! ry , etc

Contact Ed Bu rkelt Barber
Shop, Mtddieport

Process
appltcat•ons and determme
e ltgtbt l tty
fo r
CETA
Program s
Gall1a M e1gs
Communtty Action Agen

SELL YOUR S ILVE R
CO IN S,
S TER L I NG
SIL VER , GOL D, ETC, TO
BROWN ' S
IN
M ID
DLEPORT FOR TOP
DOLLAR PHONE 614 992
5113
Ptano Tunmg
L ane
Da nt els 742 2951 Tuntng
and Repa.r Servtce st nce
1965 I f no answer phone

BR AD FORD , Aucltoneer,
Complete Servtce Phone
949 2487 or 9-49 2000 racme,
Ohto, Crt ft Bradf ord

9

cy, P 0 Box 272, Cheshtre,
OH 45680 367 7342 Gal ita ,
992 6629 Met gs Call or s top
tn for appltcattOn form The
Gal Ita Me1gs Commun tty
Act10n Agency IS an Equal

Wanted to Buy

992 3644

12

Wollte Goli, Chester 985
3335
Sma ll brown dog

Weanng co ll ar Last seen
tn Bashan ar ea P lease call
949 2354 after 3 JO

househ old s

Wrtte M 0 M tller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy , OHl or ca ll 992

10 ka rat, 14 kara t, 18 karat,
gold De ntal gold and gold
ea r ptns 675 301 0

7
Yard Sale
2 Famoly Yard Sale tn
Rustt c

H1ll s,

Sy r ac use

Frtday, Apr 25, 10 4 992
7891

!l::J-l 1JJ !JJJ'W !1.1~

!Jl!.llJ!J~~ .!ri1~:.·rJ:fi

REALTY

PHONE 742-20ii~

e tc Call245 9188
alumtnum

1
George 5. HObstetter Jr.
Broker 992·5739

ftshtng

boat 992 55S5

INVESTMENT PRO·
PERTY 2 lovely',

4

42" Ford Rotary Mower FREE with
new Ford Lawn and Garden
Tractor Purchase!
You save
' '

401

1

You save

262

You save

124

1

Be ready to go AND mo w on a new Ford
Th ese
are /1mrted t1me offers so come m soon to

DALE .HILL FORD TRACTOR, INC.

••

Pomt" oy 0

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS 5%
DOWN .

Zip, Pattern Number.
EXCITING' New 19BO NEEDLE·
CRAFT CATALOG w1th owe r 170
des1gns 1n 11eat wanety ol crafts
3 flee patterns 1ns1de Send Sl 00
132-Quilt Onpnals
131·Add 1 Block Quills $1.50
130.Swoaters-S•m 38-56 $1.50
129-Quicl!Easy Jransfen $1.50
IZB-Pakhwlllk Quills
$1.50
lZ7-AicJians 'n' Doi!ItS $1.50
IZ~ratty FlowtJS
$1.50
125-Pttal ~ills
$1.50
124-Giftl 'n Ornam111ts $1.50
123-Stitth 'n' Patch Qullts$1.50
122-Stutt 'n' run Quills $1.50
121·Plllew Show.olls
$1.50
llttJOChet a W11drobt $1,50
119-Flower Crochet
$1.50
Ill-Crochet wJth Squarn $1.50
116-Nifty f1fty Quills
$1.50
115-Ripple Crochet
$1.50
114-Compltte ~l&amp;fltns $1.50
lll·Prin Alahana
. $1.50
107-11111111 Stwin&amp; . ... $1 50
105'IIIItut Crtchet . $1.50
102-M..Um Quilts
$1.50
101-Quilt Collt!:ti011
$1.50

•uo

Grass Catcher FREE with new
Ford Riding Mower Tractor!

1)1 W M itlll

Go to town or for a walk tn the
woods 1n th1s cozy pullover
lean, long easy om sh1rt or
turtle neck beneath Crochet pull
over •n Simple shell stitches of
synthetic worsted Pattern 7271
d~rect1ons for SIZeS JB to 56
1ncluded
$1 75 for each pattern Add 501
each pattern fo1 lust-class "'
ma1f and handlmg Send to:
~hct Broob
J 1Needlecratt Deal
_
'

~ddtess,

PLUS ..•

'IE~P/

Centra I Realty Co.

York, NY 10011. Pnnt Name,

1

, , 2668

M

Tu , Th , fl 8111 5
W&amp;d 81111

Sat 1111 n

General

7271

The Daily Sentinel
Bol 163, Old ~lleise.l ~ta. , new

34" Ford Rotary Mower
FREE with Ford LT-80
Lawn Tractor Purchase!

m odern homes S1 tuated
on 10 acres Live tn one
and r ent the oth er ON
L Y $87,500 00 for both' •

NEW LISTING - Overlooking Ohto River &amp; Kaiser
Alum Plant 3 lg BR 's, plenty of closers, full base·
ment &amp; fam1iy room .- On 3 beauhful acres ASk1ng
$65,000 00
FINE ESTABLISHED restdent1al homes in Racine
This !wo story W1th fm1shed basement boasts of an
" up . to date'' eat m kitchen, formal dining area,
fa.m1ly room, 3 to 5 bedrooms •. 1'12 baths, thermo

wmdows, Cheavtly msutated), carpeted cJn all 3
levels, most drapes stay The exterior Is Real Per
ma Stone, has 21arge Inviting porches and a !wo car
garage All ofth1sand morefor$57,500
POMEROY - Good 3 bedrm house w1th kitchen,
d1ning &amp; bath Ctly water and septic Nt ce vinyl
stdmg Pnced at SU,900
LOTS ON Ll NCOLN HILL FOR SALE.
Sll,OOO - Traoler &amp; lot, 3 Br , all carpeted, front
porch, wooc underpmning, 1ncludes pool Anxtous to
sell
·TRAILER - 2 BR, on mce lot, small outbuildings
for storage, on quiet street $10,500 00
SYRACU-SE - 4 yrs. old, 3 BR, utility room, kltch~n
w·d!Shwasher, sliding glass doors to patJo from din·
lng room CMneted In beautiful taste S«.900 .
NEWLY LISTED - This brick &amp; alum sided home
welcomes you w1lh Its split entry hal l. Carpeted
throughout, 3 BR , ulil tty area, sliding glass door to
redwooc deck Only 4 yrs old lmmed. Poss.
$47,500
LOTS OF LOTS - From 1 to 7S acres, bordering
Pomeroy
REDUCED - 3 BR home tn nt ce development In
eludes famtly room , set up for wood burning stove

All carpe ted, partoally closed tn carport, storage
Priced to sell . $37,500.00 .

Want To Seii?-Give Us A Call
CALL JIMMY DEEM, .~SSOCIATES 949-2388
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949-2654 or ?49·2591

\'IRGIL B. SR.

216 r: Sef:.!"'d S!r"t
Phone

BEAUTIFUL - Bnck
b1 level Fam•lv room
wtth I .replace A~ wooc
hand slatned Quality
throughout Amenol1es

1

too numerous to men

lton Call today Sells for
$69,000 00 S1tuated on 4

1- ( 614 )·992-3325

acres

RANCH STYLE home
w1th J bedrooms, 2

COUNTRY
Midland mob1te
w1th 3 bedrooms
baths Peaceful
1
w tlh 7/8 acre Gomg
$16,500
TRAILER SPACES -

baths, fam ily room wtth
fireplace K1tchen is ex
tra modern, tncludes
mtcro· wave Sttuated tn

Chester Selltng pnce
$58,000 00
START OUT in lh1S 2
bedroom home N 1ce lot
w•lh garden space Only
$23,000 00 .
TOTAL ELECTRIC - 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, ktt·

hookups, "' acres, water,

electnc, and good loca·
lton on State Route
NEW LISTING
Renovated brick hom e,
new

carpeting,

new

bath, and new kitchen
cupboards Basement, 2

chen and dmmg area 'h
basement with wood

porches, n@ar stores

CHANCE

Of

burner and workshop
Close to Metgs Htgh On
ly $39,900 00.
2 ACRES - With lovely
3 bedroom home Has
extra water tap Sells
for $39,900 00 .
PRICE REDUCED - 3

a

residence or a business

or both Has a bath,
natural gas, flue for
woodburner and Ohio
Power Service. Ask·
lngonly $12,000
RUTLAND - Real nice
2 bedroom home with 4
los Has c1ty

bedroom home
d tshwasher and

water, cen

on a little over an acre
Pnce
reduced
to

.$43,000 00
30 ACRES - Priced to
sell Only $15,000 00
MODERN
HOME

paneling, natural gas,
c1ty water, 2 large lots,
basement and garage

s•tuated on n•ce s•ze lot
tn
Hutc h•s on
Sub
d tvJson
See to ap
prec1ate
f

2 ACRES - All coty con

ve nle nces,
.4
room
home, bath. natural gas
furnace, fireplace and

A full lime Real Estate
Agegcy . Call day or

Only

Housing
· Headquart,ers

gar

bage d•sposat Situated

frat heat tng, and Oh io
Power N lce economical
home for 1ust 525,000
RACINE - 3 bedroom
home with c arpeting,

n•ce ktfchen.
$20 000

wtth

eventng,
Velma Ntctnsky, Assoc

Phone'742·3092
Cheryl Lemley,

.

____,

Auoc .

Phooe 742·2003

For Sale, 13 acres ground

Hysell Run Rd , $12,000
Call992 6201

Many extras 992 7727 .

Rentals

Mobtle Homes

1973 Fatrpotnt, l4x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr
1971 Flee!wood, 14x65 3
bdr., bath •;,
1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr .
1968 Flee!wood 12x63, 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT PLEASANT,
wv 304 675·4424

41

1971 Ztmmer trailer 12x60
1972 Buddy Tratler 12x60
992 5304

basement, dnveway $200
per

42

Includes

-4

bedrooms plus pantry
area , Ioyer, enclosed
rear porch; large side
porch, F A gas furnace,
full basement, storage
bulding, all on approx
three fourths acre level
tot for $35,000 00
NEW LISTING
RustiC H1IIS SubdiVI
approx one·hall acre
lot, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
carpeted electnc B B.
heat, garage, storage
building, quality home
for 545,000 00
NEW LISTING- MJJ~- 1 1
DLEPORT 1977,
12x60 mobile home on
50x112 ft lot includes
bedroom suite, living
room furniture, ref and

range, hOOC, storage
bU1id1ng, carport. Looks
like new tor $14,000 00.
ACREAGE - Approx.
25 acres With 4 tots
surveyed for home sites,

water to property, etec·
trlc available
Ntce
wooded area for
$27,500 00.
Bnqk
REDUCED home on 1'12 acres wlth 3
bedrooms, bath, utility
room, some remOdeling

and carpeting. priced to
sell atS20,ooo.oo
TUPPERS PLAINS Ranch house on 1 acre
lot with 3 bedrooms,
bath, carpeting, etectnc
B B. heat, wood burnmg
stove, garage. A gooc
buy at$34,900.00.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- Recently remodeled
l 1J2 story, 7 rooms, 2
bedrooms down, 2 up,

I

chloride,

ferttltzer, dog
food, and all ty pes of salt

Excelsior Salt Works, 1 nc ,
E . Ma in St., Pomeroy, 992
3891
APPLES - ROME beauty
apples a t S4 per bu Best for
app le butter Call 669 3785,
Fltzpatnck Orchard, SR
689
IN STOCK for ommedta le
delivery . various stzes of

pool k1ts Do tf yourself or
te l us tnslall lor you 0
Bumgardner Sales, Inc
992 5724
Harley Dav•dson Yamaha
Super Deals Super Service
Gtant Accessory Selecflon,
5250,000 Inventory A I he ns
Sport Cycles, 20 W. Sit mson
Ave, Athens, OH. 592 1692

Ortve for show, putt for
dough Improve your short
game with a new putter

Apartment

ttltzer.

Plant ltfe fer

Agn cultural

1 Bedroom furntshed apt
w· wall to wall carpet tn
RActne No pels S12S mo
Call 423 8257 Belpre for ap·
potntment

m•neral

45

Furnished Rooms

Board, room,
Retired person
992 6022.

General

laundry .
$150 mo

start riding mower for sale

949 2666 for apt
46

BEAU TIFUL lull color
photographs of thiS year's
champtons'hip Southern
H1gh School basketball
team 8x10, $7 50, 5x7, $4 1n
folders SeM orders and
payment to The Photo
Place , 109 High Sf,
Pomeroy, OH Allow three
weeks for mat I delivery

Lad1es all leatl!er western
boots Values to 579 95. Our
prtce $40 95
Ba•ley' s
Shoes, Mtddleport, OH
Ladtes

sandals ,

Ftrst

Ed1t1ons, values to $22 Our
pnce S3 88 pr Ba•ley 's
Shoes, M•ddleport , OH

Used Btrch cab1nets, hood,

3333
Sears Kenmore Circulating
heater with fan, 50,000

BTU Used very shortt• me
992 3079
Vegetable plants, cabbage,

Ant1ques

53

broccoli, caul iflower, let
tuce, celery, beets, green

,_

peppers,

cht lt

peppers,

ATTENTION .
( IM
POP.TANT TO YOU) W1il
pay cash or cert1f1ed check

sweet banana , egg plant

for anttques and collec·
flbles or entire estates
Nothmg too large Al so,

Large se1ect1on bedd1ng
annuats, hangtng baskets,
pots of flowers and vines

guns, pocket watches and
coin collections Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

Cleland
Greenhouse ,
Geraldtne Cleland, Racine,
OH

p•mtentos, Hungartan wax,

8. _

_

'9

:10.------'
'• 11

•ol 2

:u
~ 14.

I
1
I
I
I
I
I

:15
! 16
:
'
,

41-HOUIH for Atilt

Z-ln Memart•m

n - MobUe Homes

:t-Annt~~ncements

for Rent
44-A,.rtmtnt fer Rent

t-WanledloBuy

Sl-Housebo~

Goods
52--CI, TV, Rad io lqulpmtnt

JJ-Htlp Wtftfld
n-Situetlcl W1ntt'd

S)-Antlqutl

H-Misc Mercttanellst
ss-lulldlnt Supplltt
U--P1ts tor SilO

1l-lnsurence
14-luslnul Trllftlllt

1J-Schclolslnstruc11on
16-Jlttllo, TV
&amp;CIIfiNIIr
l~Wanted To Do

These cash rates
Include discount

&amp;LIVESTOCK

62-War~ttd

eFINANCIAL

s.tvlc"

7$-

,.,Sale

14-luslnns lul'-lnts

77-Auto llt"lr

n-Loh &amp; Acrtttt
M-lttallstete Wtntft
17-RNitart

eSERVICES

4 PM. 0111¥

I
- - - - - 1'

_

_ __

:IS. ____ __

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Dallv Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

~

12 Noon S.tvrday

tor Monca.v '

1'
1:
I
I

'I
I,
II
I.
I,
I,
I
I

. !...~--- -- --·-·-··-·-·--·-·-··-·--,--~

11-,.tum~nt

a ••uvatlnt

1)-lllcavatlnl

UtilitY Buildings

LEO

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

MORRIS

Rt. 1, Box 54
Raclne,Oh.
Ph . 614-143-2591
3·30· 1 mo

lteafl!slate Loons
14% lnterest-30 Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA AutomatiC

Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing

-

Exc

76
Cllh

'"
"'
'"
'"
word

2dilyl
3411YI
6Uy1

lad! wonlover tM minimum 1J worth Is 4 clflts per

Chartt

'"
'·"

"'
"'

per daly
Ac11 runr~lnt otftrtr lh.lfl consec:unn dlyl wtllllll curtod at fltt 1dav
r•l•

In mtmory, Card ot TIYnll:\ and'~~tuary • unrs "'word, P to

minimum Cashin •dnnu

Mobile Noma uiM aiiCI n111 u~n•re ecceptldonlv wttft c11h with
orftr" u c"'t Chartt
corrylnt lox NllmMr 1111 Care of TIM
Sefttlnel

tor'"''

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Holley Dominator Inta ke
Manifold and 600 CFM
Holley Carburetor Com·
puler designed for per
formance

and

economy

Fits 351 Cubic Inch Ford
Wmdsor engine. Never
used 2 new 4.35x18 and 1l ooox21 Carlisle Knobby
motorcvcle fires

Battery

operated fence c harger.
Ca llofter 4 30, 992·7291

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

N. L CONSTRUCTION
Quality constructton at
reasonable rates
RemOdeling
Additions
Siding
Bnck Work
Block Work
Concrete Finlsh ln~

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
built-up '
roof
and
home
repair.

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
After 5 P .M 992·5547
3 26· 1 mo.

Free Estimates

388-9759
2·14 He

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

-ROORNG
-PAINTING
-REMODEUNG
-CONCRm

All types of roof work,
new or . repair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
ctean~ng and palnt'"g
All work guaranteed.

Free Estimates

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

Call Howard
949-2862
949-2160
1-22-tfc
84

Auto Repa~r

Electncal

ELWOOD
REPAIR -

BOWERS
Sweepers.

toasters, trons , all small
appltances Lawn mower

by

Randy
Carpenter,
factory
trained
frontend
alignment
spe-

c.au. fall

Next to State H tghway
Garage on Route 7, 985
3825
M ill er Electrical Servtce
Restdent and Bustness
Reliable and Expenenced

742 3195

--11011

9t2-SI20
85

&amp; Refngerahon

FRONT END
AUGNMENTS

78

• • 110'
IT-lOON

Reasonible Prices

4 9 (pd )

4-111 mo

General Hauling

WILL HAUL ltmestone and
gravel Also, ltme hauling
and spr eadtng Leo Morns

Truckmg Phone 742 2455
87

Upholstery

A&amp;H Upholstenng, across
from the Texaco StatiOn m

Syracuse
992 3743

Ph 992 3752 or

Rutland Furniture's

CARPET SHOP
"Drive A Little Save A Lot"
SHOPISFUL~~TO~KEP

Campmg
Equipment

19ft ca mpmg tratler Se lf
contained, gas and elec

refngerator, Mag1c Chef
cook stove and Shower,
forced ajr furnace, f ull
pressure wa ter system

882 22S5

Vans&amp; 4 W.O.

Rates and Other Information

....

.

II-~========~-U:!::=======~~:==_:~:::::::=:::~

Pomeroy, o.

$250,000 Inventory Athens
Sport Cycles, 20 W Sf1 mson
Ave., Athens, OH 592 1692

Umt.r

4:14· 1 mo.

Loans 3% down on
525,000; 5% down on
balance FHA 265 Subsidy Program. FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort
Open M·W· F 9•00 to I 00
Other Times by
Appointment
Office 992·7544
Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore 51.

Trucks tor Sale

1978 Kawasaki 650
cond 985 4133
1J Wonls"'

Rutland, 0.
Ph , 7~2-2455

1------------11----------+---- - - ----

SERVICE STAllON

Giant Accessory Selectton~

14-lltctrlcel
a Rttripratlon
15--0etttrol Heullnt
....._M N Repair
17- Upholltery

tY2-37"~
'.

Sizes From 4x4 to 12x40

trol New tires Exc cond
Don Foglesong, Mason
773 5274

Harley Davidson Yamaha
Super Oea ls· Super ServiCe

----

h.

SMALL

ciallANDMARK

Motorcycles

0

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
e V - CHISEL
PLOW

air, am fm tape, speed con

speed, ltll steering wheel
10,000 miles 55600 Call992
3149 or 992 2705

omeroy,

Sills

77

seen a1 Colontal Auto Body
Shop, w Ma tn , Pomeroy

am

.

"From 30x30"

Goats 2 yr old male $25, 2
m•lktng goats and 1 bred
female $60 ea 8 mo old
female $45; 6 k1ds males
S20, females S30 Shade,
OH (614) 696 1234

1976 Ptckup truck , can be

p

-618 E M
- ·

Farm Buildings

L1vestock

,

11- Homolmprov.mtnts

34. _

GOLD
0
SiLVER
COl
NS OFANTHE
WOR
LO
RINGS ,
JEWELRY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT EO
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDD LEPORT ,
OHIO, OR CALL 992 3476

74

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

Pomeroy, OH,

1978 Ford Bronco, P s ,
P B , A C , AM F M stereo
992 6130 after 5p m

Aute Parts

&amp;AccHsor~

»-flarmt for ltle

Payrolls, profit and loss statements, al.
_f~deral and state forms.

ALL STEEL

2nd, M•ddleport, OH 992
3161

steering, Levi 1nfenor, 3

e TRANSPORTATION

:n-Ham" for Sale
12-Moil .. +tomes

Business-Fa rms- Partnerships
and Corporations

:n:lo:.

N

1979 JEEP CJ · 7, power

7l-AUtos fOr liM
7J-Vans&amp;4WD.
7.-Motorc:ycln

eREALESTATE

23
24
25.
26
27.

to luv

72-Trudr;s tor Sal•
u-LI'flltocll
64-Hay &amp; Grelr~
u- SNCI &amp; fwtlll1or

Jl&amp;ltln"'

21-

:n- Money to LOin
U - ProftSSIOMI

33, ___ _ _-'--

Gosney, anttques, 26

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto ,
p s , p b , topper Positive
traclton front and rear 985
4339

61 -f'nm lqwlpm.nl

128- 1m~

=

ANTIQUES,
FUR
NITURE, glass, chma,
anythtng See or call Ruth

73

e FARM SUPPLIES

Opportur~lty

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

CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 10" on largest
end $12 p er ton Bundled
slab $10 per ton Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co, Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689

1979 Ford P1 ckup, 6ft bed,
loaded wtth extras 446
15S2 Ca ll afer 5 P m

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

'

20 1

Wanted lo Bu y

1979 Jeep Wagoneer, 4 dr ,
fully eqUipped, exc cond
$7,500 742 3117 after 5 p m

41-FRooms
....,..s.,.cetorRIIfll
47- Wenftil til Rlftt
4&amp;-lqulpment for Rlftt

~

~~======': ~~==============:::::==::::··="=~

pedals, e&gt;&lt;cellent

63

POMEROY,O.
992-6215 or
992-7314

(614) 985-3 961

'Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph, 992·2772

cond SSOO 992 5171 or 992
7206

62

V. C. YQUNG Ill_ ,

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

Call (614) 992-9932

eRENTALS

1-Cartl ofThanlu

1-Yar41 Salt

28
29.
30.

control

wor.,,
walks
and
driveways.
' (FREE ESTIMATES)

John Teaford
Phone:

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
nsulatton
eStorm Doors
• Storm Windows
eReplecement
Windows

Wurlt lze r Orga n Rylhmn

1977 Prem1er Vol are 4 door,

1-Publlc Salt
&amp;AuctiDn

22.

_ __

c red 1 t

C a II

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept,
Ill Court St., PomeroY', 0., 45769

t--Losland Found

21 .

'
t6

manager collect 614 592
5122
payments

PHONE 992·2156

J-Ha,y Ads

18.
19
20

:7. _ _ ___

P1ck.ng up a p1ano 1n your
area Looktng tor a respon
Soble par t Y Io t a ke over

1976 Monza 4 cylmder, 4
speed, 27 m p g S9,000
mt les 992-7060

4-Giveaway

17

.J- ~---, 4. - - -- - - 5. _ _ _ __

Musical
Instruments

72

r

_

DOB OBEDIENCE classes
begtnn.ng now 367 0550
57

Family Plan
Available

~NSULATION

1974 Gremlin, P S , A C,
$1,250 Glen BISSell, 949
2801

WANT AD INFORMAnON

Flrint one word in each
space below Each 1n
1!lal or group of f1gures
counts as a word. Count
n'ame and address or
Phone number If used.
You'll get better results
~~ you describe fully,
give price The Sentinel
r~serves the right to
classify, edit or reject

_ __

Reeves

(614) 698 3290

~::::~::::::::::~::t:::::~::::::::::::;j7~1~--~A~u~to~s~t~o~r~S~a~Ie~--

I1 . Phone~.---------------

, 2. _

Ruth

and

Stiver Ca ll J A. Wamsley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Alhe ns, OH 592
6462

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

'
:1

Western

Engltsh

Faye's Gift Shop, Powell
St, Middleport, OH

_ _ _ _ _ _ __

'

etc

down

work,

spouts, some concrete ,

J&amp;L BUMN

tmaglnable •n horse equ•p
ment
B lan kets, bel1s,

boots,

Gutter

I!

ndt ng

ches, class rl ngs, wedd1 ng
bands, dtamonds Gold or

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

1 1 Wanted
( 1 For Sale
• ( 1 Announcement
( 1 For Rent

and

Everylhtng

OLD COINS, pocket wat

$75. F1replacetrontandan
tlque brass andirons 520

~

~r "1n Yotu~e ad ;:i~~~
classification 1f you'll
check the proper box
below.

pontes

LESSONS

, \

l~::::::::::::::::·:·B=0~~::::::::::4:14::1:m:o::~~::::::::::::::::::~
Horses r

HOOF HOLLOW
and

992

Beautifu l selectton of
flowers for Memonal Day

cyltnder Chevy, motor and
transmission Phone 667

CAU US.

Add~eu

requ•red

smk., gas furnace 1955 SIX

Space tor Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992 7479
•

Write your own ad and order by mali with lh1s
coupon. cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

1

Donattons

6260, noon 7 p m

lind

Manor apts. Call992 7787

I

I

HUMANE
SOC I ETY.
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed

hydrated lime 992 3891
Excels tor Salt works, tnc ,
Pomeroy, OH

RENTER 'S assistance for

nghts, gooc land $77,000
992 7559

Curb Inflation.
! Pay Cash for
l Classlfleds and
!I
Savell T

extensive remodeling
* Electrlcla workS
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

No pets 949 22S3.

Senter Ci11zens 1n Vtllage

36 Acre Farm, 1'12 story
house
Full basement,

---

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boardtng, all breeds Clean
tndoor outdoor tactleftes
Also
AKC
reg1stered
Dobermans 614 446 779S

ADO ONS &amp;
REMODEUNG

GOLF

CONSTRlJCnON
•New homes

color and sound 247 2624

Ref required Huffy elec

some

carpeting, ref
and
range Included
at
$25,000 00
BUSINESS Mid.
dleport lunchroom, all
equlppment, licenses,
Inventory Quick sale at
$11,000.00.
POMEROY Ver~
neat 2 bedroom home
situated on 3 lots,
aluminum siding, In ·
ter lor freshly painted,
full basement, porch
with wrought Iron rail
ing. Only 525,000 00.
OFFICE HOURS MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
9 S, ALSO MON . AND
FRIDAY EVENINGS
UNTIL8 P.M.
REALTOR
Henr~ Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Rotor &amp; Dollie Turner
742·2474
Jean Trussell 949·2660

COAL,
LIMESTONE ,
sand, gravel, calciUm

ROUSH

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220

SPECIAL

3 AND 4 RM turntshed ap
Is Phone 992 5434

r ~------------------~--1 ~

I
I

Mtsc Merchan1se

RISING STAR Kennel
Boardtng Call 367 0292

Furnished 3 bedroom
trailer Deposit requ1red

for Rent

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I
I
I
I
I

guns, pocket watches and

cotn collections Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

s_

~L-~ts tor _,a,_,t,.
e _~

Ktmball Ptano like new
16mm movie pro,ector,

Sleepmo Rms for 3 men

I,

Also,

Business Services

992 6342 or 992·2523

John Teaford 614 985 3961

44

•

992-2259

Mobile Homes

mobile

FOR AU YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS

~

,;

months

2 bedroom lratle r Adults
only 992 3324

COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond tor swimmtng
or ftshlng, 9 rooms, bath,
carpeted 3 to 17 acres
available Located approx.
7 m1les from Pomeroy off
Rl. 7 or 33 446 2359 after 6

bu •ldings,

s1x

for Rent

Farms for Sate

barn,

month,

lease. Deposit and referen
ce. 1633 Lmcoln Heights,
Pomeroy 992 3381

home Good cond , mostly
fu rniShed $5,000 or best of
fer 742 2898
33

Houses for Rent

Two Bedrooms FA fur
nace, storm wmdows ,

992-2342
· IDININGOtiLDS AGENCY, INC.

~

•
7

·-'

.,.

unftnlshed ,

Large attractive home on
except1onally nice acre lot
Syracuse . Modern k1tchen,
2 baths, basement, garage

12x60 2 bedroom

Nolhtng too large

Misc. Merch•niSe
LJecorated Cakes, char ac
ter c aKes or sheet cakes

lesso n s

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

~

s•on, 6 room ranch on

Iran

.'
l.
•

·•

•
"'•
"
...•

NEW LISTING - State
ly 2 story home with 7

Lots &amp; Acreage

Property For Sale Over 3
acres of la nd In Pomeroy
Only $7,000 992 3886

Me1gs Co Ca ll after 6 p m
98S 4169.

StRVLNG SOUTHE',ASTERN OHIO SINCE

~5~~·~/ei~~OJ~~tg~~~ ~~2 ~ ~

area 742 3063

35

fam 1ly room , a c , 2 car
garage, Baum Addn .,

INSURANCE

FHA 245 Graduated paym :
en l program, FHA 265- ,

rooms ,

Bnck, ranch sty le,
3
bedroom,
2112
bath,
ftreplace, full basement w·

-DOWN I

FHA Low down payment, ••

77 E StaleSt , Athens, OH .

busmess $22,000 Complete
grocery store, fully equtp
ped, carry out i1cense
59,500 Can lrade and ftnan ·
ce eas1 iy Call O' Bnen and
Crow Realty, 992 2720 or
992 35S9

baths Good garden Call
614 985 3526 Chester, OH .

Real Estate

VENTIONAL 5 Pet down, .l
SEC OND MORTGAGES. ~
VA No down payment, ,

15 year old boy would lt ke

s mtsstons .
batt e rt es,
eng1nes, or sc r .a p meta ls,

12 ft

1

Mortga ge
Money
Available New hotnes, old
homes , and reftnancmg,
your present home CON . • t

to mow lawns tn Rutland

488
Pa lmer St, Moddl eport 10

tx,AeuB~

Gtve plano lesso ns to hlegtn
ners and advanced studenf
tn my home Also teach :
chor dtng and transposmg it
tnte rested call992 5403.

Osby ( Oss•e J Marton 992
6370
Old

Wanted to Do

Situattons Wanted

J Famtly Ya rd Sale

Real Estate

18

Will care for elder l y person
1r:'l my pnvate home Ca ll
992 6022
_ ....,.,

992 2082
Real Eslale - General

992 2143

c y 992 7314

Gold Stiver or toret gn
corns or any gold or StiVer
1tems Anttque turmture,
glass or ch •n a, wtll pay top
doll ar , or com plete es tates
No ttem too large or too
small Check pnces before
se ll tng Al so do apprats•ng

BUY

can ,
your

operator 's license' Phone

Will ca r e for the elderly m
my home Tram ed and ex
penenced Have a vacan

7760

WILL

IN

Will clea n house Cal l 667
3423 or 667 6373

LOST Reward tor lost dog
Lar ge whtte col lie type
wtth brown and black fa ce
and tat I 8 mas old Chtld s
pet
N ame C h atn saw

A UTOMOBILE
SURA NCE
been
cel l e d '
Lost

Opportun tfy E mployer

Iron and brass beds, old
furntture , desks, gold
rtngs , rewelry,
silver
dollars, sterlmg, etc , wood
tee bO)(es, ant1ques, etc

Compl et e

LOST

Send

2 Inta ke Clerks

Lost and Found

LOS T

5 days

r es ume t o Da 1ly Sentme l,
P 0 Box 729 P, Pomeroy

Ktttens, K tttens, K tttens
All shapes and s1zes 992

Part Shepherd, part Co lloe

try side. 1 ""lftll Hoot
Owls. WI ~VI' minute
drive of P •• neroy. Pav·
ed street, all utilities.
1 ACRE 1'1 MIDDLEPORT - 4 room
collage, trailer hookup.
Reduced to $8,000.00
2 BDRM, HOME - 4
acres, walking distance
to Middleport
2 ~;~ BEDROOM COT·
TAGE Paneled &amp;
cal'fll!led throughout.
New furnace
Mid
dleport area . $10,500.
Hobart Dillon, Broker
Fay Mante~.
Branch Mgr.
J&gt;llolle m-2591

Part ttm e ott1ce work Of
ft ce tr am tn g af'\P ex
penence needed 8 30 a m

OH 45769

Needs a good home tn th e

Very clean, Racine
area Call for more Info
J ACRES of quiet coun·

pay cash or cert1fied check
for anttques and collec
tibles or ent•re estates

54

for Sale

Insurance

1J

GE T VALUABLE tratn tng

Gtveaway

4

Help Wanted

m 24CIUrm·2710
have
potenll
od you

ATTENTION
( IM
PORTANT TO YOU) W11i

Bus1ness Build1ngs

LIQUOr Ltcense, operattng

House for sale 8 rooms, 2

32

Gloria Beth Abels, Wake Forest' ··
Umvers1ty JUniOr from GallipoU&amp;
has been elected to Phi Beta Kapp,
the nation's top scholarship fraterruty for liberal arts students.
Miss Abels is the daughter of Dr.;:'
and Mrs. Gene H. Abels of 47'
Halliday Hts , Gallipolis She Is&gt;
maJormg in biOlogy.

3 Famtly Ya rd Sa le Thur s,

e tc

6

wtll have a ftnal greenware
and d1sque sa le, and l ar ge
ya rd sa te We also have
so m e molds fo r sa te
Please call 667 3252 f or a
copy to be sent to you
Paultne Baker

Paul 's Umted Methodtst
Chur ch tn Tuppers Platns

DA NCE

Basebal I,

must be ptcked up by May
20 Also on May 9, 10, 11 , we

and

SQUARE

7

20 18,992 6260

2358

Sizes 38-56!

Announcements

Children

You r e gone from stght and
from thts l1fe, Bu t never
from my h e~rt t love you,
Chuck , althoug h you re
gone and your memones
wtll never part

w,

Orange Twp , OH , Ef
fectove date 04 16 80
Appea labl e to NBR Two
1 000 gallon sspet tc tanks,

t he

In m emory of my husband ,
Ch arles H Hensl ey, who

EPA , P 0
Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohoo 43216
APP.roval ot plans a nd
spec tf• cat •ons

SHOOT

3

Volun t eer
F1re
Dept
Every Saturday 6 30 p m
At thetr bulldmgm Bashan
Factory choke guns only

In Memonam

2

Announcement_s

34

cmg at 11 percent Interes t
If Interested call698· 7331 m
Page town

(lnlyUS,OOO

It Pays To Advertise. • .Advertise Where It Pays. • •
P ublic Nottce

- - Ni·,i,

!:car gartge. ApprO)( w~
.ere, Tuppers Pla ins, Ohio

•
•
------------------------------------------------- ~
tamed Tuesday everung With a dinner honor.mg Mr. and Mrs. Avery
Logan, Jerry and Scott, of Topsham,
Maine. Other guests we re Bernice
Kmg, Mrs. Mabe l Taylor,
Millersport, Mr. and Mrs Wa yne
M1lhaon, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Ba1ley, Darwm, and Mr and Mrs
Guy Sargent, Krista and Jonathan,
Wolfe Pen Road

LlitlJNG

New split leVel home 1111
b"tths , l
bedrooms
.,_MboArd electric ~at ,
'therrnc»~M Windows, plus a

~

Mr. and Mrs. Dw1ght Logan enter-

all mmerals $70,000 742
2480 9fter 6 p m or weeken·
ds

ltvtng room, fu ll basement .

J

ENTERTAIN GUESTS

modern kitchen, fireplace,

patio, storms, fruit trees,

House tor Sale Large lot,
complete ly remodeled 3
bedrooms, kitchen, 2 baths,

l

Plentiful

1.50 acres with lovely view,
4 bedroom older home,

House for Sale on Brownell
Ave, Middleport . 992 5204

Ant1ques

SJ

33

KITCHEN CARPET
Rubber $895 SQ.

yd.

Bac~ed

Ana up

Padding &amp; Cvpef IMtalled Free
witn Purchase

Set 1 lees
81

Nice Selection of Remnants
_All Sizes - _ Ciood Prl~s

Home
Improvements

S &amp; G Carpet Cleanmg
esttmate
Reasonable
steam cleaned
Free
ra tes Scotchguard 992
6309 or 742 2211
WALL PAPERIN G
pa.nt.ng 742 2328

and

CARPENTER WORK complete remodeltng by AI
Tromm, 742 2328 Referen
ces..

RUTLAND JURNITUR£ __ _
~~~
~M~a~i~n~$.~t·~;;;;~~~~~ii~;;~7~~~~~

THEYoolfr COME
ANY TOUGHER.

Rool.ng, stdlng, room od·
di t 1ons,all types of general
repairs, 25 years ex
penence 992 3406

83

Excavaltng

L1mestone for driveways.
Pomerov Mason area 367

7101

84

Electrical
&amp; Refngeralion

SEWING
Repair s,

FREEl II

SO" mower when you

30" mower when

buy a riding tractor,

you buy a
walking mower.

MACHINE
servt ce,

all

makes
992 2284
The
Fabnc Shop, Pomerrf.
Aulhomed Singer Sale$
and service We sharpen
SCISSOrS

FREEl II

"Manning Roush -Owner"

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES.
210 Condor St. Ph. 992-2795 Pomeroy,

Oh. '

�14..:TheDaUySentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,AprU23,19110

Senate approves ·anti-litter hill

$104,410 judment filed in court
A judgment in the amount of
$104,410.47 has been filed in Meigs
County CoiiUilon Pleas Court by
Doris J . McDonald against Independant Order of Odd Fellows,
Mineral Lodge 242, Pomeroy,
The suit is for injuries suffered by
the plaintiff when she fell going
down a set of steps. Plaintiff charges
1

her fall was caused by deteriorated
conditions of the steps.
A judgment in !he amount of
$29,064.86 was filed by Tri.Star Electrical Contractors, Inc., and Ohio
CofP. , against Prime Builders Inc.,
Colwnbus, Pomeroy Cliffs Ltd,
Pomeroy, and et al. The suit is for
labor and material.
Esther P. Ridenour. Chester. filed

Ohio's unemployment.
(Continued from Pa.ge 1l

state government thls year, according to state personnel director
Philip Hamilton.
"We have been discussing the
possibility of a 5 percent cutback,
but that could probably occur
through attrition," he said. "We're
not anticipating any reduction and
the governor bas stated he doesn't
want anyone laid off."
Regarding the recession,
Hamilton said the state obviously
will not be taking In as much money
In certain areas as usual.
"It's pretty hard to get an idea of
wbat our tax picture is," he said.
"Our 1979 income was great. We
really don't know what we're going
to be facing for 1980. The real
problems, however, are probably
going to be felt in state government
in 1981."
· Nearly 5,500 International Harvester Co. employees in Springfield,
off the job since Nov. I, voted Sun·
day to end their strike. According to
a survey, 40area businesses were affected directly by the lengthy job action.
In Lima, UAW Local106 at a Clark
Equipment Co. industrial
machinery plant voted to accept a
four-&lt;lay work week rather than
more stringent steps to offset
lagging sales.

POTLUCKD~SUNDAY

A farewell potluck dinner will be
held Sunday following worship services at the Middleport Church of
Christ honoring Terry Yankee,
youth minister for the past four
years, and his wife, Helen. A gift will
be presented to the couple. Yankee
will be graduating from the Ken·
lucky Christian College this spring
and will be going onto the staff there.
His last Sunday at the Middleport
church will be on May 4.

VIM TO MEET
The bi-monthly meeting of Women
for Informed Mothering will be held
Thursday at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. The meeting will
begin at 7:30 p.m. and will feature
"The Story of Eric", a film depicting
Iamaze techniques during a hospital
birth. For more Information on the
organization, residents are invited
to telephone 742-2368 or 742-2137.

SEPCIAL WEEKEND
SERVICES SET
There will be special services at
the Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Friday and Saturday evenings at
7:30. The teen choir of the Colwnbus
·Whitehall Church of the Nazarene
will be slnging and the Rev. James
Harlow, their youth minister, will be
special speaker. All ages are invited.
BRUSHFIRE

The Racine Fire Department was
called for a brush fire in Lebanon
Township at 5:30 p.m. Monday.
Three trucks and 25 men answered
the call. The blaze was extinguished
when the department arrived.
SQUAD CALLED
The Tuppers Plains Emergency
Squad was called at 8:25 p.m. Sun·
day for William Tracewell, Tuppers
Plains, who was taken to CamdenClark Hospital in Parkersburg.

~here are .some hopeful areas in
Ohio, however.
Work is under way on a $400
million Miller Brewing Co. facility
at Trenton, near Hamilton, that will
employ 1,700 in two years.
In Dayton, Chevrolet is considering tonverting an old
Frigidaire plant to a diesel engine
facility by mid-1981. It would employ
5,000.
General Electric has a contract
for new jet engines with some of the
work set to be done at its Cincinnati
plant.
Work is under way on an $850
million nuclear power generator at
Moscow in Clermont County, with
800 at work on construction a~d i50
permanent jobs expected when the
operation starts in 1981.
American Electric Power Co. hils
given the central Ohio area a boost
with its decision to move its
headquarters from New York to
Colwnbus. The corporation is in the
process of hiring between 400 and 500
employees and will ultimately in·
crease its payroll to 1,500 when it's
flnally settled.
Honda Motor Co., with a motor·
cycle plant located in nearby
Marysville, has announced it will
construct an automotive assembly
operation near the same location,
providing another 2,000 jobs.

VISIT SET
A representative of the Railroad
Retirement Board will be at the
Conrail Hobson yard office In Middleport ~rom 12 noon to 2:30 p.m.
Friday.
Anyone wishing to transact
business or ask questions pertaining
to retirement, unemployment
benefits, sickness benefits of
Medicare may meet with the
representative.

CAR WASH SATIJRDAY
The Olive TO\ynshlp Fire Depart·
ment will sponsor a car wash Satur·
day at the fire station starting at 9
a.m. Cost will be $3.50 per car, inside
and out.
ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were issued to
Clinton Randall Faulk, 23, Pomeroy,
and Brynda Faye Black, 18,
Rutland; James Dexter Harris, 18,
Rt. 1, Long Bottom, and Barbara
Sue Persons, 19, Rt. I, Long Bottom.

.

MEETS TmJRSDAY
Racine Junior High eighth grade
will meet Thursday, April24, at 7:30
p.m.at the junior high concerning
the trip for students.
SQUAD CALLE~
The Syracuse ER Squad was
called Tuesday at 8:50 p.m. for
Woodrow Zwilling who was having a
severe nose bleed. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital where
he was admitted.

suit for divorce against James L.
Ridenour, Chester.
Filing for dissolution of marriage
were Thomas Walker, Rutland, and
Terri Lee Walker, Rutland; Ernest
L. Jones, Jr., Dexter, and Shirley
Marie Jones, Bidwell.

Aaaoclated Press Wrtler
COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP) - A
·House.bill raising business taxes to
.provide for anti-litter programs in
Ohio has been approved by the
•Senate.
. But a series of amendments, both
:in ccmmlttee and on the Senate floor
Wednesday, returned it to the lower
·chamber for further consideration.
. Sen. Jerome Stano, O.Parma won
· 3().3 Senate approval of the mea~ure.
.which he called "an equitable and
just" substllt!.te for a mandatory
beverage container desposit bill
._rejected by voters last November.

County Court
Fifteen defendants were fined and
18 others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Monday.
Fined by acting Judge Patrick
O'Brien were Paul F. Thomas, Middleport, $10 and costs, stop sign~
Paul Chapman, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, no headlights; Richard
Young, Racine, $5 and costs, failed
to keep exhaust in workjng order;
James Barnhart, Alexandria,
William Hendricks, Pomeroy,
Biswajit Ganguly, Syracuse, Jane
Millhone, Tuppers Plains, and
Debra Clonch, Pomeroy, $15 and
costs each, speeding; John Coffman,
Sr., Columbus, $14.50, speed; Pearl
Little, Middleport, $10 and costs,
assured clear distance; Monte
Wolfe, Syracuse, $10 and costs, no
operator's license; Howard Searles,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, failed to
display' registration; Wilbur Gun·
noe, Logan, $50 and costs, ·disposing
garbage on roadway, return to scene
and clean up area; Norma Grueser,
Minersville, $10 and costs, failure to
display registration.
Forfeiting bonds were Robert J .
Kennedy, Charleston, Donn M. Dall,
North Canton, E. S. Villanueva, Addison, Bill H. Moore, Crooksville,
Opal R. Wilson, Huntington, George
F. Paul, Ashland, susan C. Unroe,
Parkersburg, Barry Bradford,
Wooster, Richard W. Wilson ,
Parkersburg, Cynthla L. Croson,
Chesapeake, Ernest F. Harmon,
Nitro, Larry J. Miller, Uttle
Hocking, and Phil Baird, Gallipolis,
$35.50 each, speeding; Roger L.
Hoschar, Rt. I, West Colwnbia,
$360.50, DWI; Donald G. Markel,
Flatwoods, Ky., $35.50, left of center; Michael D. Vance, .Cheshire,
$35.50, failure to display
reg istration; Jerry Abbott ,
Syracuse, $37.55, stop sign; Wayne
L. Adams, Rt. I, Rutland, $37.55,
resisting, $62.55, criminal trespass.

Firefighters bring
fire under control
The Racine Fire Department was
called Tuesday at 4:30p.m. to Letart
Township on SR 338 to fight a six
acre brush fire.
Called to assist Racine were
Pomeroy and Syracuse Fire Depart·
.ments along with the Forestry
Department. The fire was brought
under control at 7 p.m.
Racine had three trucks and 22
men, Pomeroy three trucks and
Syracuse two trucks.

VETERANS HOSPITAL
Admitted--Virginia
Napper,
Racine; Clara Paulsen, Pomeroy;
Uoyd JenkinS, Pomeroy; Kathryn
Lambert, Rutland; Paul Casto,
Pomeroy; James Fugate, Pomeroy;
William Reeves, Pomeroy; Florida
Casto, Mason; Pamela Marr,
Parkersburg; Woodrow Zwilling,
Syracuse.
Discharged--William Morris,
Judith Isaacs, Gwinnie White, Vicky
Vining, William Owens, Michael
Woolard, Dessie Patterson.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES APRIL22
Aloise Bosworth, Merle Conley,
Ann Craft, Carol Cummins, Tammy
Daniels, Elizabeth Edler, Donna Edwards, . Mrs. Don Fannin and
daughter, Ken Fellure Jr., Patsy
TO END MARRIAGE
Fillinger, Lydia Gilkey, George
Jamie S. Davis, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
and John M. Davis, same address Henry, Mrs. John Hogan and
daughter, Dottie Jolmson, Lucretia
filed for dissolution of marriage.
Justice, Jerry Kouns, Grace McCoy,
George Walters, Kathy Williams,
MEET TIHJRSDAY
. Tim Wlliamson.
The Twin City Shrinettes will meet '
Bmms
at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the home of '
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Floyd,
Edna Slusher, Pomeroy.
daughter, Jackson.

GRAND OPENING- Grand opening of thls Dairy
Delite, located on Route 124, near what is known as the
Cross Roads, will be held Saturday and Sunday. The
establishment was constructed by Warren and Judy
Hart, Rutland, and Mrs. Hart will manage the
business. The Harts handled the entire construction of
the building over the past year. Bubble gwn and
balloons will be given children during the weekend
grand opening and there will be a special sundae offer.

Mayor's court
Eleven defendants forfeited bonds
and two others were fined in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Connie Qulvey,
Shade, $30; Timothy Woodyard,
Colwnbus; Jo L. Wiles, Pomeroy,
$28; Joseph Litchfield, $22; Herbert
Ervin, Racine, $30; Dwight Carl,
$33; Richard Robineau, Athens, $33;
Sharon Vannoy, DeGraf, $32, all
posted on speeding charges; Robert
Denny, Middleport, $350, driving
while intoxicated; Tom Walters, no
address recorded, $50, disturbing
the peace; Ronald Miller, Racine,
$30, failure to yield the right of way.
Fined in the court were Terry
Clark, Racine, $200 and CI\Sts and six
months probation on an assault
charge, and Steve Pullins, no ad·
dress recorded, $200 and costs, contempt of court.
Two defendants were fined and
three others forfeited bonds in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were Larry Cundiff, Mid·
dleport, $25 and costs, on a disor·
derly manner charge, and Roger
Nelson, Pomeroy, $5 and costs, im·
proper backing.
Forfeiting bonds were Dana E.
Hartley, New Haven, posted on a
charge of driving a w~aving course;
Terry R. Sheets, Route 1, Gallipolis,
$25 driving on an expired temporary
tag, and $25, illegal parking, and
Pete Halley, Middleport, $50, disorderly manner.
The Tuppers Plains Emergency
Squad answered a call to the Chester
area Friday afternoon, the scene of
an accident in which Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin Thomas, Leon, W. Va. were
injured. They were taken to Camden-Clark Hospital in Parkersburg
by the Tuppers Plains Unit. In an accident account the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad was_credited with
the run.

I

The establishment will be closed each Monday; open
from 10:30 a.m. to!O p.m., Tuesdays, Wednesdays and
Thursdays; 10:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. on Fridays and Satur·
days and 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sundays. There will be 10
employes. Mr. and Mrs. Hart live in Rutland with their
two sons, Marty, 10, and Jason, 3. Mr. Hart is a maintenance foreman at Meigs Mine 2. Marjorie Bishop,
Rutland, will serve as assistant manager of the new
business.

Area deaths

Marion Allensworth
Marion D. (Stitz ) Allensworth, 67,
St. Albans, W.Va., formerly of Mid·
dleport, died Monday afternoon in
the Thomas Memorial Hospital at
Charleston, W. Va.
He was born in Middleport, a son
of the late Harvey and Emeline
Smith Allensworth.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by his wife,
Maxine Mankin Allensworth and
three brothers.
A World War II veteran, he was
retired from the New York Central
and Penn Central Railroads.
Surviving are two daughters, Mrs.
Walter (Becky) Shirkey, St. Albans,
and Mrs. Richard (Ginny) Kester·
son, Port Clinton, Ohio; a son,
Robert Allensworth, Sandusky, and
six grandchildren. Brothers and
sisters surviving are Dale rl
Cheshire; Raymond of Groveport;
Mrs. Bertha Flowers, Springfield,
and Mrs. Viola McCullough, Austin ,
Tex.
Funeral services were held at 1
p.m. today at the Bartlett Funeral
Home· in St. Albans. Burial was in
Cunningham Memorial Gardens.

Mrs. Alberta Mae Laudennilt, 67,
Pomeroy, died Monday at the
Cabell-Huntington Hospital in Huntington, W. Va.
She was born April 6, 1913, a
daughter of the !ale Isaac and ·
Florence Whittaker Smith. She was ·
also preceded in death by her
husband, Orland.
Surviving are 14 children including Irene Nelson, Kitts ijill,
Ohio; Charles, Colwnbus; Vivian
Garnes, Pomeroy; Walter, Colum-.
bus; Bernice Butcher, Huntington;
Edward, Middleport; Orland, Jr.,
Pomeroy; Donna Briggs, Columbus; Susan Withrow, Pataskala;
Franklin and Vincent, both of Mid·
dleport; John of Lompoc, Calif.;
Thomas, Pomeroy, and Mac of Mid·
dleport. Also surviving are 26 grandchildren, five step-grandchildren;
a great-grandson; a sister, Pauline
Darst, Colwnbus, and a brother,
Isiah Smith, Mason.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Robert McGee
officiating. Burial wiU be in Meigs
Memory Garden. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. today.

COAL MINER HURT
The Rutland Emergency Squad
was called to Mine 2 of the Southern
Ohio Coal Co. at 1:51 p.m. Tuesday
·for Cecil C. Keffer, Arbuckle, W.
Va., who had a back injury. He was
taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to 376 Beech St., at 6:44
a.m. Wednesday for Oren Smith who
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.

JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER

REV. C. J. LEMLEY, EVANGELIST

SPECIAL SINGING EACH EVENING

EVERYONE WELCOME TO COME

Rev. &amp; Mrs. Paul voss
Georges. Oiler-Pastor
Special Singjng
Publis Is Invited

ELBERFELD$
SEE OUR FINE SELECTION

SHIRTS

AND WORSHIP WITH US
r.

VOL 3.l NO. 8

FURNITURE

Middleport, 0.

KNITS
SPORT SHI~ \
DRESS SHIRTS
WESltRNS

king and queen corniest;

SPEAKERS - These were the speakers for a
Meigs County grand opening for 4-H held Tuesday
night at the Pomeroy E:lementary School for advisors.
From tll!l left are Diana Eberts, Meigs home
clemonllratlon agent, who presldl!d; Pansy Jordan,
Meigs 4-H program assistant, who spoke on the annual

Agricultural Agent, who spoke on county and state
awards; Duane Plymale, area extension 4-H agent,
who spoke on demonlitrations and safety, and Fred
Dee!, GaWa County extension agent, 4-H, wbo spoke on
camping and junior leaders.

Kindergarten
•
•
registration

slated Friday

DAYTON, Ohio- State Transportation Director David L. Weir says
he'll ask Ohio's attorney general to reconsider his decision not to file
suit against U.S. Transports lion Secretary Nell Goldschmidt over the
completion of I-675.
The federal agency announced in November that I~75, which begins
at I-70 east of Dayton, would be terminated at U.S. 35 instead of linking
with I-75 south of Dayton.
Attorney General William J. Brown announced Wednesday that he
would not take action against the federal government.
Weir, wbo had asked that the suit be filed, said Brown's decision was
unexpected.

Refugees
still leaving Cuba
I
relatives to freedom in defiance of State Department warnings that
the boatllftmaylead tojaU terms and stiff fines.
There were also warnings that some small craft are not seaworthy
for the 18Cknlle roundtrip across the choppy Florida Straits and that
)rofiteering was rampant as demand for boats pushed rental prices into the thousands of dollars.
Ferrted by flotilla of hundreds of vessels, more than 630 Cubans
have reached South Florida in the last three days.

a

Weather forecast
SIZES FROM

14112 T020

ALL FAMOUS MAKES

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

aty

a so-called "sunset provision." The
language would have meant that the
lottery would go out of business ln
1982 unless renewed by ' the
Legislature.
Gov. James A. Rhodes, wbo
requested the ·bill to make the lot·
tery's management more effective,
and Lottery Director Edwin Taylor
had said the "sunset" clause would
hamsVing the agency in its planning. The Legislature can eliminate
the lottery at any time, they noted.
Sen. Harry Meshel , D·
Youngstown, is sponsor of the bill
under which the Development

Department would use about ' •15
million in profits from the state's .
liquor monopoly to spur business
and industry expansions.
·The conference committee agreed
primarily to the House version of the
bill, under which the $15 million
would be used as seed money for the
sale of about $150 million in in.dustrial development bonds. In turn, ·
those funds would be used to make
low-interest loans and back private,
conventional loans to industries and
businesses agreeing to expand their
operations in areas of high unemployment.

•

enttne
FIFTEEN CENTS

Hostage crisis increases
Iranian takeover by USSR

AKRON, Ohio- Citlni declining earnings and slumping tire sal~,
the Goodyear Tire &amp;Rubber Co. says it will idle more than 2,000 employees through temporary layoffs and plant closings.
The layoffs include 700 hourly and 70 salaried employees at a
Topeka, Kan., plant, Goodyear coofirmed, saying others a!fected have
yet to be notified.
In addition, starting Monday, its Jackson, Mich. ttre plant will close
for a week, affecting 1,125 employees. Another 350 Goodyear workers
at Jackson already are laid off .

You'll find a great selection of fine furniture,
floor coverings and appliances of the lowest
possible prices. Free delivery, convenient
terms, service when you need it. Serving you
has been our business since 1952.

•

conduct annual surveys to locate
sources of Utter in the state. It also
requires the agency to study •Iternatives for ~vering litter resour·
ces, such as alurninwn cans.
In other buslness, separate conference committees worked out
agreements on bills restructuring
the state lottery and eannarking a
por\ion of state liquor profits for industrial development programs.
They could receive final legislative
approval today, leaders said.
The · long-pending lottery bill
emerged after an agreement among
legislative leaders to strip the bill of

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO. THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 1980

More layoffs set at Goodyear plants

TIMEI

revenues to make grants to local
programs.
- Allow corporations to claim as a
· credit on- their tax returns half of
any amount, up to $2,500, they
donate to local anti-litter and
recycling programs which have
been approved by the state.
- Ban pull-away tab beverage
cans, and require use of
photodegradable (self-&lt;leteriorating) material in the handles on six·
packs and other beverage
packaging. These provisions
become effective July I, 1983.
- Mandate that the department

e

KEY WEST, Fla. -Another 560 Cubans poured ashore as countrymen already in the United States hired ·an armada to bring

SPRIMG

BAKER

Lawmakers plan to adjourn today or
Friday .until after the· June 3
primary:
The anti-litter measure would:
- Increase the corporate franchise tax by a fraction of 1 percent to
raise about $13 million annually for
litter aild recycling programs. The
maximwn tax · on any COrPOration
would be $5,000.
- Establish a statewide program
in the Natural Resources Depart·
ment and authorize it to use new

Weir requests suit be withdrawn

GEORGE'S CREEK ROAD

APRIL 27 THRU MAY 4
.
7:30P.M.

mittees on other major bills \0 clear
the way for a six·week recess.

. From the Associated Pl'l!Bs

The Racine Emergency Squad
was called Tuesday for Mrs.
Virginia Napper, Racine, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was admitted.

SHOP CLOSING
Bakers Busy Bee Ceramics, Tuppers Plains, will be closing for
business on May 15 due to an air force transfer. Classes will be continued so that items can be completed. Everything must be ·picked
upbyMay20.

leaders

REVIVAL
First Church of God
Syracuse, Ohio
April28 thru May 2
"Special Guests"

Clean up week set
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
today announced that Clean-Up
week will be held in Middleport April
28 through May 2.
Residents are asked to clean up
their yards and property and deposit
the litter at the curb in front of their
homes.
The village street department wili
pick up trash deposited at the curb
free of charge on the following
schedule:
First ward, Monday, April 28;
second ward, Tuesday; third ward,
Wednesday; fourth ward, Thursday.

liS

pushed for compromise in com·

l

Alberta Laundennilt

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

REVIVAL

Senate action came

By ROBERT E. MILLER

Partly cloudy today, with highs in the low to mid 60s. Mostly
cloudy tonight and Friday, with a chance of showers Friday. Lows
tonight near 40. Highs Friday, around 50. The chance of precipitation is
10 p~~rcent today, 20 percent tonight and 30percent Fritlay.
r·

.

EXTENDED OU'l'LOOK
SalurdaY lbnJu&amp;h Monday: Cool wlth a cballce of sbowen. Hlgbs
malDIY Ill the 511 Saturday aDd Sllllllay alld tbe mid 50s 10 mid &amp;01 MODday. LoWt 'iD the mid 3811 to mid 4011.

,,

,

v

Registration for kindergarten and
new enrollees in the first grade at
Eastern Local School District wtl1 be
held Friday. Registrations Will be
held for all kindergarten students at
Tuppers Plains Elementary from
8:30a.m. to 3:30p.m.
New enrollees in the first grade
should registet as follows :
(I) Tuppers Plains Elementary on
Friday, from 8:30a.m. to 3:30p.m.
(2) Riverview Elementary on Fri·
day,from9to lla.m.
(3) Chester Elementary on Fri·
day, from 9to 11 a.m.
Children presently enrolled in a
kindergarten class at Tuppers
Plains do not need to enroll for the
first grade:
Any child whose fifth birthday
falls on or before September 30th of
this· year, may be registered for
kindergarten thls fall. Any child
whose sixth birthday falls on or
before September 30th. this year,

WASHINGTON - Failure to
resolve the hostage crisis is pushing
Iran toward "paralysis" and disintegration and increasing the
prospect that the Soviet Union may
try to seize control of the northern
pilrt of the country, a senior Carter
administration official says.
The official, a key administration
strategist who ·asked not to be identified, told reporters that if Iran
collapses, the United States might
move to protect southern Iranian oil
fields that once were a principal .
Western supply source. But he said
the prospect of U.S. intervention sttll
is "farfetched" and remote.
The warning of Iran's Instability
and vulnerability to the Soviets
came against a background of continued fighting involving Islamic
fundamentalists and leftists. Six
deaths were reported on Iranian
university campuses Wednesday,
one day after Tehran newspapers
said 18 studen(J died In campus
violence.
There also were indications Wednesday of closer economic and industrtal ties between tbe Soviets and
.Iran.
The Carter administration
strategist said Iran's best hope is
that "rational" people will take
charge of the ·Tehr11n government
and conclude that its gravest threat
comes not from the United States,
but from the Soviet Union, which
shares much of Iran's northern bor·
der.
That realiz8tion, the official said,

SET CLOCKS
FORWARD
ONE HOUR
SUNDAY
APRIL 27
2 A.M~

could prevent partition of Iran by .
the Soviets in the north and Iraq
along the Persian Gulf in the west
and could lead to release of the 53
American hostages in Tehran.
"Maybe enough of them will conclude it is time to deal with the
problem," he said.
This bope was coupled with a
frank admission that the U.S.
strategy of appealing to moderate
elements in Tehran has failed.
Iranian President Abolhassan
Bani.SSdr said in a broadcast interview Wednesday that despite the
new commercial agreement with the
Soviet Union on Tuesday, Iran will
not allow the Soviets to attain as
much influence as the United States

had under the deposed shah.
Senate Majority Leader Robert C.
Byrd demanded on Wednesday that
Congress be fully consulted, and permitted to give its advice, lf use of
force is contemplated.
The Carter administration
strategist confinned a published
report that senior White House staff ·
members expressed strong apprehensions at a closed-door
meeting Tuesday that the United
States is moving toward a naval
blockade or' mining Iranian oil ports.
Carter said last week that if U.S
and allied economic pressures
against Iran fail, "the only next step
available that I can see would be
some form of military action."

Southern's board
hires employes
Southern's Local Board of Educa·
tion Tuesday night awarded contracts to teaching and non·
certlficatd employes.
Teachers given one-year contracts
were Shirley Sayre, Pamela
Holcomb and Joseph Malisick. Twoyear contracts went to Karen Davidson, Michaela Hoback, Connie
Gilkey, Patricia Struble, Cheryl
Boston, John Snediker, and William
Beegle. Three year contracts were
awarded to John Costanzo, Donna
Sayre, Suzanne Wolfe, Gerald
deLaval. Five year contracts were
given to Pauline Hill, Donna Norris,
Barbara Bailey, Sandra Boothe,
Constance Enslen and Carl Wolfe.
Given contracts pending certification were William Hensler and Joyce
Thoren.
Principals given one-year contracts were Jim Adams, Jennings
Beegle, Robert Beegle and one year
head teacher contracts went to
William Baer, James Wickline and
Larry Wolfe. Joyce Ritchie was gien
a continuing contract.
Given continuing contracts among
the no~rtlfied personnel were
Roger Hill, Thomas Hill, Paul
Sellers, Daniel Riffle, bus drivers ;
Isabel Lewis, cook; Raymond
Pierce, Ruth Smith, Linda Ward,
custodians; Grace Hoffman,
secretary.
A leave rl. absence for the remainder of the year was given Donna Sayre. Sandra Cobb and Charissa
Knight were added to the substitute
teacher list.

The board accepted tile resigna·
lions ci Deborah Hoff as yearbook
advisor; Joan Sellers as secretary to
the treasurer, and Larry Wolfe as
junior high girls' basketball coach. ·
The board recessed until 7:30 p.m.
next Tuesday in the high school
cafeteria at which time supplemen·
tal contracts will be awarded.

Accident~

keep area
sqUJJds busy
Two Pomeroy youngsters were injured Wednesday evening when a
car on which they were working fell .
from a jack.
They were J elf Whittington and Vincent Stone who were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital with
possible fractured anns. Stone was
admitted for treatment and Whit·
tington was treated and released . .
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered a call to the scene, at the
comer of Butternut Ave., and Brick
St. at 5:59p.m.
Three runs were made by the
Rutland Emergency Squad Wednesday evening and Thursday mor·
ning.
At 4:04 p.m. Wednesday, tfle
(C~~tinued on

PaQe s}

(Continued on page 8)

Campbell chosen as plant manager
The Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Company aMounces the appoint·
ment of E.·William Campbell to the
position of Plant Manager at the
Point Pleasant facility.
A native of Pennsylvania, Campbell received his B.S. degree in
Chemical Engineerlrig fl'(lll Pennsylvania State University In 1949.
Campbell began his Goodyear
career as a Chemical Engineer In
Akron in 1951. Campbell held several
positions in the synthetic rubber
pilot !ant and chemical plants
engineering section before being
named to the position of Tehcnical
Superintendent at the Houston (TX)
plant in 1968.
From Houston, Campbell was
transferred to Goodyear La Havre,
France plant as Plant Manager In
1971.
.
IN 1976, he was transferred back
to the United Stalell as Plant
Manager of the Calhoun (Ga.) plant,
a position he held until his transfer
to Point PleaSant.

Campbell will be replacing was appointed to the position of
William B. Hirsch who has been Manager-Chemical Plants
awarded a Sloan Fellowship at Engineering in Akron, a position he
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology to begin inJune,1980.
A native of Lima, Hirsch received
his B.S. degree ln Chemical
Engineering from Case Institute of
Tebcnology In 1964. Hirsch joined
Goodyear in 1964 as a Chemical
Engineer In the Chemical Plants
Enginering Division.
Fl'(lll 1966 to 11l!i9, Hirsch served ·
as Staff Engineer at the Point Plea·
sant PLant before returning to
Chemical Plants Engineering in
Akron for two years.
Fnm 1971 to 1974, Hirsch served
as Project Manager for Goodyear's
Isoprene Plant Projects serving first
in Japan and later in Europe.
Returnini to the United States In
1974, Mr. Hirsch served as Production Superintendent at the Houston,
TX plant until1976.
In. February of 1976, Mr. Hirsch
E. WILLIAM CAMPBELL

held until his appointment as Plart
Manager of the Point Pleasant Plant
In September, 1978.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="134">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <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="2712">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </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="47863">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <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="47862">
              <text>April 23, 1980</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1941">
      <name>allensworth</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7515">
      <name>laundermilt</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
