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                  <text>Commission places one mill levy on ballot
The Meigs County Commissioners
Tuesday voted to place a one mill
levy on the November ballot for the
.Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service.
Proceeds from the one mill levy
will be used for replacement of
emergency vehicles.
Meeting with the commissioners
in regard to the one mill levy was
Bob Bailey, E.M.S. coordjnator.
Bailey presented an excerpt from
the minutes of the EMS Boards ol
Trustees meeting held July 2, which
stated in part, " due to the
necessities to have more new
vehicles purchased and additional
money for the increased amount of
service being provided to the

rest dents of Meigs County, a motion
was made and carried to place a one
mill levy on the ballot in the 1980
general election for emergency
m ecidal service, specifying that the
one mill levy should be for the
majority of the ful)ds derived to be
used for replacement of vehicles."
Also meeting with the com·
missioners were Sandy Bruce and
Debbie Roach, representatives of
the AORTA system.
They met to discuss the idea of
participatmg counties submitting
letters of intent for a local share
match in an application for federal
funds to buy new AORTA buses.
'
The coiiUlUssioners inquired as to
the actual passenger count on the

bus between Pomeroy, Middleport
and Athe 0s.
Roach staled that according to
AORTA records, their appears to be
an increase in usage and it is anticipated that by fall more people
will utilize the service.
Thew commissioners stated that
due to a shortagew of county funds
they would !not commit the county to
matching funds but would agree to
submit a letter of intent only after
further research · is done on Meigs
County's use of the service.
The board questioned the need of
an 18 passenger bus, in that the nulnber of people presenting using the
service, it would appear that a· nine
passenger van 'would be sufficient.

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NO. 80

A letter wa s received from Lucy
Amsba r y, Ellen Bell, and Ba rbera
Schultz, requesting mformation cot'tcernmg the establishmenl of a
shelter for victims. of domestic
violence.
An appli cation will be submitted
by Community Mental Health and
residents would be referred to them
for co unseling . The operation of the
shelter would be supervised by a
cttizenn advtsory council.
The commissioners agreed to forward information concerning the
procedures for making applicalton.
County engineeer, Philip Roberts,
reported that work has begun on the
rapair of a slip on county road 75,
Highland Road. Roberts also repor-

ted on the repair to county road 28.
' One bid was r eceived I or a new
natbed truck for the highway department. The bid received. was from
the Pomeroy Motor Co., in the
amount of$1 7,999.50.
The commissiOners Ia bled the bid
for additional study by the county
engineer.
The commissioners reappointed
Judge John Beckley as a member o(
the board of trustees of Rio Grande
Corrununily College for a five year
term beginning Sept. 1, 1980. The
commissioners recessed.
1 Attending wer e Richard Jones,
;Jresid ~nl, Henry Wells, and Chester
Wells , commissioners, Mary Hol&gt;steter . clerk, and Martha Chambers.

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VOL. 31

Revisions to the
present bus
schedule were also discussed. Roach
and Bruce commented that they
would study the schedule and make
recommendations for revtsions.
Manning Webster, chairman of
the 169 Board, and Chris Layh, Mental Retardation administrator met
with the' board to agam discuss the
operational costs of the Menl;ll
Retardation School for the new
school year.
The commissioners awarded a
contract to Mid-Eastern GeoTech,
Inc., of Williamstowl), W. Va ., to do
the soil investigation work on the
Meigs County Mental Retardalton
Training Center and Workshop to be
constructed in Syracuse.

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

THE WORLD
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Medical examiner testifies
CINCINNATI - St. Louis' chief medical examiner told a federal
jury no case on record exists of permanent injury or death caused by
burning polyvinyl chloride. ·
.
In the second Beverly Hills Supper Club fi re trial, 15 makers of PVC
used in electrical wire msulation are on. trial for allegedly selling an
unreasonably dangerous product.
Much of the defense testimony has centered on hazardous gAses and
smoke that filled the burning club May 28, 1977. Attorneys for the 165
persons who died and approximately 50 others injur!'d said PVC insulation at the Southgate, Ky., club released poisonous fumes when it
burned .
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School employees up in Ohio
COLUMBUS - The state's 6!5 school dtstrtcts added employees and
boosted their payrolls during the 1979-80 academic year. while losing
76,206 students, says Ohio Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson.
"( And ) state education officials anticipate a decrease of nearly
70,000 more students when schools convene next month, " he said in a
news release Tuesday. '
During the 1979-all school year, there were 183,851 school employees
in Ohio for 2 million students, Ferguson said . That compa red to !82,411
school employees for 2. 1 rrullion students the previous year, he said.
The total salary and adrninistative costs per student also rose during
the past school year, F erguson said.
"School districts could have cut spending for salaries in the neighborhood of $102 million," il no additional teachers had beeri hired
during the 1979-all school year, he said.
Ferguson's observations were bas,ed on information submitted each
year by Ohio's school superintende nts to the stale Department of
Educatton.
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Publication lists n~w facilities

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Value
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COFFEE

DOWNY

FILTERS .

· , fABRIC
SOFTENER ;
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For fresher, clearer coffee,
and easy cleanup!

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COLUMBUS - State Development Director J ames A. Duerk has an·
nounced the publication of a new listing of port facilities along the 400mile Ohio River.
The brochure, entttled " Ohto River Port Facililtes," was prepared
by the res earch office of the Ohio De partment ol Economic and Community Development in coopearation with the Ohio Department of
Transportation.
The river's 153 marine ports, extending from East Liverpool to
Miami.Fort Station, are listed in the publication. Also included is each
port's owner or operator rail connections and type of freight handled.
The brochure, announced by Duerk on Tuesday, ts available from
the Department of Economtc and Community Development.

Bishops celebrate installation
WASHINGTON - Ninety white-robed Roman Catholic bishops and
five cardinals dressed in red marched into St. Matthews Cathedra l on
Tuesday to celebrate the mstallation of Archbishop James A. Hickey
as archbishop of Washington.
Hickey, 59, is the former bishop of Cleveland.
As the service opened in the downtown cathedral, the ca rillon soun(Cont inued on p age 16 )

Meigs Jaycees to be ·in

charge qf 1981 regatta

FRUTH PHARMACY
, "THE EVERYTHING STORE"

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ALL ITOIEI
OPEl 71AYI
AWEOI
FlEE PAIIIM

MOBILE HOME DESTROYED - The mobile home of Mrs. Doris
Snowden was COillPleted destroyed when it was hit by high winds during a
several storm Tuesday night. Mir~culously, Mrs. Snowden, who was in

Mobile home leveled by storm
The mobile home of Mrs. Doris
Snowden, IOC4lted between Pomeroy
and Chester and Route 7, was completely demolished when high winds
hit Meigs County about 6 p.m.
Tuesday.
Mrs. Snowden, employed at the Pomeroy National
Bank, was at her mobile home when
the winds- termed by some aS a tornado--struck. She was thrown from
the home as it was lifted into the air
and a large section of the home went
onto Route'7.

Meigs citizens may

Heavy rains followed the high winds and volunteers worked at
salvaging from th~ highway and the
nearby area, itt.~• from the mobile
home. The department of Sheriff
James Proffitt was on the scene to
assist and to control traffic through
the area for some time.
Mrs. Snowden was not injured in
the mishap. ·Pieces of the trailer
were scattered over a wide area .
The mobile home, of course, was a

~gister

Ohioans attending the Meigs County Fatr this year will find out only
the traditional cotton candy and hot
dogs, but also a chance to become
registered voters and the opportunity to express their opinions

EMERGENCY RUNS
Several runs by units .were reported for Tuesday by the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services. They
include Rutlan&lt;l 7:09 p.m. to
Snowville for Nancy Marming, taken
to O'Bieness Hospital, Athens;
Pomeroy, 9:16 a .m., to 312 ·Condor
St. for William Grueser, dead upon
the unit's arrival; Pomeroy Unit,
11:18 p.m. to the sheriff's office for
Paul Mitchell, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport
Unit, 11 :06 a.m. to Happy Hollow, for
Howard Searls; Tuppers Plains,
9:12 p.m .Rice Run Road for Lena
Burgelon, taken to St. Joseph
Hospital; Tuppers Plains, 7:19a.m.,
transfer Dora Woods from home in
Syracuse to Veterans Memoria l.

ski show, a jet ski competition and a
wacky boat race.
No dramatic changes are planned,
according to Gerard. " We just want
to make the best possible use of the
talent we have available in the com·
munity" Gerard said.
FUND DRIVE UNDERWAY
Plaques were presentect to John
• A fund drive has been started for
Anderson and Jim Frecker lor their
repairs and clean up of the Bald
work during the Regatta .
Knob Cemetery.
It was announced that ballots will
·Funds collected will be used for
sent to members to elect new direcnew gates, to straighten monumen·
tors. The directors will in turn make
ts, correct fencing problems and
recommendations for new o£flcers.
general clean up. Those wishing to
· Scott Luca s, administrator of
help are, asked to send donations
Veterans, Memoria l Hospital, inmarked specificall y for the
troduced Dr. John Wade, M. D. of · cemetery purpose to Shirley JohnPoint Pleasant, who is an ear, nose,
son, clerk of Lebanon Township,
throat and allergist specialist. ' Dr.
Portland, Ohio 45770.
Wade will be practicing at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
TO MEET FRIDAY
A special meeting of the Western
Boot Citizens Band Radio Club will
be held at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the
club house.
Vartable cloudiness, warm and humid with a chance of showers or
thunderstorms through Thursday. Lows tonight m the low 70s. Highs
Thursday in the low 90s. Chance ol rain 30 percent tonight, 40 percent
In Meigs County the number to
Thursday.
'
call
for emergency help Is 992Extended Ohio Forecast- Friday through Sunday : Warm with a

The Big Bend Regatta will be under the direction of the Meigs County
Jaycees in 1981.
This was announced Tuesday by
Paul Simon, president of the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce, at
a noon luncheon held at the Meigs
Inn.
The chamber has sponsored the
Big Bend Regatta since its beginning in 1964.
The directors of the chamber met
earlier with the ' officers of the
Jaycees in regard to the Jaycees
taking over the enttre operation.
Chamber members approved the .
change over.
Paul Gerard, president of the
Jaycees, reported that tentative
plans call for more activities on the
river, including power boat races, a .

the home, was not injured. Pieces of the home and its contents were scattered over a wide area . The home was located on Route 7 between
Chester and Pomeroy.

at '80 fair

on some current issues.
Ohio Secretary of State Anthony J.
Celebrezze, Jr. reports that voting
equipment will be located at the
Republican and Democratic .booths
on the fairgrounds. Those attending
can participate in a simulated election to express their, opinions, and at
the same time become more
familiar with the type of voting
machinery used in that county. Personnel will also be available at the
booths to register citizens to vote.

complete wss.
Sheriff Proffitt also reported other
damages as a result of the severe
storm. The roof on the Benjamin F .
Newsome homne was blown off and
a camper topper was moved some
200 feet and demolished along with a
metal outbuilding. The Newsome
home is located directly behind the
Snowden mobile home. There was
1extenstve "damage to the interior of
the Newsome residence.
The motor home of Tim Hawthorne, Route I, Long Bottom, although
-anchored, was moved about four
feel. Mr. and Mrs. Hawthorne were
in the home at the time . There was
only minor damage inside.
An automobile owned by Joseph
Salyers, Route 1, Reeds\ ille, was
damaged when struck by a tree.
Several large trees were uprooted at
the Edison Hobstetter summer
home.
There was roof damage to the
Bethel Church. Silver Ridge, in the
Reedsville area, when a large tree
fell onto the church. There were also
electrical damages.
James Ridenour, Chester, reported electric damages to his

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State forecast, local weather

chance of thunderstorms Friday and Saturday. Mostly fair Sunday.
Highs from the mid-80s to low 90s. Lows in mid-60s to low 70s . ·

television and the sign in front of the
Eastern High School was down
down . A wmdow was broken from
the gymnasium.
Charles Legar, Pomeroy, disaster
service director, asks thl)t residents
contact him in regar to damages.
Legar said there is a slight chance
that grants fur aid might be
available. Legar can be reached at
992-3405 .
A family of five narrowly escaped
drowning Wednesday morning when
they attempted to drive through high
water on county road 10 near Dexter.
·
According to the sheriff's department, Martin and Michele Buck, Rt.
I, Wakeman, Ohio, were returning
home following a visit wtth Mrs.
Buck's sister when they attempted
to drive through high water.
The parents managed to get out of
the car and held their three children,
ages two years, one year and six
months, above their heads as they·
walked out of the high water, up to
their shoulders.
Emergency units from tlie area
were called to the scene as well as
theOhioS\ate PatroL

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PEtiTIONS PRESENTED - Petitions carrying
1,532 signatures requesting that a ctton be taken to
provide adequate highways on the Ohio side of the
Ravenswood Bridge were delivered to the Meigs County Commissioners Tuesday afternoon . Commissioner
Richard Jones said the petitions might be hand earried

\:t·"m \
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to Ohio Governor J ames Rhodes. At the presentation
were: front, I to r , Henry Wells, Richard Jones, .
Chesler Wells, Meigs County Corrunissioners; bak 1 to :
r, County Engineer Philip Robet,1s, Louis DeLuz of the
Portland area, who headed the stg ning of the petitions ·
and Meigs Prosecutor F rederick W. Crow Ill.

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�2- The D'aily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Alig. 66, 1980

Opinions &amp;
Comments

Err,x

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

Reds ready
for title drive

~w~SrA~--re~ l't.e.A.~o

14ULMt

THE DAIL" SENTINEL
(USPS 115-!ICih
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS.MASON AREA
.
Letten of optrUo11 are welcomed. Tilt)' t hould bt lets than 300 words long 1or subjecl to reduc·

Uoo by 1M edUor) aDd must be signed with the slgoee's address. Names may ~ withheld upon
pubUcatloa. Howtver, oo request, aam ~ s will be disclosed. Lclkrs s hould~ In gOOd taste,-addreulag Issue., oot persooalltlel.
""'
Published d.llly except S.turday b.J Tb~ Ohio Valley Publlshlag Cumpaay· Multimrdt.. IUt:.,
111 CoortSl, Pomeroy, Obi, f,5TI!I. Ruxl11ess Oflh:e Phont m. tJSfi . EdJtorl.a1 Phone99Z·2157.
Sec:ood clau pustage paid at PomerOy, Ohio.
.
National advertiRiog repreteotative, Landon Assocla~, 3101 Euclid A.ve., Cleudand, Ohiu

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The AllfM:ialed })ress is nclusively eatltled to the use for publication of all Dt:W!l dispatrhrli
ll"flllled to the D(:WSpaper aod aho the local new5 publlshed'hereln.
Publl1her
Robert Wi~ett
Geoual Mgr. &amp; City Editor
Robert Hoeflich
New1 EdJtor
~r.,..,..,.
Dole Rothgeb, Jr.
Adv. Mawager
~
Carl Ght•rn
~m~

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Ohio newspapers
·
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discuss the issues
Here is some editorial comment from Ohio newspapers
throughout the past week:
THE LIMA NEWS: "At first we thought the balanced
budget show of 1981, which opened in Washington last
spring, was going to be a hit worthy of taking on the road.
President Carter and .. . congressional leaders were all
singing togeth~r about balancing the federal books. Now
'the sour notes and pratfalls make their act barely worthy
of the Gong Show.
'
"Only four months after projecting that the government
would operate with a surplus next year, the administration
now estimates that the budget will have a $30 billion
deficit. No one should be surprised if the figure turns out to
be too low....
·
"Last March, Jimmy Carter was telling us that inflation
was our No. 1 economic problem, and that balancing the
· budget was the No. 1 step to control it. To quote his own
· lyrics: 'The federal government must stop spending
money we do not have and borrowing to make up the dif1eren Ce ' ....
. "A catchy tune. But will it play in Peoria in this summer
of discontent? Apparently not."
CINCINNATI ENQUIRER: "President Carter and
· British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher have at .least
one problem in common. But there's also a vast difference
In terms of the po)itical consequences.
· "The problem is unemployment. In the United States, it
is expected to stand at about 8.5 percent by the year's end;
in Britain, it is 7.8 percent today....
.
"The difference in political consequences is that Mr,
. Carter is on the brink of a struggle for re-election, whereas
Mrs. Thatcher is likely to have nearly four more years to
wrestle with the problem ....
-- · "Mr. Carter may well be tempted to take short-term
measures in the weeks ahead to alleviate the unemployment problem; Mrs. Thatcher, however, has rejected
some of the nostrums proposed by her critics ....

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"You promise whatever you didn't do, you won't do it again? OK, I release you
in custody. of your friends.''

For Americans it doesn't pay to save
NEW YORK (AP) - It has been
made to seem one of the deepest
mysteries of personal finance, when
in truth a pretty fair' explanation of it
could he provided by almost anyone
who zver had a dollar bill in hand.
And yet, Congress has wrestled its
way through thousands of pages of
testimony about it and apparently
. still hasn't caught on, and it is joined
in confusion and doubt by some
otherwise sophisticated people.
The s()-Calied mystery is why
Americans, unlike Japanese and
Europeans, seem unwilling to save.
The answer is simply that it doesn't
,pay to save.
·
It doesn't pay because of inflation,
poor yields and lack of incentives,
particularly tax Incentives. Why
save when inflation and taxes erode
values faster than they are replaced
by interest earned?
Some other reasons also are offered: High prices make it difficult
to save, many households are un-

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"Ya say you're looKmg for something that gets
gqod mileage, eh
?"

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-Today zn
:history.
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Today is Wednesday, Aug. 6, the
·• 219th day·of 1980. There are 147 days
- left In the year.
·- 1 Today's highlightin history:
On August 6, ,1945, the atomic
: bomb was used as a weapon for the
' first time when the United States
: bombed Hiroshima, Japan in World
War II .
• On this date :
In 1800, Napolean Bonaparte ordered the dissolution of the Holy
Roman Empire.
In t914, the U.S. offered to serve as
: peace mediator at the beginning of
- World War I.
-i
, In 1962, the West Indian island of
•· Jamaica became an independent
: nation within the British com-- monwealth.
In 1978, Pope P•ul VI died at the
. age of 80.

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Business mirror
retain that rate until savings pay,
either through inflation control,
higher yields or tax incentives.
In other nations, one of the
strongest incentives· to saving is to
link it to the desire to own a home.
Those who save for the down
payment on a house get other
benefits as well.
In West Germany, savers at
building societies (equivalent to U.S.
savings institutions) can earn 18 per·
cent a year tax-free if, as agreed un-

ths' savings. If the funds are left for

two more - years, the bonus is
doubled. And yields are tax-free.
Australians buying their first
homes received matchi. ' government grants of one-third th~ amount
saved up to a maximum of $Z,OOO. A
saver who accumulates $6,000 would
have $8,000 for a downpayment.
Austria offers a plan to persons
under age 25 in which the govern·
ment pays a bonus of 17 percent a
year. In France, those saving for a

The passing of the shah is in itself
an event of no little interest. But it is
the event, not the man, that has impact on the continuing Iranian crisis.
And even that is of considerably
less consequence at this stage of
history in the making than events
taking place in his former capital principally the continuing struggle
for revolutionary power between
religious extremists and an uncoordinated array of secular
moderates. Or of numerous events
during the three decades ths t
preceded the Iranian revolution.
Those were the years of deepening ·
relationship between the United
states, the foremost global power,

and a Middle Eastern despotism
searching for a 20th-century identity.
The significant events of the
perioq are well known - the shah's
ouster in 1953 by anti-Western
nationalists and his prompt
restoration by CIA a'rrangement, the
non-stop Soviet-American competition for Mideast advantage that
invested Iran with such strategic importance, Iran's rapidly increasing
oil wealth and the shah's forceddraft effort to modernize the country, the attempt to transform Iran
into the West's surrogate policeman
following withdrawal of British
power from the Persian Gulf.
Through them all, successive administrations in Washington came to
view the interests of the "' United
States and imperial Iran as identical. That was a fallacy that continues to. cloud comprehension or
what has happened and is happening .
in Iran.

Former President Richard Nixon
self-appointed American
representative at the shah's last
rites but, as a once powerful man
similarly outpointed by events,
possibly the most appropriate- has
criticized the present administration
for lacking " the grace to admit that
(the shah) was a friend of the United
States for 30 years.'.'
Grace may have less to do with il
than realization in retrospect that
during the last several of those years
the shah was the type of friend who
makes enemies superfluous. He was
a driving force in OPEC's inflating
of oil prices that is shaking world
economic arid political stability. His
modernization of Iran was imbalanced, an attempt to construct an
industrial economy on a primitive
social and political base that
resulted in uncontainable tensions.
And his rush for Mideast military
pre-eminence - encouraged by the
Nixon administration which
removed long-standing restraints on

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Bruce under more
pressure at·Massillon

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Piqua's
David Selsor smacked four hits to
lead his team to a 14-4. victory over
Euclid on Tuesday in the 54th annual
Ohio American Legion Baseball
Tournament.
Bob Holzapfel collected four REI's
for Piqua. Paul Adkins had three
hits for Euclid.
The game had been suspended
Monday because of rain, with Piqua
leading f&gt;-1 in the third inning. Piqua',
now 2-0 in the tournament and 32-3
overall, is not scheduled to play until
Thursday.
In other games Tuesday, Lan-

U. S. arms policy, making available
to him the latest weapons in massive
quantities - had the effect of unsettling rather than stabilizing the
region.
There is considerable beating of
breasts in some quarters to the effect that American failure to go all
out in support of the shah as his
regime crumbled will cost us dearly
in the future .
Turning again to the portable
Nixon : " If the policy of the United
States is not drastically changed so
that the world will know that we
stand by our friends, we will lose all

caster and Ashtabula were
eliminated from the 13-team field.
Lima defeated Ottawa 3-2 in 14 innings, Cincinnati Budde heat Lancaster 6-4 in 14 innings, Ashley whi(&gt;"
ped Portsmouth 8-1, Fostoria
blanked Ashtabula 6-:i, and Piqua
trounced ColumbusSouthway 17-2.
Three other games were suspended until Wednesday at 9 a.m.
because of rain. In those games ,
Belpre led Lima 3-2 in tjle fifth inning, Portsmouth paced Steubenville 1-0 in the second inning and Ottawa was 72 over Euclid in the fourth
inning.

Toronto (Jefferson 4-7) at Oeveland lWaits 7·

NATIONALI.EAGUE
EAST
Won Lost Pet. GB
59 c;
.567
Moo treal
?itUburgh
56 411
.133 3
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Phil.ad tl~ia
New Yor •
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St. Louis
16 57
13 56
.126 141&gt;
Chi cago

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Ka.JUasCity (Gura 1~ ) at Detroit (Morri.oJ 12·
9), (n l
Texas fMed.Jch l)-.5 ) at New York (Guidry 12~ ).
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Seattle !Beattie 4-tO ) at California (Knapp 271. (nl

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Los Angeles
Cincinn11 tl
San Franclst'O
AUanta
SanDie.s o

That may be one lesson to be
drawn from the Iranian events.
Another might be that expediency
rather than friendship is what is
really involved in such relationships. If more reserve were exercised in the development, collapse
might not be the traumatic event it
so frequently and unfortunately is.

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(7

.~7

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BAmNG \200 at bals l: Hendrick, St.Louis,
.329 ; Templeton , St.Louis, .326; Trillo,
Phila~elphia. .324; Buckner, Chicago; .32.'1;
R.Smlth, Loll Anngele:s, .32.'1 .
RUNS : LeFlore, Montreal, 7$ ; Rose ,
Philadelphia, 70; Clark, San FranciS&lt;'o, 70;
K.Hemandez , St.Louis, 67; R.Scott, Mootreal,
66; Collins, Clncinnati,66.
RBI : Garvey, (MI. AnMeles, 82; Hendrick,
St.Lou.is, 81 ; Sdunidt, Phihtdelphia , n ; Carter.
Montreal, 69: Clark, San Francisco, 6~.
HilS : G orv~y. Los Artf!eles, 136; Templeton,
St.Louis, 133; Hendrick, St.Louis, 129 ; Taveras,
New York , 123; Cromartie, Montreal, 121.
OOUBLES : Rose, PhlbuSelphla, 30 ; Knight,
Cincinmlli, 30; K. Hernandez, St.LouiJ, 27;
Steams, New- York, 25; Reitz, St.Loois , 24;
Driessen, Cincinnati, 24 .
TRIPLES : R.Scott, Montreal, 9: LeFlore,
Montual, 8; Templeton, St.Louis, 8; Landestoy,
Houston, 8: Flyrm, New York , 7; McBride
Philadelphia, 7; O.Moreno, Pittsb1.1rgh, 7; Cla rk:
San Francisco, '1 .
•
HOME RUNS : Schmidt~ PJilladelphia, 27;
Hendrick, St.Lollis, 21; Homer, Atlanta, 21; Carter, Montreal, 20; Garvey, Los AnKeles, 20;
&amp;ker, Ws A~eles , 20; Clark, San F rancisco,
20.
STOLEN BASES: . LeFlore, Montreal, 67;
O.Moreno, Pittsburgh, 61; Collins, Cincinnati .
~2 ; R.scott, Montre~l, 38; Richfrd5 . San Diego,

·'" 11'""

56

.1116

foil

17
17

-

7

.113

.139

00

Tuesday's Games

12

Ch.!CRHO 10, PittsbUtHh 3
St.Louis at Philadelphia, ppd., rain

Montreal II , New York 5
Atlanta 6, L.o8 Angelc.s 4
Cincinn.at19, San Diego 2
Sun Frsncisco9, H ouston 3

Wednesday's Games
. San Diego ( Mura 4-J) at Cincinnati (Bonham 2·
~ 1Pittsburgh (Bibby 13-2 and Blyleven ~~ at
Chicago (Lamp 9-B and Capi11a 2-4 ), 2
New York (Jackson I-l l at Montreal (Sanderwnll-S ), (n)
St.Louis (Sykes 4--8) at Philadelphia (Walk 811, (n )
I.Al'i AngeleNo /Sutton 7·3) at Atlanta (Matula&amp;9),\ n )

Slln Francisco (Blue 9-!1 J at Houston ( Jo~ orsc h 89), (n )
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
Won lost Pet

New York
Baltimore
Detroit

66
59
56
II

Boston
Cleveland
Taronlo

ft4

Milwauk~

..

'

KanaasCity
OHkhmd

'l'eu s
Minnesota
Chicago
Califom!a
Scaltle

~2

45
WEST

66
II

Jl
44
46

.629
.573

50

.114

6
81'o
U

fil
49

.519
.315
.437

12
:II

58
~

51
47

GB

53
54
S9

-46

58

40
39

64
67

. ~9

.623
.509

.486
. .443
.t-42

II ~

38.

12
141,;;
19

.:J&amp;

19
;!;

.368

71

~

I

Tuesday's Game~
t Boston 3, Milwaukee 1
Baltimore 8, Chicago 2
Cleveland 8, Toronto 5
Texas8, New York. I
Kansas City 6, Delrolt 3
~lltomla 5, Seattle 4 .
OaklandJ, Mlnnesota2
Wednesday's Games
Minnesota (Eric kson 3-81 at Oak land

( Kln~ man6-ll )

Ch.! OHHO (Burns 10.9\ at &amp;ltimore (FianaKan
11-8)1 {n )

Milwaukee (Svrensen 7-7) at
II. In)

B ~ to n

(Ojeda I·

PITCHING (10 Decisioru ): Bibby", Pittsbur~h ,
ll-2, .ll67, 2.80; Reuss, Los Angeles, 12-4, .75(1,
2.09; Carlton, Philadelphia, 1~ • .771, 2.28; Bornback, New York, 8-3, .1'll, 4.0? ; G.Jackson, Pit·
tsburgh, ~ . :rn, 2.19; ~oskau, Cincinnati, 8-3,
.727, 3.59; Richard , HOUJton , J()..t , .714, 1.90;
Hooton, Los Angeles, lo.-40 .714, 3.28.
STRJKEOUTS :· Carlton, Philadelphia, 191;
Ryan, Houaton, 12$ ; Blyleven, Pittsburgh. 121:
P.Niekro, Atlanta , 121; Richard , Howton , 119.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BAmNG 1250 at bats ): Breu, Kansas City ,
.:J8J; Dllooe, Cleveland, .:W,; B. Bell, Te ~ta s , .J-41 ; •
Wll&amp;on, Kansas Cit}', .341; Cooper, Milwaukee , ,
.340.
.
RUNS : Wilson, Kall.'i.Bs City, 90; Wills, Texas.
80; Yount, Milwaukee, 79; Bwnbry, Bw.ltimore,
77 ; Rivers, TeiUI.s, 76.
,
.
RBI : Re.Jack.son, New Yo'rk , ':.82; Oli ver,
Texas, 79; Perez. Boston. 76; Og il vie,
Milwaukee, 76 ; Cooper, Mih1fHUkee, 72; Amm:i,
Oakland , 72.
HJTS : Wilson, Kansas City, 157; Hlver:i,
Texas, 143 ; OJive~ , T}·x.~s. iM: Cooper,

Mi l wauk~. IJ:t :

Hwnbry, tsaJumore, 126 .
OOUBLES: Yount, Milwaukee, :!2; Morrison,
Ctucago, 32; McRae, Kansa s City, 28; Olivt!r,
Texas, '!l ; D.Gorcia, Toronto, :E.
TRIPLES : Griffin, Toronto, 11 ; Wilson, Kansas City, 10: Brett. Kansa s City. It; Bumbry,
Baltimore, 7: Yount , Milwaukee, 7: Washington,
Kansas Ci t)l, 7; Landreaux, Mlnnesot.a , 7.
HOME RUNS : Re. Jackson , New York, 30 ;
Oglivie, Milwaukee, 'll ; Thomas, Milwaukee, 23;
Armas, Oakland, ?J ; Ma yberry, Toronto, 18;
V~lez ,

Tomnto, l8.
STOLEN BASES : Henderson, Oakland , 55:
WiLson, Kansas City, 46 ~ Dilone, Cleveland, 38;

Bwnbry, Baltimore, 28; Wills, Texa~ . 28.
PITCHING (10 Decisioru; ): Darwin, Texas, 91, .900. 2.34 ; Stone, Baltimore , 17-4 , .810, J118;
Gura, KarL'I.II.!I City, 15-4 . .789, 2.07 ; Jolm . New

York, 15-5, . 7~ . 3.39 : Ra iney , Boston, 11--3, .7 27 ,
Ul6 ; Lopez, Detroit, 8-3, .727, l .30 ; M cG rto ~or ,

Ba!Umore, J2{i, .700, 3.61: Corbett, MinneSota, 73.. 700. 2.09.
.
STRIKEOUTS; Guidry , New York.. 116:
M.Norr iS, Oakland, 115; F. BHnni.ster, Sc&lt;~tlle ,
112; Haas, Milwaukee, 105: Ba1'11:er , Cle veland .
100 : Perry, Texa·s, 100.

COLLEGE FOO'l'BALL .
KINGS MILLS, Ohio (AP) - Mike
Holovak, a head coach for nine years
at Boston College and a former head
coach and general manager for the
Boston Patriots of the National Football League, was among i 4 players
and coaches inducted into the
College Football Hall of Fame.
The other living players and
coaches inducted into the Hall included Howard Cassady, Ohio State;
John Lattner, Notre Dame ;
Agostine Lio, Georgetown: Dick
Maegle, Rice : Edward McGinley
Pennsylvania; Thomas Scott:
Virgipia: Vernon Smitl&gt;, Georgia;
Herman Wedemeyer, St. Marys, and
Coach John Vaught of Mississippi. ·
Ernie Davis of Syracuse, Joe eonchess of Pittsburgh and Ernest
" Pug" Rentner of Northwestern
were inducted posthumously, as was
Washington State Coach O.E .
" Babe" Hollinghery.

--~-----------.___ ·--~-

an 8-1 lead after four innings,
highlighted by Carter's tw()-riJII
double in the third and Scott's tw~
run triple an inning later. Parris!l
contributed a tw()-run homer in the
seventh.
Williams called his I,OOOth victory
"an individual honor , but it has
nothing to do with what we're trying
to do with our club h~re . Hopefully,
I'll be able to cherish it after we win
the playoffs and World Series."
The Expos have a three-game lead
over Pittsburgh in the NL East. The
Dodgers could have recaptured first
place ,in. the NL West. Instead, they
still trail Houston by one-half game.
They built a 4-1 lead on pitcher
Dave Goltz' twcrrun single and Rich
Monday's twcrrun homer. But with
two out in the ninth, Atlanta's Jeff
Burroughs waq safe on third
baseman Ron Ccy's fielding error.
After Rick Sutcliffe walked pinch
'hitter Mike Lum, Charlie Spikes
greeted Steve Howe with a runscoring pinch-single, bringing on
Don Stanhouse. Jerry Royster, the
Braves' third consecutive pinchhitter, singled home another run and
Hubbard followed with his homer.
"I knew I hit the ball well," Hubbard said, " but the way Dusty (left
fielder Baker! was going back I
thought he had a chance to get it. I
didn't go into my trot until I knew it
was out."~
Los Angeles first baseman Steve
Garvey said the Joss " could make
our team mad, which has a tendency
to make us come out blazing. But it
really takes the wind out of your
sails to lose one like this."

Syracuse wins title

SYRACUSE - A field of 10 teams
entered the Syracuse Senior league
softball tournament for girls with
undefeated Syracuse emerging the
champion. It took the . winning
Syracuse team only five games to
win the double elimination tournament.
In first round play, Syracuse
defeated New Haven 4-2 behind winning pitcher Carla ' Morris, who
tripled home two runs in the first inning.
Second round play saw Syarcuse
.
claim a 13-1 victory over the Hit-nIn the Senior Softball league
Misses. Beth Bartrum made 4-for-:i
regular season finals, Sy~acuse
and Tonia Ash 3-for-:i at the plate to
downed Dravo 12-4. The win iced a
spark the winners.
perfect 18-0 undefeated season for
In the third game, Syracuse overthe winners who also clinched the
came a 2-0 deficit to defeat Syracuse
league championship with the win . 3-2. Mary Slavin had a run-scoring
Second place in the league went to
single to tie the game and Sonia
the Middleport Superstars. Sonia
Ash's sacrifice fly produced the winAsh and Kim Dugan led the winners
ning run .
with two singles each with Dugan
Pomeroy tied the score in the fifth
Four other games are scheduled knocking in three runs. Becky Crow
inning
of the fourth game, but
Wednesday, in addition to the three had a triple, two singles and three
Syracuse
erupted for three runs to
suspended.
RBI. Laren Wolfe doubled for Dravo claim another come ·from behind
At 1 p.m .• Ashley, 2-0 and 2H,
while Michelle Johnson and Tina
fa ces the winner 'of the Belpre-Lima Hill collected singles. Carla Morris win.
Syracuse met Dravo in the chamgame: Columbus Southway, 1-1 and
was the winning pitcher and Debbie pionship game. Dravo defeated
26-!3, meets Cincinnati Budde, 1-1 Michael the loser.
Letart, Mason, Middleport and
and 28-12 ; and the loser of the ·
In Junior league, Salisbury scored Pomeroy in the loser's bracket.
Belpre-Lima game opposes the win- a 14-1 win over Mason. Salisbury is
Playing their third consecutiv.e
ner of the Steubenille-Portsmouth
lHl in the league and 21-2 overall . . game of the day, Dravo took an
. game. Fostoria, 1-1 and 21-10,
Barb Hatfield was the winning pitclashes with the winner of the Ot- cher, while Teresa Pratt doubled
tawa-Euclid game at 4 p.m.
and singled twice, Mary Moore
The double elimination tourdoubled and singled and Carla King
nament continues through Saturday doubled .
at Ohio University.
'For Mason, Mary Sisson, Karen
Lewis, and Tian ~erns each singled.

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

our friends .' '

Ford actually has been marketing
a " world car" in the United States
for the pas\ several years, but it
hasn't been heavily promoted
because it's classified as a "captivei
mport" that dllesn't meet the 75 percent standard.
That auto is the Ford Fiesta. Its
engine blocks comes from company
foundries in Dagenham, England,
and Almusafes, Spain; body panels
are pressed in Almusafes and
Saarlouis, West Germany; car·buretors are made in Belfast, Northern Ireland; wheels are cast in
Genk, Belgium; and gearboxes,
transmissions and axles are built in
Bordeaux, France.
"Our Bordeaux transaxle and
automatic transmission plants
together produce more export
revenue for France t)lan t)le entire
Bordeaux wine industry," boasts
Caldwell. What he doesn 't mention,
however, is the negative impact on
the United States' balance-of-trade

enough.
" I didn't realize there would he all
that pressure, but it finally dawned
on me around the first game that
there'd be a lot more pressure than I
anticipated. But I guess it wore off
as the season wore on.
" During the season, I couldn't
believe how everything broke right.
We came from behind to win some
early games and there were no
problems off the field. Everybody
just thought about one thing playing football. There wasn't one
complaint from a player during the
season and that's unusual."
For 1980, Bruce's Buckeyes are
being touted as p~ible national
championship taliber.
"We've got a great football team
- I think. We've got the one
ingredient you like to coach - great ,
great speed. I don't think there's a
team in the country that can match
our speed.
•
"We've got a great quarter~ck in
Art Schlichter. He's not a straight
dropback passer and he's not an O[&gt;"
lion quarterback and that's the
toughest position to defend against if
you.can run and pass.
"We have nine regulars back on
defense , our kicking game is bad:,
our skill people are back. Any
question mark would ruive to be our
offensi ve line. We're talented, but
we're very young and inexperience
will cost us early in the season.
" Last year, we were only picked
fourth in the l3ig Ten and we weren't
even in the preseason Top Twenty. I
hope they're as right this year as
they were wrong last year."

By Associated Press
Montreal Manager Dick Williams
would like to savor his latest victory
sometime in October. Los Angeles
Manager Tom Las&lt;irda would like to
forget his latest setback as soon as
possible.
"Either I'm real old or I've been
with a lot of good ballclubs,"
Williams said after the Expos bat. tered the New York Mets 11-5
Tuesday night for his 1,000th triumph, making him the 32nd major
lea81Je manager to reach that figure.
"I guess it's a combination of both."
Lasorda, on the other hand, was
one out'away from his 333rd victory
when it suddenly turned into loss
No.264 as the Atlanta Braves rallied
for five runs in the bottom ·of the ninth - all with two out, all unearned
and the last three coming on Glenn
Hubbard's home run - to defeat the
Dodgers 6-4.
"That game belonged to us,"
Lasorda said. "That's the kind you
should pack away. You have a threerun lead and you get the first two
outs in the ninth and you still let it
get away. That's tough to take."
In other National League games,
the San Francisco Giants trolinced
the Houston Astros 9-3, the Cincinnati Reds trimmed the San Diego
Padres 9-2 and the Chicago Cubs
whipped the Pittsburgh Pirates 11-3.
The St. Louis-Philadelphia contest
was rained out.
Gary Cl!rter, Rodney Scott, Andre
Dawson and Larry Parrish drove in
two runs apiece in Montreal's victory, although New York's Doug
Flynn tied a major league record
with three triples .. The Expos built

Youth League
.

Lancaster eliminated from Legion tourney

Auto industry faces long..rerm transformation

BELGIAN REVOLT
A Belgian revolt against Dutch
control began in 1830. It was
stimulated by a July revolution in
behalf of its " world cars" - the
unanswereq.
DETROIT (NEA) - Obscured by
Paris, class warfare and disconFord Escort and Mercury Lynx. ·
Because the "world car" concept
the current short-term slump in
tentment with Dutch King William I.
involves fundamental changes . in
While cars destined for the United
passenger car sales is a long-term
Belgium and Holland had been . transformation of such vast propor- · production .techniques - including
States markets are rolling off Ford
united in 1814 as a bliffer state againassembly lines in Michigan and New
lions that it will irrevocably alter the
the relocation of manufacturing
st France, but traditions, religions
Jersey, viriually identical au\os will
auto industry not only in this country
facilities to other nations and the inand interests split the new state. In
but all around the globe.
troduction of automation to an unbe produced jn Great Britain and
1828, the king 'had applied press cenAt the center of what Philip Caldprecedented degree - the policy
West Germany .
.
sorship and · intervened in the
well, board chairman of the Ford
issues are .of special importance to ·
Although approxima.tely 90 pernamiqg of bishops, causing further
Motor Co., describes as "the most . those with jobs related to the
cent of the components of the
discontent.· After ' the revolution
domestic model will come from this
massive and profound induStrial
domestic·auto industry.
began, Dutch troops were driven out
country, the E~cort and Lynx will
revolution in pea9etime history" is
of Brussels and independence was
That includes not only the more
an unpretentiO,IIS yet extraordinary
have parts made in a dozen different
proclaimed. Other European counthan 760,000 men and women direcvehicle known as the ''world car."
countries, including transaxles from
tries later prevented a Dutch
Japan, cylinder heads cast in Italy
That generic phrase refers to con- tly involved in producing and assemreconquest and recognized Belgium
and rear brakes made in Brazil.
pact, fuel-ef[icient autos specifically bling cars but also the uncounted
as an independentstate in 1839.
designed to be built, assembled and millions of others who make the
. The .percentage of imported
marketed simultaneously in scores estiamted 20,000 components - in'
FOUNDED NEW ORLEA-NS
cluding steel, glass, tires, batteries,
elements probably would be far
of nations throughout the v.orld.
French immigrants founded .the
higher were it not for the federal
· The " world car" . holds the radios and upholstery - that go into
city of New Orleans in 1718.
' promise of rescuing this country's those autos.
regulations that require at least 75
Ford, the first domestic 'auto
percent domestic components in all
auto . makers from a decade of
maker
to enter the new market, is
. WEBB WAS FIRST
cars the manufacturer wishes to be
misjudgmenls that produced the inIn 1875, Capt. Matthew Webb
dustry's current depre5sion - but about to ,launch the most expensive ·counted under. the government's
became the first person to swun the
the dramatically new approach and ambitious promotion and sales
Corporate Average· Fuel Economy
English Channel.
1aises policy questions that remain campaign in it&lt;; corporate history on
s~ndards .

.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Reds . keep out of trouble," said Moska u,
Manager John McNamara said his who has performed a variety of pitteam is on the scent of the National ching roles this season.
The Reds bunched four singles for
League West championship and San
Diego Padres Manager Jerry three runs in the first and put five
more across in a fifth inning rally . .
Coleman tended to agree.
"This team smells something and Except for .Concepcion's homer, the
they are playing better . ball," Me- scoring barrage was marked · by
"
Namara said after the Reds pulled aggressive baserunning with runwithing 2'h games af division ners taking extra bases durins
relays to the infield.
leaqing Houston and second place
"That's the difference," said
Los Angeles. The Astros and
Coleman:
"They get 11 hits and we
Dodgers bot!l lost Tuesday while
get
11
hits.
They get 9 runs and we
Cincinnati riddled the Padres 9-2.
NEW YORK (AP ) - Pressure,
get
two."
"We hit, we win," said shortstop
says Earle Bruce, isn't replacing an
The Padres had an eight-game
Dave Concepcion after the Reds won
Ohio State coaching legend named
winning streak coming into the
their third straight over the Padres,
Woody Hayes.
.
series, including a three-game · Pressure, says Earle Bruce, is
scoring 27 runs in three games.
shutout of the Pittsburgh Pirates.
The two teams finish the series
coaching at football-mad Massillon,
"The Pirates were stone cold •and
with a 12:30 p.m. game today. Bill
Ohio, High School, in 196W:i "where
they're still cold. The Reds were a
Bonham, back from a shoulder
I didn't sleep three days a week ."
cold team too, but they got hot over·
ailment, is scheduled to start on the
As he prepares for his second
night,'' Coleman said.
mound.
season as Hayes' successor, im"We hit well against everybody,
' Reds pitchers gave the Padres
ported from Iowa State after shortespecially the Dodgers," said Ken
only five runs in the three games,
fused Woody punched a Clemson
Griffey, looking ahead to the
prompting McNamara's remarks.
player in the 1978 Gator Bowl, B~uce
weekend series starting here Friday
"We've been hitting well all along
seems to have shrugged off.the yoke
with Los Angeles. "Last year, in
but the pitching and hitting and
of being Woody Hayes' successor.
September,
we started getting close
aggressive base running has come
And if he goes 11-0 again, as he did
and that's when we started playing
together in this series. It's just like
during the 1979 regular season, the
good ball" to win the division.
the beginning of the season ... when
time may not be too far off when
"We are close again," said the
this club won its first eight and 11 of
folks will be wondering who that
rightfielder.
12," McNamara said.
white-haired old guy in the black
The Padres managed a run in the
" I think any of the three could win
baseball cap was who preceded
sixth inning when Ozzie Smith
. lt ' now;" said Coleman. "I thought
Earle Bruce as coach of the
tripled and Jerry Mumphrey
Los Angeles would but they can't put
Buckeyes.
singled. They scored again in the
anything together and now that
Although he still has an office on
seventh when Gene Tenace doubled
Houson's lost J.R. Richard, a potencampus, Hayes has stayed in the
and came home on Dave Cash's
tial2().game winner, any one of them
background where Ohio State footsingle.
could take it." ·
ball is concerned, although for 28
Reds centerfielder Dave Collins
Paul Moskau, 8-3, held the Padres
years, with a 2o:Hll-IO record, he
stole his 52nd base during the game
scoreless until the sixth inning, his
was Ohio State football.
and remains third in that category in
fourth victory as a starter. ' ' Pit"From what I gather, he .wanted it
the National League. ·
ching all that relief has helped me
t9 be Earle Bruce 's show," an apthrow more pitches for strikes and
preciative Bruce said Tuesday as
th~ annual NCAA-ABC college football promotion tour zipped through
New York. "He said the right things
and made the transition very easy
Richard underwent emergency
HOUSTON (AP) - Houston
when he could have made it very difsurgery to remove a blood clot last
Astros pitcher J.R. Richard, who
ficult."
Wednesday night some 10 hours afsuffered a " major stroke" last
Even though a 17-16 loss to
ter .collapsing while working out in
week, continued to .make "good
Southern Cal in the Rose Bowl cost
the Astrodome. Doctors said then
progress," doctors said Tuesday.
the No.l-ranked Buckeyes a possible
the surgery was successful but national championship, the 1979
Richard was moved from an· inRichard had weakness in his left campaign was a relatively pressuretensive care unit to a private ·room
armandleg.
·
at Methodist Hospital, and Dr.
free one once people stopped comThe term "major stroke" was not paring Bruce to Hayes.
Harold Brelsford, the team
used by Brelsford and others,
physician, said the right-handed
"If I were · afrai'd of pressure I
- however, until a Monday night news wouldn't have come to Ohio State,"
fast-bailer was "more alert.:'
conference at the Astrodome.
Brelsford said Richard also stood
Bruce said. "I tried to stop talking
Richard had beell placed July 16 about that after the first ·game. I
up, placed weight on his weakened
on the 21-day disability list after said I'd rather not discuss that any
left leg, and had movement in the
complaining
over a period of several more, it's been hashed over long
wrist and fingers of the left hand and
weeks
of
a
"
dead
ann."
toe.s of the left foot.

Richard making progress

house receive tax-free bonuses.
The achievement of such plans is
difficult to underestimate. Some
countries have savings rates several
times the size of the anemic U.S.
rate, and they almost always surpass the U.S. norm of6 percent.
Because they save, some of these
nations face a less severe shortage
of capital to invest in economic
growth. Perhaps even more . important, they help solve another
pressing problem, that of providing
housing.
'
In the U.S., however, millions of
potential homebuyers are said to be
lacking the .ability to buy. Unable to
raise the money for a down payment,
they stand by while housing prices
rise.
Because of inflation, taxes and low
savings rates, many critics now lear
that an entire generation of
Americans may find itself unable to
afford single-family dwellings - · a
disaster in the making.

In re the .sh,a h: events not men make history

events, not men.

~

der a contract, their savings go to
the purchase of a home.
The British government also sponsors a plan. Savers agree to put
away a certain sum regularly for
five years , after which they're paid
a govermnent bonus equal to 14 man-

~

By Don Graff
He probably would have been
among the last to agree, but there
scarcely could have been a more appropriate witness than his late im- .
perial majesty, Mohammed Reza
Pahlevi, to the truth of the observation that history is made by

© 1980 b , "'E-" , lnt

willing to trim living standards, pensions and health insurance make
people feel less dependent upon
savings.
Whatever the reason, Americans
have dropped their savings rate to
below 4 percent, and seem likely to

Williams reaches 1,000 wins

early 1-0 lead before Syracuse
scored three runs and coasted to the
championship with four in the fifth
inning. Tonia Ash led the winners
with two singles and a double, Sonia
Ash a single and double, Beth Bartruro a double and · single, Carla
Morris two singles, and Kim Dugan
two singles. Laren Wolfe and Tina
Hill paced Dravo with a double and.
si~gle.

Syracuse team members are
Sonia Ash, Tonia Ash, Becky Crow,
Kim Dugan, Tina Gibbs, Beth Huffman, Carla Morris, Diane Nease,
Kathy Riffle, Mary Slavin, Penny
Wilson, and Beth Bartrurn. Rita
Slavin is the head coach assisted by
Karen Guinther and Wanda Teaford.

.Sea WorJd
Discount
Tickets

@

GALLIPOLIS

TRAVEL AGENCY
~99

BOND'S

Big Bend
All-Stars win
BELPRE - The Big Bend AllStars recently claimed a 19-4 win
over the Little Hocking All-Stars in
the Belpre Little League Tourmament. Shawn Baker, Nick Bush,
and Matt Thompson were the pitchers, while Scott Gheen had three
home runs, Shawn Baker• two
h!Jmers. Baker, Wise, Gheen, and
Becker also had singles.
The Big Bend All Stars consist of
players from the Big Bend Little
League: &lt;:;been, Baker, Becker,
Wise Eason , Bush, Cassell and Rodney Long.
Tom Anderson, Dale Witte and
Todd Sarver had two singles each
for Little Hocking .

Speedway
Stewart, OH .
Every Fri. Night

TOP DIRTRACKERS
Guaranteed Purse
Adults $4.00
Children under 12 free

Time Trials 7 PM
Racing 8:00 PM

Located 20 Minutes East of Athens ,
35 Minutes West of Parkersburg
On US SO - at Cty . Rd. 53
PHONES: Track !6f4) 662-4111
Home 614 -667-3478

ARMSTRONG
ACCOTONE

LINOLEUM·
IMPERIAL CUSHIONED

.

'4.

68

sQ.

YARD

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN MATERIALS
PH. 773-5554

I

MASON, W. VA.

�2- The D'aily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Alig. 66, 1980

Opinions &amp;
Comments

Err,x

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

Reds ready
for title drive

~w~SrA~--re~ l't.e.A.~o

14ULMt

THE DAIL" SENTINEL
(USPS 115-!ICih
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS.MASON AREA
.
Letten of optrUo11 are welcomed. Tilt)' t hould bt lets than 300 words long 1or subjecl to reduc·

Uoo by 1M edUor) aDd must be signed with the slgoee's address. Names may ~ withheld upon
pubUcatloa. Howtver, oo request, aam ~ s will be disclosed. Lclkrs s hould~ In gOOd taste,-addreulag Issue., oot persooalltlel.
""'
Published d.llly except S.turday b.J Tb~ Ohio Valley Publlshlag Cumpaay· Multimrdt.. IUt:.,
111 CoortSl, Pomeroy, Obi, f,5TI!I. Ruxl11ess Oflh:e Phont m. tJSfi . EdJtorl.a1 Phone99Z·2157.
Sec:ood clau pustage paid at PomerOy, Ohio.
.
National advertiRiog repreteotative, Landon Assocla~, 3101 Euclid A.ve., Cleudand, Ohiu

'

44115.

The AllfM:ialed })ress is nclusively eatltled to the use for publication of all Dt:W!l dispatrhrli
ll"flllled to the D(:WSpaper aod aho the local new5 publlshed'hereln.
Publl1her
Robert Wi~ett
Geoual Mgr. &amp; City Editor
Robert Hoeflich
New1 EdJtor
~r.,..,..,.
Dole Rothgeb, Jr.
Adv. Mawager
~
Carl Ght•rn
~m~

q,~

,..,...,__,L-...... ~d,~

.'

Ohio newspapers
·
.
discuss the issues
Here is some editorial comment from Ohio newspapers
throughout the past week:
THE LIMA NEWS: "At first we thought the balanced
budget show of 1981, which opened in Washington last
spring, was going to be a hit worthy of taking on the road.
President Carter and .. . congressional leaders were all
singing togeth~r about balancing the federal books. Now
'the sour notes and pratfalls make their act barely worthy
of the Gong Show.
'
"Only four months after projecting that the government
would operate with a surplus next year, the administration
now estimates that the budget will have a $30 billion
deficit. No one should be surprised if the figure turns out to
be too low....
·
"Last March, Jimmy Carter was telling us that inflation
was our No. 1 economic problem, and that balancing the
· budget was the No. 1 step to control it. To quote his own
· lyrics: 'The federal government must stop spending
money we do not have and borrowing to make up the dif1eren Ce ' ....
. "A catchy tune. But will it play in Peoria in this summer
of discontent? Apparently not."
CINCINNATI ENQUIRER: "President Carter and
· British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher have at .least
one problem in common. But there's also a vast difference
In terms of the po)itical consequences.
· "The problem is unemployment. In the United States, it
is expected to stand at about 8.5 percent by the year's end;
in Britain, it is 7.8 percent today....
.
"The difference in political consequences is that Mr,
. Carter is on the brink of a struggle for re-election, whereas
Mrs. Thatcher is likely to have nearly four more years to
wrestle with the problem ....
-- · "Mr. Carter may well be tempted to take short-term
measures in the weeks ahead to alleviate the unemployment problem; Mrs. Thatcher, however, has rejected
some of the nostrums proposed by her critics ....

'

I

"You promise whatever you didn't do, you won't do it again? OK, I release you
in custody. of your friends.''

For Americans it doesn't pay to save
NEW YORK (AP) - It has been
made to seem one of the deepest
mysteries of personal finance, when
in truth a pretty fair' explanation of it
could he provided by almost anyone
who zver had a dollar bill in hand.
And yet, Congress has wrestled its
way through thousands of pages of
testimony about it and apparently
. still hasn't caught on, and it is joined
in confusion and doubt by some
otherwise sophisticated people.
The s()-Calied mystery is why
Americans, unlike Japanese and
Europeans, seem unwilling to save.
The answer is simply that it doesn't
,pay to save.
·
It doesn't pay because of inflation,
poor yields and lack of incentives,
particularly tax Incentives. Why
save when inflation and taxes erode
values faster than they are replaced
by interest earned?
Some other reasons also are offered: High prices make it difficult
to save, many households are un-

..

. ~~-"'
_,..."")'--..

"Ya say you're looKmg for something that gets
gqod mileage, eh
?"

•

-Today zn
:history.
\

.

• •

Today is Wednesday, Aug. 6, the
·• 219th day·of 1980. There are 147 days
- left In the year.
·- 1 Today's highlightin history:
On August 6, ,1945, the atomic
: bomb was used as a weapon for the
' first time when the United States
: bombed Hiroshima, Japan in World
War II .
• On this date :
In 1800, Napolean Bonaparte ordered the dissolution of the Holy
Roman Empire.
In t914, the U.S. offered to serve as
: peace mediator at the beginning of
- World War I.
-i
, In 1962, the West Indian island of
•· Jamaica became an independent
: nation within the British com-- monwealth.
In 1978, Pope P•ul VI died at the
. age of 80.

..

Business mirror
retain that rate until savings pay,
either through inflation control,
higher yields or tax incentives.
In other nations, one of the
strongest incentives· to saving is to
link it to the desire to own a home.
Those who save for the down
payment on a house get other
benefits as well.
In West Germany, savers at
building societies (equivalent to U.S.
savings institutions) can earn 18 per·
cent a year tax-free if, as agreed un-

ths' savings. If the funds are left for

two more - years, the bonus is
doubled. And yields are tax-free.
Australians buying their first
homes received matchi. ' government grants of one-third th~ amount
saved up to a maximum of $Z,OOO. A
saver who accumulates $6,000 would
have $8,000 for a downpayment.
Austria offers a plan to persons
under age 25 in which the govern·
ment pays a bonus of 17 percent a
year. In France, those saving for a

The passing of the shah is in itself
an event of no little interest. But it is
the event, not the man, that has impact on the continuing Iranian crisis.
And even that is of considerably
less consequence at this stage of
history in the making than events
taking place in his former capital principally the continuing struggle
for revolutionary power between
religious extremists and an uncoordinated array of secular
moderates. Or of numerous events
during the three decades ths t
preceded the Iranian revolution.
Those were the years of deepening ·
relationship between the United
states, the foremost global power,

and a Middle Eastern despotism
searching for a 20th-century identity.
The significant events of the
perioq are well known - the shah's
ouster in 1953 by anti-Western
nationalists and his prompt
restoration by CIA a'rrangement, the
non-stop Soviet-American competition for Mideast advantage that
invested Iran with such strategic importance, Iran's rapidly increasing
oil wealth and the shah's forceddraft effort to modernize the country, the attempt to transform Iran
into the West's surrogate policeman
following withdrawal of British
power from the Persian Gulf.
Through them all, successive administrations in Washington came to
view the interests of the "' United
States and imperial Iran as identical. That was a fallacy that continues to. cloud comprehension or
what has happened and is happening .
in Iran.

Former President Richard Nixon
self-appointed American
representative at the shah's last
rites but, as a once powerful man
similarly outpointed by events,
possibly the most appropriate- has
criticized the present administration
for lacking " the grace to admit that
(the shah) was a friend of the United
States for 30 years.'.'
Grace may have less to do with il
than realization in retrospect that
during the last several of those years
the shah was the type of friend who
makes enemies superfluous. He was
a driving force in OPEC's inflating
of oil prices that is shaking world
economic arid political stability. His
modernization of Iran was imbalanced, an attempt to construct an
industrial economy on a primitive
social and political base that
resulted in uncontainable tensions.
And his rush for Mideast military
pre-eminence - encouraged by the
Nixon administration which
removed long-standing restraints on

.•

Bruce under more
pressure at·Massillon

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Piqua's
David Selsor smacked four hits to
lead his team to a 14-4. victory over
Euclid on Tuesday in the 54th annual
Ohio American Legion Baseball
Tournament.
Bob Holzapfel collected four REI's
for Piqua. Paul Adkins had three
hits for Euclid.
The game had been suspended
Monday because of rain, with Piqua
leading f&gt;-1 in the third inning. Piqua',
now 2-0 in the tournament and 32-3
overall, is not scheduled to play until
Thursday.
In other games Tuesday, Lan-

U. S. arms policy, making available
to him the latest weapons in massive
quantities - had the effect of unsettling rather than stabilizing the
region.
There is considerable beating of
breasts in some quarters to the effect that American failure to go all
out in support of the shah as his
regime crumbled will cost us dearly
in the future .
Turning again to the portable
Nixon : " If the policy of the United
States is not drastically changed so
that the world will know that we
stand by our friends, we will lose all

caster and Ashtabula were
eliminated from the 13-team field.
Lima defeated Ottawa 3-2 in 14 innings, Cincinnati Budde heat Lancaster 6-4 in 14 innings, Ashley whi(&gt;"
ped Portsmouth 8-1, Fostoria
blanked Ashtabula 6-:i, and Piqua
trounced ColumbusSouthway 17-2.
Three other games were suspended until Wednesday at 9 a.m.
because of rain. In those games ,
Belpre led Lima 3-2 in tjle fifth inning, Portsmouth paced Steubenville 1-0 in the second inning and Ottawa was 72 over Euclid in the fourth
inning.

Toronto (Jefferson 4-7) at Oeveland lWaits 7·

NATIONALI.EAGUE
EAST
Won Lost Pet. GB
59 c;
.567
Moo treal
?itUburgh
56 411
.133 3
(7
~
.53:&gt;
31&gt;
Phil.ad tl~ia
New Yor •
II ~
.4311
.447 121&gt;
St. Louis
16 57
13 56
.126 141&gt;
Chi cago

10 ), (n)

Ka.JUasCity (Gura 1~ ) at Detroit (Morri.oJ 12·
9), (n l
Texas fMed.Jch l)-.5 ) at New York (Guidry 12~ ).
(n )

Seattle !Beattie 4-tO ) at California (Knapp 271. (nl

'"

WEST

Holl'iton
Los Angeles
Cincinn11 tl
San Franclst'O
AUanta
SanDie.s o

That may be one lesson to be
drawn from the Iranian events.
Another might be that expediency
rather than friendship is what is
really involved in such relationships. If more reserve were exercised in the development, collapse
might not be the traumatic event it
so frequently and unfortunately is.

:;a
:;a

.,

57
12

51

.lit

(7

.~7

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BAmNG \200 at bals l: Hendrick, St.Louis,
.329 ; Templeton , St.Louis, .326; Trillo,
Phila~elphia. .324; Buckner, Chicago; .32.'1;
R.Smlth, Loll Anngele:s, .32.'1 .
RUNS : LeFlore, Montreal, 7$ ; Rose ,
Philadelphia, 70; Clark, San FranciS&lt;'o, 70;
K.Hemandez , St.Louis, 67; R.Scott, Mootreal,
66; Collins, Clncinnati,66.
RBI : Garvey, (MI. AnMeles, 82; Hendrick,
St.Lou.is, 81 ; Sdunidt, Phihtdelphia , n ; Carter.
Montreal, 69: Clark, San Francisco, 6~.
HilS : G orv~y. Los Artf!eles, 136; Templeton,
St.Louis, 133; Hendrick, St.Louis, 129 ; Taveras,
New York , 123; Cromartie, Montreal, 121.
OOUBLES : Rose, PhlbuSelphla, 30 ; Knight,
Cincinmlli, 30; K. Hernandez, St.LouiJ, 27;
Steams, New- York, 25; Reitz, St.Loois , 24;
Driessen, Cincinnati, 24 .
TRIPLES : R.Scott, Montreal, 9: LeFlore,
Montual, 8; Templeton, St.Louis, 8; Landestoy,
Houston, 8: Flyrm, New York , 7; McBride
Philadelphia, 7; O.Moreno, Pittsb1.1rgh, 7; Cla rk:
San Francisco, '1 .
•
HOME RUNS : Schmidt~ PJilladelphia, 27;
Hendrick, St.Lollis, 21; Homer, Atlanta, 21; Carter, Montreal, 20; Garvey, Los AnKeles, 20;
&amp;ker, Ws A~eles , 20; Clark, San F rancisco,
20.
STOLEN BASES: . LeFlore, Montreal, 67;
O.Moreno, Pittsburgh, 61; Collins, Cincinnati .
~2 ; R.scott, Montre~l, 38; Richfrd5 . San Diego,

·'" 11'""

56

.1116

foil

17
17

-

7

.113

.139

00

Tuesday's Games

12

Ch.!CRHO 10, PittsbUtHh 3
St.Louis at Philadelphia, ppd., rain

Montreal II , New York 5
Atlanta 6, L.o8 Angelc.s 4
Cincinn.at19, San Diego 2
Sun Frsncisco9, H ouston 3

Wednesday's Games
. San Diego ( Mura 4-J) at Cincinnati (Bonham 2·
~ 1Pittsburgh (Bibby 13-2 and Blyleven ~~ at
Chicago (Lamp 9-B and Capi11a 2-4 ), 2
New York (Jackson I-l l at Montreal (Sanderwnll-S ), (n)
St.Louis (Sykes 4--8) at Philadelphia (Walk 811, (n )
I.Al'i AngeleNo /Sutton 7·3) at Atlanta (Matula&amp;9),\ n )

Slln Francisco (Blue 9-!1 J at Houston ( Jo~ orsc h 89), (n )
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
Won lost Pet

New York
Baltimore
Detroit

66
59
56
II

Boston
Cleveland
Taronlo

ft4

Milwauk~

..

'

KanaasCity
OHkhmd

'l'eu s
Minnesota
Chicago
Califom!a
Scaltle

~2

45
WEST

66
II

Jl
44
46

.629
.573

50

.114

6
81'o
U

fil
49

.519
.315
.437

12
:II

58
~

51
47

GB

53
54
S9

-46

58

40
39

64
67

. ~9

.623
.509

.486
. .443
.t-42

II ~

38.

12
141,;;
19

.:J&amp;

19
;!;

.368

71

~

I

Tuesday's Game~
t Boston 3, Milwaukee 1
Baltimore 8, Chicago 2
Cleveland 8, Toronto 5
Texas8, New York. I
Kansas City 6, Delrolt 3
~lltomla 5, Seattle 4 .
OaklandJ, Mlnnesota2
Wednesday's Games
Minnesota (Eric kson 3-81 at Oak land

( Kln~ man6-ll )

Ch.! OHHO (Burns 10.9\ at &amp;ltimore (FianaKan
11-8)1 {n )

Milwaukee (Svrensen 7-7) at
II. In)

B ~ to n

(Ojeda I·

PITCHING (10 Decisioru ): Bibby", Pittsbur~h ,
ll-2, .ll67, 2.80; Reuss, Los Angeles, 12-4, .75(1,
2.09; Carlton, Philadelphia, 1~ • .771, 2.28; Bornback, New York, 8-3, .1'll, 4.0? ; G.Jackson, Pit·
tsburgh, ~ . :rn, 2.19; ~oskau, Cincinnati, 8-3,
.727, 3.59; Richard , HOUJton , J()..t , .714, 1.90;
Hooton, Los Angeles, lo.-40 .714, 3.28.
STRJKEOUTS :· Carlton, Philadelphia, 191;
Ryan, Houaton, 12$ ; Blyleven, Pittsburgh. 121:
P.Niekro, Atlanta , 121; Richard , Howton , 119.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BAmNG 1250 at bats ): Breu, Kansas City ,
.:J8J; Dllooe, Cleveland, .:W,; B. Bell, Te ~ta s , .J-41 ; •
Wll&amp;on, Kansas Cit}', .341; Cooper, Milwaukee , ,
.340.
.
RUNS : Wilson, Kall.'i.Bs City, 90; Wills, Texas.
80; Yount, Milwaukee, 79; Bwnbry, Bw.ltimore,
77 ; Rivers, TeiUI.s, 76.
,
.
RBI : Re.Jack.son, New Yo'rk , ':.82; Oli ver,
Texas, 79; Perez. Boston. 76; Og il vie,
Milwaukee, 76 ; Cooper, Mih1fHUkee, 72; Amm:i,
Oakland , 72.
HJTS : Wilson, Kansas City, 157; Hlver:i,
Texas, 143 ; OJive~ , T}·x.~s. iM: Cooper,

Mi l wauk~. IJ:t :

Hwnbry, tsaJumore, 126 .
OOUBLES: Yount, Milwaukee, :!2; Morrison,
Ctucago, 32; McRae, Kansa s City, 28; Olivt!r,
Texas, '!l ; D.Gorcia, Toronto, :E.
TRIPLES : Griffin, Toronto, 11 ; Wilson, Kansas City, 10: Brett. Kansa s City. It; Bumbry,
Baltimore, 7: Yount , Milwaukee, 7: Washington,
Kansas Ci t)l, 7; Landreaux, Mlnnesot.a , 7.
HOME RUNS : Re. Jackson , New York, 30 ;
Oglivie, Milwaukee, 'll ; Thomas, Milwaukee, 23;
Armas, Oakland, ?J ; Ma yberry, Toronto, 18;
V~lez ,

Tomnto, l8.
STOLEN BASES : Henderson, Oakland , 55:
WiLson, Kansas City, 46 ~ Dilone, Cleveland, 38;

Bwnbry, Baltimore, 28; Wills, Texa~ . 28.
PITCHING (10 Decisioru; ): Darwin, Texas, 91, .900. 2.34 ; Stone, Baltimore , 17-4 , .810, J118;
Gura, KarL'I.II.!I City, 15-4 . .789, 2.07 ; Jolm . New

York, 15-5, . 7~ . 3.39 : Ra iney , Boston, 11--3, .7 27 ,
Ul6 ; Lopez, Detroit, 8-3, .727, l .30 ; M cG rto ~or ,

Ba!Umore, J2{i, .700, 3.61: Corbett, MinneSota, 73.. 700. 2.09.
.
STRIKEOUTS; Guidry , New York.. 116:
M.Norr iS, Oakland, 115; F. BHnni.ster, Sc&lt;~tlle ,
112; Haas, Milwaukee, 105: Ba1'11:er , Cle veland .
100 : Perry, Texa·s, 100.

COLLEGE FOO'l'BALL .
KINGS MILLS, Ohio (AP) - Mike
Holovak, a head coach for nine years
at Boston College and a former head
coach and general manager for the
Boston Patriots of the National Football League, was among i 4 players
and coaches inducted into the
College Football Hall of Fame.
The other living players and
coaches inducted into the Hall included Howard Cassady, Ohio State;
John Lattner, Notre Dame ;
Agostine Lio, Georgetown: Dick
Maegle, Rice : Edward McGinley
Pennsylvania; Thomas Scott:
Virgipia: Vernon Smitl&gt;, Georgia;
Herman Wedemeyer, St. Marys, and
Coach John Vaught of Mississippi. ·
Ernie Davis of Syracuse, Joe eonchess of Pittsburgh and Ernest
" Pug" Rentner of Northwestern
were inducted posthumously, as was
Washington State Coach O.E .
" Babe" Hollinghery.

--~-----------.___ ·--~-

an 8-1 lead after four innings,
highlighted by Carter's tw()-riJII
double in the third and Scott's tw~
run triple an inning later. Parris!l
contributed a tw()-run homer in the
seventh.
Williams called his I,OOOth victory
"an individual honor , but it has
nothing to do with what we're trying
to do with our club h~re . Hopefully,
I'll be able to cherish it after we win
the playoffs and World Series."
The Expos have a three-game lead
over Pittsburgh in the NL East. The
Dodgers could have recaptured first
place ,in. the NL West. Instead, they
still trail Houston by one-half game.
They built a 4-1 lead on pitcher
Dave Goltz' twcrrun single and Rich
Monday's twcrrun homer. But with
two out in the ninth, Atlanta's Jeff
Burroughs waq safe on third
baseman Ron Ccy's fielding error.
After Rick Sutcliffe walked pinch
'hitter Mike Lum, Charlie Spikes
greeted Steve Howe with a runscoring pinch-single, bringing on
Don Stanhouse. Jerry Royster, the
Braves' third consecutive pinchhitter, singled home another run and
Hubbard followed with his homer.
"I knew I hit the ball well," Hubbard said, " but the way Dusty (left
fielder Baker! was going back I
thought he had a chance to get it. I
didn't go into my trot until I knew it
was out."~
Los Angeles first baseman Steve
Garvey said the Joss " could make
our team mad, which has a tendency
to make us come out blazing. But it
really takes the wind out of your
sails to lose one like this."

Syracuse wins title

SYRACUSE - A field of 10 teams
entered the Syracuse Senior league
softball tournament for girls with
undefeated Syracuse emerging the
champion. It took the . winning
Syracuse team only five games to
win the double elimination tournament.
In first round play, Syracuse
defeated New Haven 4-2 behind winning pitcher Carla ' Morris, who
tripled home two runs in the first inning.
Second round play saw Syarcuse
.
claim a 13-1 victory over the Hit-nIn the Senior Softball league
Misses. Beth Bartrum made 4-for-:i
regular season finals, Sy~acuse
and Tonia Ash 3-for-:i at the plate to
downed Dravo 12-4. The win iced a
spark the winners.
perfect 18-0 undefeated season for
In the third game, Syracuse overthe winners who also clinched the
came a 2-0 deficit to defeat Syracuse
league championship with the win . 3-2. Mary Slavin had a run-scoring
Second place in the league went to
single to tie the game and Sonia
the Middleport Superstars. Sonia
Ash's sacrifice fly produced the winAsh and Kim Dugan led the winners
ning run .
with two singles each with Dugan
Pomeroy tied the score in the fifth
Four other games are scheduled knocking in three runs. Becky Crow
inning
of the fourth game, but
Wednesday, in addition to the three had a triple, two singles and three
Syracuse
erupted for three runs to
suspended.
RBI. Laren Wolfe doubled for Dravo claim another come ·from behind
At 1 p.m .• Ashley, 2-0 and 2H,
while Michelle Johnson and Tina
fa ces the winner 'of the Belpre-Lima Hill collected singles. Carla Morris win.
Syracuse met Dravo in the chamgame: Columbus Southway, 1-1 and
was the winning pitcher and Debbie pionship game. Dravo defeated
26-!3, meets Cincinnati Budde, 1-1 Michael the loser.
Letart, Mason, Middleport and
and 28-12 ; and the loser of the ·
In Junior league, Salisbury scored Pomeroy in the loser's bracket.
Belpre-Lima game opposes the win- a 14-1 win over Mason. Salisbury is
Playing their third consecutiv.e
ner of the Steubenille-Portsmouth
lHl in the league and 21-2 overall . . game of the day, Dravo took an
. game. Fostoria, 1-1 and 21-10,
Barb Hatfield was the winning pitclashes with the winner of the Ot- cher, while Teresa Pratt doubled
tawa-Euclid game at 4 p.m.
and singled twice, Mary Moore
The double elimination tourdoubled and singled and Carla King
nament continues through Saturday doubled .
at Ohio University.
'For Mason, Mary Sisson, Karen
Lewis, and Tian ~erns each singled.

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

our friends .' '

Ford actually has been marketing
a " world car" in the United States
for the pas\ several years, but it
hasn't been heavily promoted
because it's classified as a "captivei
mport" that dllesn't meet the 75 percent standard.
That auto is the Ford Fiesta. Its
engine blocks comes from company
foundries in Dagenham, England,
and Almusafes, Spain; body panels
are pressed in Almusafes and
Saarlouis, West Germany; car·buretors are made in Belfast, Northern Ireland; wheels are cast in
Genk, Belgium; and gearboxes,
transmissions and axles are built in
Bordeaux, France.
"Our Bordeaux transaxle and
automatic transmission plants
together produce more export
revenue for France t)lan t)le entire
Bordeaux wine industry," boasts
Caldwell. What he doesn 't mention,
however, is the negative impact on
the United States' balance-of-trade

enough.
" I didn't realize there would he all
that pressure, but it finally dawned
on me around the first game that
there'd be a lot more pressure than I
anticipated. But I guess it wore off
as the season wore on.
" During the season, I couldn't
believe how everything broke right.
We came from behind to win some
early games and there were no
problems off the field. Everybody
just thought about one thing playing football. There wasn't one
complaint from a player during the
season and that's unusual."
For 1980, Bruce's Buckeyes are
being touted as p~ible national
championship taliber.
"We've got a great football team
- I think. We've got the one
ingredient you like to coach - great ,
great speed. I don't think there's a
team in the country that can match
our speed.
•
"We've got a great quarter~ck in
Art Schlichter. He's not a straight
dropback passer and he's not an O[&gt;"
lion quarterback and that's the
toughest position to defend against if
you.can run and pass.
"We have nine regulars back on
defense , our kicking game is bad:,
our skill people are back. Any
question mark would ruive to be our
offensi ve line. We're talented, but
we're very young and inexperience
will cost us early in the season.
" Last year, we were only picked
fourth in the l3ig Ten and we weren't
even in the preseason Top Twenty. I
hope they're as right this year as
they were wrong last year."

By Associated Press
Montreal Manager Dick Williams
would like to savor his latest victory
sometime in October. Los Angeles
Manager Tom Las&lt;irda would like to
forget his latest setback as soon as
possible.
"Either I'm real old or I've been
with a lot of good ballclubs,"
Williams said after the Expos bat. tered the New York Mets 11-5
Tuesday night for his 1,000th triumph, making him the 32nd major
lea81Je manager to reach that figure.
"I guess it's a combination of both."
Lasorda, on the other hand, was
one out'away from his 333rd victory
when it suddenly turned into loss
No.264 as the Atlanta Braves rallied
for five runs in the bottom ·of the ninth - all with two out, all unearned
and the last three coming on Glenn
Hubbard's home run - to defeat the
Dodgers 6-4.
"That game belonged to us,"
Lasorda said. "That's the kind you
should pack away. You have a threerun lead and you get the first two
outs in the ninth and you still let it
get away. That's tough to take."
In other National League games,
the San Francisco Giants trolinced
the Houston Astros 9-3, the Cincinnati Reds trimmed the San Diego
Padres 9-2 and the Chicago Cubs
whipped the Pittsburgh Pirates 11-3.
The St. Louis-Philadelphia contest
was rained out.
Gary Cl!rter, Rodney Scott, Andre
Dawson and Larry Parrish drove in
two runs apiece in Montreal's victory, although New York's Doug
Flynn tied a major league record
with three triples .. The Expos built

Youth League
.

Lancaster eliminated from Legion tourney

Auto industry faces long..rerm transformation

BELGIAN REVOLT
A Belgian revolt against Dutch
control began in 1830. It was
stimulated by a July revolution in
behalf of its " world cars" - the
unanswereq.
DETROIT (NEA) - Obscured by
Paris, class warfare and disconFord Escort and Mercury Lynx. ·
Because the "world car" concept
the current short-term slump in
tentment with Dutch King William I.
involves fundamental changes . in
While cars destined for the United
passenger car sales is a long-term
Belgium and Holland had been . transformation of such vast propor- · production .techniques - including
States markets are rolling off Ford
united in 1814 as a bliffer state againassembly lines in Michigan and New
lions that it will irrevocably alter the
the relocation of manufacturing
st France, but traditions, religions
Jersey, viriually identical au\os will
auto industry not only in this country
facilities to other nations and the inand interests split the new state. In
but all around the globe.
troduction of automation to an unbe produced jn Great Britain and
1828, the king 'had applied press cenAt the center of what Philip Caldprecedented degree - the policy
West Germany .
.
sorship and · intervened in the
well, board chairman of the Ford
issues are .of special importance to ·
Although approxima.tely 90 pernamiqg of bishops, causing further
Motor Co., describes as "the most . those with jobs related to the
cent of the components of the
discontent.· After ' the revolution
domestic model will come from this
massive and profound induStrial
domestic·auto industry.
began, Dutch troops were driven out
country, the E~cort and Lynx will
revolution in pea9etime history" is
of Brussels and independence was
That includes not only the more
an unpretentiO,IIS yet extraordinary
have parts made in a dozen different
proclaimed. Other European counthan 760,000 men and women direcvehicle known as the ''world car."
countries, including transaxles from
tries later prevented a Dutch
Japan, cylinder heads cast in Italy
That generic phrase refers to con- tly involved in producing and assemreconquest and recognized Belgium
and rear brakes made in Brazil.
pact, fuel-ef[icient autos specifically bling cars but also the uncounted
as an independentstate in 1839.
designed to be built, assembled and millions of others who make the
. The .percentage of imported
marketed simultaneously in scores estiamted 20,000 components - in'
FOUNDED NEW ORLEA-NS
cluding steel, glass, tires, batteries,
elements probably would be far
of nations throughout the v.orld.
French immigrants founded .the
higher were it not for the federal
· The " world car" . holds the radios and upholstery - that go into
city of New Orleans in 1718.
' promise of rescuing this country's those autos.
regulations that require at least 75
Ford, the first domestic 'auto
percent domestic components in all
auto . makers from a decade of
maker
to enter the new market, is
. WEBB WAS FIRST
cars the manufacturer wishes to be
misjudgmenls that produced the inIn 1875, Capt. Matthew Webb
dustry's current depre5sion - but about to ,launch the most expensive ·counted under. the government's
became the first person to swun the
the dramatically new approach and ambitious promotion and sales
Corporate Average· Fuel Economy
English Channel.
1aises policy questions that remain campaign in it&lt;; corporate history on
s~ndards .

.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Reds . keep out of trouble," said Moska u,
Manager John McNamara said his who has performed a variety of pitteam is on the scent of the National ching roles this season.
The Reds bunched four singles for
League West championship and San
Diego Padres Manager Jerry three runs in the first and put five
more across in a fifth inning rally . .
Coleman tended to agree.
"This team smells something and Except for .Concepcion's homer, the
they are playing better . ball," Me- scoring barrage was marked · by
"
Namara said after the Reds pulled aggressive baserunning with runwithing 2'h games af division ners taking extra bases durins
relays to the infield.
leaqing Houston and second place
"That's the difference," said
Los Angeles. The Astros and
Coleman:
"They get 11 hits and we
Dodgers bot!l lost Tuesday while
get
11
hits.
They get 9 runs and we
Cincinnati riddled the Padres 9-2.
NEW YORK (AP ) - Pressure,
get
two."
"We hit, we win," said shortstop
says Earle Bruce, isn't replacing an
The Padres had an eight-game
Dave Concepcion after the Reds won
Ohio State coaching legend named
winning streak coming into the
their third straight over the Padres,
Woody Hayes.
.
series, including a three-game · Pressure, says Earle Bruce, is
scoring 27 runs in three games.
shutout of the Pittsburgh Pirates.
The two teams finish the series
coaching at football-mad Massillon,
"The Pirates were stone cold •and
with a 12:30 p.m. game today. Bill
Ohio, High School, in 196W:i "where
they're still cold. The Reds were a
Bonham, back from a shoulder
I didn't sleep three days a week ."
cold team too, but they got hot over·
ailment, is scheduled to start on the
As he prepares for his second
night,'' Coleman said.
mound.
season as Hayes' successor, im"We hit well against everybody,
' Reds pitchers gave the Padres
ported from Iowa State after shortespecially the Dodgers," said Ken
only five runs in the three games,
fused Woody punched a Clemson
Griffey, looking ahead to the
prompting McNamara's remarks.
player in the 1978 Gator Bowl, B~uce
weekend series starting here Friday
"We've been hitting well all along
seems to have shrugged off.the yoke
with Los Angeles. "Last year, in
but the pitching and hitting and
of being Woody Hayes' successor.
September,
we started getting close
aggressive base running has come
And if he goes 11-0 again, as he did
and that's when we started playing
together in this series. It's just like
during the 1979 regular season, the
good ball" to win the division.
the beginning of the season ... when
time may not be too far off when
"We are close again," said the
this club won its first eight and 11 of
folks will be wondering who that
rightfielder.
12," McNamara said.
white-haired old guy in the black
The Padres managed a run in the
" I think any of the three could win
baseball cap was who preceded
sixth inning when Ozzie Smith
. lt ' now;" said Coleman. "I thought
Earle Bruce as coach of the
tripled and Jerry Mumphrey
Los Angeles would but they can't put
Buckeyes.
singled. They scored again in the
anything together and now that
Although he still has an office on
seventh when Gene Tenace doubled
Houson's lost J.R. Richard, a potencampus, Hayes has stayed in the
and came home on Dave Cash's
tial2().game winner, any one of them
background where Ohio State footsingle.
could take it." ·
ball is concerned, although for 28
Reds centerfielder Dave Collins
Paul Moskau, 8-3, held the Padres
years, with a 2o:Hll-IO record, he
stole his 52nd base during the game
scoreless until the sixth inning, his
was Ohio State football.
and remains third in that category in
fourth victory as a starter. ' ' Pit"From what I gather, he .wanted it
the National League. ·
ching all that relief has helped me
t9 be Earle Bruce 's show," an apthrow more pitches for strikes and
preciative Bruce said Tuesday as
th~ annual NCAA-ABC college football promotion tour zipped through
New York. "He said the right things
and made the transition very easy
Richard underwent emergency
HOUSTON (AP) - Houston
when he could have made it very difsurgery to remove a blood clot last
Astros pitcher J.R. Richard, who
ficult."
Wednesday night some 10 hours afsuffered a " major stroke" last
Even though a 17-16 loss to
ter .collapsing while working out in
week, continued to .make "good
Southern Cal in the Rose Bowl cost
the Astrodome. Doctors said then
progress," doctors said Tuesday.
the No.l-ranked Buckeyes a possible
the surgery was successful but national championship, the 1979
Richard was moved from an· inRichard had weakness in his left campaign was a relatively pressuretensive care unit to a private ·room
armandleg.
·
at Methodist Hospital, and Dr.
free one once people stopped comThe term "major stroke" was not paring Bruce to Hayes.
Harold Brelsford, the team
used by Brelsford and others,
physician, said the right-handed
"If I were · afrai'd of pressure I
- however, until a Monday night news wouldn't have come to Ohio State,"
fast-bailer was "more alert.:'
conference at the Astrodome.
Brelsford said Richard also stood
Bruce said. "I tried to stop talking
Richard had beell placed July 16 about that after the first ·game. I
up, placed weight on his weakened
on the 21-day disability list after said I'd rather not discuss that any
left leg, and had movement in the
complaining
over a period of several more, it's been hashed over long
wrist and fingers of the left hand and
weeks
of
a
"
dead
ann."
toe.s of the left foot.

Richard making progress

house receive tax-free bonuses.
The achievement of such plans is
difficult to underestimate. Some
countries have savings rates several
times the size of the anemic U.S.
rate, and they almost always surpass the U.S. norm of6 percent.
Because they save, some of these
nations face a less severe shortage
of capital to invest in economic
growth. Perhaps even more . important, they help solve another
pressing problem, that of providing
housing.
'
In the U.S., however, millions of
potential homebuyers are said to be
lacking the .ability to buy. Unable to
raise the money for a down payment,
they stand by while housing prices
rise.
Because of inflation, taxes and low
savings rates, many critics now lear
that an entire generation of
Americans may find itself unable to
afford single-family dwellings - · a
disaster in the making.

In re the .sh,a h: events not men make history

events, not men.

~

der a contract, their savings go to
the purchase of a home.
The British government also sponsors a plan. Savers agree to put
away a certain sum regularly for
five years , after which they're paid
a govermnent bonus equal to 14 man-

~

By Don Graff
He probably would have been
among the last to agree, but there
scarcely could have been a more appropriate witness than his late im- .
perial majesty, Mohammed Reza
Pahlevi, to the truth of the observation that history is made by

© 1980 b , "'E-" , lnt

willing to trim living standards, pensions and health insurance make
people feel less dependent upon
savings.
Whatever the reason, Americans
have dropped their savings rate to
below 4 percent, and seem likely to

Williams reaches 1,000 wins

early 1-0 lead before Syracuse
scored three runs and coasted to the
championship with four in the fifth
inning. Tonia Ash led the winners
with two singles and a double, Sonia
Ash a single and double, Beth Bartruro a double and · single, Carla
Morris two singles, and Kim Dugan
two singles. Laren Wolfe and Tina
Hill paced Dravo with a double and.
si~gle.

Syracuse team members are
Sonia Ash, Tonia Ash, Becky Crow,
Kim Dugan, Tina Gibbs, Beth Huffman, Carla Morris, Diane Nease,
Kathy Riffle, Mary Slavin, Penny
Wilson, and Beth Bartrurn. Rita
Slavin is the head coach assisted by
Karen Guinther and Wanda Teaford.

.Sea WorJd
Discount
Tickets

@

GALLIPOLIS

TRAVEL AGENCY
~99

BOND'S

Big Bend
All-Stars win
BELPRE - The Big Bend AllStars recently claimed a 19-4 win
over the Little Hocking All-Stars in
the Belpre Little League Tourmament. Shawn Baker, Nick Bush,
and Matt Thompson were the pitchers, while Scott Gheen had three
home runs, Shawn Baker• two
h!Jmers. Baker, Wise, Gheen, and
Becker also had singles.
The Big Bend All Stars consist of
players from the Big Bend Little
League: &lt;:;been, Baker, Becker,
Wise Eason , Bush, Cassell and Rodney Long.
Tom Anderson, Dale Witte and
Todd Sarver had two singles each
for Little Hocking .

Speedway
Stewart, OH .
Every Fri. Night

TOP DIRTRACKERS
Guaranteed Purse
Adults $4.00
Children under 12 free

Time Trials 7 PM
Racing 8:00 PM

Located 20 Minutes East of Athens ,
35 Minutes West of Parkersburg
On US SO - at Cty . Rd. 53
PHONES: Track !6f4) 662-4111
Home 614 -667-3478

ARMSTRONG
ACCOTONE

LINOLEUM·
IMPERIAL CUSHIONED

.

'4.

68

sQ.

YARD

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN MATERIALS
PH. 773-5554

I

MASON, W. VA.

�\

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 6, 1980

Conference
report ·heard

Pet show planned on
Friday at Meigs Fafr
The aMual Meigs County pet show
will be held at I p.m. on Friday, Aug .
IS, with deadline for registration set
for Aug. II.
Classes (pr the show to be held in
the area will include best dog, rodent
class, best cat, best dressed dog,
most talented, 12 a nd under; most
.talented 12 and over, most unusual
and best overall pet, selected from
all first place winners in each class.
No animalS weighing over ISO
pounds can be entered and residents
can enter only one entry per class
and no one animal can be entered in

more than one class. Pets must be
kept under control at all times and
those that can be led are to be led
with others kept in a suitable container. All pets should have rabies
shots.
A plaque will be awarded to the
winne,. in each class and rosettes to
the second and third place winners.
All taking part will be awarfted participation ribbons.
Residents are to complete the entry blank accompanying this articles.

1980 Meigs County Fair Pet Show
Class-- -- - Type of Pet.. . . .. .. .... . ... , . .. ..... .... . .. ..... .. .
Your Name .... . .. . ..... .. . .. .. . . . ..... .. ... .. . Phone -

- -----

Address . . ..... .. .. . ................ . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . ........ . .. . . .
I wish to participate in the pet s how and 1 agree to a bide by the show
rules.
Signature, .. ... . . .. ............ . . : . . .. . . .... .

.

Send entry blank plus $1 to the Meigs County Extension Office, Box
32, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 on or before Monday, Aug. II.
·

I

OTHER RESERVE CHAMPS - These older 4-H
girls were named reserve champions in the annual
Meigs County 4-H Style Revue held Tuesday night at
Eastern High School. They are from the left, Susan

Danner, sP.,rts clothes active; Denise Siegal, clothing
complements; Vicki Sauters, sports spectacular, and
Renee Trussell who was reserve champjpn in dress-up
formal and the lounging clothes categories.

Area goings on reporJed Counting flowers at the fair.
ENTERTAIN MONDAY
Mr. and Mrs . Clifford Hayes of
Chester entertained Lillian Knapper
and Silky Koch of LudwipschafenEdighein, West Germany, and Miss
Lucille Smith of Chester Monday
evening.
HOUSEWARMING SATURDAY
There will be a housewarming in
honor of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Nottingham at their new residence on
Route 243 in Chester. All friends and
relatives of the couple are invited to
attend the housewarming Saturday,
4to7p.m .
TURNS 80 AUG.12
Unnie Leifheit will celebrate her
80th birthday on Aug. 12. She resides
at the Pomeroy Health Care' Center
and cards may be sent to her there.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL

FRIDAY
An ice cream social will be held
starting at 5:30p.m. Friday at the
Racine Fire House under the sponsorship of the fire department
auxiliary.

SOCIAL SATIJRDAY
The Bashan Volunteer Fire Department will hold an ice cream social
beginning at 6 p.m . Saturday at the
fire house. Ice cream, soft drinks,
hotdogs, pie, cake and coffee will be
available and there will be local entertainment.
TRUSTEES TO MEET
The Salisbury To!VDShiP Trustees
will meet in regular session at 7 p.m.
Friday at the home of the clerk,
Wanda Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road.

TO PRESENT CONCERT
ATBEANDINNER :
The :IS-voice c hoir, "Voices of
Liberty, " will present a concert at
the l!Oth annual bean dinner to be
held Saturday at Bob Evans Fann,
Rio Grande. The program will in.
elude several selections from the
oicentennial musical, "Ring Out the
Bells of Freedom." Mrs. June Van
Vranken is the director; Sharon
Hawley, the accompanist. Narrator
is Joe Struble and KeMeth Wiggins
is the soloist.

4-H camp counselors recognized
Meigs County was weU represented this summer at Canter's Cave 4H camp near Jackson.
Numerous Meigs County 4-H'ers
participated, as campers or counselors at these different camp
sessions for Beginners, Juniors, and
Teens.
Older 4-H members are selected to
serve as camp coWJSelors based on
their leadership skills, interest, and
4-H accomplishments. The counselors assume responsibilities which
include being in charge of a cabin of
campers, assisting with class activities, and planning and carrying
out vai-ious camp programs.
. Meigs County 4-H'ers who served
as coWJSelors this year included:

Robert Jeffers, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Jeffers, Albany ; April .P arker,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Parker of Long Bottom; Beth Ritchie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elton
Ritchie of Tuppers Plains ; Carolyn
Bowen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Bowen of Route 3, Pomeroy ;
Rodney Tripp, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin Tripp of Route 3, Pomeroy ;
Bill Dyer, son of Mrs. Maxine Dyer
of BidweU; Rogie Gaul, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Gaul of Chester ;
Usa Collins, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Collins; Patty Parker,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leland
Parker of Route 3, Pomeroy ; and
Marco Jeffers, a former 4-H'er and
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers of
Albany,

54 attend ·navis reunion
The annual Davis Reunion
(descendants of Orlando and
Kathryn Dpvis) was held Aug . 3 at
the Forest Acres Park, New Uma
Road, Rutland, with 54 present.
A basket diMer was served at
noon, preceded by the blessing by
Mrs . Edith Hougland.
Mrs . . Mary Kathryn Holter,
president, presided with the
business meeting. The 1981 reunion
wiU be held at the same place, the
first Sunday in August.
The 1981 officers were elected,
Mrs . .Holter, president; Mrs. Belva
Shuler, vice president; Mrs. Susie
Travers, secretary; and Mr. and
Mrs. Rick Travers to have charge r1.
the games.
Gifts were presented to Mrs.
Glada Davis, the oldest; Bobby Joe
Shuler, ·the youngest; James Davis
and daughters traveled the farthest. ·
Gall)es were conducted by Mr. and ..
Mrs. Travers and prizes awarded to
the winners.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Worley Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Paul

Walker, Dexter; Glenn Davis, Dian
Molden, Timmy, Tina, Teresa,
LangsviUe; Mr. and Mrs. Merle
Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Davis,
David and Danny, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Davis and Jinunie, Mr. and
Mrs. KeMeth Davis, Vona (Russell )
Gillenwater, Opal Sigler, Rutland ;
Mr. and Mrs. David Lamber~
Shade; Mr, and Mrs. Ronald Davis,
~ndusky; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Shuler, Joe Bob and Bobby J oe, Mrs.
Edith Saunders, Cheshire; Bury!
White, Eleanor Williamson, Circleville; Miss Debbie Davis, Marlin
Evans, Minersville; Mr. and Mrs.
Arvil Holter, Ba5han; Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis Riffle and Greta, Pomeroy ;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davis, Middleport ; Miss Linda Davis, Doug
De&lt;;arlo, Columbus ; James Davis,
Jamie and Michelle, Stamping
Ground, Ky.; Mrs. Esther Davis,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mts. Chester
Hougland , McArthur; Mr. and Mrs.
Rick, , Travers, Greg and ·Marc,
Wilkesville.

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug . 6, 1980

Thirty-two classes for horticulture
specimens have been included in the
scl¥!dule for the two flower shows to
be staged next week at the Meigs
County Falr.
The shows will be held in the
senior fair building, the first on Wednesday, the second on Friday.
Unlike artistic arrangements, the
showing of specimen flowers
requires months of work and planning . Flowers must be grown before
'
they can be shown.
In preparing specimen flowers for
exhibit, the show chairman, Mrs.
Janet Bolin, an accredited judge of
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, advises "hardening" the
flower. This is done by irrunediately
placing the stems of the cut flowers
into wann water.
Flowers should be hardened at 40
to 5o degrees temperature for 24
hours or longer. This allows the
flowers to absorb enough w~er ·to
keep it fresh during the s how. Alter
the flower has been hardened, then
the stem shosuld be cut one-baH inch.
In grooming specimen blooms, the
foliage and stem should be washed
and a camel's hair brush should be
used to remove dirt from the flower .
Bad petals may be removed if it
doesn't spoil the synunetry of the
flower. Never oil or polish foliage .
In the Wednesday show at the fair,
the classes are as follows :
Junior Division: zinnia, dahlia
flowered ; zinnia, cactus flowered;
marigold, large type.
Senior division : hybrid, floribunda
a nd grandiflora roses, gladiolus,
dahlia and cactus flowered zinnias,
decorative and cactus type dahlias,
pompon daisies, and marigolds.
Classes for potted plants in the
Wednesday show are cacti and/or
succlllents, either one variety per

THURSDAY
EVANGEUNE CHAPTER 172
O.E.S. 7:30 Thursday at the Mid:
dleport Masonic Temple. Members
to wear chapter dresses. Initiatory

ASTROGRAPH
Thursday, Aug. 1
There will be a major shift in silwtti ons this
cominK year, which will enable you to control
things that were {ormtrly out or yollr reach.
Yut~'ll know exactly what to cJu in urder to make
them successful .
LEO I July 23-Aug. 22) Your mater!l:ll prospt.&gt;t'-

A report on the Women's Conference held a t Granville last month
was given by Miss Rhoda HaU and
Mrs. Sarah D. ·Owen at the Monday
night meeting of the B. H. Sanborn
Mission'llr-k,_Society of the Middleport FirsfBl!ptB! Church.
The meeting followed a picnic at
the home of Mrs. June Kloes. Miss
HaU opened the meeting with a
poem, "I Feel the Wind of God
Today." Devotions were by Sarah
Fowler of the Dorcas Cir&lt;;as who
useq the meditation, "Our
Message." Mary Brewer had the gift
dedication on "Thoughts I Would
Deny Even to Myself. If I Were Con·.
fronted Openly with Them."
.
There was roll caU of circles a nd ·
the announcement that the Rio.
Grande Association meeting will be ·
held at the Middleport Church on
Sept. 6. The meeting will begin at 2
p.m., there will be a diMer in the
evening followed by another
meeting.
The white cross dedication will ,
take place at the February meeting.
Next !lleetlng of the Sanborn Society
will be in October. ·
Miss Hall a nd Mrs._Owen in their
report on the conference noted that
the project for th.e year will be to
help purchase an .:-ray machine for
Nalor, India. Benediction in a friendship circle closed the meeting.

encoura15:ing today , but lt's due mere to the
efrort.ll of 9thers than to your own. Step aside and
}et good things happen. Find out more of what
lies ahead for YQU in the year following your birthday by 5endlng for your copy of Astro-G raph.
Mwil Sl for each to Astro-Graph, Box 489, Radio
C.:ily Station, N. Y. 10019. Be sure to 15pecify birth
date.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Although you 're

comptrltNe bfand Of ref und .,our

!tiD IN

pr iCe

POMEROY AND GALLI POLIS STORES.

lrower

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Meat Bologna ......... lb .

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&amp;sc

KROGER

6-o&amp; .
Ctnrs.

Baking
Ml X.. .......

SJ

Cake

89C

JUMBO 1.2 SIZE (FAMOUS WESTSIDE ) ·

California
Cantaloupe .. ... each

Bartlett-Pears.... .. . lb ,

4

FRESH
0

BlueberrieS ..... ... ...Pint

10 oz. Castleberry

HOT DOG SAUCE ••••••••••••••••• 2/7~
PEACH HALVES ••••••••••••••• .,2/$1.69

IN THE HUSK . FRESH YELLOW

Sweet Corn .. ........ ..

..

58 C

49 C
c
99
17 C

Sandwich or
Wiener Buns .. ~.\~·

•kg.

...

11. 5•01 .

AVONDAU:

:~getallle '!.~·

SJ4 9

79c
5~i

A~ondale ·
Flour .. . .

79c
99""
•
p
BIC ens ................
59c
TheM Book ........... Ea~h
Aim Tootllpaste .. ~rt.:·

ILUE, MEIMI.POINI

.

IO·Ct.
Pak

MAIII:H IAS..:ET

Black
Pepper
Apple
Juice ..

110-PAGI,IIST-1111

ChOOH fnorUe t olon, tchool colon,
Hi1 'n' He,. Blrthttonn!

Lemon
Juice .. .

Ear

GOLDCIEST

......
. . . ..
. . . 19C
ggc

JELLIED CRANBERRIES ........ 2Pl

..ISHIAKIO

Marsh THANK YOU

CHAM, lA nON

=~~

PUFPS FACIAL TISSUE ••••••••.~/$169

Sandwich

2~~·

Fresh Baked
Buns . ;;.co:

IT

IUNSAVAIL'AIU ONLV
YOU SILV..
IIIOGI I ~MIROY KltOGII

'

REG •.KOOL AID ••• ~ •••••••••••••. 6/79~
.

class rings by R. JOHNS, LTD

10 oz .'

Orange, Grape, Punch

TROPICAL DRINKS •••••••••••••. l/6~
I

/"" -----

I . \~ .

maIt ows ... ...

lb.,$

200 ct. WHite Puffs

. 023 oz.

--

ltl .

Quort

•~ ·

Grapefruit .... ,
Juice
Con ·

CHILl BEANS •••• ~ •••••••••••••••• 2/89e
19

" ·OJ .

MIOaEI

lUSSH

·

Con

ICIOOEI

=~
21b..99c
=~ 2~::· SJ39
=~-r
JS~
~ . 25 ::; S369

IS.oz . Joan of Arc

4 · 01 .

MIOGU •

,.

At'S CANOIMUSTAID

·SWEET PEAS ••••••••••••••••.•••••.2/69e·

ggc

,.•.••.. 22c

..... .

Mix : ...

KROGER

Floritla

TOMATOES., 5Lbs. $2.25

16·01 .
Pkg .

JIFFY

Paper or
Plastic Ctn,

Local Fresh

Angel Food
Cake

Ro11ted "·••- $1'19
Peanuts .. '"'

KROGER

Hi Nu 2%
Lowfat Milk

CELERY ........~.~~.~~- 3~

COUNTRY OVEN

' -lb

'

HlllCitEST DRY

KROGER

$

Avondale ·Quart
Cotsup .. .. . '"

•-•b.
51•1ced Baeon ........ _Pkg.

17oz. Teen Queen

GENU INE STONES-NO EXTRA COST

59c
. ... 49c
26 C

2t····

Avondale ,._,.•,
Corn ...
Con

VEGETABLE BEEF SOUP••••••• ~2/794

.

27C

WHOll KUNEl 01
CIEAM Sf'IU

101!.2 oz. Campbells

'

con

. . . . .• . . • Con

C.H"

PEACHES ....;.. 2 Lbs . 7~

16 oz. Ocean Spray
'

......

YB.LOW CliNG SliCED

VAC:PM

29 oz . Del Monte

'·

V'"

fleece
Slnel•
Tewell ... loll

FIRST OF THE SEASON

at no extra cost

(iilmar .... rtll'9

114-tSHHn PEl lOll

Gal •

COOL WHIP.............. ,..............~ .~~-~~-~. : 89

Attendance at morning services
Aug. 3 at the Free Methodist Church
wsa 70. Choir members present were

110'. .....

FROZEN

DIAMONDS

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

c.tGna

New Fresh

MARGARINE.. .... 79

.

Frozen
Baking Hens

PRODUCE

~

~ ~.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

SLICED BACON .•••••••••••••••• ~~}l.l9

Parkay Quarters

lut·ky. Dcalmgs wil11partners is one. Hu u t&lt;UI'-'C is
the ulht•r, Try Oolh .
ARIK~ IMan;h 21-Aprll19 ) Thi~s may
Ucvclop iu il lll&lt;t lluc r loday to ~ ive you an oppurlt.jnity lu ~111 1 1pl elc smnethi~ . the nu tc nn 1~ uf
which was m doubt. ll should work uutOK.
'I"AURUS IAitl[il 2~May 10) DealinfolS today
wlth i nflu e nliit ~ C()nlacL'i could prove eKcc ptiOnally lucky for you. Favors will be granted
tf you nUike your needs known.
GEMINI !May 21-Junc 20) Give top priori I}' to
s iluatifnls hKI&lt;iy lh.at can t&gt;nhance your ~curi ty
or increase your income. Ynur probabilities for

Mrs. Frances Cline and daughter,
Mrs. Patti Leach, Cocoa, Fla.,
visited Saturday with Mrs. Cline's
sister , Mrs. Erma Fox.
Mr. and Mrs. Faye Countryman ,
Frankfort, spent several days with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell. Leonard
Lyons and children, Rock Springs,
visited Friday with Mr. and Mrs .
Roy Howell. Mrs. Phyllis Dailey and
Junior, Radcliff, visited Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell.

Con

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

16 oz. Kraft

p&lt;Jrc ntln ynu
1-'ISC~ tFt&gt;b. t 6-/lo1areh !0! There em.! tw o
&lt;H"~' Il li today w ~ r l;' you a r() hkt!ly lu OC very

12. A solo was sung by Pastor Shook.
Mrs. Terry Whitaker, Newark
visited recently with her parents;
Pastor and Mrs. Shook.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs is not very well
at this writing.
Wyatt Schaefer, Mt. Vernon, spent
a weekend recently with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs . Norman Schaefer.
Pastor a nd Mrs. Shook visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs. Percy
Fr1ck and Mrs. Della Curtiss.

WI IISfiVf THI liGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONI SOLD
TO OlAtEitS .

OLD FASHION OR
PICKLE PIMENTO LOAF. •••••~~~.$1.79

CHEESE _... .. .. 119
•

ourcha~

COPVIIGHT 1910 . THI KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRI CES
GOOD SUNDAY , AUGUST l THitU S"TUitOAY . AUGUST 9 ,

Phone 742-2100

Singles Slice~k _$

h;tn• atldllmll&lt;ll hitltlc n benefi ts nul nuw lll:t-

an· \'er; p rtllln:;u ll;( .
( 'ANC'F.it t JLint':! 1-Jul)· tl t ' ···ur cnl husut.m J ts
l 'llll l&lt;t J.: &amp;UUS t-..ht y am.! y uu ean easi ly mlercst
utiM,-rs 111lhings that mtercst you. Onl'e yt •ur ba nd w oa~on IS r!)lh u ~o~ , I'Vcry body will want to gl'l un
&lt;; U l't:t'~'i

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARf,NTEE
Ev8f'Yihtng voo buy at Kroger os guaranteed for your tot.al
utiSf.ct.on r9rdleu ot manutacturet If you are not satos·
fted, Kroge. 'Mil repliCe your 1tem wtth tho Wtme brand o r a

STORE

8 oz. Kraft Pimiento

,\\IUARIUS I Jiin. tu-Ft:b. 1'1 1 I ;&amp; kt: SJJI;'t'Ut l
wurk tuday. A jub wd l dunt: ('uultl

i11 yuur·

. -

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT

work and altar to be dedicated.
MEIGS Association for Retarded
Children, 7:30 Thursday at the
Meigs Inn . Chris Lahy to speak on
the needs of the new school for the
mentally retarded.
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 8
p.m. Thursday a t the grange hall.
The hall ·will be vacated for the
Meigs County Fair.

pntlc

E.K~ Of theM oldvertiMid tl&amp;m$ IS teQUtred 10 be
rMdily IVIIlatM! t or Yle 1n eech Kroger Store. 8KCept as
Wifalv ncMd n ttw. ad . " we do rvn out of an iKM!rtiaed
Item, we 'Mil .o ff"' ybo your chOice of a comoarable otem,
~ 1VIlll61i~'·retl&amp;ct•ng the Slime Yvtncp or a rttoncheck
whiCh w•ll entrtle you to purchne t~ advtnlsed •tem at tt\e
.tveruMd pr1ce wttrM XI daVS

NEW TRUSTEE
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Three
new members have been elected to
ser-Ve on the board of trustees of the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
They are Joseph P. Downer, Mrs.
Edwin W. Pauley and Ray_ Stark.

DAIRY

&lt;J

where majur hopes a.re concerned. Somcthin~
yo u've been w 1.s hin ~ for mB y soon become u
rcality: Oon 't let your faith w11ivcr fur a second.
SAGITTARIUS lNov. ::1-0et. Ul Greater
lJtondil'! are likely today from joint ventur es mstead of from things you fjo on your uwn . Be &lt;t
contri but or, not a soloist.
CAPRICORN !Dt'c. ZZ-Jan. It ) Conditions are
fa vorable luday where contracts or ag reements
ore concerned. Bar ~&lt;Ain today and your terms
will be rnet.

ls~re

first class is for a collection of six or
pot or more -than one variety per
pot; ferns, true ferns, also 'more perennials, correctly labeled,
and the second, period type
asparagus, sprengeri, plumosa, one
arrangement with a poster acvariety per pot; any other foliage
companying describing the period
plant, and hanging potted foliage
and materials used in the period,
plant, Alrican violets, any variety,
containers and any other ina nd begonias, any variety.
formation to give an understanding
There are also classes for any
of the period to the public.
other potted flowering pla nt, and
Four special awards will be made
a ny hanging potted flowe·...1g plant ,
at
each of the shows: a best of show
either one variety per pot or more
and
reserve best of show, selected
than one variety per pot.
by
the
judge from the blue winners
While most exhibits (artistic
of
the
classes;
a horticulture sweep- ·
arrangements a nd specimens ) may
stakes
and
junior
gardener awa rd,
be removed after 5 p.m. on Thurselected on the hasis of points for
sday in preparation for the Friday
ribbons compiled by the judging
show, the potted plants a nd hanging
committee.
baskets are to remain in place
throughout the fair .
Ribbons and premiums for all
classes are $1._25 for blue, $1 for red,
FRIDAY SHOW
Specimen classes for the juniors
and 75 cents for white.
(those under 19 years of age) in the , - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - . . . . , . - - Friday show are dahlia and cactus
flowered zinnia s, large type
~parigold, gladiolus, and sunflQwers
· of any variety.
In the senior division the classes
are hybrid tea , fl oribunda, grandiflora and climber roses; gladiolus,
one of any color ; dahlia, £actus
flowered ziMias; decorative, cactus, and pompon dahlias; large type
marigold, a nd small, medium, large
or giant variety sunflower; one
Prices Effective thru Saturday, August 9th
spray chrysanthemum; naturally
grown plumed celosia, any other an'
nual, a nd a ny other perennial.
The show rules permit exhibitors
to enter up to 24 things in the horticulture and educational classes as
long as each entry is a different
variety or type of the item specified
Homemade
in the schedule. In the artistic section, only one entry per class is permitted .
EDUCATIONAL DIVISION
French City
These exhibits are to be put in
place at the first show and remain on
display during the entire fair. The

Sentinel·
.. Social Calendar

WEDNESDAY
GIRLS AT EASTERN High School
dishing to play voUeyball are to
meet at the high school Wednesday
at8p.m.

, ,

pracl1cal lk'rsu n, 11 beMuves yuu
luda)' tube a bit of a dreame r. Wi:-&gt;hcs al\d IM IJ)Cs
Will inspire you to aim fo r lofty la r~cls .
LIBilA t lkpt. 23-0ct. 23 ) Don't retreat ffllln
} dUI Ilcqgc ur eompt:titiun today. The vdds arc in
)'talr fa vor, rather than &lt;~.ga inst you. ))u your
lw..ost I .uck Will du the rest.
SCUKPIO ~l)rt. 21-Nov. 221 Ri! optimistic
hliS1cally

I

I'

�\

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 6, 1980

Conference
report ·heard

Pet show planned on
Friday at Meigs Fafr
The aMual Meigs County pet show
will be held at I p.m. on Friday, Aug .
IS, with deadline for registration set
for Aug. II.
Classes (pr the show to be held in
the area will include best dog, rodent
class, best cat, best dressed dog,
most talented, 12 a nd under; most
.talented 12 and over, most unusual
and best overall pet, selected from
all first place winners in each class.
No animalS weighing over ISO
pounds can be entered and residents
can enter only one entry per class
and no one animal can be entered in

more than one class. Pets must be
kept under control at all times and
those that can be led are to be led
with others kept in a suitable container. All pets should have rabies
shots.
A plaque will be awarded to the
winne,. in each class and rosettes to
the second and third place winners.
All taking part will be awarfted participation ribbons.
Residents are to complete the entry blank accompanying this articles.

1980 Meigs County Fair Pet Show
Class-- -- - Type of Pet.. . . .. .. .... . ... , . .. ..... .... . .. ..... .. .
Your Name .... . .. . ..... .. . .. .. . . . ..... .. ... .. . Phone -

- -----

Address . . ..... .. .. . ................ . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . ........ . .. . . .
I wish to participate in the pet s how and 1 agree to a bide by the show
rules.
Signature, .. ... . . .. ............ . . : . . .. . . .... .

.

Send entry blank plus $1 to the Meigs County Extension Office, Box
32, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 on or before Monday, Aug. II.
·

I

OTHER RESERVE CHAMPS - These older 4-H
girls were named reserve champions in the annual
Meigs County 4-H Style Revue held Tuesday night at
Eastern High School. They are from the left, Susan

Danner, sP.,rts clothes active; Denise Siegal, clothing
complements; Vicki Sauters, sports spectacular, and
Renee Trussell who was reserve champjpn in dress-up
formal and the lounging clothes categories.

Area goings on reporJed Counting flowers at the fair.
ENTERTAIN MONDAY
Mr. and Mrs . Clifford Hayes of
Chester entertained Lillian Knapper
and Silky Koch of LudwipschafenEdighein, West Germany, and Miss
Lucille Smith of Chester Monday
evening.
HOUSEWARMING SATURDAY
There will be a housewarming in
honor of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Nottingham at their new residence on
Route 243 in Chester. All friends and
relatives of the couple are invited to
attend the housewarming Saturday,
4to7p.m .
TURNS 80 AUG.12
Unnie Leifheit will celebrate her
80th birthday on Aug. 12. She resides
at the Pomeroy Health Care' Center
and cards may be sent to her there.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL

FRIDAY
An ice cream social will be held
starting at 5:30p.m. Friday at the
Racine Fire House under the sponsorship of the fire department
auxiliary.

SOCIAL SATIJRDAY
The Bashan Volunteer Fire Department will hold an ice cream social
beginning at 6 p.m . Saturday at the
fire house. Ice cream, soft drinks,
hotdogs, pie, cake and coffee will be
available and there will be local entertainment.
TRUSTEES TO MEET
The Salisbury To!VDShiP Trustees
will meet in regular session at 7 p.m.
Friday at the home of the clerk,
Wanda Eblin, Laurel Cliff Road.

TO PRESENT CONCERT
ATBEANDINNER :
The :IS-voice c hoir, "Voices of
Liberty, " will present a concert at
the l!Oth annual bean dinner to be
held Saturday at Bob Evans Fann,
Rio Grande. The program will in.
elude several selections from the
oicentennial musical, "Ring Out the
Bells of Freedom." Mrs. June Van
Vranken is the director; Sharon
Hawley, the accompanist. Narrator
is Joe Struble and KeMeth Wiggins
is the soloist.

4-H camp counselors recognized
Meigs County was weU represented this summer at Canter's Cave 4H camp near Jackson.
Numerous Meigs County 4-H'ers
participated, as campers or counselors at these different camp
sessions for Beginners, Juniors, and
Teens.
Older 4-H members are selected to
serve as camp coWJSelors based on
their leadership skills, interest, and
4-H accomplishments. The counselors assume responsibilities which
include being in charge of a cabin of
campers, assisting with class activities, and planning and carrying
out vai-ious camp programs.
. Meigs County 4-H'ers who served
as coWJSelors this year included:

Robert Jeffers, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Jeffers, Albany ; April .P arker,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Parker of Long Bottom; Beth Ritchie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elton
Ritchie of Tuppers Plains ; Carolyn
Bowen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Bowen of Route 3, Pomeroy ;
Rodney Tripp, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin Tripp of Route 3, Pomeroy ;
Bill Dyer, son of Mrs. Maxine Dyer
of BidweU; Rogie Gaul, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Gaul of Chester ;
Usa Collins, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Collins; Patty Parker,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leland
Parker of Route 3, Pomeroy ; and
Marco Jeffers, a former 4-H'er and
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers of
Albany,

54 attend ·navis reunion
The annual Davis Reunion
(descendants of Orlando and
Kathryn Dpvis) was held Aug . 3 at
the Forest Acres Park, New Uma
Road, Rutland, with 54 present.
A basket diMer was served at
noon, preceded by the blessing by
Mrs . Edith Hougland.
Mrs . . Mary Kathryn Holter,
president, presided with the
business meeting. The 1981 reunion
wiU be held at the same place, the
first Sunday in August.
The 1981 officers were elected,
Mrs . .Holter, president; Mrs. Belva
Shuler, vice president; Mrs. Susie
Travers, secretary; and Mr. and
Mrs. Rick Travers to have charge r1.
the games.
Gifts were presented to Mrs.
Glada Davis, the oldest; Bobby Joe
Shuler, ·the youngest; James Davis
and daughters traveled the farthest. ·
Gall)es were conducted by Mr. and ..
Mrs. Travers and prizes awarded to
the winners.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Worley Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Paul

Walker, Dexter; Glenn Davis, Dian
Molden, Timmy, Tina, Teresa,
LangsviUe; Mr. and Mrs. Merle
Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Davis,
David and Danny, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Davis and Jinunie, Mr. and
Mrs. KeMeth Davis, Vona (Russell )
Gillenwater, Opal Sigler, Rutland ;
Mr. and Mrs. David Lamber~
Shade; Mr, and Mrs. Ronald Davis,
~ndusky; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Shuler, Joe Bob and Bobby J oe, Mrs.
Edith Saunders, Cheshire; Bury!
White, Eleanor Williamson, Circleville; Miss Debbie Davis, Marlin
Evans, Minersville; Mr. and Mrs.
Arvil Holter, Ba5han; Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis Riffle and Greta, Pomeroy ;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davis, Middleport ; Miss Linda Davis, Doug
De&lt;;arlo, Columbus ; James Davis,
Jamie and Michelle, Stamping
Ground, Ky.; Mrs. Esther Davis,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mts. Chester
Hougland , McArthur; Mr. and Mrs.
Rick, , Travers, Greg and ·Marc,
Wilkesville.

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug . 6, 1980

Thirty-two classes for horticulture
specimens have been included in the
scl¥!dule for the two flower shows to
be staged next week at the Meigs
County Falr.
The shows will be held in the
senior fair building, the first on Wednesday, the second on Friday.
Unlike artistic arrangements, the
showing of specimen flowers
requires months of work and planning . Flowers must be grown before
'
they can be shown.
In preparing specimen flowers for
exhibit, the show chairman, Mrs.
Janet Bolin, an accredited judge of
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, advises "hardening" the
flower. This is done by irrunediately
placing the stems of the cut flowers
into wann water.
Flowers should be hardened at 40
to 5o degrees temperature for 24
hours or longer. This allows the
flowers to absorb enough w~er ·to
keep it fresh during the s how. Alter
the flower has been hardened, then
the stem shosuld be cut one-baH inch.
In grooming specimen blooms, the
foliage and stem should be washed
and a camel's hair brush should be
used to remove dirt from the flower .
Bad petals may be removed if it
doesn't spoil the synunetry of the
flower. Never oil or polish foliage .
In the Wednesday show at the fair,
the classes are as follows :
Junior Division: zinnia, dahlia
flowered ; zinnia, cactus flowered;
marigold, large type.
Senior division : hybrid, floribunda
a nd grandiflora roses, gladiolus,
dahlia and cactus flowered zinnias,
decorative and cactus type dahlias,
pompon daisies, and marigolds.
Classes for potted plants in the
Wednesday show are cacti and/or
succlllents, either one variety per

THURSDAY
EVANGEUNE CHAPTER 172
O.E.S. 7:30 Thursday at the Mid:
dleport Masonic Temple. Members
to wear chapter dresses. Initiatory

ASTROGRAPH
Thursday, Aug. 1
There will be a major shift in silwtti ons this
cominK year, which will enable you to control
things that were {ormtrly out or yollr reach.
Yut~'ll know exactly what to cJu in urder to make
them successful .
LEO I July 23-Aug. 22) Your mater!l:ll prospt.&gt;t'-

A report on the Women's Conference held a t Granville last month
was given by Miss Rhoda HaU and
Mrs. Sarah D. ·Owen at the Monday
night meeting of the B. H. Sanborn
Mission'llr-k,_Society of the Middleport FirsfBl!ptB! Church.
The meeting followed a picnic at
the home of Mrs. June Kloes. Miss
HaU opened the meeting with a
poem, "I Feel the Wind of God
Today." Devotions were by Sarah
Fowler of the Dorcas Cir&lt;;as who
useq the meditation, "Our
Message." Mary Brewer had the gift
dedication on "Thoughts I Would
Deny Even to Myself. If I Were Con·.
fronted Openly with Them."
.
There was roll caU of circles a nd ·
the announcement that the Rio.
Grande Association meeting will be ·
held at the Middleport Church on
Sept. 6. The meeting will begin at 2
p.m., there will be a diMer in the
evening followed by another
meeting.
The white cross dedication will ,
take place at the February meeting.
Next !lleetlng of the Sanborn Society
will be in October. ·
Miss Hall a nd Mrs._Owen in their
report on the conference noted that
the project for th.e year will be to
help purchase an .:-ray machine for
Nalor, India. Benediction in a friendship circle closed the meeting.

encoura15:ing today , but lt's due mere to the
efrort.ll of 9thers than to your own. Step aside and
}et good things happen. Find out more of what
lies ahead for YQU in the year following your birthday by 5endlng for your copy of Astro-G raph.
Mwil Sl for each to Astro-Graph, Box 489, Radio
C.:ily Station, N. Y. 10019. Be sure to 15pecify birth
date.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Although you 're

comptrltNe bfand Of ref und .,our

!tiD IN

pr iCe

POMEROY AND GALLI POLIS STORES.

lrower

Applua11ce

USDA
CHOICE

a, .........
••~...
_

AVOOODAII

l•llalsy

16-ea.
Can

2

~:~

QOYHVAUIY

. . . .i .. l·lb.
ca..ters .. ""•·

ggc

Meat
•
l-Ib .
W1eners
........ Pkg.
IN THE PIECE KROGER

Meat Bologna ......... lb .

SERVE 'N' SAVE

89 C

• "''"'""':10"0

S499
Canned Ham .. _.. _3 ea.:. _ IJI'
COUNTRY CLUI

$119
'/,-Gal.

COUNTRY CLUB

Ice Cream.. .. . ''"·
-Ct .
Corn Tots .......... 8Pkg
.

FROZEN KROGER

.

89c

Kroger Fresh
Orange Juice ...

Gal.

'$199

Ctnr.

Grade AMedium Eggs . Do&amp;.

5.8

3

YOgUrt .. .. ...-... .. .

Kroger
Salt .. ..

&amp;sc

KROGER

6-o&amp; .
Ctnrs.

Baking
Ml X.. .......

SJ

Cake

89C

JUMBO 1.2 SIZE (FAMOUS WESTSIDE ) ·

California
Cantaloupe .. ... each

Bartlett-Pears.... .. . lb ,

4

FRESH
0

BlueberrieS ..... ... ...Pint

10 oz. Castleberry

HOT DOG SAUCE ••••••••••••••••• 2/7~
PEACH HALVES ••••••••••••••• .,2/$1.69

IN THE HUSK . FRESH YELLOW

Sweet Corn .. ........ ..

..

58 C

49 C
c
99
17 C

Sandwich or
Wiener Buns .. ~.\~·

•kg.

...

11. 5•01 .

AVONDAU:

:~getallle '!.~·

SJ4 9

79c
5~i

A~ondale ·
Flour .. . .

79c
99""
•
p
BIC ens ................
59c
TheM Book ........... Ea~h
Aim Tootllpaste .. ~rt.:·

ILUE, MEIMI.POINI

.

IO·Ct.
Pak

MAIII:H IAS..:ET

Black
Pepper
Apple
Juice ..

110-PAGI,IIST-1111

ChOOH fnorUe t olon, tchool colon,
Hi1 'n' He,. Blrthttonn!

Lemon
Juice .. .

Ear

GOLDCIEST

......
. . . ..
. . . 19C
ggc

JELLIED CRANBERRIES ........ 2Pl

..ISHIAKIO

Marsh THANK YOU

CHAM, lA nON

=~~

PUFPS FACIAL TISSUE ••••••••.~/$169

Sandwich

2~~·

Fresh Baked
Buns . ;;.co:

IT

IUNSAVAIL'AIU ONLV
YOU SILV..
IIIOGI I ~MIROY KltOGII

'

REG •.KOOL AID ••• ~ •••••••••••••. 6/79~
.

class rings by R. JOHNS, LTD

10 oz .'

Orange, Grape, Punch

TROPICAL DRINKS •••••••••••••. l/6~
I

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maIt ows ... ...

lb.,$

200 ct. WHite Puffs

. 023 oz.

--

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Quort

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Grapefruit .... ,
Juice
Con ·

CHILl BEANS •••• ~ •••••••••••••••• 2/89e
19

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=~ 2~::· SJ39
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IS.oz . Joan of Arc

4 · 01 .

MIOGU •

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·SWEET PEAS ••••••••••••••••.•••••.2/69e·

ggc

,.•.••.. 22c

..... .

Mix : ...

KROGER

Floritla

TOMATOES., 5Lbs. $2.25

16·01 .
Pkg .

JIFFY

Paper or
Plastic Ctn,

Local Fresh

Angel Food
Cake

Ro11ted "·••- $1'19
Peanuts .. '"'

KROGER

Hi Nu 2%
Lowfat Milk

CELERY ........~.~~.~~- 3~

COUNTRY OVEN

' -lb

'

HlllCitEST DRY

KROGER

$

Avondale ·Quart
Cotsup .. .. . '"

•-•b.
51•1ced Baeon ........ _Pkg.

17oz. Teen Queen

GENU INE STONES-NO EXTRA COST

59c
. ... 49c
26 C

2t····

Avondale ,._,.•,
Corn ...
Con

VEGETABLE BEEF SOUP••••••• ~2/794

.

27C

WHOll KUNEl 01
CIEAM Sf'IU

101!.2 oz. Campbells

'

con

. . . . .• . . • Con

C.H"

PEACHES ....;.. 2 Lbs . 7~

16 oz. Ocean Spray
'

......

YB.LOW CliNG SliCED

VAC:PM

29 oz . Del Monte

'·

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fleece
Slnel•
Tewell ... loll

FIRST OF THE SEASON

at no extra cost

(iilmar .... rtll'9

114-tSHHn PEl lOll

Gal •

COOL WHIP.............. ,..............~ .~~-~~-~. : 89

Attendance at morning services
Aug. 3 at the Free Methodist Church
wsa 70. Choir members present were

110'. .....

FROZEN

DIAMONDS

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

c.tGna

New Fresh

MARGARINE.. .... 79

.

Frozen
Baking Hens

PRODUCE

~

~ ~.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

SLICED BACON .•••••••••••••••• ~~}l.l9

Parkay Quarters

lut·ky. Dcalmgs wil11partners is one. Hu u t&lt;UI'-'C is
the ulht•r, Try Oolh .
ARIK~ IMan;h 21-Aprll19 ) Thi~s may
Ucvclop iu il lll&lt;t lluc r loday to ~ ive you an oppurlt.jnity lu ~111 1 1pl elc smnethi~ . the nu tc nn 1~ uf
which was m doubt. ll should work uutOK.
'I"AURUS IAitl[il 2~May 10) DealinfolS today
wlth i nflu e nliit ~ C()nlacL'i could prove eKcc ptiOnally lucky for you. Favors will be granted
tf you nUike your needs known.
GEMINI !May 21-Junc 20) Give top priori I}' to
s iluatifnls hKI&lt;iy lh.at can t&gt;nhance your ~curi ty
or increase your income. Ynur probabilities for

Mrs. Frances Cline and daughter,
Mrs. Patti Leach, Cocoa, Fla.,
visited Saturday with Mrs. Cline's
sister , Mrs. Erma Fox.
Mr. and Mrs. Faye Countryman ,
Frankfort, spent several days with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell. Leonard
Lyons and children, Rock Springs,
visited Friday with Mr. and Mrs .
Roy Howell. Mrs. Phyllis Dailey and
Junior, Radcliff, visited Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell.

Con

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

16 oz. Kraft

p&lt;Jrc ntln ynu
1-'ISC~ tFt&gt;b. t 6-/lo1areh !0! There em.! tw o
&lt;H"~' Il li today w ~ r l;' you a r() hkt!ly lu OC very

12. A solo was sung by Pastor Shook.
Mrs. Terry Whitaker, Newark
visited recently with her parents;
Pastor and Mrs. Shook.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs is not very well
at this writing.
Wyatt Schaefer, Mt. Vernon, spent
a weekend recently with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs . Norman Schaefer.
Pastor a nd Mrs. Shook visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs. Percy
Fr1ck and Mrs. Della Curtiss.

WI IISfiVf THI liGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONI SOLD
TO OlAtEitS .

OLD FASHION OR
PICKLE PIMENTO LOAF. •••••~~~.$1.79

CHEESE _... .. .. 119
•

ourcha~

COPVIIGHT 1910 . THI KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRI CES
GOOD SUNDAY , AUGUST l THitU S"TUitOAY . AUGUST 9 ,

Phone 742-2100

Singles Slice~k _$

h;tn• atldllmll&lt;ll hitltlc n benefi ts nul nuw lll:t-

an· \'er; p rtllln:;u ll;( .
( 'ANC'F.it t JLint':! 1-Jul)· tl t ' ···ur cnl husut.m J ts
l 'llll l&lt;t J.: &amp;UUS t-..ht y am.! y uu ean easi ly mlercst
utiM,-rs 111lhings that mtercst you. Onl'e yt •ur ba nd w oa~on IS r!)lh u ~o~ , I'Vcry body will want to gl'l un
&lt;; U l't:t'~'i

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARf,NTEE
Ev8f'Yihtng voo buy at Kroger os guaranteed for your tot.al
utiSf.ct.on r9rdleu ot manutacturet If you are not satos·
fted, Kroge. 'Mil repliCe your 1tem wtth tho Wtme brand o r a

STORE

8 oz. Kraft Pimiento

,\\IUARIUS I Jiin. tu-Ft:b. 1'1 1 I ;&amp; kt: SJJI;'t'Ut l
wurk tuday. A jub wd l dunt: ('uultl

i11 yuur·

. -

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT

work and altar to be dedicated.
MEIGS Association for Retarded
Children, 7:30 Thursday at the
Meigs Inn . Chris Lahy to speak on
the needs of the new school for the
mentally retarded.
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 8
p.m. Thursday a t the grange hall.
The hall ·will be vacated for the
Meigs County Fair.

pntlc

E.K~ Of theM oldvertiMid tl&amp;m$ IS teQUtred 10 be
rMdily IVIIlatM! t or Yle 1n eech Kroger Store. 8KCept as
Wifalv ncMd n ttw. ad . " we do rvn out of an iKM!rtiaed
Item, we 'Mil .o ff"' ybo your chOice of a comoarable otem,
~ 1VIlll61i~'·retl&amp;ct•ng the Slime Yvtncp or a rttoncheck
whiCh w•ll entrtle you to purchne t~ advtnlsed •tem at tt\e
.tveruMd pr1ce wttrM XI daVS

NEW TRUSTEE
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Three
new members have been elected to
ser-Ve on the board of trustees of the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
They are Joseph P. Downer, Mrs.
Edwin W. Pauley and Ray_ Stark.

DAIRY

&lt;J

where majur hopes a.re concerned. Somcthin~
yo u've been w 1.s hin ~ for mB y soon become u
rcality: Oon 't let your faith w11ivcr fur a second.
SAGITTARIUS lNov. ::1-0et. Ul Greater
lJtondil'! are likely today from joint ventur es mstead of from things you fjo on your uwn . Be &lt;t
contri but or, not a soloist.
CAPRICORN !Dt'c. ZZ-Jan. It ) Conditions are
fa vorable luday where contracts or ag reements
ore concerned. Bar ~&lt;Ain today and your terms
will be rnet.

ls~re

first class is for a collection of six or
pot or more -than one variety per
pot; ferns, true ferns, also 'more perennials, correctly labeled,
and the second, period type
asparagus, sprengeri, plumosa, one
arrangement with a poster acvariety per pot; any other foliage
companying describing the period
plant, and hanging potted foliage
and materials used in the period,
plant, Alrican violets, any variety,
containers and any other ina nd begonias, any variety.
formation to give an understanding
There are also classes for any
of the period to the public.
other potted flowering pla nt, and
Four special awards will be made
a ny hanging potted flowe·...1g plant ,
at
each of the shows: a best of show
either one variety per pot or more
and
reserve best of show, selected
than one variety per pot.
by
the
judge from the blue winners
While most exhibits (artistic
of
the
classes;
a horticulture sweep- ·
arrangements a nd specimens ) may
stakes
and
junior
gardener awa rd,
be removed after 5 p.m. on Thurselected on the hasis of points for
sday in preparation for the Friday
ribbons compiled by the judging
show, the potted plants a nd hanging
committee.
baskets are to remain in place
throughout the fair .
Ribbons and premiums for all
classes are $1._25 for blue, $1 for red,
FRIDAY SHOW
Specimen classes for the juniors
and 75 cents for white.
(those under 19 years of age) in the , - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - . . . . , . - - Friday show are dahlia and cactus
flowered zinnia s, large type
~parigold, gladiolus, and sunflQwers
· of any variety.
In the senior division the classes
are hybrid tea , fl oribunda, grandiflora and climber roses; gladiolus,
one of any color ; dahlia, £actus
flowered ziMias; decorative, cactus, and pompon dahlias; large type
marigold, a nd small, medium, large
or giant variety sunflower; one
Prices Effective thru Saturday, August 9th
spray chrysanthemum; naturally
grown plumed celosia, any other an'
nual, a nd a ny other perennial.
The show rules permit exhibitors
to enter up to 24 things in the horticulture and educational classes as
long as each entry is a different
variety or type of the item specified
Homemade
in the schedule. In the artistic section, only one entry per class is permitted .
EDUCATIONAL DIVISION
French City
These exhibits are to be put in
place at the first show and remain on
display during the entire fair. The

Sentinel·
.. Social Calendar

WEDNESDAY
GIRLS AT EASTERN High School
dishing to play voUeyball are to
meet at the high school Wednesday
at8p.m.

, ,

pracl1cal lk'rsu n, 11 beMuves yuu
luda)' tube a bit of a dreame r. Wi:-&gt;hcs al\d IM IJ)Cs
Will inspire you to aim fo r lofty la r~cls .
LIBilA t lkpt. 23-0ct. 23 ) Don't retreat ffllln
} dUI Ilcqgc ur eompt:titiun today. The vdds arc in
)'talr fa vor, rather than &lt;~.ga inst you. ))u your
lw..ost I .uck Will du the rest.
SCUKPIO ~l)rt. 21-Nov. 221 Ri! optimistic
hliS1cally

I

I'

�Wednesday, August b, 1980- Page seven

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednt·sday, Aug. 6, 1980

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GRANO CHAMPS :.__ These five girls were named
grand cha mpions in their categories Tuesday night
when the annual Meigs County 4-H Style Revue was
held at Eastern High School preparatory to the Meigs

County Fair. From the left are Teresa Guthrie, total
look ; Kristi Haynes, topping your outfit; Kathy
Parker, spectator s ports ; Melanie Arnold, joyful jumper, and Renee Kaylor, top to toe.

RESERVE CHAMPS - Named reserve champions in the annual Meigs County 4-H Style Revue at
Eastern High School Tuesday night were these five

Charles Thayer, president of the
Kentucky/West Virginia Chapter of
the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, has
named Mrs . Evelyn Danbury as
Chairman of the 1980 Cystic Fibrosis
" Breath of Life" Campai!!'" for New
Haven.
The annual campaign, designed to
raise funds to support programs

The annual flower show to be held
Aug. 27 at the Forest Run Methodist
Church was announced at the recent
meeting of the Wildwood Garden
Club held at the home of Mrs.
Dwight Milhoan.
Members are to make flower
arrangements featuring the holiday
or flow er of the month in which they
were born. Members were taken on
a hayride into ' the woods where a
wiener roast was held and later were

MORE GRAND CHAMPS - These six girls were
also named grand champions in their respective
· categories Tuesday night at the annualMeigs County 4l I Style Revue held at Eastern High School. From the

left are Lisa Collins, sports clothes active ; Cindy Pitzer, clothing complements ; Beth Ri tchie, two top
awa rds in dress-up fonna l a nd lounging clothes; Connie Stout, coats and jackets, Susan Danner, dress-up
day wear, and Tammy Calaway, clothes for school.

served cookies and punch.
Attending were Mrs. Hilda
Yeauger, Mrs. Kathryn Miller, Mrs.
Jane Harris and children, Mrs. Ada
Holter, Mrs . Mae Mora, Mrs. Marcia Arnold and Jennifer, Mrs. Carrie
Grueser, Mrs. Doris Grueser, Mrs.
Evelyn Hollon, Mrs. Mae Holter,
and Mrs. Peggy Moore.

Entertain with party

be bigger and better
The baking and canning division of
the Meigs County Fair next week is
expected to be " bigger and better"
with more than a hundred classes
for everything from pickles to pies.
· Heading up the division are Mrs.
Lucille Leifheit, superintendent, and
Mrs. Frances Goeglein, chairperosn. As with a ll other divisions of
the exhibitors' fair, entries must be
registered either Thursday or
Friday from 9 a.m. lo 4 p.m. in the
fair board office on the Rock Springs
,
fairgrounds.
Ribbons and premiums will be
awarded in three places with $1.50
for blue, $1 for red, and 75 cents for
white. The judging will be done by
qualified home economists Monday
afternoon . All entries must be on the
fairgrounds before noon on Monday ,
and the articles cannot be removed
before 4 p.m. on the last day of the
fair.
In the various sections a rc preserves, peach, cherry, strawberry,
plum and tomato; jams, black raspber r y, grape , peach, and
strawberry; jellies, apple, crabapple, blackberry, elderberry, grape,
peach , plum , raspberry, and
strawberry; spreads, pear honey,
'peach butter, apple butter, and quince honey; pickles, cucumber, dill
and bread and butter; relishes, piccalilli, chow-chow, end of the gar- den, and sweet pepper relish ; and
catsup and sauces, tomato catsup
and chili sauce. ·
In the canned fruit division, there
are classes for applesauce, sliced
apples, blackberries, peaches,
whole, half, spiced, sliced, pears,
sliced and halves, plums, raspberry ,
apricots, and cherries.
In the canned vegetables division
.there are classes for brussel sprouts,
whole and s liced beets, shellie
beans, shelled beans, pickled, snap
and whole beans, ca bbage, ca rrots,
corn, grams, kraut, lima beans, kidney beans, peppers, stuffed mango,
sweet potatoes, whole, quartered

and green tomatoes, tomato juice,
vegetable soup, and canned squash.
Exhi bits in the baked goods
division are to be brought on a
disposable pa~•r or alwninum plate
and wrapped with a transparent
covering. The classes for breads are
whole wheat bread, white bread, and
banana nut bread, baking powder
biscuits, muffins, and yeast rolls,
three on a plate.
For cakes, the classes are uniced
angel food , butter cake with yellow
white frosting, chiffon, banana cake,
coconut, pound cake, chocolate
cake, and loaf cake. · After the
judging thre~uarters of the cake
may be taken home, leaving onequarter for display .
The cookies division with six to be
exhibited includes classes (or oatmeal, brownies iced, chocolate chip,
fudge uniced brownies, plain drop
molasses, ice box cookies. In pies
the classes a re apple, cherry, berry,
peca n, peach, pumpkin, and raisin.

Mr. and Mrs. Leona rd Lyons. of
Rock Springs, entertained recently
with a swimming party at their
home in celebration of the birthdays
of their children, Lenora, seven, and
Christopher, four.
Homemade ice crem was seryed
with cakes, one an Incredible Hulk
and the other a doll ·cake to the
. '
'
guests. The children received gifts
from Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stanley,
Krtsten and J. P., James White
Marlo and James, Mrs. Caroly~
Searls and Amy, Tamara Hladd, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Fruth, grandparents, Miss Crystal Fruth , Miss
Christine F ruth , Jennifer and
Heather Goins, Larry Walker, Brian
and Bradley, Leslie and Michelle
Lyons, a nd Kim Pauley.

. JUESDAYS

~
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?P .M. to
lt 12 Midnight

t•

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ll7~ 8

DRIVE THRU
N. 2nd St.
Middleport, 0.

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3.00
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PICKENS HA.RDWARE

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MASON, WV WILL CLOSE

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A. T NOON THURSDAY TO
A nEND THE MASON .·

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COUNTY FAIR. SEE
YOU THERE.

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SHOP Oh _

iiiNil QUlOO NO 010:1 ON'I lnO 11nd
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · -·
PULL OUT AND FOLD ON DOTTED LINE

ill Nil OiiiJ.lOO NO 010:1 ON 'I J.nO 11nd
PULL OUT AND FOLD ON DOTTED LINE

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ONE DAY ONLY

IN GAlliPOLIS

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PATTERN:
FITTING :
CLINIC 1I

MR. om•R

ATTEND ONE 3 HOUR CLINIC
FOR ONLY S4.00
PROFESSIONAL DESIGN CONSULTANT

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13 © 1977

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118 E. Main

Leam how to make perfectly fitting slacks and
pants every time • How to buy your correct size
pattem · How to sew sleeves and collars easily /
How to end pinning and basting - Sew zijlpers
quickly - Sew straight seams and many more
shortcuts to skill and fun In sewing. learn
amaling pattern making method that allows you
' to create unli~lted designs, contoured to your
own body requirements.
NO RESERVATION NECESSARY. BE EARLY FOR BESTSEATS.
I
Clip and receive basic dress, slack pattern and suit · F
dress pattern you can draft to fit your me,surements.. R
Also a pattern fitting manual.
'
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Clinics Begin at I O:OOA.M_ an d 7:00P.M.
Tell your friends about this Ad. Classes Identical.
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EVERYTHING fOU'VE
AlWAfS WANTED TO
KNOW ABOUT PATTERN FmiNG AND
WERE AFRAID

MIAMI

MO'Sva;;;PA~;

0 92-2556

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FALL STYLES

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

i----------------

-li'*********
••...• •. :,PRESENTING
LADIES
...•• DRAFT
NITE
NITE

,.,

ALL SUMMER
MERCHANDISE
MARKED DOWN

CHICKEN FILET
WITH FRIES

NEWDffiECI'OR
BOSTON (AP) - Ross W. Farrar
has been named associate director
of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
Farrar, who had been acting •
associate director, will be responsible for the over-all business administration of the museum.

.

fit

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

CLEANUP NIGHT FRIDAY
Paint and cleanup evening will be
held Friday at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary School from 5p.m. until
dark. Volunteers are asked to take
cleaning rags and paint brushes.
Those wishing further information
are to call David Weber, 37~117 or
37~293.

Baking, ca:nning to

0
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SUMMER
CLEARANCE
CONTINUES

Wildwood Gardeners plan show

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recognized across the country as
"National Cystic Fibrosis Week."
The purpose of the week, recently
sienecl into law by President Carter,
is -to increase public awareness and
understanding of Cystic Fibrosis.

aimed at combattmg the dtsease and
providing improved patient care, is
also regarded as the major public
education tool of the CF Foundation.
Details of the New Haven campaign,
to be held this fall, will be a nnouncPd
soon by Mrs. Danbury.
In addi tion, Thayer also announced that September 21-27 will be

..n"-

.,,

' fit
fit·

girls who mclude, I tor, Leah Danner, shirt and top ;
Maralyn Barton, topping your outfit ; Angela Collins,
clothes for school; Jo Ellen Crane, joyful jumper and
Christie Sauters, the total look.

Woman named chairman
of fibrosis campaign ·

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�Wednesday, August b, 1980- Page seven

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednt·sday, Aug. 6, 1980

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GRANO CHAMPS :.__ These five girls were named
grand cha mpions in their categories Tuesday night
when the annual Meigs County 4-H Style Revue was
held at Eastern High School preparatory to the Meigs

County Fair. From the left are Teresa Guthrie, total
look ; Kristi Haynes, topping your outfit; Kathy
Parker, spectator s ports ; Melanie Arnold, joyful jumper, and Renee Kaylor, top to toe.

RESERVE CHAMPS - Named reserve champions in the annual Meigs County 4-H Style Revue at
Eastern High School Tuesday night were these five

Charles Thayer, president of the
Kentucky/West Virginia Chapter of
the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, has
named Mrs . Evelyn Danbury as
Chairman of the 1980 Cystic Fibrosis
" Breath of Life" Campai!!'" for New
Haven.
The annual campaign, designed to
raise funds to support programs

The annual flower show to be held
Aug. 27 at the Forest Run Methodist
Church was announced at the recent
meeting of the Wildwood Garden
Club held at the home of Mrs.
Dwight Milhoan.
Members are to make flower
arrangements featuring the holiday
or flow er of the month in which they
were born. Members were taken on
a hayride into ' the woods where a
wiener roast was held and later were

MORE GRAND CHAMPS - These six girls were
also named grand champions in their respective
· categories Tuesday night at the annualMeigs County 4l I Style Revue held at Eastern High School. From the

left are Lisa Collins, sports clothes active ; Cindy Pitzer, clothing complements ; Beth Ri tchie, two top
awa rds in dress-up fonna l a nd lounging clothes; Connie Stout, coats and jackets, Susan Danner, dress-up
day wear, and Tammy Calaway, clothes for school.

served cookies and punch.
Attending were Mrs. Hilda
Yeauger, Mrs. Kathryn Miller, Mrs.
Jane Harris and children, Mrs. Ada
Holter, Mrs . Mae Mora, Mrs. Marcia Arnold and Jennifer, Mrs. Carrie
Grueser, Mrs. Doris Grueser, Mrs.
Evelyn Hollon, Mrs. Mae Holter,
and Mrs. Peggy Moore.

Entertain with party

be bigger and better
The baking and canning division of
the Meigs County Fair next week is
expected to be " bigger and better"
with more than a hundred classes
for everything from pickles to pies.
· Heading up the division are Mrs.
Lucille Leifheit, superintendent, and
Mrs. Frances Goeglein, chairperosn. As with a ll other divisions of
the exhibitors' fair, entries must be
registered either Thursday or
Friday from 9 a.m. lo 4 p.m. in the
fair board office on the Rock Springs
,
fairgrounds.
Ribbons and premiums will be
awarded in three places with $1.50
for blue, $1 for red, and 75 cents for
white. The judging will be done by
qualified home economists Monday
afternoon . All entries must be on the
fairgrounds before noon on Monday ,
and the articles cannot be removed
before 4 p.m. on the last day of the
fair.
In the various sections a rc preserves, peach, cherry, strawberry,
plum and tomato; jams, black raspber r y, grape , peach, and
strawberry; jellies, apple, crabapple, blackberry, elderberry, grape,
peach , plum , raspberry, and
strawberry; spreads, pear honey,
'peach butter, apple butter, and quince honey; pickles, cucumber, dill
and bread and butter; relishes, piccalilli, chow-chow, end of the gar- den, and sweet pepper relish ; and
catsup and sauces, tomato catsup
and chili sauce. ·
In the canned fruit division, there
are classes for applesauce, sliced
apples, blackberries, peaches,
whole, half, spiced, sliced, pears,
sliced and halves, plums, raspberry ,
apricots, and cherries.
In the canned vegetables division
.there are classes for brussel sprouts,
whole and s liced beets, shellie
beans, shelled beans, pickled, snap
and whole beans, ca bbage, ca rrots,
corn, grams, kraut, lima beans, kidney beans, peppers, stuffed mango,
sweet potatoes, whole, quartered

and green tomatoes, tomato juice,
vegetable soup, and canned squash.
Exhi bits in the baked goods
division are to be brought on a
disposable pa~•r or alwninum plate
and wrapped with a transparent
covering. The classes for breads are
whole wheat bread, white bread, and
banana nut bread, baking powder
biscuits, muffins, and yeast rolls,
three on a plate.
For cakes, the classes are uniced
angel food , butter cake with yellow
white frosting, chiffon, banana cake,
coconut, pound cake, chocolate
cake, and loaf cake. · After the
judging thre~uarters of the cake
may be taken home, leaving onequarter for display .
The cookies division with six to be
exhibited includes classes (or oatmeal, brownies iced, chocolate chip,
fudge uniced brownies, plain drop
molasses, ice box cookies. In pies
the classes a re apple, cherry, berry,
peca n, peach, pumpkin, and raisin.

Mr. and Mrs. Leona rd Lyons. of
Rock Springs, entertained recently
with a swimming party at their
home in celebration of the birthdays
of their children, Lenora, seven, and
Christopher, four.
Homemade ice crem was seryed
with cakes, one an Incredible Hulk
and the other a doll ·cake to the
. '
'
guests. The children received gifts
from Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stanley,
Krtsten and J. P., James White
Marlo and James, Mrs. Caroly~
Searls and Amy, Tamara Hladd, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Fruth, grandparents, Miss Crystal Fruth , Miss
Christine F ruth , Jennifer and
Heather Goins, Larry Walker, Brian
and Bradley, Leslie and Michelle
Lyons, a nd Kim Pauley.

. JUESDAYS

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lt 12 Midnight

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DRIVE THRU
N. 2nd St.
Middleport, 0.

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A nEND THE MASON .·

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COUNTY FAIR. SEE
YOU THERE.

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SHOP Oh _

iiiNil QUlOO NO 010:1 ON'I lnO 11nd
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · -·
PULL OUT AND FOLD ON DOTTED LINE

ill Nil OiiiJ.lOO NO 010:1 ON 'I J.nO 11nd
PULL OUT AND FOLD ON DOTTED LINE

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IN GAlliPOLIS

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PATTERN:
FITTING :
CLINIC 1I

MR. om•R

ATTEND ONE 3 HOUR CLINIC
FOR ONLY S4.00
PROFESSIONAL DESIGN CONSULTANT

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13 © 1977

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450 Pike St. •

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118 E. Main

Leam how to make perfectly fitting slacks and
pants every time • How to buy your correct size
pattem · How to sew sleeves and collars easily /
How to end pinning and basting - Sew zijlpers
quickly - Sew straight seams and many more
shortcuts to skill and fun In sewing. learn
amaling pattern making method that allows you
' to create unli~lted designs, contoured to your
own body requirements.
NO RESERVATION NECESSARY. BE EARLY FOR BESTSEATS.
I
Clip and receive basic dress, slack pattern and suit · F
dress pattern you can draft to fit your me,surements.. R
Also a pattern fitting manual.
'
E
Clinics Begin at I O:OOA.M_ an d 7:00P.M.
Tell your friends about this Ad. Classes Identical.
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EVERYTHING fOU'VE
AlWAfS WANTED TO
KNOW ABOUT PATTERN FmiNG AND
WERE AFRAID

MIAMI

MO'Sva;;;PA~;

0 92-2556

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FALL STYLES

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

i----------------

-li'*********
••...• •. :,PRESENTING
LADIES
...•• DRAFT
NITE
NITE

,.,

ALL SUMMER
MERCHANDISE
MARKED DOWN

CHICKEN FILET
WITH FRIES

NEWDffiECI'OR
BOSTON (AP) - Ross W. Farrar
has been named associate director
of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
Farrar, who had been acting •
associate director, will be responsible for the over-all business administration of the museum.

.

fit

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL

CLEANUP NIGHT FRIDAY
Paint and cleanup evening will be
held Friday at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary School from 5p.m. until
dark. Volunteers are asked to take
cleaning rags and paint brushes.
Those wishing further information
are to call David Weber, 37~117 or
37~293.

Baking, ca:nning to

0
Ill

SUMMER
CLEARANCE
CONTINUES

Wildwood Gardeners plan show

::r'&lt;

:t

recognized across the country as
"National Cystic Fibrosis Week."
The purpose of the week, recently
sienecl into law by President Carter,
is -to increase public awareness and
understanding of Cystic Fibrosis.

aimed at combattmg the dtsease and
providing improved patient care, is
also regarded as the major public
education tool of the CF Foundation.
Details of the New Haven campaign,
to be held this fall, will be a nnouncPd
soon by Mrs. Danbury.
In addi tion, Thayer also announced that September 21-27 will be

..n"-

.,,

' fit
fit·

girls who mclude, I tor, Leah Danner, shirt and top ;
Maralyn Barton, topping your outfit ; Angela Collins,
clothes for school; Jo Ellen Crane, joyful jumper and
Christie Sauters, the total look.

Woman named chairman
of fibrosis campaign ·

~"'
.n

:;:

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-

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-:~;
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• ::J'

�9-TheDailySentinel,Middlepot~PoT:r.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---------------:~::-":":-----~--;

8- The Daily Senti.Qel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday, Aug. 6, 1980

Complaint
ask funds.
he cut off

I'
I

'

.

ffFormer high tar brands not missed7 report
MERIT smokers in latest survey.
~~~

Taste Quest Ends
Latest research provides
solid evidence that MERIT
is a satisfying long~term taste
alternative to high tar
cigarettes.
Long-Term Satisfaction: In
the latest survey of former
high tar smokers who have
switched to MERIT, 9 out of
10 reported they continue to
enjoy smoking, are glad they
·switched, and reported
MERIT is the best tasting low
tar they've ever tried.
C Philip M o rris Inc, 1980

. Kings: 8 mg "ta( 0.6 mg nicotine-100's Reg: 10 mg "tar: ' 0.7 mg nicotine100's Men: 11 {llg "tar:' 0.8 mg nicotine av.per cigarene,FTC Report Dec:79

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

I

I

Smoker Tests Offer
More Proof
Blind Taste Tests: In tests
where brand identity was
concealed, a significant
.,
majority of smokers rated the
taste of low tar MERIT as
good as-or better thanleading high tar brands. Even
cigarett~s having twice the tar.
Smoker Preference:
Among the 95% of smokers ,.
stating a preference, the
MERIT low tar/good taste
combinat1c~n was favored 3 lU jW$!!1~-LO..,.W_T..,.AA--'Eoio!!N
1 over high tar leaders when
tar levels.were revealed.
MERIT is the proven
alternative to high tar
smoking. And you can taste it.
Kings &amp;lOO's
...

:·•·

,

LOW T.l •R-'IENRICHIEf) ,~AVOR'

.RIC-HoiliEDMF
...
...
LA-VO.,..A....,

...
'

...:

CINCINNATI (AP) - Four Cin·
cirmati organizations are urging the
city's federal development grants be
suspended until it provides subsidized housing for poor families.
In a formal complaint to the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, the groups say the
city should be declared ineligible for
Urban Development Action Grants
until its performance in housing im·
proves.
The Legal Aid Society, Housing
Opportunities Made Equal, a local
Fair Housing ·Agency and the Cin·
cirmati branches of the NAACP and
the American Civil Liberties Union
filed the complaint.
Cincinnati officials Tuesday branded the complaint counter productive, but offered little defense of the
city's housing recor'd.
There has been no construction of
new subsidized housing since !'975,
according to the complaint. On1y)3
units for families have been
developed through rehabilitation of
dilapidated buildings and another
584 existing units have been
provided for families since 1975.'
The organizations said the city's
own figures show a nee~ for more
than 20,000 subsidized units.
" Even if you should agree that we
have . failed to meet our responsibility for subsidized housing, the
complaint is counterproductive to
the point of bei_ng destructive,'' said
Nell D. Surber, the city's develop. ment director.
"UDAG grants permit ihe
creation of jobs al)d if the complaint
were to prevail, we would be in the
position of having neither housing
nor jobs for the people who really
need them,'' Surber said. "So I fail
to see the logic of their position. This
is the only federal money available
for development right now.''
City Council's Urban Deveropment Committe approved a
resolution Tuesday calling for the
city to acquire land by Dec. 31 "for
200 U(lits of newly constructed
family Musing." The measure,
however, revised a Legal Aid
proposal setting a September
deadline.
"They're correct in saying the city
has a lot of work to be done, " City
Manager Sylvester Murray said. "I
think it's a matter of judgment
whether what has already been done
is reasonable enough."
The city has one pending UDAG
application - $8 million for development of a Hyati-Regency Hotel
downtown.

Store ttours:
Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND.ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE lHRU SATURDAY. AUG. 9, 1980

$ 49
Pork Chops .........~8;..
CENTER CUT L9IN .
·
$ Sg
Pork Chops ........ :~... .
CENTER CUT .RIB

. . ,

1
1

.

39
GRADE

Whole Fryers...... ~.
·CHICKEN BREASTS OR

Drumsticks...:..... ~~.
CHICKEN

Student files
suit against
Army
'

CINCINNATI (AP ) - A Univer·
sity of Cincinnati law student says
it's agairist his religion as a
Christian to cut his hair and shave
his beard just because an Army
regulation requires it.
Phillip W. Taylor, 'll , said he won't
go on active duty as an officer for at
least a
• but he filed a complaint
Army early this week in
in Cincinnati.
exarlder, secretary of
, is named as a defendant
in •uc ''""·
" I'll get a polio shot, but my body
is a temple of the Lord - I just don't
believe in doing anything to my body
unless it contributes to my hea(th,''
Taylor said.
Taylor enrolled in the Reserve Of·
ficers Training Corps as an un- ,
dergraduate at Kent State University. Following graduation in June
1978, he was granted a deferment
allowing him to finish his studies
before serving in the armed forces.
Taylor has served in the Army
before as an enlistee, but the
regulations didn't bot)ler him then.
" Now that I am a Christian, they
· bother my moral conscience," he
said.
Taylor, who wears his hair over
his ears, said he requested a hair
exemption in March 1979, but the Arll'ly never replied. He contacted U. S.
Rep. Willis Gradison, R-Ohio, who
received a .letter from the Army
denying the exemption.
" It's against Army regulations to
wear the hair over the ears, a nd the .
. mustache must be cut short,"
Taylor said. "Sideburns can't extend below the earlobe. The idea is to
make everybody look alike."
Terming the ·rule idiotic, Taylor
said, "I believe in fighting because
I' III patriotic, but I don't like the ide~
of looking like I'm in the Army 24
hoursa~ay ."

A Christian for two years, Taylor
said the regulation not only violates
his religious beliels, but serves no .
military function.
' 'I've worn helmets with my beard
and long hair and I've never had any
.trouble before,". he said.

PASCAL

Celery...............-:~
YELLOW

On ions.............;.l!-.s:~.
2 LITER

PAR KAY

RC or Diet Rite...

Margarine ......... ~;

KEN·L·RATION
TENDER CHUNKS

MORTON

oz.
.
TV DInn ers••••••••• J$1

Dog · Food.~ ..!!~~~".
· MAXWELL HOUSE .

COFFEE
3 LB. CAN .
Ali. GRINDS

$7· 99

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good 0111y At Powell's
Offer Expires Aug. 9, 1980

11
(EXCEPT BE~F)

j

COUPON ·

COUPON

HEINZ

KRAFT

CORONET.

VINEGAR

MIRACLE WHIP

BATHROOM TISSUE

CIDER OR WHITE

GAL

$}49

32

oz.

$} 09

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good 9n1y at Powell's
Otfer Expires Aug. 9, 1980

4 ROLL · 69~
PKG.
•
Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
res
. 9, 1980

..'

�9-TheDailySentinel,Middlepot~PoT:r.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---------------:~::-":":-----~--;

8- The Daily Senti.Qel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday, Aug. 6, 1980

Complaint
ask funds.
he cut off

I'
I

'

.

ffFormer high tar brands not missed7 report
MERIT smokers in latest survey.
~~~

Taste Quest Ends
Latest research provides
solid evidence that MERIT
is a satisfying long~term taste
alternative to high tar
cigarettes.
Long-Term Satisfaction: In
the latest survey of former
high tar smokers who have
switched to MERIT, 9 out of
10 reported they continue to
enjoy smoking, are glad they
·switched, and reported
MERIT is the best tasting low
tar they've ever tried.
C Philip M o rris Inc, 1980

. Kings: 8 mg "ta( 0.6 mg nicotine-100's Reg: 10 mg "tar: ' 0.7 mg nicotine100's Men: 11 {llg "tar:' 0.8 mg nicotine av.per cigarene,FTC Report Dec:79

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

I

I

Smoker Tests Offer
More Proof
Blind Taste Tests: In tests
where brand identity was
concealed, a significant
.,
majority of smokers rated the
taste of low tar MERIT as
good as-or better thanleading high tar brands. Even
cigarett~s having twice the tar.
Smoker Preference:
Among the 95% of smokers ,.
stating a preference, the
MERIT low tar/good taste
combinat1c~n was favored 3 lU jW$!!1~-LO..,.W_T..,.AA--'Eoio!!N
1 over high tar leaders when
tar levels.were revealed.
MERIT is the proven
alternative to high tar
smoking. And you can taste it.
Kings &amp;lOO's
...

:·•·

,

LOW T.l •R-'IENRICHIEf) ,~AVOR'

.RIC-HoiliEDMF
...
...
LA-VO.,..A....,

...
'

...:

CINCINNATI (AP) - Four Cin·
cirmati organizations are urging the
city's federal development grants be
suspended until it provides subsidized housing for poor families.
In a formal complaint to the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, the groups say the
city should be declared ineligible for
Urban Development Action Grants
until its performance in housing im·
proves.
The Legal Aid Society, Housing
Opportunities Made Equal, a local
Fair Housing ·Agency and the Cin·
cirmati branches of the NAACP and
the American Civil Liberties Union
filed the complaint.
Cincinnati officials Tuesday branded the complaint counter productive, but offered little defense of the
city's housing recor'd.
There has been no construction of
new subsidized housing since !'975,
according to the complaint. On1y)3
units for families have been
developed through rehabilitation of
dilapidated buildings and another
584 existing units have been
provided for families since 1975.'
The organizations said the city's
own figures show a nee~ for more
than 20,000 subsidized units.
" Even if you should agree that we
have . failed to meet our responsibility for subsidized housing, the
complaint is counterproductive to
the point of bei_ng destructive,'' said
Nell D. Surber, the city's develop. ment director.
"UDAG grants permit ihe
creation of jobs al)d if the complaint
were to prevail, we would be in the
position of having neither housing
nor jobs for the people who really
need them,'' Surber said. "So I fail
to see the logic of their position. This
is the only federal money available
for development right now.''
City Council's Urban Deveropment Committe approved a
resolution Tuesday calling for the
city to acquire land by Dec. 31 "for
200 U(lits of newly constructed
family Musing." The measure,
however, revised a Legal Aid
proposal setting a September
deadline.
"They're correct in saying the city
has a lot of work to be done, " City
Manager Sylvester Murray said. "I
think it's a matter of judgment
whether what has already been done
is reasonable enough."
The city has one pending UDAG
application - $8 million for development of a Hyati-Regency Hotel
downtown.

Store ttours:
Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND.ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE lHRU SATURDAY. AUG. 9, 1980

$ 49
Pork Chops .........~8;..
CENTER CUT L9IN .
·
$ Sg
Pork Chops ........ :~... .
CENTER CUT .RIB

. . ,

1
1

.

39
GRADE

Whole Fryers...... ~.
·CHICKEN BREASTS OR

Drumsticks...:..... ~~.
CHICKEN

Student files
suit against
Army
'

CINCINNATI (AP ) - A Univer·
sity of Cincinnati law student says
it's agairist his religion as a
Christian to cut his hair and shave
his beard just because an Army
regulation requires it.
Phillip W. Taylor, 'll , said he won't
go on active duty as an officer for at
least a
• but he filed a complaint
Army early this week in
in Cincinnati.
exarlder, secretary of
, is named as a defendant
in •uc ''""·
" I'll get a polio shot, but my body
is a temple of the Lord - I just don't
believe in doing anything to my body
unless it contributes to my hea(th,''
Taylor said.
Taylor enrolled in the Reserve Of·
ficers Training Corps as an un- ,
dergraduate at Kent State University. Following graduation in June
1978, he was granted a deferment
allowing him to finish his studies
before serving in the armed forces.
Taylor has served in the Army
before as an enlistee, but the
regulations didn't bot)ler him then.
" Now that I am a Christian, they
· bother my moral conscience," he
said.
Taylor, who wears his hair over
his ears, said he requested a hair
exemption in March 1979, but the Arll'ly never replied. He contacted U. S.
Rep. Willis Gradison, R-Ohio, who
received a .letter from the Army
denying the exemption.
" It's against Army regulations to
wear the hair over the ears, a nd the .
. mustache must be cut short,"
Taylor said. "Sideburns can't extend below the earlobe. The idea is to
make everybody look alike."
Terming the ·rule idiotic, Taylor
said, "I believe in fighting because
I' III patriotic, but I don't like the ide~
of looking like I'm in the Army 24
hoursa~ay ."

A Christian for two years, Taylor
said the regulation not only violates
his religious beliels, but serves no .
military function.
' 'I've worn helmets with my beard
and long hair and I've never had any
.trouble before,". he said.

PASCAL

Celery...............-:~
YELLOW

On ions.............;.l!-.s:~.
2 LITER

PAR KAY

RC or Diet Rite...

Margarine ......... ~;

KEN·L·RATION
TENDER CHUNKS

MORTON

oz.
.
TV DInn ers••••••••• J$1

Dog · Food.~ ..!!~~~".
· MAXWELL HOUSE .

COFFEE
3 LB. CAN .
Ali. GRINDS

$7· 99

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good 0111y At Powell's
Offer Expires Aug. 9, 1980

11
(EXCEPT BE~F)

j

COUPON ·

COUPON

HEINZ

KRAFT

CORONET.

VINEGAR

MIRACLE WHIP

BATHROOM TISSUE

CIDER OR WHITE

GAL

$}49

32

oz.

$} 09

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good 9n1y at Powell's
Otfer Expires Aug. 9, 1980

4 ROLL · 69~
PKG.
•
Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
res
. 9, 1980

..'

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 6, 1980 .

CONTRACT SIGNED- Ohio Power Company has
signed a coal contract with Marietta Coal Company for
6-mil!ion tons of. washed Ohio coal to be delivered over
the next 10 years. Signing the contract were (from
left), George Nicolozakes, president of Marietta Coal,

Goodwill collection
bins thieves target

and W. S. White, Jr., chairman of the board and chief
executive officer of Ohio Power Company and
American Electric Power Cmpany, Inc. Looking on is
, Charles A. Heller, president and chief operating officer
of Ohio Power Co.

Ohio Power signs contract for ·
additional 600,000 tpns of coal
Continuing to keep its promise to
burn as much Ohio coal as possible,
Ohio Power Company has signed a
contract for an additional 600,000
tons per year.
The coal will be provided by
Marietta Coal Company tt St.
Clairsville and will total six million

lOllS over the next 10 years. A dollar

figure on t,he contract was not
disclosed.
Signing the contract were W. S.
White, Jr., chairman of both Ohio
Power and its parent firm ,
American Electric Power, and
George Nicolozakes, president of
Marietta Coal. The signing was wit·
by Charles A. Heller,
Youngstown may seek missed
president of Ohio Power, which uses
more Ohio coal than any other comhike in income tax
pany.
Heller said the coal is being
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) - An
bought primarily for the purpose of
income tax hike to provide money , reducing western coal usage at Ohio
for a raise for city workers may apPower's Gavin Plant. in Gallia Counpear on tbe ballot again in Novem·
ty. "However," Heller added, " this
ber.
Ohio coal also could be used at the
The proposal to increase the tax
Cardinal Plant, south of Steuben·
one-quarter of a percentage point
ville, so jt gives us that much more
failed in a special election last
flexibility in maintaining apFriday by a vote of 9,213 to 8,116. The
propriate stockpile levels at both
measure was proposed to cover 10
Gavin and Cardinal."
percent wage increases won by city
Heller also observed that the coal
workers after a strike in May. The
will have a sulfur content "low
settlement was contingent on apenough to help us meet current
proval of the tax hike.
sulfur-dioxide emission standards at
On Tuesday, city tax comour Ohio plants."
missioner Dominic Conti and
More than half of the coal burned
leaders oi six municipal wiions approved putting the proposal on the
ballot again. City council will meet
Aug. 'J:1 to consider the matter.
Meanwhile, layoffs of city workers
will begin Sept. I, city officials said.
Youngstown has been losing money
the past three years because of the
closings of four steel mills. An
estimated $250,000 in delinquent
taxes are outstanding, said Conti,
who announced a crack down to
collect the money.

ZANESVILLE, Ohio (AP) - A
few persons who apparantly believe
in the old saying, charity begins at
home, have been seen raiding Goodwill collection bins and taking
donations out instead of putting'
tliem in.
" The theft situation is becoming
more serious," said Robert Rosinsky, president of the Ohio
Association of Goodwills,
No one is on hand to receive the
donations at the bins, so it's difficult
to monitor the collection operations,
he said Tuesday.
" We've had lour reports of trucks
pulling up in the last two weeks and
children being put into the collection
boxes and handing out items to
. someone waiting in the trucks, " said
·Rosinky, director of the Goodwill
center in Zanesville.
Rosinsky w.ouldn't give credence
to a report, however, that the stolen
merchandise was being sold at yard
and garage sales in the area.
" I have some pretty good ideas,
but no proof that that's where it's
going," he said.
A mobile colleetion center might .
be the answer to the thefts, he said.
"It's possible to convert a trailer ,
into a mobile collection center and
staff it for several hours," he said.
"It's a trend in Goodwill. I think it's
a very positive step. It costs more,
but it increases donations and in·

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 6,1980

TWO PHOTOGRAPHERS

MINNEAPOI.JS (AP) - The work
of Minnesota phOtographers Bruce
Charlesworth and Timothy Lamb is
being exhibited at the Walker Art
Center through Sept. 7.

coming in, but less and less things to
sell."
The economy also is infiu~ncing
Goodwill's salvage operations. The
articles that Goodwill can't put into
its stores a r~ bailed up and sold to
salvage dealers, Rosinsky said.
"Two weeks ago, we could have
gotten $700 more for the same merchandise we're currently trying to
sell for salvage," he said. "The
salvage market is really being adversley affected by the economy."
The ultimate impact of all· thi s is
an eventual deterioration of services
and the availability of fewer jobs, he
said.
"There have been scattered layoffs, especially in the Columbus area
where Goodwill is tied to the industrialized sector," he said.
Rosinsky hopes the public doesn 'I
forget about " the real human need
that's out there" during this period
of economic hardship, he said.

WHOLE SMOKED

I ..-"""!~--------.

PI'CNICS
-- -

317 N. 2nd AVE .
MIDDLEPORT, OH 10
PH . 992·6342
TRY US!
We're new in t he Middleport-

•
FOODST
ORDERS
WELCOMED!

Pomeory area. We specialize in
Quali ty ory Cleaning, Laun~ry,
Carpet &amp; Furniture Clean~ng,
Wedd ing ~ Gown Prese.rvat•on,

COURTKY STORES

Suede Cl ea ning, Drapenes, and
Shirts.
Bring your cleaning needs to
carous el Confections, 317 N. Se·

137 PINE ST., GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

cond Ave. , Middle port .
Scheau1e your carpet &amp;
cleaning there also, o.r call Ar_ea
Code 304·485-5485 for more •nformation on our . sreamway
Cleaning Process.
"We're No. 1 in
Service C. Quality 11

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU SUNDAY, AUGUST 10·

MIRRO

..,.
MICHIGAN
CELERY
3 '100

4 QT.

SAUCE
POT

In addition to thefts, the economy
also is having a negative effect on
the Goodwill operations - but in a
uniqueway.
.
at Gavin Plant last year came from ,
" Generally, our store sales inOhio mines, Heller said, while some crease, but donations decrease:, ~'
40 per, cent came from western sour·
Rosinsky said, " It's like a 'bell·
ces. Ohio Power plans to complete
shaped curve. At the beginning of a
its phase-out of western coal at
recession, a lot of people come into
Gavin by 1933 and has been
the stores and as the receSsion bot·
negotiating with Ohio suppliers for a
toms out, there are still people
consistent quality, washed coal
which will help the company meet
sulfur dioxide standards and main·
lain a high level of performance in
the power plant boilers.
Nicolozakes said Marietta Coal
recently completed construction of a
new coal washing facility that will
allow the company to provide coal
with a sulfur content of 2:75 per cent
and a consistent heat content of
about 11;200 BTU's.
Heller said the comapny is continuing to negotiate for additional
long-term supplies of washed Ohio
coal with other Ohio coal operators.
" While Ohio Power already uses
more Ohio coal than anyone else,"
said HeUer, " we will continue to look
for additional Ohio coal which will
meet the environmental and
operational requirements'· of our
power plants ."

SIRLOIN STEAl.

700 W. MAIN. ST., POMEROY, OHIO

12 QUART
COVERED

creasess~urity .''

USDA CHOICE

WE RESERVE
THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT
QlTANTITlES

PRESSURE COOKER

949-20

I!

Special Purchase

.

3 PIECE

••

BUNCHES

••

CAKE

••

COOLER RACKS

-

'100 '1·00
SET

•••
•

BATHROOM TISSUE
6 ROLL
VAWE
PACK

~

'149
~,,, ..... .

SET
OF 2

YOUTH'S
BLUE NYLON

WOOD

JOGGERS

CUlTING BOARDS :•

TIDE
LAUNDRY DETERGENT

•

•6••

'149

· ·· Label
~f~

PAIR

THE DAILY SENTINEL
NEEDS 2 CARRIERS

•••

••

OPENER
SET

HELP WANTED!

••

BOTH CITIES

New film bureau
opens in Cleveland
CLEVELAND (AP) - A new film
bureau was opened in Cleveland on
Tuesday with revenue from a recen·
Uy enacted.J percent hotel bed tax.
The bureau is part of a national
promotion called "Film Cleveland"
to attract movie makers to the city ..
"Greater Cleveland's scenery,
large and small towns, diverse
population, industrial centers. and
fascinating historical s ites· provide
limitles s
filming
op·
portunities ... desired by film makers
who are tired of phony ba ck-lot
locations in Hollywood," said
Donald Fogelson, a county
spokesman.
Movies shot in the Cleveland area
include "The Gathering," The
Deer Hunter" and "Cracker Factory."
"Attracting film production companies is a sophisticated piece of
economic development," said Com·
missioner Robert E. Sweeney.
" We're trying to attract our share of
a $4 billion industry."
41

-POMEROY
-SYRACUSE

FOR SUPER 'SAVINGS!

FOR MORE INFORMATION

•••••••JONES
111 ••BOYS
11 1.1

Call 992-2156

SUPER COUPON

GE SOFT WHITE

BETWEEN 8:30 &amp; 5:00
•"

FOR
BACK TO
SCHOOL

..
COLUMBUS, OHIO

THORNVILLE, Ohio (AP) - No
injuries were reported when a tor·
nado touched down at this central
Ohio community, according to the
Perry County sheriff 's office.
The tornado, which struck shortly
after 5 p.m., swept through the com·
munity park a'nd swimming pool in
this town of about 679 residents.
About 25 electrical poles and lines
were reported down.
The National Weathec Service
said the tornado was moving eastward at40 miles an hour.

HARTLEY. SHOES,

INC~

"Middle ot Upper Block j)omerov"
Store Hours 9 to S Each Day
Open Fri . Nighllil8 : 00 P,M ,

'·

48 oz.
Makes
15 Qts.

$ 199

•
Limit 1
W1th
Coupon

Paper
Gallon

Without Coupon $3.19
Offer Expires 8· 1

Limit 1
8·10·80

Exp1r~s

~

SUN17

PAT BOONE

BOB HOPE
DAN FLEENOR'S
HURRICANE HELL DRIVERS
YOUNG BLADES . 1
OF BLUEGRASS 1'

BOB HOPE
YOUNG BLADES
OF BLUEGRASS

SAT 16

MON 18

TUES 19 FRI22
EDDIE RABBITT
MILLS BROTHERS
WED 20 SA':J 23
SHA NA NA
M
THURS 21 TENNESSEE ER NIE FORD
BOBBY GOLDSBORO SUN 24
TERESABREWER
.
THE MURPHYS
.

eI

$149 With
Coupon

LIMIT 1
Offer Expires 8· 1

•• 1,1

Ill Ill I l l I

8 • I • • I I I • I I I I I I I 1:-:1:

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON ,

WORLD'S LARGEST FREE ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAM
TUES 12 FRI15

Price Without Coupon $1.41

ATRA BLADES

48COUNT69~
LIMIT
.. With
1 BOX

~

·
Coupon ~.:!:~A

OAK RIDGE BOYS
• • • • • • • • • • • II II •••• 1 •••••••,

JONES BOYS

SUPER DOUBLE COUPON
••

•

Present this coupe),. along wltfl 1ny one manu;acturer•s
" Cents Off" coupon and gel double the sovlngs at Jones
Boys . Nollo incrude Jones Boys Coupons or those of other
reta1ters and not to exceed the vllue of the Item. Limit one
double coupon per manufacturer'&amp; coupon.
·
Coupon Expires Sun .. Aug . 10, 1980
Limit 2 Coupons Per -..u:.rurner
Not Valid for Clgaret~e or Froe Coupon~

GENERAL PARKING I·71 AT EXIT 111
,
Aclmlssion: Adults S3; Children 12 anH under $1; Children 12 and Lnder FREE weekdays until noon

.

\)

········ ·-~··111'•111111111

---~--------------------------------~---------------------I

~::~~:-:_-:.

TEnEY TEA BAGS

GILLETTE
..
.

' come Show • Nr Force oM Navy BoMs • Folk Art Display • Budweiser Elghi-Horse Hitch • KiddieFishing • Harness
Rocing • Scondlnovlan Folk Do~ cers • Square Dancing •lumberjack Show • Auctioneers Conies! • Baton Twl~ing
Contesl • Cheerleaders Conies! • Shlvo lhe Clown • Barbershop QuarteiS • Commercial ExhiOIIS • The Bob Broun snow •
Cooking Demonstrations • Kiddieland • Milking Parlor • Demollllon Derby • All OhioSlale Fair Band • COuntry Jomboree •
4-Wheel Drive Truck Pull • Live R,odlo and TV Shows • Grand Notional Tractor Pull·· Commercial Uveslock Sale • Bubble
Gum Contest • Fiddlers Conies!• Miss Ohio Slole Fair Pogeonl• All Ohio Stole Fair Youth ChOir • Dairy Goot Show • High
SchoOl Marching Bond Festival • Sole of Champions Livestock Auction •\i{orld's Largest llviSfock Exhibition • World's
Largesf Stole Fair Horse Show • World's largest Junior Fair • World's Largest Slate Fair Fine Arts Exhlbll• World's Largest
Amoleur Boxing Tournamenl
.
,

•
•
•

Price Without Coupon $1 .69 :

''''. I I I

BOBHOPE
DAN FLEENOR'S
JIM ED BROWN
THE SUNSHINE BAND
H
URRICANE
HELL
DRIVERS
AND
I
• HELEN CORNELIUS

Brazilian, Tan, Leath

Offer

With
Coupon

•••

ROYAL CREST 2% MILK

•

THURS
14
K. C. &amp;

CASPER

99~

••

1111111············~·,

AL HIRT

in Thornville area

LIGHT BULBS

4Pack

WED 13 '

Tornado sets down

lllff,ll•'•

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 6, 1980 .

CONTRACT SIGNED- Ohio Power Company has
signed a coal contract with Marietta Coal Company for
6-mil!ion tons of. washed Ohio coal to be delivered over
the next 10 years. Signing the contract were (from
left), George Nicolozakes, president of Marietta Coal,

Goodwill collection
bins thieves target

and W. S. White, Jr., chairman of the board and chief
executive officer of Ohio Power Company and
American Electric Power Cmpany, Inc. Looking on is
, Charles A. Heller, president and chief operating officer
of Ohio Power Co.

Ohio Power signs contract for ·
additional 600,000 tpns of coal
Continuing to keep its promise to
burn as much Ohio coal as possible,
Ohio Power Company has signed a
contract for an additional 600,000
tons per year.
The coal will be provided by
Marietta Coal Company tt St.
Clairsville and will total six million

lOllS over the next 10 years. A dollar

figure on t,he contract was not
disclosed.
Signing the contract were W. S.
White, Jr., chairman of both Ohio
Power and its parent firm ,
American Electric Power, and
George Nicolozakes, president of
Marietta Coal. The signing was wit·
by Charles A. Heller,
Youngstown may seek missed
president of Ohio Power, which uses
more Ohio coal than any other comhike in income tax
pany.
Heller said the coal is being
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) - An
bought primarily for the purpose of
income tax hike to provide money , reducing western coal usage at Ohio
for a raise for city workers may apPower's Gavin Plant. in Gallia Counpear on tbe ballot again in Novem·
ty. "However," Heller added, " this
ber.
Ohio coal also could be used at the
The proposal to increase the tax
Cardinal Plant, south of Steuben·
one-quarter of a percentage point
ville, so jt gives us that much more
failed in a special election last
flexibility in maintaining apFriday by a vote of 9,213 to 8,116. The
propriate stockpile levels at both
measure was proposed to cover 10
Gavin and Cardinal."
percent wage increases won by city
Heller also observed that the coal
workers after a strike in May. The
will have a sulfur content "low
settlement was contingent on apenough to help us meet current
proval of the tax hike.
sulfur-dioxide emission standards at
On Tuesday, city tax comour Ohio plants."
missioner Dominic Conti and
More than half of the coal burned
leaders oi six municipal wiions approved putting the proposal on the
ballot again. City council will meet
Aug. 'J:1 to consider the matter.
Meanwhile, layoffs of city workers
will begin Sept. I, city officials said.
Youngstown has been losing money
the past three years because of the
closings of four steel mills. An
estimated $250,000 in delinquent
taxes are outstanding, said Conti,
who announced a crack down to
collect the money.

ZANESVILLE, Ohio (AP) - A
few persons who apparantly believe
in the old saying, charity begins at
home, have been seen raiding Goodwill collection bins and taking
donations out instead of putting'
tliem in.
" The theft situation is becoming
more serious," said Robert Rosinsky, president of the Ohio
Association of Goodwills,
No one is on hand to receive the
donations at the bins, so it's difficult
to monitor the collection operations,
he said Tuesday.
" We've had lour reports of trucks
pulling up in the last two weeks and
children being put into the collection
boxes and handing out items to
. someone waiting in the trucks, " said
·Rosinky, director of the Goodwill
center in Zanesville.
Rosinsky w.ouldn't give credence
to a report, however, that the stolen
merchandise was being sold at yard
and garage sales in the area.
" I have some pretty good ideas,
but no proof that that's where it's
going," he said.
A mobile colleetion center might .
be the answer to the thefts, he said.
"It's possible to convert a trailer ,
into a mobile collection center and
staff it for several hours," he said.
"It's a trend in Goodwill. I think it's
a very positive step. It costs more,
but it increases donations and in·

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 6,1980

TWO PHOTOGRAPHERS

MINNEAPOI.JS (AP) - The work
of Minnesota phOtographers Bruce
Charlesworth and Timothy Lamb is
being exhibited at the Walker Art
Center through Sept. 7.

coming in, but less and less things to
sell."
The economy also is infiu~ncing
Goodwill's salvage operations. The
articles that Goodwill can't put into
its stores a r~ bailed up and sold to
salvage dealers, Rosinsky said.
"Two weeks ago, we could have
gotten $700 more for the same merchandise we're currently trying to
sell for salvage," he said. "The
salvage market is really being adversley affected by the economy."
The ultimate impact of all· thi s is
an eventual deterioration of services
and the availability of fewer jobs, he
said.
"There have been scattered layoffs, especially in the Columbus area
where Goodwill is tied to the industrialized sector," he said.
Rosinsky hopes the public doesn 'I
forget about " the real human need
that's out there" during this period
of economic hardship, he said.

WHOLE SMOKED

I ..-"""!~--------.

PI'CNICS
-- -

317 N. 2nd AVE .
MIDDLEPORT, OH 10
PH . 992·6342
TRY US!
We're new in t he Middleport-

•
FOODST
ORDERS
WELCOMED!

Pomeory area. We specialize in
Quali ty ory Cleaning, Laun~ry,
Carpet &amp; Furniture Clean~ng,
Wedd ing ~ Gown Prese.rvat•on,

COURTKY STORES

Suede Cl ea ning, Drapenes, and
Shirts.
Bring your cleaning needs to
carous el Confections, 317 N. Se·

137 PINE ST., GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

cond Ave. , Middle port .
Scheau1e your carpet &amp;
cleaning there also, o.r call Ar_ea
Code 304·485-5485 for more •nformation on our . sreamway
Cleaning Process.
"We're No. 1 in
Service C. Quality 11

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU SUNDAY, AUGUST 10·

MIRRO

..,.
MICHIGAN
CELERY
3 '100

4 QT.

SAUCE
POT

In addition to thefts, the economy
also is having a negative effect on
the Goodwill operations - but in a
uniqueway.
.
at Gavin Plant last year came from ,
" Generally, our store sales inOhio mines, Heller said, while some crease, but donations decrease:, ~'
40 per, cent came from western sour·
Rosinsky said, " It's like a 'bell·
ces. Ohio Power plans to complete
shaped curve. At the beginning of a
its phase-out of western coal at
recession, a lot of people come into
Gavin by 1933 and has been
the stores and as the receSsion bot·
negotiating with Ohio suppliers for a
toms out, there are still people
consistent quality, washed coal
which will help the company meet
sulfur dioxide standards and main·
lain a high level of performance in
the power plant boilers.
Nicolozakes said Marietta Coal
recently completed construction of a
new coal washing facility that will
allow the company to provide coal
with a sulfur content of 2:75 per cent
and a consistent heat content of
about 11;200 BTU's.
Heller said the comapny is continuing to negotiate for additional
long-term supplies of washed Ohio
coal with other Ohio coal operators.
" While Ohio Power already uses
more Ohio coal than anyone else,"
said HeUer, " we will continue to look
for additional Ohio coal which will
meet the environmental and
operational requirements'· of our
power plants ."

SIRLOIN STEAl.

700 W. MAIN. ST., POMEROY, OHIO

12 QUART
COVERED

creasess~urity .''

USDA CHOICE

WE RESERVE
THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT
QlTANTITlES

PRESSURE COOKER

949-20

I!

Special Purchase

.

3 PIECE

••

BUNCHES

••

CAKE

••

COOLER RACKS

-

'100 '1·00
SET

•••
•

BATHROOM TISSUE
6 ROLL
VAWE
PACK

~

'149
~,,, ..... .

SET
OF 2

YOUTH'S
BLUE NYLON

WOOD

JOGGERS

CUlTING BOARDS :•

TIDE
LAUNDRY DETERGENT

•

•6••

'149

· ·· Label
~f~

PAIR

THE DAILY SENTINEL
NEEDS 2 CARRIERS

•••

••

OPENER
SET

HELP WANTED!

••

BOTH CITIES

New film bureau
opens in Cleveland
CLEVELAND (AP) - A new film
bureau was opened in Cleveland on
Tuesday with revenue from a recen·
Uy enacted.J percent hotel bed tax.
The bureau is part of a national
promotion called "Film Cleveland"
to attract movie makers to the city ..
"Greater Cleveland's scenery,
large and small towns, diverse
population, industrial centers. and
fascinating historical s ites· provide
limitles s
filming
op·
portunities ... desired by film makers
who are tired of phony ba ck-lot
locations in Hollywood," said
Donald Fogelson, a county
spokesman.
Movies shot in the Cleveland area
include "The Gathering," The
Deer Hunter" and "Cracker Factory."
"Attracting film production companies is a sophisticated piece of
economic development," said Com·
missioner Robert E. Sweeney.
" We're trying to attract our share of
a $4 billion industry."
41

-POMEROY
-SYRACUSE

FOR SUPER 'SAVINGS!

FOR MORE INFORMATION

•••••••JONES
111 ••BOYS
11 1.1

Call 992-2156

SUPER COUPON

GE SOFT WHITE

BETWEEN 8:30 &amp; 5:00
•"

FOR
BACK TO
SCHOOL

..
COLUMBUS, OHIO

THORNVILLE, Ohio (AP) - No
injuries were reported when a tor·
nado touched down at this central
Ohio community, according to the
Perry County sheriff 's office.
The tornado, which struck shortly
after 5 p.m., swept through the com·
munity park a'nd swimming pool in
this town of about 679 residents.
About 25 electrical poles and lines
were reported down.
The National Weathec Service
said the tornado was moving eastward at40 miles an hour.

HARTLEY. SHOES,

INC~

"Middle ot Upper Block j)omerov"
Store Hours 9 to S Each Day
Open Fri . Nighllil8 : 00 P,M ,

'·

48 oz.
Makes
15 Qts.

$ 199

•
Limit 1
W1th
Coupon

Paper
Gallon

Without Coupon $3.19
Offer Expires 8· 1

Limit 1
8·10·80

Exp1r~s

~

SUN17

PAT BOONE

BOB HOPE
DAN FLEENOR'S
HURRICANE HELL DRIVERS
YOUNG BLADES . 1
OF BLUEGRASS 1'

BOB HOPE
YOUNG BLADES
OF BLUEGRASS

SAT 16

MON 18

TUES 19 FRI22
EDDIE RABBITT
MILLS BROTHERS
WED 20 SA':J 23
SHA NA NA
M
THURS 21 TENNESSEE ER NIE FORD
BOBBY GOLDSBORO SUN 24
TERESABREWER
.
THE MURPHYS
.

eI

$149 With
Coupon

LIMIT 1
Offer Expires 8· 1

•• 1,1

Ill Ill I l l I

8 • I • • I I I • I I I I I I I 1:-:1:

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON ,

WORLD'S LARGEST FREE ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAM
TUES 12 FRI15

Price Without Coupon $1.41

ATRA BLADES

48COUNT69~
LIMIT
.. With
1 BOX

~

·
Coupon ~.:!:~A

OAK RIDGE BOYS
• • • • • • • • • • • II II •••• 1 •••••••,

JONES BOYS

SUPER DOUBLE COUPON
••

•

Present this coupe),. along wltfl 1ny one manu;acturer•s
" Cents Off" coupon and gel double the sovlngs at Jones
Boys . Nollo incrude Jones Boys Coupons or those of other
reta1ters and not to exceed the vllue of the Item. Limit one
double coupon per manufacturer'&amp; coupon.
·
Coupon Expires Sun .. Aug . 10, 1980
Limit 2 Coupons Per -..u:.rurner
Not Valid for Clgaret~e or Froe Coupon~

GENERAL PARKING I·71 AT EXIT 111
,
Aclmlssion: Adults S3; Children 12 anH under $1; Children 12 and Lnder FREE weekdays until noon

.

\)

········ ·-~··111'•111111111

---~--------------------------------~---------------------I

~::~~:-:_-:.

TEnEY TEA BAGS

GILLETTE
..
.

' come Show • Nr Force oM Navy BoMs • Folk Art Display • Budweiser Elghi-Horse Hitch • KiddieFishing • Harness
Rocing • Scondlnovlan Folk Do~ cers • Square Dancing •lumberjack Show • Auctioneers Conies! • Baton Twl~ing
Contesl • Cheerleaders Conies! • Shlvo lhe Clown • Barbershop QuarteiS • Commercial ExhiOIIS • The Bob Broun snow •
Cooking Demonstrations • Kiddieland • Milking Parlor • Demollllon Derby • All OhioSlale Fair Band • COuntry Jomboree •
4-Wheel Drive Truck Pull • Live R,odlo and TV Shows • Grand Notional Tractor Pull·· Commercial Uveslock Sale • Bubble
Gum Contest • Fiddlers Conies!• Miss Ohio Slole Fair Pogeonl• All Ohio Stole Fair Youth ChOir • Dairy Goot Show • High
SchoOl Marching Bond Festival • Sole of Champions Livestock Auction •\i{orld's Largest llviSfock Exhibition • World's
Largesf Stole Fair Horse Show • World's largest Junior Fair • World's Largest Slate Fair Fine Arts Exhlbll• World's Largest
Amoleur Boxing Tournamenl
.
,

•
•
•

Price Without Coupon $1 .69 :

''''. I I I

BOBHOPE
DAN FLEENOR'S
JIM ED BROWN
THE SUNSHINE BAND
H
URRICANE
HELL
DRIVERS
AND
I
• HELEN CORNELIUS

Brazilian, Tan, Leath

Offer

With
Coupon

•••

ROYAL CREST 2% MILK

•

THURS
14
K. C. &amp;

CASPER

99~

••

1111111············~·,

AL HIRT

in Thornville area

LIGHT BULBS

4Pack

WED 13 '

Tornado sets down

lllff,ll•'•

�•
13-TheDailySentinel,Middleport-Pomercy 0 Wednesday Aug 6 1980
DICK TRACY
' .'
·
'
· '
12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 6, 1980

Summing up Sports

C1J

TELEVISION
VIEWING

SPENCER'S FAS V' CHEK

8:30

EVENING
8:00 (J) 8 ctJ O CI&gt;®Hl2J Q) NEWS
I]) BIBLe BOWL
(!) MOVIE · (DRAMA) ' "

Sth &amp; Powell
Racine, Oh.
Prices .Effective thru Aug. 9

" Vole••" 11179

CIJ

USCA CHOICE
CENTER CUT

8:58
7;00

ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW

CHUCK
ROAST
SHOULDER CUT

vye Reserve the Rl••"'

,

CHUCK ROAST. ••••• ~.~·••

Limit Ouflntftfes

179

ENGLISH ROASt ........... BONELESs~:.:~:;:
SUPERIOR

. CAPTAINEASY

7:30

AND YOU ' ~l. GET A 61LL. FROM MY'
LAWVSR FOR ALL. THO!ii&gt;E CLOTHE_!;
OF MINE YOU HAD YOUR

JUST WHAT DO YOU
THI'-IK YOU'FI:&amp; DO INe.
MAY I A6-1&lt; 'f

SUTLER TOS:$' OUT:

I

LI:7TEN, YOU
6UFFOON! Me I&lt;EE

INDUSTRIES HA:!&gt;
L.ICEN::OED YOUI&lt;::OERVICES TO ME

G ri~ '

ASA FASHION

.

OW

MOD&amp;l.!

BRAUNSCHWEIGER ...........~.~: 69' FRANKI£S ......... !.~. ?.~. P.~~:. 8!r
RED SKIN
BOLOGNA .:.~~.~.~........... ~~·.. '1.09 BEEF LIVER ...............~.~: '1.09
.
LB $219
POLISH SAUSAGE ... ......... ~I:1:.. 99' PEPER LOAF
.................
:. •
FRE'SH
CHOPPED
PORK SAUSAGE.. ........... !-:~.-.s1.49 SIRLOIN STEAK.......... !-:~·. '1.99
BUCKET STEAKS ............'=~: 'J -- STEW BEEF ...............~-~:. '2.19

1· 1

I

.

NILUKa
1

(]

®J THE JUDGE

IJ

ill) MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT

SAR:~ER

A

]

5f-iA'111ES 'IOU 'THESE

DAYS, HE15 APT TO
DO 'THIS.

FRYER PARTS ................~.~: .. 6!r LEGS &amp; BREASTS ........~-~:.7!r

~'-'ROOM ?

Now arral'lge the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug gested by the above_car1oon.

J I K
Answer: "(

III

r

r1 I I I I J

~.~

{Answers tomorrow)

FABRIC SOFTENER .......................................~~~·:~~: ...~l
. CRUISING DOWN THE RIVER - Frank Longley,
D1co Dyson and Dan Camphaus, teachers from Long
Beach, Calif., seem like characters out of Tom Sawyer,
but not really. They fashioned a pontoon boat out of 55
gallon steel drums. A week and a haH ago the trio left
Pittsburgh on a journey to New Orleans. For the past
10 years the trio traveled throughout Europe. This year
they thought it would be nice to see the United States.

The group stopped in Pomeroy Tuesday morning to
take on supplies and gas. Roy Mayer, owner and
operator of Pomeroy Pastry Shop, took the boys to a
gas station to get gas. Longley said they were "46 going
on 16." Dyson said, "We don't worry very much, none
of us does. I don't think we could be effective teachers
if we kept a lot on our minds. We're pretty lodse."

.

Lawmakers may take another
look at .sales tax measure
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
officials n'iay want to take another
look at sidetracked proposal for
cutting the sales tax on new cars to
boost purchases and help the
troubled industry.
· Neighboring Michigan did it and
wound up increasing its revenues
from the sales tax for July, said officials in Lansing on Tuesday.
Calling the experiment "a
dramatic success," Michigan Gov.
William Milliken's office said July's
sales rose 100 percent over June and

a

Young J3elievers meet
The Young Believers of the Middlepott First Baptist Church were in
Rainelle, W. Va. Thursday and
Friday. On Thursday evening they
presented a program at the First
Baptist Church there and later were
entertained with a pizza party.
Friday the youth were guests of
the BYF for an afternoon outing and
picnic at the BobcOck State Park.
Going to Rainelle were Joy Hudson,
Phyllis Davis, Lori and Lynn Kloes,
Cindy Parker, Jayne Hoeflich,
Stephanie and Angela Houchins,
Craig Darst, and Randy Osborne.
They were accompanied by the Rev.
and Mrs. Mark McClung, Mrs. Dan
Riggs and son, David, Gene Hudson,
and Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin.
_
On Wednesday afternoon the
Young Believers presented music
for the residents of the Pomeroy
Health Care Center.

PEAK

CANDY BARS .............. 4 For SJ

PINTO BEANS ..........4 lbs.51.79

CONVENIENT PAK

TODDLERSCONVENIENTPAK

PAMPERS ..........-....~~..~: .. '6.99

PAMPERS ................~~.~!: '6.99

35 percent over July 1979.
•Revenues from the sales tax,
reduced from 4 cents to 2 cents
during July, were more than $600,000
above the $12.9 million collected 'in
June when the full kent tax a?'
plied.
Michigan - hit hard by layoffs in
the auto industry like Ohio- began
collecting the full tax again Aug. 1.
But it wasn't until Tuesday that
sales figures could be analyzed and
the experiment termed successful.
Meanwhile, Sen. Paul E. Gillmor,
R· Port Clinton, asked the
Legislature on Tuesday to at least
bring an end to the current situation
in which many Ohioans may be
holding back from car purchases in
anticipation of a similar tax cut.
Leaders could do this by issuing a
statement saying the state will
rebate any sales tax reductions
people miss out on by buying now, he
said.
"The Legislature can and should
eliminate this uncertainty immediately," Gillmor said, adding
that the situation seriously has hurt
Ohio's auto industry.
The Ohio House alrea\ly has a?'
proved a proposed cut from 4 cents
to 2 cents, but the legislation is

stalled in a j 0int conference committee which has no meetings
scheduled for the near future.
According to Gillmor, the comffiittee would not even have to meet.
Instead, the parties' top leaders
could enable the slate to rebate
taxes collected in the interim if the
bill finally is enacted.
His proposal was well received l;ly
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
D-New Boston, who said he " would
have no problem with the leaders
issuing a statement"
But Senate President Oliver
Ocasek, D-Akron, opposed the tax
cut, saying the state already is in
serious revenue trouble. It would be
unfair to Ohioans who already have
bought cars in 1980, he said.
Ocasek could not be reached for
reaction to the Michigan figures. But
he said last week that Michigan's
overall revenue picture is a disaster
and its unemployment compensation fund practically is \viped
out.
Part of Michigan's problem
resulted when it gave $200 million
from its general fund to the ailing
Chrysler Corp., Ocasek said.
"I don't think we should pattern
ourselves after Michigan," he said.

CAKE MIX ............. ~~.':~?:: ... 6!r

PIE FILLING ............... '1.19

KRAFT SPREAD

DEL MONTE W.K.

CORN

PARKAY LIGHT.......... :2lbs. 99'

3 17 oz. '1

BETTYCROCKER

~n

KRAFT

FROSTING .............. ~~-,~~~~:. sug

GRAPE JELLY.......... 3 lbs. '1.19

CREST

KRAFT AMERICAN

BRIDGE
' ANNIE

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

BOA~D

50 THAT PUTS UG THAUE C'N
~l4,98~.0IT, BO SPUT! r 5AY
AHEAD"'
WE 61VE 'ER.

··'COURSE, SHE DON'T
KHOI'I HOI'/ ~U.;::.
CH:..___
SAYS HERE
MAKEG

"·WAS THE I HOPE 50 ."50i1EHOI'I
OF

!HE THOU6H T OF
DIRECTORG
DISPLEASIH6 THAT
PLEAGED WITH 6ROUP MAKEG ME
YOUR REPORT,
SHUDDER.!
MitG. FLOWERS'?

eriss-er0$5. trump

+AJIH

: ALLEYOOP

,.
,.
.... •••• .... ••,.

Vulaer;lble: Botb
Dealer: Sooth

.....

.. I RAN ACROSS
TI4!.S A WHIL.IO
AE.O.1

l!ool

·~

Pus

.,_

I+

p-

p..,

Puo

~eo clot. is a rather
ambitious ecmtract liKe there

are oaly 12 lri&lt;:b &amp;Yailable
against DDt dlstribatkliiS of

FASV' CHEK PRODUCE

tbe East·WI!!It cards.
Still, II you otop at .U 8Dd
tbe game is matdl poiJII dupti-

GASOUNE ALLEY
CRISP SOLID

HEAD
LETTUCE

49 Ol

Head

49~

POTATOES ............ 10 79C
ONIONS .................. 3 79e

gen111

FIVE
ALIVE
12 oz. Pkg.

FRENCH BREAD

Several Varieties

WINNIE
60011, I 'LL

Pl.UMI3ERS

ARE HERE HCOI&lt;1NG '5TART WOI\KING
0+1 THE MENUS,
UP THE KITCHEN
AI/VERT ISING, ANI7
EQUIPMENT'

OKAY, BILL,
13ACK TO THE

WE'VE GOT
AN AWFUL LOT

YEAH,

PFACOCK CIJAIR5

SHOP FOR

us.

M EANWff/L £ . ., NEAR8Y.,.

ANI/ WICKER TABLES

GRAND OPENING
ANNOUNCEMENT.'

TO MAKE!

WHY, THAT
5TUPII7 171NGI3AT
6 LIM ! LOOK AI 'THE
PHONY CREI7ENTIALS
HE GOT FOR M E . ..
MADE OUT IN 'THE

NAME BONNIE

0'131?Af7Y!

becomes your 13th trick.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

S
I Chef's
Cleavercreation
(Br. sp.)
5 Coocur
1 DecUvlty
7 Cop's badge
11"Boola Boola" (sl.)
grad
8 Sacrifice
11 Seafood
11 CIWke
contamiJwlt 11 Stipulatory
Zl DiMncumber clouoe
Z1 Chemical
11 Uke oome
suffix
evqreeno
Z2 Crescent·
It Pinball word
shaped figure Z2 Huabendman' s
Z3 Antique
IDI&lt;reol

~~~~
v.. tenllly'o Aaower

a Producer, 1
Hal -

zc National
hymn
It Not ezag-

31 "-, the
dawn Is
breaking
"

3Z Originate
gerated
33 Swedlah
Zl CllapUn prop
Inventor

21 Nonpro-

31 Allegiance

ductlve

3t Mml with
a beat

31 llallan city

!INuntl')'
visitor

34 Palanc:e film
35 Wrath
31 River In
Venezuelo

:n Fonner U.S.
oecretary

of slate
31 Gambling den, b c-1---l-- f!i:!
10 Ship In IIIII
headlines

11 oz. Size

tributary
Slender

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

NORTHERN

AX'I'DLBAAXB

NAPKINS....................~~~.~.r.-.9·9~
KEEBLER SANDWICH
COOKIE PAK

'1109

lo

Hei(!TH/515 W~ERE
WE STARTED!
32 oz.
Box ·

LONGFELLOW
. I

· One letter •imply standw. for another. In this s1mple A Ia
used for the three L's, X (or th e two O'J, etc. Single letters.
a~trophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmta. Each day the code l etters are different.

PEANUTS

WE'VE BEEN FLI(ING ALL
DAI{ AND GOING NO PLACE!
I'M SUPPOSEC' TO BE AT
MU51C CAMP ! .

WHAT HAPPENED ?

•
POTTSVILLE Forro•t
Tucker stars ss Bulldog O'Hal1or·
en , an harrasaed labor leader who
is at his wits end when he's hit with
a fem inist rebellion within hie own
ranks. (60 mins.)
CJl ill) GREAT PERFORMANCES
'The Marr iage of Figaro' Mirella
Freni , Hermann Prey and Dietrich
F isher-Oieskau star in Moz:art's
classic opera of mistaken identl ·
ties and love affain~. Dr. Karl Bohm
conducts the Vienna Philharmonic
Orchestra . {3 hrs., 30 mina .)
8:30 CIJ ·AGAPE
8:5B CIJ NEWS UPDATE
Q:OO CIJ 8 CD DIFF' RENT STROKES
Kimberly's boyfriend, invited to d.inner to meet the Drummonds , sug - •
gests bringing his sister aa Willis '
date--unaware that Wil lis is black.
(Repeat) (Closed-Captioned)
Cil 700CLUB
Ill (H) G) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
Kris risks her life by posing as a
porno queen when the Angela enter
the llr-rated mo-.~te business "to in·
vestigate the staying of a small ·
town boy in search of his beautiful
fiances. (Repeat; 80mina.)
O lll®l THECORNISGREENSel
in Wales at the turn of the century,
the dr~ma chronicles an English·
woman's gallant struggle to
educate youthful Welsh coa l
miners . Stare: Katharine He.pbum,
Bill Fraser. (2 hrs.)
11:30 CIJU CD SANFOIIONoalalgicfO&lt;
the moonshine from back home in
Texas, Cal whips up e batch of the
stu II and Fr~d thinks he' s oat anew
Q!_l-rich'-quick scheme. (Repeat)
W BASEBA~L : RACE FOR THE
PENNANT This weekly baaeball
series steps up to bat lor its third
season. len Berman and Maur~
Willa recap the week 's baseball .
action and summarize the critical
I?J.!lys and players .
10:00 W 8 (!) QUINCY Quincy lnvea·
ligates alter an old friend of his as ·
soc late, Sam Fujiyime, goesintoa
rage and kills a rookie police of ficer. (Repeat ; 60 mins.)
(l) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ••• "Tho
Chomp" 111711
•
ill TBS EVENING NEWS
CIHj))G)VEGASDan Tanna co urts
diaasterwhen a beautiful hypnotist
programs Binzer into an unstopp·
able human time bomb set to explode at the final b uz zerof a ba skat ball game in a pa cked arena.
60
mina.)
(Repeat;
{Qioeed -Captioned)
10: 2B ill NEWS UI&gt;DATE
10:30 ill MAX MORRIS
10:5B CIJ NEWS UPDATE

of the Forest'
11:2B CIJ NEWS UPDATE
11:30 ClJ U CD THE TONIGHT SHOW
Host : Johnny Carson. Guests: Tony
Randall , VictoriaPrincipai,Barbara Mandrell. (90 min a.) ~
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

([) MOVIE -(DRAMA} •••• ''AdviH
1nd Conaent" 1962
. I]) (H) 11!1
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE

Ill ill YOURTURN: LETTERSTO
CBS NEWS

(J) ABC CAPTIONED HEWS
®l MOVIE · (DRAMA) "
''Homecoming'' 1848
11 :50 illll21 1DLOVEBOAT-BARE'f.TA

love Boal ··'fhe Captain's Cap-

1:00 CIJ U . TDMORROWHo al Tom
\
Snydar. Guests:William PeterBiatty , author ot 'The Exorcist ' (60
mine.)
Cil GOOD NEWS
CD NEWS
1:30 CIJ REX HUMBARD
2:00 !)D) I BELIEVE
2:011 il2) 18 NEWS
2:30 I]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
CIJ MOVIE · (COMEDY)' " Four
Dwcea" 1il5
4:00 Cil700CLUB
4 :20 ill MOVIE-{COMEDY)" I'o "Blon·
dlo" 111311
5:30 ill BOB GASS

CRYPTOQVOTES

SORR~ 511( ..THIS SECTION

01= THE AIRPORT TERMINAL
IS CLOSF.O FOI(. REPAIRS!

m in~ (Closed-Captioned)

0 Ill ®l

(Be~al)

41Selne

u

Tommylorprom~ueen . (Repeat ; 60

tain' A retired sea captain makes
lila miserable t or his son the Cap tain , but e woman calms the storm.
Baretta -- 'lt's A Boy' Barette ' e
plans to marry a former girltriend
are complica ted by an underworld
power struggle. (Repeat; 2 hra., 15
mins.)
12:00 (!) MOVIE · (DRAMA) " l'a
"Defiance" 1980
0 ill CBS LATE MOVIE 'THE
SAINT: Queen 's Ransom' The Saint
is enlisted by an ex -king to obt ain
the Jewelalhatwould fund a new try
for the throne. (Repeat) 'THE HOSTAGE HEART' 1977 Stars: Brad ford
Dillman , Lorette
Swit .

21 Forbid
21 La\..yer
(abbr.)

SKONK!!

"Paj_aml G1me" 1957

il)il2)Q)EIGHTISENOUGHWhen
Tommy's and Ernie's band Is bea ten out by an all-gtrl·rock group to
play lor the se.nior prom , the guve
pIan a countBfa ttack by nomlndti ng

CIJ JEWISH VOICE
CIJ LAST OF THE Wl~D 'Prisoners

ztGambol
2'7 step - !

GIT OFF MV PROPITTY,
YOU 5HIF'LE55

"Bre•klng Polnt 11 1977
·
MOVIE · (MUSiCAL) " '

CIJ

NEWS

z Chclce group

car event

69C:

ChDc. Fudge, French,
Vanilla Cream
Pitter Patter

rour

FOCUSONTHEFAMI~Y

(!) MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) "I'.

11:00 C2l 8 CIJ.crJ 0 ill ®l &lt;l2l 8

10
Palislde
1Z Cunning
13 Compare
viewpoints
15 Greek leller
11 Enei'ID'

FAS,.,. "CHEK FROZEN FOODS

MORTON
DINNERS

Yoo bold lOng+~ of spades
aDd ace of bearls. It doesn't
matter what East holds and
Weot bas beea forced to come
dowa to eitber kio2-small of
bearts and t..O spacfes or king
of beartS and lhree spades.
H West has blanked his king
of hearts, you cash
ace of
bearts aDd dummy s queen of
bearta becomes !be 13th trick.
U West bas chucked a spade,
you cash the king and ruff a
spade. Now your last spad e

by IHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Rind
1 Arizona river DOWN
5 In reprd
1 Power on
I Evergnen
tile green

back!

aARNEY
SNOW CROP

'

one trump,
his original two hearts and
ooe.spade.
l)ummy holds

tiMI·~·r'

,

CRISP

four-&lt;:anl euding.

You said 4ou didn' I'm such a liar
40u can't believe
He's cominq t.o have a
a word l sa4!
take me home! home'

LjOU

THE

squeeze
available.
You ruff a diamond, ,draw
trumps, cash dummy's ace of
diamonds amJ your ace of
spades come down to this

I called Dad!

I'm sorn-1 I used
4ou, Melba' I'll
paL!

8 ~T~~·. '139

CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

a

+It

TAB, .SPRITE or COCA-COLA

U.S. ROUTE 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON

sotml
9A.75

CELERY.................. ;~.~~~~ .. 39e

CAMDEN PARK

+Q 7.S 2

ByO.W.WJ-y
... AiuS.Ia&amp;

100Ct.

OPE Ill TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P .M .

.....

Opening !Nd:t J

LB.

ISLAND CREEK COAL CO.

+JU
.IO&amp;U2 .

,

p...

PLUMS .......................~~·.. 69c

!

.

EASI'

• J 1091

YELLOW

•

.......

SO TH' PI.ACE HAS
T'BE INHABITED!

CALIFORNIA

-,

a diamood in your band or two
spades In dummy.
U you nlff a diamond in
your own band and cash your
at::e of bearts, yo.u develop a
Vielma coup providing ihe
opponeat w1th the king. of
bearts holds five spades so his
partner can't belp bim in
eitber suil
That im't the case. but
there is
play known as ·a

+u•
••o•uu

.KJI

ONE'S GROWIN' ~N,

ALL SEATS JUST$ J.SO

OF

overtrick if you can.
You bave 11 top tricks and
get your 12th by e1ther ruffing

»«

NORm

YEAHI H0\'115
10 BUCKS A
1'/EEK SOUND?

LB.

EMPLOYEES OUTING"

cate, you want t9 collect an

...•q•

A816 RAISE!

... I A~SO FOUND A
Pl.ACE. WHERE SOME·

BAROAfN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN

11

· Criss-cross squeeze play

+Q 1074

SANI-CAT LITTER •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IO lbs. 79e

•

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY-AUGUST 9TH

Jumbles: CHASM LOUSE BUCKET DILUTE
Answer : What l he rash tailor pressed- HIS LUCK

+AitH

r---------------------------

'Roger Walker, 123 Union Ave.,
Pomeroy, returned home Saturday
from Saudi Arabia and will spend
the next month here with his wife,
Sue.
Walker has been in Saudi Arabia
for the past six months working as
maintenance supervisor for the electrical contractor, Saudi Lord LTD of
Paramount, Calif. He , will return
there the end of August for another
sixmonths.
.
Walker's work has mostly been
centered around Jubail, along the
Persian or Arabic Gulf. He has
found the life and living conditions
very much different from here, and
returned from there with numerous
gifts for his wife and friends. His
wife and sister, Mrs: Gladys Walker,
met him at the Columbus airport
and will take him back at the time of
his departure.

I

Jumblt B~k No. 14, containing 110 puzzlll, 11 IYallable for$1 .75poslptld
lrl;)m Jumblt,Ciothls newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J . 07W.Inefudtyour
name, address, r:lp code and mtkt cheeks ptytble to NewspaperboMs.

TOOTHPASTE ...............~~~:. '1.49 SINGLES CHEESE ......~~-~~:.'1.79

Returns from Arabia

,.

. BETTY CROCKER

LUCKY LEAF BLUEBERRY

Yeslerday's

09

BAY RUTH &amp; BUTTERFINGER

il2) Q) FAMILY FEUD
7 :58 ill NEWS UPDATE
8:00 illD CD REALPEOPLeThoreturn
of the self-styled consumer advocate Captain Sticky, a mi nister
who is a ventriloquist , and an eight·
mile loot race in San Francisco.
60
mins .)
(Repeat;
(glosed-Captioned)

ill

•

JOKER' SWtLD

(J) DICK CAVETT SHOW

WH~PB~ Tl1t; Ml:;~

BIG VALUE

ABC NEWS
(J) ill) ZOOM
(J) U CD NBC NEWS
ill MUSIC
CIJ I LOVE ~UCY
CIJ CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
O lll®J CBS NEWS
(J) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
ill) VILLA A~EGRE
(H) 01 ABC NEWS
I]) NEWS UPDATE
(J) I) CROSS WITS
ill PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
CIJ HOGAN'S HEROES
CIJ il2) G) FACE THE MUSIC
CD ~UCY SHOW
O CIJ nCTACDOUGH
(J) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
®l NEWS
ill) DICK CAVETT SHOW
(2) 8 COUNTRY ROADS Guest:
Dannv Davis.
·
ill AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
ill ALL IN THE FAMILY
CII MATCH GAME
CD Wl~D KINGDOM 'To Rope A

SN

N•F T T R

HWULOLVPB EB W,

l'G B
P S

IS UNSEP,

VMLTT·

J .S E W V

STWBVP
: U H'O .

-

HEB

PGBEHYR , MD S JD
T SF L V

MONA USA STOLEN
lrt 1911 , Leonardo da Vinci's
''Mona Lisa" was stolen from the
Louvre in Paris .' It was recovered a
year later in Italy.

0 L K 8 E

Yeoterdoy'a Cryploquote: MEN ARE MORE IN'I'ERESTING
THA.N WOMEN , BUT WOMEN ARE MORE FASCINATING.J AAJES THURBER

DEPOSED GOVERNOR
William Penn was deposed as
governor of Pennsylvania in 1692.

10

.:

�•
13-TheDailySentinel,Middleport-Pomercy 0 Wednesday Aug 6 1980
DICK TRACY
' .'
·
'
· '
12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 6, 1980

Summing up Sports

C1J

TELEVISION
VIEWING

SPENCER'S FAS V' CHEK

8:30

EVENING
8:00 (J) 8 ctJ O CI&gt;®Hl2J Q) NEWS
I]) BIBLe BOWL
(!) MOVIE · (DRAMA) ' "

Sth &amp; Powell
Racine, Oh.
Prices .Effective thru Aug. 9

" Vole••" 11179

CIJ

USCA CHOICE
CENTER CUT

8:58
7;00

ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW

CHUCK
ROAST
SHOULDER CUT

vye Reserve the Rl••"'

,

CHUCK ROAST. ••••• ~.~·••

Limit Ouflntftfes

179

ENGLISH ROASt ........... BONELESs~:.:~:;:
SUPERIOR

. CAPTAINEASY

7:30

AND YOU ' ~l. GET A 61LL. FROM MY'
LAWVSR FOR ALL. THO!ii&gt;E CLOTHE_!;
OF MINE YOU HAD YOUR

JUST WHAT DO YOU
THI'-IK YOU'FI:&amp; DO INe.
MAY I A6-1&lt; 'f

SUTLER TOS:$' OUT:

I

LI:7TEN, YOU
6UFFOON! Me I&lt;EE

INDUSTRIES HA:!&gt;
L.ICEN::OED YOUI&lt;::OERVICES TO ME

G ri~ '

ASA FASHION

.

OW

MOD&amp;l.!

BRAUNSCHWEIGER ...........~.~: 69' FRANKI£S ......... !.~. ?.~. P.~~:. 8!r
RED SKIN
BOLOGNA .:.~~.~.~........... ~~·.. '1.09 BEEF LIVER ...............~.~: '1.09
.
LB $219
POLISH SAUSAGE ... ......... ~I:1:.. 99' PEPER LOAF
.................
:. •
FRE'SH
CHOPPED
PORK SAUSAGE.. ........... !-:~.-.s1.49 SIRLOIN STEAK.......... !-:~·. '1.99
BUCKET STEAKS ............'=~: 'J -- STEW BEEF ...............~-~:. '2.19

1· 1

I

.

NILUKa
1

(]

®J THE JUDGE

IJ

ill) MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT

SAR:~ER

A

]

5f-iA'111ES 'IOU 'THESE

DAYS, HE15 APT TO
DO 'THIS.

FRYER PARTS ................~.~: .. 6!r LEGS &amp; BREASTS ........~-~:.7!r

~'-'ROOM ?

Now arral'lge the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug gested by the above_car1oon.

J I K
Answer: "(

III

r

r1 I I I I J

~.~

{Answers tomorrow)

FABRIC SOFTENER .......................................~~~·:~~: ...~l
. CRUISING DOWN THE RIVER - Frank Longley,
D1co Dyson and Dan Camphaus, teachers from Long
Beach, Calif., seem like characters out of Tom Sawyer,
but not really. They fashioned a pontoon boat out of 55
gallon steel drums. A week and a haH ago the trio left
Pittsburgh on a journey to New Orleans. For the past
10 years the trio traveled throughout Europe. This year
they thought it would be nice to see the United States.

The group stopped in Pomeroy Tuesday morning to
take on supplies and gas. Roy Mayer, owner and
operator of Pomeroy Pastry Shop, took the boys to a
gas station to get gas. Longley said they were "46 going
on 16." Dyson said, "We don't worry very much, none
of us does. I don't think we could be effective teachers
if we kept a lot on our minds. We're pretty lodse."

.

Lawmakers may take another
look at .sales tax measure
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
officials n'iay want to take another
look at sidetracked proposal for
cutting the sales tax on new cars to
boost purchases and help the
troubled industry.
· Neighboring Michigan did it and
wound up increasing its revenues
from the sales tax for July, said officials in Lansing on Tuesday.
Calling the experiment "a
dramatic success," Michigan Gov.
William Milliken's office said July's
sales rose 100 percent over June and

a

Young J3elievers meet
The Young Believers of the Middlepott First Baptist Church were in
Rainelle, W. Va. Thursday and
Friday. On Thursday evening they
presented a program at the First
Baptist Church there and later were
entertained with a pizza party.
Friday the youth were guests of
the BYF for an afternoon outing and
picnic at the BobcOck State Park.
Going to Rainelle were Joy Hudson,
Phyllis Davis, Lori and Lynn Kloes,
Cindy Parker, Jayne Hoeflich,
Stephanie and Angela Houchins,
Craig Darst, and Randy Osborne.
They were accompanied by the Rev.
and Mrs. Mark McClung, Mrs. Dan
Riggs and son, David, Gene Hudson,
and Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin.
_
On Wednesday afternoon the
Young Believers presented music
for the residents of the Pomeroy
Health Care Center.

PEAK

CANDY BARS .............. 4 For SJ

PINTO BEANS ..........4 lbs.51.79

CONVENIENT PAK

TODDLERSCONVENIENTPAK

PAMPERS ..........-....~~..~: .. '6.99

PAMPERS ................~~.~!: '6.99

35 percent over July 1979.
•Revenues from the sales tax,
reduced from 4 cents to 2 cents
during July, were more than $600,000
above the $12.9 million collected 'in
June when the full kent tax a?'
plied.
Michigan - hit hard by layoffs in
the auto industry like Ohio- began
collecting the full tax again Aug. 1.
But it wasn't until Tuesday that
sales figures could be analyzed and
the experiment termed successful.
Meanwhile, Sen. Paul E. Gillmor,
R· Port Clinton, asked the
Legislature on Tuesday to at least
bring an end to the current situation
in which many Ohioans may be
holding back from car purchases in
anticipation of a similar tax cut.
Leaders could do this by issuing a
statement saying the state will
rebate any sales tax reductions
people miss out on by buying now, he
said.
"The Legislature can and should
eliminate this uncertainty immediately," Gillmor said, adding
that the situation seriously has hurt
Ohio's auto industry.
The Ohio House alrea\ly has a?'
proved a proposed cut from 4 cents
to 2 cents, but the legislation is

stalled in a j 0int conference committee which has no meetings
scheduled for the near future.
According to Gillmor, the comffiittee would not even have to meet.
Instead, the parties' top leaders
could enable the slate to rebate
taxes collected in the interim if the
bill finally is enacted.
His proposal was well received l;ly
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
D-New Boston, who said he " would
have no problem with the leaders
issuing a statement"
But Senate President Oliver
Ocasek, D-Akron, opposed the tax
cut, saying the state already is in
serious revenue trouble. It would be
unfair to Ohioans who already have
bought cars in 1980, he said.
Ocasek could not be reached for
reaction to the Michigan figures. But
he said last week that Michigan's
overall revenue picture is a disaster
and its unemployment compensation fund practically is \viped
out.
Part of Michigan's problem
resulted when it gave $200 million
from its general fund to the ailing
Chrysler Corp., Ocasek said.
"I don't think we should pattern
ourselves after Michigan," he said.

CAKE MIX ............. ~~.':~?:: ... 6!r

PIE FILLING ............... '1.19

KRAFT SPREAD

DEL MONTE W.K.

CORN

PARKAY LIGHT.......... :2lbs. 99'

3 17 oz. '1

BETTYCROCKER

~n

KRAFT

FROSTING .............. ~~-,~~~~:. sug

GRAPE JELLY.......... 3 lbs. '1.19

CREST

KRAFT AMERICAN

BRIDGE
' ANNIE

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

BOA~D

50 THAT PUTS UG THAUE C'N
~l4,98~.0IT, BO SPUT! r 5AY
AHEAD"'
WE 61VE 'ER.

··'COURSE, SHE DON'T
KHOI'I HOI'/ ~U.;::.
CH:..___
SAYS HERE
MAKEG

"·WAS THE I HOPE 50 ."50i1EHOI'I
OF

!HE THOU6H T OF
DIRECTORG
DISPLEASIH6 THAT
PLEAGED WITH 6ROUP MAKEG ME
YOUR REPORT,
SHUDDER.!
MitG. FLOWERS'?

eriss-er0$5. trump

+AJIH

: ALLEYOOP

,.
,.
.... •••• .... ••,.

Vulaer;lble: Botb
Dealer: Sooth

.....

.. I RAN ACROSS
TI4!.S A WHIL.IO
AE.O.1

l!ool

·~

Pus

.,_

I+

p-

p..,

Puo

~eo clot. is a rather
ambitious ecmtract liKe there

are oaly 12 lri&lt;:b &amp;Yailable
against DDt dlstribatkliiS of

FASV' CHEK PRODUCE

tbe East·WI!!It cards.
Still, II you otop at .U 8Dd
tbe game is matdl poiJII dupti-

GASOUNE ALLEY
CRISP SOLID

HEAD
LETTUCE

49 Ol

Head

49~

POTATOES ............ 10 79C
ONIONS .................. 3 79e

gen111

FIVE
ALIVE
12 oz. Pkg.

FRENCH BREAD

Several Varieties

WINNIE
60011, I 'LL

Pl.UMI3ERS

ARE HERE HCOI&lt;1NG '5TART WOI\KING
0+1 THE MENUS,
UP THE KITCHEN
AI/VERT ISING, ANI7
EQUIPMENT'

OKAY, BILL,
13ACK TO THE

WE'VE GOT
AN AWFUL LOT

YEAH,

PFACOCK CIJAIR5

SHOP FOR

us.

M EANWff/L £ . ., NEAR8Y.,.

ANI/ WICKER TABLES

GRAND OPENING
ANNOUNCEMENT.'

TO MAKE!

WHY, THAT
5TUPII7 171NGI3AT
6 LIM ! LOOK AI 'THE
PHONY CREI7ENTIALS
HE GOT FOR M E . ..
MADE OUT IN 'THE

NAME BONNIE

0'131?Af7Y!

becomes your 13th trick.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

S
I Chef's
Cleavercreation
(Br. sp.)
5 Coocur
1 DecUvlty
7 Cop's badge
11"Boola Boola" (sl.)
grad
8 Sacrifice
11 Seafood
11 CIWke
contamiJwlt 11 Stipulatory
Zl DiMncumber clouoe
Z1 Chemical
11 Uke oome
suffix
evqreeno
Z2 Crescent·
It Pinball word
shaped figure Z2 Huabendman' s
Z3 Antique
IDI&lt;reol

~~~~
v.. tenllly'o Aaower

a Producer, 1
Hal -

zc National
hymn
It Not ezag-

31 "-, the
dawn Is
breaking
"

3Z Originate
gerated
33 Swedlah
Zl CllapUn prop
Inventor

21 Nonpro-

31 Allegiance

ductlve

3t Mml with
a beat

31 llallan city

!INuntl')'
visitor

34 Palanc:e film
35 Wrath
31 River In
Venezuelo

:n Fonner U.S.
oecretary

of slate
31 Gambling den, b c-1---l-- f!i:!
10 Ship In IIIII
headlines

11 oz. Size

tributary
Slender

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

NORTHERN

AX'I'DLBAAXB

NAPKINS....................~~~.~.r.-.9·9~
KEEBLER SANDWICH
COOKIE PAK

'1109

lo

Hei(!TH/515 W~ERE
WE STARTED!
32 oz.
Box ·

LONGFELLOW
. I

· One letter •imply standw. for another. In this s1mple A Ia
used for the three L's, X (or th e two O'J, etc. Single letters.
a~trophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hmta. Each day the code l etters are different.

PEANUTS

WE'VE BEEN FLI(ING ALL
DAI{ AND GOING NO PLACE!
I'M SUPPOSEC' TO BE AT
MU51C CAMP ! .

WHAT HAPPENED ?

•
POTTSVILLE Forro•t
Tucker stars ss Bulldog O'Hal1or·
en , an harrasaed labor leader who
is at his wits end when he's hit with
a fem inist rebellion within hie own
ranks. (60 mins.)
CJl ill) GREAT PERFORMANCES
'The Marr iage of Figaro' Mirella
Freni , Hermann Prey and Dietrich
F isher-Oieskau star in Moz:art's
classic opera of mistaken identl ·
ties and love affain~. Dr. Karl Bohm
conducts the Vienna Philharmonic
Orchestra . {3 hrs., 30 mina .)
8:30 CIJ ·AGAPE
8:5B CIJ NEWS UPDATE
Q:OO CIJ 8 CD DIFF' RENT STROKES
Kimberly's boyfriend, invited to d.inner to meet the Drummonds , sug - •
gests bringing his sister aa Willis '
date--unaware that Wil lis is black.
(Repeat) (Closed-Captioned)
Cil 700CLUB
Ill (H) G) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
Kris risks her life by posing as a
porno queen when the Angela enter
the llr-rated mo-.~te business "to in·
vestigate the staying of a small ·
town boy in search of his beautiful
fiances. (Repeat; 80mina.)
O lll®l THECORNISGREENSel
in Wales at the turn of the century,
the dr~ma chronicles an English·
woman's gallant struggle to
educate youthful Welsh coa l
miners . Stare: Katharine He.pbum,
Bill Fraser. (2 hrs.)
11:30 CIJU CD SANFOIIONoalalgicfO&lt;
the moonshine from back home in
Texas, Cal whips up e batch of the
stu II and Fr~d thinks he' s oat anew
Q!_l-rich'-quick scheme. (Repeat)
W BASEBA~L : RACE FOR THE
PENNANT This weekly baaeball
series steps up to bat lor its third
season. len Berman and Maur~
Willa recap the week 's baseball .
action and summarize the critical
I?J.!lys and players .
10:00 W 8 (!) QUINCY Quincy lnvea·
ligates alter an old friend of his as ·
soc late, Sam Fujiyime, goesintoa
rage and kills a rookie police of ficer. (Repeat ; 60 mins.)
(l) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ••• "Tho
Chomp" 111711
•
ill TBS EVENING NEWS
CIHj))G)VEGASDan Tanna co urts
diaasterwhen a beautiful hypnotist
programs Binzer into an unstopp·
able human time bomb set to explode at the final b uz zerof a ba skat ball game in a pa cked arena.
60
mina.)
(Repeat;
{Qioeed -Captioned)
10: 2B ill NEWS UI&gt;DATE
10:30 ill MAX MORRIS
10:5B CIJ NEWS UPDATE

of the Forest'
11:2B CIJ NEWS UPDATE
11:30 ClJ U CD THE TONIGHT SHOW
Host : Johnny Carson. Guests: Tony
Randall , VictoriaPrincipai,Barbara Mandrell. (90 min a.) ~
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

([) MOVIE -(DRAMA} •••• ''AdviH
1nd Conaent" 1962
. I]) (H) 11!1
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE

Ill ill YOURTURN: LETTERSTO
CBS NEWS

(J) ABC CAPTIONED HEWS
®l MOVIE · (DRAMA) "
''Homecoming'' 1848
11 :50 illll21 1DLOVEBOAT-BARE'f.TA

love Boal ··'fhe Captain's Cap-

1:00 CIJ U . TDMORROWHo al Tom
\
Snydar. Guests:William PeterBiatty , author ot 'The Exorcist ' (60
mine.)
Cil GOOD NEWS
CD NEWS
1:30 CIJ REX HUMBARD
2:00 !)D) I BELIEVE
2:011 il2) 18 NEWS
2:30 I]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
CIJ MOVIE · (COMEDY)' " Four
Dwcea" 1il5
4:00 Cil700CLUB
4 :20 ill MOVIE-{COMEDY)" I'o "Blon·
dlo" 111311
5:30 ill BOB GASS

CRYPTOQVOTES

SORR~ 511( ..THIS SECTION

01= THE AIRPORT TERMINAL
IS CLOSF.O FOI(. REPAIRS!

m in~ (Closed-Captioned)

0 Ill ®l

(Be~al)

41Selne

u

Tommylorprom~ueen . (Repeat ; 60

tain' A retired sea captain makes
lila miserable t or his son the Cap tain , but e woman calms the storm.
Baretta -- 'lt's A Boy' Barette ' e
plans to marry a former girltriend
are complica ted by an underworld
power struggle. (Repeat; 2 hra., 15
mins.)
12:00 (!) MOVIE · (DRAMA) " l'a
"Defiance" 1980
0 ill CBS LATE MOVIE 'THE
SAINT: Queen 's Ransom' The Saint
is enlisted by an ex -king to obt ain
the Jewelalhatwould fund a new try
for the throne. (Repeat) 'THE HOSTAGE HEART' 1977 Stars: Brad ford
Dillman , Lorette
Swit .

21 Forbid
21 La\..yer
(abbr.)

SKONK!!

"Paj_aml G1me" 1957

il)il2)Q)EIGHTISENOUGHWhen
Tommy's and Ernie's band Is bea ten out by an all-gtrl·rock group to
play lor the se.nior prom , the guve
pIan a countBfa ttack by nomlndti ng

CIJ JEWISH VOICE
CIJ LAST OF THE Wl~D 'Prisoners

ztGambol
2'7 step - !

GIT OFF MV PROPITTY,
YOU 5HIF'LE55

"Bre•klng Polnt 11 1977
·
MOVIE · (MUSiCAL) " '

CIJ

NEWS

z Chclce group

car event

69C:

ChDc. Fudge, French,
Vanilla Cream
Pitter Patter

rour

FOCUSONTHEFAMI~Y

(!) MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) "I'.

11:00 C2l 8 CIJ.crJ 0 ill ®l &lt;l2l 8

10
Palislde
1Z Cunning
13 Compare
viewpoints
15 Greek leller
11 Enei'ID'

FAS,.,. "CHEK FROZEN FOODS

MORTON
DINNERS

Yoo bold lOng+~ of spades
aDd ace of bearls. It doesn't
matter what East holds and
Weot bas beea forced to come
dowa to eitber kio2-small of
bearts and t..O spacfes or king
of beartS and lhree spades.
H West has blanked his king
of hearts, you cash
ace of
bearts aDd dummy s queen of
bearta becomes !be 13th trick.
U West bas chucked a spade,
you cash the king and ruff a
spade. Now your last spad e

by IHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Rind
1 Arizona river DOWN
5 In reprd
1 Power on
I Evergnen
tile green

back!

aARNEY
SNOW CROP

'

one trump,
his original two hearts and
ooe.spade.
l)ummy holds

tiMI·~·r'

,

CRISP

four-&lt;:anl euding.

You said 4ou didn' I'm such a liar
40u can't believe
He's cominq t.o have a
a word l sa4!
take me home! home'

LjOU

THE

squeeze
available.
You ruff a diamond, ,draw
trumps, cash dummy's ace of
diamonds amJ your ace of
spades come down to this

I called Dad!

I'm sorn-1 I used
4ou, Melba' I'll
paL!

8 ~T~~·. '139

CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

a

+It

TAB, .SPRITE or COCA-COLA

U.S. ROUTE 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON

sotml
9A.75

CELERY.................. ;~.~~~~ .. 39e

CAMDEN PARK

+Q 7.S 2

ByO.W.WJ-y
... AiuS.Ia&amp;

100Ct.

OPE Ill TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P .M .

.....

Opening !Nd:t J

LB.

ISLAND CREEK COAL CO.

+JU
.IO&amp;U2 .

,

p...

PLUMS .......................~~·.. 69c

!

.

EASI'

• J 1091

YELLOW

•

.......

SO TH' PI.ACE HAS
T'BE INHABITED!

CALIFORNIA

-,

a diamood in your band or two
spades In dummy.
U you nlff a diamond in
your own band and cash your
at::e of bearts, yo.u develop a
Vielma coup providing ihe
opponeat w1th the king. of
bearts holds five spades so his
partner can't belp bim in
eitber suil
That im't the case. but
there is
play known as ·a

+u•
••o•uu

.KJI

ONE'S GROWIN' ~N,

ALL SEATS JUST$ J.SO

OF

overtrick if you can.
You bave 11 top tricks and
get your 12th by e1ther ruffing

»«

NORm

YEAHI H0\'115
10 BUCKS A
1'/EEK SOUND?

LB.

EMPLOYEES OUTING"

cate, you want t9 collect an

...•q•

A816 RAISE!

... I A~SO FOUND A
Pl.ACE. WHERE SOME·

BAROAfN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN

11

· Criss-cross squeeze play

+Q 1074

SANI-CAT LITTER •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IO lbs. 79e

•

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY-AUGUST 9TH

Jumbles: CHASM LOUSE BUCKET DILUTE
Answer : What l he rash tailor pressed- HIS LUCK

+AitH

r---------------------------

'Roger Walker, 123 Union Ave.,
Pomeroy, returned home Saturday
from Saudi Arabia and will spend
the next month here with his wife,
Sue.
Walker has been in Saudi Arabia
for the past six months working as
maintenance supervisor for the electrical contractor, Saudi Lord LTD of
Paramount, Calif. He , will return
there the end of August for another
sixmonths.
.
Walker's work has mostly been
centered around Jubail, along the
Persian or Arabic Gulf. He has
found the life and living conditions
very much different from here, and
returned from there with numerous
gifts for his wife and friends. His
wife and sister, Mrs: Gladys Walker,
met him at the Columbus airport
and will take him back at the time of
his departure.

I

Jumblt B~k No. 14, containing 110 puzzlll, 11 IYallable for$1 .75poslptld
lrl;)m Jumblt,Ciothls newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J . 07W.Inefudtyour
name, address, r:lp code and mtkt cheeks ptytble to NewspaperboMs.

TOOTHPASTE ...............~~~:. '1.49 SINGLES CHEESE ......~~-~~:.'1.79

Returns from Arabia

,.

. BETTY CROCKER

LUCKY LEAF BLUEBERRY

Yeslerday's

09

BAY RUTH &amp; BUTTERFINGER

il2) Q) FAMILY FEUD
7 :58 ill NEWS UPDATE
8:00 illD CD REALPEOPLeThoreturn
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DEPOSED GOVERNOR
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governor of Pennsylvania in 1692.

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16- The Daily Sentinel, .Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 6, 1980
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Major battle looms over property tax plan

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QUEEN AND COURT - Patty Parker, center,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Parker, was crowned
Meigs Junior Fair'Queen, at the annual Meigs County
4-H Style revue held Tuesday night l!t the Eastern Higli

Possibility of resuming talks appears dim
displeasure

over

Israel's

new

Jerusalem Law making he holy city
the capital of the Jewish state. The
law was passed by an overwhelming
majority last Wednesday in the
:Knesset, the Israeli Parliament.
In a statement authorized by his
government, Israeli Foreign
Ministry spokesman Yoram Ben·
Zeev told reporters the Jewish state
stood by its longstanding refusal to
include the lOO,jlOO Arabs living in
Jerusalem in·a plan to give limited
self-rule to more than 1 million

Palestinians who live in occupied
territories seized in the 1967 Mideast
War.
Israel has maintained the
Jerusalem Arabs, who make up
about one-third of the population of
the city holy to Jews, Moslems and
Christians, would not be able to vote
for a Palestinian council that would
represent Arabs living in the oc·
cupied West Bank . of the Jordan
River and the Gaza Strip.
"Jerusalem is not part of the
autonomy, " Ben-Zeev said. But he
added, "All issues on all matters are
subject to negotiation, because the
idea is to overcome obstacles by
negotiation.
Meanwhile, Begin and his Cabinet

drafted a reply to a letter sent by
Sadat last weekend. It was not made
publicti!Jt the Israelis were said to
have reviewed their government's
positions in the autonomy talks and
detaih!d what they termed Egyptian
deviations from the Camp David ac·
cords.
In Cairo, Foreign Minister Aly
reiterated Egypt's view that the
Arab or eastern sector of Jerusalem
was an integral part of the West
Bank and should therefore be en·
titled to autonomy,
" East Jerusalem is part of the
land occupied in 1967, and U.N.
Security Council resolution 242 applies to it as it applies to all lands oc·
cupied by force," Aly said.

11

Iranian demonstrators released
NEW YORK (AP) - Nearly 200 • officials, 171 Iranian men were
taken Tuesday night from a federal
Iranian demonstrators, whose
prison in Otisville to im Islamic Cendetenti'on brought threats of
ter in the New York City borough of
reprisals against the U.S. hostages
in Tehran, paid respects to a portrait
Queens. They were joined there by
of the A~atollah Khomeini after they
20 Iranian women who had been
detained in a Manhattan federal
were released by officials who deter·
corrections facility .
mined they were in the country
Some youths in a crowd of about 50
l!!gally.
After finally giving their names to
Queens residents shouted "Let our

·
A rea d.ea th s

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

I-

. William Grueser
William M. Grueser, 67, 312 Con·
dor Street, Pomeroy, died at his
residence Tuesday evening.
Mr. Grueser was born April7,1913
the son of the Ia te William and Addie
Bradshaw Grueser.
He was a member of the Trinity
Church, Pomeroy Fire Department
and Forked Run Sportsmans Club.
Mr. Grueser is survived by his
wife, Mary Baer Grueser, father-in·
law, Christy Baer; siters, Mrs.
Robert (Gladys) Wilkins and Mrs .
Rolland (Helen) Neutzling; several
nieces, nephews and grand nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. W. H. Perrin of·
fici a ting
Burial will be in Minersville Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at .the
funeral home after 7 p.m. Wed·
nesday. Pomeroy Firemen are to
meet at the fire station Thursday at
7 p.m. to go to Ewing Funeral home
to pay their respects.

Charles Payne
Charles C. Payne, 88, grandfather
of Mrs. Robert Morris, Letart Falls,
died Sunday in the memorial
division of a Charleston, w. Va.,
hospital following a short illness.
Mr. Payne, formerly of Sharon,
was a 36 year resident of Putnam
County, W. Va., and lived in Win·
field. He was a retired vice president
of District 17, United Mine Workers
of America.
Surviving are seven sons, J ohn,
Donald and James R., all of Win·
field; Harold of Lake ; Roy L., Nitro;
Ronald of Red House; Kendell E. of
Jacksonville, N. C.: a brother,
William of Sharon : :JJ grand·
· children; 46 great-.grandchildren,
and two great·g~eat-grandchildren .
Funeral services were held at 2
p.m. Tuesday at the Mt. Vernon
Baptist Church at Teays Valley with
the Rev. Lee White and the Rev .
Leonard F. Lett officiating. -Burial
was in the Payne Family Memori.al
Park.

Frank Smith
Frank Smith, 88, a resident of Rt.
· 2, Vinton., . died in Holzer Medical

1

Center Tuesday morning.
A retired coal miner, Mr. Smith
was born March 19, 1892, in William- ·
son, W. Va., son of the late C. C. and
Tenny Smith.
• He is survived by his wife, Ethel
Welch, whom he married Dec. 10,
1972.
Also surviving are two sons and
four daughters from a previous
marriage : Ralph Smith, Hampton,
Ga.; John Smith, St. Albans, W. Va.;
Kathleen Tabor, Deland, Fla.; Nelle
. Varney, Matewan, W. Va.; Carlette
Ramey, Williamson and Mae
Adams, Thacker, W.Va.
Three step-sons and · two stepdaughters survive: Donald Smith,
Columbus; David Young, Columbus; Robert Lemley, Syracuse; Jen·
nie Little, Pomeroy; Sharon Roush,
Mason, W. Va.; 23 grand· and 39
great-grandchildren and two greatgreat-grandchildren survive.
Funeral services will be held 11
a.m. Thursday at the Vinton Baptist
Church with Rev. Jerry Neal officiating.
Burial will be in Vinton Memorial
Park.
Friends may call at the McCoy·
Moore Funeral Home on Wednesday
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

Ronald Springer
Ronald L. Springer, 67, former
manager., of The Ohio Power Co. office in Pomeroy, died Friday.
Mr. Springer began employment
with The Ohio Power Co., on Sept. 1,
1936 as a clerk in the accounting
department at Crooksville. . He
became chief clerk at Ironton on
May 1, 1941. He was promoted to
local manager at Pomeroy on July 1,
1956. He was district manager at Mt.
Vernon ·and Findlay and was
promoted to division manager on
Nov. 1, 1963 and held that position
until the time of his early retirement
on June I, 1975.
Mr. Springer is survived by his
wife, Lavina and two sons. The home
address is 1901 El Rancho Drive, Sun
City Cente,r Fla.
- Funeral services were held today,
Aug. 6, at the Kirkpa,trick Funeral
Home in .Findlay. Burial was in
Maple Grove e~metery in Findlay.

people go" as the Iranians passed.
One youth was arrested after an egg
was thrown at an attorney for the
demonstrators.
At the center, the Iranians paid
respects to a portrait of Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini and alleged that
they had been " beaten, tortured and
kidnapped " during their detention,
which began July 27 with a demon·
stration in Washington.
Several displayed black and blue
marks they said came from shackles
and one showed stitches in his head.
U.S. officials have denied charges of
mistreatment
Those released included three who
had been hospitalized because of a
hunger strike. The Iranians stayed
at the center for several hours after
a 30-minute prayer service and then
began to leave in small groups, apparently for the homes of area
. Iranians. Some stayed in the center
overight.
Earlier, one demonstrator was
transferred to Washington where he
pleaded innocent to charges of sim·
pie assault and possession of an
unlawful weapon. A~sistant U.S. At·
torney N~l Kramer said Mah·
mouhd Safiri ·was returned to the
District of Columbia jail after his
arraignment in Superior Court.·
Khomeini had denounced the
treatment of the demonstrators. The
speaker of the Iranian Parliament,
Hashemi Rafsanjani, had ordered
preparations made to try the 52 U.S.
hostages as spies.
White House press secretary Jody
Powell rejected any suggestion that
there might be some similarity bet·
ween the detention of the Iranians
and the Nov. 4 se,jzure of Americans
in Tehran.
"These students, quite unlike the
hostages in Iran, are being ham!led
strictly in accordance with the law,"
he said.
The Iranian demonstrators had
originally refused 'to identify them·
selves, making it impossible for of·
ficials to check their immigration
status.
HenryS. Dogin, district director of
the Immigration and Naturalization
Service in New York, said the first
Iranians gave their names during interviews with authorities several
·days ago and by late Tuesda~ all had
i
identified themselves.
HOMECOMING PLANNED
Carmel homecoming will be held
Sunday, Aug . 10, at Carmel Church
with a basket dinner at noon. There
will be special music an1. speaking
in the afternoon . The public is in·
vi ted to attend.
ITAL!ANS SURRENDER
In 1943, the Italian llccl surrendered to the Allies during World War
II.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Clifford S. Morris, Letha J. Morris
to Carl S. Morris, Kathleen Morris,
Parcels, Chester· Sutton.
Florence T. Hannay to Beulah C.
White, Lots, 109, 110, 111, Mid·
dleport.
Richard W. Thomas, Gladys E.
Thomas to Joe N. Clark, Jan B.
Clark, Lots, Pomeroy.
Albert R. Dangelo, Wilma
Dangelo to Ernest C. Schaer, Irene
C. Schaer, 2.0690 acres, Olive.
Cecil R. Dillon, P. Sue Milhoan
Dillon to Jimmie Dillon, Violet L.
Dillon, 20.72 acres, Scipio.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted--Eric
Lipscomb,
Hertllock Grove; Debbie Pridemore,
Cleveland; Dora Wood, Syracuse;
Paul Ray, Long Bottom; Leondus
Lee, Pomeroy; Joseph White,
Cheshire;
Christine Conlin,
Rutland; Margaret Jones, Mid·
dieport; Arthur Reeves, Rutu;nd;
Reva Patterson, Rutland; Steven
Cremeans, Coolville; Myra Martin,
Pomeroy.
Discharged--Edwin
Cozart,
Charles Miller, Delmar Grady,
Larry Bailey, Debra Yost, Floyd
Cummins, Edward Martin.
OSU TO HOST EVENT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Sixty
of the state's most talented high
school seniors are expected to attend
the fifth annual Martin W. Essex
School for the Gifted next week.
The seminar, held Aug. IIHti at
Ohio State University, will provide
opportunities for groWth and
stimulation, snid Franklin · B.
Walter, state superintendent of
public instruction.
The school is named after Walter
M.' Essex, superintendent of public
instruction emeritus. ·

SEMINAR NEXT WEEK
COLUMBUS, Ohio. (AP) ..:. More
than 2!iO recent college graduates
seeking teaching positions are expected to attend·a day-long seminar
ne.t week for prospective job candidates and employers.
The Ohio Teachers Summer In·
tervi~w Program is being held Aug •.,
12 at Upper Arlington High School by
the Ohio Department of Education.
Franklin B. Walter, state superintendent of public1 instruction, said
the program is designed to help Ohio.
school districts fill vacancies and
keep qualified teache~s in the state.
During the seminar, school officials
• will interview job candidates for
nearly 150 vacancies. I ·

School. On left is Tammie Starcher, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Starcher, Minersville, first runner-up,
and on the right is Tammy Ervin, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Ervin, Racine, second runner-up.

promise," he said. "In every county,
we've ·had people working on the
initiative. So it'll be a grass root,s
campaign as well as a media campaign. That's something the other
'side doesn't have."
If approved by voters, the plan
would provide an estimated $161
million in residential property tax
relief to qualified homeowners, renters and family fanners. But it
would boost taxes for corporations
by closing about $742 million in
loopholes, backers said.
Homeowners with in'comes of less
than $30,000 a year could receive a
talC credit if the amount they pay in
property taxes exceeds 2.5 percent
of their income. Under the formlila,
a household with an incom~ of
$20,000 a year that paid $1,000 in
property taxes could receive a tax

•

at

e

. ·'

t )~ ~
~

at the aljnual Meigs County 4-H Style Revue held
Tuesday night at Eastern High School. They will reign
over events at the !17th annual Meigs County Fair next
week.

The talks were scheduled to
resume this week in Alexandria, but
were broken off - for the third time
in three months - by Egyptian
PresidentAnwar Sadat to show

The statewide group has filed
petitions bearing about 140,000
signatures from all 88 counties with
the secretary of stahe's office. That
number exceeded minimum filing
requirements.
Although jt expects to be outspent
by a margin of at least three-t~HJne,
OPIC Executive Director Ira .A.
Arlook said the group is counting on
a grassroots campaign to help offset
the spending margin.
"There's only so much money you
can use effectively to get your
message across," Arlook said. Op,ponents suffer from "an embarrassment of riches," he said.
A broad-based citizens group
would be formed to support the comprehensive package, Arlook said.
"That's just not an empty

, .._

·G

}

CAIRO, Egypt ( AP) -Egypt says
Israel's refusal to consider the
status of Jerusalem as part of
negotiations
on
Palestinian
autonomy means the stalemated
talks will not be resumed in the near
future.
"There is no possibility· for
resuming the talks now unless Israel
changes its position on Jerusalem,"
Egyptian Foreign Minister «amal
HassanAly said Tuesday.
He spoke with reporters here
hours after the Israeli government
of Prime Minister Menachem Begin
released a statement saying it JYaS
willing to discuss Jerusalem with
Egypt but not within the context of
the autonomy talks.

..

eo

r

KING AND QUEEN - Patty Parker, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Parker, Pomeroy, and Rocky Pit'zer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Pitzer, Long Bottom,
were named Meigs County Junior Fair Queen and King

.

By JOHN W. CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
stage has been set for a major battle
this fall over a plan to give a property tax break to low and moderate income Ohioans.
Supporters of the lax reform
package, who expect to spend
$750,000 in attempts to win voter approval Nov~ 4, predict opponents will
use up to $3 million to defeat it.
"Voters are about to encounter
one of the most expensive and most
devious propaganda campaigns in
Ohio history as the big banks and the
Ohio Manufacturers Association try
to defeat the Ohio Fair Tax
Initiative," said Mary Lynn Cappelletti, legislative director for the
Ohio Public Interest Campaign.

VOL 31 NO. 81

POM EROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

from page 1J·
ded at the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception at the Catholic
University across town, where Hickey was a seminary student 38
years ago. As part of his new duties, he will serve as chancellor o! the
university.
·
In thefirst message to parishioners and priests in his new diocese,
Hickey called for ecumenical peace and cooperation.

LiMA, Ohio - An Ohio man who was assigned to work as a clerk
during his year-long tour of duty in Vietnam figured a desk job was
safe.llut, 13 years later, Alex Pocs wonders if he figured wrong .
Pocs thinks he may have been exposed to Agent Orange, a herbicide
used in Vietnam during the late 1960s. The defoliant, named for the
orange-striped container distinguishing it from other herbicides, was
used by American forces in Vietnam from the mid-1960s to 1970 to
chemically burn away jungle growth suspected of hiding . enemy
troops.
A National Institute of Health study has revealed that 2,4,5-T- the
chemical component of Agent Orange that containS the toxic
chemical, dioxin - could cause skin disea~. gastr~intestinal illness,
cancer and birth deformities in laboratory animals.
Pocs and his wife, Parmalee, speculate the exposure may have indirectly caused the death of their child at birth in 1971.

Allen's death toll reaches 18
'

KINGSTON, Jamaica - Hurricane Allen bore down on Jamaica
early today, leaving at least I8 dead in its wake and giving the
isolated; impoverished southwest peninsula of Haiti a sideswipe that
officials feared left widespread devastation.
The eye of the storm passed witt.in 10 to 20 miles of the Haitian coast
Tuesday, and the U.S. National Weather Service reported at 3 a.m.
EDT today that Allen was centered near latitude 18.4 north, longitude
76.3 west, or about 40 miles northeast of Kingston and just off the
island's northeast tip.
,
It said the hurricane was expected to continue toward the westnorthwest at about 20 mph, that wind gusts o! 63 mph were howling
over eastern portions of Jamaica and should spread westward during
the morning, and estimated maximum sustained winds at 135 mph.
It said hurricane force winds spread out 60 miles to the north and 40
miles to the south, with gale force winds 175 miles to the north and 100
miles south, and that in addition to Jamaica the storm threatened
eastern Cuba and the Cayman Islands, west of Jamaica . •

Mansfield police go on strike
MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP ) - Mansfield policemen went out on strike
today after City Council rescinded an arbitration agreement approved
in May as a means of settling contract disputes.
The 81 officers had been working without a contract since the old one
expired May I. A majority of the policemen voted for a strike at a
meeting Tuesday night that followed the council action.
The council action came in the wake of a sick call job action by Mansfield officers last weekend. But Sgt. Richard File of the Fraternal Order of Police said Mayor Ed Meehan wanted to bait the arbitration
process because he knew the FOP was prepared to challenge the city's
claims of being in financial straits.
The last Mansfield police strike, in 1976,lasted less than a week.

Indiantown Gap quiet after riot
FORT INDIANTOWN GAP, Pa. 2 Hundreds of military police and
, National Guardsmen were posted to a Cuban refugee center hereafter
500 disgruntled refugees hurled rocks and bottles, stormed barricades
and looted the mess hall in one of three separate riots.
The reinforcements increased security twentyfold at the sprawling
complex, which houses some 5,000 refugees.
Officials reported the camp wa~ quiet during a search of its
penmeter early today. " I think the situation is well in hand," said Art
Bnll, spokesman for the Cuban Task Force, an organization set up by
the State Department to help with refugee resettlement.

.ELBERFELD$

MEN'S.WEAR
PRICE
FINAL CLEARANCE MEN'S
SUMMER CLOTHING INCLUDING

•KNIT SHIRTS •SPORT SHIRTS ·
•DRESS SHIRTS •JACKETS
•DRESS ·SLACKS

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.
enttne

. -

for almost every good and service
sold in Ohio, especially necessities
such as food,· clothing, utilities and
housing," said conunittee COQf·
dinator Kent B. McGough on Wed·
nesday.
The measure ·guarantees higher
consumer prices and the largest·tax
increase in state history, McGough
said, And it poses the "danger that
thousands of Ohio working men and
women will be threatened with loss
of their jobs," he said.
The OPIC proposal has been endorsed by the Ohio AFL-CIO, the
Ohio Farmers Union and the Ohio
Council of Senior Citizens. Gov.
James A. Rhodes has joined the
manufacturers association and
other business groups, however, in
opposing the plan.

-

FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAX. AUGUST 7, 1980

Legal action possible
•
to wzn spot on ballot

TocJa.y. ~ co~tlnued

Couple worried about future

break of $2li0, Arlook said.
proposal placed on the ballot by the
An estimated 1.5 Qlillion of the 3.7 General Assembly should not pose a
million households in the state would problem, Arlook said.
qualify for immediate tax relief unThe Legislature's proposed con·
der the plan, said Edward F. Kelly, · stitutional amendment is designed
OPIC's research director.
'
to .protect residential property
But the proposal would hike ~xes owners from tax increases triggered
for those makinjl more than $30,000 a by inflationary reappraisals.
year. About 273,000 tax returns in
"It's good, but it's not enough by
that category were filed in 1977, itself," Arlook said. "I think the
Kelly said.
voters will see it as a good one-two
In addition, the measure would punch.''
repeal laws which allow corporate
Opponents, organl.zed in a group
tax abatements to be granted to en- dubbed Ohioans For Fair Taxation,
courage industrial development; said Wednesday that the proposal
repeal a current exemption enabling would yield a nominal property tax
banks and savings and loans to pay reduction but would hike taxes by
no state income tax; and repeal cer- more than $5 for every $1 in tax
tain corporate sales tax exemptions.
relief.
Possible voter confusion over
"These increases will be paid by
OPIC's plan and a tax revision Ohioans i;, the form of higher prices

De!iberate coverup charged
WASIDNGTON (AP) - The government deliberately concealed
radiation dangers from people living downwirid of atomic tests in the
1950s and 1960s and should pay damages to innocent victims, charges a
House subcommittee.
The panel, in a draft report released Wednesday, said the nowdefunct Atomic Energy Commission "not only disregarded, but actually suppressed" all evidence of hannful effeets from radiation
given off by atmospheric tests at its Nevada Test Site.
The subcommittee said the nation owes a moral debt to those who
relied on false assurances of safety during the tests and should not force radiation victims to battle for damages through the courts.

Devic~

may save many lives

BOSTON ·- Cardiac arrest, 'killer of JOO,OOO Americans each year,
may be prevented with a tiny implanted device that automatically
zaps a victim's heart with life-saving jolts of electricity, doctors say.
The devices - miniature ·versions of the bulky emergency room
defibrillator - have been implanted in the chests of six people to
deliver bursts of electricity when their hearts begin beating
irregularly.
Doctors at Johns Hopkins University and Sinai Hospital in
Baltimore say they have successfully tested the devices and found
they cause ''no undue discomfort." Like pacemakers, the devices are
permanently buried in the heart patients' chests, and both devices can
be used at the same time.
A report or the first use of the device, invented by Dr. Michel
Mirowski, was published in today's issue of the New England Journal
of Medicine.
·

Plane· crash kills, 160 people
NOUAKCHOTT, Mauritania - A Romanian airliner carrying some
200 Romanian fishennen crashed early today in the sea off the prin-

cipal Mauritanian port of Nouadhibou, killing 160 people aboard, officials said. Rescue operations at sea reportedly saved about 40
people,
Mauritania is on the northwest coast of Africa.
The fishermen were en route to Nouadhibou (o relieve the crews on
the huge fishing boats that ply the waters off Alrica's coast, officials
said.
The airliner was on a regular flight of Romania's Tarom airline, of·
ficials said.
,,
There was no immediate indication of the cause of the crash, and an
investigation was launched.

Continue search for helicopter
NEW ORLEANS - Coast Guardsmen usifig high-powered lights
searched the stormy Gulf of Mexico through the night for a helicopter
that vanished after evacuating 12 people from an offshore oil rig.
The helicopter was reported missing when it failed to arrive at 7
p.m. Wednesday as scheduled at an airport in Houma, officials said. It
had been evacuating oil workers as a precaution against the wrath of
Hurricane Allen.
The Ocean Drilling and Exploration Co. said five of its empnoyees
were aboard, along with the pilot and seven workers from various offshore oil service companies. ·
ODECO spokesman AL Spindler said the the helicopter picked up
the last men from a company oil production platfonn. about 90 miles
southwest of Houma and was headed to shore when it disappeared.
He said the missing were among non-essential personnel ODECO
evacuated from its 10 production platforms in the Gulf.

Weather to remain warm, humid
COLUMBUS- The National Weather Service says it will continue
to be warm and hwnld air in Ohio through the weekend, with showers
and thunderstorms possible malnly in the afternoon and evening.
Scattered showers and thunderstorms that moved into western Ohio
Wednesday evening persisted during the night over the southwest
quarter of the state.
Overnight precipitation totaled .68 inch at Dayton, less than a quar·
ter-inch in the Cincinnati area, and a trace at Columbus.
The intensity and range of the showers and thunderstorms
decreased during the later part of the night, and as dawn approached,
radar indicated only a few light showers in the southwest comer of the
state.
. · It was mostly cloudy in Ohio overnight, except in the northwest part
of the state, where skies were generally clear.
·
·

State forecast, local weather
Variable cloudiness and hwnid through Friday with a chance of
showers or thunderstonn.s. Highs Friday 90-95. Lows tonight in the low
70s, The chance of rain 20 percent tonight and 30 percent Friday. Winds southwesterly 1).15 mph tonight. ·
'
·
Extended Ohio Foreeast - Saturday through Monday:Warm and
hwnid with a chance of thunderstorms each day. Daily high temperatures in low to mid-80s north and mid to upper 80s south. Night·
time lows in mid-80s to low ~0&amp;.

"I WAS

like I was Lillie Orphan
Annie in any one of these
environments," says Secre-

tary ·of Stale Edmund
Muskle of bls recent meetings with European and East
Asian

foreign

ministers.

Seeking to refute charges of
declining U.S. pr~stige
abroad, Muskie report• that
hl• advice ba~ been eagerly
solicited by his foreign couaterparts.

Turbulent
•
convention
predicted
NEW YORK (AP) - sen: Edward
M. Kennedy, in a rare appearance
by a presidential candidate on the
floor of II pollttcal convention,
promises to bring more fireworks to
what clearly will be· a turbulent
Democratic National Convention.
Kennedy said Wednesday he will
address the convention to stand up
for his beliefs on economic issues,
but political considerations also
seemed to play a part in the decision
of the long-shot challenger to take to
the convention rostrum.
It has been more than 80 years sin·
ce an orator took the convention
floor and snatched a presidential
nomination from the favorites. Then
William Jennings Bryan led another
economic debate and dispatched .the
opposition with his famous "Cross of
Gold" speech.
Kennedy said he will address the
convention during Tuesday night's
prime-time television debate on
economic policy. He said he was
making the break with tradition to
bring "maximum attention" to his
cause.
"I would certainly welcome it,"
Kennedy said, if Carter would join
the debate. Such a confrontation is
unlikely since Carter has steadfastly
refused to debate · Kennedy
throughout the campaign.
Kennedy said the dramatic appearance is intended to redeem a
campaign pledge to stand up at the ·
convention for the "victims of our
current recession and inflation."
But practical politics would seem to
compel the effort, too.
Carter is well ahead of Kennedy in
convention delegate votes and has
more than enough to get the
nomination unless a small miracle
occurs between now and next Wed·
nesday night .when the convention
votes.
A new · effort at converting
delegates to·· Kennedy's "open con·
vention" position was launched on
Wednesday with mallgrams sent to
1 1,200 delegates urging them to oppose the proposed loyalty rule.
Rep. Tom Downey, [).N.Y., said
' the Mailgrams stressed . that the
sponsoring group was not trying to
dump Carter but merely believed·an
open conve~tion l'is the ·only way to
have a strong ticket and a united
party" to beat the Republicans in
the fall.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Backers of an anti-gerrymandering
plan whose petitions have been
rejected ~y they 1lave not ruled out
the possibility of legal action to win a
spot on the Nov. 4 ballot.
• George R. Pfeiffer, executive
director of the Fair and Impartial
Redistricting Committee, said a
lawsuit is an option. But supporters
have not talked about thllt yet, he ·
said.
Petitions submitted by his group
shortly before Wednesday's filing
deadline for the November election
ran into trouble after some were
found to contain a paragraph
dealing with candidates'' residency
requirements that did not appear on
others.
A seven hour-long check o! the
documents showed 229,214 names on

petitions with the paragraph and
91,067 on those without it, said
William H. Chavanne, assistant
secretary of state. At least 284,335
valid signatures were needed to
· qualify (or a ballot spot.
"Well, it's not Valentines Day,"
Preiffer said after learning of the
rejection, "Of course we're terribiy
disappointed. An awful lot of effort
went into 'this."
The group plans to ask for the
petitions to be rechecked before
deciding what other steps to take, he
said.
"What we're going to do is exercise our right to cheek the count.
Then we will review the alleged
discrepancy and then we wlll reach
a decision about what we're going to
do, n Pfeiffer said.
.
The group had spent $375,000 since

A.llen 's death toll
climbs to 71 tothy
MERIDA, Mexico (AP)
Hurricane Allen, gaining fury and
described as the strongest on reeord
in the western Caribbean sea, churned toward Mexico's Yucatan Channel today on a path that could put the
killer storm off the U.S. Gulf CCJllSI
by the weekend. It left behind at
least 71 dead and extensive
devastation on the fourth day o! its
rampage through the Caribbean.
Offshore workers spotted a body in
the Gulf of Mexico today near where
a helicopter with ,13 Americans
aboard was missing in the stormtossed seas off Louisiana's southern
coast. The 13 .were among hundreds
of oil drilling rig and production
platform workers evacuated in an·
ticipation of the storm.
At 9 a.m. EDT, the U.S. National
Weather Service said Allen, with top
winds
'
of
1
70 mph instead of 155 mph recorded
three hours earlier, was centered
near latitude 20.8 north, longitude
85.0 west, or 120 miles east-northeast
of Cozumel, Mexico.
"Extremely dangerous Allen is
wobbling toward the Yucatan chan·

nel," the weather service said, ad·
ding that the storm 'had
strengthened through the night to
make· it the strongest ever to reach
the western Caribbean. It was
moving west northwest at about 15
mph.
"The projected track of the center
will bring it through the Yucatan
channel but the strengthening and
minor wobbles could result in the
center passing over either the ex·
treme western tip of Cuba or the northeast tip of the Yucatan Peninsula.
This should bring extreme winds to
both of these areas," the . weather
service said, ·during the morning
hours.
The Texas-Louisiana coast is
roughly 7D0-800 miles northwest of
the Yu~;atan and appears to be in the
path of Allen, which has basically
followed a north northwest route since building to hurricane force off the
eastern Caribbean island of St.
Lucia early Monday morning.
However, there was no certainty the
stonn would continue on the same
track.

Senate agenda heavy,
House business light
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Sep- reiterated that it has enough votes
tember apparently will be a working for approval and "we'll pass it in
month for state senators, but the .. September."
House , plans to meet mostly in
Ocasek and Judiciary Chairman
Marigene Valiquette, D-Toledo, opskeleton sessions.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe pose the death penalty, but · they
Jr., [).New Boston, says the lower deny that their opposition is responchamber has completed most of its sible for the long delay.
Ms. Valiquette attributed · the
business for the ·year and is waiting
delay to the need for · ·better
for the Senate to catch up.
Senate President Oliver Oacsek, guidelines ·from the nation's highest
[).Akron, confirmed Wednesday that court, which has had capital punish·
his chamber has a considerable ment laws of other states under
agenda. '
., study.
A top priority when the body
!louse Democrats and others have
reconvenes Sept. 8 will be a House- been exerting pressure on ihe Senate
.approved bill restoring Ohio's death to complete passage out of concern
penalty. The measure is being of· that Republicans will use
fered as a substitute for Ohio's old Democrats' failure to act as a camcapital punishment law which was paign issue in this year's legislative
ruled unconstitutional by the U.S. · elections. GOP senators said they
Supreme Court on July 3,1978.
planned to do just that and probably
Although the bill has been will spotlight the Democrats' long
languishing in the Senate Judiciary delay even if it does pass before the
Committee . 17 months, Ocasek ·
(Continued on pageS I ·

last summer in its attempt.to place
the issue IJefore voters, he said.
Earlier, a group supporting a comprehensive reform of the state's tax
structure filed enough petitions to
ensure its placement before voters.
The tax proposal, backed by the
Ohio Public Interest Campaign, is
designed to provide property tax
relief for homeowners, renters and
family farmers earning less than
$30,000 a year. But it would raise cor.porate taxes by closing various.
loopholes and eliminating tax
abatements.
Opponents, led by the Ohio
Manufacturers Association, said
consumers would wind up paying for
the corporate increases through
higher prices for goods and services
sold. in the state. The redistricting
(Continued on page B)

Anti-Iranian
protesters
pushed hack
NEW YORK (AP) - Guarded by
2!iO llolice and jeered by a handful of

New Yorkers, some 70 Iranian
demonstrators boarded vans and
cars under cover of darkness ·and
left an Islamic center following an
angry protest by 400 people that
stymied their attempts to return to
Washington.
The IraJiians left the center in
small groups for four vans and seven
cars provided by tbe American Indian Movement. As the caravan
pulled away, followed by a police
escort, 20 anti-Iranian protesters
shouted insults and ob5cenities at
tile pr~Khomein! demonstrators.
The handful of residents were all
that was left of a bottle-throwing
' mob that turned back buses called in
to· take the Iranians from the center,
where they had been staying since
they were freed from detention
following a protest in Washington
last monnth.
U.N . Ambassador Donald
.McHenry and Mayor Edward Koch
had rushed to the center to try to
resolve the ·stalemate, but Mark
Lane, attorney for the Iranians,
refused an offer of city transportation to an airport or bus terminal.
"My feeling is that they want an
incident and we are not going to
provide one for them," Koch said.
Police said about 400 anti-Iranian
protesters, some throwing bottles
and shouting obscenities, threatened
to break into the center Wednesday
night. Two officers were slightly injured and there were two arrests of
area residents before 200 officers
pushed back the crowd, officials
said.
The Iranians were the last of
almost 200 pr~Khomeini· demonstrators to leave the New York City
area. Earlier in the day, two bus
drivers refused to pick up the 70 to 80
remaining for fear of demon·
strators, and rock-throwing youths
turned a second set of buses away.
Lane said the Iranians turn'ed
down Koch's offer of buses because
they "don't want any help from the
federal, state and city government."
"They have, een a lack of security
up .until now," he said before the
group departed. "Tbe police stood
by and laughed while people near
the buses broke windows.' '.

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