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                  <text>Reagan opens Buckeye campaign

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.,59

NELSON'S

REG.

CHAUNCEY, Ohio - Residents of the tiny Athens County community of Chauncey were warned to boil all tap water as environmental and health officials continued tests on the community 's
water supply.
Mayor Arthur Sapp said he was advised Tuesday afternoon by Dr.
Kenneth Applegate or the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency that
the village's water supply was contaminated.
Doctors treating recent illnesses concluded that much of the con·
lamination was caused by water-borne diseases.
Applegate advised the mayor to warn the community's 1,117
residents to boil all water before conswning any while tests. were conducted by the EPA and the local hea lth department.
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GDANSK, Poland - Poland's Communist regime, under growing
pressure from striking workers, today issued a veiled warning of
possible Soviet intervention and " incalculable co nseq ~ences" if order
is not restored.
Tile threat came as the 14-day-old strike wave on the Baltic coast
was reported to have spread to the giant Ursus tractor factory outside
Warsaw and to industries in southe rn Poland. Estimates of the total
strikers rose to more than 300,000.
In a frunt-page editorial in the Communist daily Trybuna Ludu, the
regime reminded Poles that their country lies " in the direct s phere of
security of the world Socialist power - the Soviet Union.

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Tests made on Chauncey water

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'

STATEUNE, Nev. - Nevada Gov. Robert List today a ppealed for
further word from an extortionist who planted a mysterious
homemade bom'b at a glittering highway casino and reportedly
threatened to " bring the hotel down" unless officials come up with $3
million a nd a helicopter.
Frustrated author ities worked until4 a.m . trying to figure out how to
defuse the device, described by its makers as containing 1,000 pounds
of TNT, which routed 3,000 people from Harvey's Resort Hotel-Casino
on Tuesday . They said they would try again later in the day.
Earlier, List issued a plea to whoever planted the bomb to contact
authorities with further instructions. List did not say whether the "instructions" referred to defusing the bomb or how to make the payoff
·
demanded in the note.
Experts from the Army, the FBI and the Nuclear Regulatory Com·
mission wrestled all day Tuesday with the problem of how to handle
the bomb, which one source said was in a box on wheels and apparently sensitive to tilting. Representatives of the NRC were there
"simply as a friendship gesture," Douglas County Sheriff Jerry Maple
said. In Las Vegas, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of Ener!(y
said the two NRC officials went to Stateline stri ctly as observers.
, A three-page extortion note left with the bomb in a casino office said
it contained I ,000 pounds of TNT.
Maple said today the bomb contained no timer, a nd that no deadline
had been set by the extortionist.

Moritz announces budget cut
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The state Department of Mental Health is
slashing its budget by $3.5 million in addition to previous cuts in an atte mpt to stay within declining state income.
Department Director Timothy Moritz said the agency·is in danger of
experiencing a " disaster scenario" in which the agency loses its
hospital accreditation and the loss or about $50 million in revenues
during the next biennium .
Moritz said the fund cut represents a reduction of about 3 percent in
the department's 1981 fiscal budget.
· In a news release, Moritz said the latest cut would require the loss of
250 to 400 more employees in addition to the 900 to 1,200 workers the
department said would be laid off as a result of earlier budget slashes.
The total loss would be between 13 percent and 18 percent of the 8,700
persons employed by the department in July.
, If the department is subjected to a tltird round of 3 percent to 5 percent c ut s , it will lose its accredi tation , ~oritz
said. It is imperative that the department be exempted from any fur·
ther cuts, he said.

A one mill levy to provide funds
for operation of the county landfill
and pickup services· from collection
points about the county will face
Meigs Countia ns at the November
election.
The Meigs County Commissioners
meeting in regular session Tuesday
voted to place the levy before voters.
Richard E. Jones, president of the
cotpmissioners, .commented,''As I
previo usly mention ed at our
meeting held on Aug. 19, it is my
opinion that the continued operation
of the county landfUl is in serious
jeopardy due to a lack of funds to
maintain the service. I have personally examined our financial condition a nd am of the opinion that we
will be hard pressed to continue this
service throughout 1980.
" As members of the board of commissioners, I would remind yuoku
that it is not only our responsibility
to try and provide services s uch as
thi s, but in adition, we also have the
responsibility to provide the financing.
" I have, therefore, concluded that
we have no alternative regardless of
how unpopular the issue may be, bllt
to submit to the electorate a one
mimlllevy at the November election
for the operation of the county landfill a nd pickup service.
"No tax is a popular tax, but I am
convinced that the citizens of this
county should have the right to
determine whether or not this service should be continued."
The commissioners also adopted a
resolution urging the Ohio Department of Transportation to take
necessary steps to begin immediately the improvement of
existing highways leading from and
to the soon to be completed Ravenswood Bridge and that preparations
begin for the planning of a new highway from the bridge and on to the
Rock Springs interchange.
Representatives of !be Meigs
County Board of Elections and
Donald Whitiman of the Computer
Elections Services, met with the
board to discuss voting equipment
necessary to efficient pr,ocess election r:eturns. The board agreed to
advertise for bids on a Ballot Tab 200
machine which would upgrade the
existing ballot counting eQuipment

WILLIAM CRONIN

•
-.----.,. .

.

•.,.

\.

FIFTEEN CENTS

.'

SEMINAR- Job readiness was the topic of a two
day seminar for Meigs County Corrunissioners CETA
participants helu :•onday and Tuesday at the Meigs
Inn. Twenty-fo" ~· •!tended the two-day meeting, the
second such seminar held this summer for participants
in the program . Participants were divided into two

groups, the first group attending the earlier two day
session. Peg Tholll:ls, director of career development
at Rio Grande College, and Herb Spencer, a counselor
at the college, both standing, provided instruction for
the final two day session. Pictured seated, from the
left, are Gail Thoma, Jackie Bunch e nd Homer Smith.

Flood victims .to get help
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Teams
of federal and state disaster official~
have moved into five flood-damaged
eastern Ohio counties to help victims
obtain the aid they need to recover.
Disaster assistance centers
opened today in Cambridge, Bellaire
and Wellsville, said Curtis Griffith
Jr., deputy director of the Ohio
Disaster Services Agency. He said
the centers will continue to operate
through Saturday. Persons needing
assistance after then may apply
through a field office'in Cambridge.
Infonnation and applications for
assistance will be provided at the
centers for residents of Muskingum,
Guernsey, Belmont, Jefferson and
Columbiana counties.
Workers at the centers will help
flood victims seek assistance
through a variety of programs for
which they are eligible under a
federal disaster designation ..
"We hope to get checks into their
hands within a couple or three
weeks," said Griffith, who
estimated damage from the flooding
at $10 million. That was well below
the original estimates of $45 million

made before flood waters had
receded.
The revised estimate 6oes not
reflect the total loss, though. " It
does not include the personal property inventories which were in
people's homes," Griffith said.
He estimated that about 500
families may be eligible for grants
under the federal disaster
declaration. The grants cannot exceed $5,000.
Assistance will be available at the
centers to help meet emergency
food, clothing, shelter, medical aid,
minor repair, home cleanup and
health services needs. Representatives of the American Red Cross,
the Salvation Army and other volunteer groups will be at the facilities.
Temporary housing • or limited
home repairs also are available for
families whose home s a're
uninhabitable because of the floods .
Griffith estimated that as many as
50 families still may be unable to
return to their homes.
Persons who are out of work
because of the flooding can apply for
disaster unemployment assistance.

Box !M, Pomeroy.
The local finals will be held Oct. 18
at Southern High School in Racine a t
8:10p.m.
The winner of the two programs
will represent Meigs county and Vinton Cou ntyh at the Ohio Junior Miss
finals , January 23 and 24, 1981, in
Mount Vernon .

It is offered to individuals not
covered or insufficiently covered by
state or private unemployment insurance programs.
Applications for federal Small
Business Administration disaster
loans to rehabilitate property not
covered by insurance also will be
processed. Officials representing
government agriculture, insurance,
legal and taxation agencies also will
be available to provide assistance.

Men arrigned
Two defendants indicted by a
Meigs County Grand Jury on Aug. 21
have been arraigned before Meigs
County Common Pleas Court Judge
Jolm C. Bacon.
Clifford Edward Smith, 71 ,
Pomeroy, appeared before Judge
Bacon on a charge of gross sexual
imposition and entered a plea of innocent. Trial is expected to be held
in early October. A $10,000 bond was
set and Smith was released on bond.
I. Carson Crow, assistant
prosecutor, represented the State of
Ohio at the arraignment. The charge
resulted from an incident on Aug. 7
in Pomeroy allegedly involving
children under the age of 13.
Doug Burns, Pomeroy, entered a
plea of innocent to a charge of
receiving stolen property when he
was arraigned before Judge Bacon.
Burns was found indigent and the
court appointed Charles H. Knight
as his attorney after which time Burns entered his innocent pleading. He
was re leased upon hi s own
recognizance . A trial date will be
announced later. The indictment
came following an alleged illegal en·
try at the P omeroy Gun Club in July.

Cronin to head district S-H office

Extended Ohio Forecast- Friday through Sunday: Continued warm
through the period. Widely scattered showers or thunderstorms Saturday and Sunday. Highs in the 80s. Lows in the 60s.

\

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1980

Rehearsals for the 19!!0-lll Meigs
County and Vinton County Junior
Programs will get underway Sunday
at the Meigs Inn banquet room,
Pomeroy.
High school senior girls, class of
1981, who are interested in entering
this year's pagea nt can do so by attending; this practice session or by
contacting Ohio Junior Miss, Inc ..

. IIO,M.M

.:-.

.e ntine

Junior. Miss rehearsals
'
will begin here Sunday

Sunny and hazy today and Thursday. Mostly deer tonight. Afternoon highs in the mld to upper 80s. Lows tonight in the mid-$s.
Chance of rain near zero percent tonight and Thursday. Winds light
and variable today ami tonight.

'7"

Reagan huddles with Rhodes and the governors of
four other Midwest states tonight in a session that will
give the state leaders· a chance to discuss campaign
strategy and policy issues.
" These people obviously have to be involved at the
highest levels of the campaign," Donatelli said.
Attending the session will be governors James
Thompson oi Illinois, William Milliken of Michigan,
Richard Thornburg of Pennsy lvania and Lee Dreyfus
of Wisconsin.
Reagan was greeted by Rhodes, Columbus Mayor
Tom Moody and U. S. Rep . Samuel L. Devine, R..()hio,
upon arrival a t Port Columbus airport Tuesday night.

(Continued on page 16)

Weather forecast

-·'"·"
•FUTURA

Although the Teamsters have o£fered no err
dorsement so far, their bac)dryg of a Republican
nominee would not be without precedent. The uniou endorsed former ,President Nixon over U.S. Sen. George
McGovern, 0-S.D., in 1972. It issued no endorsement in
the 1976 race between Carter a'nd former President
Ford.
"I think at such time as they decide to make .an endorsement, they would give us consideration,"
Donatelli said.
Union international Vice Pres ident Jackie Presser
had said earlier that Teamsters were "gratified that
Governor Reagan is demonstrating his concern for the
serious problems that beset the 144,()QO Teamsters
members of Ohio, t)leir families, and, indeed, the
working families of America."

Presser also said the union regretted that President Carter was unable to address the delegates from
45 Ohio Teamsters locals.

One mill
levy _on
ballot

NEI.SON'S RIG. f2.17

YOUR
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•

chiefs who have already pledged suppuri fur President
Carter and taking his case to the rank-and-file .
"There's no question that has to be done in certain
cctses,u Frank Donatelli, Reagan' s campaign Cl'Uf·
dina tor fur Ohio and Pennsylvania, said.

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

C7
0

:.,~!!~

99

ASST. TITLES

the United States.
" As one who knows what it is to sit on your side of the
negotiating table, I s upport and as president will
defend the basic principle a t the heart of the American
labor movement: economic freedom and political
·freedom are indivisible," Reaga n sai&lt;l in an advance
text.
He saiil striking workers i-n Poland had demonstrated that the desire for free labor unions is coupled
with a desire for political and economic freedom.
" In 1977, Jimmy Carter said he believed our concept
of human rights is preserved in Poland. The strike by
the Polish workers ha s rendered his judgment suspect,
to say the least," Reagan said. He said American dock
workers who refused to unload Polish. ships struck a
harder blow for human rights than Carter " with ali his
words on Ulat s ueject."
The former California governor intends to actively
seek the support of traditionally Democratic union
workers, including steelworkers in Youngstown who
have been hit hard by layoffs and plant closings.
That could mean, in some cases , bypassing union

(7

TAPE

•..1

Planning and Filing
NILSON'S
Wirebound Notebook
RIG. M.67
Use one for each subjeci:
• paper for note taking
• filing pocket-with IOck·flap cover
• metric conversion table
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• extra back filing pocket

fl.n

READI PENCI

TRAISPAREIIT
TAPE

1~ --=-§3-r::-J~,m

By JOHN W. CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBU~. Ohio ( AP) - Ronald Reagan, beset by
a flap over his Taiwan-China policy earlier this week,
is turning to domestic economic issues as he launches
his campaign in Ohio today.
The Republican presidential norrunee assailed
President Carter's economic policies in a speech
before the Ohio Conference of Teamsters.
"In the next four years, do you want the American
economy run by the same manager who has run it into
the ground in the last four ?" he asked in remarks
prepared for &lt;!elivery before the union.
Reagan said he shared Teamsters' ·concerns about
. retired union workers hurt by inflation: "But so long as
we have the Carter inflationary policies, retired Teamsters and their families as well as other retired
Americans will suffer," he sa id.
Reagan reminded the audience of his six terms as
president of the Screen Actors Guild and his role in
leading its first strike . He said he may be the first
union president ever to be a candidate for president of

\

COLUMBUS - William K. Cronin
of Cambridge has been appointed
district ma nager of The Industrial
Commission of Ohio's Division o,f
Safety and Hygiene Cambridge
District Off\ce.
Cronin is top administrator in the
Cambridge District Office, which
serves G uernsey, Tuscarawas,
Muskingum, Belmont, C&lt;&gt;shocton,'

Holmes, Wayne, Stark, Carroll, Jefferson, Harrison, Monroe, Noble,
Morgan, Perry, Washington,
Athens, Meigs, Gallia, Jackson and
Lawrence counties.
His responsibilities include supervising the aistrict's industrial, construction and handicapped safety
consultants, industrial hygieni sts,

safety training officers nd accident
prevention specialists.
Cronin joi ned the Division of
Safety and Hygiene in 1975 as a construction safety consultant. He also
1
has worked for the Education and
Trianing Section and most recently
as industrial supervisor of the Cam·
bridge District Office.

�.

. .'

.

.

2-The Daily Senti nel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,Aug. 27,1980

I

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

IUSI'!! 115-1101
INTEJUnOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Letkn of opl.aklll are weleomed. They 1b.ot be In• tlaaa 3lt words loog 1or aubjed &amp;o redura. by Ott editor I aDd mut H ·alptd wl\b dae lipec'• achlrnt. Namtt may~ wllhbdd upuo
PlblleiU.. Hewnu, N ~es&amp;. umct wiD be dlscl01ed. Lr.ttrn 1hould bf In good u.ste, ad-

ar...~~~a-.aolpe......t-.
h~ dally ueept Saturday by'l'be Ohio Valley Pubi.J.shklg Compaay· MuittmcdtM , In c..
Ill Couri SL, Pomeroy, Olio 457• . Bcallle11 Otfl«"t Phoae 9ft. Ust. Editorial Phone 992·215i.
Sffillld Clau pot&amp;alt .-ld at Pomeroy, Ohio.
.
Natkl•l .clnrtlllq n:prruataUve, t.ndoa Associates, 3111 Euelld Ave. • Cl~''t&gt;la...t
44115.
•..,, Oh iO:

~OW

t'O I I..OVE THEE ? LET ME

COUNT THE WAYS

. c'

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'Ne~L; "''M

,

'Be A&amp;Httaled Pret1 it eatlu.slvdy nUlled 1o l.be ue lor pubUutioo of all news dl s ~Wf('hr~
lo tbc lltWIPiper ud also &amp;he local ~W.WI publh~~ln.
PubUI~r .J
Robert Wingett
€kaeral M&amp;r. I City F.dltor
Robert HMDkh
Newt EdJtor
Dale Rothgeb, Jr. ·
~ted

"~

Adv, Mauler

4

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

.

Opinions &amp;
Comments
~ax

ON OU~ COI'I\giNe~

(

cut

You might call that whopping tax cut approved by the
Senate Finance Committee a real bell ringer.
It's not that the public is going to greet the proposal so
enthusiastically, although it might.
It's just part of the parliamentary maneuvering engaged .
in by the cagey chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Russell Long of Louisiana.
You see, the Senate has no authority to initiate tax
measures, The Constitution gives that authority to the
House.
But the House isn't nearly so enthusiastic about rushing ·
through a pre-election tax cut as the Senate..And Long,
running hard for re-election, used a strategy he long ago
honed to a fine art.
The chairman always manages to pocket a couple of innocuous tax bill~ previously passed for the House and
saves them just for special occasions. · And that's where HR 5829 came in.
The one-page. bill that passed the House made no mention of a tax cut. Instead, it ordert~d tOe Secretary of the
Treasury to admit, duty fee, "six bronze bells from the
Ruetschi Bell Foundry of Aarau, Switzerland, for the use
of the Foundry United Methodist Church of Washington,
District of Colurribia. 11
It is this bill to which Long attached his tax cut proposal.
So now you know what Long meant when he said, in the
case of this year's proposed tax cut, "the rider will be
bigger than the horse. 11

Southern ·thinking

Billy style
· That Senate committee looking into Billy Carter's ties to
Libya is getting some insight into Southern thinking.
Randy Coteman, Carter's good friend who accompanied
•him on one trip to Libya, told the committee there never
·was any written agreement spelling out how he, Billy Carter and others would divide up any profits they made from
selling Libyan oiL
"We don't trust lawyers," he said.

CDUHTitY STCBES

tl~61: THER~$ Tl4e MA~~IAGe' PEN~L"fV

TA'( we'~ 14AV

•

•

•

expenence IS In
Rep. Guy Vander Jagt, never known to pass up an opportunity to get in a few digs at Democrats, says Jinuny
Carter has had at least one salutory effect on goverrunept
service.
,
Referring to the president's 1976 pampaign as an outsider with no goverrunent experience, the partisan
Republican from Michigan said: "He's made experience .
. respectable a_gain."

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In '84 both ·parties need new· candidates
By Robert J. Wagman
for liberal Democratic candidates
challenged by Kennedy for those
WASIDNGTON (NEA) - One
for the Senate and House. In this
very segments of the party it had
thing about Election '80 is certain,
way, he will attempt to solidify his staked out for Mondale. Look for
say political insiders: No matter
claim to the leadership of the liberal
Mondale to spend considerable time
who wins in November, both par\ies
Democrats.
. this campaign season not only trying
will have to come up with new canThe Carter forces were not overly
to win re-election, but wooing
concerned by Kennetly's conver. tion segments of the party away from
didates for 1984.
If Jimmy Carter wins, he will have
showing. They were angered and Kennedy.
served his two tenns. If he loses, it is
embarrassed in front of a national
One example of this was Mon·
very doubtful the party will give him · audience, true ; but victory was all dale's attention to teachers in his acthey were after and victory i! what ceptance speech. The National
another .shot. If Ronald Reagan
they got. The supporters of Walter Education Association has become a
wins, he will be 74 years old in 1984
and not even his·closest staff memMoildale, however, were concerned
powerful force in the Democratic
for they have the most to fea r over , Party.
bers expect him to stand for rethe longer term from a Kennedy
election; and if he loses, he won't try
Then ' there is J erry Brown.
resurgence.
again.
Perhaps no one in the United States
It has · been sa id that Mondale
So it will be new faces for both parwants to be president as much as the
never hun!iered for high politica l of·
ties and, while the 1980 election is
governor of California . His speech to
lice and was not willing to do what
still three months away , the
the convention seemed to be the
was necessary to gain it. Four years
jockeying for 1984 already has
most overtly political o' his career.
as vice president, however, apbegun.
While a portion of it did deal with
The most visible example of this,
parently has changed all that. The
Brown's vision of the United States
word now is Mondale very much
of course, was Ted Kennedy's
of the future, most of it was an atspeech to the Democratic National
wants to be president.
tack on Ronald Reagan and an at·
Convention. In it, he laid claim to the
Most Washington observers rate
tempt by Brown to position himself
leadership of the most liberal
Monstale's political staff as about the
as the only Democrat who can apelements of the party, elements he
best m town. It has been quietly
peal to both the Carter and Kennedy
needs to launch his 1984 nomination
biding its time, collecting names of segments of the party.
potential supporters and IOUs from
bid.
In the past, Brown has stayed
Most party insiders, in fact,
segments of the party. The staff is
aloof of politics. In recent days,
believe Kennedy will campaign hard
ready to make its move in ~our years
however, he has become almost the
this fall , not so much for the Carter- if Carter wins in November, im·
stereotype of the glad-handing
m~dia tely, if he loses.
Mondale ticket as for himself. Look
politician. Witness the fa ct that
Now. however, it is bei ng Brown's first question to his staff af·
for Kennedy to stump the country

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
four percent state sales lax might be
the savior of state government.
It was the only major source of
state revenue which increased in
July over July, 1979. That suggests
, that public buying power remains
strong despite rising unemployment
'and a recessionary economy.
Heads of major state agencies .
looking to a first-of-the-year review
of finances to see if more cuts are
needed in the state budget might do
well to keep an eye on the sales tax.
St"ate Treasurer Gertrude
Donahey reports that sales lax
collections for the first month of the
1981· fiscal year totaled
$129,383,837.58. That is up 2.66 percent over July, 1979 receipts of
$126,006,056.
Mrs. Donahey said state income
tax revenue for July was off 32.87
percent from July, 1979. The July,

1980 in come lax produ ced
$38,253,985. That's off more than
$18.7 million from last year's July
collections of $56,987,308.

cent off the pace of a year ago. The
highway fund will get $15.3 million of
that while the remainder is split between general revenue, highway
safety, gasoline excise, highway
obligation, highway improvement
and waterway safety funds .

Sales taxes collected on motor
vehicle sales were down slate-wide
for the month by 11.37 but the
statistics showed some unusual
bright - and dark - spots. Motor
vehicle sales taxes were up a whopping 126.78 percent for July in
· Franklin County, and 91.44 percent
in Muskingum County. Vehicle sales
taxes increased in 20 of the 88 coun·
ties.

Alcoholic beverage sales produced
$4.7 million for state coffers, up 11 .99
percent from July, 1979, and the
liquor gallonage tax came to $3.19

million last month, up 21.19 percent
over a year ago. A treasurer's officer explained that the gallonage
tax is on the while alcoholic
beverage tax is levied on beer, wine
and other drinks of lesser alcoholic
content.
Other taxes where collections
were less last month in comparison
to July, 1979, include corporate fran·
chise, cigarette excise, public
utilities, intangible excise, highway

Most notable declines in vehicle
sales lax collections were in Licking,
Noble, Paulding, Scioto, and Vinton
counties, all reporting drops of 40
percent or more .
. Among other major sources of
state revenue, gasoline taxes of
$32.79 million in July were 6.2 per-

MEN'S

••
••
••

ter making his convention speech
was whether the TV networks had
carried it. In past years, he would
not have cared. Or witness the
chaotic scene on the platform after
Ca rter's speech and the sight of
Jerry Brown pushiag his way from
the back of the podium to the front tb
get himself into the Carter-Kennedy
pictures. Brown badly needs to carve out some kind of base for a 1984
bid. Look for Brown to spend the
coming campaign season searching
for that !lase.
The Republicans now are inunune
to looking towards 1984. The way
things are shaping up now, look to
George Bush, representing the
moderate wing of the party, and
young Jack Kemp, representing th,:,
conservatives, to begin contending
·
for party leadership.
In fact, in the coming months~
espec ially if Reagan wins,.
Republican politics could become
rather strange. Reagan would much
prefer Kemp to succeed bini, but
Bush is his chosen No. 2.
If he wins, look for Reagan to
bring Kemp into his administration
in some very visible job while, at the
same time, trying to keep Bush ou~
of the spotlight.

use, and horse racing wager. Other
taxes where collections increased
for the same comparable months included insurance companies, estate
ta xes, motor transportation,
classified personal proJ)erty, ani!
natural resources severance taxes.
Fifty-seven counties reported
declines in non-vehicle sales tax
collections for July over July a yea~
ago though the percentage of change
was in a much narrower range thari
was reported for motor vehicle sales
tax collections.

MEN'S

WRANGLER ,
JEANS

'1~

•

FAMOUS BRAND

T-SHIRTS

HOLSUM

•••

••

SLIGHT IRREGULARS

••

·~"'

ICE MILK

•

GALLON

.

Sales
tax
only
source
of
revenue
up
in
July
·:The Carter effect:
•

•••
••
••

9

FOOD STAMP
ORDERS
WELCOMED!

.·

Long's bogus

:•

SIRLOIN STEAK

"'

Carl Ghet&gt;n

.......,........c::::t .....

Bm~ ~._

~~~

AP~A~T\CAl

SOUL- SO L.ET
Me COUNT
THEWA~S

.

..

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. Aug. 27, 1980

niE DAI.LY SENTINEL

OEVO'I"ED TO 111E

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• ••••••••••••
• • • 111111•••••••

Eight counties reported declines
of 20 or more percent with the shar,
pest drop, 24.06 percent, being repor'
ted in Shelby County. That was more
than offset by the 25.7 percent ilh
crease reported in Ross County
collections. Next highest increase
was 11.19 percent reported in
Medina County. '

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l l l l l l l l • • • r u•, ,

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IIIII II •••••••••••

•

Central American revolutionaries in ·trouble
By Don Graff
prepared. A campaign of repressive
El Salvador is almost mile for
countern1easures throughout the
mile the size of Massachusetts with
country effectively turned the strike
an equivalent population . .
effort into a non-event, at the cost of
But there all resemblance ends.
several hundred lives.
Rather than enjoying the
That does not mean that all is now
moderately recession-clouded peace quiet, however. The way things are
and oecurity of ·New England, El
going in that unhappy country, there
Salvador, the volcano-studded appears little hope of thBt in the
heartland of an increasingly tur- foreseeable future.
·
blj!enl Central America, is in the first phases of~ revolution.
Things at the moment aren't going
so well for the revolutionaries. A
general strike designed to bring
conunercial activity throughout the
Today is Wednesday, August 27,
nation to a half has fizzled.
A similar demonstration in April the 240th day of 1980. There are 126
by the leftist opposition brought out days left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
more than 300 thousand people in
support, throwing a scare into the · On Aug. 27, 1945, American troops
military-dominated governing jun- began landing in Japan at the end of
ta. This time was supposed to be'an World War II. It was the first foreign
occupation of that country in
• even bigger deal.
But this lime the authorities were modern history.

El Salvador has one of the most
dismal histories in a region that does
not specialize in good news. A tiny less than five percent of the
population - but vastly wealthy
land-owning elite has run the coun·
try for its own benefit since Spanish
colonial days. It relies upon the
assistance of a military establishment whose primary purpose, as in

•

'

...

J

--.

Today zn history.

.

&lt;.

~- .• ~ .. -&amp;

Cl 1110 tly NEA. I,c. _ , . . . . , : . ':~,..,.........

.,.

;I

"Don't think I don't know what's going on
btJh/ruf thost~ mirrored sung/sssss/"

• •

On this date:
In 55 B.C., Roman forces under
Julius Caesar invaded Britain.
In 1776, British forces were victorius in th~ Revolutionary war bat·
tie of Long Island in New York ..
In 1859, the first oil well in the
United States was drilled nea r
Titusville, Pa.
I

-·

most Latin countries, Is not the
defense of the country against
foreign foes but the protection of the
privileged from their own coun- •
trymen, in El Salvador's case pover- ·
ty-slricken and largely . Indian.:
peasants who work the great estates .
as virtual serfs.
Atrocity has been piled upon '
atrocity' including the assination at~
Mass earlier this year of Ron\an::
Catholic Archbishop Oscar ArnulfO:
"Romero y Galdamez, an outspoken:
critic of the junta and now the:,
foremost martyr of the revolution. •·
Thousjlnds, including many:
priests, have been murdered sine&amp;
the lirst of the year, overwhelmingly .
the victims of the death squads. A
bloody arn1y attack closed the:
National Unive~ity and only the:
church, under its sometimes'
wavering new leadership,F-.among•"
·traditional institutions continues to.
speak out against the repressiot~.

••

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

SUPER DOUBLE COUPON

Pre~ent this cOupon along with any one manufacturer 'S
"Cents Off" coupon and get double the savings at Jones

Boys. Not lo include Jones Boys Coupons or !hose of olher
retailers and not to e'acceed the value ot the item. Limit one
double c~upon per manufacturer 's coupon.
Coupon Expires. Sun ,, Aug . 31, 1980
Limil2 coupons Per Customer
Not Valid for Cigarett.e or Free Coupons

•

�.

. .'

.

.

2-The Daily Senti nel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,Aug. 27,1980

I

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

IUSI'!! 115-1101
INTEJUnOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Letkn of opl.aklll are weleomed. They 1b.ot be In• tlaaa 3lt words loog 1or aubjed &amp;o redura. by Ott editor I aDd mut H ·alptd wl\b dae lipec'• achlrnt. Namtt may~ wllhbdd upuo
PlblleiU.. Hewnu, N ~es&amp;. umct wiD be dlscl01ed. Lr.ttrn 1hould bf In good u.ste, ad-

ar...~~~a-.aolpe......t-.
h~ dally ueept Saturday by'l'be Ohio Valley Pubi.J.shklg Compaay· MuittmcdtM , In c..
Ill Couri SL, Pomeroy, Olio 457• . Bcallle11 Otfl«"t Phoae 9ft. Ust. Editorial Phone 992·215i.
Sffillld Clau pot&amp;alt .-ld at Pomeroy, Ohio.
.
Natkl•l .clnrtlllq n:prruataUve, t.ndoa Associates, 3111 Euelld Ave. • Cl~''t&gt;la...t
44115.
•..,, Oh iO:

~OW

t'O I I..OVE THEE ? LET ME

COUNT THE WAYS

. c'

II I

'Ne~L; "''M

,

'Be A&amp;Httaled Pret1 it eatlu.slvdy nUlled 1o l.be ue lor pubUutioo of all news dl s ~Wf('hr~
lo tbc lltWIPiper ud also &amp;he local ~W.WI publh~~ln.
PubUI~r .J
Robert Wingett
€kaeral M&amp;r. I City F.dltor
Robert HMDkh
Newt EdJtor
Dale Rothgeb, Jr. ·
~ted

"~

Adv, Mauler

4

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

.

Opinions &amp;
Comments
~ax

ON OU~ COI'I\giNe~

(

cut

You might call that whopping tax cut approved by the
Senate Finance Committee a real bell ringer.
It's not that the public is going to greet the proposal so
enthusiastically, although it might.
It's just part of the parliamentary maneuvering engaged .
in by the cagey chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Russell Long of Louisiana.
You see, the Senate has no authority to initiate tax
measures, The Constitution gives that authority to the
House.
But the House isn't nearly so enthusiastic about rushing ·
through a pre-election tax cut as the Senate..And Long,
running hard for re-election, used a strategy he long ago
honed to a fine art.
The chairman always manages to pocket a couple of innocuous tax bill~ previously passed for the House and
saves them just for special occasions. · And that's where HR 5829 came in.
The one-page. bill that passed the House made no mention of a tax cut. Instead, it ordert~d tOe Secretary of the
Treasury to admit, duty fee, "six bronze bells from the
Ruetschi Bell Foundry of Aarau, Switzerland, for the use
of the Foundry United Methodist Church of Washington,
District of Colurribia. 11
It is this bill to which Long attached his tax cut proposal.
So now you know what Long meant when he said, in the
case of this year's proposed tax cut, "the rider will be
bigger than the horse. 11

Southern ·thinking

Billy style
· That Senate committee looking into Billy Carter's ties to
Libya is getting some insight into Southern thinking.
Randy Coteman, Carter's good friend who accompanied
•him on one trip to Libya, told the committee there never
·was any written agreement spelling out how he, Billy Carter and others would divide up any profits they made from
selling Libyan oiL
"We don't trust lawyers," he said.

CDUHTitY STCBES

tl~61: THER~$ Tl4e MA~~IAGe' PEN~L"fV

TA'( we'~ 14AV

•

•

•

expenence IS In
Rep. Guy Vander Jagt, never known to pass up an opportunity to get in a few digs at Democrats, says Jinuny
Carter has had at least one salutory effect on goverrunept
service.
,
Referring to the president's 1976 pampaign as an outsider with no goverrunent experience, the partisan
Republican from Michigan said: "He's made experience .
. respectable a_gain."

WE RESERVE
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.

In '84 both ·parties need new· candidates
By Robert J. Wagman
for liberal Democratic candidates
challenged by Kennedy for those
WASIDNGTON (NEA) - One
for the Senate and House. In this
very segments of the party it had
thing about Election '80 is certain,
way, he will attempt to solidify his staked out for Mondale. Look for
say political insiders: No matter
claim to the leadership of the liberal
Mondale to spend considerable time
who wins in November, both par\ies
Democrats.
. this campaign season not only trying
will have to come up with new canThe Carter forces were not overly
to win re-election, but wooing
concerned by Kennetly's conver. tion segments of the party away from
didates for 1984.
If Jimmy Carter wins, he will have
showing. They were angered and Kennedy.
served his two tenns. If he loses, it is
embarrassed in front of a national
One example of this was Mon·
very doubtful the party will give him · audience, true ; but victory was all dale's attention to teachers in his acthey were after and victory i! what ceptance speech. The National
another .shot. If Ronald Reagan
they got. The supporters of Walter Education Association has become a
wins, he will be 74 years old in 1984
and not even his·closest staff memMoildale, however, were concerned
powerful force in the Democratic
for they have the most to fea r over , Party.
bers expect him to stand for rethe longer term from a Kennedy
election; and if he loses, he won't try
Then ' there is J erry Brown.
resurgence.
again.
Perhaps no one in the United States
It has · been sa id that Mondale
So it will be new faces for both parwants to be president as much as the
never hun!iered for high politica l of·
ties and, while the 1980 election is
governor of California . His speech to
lice and was not willing to do what
still three months away , the
the convention seemed to be the
was necessary to gain it. Four years
jockeying for 1984 already has
most overtly political o' his career.
as vice president, however, apbegun.
While a portion of it did deal with
The most visible example of this,
parently has changed all that. The
Brown's vision of the United States
word now is Mondale very much
of course, was Ted Kennedy's
of the future, most of it was an atspeech to the Democratic National
wants to be president.
tack on Ronald Reagan and an at·
Convention. In it, he laid claim to the
Most Washington observers rate
tempt by Brown to position himself
leadership of the most liberal
Monstale's political staff as about the
as the only Democrat who can apelements of the party, elements he
best m town. It has been quietly
peal to both the Carter and Kennedy
needs to launch his 1984 nomination
biding its time, collecting names of segments of the party.
potential supporters and IOUs from
bid.
In the past, Brown has stayed
Most party insiders, in fact,
segments of the party. The staff is
aloof of politics. In recent days,
believe Kennedy will campaign hard
ready to make its move in ~our years
however, he has become almost the
this fall , not so much for the Carter- if Carter wins in November, im·
stereotype of the glad-handing
m~dia tely, if he loses.
Mondale ticket as for himself. Look
politician. Witness the fa ct that
Now. however, it is bei ng Brown's first question to his staff af·
for Kennedy to stump the country

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
four percent state sales lax might be
the savior of state government.
It was the only major source of
state revenue which increased in
July over July, 1979. That suggests
, that public buying power remains
strong despite rising unemployment
'and a recessionary economy.
Heads of major state agencies .
looking to a first-of-the-year review
of finances to see if more cuts are
needed in the state budget might do
well to keep an eye on the sales tax.
St"ate Treasurer Gertrude
Donahey reports that sales lax
collections for the first month of the
1981· fiscal year totaled
$129,383,837.58. That is up 2.66 percent over July, 1979 receipts of
$126,006,056.
Mrs. Donahey said state income
tax revenue for July was off 32.87
percent from July, 1979. The July,

1980 in come lax produ ced
$38,253,985. That's off more than
$18.7 million from last year's July
collections of $56,987,308.

cent off the pace of a year ago. The
highway fund will get $15.3 million of
that while the remainder is split between general revenue, highway
safety, gasoline excise, highway
obligation, highway improvement
and waterway safety funds .

Sales taxes collected on motor
vehicle sales were down slate-wide
for the month by 11.37 but the
statistics showed some unusual
bright - and dark - spots. Motor
vehicle sales taxes were up a whopping 126.78 percent for July in
· Franklin County, and 91.44 percent
in Muskingum County. Vehicle sales
taxes increased in 20 of the 88 coun·
ties.

Alcoholic beverage sales produced
$4.7 million for state coffers, up 11 .99
percent from July, 1979, and the
liquor gallonage tax came to $3.19

million last month, up 21.19 percent
over a year ago. A treasurer's officer explained that the gallonage
tax is on the while alcoholic
beverage tax is levied on beer, wine
and other drinks of lesser alcoholic
content.
Other taxes where collections
were less last month in comparison
to July, 1979, include corporate fran·
chise, cigarette excise, public
utilities, intangible excise, highway

Most notable declines in vehicle
sales lax collections were in Licking,
Noble, Paulding, Scioto, and Vinton
counties, all reporting drops of 40
percent or more .
. Among other major sources of
state revenue, gasoline taxes of
$32.79 million in July were 6.2 per-

MEN'S

••
••
••

ter making his convention speech
was whether the TV networks had
carried it. In past years, he would
not have cared. Or witness the
chaotic scene on the platform after
Ca rter's speech and the sight of
Jerry Brown pushiag his way from
the back of the podium to the front tb
get himself into the Carter-Kennedy
pictures. Brown badly needs to carve out some kind of base for a 1984
bid. Look for Brown to spend the
coming campaign season searching
for that !lase.
The Republicans now are inunune
to looking towards 1984. The way
things are shaping up now, look to
George Bush, representing the
moderate wing of the party, and
young Jack Kemp, representing th,:,
conservatives, to begin contending
·
for party leadership.
In fact, in the coming months~
espec ially if Reagan wins,.
Republican politics could become
rather strange. Reagan would much
prefer Kemp to succeed bini, but
Bush is his chosen No. 2.
If he wins, look for Reagan to
bring Kemp into his administration
in some very visible job while, at the
same time, trying to keep Bush ou~
of the spotlight.

use, and horse racing wager. Other
taxes where collections increased
for the same comparable months included insurance companies, estate
ta xes, motor transportation,
classified personal proJ)erty, ani!
natural resources severance taxes.
Fifty-seven counties reported
declines in non-vehicle sales tax
collections for July over July a yea~
ago though the percentage of change
was in a much narrower range thari
was reported for motor vehicle sales
tax collections.

MEN'S

WRANGLER ,
JEANS

'1~

•

FAMOUS BRAND

T-SHIRTS

HOLSUM

•••

••

SLIGHT IRREGULARS

••

·~"'

ICE MILK

•

GALLON

.

Sales
tax
only
source
of
revenue
up
in
July
·:The Carter effect:
•

•••
••
••

9

FOOD STAMP
ORDERS
WELCOMED!

.·

Long's bogus

:•

SIRLOIN STEAK

"'

Carl Ghet&gt;n

.......,........c::::t .....

Bm~ ~._

~~~

AP~A~T\CAl

SOUL- SO L.ET
Me COUNT
THEWA~S

.

..

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. Aug. 27, 1980

niE DAI.LY SENTINEL

OEVO'I"ED TO 111E

,..

BUNS
HOT DOG OR BARBEQUE

PKG.OF

2

· PAIR
~

• • • • • • I II 11111111111

I I I I I I I I I I I 111111 I I I I eell •• #.

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

3 SUBJECT - 120 COUNT

THEME BOOK
--·
.~

LIMIT
.........

15gtth

22 WATT

EMERSON
PORTABLE

•
..

CIRCUNE
LIGHT FIXTURE

FM/AM RADIO
WITH 8·TRACK PLAYER

$8B!cH

.~...•..,.__
·-:;c' ·-· · ..........•••
Offer Expires 8·31 · 80 _ \l\~~~
.1•1••
1111111 •••• 1
,

r-- ------------------------------ -,
'--~...-!~, f ,•• I

I I I I I • I I I III I II I I I I

I

•

I

I

I

I

I

1

FOR SUPER SAVINGS!

L.
.., ••• ,11

-------..1

---- ----- --- ----------

·--------------------II!•••••

//a"-·----------------------------------------------------,--·--·1.
• ••••••••••••
• • • 111111•••••••

Eight counties reported declines
of 20 or more percent with the shar,
pest drop, 24.06 percent, being repor'
ted in Shelby County. That was more
than offset by the 25.7 percent ilh
crease reported in Ross County
collections. Next highest increase
was 11.19 percent reported in
Medina County. '

11111111111111•1 I I I I

l l l l l l l l • • • r u•, ,

,)_r.

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

12 OZ. SCOPE
MOUTHWASH

•
:

•

~'=: :~.' ~!l;'}Jil
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ss~ ~~:.,on

Offer Expires 8-31 -80
IIIII II •••••••••••

•

Central American revolutionaries in ·trouble
By Don Graff
prepared. A campaign of repressive
El Salvador is almost mile for
countern1easures throughout the
mile the size of Massachusetts with
country effectively turned the strike
an equivalent population . .
effort into a non-event, at the cost of
But there all resemblance ends.
several hundred lives.
Rather than enjoying the
That does not mean that all is now
moderately recession-clouded peace quiet, however. The way things are
and oecurity of ·New England, El
going in that unhappy country, there
Salvador, the volcano-studded appears little hope of thBt in the
heartland of an increasingly tur- foreseeable future.
·
blj!enl Central America, is in the first phases of~ revolution.
Things at the moment aren't going
so well for the revolutionaries. A
general strike designed to bring
conunercial activity throughout the
Today is Wednesday, August 27,
nation to a half has fizzled.
A similar demonstration in April the 240th day of 1980. There are 126
by the leftist opposition brought out days left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
more than 300 thousand people in
support, throwing a scare into the · On Aug. 27, 1945, American troops
military-dominated governing jun- began landing in Japan at the end of
ta. This time was supposed to be'an World War II. It was the first foreign
occupation of that country in
• even bigger deal.
But this lime the authorities were modern history.

El Salvador has one of the most
dismal histories in a region that does
not specialize in good news. A tiny less than five percent of the
population - but vastly wealthy
land-owning elite has run the coun·
try for its own benefit since Spanish
colonial days. It relies upon the
assistance of a military establishment whose primary purpose, as in

•

'

...

J

--.

Today zn history.

.

&lt;.

~- .• ~ .. -&amp;

Cl 1110 tly NEA. I,c. _ , . . . . , : . ':~,..,.........

.,.

;I

"Don't think I don't know what's going on
btJh/ruf thost~ mirrored sung/sssss/"

• •

On this date:
In 55 B.C., Roman forces under
Julius Caesar invaded Britain.
In 1776, British forces were victorius in th~ Revolutionary war bat·
tie of Long Island in New York ..
In 1859, the first oil well in the
United States was drilled nea r
Titusville, Pa.
I

-·

most Latin countries, Is not the
defense of the country against
foreign foes but the protection of the
privileged from their own coun- •
trymen, in El Salvador's case pover- ·
ty-slricken and largely . Indian.:
peasants who work the great estates .
as virtual serfs.
Atrocity has been piled upon '
atrocity' including the assination at~
Mass earlier this year of Ron\an::
Catholic Archbishop Oscar ArnulfO:
"Romero y Galdamez, an outspoken:
critic of the junta and now the:,
foremost martyr of the revolution. •·
Thousjlnds, including many:
priests, have been murdered sine&amp;
the lirst of the year, overwhelmingly .
the victims of the death squads. A
bloody arn1y attack closed the:
National Unive~ity and only the:
church, under its sometimes'
wavering new leadership,F-.among•"
·traditional institutions continues to.
speak out against the repressiot~.

••

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

SUPER DOUBLE COUPON

Pre~ent this cOupon along with any one manufacturer 'S
"Cents Off" coupon and get double the savings at Jones

Boys. Not lo include Jones Boys Coupons or !hose of olher
retailers and not to e'acceed the value ot the item. Limit one
double c~upon per manufacturer 's coupon.
Coupon Expires. Sun ,, Aug . 31, 1980
Limil2 coupons Per Customer
Not Valid for Cigarett.e or Free Coupons

•

�. 5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pumeroy , 0., Wednesday, Aug . 'll, 1980

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.; Wednesday, Aug. 'll , 1980

·Carpenter Personals

Kingman takes .Hume downtown again
•

CINCINNATI (AP)-The eighth
inning was a case of deja vu for Cin·
cinnati reliever Tom Hume.
Hume, the ace of the Cincinnati
bullpen, was summoned with the
score knotted 2-2 against the
Chicago Cubs, a team he's had
problems getting out.
The right-hander walked Bill
Buckner with one out then got a fastball out over the plate to Dave
Kingman, who had hit a solo homer
the inning before. As the ball darted
for the right-field seats and a 4-2

r

" It's nice to see the ball leave tlie
park," h'e said.
.
With Kingman hampered by a
sore shoulder, Amalfitano hasn't
seen many big hits lately. When the
Cubs put together two hits for a run
in the first inning, it marked the first
time in 41 innings Chicago had
managed more than one hit in an in·
ning.
" In this losing streak, we've been
in every game,'' he said. "We just
didn't get the right hit at the right

Cubs vi~tory, Hume remembered a
similar ending a year earlier.
"That's the second game-winning
homer he's hit off me," said Hume,
'Hl. "He hit a tw1&gt;-run homer in the
bottom of the ninth last year in .
Chicago. We lost that one, 2·1.
"You can't make a mistake with
him. That's exactly what I did. He's
so strong."

• The two-run homer Tuesday,
Kingman's 13th, brought a twinkle to
the eyes of Cubs man&lt;1ger Joe
Amalfitano. It broke the Cubs'
seven-game losing streak.

time."

Sports.World
By WW Grlmlley
AP CorretipoudeDI

Winfie_ld man of many faces

"Excuse me," said Dave Winfield
to a couple Of writers, raising his 6foot~

frame to full height. "I will be
r.ight back. "
Moments later, he returned,
reached in his locker for a brief case
from which he extracted a checkbook.
"A little bill we owe for the kids in
the pavilion last year," he ex·
plained, half under his breath. Then
he proceeded to scrawl out a check
for$1,255.
Thus· was seen just one other side
of the 28-year-old rightfielder of the
last place San Diego Padres-team
captain, inspirational leader, 300pius hitter, Golden Glove fielder,
base stealer, philanthrOPist and
legitimate super star in search of
identity.
"Nothing gives me greater
pleasure than this," he added,
referring to his contributions as
chief architect and driving force
behind the David M. Winfield Foundation, which spends hundreds of
thousands of dollars a year in behalf
of underprivileged kids.
When the Padres face the New
York Mets tonight, a special section
of Shea Stadium will be cordoned off
for some 9,000 of these
youngsters-guests of Winfield, all
admissions paid in advance.
·. "This Is only part of the
program," says Winfield, with obvious pride. "We are heavy into

nutrition, exercise, family relation·
ships, education and self-care.
"We follow up on most of these
kids. If they have medical or family
problems, we l?rovide the necessary
help."
Win(ield's program, which started
with the $20,000 Winfield Pavilion in
San Piego Stadium, has been spread
to a dozen other cities.
The rangy All·Star athlete
manages to carry on his
humanitarian endeavors, which also
includes a yearly college scholar·
ship program, while battling to
achieve what he considers his right·
ful place in the profession which is
the source of his foundation's " hope
chest."
"I feel I· am a winner who has
never been able to gain a winner's
status," he said. "I led the league in
runs-batted-in last year (118). I've
been on the All-Star team the last
four years. ,
.
"But nobody knows who I am. I
have been scarred, banged-up,
mired in mediocrity. It isn't money
that is forcing me to rock my boat at
this time. It's the realization that
baseball life is short and I have
never had the personal satisfaction
that comes to a winner. "As
someone said, you smell like what
you are planted in.''
Winfield, who came to the Padres
llirectly from the University of Min·
nesota campus in 1973, is playing out
his four·year $350,000-a-year con·
· tract after failing to gain a renewal
from owner Ray Kroc, the hamburger king.
The towering flychaser refuses to
air his financial linen but reports are
that he is seeking a contract for $10
to $13 million a year covering five to
10 years.

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

Pittsburgh
Montreal
Philadelphia ·

70

56

Ill

56

M 56
58 III

Nt!wYork

St. LA&gt;uis
ChJcago

$4

50
WEST

Houston
LOs Angek:s
Cinclnnati
AUanta
San Francisco
San Diego

New York
Baltimore

Won l..ost Pet. GB

Ill
71

71

$4

67

!9
63
63

69

62

56

62
52 71
Tuesdly'1 Gllllet

.556

-

.528
.161
.139

3¥a
Il l&gt;
Il l&gt;

.403

19

.552

.563

.:»2

.:;32

.196

\;

-

2

·~

9

.496

9

.413

lP ~

~tun

Detroit
Milwaukee
Cleveland
Toronto
Kansas City
Oakland
Texas
Minnesota
Chicago
Califumia
Seattle

Hotl.'lton7, St. f..uui!t 2

Only games scheduled
Wedoeadly'• Games
Lo3 Aflleles (Welch 11).9) at Philadelphia

In)

Houston (K.For5Ch

1Fulgham+6), (n )
Only games !ieheduled

'

16-10) at . St.

Louis

50
56

.~ 1

Lh
7J,&lt;i

M
01

58
&amp;I

.528
.523

9
91;

64

liO
73

.516
.Ill

10 ~

'51

.597

'

231;

WEST

82

..
M &amp;2

&amp;2

63

5S
52

72

19
16

11)

?:;

.MI

-

.512

171!

.133

2'/\;

.196
.126
.395
.368

191&lt;.

lll

32
;!;\;

Wnlor-sday's Garnes

•

San F'ranciaco (Whitson 8-9 ) at Montreal (Sanderson 12~71 , ( n)
San Diego (Wi..sef-5) at New York (Burris 7-7)

74
66

79
Tuesday' • Games
Texas II, Toronto 0
Minnesota 5, Cleveland I
DetroJ t5, Chicllgu4
Kansas City 7, Mllwaukee6
Oak1and3, New Yurk 1
Boston 5, Californ ia 1
Seattle 2, Baltimore J

San Diego 8, New York6,181nnlngs
LosAnse les8, PhilildelphiB t
Atlanta 4, Pittsburgh 2, 10 innings
Chicago 4, Cincinnati 2

(Ca rlton19-7 ),(n)

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
Won Lost Pet. GB
75 50
.GOO -

Texas (Medich 10-8 ) at Toronto (Clancy 11·10)
Minnesota {Arroyo HI e~ t Cleveland (Barker

IHI,Inl

Detroit (Morris 13·11) al Chicago {Burns JJ 12}, (nJ
Kansas City (Splittorff ~9 ) at Milwaukee (Mit-

chell3-2), ( n)

Only games scheduled

41

Householder, awakened Tuesday
morning to learn he was being called
up from the Reds' Indianapolis farm
team, got a standing ovation lor his
game-tying hit in the seventh.
"I'm elated," the rookie said. "A
lot of unexpected things have happened tome today.
"First, getting called up. Then
having trouble finding the stadium'
when I drove in from Indianapolis.
Then that standing ovation, which is
something I've never had. I got the
chills. Arush went through me."

Two National League outfielders
.hit two homers each Tuesday night
as their teams won 4-2, and both
broke 2·2 ties with tw~&gt;-run blasts too
late in the game for the two contenders to catch up.
Gary Matthews of the Atlanta
Braves climaxed his four-hit night in
the top of the lOth inning with his
second homer, making a loser of
Kent Tekulve and cutting the Pit·
tsburgh Pirates' lead to one-half
game in the NL East over the idle
Montreal Expos. '
· Sore-shouldered Dave Kingman
rapped his second homer, also for
two runs, in the top of the eighth inning to give Chicago a victory over
Cincinnati, dropping the Reds 4'h·
games off the pace in the NL West
and ending a seven-game Cubs'
losing streak.
In other games, the San Diego
Padres outlasted the New York Mets
8-6 in 18 innings, and the Houston
Astros beat the St. Louis Cardinals 7·
2 to maintain a 2-game lead over the

Los Angeles Dodgers, who beat
Philadelphia 8-4. ·
Kingman, as usual, didn't talk to
the press, but Matthews had.a lot to
say about Atlanta'sand his own stor·
my year, which saw him benched for
several weeks when he and the team
suffered through an early season
slump. He joined third baseman Bob
Horner in owner . Ted Turner's
doghouse.
"I've been through a lot this
year," Matthews said. "Horner and
myself were both involved in controversy at , the beginning of the
season and both of us 'have come
back and shown the caliber of
players that weare.
"This is a team. that can win in the
future if they keep it together we
have young guys who can do the
job."
·
A year ago at this time, the Braves
were 29 games under .500, headed
for their fourth straght last-place
finish in the West. Tuesday night's
win was their fourth in. a row and

eighth in nine decisions and pulled
them into a fourth-place tie with San
Francisco, one gane under .500.
"All we want to do is get to .500,"
said winning pitcher Gene Garber,;,.
5. "You can't wipe out any losses.
But when you've been in last place
for four years, hittirig .500 is a pretty
important goal."
The Braves are H against the
Pirates this season, and two straight
losses to Atlanta have cut Pit·
tsburgh's lead over Montreal to I&gt;·
game.
"They're a better team this year,"
said Pirates Manager Chuck Tanner
of the Braves.
" I honest' .. ·~lt we've had a good
ballclub all ~ng , " said Atlanta
Manager Bobby Cox. "All clubs go
into ~umps . We had ours at the
beginning of the year when
everybody notices. I think that bad
start got the public· and the press
down on us."
Astros 7, Cardinals .%
Cesar Cedeno hit .his fifth career
grand slam homer, Houston's first

·
·
d
Leader opposes double roun since19n.~ohighHght asix-runbur·
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Wrller
AKRON, Ohio (AP)-Ohio Open .
leader Charlie Sifford believes it's
not a good idea to play the final two
rounds of the slate's top golf tournament on the same day.
" I don't think you should play 36
holes. That's too darn many holes in
one day. I think you should play it
over four days," said the 57-year-old
club pro from Sleepy Hollow Country Club in Brecksville.
Sifford, with a 70 Tuesday for a
tw~&gt;-round total of 137, carried a oneshot lead over 25-year-old Jay Cudd
and Bryan Abbott, 34, going into the
grueling double round finish today
over the par-71, 6,148-yard Portage
Country Club course.
Cudd shot a 70 Tuesday to pull into
a tie for second place with Abbott,
who finished third in last year's Ohio
Open. Abbott had a 71 Tuesday.
Only slx players, all of whom are
professionals, broke par for two
rounds. Joining Sifford, Cudd and
Abbott were Steve Cherni o!
Youngstown with a 68 for a tworound total of 140, Kim Conley of
Akron, whose 70 gave him a 141
sc\}re, and Jim L&lt;lgue of Canton, who
had 72 Tuesday and also stood at

ridiculous," Sifford said.
L&lt;lgue, the tournament chairman,
said the pins were all within the
legal limits of the U.S. Golf
Association's recommendation of 3
yards from the edge of the green.
" If we didn't set the pin placements hard, it would make this course
too easy. It's too 'short. You have to
have high rough and tough pin
placements to make it a good golf
tournament," he said.
Gary Trivisonno of Mayfield, the
defending champion, apparently
was out of the running. He shot a 74
for a tw~&gt;-round total of 150, making
the final36 holes by three strokes. It
took a score of 161 for amateurs to
qualify.
The first woman to play in the 56
years of the tournament, Cleveland
pro Karen Clark, missed the cut by
32 shots. She shot 91 for a two-round
total of 185.

T~k~g::aey

71·70-111

141.

JimLogue

69-72- 141

J im Masse riu
Cltlveland
BobHanison

69-74- 143

a

Abbott disagreed with Sifford over
the Open's current setup. "We 're not
lour players here," said Abbott, the
head professional at Fonder lac
Country Club near ,Youngstown.
'We're club pros. We have to work. 1
can't afford to be away from my job
four days."
Bill Miller, executive director of
the Southern Ohio PGA, said the
four-day 1979 Ohio Open met with
player critieism.
"They said they couldn't alford to
be away from their jobs four days,
plus it was just too costly," he said.
Sifford also charged tournament
· odficials with illegal pin placements
Tuesday.
"Whoever set those pins must
have done it last night. They're
ptaying it like the U.S. Open. It's

AKRON, OhiO lAP) -

Leaders aner

Tuesday's second 1'&lt;liiJ1d in the Ohio Open GoU
Tuurn'Uilent at the 6,143-yard. par-71 PortJige
counlryClub C&lt;Jurse : Charlie Sifford 67-70-137
Brecksville
8

st m the fafth mmng that beat St.
Louis.
Joe Niekro, 14-11, pitched a seven·
hitter despite a solo homer by opposing pitcher Jim Kaat, ~. the
16th of his career.
But Niekro responded by getting
the first of seven straight Houston
hits to start the Astros' big fifth in·
ning. Cedeno's homer was the fifth
of the seven hits.
Dodgers 8, Pblllies 4
Dusty Baker knocked in three runs
with a two-run homer and a single as
Los Angeles stayed just two games
behind the Astros in the West with its
victory over Philadelphia.
The Dodgers broke a 1·1 tie with a
big third inning during which Jay
Johnstone tripled in a run and
Baker, Rick Monday and Mike
Scioscia singled in three more.
·Baker hit his 25th homer in the four·
th and Ron Cey blasted his 19th in
the seventh.
"I don't know why, I just ·see the
ball better in this park," said Baker
of Veterans Stadium. "And the fans

here, whether they're for you or
against you, are exciting. Even the
music is better."
Padres 8, Mels 6
San Diego hadn't scored in 'll
straight extra innings before Willie
Montanez singled home one run and
Jerry Mumphrey doubled in another
in the 18th to beat New York.
Mumphrey's double was his fifth
hit of the game. He had homered to
give San Diego a 6-5 lead in the
seventh inning, but the Mets tied it in
the ninth on a pinch hit double by
Joel Youngblood.
"We've had a lot of tough extrainning losses lately," said Dave Winfield, who h.9mered in the seventh.
" It was a welcome win after losing
20-and 17-inning games on this trip."

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KROGER OPEN SUNDAY, AUG. 31st.
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·SATURDAY, AUGUST 30TH
STUART DAVIS
NEW YORK (AP) - A con·
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'is beln&amp; shown at the Whitney
Museum of American Art through
,Oct.12.
. The exhibition consists of 19 pain·
.lings, drawings and prints from the
museum's permanent collection.
The museum says its association
with Davis (1894-1964) dates from
1917, the year one of his paintings
was included in a group exhibition at
Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney's
Studio.

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'~!k~dbbott

JayCudd

to be

ra.tditv available lor s.ale 1n Meh Kroger Store . e•cepl as
~ noted ., thiS ad. If we do 1\ln out of an adi.Wtised
rtem, we Will oH~ vou your cho•ce of a comparable •tem,
when ava.lable . reflfiCt nlQ the same sa111ngs 01 a n••nchock
wt·uch w111 er11111e you to purchase t!'le advertised •tem at t ne
ad'o'trtised pr• ce Wltl-un 30 davs .

~t'' '''''*,,,, , , , , , , , ,s'l(v'L'i'N,,E, , , i:,i'N''I's''"''"':;:;::,~,,,,,:;,,~ ~C~··um~b---~~~~~~~~~~

SCIOTO DOWNS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Mighty
TS, driven by Fred Street, won by 4
lengths in Tuesday night's feature
pace at Scioto Downs. The winning
horse paced the mile in 2:01 2~ and
returned$7.40, $5.20 jllld$5.
Second·place Bamdance paid
$13.20 and $6.40. Jerry Star Mist
finished third, returning $2.80.
The first race trifecta paid
$4,882.20 on the combinations of ~9
and 4-N. There was a dead heat for
second.
·
The crowd ~ 4,021 wagered
$293,434.

Mrs. C. B. Dwelley, Umatilla,
Fla., has been spending some time
here with her sons-in-law and
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Granville
Stout and Mr. and Mrs. Clay Jordan
and other relatives.
. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Devine ,
Columbus, attended the Meigs Coun·
ty Fair on Thursday afternoon and
called at the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey J ordan, as they

BUSY BEE SOCIETY
MEETS
Members of the Busy Bee Society
of the Carpenter Baptist Church held
their August meeting at the church.
Kathy Franks led devotions. Plans
were made lor a rummage and bak~
gale to be held in September. Th~se
present were Ida Cheadle, Mella
Fisher, Freda Smith, Emma Wlait·
tington, Edith Lyons, Beulah Pen y,
Hester Peck, Bonnie Cheadle and
Kathy Franks. One guest, Hans
Franks, was also present.

Matthews also slams deciding blow

Today's

The lean, long-legged man sitting
in front of locker ·No.3! in the
visitors' clubhouse at Shea Stadium
was leisurely preparing for another
day's work ~hen he was suddenly in·
terrupted by an attendant.
"A man at the front door to see .
you, Dave," said the attendant.

I

Oike Tyson's infield single off the . hit.
Amalfitano said Kingman isn't
hip of pitcher Joe Price and
completely recovered from the
Buckner's single to right gave the
shoulder injury, which h&lt;!mpers his
Cubs a HJ lead after the first. Rick
throwing more thanhis batting.
Reuschel, 11·9, hit Ron Oester with a
"He is hurt. What bothers him the
pitch In the sixth, then surrendered
most
is not being able to con-·
an RBI double to Dave Concepcion
tri~ute/'
AmalHtano said. He's a
to tie the score.
sensitive
guy.''
··
The teams traded runs in the
R~uschel,
who
pitched his sixth
seventh. Kingman's lead-off homer
put the Cubs ahead 2-1. But Ray complete game, said the Cubs aren't
Knight singled, took .second on a the same without Kingman .
"When .he's right, the team's
sacrifice bunt, and scored on Paul
right," he said.
Householder's first' major league

Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers and
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers and grandson, Michael Gene Lawson at·
tended a gathering of the Cordray
family at the Cordray !ann Athens
Route. This was held es~ially at
this time because Mr. and Mrs. John
C_or:ctray, Fullerton, Calif., are
VISiting relatives here including his
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Reed (Helen) Jeffers.

Athens; and great-grandparents, · pay remainder of pledge, contribute
funds for support of a family who
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Dwelley,
has .rrived from Laos and is living
Umatilla, Florida and Mr, and Mrs.
William LaFollette, Millfield.
near MilUield, and a meeting is plan·
Two sisters, Carrie Sue and
ned to decide where animals will be
Teresa Ann , welcomed the little one
sent as a part of the Heifer project.
home.
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
The parables will be used for
Mr. and Mr. Jim Stout (Rhonda
U.M.W.MEETS
devotions during the next year. The
-Keirns), local, are announcing the
The United Methodist Women of minister's wife, Palsy Price, was
birth of a son, Timothy Allen, born
the Temple United Methodist Chur·
August 2 at O'Bleness Memorial
ch held their August session at the welcomed back after a month's abHospital, Athens. Grandparents in· · church with Elizabeth Jordan as
sence which she spent near Chicago
elude Mr. and Mrs. Granville Stout,
hostess. Kathy Jordan, president, with her husband. Miss Price will be
local; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Keirns,
was in charge. Plans were made to hostess in September.
,were enroute home.
Mr. and Mrs. Reece Prather (Nan·
cy Smith) have moved from Wester·
ville, Ohio to Kettering where both
are employed.

•

•

-

lrottr
11 .•• .
Splnteh .... Co•

�. 5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pumeroy , 0., Wednesday, Aug . 'll, 1980

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.; Wednesday, Aug. 'll , 1980

·Carpenter Personals

Kingman takes .Hume downtown again
•

CINCINNATI (AP)-The eighth
inning was a case of deja vu for Cin·
cinnati reliever Tom Hume.
Hume, the ace of the Cincinnati
bullpen, was summoned with the
score knotted 2-2 against the
Chicago Cubs, a team he's had
problems getting out.
The right-hander walked Bill
Buckner with one out then got a fastball out over the plate to Dave
Kingman, who had hit a solo homer
the inning before. As the ball darted
for the right-field seats and a 4-2

r

" It's nice to see the ball leave tlie
park," h'e said.
.
With Kingman hampered by a
sore shoulder, Amalfitano hasn't
seen many big hits lately. When the
Cubs put together two hits for a run
in the first inning, it marked the first
time in 41 innings Chicago had
managed more than one hit in an in·
ning.
" In this losing streak, we've been
in every game,'' he said. "We just
didn't get the right hit at the right

Cubs vi~tory, Hume remembered a
similar ending a year earlier.
"That's the second game-winning
homer he's hit off me," said Hume,
'Hl. "He hit a tw1&gt;-run homer in the
bottom of the ninth last year in .
Chicago. We lost that one, 2·1.
"You can't make a mistake with
him. That's exactly what I did. He's
so strong."

• The two-run homer Tuesday,
Kingman's 13th, brought a twinkle to
the eyes of Cubs man&lt;1ger Joe
Amalfitano. It broke the Cubs'
seven-game losing streak.

time."

Sports.World
By WW Grlmlley
AP CorretipoudeDI

Winfie_ld man of many faces

"Excuse me," said Dave Winfield
to a couple Of writers, raising his 6foot~

frame to full height. "I will be
r.ight back. "
Moments later, he returned,
reached in his locker for a brief case
from which he extracted a checkbook.
"A little bill we owe for the kids in
the pavilion last year," he ex·
plained, half under his breath. Then
he proceeded to scrawl out a check
for$1,255.
Thus· was seen just one other side
of the 28-year-old rightfielder of the
last place San Diego Padres-team
captain, inspirational leader, 300pius hitter, Golden Glove fielder,
base stealer, philanthrOPist and
legitimate super star in search of
identity.
"Nothing gives me greater
pleasure than this," he added,
referring to his contributions as
chief architect and driving force
behind the David M. Winfield Foundation, which spends hundreds of
thousands of dollars a year in behalf
of underprivileged kids.
When the Padres face the New
York Mets tonight, a special section
of Shea Stadium will be cordoned off
for some 9,000 of these
youngsters-guests of Winfield, all
admissions paid in advance.
·. "This Is only part of the
program," says Winfield, with obvious pride. "We are heavy into

nutrition, exercise, family relation·
ships, education and self-care.
"We follow up on most of these
kids. If they have medical or family
problems, we l?rovide the necessary
help."
Win(ield's program, which started
with the $20,000 Winfield Pavilion in
San Piego Stadium, has been spread
to a dozen other cities.
The rangy All·Star athlete
manages to carry on his
humanitarian endeavors, which also
includes a yearly college scholar·
ship program, while battling to
achieve what he considers his right·
ful place in the profession which is
the source of his foundation's " hope
chest."
"I feel I· am a winner who has
never been able to gain a winner's
status," he said. "I led the league in
runs-batted-in last year (118). I've
been on the All-Star team the last
four years. ,
.
"But nobody knows who I am. I
have been scarred, banged-up,
mired in mediocrity. It isn't money
that is forcing me to rock my boat at
this time. It's the realization that
baseball life is short and I have
never had the personal satisfaction
that comes to a winner. "As
someone said, you smell like what
you are planted in.''
Winfield, who came to the Padres
llirectly from the University of Min·
nesota campus in 1973, is playing out
his four·year $350,000-a-year con·
· tract after failing to gain a renewal
from owner Ray Kroc, the hamburger king.
The towering flychaser refuses to
air his financial linen but reports are
that he is seeking a contract for $10
to $13 million a year covering five to
10 years.

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

Pittsburgh
Montreal
Philadelphia ·

70

56

Ill

56

M 56
58 III

Nt!wYork

St. LA&gt;uis
ChJcago

$4

50
WEST

Houston
LOs Angek:s
Cinclnnati
AUanta
San Francisco
San Diego

New York
Baltimore

Won l..ost Pet. GB

Ill
71

71

$4

67

!9
63
63

69

62

56

62
52 71
Tuesdly'1 Gllllet

.556

-

.528
.161
.139

3¥a
Il l&gt;
Il l&gt;

.403

19

.552

.563

.:»2

.:;32

.196

\;

-

2

·~

9

.496

9

.413

lP ~

~tun

Detroit
Milwaukee
Cleveland
Toronto
Kansas City
Oakland
Texas
Minnesota
Chicago
Califumia
Seattle

Hotl.'lton7, St. f..uui!t 2

Only games scheduled
Wedoeadly'• Games
Lo3 Aflleles (Welch 11).9) at Philadelphia

In)

Houston (K.For5Ch

1Fulgham+6), (n )
Only games !ieheduled

'

16-10) at . St.

Louis

50
56

.~ 1

Lh
7J,&lt;i

M
01

58
&amp;I

.528
.523

9
91;

64

liO
73

.516
.Ill

10 ~

'51

.597

'

231;

WEST

82

..
M &amp;2

&amp;2

63

5S
52

72

19
16

11)

?:;

.MI

-

.512

171!

.133

2'/\;

.196
.126
.395
.368

191&lt;.

lll

32
;!;\;

Wnlor-sday's Garnes

•

San F'ranciaco (Whitson 8-9 ) at Montreal (Sanderson 12~71 , ( n)
San Diego (Wi..sef-5) at New York (Burris 7-7)

74
66

79
Tuesday' • Games
Texas II, Toronto 0
Minnesota 5, Cleveland I
DetroJ t5, Chicllgu4
Kansas City 7, Mllwaukee6
Oak1and3, New Yurk 1
Boston 5, Californ ia 1
Seattle 2, Baltimore J

San Diego 8, New York6,181nnlngs
LosAnse les8, PhilildelphiB t
Atlanta 4, Pittsburgh 2, 10 innings
Chicago 4, Cincinnati 2

(Ca rlton19-7 ),(n)

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
Won Lost Pet. GB
75 50
.GOO -

Texas (Medich 10-8 ) at Toronto (Clancy 11·10)
Minnesota {Arroyo HI e~ t Cleveland (Barker

IHI,Inl

Detroit (Morris 13·11) al Chicago {Burns JJ 12}, (nJ
Kansas City (Splittorff ~9 ) at Milwaukee (Mit-

chell3-2), ( n)

Only games scheduled

41

Householder, awakened Tuesday
morning to learn he was being called
up from the Reds' Indianapolis farm
team, got a standing ovation lor his
game-tying hit in the seventh.
"I'm elated," the rookie said. "A
lot of unexpected things have happened tome today.
"First, getting called up. Then
having trouble finding the stadium'
when I drove in from Indianapolis.
Then that standing ovation, which is
something I've never had. I got the
chills. Arush went through me."

Two National League outfielders
.hit two homers each Tuesday night
as their teams won 4-2, and both
broke 2·2 ties with tw~&gt;-run blasts too
late in the game for the two contenders to catch up.
Gary Matthews of the Atlanta
Braves climaxed his four-hit night in
the top of the lOth inning with his
second homer, making a loser of
Kent Tekulve and cutting the Pit·
tsburgh Pirates' lead to one-half
game in the NL East over the idle
Montreal Expos. '
· Sore-shouldered Dave Kingman
rapped his second homer, also for
two runs, in the top of the eighth inning to give Chicago a victory over
Cincinnati, dropping the Reds 4'h·
games off the pace in the NL West
and ending a seven-game Cubs'
losing streak.
In other games, the San Diego
Padres outlasted the New York Mets
8-6 in 18 innings, and the Houston
Astros beat the St. Louis Cardinals 7·
2 to maintain a 2-game lead over the

Los Angeles Dodgers, who beat
Philadelphia 8-4. ·
Kingman, as usual, didn't talk to
the press, but Matthews had.a lot to
say about Atlanta'sand his own stor·
my year, which saw him benched for
several weeks when he and the team
suffered through an early season
slump. He joined third baseman Bob
Horner in owner . Ted Turner's
doghouse.
"I've been through a lot this
year," Matthews said. "Horner and
myself were both involved in controversy at , the beginning of the
season and both of us 'have come
back and shown the caliber of
players that weare.
"This is a team. that can win in the
future if they keep it together we
have young guys who can do the
job."
·
A year ago at this time, the Braves
were 29 games under .500, headed
for their fourth straght last-place
finish in the West. Tuesday night's
win was their fourth in. a row and

eighth in nine decisions and pulled
them into a fourth-place tie with San
Francisco, one gane under .500.
"All we want to do is get to .500,"
said winning pitcher Gene Garber,;,.
5. "You can't wipe out any losses.
But when you've been in last place
for four years, hittirig .500 is a pretty
important goal."
The Braves are H against the
Pirates this season, and two straight
losses to Atlanta have cut Pit·
tsburgh's lead over Montreal to I&gt;·
game.
"They're a better team this year,"
said Pirates Manager Chuck Tanner
of the Braves.
" I honest' .. ·~lt we've had a good
ballclub all ~ng , " said Atlanta
Manager Bobby Cox. "All clubs go
into ~umps . We had ours at the
beginning of the year when
everybody notices. I think that bad
start got the public· and the press
down on us."
Astros 7, Cardinals .%
Cesar Cedeno hit .his fifth career
grand slam homer, Houston's first

·
·
d
Leader opposes double roun since19n.~ohighHght asix-runbur·
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Wrller
AKRON, Ohio (AP)-Ohio Open .
leader Charlie Sifford believes it's
not a good idea to play the final two
rounds of the slate's top golf tournament on the same day.
" I don't think you should play 36
holes. That's too darn many holes in
one day. I think you should play it
over four days," said the 57-year-old
club pro from Sleepy Hollow Country Club in Brecksville.
Sifford, with a 70 Tuesday for a
tw~&gt;-round total of 137, carried a oneshot lead over 25-year-old Jay Cudd
and Bryan Abbott, 34, going into the
grueling double round finish today
over the par-71, 6,148-yard Portage
Country Club course.
Cudd shot a 70 Tuesday to pull into
a tie for second place with Abbott,
who finished third in last year's Ohio
Open. Abbott had a 71 Tuesday.
Only slx players, all of whom are
professionals, broke par for two
rounds. Joining Sifford, Cudd and
Abbott were Steve Cherni o!
Youngstown with a 68 for a tworound total of 140, Kim Conley of
Akron, whose 70 gave him a 141
sc\}re, and Jim L&lt;lgue of Canton, who
had 72 Tuesday and also stood at

ridiculous," Sifford said.
L&lt;lgue, the tournament chairman,
said the pins were all within the
legal limits of the U.S. Golf
Association's recommendation of 3
yards from the edge of the green.
" If we didn't set the pin placements hard, it would make this course
too easy. It's too 'short. You have to
have high rough and tough pin
placements to make it a good golf
tournament," he said.
Gary Trivisonno of Mayfield, the
defending champion, apparently
was out of the running. He shot a 74
for a tw~&gt;-round total of 150, making
the final36 holes by three strokes. It
took a score of 161 for amateurs to
qualify.
The first woman to play in the 56
years of the tournament, Cleveland
pro Karen Clark, missed the cut by
32 shots. She shot 91 for a two-round
total of 185.

T~k~g::aey

71·70-111

141.

JimLogue

69-72- 141

J im Masse riu
Cltlveland
BobHanison

69-74- 143

a

Abbott disagreed with Sifford over
the Open's current setup. "We 're not
lour players here," said Abbott, the
head professional at Fonder lac
Country Club near ,Youngstown.
'We're club pros. We have to work. 1
can't afford to be away from my job
four days."
Bill Miller, executive director of
the Southern Ohio PGA, said the
four-day 1979 Ohio Open met with
player critieism.
"They said they couldn't alford to
be away from their jobs four days,
plus it was just too costly," he said.
Sifford also charged tournament
· odficials with illegal pin placements
Tuesday.
"Whoever set those pins must
have done it last night. They're
ptaying it like the U.S. Open. It's

AKRON, OhiO lAP) -

Leaders aner

Tuesday's second 1'&lt;liiJ1d in the Ohio Open GoU
Tuurn'Uilent at the 6,143-yard. par-71 PortJige
counlryClub C&lt;Jurse : Charlie Sifford 67-70-137
Brecksville
8

st m the fafth mmng that beat St.
Louis.
Joe Niekro, 14-11, pitched a seven·
hitter despite a solo homer by opposing pitcher Jim Kaat, ~. the
16th of his career.
But Niekro responded by getting
the first of seven straight Houston
hits to start the Astros' big fifth in·
ning. Cedeno's homer was the fifth
of the seven hits.
Dodgers 8, Pblllies 4
Dusty Baker knocked in three runs
with a two-run homer and a single as
Los Angeles stayed just two games
behind the Astros in the West with its
victory over Philadelphia.
The Dodgers broke a 1·1 tie with a
big third inning during which Jay
Johnstone tripled in a run and
Baker, Rick Monday and Mike
Scioscia singled in three more.
·Baker hit his 25th homer in the four·
th and Ron Cey blasted his 19th in
the seventh.
"I don't know why, I just ·see the
ball better in this park," said Baker
of Veterans Stadium. "And the fans

here, whether they're for you or
against you, are exciting. Even the
music is better."
Padres 8, Mels 6
San Diego hadn't scored in 'll
straight extra innings before Willie
Montanez singled home one run and
Jerry Mumphrey doubled in another
in the 18th to beat New York.
Mumphrey's double was his fifth
hit of the game. He had homered to
give San Diego a 6-5 lead in the
seventh inning, but the Mets tied it in
the ninth on a pinch hit double by
Joel Youngblood.
"We've had a lot of tough extrainning losses lately," said Dave Winfield, who h.9mered in the seventh.
" It was a welcome win after losing
20-and 17-inning games on this trip."

LABOR DAY HOURS

KROGER OPEN SUNDAY, AUG. 31st.
9am TIL 10pm
RE-OPEN LABOR DAY, MONDAY
SEPTEMBER 1ST. AT 9am ·
Each ol tneu advert •sed •tems •s reQu.red

Colwnbus

steve Chum!
Youngstown

72-68-140

Canton

Cincinnati

Gory Wilkins
Norwalk

n-71- 113

GeorgeBelllnu

·

Youngtown
Martin Roesnlk

70-73-113

Charlie Wood

72-7 1- 143

eanaoo

J!'i!.O:..~~~!d

Be paid good money

to learn
a valuable skill!

7!.-73- 115

Mark Hessler
Collllt1bus

7&gt;71- 146

Kim Boehlke

Youngst4lwn

Dick James
Lebanon
Chris Roderick
Dublin
Rocky Ne""n

72-75--147

73-74-117 '
7~71 - 147

75-72- 147

'
Il:l
\l

Thursday August 28th.

j!~

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PARK RESERVED

CH...,OATION

·Mo.

UNTIL 4 PM

"FAMILY OUTING"

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·SATURDAY, AUGUST 30TH
STUART DAVIS
NEW YORK (AP) - A con·
centration of works by Stuart Davis
'is beln&amp; shown at the Whitney
Museum of American Art through
,Oct.12.
. The exhibition consists of 19 pain·
.lings, drawings and prints from the
museum's permanent collection.
The museum says its association
with Davis (1894-1964) dates from
1917, the year one of his paintings
was included in a group exhibition at
Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney's
Studio.

,...•..

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r.~""li~~~ Every Fri . Night

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Adults $4.00
Children under 12 free

con

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Transportation
Administration
Personnel
Mechanics
Food service

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Steve Crisan
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SCIOTO DOWNS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Mighty
TS, driven by Fred Street, won by 4
lengths in Tuesday night's feature
pace at Scioto Downs. The winning
horse paced the mile in 2:01 2~ and
returned$7.40, $5.20 jllld$5.
Second·place Bamdance paid
$13.20 and $6.40. Jerry Star Mist
finished third, returning $2.80.
The first race trifecta paid
$4,882.20 on the combinations of ~9
and 4-N. There was a dead heat for
second.
·
The crowd ~ 4,021 wagered
$293,434.

Mrs. C. B. Dwelley, Umatilla,
Fla., has been spending some time
here with her sons-in-law and
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Granville
Stout and Mr. and Mrs. Clay Jordan
and other relatives.
. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Devine ,
Columbus, attended the Meigs Coun·
ty Fair on Thursday afternoon and
called at the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey J ordan, as they

BUSY BEE SOCIETY
MEETS
Members of the Busy Bee Society
of the Carpenter Baptist Church held
their August meeting at the church.
Kathy Franks led devotions. Plans
were made lor a rummage and bak~
gale to be held in September. Th~se
present were Ida Cheadle, Mella
Fisher, Freda Smith, Emma Wlait·
tington, Edith Lyons, Beulah Pen y,
Hester Peck, Bonnie Cheadle and
Kathy Franks. One guest, Hans
Franks, was also present.

Matthews also slams deciding blow

Today's

The lean, long-legged man sitting
in front of locker ·No.3! in the
visitors' clubhouse at Shea Stadium
was leisurely preparing for another
day's work ~hen he was suddenly in·
terrupted by an attendant.
"A man at the front door to see .
you, Dave," said the attendant.

I

Oike Tyson's infield single off the . hit.
Amalfitano said Kingman isn't
hip of pitcher Joe Price and
completely recovered from the
Buckner's single to right gave the
shoulder injury, which h&lt;!mpers his
Cubs a HJ lead after the first. Rick
throwing more thanhis batting.
Reuschel, 11·9, hit Ron Oester with a
"He is hurt. What bothers him the
pitch In the sixth, then surrendered
most
is not being able to con-·
an RBI double to Dave Concepcion
tri~ute/'
AmalHtano said. He's a
to tie the score.
sensitive
guy.''
··
The teams traded runs in the
R~uschel,
who
pitched his sixth
seventh. Kingman's lead-off homer
put the Cubs ahead 2-1. But Ray complete game, said the Cubs aren't
Knight singled, took .second on a the same without Kingman .
"When .he's right, the team's
sacrifice bunt, and scored on Paul
right," he said.
Householder's first' major league

Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers and
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers and grandson, Michael Gene Lawson at·
tended a gathering of the Cordray
family at the Cordray !ann Athens
Route. This was held es~ially at
this time because Mr. and Mrs. John
C_or:ctray, Fullerton, Calif., are
VISiting relatives here including his
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Reed (Helen) Jeffers.

Athens; and great-grandparents, · pay remainder of pledge, contribute
funds for support of a family who
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Dwelley,
has .rrived from Laos and is living
Umatilla, Florida and Mr, and Mrs.
William LaFollette, Millfield.
near MilUield, and a meeting is plan·
Two sisters, Carrie Sue and
ned to decide where animals will be
Teresa Ann , welcomed the little one
sent as a part of the Heifer project.
home.
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
The parables will be used for
Mr. and Mr. Jim Stout (Rhonda
U.M.W.MEETS
devotions during the next year. The
-Keirns), local, are announcing the
The United Methodist Women of minister's wife, Palsy Price, was
birth of a son, Timothy Allen, born
the Temple United Methodist Chur·
August 2 at O'Bleness Memorial
ch held their August session at the welcomed back after a month's abHospital, Athens. Grandparents in· · church with Elizabeth Jordan as
sence which she spent near Chicago
elude Mr. and Mrs. Granville Stout,
hostess. Kathy Jordan, president, with her husband. Miss Price will be
local; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Keirns,
was in charge. Plans were made to hostess in September.
,were enroute home.
Mr. and Mrs. Reece Prather (Nan·
cy Smith) have moved from Wester·
ville, Ohio to Kettering where both
are employed.

•

•

-

lrottr
11 .•• .
Splnteh .... Co•

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

-.Former
Panther, Herd great
.

.

·- inducted in national hail
ByCHARLENEHOEFUCH
Naismith Memorial Basketball
: : HaD of Fame; Springfield, Mass.,
has selected Charles Slack for
recognition as a former basketball
player who has achieved success in
his chosen profession.
Son of Margaret Slack Goett of
Pomeroy, and the Ia~ Harley Slack,
- the new Hall of Fame member is
· · Goodyear's director of personnel
: staff and field distribution. He was
- inducted into the Swrunit County
Hall of Fame in 1975..
Slack started at MarshaU CoUege
• with the class of '56 where he c.ompiled records for rebounding and
scored 1,551 points during his four
: year career. He still hOlds the single
: · season NCAA rebounding record.

.

.~

.

with an average of 25.6 per game.
Slack was selected twice as a
recipient of the Robe Award and as
MarshaU's top athlete of. the year.
Slack first played organized basketbaD in the sixth grade, and played at
Pomeroy lligh School, the U. S. Air
Force, Marshall College and
Goodyear.
He was chosen for the 1960 AA U
AU-American team. During his
basketball career at Goodyear, he
was selected twice as most valuable
player and three times all-member
industrial league. In 1960, he was an .
alternate on the Olympic basketbaU
team.
.
Slack and his wife, Alma, reside in
Akron.

Jenkins faces
~ :three counts
.-

TORONTO (AP)-Texas Rangers
pitcher Ferguson Jenkins was
, scheduled to appear In Provincial
- Court today in nearby Brampton,
Ontario after being charged with
; · : three counts of possessi\lll under
· • Canada's Narcotics Control Act.
The court appearimce was supposed to be for the purpose of setting
a trial date for the Canadian-born
- Jenkins, who was arrested by the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police af. • ter two ounces of marijuana, four
: - grams of cocaine and two grams of
:: · hashish were found in a team bag
.. Monday at Toronto International
·- Airport.
.
The American League office took
: the position Tuesday afternoon that
; there would be no suspension of the
• veteran pitcher, since he was
• presumed innocent unless proven
: - otherwise In court. · However, AL
- President Lee MacPhail said
: Tuesday night in Milwaukee, "I'm
; not sure we can wait thatlong."
.: · MacPhail, attending a game bet. : ween the Brewers and the Kansas
' City Royals, added, "BasebaU can't
. : afford to wait forever."
: · He said the Rangers wtu have the
·: firsi decision on the matter, but ad• ded that if the club does not resolve
: it to basebaU's satisfaction, the issue
likely would be decided by BasebaU
: Comrnlssioner Bowie Kuhn.
• Jenkins, a 36-year old righthander, was scheduled to pitch
; against the Toronto Blue Jays
·: Tuesday afternoon but was replaced
: by Charlie Hough, who tossed a five:

hit shutout in an IHl Texas victory.
The decision to hold Jenkins out of
the lineup came after 'a telephone
discU.ssion between MacPhail and
Texas executive vice president Eddie Robinson. Robinson, in turn,
telephoned Rangers Manager .Pat
Corrales and told him not to pitch
Jenkins.
The idea to keep Jenkins on the
bench originated In the AL office, according to Bob Fishel, assistant to
MacPhail.
"We recognized the fact that it
would not be wise to have him pitch,
especiaUy in Canada with the heavy
media Interest on him,'' Fishel said
from his New York office. "We were
just trying to protect him, and we informed the Major League Players
Association of our decision.''
.Jenkins is the first active. major
league basebaU player to be charged
with a drug-related offense.
"We've never had a situationlike
this before,'' Fishel said. "Obviously
we can't comment any further since
the case is before the courts and a
man ls presumed innocent until
proven guilty."
.
Jenkins, a four,time winner of
Canada's
Athlete-of-the-Year
award, ls in his 16th major league
season and has a ca,eer won-lost
record of 256-192. He won 20 or more
games in six straight years and was
the Cy Young Award winner in 1971
while playing with the Chicago Cubs
of the National League.
This season with the Rangers he ls
11-10 with a 3.35 earned run average.

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug. 27, 19M

Bengals exec gived unpleasant news
WILMINGTON,
Ohio
(AP)- Frank Smouse's jop with the
Cincinnati Bengals is to wave goodbye to the waived.
The assistant player personnel
director had given the unpleasant
news to 10 players J;ly lunchtime ·
Tuesday, and told kicker Chris Bahr
he was cut from the squad at the end
of the afternoon workout.
It's a job Assistant General
Manager Mike Brown hated, but
Smouse doesn't seem to mind.
" During training camp I used to
go up in the mornings and wake 'em
up," Brown said. ''!told one guy and
he was still asleep. He said, 'Am I
dreaming?' It's a job I never liked
and it gets worse and worse the
closer you get to the final cuts.''
Smouse said it's tougher on the
coaches who "bleed with the players

BEREA, Ohio (AP)-For the eight
Cleveland Browns released from the
team, the message probably fell on
deaf ears. But coach Sam Rutigliano
was trying to be realistic about the
corning season.
"A team like ·this has three personalities," he told his club. "The
first one ls what you think you are.
The second is what others think you
are. The third is what you really are,
arid that's the most important one.
"This team is getting better, but
you can never lose sight of what you
really are. This ls a good team, bet·
ter than the last two years, but we
have to continue to do what we do
best and play from the ~tt01ns of
our feet," he said.
But for the most recent eight cut

women's po~t in France
•

·

e

le•

: : Former Sox pres,ident improved:
: · CHICAGO (AP)-Chicago White
". Sox President Bill Veeck remains
• hospitalized in fair to good con!Utjon
: .In IUinols Masonic Medical Center
: • with respiratory problel'll'l.
~ • · Veeck, 66, was hospitalized Sun; · ~Y night and has ·received oxygen
: 'In the intensive-care unit since then,
: ·a hospital spokesman said. He added
·: that Veeck is receiving Inhalation
· therapy and remains in the in: tensive-care unit:
,
·
. His hospitalization came only days ,
; • 'after the White Sox board of direc; :tors approved 9afe of the Am'erican
; .League baseball Club to Edward J. ·
:- DeBartolo of Youngstown, Ohio, for
. • an ~tima\ed $20 million.
·
Veeck put together a group .which
:,: purchased the 118U dub five. years
• ··ago for about $11 mUllon. · The
rf. :agreement last Friday to sell the
· j:,lub niust be approved by the White
'-. Sox stockholders and the AmeriCjln
• : League, but Veeck said he felt that
~:.was "merely a_formality."
I
TENNIS
'
NEW YORK (AP)-Bjorn Borg
~ and John McEnroe posted straight~ 'Set victories. in the opening round of
} , the ~.082 U.S. Open tennis cham;
· pionsbips.
·
.
• . Top seeded Borg, of Sweden,
) ; defeated Guillermo Au born of
0.·: Argentia 6-1,.6-4, 6-1, while McEnroe
~: pushed past Christophe RogerVassiln of France 6-3;114, S.l.
"" • In other matches. Vilas Gerulaitas

\

from the squad, play won't happen
in Cleveland. Those cuts included:
Larry Collins, running back .from
Texas A x I, a third-round selection
in 1978; Mickey S~, defensive
tackle from South.Carolina State, a
fourth-round draft choice in 1977;
Peter Boermeester, a kicker signed
as a (ree agent this year from
UCLA; Sam Clapham, offensive
tackle from Oaklahoma, a secondround draft ·choice last year who
spent the year on injured reserve;
Rick Donaldson, a free agent
linebacker signed this year from
Penn State;
Jeff ·Langhans, center from
Clarion State and a free agent; Jim
Moore, guard .from Wisconsin,
signed as a free agent this year after

a trial last year with the Chicago
Bears; and Pat Moriarty, running
back from Georgia Tech, signed as a
free agent last year.
Rutigliano, who personally informedsthe players of th~ir
dismissal, said the Browns are more
"competitive" than they had been.
" I, think that at least four of the
players- Sims, Collins, Claphan and
Moriarty-have a good chance of
being picked up by other teams," he
said.
Marcus Jackson, the rookie nose
tackle who was selected in the 12th
round of this year's draft, was
placed on the injured reserve llst.
Of those cut, Boermeester was the
most philosoJjhical.
"I knew they'd stick with Don

Cleveland 5-1; Texas blanked Toron- single and the Mariners tied it in the
to~; Detr oil edged Chicago S-4 and
sixth on Boehle's sacrifice fly.
Boston turned back California 5-1 .
It was Seattle's second straight
Brett singled iri his first three victory over Baltimore, keeping the
times at bat, then tipped his cap Orioles one-half-game behind the
when her eceived a standing ovation Yankees in the AL East.
from many in the crowd of 16,824 at
Tww 5,1mllan•l
County Stadium a( ter he doubled to.
Roy Smalley's bases-loaded single
right&lt;enter leading off the sixth in- keyed a five-run fifth inning and
ning.
Roger Erickson scattered seven hits
Brett singled again with two out in in eight Innings to pace Minnesota
the eighth for the first five-hit game over Cleveland.
o f his sensational season and
The victory was the first for new
received another standing ovation. Minnesota Manager Johnny Gory!,
An RBI raised Brett's total to 93 in
who took over in the wake of Gene
just 91 games so far this year.
Mauch's resignation Sunday.
Hal McRae also was instrumental
The Twins bunched six singles, inin the Royals' offense, knocking in cluding SmaUey's two-run shot, and
four run s with a triple and a single a double to chase loser Rick Waits,
and Willie Wilson added four hits.
11).121 in the fifth.
A's 3, Yaakees 1
Erickson improved his record to 5Rick Langford pitched his 19th 10 with last-inning relief help from
straight complete game and earned Doug Corbett.
hiii first career victory over New
Rangers 8, Blue Jays 0
York, leading Oakland past the
Charlie Hough pitched a fiveYankees with a seven-hitter.
hitter and Mickey Rivers drove in
The Yankees out-hit the A's 7-to-4,
three runs to lead Texas past Toronbut lost a second straight time to the
to. Hough, obtained from the Los
team managetl by former New York
Angeles Dodgers July 11, posted his
Manager Billy Martin.
first victory in • the American
Langford, 14-10, · shut out the
League, striking out seven and
Yankees after the first inning,
walking two.
retiring the last 10 batters. It was
The Rangers sent six men to the
Langford's 22nd complete game in
25 starts this season and he has won
10 of his last 11 games.
·
Mariners 2, Orioles I
Bruce Boehle smashed his loth
home run leading off the ninth Inning
to lift Seattle ov,er Baltimore.
Boehle's home run broke up a pitching duel between Floyd Bannister,
7-10, and Baltimore's Scott
McGregor, 15-7. Bannister wound up
with a four-hitter.
.
The Orioles scored a run in the fifth inning on Mark Belanger's RBI·

third-seeded Aulby had defeated
Ralph Hartmann and second-seeded
Paut'Moser.
PRO FOOTBALL
EDMONTON, Alberta (AP)
Dave Cutler of the Canadian FootbaD League's Edmonton Eskimos
became professional football's aU-'
time top field-goal kicker with his
336th career three-pointer.
The 48-yard kick, which came at
5: 56 of the first quarter of their 45-20
victory over the Ottawa Rough
Riders, eclipsed the record of 335
previously held by George Blanda,
-who retired several seasons ago
from the National FootbaU League.

Cockroft because of his experience,
even though he is having problems,"
said the left-footed soccer-style
kicker.
"It's aU a numbers game and
there were just too many guys. But
the thing is, I know I can kick in the
NFL. It's just a matter of being in
the right place at the right' time. I
thought this would be the right time
and place for me, but it wasn't and I
understand.
"But it was worth it. The experience was good, and financiaUy it
was worthwhile too. I got a small
bonus to sign, so I didn't lose
anything except time,'' Boermeester said.
"I'D probably give it one more try
next year."

that
votesofplayers
into the
Pro Little
Football Hall
Fame, chose
Larry
of Miami as the other guard.
Q. I am ali avid Bart Starr fan and
think he wlll be a winner in Green
Bay eventually. What is your opinion
why he bas been a loser so far? Joe Meyers, Marinette, Wis.
The former Packer quarterback
great has had only one winning
season in the five since he took over
the team in i975. Committed to the
draft to rebuild, he just hasn't had
scintillating results in his role as
combination head coach nd general
manager. So, he has to take the
blame. L&lt;Jsing top draftee Bruce
Clark to Canada this year was a particularly tough blow. This has to be
the year of decision for Starr, the
quiet, intense man from Alabama. I
can't see the Packers becoming a
force in 1980, either, because,
ironically, field leadership (which as
Bart's forte) seems to be the biggest
deficiency in the Packer arsenal.
You might also say they've had bad
luck with injuries, su ~h as losing

plate in a six-run fourth inning,
belting four singles and two singles
while chasing Jesse Jefferson, 4-12.
Tigers 5, Wblte Sox 1
Tom Brookens drove in two runs ·
with a pair of infield outs . and
Aurelio Lopez turned in a brilliant
job of long relief to lead Detroit over
Chicago.
The Tigers broke a 4-4 tie in the fifth, loading the bases on a single by
Champ Summers and a pair of
walks. Swruners came home as
Brookens hit into a force play at
second.
Lopez, 1().4, aUowed only two bits
in six Innings before getting relief
help himself in the ninth from Pat
Underwood. White Sox reliever Rich
Worthen, 4-6, took the loss.
Red Sox 5, Angels 1
Jim Dwyer had three hits, Including a pair of doubles, and Carl
Yastrzemski added a two-run homer
to power Boston over California.
Boston rookie left-bander John
Tudor, 5-2, aUowed four hits before
he was relieved by Bob Stanley In
the eighth. Stanley picked up his 11th
save of the season and in his last 14
games, has three victories and 10
saves.
Chris Knapp, 2-10, was the loser.

-

~

Pomeroy, Ohio

DRAFT

NITE
TUESDAYS

S159 .

G&amp;J Auto Parts
Rt. 33

9 P.M . to
12

Mason, W.Va.

AIR CONDITIONED

CITY MITS
DRIVE lHRU

~

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•

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HELP WANTED!
THE DAILY SENTINEL
NEEDS 2 CARRIERS ·
IN

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16oz .

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$139

lb.

99~

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18 IN.

FAS 1/
ORE-IDA

20%
Reduction Sale

MICHIGAN

89~

CHEK FROZEN

. . . . . . . . ~~.~~.:.99~

~=~:.
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~~~~:: . . . . .. . . . . . . 99~
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8oz.

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Open Thursday, Friday.
and Saturday Only ·
For This Sale.
9:00 A.M. io 6:00 P.M.

ct.

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BABY RUTH ...... ................4/ 1.00

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9 P.M . to
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..•

.v-

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NITE
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G&amp;J Auto Parts
144 w. 2nd St.

Parting shot:
Not since Tetl Williams batted .406
in 1941 has anyone challenged the
.400 with the seriousness of Kansas
City's George Brett. Even when Rod
Carew hit his career high of .388 in
1977, he failed to top .400 after July
10.
Please send all sports questions to ·
Murray Olderman, P.O. Box 6346,
In cline Village, Nev. 8945(). Because
of the volume of mail, there will be
no individual response.

REYNOLDS
HEAVY DUTY

.-.

PLUS/
., .. CASH REFUND
"llitfi

,....._
. , Murray Olderman

By Mur;ray Olderman
their top running backs last year ,
The tipoff:
but all teams cope with that factor.
Billy Sims of the Detroit Lions is
Q. How many fiome runs has
an NFL rookie, but pro scouts are George Fosler )lit in his career with
already slavering over the next
the Cincinnati Reds - David
great running back who'll be coming Briones, Guadalupe, Callf.
out of the college ranks - George
Corning into this season, the Reds'
Rogers, a cinch AII-Ameirca left fi elder had 201 career homers,
repeater for Suth Carolina.
but the first four of them were in
Q. I noticed that in an All-Pro
brief appearances with the San
team picked fo.r the 1970s, Joe
Francisco Giants, who dealt him to
OeLamielleure of Buffalo was Cincinnati in May 1971. His prOducpieked for the first team and John tion has dropped off these iast two
Hannah of New England was placed summers because of a rash of inon the second team. I always juries.
thought Hannah was regarded as the'
Wily did the Minnesota Vikings
finest at the positon. What's . your trade Chuck Foreman, the most
pick between the two of themn? productive back in the team's '
G.Y.,Oiean,N.Y.
history, and what did they get or
For an authoritative answer, I him? How wlll be do with the New
deferred to Jim Ringo, the offensive England Patriots? - F.W., Lynn,
line coach for the Patriots who also Mass.
handled DeLam with the Bills. .He
The Vikings gave up on Chuck
said, "I couldn't make a choice. I'd because he had slowed to the proverwant them both." He noted that bial crawl and couldn 'I get around
DeLarnielleure was more mobile, the corner on sweeps. They aiso had
but Hannah was bigger, and that Ted Brown ready to take his place
both were ver'/ intense players. aiongside Rickey Young as the
Myself, I'd take Hannah because of Viking set backs. The real eason,
his strength. That team, which was .though, was that Foreman had
'selected by the same polling group

Brett5-5, returns to .400 hatting mark

. :~ :Toledo eager taking

i

-JUST ASK

Woods, just picked up last week, Alexis a wide. receiver and the
was cut because the Bengals Mon" team'~ 11th-round draft choice;
day picked up Chicago quarterback Mike Chronister, a free agent wide
Turk Schonert, last year's NCAA receiver; Larry Poole, a free .agent
passing champion from Stanford.
running back; Vaughn Lusby, a
"ThiS is my fourth time," Woods regular punt return man last
said ....I just wonder what it takes to season; Barney Cotton, offensive
make a team, what it takes to make lineman; Gary Don Johnson, ~efen­
a cut. It's a little hard to rationalize sive lineman and .Ken E~ling, a
it all. Everybody says it's worth it, free agent linebacker.
but I'm beginning to wonder. Even If
Besides Schonert, the Bengals adI do get picked up somewhere else,
ded Pittsburgh defensive lineman
this is a lot to go through for a job."
. Fred Anderson off the waiver list.
Bahr wasn't a bit surprised by the Wide receiver Billy Brooks will
news-he had predicted it two weeks remain on the "unable to perform"
ago after rookie Sandro VitieUo list unavailable until at least mid·
'
.
began playing in preseason games.
season.
"I expected to .get it from Day
The Bengals reached the 50-man
One," Bahr said. "They decided it roster limit Tuesday and must waive
was time to go with a new guy."
five more by Monday to be at the
Other'cuts included: Rick Walker, ·regular-season limit of 45.
a fourth-year tight end; Alton

Eight released from Browns' squad

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sporls Writer
George Brett is back in the exclusive "400 Club" again, after practically breaking down the door.
Kansas City's blond bomber continued on his amazing' streak with
five hits in
' five at-batS Tuesday night to help
the Royals beat the Milwaukee
Brewers 7-li and raise his average to
a sizzling .407.
Even enemy fans are applauding
his performance.
"It gives you a lot of confidence
and makes you feel good knowing
the peopl e in Milwaukee are behind
me," said Brett after getting several
ovations Tuesda y night. "People all
over wantto see me hit .400."
Brett's eighth-inning single gavr
him
seven hits in his last seven of,..,.
ficial at-bats. He started the game
hitting .398, and he has hit safely in
43 of the Royals' 46 games since the
AU-star break.
"I reaUy feel no pressure now
"It's a good opportunity to coach a
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)-Former
about
hitting .400 for the season
natiOnal
team.
I
think
it
will
be
good
: :university of Tolepo player Mike
because
th ere is such a long way to
experience.
I
couldn't
pass
it
up,''
: ·Larsen has been hired to coach a
go,"
said
Brett. "I imagine I will feel
Larsen
said
while
visiting
relatives
: national women's basket))aU team in.
more
pressur
If I'm at .395 or .400
in his home area of Ludington, Mlch,
: France. .
.
with
a
week
to
go
in the season- but
Larsen said he was asked to coach
• The . &amp;-loot-7 · Larsen, a 1976
not
now.
. .gratluate ofToledo, has been playing 't)ie girls'. team by his company after
"Look, I think .380 would be a heck
: ;tn France for the Association Sports several members of-last year's team
of
a season,'' Brett added. "I never t
· -Montferrandaise of · Clermont complained·about the former coach,
hought
I could hit .380. Even .380
· 'Ferrand. He also coached Its men's who later was released.
would
be
a good se.ason: Don't get
· "They were having proble!DS,''
·: team for the last two seasons. .
me
wrong.
My heart is set on .400,
. Larsen was set to retui'n to the . said Larsen. "l think thtiy finished •
: United. States this y~ar to devote third or Jourth in their division lasf · but I don't want to it get to me to
the point where I put pressure on
· :• . fuU-time to his job with the Michelin year. Any time ·y,ou're involved In
myself. I just want ·to have fun
athletics_
,
you're
going
to
have
; :Tire Corp.
·
playing basebaU, and fun to m e is
problems.
The
key
is.
to
be
able
to
· · "Then the company asked me If
hitting
and driving in runs." .
deal
with
thein
w~en
they
come
up."
: :r d be interested in cpaching the
Elsewhere
in the American
.
Larsen
sald
a
Canadjan
·woman
· ' women's team. I didn't think I could
League,
Oakland
beat New York ~1 ,
'
already
has
been
recniited
to
play
: pass up the opportwlity at my age,''
Seattle-tripped
for
the
French
~m
next
,season.
: ·he said.
Baliin!ore 2-1; Minnesota stopped
.
.

~

for a month and then they have to let
'em go" than for him to tell the
news.
" If they don't get picked up by
somebody else, they can get on with
their life's work," the former Kent
State coach said. "The difference
between this occupation and other
occupations is that when you sign
your first contract you know that
only a certain number are kept. I
think the players understand that."
There were few surprises in the
waives outside of the release of light
en~) Jim Corbett and free agent
quarterback Pete Woods.
The Bengals decided to keep Dan
Ross, who won the position from
Corbett as a rookie last year, and
M.L. Harris, a free agent who
played for Coach Forrest Gregg on
the Toronto Argonauts last season.

ballooned tu 225 pounds and couldn 't
handle the CKtra weight. After the
trade in April, fur that " unannounced futu re draft choice," )¥,
went un a diet ami lost 25 pound s.
Patriot general manager ·Bucko
Kilroy se~s him as the big play guy
in the Patriots' attack this fall. At 30,
Foreman still may have a smidgin of
football left.

. .,

SOct.

·79t,

THIN SPAGHETTI .......... : ~. :. 4/'l.OO
LIBBY
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DEEP BROWN BEAN.S....... :.4/11.00
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MT .IQ_LtVE KOSH

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DILL PICKLES •.. · ............ ·:.. · 1.29
SMUCKERS
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48 oz. IJ
GRAPE JELLY...................... •49
Gat
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CLOROX BLEACH ......... ,.......
:.. 79
VIETTI

HOT DOG SAUCE ........ ~~ ?:: .3/ 11.00

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A&amp;W

12 01 . I

39

ROOT BEER. REG .... :....... 6pak . 1.49

32 oz. '1 •29
KRAFT MAYONNAISE................

CAKE MIX ............................. 6.9

MUSTARD ...•
DELMONICO

I ••••••••••• 0 •• 0. 0 0 I 0 ••• I . I

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7 oz

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BETTY CROCKER

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.BETTY CROCKER

FROSTING ......................... 11.29

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

-.Former
Panther, Herd great
.

.

·- inducted in national hail
ByCHARLENEHOEFUCH
Naismith Memorial Basketball
: : HaD of Fame; Springfield, Mass.,
has selected Charles Slack for
recognition as a former basketball
player who has achieved success in
his chosen profession.
Son of Margaret Slack Goett of
Pomeroy, and the Ia~ Harley Slack,
- the new Hall of Fame member is
· · Goodyear's director of personnel
: staff and field distribution. He was
- inducted into the Swrunit County
Hall of Fame in 1975..
Slack started at MarshaU CoUege
• with the class of '56 where he c.ompiled records for rebounding and
scored 1,551 points during his four
: year career. He still hOlds the single
: · season NCAA rebounding record.

.

.~

.

with an average of 25.6 per game.
Slack was selected twice as a
recipient of the Robe Award and as
MarshaU's top athlete of. the year.
Slack first played organized basketbaD in the sixth grade, and played at
Pomeroy lligh School, the U. S. Air
Force, Marshall College and
Goodyear.
He was chosen for the 1960 AA U
AU-American team. During his
basketball career at Goodyear, he
was selected twice as most valuable
player and three times all-member
industrial league. In 1960, he was an .
alternate on the Olympic basketbaU
team.
.
Slack and his wife, Alma, reside in
Akron.

Jenkins faces
~ :three counts
.-

TORONTO (AP)-Texas Rangers
pitcher Ferguson Jenkins was
, scheduled to appear In Provincial
- Court today in nearby Brampton,
Ontario after being charged with
; · : three counts of possessi\lll under
· • Canada's Narcotics Control Act.
The court appearimce was supposed to be for the purpose of setting
a trial date for the Canadian-born
- Jenkins, who was arrested by the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police af. • ter two ounces of marijuana, four
: - grams of cocaine and two grams of
:: · hashish were found in a team bag
.. Monday at Toronto International
·- Airport.
.
The American League office took
: the position Tuesday afternoon that
; there would be no suspension of the
• veteran pitcher, since he was
• presumed innocent unless proven
: - otherwise In court. · However, AL
- President Lee MacPhail said
: Tuesday night in Milwaukee, "I'm
; not sure we can wait thatlong."
.: · MacPhail, attending a game bet. : ween the Brewers and the Kansas
' City Royals, added, "BasebaU can't
. : afford to wait forever."
: · He said the Rangers wtu have the
·: firsi decision on the matter, but ad• ded that if the club does not resolve
: it to basebaU's satisfaction, the issue
likely would be decided by BasebaU
: Comrnlssioner Bowie Kuhn.
• Jenkins, a 36-year old righthander, was scheduled to pitch
; against the Toronto Blue Jays
·: Tuesday afternoon but was replaced
: by Charlie Hough, who tossed a five:

hit shutout in an IHl Texas victory.
The decision to hold Jenkins out of
the lineup came after 'a telephone
discU.ssion between MacPhail and
Texas executive vice president Eddie Robinson. Robinson, in turn,
telephoned Rangers Manager .Pat
Corrales and told him not to pitch
Jenkins.
The idea to keep Jenkins on the
bench originated In the AL office, according to Bob Fishel, assistant to
MacPhail.
"We recognized the fact that it
would not be wise to have him pitch,
especiaUy in Canada with the heavy
media Interest on him,'' Fishel said
from his New York office. "We were
just trying to protect him, and we informed the Major League Players
Association of our decision.''
.Jenkins is the first active. major
league basebaU player to be charged
with a drug-related offense.
"We've never had a situationlike
this before,'' Fishel said. "Obviously
we can't comment any further since
the case is before the courts and a
man ls presumed innocent until
proven guilty."
.
Jenkins, a four,time winner of
Canada's
Athlete-of-the-Year
award, ls in his 16th major league
season and has a ca,eer won-lost
record of 256-192. He won 20 or more
games in six straight years and was
the Cy Young Award winner in 1971
while playing with the Chicago Cubs
of the National League.
This season with the Rangers he ls
11-10 with a 3.35 earned run average.

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug. 27, 19M

Bengals exec gived unpleasant news
WILMINGTON,
Ohio
(AP)- Frank Smouse's jop with the
Cincinnati Bengals is to wave goodbye to the waived.
The assistant player personnel
director had given the unpleasant
news to 10 players J;ly lunchtime ·
Tuesday, and told kicker Chris Bahr
he was cut from the squad at the end
of the afternoon workout.
It's a job Assistant General
Manager Mike Brown hated, but
Smouse doesn't seem to mind.
" During training camp I used to
go up in the mornings and wake 'em
up," Brown said. ''!told one guy and
he was still asleep. He said, 'Am I
dreaming?' It's a job I never liked
and it gets worse and worse the
closer you get to the final cuts.''
Smouse said it's tougher on the
coaches who "bleed with the players

BEREA, Ohio (AP)-For the eight
Cleveland Browns released from the
team, the message probably fell on
deaf ears. But coach Sam Rutigliano
was trying to be realistic about the
corning season.
"A team like ·this has three personalities," he told his club. "The
first one ls what you think you are.
The second is what others think you
are. The third is what you really are,
arid that's the most important one.
"This team is getting better, but
you can never lose sight of what you
really are. This ls a good team, bet·
ter than the last two years, but we
have to continue to do what we do
best and play from the ~tt01ns of
our feet," he said.
But for the most recent eight cut

women's po~t in France
•

·

e

le•

: : Former Sox pres,ident improved:
: · CHICAGO (AP)-Chicago White
". Sox President Bill Veeck remains
• hospitalized in fair to good con!Utjon
: .In IUinols Masonic Medical Center
: • with respiratory problel'll'l.
~ • · Veeck, 66, was hospitalized Sun; · ~Y night and has ·received oxygen
: 'In the intensive-care unit since then,
: ·a hospital spokesman said. He added
·: that Veeck is receiving Inhalation
· therapy and remains in the in: tensive-care unit:
,
·
. His hospitalization came only days ,
; • 'after the White Sox board of direc; :tors approved 9afe of the Am'erican
; .League baseball Club to Edward J. ·
:- DeBartolo of Youngstown, Ohio, for
. • an ~tima\ed $20 million.
·
Veeck put together a group .which
:,: purchased the 118U dub five. years
• ··ago for about $11 mUllon. · The
rf. :agreement last Friday to sell the
· j:,lub niust be approved by the White
'-. Sox stockholders and the AmeriCjln
• : League, but Veeck said he felt that
~:.was "merely a_formality."
I
TENNIS
'
NEW YORK (AP)-Bjorn Borg
~ and John McEnroe posted straight~ 'Set victories. in the opening round of
} , the ~.082 U.S. Open tennis cham;
· pionsbips.
·
.
• . Top seeded Borg, of Sweden,
) ; defeated Guillermo Au born of
0.·: Argentia 6-1,.6-4, 6-1, while McEnroe
~: pushed past Christophe RogerVassiln of France 6-3;114, S.l.
"" • In other matches. Vilas Gerulaitas

\

from the squad, play won't happen
in Cleveland. Those cuts included:
Larry Collins, running back .from
Texas A x I, a third-round selection
in 1978; Mickey S~, defensive
tackle from South.Carolina State, a
fourth-round draft choice in 1977;
Peter Boermeester, a kicker signed
as a (ree agent this year from
UCLA; Sam Clapham, offensive
tackle from Oaklahoma, a secondround draft ·choice last year who
spent the year on injured reserve;
Rick Donaldson, a free agent
linebacker signed this year from
Penn State;
Jeff ·Langhans, center from
Clarion State and a free agent; Jim
Moore, guard .from Wisconsin,
signed as a free agent this year after

a trial last year with the Chicago
Bears; and Pat Moriarty, running
back from Georgia Tech, signed as a
free agent last year.
Rutigliano, who personally informedsthe players of th~ir
dismissal, said the Browns are more
"competitive" than they had been.
" I, think that at least four of the
players- Sims, Collins, Claphan and
Moriarty-have a good chance of
being picked up by other teams," he
said.
Marcus Jackson, the rookie nose
tackle who was selected in the 12th
round of this year's draft, was
placed on the injured reserve llst.
Of those cut, Boermeester was the
most philosoJjhical.
"I knew they'd stick with Don

Cleveland 5-1; Texas blanked Toron- single and the Mariners tied it in the
to~; Detr oil edged Chicago S-4 and
sixth on Boehle's sacrifice fly.
Boston turned back California 5-1 .
It was Seattle's second straight
Brett singled iri his first three victory over Baltimore, keeping the
times at bat, then tipped his cap Orioles one-half-game behind the
when her eceived a standing ovation Yankees in the AL East.
from many in the crowd of 16,824 at
Tww 5,1mllan•l
County Stadium a( ter he doubled to.
Roy Smalley's bases-loaded single
right&lt;enter leading off the sixth in- keyed a five-run fifth inning and
ning.
Roger Erickson scattered seven hits
Brett singled again with two out in in eight Innings to pace Minnesota
the eighth for the first five-hit game over Cleveland.
o f his sensational season and
The victory was the first for new
received another standing ovation. Minnesota Manager Johnny Gory!,
An RBI raised Brett's total to 93 in
who took over in the wake of Gene
just 91 games so far this year.
Mauch's resignation Sunday.
Hal McRae also was instrumental
The Twins bunched six singles, inin the Royals' offense, knocking in cluding SmaUey's two-run shot, and
four run s with a triple and a single a double to chase loser Rick Waits,
and Willie Wilson added four hits.
11).121 in the fifth.
A's 3, Yaakees 1
Erickson improved his record to 5Rick Langford pitched his 19th 10 with last-inning relief help from
straight complete game and earned Doug Corbett.
hiii first career victory over New
Rangers 8, Blue Jays 0
York, leading Oakland past the
Charlie Hough pitched a fiveYankees with a seven-hitter.
hitter and Mickey Rivers drove in
The Yankees out-hit the A's 7-to-4,
three runs to lead Texas past Toronbut lost a second straight time to the
to. Hough, obtained from the Los
team managetl by former New York
Angeles Dodgers July 11, posted his
Manager Billy Martin.
first victory in • the American
Langford, 14-10, · shut out the
League, striking out seven and
Yankees after the first inning,
walking two.
retiring the last 10 batters. It was
The Rangers sent six men to the
Langford's 22nd complete game in
25 starts this season and he has won
10 of his last 11 games.
·
Mariners 2, Orioles I
Bruce Boehle smashed his loth
home run leading off the ninth Inning
to lift Seattle ov,er Baltimore.
Boehle's home run broke up a pitching duel between Floyd Bannister,
7-10, and Baltimore's Scott
McGregor, 15-7. Bannister wound up
with a four-hitter.
.
The Orioles scored a run in the fifth inning on Mark Belanger's RBI·

third-seeded Aulby had defeated
Ralph Hartmann and second-seeded
Paut'Moser.
PRO FOOTBALL
EDMONTON, Alberta (AP)
Dave Cutler of the Canadian FootbaD League's Edmonton Eskimos
became professional football's aU-'
time top field-goal kicker with his
336th career three-pointer.
The 48-yard kick, which came at
5: 56 of the first quarter of their 45-20
victory over the Ottawa Rough
Riders, eclipsed the record of 335
previously held by George Blanda,
-who retired several seasons ago
from the National FootbaU League.

Cockroft because of his experience,
even though he is having problems,"
said the left-footed soccer-style
kicker.
"It's aU a numbers game and
there were just too many guys. But
the thing is, I know I can kick in the
NFL. It's just a matter of being in
the right place at the right' time. I
thought this would be the right time
and place for me, but it wasn't and I
understand.
"But it was worth it. The experience was good, and financiaUy it
was worthwhile too. I got a small
bonus to sign, so I didn't lose
anything except time,'' Boermeester said.
"I'D probably give it one more try
next year."

that
votesofplayers
into the
Pro Little
Football Hall
Fame, chose
Larry
of Miami as the other guard.
Q. I am ali avid Bart Starr fan and
think he wlll be a winner in Green
Bay eventually. What is your opinion
why he bas been a loser so far? Joe Meyers, Marinette, Wis.
The former Packer quarterback
great has had only one winning
season in the five since he took over
the team in i975. Committed to the
draft to rebuild, he just hasn't had
scintillating results in his role as
combination head coach nd general
manager. So, he has to take the
blame. L&lt;Jsing top draftee Bruce
Clark to Canada this year was a particularly tough blow. This has to be
the year of decision for Starr, the
quiet, intense man from Alabama. I
can't see the Packers becoming a
force in 1980, either, because,
ironically, field leadership (which as
Bart's forte) seems to be the biggest
deficiency in the Packer arsenal.
You might also say they've had bad
luck with injuries, su ~h as losing

plate in a six-run fourth inning,
belting four singles and two singles
while chasing Jesse Jefferson, 4-12.
Tigers 5, Wblte Sox 1
Tom Brookens drove in two runs ·
with a pair of infield outs . and
Aurelio Lopez turned in a brilliant
job of long relief to lead Detroit over
Chicago.
The Tigers broke a 4-4 tie in the fifth, loading the bases on a single by
Champ Summers and a pair of
walks. Swruners came home as
Brookens hit into a force play at
second.
Lopez, 1().4, aUowed only two bits
in six Innings before getting relief
help himself in the ninth from Pat
Underwood. White Sox reliever Rich
Worthen, 4-6, took the loss.
Red Sox 5, Angels 1
Jim Dwyer had three hits, Including a pair of doubles, and Carl
Yastrzemski added a two-run homer
to power Boston over California.
Boston rookie left-bander John
Tudor, 5-2, aUowed four hits before
he was relieved by Bob Stanley In
the eighth. Stanley picked up his 11th
save of the season and in his last 14
games, has three victories and 10
saves.
Chris Knapp, 2-10, was the loser.

-

~

Pomeroy, Ohio

DRAFT

NITE
TUESDAYS

S159 .

G&amp;J Auto Parts
Rt. 33

9 P.M . to
12

Mason, W.Va.

AIR CONDITIONED

CITY MITS
DRIVE lHRU

~

-+&lt;
Middleport, b . -+&lt;

748 N. 2nd St.

•

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NEEDS 2 CARRIERS ·
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Parting shot:
Not since Tetl Williams batted .406
in 1941 has anyone challenged the
.400 with the seriousness of Kansas
City's George Brett. Even when Rod
Carew hit his career high of .388 in
1977, he failed to top .400 after July
10.
Please send all sports questions to ·
Murray Olderman, P.O. Box 6346,
In cline Village, Nev. 8945(). Because
of the volume of mail, there will be
no individual response.

REYNOLDS
HEAVY DUTY

.-.

PLUS/
., .. CASH REFUND
"llitfi

,....._
. , Murray Olderman

By Mur;ray Olderman
their top running backs last year ,
The tipoff:
but all teams cope with that factor.
Billy Sims of the Detroit Lions is
Q. How many fiome runs has
an NFL rookie, but pro scouts are George Fosler )lit in his career with
already slavering over the next
the Cincinnati Reds - David
great running back who'll be coming Briones, Guadalupe, Callf.
out of the college ranks - George
Corning into this season, the Reds'
Rogers, a cinch AII-Ameirca left fi elder had 201 career homers,
repeater for Suth Carolina.
but the first four of them were in
Q. I noticed that in an All-Pro
brief appearances with the San
team picked fo.r the 1970s, Joe
Francisco Giants, who dealt him to
OeLamielleure of Buffalo was Cincinnati in May 1971. His prOducpieked for the first team and John tion has dropped off these iast two
Hannah of New England was placed summers because of a rash of inon the second team. I always juries.
thought Hannah was regarded as the'
Wily did the Minnesota Vikings
finest at the positon. What's . your trade Chuck Foreman, the most
pick between the two of themn? productive back in the team's '
G.Y.,Oiean,N.Y.
history, and what did they get or
For an authoritative answer, I him? How wlll be do with the New
deferred to Jim Ringo, the offensive England Patriots? - F.W., Lynn,
line coach for the Patriots who also Mass.
handled DeLam with the Bills. .He
The Vikings gave up on Chuck
said, "I couldn't make a choice. I'd because he had slowed to the proverwant them both." He noted that bial crawl and couldn 'I get around
DeLarnielleure was more mobile, the corner on sweeps. They aiso had
but Hannah was bigger, and that Ted Brown ready to take his place
both were ver'/ intense players. aiongside Rickey Young as the
Myself, I'd take Hannah because of Viking set backs. The real eason,
his strength. That team, which was .though, was that Foreman had
'selected by the same polling group

Brett5-5, returns to .400 hatting mark

. :~ :Toledo eager taking

i

-JUST ASK

Woods, just picked up last week, Alexis a wide. receiver and the
was cut because the Bengals Mon" team'~ 11th-round draft choice;
day picked up Chicago quarterback Mike Chronister, a free agent wide
Turk Schonert, last year's NCAA receiver; Larry Poole, a free .agent
passing champion from Stanford.
running back; Vaughn Lusby, a
"ThiS is my fourth time," Woods regular punt return man last
said ....I just wonder what it takes to season; Barney Cotton, offensive
make a team, what it takes to make lineman; Gary Don Johnson, ~efen­
a cut. It's a little hard to rationalize sive lineman and .Ken E~ling, a
it all. Everybody says it's worth it, free agent linebacker.
but I'm beginning to wonder. Even If
Besides Schonert, the Bengals adI do get picked up somewhere else,
ded Pittsburgh defensive lineman
this is a lot to go through for a job."
. Fred Anderson off the waiver list.
Bahr wasn't a bit surprised by the Wide receiver Billy Brooks will
news-he had predicted it two weeks remain on the "unable to perform"
ago after rookie Sandro VitieUo list unavailable until at least mid·
'
.
began playing in preseason games.
season.
"I expected to .get it from Day
The Bengals reached the 50-man
One," Bahr said. "They decided it roster limit Tuesday and must waive
was time to go with a new guy."
five more by Monday to be at the
Other'cuts included: Rick Walker, ·regular-season limit of 45.
a fourth-year tight end; Alton

Eight released from Browns' squad

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sporls Writer
George Brett is back in the exclusive "400 Club" again, after practically breaking down the door.
Kansas City's blond bomber continued on his amazing' streak with
five hits in
' five at-batS Tuesday night to help
the Royals beat the Milwaukee
Brewers 7-li and raise his average to
a sizzling .407.
Even enemy fans are applauding
his performance.
"It gives you a lot of confidence
and makes you feel good knowing
the peopl e in Milwaukee are behind
me," said Brett after getting several
ovations Tuesda y night. "People all
over wantto see me hit .400."
Brett's eighth-inning single gavr
him
seven hits in his last seven of,..,.
ficial at-bats. He started the game
hitting .398, and he has hit safely in
43 of the Royals' 46 games since the
AU-star break.
"I reaUy feel no pressure now
"It's a good opportunity to coach a
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)-Former
about
hitting .400 for the season
natiOnal
team.
I
think
it
will
be
good
: :university of Tolepo player Mike
because
th ere is such a long way to
experience.
I
couldn't
pass
it
up,''
: ·Larsen has been hired to coach a
go,"
said
Brett. "I imagine I will feel
Larsen
said
while
visiting
relatives
: national women's basket))aU team in.
more
pressur
If I'm at .395 or .400
in his home area of Ludington, Mlch,
: France. .
.
with
a
week
to
go
in the season- but
Larsen said he was asked to coach
• The . &amp;-loot-7 · Larsen, a 1976
not
now.
. .gratluate ofToledo, has been playing 't)ie girls'. team by his company after
"Look, I think .380 would be a heck
: ;tn France for the Association Sports several members of-last year's team
of
a season,'' Brett added. "I never t
· -Montferrandaise of · Clermont complained·about the former coach,
hought
I could hit .380. Even .380
· 'Ferrand. He also coached Its men's who later was released.
would
be
a good se.ason: Don't get
· "They were having proble!DS,''
·: team for the last two seasons. .
me
wrong.
My heart is set on .400,
. Larsen was set to retui'n to the . said Larsen. "l think thtiy finished •
: United. States this y~ar to devote third or Jourth in their division lasf · but I don't want to it get to me to
the point where I put pressure on
· :• . fuU-time to his job with the Michelin year. Any time ·y,ou're involved In
myself. I just want ·to have fun
athletics_
,
you're
going
to
have
; :Tire Corp.
·
playing basebaU, and fun to m e is
problems.
The
key
is.
to
be
able
to
· · "Then the company asked me If
hitting
and driving in runs." .
deal
with
thein
w~en
they
come
up."
: :r d be interested in cpaching the
Elsewhere
in the American
.
Larsen
sald
a
Canadjan
·woman
· ' women's team. I didn't think I could
League,
Oakland
beat New York ~1 ,
'
already
has
been
recniited
to
play
: pass up the opportwlity at my age,''
Seattle-tripped
for
the
French
~m
next
,season.
: ·he said.
Baliin!ore 2-1; Minnesota stopped
.
.

~

for a month and then they have to let
'em go" than for him to tell the
news.
" If they don't get picked up by
somebody else, they can get on with
their life's work," the former Kent
State coach said. "The difference
between this occupation and other
occupations is that when you sign
your first contract you know that
only a certain number are kept. I
think the players understand that."
There were few surprises in the
waives outside of the release of light
en~) Jim Corbett and free agent
quarterback Pete Woods.
The Bengals decided to keep Dan
Ross, who won the position from
Corbett as a rookie last year, and
M.L. Harris, a free agent who
played for Coach Forrest Gregg on
the Toronto Argonauts last season.

ballooned tu 225 pounds and couldn 't
handle the CKtra weight. After the
trade in April, fur that " unannounced futu re draft choice," )¥,
went un a diet ami lost 25 pound s.
Patriot general manager ·Bucko
Kilroy se~s him as the big play guy
in the Patriots' attack this fall. At 30,
Foreman still may have a smidgin of
football left.

. .,

SOct.

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FROSTING ......................... 11.29

�•
8- The Daily Sentinel, ,\ liddlcport-Pvmcruy, 0 .. Wednesday, Aug . 27, 1980

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepv:l- Pomeroy, &lt;.i., Wednesaay, A u~ . 27, !D80

TV boss learns through miscues
signed eight top young amateur .
ByHA,LBOCK
boxers, t\ll"ning them pro all at once
AP Sports Writer
Arthur A. Wptson, president of in news ·conference Tuesday at the
posh Waldorf Astoria; At the same
NBC Sports, to6k a long, thoughtful
drag on his cigarette.
time, NBC announced that the
fighters would be featured on the
" If you don't learn by your own
mistakes and the mistakes of network, four of them making their
others/' he said, "then you are in professional debuts Saturday, Nov. ! '
trouble."
and the other four one week later on
NBC assqres us it has learned Saturday, Nov. 8.
The amateur ~redentials of the ·
from the mistakes of ABC. Bob
fighters are impressive.
Arum, it is hoped, has learned from
Featherweight Bernard Taylor of
the mistakes of Don King:
The last time a boxing promoter Charlotte, N.C, and jJ,J.Dior welterweight Johnny Bumphus of Nashand a television n~twork joined forVille, Tenn., both won their divisions
ces was the King-ABC ope·ration
called the United States Boxing . in the Olympic boxingtrials.
Welterweight Davey Moore of
Championships, a project that
New
York City and heavyweight
raised all manner of difficult
Chris McDonald of Tiverton, R.I.
questions about the ratings and
were · Olympic Trials silver
records of the participating fighters
medalis:ts and. both are four-time
and the tournament matchups.
Now television will try again with Golden " Glove champions. Mida different promoter- Arum instead dleweight Alex Ramos and
of King-and a different net- heavyweight Mitchell Green, both of
work-NBC instead of ABC. And it New York City, alSo are four-time
isn't even a tournament, just ·a fist- Golden Gloves champions. Junior
ful of top young boxers breaking into middleweight Tony Ayala of San. Antonio, Texas is a national Golden
the professional ranks. Still, the
Gloves champion and light
players in this game remember the
King-ABC episode and you get the
heavyweight Tony Tucker of Grand
feeling they're being extra careful
Rapids, Mich., was the Pan
this time around.
American Games and World Cup
champion last year_
Top Rank, Inc., Arum's company,

a

Auto-pitch Arm Saver
(A must for weekend softboll pitchers)
Weekend mound oce holds boll (A) in line with pool cue (B) . Once type of pitch hos been agreed upon,
ace chucker adjusts cue stick guide (C) along track in wristband (D) by pull in!! string (E) tied to powerful
pinkie (f) so that cue stick gives ball proper spin for drop, curve, etc. When mound ace is ready for
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for his regular 9 to 5 routine during the week .
coPnuGHI80BALEXA~oER ,I9So

New Twins manager learning game
CLEVELAND (AP )-Minnesota's
Johnny Gory! has quickly learned
that there's more to managing · a .
major league baseball team than
winning and losing.
Gory! on Tuesday guided the
Twins to a :&gt;-1 defeat of the Cleveland
Indians, his first victory against one
defeat since he took over the club
following Gene Mauch's resignation
on Sunday.
" There's a lot of public relations
and . other things iuvolved in th)s
job," said Gory!. "There's been so
many things going on, I haven't
really had much time to think about
the games."
Right-hander Roger Erickson
gave Gory! one less thing to worry
about Tuesday night by allowing the

Indians seve·n hits and one run over
eight innings of work. The Twins
supported Erickson with a five-run
explosion in the fifth inning .
" Roger has pitched well most of
the season, " said Gory!, who intends
to continue serving as the team's
third base coach. &gt;''He's taken leads
late into the ball game and was
unable to hold onto them. That's why
he was 4-10 (entering Tuesday's

galle)."
Gory! inserted ace reliever Doug
Corbett into the contest in the ninth
inning, and Corbett gave up a walk
and a single before striking out Rick
Manning to end the game.
"Erickson ran out of gas," said
Gory!. •'I checked v,:ith (catcher Butch) Wynegar, and he said he was
losing his stuff."

FOR THE BOTH OF YOU _
1
· BEAUTY SALON

The outing was particularly disapmound to score the Twins' second
pointing for Cleveland left-hander
run.
Rick Waits, 1()-12, who said: " This is
"Castillo battled the heck out of
the best I've felt physically in a long
that Waits, didn't he ?" Gory! said.
time. I was throwing hard. I had a
Roy Smalley then bounced a
good fastball tonight. They just hit . ground ball into left field to bring in
them where we weren't.' '
two more ,runs, ending the evening
Waits allowed only a harmless
for Waits.
single through the first four inilings,
" I knew Smalley was the hitter I
but Ron Jackson singled opening the ' had to have," said Waits. "I put the
fifth and moved to second on rightball where I wanted to, and he hit it
fielder Jorge Orta's error - an
on the ground. It's a funny game."
omen of bad things to come.
Jose Moral~s doubled off Sandy
Wynegar singled Jackson home,
Wihtol'for the Twins' final run.
and Dave Edwards and Hosken
Cleveland scored its run in the
Powell both singled to load the
fourth when Mike' Hargrove doubled
bases.
off the glove of right-fielder Hosken
John Castino then fouled off
Powell- Hargrove's 1,000th care.e r
several tw&lt;rstrike pitches before
hit, He came home on Ron Hassey's
puncing an infield hit over tl)e
single.

Corner of Jrd &amp; Cherry St.
Syracuse, Ohio ·

1st ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL
SHAMPOO
&amp; SETS
ONLY

the youngest ,player ever to win the Slam-he won the French and WimOpen. " Anne Smith is a tough first . bleddn, each for the fifth time,
earlier this year and needs victories
round match, I have Rosie (Casals)
next. The others don't have that here and in the Australian Open to
complete the feat-overwhelmed
tough a draw."
Guillermo Aubone of Argentina 6-1,
Still, Austin must believe she can
win again, even if she wouldn't come 6-4, 6-1: McEnroe, the defending
champion, slammed Christophe
right out and say it.
Roger-Vasselin of France 6-3, 6-4, 6" I would never say that," she
1. Neither player seemed bothered
claimed. " Then everybody would
by injuries that forced each to withexpect lne to win and it would be in
draw
from the Canadian Open two
the papers that Tracy is cocky. No
weeks
ago.
one eKpected me to win last year; t
"
My
knee felt fine," said Borg.
didn'tthink I'd win.
''After Toronto, I rested it for a few
'' I don't think the pressure bothers
me. My arm -muscles are a little days and since then, it hasn't
bothered me."
tight and that might bother me a bit.
McEnroe, playing on heavily
It's OK but. I didn't swing my hartaped ankles, said he was conscious
dest tonight. "
of the injury- a sprain.
While Austin struggled a bit agaln" It was irritating, especially at
st Smith, No.3 Chris Evert Lloyd
barely had a workout in demolishing the net, " he said. " I Can't jwnp
Kim Sands 6-0, 6-0.
" I would have liked a tougher match than that ; there's no way I can
tell how I'm playing from a match
like that," said Lloyd, who won here
from 1975 through 1978. " I think the
No.I position is up for grabs if
Tracy, Martina or I wln here . And
I'm comfortable as No.3. The
pressure is off my back.
" It was the same at Wimbledon,"
added Lloyd, a loser in the finals
(here, where she also was ranked
third. " The focus was on No.I and

Cherie Lightfoot, Pomeroy, was
the maid of honor, a nd Tonia Ash
.and Sonia Ash, the bridesmaids for
the wedding of Sara Marie Diddle
and Richard Denver Sey ler II. The

timcl, perhaps that little scrap of ·
paper isn't so traumatic after all. -

H.
DEAR HELEN:
Why are many men so dumb?
They pick fluffy, silly, usually nearfrigid nitwits fur wives, then turn to
us wholehearted women for sex and
friendship. Yet they won't divorce
these inadequate creatures to marry
us. Is it because they' re basically
a fraid of real women and need, for
" mother of their children,' ; someone
who makes them feel superior? THE OTHER WOMAN
DEAR OW.:
Could be. And my advice is : stay
a way from this type, even if he's
single. He's a throwback to the time
when the prissy, helpless, "pure"
fem~le was prized and the lusty
woman "used." Thank goodness his
breed is disapperi ng fast ! - H.
DEAR HELEN:
After years of trying, my husband
and I finally decided for artificial insemination. No one knows our
beautiful son was derived fril111 a
test tube. We've been told the donor
is healthy and has no heredity
problems, but we don 't know his
name.
Should we tell our child the truth,
and at what age? - PROUD
PARENTS
DEAR PARENTS:
This is your decision, but if it were
mine, I'd forget the test tuve and see
your son as totally yours. What could
_be gained by telling him? - R

wedding took place on July 13 at 2:30
P·ll1· at the Racine First Baptist
Church, instead of July 17 .as was
erroneo usly reported in the Sunday
Times-sentinel. Elaine Metheny a nd
not E laine Matthews assisted with
the serv ing.

COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP)
The
number of auctioneers plying their
trade in Ohio has almost do~b1ed in
the last 16 years, but it is a part-time
job for must of them, a sta~e official
say~ .

About 2,20Q auctioneers, trained
fur selling real estate and personal
property to the highest bidder, are
c~rrentiy licensed by the state, says
Charles R. Carroll, chief of the
division of licensing in the commerce department.

In addition, there are about 450
auction houses and 275 apprentice
auctwneers in the state. In 1964 , the
nw11ber of.auctioneers was 1,200, he
said.
" I doubt that 10 percent in the
whole state are strictly auctioneers, " Carroll said.
Persons seeking licenses must undergo a n oral · and wr itten
examination administered by
Carroll's office. In addition to the$25
testing fee , t~ere is an initial charge

around at net. And on serve, I'm
afraid of it and not jumping off.
" I have to tape it tight but it won't

Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Blakeslee
returned ·his week from visits . in
seve ral states. They celebrated their
43rd wedding anniversary while in
Wichita, Kansas, honored with a dinner at the Wichita Hilton In 's Judge
Riggs Club, hosted by their daughter
· and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Mel
Circle, and the Blakeslee's grand-

REVIVAL TO BEGIN
The Carleton CHurch, Kingsbury
Road and County Road 18, will be
holding a revival from Wednesday to
Sunday, Sept. 7, with services beginning each evening at 7:30 p.m . The
evangelist will be J ohn Lanier of
Junction City , and there will be
special singing nightly.
The Gospel Tones, Charleston, will
be appearing Tuesday, Sept. 2, and
Pastor Gary King invites everyone
to attend.

children, Mark and Marianne .
Marianne accompanied her grandparents to the Nationa l County
Agent's Convention in Oklahoma
City and returned home by bus to
Wichita .
The Blakeslees visited Mrs.
Blakeslee's brother and sister-lnlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Lavender
in Houston, Tex., visited ·a second
time at Wichita, and ITJ&lt;~de a trip to
see Mrs. Blakeslee's sister, Mrs.
Eva Smith, at Hudson Lake, Indiana, before returning home.

-"

MR. SJ;'ENCER HOSPITALIZED
Dwight Spencer, · Chester, wellknown for his work in Pomeroy
selling flowers and vegetables on
Main St.,, was admitted to Holzer
Medical Center Monday afternoon.
Ca rds may be sent to Room 434.

TO MEET WEDNESDAY
The Long Bottom Community
Association will hold its monthly
meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the
conununity building.
·

4 SUBJECT

THEME BOOK
• 96 PAGES
70

• 3 DIVIDERS
• REGULAR '1.39

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get any worse. "
Other seeded men to advance included 'No.4 Guillermo Vilas of
Argentina, a 6-ll, 6-1, 6-2 winner over
Warren Maher of Australia; No.5
Vilas Gerulaitis, who topped Vince
Van Patten 6-3, 6-4, 6-ll ; eighthseeded EddieDibbs, who saved two
match points before he beat Bob
Lutz :&gt;-7, 2~, 7-5,6-ll, 6-2; No.9 Peter
Fteming, with a 6-4, 6-1, 3-9, 6-2 vic. tory over Billy Nealon ; No.ll
Roscoe Tanner, who defeated Ray
Moore of South Africa 6-3, 6-4, 6-1;
14th-seed Wojtek Fibak of Poland,
with a 6-4, 0-6, 6-3, 6-4 decision against John Benson, and No . 15 Yannick
Noah of France, who took David
Schneider of South Africa, 6-1, 6-ll, 63.

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Seconds, made for a national cha in .

29

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DISNEY SCHOOL BAGS .................................. ..
BOYS &amp; MENS TENNIS SHOES......................~
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DAIRY

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Imperfect's from a famous
W.Va. Mfgr . Novelty sayings
and animals . A new look for

pEN c I Lo::t "'""'\

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE

of $50 fur a license, renewable anhousehold goods or industrial plant ·.
nually, a division employee said.
sales, among others.
Although the division employs
The most recent updating of Ohio
three auction, inv,estigators to con·
law prohibiting any person from acduct spot checks, the number of
ting as an auctioneer without a licencomplaints• received is relatively
se occurred two years ago.
·
small.
A measure sponsored by Rep.
" We have very few complaints.
Sherrod Brown, D-Mansfield, inMost are from those who don't uncreased the license fees and the
derstand the auction method . of
amount of the bond required of auc,
selling, ;' Carroll said .
tioneers, auction businesses and ap-·
dne reason for that record may be
prentice auctioneers. In addition, it
that most a uctioneers operate within
altered licensing requirements for
50 miles of their homes and are
apprentice auctioneers and added
known by those in the community,
new s.t andards to be . used for
he said.
revoking auctioneer licenses..
Auction sales are increasing in
popularity, says F rank Weade of r"'T""----....;....;'"""=---4Washington Court House. He is
president of the Ohio Auctioneers
Association, which represents about
700 of the state's auctioneers.
"This is one fonn of liquidation of
an esf.ate that ·can be conducted in a
few hours," he said. ·
A booklet prepared by Weade's
group says fees charged by an auctioneer depend on the type of sale involved. Different rates are assessed
for real estate, farm, purebred
livestock,
weekly
livestock,

Blakeslees visit several states

WOOD

Fas ion

Two , women's seeds were
eliminated in the opening ro~nd.
No.7 Greer Stevens of Australia was
ousted by Kate Latham 6-4, Hi and
No.l5 Betty Stove of the Netherlands
fell to Anne Hobbs of Britain 6-4, 6-ll.
Things went rather routinely
among the men. The top two seeds,
Bjorn Borg of Sweden and John
McEnroe, eased to victory.
Borg, looking for his first U.S.
Open title as well as the Grand

By HELEN BOTI'EL
Special correspondent
DEARHELEN: .
M.e!lssa moved into my apartment
after spending the night with me on
our first date. l didn't invite her:
When I got home from work that
evening, she was there cooking dinner - had talked the landlord into
letting her in. It's been two years,
and .. .
It hasn't been bad, musi of the
time. But she sort of runs my life.
When I protest, she points out that
I'm now out of debt, have quit
smoking, stopped boozing around
and have moved on to a much better
job. True. So I'm a weak character
who needs a nurse, but not on a permanent basis. I don't mind living
together, but Helen, she's got
marriage on her mind. And she's got
a very strong mind!
She's even got the date set. How
can I stop this without bre~kin g up a
pretty darn good relationship? BETTER DEAD THAN WED
(ALMOST)
P.S. Don't worry about publishing
this : She doesn 't read newspapers.
DEARBDTWA:
Outside of being pushy, Melissa
doesn't sound like a bad sort. (But
then, ca n a woman who doesn't r·ead
newspapers be all good ·~)
Seems to me you're more
frightened of marriage than turned
off by this relationship. Think how
you'd feel if you lost her.
Then consider this: Sin ce Melissa
won't drive much longer without a
~~ license", and you evidently don't
mind her kind of driving (most of the

Debbie Powell- Owner, Operator
Bev e·ishop- Operator

The Latest
LOOkS Of

No.2.''

$400

Ife 's about to wl}d but
he 's rather be dead

CORRECTION

PHONE 992-3982 FOR APPOINTMENT
OPENTUESDAYTHRUSATURDAY

First seed survives tough ·opener
By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP):_It will take .
more than unusual conditions, a
tight arm and the pressure of being
the defending champion and No.1
seed to get Tracy Austin upset.
Austin beat Anne Smith 6-2, 7-5
Tuesday night in the ·first round of
the U.S. Open tennis championships,
then described the match as difficult
and somewhat bizarre.
" Now that it's over, I'm glad it
was tough, " said Austin, at 17, the
world's top women's player. " You
have to get used to the planes flying
over. I didn't realize how much you
go by the sound of the ball. It's hard
to judge how hard it 's hit when you
don't hear it. It's weird."
Tracy took today off but one of her
main challengers, second-seed Martina Navratilova, had an evening
match with Lena Sandin of Sweden.
The only other seeded women
scheduled for today were No.6 Dianne Fromholtz of Australia, who also
played under the lights, against Zina
Garrison, and No.lO Virginia Ruzici
of Romania vs. Nina Bohm of
Sweden. "
Jimmy Connors, rated third, was
.'pi.tted against Marcel Freeman at
night, while in day matches, sixthseed Gerie ' IV(ayer played Gianni
Ocleppo of Italy , seventi1-seed
iU!rold Solomon tangled with Kevin
Curreri of South Africa, No.lO Ivan
Lend! of Czechoslovakia played Tim
Mayotte, No.l2 Jose-Luis Clerc of
Argentina opposed Bernie Mi\ton of
. South Africa, No.l3 Brian Gottfried
took on David Carter. of Australia,
and Victor Amaya, the 16th seed,
played Larry Davidson.
Atistin noted the difficulty of her ·
portion of the draw in the $654,082
tournament.
"My draw is unbelievable," said

..

.....-----

SEPT. 2-6

Number of Ohio auctioneers double in 10 years

Helen Help Us

LABOR DAY

' 10To 8

LIBBY'S PUMPKIN ••••••••• ~ •• 2/$Ll9 .

-· ...._ -· ..._-· ..._-· ..._. -· _
POINT PLEASANT ·oR).,A5c&gt;N

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8- The Daily Sentinel, ,\ liddlcport-Pvmcruy, 0 .. Wednesday, Aug . 27, 1980

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepv:l- Pomeroy, &lt;.i., Wednesaay, A u~ . 27, !D80

TV boss learns through miscues
signed eight top young amateur .
ByHA,LBOCK
boxers, t\ll"ning them pro all at once
AP Sports Writer
Arthur A. Wptson, president of in news ·conference Tuesday at the
posh Waldorf Astoria; At the same
NBC Sports, to6k a long, thoughtful
drag on his cigarette.
time, NBC announced that the
fighters would be featured on the
" If you don't learn by your own
mistakes and the mistakes of network, four of them making their
others/' he said, "then you are in professional debuts Saturday, Nov. ! '
trouble."
and the other four one week later on
NBC assqres us it has learned Saturday, Nov. 8.
The amateur ~redentials of the ·
from the mistakes of ABC. Bob
fighters are impressive.
Arum, it is hoped, has learned from
Featherweight Bernard Taylor of
the mistakes of Don King:
The last time a boxing promoter Charlotte, N.C, and jJ,J.Dior welterweight Johnny Bumphus of Nashand a television n~twork joined forVille, Tenn., both won their divisions
ces was the King-ABC ope·ration
called the United States Boxing . in the Olympic boxingtrials.
Welterweight Davey Moore of
Championships, a project that
New
York City and heavyweight
raised all manner of difficult
Chris McDonald of Tiverton, R.I.
questions about the ratings and
were · Olympic Trials silver
records of the participating fighters
medalis:ts and. both are four-time
and the tournament matchups.
Now television will try again with Golden " Glove champions. Mida different promoter- Arum instead dleweight Alex Ramos and
of King-and a different net- heavyweight Mitchell Green, both of
work-NBC instead of ABC. And it New York City, alSo are four-time
isn't even a tournament, just ·a fist- Golden Gloves champions. Junior
ful of top young boxers breaking into middleweight Tony Ayala of San. Antonio, Texas is a national Golden
the professional ranks. Still, the
Gloves champion and light
players in this game remember the
King-ABC episode and you get the
heavyweight Tony Tucker of Grand
feeling they're being extra careful
Rapids, Mich., was the Pan
this time around.
American Games and World Cup
champion last year_
Top Rank, Inc., Arum's company,

a

Auto-pitch Arm Saver
(A must for weekend softboll pitchers)
Weekend mound oce holds boll (A) in line with pool cue (B) . Once type of pitch hos been agreed upon,
ace chucker adjusts cue stick guide (C) along track in wristband (D) by pull in!! string (E) tied to powerful
pinkie (f) so that cue stick gives ball proper spin for drop, curve, etc. When mound ace is ready for
delivery, he only has to flex bicep cousing frog (G) stropped to arm to have violent knee-jerk reaction
which sloms hind feet sovagely into cue stick , sending bovine sphere rocketing towards homeplate . By
flexing wrist muscle, which moves forearm band (H) and cue stick closer or further from frog's fierce kick,
our fi re boller controls velocity of pitch. This ingenious outo-pitch leaves weekend jock 's arm in one piece
for his regular 9 to 5 routine during the week .
coPnuGHI80BALEXA~oER ,I9So

New Twins manager learning game
CLEVELAND (AP )-Minnesota's
Johnny Gory! has quickly learned
that there's more to managing · a .
major league baseball team than
winning and losing.
Gory! on Tuesday guided the
Twins to a :&gt;-1 defeat of the Cleveland
Indians, his first victory against one
defeat since he took over the club
following Gene Mauch's resignation
on Sunday.
" There's a lot of public relations
and . other things iuvolved in th)s
job," said Gory!. "There's been so
many things going on, I haven't
really had much time to think about
the games."
Right-hander Roger Erickson
gave Gory! one less thing to worry
about Tuesday night by allowing the

Indians seve·n hits and one run over
eight innings of work. The Twins
supported Erickson with a five-run
explosion in the fifth inning .
" Roger has pitched well most of
the season, " said Gory!, who intends
to continue serving as the team's
third base coach. &gt;''He's taken leads
late into the ball game and was
unable to hold onto them. That's why
he was 4-10 (entering Tuesday's

galle)."
Gory! inserted ace reliever Doug
Corbett into the contest in the ninth
inning, and Corbett gave up a walk
and a single before striking out Rick
Manning to end the game.
"Erickson ran out of gas," said
Gory!. •'I checked v,:ith (catcher Butch) Wynegar, and he said he was
losing his stuff."

FOR THE BOTH OF YOU _
1
· BEAUTY SALON

The outing was particularly disapmound to score the Twins' second
pointing for Cleveland left-hander
run.
Rick Waits, 1()-12, who said: " This is
"Castillo battled the heck out of
the best I've felt physically in a long
that Waits, didn't he ?" Gory! said.
time. I was throwing hard. I had a
Roy Smalley then bounced a
good fastball tonight. They just hit . ground ball into left field to bring in
them where we weren't.' '
two more ,runs, ending the evening
Waits allowed only a harmless
for Waits.
single through the first four inilings,
" I knew Smalley was the hitter I
but Ron Jackson singled opening the ' had to have," said Waits. "I put the
fifth and moved to second on rightball where I wanted to, and he hit it
fielder Jorge Orta's error - an
on the ground. It's a funny game."
omen of bad things to come.
Jose Moral~s doubled off Sandy
Wynegar singled Jackson home,
Wihtol'for the Twins' final run.
and Dave Edwards and Hosken
Cleveland scored its run in the
Powell both singled to load the
fourth when Mike' Hargrove doubled
bases.
off the glove of right-fielder Hosken
John Castino then fouled off
Powell- Hargrove's 1,000th care.e r
several tw&lt;rstrike pitches before
hit, He came home on Ron Hassey's
puncing an infield hit over tl)e
single.

Corner of Jrd &amp; Cherry St.
Syracuse, Ohio ·

1st ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL
SHAMPOO
&amp; SETS
ONLY

the youngest ,player ever to win the Slam-he won the French and WimOpen. " Anne Smith is a tough first . bleddn, each for the fifth time,
earlier this year and needs victories
round match, I have Rosie (Casals)
next. The others don't have that here and in the Australian Open to
complete the feat-overwhelmed
tough a draw."
Guillermo Aubone of Argentina 6-1,
Still, Austin must believe she can
win again, even if she wouldn't come 6-4, 6-1: McEnroe, the defending
champion, slammed Christophe
right out and say it.
Roger-Vasselin of France 6-3, 6-4, 6" I would never say that," she
1. Neither player seemed bothered
claimed. " Then everybody would
by injuries that forced each to withexpect lne to win and it would be in
draw
from the Canadian Open two
the papers that Tracy is cocky. No
weeks
ago.
one eKpected me to win last year; t
"
My
knee felt fine," said Borg.
didn'tthink I'd win.
''After Toronto, I rested it for a few
'' I don't think the pressure bothers
me. My arm -muscles are a little days and since then, it hasn't
bothered me."
tight and that might bother me a bit.
McEnroe, playing on heavily
It's OK but. I didn't swing my hartaped ankles, said he was conscious
dest tonight. "
of the injury- a sprain.
While Austin struggled a bit agaln" It was irritating, especially at
st Smith, No.3 Chris Evert Lloyd
barely had a workout in demolishing the net, " he said. " I Can't jwnp
Kim Sands 6-0, 6-0.
" I would have liked a tougher match than that ; there's no way I can
tell how I'm playing from a match
like that," said Lloyd, who won here
from 1975 through 1978. " I think the
No.I position is up for grabs if
Tracy, Martina or I wln here . And
I'm comfortable as No.3. The
pressure is off my back.
" It was the same at Wimbledon,"
added Lloyd, a loser in the finals
(here, where she also was ranked
third. " The focus was on No.I and

Cherie Lightfoot, Pomeroy, was
the maid of honor, a nd Tonia Ash
.and Sonia Ash, the bridesmaids for
the wedding of Sara Marie Diddle
and Richard Denver Sey ler II. The

timcl, perhaps that little scrap of ·
paper isn't so traumatic after all. -

H.
DEAR HELEN:
Why are many men so dumb?
They pick fluffy, silly, usually nearfrigid nitwits fur wives, then turn to
us wholehearted women for sex and
friendship. Yet they won't divorce
these inadequate creatures to marry
us. Is it because they' re basically
a fraid of real women and need, for
" mother of their children,' ; someone
who makes them feel superior? THE OTHER WOMAN
DEAR OW.:
Could be. And my advice is : stay
a way from this type, even if he's
single. He's a throwback to the time
when the prissy, helpless, "pure"
fem~le was prized and the lusty
woman "used." Thank goodness his
breed is disapperi ng fast ! - H.
DEAR HELEN:
After years of trying, my husband
and I finally decided for artificial insemination. No one knows our
beautiful son was derived fril111 a
test tube. We've been told the donor
is healthy and has no heredity
problems, but we don 't know his
name.
Should we tell our child the truth,
and at what age? - PROUD
PARENTS
DEAR PARENTS:
This is your decision, but if it were
mine, I'd forget the test tuve and see
your son as totally yours. What could
_be gained by telling him? - R

wedding took place on July 13 at 2:30
P·ll1· at the Racine First Baptist
Church, instead of July 17 .as was
erroneo usly reported in the Sunday
Times-sentinel. Elaine Metheny a nd
not E laine Matthews assisted with
the serv ing.

COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP)
The
number of auctioneers plying their
trade in Ohio has almost do~b1ed in
the last 16 years, but it is a part-time
job for must of them, a sta~e official
say~ .

About 2,20Q auctioneers, trained
fur selling real estate and personal
property to the highest bidder, are
c~rrentiy licensed by the state, says
Charles R. Carroll, chief of the
division of licensing in the commerce department.

In addition, there are about 450
auction houses and 275 apprentice
auctwneers in the state. In 1964 , the
nw11ber of.auctioneers was 1,200, he
said.
" I doubt that 10 percent in the
whole state are strictly auctioneers, " Carroll said.
Persons seeking licenses must undergo a n oral · and wr itten
examination administered by
Carroll's office. In addition to the$25
testing fee , t~ere is an initial charge

around at net. And on serve, I'm
afraid of it and not jumping off.
" I have to tape it tight but it won't

Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Blakeslee
returned ·his week from visits . in
seve ral states. They celebrated their
43rd wedding anniversary while in
Wichita, Kansas, honored with a dinner at the Wichita Hilton In 's Judge
Riggs Club, hosted by their daughter
· and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Mel
Circle, and the Blakeslee's grand-

REVIVAL TO BEGIN
The Carleton CHurch, Kingsbury
Road and County Road 18, will be
holding a revival from Wednesday to
Sunday, Sept. 7, with services beginning each evening at 7:30 p.m . The
evangelist will be J ohn Lanier of
Junction City , and there will be
special singing nightly.
The Gospel Tones, Charleston, will
be appearing Tuesday, Sept. 2, and
Pastor Gary King invites everyone
to attend.

children, Mark and Marianne .
Marianne accompanied her grandparents to the Nationa l County
Agent's Convention in Oklahoma
City and returned home by bus to
Wichita .
The Blakeslees visited Mrs.
Blakeslee's brother and sister-lnlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Lavender
in Houston, Tex., visited ·a second
time at Wichita, and ITJ&lt;~de a trip to
see Mrs. Blakeslee's sister, Mrs.
Eva Smith, at Hudson Lake, Indiana, before returning home.

-"

MR. SJ;'ENCER HOSPITALIZED
Dwight Spencer, · Chester, wellknown for his work in Pomeroy
selling flowers and vegetables on
Main St.,, was admitted to Holzer
Medical Center Monday afternoon.
Ca rds may be sent to Room 434.

TO MEET WEDNESDAY
The Long Bottom Community
Association will hold its monthly
meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the
conununity building.
·

4 SUBJECT

THEME BOOK
• 96 PAGES
70

• 3 DIVIDERS
• REGULAR '1.39

cou

STENO
PAD

89¢

get any worse. "
Other seeded men to advance included 'No.4 Guillermo Vilas of
Argentina, a 6-ll, 6-1, 6-2 winner over
Warren Maher of Australia; No.5
Vilas Gerulaitis, who topped Vince
Van Patten 6-3, 6-4, 6-ll ; eighthseeded EddieDibbs, who saved two
match points before he beat Bob
Lutz :&gt;-7, 2~, 7-5,6-ll, 6-2; No.9 Peter
Fteming, with a 6-4, 6-1, 3-9, 6-2 vic. tory over Billy Nealon ; No.ll
Roscoe Tanner, who defeated Ray
Moore of South Africa 6-3, 6-4, 6-1;
14th-seed Wojtek Fibak of Poland,
with a 6-4, 0-6, 6-3, 6-4 decision against John Benson, and No . 15 Yannick
Noah of France, who took David
Schneider of South Africa, 6-1, 6-ll, 63.

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APPLES ......... ~.~.~?. 984

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THEME

32 oz. Kraft Miracle_Whip

SALAD DRESSING •••••••••••~:::. 51.69

Hurry on in , 120 pair each store.

2

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14 oz. Kraft Deluxe .

MACARONI D_INNER•••••••••• 2/51.97

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BE
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Store Hours 9 tb s Each Day
Open Fri . Night tiiS :,OO P.M.

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"PRES!OE~T"

$

long, over the calf length. White '
with stripe tops . Fits size 9 to 15.
Seconds, made for a national cha in .

29

45" &amp;60" PLAI 0 FLANNEL
60" VELOUR

.

MENS
TUBE SOCKS

New

ORANGE JUICE •••••••••••••••• 2/51.59
oz. Dei Monte
Sliced or Halves
2/$1 •69
PEACHES ••••••••••••••••••••••••

BACK TO SCHOOl. SPECIALS

·

DISNEY SCHOOL BAGS .................................. ..
BOYS &amp; MENS TENNIS SHOES......................~
99
,._... .....REG. $3 MENS BELTS. ..................................$.

FROZEN

Off Leather

t

$.,. ·- &amp;·
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F-OR YOUR SHEP HEADS
NOTEBOOK
WESTCLOX DIGITAL
PAPER
ALARM CLOCK
This electric. Westclox has
large easy to read num bers. The d ial Is lighted.
'Compact walnut look
styrofoam case . A $12.99

l

·gg~ ·'

A VERY SPECIAL BUYI

CHEESE.. ....~~.~: ..~} 69 CABBAGE .... _._ ..2.' ~:~ 39'

Burgundy Brush-

FOR

200 SHEETS

PRODUCE

Pimento Sliced Individual

2.61

Value ·

to $2.00.

HAM SALAD •••• ~ •••••••••••••••L.~-. 5 1.19

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good variety of designs and colors In
two sizes. Slight irregulars of values

Homemade

MARGARINE ...... :79~

Stick Pen Style

Fits Sizes 6 To-8112 And 9 To 11

WIENERS •••••••• .'•••••• ~~ •••• :.k.g~. 51.29

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Eickrich 12 oz . Packa~e

.

POSTERS

GIRLS AND MISSES

ECKRICH BOLOGNA •••••••• ~:.·•• 51.69

. ·

WEAR EVER

·~~ '6'9~"""

Prices Effective thru Saturday, August 30th

Miracle 6 Stic'k

LAMINATED
- .

PERFECT

Phone 742-2100

DAIRY

77~

Imperfect's from a famous
W.Va. Mfgr . Novelty sayings
and animals . A new look for

pEN c I Lo::t "'""'\

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE

of $50 fur a license, renewable anhousehold goods or industrial plant ·.
nually, a division employee said.
sales, among others.
Although the division employs
The most recent updating of Ohio
three auction, inv,estigators to con·
law prohibiting any person from acduct spot checks, the number of
ting as an auctioneer without a licencomplaints• received is relatively
se occurred two years ago.
·
small.
A measure sponsored by Rep.
" We have very few complaints.
Sherrod Brown, D-Mansfield, inMost are from those who don't uncreased the license fees and the
derstand the auction method . of
amount of the bond required of auc,
selling, ;' Carroll said .
tioneers, auction businesses and ap-·
dne reason for that record may be
prentice auctioneers. In addition, it
that most a uctioneers operate within
altered licensing requirements for
50 miles of their homes and are
apprentice auctioneers and added
known by those in the community,
new s.t andards to be . used for
he said.
revoking auctioneer licenses..
Auction sales are increasing in
popularity, says F rank Weade of r"'T""----....;....;'"""=---4Washington Court House. He is
president of the Ohio Auctioneers
Association, which represents about
700 of the state's auctioneers.
"This is one fonn of liquidation of
an esf.ate that ·can be conducted in a
few hours," he said. ·
A booklet prepared by Weade's
group says fees charged by an auctioneer depend on the type of sale involved. Different rates are assessed
for real estate, farm, purebred
livestock,
weekly
livestock,

Blakeslees visit several states

WOOD

Fas ion

Two , women's seeds were
eliminated in the opening ro~nd.
No.7 Greer Stevens of Australia was
ousted by Kate Latham 6-4, Hi and
No.l5 Betty Stove of the Netherlands
fell to Anne Hobbs of Britain 6-4, 6-ll.
Things went rather routinely
among the men. The top two seeds,
Bjorn Borg of Sweden and John
McEnroe, eased to victory.
Borg, looking for his first U.S.
Open title as well as the Grand

By HELEN BOTI'EL
Special correspondent
DEARHELEN: .
M.e!lssa moved into my apartment
after spending the night with me on
our first date. l didn't invite her:
When I got home from work that
evening, she was there cooking dinner - had talked the landlord into
letting her in. It's been two years,
and .. .
It hasn't been bad, musi of the
time. But she sort of runs my life.
When I protest, she points out that
I'm now out of debt, have quit
smoking, stopped boozing around
and have moved on to a much better
job. True. So I'm a weak character
who needs a nurse, but not on a permanent basis. I don't mind living
together, but Helen, she's got
marriage on her mind. And she's got
a very strong mind!
She's even got the date set. How
can I stop this without bre~kin g up a
pretty darn good relationship? BETTER DEAD THAN WED
(ALMOST)
P.S. Don't worry about publishing
this : She doesn 't read newspapers.
DEARBDTWA:
Outside of being pushy, Melissa
doesn't sound like a bad sort. (But
then, ca n a woman who doesn't r·ead
newspapers be all good ·~)
Seems to me you're more
frightened of marriage than turned
off by this relationship. Think how
you'd feel if you lost her.
Then consider this: Sin ce Melissa
won't drive much longer without a
~~ license", and you evidently don't
mind her kind of driving (most of the

Debbie Powell- Owner, Operator
Bev e·ishop- Operator

The Latest
LOOkS Of

No.2.''

$400

Ife 's about to wl}d but
he 's rather be dead

CORRECTION

PHONE 992-3982 FOR APPOINTMENT
OPENTUESDAYTHRUSATURDAY

First seed survives tough ·opener
By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP):_It will take .
more than unusual conditions, a
tight arm and the pressure of being
the defending champion and No.1
seed to get Tracy Austin upset.
Austin beat Anne Smith 6-2, 7-5
Tuesday night in the ·first round of
the U.S. Open tennis championships,
then described the match as difficult
and somewhat bizarre.
" Now that it's over, I'm glad it
was tough, " said Austin, at 17, the
world's top women's player. " You
have to get used to the planes flying
over. I didn't realize how much you
go by the sound of the ball. It's hard
to judge how hard it 's hit when you
don't hear it. It's weird."
Tracy took today off but one of her
main challengers, second-seed Martina Navratilova, had an evening
match with Lena Sandin of Sweden.
The only other seeded women
scheduled for today were No.6 Dianne Fromholtz of Australia, who also
played under the lights, against Zina
Garrison, and No.lO Virginia Ruzici
of Romania vs. Nina Bohm of
Sweden. "
Jimmy Connors, rated third, was
.'pi.tted against Marcel Freeman at
night, while in day matches, sixthseed Gerie ' IV(ayer played Gianni
Ocleppo of Italy , seventi1-seed
iU!rold Solomon tangled with Kevin
Curreri of South Africa, No.lO Ivan
Lend! of Czechoslovakia played Tim
Mayotte, No.l2 Jose-Luis Clerc of
Argentina opposed Bernie Mi\ton of
. South Africa, No.l3 Brian Gottfried
took on David Carter. of Australia,
and Victor Amaya, the 16th seed,
played Larry Davidson.
Atistin noted the difficulty of her ·
portion of the draw in the $654,082
tournament.
"My draw is unbelievable," said

..

.....-----

SEPT. 2-6

Number of Ohio auctioneers double in 10 years

Helen Help Us

LABOR DAY

' 10To 8

LIBBY'S PUMPKIN ••••••••• ~ •• 2/$Ll9 .

-· ...._ -· ..._-· ..._-· ..._. -· _
POINT PLEASANT ·oR).,A5c&gt;N

_,
I

..

_,

t

:t
... ......

~

�J()- The Daily Sentinel,

Middleport-J&gt;umeruy, 0 ., Wedl)esday, Aug. 27, 1980

Advanced cardiac life support
provider course ·offered

Entertainment heads Dairy Barn
festivities slated for Labor Day
ATHENS
Entertainment
headlines this year's Labor Day Arts
and Crafts Festival to beheld at the
Dairy Barn in Athens Monday, Sept.
I.

Two area bluegras.s bands,
Sucotash from Logan and The White
Eyes Music Club from Zanesville
will play sarting at 10 a.m. Bruce
and Gay Dalzell will add a touch of
jazz singing and strununing bluesy
favorites.
After the handclapping stops at 3
p.m., square dancing starts on the
old brick pavillion with the Not for
Profit String Band playing until 5
p.m.
Emcee for this year's entertairunent will be Tony Coleman.
The main feature of this country
style event will be the exhibit and
sale or quality crafts by artisans

from all over southeastern Ohiu.
Ceramicists will exhibit pottery ,
stoneware and porcelain. Using
local woods, woodworkers have
crafted everything from tables to
clocks to jewelry boxes. Quilts,
pinafores, handknit sweaters and
embroidered artifacts are a few of
the crafts fiber artists will display.
Jewelry, · leather goods and
stained glass items will be for sale
as well as more unique items like
carved birds and handmade books.
For the first time, painting and
sculpture will be included in this annual jurled show.
For early Christmas shoppers a
number of handmade toys will be on
sale.
'
Another(irst for the Barn Raisin'
will be a baby sitting service
provided for children three years of
age and younger. For older children

there will be supervised craft ac·
ti vities. Puppeteer Margaret Hul&gt;'
per will be returning with her puppet
company and will perform at 11 a.m.
and 4 p.m. Storyteller Jane
McGregor, representing OVAL
· Library System will be 6n hand to
entertain the children at I p.m. and 3
p.m. The Children's Opera Chorus
will make their debut at the Dairy
Barn singing a medley of songs
about early Ohio composed of local
songwriter Eusebia Hunkins.
C.J.s Restaurant will be serving
food.
The American Association of
University Women will serve
lemonade and cookies.
Bring lawnchairs for comfortable
seating during ~ntertainment.
Barn Raisin' 80 is supported by
funds provided by teh Athens City
Council and the Dairy Barn.

Alfred UMW meets for August fare

'·

Alfred UMW met ai the church
August 19 and 10 members present
and 12mck calls reported. ·
· The meeting opened with prayer
by Florence Ann Spencer and the
singing of the hymn, " The Light or
the World is Jesus."
During the ·business meeting, letters were read from Rev. Jean
Conover and Betty Ruth Good
!banking the society for birthday
cards. The society voted to donate
$100 to the Church Improvement

Fund.
Rqth Brooks chose William Henderson of Kwale, Kenja, Africa,
from the prayer calendar, and the
society signed a birthday card for
him.
The nominating committee, Osie
Mae Follrod, Florence Ann Spencer,
and Annie Thompson, are to report
nominations next month.
Friendship cards were signed for
Helen Woode and Icy Taylor.
Mrs. Thompson was leader of the

Polly's Pointers

Auto cleaner for table
.
By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - My laminated
plastic table lop is very dull and
scratchy looking. The different
waxes I have used do not restore the
shine and I would like to know what I
could use so it will shine again. SALLY
DEAR SALLY
- Your table
should be improved in looks af·
ter it is cleaned
with
an
automobile cleaner followed by a
. coat or so or,paste
wax.
CRAMER
Repeat the waxing every month or
. • so. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY- Use dental floss
to split a Ia yet in half without a lot of
crumbs. Use a sharp knife to start,
put the dental floss in the slit and
pull through. It splits evenly and
without a lot of mess. - ROLIJTTE
DEAR POLLY - Do tell the lady
who has rust stains on her cement
steps' to take dry powdered cement
and sprinkle it over the steps and
then rub with a sand rock until the
stains are gone. I find this works.
great. - VIRGINIA
DEAR POLLY - We like to start
our redecorating for spring in the
winter, but there is the problem of

not being able to open the doors and
windows for ventilation. We have
found that adding a tablespoon of
vanilla to each quart of paint
eliminates any fresh paint odor. CAROLYN
DEAR POLLY- Many short cuts
come to us quite by accident just as
my latest did a couple of days ago. I
had gathered up three sheets of
fabric softener that had been used in
the dryer and as I walked through
the living room it struck me that
these things should make good
dusters as there is some static in
them. How right I was as those three
sheets, crumbled, dusted the furniture in three rooms. The dust
really stuck to them and no polish
was needed. - VIRGINIA
DEAR POLLY~ When you buy
fresh eggs but still have some on
hand, mark the older ones with a
pencil so as to be sure they are used
first.- JUANITA
Polly will s~nd . you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Pf!'ve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY's POINTERS
in care of this newspaper.

program "So Many Hungry
People." Several members had seen
part of " Halocaust" on TV about th
plight of Cambodian refugees just
before coming to the meeting and
commented on it. Janet Moore and
Nina Robinson read the scripture
selections from Matthew and
James. The society read ''Where
Cross the Crowded Ways of Life" in
unison and then responded to Mrs.
Thompson's reading of the Litany of
Confession.
All took part in reading and
discussion of the rest of the lesson.
Thelma Henderson reported on the
Hunger Network in Ohio, Kentucky ,
and Tennesee.. Nellie Parker reported on a heifer project started by
Dan West in 1944 and still working
distributing farm animals and
poultry to the world's poor. The
society agreed to boycot companies
that e&lt;ploit hungry people and to
help these people help themselves.

Wedding
announced
The open' church wedding of Rick
Walker and Camilla Brinegar will be
an event of Saturday, Aug. 30, at6 :30
p.m. at the Racine Baptist Church. A
program of nuptial music will start
at6p.m.

On two successive Saturdays in
October, an Advanced Cardiac Life
Support Provider Course will be of·
fered in the Holzer Medical Center
Clinic in Gallipolis under the direction of G. Wilson Bowers, M.D. The
classes will be.conducted on Oct. II
and on Oct. 18, from 8:30 a.m. until 5
p.m. each Saturday.
Accor'ding to Dr. Bowers, anyone
who wishes to take this advanced
course in October must hold cer·
tification in Basic Cardiac Life Sui&gt;'
port within the past 12 months, in accordance with the standards of the
American Heart Association. The
two day course is open to any
physician,

Margaret Neuman changes residence
Mrs. Margaret Neuman who for
the past several years has resided on
High Street in Pomeroy, is now
living at Share House, 142 East
State, Athens.
Share House is a home of residential living for senior citizens. It is
especia lly equipped and is the fir st
in Ohio to open. The house has a

WIM TO MEET

A WIM (Women for Informed
Mothering) meeting Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. The guest
speaker will be Carol Layh, a
clinical child specialist who is also a
parent. Members and children are
welcome too.

have private rooms .

Mrs. Neuman's piano wa s moved
ot the House and she continues to
play on Wednesdays at the Athens
Mental Health Cen ter. She
welcomes visitors and cards and letters.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL AUERGIST
Office Hours by Appointment Only

RETURN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Don Erwin and
children, Amy and Matt, and Mr .
and Mrs. Earl McKinley, Scott and
Jennifer have returned from a week
at Myrtle Beach, S.C.

CALL (614)-992-2104

or (304~75-2144

Public Invited!
MC130273 Sub·l MlF

cet

20% off
ONE GROUP OF VELOUR &amp; KNIT TOPS ................ 20% off
For The House Wlfe &amp; Working Gal &amp; Select
GROUP OF 2 PIECE SUITS ...................................... 30% off
NEW FALL L&amp;K COORDINATES ............................. J0% off
',.
'
Use our Lay·A·Way Department, and plan ahead while our selection Is good. The Fashion Shoppe offers
ONE GROUP OF BLOUSES .....................................

lovely fashion• at prices you

CBD

With

Payment Plan.

ALL JEANS················ · ····· ·· ······················· ~······ ·· ·:..... 20%

This summer has seen days and weeks
on end of scorching temperatures.
And, with.air conditioners, fans and .
retngerators working overtime, we know
you are concerned about your electric bill
being higher than usual.
•
We unaerstand your concern, and our
Equal.Payment Plan may be of help to
YOU.

When you qualify for the Plan, we bill
you a fiXed amount each month based

afford.

New Haven

on your average yearly usage.
That way, we can smooth out the ups
and downs of your electric bills and help
you avoid the strain on your budget ·
caused by Mother Nature's unpredictable
ways,
. The Equal Payment Plan works just as well
when It comes to Ironing out your winter
heating bills, too. so, if you like the idea of a
manageable and predictable electric bill
contact us. We'll take it from there.
'

.

THE FASHION SHOPPE
Slvre Hours· Moaday thru Saturday 9:30 to 5:00

YOW' blueprint up before going to wort.
SAGrrtARJUS (Nov. 23-0... !II 1&gt;o not

~te or gamble rinaneiaUy today on .

anything you don't personally control. Banking '
on others may put yo1.1 ln the red.
CAPRICORN (Ott. ~u. 191 Indecision ls
not ooe of your characteristics, but tcxtay you
may not be able to make up your mind on an imporW\1 issue, thus impedlnjj your progress
A!IUARIUS IJu. lit-Feb. IJ) lns~d oi
haYUl( faith ln your own Ideas today, you may
t too much stock In lhose of others and aa.-ept
ts inferior to youn.
· •
ES (Feb. a-MarcliZCI) Be a wary sOOpper
today. Son_lethinc that may appear to be a
ball!aln at flnt glan&lt;e may proye10 be anything
but that once yoo lfUI'clw&lt; it.
ARIES IMtrdt Zl·AprO.IJ)_YOW' mate .may
requite a bit more ·~ aild patience
thin usual today. Even thouah you think you're
right, try .. appredot&lt; his or
views.
TAURUS (April llt-Mty Ill Do not let down
one who loves you and i8 COunting on you today.
Do what need! doing, even if it costs you a degree

Working for you.
\

Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday lQ am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EfFECIIVE THROOQt SAlUIDY, AlGJST J), 191)

nor

oflnconventence.

GEMINI (Mty ZI.J... Ill If your budget's a
bit ottl of balaltCt! at this lim&lt;, it trljly be because
of too lllll:fl1 frivolous interests. Find ways to
trim the lat.
CANCER (Jido&lt; Zl.July It) Challengiml
altuaUons could intlmi4ate you today, althougfi
they ahouldn't and you might baclt off before
really trying. Be tenacious, not timid.
LEO (Jaly !J.Aq. 121 Rother than usessing
things in a losJcal fashion today, you may Jet
yoor omollON impair your Judcment. 11linlt
reaUstlcaUy.

USDA CHOICE

•
;

J

.,,.'

•
•
•
•

WEDNESDAV
ANNUAL FLOWER show of Wild. wood Garden Club, 8 p.m. Wed·
nesday at the Forest Run United
Methodist CHurch.
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT Lions
Club will meet Wednesday at 12 noon
at the Meigs Inn, Pomeroy. All Lions
are invited to attend.
AMERICAN LEGION and
American Legion Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Middleport, dinner at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday followed by meetings at 7:30
p.m. Awrlllary dues are now payable
with the amount being $.'! for juniors
and $5 for seniors.
LONG BOTTOM Community
Association will hold its monthly
meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the
community building.
THURSDAY
TWIN CITY SHRINETTES, 7:30
';'hursday at the home of Mrs. Mary
Bowen.

COMPLETES COURSE
MARION - .Susan C. Burgess of
Ohio 124, Minersville, a General
Telephone Co. of Ohio employee, has
completed a course at the company's Robert M. Wopat Employee
Development Center in Marlon.
In this class, trainees are taught
all phases of billing procedures, in·
eluding customer bill inquiries.
Burgess is a public representative
in the company's Pomeroy district.

MRS. WATSON FALLS
Mrs. Laura Watson . who has
resided for the past several years
with her daughter~ Mrs. Robert
Roush in West Jefferson, fell Sunday
at the Roush home breakliig her hip.
s~ is confined to the Madison Coun·
ty Hospital at London, Room 131,
where she underwent surgery
Tuesday. Cards may be sent to Mrs.
Watson at the hospital in London,
43140.
VISIT HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Russ of
Cleveland have spent several days
here visiting Mrs. Genevieve
Meinhart and Miss Erma Smith.

MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of Evangeline Chapter
1721 Order of Eastern Star,
scheduled for Sept. 4, has been can·
celled~

$ 49

. .

Chuck Steak .......~•..

Social
calendar

The Women's Retreat to be held
Sept. 19 and 20 at the Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly ws announced
when the Women's Fellowship or the
Meigs County Churches or Christ
met at the Middleport Church.
Patty Jeffers will be the speaker
at the retreat. Members sang " Love
Lifted Me" and "Sweet Hour or
Prayer" to open the meeting with
Mrs. Marjorie Purtell giving prayer.
Mrs. Virginia Wyatt gave the
secretary's report, and Mrs. Ruth
Underwood, the treasurer's report.
Twenty-five members were present
and answered roll call.
The program on flower arranging
as given by Mrs. Betty Dean of the
Chester Garden Club. She also
talked about the meaning or flowers.
The meeting closed with group
singing of "He Lives." Refreshments were served: Next meeting
will be Thursday night at the Meigs
Museum with the bost church to be
the Pomeroy Church of Christ.

• Nashville
• Williamsburg
•Gatlinsburg

Store Hours:

.

~RPIO fOrt U·Nov. !!) Unless you have a
delinil&lt; plan oo how lo handle a cllfficult t.sk
today, you're apt to go Dff on tangents. Draw

Women's Retreat set
for September 19, 20

Featuring Color Slides On:

WE'LL SAVE YOU DOLLARS ON YOUR SCHOOL WARDROBE

present.

1

I

Thursday,Friday &amp; Satur~ay August 28, 29 &amp; 30

dar,

GILMORE REUNION SEPT. I
The Walter Gilmore family
reunion will be held Sept. 1 at the
roadsl.de par k on Rou te 33 at 3 p.m.
JOHNSON REUNION SUNDAY
Friends and relatives are invited.
The annual Johnson family
rew1ion will be held this year at the
Those attendl.ng are t o tak e a
_co_v_e_re_d_d_is_h_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _s_ta_t_e_l&gt;a_r_k_in_P_o_rt_Ia_n_d_,o_n_s_un_da_Y_·_

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

· ~ comfng

lh.i
.

tuear rega~ something another has started
It ~~'t have the meall.!l or skill to carry out.
... prove to be your cup of tta.
' VIRGO IAq, INept 121 T1lis is nol a good
to become invalved in lbe financial affair! or
;
or to let them beeorpe immersed In f(lUl'!J .
lJ lthe~ay !!pelts treu.ble. Find out more or wh.at
tMaa b d for you·in the year fllllowtng your blr·
Y Y Be~ £or your copy of Altro-Graph
MaU $1 for each lo Mtro.Graph. Box 489 Radl~
City Station, N. Y. 10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
.
lJBRA (Sept. 23-0c!t %3) Normally you work
~ weU wtth partners or assoclB~s but today
d be an exception, Skip team effOrts for the

CHICKEN BARBECUE
The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department will be having a chicken
barbecue Sunday, behind the fire
station. Serving will begin at 11 a.m.
and continue until supplies are sold
out.

TRAVEL SHOW
(REGISTER FOR A FREE MOTORCOACH TOUR

Thunday, Aq. ZI,IMe
()pportw'llty may come your way

HOMECOMING SUNDAY
Homecoming at the North Bethel
United Methodist Church will be
held Sunday. There will be a covered
dish dinner at noon and special
speakers and singers in the afternoon. The public is invited.

VISIT HERE
Missy Erwin of Salsbury, Md. has
returned home after spending the
summer here with her grandmother,
Mrs. Clarice Erwin. Missy is the
daugber of Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Erwin and her parents came from
Maryland fur her.

BACI&lt; TO SCHOOL SALE

5th Street

resident manager who handles
nutritional needs of the residents
who are free to come and go and

CAA FREE CLOTHING DAY
The Gallia-Meigt Conununity Action Agency will holds its free
clothing day for the low-income per·
sons on Thursday, Aug. 28, from 9
a.m. until 12 noon. Tile ageney 's
clothing bank is located in t[le old
high school building in Cheshire.

Fashion Wise, Money Wise
. Shop The Fashion Shopp~

'·=·

paramedic or

other allied health team member
responsible for delivery emergency
cardiac car~ throughout this region,
so long as the pre-requisite is met.
Of importance to physicians who

ASTROGRAPH

Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy, Oak
Hill Hospital in Oak Hill, Pleasant
Valley Hospital in Pl. Pleasant, as
well as the Holzer Clnic, Ltd ., and
the Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
Registration is limited to 30 participants. Interested persons from
Gallia, Jackson, Meigs, Mason,
Lawrence and Vinton counties
should co.ntact Mary Waugh, R.N.,
in the Education Coordinator's Of.
lice at the Holzer Medical Center by
calling 446-5247 irrunediately. The
charge for the course is $50, which
covers the cost of the course
maierials and lunch on the two consec utive Saturdays. Registration
must be completed before Friday,
Sept. 12, so that materials may be
distributed to the-class participants
in advance of the fist day of class on
Oct. II.

Thursday, August 28, 1980 at AAA Office
33 Court Street, 7:30 p.m . .

Mr. and Mrs. Howard R. Ervin,
Jr., Racine, are announcing the bir·
th of their second child, a daughter,
born July 23 at th Holzer Medical
Center. The infant has been named
Sara Beth. She weighed six pounds,
rune ounces, and was 20 mches long.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Howard R. Ervin, Sr., of Racine,
and Mrs. Frances Carleton
• Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. Ervin als~
:: have a son, Howard R. (B.J.) Ervin,
.• III.
.

..

nurse,

may wish to take the course is that it
carries Category I Credit. It has
been approved for 12 hours of
American Medical Association
credit and also approved for 12 hours
of American College of Emergency
Physician credit. Physicians who
participate should include this information on their report forms to
their medical societies and indicate
that the approved Category I agency
co-sponsoring the program is the
American Heart Association.
Assisting Dr. Bowers as certified
instructors for this advanced course
are James Witherall, M.D., Rebecca
Strafford, M.D., Tim Betz, R.N .,
F.N. P.,. Nancy Cooper, R.N., Bar·
bara Jones, R.N., Rae Ann Gwiazdowsky, R.N ., Dot Neutzling, R.N.,
Connie Thrapp, R.N., and Mary
Waugh, R.N. This group of faculty
members are from Veterans

You Are Invited To A Free

New arrival

11-The Daily Sentinel, MiddleportPomeroy, 0 ., Wednesda .. , Aug. 27, 191!0

$ 29

BUCKET

Cube Steaks........L!-••
RED SKIN

GRADE A

~

Whole Fryers ...... ~

Chunk Bologna....~

CHICKEN BREASTS OR

Drumsticks .........L!·.
CHICKEN

Thighs .................~.

Peaches ..............~.
$ 59

ROYALCRESr

2% Milk ...........:;...
STAR-KIST

C

Chunk Tuna.....6~5.~.
CORONET

'

BOLD DETERGENT
10 lB.
$499
11 oz.
Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at•Powell's
Offer Expires Aug. 30,.1980

L_

$ 99

•

Fr1ed Chlcken... ;.o:.••
3

••

CUUPUN

large Eggs..........~.

C BA~QUET

Paper Towels.....~0~
~-

GRADE A

. ...

· ;;;;;;;i;;;~~· ~~~---=~

CO_LJPDN- J

WHmGOLD

CORONET

SUGAR
5 LB.
$199

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROll.
PKG.

69~
I

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
ires
30, 1980

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Pow.ell's
Offl'r
30; 1980

HYLAND CHUNK
- --

DOG FOOD

$329

25 LB.
I

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

�J()- The Daily Sentinel,

Middleport-J&gt;umeruy, 0 ., Wedl)esday, Aug. 27, 1980

Advanced cardiac life support
provider course ·offered

Entertainment heads Dairy Barn
festivities slated for Labor Day
ATHENS
Entertainment
headlines this year's Labor Day Arts
and Crafts Festival to beheld at the
Dairy Barn in Athens Monday, Sept.
I.

Two area bluegras.s bands,
Sucotash from Logan and The White
Eyes Music Club from Zanesville
will play sarting at 10 a.m. Bruce
and Gay Dalzell will add a touch of
jazz singing and strununing bluesy
favorites.
After the handclapping stops at 3
p.m., square dancing starts on the
old brick pavillion with the Not for
Profit String Band playing until 5
p.m.
Emcee for this year's entertairunent will be Tony Coleman.
The main feature of this country
style event will be the exhibit and
sale or quality crafts by artisans

from all over southeastern Ohiu.
Ceramicists will exhibit pottery ,
stoneware and porcelain. Using
local woods, woodworkers have
crafted everything from tables to
clocks to jewelry boxes. Quilts,
pinafores, handknit sweaters and
embroidered artifacts are a few of
the crafts fiber artists will display.
Jewelry, · leather goods and
stained glass items will be for sale
as well as more unique items like
carved birds and handmade books.
For the first time, painting and
sculpture will be included in this annual jurled show.
For early Christmas shoppers a
number of handmade toys will be on
sale.
'
Another(irst for the Barn Raisin'
will be a baby sitting service
provided for children three years of
age and younger. For older children

there will be supervised craft ac·
ti vities. Puppeteer Margaret Hul&gt;'
per will be returning with her puppet
company and will perform at 11 a.m.
and 4 p.m. Storyteller Jane
McGregor, representing OVAL
· Library System will be 6n hand to
entertain the children at I p.m. and 3
p.m. The Children's Opera Chorus
will make their debut at the Dairy
Barn singing a medley of songs
about early Ohio composed of local
songwriter Eusebia Hunkins.
C.J.s Restaurant will be serving
food.
The American Association of
University Women will serve
lemonade and cookies.
Bring lawnchairs for comfortable
seating during ~ntertainment.
Barn Raisin' 80 is supported by
funds provided by teh Athens City
Council and the Dairy Barn.

Alfred UMW meets for August fare

'·

Alfred UMW met ai the church
August 19 and 10 members present
and 12mck calls reported. ·
· The meeting opened with prayer
by Florence Ann Spencer and the
singing of the hymn, " The Light or
the World is Jesus."
During the ·business meeting, letters were read from Rev. Jean
Conover and Betty Ruth Good
!banking the society for birthday
cards. The society voted to donate
$100 to the Church Improvement

Fund.
Rqth Brooks chose William Henderson of Kwale, Kenja, Africa,
from the prayer calendar, and the
society signed a birthday card for
him.
The nominating committee, Osie
Mae Follrod, Florence Ann Spencer,
and Annie Thompson, are to report
nominations next month.
Friendship cards were signed for
Helen Woode and Icy Taylor.
Mrs. Thompson was leader of the

Polly's Pointers

Auto cleaner for table
.
By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - My laminated
plastic table lop is very dull and
scratchy looking. The different
waxes I have used do not restore the
shine and I would like to know what I
could use so it will shine again. SALLY
DEAR SALLY
- Your table
should be improved in looks af·
ter it is cleaned
with
an
automobile cleaner followed by a
. coat or so or,paste
wax.
CRAMER
Repeat the waxing every month or
. • so. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY- Use dental floss
to split a Ia yet in half without a lot of
crumbs. Use a sharp knife to start,
put the dental floss in the slit and
pull through. It splits evenly and
without a lot of mess. - ROLIJTTE
DEAR POLLY - Do tell the lady
who has rust stains on her cement
steps' to take dry powdered cement
and sprinkle it over the steps and
then rub with a sand rock until the
stains are gone. I find this works.
great. - VIRGINIA
DEAR POLLY - We like to start
our redecorating for spring in the
winter, but there is the problem of

not being able to open the doors and
windows for ventilation. We have
found that adding a tablespoon of
vanilla to each quart of paint
eliminates any fresh paint odor. CAROLYN
DEAR POLLY- Many short cuts
come to us quite by accident just as
my latest did a couple of days ago. I
had gathered up three sheets of
fabric softener that had been used in
the dryer and as I walked through
the living room it struck me that
these things should make good
dusters as there is some static in
them. How right I was as those three
sheets, crumbled, dusted the furniture in three rooms. The dust
really stuck to them and no polish
was needed. - VIRGINIA
DEAR POLLY~ When you buy
fresh eggs but still have some on
hand, mark the older ones with a
pencil so as to be sure they are used
first.- JUANITA
Polly will s~nd . you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Pf!'ve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY's POINTERS
in care of this newspaper.

program "So Many Hungry
People." Several members had seen
part of " Halocaust" on TV about th
plight of Cambodian refugees just
before coming to the meeting and
commented on it. Janet Moore and
Nina Robinson read the scripture
selections from Matthew and
James. The society read ''Where
Cross the Crowded Ways of Life" in
unison and then responded to Mrs.
Thompson's reading of the Litany of
Confession.
All took part in reading and
discussion of the rest of the lesson.
Thelma Henderson reported on the
Hunger Network in Ohio, Kentucky ,
and Tennesee.. Nellie Parker reported on a heifer project started by
Dan West in 1944 and still working
distributing farm animals and
poultry to the world's poor. The
society agreed to boycot companies
that e&lt;ploit hungry people and to
help these people help themselves.

Wedding
announced
The open' church wedding of Rick
Walker and Camilla Brinegar will be
an event of Saturday, Aug. 30, at6 :30
p.m. at the Racine Baptist Church. A
program of nuptial music will start
at6p.m.

On two successive Saturdays in
October, an Advanced Cardiac Life
Support Provider Course will be of·
fered in the Holzer Medical Center
Clinic in Gallipolis under the direction of G. Wilson Bowers, M.D. The
classes will be.conducted on Oct. II
and on Oct. 18, from 8:30 a.m. until 5
p.m. each Saturday.
Accor'ding to Dr. Bowers, anyone
who wishes to take this advanced
course in October must hold cer·
tification in Basic Cardiac Life Sui&gt;'
port within the past 12 months, in accordance with the standards of the
American Heart Association. The
two day course is open to any
physician,

Margaret Neuman changes residence
Mrs. Margaret Neuman who for
the past several years has resided on
High Street in Pomeroy, is now
living at Share House, 142 East
State, Athens.
Share House is a home of residential living for senior citizens. It is
especia lly equipped and is the fir st
in Ohio to open. The house has a

WIM TO MEET

A WIM (Women for Informed
Mothering) meeting Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. The guest
speaker will be Carol Layh, a
clinical child specialist who is also a
parent. Members and children are
welcome too.

have private rooms .

Mrs. Neuman's piano wa s moved
ot the House and she continues to
play on Wednesdays at the Athens
Mental Health Cen ter. She
welcomes visitors and cards and letters.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL AUERGIST
Office Hours by Appointment Only

RETURN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Don Erwin and
children, Amy and Matt, and Mr .
and Mrs. Earl McKinley, Scott and
Jennifer have returned from a week
at Myrtle Beach, S.C.

CALL (614)-992-2104

or (304~75-2144

Public Invited!
MC130273 Sub·l MlF

cet

20% off
ONE GROUP OF VELOUR &amp; KNIT TOPS ................ 20% off
For The House Wlfe &amp; Working Gal &amp; Select
GROUP OF 2 PIECE SUITS ...................................... 30% off
NEW FALL L&amp;K COORDINATES ............................. J0% off
',.
'
Use our Lay·A·Way Department, and plan ahead while our selection Is good. The Fashion Shoppe offers
ONE GROUP OF BLOUSES .....................................

lovely fashion• at prices you

CBD

With

Payment Plan.

ALL JEANS················ · ····· ·· ······················· ~······ ·· ·:..... 20%

This summer has seen days and weeks
on end of scorching temperatures.
And, with.air conditioners, fans and .
retngerators working overtime, we know
you are concerned about your electric bill
being higher than usual.
•
We unaerstand your concern, and our
Equal.Payment Plan may be of help to
YOU.

When you qualify for the Plan, we bill
you a fiXed amount each month based

afford.

New Haven

on your average yearly usage.
That way, we can smooth out the ups
and downs of your electric bills and help
you avoid the strain on your budget ·
caused by Mother Nature's unpredictable
ways,
. The Equal Payment Plan works just as well
when It comes to Ironing out your winter
heating bills, too. so, if you like the idea of a
manageable and predictable electric bill
contact us. We'll take it from there.
'

.

THE FASHION SHOPPE
Slvre Hours· Moaday thru Saturday 9:30 to 5:00

YOW' blueprint up before going to wort.
SAGrrtARJUS (Nov. 23-0... !II 1&gt;o not

~te or gamble rinaneiaUy today on .

anything you don't personally control. Banking '
on others may put yo1.1 ln the red.
CAPRICORN (Ott. ~u. 191 Indecision ls
not ooe of your characteristics, but tcxtay you
may not be able to make up your mind on an imporW\1 issue, thus impedlnjj your progress
A!IUARIUS IJu. lit-Feb. IJ) lns~d oi
haYUl( faith ln your own Ideas today, you may
t too much stock In lhose of others and aa.-ept
ts inferior to youn.
· •
ES (Feb. a-MarcliZCI) Be a wary sOOpper
today. Son_lethinc that may appear to be a
ball!aln at flnt glan&lt;e may proye10 be anything
but that once yoo lfUI'clw&lt; it.
ARIES IMtrdt Zl·AprO.IJ)_YOW' mate .may
requite a bit more ·~ aild patience
thin usual today. Even thouah you think you're
right, try .. appredot&lt; his or
views.
TAURUS (April llt-Mty Ill Do not let down
one who loves you and i8 COunting on you today.
Do what need! doing, even if it costs you a degree

Working for you.
\

Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday lQ am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EfFECIIVE THROOQt SAlUIDY, AlGJST J), 191)

nor

oflnconventence.

GEMINI (Mty ZI.J... Ill If your budget's a
bit ottl of balaltCt! at this lim&lt;, it trljly be because
of too lllll:fl1 frivolous interests. Find ways to
trim the lat.
CANCER (Jido&lt; Zl.July It) Challengiml
altuaUons could intlmi4ate you today, althougfi
they ahouldn't and you might baclt off before
really trying. Be tenacious, not timid.
LEO (Jaly !J.Aq. 121 Rother than usessing
things in a losJcal fashion today, you may Jet
yoor omollON impair your Judcment. 11linlt
reaUstlcaUy.

USDA CHOICE

•
;

J

.,,.'

•
•
•
•

WEDNESDAV
ANNUAL FLOWER show of Wild. wood Garden Club, 8 p.m. Wed·
nesday at the Forest Run United
Methodist CHurch.
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT Lions
Club will meet Wednesday at 12 noon
at the Meigs Inn, Pomeroy. All Lions
are invited to attend.
AMERICAN LEGION and
American Legion Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Middleport, dinner at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday followed by meetings at 7:30
p.m. Awrlllary dues are now payable
with the amount being $.'! for juniors
and $5 for seniors.
LONG BOTTOM Community
Association will hold its monthly
meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the
community building.
THURSDAY
TWIN CITY SHRINETTES, 7:30
';'hursday at the home of Mrs. Mary
Bowen.

COMPLETES COURSE
MARION - .Susan C. Burgess of
Ohio 124, Minersville, a General
Telephone Co. of Ohio employee, has
completed a course at the company's Robert M. Wopat Employee
Development Center in Marlon.
In this class, trainees are taught
all phases of billing procedures, in·
eluding customer bill inquiries.
Burgess is a public representative
in the company's Pomeroy district.

MRS. WATSON FALLS
Mrs. Laura Watson . who has
resided for the past several years
with her daughter~ Mrs. Robert
Roush in West Jefferson, fell Sunday
at the Roush home breakliig her hip.
s~ is confined to the Madison Coun·
ty Hospital at London, Room 131,
where she underwent surgery
Tuesday. Cards may be sent to Mrs.
Watson at the hospital in London,
43140.
VISIT HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Russ of
Cleveland have spent several days
here visiting Mrs. Genevieve
Meinhart and Miss Erma Smith.

MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of Evangeline Chapter
1721 Order of Eastern Star,
scheduled for Sept. 4, has been can·
celled~

$ 49

. .

Chuck Steak .......~•..

Social
calendar

The Women's Retreat to be held
Sept. 19 and 20 at the Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly ws announced
when the Women's Fellowship or the
Meigs County Churches or Christ
met at the Middleport Church.
Patty Jeffers will be the speaker
at the retreat. Members sang " Love
Lifted Me" and "Sweet Hour or
Prayer" to open the meeting with
Mrs. Marjorie Purtell giving prayer.
Mrs. Virginia Wyatt gave the
secretary's report, and Mrs. Ruth
Underwood, the treasurer's report.
Twenty-five members were present
and answered roll call.
The program on flower arranging
as given by Mrs. Betty Dean of the
Chester Garden Club. She also
talked about the meaning or flowers.
The meeting closed with group
singing of "He Lives." Refreshments were served: Next meeting
will be Thursday night at the Meigs
Museum with the bost church to be
the Pomeroy Church of Christ.

• Nashville
• Williamsburg
•Gatlinsburg

Store Hours:

.

~RPIO fOrt U·Nov. !!) Unless you have a
delinil&lt; plan oo how lo handle a cllfficult t.sk
today, you're apt to go Dff on tangents. Draw

Women's Retreat set
for September 19, 20

Featuring Color Slides On:

WE'LL SAVE YOU DOLLARS ON YOUR SCHOOL WARDROBE

present.

1

I

Thursday,Friday &amp; Satur~ay August 28, 29 &amp; 30

dar,

GILMORE REUNION SEPT. I
The Walter Gilmore family
reunion will be held Sept. 1 at the
roadsl.de par k on Rou te 33 at 3 p.m.
JOHNSON REUNION SUNDAY
Friends and relatives are invited.
The annual Johnson family
rew1ion will be held this year at the
Those attendl.ng are t o tak e a
_co_v_e_re_d_d_is_h_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _s_ta_t_e_l&gt;a_r_k_in_P_o_rt_Ia_n_d_,o_n_s_un_da_Y_·_

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

· ~ comfng

lh.i
.

tuear rega~ something another has started
It ~~'t have the meall.!l or skill to carry out.
... prove to be your cup of tta.
' VIRGO IAq, INept 121 T1lis is nol a good
to become invalved in lbe financial affair! or
;
or to let them beeorpe immersed In f(lUl'!J .
lJ lthe~ay !!pelts treu.ble. Find out more or wh.at
tMaa b d for you·in the year fllllowtng your blr·
Y Y Be~ £or your copy of Altro-Graph
MaU $1 for each lo Mtro.Graph. Box 489 Radl~
City Station, N. Y. 10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
.
lJBRA (Sept. 23-0c!t %3) Normally you work
~ weU wtth partners or assoclB~s but today
d be an exception, Skip team effOrts for the

CHICKEN BARBECUE
The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department will be having a chicken
barbecue Sunday, behind the fire
station. Serving will begin at 11 a.m.
and continue until supplies are sold
out.

TRAVEL SHOW
(REGISTER FOR A FREE MOTORCOACH TOUR

Thunday, Aq. ZI,IMe
()pportw'llty may come your way

HOMECOMING SUNDAY
Homecoming at the North Bethel
United Methodist Church will be
held Sunday. There will be a covered
dish dinner at noon and special
speakers and singers in the afternoon. The public is invited.

VISIT HERE
Missy Erwin of Salsbury, Md. has
returned home after spending the
summer here with her grandmother,
Mrs. Clarice Erwin. Missy is the
daugber of Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Erwin and her parents came from
Maryland fur her.

BACI&lt; TO SCHOOL SALE

5th Street

resident manager who handles
nutritional needs of the residents
who are free to come and go and

CAA FREE CLOTHING DAY
The Gallia-Meigt Conununity Action Agency will holds its free
clothing day for the low-income per·
sons on Thursday, Aug. 28, from 9
a.m. until 12 noon. Tile ageney 's
clothing bank is located in t[le old
high school building in Cheshire.

Fashion Wise, Money Wise
. Shop The Fashion Shopp~

'·=·

paramedic or

other allied health team member
responsible for delivery emergency
cardiac car~ throughout this region,
so long as the pre-requisite is met.
Of importance to physicians who

ASTROGRAPH

Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy, Oak
Hill Hospital in Oak Hill, Pleasant
Valley Hospital in Pl. Pleasant, as
well as the Holzer Clnic, Ltd ., and
the Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
Registration is limited to 30 participants. Interested persons from
Gallia, Jackson, Meigs, Mason,
Lawrence and Vinton counties
should co.ntact Mary Waugh, R.N.,
in the Education Coordinator's Of.
lice at the Holzer Medical Center by
calling 446-5247 irrunediately. The
charge for the course is $50, which
covers the cost of the course
maierials and lunch on the two consec utive Saturdays. Registration
must be completed before Friday,
Sept. 12, so that materials may be
distributed to the-class participants
in advance of the fist day of class on
Oct. II.

Thursday, August 28, 1980 at AAA Office
33 Court Street, 7:30 p.m . .

Mr. and Mrs. Howard R. Ervin,
Jr., Racine, are announcing the bir·
th of their second child, a daughter,
born July 23 at th Holzer Medical
Center. The infant has been named
Sara Beth. She weighed six pounds,
rune ounces, and was 20 mches long.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Howard R. Ervin, Sr., of Racine,
and Mrs. Frances Carleton
• Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. Ervin als~
:: have a son, Howard R. (B.J.) Ervin,
.• III.
.

..

nurse,

may wish to take the course is that it
carries Category I Credit. It has
been approved for 12 hours of
American Medical Association
credit and also approved for 12 hours
of American College of Emergency
Physician credit. Physicians who
participate should include this information on their report forms to
their medical societies and indicate
that the approved Category I agency
co-sponsoring the program is the
American Heart Association.
Assisting Dr. Bowers as certified
instructors for this advanced course
are James Witherall, M.D., Rebecca
Strafford, M.D., Tim Betz, R.N .,
F.N. P.,. Nancy Cooper, R.N., Bar·
bara Jones, R.N., Rae Ann Gwiazdowsky, R.N ., Dot Neutzling, R.N.,
Connie Thrapp, R.N., and Mary
Waugh, R.N. This group of faculty
members are from Veterans

You Are Invited To A Free

New arrival

11-The Daily Sentinel, MiddleportPomeroy, 0 ., Wednesda .. , Aug. 27, 191!0

$ 29

BUCKET

Cube Steaks........L!-••
RED SKIN

GRADE A

~

Whole Fryers ...... ~

Chunk Bologna....~

CHICKEN BREASTS OR

Drumsticks .........L!·.
CHICKEN

Thighs .................~.

Peaches ..............~.
$ 59

ROYALCRESr

2% Milk ...........:;...
STAR-KIST

C

Chunk Tuna.....6~5.~.
CORONET

'

BOLD DETERGENT
10 lB.
$499
11 oz.
Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at•Powell's
Offer Expires Aug. 30,.1980

L_

$ 99

•

Fr1ed Chlcken... ;.o:.••
3

••

CUUPUN

large Eggs..........~.

C BA~QUET

Paper Towels.....~0~
~-

GRADE A

. ...

· ;;;;;;;i;;;~~· ~~~---=~

CO_LJPDN- J

WHmGOLD

CORONET

SUGAR
5 LB.
$199

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROll.
PKG.

69~
I

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
ires
30, 1980

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Pow.ell's
Offl'r
30; 1980

HYLAND CHUNK
- --

DOG FOOD

$329

25 LB.
I

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

�.J.~- .t 11 t: UdUJ ~XULuJ~I • •vuuuJt~ourL·J"'omcruy, u ., Wedncsc.Ja y Aug. 27. 1980

DICK TRACY

'·

Dayton woman plans to 'crowd in lots of life'
DAYTON, Ohio (AP )- A33-year·
old cerebral palsy victim who learned how to walk five years ago says
she wants to crowd as much living as
she can in her life.
·
"I will never be perfect and like
others," Susan Montfort said. ''I'll
be handicapped all my life, but I
have improved. And I will improve
even more.' '
Five years ago, she had an experimental pacemaker installed in
her brain. As a result, she was able
to stand up for the first time since
she was~ years old. Eventually, she
learned how to walk.
Ms. Montfort said she had another
operation to replace part of the
pacemaker earlier this year and
took stock of her life' while in the
hospital.
"I looked around at all the bedrid·

COUSINS WITH A COMMON BOND- music- met at the West
Virginia State Fair last Friday following the grandstand performance
by the. Black Knight Band of P!. Pleasant high School. From left, are
Sissy Simpson, daughter of Emmett and Debbie Schwarz Simpson of
White Sulphur Springs, chats with C. R. McDaniel, who plays trumpet
in the Black knight Band and his sister, Christine, one of the featured
twirlers with the 1~member Mason CoWJty unit. Directed by Gary
Stewart, the P!. Pleasant musicians performed for the traditional flag
raising ceremony at noon as well 'as at the evening gran&lt;!stand show.
. Among the band chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. Calvin McDaniel, P!.
Pleasant, parents of C. R. and Christine. Miss Simlll&gt;on, whose grand·
father, the late.Henry Schwarz, was reared in Mason, is a member of
the 14-unit flagline at Greenbrier East High School and plays the flute
iil the East concert band.

A rea families have
weekend reunions
Heilman reunion
The Heilman reunion was held
Saturday, Aug. 17, at the home of
Mildred lhle, Morning Star.
Those attending were Norman
Hailman, West Uberty, the only
living member of e original John
Heilman family; Cecil Heilman,
Canton; Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Midkiff, Magnetic Springs; Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Midkiff, Huron; Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Midkiff, Shawn, and Kelly
Jo, Sandusky; Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Forider, Nathan, and Matthew,

Richmond; Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Relyea, Flint, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs.
Virgin King, Mrs. Neva King, Mrs.
Jessie Carr, Mr. and Mrs. Ziba
Midkiff, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ihle, Lois,
Melissa, Kathy, David, and Paul, all
local.
A prayer song was sung by all
present, preceding a basket dinner
at noon. The afternoon was spent
visiting and singing hymns around
the piano with Nathan Midkiff accompanying.

Curtis reunion
The 73rd annual reunion of the
descendants of Hoit and Mary
Foster Curtis was held at the Park'er
Park, Alexandria, Ohio, hosted by
Betty Rose Duke, Aug.17.
Prayer was given by Elijah John~n and a picnic dinner was held.
Arlending'were Kenneth and Betty
Duke, Annette Duke, Kermit and
Annabel Anderson, Hubert and
Marie Johnson, Keith and Jennifer
Johnson, Alexandria; Curtis Brad' . foid, Arlington; Hobert and Inzy
Newell, Chester; Ruth Muska,
Columbus; Nick and Myra Grenier,
Curtis and Jeremiah, Dayton;
Drema and Diana Rathburn, Mike
and Sandra Luttrell and Anita, Fairborn; Elinor Rose, Mt. Vernon;
Jerry and Debbie Michella and
Melody Anderson, Glenford; Don
and Yvonne Griffith, Howard John-

son, Granville; Troy and Wendy
Hannum, Heath; Donald and
Maxine Bailey, Dick, Gail, Wendy,
Elaine Roberts, Jackie and Jennifer
Ferguson, Wayne and Elizabeth
Chapman, Johnstown; Ralph and
Ruby Bowman, Susie Richey, Gor·
den and Betty Rose, Reid . and
Harold Rose, Randy Rose, Perle and
Margaret Anderson, Newark.
Keith, Emma and Rachel Ashley,
Pomeroy; Lottie Bradford, Clarence
and Ruth Bradford, Racine; Hazel
Curtis, Perry and Sylvia Curtis,
John and Marjorie Brewer, Reedsville; Charles, Donna, Linda and
Bob Johnson, Rising Sun; Charles
and Chris Curtis, Springboro; Elijah
and Barbara Jean Johnson, Toledo;
Brian, Donna and Barry Bradford,
Wooster; John and Myrtle Palmer,
Youngstown.

•

New Haven Women
host prayer retreat
..
'

Tile New Haven Women of the
Church of God held their annual
Prayer Retreat at the Racine Locks
and Dam Park on Thursday, Aug. 14
beginning at 5:30 p.m. A covered
dish dinner was enjoyed by the
members attending.
After the dinner a short business
meeting was conducted by the ·
president, Orpha Field,s. The
secretary's report was given and approved as read, and the treasurer's
report also given. Roll call was
given by the members naming a
weakness they would like to over-

come.
Historian, Bonnie Fields reported
the local had won first prize honors
again on the history book this year.
Also a gold seal certificate was
awarded for the year's work.
A reminder was made . by the
president concerning the State
Prayer Retreat to be held on Oct. 3
and4.

It was reported that the Fall
Group Bible Study will be starting

Sept. 4 beginning at 10 a.m. The
theme this year will be "The
Psalms", Mirror of the Hwnan
Spirit, the study will be on "Women
Called by God".
The program was presented by
spiritual director, Delores Taylor.
She was assisted by Sarah Gibbs,
Grace Cunningham and Orpha
Fields. The theme was "Serve the
Lord with Glasses". The group sang
songs and a prize was won by Loretta Stewart. The meeting closed with
a circle prayer.
Those attending were: Delores
Taylor, Rena Jolmson, Sarah Gibbs,
Orpha Fields, Bonnie Fields, Sue Erwin, Becky Reed, Roberta Maynard,
Grace CWJningham, Eleanor Davis,
Loretta Stewart, Susie Bess, Iva
Capehart, Mary Kelly, Norma
Greene and Pansy Fry.

den f!llks ... those that couldn't even
corrununicate. They tried so hard,"
she said. "When I looked at them, I
asked myself, 'Why am I complaining when I have problems
keeping my balance, when their lot
is so much more severe?"'
. She credits her family for instilling a positive attitude in her at a
young age. "My mother told me
never to let the word 'don't' appear
in my vocabulary. And. my family
held off. A simple thing like buttoning my coat took so long that I
could feel people holding themselves
back from aiding me, but they never
gave in, and sooner or later, I did the
job myself," he said.
Her late father arranged a job interview for her at the Dayton Power
X Light Co. "My dad told them to
just give me a chance. 'If she can't

·Mason news reported.

make it, then don't keep her,"' she 'What's wrong with you?~
Sjlid he told the company.
"I told him I have a handicap. He
For the past l1 years, she has asked me what that was. Then I
worked for the company as a clerk asked him if he had never. seen
two days a week, doing typing, filing anyone on braces or in a wheelchair
and other jobs,
before. He said, 'No.' I blame his
" Work is hard on me," Ms. Mont.. parents that he led such a sheltered
fort said. "Alter a daY's work, I am life. Anyway, I told him not to stare
very tired. I know I have been at and that it was rude to stare. I got a
work, built also makes me feel I am bit angry and told him to just turn
doing something worthwhile and around and walk away."
constructive. I like it real well, and I
Last year, Ms. Montfort fullilled a
love the people I work with."
. lifelong dream when she took a 19Ms. Montford's speech is slightly day European trip with a group of
slurred, but is WJderstandable. She handicapped persons.
cannot balance herself well as she
"It was cool," she said.. " I just
walks, and that brings stares from always wanted to do it. I saved and
onlookers.
saved and was able to. I think you
"I think staring is the hardest should crowd as much living as you
thing that a handicapped person has ca n Into your life.
to face," she said. "I remember not
"Live while you can and do what
long ago, this kid - about 10 or so you are able."
watched me and then he asked me.

GREETINGS, EARmLINGS
GULFPORT, Miss. (AP) - The Martians are corning to, the aid of
the U.S. space program.
More precisely, Martian Metals here is donating money to the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration to help save the Mars
Viking project.
.
.
The Viking project receives readings of Mars' weather patterns
from instrument packages that landed on the planet. The program is
in financial straits because NASA is about out of money to pay for
processing the data received.
Martian Metals, which manufactures lead figures used in war·
gaming and fantasy games, has promised to donate 10 percent of its
gross sales for July and August to the project.
Acompany spokesman said he couldn't give a dollar estimate of the
contribution. But an advertisement placed by the company says
there's another reason to give money: To stave off interplanetary con-

ALL SEATS JUST $1.50

ADMISSION EVERY TIIESO&gt;IY SUO

{]) IJ (l)G11J@Hl2&gt;0J

CIJ

.
NEWS

BIBLE BOWL

(!) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) .. 11

8:30

CAPTAIN EASY
~00/&lt;, We' LL CAMP
HeR&amp; WHII.&amp; THE;

I:M NOT 9UR6 1
BIOL.IcV6 THIS ....

RWJ

THAT

BY

TH6N WE: TRAN5M IT
TILL MY AIDE t3eT5

WORI.D DISCOV6RS
W6'R6 M1551NI3-IT' Ll. 95 LII&lt;E A
PIC'-11 C ~

M~ AI3A I '-1 I

AND YOUR PHOT'O
WILLE!&amp; SPl.A~KED

OU/0: P05-ITION--AFTI:R
WHICH WE:'L L &amp;TART
TI':!!!KI&lt;ING DUE
NORTH:
~y THE
TIME WE'~E­
Re5-CUED, We'LL.

WOR"DWID/0 li&lt;J YOUR
&amp;ANPRA f':ITZINGHAM
JEANS~

ARE "'OU
TFtYIN6 TO
TELl. ME TH/5

WHOl.&amp; ijflll*!
MES&gt;51!&gt;

8:58
7:00

A"'OTHER

PUSUCIT!o'

S.TUNT'!

81: HEADLINE

NEW5i

.

""1

,,A/JD Ttl~ Q\A? I).JfJD APPI..I~
F'CR MY JOB H!;R&amp; WHI*l I t.£FT
... HAD A FUfJ~l'( ~ ...

"Amerlc•thon" 1871
CIJ CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
C1J ABC NEWS
C1J (llJ ZOOM
CIJ IJ 11) NBC NEWS
ill MUSIC
CIJ BOB NEWHART SHOW
CIJ CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS Gueol: Alap Aida .
CJCIJ[W CBS NEWS
C1J WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(llj VILLA ALEGRE
GZJID ABC NEWS
(]) NEWS UPDATE
(]) IJ CROSS WITS
CII PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
CIJ ALLINTHEFAMILY
CIJI12J ID FACE THE MUSIC
C!J LUCY SHOW
CJ (J) TIC lAC DOUGH
CIJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
!liD NEWS
(llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
(]) 1J COUNTRY ROADS
CIJ AT HOME WITH TH£ BIBLE
(!) SKYSPORTSSPECTACULAR
High ~ lly i ng entertainment as the
sky is turned Into a giant sports

'fllllf~ fii}lf . ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®
Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one lener to each squllre, to form·
tour ordinary words.

UJ

" ::-'..:L~--·

1· 1

- - ...

NEARY

I

REFILP

b.

WHA'T 'IOU Ml&lt;SH'T
EXF'ECT iO HAVE WHEN
'IOU &lt;SO SKA'TIN6 Wl"TH

kiNoowsl
) I I (]

Now arrange· the Circled lett;ers to
form the surprise answ~r . as sug·

()

Vesterday .s

I

TH~ &lt;AJ~ ... WHi\T'S
H~ 0011-\0 ~ '?

001HII.l0. HI; OOT

....__, lHE: JC¥.

gested by the above cartoon.

(Answers tomo rrow)

Jumbles: HENNA PIVOT CHOSEN BUNKER
Answer: How the glazier got ahead in his work HE TOOK " PANES "

BRIDGE

craft from 50 different countries will

TK,io..l"S

"/OUR !5ES'T &lt;SAl...

"0 0-rx X] rX X J"

Answer here .-

arena during this novel and faacin ~
sting air show. Almost 11 ,600 air·

be on hand for the Oshkosh Air
Show. the largest aporta·a-wiatlon
event In the world .
IIJ BASEBALL Atlanta Braves vo
Pittsburgh Pirates
(j) MATCH GAME
CIJ WILD KINGDOM 'KIIIers ollhe

byHenr/Arnolda.ndBobLee

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Defender telegraphs play

Rupununi '

0 (J) JOKER'S WILD
CIJ DICK CAVETT SHO.W
®J THE JUDGE

NORTH

(llJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
(1%] ID FAM/lY FEUD

7:5B CIJ NEWS UPDATE
8:00 (]) 1J CIJ REAL PEOPLE An ole·
ph ant that roller skates, avleitwith
HarryBiackatoneJr., the magician,

and home made boat races on tho·

... JEEZ·· I'IHAT

Beaver River in Oregon. (Repeat;
60 mins.) (Closed-Captioned)
CIJ FOCUSONTHEFAMILY
(!) MOVIE -(DRAMA) .,. "Air·

BOY/ AND

DO TH' OTHEI\

@Qrl 11

T' THIN~

FAMILIES I'IANI'/1
START A WAR.

ctJ

liW'iDA

1&amp;70

GZJ ID

EIGHT IS ENOUGH

N8ncv finds herself in the midst of
an unusual love triangle when her
r81ation8hip with a man who wants
to marry her becomes complicated
by a third party, his five -year old
daughter. (Repeat; 60 mins.)
lQ!osed ·Captioned)
Ill CIJ !liD FUNNY BUSINESS
Walter Matthau is host of the retro·
apective, which features more than
100 glimpses of movie lavorltea
tram the beginning of sound in mo·
tion pictures up to the 1950's.
Among the many a tara appearing In
historic films are W.C. Fields, Mae
West, Laurel and Hardy, and the

LIKED

FOR?

HER!

...

~r~olh;~~ ~~~:~ESPEARE
UH HUH 1 Y'KNOW,ED,TH/S
PIT COUI.D"''T BE MORE'N
FIVE FEET DEEP. ..

DINNER THEATRE SET - Mike Costilow as Butterwurth is
shown here encouraging Barbara Wilson to make reservations for the
1920's melodramatic production, "Dracula". Theatre 35 wW present
this comedy at the Holiday Inn; Sept. 4, 5, 6. Tickets are still available
for all three performances. Cali 4-IIHI090 to make reservations for this
"tongue-in-cheek" approach to the recently revived Broadway show.

recently by the National Endowment for the Arts.
The annoWJcement of the grants
was made here in conjunction with
the opening session of a national conference of Chamber Music America.

CHAMBER MUSIC
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) - Seven·
ty-three chamber-music grants
totaling f478,700 and 71 new music
performance grants totaling $454,800
for fiscal 1980 were announced

GASOUNE
. ALLEY
-

Head for the mountains r
Take a qood old-fashioned
campinq trip!

Gretchen wi II
talloi
when

shes

ready!

JIRT(1,~~Q

r-NOWs69

THIS ELEPHANT LEAVES
DISTINCTIVE PRINTS'
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Danner Shoe Manufacturing Co. list the
boots as size 31 Z. President Bill Danner says their width really
.
'qualifies them as 31 zz:l:!..
The new owner of the boots, a female Asian elephant named Tuy
Hoa, probably doesn't care.
Personnel at Washington Park Zoo, where the two boots were fitted
on Toy Hoa ori Tuesday, hppe they wlli let the elephant's cracked hind
feet heal. The feet cracked from too much moisture, and Tuy Hoa will
wear the boots until her feet have recovered.
The waterproof leather boots look a tittle like regular hiking boots,
with treads on the bottoms, laces up the fronts and company emblems
on the sides.

8AROAIN MATINE~S ON SAT 4 SUN

EVENING
8:00

BO!lli LOSER

met.

"Your Viking landers are the funniest things we've ever seen," the
adsays.
·
.
"Tourists come from halfway around Mars to look at the little
blinking lights and hear the funny noises they make. If you turn off
your landers, it'll mess up the tourist trade, and strain the compan!,
and the Venusians will get uppity, and the Martian government will
probably declare war on SOMEBODY. Don't say you weren't war·
ned.''

AUG. 27, 1880

7:30

their vacation at Myrtle Beach. Mr.
By ALMA MARSHALL
and Mrs. Denver Blake, Jackie and
Special correspondent
Dawn, Laura James camped near
HOMEMAKERS HAVE PICNIC
The
Mason
Extension the beach while Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Homemakers enjoyed a picnic at the Kearns, Melissa and 'Scott, ·Mr. and
Mason CoWJty Farm Museum at Mrs. Jack Fox stayed at a nearby
Mason County Fairgrounds on Aug. motel. They all jomed in the fun of
19.
swimming, playing golf arid enjoying good !ood, and all returned
Alter eating, the group listened as
home on Sunday.
Mrs. Landon Smith presented the
lesson on County Government. She
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel
named the various branches of visited over the weekend with their
government, tlleir duties and period daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
of which the candidates are elected.
Mrs. James Loyd and sons at NashSome of the Federal and State port, Oh.
programs are senior citizens, fire
Several Mason residents enjoyed a
full weekend at Cincinnati by at·
department, schools and county
government.
tending the Cincinnati Reds·
The lesson leader asked questions Pittsburgh Pirates game, took in the
as to the duties of various branches activities at Kings Island and saw
of our local government.
the Football )iall of Fame. This
The vari&lt;1us problems facing the gr04p included Mr. and Mrs. John
county, to name a few, included the Sisson, Miriam, Melanie, Marcia
senior citizens program, roads, and Mary Alice, Angie Hood, Mr.
crime and lack of money.
and Mrs. Dennis Harris and Julie,
all
of Mason, Don Roush and Buddy
During a brief business meeting,
Rose, both of New Haven.
the club voted in favor of the
· Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart
proposed changes in the Mason
County Homemakers Council Con- and his sisters, Mrs. Lee Richardson
stitution.
and Mrs. Louise Rosenbaum returned home on Thursday after camThe meeting was concluded with
ping at Canaan Valley.
singing with Mrs. Ray Proffitt at the
piano.
Mrs. Rosenbaum 'liad been visiting
her son and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Attending were Joyce Carson,
Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mrs. Sarah Spen- Jack Rosenbaum and family at
cer, Mrs. Matilda Noble, Mrs.
Wilmington, DeJa. and before returLaurene Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Lan- l)ing home the Capeharts and Mrs.
don Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil · Richardson visited at Wilmington
Smith, Mrs. Aima Marshall and with the Rosenbawns before returMrs. Helen Fell.
ning to camp and home.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Troy went to
Beckley, W. Va. on Saturay where
Mason aod Area Personals
Several Clifton residents spent they saw the Hatfield and McCoys.

On the Light Side

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PLAYS'TwolfthNight'Thlscomedy
of misplaced love. mistaken identl·
ty and revenge stars Felicity Kendall and Sinead Cusack. (2 hrs. 30
mkla.)
8:30 Cil AGAPE
8:58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
0:00 ( ] ) . CIJ DIFF'RENT STROKES
Arnold doesn't know his pet gold·
fish died but he thinks his father is
about to . (Repeat)
(I) 700CLUB
ClliHJBCHARLIE'SANGELSThe
Angela are marked lor death when
Kelly and Tiftany work undercover
as high -priced call girl a and Kria
discovers a shocking secret about
the young woman ahe'e protecting
from the leader of a proatitution
ring . (R_!Peat; 60 mine.)
0:30 (])IJW SANFORD
10:00 (]) IJ (!) QUINCY A gunahot viC ·
tim. treated by a young doctor at an
emergencycllnlc , is dead on arrival
at the main hospital from a second
wound apparently overlooked ear·
tier, and Quincy must find out It the
physicIan Ia guilty ot manalaughter.
(.B.epeat: 60 mine.)
(!) BASEBAll.: RACE FOR THE
PENNANT Exciting baaebo/1 ac·
tion as this up to the minute seriea
summarizes the week 's playa and
pta yera with clips. commentary and
Q!&amp;llt interviawa.
W TBS EVENING NEWS
(J) (l2J Gl VEGAS Dan Tanna'a
reputation and Ufe are on the line
when a desperate casino owner
frames Dan for the murder of two
party girle. (Repeat: 60 mine.)
(Qiosed·Captioned)
D(J)®J CBSNEWSHOUR
10:28 (I) NEWS UPDATE
10:30 (I) MAX MORRIS
C!J CANDID CANDID CAMERA
When you least expect It, AllenF unt
appears wrthhia hidden camera for
spontaneous, uncensored comedy
situations.
CIJ BEAUX ARTS TRIO PLAYS
RAVEL The Internationally acclaimed Beaux Arts Trio performs
one of Maurice Ravel 'a moat impor·
tant chamber works, 'Trio in A
Minor'.
(llJ NEWS
•
10:58 CIJ NEWS UPDAT~""' ""' ...
I I :00 (]) IJ (J) CIJ Ill "'-' ""' U&lt;&gt; . . ,
NEWS
JEWISH voice
C!lMOVIE -(MUSICAL) eu "Hair"
1078
1IJ NIGHT GALLERY
CIJ DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:28 (I) NEWS UPDATE
. 11:30 (]) 1J C!J THE TONIGHT SHOW
Host: Johnny Carson. Guests:
Johnny Mathia, George Segal,
Elizabeth Aahley. (90 mlna.)
Cil ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
ffiMOVIE -{COMEDY) •• "Amor·
oua
Adventure•
of Moll
Fland1ra" 1985
Cllll2&gt;1D
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
Ill Cll U.S. OPEN TENNIS UP·
OATEHighlightaoftheday'sactlon •
the
u .s.
Open
Tennla
ol
Championship .
CIJ ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
!liD MOIO'IE ·(COMEDY) u• "On
The Double" 1861
11:50 (j)(j})ll) LOVEBOAT-BARETTA
·
Love Boat-· 'Take My Grand·
daiJghtar,Pieaaa' A.womanulecta
the ship' s doctor lor her spinster
granddaughter who
prefare
someone alae. Baratla··'Who Can
Make The Sun Shine' Baretla seta
out to nail a drug dealer who has
built up a clientele among pre-teen
children. (Repeat; 2 hra.. 15
mins.)
12:00 0 CIJ CBS LATE MOVIE 'THE
SAINT:Tha-Angel'sEye'LordCran·
more must sell hla famed diamond,
bul hlo nophew qblecta. (Repeat)
'SIDEWINDER ONE ' 1977 Staro:
Michael Parks, Susan t:loward .
1:00
TOMORROW
CIJ GOOD NEWS
ffi NEWS
1:30 CIJ REX HUMBARD

ARE lt'OU ACCUSING
US OF G'!VING VP ?

CIJe

South did and North merely
bid three. He might well have
jumped to game, but he knew
his partner hated to stop at
three and would go on to

8-27-80

+ K J 10 8 4
•1o 8 2

game with any excuse, or

.J4

+K8 4

·even with no excuse at all.
A transfer bid would also
have led to the same spade

EAST

WEST
.A2 .

• 73
.AQ973
• J5 4
• QJ 10
• 9632
.753
Q 10 9 6
SOUTH
+Q 9 6 5

contract.

South won the diamond in
dummy and led the king of
spades. West took his ace and
led the jack of diamond s.
South won with the ace and
led a trump to dummy and
played the jack of clubs. East
covered. South played his king
and noted that West foloweu
with the three.
Now South played his ace.
West played the five. Now
South ruffed a club and noted
the fall of West's seven.
·
South· knew that West was

+

•Ks

+A 7 5

+AK82

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West
East
Pass
Pass
Pass

South
I NT

2+

Pass
Pass
Pass

••

careful to shOl\' an even num·

ber of cards in a side sui t by
playing high-low and thus
decided that .West did not holu
another c)ub. So South simply
led dummy's remaining
diamond.
West was in with the
By Oswald Jacoby
10 and had to lead a heart to
and Alan Sontag
establish South's king as the
lOth winner.
When you use Jacoby transIf South had stripped th e
fer you don't have to transfer clubs completely, West would
merely because you have a have been able to avoid the
live-card suit. Thus, · North end play by chucking his 10 of
elected to respond two clubs diamonds.
to find out if his partner held (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
four spades with him.
Opening lead:+ Q

~ttl M1tJt If'
by THOMAS JOSfPH

ACROSS
1 African nation
5 Rmg
10 Jeannie,
on TV reruns
11 Maniacal
13 "A - to Uve"
14 City in Texas
15 - fog
(muddled l
16 Wonder
17 Aggregate
18 1929-1930 craze
20 Fury
21 Affix
22 December
word
23 Jalopy
26 Darling girl
27 Ineffectual
28 Legume
'29 Frank's
second mate
30 Take care of
34 Topic under
the dryer
35 Cartoonist
Dorgan
36 Cockney
expletive
37 Twist
39ln veritas
40 SeU
41 Malevolent
42 Thomas
of comedy
43 River duck

DOWN

1 Be entitled to
2 Turkish city
3 Type of
secretary
4 Suffix
with ooro •
5 Boasted
6 Brother
of Zeus
7 - had it!
8 calling
9 Guaranteed
12 With pluck
16 ---ile-camp
19 Actress
Jackson
22 Undiluted

Yesterday's Answer
23 Cry out
3() Gertrude
24 Separated,
as threads 31 Gothic arch
25 Poisonous 32 Old Greek
colony
fWJgUS .
33 t'ish
26 Useless
38 Truck part
plant ·
28 Opalescent 39 Old hand

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
.

AXYDLBAAXR

Is I. ONGFEl, LOW
One letter simply stands for onothcr. In this .sam ple A Is
sed for th e three L's, X for /he lwo O's. elc. Sm gl e letlr-rs.

~poslrophes,

the len g th ;-&amp;nd

formati~n

o f the w o rd s nrc

hints. Ea ch day I he r ode lett ers arc different.

all

CRYPTOQ UOTES

DK

EYPWB

KMJW

MJXXDLY
AMLJKLN

KP

KMJW

DK,

NP

OL

KP

R GTTL Y

KP

OLKKLY

DR

WPK

J WN

RPULKD UL R
KP

KYGRK,

- RJUGLQ SPMWRPW
Yesterday's Crypioquole: MEN MIGHT AS WELl. BE
IMPRISONED, AS EXCLUDED FROM THE MEANS OF
EARNING THEIR BREAD.- JOHN S'I1JART MILL
\flO

K i n~

Fulvres Syndicate , Inc

�.J.~- .t 11 t: UdUJ ~XULuJ~I • •vuuuJt~ourL·J"'omcruy, u ., Wedncsc.Ja y Aug. 27. 1980

DICK TRACY

'·

Dayton woman plans to 'crowd in lots of life'
DAYTON, Ohio (AP )- A33-year·
old cerebral palsy victim who learned how to walk five years ago says
she wants to crowd as much living as
she can in her life.
·
"I will never be perfect and like
others," Susan Montfort said. ''I'll
be handicapped all my life, but I
have improved. And I will improve
even more.' '
Five years ago, she had an experimental pacemaker installed in
her brain. As a result, she was able
to stand up for the first time since
she was~ years old. Eventually, she
learned how to walk.
Ms. Montfort said she had another
operation to replace part of the
pacemaker earlier this year and
took stock of her life' while in the
hospital.
"I looked around at all the bedrid·

COUSINS WITH A COMMON BOND- music- met at the West
Virginia State Fair last Friday following the grandstand performance
by the. Black Knight Band of P!. Pleasant high School. From left, are
Sissy Simpson, daughter of Emmett and Debbie Schwarz Simpson of
White Sulphur Springs, chats with C. R. McDaniel, who plays trumpet
in the Black knight Band and his sister, Christine, one of the featured
twirlers with the 1~member Mason CoWJty unit. Directed by Gary
Stewart, the P!. Pleasant musicians performed for the traditional flag
raising ceremony at noon as well 'as at the evening gran&lt;!stand show.
. Among the band chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. Calvin McDaniel, P!.
Pleasant, parents of C. R. and Christine. Miss Simlll&gt;on, whose grand·
father, the late.Henry Schwarz, was reared in Mason, is a member of
the 14-unit flagline at Greenbrier East High School and plays the flute
iil the East concert band.

A rea families have
weekend reunions
Heilman reunion
The Heilman reunion was held
Saturday, Aug. 17, at the home of
Mildred lhle, Morning Star.
Those attending were Norman
Hailman, West Uberty, the only
living member of e original John
Heilman family; Cecil Heilman,
Canton; Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Midkiff, Magnetic Springs; Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Midkiff, Huron; Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Midkiff, Shawn, and Kelly
Jo, Sandusky; Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Forider, Nathan, and Matthew,

Richmond; Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Relyea, Flint, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs.
Virgin King, Mrs. Neva King, Mrs.
Jessie Carr, Mr. and Mrs. Ziba
Midkiff, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ihle, Lois,
Melissa, Kathy, David, and Paul, all
local.
A prayer song was sung by all
present, preceding a basket dinner
at noon. The afternoon was spent
visiting and singing hymns around
the piano with Nathan Midkiff accompanying.

Curtis reunion
The 73rd annual reunion of the
descendants of Hoit and Mary
Foster Curtis was held at the Park'er
Park, Alexandria, Ohio, hosted by
Betty Rose Duke, Aug.17.
Prayer was given by Elijah John~n and a picnic dinner was held.
Arlending'were Kenneth and Betty
Duke, Annette Duke, Kermit and
Annabel Anderson, Hubert and
Marie Johnson, Keith and Jennifer
Johnson, Alexandria; Curtis Brad' . foid, Arlington; Hobert and Inzy
Newell, Chester; Ruth Muska,
Columbus; Nick and Myra Grenier,
Curtis and Jeremiah, Dayton;
Drema and Diana Rathburn, Mike
and Sandra Luttrell and Anita, Fairborn; Elinor Rose, Mt. Vernon;
Jerry and Debbie Michella and
Melody Anderson, Glenford; Don
and Yvonne Griffith, Howard John-

son, Granville; Troy and Wendy
Hannum, Heath; Donald and
Maxine Bailey, Dick, Gail, Wendy,
Elaine Roberts, Jackie and Jennifer
Ferguson, Wayne and Elizabeth
Chapman, Johnstown; Ralph and
Ruby Bowman, Susie Richey, Gor·
den and Betty Rose, Reid . and
Harold Rose, Randy Rose, Perle and
Margaret Anderson, Newark.
Keith, Emma and Rachel Ashley,
Pomeroy; Lottie Bradford, Clarence
and Ruth Bradford, Racine; Hazel
Curtis, Perry and Sylvia Curtis,
John and Marjorie Brewer, Reedsville; Charles, Donna, Linda and
Bob Johnson, Rising Sun; Charles
and Chris Curtis, Springboro; Elijah
and Barbara Jean Johnson, Toledo;
Brian, Donna and Barry Bradford,
Wooster; John and Myrtle Palmer,
Youngstown.

•

New Haven Women
host prayer retreat
..
'

Tile New Haven Women of the
Church of God held their annual
Prayer Retreat at the Racine Locks
and Dam Park on Thursday, Aug. 14
beginning at 5:30 p.m. A covered
dish dinner was enjoyed by the
members attending.
After the dinner a short business
meeting was conducted by the ·
president, Orpha Field,s. The
secretary's report was given and approved as read, and the treasurer's
report also given. Roll call was
given by the members naming a
weakness they would like to over-

come.
Historian, Bonnie Fields reported
the local had won first prize honors
again on the history book this year.
Also a gold seal certificate was
awarded for the year's work.
A reminder was made . by the
president concerning the State
Prayer Retreat to be held on Oct. 3
and4.

It was reported that the Fall
Group Bible Study will be starting

Sept. 4 beginning at 10 a.m. The
theme this year will be "The
Psalms", Mirror of the Hwnan
Spirit, the study will be on "Women
Called by God".
The program was presented by
spiritual director, Delores Taylor.
She was assisted by Sarah Gibbs,
Grace Cunningham and Orpha
Fields. The theme was "Serve the
Lord with Glasses". The group sang
songs and a prize was won by Loretta Stewart. The meeting closed with
a circle prayer.
Those attending were: Delores
Taylor, Rena Jolmson, Sarah Gibbs,
Orpha Fields, Bonnie Fields, Sue Erwin, Becky Reed, Roberta Maynard,
Grace CWJningham, Eleanor Davis,
Loretta Stewart, Susie Bess, Iva
Capehart, Mary Kelly, Norma
Greene and Pansy Fry.

den f!llks ... those that couldn't even
corrununicate. They tried so hard,"
she said. "When I looked at them, I
asked myself, 'Why am I complaining when I have problems
keeping my balance, when their lot
is so much more severe?"'
. She credits her family for instilling a positive attitude in her at a
young age. "My mother told me
never to let the word 'don't' appear
in my vocabulary. And. my family
held off. A simple thing like buttoning my coat took so long that I
could feel people holding themselves
back from aiding me, but they never
gave in, and sooner or later, I did the
job myself," he said.
Her late father arranged a job interview for her at the Dayton Power
X Light Co. "My dad told them to
just give me a chance. 'If she can't

·Mason news reported.

make it, then don't keep her,"' she 'What's wrong with you?~
Sjlid he told the company.
"I told him I have a handicap. He
For the past l1 years, she has asked me what that was. Then I
worked for the company as a clerk asked him if he had never. seen
two days a week, doing typing, filing anyone on braces or in a wheelchair
and other jobs,
before. He said, 'No.' I blame his
" Work is hard on me," Ms. Mont.. parents that he led such a sheltered
fort said. "Alter a daY's work, I am life. Anyway, I told him not to stare
very tired. I know I have been at and that it was rude to stare. I got a
work, built also makes me feel I am bit angry and told him to just turn
doing something worthwhile and around and walk away."
constructive. I like it real well, and I
Last year, Ms. Montfort fullilled a
love the people I work with."
. lifelong dream when she took a 19Ms. Montford's speech is slightly day European trip with a group of
slurred, but is WJderstandable. She handicapped persons.
cannot balance herself well as she
"It was cool," she said.. " I just
walks, and that brings stares from always wanted to do it. I saved and
onlookers.
saved and was able to. I think you
"I think staring is the hardest should crowd as much living as you
thing that a handicapped person has ca n Into your life.
to face," she said. "I remember not
"Live while you can and do what
long ago, this kid - about 10 or so you are able."
watched me and then he asked me.

GREETINGS, EARmLINGS
GULFPORT, Miss. (AP) - The Martians are corning to, the aid of
the U.S. space program.
More precisely, Martian Metals here is donating money to the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration to help save the Mars
Viking project.
.
.
The Viking project receives readings of Mars' weather patterns
from instrument packages that landed on the planet. The program is
in financial straits because NASA is about out of money to pay for
processing the data received.
Martian Metals, which manufactures lead figures used in war·
gaming and fantasy games, has promised to donate 10 percent of its
gross sales for July and August to the project.
Acompany spokesman said he couldn't give a dollar estimate of the
contribution. But an advertisement placed by the company says
there's another reason to give money: To stave off interplanetary con-

ALL SEATS JUST $1.50

ADMISSION EVERY TIIESO&gt;IY SUO

{]) IJ (l)G11J@Hl2&gt;0J

CIJ

.
NEWS

BIBLE BOWL

(!) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) .. 11

8:30

CAPTAIN EASY
~00/&lt;, We' LL CAMP
HeR&amp; WHII.&amp; THE;

I:M NOT 9UR6 1
BIOL.IcV6 THIS ....

RWJ

THAT

BY

TH6N WE: TRAN5M IT
TILL MY AIDE t3eT5

WORI.D DISCOV6RS
W6'R6 M1551NI3-IT' Ll. 95 LII&lt;E A
PIC'-11 C ~

M~ AI3A I '-1 I

AND YOUR PHOT'O
WILLE!&amp; SPl.A~KED

OU/0: P05-ITION--AFTI:R
WHICH WE:'L L &amp;TART
TI':!!!KI&lt;ING DUE
NORTH:
~y THE
TIME WE'~E­
Re5-CUED, We'LL.

WOR"DWID/0 li&lt;J YOUR
&amp;ANPRA f':ITZINGHAM
JEANS~

ARE "'OU
TFtYIN6 TO
TELl. ME TH/5

WHOl.&amp; ijflll*!
MES&gt;51!&gt;

8:58
7:00

A"'OTHER

PUSUCIT!o'

S.TUNT'!

81: HEADLINE

NEW5i

.

""1

,,A/JD Ttl~ Q\A? I).JfJD APPI..I~
F'CR MY JOB H!;R&amp; WHI*l I t.£FT
... HAD A FUfJ~l'( ~ ...

"Amerlc•thon" 1871
CIJ CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
C1J ABC NEWS
C1J (llJ ZOOM
CIJ IJ 11) NBC NEWS
ill MUSIC
CIJ BOB NEWHART SHOW
CIJ CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS Gueol: Alap Aida .
CJCIJ[W CBS NEWS
C1J WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(llj VILLA ALEGRE
GZJID ABC NEWS
(]) NEWS UPDATE
(]) IJ CROSS WITS
CII PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
CIJ ALLINTHEFAMILY
CIJI12J ID FACE THE MUSIC
C!J LUCY SHOW
CJ (J) TIC lAC DOUGH
CIJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
!liD NEWS
(llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
(]) 1J COUNTRY ROADS
CIJ AT HOME WITH TH£ BIBLE
(!) SKYSPORTSSPECTACULAR
High ~ lly i ng entertainment as the
sky is turned Into a giant sports

'fllllf~ fii}lf . ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®
Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one lener to each squllre, to form·
tour ordinary words.

UJ

" ::-'..:L~--·

1· 1

- - ...

NEARY

I

REFILP

b.

WHA'T 'IOU Ml&lt;SH'T
EXF'ECT iO HAVE WHEN
'IOU &lt;SO SKA'TIN6 Wl"TH

kiNoowsl
) I I (]

Now arrange· the Circled lett;ers to
form the surprise answ~r . as sug·

()

Vesterday .s

I

TH~ &lt;AJ~ ... WHi\T'S
H~ 0011-\0 ~ '?

001HII.l0. HI; OOT

....__, lHE: JC¥.

gested by the above cartoon.

(Answers tomo rrow)

Jumbles: HENNA PIVOT CHOSEN BUNKER
Answer: How the glazier got ahead in his work HE TOOK " PANES "

BRIDGE

craft from 50 different countries will

TK,io..l"S

"/OUR !5ES'T &lt;SAl...

"0 0-rx X] rX X J"

Answer here .-

arena during this novel and faacin ~
sting air show. Almost 11 ,600 air·

be on hand for the Oshkosh Air
Show. the largest aporta·a-wiatlon
event In the world .
IIJ BASEBALL Atlanta Braves vo
Pittsburgh Pirates
(j) MATCH GAME
CIJ WILD KINGDOM 'KIIIers ollhe

byHenr/Arnolda.ndBobLee

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Defender telegraphs play

Rupununi '

0 (J) JOKER'S WILD
CIJ DICK CAVETT SHO.W
®J THE JUDGE

NORTH

(llJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
(1%] ID FAM/lY FEUD

7:5B CIJ NEWS UPDATE
8:00 (]) 1J CIJ REAL PEOPLE An ole·
ph ant that roller skates, avleitwith
HarryBiackatoneJr., the magician,

and home made boat races on tho·

... JEEZ·· I'IHAT

Beaver River in Oregon. (Repeat;
60 mins.) (Closed-Captioned)
CIJ FOCUSONTHEFAMILY
(!) MOVIE -(DRAMA) .,. "Air·

BOY/ AND

DO TH' OTHEI\

@Qrl 11

T' THIN~

FAMILIES I'IANI'/1
START A WAR.

ctJ

liW'iDA

1&amp;70

GZJ ID

EIGHT IS ENOUGH

N8ncv finds herself in the midst of
an unusual love triangle when her
r81ation8hip with a man who wants
to marry her becomes complicated
by a third party, his five -year old
daughter. (Repeat; 60 mins.)
lQ!osed ·Captioned)
Ill CIJ !liD FUNNY BUSINESS
Walter Matthau is host of the retro·
apective, which features more than
100 glimpses of movie lavorltea
tram the beginning of sound in mo·
tion pictures up to the 1950's.
Among the many a tara appearing In
historic films are W.C. Fields, Mae
West, Laurel and Hardy, and the

LIKED

FOR?

HER!

...

~r~olh;~~ ~~~:~ESPEARE
UH HUH 1 Y'KNOW,ED,TH/S
PIT COUI.D"''T BE MORE'N
FIVE FEET DEEP. ..

DINNER THEATRE SET - Mike Costilow as Butterwurth is
shown here encouraging Barbara Wilson to make reservations for the
1920's melodramatic production, "Dracula". Theatre 35 wW present
this comedy at the Holiday Inn; Sept. 4, 5, 6. Tickets are still available
for all three performances. Cali 4-IIHI090 to make reservations for this
"tongue-in-cheek" approach to the recently revived Broadway show.

recently by the National Endowment for the Arts.
The annoWJcement of the grants
was made here in conjunction with
the opening session of a national conference of Chamber Music America.

CHAMBER MUSIC
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) - Seven·
ty-three chamber-music grants
totaling f478,700 and 71 new music
performance grants totaling $454,800
for fiscal 1980 were announced

GASOUNE
. ALLEY
-

Head for the mountains r
Take a qood old-fashioned
campinq trip!

Gretchen wi II
talloi
when

shes

ready!

JIRT(1,~~Q

r-NOWs69

THIS ELEPHANT LEAVES
DISTINCTIVE PRINTS'
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Danner Shoe Manufacturing Co. list the
boots as size 31 Z. President Bill Danner says their width really
.
'qualifies them as 31 zz:l:!..
The new owner of the boots, a female Asian elephant named Tuy
Hoa, probably doesn't care.
Personnel at Washington Park Zoo, where the two boots were fitted
on Toy Hoa ori Tuesday, hppe they wlli let the elephant's cracked hind
feet heal. The feet cracked from too much moisture, and Tuy Hoa will
wear the boots until her feet have recovered.
The waterproof leather boots look a tittle like regular hiking boots,
with treads on the bottoms, laces up the fronts and company emblems
on the sides.

8AROAIN MATINE~S ON SAT 4 SUN

EVENING
8:00

BO!lli LOSER

met.

"Your Viking landers are the funniest things we've ever seen," the
adsays.
·
.
"Tourists come from halfway around Mars to look at the little
blinking lights and hear the funny noises they make. If you turn off
your landers, it'll mess up the tourist trade, and strain the compan!,
and the Venusians will get uppity, and the Martian government will
probably declare war on SOMEBODY. Don't say you weren't war·
ned.''

AUG. 27, 1880

7:30

their vacation at Myrtle Beach. Mr.
By ALMA MARSHALL
and Mrs. Denver Blake, Jackie and
Special correspondent
Dawn, Laura James camped near
HOMEMAKERS HAVE PICNIC
The
Mason
Extension the beach while Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Homemakers enjoyed a picnic at the Kearns, Melissa and 'Scott, ·Mr. and
Mason CoWJty Farm Museum at Mrs. Jack Fox stayed at a nearby
Mason County Fairgrounds on Aug. motel. They all jomed in the fun of
19.
swimming, playing golf arid enjoying good !ood, and all returned
Alter eating, the group listened as
home on Sunday.
Mrs. Landon Smith presented the
lesson on County Government. She
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel
named the various branches of visited over the weekend with their
government, tlleir duties and period daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
of which the candidates are elected.
Mrs. James Loyd and sons at NashSome of the Federal and State port, Oh.
programs are senior citizens, fire
Several Mason residents enjoyed a
full weekend at Cincinnati by at·
department, schools and county
government.
tending the Cincinnati Reds·
The lesson leader asked questions Pittsburgh Pirates game, took in the
as to the duties of various branches activities at Kings Island and saw
of our local government.
the Football )iall of Fame. This
The vari&lt;1us problems facing the gr04p included Mr. and Mrs. John
county, to name a few, included the Sisson, Miriam, Melanie, Marcia
senior citizens program, roads, and Mary Alice, Angie Hood, Mr.
crime and lack of money.
and Mrs. Dennis Harris and Julie,
all
of Mason, Don Roush and Buddy
During a brief business meeting,
Rose, both of New Haven.
the club voted in favor of the
· Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart
proposed changes in the Mason
County Homemakers Council Con- and his sisters, Mrs. Lee Richardson
stitution.
and Mrs. Louise Rosenbaum returned home on Thursday after camThe meeting was concluded with
ping at Canaan Valley.
singing with Mrs. Ray Proffitt at the
piano.
Mrs. Rosenbaum 'liad been visiting
her son and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Attending were Joyce Carson,
Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mrs. Sarah Spen- Jack Rosenbaum and family at
cer, Mrs. Matilda Noble, Mrs.
Wilmington, DeJa. and before returLaurene Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Lan- l)ing home the Capeharts and Mrs.
don Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil · Richardson visited at Wilmington
Smith, Mrs. Aima Marshall and with the Rosenbawns before returMrs. Helen Fell.
ning to camp and home.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Troy went to
Beckley, W. Va. on Saturay where
Mason aod Area Personals
Several Clifton residents spent they saw the Hatfield and McCoys.

On the Light Side

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PLAYS'TwolfthNight'Thlscomedy
of misplaced love. mistaken identl·
ty and revenge stars Felicity Kendall and Sinead Cusack. (2 hrs. 30
mkla.)
8:30 Cil AGAPE
8:58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
0:00 ( ] ) . CIJ DIFF'RENT STROKES
Arnold doesn't know his pet gold·
fish died but he thinks his father is
about to . (Repeat)
(I) 700CLUB
ClliHJBCHARLIE'SANGELSThe
Angela are marked lor death when
Kelly and Tiftany work undercover
as high -priced call girl a and Kria
discovers a shocking secret about
the young woman ahe'e protecting
from the leader of a proatitution
ring . (R_!Peat; 60 mine.)
0:30 (])IJW SANFORD
10:00 (]) IJ (!) QUINCY A gunahot viC ·
tim. treated by a young doctor at an
emergencycllnlc , is dead on arrival
at the main hospital from a second
wound apparently overlooked ear·
tier, and Quincy must find out It the
physicIan Ia guilty ot manalaughter.
(.B.epeat: 60 mine.)
(!) BASEBAll.: RACE FOR THE
PENNANT Exciting baaebo/1 ac·
tion as this up to the minute seriea
summarizes the week 's playa and
pta yera with clips. commentary and
Q!&amp;llt interviawa.
W TBS EVENING NEWS
(J) (l2J Gl VEGAS Dan Tanna'a
reputation and Ufe are on the line
when a desperate casino owner
frames Dan for the murder of two
party girle. (Repeat: 60 mine.)
(Qiosed·Captioned)
D(J)®J CBSNEWSHOUR
10:28 (I) NEWS UPDATE
10:30 (I) MAX MORRIS
C!J CANDID CANDID CAMERA
When you least expect It, AllenF unt
appears wrthhia hidden camera for
spontaneous, uncensored comedy
situations.
CIJ BEAUX ARTS TRIO PLAYS
RAVEL The Internationally acclaimed Beaux Arts Trio performs
one of Maurice Ravel 'a moat impor·
tant chamber works, 'Trio in A
Minor'.
(llJ NEWS
•
10:58 CIJ NEWS UPDAT~""' ""' ...
I I :00 (]) IJ (J) CIJ Ill "'-' ""' U&lt;&gt; . . ,
NEWS
JEWISH voice
C!lMOVIE -(MUSICAL) eu "Hair"
1078
1IJ NIGHT GALLERY
CIJ DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:28 (I) NEWS UPDATE
. 11:30 (]) 1J C!J THE TONIGHT SHOW
Host: Johnny Carson. Guests:
Johnny Mathia, George Segal,
Elizabeth Aahley. (90 mlna.)
Cil ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
ffiMOVIE -{COMEDY) •• "Amor·
oua
Adventure•
of Moll
Fland1ra" 1985
Cllll2&gt;1D
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
Ill Cll U.S. OPEN TENNIS UP·
OATEHighlightaoftheday'sactlon •
the
u .s.
Open
Tennla
ol
Championship .
CIJ ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
!liD MOIO'IE ·(COMEDY) u• "On
The Double" 1861
11:50 (j)(j})ll) LOVEBOAT-BARETTA
·
Love Boat-· 'Take My Grand·
daiJghtar,Pieaaa' A.womanulecta
the ship' s doctor lor her spinster
granddaughter who
prefare
someone alae. Baratla··'Who Can
Make The Sun Shine' Baretla seta
out to nail a drug dealer who has
built up a clientele among pre-teen
children. (Repeat; 2 hra.. 15
mins.)
12:00 0 CIJ CBS LATE MOVIE 'THE
SAINT:Tha-Angel'sEye'LordCran·
more must sell hla famed diamond,
bul hlo nophew qblecta. (Repeat)
'SIDEWINDER ONE ' 1977 Staro:
Michael Parks, Susan t:loward .
1:00
TOMORROW
CIJ GOOD NEWS
ffi NEWS
1:30 CIJ REX HUMBARD

ARE lt'OU ACCUSING
US OF G'!VING VP ?

CIJe

South did and North merely
bid three. He might well have
jumped to game, but he knew
his partner hated to stop at
three and would go on to

8-27-80

+ K J 10 8 4
•1o 8 2

game with any excuse, or

.J4

+K8 4

·even with no excuse at all.
A transfer bid would also
have led to the same spade

EAST

WEST
.A2 .

• 73
.AQ973
• J5 4
• QJ 10
• 9632
.753
Q 10 9 6
SOUTH
+Q 9 6 5

contract.

South won the diamond in
dummy and led the king of
spades. West took his ace and
led the jack of diamond s.
South won with the ace and
led a trump to dummy and
played the jack of clubs. East
covered. South played his king
and noted that West foloweu
with the three.
Now South played his ace.
West played the five. Now
South ruffed a club and noted
the fall of West's seven.
·
South· knew that West was

+

•Ks

+A 7 5

+AK82

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West
East
Pass
Pass
Pass

South
I NT

2+

Pass
Pass
Pass

••

careful to shOl\' an even num·

ber of cards in a side sui t by
playing high-low and thus
decided that .West did not holu
another c)ub. So South simply
led dummy's remaining
diamond.
West was in with the
By Oswald Jacoby
10 and had to lead a heart to
and Alan Sontag
establish South's king as the
lOth winner.
When you use Jacoby transIf South had stripped th e
fer you don't have to transfer clubs completely, West would
merely because you have a have been able to avoid the
live-card suit. Thus, · North end play by chucking his 10 of
elected to respond two clubs diamonds.
to find out if his partner held (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
four spades with him.
Opening lead:+ Q

~ttl M1tJt If'
by THOMAS JOSfPH

ACROSS
1 African nation
5 Rmg
10 Jeannie,
on TV reruns
11 Maniacal
13 "A - to Uve"
14 City in Texas
15 - fog
(muddled l
16 Wonder
17 Aggregate
18 1929-1930 craze
20 Fury
21 Affix
22 December
word
23 Jalopy
26 Darling girl
27 Ineffectual
28 Legume
'29 Frank's
second mate
30 Take care of
34 Topic under
the dryer
35 Cartoonist
Dorgan
36 Cockney
expletive
37 Twist
39ln veritas
40 SeU
41 Malevolent
42 Thomas
of comedy
43 River duck

DOWN

1 Be entitled to
2 Turkish city
3 Type of
secretary
4 Suffix
with ooro •
5 Boasted
6 Brother
of Zeus
7 - had it!
8 calling
9 Guaranteed
12 With pluck
16 ---ile-camp
19 Actress
Jackson
22 Undiluted

Yesterday's Answer
23 Cry out
3() Gertrude
24 Separated,
as threads 31 Gothic arch
25 Poisonous 32 Old Greek
colony
fWJgUS .
33 t'ish
26 Useless
38 Truck part
plant ·
28 Opalescent 39 Old hand

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
.

AXYDLBAAXR

Is I. ONGFEl, LOW
One letter simply stands for onothcr. In this .sam ple A Is
sed for th e three L's, X for /he lwo O's. elc. Sm gl e letlr-rs.

~poslrophes,

the len g th ;-&amp;nd

formati~n

o f the w o rd s nrc

hints. Ea ch day I he r ode lett ers arc different.

all

CRYPTOQ UOTES

DK

EYPWB

KMJW

MJXXDLY
AMLJKLN

KP

KMJW

DK,

NP

OL

KP

R GTTL Y

KP

OLKKLY

DR

WPK

J WN

RPULKD UL R
KP

KYGRK,

- RJUGLQ SPMWRPW
Yesterday's Crypioquole: MEN MIGHT AS WELl. BE
IMPRISONED, AS EXCLUDED FROM THE MEANS OF
EARNING THEIR BREAD.- JOHN S'I1JART MILL
\flO

K i n~

Fulvres Syndicate , Inc

�15- The DailySentinel, Mtduleport-Pvmeru) . o , Wcdn esd~y, A~g 27, 1980

14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug '1:1,1980
By The Associated Press
Georgians voted to g1ve Sen. Her·
man Talmadge a chance to run for
re-election, despite his Senate censure for financial misconduct, wh1le
Oklahomans set up runoffs by
denying majority support to any
candidate 10 U.S. Senate prunartes.
In Alaska, Incomplete returns
from Tuesday's balloting showed
voters favoring a proposal to set up a
corrurussion that would rev1ew the
state's relations with the federal
government. The conunission would
study the possibility of changmg the
state back to a temtory or even
seceeding from the union.
Alaskans were also choosing between Sen. Mike Gravel and two

Talmadge
•
recerves
second
chance

32

challengers seeking the Democratic
senatorial nomination. Si•
Republicans were vying for their
party's endorsement. Two candidates sought the Democratic nod
to oppose Rep. Don Young, who was
unopposed for the Republican endorsement.
Talmadge, a Democrat who has
spent 23 years in the Senate, faced
Lt. Gov. Zell Miller in a runoff election that was set up when none of the
siK candidates received a majority
of the vote in the Aug. 5 primary.
W1th returns m from 2,183, of the
state's 2,251 precmcts, Talmadge
had 58 percent of the vote with
530,489 to42 percent or 385,057 and 42
percent for Miller.

Talmadge, who was censured by
the Senate for nushandling officeexpense funds and campaign
money, wtll face Republican Matt
Mattlingly, a St. Simons Island
businessman, in November.
Wtth 158 of the 421 precmcts repor·
ltng in the Alaskan ·referendum,
there were 13,398, or 56 percent, yes
votes, while there were 10,525, or 44
percent, no votes.
Congress is considering legislation
to place more than 100 nullion acres
of federal land m the state under
protection as conservation areas.
The legislation has been bitterly
crtttcized by proponents of greater
development, who maintain the
federal government is meddling in
the state's affa1rs.
.

,.

SINGING DOG HELPS
CLINCH HOG-&lt;:ALLING PRIZE .
INDIANAPOLIS (APl - Bob Ertel, accompanied by bls singing
dog, won the annual hog-ull.IDg contest at tbe IDdlaaa Stale Fair. But
bls wife, Pat, bad to settle for seeond place In tbe busbaod-calllDg competition.
Ertel of Batesville, Ind., was using the staDdard "Sooooeeeeeee!"
call in Sunday's contest when the family dog ran up from the audience
and joined In with a chorus of howls.
The louder Ertel yelled, the louder the dog howled. The combination
proved unbeatable.
Ertel's wife finished seeond to Unda Knott of GilSport, Ind., In the
hushand-calllng contest
Mrs. knott, wbo entered the stale contest at her husband's urging,
hollered oat her husband's first aad middle names, David Harry, then
added a long "Sooooeeeeeee" a11d two short "Soooeeees" at the end. .
"I was embarrassed, alld shocked that I won," Ml'll. Knott said.
"But my husband said If 1 didn't win I'd just be the second biggest
mouth In our county, so I decided I'd better try towta."

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
ARABQREements
3 __ _,
A'-'n,_,
no
" u"'n"'c"e"-m"'e,_,n,_,t"s_
I PAY h1ghest pr 1ces
poss1ble for gold and Sliver
, co•ns, rmgs, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Moddleport
PICKING UP a poano in
your area
Responsible
party may take over low
morthly payments
Call
credot manager at 773-512S.
Gray's P1ano and Organ,
Co
CANDY SUPPLIES on
sale.
Ann's
Cake
Decor•ting Supplies, 50716
Osborn Rd ., Reedsvdle,
Oh 667·6485
SHOOTING

Forked

Run

MATCH .

Sportsman

Club Startong Aug. 31 each
sUn. there after. Factory
choked guns only

Announcements

3

Announcements

3

P1ano Tun1ng
Lane
Daniels 742-2951
Tun1ng
and Repa1r Serv1ce s1nce
1965 If no answer phone
992 2082 .

WILL
YOUR
House
Withstand another hard
wmter? How about that
roof and barn, that snow
gets pretty heavy! Let us
do any general main
tanence work for you, patn·
ting, gutter repair, patch
work, odds and ends, so you
can sit back in front of that
warm fire thts winter and
not have to worry. Call992
3941,992-3519, or 992·S126
and we'll come and g1ve
you a tree esttmate.
References are provided
upon request.

BAKERS BUSY
BEE
CERAMICS,
Tuppers
Plams, IS hav1ng the1r annual fmished ceram1c sale
on Saturday, August 30
from 9·5.
Bring your
Chnstmas 91ft lists. Very
resonable pr 1ces on lots of
n1ce 1tems. Also a green
ware sale same day at 30
percent off.
Bring your
own boxes for greenware
Paul1ne Baker

FREESTONE
canning
peaches; $9 .98 bushel,
bnng your own contamers.
Bob's Market, Mason,
W.Va. 773-5721.

MASON HOME REPAIR
heat 1ng and air con
dttton1ng furnace cleanmg,
plumb1ng, repair, residen
ttal electr1c w1nng, sales
servtce and tnstallat1on .
992·2364.

Announcements

3

Middlepor~OhjO
SUPERMA K;JT
8300 Squl Ft.
ForSaleorLease

ADDRESSERS WANTED
1mmed1ate!y! Work at
home no
expenence
necessary· excellent pay.
Wnte Amer1can Serv1ce,
8350 Park Lane, Suite 127,
Dallas, TX 75231

SEPTIC TANKS I Cia Ilia
County
Certofoed).
Le;ach beds, water and
gd' line, electriC hnes,
pole buildings. Reese
Trenchong and Backhoe
Service, 367-7560.

BABYSITTER NEEDED
in Racine area For one
school age ch1ld and one tn·
fant . Needed before school
starts 949-2624

4----GiVeawav--PUPPtEs. PART shepherd
and part lnsh Setter. 949·

2437

No Waist Seam

Yard Sale

YARD SALE at the Vic
Brown residence on St Rt .
124 in Mtnersv1ile Antiqu e
brass bed and chest, auto

26194

(6141837·8182

and 29th.

1

Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon1 Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable.

.r
:I

~ ·~

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
Phone~---------------

'1
I

I
I
•I
I
I
1

1
1
{
I

) Wanted
) For Sale
) Announcement
&gt; For Rent

1. - - - - -

2

I
_ _ _ __
I 6. _ _ _ __
I 7. _ _ _ __
I 9.
B. - - - - _ _ _ __
4
5.

1

I

10.· ----~

I

11 .
12

•'I
I
I
t

1
.. I

I
I....,_

for Rent

4-GIVWWI'I

«-Apartment tor Rent
45--FRoomt

t-Lostand '•tJnd

4....._Sput ror R " '
u-wanttCI to Rtnt

r- Yard S.te
t-Publlc Sate
&amp;Auction
~Wanted to Buy

41--Et~ulpmtnl

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

si-Houstholcl Goocls

n-cl, TV, RadiO ECIUI.,mtnt

,1.,...Htlpw1 nttd

st-AntlqUII

12-SIII.!IMcl Wantttct
IJ-Insuranca
14-luslnHI Tralnlnt

~PtbforS.It

15--Schoolslnslrvellon

72-Trucks tor s...

IUslntu

U-LhiHIOCk
,._Hay 1 Grain
U- Sted &amp; Ftrtlllztr

u-Pro,tutonat
S.rvlc.s

e TRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE
11-Hctmll for Saltf

71-Autos tor Stlf

7)-Yint 14 W.O.
1'4-Mottrcyclet
75Auto Ptrts

32-MotHitttomll
tor Sala
lJ-Farmslor Slit
34-luslnns lulldlnts
U-LotsAAcrtlta
lt-Raal••tatawantt'CI
37-Raaltors

22. - -- - - - 1
23. - - - - - - 1
25.

41-Farm !(lulpmtnt

111-W•nmt to lu~

. OPIIOrtllnlty
22-Monay to Lou

I
I
I
I
I

20.

24.

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

eFINANCtAL

17.
18.
19.

- -- ' - - -- l
l
I
- - - - --

&amp; ,.,,..... , •••
77-AutoR-Ir

11-Homttm,rovtmtllts

4 fi .M. Dally
12 NOOf'l Saturd.,.

28. - - - - - -

29. ------

htrMoniay

31 _,...._ __

1,

12-Piumblnt&amp; Excavttlng

IJ-Iutvttlfll
M-lt.drlctl
&amp; Retrl..,ttion
15-GtnHII H1ullnt

14

35.

II

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. •sJ69
..,

..

c ....

,......
100

,.,..

1

1·
It

I

I '
~

j

....

Chlrfl
1.25

'·"
wordlll4 cents per worcl INr

2.2S
l . 75

Itch word tYtr tllt'mlnlmum 1!
d1y
Ads rlfl,nlng othtr tftlln COI'IttcVIIIIt diYI will be ChlrJtd tt tltt 1 dty

1

1

lrl memory. C1rd ot Thtnll• •IJd Obltuer~ ·
mllllmum Caslllllld\llllltt

• ctfltl

.,., word,

SJ,OCI

Mobile HomttiiHincl YMdSIItsarttcu,ttd onlywlthctlh wltll
orhr 25 ctnt &lt;har91 lor 1d1 urrylno •o• Number In Cart 01' TIM
S.ntlntl.

PORCH SALE , Wednesday
and Thursday, from 12 6 at
Rose Hill, Pomeroy, Oh10 .
Reclmer, 20' girl's bike,
coleman heater, Children's
games and toys, small apPlia nces, d 1shes, ha 1r
dryer, and
women's
clolhong.
AUTUMN SALE August
27 ,28,291h 667 3866, two
piece bedroom su1te, one
stuffed chair, one rocker,
one workshop table, one
dusk to dawn light. Other
1tems to numerous to men ·
lion. Turn right at the light
at Tuppers Plaons on 681 go
two m11es, turn at road 270,
at fire tower and one mile
beyond.
2 FAMILY PORCH Sale.
Aug . 29 &amp; 30 . mile west of
Forked Run State Park on
Route 124 Grant Young

'I•

FRIDAY , August 27, I rom
9 3 north on Route 7 to F1ve
Po1nts, turn left onto Flat·
swoods Road, go three
tenths mile, white house on
tell
Beautoful ladoes
clothes,
some
men's
clothes, glassware, pat
terns, fab ric, some fur
niture
Ra1n ca ncels No
dealers inv1ted .

Publi~Sale

&amp; Auction

IN-M H, AeNir

2d•~·
Jd·~·

4days

LAST OF THE great yard
sales, great fall barga1ns
August 29 and 30th tnree
mtles on 681 east of Oar ·
wm .
Follow s1gns!
Clothes ,
c hain
saw
(husquarna), copper kef
tie, v1deogame, and many
more unbelievable good
buys 992·7709 or 992 ·2016 .
Come on out and see what
its about!

8

17-Uphollttry

1 dty

3-t. _ _ _ __

Yard Sale

--- - _.... - - - - -

Rates and Other Information

33 . ,..,.--.,...,-- - -

13.

7

BASEMENT SALE, September 2 4 from 9-4 at lOS
Wright Street, Pomeroy.
Third house on the right.

eSE'RVtCES

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

26.
27. - - - - - -

Printed Patlern

54-Mltc. MtrchandiH
S~lulldlnt Suppllts

ItRlldlo, TV
&amp;CIRt!Nir
11-Wanttcl To Do

11-

tor A.ent

15 Words or Under

,~- ------

•

0-MObUa HOmll

5-HappyAdl

J2 . ..J.:__ _ _ __

I :!:
I
_1

2..- lnMamorlam

These cash rates
include discount

eRENTALS
•U-HOUIII for Rtnt

3-.l!nnouncements

21. - - - - - 1

I' 3. -- - - •

eANNOUNCEMENTS
1-C.,-d of Thanks

Print one word In each
space below. Each in·
itial or group of figures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number If used .
You'll get better results
if you describe fully,
g1ve price. The Sentonel
reser~Jes the right to
classify, ed1t or reject
any ad Your ad will be
put in the proper
classifocatlon If you ' ll
1 check the proper box
1 below.

,I

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

Adctreu~-------­

12

GET VALUABLE traonong
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
t1nel route earner Phone
us righl away and get on
the elogoboloty lost at 992·
2156or992 21S7

r:-----------------------"t
:I.
Curb lnflatlcn.
can~~d~!r.\':.'~:
~~~~~!~· Fr~~bg~s~gu~~~
1
:: Pay Cash fot
!: ,.-~"""-='-""---"~---_ - - - - ;
Classlfleds and 1
WANT AD INFORMATION
Savell I
PHONE 992-2156
1•
1

-

Help Wanted

11

SALE 20% off all toshong
tackle . Aug . 25 to Sept 7
Rods, reels, tackle boxes,
marme supplies, lures No
lawaway on sale atems.
Open 9 to 6 daoly . The
Tackle Box, Sr. 124,
Syracuse, Oh 992 6193 .

7

-~-~----------"":"'"""T, loo.~------------~-------1

OSStE 1S AUCTION House,
20 N 2nd Street, Moddleport, Ohio. We sell one
piece or entire households.
New, used, or antiques, m
eluding homes, farms, or
loquodatoon sales. Get top
dollar List w1th the man
who has over 25 years in
the new, used and antique
turn1ture business .
We
take cons1gnments. For m·
formation and PICkup sed
viCe, call 992 6370 or 1n
West Vorgin oa 773 -5471 Sale
every Fr~day n1ght at 7
p.m . Auct1oneer Howard
Beasley, apprent1ce auc
t1oneer, Osby A Marttn
Ina IUQk)

AffE NT oO N
( OM
PORT A N r TO YOU I Woll
P&lt;lY Cdsh or certtli ed check
l or ant1ques and coll ec
l1bles or ent 1re es tates
Not h tn9 too l arge A l so,
yu ns, pocke t wMc hes ,Jnd
com collec t, ons C.1ll 614
76'/ :i l67or55/34 l l

, MOBIL E home lor sale
$6500, land co ntract w 1th
$500 down or wtll negot1ate
cash
sale
Also one
bedroom , built m bunk,s,
•sxto mobole home, S2BOO.
land contrac t. $300 down
Wnte J Bowland. 15068
Emptre Rd, Thorn vtlle,
OH . 43076 .
--- ---- - - - ~-

1975 Western M anston 14 x
70 thr ee bedroom , 1971
· Cameron, 14 x 64 two
bedroom , 1971 Liber t y, 14 x
65 two bedroom . 1968
Atlan t1c,
12 &gt;&lt; 60 two
' bedroom ,
1968
N ew
Moon, 12 x 60 w1th ex pando,
two bedroom , 1967 Buddy,
12 x SO, 2 bedroom •
B&amp; S
Mob1l e Home Sa les
Pt Pleasant, w VA .
67S 4424

"""'"'"

'SER.AAA~

.it~ELTZE~ .

M1sc. Merchan•se
EARLY AMERICA N ~o l a,
90' l ong, be1ge, go ld , green,
fl ora l ny lon co ver Goo d
condtl lon Pl1one 949 23 61
$1 00 00.

WILLVA SEND

WOFI- •

ME ONE OF 'THOS~

,..y.

lE~ SHII'tTS '10U
~VEOWff'!.EASS ...

t440S'~Y.,

KE NWOOD rAPE DEC K,
ampld1e r ,
tur nt ab l e,
speakers $600 L ess than 6
mon t hs ol d 992 6190

1'/ILLYA, HUH?

LA DlE COMPLETE 12 l d
wa rdr obe
Clo t hes a r e
bra nd new m ost st1ll have
lags on Reason tor sel l1ng,
Don' t t 1t Incl udes L1ll1 A nn
su tt s. John Mey er &amp;
M anhatten blou ses, B1ll
L 1ce
d es t gner
r ob e.
Chnst1an D1or dresses, etc
992-3283

8

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auct1on

BRADFORD, Auctooneer,
Complete Servtce Phone
949 2487 or 949 2000. racone,
Oh1o, Critt Bradford
9

Wanted to Buy

WANTED TO BUY, glass
door or one half a glass
door 32 mches wide by 78
onches long . 742 -2545

4663
SIZES

8-18

t.'f-/1..-.

-/1.1-s

ThiS !&lt;Itt style (no waost seam)
has graceful gathers rad1at1ng
out from slnng·tted necklone to
shoulders Wear ot belted or lree,

MEDICAL
labratory
techtnician, full or part
t1me positions avatlable for
MT, MLT, or CLA, salary
commensurate wtth ex ·
perience. Please contact
the Labratory Superv1sor,
at Veterans Memorial
Hospital ,
Mulberry
Hetghts~ Pomeroy, Ohio at
614 992 -2104 est 55 Equal
Opportunity Employer.

Pnnted Pattern 4663 Mosses
S11es 8, 10, 12, 14, 16 18 S01e
12 (bust 34) takes 2 518 yards
45-lnch fabroc.
$1.75 lw uch patient. Add 50e

--- - -- - - -

Artno Adlms

ted tor approx1mately one
month . P 0 . Box 268 1n M1d
dleport, Ohoo . An Equal
Opportunoty Employer

- -- --

~ --- - ----

Miscellaneous

OIL FURNACE, sloghtly
used . 992-7688 R.D
2
Pomeroy .

Real estate
31

Homes tor Sale

NEW 3 bedroom home for
sale . Built in kitchen,
d i ning
room ,
large
recreat1on room, fireplace,
lots of storage, 21f2 baths,
g•rage, 1 acre lot. 992 3454
ED
BARTELS,~oan
Representat11Je, 1100 East
Maon St., Pomeroy, Oh
Mortgage
money
available . All types home
ftnanctng ,
new,
old,
retmanc1ng, and 2nd mor
tgages Phone 992 7000 or
992 5732 .

197 1 REBEL RAIDER 12 x
mob1l e home 1n good con
doloon $5,500 Cal1985 3562
1970 CH AMPION mobole
home 12 x 60 , thr ee
bedroom s, equ 1pped w1fh
washer, d r y er , range ,
reftrgerator , and a1r con
d1t1oner 992 2640
1970 MOBIL E HOME 40 x
12 wtTh new turn1ture 1
304 -773·5131
FOUR YEARold double
Wtde-24 x 64 m excell ent
co ndttt on Mus t be moved
tram present iocatton 1n
Syrac use 992 2638

3S

sew 1t

lf1

a few hours

111 uch )11111111 lw firsHIID
aitmlilllld hlndllq, Send to:
~·111m Dept
Tile Dally se'~tlnel

243 Wtot 11 St, IIW YOit, flY
10011. Pritt NAME, ADORES$,
SIZE, llld
IUMIIU.

ZIP,

snu

Why put up woth ht&amp;h poocessave dollars, &amp;et better qual1ty!
Send for our NEW FALL-WINTER
PATTERN CATALOG 94 patlerns,
ftee Pattern Coupon (wortlt
$1.75) Catal1111, Sl 00 .
133-fllltion HDntt Qulltin&amp;$1.75

130-S.....,.Si• 31-56 $1.75
129-0IIcl/E., Trllllftos.$1.75
127-{filtans 'n' Dolll• . .$1.75
I

FIVE YEAR old bo level
home.i Three bedroom , 22fJ
baths, large famoly room
w1th fireplace , fully car·
peted. Large sun deck and
pat1o. W1thin walking
dlstroct of shoots. 992-7132.
FINE COUNTRY Lovong .
Baum Addit1on Home on
large landscaped lot, 3
bedrooms, 2112 baths, large
livmg room, drning room,
paneled family room, with
stone fireplace, picture
window &amp; sliding glass
doors to pat1o, gas heat ,
central a c , extra large
double garage . 985-3543.
MODULAR HOME . Must
relocate, 3 bedroom, 2 full
baths, garden tub on
master bedroom , tully
equipped modern kitchen,
donlng, llvong &amp; family
rooms. Paneling &amp; car petong throughout, central
•ir &amp; heat . 992 ·7342
32

, Mobile Homes
tor Sale

MObile home; Rochardson:
two bedroom 50 x 12 for
S2,000
Good conditoon,
goOd lot for $45.00 a month .
New water heater. New '
Haven, W.Va . Richardsons
Traoler Park, Moll St. 882
2216

-- - - - -- - ---

---

Lots &amp; Acreage

65ACRE S INMeogsCounty
near Harnsonv il le, Oh1c:;&gt; 30
acr es of tillab le groun d,
rest 1n pasture Wood, two
ponds, a 1r sTr 1p, pl ane
shed, $56,500 742 2577
1 89 ACRES FOR sa le,
tooters tor tra11 er , sept1c
tank , water, electnc, 1n
Rutland, Ohoo
Call 773
5373 '"Mason, Wv
ONE ACRE of good Ir on
tage In th e Ra c1ne Dorcas
area 9&lt;19 2890
ONE ACRE of ground w1th
unf1n1 s hed basement
S35,000 Phone 667 3826
SUITABLE LOT tor mob1 le
:~orne Easy term s, close t o
town 992 -5786 or 992 2529
REAL ESTATE tor sa l e.
cor ner l ot on ma1n h 1gh·
way , over 250 toot of Iron
tage , 95 perce nt t1nancmg
t9 Qualifi ed chur ch group ,
organ1zat1on , or successf u l
bus1ness managem en t
992 S786 or 991 2S29

lff903IS
42

-

-

Mobile Home s
for Rent

THREE
BEDRO O M
mobtle
h,ome
ap
prox1mately f1ve m tl es
t rom Pom eroy or M1d
dl eporl 992 5858
TWO B E DROOM mobolo
home , re al n1ce Brown's
Trail er Park 992 3324
TWO BEDROOM mobole
home n ea~ Ra c1ne Ca l l
992 5858
TRAILER one adul t only
992 3181

-----' ------

IN
SYRACUSE
one
bedroom trail er w1th htde
a bed Utd1ttes lurn 1shed
Oepos1t requ ,red No pets.
992 3269
Reat Estate

General

FURNI SHED
APART
MENT 4 rooms &amp; bath
A dult s only , no pets 992
387 4

46

-

Household Goods

USED APPLIANCES
1 Good Used Fngtdatr
Refngerator
S1SO
1 Good Used Whtrlpool
Refrtgerator
$125
1 Good Used Sears Coldspot Combtnatton
Refngerator
$175
1 Good Used G1bson
Coppertone combination
Refngerator
S2SO
1 Good Used Un•co
Large
Chest Freezer
$200

RENTER ' S aSS IStan ce tor
Sen tor Clt1zens 1n VIlla ge
Manor &lt;1P 1S Ca ll 992 7787

OWNER MUST SELL
New rust1c home surroun
ded by 7 5 acres of n1ce
wood . 2 bedrooms, 1'12
baths, fireplace, sptral
staorway . Wood decks
overlook1ng
flatwoods,
over 1,400 ft. of living
space . 992·3213

WANTED TO BUY I to 5
acres of land in the
Southern Local School
Dostrict. Phone 742-2974 al·
ter 6 p.m

--PHONE
- , - - - - -· - - --- -SOLICoTOR·wan ·

-

17

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom
ranch home in Baum Ad·
d1t1on. Gas and central air.
Fully carpeted with
drapes, family room, with
fireplace. Priced to sell by
owner . Due to employment
must move from area 985·
3814

Gold, sil\ler or fore 1gn
coms or any gold or Silver
1tems Ant1que furntture,
g lass or ch1na, Will pay top
dollar, or complete estates
No 1tem too large or too
small Check pnces before
sellmg Also do appra1smg
Osby IOssoe) Marton. 992
6370

APPLICATIONS will be
accepted for part ·time
POSitions of l1brary arde at
the Chester Rlverv1ew and
Tuppers Plains elementary
and full time at the Eastern
Htgh School until 1 noon
Thursday, August 28 All
1nterested
appl1cants
please contact Mr. Hull at
Eastern High School.

WIL L DO Babysltlong on
my home. Any t1me . Have
references. 742 ·3116.

HOUSE FOR Sale by
owner Good location in
Moddleport, proced roght
for sale Phone 992 5792 or
992 2917

10 karat. 14 karat, 18 karat.
gold. Denial gold and gold
ear pins. 675 3010.

Help Wanted

SITUATIONS WANTED,
family care tor elderly per
son 992 -6022

TWO BEDROOM house,
full basement, fvel oil fur·
nace,
woodburner
Workshop w1th attached
shed . $29,500 Phone 949
2249

IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furn1ture, desks, gold
nngs , jewelry, s11ver
dollars, sterltng, etc ., wood
1ce boxeso~ ars ant1ques,
etc Complete households
Wrote M . D . Moller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OHI or call 992·
7760

1_1_ _

S1tuat1ons Wanted

-

51

60 two bedroom, one bath

Space tor Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pa r k , Rou le 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots Ca ll
992 7•79
TRAILER SPA,C E f or r en t
1n Middl epor t. $45 00 per
mont h 992 S349

84 ACRE FARM Porlland, Ohoo Co Rd
31. Owner will1ng to split
thi s farm 1n several
possible sections
(1) 7 yr old house .an d
ga,.age on 4 acres for
$39,500.
12) 5 acre buoldong sote

3 rs 1nch reba r

17c per too t
by 20 It sec t 10n on ly 0
Bumgardner Sales. Nobl e
summ1t Rd , Mtddlepor t ,
OH 992 512d

Real Estate

!i6

Real Esta-ct.:_
e _ ,G:.::eneral

r~::~~~w

DILLON
REAL ESTATE

216 E. Second Street

l
BDRM. HOME 1n
Syracuse Paneled and
carpe t ed throughout,
alum1num 51d1ng, 2 n1ce
porches, on a l eve l lot
OVER 2 ACRES OF
LAND,
h ooku p fo r
mob1 ie home, and a 3
bedroom fram e ranch 3
mil es from Mtddleport
1n Kyger Creek School
D1stnct
2 BEDROOM FRAME
cl ose to Middleport
schools , park &amp; shopp·
ong $12,500.00 .
2
STORY
FRAME
DUPLEX - 2 bed room
apt down , t bedroom
apt up Rent will pa y
for home
2 BEDROOM HOME 2 acres of land , 2 mtles
from Mtdd leport Also
so m e fru1t trees.
4 BEDROOM frame on
Rt 7 '"Pomeroy Large
modern eat-tn k. ttchen

Phone
I· ( 614 ) - 992 · 3325
QUICK SALE - 6 room
nome, bath , new forced
a1r furnace, good dnlled
well , garden , large front
porch , utilttY room on
hard
road for only
$12,000
GOOD FARM 80
acres of n1c e laying
land . 5 bedroom farm
home, bath, and lots of
outbuildings. T P water
avai lable
MIDDLEPORT.
3
bed room s, large bath ,
lots of carpettng H as
utlltty room , equ1pped
k1tchen, and near shopp
ong On l y$ 16,500
2 LOTS - Old S room
house nea r Jones Boys
store Out of al l flood s
Only $3 ,500
365 ACRES Mostly
new barb wtre fence,
free gas, drilled wel l
and bottom l and one
half mile w 1de and one
mile long 5 bedroom
renovat ed home w1t h 2
bath s, l ots of n 1ce
carpet1 ng, rec
room ,
den, tormal d1n1ng ,.
l arge basemen) and 2
l arge porches . $225.000 .
Make
that
change
before school starts!
Low down payment .
Want to sell. Call us at
992-3325 or 992·3876 .

7 ROOMS and B,ATH .
Can be used as com m er
c1a l or as a home
2 STORY FRAME house
m Rac1ne Carpe ted,
paneled Large lot on a
qutet str eet
2 OR 3 BEDROOM
frame house on Broad
way St 1n Middl eport.
Close to pool , park &amp;
stores Newly pamted
m:: de &amp; ou1.
FAYE MANLEY

CALL 992-2598
DAY OR NIGHT

ousing
Headquarters

Real Estate- General

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
NEW LtSTING - A 1 condlf1Ut l 1 3 BR , full base·
m ent, 1n town \o ca t1on , many ex tras Pn ced to sell
$39,000

OVER 100 ACRES - All m1neral nght s go With pro
perty Water l1nesc lose, ttmber ready to cut , drill ed
gas well Ca ll tor more 1nto
BEAUTIFUL - Well k epi home has 3 BR's, cou ld
be more, fa m ily room &amp; den, Jlh ba th , 2 ca r garage,
well onsu l ated. A ll t hos and mu ch more. SS7.500

NANCY JASPERS , ASSOCIATE
949·2591 L eave Message
or 949-2654

Real Estate- General

HOBSTETTER REALTY
GeorgeS Hobste1ter, Jr., Brok er
OFFICE 742-2003

H I LLC RE ST KENNEL S
Boardmg , all breeds. Clean
1ndoor outdoor f ac, llttes
Also
AKC
reg1ster ed
Dobermans 614 446 7795
HOOF HOLLOW Horses
and pon1 es and ndmg
les sons
Everyth1ng
1m ag1 na bl e m hor se equ 1p
men t
Bl a nk et s, bel t s,
boots, ere E ngl1 sh and
West ern
Ruth Re eves
161• 1698 3290
AK ~

REG i oTE RED Old
Eng lt sh
sheep
dogs
Females, 7 w eeks old $200
5 year old $100 JO• 895 3624

PHONE 742-2003
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
ATHENA ACRES
Lovely 2 story home, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, ltv
1ng room w1th stone see
through f i rep lace to
btrch l ibrary , formal
d 1n10g room , large
modern k1tchen , utiltty
room &amp; cellar Pat1o
with 1nV1tmg l4' x28'
sw 1mm1ng poo l
24
acres, half cleared, rest
woods Al l mtnera ls go
Ca 11 for your appt
NEI'I LISTING 3
bedroom
hom e,
Rutland, large 11v1ng
room w1th ftreplace ,
d1n10g room , kitchen,
ut1 l1ty and double car
garage
Ask1ng
SJS,OOO 00
POMEROY - Lovely 2
home w1th
s tory
beauttful woodwork on
Mulberry Ave , I1V111g
room
w1th
nt ce
ftrepla ce, d1n1ng room ,
f am 1l y
room ,
3
bedrooms, Jl/:z baths ~
nt ce modern kitchen
and garage Call for
appt
ACREAGE - 5 acr es on
Hy se ll
Run
Rd ,
buildmg s1te &amp; some
tomber , $7,000 00.
HYSELL RUN RD. Approx 8 acres w1th 2
bedroom hom e Asking
S21 ,SOO 00
CONOOR
ST
3
bedroom hom e, 11v1ng
r oo m , ktt chen, some
furn 1ture. Would make
good rental propert y
Askong S13,SOO 00.
POMEROY Nice 3
bedroom brrck home,
large 11vmg room , la rge
forma l dtn1ng room , ex·
tra n 1ce familY room &amp;
k.1tchen comb1ned, 1 11'2
baths .
Sells
l or
$26 , ~0 OOGROCERY
BUSINESS - St. Route
12•, Rutland, Bldg . 1n
eludes equ1pment and
rental
apartment
$21,200 00
COUNTRY COMFORT
2'J.t:l acres with 3
be d r oo m
H o l·lypark
mobile home with large
family room , double car
garage Ha s edra sep·
toe tank and water hookup Nice 32' x22' barn.
PRICE REDUCED $47,SOO.OO
Velma N1C1nsky, Assoc
Phone 742·3092
Cheryl Leml ey , Assoc.
Phone 742 3171

I'

DEAN'S
TRANSMISSION
SPECIALISTS
Bebui lts· R epa1rs

Seal Jobs
Located 6 miles north of
Albany, Oho on 681
North.
22 Years Experience
Fully Guaranteed
Ph. 664-6370
If no answer
Call698·3113
7 31 1 mo.·pd

..

Owner will tmance at 9%
te rest w1th 10% down. Home has 3 bedrooms, kit
c hen , bath , full basement and sunporc h. Loca ted on
Hig h St 1n Pomeroy . Call today, won' t l ast long at
only $2S,OOO 00
Velma NtCinSky, A SSOC.
Phone 742 ·30Y2
Cheryl Lcmley , A ssoc.
Phone742 3171

Call Allers P.M.

843 2803
•

ALL STEEL

Farm Buildings

SALES

Sizes
"From 30xl0"
SMALL

THE POOL PEOPLE

Utility Buildings

31711 Nobte Sumot Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
992-5724

Sires from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Sales, service and supplies. In ground and
above ground pools.
5·1 ttc

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2S91
6-IS· tfc

Excavating

NEW
LISTING
EASTERN
SCHOOL
DISTRICT - One iloor
plan, 2 bedroom home
w1th
a
Heatol a tor
f1reo lac e, full base
ment, and a la rge ntce
bu1 1t-m k1tchen . Has approxtmately 41/.tt acres·
$36,500 00.
NEW LISTING · WALK
TO THE MARKET - A
2 story frame home that
could be a two family .
Could
use
some
rem o d e l1ng
1ns1de
$6,200.00.
NEW
LISTING
BEAUTY SALON woth 5
rooms &amp; bath
1s 2
workmg stat1ons ~ a l l
equ 1p m e nt
A lso
a
mob1le home hookup
N1ce corner lot Put
yourself 10 a bus mess of
your own for only
$24,900 .00
NEW LISTING 90
acre s of va cant land
near Long Bortom
$27.000 00
MOVE RIGHT IN - to
th1 s NEW ran ch style
home that has 3
bedrooms, utility room, ~
large one acre lot, par
t1ally fen ced Super mce
at $39,900 .00
FARMERS HOME AP ·
PROVED - Approx 10
yr o ld house that has
new carpet, new wm
dows, and a new wood
burn ~ r on a 1
h acre lot
Prtced
to
sell
at
$21 ,500 00
DON ' T BE A RENT
SLAVE - You can l 1ve
1n th 1s house fo r less
than you can rent It has
two--2 bedroom apa rt
ments that are m good
co ndition .
Just
$13,300.00.
MIDDLEPORT l'h
story bnck home w1th
front &amp; rear porches and
approx 1•12 acres The
k1t c hen
ha s
n 1ce
cabi net s
an d
a
dt sh wash e r
On l y
$20,000.00 .
PRIVATE RETREAT
Forget
about
everythmg in th 1s qu1et,
peaceful se tting . 12
acres of 0 1ce land, plus a
mob ile home that has 2
rooms bu 11t on the rear
Could be heated wt•h
wood. $22,300.00.
WE ARE A FULL TIME
FULL SERVICE
REAL ESTATE COM PANY .
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland , Jr .
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trus.sell949-2660
Roaer &amp; Dothe Turner
992 -5692
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Expertenced Operators
avatlable for local work.
• 2 rUbber h re backhoes
e1 eKcavator hoe 1114
yd .
e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equ1pment.
992·2478
B-14 1 mo pd

VINYL SIDING
ROOFING
REMODELING
Serving your area
tor 25 years. Call
now for large sav·
ings.
For
Free
Estimate Call
Eugene-Long
( 614) 843·3322
B 18 1 mo. pd .

All types of root1ng, new
and repa~r, gutte..-s,
downspouts,
commer·
c1al &amp; res1dent1al.
949·2160 Pomeroy
797·2432 Athens
Tom Hoskins or
Gerald Clark
797-4847
21 years expenence. All
work guaranteed.
Free Est•rnate
8 14-1 mo

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes- ex·
tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
B 7 1 mo

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
N. 2nd Ave.
M•ddlepo..-t, Ohio
PH . 992 -6342
TRY US!
Complete Dry Cleanong
and Laundry
eCarpet
• Draper.es
• Fu..-n1ture
c" We're No . 1 tn
Service &amp; Qloatol('

PUT A cold nose 1n your
futur e
Me 1gs
Counly
Hum ane Soc1ety Wormed,
shots 992 6260. Two ger
ma n-shepherd elk hounds,
mal e, four lovely pupp1es,
pretty brown shepherd
t ype dog , several love ly
cat s and k1ttens

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
"' Call Howard
949·2862
949·2160
1·22·ttc

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

PARK
FINANCIAL

Pets for Sale

56

All types of roof work,
new or repatr gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleanong and painting.
All work guaranteed.

General

REAL ESTATE

MIDDLEPORT - Large sta tel y brick home oil a
corner lot only a block from shopping Three
bedrooms and bath upsta1rs Ftve rooms and bath
downstairs New furnace w 1th central air conditionIng . One car garage with storage room up. Full
basement Call for an appointment - 559 ,000 00

Call Bill Childs, Mgr. 992-2342
Rodney Downing, Broker

-Addonsand
remOdeling
-Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work
- Plumbing and
elec1rica I work
(Free Estimates)

REAL ESTATE LOANS
Federal Housing
VP,terans
Admtntstration
107 S~camore
Pomeroy
Office 992· 7544
Home 992· 6191

Farm sappljes
&amp; l j 1/£5fBEil

V.C. YOUNG II

992·6215 01' 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

. . .,____ 4_
~arm ~_qu~p~ent

61

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

USE D R 40 dotch wot ch
w1th trencher
1 614 694
7842 .

CARPET SHOP
"Drive A Little Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED

1976 JOHN D EE RE 3800
Chopper w1th 2 row corn
hertd and 2 row snapper
head , ex c co nd, $5,595,
Sh1n ns Tractor Sa l es, Leon,
w v a, 458 1630

GRASS CARPET
0
TURF"
$399 Sq Yd.
Reg . $5 .99

Blue &amp; Gold
RUBBER
BACK

SHAG
CARPET
1nstallcd

&amp;1'.1195

•4"

( Pnce Does Not
Include
In

1974 NEW
HOLLAND
Super 717 chopper wtfh one
r ow head, good cond ,
S2,495
Sl11 nn 's Tractor
Sa les. Henderson , WV, 458
1630

Sq. Yd .

Cash· N-Carry

Sltllli'II IOn)

~,Sq. Yd

and up
w / paddong

JULY CARPETSAIJE
ALL CARPET AT DISCOUNT PRICES
Any regular carpet jobs tnstalled with free pad.
Nfce ·seleCtion of- Carpet Rem-nants and
Lonoieum Remnants at Bi Discounts.

ONE
NEW MAS SEY
Ferg uson 200 chopper, 2
row head weathered I1SI
proce, $8,000 $3995, SHINN
TRAC fOR
SALES,
Ga ll1polts, Oh1o 446 1044

RUTLAND FURNITURJ
Main St.

742-2211

C
A
SE TRAcTOR;.;;;~.~. ~·~-~========:::::+======~::=~
mount m ower $795 949
2179

==e--ansportation
Want~ d

62

to Buy

CHIP WOOD Poles m ax
diameter 10" on largest
end $12 per t on Bundl ed
sl ab $10 per ton Oelt vered
10 Oh10 Pa l let Co 1 Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 2689

71

SeF*i•tes

- 4---4-----Autos For Sale
'
- -

-

~

4

-

-

-

-

-

1966 DODGE POLARA for
sale for
parts, as I&lt; tng
$200 00 1f ontcres ted call
992 7775

4

Real Estate -

742-'!-455

Rt. I, Portland, Oh.
8·13-1 mo

Pullins

OLD COINS, pockel wal
ches, c lass nngs, w eddmg
ba nd s, d 1amond s Gold or
sliver Call J A Wamsl ey,
742 2331. Treasure Che st
Coon Shop , Athens. OH . 592
6462
GO LD
AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RING S,
JEW E LRY ,
STE RLING SILVER AND
MISC
ITEMS PAYIN G
RE C ORD
HI GH,
HI GHE ST UP TO DATE
PRICE S CON T A CT ED
BURKET T
BARB ER
SHO P. MIDDLEPORT ,
OH 10 , OR CALL 992 3476

------- 4---

~roN·rr&gt;AC'T -

- Haul
Lomesrone,
gravel , fill dtrt
- Agnc. hme spreading
- Backhoe work
-New and used farm
equ•pment
- Mechanocat work on
:~~~s. equtp., cars,

~~~m~o~.
~~==========~7~-3~1=·1~m~u~~~~~~==~~~====~~~~~~~~8~-8~D. BUMGARDNER

L1vestock

63

4

Phone Virgima .Hayma11
985·4197

Ph. 992·2772

--------

608 E .
MAl N . .ioioli;Ooll~...
POMEROY, D

HOBSTffiER
REALTY

INSIDE &amp; OUT

James Keesee

Charles M Hayes, Realtor
Neac•l E Car se y, IJr Mgr
Ph 991 '24(ll cr 9'11· 11&amp;0

Real Estate - Gener al

&amp;

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT &amp;
TRUCKING

Real Estate- General

tor $5,000

(3) 75 acres, fen ced, atl
useable for hay or plan·
t1ng 1 lg. 1 barn and 2
ponds lor SS25 pr acre
60 ACRES tor hunting
and fish1ng Plenty of
pmes for cabm. Shade
Creek runntng through.
Includes mrneral nghts.
$1.,000 .
FORKED RUN LAKE
AREA Sm. ret1re
ment home 10 yrs . old
block with city water,
sets on l'h acre. $21.500 .
BUILDING SITES on
Rt 7 below Eastern
H igh School 1 1112 to 21!2
acre each . S7,500

Vinyl

BELL
House Pamting

Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
• Storm Doors
eStormWondows
• Replacement
W1ndows
Free Estimate

POODLE
GROOMING
Judy T ayl or. 614 367 7220

TWO MALE pek1n gese
pupp1es Reg1st ered 949
2890

General

Housing
Headquarters

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

•
Pe t s tor Sale

General

POMERDY, O.

Business Services

Bulldtny Supph cs

!i5

992·12SJ_

ANT TO SELL? GIVE US ACALL! !
TUPPERS PLAINS
'New elegant bnck to
make you proud. 2
bedrooms, formal dtn·
1ng , kiTchen has a ll
bullt· ins, f a m
rm
w / f~r e pl ace,
2 ca r
garage

Real Esta1e

POMEROY
LANDMARK
E Mam St. Pomeroy, 0 .

NEW LISTING - Small2 BR home need s work only $8,000

Cassady Really
Belpre, Oh.

HEAriNGOIL BuynOwcil
Summe r Prr ces E KCCIS1or
Co 6~• 992 2205

54

On the Light Side

to topple a group of older officers
and quickly placed men loyal to him
in key posts. For a time he also took
over as acting head of the Korean
CIA despite a prohibition against ar·
my officers holding the job.
Over the next few months, the
military publicly proclaimed loyalty
to the civilian government but
quietly reserved power for itself.
In May, when thousands of university students took to the streets of
Seoul and Kwangju to demand lif·
tlng of martial law and rapid, free
elections, Chun cracked down.
Extending a stricter martial law
nationwide, he arrested dozens of
top politicians, students, JOUrnalists
and dissident leaders including Kim
Dae-jung, now be'{).g courtrnartlaled on sedition chiirges which
carry the death penalty.

for 11 days smce the Aug. 16
restgnatwn of Chm Kyu-hah. Choi
became president when President
Park Chung-hee was assassinated
Oct. 26 by his chief of mtelligence.
The 49-year-old Chun, a balding, 5foot, 6-lnch tall career officer, was a
protege of Park and at the time of
his assassination was a major
general in charge of the Defense
Security Command, which controlled all military intelligence ac·
tivities.
Chun took control of the investigation and defying orders of acting President Choi ordered the
arrest of his superior, Gen. Chung
Seung-hwa, known to have been 50
yanls from Park when he was shot.
On Dec. 12, Chun and a small
group of officers carried out a coup

Anltqu cs

They'll Do It Every Time

Mobote Homes
for Sale

.

Gen. Chun Doo-hwan new Korea president
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) ~ying he would fulfill his new duties
South Korea's new mihtar/"'-1. wlthout seHishness," and that the
strongman, Gen. Chun Doo-hwan, election was a "national call for me
was elected president today without to devote my body and soul to the
opposition or debate just eight mon- · creation of a new history."
ths after he emerged from obChun said his government would
. scurity.
be "an honest and efficient one,
Chun, virtually unknown to listening to the people's voice aU the
Koreans outside the military and to time, and based on the people's conforeigners before the coup he led in fidence."
December, was elected by 2,224
The election was a foregone conmembers of the nation's rubber· elusion followmg Chun's resignation
from the military as a full general
stamp Electoral College.
Fifteen members were absent and last Friday. His retirement was
~vote was declared invalid.
necessary because the constitution
Chun, who has effectively conbars active-duty officers from
trolled the country since the coup,
becoming president.
Chun is South Korea's third
was the only candidate for
president. He did not appear at the
president in two weeks and the fourelection ceremony, officials reporth in a year, succeeding acting
ted.
President and acting Prime
Later he issued a brief statement
Minister Park Choong-hoon, in office

whtle Coats had 147,197 or 33 Jllll!r·
cent. On the Republican side,
Nickles had 46,229 or 33 percent,
while Zink had 45,920 or 33 percent.
There were also primary contests
for four of the state's six
congressional seats. The only ino
cumbent to be challenged was Rep:
Wes Watkins, a 3rd District
Democrat, who beat Letand Kelly of
Sulphur.
In Alaska, Gravel was challenged
by Clark Gruening of Anchorage and
Michael Beasley of Eagle River.
Richard Whittaker of Ketchikan
and Kevin "Pat" Parnell of Anchorage were seeking the ,
Democratic nod mthe congressional
race.

The proposal would require the
governor to set up an 11-member
Alaska Statehood Commission to
study "alternative forms of
association possible between the
United States and the people of
Alaska."
In the Oklahoma senatorial contests, former Oklahoma County
District Attorney Andy Coats and
Oklahoma City oilman Robert S.
Kerr Jr. won spots in the
Democratic runoff, while state Sen:
Don Nickles of Ponca City and John
Zink of Tulsa will compete m the
Republican runoff. Sen. Henry
Bellman, a Republican, is retiring
from the seat.
With 2,676 of 2, 774 precincts repor·
ling, Kerr had 147,878 or 33 percent,

·

JONE S Meat Packong
s 1aughter1ng,
c u sto m
process1ng, r etail mea t
Wa shtngton Co. Rd 248,
L1ttle Hod.tng, OH 667
61 33
-

-

v

-

- -

-~---

LAR GE Gue rnsey cow
EKc m il k cow, sound $675
9492 179
HO GS approxomat e ~y 200
lbs $100 9•9 2179
YOUNG HE AVY Lay ong
hens 52 00 ea 949 2119

1972 VOLKSWAGON
I 30d 773-513 1

Call

1973 NOVA SUPER sport
350 V·8 w1 th standard tran
sm IS StOn, th ree speed ,
65,000 miles Pho ne 742
2•31
-~-- - ------

1973 VW SU P ER Beetl e.
Pro ce $1 ,300 Ca ll 614 949
2540 after 5 p m

61

Home
__ ! m_proveme~--

S &amp; G Carpet Clean~ng
St ea m
c leaned
Free
es t1 ma t e
Reason ab le
rates
Sc otchguard
992
6309 or 7d2 22 11

aJ--

4

_EXC2~.!!_1!!L_ _

_

J x F BACK HO E SER VICE llscensed and bon·
ded, se pt 1c
t ank
tn ·
stallat1on, water and gas
li nes Excavat1ng work and
trans1t layout 992·7201.

84

-------·E l ec tncal
&amp; Refngerat~on

74

Motor~ycles__

_

1977 SU ZUK I GOFFER 100
less th an 1400 md es w tt h
wtndscr een
1n c lud e d
$550 00 Call 992 7775
1979 HONDA H AWK ' dOO' on
exce llent cond1t1on, must
se ll lor $1700 00 Ca ll 992 - ,
5502

7S

Boats and
Motors for Sale

20
HOR SE
motor 949 2273

E vonrud e

1969 FIBERGLASo tro haul
,boc1t 1969 Ev1nrude motor
w1th trader Sk1 equ1p &amp;
I ole 1a ckets Sl , 100 992
53R2

SE WING
MACHINE
Repatrs,
service , illl
makes
992 228•
T he
Fabn c Shop, Pom erO y.
Authonzed Smger Saies
and Serv 1ce We shar~en
SCISSOrS

----- ------

ELWOOD
BOWERS
RE PAIR
Sweepers,
toas ter s, 1rons , a II sma 11
appli ances. Lawn mower .
Next to St ate Highw•y
Garage on Rou te 7, ~S
3825

·- -- --------

APPLIA NCE servoce, all
mak.es washers, dryers,
ranges,
d i sh
washers ,dfsposals, water
tank.s Cal l K-en Young 985·
3561 bot ore 9a m . or aft or 6
P m.

�15- The DailySentinel, Mtduleport-Pvmeru) . o , Wcdn esd~y, A~g 27, 1980

14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug '1:1,1980
By The Associated Press
Georgians voted to g1ve Sen. Her·
man Talmadge a chance to run for
re-election, despite his Senate censure for financial misconduct, wh1le
Oklahomans set up runoffs by
denying majority support to any
candidate 10 U.S. Senate prunartes.
In Alaska, Incomplete returns
from Tuesday's balloting showed
voters favoring a proposal to set up a
corrurussion that would rev1ew the
state's relations with the federal
government. The conunission would
study the possibility of changmg the
state back to a temtory or even
seceeding from the union.
Alaskans were also choosing between Sen. Mike Gravel and two

Talmadge
•
recerves
second
chance

32

challengers seeking the Democratic
senatorial nomination. Si•
Republicans were vying for their
party's endorsement. Two candidates sought the Democratic nod
to oppose Rep. Don Young, who was
unopposed for the Republican endorsement.
Talmadge, a Democrat who has
spent 23 years in the Senate, faced
Lt. Gov. Zell Miller in a runoff election that was set up when none of the
siK candidates received a majority
of the vote in the Aug. 5 primary.
W1th returns m from 2,183, of the
state's 2,251 precmcts, Talmadge
had 58 percent of the vote with
530,489 to42 percent or 385,057 and 42
percent for Miller.

Talmadge, who was censured by
the Senate for nushandling officeexpense funds and campaign
money, wtll face Republican Matt
Mattlingly, a St. Simons Island
businessman, in November.
Wtth 158 of the 421 precmcts repor·
ltng in the Alaskan ·referendum,
there were 13,398, or 56 percent, yes
votes, while there were 10,525, or 44
percent, no votes.
Congress is considering legislation
to place more than 100 nullion acres
of federal land m the state under
protection as conservation areas.
The legislation has been bitterly
crtttcized by proponents of greater
development, who maintain the
federal government is meddling in
the state's affa1rs.
.

,.

SINGING DOG HELPS
CLINCH HOG-&lt;:ALLING PRIZE .
INDIANAPOLIS (APl - Bob Ertel, accompanied by bls singing
dog, won the annual hog-ull.IDg contest at tbe IDdlaaa Stale Fair. But
bls wife, Pat, bad to settle for seeond place In tbe busbaod-calllDg competition.
Ertel of Batesville, Ind., was using the staDdard "Sooooeeeeeee!"
call in Sunday's contest when the family dog ran up from the audience
and joined In with a chorus of howls.
The louder Ertel yelled, the louder the dog howled. The combination
proved unbeatable.
Ertel's wife finished seeond to Unda Knott of GilSport, Ind., In the
hushand-calllng contest
Mrs. knott, wbo entered the stale contest at her husband's urging,
hollered oat her husband's first aad middle names, David Harry, then
added a long "Sooooeeeeeee" a11d two short "Soooeeees" at the end. .
"I was embarrassed, alld shocked that I won," Ml'll. Knott said.
"But my husband said If 1 didn't win I'd just be the second biggest
mouth In our county, so I decided I'd better try towta."

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
ARABQREements
3 __ _,
A'-'n,_,
no
" u"'n"'c"e"-m"'e,_,n,_,t"s_
I PAY h1ghest pr 1ces
poss1ble for gold and Sliver
, co•ns, rmgs, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Moddleport
PICKING UP a poano in
your area
Responsible
party may take over low
morthly payments
Call
credot manager at 773-512S.
Gray's P1ano and Organ,
Co
CANDY SUPPLIES on
sale.
Ann's
Cake
Decor•ting Supplies, 50716
Osborn Rd ., Reedsvdle,
Oh 667·6485
SHOOTING

Forked

Run

MATCH .

Sportsman

Club Startong Aug. 31 each
sUn. there after. Factory
choked guns only

Announcements

3

Announcements

3

P1ano Tun1ng
Lane
Daniels 742-2951
Tun1ng
and Repa1r Serv1ce s1nce
1965 If no answer phone
992 2082 .

WILL
YOUR
House
Withstand another hard
wmter? How about that
roof and barn, that snow
gets pretty heavy! Let us
do any general main
tanence work for you, patn·
ting, gutter repair, patch
work, odds and ends, so you
can sit back in front of that
warm fire thts winter and
not have to worry. Call992
3941,992-3519, or 992·S126
and we'll come and g1ve
you a tree esttmate.
References are provided
upon request.

BAKERS BUSY
BEE
CERAMICS,
Tuppers
Plams, IS hav1ng the1r annual fmished ceram1c sale
on Saturday, August 30
from 9·5.
Bring your
Chnstmas 91ft lists. Very
resonable pr 1ces on lots of
n1ce 1tems. Also a green
ware sale same day at 30
percent off.
Bring your
own boxes for greenware
Paul1ne Baker

FREESTONE
canning
peaches; $9 .98 bushel,
bnng your own contamers.
Bob's Market, Mason,
W.Va. 773-5721.

MASON HOME REPAIR
heat 1ng and air con
dttton1ng furnace cleanmg,
plumb1ng, repair, residen
ttal electr1c w1nng, sales
servtce and tnstallat1on .
992·2364.

Announcements

3

Middlepor~OhjO
SUPERMA K;JT
8300 Squl Ft.
ForSaleorLease

ADDRESSERS WANTED
1mmed1ate!y! Work at
home no
expenence
necessary· excellent pay.
Wnte Amer1can Serv1ce,
8350 Park Lane, Suite 127,
Dallas, TX 75231

SEPTIC TANKS I Cia Ilia
County
Certofoed).
Le;ach beds, water and
gd' line, electriC hnes,
pole buildings. Reese
Trenchong and Backhoe
Service, 367-7560.

BABYSITTER NEEDED
in Racine area For one
school age ch1ld and one tn·
fant . Needed before school
starts 949-2624

4----GiVeawav--PUPPtEs. PART shepherd
and part lnsh Setter. 949·

2437

No Waist Seam

Yard Sale

YARD SALE at the Vic
Brown residence on St Rt .
124 in Mtnersv1ile Antiqu e
brass bed and chest, auto

26194

(6141837·8182

and 29th.

1

Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon1 Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable.

.r
:I

~ ·~

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
Phone~---------------

'1
I

I
I
•I
I
I
1

1
1
{
I

) Wanted
) For Sale
) Announcement
&gt; For Rent

1. - - - - -

2

I
_ _ _ __
I 6. _ _ _ __
I 7. _ _ _ __
I 9.
B. - - - - _ _ _ __
4
5.

1

I

10.· ----~

I

11 .
12

•'I
I
I
t

1
.. I

I
I....,_

for Rent

4-GIVWWI'I

«-Apartment tor Rent
45--FRoomt

t-Lostand '•tJnd

4....._Sput ror R " '
u-wanttCI to Rtnt

r- Yard S.te
t-Publlc Sate
&amp;Auction
~Wanted to Buy

41--Et~ulpmtnl

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

si-Houstholcl Goocls

n-cl, TV, RadiO ECIUI.,mtnt

,1.,...Htlpw1 nttd

st-AntlqUII

12-SIII.!IMcl Wantttct
IJ-Insuranca
14-luslnHI Tralnlnt

~PtbforS.It

15--Schoolslnslrvellon

72-Trucks tor s...

IUslntu

U-LhiHIOCk
,._Hay 1 Grain
U- Sted &amp; Ftrtlllztr

u-Pro,tutonat
S.rvlc.s

e TRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE
11-Hctmll for Saltf

71-Autos tor Stlf

7)-Yint 14 W.O.
1'4-Mottrcyclet
75Auto Ptrts

32-MotHitttomll
tor Sala
lJ-Farmslor Slit
34-luslnns lulldlnts
U-LotsAAcrtlta
lt-Raal••tatawantt'CI
37-Raaltors

22. - -- - - - 1
23. - - - - - - 1
25.

41-Farm !(lulpmtnt

111-W•nmt to lu~

. OPIIOrtllnlty
22-Monay to Lou

I
I
I
I
I

20.

24.

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

eFINANCtAL

17.
18.
19.

- -- ' - - -- l
l
I
- - - - --

&amp; ,.,,..... , •••
77-AutoR-Ir

11-Homttm,rovtmtllts

4 fi .M. Dally
12 NOOf'l Saturd.,.

28. - - - - - -

29. ------

htrMoniay

31 _,...._ __

1,

12-Piumblnt&amp; Excavttlng

IJ-Iutvttlfll
M-lt.drlctl
&amp; Retrl..,ttion
15-GtnHII H1ullnt

14

35.

II

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. •sJ69
..,

..

c ....

,......
100

,.,..

1

1·
It

I

I '
~

j

....

Chlrfl
1.25

'·"
wordlll4 cents per worcl INr

2.2S
l . 75

Itch word tYtr tllt'mlnlmum 1!
d1y
Ads rlfl,nlng othtr tftlln COI'IttcVIIIIt diYI will be ChlrJtd tt tltt 1 dty

1

1

lrl memory. C1rd ot Thtnll• •IJd Obltuer~ ·
mllllmum Caslllllld\llllltt

• ctfltl

.,., word,

SJ,OCI

Mobile HomttiiHincl YMdSIItsarttcu,ttd onlywlthctlh wltll
orhr 25 ctnt &lt;har91 lor 1d1 urrylno •o• Number In Cart 01' TIM
S.ntlntl.

PORCH SALE , Wednesday
and Thursday, from 12 6 at
Rose Hill, Pomeroy, Oh10 .
Reclmer, 20' girl's bike,
coleman heater, Children's
games and toys, small apPlia nces, d 1shes, ha 1r
dryer, and
women's
clolhong.
AUTUMN SALE August
27 ,28,291h 667 3866, two
piece bedroom su1te, one
stuffed chair, one rocker,
one workshop table, one
dusk to dawn light. Other
1tems to numerous to men ·
lion. Turn right at the light
at Tuppers Plaons on 681 go
two m11es, turn at road 270,
at fire tower and one mile
beyond.
2 FAMILY PORCH Sale.
Aug . 29 &amp; 30 . mile west of
Forked Run State Park on
Route 124 Grant Young

'I•

FRIDAY , August 27, I rom
9 3 north on Route 7 to F1ve
Po1nts, turn left onto Flat·
swoods Road, go three
tenths mile, white house on
tell
Beautoful ladoes
clothes,
some
men's
clothes, glassware, pat
terns, fab ric, some fur
niture
Ra1n ca ncels No
dealers inv1ted .

Publi~Sale

&amp; Auction

IN-M H, AeNir

2d•~·
Jd·~·

4days

LAST OF THE great yard
sales, great fall barga1ns
August 29 and 30th tnree
mtles on 681 east of Oar ·
wm .
Follow s1gns!
Clothes ,
c hain
saw
(husquarna), copper kef
tie, v1deogame, and many
more unbelievable good
buys 992·7709 or 992 ·2016 .
Come on out and see what
its about!

8

17-Uphollttry

1 dty

3-t. _ _ _ __

Yard Sale

--- - _.... - - - - -

Rates and Other Information

33 . ,..,.--.,...,-- - -

13.

7

BASEMENT SALE, September 2 4 from 9-4 at lOS
Wright Street, Pomeroy.
Third house on the right.

eSE'RVtCES

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

26.
27. - - - - - -

Printed Patlern

54-Mltc. MtrchandiH
S~lulldlnt Suppllts

ItRlldlo, TV
&amp;CIRt!Nir
11-Wanttcl To Do

11-

tor A.ent

15 Words or Under

,~- ------

•

0-MObUa HOmll

5-HappyAdl

J2 . ..J.:__ _ _ __

I :!:
I
_1

2..- lnMamorlam

These cash rates
include discount

eRENTALS
•U-HOUIII for Rtnt

3-.l!nnouncements

21. - - - - - 1

I' 3. -- - - •

eANNOUNCEMENTS
1-C.,-d of Thanks

Print one word In each
space below. Each in·
itial or group of figures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number If used .
You'll get better results
if you describe fully,
g1ve price. The Sentonel
reser~Jes the right to
classify, ed1t or reject
any ad Your ad will be
put in the proper
classifocatlon If you ' ll
1 check the proper box
1 below.

,I

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

Adctreu~-------­

12

GET VALUABLE traonong
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
t1nel route earner Phone
us righl away and get on
the elogoboloty lost at 992·
2156or992 21S7

r:-----------------------"t
:I.
Curb lnflatlcn.
can~~d~!r.\':.'~:
~~~~~!~· Fr~~bg~s~gu~~~
1
:: Pay Cash fot
!: ,.-~"""-='-""---"~---_ - - - - ;
Classlfleds and 1
WANT AD INFORMATION
Savell I
PHONE 992-2156
1•
1

-

Help Wanted

11

SALE 20% off all toshong
tackle . Aug . 25 to Sept 7
Rods, reels, tackle boxes,
marme supplies, lures No
lawaway on sale atems.
Open 9 to 6 daoly . The
Tackle Box, Sr. 124,
Syracuse, Oh 992 6193 .

7

-~-~----------"":"'"""T, loo.~------------~-------1

OSStE 1S AUCTION House,
20 N 2nd Street, Moddleport, Ohio. We sell one
piece or entire households.
New, used, or antiques, m
eluding homes, farms, or
loquodatoon sales. Get top
dollar List w1th the man
who has over 25 years in
the new, used and antique
turn1ture business .
We
take cons1gnments. For m·
formation and PICkup sed
viCe, call 992 6370 or 1n
West Vorgin oa 773 -5471 Sale
every Fr~day n1ght at 7
p.m . Auct1oneer Howard
Beasley, apprent1ce auc
t1oneer, Osby A Marttn
Ina IUQk)

AffE NT oO N
( OM
PORT A N r TO YOU I Woll
P&lt;lY Cdsh or certtli ed check
l or ant1ques and coll ec
l1bles or ent 1re es tates
Not h tn9 too l arge A l so,
yu ns, pocke t wMc hes ,Jnd
com collec t, ons C.1ll 614
76'/ :i l67or55/34 l l

, MOBIL E home lor sale
$6500, land co ntract w 1th
$500 down or wtll negot1ate
cash
sale
Also one
bedroom , built m bunk,s,
•sxto mobole home, S2BOO.
land contrac t. $300 down
Wnte J Bowland. 15068
Emptre Rd, Thorn vtlle,
OH . 43076 .
--- ---- - - - ~-

1975 Western M anston 14 x
70 thr ee bedroom , 1971
· Cameron, 14 x 64 two
bedroom , 1971 Liber t y, 14 x
65 two bedroom . 1968
Atlan t1c,
12 &gt;&lt; 60 two
' bedroom ,
1968
N ew
Moon, 12 x 60 w1th ex pando,
two bedroom , 1967 Buddy,
12 x SO, 2 bedroom •
B&amp; S
Mob1l e Home Sa les
Pt Pleasant, w VA .
67S 4424

"""'"'"

'SER.AAA~

.it~ELTZE~ .

M1sc. Merchan•se
EARLY AMERICA N ~o l a,
90' l ong, be1ge, go ld , green,
fl ora l ny lon co ver Goo d
condtl lon Pl1one 949 23 61
$1 00 00.

WILLVA SEND

WOFI- •

ME ONE OF 'THOS~

,..y.

lE~ SHII'tTS '10U
~VEOWff'!.EASS ...

t440S'~Y.,

KE NWOOD rAPE DEC K,
ampld1e r ,
tur nt ab l e,
speakers $600 L ess than 6
mon t hs ol d 992 6190

1'/ILLYA, HUH?

LA DlE COMPLETE 12 l d
wa rdr obe
Clo t hes a r e
bra nd new m ost st1ll have
lags on Reason tor sel l1ng,
Don' t t 1t Incl udes L1ll1 A nn
su tt s. John Mey er &amp;
M anhatten blou ses, B1ll
L 1ce
d es t gner
r ob e.
Chnst1an D1or dresses, etc
992-3283

8

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auct1on

BRADFORD, Auctooneer,
Complete Servtce Phone
949 2487 or 949 2000. racone,
Oh1o, Critt Bradford
9

Wanted to Buy

WANTED TO BUY, glass
door or one half a glass
door 32 mches wide by 78
onches long . 742 -2545

4663
SIZES

8-18

t.'f-/1..-.

-/1.1-s

ThiS !&lt;Itt style (no waost seam)
has graceful gathers rad1at1ng
out from slnng·tted necklone to
shoulders Wear ot belted or lree,

MEDICAL
labratory
techtnician, full or part
t1me positions avatlable for
MT, MLT, or CLA, salary
commensurate wtth ex ·
perience. Please contact
the Labratory Superv1sor,
at Veterans Memorial
Hospital ,
Mulberry
Hetghts~ Pomeroy, Ohio at
614 992 -2104 est 55 Equal
Opportunity Employer.

Pnnted Pattern 4663 Mosses
S11es 8, 10, 12, 14, 16 18 S01e
12 (bust 34) takes 2 518 yards
45-lnch fabroc.
$1.75 lw uch patient. Add 50e

--- - -- - - -

Artno Adlms

ted tor approx1mately one
month . P 0 . Box 268 1n M1d
dleport, Ohoo . An Equal
Opportunoty Employer

- -- --

~ --- - ----

Miscellaneous

OIL FURNACE, sloghtly
used . 992-7688 R.D
2
Pomeroy .

Real estate
31

Homes tor Sale

NEW 3 bedroom home for
sale . Built in kitchen,
d i ning
room ,
large
recreat1on room, fireplace,
lots of storage, 21f2 baths,
g•rage, 1 acre lot. 992 3454
ED
BARTELS,~oan
Representat11Je, 1100 East
Maon St., Pomeroy, Oh
Mortgage
money
available . All types home
ftnanctng ,
new,
old,
retmanc1ng, and 2nd mor
tgages Phone 992 7000 or
992 5732 .

197 1 REBEL RAIDER 12 x
mob1l e home 1n good con
doloon $5,500 Cal1985 3562
1970 CH AMPION mobole
home 12 x 60 , thr ee
bedroom s, equ 1pped w1fh
washer, d r y er , range ,
reftrgerator , and a1r con
d1t1oner 992 2640
1970 MOBIL E HOME 40 x
12 wtTh new turn1ture 1
304 -773·5131
FOUR YEARold double
Wtde-24 x 64 m excell ent
co ndttt on Mus t be moved
tram present iocatton 1n
Syrac use 992 2638

3S

sew 1t

lf1

a few hours

111 uch )11111111 lw firsHIID
aitmlilllld hlndllq, Send to:
~·111m Dept
Tile Dally se'~tlnel

243 Wtot 11 St, IIW YOit, flY
10011. Pritt NAME, ADORES$,
SIZE, llld
IUMIIU.

ZIP,

snu

Why put up woth ht&amp;h poocessave dollars, &amp;et better qual1ty!
Send for our NEW FALL-WINTER
PATTERN CATALOG 94 patlerns,
ftee Pattern Coupon (wortlt
$1.75) Catal1111, Sl 00 .
133-fllltion HDntt Qulltin&amp;$1.75

130-S.....,.Si• 31-56 $1.75
129-0IIcl/E., Trllllftos.$1.75
127-{filtans 'n' Dolll• . .$1.75
I

FIVE YEAR old bo level
home.i Three bedroom , 22fJ
baths, large famoly room
w1th fireplace , fully car·
peted. Large sun deck and
pat1o. W1thin walking
dlstroct of shoots. 992-7132.
FINE COUNTRY Lovong .
Baum Addit1on Home on
large landscaped lot, 3
bedrooms, 2112 baths, large
livmg room, drning room,
paneled family room, with
stone fireplace, picture
window &amp; sliding glass
doors to pat1o, gas heat ,
central a c , extra large
double garage . 985-3543.
MODULAR HOME . Must
relocate, 3 bedroom, 2 full
baths, garden tub on
master bedroom , tully
equipped modern kitchen,
donlng, llvong &amp; family
rooms. Paneling &amp; car petong throughout, central
•ir &amp; heat . 992 ·7342
32

, Mobile Homes
tor Sale

MObile home; Rochardson:
two bedroom 50 x 12 for
S2,000
Good conditoon,
goOd lot for $45.00 a month .
New water heater. New '
Haven, W.Va . Richardsons
Traoler Park, Moll St. 882
2216

-- - - - -- - ---

---

Lots &amp; Acreage

65ACRE S INMeogsCounty
near Harnsonv il le, Oh1c:;&gt; 30
acr es of tillab le groun d,
rest 1n pasture Wood, two
ponds, a 1r sTr 1p, pl ane
shed, $56,500 742 2577
1 89 ACRES FOR sa le,
tooters tor tra11 er , sept1c
tank , water, electnc, 1n
Rutland, Ohoo
Call 773
5373 '"Mason, Wv
ONE ACRE of good Ir on
tage In th e Ra c1ne Dorcas
area 9&lt;19 2890
ONE ACRE of ground w1th
unf1n1 s hed basement
S35,000 Phone 667 3826
SUITABLE LOT tor mob1 le
:~orne Easy term s, close t o
town 992 -5786 or 992 2529
REAL ESTATE tor sa l e.
cor ner l ot on ma1n h 1gh·
way , over 250 toot of Iron
tage , 95 perce nt t1nancmg
t9 Qualifi ed chur ch group ,
organ1zat1on , or successf u l
bus1ness managem en t
992 S786 or 991 2S29

lff903IS
42

-

-

Mobile Home s
for Rent

THREE
BEDRO O M
mobtle
h,ome
ap
prox1mately f1ve m tl es
t rom Pom eroy or M1d
dl eporl 992 5858
TWO B E DROOM mobolo
home , re al n1ce Brown's
Trail er Park 992 3324
TWO BEDROOM mobole
home n ea~ Ra c1ne Ca l l
992 5858
TRAILER one adul t only
992 3181

-----' ------

IN
SYRACUSE
one
bedroom trail er w1th htde
a bed Utd1ttes lurn 1shed
Oepos1t requ ,red No pets.
992 3269
Reat Estate

General

FURNI SHED
APART
MENT 4 rooms &amp; bath
A dult s only , no pets 992
387 4

46

-

Household Goods

USED APPLIANCES
1 Good Used Fngtdatr
Refngerator
S1SO
1 Good Used Whtrlpool
Refrtgerator
$125
1 Good Used Sears Coldspot Combtnatton
Refngerator
$175
1 Good Used G1bson
Coppertone combination
Refngerator
S2SO
1 Good Used Un•co
Large
Chest Freezer
$200

RENTER ' S aSS IStan ce tor
Sen tor Clt1zens 1n VIlla ge
Manor &lt;1P 1S Ca ll 992 7787

OWNER MUST SELL
New rust1c home surroun
ded by 7 5 acres of n1ce
wood . 2 bedrooms, 1'12
baths, fireplace, sptral
staorway . Wood decks
overlook1ng
flatwoods,
over 1,400 ft. of living
space . 992·3213

WANTED TO BUY I to 5
acres of land in the
Southern Local School
Dostrict. Phone 742-2974 al·
ter 6 p.m

--PHONE
- , - - - - -· - - --- -SOLICoTOR·wan ·

-

17

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom
ranch home in Baum Ad·
d1t1on. Gas and central air.
Fully carpeted with
drapes, family room, with
fireplace. Priced to sell by
owner . Due to employment
must move from area 985·
3814

Gold, sil\ler or fore 1gn
coms or any gold or Silver
1tems Ant1que furntture,
g lass or ch1na, Will pay top
dollar, or complete estates
No 1tem too large or too
small Check pnces before
sellmg Also do appra1smg
Osby IOssoe) Marton. 992
6370

APPLICATIONS will be
accepted for part ·time
POSitions of l1brary arde at
the Chester Rlverv1ew and
Tuppers Plains elementary
and full time at the Eastern
Htgh School until 1 noon
Thursday, August 28 All
1nterested
appl1cants
please contact Mr. Hull at
Eastern High School.

WIL L DO Babysltlong on
my home. Any t1me . Have
references. 742 ·3116.

HOUSE FOR Sale by
owner Good location in
Moddleport, proced roght
for sale Phone 992 5792 or
992 2917

10 karat. 14 karat, 18 karat.
gold. Denial gold and gold
ear pins. 675 3010.

Help Wanted

SITUATIONS WANTED,
family care tor elderly per
son 992 -6022

TWO BEDROOM house,
full basement, fvel oil fur·
nace,
woodburner
Workshop w1th attached
shed . $29,500 Phone 949
2249

IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furn1ture, desks, gold
nngs , jewelry, s11ver
dollars, sterltng, etc ., wood
1ce boxeso~ ars ant1ques,
etc Complete households
Wrote M . D . Moller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OHI or call 992·
7760

1_1_ _

S1tuat1ons Wanted

-

51

60 two bedroom, one bath

Space tor Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pa r k , Rou le 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots Ca ll
992 7•79
TRAILER SPA,C E f or r en t
1n Middl epor t. $45 00 per
mont h 992 S349

84 ACRE FARM Porlland, Ohoo Co Rd
31. Owner will1ng to split
thi s farm 1n several
possible sections
(1) 7 yr old house .an d
ga,.age on 4 acres for
$39,500.
12) 5 acre buoldong sote

3 rs 1nch reba r

17c per too t
by 20 It sec t 10n on ly 0
Bumgardner Sales. Nobl e
summ1t Rd , Mtddlepor t ,
OH 992 512d

Real Estate

!i6

Real Esta-ct.:_
e _ ,G:.::eneral

r~::~~~w

DILLON
REAL ESTATE

216 E. Second Street

l
BDRM. HOME 1n
Syracuse Paneled and
carpe t ed throughout,
alum1num 51d1ng, 2 n1ce
porches, on a l eve l lot
OVER 2 ACRES OF
LAND,
h ooku p fo r
mob1 ie home, and a 3
bedroom fram e ranch 3
mil es from Mtddleport
1n Kyger Creek School
D1stnct
2 BEDROOM FRAME
cl ose to Middleport
schools , park &amp; shopp·
ong $12,500.00 .
2
STORY
FRAME
DUPLEX - 2 bed room
apt down , t bedroom
apt up Rent will pa y
for home
2 BEDROOM HOME 2 acres of land , 2 mtles
from Mtdd leport Also
so m e fru1t trees.
4 BEDROOM frame on
Rt 7 '"Pomeroy Large
modern eat-tn k. ttchen

Phone
I· ( 614 ) - 992 · 3325
QUICK SALE - 6 room
nome, bath , new forced
a1r furnace, good dnlled
well , garden , large front
porch , utilttY room on
hard
road for only
$12,000
GOOD FARM 80
acres of n1c e laying
land . 5 bedroom farm
home, bath, and lots of
outbuildings. T P water
avai lable
MIDDLEPORT.
3
bed room s, large bath ,
lots of carpettng H as
utlltty room , equ1pped
k1tchen, and near shopp
ong On l y$ 16,500
2 LOTS - Old S room
house nea r Jones Boys
store Out of al l flood s
Only $3 ,500
365 ACRES Mostly
new barb wtre fence,
free gas, drilled wel l
and bottom l and one
half mile w 1de and one
mile long 5 bedroom
renovat ed home w1t h 2
bath s, l ots of n 1ce
carpet1 ng, rec
room ,
den, tormal d1n1ng ,.
l arge basemen) and 2
l arge porches . $225.000 .
Make
that
change
before school starts!
Low down payment .
Want to sell. Call us at
992-3325 or 992·3876 .

7 ROOMS and B,ATH .
Can be used as com m er
c1a l or as a home
2 STORY FRAME house
m Rac1ne Carpe ted,
paneled Large lot on a
qutet str eet
2 OR 3 BEDROOM
frame house on Broad
way St 1n Middl eport.
Close to pool , park &amp;
stores Newly pamted
m:: de &amp; ou1.
FAYE MANLEY

CALL 992-2598
DAY OR NIGHT

ousing
Headquarters

Real Estate- General

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
NEW LtSTING - A 1 condlf1Ut l 1 3 BR , full base·
m ent, 1n town \o ca t1on , many ex tras Pn ced to sell
$39,000

OVER 100 ACRES - All m1neral nght s go With pro
perty Water l1nesc lose, ttmber ready to cut , drill ed
gas well Ca ll tor more 1nto
BEAUTIFUL - Well k epi home has 3 BR's, cou ld
be more, fa m ily room &amp; den, Jlh ba th , 2 ca r garage,
well onsu l ated. A ll t hos and mu ch more. SS7.500

NANCY JASPERS , ASSOCIATE
949·2591 L eave Message
or 949-2654

Real Estate- General

HOBSTETTER REALTY
GeorgeS Hobste1ter, Jr., Brok er
OFFICE 742-2003

H I LLC RE ST KENNEL S
Boardmg , all breeds. Clean
1ndoor outdoor f ac, llttes
Also
AKC
reg1ster ed
Dobermans 614 446 7795
HOOF HOLLOW Horses
and pon1 es and ndmg
les sons
Everyth1ng
1m ag1 na bl e m hor se equ 1p
men t
Bl a nk et s, bel t s,
boots, ere E ngl1 sh and
West ern
Ruth Re eves
161• 1698 3290
AK ~

REG i oTE RED Old
Eng lt sh
sheep
dogs
Females, 7 w eeks old $200
5 year old $100 JO• 895 3624

PHONE 742-2003
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
ATHENA ACRES
Lovely 2 story home, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, ltv
1ng room w1th stone see
through f i rep lace to
btrch l ibrary , formal
d 1n10g room , large
modern k1tchen , utiltty
room &amp; cellar Pat1o
with 1nV1tmg l4' x28'
sw 1mm1ng poo l
24
acres, half cleared, rest
woods Al l mtnera ls go
Ca 11 for your appt
NEI'I LISTING 3
bedroom
hom e,
Rutland, large 11v1ng
room w1th ftreplace ,
d1n10g room , kitchen,
ut1 l1ty and double car
garage
Ask1ng
SJS,OOO 00
POMEROY - Lovely 2
home w1th
s tory
beauttful woodwork on
Mulberry Ave , I1V111g
room
w1th
nt ce
ftrepla ce, d1n1ng room ,
f am 1l y
room ,
3
bedrooms, Jl/:z baths ~
nt ce modern kitchen
and garage Call for
appt
ACREAGE - 5 acr es on
Hy se ll
Run
Rd ,
buildmg s1te &amp; some
tomber , $7,000 00.
HYSELL RUN RD. Approx 8 acres w1th 2
bedroom hom e Asking
S21 ,SOO 00
CONOOR
ST
3
bedroom hom e, 11v1ng
r oo m , ktt chen, some
furn 1ture. Would make
good rental propert y
Askong S13,SOO 00.
POMEROY Nice 3
bedroom brrck home,
large 11vmg room , la rge
forma l dtn1ng room , ex·
tra n 1ce familY room &amp;
k.1tchen comb1ned, 1 11'2
baths .
Sells
l or
$26 , ~0 OOGROCERY
BUSINESS - St. Route
12•, Rutland, Bldg . 1n
eludes equ1pment and
rental
apartment
$21,200 00
COUNTRY COMFORT
2'J.t:l acres with 3
be d r oo m
H o l·lypark
mobile home with large
family room , double car
garage Ha s edra sep·
toe tank and water hookup Nice 32' x22' barn.
PRICE REDUCED $47,SOO.OO
Velma N1C1nsky, Assoc
Phone 742·3092
Cheryl Leml ey , Assoc.
Phone 742 3171

I'

DEAN'S
TRANSMISSION
SPECIALISTS
Bebui lts· R epa1rs

Seal Jobs
Located 6 miles north of
Albany, Oho on 681
North.
22 Years Experience
Fully Guaranteed
Ph. 664-6370
If no answer
Call698·3113
7 31 1 mo.·pd

..

Owner will tmance at 9%
te rest w1th 10% down. Home has 3 bedrooms, kit
c hen , bath , full basement and sunporc h. Loca ted on
Hig h St 1n Pomeroy . Call today, won' t l ast long at
only $2S,OOO 00
Velma NtCinSky, A SSOC.
Phone 742 ·30Y2
Cheryl Lcmley , A ssoc.
Phone742 3171

Call Allers P.M.

843 2803
•

ALL STEEL

Farm Buildings

SALES

Sizes
"From 30xl0"
SMALL

THE POOL PEOPLE

Utility Buildings

31711 Nobte Sumot Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
992-5724

Sires from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Sales, service and supplies. In ground and
above ground pools.
5·1 ttc

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2S91
6-IS· tfc

Excavating

NEW
LISTING
EASTERN
SCHOOL
DISTRICT - One iloor
plan, 2 bedroom home
w1th
a
Heatol a tor
f1reo lac e, full base
ment, and a la rge ntce
bu1 1t-m k1tchen . Has approxtmately 41/.tt acres·
$36,500 00.
NEW LISTING · WALK
TO THE MARKET - A
2 story frame home that
could be a two family .
Could
use
some
rem o d e l1ng
1ns1de
$6,200.00.
NEW
LISTING
BEAUTY SALON woth 5
rooms &amp; bath
1s 2
workmg stat1ons ~ a l l
equ 1p m e nt
A lso
a
mob1le home hookup
N1ce corner lot Put
yourself 10 a bus mess of
your own for only
$24,900 .00
NEW LISTING 90
acre s of va cant land
near Long Bortom
$27.000 00
MOVE RIGHT IN - to
th1 s NEW ran ch style
home that has 3
bedrooms, utility room, ~
large one acre lot, par
t1ally fen ced Super mce
at $39,900 .00
FARMERS HOME AP ·
PROVED - Approx 10
yr o ld house that has
new carpet, new wm
dows, and a new wood
burn ~ r on a 1
h acre lot
Prtced
to
sell
at
$21 ,500 00
DON ' T BE A RENT
SLAVE - You can l 1ve
1n th 1s house fo r less
than you can rent It has
two--2 bedroom apa rt
ments that are m good
co ndition .
Just
$13,300.00.
MIDDLEPORT l'h
story bnck home w1th
front &amp; rear porches and
approx 1•12 acres The
k1t c hen
ha s
n 1ce
cabi net s
an d
a
dt sh wash e r
On l y
$20,000.00 .
PRIVATE RETREAT
Forget
about
everythmg in th 1s qu1et,
peaceful se tting . 12
acres of 0 1ce land, plus a
mob ile home that has 2
rooms bu 11t on the rear
Could be heated wt•h
wood. $22,300.00.
WE ARE A FULL TIME
FULL SERVICE
REAL ESTATE COM PANY .
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland , Jr .
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trus.sell949-2660
Roaer &amp; Dothe Turner
992 -5692
OFFICE PHONE
992-2259

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Expertenced Operators
avatlable for local work.
• 2 rUbber h re backhoes
e1 eKcavator hoe 1114
yd .
e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equ1pment.
992·2478
B-14 1 mo pd

VINYL SIDING
ROOFING
REMODELING
Serving your area
tor 25 years. Call
now for large sav·
ings.
For
Free
Estimate Call
Eugene-Long
( 614) 843·3322
B 18 1 mo. pd .

All types of root1ng, new
and repa~r, gutte..-s,
downspouts,
commer·
c1al &amp; res1dent1al.
949·2160 Pomeroy
797·2432 Athens
Tom Hoskins or
Gerald Clark
797-4847
21 years expenence. All
work guaranteed.
Free Est•rnate
8 14-1 mo

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes- ex·
tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
B 7 1 mo

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
N. 2nd Ave.
M•ddlepo..-t, Ohio
PH . 992 -6342
TRY US!
Complete Dry Cleanong
and Laundry
eCarpet
• Draper.es
• Fu..-n1ture
c" We're No . 1 tn
Service &amp; Qloatol('

PUT A cold nose 1n your
futur e
Me 1gs
Counly
Hum ane Soc1ety Wormed,
shots 992 6260. Two ger
ma n-shepherd elk hounds,
mal e, four lovely pupp1es,
pretty brown shepherd
t ype dog , several love ly
cat s and k1ttens

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
"' Call Howard
949·2862
949·2160
1·22·ttc

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

PARK
FINANCIAL

Pets for Sale

56

All types of roof work,
new or repatr gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleanong and painting.
All work guaranteed.

General

REAL ESTATE

MIDDLEPORT - Large sta tel y brick home oil a
corner lot only a block from shopping Three
bedrooms and bath upsta1rs Ftve rooms and bath
downstairs New furnace w 1th central air conditionIng . One car garage with storage room up. Full
basement Call for an appointment - 559 ,000 00

Call Bill Childs, Mgr. 992-2342
Rodney Downing, Broker

-Addonsand
remOdeling
-Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work
- Plumbing and
elec1rica I work
(Free Estimates)

REAL ESTATE LOANS
Federal Housing
VP,terans
Admtntstration
107 S~camore
Pomeroy
Office 992· 7544
Home 992· 6191

Farm sappljes
&amp; l j 1/£5fBEil

V.C. YOUNG II

992·6215 01' 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

. . .,____ 4_
~arm ~_qu~p~ent

61

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

USE D R 40 dotch wot ch
w1th trencher
1 614 694
7842 .

CARPET SHOP
"Drive A Little Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED

1976 JOHN D EE RE 3800
Chopper w1th 2 row corn
hertd and 2 row snapper
head , ex c co nd, $5,595,
Sh1n ns Tractor Sa l es, Leon,
w v a, 458 1630

GRASS CARPET
0
TURF"
$399 Sq Yd.
Reg . $5 .99

Blue &amp; Gold
RUBBER
BACK

SHAG
CARPET
1nstallcd

&amp;1'.1195

•4"

( Pnce Does Not
Include
In

1974 NEW
HOLLAND
Super 717 chopper wtfh one
r ow head, good cond ,
S2,495
Sl11 nn 's Tractor
Sa les. Henderson , WV, 458
1630

Sq. Yd .

Cash· N-Carry

Sltllli'II IOn)

~,Sq. Yd

and up
w / paddong

JULY CARPETSAIJE
ALL CARPET AT DISCOUNT PRICES
Any regular carpet jobs tnstalled with free pad.
Nfce ·seleCtion of- Carpet Rem-nants and
Lonoieum Remnants at Bi Discounts.

ONE
NEW MAS SEY
Ferg uson 200 chopper, 2
row head weathered I1SI
proce, $8,000 $3995, SHINN
TRAC fOR
SALES,
Ga ll1polts, Oh1o 446 1044

RUTLAND FURNITURJ
Main St.

742-2211

C
A
SE TRAcTOR;.;;;~.~. ~·~-~========:::::+======~::=~
mount m ower $795 949
2179

==e--ansportation
Want~ d

62

to Buy

CHIP WOOD Poles m ax
diameter 10" on largest
end $12 per t on Bundl ed
sl ab $10 per ton Oelt vered
10 Oh10 Pa l let Co 1 Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 2689

71

SeF*i•tes

- 4---4-----Autos For Sale
'
- -

-

~

4

-

-

-

-

-

1966 DODGE POLARA for
sale for
parts, as I&lt; tng
$200 00 1f ontcres ted call
992 7775

4

Real Estate -

742-'!-455

Rt. I, Portland, Oh.
8·13-1 mo

Pullins

OLD COINS, pockel wal
ches, c lass nngs, w eddmg
ba nd s, d 1amond s Gold or
sliver Call J A Wamsl ey,
742 2331. Treasure Che st
Coon Shop , Athens. OH . 592
6462
GO LD
AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RING S,
JEW E LRY ,
STE RLING SILVER AND
MISC
ITEMS PAYIN G
RE C ORD
HI GH,
HI GHE ST UP TO DATE
PRICE S CON T A CT ED
BURKET T
BARB ER
SHO P. MIDDLEPORT ,
OH 10 , OR CALL 992 3476

------- 4---

~roN·rr&gt;AC'T -

- Haul
Lomesrone,
gravel , fill dtrt
- Agnc. hme spreading
- Backhoe work
-New and used farm
equ•pment
- Mechanocat work on
:~~~s. equtp., cars,

~~~m~o~.
~~==========~7~-3~1=·1~m~u~~~~~~==~~~====~~~~~~~~8~-8~D. BUMGARDNER

L1vestock

63

4

Phone Virgima .Hayma11
985·4197

Ph. 992·2772

--------

608 E .
MAl N . .ioioli;Ooll~...
POMEROY, D

HOBSTffiER
REALTY

INSIDE &amp; OUT

James Keesee

Charles M Hayes, Realtor
Neac•l E Car se y, IJr Mgr
Ph 991 '24(ll cr 9'11· 11&amp;0

Real Estate - Gener al

&amp;

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT &amp;
TRUCKING

Real Estate- General

tor $5,000

(3) 75 acres, fen ced, atl
useable for hay or plan·
t1ng 1 lg. 1 barn and 2
ponds lor SS25 pr acre
60 ACRES tor hunting
and fish1ng Plenty of
pmes for cabm. Shade
Creek runntng through.
Includes mrneral nghts.
$1.,000 .
FORKED RUN LAKE
AREA Sm. ret1re
ment home 10 yrs . old
block with city water,
sets on l'h acre. $21.500 .
BUILDING SITES on
Rt 7 below Eastern
H igh School 1 1112 to 21!2
acre each . S7,500

Vinyl

BELL
House Pamting

Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
• Storm Doors
eStormWondows
• Replacement
W1ndows
Free Estimate

POODLE
GROOMING
Judy T ayl or. 614 367 7220

TWO MALE pek1n gese
pupp1es Reg1st ered 949
2890

General

Housing
Headquarters

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

•
Pe t s tor Sale

General

POMERDY, O.

Business Services

Bulldtny Supph cs

!i5

992·12SJ_

ANT TO SELL? GIVE US ACALL! !
TUPPERS PLAINS
'New elegant bnck to
make you proud. 2
bedrooms, formal dtn·
1ng , kiTchen has a ll
bullt· ins, f a m
rm
w / f~r e pl ace,
2 ca r
garage

Real Esta1e

POMEROY
LANDMARK
E Mam St. Pomeroy, 0 .

NEW LISTING - Small2 BR home need s work only $8,000

Cassady Really
Belpre, Oh.

HEAriNGOIL BuynOwcil
Summe r Prr ces E KCCIS1or
Co 6~• 992 2205

54

On the Light Side

to topple a group of older officers
and quickly placed men loyal to him
in key posts. For a time he also took
over as acting head of the Korean
CIA despite a prohibition against ar·
my officers holding the job.
Over the next few months, the
military publicly proclaimed loyalty
to the civilian government but
quietly reserved power for itself.
In May, when thousands of university students took to the streets of
Seoul and Kwangju to demand lif·
tlng of martial law and rapid, free
elections, Chun cracked down.
Extending a stricter martial law
nationwide, he arrested dozens of
top politicians, students, JOUrnalists
and dissident leaders including Kim
Dae-jung, now be'{).g courtrnartlaled on sedition chiirges which
carry the death penalty.

for 11 days smce the Aug. 16
restgnatwn of Chm Kyu-hah. Choi
became president when President
Park Chung-hee was assassinated
Oct. 26 by his chief of mtelligence.
The 49-year-old Chun, a balding, 5foot, 6-lnch tall career officer, was a
protege of Park and at the time of
his assassination was a major
general in charge of the Defense
Security Command, which controlled all military intelligence ac·
tivities.
Chun took control of the investigation and defying orders of acting President Choi ordered the
arrest of his superior, Gen. Chung
Seung-hwa, known to have been 50
yanls from Park when he was shot.
On Dec. 12, Chun and a small
group of officers carried out a coup

Anltqu cs

They'll Do It Every Time

Mobote Homes
for Sale

.

Gen. Chun Doo-hwan new Korea president
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) ~ying he would fulfill his new duties
South Korea's new mihtar/"'-1. wlthout seHishness," and that the
strongman, Gen. Chun Doo-hwan, election was a "national call for me
was elected president today without to devote my body and soul to the
opposition or debate just eight mon- · creation of a new history."
ths after he emerged from obChun said his government would
. scurity.
be "an honest and efficient one,
Chun, virtually unknown to listening to the people's voice aU the
Koreans outside the military and to time, and based on the people's conforeigners before the coup he led in fidence."
December, was elected by 2,224
The election was a foregone conmembers of the nation's rubber· elusion followmg Chun's resignation
from the military as a full general
stamp Electoral College.
Fifteen members were absent and last Friday. His retirement was
~vote was declared invalid.
necessary because the constitution
Chun, who has effectively conbars active-duty officers from
trolled the country since the coup,
becoming president.
Chun is South Korea's third
was the only candidate for
president. He did not appear at the
president in two weeks and the fourelection ceremony, officials reporth in a year, succeeding acting
ted.
President and acting Prime
Later he issued a brief statement
Minister Park Choong-hoon, in office

whtle Coats had 147,197 or 33 Jllll!r·
cent. On the Republican side,
Nickles had 46,229 or 33 percent,
while Zink had 45,920 or 33 percent.
There were also primary contests
for four of the state's six
congressional seats. The only ino
cumbent to be challenged was Rep:
Wes Watkins, a 3rd District
Democrat, who beat Letand Kelly of
Sulphur.
In Alaska, Gravel was challenged
by Clark Gruening of Anchorage and
Michael Beasley of Eagle River.
Richard Whittaker of Ketchikan
and Kevin "Pat" Parnell of Anchorage were seeking the ,
Democratic nod mthe congressional
race.

The proposal would require the
governor to set up an 11-member
Alaska Statehood Commission to
study "alternative forms of
association possible between the
United States and the people of
Alaska."
In the Oklahoma senatorial contests, former Oklahoma County
District Attorney Andy Coats and
Oklahoma City oilman Robert S.
Kerr Jr. won spots in the
Democratic runoff, while state Sen:
Don Nickles of Ponca City and John
Zink of Tulsa will compete m the
Republican runoff. Sen. Henry
Bellman, a Republican, is retiring
from the seat.
With 2,676 of 2, 774 precincts repor·
ling, Kerr had 147,878 or 33 percent,

·

JONE S Meat Packong
s 1aughter1ng,
c u sto m
process1ng, r etail mea t
Wa shtngton Co. Rd 248,
L1ttle Hod.tng, OH 667
61 33
-

-

v

-

- -

-~---

LAR GE Gue rnsey cow
EKc m il k cow, sound $675
9492 179
HO GS approxomat e ~y 200
lbs $100 9•9 2179
YOUNG HE AVY Lay ong
hens 52 00 ea 949 2119

1972 VOLKSWAGON
I 30d 773-513 1

Call

1973 NOVA SUPER sport
350 V·8 w1 th standard tran
sm IS StOn, th ree speed ,
65,000 miles Pho ne 742
2•31
-~-- - ------

1973 VW SU P ER Beetl e.
Pro ce $1 ,300 Ca ll 614 949
2540 after 5 p m

61

Home
__ ! m_proveme~--

S &amp; G Carpet Clean~ng
St ea m
c leaned
Free
es t1 ma t e
Reason ab le
rates
Sc otchguard
992
6309 or 7d2 22 11

aJ--

4

_EXC2~.!!_1!!L_ _

_

J x F BACK HO E SER VICE llscensed and bon·
ded, se pt 1c
t ank
tn ·
stallat1on, water and gas
li nes Excavat1ng work and
trans1t layout 992·7201.

84

-------·E l ec tncal
&amp; Refngerat~on

74

Motor~ycles__

_

1977 SU ZUK I GOFFER 100
less th an 1400 md es w tt h
wtndscr een
1n c lud e d
$550 00 Call 992 7775
1979 HONDA H AWK ' dOO' on
exce llent cond1t1on, must
se ll lor $1700 00 Ca ll 992 - ,
5502

7S

Boats and
Motors for Sale

20
HOR SE
motor 949 2273

E vonrud e

1969 FIBERGLASo tro haul
,boc1t 1969 Ev1nrude motor
w1th trader Sk1 equ1p &amp;
I ole 1a ckets Sl , 100 992
53R2

SE WING
MACHINE
Repatrs,
service , illl
makes
992 228•
T he
Fabn c Shop, Pom erO y.
Authonzed Smger Saies
and Serv 1ce We shar~en
SCISSOrS

----- ------

ELWOOD
BOWERS
RE PAIR
Sweepers,
toas ter s, 1rons , a II sma 11
appli ances. Lawn mower .
Next to St ate Highw•y
Garage on Rou te 7, ~S
3825

·- -- --------

APPLIA NCE servoce, all
mak.es washers, dryers,
ranges,
d i sh
washers ,dfsposals, water
tank.s Cal l K-en Young 985·
3561 bot ore 9a m . or aft or 6
P m.

�One mill.

• •

{Con tinued from pagel)

I

nesday morning.
of the election board. The new piece
Enrollment this year on opening
of equipment features an ~utomatic
compared to last year is: high
day
feed which will take an entire
514, last; 534, this ; Tuppers
school,
precinct at one time processing it at
141, laSt; 144 this year rtQt
Plains,
the rate of 200 votes per minute with
counting
kindergarten; Riverview,
an a utomatic print out, precinct by
145
last;
155 this, and Chester
precinct plus showing accumlative
196 last, and 191 this
Elementary,
totals.
year.
Representing the board of elections . were Leslie F. Fultz, Bill
Co7""rt, Evelyn Clark and Mrs.
Dorothy Johnston.
Seven defendants forfeited bond
a nd driving while under suspension,
and three were fined in the court of
Robert Persons of Chester To;.n.
$5() and costs.
ship spoke. to the commissioners on · Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Middleport mayor's court held Tuesday .
the renaming of the road on which he
Three defendants forfeited bond and
Forfeiting bonds were Gary · three were fine in the Tuesday 's
lives. The matter was referred to
Smith, Middleport, speeding, $26;
the Chester Township Trustees for
Middleport Mayor's Court, presided
Edna Lavender, Syracuse,
recommendations on the change.
over by Mayor Fred Hoffman.
speeding, $26; Tom Quillen, MidFred Nichols of the State Fire
Fined were Martin Eugene Seelig,
dleport, disorderly manner, $50; ' Middleport, disorderly manner, $5()
Marshall's office met to inform the
Kenny White, Pomeroy, public inand costs; Michael A. Bolin, Midboard of the results of his inspection
toxication, $100; Patricia l'itzer,
dleport, $2:i and costs, squealing
of several county buildings. The
Elyria, speeding, $30; Russell
commissioners agreed that the
tires; George McDaniel, Mid)lagers, Brunswick, speeding, $26;
dleport, three· charges of disorderly
buildings will be brought into com\ J a tnes Kaiser, Racine, s peeding,
pliance with state regulations.
manner, $5() and 10 days im$29.
prisonment for each.
Bids for bitwninous materials
Fined were Larry Sellers, Porwere opened with the bid going for
Forfeiting bonds were Arthur D.
tland, disorderly manner, $50 and
Shelly.Sands for the month of SepRoush, Racine, $350, driving while
costs; Wayne Little, Pomeroy,
tember.
intoxicated; John E . Wise, Rutland,
destruction of property, $200 and
Michael
Swisher,
welfare
direc$350,
driving while intoxicated; Mar1
tor, was given permission to enter
costs, and assault, $200 and costs;
tha L. Erb, New Haven,W. Va., $2:i,
Jerry Stewa rt, Letart, W. Va.,
into a rental contract with the Cost
running a stop sign.
reckless operation, $150 and costs,
Containment Co. for a desk top computer to be used in processing food
stamp budgets. The commissioners
increased to 19 cents a mile the
allowance for county employes
travel.
A copy of a resolution passed by
the Meigs County Library District
Board of Trustees was received
.
.
r\lQuesting that a one-half mill levy
Buy one BASF
be placed on the November ballot for
current operating expenses of the
Performance
Meigs County District Library.
cassette
get
The commissioners agreed to
r\lQuest additional information from
free.
the library board on the n;~ture of
• Dyn am ic rZ~nge superior to other
future improvements and the manstandard fe rric mdde tapes.
ner in which additional funds would
• Lower tape noise and excepbe expended. This is consistant with
t i on~lly dean, acc urate sound .
the policy of the board used in all
• Cassette houSing reatures
ather levy r\lQuests, commissioners
pa tented Security Mechanism lM
report.
for smoo th . even wind ing of
the tape .
All three commissioners, Jones, .
• The perfect gift .
Henry Wells and Chester Wells and
clerk, Mary Hobstetter were present
for the meeting.

Carter plans $27 billion tax ·cut
By GLENN RI'IT
Associated Press Write
WASHINGTON (AP ) - President
Carter is proposing about $27 billion
in 1981 tax cuts for individuals
married couples and businesses a~
part of an economic program that
also aims to create almost 1 million
new jobs in the next two years.
. However, the wide-ranging, election-year package being unveiled
today would increase the federal
deficit to about $40 billion in the
fiscal year beginning Oct I, Only five
months ago, Carter was championing a balanced budget as the key
to his economic policy .
Despite the deficit, administration
officials insist the package is not inflationary because the initiatives
will spur investment, increase
productivity and put people back to
work over the next five years.
Beyond economics, Carter's
thrust has political import. It is his

Mayor's court

''

,
,
"'
CHECKS READY - Tom Wolfe, center, holds a
display board of checks to be distributed to Meigs and
Mason County organizations who will share the $9,100
raised klr charity through the annual Da vid Diles
Charity Golf Tournament. Wolfe is president of the

. ..

~·- - &lt;·

Racine home National Bank. On the left is J&lt;re Young,
vice-president of Pomeroy Bank One, and on the right
is Ted Reed, president of the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. The three men make up the board determining.distribution of moneys raised through the tournament.

Meigs-Mason will share $9,100
from Diles Charity golf event
Meigs and Ma son County
organizations will share $9,100 as the
result of this summer's Da.vid Diles
Charity Golf Tournament held at the
Riverside Golf Course at Mason .
The amount represents money
cleared from the a nnual tour-

MEET THE
TEAM NIGHT
Meigs High School will observe
meet the team nlgl&gt;t at 7 p.m. Thur·
sday at the Pomeroy Stadium.

I

nament.
Organizations benefitting from the
tournament and the amounts to be
received by each·include:
Mason County Lions Club, $200;
Meigs County Lions Clqb, $200;
Meigs County Humane Society,
$300; Mason County Humane
Society, $300 ; Middleport, Pomeroy,
Racine, Syracuse, Tuppers Plains,
Rutland, Bashan, Salem Center,
Chester, Mason an~ New Haven Fire
·Departments, $300 each.
New Haven Recreation Center,
$200; Syracuse Recreation Center,

$200; Ohio University scholarship
(Meigs and Mason student), $1,000;
Meigs Historical Society, $200;
Multiple Sclerosis, $500; Racine,
Mason, Syracuse, Pomeroy, Point
Pleasant, Middleport and New
Haven Emergency Units, each $300;
Wahama a nd Meigs High Schools
Golf Teams, $200 each, and the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation $200.

.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
- ~~
Admissions--Glenda Lawson,
Pomeroy; Inez Ash, Racine; Lillie
Adams , Long Bottom ; Eura
Largent, Syracuse; Dwayne Johnson, . Pomeroy; Thomas Smith,
meces and nephews. Funeral serLetart Falls; Goldie Denny ,
viceswillbeheldat2p.m.Fridayat
Langsville ; Sharon Jessie,
the Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral
Pomeroy; Lottie Fruth, Mason, w.
Home with Mr. Robert Melton,
Va.; Adrienne French, Pomeroy;
pastor of the Middleport Church of
Mildred Wolfe, Pomeroy.
Christ, officiating. Burial will be in
Discharges--Ernest Imboden,
Gravel Hill Cemetery at Cheshire.
Beverly Collins, James Meadows,.
Friends may call at the funeral
Aunda Kline, Lester Hawk, Almeda
home from 4 to 9 p.m. Thursday.
Hardwick, Helen Holt, Samuel
Spears, Robert Manley, Sandra
Stanley, Mary Andrews, Neva
Hoyt Webb
Grimm.

.Area deaths

Grace Swartz

Grace Swartz, 81, Pomeroy, died
Tuesday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital following a sudden illness.
He was born at Alfred, Oh., to the
late William and Luzina Ziegler Bentz. Mrs. Swartz was a member of the
Alfred UM Church, the United
Methodist Women, and the Modern
Woodsmen of America.
She had lived in Alfred all her life.
Survivors include three sons,
Millard and Vernon, Coolville, a nd
Richard, Ravenna, Oh.
One brother, Warren Bentz,
Glouster, survives, along with two
sisters, Shirley Bahr, Longbottom,
and Lola Dereberry, Doylestown,
Oh. Eleven gra ndchildren and two
step-grandchildren survive, a long
with nine great grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her
husband Vere Swartz in 1977, four
sisters and two brothers.
Funeral services will be Thursday
2 p.m. at the Alfred UM Church in
charge of the Rev. Richard Thomas
and Rev . Gilbert S(&gt;!'ncer, with
burial in Bentz Cemetery.
Friends ,m ay call at the White
Funeral Home, Coolville.

Netta Warner
Mrs. Netta A. (Nettie) Warner, 85,
Pomeroy, died Tuesday at the
Christian Anchorage Nursing Home
in Marietta .
Mrs. Warner was born Oct. 15,
1894 at Kyger, a daughter of the late
James and Alvina Coughenour
Searles. She was also preceded in ·
death by her first husband, Joe
Sewell; her second husband, Charles
A. Warner, two sisters and three
brothers.
She was a member of the Middleport Church of Christ.
Surviving are a son, John Sewell,
Marietta; ·two grandchildren, three
great-grandchildren, and several

Mrs. Orien Roush and Ralph
Webb, local, received word of the
death of their brother, Hoyt Webb,
former Racine area resident, at
Newton Falls.
Funeral services will be held at 11
a.m. Friday at the Borouski Funeral
Home, 30 Ridge Road, in Newton
Falls with the Rev. Robert Weber,
pastor of the First Christian Church
officiating.
'
Trye family requests in lieu of
flowers donations be made to the
memorial fund of the' First Christian
Church at Newton Falls.
Mr. and Mrs. Orien Roush and
Ralph Webb will attend the Friday
services.
Mr. Webb was married to the former Thelma Byers of 1\le ·R acine
area. She survives along with two
children.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES AUG. 26
Oscar Bachtel, Mrs. Larry Bissel
and daughter, John Burson, Daniel
Burton, Lucille Casto, Randy Clary,
Richard Dabney, Mary Davis,
Phillip Dobbins, Mrs. Paul Forbes
Jr. and son, Helen Hartsough,
Thelma Hysell, Noel Janney, Ernest
Lester, Lula Lester, !son Locey,
Angela Lyall, David Massie, Mrs.
Jerry McGhee and son, Micahel McCreedy, Jerry Mullins Jr., Mrs.
Ronald Myers and son, Martha
Price, Leis Scherer, Donna Thomas,
Donald Willis.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs: Thomas Karr, son,
Pomeroy; Mr and Mrs. Randy Redmond, daughter, Pedro; Mr. and
Mrs. Malachi Willis, son, Jackson .

DIAfv\ONDS WITH
Efv\ERALDS, RUBIES
OR SAPPHIRES
Yours in matching earrings
and pendants

Publ•c Noti ce

PUBLIC NOTICE
Not ice i!) hereby given
that o n Sa tu rd ay, Augus t

JO!h , 1980, df 10:00 A.M. a
public sate will be held at

10 5

Un io n

Avenu e ,

Pomeroy , Ohio,
cash

th e

to

sell tor

fol l owing

collateral, to -wit :

1977 Ford TK , MFR .' s
serial no. F ISHN088368
Tt1e F a rm e rs Ba nk and
Sav ings
Company,

Pomeroy, Ohio, rese rves
the right to Qid at this sate,

and to withdraw any of th e
above mentioned vehic les
prior to the sale. F urther,
The Farmers Bank and ·
savings Company reserves
the right to re jec t any or a ll
bids submifted .
!8) 27 , 28, 29 J!c

The brilliance o1 ~!amends accented with the rich shimmering
color of emeral~s. rubies or sapphires. Together in marvelously matching PeMants and earrings . Quality crafted with
!4 k!. whi&lt;e or yellow QOid senlngs. A delight to gi" . _ ,
dream to have. And so wonderful to wear.

110

Pendant aton; 1

_

144

Earrings alone 1

F.eflt'l'""'"'"l'""

Diamonds with choice
of emeralds. rubies.

or sapphires
3·pc SET
SPECIAL

~496

CANDY'S CLASSIC COLLECTIONS
INGEL'S FURNITURE
.

LAY -AWAY FO~ CHRISTMAS

e

ELBERFELD$

FREE CASSETTEJ

'·

VOL. 31

NO. 96

Reagan wants a tax c ut enacted
immediately, and the Senate Finance Committee already has approved
a bill that would reduce taxes next
year by about $39 billion.
Carter's proposed tax c uts for
calendar year 1981 should benefit individuals and businesses about
equally, administration sources
said.
Specifically, Carter was expected
to propose tax credits for individua ls
and employers to offset the '$13
billion increase in Social Security
payroll taxes that goes into effect
Jan.!.
·
In addition, he wants to reduce the
so-called 11 marriage penalty," a .tax
law quirk that requires a working
married couple to pay more taxes
than two single persons.
Besides the Social Security offset,
businesses would be given other tax
breaks under Carter's proposal.
The current depreciation rate

would be speeded up, reportedly
about 40 percent, to let companies
write off and replace old equipment .
and pla nts faster, thus keeping up
with the latest changes as well as inflated costs.
·
In addition, there would be special
tax break s for businesses in
economically distressed areas.
Companies m. high unemployment
areas could seek an extra-fast tax
writeoff in addition to the general
speedup in depreciation rates, Carter a ides said. To qualify, businesses
would have to meet criteria yet to be
developed.
Moreover, Carter was proposing a
partial cash rebate on the existing
investment tax credit. Currently,
only companies that make money
and pay taxes qualify for the credit.
The change would allow firms just
starting out or those that lost money
to take advantage of the credit if

•

at

they invest in new machinery or
plant, administration officials said .
The business-tax changes are
aimed at revitalizing U.S. industry.
While the must obvious benefits
would be to the troubled auto and
steel sectors, administration officials said the revisions would help
virtually all companies, including
small businesses that' are just starting out and have limited capital.
other proposals include :
- A 13-week extension of unemployment benefits, which now run
out after 39 weeks.
- Between $500 million and $1
billion in "countercyclical revenue
sharing" aid that would go to cities
and counties where unemployment
is particularly high. This money also
would help offset the proposed loss
of state revenue sharing.
- An additional $1 billion in fiscal
1981 and $2 billion in fiscal 1982 for
economically troubled localities and

compa nies .
- Multimillion-dollar spending
programs to build ports for coal export, maintain highways and
weatherize housing . .
- A bolstered retraining program
under .the Comprehensive Employment Training Act, or CETA.
- A 3 percent annuar increase, after adjusting for inflation, in federal
spending for research and development, with much of this money going
to universities and to private industry, rather than to government
agencies.
Administration officials predicted
that the combined tax and spending
programs would create between
4(i(),OOO and 500,000 new jobs in both
ca lendar years 1981 and 1982.
While this could help grease the
recovery from the recession, officials said the programs were not
designed to end the current
economic downturn.

en tine
FIFTEEN CENTS

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1980

C-90

and
a second one

SUITFILED
.
A suit for $2163.2:i, allegedly due
on a promissory note, has been filed
in the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Delmar Baum, doing
business at True Value Hardware,
Chester, against Grant A. and Linda
·
Newland, Tuppers Plains, eta!.
In the same court, a hearing on the
extradition of William E. Connolly to
Mason County, W. Va ., on an alleged
auto theft charge' has beJ?n con- ·
tinued.

liBASF

.,...

Our Price

ELBERFELD$
IN POMEROY

SoMETHING NEW
HA.s BEEN ADDED To
CHECKING AT
CENTRAL TRUST.

Ohio Bell rate hearings held
CLEVELAND- Telephone service is getting more sophisticated all
the time, said Herbert Kammerman at a public hearing on Ohio Bell
Telephone Co.'s proposal for a $97 million rate increase this year.
Supported by other irate Ohio Bell customers, Kammerman said,
"None of this has anything to do with basic telephone services." ·
The Maple Heights telephone subscriber added, in remarks before a
Public Utilities Corrunission of Ohio hearing Wednesday, "The quality
of the system is going downhill. We're all ca ptives of the system .
"The only choice we have is to do without. "
The PUCO staff recommended earlier this month that Ohio Bell be
granted a rate increase of between $82.2 million and $97 million. The
suggestion brought strong objections from the Office of the Consumers' Counsel in Columbus, which labeled the staff report a

' 'tremendous disappointment. ' '

U. S. ambassador escapes death
BEIRUT, Lebanon - U.S. Ambassador John Gunther Dean escaped
unharmed from an assassination a ttempt by unidentified gunmen who
fired machine guns and a rocket-propelled grenade at his armored
limousine.
The attack came Wednesday evening, only hours after Dean
disclosed that the United States was working with Israel and the
United Nations to halfthe spiral of violence in southern Lebanon.
Bracketed by two car loads of bodyguards, Dean, his French-born
wife Martine , and their adult daughter Catherine, had just left the ambassador's residence in predominantly Christian East Beirut when
gunmen opened fire from a Mercedes.
Security sources said Dean ducked down on the back seat when the
shooting started and his limousine sped off. Bodyguards in the escort
cars peppered the attackers with a hail of automatic weapons fire.
"We fired back at them," one sec11rity man said. " I'm not sure if we
hit anyone becausewe left pretty quickly."
Security sources said hree suspects were arrested at the scene after
Dean's bodyguards shot out the tires of the Mercedes, forcing the gunmen to abandon it. The suspects were not identified.

IN SESSION-Officials are pictured at a meeting held at Southern High
School Wednesday at which time residents learned that there will be no
improved or new highways on the Ohio side of the new Ravenswood

CHOICE.
There :vas J time when one checking pla n could fit just
about everyone s.banktng needs . But today that's simply no
longer true . That s why, beginning September I at Central
Trust, we'll offer you a choice in c~c king plans.

For those who write only a few checks each month and
prefer to maintain a small balance, we recommend the Economy
Account. The service charge is on\y 75~ per month, plus M
for each check paid.
If you write quite a few checks each month and maintain
a larger average checking balance, you'll want the Balance
Account. The service charge is determined by your average
monthly balance, and there are no addi tiona! charges, no matter
how many checks you wr ite. The absolute maximum charge
1s $3.00 per month, but 1f you maintain an average monthly
balance of only $400 there will be no service charge for
that month.
And one of the best things about checking at Central
Trust is that with both the Economy Account and the Balance
Account, you can eliminate all checking service charges just
by keeping a minimum balance of $1,000 in a ·regular Central
r
Trust savings account.
,
Come in to any Central Trust office and pick the plan
that s right for you . A choice in checking. It's just one more better
banking service from Central Trust.

The cupboard is bare !
This appears to be the situation as
far as any highway improvem~nts
or new highways are concerned near
the new Ravenswood Bridge, according to statements made by Ohio
Director of Transportation David
Weir Wednesday when he spoke to
some 75 Meigs residents at the
Southern High School in Racine.
Accompanied by several aides;
Weir announced last week that he
would meet with local and state officials at the high school to discuss
highway programs, partic ularly in
relationship to the new bridge. The

lack of improved highways or new
highways on the Ohio side of the
bridge has been the subject of
numerous local complaints.
Richard E. Jones, president of the
Meigs County Commissioners, addressed Weir, his aides, Rep. Ron
James , Sen . Oak'~v O.:ollins, Rep.
Claire Ball of Athens and the crowd
to open the meeting.
Jones charged that committments
had ben made several years ago by
the state that there would •be major
highway action on the Ohio side of
the bridge. He said that Meigs Countians are now concerned because no

A change in the schedule of the
AORTA bus which operates between
Pomeroy and Athens became effective Aug. 15, it was announced
today.
Trips to Athens and back have
been reduced from four to two per
day with the bus to continue
operating on a five-day schedule.
The fares remain five cents per mile
with a minimum charge of 25 cents,
with senior citizens and the handicapped to ride at half of the
regular adult fare.
The bus leaves the Court St.,
Pomeroy stop at 6:30 a .m ., goes to
Middleport, leaving there at 6:42,

1HE

CENIRAL 1RUSf
COMPANY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'~ Fire

Class cancelled by low tUi'-nout

Better Banking Service. That's the Central Idea.

Weather forecast
Hazy, warm and humid through Friday. Mostly sunny Friday. Highs
around 90. Clear tonight. Lows near 70, Chance uf rain 10 percent
tonight and Friday. Winds southerly to southwesterly 10 rnph or less
·
·
tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecast- Saturday through Monday : Generally
fair weather through the Labor Day weekend. Highs85-90. Lows 65-70.

·'

such improvements have been forthcoming while major developments
have taken part on the West Virginia
side of the bridge.
Attorney Bernard Fultz then addressed the group asking that Weir
1explain the short range and long
range plans of the department of
transportation in the bridge area of
Ohio.
Fultz commented that probably
there will not be many Ohioans attending the bridge dedication when
it is completed because they will be
" too embarrassed". He too charged
that promises of upgrading present

roads or construction of new highways near the bridge would take
place in Ohio.
Weir stated that he had only
" bleak news" for the people assembled at the meeting. He said that income of the state has been greatly
reduced and the programs of the
department beta use of lack of funds
have become "chaotic".
The gasoline tax is bring 25 million
dollars less into the department's
budget and costs have increased unbelievably, Weir stated. Paving
programs once ran about 1900 miles
(Continued on page 10)

Announce change
•
ID bus schedule

CONCORD, N.H. - A father who fought for five years to see his
daughter - only to see her speak against him in court - has been
awarded $30,000 after contending the Unification Church violated his
rights as a parent in recruiting her.
A church official called the award unprecedented, but Don Kieffer
said he would " give up everything" to get his daughter Jana back.
Kieffer had asked $1 million in damages, contending the church
" deprived him of his natural parental right" by recruiting his
daughter when she was a minor. He also contended the church "continued to exercise its mind control techniques" over Jana after
recruiting her.
David Hager, legal director. of the church - whose mem!lers are .
sometimes called Moonies - said the church had never before lost a
suit over its recruitment or retention of members, "none that relate in
any way to this type of issue ."
Hager said he believe(! the U.S . District Court jury found the church
responsible for violating the father's rights as a parent, not with controlting the young woman's mind. " If they found mind control, they
would have socked us for a million bucks," Hager said,

HEIGHTS, Ky. - A Northern Kentucky University course on
Marxism and Maoism lasted one day- despite a suit won in June by a
part-time instructor who asked for the course's reinstatement.
Dr. Aaron Miller, dean of experimental programs, said the course
was canceled when only three students signed up lor it. At least six
must register for an experimental class, he said.
·• Part-time instructor Dr. Nina Schiller said the class wasn't given a
fair chance.
" They didn't leave it up for late registration," said Ms . Schiller, a
self-avowed Communist. " When people went Monday to register, they
couldn't. It was canceled Monday morning."
U.S. District Judge William 0 . Bertelsman found the university
violated the instructor's First Amendment rights and due process of
law when it canceled the class last December and cited her " un•
professional conduct" in publicizing the class.

bridge. From the left are Sen. Oakley Collins, David Weir, director of the
Ohio Department of Transportation; Rep. Ron Jarnes and Rep. Claire
Ball, Athens.

Highway director says cupboard bare

Father awarded sum in Moonie case

And the right choice can save you money.
What's more stunning than diamonds?

rebuttal to a $37 billion tax cut
proposed earlier by Republican
presidential nominee Ronald
Reagan.
Its unveiling comes on the eve of
Labor Day weekend, the traditional
start of the presidential campaign.
The program has three major
goals: to relieve Americans or an
ever-increasing tax load, revitalize
U.S. industry and help workers laid
off during the recession, as well as
the chronically unemployed.
In addition to the tax cuts, sources .
said Carter was proposing about $4
billion in new federal spending for
job retraining, additional research
and development, and energy conservation and transportation
programs.
Most of the tax and spending
initiatives will not be formally
proposed as legislation until after
the Nov. 4 election, administration
sources said.

ANA TELLO

Rotarians greet Ana Tello,
Mexican exchange student
Members of the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club have rolled
out the welcome mat for Ana Laura
Tello, a 17 year old exchange student
from Puebla, Mexico.
Ana arrived Monday afternoon at
Kanawha County Airport in
Charleston, W. Va ., where she was
met by Mr. and Mrs. Henry (Hank)
Cleland, Jr., of Pomeroy, her host
family in the United States. She will
probabl y be spending some time' at
the residence of Mr. 1and Mrs.
Robert Buck, all of Pomeroy .
She is the youngest in a family u!
six children, and is ll1e only girl.
Ana 's father, who, incidentall y,
lived six years in 'lew Jersey when
he was a tee nager, is e mployed in a
man ufacturi n g pl ant. fi e is

..

originally from Cuba . Her mother
keeps busy as a housewife, and was
born and reared in Mexico.
Ana is being trained as a secretary
a nd will be attending Meigs High
School as a sen ior for the next year
in the business and office education
program. When she returns to
Pueb!a, she will be working as a
receptionist-secretary for a large
iron factory, relating more with
English-speaking clientele. Visiting
the United States fur the first time,
she is here to improve her English
and learn American customs and
etiquette fur use in her career.
Ana enjoys volleyball, and she
hopes tu play on the Meigs High
Sc hool volleyball team . She plays
(Con ti nued on pag e 10)

then returns to Pomeroy at 6:54 and
leaves for Athens arriving at 7:50.
For the return tr:Ip, the bus leaves
Athens at 8 a.m., makes regular
stops at Shade, Pratts Fork;
Burlingham, Darwin, Rock Springs,
and arrives in Pomeroy at 9:01,
travels again to Middleport leaving
there at 9:15 a.m. for he trip to
Pomeroy.
The next bus leaves Pomeroy at 4
p.m. lor Middleport and returns to
Pomeroy at 4:24 before leaving for
Athens. It arrives in Athens at 5 :20
and departs from there for Pomeroy
at 5:30p.m. arriving hereat6 :32.

&lt;lestroys mobile home

The mobile home and all of the
possessions of the Ronald Deem
Family on Owl Road near Tuppers
Plains were destroyed by fire about
6 p.m. Wednesday.
The Tuppers Plains Fire Department answered a call to the scene
but the mobile home was all but
destroyed upon the department's
arrival. There was no one at home
ai the time. There was some Insurance coverage, it is reported.
Mr. and Mrs . Deem have four
children.
Meantime, an appeal was issued
today on behalf of the family for

clothing as well as any household
goods which anyone might want to
The family needs girls
give.
dresses, six &amp;-X; trousers, &amp;-X; girls
shoes, sizes 12 or 13; boys trousers,
size 2 and size 2 boys shirts; boys
trousers and shirts, size 3; boys
trousers, size 6 or &amp;-X, boys shoes ,
size 12; women's shoes, Gt or 7;
women 's slacks and dresses, size 12;
blouses, size 32-36; mens trousers,
~30; men's shirts, l~t. medium;
men's shoes, 9t-10. Anyone wishing
to give is asked to contact Bill Watson at 667-3562.

Southern Local reaches agreement
day, employes will be allowed three
An agreement between the
days of leave for a death in the imSouthern Local School District
mediate family, they will receive 17
Board of Education and the
District's Chapter of the Ohio ' cents a mile for any use of their personal vehicles for district business
Association of Public s dhool Emand a plan was accepted for a volunployes were reached Wednesday
tary list of rotating bus drivers for
n\ght.
extra driving duties.· According tm
The board met in recessed session
the agreement these drivers will be
and approved the agreement which
paid $5 an hour for the first two
provides non-certified employes
hours 'and $3.50 an hour for each
with a seven percent pay hike.
hour thereafter.
·
Otherd terms of the agreement
The next regular board meeting
provi e that the Friday after
has been set for Sept. 15.
Thanksgiving will be a paid vacation

\

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