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10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jnly 7, 1980

Reports conflicting
on-shah's condition

'

e

CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Although • In that operation, the doctors in. Cairo's leading newspaper says tl)e serted tubes to drain an abscess
Shah of Iran is in very critical con- which developed in the shah's upper
dition, one of his doctors says his abdomen after the removal of his
ccindition is excellent. But workmen cancerous spleen last March. But af·
.. were reported speeding the ter the spleen was removed, the canpreparation ofbis burial vault.
cer was reported to bave spread to
The semi-official newspaper AI
his live!_· ---~-Ahr.am said Sunday · that Shah
Mohanunad Reza Pahlavi was in
· and out of .a coma, his weight had
dropped to lHl pounds, he.underwent
emergency surgery last Wednesday
to stop hemorrhaging, and his doctors were "anxious" about his
"general infection or poisoning.''
An Admiral dehumidifier can
milke vour basemen! or orher
_ But a surgeon treating Pahlavi,
~ area more comforlabte bf
who has suffered from lymph cancer
taking the excess moisture.out o
for six years, denied the ~year-old
lhe air. 11 helps prorecr furnilure
and woodwork from the damiigpatient was in a coma or in critical
ihg effects of constanr dampness.
condition.
It retards mildew, '"old, musty
"If you have a very high fever, it's
odors and rust- gives your home
natural that you're sometimes unmore living area .
conscious, but (it's) not a coma,"
the doctor said.
He said the former monarch was
"doing very well ... fully alert, conscious, talking, smiling" after
surgery Saturday in which an inMiddleport, Ohio
cision made last Monday was
cleaned and dressed.

VOL. 31

NO. 59

•

•

enttne

at

TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1980

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Prices up
in June

ADMIRAL
DEHUMIDIFIERS

Baker Furniture ·

BICYCLES - Fo11r Meigs County youngsters are receiving bicycles
for being lop winners in the annual hike-bike of the Meigs County
Association for Retarded Citizens. The four brought in the most money
from sponsors who contributed a. total of $7,637.14 to the hike-bike this
year. Pictured with their new bikes are, I tor, Barbara Pore, Chester, top
girl·with sponsors paying $881,50 ; Jerry Grueser, Minersville, top boy in
the county with sponsors paying $411.80, and Jennifer Couch, Pomeroy,
second place girl with sponsors paying $402.25. Not pictured is tlie second
place boy, Steve Carson, Middleport, whose sponsors paid $286.50. Pore
and Grueser received 10 speed bikes donated by Meigs Aerie 2171, Frater-·
nal Order of Eagles and its Auxiliary, while Couch and Carson will
receive three speed bikes, one given by Powell's.Super Valu and the other
by an architect involved in plans for the new school for the retarded.

TROPHIES- third and fourth place winners in the annual hikeobike
of the Meigs Association for Retarded Citizens lire receiving trophies for
the money they brought in from sponsors. On the left is Uinna Hankla,
Rutland, third place girl in the county with sppnsors paying $2!16.96 and on
the right is Ruth Ann Fry, Pomeroy, fourth place girl who brought in
$255.40. Third place boy was Jeff Miller, Rutland, who brought in $269.78,
and Mike Kloes of Minersville was fourth with $205.08. Trophies for the
third and fourth place winners were provided by Betty Smith.

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
installed OJer heavy rubber padding

Pope ignores spiritist cult in Brazil
SALVADOR Brazil (AP) _
Followers ·of ~andomble northeast
Brazil's ~ular spiritist culi are ·
upset because Pope Jolm Paui II is
ignoring them during his visit to this ·
centeroftheirformofChristianity.
"Tire Catholic Church benefited
from candomble " said Eduardo
Mangabeira Jr., ~hose father runs
one .of the cult's many temples in
Brazil's first colonial capital and
stjll speaks the Yoruba tongue of his
Nigerian slave forebesrs. "Now it
tlirns its back on us although we
consider ourselves Cb{.istians."
The candomblisls are upset
because the pope is not making the
climb up the steps of Our Lord of
Bonfim, Salvador's most popular
Catholic church which thousands of .
Brazilians mak~ in repayment for
prayers answered or for elimination
ofthe"evileye.''
Instead "the mountain is coming

.._ ~

to Mohammed," sai&lt;! Mangaoeii'a.
The statue of Bonfim was to be
presented to the pope during ~n
open-air Mass today and a woman ill
folk costume was to carry fruit to the
altar durmg the off~rtor&gt;: to the
sound of drums used durmg candomble ceremonies.
Candomble. was brought to Brazil ·
by West Afr1can sJ.aves and _rracticed m tandem w1th Chrtsllaruty
when the Po~uguese colonialists
forced the Af_n~ans to convert to
Roman Catholicisin.
While the Vatica~ considers Brazil
the largest Catholic country ill the
world and counts _104 million of the
123 mil!ion B~aziba~ as Catholics,
th~ nat10nal b1shops conference adnuts that as many as 80 percent of
the total population .revere "private
S!lints" not recognized by the church,
.
.
Near th,e lush tropical beach or m

'

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· the wretched swamp slums d
Salvador, hundreds of drums thump
out the candomble beat every night,
calling down the "orixas'' or spirits
identified with Roman Catholic sainIs.
When they were forced to convert
to Catholicism, the slaves coupled
each of the spirits they had looked to
with a Roman Catholic saint. Ogum,
god of iron and of war, becallle Si.
Anthony. Oxossi, god of the hunters,
became St. George, the dragon
slayer. Oba, goddess of the rivers,
became St. Joan of Arc.
Some practitioners say the pope is
a son _of ogurn because the god of
iron is resJionsible for guiding
people's destinies.
·
The pope flew 1,000 miles from
wintry southern Brazil to the northern tropics Sunday and warned
Latin America's leaders they will
face continued violence unless they

Heat wave deaths continue
By The Associated Press
After a sizzling holiday weekend,
the South and Southwest faced more
blistering temmpenitures as the
heat wave that has claimed at least
1421iv~ entered its 15th day,
The death toll today stood at 86 in
Texas, 28 in Arkansa~, 17 in
Oklahoma, . 5 in Kansas, 3 in
Louisiana and one each in Missouri,
Mississippi and Alabama.
In Arkansas, the Nalional
Weather Service said the outlook for
the rest of the summer was for continued sizzling temperatures;
"The type weather pattern we're
-seeing usually comes later in the
---~----------------------

Area Deaths

1

I

Virginia, Owens
Virginia Owens, 76, a
longtime South Third Avenue
resident of MiddlepOrt, died Monday
morning at the Holzer Medical Cet\ter following an extended illness.
Funeral· arrangements will be announced by the Rawlings-Coals. 'Blower Fune~l Home. ·
MrS,

cumbed to the heal Sunday. One person collapsed after digging mtne
yard and two others were found inside their homes in Lawrence Coun·
ty, where temperatures reached 104
degrees Sunday.
In Oklahoma, railroad tracks expanded after two weeks of
sweltering ~emperattires and caused
a lli·&lt;:ar, lteight train to derail near
Fort Pibson late Saturday, said
Missouri Pacific Railroad officials,
The Middleport Emergency squad
· No injuries were reported.
went to South Third Avenue at 9:03
Temperatures were at or above
p.m. Saturday for Hilah Jones who
100
degrees in many parts of Kansas
was taken to Veterans Memorial
on
the last day of the holiday
'Hospital.
weekend
and forecasts predicted no
Edward Chasin, Rutland, was
Mup
in
the
heat. Wichita sirlled untaken to Veterans Memorial by the
der
a
recorl)
107 - the eighth lime
squad at 5:20 p.m. Sunday. Police
since
June
24
that Kansas's largest
said a car driven by Theodore C.
city
has
tied
or
broken a maximum
Fisher, Pomeroy, cut . across the
temperature
record.
path of a motorcycle driven by
The 107-degree readjng broke
Chasin. Chasin was treated and
Wichita's
105-degree record set in
released.
1954.
Hutchinson
reported 107
In a second accident in Middleport
degrees,
with
Belleville,
Hill City,
Sunday, Betty W. Schneeman, of
and
Beloit
baking
at
105~
A high of
Dayton, was taken to VMH after she
103
degrees
was
reported
· in
allegedly pulled her car into the path
Chanute,
Dodge
City,
Emporia,
of a vehicle operated by Susan
Goodland and Lawrence, while the
Zerkle, Pomeroy. The accident ·oc·
mercury in Topeka and Coffeyville
curred at the intersection of Ash and
was at 100.
,PeariSts.
summer," said forecaster Mike
Thompson at Little Rock. "But
because it has been established
earlier than normal we have a chance of seeing above normal temperatures later this summer.''
Three Arkansas residents sue-

.' .

$1295

make "profound and courageous
reforms."
Meeting with politicians,
businessmen and intellectuals, he
saJd the ~' reali~tion ~f justice on
~ contin~nt ~ facmg a clear
dilemma: e1lher 1t IS done through
profound and courageous reforms, .
according to the principles that exp~e~ the ~upremacy of h~n
digmty, .or 1t IS done - w1thout
lasting results and without benefit
for man, I am convmced - through
the forces of VIolence. Each one ot
you must feel touched by this dilemrna. Each one of you must make
your c~.oice at this historic
moment.

MEIGS COUNTIAN INVOLVED - David Clem, bong Bottom, is
doing his part as a member of Company C 2161h Engineer Combat Bat. taboo from Felicity, Ohio, now participating in two weeks' annual
training at Camp Perry in northern Ohio near Port Clinton. Sgt. Clem is
busy operating a dozer leveling a stagmg center lor three types of

Excellent quality carpet at a moderate price. 12 Joot
width - 100% nylon pile- heavy jute backing - dark
brown tone.-and dark brown tones.

ELBERFEUDS WAREHOUSE

From the Associated Press

Bonier patrol closes its net

ON MECHANIC STREET
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

' '

RECIFE, Brazil - For more than a decade, Brazil's "red bishop"
was a non-person 'in his own country.
The military government banned the name of the Most Rev. Helder
Pessoa Camara, the Roman Catholic archbishop of Olinda and Recife,
from the media, and his telephone rang frequently with threatening
calls. Many were from military officers accusing him of subversion in
his work with northeast Brazil's poor.
·
Today the Most Rev. Helder Pessoa Camara, the Roman Catholic
archbishop of Olinda and Recife, savored the triwnph of a nationwide
joint TV appearance Monday with Pope John Paul IL
Standing before an altar on a truck parked on an overpass, they
celebrated Mass together before more than 400,000. people, many of
them farm workers.

..

·The Farmers Bank,
a Meigs _County hank
for ¥:-eigs County people
.
owned and operated
by
Meigs
County
people.
.

Shah's condition improves
CAIRO, Egypt - The deposed Shah of Iran, plagued by an infection
thai has stalled further cancer treatment, is showing signs of improvement and may soon· be removed from intensive care, say officials at Egypt's Maadi Military Hospital.
A hospital bulletin issued Monday night said Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi's temperature had dropped to 99.1 degrees, half a degree
above not;mal, after reaching as high as 104 degrees during the past
week's illness.
"
He is ''much better... (and) can Come out of intensive care if his temperature remains stable and normal for three or four days," said one
of the shah's doctors, who declined to be identified.

-

Andersoncon Isreali tot1-

I

•

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'

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Clear north and variable cloudiness with a chance of showers 0r
thunderstorms south'tonight. Lows in.mid-50s north to upper 60s south.
Mostly sunny Wednesday. Highs in upper 70s tomid-&lt;10~.
'

I

EXTENDED FORECAST
By The Associated Press
Thursday through Saturday: Fair Thursday. A chance of showers or
thund~rstorms F_
r,iday and Saturday, Highs in the low to mid-80s Thurs!lay, warming to the mid-80s !o low OOs Friday and Saturdi!Y· Lows In
mid-50s to low 60s Thur~day morning, rising to the mid-80s to low 70s
Friday and Saturday.
·

'

Pomeroy, Ohio

"

The Comm,u nity .·. Owned Bank . '

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

JERUSALEM - John Anderson begins a four-day yjsit to -Israel
today , courting Jewish support in the United States to keep his
presidential hopes a\ive. It is the.lirst and longest stop of a five-nail on
tour.
,
With the Republican National Convention opening inDetroit Monday, Anderson organized a 11-day foreign trip which he hopes will be
well publiCized hack home. He will also visit Egypt, West Germany ,
France ~nd Britain.

Weather forecast

Farmers
.Bank

-

so hard to make the project a succeSs. ''Our thanks go .
out to each and everyone-who Pa-rticipated. Remem· ·
her, we who serve as volunteers need your support to
continue our services and we wo~k to serve s,uch deserving citizens as you," Struble sblted. Pictured, 1-r, are,
Dove White, Etta Cullwns, E.bel Hart, Ola Smith,
.Mildred Zeigler, Joe Struble, William Hart, and ·
Russell Cull urns.

AJO, Ariz. (AP) - The Border Patrol, using "hard-core, firm identification" from survivors, says it is closing its net on the "coyotes"
who smuggled a group of Salvadorans into the United States and let 13
. die in the scorching desert.
Once they recuperate from their ordeal, the survivors - 13 El
Salvador natives and one Mexican - will be moved to Tucson and held
as material witnesses, Border Patrol offiCials sa id.
The survivors have described their guides as "three Mexican
youths," according to agent John Rockhill.

Bishop, Pope share spotlight

.

..

goods rose 0.8 percent.
Soaring increases for energy had
paced the sharp rise in wholesale
prices earlier this year, but energy ·
costs declined in June for the firSt
time since March 1976. Energy
goods declined by 0.6 percent, the
largest drop in more tlWn four
years, the government said.
Gasoline prices fell 1.2 percent in
June, while prices for home heating
oil were unchanged from · the
previous month.
While the stabilization .in energy
prices hel!\ed limit rises at the
wholesale level, economists expect
food ptices to begin showing large
price increases later this year.
Through the first six months of
1980, wholesale food prices actually ·
decJ,ined at an annual rate of 4.6 per·
cent, helping to offset an 18.1 percent
annual rise in non-food products
during the same period.
The 0. 7 percent increase in food
prices in June followed a 0.1 percent
rise ,in May and a 2.8 percent decline......
in April. The goverrunent attributed
· the increase mainly to increases in
the price 9f beef and pork.
Wholesale prices for consumer
goods other than food and energy
rose 1.1 percent in June, the largest
increase since February. The gover·
runenl said sharp price rises for gold
jewelry and new cars were major
factors in that advance.
IConl inued on oage·lill

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Two hurt in wrecks

GENEROUS DONATION- A donation of $1,002.50
was made to the Pomeroy Emergency Squad by members of Modern Woodmen of America No. 7230 of
Burlingham. The donation was made from proceeds
from a ham and bake dinner held Memorial Day. Chief
Joe 'Struble of the Pomeroy Squad expressed appreciation of the generous donation by the Modern .
Woodmen and the generosity of the Pl!ODie who worked

engineermg projects which will be used by other engineering units in conjunction with four .engineering tasks. During the two week period, men
from Company C will be training in all phases of engineering, demolition,
construction and rigging.

WASHINGTON (AP) - ' Inflation
at the wholesale level moderated to
a 6.3 percent annual rate during the
second quarter of 1980, as an unaccustomed decline in energy costs
helil prices to a relatively modeSt 0.6 ·
·percent rise in June , the government
reported today.
The Jl)ne increase in the Producer
Price Index was larger than price
rises recorded in April and May but
was ,substantially below the torrid
price rises · that shocked the
economy during the first three months of this year.
As a result, the annual inflation
rate at the wholesale, or finished
goods, level in -the second quarter
fell to one-third of the 16.9 J)ercent
· _rate of the first quarter, the Labor
Departmnent said.
Through the first half of 1980, in:
flation at that level was running at a
12.4 percent annual clip, abol!t equal
to the 1979 rate .
An annual rate is detennined l)y
extending and compounding a monthly or quarterly price changes over
a 12-month period. ·
Price changes at wholesale normally work their way up to the c.onsumer level within a short time, and
signal· changes in inflation at the '
retail level.
The government said wholesale
fOod prices advanced by 0.7 percent,
the largest in.crease in three months,
while wholesale prices for other

Pomeroy Council ·calls special se~sion
to discuss police department''s status

&amp;USPE&lt;;T FOUL PLAY
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Foul play is
suspected in the July 3 disappearance of an Akron woman, said
Summit County Sheriff's detective
Rick Grayshock.
· Judy Turner, 31, a security guard
employed by Merkel Security in
Barberton, did not return home from
work last Thursday. Her husband
said Mrs. Turner told him she had
several errands to complete after
getting off work at 5 p.m. He reported her missing on Friday, July 4.

'

FifTEEN CENTS

.. .

Member FDIC

)

BY KATIE CROW
A special meeting of the Pomeroy
Village Council will be held in the
near future to discuss the status of
the police department. This was
made public Monday night through a
Jetter from Fred Crow, solicitor.
The opinion on the ·status of the
police department, submitted by
Crow, was not revealed to the news
media.
The letter slated that since Chief
of Police Charles McKinney had employed an attorney the matter
should be heard at a special meeting
of council rather than a general
meeting in view of the publicity
which might be badJor ttte village.
Crow also stated in his letter that
he had discussed the matter with attorney Charles Knight. Knight was
agreeable to the meeting to be set oy
Mayor Clarance Andrews when all
members of council are present.
The news media a*ed questions
regarding the status report and the
special meeting of COilllCil.
ljarold Brown; councilman, said
the meeting W!lS to discuss the
latitude and responsibility of the of-

fice of the chief of police. He further
said the department was going
through an adjustment period.
Council adopted a job description
for the police department that was
drawn up earlier by the safety committee.
WORK REPORT GIVEN
Meeting with council was· Orval
Wiles, cemetery trustee, concerning
work that has been done at the
cemetery. Wiles. explained that
there was improvement, but he was
not entirely satisfied.
Wiles noted that· two riew lawn
mowers are needed to do the job and
do it right: " The equipment is in bad
shape'' Wiles stated.
Council agteed to the purchase of
two new mowers. Wiles also asked if
the men working at the cemetery
could come to work earlier. He
stated that they report at the city
hall at 7:30 and before they get started working at the cejlletery it is after 8 a.m.
Council reported that employes
they must sign in before starting
work, but saw no reason why they
could not be at the cemetery shortly

,
after.
Also meeting with council was Bill
Watson. Watson presented a letter to
council commending the chief of
police for the excellent clean-up job
around the Baptist Church following
the Regatta.
Watson reported that thiS year
was the first time in 10 years that the
area around the church· had been
cleaned up, He added that he felt the
chief was doing a "fine job".
May&lt;ir Clarence Andrews expressed his thanks to Watson and
said he and the council appreciated
hearing from the public.
Brown said the Pomeroy Chainber
of Commerce had asked for special
consideration regarding its bill for
payment of special police protection
during Regatta.
It was council's opinion that the
chamber should pay approximately
$:jOO of the amount due for the extra
hours worked by police officers
during Regatta.
Council outlined the extra costs involved during tlie Regatta such as
clean up, not issuing parking tickets
and offering the parking lot for con-

cession stands for the four day
period.
Council voted to enter into a new
contract with Blue Cross of Ohio for
the same amount of coverage at a
Jessercost.
~The chief of police reported his
department, during the month of
June, made 125 arrests, issued 1,081
tickets, and collected $2,242.50 from
the parking meters.
· Betty Baronick, council member,
reported that officers were not ·
patrolling the area at the mini-park
and the park was being used all
hours.
Mayor Andrews asked the chief to
see that an offiCer does patrol the
·area at night:
Baronick also stated th8t more
supervision is needed in the cutting
of weeds and clean up in the village,
Tiie meeting was opened by prayer
by Lou Osborne. Attending were
Mayor Andrews, Jane Walton, clerk,
Brown, Osborne, Baronick, Rod
Karr and Larry Wehrung council
members; Jack Krautter, Donnie
Ward, Randy Carpenter, and Edith
Sisson.

·President unveils auto industry plans
DETROIT (AP) -:- President Car- ~ might be required.
- A le"l' costly way tlf complying
ter huddled early today with auto in·dustry and union leaders, unveiling with re_gulations th,at protect
a .set of proposals to help the ailing workersfromtoxicleadandarsenic.
industry make-the expensive Iran- A pl)ogram to provide at least
sition to manufacturing smaller $50 millioh next year to communities
cars.
and firms hurt-·by the auto industry
·Carter, said, ~· we have literally slowdown.
worked day and night'' on the plan,
- Special loans totalling between ·
which included multi-million dollar $200 million and $400 million to help
loans and regulatory relief.
auto dealers finance their car inCarter's whirlwind, 5:i-minute ventories.
- Speed-up of a Treasury Departvisit to Detroit came as Republicans
were gathering here for pre- ment proposal that should allow the
convention activities; GOP leaders industry , faster depreciation tax
said the stopover was motivated writeoffs for plants and equipment.
purely by political considerations.
Garter also said that when (he lime
They blamed Carter for economic
is right he will propose a general tax
upheavals that have emerged as the
cut and the auto industry obviously
auto industry sales plummeted, forwill have special consideration.
cing · hundreds . of thousands of
The p~esident arrived, en route
·worker layoffs.
from Plains, Ga., to a memorial ser·
In announcing his auto aid vice in Tokyo for Masayoshi Ohira,.
package, Carter said, ''I believe this the Japanese prime minister who
is a major step forward in providing died last month.
for the American conSu!neP a high
It is the Japanese who have cut
quality, fuel efficient auto that will most deeply into the U.S, car
be requir~d ir the months ahead."
market. The Japanese makers .have
His_proposals included:
beeri selling smaller, more fuel ef- An expedited hearing on com- ficient cars for years;- as gasoline
plaint.s that the U.S. auto industry is prices rose in the past decaqe, imbeing hurt by imports of foreign ports have steadily increased their
cars.
.
· share~f the U.S. market.
'- Regulatory clianges that would
Japanese imports accounted for 22
save the in ' ustry $500 million in percent of all cars Sold in the United
complying with federal anti- States last month; other impprts .
pollution standards. New legislation were about 5 )lercent. A year _ag 0 ,1

\

the Japanese were aboul16 percent
and the others about 6 percent.
The president describe(! the
federal aid plan as "the first step
only. "

"I am deeply concerned obviously
about the high unemployment in the
auto industy," he said, "We have
literally worked day and night to
come up with some proposals.''
United Auto Workers President
Doug Fraser told reporters that Carter's plan was "a gOod first step.'.
Thomas A. Murphy,_chainnan of
General Motors, said, "We welcome
this opportunity to move forward.
It's an important first step,"

Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich.; said
Monday that the decision to speedup
processing of a Uniled Auto Workers
complaint seeking government action against Japanese imports "will
be a signal to the Japanese by the
government that they shoujd be
doing something voluntarily (to ·
llinit auto exports), or there will be
some government action taken," he
said.
Carter was . joined today by ·a
federal delegation that was larger
and higher ranking than the one
which accompanied him to the
econorhic sununit conference in
Venice, Italy, last month.

Restrictions placed on Crab Creek bridgeCHARLESTON - The West
Virginia Department of Highways
has announced weight re~ctioM
on several bridges including Mason
Co: 9/3 spanning Broad Run - 3
HEARINGSLATED )
AP¥blic hearing of the 1981 budget
as prepared by the Rutland Township Trustees ·and the proposed use
· of Federal Revenu~ Sharing Trust
Fund money will be beld at the office .
of the trustees at the Rutland Fire
,House. The meeting will be Friday
at6 :30p.m.
.

,

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'

tons.
Following reevaluation of the
structure, an improvement has been •
made in the weight restriction on the
bridge carryit:tg Mason Co. 216 over
Crab Creek.
The former 6-ton load limit lias
. been replace&lt;,! with a 16-ton load
limit. The bridge is located 0.43 mile
east of the junction of Mason Co. 217
withWVA2.
Restrictions have been posted to
prevent serious damage or destructiop from occurring to the bridge
. whl)n l!Sed by overweight vehicles.

\

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�'
3- The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesd~y, July 8, 19110

,'

Opinio~s &amp;

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LAST FLING VACATION ~EfORE . H~R~

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-CQmments

;•

J'

a ... ._
~.,.

11IE DAILY SENTINEL
!USPS IU.. .)

· BONE IN

r

CHUCK.
STEAK

DEVOTED TO mE
IN'l'EIIEmOF

MEIG$-MASON AREA
l.ctlen al GPtafOD &amp;re welcomf!lt. They IMuJd be Jeu Ibn - WOrdiiOIIg (of subjed to reducUGa by tile editor) atM:I mut be slped wttb &amp;H slpee's ~. Nam~;~ DLIJ be withheld apoa
p!bhtloil. Bnt:ver, on req~t;-Dimes will be disciOHd. LeHtn 1boald be Ja good tlaic:, addreulq: IIAes, •t perso...Utlel.
Pa~ daUy. ezeept S.tarday by 'l1le Ohfo v.pey PubU.b.J.nc Comp.ay· MuJilmflHII, Inc.,
lliCoartSL, Pomeroy, ObJo~e. lkuii.DnaOfflre Pbonettz..!151. Editorial Pboae9ft.U57.
SecoDd c.... PMYilt paid at hmeroy, Oito.
Natio111.l atlvertillag rt!pretentiiU\'e, LaadN Alltdl&amp;et, 3101 EucUd Ave., ClevelaDd, ObJo
11111

.

~ Altoeiated Frett

.

II ucl111lnly eatttled to 'the use tor pubUcatioo of .U
.-edited t. tbe aewapaper aad alao Cht ICK'al oeWI pubHahelbetl!ht.
·

Pv.bU.her

·

Geaeral Mar. &amp;CityEd.Jtor
NewtEdllor
~'b.
Adv. Mauger
,..'""

B~ ~....._-,-, r""T"'1a1c::l'~

Robert Wlngen
Robert Hoeftltb

DaleRotbgeb, Jr.
Carl Gbet'!D

-·

j Dems

seek delegates'
hearts, minds, votes

The weapqlls in the fight for the hearts, minds and votes
of the 3,383 Democratic National Convention delegates
range from computers to invitations to the White Hoi)Se.
President Carter has a majority of the delegates now
and he aims to keep that edge through the noniination roll
call at the the August convention. The Carter campaign
wants to use a smooth-running, harmonious convention as
the opening shot of the Jail election campaign.
Sen. Edward Kennedy has to strip away delegates from
Carter to have any chance to win the Demoeratic presidential nominations. His strategy is to win a battle on party
rules at the New York convention, take 400-500 delegates
away from the incwnbent and wrap up the nomination. ·
.The key for both strategies is personal attention to the
delegates.
Invitations to talk with President Carter at. 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. are arrayed against small group meetings
with Sen. Kennedy.
"The president wants to tharik those people who made
his nomination possible," says Tom Donilon, who runs the
delegate effort for the Carter-Mondale committee.
But the Kennedy campaign will be making a parallel ef·
fort, according to Rick Stearns, director of delegate se,lection for tpe Massachusetts senator.
"The most effective contact with a delegate is by
another deleg1.1te or by someone else they know," Stearns
said in an interview. ''Then, at some point, you want to get
the candidate involved."
;
He said Kennedy will be meeting with delegates in Jllly,
in the weeks before the convention starts Aug. 11.
The Carter campaign's 14 delegate staffers are making
telephone calls and getting letters written to the more than
1,900 delegates now pledged to the president.
The Kennedy campaign has 13 field staffers contacting
delegates, getting others to call wavering or possibly
wavering delegates and making the Kennedy argument all
the time.
Both campaigns are using computers to lighten the burClen of tracking all the delegates. The Carter campaign has
been using a sophisticated computer from the start .of its
effort, while the Kennedy &lt;;,ampaign signed a contract for
computer time only recently.
The Carter campaign is concentrating on the delegates
who will cast the 1,981.6 votes which, according to an
Associated PresS delegate count, are now pledged to the
president. Using a plan developed late last fall, Donilon is
directing the constant contacts with the Carter delegates
and setting up the machinery that will function on the convention floor.
The Kennedy strategy is different, for Kennedy has only
1,235.4 votes no~ co~ed to him. He must take
delegates away from Carter to have any chance to win the
nomination.
.,

Today in history.

·1~·

~, diljia"'kbes

~--

••

:; Today is Tuesday, Jwy 8, the !90th granted a charter to Rhode Island.
:. day of 1980. There are 176 days left in
In 1822, the English poet, Percy
·: the year.
Bysshe Shelley, drowned when his
: Today's highlight in history: in
boat capsized in the Gulf of Spezzia
• 1835, the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia
off Italy.
: cracked as it was being rung for the
Iij 1940, the government of NorWay
· funeral of L(:hief Justice John Mar- moved to London after 62 days of
' resisting Nazi invaders in ·World
shall.
War II.
On this date :
· . In 1663, England's King Charles II

'

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Dale Little; back, I tor, Kevin King, Tim Jeffers, Bill
Brothers, Art Hunnel, Otis Norris and Jeff Holtz. In the
back are Coaches Tom Hysell and Don HunneL

' POMEROY TIGERS
Members of the 1980
Pomeroy Tigers for this season include: front , I tor,
Todd Hysell, Steve Musser, Chris Shank, Parker Long,

BY niE PIECE

•1!9
SUPERIOR

FRANKIES
12

Synthetic fuels: a bad investment
By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Wheh
President Carter signs into law the
Energy Security Act of 1980, the
federa l government will have
irrevocably embraced a new
tec.hnology that poses a potef!tially
grave threat to the health of
thousands of workers.
The bill signing ceremony, terr
tatively scheduled for July 4, will be
heavily promoted and highly
publicized uecause it marks the
nation 's official conunitment to the
development and production of synthetic fuels as a major new source of
energy.
The legislation, authorizing the expenditure of $20 billion in loans,
guarantees and price supports
during the next 'five years,
establishes a synfuel production
target of 500,000 barrels per day by
1987, the equivalent of 4 percent of
domestic oil consumption.
The extraordinary financial cost is
not tpe only price the country will
pay for gambling on an unproven
technology to reduce dependence on
imported oil rather than investing in
a broad portfolio of renewable and
alternative energy sources.

Many of those dangers alrady
have been widely publicized : The
Rockies and Northern Plains could
be transformed into the United
States' version of Germany's
heavily .industrialized Ruhr Valley.
Synfuel production is likely to
disfigure the region's land, drain its
scarce water supply and place an in·
tolerable strain on its limited social
services.

reassurances that a) there were no
serious problems and b ) they would
soon be resolved.
While admitting that "we have
identified ca rcinogenic (cancercausing ) substances in the products
and the waste of all the synthetic
fuels we have studied," Ms. Clusen
said "government and industry are
cooperating in the effort to define
and ameliorate the risks associated

Today's commentary
But too little attention has been
focused on the dangers of adverse
health effects likely to be faced by
the uncounted thousands of men an
women expected to be employed in
coal gasificaiton or liquifaction and
retorting oil shale.
When Congress was considering
the legislation late last year, Ruch
C. Clusen, the Energy Department's
assistant secretary for environmental matters, off.ered
typically opaque bureacratlc

with chr~nic exposure to arcinogenic materials prior to commercialization ... ''

But a confidential memo sent to
Labor Secretary Ray Marshall only
one month earlier was far more
specific - and ominous - in war·
ning about the " important health
and environmental problems that
may be anticipated" in synfuel
,prodw;tion.
Written by Eula Bingham, the
head of the Occupational Safety and

Health Administration, the unpublicized memo cited "specific information available which links oil
shale processing with cancer, par·
ticularly cutaneous carcinol118" or
skin cancer. Extraordinarily high
levels have been documented among
both ~otti~!l . and Estonian workers,
Ms. Bingham warned.
In the coal gasification process,
she said, ·'carbon monoxide poses a
particularly dangerous hazard,"
while other chemicals with the
potential to ca use industrial
fatalities include hydrogen cyanide,
hydrogen sulfide, carbon disulfide
and metal carbonyb.
Commercial coal and gasification
· never has been attempted in this
country, but in similar industrial
operations '·the workers have
exhibited higher than expected mortality from cancers of the lung, kidn~y. bladder, prostate and skin,"
Ms. Bingham noted.
In coal liquefaction, "the car:
cinogenicity of materials produced
... already has been demonstrated"
among a small group of ·American
workers who experienced a skin can·
cer rate of 16 to 37 limes greater
than expected, she added.

Ohio perspective

Platform to read like Gettysburg Address
COLUMBUS, · Ohio (AP) - The delegates pledged to Ronald.
Republican platform "ought to be Reagan, .-the party's apparent
about 500 words and read like the nominee, are split over conGettysburg Address," according to troversial platfonn issues such as
one Ohio political observer.
the Equal Rights Alnendment and
He and others suggest that· anti-aoortion ani:! anti-busing amendelegates to ' the Republican dments to the U.S. Constitution.
National Convention ·in Detroit
While some of the more moderate
refrain · from making platform of the 77 Ohio delegates agree that
planks very specific and avoid Reagan and the 1980 convention
detailed positions on· issues that must avoid giving the impression
could lead to rifts in the party.
that the party has been taken over
"Why do it? The platform is ob- by far right-wirigers, others favor a
solete and nobody pays any attention hard·line position on all planks in the
to it anyway," said State Rep. platfonn.
Robert Netzley, R-Laura.
Most of the Reagan delegates ap.
Stat.e Rep. David Johnson, R- . pear united in opposing busing to
North Canton,. also expressed con· achieve school integration. Several,
cern ·about alienating GOP, however, would pre!er not to see it
Democratic a'nd independent take the fonn of a platform plank.
· moderates.
Reagan favors eliminating a
According to a survey by the traditional Republican plank sup.
Akron Be.acon Journal, · Ohio porting the ERA, but several women

moderates say they will try to reverse the position.
" It has been in the platform since
1940 and they could alienate a lot of
women by removing it," said Columbus councilwoman Dorothy Teater,
who is leading a campaign to persuade delegates to keep the plank.
The survey revealed that most
members of the Ohio delegation
were opposed to the ERA, but were
split over whether the issue should
be addressed in the platfonn.
State Rep. William B. Batchelder,
R-Medina, predicts a floor fight over
the abortion issue, which Reagan op.
poses.
"You hear all of this equal rights
and civil rights lmd poor little babies
do not· even · have the right to be
born," said Marjorie B. Rooss of
Montgomery.
Donald J. Loss of Perrysburg,

however, said the abortien issue
doesn't have to be in the platform
because Reagan "has made his
views clear on abortion."
Donald R. Fraser of Bowling
Green, another delegate, agreed,
S!'Ying that there is "no reason for it
on the platfonn because the
Supreme Court has spoken on it."
Although a conservative, Batchelder - one of two Ohio-delegates
on the convention platform COlD'
mittee - favors taking a hard-line
position on such social issues as
busing, abortion and the ERA.
"Reagan .himself has been successful at it· by taking cleat, forthright positions that appeal to con- '
servative Democrats and independents at a ttme when the country is turning conservative," said
Batchelder.

Today's political roundup

conservative~ platform

Republicans finalize

" All day long he's been acting /Ike Valery Giscard d 'Estaing. You know what I mean?"

WITH THESE .••

COOK UPA

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, J.uly 8,1980

Republicans, told that 19110 will be .sunday that arriving at an equal· Chalnnan Arthur Bums. Tower said
their "banner year," are puttirig the • rights plank that would head off a former Secretary of State Henry M.
final touches on a party platfonn floor fight "will be very tough, Kissinger, who had been scheduled
that GOP leaders say will be closely although pos!lible."
to appear, ca 0celed at the last
attuned to Ronald Reagan's con· Reagan personally · opplll!es a minute. so he wouldn't upstage his
servative political philoSophy.
plank urging ratification' of. the own convention speech next week.
But as the 106-member platfonn ERA, but his aides said Sunday he
As the pre-convention activities
conunittee was meeting today to probably would accept a pro-ERA began, Reagan, who is vacationing
take final public testimony from statement if that is what the plat· IIi Mexico and isn't due to arrive in
GOP officials, a battle was looming form conunittee decides.
Detroit until next Sunday, expanded
over whether the document should
Tower said that while Reagan his search for a rutming mate. Sourinclude a plank urging ratification of won't be · bound to · support. ces in the Reagan •camp said Rep.
the Equal Rights Amendment. .
everything in the platform, "I don't Thomas Evans, R-Del., a fonne~ coSen. John Tower of Texas, the expect anything major -in the plat- chairman of the Republican
platform committee chainnan, said form to be inconsistent with Gover· National Conunittee, has been ad·
he has no intention of letting the nor Reagan's views." And that iq· ded to 'the list of potential vice
dispute become a ·"street · brawl" . elude~ the ERA plank, he said.
·presidential candidates on whom ex·
and mar next week's Republican
The p.Jatform conunittee held Its tensive background infonnation is
National Convention at which first session late Sunday, a closed- being requested.
.
Reagan's nominationis ·a foregone door org_anizational meeting. Today,
Other often-mentioned prospects
it was to hear from Michigan Gov.
conclusion.
incJude Sen. Richard G. Lugar oOnBut Republican National Chair- William G. Milliken, RlimSfeld and diana,; Senate Minority Leader
:nan Bill Brock told reporters on former Federal Reserve Board Howard Baker of Tennessee, fonner
.;
1

.

J

u :N. Ambassador George Busti,
Rep. Jack Kemp of New York, Rep.
Guy Vander Jagt of Michigan and
fonner Defense Seq-etary Donald Rumsfeld.
' "It's going to be il batu1er year for
Republicans at all levels," Vander
Jagt, chainnan of the National
Republican Congressional Committee, said in remarks prepared for
today's session. "On virtually every ·
issue, the voters see the Republican
party as the bist equipped to handle
the problems that are worrying
them.' '
He referred to a recently colD'
pleted survey by GOP po'Uster Bob
Teeter In .which li majority of those
sUrveyed not only favored Reagan
over President Carter but felt that
Republicans could do a boitter job
than Democrats in handling all
major issues except unemployment.
I
I

oz.

69~
YANKEE TEAM - The 1980 Pomeroy Yankees
Utile League baseball team, pictured above, consists
of, front row, I tor, Brian Tannehill, Chris Kennedy,
David Hendricks, Brian Willis, and Steve Tracy;
second row , I tor, Joey Parker, John Henry, Don Dor-

COKE

st, Tim Sloan, Shennan Hoschar, and Todd Hoschar;
third row, I to r, coaches Mark Taruiehill, Larry
Hoschar, and Harold Willis. Dave Hendricks is also a
coach, and absent were Josh Henry, Sean ·Jeffers, and
Mark Corbitt.

16 OZ. 8 PAK .

12 Can Carton

Richard, Stone open
'80 ·all-star classic
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Earl
Weaver managed the American
League AU-stars the last time they
won and he'd like nothing better
than to duplicate the feat tonight after a eight-year drought.
The Baltimore skipper look umbrage when Pittsburgh. relief pit·
ching ace Kent Tekulve told an
audience that the National League
had won the last eight and 16 of the
last 17 because the players were
faster afoot.
"We've had speed," Weaver retorted, and then pointed out that in an
All-5tar Game it's mostly pitching
and hitting without too much
strategy unless mabye the Score is
tied in the eighth inning.
"Then we might try to steal," he
said.
Weaver named right-hander Steve
Stone of his own pitching staff to
start against the National Leaguers,
whose Manager Chuck Tanner
picked fireball throwing , righthander J .R. Richard of Houston to
start.
II was almost Mutt and Jeff when
the two hurlers stood together for
photos. Richard looms 6-feel-ll and
Stone goes 5-10.
Richard depends on hili fastball
because "that's whatit's all about."
Stone has more of an assortment.
Each pitcher can work a
maximum of three innings under
All-star rules, and each squad has
plenty of outstanding successors for
Richard, with his 10-4 record in 1980,
and Stone with his 12-3.
Weaver even suggested that relief
pitchers work an inning between the
. stints of the starters because "they
can wann up faster and you don't
know when they might be needed."
American League President Lee
MacPhail, who has had to rule on
altercations between Weaver and
various umpires, said he thought the
punishment of this AU-star Game
might be the.most harsh.
"He has Paul Molitor, George
Brett and Jim Rice sitting on the
bench and he·can 't use any of them,"
corrunenled the league president in
·noting that the top vote-getters in
· three positions are on the injured
list.
Weaver chose Willie Randolph of
the New York Yankees tu replace
Milwaukee's Molitor at second base,
Gralg ·Nettles to start at third base
instead of Kansas City's Brett and '
Ben Oglivie of Milwaukee to take
.overfor Rice of Boston.
Weaver said ·he chose Stone over

such other stars as Tommy John of
the Yankees, Larry Gura of the Kansas City Royals, Rick Honeycutt of
the Seattle Mariners, and Dave Stieb
of the Toronto Blue Jays "because
he was coming off three days' rest."
Tanner. said Richard was chosen
over Steve Carlton of the
Philadelphia Phillies and Jerry
Reuss of the host Dodgers for the
same reason.
Weaver, handling the designated
visiting team, named a batting order
with Randolph at second; Rod
Carew, California Angels, lb; Fred
Lynn, Boston, cf; . Reggie Jackson,
New York 'iankees, rf; Oglivie,
Milwaukee, If; Carlton Fisk, Boston,
c; Nettles, Yankees, 3o; Bucky
•Dent, Yankees, ss; and Stone.
Tanner, withthe NL as the
homeclub, listed Davey Lopes,
Dodgers, 2b; Reggie Smith,
Dodgers, rf ; Dave Parker, Pittsburgh, cf; Steve Garvey, Dodgers,
!b; Johnny Bench, Cincinnati; c;
Dave Kingman , Chicago Cubs, If;
'Ken Reitz, StLouis, 3b; Bill Russell,
Los Angeles, ss; and Richard.
Parker was named the MVP in
1979 when the·NL won 7-6 with a mn
in the ninth inning.
· St. Louis shortstop Garry Templeton was among those who decided
to skip the game because the fans
voted others to starting jobs. Templeton was hitting 36 points higher
than the Russell when the balloting
was concluded.
The Dodgers' Smith, who had '· an

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OPEN FOR YOU

REUTER BROGAN

GRAHAM

DR. PEPPER

argument over All-star Game
tickets two years ago, said there was
no such trouble this time; but added:
"I'm here because the fans voted for
me. I'd rather be fishing ."
His tearrunate, Garvey, who was
voted Most Valuable Player in the
1974 and 1978 All-star Games and is
back again, said : "It is an honor and
privilege to play with your peers."
Alan Trammell, the Detroit shortstop who was runnerup to Dent in ·
the AL vote, said: "Being one of the
28 on the squad is an honor to me.
You know there are new faces
coming up in the America n'League.
This is the first year for a lot of us
and we haven't tasted defeat. We
want to win this game.''
Carew, selected to his 14th AU-star
squad, wasn't talking much to the
media but he did admit there was
still a thriU to being in the game
because " otherwise I wouldn't be
here."
Overall, since the start of the interleague rivalry in 1933, the NL
leads 31·18 with one game ending in ·
a tie.
This 51st game (some seasons had
two ) is scheduled to start at 5:40
p.m. PDT with a capacity crowd of
56,000 expected. SPilctators were admitted free to the workouts on Mondlly and about 20,000 showed up. One
of the players getting the most ap.
plause was Tonuny John, a star with
the Dodgers until he became a free
agent two seasons ago and signed
with the Yankees.

PKG. 16 OZ.

-

DAIRY
BROUGHTON
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'1 29

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- Of.EN ~LU TO JO P-.11.
SUNDAY. 10 TO 10

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\ .

,.

•

�'
3- The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesd~y, July 8, 19110

,'

Opinio~s &amp;

•. ..CAARI Ek JET TO AN \&lt;St.A~t;)
PARA\)\~E, COCKTA\!,. RE"EPTIO~
lU~URY HOTE'f.;.. AI..L M~At..$ .. • ·

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-CQmments

;•

J'

a ... ._
~.,.

11IE DAILY SENTINEL
!USPS IU.. .)

· BONE IN

r

CHUCK.
STEAK

DEVOTED TO mE
IN'l'EIIEmOF

MEIG$-MASON AREA
l.ctlen al GPtafOD &amp;re welcomf!lt. They IMuJd be Jeu Ibn - WOrdiiOIIg (of subjed to reducUGa by tile editor) atM:I mut be slped wttb &amp;H slpee's ~. Nam~;~ DLIJ be withheld apoa
p!bhtloil. Bnt:ver, on req~t;-Dimes will be disciOHd. LeHtn 1boald be Ja good tlaic:, addreulq: IIAes, •t perso...Utlel.
Pa~ daUy. ezeept S.tarday by 'l1le Ohfo v.pey PubU.b.J.nc Comp.ay· MuJilmflHII, Inc.,
lliCoartSL, Pomeroy, ObJo~e. lkuii.DnaOfflre Pbonettz..!151. Editorial Pboae9ft.U57.
SecoDd c.... PMYilt paid at hmeroy, Oito.
Natio111.l atlvertillag rt!pretentiiU\'e, LaadN Alltdl&amp;et, 3101 EucUd Ave., ClevelaDd, ObJo
11111

.

~ Altoeiated Frett

.

II ucl111lnly eatttled to 'the use tor pubUcatioo of .U
.-edited t. tbe aewapaper aad alao Cht ICK'al oeWI pubHahelbetl!ht.
·

Pv.bU.her

·

Geaeral Mar. &amp;CityEd.Jtor
NewtEdllor
~'b.
Adv. Mauger
,..'""

B~ ~....._-,-, r""T"'1a1c::l'~

Robert Wlngen
Robert Hoeftltb

DaleRotbgeb, Jr.
Carl Gbet'!D

-·

j Dems

seek delegates'
hearts, minds, votes

The weapqlls in the fight for the hearts, minds and votes
of the 3,383 Democratic National Convention delegates
range from computers to invitations to the White Hoi)Se.
President Carter has a majority of the delegates now
and he aims to keep that edge through the noniination roll
call at the the August convention. The Carter campaign
wants to use a smooth-running, harmonious convention as
the opening shot of the Jail election campaign.
Sen. Edward Kennedy has to strip away delegates from
Carter to have any chance to win the Demoeratic presidential nominations. His strategy is to win a battle on party
rules at the New York convention, take 400-500 delegates
away from the incwnbent and wrap up the nomination. ·
.The key for both strategies is personal attention to the
delegates.
Invitations to talk with President Carter at. 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. are arrayed against small group meetings
with Sen. Kennedy.
"The president wants to tharik those people who made
his nomination possible," says Tom Donilon, who runs the
delegate effort for the Carter-Mondale committee.
But the Kennedy campaign will be making a parallel ef·
fort, according to Rick Stearns, director of delegate se,lection for tpe Massachusetts senator.
"The most effective contact with a delegate is by
another deleg1.1te or by someone else they know," Stearns
said in an interview. ''Then, at some point, you want to get
the candidate involved."
;
He said Kennedy will be meeting with delegates in Jllly,
in the weeks before the convention starts Aug. 11.
The Carter campaign's 14 delegate staffers are making
telephone calls and getting letters written to the more than
1,900 delegates now pledged to the president.
The Kennedy campaign has 13 field staffers contacting
delegates, getting others to call wavering or possibly
wavering delegates and making the Kennedy argument all
the time.
Both campaigns are using computers to lighten the burClen of tracking all the delegates. The Carter campaign has
been using a sophisticated computer from the start .of its
effort, while the Kennedy &lt;;,ampaign signed a contract for
computer time only recently.
The Carter campaign is concentrating on the delegates
who will cast the 1,981.6 votes which, according to an
Associated PresS delegate count, are now pledged to the
president. Using a plan developed late last fall, Donilon is
directing the constant contacts with the Carter delegates
and setting up the machinery that will function on the convention floor.
The Kennedy strategy is different, for Kennedy has only
1,235.4 votes no~ co~ed to him. He must take
delegates away from Carter to have any chance to win the
nomination.
.,

Today in history.

·1~·

~, diljia"'kbes

~--

••

:; Today is Tuesday, Jwy 8, the !90th granted a charter to Rhode Island.
:. day of 1980. There are 176 days left in
In 1822, the English poet, Percy
·: the year.
Bysshe Shelley, drowned when his
: Today's highlight in history: in
boat capsized in the Gulf of Spezzia
• 1835, the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia
off Italy.
: cracked as it was being rung for the
Iij 1940, the government of NorWay
· funeral of L(:hief Justice John Mar- moved to London after 62 days of
' resisting Nazi invaders in ·World
shall.
War II.
On this date :
· . In 1663, England's King Charles II

'

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Dale Little; back, I tor, Kevin King, Tim Jeffers, Bill
Brothers, Art Hunnel, Otis Norris and Jeff Holtz. In the
back are Coaches Tom Hysell and Don HunneL

' POMEROY TIGERS
Members of the 1980
Pomeroy Tigers for this season include: front , I tor,
Todd Hysell, Steve Musser, Chris Shank, Parker Long,

BY niE PIECE

•1!9
SUPERIOR

FRANKIES
12

Synthetic fuels: a bad investment
By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Wheh
President Carter signs into law the
Energy Security Act of 1980, the
federa l government will have
irrevocably embraced a new
tec.hnology that poses a potef!tially
grave threat to the health of
thousands of workers.
The bill signing ceremony, terr
tatively scheduled for July 4, will be
heavily promoted and highly
publicized uecause it marks the
nation 's official conunitment to the
development and production of synthetic fuels as a major new source of
energy.
The legislation, authorizing the expenditure of $20 billion in loans,
guarantees and price supports
during the next 'five years,
establishes a synfuel production
target of 500,000 barrels per day by
1987, the equivalent of 4 percent of
domestic oil consumption.
The extraordinary financial cost is
not tpe only price the country will
pay for gambling on an unproven
technology to reduce dependence on
imported oil rather than investing in
a broad portfolio of renewable and
alternative energy sources.

Many of those dangers alrady
have been widely publicized : The
Rockies and Northern Plains could
be transformed into the United
States' version of Germany's
heavily .industrialized Ruhr Valley.
Synfuel production is likely to
disfigure the region's land, drain its
scarce water supply and place an in·
tolerable strain on its limited social
services.

reassurances that a) there were no
serious problems and b ) they would
soon be resolved.
While admitting that "we have
identified ca rcinogenic (cancercausing ) substances in the products
and the waste of all the synthetic
fuels we have studied," Ms. Clusen
said "government and industry are
cooperating in the effort to define
and ameliorate the risks associated

Today's commentary
But too little attention has been
focused on the dangers of adverse
health effects likely to be faced by
the uncounted thousands of men an
women expected to be employed in
coal gasificaiton or liquifaction and
retorting oil shale.
When Congress was considering
the legislation late last year, Ruch
C. Clusen, the Energy Department's
assistant secretary for environmental matters, off.ered
typically opaque bureacratlc

with chr~nic exposure to arcinogenic materials prior to commercialization ... ''

But a confidential memo sent to
Labor Secretary Ray Marshall only
one month earlier was far more
specific - and ominous - in war·
ning about the " important health
and environmental problems that
may be anticipated" in synfuel
,prodw;tion.
Written by Eula Bingham, the
head of the Occupational Safety and

Health Administration, the unpublicized memo cited "specific information available which links oil
shale processing with cancer, par·
ticularly cutaneous carcinol118" or
skin cancer. Extraordinarily high
levels have been documented among
both ~otti~!l . and Estonian workers,
Ms. Bingham warned.
In the coal gasification process,
she said, ·'carbon monoxide poses a
particularly dangerous hazard,"
while other chemicals with the
potential to ca use industrial
fatalities include hydrogen cyanide,
hydrogen sulfide, carbon disulfide
and metal carbonyb.
Commercial coal and gasification
· never has been attempted in this
country, but in similar industrial
operations '·the workers have
exhibited higher than expected mortality from cancers of the lung, kidn~y. bladder, prostate and skin,"
Ms. Bingham noted.
In coal liquefaction, "the car:
cinogenicity of materials produced
... already has been demonstrated"
among a small group of ·American
workers who experienced a skin can·
cer rate of 16 to 37 limes greater
than expected, she added.

Ohio perspective

Platform to read like Gettysburg Address
COLUMBUS, · Ohio (AP) - The delegates pledged to Ronald.
Republican platform "ought to be Reagan, .-the party's apparent
about 500 words and read like the nominee, are split over conGettysburg Address," according to troversial platfonn issues such as
one Ohio political observer.
the Equal Rights Alnendment and
He and others suggest that· anti-aoortion ani:! anti-busing amendelegates to ' the Republican dments to the U.S. Constitution.
National Convention ·in Detroit
While some of the more moderate
refrain · from making platform of the 77 Ohio delegates agree that
planks very specific and avoid Reagan and the 1980 convention
detailed positions on· issues that must avoid giving the impression
could lead to rifts in the party.
that the party has been taken over
"Why do it? The platform is ob- by far right-wirigers, others favor a
solete and nobody pays any attention hard·line position on all planks in the
to it anyway," said State Rep. platfonn.
Robert Netzley, R-Laura.
Most of the Reagan delegates ap.
Stat.e Rep. David Johnson, R- . pear united in opposing busing to
North Canton,. also expressed con· achieve school integration. Several,
cern ·about alienating GOP, however, would pre!er not to see it
Democratic a'nd independent take the fonn of a platform plank.
· moderates.
Reagan favors eliminating a
According to a survey by the traditional Republican plank sup.
Akron Be.acon Journal, · Ohio porting the ERA, but several women

moderates say they will try to reverse the position.
" It has been in the platform since
1940 and they could alienate a lot of
women by removing it," said Columbus councilwoman Dorothy Teater,
who is leading a campaign to persuade delegates to keep the plank.
The survey revealed that most
members of the Ohio delegation
were opposed to the ERA, but were
split over whether the issue should
be addressed in the platfonn.
State Rep. William B. Batchelder,
R-Medina, predicts a floor fight over
the abortion issue, which Reagan op.
poses.
"You hear all of this equal rights
and civil rights lmd poor little babies
do not· even · have the right to be
born," said Marjorie B. Rooss of
Montgomery.
Donald J. Loss of Perrysburg,

however, said the abortien issue
doesn't have to be in the platform
because Reagan "has made his
views clear on abortion."
Donald R. Fraser of Bowling
Green, another delegate, agreed,
S!'Ying that there is "no reason for it
on the platfonn because the
Supreme Court has spoken on it."
Although a conservative, Batchelder - one of two Ohio-delegates
on the convention platform COlD'
mittee - favors taking a hard-line
position on such social issues as
busing, abortion and the ERA.
"Reagan .himself has been successful at it· by taking cleat, forthright positions that appeal to con- '
servative Democrats and independents at a ttme when the country is turning conservative," said
Batchelder.

Today's political roundup

conservative~ platform

Republicans finalize

" All day long he's been acting /Ike Valery Giscard d 'Estaing. You know what I mean?"

WITH THESE .••

COOK UPA

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, J.uly 8,1980

Republicans, told that 19110 will be .sunday that arriving at an equal· Chalnnan Arthur Bums. Tower said
their "banner year," are puttirig the • rights plank that would head off a former Secretary of State Henry M.
final touches on a party platfonn floor fight "will be very tough, Kissinger, who had been scheduled
that GOP leaders say will be closely although pos!lible."
to appear, ca 0celed at the last
attuned to Ronald Reagan's con· Reagan personally · opplll!es a minute. so he wouldn't upstage his
servative political philoSophy.
plank urging ratification' of. the own convention speech next week.
But as the 106-member platfonn ERA, but his aides said Sunday he
As the pre-convention activities
conunittee was meeting today to probably would accept a pro-ERA began, Reagan, who is vacationing
take final public testimony from statement if that is what the plat· IIi Mexico and isn't due to arrive in
GOP officials, a battle was looming form conunittee decides.
Detroit until next Sunday, expanded
over whether the document should
Tower said that while Reagan his search for a rutming mate. Sourinclude a plank urging ratification of won't be · bound to · support. ces in the Reagan •camp said Rep.
the Equal Rights Amendment. .
everything in the platform, "I don't Thomas Evans, R-Del., a fonne~ coSen. John Tower of Texas, the expect anything major -in the plat- chairman of the Republican
platform committee chainnan, said form to be inconsistent with Gover· National Conunittee, has been ad·
he has no intention of letting the nor Reagan's views." And that iq· ded to 'the list of potential vice
dispute become a ·"street · brawl" . elude~ the ERA plank, he said.
·presidential candidates on whom ex·
and mar next week's Republican
The p.Jatform conunittee held Its tensive background infonnation is
National Convention at which first session late Sunday, a closed- being requested.
.
Reagan's nominationis ·a foregone door org_anizational meeting. Today,
Other often-mentioned prospects
it was to hear from Michigan Gov.
conclusion.
incJude Sen. Richard G. Lugar oOnBut Republican National Chair- William G. Milliken, RlimSfeld and diana,; Senate Minority Leader
:nan Bill Brock told reporters on former Federal Reserve Board Howard Baker of Tennessee, fonner
.;
1

.

J

u :N. Ambassador George Busti,
Rep. Jack Kemp of New York, Rep.
Guy Vander Jagt of Michigan and
fonner Defense Seq-etary Donald Rumsfeld.
' "It's going to be il batu1er year for
Republicans at all levels," Vander
Jagt, chainnan of the National
Republican Congressional Committee, said in remarks prepared for
today's session. "On virtually every ·
issue, the voters see the Republican
party as the bist equipped to handle
the problems that are worrying
them.' '
He referred to a recently colD'
pleted survey by GOP po'Uster Bob
Teeter In .which li majority of those
sUrveyed not only favored Reagan
over President Carter but felt that
Republicans could do a boitter job
than Democrats in handling all
major issues except unemployment.
I
I

oz.

69~
YANKEE TEAM - The 1980 Pomeroy Yankees
Utile League baseball team, pictured above, consists
of, front row, I tor, Brian Tannehill, Chris Kennedy,
David Hendricks, Brian Willis, and Steve Tracy;
second row , I tor, Joey Parker, John Henry, Don Dor-

COKE

st, Tim Sloan, Shennan Hoschar, and Todd Hoschar;
third row, I to r, coaches Mark Taruiehill, Larry
Hoschar, and Harold Willis. Dave Hendricks is also a
coach, and absent were Josh Henry, Sean ·Jeffers, and
Mark Corbitt.

16 OZ. 8 PAK .

12 Can Carton

Richard, Stone open
'80 ·all-star classic
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Earl
Weaver managed the American
League AU-stars the last time they
won and he'd like nothing better
than to duplicate the feat tonight after a eight-year drought.
The Baltimore skipper look umbrage when Pittsburgh. relief pit·
ching ace Kent Tekulve told an
audience that the National League
had won the last eight and 16 of the
last 17 because the players were
faster afoot.
"We've had speed," Weaver retorted, and then pointed out that in an
All-5tar Game it's mostly pitching
and hitting without too much
strategy unless mabye the Score is
tied in the eighth inning.
"Then we might try to steal," he
said.
Weaver named right-hander Steve
Stone of his own pitching staff to
start against the National Leaguers,
whose Manager Chuck Tanner
picked fireball throwing , righthander J .R. Richard of Houston to
start.
II was almost Mutt and Jeff when
the two hurlers stood together for
photos. Richard looms 6-feel-ll and
Stone goes 5-10.
Richard depends on hili fastball
because "that's whatit's all about."
Stone has more of an assortment.
Each pitcher can work a
maximum of three innings under
All-star rules, and each squad has
plenty of outstanding successors for
Richard, with his 10-4 record in 1980,
and Stone with his 12-3.
Weaver even suggested that relief
pitchers work an inning between the
. stints of the starters because "they
can wann up faster and you don't
know when they might be needed."
American League President Lee
MacPhail, who has had to rule on
altercations between Weaver and
various umpires, said he thought the
punishment of this AU-star Game
might be the.most harsh.
"He has Paul Molitor, George
Brett and Jim Rice sitting on the
bench and he·can 't use any of them,"
corrunenled the league president in
·noting that the top vote-getters in
· three positions are on the injured
list.
Weaver chose Willie Randolph of
the New York Yankees tu replace
Milwaukee's Molitor at second base,
Gralg ·Nettles to start at third base
instead of Kansas City's Brett and '
Ben Oglivie of Milwaukee to take
.overfor Rice of Boston.
Weaver said ·he chose Stone over

such other stars as Tommy John of
the Yankees, Larry Gura of the Kansas City Royals, Rick Honeycutt of
the Seattle Mariners, and Dave Stieb
of the Toronto Blue Jays "because
he was coming off three days' rest."
Tanner. said Richard was chosen
over Steve Carlton of the
Philadelphia Phillies and Jerry
Reuss of the host Dodgers for the
same reason.
Weaver, handling the designated
visiting team, named a batting order
with Randolph at second; Rod
Carew, California Angels, lb; Fred
Lynn, Boston, cf; . Reggie Jackson,
New York 'iankees, rf; Oglivie,
Milwaukee, If; Carlton Fisk, Boston,
c; Nettles, Yankees, 3o; Bucky
•Dent, Yankees, ss; and Stone.
Tanner, withthe NL as the
homeclub, listed Davey Lopes,
Dodgers, 2b; Reggie Smith,
Dodgers, rf ; Dave Parker, Pittsburgh, cf; Steve Garvey, Dodgers,
!b; Johnny Bench, Cincinnati; c;
Dave Kingman , Chicago Cubs, If;
'Ken Reitz, StLouis, 3b; Bill Russell,
Los Angeles, ss; and Richard.
Parker was named the MVP in
1979 when the·NL won 7-6 with a mn
in the ninth inning.
· St. Louis shortstop Garry Templeton was among those who decided
to skip the game because the fans
voted others to starting jobs. Templeton was hitting 36 points higher
than the Russell when the balloting
was concluded.
The Dodgers' Smith, who had '· an

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OPEN FOR YOU

REUTER BROGAN

GRAHAM

DR. PEPPER

argument over All-star Game
tickets two years ago, said there was
no such trouble this time; but added:
"I'm here because the fans voted for
me. I'd rather be fishing ."
His tearrunate, Garvey, who was
voted Most Valuable Player in the
1974 and 1978 All-star Games and is
back again, said : "It is an honor and
privilege to play with your peers."
Alan Trammell, the Detroit shortstop who was runnerup to Dent in ·
the AL vote, said: "Being one of the
28 on the squad is an honor to me.
You know there are new faces
coming up in the America n'League.
This is the first year for a lot of us
and we haven't tasted defeat. We
want to win this game.''
Carew, selected to his 14th AU-star
squad, wasn't talking much to the
media but he did admit there was
still a thriU to being in the game
because " otherwise I wouldn't be
here."
Overall, since the start of the interleague rivalry in 1933, the NL
leads 31·18 with one game ending in ·
a tie.
This 51st game (some seasons had
two ) is scheduled to start at 5:40
p.m. PDT with a capacity crowd of
56,000 expected. SPilctators were admitted free to the workouts on Mondlly and about 20,000 showed up. One
of the players getting the most ap.
plause was Tonuny John, a star with
the Dodgers until he became a free
agent two seasons ago and signed
with the Yankees.

PKG. 16 OZ.

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SUNDAY. 10 TO 10

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•

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Julv 8. 1980

L.e Doux· :r,o match for Holmes
BLOOMiNGTON, Minn. (AP) The baltle lines are c1early being
drawn for a Larry HolmesMuhammad Ali fight following
Holmes's victory over Scott LeDoux
in the " battle of the eye."
. While LeDou was complaining
thai' a thumb to his left eye led to his
being stopPed iri the seventh· round
Monday night in his bid for the
· ~orld Boxing Council heavyweight
title, Ali was shouting about what he
would do to Holmes and Holmes was
saying : "The hell with Ali. Let him
fight somebody else.
" Let him fight the Nos.! ,2 and3
contenders. He'll .fade like an old

man."

and the bottom knuckle of my hand
hit him in the eye," explained
Holmes. "How can you thumb a man
with a punch at 100 miles an hour.··
Early in the seventh round , Pearl

OPEN DAILY 10.9
SUNDAY 1-6

again summoned the doctor to
examine .the eye. Again actwn
resumed ..
"He was defenseless," said
Holmes. At 2:05 of Lhe round, Pearl
agreed.
·

WED., THURS.,
FRI., SAT. SALE

·Knight ready
the other night, and we talked a bout
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ray Knight
caught a plane for Los Angeles im- ,how the only thing I ever wanted to'
be is a big-league ballplayer."
mediately after the Cincinnati Reds'
Knight said he watched the All·
Sunday game against the Houston
Star game every year while growing
Astros.
up. Atlanta third baseman Eddie
" I want to get out there before
Mathews
was his hero.
they change their mind," Knight
·
"Mathews
only made · it about
said.
every
other
year,
and I was disapAfter hearing last Thursday that
pointed
for
him,"
he
said. " Ron SanChuck Tanner had .chosen Kenny
to
or
Ken
Boyer
would
make it. I
Reitz as an alternate to tod~y·s All·
·
as
much as
think
it
hurt
me
Star game, the third baseman said
Mathews.
"
he quietly swallowed Pis disap' Knight said he knows the way
pointment.
Mathews must have felt. " I was
Then, the injured Mike Schmidt
disappointed they didn't choose me
was taken off the roster and Knigh!
this week the first time around. I
added. Cincinnati Clu~ President
was disappointed last year because I
Dick Wagner called Kmght with the
was hitting .3ll at the all-star break,
news Friday morning.
and .Tommy Lasorda picked Ron
"You know, I had had such a big
Cey, who was hitting only about
disappointment not being named
.
that I didn't grasp it, I thought he ' .250."
Knight,
who
ended
up
batting
.318,
was kidding me," Knight said. "It's
the third highest average in the
one of those times you think that aU
National League last year, said
the hard work you did as a kid has
being
selected for the team signifies
paid off.
in his career.
a
turnaround
" I was on the phone to my father

But before leaving his post-fight
news conference, the J().year-old
Holmes said, "If I get $8 million, J'U
fight Ali next year."
Holmes wouldn't get $8 million but
he would get a lot of money and he
might fight Ali next fall , not next
year.
Before the fight, promoter Don
K~g had said: " There is. going ·" 1.~
a fight. That's definite ... sometime in
September or October."
There is a deal in the works involving Greg Campbell of Madison,
Wis., who has . been involved in
business ventures with Ali, that
could put the fight in Egypt. Caesars
Palace in Las Vegas, Nev. , reportedly is another contender for the
fight.
"The way he looked tonight I
would have whupped him," said Ali,
who was among a crowd of 6,491 that
watched Holmes's one-sided victory
at the Met Center. "He's still my
LOS ANGELES ( AP) - Major
sparring partner." Holmes uSed to
league baseball players overhelp Ali p~epare for fights.
whelmingly and
ratified
the new
agreement
benefit
plan,basic
the
Ali said he lhought the fight MonNew York Times reported ,i n its
.• day night should have been stopped
Tuesday editions.
a round earlier. It almost wa"'
According to Players Association
In the closing seconds of the sixth
Executive Director Marvin Miller,
round, Holmes threw a right upthe vote in favor of the Basic
percut that smashed into LeDoux's
Agreement was 619-22. Miller '!liS
left eye. The 31-year-old challenger
quoted. by the Times as saying the
cjropped to his knees and put his
tally did not include the vote of the
glove to the eye. Referee Davey
Cincinnati Reds, whose player
Pearl started counting, LeDoux got
representative,
Bill Bonham, did not
up at five, took a mandatory eight-~!tend
the
.
association's
executive
count and lasted the round.
Monda}.
board
meeting
on
Pearl summoned Dr. Jerry
The Times reported that Min· O'Brien 19 LeDoux's corner to
nesota was the only team to turn
examine tJJ~ eye, which was closing
down the Basic Agreement, rejecrapidly and had blood around it.
llng It by a 17-9 margin. The Twins'
O'Brien Jet the fight continue.
"I caught a thumb + bingo," said · player representative, Mike Marshall, was recently released by the
LeDoux. "You can't imagine what
club .
. it's like to get a thumb in your eye. It
(the pain) was unbelievable. It was
The Twins also , cast the only Ji
Oitintentional."
•
"no" votes on the benefit plan,
which was passed by a 749-ll
; "I hit him w'ith a right' uppercut

Agreement ratified

~ummer league.action

margin.
The Times said the executive

1
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~~Special
u~urchase
THE DAILY SENTINEL 1980 edition tee ball team
is pictured above. Front row, · I to r, are Brandon
Roush, Michelle Lyons, Missy Leach, Kelly Marcinko,
Lenora ·Lyons, and B. J. H~ckett . Second row, I tor, are
Danny Robinson, Randy Moore,
. Tim Hall, Jason Hall

board also elected the association's
twcrmembers and two alternates to
the joint player-owner committee
that will study free agent com-

pensation. The two members are Sal
Bando of · the Milwaukee Brewers
and Bob Boone of the Philadelphia
Phillies. Elliott Maddox of the New

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Our 5..77 Pkg.

Pkg .

Men's Tube
Work Socks

Po lyester/
co tton te e
s hirts or
bri e fs .
Our 2 . 97.
Boys· Sizes;
package of
3 ...... 2.58

6-pair pack·
age of cot·
ton t n ylon
socks . Fit
10· t 3,

Dandruff

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Freshen s.;:_
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sol id . Save 1

Our Reg . 7.44

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Underwear

Moisturizing

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~::'i'..:::::

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" "'1\ • •.•

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Normal
Dry
Oily

Dis infects .
removes
stains fro m
toilet bowl.
48-oz."

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Mirror

· Co1orful
·· Bath Towels

.

14x50" walnut co lor .
F.its conve- ,
n ien tly on
door back.

oz . · bag.

~~--·' Nacho cheese
flavored tor ·
tilla chips.

Your Choice

Bath

2 99

~

Early Spring
Lemon
Rose
Pine
Powder
Freah

Bath Towels

Cotton/polyester print on
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Fringed cotton /polyester . towel,
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Our 58 ',
12 " Washclotl'l . .. 46'

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Middleport, Ohio·

.,

8 white plas·
tic knives ,
forks and

R e usa b I e lfPitt:':if~J!:!\ ~i\!
plasti c.
3 sizes.
9, 10', 14 oz.

$J 94

York Mets and Scott McGregor of
Baltimore will be the alternates . The
elections are subject to the approval
of major league players . .

WED THURS 'FRI SAT

'

V~UGHAN'S

Fittingly right and on
the high side of fashion 1
Choose from fly front .
pleats or shirred detai ling s in must -have
shades. Save now '

Dinnerware

Clear
plasti c.

Misses' Woven
Polyester Pants

Leslie Lyons, .Sean Duncan, and Shawn Hawley. Back
row, I tor, are coaches Danny Robinson, David Leach,
and head coach, Joe Hall. The team finished the season
with a 2 and 7 record.

.

Tumblers

12 "x25 ' foi l
roll for househo ld . Great
savings.

9 i.n . plat es.
·25 pak. ·
M icro·wave
ove n save .

~a!
I
Plastic

67

FOR
U
Aluminum
Wrap Foil

Plates

r~--------------------,--------------~------------_..:.__

In the Junior softball circuit the
April King Jed the winning · Mid'undefeated Salisbury squad posted a
dleport team with a three run home
10-2 victory Qver New Haven. Barb run, !louble, and single, Natalie
Hatfield who now owns an 8-0 record Lambert a three run homer and
picked up the win.
single, Pam Crooks four singles,
Leading hiiters for Salisbury were . Kris Snowden, Cindy Crooks three
.Barb Hatfield with a double and singles, Paula Horton, Kim Fraley,
. :single, Rhonda Zirkle four singles, and Margie Miller all with two
Mary Moore four singles, and Jodie singles. Darlene suffered the loss for
Harrison, Carla King, Denise Mason.
Stegall, Kim Eblin, Teresa Pratt,
Middleport's offense exploded
Darla King, and April Brickles all against New Haven with I8liits and
collected singles for. the winners.
16 runs.
.Coach David Pratt credited Denise
Natalie Lambert again picked up
~legal!, Rhonda Zirkle, and Mary
the victory.
Moore with outstanding defensive
For Middleport Vicki Boyles hit a
play. Vanessa Grady suffered the home run and single, Paula Horton a
loss for the New Haven Team.
double , and two singles, Cindy
Crooks three singles, Paula Swisher,
April King, Natalie Lambert, and
Many summer leagues are coming
to an end, but the local Senior Soft- Margie Miller with two singles
apiece.
ball league is going strong.
T. Clark was the New Haven
• Middleport's Superstars kicked off
hurler. New Haven hitters were P.
!Jle second half of their schedule
W~Jey, T. Allensworth, B. Gorwith two wins, 23-2 over Mason and
don, with two singles, D. Phalen, B.
16-8 over New Haven. Against
Allensworth, J. Clark, M. Gonde,
Mason· Natalie Lambert went the
and R Kimes with one single apiece.
distance for the win · and was
credited with pitching a great game.

--

as~ac

Our 1.43

.

I
I' .
I

~

1
I 888
I
Ea. - Our

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1·oz." concen·
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~~~J&gt;~~::V Reg. , ever1'
green .
'Fl. oz. '"thl wt.

-CORRECTION-FOR MONDAY JULY· 7 1980 AD
USDA CHOICE
BONELESS. '

CHUCK

ROAST -

~=

LB.

1o!?aa

6-Qt. Picnic
Cooler

With push-button.Jwing-down
lid . -::.ave.
Our ~.88, 2-Gal.
Picnic Jug 2 :97

49.7.

Our
R.eg : .
18 88
ADULT SLEEPING BAG '
Fabric cover, .tricot lining; 3 Jb:acryfic
fill . 33'
'

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Model220
Great for Camping

0

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.ALL MIRROR .
CAMPING ACCESSORIES

.

11

87
Our17 .67 .

2¥z Qt. Electric Kettle
Great for camping trips .

~!6
6s!~9.66~5~~
Our Reg.

Reg . 10.66

Latex One-coat Flat or Enamel

,l~~h~rceBatteries.

Fast drying , washable wall
paint. 5-yr. durability .

Eveready ~·

9-volt. or 2.:Pack "C" or "D". 1

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�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Julv 8. 1980

L.e Doux· :r,o match for Holmes
BLOOMiNGTON, Minn. (AP) The baltle lines are c1early being
drawn for a Larry HolmesMuhammad Ali fight following
Holmes's victory over Scott LeDoux
in the " battle of the eye."
. While LeDou was complaining
thai' a thumb to his left eye led to his
being stopPed iri the seventh· round
Monday night in his bid for the
· ~orld Boxing Council heavyweight
title, Ali was shouting about what he
would do to Holmes and Holmes was
saying : "The hell with Ali. Let him
fight somebody else.
" Let him fight the Nos.! ,2 and3
contenders. He'll .fade like an old

man."

and the bottom knuckle of my hand
hit him in the eye," explained
Holmes. "How can you thumb a man
with a punch at 100 miles an hour.··
Early in the seventh round , Pearl

OPEN DAILY 10.9
SUNDAY 1-6

again summoned the doctor to
examine .the eye. Again actwn
resumed ..
"He was defenseless," said
Holmes. At 2:05 of Lhe round, Pearl
agreed.
·

WED., THURS.,
FRI., SAT. SALE

·Knight ready
the other night, and we talked a bout
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ray Knight
caught a plane for Los Angeles im- ,how the only thing I ever wanted to'
be is a big-league ballplayer."
mediately after the Cincinnati Reds'
Knight said he watched the All·
Sunday game against the Houston
Star game every year while growing
Astros.
up. Atlanta third baseman Eddie
" I want to get out there before
Mathews
was his hero.
they change their mind," Knight
·
"Mathews
only made · it about
said.
every
other
year,
and I was disapAfter hearing last Thursday that
pointed
for
him,"
he
said. " Ron SanChuck Tanner had .chosen Kenny
to
or
Ken
Boyer
would
make it. I
Reitz as an alternate to tod~y·s All·
·
as
much as
think
it
hurt
me
Star game, the third baseman said
Mathews.
"
he quietly swallowed Pis disap' Knight said he knows the way
pointment.
Mathews must have felt. " I was
Then, the injured Mike Schmidt
disappointed they didn't choose me
was taken off the roster and Knigh!
this week the first time around. I
added. Cincinnati Clu~ President
was disappointed last year because I
Dick Wagner called Kmght with the
was hitting .3ll at the all-star break,
news Friday morning.
and .Tommy Lasorda picked Ron
"You know, I had had such a big
Cey, who was hitting only about
disappointment not being named
.
that I didn't grasp it, I thought he ' .250."
Knight,
who
ended
up
batting
.318,
was kidding me," Knight said. "It's
the third highest average in the
one of those times you think that aU
National League last year, said
the hard work you did as a kid has
being
selected for the team signifies
paid off.
in his career.
a
turnaround
" I was on the phone to my father

But before leaving his post-fight
news conference, the J().year-old
Holmes said, "If I get $8 million, J'U
fight Ali next year."
Holmes wouldn't get $8 million but
he would get a lot of money and he
might fight Ali next fall , not next
year.
Before the fight, promoter Don
K~g had said: " There is. going ·" 1.~
a fight. That's definite ... sometime in
September or October."
There is a deal in the works involving Greg Campbell of Madison,
Wis., who has . been involved in
business ventures with Ali, that
could put the fight in Egypt. Caesars
Palace in Las Vegas, Nev. , reportedly is another contender for the
fight.
"The way he looked tonight I
would have whupped him," said Ali,
who was among a crowd of 6,491 that
watched Holmes's one-sided victory
at the Met Center. "He's still my
LOS ANGELES ( AP) - Major
sparring partner." Holmes uSed to
league baseball players overhelp Ali p~epare for fights.
whelmingly and
ratified
the new
agreement
benefit
plan,basic
the
Ali said he lhought the fight MonNew York Times reported ,i n its
.• day night should have been stopped
Tuesday editions.
a round earlier. It almost wa"'
According to Players Association
In the closing seconds of the sixth
Executive Director Marvin Miller,
round, Holmes threw a right upthe vote in favor of the Basic
percut that smashed into LeDoux's
Agreement was 619-22. Miller '!liS
left eye. The 31-year-old challenger
quoted. by the Times as saying the
cjropped to his knees and put his
tally did not include the vote of the
glove to the eye. Referee Davey
Cincinnati Reds, whose player
Pearl started counting, LeDoux got
representative,
Bill Bonham, did not
up at five, took a mandatory eight-~!tend
the
.
association's
executive
count and lasted the round.
Monda}.
board
meeting
on
Pearl summoned Dr. Jerry
The Times reported that Min· O'Brien 19 LeDoux's corner to
nesota was the only team to turn
examine tJJ~ eye, which was closing
down the Basic Agreement, rejecrapidly and had blood around it.
llng It by a 17-9 margin. The Twins'
O'Brien Jet the fight continue.
"I caught a thumb + bingo," said · player representative, Mike Marshall, was recently released by the
LeDoux. "You can't imagine what
club .
. it's like to get a thumb in your eye. It
(the pain) was unbelievable. It was
The Twins also , cast the only Ji
Oitintentional."
•
"no" votes on the benefit plan,
which was passed by a 749-ll
; "I hit him w'ith a right' uppercut

Agreement ratified

~ummer league.action

margin.
The Times said the executive

1
Plastic

07

~~Special
u~urchase
THE DAILY SENTINEL 1980 edition tee ball team
is pictured above. Front row, · I to r, are Brandon
Roush, Michelle Lyons, Missy Leach, Kelly Marcinko,
Lenora ·Lyons, and B. J. H~ckett . Second row, I tor, are
Danny Robinson, Randy Moore,
. Tim Hall, Jason Hall

board also elected the association's
twcrmembers and two alternates to
the joint player-owner committee
that will study free agent com-

pensation. The two members are Sal
Bando of · the Milwaukee Brewers
and Bob Boone of the Philadelphia
Phillies. Elliott Maddox of the New

,----------..;.._.....__.....;:
.--..
OPEN DAILY 9-9; SATURDAY 9~; SUNDAY 1~

.,

.,

.
97
J3

Satin Supreme
Drapes

HIGH- EFFICIENCY • 115 vo1t • 2·
I SP'eea fan • 2-way a1r d1rec1to n • .Ex-

Limit 2
Our 87'-96'

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~~~7

:1 *&lt;I III ·Qt• '

'9

Men's Tee
Shirts

468B
Exchange

Price

.Our Heavy-duty
Arrestor®Muffler

Maintenance-free .
36•Month Battery

Double-wrapped muffler tor
many U.S . cars , light trucks.

Calcium-lead battery tor many
U.S . cars and light trucks . Save.

Single unit •yatema ••eluded

Heavy ·
weight cot· .
ton in so lid
colors ; front
pocket .

A78x13"
B78x13"

Our 3.88 Pkg .

'J!f
i&amp;,~hree

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hont b.-oke pods
2.True rotors
~ 3.1n•t&gt;O&lt;I caliper~
4.Reflll hydrauli c system

C78x14 E78x14
F78x14 G78x14
Ea.
H78xt4

Sale Price

Save On Disc
Brake

S . Rep~ck inner and o.uter
bearings

G78x15
H78x15

6.1nspect master cylinder
7 .Replace front gre~se seals
l.ln1pa&lt;t rear linings fa~·
wear (additional cost If re ·
pairs on rear
needed)

---

bro~ 8s

'

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Disc brake speicial tor
only. f:ot mostArrteticai,·
made cars. Save

are

I

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2!!

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Jean Nate,,
Specials

Regular or
extra body.
7
f I u id
ounce bottie . Save!

Bath bub·
bles or refreshing atter - bath
splash .

Mouthwash

Economy ·
size , 18·
oz.· bottle'of
Scope '
mouthwash.
· Save now!

Limit 2

Limit 2

277

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~-

4 oz . bottle.
SAVE.

. '

r)t .i • N&gt;-tir!
"().tii••••P

I

Lof
. 1011

Our Reg.

l!o~s
Silkience·•

a \t lr")t..v.T• e: " Lt•

Your Choice

Our Reg . 3 .68

Our 14.27 50x63 .... ". 11.97
Our 31.47 7Sx84 ..... .. 25.88
Our 37.971D0x84 ...... 31.97

Model AHJ-POS-2

Misses' Sizes

Oil or

IB'!!t

Yarn dye rayon and acetate.

haust control • Energy ,Saving Opt1ons
(interrnitient l an and ad justable th ermostat) • COMFORT GUARD ' control
help s ma1nta1n com !ort level you select
ln sta- Mount *. tor last mstal la,tion "Tmk.

.

50"x84"

our Reg . 17 .27

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$207

5,000 BTU/Hr.

'---THE SAVING PLACE'm-· ...-

asc
4 Days Only

97c

,4~~

Blue Denim
Work Jeans

16-oz·. Flex '
Shampoo

Men's jeans
made for
r u g q e ·d
wear• Poly ester/cotton.

Formul a
choice .

34-oz·. Capri
Shampoo

Glade®Air
Freshener

F:ormula Choice.

'F1. Ol .

Herbal

1111 U,(..., ,

Baby

Our 5..77 Pkg.

Pkg .

Men's Tube
Work Socks

Po lyester/
co tton te e
s hirts or
bri e fs .
Our 2 . 97.
Boys· Sizes;
package of
3 ...... 2.58

6-pair pack·
age of cot·
ton t n ylon
socks . Fit
10· t 3,

Dandruff

·AetWt.

Freshen s.;:_
the air for
days! 6-oz.
sol id . Save 1

Our Reg . 7.44

'46-pr

Men's Knit
Underwear

Moisturizing

&lt;ll tM

Balsam
Strawberry

Lemon Creme

~::'i'..:::::

o • •oo

" "'1\ • •.•

0 1L t~ 01o O"I

Golden Protein
Normal
Dry
Oily

Dis infects .
removes
stains fro m
toilet bowl.
48-oz."

~ ~~~~~

' Fl. Ol.

7

,

f57

···- l37

sonooor
Mirror

· Co1orful
·· Bath Towels

.

14x50" walnut co lor .
F.its conve- ,
n ien tly on
door back.

oz . · bag.

~~--·' Nacho cheese
flavored tor ·
tilla chips.

Your Choice

Bath

2 99

~

Early Spring
Lemon
Rose
Pine
Powder
Freah

Bath Towels

Cotton/polyester print on
Jacquard, 22x42" . Save .

Fringed cotton /polyester . towel,
22x42".
Our 58 ',
12 " Washclotl'l . .. 46'

Hot Cycle • (111

I·
I
I

Middleport, Ohio·

.,

8 white plas·
tic knives ,
forks and

R e usa b I e lfPitt:':if~J!:!\ ~i\!
plasti c.
3 sizes.
9, 10', 14 oz.

$J 94

York Mets and Scott McGregor of
Baltimore will be the alternates . The
elections are subject to the approval
of major league players . .

WED THURS 'FRI SAT

'

V~UGHAN'S

Fittingly right and on
the high side of fashion 1
Choose from fly front .
pleats or shirred detai ling s in must -have
shades. Save now '

Dinnerware

Clear
plasti c.

Misses' Woven
Polyester Pants

Leslie Lyons, .Sean Duncan, and Shawn Hawley. Back
row, I tor, are coaches Danny Robinson, David Leach,
and head coach, Joe Hall. The team finished the season
with a 2 and 7 record.

.

Tumblers

12 "x25 ' foi l
roll for househo ld . Great
savings.

9 i.n . plat es.
·25 pak. ·
M icro·wave
ove n save .

~a!
I
Plastic

67

FOR
U
Aluminum
Wrap Foil

Plates

r~--------------------,--------------~------------_..:.__

In the Junior softball circuit the
April King Jed the winning · Mid'undefeated Salisbury squad posted a
dleport team with a three run home
10-2 victory Qver New Haven. Barb run, !louble, and single, Natalie
Hatfield who now owns an 8-0 record Lambert a three run homer and
picked up the win.
single, Pam Crooks four singles,
Leading hiiters for Salisbury were . Kris Snowden, Cindy Crooks three
.Barb Hatfield with a double and singles, Paula Horton, Kim Fraley,
. :single, Rhonda Zirkle four singles, and Margie Miller all with two
Mary Moore four singles, and Jodie singles. Darlene suffered the loss for
Harrison, Carla King, Denise Mason.
Stegall, Kim Eblin, Teresa Pratt,
Middleport's offense exploded
Darla King, and April Brickles all against New Haven with I8liits and
collected singles for. the winners.
16 runs.
.Coach David Pratt credited Denise
Natalie Lambert again picked up
~legal!, Rhonda Zirkle, and Mary
the victory.
Moore with outstanding defensive
For Middleport Vicki Boyles hit a
play. Vanessa Grady suffered the home run and single, Paula Horton a
loss for the New Haven Team.
double , and two singles, Cindy
Crooks three singles, Paula Swisher,
April King, Natalie Lambert, and
Many summer leagues are coming
to an end, but the local Senior Soft- Margie Miller with two singles
apiece.
ball league is going strong.
T. Clark was the New Haven
• Middleport's Superstars kicked off
hurler. New Haven hitters were P.
!Jle second half of their schedule
W~Jey, T. Allensworth, B. Gorwith two wins, 23-2 over Mason and
don, with two singles, D. Phalen, B.
16-8 over New Haven. Against
Allensworth, J. Clark, M. Gonde,
Mason· Natalie Lambert went the
and R Kimes with one single apiece.
distance for the win · and was
credited with pitching a great game.

--

as~ac

Our 1.43

.

I
I' .
I

~

1
I 888
I
Ea. - Our

I
l97
· .·,
~8.8~ • I
6 .88
Our 2.97
13.8~ I
: •·Amp Battery : Colorful Nylon : Sun f!lter : Amber Or Clear : Choice &amp; Gumout
1.;. ~~a!l,!!~
,a_ ~e!t ~o!'!!'! _1__ ~~ _v~s!':.. _.! -".!'!!J!e.,!I_L!'!!I!.! _-~~ £~~'.

""'"""'! Super Powder

'I

~~88

:

..CVow- 36.88

:

1

Tune-up
-~i!ltz!r___

1

_l _

!a!':.

I
I

Hot Cycle · (1708)

Less
Kodak " IJ/:
Rebate til

J

6~~Reg.
68.97
-

r Choice
Our Reg . 16.44-17.44

Sleek, Safe Hot Cycre ®
Ea . - Our
2.66-2.97

16"

wheel for children .

20''

'

-

H~Rise

Bikes

Boys or girls .

Insect
·Repellent
FRIINDLIEST sirtvfCI
IN TOWN
. .
BIOOIST
BARGAINS
IN 70WN
. . .
·..
.

1·oz." concen·
trated cream or
6-oz ... spray .
~~~J&gt;~~::V Reg. , ever1'
green .
'Fl. oz. '"thl wt.

-CORRECTION-FOR MONDAY JULY· 7 1980 AD
USDA CHOICE
BONELESS. '

CHUCK

ROAST -

~=

LB.

1o!?aa

6-Qt. Picnic
Cooler

With push-button.Jwing-down
lid . -::.ave.
Our ~.88, 2-Gal.
Picnic Jug 2 :97

49.7.

Our
R.eg : .
18 88
ADULT SLEEPING BAG '
Fabric cover, .tricot lining; 3 Jb:acryfic
fill . 33'
'

.

19!~.97
LANTERN
Model220
Great for Camping

0

0/

. /OOFF

.ALL MIRROR .
CAMPING ACCESSORIES

.

11

87
Our17 .67 .

2¥z Qt. Electric Kettle
Great for camping trips .

~!6
6s!~9.66~5~~
Our Reg.

Reg . 10.66

Latex One-coat Flat or Enamel

,l~~h~rceBatteries.

Fast drying , washable wall
paint. 5-yr. durability .

Eveready ~·

9-volt. or 2.:Pack "C" or "D". 1

~~~

..

" 1'

SHOP AND SAVEl

,
'
'

'
I.

"
'

. ,.

'·

\

�'\t'il\if.\.41 ID'\l

Community
Corner
.
.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~~

Tele.v ision
Viewing

byHenrtArnotdand ·Boblee .

Unscramble these four Jumbtes,

.

one letter to each square, to torm
four ordinary words.

Two tour Egypt and Jordan
.By Charlene Hoeflich
crossed over the River on the AllenSentinel staff writer
by Bridge near the traditional site of
Phyllis Hackett and Barbara Jesus· baptism in the Jordan River.
Mullen are back from a two week Then it was on to Jericho where the
tour- of the Holy Land, Egypt, and walls ~arne tumbling down, and
,Jordan, with the highlight of their Elisha's Fountain. The tour included
trip being the Passioo Play at
the Dead Sea, Bethany where they
Oberammergau, a small village in visited the tomb of Lazarus and on
the Bavarian Alps. Both came away the Holy City of Jerusalem.
In Jerusalem, there were viSits to
feeling tha.t it was indeed a masterpiece of dramatic artistry.
• the tomb of Jesus, a walking tour of
Presented every 10 years, the the Old City, a view of Gabbatha and
Passion · Play is given every 10 the pavement of Pilate's judgment
years. It takes almost eight hours to
hall, and on to the Temple area on
perform and the 124 speaking parts Mt. Moriah. They also saw the
are acted by inhabitants of the Chapel of the Ascension, the Garden
village.
of Gethseinane, the room of the Last
The stage is an open-air platform Supper and King David's Tomb,
along with the Shrine where the
and the audience "Is seated in a
roofed auditorium which holds 5,200 . Dead Sea Scroll collection is
spectators. While in Oberam- exhibited.
From there they motored to
mergau, Phyllis and Barb stayed
with a family rather than at a hotel.
Bethlehe"' for a visit to the Church
The two .with a group of 15 others
of the Nativity, viewing the shepherflew from New York to London and
ds' fields all() the fields of Boaz and
then on to Oberammergau. From
Ruth. The trip included visits into
there they went to Munich and then
the land of Samaria, Mt. Tabor,
on to Cairo where · they did lots of
traditional place of the Tran·
sightseeing including the pyramids
sfiguration, and Tiberias with a
cruise on the Sea of Galilee to .Caperof Giza and the Sphinx, with rides on
camelback, and a visit to the Egypnaum, on to CaDd of Galilee, past the
tian Museum which contains the
Hill of Precipitation into Nazareth
treasures of King Tutankhamen. .
and oo to the Jordan River for baptism.
Their sightseeing tours included
Barb· and Phyllis took an optional
the Citadel and the Mohammed Ali
Mosque, as well as historical
tour to Masadli!Beersheba. They
dwellings, and a walk through the ·toured the coastal·area of Haifa amf
bazaar. From there the group flew
then on to Jerusalem where they
took a motor tour of the city. From
from Cairo to Anunan.with a visit to
there they flew back to Lonaon and
the National Archeological Musuem
on home.
and theri on to Tiberius where they

rJ r ()
I GASIBd

BROTHERS -,. The Uhrig Brothers of Chillicothe
will be featured in gospel music at the Mt. Union

Missionary Baptist Church near Carpenter at 7:30p.m.
Sunday. The public is invited.

Mason County news reported
mittee discussed going !o
By Alma Marshall
Harrisville, W. Va. to tour a factory ·
Special correspondent
outlet and shop at the Mall at Vien·
HOMEMAKERS MEET
na.
MASON - Mrs. Cecil Smith
The president, Mrs. John Mar·
presented the lesson, "Bangladesh,
shall,
thanked Mrs. Joyce Carson for
The Land of Green Horizons," when
the
contribution
to the club of·$31.92
the Mason Extension Homemakers
from bottle caps.
held a covered dish dinner for their
June meeting at the Virgil A. Lewis · . Those attending the potluck dinner
included Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mrs. ·
historic home in Mason.
John Marshall, Mrs. George Carson,
Mrs. Lester Johnson presented the
Mrs. Wiilialjl Zerkle, Mrs. Laurene
devotionals which followed the
Lewis, Mrs. Sarah Willis, Mrs.
Pledge of Allegiance. She used
Sarah Spencer, Mrs. Matilda Noble,
Hevelatio11 chapter 20, 1-4th verses
Mrs. Clara Wiliams, Mrs. Ramond
and 7·11th verses. Mrs. Laurene
Sydenstricker, Mrs. Lea Belcher
Lewis read Senator Byrd's
and Mrs. Hazel Smith.
published article, "Foundation of
NEW ARRIVAL
Freedom.''
.
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. John
Mrs. Laurene Lewis, a club memDillon, Mason, announced the birth
ber and Mason County Belle, gave a
of a daughter at Plea8ant Valley
report on her venture and stay at
Glenville, W, Va. where . she
Hospital June II, 1980. The infant
wsa named Carmen Renee. She
represented Ma~n County at the
weighed 7 pounds 9'&gt;2 ounces and
Folk Festival. There were 39 Belles
was 22 inches long.
.
out of 55 counties present for the anMaternal grandpaents are Mr.
nual festival.
and Mrs. Walter Werry, Mason, and
Mrs. Sarah Spencer of the Health
paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Conunittee ask~d club members if
Mrs. Kenneth Dillon, Mason.
they had had their check-up and
Maternal great-grandmother is
reported the results.
Mrs. Charles J. Werry, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Spencer of the tour com·

ASTRO
GRAPH
July 9, 1980
Something in which )'uu have put quite a bit of

£ailh, bul have not

~en

2:1blc to finalize, could

come to fruitiun this ocming year. Don't to&amp;; in
the towel if you suffer a fe w disappoinLinenl.'i .

CANCER ·!June 21-Jtlly 221 Yuur desire tu help
pt!rsons yuuluve tod&lt;t}' is a nuble asse~ . However,
don't make those yuu aid f~l ubligt~ted or indebted tu yuu for your good dt't'tis. Roml;lncc,
tr~t vel. luck, resources, possible pilh11ls and
t.:l:lrce r for the coming muuth.'i art: all discu~
in your Astm-Graph, which begins wjth your birthday. Mail Sl fur t!I!.Ch to Astru-Gre~ph, Box 489,
Radio City Station, N. V. 10019. Be bUrt! to Spt!Ctfy
birth date,
LEO (July 23-Aug. ~~) Your hopes and dreams
l,udaY may waiver between wishful thinking-ttml
llt!l!,citive t:lllremisrn . Neither is Lhe right attitude, but a log!ce~ las.sessment is.
VIRGO !Sept. 23-0cl. :m Yuu arc far more
ca~ blc today than you arc likely to gtvc yourself
credit fur . lnstclld of avoiding challe n ~es, meet
them head-on.
LIHRA !Sept. Zl·(h-1. 23) You 're apt to h1:1ve a
few proL lem~ today , but who doesn't ? Fortunately, they are mana~ea bl e if you act as you
•did in successful past experiences.
SCORPIO !Oct. 21-Nov. 2U J oint ventures with
persons who were lucky fur you previously are
likt!ly to be su a~ain today. Exneriences witl1 individuals ' who were unluckY wiU also be
repeaters.

Helen Help Us

.JVew boyfriend banishes
all (Jld girlfriends

SAGmARIUS !Nov. %3-Dec. 21) This is nut a
~;:ooc.J day to n :qucst favors from one you know on
a purely busmesslike basis. Pals will come
throuKh lor you, but other types of contrai.:ls nmy

CA!"__'AQ!_)l:~Y
~f1T'S

GeT

ei\5Y, MY ~OY-- IT'' SEEN
NICe I&lt;NOWINI:I YOU! .

TO
rHe &amp;OTTOM
DOWN

LINe. J.P.~

.:

POMEROY - · Kimbirly ' Sue
.Jones, daughter of Mr., and Mrs.
Richard Jones, Pomeroy, has been
awarded a full tuition scholarhsip by
the Cincinnati Conservatory ti
Music.
,, Miss Jones, who received her
bachelor of music education degree
from Morehead State ·university ,
Morehead, Ky., · this spring, will
begin her wort&lt; on a master's degree
at the Cincinnati Conservatory in
,September. She will continue her
work in.. piano, accompaniment, and
music education .
At Morehead State University,
Miss Jones was a member of Kappa
Delta Pi, educational honor society,
Gamma Beta Phi, national honor .
society, was selected to appear in
the National Dean's List, was
recipient of the Helen F. Fulbright
Music Education Citation, and for
the spring semester was placed on
the President's List for Academic
Acluevement having received a 4.0.
Miss Jones studied piano under
Mrs. Patrick Lochary, Pomeroy,
and was the student of Carl Payne
while at Morehead. ·
·

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Barnhart, and Mrs. William Barnhart,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
Pomeroy, and the maternal -grand·
of a son, Wayne Allen, on June 26 at , parents are Mr. and,. Mrs. William
St. Josepl1 Hospital in Parkersburg, Thornton, Dayton, and Mrs. Mabel
W. Va. The -baby weighed 10 pounds, · Patton of Fontana, Calif.
one ounce, and was 21 inches lung.
Mr. and Mrs. Barnhart have a
Paternal grandparents arc Mr.
fivt,_ycar old daughter, Jennifer.

.

'

I

~

form the surp'rtse answer, as suggitSiod by the above cartoon.

FRIENDS Guest: Neil Sedaka .

I I)

virtuoso harmonica player. Hoat:
Hugh Downs . (Closed Captioned)

G2i 81 ABC NEWS

What to say to an Overly talkCJtlve· person -

8:58 CD NEWS UPDATE

SKIP THE LIP

7:00

7-8·80 .

.K108732

+Q·4

. +J
WEST

ANNIE

...THIS IS QUITE AN.
HONOR FOR YOU, MRS.

1

GoODNESS!
THE . HA HA '"
FLOI'iERS! VERY FEI'i
BIG CHEESE
PEOPLE GET TO SEE OF "BIG CHEESE
INTERNATIONAL"
MR . BANGAVEL!
HIMSELF? ...

HEY!
LEMME CO

ER - AWORD OF CAUTIOH .-EVEN IF
~R. BANGAVEL HAD A SENSE
OF HUMOR ~-WHICH HE
NOT- HE'D BE SICK TO
DEATH OF THAT LIHE .

EAST
+A8432

+6

•s

.Q.S
'+K1052

+98 7
+Q 10 6 5

+A9. 8713

TH' TALI\IH',

SOUTH

A1'1RIGHT ~

+QJ7
.AJ94
+AJ63

SIDDOI'IN!

+K2

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
North

West

East

Soutb

2.

I NT

Pass
Pass
. Pass

Pass
Pass

Opening lead:+

Pass

~

IT'S OBVIOUS SOME ·

1HING DID! THEY HEMED OUT OF THE CAN)ON
IN A HURRY. ••

By Oswald JacQby
!"'d Alaa Sontag
West, ~a process of elimination, hit upon the good
spade lead. Leading a singleton into the notrump bidder
can often be disastrous, but on
this hand no other lead looked
promising.
East won the opening spade
lead with the ace and immediaq,ly returned the spade four,
which West ruffed . .West now
did some addition. He had
nine points and dummy had

GASOLINE ALLEY

It's been
Lil4's Irma
Lil4 can't know what's buried for sa4 the4 is a
inside that bus, Melba! fiftL! LJears 1 case in ther'!

Did somebod4
mention
food?

Comes Summer' Swing info· summer wiih favorlte Mar1inMull .ln zany
sketches, this eXclusive aalutea
the ·sunniest end funniest daY.&amp; ot

nine. South had promised l6 to
18 points for his one notrump
opening bid and East had
already turned up with an ace.
· There was room in the East
hand for at most a king. Did
East have the king.~&gt;f clubs? If
he did, West could underlead
his ace to East's king and get
another spade ruff . .Sqt West
realized that East would have
returned a lower spade. than
the four if he had a· potential
club entry. Consequently,
West made a passive heart
return which declarer won in
his hand.
Now it was declarer's turn
to think. If East had the club
ace, · dummy's potential diamond loser could be discarded ·
on declarer's club king. All of
this added up to a 75 percent
chance. Declarer could first
play clubs, and if West had the
ace, . later ;try a diamond
finesse.
Then it occurred to South - ·
how could East have the club
ace? If h~ had it, he would
have led the deuce of spades
for a suit preference signal at
trick two.
. Declarer then found the
· solution. He played two more
·rounds of spades and pitched
his low club. Then be led the
jack of clubs to his singleton
klng which West won. West
was now endplayed. Either a
diamond lead away from his
king or a club, which would '
yield a ruff and sluff, would
allow declarer to !llake the
game.
Both sides had played
perfectly.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

summer .

ALLIN THE FAMILY
SHA NA NA
.
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
DIIJ JOKER'S WILD
(j) DICK CA~ETT SHOW
(llJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
(l%i IIi) SHA NA NA Guelt: Steve
Allen.
7:58 CD NEWS UPDATE
·
1):00 (I) UCD THE MISADVENTURES
OF SHERIFF LOBO Sheriff Lobo'l
(I)
(j)
C!)

concern for hi smother, who is sup· ·
pos8dly dyirig,leadfi him to sell his
services to •a con man who uaea
beautiful women'to bilk upstanding
citizens . (Repeat; 60mina.)

CD ORAL ROBERTS

(I) MOVIE -(DRAMA-ROMANCE)
••• "An Affair to Remember"

1V57
CII G2i m MAJOR LEAGUE BA·
SEBALL ALL-STAR GAME ABC

Sport a will provide live coverage of
. this all·star game between the Na·
tiona I League and the American
leaguefromOodgerStadjuminlos
Angeles . (3 hra ., 15 mins.)

D IIJ THE WHITE SHADOW

Young Thorpe must make a unique
choice between basketball and art
as his best bet for future stardom.
(Re_R!'at; eo mins.)
CIJUIJ NOVA 'Bridge That Spanned
the World' Thedeveloprnent of iron·
making is traced as it relatee to the
first iron bridge, castatCoaibrook·
dale, England. (CioeedCaptloned)
~Omine.)

®) JAMES ROBISON SPECIAL
8:30 CD GOOD NEWS
(]) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ••'"'
"PromiHIIn The Dark"

8:58 (]) NEWS UPDATE
11:00 CilR CD TUESDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES 'Battered' 1978
Stare: Karen Grassle , MikeFarrell.

CD 700CLUB
DCil®lTUI!SDAYNIGHTMOVIE '
' A Special Kind Of Love' 1978
Stars: Charles Durning, Irene Te-

drow .
(j) (jj)

~rur•"tll"
L "
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

3t Make eyes (at)

hou sa hold divided by b itterneae
and jealousy. (Closed Captioned)

1 Window

WINNIE
I STILL
CAN
'T TELL
117E/1177CAL TWINS ...
THEM
APAIU!
BUT WHO'S WHO?
OKAY, 50 YOU'RE

I 'M 17/ETER.••
AND HE ':5

PETER/

PAPPY! CJON'T

WHIC::H ONE OF
YOU CAUS E!/ MY

HIM/II AND HE'S

OAU6HTER 50

OF THING BEFORE,

MU CH PAIN?

IXJNE 11'15 50RT

HIT HIM! IT'S MY
FAULl: TOO! L..I

WHEN 11 SUI1EI7 HIS LEV /ffM QN...
NOT KNOWIN0 HE
CONVENIENCE !
WAS MARRIEP}

feGridiron
support
number
5 Meaning
u Sambar, e.g.
11Gan:on's
DOWN
object
1 Pick at
1% More
a banjo
penetrating Z Incensed
13 Velocity
3 Novel idea
Yesterday's
14 Slip b)l
CSoap
10
ParadolWI'e
15 Colorado
substance
Indian
5Vlalonary
11 Panegyrize
19 Irish fairies
11 Chemistry
goals
I Toast for
setting
ZZ Political .
.• 17 Resident
.a soprano
cartoonist
of (suffix)
7 Shade ol green Z3 Preas
18 Ben-Bur's
I Was stalu&amp;quo
statement
enemy
oriented
Z4 Without end
ZO- transit ... I Unruly
25 "Betty-"
21 Consequently
ZZ Russian
river
Z3 "I do': It &amp;glllinl;.-f-t--t!5 V.M.I. studentb-+-+N To be: Fr.
%7 Pear variety +:-+-'-lZI Hawaiian
hospitality
symbol
Z9 Bubbled, as
. if boiling

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

BARNEY

'IOU LOW·.OOWN, ·
CARD·PLA'iiN'
VARMINT!!

THAR'S A MIXED·UP PAIR
IF I EV6R SEEI\J ONE

Ot: LUKEY'S IN
TH' DOGHOUSE
AN' ELVINEV'S
BARKIN' HER
HEAD OFF

~mins . )

1Cl:OO I1J
-

Anlwer
virtuoso harmonica player. Host:
%7 Much
•
Hugh OoW.s. (Closed Captioned)
10:58 (]) NEWS UPDATE
traveled, 11:00 (I) II CD 0 (j) ®) NEWS
as a !18th
CD TODAY IN B.IBLE PROPHECY •
Z9 Show
~ ~~~~~:~~AGE
. segment
(jj) OICK CAVETT SHOW
300straclze 11:16 CIJGI!m NEWS
11:28 (])NEWS UPDATE
31Sidetrack 11 :30 CIJIICD THETDNIGHTSHOW
31 Ullmann
'Best Of Carson' Guest a: Mary
37 Turf
Tyler Moore , Anthony Newley, · :
Beverly Johnson. (Repeat; 90 •
mine.)

CD ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
CII MOVIE -(DRAMA) ·~· "Ap~lntmont With Donger" 11151
IIJ (I)
CBS LATE MDVII! .
'CANNON: Night Flight To Murder'
De vid Hedison guest atara a e a FA A.
inspector who helps.track a milling eirllnercontainlnQ $3 mlllioh In
securities . (Repeat) 'BARNABY
JONES : Fraiernity 01 Thievea' •
Stare: Budd¥ Ebaen , Bradford
Dillman.

I1J ABC CAPnONED NEWs
®J . MOVIE -(CLASSIC-DRAMA)
•••• "Camille" 1936

11:45 ill Gil 81
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
12:05 CII
TUESDAY MOVIE OF
THE WEEK
12:30 (])MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••'"'

(!)).

33He's no
gentleman
34 Tool
. 35 Stocking .
· 3'7 ExCited state
38 Doctor's
· !IO!uUon

· "The Chin• Syndrome" 1i7i

1:00 Cilll TOMORROW
(]) CHARISMA
CD NEWS
1:26 CII NEWS
1:30 (]) OLDTIMEGOSPELHOUR
CII MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) ••

)
Ia

has~kep!

lrom

me CtJtSide WCt"ld

I! N;'IJ

~!WI I ,W

IJI,IJI'IIIIi .

IT'5 THE 11 60 LOOK II
MARCIE ... IT'LL 61VE ME
A NEW IMAGE ... WHEN
PEOPLE 5EE

WELL, WHAT DOES

WINDOW ON THE WORLD

'Saboteur of Telemark'
(llJ NEWS

10:28 CD NEWS UPDATE
10:3D CD FAITH 20
ffiMOVIE-(DRAMAt••'"' "Cuba"
1979
(I) LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
(llJ OVER EASY Guest:Larry Adler,

3ZSea bird

PEANUTS

FLAMBARDS 'Christina' In

thiapremiereeplaode, Chrlatjna,
an orphan since childhood, arrives
at Ffambarda tolivewlth her Uncle
Rus selland hercousins William and
Mark. S'et in the early 1900s, the
series tells the story of an orphan
girl sent to live in a male dominated

DAihl"'dtYPTOQUO'fE- Here's how to work It:

fi:r- ttree tu'd-ed years, ·
a ten~ 1'110 secte1

(I) U

CROSS WITS
(]) GREAT BAN~NA PIE CAPER
Cii HOGAN'S HEROES
Cii Gil ID FACE THE MUSIC
CD LUCY SHOW
D Cil TIC TAC DO\)GH
I1J MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
®)NEWS ,
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 (I) . U ®J
HOLLYWOOD
SOUARES
CD FAITH THAT UVES
I]) COMEDY TONIGHT 'Here

Solid bridge on all sides
NORTH

I LOVE LUCY
CAROL BURNETT . AND

D()J®l CBS NEWS
I1J WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
.
(jj) OVER EASYGue$1: Larry Adlar,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

+K 10 9!

·

ayers.

Now arrange the cirded letters to

(Answers tomorrow!
Jumbles: PI LOT BISON APATHY TALKER
Answer:

baaebal_l action ·an'd

summarize the criticel playa and

BRIDGE

.

Baby arrives
'-

week's

Jumblt look No. 14, conttlnlng 110 puulll, II IVIIIIbll f«$1.75 poetpald
tram Jumble, c/o thl1 newtptlptlr, BOK ~. Norwoocl, N.J. 07148.1nclucle)lour
name, addretl, zip codt and make checks payablt to Ntwsptptrbookt .

turns two

'

t
) (J )

Yesterday's

Kimberly jones
. ' Receives scholarship

Miss Sisson

LET'S SHANGHAI ALL THE FROGS - That was the theme used by .
Cub Scout Pack 235, Chester, for their float in the Regatta parade. On the
float were Chris LeDeaux, Tony, Todd and Jennifer Lee, Sherri, David
and Carol King, Floyd, Matthew and Kelly Ridenour, David King, Brian
Beeler, Timmy Clark, David Casto, Tom, Linda, Tommy and Teresa
Perry, Frank, JoAnn, Terry and Rodney Newsome, and Mony Wood. · ·

nant: Halfway To the World ·s eries'
This weekly baseball aeries atepa
I.!P to bat for ita third eeaaon. Len
Berman and Maury. Wills recap the

~CYRIKT

i

Family cookout held

Social Calendar

7- 8

Answer:IITXXII )troN(X I

··· '

BYHELENANDSUEBOTTEL
advice colwnnist because I'm so
Special correspondents .
good at helping them with their
llOL
HELEN
AND
SUE:
•problems. So how come I can't solve
CAPRICQRN to«. 22-Jan. 191 GUCIIs may
take a trine lonHer to achieve today, but they are
Mfbest girlfriend has a new guy. my own? Do you have that trouble
reac hable. Treat obt:~tacles as skpping stones,
He's told her to break up with me too, Helen or Sue? .Would you give
not r~dblocks.
AQUARIUS jJan. !0-Feb. 191 We all have
and her other girlfriends because .he yourself the advice you give others
(rmlts IJut 1111 f.lllt: &lt;tppreuiates hclvin15 them called
doesn't like us. (No reason - we're -and would you take it?
to their 11ttention in front of others. Should you
feel the need to criticize one you love , do so
pretty likable people.)
My problem: I really care about
p~ivately .
. So she's staying away from us .. Rick and I guess he feels the same
PISCES lFeb. 2~Marcb 20) Associates may
nut fully understcmd what you are trying to
We've been friends for 12 years and I for me, otherwise he wouldn't be
at• hi!!Ve today . They could get in your w~ty. It's
hate to lose her. What do you think of going with. me. But he never exbest wdo what needsdoin~ without assistance.
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 19 I Be pre~ red and
a f~Jlow like this, and what should presses his feelings and I'm afraid .
willing to adjust y!Jur thinking · today if an
we do? - REJECTED
as;ociate'S ideas are better than yours. Result:!
to. I don't want a big commitment or
coun t far mvre than authorship.
anything,
but I don't like iilsecurity
TAURUS jAprll ZO.May ZO I Your liUiterial
REJECTED:
either. Am I silly for wanting to
aspects took Hood today, but thin~s won't be hanI'd say this fellow is either very in- know where I stand, and should I tell
ded to you on 11 silver platter~ you 're primed to
work hflrd fur your rewards, me)" II be t}\ ~re.
reading from the Upper Room,
secure
or suspicious, jealous or him? -BAFFLED
GemJnl I May U-June 20) In situation:; where
"Silencing Slander." For roll call you're ca lled ujxm to lead or direct others today,
overpossessive, and perhaps all DEAR BATTLED:
be neither too harsh nor lou ler1icnl. Find the
member exchanged plants. The proper
four. Let's hope your friend soon
middle ~ruund .
Maybe Rick hides his feelings
program eneitled " Roses Now and
realizes that having an oppressive because he also is afraid to show '
Forever" was given by Mrs. Lois ·
boyfriend is about as much fun as them. Girls don't have a corner on
fi
Walker.
being crushed under a large rock. insecurity, you know.
A nge!a and Andrea Sisson
Mrs. Janet Bolin made a flower
HELEN
So be honest: tell him you like him
arrangement using roses and
A family cookout was held at the
a lot, in a friendly, non-mushy way.
· weathered
wood .
Other
REJECTED :
home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hill, Sr.
Taking the initiative ts women's
arrangements on the theme,
What should you do? Be as un- Mght these days. - SUE
at Letart Falls on July I in honor of
'' Beauty and the Beast" using roses
their son, Paul Hill, Jr., who was derstanding and uncritical as her
and weathered wood were displayed
boyfriend- isn't. And stand by until hEAR B.:
celebrating his 15th birthday.
by Lois Walker and Charlotte
she
outgrows him. - SUE Paul, Jr. was presented a cake
· I agree with Sue, but you're right,
Wilford.
iced in white with a fishing scene
The second birthday of Angela
Baffled, I'd have a hard time taking
Club members will attend the
done in blue and white, inscribed DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
my own advice here. You see, my
Sisson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Mountaineer Dinenr Theatre on July
My little sister and I still play with generation of women was raised to
with "Happy Birthday, Paul." He
Fred Sisson, Galion, was observed
25. The traveling prize was won by
Barbie
dolls. We're big·boned and "sit and wait, keep men guessing,
also received gifts and money.
Sunday with a cookout at the home
Mrs. Marjorie Davis, and Mrs. Joan
husky, and it makes us feel bad don't let 'em know how you feel until
The evening was spent socializing
of Mr. and Mrs. Rollin ·Radford,
Fetty won the door prize.
seeing all those slim dolls with nice they 'say sil first." I tell others this
and playing games.
.
Rock Springs Road.
figures.
Attending were his parents, Mr.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Fred
attitude is basically dishonest, but
How come they doo 't make these thank goodness (being happily marand Mrs. Paul Hill, Sr.; grand··
Sisson and daughter, Andrea, Tim
dress-up dolls in "chubby" sizes, ried) I needn't prove it personally.
parents, Harry and Katie Hill, Mrs.
and Rose Sisson, grandparents, Mr.
too, so that heavy kids wouldn't feel -HEl-LEN
Kathryn Hill and children, Tina and
.
and Mrs. Archie Swartz, Mr. and ,
left out? - DISCRIMINEE
Jarrod, Charlie Hill and children,
Mrs. Kenneth Buckley, Tammy and;
DEAR
DIS:
Tommy and Jodi, George Hill and
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject
Tyson, Mrs. Ava Zo Sisson, the host
Good question. Why don't you ask for discusion, tw~generation style?
daughter, Mandy, Brenda Glenn, .
and hostess and their daughter,
it
of a doll manufacturer? Perhaps Direct your questions to either Sue Sally. A Raggedy Ann theme was
Beverly, Jodi and Jamie Dummins,
this might be the start of a whole or Helen Batte! .-! or both, if you
Lori Wolfe, and Kyle Wickline, and
carried out for the party.
ne)l' line. - HELEN AND SUE
guest of honor, Paul Hill, Jr.
want a· combination motherAndrea Sisson visited here with
daughter answer - in care of this her grandparents for several days
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
newspaper.)
before being joined by her parents
My friends tell me I should be an
and sister on June 27 for a week's
ON HONOR ROLL
visit. The family returned to Galion •
Five Meigs Countians were.named
Monday.
to
th,e
Ohio
State
University
spring
. TUESDAY
quarter. honor roll. Those honored
MEIG.S CHAPTER 53, D.A.V.
. Coucl\. Lisa Colette Dye, Laura ·
must receive a grade point average
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at chapSOCIAL SATURDAY
Ellen Hoover, Dawn Renee Sorden,
·of at least 3.5 and must be enrolled
ter home on Butternut Ave.,
An old-fashioned ice cream social for at least 12 credit hours. The local
all ~f Pomeroy, and Brice En.:in ·
Pomeroy.
will be held Saturday at 5 p.m. at group named include Richard Alan . Hart, Racine.
Red Crispins Corner between the
Methodist Church and the post office
WEDNESDAY
in
Long Bottom. Homemade ice
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
cream,
baked gOOIIs, hot dogs, and
Lions Club meeting, noon WedBARGAtN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
other refreshlnents will be sold.
A.LL SEAlS JUST S t.50
nesday, at Meigs Inn.
Local
bands
and
vocal
groups
will
SPECIAL MEETING, Pomeroy
Lodge 164. F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:30 entertain. The event is sponsored by
the Long Bottom Community
p.m. with work in fellowcraft
Association.
degree.

r---

t
Ill J

EVENING
6:00 CIJ D CD D(])®Jil2lm NEWS
CD ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
b!.OINED IN PROGRESS)
lU ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
(j) ABC NEWS .
(j)(jj) ZOOM
6:30 CIJ D CD NBC NEWS
I]) BASEBALL 'Race For the Pen·

tRHODIA

Rutland Gardeners
elect new rJfficers
New officers were elected at the ·
"I:bursday night meeting of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners held at
the lake house .of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Snpwden. Mr. Snowden
prepared a dinner for the garden
club members.
Officers elected were Mrs. Lois
Walker, president; Mrs. Joan Fetty,
vice president; Mrs. Janet Bolin,
treasurer; and Mrs. Margaret Edwards, secretary.
Plans were made for the
celebration of the 20th .anniversary
of the club in August. Charter members no longer active with the club
will be invited to the Aug. 27
meeting.
Mrs. Snowden gave devotions

0

I l

w

JULY 8, 11180

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

.

· One letter limply 1tanda for another. In this 11mple A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc: Single letters,
apoatrophea, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each doy the code letters are dilrerent. ·
,

· "OuHn Of The S.aa" HMO

2:00 ®&gt;I BELIEVE
2:0~ G2ie NEWS
2:30 (]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
3:20 CII MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE! •'"'
"Caflfornla" 1981
·
4:00· (]) 700 CLUB .
•:55 Cii UNTOUCHABLES
~:30 CD JESUS IS THE ANSWER

CRYPTOQ.UOTES

OOGI&lt;NOW
YWMD
GQW '

LXT

EQW

ITGYPWBFT

y z

H Y I LX

HYILX

BW

ETW.- GQIMDMT
Yeaterday'a Cryptoquo&amp;e: WISDOM lS THE POWER TO 'p()T
OUR TIME AND OUR KNOWLEDGE TO PROPER USE.THOMAS WATSON

.,

,.

.

VOLCANOES

L()S ANG.E;LES.(AP) - .Some 50 ·

volcanoes have .been active in the
U.S. during recorded history, almost
all In the Cascade· mountains of
California, Wllllhington, Oregon, on
the Alaska' peninsula and tl)e
Aleutian and Hawaiian islands.

�'\t'il\if.\.41 ID'\l

Community
Corner
.
.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~~

Tele.v ision
Viewing

byHenrtArnotdand ·Boblee .

Unscramble these four Jumbtes,

.

one letter to each square, to torm
four ordinary words.

Two tour Egypt and Jordan
.By Charlene Hoeflich
crossed over the River on the AllenSentinel staff writer
by Bridge near the traditional site of
Phyllis Hackett and Barbara Jesus· baptism in the Jordan River.
Mullen are back from a two week Then it was on to Jericho where the
tour- of the Holy Land, Egypt, and walls ~arne tumbling down, and
,Jordan, with the highlight of their Elisha's Fountain. The tour included
trip being the Passioo Play at
the Dead Sea, Bethany where they
Oberammergau, a small village in visited the tomb of Lazarus and on
the Bavarian Alps. Both came away the Holy City of Jerusalem.
In Jerusalem, there were viSits to
feeling tha.t it was indeed a masterpiece of dramatic artistry.
• the tomb of Jesus, a walking tour of
Presented every 10 years, the the Old City, a view of Gabbatha and
Passion · Play is given every 10 the pavement of Pilate's judgment
years. It takes almost eight hours to
hall, and on to the Temple area on
perform and the 124 speaking parts Mt. Moriah. They also saw the
are acted by inhabitants of the Chapel of the Ascension, the Garden
village.
of Gethseinane, the room of the Last
The stage is an open-air platform Supper and King David's Tomb,
along with the Shrine where the
and the audience "Is seated in a
roofed auditorium which holds 5,200 . Dead Sea Scroll collection is
spectators. While in Oberam- exhibited.
From there they motored to
mergau, Phyllis and Barb stayed
with a family rather than at a hotel.
Bethlehe"' for a visit to the Church
The two .with a group of 15 others
of the Nativity, viewing the shepherflew from New York to London and
ds' fields all() the fields of Boaz and
then on to Oberammergau. From
Ruth. The trip included visits into
there they went to Munich and then
the land of Samaria, Mt. Tabor,
on to Cairo where · they did lots of
traditional place of the Tran·
sightseeing including the pyramids
sfiguration, and Tiberias with a
cruise on the Sea of Galilee to .Caperof Giza and the Sphinx, with rides on
camelback, and a visit to the Egypnaum, on to CaDd of Galilee, past the
tian Museum which contains the
Hill of Precipitation into Nazareth
treasures of King Tutankhamen. .
and oo to the Jordan River for baptism.
Their sightseeing tours included
Barb· and Phyllis took an optional
the Citadel and the Mohammed Ali
Mosque, as well as historical
tour to Masadli!Beersheba. They
dwellings, and a walk through the ·toured the coastal·area of Haifa amf
bazaar. From there the group flew
then on to Jerusalem where they
took a motor tour of the city. From
from Cairo to Anunan.with a visit to
there they flew back to Lonaon and
the National Archeological Musuem
on home.
and theri on to Tiberius where they

rJ r ()
I GASIBd

BROTHERS -,. The Uhrig Brothers of Chillicothe
will be featured in gospel music at the Mt. Union

Missionary Baptist Church near Carpenter at 7:30p.m.
Sunday. The public is invited.

Mason County news reported
mittee discussed going !o
By Alma Marshall
Harrisville, W. Va. to tour a factory ·
Special correspondent
outlet and shop at the Mall at Vien·
HOMEMAKERS MEET
na.
MASON - Mrs. Cecil Smith
The president, Mrs. John Mar·
presented the lesson, "Bangladesh,
shall,
thanked Mrs. Joyce Carson for
The Land of Green Horizons," when
the
contribution
to the club of·$31.92
the Mason Extension Homemakers
from bottle caps.
held a covered dish dinner for their
June meeting at the Virgil A. Lewis · . Those attending the potluck dinner
included Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mrs. ·
historic home in Mason.
John Marshall, Mrs. George Carson,
Mrs. Lester Johnson presented the
Mrs. Wiilialjl Zerkle, Mrs. Laurene
devotionals which followed the
Lewis, Mrs. Sarah Willis, Mrs.
Pledge of Allegiance. She used
Sarah Spencer, Mrs. Matilda Noble,
Hevelatio11 chapter 20, 1-4th verses
Mrs. Clara Wiliams, Mrs. Ramond
and 7·11th verses. Mrs. Laurene
Sydenstricker, Mrs. Lea Belcher
Lewis read Senator Byrd's
and Mrs. Hazel Smith.
published article, "Foundation of
NEW ARRIVAL
Freedom.''
.
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. John
Mrs. Laurene Lewis, a club memDillon, Mason, announced the birth
ber and Mason County Belle, gave a
of a daughter at Plea8ant Valley
report on her venture and stay at
Glenville, W, Va. where . she
Hospital June II, 1980. The infant
wsa named Carmen Renee. She
represented Ma~n County at the
weighed 7 pounds 9'&gt;2 ounces and
Folk Festival. There were 39 Belles
was 22 inches long.
.
out of 55 counties present for the anMaternal grandpaents are Mr.
nual festival.
and Mrs. Walter Werry, Mason, and
Mrs. Sarah Spencer of the Health
paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Conunittee ask~d club members if
Mrs. Kenneth Dillon, Mason.
they had had their check-up and
Maternal great-grandmother is
reported the results.
Mrs. Charles J. Werry, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Spencer of the tour com·

ASTRO
GRAPH
July 9, 1980
Something in which )'uu have put quite a bit of

£ailh, bul have not

~en

2:1blc to finalize, could

come to fruitiun this ocming year. Don't to&amp;; in
the towel if you suffer a fe w disappoinLinenl.'i .

CANCER ·!June 21-Jtlly 221 Yuur desire tu help
pt!rsons yuuluve tod&lt;t}' is a nuble asse~ . However,
don't make those yuu aid f~l ubligt~ted or indebted tu yuu for your good dt't'tis. Roml;lncc,
tr~t vel. luck, resources, possible pilh11ls and
t.:l:lrce r for the coming muuth.'i art: all discu~
in your Astm-Graph, which begins wjth your birthday. Mail Sl fur t!I!.Ch to Astru-Gre~ph, Box 489,
Radio City Station, N. V. 10019. Be bUrt! to Spt!Ctfy
birth date,
LEO (July 23-Aug. ~~) Your hopes and dreams
l,udaY may waiver between wishful thinking-ttml
llt!l!,citive t:lllremisrn . Neither is Lhe right attitude, but a log!ce~ las.sessment is.
VIRGO !Sept. 23-0cl. :m Yuu arc far more
ca~ blc today than you arc likely to gtvc yourself
credit fur . lnstclld of avoiding challe n ~es, meet
them head-on.
LIHRA !Sept. Zl·(h-1. 23) You 're apt to h1:1ve a
few proL lem~ today , but who doesn't ? Fortunately, they are mana~ea bl e if you act as you
•did in successful past experiences.
SCORPIO !Oct. 21-Nov. 2U J oint ventures with
persons who were lucky fur you previously are
likt!ly to be su a~ain today. Exneriences witl1 individuals ' who were unluckY wiU also be
repeaters.

Helen Help Us

.JVew boyfriend banishes
all (Jld girlfriends

SAGmARIUS !Nov. %3-Dec. 21) This is nut a
~;:ooc.J day to n :qucst favors from one you know on
a purely busmesslike basis. Pals will come
throuKh lor you, but other types of contrai.:ls nmy

CA!"__'AQ!_)l:~Y
~f1T'S

GeT

ei\5Y, MY ~OY-- IT'' SEEN
NICe I&lt;NOWINI:I YOU! .

TO
rHe &amp;OTTOM
DOWN

LINe. J.P.~

.:

POMEROY - · Kimbirly ' Sue
.Jones, daughter of Mr., and Mrs.
Richard Jones, Pomeroy, has been
awarded a full tuition scholarhsip by
the Cincinnati Conservatory ti
Music.
,, Miss Jones, who received her
bachelor of music education degree
from Morehead State ·university ,
Morehead, Ky., · this spring, will
begin her wort&lt; on a master's degree
at the Cincinnati Conservatory in
,September. She will continue her
work in.. piano, accompaniment, and
music education .
At Morehead State University,
Miss Jones was a member of Kappa
Delta Pi, educational honor society,
Gamma Beta Phi, national honor .
society, was selected to appear in
the National Dean's List, was
recipient of the Helen F. Fulbright
Music Education Citation, and for
the spring semester was placed on
the President's List for Academic
Acluevement having received a 4.0.
Miss Jones studied piano under
Mrs. Patrick Lochary, Pomeroy,
and was the student of Carl Payne
while at Morehead. ·
·

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Barnhart, and Mrs. William Barnhart,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
Pomeroy, and the maternal -grand·
of a son, Wayne Allen, on June 26 at , parents are Mr. and,. Mrs. William
St. Josepl1 Hospital in Parkersburg, Thornton, Dayton, and Mrs. Mabel
W. Va. The -baby weighed 10 pounds, · Patton of Fontana, Calif.
one ounce, and was 21 inches lung.
Mr. and Mrs. Barnhart have a
Paternal grandparents arc Mr.
fivt,_ycar old daughter, Jennifer.

.

'

I

~

form the surp'rtse answer, as suggitSiod by the above cartoon.

FRIENDS Guest: Neil Sedaka .

I I)

virtuoso harmonica player. Hoat:
Hugh Downs . (Closed Captioned)

G2i 81 ABC NEWS

What to say to an Overly talkCJtlve· person -

8:58 CD NEWS UPDATE

SKIP THE LIP

7:00

7-8·80 .

.K108732

+Q·4

. +J
WEST

ANNIE

...THIS IS QUITE AN.
HONOR FOR YOU, MRS.

1

GoODNESS!
THE . HA HA '"
FLOI'iERS! VERY FEI'i
BIG CHEESE
PEOPLE GET TO SEE OF "BIG CHEESE
INTERNATIONAL"
MR . BANGAVEL!
HIMSELF? ...

HEY!
LEMME CO

ER - AWORD OF CAUTIOH .-EVEN IF
~R. BANGAVEL HAD A SENSE
OF HUMOR ~-WHICH HE
NOT- HE'D BE SICK TO
DEATH OF THAT LIHE .

EAST
+A8432

+6

•s

.Q.S
'+K1052

+98 7
+Q 10 6 5

+A9. 8713

TH' TALI\IH',

SOUTH

A1'1RIGHT ~

+QJ7
.AJ94
+AJ63

SIDDOI'IN!

+K2

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
North

West

East

Soutb

2.

I NT

Pass
Pass
. Pass

Pass
Pass

Opening lead:+

Pass

~

IT'S OBVIOUS SOME ·

1HING DID! THEY HEMED OUT OF THE CAN)ON
IN A HURRY. ••

By Oswald JacQby
!"'d Alaa Sontag
West, ~a process of elimination, hit upon the good
spade lead. Leading a singleton into the notrump bidder
can often be disastrous, but on
this hand no other lead looked
promising.
East won the opening spade
lead with the ace and immediaq,ly returned the spade four,
which West ruffed . .West now
did some addition. He had
nine points and dummy had

GASOLINE ALLEY

It's been
Lil4's Irma
Lil4 can't know what's buried for sa4 the4 is a
inside that bus, Melba! fiftL! LJears 1 case in ther'!

Did somebod4
mention
food?

Comes Summer' Swing info· summer wiih favorlte Mar1inMull .ln zany
sketches, this eXclusive aalutea
the ·sunniest end funniest daY.&amp; ot

nine. South had promised l6 to
18 points for his one notrump
opening bid and East had
already turned up with an ace.
· There was room in the East
hand for at most a king. Did
East have the king.~&gt;f clubs? If
he did, West could underlead
his ace to East's king and get
another spade ruff . .Sqt West
realized that East would have
returned a lower spade. than
the four if he had a· potential
club entry. Consequently,
West made a passive heart
return which declarer won in
his hand.
Now it was declarer's turn
to think. If East had the club
ace, · dummy's potential diamond loser could be discarded ·
on declarer's club king. All of
this added up to a 75 percent
chance. Declarer could first
play clubs, and if West had the
ace, . later ;try a diamond
finesse.
Then it occurred to South - ·
how could East have the club
ace? If h~ had it, he would
have led the deuce of spades
for a suit preference signal at
trick two.
. Declarer then found the
· solution. He played two more
·rounds of spades and pitched
his low club. Then be led the
jack of clubs to his singleton
klng which West won. West
was now endplayed. Either a
diamond lead away from his
king or a club, which would '
yield a ruff and sluff, would
allow declarer to !llake the
game.
Both sides had played
perfectly.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

summer .

ALLIN THE FAMILY
SHA NA NA
.
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
DIIJ JOKER'S WILD
(j) DICK CA~ETT SHOW
(llJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
(l%i IIi) SHA NA NA Guelt: Steve
Allen.
7:58 CD NEWS UPDATE
·
1):00 (I) UCD THE MISADVENTURES
OF SHERIFF LOBO Sheriff Lobo'l
(I)
(j)
C!)

concern for hi smother, who is sup· ·
pos8dly dyirig,leadfi him to sell his
services to •a con man who uaea
beautiful women'to bilk upstanding
citizens . (Repeat; 60mina.)

CD ORAL ROBERTS

(I) MOVIE -(DRAMA-ROMANCE)
••• "An Affair to Remember"

1V57
CII G2i m MAJOR LEAGUE BA·
SEBALL ALL-STAR GAME ABC

Sport a will provide live coverage of
. this all·star game between the Na·
tiona I League and the American
leaguefromOodgerStadjuminlos
Angeles . (3 hra ., 15 mins.)

D IIJ THE WHITE SHADOW

Young Thorpe must make a unique
choice between basketball and art
as his best bet for future stardom.
(Re_R!'at; eo mins.)
CIJUIJ NOVA 'Bridge That Spanned
the World' Thedeveloprnent of iron·
making is traced as it relatee to the
first iron bridge, castatCoaibrook·
dale, England. (CioeedCaptloned)
~Omine.)

®) JAMES ROBISON SPECIAL
8:30 CD GOOD NEWS
(]) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ••'"'
"PromiHIIn The Dark"

8:58 (]) NEWS UPDATE
11:00 CilR CD TUESDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES 'Battered' 1978
Stare: Karen Grassle , MikeFarrell.

CD 700CLUB
DCil®lTUI!SDAYNIGHTMOVIE '
' A Special Kind Of Love' 1978
Stars: Charles Durning, Irene Te-

drow .
(j) (jj)

~rur•"tll"
L "
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

3t Make eyes (at)

hou sa hold divided by b itterneae
and jealousy. (Closed Captioned)

1 Window

WINNIE
I STILL
CAN
'T TELL
117E/1177CAL TWINS ...
THEM
APAIU!
BUT WHO'S WHO?
OKAY, 50 YOU'RE

I 'M 17/ETER.••
AND HE ':5

PETER/

PAPPY! CJON'T

WHIC::H ONE OF
YOU CAUS E!/ MY

HIM/II AND HE'S

OAU6HTER 50

OF THING BEFORE,

MU CH PAIN?

IXJNE 11'15 50RT

HIT HIM! IT'S MY
FAULl: TOO! L..I

WHEN 11 SUI1EI7 HIS LEV /ffM QN...
NOT KNOWIN0 HE
CONVENIENCE !
WAS MARRIEP}

feGridiron
support
number
5 Meaning
u Sambar, e.g.
11Gan:on's
DOWN
object
1 Pick at
1% More
a banjo
penetrating Z Incensed
13 Velocity
3 Novel idea
Yesterday's
14 Slip b)l
CSoap
10
ParadolWI'e
15 Colorado
substance
Indian
5Vlalonary
11 Panegyrize
19 Irish fairies
11 Chemistry
goals
I Toast for
setting
ZZ Political .
.• 17 Resident
.a soprano
cartoonist
of (suffix)
7 Shade ol green Z3 Preas
18 Ben-Bur's
I Was stalu&amp;quo
statement
enemy
oriented
Z4 Without end
ZO- transit ... I Unruly
25 "Betty-"
21 Consequently
ZZ Russian
river
Z3 "I do': It &amp;glllinl;.-f-t--t!5 V.M.I. studentb-+-+N To be: Fr.
%7 Pear variety +:-+-'-lZI Hawaiian
hospitality
symbol
Z9 Bubbled, as
. if boiling

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

BARNEY

'IOU LOW·.OOWN, ·
CARD·PLA'iiN'
VARMINT!!

THAR'S A MIXED·UP PAIR
IF I EV6R SEEI\J ONE

Ot: LUKEY'S IN
TH' DOGHOUSE
AN' ELVINEV'S
BARKIN' HER
HEAD OFF

~mins . )

1Cl:OO I1J
-

Anlwer
virtuoso harmonica player. Host:
%7 Much
•
Hugh OoW.s. (Closed Captioned)
10:58 (]) NEWS UPDATE
traveled, 11:00 (I) II CD 0 (j) ®) NEWS
as a !18th
CD TODAY IN B.IBLE PROPHECY •
Z9 Show
~ ~~~~~:~~AGE
. segment
(jj) OICK CAVETT SHOW
300straclze 11:16 CIJGI!m NEWS
11:28 (])NEWS UPDATE
31Sidetrack 11 :30 CIJIICD THETDNIGHTSHOW
31 Ullmann
'Best Of Carson' Guest a: Mary
37 Turf
Tyler Moore , Anthony Newley, · :
Beverly Johnson. (Repeat; 90 •
mine.)

CD ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
CII MOVIE -(DRAMA) ·~· "Ap~lntmont With Donger" 11151
IIJ (I)
CBS LATE MDVII! .
'CANNON: Night Flight To Murder'
De vid Hedison guest atara a e a FA A.
inspector who helps.track a milling eirllnercontainlnQ $3 mlllioh In
securities . (Repeat) 'BARNABY
JONES : Fraiernity 01 Thievea' •
Stare: Budd¥ Ebaen , Bradford
Dillman.

I1J ABC CAPnONED NEWs
®J . MOVIE -(CLASSIC-DRAMA)
•••• "Camille" 1936

11:45 ill Gil 81
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
12:05 CII
TUESDAY MOVIE OF
THE WEEK
12:30 (])MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••'"'

(!)).

33He's no
gentleman
34 Tool
. 35 Stocking .
· 3'7 ExCited state
38 Doctor's
· !IO!uUon

· "The Chin• Syndrome" 1i7i

1:00 Cilll TOMORROW
(]) CHARISMA
CD NEWS
1:26 CII NEWS
1:30 (]) OLDTIMEGOSPELHOUR
CII MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) ••

)
Ia

has~kep!

lrom

me CtJtSide WCt"ld

I! N;'IJ

~!WI I ,W

IJI,IJI'IIIIi .

IT'5 THE 11 60 LOOK II
MARCIE ... IT'LL 61VE ME
A NEW IMAGE ... WHEN
PEOPLE 5EE

WELL, WHAT DOES

WINDOW ON THE WORLD

'Saboteur of Telemark'
(llJ NEWS

10:28 CD NEWS UPDATE
10:3D CD FAITH 20
ffiMOVIE-(DRAMAt••'"' "Cuba"
1979
(I) LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
(llJ OVER EASY Guest:Larry Adler,

3ZSea bird

PEANUTS

FLAMBARDS 'Christina' In

thiapremiereeplaode, Chrlatjna,
an orphan since childhood, arrives
at Ffambarda tolivewlth her Uncle
Rus selland hercousins William and
Mark. S'et in the early 1900s, the
series tells the story of an orphan
girl sent to live in a male dominated

DAihl"'dtYPTOQUO'fE- Here's how to work It:

fi:r- ttree tu'd-ed years, ·
a ten~ 1'110 secte1

(I) U

CROSS WITS
(]) GREAT BAN~NA PIE CAPER
Cii HOGAN'S HEROES
Cii Gil ID FACE THE MUSIC
CD LUCY SHOW
D Cil TIC TAC DO\)GH
I1J MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
®)NEWS ,
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 (I) . U ®J
HOLLYWOOD
SOUARES
CD FAITH THAT UVES
I]) COMEDY TONIGHT 'Here

Solid bridge on all sides
NORTH

I LOVE LUCY
CAROL BURNETT . AND

D()J®l CBS NEWS
I1J WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
.
(jj) OVER EASYGue$1: Larry Adlar,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

+K 10 9!

·

ayers.

Now arrange the cirded letters to

(Answers tomorrow!
Jumbles: PI LOT BISON APATHY TALKER
Answer:

baaebal_l action ·an'd

summarize the criticel playa and

BRIDGE

.

Baby arrives
'-

week's

Jumblt look No. 14, conttlnlng 110 puulll, II IVIIIIbll f«$1.75 poetpald
tram Jumble, c/o thl1 newtptlptlr, BOK ~. Norwoocl, N.J. 07148.1nclucle)lour
name, addretl, zip codt and make checks payablt to Ntwsptptrbookt .

turns two

'

t
) (J )

Yesterday's

Kimberly jones
. ' Receives scholarship

Miss Sisson

LET'S SHANGHAI ALL THE FROGS - That was the theme used by .
Cub Scout Pack 235, Chester, for their float in the Regatta parade. On the
float were Chris LeDeaux, Tony, Todd and Jennifer Lee, Sherri, David
and Carol King, Floyd, Matthew and Kelly Ridenour, David King, Brian
Beeler, Timmy Clark, David Casto, Tom, Linda, Tommy and Teresa
Perry, Frank, JoAnn, Terry and Rodney Newsome, and Mony Wood. · ·

nant: Halfway To the World ·s eries'
This weekly baseball aeries atepa
I.!P to bat for ita third eeaaon. Len
Berman and Maury. Wills recap the

~CYRIKT

i

Family cookout held

Social Calendar

7- 8

Answer:IITXXII )troN(X I

··· '

BYHELENANDSUEBOTTEL
advice colwnnist because I'm so
Special correspondents .
good at helping them with their
llOL
HELEN
AND
SUE:
•problems. So how come I can't solve
CAPRICQRN to«. 22-Jan. 191 GUCIIs may
take a trine lonHer to achieve today, but they are
Mfbest girlfriend has a new guy. my own? Do you have that trouble
reac hable. Treat obt:~tacles as skpping stones,
He's told her to break up with me too, Helen or Sue? .Would you give
not r~dblocks.
AQUARIUS jJan. !0-Feb. 191 We all have
and her other girlfriends because .he yourself the advice you give others
(rmlts IJut 1111 f.lllt: &lt;tppreuiates hclvin15 them called
doesn't like us. (No reason - we're -and would you take it?
to their 11ttention in front of others. Should you
feel the need to criticize one you love , do so
pretty likable people.)
My problem: I really care about
p~ivately .
. So she's staying away from us .. Rick and I guess he feels the same
PISCES lFeb. 2~Marcb 20) Associates may
nut fully understcmd what you are trying to
We've been friends for 12 years and I for me, otherwise he wouldn't be
at• hi!!Ve today . They could get in your w~ty. It's
hate to lose her. What do you think of going with. me. But he never exbest wdo what needsdoin~ without assistance.
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 19 I Be pre~ red and
a f~Jlow like this, and what should presses his feelings and I'm afraid .
willing to adjust y!Jur thinking · today if an
we do? - REJECTED
as;ociate'S ideas are better than yours. Result:!
to. I don't want a big commitment or
coun t far mvre than authorship.
anything,
but I don't like iilsecurity
TAURUS jAprll ZO.May ZO I Your liUiterial
REJECTED:
either. Am I silly for wanting to
aspects took Hood today, but thin~s won't be hanI'd say this fellow is either very in- know where I stand, and should I tell
ded to you on 11 silver platter~ you 're primed to
work hflrd fur your rewards, me)" II be t}\ ~re.
reading from the Upper Room,
secure
or suspicious, jealous or him? -BAFFLED
GemJnl I May U-June 20) In situation:; where
"Silencing Slander." For roll call you're ca lled ujxm to lead or direct others today,
overpossessive, and perhaps all DEAR BATTLED:
be neither too harsh nor lou ler1icnl. Find the
member exchanged plants. The proper
four. Let's hope your friend soon
middle ~ruund .
Maybe Rick hides his feelings
program eneitled " Roses Now and
realizes that having an oppressive because he also is afraid to show '
Forever" was given by Mrs. Lois ·
boyfriend is about as much fun as them. Girls don't have a corner on
fi
Walker.
being crushed under a large rock. insecurity, you know.
A nge!a and Andrea Sisson
Mrs. Janet Bolin made a flower
HELEN
So be honest: tell him you like him
arrangement using roses and
A family cookout was held at the
a lot, in a friendly, non-mushy way.
· weathered
wood .
Other
REJECTED :
home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hill, Sr.
Taking the initiative ts women's
arrangements on the theme,
What should you do? Be as un- Mght these days. - SUE
at Letart Falls on July I in honor of
'' Beauty and the Beast" using roses
their son, Paul Hill, Jr., who was derstanding and uncritical as her
and weathered wood were displayed
boyfriend- isn't. And stand by until hEAR B.:
celebrating his 15th birthday.
by Lois Walker and Charlotte
she
outgrows him. - SUE Paul, Jr. was presented a cake
· I agree with Sue, but you're right,
Wilford.
iced in white with a fishing scene
The second birthday of Angela
Baffled, I'd have a hard time taking
Club members will attend the
done in blue and white, inscribed DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
my own advice here. You see, my
Sisson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Mountaineer Dinenr Theatre on July
My little sister and I still play with generation of women was raised to
with "Happy Birthday, Paul." He
Fred Sisson, Galion, was observed
25. The traveling prize was won by
Barbie
dolls. We're big·boned and "sit and wait, keep men guessing,
also received gifts and money.
Sunday with a cookout at the home
Mrs. Marjorie Davis, and Mrs. Joan
husky, and it makes us feel bad don't let 'em know how you feel until
The evening was spent socializing
of Mr. and Mrs. Rollin ·Radford,
Fetty won the door prize.
seeing all those slim dolls with nice they 'say sil first." I tell others this
and playing games.
.
Rock Springs Road.
figures.
Attending were his parents, Mr.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Fred
attitude is basically dishonest, but
How come they doo 't make these thank goodness (being happily marand Mrs. Paul Hill, Sr.; grand··
Sisson and daughter, Andrea, Tim
dress-up dolls in "chubby" sizes, ried) I needn't prove it personally.
parents, Harry and Katie Hill, Mrs.
and Rose Sisson, grandparents, Mr.
too, so that heavy kids wouldn't feel -HEl-LEN
Kathryn Hill and children, Tina and
.
and Mrs. Archie Swartz, Mr. and ,
left out? - DISCRIMINEE
Jarrod, Charlie Hill and children,
Mrs. Kenneth Buckley, Tammy and;
DEAR
DIS:
Tommy and Jodi, George Hill and
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject
Tyson, Mrs. Ava Zo Sisson, the host
Good question. Why don't you ask for discusion, tw~generation style?
daughter, Mandy, Brenda Glenn, .
and hostess and their daughter,
it
of a doll manufacturer? Perhaps Direct your questions to either Sue Sally. A Raggedy Ann theme was
Beverly, Jodi and Jamie Dummins,
this might be the start of a whole or Helen Batte! .-! or both, if you
Lori Wolfe, and Kyle Wickline, and
carried out for the party.
ne)l' line. - HELEN AND SUE
guest of honor, Paul Hill, Jr.
want a· combination motherAndrea Sisson visited here with
daughter answer - in care of this her grandparents for several days
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
newspaper.)
before being joined by her parents
My friends tell me I should be an
and sister on June 27 for a week's
ON HONOR ROLL
visit. The family returned to Galion •
Five Meigs Countians were.named
Monday.
to
th,e
Ohio
State
University
spring
. TUESDAY
quarter. honor roll. Those honored
MEIG.S CHAPTER 53, D.A.V.
. Coucl\. Lisa Colette Dye, Laura ·
must receive a grade point average
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at chapSOCIAL SATURDAY
Ellen Hoover, Dawn Renee Sorden,
·of at least 3.5 and must be enrolled
ter home on Butternut Ave.,
An old-fashioned ice cream social for at least 12 credit hours. The local
all ~f Pomeroy, and Brice En.:in ·
Pomeroy.
will be held Saturday at 5 p.m. at group named include Richard Alan . Hart, Racine.
Red Crispins Corner between the
Methodist Church and the post office
WEDNESDAY
in
Long Bottom. Homemade ice
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
cream,
baked gOOIIs, hot dogs, and
Lions Club meeting, noon WedBARGAtN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
other refreshlnents will be sold.
A.LL SEAlS JUST S t.50
nesday, at Meigs Inn.
Local
bands
and
vocal
groups
will
SPECIAL MEETING, Pomeroy
Lodge 164. F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:30 entertain. The event is sponsored by
the Long Bottom Community
p.m. with work in fellowcraft
Association.
degree.

r---

t
Ill J

EVENING
6:00 CIJ D CD D(])®Jil2lm NEWS
CD ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
b!.OINED IN PROGRESS)
lU ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
(j) ABC NEWS .
(j)(jj) ZOOM
6:30 CIJ D CD NBC NEWS
I]) BASEBALL 'Race For the Pen·

tRHODIA

Rutland Gardeners
elect new rJfficers
New officers were elected at the ·
"I:bursday night meeting of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners held at
the lake house .of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Snpwden. Mr. Snowden
prepared a dinner for the garden
club members.
Officers elected were Mrs. Lois
Walker, president; Mrs. Joan Fetty,
vice president; Mrs. Janet Bolin,
treasurer; and Mrs. Margaret Edwards, secretary.
Plans were made for the
celebration of the 20th .anniversary
of the club in August. Charter members no longer active with the club
will be invited to the Aug. 27
meeting.
Mrs. Snowden gave devotions

0

I l

w

JULY 8, 11180

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

.

· One letter limply 1tanda for another. In this 11mple A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc: Single letters,
apoatrophea, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each doy the code letters are dilrerent. ·
,

· "OuHn Of The S.aa" HMO

2:00 ®&gt;I BELIEVE
2:0~ G2ie NEWS
2:30 (]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
3:20 CII MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE! •'"'
"Caflfornla" 1981
·
4:00· (]) 700 CLUB .
•:55 Cii UNTOUCHABLES
~:30 CD JESUS IS THE ANSWER

CRYPTOQ.UOTES

OOGI&lt;NOW
YWMD
GQW '

LXT

EQW

ITGYPWBFT

y z

H Y I LX

HYILX

BW

ETW.- GQIMDMT
Yeaterday'a Cryptoquo&amp;e: WISDOM lS THE POWER TO 'p()T
OUR TIME AND OUR KNOWLEDGE TO PROPER USE.THOMAS WATSON

.,

,.

.

VOLCANOES

L()S ANG.E;LES.(AP) - .Some 50 ·

volcanoes have .been active in the
U.S. during recorded history, almost
all In the Cascade· mountains of
California, Wllllhington, Oregon, on
the Alaska' peninsula and tl)e
Aleutian and Hawaiian islands.

���•.

BARGAIN PRICfS
AT ALL
. STIFFLfR'S STORfS.

.State'IA)ide survey reveals
home t(Jp crime influence

GRAND PRIZE' - Big Bend a rea residents are
eligible to compete for this 1956 Chevrolet 2-dom' Belair
which is the national grand prize in Dairy Isle's fifth ·
aMual old car sweepstakes. The restored beauty has a
white body, fender skirts and the original plastic door ·
covers. The sweepstakes drawing, with no purchase ·
necessary for participation, will. be held from July I
through Aug. 15 . .Residents can enter the drawing bt

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - A worth noting, " the survey said. "For
statewide survey says Ohio's top law example, all33 small-county sheriffs
rated the home as number one in im·
enforcement officials think the home
and the schools may be the most in· portance," as did 28 of 31 police
chiefs of medium-siz~ cities.
fluential social institutions affecting
'
The survey also took note that
crime.
of those responding listed
most
The 1979 survey of Ohio's sheriffs
government
as least important. " As
and police chiefs was conducted by
law
enforcement
is nearly always a
the state Department of.Economic
fWlction
of
government,
this ranking
·and Community Development.
Those who answered . the survey indicated the extent to which the
listed "the church'' and ''the govern· chiefs and sheriffs feel they can, by
themselves, control crime
ment" as the least important factors
problems," it said.
affecting crime.
.
Ohio Development· Director
The survey, which was released
Monday, drew responses from about James Duerk said the Survey was
90 percent of the sheriffs and police conducted to get a better picture of
chiefs . throughout the state. It . attitudes of law enlorcement ofshowed· near-unanimous agreement ficials in the state. He said the 20among the officials that the home page survey covered a variety of
was the most influential element af· issues, many of which were administrative, such as budgeting,
feeling crime. " The overwhelming agreement in manpower, salaries and benefits
all rankings among officers who ser· and promotion policy..
· The survey also included 18
ve vastly different jurisdictions is

the local Dairy Isle 19Cated at Fourth St., in Middleport
or at the 3-in-One, East Main St., Pomeroy. Con·
testants are eligible to win the grand prize and/or a 10
. speed bike offered !&gt;y Dairy Isle Owner Hershel McClure. For the past four years, grand prize winners
have won a 1948 Package, a 1951 Kaiser, a 1955 Hudson
. and 1963 Corvair.·

American gay rights groups.
help fellow Cuban re(ugees
-- . WASIDNGTON (AP) - American
gay righ~ groups are trying to help
~ousands of Cuban homosexuals
who have come to the United States
in the "freedom flotilla" to escape
what they call severe repression in
Cuba.
.
A Florida human rights group
reportedly has foWJd 800 homes and
jobs for Cuban homosexuals while a
nationwide gay rights religious in·
stitution claims 4,000 of its members
have offered refuge for the Cubans.
" You can get thrown in jail in
Cuba just for being a homosexual,"
one gay rights activist said Monday,
explaining why so manY"' Cuban
homosexuals joined the exodus.
The informant, who asked not to
be identified, said such people are

considered

under

"dangerous"

Cubarllaw and face jail terms of up
to four years. He based his infonnation on inter.views with a num•
ber of Cuban homosexuals.
Carter administration officials,
faced with hostile public attitudes
toward the- influx of Cubans, have
made on!Y,}leeting references to the
presence of homosexuals among the
more than 117,000 Cubans who have

, WEEKEND FLEA MARKET
.Racine American Legion Post 604
will stage a flea market from 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday in its
air conditioned building in Racine.
Refreshments will be sold. Persons
wishing to rent tables are invited to
call94!1-2095 or 949-25ill).

Norma F. Bentley
Naomi f . (Babe) Bentley, 87,
Rutland, died Monday .at Veterans
Memorial Hospital following a
lingering illness. Arrangements will
be aMo'imced by the Walker Funeral
Home.

Virginia Owens
FWJeral services for Mrs. Virginia
Lee Booth Owens, 78, Middleport,
who died Monday at the , !:lolzer
Medical Center, will be held at 2
p.m. Thursday at the Rawlings·
Coats-BlowerFWJeralHome.
Mrs. Owens was horn in Meigs
County, a daughter · of the late
William and Mamie Booth Shell.
She was also preceded in death by
several brothers and sisters.
Surviving are her husband, Edward Karl Owens; 'three daughters
and sons-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John
(Martha Jane) Bowman, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles (Anna ) Price, all of
Pataskala, and Mr. and Mrs. L. P .
(Carla) Winebrenner, Columbus;
two sisters, Kathleen Merz and Mrs.
George (Thelma) Swisher, ~oth of
Columbus; a brother, Jirruny Shell,
New Mexico, five grandchildren,and
eight great-grandchildren.
Officiating at services will be the
Rev. William Middleswart. Friends

.

J

'

Dilly Stnllnet

BIG
OAYSI

.

SALE
STARTS
THURSDAY, .
JULY 10

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday admission - Donna
Dixon, Guysville; John Blosser,
.Middleport; Hilah Jones, Mid·
dleport.
Saturday discharges - Julia
Leifheit, Charles Jeffers, Hazel
McHaffie, Sa,lly Aleshire.
·sunday admissions - Gladys
Shumway, Pomeroy; Audrey Sweet,
Middleport; Cathy Riffle, Rutland;
Pearly Hutton, Rutland; · William
Wise, Glouster; ·Estill Moore,
Syracuse.
Sunday discharges- John Salser,
Opal Capehart, Lena Maynard,
Thelma Capehart.
Admitted-Pauline Cunningham,
Minersville; Kenneth Smith,
Coolville; Mary Spencer, Pomeroy;
Mary Derenberger, Pomeroy;
Rudolph Gordon, Gallipolis; Belva
Pickens, Racine.
Discharged-L. Donald Telle, Rodney Pierce, Benjamin Quisenberrry,
Frank Levacy, Barbara Smith,
George DeLong.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES JULY 7
Jacqueline Anderson, Mary Ar·
nold, Mrs. JAmes Batesky and son,
Perry Brumfield, Thelma Calloway,
Mildred Coughenour, Ronald Hart,
James Hemsley, Linda Holter, Mar·
tha Hopkins, WinifreCl Hurst, Guster
Jenkins, Sharon · Miller, Sherry
Nichols, Elizabeth Rafferty, Maxine
Smith, Frankie Stafford, Mabel
Waugh, Christina Wiseman, Madlyn
Wykle
·

Development Director James A,
Duerk. France, Sweden, Italy, Ger·
many, Spain and Denmark are
among the possible European
customers.
·
Coal shipped from Ohio could cost
as much as $75 a ton abroad, but
Tostenson said even that would compare favorably with the rising cost of
oil. "We would be very much in the
ballgame on costs,'' he said.
He said the &lt;;ommittee was investigating the possibility of shipping coal from facilities along Lake
Erie at Toledo, Conneaut and
Ashtabula. In addition, . supplies
could be sent by barge down the Ohio
River to New Orleans. Coal · has
historically been carried east by rail
to reach ports.
" You must keep the cost of transportation and transfer at a
minimum if you are to remain competitive, " Tostenson said.

•
•'

RUN
TO
OUR.•

-~

MASON FURNITURE

~::..····

Emergency squad runs
The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Headquarters
reports five runs by local units on
Monday.
At 2:26 a .m., the Syracuse Unit
took Pauline Cunningham to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and the
Pomeroy Unit at 2:28a.m. picked up
Steve Dill from a Route 7 residence
and took him to Holzer Medical Center.
At 12:33 p.m., the Middleport Unit
took George Casto to Holzer Medical
Center and at 8:17 p.m., the
Syracuse Unit took Jimmy Warner
to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
11 :53 p.m., the Syracuse Unit went
to Third St. for Paul Hagman who
was having difficulty breathing and
he was taken to Veterans Memorial.

. :;

'

' •.

ADMIRAL
DEHUMIDIFIERS
An

Admiral

dehumidifier can

make vOur basement or other
.dMn,o.area more comfortable

by

taking the excess moisture out -a

the air. It helps· protect furniture

r:gd ~~:~~:r~o~~~::'n:::::~:s~~·
n retards mildew, mold, musty

·.

odors and rust- gives vour home

more living area.

BIRTIIS

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Coy, daughter,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. John Frye,
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Kent, daughter, Jackson;
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Van Matre,
daughter, Clifton, W. Va:

' '' .

Baker Furniture
MiddlepOrt, Ohio
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ON THE 2nd R.OOR
INCWDING THE MOPPETS

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8:30 to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noorl

EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONL.

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sleeping bag . II'S light, fluity and warm ...
just perfect tor slumber parties, on a bunk at camp, in a camper on a.
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Accounts at our bank are insured -for safety
to $100,000 by an agency of the federal
government. Bank where your money is
always available when yqu need it. Start today.

WHEN YOU VISIT. PARK FREE

Member FDIC

MIDDLEPORT, OH ,
1
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•••
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BIILD A COMFORTABLE NEST.
EGG WITH AN INSURED ACCOUNT

MASON FURNITURE

Herman Grate

HOSPITAL NEWS

.

FOR THE BEST DltALS,IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

. .173:5592

man, on Monday.
But he said Ohio coal shipped to
foreign consumers would have to be
" washed"to cut its sulfur and ash
content. Tostenson is president of
the Ohio Mining and Reclamation
Association.
Several European countries
already require coal washing, said
Ohio Environmental .Protection
Agency Director James F. McAvoy.
The panel -said that although
restrictions on sulfur emissions iii
most nations are generally two to
three times less stringent than those
in the United States, they are
tougher in some nations.
Taiwan and Japan appear to hold
the most potential as foreign buyers
of " washed" Ohio coal, said state

YOUR NEEDS .COME FIRST
.

SHOP

~OPEN

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A coinmittee trying to find new markets
abroad for Ohio's high-sulfur coal
has run into some of the same anti·
pollution rules which hinder coal use
in the United States.
But the Ohio Coal Export Committee said some foreign countries
are beginning to relax those
regulations in the face of
skyrocketing oil prices.
The seven-member panel was
created by Gov, James A. Rhodes to
help stimulat.e. the state's coal industry by developing markets out·
side the United States. He . said
federal environmental regulations
~orbing sulfur dioxide emissions
from coal have cost the jobs of
thousands·of Ohio miners.
Demand for coal is increasing in
Europe and Asia because nations
are rapidly developing systems for
converting from expensive oil, said
Neal S. Tostenson, committee chair·

.
I

Area deaths

opinion questions and cited these fin:
dings :
- 91 percent of the sheriffs and
chiefs of police responding feel the
death penalty is an effective crime
deterrent.
- 51 percent said unions and
collective bargaining have · a
detrimental effect on law en·
forcement operationS. The sheriffs
tended to be more negative toward
the issue than the chiefs.
-A majority of those polled
believe tlieir officers should be
allowed to work second jobs.
-Most chiefs and sheriff~ feel that
juveniles . who commit serious
crimes should not automatically be
tried as adults.
A majority of those responding
have mofe than 20 years' experience
in law enforcement. One-third have
been serving as chief executive of·
ficers for more than 10 years.

pt, """"' ,.. .,,,.,.,

Coal committee encounters trouble

fled to the United States since the
One of the informants said that
exodys began.
other Cubans escaped the island by
The officials have maintained that
turning up at police stations
the most difficult refugees to resetmasquerading as homosexuals.
tie are single, male Cubans with no
" They showed up wearing dresses
skills and no family in the United
and lipstick, knowing full well the
States.
authorities would be anxious to get
rid of them, " he said.
·
But homosexuals appear ~b . po.Se
the biggest resettlement problem for
the Red Cross and other voluntary
agencies. They have sought
assistance from -gay rights groups
(Continued'l rom page 11
from around the country.
The ProduCer Price Index for
One of the most active groups has
finished goods measures prices at
the
20,000-memb e r
be e n
the stage of preparation just before
Metropolitan Community Church
goods are ready for retail sale.
with 113 brancheS around the counThrough June, the index stood at
try. About 20 representatives from
242.6, which means that a marketvarious u.s. gay rignts groups met
basket of goods and services that
at the Washington branch of the
cost $100 in the base year of 1967
church Monday to discuss future
costs $242.60 last month.
strategy.
June's 0.8 percent rise + ·equal to
A spokesman, speaking privately;
a compound 10 percent increase
said 4,000 church members have of' ASKTOWED
over the course of a full year + comfered to sponsor Cuban homosexuals
Marriage licenses were issued to
pares with a 0.3 percent rise in May
and $60,000 has been raised to assist . and a 0.5 percent increase in April.
JohMy C. Sheets, 24, Rt. I, Reed·
the resettlement process.
sville, and Patricia Elaine Burson,
The April and May increa~es were
Although the government has no
28, Rt. I, Reedsville; William Joseph
unusually low in large part because
reliable figures, two representatives
Cremeans, 19, Middleport, and
of declines in food .prices, and gover·
of gay activist groups estimated
Debra LyM Morrison, 18, Mid·
nment economists had expected the
Monday that almost a third of some
dleport;
Atan Patrick Mills, 24, Rl
rate to increase in JWJe, although
32,000 Cubans awaiting resettlement
2,
Racine,
and Nanna Jean Jarrell,
nowhere near the 1.3 percent to 1.6
at four U.S. military bases are
18,
Rt.
2,
Rapine.
percent monthly increases recorded
homosexuals.
during the first quarter of this year.
Immigration officials have told
The Producer Price Index · also
MATCH RESCHEDULED
gay rights groups that about 2,000
surveys prices at an intermediate
The
Rutland American Legion
are self-professed homosexuals. But
level, which applies to goods that
shooting
match scheduled for July 6
sources who nave intervicwea the
have undergone partial processing,
was
cancelled
due to illness but will
Cubans estimated that only one in
and at a crude level, which applies to ·be held this Sunday at the post farm.
five answers truthfully when asked
unprocessed goods such · as ore,
It will be checked with 20 guage shell
by immigration officials about
wheat and cotton.
only and those taking part must be
sexual preferences.
The government said wholesale
signed up by 12 :30 p.m.
prices at the intermediate level rose
0.8 percent in June, the largest in·
POTLUCK PICNIC
crease in four months. Prices at the
The Winding Trail Garden Club
crude level advanced only 0.3 per·
will meet this evenirig at 6:30p.m. at
cent, following a 1.3 percent rise in
the
home of Alice Thompson. A
May.
may call at the fWJeral home from .,
potluck picnic will be served with
During the past 12 months, the
to 9 p.m. Wednesdf.y. Burial will be
meat to be~l!rovided. Marianna Mit·
government said, wholesale prices
in Beech Grove Cemetery.
chell will serve as hostess. ' ·
at the finished goods level rose 13.5
percent. Energy prices •Juring that
osephfue T eafo.:.J.
period had soared 64.8 percent while
BUDGET HEARING
Josephine L. Teaford, 83, · 726
consumer food prices rose -just 3.3
Olive Township Tl'ljStees will meet
Napoleon Ave., Columbus, died
percent and other goods advanced , July 17, at 8 p.m. at Reedsville, for
Monday at her home.
11.6 percent.
·
·
public inspection of the 1981 budget
She was a retired nurse and a
Inflation at the retail level began
and use of revenue sharing fWlds.
member of the Whitehall Methodist
to moderate from an 18 percent an·
Church.
nual rate during the beginning of the
MEET TONIGHT
Surviving are her daughter, Mrs.
year and is now rWJning at about 15
Syraucse
Firemen will meet in
J esse (Josephine) Howard; a
percent a year. The government exspecial
session
this evening at 7 p.m.
daughter alld son-in-law, Rose and
pects the inflation rate to come down
All
members
are
urged \O attend. ·
Robert ·Kautz; a son, Roy A.
to about 12 percent for the full year.
. Teaford, and sons and daughters· inlaw, · Ferd G. and Juanita Kirby,
Homer J . and Dorothy Teaford, and
William A. and Sharon Teaford, 14
grandchildren , 23 great·
grandchildren and a special friend,
Clara Brining.
Mrs. Teaford's late husband,
Homer, was from this area . She was ·
also preceded in · death by her
daughter, Elizabeth.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Thursday at the Evans Funeral
'Home 4171 E. · Livingston Ave.,
Columbus with the Rev. Lester B.
Woosley officiating. Burial will be in
the Union Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 7 to 9
this evening and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Wednesoay .

Prices up •••.

SUPPLEMENT TO THE::
Mtdlson Prn1, S.ntlrwl,
&amp;nopp.tt ~ .......

I

When you open illo its full width, It's an ideal bed c~mforter, and you
1
·
can zip two together fortwo sleepers. ·
I

.

-

You can machine wash It, too. use cold to lukewarm water. Then
tumble· dry it on the dryer .allow heat ... or air dry it .. . or have it dry·
cleaned .
·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

...

�•.

BARGAIN PRICfS
AT ALL
. STIFFLfR'S STORfS.

.State'IA)ide survey reveals
home t(Jp crime influence

GRAND PRIZE' - Big Bend a rea residents are
eligible to compete for this 1956 Chevrolet 2-dom' Belair
which is the national grand prize in Dairy Isle's fifth ·
aMual old car sweepstakes. The restored beauty has a
white body, fender skirts and the original plastic door ·
covers. The sweepstakes drawing, with no purchase ·
necessary for participation, will. be held from July I
through Aug. 15 . .Residents can enter the drawing bt

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - A worth noting, " the survey said. "For
statewide survey says Ohio's top law example, all33 small-county sheriffs
rated the home as number one in im·
enforcement officials think the home
and the schools may be the most in· portance," as did 28 of 31 police
chiefs of medium-siz~ cities.
fluential social institutions affecting
'
The survey also took note that
crime.
of those responding listed
most
The 1979 survey of Ohio's sheriffs
government
as least important. " As
and police chiefs was conducted by
law
enforcement
is nearly always a
the state Department of.Economic
fWlction
of
government,
this ranking
·and Community Development.
Those who answered . the survey indicated the extent to which the
listed "the church'' and ''the govern· chiefs and sheriffs feel they can, by
themselves, control crime
ment" as the least important factors
problems," it said.
affecting crime.
.
Ohio Development· Director
The survey, which was released
Monday, drew responses from about James Duerk said the Survey was
90 percent of the sheriffs and police conducted to get a better picture of
chiefs . throughout the state. It . attitudes of law enlorcement ofshowed· near-unanimous agreement ficials in the state. He said the 20among the officials that the home page survey covered a variety of
was the most influential element af· issues, many of which were administrative, such as budgeting,
feeling crime. " The overwhelming agreement in manpower, salaries and benefits
all rankings among officers who ser· and promotion policy..
· The survey also included 18
ve vastly different jurisdictions is

the local Dairy Isle 19Cated at Fourth St., in Middleport
or at the 3-in-One, East Main St., Pomeroy. Con·
testants are eligible to win the grand prize and/or a 10
. speed bike offered !&gt;y Dairy Isle Owner Hershel McClure. For the past four years, grand prize winners
have won a 1948 Package, a 1951 Kaiser, a 1955 Hudson
. and 1963 Corvair.·

American gay rights groups.
help fellow Cuban re(ugees
-- . WASIDNGTON (AP) - American
gay righ~ groups are trying to help
~ousands of Cuban homosexuals
who have come to the United States
in the "freedom flotilla" to escape
what they call severe repression in
Cuba.
.
A Florida human rights group
reportedly has foWJd 800 homes and
jobs for Cuban homosexuals while a
nationwide gay rights religious in·
stitution claims 4,000 of its members
have offered refuge for the Cubans.
" You can get thrown in jail in
Cuba just for being a homosexual,"
one gay rights activist said Monday,
explaining why so manY"' Cuban
homosexuals joined the exodus.
The informant, who asked not to
be identified, said such people are

considered

under

"dangerous"

Cubarllaw and face jail terms of up
to four years. He based his infonnation on inter.views with a num•
ber of Cuban homosexuals.
Carter administration officials,
faced with hostile public attitudes
toward the- influx of Cubans, have
made on!Y,}leeting references to the
presence of homosexuals among the
more than 117,000 Cubans who have

, WEEKEND FLEA MARKET
.Racine American Legion Post 604
will stage a flea market from 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday in its
air conditioned building in Racine.
Refreshments will be sold. Persons
wishing to rent tables are invited to
call94!1-2095 or 949-25ill).

Norma F. Bentley
Naomi f . (Babe) Bentley, 87,
Rutland, died Monday .at Veterans
Memorial Hospital following a
lingering illness. Arrangements will
be aMo'imced by the Walker Funeral
Home.

Virginia Owens
FWJeral services for Mrs. Virginia
Lee Booth Owens, 78, Middleport,
who died Monday at the , !:lolzer
Medical Center, will be held at 2
p.m. Thursday at the Rawlings·
Coats-BlowerFWJeralHome.
Mrs. Owens was horn in Meigs
County, a daughter · of the late
William and Mamie Booth Shell.
She was also preceded in death by
several brothers and sisters.
Surviving are her husband, Edward Karl Owens; 'three daughters
and sons-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John
(Martha Jane) Bowman, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles (Anna ) Price, all of
Pataskala, and Mr. and Mrs. L. P .
(Carla) Winebrenner, Columbus;
two sisters, Kathleen Merz and Mrs.
George (Thelma) Swisher, ~oth of
Columbus; a brother, Jirruny Shell,
New Mexico, five grandchildren,and
eight great-grandchildren.
Officiating at services will be the
Rev. William Middleswart. Friends

.

J

'

Dilly Stnllnet

BIG
OAYSI

.

SALE
STARTS
THURSDAY, .
JULY 10

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday admission - Donna
Dixon, Guysville; John Blosser,
.Middleport; Hilah Jones, Mid·
dleport.
Saturday discharges - Julia
Leifheit, Charles Jeffers, Hazel
McHaffie, Sa,lly Aleshire.
·sunday admissions - Gladys
Shumway, Pomeroy; Audrey Sweet,
Middleport; Cathy Riffle, Rutland;
Pearly Hutton, Rutland; · William
Wise, Glouster; ·Estill Moore,
Syracuse.
Sunday discharges- John Salser,
Opal Capehart, Lena Maynard,
Thelma Capehart.
Admitted-Pauline Cunningham,
Minersville; Kenneth Smith,
Coolville; Mary Spencer, Pomeroy;
Mary Derenberger, Pomeroy;
Rudolph Gordon, Gallipolis; Belva
Pickens, Racine.
Discharged-L. Donald Telle, Rodney Pierce, Benjamin Quisenberrry,
Frank Levacy, Barbara Smith,
George DeLong.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES JULY 7
Jacqueline Anderson, Mary Ar·
nold, Mrs. JAmes Batesky and son,
Perry Brumfield, Thelma Calloway,
Mildred Coughenour, Ronald Hart,
James Hemsley, Linda Holter, Mar·
tha Hopkins, WinifreCl Hurst, Guster
Jenkins, Sharon · Miller, Sherry
Nichols, Elizabeth Rafferty, Maxine
Smith, Frankie Stafford, Mabel
Waugh, Christina Wiseman, Madlyn
Wykle
·

Development Director James A,
Duerk. France, Sweden, Italy, Ger·
many, Spain and Denmark are
among the possible European
customers.
·
Coal shipped from Ohio could cost
as much as $75 a ton abroad, but
Tostenson said even that would compare favorably with the rising cost of
oil. "We would be very much in the
ballgame on costs,'' he said.
He said the &lt;;ommittee was investigating the possibility of shipping coal from facilities along Lake
Erie at Toledo, Conneaut and
Ashtabula. In addition, . supplies
could be sent by barge down the Ohio
River to New Orleans. Coal · has
historically been carried east by rail
to reach ports.
" You must keep the cost of transportation and transfer at a
minimum if you are to remain competitive, " Tostenson said.

•
•'

RUN
TO
OUR.•

-~

MASON FURNITURE

~::..····

Emergency squad runs
The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Headquarters
reports five runs by local units on
Monday.
At 2:26 a .m., the Syracuse Unit
took Pauline Cunningham to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and the
Pomeroy Unit at 2:28a.m. picked up
Steve Dill from a Route 7 residence
and took him to Holzer Medical Center.
At 12:33 p.m., the Middleport Unit
took George Casto to Holzer Medical
Center and at 8:17 p.m., the
Syracuse Unit took Jimmy Warner
to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
11 :53 p.m., the Syracuse Unit went
to Third St. for Paul Hagman who
was having difficulty breathing and
he was taken to Veterans Memorial.

. :;

'

' •.

ADMIRAL
DEHUMIDIFIERS
An

Admiral

dehumidifier can

make vOur basement or other
.dMn,o.area more comfortable

by

taking the excess moisture out -a

the air. It helps· protect furniture

r:gd ~~:~~:r~o~~~::'n:::::~:s~~·
n retards mildew, mold, musty

·.

odors and rust- gives vour home

more living area.

BIRTIIS

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Coy, daughter,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. John Frye,
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Kent, daughter, Jackson;
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Van Matre,
daughter, Clifton, W. Va:

' '' .

Baker Furniture
MiddlepOrt, Ohio
,·

.ELBERFELD$
.

SEE OUR FINE SELECTION OF

SLEEPING BAGS
ON THE 2nd R.OOR
INCWDING THE MOPPETS

.'

ll/lon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noorl

EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONL.

1'

You'll love your NITE
sleeping bag . II'S light, fluity and warm ...
just perfect tor slumber parties, on a bunk at camp, in a camper on a.
boat ... or for just plair;~loafing at ttome.
'
.

THE CENTRAL TRUST.CO., NA

•
Mason, W.Va.

•

Accounts at our bank are insured -for safety
to $100,000 by an agency of the federal
government. Bank where your money is
always available when yqu need it. Start today.

WHEN YOU VISIT. PARK FREE

Member FDIC

MIDDLEPORT, OH ,
1
-.Qeposits Insured to 5100,000

•••
•••
•

•

BIILD A COMFORTABLE NEST.
EGG WITH AN INSURED ACCOUNT

MASON FURNITURE

Herman Grate

HOSPITAL NEWS

.

FOR THE BEST DltALS,IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

. .173:5592

man, on Monday.
But he said Ohio coal shipped to
foreign consumers would have to be
" washed"to cut its sulfur and ash
content. Tostenson is president of
the Ohio Mining and Reclamation
Association.
Several European countries
already require coal washing, said
Ohio Environmental .Protection
Agency Director James F. McAvoy.
The panel -said that although
restrictions on sulfur emissions iii
most nations are generally two to
three times less stringent than those
in the United States, they are
tougher in some nations.
Taiwan and Japan appear to hold
the most potential as foreign buyers
of " washed" Ohio coal, said state

YOUR NEEDS .COME FIRST
.

SHOP

~OPEN

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A coinmittee trying to find new markets
abroad for Ohio's high-sulfur coal
has run into some of the same anti·
pollution rules which hinder coal use
in the United States.
But the Ohio Coal Export Committee said some foreign countries
are beginning to relax those
regulations in the face of
skyrocketing oil prices.
The seven-member panel was
created by Gov, James A. Rhodes to
help stimulat.e. the state's coal industry by developing markets out·
side the United States. He . said
federal environmental regulations
~orbing sulfur dioxide emissions
from coal have cost the jobs of
thousands·of Ohio miners.
Demand for coal is increasing in
Europe and Asia because nations
are rapidly developing systems for
converting from expensive oil, said
Neal S. Tostenson, committee chair·

.
I

Area deaths

opinion questions and cited these fin:
dings :
- 91 percent of the sheriffs and
chiefs of police responding feel the
death penalty is an effective crime
deterrent.
- 51 percent said unions and
collective bargaining have · a
detrimental effect on law en·
forcement operationS. The sheriffs
tended to be more negative toward
the issue than the chiefs.
-A majority of those polled
believe tlieir officers should be
allowed to work second jobs.
-Most chiefs and sheriff~ feel that
juveniles . who commit serious
crimes should not automatically be
tried as adults.
A majority of those responding
have mofe than 20 years' experience
in law enforcement. One-third have
been serving as chief executive of·
ficers for more than 10 years.

pt, """"' ,.. .,,,.,.,

Coal committee encounters trouble

fled to the United States since the
One of the informants said that
exodys began.
other Cubans escaped the island by
The officials have maintained that
turning up at police stations
the most difficult refugees to resetmasquerading as homosexuals.
tie are single, male Cubans with no
" They showed up wearing dresses
skills and no family in the United
and lipstick, knowing full well the
States.
authorities would be anxious to get
rid of them, " he said.
·
But homosexuals appear ~b . po.Se
the biggest resettlement problem for
the Red Cross and other voluntary
agencies. They have sought
assistance from -gay rights groups
(Continued'l rom page 11
from around the country.
The ProduCer Price Index for
One of the most active groups has
finished goods measures prices at
the
20,000-memb e r
be e n
the stage of preparation just before
Metropolitan Community Church
goods are ready for retail sale.
with 113 brancheS around the counThrough June, the index stood at
try. About 20 representatives from
242.6, which means that a marketvarious u.s. gay rignts groups met
basket of goods and services that
at the Washington branch of the
cost $100 in the base year of 1967
church Monday to discuss future
costs $242.60 last month.
strategy.
June's 0.8 percent rise + ·equal to
A spokesman, speaking privately;
a compound 10 percent increase
said 4,000 church members have of' ASKTOWED
over the course of a full year + comfered to sponsor Cuban homosexuals
Marriage licenses were issued to
pares with a 0.3 percent rise in May
and $60,000 has been raised to assist . and a 0.5 percent increase in April.
JohMy C. Sheets, 24, Rt. I, Reed·
the resettlement process.
sville, and Patricia Elaine Burson,
The April and May increa~es were
Although the government has no
28, Rt. I, Reedsville; William Joseph
unusually low in large part because
reliable figures, two representatives
Cremeans, 19, Middleport, and
of declines in food .prices, and gover·
of gay activist groups estimated
Debra LyM Morrison, 18, Mid·
nment economists had expected the
Monday that almost a third of some
dleport;
Atan Patrick Mills, 24, Rl
rate to increase in JWJe, although
32,000 Cubans awaiting resettlement
2,
Racine,
and Nanna Jean Jarrell,
nowhere near the 1.3 percent to 1.6
at four U.S. military bases are
18,
Rt.
2,
Rapine.
percent monthly increases recorded
homosexuals.
during the first quarter of this year.
Immigration officials have told
The Producer Price Index · also
MATCH RESCHEDULED
gay rights groups that about 2,000
surveys prices at an intermediate
The
Rutland American Legion
are self-professed homosexuals. But
level, which applies to goods that
shooting
match scheduled for July 6
sources who nave intervicwea the
have undergone partial processing,
was
cancelled
due to illness but will
Cubans estimated that only one in
and at a crude level, which applies to ·be held this Sunday at the post farm.
five answers truthfully when asked
unprocessed goods such · as ore,
It will be checked with 20 guage shell
by immigration officials about
wheat and cotton.
only and those taking part must be
sexual preferences.
The government said wholesale
signed up by 12 :30 p.m.
prices at the intermediate level rose
0.8 percent in June, the largest in·
POTLUCK PICNIC
crease in four months. Prices at the
The Winding Trail Garden Club
crude level advanced only 0.3 per·
will meet this evenirig at 6:30p.m. at
cent, following a 1.3 percent rise in
the
home of Alice Thompson. A
May.
may call at the fWJeral home from .,
potluck picnic will be served with
During the past 12 months, the
to 9 p.m. Wednesdf.y. Burial will be
meat to be~l!rovided. Marianna Mit·
government said, wholesale prices
in Beech Grove Cemetery.
chell will serve as hostess. ' ·
at the finished goods level rose 13.5
percent. Energy prices •Juring that
osephfue T eafo.:.J.
period had soared 64.8 percent while
BUDGET HEARING
Josephine L. Teaford, 83, · 726
consumer food prices rose -just 3.3
Olive Township Tl'ljStees will meet
Napoleon Ave., Columbus, died
percent and other goods advanced , July 17, at 8 p.m. at Reedsville, for
Monday at her home.
11.6 percent.
·
·
public inspection of the 1981 budget
She was a retired nurse and a
Inflation at the retail level began
and use of revenue sharing fWlds.
member of the Whitehall Methodist
to moderate from an 18 percent an·
Church.
nual rate during the beginning of the
MEET TONIGHT
Surviving are her daughter, Mrs.
year and is now rWJning at about 15
Syraucse
Firemen will meet in
J esse (Josephine) Howard; a
percent a year. The government exspecial
session
this evening at 7 p.m.
daughter alld son-in-law, Rose and
pects the inflation rate to come down
All
members
are
urged \O attend. ·
Robert ·Kautz; a son, Roy A.
to about 12 percent for the full year.
. Teaford, and sons and daughters· inlaw, · Ferd G. and Juanita Kirby,
Homer J . and Dorothy Teaford, and
William A. and Sharon Teaford, 14
grandchildren , 23 great·
grandchildren and a special friend,
Clara Brining.
Mrs. Teaford's late husband,
Homer, was from this area . She was ·
also preceded in · death by her
daughter, Elizabeth.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Thursday at the Evans Funeral
'Home 4171 E. · Livingston Ave.,
Columbus with the Rev. Lester B.
Woosley officiating. Burial will be in
the Union Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 7 to 9
this evening and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Wednesoay .

Prices up •••.

SUPPLEMENT TO THE::
Mtdlson Prn1, S.ntlrwl,
&amp;nopp.tt ~ .......

I

When you open illo its full width, It's an ideal bed c~mforter, and you
1
·
can zip two together fortwo sleepers. ·
I

.

-

You can machine wash It, too. use cold to lukewarm water. Then
tumble· dry it on the dryer .allow heat ... or air dry it .. . or have it dry·
cleaned .
·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

...

�-.JULY

..;;.JULY CUARANCE

CL~ARANC~ SALE~

REGULAR
SIZE SHREDDED
'
FOAM FILLED

.

SAL~.

•

great bargain for our
Ju ly Clearance Sale. Full size
fluffy foam fi lled bed pillows.
Pretty coverings.

··o

s 88

Eath····

... - .JULY CLEARANU $ALE.._
·sPECIAL CLOSE~OUT GROUP ·

'

fOOTWfAR

Clearance Groupl ~ assortment
df Mlseee and ~lora summer
haltera and cemlaott toP•· Aaaorted
styles, afzea ond

A bergaln bonanza for sewi ng enthusiast! A big assort·
ment of novelty and cotton blended fabrics In solid col·
ors and prints. Values to $1. July Clearance Sale.

SAL~­

FINAL CLOSE-OUT GROIJ.P
LADIES' BETTER SUMMER .

·UD

COTTON FABRICS

1

- JULY CLURANU

P·LADIES

MILL LENGTHS ASSORTMENT
NOVELTY AND BLENDED

LLOWS
1
. , . •• _.

SAU~

LADIES SUMMER

BLOUSES.

Special closeout group of ladles'
summer blouses. A varlt!ty of styles
choose from in assorted sizes and
I
Values to $3.99.

, Buy two pairs lor the price of one. Seleci from brands
you kn ow and trust! Dress, casual and sport styles.
All new spring and summer styles. July Clearan ce
Sale!

Each

· , Yard
.

YOU ALWAYS DO BETTER AT STIFFLER'S
SHOP EUERY DAY AND SAUE

QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED
-JULY

-STIFFUR'S JULY

CLEARANt~;

·SELECTED SALE G.ROUP
FAMOUS HAGGAR
SPRING &amp; SUMMER

.
·.
'

--

SELECTED GROUP
·SUMMER STYLE
COOL &amp;COMFORTABLE

Clearance of . Men 's Haggar Spring
and Summer separates. Includes mat·
ch lng coat s, vests and pants In a.
polyester blend. Solids and plaids In
tan, lt. blue, grey and navy. Some
other Haggar slacks included In
group. Good range of si~es .

Final clearance of ladies sportswear.
Good assortment of famous brands,
su mmer styles In a variety of colors
and sizes. Save one-hal f during this

popular sportswear Item. Misses and Juniors
. one and two piece styles, cool and comfortable
terry romper suits. Assorted · cool !i ummer
snaaes _ to choose from . Some with trim .
Misses and Juniors sizes.

sa le. Come earl y f,o r best sele&lt;;:Hon.

OFF

OFF

OFF
REG.

R~G.
PRIC~

PRICE

J

SPORTSW~AR

Clearance group of this summer' s most

' Clearance of ladles spring and summer dresses. Popular styies of better
quality dresses . Assorted sizes,
styles and colors. Values to $24,99.
Don 't miss thi s c learance special.

SALE-

SPECIAl SALE GROUP!
MISSES &amp;JUNIORSSUMMER
FAMOUS BRANDS

MISSES PO PULA~·
ONE AND TWO-PIECE
STYLES-TERRY

. ROMP~RS

PARAT~S DRfSS~S

CUARA~Cf

RE(;.
PRICE ..

Each ·.

JACKSON STORE ONLY
;_JULY UtllrKANt;t .,u..:;·CLOSE·OUT·LADIES
. AND MISSES ASSORTED

LADIES POPULAR
ASSORTED CREPE SOLE

SUMMER SHORTS

Close-out group of lad les and misses summer
shorts. Assorted styles, sizes and colors In the
group . Stoc.k up

~wl

""

THONG

SURF~RS

Ladles' popular crepe sole thong surfers In
assorted colors. Good range of sizes. Save now dur·
lng Stiffler's July Clearance I

f

Pair

-JULY

tLURANt~ SALE ~

OUT THEY GO! SAVE NOW!
BIG .ASSORTMENT FABRIC

REMNANTS
Mill asso.rtm ent of 112 to 1 yard remnant s In fancy
prints and solid colors in assorted fabrics. Ideal fc;&gt;r
many sewing needs.

-JULY \UAnA"~
BE NICE TO YOUR FEET
ONE SIZE-CUT TO FIT

SAL~­

-JULY .

CUT FROM FULL BOLTS
SOLIDS &amp; FANCY

DOUBL~

KNITS

Beau tif ul solid or fancy polyester doubleknlt
fabrics. Cut from full bolts. Buy now and double
your savings !
·

SAU-

-JULY

LARGE g.INCH SIZE
VINYL

ONE SIZE FITS All
'
LADIES STRETCH NYLON ·

PLAY BALLS

PANTIES

Big colorful fancy I

79~ valu&lt;~~ Outdoor fun

balls. 9" size. Regular
any age kid. Special sale

price.

-JULY tLURANCE

tLEARANC~ SAL~ -'"­

Cushion your s~eo. Buy foam lntersoles for your
shoes. They come In one size and you cut them to
fit . Save now! .
•

PLANTER

Each
,.,

-JULY tLfARANtE SALE-

-JULY CLURANU SAU-

SPECIAL-ASSORTED
VINYL PRINTED

TWELVE·INCH OVAL
FOOTED AMBER

One size fits all! 100% nylon 'ltretch panties . Your
chocle of briefs, hipsters or bikinis that. will. stretch
to lit sizes 4 to 7.
·

PLACE MATS
Assortment of printed vinyl placemats. First quality
and some Irregulars. Save during our July
Clearance Sale.

'

. '

GLASS BOWLS
Tw~lve Inch, footed, oval glass bowl s. All amber In

color with a pressed floral and fruit desi gn . Buy
now!
·
'

LADIES AND MISSES
POPULAR STYLE

'PERFECT POSTURE' f.9AM
•
NON-ALLERGENIC ·

DENIM JEANS

BED PILLOWS

Special sale group of lingle knit fabrics In mill
lengths. Assorted colors to choose from ..Stock up
now! ·
·

Non-allergenic, solid foam pillow-wi lt not bunch up
or mat. Removable, washable cover with non·rust
zipper. Odorless and dust proof.

Special clearance group! Misses and Juniors size,
famou s brand denim jeans In assorted styles. July
Clearance Sale.

KNEE-HI HOSE

One size fits all. Ladles' first quality stretch nylon
knee-hi hose. Come In assorted summer shades.

f '.

Stock up now I "

. I.

5

Pa1r

-JULY CL£ARANCI SAUASSORTMENT OF STYLES .
MISSES POLYESTER

RNIT SHORTS.
.
.
A good selection of better quality shorts. Some
with colored stripe trl"! In ladlea and mlsaaa sizes.
Regular $2.99 values. Sale price.

)

Each

s 99
Pair

AND BOY'S
AMERICAN ·MADE

GYM

SHO~S

American made gym 111d tennis oxford&amp;. with mold·
ed soles and cushion Insoles. Sturdy can~•• up·
pers. All sizes.
·

'3~!

Each

··

-JULY CUARANC~ SAL£. MILL ASSORTMENT .
2.1"X34" AND 24"X40"

-JULY CLURANCE SALE:..;.:
371A INCH BY 6· FOOT
WHITE VINYL WINDOW

AREA RUGS

SHADES

Mill assortmen1 of 21"x34" and 2~"x40" loop •~d
sha~rarea rugs In a varle!y of colors and patterns .

Buy now and save. "'

"fl7V• Inch by 6 foot white vinyl window shades .
regular $1.59. Special · price for Stiffler's July
Clearance Sale.
.

Pair

Yard
- JULY -CLfAANt~ SAL£AnRACTIVI MULTI-COLORED
BIG SIZE'.HUVY WT.

-JULY CLEARANCE SAL~24"X60" COLORFUL
CANDY STRIPE

RAG~: RUGS

RUG .RUNNERS

'

Heavy quality bolo wovan.reverslble rugs. Machine ·
washable. 24"x45" slze.'Vour&lt;:holce of lovely bright
colors.

I

(

'r

I'

'

Special group of boy's popular novelty printed front
tee shirts in assorted soli d colo rs. A great fun shirt
for summer.

JULY CLEARANC~ UU
BOY'S POPULAR STRIPE TOP WHITE

TUBE SOCKS

Stock up now for back to school wear. Boy' s white
stripe top stretc h tube socks . First quality! Great
savings!
·

•

'--.. ~

Pair

-JULY CLURAN(E
......
MEN'S FRUIT OF LOOM COMBED \

COTTON 8RifFS

Men's famous Fruit of the Loom brand cbm~ed cot ·
ton briefs. Three to a package. Stock up now du ring
this clearance sale!

MEN'S FRUIT OF LOOM

COTTON I-SHIRTS

Great sav ings during Stifflers July Clearance Salel
Men 's fa mous Fruit of the Loom cotton tee shirt s.
Three l o a package.

To $'\88
Pkg.

I.

(OlTON s·RIEFS - COTTON T-SHIRTS

Pair

I •

lEt·

Pair

SPORT SOCKS .

'100

Each

-JULY tUARANCE SAL~­
BOY'S NOVELTY PRINTED

f

-'JULY CLURANt£ SAUBOY'S FRUIT OF LOOM COMBED

Ladles' com fortable pom-pom trim low cut sport
socks with 1cushioned sole. 79% cotton, 21% ·
nylon, white, one size fits all.

s1oo

TUB£ SOCKS

Men 's white stripe top tube socks. Choice of 18
inch or 22 inch over the call style. Regu lar $1 .00 to
$1 .25. Fi rst quality!

-JULY CLEARAN.CE SALE :lADIES' "POM-POM"
CUSHIONED SOLE
I

Rubber backed 24"x60" broadloom carpet runners
In candy stripe design. Special for this July
Clearance Sale I

-JULY CLEARANCE SALEMEN'S POPULAR STRIPE TOP WHITE

50
Pair

Each

-JULY CLEARANCE SALE-

MILL LEN ·ASSORTMENT
SINGLE K &lt;POLYESTER

FLAR£ JEANS

Regular $18.50 values . Men•s- famous Levi blue
denim jeans . Now Is the time to save on famous
brand Item s.

Attractive basketweave wicker planters In walnut
· finish . Ideal for outdoor summer fl ower ar·
rangements. Save now I

Yard
Out they go! Beautiful selection of ladles' short
sleeve cotton knit tops. Shop during this sale and
save! Drastically reduced!

·-JULY tLURANCE SALEMEN'S FAMOUS LEVI DENIM

SAL~-

26·1NCH WICKER
FERN STAND

.

FOAM INTERSOLES

LADIES FIRST QUALITY
STRETCH NYLON

-JULY CLURANtE

More savings from Stiffler's. Boy's famous Fruit of
the Loom ;.ombed cotton briefs. Three · to a
package. GrUt savings. Don't miss lhls.

·3To'"'"
I.

-JULY CLEARANC~ SAL~­
. BOY'S FRUIT OF LOOM

Stiffler's July Clearance Sale . Three to a package.
Boy's Fruit of the Loom combed cotton tea shirts.·
White only. Stpck up- nowt

Pkg.

To
' P'kg.

I..

'\'

.·'';

~

\.

'1··

�-.JULY

..;;.JULY CUARANCE

CL~ARANC~ SALE~

REGULAR
SIZE SHREDDED
'
FOAM FILLED

.

SAL~.

•

great bargain for our
Ju ly Clearance Sale. Full size
fluffy foam fi lled bed pillows.
Pretty coverings.

··o

s 88

Eath····

... - .JULY CLEARANU $ALE.._
·sPECIAL CLOSE~OUT GROUP ·

'

fOOTWfAR

Clearance Groupl ~ assortment
df Mlseee and ~lora summer
haltera and cemlaott toP•· Aaaorted
styles, afzea ond

A bergaln bonanza for sewi ng enthusiast! A big assort·
ment of novelty and cotton blended fabrics In solid col·
ors and prints. Values to $1. July Clearance Sale.

SAL~­

FINAL CLOSE-OUT GROIJ.P
LADIES' BETTER SUMMER .

·UD

COTTON FABRICS

1

- JULY CLURANU

P·LADIES

MILL LENGTHS ASSORTMENT
NOVELTY AND BLENDED

LLOWS
1
. , . •• _.

SAU~

LADIES SUMMER

BLOUSES.

Special closeout group of ladles'
summer blouses. A varlt!ty of styles
choose from in assorted sizes and
I
Values to $3.99.

, Buy two pairs lor the price of one. Seleci from brands
you kn ow and trust! Dress, casual and sport styles.
All new spring and summer styles. July Clearan ce
Sale!

Each

· , Yard
.

YOU ALWAYS DO BETTER AT STIFFLER'S
SHOP EUERY DAY AND SAUE

QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED
-JULY

-STIFFUR'S JULY

CLEARANt~;

·SELECTED SALE G.ROUP
FAMOUS HAGGAR
SPRING &amp; SUMMER

.
·.
'

--

SELECTED GROUP
·SUMMER STYLE
COOL &amp;COMFORTABLE

Clearance of . Men 's Haggar Spring
and Summer separates. Includes mat·
ch lng coat s, vests and pants In a.
polyester blend. Solids and plaids In
tan, lt. blue, grey and navy. Some
other Haggar slacks included In
group. Good range of si~es .

Final clearance of ladies sportswear.
Good assortment of famous brands,
su mmer styles In a variety of colors
and sizes. Save one-hal f during this

popular sportswear Item. Misses and Juniors
. one and two piece styles, cool and comfortable
terry romper suits. Assorted · cool !i ummer
snaaes _ to choose from . Some with trim .
Misses and Juniors sizes.

sa le. Come earl y f,o r best sele&lt;;:Hon.

OFF

OFF

OFF
REG.

R~G.
PRIC~

PRICE

J

SPORTSW~AR

Clearance group of this summer' s most

' Clearance of ladles spring and summer dresses. Popular styies of better
quality dresses . Assorted sizes,
styles and colors. Values to $24,99.
Don 't miss thi s c learance special.

SALE-

SPECIAl SALE GROUP!
MISSES &amp;JUNIORSSUMMER
FAMOUS BRANDS

MISSES PO PULA~·
ONE AND TWO-PIECE
STYLES-TERRY

. ROMP~RS

PARAT~S DRfSS~S

CUARA~Cf

RE(;.
PRICE ..

Each ·.

JACKSON STORE ONLY
;_JULY UtllrKANt;t .,u..:;·CLOSE·OUT·LADIES
. AND MISSES ASSORTED

LADIES POPULAR
ASSORTED CREPE SOLE

SUMMER SHORTS

Close-out group of lad les and misses summer
shorts. Assorted styles, sizes and colors In the
group . Stoc.k up

~wl

""

THONG

SURF~RS

Ladles' popular crepe sole thong surfers In
assorted colors. Good range of sizes. Save now dur·
lng Stiffler's July Clearance I

f

Pair

-JULY

tLURANt~ SALE ~

OUT THEY GO! SAVE NOW!
BIG .ASSORTMENT FABRIC

REMNANTS
Mill asso.rtm ent of 112 to 1 yard remnant s In fancy
prints and solid colors in assorted fabrics. Ideal fc;&gt;r
many sewing needs.

-JULY \UAnA"~
BE NICE TO YOUR FEET
ONE SIZE-CUT TO FIT

SAL~­

-JULY .

CUT FROM FULL BOLTS
SOLIDS &amp; FANCY

DOUBL~

KNITS

Beau tif ul solid or fancy polyester doubleknlt
fabrics. Cut from full bolts. Buy now and double
your savings !
·

SAU-

-JULY

LARGE g.INCH SIZE
VINYL

ONE SIZE FITS All
'
LADIES STRETCH NYLON ·

PLAY BALLS

PANTIES

Big colorful fancy I

79~ valu&lt;~~ Outdoor fun

balls. 9" size. Regular
any age kid. Special sale

price.

-JULY tLURANCE

tLEARANC~ SAL~ -'"­

Cushion your s~eo. Buy foam lntersoles for your
shoes. They come In one size and you cut them to
fit . Save now! .
•

PLANTER

Each
,.,

-JULY tLfARANtE SALE-

-JULY CLURANU SAU-

SPECIAL-ASSORTED
VINYL PRINTED

TWELVE·INCH OVAL
FOOTED AMBER

One size fits all! 100% nylon 'ltretch panties . Your
chocle of briefs, hipsters or bikinis that. will. stretch
to lit sizes 4 to 7.
·

PLACE MATS
Assortment of printed vinyl placemats. First quality
and some Irregulars. Save during our July
Clearance Sale.

'

. '

GLASS BOWLS
Tw~lve Inch, footed, oval glass bowl s. All amber In

color with a pressed floral and fruit desi gn . Buy
now!
·
'

LADIES AND MISSES
POPULAR STYLE

'PERFECT POSTURE' f.9AM
•
NON-ALLERGENIC ·

DENIM JEANS

BED PILLOWS

Special sale group of lingle knit fabrics In mill
lengths. Assorted colors to choose from ..Stock up
now! ·
·

Non-allergenic, solid foam pillow-wi lt not bunch up
or mat. Removable, washable cover with non·rust
zipper. Odorless and dust proof.

Special clearance group! Misses and Juniors size,
famou s brand denim jeans In assorted styles. July
Clearance Sale.

KNEE-HI HOSE

One size fits all. Ladles' first quality stretch nylon
knee-hi hose. Come In assorted summer shades.

f '.

Stock up now I "

. I.

5

Pa1r

-JULY CL£ARANCI SAUASSORTMENT OF STYLES .
MISSES POLYESTER

RNIT SHORTS.
.
.
A good selection of better quality shorts. Some
with colored stripe trl"! In ladlea and mlsaaa sizes.
Regular $2.99 values. Sale price.

)

Each

s 99
Pair

AND BOY'S
AMERICAN ·MADE

GYM

SHO~S

American made gym 111d tennis oxford&amp;. with mold·
ed soles and cushion Insoles. Sturdy can~•• up·
pers. All sizes.
·

'3~!

Each

··

-JULY CUARANC~ SAL£. MILL ASSORTMENT .
2.1"X34" AND 24"X40"

-JULY CLURANCE SALE:..;.:
371A INCH BY 6· FOOT
WHITE VINYL WINDOW

AREA RUGS

SHADES

Mill assortmen1 of 21"x34" and 2~"x40" loop •~d
sha~rarea rugs In a varle!y of colors and patterns .

Buy now and save. "'

"fl7V• Inch by 6 foot white vinyl window shades .
regular $1.59. Special · price for Stiffler's July
Clearance Sale.
.

Pair

Yard
- JULY -CLfAANt~ SAL£AnRACTIVI MULTI-COLORED
BIG SIZE'.HUVY WT.

-JULY CLEARANCE SAL~24"X60" COLORFUL
CANDY STRIPE

RAG~: RUGS

RUG .RUNNERS

'

Heavy quality bolo wovan.reverslble rugs. Machine ·
washable. 24"x45" slze.'Vour&lt;:holce of lovely bright
colors.

I

(

'r

I'

'

Special group of boy's popular novelty printed front
tee shirts in assorted soli d colo rs. A great fun shirt
for summer.

JULY CLEARANC~ UU
BOY'S POPULAR STRIPE TOP WHITE

TUBE SOCKS

Stock up now for back to school wear. Boy' s white
stripe top stretc h tube socks . First quality! Great
savings!
·

•

'--.. ~

Pair

-JULY CLURAN(E
......
MEN'S FRUIT OF LOOM COMBED \

COTTON 8RifFS

Men's famous Fruit of the Loom brand cbm~ed cot ·
ton briefs. Three to a package. Stock up now du ring
this clearance sale!

MEN'S FRUIT OF LOOM

COTTON I-SHIRTS

Great sav ings during Stifflers July Clearance Salel
Men 's fa mous Fruit of the Loom cotton tee shirt s.
Three l o a package.

To $'\88
Pkg.

I.

(OlTON s·RIEFS - COTTON T-SHIRTS

Pair

I •

lEt·

Pair

SPORT SOCKS .

'100

Each

-JULY tUARANCE SAL~­
BOY'S NOVELTY PRINTED

f

-'JULY CLURANt£ SAUBOY'S FRUIT OF LOOM COMBED

Ladles' com fortable pom-pom trim low cut sport
socks with 1cushioned sole. 79% cotton, 21% ·
nylon, white, one size fits all.

s1oo

TUB£ SOCKS

Men 's white stripe top tube socks. Choice of 18
inch or 22 inch over the call style. Regu lar $1 .00 to
$1 .25. Fi rst quality!

-JULY CLEARAN.CE SALE :lADIES' "POM-POM"
CUSHIONED SOLE
I

Rubber backed 24"x60" broadloom carpet runners
In candy stripe design. Special for this July
Clearance Sale I

-JULY CLEARANCE SALEMEN'S POPULAR STRIPE TOP WHITE

50
Pair

Each

-JULY CLEARANCE SALE-

MILL LEN ·ASSORTMENT
SINGLE K &lt;POLYESTER

FLAR£ JEANS

Regular $18.50 values . Men•s- famous Levi blue
denim jeans . Now Is the time to save on famous
brand Item s.

Attractive basketweave wicker planters In walnut
· finish . Ideal for outdoor summer fl ower ar·
rangements. Save now I

Yard
Out they go! Beautiful selection of ladles' short
sleeve cotton knit tops. Shop during this sale and
save! Drastically reduced!

·-JULY tLURANCE SALEMEN'S FAMOUS LEVI DENIM

SAL~-

26·1NCH WICKER
FERN STAND

.

FOAM INTERSOLES

LADIES FIRST QUALITY
STRETCH NYLON

-JULY CLURANtE

More savings from Stiffler's. Boy's famous Fruit of
the Loom ;.ombed cotton briefs. Three · to a
package. GrUt savings. Don't miss lhls.

·3To'"'"
I.

-JULY CLEARANC~ SAL~­
. BOY'S FRUIT OF LOOM

Stiffler's July Clearance Sale . Three to a package.
Boy's Fruit of the Loom combed cotton tea shirts.·
White only. Stpck up- nowt

Pkg.

To
' P'kg.

I..

'\'

.·'';

~

\.

'1··

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