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VOL. 31 NO. 22

•

•

a1

enttne

POMEROY-MIUlJLEPORT, OHIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

Spencer, Meadows, Fox Meigs' top Jaycee$'
Terry /spencer was named Jaycee
of the year, Mitch Meadows was

named outstanding first year
Jaycee, and Dave Fox was
recognized as the key man of the
year for his efforts in the boxing
program at the annual Jaycees
awards banquet beld Tuesday night
at the Meigs Inn.
Other banquet awards went to
Mike Williams, Dave Jenkins, Mike
Kelly, Jay Hill, Mike Mullen, Siler·
man White, Brian Conde, Bill
Yowtg, Bob Schmoll, Frog Wayland,
Chuck Hannahs, Mike Kelly, Dave
Miller, Ken Hartley, Mick Reed,
Dick Owen, Mitch Davenport, Dave
Miller, Rocky Williams, Mick Reed,
Marc French, Hank JohnRnn .
George Francis, and Rocky

SECTION A · PAGE A8

•

Williams.

Special awards went to Athens
Messenger, The Daily Sentinel, Har·
tley Shoe Store, Betsy Ross Bakery,
Powell's Super Valu, LaSalle Motor
Hotel, R. C. Bottling Co., and Meigs
Coll!ltY Welfare Office.
Carl Wolfe, head basketball coach
at Southern High School was the
guest speaker. He was introduced by
Brian Conde.
New officers installed were Paul
(continued on page 16 )

JAYCEE MAN OF THE YEAR went to Terry Spencer, left, and outstanding first year Jaycee award went to Mitch Meadows. The awards
were presented at the Jaycees annual awards banquet held at the Meigs
Inn Tuesday evening. Absent was Dave Fox who received the Key Man
award.

GUEST SPEAKER - Carl Wolfe, center, head
basketball coach at Southern High School, who led his
team to the state finals, was guest speaker at the annual Jaycees awards banquet held Tuesday night at

the Meigs Inn. On the left is Mike Williams, past
president, and on the right is Dave Jenkins, past
president and past chairman of the board~

Two river victims' bodies ·recovered

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KEY WEST, Fla. - Cuban authorities closed Marie) harbor for
nearly two days, then let a stream of refugee-laden boats go in what
U.S. officials say may be Fidel Castro's latest attempt to create con·
fusion in the "Freedom Flotilla."
The long line of vessels that chugged into Key West as the boallift entered its 24th day was expected to push the tD!l¥ number of flotilla
refugees past 40,000.
One new arrival, vomiting and complaining of abdominal pain, was
rushed to a local hospital early today.

CAIRO, Egypt - President Anwar Sadat said today Egypt would
resume Qegotiations with Israel on Palestinian autonomy even though
a "fonnldable" gap existed in their positions.
Sadat in a speech tD parliament, said the decision to rejoL1 the talks
wtth ~United States and Israel came at the.urglng of U.S. President
Carter.
The Egyptian leader broke off the talks May 8t after Israeli Prime
Minister Menachem Begin Insisted Israel would retain overall control
of security in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Cle2ser
IIQ

Castro continues confusion effort

Egypt will resume negotiations

53

7-oz. Size
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Toothpaste

Fro!D tbe Associated Press

Antidote rushed to hospital
Llsterlne
MouthwMh
24-oz. Size
Kills germs on con-

tactl
54

CLEVELAND - An antidote for a tDxic Insecticide that spilled in a
Pennsylvania department store was rushed from a Cleveland
warehouse to a New Castle hospital, where 40 persons were treated for
minor injuries.
Deputy sheriffs and Ohio Highway Patrol officers carried 90 onegram vials of the antidote to the Ohio-Pennsylvania border Tuesday
evening. From there, Pennsylvania state troopers look them to New
Castle.
.
Gaylords store in Shenango Township, Pa., was evacuated after 12
bottles of the pesticide crashed to the floor in what store officials
called a "freak accident."

Muskie urges sanction adoption

FOR

BRUSSELS, Belgium - Secretary of State Edmund S. Muskie, in
his diplomatic debut, urged the European allies today to implement

"IT IS Ben Franklin's policy to have ollltomo In otoclc during tho sale period. Bocouso thlo cl~culor Ia
kited appro•imately 90 days prior to the sale
there could be an unforeseen delay, ~' •n some
~:ses non · ship~ent of an item. We regret any inconvenlenc~ and will, to the best of ou~ abili~y.~ffer a
suitable substitute. We do reserve the right to limit the quantity on some items and spec•al pncesareln
effect only during the sale period while quantities last."

economic sanctions against Iran In the interest of the trans-Atlantic
partnership and the Americans held hostage more than six months.
Muskie's call for solidarity came at a closed meeting of the NATO
Defense Planning Committee. Some of the Europeans have threatened
to ease the sanctions rather than lose current lucrative cootracts.

d•t•.

Sale Starts Wednesday

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SAVE!
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FOR BARGAINS IN
WERV'DEPARTMENT

Iran rescue attempt hero buried
DUBLIN, Ga. -Friends and family gave a hero's bUrial Tuesday to
Marine Sgt. Dewey L. Johnson, his coffin decorated by a model of the
helicopter In which he died trying to rescue the American hostages In
Iran.

Johnson, 32, of Dublin was one of eight U.S. servicemen killed during
the unsuccesSful rescue misSion last month.
A 21-gun Slllute was fired at the gravesite In Dublin Memorial Gar·
dens as about 200 mourners, Including 30 Marines, stood by during the
20-mlnute service.

Authority given for largest hike
WASHINGTON - The Civil Aeronautics Board has given U.S.
airlines authority for the largest air fare Increases ever, but doesn't
expect any immediate, dramatic ticket price hikes.
The increases apply to flights in the _48 adjacent states. The board
expects to decide by Friday on international fare hikes and wtthin two
weeks on fares to Hawaii, Alaska and PuertD Rico.

1,500 student~ battle police
SEOUL, South Korea - An estimated 1,500 slogan-chanting students
demanding an end to martial law battled riot police late into the night
bere Tuesday.
Meanwhile, South Korean officials studied intelligence reports of
unusual North Korean military actions above the truce zone· only 25
miles to the northllfthe capital city.

Weather forecast ·
Clear ana cool tonight with areas of d~nse fog by morning. Lows in
the low to mid 40s. Mostly sunny Thursday. highs between 70 and 75.
Tbe chance of rain is near zero tonight and Thursday.
EXTENDEDOUJOFORECAsr

,

Fiiday through Sunday' Fair Friday. A chance of showers or
thunderstorms Saturday and Sunday. Highs through the period from
the 70s to the low 80s. Lows from the upper 40s to the 50s.

The bodies of two more boating accident victims have been recovered
from the Ohio River by Mason Coun·
ty authorities.
Found within minutes of each
other Tuesday were the bodies of
Eyria Phillips Upscomb, 17, of Hart·
ford, who drowned in Leading Creek
in lower Middleport last Feb. 21, and
Daniel Chapman, 19, Cheshire, who
drowned in a boat mishap near the

Indiana-Michigan Dry D~
Lakin, March 29.
According tD the Mason County
sheriff's department, Lipscomb's
body was found at 1:30 p.m. by
Conley Dudley, Sr. of Mason. It was
lying in the water near West Columbia.
Upscomb was with three other
companions when their johnboat
overturned where Leading Creek
joins the Ohio River at Middleport.

The other three boaters reached
shore safely.
Chapman's body was discovered
at 1:33p.m. by George Shamblin, an
employee of American .Electric
Power. It was lodged between
barges tied up to the riverbank at
Eight Mile Island.
Chapman accidentally drowned
when a boat he and five other people
were riding struck an AEP barge
then capsized. All others were

rescued.
Both bodies were transported by
the Point Pleasant Rescue Squad tD
the State Medical ElGlflliner's Office
in South Charleston for autopsies.
Last Sunday, the bodies of two victims of a Millwood boating accident,
Garnett Edmund Pritt, r1, Tuppers
Creek, and Glenn Eugene Slater, rl,
Kanawha County, were pulled from
the river near Letart. They had been
missing since April 20.

Multi-Purpose Building open house set
Open house at the new Multi·
Purpose and Senior Citizens Center,
Mulberry Heights, will be observed
on Sunday, May 25, beginning at 2
p.m. This was announced at the

regular meeting of the Meigs County
Conunissioners Tuesday .
Ceremonies will feature ribbon
cutting ceremonies, speeches, a tDur
of the facility and refreslunents. The
event is open to the public.
During the business session,
Wesley Buehl, county engineer,
discussed estimated cost repair to

the Hobaon Bridge.
Buehl Informed the board bridge
work would cost approximately
$30,000. The commissioners agreed
to the repair with one stipulation,
that local contractors be considered
for work In scraping, sandblasting
and painting the bridge. Buehl
agreed. The work will be contracted
by quotations rather than advertising for bids.
--~"

FIRM EMPWYED

Conunissioners, in other business,
voted to hire John David Jones and

Associates, Inc., Colwnbus, as consulting engineers for the Tuppers
Plains sewage project.
The engineer will do a planning
survey for the Tuppers Plains area
in order to bl:ing .about a solution
that will lead to the lifting of the
existing connection ban.
Five bids for a new emergency
vehicle were tabled for study by the
commissioners and the EMS boards
of trustees.
Bids were received from the
following : Burgess Motor Sales,

$27,043 .79, and $25.964.64 ;
Springfield Equipment, $27,&gt;124.32;
The Horton Co., $28,600; Edwin H.
Davis and Son, $24,619.
The board also discussed the ex·
tension of the water system in Tuppers Plains. Buehl will have In·
formation within the next two weeks
on his proposal.
Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells, and Chester
Wells, conunissioners. Mary HoJ&gt;.
stetter, clerk, and Martha Cham·
bers.

Southern Local hoard approves graduation list
The Southern Local School
District Board of Education meeting
in regular session Tuesday night approved a list of 70 seniors for
graduation this spring.
The board agreed to participate in

the educational television
programing for Southern Ohio and
agreed to take part in the
Southeastern Ohio Vocational
Education Cooperative during the
next school year.

The Personal Service Life Insurance Co. was named to handle
student and football Insurance for
the next school year.
Ernest Spencer was named as a

substitute bus driver for the rest of
the year and it was agreed to pur·
chase two new lawn mowers.
The resignation of Connie Enslen
as voUeyball coach was accepted.

Toledo suffering from economic slump
cording to an official in the state
Bureau of Employment Services.
City Manager J. Michael Porter
would not disclose current revenue
figures, but _said they were worse
than projections. He mdicated that
collections were running $1.2 million
behind 1979 figures In late April,
with some re~enue not yet reported.
Po~r orgmally had hoped that
collections would catch up With last
year's revenues at about mid-year,
but most financial experts are douJ&gt;.
Uul.
In addition to the general
economic slump, Toledo also is

Board certifies

Carter, Reagan post wins

school bus drivers
Bus driver certificates were
issued to six persons when the Meigs
County Board of Education met in
regular session Monday night.
Receiving certificates were
Thomas Durham, Bonnie Smith, Ernest Spencer, Diana Crosby, Debora
Estep and Kathy Morris.
The board adopted textbooks in
the fields of mathematics; drivers
education, psychology, health and
speech as recommended by the textbook committee. It was agreed to
continue cooperation with the
Southeastern Ohio Voluntary
Etlucation Cooperative and Supt.
Robert Bowen was authorized to at·
tend a county superintendents
meeting ln Colwnbus Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday this week.
Unda Haley was authorized to at·
tend a clerk's clinic in Athens. The
state salary schedule going into effect on July 1was adopted.

,,

'

By The Associated Preos
President Carter and Ronald
Reagan won matching victories in
the Maryland and Nebraska
presidential primary elections
Tuesday to forge ever-widening
leads in their efforts for competing
nominations.
Carter now has won 16 of his 21
primary contests against Sen. Ed·
ward Kennedy.
Reagan won a seven-point victory
over George Bush in Maryland and a
Ho-1landslide in Nebraska. He now
has -.:on 17 primaries, Bush 5.
Reagan-'s performance practically
eliminated Bush from Republican
contention. Bush would have tD win
97 percent of the remaining GOP
delegates to catch the former
California governor.
KePnedy is in much the same boat.
He must win almost 79 percent of the
remaining Democratic vote in order

paying a heavy price for automatic
cost-of-living benefits which are
granted to city employees. Inflation
has boosted those payments to 23
cents an hour for the second quarter
of this year.
For several days, Porter has been
huddling behind closed doors with
his department heads and officiaLs
of municipal unions. They reportedly are mapping strategy to deal
with the impending revenue shortage.
.
Depending on the seventy of the
financial crisis, the city could defer
further cost-of-living benefits, call

for temporary w~ge reductions,
defer a 2 percent hike scheduled to
start m July, tmpose across-theboard budget cuts to each department ~rlay off workers. .
William Endsley: prestdent. of
Local 7 of the Amertcan F~eration
of State, County and Muructpal E~
ployees, said the Situation doesn t
1"','~ very. good.
The ctty WJii have t~ de~onst~te
.. . willingness to suffer if were gomg
to s.uffer, " he sru'd: "B
. ut so far, I
can t argue with their figures.
goldrtabl
out there.
I' "There's
f lin no pot ofom!
"
m ee g very unc o
e.

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) _ While the
economy continues to sink under increasing layoffs and unemployment,
the city is struggling to keep its
flnsnces from floundering.
Joble&amp;Sness in this Lake Erie city
jwnped to 8.6 percent during the fir·
st three mooths of 1980. That rate,
higher than state and national
figures, has cut deeply intD the citv's
major source of revenue - payroll
·
ta
mcome
Much ofx.the area's manufacturing
business is devoted to the
· dustry , which IS
· down
automoti ve m
21 percent from March 1979, ac-

to overtake Carter.
Reagan said he was happy with his
triumphs and "most optimistic" of
eventual nomination. Carter's campaign chairman predicted the
president would clinch nomination
even before the June 3 primary
finale.

Both Kennedy and Bush said they
would press on.
They both were campaigning in
the west, where the Oregon primary
is next Tuesday. Bush also had his
sights set on Michigan's Republican
primary the same day; there is no
Michigan Democratic election . .

Announce allocation
An addltlonal $153,788 has been
allotted by the Ohio Controlling
Board for the construction of a
training center and workshop for
community mental retardation
facilities to be built in Syracuse according to Rep. Ron James.
Meigs County Commissioners will
be allowed to spend the money granted by the stale for the construction
of a 17,161 square foot building

situated ·oo five acres of land in tbe
Village of Syracuse. The slate has
already approved $892,440 and the
local funds will amount to $lrl ,354
before the project is completed.
The training center and workshop
in Syracuse is a mental retardation
facility project of the Ohio Depart·
ment of Mental Health and Mental
Retardation.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 14,1980

Opinions
&amp; Comments

\,•'-

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 14, 1980

Meigs gals advance to regionals

•

ET'fA ~WO!tt\-\~-'1{;~ N.i .R . 'ao
HU~ME

By Scott Woife
GAIJJPOUS - It took all seven Innings to decide a winner but
when the dust had finally settled, the Meigs Marauder gals' had
brought home a district championship with a dramatic 14-13 comefrom-behind victory over South Point Tuesday'night.
'
Beth Bartrum's double provided the winning margin in the bottom
of the seventh inning.
Preceding Bartrum's double, South Point's Carolyn Hall had
walked the bases full, Issuing free passes to Pam Crooks Tonia Ash
~d Sonia Ash. Crooks and Ash then crossed the plate on ~rtrum's hii
clinching the district crown.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
IUSPS 145-... 1
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
Ldten of opl.o.loa arr wtleomed. They shoold be leulhaa 300 words long lor subject tel reducUoo by lbr ed.l.tllrl. and mual be slped with the si(ntt' l address. Names may be withheld upon
pabUcation. However, oa request, oa,me&amp; will be dbrl011ed. Lt'Uers should be in good tau~. ad-

dreul.og l.uues, oot persooallties.

Publisbed claUy escept Satunt.y by Th.e Ohio Valley Publishing Company· Multimedia, Inc.,
lllCourtSt., Pomeroy, Ohiu45719. BUBlneu Office Phone 99!- 2156. EdJtorial Phone !WZ-2157,
Sttood clasl postage paid at Pomero)', Ohio.
Natkmal advertising represeotatin, Landon Associalf:s, 3101 EQclid Ave .. Cleveland. Ohio
44115 .
TH Alloclated Pn!SII Is exclusively enllllcd lo the use for publit:atloo uf all ntwt dlspatchel
creci.Ued to tbe oewspaper and also the localut'\U publb;hetf herein.

Publlsber

Rober1 HoeOich
Dale Rothgeb, J r.

{JI?;.,.
Y.L....Ii.

New1 Editor
Ad\1. Manager

sms:J
'qjt5

Carl Ghet!n

rn.........JL----r"t~d~~

Five area baseball players were
nam~ to the Southeastern Ohio All·

Hey, candidates!
With three weeks remaining until the JWJe 3 primary
election, where are the candidates and what do they stand
for?
We've thus far seen some bumper stickers, matches,
posters, combs, pencils and pens-we've thus far heard
nothing from any of the office seekers about issues, platfonns, policies, problems, or solutions.
Either there aren't any issues-in which case the incumbents should be in pretty good shape-or else the candidates are keeping them to themselves.
We've heard a few radio announcements declaring how
good certain office hopefuls would be for the county; we've
heard nothing about HOW they would be good for the county.
We've published some advertising for candidates asking
for your vote-nothing that details why you should vote for
them.
On June 3 a few dozen candidates are asking the public
for support and votes. That support will ultimately lead to
one candidate being elected to office.
It doesn't seem unreasonable to us to expect those candidates-who are asking to be endowed with public
authority, public trust, and public dollars-to conunit
themselves on public issues.
If nothing else they could make a few promises to be
broken when, and if, elected. At least that way the electorate will know that the office holder has done something
during the tenn-even if itS only that he or she was unable
to keep his or her word.
Our intention here is really quite simple-we would like
to complicate the neat little beauty contest currently being
waged by asking that the multitude of candidates do
something to justify their call for public votes.
What we would like to see are specifics-specific comments on specific issues, with proposed solutions to
existing and potential problems.
If all a candidate can do is mouth the ever popular "I will
. fix the roads," "I will reduce crime," "I will do my best,"
or any of the other proverbial, non-specific and nonconunittal "I will's", its probably because that candidate
has no idea how he or she will actually, practically do
anything once elected.

Today in history.
Today is Wednesday, May 14, the
!35th day of 1980. There are 231 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On May 14, 1787, a convention
began in Philadelphia to draw up the
American Constitution.
On this date:
In 1804, Captain Meriweather
Lewis and William Clark set out
from St. umis, Mo., on an expedition
to the Pacific Coast.
In 19411, the independent state of
Israel was proclaimed as BritaiJt en·
ded its rule in Palestine.
In 1964, Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev opened the Aswan Dam
on the Nile River in Egypt.
In 1972, after 27 years of American
rule, Okinawa was returned to
Japan.

• •

Ten years ago, the Ford Motor Co.
announced that it had turned down a
proposal to build a truck plant in the
Soviet Union.
Five years ago, the United States
announced that Marines had recaptured by force the merchant ship
"Mayaguez," and that American
planes had destroyed three Cambodian naval vessels.
Last year, the United States and
China initialed a "breakthrough"
trade agreement, opening the way to
expanded commerce and most·
favored-nation treatment for China
after a J().year chill.
Thought lor today: There is no
education like adversity. - Ben·
jamin Disraeli (1804-1881 i

u

.

Five area players on All-Star squad

Robert Wingett

Gelleral Mgr. &amp;: City EdUor

.

Earlier in the game, South Point was propelled to a 5-0 first inning
lead on double by Miller and a triple by Candy Hall.
In the bottom of that same g&lt;&gt;-round, Meigs equalled its opponent's
performance by plating five runs. The rally was sparked by a Beth
Bartrum double that drove in Tonia Ash. An error allowing April King
to reach first, let in two more runs. Cherie Lightfoot then came
through with a triple followed by a Terri Wilson's single.
In the second, Meigs took the driver's seat in the scoring teeter·
totter, plating two runs. In the third the lead again changed hands
when South Point rallied for ~ix runs highlighted by Jackson's triple

.·

.•
.

.

district baseball squad. Those selec·
ted will participate in the annual
EAST-WEST all-star series sponsored by the Southeastern Ohio
Baseball Coaches Association to be
held later this month in Portsmouth.
Among those picked were
Southern first baseman Jack Duffy,
Eastern Catcher Brian Bissell.
Kyger Creek's Greg Smith, and Han·
nan Trace's Tim Beaver.

This year the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference was again well
represented among the district
selections.
Gallipolis Blue Devil Ken Brown
will also represent the area in the
annual series. Brown will play for
the West squad while the other area
all-stars will play for the East.
Eastern Head Coach Ralph Wigal
was selected as a Coach for the East
all-stars. The series will be played
on Sunday, May 25 with Monday,

May 26 as an alternate date.
The complete rosters for the two
sqlladsare :
EAST

PITCHERS - Jolm Homer of
Warren, Barney Joseph of Belpre,
Brian Swann of Jackson, Rick
Dickens of South Point and Ken
Kovach and Todd Trace of Trimble .
CATCHERS - Fred Ross of
Athens, Steve Griffith of South Point
and Dave Brown of Trimble.
INFIELDERS - Jim Cooksey of

Gallipolis rips Meigs, 8-1
"It's something you can afford, and with a little haggling I think we can get you
the mineral rights."

Federal regulations: a case for red tape
By Robert Walters
PffiLADELPffiA (NEA) - The
words differ slightly, but the music
is identical to the theme song being
heard all across the land as part of a
determined corporate propaganda
campaign against oppressive
federal regulation.
In this case, the lyrics belong to
the pharmaceutical industry, busily
promoting the notion that only insen·
sitlve bureaucrats at the Food and
Drug Administration stand between
millions of ailing Americans and the
new vistas in drug therapy that
could ease their pain If not save their
lives.
For elllllllple, the F£?A is blamed
by Lewis A. Engman, president of
the rharmaceutical Manufacturers
Association, for producing little
more than "a steady stream of over·
regulation ... needless red tape ...
and excessi~ely detailed re·
quirements."
But now unfolding in this city is a
saga that provides a compelling
case for more - not less - government regulation of an industry
whose products can produce
needless deaths and life-long suffer·
ing as readily as they can fight
disease and save lives.
It involves Selacryn, a new drug

approved last May for nationwide
marketing by Smith Kline &amp; French
Laboratories, one of the nation's
largest pharmaceutical houses and
a subsidiary of the Philadelphia •
based SmithKline Corp.

seriously impaired liver function .
The problem went unnoticed in
Washington for more than a month,
partly because SmithKline failed to
use a reporting system specifically
designed to provide federal

Today's commentary
Selacryn was believed to represent a major advance in treating
high blood pressure, because in addition to relieving hypertension it
also produced several other positive
cllnlcal effects. Unknown at the time
was the impact of negative side ef·
feels.
Federal law requires that phar·
maceutical !inns report to the FDA
"as soon as possible, and in any
event within 15 working days" if
they receive "information concerning any unexpected side effect, in·
jury, toxicity or sensitivity reac·
tion" in connection with drugs they
are distributing.
No such reports were filed by
SmithKline relating to liver damage
suffered by Selacryn users. But
buried in a routine quarterly report
filed with the FDA last November
was the disclosure of 12 such cases of

regulatory officials with prompt
warning of potentially serious
danger.
When company officials finally
were summoned by the FDA to an
urgent mid-January meeting, they
arrived with reports of, additional
4ll cases of liver damage. The new
total of 52 cases included 30 in·
stances of jaundice - and five
deaths .
The day after that meeting,
SmithK!ine began an emergency
recall of Selacryn. By that time,
however, the drug had been
prescribed for more than 300,000 pa·
tients and more than 500,000 bottles
of Selacryn were on the market. •
SmithK!ine continued to receive
reports of death and illness among
Selacryn users, but sought to
minimize unfavorable publicity. In
March, for inslance, the company

revealed that the casualty count had
soared to 363 known cases of liver
damage- including 24 deaths.
But the format of that disclosure
was a most unusual one: The information was buried in the· middle
of a thick financial prospectus the
corporation was required to file with
the Securities and Exchange Com·
mission in conjunction with its plans
to acquire a company that produces
contact lenses.
SmithKline notes that no cauae •
and· effect relationship has yet been
finnly established between Selacryn
treatment and the illness and death
suffered by its users. But the company is reluctant to cliscuss any
details of the episode.
" We are continuing to cooperate
fully with the FDA in a review of our
recall of the product and the data
which led to that decision," says a
vaguely worded corporate statement. "Until this review is com·
pleted, we don 't think it appropriate
to comment further."
Unanswered remains the crucial
question: Why did SmithKline fail
for so many months to report to
federal officials the toxic effeets that
the FDA says became apparent
within two to 13 weeks after patients
began Selacryn treatment?

The bats came out of hibernation
Tuesday afternoon at Memorial
Field. The Gallia. Academy Blue
Devils, in the throes of an awful hit·
ling slump through the second half
of the season, stepped up against
three Meigs pitchers to Blllllck 10
hits and erupt for six third-inning
runs - four of them coming home on
Kenny Brown's second grand-slam
homer of the spring - to lock up
· thin! place in the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League with an S-1 triumph.
"I've been disappointed with some
of the close games we've been
through," GAHS Coach Jim Osborne
said, "but if you would have told
anyone this team was going to finish
thin! in the league at the beginning
of the seaosn, they wouldn't have
believed you." Third place belongs
to the locals (8-5) no matter what.
Jackson (4-7) dropped an eight·
. inning, 2-1 decision to Athens in a pit·
ching duel between Athens' Jeff
Bush and Brian Swann. Bush lost a
bit for a no-hitter in the eighth in·
ning, but the Bulldogs took over
· fourth place with a 4-3 mark.
. Wellston (~2) and Ironton (S-1)
. meet Friday at Ironton to decide the
SEOAL championship.
"And if you tum our losses to
~thens and Logan (4-3 in eight
frames and 2-1) into wins , as they
. very well sbould have been, we
would still be right in it," Osborne
adds.
Brown's tough five-hit, 10·
strikeout pitching sent the
Marauders back to 1·7 in the SEOAL
• and S-11 overall. Meigs had just one
baserunner through the first three
stanzas and didn't record their first

Business mirror

Costs, conditions of credit 'a disaster'
NEW YORK (AP) - Small
business has been forced to lay off
workers and postpone vital equipment purchases in order to have suf·
ficient funds to meet high borrowing
costs, a survey soon to be released
will show.
Conunenting on the findings, Prof.
William Dunkelberg, a Purdue
University economist, termed the
costs and conditions of credit during
the past few months "a disaster"
that has small businesses reeling.
His findings were made as con·
sultan! to the National Federation of
Independent Business, a San Mateo,
Calif. organization that claims
610,000 members, 90 percent of
whom employ ..u or fewer workers.
Dunkelberg said the federation's

small business optimism index,
begun in 1972, fell to an all-time low
of 71 in April, based on responses
from 2,302 members. Tile previous
low was 78 in the recession of 19'14.
He said first-quarter employment
per finn fell by about one-half of 1
percent, or nearly double the .26 rate
of the previous three months, when
the federation had said the "bottom
fell out" of the job market.
"Ordinarilly small·buainess employment is more stable," said the
professor, alluding to the absence of
mass layoffs. "But what we're now
talking about are some fundamental
changes in the picture.''
Stressing the seriousness of the
decline, he recalled a Massachusetts

Institute of Technology study that
showed 80 percent of all new jobs
fr&lt;m 1969to 19'16 were created by fir·
ms employing 100 or fewer workers.
Small business, as measured by
the federation, makes up 40 percent
to 50 percent of gross national
product, and SO percent to 60 percent
of employment. "This is the
economy's
backbone," said
Dunkel berg.
While credit conditions have eased
during this month, any positive
response from small businesses
might be delayed. "Now they have a
severe cash flow because sales are
falling ," the professor sa~.
The survey was conducted by mail
from among a cross-section of 6,000
federation members throughout the

country. In addition to answering
fixed questions, the resondents were
encouraged to add other views.
In the April survey, the bitterest
complaints involved the high cost
and limited supply of credit. Some
said they were forced to limit raises,
delay hirillg or lay off workers in order to pay for loans.
" If interest rates don't go down in
a very short time there won't be
· such a thing as a little private
busi!tes.sman," wrote one.

SCIOTO DOWNS
COLUMBUS (AP) - Annbro
Voltage, driven by Dave Richar·
dson, was the featured eighth race
Monday night at Scioto Downs in
2:112 4-6, paying $2.60,$2.00 and $2.~.
Jimmy C was second and returned .
$3.~ and $2.60 while Shadow Skipper
finished third and paid $3.40.
The first race trifecta of~ paid
. $1,511.10.
Attendance was 3,555 and the han.dle amounted to$318,085.

hit until Cliff Kennedy's leadoff
safety on the first pitch of the fourth.
Brown's roughest innings were the
fifth and sixth. In the fourth, Jerry
Fields, who collected two of the five
Meigs hits, led off with a single,
moved to second on an error and
scored on Troy Brook's two-out·
single.
In the sixth, the Marauders loaded
'the bases on a walk, an infield hit
and Fields' second single, but third
baseman Paul Duncan forced the
lead runner at the plate for the
second out while Brown fanned
Terry Wayland on five pitches to
retire the side.
Striking out two Marauders in four
separate innings, Brown posted his
fifth complete game and fifth victory against three losses.
And talk about helping your own
cause ... Brown brought home Duncan with Gallipolis' second tally of
the game with a single to right. The
Blue Devils started that secondinning rally after Bob Foster and
Ted · Adams opened with infield
popouts.
Craig Mason and Duncan walked

while Chuck Derifield plated Mason
with the single to set the stage for
Brown's RBI safety.
With one out in the third, Alli.son
walked, went to third on Footer's
ground-rule double and scored on
Adams' liner to left.
Mason singled, Derifield walked
and Phil King produced an RBI
single - his third hit of the game in
three appearances - to load the
sacks fpr Brown's one-ball, onestrike poke over the right-field fence
off Meigs reliever Jeff Wayland.
Eight different Blue Devils accounted for the 10 hits, with King's
first-Inning double accounting for
the third extra-base shot.
Alli.son got the final GAHS hit in
the fourth as Tom Owens came on in
the fifth to strike out four Blue
Devils and walk one for Meigs.
Roger Kovalchik, working the fir·
st 21&gt; innings, took the loss.
GAHS finishes the season Friday
at Jackson. Last season, the Blue
. Devils defeated the Ironmen at
Jackson for the first time in seven
years. It was one of only five wins
for the locals last season.

Athens, Dave Lennington of Marie!·
ta, Chris Weghorst of Logan, Dave
Crawford of Belpre, Jim Friend of
South Point, Jeff Montgomery of
Wellston, Jack Duffy of Southern,
Greg Smith of Kyger Creek and Tim
Beaver of Hannan Trace.
OUTFIELDERS - Chris Tenaglia
of Athens, Scott Campbell of
Sheridan, Brian Denison of New
Lexington, Dan Knost of Warren,
Brian Bissell of Eastern (Meigs )
and Bret Irwin of Trimble.
COACHES - Jim Jordan of
Marietta, Bob Lester of South Point
and Ralph Wigal of Eastern
(Meigs ).
WEST
PITCHERS- Scott Parrish and
.Chris North of Lancaster, Benny
Allen of Miami Trace, Craig Wright
of Portsmouth, Sam Topping of Portsmouth East and Ken Boardman of
Valley.
CATCHERS - Rob Hansel of
Chillicothe, Kirk McMahon of Portsmouth and Kevin Price of PortsmouthEast.
INFIELDERS - Tony Curry of
Lancaster , Todd Uhrig of
Chillicothe, Ken Brown of Gallipolis,
Keith Bare of Coal Grove, Mike Eddleman of Miami Trace, Scott .
Donohue of Ironton, Ralph Merritt of
Valley, Brent Miller of Symmes
Valley aDd Tom Hutchinson of Min·
ford.
OUTFIELDERS
Tom
Stoughton of Lancaster, Jim Lwnp
of Chillicothe, Adam Ainsworth of
Ironton, Lynn Fuller of Portsmouth,
Benny Taylor of Symmes Valley and
Mark Barth of New Boston.
COACHES-Tom White of Lancaster, Randy Burnside of Miami
Trace and Ron Erion of New Boston.

and three bread and butter singles.
In the fourth, Meigs plated four runs thus tying the game at 11·11.
The lead continued to see-saw when Pam Crooks walked and
moved to second on a sacrifice bunt by Tonia Ash. Sonia Ash grounded
out to the right side allowing Crooks to advance.
Bartrum again came through in the clutch with an RBI single to
give the Meigs girls a one run lead going into the seventh.
With two out in the top of the seventh and final inning Moore and
Carey singled for South Point. Mitzie Howard then hit a line hugging
double down the third base line to give her team a 13-12lead.
With its back to the wall, Meigs came through in the bottom of the
seventh inning on Beth Bartrwn's heroic smash to win the game.
Bartrum had two doubles and a single, Sonia Ash two doubles, and
Terri Wilson three singles.
Mitzie Howard had two singles and double, and Miller a double
and single for South Point.
Batteries were Beth Bartrum who picked up the win and catcher
Susan Zirkle. Carolyn Hall and Kratzenburg went all the way for South
Point.
The district champs will now compete in the regional semi-finals
at Lancaster on Friday, May 22. Meigs will play the winner of the New
Concord upper bracket winner. Game time is one o'clock. Meigs is
now 1&amp;-2 overall on the yea r.
Linescore:
S. Point
506 000 2-13 10 5
Meigs
5~ 410 2--14 11 2
Batteries: Bartrum and Zirkle.
C. Hall and Kratzenburg.

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Roy~

Crown finishes
second in tournament
The Royal Crown Bottling softball

team of Middleport has started their
1980 campaign on a winning note.
They captured a second place trophy
one week ago in. a 16 team tour·
nament at Huntington and they took
all the marbles in a local tour·
nament last weekend at Syracuse.
At Huntington, R. C. suffered a S-5
defeat in the opening round at the
hands of Verb's, a Huntington team.
But in the next game the R. C.
boys posted a 1~9 come-from-behind
win over Newberry's of Portsmouth.
The third game was spelled a 12-1
win for the locals over Huntington
Equipment.
Sunday's first game found the R.
C. boys down by ten runs in the fifth
inning. But a strong comeback and
some clutch hitting gave R. C.
another thrilling win, 12-11 over Seth
of West Virginia. The next contest
pitted the locals against Five Corners, the defending West Virginia

State Champs and R. C. came o~t on
top, 1~9. The Meigs County crew
then got revenge over Verb's win
with a 12-5 win.
In the championship round against
Green Mountain Lwnber Company,
R. C. won the first game 10-S, but fell
in the second contest, 9-4. The team
had a total of 16 home runs in their
eight games. Bill Painter slugged
five, Dave Flffe had two, Ed Kincade and Gene Wise each had three,
and Greg Gibbs knocked one.
Last weekend, R. C.'s Bob Whaley
had a hot bat and clobbered enough
home runs to win him the Moot
Home Runs trophy as R. C. went
through the toliiJUIIIlent undefeated.
R. C. defeated Ace Hardware 13-3,
City Limits 13-4, and Carr's of Point
Pleasant 16-6 on Saturday. Sunday
they beat Mead's of Point Pleasant
Ill&gt;! in the first game and 8-4 in the
second to win the tourney. The team
is coached by Gene Wise.

Because of the role of small
businesses in innovating, in creating
jobs, and in responding quickly to
economic change, Dunkelberg feels
the results are grim evidence of a
decline in national economic health.

Pope's move ends political career

n

WA.SH1NGTON (AP) - PopeJolm · outspoken liberal Democrats from
Paul II's move to separate priests the House, boasted Rep. Guy Vander
from politics has halted Rep. Robert Jagt, R·Mich.
Vander J agt, chainnan of the
F. Drinan's long political career and
spawned some whimsic'! National Repujllican Congressional
Committee, joked: "At the time
speculation by his colleagues.
House Majority Leader Jim Mikva was appointed, my friends
Wright, 0-Texas, immediately
lamented the lack of a
"Presbyterian pope" to ease out
some members he said he'd rather
see leave Congress than Drinan.
At the same time, Republicans
were. praising the pope for doing to
the Massachusetts Democrat, a
Jesuit priest, what they've been called and praised me for my in·
· unable to do at the polls for years.
fluence with the president. Un·
Drlnan·s decision to abide by the .fortuntely, I have to disclaim in·
pope's order and no~ for re- fluence with the pope."
election ~oupled with President Car·
ter's appointment last year of Ab , Va.l'der Jagt, a Presbyterian with
a divinity degree from Yale, may be
Mikva of Illinois to a federal
judgeship yanked two of the most just the one Wright had in mind.

Pentagon-booster Rep. Richard H.
Ichord, [).Mo., posed a simple - llJt
decidedly rhetorical - question
during floor debate on balancing the
federal budget.
"Will any member of the committee on the budget or will any

In Washington

"I've got an idea, Norman. Let 's go out of control - like - THE ECONOMY!"

,

.

member of this House rise and
assure me that this budget this
military budget, is acquiring 'more
airplanes for the Navy than we are
sending to the boneyard?"
He surveyed1he chamber.
"I see no one is rising because
they know what the answer is," he

gloated.
At that, Rep. Thomas J. Downey,
[).N.Y., stood.
Ichord: "I will yield to the gentleman if he will assure me that we
are acquiring more planes for the
Navy than we are sending to the
boneyard."
Downey : "I just want to know
what the boneyard is."
'
Ichord: "Then I refuse to yield."
Downey s.l and Icbord resumed
his speech on defense spending. But
five minutes later, Downey was on
his feet again. Ichord IIBked him
whatfor.
Downey: "Many of u.s have been
waiting avidly for an explanation of
the boneyard .... "
Ichord: "The 'boneyard' Is
synonymous, r would state to the
gentleman from New York, with a
graveyard."

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140'

SAVB4Qe

·.

40C

I
I

.•

I

NOT VERY CLOSE - Meigs' Jerry Fields is
thrown out during action in Tuesday's Meigs-

.G~Wpolls game. First baseman Craig Mason awaits
throw. Umpire is George Nessclroad. Gallipolis
S.l. Keith Wilson photo.

· ~tl!e·

won

'
!toe
w_.
~-------~--------------SAVARIN. fBI OOrriB wttB

I

~

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 14,1980

Opinions
&amp; Comments

\,•'-

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 14, 1980

Meigs gals advance to regionals

•

ET'fA ~WO!tt\-\~-'1{;~ N.i .R . 'ao
HU~ME

By Scott Woife
GAIJJPOUS - It took all seven Innings to decide a winner but
when the dust had finally settled, the Meigs Marauder gals' had
brought home a district championship with a dramatic 14-13 comefrom-behind victory over South Point Tuesday'night.
'
Beth Bartrum's double provided the winning margin in the bottom
of the seventh inning.
Preceding Bartrum's double, South Point's Carolyn Hall had
walked the bases full, Issuing free passes to Pam Crooks Tonia Ash
~d Sonia Ash. Crooks and Ash then crossed the plate on ~rtrum's hii
clinching the district crown.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
IUSPS 145-... 1
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
Ldten of opl.o.loa arr wtleomed. They shoold be leulhaa 300 words long lor subject tel reducUoo by lbr ed.l.tllrl. and mual be slped with the si(ntt' l address. Names may be withheld upon
pabUcation. However, oa request, oa,me&amp; will be dbrl011ed. Lt'Uers should be in good tau~. ad-

dreul.og l.uues, oot persooallties.

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rn.........JL----r"t~d~~

Five area baseball players were
nam~ to the Southeastern Ohio All·

Hey, candidates!
With three weeks remaining until the JWJe 3 primary
election, where are the candidates and what do they stand
for?
We've thus far seen some bumper stickers, matches,
posters, combs, pencils and pens-we've thus far heard
nothing from any of the office seekers about issues, platfonns, policies, problems, or solutions.
Either there aren't any issues-in which case the incumbents should be in pretty good shape-or else the candidates are keeping them to themselves.
We've heard a few radio announcements declaring how
good certain office hopefuls would be for the county; we've
heard nothing about HOW they would be good for the county.
We've published some advertising for candidates asking
for your vote-nothing that details why you should vote for
them.
On June 3 a few dozen candidates are asking the public
for support and votes. That support will ultimately lead to
one candidate being elected to office.
It doesn't seem unreasonable to us to expect those candidates-who are asking to be endowed with public
authority, public trust, and public dollars-to conunit
themselves on public issues.
If nothing else they could make a few promises to be
broken when, and if, elected. At least that way the electorate will know that the office holder has done something
during the tenn-even if itS only that he or she was unable
to keep his or her word.
Our intention here is really quite simple-we would like
to complicate the neat little beauty contest currently being
waged by asking that the multitude of candidates do
something to justify their call for public votes.
What we would like to see are specifics-specific comments on specific issues, with proposed solutions to
existing and potential problems.
If all a candidate can do is mouth the ever popular "I will
. fix the roads," "I will reduce crime," "I will do my best,"
or any of the other proverbial, non-specific and nonconunittal "I will's", its probably because that candidate
has no idea how he or she will actually, practically do
anything once elected.

Today in history.
Today is Wednesday, May 14, the
!35th day of 1980. There are 231 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On May 14, 1787, a convention
began in Philadelphia to draw up the
American Constitution.
On this date:
In 1804, Captain Meriweather
Lewis and William Clark set out
from St. umis, Mo., on an expedition
to the Pacific Coast.
In 19411, the independent state of
Israel was proclaimed as BritaiJt en·
ded its rule in Palestine.
In 1964, Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev opened the Aswan Dam
on the Nile River in Egypt.
In 1972, after 27 years of American
rule, Okinawa was returned to
Japan.

• •

Ten years ago, the Ford Motor Co.
announced that it had turned down a
proposal to build a truck plant in the
Soviet Union.
Five years ago, the United States
announced that Marines had recaptured by force the merchant ship
"Mayaguez," and that American
planes had destroyed three Cambodian naval vessels.
Last year, the United States and
China initialed a "breakthrough"
trade agreement, opening the way to
expanded commerce and most·
favored-nation treatment for China
after a J().year chill.
Thought lor today: There is no
education like adversity. - Ben·
jamin Disraeli (1804-1881 i

u

.

Five area players on All-Star squad

Robert Wingett

Gelleral Mgr. &amp;: City EdUor

.

Earlier in the game, South Point was propelled to a 5-0 first inning
lead on double by Miller and a triple by Candy Hall.
In the bottom of that same g&lt;&gt;-round, Meigs equalled its opponent's
performance by plating five runs. The rally was sparked by a Beth
Bartrum double that drove in Tonia Ash. An error allowing April King
to reach first, let in two more runs. Cherie Lightfoot then came
through with a triple followed by a Terri Wilson's single.
In the second, Meigs took the driver's seat in the scoring teeter·
totter, plating two runs. In the third the lead again changed hands
when South Point rallied for ~ix runs highlighted by Jackson's triple

.·

.•
.

.

district baseball squad. Those selec·
ted will participate in the annual
EAST-WEST all-star series sponsored by the Southeastern Ohio
Baseball Coaches Association to be
held later this month in Portsmouth.
Among those picked were
Southern first baseman Jack Duffy,
Eastern Catcher Brian Bissell.
Kyger Creek's Greg Smith, and Han·
nan Trace's Tim Beaver.

This year the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference was again well
represented among the district
selections.
Gallipolis Blue Devil Ken Brown
will also represent the area in the
annual series. Brown will play for
the West squad while the other area
all-stars will play for the East.
Eastern Head Coach Ralph Wigal
was selected as a Coach for the East
all-stars. The series will be played
on Sunday, May 25 with Monday,

May 26 as an alternate date.
The complete rosters for the two
sqlladsare :
EAST

PITCHERS - Jolm Homer of
Warren, Barney Joseph of Belpre,
Brian Swann of Jackson, Rick
Dickens of South Point and Ken
Kovach and Todd Trace of Trimble .
CATCHERS - Fred Ross of
Athens, Steve Griffith of South Point
and Dave Brown of Trimble.
INFIELDERS - Jim Cooksey of

Gallipolis rips Meigs, 8-1
"It's something you can afford, and with a little haggling I think we can get you
the mineral rights."

Federal regulations: a case for red tape
By Robert Walters
PffiLADELPffiA (NEA) - The
words differ slightly, but the music
is identical to the theme song being
heard all across the land as part of a
determined corporate propaganda
campaign against oppressive
federal regulation.
In this case, the lyrics belong to
the pharmaceutical industry, busily
promoting the notion that only insen·
sitlve bureaucrats at the Food and
Drug Administration stand between
millions of ailing Americans and the
new vistas in drug therapy that
could ease their pain If not save their
lives.
For elllllllple, the F£?A is blamed
by Lewis A. Engman, president of
the rharmaceutical Manufacturers
Association, for producing little
more than "a steady stream of over·
regulation ... needless red tape ...
and excessi~ely detailed re·
quirements."
But now unfolding in this city is a
saga that provides a compelling
case for more - not less - government regulation of an industry
whose products can produce
needless deaths and life-long suffer·
ing as readily as they can fight
disease and save lives.
It involves Selacryn, a new drug

approved last May for nationwide
marketing by Smith Kline &amp; French
Laboratories, one of the nation's
largest pharmaceutical houses and
a subsidiary of the Philadelphia •
based SmithKline Corp.

seriously impaired liver function .
The problem went unnoticed in
Washington for more than a month,
partly because SmithKline failed to
use a reporting system specifically
designed to provide federal

Today's commentary
Selacryn was believed to represent a major advance in treating
high blood pressure, because in addition to relieving hypertension it
also produced several other positive
cllnlcal effects. Unknown at the time
was the impact of negative side ef·
feels.
Federal law requires that phar·
maceutical !inns report to the FDA
"as soon as possible, and in any
event within 15 working days" if
they receive "information concerning any unexpected side effect, in·
jury, toxicity or sensitivity reac·
tion" in connection with drugs they
are distributing.
No such reports were filed by
SmithKline relating to liver damage
suffered by Selacryn users. But
buried in a routine quarterly report
filed with the FDA last November
was the disclosure of 12 such cases of

regulatory officials with prompt
warning of potentially serious
danger.
When company officials finally
were summoned by the FDA to an
urgent mid-January meeting, they
arrived with reports of, additional
4ll cases of liver damage. The new
total of 52 cases included 30 in·
stances of jaundice - and five
deaths .
The day after that meeting,
SmithK!ine began an emergency
recall of Selacryn. By that time,
however, the drug had been
prescribed for more than 300,000 pa·
tients and more than 500,000 bottles
of Selacryn were on the market. •
SmithK!ine continued to receive
reports of death and illness among
Selacryn users, but sought to
minimize unfavorable publicity. In
March, for inslance, the company

revealed that the casualty count had
soared to 363 known cases of liver
damage- including 24 deaths.
But the format of that disclosure
was a most unusual one: The information was buried in the· middle
of a thick financial prospectus the
corporation was required to file with
the Securities and Exchange Com·
mission in conjunction with its plans
to acquire a company that produces
contact lenses.
SmithKline notes that no cauae •
and· effect relationship has yet been
finnly established between Selacryn
treatment and the illness and death
suffered by its users. But the company is reluctant to cliscuss any
details of the episode.
" We are continuing to cooperate
fully with the FDA in a review of our
recall of the product and the data
which led to that decision," says a
vaguely worded corporate statement. "Until this review is com·
pleted, we don 't think it appropriate
to comment further."
Unanswered remains the crucial
question: Why did SmithKline fail
for so many months to report to
federal officials the toxic effeets that
the FDA says became apparent
within two to 13 weeks after patients
began Selacryn treatment?

The bats came out of hibernation
Tuesday afternoon at Memorial
Field. The Gallia. Academy Blue
Devils, in the throes of an awful hit·
ling slump through the second half
of the season, stepped up against
three Meigs pitchers to Blllllck 10
hits and erupt for six third-inning
runs - four of them coming home on
Kenny Brown's second grand-slam
homer of the spring - to lock up
· thin! place in the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League with an S-1 triumph.
"I've been disappointed with some
of the close games we've been
through," GAHS Coach Jim Osborne
said, "but if you would have told
anyone this team was going to finish
thin! in the league at the beginning
of the seaosn, they wouldn't have
believed you." Third place belongs
to the locals (8-5) no matter what.
Jackson (4-7) dropped an eight·
. inning, 2-1 decision to Athens in a pit·
ching duel between Athens' Jeff
Bush and Brian Swann. Bush lost a
bit for a no-hitter in the eighth in·
ning, but the Bulldogs took over
· fourth place with a 4-3 mark.
. Wellston (~2) and Ironton (S-1)
. meet Friday at Ironton to decide the
SEOAL championship.
"And if you tum our losses to
~thens and Logan (4-3 in eight
frames and 2-1) into wins , as they
. very well sbould have been, we
would still be right in it," Osborne
adds.
Brown's tough five-hit, 10·
strikeout pitching sent the
Marauders back to 1·7 in the SEOAL
• and S-11 overall. Meigs had just one
baserunner through the first three
stanzas and didn't record their first

Business mirror

Costs, conditions of credit 'a disaster'
NEW YORK (AP) - Small
business has been forced to lay off
workers and postpone vital equipment purchases in order to have suf·
ficient funds to meet high borrowing
costs, a survey soon to be released
will show.
Conunenting on the findings, Prof.
William Dunkelberg, a Purdue
University economist, termed the
costs and conditions of credit during
the past few months "a disaster"
that has small businesses reeling.
His findings were made as con·
sultan! to the National Federation of
Independent Business, a San Mateo,
Calif. organization that claims
610,000 members, 90 percent of
whom employ ..u or fewer workers.
Dunkelberg said the federation's

small business optimism index,
begun in 1972, fell to an all-time low
of 71 in April, based on responses
from 2,302 members. Tile previous
low was 78 in the recession of 19'14.
He said first-quarter employment
per finn fell by about one-half of 1
percent, or nearly double the .26 rate
of the previous three months, when
the federation had said the "bottom
fell out" of the job market.
"Ordinarilly small·buainess employment is more stable," said the
professor, alluding to the absence of
mass layoffs. "But what we're now
talking about are some fundamental
changes in the picture.''
Stressing the seriousness of the
decline, he recalled a Massachusetts

Institute of Technology study that
showed 80 percent of all new jobs
fr&lt;m 1969to 19'16 were created by fir·
ms employing 100 or fewer workers.
Small business, as measured by
the federation, makes up 40 percent
to 50 percent of gross national
product, and SO percent to 60 percent
of employment. "This is the
economy's
backbone," said
Dunkel berg.
While credit conditions have eased
during this month, any positive
response from small businesses
might be delayed. "Now they have a
severe cash flow because sales are
falling ," the professor sa~.
The survey was conducted by mail
from among a cross-section of 6,000
federation members throughout the

country. In addition to answering
fixed questions, the resondents were
encouraged to add other views.
In the April survey, the bitterest
complaints involved the high cost
and limited supply of credit. Some
said they were forced to limit raises,
delay hirillg or lay off workers in order to pay for loans.
" If interest rates don't go down in
a very short time there won't be
· such a thing as a little private
busi!tes.sman," wrote one.

SCIOTO DOWNS
COLUMBUS (AP) - Annbro
Voltage, driven by Dave Richar·
dson, was the featured eighth race
Monday night at Scioto Downs in
2:112 4-6, paying $2.60,$2.00 and $2.~.
Jimmy C was second and returned .
$3.~ and $2.60 while Shadow Skipper
finished third and paid $3.40.
The first race trifecta of~ paid
. $1,511.10.
Attendance was 3,555 and the han.dle amounted to$318,085.

hit until Cliff Kennedy's leadoff
safety on the first pitch of the fourth.
Brown's roughest innings were the
fifth and sixth. In the fourth, Jerry
Fields, who collected two of the five
Meigs hits, led off with a single,
moved to second on an error and
scored on Troy Brook's two-out·
single.
In the sixth, the Marauders loaded
'the bases on a walk, an infield hit
and Fields' second single, but third
baseman Paul Duncan forced the
lead runner at the plate for the
second out while Brown fanned
Terry Wayland on five pitches to
retire the side.
Striking out two Marauders in four
separate innings, Brown posted his
fifth complete game and fifth victory against three losses.
And talk about helping your own
cause ... Brown brought home Duncan with Gallipolis' second tally of
the game with a single to right. The
Blue Devils started that secondinning rally after Bob Foster and
Ted · Adams opened with infield
popouts.
Craig Mason and Duncan walked

while Chuck Derifield plated Mason
with the single to set the stage for
Brown's RBI safety.
With one out in the third, Alli.son
walked, went to third on Footer's
ground-rule double and scored on
Adams' liner to left.
Mason singled, Derifield walked
and Phil King produced an RBI
single - his third hit of the game in
three appearances - to load the
sacks fpr Brown's one-ball, onestrike poke over the right-field fence
off Meigs reliever Jeff Wayland.
Eight different Blue Devils accounted for the 10 hits, with King's
first-Inning double accounting for
the third extra-base shot.
Alli.son got the final GAHS hit in
the fourth as Tom Owens came on in
the fifth to strike out four Blue
Devils and walk one for Meigs.
Roger Kovalchik, working the fir·
st 21&gt; innings, took the loss.
GAHS finishes the season Friday
at Jackson. Last season, the Blue
. Devils defeated the Ironmen at
Jackson for the first time in seven
years. It was one of only five wins
for the locals last season.

Athens, Dave Lennington of Marie!·
ta, Chris Weghorst of Logan, Dave
Crawford of Belpre, Jim Friend of
South Point, Jeff Montgomery of
Wellston, Jack Duffy of Southern,
Greg Smith of Kyger Creek and Tim
Beaver of Hannan Trace.
OUTFIELDERS - Chris Tenaglia
of Athens, Scott Campbell of
Sheridan, Brian Denison of New
Lexington, Dan Knost of Warren,
Brian Bissell of Eastern (Meigs )
and Bret Irwin of Trimble.
COACHES - Jim Jordan of
Marietta, Bob Lester of South Point
and Ralph Wigal of Eastern
(Meigs ).
WEST
PITCHERS- Scott Parrish and
.Chris North of Lancaster, Benny
Allen of Miami Trace, Craig Wright
of Portsmouth, Sam Topping of Portsmouth East and Ken Boardman of
Valley.
CATCHERS - Rob Hansel of
Chillicothe, Kirk McMahon of Portsmouth and Kevin Price of PortsmouthEast.
INFIELDERS - Tony Curry of
Lancaster , Todd Uhrig of
Chillicothe, Ken Brown of Gallipolis,
Keith Bare of Coal Grove, Mike Eddleman of Miami Trace, Scott .
Donohue of Ironton, Ralph Merritt of
Valley, Brent Miller of Symmes
Valley aDd Tom Hutchinson of Min·
ford.
OUTFIELDERS
Tom
Stoughton of Lancaster, Jim Lwnp
of Chillicothe, Adam Ainsworth of
Ironton, Lynn Fuller of Portsmouth,
Benny Taylor of Symmes Valley and
Mark Barth of New Boston.
COACHES-Tom White of Lancaster, Randy Burnside of Miami
Trace and Ron Erion of New Boston.

and three bread and butter singles.
In the fourth, Meigs plated four runs thus tying the game at 11·11.
The lead continued to see-saw when Pam Crooks walked and
moved to second on a sacrifice bunt by Tonia Ash. Sonia Ash grounded
out to the right side allowing Crooks to advance.
Bartrum again came through in the clutch with an RBI single to
give the Meigs girls a one run lead going into the seventh.
With two out in the top of the seventh and final inning Moore and
Carey singled for South Point. Mitzie Howard then hit a line hugging
double down the third base line to give her team a 13-12lead.
With its back to the wall, Meigs came through in the bottom of the
seventh inning on Beth Bartrwn's heroic smash to win the game.
Bartrum had two doubles and a single, Sonia Ash two doubles, and
Terri Wilson three singles.
Mitzie Howard had two singles and double, and Miller a double
and single for South Point.
Batteries were Beth Bartrum who picked up the win and catcher
Susan Zirkle. Carolyn Hall and Kratzenburg went all the way for South
Point.
The district champs will now compete in the regional semi-finals
at Lancaster on Friday, May 22. Meigs will play the winner of the New
Concord upper bracket winner. Game time is one o'clock. Meigs is
now 1&amp;-2 overall on the yea r.
Linescore:
S. Point
506 000 2-13 10 5
Meigs
5~ 410 2--14 11 2
Batteries: Bartrum and Zirkle.
C. Hall and Kratzenburg.

Authorized CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

Phone 992·2178
108 w. Main St.
Pomeroy, 0 .
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open : Mon. thru Wed . 9·5
Thurs . 9· 12, Fri. 9·5, Sal. 9-2

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or Your Money Back

Roy~

Crown finishes
second in tournament
The Royal Crown Bottling softball

team of Middleport has started their
1980 campaign on a winning note.
They captured a second place trophy
one week ago in. a 16 team tour·
nament at Huntington and they took
all the marbles in a local tour·
nament last weekend at Syracuse.
At Huntington, R. C. suffered a S-5
defeat in the opening round at the
hands of Verb's, a Huntington team.
But in the next game the R. C.
boys posted a 1~9 come-from-behind
win over Newberry's of Portsmouth.
The third game was spelled a 12-1
win for the locals over Huntington
Equipment.
Sunday's first game found the R.
C. boys down by ten runs in the fifth
inning. But a strong comeback and
some clutch hitting gave R. C.
another thrilling win, 12-11 over Seth
of West Virginia. The next contest
pitted the locals against Five Corners, the defending West Virginia

State Champs and R. C. came o~t on
top, 1~9. The Meigs County crew
then got revenge over Verb's win
with a 12-5 win.
In the championship round against
Green Mountain Lwnber Company,
R. C. won the first game 10-S, but fell
in the second contest, 9-4. The team
had a total of 16 home runs in their
eight games. Bill Painter slugged
five, Dave Flffe had two, Ed Kincade and Gene Wise each had three,
and Greg Gibbs knocked one.
Last weekend, R. C.'s Bob Whaley
had a hot bat and clobbered enough
home runs to win him the Moot
Home Runs trophy as R. C. went
through the toliiJUIIIlent undefeated.
R. C. defeated Ace Hardware 13-3,
City Limits 13-4, and Carr's of Point
Pleasant 16-6 on Saturday. Sunday
they beat Mead's of Point Pleasant
Ill&gt;! in the first game and 8-4 in the
second to win the tourney. The team
is coached by Gene Wise.

Because of the role of small
businesses in innovating, in creating
jobs, and in responding quickly to
economic change, Dunkelberg feels
the results are grim evidence of a
decline in national economic health.

Pope's move ends political career

n

WA.SH1NGTON (AP) - PopeJolm · outspoken liberal Democrats from
Paul II's move to separate priests the House, boasted Rep. Guy Vander
from politics has halted Rep. Robert Jagt, R·Mich.
Vander J agt, chainnan of the
F. Drinan's long political career and
spawned some whimsic'! National Repujllican Congressional
Committee, joked: "At the time
speculation by his colleagues.
House Majority Leader Jim Mikva was appointed, my friends
Wright, 0-Texas, immediately
lamented the lack of a
"Presbyterian pope" to ease out
some members he said he'd rather
see leave Congress than Drinan.
At the same time, Republicans
were. praising the pope for doing to
the Massachusetts Democrat, a
Jesuit priest, what they've been called and praised me for my in·
· unable to do at the polls for years.
fluence with the president. Un·
Drlnan·s decision to abide by the .fortuntely, I have to disclaim in·
pope's order and no~ for re- fluence with the pope."
election ~oupled with President Car·
ter's appointment last year of Ab , Va.l'der Jagt, a Presbyterian with
a divinity degree from Yale, may be
Mikva of Illinois to a federal
judgeship yanked two of the most just the one Wright had in mind.

Pentagon-booster Rep. Richard H.
Ichord, [).Mo., posed a simple - llJt
decidedly rhetorical - question
during floor debate on balancing the
federal budget.
"Will any member of the committee on the budget or will any

In Washington

"I've got an idea, Norman. Let 's go out of control - like - THE ECONOMY!"

,

.

member of this House rise and
assure me that this budget this
military budget, is acquiring 'more
airplanes for the Navy than we are
sending to the boneyard?"
He surveyed1he chamber.
"I see no one is rising because
they know what the answer is," he

gloated.
At that, Rep. Thomas J. Downey,
[).N.Y., stood.
Ichord: "I will yield to the gentleman if he will assure me that we
are acquiring more planes for the
Navy than we are sending to the
boneyard."
Downey : "I just want to know
what the boneyard is."
'
Ichord: "Then I refuse to yield."
Downey s.l and Icbord resumed
his speech on defense spending. But
five minutes later, Downey was on
his feet again. Ichord IIBked him
whatfor.
Downey: "Many of u.s have been
waiting avidly for an explanation of
the boneyard .... "
Ichord: "The 'boneyard' Is
synonymous, r would state to the
gentleman from New York, with a
graveyard."

A cotfee ) ke a man . .------------------~----,
should have character.
D1scover how much
character there is in
Savarin~ cottee and save 1
on great tasting Savann Hegular
40~ at the same time
1
or Savarin Instant Cotfee
c:
Wherever f1ne coffee
0
~ ~ Gtoctr [lch couoon tn trtla f'l)ur cwstomer to 4()C ot! to ..ards
a.
the pvrchast ot Sua nn coHH For e.ch coupon fOU •cctpt u our
IS grown . El Exigente~
:&gt;
IYihon /ed 11!~1 fit: vrnll P'~ ~011 Wf plu11l han~r11 1 . pro~oded ~OU
The Demanding One.
0
1 nd vowr t iiSIOnlffS hal't c omp'ltll • •lh tilt terms ot thr\ ot!er Any
u
oll\el ll)l)la tron con• trtu tes lr1ull lnviJas showrnr yo~r ourctwse
chooses the finest coffee I ot
sunJC.ent stoo HI cover 111 ccuPOni must~ shawn u'Km ~utsl
\lord ~ prohtbltell t.l~ed o t rnl ncteil or pr~unttd byoutsr!le a&amp;ent:lf:s .
beans for Sava rin That
coupon broktr 5 or othe rs who ue not rda ~ drstrrbi.Jiors ol our met ·
htndrse ~s~ nlut 1110 otlt Co~pons will be redeel!lt(j by 1n111
g1ves Savarin its special I cSe~ll
Sc~nbrutm &amp; Co . IM f&gt; 0 So• l5J4. 01n!on , Iowa
I ~7)4lo011e1SA hmll!lllo
cha racter. its rich
1 coupon Po!t p~ rc ll.lse
••••'" Nov•~t~Mr 310, 1. . ..
distinctive taste
Find out what a dif·
I
terence character makes
in a coHee. And save
25900·101756
money while you do it

140'

SAVB4Qe

·.

40C

I
I

.•

I

NOT VERY CLOSE - Meigs' Jerry Fields is
thrown out during action in Tuesday's Meigs-

.G~Wpolls game. First baseman Craig Mason awaits
throw. Umpire is George Nessclroad. Gallipolis
S.l. Keith Wilson photo.

· ~tl!e·

won

'
!toe
w_.
~-------~--------------SAVARIN. fBI OOrriB wttB

I

~

�•

•
5--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o. , Wednesday, May 14• 1980

f-1be Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 14. 1980

Major Leape Buet.U

TODAY'S

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE

W. L.Pet GB

-=....

BAITING

1; n .m
16 12 .;n
13 13 .500 '

Toroot&lt;&gt;
New Yort ·

Milwaukee

Cleve.land

WEST

Oakland
CtUcago

14
13
13
11

15 .433 2.,
HI .448 3¥.
17 .w •
1$ .123 •

16 13 .~2 1~
15 16 .484 314
Minnesota
13 18 .419 511
California
1.1 17 .393 8
Tuetday's Games
Bootoo 10, Minne&gt;ota 5
Baltimore 4, Texas 2
Seattle at Toronto, pdd ., raUl
Detroit t., Oakland 3
Kansas City 4, New York 1
Chicaso S, Milwaukee 5, tO Innings
WedDcadlly's Gamr:t
MiMesota (Koosman 2-3) at Bost.Gn
(StanleyW1, n
Texas (Perry 2·1) at Baltimore
( M~regor 1-2),

n

Seattle (Abbott 2-2) st Toronto (Mirabella
3-11. n
California (Frost 3-31 at Cleveland (Waits
W) , n

Oakland (lAngford ~I ) at Detroit (Wilcox
2-2) , n

Kansas City {Leonard 2-3 ), at New York

IG uidry~l.n

Chicago (Proly G-Il at Milwaukee (Haas 33),n

bat.s ): Reitz, St. Louis,

.404 ; Hendrick, St, Louis, .365; Templeton.
St. Louis, .~7 ; Buckner. Chi cago, .343; R.
South, Los Anl!leles . .343.
RUNS : Templeton, St. Louis, Z3 ; Sclunidt
Philadelphia , 2! ; Lopes, Los Angeles, 22 ;'
Griffey, Cinclnnati, 21 ; Law , Loe Angeles,

21 .
RBI : Garvey, Los Angeles, 26 ; Schmidt,
Philadelphia, !4; Hendrick, St. I..ouU, 24 ;
Rei b. St. Louis, Z3 ; Knight, Cincinnati, 23; J .
Cruz. HoWl ton, 23 ; R. Smith, l..o!l AnMgles.
37 : Buckner, Chicago, 36 ; Cabell, HotLSton ,

18 12 .600
17 13 .!"J67 1
16 13 .$52 11,;:

KllllS&amp;! City
TeUJ
Seattle

{~at

36.
•
DOUBLES : Stearns,

New

York,

12;

Buckner, Chicago, t; Rose, Philadelphia, 8;
Hendrick, St. Louis,8; Knight, Cincinnati, 8.
TRIPLES : LeFlore, Montreal. 3; Moreno ,

Pittsburgh, 3; Templetm, St. Louis , 3; eon.
&lt;.'t'pcion, Cinci.n.Niti, 3; Griffey. Cincinnati,
3; Law, Los Angelelij, 3.
HOME RUNS : Schntidt, Philadelphia, 9;
~n. Chicago, 7; Martin, Chicago, 7;

Luz.wki, Philadelphia, 7; Parker, Pittsburgh, 6; Baker, Los Angeles , 6: R. Smith,
Los Angeles, 6.
STOLEN BASES : Moreno , Pittsburgh, 16 ;
l..Bi\lo', lAl8 Angeles, 15 ; LeFlore, Montreal,
12; Cedeno, Houston,l2 ; R. Scott, Montreal,
10.
PITCKJNG (4 Decisions) : Tekul\·e, Pitbburgb, ~. 1.000, 2.06; Bibby, Pittsburgh, 4-{),
1.000, 3.59; Pastore, Cincinnati, ~1 . . 800,
2.74 ; K. Forsch, Houston, 4-1, .81Xl, 2.91 ;
Richard, Houston, 4-1, .800, 2.49; Hume, Cin·
dnnati, J-1, .7:ill, l.lll; Carlton, Philadelphia,
5-2, .71 4, 2.09; Vuckovich, St. Louis, S--2, .714,
2.~.

Tbund.ly'1 Gamet

STRIKEOUTS: Richard, Hou.ston, 56;
Carlton, Phih!delphia, 48; R yan, Houston,
40 ; Vuckovich, St. Louis, 35: Blyleven, Pitts-

Chicago at Milwaukee
Seattle at Toronto, n
Boaton at Cleveland, n
Only games scheduled

burgh, 34.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BA M1NG (65 at bal.$): Molinaro, Chicago,
.364 ; Wathan, Kansas City , .363; Ogli,..ie

Pills burgh

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB
9 .&amp;5&gt;4

17

Chicago Philadelphia
St. UJuil!
Montreal
NewYortc:

1! 11 .&lt;Ill
12 13 .1811
13 15 .i&amp;.f
12 15 .44-4

Ill
"'
5

5'f.t

9 18 .ll3 81ooa
WEST

Cincinnati

~

Ho1&amp;5too

18 11 .621 I

l...ofl Angelea

II

.&amp;\5

18 12 .1100 1""

15 15 . ~ 41,;:

San Diego
Atlanta

11 16 .I(J7 7

San FranclsC&lt;I
11 20 .J5.5 9
Tllesdliy'sGamea
Atlanta 7, Philadelphia J
ctncinnaUI5, NewYork4
Montreal3, Houston 2
San Diego 3, St. Louis 2
l.mAngeles4, Chicago2
San Francisco 5, Pitlllbllrgh 0
W~y' •Ga.mH

New York (Swan 2-2 ) at Cincinnati
I Uebrandl:J-21
Ptttsbura:h (Bibby 4-0) at San Francisco

ll&lt;n&lt;P.I"!r H I

Philadelphia (Carlton 5-21 at Athmla ( McWilliams 2-2), n
Mootreal (Sanderson 2-2J at Houston {For-

sch~J),n

St. Louis (Thomas 0..0) at San Diego
(LucasU), n
Chicago (McGlothen HI) at Los Angel~!!~
(SutcllffeG-2), n
Tbtll'llday'l GamH
Pittsburgh at San Francisco

Milwallkee, .358; Revering, Oakland,

.»4;

B. Bell, Texas, . ~ .
RUNS : Will s, Texas, 25; Yount
Milwaukee, 23 ; Bumbry, Baltimore, Z2{
Trammell, Detroit, 22; McRae, Kansa:s City,
Zl.
RBI : Vel~r. . Toronto, t1; t . Johnson,
Chicago, 23 ; B. Bell, Teras, ZJ; Oliver,
Texas, 23; Parrish, Detroit, 22.
HITS: B. Bell, TeiaS, 41; Landreawc:, Mi~
nesota, 40; Rivers, Texas, 39; Perez, Bo.ston

37; $Tied Wlth36.
•
DOUBLES : D. Garcia, ToniJto, 12;
Morrison , Chicago,ll; McRae, Kansas City,
I ; B. Bell, Texas, 11 ; Lynn, Boston, 9; Yount,
Milwaukee, 9; Oliver, Texas, 9.
TRlPLES: Brett, Kansas City, 4; Castino,
Minnesota , 4; Grtffin, Toronto, 3; Nor·
dhagen, Cllicago, 3; Wilson, Kai\.'Ul.'i City, 3;
Powell, Minnesota , 3.

HOME RUNS : Velez, Toronto, 8; Re.
Jackson, New York, 7; Rudi, caiifomia 7;
Fisk, Boston, 6; Lezcano, Milwaukee,' 6;
Mayberry , Toronto, 6; Smalley, MiMeaota,
6; L. Robert., Seattle. 6.
STOLEN BASES' Hender.oon, Oakland,
12; Wills, Texas, II ; Wihon, Kall.!lll.!l City, 10;
Bwnbry, Baltimore, 9; Carew, California, 8.
PITCHING {4 Decisions) : John, New
York,~. !.(XX), ~ . 77; Honeycutt, SeatUe, tHl,
1.000, 2.45 ; Noms, Oakland, 5-&lt;1, 1.000, O.:M;
Redfem, Minne3ota, ~1 , .833, 1.95; Stieb,
Toronto, ~1 • .800, 2.23; Caldwell, Milwaukee,
32-1, .700, 3.12; ~abella, Toronto, J-1, . 7~.
1.!13; Dotson, Chicago, J-1, .750, 4.45.
STRIKEOUTS: NOITis, Oakland, 41; Redfern, Minnesota, 36; Guidry, New York, 35;
Keough, Oakland, 33; Matlack, Tens, 32.

st. Louis at San Diego, n
Only games scheduled

Twelday'•

SporU TranaacUou
BASEBAlL
Amertcaa Lague

NBA Playoffs
Cbamploaktp FluJJ
Best of Seven
SaDday, Mil)' 4
Lo8 Angeles 109, Philadelphia 102
w-...y,May7
Plllladeljlbla 10'7, Loll Aqeleslllt
Satuday11 Game
Los Angeles 111, Philadelphia 101
-y'oGame
Philadelphia 105. l.os Anaeles 102, ~ries
lledl-2
Wedaetday'• Game
Plllladelphla at Los An&amp;eles, n
Friday'• Game
Los Angeles st Philadelphia, n
SUDday, Miy 18
Philadelphia at Los Angeles, lf necessary

BALTIMORE ORIOLES -

Sold Dave
Skaggs, catcher, to the California Angels tor
W1 wu1Lscltl!ted amoWlt of cB.!'Ih.

BASKETBAlL

Womea's BMketbaU Iague
NEW JERSEY GEMS - NAMED Kathy
Mosolino head coach.
FOOTIIAU.

Nallall Foolboll ~

SEATTLE SEAIIAWKS - Si&lt;ned Andn.

Hines, offensive tackle; Terry fiion, defensive end, and Jsck Cosgrove, center.
Caaldlaa Foolbl.lllague

TORONTO ARGONAUTS - 'l'raded Dan
Huclack, !lanker, to British Colwnbia for the
Liotll! ' second-round draft pick in 1981.
HOCKEY
N1dooal Hdey Lugve
HARTFORD WHALERS - Signed Thorn·
my Abral'lanuBon, defeMeman, to a
multiyear CGnlract.

N1tiooal Hockty Lupe

COLU:GE

PLA'ITSBURGH STATE - I..oub Fiigon,
Wd hockey coach, resigned June 15.

Pllyolf1
FIDalJ
BeltofSnen

'IVelday' s Game
New York lalandcrs f. , Philadelphia 3, ot,
NewYort leads series 1.(1
1'1u,.nday'• Gam~
New York L!Jandenat Philadelphia, n
Satanlay. May 11
Philadelphia at New York Islanders, n

SAN FRANClSCO - Named Bill FU5Co,
athletic director, and Pet.e BaiT)', head
b&amp;sketball coach.
SOUTHERN OREGON STATE COLLEGE
- Named State HwnaiUl head basketbaU
coach.

TEXAS-EL PASO - l..Birry McFarlin,
head baseball coach, resigned effective June
1.

Games 5, 6, and 7, if necessary, to be annoonced

TEXAS-SAN ANTONIO- Named Don Eddy head basketbaU COIICh.

Hubbard romps
The Hubbard's Greenhouse Little
Lea'gue team of Syracuse started its
season right Monday night by romping to a :l.5.j) win over host Tuppers
Plains Bears.
Winning pitcher Todd Adams
teamed with Mike Chancey to hurl a
no-hitter, fanning 11 batters and
walking six. Snyder took the loss for
the hosts.

Chancey led the winners at the
plate as he banged out three singles
and a triple.
Doug Owens and Scott Grueser
each had a triple and single, and
Jinuny Wolfe socked a triple and
Adams had two singles. Mike Kloes
had a double, and John Riffle, Bo
Willis, and Todd Hubbard each had a
single.

Interlake Linksters post win over Foote
'

For the third consecutive year, the
Foote Mineral GoH Team lost to the
Interlake linksters of Beverly at a
match held at the Jaymar GoH Course near Pomeroy Saturday. .
Although the Foote team failed once again to retrieve the traveling
trophy from Interlake's trophy
room, the Foote organization was
complimented for its perfonnance.
Prior to tee-off a breakfast was ser-

Owners p~esent new package

·ght, Reds rout Mets, 15-4

Sports scoreboard

ved at the .club house while a luncheon foUowed the competition.
During the awards presentation
Interlakes Plant Manager Bill
Meredith accepted the winning
trophy thanking Foote Mineral
Plant Manager Bill Beard and Asst.
Plant Manager Cliff Northrup for
their hospitality and fine sportsmanship. Foote Mineral has
requested a rematch in the fall.

By Associated Press
Ray Knight didn't want much.
"I was just hoping to get a base
hit," the Cincinnati tliird baseman
said.
But he more than doubled his expectations Tuesday night with two
home runs in the same inning, one a
grand slam, to lead the Reds to a IS-4
rout of the New York Mets.
Knight thus became the first Cincinnati player and only the 11th in
National League history to slug two
homers in one inning.
Not bad for a hitter stuck in an ~
for-15 slump.
"I thought I might never get a hit
again,"·Knight said. "I'm basicaUy
a contact hitter and was starting to
get desperate over my long hitless
streak.
In other NL action, the Montreal
Expos defeated the Houston Astros
3-2, the Atlanta Braves downed the
Philadelphia Phillies 7-3, the San
Francisco Giants whippe'd the Pittsburgh Pirates 5-ll, the San Diego
Padres edged the St. Louis Cardinals 3-2 and the Los Angeles
Dodgers stopped the Chicago Cubs 42.
The Reds made a Iaugher of their
game with eight runs in the fifth inning, sending 11 batters to the plate.
Knight led off with a homer and ended the scoring with his grand slam.
Ken Griffey also hit a three-run
homer during the burst.
Knight blasted his first homer off
Mark Hornback, and later his slam
off Ed Glynn.
Winner Frank Pastore. 4-1 , pitII

ched only five innings for the Reds,
leaving the game with a stiff
shoulder. Ray Burris, 2-3, started for
the Mets, but wildness caused his
departure in the third inning.
Expoo 3, Astros 2
David Palmer and Woodie
Fryman teamed up on five-hitter
and Andre Dawson and Larry
Parrish doubled home runs as Montreal defeated Houston.
Palmer, 2-ll, gave up all five of
Houston's hits before needing relief
help in the eighth from Fryman, who
recorded his fourth save.
While Palmer was baffling the
Astros, Houston starter Nolan Ryan
was having his problems, losing for
the third time in four decisions.
Braves 7, Phillles 3
Bob Homer, batting .051 at game
time, snapped out of an ~for-21
slump and drove in his first run of
the season with a single as Atlanta
downed Philadelphia.
Homer's RBI single sparked a
two-run rally in the second inning off
Randy Lerch, 11-5, and gave the
Braves 8 4-1 lead. They later wraJ)ped it up with a three-run eighth, one
on Dale Murphy's homer.
Glaots 5, Plnlles 0
Vida Blue pitched a four-hitter for
his first shutout since 1978, and Jack
Clark hit a home run and knocked in
two nms to lead San Francisco over
Pittsburgh.
Pittsburgh's Bert Blyleven, o-3,
made a strong showing in his first
pitching appearance in two weeks.
The right-hander, who quit the team

Lynn hits for cycle;
Red Sox bomb Twins
By Associated Press
When is a triple better than a
homer ? When it follows a
homer ...and a double ... and a single.
Fred Lynn's drive off the waU in
center field in the eighth inning went
for a triple as he hit for the cycle for
the first time in his career to lead the
Boston Red Sox to a l(t{i victory over
the Minneso.ta Twins Tuesday night.
''I'd rather have the trjple because
I've never hit for the cycle," Lynn
said. "I only had one triple last year.
So I've gotten my quota for this
year. I made good use of it."
Lynn doubled in the first inning
when the Red Sox scored once, hit a
two-run homer off loser John
Verhoeven to give Boston a 6-S lead
in th fourth and singled in a run in
the sixth before his run-5\!oring
triple in the eighth completed the
cycle.
Last year's batting champion had
a slow start at the plate, but he now
has three homers in the last three
games, and 13 hits and 10 RBI in his
last five outings.
In other American League games,
Baltimore beat Texas 4-2, Detroit
edged Oakland 4-3, Kansas City stopped New York 4-1 and Chicago nipped Milwaukee 6-S in 10 innings.
Seattle at Toronto and California at
Cleveland were rained out.
Minnesota shelled Minnesota starter Bruce Hurst for four runs in the
second inning on doubles · by Ron
Jackson, Dave Edwards and Pete
Mackanin, a triple by John Castino
and a single by Hosken Powell.
But Steve Renko won his second
game in as many decisions with 52-3
innings of relief in which he gav~ up
no earned runs.
Carl Yastrzemski had a two-run
homer to help the Red Sox.
KoyaiA, Yankees 1
Renie Martin bad started a game
on Saturday, but scheduled Kansas
City starlet Paul Splittorff injured
his back during wannups and
Manager Jim Frey caUed on the
slender right-hander to pitch with
two days' rest. He responded with
52-3 innings of hitless ball and went
on to post the victory as the Royals
scored aU their runs in the third inning, two of them on a homer by

Willie Aikens.
Martin was relieved in the seventh
inning after aUowing only one hit, a
sixtlrinning single by Ruppert
Jones. .Jt was his longest major
league outing to date.

on April 30 but rejoined the club last
week, allowed six hits in eight innings.
Blue, 4-2, struck out nine, walked
only one and did not aUow 8 runner
past first base until the ninth.
Padres 3, Cardinals 2
Gene Richards' RBI single with
two out in the ninth capped a two-run
rally, leading San Diego over St.
Louis.
. .
Trailing 2-1 g0ing into the ninth,
Von Joshua doubled and took third
on a groundout. Jerry Turner, hitting for Rollie Fingers, 3-3, singled
to score Joshua with the tying run.
Jerry Turner took second on a

fewer teams, there would be no compensation to the team Jooing the free
agent.
·
For a player selected by four to
seven clubs, the coJ!1pensation
would be a choice in the draft of
amateur players, as is the case now.

tract language.
A "ranking player" would be
defined as one who is selected by
more than seven clubs in a limited
number of rounds, to vary acording
- A 70. percent increase - to $14.4 to the number of players in the free
miUion from $8.3 million - in the agent pool each year, and one who
clubs' annual contributions to the
ranks among a certain upper portion
player pension and insurance plan.
of the leaders in his league, with pit-Increases in player aUowances chers, relief pitchers, catchers and
for regular season and spring / infielde~utfielders in separate
training expenses.
categories.
--several improvements in conFor a player selected by three or

CINCINNATI (AP) - Negotiators
for major league basebaU team
owners have offered a new proposal
covering a number of key issues in
contract talks with the Major
League Players Association.
A • management spokesman
acknowledged that the proposal,

passed bali by catcher Ted Sinunons
and reliever Jim Kaat, ~1 . intentionally walked Dave Winfield to
set the stage for Richards' winning
hit.
Dodgen 4, Cubs Z
Reggie Smith slugged a solo
homer and singled home another nm
to lead Los Angeles over Chicago.
Bob Welch, 2-1, earned the victory,
scattering nine hits, including Dave
Kingman's tw()onm homer ln the f~
st inning, his seventh.
Smith homered in the l;lottotn of
the first and Los Angeles went in
front to stay with two runs ln the
third.

which was presented Tuesday, deals ·
wtth the most serious issues in the
talks- compensation for teams who
lose players to the free agent draft,
and the percentage of television
revenues to be paid to the players
pension fund.
In a story in today's editions, The

Cincinnati Enquirer reported what
were said to be highlights of the
management proposal.
They included:
-Substantial revision of the
proposal covering selection rights
for clubs losing "ranking players" in
the free-agency re-entry draft.

STAMP ACT PASSED
In 1765, the British Hpuse of Lords
passed the Stamp Act to raise
revenue in the Ame.rican colonies.

,_~~~~~--~ ·

YOUR FRIENDLY

OPEN
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Wltlte S.lpiMir, 7tlt. A•• ·

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GOOD SUNDAY MAY 11 THIU SATUIDAY MAY 17 . 19101N

POMEROY AND GALLI POLIS STORES.

WI IISIIVI THI liGHT TO tiMIT .OUANTITI($. NONE SOlD

FOUR WINDS

TO DEAliiS .

,I

CHAPMAN SHOES

1

"Next to Elberfelds in Pomeroy, Oh."

.I'

U.S. GOVT GRADED CHC)ICE,
BEEF CHUCK

!

Center Blade Cut
Chuck Roast

.'

White Sox 6, Brewers 5
There were seven homers in the
game, but it was Thad Bosley's pincl&gt;-hit single in the loth inning that
sent home the winning run.
Wayne Nordhagen, who earlier
had hit one of three homers by
Chicago, singled with two outs in the
loth off losing pitcher Reggie
Cleveland. Pinch-runner Bob
Molinaro _went to second on a single
by Harold Baines and Bosley
followed with his game-winning hit.
Solo homers by Nordhagen, Junior
Moore and Jim Morrison helped the
White Sox to a iH lead going into the
ninth, but Robin Yount tied the game
with a solo homer.
Cecil Cooper, Sixto Lezcano and
Gonnan Thomas homered· for the
Brewers.

''

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$

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29

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

F;fi~g

Chicken Thighs ..' lb.
SERVE 'N' SAVE
1-lb.
•
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U.S. GOVTGRADEDCHOICE.
IEEFCHUCK

'

Boneless
Pot Roast....... lb.

Ground Beef.......... lb.
KAHN'S

Wieners ..... .

Tigers 4, A's 3
Richie Hebner's two-run triple in
the first inning sent Detroit on the
way to victory over Oakland, which
still leads the AL West.
Kirk Gibson homered for the
Tigers, and Dave Revering also had
a solo shot for the A's, who got a six·
th complete game from Matt
Keough although he lost his third
game in seven decisions.
Jack Morris, 4-4, was the winner
with relief help from Pat Underwood
and Aurelio Lopez.
''

BostonButt
Pork Roast .... .. lb .

age

COUNTRY CLUB

-lb. $499
suctD
Canned Ham ... 3 Con
C SLICED INTO CHOPS FRESH
$1
09
Quarter Pork Lo1n. lb .

...

filE

89

0

Vac Pak
Kroger Coffee

$139
$139

S$
-lb.
Can

Kroger 0.5%
Lowfat Milk

Gti.$

99,.

s179

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK .
ANYSIZEPKG .

Orioles 4, Rlmgers 2
Rookie catcher Dan Graham,
called up from Rochester only last
week, had three hits, including a
homer and the game-winning single,
to lead struggling Balllmore over
Texas.
Graham lined a two-out single to
center field in the bottom of the
eighth off Texas reliever Jim Kern
to score Pat Kelly from third,
breaking a 2-2 tie. Eddie Murray
then scored all the way from first
base when center fielder ·Mickey
Rivers misplayed the baU for an
error.

age

FRESH BONE lN

Stokely
Applesauce

49

3 1

3 s2

Stokely
29-oz.
Peaches
Cans
STOKELY FRUIT
2
$1
•
17-oz.
Cocktail ....... Cans

17 _0 ,
cans.

3
$1
Golden Corn 'l~~!4
$1
Kroger Biscuits }~~~
STOKELY WHOLE KERNEL OR
CREAM STYLE

Plastic
Ctn.

3
$1
Green Beans. 't~~!·
STOKELY SHELLIE BEANS ,
FRENCH STYLE OR CUT

IN THE DAIRY DEI'T.
TEX.USTYLE

"'
KROGER ROUND TOP

ggc :,~:~. . .32~:~~J19

COUNTRY CLUJ

. Ice
'/,-Gal.
Cream ........ &lt;:tn.
KROGER SANDWICH OR 2
$119
FIIOZEN I
·
I O·lnch $1 09
Wiener Buns . ~t-;::
Jeno .s PIZZI .... .. Plua
liGHT GUARD BRONZE
I'IIISH •
c
··;: Asparagus ............... lb.
Deodorant..... . 5-oz.
Can
~

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KROGER

Grade A
Large Eggs

o

1...

o.•.

99

49c

lNTHEHUSK

Fresh Yellow
Sweet Corn

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

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AVAILAilEONLYINSTOIISwmtDIUDIPTS.
HOT FOODS AVAit.Aillll-

Tl.,.,...

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11 pc. SHRIMP.••. sp9
WITH FRIES·••.•••••.s1 69

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Strawberries

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PINT •.• 6t'

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992-2556
570W. Main
Pomeroy, 0 .

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WIICI1 Of CHICIIIH, IIADY TO
lAT. wmteONI

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s239

Fried Chicken .. ............ ...
PIISN.
Glazed Donuh .. .. ..
,...

$399

10 $119
·age
Kaiser Rolls .........'...... :-.~:

OIUHIWliD

ltOllSAVAilAILIONlV ATYOUIStLVIIIIIDOI
AND POMIROY ICIOGIIITOIII

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All Meat
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$ 59

�•

•
5--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o. , Wednesday, May 14• 1980

f-1be Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 14. 1980

Major Leape Buet.U

TODAY'S

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE

W. L.Pet GB

-=....

BAITING

1; n .m
16 12 .;n
13 13 .500 '

Toroot&lt;&gt;
New Yort ·

Milwaukee

Cleve.land

WEST

Oakland
CtUcago

14
13
13
11

15 .433 2.,
HI .448 3¥.
17 .w •
1$ .123 •

16 13 .~2 1~
15 16 .484 314
Minnesota
13 18 .419 511
California
1.1 17 .393 8
Tuetday's Games
Bootoo 10, Minne&gt;ota 5
Baltimore 4, Texas 2
Seattle at Toronto, pdd ., raUl
Detroit t., Oakland 3
Kansas City 4, New York 1
Chicaso S, Milwaukee 5, tO Innings
WedDcadlly's Gamr:t
MiMesota (Koosman 2-3) at Bost.Gn
(StanleyW1, n
Texas (Perry 2·1) at Baltimore
( M~regor 1-2),

n

Seattle (Abbott 2-2) st Toronto (Mirabella
3-11. n
California (Frost 3-31 at Cleveland (Waits
W) , n

Oakland (lAngford ~I ) at Detroit (Wilcox
2-2) , n

Kansas City {Leonard 2-3 ), at New York

IG uidry~l.n

Chicago (Proly G-Il at Milwaukee (Haas 33),n

bat.s ): Reitz, St. Louis,

.404 ; Hendrick, St, Louis, .365; Templeton.
St. Louis, .~7 ; Buckner. Chi cago, .343; R.
South, Los Anl!leles . .343.
RUNS : Templeton, St. Louis, Z3 ; Sclunidt
Philadelphia , 2! ; Lopes, Los Angeles, 22 ;'
Griffey, Cinclnnati, 21 ; Law , Loe Angeles,

21 .
RBI : Garvey, Los Angeles, 26 ; Schmidt,
Philadelphia, !4; Hendrick, St. I..ouU, 24 ;
Rei b. St. Louis, Z3 ; Knight, Cincinnati, 23; J .
Cruz. HoWl ton, 23 ; R. Smith, l..o!l AnMgles.
37 : Buckner, Chicago, 36 ; Cabell, HotLSton ,

18 12 .600
17 13 .!"J67 1
16 13 .$52 11,;:

KllllS&amp;! City
TeUJ
Seattle

{~at

36.
•
DOUBLES : Stearns,

New

York,

12;

Buckner, Chicago, t; Rose, Philadelphia, 8;
Hendrick, St. Louis,8; Knight, Cincinnati, 8.
TRIPLES : LeFlore, Montreal. 3; Moreno ,

Pittsburgh, 3; Templetm, St. Louis , 3; eon.
&lt;.'t'pcion, Cinci.n.Niti, 3; Griffey. Cincinnati,
3; Law, Los Angelelij, 3.
HOME RUNS : Schntidt, Philadelphia, 9;
~n. Chicago, 7; Martin, Chicago, 7;

Luz.wki, Philadelphia, 7; Parker, Pittsburgh, 6; Baker, Los Angeles , 6: R. Smith,
Los Angeles, 6.
STOLEN BASES : Moreno , Pittsburgh, 16 ;
l..Bi\lo', lAl8 Angeles, 15 ; LeFlore, Montreal,
12; Cedeno, Houston,l2 ; R. Scott, Montreal,
10.
PITCKJNG (4 Decisions) : Tekul\·e, Pitbburgb, ~. 1.000, 2.06; Bibby, Pittsburgh, 4-{),
1.000, 3.59; Pastore, Cincinnati, ~1 . . 800,
2.74 ; K. Forsch, Houston, 4-1, .81Xl, 2.91 ;
Richard, Houston, 4-1, .800, 2.49; Hume, Cin·
dnnati, J-1, .7:ill, l.lll; Carlton, Philadelphia,
5-2, .71 4, 2.09; Vuckovich, St. Louis, S--2, .714,
2.~.

Tbund.ly'1 Gamet

STRIKEOUTS: Richard, Hou.ston, 56;
Carlton, Phih!delphia, 48; R yan, Houston,
40 ; Vuckovich, St. Louis, 35: Blyleven, Pitts-

Chicago at Milwaukee
Seattle at Toronto, n
Boaton at Cleveland, n
Only games scheduled

burgh, 34.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BA M1NG (65 at bal.$): Molinaro, Chicago,
.364 ; Wathan, Kansas City , .363; Ogli,..ie

Pills burgh

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB
9 .&amp;5&gt;4

17

Chicago Philadelphia
St. UJuil!
Montreal
NewYortc:

1! 11 .&lt;Ill
12 13 .1811
13 15 .i&amp;.f
12 15 .44-4

Ill
"'
5

5'f.t

9 18 .ll3 81ooa
WEST

Cincinnati

~

Ho1&amp;5too

18 11 .621 I

l...ofl Angelea

II

.&amp;\5

18 12 .1100 1""

15 15 . ~ 41,;:

San Diego
Atlanta

11 16 .I(J7 7

San FranclsC&lt;I
11 20 .J5.5 9
Tllesdliy'sGamea
Atlanta 7, Philadelphia J
ctncinnaUI5, NewYork4
Montreal3, Houston 2
San Diego 3, St. Louis 2
l.mAngeles4, Chicago2
San Francisco 5, Pitlllbllrgh 0
W~y' •Ga.mH

New York (Swan 2-2 ) at Cincinnati
I Uebrandl:J-21
Ptttsbura:h (Bibby 4-0) at San Francisco

ll&lt;n&lt;P.I"!r H I

Philadelphia (Carlton 5-21 at Athmla ( McWilliams 2-2), n
Mootreal (Sanderson 2-2J at Houston {For-

sch~J),n

St. Louis (Thomas 0..0) at San Diego
(LucasU), n
Chicago (McGlothen HI) at Los Angel~!!~
(SutcllffeG-2), n
Tbtll'llday'l GamH
Pittsburgh at San Francisco

Milwallkee, .358; Revering, Oakland,

.»4;

B. Bell, Texas, . ~ .
RUNS : Will s, Texas, 25; Yount
Milwaukee, 23 ; Bumbry, Baltimore, Z2{
Trammell, Detroit, 22; McRae, Kansa:s City,
Zl.
RBI : Vel~r. . Toronto, t1; t . Johnson,
Chicago, 23 ; B. Bell, Teras, ZJ; Oliver,
Texas, 23; Parrish, Detroit, 22.
HITS: B. Bell, TeiaS, 41; Landreawc:, Mi~
nesota, 40; Rivers, Texas, 39; Perez, Bo.ston

37; $Tied Wlth36.
•
DOUBLES : D. Garcia, ToniJto, 12;
Morrison , Chicago,ll; McRae, Kansas City,
I ; B. Bell, Texas, 11 ; Lynn, Boston, 9; Yount,
Milwaukee, 9; Oliver, Texas, 9.
TRlPLES: Brett, Kansas City, 4; Castino,
Minnesota , 4; Grtffin, Toronto, 3; Nor·
dhagen, Cllicago, 3; Wilson, Kai\.'Ul.'i City, 3;
Powell, Minnesota , 3.

HOME RUNS : Velez, Toronto, 8; Re.
Jackson, New York, 7; Rudi, caiifomia 7;
Fisk, Boston, 6; Lezcano, Milwaukee,' 6;
Mayberry , Toronto, 6; Smalley, MiMeaota,
6; L. Robert., Seattle. 6.
STOLEN BASES' Hender.oon, Oakland,
12; Wills, Texas, II ; Wihon, Kall.!lll.!l City, 10;
Bwnbry, Baltimore, 9; Carew, California, 8.
PITCHING {4 Decisions) : John, New
York,~. !.(XX), ~ . 77; Honeycutt, SeatUe, tHl,
1.000, 2.45 ; Noms, Oakland, 5-&lt;1, 1.000, O.:M;
Redfem, Minne3ota, ~1 , .833, 1.95; Stieb,
Toronto, ~1 • .800, 2.23; Caldwell, Milwaukee,
32-1, .700, 3.12; ~abella, Toronto, J-1, . 7~.
1.!13; Dotson, Chicago, J-1, .750, 4.45.
STRIKEOUTS: NOITis, Oakland, 41; Redfern, Minnesota, 36; Guidry, New York, 35;
Keough, Oakland, 33; Matlack, Tens, 32.

st. Louis at San Diego, n
Only games scheduled

Twelday'•

SporU TranaacUou
BASEBAlL
Amertcaa Lague

NBA Playoffs
Cbamploaktp FluJJ
Best of Seven
SaDday, Mil)' 4
Lo8 Angeles 109, Philadelphia 102
w-...y,May7
Plllladeljlbla 10'7, Loll Aqeleslllt
Satuday11 Game
Los Angeles 111, Philadelphia 101
-y'oGame
Philadelphia 105. l.os Anaeles 102, ~ries
lledl-2
Wedaetday'• Game
Plllladelphla at Los An&amp;eles, n
Friday'• Game
Los Angeles st Philadelphia, n
SUDday, Miy 18
Philadelphia at Los Angeles, lf necessary

BALTIMORE ORIOLES -

Sold Dave
Skaggs, catcher, to the California Angels tor
W1 wu1Lscltl!ted amoWlt of cB.!'Ih.

BASKETBAlL

Womea's BMketbaU Iague
NEW JERSEY GEMS - NAMED Kathy
Mosolino head coach.
FOOTIIAU.

Nallall Foolboll ~

SEATTLE SEAIIAWKS - Si&lt;ned Andn.

Hines, offensive tackle; Terry fiion, defensive end, and Jsck Cosgrove, center.
Caaldlaa Foolbl.lllague

TORONTO ARGONAUTS - 'l'raded Dan
Huclack, !lanker, to British Colwnbia for the
Liotll! ' second-round draft pick in 1981.
HOCKEY
N1dooal Hdey Lugve
HARTFORD WHALERS - Signed Thorn·
my Abral'lanuBon, defeMeman, to a
multiyear CGnlract.

N1tiooal Hockty Lupe

COLU:GE

PLA'ITSBURGH STATE - I..oub Fiigon,
Wd hockey coach, resigned June 15.

Pllyolf1
FIDalJ
BeltofSnen

'IVelday' s Game
New York lalandcrs f. , Philadelphia 3, ot,
NewYort leads series 1.(1
1'1u,.nday'• Gam~
New York L!Jandenat Philadelphia, n
Satanlay. May 11
Philadelphia at New York Islanders, n

SAN FRANClSCO - Named Bill FU5Co,
athletic director, and Pet.e BaiT)', head
b&amp;sketball coach.
SOUTHERN OREGON STATE COLLEGE
- Named State HwnaiUl head basketbaU
coach.

TEXAS-EL PASO - l..Birry McFarlin,
head baseball coach, resigned effective June
1.

Games 5, 6, and 7, if necessary, to be annoonced

TEXAS-SAN ANTONIO- Named Don Eddy head basketbaU COIICh.

Hubbard romps
The Hubbard's Greenhouse Little
Lea'gue team of Syracuse started its
season right Monday night by romping to a :l.5.j) win over host Tuppers
Plains Bears.
Winning pitcher Todd Adams
teamed with Mike Chancey to hurl a
no-hitter, fanning 11 batters and
walking six. Snyder took the loss for
the hosts.

Chancey led the winners at the
plate as he banged out three singles
and a triple.
Doug Owens and Scott Grueser
each had a triple and single, and
Jinuny Wolfe socked a triple and
Adams had two singles. Mike Kloes
had a double, and John Riffle, Bo
Willis, and Todd Hubbard each had a
single.

Interlake Linksters post win over Foote
'

For the third consecutive year, the
Foote Mineral GoH Team lost to the
Interlake linksters of Beverly at a
match held at the Jaymar GoH Course near Pomeroy Saturday. .
Although the Foote team failed once again to retrieve the traveling
trophy from Interlake's trophy
room, the Foote organization was
complimented for its perfonnance.
Prior to tee-off a breakfast was ser-

Owners p~esent new package

·ght, Reds rout Mets, 15-4

Sports scoreboard

ved at the .club house while a luncheon foUowed the competition.
During the awards presentation
Interlakes Plant Manager Bill
Meredith accepted the winning
trophy thanking Foote Mineral
Plant Manager Bill Beard and Asst.
Plant Manager Cliff Northrup for
their hospitality and fine sportsmanship. Foote Mineral has
requested a rematch in the fall.

By Associated Press
Ray Knight didn't want much.
"I was just hoping to get a base
hit," the Cincinnati tliird baseman
said.
But he more than doubled his expectations Tuesday night with two
home runs in the same inning, one a
grand slam, to lead the Reds to a IS-4
rout of the New York Mets.
Knight thus became the first Cincinnati player and only the 11th in
National League history to slug two
homers in one inning.
Not bad for a hitter stuck in an ~
for-15 slump.
"I thought I might never get a hit
again,"·Knight said. "I'm basicaUy
a contact hitter and was starting to
get desperate over my long hitless
streak.
In other NL action, the Montreal
Expos defeated the Houston Astros
3-2, the Atlanta Braves downed the
Philadelphia Phillies 7-3, the San
Francisco Giants whippe'd the Pittsburgh Pirates 5-ll, the San Diego
Padres edged the St. Louis Cardinals 3-2 and the Los Angeles
Dodgers stopped the Chicago Cubs 42.
The Reds made a Iaugher of their
game with eight runs in the fifth inning, sending 11 batters to the plate.
Knight led off with a homer and ended the scoring with his grand slam.
Ken Griffey also hit a three-run
homer during the burst.
Knight blasted his first homer off
Mark Hornback, and later his slam
off Ed Glynn.
Winner Frank Pastore. 4-1 , pitII

ched only five innings for the Reds,
leaving the game with a stiff
shoulder. Ray Burris, 2-3, started for
the Mets, but wildness caused his
departure in the third inning.
Expoo 3, Astros 2
David Palmer and Woodie
Fryman teamed up on five-hitter
and Andre Dawson and Larry
Parrish doubled home runs as Montreal defeated Houston.
Palmer, 2-ll, gave up all five of
Houston's hits before needing relief
help in the eighth from Fryman, who
recorded his fourth save.
While Palmer was baffling the
Astros, Houston starter Nolan Ryan
was having his problems, losing for
the third time in four decisions.
Braves 7, Phillles 3
Bob Homer, batting .051 at game
time, snapped out of an ~for-21
slump and drove in his first run of
the season with a single as Atlanta
downed Philadelphia.
Homer's RBI single sparked a
two-run rally in the second inning off
Randy Lerch, 11-5, and gave the
Braves 8 4-1 lead. They later wraJ)ped it up with a three-run eighth, one
on Dale Murphy's homer.
Glaots 5, Plnlles 0
Vida Blue pitched a four-hitter for
his first shutout since 1978, and Jack
Clark hit a home run and knocked in
two nms to lead San Francisco over
Pittsburgh.
Pittsburgh's Bert Blyleven, o-3,
made a strong showing in his first
pitching appearance in two weeks.
The right-hander, who quit the team

Lynn hits for cycle;
Red Sox bomb Twins
By Associated Press
When is a triple better than a
homer ? When it follows a
homer ...and a double ... and a single.
Fred Lynn's drive off the waU in
center field in the eighth inning went
for a triple as he hit for the cycle for
the first time in his career to lead the
Boston Red Sox to a l(t{i victory over
the Minneso.ta Twins Tuesday night.
''I'd rather have the trjple because
I've never hit for the cycle," Lynn
said. "I only had one triple last year.
So I've gotten my quota for this
year. I made good use of it."
Lynn doubled in the first inning
when the Red Sox scored once, hit a
two-run homer off loser John
Verhoeven to give Boston a 6-S lead
in th fourth and singled in a run in
the sixth before his run-5\!oring
triple in the eighth completed the
cycle.
Last year's batting champion had
a slow start at the plate, but he now
has three homers in the last three
games, and 13 hits and 10 RBI in his
last five outings.
In other American League games,
Baltimore beat Texas 4-2, Detroit
edged Oakland 4-3, Kansas City stopped New York 4-1 and Chicago nipped Milwaukee 6-S in 10 innings.
Seattle at Toronto and California at
Cleveland were rained out.
Minnesota shelled Minnesota starter Bruce Hurst for four runs in the
second inning on doubles · by Ron
Jackson, Dave Edwards and Pete
Mackanin, a triple by John Castino
and a single by Hosken Powell.
But Steve Renko won his second
game in as many decisions with 52-3
innings of relief in which he gav~ up
no earned runs.
Carl Yastrzemski had a two-run
homer to help the Red Sox.
KoyaiA, Yankees 1
Renie Martin bad started a game
on Saturday, but scheduled Kansas
City starlet Paul Splittorff injured
his back during wannups and
Manager Jim Frey caUed on the
slender right-hander to pitch with
two days' rest. He responded with
52-3 innings of hitless ball and went
on to post the victory as the Royals
scored aU their runs in the third inning, two of them on a homer by

Willie Aikens.
Martin was relieved in the seventh
inning after aUowing only one hit, a
sixtlrinning single by Ruppert
Jones. .Jt was his longest major
league outing to date.

on April 30 but rejoined the club last
week, allowed six hits in eight innings.
Blue, 4-2, struck out nine, walked
only one and did not aUow 8 runner
past first base until the ninth.
Padres 3, Cardinals 2
Gene Richards' RBI single with
two out in the ninth capped a two-run
rally, leading San Diego over St.
Louis.
. .
Trailing 2-1 g0ing into the ninth,
Von Joshua doubled and took third
on a groundout. Jerry Turner, hitting for Rollie Fingers, 3-3, singled
to score Joshua with the tying run.
Jerry Turner took second on a

fewer teams, there would be no compensation to the team Jooing the free
agent.
·
For a player selected by four to
seven clubs, the coJ!1pensation
would be a choice in the draft of
amateur players, as is the case now.

tract language.
A "ranking player" would be
defined as one who is selected by
more than seven clubs in a limited
number of rounds, to vary acording
- A 70. percent increase - to $14.4 to the number of players in the free
miUion from $8.3 million - in the agent pool each year, and one who
clubs' annual contributions to the
ranks among a certain upper portion
player pension and insurance plan.
of the leaders in his league, with pit-Increases in player aUowances chers, relief pitchers, catchers and
for regular season and spring / infielde~utfielders in separate
training expenses.
categories.
--several improvements in conFor a player selected by three or

CINCINNATI (AP) - Negotiators
for major league basebaU team
owners have offered a new proposal
covering a number of key issues in
contract talks with the Major
League Players Association.
A • management spokesman
acknowledged that the proposal,

passed bali by catcher Ted Sinunons
and reliever Jim Kaat, ~1 . intentionally walked Dave Winfield to
set the stage for Richards' winning
hit.
Dodgen 4, Cubs Z
Reggie Smith slugged a solo
homer and singled home another nm
to lead Los Angeles over Chicago.
Bob Welch, 2-1, earned the victory,
scattering nine hits, including Dave
Kingman's tw()onm homer ln the f~
st inning, his seventh.
Smith homered in the l;lottotn of
the first and Los Angeles went in
front to stay with two runs ln the
third.

which was presented Tuesday, deals ·
wtth the most serious issues in the
talks- compensation for teams who
lose players to the free agent draft,
and the percentage of television
revenues to be paid to the players
pension fund.
In a story in today's editions, The

Cincinnati Enquirer reported what
were said to be highlights of the
management proposal.
They included:
-Substantial revision of the
proposal covering selection rights
for clubs losing "ranking players" in
the free-agency re-entry draft.

STAMP ACT PASSED
In 1765, the British Hpuse of Lords
passed the Stamp Act to raise
revenue in the Ame.rican colonies.

,_~~~~~--~ ·

YOUR FRIENDLY

OPEN
S 24 HRS.
R .~.J~lY..:

Outdorables
m s tep with fun and fashion
\....,_ _ Fashion-ri tr: ht casual foOt \\o·ca r desi@ned
In llar11el Green in s ublle n e utra ls

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ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

or hrilliant hu t•s waiting for you
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Frozen
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~ you buy 11 Krogao il guertntted for vour totll
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OOI'Y1JMI'Ib'e bttnd or refund your purchlll price.
COPYIIGHT ltiO -T HE IUtOGl• CO . lllMS AND NICIS

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Wltlte S.lpiMir, 7tlt. A•• ·

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

GOOD SUNDAY MAY 11 THIU SATUIDAY MAY 17 . 19101N

POMEROY AND GALLI POLIS STORES.

WI IISIIVI THI liGHT TO tiMIT .OUANTITI($. NONE SOlD

FOUR WINDS

TO DEAliiS .

,I

CHAPMAN SHOES

1

"Next to Elberfelds in Pomeroy, Oh."

.I'

U.S. GOVT GRADED CHC)ICE,
BEEF CHUCK

!

Center Blade Cut
Chuck Roast

.'

White Sox 6, Brewers 5
There were seven homers in the
game, but it was Thad Bosley's pincl&gt;-hit single in the loth inning that
sent home the winning run.
Wayne Nordhagen, who earlier
had hit one of three homers by
Chicago, singled with two outs in the
loth off losing pitcher Reggie
Cleveland. Pinch-runner Bob
Molinaro _went to second on a single
by Harold Baines and Bosley
followed with his game-winning hit.
Solo homers by Nordhagen, Junior
Moore and Jim Morrison helped the
White Sox to a iH lead going into the
ninth, but Robin Yount tied the game
with a solo homer.
Cecil Cooper, Sixto Lezcano and
Gonnan Thomas homered· for the
Brewers.

''

'

$

.

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29

..

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

F;fi~g

Chicken Thighs ..' lb.
SERVE 'N' SAVE
1-lb.
•
W1eners
.......... ..... Pkg.

.

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Pkg.

...

I

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U.S. GOVTGRADEDCHOICE.
IEEFCHUCK

'

Boneless
Pot Roast....... lb.

Ground Beef.......... lb.
KAHN'S

Wieners ..... .

Tigers 4, A's 3
Richie Hebner's two-run triple in
the first inning sent Detroit on the
way to victory over Oakland, which
still leads the AL West.
Kirk Gibson homered for the
Tigers, and Dave Revering also had
a solo shot for the A's, who got a six·
th complete game from Matt
Keough although he lost his third
game in seven decisions.
Jack Morris, 4-4, was the winner
with relief help from Pat Underwood
and Aurelio Lopez.
''

BostonButt
Pork Roast .... .. lb .

age

COUNTRY CLUB

-lb. $499
suctD
Canned Ham ... 3 Con
C SLICED INTO CHOPS FRESH
$1
09
Quarter Pork Lo1n. lb .

...

filE

89

0

Vac Pak
Kroger Coffee

$139
$139

S$
-lb.
Can

Kroger 0.5%
Lowfat Milk

Gti.$

99,.

s179

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK .
ANYSIZEPKG .

Orioles 4, Rlmgers 2
Rookie catcher Dan Graham,
called up from Rochester only last
week, had three hits, including a
homer and the game-winning single,
to lead struggling Balllmore over
Texas.
Graham lined a two-out single to
center field in the bottom of the
eighth off Texas reliever Jim Kern
to score Pat Kelly from third,
breaking a 2-2 tie. Eddie Murray
then scored all the way from first
base when center fielder ·Mickey
Rivers misplayed the baU for an
error.

age

FRESH BONE lN

Stokely
Applesauce

49

3 1

3 s2

Stokely
29-oz.
Peaches
Cans
STOKELY FRUIT
2
$1
•
17-oz.
Cocktail ....... Cans

17 _0 ,
cans.

3
$1
Golden Corn 'l~~!4
$1
Kroger Biscuits }~~~
STOKELY WHOLE KERNEL OR
CREAM STYLE

Plastic
Ctn.

3
$1
Green Beans. 't~~!·
STOKELY SHELLIE BEANS ,
FRENCH STYLE OR CUT

IN THE DAIRY DEI'T.
TEX.USTYLE

"'
KROGER ROUND TOP

ggc :,~:~. . .32~:~~J19

COUNTRY CLUJ

. Ice
'/,-Gal.
Cream ........ &lt;:tn.
KROGER SANDWICH OR 2
$119
FIIOZEN I
·
I O·lnch $1 09
Wiener Buns . ~t-;::
Jeno .s PIZZI .... .. Plua
liGHT GUARD BRONZE
I'IIISH •
c
··;: Asparagus ............... lb.
Deodorant..... . 5-oz.
Can
~

......

KROGER

Grade A
Large Eggs

o

1...

o.•.

99

49c

lNTHEHUSK

Fresh Yellow
Sweet Corn

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

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AVAILAilEONLYINSTOIISwmtDIUDIPTS.
HOT FOODS AVAit.Aillll-

Tl.,.,...

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11 pc. SHRIMP.••. sp9
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PINT •.• 6t'

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WIICI1 Of CHICIIIH, IIADY TO
lAT. wmteONI

lb.

s239

Fried Chicken .. ............ ...
PIISN.
Glazed Donuh .. .. ..
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$399

10 $119
·age
Kaiser Rolls .........'...... :-.~:

OIUHIWliD

ltOllSAVAilAILIONlV ATYOUIStLVIIIIIDOI
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All Meat
Bologna

$ 59

�~~~~~::e:r:s~Pmir~· :Wedn~esda~y·~~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--------------~~~------------~

!&gt;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Wednesday, May 14, 1980

I

Church
hosts
banquet

I

I

The Health Review

The Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene hosted a rnother-&lt;laug!)ter
"11banquet at Shoney's Restaurant in
· Point Pleasant on May 8.
Mothers and daughters from the
Racine Church of the Nazarene and
Middleport Church of the Natarene
were invited to the dinner. There
were readings by Nancy Aeiker and
Elizabeth Coffman and a prayer by
Mamie Stephenson. Gifts were
presented by Mrs. Stephenson to the
youngest mother, Shari Colmer, tbe
oldest mother, Mrs. Willa Grimm,
and the mother who had been
married the longest, Freda Henderson.
Others attending were Mary
Walburn, Pam Walburn, Carla
Aelker, lima Brickl~s, Denise
"""JUes, vtrglnia Snuth, Brenda
Johnson, Barbara Colmer, Amber
Colmer, Paulette Farley, Nancy
Whittekind, Tammy Johnson,
Dorothy Bentz, Jane Taylor, Betty
Taylor, Judy White, Angie and Amy
White, Marjorie Taylor, Eileen
Searls, Myrna Custer, Nellie Cox,
Judith Broome, Lisa Ashley, and
Diana Smith.

..

·"

-

POPPY DAY - The Racine American Legion
Auxiliary, Post 602, will observe Poppy Day in Racine
on May 24. Racine Mayor Ch3rles Pyle. recently Signed
a proclamation for the Auxtltary and 1s pictured here
with the Auxiliary's poppy royalty and Mrs. Shirley

------------------1
I

c 1

!-

I
I

Carpenter poppy chairman. They are left to right,
Tabitha Williord, Poppy Princess; Mrs. Carpenter
holding Jenny Carpenter, Little Miss Poppy, and Aiisa
Willford, Junior Miss Poppy.

jazz festival reported

Report heard

Girl Scout Diary
ll 1 &lt; h.,, I,.,, , II d ht lr

A report on hospital equipment
and contributions from families who
have used the equipment was given
at the Thursday night meeting of the
Laurel Cliff Better Health Club held
at the home of Mrs. Polly Eichinger.
Group singing of "Count Your
Blessings" opened the meeting with
Mrs. Eichinger reading scripture
from Proverbs 31 and an article entitled "The Greatest Gift. " She also
had prayer.
Readings included
" The
Gleaners" by Jean Wright, "Our
Mother" by Marge Fetty, "Mother
and Horne" by Donna Gllmore,
"Paze of Our Lives" by Doris Shook,
and "Relieving Fatigue" by Ann
Mash.
A proposed visit to the Ohio
Historical Village was discussed by
Mrs. Wright. Mrs. Eichinger, Mrs.
Gilmore and Mrs. Ruby Frick reported on those ill noting that Mrs. Della
Curtis remains hospitalized. ·
Games were played with prizes
going to the winners. Mrs Mash will
host the June meeting. Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Eichinger and Mrs. Fetty.

SALISBURY BROWNIE
TROOPI220
A camp-out was enjoyed by the
Salisbury Brownies Saturday at
Camp Kiashuta near Chester. At last
- week's meeting in preparation for
' the outing, the girls listened to portions of safety-wise read by their
leader. A first aid kit was prepared
with each Brownie contributing to it,
and Valerie Simpson, a junior scout,
worked on the health aid badge by
giving a demonstration on first aid
for minor Injuries for the Brownies.
Tiffany Coffee and Diana Me•; Clelland served refreshments.
SALISBURY JUNIOR
TROOPllOO
Flowers were potted for Mother's
Day at the Tuesday evening meeting
. of the Junior Troop held at Meigs
High School.
Participation in the Meigs County
Fair was discussed along with entries which can be made. The scouts
. were encouraged to share their accomplislunents, interests and ideals
through displays at the fair .
. The meeting opened with a flag
ceremony and the girl scout promise.
Refreshments were served by Sally Radford, Susan Jones and Valerie
Simpson.

VARIETY SHOW PLANNED
The Riverview Elementary School
and the Long Bottom Community
Association have joined hands for
the presentation of a variety show at .
7:30 p.m. Friday in the Riverview
School Auditorium.
A number of local bands and vocal
groups will be entertaining and a
bake sale will be held in conjunction
with the event. Admission will be $1
for students and 50 cents for
children.

R~GE,BAKESALE

SATURDAY
Racine Chapter 134, Order of
Eastern Star, will hold a spring rum: mage sale and a bake sale Saturday
- on tbe back parking lot of the
· Racine-Home National Bank.
Those having ·r'ummage to con. tribute are asked to take it to the
: Helen Pickens home on Tyree
Boulevard. Baked goods are to be
: taken to the sales lot by 9 a .m. Satur. day.

The success of the jazz hand
festival was reported by Randy
Hunt, director, and he extended aJ)preciation to all who helped and SUJ)ported the effort at the recent Band
Boosters meeting held at Meigs High
School.
Band banquet plans were announced for Thursday at 6:30 p.m.
with awards to be presented at that
time. Officers will be installed. The
hand will participate in tbe bike-hike
on Saturday, and it was noted that
for the Memorial Day parade, the
high school hand will be at Middleport, and the junior high hand in
Pomeroy.
Tag day was set for June 14.
Students will sell tags in Middleport,
Pomeroy, and Rutland.
POSmON CHANGE
REPORTED
Dale Colburn, Route 2, Porneory,
has taken over the position of
secretary-treas ur er of the
Burlingham Cemetery succeeding
Helen Sinclair. Anyone wishing to
pay for upkeep of grave plots should
send the money to Colburn.

~

"OKLAHOMA" TO BE
PRESENTED
The Meigs High School Music
Department will . present Rogers'
and Hanunerstein's ''Oklahoma,''
on May 30 and 31 at 7:30p.m. in the
Larry R. Morrison Auditorium.
Leads for the musical are Lynetta
Whittington, Eric Scites, Linda
Eason, Anna Wiles, Jeff Nash,
Robert Evans, Craig Darst, Danny
Riggs, Fred Young, Jean Horton,
Mark Burson and Jeff Carson.

.

ANSWER : Meningitis is an inflanunation (-itis) of the membranes rmeninges) covering the
brain and spinal cord. This inflanunation is a result of the body's
response to a n invasion of the brain
and spinal cord- collectively called
the central nervous system (CNS) by infectious agents (bacteria,
.
viruses, fungi or protozoans ).
QUESTION : How can meningitis
be recognized?
ANSWER : The signs and SymJ)torns of infectwn, regardless of
cause or location, conunonly include: headache, fever, discomfort,
loss of appetite, general aches and
pains and sometimes nausea and
vomiting. In meningitis, since the infection involves the CNS, particular
signs and syhmptoms related to the
brain and ~pinal cord will also be
seen. For example, stiffness of the
neck may be present as the body attempts to protect the irritated and
inflamed spinal cord. A severe
headache may be present because of
involvement of the membranes of
the brain. In addition, certain
s~ecific signs may be noted
suggesting that a particular nerve or
area of the brain is affected. For
example, there may be double vision
because the nerve to the muscle of
one eye is affected. Also, the person
may become less active and alert,
indicating a depression in the level
of consciousness. He may become
confused and disoriented. He might
experience a seizure or sink into a
deep coma from which he cannot be
aroused. (This is the unconsciousness of which you had
spoken.)
QUESTION : How can meningitis
be diagnosed a nd treated?

daughter , Evelyn Smith of
Pomeroy, spent Mother's Day with
Mr. and Mrs . Marshall Boggs and
family of Washington C. H. Mrs.
Boggs' mother, Mrs. Grover Smith,
is with the Boggs family. She is 87
years old and is in good health.

Judith A. Clark, Ronald Clark, and
William Ault were initiated when
Evangeline Chapter . 172, Order of
the Eastern Star, met recently at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Mrs. Rowena Clark presented her
daughter with a ritual. Sunshine
pages were Celesta Bush and TwiJa
Childs. The pro-tem officers were
Grace French, chaplain; Virginia
Buchanan, EJecta; Gle1U18 Crisp,
as&amp;ociate matron, and lla Darnell,
warder.

Refreshments were served by
Mrs, Euvetta Bechtle and Mrs.
Sarah Kennedy.

OPENED IN 1855
The Niagara Falls suspension
bridge was opened in 1855.

Hubbard's
Greenhot1~-:
Ph. 9,..-5776
Syracuse, OH ,

FOR THE BOTH OF YOU

NEW

BEAUTY SALON

SHIPMENT

The Meigs County Extension
Homemakers Clubs will be sponsoring a "Spring Fling" on Tuesday,
May 20, from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Grace
Ep!.scopal Church, 325 East Main
Street, Pomeroy.
Open to tbe public, the program
will feature a presentation ti
"Clothing for Women In the Middle." This program is oriented ,
toward women in tbe wide span middle age range, those of varying
figures, · including fuller and
changing figures, and ideas for a
workable attractive wardrobe
without spending a lot of money. Attention is given to understanding the
contribution of fashion and basic
clothes to specific clothing selection
helps. Since very few of us have
"perfect figures," this program
should be of help to all women of
varying ages.
Displays and discussion of local
opportunities in Extension
Homemakers Clubs will also be included. Copies of materials and information on club lesson topics will
be available on such subjects as
meat stretchers, house plants, time
management, money management,
and horne organization of files.
Refreshments will be served.
· Registration fee is 50 cents.

'2 00 OFF ON ALL

Call For Ap

992-3982

For those who reach their
established goal in three months a
prize is awarded. The KOPS (Keep
Off Pounds) chose teams and the
winning team showing the most
weight lost were entertained by the
losing team. Diet buddies have been
8.'18igned and a shopping trip planned. Exercises are included as a
part of the weekly meetings beld
from 10 to 10:30 on Monday mornings.
At last week's meeting Loretta
Bates got the traveling gifts for •
having lost over 14 pounds and Pam
Nitz received $5 for having reached
tbe goal which she set during the
months from January to April. Debi
Bates with a 15 pound loss was the
best loser for tbe month. Loss for tl~e
month of April was 41 pounds.

NOW OPEN
FOR SPRING SEASON

r.-- Social Cal~~;;j

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

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80 Royal
Arch Masons Wednesday 7:30p.m.
Bosworth Council 46 Royal and
Select Masters 8:30p.m.
MIDDLEP'Ol}T
Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p. rn. Wednesday,
home of Mrs. Everett Taylor. Mrs.
Lois Pauley to give a craft
demonstration.

Daily 9 to 5 &amp; Sun. 1 to s

nruRSDAY
WIWNG WORKERS Class of Enterprise United Methodist Church
meeting 7:30 p.m. Thursday at home
of Marjorie Bowen.
MEIGS COUN'IY Democrats will
meet at 8 p.m. Thursday at Carpenters' hall; E. Main St., Pomeroy.
Number of candidates on district
level expected; all Democrats invited.
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club special ladies night, 7
p.m. Thursday at Meigs Inn. Special
program with entertainment and
awards to Lions Club members for
service and attendance.
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Clubmeeting,1:15p.m. Thursday at
horne of Ethel Grueser for election
of officers; program by Buena
Grueser and contests by Frances
Goeglein.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD Conservation League, 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Riverboat Room.
Devotions by Peggy Houdashelt,
program by the Rev. Aaron Buffington . Tonda seidenable and
Eloise White, hostesses.
MAGNOUA CLUB, horne of Mrs .
Georgia Watson, Bernice Durst,
8.'18istant hostess. Ella Smith to have
devotions, Margaret Rose, tbe
progrom, 7:30 Thursday·

Great For the
Latest Styles

FABRIC -sHOP
Pomeroy, 0.

115W. 2nd
992-2281

Red or Golden Delicious

POLISH

APPLES
894
RED GRAPES

ECKRICH

Jibs.

LB.

USAG

Rac!ne, 0.

New White

ONIONS 2LB. 59~
COUNTRY EGGS

PHEBE ' S STORE
~

We Glady Accept Fed. Fo"" Stamps

99~.

Mondiy thru Fr :...ay
9:00ti 1 ~ - 00
~~t :,;; ·..iay 9 : 00·9: oo
CLOSED

SUNDAYS

Bring

79'

~wn
Container

Betty

Valley Bell

CAKE MIX

fRUIT DRINK

Spry
42 oz.

$} 89

Austin A-I

BLEACH

Gallon

89~

BUNS

Bell -All
__..__
8 Pack

ICE CREAM

DOZEN

Gallon

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1980

·

.
:
•
:
:
·
;
.
'

WEEKEND GUESTS
Weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth McLaughlin included Mr.
and Mrs. William Howells and sons,
Rittman; Mr. and Mrs. Alan ·
McLaughlin, Fostoria ; Mr. and Mrs.
Gary COok, Fernandina Beach,
Fla.; Mrs. Duane McLaughlin and
8011 Idaho Falls, Idaho; Teresa
McLaughlin, Columbus; Mrs. Doris ·
Hoteling, Alvada; Mrs. Boruue
Tyson, Findlay; Mrs. · Norm~
Wedg~. John, Dee and Lor1,
Fostoria. They were here especla~y
for the wedding of Kevm
McLaughlin and Terri Yeauger on
Saturday.

7

CHICKEN BREASTS OR

THIGHS ................L~

.•

SUPERIOR FRANKIES

WIENERS .......... :~~.

Cheshire.

WHEN STYLED FOR BOTH
MEN &amp;WOMEN
Prke Cuts on other Selected Services.

OPEN TUES. thru sat.

Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

Several ~ntests all designed to
encourage weight loss are underway
at the TOPS OH 1383 Club at

HAIRCUTS

Permanent Special Starts May 20
thru May 31

Store HoutS:

Cheshire TOPS meets

45" DENIM

.

SHORTENING

:

Eastern Star initiates three members recently

DEBBY POWELL, OWNER-OPERATOR BEV BISHOP, OPEIRAT01R~

GO VISITING

:
·:
:

DANCE SLATED
A round and square dance will be
held at the Eti Dennison Post,
American Legion, Rutland, beginning May 31.
Admission is $1.50 for adults, $1.50
for minors dancing and 75 cents for
children not participating. The dances will be held each Saturday night
from 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. Caller is Ray
Fitch. Music will be provided by
Original Hill Toopers Band.

cause?

ANSWER: Meningitis in its most
severe form usually develops within
a relatively short period of time
(usually hours ) and is considered a
medical emergency. The individual
should be rushed to the local
emergency room for evaluation and
treatment. Be prepared to give the
particulars about the problem. Such
things as :
_ When did the signs and SYffi!&gt;"
toms first appear'
_ What were the circumstances
relating to their appearance?
_ Has this ever happened before?
_ Was the person taking any
medicines (bring them along for
positive identification )'
_ Were they recently sick?
_ Are any of the people he knows
slrnllarly afflicted ?
All this is most important since
meningitis is not the only condition
suggested by combinations of severe •
headache, neck stiffness, depressed
consciousness, delirium, seizure and
deep coma as described above.
A diagnosis will be I_""de from the
background informatiOn a long w1th
other information gathered through
a physical examination and a!&gt;"
propriate laboratory tests. Of particular value is the study of
cerebrospinal fluid (a clear fluid
found in the CNS). This test at times
can be the clincher for diagnosis.
The Importance of finding out tbe
cause of the ailment should be emphasized, because in a medical
emergency a proper diagnosis must
be made before effective treatment can begin. If, for example, the cause has been
determined to be bacterial
then antibiotics can be giveii.
Whether or not the patient recovers
completely or if he has lasting
damage to the nervous system will
be determined by many and varied
factors . Strength of the causative
agent, severity of the infection and
the state of the patient's body defense system are all important considerations. Also, if a specific
therapy exists and it was begun soon
enough, the chances of the victim's
total recovery are, of course, greatly
enhanced.

CORNER OF 3rd &amp;CHERRY Sl,

Mrs. Clyde Saunders and her

VISITS FROM JAPAN
Lance Cpl. David L. Tiemeyer
who has been stationed in Okinawa
and Japan was home for three weeks
to visit with his mother, Loretta
Tiemeyer and his brothers and
sisters. He is now in San Diego,
Calif.

NEIBON AWARDED
(::UJVIS, N. M. - Staff Sergeant
Melvin R. Nelson, whose wife, Loretta, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert L. Sawyers of Mason, W.Va.,
is a member of an organization that
has received the U.S. Air Force Outstanding Unit Award here at Cannon
Air Force Base.
The U. S. Air Force Outstanding
Unit Award is earned by members of
an Air Force unit for exceptionally
meritorious service or outstanding
achievement that clearly sets the
unit part from similar units .
Sergeant Nelson is a 1960 graduate
of Yamato High School, Tokyo,
Japan.

By Robert G. Stockmal
D.O., Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of
Family Medicine
Ohio Uolversity College of
Osteopathic Medicine
QUESTION : In last week's article
you mentioned loss of consciousness
related to fainting. I recall having
read somewhere that meningitis can
cause loss of consciousness too.
Could you define meningitis and its

L

to sponsor
Spring Fling
SatUrday

Meningitis -medical emergency

$

E-Z-CARVE BONELESS

USDA CHO~CE

49
1
$J29 HAMS.................... ..
WHOLE OR HALF

ARM ROASI ........ ~B~
USDA CHOICE

CHUCK .STEAK..... ~B~

.

:

LB

~

••

$J29
••

$J59

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

CHUCK ROASI ........

CALIFORNIA

STRAWBER RIES...~.7
PARKAY

.

MARGARINE ......~-.2/

$

•

1

LIQUID DETERGENT

KRAFT

Barbecue
INSTANT COFFEE
10 Ol

$449

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell ' s
Offer EMpires May 17,1980

5
1

Sauce!!2 ~

KOOL-AID
.10 QT. CAN

ALL FLAVORS
Offer No. 1749

FLOUR

'

$}39

25 LB.

BAG

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell ' s
Offer Expires fv' ay 17, 1980

~~

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires May 17, 1980

5 LB • .
BAG

79~

Lim it 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires May 1 1980

�~~~~~::e:r:s~Pmir~· :Wedn~esda~y·~~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--------------~~~------------~

!&gt;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Wednesday, May 14, 1980

I

Church
hosts
banquet

I

I

The Health Review

The Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene hosted a rnother-&lt;laug!)ter
"11banquet at Shoney's Restaurant in
· Point Pleasant on May 8.
Mothers and daughters from the
Racine Church of the Nazarene and
Middleport Church of the Natarene
were invited to the dinner. There
were readings by Nancy Aeiker and
Elizabeth Coffman and a prayer by
Mamie Stephenson. Gifts were
presented by Mrs. Stephenson to the
youngest mother, Shari Colmer, tbe
oldest mother, Mrs. Willa Grimm,
and the mother who had been
married the longest, Freda Henderson.
Others attending were Mary
Walburn, Pam Walburn, Carla
Aelker, lima Brickl~s, Denise
"""JUes, vtrglnia Snuth, Brenda
Johnson, Barbara Colmer, Amber
Colmer, Paulette Farley, Nancy
Whittekind, Tammy Johnson,
Dorothy Bentz, Jane Taylor, Betty
Taylor, Judy White, Angie and Amy
White, Marjorie Taylor, Eileen
Searls, Myrna Custer, Nellie Cox,
Judith Broome, Lisa Ashley, and
Diana Smith.

..

·"

-

POPPY DAY - The Racine American Legion
Auxiliary, Post 602, will observe Poppy Day in Racine
on May 24. Racine Mayor Ch3rles Pyle. recently Signed
a proclamation for the Auxtltary and 1s pictured here
with the Auxiliary's poppy royalty and Mrs. Shirley

------------------1
I

c 1

!-

I
I

Carpenter poppy chairman. They are left to right,
Tabitha Williord, Poppy Princess; Mrs. Carpenter
holding Jenny Carpenter, Little Miss Poppy, and Aiisa
Willford, Junior Miss Poppy.

jazz festival reported

Report heard

Girl Scout Diary
ll 1 &lt; h.,, I,.,, , II d ht lr

A report on hospital equipment
and contributions from families who
have used the equipment was given
at the Thursday night meeting of the
Laurel Cliff Better Health Club held
at the home of Mrs. Polly Eichinger.
Group singing of "Count Your
Blessings" opened the meeting with
Mrs. Eichinger reading scripture
from Proverbs 31 and an article entitled "The Greatest Gift. " She also
had prayer.
Readings included
" The
Gleaners" by Jean Wright, "Our
Mother" by Marge Fetty, "Mother
and Horne" by Donna Gllmore,
"Paze of Our Lives" by Doris Shook,
and "Relieving Fatigue" by Ann
Mash.
A proposed visit to the Ohio
Historical Village was discussed by
Mrs. Wright. Mrs. Eichinger, Mrs.
Gilmore and Mrs. Ruby Frick reported on those ill noting that Mrs. Della
Curtis remains hospitalized. ·
Games were played with prizes
going to the winners. Mrs Mash will
host the June meeting. Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Eichinger and Mrs. Fetty.

SALISBURY BROWNIE
TROOPI220
A camp-out was enjoyed by the
Salisbury Brownies Saturday at
Camp Kiashuta near Chester. At last
- week's meeting in preparation for
' the outing, the girls listened to portions of safety-wise read by their
leader. A first aid kit was prepared
with each Brownie contributing to it,
and Valerie Simpson, a junior scout,
worked on the health aid badge by
giving a demonstration on first aid
for minor Injuries for the Brownies.
Tiffany Coffee and Diana Me•; Clelland served refreshments.
SALISBURY JUNIOR
TROOPllOO
Flowers were potted for Mother's
Day at the Tuesday evening meeting
. of the Junior Troop held at Meigs
High School.
Participation in the Meigs County
Fair was discussed along with entries which can be made. The scouts
. were encouraged to share their accomplislunents, interests and ideals
through displays at the fair .
. The meeting opened with a flag
ceremony and the girl scout promise.
Refreshments were served by Sally Radford, Susan Jones and Valerie
Simpson.

VARIETY SHOW PLANNED
The Riverview Elementary School
and the Long Bottom Community
Association have joined hands for
the presentation of a variety show at .
7:30 p.m. Friday in the Riverview
School Auditorium.
A number of local bands and vocal
groups will be entertaining and a
bake sale will be held in conjunction
with the event. Admission will be $1
for students and 50 cents for
children.

R~GE,BAKESALE

SATURDAY
Racine Chapter 134, Order of
Eastern Star, will hold a spring rum: mage sale and a bake sale Saturday
- on tbe back parking lot of the
· Racine-Home National Bank.
Those having ·r'ummage to con. tribute are asked to take it to the
: Helen Pickens home on Tyree
Boulevard. Baked goods are to be
: taken to the sales lot by 9 a .m. Satur. day.

The success of the jazz hand
festival was reported by Randy
Hunt, director, and he extended aJ)preciation to all who helped and SUJ)ported the effort at the recent Band
Boosters meeting held at Meigs High
School.
Band banquet plans were announced for Thursday at 6:30 p.m.
with awards to be presented at that
time. Officers will be installed. The
hand will participate in tbe bike-hike
on Saturday, and it was noted that
for the Memorial Day parade, the
high school hand will be at Middleport, and the junior high hand in
Pomeroy.
Tag day was set for June 14.
Students will sell tags in Middleport,
Pomeroy, and Rutland.
POSmON CHANGE
REPORTED
Dale Colburn, Route 2, Porneory,
has taken over the position of
secretary-treas ur er of the
Burlingham Cemetery succeeding
Helen Sinclair. Anyone wishing to
pay for upkeep of grave plots should
send the money to Colburn.

~

"OKLAHOMA" TO BE
PRESENTED
The Meigs High School Music
Department will . present Rogers'
and Hanunerstein's ''Oklahoma,''
on May 30 and 31 at 7:30p.m. in the
Larry R. Morrison Auditorium.
Leads for the musical are Lynetta
Whittington, Eric Scites, Linda
Eason, Anna Wiles, Jeff Nash,
Robert Evans, Craig Darst, Danny
Riggs, Fred Young, Jean Horton,
Mark Burson and Jeff Carson.

.

ANSWER : Meningitis is an inflanunation (-itis) of the membranes rmeninges) covering the
brain and spinal cord. This inflanunation is a result of the body's
response to a n invasion of the brain
and spinal cord- collectively called
the central nervous system (CNS) by infectious agents (bacteria,
.
viruses, fungi or protozoans ).
QUESTION : How can meningitis
be recognized?
ANSWER : The signs and SymJ)torns of infectwn, regardless of
cause or location, conunonly include: headache, fever, discomfort,
loss of appetite, general aches and
pains and sometimes nausea and
vomiting. In meningitis, since the infection involves the CNS, particular
signs and syhmptoms related to the
brain and ~pinal cord will also be
seen. For example, stiffness of the
neck may be present as the body attempts to protect the irritated and
inflamed spinal cord. A severe
headache may be present because of
involvement of the membranes of
the brain. In addition, certain
s~ecific signs may be noted
suggesting that a particular nerve or
area of the brain is affected. For
example, there may be double vision
because the nerve to the muscle of
one eye is affected. Also, the person
may become less active and alert,
indicating a depression in the level
of consciousness. He may become
confused and disoriented. He might
experience a seizure or sink into a
deep coma from which he cannot be
aroused. (This is the unconsciousness of which you had
spoken.)
QUESTION : How can meningitis
be diagnosed a nd treated?

daughter , Evelyn Smith of
Pomeroy, spent Mother's Day with
Mr. and Mrs . Marshall Boggs and
family of Washington C. H. Mrs.
Boggs' mother, Mrs. Grover Smith,
is with the Boggs family. She is 87
years old and is in good health.

Judith A. Clark, Ronald Clark, and
William Ault were initiated when
Evangeline Chapter . 172, Order of
the Eastern Star, met recently at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Mrs. Rowena Clark presented her
daughter with a ritual. Sunshine
pages were Celesta Bush and TwiJa
Childs. The pro-tem officers were
Grace French, chaplain; Virginia
Buchanan, EJecta; Gle1U18 Crisp,
as&amp;ociate matron, and lla Darnell,
warder.

Refreshments were served by
Mrs, Euvetta Bechtle and Mrs.
Sarah Kennedy.

OPENED IN 1855
The Niagara Falls suspension
bridge was opened in 1855.

Hubbard's
Greenhot1~-:
Ph. 9,..-5776
Syracuse, OH ,

FOR THE BOTH OF YOU

NEW

BEAUTY SALON

SHIPMENT

The Meigs County Extension
Homemakers Clubs will be sponsoring a "Spring Fling" on Tuesday,
May 20, from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Grace
Ep!.scopal Church, 325 East Main
Street, Pomeroy.
Open to tbe public, the program
will feature a presentation ti
"Clothing for Women In the Middle." This program is oriented ,
toward women in tbe wide span middle age range, those of varying
figures, · including fuller and
changing figures, and ideas for a
workable attractive wardrobe
without spending a lot of money. Attention is given to understanding the
contribution of fashion and basic
clothes to specific clothing selection
helps. Since very few of us have
"perfect figures," this program
should be of help to all women of
varying ages.
Displays and discussion of local
opportunities in Extension
Homemakers Clubs will also be included. Copies of materials and information on club lesson topics will
be available on such subjects as
meat stretchers, house plants, time
management, money management,
and horne organization of files.
Refreshments will be served.
· Registration fee is 50 cents.

'2 00 OFF ON ALL

Call For Ap

992-3982

For those who reach their
established goal in three months a
prize is awarded. The KOPS (Keep
Off Pounds) chose teams and the
winning team showing the most
weight lost were entertained by the
losing team. Diet buddies have been
8.'18igned and a shopping trip planned. Exercises are included as a
part of the weekly meetings beld
from 10 to 10:30 on Monday mornings.
At last week's meeting Loretta
Bates got the traveling gifts for •
having lost over 14 pounds and Pam
Nitz received $5 for having reached
tbe goal which she set during the
months from January to April. Debi
Bates with a 15 pound loss was the
best loser for tbe month. Loss for tl~e
month of April was 41 pounds.

NOW OPEN
FOR SPRING SEASON

r.-- Social Cal~~;;j

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

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80 Royal
Arch Masons Wednesday 7:30p.m.
Bosworth Council 46 Royal and
Select Masters 8:30p.m.
MIDDLEP'Ol}T
Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p. rn. Wednesday,
home of Mrs. Everett Taylor. Mrs.
Lois Pauley to give a craft
demonstration.

Daily 9 to 5 &amp; Sun. 1 to s

nruRSDAY
WIWNG WORKERS Class of Enterprise United Methodist Church
meeting 7:30 p.m. Thursday at home
of Marjorie Bowen.
MEIGS COUN'IY Democrats will
meet at 8 p.m. Thursday at Carpenters' hall; E. Main St., Pomeroy.
Number of candidates on district
level expected; all Democrats invited.
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club special ladies night, 7
p.m. Thursday at Meigs Inn. Special
program with entertainment and
awards to Lions Club members for
service and attendance.
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Clubmeeting,1:15p.m. Thursday at
horne of Ethel Grueser for election
of officers; program by Buena
Grueser and contests by Frances
Goeglein.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD Conservation League, 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Riverboat Room.
Devotions by Peggy Houdashelt,
program by the Rev. Aaron Buffington . Tonda seidenable and
Eloise White, hostesses.
MAGNOUA CLUB, horne of Mrs .
Georgia Watson, Bernice Durst,
8.'18istant hostess. Ella Smith to have
devotions, Margaret Rose, tbe
progrom, 7:30 Thursday·

Great For the
Latest Styles

FABRIC -sHOP
Pomeroy, 0.

115W. 2nd
992-2281

Red or Golden Delicious

POLISH

APPLES
894
RED GRAPES

ECKRICH

Jibs.

LB.

USAG

Rac!ne, 0.

New White

ONIONS 2LB. 59~
COUNTRY EGGS

PHEBE ' S STORE
~

We Glady Accept Fed. Fo"" Stamps

99~.

Mondiy thru Fr :...ay
9:00ti 1 ~ - 00
~~t :,;; ·..iay 9 : 00·9: oo
CLOSED

SUNDAYS

Bring

79'

~wn
Container

Betty

Valley Bell

CAKE MIX

fRUIT DRINK

Spry
42 oz.

$} 89

Austin A-I

BLEACH

Gallon

89~

BUNS

Bell -All
__..__
8 Pack

ICE CREAM

DOZEN

Gallon

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1980

·

.
:
•
:
:
·
;
.
'

WEEKEND GUESTS
Weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth McLaughlin included Mr.
and Mrs. William Howells and sons,
Rittman; Mr. and Mrs. Alan ·
McLaughlin, Fostoria ; Mr. and Mrs.
Gary COok, Fernandina Beach,
Fla.; Mrs. Duane McLaughlin and
8011 Idaho Falls, Idaho; Teresa
McLaughlin, Columbus; Mrs. Doris ·
Hoteling, Alvada; Mrs. Boruue
Tyson, Findlay; Mrs. · Norm~
Wedg~. John, Dee and Lor1,
Fostoria. They were here especla~y
for the wedding of Kevm
McLaughlin and Terri Yeauger on
Saturday.

7

CHICKEN BREASTS OR

THIGHS ................L~

.•

SUPERIOR FRANKIES

WIENERS .......... :~~.

Cheshire.

WHEN STYLED FOR BOTH
MEN &amp;WOMEN
Prke Cuts on other Selected Services.

OPEN TUES. thru sat.

Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

Several ~ntests all designed to
encourage weight loss are underway
at the TOPS OH 1383 Club at

HAIRCUTS

Permanent Special Starts May 20
thru May 31

Store HoutS:

Cheshire TOPS meets

45" DENIM

.

SHORTENING

:

Eastern Star initiates three members recently

DEBBY POWELL, OWNER-OPERATOR BEV BISHOP, OPEIRAT01R~

GO VISITING

:
·:
:

DANCE SLATED
A round and square dance will be
held at the Eti Dennison Post,
American Legion, Rutland, beginning May 31.
Admission is $1.50 for adults, $1.50
for minors dancing and 75 cents for
children not participating. The dances will be held each Saturday night
from 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. Caller is Ray
Fitch. Music will be provided by
Original Hill Toopers Band.

cause?

ANSWER: Meningitis in its most
severe form usually develops within
a relatively short period of time
(usually hours ) and is considered a
medical emergency. The individual
should be rushed to the local
emergency room for evaluation and
treatment. Be prepared to give the
particulars about the problem. Such
things as :
_ When did the signs and SYffi!&gt;"
toms first appear'
_ What were the circumstances
relating to their appearance?
_ Has this ever happened before?
_ Was the person taking any
medicines (bring them along for
positive identification )'
_ Were they recently sick?
_ Are any of the people he knows
slrnllarly afflicted ?
All this is most important since
meningitis is not the only condition
suggested by combinations of severe •
headache, neck stiffness, depressed
consciousness, delirium, seizure and
deep coma as described above.
A diagnosis will be I_""de from the
background informatiOn a long w1th
other information gathered through
a physical examination and a!&gt;"
propriate laboratory tests. Of particular value is the study of
cerebrospinal fluid (a clear fluid
found in the CNS). This test at times
can be the clincher for diagnosis.
The Importance of finding out tbe
cause of the ailment should be emphasized, because in a medical
emergency a proper diagnosis must
be made before effective treatment can begin. If, for example, the cause has been
determined to be bacterial
then antibiotics can be giveii.
Whether or not the patient recovers
completely or if he has lasting
damage to the nervous system will
be determined by many and varied
factors . Strength of the causative
agent, severity of the infection and
the state of the patient's body defense system are all important considerations. Also, if a specific
therapy exists and it was begun soon
enough, the chances of the victim's
total recovery are, of course, greatly
enhanced.

CORNER OF 3rd &amp;CHERRY Sl,

Mrs. Clyde Saunders and her

VISITS FROM JAPAN
Lance Cpl. David L. Tiemeyer
who has been stationed in Okinawa
and Japan was home for three weeks
to visit with his mother, Loretta
Tiemeyer and his brothers and
sisters. He is now in San Diego,
Calif.

NEIBON AWARDED
(::UJVIS, N. M. - Staff Sergeant
Melvin R. Nelson, whose wife, Loretta, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert L. Sawyers of Mason, W.Va.,
is a member of an organization that
has received the U.S. Air Force Outstanding Unit Award here at Cannon
Air Force Base.
The U. S. Air Force Outstanding
Unit Award is earned by members of
an Air Force unit for exceptionally
meritorious service or outstanding
achievement that clearly sets the
unit part from similar units .
Sergeant Nelson is a 1960 graduate
of Yamato High School, Tokyo,
Japan.

By Robert G. Stockmal
D.O., Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of
Family Medicine
Ohio Uolversity College of
Osteopathic Medicine
QUESTION : In last week's article
you mentioned loss of consciousness
related to fainting. I recall having
read somewhere that meningitis can
cause loss of consciousness too.
Could you define meningitis and its

L

to sponsor
Spring Fling
SatUrday

Meningitis -medical emergency

$

E-Z-CARVE BONELESS

USDA CHO~CE

49
1
$J29 HAMS.................... ..
WHOLE OR HALF

ARM ROASI ........ ~B~
USDA CHOICE

CHUCK .STEAK..... ~B~

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:

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••

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CHUCK ROASI ........

CALIFORNIA

STRAWBER RIES...~.7
PARKAY

.

MARGARINE ......~-.2/

$

•

1

LIQUID DETERGENT

KRAFT

Barbecue
INSTANT COFFEE
10 Ol

$449

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell ' s
Offer EMpires May 17,1980

5
1

Sauce!!2 ~

KOOL-AID
.10 QT. CAN

ALL FLAVORS
Offer No. 1749

FLOUR

'

$}39

25 LB.

BAG

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell ' s
Offer Expires fv' ay 17, 1980

~~

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires May 17, 1980

5 LB • .
BAG

79~

Lim it 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires May 1 1980

�8--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 14, 1980

Eastern Band Boost~rs receive awards
at annual spring family ba-nquet here
Mrs, Elberfeld thanks members
for their cooperation and work
during the past year. She reported
that uniforms have been paid for as
weU as aU other outstanding bills.
Supt. Roberts gave the prayer
preceding dinner.
AU fifth and sixth grade band
students of the district who completed the year were eligible to
receive certificate awards .
However, due to a delivery problem ,
they were not presented at the
banquet and will instead be awarded
at the elementary school ·award
assemblies .

Numerous awards were presented
at the annual spring family banquet
of the Eastern Band Boosters.
Guests welcomed ,by James
Wilhelm, director, included Supt.
and Mrs. Richard Roberts and Principal and Mrs. James Page. He
thanked students for their work as
weU as the parents and introduced
band booster students for their work
as well as the parents and introduced band booster officers who
include Mrs. Charlotte Elberfeld,
president; Mrs. Ann Collins, vice
president; Mrs. Judy Eichinger,
secretary, and Mrs. Pat Shrivers,
treasurer.

AGOOD HOME WILL SAVE THIS DOG'S LIFE
This adult Coon hound (Plott), female, will soon be one of the
sta~cs - among t)le millions euthanized each year, because there
are JUSt not enough homes to go around. If interested in giving this
B;=l a chance at life by providing her with a good home for her
lifetime, please caU the Meigs County Humane Society at 992-&lt;i260
This is a nice, big, gentle lady and she needs someone desperately.
.

Rutland Alumni Assn.
to hold banquet May 24
RUTLAND - The 1980 Rutland
for the banquet will be charged $2
High School Alumni Association's
admission for alumni and guests.
annual banquet and dance will be
Reservations for the banquet are
held on Saturday, May 24.
,to be made before May 19. The $5 fee
The Rutland Elementary School
to cover the dinner, entertainment,
will open at 5: :llland the steak dinner
dues and dance, is to be sent to Box
will be served at6:30 p.m.
315, Portland,
Dr. SaUy Schaaf will be the ·
Plans have also been made for an
speaker at the dinner and there will
alumni picnic on May 2S at the
be some special awards,
Rutland Elementary School. The
recognitions and door prizes. Music
Association is also selling RuUand
for the dance to foUow will be
Red Devils 'T-shirts at $4.2S each.
provided by the five piece group,
Mrs. Suzy Parker Carpenter is
"Generation." Those not registered
president.

·Helen Help Us

Research underscores MERITas proven
taste alternative to high tar smoKing.
One low tar cigarette offers proofnot claims - that there is a satisfying
alternative to.high tar smoking. That
alternative: MERIT.

MERIT Thste KeylO Success.
Latest smoker studies provide documented evidence in key areas of taste,
ease of switch and ability to satisfy
long term.
Blind Taste Tests: In tests where
brand identity was concealed, a significant majority of smokers rated the
taste of low tar MERIT as good
as-or better than-leading
high tar brands. Even cigarettes .·
having twice the tar!

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

L-----------------.,..------'

C

~hilip

Smoker Preference: Among the 95%
of smokers stating a preference, the
1 MERIT low tar/good taste combination
was favored 3 to 1 over high tar leaders
Filter
when tar levels were revealed!
Long-Term Satisfaction:.In the latest
survey of former high tar smokers who
have switched to MERIT,9 out of 10
reported they continue to enjoy smok-~ ,
,ing, are glad th~y switched, ar:d report
~~~/;;:.:
MERIT ts the best-tasttng low
%6/
tar they've ever tried!
MERIT is the proven
alternative to high tar smoking.
And you can taste it.

·
MERIT.

Morri s :nc. 1!180

Kings: Bmg ·'tar:' 0.6 mg niCOtine - 100' s Rcg· lQ mg "tar:' 0.7 mg nicotine100's Men: 11 n,~ "tar:· 0.8 mg aicotine.av. pe cigarelle. FTCReport Dec:79

Special correspolldenls
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
We are three sisters, 22, 16 and 14,
For the past two years our mother's
brother has rented a room in our
holl.!le. He's in his mld-30s, single and
not pleasant to be around. He shows
no appreciation and has no goals in
life.
At first he was here ~'just until he
could find another place." It looks
like he's settled in for good!
We kept our dislike to ourselves
for a long tiJfie and just recently
discussed it with our parents. Mom
became infuriated and Dad agrees
. with us but won't do anything.
What do you think? Does an uncle
we hadn't seen for years have a right
to our food (three home-cooked
meals 8 day) , telephone, TV and run
of the house, aU for $65 8 month? THREE CHERRIES LIVING IN
THE PITS
DEAR TiiREE:
A $65 per month charge wouldn't
even cover this aU-but-freeloader's
meals. We'd say he is taking advantage of an easy mark and you'U
have a permanent live-in uncle
unless your father gets tough.
HELEN
THREE :
When a famly is four against one
for change then the single holdout
shouldn't have the deciding vote.
Let's hope you soon give your uncle
a dose of seU-sufficiency by "unsetting" him out of your lives. SUE

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Another letter to " Ralph" the
psychologist, who was so adamant

A party honoring Jimmy Starcher
on his third birthday was held recently at the home of his grandparents,
Charles and Grace Price, Route I,
Long Bottom.
Attending were his parents, Jim
and JeaMie Starcher, Charles and
Grace Price, Teddy, Chester and
Lori Mundry, Bob, Penny, Brett and
Bobbie Price, Tim and Paula Dillon,
Roger, Ruth and Scott Dillon, Irene
and Jerry Starcher. He received
several gifts and following the party
a family picnic was held in observance of Mother's Day.

jimmy Starcher
•

against equal rights for women and
ignored their contributions except in
the capacity of being receptive and
pleasing men.
As for his and his wife's assertion
that there. had never been a great
female songwriter, I consiaer Jonie
MitcheU, Carol King, Carlie Simon,
Linda Ronstadt, Judy Collins and
Joan Baez great.
To acquaint him with some of the
other great women of our time, how
about Sarah CaldweU, opera producer and conductor; Shirley
Chisholm, U.S, Representative;
Chien..Shiung Mu, nucle.y- physicist;
Yeffe KimbaU, artist; ' Billie Jean
King, tennis champion; Barbara
Walters, TV newscaster; and Cynthia Wedel, psychologist and church
leader?
A woman can be weU educated
and involved in current isues
without relinquishing her femininity,
I'm certainly glad not aU men are
so insensitive and unaware. MELODIE
READERS ALL:
And stiU they come: Poor Ralph
now has top honors as the most
castigated man in our column's
history.
One final note: Should these letters inspire you to learn more about
outstanding and unusual females,
we recommend an exceUent book,
"Liberty's Women," published in
March by G. &amp; C. Merriam Co. It's a
unique reference work containing
biographies of more than 1,000
women who have made significant
contributions to American life.
We hope Ralph and Mrs. Ralph
read it too. - HELEN AND SUE

Birthday boy turns three

Kings &amp; too's

~ltmentacy :

5th grade outMtli:isa Calaway; 6th
gr-.-de oul.oltanding ml!lllci.Hn - lha Henderson;

6th grHde m011t improved musician , Stout

'ftlc! band ~rophie s 8.5 awarded tlu!t night are :

Teni

C~~ter Elementary : Sth grade out:ltanding

mw;!c!'ln -

Am~

Louks : 6th grade outs.anding

musiCian - Tem Sta rctEr ; 6th grade most im-

proved mWIIci.an- Pete DarliJ4!.
Riverview Elementary : 5th grade oul:ltanding
musician - Arlene Rllc'hle: 6th grade outstanding mu.sidan, Bobby Epling.
Eastern Jr. High: 7th grade out!tandlng

musician - . Angie Spencer; 8th grade out~ndJ.ng mwncian - Melis&amp;a Scarbroogh ; mtl5t
unproved musician - Sheila Koenig.
E~s~rn 1-;li~h School 9th grade outstanding
mus1ct.B n - L1sa CoUiru ; lOth grade outstanding
musicw n - Carolyn Bowen ; 11th grade outstanding musician - Connie Stout; 12th gnllle
outstanding mwici.an - Nant.'Y Samos; most iJn..
prond musician - Sh.&amp;roo Griffin.
MDSt GUt.1ta~dinp; majorette - Belh Riebel;
most ou~t.anding flag C(Jrp.s member - Debbie
Eynon.

Students attend first annual Rio Roundup.
On Tuesday the students of Midd,leport Elementary attended the first annual Rio Roundup at Rio Grande.
The children were treated to
Western singing, Indian dancing and
a pageant about the life of cowboys
during the middle and late 1800s.
This fun learning experience was a
project of Professor Bob Leith of the
Rio Grande CoUege History Department. Professor Leith's students
and other volunteers were dressed in
westen costumes. Frank Petrie, Jr.
and George Miller explained to the
students how to approach, groom
and saddle a horse correctly. Petrie
also put his horse "Super 76"
through paces used by the cowboys.
Middleport Elementary was in-

PRA\'ER MEETING SUNDAY
A county-wide prayer meeting will
be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Bald
Knob Mission with Glen BisseU as
class leader.

vited to the demonstration by Rio
Grande College. Approximately
1,400 student~ attended from
Southeastern Ohio. The show was
presented at BiU Well's Stables.
The children were pleased when
they found their reading teacher's
son, David Horton, was in the
pageant. He played the part of
" Billy Joe, " farm boy, who was shot
"dead" by the Gunslinger. Mick
Childs, husband of Mrs. ChUds,
second grade teacher, was the
telegraph operator ·or the Western

TheM" htst two awards were chosen by the

squad members themselvea.
Students earning varsity band Jenera are :
Becky Ambr06e, Usa Collin.s, Brian Colliru,
Becky Eichinger. Julie Elberfeld, Shllroo Grif·
fln. Bt!th Hayman, Leonard Koenig, Rhonda
Riebel, Tim Roberta, T&amp;Lni Samoa, Je!fShrivers
Diane Smith, Jodi Smith BeUrTeaford ~
Thoma, lba Wlboo, David Young.
'
Sen·ice certificate.s were .11Warded to any
junior or senior high school studenta that have
participated m marching or concert band.
The fina l award.s of the evenin8 were the
spe-cial natiOIUlt Bwards that are chosen or soonsored by national groups. Nominated for &lt;fAJl.
Americ.lln" honors from Purdue University
were: Kenn y Newell, l.aura EichinQer Tammie
Sta r~her , Beth Riebel, ~t.nd De6bii! Eynon.
Nom.JMted and se lected for '' Who's Who In
Music" were: Nancy Samos, Janet Mora, and
Oenlse WJute .
The "John Philip Sousa" Mliooal award for
bBod excellerx.-e was awarded to : Laura
Eichinger.
FoUowing the banquet, 50 parents and students
journeyed to Parkersburg for a bowlillg p~~rty .
The band boo.sters would like to thank the
bU:.lllt!'i.'le!l whi('h contributed Lroplliea and awar·
ds fo. lhi! year's banquet : NeweU's Sunoco
• GauJ'.sShake Haven, Ridenour Supply Ride~

TV, Swrunerfield 's Re.st.aurant Ba~ Lumber
Gaul '.s Market, Reed 's Groct'ry: Barr's Ashland:
D. V. Weber Construction Co., Phylli.s' Snip and
Curl, Lawren ce's Grocery and Pomeroy
National Bank.

SPECIAL!!!

KINGSFORD
CHARCOAL
1o lb. Bag

scene.

$209

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRU

The Middleport students had a
sack lunch on the grounds of Bob
Evans farms and in the afternoon
toured the animal exhibits.

748 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, Oh.

WHERE YOUR INFLATED

DOLLAR WILL STILL
BUYS MOREll
CHECK US AND COMPARE·
2 Packages
Will Reweb
A Chair
WREATHS AND,SPRAYS
If you haven't bought
yours -- don't delay
FEET · 6 COLORS
We nev~er seem to have
. 17
.

(;,l{f!IIUAiid"7)tHt-

Live-in uncle a pain
to 3 fed-up nieces
By Helen and Sue Hottel

TO OBSERVE 75TH ANNIVERSARY
Wilkesville Chapter 'lffl, Order of
Eastern Star, will be observing its
7:ith aMiversary at 7:30p.m. Thursday . Ronald Seigla, Worthy Grand
Patron of the Grand Chapter of Ohio,
will visit. A dinner at the Pythian
HaU at 6 p.m. will precede the observance. Evangeline Chapter, Middleport, is the mother chapter of the
Wilkesville Chapter.

Tuppers ?law

standing musician -

HAM DINNER MEMORIAL DAY
The Modem Woodmen of America
at Burlingham will stage a ham dinner with homemade ice cream and
pies on Memorial Day, May 26, at
the Burl.jngham HaU with serving to
beo!in at 11 a.m. There will also be a
bake ~le. Proceeds will go to the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad •

supply .

MISSES AND WOMENS
ENTIRE STOCK OF

We hare the selection

as always at ttie

Time for rewebblng chairs, at
savings . Save 15c on each
package . On Sale 5 days only .

best price!

3

·$ 99

TO

Washable poly . Small
lot Includes daisies ,
roses, carna tions, et c.
On sale Wednesday ,
while they last .

TANK
TOPS
Sizes

8

$ 99

Sm-Med- Lg
And
Extra Lg 40 To 44

ARTIFICAL POLY

FLOWERING BUSH

Reg. 1.99 ·
1

$}59

Gel your su mmer needs
now and save. Choose
from dozens of style s,
fashion looks, basics .
slim or wi de strap s.
Fabri cs of ter ry , cotton
blends, spun polyester
and more. Don 't Miss
These.

RED ROSE
CROSS

'$199

ARTIFICAL FLOWERS
Hurry They're
¢
¢

AND

8 58
TO

Going Fast

25%off

enough.~ hurry on In .for your

'-AWN CHAIR
WEBBING
Regular
49'

5 Day Special!'

Select Froom
Over 600 In
Each Store
Now Thru Sunday ~

$399

Prices In Effect Wednesday Thru Sot.

OPEN NIGHTLY TILL 8 P.M.

RIGID PLASTIC

COIL SPRING

42"1NCH
WADING
POOL

WOODEN
· CLOTHES
PINS
Made In U.S.A.
40 To Pkg.

The pool thats easy lor
mom to handle, fills
with water quickly .
Hours of fun for your
little ones .

Reg.
1.59

1

99¢

WE NEED HANGING SPACE
SO YOU GET BARGAINS!
WOMENS

SAVE 50%

CANVAS

ENTIRE SPRING STOCK

TOTE BAGS
J Styles. 6 color- s. All
purpose bags wi th zipper s.
pockets and snap s. Our
spring stoc k redu ced .

Regular
1
4.99

$ 266

''

WOMENS
PANTS
Sizes 6 To 18, 32 To 38
Values to $12.99 . Light and dark
shades by Shir ley, Block and
other we l l known Mfgrs. A big
variety of styles to choose from .
Come get your share, Now.

--~-PRICE
By Sun Terrace . Tubular aluminum frame, full size .
Made with alum1num wa terfall arms . Bnght multi
color that wil l match any colors .

2

FOR

OR '5.99 Each

2

�8--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 14, 1980

Eastern Band Boost~rs receive awards
at annual spring family ba-nquet here
Mrs, Elberfeld thanks members
for their cooperation and work
during the past year. She reported
that uniforms have been paid for as
weU as aU other outstanding bills.
Supt. Roberts gave the prayer
preceding dinner.
AU fifth and sixth grade band
students of the district who completed the year were eligible to
receive certificate awards .
However, due to a delivery problem ,
they were not presented at the
banquet and will instead be awarded
at the elementary school ·award
assemblies .

Numerous awards were presented
at the annual spring family banquet
of the Eastern Band Boosters.
Guests welcomed ,by James
Wilhelm, director, included Supt.
and Mrs. Richard Roberts and Principal and Mrs. James Page. He
thanked students for their work as
weU as the parents and introduced
band booster students for their work
as well as the parents and introduced band booster officers who
include Mrs. Charlotte Elberfeld,
president; Mrs. Ann Collins, vice
president; Mrs. Judy Eichinger,
secretary, and Mrs. Pat Shrivers,
treasurer.

AGOOD HOME WILL SAVE THIS DOG'S LIFE
This adult Coon hound (Plott), female, will soon be one of the
sta~cs - among t)le millions euthanized each year, because there
are JUSt not enough homes to go around. If interested in giving this
B;=l a chance at life by providing her with a good home for her
lifetime, please caU the Meigs County Humane Society at 992-&lt;i260
This is a nice, big, gentle lady and she needs someone desperately.
.

Rutland Alumni Assn.
to hold banquet May 24
RUTLAND - The 1980 Rutland
for the banquet will be charged $2
High School Alumni Association's
admission for alumni and guests.
annual banquet and dance will be
Reservations for the banquet are
held on Saturday, May 24.
,to be made before May 19. The $5 fee
The Rutland Elementary School
to cover the dinner, entertainment,
will open at 5: :llland the steak dinner
dues and dance, is to be sent to Box
will be served at6:30 p.m.
315, Portland,
Dr. SaUy Schaaf will be the ·
Plans have also been made for an
speaker at the dinner and there will
alumni picnic on May 2S at the
be some special awards,
Rutland Elementary School. The
recognitions and door prizes. Music
Association is also selling RuUand
for the dance to foUow will be
Red Devils 'T-shirts at $4.2S each.
provided by the five piece group,
Mrs. Suzy Parker Carpenter is
"Generation." Those not registered
president.

·Helen Help Us

Research underscores MERITas proven
taste alternative to high tar smoKing.
One low tar cigarette offers proofnot claims - that there is a satisfying
alternative to.high tar smoking. That
alternative: MERIT.

MERIT Thste KeylO Success.
Latest smoker studies provide documented evidence in key areas of taste,
ease of switch and ability to satisfy
long term.
Blind Taste Tests: In tests where
brand identity was concealed, a significant majority of smokers rated the
taste of low tar MERIT as good
as-or better than-leading
high tar brands. Even cigarettes .·
having twice the tar!

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

L-----------------.,..------'

C

~hilip

Smoker Preference: Among the 95%
of smokers stating a preference, the
1 MERIT low tar/good taste combination
was favored 3 to 1 over high tar leaders
Filter
when tar levels were revealed!
Long-Term Satisfaction:.In the latest
survey of former high tar smokers who
have switched to MERIT,9 out of 10
reported they continue to enjoy smok-~ ,
,ing, are glad th~y switched, ar:d report
~~~/;;:.:
MERIT ts the best-tasttng low
%6/
tar they've ever tried!
MERIT is the proven
alternative to high tar smoking.
And you can taste it.

·
MERIT.

Morri s :nc. 1!180

Kings: Bmg ·'tar:' 0.6 mg niCOtine - 100' s Rcg· lQ mg "tar:' 0.7 mg nicotine100's Men: 11 n,~ "tar:· 0.8 mg aicotine.av. pe cigarelle. FTCReport Dec:79

Special correspolldenls
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
We are three sisters, 22, 16 and 14,
For the past two years our mother's
brother has rented a room in our
holl.!le. He's in his mld-30s, single and
not pleasant to be around. He shows
no appreciation and has no goals in
life.
At first he was here ~'just until he
could find another place." It looks
like he's settled in for good!
We kept our dislike to ourselves
for a long tiJfie and just recently
discussed it with our parents. Mom
became infuriated and Dad agrees
. with us but won't do anything.
What do you think? Does an uncle
we hadn't seen for years have a right
to our food (three home-cooked
meals 8 day) , telephone, TV and run
of the house, aU for $65 8 month? THREE CHERRIES LIVING IN
THE PITS
DEAR TiiREE:
A $65 per month charge wouldn't
even cover this aU-but-freeloader's
meals. We'd say he is taking advantage of an easy mark and you'U
have a permanent live-in uncle
unless your father gets tough.
HELEN
THREE :
When a famly is four against one
for change then the single holdout
shouldn't have the deciding vote.
Let's hope you soon give your uncle
a dose of seU-sufficiency by "unsetting" him out of your lives. SUE

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Another letter to " Ralph" the
psychologist, who was so adamant

A party honoring Jimmy Starcher
on his third birthday was held recently at the home of his grandparents,
Charles and Grace Price, Route I,
Long Bottom.
Attending were his parents, Jim
and JeaMie Starcher, Charles and
Grace Price, Teddy, Chester and
Lori Mundry, Bob, Penny, Brett and
Bobbie Price, Tim and Paula Dillon,
Roger, Ruth and Scott Dillon, Irene
and Jerry Starcher. He received
several gifts and following the party
a family picnic was held in observance of Mother's Day.

jimmy Starcher
•

against equal rights for women and
ignored their contributions except in
the capacity of being receptive and
pleasing men.
As for his and his wife's assertion
that there. had never been a great
female songwriter, I consiaer Jonie
MitcheU, Carol King, Carlie Simon,
Linda Ronstadt, Judy Collins and
Joan Baez great.
To acquaint him with some of the
other great women of our time, how
about Sarah CaldweU, opera producer and conductor; Shirley
Chisholm, U.S, Representative;
Chien..Shiung Mu, nucle.y- physicist;
Yeffe KimbaU, artist; ' Billie Jean
King, tennis champion; Barbara
Walters, TV newscaster; and Cynthia Wedel, psychologist and church
leader?
A woman can be weU educated
and involved in current isues
without relinquishing her femininity,
I'm certainly glad not aU men are
so insensitive and unaware. MELODIE
READERS ALL:
And stiU they come: Poor Ralph
now has top honors as the most
castigated man in our column's
history.
One final note: Should these letters inspire you to learn more about
outstanding and unusual females,
we recommend an exceUent book,
"Liberty's Women," published in
March by G. &amp; C. Merriam Co. It's a
unique reference work containing
biographies of more than 1,000
women who have made significant
contributions to American life.
We hope Ralph and Mrs. Ralph
read it too. - HELEN AND SUE

Birthday boy turns three

Kings &amp; too's

~ltmentacy :

5th grade outMtli:isa Calaway; 6th
gr-.-de oul.oltanding ml!lllci.Hn - lha Henderson;

6th grHde m011t improved musician , Stout

'ftlc! band ~rophie s 8.5 awarded tlu!t night are :

Teni

C~~ter Elementary : Sth grade out:ltanding

mw;!c!'ln -

Am~

Louks : 6th grade outs.anding

musiCian - Tem Sta rctEr ; 6th grade most im-

proved mWIIci.an- Pete DarliJ4!.
Riverview Elementary : 5th grade oul:ltanding
musician - Arlene Rllc'hle: 6th grade outstanding mu.sidan, Bobby Epling.
Eastern Jr. High: 7th grade out!tandlng

musician - . Angie Spencer; 8th grade out~ndJ.ng mwncian - Melis&amp;a Scarbroogh ; mtl5t
unproved musician - Sheila Koenig.
E~s~rn 1-;li~h School 9th grade outstanding
mus1ct.B n - L1sa CoUiru ; lOth grade outstanding
musicw n - Carolyn Bowen ; 11th grade outstanding musician - Connie Stout; 12th gnllle
outstanding mwici.an - Nant.'Y Samos; most iJn..
prond musician - Sh.&amp;roo Griffin.
MDSt GUt.1ta~dinp; majorette - Belh Riebel;
most ou~t.anding flag C(Jrp.s member - Debbie
Eynon.

Students attend first annual Rio Roundup.
On Tuesday the students of Midd,leport Elementary attended the first annual Rio Roundup at Rio Grande.
The children were treated to
Western singing, Indian dancing and
a pageant about the life of cowboys
during the middle and late 1800s.
This fun learning experience was a
project of Professor Bob Leith of the
Rio Grande CoUege History Department. Professor Leith's students
and other volunteers were dressed in
westen costumes. Frank Petrie, Jr.
and George Miller explained to the
students how to approach, groom
and saddle a horse correctly. Petrie
also put his horse "Super 76"
through paces used by the cowboys.
Middleport Elementary was in-

PRA\'ER MEETING SUNDAY
A county-wide prayer meeting will
be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Bald
Knob Mission with Glen BisseU as
class leader.

vited to the demonstration by Rio
Grande College. Approximately
1,400 student~ attended from
Southeastern Ohio. The show was
presented at BiU Well's Stables.
The children were pleased when
they found their reading teacher's
son, David Horton, was in the
pageant. He played the part of
" Billy Joe, " farm boy, who was shot
"dead" by the Gunslinger. Mick
Childs, husband of Mrs. ChUds,
second grade teacher, was the
telegraph operator ·or the Western

TheM" htst two awards were chosen by the

squad members themselvea.
Students earning varsity band Jenera are :
Becky Ambr06e, Usa Collin.s, Brian Colliru,
Becky Eichinger. Julie Elberfeld, Shllroo Grif·
fln. Bt!th Hayman, Leonard Koenig, Rhonda
Riebel, Tim Roberta, T&amp;Lni Samoa, Je!fShrivers
Diane Smith, Jodi Smith BeUrTeaford ~
Thoma, lba Wlboo, David Young.
'
Sen·ice certificate.s were .11Warded to any
junior or senior high school studenta that have
participated m marching or concert band.
The fina l award.s of the evenin8 were the
spe-cial natiOIUlt Bwards that are chosen or soonsored by national groups. Nominated for &lt;fAJl.
Americ.lln" honors from Purdue University
were: Kenn y Newell, l.aura EichinQer Tammie
Sta r~her , Beth Riebel, ~t.nd De6bii! Eynon.
Nom.JMted and se lected for '' Who's Who In
Music" were: Nancy Samos, Janet Mora, and
Oenlse WJute .
The "John Philip Sousa" Mliooal award for
bBod excellerx.-e was awarded to : Laura
Eichinger.
FoUowing the banquet, 50 parents and students
journeyed to Parkersburg for a bowlillg p~~rty .
The band boo.sters would like to thank the
bU:.lllt!'i.'le!l whi('h contributed Lroplliea and awar·
ds fo. lhi! year's banquet : NeweU's Sunoco
• GauJ'.sShake Haven, Ridenour Supply Ride~

TV, Swrunerfield 's Re.st.aurant Ba~ Lumber
Gaul '.s Market, Reed 's Groct'ry: Barr's Ashland:
D. V. Weber Construction Co., Phylli.s' Snip and
Curl, Lawren ce's Grocery and Pomeroy
National Bank.

SPECIAL!!!

KINGSFORD
CHARCOAL
1o lb. Bag

scene.

$209

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRU

The Middleport students had a
sack lunch on the grounds of Bob
Evans farms and in the afternoon
toured the animal exhibits.

748 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, Oh.

WHERE YOUR INFLATED

DOLLAR WILL STILL
BUYS MOREll
CHECK US AND COMPARE·
2 Packages
Will Reweb
A Chair
WREATHS AND,SPRAYS
If you haven't bought
yours -- don't delay
FEET · 6 COLORS
We nev~er seem to have
. 17
.

(;,l{f!IIUAiid"7)tHt-

Live-in uncle a pain
to 3 fed-up nieces
By Helen and Sue Hottel

TO OBSERVE 75TH ANNIVERSARY
Wilkesville Chapter 'lffl, Order of
Eastern Star, will be observing its
7:ith aMiversary at 7:30p.m. Thursday . Ronald Seigla, Worthy Grand
Patron of the Grand Chapter of Ohio,
will visit. A dinner at the Pythian
HaU at 6 p.m. will precede the observance. Evangeline Chapter, Middleport, is the mother chapter of the
Wilkesville Chapter.

Tuppers ?law

standing musician -

HAM DINNER MEMORIAL DAY
The Modem Woodmen of America
at Burlingham will stage a ham dinner with homemade ice cream and
pies on Memorial Day, May 26, at
the Burl.jngham HaU with serving to
beo!in at 11 a.m. There will also be a
bake ~le. Proceeds will go to the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad •

supply .

MISSES AND WOMENS
ENTIRE STOCK OF

We hare the selection

as always at ttie

Time for rewebblng chairs, at
savings . Save 15c on each
package . On Sale 5 days only .

best price!

3

·$ 99

TO

Washable poly . Small
lot Includes daisies ,
roses, carna tions, et c.
On sale Wednesday ,
while they last .

TANK
TOPS
Sizes

8

$ 99

Sm-Med- Lg
And
Extra Lg 40 To 44

ARTIFICAL POLY

FLOWERING BUSH

Reg. 1.99 ·
1

$}59

Gel your su mmer needs
now and save. Choose
from dozens of style s,
fashion looks, basics .
slim or wi de strap s.
Fabri cs of ter ry , cotton
blends, spun polyester
and more. Don 't Miss
These.

RED ROSE
CROSS

'$199

ARTIFICAL FLOWERS
Hurry They're
¢
¢

AND

8 58
TO

Going Fast

25%off

enough.~ hurry on In .for your

'-AWN CHAIR
WEBBING
Regular
49'

5 Day Special!'

Select Froom
Over 600 In
Each Store
Now Thru Sunday ~

$399

Prices In Effect Wednesday Thru Sot.

OPEN NIGHTLY TILL 8 P.M.

RIGID PLASTIC

COIL SPRING

42"1NCH
WADING
POOL

WOODEN
· CLOTHES
PINS
Made In U.S.A.
40 To Pkg.

The pool thats easy lor
mom to handle, fills
with water quickly .
Hours of fun for your
little ones .

Reg.
1.59

1

99¢

WE NEED HANGING SPACE
SO YOU GET BARGAINS!
WOMENS

SAVE 50%

CANVAS

ENTIRE SPRING STOCK

TOTE BAGS
J Styles. 6 color- s. All
purpose bags wi th zipper s.
pockets and snap s. Our
spring stoc k redu ced .

Regular
1
4.99

$ 266

''

WOMENS
PANTS
Sizes 6 To 18, 32 To 38
Values to $12.99 . Light and dark
shades by Shir ley, Block and
other we l l known Mfgrs. A big
variety of styles to choose from .
Come get your share, Now.

--~-PRICE
By Sun Terrace . Tubular aluminum frame, full size .
Made with alum1num wa terfall arms . Bnght multi
color that wil l match any colors .

2

FOR

OR '5.99 Each

2

�10--The _Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 14, 1980

CBS regains prime time lead
NEW YORK (AP) - NBC paid a
reported $5 million for broadcast
rights to "Breaking Away," and the
Osca!'-winning movie helped boost
the network's weekly ratings to their
highest level since mid-March.
Alas, NBC was third once more for
the week ending May 11, behind CBS
and ABC.
CBS' No. 1 finish in the prime-time
ratings race was its first since the
season ended April 20. CBS wrested
the prime-time title from four-time
champ ABC in the recently completed season.
.
CBS' rating for the most recent
week surveyed by the A.C. Nielsen
Co. was 16.6 to 16.4 for ABC and 15.9
for NBC.
CBS' "60 Minutes" was the week S
most-watched program, followed by
"Three's Com1&gt;4ny" on ABC. CBS
had five of the week's Top 10
programs, and NBC listed three.
The networks say CBS' rating
means in an average prime-time
minute during the week, 16.6 percent
of the homes in the country with
television were tuned to the No. 1
network.
1

The rating for "60 Minutes" was
22.6. Nielsen says that means of all
the television-equipped homes in the
country, 22.6 percent saw at least
part of the program.
"Breaking Away" fini3hed No. 5
for the week, and was only one of
several movies the scored in the
week's ratings. "Off the Minnesota
Strip" on ABC was lOth, Part I d.
"The Curse of King Tut's Tomb" on
NBC 13th and the first installment in
a tw{)opart screening of the recent
"King Kong" remake, also on NBC,
14th.
Several other movies were
moderately successful : " Uke Mom,
Like Me,'' on CBS, No. 25; ''Angel on
My Shoulder," ABC, No. 27';
"Capricorn One," NBC, No. 33, and
"T'ne Memory of Eva Ryker," CBS,
No. 34.
NBC was hurt again at the bottom
of the ratings, with three of the five
least-watched programs, including
"The Big Show" in 57th place, a
"Kennedy for President" spot 59th
and "Prime Time Saturday" No. 60.
"The White· Shlldow" on CBS was
56th, and "The Return .of the King,"

an animated special on ABC, was
58th.
'
Here are the week's Top 10 shows :
"60 Minutes," with a rating of 22.6
representing 17.2 million homes,
CBS; "Three's Company, " 22.4 or
17.1 million, ABC; "The Jeffersons," 21.9 or 16.7 million, and
"Johnny Cash: The First 25 Years,"
21.7 or 16.6 million, both CBS;
Movie-"Breaking Away," ~c. and
"Alice," CBS, both 21.4 or 16.2
million; "Real People," 21 or 16
million, and "Little House on the
Prairie," 20.9 or 15.9 million, both
NBC; "Archie Bunker's Place," 20.8
or 15.8 million, CBS, and Movie-"Off
the Minnesota Strip," 20.6 or 15.7
million, ABC.
The next 10 programs: "Taxi,"
ABC; "M-A-8-H," special time,
CBS; "The Curse of King Tot's
Tomb," Part I, and Movie-"King
Kong," Part!, both NBC; "Charlie's
Angels,'' ABC; ''Diff'rent Strokes,''
NBC, and "Laverne and Shirley,"
ABC, tie; "National Cheerleading
Championships," CBS , and
" Vega$," ABC, tie, and

Missionary Society installs
officers at Thursday meeting
Officers were installed at the
Thursday night meeting of the
Missionary Society of the Pomeroy
Pirst Baptist Church.
Installed by Mrs. Georgia Watson
were Caryl Cook, president; Phyllis
Skinner,
secretary-treasurer ;
Harriet Sterrett, chairman of
Christian social relations; Maria
Foster, vice president of leadership
development and spiritual growth;
Margaret Bailey, love gift chairman; Ellen Couch, literature;
Aydrey Young, scholarship.
Mrs. Skinner opened the meeting
with the love gift being taken and
dedicated by Mrs. Bailey. The Ba)r
tist Women's Conference was announced for June 111-20 in Granville.
Mrs. Foster had the program on
the theme, " Water Without

Walking." It was taloen from the
prognna book, " All of God's
Children" and dealt with money
collected for the installation of pumps and deep welis for villages
without a water source. It was noted
that in many places around the
world women and children have to
walk miles every day carrying big
water containers just to have water
for their needs. Special situations
were chosen by the International
Ministries of the American Baptist
Churches for the installation of pumps.
Scriptures were read by Audrey
Young, Phyllis Skinner, Margaret
Bailey, and Georgia Watson. "Fill
My Cup 0 Lord" was the song to
close the meeting. Mrs. Bailey served refreshments.

Safety patrol honored
Recognition was given to the
safety patrol members and officers
for the 1~1 year were installed at
the Monday night meeting of the
Pomeroy PTA.
John Arnott presented trophies to
the safety patrol members and extended appreciation to the boys and
girls for their assistance during the
year.
Robert Morris, principal, installed
the new officers, Bob Barton,
president; Joan Anderson, vice
president; Sharon Wright, second
vice president; Judy Werry, recording secretary; Debbie Buck,
corresponding secretary; Darla
Hawley, treasurer; Dina Gryszka,
HAWK HOSPITALIZED
Robert J. Hawk, 205 Pleasant
Ridge, Pomeroy, an employe of the
Pomeroy Cement Block Co., is a
patient in the cardiac care unit of
Holzer Medical Center. Cards may
be sent to him at Room4-41-H.

historian ; Delores Hawk, membership; Anita Dean, ways and
means chairman; and Nonna Baker
and Jean Powell, county council
representatives, and Sharon Mattox
and Rita Fields, alternates.
The Rev.· Floyd Shook gave
devotions. Officers' reports •were
given and a television fund raising
project discussed. The PTA voted to
purchase the lumber for shelves for
the library with the shelves to be
built by one of the parents.
Plans for field day were discussed.
Refreshments were served by the
second grade parents and the sixth
grade won the room count.
MRS. ROUSH VISITS HERE
Mrs. Dale K. Roush of Apple
Creek was here over the weekend to
visit her parents. Ben Turner
remains at the Pleasant Valley Nursing Home in Point Pleasant, and
Mrs. Roush and Mrs. Turner visited
him there.

CBS.

~
~

SPECI AL

@ EDITION

ROAD-ATLAS
..

·1
·

ll7'!

O tt er good through July 1
Wh1le Supplies last

Sunday, May 18, Noon til 6 P.M.

'

137 PINE STREET, (lALLIPOLIS, OHIO

BffiTIIDAY SURPRISE
By Alma Mlll'!ihaU
Special correspondent
lETART, W. Va. - Frank McDennitt, Letart, entertained with a
surprise birthday party for his wife,
Louise, on Tuesday at their home.
Ice cream and cake were served to
the following : Mrs. Frank McDennitt, Ada Vickers, New Haven;
Louise Robinson, Kay and Mike of
Clifton ; Emma Rogers, Robbie and
Stephanie, Letart; Bill McDennitt
and Bryan, Hattie McDaniel and two
sons, Denver Blake, Jackie and
Dawn, Mark Gilkey and Clara
Williams, all of Clifton; Ethel
Rayburn and Arthur,l..etart.

.

~
~

..

NO FEE TRAVELERS CHEQUES: AAA members rocolve no·leo Thomas
Cook Travelers Cheques lrom any office. You save $10 per thousand
over tho usuol1% leo. Man~ members II YO tho cost of membership with
this benefit alone!
To join by m111 und S25 ptut 110 ••en lor II)OUUI tnd Children living 11 home to address b•low.
InClUde thll 1d tor FREE 1.1111 Alnewal Du11 1r1 ouly S1ii SO per Jllr

IOJt\ Your Persom.;/ Automobile
Club
'(tS.)'
GalliPOliS, Ohio

Fo1 .no.:mbers hip information call or vls1t:

Ph. 446-0699

.

.., e...PA~ 'U A " C!.&amp;P A'-" '!.#A'-!» ~a· a.!' ~A"-' rv""Ui

'·

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"MELLODY MADE"
••
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CHOCOLATE DRINK

'/

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.

GAllON

~~,,,,

REG. 3.99

Zebco
Omega ' 144 '"

1

~

'17~!

GAlLON

MOTHER'S DAY OBSERVED
MASON - In observance of
Mother's Day on Sunday morning,
potted flowers were presented by
Dr. John Wildman, pastor of Mason
United Methodist Church, to the
eldest mother present, Mrs. Clara
Roush, to the youngest mother, Mrs.
Fred (Valerie Cadle) Weaver, and to
the mother with the most children
present and the recipient was Mrs.
Roy Test.
At the opening of the service
' James Proffitt read a Mother's Day
poem.

FRESH

~
..... GROUND
:'•
BEEF

• c:osed-face ~p:nhm g ' E-~··

The honoree received several gifts.

••

il

••
•

~

FAMILY PRODUCTS

•••
•••

COOLER

•

~--·

"WALDORF"

••
•

BATHROOM

••
••
•

TISSUE

•239
.

COOLER

Eckrich

$4~

JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••••••••~~}1.49
Homemade

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••:~:. $1.19

STEAK

~~~

PAINT

4-ROll
PKG.

EACH

RUBBER MAID
SIDEKICK

fit

i111'~ Wifl.t

a

M

D

m

Mil B

.CHICKEN BROTH

••

illl U

rtilll -

~

···········'''~

SWANSON'S

••

4
i!mi tiD'@

i@ii! ·

..• ·BATH SOAP

••
•

•
.
...
14 oz. $}00
CANS

m u .Q;1iill

~ f!Zf!l W'.t&lt; •

tiD

.;:

••
•

B

1il.lli

q

!M'r ,

z &gt;;iri'f - J!ta

.~

n ·B

French City

BULK WIENERS •••••••••••••••~~~. $1.39
PRODUCE

DAIRY
lib. Parkay
Quarters

MARGARINE ......

·

79

~

12 oz. Kraft American
Individual Wrapped Sliced

CHEESE .........~1.69

88's Golden Delicious

APPLES.

2

Apples

49~

2 lb. New Yellow

i!&gt;i

i

I

I

I
L

FOR SUPER SAVINGS!
~~~!~·~·:.::· I I

aI

ONIONS ...... ~~~. 59~

I 8 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

• I I I •

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON
VALVOLINE
IOWJO

....

MOTOR OIL

FRENCH FRIED POTATOES ••••~~~~ 99'

MASONS TO MEET
Middleport Lodge 363, F. and A.
M. will have work in the master
mason degree at 7 p.m. Tuesday. All
master masons are invited to attend.

by bringing or mailing In this ad . Low cost AAA
membership is LESS THAN $2.50 a MONTH PER
COUPLE. plus entrance fee (see details below), so
call or visit to JOIN THE CLUB !

USDA CHOICE

~ \~

····················· "ol ~.,J.'I)~~

The Carpenter Baptist Church will
hold a rummage sale and a bake sale
on the school lot, across from
Laura's Grocery Store on Route 143,
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday.

Vou can't beat AAA for personal Auto Club ser·
vices and dozen s o f benefits you can
use- Emergency Road Ser'\lice, Personal Ace I·
dent Insurance, world famous Trip Planning and
more ! And through July t new master members

BILTMORE
INTERIOR
LATEX WALL

CAPACITY

R~GESALESATURDAY

Free AAA Road Atlas

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU SUNDAY, MAY 18TH

two years and has been an active
member for 12 years and has served
on many educational committees.
She is interested in all kinds of crafts
and has participated in many county
workshops. She is a member of Cllf.
ton United Methodist Church, a former Sunday School teacher and
choir member.
She is the mother of Mrs. Margie
Cartwright and Mrs. Millll Smith,
both of Clifton. She has four grandchildren, Randy and Greg Lewis,
Elaine Burson, and Teresa Smith
and one great-grandchild, Chris
Grogan.

12 QT.

SMORGASBORD SATURDAY
The Pythian Sisters Lodge will
stage a public smorgasbord Saturday from 5 to 8 p.m. at the hall. Admission is $3 per adult and $1.50 for
children.

Present this ad when
you join to receive a

By Alma Marsball
Special correspondent
CLIFTON - .Mrs. Laurene Lewis
was elected Mason County Belle for
1980 to represent the county at the
Folk Festival at Glenville, W.Va. on
June 19, 20, 21 and 22 at Glenville, W.
Va. The candidate was elected at
Spring Luncheon which was held at
the Hotiday Inn, Kanauga. Ohio.
Also pictured is Matilda Noble, former Mason County Belle, both are
members of Mason Extension
Homemakers.
Mrs. Lewis was president of
Mason Extension Homemakers for

FOOD STAMP
ORDERS
WElCOMED!!!!
WE RESERVE
THE RIGHT
TO liMIT
QUANTITIES!!!

700 W. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

LAURENE Lewis (left) was elected Mason County Bell for 1980. Dn
right is Matilda Noble, former Belle.

at Rock Springs Grange

ANOTHER UNIQUE AAA MEMBERSHIP BENEFIT

JONES MEAT PACKING'

COUNTRY STOBES

1.7 oz. Teen Queen

SWEET
PEAS
••••••••••••••••••••
~ •.2/&amp;SC
10 oz. Vienna

~~oi'~'a •

•I

~··vwhi1I~!Only

Jumbo

:\,'\:'l'l'U 1 I

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON
DUPONT
"EASY-CARE"

14'/2 oz. Joan of Arc Green

! FRUIT COCKTAIL ••••••••••••••. 2/$1.29
! INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••••••••!::.s5.39
~onte

10 oz. Folger's

•

•
•

Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's
"Cents Off" coupon and get double the savings at Jones
Boys . Not to include Jones B~ys 'Coupons or those .at ~ther
retailers and not to exceed the va,1ue of the Item. L1m1t one
double coupon per manufacturer s coupon.
coupon Expires Sun., May 18, 1980
Limit 2 Coupons Per Customer
Not valid for Cigarette or Free Coupons

••
••

.

THIS WEEK AT JONES BOYS!!!!
WE'LL DOUBLE THE VALUE ON ALL
MANUFACTURER'S COUPONS WITH
OUR "DO'UBLE SAVINGS COlJ~
PONS"!!!
NOT VALID ON CIGARETTE OR
FREE COUPONS!!!
EACH OF THESE TWO COUPONS
PLUS
ANY MANUFACTURER'S COUPON
MEANS DOUBLE SAVINGS!!!!

I I I 1,1 I I I I • I I I . I I . I . • .

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON
MEN'S and BOYS '

••

•

NYLON Limit
JOGGER
$488 One
With
Coupon
Pair
Per Customer
Price Without Coupon
$6.99

Offer Expires 5-18-80

·············· ···~········
••••••••••••••••••••••••
JONES BOYS

DOUBLE COUPON SAVINGS

3 oz.

REGULAR JELLOS••••••••••••••••. 3/79'

STEEL ICE CHEST

~11..'\11.'\\.\\11111

Offer Expires 5-18-80

TOMATO JUICE. •••.•••••••••••••••'.a.n•• 79'

17 oz. Del

39~ t~~it

:
Per
•
Customer.:::
; p,.;,., Without Coupon

HUNTS
CATSUP
•••••••••••••••••••••••
59'
· 46 oz. Stokely

CUT ASPARAGUS~ •••••••••••••••• ~ •• 7fJ

JONESBOYS
SUPER COUPON

With
Coupon

14 oz.

'

I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 • I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

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I • I I I I I I I I I I I I~O_!..I.i:',;;t~Z!:.{I,:

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON
43 QUART SIZE

:with
$}588Limit0ne
• Coupon
Per
Customer

Quart 59~ Limit
With
6 Quarts
Coupon
Price Without Coupon 89c
Offer Expires 5-18-80
I I I • a I I I I I I I I I I I I I 10 I• n •

• • • • • • • • • • • I I • • • • • • • • • • • • • •.,,.

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Ftu New Slaughter Floor

'

:

Woods return home

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W001f and
children, Carrie, Cathy and Donna
Jean, Grand Forks, N. D., have
returned home after a 15 day leave
with his parent~, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Wood.
While here the Kenneth Wood and
Nonnan Wood families spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Brickles and Jeffrey and Ronnie
Wood, Gaithersburg, and were the
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. W.
Lynch, Athens. The Kenneth Wood
family also visited their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Weber Wood.
Other guests at the Norman Wood
home during the visit their son and
his family were Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
DeBord and Tammie, Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Gilliam, Terri and Eddie,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. John
Gilliam and Troy, Columbus.

•.........

~ROUND

The charter was draped in
memory
of Mildred Betzing at the
New York, rehearsed for another
Thursday night meeting of the Rock
three weeks, returned to Toronto
Springs Grange held at the hall.
and taped the second half."
During the meeting one name was
Concentrating Mrs. Roosevelt's
proposed
for membership and Mrs.
scenes in the first half allowed the
Barbara Fry gave the CWA report.
actors to build their relationship
William Radford gave the
more effectively. But the
legislative report also reported on
arrangement was set up largely for
the.state bowling tournament. Coneconomic reasons.
tribution was made to the national
The cast has 60 speaking parts,
youth fund. Communications were
and many actors who appear in the
read
from the Ohio Blind Society and
first half do not appear in the second
a thank you note was read from the
half, and many in the second half are
Don Betzing family.
not in the first. That way they did net
It wa5 noted that 12 members from
have to pay all of the actors for the
Rock
Springs Grange had visited the
entire production.
·
Star
Grange
on May 2. Mrs. Bethel
"The form of the play is that
Grueser,
lecturer,
had the program
people who knew Roosevelt talk to
there
and
the Star Grange served a
the audience and tell us what they
potluck dinner following the
knew about him," said Greenberg. · meeting.
"Then it goes into the drama. That
Sympathy was extended to the
comes from Bishop's book. He went
Don
Betzing family, and a card was
around interviewing people. So it's
sent
to Roy Grueser who was reporessentially a memory play.
ted
to
have had surgery. A tentative
"We try to keep that feeling of
date
for
a visit from the Columbia
memory by not having totally
Grange was set.
realistic sets. We want to remind
Refreshments were served by Mr.
people that it's a play, not a
and
Mrs. Harold Blackston and Mr.
docudrama.
and Mrs. WilllamGrueser.
"I don't like the word docudrama.
It's a question of how accurate are
you. I'm trying to be as accurate ils
possible. And sometimes the records
lie. Just because it's based on
MISSIONARIES TO SPEAK
memory doesn'tmean it's off.''
The
Rev. and Mrs. Marshall Ruth,
Besides "Blind Ambition,'' he
Athens,
missionaries on furlough
wrote "The Missiles of October,
from
Korea,
will be at the local
"The Silence" and the movies
Salvation
Army
Corps Thursday at
"Soylent Green" and "Skyjacked."
7:30p.m.
He said he is researching a play on
Slides will be shown and special
the Iranian situation and has recenmusic
presented. The public is intly finished scripts based on "The
vited to attend.
Day the Bubble Burst," an account
of the 1929 stock market crash by
Gordon Thomas and Max MoranWitts, and "Robert Kennedy and His CHILDREN'S PROGRAM SLATED
A program, "Be a Publisher; Be
Times," by historian Kenneth
an
Author" will be presented by PatSchlesinger.
ty Asbeck at the Middleport Public
Library from I to 3 p.m. Saturday.
The program is for children from the
ages of kindergarten through sixth
grade.

m

Off 555 or County Rd. 26 on
· washington County ~48, Little Hocking OH.
ALL FREE!
.

~

Mrs. Betzing remembered

.

-Tour our complete slaughtering and processing plant.
-Register for free meat every hour.
-several live . country and Bluegrass brlnds playing
noon till ??

~~,,,

" M~A..S..H,"

Stanley Greenburg and'FDR'on NBC
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Stanley scandal.
The three-hour play, which airs
Greenberg wrote a screenplay five
years ago based on the last year of Thursday night on NBC, stars Jason
Franklin D. Roosevelt's life, only to · Robards as Roosevelt (the unidenfind someone else was at work on a tified actor who triggered the play's
production called "Eleanor and resurrection never got the job) .
Franklin," covering the same Eileen Heckart is Eleanor
Roosevelt, and Kim Hunter plays
period.
"Television felt it didn't need two Lucy Rutherford, who was at
Roosevelt's side when he died in
FOR's in one year, so I set it aside,''
Greenberg recalled. "When I was WarmSprings, Ga., in 1945.
The play is roughly divided into
working on 'Blind Ambition,' I saw
an actor who looked like Roosevelt. I two parts. The first half concerns
thought I should do a play on Roosevelt and his wife at the White
Roosevelt. Then it occurred to me I House. The second half focuses on
Roosevelt and Miss Rutherford at
had done a play on Roosevelt."
Greenberg wrote ·"F.D.R. The Warm Springs.
"We rehearsed for three weeks in
Last Year," based largely on the
book by Jim Bishop. "Blind Am- New York, then went to Toronto,
bition" was adapted from John Canada, to tape the first half,'' said
Dean's account of the downfall of Greenberg. "Then we returned to
Richard M. Nixon in the Watergate

Mason County news reported

Mason persooalll
Mrs. Sarah Spencer reiurned
home on Friday, after spending
several days visiting her son and
wife , Dr. and Mrs. Edward Spencer
and two daughters, at Bluefield, W.
Va.
Mrs. Russell Capehart has returned home from Holzer Medical Center after undergoing surgery.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel
spent the weekend in Colwnbus
visiting their daughter and son-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Stan Saunders
and family. While there they observed the 13th birthday of Amber
Saunders. Several of Amber's friends were also there attending the birthday observance.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Oliver spent
two days visiting in Toledo with her
sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
LouisHanns.
Visiting with Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Greenlee, Greer Rd., on
Mother's Day were Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas McCoy, Trena, Tammy and
Jason, Lesage, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Newberry, Jr., Pl. Pleasant;
Mr. and Mrs. John Greenlee, Lisa,
Lori and John, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jim
McCoy of Huntington visited her
parents the Sunday before last.

SUPER DOUBLE COUPON
:'
1
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" Cents Off" coupon and get double the savings at Jones
Boys. Not to include Jones Boys coupons or those of other
retailers and not to e)lceecl the value of the item. Limit one
double coupon per manufacturer' s coupOn.
Coupon E)lpires Sun., May 18, 1980
Limit 2 Coupons Per customer
Not Valid for Cigarette or Free Coupons

•••••••••••••••••••••••

�10--The _Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 14, 1980

CBS regains prime time lead
NEW YORK (AP) - NBC paid a
reported $5 million for broadcast
rights to "Breaking Away," and the
Osca!'-winning movie helped boost
the network's weekly ratings to their
highest level since mid-March.
Alas, NBC was third once more for
the week ending May 11, behind CBS
and ABC.
CBS' No. 1 finish in the prime-time
ratings race was its first since the
season ended April 20. CBS wrested
the prime-time title from four-time
champ ABC in the recently completed season.
.
CBS' rating for the most recent
week surveyed by the A.C. Nielsen
Co. was 16.6 to 16.4 for ABC and 15.9
for NBC.
CBS' "60 Minutes" was the week S
most-watched program, followed by
"Three's Com1&gt;4ny" on ABC. CBS
had five of the week's Top 10
programs, and NBC listed three.
The networks say CBS' rating
means in an average prime-time
minute during the week, 16.6 percent
of the homes in the country with
television were tuned to the No. 1
network.
1

The rating for "60 Minutes" was
22.6. Nielsen says that means of all
the television-equipped homes in the
country, 22.6 percent saw at least
part of the program.
"Breaking Away" fini3hed No. 5
for the week, and was only one of
several movies the scored in the
week's ratings. "Off the Minnesota
Strip" on ABC was lOth, Part I d.
"The Curse of King Tut's Tomb" on
NBC 13th and the first installment in
a tw{)opart screening of the recent
"King Kong" remake, also on NBC,
14th.
Several other movies were
moderately successful : " Uke Mom,
Like Me,'' on CBS, No. 25; ''Angel on
My Shoulder," ABC, No. 27';
"Capricorn One," NBC, No. 33, and
"T'ne Memory of Eva Ryker," CBS,
No. 34.
NBC was hurt again at the bottom
of the ratings, with three of the five
least-watched programs, including
"The Big Show" in 57th place, a
"Kennedy for President" spot 59th
and "Prime Time Saturday" No. 60.
"The White· Shlldow" on CBS was
56th, and "The Return .of the King,"

an animated special on ABC, was
58th.
'
Here are the week's Top 10 shows :
"60 Minutes," with a rating of 22.6
representing 17.2 million homes,
CBS; "Three's Company, " 22.4 or
17.1 million, ABC; "The Jeffersons," 21.9 or 16.7 million, and
"Johnny Cash: The First 25 Years,"
21.7 or 16.6 million, both CBS;
Movie-"Breaking Away," ~c. and
"Alice," CBS, both 21.4 or 16.2
million; "Real People," 21 or 16
million, and "Little House on the
Prairie," 20.9 or 15.9 million, both
NBC; "Archie Bunker's Place," 20.8
or 15.8 million, CBS, and Movie-"Off
the Minnesota Strip," 20.6 or 15.7
million, ABC.
The next 10 programs: "Taxi,"
ABC; "M-A-8-H," special time,
CBS; "The Curse of King Tot's
Tomb," Part I, and Movie-"King
Kong," Part!, both NBC; "Charlie's
Angels,'' ABC; ''Diff'rent Strokes,''
NBC, and "Laverne and Shirley,"
ABC, tie; "National Cheerleading
Championships," CBS , and
" Vega$," ABC, tie, and

Missionary Society installs
officers at Thursday meeting
Officers were installed at the
Thursday night meeting of the
Missionary Society of the Pomeroy
Pirst Baptist Church.
Installed by Mrs. Georgia Watson
were Caryl Cook, president; Phyllis
Skinner,
secretary-treasurer ;
Harriet Sterrett, chairman of
Christian social relations; Maria
Foster, vice president of leadership
development and spiritual growth;
Margaret Bailey, love gift chairman; Ellen Couch, literature;
Aydrey Young, scholarship.
Mrs. Skinner opened the meeting
with the love gift being taken and
dedicated by Mrs. Bailey. The Ba)r
tist Women's Conference was announced for June 111-20 in Granville.
Mrs. Foster had the program on
the theme, " Water Without

Walking." It was taloen from the
prognna book, " All of God's
Children" and dealt with money
collected for the installation of pumps and deep welis for villages
without a water source. It was noted
that in many places around the
world women and children have to
walk miles every day carrying big
water containers just to have water
for their needs. Special situations
were chosen by the International
Ministries of the American Baptist
Churches for the installation of pumps.
Scriptures were read by Audrey
Young, Phyllis Skinner, Margaret
Bailey, and Georgia Watson. "Fill
My Cup 0 Lord" was the song to
close the meeting. Mrs. Bailey served refreshments.

Safety patrol honored
Recognition was given to the
safety patrol members and officers
for the 1~1 year were installed at
the Monday night meeting of the
Pomeroy PTA.
John Arnott presented trophies to
the safety patrol members and extended appreciation to the boys and
girls for their assistance during the
year.
Robert Morris, principal, installed
the new officers, Bob Barton,
president; Joan Anderson, vice
president; Sharon Wright, second
vice president; Judy Werry, recording secretary; Debbie Buck,
corresponding secretary; Darla
Hawley, treasurer; Dina Gryszka,
HAWK HOSPITALIZED
Robert J. Hawk, 205 Pleasant
Ridge, Pomeroy, an employe of the
Pomeroy Cement Block Co., is a
patient in the cardiac care unit of
Holzer Medical Center. Cards may
be sent to him at Room4-41-H.

historian ; Delores Hawk, membership; Anita Dean, ways and
means chairman; and Nonna Baker
and Jean Powell, county council
representatives, and Sharon Mattox
and Rita Fields, alternates.
The Rev.· Floyd Shook gave
devotions. Officers' reports •were
given and a television fund raising
project discussed. The PTA voted to
purchase the lumber for shelves for
the library with the shelves to be
built by one of the parents.
Plans for field day were discussed.
Refreshments were served by the
second grade parents and the sixth
grade won the room count.
MRS. ROUSH VISITS HERE
Mrs. Dale K. Roush of Apple
Creek was here over the weekend to
visit her parents. Ben Turner
remains at the Pleasant Valley Nursing Home in Point Pleasant, and
Mrs. Roush and Mrs. Turner visited
him there.

CBS.

~
~

SPECI AL

@ EDITION

ROAD-ATLAS
..

·1
·

ll7'!

O tt er good through July 1
Wh1le Supplies last

Sunday, May 18, Noon til 6 P.M.

'

137 PINE STREET, (lALLIPOLIS, OHIO

BffiTIIDAY SURPRISE
By Alma Mlll'!ihaU
Special correspondent
lETART, W. Va. - Frank McDennitt, Letart, entertained with a
surprise birthday party for his wife,
Louise, on Tuesday at their home.
Ice cream and cake were served to
the following : Mrs. Frank McDennitt, Ada Vickers, New Haven;
Louise Robinson, Kay and Mike of
Clifton ; Emma Rogers, Robbie and
Stephanie, Letart; Bill McDennitt
and Bryan, Hattie McDaniel and two
sons, Denver Blake, Jackie and
Dawn, Mark Gilkey and Clara
Williams, all of Clifton; Ethel
Rayburn and Arthur,l..etart.

.

~
~

..

NO FEE TRAVELERS CHEQUES: AAA members rocolve no·leo Thomas
Cook Travelers Cheques lrom any office. You save $10 per thousand
over tho usuol1% leo. Man~ members II YO tho cost of membership with
this benefit alone!
To join by m111 und S25 ptut 110 ••en lor II)OUUI tnd Children living 11 home to address b•low.
InClUde thll 1d tor FREE 1.1111 Alnewal Du11 1r1 ouly S1ii SO per Jllr

IOJt\ Your Persom.;/ Automobile
Club
'(tS.)'
GalliPOliS, Ohio

Fo1 .no.:mbers hip information call or vls1t:

Ph. 446-0699

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GAlLON

MOTHER'S DAY OBSERVED
MASON - In observance of
Mother's Day on Sunday morning,
potted flowers were presented by
Dr. John Wildman, pastor of Mason
United Methodist Church, to the
eldest mother present, Mrs. Clara
Roush, to the youngest mother, Mrs.
Fred (Valerie Cadle) Weaver, and to
the mother with the most children
present and the recipient was Mrs.
Roy Test.
At the opening of the service
' James Proffitt read a Mother's Day
poem.

FRESH

~
..... GROUND
:'•
BEEF

• c:osed-face ~p:nhm g ' E-~··

The honoree received several gifts.

••

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FAMILY PRODUCTS

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COOLER

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"WALDORF"

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COOLER

Eckrich

$4~

JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••••••••~~}1.49
Homemade

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••:~:. $1.19

STEAK

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PAINT

4-ROll
PKG.

EACH

RUBBER MAID
SIDEKICK

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14 oz. $}00
CANS

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BULK WIENERS •••••••••••••••~~~. $1.39
PRODUCE

DAIRY
lib. Parkay
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MARGARINE ......

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Individual Wrapped Sliced

CHEESE .........~1.69

88's Golden Delicious

APPLES.

2

Apples

49~

2 lb. New Yellow

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FRENCH FRIED POTATOES ••••~~~~ 99'

MASONS TO MEET
Middleport Lodge 363, F. and A.
M. will have work in the master
mason degree at 7 p.m. Tuesday. All
master masons are invited to attend.

by bringing or mailing In this ad . Low cost AAA
membership is LESS THAN $2.50 a MONTH PER
COUPLE. plus entrance fee (see details below), so
call or visit to JOIN THE CLUB !

USDA CHOICE

~ \~

····················· "ol ~.,J.'I)~~

The Carpenter Baptist Church will
hold a rummage sale and a bake sale
on the school lot, across from
Laura's Grocery Store on Route 143,
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday.

Vou can't beat AAA for personal Auto Club ser·
vices and dozen s o f benefits you can
use- Emergency Road Ser'\lice, Personal Ace I·
dent Insurance, world famous Trip Planning and
more ! And through July t new master members

BILTMORE
INTERIOR
LATEX WALL

CAPACITY

R~GESALESATURDAY

Free AAA Road Atlas

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU SUNDAY, MAY 18TH

two years and has been an active
member for 12 years and has served
on many educational committees.
She is interested in all kinds of crafts
and has participated in many county
workshops. She is a member of Cllf.
ton United Methodist Church, a former Sunday School teacher and
choir member.
She is the mother of Mrs. Margie
Cartwright and Mrs. Millll Smith,
both of Clifton. She has four grandchildren, Randy and Greg Lewis,
Elaine Burson, and Teresa Smith
and one great-grandchild, Chris
Grogan.

12 QT.

SMORGASBORD SATURDAY
The Pythian Sisters Lodge will
stage a public smorgasbord Saturday from 5 to 8 p.m. at the hall. Admission is $3 per adult and $1.50 for
children.

Present this ad when
you join to receive a

By Alma Marsball
Special correspondent
CLIFTON - .Mrs. Laurene Lewis
was elected Mason County Belle for
1980 to represent the county at the
Folk Festival at Glenville, W.Va. on
June 19, 20, 21 and 22 at Glenville, W.
Va. The candidate was elected at
Spring Luncheon which was held at
the Hotiday Inn, Kanauga. Ohio.
Also pictured is Matilda Noble, former Mason County Belle, both are
members of Mason Extension
Homemakers.
Mrs. Lewis was president of
Mason Extension Homemakers for

FOOD STAMP
ORDERS
WElCOMED!!!!
WE RESERVE
THE RIGHT
TO liMIT
QUANTITIES!!!

700 W. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

LAURENE Lewis (left) was elected Mason County Bell for 1980. Dn
right is Matilda Noble, former Belle.

at Rock Springs Grange

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Boys . Not to include Jones B~ys 'Coupons or those .at ~ther
retailers and not to exceed the va,1ue of the Item. L1m1t one
double coupon per manufacturer s coupon.
coupon Expires Sun., May 18, 1980
Limit 2 Coupons Per Customer
Not valid for Cigarette or Free Coupons

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THIS WEEK AT JONES BOYS!!!!
WE'LL DOUBLE THE VALUE ON ALL
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PORK BARBECUE ••••••••••••••••• $1.29

~-~~-~~·~:~:t;;n.Ec.;.;;·~~·

Ftu New Slaughter Floor

'

:

Woods return home

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W001f and
children, Carrie, Cathy and Donna
Jean, Grand Forks, N. D., have
returned home after a 15 day leave
with his parent~, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Wood.
While here the Kenneth Wood and
Nonnan Wood families spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Brickles and Jeffrey and Ronnie
Wood, Gaithersburg, and were the
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. W.
Lynch, Athens. The Kenneth Wood
family also visited their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Weber Wood.
Other guests at the Norman Wood
home during the visit their son and
his family were Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
DeBord and Tammie, Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Gilliam, Terri and Eddie,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. John
Gilliam and Troy, Columbus.

•.........

~ROUND

The charter was draped in
memory
of Mildred Betzing at the
New York, rehearsed for another
Thursday night meeting of the Rock
three weeks, returned to Toronto
Springs Grange held at the hall.
and taped the second half."
During the meeting one name was
Concentrating Mrs. Roosevelt's
proposed
for membership and Mrs.
scenes in the first half allowed the
Barbara Fry gave the CWA report.
actors to build their relationship
William Radford gave the
more effectively. But the
legislative report also reported on
arrangement was set up largely for
the.state bowling tournament. Coneconomic reasons.
tribution was made to the national
The cast has 60 speaking parts,
youth fund. Communications were
and many actors who appear in the
read
from the Ohio Blind Society and
first half do not appear in the second
a thank you note was read from the
half, and many in the second half are
Don Betzing family.
not in the first. That way they did net
It wa5 noted that 12 members from
have to pay all of the actors for the
Rock
Springs Grange had visited the
entire production.
·
Star
Grange
on May 2. Mrs. Bethel
"The form of the play is that
Grueser,
lecturer,
had the program
people who knew Roosevelt talk to
there
and
the Star Grange served a
the audience and tell us what they
potluck dinner following the
knew about him," said Greenberg. · meeting.
"Then it goes into the drama. That
Sympathy was extended to the
comes from Bishop's book. He went
Don
Betzing family, and a card was
around interviewing people. So it's
sent
to Roy Grueser who was reporessentially a memory play.
ted
to
have had surgery. A tentative
"We try to keep that feeling of
date
for
a visit from the Columbia
memory by not having totally
Grange was set.
realistic sets. We want to remind
Refreshments were served by Mr.
people that it's a play, not a
and
Mrs. Harold Blackston and Mr.
docudrama.
and Mrs. WilllamGrueser.
"I don't like the word docudrama.
It's a question of how accurate are
you. I'm trying to be as accurate ils
possible. And sometimes the records
lie. Just because it's based on
MISSIONARIES TO SPEAK
memory doesn'tmean it's off.''
The
Rev. and Mrs. Marshall Ruth,
Besides "Blind Ambition,'' he
Athens,
missionaries on furlough
wrote "The Missiles of October,
from
Korea,
will be at the local
"The Silence" and the movies
Salvation
Army
Corps Thursday at
"Soylent Green" and "Skyjacked."
7:30p.m.
He said he is researching a play on
Slides will be shown and special
the Iranian situation and has recenmusic
presented. The public is intly finished scripts based on "The
vited to attend.
Day the Bubble Burst," an account
of the 1929 stock market crash by
Gordon Thomas and Max MoranWitts, and "Robert Kennedy and His CHILDREN'S PROGRAM SLATED
A program, "Be a Publisher; Be
Times," by historian Kenneth
an
Author" will be presented by PatSchlesinger.
ty Asbeck at the Middleport Public
Library from I to 3 p.m. Saturday.
The program is for children from the
ages of kindergarten through sixth
grade.

m

Off 555 or County Rd. 26 on
· washington County ~48, Little Hocking OH.
ALL FREE!
.

~

Mrs. Betzing remembered

.

-Tour our complete slaughtering and processing plant.
-Register for free meat every hour.
-several live . country and Bluegrass brlnds playing
noon till ??

~~,,,

" M~A..S..H,"

Stanley Greenburg and'FDR'on NBC
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Stanley scandal.
The three-hour play, which airs
Greenberg wrote a screenplay five
years ago based on the last year of Thursday night on NBC, stars Jason
Franklin D. Roosevelt's life, only to · Robards as Roosevelt (the unidenfind someone else was at work on a tified actor who triggered the play's
production called "Eleanor and resurrection never got the job) .
Franklin," covering the same Eileen Heckart is Eleanor
Roosevelt, and Kim Hunter plays
period.
"Television felt it didn't need two Lucy Rutherford, who was at
Roosevelt's side when he died in
FOR's in one year, so I set it aside,''
Greenberg recalled. "When I was WarmSprings, Ga., in 1945.
The play is roughly divided into
working on 'Blind Ambition,' I saw
an actor who looked like Roosevelt. I two parts. The first half concerns
thought I should do a play on Roosevelt and his wife at the White
Roosevelt. Then it occurred to me I House. The second half focuses on
Roosevelt and Miss Rutherford at
had done a play on Roosevelt."
Greenberg wrote ·"F.D.R. The Warm Springs.
"We rehearsed for three weeks in
Last Year," based largely on the
book by Jim Bishop. "Blind Am- New York, then went to Toronto,
bition" was adapted from John Canada, to tape the first half,'' said
Dean's account of the downfall of Greenberg. "Then we returned to
Richard M. Nixon in the Watergate

Mason County news reported

Mason persooalll
Mrs. Sarah Spencer reiurned
home on Friday, after spending
several days visiting her son and
wife , Dr. and Mrs. Edward Spencer
and two daughters, at Bluefield, W.
Va.
Mrs. Russell Capehart has returned home from Holzer Medical Center after undergoing surgery.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel
spent the weekend in Colwnbus
visiting their daughter and son-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Stan Saunders
and family. While there they observed the 13th birthday of Amber
Saunders. Several of Amber's friends were also there attending the birthday observance.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Oliver spent
two days visiting in Toledo with her
sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
LouisHanns.
Visiting with Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Greenlee, Greer Rd., on
Mother's Day were Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas McCoy, Trena, Tammy and
Jason, Lesage, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Newberry, Jr., Pl. Pleasant;
Mr. and Mrs. John Greenlee, Lisa,
Lori and John, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jim
McCoy of Huntington visited her
parents the Sunday before last.

SUPER DOUBLE COUPON
:'
1
•
11

Present this coupon along with any one manufacturer's
" Cents Off" coupon and get double the savings at Jones
Boys. Not to include Jones Boys coupons or those of other
retailers and not to e)lceecl the value of the item. Limit one
double coupon per manufacturer' s coupOn.
Coupon E)lpires Sun., May 18, 1980
Limit 2 Coupons Per customer
Not Valid for Cigarette or Free Coupons

•••••••••••••••••••••••

�------

~

12-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday, May 14, 1980

. 13-TbeDaUySentinel.Middleport-Pomeroy 0 . Wednesdau May 14, 1980

DICK TRACY

•

'

'

''

1f \f)l~ ~ft W

•

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHennArnoldandBoblee

~ ~ ~~L!l ..;..
Unscramble these tour Jumbles.

one lener 10 each square , 10 form
tour ordinary word s

b

BUICT

I I I

· · "'&lt;01'1'-""~
'
.,·- •r,
.,_,..

Television
Viewing

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

I YASHK

MAY 14, 1080
EVENING

s:oo mu C!lo iilMJMilb
WHAT ARE THE
C.HANC:E'5 OF
HIS eEJN o
UNDERVVE IE&gt;H'T'-'

. CAPI'AINEASY
: 'fOU CAP'I"Air.J EASY t

A SALUTE TO
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

I DO, &amp;UDDY ~ ...
I GOT A ME95AISE
FOR YAl

'fEAHt 1\JEL~·
IGOT ONE FOR
'fOU TOO•

GLA BEN-t&gt;~"""

SU5TE'i&lt;:!

I. I I I (J

Now arrange the c1rded lener s 10
torm the surpr1se answer, as sug·
gested by the above canoon

Printanswerhere:

rI I

I J

(Answers tomorrow )

Jumble s BURST
Answer

MONEY

INDUCE

GRUBBY

That phony didn't want a phone because he
was afraid people would do thiS GE T HIS NUMBER

BRIDGE

H/\00 IT 11-Im.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Defender misses the boat

',

.

'
"

NORTH
+A 6
• Q lOB 4

'

immediately lead trumps, this
is an unlikely defense. They
took the push to five hearts
and feisty East doubled.
If West had led the ace of
dubs, declarer would have

~ - 14 - 80

t A62

+Q J l UB
WEST
+J 52
. ....
.9 6 43
+A 9765 l

. ANNIE

tiOW YOU'VE OOHE IT,

FACING FACTS.

1\N0¥1 l'iE HEARD
SETTIH' SEI-IATOR STAN
UP AS A FALL GUY! r - - J .

• • •

DOWNING-CHILDS INS. agency
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
POMEROY, OHIO

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY, RUTLAND, TUPPERS PLAINS

THE MEIGS INN
POMEROY, OHIO

VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RACINE FOOD MKT.
RACINE, OHIO

THER IS ITW

THE BEACH?

WARNER INS. agency

Need t anchor
4er end o' th'
rope up
ther' '
Rufus!

.

•

WINNIE
OKAY WENDYr
Wl-+0 '15 HE ?

THE MAN IN 'IOIJR LIFE/
AND DON'T TRY 10 DENY
. IT Elll1ER l THAT
LOOK ON YOUR

FACE lo

UN-

OH JANIE r

YOU~E RIGHT 1
L TI-l l N 1&lt;. I'M
MLLJN6 IN

LOVE!

MISTAKAI3

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE
•
BARNEY

'fOU OUGHT
TOGO INTH'
PRODUCE
BIZNESS.
LOWEEIV

POMEROY, OHIO

MEIGS AUTO PARTS

I CAN'T-- MV
FAMBLV EATS UP
EVER'THING IN
THIS LITTLE

'

POMEROY, OHIO

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS

J&amp;R SPORTS SHOP
POMEROY, 'OHIO

FRANCIS FLORIST
POMEROY, OHIO

(NEWSPA PER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

39- of Wight
ACROSS
40Scrap
I Davenport
41 Utilities
5lnlet
customer
8S,6or7,
. to a golfer
9 Table
DOWN
!Located
of errors
13 Pastry item 2 Speechify
3 Yogi Bear's
14 Figaro's
friend
foam
15 Belmondo's 4 Fonnic
acid source
season
5 Describe
16 Lardaceous
6 On the
17 Espouse
warpath
18 Notwith7 Skill
standing
10 O'Neill
20 Chemical
drama
suffix
11
Grid
score
21 Lacerated
22 Valley
23 Pluck, as a
guitar
25 Younger
brother

Yesterday's Answer
12 Enthu25 Regular
siastic
bexahedroo
16 Concern
27 Fee payer
19 Serve drinks 29 "I do"
22 Paid
spot
attendance 30 caption
23 Laundry
31 Modify
item
26llove (Lat.)
24 Period
37 "'l'urandot"
of office
role

of sheet
27 Dainty
28 Girl's name
29 Edmonton
is its
capital
32 Toupee (sl.)
33 Extend
34 Nothing
35 Sow the
seeds of
37 Latvian
38 Band leader
of "The
Herd''

.'

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

for declarer to ruff the spade
return in dummy and drive
out East's ace of trump .

26 Kind

POMEROY, OHIO

RAWLINGS·COATS.BLOWER FUNERAL HOME

Clufis it was a simple matter

by THOMAS JOSEPH

RUTlAND, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

ace, dropping East's king and
give East a diamond ruff. Not
surprisingly. our unimaginative West didn't find this
defense.
After East won the king of

~NW4Hd'

: GASOI.JNE ALLEY

RUTLAND FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

have seven spades for his

three-spade bid . He had shown
up with all four hearts and
had followed to one diamond.
His remaining card must be a
club honor. If West had the
ace and king of clubs he would
undoubtedly have led one.
Accordingly, declarer led a
small club from his hand
toward dummy's Q J 10 8. To
defeat the contract West

..

POMEROY, OHIO

STATE FARM INS.

led a spade. Declarer won the
king in his hand and at trick
two crossed to dummy's ace
of diamonds. Then he cashed
the ace of spades and pitched
a small club from his hand .
Next he led a small trump
from dummy and East
ducked, South winning with
the king .
The hand was now an open
book to declarer. East should

would have to rise with his

East's three-spade overcall
would not be approved of by
most players. However. his
partner was a passed hand,
the vulnerability was in his
favor and he was in a frisky
mood .
Although North-South ca n
defeat four spades if they

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
I

Pass

Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

THE CENTRAL TRUST CO.

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

GUZ AND 11-iE SERGEANT
IIEFORE THEY LEAVE
. FOR Tl-4E ISLAND! •

POMEROY, OHIO

K&amp;C JEWELERS

THE FARMERS BANK

YES .. .BUT I'M AFRAID
~'RE TOO LATE!

HOW ,M UCH FAR-

MAYBE WE' CAN CATCH

SEARS AUTHORIZED CATALOG MERCHANT

RACINE, OHIO

4.

Db I.

ALLEYOOP

POMEROY, OHIO

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

s•

Opening lead:+ 2

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

+K QJl07

• Pass

POMEROY, OHIO

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

+5
+K
+K
.KJ976

4+

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

POMEROY, OHIO

• A 5 32

SOUTH

THEM!!

POMEROY, OHIO

THE DAILY SENTINEL

heritage house

CHAHCES! "'"'MD...~· ~·

EWING FUNERAL HOME

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

OOH'T TAKE ANY

H0¥1 LONE, HAVE
THEY BEEN THERE.~' I'Trrrn

+Q J09810

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West
Soulh
West
North East
3+
Pass
I+

TODAY, HOSPITALS OFFER THE FINEST CARE WITH THE MOST MODERN EQUIPMENT AVAILABLE TO MEDICAL SCIENCE. FROM INTENSIVE
CARE FACIUTIES TO THE MATERNITY WARDS, MODERN HOSPITALS ARE DESIGNED TO BE EFFICIENT AND EFFECTIVE FOR DOCTORS, NURSES
AND PATIENTS. VISIT YOUR LOCAL COMMUNITY HOSPITAL DURING NATIONAL HOSPITAL WEEK OPEN HOUSE.

THE FABRIC SHOP

ACOUPLE OF KIDS!'

EAST

+3 2

NO ONE EVER ENJOYS GOING TO THE HOSPITAL,
YET IT'S SURE NICE TO KNOW THAT IT'S THERE
WHEN YOU NEED IT.

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

HUCHIE .1

had no chance. However , West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
A X Y D L II A A' X 11
II LONGFELLOW

..' .

One letter simply stands !or another. In this sample A II
used !or the Jhree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formali?n of the words are all
hinls. Earh day the rode_tellers are d•trerent.

'I

'
,,

PEANUTS

NEWS
·
CD ROSSBAOLEYHOUR
(,lOINED IN PROGRESS)
W CAROL BURNETT
-AND FRIENDS
@ ABC NEWS
(])@ ZOOM
6 :30 Cf:J U CIJ NBC NEWS
(!) PRESTO CHANGO ,
IT 'S MAGIC! The world 's
moat
c elebrated
mag icians conjure up e
dazzling display of award·
wirmino ill usion and
comedy. Raymond Burr
haste .
I])
BOB NEWHART
SHOW
@ CAROL BURNETT
AND FRIENDS
0 ({)®) CBS NEWS
I]) WILD WILD WORLD
OF ANIMALS
® VILLA ALEGRE
WID ABC NEWS
7:00 (]) 8 CROSS WITS
CD BIBLE BOWL
ill SANFORD AND SON
@ ii2J Q) FACE THE
MUSIC
CD LOVE AMERICAN
STYLE
O Cil TICTACDOUGH
I]) MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
®)NEWS
@
DICK CAVETT
S!IOW
7:30 008 COUNTRY ROADS
Guests: Charlie McClain ,
T.G. Sheppard.
CD AT HOME WITjl THE
BIBLE
CIJ BILLY SMART'S CIR·
CUS For circ us lovers of
all ages, Britain's largest
traditional temity circus
presents Europe 's best
Big-Top atsrs in delightful
three· ring spectacular.
CD BASEBALL Atlanta
Bra... ea vs Philadelphia
Phillies
({) MATCH GAME
CIJ WILD KINGDOM
'Giants of Oadanawe '
tiJ IIl JOKER'S WILD
I])
DICK CAVETT
SHOW
®)THE JUDGE
@
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
W ID FAMILY FEUD
8•00 (]) 8 CD REAL PEOPLE
A view of the world 's sm al·
lee! police station, a "Visit
with people wh o collect
turtles . end a look into the
local legend that a man
from outer spac e was bur·
ied in a small Texas town .
(QO mina.)
CD
FOCUS ON THE
FAMILY
@II2J Q) CHARLJE ' SANGELS After Kelly and Kris
wel come their new teem
member, Tiffany Welles,
they set sail aboard 'The
Love Boat' and inves·
tigste e f ortune in stolen
museum pieces . (Repeat ;
2 hra.)_
0 ({) ®) SPECIAL
MOVIE PRESENTATION
'Haywire' 1980 Stars:
Jason Robards, Lee
Remick .
Cil ® GREAT PERFOR·
MANCES 'The Good Doctor ' Neil Simon 's work is a
composite of eight short
stories focusing on the
ups and downs o fthe 19th
century Bourgeoisie. (QO
mins.)
· 8:30 CD THE PRESENCE OF
Ci_OD
!J.) MOVIE -{DRAMA)'"
"Love And Bullets"
1970
9:00 (]) 8 CD DIFF'REN'T
STROKES Mr. Drum·
mend ' s plan to formally
adopt Am old and Willis Is
stalled when a junkman ,
waving an old wil l under
whi c h the boys would
inherit a lot of m oney ,
claims to be their only livIng relative . (Repeat; 60
mine.}
CD GOOD NEWS FOR A
WORLD IN CRISIS
0:30 I]) ®
C'EST MOl,
TOULOUSE-LAUTREC
Thisprogrampresents the
life ot the French artist,
Henri
de
ToulouseLautrec, in his own
words.
10:00 &lt;Il8 CD OUINCY A lire in
the small -town jail whe re
Quincy had rested for the
night, claims the lives of
four prisoners and the
weary medical examiner
suspects that it was star1 ·
ed to cover up a murder .
(Repeat ; 60 mine .)
Ill THE IMMIGRANT
Leon Stein is 66, an ex trovert New Yorke r, a
staunch union man and a
Jew. Althoughhewasborn
in America, hie immigrant
rootegoverydeep . 'There
Isn't a day ,' says Stein,
'that I do not feel my lmmi·
grant origins .. .AU the jud gements that I make come
from what is within me that
arri\'ed in this country only
!_generation ago.·
lJJWIDYEGASDanTen·
na, tracking down the attacker of a gorgeous
superstar, Ia unaware the
man Is one of the security
guarda protecting her.
!B.epeal; 80 mlna.)
Cll THEY HAD A DREAM ,
' Brown \'8 . Board ol
Educat ion' This program
examines the htstory,
past and prestnt, of

echool deaegre·gation,
and teaturaa participants
of the famous 'Brown vs .
Board of Education' case.

·~omlna.l

CRYPTOQUOTES

'r

'i

WHEN WE GET TO THE
TOP OF THE HILL, WE'LL
' ALL EAT THE ANGEL FOOD
CA:KE TfiAT HMRIET BROUGHT

[J

W&gt;N CAN'T WE EAT
THE CAKE AT THE TOP
OF HIE HI ?

'' BECAUSE HARRIET ATE
IT AT Tl1E BOTTOM
OF THE HILL! ''

T

OTU .

DTUA
MYYKLV

U ZNZL

MC
AM

EA

DXTA
XEO

A X Z

CZZBV

AM

10:30

"The Prleoner Of Zen·

dl" 1078
@ OVER EASY Gueal:
Janet Leigh. Hoal: Hugh

UZNZL

TVW

CM L.

OEBAMU
VYXMRZUXTKZL
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: BUREAUCRACY IS BASED ON A
WI LLINGNESS EITHER TO PASS THE BUCK OR TO SPEND
IT. - MRS. HENRY SERWAT

NEWS
MOYIE ~COMEDY)'

Downa.

1 1:oo

~eCIJ&lt;IJDIIl®lW
N!WS
JEWISH VOICE
LAST OF THE WILD
DAVE ALLEN AT
LAROE
@
DICK CAVETT
SHOW

�------

~

12-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday, May 14, 1980

. 13-TbeDaUySentinel.Middleport-Pomeroy 0 . Wednesdau May 14, 1980

DICK TRACY

•

'

'

''

1f \f)l~ ~ft W

•

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHennArnoldandBoblee

~ ~ ~~L!l ..;..
Unscramble these tour Jumbles.

one lener 10 each square , 10 form
tour ordinary word s

b

BUICT

I I I

· · "'&lt;01'1'-""~
'
.,·- •r,
.,_,..

Television
Viewing

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

I YASHK

MAY 14, 1080
EVENING

s:oo mu C!lo iilMJMilb
WHAT ARE THE
C.HANC:E'5 OF
HIS eEJN o
UNDERVVE IE&gt;H'T'-'

. CAPI'AINEASY
: 'fOU CAP'I"Air.J EASY t

A SALUTE TO
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

I DO, &amp;UDDY ~ ...
I GOT A ME95AISE
FOR YAl

'fEAHt 1\JEL~·
IGOT ONE FOR
'fOU TOO•

GLA BEN-t&gt;~"""

SU5TE'i&lt;:!

I. I I I (J

Now arrange the c1rded lener s 10
torm the surpr1se answer, as sug·
gested by the above canoon

Printanswerhere:

rI I

I J

(Answers tomorrow )

Jumble s BURST
Answer

MONEY

INDUCE

GRUBBY

That phony didn't want a phone because he
was afraid people would do thiS GE T HIS NUMBER

BRIDGE

H/\00 IT 11-Im.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Defender misses the boat

',

.

'
"

NORTH
+A 6
• Q lOB 4

'

immediately lead trumps, this
is an unlikely defense. They
took the push to five hearts
and feisty East doubled.
If West had led the ace of
dubs, declarer would have

~ - 14 - 80

t A62

+Q J l UB
WEST
+J 52
. ....
.9 6 43
+A 9765 l

. ANNIE

tiOW YOU'VE OOHE IT,

FACING FACTS.

1\N0¥1 l'iE HEARD
SETTIH' SEI-IATOR STAN
UP AS A FALL GUY! r - - J .

• • •

DOWNING-CHILDS INS. agency
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
POMEROY, OHIO

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY, RUTLAND, TUPPERS PLAINS

THE MEIGS INN
POMEROY, OHIO

VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RACINE FOOD MKT.
RACINE, OHIO

THER IS ITW

THE BEACH?

WARNER INS. agency

Need t anchor
4er end o' th'
rope up
ther' '
Rufus!

.

•

WINNIE
OKAY WENDYr
Wl-+0 '15 HE ?

THE MAN IN 'IOIJR LIFE/
AND DON'T TRY 10 DENY
. IT Elll1ER l THAT
LOOK ON YOUR

FACE lo

UN-

OH JANIE r

YOU~E RIGHT 1
L TI-l l N 1&lt;. I'M
MLLJN6 IN

LOVE!

MISTAKAI3

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE
•
BARNEY

'fOU OUGHT
TOGO INTH'
PRODUCE
BIZNESS.
LOWEEIV

POMEROY, OHIO

MEIGS AUTO PARTS

I CAN'T-- MV
FAMBLV EATS UP
EVER'THING IN
THIS LITTLE

'

POMEROY, OHIO

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS

J&amp;R SPORTS SHOP
POMEROY, 'OHIO

FRANCIS FLORIST
POMEROY, OHIO

(NEWSPA PER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

39- of Wight
ACROSS
40Scrap
I Davenport
41 Utilities
5lnlet
customer
8S,6or7,
. to a golfer
9 Table
DOWN
!Located
of errors
13 Pastry item 2 Speechify
3 Yogi Bear's
14 Figaro's
friend
foam
15 Belmondo's 4 Fonnic
acid source
season
5 Describe
16 Lardaceous
6 On the
17 Espouse
warpath
18 Notwith7 Skill
standing
10 O'Neill
20 Chemical
drama
suffix
11
Grid
score
21 Lacerated
22 Valley
23 Pluck, as a
guitar
25 Younger
brother

Yesterday's Answer
12 Enthu25 Regular
siastic
bexahedroo
16 Concern
27 Fee payer
19 Serve drinks 29 "I do"
22 Paid
spot
attendance 30 caption
23 Laundry
31 Modify
item
26llove (Lat.)
24 Period
37 "'l'urandot"
of office
role

of sheet
27 Dainty
28 Girl's name
29 Edmonton
is its
capital
32 Toupee (sl.)
33 Extend
34 Nothing
35 Sow the
seeds of
37 Latvian
38 Band leader
of "The
Herd''

.'

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

for declarer to ruff the spade
return in dummy and drive
out East's ace of trump .

26 Kind

POMEROY, OHIO

RAWLINGS·COATS.BLOWER FUNERAL HOME

Clufis it was a simple matter

by THOMAS JOSEPH

RUTlAND, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

ace, dropping East's king and
give East a diamond ruff. Not
surprisingly. our unimaginative West didn't find this
defense.
After East won the king of

~NW4Hd'

: GASOI.JNE ALLEY

RUTLAND FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

have seven spades for his

three-spade bid . He had shown
up with all four hearts and
had followed to one diamond.
His remaining card must be a
club honor. If West had the
ace and king of clubs he would
undoubtedly have led one.
Accordingly, declarer led a
small club from his hand
toward dummy's Q J 10 8. To
defeat the contract West

..

POMEROY, OHIO

STATE FARM INS.

led a spade. Declarer won the
king in his hand and at trick
two crossed to dummy's ace
of diamonds. Then he cashed
the ace of spades and pitched
a small club from his hand .
Next he led a small trump
from dummy and East
ducked, South winning with
the king .
The hand was now an open
book to declarer. East should

would have to rise with his

East's three-spade overcall
would not be approved of by
most players. However. his
partner was a passed hand,
the vulnerability was in his
favor and he was in a frisky
mood .
Although North-South ca n
defeat four spades if they

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
I

Pass

Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

THE CENTRAL TRUST CO.

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

GUZ AND 11-iE SERGEANT
IIEFORE THEY LEAVE
. FOR Tl-4E ISLAND! •

POMEROY, OHIO

K&amp;C JEWELERS

THE FARMERS BANK

YES .. .BUT I'M AFRAID
~'RE TOO LATE!

HOW ,M UCH FAR-

MAYBE WE' CAN CATCH

SEARS AUTHORIZED CATALOG MERCHANT

RACINE, OHIO

4.

Db I.

ALLEYOOP

POMEROY, OHIO

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

s•

Opening lead:+ 2

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

+K QJl07

• Pass

POMEROY, OHIO

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

+5
+K
+K
.KJ976

4+

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

POMEROY, OHIO

• A 5 32

SOUTH

THEM!!

POMEROY, OHIO

THE DAILY SENTINEL

heritage house

CHAHCES! "'"'MD...~· ~·

EWING FUNERAL HOME

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

OOH'T TAKE ANY

H0¥1 LONE, HAVE
THEY BEEN THERE.~' I'Trrrn

+Q J09810

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West
Soulh
West
North East
3+
Pass
I+

TODAY, HOSPITALS OFFER THE FINEST CARE WITH THE MOST MODERN EQUIPMENT AVAILABLE TO MEDICAL SCIENCE. FROM INTENSIVE
CARE FACIUTIES TO THE MATERNITY WARDS, MODERN HOSPITALS ARE DESIGNED TO BE EFFICIENT AND EFFECTIVE FOR DOCTORS, NURSES
AND PATIENTS. VISIT YOUR LOCAL COMMUNITY HOSPITAL DURING NATIONAL HOSPITAL WEEK OPEN HOUSE.

THE FABRIC SHOP

ACOUPLE OF KIDS!'

EAST

+3 2

NO ONE EVER ENJOYS GOING TO THE HOSPITAL,
YET IT'S SURE NICE TO KNOW THAT IT'S THERE
WHEN YOU NEED IT.

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

HUCHIE .1

had no chance. However , West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
A X Y D L II A A' X 11
II LONGFELLOW

..' .

One letter simply stands !or another. In this sample A II
used !or the Jhree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formali?n of the words are all
hinls. Earh day the rode_tellers are d•trerent.

'I

'
,,

PEANUTS

NEWS
·
CD ROSSBAOLEYHOUR
(,lOINED IN PROGRESS)
W CAROL BURNETT
-AND FRIENDS
@ ABC NEWS
(])@ ZOOM
6 :30 Cf:J U CIJ NBC NEWS
(!) PRESTO CHANGO ,
IT 'S MAGIC! The world 's
moat
c elebrated
mag icians conjure up e
dazzling display of award·
wirmino ill usion and
comedy. Raymond Burr
haste .
I])
BOB NEWHART
SHOW
@ CAROL BURNETT
AND FRIENDS
0 ({)®) CBS NEWS
I]) WILD WILD WORLD
OF ANIMALS
® VILLA ALEGRE
WID ABC NEWS
7:00 (]) 8 CROSS WITS
CD BIBLE BOWL
ill SANFORD AND SON
@ ii2J Q) FACE THE
MUSIC
CD LOVE AMERICAN
STYLE
O Cil TICTACDOUGH
I]) MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
®)NEWS
@
DICK CAVETT
S!IOW
7:30 008 COUNTRY ROADS
Guests: Charlie McClain ,
T.G. Sheppard.
CD AT HOME WITjl THE
BIBLE
CIJ BILLY SMART'S CIR·
CUS For circ us lovers of
all ages, Britain's largest
traditional temity circus
presents Europe 's best
Big-Top atsrs in delightful
three· ring spectacular.
CD BASEBALL Atlanta
Bra... ea vs Philadelphia
Phillies
({) MATCH GAME
CIJ WILD KINGDOM
'Giants of Oadanawe '
tiJ IIl JOKER'S WILD
I])
DICK CAVETT
SHOW
®)THE JUDGE
@
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
W ID FAMILY FEUD
8•00 (]) 8 CD REAL PEOPLE
A view of the world 's sm al·
lee! police station, a "Visit
with people wh o collect
turtles . end a look into the
local legend that a man
from outer spac e was bur·
ied in a small Texas town .
(QO mina.)
CD
FOCUS ON THE
FAMILY
@II2J Q) CHARLJE ' SANGELS After Kelly and Kris
wel come their new teem
member, Tiffany Welles,
they set sail aboard 'The
Love Boat' and inves·
tigste e f ortune in stolen
museum pieces . (Repeat ;
2 hra.)_
0 ({) ®) SPECIAL
MOVIE PRESENTATION
'Haywire' 1980 Stars:
Jason Robards, Lee
Remick .
Cil ® GREAT PERFOR·
MANCES 'The Good Doctor ' Neil Simon 's work is a
composite of eight short
stories focusing on the
ups and downs o fthe 19th
century Bourgeoisie. (QO
mins.)
· 8:30 CD THE PRESENCE OF
Ci_OD
!J.) MOVIE -{DRAMA)'"
"Love And Bullets"
1970
9:00 (]) 8 CD DIFF'REN'T
STROKES Mr. Drum·
mend ' s plan to formally
adopt Am old and Willis Is
stalled when a junkman ,
waving an old wil l under
whi c h the boys would
inherit a lot of m oney ,
claims to be their only livIng relative . (Repeat; 60
mine.}
CD GOOD NEWS FOR A
WORLD IN CRISIS
0:30 I]) ®
C'EST MOl,
TOULOUSE-LAUTREC
Thisprogrampresents the
life ot the French artist,
Henri
de
ToulouseLautrec, in his own
words.
10:00 &lt;Il8 CD OUINCY A lire in
the small -town jail whe re
Quincy had rested for the
night, claims the lives of
four prisoners and the
weary medical examiner
suspects that it was star1 ·
ed to cover up a murder .
(Repeat ; 60 mine .)
Ill THE IMMIGRANT
Leon Stein is 66, an ex trovert New Yorke r, a
staunch union man and a
Jew. Althoughhewasborn
in America, hie immigrant
rootegoverydeep . 'There
Isn't a day ,' says Stein,
'that I do not feel my lmmi·
grant origins .. .AU the jud gements that I make come
from what is within me that
arri\'ed in this country only
!_generation ago.·
lJJWIDYEGASDanTen·
na, tracking down the attacker of a gorgeous
superstar, Ia unaware the
man Is one of the security
guarda protecting her.
!B.epeal; 80 mlna.)
Cll THEY HAD A DREAM ,
' Brown \'8 . Board ol
Educat ion' This program
examines the htstory,
past and prestnt, of

echool deaegre·gation,
and teaturaa participants
of the famous 'Brown vs .
Board of Education' case.

·~omlna.l

CRYPTOQUOTES

'r

'i

WHEN WE GET TO THE
TOP OF THE HILL, WE'LL
' ALL EAT THE ANGEL FOOD
CA:KE TfiAT HMRIET BROUGHT

[J

W&gt;N CAN'T WE EAT
THE CAKE AT THE TOP
OF HIE HI ?

'' BECAUSE HARRIET ATE
IT AT Tl1E BOTTOM
OF THE HILL! ''

T

OTU .

DTUA
MYYKLV

U ZNZL

MC
AM

EA

DXTA
XEO

A X Z

CZZBV

AM

10:30

"The Prleoner Of Zen·

dl" 1078
@ OVER EASY Gueal:
Janet Leigh. Hoal: Hugh

UZNZL

TVW

CM L.

OEBAMU
VYXMRZUXTKZL
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: BUREAUCRACY IS BASED ON A
WI LLINGNESS EITHER TO PASS THE BUCK OR TO SPEND
IT. - MRS. HENRY SERWAT

NEWS
MOYIE ~COMEDY)'

Downa.

1 1:oo

~eCIJ&lt;IJDIIl®lW
N!WS
JEWISH VOICE
LAST OF THE WILD
DAVE ALLEN AT
LAROE
@
DICK CAVETT
SHOW

�•

.•14-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 14, 1900

15-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Ma y 14 1980
44

Presidential contenders stump in Ohio
By Tbe Associated Press

VIce President Walter F Mandale, who was m two Ohio Cities to
woo votes for the Cartel'oMondale
ticket m the state's June 3 primary,
says the administration's antiinflation effort IS beguuung to work
Without It, "there would be
massive unemployment, " he said m
Columbus on Tuesday
He later VISited Cleveland, where
he officially kicked off the campaign
and spoke before high school students.
In other prunary campa1grung
Tuesday, Mrs George Bush stumped for her husband's GOP ticket m
Dayton.
Mandate told Democratic delegate
candidates m Columbus that shorttenn borroWing rates dropped 7 percent m the past month The prune
rate - charged by maJor banks to
preferred busmess customers also sunk 3.2 percent durmg that
time, he said.
Referrmg to Ohio's depressed coal
muustry, Mandate said the $227
billion to be realized by the new wmdfall profits tax on oil comparues
" will be used to hire Amencan
workers to prcxluce energy, such as
Ohio coal and unconventiOnal gas "
Such steps will "restore Amenca to
Its rightful place m the world," he
added.
Although Mandate's bnef talk
brought cheers from a crowd of
about 150 delegates and party faithful, some - mcluding Ohio Senate
President Oliver Ocasek, D-Akronpredicted a "gocxl fight " between
President Carter and Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy, D-Mass, m the state

next month
"Kennedy has picked up support
m pockets, maybe m Cleveland,"
Ocasek said. But he added that Carter probably still w11l wm by an
estimated 6G40 favor
Later m the day m Cleveland,
Mandate tried to play down the
prunary battle between Carter and
Kennedy.
"Let's stop fighting each other and
let's start fighting Ronald Reagan
and wm this electiOn," he told a lunchtune crowd of hundreds m downtown Cleveland
Later, he told reporters, "I am
confident we will do well Ul Ohio, but
we are takmg nothing for gra nted "
The Cleveland Press on Tuesday
offered to sponsor a Kennedy-Carter
debate when both candidates for the
Democratic nommahon visit
Cleveland on May 29
Kennedy accepted at once But on
Monday , White House press
secretary Jody Powell ruled out a
'
debate
"It (a debate) would serve no
useful purpose, " Powell S8ld.
Mondale concluded his Ohio campaign swmg,w1th an address to more
than 1,000 students at Shaker
He~ghts High School, located m an
affluent Cleveland suburb.
Mondale said he prefers understandmg and restramt to
hostilities and differences w1th
Russia
But he said, "For severa: years
now, the Soviet Uruon has not
" If
demonstrated that restramt
we are not a force for peace and
responsibility, then It won't get
done''

Meanwhile , on the Republican
side, Barbara Bush stumped m
Dayton Tuesday for her husband,
predictmg he would do well m Ohio
and the other remaUIUig prunaries.
In a speech to K1warus and several
mterv1ews, she praised her
husband's record .
"If J1mmy Carter has t&lt;Jught us

nothing else, he has taught us we
must nonunate and elect a man who
does not have to be tramed on the
JOb," she said, refemng to George
Bush, former Umted Nations Ambassador and past CIA director.
"We've learned from Junmy Carter
that 11 takes vast experience to make

3 AND .4 RM furniShed ap
ts Phone 992 5434

RENTER'S aSSISion ce for
Sen1or Ctf1zens tn VIllage

Manor apts Call992 7787
Ohio's pnmary, Bush and his family
plan a whirlwmd tour m Ohio Former California Gov. Ronald Reagan,
the GOP front-runner, has scheduled
a campaign swing through the state
later this month.
Kennedy also plans to VISit several
Ohio cities.

a gocxl president "
Although she acknowledged that
some Republicans have questioned
the WISdom of her husband's continued campaign, she said, "! think
my major value IS to tell people It's

not over.''
In the remaining weeks before

PubliC NoflcL,eo____

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
LIMITATION

COUNTY MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The tol low.ng documents
were rece1ved or prepared
by

The

Oh10

En

v•ronmental
ProtectiOn
Agency dur.ng the prevtous
week The effectn1e date of
each fmal act 1on •s stated
The tSsuance date at each

proposed actton 1S stated
Anyone aggneved or ad

versely affected by a fmal

actton to tssue, deny ,
mod 1fy, revoke, or renew a
permd l •cense, or var1an
ce, or to approve or dtsap
prove
p lans
and
speclftcattons, may file an
appeal w •th
v1ronmental

The En
Board of

Rev1ew. Su 1te 305, 395 E
Broad St, Colu mbus Oh to
43216. w1lhm lhorly (301

days of the effecttve date,
pursuaht to Oh1o Rev1sed
Cf&gt;de Sect,on 2745 07, unless
such fmal act1on was
preceded by the sa me or
substantiall y
tne same
proposed act,on
In ad
d1t1on, pursuant to Sect1on

3745 04 of The Rev,sed
Cod!!;' not1ce of the f1l1n9 of

the appeal shall be filed
w1th The D1rector of the
OhiO
Environmental
Protect1on Agency, 361 E
Broad Street, Columbus,
Oh10 43216, w1thm tnree Ill

days after the appeal 1S
filed

w1th

The En
v~ronmental
Board of
Re'Vtew All suc h f1nal ac
t1ons are so 1dent1f 1ed Such
persons mav request an ad
1udlcat1on hearlng before
The OhiO EPA on a
proposed act1on to 1ssue,
deny, mod1fy , revoke, or
renew a perm1t, 11cense, or
vanance , or to approve or
d1SaP.prove plans and
specifications, w1thm th1r

ty (301 days of the 1ssuance
dale ORC 3745 07 does not

prov1de for ad1Ud 1cat1on
heanng requests or ap
pealS tram oraers, venf 1ed
compla1nts,
or en
forcement
co mplian ce
schedule letters Withm 30
days of publ1cat1on m a
newspaper in the affected
.county , anv person may
also (1) subm1t wr 1t1en
commen ts relat1ng to ac
t1ons, proposed act1ons,
venf1ed complamts, en
forcement
compliance
schedule
letters
or
prel1m1nary staff deter
mlnat10ns on perm1ts tom

'" stall, (21 request a publi c
~ meet1ng
regard1ng
\, proposed act1ons or on
' prel imi nary staff deter
~ mmattons on permtts to 1n

j stall. and/or (31 request

~~ not1ce of further acttons or

'
'
..
,.,
.,
l.

proceedin9s All requests
for ad1Ud1catton heanngs
and public meet1ngs, and
other commun1cat1ons con
cern109 publ 1c meet1ngs,
ad1U dtcat1on
hear1nts,
ver1f 1ed compla1nts, and
regulat1ons, should be ad·

; dressed to The Legal
, Records Sectton, Oh 1o
.' EPA. P 0 Box 1049,
J Columbus, Oh 1o 43216,
~ (6 141 466 6037
Unless

NOTICE IS hereby g1ven
that tn purs uance of a
Resolut1on of th e Board of
Trustees of the Townshtp of
Olive. Ohto, passed on lhe
18th day of Marc h, 1980,
there will be submttted ro a
vote of th e people of sa1d
TownshiP at a Pr tmary

ELECT ION lo be held 1n

Liberian student postpones trip home
BOWLiNG GREEN, Ohio (APJ Though much of her family still hves
m Ubena, B1jou Jude IS postporung
her return to the strife-tom nation
unhl some stability IS restored.
"I had planned on gomg back m
November," said the 22-year-&lt;Jid
elementary educatiOn maJor at
Bowling Green State Uruvers1ty,
who graduates next month. "But
now, I think I'll stay here (the
Uruted States ) and go to grad school
for two years
" By then, I think things Will have
calmed down

11

Miss Jude left the Afncan nat10n
about SIX years ago to attend school
m the Umted States Although
discontent eXISted when she left her
homeland, It's smce explcxled mto a
military revolution
Libenan President William K.
Tolbert Jr was ktlled and his goverrunent overthrown m a coup April 12.
Ten days later, 13 officials of the
Tolbert govenunent and his ruling
True Whig Party were gunned down
by a flnng squad
Master Sgt Samuel K. Doe, who
led the coup and IS now chief of state

~

EPA, P 0 Box 1049,
Columbus, Oh10 41116

~
Issuance of
.ot.ce of
',, regtstra1ton
~
Jaymar Coal Company
Rl 1
~

~

Oh , Effecl1ve
dat~ 05·09 80
APPlicati on No(sJ
0653000003 POOl
Chesh~re,

(~l

'EVERYBODY
"::Shops the
w

'WANT AD WAY

Rac1ne Gun Club Sun
shoots are d1scont.nued for
the season
G1veaway

Male ca t All black , 3
yrs old 123 L1ncoln Hill.

Pomey, Oh 992 5573

7

YardSale

Stobart s Greenhouse now
Hang1ng baskets,
open
beddtng plants, tomatpes,
cabbage, peppers R t 2

at a rate noT exceed1ng 0 so
m111 for each one dollar of
valuatton, wh1ch amounts
to f1ve cenls for eac h one
hundred dol lar s of
valuat•on, for f tve years
The Polls for sa 1d Elec
t 1on will open a t 6 30
a c lock AM and rema1n
open until 7 30 o'clock PM
of sa1d day
By order of the Board of
E lecttons, of Metgs Cou nty ,
Oh10
Ernest A W1ngett
Cha trman

Four Fam1ly Yard Sa le
Wednesday and Thursday
Lots of gtrls stze 7 12,
men's, women's and l1ttle
boys SIZes, glassware, Ken
more sew1 ng machme
cabt net, Harley Dav1dson
motorcycle parts, bed
spreads. cur ta tns, larc;Je
fuel 011 tank, and much
m1sc Ra10 or shtne Turn

Dorothy M Johnston
D1rector

Dated May 6 1980
151 7 14 21, 28 . 4l c

Rac10e, Oh1o 949 2342
Rummage Sale
Fnday
and Saturday , 16th and 17th
at old Mart 1n Restaurant,
Mtddleport Be1ng held by
Pat Clonch 9 to?

YARO SALE

W1ll1am S

Cross on Mam St, Rac1ne

Oh 9 4 May 16 Dresses,
curtams, rugs, l1ttle gtrls
1eans, btg g1rl s 1eans and
other mtsc 1tems

and head of the People's Redemtr
lion Council, has promiSed that no
more executiOns Will occur.
Despite disapproval of the
assassmahons, Miss Jude said she
favors the revolutton
"I found myself supporting II,"
she said " Tbe change was needed
even though the methods weren't
necessary I JUS! hope It's a change
for the better."
Although her family m Libena which currently mcludes a grandmother, brother and several aunts
and uncles - were considered nuddle class, others were not so lucky,
she sat d.
"The poor were bemg taken advantage of and bemg explOited," she
sa1d, "and! don't think that's right "
The revolution hopefully will
restore the rights of Liberia's poor,
Miss Jude said But that could take
time, she added
"The country IS kind of shaky and
It'll take some time to bwld 1! up,"
she said ·
Miss Jude expects to remam m the
Uruted States for the next two years
to pursue a master's degree m

on Forest Run Road Ap
prox 6 miles Watch for
s1g ns 9 4 For more 1n
formatton cl949 2288 or 9.49

2328
County Rd 28. 1 m1 N of
Bastlan Approx1mately 3
mt S of Keno La rge a .ron
dtt1oner, 10 wall bathroom
heater clof hes and m1sc
Thur s Frt and Sa t

Pubhc Not1ce

PUBLIC NOTICE

The Board of Trustees of
Lebanon Townshtp, Me1gs
County, Oh10, will rece 1ve
b1ds until 5 o'c lock p m for

the 28th day of May , 1980,

tor the purpose of pur
chast ng road ad for dus l
control
The Board of Trustees
reserve the nght to re 1ec t
any or all b1ds
By order of th e Board of
Trustees of Lebanon Town
Shtp
Sh~r l ey Johnson,

Clerk
55338 SR 124
Portland, Oh 45770
(51 14 lie

Yard Sale Thursday and
Fr~~ay ,

Yard Sale Fnday and
Saturday from nme to SIX,
dtshes, Silverware
ap
pllanc:es, clothtng, Avon
bottles, toys Ram or shme
at R1lev's, 531 South Second
Ave , Middleport
Oh10

4S760

education. But afterward, she plans
to return home and help rebuild her
country.
"The public schools need better
teachers and better facilities," she
sa1d. "The government didn't

Three Fam ly Yard Sale

May 15 through May 18 off

Rt 12-1 off county road 10,
one mile up Dexter Rd
Magnavox stereo, Sears
d1shwasher
S1gnatua re
sew1ng
mach1ne w1th
cabmet (new), three p1ece
maple bedroom su1te, one
so fa and chatr and other
m1sc furntture , cloth1ng
and numerous other 1tems

Yard

Sale

Thursday

Frtday and Sat urday on
F 1sher St off Spnng Ave
Pomeroy

Yard Sa le May 15, 16, 17 al
685 Locust St , Mtddleport
OhtO
Announcements

I PAY h1ghes t pr1ces
poss1ble tor gold and SliVer
co 1ns, nngs, 1ewelry, etc

BRADFORD, Auct1oneer,
Compl ete Serv1ce Phone
9&lt;19 2487 or 949 2000 rac1ne,
OhiO, Cntt Bradford
Odd ~

and Ends Shop at the
old Reufers gas stat1 on on
SR 33 at the foot of Rose
H1ll Open for bustness
Monday May 12 till August
31 Open Monday through
Saturday 9 til 8 anyone
want tng to sell th tn gs we II
ptckup and sell on a 50 pet
50 pet bas1s Anyone With
ant1ques or handcrafted
1tems we 11 se ll on an 80
pet 20 pet bas ts We do
p1 cku p, selling, bookwork.
and return anyth mg over 30

days old Would like people
to do own pr1c10g Carolyn
Lew1s at 992 292 1 or Kathy

REynolds at 992 5981

Wanted to Buy

VISIT HERE

Contact Ed Burkel! Barber
Shop, Middleport

P1 ck1 ng up .,~n Easy play
organ
•n
your
area
Lookmg tor a responstb le
party to take over pay men
ts Cal l cred1t manager

co llect 614 592 5122
Tuning

Oan,els 742 2951

Lane

Tu"' "'g

and Repair Serv 1ce since
1965 If no answer phone

992 2082

FAYE 'S GIF T SHOP New
loca tio l Next to Hemer's
Bread Store Flowers for
Memon a l Day

Boardmg Call 367 0292

71

HILLCREST

1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme
A C power sea ts am fm ,
ex tra s v.nyl top Pnced to
sell 99'16215

pay cash or cert1f1ed check
for ant1ques and co Noth1ng
too large
Also, guns ,
pocket watches and co•n
collecttons Cal l 614 767
3167 or 557 34 11

Furntshed Rooms

W 1ll ca re tor elderly person
m my pnvate home 992

6022

LIMESTONE ,

sand , gravel, ca lc1um
chlonde, fer t 1hzer, dog
food , and all types of salt
Excelstor Salt Works, 1nc ,
E Mam Sl, Pomeroy, 997

3891
Space for Rent

Iron and brass beds, old
furn1ture
desks
gold
r 1nQs , 1ewelry, Sl iver
dollars, ster l1ng, etc, wood
1ce boxes. ant1ques, etc
Complete
househo ld s
Wr tte M D M ll er, Rt 4,

Pomeroy . OHI or call 992
7760

10 karat, 14 karat 18 karat,

gold Dental gold and gold
Gold, s11ver or fore1gn
co1ns or any gold or stlver
1tems Anftque fur n1ture,
glass or chtna, will pay top
dollar , or comple te estates
No 1tem too large or too
small Check pnces before
se lling A lso do appra1s1ng
Osby (Osste) Mart1n 992

DANCE SATI1RDAY
A dance will be held Saturday
from 8 to ll p m. at the Meigs Semor
Citizens Center m Pomeroy. Music
will be by the Stringdusters. Adnussion is $1 for adults and children
under 12 will be admitted free when
accompanymg parents.

Insurance

VENT IONAL 5 Pel down,
SECOND MORTGAGES
VA No down payment,
FHA Low down pa yment,

FHA 245 Graduated paym

ent

Operattng room head nur
se Prev1ous head nurse
superv1sor exp requt red
Salary commensura te w1th
exper.ence
Excellent
tnnge beneftts
Nuclear
med1ctne techniCian , day

shoft

Men Fr1

Subs1dy program Call 592

**************

!lt- First
MONEY - MONEY *
mortgages, t

tran

engmes, or scrap meta ls,

elc Call245 9188

Washer and Drye r Call
Eva Hollon at 985 3980

************-,r·
Thinkmg About
Money Markets??

Why Take 9Vz%
When

INGELS
INVESTMENT

Pleasant, W Va 25550 304
675 4340
lady Call after 5, 992 3488
per

thousand

for

Earn extra money at home,
good pay, easy work No
exper1ence
necessary
Send for appl1 cat ,on to R

Ne,ghbarger ,

RI SIN G STAR

Kennel

KENNELS

Board1ng all breeds Clean
1ndoor ou tdoor lac tittles
Also
AKC
r eg1stered
Dobermans 614 446 7795

Mustcal
Instruments

57

P1ck1ng up a pt ano tn your
area Look1ng lor t1 respon
Stble partv to take over
payments
Call cred it
manager co llect 614 592

$10,000 Minimum
withdrawal)

stop in or give us a
call to explain our
companv.
992· 2635
Middleport, Oh.

Real Estate

Insurance

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
SERVING SOUTllEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868'
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU H/WE*THE COVERAGE?

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

12

S1tuat1ons Wanted

Wtll clean house Call 667
3423 or 667 6373
Wtl l do odds and ends panel1ng , fl oor t 11e, ce111ng

tole 992 6338

17

M•scellaneous.

Vegetable plants, cabbage,
broccoli, caulif lower, let
tuce, celery beets , green
peppers, ch1lt, ptmlentos,
Hunganan wax, sweet
banana, egg plant Larg
selectton beddtng annuals,
i"dngtng baskets, pots of
lowers and vmes Cleland
Grenhuuse,
Geraldtne
Cleland Racme Oh10

- - - -- - --

2

bedr

Fleetwood, 14•65 3

1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES PT PLEASANT.
wv 304 675 4424

31

In Syracuse one bedroom
tra 11er w1th h1de a bed
Utlltt1es furntshed except
gas and elec tr1c Coupl e
w 1t h one ch •ld or two
workmg peopl e Depos1t
requ 1red No pets Call 992

3269

Real Estate

Me1gs co Call after 6 p m.
985 4169

Kana uga $3200 00 Call 304
882 2466

12x45 add a room trai ler
and large 11vmg room and
ut111ty room, a nd bedroom

$2900 00 Ca ll between 10
and4at992 6173
Real Estate- General

992-2259
NEW LISTING - 3 Yrs;
old Excellent condlt1on,
ranch 1 acres of n1 ce

a

1ay1ng land , tully equ1p
ped k1tchen, 3 bed
rooms, 2 baths. other
features $36,900 00
NEW LISTING- Han
dyman's spec1at Could
be 2 fam 1ly 1n Pomeroy

Want $12,500.00.
NEW LISTING

DILLON

Chester, 8 room house
on J4 acre With ~

REAL ESTATE

BUSINESS BUILDING

m downtown Rutland,

0 . approx 10 yrs old

Use as busmess or con
vert to ltvmg quarters
See to apprec1ate

NEW LISTING, 3 BR

cottage w1th 2 acres of
qu1et countryside
5
m1nutes from M1d

dleporl, 0

3 BEDROOM HOME ,
carpeted and paneled ,
on V1ne
Street 1n
Rac•ne
very cl ean,
ready to move 1nto N1ce
level loty Will al so con
Sider r enting

bedrooms,

]

baths,

downstairS remOdeled ,
basement,
ut1lltv

$17,500 ()()
VERY NICE

3

bedroom home, full
basement, WBFP, n 1ce
stft tn g
porch
w 1t h
bauttful r111er v1ew
Must be seen, llf2 stones

pay cash or cert1f1ed check
for ant1ques and collec
t1bles or ent tre estates

Nothmg 100 large

Also.

guns, pocket watches and
co1n collections Call 614
767-3167 or 557 3411

cottage, trailer hookup,

140 Acres With frame
house , all mmeral s, call
for deta11s•

$10,500
TAKING LISTINGS•

Hobart Dtllon , Broker
Fay Manley,
Branch Mgr

Phone 992 2598

General

GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr
Broker

NEW LISTING -

Neal

Old

Approx

OFFICE HOURS
Monday lhru Sat
9·5
AlsoMon &amp; Fn

Even1ngs Unlll8 P.M.
REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr
992-6191

ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dott1e Turner

742-2474
Jean Trusse11949·2660

Real Estate- General

TRAILER - 2 BR , on n1ce l ot , small outbu1 ld1ngs
for storage, on qu1et street $10,500
LOT IN RACINE - Includes septic, water &amp; gas
l 1nes Askmg$3,700

REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE - 3 BR Muse, fam 1 '
l y room , parttally closed m carport lOxiO storage
bldg Reduced to $37,000
SPLIT ENTRY - Only 5 yr old, 3 BR In gOOd
development 547,500
LOTS - Bordenng Pomeroy 1 to 75 acres
POMEROY - 3 BR home, Ct tV water, vmyl Stdlng

basement, heav11y Insul ated, thermo w1ndows 11ft
out for c lean1ng Carpeted on all3 1evels Ex tenor 1s
Real Perma Stone. 2 car garage Much more for

Over 100 acres
could be housmg development - gas alreadv drill'
eel, on propertv water lines close A ll mineral rights

go with property Also T1mber ready to be cui Ca ll
for more 1nformat•on

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US A CAll
Call J1mmy Deem, Assoc1ate 9119·2388
or Nancy Jaspers, Associate 949·2654 or 949·2591

( Mator

20x24x l 0
for
- 30"x48'xl2 for
- 40'x48 x14 for
- 48'x72'x14 for
F o B Faclory

61

Farm Equtpment

5 Ft Brush Hog Good
cond S200 742 31 17 after 5
Lawn tractor, 154 In
Ternat1onal Lowboy, 60 mch
mower, A I cond1t1on Call
742 2211 before 5 and 985
4338 after 5 and ask for
Dav 1d
B Model Mack Tra ctor Ex

ce llent shape Call 992 7354

Call co llect today 614 294

after 7 p m

l gold t1cket
M emortal
Golf tournament 992 5574

53 Ferguson fractor , 3 potnt
h1tch wtth plow and diSC
Good
co ndlf1on
for

Potted plant dirt and horse
manure Sack or tru ck
load E J H1ll, Flatwoods

Rd Pomey Oh

Butldmg Supp hes

5

A real

That' s all 1t wtll take to
fall 1n love w1th th ts 3
bedroom , total electnc
home
S1tuated
on
almost an acre Close to

MeigS H1gh on Crew Rd

to

$39,900 00
EXT~A WELL ·KEPT 3
bedrooms 1 bath. k1f
chen and ut11!ty Rural
water S1tuated on n1ce
SIZe lOt 10 HUtChiSOn
Subdtvts1on
Call for
more details
we need homes 1n the

Pets for Sale

SOC IETY

Adopt a home less pet
Healthy, shots wormed
Donat 1ons requ1red 992
6260, noon 7 p m , except
Tuesday , emergency calls
onty

HOOF HOL LO W Horses
and pon1es and nd1ng
lessons
Everythtng
1magtnable m horse equ1 p
ment
Blankets, belts
boots etc Engltsh and
Western
Ruth Re eves

(614) 698 3290

Put a co ld nose 1n your
future Healthy , wormed
and shot s
Me1gs Co
Humane Soc 1ety, 992 6260 3
male I nsh Setters , 1
mm1ature Collie Type, 1
Plot Hound . 1 Chesapeake
Bay Retnever 1 male Btrd
dog , 8 wk old pupp1es

Shepherds

Beagle types

Assorted k1ttens

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7210

pnce range for our
qualified buyers G1ve
usa calf!!!
Velma Ntcmsky , Assoc

FUR

NITURE , gl ass, c h1na,
anyth1ng See or ca ll Ruth
Gosney , ant1ques, 26 N

2nd, Middleport OH 992
316 1

e ANNOUNCEME "'TS

1- C.,rd ot Th.anu

Phone
1-(614) ·992·3325
NEW LISTING - N1ce4

ches, class r~ngs weddmg
bands. d 1amonds Gold or
s•lver Ca ll J A Wamsley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest

Co1n Shop, Athens, OH 592
6462

GOLD AND SILVER
CO l NS OF THE WORLO
RINGS, JEWELRY,
STE RLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
H IG H.
HIGHE ST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP. MIDDLEPORT ,
OH 10, OR CALL 992 3476
63

bedrooms In Pomeroy,
W!thtn walktng distance
of stores Has n 1ce bath ,
hot
water
heat,
ca rpet1ng, new k1tchen

and coppe r plumbing
Near playground
NEW LISTING - Bnck
veneer

ranch,

3

bedrooms. 2 full batns,

several

nice

c losets,

modern equipped kit

chen, storm wtndows,
fam1ly room, ful l base
ment, carPOrt, and nice

la rge lot $47,500
MODULAR SITE -

4

acres out of town on
Lead 1ng Creek water

w1lh sept1c lank and
electrtclty

SOLID BRICK - 3 or 4
bedrooms, new bath, all
new kitchen, formal d1n
mg, and on a 1e11e1 lot
near stores and school
$38,500

,, _ Help

14- B\Islnen Tntn+nt
ts-School:s lnsl ruclton
16RiiCIIO TV
I CB Rtp.1tr
11-W•nled To Do
austneu
Opportunity
22- Money fo Lo•n
13-Profnuonill
SerYIUl

for Mond•v

Want to try our protec·

lion pion. CALL 992 3325
or99HB76.

Housing
H adquarlsts

eS ERVICES

&amp;

992· 3795

Family Plan
Available
John Teaford
Phone

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

SERVICE STAroN
Pomeroy, 0

THE POOL PEOPLE

SCFIIEeS
Hom e
1mprovements

S &amp; G Carpet Clean1ng
Steam
cleaned
Free
es t1 mate
Reasonab l e

31711 Noble Summtt Rd
Middleport, Oh10
992 5724
Sales , servtce and sup
pl1es
In ground and
above ground pools
5 1 Tfc

PARK FINANCIAL
&amp; VA AutomatiC
Loa ns, No Down Pay
menT Federal Houstng
Loans , 3% down on
S25, DOO, 5% down on
balance FHA 265 Sub
s•dv Program FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort
Open M W F 9:00 to I 00
Other Ttmes
By Appo1ntment
Off1ce 992 7S44
VA

Home 992 6191

(614) 985-3961
4 14 1 mo

59 1 mo pd

LANDMARK

81

GOLF
LESSONS

Real Estate Loans
13% Interest 30 Yrs

Vinyl and Alum inurn
Siding

107 Sycamore St
Pomeroy, OH.

H. L WHITESEL

ROOFING
All types of root work,
new or repair guTters
and downspouts, gutter
clean n~ and pa1ntmg.
All worl&lt; guaranteed

BISSEU
SIDING CO.
Call tor Free S1dmg
Esttmate, 949 2801 or
949 2860
No Sunday
calls
51 1 mo

FrP '? Est1mates
.nable Pnces
I Howard
'l 2862
949 216(1

Rea~

1 22 tfc

l-'===--~:...::====~-==========~,.===========
WALL PAPERING and
BOB'S
ADD ONS &amp;
pamtmg 742 2328
REMODELING
GENERAL
CARPENTER WORK
com plete remodeling by A I
Gutter work , down
CONTRACTING
Tromm , 742 2328 Refer en
spouts, some concrete
T sh1rts
novelty
ces

6309
2211
rat esor 742
Scotchguard

992

sh1rts for pol1ftC1ans,
ball teams, busmesses
or mdtvlduals
Shtrts $4 oo Each

Rooftng, s1d 1ng, room ad
d1t1ons all types of general
r epa.rs, 25 years ex
per~ence 992 3406

"We

pnnl ALMOST

anythtng on ALMOST
anythmg 1"

Wttl
do remodel 1ng ,
rooftng, pa10t1ng, plumbtng
and elec t Free est1ma1es
Call Charles Smcl atr, 985

Ph 614 949·2358

Evenmgs &amp; Weekends
58 1 mo

-

wortt
walks
dnv ewavs

Vmyl Siding
Gutter work
Soffit
Garages
C!arports
Room add1t1ons

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Call After 5 P M
992-6323

'27

and

POMER OY , O
992-6215 or
992-7314
128lmo

pd

4121

74

Motorcycles

1970 Honda motorcycle 750
4 cyl w 1975 eng Has a
sar~ ng and luggage trunk
and more extras L1ke new

742 3154

Honda z 150 trail b1ke, l1ke
new, less t ha n 100 m 1les

$300 00 Also Rem1ngton 308
pump nfle w1th 3x9 power
scope 1n case $300 00 Call

992 2713

Root pa1nt1ng and tr1m
work Barn pa1nt~ng Free
es timat es
M1nor root

repair 992 3627

All typ es of roofmg new
and
r e pa~r
gutters
downspou ts, commer
c1al &amp; r es tdent1al
949 2160 Pomeroy
797 2432 Athen s
Tom Hosktns or
Gerald Clark
21 years expe nenc e All
work guaranteed
Free Esttmate
4 24 1 mo

Remodel1ng,
f loors,
cetlmgs, panelmg, doors,
w1ndows, patntmg, free
est1mates 992 2759
Wtll

pour

concrete

•HOWARD
ROTOVATOR
• V-CHISEI.
PLOW

Ohio Valley Roofing

la y

bloc k and brick Call 992
3417

LEO

MORRIS
Rutland, 0.
Ph . 742-2455
4 14 1 mo

I
I
I

Rutland Furniture's
SMALL

Utility Buildings
S1zes fro,n 41:6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Wn te your own ad and order by mad wtth th 1s
coupon Cance l your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

I,
I
I
Address; _________________ I
I

Phone ___________________
Pnnt one word 1n each
space below Ea ch tn
111al or group of f1gu r es
co unls as a word Count
name and addr ess or
phone number 1f used
You II get better results
1f you descnbe fully
g1ve pnce The Senttnel
r ese rves th e r tght to
c1ass1fy ed1T or r e1ect
any ad Your ad will be
pu r 1n rne pr.ope r
cl ass1 ft cat1on tf you 11
check the proper box
below
) Wanted
l For Sale
) Announcement
) F or Ren t

Rt l , BoJC 54
Rac1ne Oh .

Ph 6148432591
5 14 1 mo

81

Home
Improvements

1

Will patnt roofs and hou ses
Will d o any SIZe 10b Call

Ma1or and m1nor r oof
repa1r s Pamttng, sh1ngles
and some s1d1ng
Fr ee
est1mates Call 742 253 4 or

83

5
6

Relr lger~tt•on

U - Gener • l Hauling
16- M H lhp• lr
11- Upholsl•ry

7

6
9

These cas h rates
tnclude d1scount

17
18
19
20

Chlrge

, 1 00

I 25

I JO

I tO

110

125

)00

375

In memory C.1rCI ol Thlnlr.~t lnd ObtiU.1 r y ' eenn per word 'J 00
mtnlm\lm Cuh '" ildvence
MObile Home 1.11u •nd Y~rC sale' •re •ccrpleti only wtlh C.1th=_j•"
order lS ctnt charge tor 1/U urry.ng 6o• 11/IJmtler In C.:tre ol Tt.e

25

26
27
28
30

11

12
13

31
32 - - - - - 33

14
15

35

16
Mall Th1s Coupon w1th Rem.ttance
The Dally ~~ntinel
Box 719
Pomeroy , Oh 45769

-

CARPET

$995 And Up

Paddtng &amp; Caroet Installed Free ·
with t"'urcnase

Nice Selection of Remnants
A II Sizes - Good Prices

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Mam St

]4:t·221 1

Excavat•ng

Dozer, b ackhoe and tren
cher Sept1c sysfems com
plete serv ces Hourly or
contract
Eng1n ee r1ng ,
la yout and construct1on
Btl l Pu lli ns 9922478
Ottch W1tch trencher, like
new ,
h 1g h float
t~r es
$2 500 00 Call I 457 3139
Also Bobca t style loader,
hydro stat tc drtve , 215
hours, prtme condt t 1on

$4 ,800 00 Call i 457 3139
84

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

The Gravely 30-mch rotary mower cuts
nght through 1he toughest grass and weeds
and does a good JOb on your lawn as well
The mower IS tough With all-geard1rect
dnve all-steel deck and anu-scalpmg
roller The lraclor IS also al!-geardnven
Call us for a free demonstration
We service what we sell

~GRAVELY.

Electncal
-~&amp;
~
Refrtgeratton

SE WIN G

MACHINE

ser v1c:e,
al l
makes
992 228.4
The
Shop, Pomeroy
F abnc
Authonzed Smger Sa les
and Serv 1ce We sha r pen
SCISSOrS
Repa~rs ,

ELWOOD
REPAIR

BOWERS
Sweepers,

toasters, ~rons , all smal l
appliances Lawn mower
Next to Srate H1ghway '
Garage on Route 7, 985

3825

-----

Rubber $895 SQ.
Backed
yd.

7101

29

10------

A
SHOP IS FULLY STOCKED
BEDROOM&amp;
KITCHEN CARPET
LIVING ROOM

L1me stone for dr1veway s
Pomer oy Mason area 367

24

-----

CARPET
SHOP
" Dnve A Little Save Lot"

742 2188

22
23

4

Each word OYer "'• mtntmYm a worcn '' 4 unit per word per diiY
Adl r\lnnlnt otner thin consec\ll111e cla ys will tie charOJed altPI•' d'V
nt•

s.nu"el

4339

2
3

ll - Home I mpr o11ements
82- Piumbtn;&amp; Ex"""llnll
13- E\CIIIIt lng
1~ - E lectfiUI

(' "h

J Ci8YI

by Randy Carpenter,
factory
trained frontend
altg nm en t
speCialist.

21

I' Words or Under

'diiVI

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto ,
p s, p b , topper P0S 1f1V e
tract1on front and r ear 985

e TRANSPORTATION

Rates and Other lnformat1on
1 d•v
2 d.1y1

Vans &amp; 4 W D

71-A\Ito, tor ~.ale
13- V.ant &amp; 4 W D
74 - Motorcycles
7SAuto Parts
&amp; Acunorln
77- AiliO Rep.a .r

Want-Ad Advertt stng
oeadl1nes
D.111'f

73

6'- Hay I Gr.illt!l
6S- Seed &amp; Ferllltter

JI - Homes for h il l
U - Mobll•+tomu
lor S.111
33- Farms lor 5ille
34- Bustnus Bulldtngs
U- Lols I Acre•g•
J6--ll••• Eslal• WlnleCI
31- A••Itort

bath , natural gas, and
waler for oniV S12 ,000
4 LOTS - and n1ce 6
nice nome for ]usl
$25,500
WE CAN SAVE YOUR
TIME, YOUR MONEY,
AND CARPET WEAR
BY LISTING YOUA
PROPERTY WITH US.

U -L tvUIOC~

e REAL ESTATE

4 PM

Salem Twp. Rd 180
De)( ter, Ohto 45726
B111 Eskew, Ph 742 2456
Your Place or Mme

992 3941 or 992 2452

li - F•rm Equ•pmtnt
U - Winled lo Bu y
72- Trucks for Sale

e FINANCIAL

12 Noon sa1urdn

eRENTALS

eFARMSUPPLI ES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

21 -

Here IS your chance for
a cheap home or
business or both Has a

room home. Has centra l
heal and city water A

W.1nt•d

l:J- Ins~o~r.1nce

OPPORTUNITY

General Welding

and

7876

Pomeroy , Oh

4 2 tiC

Tri.f.ounty

1957 Ford Jlh ton truck 992

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

51 - Household Goods
U - CB, TV, R'dto Equtpm•nt
J3- AnllqYes
u-Misc Menhlndt)e
U -- BUt ld1ng SYpplles
5~- Pets for S.ale

w.,nted

12-SIIU.1l~

ENGINE
STEAM
CLEANED
'12.00

Curb Inflation.
! Pay Cash for
I Classlfleds and
:
Savell!
I

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

1975 Ford P1ckup Ranger
XLT, 302 eng, auto, ps ,
a1r, am fm radto, C B A ll
good t1res Low m11es, runs
good , good pn ce 992 7841

618 E. Ma1n

I

PIGS for sa le 843 4734

tor Rent
41- Motllle Homes
for Ren t
44 - AJNrtmenl tor Rent
H - FRooms
u - S pact tor J;~ent
47 - WanteCito Rent
41 - Eqytpmentlor Rent

to Buy

992 6173 between 10 and 4

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

r----------------------,~====~11------===---_.._

L1vestock

41 - Houie~

2-lnMemon•m
J- AnnO\Incemenls
4- GtYUWil'f
i-H.1ppy Ads
6--Losl and Fo\lnd
7-Y•rd hie
1- Putlllc S.le
&amp; Auction
~Wanted

HAVE YOUR

Calll6141 992 9932

OLD COINS , pocket wal

or Wnte Dally senttnel Classofied Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0 ., 45769

Second Street

4.46

197.4 lntern attonal VB w1th
16 foot van box and
hydraultc I 1ft $3700 00 Call

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

216 l

Middleport. 0

FRONT END
ALIGNMENTS

Trucks for Sate

loaded w1th extras
1552 Call afer 5 p m

se wmg

TllE
SEWING CENTER

Auto Repatr

77

1976 Ford Courter
ex
cellent cond1t10n 992 7312

1979 Ford PICKUp, 6 f1 bed,

your

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessones

fer 992 7805

Tomato Plants for Sale
See Bud Barttm s, County
Road 50, Reedsville, Oh10

ANT IQUES,

For all
needs

B usmess- Farms-Partners h1 ps
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and toss statements, all
federal and state forms.

4 18 1 mo

1973 Chevy Camaro, wh1te
w1th black vtnyl top Good
runn1ng condtt ton Best of

pm

lo Oh10 Pal let Co . Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 2689

992-5320

992 2779

843 2795 or 943 2781

62
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD Poles max

Startmg Soon
Ca II for Registra t,on

Gas tnb oard outboard
motor, $175 For more 1n
lormatt on 742 23 15

1972 Chevy Monte Carlo
body parts Also 350 eng w
4 barrel and auto fran
sm1sston After 5 Mon
Fn , Weekends anyt1 me

Tomato Stakes for Sale
$10 00 per hundred Call

PHONE 992-2156

Phone 742·3092

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742 2003

1978 Checkmate u mate 11
Sk1 boat 150 h p Evenrude
motor Two low dr1ve on
trailer $6,500 384 37 94 af
rer 5 p m

1978 Mercury 2 dr , 6 cvl ,
auto Good gas m1leage
Wil l cons1der one half ton 6
cy l p1ckup 1n t rade or
1973 Olds Omega
v 8,
automat1c, good t~rcs, snow
t res .ncluded
Ong1nal
owner 992 5098 or 992 2077

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

SEWING CLASSES

76

1977 Chevrolet P1ckup, 6
c yl
3 speed Good gas
mileage 992 5636 after 5

WANT AD INFORMATION

l1S,OOO 00 to l30 ,000 00

~

BoatS and ~
~~o~rs for Sale

5752 2

14 1n ch cha 1nsaw, new bar
and cha1n Excellent con

slab $10 per ton Deltvered

Almost

1979 Ford L TO Country
Squ tre stat tonwagon
9
passenger 18 mpg Com
pl etely loaded $5,500 992

1978 Ford V 8 PICkup
Truck Heavy duty spnngs
for pull1ng camper Good
cond $3 BOO 949 2042

d1ameter 10" on largest

ma1ntenance tree home
Th1s home has so many
n1 ce features such as
m1cro wave, Mohawk
carpet
throughout,
famtl y room
w1th
ftrepl ace, hand stat ned
woodwork We 1ust can't
name Them alt 11 G1ve us
a ca II for more mfo On

per gallon $1800 DO Call
992 7060

7S

Services

-

wh1te v.nyt top 742 2103 af
ler 4

$2 DOO 00 Cal 742 3117 after

end $12 per ton Bundled
HUM ANE

1978 Cama r a, 20 000 m11es
extra s, excellent cond1tton
1976 Chevy Monza, 27 m tl es

1974 Hond a 360, 1975 Ford
E l1 te, am fm tape, a c
p s p b 53,000 mil Red w

d1loon $75 00 Ca ll 992 3079

Stock trader pull type, 1978
81f2 foot coachman tru ck
c~mper,
self con ta med
w1th extras $3,000 00 call

56

1977 Co rdoba vtnyl top
a c p s, p b cru1se con
tr ol re ar wtnd ow defogger ,
leather sea ts $1.800 92

72

2675 lol 8 p m

rough cut wa lnu t lumber ,

185

reduced

bulldtngs

Mfg I
$3 070 00
$4 120 00
$5,096 00
$7,407 00

aged 742 3117 after 5

butld1ngs
Some
mmerals Cal! Today

Pr1ce

span

Approx,mate ly 1,000 f! of

house, and

BRICK

BU ILDINGS"'
LAST
CHANCE AT THESE
PRICES - All steel clear

ss

acres
more or less
S1tuated on Van Zandt

Rd

Middleport

9131

$3 750 985 391 2

742 3019

bulld1ng s1tes, lots of
road
frontage

$10,000 00
ACREAGE -

throughout
New fur
na ce M•ddl eport area

:PHONE 742-2003'

available Close to
Meigs High School, gOOd

1 ACRE IN MID
DLEPORT - 4 room

4

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

vacant land , gas, elec
tr1 c,
and
water

S57.500
INVESTMENT PROPERTY -

needs some repair AI most
2 acres 1 7 m1 out of
Rutland on New L 1ma Rd.
Stgn tn yard $8,000 tf sold
th1s month

ATTENTION
( IM
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

Chocolate
Sale
All
chocolate 10 stock S1 30 per
pound wh1le 1T lasts at
Carouse l Contect1onar y

of excellent 11veablllly
ONLY $28,500 00
ACREAGE - 10 Acres

Ftve rooms and bath, out
Stde bu1ld1ng, acre lot
Woodrow Kuhn, 609 Cherry

BYOWNER 2storyhouse,

Ant1ques

SJ

JUST ONE LOOK -

onRt 33$14,900
LARGE HOUSE IN RACINE - 2 story, foniShed

-

Phone 992 7331

ly $69,000 00

Large Attra ct,ve home on
e)(ce pt1ona11y n1ce acre lot
Syracuse Modern k1tchen,
2 baths, basement, garage
Many extras 992 7727

Sl , Vinton, Oh10

Bearcat 250 programmable
scanner 50 channel S275 00

dream home•••

$65.000

Bnck.
ranch style,
3
bedroom,
2 1h
bath,
fireplace. full basement w
fariuly room, a c, 2 car
garage, Baum Addn ,

Equtpment

Only $21,500 00
NEW LISTING -

for Rent

NEW LISTING - Overlooktng OhiO Rtver &amp; Katser
Alum Plant, 3 lg BR 's, plenty of closets, full base
ment &amp; fam1ly room On 3 beaut1ful acres Askmg

Homes for Sale

CB,TV, Radto

Almost 8 acres on Hysell
Run 2 bedroom home
Has 2 rural water taps
and 2 se pt1 c systems

1969 Kirkwood mobtle
home 12x60, two bedroom ,
unturn1shed, large llvmg
room and dmtng r oom At

Real Estate

Oh

to sell at only $25,500 00
NEW LISTING

CENTRAL REALTV CO.

Edgewater Beach, Thorn

992 2143

Cameron. 14x65

2 BEDROOM COT ·
TAGE
Panele d

273

Part ttm e
pharmacy
techn1c1an, m 1n1 mum h1gh
school graduate Call 992
6297 from 9 5 weekdays

bedroom

1971

Merchandise
52

5724

Wurlttzer organ
9
1n
strum ents, 5 rythms, per
cu ssto n, cassette r ecorder
player
Call
992 7585
even1ngs

Bu~iness

1975 Ca nAm 250cc 304 773

Autos for Sale

3886

Potted tomato plants An
drew Cross, L etart Falls

2 bedroom home on
State Rt 12.4 Sttuated
on an acre w 1th cel lar
and 2 bu1 ld1ngs Lots of
d 1fferent fru1ts Pnced

Mobile Homes

acres, wa lk. mg dtstance
to Middleport

(No penally for early

Vil le. Oh 43076
AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE been can
cel led?
Lo s t your

14x65 2

Reduced to $8,000 DO
2 BDRM. HOME -

co.
Pays 12% No

Woman to stay wtth elderly

$388

Fa~rpomt ,

:$$$$$:

co mmensurate w1th exp
Exc fn nge benef1ts Co n
tact personnel d1rector,
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal ,
Valley
Dr1ve,
Po1nt

batter~es ,

992·2342
DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

FHA 265

305 1, Ireland M ortgage Co,
77 E State Sl, Athens. OH

Salary

W ILl

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

program,

!second mortgages,!
,._and
refinance,._
*cases. Call Com-*
!plete
Mortgage!
,..serv1ces
'n*
by May 23,1980 to Planned *Gallipolis, Ohio at*
Parenthood of Southeast
OhiO, 8 NorTh Court St, !446·1517 for more!
Athens, o n 45701 An Equal *information andltOpportun 1t y Employer
!vour appointment.

J M C Rt I, Box 306
Belpre Oh 45714

sml~:~tons,

Money to Loan

1980

I mmed1ate open1ng for
Soc1al
Work er
w1t h
Bachelor's Degree, ex
pertence tn c r 1S1S cou n
se lmg , based 1n Me1gs Co,
wil li ng to travel to ne1gh
borh1ng count1es Must be
htghly organ•zed, w111 have
dtverse respons1bd1ttes
Half t1me pos1t1on to start,
poss1ble 1ncrease to three
fourth or full Send resume

1973

bdr , bath lf2
1971 Shakespear, 1.4x65 2
bedroom

F lnanelal

Mortgage
Money
Available New homes, Old
homes, and ref 1n anetng
your presen t home CON

WANTED
F txed base
operator for Ga lli a Me1gs
Reg1onal Airport
Prtn
ctpals only, send proposal
and references to Ga l l •a
Metgs RegiOnal Airport
Author1ty
Box
338,
Gal lipOliS, Oh10 by May 23,

42

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1971

Full t1me and par t f1me RN

6370

old

G1ve p1ano lessons to begm
ners and adanced student
1n my home Also teach
chord1ng and transpostng 1f
1nterested ca ll992 5403

22

eve lopes you mad Postage
pa1d Work at home Age or
e&gt;&lt;per1ence no barner
Send name and address to

BUY

32

99~

Real Estate- General

SPONSOR SHOWING
The Pomeroy Elementary School
Patrol will sponsor the showmg of a
fuil-length feature film, "Dark Star"
dealing wtth space at 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the school. AdmissiOn IS $1
and refreshments will be served.

wanted to Do

Large lots Cal l

992 7479

IN STOCI&lt; for tmm ed1ate
delivery vanous s1zes of
pool k1ts Do 1t yourself or
let us mstall for you D
Bumgardner Sa les, Inc

Motorcycles

Pets for Sale

Mtsc Merchantse

COAL ,

Pomeroy

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Thomas
Hayman,
Syracuse; Martha Roush, Rutland;
Helen Knapp, New Haven; Betty
Caldwell, Middleport; Jesse Swan,
Langsville ; Cecil Etselstein,
Pomeroy
DISCharged-Albert Bolen, Linda
Jacks, Mickey Foster, Frankie Stafford, Freda Fields, Mary Gilkey,
Clarence Might, Kenneth Matson,
Carl Autherson

and son, Willlll Reese, Berlin Center,
spent Wednesday here with her
siSter and brother-in-law, Mr and
Mrs. Clarence Spurrier, Pomeroy,
and other relatives. Visiting m the
afternoon were Myrtle Grover, Mr
and Mrs Henry Eblin, Sr., Mrs.
Marcia Houdashelt, Greg Grover
and daughter. Several members of
the family went to the Holzer
Med,ical Center to VISit Ben Eblin,
who IS seriously Ill His room number IS 401

!

operator s license? Phone

13

ATTENTION
( IM
PORTANT TO YOU J Wo ll

54

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of

allocate enough, didn't emphasiZe
education enough.
" A country of educated people
who are aware of their country ... I
think it wtll make for a better
SOCiety."

Mrs l..oUJSe West, Powhattan Pomt,

2156or992 2157

Ztd1an at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Fnday 9 s

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auction

8

9

GET VALUABLE tratn1ng
as a young bus 1ness person
and earn good money plus
some g r eat g1fts as a Sen
t1nel route carr1er Phone
us r1ght away and get on
the ellg1bll1ty list aT 992

or LPN 11 7 Contact Mr

13

J

on old Route 33 at 1c;I_ _...:H
=el"'p:..:W
=a::
nl:.::ec::dc__

the foot of Rose Hill from 9
4

ear ptns 675 3010
Four Family Trailer Sale
Four m11es out 143 May 16
and 17 from9 to5

1Q

7 _ ___.:!Y~a":r!'.d~S~a~
l e:___

off Rl 7 north of Pomeroy,

---=-77."""~--­

Ptano

14, lie

Announcements

4

56

fur

n1shed 992 77(M
45

74

S_J _____ A._ntlques

5122

the Towns htp of Olive,
Ohto, at the regular places
of vo t1n g theretn, on
Tuesday , the 3rd day of
June , 1980 , lhe quest1on ot
levy m~ . 1n excess of th e ten
mill 11m1tat1ons, for t he
ber'leftt of Ol1ve Townsh1p
for
the
purpose
of
provtd1ng and matntammg
fire apparatus appl tances
f re department bulldmgs
or sources of water supp ly
and mater~als therefor or
the estab liShment and
mamtenance of ltnes of f1re
alarm tel ephones lor the
Oltve TownshiP Volunteer
F 1re Department only
Sa1d tax bemg an ad
dtt1onal tax of 11 2 mtll to
ru n for f1ve years

~
~

otherwtse stated 1n par
t1cular nottces, all other
communt cat 1ons 1ncludlng
comments on proposed ac
" liOns snould be addressed
-,. either to The D1V1S10n of
Author~zatton
&amp; ,_f')m ·
pliance (Air) or Perm1t
and Approva I Section
(Water), wh tchever ts ap
propnate, at The Oh10

3

Rooms and bath

4t

46

It Pays To Advertise. • .Advertise Where It Pays. • •
Public Nohce

"

Apar1ment
for Rent

____

Haul1ng
- -Geniral
_......_

85 --

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel Also, I me hau11ng
"and spreadtng Leo Morns
Truck.ng Phone J.J2 2455

SO" Mower when

you buy a .
Rtding Tractor

30" Mower when

you buy a 1
Walking Tractor

MANNING ROUSH, OWNIR

I

~

'

�•

.•14-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 14, 1900

15-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Ma y 14 1980
44

Presidential contenders stump in Ohio
By Tbe Associated Press

VIce President Walter F Mandale, who was m two Ohio Cities to
woo votes for the Cartel'oMondale
ticket m the state's June 3 primary,
says the administration's antiinflation effort IS beguuung to work
Without It, "there would be
massive unemployment, " he said m
Columbus on Tuesday
He later VISited Cleveland, where
he officially kicked off the campaign
and spoke before high school students.
In other prunary campa1grung
Tuesday, Mrs George Bush stumped for her husband's GOP ticket m
Dayton.
Mandate told Democratic delegate
candidates m Columbus that shorttenn borroWing rates dropped 7 percent m the past month The prune
rate - charged by maJor banks to
preferred busmess customers also sunk 3.2 percent durmg that
time, he said.
Referrmg to Ohio's depressed coal
muustry, Mandate said the $227
billion to be realized by the new wmdfall profits tax on oil comparues
" will be used to hire Amencan
workers to prcxluce energy, such as
Ohio coal and unconventiOnal gas "
Such steps will "restore Amenca to
Its rightful place m the world," he
added.
Although Mandate's bnef talk
brought cheers from a crowd of
about 150 delegates and party faithful, some - mcluding Ohio Senate
President Oliver Ocasek, D-Akronpredicted a "gocxl fight " between
President Carter and Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy, D-Mass, m the state

next month
"Kennedy has picked up support
m pockets, maybe m Cleveland,"
Ocasek said. But he added that Carter probably still w11l wm by an
estimated 6G40 favor
Later m the day m Cleveland,
Mandate tried to play down the
prunary battle between Carter and
Kennedy.
"Let's stop fighting each other and
let's start fighting Ronald Reagan
and wm this electiOn," he told a lunchtune crowd of hundreds m downtown Cleveland
Later, he told reporters, "I am
confident we will do well Ul Ohio, but
we are takmg nothing for gra nted "
The Cleveland Press on Tuesday
offered to sponsor a Kennedy-Carter
debate when both candidates for the
Democratic nommahon visit
Cleveland on May 29
Kennedy accepted at once But on
Monday , White House press
secretary Jody Powell ruled out a
'
debate
"It (a debate) would serve no
useful purpose, " Powell S8ld.
Mondale concluded his Ohio campaign swmg,w1th an address to more
than 1,000 students at Shaker
He~ghts High School, located m an
affluent Cleveland suburb.
Mondale said he prefers understandmg and restramt to
hostilities and differences w1th
Russia
But he said, "For severa: years
now, the Soviet Uruon has not
" If
demonstrated that restramt
we are not a force for peace and
responsibility, then It won't get
done''

Meanwhile , on the Republican
side, Barbara Bush stumped m
Dayton Tuesday for her husband,
predictmg he would do well m Ohio
and the other remaUIUig prunaries.
In a speech to K1warus and several
mterv1ews, she praised her
husband's record .
"If J1mmy Carter has t&lt;Jught us

nothing else, he has taught us we
must nonunate and elect a man who
does not have to be tramed on the
JOb," she said, refemng to George
Bush, former Umted Nations Ambassador and past CIA director.
"We've learned from Junmy Carter
that 11 takes vast experience to make

3 AND .4 RM furniShed ap
ts Phone 992 5434

RENTER'S aSSISion ce for
Sen1or Ctf1zens tn VIllage

Manor apts Call992 7787
Ohio's pnmary, Bush and his family
plan a whirlwmd tour m Ohio Former California Gov. Ronald Reagan,
the GOP front-runner, has scheduled
a campaign swing through the state
later this month.
Kennedy also plans to VISit several
Ohio cities.

a gocxl president "
Although she acknowledged that
some Republicans have questioned
the WISdom of her husband's continued campaign, she said, "! think
my major value IS to tell people It's

not over.''
In the remaining weeks before

PubliC NoflcL,eo____

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
LIMITATION

COUNTY MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The tol low.ng documents
were rece1ved or prepared
by

The

Oh10

En

v•ronmental
ProtectiOn
Agency dur.ng the prevtous
week The effectn1e date of
each fmal act 1on •s stated
The tSsuance date at each

proposed actton 1S stated
Anyone aggneved or ad

versely affected by a fmal

actton to tssue, deny ,
mod 1fy, revoke, or renew a
permd l •cense, or var1an
ce, or to approve or dtsap
prove
p lans
and
speclftcattons, may file an
appeal w •th
v1ronmental

The En
Board of

Rev1ew. Su 1te 305, 395 E
Broad St, Colu mbus Oh to
43216. w1lhm lhorly (301

days of the effecttve date,
pursuaht to Oh1o Rev1sed
Cf&gt;de Sect,on 2745 07, unless
such fmal act1on was
preceded by the sa me or
substantiall y
tne same
proposed act,on
In ad
d1t1on, pursuant to Sect1on

3745 04 of The Rev,sed
Cod!!;' not1ce of the f1l1n9 of

the appeal shall be filed
w1th The D1rector of the
OhiO
Environmental
Protect1on Agency, 361 E
Broad Street, Columbus,
Oh10 43216, w1thm tnree Ill

days after the appeal 1S
filed

w1th

The En
v~ronmental
Board of
Re'Vtew All suc h f1nal ac
t1ons are so 1dent1f 1ed Such
persons mav request an ad
1udlcat1on hearlng before
The OhiO EPA on a
proposed act1on to 1ssue,
deny, mod1fy , revoke, or
renew a perm1t, 11cense, or
vanance , or to approve or
d1SaP.prove plans and
specifications, w1thm th1r

ty (301 days of the 1ssuance
dale ORC 3745 07 does not

prov1de for ad1Ud 1cat1on
heanng requests or ap
pealS tram oraers, venf 1ed
compla1nts,
or en
forcement
co mplian ce
schedule letters Withm 30
days of publ1cat1on m a
newspaper in the affected
.county , anv person may
also (1) subm1t wr 1t1en
commen ts relat1ng to ac
t1ons, proposed act1ons,
venf1ed complamts, en
forcement
compliance
schedule
letters
or
prel1m1nary staff deter
mlnat10ns on perm1ts tom

'" stall, (21 request a publi c
~ meet1ng
regard1ng
\, proposed act1ons or on
' prel imi nary staff deter
~ mmattons on permtts to 1n

j stall. and/or (31 request

~~ not1ce of further acttons or

'
'
..
,.,
.,
l.

proceedin9s All requests
for ad1Ud1catton heanngs
and public meet1ngs, and
other commun1cat1ons con
cern109 publ 1c meet1ngs,
ad1U dtcat1on
hear1nts,
ver1f 1ed compla1nts, and
regulat1ons, should be ad·

; dressed to The Legal
, Records Sectton, Oh 1o
.' EPA. P 0 Box 1049,
J Columbus, Oh 1o 43216,
~ (6 141 466 6037
Unless

NOTICE IS hereby g1ven
that tn purs uance of a
Resolut1on of th e Board of
Trustees of the Townshtp of
Olive. Ohto, passed on lhe
18th day of Marc h, 1980,
there will be submttted ro a
vote of th e people of sa1d
TownshiP at a Pr tmary

ELECT ION lo be held 1n

Liberian student postpones trip home
BOWLiNG GREEN, Ohio (APJ Though much of her family still hves
m Ubena, B1jou Jude IS postporung
her return to the strife-tom nation
unhl some stability IS restored.
"I had planned on gomg back m
November," said the 22-year-&lt;Jid
elementary educatiOn maJor at
Bowling Green State Uruvers1ty,
who graduates next month. "But
now, I think I'll stay here (the
Uruted States ) and go to grad school
for two years
" By then, I think things Will have
calmed down

11

Miss Jude left the Afncan nat10n
about SIX years ago to attend school
m the Umted States Although
discontent eXISted when she left her
homeland, It's smce explcxled mto a
military revolution
Libenan President William K.
Tolbert Jr was ktlled and his goverrunent overthrown m a coup April 12.
Ten days later, 13 officials of the
Tolbert govenunent and his ruling
True Whig Party were gunned down
by a flnng squad
Master Sgt Samuel K. Doe, who
led the coup and IS now chief of state

~

EPA, P 0 Box 1049,
Columbus, Oh10 41116

~
Issuance of
.ot.ce of
',, regtstra1ton
~
Jaymar Coal Company
Rl 1
~

~

Oh , Effecl1ve
dat~ 05·09 80
APPlicati on No(sJ
0653000003 POOl
Chesh~re,

(~l

'EVERYBODY
"::Shops the
w

'WANT AD WAY

Rac1ne Gun Club Sun
shoots are d1scont.nued for
the season
G1veaway

Male ca t All black , 3
yrs old 123 L1ncoln Hill.

Pomey, Oh 992 5573

7

YardSale

Stobart s Greenhouse now
Hang1ng baskets,
open
beddtng plants, tomatpes,
cabbage, peppers R t 2

at a rate noT exceed1ng 0 so
m111 for each one dollar of
valuatton, wh1ch amounts
to f1ve cenls for eac h one
hundred dol lar s of
valuat•on, for f tve years
The Polls for sa 1d Elec
t 1on will open a t 6 30
a c lock AM and rema1n
open until 7 30 o'clock PM
of sa1d day
By order of the Board of
E lecttons, of Metgs Cou nty ,
Oh10
Ernest A W1ngett
Cha trman

Four Fam1ly Yard Sa le
Wednesday and Thursday
Lots of gtrls stze 7 12,
men's, women's and l1ttle
boys SIZes, glassware, Ken
more sew1 ng machme
cabt net, Harley Dav1dson
motorcycle parts, bed
spreads. cur ta tns, larc;Je
fuel 011 tank, and much
m1sc Ra10 or shtne Turn

Dorothy M Johnston
D1rector

Dated May 6 1980
151 7 14 21, 28 . 4l c

Rac10e, Oh1o 949 2342
Rummage Sale
Fnday
and Saturday , 16th and 17th
at old Mart 1n Restaurant,
Mtddleport Be1ng held by
Pat Clonch 9 to?

YARO SALE

W1ll1am S

Cross on Mam St, Rac1ne

Oh 9 4 May 16 Dresses,
curtams, rugs, l1ttle gtrls
1eans, btg g1rl s 1eans and
other mtsc 1tems

and head of the People's Redemtr
lion Council, has promiSed that no
more executiOns Will occur.
Despite disapproval of the
assassmahons, Miss Jude said she
favors the revolutton
"I found myself supporting II,"
she said " Tbe change was needed
even though the methods weren't
necessary I JUS! hope It's a change
for the better."
Although her family m Libena which currently mcludes a grandmother, brother and several aunts
and uncles - were considered nuddle class, others were not so lucky,
she sat d.
"The poor were bemg taken advantage of and bemg explOited," she
sa1d, "and! don't think that's right "
The revolution hopefully will
restore the rights of Liberia's poor,
Miss Jude said But that could take
time, she added
"The country IS kind of shaky and
It'll take some time to bwld 1! up,"
she said ·
Miss Jude expects to remam m the
Uruted States for the next two years
to pursue a master's degree m

on Forest Run Road Ap
prox 6 miles Watch for
s1g ns 9 4 For more 1n
formatton cl949 2288 or 9.49

2328
County Rd 28. 1 m1 N of
Bastlan Approx1mately 3
mt S of Keno La rge a .ron
dtt1oner, 10 wall bathroom
heater clof hes and m1sc
Thur s Frt and Sa t

Pubhc Not1ce

PUBLIC NOTICE

The Board of Trustees of
Lebanon Townshtp, Me1gs
County, Oh10, will rece 1ve
b1ds until 5 o'c lock p m for

the 28th day of May , 1980,

tor the purpose of pur
chast ng road ad for dus l
control
The Board of Trustees
reserve the nght to re 1ec t
any or all b1ds
By order of th e Board of
Trustees of Lebanon Town
Shtp
Sh~r l ey Johnson,

Clerk
55338 SR 124
Portland, Oh 45770
(51 14 lie

Yard Sale Thursday and
Fr~~ay ,

Yard Sale Fnday and
Saturday from nme to SIX,
dtshes, Silverware
ap
pllanc:es, clothtng, Avon
bottles, toys Ram or shme
at R1lev's, 531 South Second
Ave , Middleport
Oh10

4S760

education. But afterward, she plans
to return home and help rebuild her
country.
"The public schools need better
teachers and better facilities," she
sa1d. "The government didn't

Three Fam ly Yard Sale

May 15 through May 18 off

Rt 12-1 off county road 10,
one mile up Dexter Rd
Magnavox stereo, Sears
d1shwasher
S1gnatua re
sew1ng
mach1ne w1th
cabmet (new), three p1ece
maple bedroom su1te, one
so fa and chatr and other
m1sc furntture , cloth1ng
and numerous other 1tems

Yard

Sale

Thursday

Frtday and Sat urday on
F 1sher St off Spnng Ave
Pomeroy

Yard Sa le May 15, 16, 17 al
685 Locust St , Mtddleport
OhtO
Announcements

I PAY h1ghes t pr1ces
poss1ble tor gold and SliVer
co 1ns, nngs, 1ewelry, etc

BRADFORD, Auct1oneer,
Compl ete Serv1ce Phone
9&lt;19 2487 or 949 2000 rac1ne,
OhiO, Cntt Bradford
Odd ~

and Ends Shop at the
old Reufers gas stat1 on on
SR 33 at the foot of Rose
H1ll Open for bustness
Monday May 12 till August
31 Open Monday through
Saturday 9 til 8 anyone
want tng to sell th tn gs we II
ptckup and sell on a 50 pet
50 pet bas1s Anyone With
ant1ques or handcrafted
1tems we 11 se ll on an 80
pet 20 pet bas ts We do
p1 cku p, selling, bookwork.
and return anyth mg over 30

days old Would like people
to do own pr1c10g Carolyn
Lew1s at 992 292 1 or Kathy

REynolds at 992 5981

Wanted to Buy

VISIT HERE

Contact Ed Burkel! Barber
Shop, Middleport

P1 ck1 ng up .,~n Easy play
organ
•n
your
area
Lookmg tor a responstb le
party to take over pay men
ts Cal l cred1t manager

co llect 614 592 5122
Tuning

Oan,els 742 2951

Lane

Tu"' "'g

and Repair Serv 1ce since
1965 If no answer phone

992 2082

FAYE 'S GIF T SHOP New
loca tio l Next to Hemer's
Bread Store Flowers for
Memon a l Day

Boardmg Call 367 0292

71

HILLCREST

1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme
A C power sea ts am fm ,
ex tra s v.nyl top Pnced to
sell 99'16215

pay cash or cert1f1ed check
for ant1ques and co Noth1ng
too large
Also, guns ,
pocket watches and co•n
collecttons Cal l 614 767
3167 or 557 34 11

Furntshed Rooms

W 1ll ca re tor elderly person
m my pnvate home 992

6022

LIMESTONE ,

sand , gravel, ca lc1um
chlonde, fer t 1hzer, dog
food , and all types of salt
Excelstor Salt Works, 1nc ,
E Mam Sl, Pomeroy, 997

3891
Space for Rent

Iron and brass beds, old
furn1ture
desks
gold
r 1nQs , 1ewelry, Sl iver
dollars, ster l1ng, etc, wood
1ce boxes. ant1ques, etc
Complete
househo ld s
Wr tte M D M ll er, Rt 4,

Pomeroy . OHI or call 992
7760

10 karat, 14 karat 18 karat,

gold Dental gold and gold
Gold, s11ver or fore1gn
co1ns or any gold or stlver
1tems Anftque fur n1ture,
glass or chtna, will pay top
dollar , or comple te estates
No 1tem too large or too
small Check pnces before
se lling A lso do appra1s1ng
Osby (Osste) Mart1n 992

DANCE SATI1RDAY
A dance will be held Saturday
from 8 to ll p m. at the Meigs Semor
Citizens Center m Pomeroy. Music
will be by the Stringdusters. Adnussion is $1 for adults and children
under 12 will be admitted free when
accompanymg parents.

Insurance

VENT IONAL 5 Pel down,
SECOND MORTGAGES
VA No down payment,
FHA Low down pa yment,

FHA 245 Graduated paym

ent

Operattng room head nur
se Prev1ous head nurse
superv1sor exp requt red
Salary commensura te w1th
exper.ence
Excellent
tnnge beneftts
Nuclear
med1ctne techniCian , day

shoft

Men Fr1

Subs1dy program Call 592

**************

!lt- First
MONEY - MONEY *
mortgages, t

tran

engmes, or scrap meta ls,

elc Call245 9188

Washer and Drye r Call
Eva Hollon at 985 3980

************-,r·
Thinkmg About
Money Markets??

Why Take 9Vz%
When

INGELS
INVESTMENT

Pleasant, W Va 25550 304
675 4340
lady Call after 5, 992 3488
per

thousand

for

Earn extra money at home,
good pay, easy work No
exper1ence
necessary
Send for appl1 cat ,on to R

Ne,ghbarger ,

RI SIN G STAR

Kennel

KENNELS

Board1ng all breeds Clean
1ndoor ou tdoor lac tittles
Also
AKC
r eg1stered
Dobermans 614 446 7795

Mustcal
Instruments

57

P1ck1ng up a pt ano tn your
area Look1ng lor t1 respon
Stble partv to take over
payments
Call cred it
manager co llect 614 592

$10,000 Minimum
withdrawal)

stop in or give us a
call to explain our
companv.
992· 2635
Middleport, Oh.

Real Estate

Insurance

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
SERVING SOUTllEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868'
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU H/WE*THE COVERAGE?

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

12

S1tuat1ons Wanted

Wtll clean house Call 667
3423 or 667 6373
Wtl l do odds and ends panel1ng , fl oor t 11e, ce111ng

tole 992 6338

17

M•scellaneous.

Vegetable plants, cabbage,
broccoli, caulif lower, let
tuce, celery beets , green
peppers, ch1lt, ptmlentos,
Hunganan wax, sweet
banana, egg plant Larg
selectton beddtng annuals,
i"dngtng baskets, pots of
lowers and vmes Cleland
Grenhuuse,
Geraldtne
Cleland Racme Oh10

- - - -- - --

2

bedr

Fleetwood, 14•65 3

1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES PT PLEASANT.
wv 304 675 4424

31

In Syracuse one bedroom
tra 11er w1th h1de a bed
Utlltt1es furntshed except
gas and elec tr1c Coupl e
w 1t h one ch •ld or two
workmg peopl e Depos1t
requ 1red No pets Call 992

3269

Real Estate

Me1gs co Call after 6 p m.
985 4169

Kana uga $3200 00 Call 304
882 2466

12x45 add a room trai ler
and large 11vmg room and
ut111ty room, a nd bedroom

$2900 00 Ca ll between 10
and4at992 6173
Real Estate- General

992-2259
NEW LISTING - 3 Yrs;
old Excellent condlt1on,
ranch 1 acres of n1 ce

a

1ay1ng land , tully equ1p
ped k1tchen, 3 bed
rooms, 2 baths. other
features $36,900 00
NEW LISTING- Han
dyman's spec1at Could
be 2 fam 1ly 1n Pomeroy

Want $12,500.00.
NEW LISTING

DILLON

Chester, 8 room house
on J4 acre With ~

REAL ESTATE

BUSINESS BUILDING

m downtown Rutland,

0 . approx 10 yrs old

Use as busmess or con
vert to ltvmg quarters
See to apprec1ate

NEW LISTING, 3 BR

cottage w1th 2 acres of
qu1et countryside
5
m1nutes from M1d

dleporl, 0

3 BEDROOM HOME ,
carpeted and paneled ,
on V1ne
Street 1n
Rac•ne
very cl ean,
ready to move 1nto N1ce
level loty Will al so con
Sider r enting

bedrooms,

]

baths,

downstairS remOdeled ,
basement,
ut1lltv

$17,500 ()()
VERY NICE

3

bedroom home, full
basement, WBFP, n 1ce
stft tn g
porch
w 1t h
bauttful r111er v1ew
Must be seen, llf2 stones

pay cash or cert1f1ed check
for ant1ques and collec
t1bles or ent tre estates

Nothmg 100 large

Also.

guns, pocket watches and
co1n collections Call 614
767-3167 or 557 3411

cottage, trailer hookup,

140 Acres With frame
house , all mmeral s, call
for deta11s•

$10,500
TAKING LISTINGS•

Hobart Dtllon , Broker
Fay Manley,
Branch Mgr

Phone 992 2598

General

GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr
Broker

NEW LISTING -

Neal

Old

Approx

OFFICE HOURS
Monday lhru Sat
9·5
AlsoMon &amp; Fn

Even1ngs Unlll8 P.M.
REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr
992-6191

ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dott1e Turner

742-2474
Jean Trusse11949·2660

Real Estate- General

TRAILER - 2 BR , on n1ce l ot , small outbu1 ld1ngs
for storage, on qu1et street $10,500
LOT IN RACINE - Includes septic, water &amp; gas
l 1nes Askmg$3,700

REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE - 3 BR Muse, fam 1 '
l y room , parttally closed m carport lOxiO storage
bldg Reduced to $37,000
SPLIT ENTRY - Only 5 yr old, 3 BR In gOOd
development 547,500
LOTS - Bordenng Pomeroy 1 to 75 acres
POMEROY - 3 BR home, Ct tV water, vmyl Stdlng

basement, heav11y Insul ated, thermo w1ndows 11ft
out for c lean1ng Carpeted on all3 1evels Ex tenor 1s
Real Perma Stone. 2 car garage Much more for

Over 100 acres
could be housmg development - gas alreadv drill'
eel, on propertv water lines close A ll mineral rights

go with property Also T1mber ready to be cui Ca ll
for more 1nformat•on

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US A CAll
Call J1mmy Deem, Assoc1ate 9119·2388
or Nancy Jaspers, Associate 949·2654 or 949·2591

( Mator

20x24x l 0
for
- 30"x48'xl2 for
- 40'x48 x14 for
- 48'x72'x14 for
F o B Faclory

61

Farm Equtpment

5 Ft Brush Hog Good
cond S200 742 31 17 after 5
Lawn tractor, 154 In
Ternat1onal Lowboy, 60 mch
mower, A I cond1t1on Call
742 2211 before 5 and 985
4338 after 5 and ask for
Dav 1d
B Model Mack Tra ctor Ex

ce llent shape Call 992 7354

Call co llect today 614 294

after 7 p m

l gold t1cket
M emortal
Golf tournament 992 5574

53 Ferguson fractor , 3 potnt
h1tch wtth plow and diSC
Good
co ndlf1on
for

Potted plant dirt and horse
manure Sack or tru ck
load E J H1ll, Flatwoods

Rd Pomey Oh

Butldmg Supp hes

5

A real

That' s all 1t wtll take to
fall 1n love w1th th ts 3
bedroom , total electnc
home
S1tuated
on
almost an acre Close to

MeigS H1gh on Crew Rd

to

$39,900 00
EXT~A WELL ·KEPT 3
bedrooms 1 bath. k1f
chen and ut11!ty Rural
water S1tuated on n1ce
SIZe lOt 10 HUtChiSOn
Subdtvts1on
Call for
more details
we need homes 1n the

Pets for Sale

SOC IETY

Adopt a home less pet
Healthy, shots wormed
Donat 1ons requ1red 992
6260, noon 7 p m , except
Tuesday , emergency calls
onty

HOOF HOL LO W Horses
and pon1es and nd1ng
lessons
Everythtng
1magtnable m horse equ1 p
ment
Blankets, belts
boots etc Engltsh and
Western
Ruth Re eves

(614) 698 3290

Put a co ld nose 1n your
future Healthy , wormed
and shot s
Me1gs Co
Humane Soc 1ety, 992 6260 3
male I nsh Setters , 1
mm1ature Collie Type, 1
Plot Hound . 1 Chesapeake
Bay Retnever 1 male Btrd
dog , 8 wk old pupp1es

Shepherds

Beagle types

Assorted k1ttens

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7210

pnce range for our
qualified buyers G1ve
usa calf!!!
Velma Ntcmsky , Assoc

FUR

NITURE , gl ass, c h1na,
anyth1ng See or ca ll Ruth
Gosney , ant1ques, 26 N

2nd, Middleport OH 992
316 1

e ANNOUNCEME "'TS

1- C.,rd ot Th.anu

Phone
1-(614) ·992·3325
NEW LISTING - N1ce4

ches, class r~ngs weddmg
bands. d 1amonds Gold or
s•lver Ca ll J A Wamsley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest

Co1n Shop, Athens, OH 592
6462

GOLD AND SILVER
CO l NS OF THE WORLO
RINGS, JEWELRY,
STE RLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
H IG H.
HIGHE ST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP. MIDDLEPORT ,
OH 10, OR CALL 992 3476
63

bedrooms In Pomeroy,
W!thtn walktng distance
of stores Has n 1ce bath ,
hot
water
heat,
ca rpet1ng, new k1tchen

and coppe r plumbing
Near playground
NEW LISTING - Bnck
veneer

ranch,

3

bedrooms. 2 full batns,

several

nice

c losets,

modern equipped kit

chen, storm wtndows,
fam1ly room, ful l base
ment, carPOrt, and nice

la rge lot $47,500
MODULAR SITE -

4

acres out of town on
Lead 1ng Creek water

w1lh sept1c lank and
electrtclty

SOLID BRICK - 3 or 4
bedrooms, new bath, all
new kitchen, formal d1n
mg, and on a 1e11e1 lot
near stores and school
$38,500

,, _ Help

14- B\Islnen Tntn+nt
ts-School:s lnsl ruclton
16RiiCIIO TV
I CB Rtp.1tr
11-W•nled To Do
austneu
Opportunity
22- Money fo Lo•n
13-Profnuonill
SerYIUl

for Mond•v

Want to try our protec·

lion pion. CALL 992 3325
or99HB76.

Housing
H adquarlsts

eS ERVICES

&amp;

992· 3795

Family Plan
Available
John Teaford
Phone

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

SERVICE STAroN
Pomeroy, 0

THE POOL PEOPLE

SCFIIEeS
Hom e
1mprovements

S &amp; G Carpet Clean1ng
Steam
cleaned
Free
es t1 mate
Reasonab l e

31711 Noble Summtt Rd
Middleport, Oh10
992 5724
Sales , servtce and sup
pl1es
In ground and
above ground pools
5 1 Tfc

PARK FINANCIAL
&amp; VA AutomatiC
Loa ns, No Down Pay
menT Federal Houstng
Loans , 3% down on
S25, DOO, 5% down on
balance FHA 265 Sub
s•dv Program FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort
Open M W F 9:00 to I 00
Other Ttmes
By Appo1ntment
Off1ce 992 7S44
VA

Home 992 6191

(614) 985-3961
4 14 1 mo

59 1 mo pd

LANDMARK

81

GOLF
LESSONS

Real Estate Loans
13% Interest 30 Yrs

Vinyl and Alum inurn
Siding

107 Sycamore St
Pomeroy, OH.

H. L WHITESEL

ROOFING
All types of root work,
new or repair guTters
and downspouts, gutter
clean n~ and pa1ntmg.
All worl&lt; guaranteed

BISSEU
SIDING CO.
Call tor Free S1dmg
Esttmate, 949 2801 or
949 2860
No Sunday
calls
51 1 mo

FrP '? Est1mates
.nable Pnces
I Howard
'l 2862
949 216(1

Rea~

1 22 tfc

l-'===--~:...::====~-==========~,.===========
WALL PAPERING and
BOB'S
ADD ONS &amp;
pamtmg 742 2328
REMODELING
GENERAL
CARPENTER WORK
com plete remodeling by A I
Gutter work , down
CONTRACTING
Tromm , 742 2328 Refer en
spouts, some concrete
T sh1rts
novelty
ces

6309
2211
rat esor 742
Scotchguard

992

sh1rts for pol1ftC1ans,
ball teams, busmesses
or mdtvlduals
Shtrts $4 oo Each

Rooftng, s1d 1ng, room ad
d1t1ons all types of general
r epa.rs, 25 years ex
per~ence 992 3406

"We

pnnl ALMOST

anythtng on ALMOST
anythmg 1"

Wttl
do remodel 1ng ,
rooftng, pa10t1ng, plumbtng
and elec t Free est1ma1es
Call Charles Smcl atr, 985

Ph 614 949·2358

Evenmgs &amp; Weekends
58 1 mo

-

wortt
walks
dnv ewavs

Vmyl Siding
Gutter work
Soffit
Garages
C!arports
Room add1t1ons

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Call After 5 P M
992-6323

'27

and

POMER OY , O
992-6215 or
992-7314
128lmo

pd

4121

74

Motorcycles

1970 Honda motorcycle 750
4 cyl w 1975 eng Has a
sar~ ng and luggage trunk
and more extras L1ke new

742 3154

Honda z 150 trail b1ke, l1ke
new, less t ha n 100 m 1les

$300 00 Also Rem1ngton 308
pump nfle w1th 3x9 power
scope 1n case $300 00 Call

992 2713

Root pa1nt1ng and tr1m
work Barn pa1nt~ng Free
es timat es
M1nor root

repair 992 3627

All typ es of roofmg new
and
r e pa~r
gutters
downspou ts, commer
c1al &amp; r es tdent1al
949 2160 Pomeroy
797 2432 Athen s
Tom Hosktns or
Gerald Clark
21 years expe nenc e All
work guaranteed
Free Esttmate
4 24 1 mo

Remodel1ng,
f loors,
cetlmgs, panelmg, doors,
w1ndows, patntmg, free
est1mates 992 2759
Wtll

pour

concrete

•HOWARD
ROTOVATOR
• V-CHISEI.
PLOW

Ohio Valley Roofing

la y

bloc k and brick Call 992
3417

LEO

MORRIS
Rutland, 0.
Ph . 742-2455
4 14 1 mo

I
I
I

Rutland Furniture's
SMALL

Utility Buildings
S1zes fro,n 41:6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Wn te your own ad and order by mad wtth th 1s
coupon Cance l your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

I,
I
I
Address; _________________ I
I

Phone ___________________
Pnnt one word 1n each
space below Ea ch tn
111al or group of f1gu r es
co unls as a word Count
name and addr ess or
phone number 1f used
You II get better results
1f you descnbe fully
g1ve pnce The Senttnel
r ese rves th e r tght to
c1ass1fy ed1T or r e1ect
any ad Your ad will be
pu r 1n rne pr.ope r
cl ass1 ft cat1on tf you 11
check the proper box
below
) Wanted
l For Sale
) Announcement
) F or Ren t

Rt l , BoJC 54
Rac1ne Oh .

Ph 6148432591
5 14 1 mo

81

Home
Improvements

1

Will patnt roofs and hou ses
Will d o any SIZe 10b Call

Ma1or and m1nor r oof
repa1r s Pamttng, sh1ngles
and some s1d1ng
Fr ee
est1mates Call 742 253 4 or

83

5
6

Relr lger~tt•on

U - Gener • l Hauling
16- M H lhp• lr
11- Upholsl•ry

7

6
9

These cas h rates
tnclude d1scount

17
18
19
20

Chlrge

, 1 00

I 25

I JO

I tO

110

125

)00

375

In memory C.1rCI ol Thlnlr.~t lnd ObtiU.1 r y ' eenn per word 'J 00
mtnlm\lm Cuh '" ildvence
MObile Home 1.11u •nd Y~rC sale' •re •ccrpleti only wtlh C.1th=_j•"
order lS ctnt charge tor 1/U urry.ng 6o• 11/IJmtler In C.:tre ol Tt.e

25

26
27
28
30

11

12
13

31
32 - - - - - 33

14
15

35

16
Mall Th1s Coupon w1th Rem.ttance
The Dally ~~ntinel
Box 719
Pomeroy , Oh 45769

-

CARPET

$995 And Up

Paddtng &amp; Caroet Installed Free ·
with t"'urcnase

Nice Selection of Remnants
A II Sizes - Good Prices

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Mam St

]4:t·221 1

Excavat•ng

Dozer, b ackhoe and tren
cher Sept1c sysfems com
plete serv ces Hourly or
contract
Eng1n ee r1ng ,
la yout and construct1on
Btl l Pu lli ns 9922478
Ottch W1tch trencher, like
new ,
h 1g h float
t~r es
$2 500 00 Call I 457 3139
Also Bobca t style loader,
hydro stat tc drtve , 215
hours, prtme condt t 1on

$4 ,800 00 Call i 457 3139
84

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

The Gravely 30-mch rotary mower cuts
nght through 1he toughest grass and weeds
and does a good JOb on your lawn as well
The mower IS tough With all-geard1rect
dnve all-steel deck and anu-scalpmg
roller The lraclor IS also al!-geardnven
Call us for a free demonstration
We service what we sell

~GRAVELY.

Electncal
-~&amp;
~
Refrtgeratton

SE WIN G

MACHINE

ser v1c:e,
al l
makes
992 228.4
The
Shop, Pomeroy
F abnc
Authonzed Smger Sa les
and Serv 1ce We sha r pen
SCISSOrS
Repa~rs ,

ELWOOD
REPAIR

BOWERS
Sweepers,

toasters, ~rons , all smal l
appliances Lawn mower
Next to Srate H1ghway '
Garage on Route 7, 985

3825

-----

Rubber $895 SQ.
Backed
yd.

7101

29

10------

A
SHOP IS FULLY STOCKED
BEDROOM&amp;
KITCHEN CARPET
LIVING ROOM

L1me stone for dr1veway s
Pomer oy Mason area 367

24

-----

CARPET
SHOP
" Dnve A Little Save Lot"

742 2188

22
23

4

Each word OYer "'• mtntmYm a worcn '' 4 unit per word per diiY
Adl r\lnnlnt otner thin consec\ll111e cla ys will tie charOJed altPI•' d'V
nt•

s.nu"el

4339

2
3

ll - Home I mpr o11ements
82- Piumbtn;&amp; Ex"""llnll
13- E\CIIIIt lng
1~ - E lectfiUI

(' "h

J Ci8YI

by Randy Carpenter,
factory
trained frontend
altg nm en t
speCialist.

21

I' Words or Under

'diiVI

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto ,
p s, p b , topper P0S 1f1V e
tract1on front and r ear 985

e TRANSPORTATION

Rates and Other lnformat1on
1 d•v
2 d.1y1

Vans &amp; 4 W D

71-A\Ito, tor ~.ale
13- V.ant &amp; 4 W D
74 - Motorcycles
7SAuto Parts
&amp; Acunorln
77- AiliO Rep.a .r

Want-Ad Advertt stng
oeadl1nes
D.111'f

73

6'- Hay I Gr.illt!l
6S- Seed &amp; Ferllltter

JI - Homes for h il l
U - Mobll•+tomu
lor S.111
33- Farms lor 5ille
34- Bustnus Bulldtngs
U- Lols I Acre•g•
J6--ll••• Eslal• WlnleCI
31- A••Itort

bath , natural gas, and
waler for oniV S12 ,000
4 LOTS - and n1ce 6
nice nome for ]usl
$25,500
WE CAN SAVE YOUR
TIME, YOUR MONEY,
AND CARPET WEAR
BY LISTING YOUA
PROPERTY WITH US.

U -L tvUIOC~

e REAL ESTATE

4 PM

Salem Twp. Rd 180
De)( ter, Ohto 45726
B111 Eskew, Ph 742 2456
Your Place or Mme

992 3941 or 992 2452

li - F•rm Equ•pmtnt
U - Winled lo Bu y
72- Trucks for Sale

e FINANCIAL

12 Noon sa1urdn

eRENTALS

eFARMSUPPLI ES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

21 -

Here IS your chance for
a cheap home or
business or both Has a

room home. Has centra l
heal and city water A

W.1nt•d

l:J- Ins~o~r.1nce

OPPORTUNITY

General Welding

and

7876

Pomeroy , Oh

4 2 tiC

Tri.f.ounty

1957 Ford Jlh ton truck 992

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

51 - Household Goods
U - CB, TV, R'dto Equtpm•nt
J3- AnllqYes
u-Misc Menhlndt)e
U -- BUt ld1ng SYpplles
5~- Pets for S.ale

w.,nted

12-SIIU.1l~

ENGINE
STEAM
CLEANED
'12.00

Curb Inflation.
! Pay Cash for
I Classlfleds and
:
Savell!
I

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

1975 Ford P1ckup Ranger
XLT, 302 eng, auto, ps ,
a1r, am fm radto, C B A ll
good t1res Low m11es, runs
good , good pn ce 992 7841

618 E. Ma1n

I

PIGS for sa le 843 4734

tor Rent
41- Motllle Homes
for Ren t
44 - AJNrtmenl tor Rent
H - FRooms
u - S pact tor J;~ent
47 - WanteCito Rent
41 - Eqytpmentlor Rent

to Buy

992 6173 between 10 and 4

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

r----------------------,~====~11------===---_.._

L1vestock

41 - Houie~

2-lnMemon•m
J- AnnO\Incemenls
4- GtYUWil'f
i-H.1ppy Ads
6--Losl and Fo\lnd
7-Y•rd hie
1- Putlllc S.le
&amp; Auction
~Wanted

HAVE YOUR

Calll6141 992 9932

OLD COINS , pocket wal

or Wnte Dally senttnel Classofied Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0 ., 45769

Second Street

4.46

197.4 lntern attonal VB w1th
16 foot van box and
hydraultc I 1ft $3700 00 Call

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

216 l

Middleport. 0

FRONT END
ALIGNMENTS

Trucks for Sate

loaded w1th extras
1552 Call afer 5 p m

se wmg

TllE
SEWING CENTER

Auto Repatr

77

1976 Ford Courter
ex
cellent cond1t10n 992 7312

1979 Ford PICKUp, 6 f1 bed,

your

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessones

fer 992 7805

Tomato Plants for Sale
See Bud Barttm s, County
Road 50, Reedsville, Oh10

ANT IQUES,

For all
needs

B usmess- Farms-Partners h1 ps
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and toss statements, all
federal and state forms.

4 18 1 mo

1973 Chevy Camaro, wh1te
w1th black vtnyl top Good
runn1ng condtt ton Best of

pm

lo Oh10 Pal let Co . Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 2689

992-5320

992 2779

843 2795 or 943 2781

62
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD Poles max

Startmg Soon
Ca II for Registra t,on

Gas tnb oard outboard
motor, $175 For more 1n
lormatt on 742 23 15

1972 Chevy Monte Carlo
body parts Also 350 eng w
4 barrel and auto fran
sm1sston After 5 Mon
Fn , Weekends anyt1 me

Tomato Stakes for Sale
$10 00 per hundred Call

PHONE 992-2156

Phone 742·3092

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742 2003

1978 Checkmate u mate 11
Sk1 boat 150 h p Evenrude
motor Two low dr1ve on
trailer $6,500 384 37 94 af
rer 5 p m

1978 Mercury 2 dr , 6 cvl ,
auto Good gas m1leage
Wil l cons1der one half ton 6
cy l p1ckup 1n t rade or
1973 Olds Omega
v 8,
automat1c, good t~rcs, snow
t res .ncluded
Ong1nal
owner 992 5098 or 992 2077

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

SEWING CLASSES

76

1977 Chevrolet P1ckup, 6
c yl
3 speed Good gas
mileage 992 5636 after 5

WANT AD INFORMATION

l1S,OOO 00 to l30 ,000 00

~

BoatS and ~
~~o~rs for Sale

5752 2

14 1n ch cha 1nsaw, new bar
and cha1n Excellent con

slab $10 per ton Deltvered

Almost

1979 Ford L TO Country
Squ tre stat tonwagon
9
passenger 18 mpg Com
pl etely loaded $5,500 992

1978 Ford V 8 PICkup
Truck Heavy duty spnngs
for pull1ng camper Good
cond $3 BOO 949 2042

d1ameter 10" on largest

ma1ntenance tree home
Th1s home has so many
n1 ce features such as
m1cro wave, Mohawk
carpet
throughout,
famtl y room
w1th
ftrepl ace, hand stat ned
woodwork We 1ust can't
name Them alt 11 G1ve us
a ca II for more mfo On

per gallon $1800 DO Call
992 7060

7S

Services

-

wh1te v.nyt top 742 2103 af
ler 4

$2 DOO 00 Cal 742 3117 after

end $12 per ton Bundled
HUM ANE

1978 Cama r a, 20 000 m11es
extra s, excellent cond1tton
1976 Chevy Monza, 27 m tl es

1974 Hond a 360, 1975 Ford
E l1 te, am fm tape, a c
p s p b 53,000 mil Red w

d1loon $75 00 Ca ll 992 3079

Stock trader pull type, 1978
81f2 foot coachman tru ck
c~mper,
self con ta med
w1th extras $3,000 00 call

56

1977 Co rdoba vtnyl top
a c p s, p b cru1se con
tr ol re ar wtnd ow defogger ,
leather sea ts $1.800 92

72

2675 lol 8 p m

rough cut wa lnu t lumber ,

185

reduced

bulldtngs

Mfg I
$3 070 00
$4 120 00
$5,096 00
$7,407 00

aged 742 3117 after 5

butld1ngs
Some
mmerals Cal! Today

Pr1ce

span

Approx,mate ly 1,000 f! of

house, and

BRICK

BU ILDINGS"'
LAST
CHANCE AT THESE
PRICES - All steel clear

ss

acres
more or less
S1tuated on Van Zandt

Rd

Middleport

9131

$3 750 985 391 2

742 3019

bulld1ng s1tes, lots of
road
frontage

$10,000 00
ACREAGE -

throughout
New fur
na ce M•ddl eport area

:PHONE 742-2003'

available Close to
Meigs High School, gOOd

1 ACRE IN MID
DLEPORT - 4 room

4

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

vacant land , gas, elec
tr1 c,
and
water

S57.500
INVESTMENT PROPERTY -

needs some repair AI most
2 acres 1 7 m1 out of
Rutland on New L 1ma Rd.
Stgn tn yard $8,000 tf sold
th1s month

ATTENTION
( IM
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

Chocolate
Sale
All
chocolate 10 stock S1 30 per
pound wh1le 1T lasts at
Carouse l Contect1onar y

of excellent 11veablllly
ONLY $28,500 00
ACREAGE - 10 Acres

Ftve rooms and bath, out
Stde bu1ld1ng, acre lot
Woodrow Kuhn, 609 Cherry

BYOWNER 2storyhouse,

Ant1ques

SJ

JUST ONE LOOK -

onRt 33$14,900
LARGE HOUSE IN RACINE - 2 story, foniShed

-

Phone 992 7331

ly $69,000 00

Large Attra ct,ve home on
e)(ce pt1ona11y n1ce acre lot
Syracuse Modern k1tchen,
2 baths, basement, garage
Many extras 992 7727

Sl , Vinton, Oh10

Bearcat 250 programmable
scanner 50 channel S275 00

dream home•••

$65.000

Bnck.
ranch style,
3
bedroom,
2 1h
bath,
fireplace. full basement w
fariuly room, a c, 2 car
garage, Baum Addn ,

Equtpment

Only $21,500 00
NEW LISTING -

for Rent

NEW LISTING - Overlooktng OhiO Rtver &amp; Katser
Alum Plant, 3 lg BR 's, plenty of closets, full base
ment &amp; fam1ly room On 3 beaut1ful acres Askmg

Homes for Sale

CB,TV, Radto

Almost 8 acres on Hysell
Run 2 bedroom home
Has 2 rural water taps
and 2 se pt1 c systems

1969 Kirkwood mobtle
home 12x60, two bedroom ,
unturn1shed, large llvmg
room and dmtng r oom At

Real Estate

Oh

to sell at only $25,500 00
NEW LISTING

CENTRAL REALTV CO.

Edgewater Beach, Thorn

992 2143

Cameron. 14x65

2 BEDROOM COT ·
TAGE
Panele d

273

Part ttm e
pharmacy
techn1c1an, m 1n1 mum h1gh
school graduate Call 992
6297 from 9 5 weekdays

bedroom

1971

Merchandise
52

5724

Wurlttzer organ
9
1n
strum ents, 5 rythms, per
cu ssto n, cassette r ecorder
player
Call
992 7585
even1ngs

Bu~iness

1975 Ca nAm 250cc 304 773

Autos for Sale

3886

Potted tomato plants An
drew Cross, L etart Falls

2 bedroom home on
State Rt 12.4 Sttuated
on an acre w 1th cel lar
and 2 bu1 ld1ngs Lots of
d 1fferent fru1ts Pnced

Mobile Homes

acres, wa lk. mg dtstance
to Middleport

(No penally for early

Vil le. Oh 43076
AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE been can
cel led?
Lo s t your

14x65 2

Reduced to $8,000 DO
2 BDRM. HOME -

co.
Pays 12% No

Woman to stay wtth elderly

$388

Fa~rpomt ,

:$$$$$:

co mmensurate w1th exp
Exc fn nge benef1ts Co n
tact personnel d1rector,
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal ,
Valley
Dr1ve,
Po1nt

batter~es ,

992·2342
DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

FHA 265

305 1, Ireland M ortgage Co,
77 E State Sl, Athens. OH

Salary

W ILl

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

program,

!second mortgages,!
,._and
refinance,._
*cases. Call Com-*
!plete
Mortgage!
,..serv1ces
'n*
by May 23,1980 to Planned *Gallipolis, Ohio at*
Parenthood of Southeast
OhiO, 8 NorTh Court St, !446·1517 for more!
Athens, o n 45701 An Equal *information andltOpportun 1t y Employer
!vour appointment.

J M C Rt I, Box 306
Belpre Oh 45714

sml~:~tons,

Money to Loan

1980

I mmed1ate open1ng for
Soc1al
Work er
w1t h
Bachelor's Degree, ex
pertence tn c r 1S1S cou n
se lmg , based 1n Me1gs Co,
wil li ng to travel to ne1gh
borh1ng count1es Must be
htghly organ•zed, w111 have
dtverse respons1bd1ttes
Half t1me pos1t1on to start,
poss1ble 1ncrease to three
fourth or full Send resume

1973

bdr , bath lf2
1971 Shakespear, 1.4x65 2
bedroom

F lnanelal

Mortgage
Money
Available New homes, Old
homes, and ref 1n anetng
your presen t home CON

WANTED
F txed base
operator for Ga lli a Me1gs
Reg1onal Airport
Prtn
ctpals only, send proposal
and references to Ga l l •a
Metgs RegiOnal Airport
Author1ty
Box
338,
Gal lipOliS, Oh10 by May 23,

42

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1971

Full t1me and par t f1me RN

6370

old

G1ve p1ano lessons to begm
ners and adanced student
1n my home Also teach
chord1ng and transpostng 1f
1nterested ca ll992 5403

22

eve lopes you mad Postage
pa1d Work at home Age or
e&gt;&lt;per1ence no barner
Send name and address to

BUY

32

99~

Real Estate- General

SPONSOR SHOWING
The Pomeroy Elementary School
Patrol will sponsor the showmg of a
fuil-length feature film, "Dark Star"
dealing wtth space at 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the school. AdmissiOn IS $1
and refreshments will be served.

wanted to Do

Large lots Cal l

992 7479

IN STOCI&lt; for tmm ed1ate
delivery vanous s1zes of
pool k1ts Do 1t yourself or
let us mstall for you D
Bumgardner Sa les, Inc

Motorcycles

Pets for Sale

Mtsc Merchantse

COAL ,

Pomeroy

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Thomas
Hayman,
Syracuse; Martha Roush, Rutland;
Helen Knapp, New Haven; Betty
Caldwell, Middleport; Jesse Swan,
Langsville ; Cecil Etselstein,
Pomeroy
DISCharged-Albert Bolen, Linda
Jacks, Mickey Foster, Frankie Stafford, Freda Fields, Mary Gilkey,
Clarence Might, Kenneth Matson,
Carl Autherson

and son, Willlll Reese, Berlin Center,
spent Wednesday here with her
siSter and brother-in-law, Mr and
Mrs. Clarence Spurrier, Pomeroy,
and other relatives. Visiting m the
afternoon were Myrtle Grover, Mr
and Mrs Henry Eblin, Sr., Mrs.
Marcia Houdashelt, Greg Grover
and daughter. Several members of
the family went to the Holzer
Med,ical Center to VISit Ben Eblin,
who IS seriously Ill His room number IS 401

!

operator s license? Phone

13

ATTENTION
( IM
PORTANT TO YOU J Wo ll

54

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of

allocate enough, didn't emphasiZe
education enough.
" A country of educated people
who are aware of their country ... I
think it wtll make for a better
SOCiety."

Mrs l..oUJSe West, Powhattan Pomt,

2156or992 2157

Ztd1an at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Fnday 9 s

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auction

8

9

GET VALUABLE tratn1ng
as a young bus 1ness person
and earn good money plus
some g r eat g1fts as a Sen
t1nel route carr1er Phone
us r1ght away and get on
the ellg1bll1ty list aT 992

or LPN 11 7 Contact Mr

13

J

on old Route 33 at 1c;I_ _...:H
=el"'p:..:W
=a::
nl:.::ec::dc__

the foot of Rose Hill from 9
4

ear ptns 675 3010
Four Family Trailer Sale
Four m11es out 143 May 16
and 17 from9 to5

1Q

7 _ ___.:!Y~a":r!'.d~S~a~
l e:___

off Rl 7 north of Pomeroy,

---=-77."""~--­

Ptano

14, lie

Announcements

4

56

fur

n1shed 992 77(M
45

74

S_J _____ A._ntlques

5122

the Towns htp of Olive,
Ohto, at the regular places
of vo t1n g theretn, on
Tuesday , the 3rd day of
June , 1980 , lhe quest1on ot
levy m~ . 1n excess of th e ten
mill 11m1tat1ons, for t he
ber'leftt of Ol1ve Townsh1p
for
the
purpose
of
provtd1ng and matntammg
fire apparatus appl tances
f re department bulldmgs
or sources of water supp ly
and mater~als therefor or
the estab liShment and
mamtenance of ltnes of f1re
alarm tel ephones lor the
Oltve TownshiP Volunteer
F 1re Department only
Sa1d tax bemg an ad
dtt1onal tax of 11 2 mtll to
ru n for f1ve years

~
~

otherwtse stated 1n par
t1cular nottces, all other
communt cat 1ons 1ncludlng
comments on proposed ac
" liOns snould be addressed
-,. either to The D1V1S10n of
Author~zatton
&amp; ,_f')m ·
pliance (Air) or Perm1t
and Approva I Section
(Water), wh tchever ts ap
propnate, at The Oh10

3

Rooms and bath

4t

46

It Pays To Advertise. • .Advertise Where It Pays. • •
Public Nohce

"

Apar1ment
for Rent

____

Haul1ng
- -Geniral
_......_

85 --

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel Also, I me hau11ng
"and spreadtng Leo Morns
Truck.ng Phone J.J2 2455

SO" Mower when

you buy a .
Rtding Tractor

30" Mower when

you buy a 1
Walking Tractor

MANNING ROUSH, OWNIR

I

~

'

�18-'lbeDal!ySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 14, 1!H!O

EPA approves $3~648,150 Syracuse-Racine sewage grant

Two Americans implicated
in hostage rescue attempt
By Tbe Associated Press
Two American men have been
arrested In Iran in COMection with
the failed hostage-rescue mission
and are being held in prison In
Tehran, the prosecutor-general's of·
flee said today.
An official said the two
Americans, whose names were not
disclosed, were being held in Evin
prison - the same place Cynthia
Dwyer, an American free-lance
journalist from Buffalo, N.Y., is
being held. Revolutionary guards
who arrested her say they have
proof she is a CIA spy.
The Iranian government also an·
nounced that an international conference would be held In Tehran, the
Iranian capital, from June 2-5, to
deal with alleged American crimes
against Iran, including the rescue effort last month in which eight
American commandos were killed.
A leawng Iranian official said
today the newly elected Iranian
parliament will not consider the fate
of the American hostages for some
time after it meets, probably putting
off the issue beyond June.
"We have many more important
decisions," said Ayatollah Mohammad Beheshti, head of the Justice
Ministry and a spokesman for Iran's
nominally ruling Revolutionary
Council.
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini,
Iran's supreme revolutionary
leader, has said the parliament will
decide what to do about the SO
American hostages who spent their

I'
I

!92th day in captivity todsy.

But Beheshti told reporters the
parliament must first choose a
prime minister and Cabinet, and
also discuss "the plans of the new
government," including education
policy and the Islamic "cultural
revolution.''
" It doesn't mean that we want to
delay the discussion of the problem
of the hostages" he said.
"Parliament will discuss it at the first possible chance."
Beheshti earlier said the hostage
issue would not be debated in
parliament before mid-June.
In other developments today:
-The official Iranian news agency, Pars, said Iranian authorities
had arrested 1,135 persons on nar·
cotic smuggling charges and confiscated drugs weighing more than
five tons.
- An Iranian Oil Ministry
spokesman announced a new
agreement for Iran to sell oil to
China. He did not disclose terms.
- The former director of the
Iranian National Oil Co. predicted
during a news conference in Paris
that Khomeini would be overthrown.
He said there are elements in Iran's
armed forces ready to rebel.
- The Interior Ministry said Iran's
revolutionary regime will prosecute
foreign journalists involved in plots
and keep American travelers under
surveillance to guard against conspiracies.
A ministry spokesman said after a

· meeting of the ruling Revolutionary
Council Tuesdsy night the government will be on the lookout for journalists who come to Iran with press
cards issued abroad and
"sometimes take part in conspiracies," the official Pars news
agency reported.
"Our officials will be on the alert,
and those whose actions conflict
with their work as journalists will be
prosecuted, just as some have
already been detained." This was an
apparent reference to free-lance
jOW1lalist Cynthia Dwyer of Buffalo,
N.Y., arrested on charges of being a
CIA agent.
The / spokesman added that
"Americans, who are not journalists
and who have entered Iran will be
kept under surveillance until .the
reason for their trip to Iran has been
clarified and it has been proved that
they do not intend to conspire against Iran or take part in sabotage activlties."

Ayatollah Ruhollab Khomeini's
government has been taking extra·
precautions ever since President
Carter's attempt to rescue the 53
American hostages was aborted 200
miles east of Tehran April 25
because of equipment problems.
The revolutionary regime refers
to the U.S. Embassy as "the den of
spies," and has announced disper·
sing the hostages, held since
miljtant students seized. the embassy Nov. 4, to 13 cities to foil
another U.S. rescue attempt.

Request preliminary studies
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Economic Development Ad·
ministration says it wants some answers before considering backing a
proposed worker-community
takeover of two mills being closed by
U.S. Steel Corp. in Youngstown,
Ohio.
An EDA official said Tuesday that
the "pre-feasibility studies" include
questions as to whether the eastern

NATO may
•

remg on
agreement
·BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -Of.
ficials attending a meeting of North
Atlantic alliance defense ministers
expressed doubts Tuesday that,
despite U.S. proddings, all 15 NATO
nations will meet a pledge to In·
crease defense spending by 3 percent a year over the next five years.
A high-ranking U.S. Defense
Department official who asked that
he not be identified said some of the
countries have failed to commit the
money needed to increase their for·
ces. NATO leaders agreed In
Washington In 19'18 to the 3 percent
annual increase In spending to give
the Soviet Union a signal that the
West was willing to back up its
rhetoric.

.I

41 emergency calls
answered in April
The Middleport Fire Department
answered a total of 41 calls - nine
lire and 32 emergency medical calls
- during the month of April. Of the
32 emergency medical calls, 22 were
In town and 10 were out of town.
Two calls involved motor vehicle
accidents. All vehicles of the depart·
ment were driven a total of 1,353.9
miles, Jeff Darst, chief, stated in his
monthly report.

MEETS TIIURSDAY
Syracuse Village Council will
meet in special session Thursday at
7p.m.

Ohio facilities actually are available
for purchase and how they can be
modernized and made operable.
George Karras, deputy assistant
secretary of operations for the EDA,
said the Mahoning Valley Economic
Development Corp. will seek a
federal grant to firumce the studies.
He met this week with officials of the
group and Community Steel Corp. to

Absentee balloting
underway in Meigs
Voting via the absentee, disabled
and military personnel ballot is now
underway in Meigs County at the
county board of elections office,
located in the Masonic Temple
building, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
The board office is open from 8:30
to 4:30p.m. Monday through Friday
and from 9 a.m. to 12 noon on Saturday for · the convenience of these
voters. The deadline for voting in
this manner for the June 3 primary
election is 12 noon on Saturday, May
31.

Animal weigh-in set
4-H and FF A members planning
on carrying a market lamb or
market hog this summer, must
bring their animals to the Meigs
County Fairgrounds on Saturday,
May 17 for weigh-in.
All market lambs and market
hogs must be brought in to be eartagged. The market lambs must be
weighed, but only market hogs participating In the rate of gain must be
weighed in.
The animals must be brought to
the fairgrounds any time between 9
a.m. and 12 noon. If there are any
questions, please call John Rice at
~96 .

Thirteen defendants were fined

4

Meigs County Court Monday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were En~ Key, Belpre, $20 and
COIIts, stop sign violation; Charles
Landers, Minersville, and Terry
Rowley, Mldl!leport, $5 and costs
each, W1S8fe vehicle; David Fowler,
Pomef11Y, $10 and costs, left fl.
center; Michael T . Gard,
Raedsvllle, and · Merri Ault, Mid·
dleport, $21 and costs each, speed;
Jolm Casto, Pomeroy, $113 and
CGIU, overweight; Charles Slar·
IJIII)d, Albany, $150 and costs, three
diJI .CGilfinement, DWI; William
Yaatao, Muon, f25 and costs, stop
~ 111n YlolaUon; Donald Davidson,
j Pwlero)r, $21 and costs, speed; John
ColenYn Reedsville, $10 and costs,

•

was "a major concern," Karras

said.
The heads of the two USW locals
affected by the closings and attorneys Staughton Lynd and
Raymond Sawyer were among those
who met with Karras.

Meigs' emergency runs
The central office of the Meigs
County emergency squads reports
the following runs for Tuesday.
Middleport unit, 10:10 a.m. to
Meigs High School for faculty member, Verna Evans, taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
Tuppers Plains Unit at 3:33 for

21 cases terminated
and eight others forfeited bonds in

discuss Community's proposal for
reviving the U.S. Steel plants.
Community Steel was incorporated by United Steelworkers
leaders in Youngstown to try to buy
the mills, which employed 3,500
workers before U.S. Steel began
phasing them out in March. Its plan,
offered to the EDA several weeks
ago, proposes raising $60 million to
put the aging facilities back in
operation. Much of the plan would be
backed by federal loan guarantees.
Union leaders suggested the
possibility of buying part or all of the
Ohio Works and McDonald Works
shortly after the shutdowns were announced by U.S. Steel in November.
But so far, they have been unable to
convince the company to discuss the
proposal.
U.S. Steel Chairman David
Roderick has said he would not sell
to a "government subsidized competitor. "
Karras declined to speculate
about the availability of the plants in
view of the company's adamant
position. But he said it was decided
that certain matters "need to be explored" before the plan to acquire
the mills can be considered.
One question which was raised involved the "down time" of the closed
miJls and what this might mean to
the market for products which had
been turned out by U.S. Steel's
Youngstown district, Karras said.
Other questions involved the
availability of private financing and
"operating management," he added.
Some of the mills' management
personnel had "expressed an interest In participating," but this still

expired temporary tags; Roger
Adkins, no address recorded, five
days confinement, jail sentence
suspended, six months probation,
barred from Tall Timbers, assault;
Darrell Fulton, Millfield, seven days
confinement, restitution, placed on
probation, jail sentence suspended,
insufficient funds.
Forfeiting bonds were Basil
Warden, Cambridge, Gerald
Howard, Ironton, Steve Swann, Columbus, Beverly Burger, Vienna, W.
Va., and Roy Barrett, Lesage, W.
Va., $40.50 each, speed; Victoria
Slack, Middleport, $60.50, speed;
Van A. Willford, Middleport, $62.55,
reckless operation; Donald Stohart,
no addr~ss recorded, $60.50, no
operators license, $360.50, DWI.

Kathy Francis, taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
Syracuse Unit, 7:03 for Thomas
Hayman, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
RuUand Unit, 6:11 for Marty
Dugan, taken to O'Bleness Hospital,
Athens; 17:16 to Depot St. for auto
accident, Betty Clagg and Richard
Danner taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

A ~.1164,150 grant has been approved for the Syracuse • Racine
Regional Sewage District by the
United States Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA).
Atty. Frank W. Porter announce!~
the approval today following official
notification from Edwin Neutzllng,

EPA president.
The Syracuse • Racine Regional
Sewage District was formed several
year8 ago by the villages of
Syracuse and Racine and Sutton
Township trustees to work on a
sewage project.
The grant Is 75 percent of the

e
ternal vice president, and Terry Spencer, secretary;
back, Mitch Meadows, treasurer, Dave Harris, state
director, and Sherman White, external vice president.

Spencer

Area deaths
Daniel Chapman
Funeral services for Daniel (Danny ) Chapman, 19, Rt. I, Cheshire,
will be held I p.m. Friday in the
Cheshire Baptist Church with Rev .
William L. Uber officiating.
Burial will be In Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may
call at the Crow-Russell Funeral
Home in Pl. Pleasant after 4 p.m.
Thursday.
Chapman drowned In the Ohio
River March 29 following a boating
accident. His body was found in the
river at 1:33 p.m. Tuesday near
Lakin.
He attended Meigs and Kyger
Creek High School.
Chapman was born July 15, 1960,
at Pl. Pleasant, son of Harold Chapman, of Melvindale, Mich., and
Yvonne Swisher Dennis, Cheshire.
Surviving besides his parents are:
John Dennis. stepfather, Cheshire ;
four sisters: Cheryl Curry Swisher,
Cheshire; Dorothy Owens,
Pomeroy; Freeda and Carla Chapman, both of Cheshire; one brother,
George Curry, Cheshire; and John
F. Swisher, Middleport, a grandfather with whom he made his home.

Terry L. Fetty,

Jr.

Terry Lee Fetty, Jr., 2, 119 Eaker
St., Travis Air Force Base, California, was killed instantly in an auto
accident at 9:35 p.m. Saturday in

HOSPITAL '\E'W'S
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGF.'l MAY 12
Robert Atkinson, Janey Baisden,
Harry Bass, Goldie Cremeans, Mark
Foster, Bobby Fout, Velda Huffman,
Janet Johnson, Usha Landha,James
McClanahan, Minnie Rifle, Delbert
Russ, David Spencer, Archie
Swartz, Patricia Waulk, Delores
Wiseman.
BmTHS

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Carpenter,
son, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Hall, daughter, Patriot; Mr.
and Mrs. Terry Powell, daughter,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Short,
daughter, Crown City; Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Wheeler, daughter, Racine.
DISCHARGF.'l MAY 13
OrviUe Abrams, Bobby Baldridge,
Verna Birchfield, Margaret Bond,
Margaret Bray, Worthy l,i:vans,
Willoughby Hill, Virgil Holley, Mrs.
Harold Hollingshead and son,
Charles Houck, Verdie Keefer, Lori
Kinnaird, April Kiser, Ernest
McKinney, Donna McGuire, Susan
Mitchell, Mrs. Edward Nottingham
and daughter, Oscar Perkins, Matthew Pierce, Sara Rainey, Harry
Rice, Alisha Robinson, Paul
Rodgers, Pearl Saunders, Jerry
Sheward, Mrs. Kenneth SMart and
son, Ralph Taylor, Robin Wallace,
Amy Weidemeyer, Grady Winston,
Bobby Jo Wilds, Charles Williams,
Ethel Williams.
BmTHS

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Harris ll, son,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. James Rif·
fie, son, Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Rose, son, Gallipolis.

NEW OFFICE HOURS
E. S. Villaneuva, M.D.

(Con!lnuedtrom page 1)
Gerard, president, Brian Conde, internal vice president, Sherman
Mohomet, fll ., a suburb of chamWhite,
external vice president, Mitpagne.
ch
Meadows,
treasurer, Terry SpenThe family was enroute home af- ·
cer,
secretary,
and Dave Harris,
ter visiting In Meigs County when
state director.
the accidenttook place. ·
Serving as master of ceremonies
Terry Lee was born March 8, 19'18,
were Mike Williams and Dave
in Yokta, Japan, the son of Terry
Jenkins.
Lee Fetty, Sr., and Teresa Reams
Fetty who survive along with two
sisters, Karen and Sandra, both at
home.
Other survivors are paternal gran{
dparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold FetBob Dugan, Middleport, was fined
ty, Route I, Langsville; maternal
$50 and costs in the court of Midgrandparents, Charles Reams, Sr.,
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Conneeticut, and Mrs. Rose Ream's,
Tuesday night on a disorderly manParkersburg; foster grandparents,
ner charge. Roberta A. Legg, BidMr. and Mrs. John Knotts, Colum·
well, forfeited a f!1 bond posted on a
bus, and several aunts, uncles and
speeding charge.

Mayor's court

cousins.

Services will be held at 1:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Walker Funeral
Home in RuUand with the Rev.
Floyd Shook officiating. Burial will
be in Miles Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 2 p.m. Wednesday until
time of services on Thursday. The
family will receive friends from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at the
funeral home.

William L. Foster
William L. Foster, Sr., 70, Parker·
sburg, died Monday at Parkersburg.
A veteran of the U. S. Marines in
World War II, he is survived by a
son, William L. Foster, Jr., Racine,
and a half-sister, Judith Arui
Winans, Westerlake.
Funeral services were held thia lif·
ternoon at the Levitt Funeral Home
in Parkersburg and burial was in the
Olive Cemetery in that city.

Lindy Joe Schoonover
Lindy Joe Schoonover, 49, Colum·
bus, formerly of Rutland, died
Tuesday at his residence in Columbus.
Born in Rutland June 30, 1930, Mr.
Schoonover had resided In Columbus
for the past 25 years. He was a 1M9
graduate of RuUand HighSchool.
He served in the 82nd Airborne
Division of the U.S. Army,l94~1952.
He was preceded In death by his
mother and father, Clarence and
Freda Schoonover, three brothers,
Edward, William.and Clarence, Jr.
Surviving are a daughter, Mary
Jo, Columbus, six brothers, Jack,
Mansfield; Bob, Fresno, Calif. ;
Charles and Tom of RuUand; Gene,
Nelsonville, and Jerry of Cheshire;
a sister, Juanita Bolin, Columbus.
Funeral services will be held at
the Glen L. Myer Funeral Horne In
Columbus.

Fifteen defendants forfeited bonds
and three others were fined In the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were James Peck, Cheshire
Route I, $30 and costs, improper
backing; Craig Udel, New Haven,
$30 and costs, failure to.yield right of
way, and James Eakins, Middleport, $50 and costs, open flask.
Forfeiting were Robert K. Kennedy, Rutland, $50 on an open flask
charge and ~ on a failure to appear
charge; Russell Snider, Pomeroy,
$50, squealing tires; Paul Van
Cooney, Langsville, $350, driving
while intollicated; Rex Roy, Racine,
$35; Richard Stewart, Middleport,
~; Darlene Jeffers, Syracuse, f29;
James Patterson, Racine, f!l; Kenneth Young, Pomeroy, $35; Brent
Chapman, Ona, W.Va., $36; Rocky
Freeman, Cheshire, ~; Joseph
Kanawalsky, Reedsville, ~1; John
Young, Gallipolis, $40; Eloise Mat·
son, Rutland, $26, and lMry Eakins,
Racine, $40, all on speeding
charges; Anthony Reeves,
Pomeroy, open flask, $50.

SEEK LICENSF.'l
MaiTiage licenses were issued to
William BrianStooe, 20, Middleport,
and Pamela AM Conlin, 18,
Rutland; Charles Byrne Mullen, 30,
Middleport, and Dehra Kay Bailey,
22, Pomeroy; Bobby .Eugene Dill,
Jr., 24, Middleport, and Carla Jean
Kauff, 19, HeJ!Ilock Grove.

ro END MARRIAGF.'l
Harold D. Clark, Cheshire, and
Mary J. Clark, Racine, filed lor
dissolution of marriage in Meigs
County CoiiUDon Pleas Court.
Dolores Ann Provence was granted a divorce from Jack L. Provence
on charges of extreme cruelty.

ELBERFELD$
fMIII ACTIVE SPORTSWEAR
FOR MEN
• SWIM TRUNKS
•TANK TOPS
• KNIT SHIRTS
TENNIS SI:IORTS
• CUTOFFS
• TERRY SHORTS

styles in boys' sizes 1 to

NEW OFFICE HOURS:

20 in shorts · swim
trunks · shirts - tanks

Monday through Saturday ·
9:00 A.M. - 1:00 P.M .

By Tbe Alaociated Prell ·
Iran claims 96 aniled American
saboteurs and asSaasins and 19
Iranian exiles are on the loose after
being landed In the mounlalns by
helicopters and says two other
Americans have been arrested lor
taking part In the unsuccessful at·
tempt to rescue the 53 U.S. hostages.
"Ninety-six Americans have landed in various parts of Iran with the
intention of carrying out acts of
sabotage in the next two weeks, as
well as assassinations In various
cities," President Abothassan BaniSadr said In an interview with
Tehran Radio Wednt!llday.
He said 19 longtime Iranian
residents of the United States were
with the Americans, and that the
team and anns were landed by two
helicopters In the mounlalnous
Bakhtiari tribal region about 250
milessouthwestcifTehran.
The State Department had no
comment on the charge. The Pentagon said the only U.S. forces In the

We atso

t~nd

have

area are the two dozen U.s. Navy
ships off Iran's southern coast. Two
of them are aircraft caiTiers,, and
three weeks ago helicopters from
the carrier Nimitz took part In the
attempt to rescue the American
hostages held in Iran since Nov. 4.
Following that attempt, the
militants who had been holding 50 of
the Americans in the U.S. Embassy
in Tehran announced their captives
would be dispersed around the country to make any attempt to rescue
them more difficulty. The
Americans have been reported scattered among 13 citie!l, and today
Tehran Radio' announced a group
was being sent to a 14th point,
Hamadan, m miles southwest of
Tehran.
The broadcaSt said an addltiooal
purpose of the transfer was "to
prepare the spies for the day of
trial." Spy trials for some of the
hostages have been urged both by
the Americans' captors and by
leading members of the hardline
Islamic Republican Party which will
dominate the new Parliament that is

many

more .

tlBERFELDS IN POMEROY

mer.0

Meanwhile, a public meeting is set

for May 21 at 7:30p.m. at Southern
High School cafeteria concerning
·the planned sewage system.
Before construction begins,
residents must be lnfonned of rights
of way and rates. All residents are
urged to attend.

en tine

at

to decide the fate of the hostages.
Meanwhile, the Iranian
prosecutor-general's offlce said two
American men were arrested for
taking part in the aborted hostage
· rescue and put in Evin Prison in
Tehran. No clue to their identity was
given, and the State Department
said it had no lnformatioo on them.
The London Dally Telegraph said
after the rescue attempt that more
than 100 Infiltrators, including Farsi-speaking CIA agents and Green
Berets, were Infiltrated Into Iranto
assist the conunandos who never got
to Tehran. But the New York Times
reported at the time that it was told
all of the Infiltrators had escaped
from the country.
The Chicago Sun-Times on Wednesday said sources In Washington
told it the rescue attempt was much
larger than American officials have
said publicly. The sources were
quoted as saying about 400 undercover agents, most of them
Iranian, were mobilized to stir up
trouble durtng the rescue.

Interest
rates
declining
From tbe Asooclated Press

Anderson fights Ohio election laws
TULSA, Okla. - John ·B. Anderson, the independent presidential
candidate, has chosen Ohio as the firxt legal test for battling state election laws which might keep his name off the ballot In the November
generai elections.
While campaigning across Oklahoma on Wednesdsy, the lllinois
congressman said his lawyers would file suit Friday In the U.S.
District Court In Columbus, Ohio.
Anderson also pointed to a "growing tide" for his candidacy, citing a
new ABC-Harris Poll that showed 23 percent of Americans ready to
vote for him and 29 percent who would vote for him if they thought )1e
stood a reasonalbe chance of winning.

Saturday mail given reprieve
WASIDNGTON - Saturday mall delivery enjoyed a brief reprieve
from the budget ax, but it's back on the chopping block again as House
and Senate negotiators try to overcome growing doubts that the 1981
budget will actually be balanced.
In what one lawmaker described as "a litmus test" on congressional
ccmmitment to balance the budget, the negotiators agreed Wednesday to delete $700 million from the Potllal Service subsidy.
The action overturns a Senate vote two days earlier to restore ~
million fl. a proposed $1100 mllllon cut so Saturday mail could be continued. The HOU8e favored a ~ million postal subsidy reduction and
an end to Saturday mail.
_

Strikers plan appeal to public
EAST UVE~L, Ohio -Striking safety forces here planned an
appeal to the cominunlty today to pressure city officials into reopening
stalled contract talks.
Negotiations aimed at ending the nlne-day-i!ld strike by police and
lltemen broke off sharply on Wednesday, and the attorneY lor the
strikers said Wednesday evening that efforts to reopen the talks had
failed.
Kapp said striking workers took to the airwaves to explain their
position to the public.

Mishandling of federal funds probed
ELYRIA, Ohio - Lorain's fonner mayor and service director
denied any wrongdoing prior to giving testimony before a special
grand jury which Is Investigating possible criminal activity In connectiCil with alleged mishandling of federal money for two programs.
Lorain County Prosecutor Joseph R. Grund&amp; has been presenting
evidence concerning Lorain's federally funded houaing repair and
Cmlprehensive Employment and Training Act programs. Gnmda
previously said that a county audit showed possible mishandling of
$3M.0631n CETA fwlds,
Former Mayor Joseph Zahorec, a Democrat, was defeated in his
19'19 re-election bid by a Republican, William Parker.

Weather forecast

AND SELECT
YOURS

officials Involved," Porter said.
Porter added, " It is hoped that
bids will be sought within the next
few weekB and construction should
get underway before the end of sum-

THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1980

-----

·State department: 'No-·-'
comment' on charge

STOP IN

Family Practice • Gynecology
MEIGS MEDICAL BUILDING
VflERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
992-6633

served on the board until recently.
Atty. Porter praised the mayors of
both villages, village offlcials and
the trustees of Sutton Township for
their hark work.
"This grant is the result of a
cooperative effort on the part of all

•

POMEROY-MIUULEPORT. OHIO.

VOL. 31 NO. 23

NEW OFFICERS - Newly elected officers of the
Meigs County Jaycees were installed at the annual
awards banquet held at the Meigs Inn Tuesday night.
Front, 1-r, Paul Gerard, president, Brian Conde. in·

allowable costs. Balance of the cost
wU come from FHA and connectioo
fees paid by customers.
Present members of the Syracuse
- Racine Regional Sewage District
are Neutzlng, Albert Hill, Jr., and
Gary Norris. Freeland Norris also

Increasing clouclinells tonight. Lows betw~n 45 llndiiO. Cloudy
with a chance of rain Friday. Highs In the lower 70s. The chance of
rain Is near zero tonight and 50 percent Friday.
0100 EX'l1!:NDEO FORECABT
S.lllnlay tllrGiqh Moaday: A clluce of •bowen · and
tllalldent.ma S.lllnlay and Sllllday. MOitly fair Moaday, IIIIJu
tbroagildle perted llllhe mid to upper 711. lAft mm die "' lo tbe low

...

·WASHINGTON (AP) - Interest
rates on government-hacked mortgages are falling by the sharpest
amount ever, 1.5 percent, amid hints
the Federal Reserve Board may
sooo dismantle credlt controls It imposed In March.
The government announced Wednesday that Federal Housing Ad·
ministration and Veterans Ad·
ministration mortgage rates for
single-family homes will drop from
13 percent to 11.5 percent, effective
today.
Meanwhile, Federal Reserve
Board Chairman Paul Volcker said
monetary and credit conditions have
improved so much of late that the
board can begin to consider
eliminating some of the controls imposed In March.
"Money and credit growth have
slowed appreciably. Indeed, there is
now C0!18lderable romm for growth
consistent with the targets we set for
ourselves for all of this year,"
Volcker said in a speech to the
Natiooal Association of Mutual
Savings Banks, meeting In Lake
Buena Vtsta, Fla.
The economy has slowed considerably, leading many analysts to
predict a recession as bad, If not
worse, than the 19'14-75 downturn.
Nobel Prize economist Milton
Friedman, in an inte;view Wed·
nesday, said, "It would be a miracle
if, with thia kind of start, the
recession ended up less severe than
the (1974-75) one."
He sharply criticized the credit
controls Volcker said may be
dismantled.
In recent weeks, the money supply
has declined sharply, while the
govenunent has reported a rapid
rise In unemployment and the
smallest increase In wholesale
prices in 11 months.

TOP STUDENI'S- Amy Fisher and Brian Johnson, valedictorian
and salutatorian, respectively, of thia year's graduating class at
Southern High School.

Assembly honors top students

Southern High School will
graduate 70 seniors Sunday
Amy Fisher and Brian Simpson
were named valedictorian and
salutatorian, respectively, of the
1960 graduating class at Southern
High School durtng the BMual awards assembly Wednesday.
Miss Fisher is graduating with a
U3 point academic average. She is
the daughter of Mrs. Bonnie Fisher,
Racne, and John Fisher, Jr., Route
3,Pomeroy.
Miss Fisher also won one of the
two awards given In social studies
and was named the activities key
winner.
Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Johnson, Portland, is graduating
with a 4.4i point average.
Besides being named salutatorian,

Johnson was named the recipient of
the Ohio $1,000 scholarship,
renewable, as established by the
Ohio Legislature. Jolmson won also
a social studies award, and awards
in mathrnatics, dramatics and
English.
Southern will be the first Meigs
County High School to graduate this
spring.

Baccalureate services for the 70
Southern High Seniors will be held at
2 p. m. with the Rev. Don Walker,
pastor of the Racine Baptist Church,
delivering the sermon.
The Southern Choir will present
"The Way We Were" and "I'll
Always Remember" and the band
will present "Pomp and· Circwnstance" as the processional and
recessional.

CITIZENSIHP WINNERS - Meliasa Ihle and David Foreman
were named the citizenship winners of thia year's Southern High
SchoOl graduating class.

Bike safety check planned

Arrest made
Wednesday
Sam Terzopplous, 24, Rt. 2,
Racine, has been arrested by the
Meigs County Sherrif's Department
oo charges of receiving stolen
property.
The arrest was made In connection with property taken from the
Sam Yates ·residence on Tanners
Run Road in late April.
Terzopplous is being held in Meigs
County Jail and will lace charges In
in Meigs County Court today.

OUTSTANDING ATID..ETE Jack Duffy wu awarded this
year'• Larry Morrison tropby as
lhe outstanding athlete at lhe
Soutberu High Sebool senior
awards usembly Weclliesday.

A safety check of all bicycles of 10:30 p. m. Bikers will travel on
riders participating in Saturday's coWJty road 5 and are scheduled to
hike-bike will be held at 6:30 p. m. beattheBradburySchoolatll a.m.
Friday at the senior citizens center ·. Traveling on Route 124, the participants will go to Fort Meigs, from
in Pomeroy.
Fort
Meigs to Harrisonville School,
The inspection will be conducted
aiTiving
their between 1:30 and 2 p.
by members of the Meigs County
m.
REACT Team. Registration for the
From the Harrisonville Sebool, the
hike-bike will lake place at 9 a. m.
bikers
will go on Routes 7 and 1~ to
Saturday behind the center and
the
hospllal
hill and fm;n there back
riders will leave the location at 10 a.
to
the
senior
citizens center parking
m.
lot arriving between 4: :IJl and 5 p. m,
The Meigs 'REACT Team, with
Hysell !11'8es lil1 motorists to use
Guy D. Hysell as chalnnan, is
extreme
caution Saturday In driving
heading the safety program.
.
since
over
200 bikes are scheduled to
Riders will leave the parking lot
be taking part In the annual event.
behind the senior citizens center at
Sixteen REACT units will be
10 a. m. moving through downtown
working
on the project.
Pomeroy and on to Middleport by

Richard Furbee of the graduating
class will give the Invocation with
Pam Harden, also of the class,
giving the benediction. Senior Cindy
Lee will introduce the speaker.
Commencement wiU be at 8 p. m.
Sunday with Amy Fisher giving the
valedictorian address and . Brian
Johnson, the salutatorian address.
Principal James Adams will
recognize the class with Bobby Ord,
superintendent of the district,
presenting the class to Shirley Johnson, president of the Southern Board
of Education. Mrs. Johnson will
present seniors with their diplomas.
The band will play the
processional and recessional and
some selections from Star Trek.
Amy Souder, a member of the class,
will give the invocation, with James
Meadows, a senior also, giving the
benediction.
In other presentations Wed·
nesday, Randy Collins won the
agriculture award; David Foreman,
industrial arts; Cindy Lee, home
economics; Richard Furbee, science; Cricket Carpenter, typing; Kim
Dugan, commercial; Rosemary
Hubbard, along with Johnson, malb-.
matics; Meg Amberger, along with
Johnson, dramatics; Amy Souder,
French; Meg Amberger, vocal
music; Robert Cline, a trophy in the
work-study program and a certificate to James Kiser; Melissa lhle
and David Foreman, citizenship;
Richard Furbee, Cannen Manuel,
perfect attendance.
Jack Duffy was presented the
large Larry Morrison trophy as the
outstanding athlete of the year, and
seniors who are members of the
National Honor Society were
honored. Dale Teaford and Della
Johnson, juniors, were named as
Danforth Foundation winners, out·
standing boy and girl in their class.
Principal James Adams presided
over the awards 8S8elllbly with
various teachers presenting the
(Continued on page 12)

Accident
results
•

•.

•

..

m citation
•

Sherry Perry, 25, Waverly, was
cited by Meigs Counly Sherrif's
Department after a single car accident Wednesday at 12:20 am. 111
U.S.Rl33.
· '
Perry Willi traveliDg north when he
went off the right side fl. the rolld,
struck a guardrail and came lo a
stop 1n the yard Of Richard Meee.
Perry was dted on charges of
reckless «¢1'8Uon. There was
moderate property damaBe.

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