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                  <text>14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Juhe 18, 19110

Mason County authorities ·
checking possible homicide

Lawmakers back
away from plans
COLUMBUS, Ohio t AP ) - Some
Ohio Ia wmakers have backed away
from a plan to delay increases in
nursing home substdies n~xt fiscal
yea r to help alleviate a sUite budget
crunch.
The unanutlous vote Tuesday by
the Senale Ftnance Conumttee
means slate fiscal planners now wtll
have to come up wtth $17 nullton, Illstead of $ti rmllion, to projecl balanced books for the fiscal year starling
July I.
Under an agreement by top
legislattve leaders and Gov. James
A. Rhodes, the state would have
delayed increases in Medtcatd
payments to nursing homes totaltng $11 .8 million - from July I,
1911(), to July I, 1981.
The deferment was announced
last week as part of an a ustenty
package in a pending appropnatwns
btll, which was to get Senate floor
ac!ton today. The bill s!tll must be
considered by the House. It would go
wtlh a 3 percent state spendmg cut
and a 5 percent hike tn liquor pnces
- already betng Implemented by the
administration - to resolve the
money ptnch, at least for now.
All told, the series of moves were
to make up all but $ti million of an
anhctpated deficit of $260 million in
the 1981 fiscal year. Now that nurstng home funds are restored, only
$249 mtllion will come m, said
Rtchard G. Sheridan, dtrector of the
Leg ts lative Budge t Office.
Several lawmakers who sponsored
the brll hikmg Medicaid payments
and calling for broad nursmg home
reforms were ·angry about the
decision to delay. It was made by
Rhodes and legislative · leaders,
without rank-and-file members get-

De~psey

Funeral services for Mrs. George
Dempsey, Huntington, a former
Pomeroy resident, were held Monday afternoon at the KlingeiCarpenter Funeral Home in Huntington. Mrs. Dempsey died at
Cabell Huntington Hospital after a
lingering illness.
She wsa the former Garnet Bartels, daughter of the late C. A. Bar-

The Commerce Department said
housing starts plunged 11.5 percent
last month, the fifth consecutive
monthly decrease. May 's seasonally
adjusted, annual rate of 920,000 starts was the third lowest level in
history, and was 49 percent below a
year ago.
Not since February 197&gt;-during
the depths of the last recession- have
housing starts been so low.
"I would not underplay the difficulties facmg homebUilders. They

are en tical,' '

said Commerce

Secretary Philip Klutzmck.
Michael Sumichrast, chtef
economtsl of the National
Association of Homebuilders,
estunates that unemployment in the
housrng industry has reached
926,000, and he anttcrpates little job
rehef until later this year.
At the current pace, It will take 12
months to sell off the inventory of
homes, he satd.
Sumichrast said the housing
slump may be bottonung out, but the
recovery will be slow and agonizing.
Klutznick also pornted to a slight
increase in building permits in May
as a srgn that construction activity
may be stabilizing.
However, James Christian, a
seni'1!ieconomist for the U.S. League
of Savings Associations, was more
pessimistic . He predicted the
housmg slump wtll not end untrl late
s ummer, partly due to the recession
but also because mortgage rates will
not soften much more.
He satd mortgage rates, which
peaked at 16 percent, wtll remain at
about 12 percent, and would not dip
below 11 percent anytime soon desprte fast falling short-term rates.

tels, and Mrs. Sidney Bartels, who
survives along wrth her husband,
George Dempsey, and a sister, Ruth
Bartels. She was preceded in death
by her father, one sister, Mrs . Mark
Roller, and "her first husband,
Claude Q'.Brien. Other survivors include an aunt, Mrs. Carl Weese,
Syracuse, a niece, Mrs. Charles Gibbs of Sewell, N. J . and several local

cousins.
Burial was in " the Woodmere
Cemetery rn Huntington.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Mabel
Neimeyer,
Letart, W. Va.; Barbara Lewis,
West Columbia; Agnes Brown,
Pomeroy; Stella Brady, Albany.
Discharged--Robert
Warren,
"Jenda Lawson, Nellie Roush, Glenna Soul!lby, Judith Huller, Lloyd
Moore.
'HOLZER~ICALCENTER

DISCHARGESJUNE17
Issac Barnett, Connie Boster,
ThomU Canter, Virgil Caudill,
Enelola Copley, Todd Daniel, Mrs.
Ronald Duncan and son; Karen
t:versbach, Jason Evays, Mary
Lena Fox, Ruger Gil t :

tersuoo.

Scholarship
• •
recipient

But the chatrman r e jected
Mahoney's proposal to ta ke the
needed $11.8 rmllion from nursing
home profits, saymg that would ·
" only discourage nursmg homes
from dmng a better job.''
There were other proposals to
save or rarse money, but all were
rejected .
Sen. Jerome Stano, D-Parma,
menltoned a 25 percent boost in the
sUite's wholesale tax on beer. But he
declined to propose it formally .
Sheridan, among other things,
mentioned an end to a new tax credit
that homeowners may claim for improvrng the1r property . or cance llation of the exemption that
mag~zines and newspapers have
from Ohio sales tax.
Meshel ended the discussion by
calling for a vole on the revised bill.

Area death·s
Mrs. George

JAYNE LEE HOEFLICH

" pow-wow," agreed.

Americans now saving
more, spending less
WASHINGTON
( AP )
-Americans are saving more and
spending less as the deepening
recession staggers income and further decimates a reeling housing mdustry, government ftgures show.
The Commerce Department
reported Tuesday that people saved
3.9 percent more of thetr rncome in
MV AY THAN IN April and spent 0.1
percent less.
At the same time, personalmcome
+ mcludmg wages, salartes, rents,
stock dividends and interest, mmus
Social Security payments + actually
increased a scant $3.1 billion , or 0.1
percent. But that did no more than
offset an Aprtl decline, the frrst smce
July 1975, and leave the annual rate
the same as two months ago at $2.07
trrliion .
The figures represent a reversal
over the last few months as
Americans swttch from hedgmg
agaiast mflalton to cushionmg
against recession .
The growth in savings, marking
the third straight month of mcrease,
means that Americans saved 4.5
percent of their Jncome in May, compared with only 3.3 percent as recenUy as February, when rampant inflation was 1 sowing a "buy now"
philosophy.
May was the second straight morr
th of decrease in personal spendmg .
The purchase of long-lasting items
such as appliances, furmture and
cars, declined more than $23 billion
in April and May .
Savings traditionally increase
during a recession, as people try to
prepare for posstble job layoffs or
cuts in overtime pay, economists
say.

PT . PlliASANT - Honucidc ts
suspected in the death of a Pl.
Pleasant man whose body was fuund
this mutmng on a heavily wooded
htllside belnnd the Pleasant Valley
Apartments under constructwn on
12th Street.
The body of James Terry McCausland, 16, of 412 Lewis St., was

tmg a chance to ~ole on it, they satd.
Sen. John K. Mahoney, ().
Spnngf1eld, a member of the
Lc~isli::ltu·re 's nursmg home t'Oillmisston, called the decrston
" morally mdefensible." The earlier
bill's chtef sponsor, Rep. John A.
Begala, D-Kent, called tt " stck
public policy ."
Mahoney and Begala, along wrth
varwus senior ctttzen and welfare
lobbyists , waged a spmted fight to
: get the delay shelved, saymg the top
leaders had nul fully understood the
ramifications of thetr action. The
delay would be counterproductive
because it would hold back. nursmg
home reforms cuntamed m the new
law, whtch Begala satd will save the
state "nulhons of dollars."
Senate Ftnance Chatrman Harry
Meshel, D-Yotingstown, who said he
was not in on the top level budget

Joseph Hale, Louise Hawkins,
Delores Humphreys, Charles Kiser,
Elonora Knl~, John Landaker,
DOnna Lewis, Betty Matney, James
McDamel, Mary McFarland, Enos
Mc-Guire, Anirta Nchl, lliimrod
Pauley, Mark Price, TraviS Ratltff,
Sharon Russell, Annise Sorrell,
Everett · Sharp, Merrill SHriver,
Stephen Tabor, Eric Thompson,
Audrey Tipton, Jesse West, Mrs.
Frank Williams and daughter, Dawn
Wtllis, Leta Wrseman, Michelle
Wuuwcr.

'
BIRTH
Mr. wtd Mrs. Dayrus Mun·
tgumcry, daughter, Pumtruy.

Jayne Lee Hoeflrch, Pomeroy, has
been awarded at $1,100 C. Paul and
Beth K. Stocker Endowment
Scholarship by Ohto University for
the 1980-81 acadenuc year. The
scho lar ship rs awarded rn
recognition of excellence tn
academic endeavors a nd demonstrated talent.
Granted early admissiOn to Ohio
Umverstly late last fall, Ms.
HoeOtc h has just completed her
second quarter studies as a physiCs
major wtth an accumulative fourpoint grade average m the university's Honors Tutonal College.
Earlier, she was awarded a $750
armual renewable Peace Fund
Scholarshtp awarded by the South
Carolina Fow1dation of Independent
Colleges, on behalf of Multimedia,
Inc., and a scholarship by the Ladi~s
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, in Pomeroy. The
daughter of Charlene and Bob
Hoeflich, Pomeroy. Jayne ts
working m The Sentinel's edttorial
department for the swruner months.

Seven juveniles
draw court fines
Sevelj juveniles were f10ed upon
appearance before Meigs County
Juvenile Judge Robert E. Buck on
traffic charges.
Fined were, Charles Stewart, 16,
Danville, $50 and costs, unsafe
vehicle, $45 suspended providing the
vehicle is repaired; Douglas Neece,
16, Rt. I, Middleport, $5 and costs,
driv10g privileges suspended seven
days, reparrs ordered, unsafe
vehicle; Scott Hartinger, 16, Middleport, $22 and costs, speed; Herbert Noel, 17, Rt. 1, Pomeroy, $15
and costs, driving the wrong way on
a one way street, fine and costs
suspended; Craig Sinclair, 14, Rt. I,
Shade, $50 and costs, $40 suspended,
operat10g a motorcycle wtlhout
operator's license; Gene Oiler, 16,
Middleport, $16 and costs, speeding;
David Kennedy, 17, Pomeroy, $11
and costs. speeding.
Meanwhile, Carl R. Hysell,
juvenile officer, said today that
during the summer months there
bas been an 10crease 10 motorcycle
related cases.
Most complaints are ftl~d by law
enforcement offrcers whnse duty is
to enforce such laws commonly
violated by cyclist such as no
operator's license, no registration,
and no safety equipment, Hysell
satd.
All parents with teenagers, who
have motorcycles, should exercise
their parental authority over their
children and their motorcycle,
therefore prevening a possible court
appearance, Hysell conunents.
Residents are reminded thatimbrkes and motorcycles must have
license plates to operate on the
streets and highways. The operators
must also have a motorcycle
operator's license or endorsement to
their regular license to operate the
motorcycle on the streets and highways.

I

TWO SQUAD RUNS
The Meigs County Emergency
Servrce Headquarters reports two
runs by the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad on Tuesday. The unit went
to Peach Fork Road fur Denver Carman and to 247 Mulberry Heighls for
Mrs. Hardin Warner. Both patien ts were taken to Holzer Medical Center.

discovered about 7: 15 a.m. by hiS
brother, Robert; and Mark Bennett .
The .Jictirnls shirt had been
removed and tied around his wrists
and apparently used to drag the
body 100-200 feet down the hillstde
through brush and woods.
The body was found lymg face
down 10 a dry creek bed.
It was badly scratched from being

Mayor's court

Anderson feels U~ S.
must rebuild cities
InCLEVELAND tAP)
dependent presidential candidate
Jolm Anderson satd today that the
United States must rebuild tts
decaymg older ctltes.
Anderson addressed the annual
convention of the United States
Jaycees in Cleveland.
·'The captUII plants - the bridges,
the streets and the sewers - of our
older ctlies, hke the one in which you
are meeting, are decaying. Unless
we are prepared to re-inv~st in the
decllnmg caprtal plants of these
ciltes, we must then accept the
ulltma te collapse of our urban environments and the industrial
capactty that they ought to be able to
support," Anderson said.
He told the convention that the
country must renew Its conumtment
to sxral justice and equality under
the law and urged the Jaycees to
support ratification of the Equal
Rrghts Amendment in their respecltve states.
That conunent drew mild applause and some boos.
The Jaycees do not have women
members. Their women 's auxiliary
group was holdmg a separate
meeting and was unable to hear Anderson speak.
Anderson 's conunents dtd not
dwell on his two major opponents,
Prestdent Carter and former
California Gov . Ronald Reagan .
He said that rf voters are satisfied
wtth the performance of the United
Stales in the past three-and-a-half
years, they need look no closer than
Carter.
He said those who feel there is a
need fur a change must look
elsewhere.
" If you are satiSifed wtlh the
merely glib and, up to this pomt,
general promises of yet another former governor ... 1f you are prepared
to believe the Reagan thesis that we
can tax-cut our way to prosperity or

that we can, m the span of a few
short yea rs, produce our way out of
the energy crisis .. . or tf you are
prepared to accept generalization
and, I think, very s rmplistic answers
to complex problems, then Y.OU need
look no further than the ex-governor
of California," Anderson added.

Passenger
injured in
~:J,Uto crash
One person was injured and two
drivers ci~d as the result of two accidents mvestigated Tuesday by the
Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway Patrol.
Officers were called to the scene of
a two-vehicle accident on TR 8, just
north of SR 141, at 9 p.m. , the patrol
reports a south bound auto operated
by Roger Gilbert, 19, Patriot Star
Route, and a north bound vehicle
driven by Kenn~th R. Bloomer, 40,
Gallipolis, collided in a curve.
A passenger in the Gilbert auto,
Gail Gilbert, 18, PSR, claimed injury and was transported by a
relative to Holzer Mcdtca l Center for
treatment.
Bloomer was cited on a charge of
failure to yield one-ruilf the roadway.
The patrol 10vestigated a onevehicle accident tn Meigs County 011
SR 33, just east of SR 681, at 6 a.m.
Officers report a west bound auto
operated by Dwayne Qualls, 20, Middleport, went out of control tn a curve, passed off the left side of the
roadway ~ver a guardrail and overturned .
There were no injunes. Qualls was
ctted on a charge of no operator's
license.

Dr. Thesing begins practice
Thomas A. Thesrng, D.O.,
Associate Professor ci Family
Medicine at the Ohio University
College· of Osteopathic Medicine,
began providing serviCes at the Vinton County Health Clinic in McArthur, two day• per week effective
Monday, June 16.
A native of Lancaster, Dr. Thesmg
graduated from Ohio State University and the College of Osteopathic
Medicine and Surgery in Des
Moines, Iowa, and served his internship at Grandview Hospital in
Dayton .
After over 16 years 10 private
practice in Centerville, three years
10 the Atr Force and a brief practice
m Florida and West Virginia, Dr.
Thesing joined the Ohio Umversity
College of Osteopathic Medictne on

dragged. Cause of death was not immediately known.
The body was transferred to
Charleston by Shenff James D. Hall
and Mason County Coroner J ohn
Grubb, where tl will be examined by
the state medical examiner .
The vtcltm was a 19110 graduate of
Point Plea'"!nt Htgh School.

June I, 19110.
He IS a member of the American
Osteopathic Association,
the
American College of General Practitioners in Osteopathic Physicians
and Surgeons, and the Ohio Society
of Osteopathic General Practitioners.
According to Dr. W1lliam H. Ailen,
Jr., President of the Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation Board
of Trustees in Athens, Dr. Thesing
will be sharing duties at the McArthur clinic with Dr. Christopher D.
Olson, also with the Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine.
Each physician will be at the clime
two days per week, makmg services
available Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday each week.

One defendant forfeited a bond
and four others were fined Tuesday
night tn the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman.
ForfeitiQg a $50 bOnd posted on a
disorderly manner charge was
Tunothy Lee Mayes, Point Pleasant.
Fined were V1rgtl Philips, Middleport, $25 a nd costs, diSorderly
manner; Carla D. , McFarland ,,
Mason, $25 and costs, unsafe manner; Paul J . Grady, Racine, $100 and
costs, destructiOn of pro~rty, and ,
Robert E. Petrie, Middleport, $100
and costs, ~rinunal !repassing.
Four defendants were fined and 12
others forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Fined were David Dtles, Southfield , Mich., $50, costs s uspended, on
a charge M passing on a double
yellow line ; Danny Buffington,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, squealing
bres; $300 and costs, fleemg a police
officer, and a $50 forfeiture on a
speeding charge; John Partlow, no
address recorded, $50 and costs,
disorderly conduct, and Richard ·
Giimore, no address recorded, $250
and costs, reckless operation.
Forfeiting bonds were Betty Kern,
Shade, $30, posted on a charge of
failing to register a motor vehicle;
Ronald K. Browning, Pomeroy, $30,
stop sign violation ; Bobby
Schoonover, Gallipolis, $33; Carol
Richmond, Middleport, $32 ; Craig
Swick, Middleport, $30 ; Lawrence
McGill, St. Albans, W. Va., $28 ;
Brtan
Conde,
Pomero~.
$31; Mitchell Chapman, Pomeroy,
$35; Corbett Cleek, Racine, $34, all
posted on speeding charges;
Ri chard Hermann, Mtddleport, $50,
traffic light violation; Douglas
Seyler, Columbus, $250, reckless
operation, and $50, operating a
motor vehicle while under susperr
slon.

WORKERS FURLOUGHED
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP)- Armco Inc. reported that 142 more
steelworkers will be furloughed Sunday, bringing layoffs at the Middletown Works to 670.
At the same time, Sorg Paper Co.
confirmed that 74 percent of its
hourly workers have been laid off
this week with the remaining 26 percent, about 120 paperrnakers, still on
the job.

minister of the Enterprise United
Methodist Church, Pomeroy. He
also gave the invocation a nd
benedictiOn.
The processional, " Pomp and Circumstance," was presented by the
Mei gs Band as well as the
recessional.
Introductions were made by Paul
Matson , president of the graduating
class. The presentabon of the class
was made by James A. Diehl, Jr.,
principal and the acceptance of the
class, Jll() students, was made by
Davtd Gleason, s upenntendent.
The pesentalton uf diplomas was
made by Carol F. Pierce, president
of the board uf education.

.
.

~

,,

.'

STANDING OVATION- Chris Schenkel, ABC sportscaster, holds
gift as Dave Diles, his colleague, smiles durmg Wednesday's banquet
kicking off the Dave Diles Celebrity Classic. Schendel was given a
standing ovation when mtroduced to the 300 prsons attending.

VOL. 31

NO. 47

From the Associated Press

Terrorists takeover doesn't last
NICOSIA, Cyprus - Three terrorists stormed and briefly occupied
the British Embassy m Ba ghdad today before Iraqi security men shot
their way in and killed the mtruders, the offtctallraqr news agency
reported.
No other casualties were reported.
It satd the three men hurled grenades into the embassy and then
rushed in with automatrc weapons blazmg.
lraqr securrty forces obtamed permission from the Bntish ambassador to storm the building and ktlled the intruders in a shootout,
the news agency said.

ERA fails again in Illinois
SPRINGFIELD, Ill.- After a day of fevensh lobbymg, includmg
telephone calls from the White House, the Illinois House agam rejected the Equal Rights Amendment. But ERA supporters say their battie for this state's ratification isn't over yet.
"We're detcrrruned people, we 're not the kind of people who fold up
our tents and go away," satd Eleanor Smeal, president of the Nattonal
Organizalton for Women , after a proposal to ratify the amendment fell
five votes short of the 107 needed to pass the House.

Four day spree leaves 42··dead
JOHANNESBURG , $outh Afnca- The four-&lt;lay spasm of nolmg,
looting, arson and vandalism in South Africa's black and colored townships reportedly left at least 42 people dead in the worst racial clashes..
this whtle-ruled nalton as seen smce 1976. Damage was esltmated in
the nullions.
But Police commissioner Gen. Mike Geldenhuys satd reports from
around the country Wednesday indicated the situation was " qureter
than it has been smce the begtnning of the current wave of unrest" on
Sw1day in the sprawling black ghetto of Soweto outside Johannesburg.

Cincy. man given life sentence

Cullom DehumlciHier with
25 Pint Weter Remov'l
Cepeclty•

BATAVIA, Ohio - A 1g:.year-old Cinc1nnalt man, one of three accused in the brutal revenge slaying of Johnny Ray Miller, was sentenced to life after a jury convicted him of aggravated murder.
Dale L. Slusher was sentenced, while trials for Cheryl Johnson, 18,
and James Ashurst, both of Cincinnati, were scheduled later 10 Cler·
mont County Common Pleas Court. . .'
The prosecution claimed Miller, 17, of Cincinnati, was shot, stabbed
and beaten because Ms. Johnson allegedly believed he was responsible for the theft arrest or her conunon-law-husband, Rrcky J ohnson,
21, in Cincirmati.
·

0 Recessed wheels and
caster for easy mo b•llty
0 Steel cab•net with walnut
woodgrai n fintsh
0 Louvered a~r-intake grille
with decorator panels
0 Automatic signal lightshuts off unil when bucket
IS full
0 Automatic humidistat
0 10-quart. high-tmpact
styrene bucket
0 Threaded hose connection
0 Electrical cord w•th
grounded safely plug

Weather foreca~t

*(Per 2• hr)

25 Pint Capacity , ONLy
15 Pint Capacity

'2 29.00

ONLY 'lM.OO

ELBERFELD$
WAflEHOUSEf
'. .

.

' .

A SPECIAL AWARD was presented to Dave Diles , nght, from Bill
Nelson at the Dave Dtles Celebnty banquet Wednesday mght. Dtles
was presented a gold plated putter.

·•

at y

enttne

THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

Bani-Sadr given more power
as Iranian military changes

NORFOLK, Neb. - A woman apparently shot and stabbed her four
daughters to death ahd then turned the gun on herself, police said
today.
Stella Delores Almarez, 29, the mother of the victims , was in stable
conditiOn at a hospital where she was being treated for a gunshot
wound in the head. Police said they were waiting to question her, but
said there had been no arrests.
Officers said two of the children were shot with a ,J2-caliber
revolver and the other two apparently died 411f knife wounds We dnesday mght.

White-Westinghouse

•

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO,

Mother kills children, herself

Prevent Damage from Excess
Moisture in the air-with this
White-Westinghouse Dehumidifier!

CHECK PRESENTED - Dan Devine, left, was presented a $500
check to grve to hjs favorite chanty. Tom Wolfe, president of the
Racine Home National Bank, presented the check from the proceeds
of the Dave Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament. Dave Diles is in the mtddle.

e

WASIUNGTON - President Carter, leavmg on , an eight-&lt;lay
European trip aimed at restoring unity to the Wes\ern alliance, called
today for the allies to present a unified front against Soviet aggression .
"I will be totally frank with you, as I will be" with leaders of the
alliance, the president satd m his statement for a White House departureceremony. " The industrial democracies are being tested . ... We
must sustain world opposition to Soviet agression and not allow the
Soviets to derive any permanent benefits fr~m their invasions of a
neutral nation."

HOLD BACK THE
"INVISIBLE FLOOD"I

Nationwide

..

. ..
" ' ...

President calls for unified front

180 seniors
(Continued from page 1l

'

Partly cloudy today, with highs in the low 80s. Variable cloudiness
tonight, with a chance of showers or thunderstorms. Lows near 60.
Mostly.sunnY. Friday, with ~Ughs in the upper 70s. The chance of ram is
20 percent today, 30 percent tonight and 10 percent Friday.
OhJo Extended Outlook
By The Associated Press
Saturday thro118h Mooday: Fair and gradually warming, with highs
near 8G Saturday and from 85 to·90 by Monday. Lows in the low to mid
50s Saturday aoci In the low to mid 60s by Monday.

•

.r

A major shakeup in the Iranian
military was announced today by
the off;cial Pars news agency, but it
was not imlnediately clear whether
the move further eroded or
strengthened President Abolhassan
Bani-Sadr's authority agamst
Moslem hardlmers seekmg to undermine him.
Pars said Bani.Sadr accepted the

res ignation of the acting military
chief of staff , Gen. fo1ohanunad Hadi
Shadmehr, and that Gen. Vahollah
Fallahi was made the new actmg
chief of staff. It said Shadmehr
became Bani-&amp;dr's military adviser.
The news agency also sa id Gen.
Ghasemali Zahirnejad has been appointed conunander of land forces

and of the lslanuc republic gendarmerie, and Col. Javad Fakoun
was named the atr force chref. The
news agency dtd not say who they
replaced.
Bani-&amp;dr, fighting efforts by
Islamic fundamentalists to strip him
of his dwmdlmg powers, urged the
revolutionary guards Wednesday to
close ranks behind hinn after his

Voters may face two plans
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Senate committee has set the stage
for a November election in which
Ohio voters could be confronted with
.
two tax-relief plans.
The Senate Ways and Means Committee recommended for passage
Wednesday a proposed consttlutional amendment that would
allow the Legislature to tax restdential and agricultural property differently than other rea l estate. All
classes of property now must be
taxed at uniform rates.
The conuruttee voted to indefmitely postpone actton - m effect, killing, 1n the Legislature - a
cttizen-mittaled bill that would make
more sweeping changes m the
state's tax structure.
That gtves the Ohio Publt c In-

teres! Campaign, which circulated
pelttwns for the proposal, extra tune
to obtain 85,301 signatures more to
quahfy for the fall ballot
Had the ways and means panel,
headed by Sen. Neal F. Zinuners Jr.,
D-Dayton, not acted, th e group
would have had less time to ctrculate petiltons in advanc-e of Ute
Aug. 6 fall election frling.
He said the vote· to postpone consideration of the measure was "an
effort to be fair and remov e the btU
from this particular arena.''
Supporters gathered the names of
more than 97,000 voters on petitions
to enable the bill to be mtroduced in
the Senate last March.
Under state law, legislators had
up to 120 days to act on the btll before
attempts could be launched to place

it on the ballot . That time period exptres June 27, a week from Fnday.
" I think tt's a shame that we
couldn't get a vote from the full
Senate," said Mary Lynne Cappelletti, OPIC spokeswoman.
Stte disagreed with suggesltons
that the constitutional amendment
would be an alternative to her
group's plan .
" Th e trouble wtlh any
classificah on amendment ts tt's a n
empty shell," she said , an apparent
reference to need for legis la ttve actwn to unplement the tax rehef tf the
amendment were adopted.
Her group's proposa l would give
about $150 millton worth of property
tax rehef for low-and moderatemcome homeowners and renters. It
{ Conttnued on pag e 8)

Reject anti litter measure
.

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -An anti-htter measure, billed as a substitute for a proposal defeated by
Ohio's voters last November. has
suffered a setback tn the House.
Members refused 42-53 Wednesday to accept a jomt conference
committee's version of the proposal.
The Senate has yet to acton the committee report, but rejeclion by the
House all but assures it will have to
go to a new joint panel in the closing
days of the Legislature's June

said .
The vole clearly came as a s urprise to many in the chamber .
" I have no explanation," said Rep.
Thomas J . Carney, D-Boardman,

the btll's sponsor . He was among
those pushmg the b1ll as a substitute
by a mandatory beverage contamer
deposit btl! rejected by voters in
1979.

newspaper reported Moslem hardlmers were plotting to oust htm as a
' 'toolof America.' '
Tehran Radio said Bani-Sadr went
to a revolutionary guards' barracks
to a ppeal for an end to the feuding
tha t prompted the resrgna twn of his
hand-ptcked guard commander, Abu
Sharif. The radio also said BamSadr rejected Sharif's resignation.
The report did not say who was
flghtmg whom in the guards, but the
sq uabbling was presumed to be between Bani.Sadr's moderate supporter~ and the extreme Moslem
fundamentahsts who back the
I s l amic
c ler gy-domtnated
Republican Party, which controls
Ira n's Parliament.
A party leader , Dr. Hassan Ayat,
was reported Wednesday to be plotlin g the overthrow of Bani.Sadr and
was quoted as labeling him "a tool of

Amen ca.''
The Tehran newspaper Enghlab
Es lam t, owned by Bani-Sadr, ·
(Con t inued on pa ge B)

MANSHOTTODEATH
Several people are being
questioned as the investigation of
the dea th of James Terry McCausland intensifies according to
Mason Couinty Sheriff James Hall.
Preliminary examination of the
body by the state medical examiner
has shown a bullet wound in the victim's chest. The bullet was probably
fired from a 22 calibre rifle, Hall
said.
According to Mason County
Coroner Dr. John Grubb, the official
reports of the examinations will not
be completed for two- three weeks.

sess10n.
Sununer adjournment now is
scheduled for the end of next week.
House opponents clauned Wednesday that the measure imposes an
unfair tax on all businesses when it
should be confined to litter stream
products.
The proposal calls for the franchise tax patd by aU compames to be
increased slightly to raise $13
nullion for a statewide litter control
program. fn addition, makers of socalled litter stream products would
face a second tax increase.
Revenue ytelded by the tax wodld
be used by the natural resources
department to make grants to local
communities for setting up litter
pickup and recycling programs.
Rep. Paul R. Leonard, D-Dayton,
said the btU would not raise enough
money to solve the state's litter
problem and charged it did not have
department support.
Rejection of the report 1aised the
possibility of nanung a new conference conmuttee in an attempt to
reach an acceptable verston ..
House Speaker Ver'l"l G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, would,nut say if
ur when the proposal mt;,:ht reach
the floot agam.
" We jus t take that day by day," he

..,.,v'""""' -

Kermit (the frog) was injured recenUy during one of the severe storms that hi\ the area.
Kermit was taken to the Meigs County Board fo Health
tube exanuned. Debbie Lavalley, R.N ., second from
left, and Carol Tannehill, R.N . are shown taking Ke\·
mit's bluod pressure . On left is Frank Petrie, deputy
hea lth conm1isswner, on the right, Paul Gerard, Grand

Croaker in charge of vice. It is hoped that Kernlit .will
be much improved by Big Bepd Reg~tta time. The
Regatta wih be held June 26, 'J:I, 28 and 29. The frog
jump will be held on Saturday, Jun 28, at Marauder
Stadium in Pomeroy. Kermit Walton, owner of Kermit,
ts keeping his fingers crossed hoping that Kermit will
be hop~ing by June 28.

.,

j

�I

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, June 19,1980

2- The D~ ily Sent111 ci, Middlepurt-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, J une 19,1980

Opinions
&amp; Comments

Dinner, awards highlight banquet

•

BY St:011' WOLFE
ROYAL OAK - A pre·tuurn;une nt
diJIIICr

lllE DAILY SENTINEL
IUSPSIIHAI
DEVOTED TO ni E
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AKEA
Lenen of opilllolt arc wekuned. T hey sllou)d be Itt• tb~a M wonk loac 1or aabjcc:l to miucttoa by~ editor) ud must br signed wttb tbe t iPtt'• addreu. Namn; may br • ithJteld upoa
pubUcation. However, oa req~t,. aames will bt df.ad&lt;Jftd. Let1rn shGUid be iD cood ta1te, ·~
drttalnc in~~n, 110&amp; pemmaUUes.
h bllsbed daily cnept S.tu.rday by The Oblo Valley PubtiJliq Compuy- MILIUmedia, lac.,
Ill Court SL, Pomervy, Oh1o f571t. B1111DH1 Office Phooe 9ft. 2151. Editorial PbMte tn-! 157.
Second class postage paiht Pomeroy, Ohto.
NaUoaal advertial.ag represent.Uve, l..aodou AsaotLitel, 3111 EucUd Ave., Cleveillnd. ObJu

·. ..

~115.

Tbe An od aled PuA1 iJ eululve ly eaiiUed to tbe w e lor publh:atioo of aU De'lh dllpablbes
..mJttd lo the newspaper and also the local oewa publi.sbedllen!ln.
·
P\lbl.lsher

General M:cr. 4r: City EcUior
News Editor
~,...A.
Adv. Mau ger
to'"~

B!m:g '"""--'"---r• ..,........d.=

Robrrt WlqeU

RobertHGefllch
Dale Rotb&amp;:eb, Jr.
Carl Gbeea

~~

··-..:;-

...,

\

Today in history.

DAVE DILES, left , ta lks to Walter Roush at the Dave Diles
Celebrity banquet held Wednesday night at Roya l Oak Park.
Nwnerous awards were presented., Approxima tely 300 persons at·
tended.
·

••

Walter Mondale: our next pre_sident?

Today is Thursday, June 19, the
victed of giving atOmiC secrets to the
171sl day of 1980. There are 195 days
Soviets.
left in the year.
In 1964, Sen. Edward Kennedy, a
Today 's highlight in history : in
Ma ssachusetts Democrat, was
1885, the Statue of Liberty, a gift
seriously injured in a plane crash in
from France, arrived in New York . Massachusetts that killed two other
City.
people.
On this dale :
Ten years ago, the Soyuz 9
In 1756, 146 British prisoners suf·
spacecraft landed in the Soviet
located in a dungeon in India, which
Union, setting the record for the
became known as the " Black Hole of
longest manned space flight at 17
Calcutta ."
days, 16 hours, 59 minutes.
In 1862, Congress prohibited
Five years ago, U.N. Secretary·
slavery in american territories .
General Kurt Waldheim opened the
In 1953, Julius and Ethel Rosen·
first major world conference on the
berg were executed in New York's
status of women, in Mexico City.
Sing Sing Pr ison after being con·

Berry's World

congressional delegation would cast
one vote for the candidate favored
by a majority of its members. To be
elected president by the House, a
candidate would have to receive the
votes of a majority- at least 26 - of
the state delegations.

to the Democrats' 24. The seven
remaining delegations are evenly
divided.
If all representatives. vole\! along
party lines, Carter woUld receive 24
votes and Reagan would receive 19.
The remaining seven delegates

Today's commentary
Currently, 29 delegations are controlled by Democrats, 12 are con·
trolled by Republicans and nine ~re
evenly split If that distribution were
unchanged in the next Congress,
Ca rter would likely win the House
vote.
But in a number of state
delegations, Democrats outnumber
Republicans by one one or two s eats .
If Reagan and Anderson did well
enough to ,throw the' election into the
House, Republicans would likely
have taken control of some
delegations that now are split or
have small Democratic majorities.
So, let's say the Republicans con·
trol19 delegations in the new House

would be deadlocked, with half their
members voting for Carter and half
for Reagan. If the House followed
the same rules as it did in 1825, the
votes of those split delegations
would simply not count.
Thus, neither Carter or Reagan
would have the 26 votes needed for
election.
Meanwhile, the Senate would be
exercising its authority under the
12th Amendment to choose a vice
president from the two candidates
with the most electoral votes - in
this case, Walter Mondale and
Reagan's yet-unnamed running
mate.
Currently Democrats hold a 58-41

majority in the Senate. (There is one
independent). Though Republicans
could make significant gains in the
House if the November election is
close, they would be unlikely to gain
a majority in the Senate. Asswning
its members voted along party lines,
the new Senate would rHlect
Walter Mondale.
If the House did not select a
president by inauguration day, the
new vice president would become
acting president unW the impasse
was broken. And it might not be
broken until after the 1982
congressional elections.

'

spurts,
11\Ciided

WHS

rccugrlized and com-

fur his work with the net-

work .
Marsl1all grid coach Sonny Ran·
tile; cK-Detruit L(un coach Rick For·
wnu, ju umalist Kay Kessler, and
plwlugrap hcr Leu Hi ll were given
recognit ion.

TENNIS
EASTBOURNE, England (AP) Betty Stove of the Netherlands upset
top-seeded Ma rtina Navratilova 6·3,
Hi, 7·5 in the third round of the
Wom en's Grass Courts Tournament.
In other action, Traey Austin ad·
va nced with a 6-3, 6·2 victory over
Wendy While 6·3, 6-2; South Africa's
Gree r Stevens beat Andrea J aeger,
7-5, 6-3; Wendy Turnbull of Australia
defeated Kate Latham 6-7, 6·2, 6-4;
Lesli e Allen was beaten 6-4, 6-4 by
Diane Fromholtz of Austral ia; and
Diane Des for edged out Belly
Nagelsen 5-7, 6·3, 6-2,
LONDON (AP) - Raul Ramirez
defeated Britam 's Mark Cox 6-4, 6-4
and Brian Goltfned beat Britain's

••

L'ohn Feaver , 7-5, 7~. in second
round play in the Surrey Grass Cour·
ts Challlpwnslup a t Surbiton.
SOCCER
ROME I API - Belgium and Italy
played a scoreless lie, giving the
Belgians the right to play West Ger·
ma ny in the Europea n soccer cham·
piunship final on Sunday.
The Belgians only needed a ti e to
ma ke it to Sunday's fi nal because of
their better goal average.
BASKETBALL
PHOENIX, Ariz. (API - AI Wood
scored 17 points and Sam Bowie ad·
ded 16to lead the U.S. Olympic team
to a 97-66 victory over a lackluster
team of NBA All-Stars.

. 1978
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SUNSET BEACH, Calif. (AP ) From an easy chair aside a fireplace
in the beachftont house he uses as an
office, Joe Karbo looks across the
dazzling sand and sea to Catalina.
He has just driven over in a Rolls
Royce from hi~~o house at nearby
Huntington Beach, where he lives
with his wife, Betty, andca 12-year·
old daughter, the last of eight
children still at home.
Home is where his heart is, says
Joe, a heavyset fellow with a ruddy,
relaxed face enclosed in beard and
· mustache. It's wbere he also moors
his two sailboats at a backyard dock
from which he swims each day.
That is, when he tesides there.
Next week, said Joe, he hopes to
get away "and hole up and write" at
his condominium In Mexico. He has
another condo in Hawaii, and a
"cabin" up north in Washington.
Downstairs the clerical help is
~usy attending to business. Jue Kar·

auto., AM ,FM .

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~xtremely

.
.

SCOTT WOLFE, left , spurts writer fur The Daily Se nti nel,. interviews Duane Bobick, heavyweight boxer, at the Da ve Diles
, Celebrity banqu et held Wednesday mght at Royal Oa k Park .

Rare
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Even if the Democrats .hen
regained control of a majority of
state delegations, would Carter be
called back from "retirement" after
two years of Mondale presidency?
Probably not. Mondale would end up
serving four years as "acting
president"
,
Is all this possible? Technically,
yes. Is it farfetched ? Of course. But
the very fact that some credible
people in this town are discussing
the possibility shows that many
think this will be a strange political
year ahead.

·
:
.
:
_
·
:
:
·
·
:

1977 BUICK Limited
Red metallic paint with
crushed velou r interior,
loaded with all the extras.
Must be seen
19,000 miles

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1979 VOLKSWAGEN BUS
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New Demonstrator Never Titled

Food stamp coupons through the mail
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ Ohio's
350,000 food stamp recipients may be
able to pick up their coupons next
year at the same place other people
get their Social Security or unem·
ploymenl checks - their mailbox .
The House Human Resources
Conunittee has recommended for
passage a bill requiring the Ohio
Department of Public Welfare to
establish a system of issuing food
stamp coupons through the postal
service.
Rep. John A. Begala, [).Kent, says
his proposal would save energy and
money for recipients who, because
of age or disability, find it difficult to
travel to distribution centers for the
coupons.
Witnesses testifying before the
panel he chairs said the problem is
especially acute in rural areas
without public transportation. Some

Suulhem High Schoo l Basketball
t:vad1 Carl Wulfe, Ronnie and
Slnrlcy Smith, Fred Crow, Roger
Murgan, George Harris, and Don
Mills.
Diles announced pruceeds from
the eve nt will go tu the Humane
S&lt;&gt;clely, ' historical suciety, area
volunteer fire departments, and
high sehoul golf learns at Wahama
and Meigs . All pruceeds will stay
Wllhill the COI]1J11Ullity.
The C:twards ceremonies were
" wrapped up" with a surprise
awaf(i going to Dave Diles. Bill
Nelsun a warded Diles with a 24 gold
carat putter in appreciation of his et·
forts .
Entertainment was provided by
" The Dark Hollow Bluegrass Boys"
frum Meigs County. Members of the
group are J. Brent Patterson,
Robert Taylor , Rick Boring, and
Kim Browning.
Sportscaster Ron Winters also
juined in with his trwnpet to liven up
the evening.

1976 MALTBU CLASSIC ........................ '1995

·
;
·

elderly recipients said they don't
have cars -or can 't afford to spend
money on gasoline for what are, in
some cases, round trips of 25 miles.
Under the bill, the Welfare Department would set up a system of
issuing food stamp allotments by
certified mail effective July 1, 1981.
County welfare departments
would administer the mailings . The
system would include procedures for
determining eligibility at the same
intervals currently in effect
The measure also calls for the
state a gency to provide an alternate
system in those counties where it
can show demand for mail issuance
has significantly dropped. The alter·
nate plan could also be used in areas
where the loss rate for mailed
coupons exceeds tolerable levels
established by the U.S. Department
of Agriculture.

Now Only
In addition, county cormnissioners
would have the annual option of
withdrawing from or reinstituting
the mail issuance plan,
Any individual could also wilhdraw or join the mailing system,
regardless of a county decision.
Although the bill will allow for
mail issuance to most of the state's
food stamp recipients, officiaLs from
some larger counties expressed con·
cern about a serious loss rate if
stamps are mailed.
" Most of the urban areas will
probably decide to opt out," Begala
said. " It's unfortunate, bec'ltuse per·
sons there could benefit just as
much."
State and county expenses and
reimbursements under the bill could
either increase or decrease as a
result of the biU, a ,fiscal analysis
prepared for legislators said. But it

added that state welfare officiaLs
asswne the cost increases and
decreases will be nearly equal,
balancing out to provide little
overall change.
" The mail issuance system is
going to result in minimal savings to
the state," Begala said. " It
shouldn't cost any more and may
cost a little less."

bo grossed $2.5 million last year, he
says, but now he guesses he has
already surpasse~ that figure. He is,
of course, a m~ltimillionaire.
"I am content to live as I am lor
the rest of my life," says Joe.
'' Money no longer can enrich me.''
He likes writing, acting, poker.

out," he admonishes readers. Take
charge of your life. Don't let it dictate to you; tell it what you want;
make It do your bidding. " You can
have anything you want "
Joe dl)jlSn't ask you to believe him.
Just order his material. " If I'm·
wrong, all you've lost is a stamp,"

Business mirror
Some might recognize Joe Karbo
as the' man who runs countless ads in
newspapers and magazines about
people heing " too busy working to
make any money." Life for such
people, Joe says, is a prison sen,
tence,
" Don't take as long as I did to find

DICK WEBER, pro-bowler, chats with friends at the Dave Diles
Celebrity banquet held Wedneday mght at Royal Oak Pa rk. Next to
Weber is Nelson Burton.

While the bill would generall}l
eliminate the 80-cent cost per food
stamp transaction that counties
currently pay to banks, it' would increase county staff, mailing, storage
and security costs. But in either
case, half the cost would be reimbursed by federal funds and about 45
percent through state money,
The panel's reconunendation sent '
the b_ill to the Rules Conunittee to ·
await assignment to a floor vote.

goaLs, visualize them, declare them
every day, and achieve them,
The book tells them much about
the background of Joe Kat'bo, of. his
being $50,000 in debt and without a
job in 1962 alld IJow, through the use
of Dyna-Psyc, he and Betty soon '
were on the way to wealth.
Dyna-Psyc's principles are slm- ;.
pie: You define and visualize your ·
goals as if they were ac- ~
commplishmenta. You . declare ;
them, live them, become them. No ·'
mysleJ?', says Joe Karbo. "The ;
power IS within all of us."
Most people, he contends, are •
progranuned for failure by the time •
they are six yean of age. "We '
rehearse !allure instead of rehear- ;

he reminds you . " But what if I'm
right?" The question is· provocative.
People order.

sing success," he says. ..

In return for their $10; respondents
receive a copy of "The Lazy Man's
Way to Riches," a !59-page book
that tells them how to define their

Since 1973, he says, It has sold 1
million copies in the United States
and perhaps 400,000 more In
England, Canada, Australia, New
Zealand, and Gennany.

1,

•

'7400
~·

Dyna-Psyc: a manual for success?

"Excuse me, dear. Are you still steaming about
Ramsey Clark?"

Dcvuie presented Srlienkel ami
Diles will! gifts fur lhcu· lung·lastmg
fncndslup. Uev111es ass"tanl, Gene
Snulh, who ot"cumpamed hi111 on the
trip from Suuth Beut.l, ImL will cum·
pete 111 the tourney, lou.
Jun Spence, Vicc~president of ABC

- Tltc Trad!llUnal " Guud Guy"
a" artls were then given. Plaques
\\Crc prcscutcd lt1 Horj:ict~ and
IJorotlly Kctrr , uwncrs uf Roya l Oak
P&lt;J rk cmd !l UPPIJflt!fS or the tuurll i:t iiiClll; Gary aud Mary Ruush, Bob
and Louise Huuslt fur tlieir support,
they are the owners uf Riverside
Gulf Course; heavyweight boxer
Duane Rub1ck, Prl&gt;-bowlers Nelson
Burlu11, Jc and Dick Weber,
Washington Redskin Run McDole,
and Toledo grid cuach Charles
"Ctmck" Stubarl.
Also recogmzed were WVU grid
coach Don Nehlen, Ohiu U. coache:s
Brian Burke and Dauny Nee, Miami
coaches Darrell Hedric and Tum
Rue, executive Art Morand, PGA
pros Bi ll Uzelac, Ray Mc-Guire,
Jerry Meek , and Gary Dixon.
Eddie Rosenburg and Kent State
basketball coach Ed Douma, were
recognized along with Jim and Jay
R1epenhuff of Anheusr·B usch.
Special Awards went to
Washinglun Redskin Bill Brundige ,

4 Doo r, V·8,

,By Robert J. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA) - A few
weeks ago, the political fable cir·
culating around Washington had
Sen. Edward Kennedy taking the
Democratic presidential nomination
from President Carter through a
successful rules challenge on the
floor of the Democratic Convention .
Now a few fable is making the
rounds. This one has Walter Mon·
dale becoming president next
January ,
The fable would require in·
dependent candidate John Anderson
to win several states in the Novem·
ber election. Then asswning that the
Democratic and
Republi can
nominees, Carter and fonner Gov.
Ronald Reagan, split the rest of the
states, nobody would have the 270
electoral votes needed for election.
Under the 12th Amendment to the
Constitution , an Electora l College
deadlock would have to be declared.
For the first time since 1825, the
House of Representatives would
select the president from among the
three leading contenders.
In choosing the presxident, mem·
bers of the House would not vote as
individuals. Rather, each state's

Ohio perspective

• •

Ill t 'UfljUilCtiOII With tfiC

u $500 check

11 1 bd1 •.df of the Diles' Classi c. T l1c
chct:k \\US ~jlVt; ll to DcVIlll' l 11 Ut:
tlHna tct.l t 11 Ius ft.I Vontc dwnty.

Sports briefs.

Editorial comments
The following is a sample of conunent compiled from the
editorial pages of Ohio newspapers during the past week:
_ THE LORAIN JOURNAL : " Like all fairy tales, the
congressional spoof about balancing the federal budget
has about reached 'The End.'
" The microscopic surplus that the president proposed and Congress is dickering with to best political advantage
- is disappearing before it ever becomes finaL
" What brought this all about ... is a continuing unwillingness in Washington to accept the fact that the
federal goverrunent cannot be all things to all people.
Rather than deny anyone, Congress and-or the administration continues to spin out the programs ....
" But the immediate cause for the quickly swelling
deficit is the recession, which was brewed ... by Carter to
bring down the inflation rate ... . Carter, the man who
asked us to trust him ... now says he hopes and prays 'the
recession will be short' .. ..
"What is expected between now and November ,is for
Carter to propose a tax cut, at the same time belittling his
Republican opponent for supporting massive tax cuts ....
We probably should respect Carter's opinion .... After all,
he is an authority! '
THE UMA NEWS : " New Orleans is the latest city to
face the music .... The city's budget isn't going to balance,
it seems, without some massive layoffs and other cuts this
year.
" Localities are usually constrained in a way that the
federal government is not, in that they cannot create more
money out of thin air when expenses exceed revenues. We
say 'usually' because the awesome crunch that's been
predicted for some profligates hasn't yet come to pass .. ..
Unless the federal government ... is willing imd able to
relieve all these local debts over the long term, however,
the ax is going to have to fall ....
" There apparently is no out for the city (New Orleans)
fathers, who are faced with a constitutional requirement to
balance the budget .. .. The task is especially tough because
residents there aren't accustomed to paying much in
direct taxes ....
" 'The major problem with this city is that people don't
want to pay taxes,' says a University of New Orleans
economic professor.
"Who does?"

hdd

Dave Diles Celebrity Gulf Tuur·
muncnt hurwrcd piHll t:tpatm g
cclcbrllies and lucul dig11atuncs
Wednesduy evening at R11yul Oak
Park .
After a delicious feast, host Dave
Diles introduced the evening agenda
with the aid of tournament chairman
Bill Nelson.
Diles intrudured fellow ABC spur·
tscaster Chris Schenkel, wliu was
honored with a standing uvatwn.
Schenkel had to leave the ceremony
early because of em assignment iu
Las Vegas, Nevada.
Notre Dame football coach Dan

lk.'\' Jm: \\as prcsL.:utcd

:
'"
•.
•

BASEBAU.

sponsor tournament
The Wahama Athletic Boosters
are sponsoring the 1980 Big Bend
Softball Tournament on June 21 a nd
22. This will be a double elimination
tournament consisting of twelve
_teams. All teams must be sanctioned
by the ASA. The entry fee is $60 plus
two ASA approved softballs.
All fees must be paid before the
first game . Roster. limit is' 20 . This
includes coaches, managers, etc.
Teams wishing to enter the lour·
nament, or wanting additional in·
formation call Donald Van Meter at
773-5152.

American League
AlrFllled Billy MCI.rttn, manUf!lCr, Oi!kltmd A ·~.
fur an i:lrt:wncut w1 lh um pire Dale Furtl June6.
DETROIT TJGEftS. Plciced K1rk Gibsun, een·
\~;r f1clde r . un lhe 1$-Uay tliSl:lbled list. Hear·
IJVi:lletl Mark Wagner , nfielder, frum t he 15-&lt;JCI)'

dJS&lt;JbietJ hst
•
NE W VOHK YANKEEs-Heca llcd Demus
Slwrn ll, infielder, frum Cuhnnbus uf the In·
\~nw l wnal Lca"'ue. Placed f' retl Sl&lt;tnlc), m·
fw!Ucr, un lhc 2hlay di.sab!eU li.sl.
Natlun11l League
~A:-.1 DIEGO PADR E~Plact!d Rit:k W1sc, p1t·
cht!r , on th~ 21-duy disabled ll!:il t!ffectlvt' J une 16.
Hccullcd Ut!nrus Bluir, pl tcl1cr, from Hawaii of
the Ptn:1fic Cuasl Lea~o~uc.
BASKETBALL
Na 1iuual Basketball Assocla llon
DETROIT PISTONS-Name d Don C~ne)'
H ~S I SUUll cuuch. Elttended the cunt r&lt;~cl of Terry
1\lcr, furv.·urd.
.PORTLAND TRAI L BLAZERS-St~::ncd Tom
Q,..cns, center, to t1 three-yea~t.'tlnlr&lt;t c l.
FOOTBA L[
NaUonal Ftmtball League
DALLAS COWBOYS.Signed Larry Su\'ajle,
llnl'l&gt;acker , AmJ Nunn Well!&gt;, dcfens 1 w tackl~·.

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�I

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, June 19,1980

2- The D~ ily Sent111 ci, Middlepurt-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, J une 19,1980

Opinions
&amp; Comments

Dinner, awards highlight banquet

•

BY St:011' WOLFE
ROYAL OAK - A pre·tuurn;une nt
diJIIICr

lllE DAILY SENTINEL
IUSPSIIHAI
DEVOTED TO ni E
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AKEA
Lenen of opilllolt arc wekuned. T hey sllou)d be Itt• tb~a M wonk loac 1or aabjcc:l to miucttoa by~ editor) ud must br signed wttb tbe t iPtt'• addreu. Namn; may br • ithJteld upoa
pubUcation. However, oa req~t,. aames will bt df.ad&lt;Jftd. Let1rn shGUid be iD cood ta1te, ·~
drttalnc in~~n, 110&amp; pemmaUUes.
h bllsbed daily cnept S.tu.rday by The Oblo Valley PubtiJliq Compuy- MILIUmedia, lac.,
Ill Court SL, Pomervy, Oh1o f571t. B1111DH1 Office Phooe 9ft. 2151. Editorial PbMte tn-! 157.
Second class postage paiht Pomeroy, Ohto.
NaUoaal advertial.ag represent.Uve, l..aodou AsaotLitel, 3111 EucUd Ave., Cleveillnd. ObJu

·. ..

~115.

Tbe An od aled PuA1 iJ eululve ly eaiiUed to tbe w e lor publh:atioo of aU De'lh dllpablbes
..mJttd lo the newspaper and also the local oewa publi.sbedllen!ln.
·
P\lbl.lsher

General M:cr. 4r: City EcUior
News Editor
~,...A.
Adv. Mau ger
to'"~

B!m:g '"""--'"---r• ..,........d.=

Robrrt WlqeU

RobertHGefllch
Dale Rotb&amp;:eb, Jr.
Carl Gbeea

~~

··-..:;-

...,

\

Today in history.

DAVE DILES, left , ta lks to Walter Roush at the Dave Diles
Celebrity banquet held Wednesday night at Roya l Oak Park.
Nwnerous awards were presented., Approxima tely 300 persons at·
tended.
·

••

Walter Mondale: our next pre_sident?

Today is Thursday, June 19, the
victed of giving atOmiC secrets to the
171sl day of 1980. There are 195 days
Soviets.
left in the year.
In 1964, Sen. Edward Kennedy, a
Today 's highlight in history : in
Ma ssachusetts Democrat, was
1885, the Statue of Liberty, a gift
seriously injured in a plane crash in
from France, arrived in New York . Massachusetts that killed two other
City.
people.
On this dale :
Ten years ago, the Soyuz 9
In 1756, 146 British prisoners suf·
spacecraft landed in the Soviet
located in a dungeon in India, which
Union, setting the record for the
became known as the " Black Hole of
longest manned space flight at 17
Calcutta ."
days, 16 hours, 59 minutes.
In 1862, Congress prohibited
Five years ago, U.N. Secretary·
slavery in american territories .
General Kurt Waldheim opened the
In 1953, Julius and Ethel Rosen·
first major world conference on the
berg were executed in New York's
status of women, in Mexico City.
Sing Sing Pr ison after being con·

Berry's World

congressional delegation would cast
one vote for the candidate favored
by a majority of its members. To be
elected president by the House, a
candidate would have to receive the
votes of a majority- at least 26 - of
the state delegations.

to the Democrats' 24. The seven
remaining delegations are evenly
divided.
If all representatives. vole\! along
party lines, Carter woUld receive 24
votes and Reagan would receive 19.
The remaining seven delegates

Today's commentary
Currently, 29 delegations are controlled by Democrats, 12 are con·
trolled by Republicans and nine ~re
evenly split If that distribution were
unchanged in the next Congress,
Ca rter would likely win the House
vote.
But in a number of state
delegations, Democrats outnumber
Republicans by one one or two s eats .
If Reagan and Anderson did well
enough to ,throw the' election into the
House, Republicans would likely
have taken control of some
delegations that now are split or
have small Democratic majorities.
So, let's say the Republicans con·
trol19 delegations in the new House

would be deadlocked, with half their
members voting for Carter and half
for Reagan. If the House followed
the same rules as it did in 1825, the
votes of those split delegations
would simply not count.
Thus, neither Carter or Reagan
would have the 26 votes needed for
election.
Meanwhile, the Senate would be
exercising its authority under the
12th Amendment to choose a vice
president from the two candidates
with the most electoral votes - in
this case, Walter Mondale and
Reagan's yet-unnamed running
mate.
Currently Democrats hold a 58-41

majority in the Senate. (There is one
independent). Though Republicans
could make significant gains in the
House if the November election is
close, they would be unlikely to gain
a majority in the Senate. Asswning
its members voted along party lines,
the new Senate would rHlect
Walter Mondale.
If the House did not select a
president by inauguration day, the
new vice president would become
acting president unW the impasse
was broken. And it might not be
broken until after the 1982
congressional elections.

'

spurts,
11\Ciided

WHS

rccugrlized and com-

fur his work with the net-

work .
Marsl1all grid coach Sonny Ran·
tile; cK-Detruit L(un coach Rick For·
wnu, ju umalist Kay Kessler, and
plwlugrap hcr Leu Hi ll were given
recognit ion.

TENNIS
EASTBOURNE, England (AP) Betty Stove of the Netherlands upset
top-seeded Ma rtina Navratilova 6·3,
Hi, 7·5 in the third round of the
Wom en's Grass Courts Tournament.
In other action, Traey Austin ad·
va nced with a 6-3, 6·2 victory over
Wendy While 6·3, 6-2; South Africa's
Gree r Stevens beat Andrea J aeger,
7-5, 6-3; Wendy Turnbull of Australia
defeated Kate Latham 6-7, 6·2, 6-4;
Lesli e Allen was beaten 6-4, 6-4 by
Diane Fromholtz of Austral ia; and
Diane Des for edged out Belly
Nagelsen 5-7, 6·3, 6-2,
LONDON (AP) - Raul Ramirez
defeated Britam 's Mark Cox 6-4, 6-4
and Brian Goltfned beat Britain's

••

L'ohn Feaver , 7-5, 7~. in second
round play in the Surrey Grass Cour·
ts Challlpwnslup a t Surbiton.
SOCCER
ROME I API - Belgium and Italy
played a scoreless lie, giving the
Belgians the right to play West Ger·
ma ny in the Europea n soccer cham·
piunship final on Sunday.
The Belgians only needed a ti e to
ma ke it to Sunday's fi nal because of
their better goal average.
BASKETBALL
PHOENIX, Ariz. (API - AI Wood
scored 17 points and Sam Bowie ad·
ded 16to lead the U.S. Olympic team
to a 97-66 victory over a lackluster
team of NBA All-Stars.

. 1978
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SUNSET BEACH, Calif. (AP ) From an easy chair aside a fireplace
in the beachftont house he uses as an
office, Joe Karbo looks across the
dazzling sand and sea to Catalina.
He has just driven over in a Rolls
Royce from hi~~o house at nearby
Huntington Beach, where he lives
with his wife, Betty, andca 12-year·
old daughter, the last of eight
children still at home.
Home is where his heart is, says
Joe, a heavyset fellow with a ruddy,
relaxed face enclosed in beard and
· mustache. It's wbere he also moors
his two sailboats at a backyard dock
from which he swims each day.
That is, when he tesides there.
Next week, said Joe, he hopes to
get away "and hole up and write" at
his condominium In Mexico. He has
another condo in Hawaii, and a
"cabin" up north in Washington.
Downstairs the clerical help is
~usy attending to business. Jue Kar·

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.

SCOTT WOLFE, left , spurts writer fur The Daily Se nti nel,. interviews Duane Bobick, heavyweight boxer, at the Da ve Diles
, Celebrity banqu et held Wednesday mght at Royal Oa k Park .

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Even if the Democrats .hen
regained control of a majority of
state delegations, would Carter be
called back from "retirement" after
two years of Mondale presidency?
Probably not. Mondale would end up
serving four years as "acting
president"
,
Is all this possible? Technically,
yes. Is it farfetched ? Of course. But
the very fact that some credible
people in this town are discussing
the possibility shows that many
think this will be a strange political
year ahead.

·
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1977 BUICK Limited
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Food stamp coupons through the mail
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ Ohio's
350,000 food stamp recipients may be
able to pick up their coupons next
year at the same place other people
get their Social Security or unem·
ploymenl checks - their mailbox .
The House Human Resources
Conunittee has recommended for
passage a bill requiring the Ohio
Department of Public Welfare to
establish a system of issuing food
stamp coupons through the postal
service.
Rep. John A. Begala, [).Kent, says
his proposal would save energy and
money for recipients who, because
of age or disability, find it difficult to
travel to distribution centers for the
coupons.
Witnesses testifying before the
panel he chairs said the problem is
especially acute in rural areas
without public transportation. Some

Suulhem High Schoo l Basketball
t:vad1 Carl Wulfe, Ronnie and
Slnrlcy Smith, Fred Crow, Roger
Murgan, George Harris, and Don
Mills.
Diles announced pruceeds from
the eve nt will go tu the Humane
S&lt;&gt;clely, ' historical suciety, area
volunteer fire departments, and
high sehoul golf learns at Wahama
and Meigs . All pruceeds will stay
Wllhill the COI]1J11Ullity.
The C:twards ceremonies were
" wrapped up" with a surprise
awaf(i going to Dave Diles. Bill
Nelsun a warded Diles with a 24 gold
carat putter in appreciation of his et·
forts .
Entertainment was provided by
" The Dark Hollow Bluegrass Boys"
frum Meigs County. Members of the
group are J. Brent Patterson,
Robert Taylor , Rick Boring, and
Kim Browning.
Sportscaster Ron Winters also
juined in with his trwnpet to liven up
the evening.

1976 MALTBU CLASSIC ........................ '1995

·
;
·

elderly recipients said they don't
have cars -or can 't afford to spend
money on gasoline for what are, in
some cases, round trips of 25 miles.
Under the bill, the Welfare Department would set up a system of
issuing food stamp allotments by
certified mail effective July 1, 1981.
County welfare departments
would administer the mailings . The
system would include procedures for
determining eligibility at the same
intervals currently in effect
The measure also calls for the
state a gency to provide an alternate
system in those counties where it
can show demand for mail issuance
has significantly dropped. The alter·
nate plan could also be used in areas
where the loss rate for mailed
coupons exceeds tolerable levels
established by the U.S. Department
of Agriculture.

Now Only
In addition, county cormnissioners
would have the annual option of
withdrawing from or reinstituting
the mail issuance plan,
Any individual could also wilhdraw or join the mailing system,
regardless of a county decision.
Although the bill will allow for
mail issuance to most of the state's
food stamp recipients, officiaLs from
some larger counties expressed con·
cern about a serious loss rate if
stamps are mailed.
" Most of the urban areas will
probably decide to opt out," Begala
said. " It's unfortunate, bec'ltuse per·
sons there could benefit just as
much."
State and county expenses and
reimbursements under the bill could
either increase or decrease as a
result of the biU, a ,fiscal analysis
prepared for legislators said. But it

added that state welfare officiaLs
asswne the cost increases and
decreases will be nearly equal,
balancing out to provide little
overall change.
" The mail issuance system is
going to result in minimal savings to
the state," Begala said. " It
shouldn't cost any more and may
cost a little less."

bo grossed $2.5 million last year, he
says, but now he guesses he has
already surpasse~ that figure. He is,
of course, a m~ltimillionaire.
"I am content to live as I am lor
the rest of my life," says Joe.
'' Money no longer can enrich me.''
He likes writing, acting, poker.

out," he admonishes readers. Take
charge of your life. Don't let it dictate to you; tell it what you want;
make It do your bidding. " You can
have anything you want "
Joe dl)jlSn't ask you to believe him.
Just order his material. " If I'm·
wrong, all you've lost is a stamp,"

Business mirror
Some might recognize Joe Karbo
as the' man who runs countless ads in
newspapers and magazines about
people heing " too busy working to
make any money." Life for such
people, Joe says, is a prison sen,
tence,
" Don't take as long as I did to find

DICK WEBER, pro-bowler, chats with friends at the Dave Diles
Celebrity banquet held Wedneday mght at Royal Oak Pa rk. Next to
Weber is Nelson Burton.

While the bill would generall}l
eliminate the 80-cent cost per food
stamp transaction that counties
currently pay to banks, it' would increase county staff, mailing, storage
and security costs. But in either
case, half the cost would be reimbursed by federal funds and about 45
percent through state money,
The panel's reconunendation sent '
the b_ill to the Rules Conunittee to ·
await assignment to a floor vote.

goaLs, visualize them, declare them
every day, and achieve them,
The book tells them much about
the background of Joe Kat'bo, of. his
being $50,000 in debt and without a
job in 1962 alld IJow, through the use
of Dyna-Psyc, he and Betty soon '
were on the way to wealth.
Dyna-Psyc's principles are slm- ;.
pie: You define and visualize your ·
goals as if they were ac- ~
commplishmenta. You . declare ;
them, live them, become them. No ·'
mysleJ?', says Joe Karbo. "The ;
power IS within all of us."
Most people, he contends, are •
progranuned for failure by the time •
they are six yean of age. "We '
rehearse !allure instead of rehear- ;

he reminds you . " But what if I'm
right?" The question is· provocative.
People order.

sing success," he says. ..

In return for their $10; respondents
receive a copy of "The Lazy Man's
Way to Riches," a !59-page book
that tells them how to define their

Since 1973, he says, It has sold 1
million copies in the United States
and perhaps 400,000 more In
England, Canada, Australia, New
Zealand, and Gennany.

1,

•

'7400
~·

Dyna-Psyc: a manual for success?

"Excuse me, dear. Are you still steaming about
Ramsey Clark?"

Dcvuie presented Srlienkel ami
Diles will! gifts fur lhcu· lung·lastmg
fncndslup. Uev111es ass"tanl, Gene
Snulh, who ot"cumpamed hi111 on the
trip from Suuth Beut.l, ImL will cum·
pete 111 the tourney, lou.
Jun Spence, Vicc~president of ABC

- Tltc Trad!llUnal " Guud Guy"
a" artls were then given. Plaques
\\Crc prcscutcd lt1 Horj:ict~ and
IJorotlly Kctrr , uwncrs uf Roya l Oak
P&lt;J rk cmd !l UPPIJflt!fS or the tuurll i:t iiiClll; Gary aud Mary Ruush, Bob
and Louise Huuslt fur tlieir support,
they are the owners uf Riverside
Gulf Course; heavyweight boxer
Duane Rub1ck, Prl&gt;-bowlers Nelson
Burlu11, Jc and Dick Weber,
Washington Redskin Run McDole,
and Toledo grid cuach Charles
"Ctmck" Stubarl.
Also recogmzed were WVU grid
coach Don Nehlen, Ohiu U. coache:s
Brian Burke and Dauny Nee, Miami
coaches Darrell Hedric and Tum
Rue, executive Art Morand, PGA
pros Bi ll Uzelac, Ray Mc-Guire,
Jerry Meek , and Gary Dixon.
Eddie Rosenburg and Kent State
basketball coach Ed Douma, were
recognized along with Jim and Jay
R1epenhuff of Anheusr·B usch.
Special Awards went to
Washinglun Redskin Bill Brundige ,

4 Doo r, V·8,

,By Robert J. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA) - A few
weeks ago, the political fable cir·
culating around Washington had
Sen. Edward Kennedy taking the
Democratic presidential nomination
from President Carter through a
successful rules challenge on the
floor of the Democratic Convention .
Now a few fable is making the
rounds. This one has Walter Mon·
dale becoming president next
January ,
The fable would require in·
dependent candidate John Anderson
to win several states in the Novem·
ber election. Then asswning that the
Democratic and
Republi can
nominees, Carter and fonner Gov.
Ronald Reagan, split the rest of the
states, nobody would have the 270
electoral votes needed for election.
Under the 12th Amendment to the
Constitution , an Electora l College
deadlock would have to be declared.
For the first time since 1825, the
House of Representatives would
select the president from among the
three leading contenders.
In choosing the presxident, mem·
bers of the House would not vote as
individuals. Rather, each state's

Ohio perspective

• •

Ill t 'UfljUilCtiOII With tfiC

u $500 check

11 1 bd1 •.df of the Diles' Classi c. T l1c
chct:k \\US ~jlVt; ll to DcVIlll' l 11 Ut:
tlHna tct.l t 11 Ius ft.I Vontc dwnty.

Sports briefs.

Editorial comments
The following is a sample of conunent compiled from the
editorial pages of Ohio newspapers during the past week:
_ THE LORAIN JOURNAL : " Like all fairy tales, the
congressional spoof about balancing the federal budget
has about reached 'The End.'
" The microscopic surplus that the president proposed and Congress is dickering with to best political advantage
- is disappearing before it ever becomes finaL
" What brought this all about ... is a continuing unwillingness in Washington to accept the fact that the
federal goverrunent cannot be all things to all people.
Rather than deny anyone, Congress and-or the administration continues to spin out the programs ....
" But the immediate cause for the quickly swelling
deficit is the recession, which was brewed ... by Carter to
bring down the inflation rate ... . Carter, the man who
asked us to trust him ... now says he hopes and prays 'the
recession will be short' .. ..
"What is expected between now and November ,is for
Carter to propose a tax cut, at the same time belittling his
Republican opponent for supporting massive tax cuts ....
We probably should respect Carter's opinion .... After all,
he is an authority! '
THE UMA NEWS : " New Orleans is the latest city to
face the music .... The city's budget isn't going to balance,
it seems, without some massive layoffs and other cuts this
year.
" Localities are usually constrained in a way that the
federal government is not, in that they cannot create more
money out of thin air when expenses exceed revenues. We
say 'usually' because the awesome crunch that's been
predicted for some profligates hasn't yet come to pass .. ..
Unless the federal government ... is willing imd able to
relieve all these local debts over the long term, however,
the ax is going to have to fall ....
" There apparently is no out for the city (New Orleans)
fathers, who are faced with a constitutional requirement to
balance the budget .. .. The task is especially tough because
residents there aren't accustomed to paying much in
direct taxes ....
" 'The major problem with this city is that people don't
want to pay taxes,' says a University of New Orleans
economic professor.
"Who does?"

hdd

Dave Diles Celebrity Gulf Tuur·
muncnt hurwrcd piHll t:tpatm g
cclcbrllies and lucul dig11atuncs
Wednesduy evening at R11yul Oak
Park .
After a delicious feast, host Dave
Diles introduced the evening agenda
with the aid of tournament chairman
Bill Nelson.
Diles intrudured fellow ABC spur·
tscaster Chris Schenkel, wliu was
honored with a standing uvatwn.
Schenkel had to leave the ceremony
early because of em assignment iu
Las Vegas, Nevada.
Notre Dame football coach Dan

lk.'\' Jm: \\as prcsL.:utcd

:
'"
•.
•

BASEBAU.

sponsor tournament
The Wahama Athletic Boosters
are sponsoring the 1980 Big Bend
Softball Tournament on June 21 a nd
22. This will be a double elimination
tournament consisting of twelve
_teams. All teams must be sanctioned
by the ASA. The entry fee is $60 plus
two ASA approved softballs.
All fees must be paid before the
first game . Roster. limit is' 20 . This
includes coaches, managers, etc.
Teams wishing to enter the lour·
nament, or wanting additional in·
formation call Donald Van Meter at
773-5152.

American League
AlrFllled Billy MCI.rttn, manUf!lCr, Oi!kltmd A ·~.
fur an i:lrt:wncut w1 lh um pire Dale Furtl June6.
DETROIT TJGEftS. Plciced K1rk Gibsun, een·
\~;r f1clde r . un lhe 1$-Uay tliSl:lbled list. Hear·
IJVi:lletl Mark Wagner , nfielder, frum t he 15-&lt;JCI)'

dJS&lt;JbietJ hst
•
NE W VOHK YANKEEs-Heca llcd Demus
Slwrn ll, infielder, frum Cuhnnbus uf the In·
\~nw l wnal Lca"'ue. Placed f' retl Sl&lt;tnlc), m·
fw!Ucr, un lhc 2hlay di.sab!eU li.sl.
Natlun11l League
~A:-.1 DIEGO PADR E~Plact!d Rit:k W1sc, p1t·
cht!r , on th~ 21-duy disabled ll!:il t!ffectlvt' J une 16.
Hccullcd Ut!nrus Bluir, pl tcl1cr, from Hawaii of
the Ptn:1fic Cuasl Lea~o~uc.
BASKETBALL
Na 1iuual Basketball Assocla llon
DETROIT PISTONS-Name d Don C~ne)'
H ~S I SUUll cuuch. Elttended the cunt r&lt;~cl of Terry
1\lcr, furv.·urd.
.PORTLAND TRAI L BLAZERS-St~::ncd Tom
Q,..cns, center, to t1 three-yea~t.'tlnlr&lt;t c l.
FOOTBA L[
NaUonal Ftmtball League
DALLAS COWBOYS.Signed Larry Su\'ajle,
llnl'l&gt;acker , AmJ Nunn Well!&gt;, dcfens 1 w tackl~·.

• hammers
• saws
• wrenches
• pliers
• electric
sanders
• nails and
screws ..

While

sur:~••

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ReJUiar

17.95

now

1

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Drive Socket Set
Nickel chrome plated set includes 7 3/8-ln . drive
sockets loom 311l in. io 314 in., 518-ln, spark plug aocket,
3-in. socket' extension , reversible ratchet, and a 318 in.

drive speeder disc-all in a fined box.

MM81 2

awootitieo U.i11d

at

Gov. ~ulsted loilns for qualified buyers -

--FHA 26S·YA·Conventional fin, avail.

Mobile Home Trades Welcome
Show Models
,

Ku~GSBURY HoME SALES &amp;SERVICE
"For the FirsT In Manufacuted Housing"
1100 e. Main
,
992·7034
Pomeroy, 0 .

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to do the job right!

Shop for
all your
tools &lt;Jnd
hardware

MODULAR
HOMES · .

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Wahama boostt:rs

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You IUE~~r,......,.,

.t •

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SUPPLY
CORPORATION
..
923 S. 3rd A11e.
Middleport, O.
992·2709 or 992-6611

o

•
Open : 7:00to5:00Mon.thruFrl
.
7:00 to 3:00 Saturday

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middlt&gt;port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jw~e 19, 1980

A GOOD GUY AWARD "'as presented to Horace
and Dorothy Karr, owners of Royal Oak Park, at the
Dave Diles Celebrity banquet held Wednesday night at

Royal Oak Park. Pictured , 1-r, Horace and Dorothy
Karr anq Bill Nelson who made the presentation.

Meigs pounds Vinton
BY SC01T WOLFE
In a game where every player s:aw
action, Meigs' American Legion
team claimed a 22-2 victory over a
;very young Vinton County squad.
• Meigs raised its record to 7-2 on
~e year by capturing the slugfest
WUl .

Art Foglestrom, in relief of winning pitcher Jeff Wayland, sealed
.the win after coming on in the fifth
;inning.
: The pair really never pitched un&lt;ler pressure as the offenseproduced
12 runs in the first three innings. The
duo combined for six strikeouts and
just three walks.
Ward, B. Norris, and Oney took to
the mound for Vinton County fan)ling six and walking 11 batters

wh1ch proved to be very costly.
Meigs 17-hit attack was led by
Terry Wayland with three singles,
Phil King and Kent Wolfe two
singles, Jerry Fields two singles,
and Steve Little, Leonard , Kenny
Brown, Greg Wigal, Joe Bob Hemsley, with s(ngles. Tommy Owens,
Bob Foster and Bea ver doubled for

KANSAS CITY, Mo. iAP ) Jamie Quirk drove in three runs and
Amos Otis two to back the seven-hit
pitching of Larry Gura and power
the Kansas City Royals to a 10-2 victory over the Cleveland Indians on
Wednesday night.

••• •••••
••

...• •

I ••

••
•••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
MAJOR LEAGUE BASE.BA.LJ..
AMERICAN LEAG L E

EAST
W.
40
J3
32
32

Nt&gt;!oi.' Yorlt

Boston
Milwaukee

BallLmore

Clevelomd
Toronto

M. PrL G8
21 656
28 .541 j
28 .5.33 i l ;
~ .516 817

"' 29
3(l

o.u-~·

2fl

500 9

500 g ~
491 10

30
29

WEST

KansasCtty

39 23 .629
3(1 31 . ~ 92 81l

Cll.icagu

O.ltland

J(l

Tel.il:i
SeatUe

2S l4

33

4i6 91-.

452 II

2ll 3$ 444 Ill-:
Minnesota
25 J6 .410 J31~
Call forma
21 39 3$0 17
WcciMsday's C.mes
T()rooto So-3, Chicago +1

Baltimore 3, O..k..i.and 2
Boston 6, Se.allle 2

Nev.• Yurt S, California Cl
Kansas City lO, CleveLand 2
Oct.nnt al Minnesota. ppd ., nun
TeJtaS8, Milwauk~ . l

Thuncb:y'll Gamn
2-:. 1 at

DPlru!l &lt;Scb.atu&gt;dar
tJacksonJ-.1 ; .

Oakland

H..angford
tn).

Mmnesotcl

at

H I

McGr~or $-.S ),

BahmlOtc

Suttle t RoberU HH a\ Boston tStanle) :N 1.
1n) .

Cturago 1Barrios 1-11 at Toronto 1Leal 1·1 1.
l n l.

. Cahfumw (Mclrtmez
(Figueroa 1-2), ~ n ).

1-2 )

at

Ne"· York

. Clenland (Barker H ) zt Kai\Sil :s C1ty 1Murt.m
·i-3 J. 1n !.

1\hi.,., Hukee (Tr&amp;\'ers 1-JJ at Texas All&lt;trd 0-&lt;l •.
tn !.
Frida}"'s Games
Seattlt' ill Balbmurt' , tn l
Cal1fum~a atSustun. t n 1

Odklimd at Nf"W Yrn-k , I n I
Detrott.at ChJcJ~,go. 1n l
Mllw11ukee at Kansas City, 1n ;
Clt'\'t'Jand at MmnesQI.It, tn )
Tl&gt;!"tiOto at Tuas. 1n J

NATIONAl LEAG UE

EAST
W. L Pel

Montreal

31 %
&lt;

Pt11ladt'lph~a

33 2&lt; .519
31 27 .551
27 n .&lt;SO

Pltl&gt;bu'.f
Nn· Yu
Ouca~u

:tS

SL Lou"

WEST

Huuslon

GB

~

n .&lt;39

.,

...."'' .

8'&gt;

23 311 .371 127

Cincmrw.li

3i 23 .617
3S 2i .,)fi,.\ 3
l3 :9 .53:2 5

SanFr.mctscu

2i 35

Atlanta
San Diego

li 34 .t33 11

l..ai Ane:eles

. U~

11

Tf 36 .t :!:!l ll
W-..Joy'oG..,..
San FrallCl5C."\18, Ntw York J
All.anl.ill-.5, PlUsburgh 2-4

HOliSlon l,St. LowsO
Plulodelplua 0, San Diego l
Los .Angeles I, Montreal 7
Tbllndn's Games
Clocli'Ula\1 i Pnce I).CI.) al ctuc.agu 11\rukt.ra .._
3).
Phil&amp;OP.Iphia

t Walk 2-CI J at San D!e~&gt;u
(EichelbuguO.O;.
New Yoit i.Bornbck :S.l J at San Fnu-.cl3Cv

("'-.,..,),

Pittsbw"~h (Rubmson 2-~ J at AllanUI: 1Rann.a 0..
0),\n).
Sl. Lows (Sykes l~i at Hoo.ston t Ryan ~ ~ .

( n ).

.

Montreal (Gnrnsle)' 2-4 1 at lAJ:5 Mgt'les

UJwton$.3 ), (n l .

Friday'sGatnn
0\lca~o alAUant., fn)

a

lA.Ws at Cincinnati' ( n )

the · group, not in order, were J . Brent Patterson,
guitar, Robert Taylor, banjo, Rick Boring, mandolin,
· bass.
and Kim
BIG BEND YO UTif •
BAS E BALL LEAGUE STAN DINGS

County~

June 15, 1981)
Wun lost
8
0

Mtddlcport Brave!!
New l'hwen Rctl'i
Mtddll.'purt lndt::.ns

7

New H~ vtm Cubs
Pumeruy P1rales
Mason Rctnt;:Cr !l

Meigs.
Cottrill, Payton, and Timms were
the only V. C. hitters all with singles.
Meigs woll host Vinton County
agai n this Saturday at the Meigs
High Sehoul fi eld 111 Rock Springs.
The double-header will begin at 1 .
p.m.

Pum~ru)' T1~ers

Rullc.nd Reds
Pumero)" Yankees
Rutland Dodgers
Puml:'r())' G 1ants
lb rtf ord H1.1rnets

PJtt.sbu.r !!.h at Houstoo. 1n '
Muntre1d at SC!n D1e~u. 1 n 1
~l'~ ' 't1rk &lt;H Los An~el es, n 1
Ptuladelphi&lt;t &lt;tt San F rancLSCt.J. , 11 ,

TOOA Y'S MAJOR LE.AGL'E L£..1, 0 ERS
B)· Tbt As.sociak'd Preu
AMERICA., LEA.GLE
BATTI~G t 11!1 ttl balS t: ~ ulttu r , ~1l l \4"itukE't',

.353 ;

P:~o cturek .

.J.tl: Ortot,

Seattle .. 3-46 : Swrm1ers, DrtroH ,
.338: Srt&gt;tt, Kan.sas Ct\y,

Cl~\·eland ,

.337.

RU~S : Yoont, Mtl lltaukee . .11 . W1lson, Komsas
Ctl). ~ 9 : W1ll.s. Texas. 48 ; Randulph, Nt'w \" (Irk ,
4.'1 ; Brumbry, Balltmore, ~3: Rtce, Boston, 43 :
TnmmM-1, Detroit, 43; Henderson, Oaliand, 43 .
RBI : Oln·er. Texas, 48 ; Perez, Bostvn. 46 :
~11\· te, Milwaukee. 46 : Arm.as. Oak.land. ·H :
C0o.-.per. Mtlwi:lukee. fJ .
HITS : Wtlson , Ka nsas 'Ctty. 85 : Bumbr~ .
&amp;IUmure. 19; Yount, Mtl\ol·aukee, 78: Bur lt~son,
Busi.IJI'I, i7; Rtvers, T t'JUl.S. 77 .
OOUBLE..S : Mornsoo, Ch1cat,:o. 22 : YHvw11.
M ilwt~ uJU"t'. %0; Gan·ta, Toront o. 18 . C:trt&gt;~~o .
Cctltf umt&lt;t. li: Qh,·er. Texas. 16
TRIPLES : Gnffm , Toronto. 8: Bumbn .
&amp; lumurt&gt;. ~ : Brett. Kansas Clt}. ~: J() \Jed ~~o· tih

..

HOME;. RL'~S : ~bne. ~ l h.,·auk« . 17.
J cttks..lll, :-;t'llo York, 1~ : R1ce. &amp;a1un. 13 .
.\l&lt;t)~rt). Tun.111tu, 1.'1 : l'humils, Mi lwaukt't' . 12:
\"elet, Turunto. l2: Rudt. CaWomta, 11..
STOLE\ BASES : Henderson, Oakland . :ll .
Wtlsoo, Kansas Cit)'. !i; Cruz. Se.atUe, 21J ; Wtlb,
Te~tas, 1! : BwnbrJ , BallmMe, IT : R.and ulph.

The victory, coupled with Toron·
to's doubleheader sweep of Chicago,
made Kansas City the only team in
the American League West with a
record above .500 and hiked the
Royals' division lead to 8'&gt; games
over the White Sox.
Gura, 9-2, tied Tommy John of the
New York Yankees lor the league
high in victories. The Indians, losing
for only the fourth time 111 their last
13 games, scored in the second and
third inn i n~s before the Royals erupted I or I our in the bottom of the
third .
Aller Frank White reached on an
error by seccnd baseman Alan Bannister, Willie Aikens and Otis rapped
singles, Otis' knocking in a run. Clint
Hurdle singled to make it 2-2, then
John Wathan singled to load the
bases and Quirk tagged starter John
Denny, 7-5. for a two-run double.
Otis added a sacrifice fly in the fourth.
The Royals added five runs in the
eighth. Two scored on a throwmg
error b)' third baseman Dave
Rosello and Darrell Porter and
Wathan delivered RBI singles.
Yankees 5, Angels 0 - Ron Guidry
fired a six-hitter to break a personal
two-game losing streak and Bobby
Brown and Graig Nettles homered
as the Yankees handed the Angels
their eighth consecutive setback.

LL tournament
entries sought

Sey, Yurt 1; .

16 Dn:tslon.s. l: f'OimJt&gt;r . Oucc.gu . .&gt;1, .&amp;.13, 2. ~ : John. ~I'll' York , S-2, .8111 , 3 07 .
Gura, Kansas Ctt~, 9&gt;-1, .81, 2. lti : ~~llt'~, Bo.stor1.
;.2', .178, U-8 ; Stunt&gt;, &amp;ltmwre, !--J• .727. 3.81 :
Sptllner. QeveUtnd, 7,3, .700, CG . GuidO.~"'""
Yurk, 7...1. iOO . .'1 .22: Undervo&lt;.o..&lt;i. ~t'"" 'r'vrk . i·:l.
i00.1.99.
SiRIKEOUTS: Guidi}. !\l'\1 Yurk , 88:
Kt."UUgh, Oak.lcmd. 68 ; BanniSter. Seatlle . 67.
:Vvrr~S . Oakland, 66 : Leoo.ard. Kc.ns.a sCit~. 60.
PITCHI~G

LEAGt:E LEADERS
8)· 11Ho AUOC":il#d PN!U
NA. TIOSAL l..EAGL E
BAmNG i 1!5 at bo!Ui i: Hernandez, St. Louts.
.336; Val l, ChJcagu, .336: Sm1th. Los An.:e le;::,,

.332. Cn.u., Huustun, .327 ; W~t Uang. Houstoo ..126
RUNS. Schnudt. Ptul.otdelptua. 49: Hernandel.

St. Luu.LS . 4S : Rust', Phlladt'-lphi&lt;l. 43 ; Tl'mpl~hon ,
Sl Lows. 40 : ~turph~ . Atlanta , 40.
RBI : Sctumdt, l&gt;hlbdt'-iptu~ • .11 : He ndnl·k. St .
LouiS, ~1 : Gar:l'h Los Angeles. ~9 . Srntth, Los
Angele:., 44 ; Luzmsk.t, P tuladdphta, ~ I .
HITS : Templetoo. St Luuts. !I : H ernand~l .
St . l..uuLS , ill ; fl:etU, St. Loms. 72; Cnu:, HUllih•l.
12 : Moreno. Pmsburgh. ll; ChambliSS, Altanla,
il: Garvl'} , Lus Angeles, I I : Snulh. l.Ats Arlt:t' lcs.
i l.
DOUBLES: Stearns, ~e\4 York . 19; Ru:st&gt; .
PhtlitdelphtOio. 19: Cbamble&gt;s. Atl.anl.li. , 18: Herna.ndt&gt;t. SL LtJUIS.. 17 ; Kntght. Clncml\&lt;IU. II
TRJPI.£S : Mvrrnu, P!U.s.burgh, 6: McBnde ,
Ptuladi!.lph~.a , J ; l lif'd • ·tlh 4.

HOM£ RUNS ' Schnudl, l'tulatlellua. 20:
Luz.msk•. Ptnladelphte~ , IS . Baker. U.t:S An~ele~.
IS . Gan.e). Lus ~elo . lt : Cdrter . Munttei:l l,
13. Ht"ndnct , SL Louts., lJ

STOLEN BASES: MoreOfl. Pltlsburgh, 31 :
LcFion&gt;, Muntre.al, 35; CuUms. Cml"mnall, 24 :
&amp;.'VI.\ , Muntreal, 19: Law, Los ~eles. 1!.

PITCHING 16 DeclStons 1. Btbb) .

Pltubu ~h.

i ·l . .!i5. 3.16; Rruss. UJs Angelt':S., i-1 . m . 2.ll:
C.rltotl, Phtladelph~. IH• . 85i , 1.14 ; Bahnsen.
Ml•llre:d, &gt;1. .Ill, 1.02; Rt"ed, PluilldelphJa , &gt;1.
.133. 2.112: Reed, l'tulatlelplu;o, &gt;-1 • .133. %.2;
Musk.au, CuK".''lUWlU, S-1, .&amp;u, 3.&amp;2 : Wt':kh , IA4
Ar ~&amp;:t&gt;}es. 7-2. .171.. U2 ; .RK"hilrd. Hv.Jst.un, 9-3.
.75G.'Ul
STRfKEOliT'S : Ciirlton, Phtladelphua, 121;
RlchMrd. HUU$1.on, ltJ3: Ryan, Houston, 7.1 :
Ntekru, AUinta, 12; 81) len•n. P1U.sbttr gh, 7I.

Entries are being accepted for the
1980 Syracuse Little League Tournament which begins July 9. To enter, managers should send his team
name and roster to Box 293,
Syra cuse, 0.
This year's tourney "ill be double
elimination. Only the first 24 teams
w11l be accepted.
Entry fee is three balls or $9 .
Ninety-six trophies will be awarded.
Six team trophies and the first six
team individuals.
This tournament for 19 years was
lleld at Kyger Creek moving to
Syracuse three years ago .
No All Star teams may enter.
Each manager will determine ·how
many innings his pitchers will pitch.

0

4
•
3

6

J
J
J

3
J

J
5

'

' 6'

2
00

8'

JUDGES CAKE SHOW - Nancy Roush, pictured,
will be judging the Big Bend Regatta Cake Show, to be
held at the Lutheran Church, June 28. Mrs. Roush will

COACH HONORED- A
Guy Award was presented to Carl
Wolfe , head basketball coach at Southern High &amp;hool, Racine, who
coac hed his team to the state finals . The award was made a1 the Dave
Diles Celebrity banquet held Wednesday night at Royal Oak Park.

score.
Joey Loving 's game winning
single provided the needed margin
in the extra inning affair. Mid·
dleport hitters were David Smith a
single and triple, Eddie Crooks a
double and single, and Joey Loving a
single.
Smith picked up the win in relief of
Loving "'ho fanned 10 and walked
none. Todd Lisle suffered the loss
with a good performance striking
out 12 and walking only one.
Chris Stewart, Bryan Weaver, and
Eber Pickens doubled and singled
for Syracuse while Todd Lisle
Slllgled.
The Racine Reds scored another
convincing win , this time a 1&amp;-1
deeJSion over the Chester Chieftains.
Jay Bostick led the winners with
two doubles and two singles, Matt
Jewell a triple, and Brian Warden a
double for Racine, &amp;ott Wickline
picked up the win with . seven
strikeouts and four walks. Wickline
is now &amp;-1 on the year. Taylor was
the Chieftain pitcher. Chester hitters
were not available. Racine is now 1().
1.

Mason Rangers won a hard fought
game against the Pomeroy Yankees
6-5 in seven innings of play. Rod
Long went six innings striking out 14
and walking eight, while Darrell
Mitchell came on in the seventh to
pick up the win. LeadiJ!Il hitters for
the Rangers were Darrell Milchell a
single and double, Ed Starcher and
Rod Dale with singles. In six innings
Brian Willis fanned IS, before getting relief from Sherman Hoschar

Adults - Beginnr, holiday or one
mixpan
,
Adults - Intennediate (over one
year's experience decorating)
novelty or holiday;
Adults - Advanced (teach as a
hobby but do not consider oneslf
professional or sell over $500 or
cakes per year) special occasion or
- -\
novelty;
Professional (Judges or teaches
on a larger scale) wedding or baby
shower, or novelty.
Entry blanks should be sent to the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce,

Name ............... , . .. , , . , . , ........... Phone No..... , .... , . ... , ................ .. .. .

Casey Kasem
WMPO
·SATURDAYS
~
Noon
_
. ._ . =._;._
_
_.

who suffered the loss. Yankee hitters were Dave Hendricks had two
doubles. Brian Willis two singles,
and Sherman Hoschar a double.

Address , , , , ...... , . ............ .'........... Zip Code . . ............. .. ................... .
Check the categories you wish to enter.

•

Children

Your Choice-- - - -

.Teens

Your Choice-- - - -

___J

Adults- Beginner

A. Holidayh---- - B. One Mix Pan- - - - -

•

Intermediate
Advanced

ON ANY CAR OR TRUCK YOU DRIVE
IN WE Wll.l. AI.I.QW YOU A MINIMUM
$300 TRADE INIII

CHEVY NOVA ................. ,&lt;.~: ·.~ ~.Y.':~.".'~:::.~ .. 12995
CHEVY NOVA .• :........ ~·.d:: ?.0.5.~~: ~.".'~;: :'.~·. ~.~ .. ' 11995
CHEVY CHEVELLE ............ : .~': .~~:~ :.~ :: :.~ ... 11295
OLDS 442 ................................ ?.~: .~ : 1895
VW BUS ..... .'•.•...•...• ,,.,,,,.,,, •..9• ~.a.5,5,e.~~~ ~. S}Q95

....

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1973 CHEVY C-20 ......... ...................'.'.:~~:~.'?...11495
1970 FORD F-100 ...............~~:~~·.~.5: .~?: .'::.~~~?~~ ..11195

ROGER RIEBEL,
Phone 985· 3345 or 667 ·3463
Non SR 7 Beyond Tuppers Plains

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - I would like to
know if there is any way I can care
for a fur coat at horne during the
surruner instead of sending it to a fur
storage place.- EDITH

ASTRO
GRAPH
f'riday, JIIDC zt

Your prospecta for the comille year are en-

major changt!8 impuls.lnly or without havlng aU
the facts.· Plan your moves wisely and, above aU,

bepaUent.

~

WATCH· SPECIAL!
ALL WATcHES
NOW REDUCED

20%
We 11M reducld .. witches in aur stDm

tor thl bla lliL So ~ ,00 ... in the ........
tor 1 watch ar ~ JOU - wil be. S1u9 ia
lithw Gllpolis ar Pom11111 111d Sl\le 011 the
wlllch ol JOUI d!oict.

.C:WVE11E
•SEIKO (Gallipolis On~)
'
•POCKET WAratES'
MI. WAltiiES F\IUY GUARAIITUO

GEMINI (May %1..hilte 10) Manaie your
resourcea with wisdom today, or you may suf[er
a la!IS. U you do any gambling be :~ure It Ia for
very .smaU stakes. Romance, travel, luck,
resources, p€1SS1ble pttlalls and career tor lhe
cornin8 months are aU di.scu.saed in your AstroGral)h Jetter, which beglna with your blrthday.
Mail fl for each lo Aotr&lt;H;raph, llol411l, Radio
City station, N. V.JOOJ9. Be sure to specify birth
tlat..

tANCER (Jut21.J11ly Z%) Don 'taak others to
do U\inp you wouldn' t do yourself. Others wW
follow ywr lead, and if it's a poor one, you can

uoect pcobtema.
LF.o (JIIly ZS.Aq.

!Zt NonnaUy you're the
type who lays aU the cards on the table, but today

Othen may hive 4ifficulty knowing where you
stand bec.IJ.&amp;Se you're reluctant to truly speak
your mind.
VIRGO IAq. !J.&amp;pl. I!) The lemptoUoo lo

apend wtneeeSt~~~rity could be very strong today,
and you may make some unwisepurchua. Shop
sensibly and buy only what you need.
LlliRA i!Jepl. %Wei. %3) lnslead of chatletljies
awakeninll your resourcefulneas today, they

Novelty- - - - -

A, Wedding Baby Shower-- - - - B. Novely--- - -

lingering odor. My mother-in-Jaw
told me this and I have used this
method for61 years. - IMOGENE
DEAR READERS - I have never
tried this myself but have heard of it
from several sources. For the first
time, I would try it on just a few
things that are not too important. POLLY
DER POLLY - A shoe hom
makes an excellent trowel to us for
transplanting potted plants. It
reaches deep into the pots without
disturbing the roots.- MRS. G.P.
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem i• her
column. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in ca re of his newspaper.

Send fur to storage

cwraging, provided you don't attempt to make

•BIJLOVA

A. Sjpecial occasion------:- B.

Polly's Pointers

Rl EBEL'S USED CARS

JEWElRY

A. Novelty- - - - - B. Holiday- - - - -

Professional

WE'RE DEALING

1977
1976
1974
1970
1970

and the entry fees, $1 per cake lor
adults and 50 cents per ca ke for
children, should be enclosed, with
checks made payable to the Chamber of Commerce. Cakes may be entered the day of the contest, with the
entry fee being paid at the time of
entry.
All cakes must be in place by 12
noon, including cakes entered on
June28.
A trophy will be given to the Best
of Show, and all entrants will be
eligible for a prize drawing after the
contest.

ENTRYB~NK

Summer league results given
In area little league action the
Middleport Cubs slipped past the
Syracuse team by a narrow 3-2

have several of her prize-winning cakes on display at
the show, including the one which won the OHio State
Championship.

Cake show added to Regatta
Acake show has been added to the
program for the Big Bend Regatta ,
June 26-29. &amp;heduled for Saturday,
June 28, at 2 p.m. at the Lutheran
Church, Pomeroy, the show will be
judged by Nancy Roush, Coolville,
veteran cake exhibitor and winner ol
the Ohio State Cake Decorating
Championship.
Trophies and ribbons will be
aswarded in each of 10 categories,
which re:
Children, age 7-12, your choice
Teens, age 13-17, your choire ;

Royals whip Indians

I ••

•'

PROVIDING ENTERTAINMENT at the Dave
Diles Celebrity banquet Wednesday night at Royal Oak
was the Dark Hollow
Boys. Making up

RE CEIVES SCHOLARSHIPS - Three Meigs
County students attending Ohio University have been
awarded various academic scholarships by the university for the 1980-31 academic year. They are : Jane Bur·
son, left, recipien t of a Dean's AchievementAnonymous &amp;holarship, is a sophomore pre-med
student and the daughter of Fred and Jane Burson, Rt.

DEAR EDITH
- A line fur coat
should always be
sent to storage for
the surruner. I had
friends tell me
that when they
left home lor the
summer they left
fur stoles, etc. in
the refrigerators
that were empty
and turned on
very low.
Cramer
Last year I decided to try it myself
and left a mink jacket (f9lded inside
out) on a shelf in my turned-downlow refrigrator for several months
while I was away. It loolr:ed great,
but I am not reeommending this. It's
just what I did and it worked for me.
I have been told that a fur should
never be put in a plastic bag lor
storage. - POLLY
· DEAR POLLY - When I store
furs or woolens I keep them free of
moths and smell by using black pepper. I sprinkle black pepper in the
folds of wool blankets and then do
them up in newspaper. I have a coat
with a fur collar that I hang in a bag,
sprinkle the collar generously with
pepper and when I want to wear it
again I take it out of doors, shut my
eys, shake Vigorously imd there is no

plans made
Wedding

be more of a liability today than an a~~.~et. In-

own.

AQU.UUUS (loa. »Fell. It) Dutieaor l'tlj)OO-

iJblUUes annot be rationalized awa:r.loday, oor
should they be poltponed to a later te. Delays

arert't asubautute for solutions.

PIBCEII I Folt. »Mar&lt;~ .) Thla II not a good

dar to Jet IOflltOI'It elle manage your personalaffaira, or lor you to try to dJrect theirs.
ARIEIIIMacdiii·Apiil IJ) Youandrourmat&lt;
may not be in thl! proper mood today to d~

volaUielNues. Table these matters till you each
teet they can be hlndled calmly.
TAURU!

coworkm

(A~

»May •) Aaslalanil or

t appreciate it it you behave
to.lly or don't ahoulder your share ol the burden. Do your duties with a .-nile.
W&lt;lll

NEED ELIMINATEU
A scientist at Israel's Ben-Gurion
Umversity of the Negev has
discovered a bacillus which kills
mo s quito larvae, t hereby
eliminating the need for pesticides.

Immature girl has baby
to spile her parents
By Helen and Sue Bottel

Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
My cousin is having a baby mostly
to spite her parents. The lather
disappeared- she didn't really care
for him. She waited until it was too
late for an abortion because she
" hated the thought."
But she hates the thought of a
baby, too. She's selfish and immature and she plans to throw this
child on its very unwilling grandparents while she continues to chase
around, and attend school when she
feels like it. II anyone suggests adoption she goes into hysterics. (Mostly
put-on, and very theatrical.)
She told me frankly she's doing
this to get even with her folks. What
can the family do? - SHOCKED
. COUSIN
DEAR SHOCKED COUSIN:
All we can suggest here is intensive therapy for a very mixed-up
girl and her equally unhappy parents.
Let's hope some of tltis hate and
ntisery dissipates before the baby
becomes a child nobody wants. HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE: Or let's hope
therapy can convince family members that someone out there
desperately wants a child they
aren't prepared to care for and love.
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I'm wondering why I never hear
these big-mouth women complaining about " equal rights" with
the draft ?
(Note from Sue: If you read last
Tuesday's column you re now aware
that " Ready to Fight" - female 1

r---

Social Calendar
THURSDA\'

MAGNOUA CLUB will meet
Thursday evening at 7:30p.m. at the
home of Ellen Couch. Georgie Watson will have devotions, and Bernice
Ann Durst will give the program.
WILLING WORKERS Class of the
Enterprise United Methodist Church
will hold their meeting June 19 at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Maybelle Moore.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD Conservation League, 6 p.m. Thursday
at the home of Mrs. Susie Soulsby.
Mrs. Clarice Kennedy to have
devotions. Members to take their
own table service and a swim suit.
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club, 1:15 p.m. at tbe home of Mrs.
Nancy Grueser. Members to meet at
the Rock Springs Church at 12:30
p.m. for the trip to the Grueser
home.

agreed with a number of high school
students that women should be draf·
ted.)
Face it, women have been complaining about something they don 't
have for the last deCij.de. The trouble
is the only things women don 't
possess are heaven or Mars. Their
next step will probably be to kick
men right off the earth.
,
I'm all for 50 percent of each sex in
the draft - and in combat' You
ladies want to be in our locker rooms
and jobs, so why should it be just the
young guys who have to bail
everyone out in times o£ war? I'm
lor "with justice for all." - HAD
ENOUGH
DEARH.E.:
While you men and women writers
are hassling the female draft, we're
concentrating on a much bigger
goal: Let's all hope, pray and work
for the elimination global war, so
that none of our drafted youth will
ever again serve in combat! HELEN AND SUE

ELECT GROUP MISSES

TENNIS
SHOES
1h PRICE

DEAR HElEN AND SUE :
Someone asked about a mail
shower for a bride away from home .
What a beautiful thought!
We had a mail shower lor a dear
friend whose military husband was
transferred from our area. We wrapped the presents after all guests saw
them . Then we called Kansas witA a
big, "Suprise 1 We're having a baby
shower for you right now." We took
pictures and sent them too.
How exciting to know that
somewhere across the United States
you're being wished well by your
friends. - OOTIY

WOMEN'S WARE
-SPORTSWEAR
-SWIM WEAR
-DRESSES
-SLACKS
SHOP NOW AND
RECEIVE DISCOUNTS OF

20 50%0FF
TO

BAHR CLOTHIERS
PARK RESERVED

may hive but the oppoe.lte effect and cause you

stead ol trying to dra&amp; tbem along, go i&amp; on your

Helen Help Us

Announcement is being made of
the approaching marriage of Abra
Burris, daughter of Mrs. Howard
Selby, Point Pleasant, and Virgil
Burris, Leon, to Philip M. Ohlinger,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Philip D. Ohl·
inger, Pomeroy, Ohio.
FRIDAY
The open church wedding will take
PAST
MATRONS,
· Evangeline
place Friday, J~ne 20, 7:30p.m. at
Chapt~r 172, Order of the Eastern
Open M.·Sat.
106 N. lnd Ave.
the Main Street Baptist Church,
Star,
7:30
Friday
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
9:30
filS
P.M.
Middleport,
Oh .
Point Pleasant. Rev . James
James
Clatworthy,
Middleport.
Steinspring wiD officiate, and a ·
reception will follow the ceremony ,--------------1--------------~------:-------­
at the church.

1o back ell belore youreolly try.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your iipltndid
imagination could play trtcb today and CIUif
you &amp;o see thinas u being more negative lhan
they really art.Loot for sunahine, not cloudl.
BA&lt;lm.uuus (Nov. za.Dee.lll Blt!iness and
oleuure m~ke a poor mil today. Settle for one or
~ other. The odds aren't with you.
CAPliiOORN (Dee. !Waa. It) .....,ilia
whole a.lmlart not In harmony with yoon wW

I, Shade. Seth A. Hlll , center, a sophomore Uldustrial
and systems engineering major and the son of David
and Linda Hill, Racine, the recipient of a Ben Manley
Endowment Scholarship. Michael Bryan Wayland, a
junior electrical engineering major and the son of Gary
and Sonja Wayland , Rutland, the recipient of a Ben
Manley Endowment Scholarship.

UNTIL S P.M.

SATURDAY-JUNE 21st

ANNOUNCEMENT
• Effective July 1, 1980
Dr. Zinnia B. Dayo will no longer be connected
with Bend Area Medical Center and will
relocate her practice .to 306 N. 2nd Ave., Mid·
dleport, Ohio (Dr. J. J. Davis' former office). '
I

HOME TEL. (304) 882-2730
OFFICE TEL. (614) 992-3333

FOR

..SUMMER OUTING"

•
I

OF ·

LARGE INDUSTRIAL CONCERN
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFtE~ P.M • .

•

CAMDEN PARK
O:S : 60WEST-HUNTINGTON

•

CLOSED EVERY MOND~Y EXCEPT HOLIDAYS

'

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middlt&gt;port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jw~e 19, 1980

A GOOD GUY AWARD "'as presented to Horace
and Dorothy Karr, owners of Royal Oak Park, at the
Dave Diles Celebrity banquet held Wednesday night at

Royal Oak Park. Pictured , 1-r, Horace and Dorothy
Karr anq Bill Nelson who made the presentation.

Meigs pounds Vinton
BY SC01T WOLFE
In a game where every player s:aw
action, Meigs' American Legion
team claimed a 22-2 victory over a
;very young Vinton County squad.
• Meigs raised its record to 7-2 on
~e year by capturing the slugfest
WUl .

Art Foglestrom, in relief of winning pitcher Jeff Wayland, sealed
.the win after coming on in the fifth
;inning.
: The pair really never pitched un&lt;ler pressure as the offenseproduced
12 runs in the first three innings. The
duo combined for six strikeouts and
just three walks.
Ward, B. Norris, and Oney took to
the mound for Vinton County fan)ling six and walking 11 batters

wh1ch proved to be very costly.
Meigs 17-hit attack was led by
Terry Wayland with three singles,
Phil King and Kent Wolfe two
singles, Jerry Fields two singles,
and Steve Little, Leonard , Kenny
Brown, Greg Wigal, Joe Bob Hemsley, with s(ngles. Tommy Owens,
Bob Foster and Bea ver doubled for

KANSAS CITY, Mo. iAP ) Jamie Quirk drove in three runs and
Amos Otis two to back the seven-hit
pitching of Larry Gura and power
the Kansas City Royals to a 10-2 victory over the Cleveland Indians on
Wednesday night.

••• •••••
••

...• •

I ••

••
•••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
MAJOR LEAGUE BASE.BA.LJ..
AMERICAN LEAG L E

EAST
W.
40
J3
32
32

Nt&gt;!oi.' Yorlt

Boston
Milwaukee

BallLmore

Clevelomd
Toronto

M. PrL G8
21 656
28 .541 j
28 .5.33 i l ;
~ .516 817

"' 29
3(l

o.u-~·

2fl

500 9

500 g ~
491 10

30
29

WEST

KansasCtty

39 23 .629
3(1 31 . ~ 92 81l

Cll.icagu

O.ltland

J(l

Tel.il:i
SeatUe

2S l4

33

4i6 91-.

452 II

2ll 3$ 444 Ill-:
Minnesota
25 J6 .410 J31~
Call forma
21 39 3$0 17
WcciMsday's C.mes
T()rooto So-3, Chicago +1

Baltimore 3, O..k..i.and 2
Boston 6, Se.allle 2

Nev.• Yurt S, California Cl
Kansas City lO, CleveLand 2
Oct.nnt al Minnesota. ppd ., nun
TeJtaS8, Milwauk~ . l

Thuncb:y'll Gamn
2-:. 1 at

DPlru!l &lt;Scb.atu&gt;dar
tJacksonJ-.1 ; .

Oakland

H..angford
tn).

Mmnesotcl

at

H I

McGr~or $-.S ),

BahmlOtc

Suttle t RoberU HH a\ Boston tStanle) :N 1.
1n) .

Cturago 1Barrios 1-11 at Toronto 1Leal 1·1 1.
l n l.

. Cahfumw (Mclrtmez
(Figueroa 1-2), ~ n ).

1-2 )

at

Ne"· York

. Clenland (Barker H ) zt Kai\Sil :s C1ty 1Murt.m
·i-3 J. 1n !.

1\hi.,., Hukee (Tr&amp;\'ers 1-JJ at Texas All&lt;trd 0-&lt;l •.
tn !.
Frida}"'s Games
Seattlt' ill Balbmurt' , tn l
Cal1fum~a atSustun. t n 1

Odklimd at Nf"W Yrn-k , I n I
Detrott.at ChJcJ~,go. 1n l
Mllw11ukee at Kansas City, 1n ;
Clt'\'t'Jand at MmnesQI.It, tn )
Tl&gt;!"tiOto at Tuas. 1n J

NATIONAl LEAG UE

EAST
W. L Pel

Montreal

31 %
&lt;

Pt11ladt'lph~a

33 2&lt; .519
31 27 .551
27 n .&lt;SO

Pltl&gt;bu'.f
Nn· Yu
Ouca~u

:tS

SL Lou"

WEST

Huuslon

GB

~

n .&lt;39

.,

...."'' .

8'&gt;

23 311 .371 127

Cincmrw.li

3i 23 .617
3S 2i .,)fi,.\ 3
l3 :9 .53:2 5

SanFr.mctscu

2i 35

Atlanta
San Diego

li 34 .t33 11

l..ai Ane:eles

. U~

11

Tf 36 .t :!:!l ll
W-..Joy'oG..,..
San FrallCl5C."\18, Ntw York J
All.anl.ill-.5, PlUsburgh 2-4

HOliSlon l,St. LowsO
Plulodelplua 0, San Diego l
Los .Angeles I, Montreal 7
Tbllndn's Games
Clocli'Ula\1 i Pnce I).CI.) al ctuc.agu 11\rukt.ra .._
3).
Phil&amp;OP.Iphia

t Walk 2-CI J at San D!e~&gt;u
(EichelbuguO.O;.
New Yoit i.Bornbck :S.l J at San Fnu-.cl3Cv

("'-.,..,),

Pittsbw"~h (Rubmson 2-~ J at AllanUI: 1Rann.a 0..
0),\n).
Sl. Lows (Sykes l~i at Hoo.ston t Ryan ~ ~ .

( n ).

.

Montreal (Gnrnsle)' 2-4 1 at lAJ:5 Mgt'les

UJwton$.3 ), (n l .

Friday'sGatnn
0\lca~o alAUant., fn)

a

lA.Ws at Cincinnati' ( n )

the · group, not in order, were J . Brent Patterson,
guitar, Robert Taylor, banjo, Rick Boring, mandolin,
· bass.
and Kim
BIG BEND YO UTif •
BAS E BALL LEAGUE STAN DINGS

County~

June 15, 1981)
Wun lost
8
0

Mtddlcport Brave!!
New l'hwen Rctl'i
Mtddll.'purt lndt::.ns

7

New H~ vtm Cubs
Pumeruy P1rales
Mason Rctnt;:Cr !l

Meigs.
Cottrill, Payton, and Timms were
the only V. C. hitters all with singles.
Meigs woll host Vinton County
agai n this Saturday at the Meigs
High Sehoul fi eld 111 Rock Springs.
The double-header will begin at 1 .
p.m.

Pum~ru)' T1~ers

Rullc.nd Reds
Pumero)" Yankees
Rutland Dodgers
Puml:'r())' G 1ants
lb rtf ord H1.1rnets

PJtt.sbu.r !!.h at Houstoo. 1n '
Muntre1d at SC!n D1e~u. 1 n 1
~l'~ ' 't1rk &lt;H Los An~el es, n 1
Ptuladelphi&lt;t &lt;tt San F rancLSCt.J. , 11 ,

TOOA Y'S MAJOR LE.AGL'E L£..1, 0 ERS
B)· Tbt As.sociak'd Preu
AMERICA., LEA.GLE
BATTI~G t 11!1 ttl balS t: ~ ulttu r , ~1l l \4"itukE't',

.353 ;

P:~o cturek .

.J.tl: Ortot,

Seattle .. 3-46 : Swrm1ers, DrtroH ,
.338: Srt&gt;tt, Kan.sas Ct\y,

Cl~\·eland ,

.337.

RU~S : Yoont, Mtl lltaukee . .11 . W1lson, Komsas
Ctl). ~ 9 : W1ll.s. Texas. 48 ; Randulph, Nt'w \" (Irk ,
4.'1 ; Brumbry, Balltmore, ~3: Rtce, Boston, 43 :
TnmmM-1, Detroit, 43; Henderson, Oaliand, 43 .
RBI : Oln·er. Texas, 48 ; Perez, Bostvn. 46 :
~11\· te, Milwaukee. 46 : Arm.as. Oak.land. ·H :
C0o.-.per. Mtlwi:lukee. fJ .
HITS : Wtlson , Ka nsas 'Ctty. 85 : Bumbr~ .
&amp;IUmure. 19; Yount, Mtl\ol·aukee, 78: Bur lt~son,
Busi.IJI'I, i7; Rtvers, T t'JUl.S. 77 .
OOUBLE..S : Mornsoo, Ch1cat,:o. 22 : YHvw11.
M ilwt~ uJU"t'. %0; Gan·ta, Toront o. 18 . C:trt&gt;~~o .
Cctltf umt&lt;t. li: Qh,·er. Texas. 16
TRIPLES : Gnffm , Toronto. 8: Bumbn .
&amp; lumurt&gt;. ~ : Brett. Kansas Clt}. ~: J() \Jed ~~o· tih

..

HOME;. RL'~S : ~bne. ~ l h.,·auk« . 17.
J cttks..lll, :-;t'llo York, 1~ : R1ce. &amp;a1un. 13 .
.\l&lt;t)~rt). Tun.111tu, 1.'1 : l'humils, Mi lwaukt't' . 12:
\"elet, Turunto. l2: Rudt. CaWomta, 11..
STOLE\ BASES : Henderson, Oakland . :ll .
Wtlsoo, Kansas Cit)'. !i; Cruz. Se.atUe, 21J ; Wtlb,
Te~tas, 1! : BwnbrJ , BallmMe, IT : R.and ulph.

The victory, coupled with Toron·
to's doubleheader sweep of Chicago,
made Kansas City the only team in
the American League West with a
record above .500 and hiked the
Royals' division lead to 8'&gt; games
over the White Sox.
Gura, 9-2, tied Tommy John of the
New York Yankees lor the league
high in victories. The Indians, losing
for only the fourth time 111 their last
13 games, scored in the second and
third inn i n~s before the Royals erupted I or I our in the bottom of the
third .
Aller Frank White reached on an
error by seccnd baseman Alan Bannister, Willie Aikens and Otis rapped
singles, Otis' knocking in a run. Clint
Hurdle singled to make it 2-2, then
John Wathan singled to load the
bases and Quirk tagged starter John
Denny, 7-5. for a two-run double.
Otis added a sacrifice fly in the fourth.
The Royals added five runs in the
eighth. Two scored on a throwmg
error b)' third baseman Dave
Rosello and Darrell Porter and
Wathan delivered RBI singles.
Yankees 5, Angels 0 - Ron Guidry
fired a six-hitter to break a personal
two-game losing streak and Bobby
Brown and Graig Nettles homered
as the Yankees handed the Angels
their eighth consecutive setback.

LL tournament
entries sought

Sey, Yurt 1; .

16 Dn:tslon.s. l: f'OimJt&gt;r . Oucc.gu . .&gt;1, .&amp;.13, 2. ~ : John. ~I'll' York , S-2, .8111 , 3 07 .
Gura, Kansas Ctt~, 9&gt;-1, .81, 2. lti : ~~llt'~, Bo.stor1.
;.2', .178, U-8 ; Stunt&gt;, &amp;ltmwre, !--J• .727. 3.81 :
Sptllner. QeveUtnd, 7,3, .700, CG . GuidO.~"'""
Yurk, 7...1. iOO . .'1 .22: Undervo&lt;.o..&lt;i. ~t'"" 'r'vrk . i·:l.
i00.1.99.
SiRIKEOUTS: Guidi}. !\l'\1 Yurk , 88:
Kt."UUgh, Oak.lcmd. 68 ; BanniSter. Seatlle . 67.
:Vvrr~S . Oakland, 66 : Leoo.ard. Kc.ns.a sCit~. 60.
PITCHI~G

LEAGt:E LEADERS
8)· 11Ho AUOC":il#d PN!U
NA. TIOSAL l..EAGL E
BAmNG i 1!5 at bo!Ui i: Hernandez, St. Louts.
.336; Val l, ChJcagu, .336: Sm1th. Los An.:e le;::,,

.332. Cn.u., Huustun, .327 ; W~t Uang. Houstoo ..126
RUNS. Schnudt. Ptul.otdelptua. 49: Hernandel.

St. Luu.LS . 4S : Rust', Phlladt'-lphi&lt;l. 43 ; Tl'mpl~hon ,
Sl Lows. 40 : ~turph~ . Atlanta , 40.
RBI : Sctumdt, l&gt;hlbdt'-iptu~ • .11 : He ndnl·k. St .
LouiS, ~1 : Gar:l'h Los Angeles. ~9 . Srntth, Los
Angele:., 44 ; Luzmsk.t, P tuladdphta, ~ I .
HITS : Templetoo. St Luuts. !I : H ernand~l .
St . l..uuLS , ill ; fl:etU, St. Loms. 72; Cnu:, HUllih•l.
12 : Moreno. Pmsburgh. ll; ChambliSS, Altanla,
il: Garvl'} , Lus Angeles, I I : Snulh. l.Ats Arlt:t' lcs.
i l.
DOUBLES: Stearns, ~e\4 York . 19; Ru:st&gt; .
PhtlitdelphtOio. 19: Cbamble&gt;s. Atl.anl.li. , 18: Herna.ndt&gt;t. SL LtJUIS.. 17 ; Kntght. Clncml\&lt;IU. II
TRJPI.£S : Mvrrnu, P!U.s.burgh, 6: McBnde ,
Ptuladi!.lph~.a , J ; l lif'd • ·tlh 4.

HOM£ RUNS ' Schnudl, l'tulatlellua. 20:
Luz.msk•. Ptnladelphte~ , IS . Baker. U.t:S An~ele~.
IS . Gan.e). Lus ~elo . lt : Cdrter . Munttei:l l,
13. Ht"ndnct , SL Louts., lJ

STOLEN BASES: MoreOfl. Pltlsburgh, 31 :
LcFion&gt;, Muntre.al, 35; CuUms. Cml"mnall, 24 :
&amp;.'VI.\ , Muntreal, 19: Law, Los ~eles. 1!.

PITCHING 16 DeclStons 1. Btbb) .

Pltubu ~h.

i ·l . .!i5. 3.16; Rruss. UJs Angelt':S., i-1 . m . 2.ll:
C.rltotl, Phtladelph~. IH• . 85i , 1.14 ; Bahnsen.
Ml•llre:d, &gt;1. .Ill, 1.02; Rt"ed, PluilldelphJa , &gt;1.
.133. 2.112: Reed, l'tulatlelplu;o, &gt;-1 • .133. %.2;
Musk.au, CuK".''lUWlU, S-1, .&amp;u, 3.&amp;2 : Wt':kh , IA4
Ar ~&amp;:t&gt;}es. 7-2. .171.. U2 ; .RK"hilrd. Hv.Jst.un, 9-3.
.75G.'Ul
STRfKEOliT'S : Ciirlton, Phtladelphua, 121;
RlchMrd. HUU$1.on, ltJ3: Ryan, Houston, 7.1 :
Ntekru, AUinta, 12; 81) len•n. P1U.sbttr gh, 7I.

Entries are being accepted for the
1980 Syracuse Little League Tournament which begins July 9. To enter, managers should send his team
name and roster to Box 293,
Syra cuse, 0.
This year's tourney "ill be double
elimination. Only the first 24 teams
w11l be accepted.
Entry fee is three balls or $9 .
Ninety-six trophies will be awarded.
Six team trophies and the first six
team individuals.
This tournament for 19 years was
lleld at Kyger Creek moving to
Syracuse three years ago .
No All Star teams may enter.
Each manager will determine ·how
many innings his pitchers will pitch.

0

4
•
3

6

J
J
J

3
J

J
5

'

' 6'

2
00

8'

JUDGES CAKE SHOW - Nancy Roush, pictured,
will be judging the Big Bend Regatta Cake Show, to be
held at the Lutheran Church, June 28. Mrs. Roush will

COACH HONORED- A
Guy Award was presented to Carl
Wolfe , head basketball coach at Southern High &amp;hool, Racine, who
coac hed his team to the state finals . The award was made a1 the Dave
Diles Celebrity banquet held Wednesday night at Royal Oak Park.

score.
Joey Loving 's game winning
single provided the needed margin
in the extra inning affair. Mid·
dleport hitters were David Smith a
single and triple, Eddie Crooks a
double and single, and Joey Loving a
single.
Smith picked up the win in relief of
Loving "'ho fanned 10 and walked
none. Todd Lisle suffered the loss
with a good performance striking
out 12 and walking only one.
Chris Stewart, Bryan Weaver, and
Eber Pickens doubled and singled
for Syracuse while Todd Lisle
Slllgled.
The Racine Reds scored another
convincing win , this time a 1&amp;-1
deeJSion over the Chester Chieftains.
Jay Bostick led the winners with
two doubles and two singles, Matt
Jewell a triple, and Brian Warden a
double for Racine, &amp;ott Wickline
picked up the win with . seven
strikeouts and four walks. Wickline
is now &amp;-1 on the year. Taylor was
the Chieftain pitcher. Chester hitters
were not available. Racine is now 1().
1.

Mason Rangers won a hard fought
game against the Pomeroy Yankees
6-5 in seven innings of play. Rod
Long went six innings striking out 14
and walking eight, while Darrell
Mitchell came on in the seventh to
pick up the win. LeadiJ!Il hitters for
the Rangers were Darrell Milchell a
single and double, Ed Starcher and
Rod Dale with singles. In six innings
Brian Willis fanned IS, before getting relief from Sherman Hoschar

Adults - Beginnr, holiday or one
mixpan
,
Adults - Intennediate (over one
year's experience decorating)
novelty or holiday;
Adults - Advanced (teach as a
hobby but do not consider oneslf
professional or sell over $500 or
cakes per year) special occasion or
- -\
novelty;
Professional (Judges or teaches
on a larger scale) wedding or baby
shower, or novelty.
Entry blanks should be sent to the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce,

Name ............... , . .. , , . , . , ........... Phone No..... , .... , . ... , ................ .. .. .

Casey Kasem
WMPO
·SATURDAYS
~
Noon
_
. ._ . =._;._
_
_.

who suffered the loss. Yankee hitters were Dave Hendricks had two
doubles. Brian Willis two singles,
and Sherman Hoschar a double.

Address , , , , ...... , . ............ .'........... Zip Code . . ............. .. ................... .
Check the categories you wish to enter.

•

Children

Your Choice-- - - -

.Teens

Your Choice-- - - -

___J

Adults- Beginner

A. Holidayh---- - B. One Mix Pan- - - - -

•

Intermediate
Advanced

ON ANY CAR OR TRUCK YOU DRIVE
IN WE Wll.l. AI.I.QW YOU A MINIMUM
$300 TRADE INIII

CHEVY NOVA ................. ,&lt;.~: ·.~ ~.Y.':~.".'~:::.~ .. 12995
CHEVY NOVA .• :........ ~·.d:: ?.0.5.~~: ~.".'~;: :'.~·. ~.~ .. ' 11995
CHEVY CHEVELLE ............ : .~': .~~:~ :.~ :: :.~ ... 11295
OLDS 442 ................................ ?.~: .~ : 1895
VW BUS ..... .'•.•...•...• ,,.,,,,.,,, •..9• ~.a.5,5,e.~~~ ~. S}Q95

....

1974 FORD F-100.......................... ~.~~~·.~.5:.~~... 11695
1973 CHEVY C-20 ......... ...................'.'.:~~:~.'?...11495
1970 FORD F-100 ...............~~:~~·.~.5: .~?: .'::.~~~?~~ ..11195

ROGER RIEBEL,
Phone 985· 3345 or 667 ·3463
Non SR 7 Beyond Tuppers Plains

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - I would like to
know if there is any way I can care
for a fur coat at horne during the
surruner instead of sending it to a fur
storage place.- EDITH

ASTRO
GRAPH
f'riday, JIIDC zt

Your prospecta for the comille year are en-

major changt!8 impuls.lnly or without havlng aU
the facts.· Plan your moves wisely and, above aU,

bepaUent.

~

WATCH· SPECIAL!
ALL WATcHES
NOW REDUCED

20%
We 11M reducld .. witches in aur stDm

tor thl bla lliL So ~ ,00 ... in the ........
tor 1 watch ar ~ JOU - wil be. S1u9 ia
lithw Gllpolis ar Pom11111 111d Sl\le 011 the
wlllch ol JOUI d!oict.

.C:WVE11E
•SEIKO (Gallipolis On~)
'
•POCKET WAratES'
MI. WAltiiES F\IUY GUARAIITUO

GEMINI (May %1..hilte 10) Manaie your
resourcea with wisdom today, or you may suf[er
a la!IS. U you do any gambling be :~ure It Ia for
very .smaU stakes. Romance, travel, luck,
resources, p€1SS1ble pttlalls and career tor lhe
cornin8 months are aU di.scu.saed in your AstroGral)h Jetter, which beglna with your blrthday.
Mail fl for each lo Aotr&lt;H;raph, llol411l, Radio
City station, N. V.JOOJ9. Be sure to specify birth
tlat..

tANCER (Jut21.J11ly Z%) Don 'taak others to
do U\inp you wouldn' t do yourself. Others wW
follow ywr lead, and if it's a poor one, you can

uoect pcobtema.
LF.o (JIIly ZS.Aq.

!Zt NonnaUy you're the
type who lays aU the cards on the table, but today

Othen may hive 4ifficulty knowing where you
stand bec.IJ.&amp;Se you're reluctant to truly speak
your mind.
VIRGO IAq. !J.&amp;pl. I!) The lemptoUoo lo

apend wtneeeSt~~~rity could be very strong today,
and you may make some unwisepurchua. Shop
sensibly and buy only what you need.
LlliRA i!Jepl. %Wei. %3) lnslead of chatletljies
awakeninll your resourcefulneas today, they

Novelty- - - - -

A, Wedding Baby Shower-- - - - B. Novely--- - -

lingering odor. My mother-in-Jaw
told me this and I have used this
method for61 years. - IMOGENE
DEAR READERS - I have never
tried this myself but have heard of it
from several sources. For the first
time, I would try it on just a few
things that are not too important. POLLY
DER POLLY - A shoe hom
makes an excellent trowel to us for
transplanting potted plants. It
reaches deep into the pots without
disturbing the roots.- MRS. G.P.
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem i• her
column. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in ca re of his newspaper.

Send fur to storage

cwraging, provided you don't attempt to make

•BIJLOVA

A. Sjpecial occasion------:- B.

Polly's Pointers

Rl EBEL'S USED CARS

JEWElRY

A. Novelty- - - - - B. Holiday- - - - -

Professional

WE'RE DEALING

1977
1976
1974
1970
1970

and the entry fees, $1 per cake lor
adults and 50 cents per ca ke for
children, should be enclosed, with
checks made payable to the Chamber of Commerce. Cakes may be entered the day of the contest, with the
entry fee being paid at the time of
entry.
All cakes must be in place by 12
noon, including cakes entered on
June28.
A trophy will be given to the Best
of Show, and all entrants will be
eligible for a prize drawing after the
contest.

ENTRYB~NK

Summer league results given
In area little league action the
Middleport Cubs slipped past the
Syracuse team by a narrow 3-2

have several of her prize-winning cakes on display at
the show, including the one which won the OHio State
Championship.

Cake show added to Regatta
Acake show has been added to the
program for the Big Bend Regatta ,
June 26-29. &amp;heduled for Saturday,
June 28, at 2 p.m. at the Lutheran
Church, Pomeroy, the show will be
judged by Nancy Roush, Coolville,
veteran cake exhibitor and winner ol
the Ohio State Cake Decorating
Championship.
Trophies and ribbons will be
aswarded in each of 10 categories,
which re:
Children, age 7-12, your choice
Teens, age 13-17, your choire ;

Royals whip Indians

I ••

•'

PROVIDING ENTERTAINMENT at the Dave
Diles Celebrity banquet Wednesday night at Royal Oak
was the Dark Hollow
Boys. Making up

RE CEIVES SCHOLARSHIPS - Three Meigs
County students attending Ohio University have been
awarded various academic scholarships by the university for the 1980-31 academic year. They are : Jane Bur·
son, left, recipien t of a Dean's AchievementAnonymous &amp;holarship, is a sophomore pre-med
student and the daughter of Fred and Jane Burson, Rt.

DEAR EDITH
- A line fur coat
should always be
sent to storage for
the surruner. I had
friends tell me
that when they
left home lor the
summer they left
fur stoles, etc. in
the refrigerators
that were empty
and turned on
very low.
Cramer
Last year I decided to try it myself
and left a mink jacket (f9lded inside
out) on a shelf in my turned-downlow refrigrator for several months
while I was away. It loolr:ed great,
but I am not reeommending this. It's
just what I did and it worked for me.
I have been told that a fur should
never be put in a plastic bag lor
storage. - POLLY
· DEAR POLLY - When I store
furs or woolens I keep them free of
moths and smell by using black pepper. I sprinkle black pepper in the
folds of wool blankets and then do
them up in newspaper. I have a coat
with a fur collar that I hang in a bag,
sprinkle the collar generously with
pepper and when I want to wear it
again I take it out of doors, shut my
eys, shake Vigorously imd there is no

plans made
Wedding

be more of a liability today than an a~~.~et. In-

own.

AQU.UUUS (loa. »Fell. It) Dutieaor l'tlj)OO-

iJblUUes annot be rationalized awa:r.loday, oor
should they be poltponed to a later te. Delays

arert't asubautute for solutions.

PIBCEII I Folt. »Mar&lt;~ .) Thla II not a good

dar to Jet IOflltOI'It elle manage your personalaffaira, or lor you to try to dJrect theirs.
ARIEIIIMacdiii·Apiil IJ) Youandrourmat&lt;
may not be in thl! proper mood today to d~

volaUielNues. Table these matters till you each
teet they can be hlndled calmly.
TAURU!

coworkm

(A~

»May •) Aaslalanil or

t appreciate it it you behave
to.lly or don't ahoulder your share ol the burden. Do your duties with a .-nile.
W&lt;lll

NEED ELIMINATEU
A scientist at Israel's Ben-Gurion
Umversity of the Negev has
discovered a bacillus which kills
mo s quito larvae, t hereby
eliminating the need for pesticides.

Immature girl has baby
to spile her parents
By Helen and Sue Bottel

Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
My cousin is having a baby mostly
to spite her parents. The lather
disappeared- she didn't really care
for him. She waited until it was too
late for an abortion because she
" hated the thought."
But she hates the thought of a
baby, too. She's selfish and immature and she plans to throw this
child on its very unwilling grandparents while she continues to chase
around, and attend school when she
feels like it. II anyone suggests adoption she goes into hysterics. (Mostly
put-on, and very theatrical.)
She told me frankly she's doing
this to get even with her folks. What
can the family do? - SHOCKED
. COUSIN
DEAR SHOCKED COUSIN:
All we can suggest here is intensive therapy for a very mixed-up
girl and her equally unhappy parents.
Let's hope some of tltis hate and
ntisery dissipates before the baby
becomes a child nobody wants. HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE: Or let's hope
therapy can convince family members that someone out there
desperately wants a child they
aren't prepared to care for and love.
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I'm wondering why I never hear
these big-mouth women complaining about " equal rights" with
the draft ?
(Note from Sue: If you read last
Tuesday's column you re now aware
that " Ready to Fight" - female 1

r---

Social Calendar
THURSDA\'

MAGNOUA CLUB will meet
Thursday evening at 7:30p.m. at the
home of Ellen Couch. Georgie Watson will have devotions, and Bernice
Ann Durst will give the program.
WILLING WORKERS Class of the
Enterprise United Methodist Church
will hold their meeting June 19 at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Maybelle Moore.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD Conservation League, 6 p.m. Thursday
at the home of Mrs. Susie Soulsby.
Mrs. Clarice Kennedy to have
devotions. Members to take their
own table service and a swim suit.
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club, 1:15 p.m. at tbe home of Mrs.
Nancy Grueser. Members to meet at
the Rock Springs Church at 12:30
p.m. for the trip to the Grueser
home.

agreed with a number of high school
students that women should be draf·
ted.)
Face it, women have been complaining about something they don 't
have for the last deCij.de. The trouble
is the only things women don 't
possess are heaven or Mars. Their
next step will probably be to kick
men right off the earth.
,
I'm all for 50 percent of each sex in
the draft - and in combat' You
ladies want to be in our locker rooms
and jobs, so why should it be just the
young guys who have to bail
everyone out in times o£ war? I'm
lor "with justice for all." - HAD
ENOUGH
DEARH.E.:
While you men and women writers
are hassling the female draft, we're
concentrating on a much bigger
goal: Let's all hope, pray and work
for the elimination global war, so
that none of our drafted youth will
ever again serve in combat! HELEN AND SUE

ELECT GROUP MISSES

TENNIS
SHOES
1h PRICE

DEAR HElEN AND SUE :
Someone asked about a mail
shower for a bride away from home .
What a beautiful thought!
We had a mail shower lor a dear
friend whose military husband was
transferred from our area. We wrapped the presents after all guests saw
them . Then we called Kansas witA a
big, "Suprise 1 We're having a baby
shower for you right now." We took
pictures and sent them too.
How exciting to know that
somewhere across the United States
you're being wished well by your
friends. - OOTIY

WOMEN'S WARE
-SPORTSWEAR
-SWIM WEAR
-DRESSES
-SLACKS
SHOP NOW AND
RECEIVE DISCOUNTS OF

20 50%0FF
TO

BAHR CLOTHIERS
PARK RESERVED

may hive but the oppoe.lte effect and cause you

stead ol trying to dra&amp; tbem along, go i&amp; on your

Helen Help Us

Announcement is being made of
the approaching marriage of Abra
Burris, daughter of Mrs. Howard
Selby, Point Pleasant, and Virgil
Burris, Leon, to Philip M. Ohlinger,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Philip D. Ohl·
inger, Pomeroy, Ohio.
FRIDAY
The open church wedding will take
PAST
MATRONS,
· Evangeline
place Friday, J~ne 20, 7:30p.m. at
Chapt~r 172, Order of the Eastern
Open M.·Sat.
106 N. lnd Ave.
the Main Street Baptist Church,
Star,
7:30
Friday
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
9:30
filS
P.M.
Middleport,
Oh .
Point Pleasant. Rev . James
James
Clatworthy,
Middleport.
Steinspring wiD officiate, and a ·
reception will follow the ceremony ,--------------1--------------~------:-------­
at the church.

1o back ell belore youreolly try.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your iipltndid
imagination could play trtcb today and CIUif
you &amp;o see thinas u being more negative lhan
they really art.Loot for sunahine, not cloudl.
BA&lt;lm.uuus (Nov. za.Dee.lll Blt!iness and
oleuure m~ke a poor mil today. Settle for one or
~ other. The odds aren't with you.
CAPliiOORN (Dee. !Waa. It) .....,ilia
whole a.lmlart not In harmony with yoon wW

I, Shade. Seth A. Hlll , center, a sophomore Uldustrial
and systems engineering major and the son of David
and Linda Hill, Racine, the recipient of a Ben Manley
Endowment Scholarship. Michael Bryan Wayland, a
junior electrical engineering major and the son of Gary
and Sonja Wayland , Rutland, the recipient of a Ben
Manley Endowment Scholarship.

UNTIL S P.M.

SATURDAY-JUNE 21st

ANNOUNCEMENT
• Effective July 1, 1980
Dr. Zinnia B. Dayo will no longer be connected
with Bend Area Medical Center and will
relocate her practice .to 306 N. 2nd Ave., Mid·
dleport, Ohio (Dr. J. J. Davis' former office). '
I

HOME TEL. (304) 882-2730
OFFICE TEL. (614) 992-3333

FOR

..SUMMER OUTING"

•
I

OF ·

LARGE INDUSTRIAL CONCERN
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFtE~ P.M • .

•

CAMDEN PARK
O:S : 60WEST-HUNTINGTON

•

CLOSED EVERY MOND~Y EXCEPT HOLIDAYS

'

�6- 1 he Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 19, 1980

Solomon's had luck continues;Bucs lose twi.Dhill
By Associated Press
When he was Willi the Atlanta
Braves, Eddll' Solumun earned the

re(IDtation uf a " hard-luck" pitcher.
Now that he 's w1th the Pittsburgh
Pirates, nothing's ch'\IIged.
·•Jt seemed like 1 was still playmg
with the Braves," said Sulomun after looing a tough :l-2 decisiu11 to
Atlanta Wednesday night in the
opener of a twi-night doubleheader.
The Braves also won the nightcap,
:&gt;-!.
Solomon sailed into Lhe ninth inni11g with ct neat five-hitter, leading

241 when the roof caved in, thanks to
faulty fielding by his t eammates.
Dale Murphy singled and Chris
Chambliss then reached base on an
error by first baseman Bill Robinsun.

·Bruce. Sutter
records save

1

Martin's
grands lam
kills Reds

After reliever Kent Tekulve entered the game, Gary Matthews
reached base on shortstop Tim
Foli's throwing error, loading the
bases. One out later, Bill Nahorodny
chased them all home w1th a double
that fell just fair by inches down the
third base line.
Nahorodny called his hit a "stroke
of luck."
Elsewhere in the National League,
Los Angeles nipped Montreal 6-7;

Sun FlanciScu beat New Yt•rk
CIHctJgu blanked

~;

Ci'm.' lllflall 7..(1 ;

Huustun blanked St. Louis 3-0 all(]
Pluladclphia tnpped San Diego :H.
The Pirate fielding was nu better
111 t11e second game. It was a wild
throw by Berra that allowed the
Braves Lu score the winning run in

u,e seventh inning.
Dodgers8,Expos7
Bill Russell hit a three-run homer
to key a six-rpn seventh inmng as
Lms Angeles came from behind to
edge Montreal.
The Expos buill a 7-21ead after six
innings for starter Steve Rogers,
who left the game with a tender
elbow. Sta n Bahnsen took over and,
after walking two batters in the
seventh, gave up a homer to Russell.
Elias Sosa replaced Bahnsen and
gave up a walk and a single to pinchhitter Jay Johnstone. Rud1 Law hit
into a forceuut as pinch-runner
[)(orrel Thomas scored to get the
Dodgers within a run at 7-6. Successive ·smgles by Dave Lopes,
Reggie Smith and Steve Garvey
produced two more runs.
Charlie Hough, the fourth Los
An~eJes pttcher, was the winner.
Ron Leflore hit two home runs for
Montreal, driving in three runs.

Giants 8, Mets 5
Jack Clark belled iour singles and
scored three runs to lead Sao Francisco over New \' ork. The Mets,
losing their foorth straight game,
committed four errors and had lour
wild pitcheo to help the Giants score
lhl"ee unearned runs.
Jose Moreno knocked in three nms
for the Mets, one with a homer in the
third and two more with a double in
the ninth when New York drove John
Montefusco, 3-S, from the game.
Greg Minton, the second Giants'
reliever of the inning, finally quelled
the rally.
Cubs 7, Reds 0
Jerry Martin hit a grand slam
homer and Dennis Lamp and Bruce
Sutter combined on an eight-hitter to
lead Chiicago past Cincinnati. Martin's one-out blast, his 12th homer of
the season, came in the seventh inning off reliever Doug Bair.
Lamp, 6-6, struck out three,
walked none and yielded seven hits
before giving way to Sutter with two
out and two on in the sixth. Sutter
shut the door on the Reds and went
on to record his 14th save.
" I hit the ball pretty good," said
Martin. "I was thinking that I wanted to drive in'at least one."

Astros 3, Cardinals 0
Juc Niekro pitched a six-hitter tu
lead Houston over St. Louis.
The Astros took a H lead 1n the
first with a run-scoring single by
Enos Cabell uff Jim Kaat, 1-4. They
made it 2..(1 in the third on

Ce~r

Cedeno's RBI grounder and 341 in
the fourth when Niekro hit into a
double play.
Niekro, 7-5, said he threw mostly
fastballs Wednesday night instead of
knu ckleballs.
Phillies ti, Padres I
Pinch-hitter Keith Moreland
belted a tw&lt;rrun double in the ninth
inning to snap a 1-1 lie and trigger
Pl1iladelphia over San Diego as hothanded Steve Carlton won h1 s 12th
victory of the year.
Garry Maddux led off the Phillies'
ninth with a single off reliever Bob
Shirley, :i-3, and Larry Bowa bunted
for a smgle, his third hit of the night .
After Manny Trillo grounded out,
advancing the runners, Moreland,
batting for Carlton, 12-2, lined his
double to the center Held wall for
two runs. Two more runs scored on a
double error by the Padres.
Tug McGraw worked the final inning for the Phillics.

The Racme Firemen's Auxiliary

TWO'S
COMPANY

met recently at the firehouse annex

•

DRESS SHOP'S

'13' CLUB
AFTER 12 PURCHASES
RECEIVE YOUR
AVERAGE PURCHASE
PRICE IN FOUNDATION

A nita Higgins

Presented with
hygiene award

WEAR FREE I I I
"

POMEROYH - Anita M. Higgins,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy T.
Higgins, Westerville, was presented
wi th the Dental Hygiene
Professional Development Award at
he June 15 Pinning and Capping
Ceremony of the Dental Hygiene
Program at the Raymond Walters
College Auditorium, Cincinnati, al 2
p.m. The presentation of the award
was made by Kim L. Autio, R.D.H.,
B.S., M.S.
David H. Goldstein, D.D.S.,
Pa tricia Frese, R.D.H., B.S, and
Irish H. Schwarz, R.D.H. presented
the University of Ctnc innati, Dental
Hygien ist pins to 25 members of the
graduating class signifying that they
had eamed the R.D.H. associate
degree.
Presentation of caps to the 28
freshman students upon completion
of their first year of Dental Hygiene
study was made by Autio.
Ronald W. Krantz, D.D.S. gave the
add ress of welcome. Dr. Wayne
Reno, assistant dean, led the
processional and recessional.
Miss Higgins ' Professiona l
Development Award was made by a
vote of the faculty. The award
recognized her outstandi ng
profess ional development and contribution to the dental hygiene
profession.
Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler A. Drake,
grandprents, attended the pinning
a nd ca pping ceremony. Miss
Higgins' mother will ·be remembered as the former Mary L. Drake.

118 E. MAIN
POMEROY , 0~.
PS : SALE CONTINUES
ON SELECT GROUP
TOPS

CHlCAGO tAP! - Despite trade
rumors and dissatisfaction with his
contract, Chicago Cubs centerfielder Jerry Martin says if he
were a betting man, he'd wager
l!loncy on bcm~ back 1n Ch1cago
11ext season.

" When f got to the park, I heard
' Bob ) Kennedy 1Cub executive vice
president) wanted to see me. The first thing I said is, 'Am I gone'' But
then I remembered the trade
ueadline had passed. It did me
good," said Martm, whose grandslam home run Wednesday backed
the shutout pitching of Dennis Lamp
and Bruce Sutter as Chicago stung
the Cincimwt1 Reds HJ m a National
League con test.
If Kennedy can recognize a good
bet when he sees one, he' ll take Mar·
ti n up on his offer.
With Dave Kingman on the 15-day
disabled liSt, Marlin is the closest
th1ng to a ge nume long-ball threat
ll1e Cubs can muster. And he- drove
hume that fact again in the seventh
\\hen he faced Cincinna ti reliever

Duug Bair in a duel of strength vs.
strength, fastballe r vs. fastball hitter .
" I h1l the ball pretty good. I was
thinking that I wanted to drive in at
least one," sa ill Martin, whose oneout blast was his 12th of the season
and thi rclm as many days. "I got a
lot more of the ball than even I was
thinking aboul."
·Forewarned may be forearmed,
but Bair, who served up the fastball,
sa1d he would make the same pitch
in tht: same ~itualion.
" They told me beforehand that
Ma rtin was hot. And I had to throw a
strike," Bair said. " But it was a
mistake throwing it where I did .
There was plenty behind it - he
could have hit anytlung, a grounder,
a pop up; anythmg."
Martin's slam was the cap on a
busy Cub seventh. Mario Solo, who
ota rted the 111ning tn relief of Charlie
Lcibramlt. G-4, got into trouble from
the out set. He walked Mi ck
Kelleher, and after a sacnfi ce bunt
by Ivan DeJesus, gave up a single to
Lenny Handle cmd an intentional
pass to Bill Buckner.
Sot o promptly gave way to Bair after hilli ng Mike Va1l with the bases
luachltn give Ch icago a 3.{) lead.
DeJesus, who banged out three
lnts 111 three at-bats and had two of
f1ve stolen bases for Chicago, gave
the Cubs all the s_upport they needed
w1th a tw&lt;rrun s1ngle in the second to
score Barry Foote and Mike Tyson
fo ra 2.{) lead.
Lamp , 6~;, struck out three,
walked nunc and yielded seven hits
before giv1ng way to Sutter with two
on and two out in sixth. Sutter, who
recorded his 14th save, got pinchhitter Harry Spilman tv ground out
to second for the final uut of the innin~.

BOUNCE ALONG
IN

sti

the
with a

bank,but
•

We've changed our name. Nothing else.
We're still the same bank ... the same
folks who have served you for all these
years ... the same folks who have tried
to respond to all of your financial needs
in the friendliest and most professional
way possible. That will never change,
even though we've changed our name.
As a matter of fact, now that we are
part of a strong and growing partnership
of other BANK ONE banks throughout
Ohip, we'll be able to offer you even

COLUMBUS - Entry deadlines
for the following divisions of the 1000
Ohio State Fair have been set for
July I :
- Family Arts and Crafts, which
includes baked goods, fashion entries, domestic arts, conserved
products, and an_tiques;
- Agriculture, Horticulture and
Floriculture, including grains,
vegetables and fruits, nuts, bees and
honey , flower specimens and
arrangements;
- Junior and Senior Fair divisons,
including all livestock and entries
for ll)a ny youth organizations' competitions.
Entries for at 1980 Ohio State Fair
Horse Show must be postmarked no
later than July 5.
Persons interested in participating in this year's competition
are encouraged to contact the Entries Departm ent, Ohio State Fair,
632 East lith Ave., Columbus, 43211,
or should ca ll (614) 294-5441.
Moot divisions are open to the
general public and entering is easy.
Be a part of the fun at the 1980 Ohio
State Fair schedul ed to run Aug. 12
through the 24th.

more. advantages in bank products and
serv1ces.
If you're a customer of our bank, all
you have to do is remember our new
name. Continue to use all items that
carry our old name. Conversion will take
time and we have to get used to our
new name, too. If you're not one of our
customers now, this would be a great
time to switch. We'd sure like to be able
to welcome you to BANK ONE!

LOW COST DEVICE
A kibbutz factory in Israel's
Negev Desert is producing a lowcost ultra-violet light device for
purifying water which eliminates
the need for chlorination.

'

.

•

'JVE SERVE
·rJ-t EJ~\ ).\LL!

.

. TifE
SHOE BOX
'

MIDOilPORT, OHIO

•
Member FDIC

BANK ONE™

•.

Medical

Center

arc

fr' ollltllc

utlitr, hcmJ-

tled .
lt will be at least a 111unth before

waitin~

tu determin e how much
Siamese twins born lu a Pi4ua

SUfJ4cl')' to scpart:tlc tbem i~ conSILicrt!lllu al111W tum~ fur the infants'
lungs tu mature enough so they can

couple depend on each other fur life
support before cons id~ring surgery
tu o;eparatc them, a hospital
spokesman says.
But they may need surgery within
days to correct a mure inunedialc
problem, a physician said.
Dr. Paul Deenadayalu said Wed·
nesday that the twins have a swgle

function Without outside support,
S&lt;Jid hospital spokesman Phil Stuffan .
The daughters uf Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Wackier, whu were born six
weeks prematurely Tuesday, are

jun1cd at the base of the spine and
face away from each other, he said.

rectum, but no anal opening, and

Til e couple has one other child, a

that a colostomy tu create a surgical
opening to allow elimination of
wastes soon may be required. A
common artery at the base of the
spine also may require surgery if
one of the twins begins taking too
'

bluod

!)Oil.

''I'm glad they are healthy," sa1d
Wackier, 26, at a news conference

Wednesday at Piqua Memorial
Hospital where the twins were born
and his wife, Rebecca, is still a
patient. Wackier is an employee of
B" O Railroad.
"I fell a little grim at first, but after speaking to the dnctor and nurse,
I have htgh hopes of bringing them
home," Mrs. Wackier, 25, said.
The couple named its daughers
Valerie Renee and Natalie Renee.
The g1rls' combined weight at bir-

.

BIGGEST FLAG
America 's largest flag is more
than 2xl stories high and weighs 7
tons. Each of the stars on the twoa cre flag measures 13 feet across.
The stripes are 16 feet high and 411
feet long, according to National
Geographic.

•

!11 was 7 pounds and 12t ounces.
Tiley were transferred to Children's
r&gt;ledical Center because it has acute
care facilities, Stoffan said. So far,
the twins are doing as well as could .
be expected of premature babies, he
added .
The tw1ns were delivered
naturally, a s1t uatiun consider¢
rare i11 such cases, said Dr. Lawrence A. Gould, who assisted at the
delivery.
" One set of every 1,000 twin
deliveries is conjo111ed,'' Gould said.
They have separate genitals and
urinary tracts and alJcast one kidney each, he said.
Doctors here probably will be able
to perform surgery to separate the
twms, Stoffan said.
" We do a lot of difficult surgery,"
he sai d. "The complexity of the
;;urgery depends on how much they
share bodily functions. We wouldn't
do it here if we didn't think we
could. 11
Physicians could not say at
present how long a time of
hospitalization may be required, he
sai d.

•

..

Hi-Fi • CB • Security·
Tape
• Phone Dialer
•
Complete Stereo System!
AM/FM/Phon~-Track/Cassette •
Ctarlnetle@-101 by Plealislic" .

Tape no : •nCil.Gec

We welcome your account
regardless of size. Come in and see!

259

~~~~~~~W A Home
Bank
For

Save
$110

95
Reg .
369.95

• Record· Your Own Tapes for Home or Car
• 3-Speed Changer with Cue/Pause Control
• 22" High Air-Suspension Speakers
Set up your own home "recording studio."
Record from phone. radio . other recorders , au)(
or mike inputs . Dual VU meters and recording
level controls. Speaker systems each have a··
woofer, 3" tweeter, 2·way c rossover . Hin ged
dust cover included . 13-1204

eigs County
People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK

60-MiNute

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THIS WEEKEND
AT THE
INN PLACE

WHISKY
LANCASTER, OH.

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lions , gl?t weather and r~~ernt;r ps! A~k for direc·
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MEIGS INN

Safe Summer Driving with CB.

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BySAFEHOUSE®

.

WEEKEND MEETING PLANNED
· The Hysell Run Holiness Church
will be holding a weekend" meeting
June 19-22, with evangelist lliirbara
Higginbotham Clark, Colun1bus.
Special singing 'will be held nightly,
and Theron Durham, pastor, invites
the public. The c~urch is Iocted ou
Cuonty Road 15, off State Rollte 124.

Chlldren's

I I JUtll

StorewiD

THE

Black/White
Beige/ lirow n
light Blue

DAYTON,UIUu{APJ - Ou&lt;.:tors al •

Save 30o/o
to 50°/o

d

10 RECEIVE DEGREES
Ten Meigs Countians wre among
the 572 graduates of Hocking
Technical College who received
dJplomas Sunday afternoon at the
NelSonville-York High School gymnasium.
They are Diane S. Young, Dexter;
Steven Bachner, Richard Blevins,
and Christi Hess, Middleport; Sandra A. · Keney, Cheryl Lefebre,
Pomey; Michael Roberts, Racine;
E~ J . VanMeter, Reedsville;
Su!ian J . Kennedy, Rutland, and
Carol E. Loika, Shade.

Dayton babies joined at spine

•

4 PC. GROUP W/VOCAL

BANK ONE OF POMEROY
FORMERLY
POMEROY NATIONAL BANK

-.

with vice-president Enm1a Lyons
calling the meeting to order. Jean
Johnson and Bcv Cummins led the
Pledge of Allegiance and the Lord's
Prayer, respectively. Ruth Shain
read the secretary's report, and
Gene Lyons gave the treasurer's
report. Doris Williams was
welcomed as a new member.
Ice cream sa les on Memorial Day
and the Election Day Dinner were
profitable for the group, and thanks
are extended to everyone who
assisted or donated. Special thanks
go to Firemen Dan Shane and Jack
Lyons.
An ice cream sale will be going on

throughout the day, July 4, in cunjuncllurJ with the annual firemen 's
barbecue. Games are planned for
the day. A float will be constructe'&lt;:~
fur the parade on that date. Concession stands will be operated by
the organization, which will sell hot
dogs, sloppy joes, fish, pizza, and
pop, and a country store will be
opened. Anyone wishing to donate to
the auxiliary to assist with the July 4
celebration is welcomed, and asked
to contact any auxiliary member .
Recipes are still being accepted
for the Auxiliary cookbook, and
arrangements may be made by
calling 949-2353 or 949-2720, or giving
the recipe to any auxillary member.
Doris Williams' birthday was observed, and she also won the door
prize, contluding the meeting.
Refeshments were served to
Beulah Autherson, Aggie · Bogess,
Mae Cleland, Bev Cummins, Jean
Johnson, Debbie Lyons, Gene Lyons,
Ruth Shain, and·Doris Williams.

1980 Ohio State Fair
entry deadline set

ona

•

Williams welcomed as
new auxiliary member

PLA~

mergencv Ch. 9.

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Speaker System
Optimus" -10 by Realistic

Save$60

7!re~ch

Reg. 139.95 Each
An active 8" woofer co ~I'=
d=====oJ.J
cone for bass dow n Ia ~~ ~z '~f pas.sive 10"
dome tweeter adds highs t
de dispersion
brilliance control malches ~ bt'OOO Hz, variable
acoustics. 40 _2028
re e to room 's

2o

THERE'S A RADIO SHACK NEAR .YOU!

MoSI ,,:.:m~sp;~;;~~;;J;~

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litOi for lh fs

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Ot!ighborhood . . ._ _ _ _ _, .

'

POMEROY, OHIO

PRICES. MAY VAfW

~T

INOIVIOUM. STORES

�6- 1 he Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 19, 1980

Solomon's had luck continues;Bucs lose twi.Dhill
By Associated Press
When he was Willi the Atlanta
Braves, Eddll' Solumun earned the

re(IDtation uf a " hard-luck" pitcher.
Now that he 's w1th the Pittsburgh
Pirates, nothing's ch'\IIged.
·•Jt seemed like 1 was still playmg
with the Braves," said Sulomun after looing a tough :l-2 decisiu11 to
Atlanta Wednesday night in the
opener of a twi-night doubleheader.
The Braves also won the nightcap,
:&gt;-!.
Solomon sailed into Lhe ninth inni11g with ct neat five-hitter, leading

241 when the roof caved in, thanks to
faulty fielding by his t eammates.
Dale Murphy singled and Chris
Chambliss then reached base on an
error by first baseman Bill Robinsun.

·Bruce. Sutter
records save

1

Martin's
grands lam
kills Reds

After reliever Kent Tekulve entered the game, Gary Matthews
reached base on shortstop Tim
Foli's throwing error, loading the
bases. One out later, Bill Nahorodny
chased them all home w1th a double
that fell just fair by inches down the
third base line.
Nahorodny called his hit a "stroke
of luck."
Elsewhere in the National League,
Los Angeles nipped Montreal 6-7;

Sun FlanciScu beat New Yt•rk
CIHctJgu blanked

~;

Ci'm.' lllflall 7..(1 ;

Huustun blanked St. Louis 3-0 all(]
Pluladclphia tnpped San Diego :H.
The Pirate fielding was nu better
111 t11e second game. It was a wild
throw by Berra that allowed the
Braves Lu score the winning run in

u,e seventh inning.
Dodgers8,Expos7
Bill Russell hit a three-run homer
to key a six-rpn seventh inmng as
Lms Angeles came from behind to
edge Montreal.
The Expos buill a 7-21ead after six
innings for starter Steve Rogers,
who left the game with a tender
elbow. Sta n Bahnsen took over and,
after walking two batters in the
seventh, gave up a homer to Russell.
Elias Sosa replaced Bahnsen and
gave up a walk and a single to pinchhitter Jay Johnstone. Rud1 Law hit
into a forceuut as pinch-runner
[)(orrel Thomas scored to get the
Dodgers within a run at 7-6. Successive ·smgles by Dave Lopes,
Reggie Smith and Steve Garvey
produced two more runs.
Charlie Hough, the fourth Los
An~eJes pttcher, was the winner.
Ron Leflore hit two home runs for
Montreal, driving in three runs.

Giants 8, Mets 5
Jack Clark belled iour singles and
scored three runs to lead Sao Francisco over New \' ork. The Mets,
losing their foorth straight game,
committed four errors and had lour
wild pitcheo to help the Giants score
lhl"ee unearned runs.
Jose Moreno knocked in three nms
for the Mets, one with a homer in the
third and two more with a double in
the ninth when New York drove John
Montefusco, 3-S, from the game.
Greg Minton, the second Giants'
reliever of the inning, finally quelled
the rally.
Cubs 7, Reds 0
Jerry Martin hit a grand slam
homer and Dennis Lamp and Bruce
Sutter combined on an eight-hitter to
lead Chiicago past Cincinnati. Martin's one-out blast, his 12th homer of
the season, came in the seventh inning off reliever Doug Bair.
Lamp, 6-6, struck out three,
walked none and yielded seven hits
before giving way to Sutter with two
out and two on in the sixth. Sutter
shut the door on the Reds and went
on to record his 14th save.
" I hit the ball pretty good," said
Martin. "I was thinking that I wanted to drive in'at least one."

Astros 3, Cardinals 0
Juc Niekro pitched a six-hitter tu
lead Houston over St. Louis.
The Astros took a H lead 1n the
first with a run-scoring single by
Enos Cabell uff Jim Kaat, 1-4. They
made it 2..(1 in the third on

Ce~r

Cedeno's RBI grounder and 341 in
the fourth when Niekro hit into a
double play.
Niekro, 7-5, said he threw mostly
fastballs Wednesday night instead of
knu ckleballs.
Phillies ti, Padres I
Pinch-hitter Keith Moreland
belted a tw&lt;rrun double in the ninth
inning to snap a 1-1 lie and trigger
Pl1iladelphia over San Diego as hothanded Steve Carlton won h1 s 12th
victory of the year.
Garry Maddux led off the Phillies'
ninth with a single off reliever Bob
Shirley, :i-3, and Larry Bowa bunted
for a smgle, his third hit of the night .
After Manny Trillo grounded out,
advancing the runners, Moreland,
batting for Carlton, 12-2, lined his
double to the center Held wall for
two runs. Two more runs scored on a
double error by the Padres.
Tug McGraw worked the final inning for the Phillics.

The Racme Firemen's Auxiliary

TWO'S
COMPANY

met recently at the firehouse annex

•

DRESS SHOP'S

'13' CLUB
AFTER 12 PURCHASES
RECEIVE YOUR
AVERAGE PURCHASE
PRICE IN FOUNDATION

A nita Higgins

Presented with
hygiene award

WEAR FREE I I I
"

POMEROYH - Anita M. Higgins,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy T.
Higgins, Westerville, was presented
wi th the Dental Hygiene
Professional Development Award at
he June 15 Pinning and Capping
Ceremony of the Dental Hygiene
Program at the Raymond Walters
College Auditorium, Cincinnati, al 2
p.m. The presentation of the award
was made by Kim L. Autio, R.D.H.,
B.S., M.S.
David H. Goldstein, D.D.S.,
Pa tricia Frese, R.D.H., B.S, and
Irish H. Schwarz, R.D.H. presented
the University of Ctnc innati, Dental
Hygien ist pins to 25 members of the
graduating class signifying that they
had eamed the R.D.H. associate
degree.
Presentation of caps to the 28
freshman students upon completion
of their first year of Dental Hygiene
study was made by Autio.
Ronald W. Krantz, D.D.S. gave the
add ress of welcome. Dr. Wayne
Reno, assistant dean, led the
processional and recessional.
Miss Higgins ' Professiona l
Development Award was made by a
vote of the faculty. The award
recognized her outstandi ng
profess ional development and contribution to the dental hygiene
profession.
Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler A. Drake,
grandprents, attended the pinning
a nd ca pping ceremony. Miss
Higgins' mother will ·be remembered as the former Mary L. Drake.

118 E. MAIN
POMEROY , 0~.
PS : SALE CONTINUES
ON SELECT GROUP
TOPS

CHlCAGO tAP! - Despite trade
rumors and dissatisfaction with his
contract, Chicago Cubs centerfielder Jerry Martin says if he
were a betting man, he'd wager
l!loncy on bcm~ back 1n Ch1cago
11ext season.

" When f got to the park, I heard
' Bob ) Kennedy 1Cub executive vice
president) wanted to see me. The first thing I said is, 'Am I gone'' But
then I remembered the trade
ueadline had passed. It did me
good," said Martm, whose grandslam home run Wednesday backed
the shutout pitching of Dennis Lamp
and Bruce Sutter as Chicago stung
the Cincimwt1 Reds HJ m a National
League con test.
If Kennedy can recognize a good
bet when he sees one, he' ll take Mar·
ti n up on his offer.
With Dave Kingman on the 15-day
disabled liSt, Marlin is the closest
th1ng to a ge nume long-ball threat
ll1e Cubs can muster. And he- drove
hume that fact again in the seventh
\\hen he faced Cincinna ti reliever

Duug Bair in a duel of strength vs.
strength, fastballe r vs. fastball hitter .
" I h1l the ball pretty good. I was
thinking that I wanted to drive in at
least one," sa ill Martin, whose oneout blast was his 12th of the season
and thi rclm as many days. "I got a
lot more of the ball than even I was
thinking aboul."
·Forewarned may be forearmed,
but Bair, who served up the fastball,
sa1d he would make the same pitch
in tht: same ~itualion.
" They told me beforehand that
Ma rtin was hot. And I had to throw a
strike," Bair said. " But it was a
mistake throwing it where I did .
There was plenty behind it - he
could have hit anytlung, a grounder,
a pop up; anythmg."
Martin's slam was the cap on a
busy Cub seventh. Mario Solo, who
ota rted the 111ning tn relief of Charlie
Lcibramlt. G-4, got into trouble from
the out set. He walked Mi ck
Kelleher, and after a sacnfi ce bunt
by Ivan DeJesus, gave up a single to
Lenny Handle cmd an intentional
pass to Bill Buckner.
Sot o promptly gave way to Bair after hilli ng Mike Va1l with the bases
luachltn give Ch icago a 3.{) lead.
DeJesus, who banged out three
lnts 111 three at-bats and had two of
f1ve stolen bases for Chicago, gave
the Cubs all the s_upport they needed
w1th a tw&lt;rrun s1ngle in the second to
score Barry Foote and Mike Tyson
fo ra 2.{) lead.
Lamp , 6~;, struck out three,
walked nunc and yielded seven hits
before giv1ng way to Sutter with two
on and two out in sixth. Sutter, who
recorded his 14th save, got pinchhitter Harry Spilman tv ground out
to second for the final uut of the innin~.

BOUNCE ALONG
IN

sti

the
with a

bank,but
•

We've changed our name. Nothing else.
We're still the same bank ... the same
folks who have served you for all these
years ... the same folks who have tried
to respond to all of your financial needs
in the friendliest and most professional
way possible. That will never change,
even though we've changed our name.
As a matter of fact, now that we are
part of a strong and growing partnership
of other BANK ONE banks throughout
Ohip, we'll be able to offer you even

COLUMBUS - Entry deadlines
for the following divisions of the 1000
Ohio State Fair have been set for
July I :
- Family Arts and Crafts, which
includes baked goods, fashion entries, domestic arts, conserved
products, and an_tiques;
- Agriculture, Horticulture and
Floriculture, including grains,
vegetables and fruits, nuts, bees and
honey , flower specimens and
arrangements;
- Junior and Senior Fair divisons,
including all livestock and entries
for ll)a ny youth organizations' competitions.
Entries for at 1980 Ohio State Fair
Horse Show must be postmarked no
later than July 5.
Persons interested in participating in this year's competition
are encouraged to contact the Entries Departm ent, Ohio State Fair,
632 East lith Ave., Columbus, 43211,
or should ca ll (614) 294-5441.
Moot divisions are open to the
general public and entering is easy.
Be a part of the fun at the 1980 Ohio
State Fair schedul ed to run Aug. 12
through the 24th.

more. advantages in bank products and
serv1ces.
If you're a customer of our bank, all
you have to do is remember our new
name. Continue to use all items that
carry our old name. Conversion will take
time and we have to get used to our
new name, too. If you're not one of our
customers now, this would be a great
time to switch. We'd sure like to be able
to welcome you to BANK ONE!

LOW COST DEVICE
A kibbutz factory in Israel's
Negev Desert is producing a lowcost ultra-violet light device for
purifying water which eliminates
the need for chlorination.

'

.

•

'JVE SERVE
·rJ-t EJ~\ ).\LL!

.

. TifE
SHOE BOX
'

MIDOilPORT, OHIO

•
Member FDIC

BANK ONE™

•.

Medical

Center

arc

fr' ollltllc

utlitr, hcmJ-

tled .
lt will be at least a 111unth before

waitin~

tu determin e how much
Siamese twins born lu a Pi4ua

SUfJ4cl')' to scpart:tlc tbem i~ conSILicrt!lllu al111W tum~ fur the infants'
lungs tu mature enough so they can

couple depend on each other fur life
support before cons id~ring surgery
tu o;eparatc them, a hospital
spokesman says.
But they may need surgery within
days to correct a mure inunedialc
problem, a physician said.
Dr. Paul Deenadayalu said Wed·
nesday that the twins have a swgle

function Without outside support,
S&lt;Jid hospital spokesman Phil Stuffan .
The daughters uf Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Wackier, whu were born six
weeks prematurely Tuesday, are

jun1cd at the base of the spine and
face away from each other, he said.

rectum, but no anal opening, and

Til e couple has one other child, a

that a colostomy tu create a surgical
opening to allow elimination of
wastes soon may be required. A
common artery at the base of the
spine also may require surgery if
one of the twins begins taking too
'

bluod

!)Oil.

''I'm glad they are healthy," sa1d
Wackier, 26, at a news conference

Wednesday at Piqua Memorial
Hospital where the twins were born
and his wife, Rebecca, is still a
patient. Wackier is an employee of
B" O Railroad.
"I fell a little grim at first, but after speaking to the dnctor and nurse,
I have htgh hopes of bringing them
home," Mrs. Wackier, 25, said.
The couple named its daughers
Valerie Renee and Natalie Renee.
The g1rls' combined weight at bir-

.

BIGGEST FLAG
America 's largest flag is more
than 2xl stories high and weighs 7
tons. Each of the stars on the twoa cre flag measures 13 feet across.
The stripes are 16 feet high and 411
feet long, according to National
Geographic.

•

!11 was 7 pounds and 12t ounces.
Tiley were transferred to Children's
r&gt;ledical Center because it has acute
care facilities, Stoffan said. So far,
the twins are doing as well as could .
be expected of premature babies, he
added .
The tw1ns were delivered
naturally, a s1t uatiun consider¢
rare i11 such cases, said Dr. Lawrence A. Gould, who assisted at the
delivery.
" One set of every 1,000 twin
deliveries is conjo111ed,'' Gould said.
They have separate genitals and
urinary tracts and alJcast one kidney each, he said.
Doctors here probably will be able
to perform surgery to separate the
twms, Stoffan said.
" We do a lot of difficult surgery,"
he sai d. "The complexity of the
;;urgery depends on how much they
share bodily functions. We wouldn't
do it here if we didn't think we
could. 11
Physicians could not say at
present how long a time of
hospitalization may be required, he
sai d.

•

..

Hi-Fi • CB • Security·
Tape
• Phone Dialer
•
Complete Stereo System!
AM/FM/Phon~-Track/Cassette •
Ctarlnetle@-101 by Plealislic" .

Tape no : •nCil.Gec

We welcome your account
regardless of size. Come in and see!

259

~~~~~~~W A Home
Bank
For

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$110

95
Reg .
369.95

• Record· Your Own Tapes for Home or Car
• 3-Speed Changer with Cue/Pause Control
• 22" High Air-Suspension Speakers
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or mike inputs . Dual VU meters and recording
level controls. Speaker systems each have a··
woofer, 3" tweeter, 2·way c rossover . Hin ged
dust cover included . 13-1204

eigs County
People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK

60-MiNute

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90-Minute
r-;.n:;------,-----.

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THIS WEEKEND
AT THE
INN PLACE

WHISKY
LANCASTER, OH.

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'covers area 20 ' wide and
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FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHT

MEIGS INN

Safe Summer Driving with CB.

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.

WEEKEND MEETING PLANNED
· The Hysell Run Holiness Church
will be holding a weekend" meeting
June 19-22, with evangelist lliirbara
Higginbotham Clark, Colun1bus.
Special singing 'will be held nightly,
and Theron Durham, pastor, invites
the public. The c~urch is Iocted ou
Cuonty Road 15, off State Rollte 124.

Chlldren's

I I JUtll

StorewiD

THE

Black/White
Beige/ lirow n
light Blue

DAYTON,UIUu{APJ - Ou&lt;.:tors al •

Save 30o/o
to 50°/o

d

10 RECEIVE DEGREES
Ten Meigs Countians wre among
the 572 graduates of Hocking
Technical College who received
dJplomas Sunday afternoon at the
NelSonville-York High School gymnasium.
They are Diane S. Young, Dexter;
Steven Bachner, Richard Blevins,
and Christi Hess, Middleport; Sandra A. · Keney, Cheryl Lefebre,
Pomey; Michael Roberts, Racine;
E~ J . VanMeter, Reedsville;
Su!ian J . Kennedy, Rutland, and
Carol E. Loika, Shade.

Dayton babies joined at spine

•

4 PC. GROUP W/VOCAL

BANK ONE OF POMEROY
FORMERLY
POMEROY NATIONAL BANK

-.

with vice-president Enm1a Lyons
calling the meeting to order. Jean
Johnson and Bcv Cummins led the
Pledge of Allegiance and the Lord's
Prayer, respectively. Ruth Shain
read the secretary's report, and
Gene Lyons gave the treasurer's
report. Doris Williams was
welcomed as a new member.
Ice cream sa les on Memorial Day
and the Election Day Dinner were
profitable for the group, and thanks
are extended to everyone who
assisted or donated. Special thanks
go to Firemen Dan Shane and Jack
Lyons.
An ice cream sale will be going on

throughout the day, July 4, in cunjuncllurJ with the annual firemen 's
barbecue. Games are planned for
the day. A float will be constructe'&lt;:~
fur the parade on that date. Concession stands will be operated by
the organization, which will sell hot
dogs, sloppy joes, fish, pizza, and
pop, and a country store will be
opened. Anyone wishing to donate to
the auxiliary to assist with the July 4
celebration is welcomed, and asked
to contact any auxiliary member .
Recipes are still being accepted
for the Auxiliary cookbook, and
arrangements may be made by
calling 949-2353 or 949-2720, or giving
the recipe to any auxillary member.
Doris Williams' birthday was observed, and she also won the door
prize, contluding the meeting.
Refeshments were served to
Beulah Autherson, Aggie · Bogess,
Mae Cleland, Bev Cummins, Jean
Johnson, Debbie Lyons, Gene Lyons,
Ruth Shain, and·Doris Williams.

1980 Ohio State Fair
entry deadline set

ona

•

Williams welcomed as
new auxiliary member

PLA~

mergencv Ch. 9.

2-Way Floor/Shelf
Speaker System
Optimus" -10 by Realistic

Save$60

7!re~ch

Reg. 139.95 Each
An active 8" woofer co ~I'=
d=====oJ.J
cone for bass dow n Ia ~~ ~z '~f pas.sive 10"
dome tweeter adds highs t
de dispersion
brilliance control malches ~ bt'OOO Hz, variable
acoustics. 40 _2028
re e to room 's

2o

THERE'S A RADIO SHACK NEAR .YOU!

MoSI ,,:.:m~sp;~;;~~;;J;~

a lso IYII labl e 111
Rad•o Shack

. SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

D"etlers.
litOi for lh fs

, sign in ~our

10

.......

KGa

....-.....1.

•~taa~~.
aa.-.L•J.

Ot!ighborhood . . ._ _ _ _ _, .

'

POMEROY, OHIO

PRICES. MAY VAfW

~T

INOIVIOUM. STORES

�_9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pol 11ero} , l!., 'l'hurstla y. ,J unc 19, 1980

Tax cut rejected

,,

. ~

"'.··

~

I

t
PRESENTED FROG MEMBERSHIPS - Residents o£ the Meigs
County Infirmary were presented membership tickets to the annual
frog jump which will be held at Marauder Stadium in Pomeroy June
28. Shown are, front, 1-r, Mildred Jacobs, superintendent, Maxine

Black, Leona Martin , Josephme Mallory, Etta Ellis, Betty Wills,
Charles Bush and Paul Gera rd, Grand Croaker in charge o£ vice and
president of the Jaycees who are in charge of the event, presented the
tickel'l; back, Joe Vadish, Charles Steele, Virgil Saunders and Myron
Edrich.

Panel rejects delayed subsidies
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) -Some
Ohio lawmakers have backed away
from a plan to delay increases in
nursing home subsidies next fiscal
year to help alleviate a state budget
crunch.
The unanimous vote Tuesday by
the Senate Finance Committee
means state fiscal planners now will
have to come up with $17 million, in·
stead of~ million, to project balan·
ced books for the fiscal year starting
July I.
Under an agreement by top
legislative leaders and Gov. James
A. Rhodes, the state would have
delayed increases in Medicaid
payments to nursing homes totaling $11 .8 million - from July 1,
1980, to July 1,1981.
·
The deferment was announced
last week as part of an a usterity
package in a pending appropriations
bill, which wa s to get Senate floor
action today. The bill still must be
considered by the House. It would go
witll a 3 percent state spending cut
and a 5 percent hike in liquor prices
-already being implemented by the
administration - to resolve the
money pinch, at least for now.
All told, the series of moves were

House trailer

tax

to make up all but $6 million of an
anticipated deficit or $2tl0 million in
the ·1981 fiscal year. Now that nursing home funds are restQred, only
$249 million will come in, said
Richard G. sheridan, director of the
Legislative Budget Office.
Several lawmakers who sponsored
the bill hiking Medicaid payments
and calling for broad nursing home
reforms were angry about the
decision to delay . It was made by
Rhodes and legislative leaders,
without rank-and-file members getting a chance to vote on it, they said.
Sen. John K. Mahoney, [).
Springfield, a member of the
Legislature 's nursing home commission, ca lled th e decision
'"morally indefensible." The earli er
bill's chief sponsor, Rep. John A.
Begala, D-Kent, called it "sick
public policy."
Mahoney and Begala, along with
various senior citizen and welfare
lobbyists, waged a spirited fight to
get the delay shelved, saying the top
leaders had not fully understood the
ramifications of their action. The
delay would be counterproductive
because It would hold back nursing
home reforms contained in the new

TO END MARRIAGE
Gregory Bailey, 49999 Pine Tree
Drive, Reedsville, and J o L . Bailey,
same address, Reedsville, have
petitioned for dissolution o£
marriage in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court, and have been
granted a separation agreement.

stating that the house trailer has
been registered . for each year of
ownership and that all taxes due
have been pa id.
At the time of the proposed !ran·
sfer, the county treasurer shall then ·
collect all the taxes that are due for
the current year and all previous
yea rs not exceeding a total or five
yea rs, Frank states.
When any house trailer required to
be registered by law is not
registe red, the owner of such a
tra iler is subject to a fine, the
auditor concluded.
BOOKS CLOSE JULY 18
Meigs County real estate tax
books will be open until July 16 for
payment of taxes, Meigs Treasurer
George Collins said today.

Voters •••
1)

also would raise about $700 million a
year by hiking taxes on corporations
and individuals who earn more than
$30,000 a year.
The constitutional amendment
proposed by Sen. Jerome Stano, [).
Parma, would give the Legislature
authority .for the first time to cut
taxes for specific classes of propersuch as residential or
agricultural.
For example, i£ property values
doubled as a result of reappraisals
reflecting the impact or inrtation, the
amendment would allow the
Legislature to reduce the tax rate by
haH to yield the same amount or
revenue as the preceding year.

ty,

agreed.

But the cha irman rejected
Mahoney's proposal to take the
needed $11.6 million from nursing
home profits, saying that would
"only discourage nursing homes
from doing a better job."
There were other proposals . to
save or raise money , but all were

published what it said was the text of
a tape recording quoting Ayat as
saying the president " will be ousted
soon." It did not say who he was
talking to.
" I have not been conspiring against anybody ," Ayat fired back after
the paper hit the stands. He sa id he
would expose "a shameful plot that
directors of Enghlab Eslami are involved in against me, against the
Islamic Republican Party and
against the iman (Ira nian
Revolutionary leader Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini).
The newspaper report highlighted
the growing rift between Bani.Sadr,
who has called for a speedy end to
the 229-day-old hostage crisis, and
the JVIoslem hardliners of the
Islamic Republican Party, many u£
whom are urging spy trials for the 53
captive Americans.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) The state's coal mines produced
nearly 3 tons more per man-day in
1979, compared with the previous
year, according to the West Virginia
Coal Association.
The statistics, which buck a
national trend , show that total mine
productivity jumped from 8.7 tons
per man-day in 1978 to 11.09 tons per
man day in 1979.
Production in underground mines
rose from 7.6 tons per man-day to
11.09 tons last year, while surface
mining went from 16.7 tons per man·

DUCKS BACK
THEIR

INSIDE

CIRYL. ]

BUILDING-

I

JUN£ 1Q, 1QBO
£VENING
6 :00

CAPI'AlN EASY

WHAPPA

'lA Ma'AN ··
'FI)(.IN' i H&amp;
6~AMe ON

KEEFER''!'

YOU HcAFID YOUR 6055!
CONCU.55101\1--WHICH
MAKeS 'IOU THE

t GANDIL

HIM--

KlllcR-- ii:IGHT;

IJ I

XXJ

{Answers tomorrow)
GLAND

VENDOR

SKEWER

Answer : Th e Romans counted half a dozen rulers
from Scandlnavia-"VI·KINGS "
JumDie Book No. 13, containing 110 puules.ls av•llaDielor 51 .75 pollptld
!Rfrn Jumble, c/o this nawapa:f"• Bok 34, Norwood, N.J. 07848.1ncludayour

BORN LOSER

name, teldrtll, zip code en make .checks P•r•ble to Newapaperboolr.s.

I'VE {t:(Jf SCM8 SAD
~

A)..IDSDMG

(t(X)D~s ..

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

WRONG-

STILL-! COJLDN'T

IT'S NICE 0'
BEAR TO SEE YOU YOO T' WORRY,
AND SANDi' WALK
BUT WE'RE
OFF IHTO THE
PRETTY EiOOD AT
NIGHT ...
TAKIN' CARE OF
OURSELVES ...

6·19-80

+QJ4
.KQ7
tK?4
10 9 6 3
WEST
EAST
+to9872
+A 53
.10 4 3
• AJ 6 2

• ANNIE

... J'M NOT IH Tl?OUBLE \'liTH
TH' LAW CR ANYTHING, MRS.
FLOWERS ... ~NO I'M
NOT DOIN' Ai'IY

were the sa me at all tables.
Every South but one made
four notrump . The unfortunate one who didn't managed to gather in only eight
tricks, and there was nothing
he could do about the whole
thing. In fact, he gave himself
the best chance.

+

YES- l BELIEVE THAT...
AND I \'IIGH I COOLD
SAY THAT ABOUi
MYSELF \'iiTH AS MUCH
CERTAINTY BUT

t95

+ K5 2

• 10 8 3 2

+7 4
SOUTH
+Ks
.98&gt;
tAQJS
+A Q J 8

West

Nortb

Easl

Soutb

Pass
Pass

3 NT

Pass

Pass

tNT

ALLEYOOP
Opening lead:+ I 0
BECAUSE WE NEVER FOUND SO MUCH
A HALF -DIME IN TH ' CAB IN THOSE
V l~IE(;A~ !!ENDERS USED AS A HIDEOUT!

FLOOR STOCK

___.---.

'n PRICE

END TABLES
LOTS OF

PICTURES

10 or maybe even the nine and

I DUNNO!
THAT'S
WHAT
I A.IM

T'FIND.

OUT 1

He covered the I 0 of spades
with dummy's jack to give the
impression that he didn't hold
the king .
It didn't do him any good .
East was looking at all the
high hearts and assumed that
South would not open a
notrump with no face card in
either maJor. Then East asked
himself the $64,000 question:
"How can I beat this hand?"
Then East saw tha t a shift
to the deuce of hearts would
be a winner if West held th~'

By Oswald Jacoby
aod Alao Sontag

When today's hand was
played in a Dallas duplicate,
the bidding and opening lead

if West could get in with a dia·
mond or club.
So, East did shift to the
deuce of hearts. Wesl's 10
knocked out one of dummy's
honors . West got in with the
club king and led a heart to
give East three heart tricks
and a top score.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.I

.

BETTER SUMMER DRESSES ................. '14 OFF
All Summer Sleepwear
and Selected Summer Sportswear
BOYS' SWIMWEAR ................. 50• TO •2.00
GIRLS' SWIMWEAR.-....... .... .. ~1.00 TO '3.00

20% OFF
GIRLS JEANS
REDlJCED

Ph. 992·5094
2nd St.

INFANT BONNETh
¥3 OFF

KIDDIE

Pomeroy, OH.

ALL WOOD PINi:

BEDROOM
SUITE

You thin it, I've
made all this

up~

You're

li~e

40u1n

'6.9

the
funn4

00

farm~

DISASSEMBLED

WALNUT
DESK

'69 00

DISASSEMBLED

We Care About
Your Health!
We're the ph~rmacists
you can depend on in
emergencies to fill all
of your health needs.
We also have natural
vitamins! Come lin!

I "" FEELINL" BET1ER
:-..C\\ . 'CcJrFOc"E II [
:7EN[" OUT FOf':
SOAIETHI NG TO. ~
E-\T.. .
_....

DISASSEMBLED

WALNUT
HEAD BOARD
'

, Sundi'IY 10 : lO to 11 : lOa nd 5 to 9 p . ";,'H , '1 '1'2 -lt:ii5

PRE\ CRI PTIC?NS FnendiV 'iervtce .

all

rest' You th~nlo&lt;. I'm

6 DRAWER

Health IS
•
Happtness

"BARNEY

FROM

CLOSEOUT PRICES ON

All CARPET &amp;
LINOLEUM

Kitchen Carpet $4 :49 sq. yd.
Cushion Floor
Linoleum 53.99 sq. vd.

MV BROTHER
• BUBBA IS COM!N'
FER A VISIT
TODAY,

I'LL GO DOWN
TO TH' BRIDGE
AN' WAIT
FOR HIM

PAW!!

ACROSS
2 Verve
1 Role for
3 Gossip (sl. )
Maria
4 Ending for
Callas
election
&amp; Southern city 5 Eddie
II Of foreign
Fisher
origin
hit song
1% Notions
6 Give a
13 Suffer from
name to
unrequited
7 Hurly-burly
love
8 French seas
15 Ending
9 Multitude
for exist
10 Gray
I&amp; Sesame
14 Helping
plant
hand
17 "Guys and 18 Be desiDolls" hero
rous of
18 Beverage
19 European
20 Hayworth
river
20 Droop
film role :
1953
21 Abdul's
23 Wet down
gannent
27 Overhead
22 Predicament
28 Misrepresent
29 8allpark
entrance
30 Deal in, as
merchandise
31 Boat pin
33 Villain's
cry
36 Yale name
37 Course
gadget
411 Berlin
musical
43 Window
44ldolize
45 Quam!
taFamous
DOWN
1 Riot.control

Yesterday's Answer
Z4 Used
34 Take
on
Z5 Man's
35 "Play It
nickname
- Lays" :
28- long
Didion
!II Prospera's
31Run
slave
30 Hindu
along
festival
38 French
32 Word for
infinitive
311 Ocellated
Dolly
41 Coterie
33 Freeman
42 Tokyo's
Gooden
old name
role

~

mine .)

8:30

(]) PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
(fil BILl MOYERS' JOURNAL (SO
mins.)
(1) WAKE UP AMERICA
({) lJ%) 18 BENSON Bens on dis·
covers that the governors mans ion

CLOSEOUT ON ALL

REG. $499.95

LONGFELLOW

hints. Each day the code letters are d1fferent.

I DIDN'T
COME f.IERE
TO Elf:
LAli6HEO

AT!

CRVPTOQUOTES
,,: AUR ~ GM

HFWP

FR

NULH;

VFAWP

GNW

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· Open t.t lqhhltll9

V E K F P
P G W A W R P E R.
Yeslerday'a Cryploquote:IMPATIENCE AND NOT
INEXPERIENCE IS THE GREATEST HANDICAP OF
YOUTH.-ARNOLD H.GLASGOW
tQ 1110 Kino Ft•tvrn SyrMith: .... Int .

m m w .., .

~

·

epeot:90ml na . )

~Face" 1853

ROBS BAGLEY SHOW
;
MOVIE -{MYSTERY! .. "Angal .

({)

&lt; • '•)

EltPGtrRUGW

0 ({)\W KNOTSLANOINGJ.R.
Ewing comes to Knots lending to ,
protect Ewing fJmily interests in
otr-ah'ore oil drilling about to begin ·
near the town. (Repea t; 80 mina.) •
1
(]) SOUNDSTAGE 'Tom Johns! on
oaed Captioned)
NEWS
10: 15
UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
' Distant Thunder'
10: 30 ill NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
(ill OVER EASY Gueol: Paul Nalh-'
anson . Host: HuQtt Downs.
dlt ~
11:oo
CIJ t11 ®J
NEWS
Cil JOIMI ANKERBERG SHOW
()) DAft ALLEN AT LARGE
DICK CAVETT SHOW
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
11 : 15
11:30 . e m THE TONIGHT SHOW·
•eeat Of Carson' Guests: Gregory."'
Peck, Marti n Mull, Judith Blagen-

rn •

One letter simply stands for another .. In this sample A il
used for the three L's, X for the two 0 s. etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formati?n of the words are all

PEANUTS

eo

~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXVDLBAAXR
1J

lCioaed ·Captioned)
a (I)@ BARNABY JON£S J.R.
Jones goes undercover as a coun·
setor ina drug addic t rehabilitat ion
school in order to sol ve a murder
and avenge a fri end's death.
mine.)
(B_epeat;
(])
RIGHTEOUS
APPLES
'Convictions' The Apples unite with
a r. u1vu" I iga live reporter I o e xp oae
a doctor who sterilizes J .T .' s girl·
friend during an abortion .
(ill SNEAK PREVIEWS Co·Hosts
Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel
review the latest movies.
9:30 ffi CANDID CANOID CAMERA'
Allen Funl i! back aga in prasenling
tt1e tt1ird in th is adult co medy sar·
ies . lt's uncensored. spontaneous
hilarity as only Fu nt c an bring t o the
screen .
CIJI!ZI I8 SEMI·TOUGHII 'o a hilar·
ioua ca ucus when Billy Clyde and
Shake pile ont o the bandwagon In
an effort to help Barbara Jane cam· ·
R.!ign lor an unusua l politician.
llJ GOOD NEIGHBORS 'Pagan
R ite '
~
(fil CAMERA THREE 'Shodo: Tha,
Path or Writing'
10:00 ffi MOVIE ~THRILLER) ••• " Tho

Onion Field " H17Qi
({)ll%) 18 2G-20

item

W/WoodTrim
(large Sofa and Chair)

diving

(]) SNeAK PREVIEWS Co· hoala
Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel look
at movies dealing with the war in
Vietnam.
9 :00 m u m THURSOAYNIGHTAT
THE MOVIES 'Cry Of The Innocen t'
1980 Stars : Rod Taylor, Joanna
Pettet.
(1) 700CLUB
• ({)ll%) 18 BARNEY MILlER Barney
~il l e r
assigns
a pret ty
pol ic ewoman with a toothac he to·
check o ut a dentist acc used of,
co mmitti ng han ky ·penky while a
female pat ient was under t he in·
tluen c e of laugh ing gas. (Repeat)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

REG. '699

DRESSER

ekciting

this

cham p ionship.
(I) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
({) ABC NEWS
(]) (fil ZOOM
6:30 m u m NBC NEWS
ffi NASHVILLE COUNTRY POP
FESTIVALHeadsouthtotheGrand
Ole Op ry Houaefort hi&amp; high· en erg 'I
country -pop music festival featur·
ing stare like Barbara Mandrell,•
Lynn Ande rson, singer · comed ia rt"
Jim Stafford and J.ohnny Cash'S:
country -rocking daughter. Ro·
sea nne Cash.
(I) I LOVE LUCY
({)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIEND$
0 ({)\W CBS NEWS
(])
WILD WILD WORLO OF
ANIMALS
(fi) OVER EASY Guest : PauiNath·
a neon. Host: Hugh Downs.
lJ%) CD ABC NEWS
7:00 m U ORAL ROBERTS
(1) BACKYARD
(I) HOGAN'S HEROES
({)ll%) 0) F~CETHEMUSIC
m LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
a CIJ TICTACOOUGH
(]) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
\W NEWS
.
(fil DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 (1) ZOLA LEVITT
(I) ALL IN THE FAMILY
CIJ IN SEARCH OF
m COUNTRY ROAOS
a ({) JOKER' S WILD
(]) OICKCAVETTSHOW
.
$100,000NAME THAT TUNE
MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT ·
18 NASHVILLE ON THE.
Jll)AD
8:00 m UBUCKROGERSINTHE25th
CENTURY When a gala ct ic crea ·
lure that turns people into zomb ies
pursues the helpteaa Co lonel
W ilma Deering . no o ne believes
Buck Roge rs ' claim that the
'myth ic al : vorvon really &amp;kists ..
(Be peat; 60 mins .)
ill MISSIONAIRES IN ACTION
ffi MOVIE ~ DRAMA I , • .,., " Nunz:lo"
IIl MOviE ·!COMEDY) " " .,.,
" Lover Come Back" 1961
({), lJ%) 18 MORK AND MINDY
Think ing the Air Force is a travel
club , Mark dona a uniform andrecrui ts M indytoaccompanyhim ona
at range secret m i as ion at the site of
a nuc lear accident. (Repeat )
m ORAL ROBERTS
. a Cil\W THE WALTONSO ii,ia's
alarming concern over the defense
plant workers' unatten ded chi ldren
prompts her to o p en a day ca re
center at home . (Repeat ; 60

devises a crazy scheme to smoke
out the culprits. (Repeat)

~~

. $399°0

4 DRAWER
WALNUT CHEST

DIVING
CHAMPIONSHIPS
World ·Class divers from more than
1a nations co nverge for high·
bounding springboard competition

haa been bugged -- and Benson

AIR CONDITIONERS
AS MUCH AS '70 00 OFF REG. PRICE

Is

h R Ph
Charlts Rifth.·. R.
"'"""' McCullo
ug , ·HanntnQ
· . , R· ""
· Rooald
Mon tttruSa t 8 :00a .rn . to'lp .m

Mason, W. Va. '

IT

Jumbles: LIMIT

NORTH

LIVING ROOM SUITE

EVENINGS' BY APPOINTMENT ONL
··
Herm•n Grete

I

r I XXJ r I

Dandy defense downs game

2 PC. EARLY AMERICAN

._

Now arrange lhe circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as suggested by the above cartoon

Answer here: TO
YeSie&lt;day·s

(!l CAN AM MIX INTERNATIONAL

m

AMANA

TRISTATE AREA

Mon., Tues.; weci., Friday &amp; sat. ·
l:30 to 5:00 Thursday tlll12 Noon

!

5HOVE;L AND WHACKEOD

1980 ZEN 1111 TV
&amp; STEREOS

MASON FURNITURE

I I I J

NOW HOeD IT. ME-L.OilUM!
YOU AlN 'T MAK IN' Ml! THe
FALL GUY! YOU 6RA6BED A

HE SAYS YOU JUMPED
DeAN AND CAU5ED HIS

W b ctl b (J)@ii!2) 1) NEWS
ill ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(,!_OINEO IN PROGRESS)

HE PU"T HIS 6U I"TAR.
IN THE FtEF'I'i:I6ER AIOI'i: ~SCAU5E
HE WANTEDTHI5.

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

PRIZE WINNERS NAMED
Eighteen members wre present at
the Tuesday morning meeting of thP.
Women's Golf Association. Prize
winners were Maxine Gaskill, Nancy Reed, Liz Cutler, and Cathy
Gard . Low-putt competition winners
were Grace Eich and Nellie Brown.
Members arc to ho a hostess group
for a reception following the Dave
Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament.

Tel~vision

Viewing

four ord1nary words.

RUN-DOWN

buy cars/' he said.

The tax savings on an $8,000
vehicle would be $200, or hall o£ the
normal tax, he said.
SeQ. Ronald L. Nabakowski, [).
Lorain, said the sales tax cut could
stimulate sales o£ foreign cars,
having no effect on the state's 78,000
laid-of£ auto workers.
Van Meter's amendmt!ht was
defeated 18-13 before the budget
balancing bill was approved and
sent to the House.
All favorable votes on the amendment were cast by Republicans,
although two - Sens. Sam Speck,
New Concord, and Oakley C. Collins,
Ironton - opposed it.

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter lo each square , to form

association.

·MASON
FURNITURE
FOR THE Bt:ST-DiiALS JNnie

O"N

1ffllff.\O fii})l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~~ &lt;!&lt;

UT ONCE HIS
ARE OUT
OF SIGH1': WILLIE

day to 19.43 tons, according to the

~--

..

I

Coal production up in 1979

Bani-Sadr.•.
(Cont inued from page 1)

pag ~

" pow ~wow, "

rejected.
Sen. Jerome Stano, D-Parma,
mentioned a 25 percent boost in the
sta te's wholesale tax on beer. But he
declined to propose it formally.
Sheridan, among other things,
me~otioned an end to a new tax credit
that homeowners may claim for improving their proper)y or cancellation of the exemption that
magazines and newspapers have
from Ohio sales tax.
Meshel ended the di~cussion by
ca lling for a vote on the r~vised bill.

reminder presented

Meigs Cunty Auditor Howard
Frank reminds Meigs Countians of
new regulations regarding house
!r;tiler tax payments.
Frank reports the certificate of
title to a house trailer is to be stamped at the time of the first payment
o£ the trailer tax and it is required
that taxes owed prior to a transfer of
a certificate of title be collected.
Upon the receipt of an application
to transfer ownership of a house
trailer, the clerk o£ the court o£common pleas is not to issue any cer·
ti£icate of title which does not contain or have attached an endorsement of the county treasurer

(Conti nued from

Jaw, which Begala said will save the
state "millions of dollars."
Senate Finance Chairman Harry
Meshel, D-Youngstown , who said he
was not in on the top level budget

wx in ludf for new cHr purchases for
6() days. His amendment, while
costing the state an estimated $12
million in revenue during July and
August, would help dealers' clear inventories before the 1981 models roll
into .!:ihowrooms, he said.
"It's not enough for us to sit hert~
Ullking about dividing up shor·
Ulges," he said. ''Unless we do
sometbjpg, the worst IS yet to
conn!."
The proposal was endorsed by
most of his GOP colleagues.
But several Democrats, including
Finance Chairman Hqrry 11\eshel of
Youngstown, said there were no
assurances it would boost auto sales.
"Many people are unemployed
and they don't have the money to

COLU MBUS, Ohio tAPJ
Arguments 'uvcr how to handle the
st.at~'s current revenue pinch have
taken a new twi~t. with " senator
suggesting temporary tax cuts.
But the effort was rejected in tne
upper chamber Wednesday, after
lively debate and a majority's
opinion that the federa l, and not the
state government, is the only. one
that actually can spur the economy.
The discussion came as the Senate
approved 28-3 and ·sent the House a
bill cutting back and delaying state
spending and obligations to deal
witll a $266 million budget shortfall
expected in the new fiscal year starting July L
If the House approves the proposal
tllen it, along with austerity moves
announced by the administration of
Gov. James A. Rhodes, assertedly
will enable the state to make up all
but about $17 million of the deficit.
Leaders of the De mocratcon troll~d Legislat.ure say they hope
the national economy will recover
sufficiently to make up that amount
a nd head of£ future budget
problems.
Recent drops in auto sales have
cut into revenues from the sales lax,
and are the biggest single reason for
the current problem.
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, RAshland, offered a n amendment to
stimulate auto sales by cutting tbe
sUite's 4-cenl'l-on-the-dollar sales

DICKTRAr.Y

(12)

•

•
ABC

NEWS

~~=LATEMOVIE'THEJEF· ,

�_9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pol 11ero} , l!., 'l'hurstla y. ,J unc 19, 1980

Tax cut rejected

,,

. ~

"'.··

~

I

t
PRESENTED FROG MEMBERSHIPS - Residents o£ the Meigs
County Infirmary were presented membership tickets to the annual
frog jump which will be held at Marauder Stadium in Pomeroy June
28. Shown are, front, 1-r, Mildred Jacobs, superintendent, Maxine

Black, Leona Martin , Josephme Mallory, Etta Ellis, Betty Wills,
Charles Bush and Paul Gera rd, Grand Croaker in charge o£ vice and
president of the Jaycees who are in charge of the event, presented the
tickel'l; back, Joe Vadish, Charles Steele, Virgil Saunders and Myron
Edrich.

Panel rejects delayed subsidies
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) -Some
Ohio lawmakers have backed away
from a plan to delay increases in
nursing home subsidies next fiscal
year to help alleviate a state budget
crunch.
The unanimous vote Tuesday by
the Senate Finance Committee
means state fiscal planners now will
have to come up with $17 million, in·
stead of~ million, to project balan·
ced books for the fiscal year starting
July I.
Under an agreement by top
legislative leaders and Gov. James
A. Rhodes, the state would have
delayed increases in Medicaid
payments to nursing homes totaling $11 .8 million - from July 1,
1980, to July 1,1981.
·
The deferment was announced
last week as part of an a usterity
package in a pending appropriations
bill, which wa s to get Senate floor
action today. The bill still must be
considered by the House. It would go
witll a 3 percent state spending cut
and a 5 percent hike in liquor prices
-already being implemented by the
administration - to resolve the
money pinch, at least for now.
All told, the series of moves were

House trailer

tax

to make up all but $6 million of an
anticipated deficit or $2tl0 million in
the ·1981 fiscal year. Now that nursing home funds are restQred, only
$249 million will come in, said
Richard G. sheridan, director of the
Legislative Budget Office.
Several lawmakers who sponsored
the bill hiking Medicaid payments
and calling for broad nursing home
reforms were angry about the
decision to delay . It was made by
Rhodes and legislative leaders,
without rank-and-file members getting a chance to vote on it, they said.
Sen. John K. Mahoney, [).
Springfield, a member of the
Legislature 's nursing home commission, ca lled th e decision
'"morally indefensible." The earli er
bill's chief sponsor, Rep. John A.
Begala, D-Kent, called it "sick
public policy."
Mahoney and Begala, along with
various senior citizen and welfare
lobbyists, waged a spirited fight to
get the delay shelved, saying the top
leaders had not fully understood the
ramifications of their action. The
delay would be counterproductive
because It would hold back nursing
home reforms contained in the new

TO END MARRIAGE
Gregory Bailey, 49999 Pine Tree
Drive, Reedsville, and J o L . Bailey,
same address, Reedsville, have
petitioned for dissolution o£
marriage in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court, and have been
granted a separation agreement.

stating that the house trailer has
been registered . for each year of
ownership and that all taxes due
have been pa id.
At the time of the proposed !ran·
sfer, the county treasurer shall then ·
collect all the taxes that are due for
the current year and all previous
yea rs not exceeding a total or five
yea rs, Frank states.
When any house trailer required to
be registered by law is not
registe red, the owner of such a
tra iler is subject to a fine, the
auditor concluded.
BOOKS CLOSE JULY 18
Meigs County real estate tax
books will be open until July 16 for
payment of taxes, Meigs Treasurer
George Collins said today.

Voters •••
1)

also would raise about $700 million a
year by hiking taxes on corporations
and individuals who earn more than
$30,000 a year.
The constitutional amendment
proposed by Sen. Jerome Stano, [).
Parma, would give the Legislature
authority .for the first time to cut
taxes for specific classes of propersuch as residential or
agricultural.
For example, i£ property values
doubled as a result of reappraisals
reflecting the impact or inrtation, the
amendment would allow the
Legislature to reduce the tax rate by
haH to yield the same amount or
revenue as the preceding year.

ty,

agreed.

But the cha irman rejected
Mahoney's proposal to take the
needed $11.6 million from nursing
home profits, saying that would
"only discourage nursing homes
from doing a better job."
There were other proposals . to
save or raise money , but all were

published what it said was the text of
a tape recording quoting Ayat as
saying the president " will be ousted
soon." It did not say who he was
talking to.
" I have not been conspiring against anybody ," Ayat fired back after
the paper hit the stands. He sa id he
would expose "a shameful plot that
directors of Enghlab Eslami are involved in against me, against the
Islamic Republican Party and
against the iman (Ira nian
Revolutionary leader Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini).
The newspaper report highlighted
the growing rift between Bani.Sadr,
who has called for a speedy end to
the 229-day-old hostage crisis, and
the JVIoslem hardliners of the
Islamic Republican Party, many u£
whom are urging spy trials for the 53
captive Americans.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) The state's coal mines produced
nearly 3 tons more per man-day in
1979, compared with the previous
year, according to the West Virginia
Coal Association.
The statistics, which buck a
national trend , show that total mine
productivity jumped from 8.7 tons
per man-day in 1978 to 11.09 tons per
man day in 1979.
Production in underground mines
rose from 7.6 tons per man-day to
11.09 tons last year, while surface
mining went from 16.7 tons per man·

DUCKS BACK
THEIR

INSIDE

CIRYL. ]

BUILDING-

I

JUN£ 1Q, 1QBO
£VENING
6 :00

CAPI'AlN EASY

WHAPPA

'lA Ma'AN ··
'FI)(.IN' i H&amp;
6~AMe ON

KEEFER''!'

YOU HcAFID YOUR 6055!
CONCU.55101\1--WHICH
MAKeS 'IOU THE

t GANDIL

HIM--

KlllcR-- ii:IGHT;

IJ I

XXJ

{Answers tomorrow)
GLAND

VENDOR

SKEWER

Answer : Th e Romans counted half a dozen rulers
from Scandlnavia-"VI·KINGS "
JumDie Book No. 13, containing 110 puules.ls av•llaDielor 51 .75 pollptld
!Rfrn Jumble, c/o this nawapa:f"• Bok 34, Norwood, N.J. 07848.1ncludayour

BORN LOSER

name, teldrtll, zip code en make .checks P•r•ble to Newapaperboolr.s.

I'VE {t:(Jf SCM8 SAD
~

A)..IDSDMG

(t(X)D~s ..

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

WRONG-

STILL-! COJLDN'T

IT'S NICE 0'
BEAR TO SEE YOU YOO T' WORRY,
AND SANDi' WALK
BUT WE'RE
OFF IHTO THE
PRETTY EiOOD AT
NIGHT ...
TAKIN' CARE OF
OURSELVES ...

6·19-80

+QJ4
.KQ7
tK?4
10 9 6 3
WEST
EAST
+to9872
+A 53
.10 4 3
• AJ 6 2

• ANNIE

... J'M NOT IH Tl?OUBLE \'liTH
TH' LAW CR ANYTHING, MRS.
FLOWERS ... ~NO I'M
NOT DOIN' Ai'IY

were the sa me at all tables.
Every South but one made
four notrump . The unfortunate one who didn't managed to gather in only eight
tricks, and there was nothing
he could do about the whole
thing. In fact, he gave himself
the best chance.

+

YES- l BELIEVE THAT...
AND I \'IIGH I COOLD
SAY THAT ABOUi
MYSELF \'iiTH AS MUCH
CERTAINTY BUT

t95

+ K5 2

• 10 8 3 2

+7 4
SOUTH
+Ks
.98&gt;
tAQJS
+A Q J 8

West

Nortb

Easl

Soutb

Pass
Pass

3 NT

Pass

Pass

tNT

ALLEYOOP
Opening lead:+ I 0
BECAUSE WE NEVER FOUND SO MUCH
A HALF -DIME IN TH ' CAB IN THOSE
V l~IE(;A~ !!ENDERS USED AS A HIDEOUT!

FLOOR STOCK

___.---.

'n PRICE

END TABLES
LOTS OF

PICTURES

10 or maybe even the nine and

I DUNNO!
THAT'S
WHAT
I A.IM

T'FIND.

OUT 1

He covered the I 0 of spades
with dummy's jack to give the
impression that he didn't hold
the king .
It didn't do him any good .
East was looking at all the
high hearts and assumed that
South would not open a
notrump with no face card in
either maJor. Then East asked
himself the $64,000 question:
"How can I beat this hand?"
Then East saw tha t a shift
to the deuce of hearts would
be a winner if West held th~'

By Oswald Jacoby
aod Alao Sontag

When today's hand was
played in a Dallas duplicate,
the bidding and opening lead

if West could get in with a dia·
mond or club.
So, East did shift to the
deuce of hearts. Wesl's 10
knocked out one of dummy's
honors . West got in with the
club king and led a heart to
give East three heart tricks
and a top score.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.I

.

BETTER SUMMER DRESSES ................. '14 OFF
All Summer Sleepwear
and Selected Summer Sportswear
BOYS' SWIMWEAR ................. 50• TO •2.00
GIRLS' SWIMWEAR.-....... .... .. ~1.00 TO '3.00

20% OFF
GIRLS JEANS
REDlJCED

Ph. 992·5094
2nd St.

INFANT BONNETh
¥3 OFF

KIDDIE

Pomeroy, OH.

ALL WOOD PINi:

BEDROOM
SUITE

You thin it, I've
made all this

up~

You're

li~e

40u1n

'6.9

the
funn4

00

farm~

DISASSEMBLED

WALNUT
DESK

'69 00

DISASSEMBLED

We Care About
Your Health!
We're the ph~rmacists
you can depend on in
emergencies to fill all
of your health needs.
We also have natural
vitamins! Come lin!

I "" FEELINL" BET1ER
:-..C\\ . 'CcJrFOc"E II [
:7EN[" OUT FOf':
SOAIETHI NG TO. ~
E-\T.. .
_....

DISASSEMBLED

WALNUT
HEAD BOARD
'

, Sundi'IY 10 : lO to 11 : lOa nd 5 to 9 p . ";,'H , '1 '1'2 -lt:ii5

PRE\ CRI PTIC?NS FnendiV 'iervtce .

all

rest' You th~nlo&lt;. I'm

6 DRAWER

Health IS
•
Happtness

"BARNEY

FROM

CLOSEOUT PRICES ON

All CARPET &amp;
LINOLEUM

Kitchen Carpet $4 :49 sq. yd.
Cushion Floor
Linoleum 53.99 sq. vd.

MV BROTHER
• BUBBA IS COM!N'
FER A VISIT
TODAY,

I'LL GO DOWN
TO TH' BRIDGE
AN' WAIT
FOR HIM

PAW!!

ACROSS
2 Verve
1 Role for
3 Gossip (sl. )
Maria
4 Ending for
Callas
election
&amp; Southern city 5 Eddie
II Of foreign
Fisher
origin
hit song
1% Notions
6 Give a
13 Suffer from
name to
unrequited
7 Hurly-burly
love
8 French seas
15 Ending
9 Multitude
for exist
10 Gray
I&amp; Sesame
14 Helping
plant
hand
17 "Guys and 18 Be desiDolls" hero
rous of
18 Beverage
19 European
20 Hayworth
river
20 Droop
film role :
1953
21 Abdul's
23 Wet down
gannent
27 Overhead
22 Predicament
28 Misrepresent
29 8allpark
entrance
30 Deal in, as
merchandise
31 Boat pin
33 Villain's
cry
36 Yale name
37 Course
gadget
411 Berlin
musical
43 Window
44ldolize
45 Quam!
taFamous
DOWN
1 Riot.control

Yesterday's Answer
Z4 Used
34 Take
on
Z5 Man's
35 "Play It
nickname
- Lays" :
28- long
Didion
!II Prospera's
31Run
slave
30 Hindu
along
festival
38 French
32 Word for
infinitive
311 Ocellated
Dolly
41 Coterie
33 Freeman
42 Tokyo's
Gooden
old name
role

~

mine .)

8:30

(]) PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
(fil BILl MOYERS' JOURNAL (SO
mins.)
(1) WAKE UP AMERICA
({) lJ%) 18 BENSON Bens on dis·
covers that the governors mans ion

CLOSEOUT ON ALL

REG. $499.95

LONGFELLOW

hints. Each day the code letters are d1fferent.

I DIDN'T
COME f.IERE
TO Elf:
LAli6HEO

AT!

CRVPTOQUOTES
,,: AUR ~ GM

HFWP

FR

NULH;

VFAWP

GNW

YUPWP

FG

QtJR. -

LEXW.LG

· Open t.t lqhhltll9

V E K F P
P G W A W R P E R.
Yeslerday'a Cryploquote:IMPATIENCE AND NOT
INEXPERIENCE IS THE GREATEST HANDICAP OF
YOUTH.-ARNOLD H.GLASGOW
tQ 1110 Kino Ft•tvrn SyrMith: .... Int .

m m w .., .

~

·

epeot:90ml na . )

~Face" 1853

ROBS BAGLEY SHOW
;
MOVIE -{MYSTERY! .. "Angal .

({)

&lt; • '•)

EltPGtrRUGW

0 ({)\W KNOTSLANOINGJ.R.
Ewing comes to Knots lending to ,
protect Ewing fJmily interests in
otr-ah'ore oil drilling about to begin ·
near the town. (Repea t; 80 mina.) •
1
(]) SOUNDSTAGE 'Tom Johns! on
oaed Captioned)
NEWS
10: 15
UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
' Distant Thunder'
10: 30 ill NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
(ill OVER EASY Gueol: Paul Nalh-'
anson . Host: HuQtt Downs.
dlt ~
11:oo
CIJ t11 ®J
NEWS
Cil JOIMI ANKERBERG SHOW
()) DAft ALLEN AT LARGE
DICK CAVETT SHOW
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
11 : 15
11:30 . e m THE TONIGHT SHOW·
•eeat Of Carson' Guests: Gregory."'
Peck, Marti n Mull, Judith Blagen-

rn •

One letter simply stands for another .. In this sample A il
used for the three L's, X for the two 0 s. etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formati?n of the words are all

PEANUTS

eo

~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXVDLBAAXR
1J

lCioaed ·Captioned)
a (I)@ BARNABY JON£S J.R.
Jones goes undercover as a coun·
setor ina drug addic t rehabilitat ion
school in order to sol ve a murder
and avenge a fri end's death.
mine.)
(B_epeat;
(])
RIGHTEOUS
APPLES
'Convictions' The Apples unite with
a r. u1vu" I iga live reporter I o e xp oae
a doctor who sterilizes J .T .' s girl·
friend during an abortion .
(ill SNEAK PREVIEWS Co·Hosts
Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel
review the latest movies.
9:30 ffi CANDID CANOID CAMERA'
Allen Funl i! back aga in prasenling
tt1e tt1ird in th is adult co medy sar·
ies . lt's uncensored. spontaneous
hilarity as only Fu nt c an bring t o the
screen .
CIJI!ZI I8 SEMI·TOUGHII 'o a hilar·
ioua ca ucus when Billy Clyde and
Shake pile ont o the bandwagon In
an effort to help Barbara Jane cam· ·
R.!ign lor an unusua l politician.
llJ GOOD NEIGHBORS 'Pagan
R ite '
~
(fil CAMERA THREE 'Shodo: Tha,
Path or Writing'
10:00 ffi MOVIE ~THRILLER) ••• " Tho

Onion Field " H17Qi
({)ll%) 18 2G-20

item

W/WoodTrim
(large Sofa and Chair)

diving

(]) SNeAK PREVIEWS Co· hoala
Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel look
at movies dealing with the war in
Vietnam.
9 :00 m u m THURSOAYNIGHTAT
THE MOVIES 'Cry Of The Innocen t'
1980 Stars : Rod Taylor, Joanna
Pettet.
(1) 700CLUB
• ({)ll%) 18 BARNEY MILlER Barney
~il l e r
assigns
a pret ty
pol ic ewoman with a toothac he to·
check o ut a dentist acc used of,
co mmitti ng han ky ·penky while a
female pat ient was under t he in·
tluen c e of laugh ing gas. (Repeat)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

REG. '699

DRESSER

ekciting

this

cham p ionship.
(I) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
({) ABC NEWS
(]) (fil ZOOM
6:30 m u m NBC NEWS
ffi NASHVILLE COUNTRY POP
FESTIVALHeadsouthtotheGrand
Ole Op ry Houaefort hi&amp; high· en erg 'I
country -pop music festival featur·
ing stare like Barbara Mandrell,•
Lynn Ande rson, singer · comed ia rt"
Jim Stafford and J.ohnny Cash'S:
country -rocking daughter. Ro·
sea nne Cash.
(I) I LOVE LUCY
({)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIEND$
0 ({)\W CBS NEWS
(])
WILD WILD WORLO OF
ANIMALS
(fi) OVER EASY Guest : PauiNath·
a neon. Host: Hugh Downs.
lJ%) CD ABC NEWS
7:00 m U ORAL ROBERTS
(1) BACKYARD
(I) HOGAN'S HEROES
({)ll%) 0) F~CETHEMUSIC
m LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
a CIJ TICTACOOUGH
(]) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
\W NEWS
.
(fil DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 (1) ZOLA LEVITT
(I) ALL IN THE FAMILY
CIJ IN SEARCH OF
m COUNTRY ROAOS
a ({) JOKER' S WILD
(]) OICKCAVETTSHOW
.
$100,000NAME THAT TUNE
MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT ·
18 NASHVILLE ON THE.
Jll)AD
8:00 m UBUCKROGERSINTHE25th
CENTURY When a gala ct ic crea ·
lure that turns people into zomb ies
pursues the helpteaa Co lonel
W ilma Deering . no o ne believes
Buck Roge rs ' claim that the
'myth ic al : vorvon really &amp;kists ..
(Be peat; 60 mins .)
ill MISSIONAIRES IN ACTION
ffi MOVIE ~ DRAMA I , • .,., " Nunz:lo"
IIl MOviE ·!COMEDY) " " .,.,
" Lover Come Back" 1961
({), lJ%) 18 MORK AND MINDY
Think ing the Air Force is a travel
club , Mark dona a uniform andrecrui ts M indytoaccompanyhim ona
at range secret m i as ion at the site of
a nuc lear accident. (Repeat )
m ORAL ROBERTS
. a Cil\W THE WALTONSO ii,ia's
alarming concern over the defense
plant workers' unatten ded chi ldren
prompts her to o p en a day ca re
center at home . (Repeat ; 60

devises a crazy scheme to smoke
out the culprits. (Repeat)

~~

. $399°0

4 DRAWER
WALNUT CHEST

DIVING
CHAMPIONSHIPS
World ·Class divers from more than
1a nations co nverge for high·
bounding springboard competition

haa been bugged -- and Benson

AIR CONDITIONERS
AS MUCH AS '70 00 OFF REG. PRICE

Is

h R Ph
Charlts Rifth.·. R.
"'"""' McCullo
ug , ·HanntnQ
· . , R· ""
· Rooald
Mon tttruSa t 8 :00a .rn . to'lp .m

Mason, W. Va. '

IT

Jumbles: LIMIT

NORTH

LIVING ROOM SUITE

EVENINGS' BY APPOINTMENT ONL
··
Herm•n Grete

I

r I XXJ r I

Dandy defense downs game

2 PC. EARLY AMERICAN

._

Now arrange lhe circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as suggested by the above cartoon

Answer here: TO
YeSie&lt;day·s

(!l CAN AM MIX INTERNATIONAL

m

AMANA

TRISTATE AREA

Mon., Tues.; weci., Friday &amp; sat. ·
l:30 to 5:00 Thursday tlll12 Noon

!

5HOVE;L AND WHACKEOD

1980 ZEN 1111 TV
&amp; STEREOS

MASON FURNITURE

I I I J

NOW HOeD IT. ME-L.OilUM!
YOU AlN 'T MAK IN' Ml! THe
FALL GUY! YOU 6RA6BED A

HE SAYS YOU JUMPED
DeAN AND CAU5ED HIS

W b ctl b (J)@ii!2) 1) NEWS
ill ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(,!_OINEO IN PROGRESS)

HE PU"T HIS 6U I"TAR.
IN THE FtEF'I'i:I6ER AIOI'i: ~SCAU5E
HE WANTEDTHI5.

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

PRIZE WINNERS NAMED
Eighteen members wre present at
the Tuesday morning meeting of thP.
Women's Golf Association. Prize
winners were Maxine Gaskill, Nancy Reed, Liz Cutler, and Cathy
Gard . Low-putt competition winners
were Grace Eich and Nellie Brown.
Members arc to ho a hostess group
for a reception following the Dave
Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament.

Tel~vision

Viewing

four ord1nary words.

RUN-DOWN

buy cars/' he said.

The tax savings on an $8,000
vehicle would be $200, or hall o£ the
normal tax, he said.
SeQ. Ronald L. Nabakowski, [).
Lorain, said the sales tax cut could
stimulate sales o£ foreign cars,
having no effect on the state's 78,000
laid-of£ auto workers.
Van Meter's amendmt!ht was
defeated 18-13 before the budget
balancing bill was approved and
sent to the House.
All favorable votes on the amendment were cast by Republicans,
although two - Sens. Sam Speck,
New Concord, and Oakley C. Collins,
Ironton - opposed it.

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter lo each square , to form

association.

·MASON
FURNITURE
FOR THE Bt:ST-DiiALS JNnie

O"N

1ffllff.\O fii})l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~~ &lt;!&lt;

UT ONCE HIS
ARE OUT
OF SIGH1': WILLIE

day to 19.43 tons, according to the

~--

..

I

Coal production up in 1979

Bani-Sadr.•.
(Cont inued from page 1)

pag ~

" pow ~wow, "

rejected.
Sen. Jerome Stano, D-Parma,
mentioned a 25 percent boost in the
sta te's wholesale tax on beer. But he
declined to propose it formally.
Sheridan, among other things,
me~otioned an end to a new tax credit
that homeowners may claim for improving their proper)y or cancellation of the exemption that
magazines and newspapers have
from Ohio sales tax.
Meshel ended the di~cussion by
ca lling for a vote on the r~vised bill.

reminder presented

Meigs Cunty Auditor Howard
Frank reminds Meigs Countians of
new regulations regarding house
!r;tiler tax payments.
Frank reports the certificate of
title to a house trailer is to be stamped at the time of the first payment
o£ the trailer tax and it is required
that taxes owed prior to a transfer of
a certificate of title be collected.
Upon the receipt of an application
to transfer ownership of a house
trailer, the clerk o£ the court o£common pleas is not to issue any cer·
ti£icate of title which does not contain or have attached an endorsement of the county treasurer

(Conti nued from

Jaw, which Begala said will save the
state "millions of dollars."
Senate Finance Chairman Harry
Meshel, D-Youngstown , who said he
was not in on the top level budget

wx in ludf for new cHr purchases for
6() days. His amendment, while
costing the state an estimated $12
million in revenue during July and
August, would help dealers' clear inventories before the 1981 models roll
into .!:ihowrooms, he said.
"It's not enough for us to sit hert~
Ullking about dividing up shor·
Ulges," he said. ''Unless we do
sometbjpg, the worst IS yet to
conn!."
The proposal was endorsed by
most of his GOP colleagues.
But several Democrats, including
Finance Chairman Hqrry 11\eshel of
Youngstown, said there were no
assurances it would boost auto sales.
"Many people are unemployed
and they don't have the money to

COLU MBUS, Ohio tAPJ
Arguments 'uvcr how to handle the
st.at~'s current revenue pinch have
taken a new twi~t. with " senator
suggesting temporary tax cuts.
But the effort was rejected in tne
upper chamber Wednesday, after
lively debate and a majority's
opinion that the federa l, and not the
state government, is the only. one
that actually can spur the economy.
The discussion came as the Senate
approved 28-3 and ·sent the House a
bill cutting back and delaying state
spending and obligations to deal
witll a $266 million budget shortfall
expected in the new fiscal year starting July L
If the House approves the proposal
tllen it, along with austerity moves
announced by the administration of
Gov. James A. Rhodes, assertedly
will enable the state to make up all
but about $17 million of the deficit.
Leaders of the De mocratcon troll~d Legislat.ure say they hope
the national economy will recover
sufficiently to make up that amount
a nd head of£ future budget
problems.
Recent drops in auto sales have
cut into revenues from the sales lax,
and are the biggest single reason for
the current problem.
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, RAshland, offered a n amendment to
stimulate auto sales by cutting tbe
sUite's 4-cenl'l-on-the-dollar sales

DICKTRAr.Y

(12)

•

•
ABC

NEWS

~~=LATEMOVIE'THEJEF· ,

�1()-The Datly Senhnel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 1 hursday June 19 1980

11- TheDailySentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Thursday JuneJ9 1980
ll

Oilseed
buildup
•
continues

put

WASHINGTON tAP 1 - A IJUJiuup
mlhe wt rid s otlseed supply appeals
to he ~onlt u ng "tlh lillie stgt f
mea 111 g u
levelu g oH soot
pusstb Illy of u further pn e c1 u1 d
fut U S soybean fa1 n ers tf the~
bnng 1 a1other bwnper crop tt s
year
1 he Agr culture Department satd
Wednesday that world pruducl101 uf
u !seeds - mamly soybeans but
also mcludmg a vanely of other
crops - m 197~ now IS eshn aled
al l77 ~ nulhun metnc tons
1 hal sa decline n prospects from
a n onlh ago prunauly because of
lower soybean est mat\,s f01
Argent na and Brat I t wu leadmg
con pehlors of Amencan soybean
farn ers 111 I c wm ld market
Butllei epurladded
The growth n world con
sumplwn of mlseed products IS
sluw1 g a1d 197~0 use IS not ex
peeled to absorb the est1 mled out

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Clyde J Morlan Ethel M Morlan
to Judith A Sams 203 22 acres
Orange
Danny L Meadows Karen Sue
Meadows to Commercial and
Savmgs Bank Parcels $47 000
Rutland Middleport
Thelma 0 Campbell to Southern
Ohio Coal Co 45 acres Sale111
Myrtle Warner to Dale G Warner

AsH ft!sult t.:anyuvcl stu ks

f

bull uiisuuds a1 d uJisued pi Jducts
are uxpectcd l
se substw l ally
l11s ~cat Mud uf ll c bUildup "'II
be 111 U S suyhea1s cullu seed sui
fl \&lt; er seed a I d&gt; yhea1 uti
Canau a 1apescL'&lt;i a td B az ha1
soybean a1 d so) be a I uJI sl &gt;eks a Ie
also Ilk ely to expa1 d
A n elr c tun ts abuut2 20~ pound&gt;
and equal lu 36 7 busl els
f
suybeai s
The record U S soybea n harvest
last year - part of the 197~ 1\0r!d
pruduclwn total
was about 61 7
nu ll o n elnc tm s or more tl a 65
percent of the "u ld output of 94 5
null 01 tons
All told as ai IllustratiOn of the
mpacl of U S SU) hea s the crop
accounted fur about 41 pe1 ce 1t of all
otlseed produced m the world ml979BO accord ng to the report s f gures
It s sltll t o early to predtcll980-

Markham Flemmg I 32 acres Bed
ford
John Dunham Janet Dunham to
S W Jack Dnlllng Co Right of
Way ColumbLa
Hubert Pullms H P Pullins to
Hubert Charles Pullins Fredrtck
Eugene Pullms
I 06 acres
Pomeroy
H P Pullins Hubert Pullins to
Paul Russell Pullms Int m Lots
Mtddleport
Dav d e; Marc nko LLSa Mar
ctnko to Jeffrey W Marc1nko Peggy
J Marctnko Lot 12 Weatherman s
2nd Orange
Mary Frances Cowa1 to Ruth
Runyon lnl m parcel Bedford
Floyd W Carson Esther L Car
son to R Gene Brasel Deed of

Lot 2() Crook s Add Syracuse
Hazel M Dunlavy to Grace M
Warner George H Warner 10
acres Bedford
Floyd M Carson Esther T Car
son to R Gene Brasel Parcels
Rutland
Delbert H Romme to W !hom N
SNowden 17 acres Rutland
Clifford Jacobs Mtldred Jacobs to
Edward G Moore Kathryn T
Moore 52 acre Salls bury
Milo Hutchison Betty A Hut
chison to Township Trustees of
Rutland Township 2 18 acres
Rutland
Guy Hysell Ruby Hysell to Guy
Hysell Ruby Hysell Parcels
Rutland
Charles F Zetgler to Madalyn

pttces at the farm 111 198~1 at bet
wcet $5 75 and $7 a bushel

81 't lsceu utput 1cltably
t SH td
H &gt;ICVCJ il ill a l~ s s r us plw
lu ~ 1 lcnttuJ s UJ d p1 ubablc yLelds
c ' b cd "Ill II end prt jeclt n ti
II c f retgl tlseeds c1up m pi es a
198().81 harvest somewhat heluw the
u p ccedc 1lcd 197~ level
1 hus tl e repurl added woJ ld
prududwn of utlsecds u the year
a/ ead could rat ge between 162
nulhun a1 d 178 m llwn melrtc tors
depcndm~ on actual plant ngs and
\leather cur dtl on~
Accord g lu rece nt USDA
calculal u 1s Amcncan farmers
n ay average about$6 10 a bushelfur
last years soy bean harves~ an
overage based on pnces over the en
lue 121 IUntl 1a1kelmg year that
will end Aug 31 That compares wtth
$6 66 a bushelm 1978-79
1he pnce outlook - as well as
p1 uduclwn - s extremely fuzzy for
the comtng year but USDA analysts
currently are pru]ectmg soybean

rallroods arc askmg gram farmers
alu1 e to dtg a little deeper and come
up w th a Julher fJOO nullion
Bergland satd These same far
mers are already paying more than
$1 btllton a year In fre1ghl charges
and that fur a quality of rail serv1ce
whtch ts quesltonable Enough IS
enough

WASHINGlON
For the ftrsl
tune 111 two years Agnc ullure
Secretary Bob Be1 gland has
prutested a proposed nat onw1de rail
fre1g ht rate ncreuse
Bergland m a statement tssued
Wcdt esday satd the htke bemg con
stdered by the Interstate Commerce
Gun mtsstun ts
mequ1lable
dLScrmunalory too high and comes
at the wrung tm1e
In other recent rate mcreases he
satd ra Iroads were JUSIIfted m the
mleresl uf mau taiomg service to
farmers
But the ratlroads now are askmg
for a 10 percent addttton to gra n
fre1ghl b1lls start ng on July 12 he
satd Rat! rates already have gone
up 24 percent smce Apnl1979 he ad
ded
For JUSl th s one ncrease the

Correction Rutland
Roher! G Pickett Elotse PICkett
to Madalyn Markham Flemmg
Rtghl of Way Bedford
Branch
Madolyn Flemmg
Flen mg Robert G P1ckett Elmse
P1cketl to Frank Herald Jr Right
of Way Bedford
Dorothy F Wrtght to Ann W Dex
ler Belly J Carl sle 75 acre
Rutland
Maunce E Durst Marcella G
Durst to Roland H Durst Bonme
Jean Durst 5 acres Salisbury
Adolph Saelens to Wtlham R
Sprague Emtly Sprague S &gt;;, Lot
299 MIddleporl
Dons J Haynes to David A Lipscom b Georgtna R Upscomb 3 95
acres Sal sbury

Pet
Assump on
Beaut ful large br ck ranch
styl e
ow ut t es
3
bedrooms
2 2
bath s
f repla ce fu I basement
fam l y
oo m a r con
d toner 3 car garage
Baum Add t on Me gs Co

985 4169

8 Room House on ap
pro x mately 2 acres St Rt

24 Lots of extras 992 7255
Assumab e mortgage 9 2
Pet J bedrooms 2 baths
full basement
2 ca
garage Rlggscrest Manor

614 985 4329

Pub! c Not ce

ORDINANCE
NO 515

Fuc ng and regulat ng tne

that mav be charged
CvnceColumba
Gas of Oh o

Inc

ts

successors

or

a5s•gns for gas to the
VIllage ot Pomero',' Oh o

and to 11s nhab1tants for

the per od of Two (2) Years
from and after the effect ve

of th s ordinance

BE T ORDA NED BY
THE COONCIL OF THE
V LLAGE OF POMEROY
OHIO
SECT ON 1 Thai to the

perod of One ( 1 Year
from and after the effect ve

date at th s orq nance the
max mum

pr ce wh ch
Columb a Gas of Oh o nc
ts suc cessors or ass gns
shal
be perm tted
a
c harge
for
and
th e
m n mum pr ce a wh ch t

or they shal be requ red to
furn sh gas to the V
Pomeroy

Mun c pal

y)

age of
Oh o

and to ts

nhab tants sha
be and
1'\e sa me s hereby t xed
for each nd v dual con

sllmer as fol ows
A

Customer Charge

of

60 per meter per month
egardless ot gas con

$4

sumed and 6 291c per 00

cub c feet per meter per
mon h f or al gas con
sumed
A
Customer Charge
for each customer each

month of Four Dollars and
S xry Cents ($4 60) sha be

made If serv ce under t h s
ra e schedule s d scan
t nued at the re~uest of
customer
he Company
shal not be under any
ob gat on to resume ser
v ce o the same customer
on he same prem ses unt
the customer has made
payment of an amount
equa to the
Customer
Cha ge for each month of
the nterven ng per od bu
not to exceed twe ve 12)

months

From and after he ex
p rat on of the aforesa d
One Year per od and fo a
further per ad of One 1)
Year
thereafte r
as
to ows
A Customer Charge of
S4 83 per meter per month
regardless of gas con

sumed and 0 063c per 100
cub c teeT per meter per
month for a I gas con
sumed
Custome
Charge
A
for each cus omer each
month of Four Dol ars and

E ghty ·three Cents $4 83 )
sha II be made f serv ce

under th s rate schedu e s
d scant nued at the equest
of customer he Company

shall not be under any

obi ga t on to resume ser
v ce to the same customer
on the same prem ses unt I
the customer has made
payment of an amount

eQual to the customer
Charge tor each month at
the ntervenlng per ad but

not to exceed

welve (12

months
lihe abOve rates exc ude
gas costs and the Oh o
Grpss Rece pts Tax All

bills rendered pursuant to

this ordinance sha t be ad
Ju~ted to reflect the effect
of the Oh o GrQss Rece pts
Tax and are sub ect tq

decrease or increase n ac

cordance w th the Gas
COST Recovery Prov sons
of the Company s
Rules
and Regula! ons or t Je
wfth the Pub c Ut t es
Comm Iss/on of Oh o
SECTION 2 That t sex
P!'HSIY cond tloned the ser
vi~' to be rendered bY sa d
Company Its successors or
as,lgns pursuant to th s or
dlnance shall be pr mar ly
tor domestic and com
mercia! purposes and that
"rv1c~ shall not t&gt;e ex
te~ to other consumers
of dllterent classes unt at
ter all reasonable
requirements tor domestoc
and commercial purposes
are tully met and thiS
ptov/slon shall be b nd ng
upon said Company ts

successors

or

ass gns

during each month of each
year but durlnq any mon
th or r.ear aub ect to the
forego ng 1Jml1atlons and
after compliance w rh the
toregoJng provls ons gas
1)141~ be delivered to any

Publ c Not ce

Publ c Not1ce

SIDLER COMMISSIONEO
SAN ANTON10 Tex
Harold E
Sidler Ill son of relLred Air Force
Chief Master Sergeant and Mrs
Harold E Stdler Jr of Route 1 Apple Grove W Va has been com
nusstoned a second lieutenant m the
U S Air Force upon graduatiOn
from Officer Trammg School at
Lackland Air Force Base here
The lieutenant was selected
lluough competition exanunation
for attendance at the school and wtll
no\\ go to Langley Atr Force Base
Va forduty
A 1975 graduate of Tabb Htgh
School Tabb Va the lieutenant
recetved a bachelors degree m 1979
from Marshall Umverstty Hun
tmgton W Va

o he consume
and ad
d t ona
c asses o con
sume s at each t mes and
under such cond ons and
fo such ates as may be
ag eed upo be ween he
Company and such con
sumer or cons um ers

ta n ng 12 70 acres more or

less

Also the to ow ~g
descr bed real estate
bounded and described as

follows S tuated n the
County of Me 1gs State of
Oh a and n 01 ve Town
sh p, to wit Be ng s tuatec'

SEC T ON 3 The te ms

and co nd t ons of th e ser
v ce to be rende ed sha
co fo m w h and be sub
1ec
o
he Rules and
Regulat ens tor turn sh ng
gas se v ce of the Company
on le w h and approved
by the Pub c U
es Com
m ss on o Oh o

In Lo No 103 Sect on 9
Town 4 Range 1 begin
n ng at t~e northeast cnr

ner of Luther Barnhart s
Japd thence south 77° 15

s or

SEC T ON 4 Tha the gas

urn shed or de ve red pu
suant to he e ms at h s
ord nance
by the sa d
Company sha
have an
ave age heat ng va ue of
1 000 B

sh

hermal un t s

pe cu b c too tor any con
secu t ve Tw el ve 12 mon h
pe od sub 1ec t o a var an
ce of no m ore th an f ve 5
pe ce n upwa d a down
wa rd
SECT ON 5 n H eeven
the S at e of Oh a o he
Mun c pa t y
s h ou d
he ea er mpose a ta x
upon the Com pan y that s
no now mposed or shou d
he eaf er ncrease he rat e
of any ta x now mposed
upon the Company above
the ta x ra e now ex st ng
other ha n the rat e on
p ope ty sted n he ea
es a e t ax I s f and
dup ca fe
hen he ra es
p esc r bed n Sect on 1
sha ll be ncreased o he ex
ten
necessa ry
o com
pe nsate the Com pany for
the ncrease n cos t due to
such new ta x or h g her ax
ra e Th s sha l be dorre n
the f o ow ng ma nner
a) f the new ta x or
h ghe tax ate s comp u ed
n d r ec t r e a on o gas
so d or revenues re ce ved
for the sa e ot gas the rates
se for h he r e n sha be ad
usted
o th e ex en
necessa ry to r ecompense
the Company for
he
amount her eof
b)
t the new ta x. o
h ghe
ax rate s no
related d ec y to Iii! as so ld
a o r evenues ece ved fa
the sa le of gas then he
to a do lar eft ec thereo
upon th e cos of serv ng gas

by the campanr

PASSE D
6 16 60

C a ence Andrews

ATT EST

Jane wa on
6 19 'lb 1

shal hen bed v ded by the

lo al sa es made a the
typ es of custom ers cove ed
by th s ord nance dur ng
the same twe ve month
per od and th e rat es
prescr bed he en shall be
cor r espond ngly adJUSted
The adJUStment of the
ra tes prescr bed n rh s Or
d nance as prov ded n

subparagraph Ia ) and Cbl

above shall be made by
round ng he tna lhema ca l
r esu 1 of the compu at ons
so presc r bed to th e nearest
one qua te ce nt &lt; 4} pe
o e nuu~a a cuo c teet
The ad usted rate sha I
be
aced n effec and

r

shal a ppl y a all meter

r ead ngs occ urr ng on and

alter the effect ve date of

the statute ord nance
reso ut on pursuan
wh ch the new fa)( or
creased ta x rate s

or
to
In
m

pose2
Wr tten not f cat on of
the adlusll)lent shall be

ser)t t o he Clerk of Counc
of the Mun c pal ty as

qu ck/y as pass bl e atte

th e effect of t he new tax o
h ghe
tax rate can be
determ ned

SECT ON 6 fha t any or

d nance or reso ut on or
part of an ord nance or
r eso ut on
in cons stenf
her ew th s t o the ex tent of
such ncOI1S stency hereb y
r epea led
SECTION I [hat ShOUld
any sec t on or part of a sec
r on or prov s on ot a sec
t on of th s ord nance be
decla ed vo d fh e rt:ma n

der at th s ord nance shalt
o beat ected her eby

south 2" 30 west 404 teet to
J B To rrence southeast
corner thence north 66" 15
west 920 feet to center a
sa d road lead ng frorr
Reedsv lie to Joppa then
ce north 150 30 west 16
f eet a ong sa d road then
ce north
15 east 89 feet

so

CLERK

thence north 79" east 33l

c

fee

place of beg nn ng and
be ng 83 teet along High
way No 124 as recorded n
Vo ume 140 Page 531
Melw;; County Deed Recor
ds
REFERENCE DEED
Vo 173.._ Page 515 Meigs
CountyueedRecords

3

pra sed at S6 866 66 Trac•
I $22 500 oo Tract 11 and
snoo 00 Tract Ill Terms
of sale casn
James J Proffitt
SherIf of
Me gs County Oh o
(5) 15 22 29 (6/ 12 19. 6tc

Dan els 742 2951

Sa d rea l estate is ap

Pamt &amp;Embroider

thence north 13o nortt

150 feP.t t,p place of beg n

n ng

acre

Pub c Not ce

-FOR SALE-

The rea l estate ot the late
v ctor H Lethe s tuated
n Sal sbury Townsh p
Me ~s Coun y Oh o con
ta n ng 5 acres more or
ess and ocated on S ar
cher Road as s descr bed
n deed record ed n vo

259 Page 4!11 of the Deed
Records ol Me gs County
Oh o and upon wh ch s

s tuated a two story fr ame

con ra n ng 8 40/ 10C

more or ess

Terms of sa le Cash upon
del very of deed a nd ea
es ate tax!!s w I be pro
rated as of the date he
deed
s
de l v e red
Possess on n twentr days
For nformat on cal Frank

W Parle J

at 992 5 32

Edw n P Le the t
Executor of the Las
w and Testamento
V ctor H Le th e 1
Deceased

REFERENCE DEED
Vol 172 Page 567 Me g•
County Deed Records
TRACT TWO
Parcel No 1 The
to ow ng
real
estate
s tuated in the County of
Me gs n the State of Oh a

(6) 9 26 2tc

Publ c Not ce

lNTHE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
COMMUNITY BANK ET
AL
Pia ntlffs
vs
EARL L FAUDI!EE ET
AL
Defendants
No 17 420
NOTICE OF
SHERIFF S SALE
AND PROOF OF
PUBLICATIONIn r,ursuance of an order
of sa e to me d rected frorr
the Clerk of Court of Com
mon Pleas of Me gs Coun
ty Oh a I w I offer tor salE
,;.

publ c auct on

at the

.door of the Courthouse r
Pomeroy Me gs County
Oh o on the 21st day ot
June 180 at 10 oo A M thE
tollowtng real estate
TRACT
ONE
The following described
rea
estate s tuated ir:
Meigs County Oh o and r
0 lve Townsh ip to wit
Sect on No 9 Lot 100 Town
No ~ Range No 11 anc
beg nn ng at an ron pin a
the northwest corner Of Ian
ds of Luther and Agne
Barnhart

wh ch point

south 88 ,o east 3 70 cha n
and north 9" east 2 cha n
from the southeast corner
of \tore Jot thence north
7 07 cha ns to the north line
of Lot 103 thence east
along the north 1 ne of Lot
No T03, 17 66 chatns to Jan
ds of AIQ a M /Is thence
south 8 08 cholns to ands oi
Arthur and Chloe M /Is
thence no,th 82" west 5 2~
cha ns to lands of Luther
and Agnes Barnhart then
ce north 72 ,o west 5
cha ns

thence south 12 :12o

west 5 chains thence south
7212° west 3 85 chains to the
place of beg nn ng con

th 1 ne ot sa d lands of Belle
R ce 712 rods to the west
s de of the pub c road or
highway known as 2&lt;18
now known as 124h thence
north atonq sa d lghway
5 2 to a stake thence west
7 , rods to the west line of

lands owned by Arthur
Mlilsr thence south along
the said west line of Arthur
Mills 5'12 rods to the place
of beginning Sa d parcel
containing

41 •

square

rods
Parcel No 2
The
following described real
estate situated n the Town
ship of 0 lve n the County
ot Meigs State of Ohio and
n 100 Acre LOt NO 103 of
the Oh o Company s Pur
chase

and

more

par

t cular/y described os
follows Beg Inn ng on the
west side of the r9ad
leading from Long Boltom
to Hock ngport at the
southeast corner of lot for

merly owned by Arthur
M lis thence south on tne
west side of said road 53
rods more or less thence
west 712 rods to a stake
thence north 50 to the
southwest corner of a Jot
formerly owned by Arthur

have

s

Ia 16 one pole perch d
Br ng own ba

Pr zes tor

House and Ya d Sa e 26

Ra road Street M dleport
down

by

he

Cloth ng

Ma na)

Avon

do IS

g assware
what nets
some turn ture r ngs etc
Fo ow the s gns a n or
sn ne
123

Park

Dr ve

P easant

Pont

Wednesday

refreshments The e w II
be .a membersh p ch cken
barbecue al 6 30 p m Any

Thursday F dav and Sat
from 8 3 Furn ture arge
cloth ng mat ern ty baby
clothes formals

quest ons call Roy Howell
al992 5421

REFR GERATOR

boys and g rl and free

FEED ONE ADULT ~
$7 06 weekly nc/udes one
pound meat da y cho ce of

e gh fresh vegetab es and
gra ns Free deta s wr te

L D D P 0 Box 40 tAl
Tuppers P a ns Oh a 45783
Happy Ad,~s_ __
CLEAN UP YOUR ACT

S

Saturday s a great t me to
get those whee s cleaned
up at a car wash on t he

M dd eport F rst Bapt st

Church park ng at corner

of Palmer Seven h Sts Sat
9 3 Sponsored by Youth
Fel owsh p

7432

fxtA6a'8~
Show you "' of v brant coo
w h th s go ous qo t
p, n and emb•o de br ant
butte I es to ght up you who e

bed oom Palte n 7432 l ssue
t onsfe of 24 mot Is fo
60 ~ x89 • qu to/ 12 blocks
cha ti d ect ons
Sl 75 fo each patte111 Add 501
each patte n o f siC ass a
ma and hand ng Send to
Allee Btooks
3 ~
NeediOCJaft Dtpl
(Insert name of )OUr paper)
lltx 163 Old Ciltlsea Sll New
Yodt NY 10011 Pnnl Namt
Address Zip Pattern Numbor
EXC liNG New /980 NEEDlE
CRAFT CATALOG w th Oie 170
des gns n g eat va ely of c ails

3I ee patte ns ns de Send $1 00
132-Qu/11 011&amp; nak
$1 50

Ill Add t Bloct Qliiib $150
130 Swulln-Sins 3&amp;.5&amp; $1 50
129-Qukk t ~ r,. ..,,.. $1 50
121-PakhwO.. Qallb
$1 50
127 Alpans n DoilttS $150
126-l:llftr FlowtJS
$1 50
125 Pill( ~ulb
$1 50
124-Gitts n Otnamtftb $1 50
n Patch Qa~b$1.50
Putt Qailb $1 50
Shilw.olts
$1 50
NtedltJIIInt
$1 50
Ft11J Qttilb
$1 50
Is:r~:~,c.och•t
s1 50
113
G1fb
$1 50
110 16 l 11J Rup
Sl 50
IOHtw
l
""''
$ISO
101 lnsllnl Moc11me
$1 50
tOI&gt;Instant F11h1on
$1 S"o
105 IMIIIIt Ctochtt
$1 50
10315 Qliiib lor Todl) $1 50
101 ~utll Coiltcllon
Sl 50

sate Two bath cen tral
heat and a r woodbu ne
complete ca rpe ted huge
two car garage and
workshop
Located
n

Syacuse Ca / 992 3502
LOCATED

stools

Old

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE tro n ng
11

as a young bus ness person
and earn good money plus
some great g fts as a Sen
t ne route carr er Phone
us r ght away and get on
the e/ g b I ty st at 992

2 56 or 992 2157

VETERANS I you can
spare 39 davs a year t
cou ld be worth over $1 400
to you Plus free tu ton
ass stance to any Wes
v rg n a college or ac
cred ted bus ness o trade
schoo
cont nue your
ret ement
~enef ts He p
your commun y n t mes of
emergency Th Nat anal
Guard needsyour
ex
per ence Good pay good

Truck dr ver
ers
sk dde

t mber cut
ope ators

Tr State Ch pp ng Inc 992
3661

u I toes 992 7727

**~*~*********

lt~~$$$1

: MONEY MONEY

k tchen

cab nets glasses d shes
cloth ng rrl see laneous
terns Cons ruct on too s

June 20 21 Route 33 Co R
19 west 992 6156

6

Lostand Found

BLACK Ch huahua Salem
Center a ea CAll 742 2146
S25 rewa rd

TUPPERS Pans on Route

7 below Ashland Stat on on
r ght June 20 and 21 Lots

at

1 tile

boys clothes 6 9

months up to s ze 3

do odds and ends
W
Pane ng floor T le and
ce I ng t le
Call Fred

w
wall papr ng 992 3760
W I mow lawns and

sport at on Cal 742 3074

Re s dence 2 W Center
street Mason W Va Rain
cancels

AUTOMOB
SURANCE

m es

from

Three

Chester

on

Scout Camp Road Lowell
B ng s Wednesday hrough

mortgages
mortgages ~
refinance*
Call Com It
Mortgage:
~tServices
arl*.
ltGalhpohs, OhiO at~
:446 1517 for more~
ltinformatton andlt
!!:Your appomtmi!nt

1973

for Sale
Fa rpo nt 14x65 2

1971

Cameron

l4x65

1971

F eetwood

14x65 3

bedr

bdr ba th

2

:1

1971 Shakespear

1965 Yanor 12x52 2 bedr
1968 F eetwood 12x63 2
Bdr
8 &amp; S MOB LE HOME
SALES PT PLEASANT
wv 304 675 4424
1969

12x60

2

pa d 1 k d acc epted No

N

can

eel ed'
Lost
your
operator s license' Phone

992 2 43

17

TWO bedroom tra er
A dult s only
Browns
Tra er Court Ca 1992 3324

3 AND 4 RM torn shed ap
Is Phone 992 5434

o 992 7142 before 3 00

8

21

Bustness

BI!AOFORD Auct oneer
Complete Serv rc,e Phone

CASH Loan never repay

Opportun ty

tree detal s A L Lutton
P 0 Box 766 Gall pot s
Oh

9

wanted to Buy
Iron and brass beds old

23

Profess onal
Servtces

turn ture
desks
gold
r ngs
1ewelry
s lver
dollars sterl ng etc wood

Deluxe Ford I berg lass top
per to I t e ght foot bedt
Ca/1992 7201
J and F Backhoe Serv ce
L censed and bonded Sep
tic tank nsta/ at on Water

and gas I nes Excave~t ng
work and trans t layout

Call992 7201

Call

Manor a pts Cal '192 7767

I bedroom tu r n shed apar
tmen $ 25 month ut I t es

not nc luded 992 2288
Two

Jl
Homes for Sole
NEW lor 4 Bedroom home
2

WILL BUY Old tran
sm sslo~s
botter/es

eng nes or screp metals

lis only 1suqeallon but Jet 1 etc Call245 9168
not rorget who 1 making Itt

- - - ---

bedroom

2

baths

rec

room

flreploce
basement
garage At Morning star
Hts Ll!l! Construction 99 2
loiS~ or 992 5ol55

turn shed

apartm ent 992 5434
3129 or 992 5914

992

Space for Rent

46

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy Large ots Call

Tra ler Lots for rent n
Grea t Bend area new
br dge s t e and acros from
Par and Grade Sc hool $50

and $60 pe man h 1 304
273 3623 I 614 843 2353
Merchandise

51

c kets
June II vs s t Lou s
sel at d scoun 949

Starcraft

Noth ng too large
guns pocke

Also
4

Wanted to Buy

d ame e 10
on largest
end $ 12 p er ton Bund ed
sla b S1U pe on Del vered

a Oh o Pa l e Co

Rt 2

ANTIQUES

FUR

N TURE

ch na

Pomeroy 99'1 '16tl9

Gosne y

H LLCRES T

KENNELS

Boa rd ng all breeds C ea n
ndoor outdoor ta c I es
A so
AKC
reg st ere d
Dobermans 614 446 7795

HUMANE

SOC E TY

Adopt a hOmeless pet
Hea thy shots wormed
Donat ons requ red Y92
6260 noon 7 p m
except
Tuesday emergen cy calls

&gt;

GOLD AND
CO IN S OF TH E WORLD
R NGS
JEWELRY
STERL ING SILV ER AND
M SC
TE MS PAY NG
REC ORD
H GH
H GHEST
UP TO DATE
PR CES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBE R
SHOP MIDDL EPORT
OH 0 OR CALL 992 3476
L vest.::oc,.k'-~­
P gs for Sale Cal 643 4734
Re g s ter ed

Horses

and panes and r d ng
les so ns
E veryth n g
mag nable n horse equ p
men
Bl a nk et s
be lts
boots etc Engl sh and
Weste n
Ruth Re ev es

l6 4) 698 3290
REG STEREO

Reg stered
Hereto d Bull

618 E Matn

57

Instruments

- Card of Thanks
"Mtmorl•m
)-Anntunctmtnfs

42-MC»b 1 Homes
fo Rtnt

4-G vHwily

«-AtMr menr or • tn

i-HappyAdl
._Lot land Found

u-Fitooms
...._s,.ct
or Rtnt

4

n

I -

n-

IUS Mil

Opportun

tv

22- Monty to LINin

li-Ru E1 a •
31- Rtl tort

4P M Dallv
2 Noon S1tuttiiV

tctr Moml•v

1.

and

1973

1979
p5

1975 MUSTA NG II
body by uns good
Ca 199'J. 5 86

Rough

27 mpg

Call (614) 992 99J 2
Po

o

Curb InflatIon.
Pay Cash fot
Classlfleds and
Savel II

Wr te your own ad and order by ma I w th th s
coupon Cance your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundab e

lntormat on

Loans

-Addons and

5% down on
balance F.HA 265 Sub-

remodl ng
-Roof ng and

SJdy Program FHA 245

I

I -Hometm,rovemtnts
12--P umblntl IXCIIYif nt

ll-EII;C.\IIf fll
14-1! Mtr Cll

I Rlfr gent Ofl
Is-Genera Ho~ul nt
N-MHRtHr
17-Upfto ,_,.

Jdan
•days

AG1 "'"" nt

••

~tthe

S zes from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Open M W F 9 00 to 1 oo

- Ptumbong and

::;

put

n

the

T sh rt and novelty
sh rts tor pol t cans ball

tams busonesses or on
Shtrts S4 oo Each

We

(Free Estomatesl

n

99 2 6215

VC YOUNG 111
or

) For Sale
) Announcement
) For Rent

Cfwlr11

STILl PAYING

V1n~ and Alum1num

S2CJIDFOR&amp; UP

Siding

cARPENTER's
DANCE

SILVER
DOllARS
02801
94~

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

sTuDio

'ih~~'Zs~~~\~~~~!

Call tor Free S d ng
Estomate 949 2801 or
949286° No Sunday
calls
6 13 1 mo

Up Is July 14th
BALLET TAP
&amp;JAZZ
For More tnformatoon
CALL 949 2710

Mosl Dates
No Sunday Calls

S

Summerio~rollment

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
eV CHISEL
PLOW

rn6nlmum CaalllnH\I•nce

M.-. • Home ntn ai'MI YA d 11111 a eacctttted only wlttt cash w "'
onler U Ctftt cMrtt tor Ida e.1 rylftll loJC NurniMr In C.Jrt of Tltt
Sen lnef

G Carpet C ean ng

L£0

MORRIS

W II pour concre te lay
bock and b ck Ca l 992

Rutland 0
Ph 742 2455
S 21 1 mo

3406

These cash rates

nclude d scount
17
18
19
20

W
do r emade ng
roof ng pa nt ng plumb ng
and e ect F r ee Est mates
Ca ll Cha les s ncla r 985

21

Floor ng ce I ng panel ng
doors and w ndows. also

' 21

4

25

5
6
7

26
27

6

29

9

))

10 ." - - - - - -

31 _ _ _ _ __

AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

SERVING SOUTHEASTERft OHIO SINCE
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE,

FOR All YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS

CAU. US.

992-2342
IXMNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

GOOD SUPPLY

SHRUBS

28

&amp; TREES

32 -~---

3. _ _ _ _ __

34 _ __ __
35 _ _

DOWNI

pa nt ng 992 2759

23
24

_ _:__

20% OFF

POMEROY
LANDMARK
MaanSt
Pomeroy 992 2181

MIDDUPORT, OHIO
84

Efectncal

8S

&amp; Refngerataon

SEW ING
Repa

mak es

MACHINE

s

serv ce

992 2284

all

The

Fab c Shop
Pomeroy
Au hor zed S nger Sales
and Serv ce We sharpen
!:)c ssors

General Haul ng

WILL HAUL l mestone and
gravel Also lime haul ng
and spread ng Leo Morns

Truck ng Phone 742 2ol55

=----

thin cctnstcu "' tl•v• w 11 bt cNrfM at the Dv

In memon Card ot Thlnk1 aNI Oblhia y • c"ts..,. word P 10

&amp;

6309or742 22 11

2
3

12
13
14
15
16

ALMOS)

Even ngs &amp; Weekends

S eam
cl eaned
Free
est mate
Reasonab l e
rat es
Sea chgua d 992

you II

pnnt

anyth ng on ALMOST
anyth ng
Ph 614 949 2358

proper

f

Custom
PShopnnt

l ~======~S~e~r~V;I:~:~;5l:m:o::::-n~~~~~~~~~~~~==========~6~1~8~1~m~o~

ty ed t or re eel
any ad Your ad wil be

class f cat on

2591
6 15 tfc

dlv•duals

w

~

843

0

electrtcal work

w

107 Sycamore St

Ph 614

work

- Concrete work

ByAppotntment
Othce992 7544
Home992 6191

111 3 Bo• 54
Rac1ne Oh

gutter

Gradual Payment Mort
other T mes

I'
I

class

11

"'
"'"
'"
I!Kh word tl"•r thlm n mum 1S words 11 • ctft 1 per wortl perctay

1 days

Utility Bu1ldrngs

~==P~o~m~e~r~o~O~H~==n~tr~Po~m=er=o~y=O=h~="~2:7:3:14~+~~====:;::;6~16~ti~c~

22

Co~ah

tday

I

No Down Pay

ment Federal Hoosmg
Loans 3% down on
$25 000

You II get better results
I you descr be tully
g ve pr ce The Sent nel

oRep~~

..
...•

$25 ()()() 00

SMALL

''YOUfiiGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automat c

LANDMARK II
SERVICE STATION,!
I

--------------------.,..,

Rates and Other lnformataon

•

11 11,~ In::~;~t3~a;~s

I
I

I

s tes
From 30x30

5 29 1 mo

Super. or Vtnyl Products

tratned frontend 1
alignment
spe I
ctahst
1

Bela

Farm Burld1ngs

Eugene long (614) 843-3322

DISCOUnt

Hor zan automat c
pb
am fm st ereo
casse tte p ayer 992 2580 at
ter 4 p m

1972

) Wanted

basement 5 rooms arid

Call for

51 tic

mo

ALL STEEL

Servmg your area tor 25 years
Call Now for Large Savmgs
For Free Estt male Ca II

he OW

eSEI!VICES

want Ad Advertising
Dead tines

6 14

This Week Only
This Coupon
Worth

Camara Ca 992 7669

7._Motwcycle1J
UA11to p.,.fl
&amp; Acctuorln

Wan~

Sales service and supplies In ground and
above ground pools

Rae ne Oh
Ph 614 843 2591

22 ttc

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

check the proper box

Wantttl to luy
Tn.~cks or Sa •

n-.t.w

317tl Noble Summit Rd
Moddleport Ohio
992 S724

Rt 3 Box S4

FRONT ENd
ALIGNMENT

reserves the r ght to

U-Lots I Ac Hit

Assocl•tes

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Utility Buildrngs

VINYL SIDING

On any alignment
by Randy Car
penter
factory

e TRANSPORTATION

, -Homts tor S.•t
12-MOIM ,._.O"'fl
IO II t
U - Farmalor he
J4-lualnnl lu ld "''

DON T SAY LATER t
COULD
HAVE
BOUGHT IT OWN IT
NOWI DON'T WAITI
CALL OR COME IN TO
DAY
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland Jr
992 6191

Free Est• mates
Reasonable Pnces

SMALL

1 ---.jcoupon~---;

p s p b good cond $2 700

71---Awlot fOr S• t
n-vana&amp;4W D

ei!EAL ESTATE

SAlES
mEPOOL PEOPU

SlleS
From 30x.30

s zes from 4)(6 to ]2x40

1

99, 3854

6l-LIYtltOCk
64-Hay I G o~ln
n-SteCI&amp;Ftrt tar

U-Pro ' " ona
S. Y Cll

D BUMGARDNER

Farm Bulldrngs

All types of roof work
new or repa 1r gutters
and downspouts gu1ter
clean,ng and pa1ntmg
All work guaranteed

Call Howard
949 2862
949 ~160

I
m leage $230 Ca I 992 31 49 I
I
or 992 2705
I
1977 Chevrolet Impa a 4 I
door 350 eng am fm a c
I

t al or group of f gures
counts as a wot d Count
name and address or
phone number f used

41-F•rm lqulpmlft

eFINANCIAL

Is 1ust a lew at the
features of lh s 7 room
house Must see to ap
precfate S38 000 00
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- I Y2 story 2 4 bedroom
home with a lull base
men! lllat has been
remodeled lately N ce
Jot S25 000 00
ALL CLEARED - and
Is fairly level w th at
least 4 bu ld ng s tes
Approx 10 Acres Wo I
Subdivide $11 500 00
OLD ST RT 33" - 3
acres and a 1 story 5
room home that needs
$Qme repairs Reduced
to$6 000 00
LAND CONTRACT This 1'h story home has
3 lots alum s ding tu

ALL STEEL

ROOFING

3301 or 965 4140

1973 Datsun 4 speed Good

,.._E11u Pmtnt fo RH

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

&amp; CBitepa r
t-W•ntect To De

porch

JOHN TEAFORD
614 985 3961
6 31 mo

Pr nt one word n each

,.-M ac Me chartcllse
55-BII ld ftJIUppl I I
.u-P eta lor s. •

4--IVI nilS T • nlnt
J-Sdtoolslnst vet on
6Rad 0 TV

1 Profess onal teach•ng
cert flcate
2 Played professional
tou r naments tn Ohto W
v" Kent cl(y

Carl Reed 667 3327

H. L WRITESEL

Ten foot speed boa w th a
35 hp Mercury eng ne w th
Ira er S/50 00 Call 985

II

space below Each In

n-ca TV Rad o Equ pmMt
5l-An qual

l-lnswrance

etc

Tom Burroughs 667 6150
6 15 mo pd

Straw $ 25 a ba e

47- Wanttcl to a ...

eMEI!CHANDtSE

1 - " ' P wanted
'J-S Nit" W1nt.ct

- CLUB REPAIR-

Boats and
Motors lor Sa e

Phon•·~-----------------

S1-HouHftold GOOCh

htgh
school
students

Ca 985 4104

Hovltt or Rent

&amp;Ave ion

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

for

Playing 1tems clubs
bags balls shoes carts

FREE ESTIMATES

5-25 tfc

N NE we11k Old p gs $16 00
each

949 2M6
5 23 1 mo

Scholarsh ps pass ble

Gutter&amp;
Replacement
Wtndowsand
Roofmg

742 2328

$300

~

Beg nn ng &amp; Advanced

SIDING, SOFFIT

Construction

old Oscar Weber 965 3906

mal e

Mustcat

•

- l ntenor &amp; Exterior
Work

GOLF LESSONS

T L BURROUGH'S

AI Tromm

7S

- Free Estimates

Pomeroy Oh

ROOFING
REMODELING
HOME
MAINTENANCE

Polled
18 months

walker coon hound W
run and ree Cal 9.49 2545

2

9--WantedtoBuy

new baths

742-2474
Ollice Phone 992 22.19

L

19/4 JEE P CJS Sl900 00
Ca l 949 2545

Kawasak
uo
cond 742 'l7 47

work

-Fully Insured

992 379'
41 tfc
--------------~

YH S 42 09

Herefo d bu
14 months
old Last of our Superol
caves RRS Fa m 991 5565

71

Put a
futu e
Assorted k ttens
and cats dogs and pupp es
Shots
wormed
To see
t hese beau ful dogs IN 1
make you want to grab
oneup and ake t home A I
var et es Humane Soc ety

ei!ENTALS

t-Pvll cSa •

Qu ck

Do"l• &amp; Roger Turner

614

I

Roller Brush ilnd Spr•'f

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCA TIOII t

Poll e d

9506

eANNOUNCEMENTS

- YI dille

built throughout 5 acres
at niCe lay ng cleared
land SS8 700 oo
BUSINESS
Mtd
dleport Lunch Room All equipment licenses

Jean Trussell 9U 2660

1971 Jeep Wagonee 4x4
Lock out hub s 967 FIOO
p ckup both n ex cond

Address.__•_ _ _ _ _ __

dining
room
cozy
I replace and os qoottly

spotless

o

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Th1s 3 bedroom home

Is

N

26

1 :1 yr o d male red Dober
man w th papers SlOO 773

and

$7 ()()() 00
6PLIT LEVEL RANCH

front

an ques

Vans &amp; 4 W

&amp;

Sandblasting Co.

Bustness-Farms-Partnershtp s
and Corporations
Payrolls proftt and loss statements all
fPCieral and state forms

6461

WANT AD INFORMATION

situated on 1 113 acre
Does need some repa r

tnventory

P ckup w th
toppe exce ent cond ton
low m eage o1s at eKt as
Ca ll Yn :.w 5 after 6 p m

ches class r ng s wedd ng
bands d amends Gold or
s lver Ca J A Wamsl ey
42 133
T easure Ches
Con Sho p Athens OH 592

~------+---------1

room block house with

basement

1980 Datsun

7l

Gheen's
Painting

Tn-County
Bookkeeping
Serv1ce

only

or Wnte Dally Senhnel ClaSSified Dept
111 Court St Pomero)'l, 0 45769

part

Y 4 Datsun p ckup
tape deck some us
fhrow n a used oppe
~ 00 00 Ca YY2 J
0 at e
!I or "191. 366:.! days

lnd M dd eport OH 992
Jl61

PHONE 992-2156
LISTING -

glass

any h ng See qr cal Roth

~~dayc;~4 ;8f~1t70 manager

.--~~

NEW

Business Services

CH P WOOO Poles max

area Pr ces from $250 and ...

se t

General

n erna ana
Ha vcster
Com b ne 64R 6 too cut
Gran ank new rubber zed
canvas new cy l nde be ts
smoo h runn ng
eady o
work Pau 5ayre Por
t and Oh o R • J JI:I Great
Bend Road Phone t:I4 J 45Yl
cal atte 5p m

or ~a c 13 Mode
ac or
Ex ec len
o ca 1 '19'1.. J)4 at

we are p ck ng up sever pi
1----'!!!':'!_ ___ J
repossessed and t ade n 1-------------&lt;~---------1
p anos and organs n your , ••··-

conta ned w th extras 992
5434 992 3129or992 5914
Real Estate

F arm Equ pm ent

6J

POODLE GROOM NG
Judy Tay or 6 4 367 7220

watches and

travel

Fully

e gh too bed tru ck 992
3090

HOOF HOLLOW

54
1973

wo mete r ham
rad o
equ pment One Heathk
transce ve w th s x tr an
sm t and ece ve channels
A l so
add t ana
four
r ece ve channel s Power
supply tor h s ncluded
Also Heathk t amp/ f er
w th power supp y One
ver ca l and one beam an
enna for two meters
Phone YY2 306

992 6260

co n collect ons Cal 6
767 3167 or 557 34 I

more

Call

n V II age

Sen or C t zens

workshop 10 basement

Gold
s lver or foreign
cons or any gold or sliver
tems Ant que furniture
glass or ch na will pay top

ke new Cal 992

14 3 af er 5 p m

Pets for Sale

RENTERs ass s ance for

5970 before 12 or after 5

nice

dollar or compjete estates
No tem too large or too
small Check prices before
sell ng Also do appraising
Osby (Oss e) Martin 992
6J70

Apartment
for Rent

44

1973 3 bedroom 2 complete
baths furn shed 8x14 front
porch
7/ B acre near
Ha r sonv lie $14 500 992

carpeting

••

$too 00

One Amana
a r co n
d t one One camper to f t

pay cash or cert f ed check
tor an ques and co lee
t bles or en re estates

and

LAFF -A

Wh r p ool

auto m a c wa she r and
dryer One year old good
cond 1 on $300 00 Leblanc
ci a r net good cond ton
$75 00
Yamaha gu ta
mOde No GSSA w h case

7

ATTE NT ON
l M
PORT ANT TO YOU ) WI

tra ter

61

U (.K

Ma c k
cund

OLD COl NS pocke wal

also has a den 2 baths

n the area of Sumner
Road f seen cal 965 4137

711/lJ

Go ldt one

ucks tor S,u c

r

62

m es Sou th M ddleport

n ng 992 2661

LARGE female cal co cat

ce bo&lt;es antiques et~
Complete
households
wr te M D Miler Ill 4
Pomeroy OHl or call 992

Deco a ted cakes for at oc
cas ons Cha acfer cakes
and shec cakes Ca I 99'J.
6342 or ~'l 2583

pe s no drunks Steep ng
r oo m f or r ent 50 acres of
pas ure John Sheets JV2

bedroom

Ho ypark Tr a ler
Fur
n shed a c washer metal
out bu1ld ng
under p n

Los

Oh o Cr tt Bradford

t es

14x65 2

bedroom

-

Saturday

949 2487 or 949 2000 rae ne

ut

992 7479

Mobtle Homes

Sale Pr ceS11 000 oo
WHAT A PRESENT
FOil FATHER - New

SERUM
Serum ts the clear
yellowish flwd of the blood
which Is left after blood
clota in the teat tube
Senun contalliS antibodies
Which form tn resporiBe to
the presence of bacteria
toxins and other foreign
substances

Home

Mo b e

I do

such as I ght haul ng pa1n
t ng tear ng down houses
clear ng
and bu ld ngs
lots and mow ng lawns
Have tools and tran

1Jinsurance

sa e

Mobtle Homes
_ -... for~ ent - 4 2 Bedroom M ob le Home
turn shed k chen elder y
couple pref erred Depos t
equ red No pets 992 2749

42

w 1 do genera I house
clean ng SJ oo hour 992
5094 or 992 5207 after 5

LARGE ya d sale Fr day
J one 20 9 t I &gt; Cl ne

CAR PORT

~

ItFtrst
:second
*and
!teases
:plete

S tuat ons Wanted

12

R ggs

MAY 23 o June 30 30'o ott
greenwa e sale Br ng a
con ta ner f.J a m to 9 p m
Dr ehcl s Ce am cs 51,1 N
~econd Ave
M ddleport
W11 5

man h

exce l ent

benet ts For dela s call
SFC Yoho304 675 3950

M I er 992 6338

Freeze
comb nat on
Upr ght freezer Bar and 4

n

res dent a
co mmun ty
spac ous attract ve rna n
tenance free home located
on lovely acre lot Modern
k tchen
fam ly room
several bedroom s 2 baths
basement
garage
Low

bedroom

w 1 do odd and ends lobs

Parcel No 2 Be ng n lOC
Acre Lot No 103 n Sect or

northwest corner of a ot or
parcel of land form!!r y
owned by Bel e Ri ce and
running east along the nor

a Pa r 992 3830 Chamber
Off ce 992 5005 New York
Cloth ng House 992 2049

and lake Age to f sh from 1

150 feet thence north 72 2
f eet t o the p ace of beg n
n ng conta n ng one fourtt
( •&gt; of an acre

REFERENCE DEED
vo 172 Page 590 Me gs
County Deed Records
TRACT THREE
Parcel No 1 The
tor ow ng desd'Dell -na\
estates tuated n the Town
ship of Olive County of
Me gs and State ot Ohio
to-wit Beg nn ng at the

Roya
Oak Lodge
Joe
Lav nger
and
the
T un e t me rs
T ckets
ava lable a S mons P ck

Shade Valley Club House

thence east 150 feet thence
south 72 21eet thence west

t he place of beg nn ng con
an ng 14/ 100 of an acre
more or less

Barn Sale George E K ng

Tun ng farm I vee ghth m le off
and Repa r Serv ce s nee Rt 7 Baby c lothes adult
1965 If no answer phone clothes ots of m sc 1956
992 2062
Case tra ctor Wed though
Sat 9 9 992 37 37
Regatta FROG
BALL
sato day June 28 9

Derby Saturday June 21st
from 8 a m t 2 p m at

south west corner df tot
deeded by W H Smart and
w fe to Edward S mmons

south 72 12 teet thence west
65 teet thence north 72 ,
teet thence east 85 teet to

Lane

Annual Ch ldren s F sh ng

descr bed as follows
Beg ng n one Hundreo
Acre Lot No OJ n Sec
tons Nos 3 and 9 Town
No .4 Range No 11 of thf
Ohio Company s Flu chase

Yard Sale

7

Tun ng

Game C ub w I

and n the Townsh p o
01 ve and bounded anc

Nos 3 and 9 Town No 4
Range No 11 of the Otl c.
Company s Purchase and
beg nn ng at t he northeas
co rn er or lands formerly
owned by Pearl K bble and
sou heast corner of lands of
Fred Shumway
thence

2354

The Me gs CounTy F sh and

s x room hou sP. and ou
bu d ngs w 11 be sold as s and bounded on the south
a auct on on the Court by Ia 1ds of Pear K bble oo
the east by lands at Peart
House S eps n Pomeroy
K bble on the north by Jan
Oh a a 10 OOA M onMon
day June 30th 1980 a nd ds of Fred Shumway on
me m n mum pr ce for the west by State H ghway
wh ch th s house w I be No 124 and beg nn ng at
so d at h s sale s $7 500 00 M_one 217 'feet sooth of the

n Jh e

Mun c pa ty shal be dete
based
upon
m ned
operat ons of he Company
n he Mu n c pa ty dur ng
the mos recen y ava ab e
twe ve month per ad en
d ng on th e l as t day of the
Dec ember preced ng he
effec t ve date of he new
ta x. or h gher tax ra e the
to al dollars so computed

MAYOR

east 3.4 2 feet thence s1c
east 283 :::1 feet to A thur
M I s west I ne
thence

M Is ttlen ce east seven
and one ha f rods to the

Wh te male fox hound old
town area of Portlarfd and
Rae ne If found call 843

25ijij

R

!
~*********** ....

Los1 and Found

6

House t or Rent Locafed on
Ma n S
a
th Logan
Monument Co d sp ay rr
erested par y
man or
woman
mus
be sa les
or en ed to help us sel
monuments on he ot Con
ta ct Leo L vaughan 992

n

M 5oc Mcrchantse

54

THREE bedroom house tor

32

I

Houses tor !len!

8

Shop The Sentinel Classifieds For Good Buys
Publ c Nollce

4t

Beautiful arge home Low
uttl lies br ck ranch s yle
3 bedrooms
2 baths
f repla ce ful
basemen t
fam ly room
a r con
d toner J car garage
Baum Add ton
M e gs
County Ca I 985 4 69

WASHINGTON (AP)
The
Agriculture Departmenlts crankmg
up to buy turkey lor school cafetena
use m the fall
Offtc als sa td buis from suppliers
wtll be considered each week wtth
the ftrst offers due on June 30 until
further nolLce 4
To be ellg1ble processors must
operate under federalmspeclton and
comply wtth all USDA purcllasmg
reqmrements
Each year the department buys a
vanely of conunodiltes mcludmg
poultry for donatiOn under Its school
lunch program

Dorothy Hawk to Timothy
Hawthorne Margaret Evelyn Riffle
1 09 acres Chester
ENTERS GUILTY PLEA
COLUMBUS Ohto (AP)- A Lon
don Ohio man entered a plea of
gutlly to one count of grand theft m
connectton with Illegally obtammg
Medtcatd Medtcare funds
Mtchael H Maddobne III 26 ad
nutted he transported palLents m a
sulrcompact car and then btlled
both the Oh1o Welfare Department
and Nationwide Insurance the
Medtcare
mtermed1ary
for
provtdmg ambulance servtces He
entered his plea m Franklm County
Common Pleas Court on Tuesday
He agreed to pay back $2 000 to
Medtcatd and $8 000 to Medicare

Homes for Sale

Mall ThiS Coupon With Remittance
The Datly Sentmel
Box 72'1
Pomeroy Oh 45769

tJ---------"9--------·-·--·-·-·-;;.J,"'rfl

ELWOOD

BOWERS

REPA R
Sweepers
tl)as ers rons all small
app! ances Lawn mower

Next a Stale H ghway
Garage on Route 7 985
3815

87
A&amp;H Upholster ng Now
lie Upholstertng Car
Seats Ph 992 3752 or 992
3743

�1()-The Datly Senhnel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 1 hursday June 19 1980

11- TheDailySentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Thursday JuneJ9 1980
ll

Oilseed
buildup
•
continues

put

WASHINGTON tAP 1 - A IJUJiuup
mlhe wt rid s otlseed supply appeals
to he ~onlt u ng "tlh lillie stgt f
mea 111 g u
levelu g oH soot
pusstb Illy of u further pn e c1 u1 d
fut U S soybean fa1 n ers tf the~
bnng 1 a1other bwnper crop tt s
year
1 he Agr culture Department satd
Wednesday that world pruducl101 uf
u !seeds - mamly soybeans but
also mcludmg a vanely of other
crops - m 197~ now IS eshn aled
al l77 ~ nulhun metnc tons
1 hal sa decline n prospects from
a n onlh ago prunauly because of
lower soybean est mat\,s f01
Argent na and Brat I t wu leadmg
con pehlors of Amencan soybean
farn ers 111 I c wm ld market
Butllei epurladded
The growth n world con
sumplwn of mlseed products IS
sluw1 g a1d 197~0 use IS not ex
peeled to absorb the est1 mled out

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Clyde J Morlan Ethel M Morlan
to Judith A Sams 203 22 acres
Orange
Danny L Meadows Karen Sue
Meadows to Commercial and
Savmgs Bank Parcels $47 000
Rutland Middleport
Thelma 0 Campbell to Southern
Ohio Coal Co 45 acres Sale111
Myrtle Warner to Dale G Warner

AsH ft!sult t.:anyuvcl stu ks

f

bull uiisuuds a1 d uJisued pi Jducts
are uxpectcd l
se substw l ally
l11s ~cat Mud uf ll c bUildup "'II
be 111 U S suyhea1s cullu seed sui
fl \&lt; er seed a I d&gt; yhea1 uti
Canau a 1apescL'&lt;i a td B az ha1
soybean a1 d so) be a I uJI sl &gt;eks a Ie
also Ilk ely to expa1 d
A n elr c tun ts abuut2 20~ pound&gt;
and equal lu 36 7 busl els
f
suybeai s
The record U S soybea n harvest
last year - part of the 197~ 1\0r!d
pruduclwn total
was about 61 7
nu ll o n elnc tm s or more tl a 65
percent of the "u ld output of 94 5
null 01 tons
All told as ai IllustratiOn of the
mpacl of U S SU) hea s the crop
accounted fur about 41 pe1 ce 1t of all
otlseed produced m the world ml979BO accord ng to the report s f gures
It s sltll t o early to predtcll980-

Markham Flemmg I 32 acres Bed
ford
John Dunham Janet Dunham to
S W Jack Dnlllng Co Right of
Way ColumbLa
Hubert Pullms H P Pullins to
Hubert Charles Pullins Fredrtck
Eugene Pullms
I 06 acres
Pomeroy
H P Pullins Hubert Pullins to
Paul Russell Pullms Int m Lots
Mtddleport
Dav d e; Marc nko LLSa Mar
ctnko to Jeffrey W Marc1nko Peggy
J Marctnko Lot 12 Weatherman s
2nd Orange
Mary Frances Cowa1 to Ruth
Runyon lnl m parcel Bedford
Floyd W Carson Esther L Car
son to R Gene Brasel Deed of

Lot 2() Crook s Add Syracuse
Hazel M Dunlavy to Grace M
Warner George H Warner 10
acres Bedford
Floyd M Carson Esther T Car
son to R Gene Brasel Parcels
Rutland
Delbert H Romme to W !hom N
SNowden 17 acres Rutland
Clifford Jacobs Mtldred Jacobs to
Edward G Moore Kathryn T
Moore 52 acre Salls bury
Milo Hutchison Betty A Hut
chison to Township Trustees of
Rutland Township 2 18 acres
Rutland
Guy Hysell Ruby Hysell to Guy
Hysell Ruby Hysell Parcels
Rutland
Charles F Zetgler to Madalyn

pttces at the farm 111 198~1 at bet
wcet $5 75 and $7 a bushel

81 't lsceu utput 1cltably
t SH td
H &gt;ICVCJ il ill a l~ s s r us plw
lu ~ 1 lcnttuJ s UJ d p1 ubablc yLelds
c ' b cd "Ill II end prt jeclt n ti
II c f retgl tlseeds c1up m pi es a
198().81 harvest somewhat heluw the
u p ccedc 1lcd 197~ level
1 hus tl e repurl added woJ ld
prududwn of utlsecds u the year
a/ ead could rat ge between 162
nulhun a1 d 178 m llwn melrtc tors
depcndm~ on actual plant ngs and
\leather cur dtl on~
Accord g lu rece nt USDA
calculal u 1s Amcncan farmers
n ay average about$6 10 a bushelfur
last years soy bean harves~ an
overage based on pnces over the en
lue 121 IUntl 1a1kelmg year that
will end Aug 31 That compares wtth
$6 66 a bushelm 1978-79
1he pnce outlook - as well as
p1 uduclwn - s extremely fuzzy for
the comtng year but USDA analysts
currently are pru]ectmg soybean

rallroods arc askmg gram farmers
alu1 e to dtg a little deeper and come
up w th a Julher fJOO nullion
Bergland satd These same far
mers are already paying more than
$1 btllton a year In fre1ghl charges
and that fur a quality of rail serv1ce
whtch ts quesltonable Enough IS
enough

WASHINGlON
For the ftrsl
tune 111 two years Agnc ullure
Secretary Bob Be1 gland has
prutested a proposed nat onw1de rail
fre1g ht rate ncreuse
Bergland m a statement tssued
Wcdt esday satd the htke bemg con
stdered by the Interstate Commerce
Gun mtsstun ts
mequ1lable
dLScrmunalory too high and comes
at the wrung tm1e
In other recent rate mcreases he
satd ra Iroads were JUSIIfted m the
mleresl uf mau taiomg service to
farmers
But the ratlroads now are askmg
for a 10 percent addttton to gra n
fre1ghl b1lls start ng on July 12 he
satd Rat! rates already have gone
up 24 percent smce Apnl1979 he ad
ded
For JUSl th s one ncrease the

Correction Rutland
Roher! G Pickett Elotse PICkett
to Madalyn Markham Flemmg
Rtghl of Way Bedford
Branch
Madolyn Flemmg
Flen mg Robert G P1ckett Elmse
P1cketl to Frank Herald Jr Right
of Way Bedford
Dorothy F Wrtght to Ann W Dex
ler Belly J Carl sle 75 acre
Rutland
Maunce E Durst Marcella G
Durst to Roland H Durst Bonme
Jean Durst 5 acres Salisbury
Adolph Saelens to Wtlham R
Sprague Emtly Sprague S &gt;;, Lot
299 MIddleporl
Dons J Haynes to David A Lipscom b Georgtna R Upscomb 3 95
acres Sal sbury

Pet
Assump on
Beaut ful large br ck ranch
styl e
ow ut t es
3
bedrooms
2 2
bath s
f repla ce fu I basement
fam l y
oo m a r con
d toner 3 car garage
Baum Add t on Me gs Co

985 4169

8 Room House on ap
pro x mately 2 acres St Rt

24 Lots of extras 992 7255
Assumab e mortgage 9 2
Pet J bedrooms 2 baths
full basement
2 ca
garage Rlggscrest Manor

614 985 4329

Pub! c Not ce

ORDINANCE
NO 515

Fuc ng and regulat ng tne

that mav be charged
CvnceColumba
Gas of Oh o

Inc

ts

successors

or

a5s•gns for gas to the
VIllage ot Pomero',' Oh o

and to 11s nhab1tants for

the per od of Two (2) Years
from and after the effect ve

of th s ordinance

BE T ORDA NED BY
THE COONCIL OF THE
V LLAGE OF POMEROY
OHIO
SECT ON 1 Thai to the

perod of One ( 1 Year
from and after the effect ve

date at th s orq nance the
max mum

pr ce wh ch
Columb a Gas of Oh o nc
ts suc cessors or ass gns
shal
be perm tted
a
c harge
for
and
th e
m n mum pr ce a wh ch t

or they shal be requ red to
furn sh gas to the V
Pomeroy

Mun c pal

y)

age of
Oh o

and to ts

nhab tants sha
be and
1'\e sa me s hereby t xed
for each nd v dual con

sllmer as fol ows
A

Customer Charge

of

60 per meter per month
egardless ot gas con

$4

sumed and 6 291c per 00

cub c feet per meter per
mon h f or al gas con
sumed
A
Customer Charge
for each customer each

month of Four Dollars and
S xry Cents ($4 60) sha be

made If serv ce under t h s
ra e schedule s d scan
t nued at the re~uest of
customer
he Company
shal not be under any
ob gat on to resume ser
v ce o the same customer
on he same prem ses unt
the customer has made
payment of an amount
equa to the
Customer
Cha ge for each month of
the nterven ng per od bu
not to exceed twe ve 12)

months

From and after he ex
p rat on of the aforesa d
One Year per od and fo a
further per ad of One 1)
Year
thereafte r
as
to ows
A Customer Charge of
S4 83 per meter per month
regardless of gas con

sumed and 0 063c per 100
cub c teeT per meter per
month for a I gas con
sumed
Custome
Charge
A
for each cus omer each
month of Four Dol ars and

E ghty ·three Cents $4 83 )
sha II be made f serv ce

under th s rate schedu e s
d scant nued at the equest
of customer he Company

shall not be under any

obi ga t on to resume ser
v ce to the same customer
on the same prem ses unt I
the customer has made
payment of an amount

eQual to the customer
Charge tor each month at
the ntervenlng per ad but

not to exceed

welve (12

months
lihe abOve rates exc ude
gas costs and the Oh o
Grpss Rece pts Tax All

bills rendered pursuant to

this ordinance sha t be ad
Ju~ted to reflect the effect
of the Oh o GrQss Rece pts
Tax and are sub ect tq

decrease or increase n ac

cordance w th the Gas
COST Recovery Prov sons
of the Company s
Rules
and Regula! ons or t Je
wfth the Pub c Ut t es
Comm Iss/on of Oh o
SECTION 2 That t sex
P!'HSIY cond tloned the ser
vi~' to be rendered bY sa d
Company Its successors or
as,lgns pursuant to th s or
dlnance shall be pr mar ly
tor domestic and com
mercia! purposes and that
"rv1c~ shall not t&gt;e ex
te~ to other consumers
of dllterent classes unt at
ter all reasonable
requirements tor domestoc
and commercial purposes
are tully met and thiS
ptov/slon shall be b nd ng
upon said Company ts

successors

or

ass gns

during each month of each
year but durlnq any mon
th or r.ear aub ect to the
forego ng 1Jml1atlons and
after compliance w rh the
toregoJng provls ons gas
1)141~ be delivered to any

Publ c Not ce

Publ c Not1ce

SIDLER COMMISSIONEO
SAN ANTON10 Tex
Harold E
Sidler Ill son of relLred Air Force
Chief Master Sergeant and Mrs
Harold E Stdler Jr of Route 1 Apple Grove W Va has been com
nusstoned a second lieutenant m the
U S Air Force upon graduatiOn
from Officer Trammg School at
Lackland Air Force Base here
The lieutenant was selected
lluough competition exanunation
for attendance at the school and wtll
no\\ go to Langley Atr Force Base
Va forduty
A 1975 graduate of Tabb Htgh
School Tabb Va the lieutenant
recetved a bachelors degree m 1979
from Marshall Umverstty Hun
tmgton W Va

o he consume
and ad
d t ona
c asses o con
sume s at each t mes and
under such cond ons and
fo such ates as may be
ag eed upo be ween he
Company and such con
sumer or cons um ers

ta n ng 12 70 acres more or

less

Also the to ow ~g
descr bed real estate
bounded and described as

follows S tuated n the
County of Me 1gs State of
Oh a and n 01 ve Town
sh p, to wit Be ng s tuatec'

SEC T ON 3 The te ms

and co nd t ons of th e ser
v ce to be rende ed sha
co fo m w h and be sub
1ec
o
he Rules and
Regulat ens tor turn sh ng
gas se v ce of the Company
on le w h and approved
by the Pub c U
es Com
m ss on o Oh o

In Lo No 103 Sect on 9
Town 4 Range 1 begin
n ng at t~e northeast cnr

ner of Luther Barnhart s
Japd thence south 77° 15

s or

SEC T ON 4 Tha the gas

urn shed or de ve red pu
suant to he e ms at h s
ord nance
by the sa d
Company sha
have an
ave age heat ng va ue of
1 000 B

sh

hermal un t s

pe cu b c too tor any con
secu t ve Tw el ve 12 mon h
pe od sub 1ec t o a var an
ce of no m ore th an f ve 5
pe ce n upwa d a down
wa rd
SECT ON 5 n H eeven
the S at e of Oh a o he
Mun c pa t y
s h ou d
he ea er mpose a ta x
upon the Com pan y that s
no now mposed or shou d
he eaf er ncrease he rat e
of any ta x now mposed
upon the Company above
the ta x ra e now ex st ng
other ha n the rat e on
p ope ty sted n he ea
es a e t ax I s f and
dup ca fe
hen he ra es
p esc r bed n Sect on 1
sha ll be ncreased o he ex
ten
necessa ry
o com
pe nsate the Com pany for
the ncrease n cos t due to
such new ta x or h g her ax
ra e Th s sha l be dorre n
the f o ow ng ma nner
a) f the new ta x or
h ghe tax ate s comp u ed
n d r ec t r e a on o gas
so d or revenues re ce ved
for the sa e ot gas the rates
se for h he r e n sha be ad
usted
o th e ex en
necessa ry to r ecompense
the Company for
he
amount her eof
b)
t the new ta x. o
h ghe
ax rate s no
related d ec y to Iii! as so ld
a o r evenues ece ved fa
the sa le of gas then he
to a do lar eft ec thereo
upon th e cos of serv ng gas

by the campanr

PASSE D
6 16 60

C a ence Andrews

ATT EST

Jane wa on
6 19 'lb 1

shal hen bed v ded by the

lo al sa es made a the
typ es of custom ers cove ed
by th s ord nance dur ng
the same twe ve month
per od and th e rat es
prescr bed he en shall be
cor r espond ngly adJUSted
The adJUStment of the
ra tes prescr bed n rh s Or
d nance as prov ded n

subparagraph Ia ) and Cbl

above shall be made by
round ng he tna lhema ca l
r esu 1 of the compu at ons
so presc r bed to th e nearest
one qua te ce nt &lt; 4} pe
o e nuu~a a cuo c teet
The ad usted rate sha I
be
aced n effec and

r

shal a ppl y a all meter

r ead ngs occ urr ng on and

alter the effect ve date of

the statute ord nance
reso ut on pursuan
wh ch the new fa)( or
creased ta x rate s

or
to
In
m

pose2
Wr tten not f cat on of
the adlusll)lent shall be

ser)t t o he Clerk of Counc
of the Mun c pal ty as

qu ck/y as pass bl e atte

th e effect of t he new tax o
h ghe
tax rate can be
determ ned

SECT ON 6 fha t any or

d nance or reso ut on or
part of an ord nance or
r eso ut on
in cons stenf
her ew th s t o the ex tent of
such ncOI1S stency hereb y
r epea led
SECTION I [hat ShOUld
any sec t on or part of a sec
r on or prov s on ot a sec
t on of th s ord nance be
decla ed vo d fh e rt:ma n

der at th s ord nance shalt
o beat ected her eby

south 2" 30 west 404 teet to
J B To rrence southeast
corner thence north 66" 15
west 920 feet to center a
sa d road lead ng frorr
Reedsv lie to Joppa then
ce north 150 30 west 16
f eet a ong sa d road then
ce north
15 east 89 feet

so

CLERK

thence north 79" east 33l

c

fee

place of beg nn ng and
be ng 83 teet along High
way No 124 as recorded n
Vo ume 140 Page 531
Melw;; County Deed Recor
ds
REFERENCE DEED
Vo 173.._ Page 515 Meigs
CountyueedRecords

3

pra sed at S6 866 66 Trac•
I $22 500 oo Tract 11 and
snoo 00 Tract Ill Terms
of sale casn
James J Proffitt
SherIf of
Me gs County Oh o
(5) 15 22 29 (6/ 12 19. 6tc

Dan els 742 2951

Sa d rea l estate is ap

Pamt &amp;Embroider

thence north 13o nortt

150 feP.t t,p place of beg n

n ng

acre

Pub c Not ce

-FOR SALE-

The rea l estate ot the late
v ctor H Lethe s tuated
n Sal sbury Townsh p
Me ~s Coun y Oh o con
ta n ng 5 acres more or
ess and ocated on S ar
cher Road as s descr bed
n deed record ed n vo

259 Page 4!11 of the Deed
Records ol Me gs County
Oh o and upon wh ch s

s tuated a two story fr ame

con ra n ng 8 40/ 10C

more or ess

Terms of sa le Cash upon
del very of deed a nd ea
es ate tax!!s w I be pro
rated as of the date he
deed
s
de l v e red
Possess on n twentr days
For nformat on cal Frank

W Parle J

at 992 5 32

Edw n P Le the t
Executor of the Las
w and Testamento
V ctor H Le th e 1
Deceased

REFERENCE DEED
Vol 172 Page 567 Me g•
County Deed Records
TRACT TWO
Parcel No 1 The
to ow ng
real
estate
s tuated in the County of
Me gs n the State of Oh a

(6) 9 26 2tc

Publ c Not ce

lNTHE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
COMMUNITY BANK ET
AL
Pia ntlffs
vs
EARL L FAUDI!EE ET
AL
Defendants
No 17 420
NOTICE OF
SHERIFF S SALE
AND PROOF OF
PUBLICATIONIn r,ursuance of an order
of sa e to me d rected frorr
the Clerk of Court of Com
mon Pleas of Me gs Coun
ty Oh a I w I offer tor salE
,;.

publ c auct on

at the

.door of the Courthouse r
Pomeroy Me gs County
Oh o on the 21st day ot
June 180 at 10 oo A M thE
tollowtng real estate
TRACT
ONE
The following described
rea
estate s tuated ir:
Meigs County Oh o and r
0 lve Townsh ip to wit
Sect on No 9 Lot 100 Town
No ~ Range No 11 anc
beg nn ng at an ron pin a
the northwest corner Of Ian
ds of Luther and Agne
Barnhart

wh ch point

south 88 ,o east 3 70 cha n
and north 9" east 2 cha n
from the southeast corner
of \tore Jot thence north
7 07 cha ns to the north line
of Lot 103 thence east
along the north 1 ne of Lot
No T03, 17 66 chatns to Jan
ds of AIQ a M /Is thence
south 8 08 cholns to ands oi
Arthur and Chloe M /Is
thence no,th 82" west 5 2~
cha ns to lands of Luther
and Agnes Barnhart then
ce north 72 ,o west 5
cha ns

thence south 12 :12o

west 5 chains thence south
7212° west 3 85 chains to the
place of beg nn ng con

th 1 ne ot sa d lands of Belle
R ce 712 rods to the west
s de of the pub c road or
highway known as 2&lt;18
now known as 124h thence
north atonq sa d lghway
5 2 to a stake thence west
7 , rods to the west line of

lands owned by Arthur
Mlilsr thence south along
the said west line of Arthur
Mills 5'12 rods to the place
of beginning Sa d parcel
containing

41 •

square

rods
Parcel No 2
The
following described real
estate situated n the Town
ship of 0 lve n the County
ot Meigs State of Ohio and
n 100 Acre LOt NO 103 of
the Oh o Company s Pur
chase

and

more

par

t cular/y described os
follows Beg Inn ng on the
west side of the r9ad
leading from Long Boltom
to Hock ngport at the
southeast corner of lot for

merly owned by Arthur
M lis thence south on tne
west side of said road 53
rods more or less thence
west 712 rods to a stake
thence north 50 to the
southwest corner of a Jot
formerly owned by Arthur

have

s

Ia 16 one pole perch d
Br ng own ba

Pr zes tor

House and Ya d Sa e 26

Ra road Street M dleport
down

by

he

Cloth ng

Ma na)

Avon

do IS

g assware
what nets
some turn ture r ngs etc
Fo ow the s gns a n or
sn ne
123

Park

Dr ve

P easant

Pont

Wednesday

refreshments The e w II
be .a membersh p ch cken
barbecue al 6 30 p m Any

Thursday F dav and Sat
from 8 3 Furn ture arge
cloth ng mat ern ty baby
clothes formals

quest ons call Roy Howell
al992 5421

REFR GERATOR

boys and g rl and free

FEED ONE ADULT ~
$7 06 weekly nc/udes one
pound meat da y cho ce of

e gh fresh vegetab es and
gra ns Free deta s wr te

L D D P 0 Box 40 tAl
Tuppers P a ns Oh a 45783
Happy Ad,~s_ __
CLEAN UP YOUR ACT

S

Saturday s a great t me to
get those whee s cleaned
up at a car wash on t he

M dd eport F rst Bapt st

Church park ng at corner

of Palmer Seven h Sts Sat
9 3 Sponsored by Youth
Fel owsh p

7432

fxtA6a'8~
Show you "' of v brant coo
w h th s go ous qo t
p, n and emb•o de br ant
butte I es to ght up you who e

bed oom Palte n 7432 l ssue
t onsfe of 24 mot Is fo
60 ~ x89 • qu to/ 12 blocks
cha ti d ect ons
Sl 75 fo each patte111 Add 501
each patte n o f siC ass a
ma and hand ng Send to
Allee Btooks
3 ~
NeediOCJaft Dtpl
(Insert name of )OUr paper)
lltx 163 Old Ciltlsea Sll New
Yodt NY 10011 Pnnl Namt
Address Zip Pattern Numbor
EXC liNG New /980 NEEDlE
CRAFT CATALOG w th Oie 170
des gns n g eat va ely of c ails

3I ee patte ns ns de Send $1 00
132-Qu/11 011&amp; nak
$1 50

Ill Add t Bloct Qliiib $150
130 Swulln-Sins 3&amp;.5&amp; $1 50
129-Qukk t ~ r,. ..,,.. $1 50
121-PakhwO.. Qallb
$1 50
127 Alpans n DoilttS $150
126-l:llftr FlowtJS
$1 50
125 Pill( ~ulb
$1 50
124-Gitts n Otnamtftb $1 50
n Patch Qa~b$1.50
Putt Qailb $1 50
Shilw.olts
$1 50
NtedltJIIInt
$1 50
Ft11J Qttilb
$1 50
Is:r~:~,c.och•t
s1 50
113
G1fb
$1 50
110 16 l 11J Rup
Sl 50
IOHtw
l
""''
$ISO
101 lnsllnl Moc11me
$1 50
tOI&gt;Instant F11h1on
$1 S"o
105 IMIIIIt Ctochtt
$1 50
10315 Qliiib lor Todl) $1 50
101 ~utll Coiltcllon
Sl 50

sate Two bath cen tral
heat and a r woodbu ne
complete ca rpe ted huge
two car garage and
workshop
Located
n

Syacuse Ca / 992 3502
LOCATED

stools

Old

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE tro n ng
11

as a young bus ness person
and earn good money plus
some great g fts as a Sen
t ne route carr er Phone
us r ght away and get on
the e/ g b I ty st at 992

2 56 or 992 2157

VETERANS I you can
spare 39 davs a year t
cou ld be worth over $1 400
to you Plus free tu ton
ass stance to any Wes
v rg n a college or ac
cred ted bus ness o trade
schoo
cont nue your
ret ement
~enef ts He p
your commun y n t mes of
emergency Th Nat anal
Guard needsyour
ex
per ence Good pay good

Truck dr ver
ers
sk dde

t mber cut
ope ators

Tr State Ch pp ng Inc 992
3661

u I toes 992 7727

**~*~*********

lt~~$$$1

: MONEY MONEY

k tchen

cab nets glasses d shes
cloth ng rrl see laneous
terns Cons ruct on too s

June 20 21 Route 33 Co R
19 west 992 6156

6

Lostand Found

BLACK Ch huahua Salem
Center a ea CAll 742 2146
S25 rewa rd

TUPPERS Pans on Route

7 below Ashland Stat on on
r ght June 20 and 21 Lots

at

1 tile

boys clothes 6 9

months up to s ze 3

do odds and ends
W
Pane ng floor T le and
ce I ng t le
Call Fred

w
wall papr ng 992 3760
W I mow lawns and

sport at on Cal 742 3074

Re s dence 2 W Center
street Mason W Va Rain
cancels

AUTOMOB
SURANCE

m es

from

Three

Chester

on

Scout Camp Road Lowell
B ng s Wednesday hrough

mortgages
mortgages ~
refinance*
Call Com It
Mortgage:
~tServices
arl*.
ltGalhpohs, OhiO at~
:446 1517 for more~
ltinformatton andlt
!!:Your appomtmi!nt

1973

for Sale
Fa rpo nt 14x65 2

1971

Cameron

l4x65

1971

F eetwood

14x65 3

bedr

bdr ba th

2

:1

1971 Shakespear

1965 Yanor 12x52 2 bedr
1968 F eetwood 12x63 2
Bdr
8 &amp; S MOB LE HOME
SALES PT PLEASANT
wv 304 675 4424
1969

12x60

2

pa d 1 k d acc epted No

N

can

eel ed'
Lost
your
operator s license' Phone

992 2 43

17

TWO bedroom tra er
A dult s only
Browns
Tra er Court Ca 1992 3324

3 AND 4 RM torn shed ap
Is Phone 992 5434

o 992 7142 before 3 00

8

21

Bustness

BI!AOFORD Auct oneer
Complete Serv rc,e Phone

CASH Loan never repay

Opportun ty

tree detal s A L Lutton
P 0 Box 766 Gall pot s
Oh

9

wanted to Buy
Iron and brass beds old

23

Profess onal
Servtces

turn ture
desks
gold
r ngs
1ewelry
s lver
dollars sterl ng etc wood

Deluxe Ford I berg lass top
per to I t e ght foot bedt
Ca/1992 7201
J and F Backhoe Serv ce
L censed and bonded Sep
tic tank nsta/ at on Water

and gas I nes Excave~t ng
work and trans t layout

Call992 7201

Call

Manor a pts Cal '192 7767

I bedroom tu r n shed apar
tmen $ 25 month ut I t es

not nc luded 992 2288
Two

Jl
Homes for Sole
NEW lor 4 Bedroom home
2

WILL BUY Old tran
sm sslo~s
botter/es

eng nes or screp metals

lis only 1suqeallon but Jet 1 etc Call245 9168
not rorget who 1 making Itt

- - - ---

bedroom

2

baths

rec

room

flreploce
basement
garage At Morning star
Hts Ll!l! Construction 99 2
loiS~ or 992 5ol55

turn shed

apartm ent 992 5434
3129 or 992 5914

992

Space for Rent

46

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy Large ots Call

Tra ler Lots for rent n
Grea t Bend area new
br dge s t e and acros from
Par and Grade Sc hool $50

and $60 pe man h 1 304
273 3623 I 614 843 2353
Merchandise

51

c kets
June II vs s t Lou s
sel at d scoun 949

Starcraft

Noth ng too large
guns pocke

Also
4

Wanted to Buy

d ame e 10
on largest
end $ 12 p er ton Bund ed
sla b S1U pe on Del vered

a Oh o Pa l e Co

Rt 2

ANTIQUES

FUR

N TURE

ch na

Pomeroy 99'1 '16tl9

Gosne y

H LLCRES T

KENNELS

Boa rd ng all breeds C ea n
ndoor outdoor ta c I es
A so
AKC
reg st ere d
Dobermans 614 446 7795

HUMANE

SOC E TY

Adopt a hOmeless pet
Hea thy shots wormed
Donat ons requ red Y92
6260 noon 7 p m
except
Tuesday emergen cy calls

&gt;

GOLD AND
CO IN S OF TH E WORLD
R NGS
JEWELRY
STERL ING SILV ER AND
M SC
TE MS PAY NG
REC ORD
H GH
H GHEST
UP TO DATE
PR CES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBE R
SHOP MIDDL EPORT
OH 0 OR CALL 992 3476
L vest.::oc,.k'-~­
P gs for Sale Cal 643 4734
Re g s ter ed

Horses

and panes and r d ng
les so ns
E veryth n g
mag nable n horse equ p
men
Bl a nk et s
be lts
boots etc Engl sh and
Weste n
Ruth Re ev es

l6 4) 698 3290
REG STEREO

Reg stered
Hereto d Bull

618 E Matn

57

Instruments

- Card of Thanks
"Mtmorl•m
)-Anntunctmtnfs

42-MC»b 1 Homes
fo Rtnt

4-G vHwily

«-AtMr menr or • tn

i-HappyAdl
._Lot land Found

u-Fitooms
...._s,.ct
or Rtnt

4

n

I -

n-

IUS Mil

Opportun

tv

22- Monty to LINin

li-Ru E1 a •
31- Rtl tort

4P M Dallv
2 Noon S1tuttiiV

tctr Moml•v

1.

and

1973

1979
p5

1975 MUSTA NG II
body by uns good
Ca 199'J. 5 86

Rough

27 mpg

Call (614) 992 99J 2
Po

o

Curb InflatIon.
Pay Cash fot
Classlfleds and
Savel II

Wr te your own ad and order by ma I w th th s
coupon Cance your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundab e

lntormat on

Loans

-Addons and

5% down on
balance F.HA 265 Sub-

remodl ng
-Roof ng and

SJdy Program FHA 245

I

I -Hometm,rovemtnts
12--P umblntl IXCIIYif nt

ll-EII;C.\IIf fll
14-1! Mtr Cll

I Rlfr gent Ofl
Is-Genera Ho~ul nt
N-MHRtHr
17-Upfto ,_,.

Jdan
•days

AG1 "'"" nt

••

~tthe

S zes from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Open M W F 9 00 to 1 oo

- Ptumbong and

::;

put

n

the

T sh rt and novelty
sh rts tor pol t cans ball

tams busonesses or on
Shtrts S4 oo Each

We

(Free Estomatesl

n

99 2 6215

VC YOUNG 111
or

) For Sale
) Announcement
) For Rent

Cfwlr11

STILl PAYING

V1n~ and Alum1num

S2CJIDFOR&amp; UP

Siding

cARPENTER's
DANCE

SILVER
DOllARS
02801
94~

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

sTuDio

'ih~~'Zs~~~\~~~~!

Call tor Free S d ng
Estomate 949 2801 or
949286° No Sunday
calls
6 13 1 mo

Up Is July 14th
BALLET TAP
&amp;JAZZ
For More tnformatoon
CALL 949 2710

Mosl Dates
No Sunday Calls

S

Summerio~rollment

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
eV CHISEL
PLOW

rn6nlmum CaalllnH\I•nce

M.-. • Home ntn ai'MI YA d 11111 a eacctttted only wlttt cash w "'
onler U Ctftt cMrtt tor Ida e.1 rylftll loJC NurniMr In C.Jrt of Tltt
Sen lnef

G Carpet C ean ng

L£0

MORRIS

W II pour concre te lay
bock and b ck Ca l 992

Rutland 0
Ph 742 2455
S 21 1 mo

3406

These cash rates

nclude d scount
17
18
19
20

W
do r emade ng
roof ng pa nt ng plumb ng
and e ect F r ee Est mates
Ca ll Cha les s ncla r 985

21

Floor ng ce I ng panel ng
doors and w ndows. also

' 21

4

25

5
6
7

26
27

6

29

9

))

10 ." - - - - - -

31 _ _ _ _ __

AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

SERVING SOUTHEASTERft OHIO SINCE
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE,

FOR All YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS

CAU. US.

992-2342
IXMNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

GOOD SUPPLY

SHRUBS

28

&amp; TREES

32 -~---

3. _ _ _ _ __

34 _ __ __
35 _ _

DOWNI

pa nt ng 992 2759

23
24

_ _:__

20% OFF

POMEROY
LANDMARK
MaanSt
Pomeroy 992 2181

MIDDUPORT, OHIO
84

Efectncal

8S

&amp; Refngerataon

SEW ING
Repa

mak es

MACHINE

s

serv ce

992 2284

all

The

Fab c Shop
Pomeroy
Au hor zed S nger Sales
and Serv ce We sharpen
!:)c ssors

General Haul ng

WILL HAUL l mestone and
gravel Also lime haul ng
and spread ng Leo Morns

Truck ng Phone 742 2ol55

=----

thin cctnstcu "' tl•v• w 11 bt cNrfM at the Dv

In memon Card ot Thlnk1 aNI Oblhia y • c"ts..,. word P 10

&amp;

6309or742 22 11

2
3

12
13
14
15
16

ALMOS)

Even ngs &amp; Weekends

S eam
cl eaned
Free
est mate
Reasonab l e
rat es
Sea chgua d 992

you II

pnnt

anyth ng on ALMOST
anyth ng
Ph 614 949 2358

proper

f

Custom
PShopnnt

l ~======~S~e~r~V;I:~:~;5l:m:o::::-n~~~~~~~~~~~~==========~6~1~8~1~m~o~

ty ed t or re eel
any ad Your ad wil be

class f cat on

2591
6 15 tfc

dlv•duals

w

~

843

0

electrtcal work

w

107 Sycamore St

Ph 614

work

- Concrete work

ByAppotntment
Othce992 7544
Home992 6191

111 3 Bo• 54
Rac1ne Oh

gutter

Gradual Payment Mort
other T mes

I'
I

class

11

"'
"'"
'"
I!Kh word tl"•r thlm n mum 1S words 11 • ctft 1 per wortl perctay

1 days

Utility Bu1ldrngs

~==P~o~m~e~r~o~O~H~==n~tr~Po~m=er=o~y=O=h~="~2:7:3:14~+~~====:;::;6~16~ti~c~

22

Co~ah

tday

I

No Down Pay

ment Federal Hoosmg
Loans 3% down on
$25 000

You II get better results
I you descr be tully
g ve pr ce The Sent nel

oRep~~

..
...•

$25 ()()() 00

SMALL

''YOUfiiGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automat c

LANDMARK II
SERVICE STATION,!
I

--------------------.,..,

Rates and Other lnformataon

•

11 11,~ In::~;~t3~a;~s

I
I

I

s tes
From 30x30

5 29 1 mo

Super. or Vtnyl Products

tratned frontend 1
alignment
spe I
ctahst
1

Bela

Farm Burld1ngs

Eugene long (614) 843-3322

DISCOUnt

Hor zan automat c
pb
am fm st ereo
casse tte p ayer 992 2580 at
ter 4 p m

1972

) Wanted

basement 5 rooms arid

Call for

51 tic

mo

ALL STEEL

Servmg your area tor 25 years
Call Now for Large Savmgs
For Free Estt male Ca II

he OW

eSEI!VICES

want Ad Advertising
Dead tines

6 14

This Week Only
This Coupon
Worth

Camara Ca 992 7669

7._Motwcycle1J
UA11to p.,.fl
&amp; Acctuorln

Wan~

Sales service and supplies In ground and
above ground pools

Rae ne Oh
Ph 614 843 2591

22 ttc

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

check the proper box

Wantttl to luy
Tn.~cks or Sa •

n-.t.w

317tl Noble Summit Rd
Moddleport Ohio
992 S724

Rt 3 Box S4

FRONT ENd
ALIGNMENT

reserves the r ght to

U-Lots I Ac Hit

Assocl•tes

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Utility Buildrngs

VINYL SIDING

On any alignment
by Randy Car
penter
factory

e TRANSPORTATION

, -Homts tor S.•t
12-MOIM ,._.O"'fl
IO II t
U - Farmalor he
J4-lualnnl lu ld "''

DON T SAY LATER t
COULD
HAVE
BOUGHT IT OWN IT
NOWI DON'T WAITI
CALL OR COME IN TO
DAY
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland Jr
992 6191

Free Est• mates
Reasonable Pnces

SMALL

1 ---.jcoupon~---;

p s p b good cond $2 700

71---Awlot fOr S• t
n-vana&amp;4W D

ei!EAL ESTATE

SAlES
mEPOOL PEOPU

SlleS
From 30x.30

s zes from 4)(6 to ]2x40

1

99, 3854

6l-LIYtltOCk
64-Hay I G o~ln
n-SteCI&amp;Ftrt tar

U-Pro ' " ona
S. Y Cll

D BUMGARDNER

Farm Bulldrngs

All types of roof work
new or repa 1r gutters
and downspouts gu1ter
clean,ng and pa1ntmg
All work guaranteed

Call Howard
949 2862
949 ~160

I
m leage $230 Ca I 992 31 49 I
I
or 992 2705
I
1977 Chevrolet Impa a 4 I
door 350 eng am fm a c
I

t al or group of f gures
counts as a wot d Count
name and address or
phone number f used

41-F•rm lqulpmlft

eFINANCIAL

Is 1ust a lew at the
features of lh s 7 room
house Must see to ap
precfate S38 000 00
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- I Y2 story 2 4 bedroom
home with a lull base
men! lllat has been
remodeled lately N ce
Jot S25 000 00
ALL CLEARED - and
Is fairly level w th at
least 4 bu ld ng s tes
Approx 10 Acres Wo I
Subdivide $11 500 00
OLD ST RT 33" - 3
acres and a 1 story 5
room home that needs
$Qme repairs Reduced
to$6 000 00
LAND CONTRACT This 1'h story home has
3 lots alum s ding tu

ALL STEEL

ROOFING

3301 or 965 4140

1973 Datsun 4 speed Good

,.._E11u Pmtnt fo RH

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

&amp; CBitepa r
t-W•ntect To De

porch

JOHN TEAFORD
614 985 3961
6 31 mo

Pr nt one word n each

,.-M ac Me chartcllse
55-BII ld ftJIUppl I I
.u-P eta lor s. •

4--IVI nilS T • nlnt
J-Sdtoolslnst vet on
6Rad 0 TV

1 Profess onal teach•ng
cert flcate
2 Played professional
tou r naments tn Ohto W
v" Kent cl(y

Carl Reed 667 3327

H. L WRITESEL

Ten foot speed boa w th a
35 hp Mercury eng ne w th
Ira er S/50 00 Call 985

II

space below Each In

n-ca TV Rad o Equ pmMt
5l-An qual

l-lnswrance

etc

Tom Burroughs 667 6150
6 15 mo pd

Straw $ 25 a ba e

47- Wanttcl to a ...

eMEI!CHANDtSE

1 - " ' P wanted
'J-S Nit" W1nt.ct

- CLUB REPAIR-

Boats and
Motors lor Sa e

Phon•·~-----------------

S1-HouHftold GOOCh

htgh
school
students

Ca 985 4104

Hovltt or Rent

&amp;Ave ion

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

for

Playing 1tems clubs
bags balls shoes carts

FREE ESTIMATES

5-25 tfc

N NE we11k Old p gs $16 00
each

949 2M6
5 23 1 mo

Scholarsh ps pass ble

Gutter&amp;
Replacement
Wtndowsand
Roofmg

742 2328

$300

~

Beg nn ng &amp; Advanced

SIDING, SOFFIT

Construction

old Oscar Weber 965 3906

mal e

Mustcat

•

- l ntenor &amp; Exterior
Work

GOLF LESSONS

T L BURROUGH'S

AI Tromm

7S

- Free Estimates

Pomeroy Oh

ROOFING
REMODELING
HOME
MAINTENANCE

Polled
18 months

walker coon hound W
run and ree Cal 9.49 2545

2

9--WantedtoBuy

new baths

742-2474
Ollice Phone 992 22.19

L

19/4 JEE P CJS Sl900 00
Ca l 949 2545

Kawasak
uo
cond 742 'l7 47

work

-Fully Insured

992 379'
41 tfc
--------------~

YH S 42 09

Herefo d bu
14 months
old Last of our Superol
caves RRS Fa m 991 5565

71

Put a
futu e
Assorted k ttens
and cats dogs and pupp es
Shots
wormed
To see
t hese beau ful dogs IN 1
make you want to grab
oneup and ake t home A I
var et es Humane Soc ety

ei!ENTALS

t-Pvll cSa •

Qu ck

Do"l• &amp; Roger Turner

614

I

Roller Brush ilnd Spr•'f

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCA TIOII t

Poll e d

9506

eANNOUNCEMENTS

- YI dille

built throughout 5 acres
at niCe lay ng cleared
land SS8 700 oo
BUSINESS
Mtd
dleport Lunch Room All equipment licenses

Jean Trussell 9U 2660

1971 Jeep Wagonee 4x4
Lock out hub s 967 FIOO
p ckup both n ex cond

Address.__•_ _ _ _ _ __

dining
room
cozy
I replace and os qoottly

spotless

o

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Th1s 3 bedroom home

Is

N

26

1 :1 yr o d male red Dober
man w th papers SlOO 773

and

$7 ()()() 00
6PLIT LEVEL RANCH

front

an ques

Vans &amp; 4 W

&amp;

Sandblasting Co.

Bustness-Farms-Partnershtp s
and Corporations
Payrolls proftt and loss statements all
fPCieral and state forms

6461

WANT AD INFORMATION

situated on 1 113 acre
Does need some repa r

tnventory

P ckup w th
toppe exce ent cond ton
low m eage o1s at eKt as
Ca ll Yn :.w 5 after 6 p m

ches class r ng s wedd ng
bands d amends Gold or
s lver Ca J A Wamsl ey
42 133
T easure Ches
Con Sho p Athens OH 592

~------+---------1

room block house with

basement

1980 Datsun

7l

Gheen's
Painting

Tn-County
Bookkeeping
Serv1ce

only

or Wnte Dally Senhnel ClaSSified Dept
111 Court St Pomero)'l, 0 45769

part

Y 4 Datsun p ckup
tape deck some us
fhrow n a used oppe
~ 00 00 Ca YY2 J
0 at e
!I or "191. 366:.! days

lnd M dd eport OH 992
Jl61

PHONE 992-2156
LISTING -

glass

any h ng See qr cal Roth

~~dayc;~4 ;8f~1t70 manager

.--~~

NEW

Business Services

CH P WOOO Poles max

area Pr ces from $250 and ...

se t

General

n erna ana
Ha vcster
Com b ne 64R 6 too cut
Gran ank new rubber zed
canvas new cy l nde be ts
smoo h runn ng
eady o
work Pau 5ayre Por
t and Oh o R • J JI:I Great
Bend Road Phone t:I4 J 45Yl
cal atte 5p m

or ~a c 13 Mode
ac or
Ex ec len
o ca 1 '19'1.. J)4 at

we are p ck ng up sever pi
1----'!!!':'!_ ___ J
repossessed and t ade n 1-------------&lt;~---------1
p anos and organs n your , ••··-

conta ned w th extras 992
5434 992 3129or992 5914
Real Estate

F arm Equ pm ent

6J

POODLE GROOM NG
Judy Tay or 6 4 367 7220

watches and

travel

Fully

e gh too bed tru ck 992
3090

HOOF HOLLOW

54
1973

wo mete r ham
rad o
equ pment One Heathk
transce ve w th s x tr an
sm t and ece ve channels
A l so
add t ana
four
r ece ve channel s Power
supply tor h s ncluded
Also Heathk t amp/ f er
w th power supp y One
ver ca l and one beam an
enna for two meters
Phone YY2 306

992 6260

co n collect ons Cal 6
767 3167 or 557 34 I

more

Call

n V II age

Sen or C t zens

workshop 10 basement

Gold
s lver or foreign
cons or any gold or sliver
tems Ant que furniture
glass or ch na will pay top

ke new Cal 992

14 3 af er 5 p m

Pets for Sale

RENTERs ass s ance for

5970 before 12 or after 5

nice

dollar or compjete estates
No tem too large or too
small Check prices before
sell ng Also do appraising
Osby (Oss e) Martin 992
6J70

Apartment
for Rent

44

1973 3 bedroom 2 complete
baths furn shed 8x14 front
porch
7/ B acre near
Ha r sonv lie $14 500 992

carpeting

••

$too 00

One Amana
a r co n
d t one One camper to f t

pay cash or cert f ed check
tor an ques and co lee
t bles or en re estates

and

LAFF -A

Wh r p ool

auto m a c wa she r and
dryer One year old good
cond 1 on $300 00 Leblanc
ci a r net good cond ton
$75 00
Yamaha gu ta
mOde No GSSA w h case

7

ATTE NT ON
l M
PORT ANT TO YOU ) WI

tra ter

61

U (.K

Ma c k
cund

OLD COl NS pocke wal

also has a den 2 baths

n the area of Sumner
Road f seen cal 965 4137

711/lJ

Go ldt one

ucks tor S,u c

r

62

m es Sou th M ddleport

n ng 992 2661

LARGE female cal co cat

ce bo&lt;es antiques et~
Complete
households
wr te M D Miler Ill 4
Pomeroy OHl or call 992

Deco a ted cakes for at oc
cas ons Cha acfer cakes
and shec cakes Ca I 99'J.
6342 or ~'l 2583

pe s no drunks Steep ng
r oo m f or r ent 50 acres of
pas ure John Sheets JV2

bedroom

Ho ypark Tr a ler
Fur
n shed a c washer metal
out bu1ld ng
under p n

Los

Oh o Cr tt Bradford

t es

14x65 2

bedroom

-

Saturday

949 2487 or 949 2000 rae ne

ut

992 7479

Mobtle Homes

Sale Pr ceS11 000 oo
WHAT A PRESENT
FOil FATHER - New

SERUM
Serum ts the clear
yellowish flwd of the blood
which Is left after blood
clota in the teat tube
Senun contalliS antibodies
Which form tn resporiBe to
the presence of bacteria
toxins and other foreign
substances

Home

Mo b e

I do

such as I ght haul ng pa1n
t ng tear ng down houses
clear ng
and bu ld ngs
lots and mow ng lawns
Have tools and tran

1Jinsurance

sa e

Mobtle Homes
_ -... for~ ent - 4 2 Bedroom M ob le Home
turn shed k chen elder y
couple pref erred Depos t
equ red No pets 992 2749

42

w 1 do genera I house
clean ng SJ oo hour 992
5094 or 992 5207 after 5

LARGE ya d sale Fr day
J one 20 9 t I &gt; Cl ne

CAR PORT

~

ItFtrst
:second
*and
!teases
:plete

S tuat ons Wanted

12

R ggs

MAY 23 o June 30 30'o ott
greenwa e sale Br ng a
con ta ner f.J a m to 9 p m
Dr ehcl s Ce am cs 51,1 N
~econd Ave
M ddleport
W11 5

man h

exce l ent

benet ts For dela s call
SFC Yoho304 675 3950

M I er 992 6338

Freeze
comb nat on
Upr ght freezer Bar and 4

n

res dent a
co mmun ty
spac ous attract ve rna n
tenance free home located
on lovely acre lot Modern
k tchen
fam ly room
several bedroom s 2 baths
basement
garage
Low

bedroom

w 1 do odd and ends lobs

Parcel No 2 Be ng n lOC
Acre Lot No 103 n Sect or

northwest corner of a ot or
parcel of land form!!r y
owned by Bel e Ri ce and
running east along the nor

a Pa r 992 3830 Chamber
Off ce 992 5005 New York
Cloth ng House 992 2049

and lake Age to f sh from 1

150 feet thence north 72 2
f eet t o the p ace of beg n
n ng conta n ng one fourtt
( •&gt; of an acre

REFERENCE DEED
vo 172 Page 590 Me gs
County Deed Records
TRACT THREE
Parcel No 1 The
tor ow ng desd'Dell -na\
estates tuated n the Town
ship of Olive County of
Me gs and State ot Ohio
to-wit Beg nn ng at the

Roya
Oak Lodge
Joe
Lav nger
and
the
T un e t me rs
T ckets
ava lable a S mons P ck

Shade Valley Club House

thence east 150 feet thence
south 72 21eet thence west

t he place of beg nn ng con
an ng 14/ 100 of an acre
more or less

Barn Sale George E K ng

Tun ng farm I vee ghth m le off
and Repa r Serv ce s nee Rt 7 Baby c lothes adult
1965 If no answer phone clothes ots of m sc 1956
992 2062
Case tra ctor Wed though
Sat 9 9 992 37 37
Regatta FROG
BALL
sato day June 28 9

Derby Saturday June 21st
from 8 a m t 2 p m at

south west corner df tot
deeded by W H Smart and
w fe to Edward S mmons

south 72 12 teet thence west
65 teet thence north 72 ,
teet thence east 85 teet to

Lane

Annual Ch ldren s F sh ng

descr bed as follows
Beg ng n one Hundreo
Acre Lot No OJ n Sec
tons Nos 3 and 9 Town
No .4 Range No 11 of thf
Ohio Company s Flu chase

Yard Sale

7

Tun ng

Game C ub w I

and n the Townsh p o
01 ve and bounded anc

Nos 3 and 9 Town No 4
Range No 11 of the Otl c.
Company s Purchase and
beg nn ng at t he northeas
co rn er or lands formerly
owned by Pearl K bble and
sou heast corner of lands of
Fred Shumway
thence

2354

The Me gs CounTy F sh and

s x room hou sP. and ou
bu d ngs w 11 be sold as s and bounded on the south
a auct on on the Court by Ia 1ds of Pear K bble oo
the east by lands at Peart
House S eps n Pomeroy
K bble on the north by Jan
Oh a a 10 OOA M onMon
day June 30th 1980 a nd ds of Fred Shumway on
me m n mum pr ce for the west by State H ghway
wh ch th s house w I be No 124 and beg nn ng at
so d at h s sale s $7 500 00 M_one 217 'feet sooth of the

n Jh e

Mun c pa ty shal be dete
based
upon
m ned
operat ons of he Company
n he Mu n c pa ty dur ng
the mos recen y ava ab e
twe ve month per ad en
d ng on th e l as t day of the
Dec ember preced ng he
effec t ve date of he new
ta x. or h gher tax ra e the
to al dollars so computed

MAYOR

east 3.4 2 feet thence s1c
east 283 :::1 feet to A thur
M I s west I ne
thence

M Is ttlen ce east seven
and one ha f rods to the

Wh te male fox hound old
town area of Portlarfd and
Rae ne If found call 843

25ijij

R

!
~*********** ....

Los1 and Found

6

House t or Rent Locafed on
Ma n S
a
th Logan
Monument Co d sp ay rr
erested par y
man or
woman
mus
be sa les
or en ed to help us sel
monuments on he ot Con
ta ct Leo L vaughan 992

n

M 5oc Mcrchantse

54

THREE bedroom house tor

32

I

Houses tor !len!

8

Shop The Sentinel Classifieds For Good Buys
Publ c Nollce

4t

Beautiful arge home Low
uttl lies br ck ranch s yle
3 bedrooms
2 baths
f repla ce ful
basemen t
fam ly room
a r con
d toner J car garage
Baum Add ton
M e gs
County Ca I 985 4 69

WASHINGTON (AP)
The
Agriculture Departmenlts crankmg
up to buy turkey lor school cafetena
use m the fall
Offtc als sa td buis from suppliers
wtll be considered each week wtth
the ftrst offers due on June 30 until
further nolLce 4
To be ellg1ble processors must
operate under federalmspeclton and
comply wtth all USDA purcllasmg
reqmrements
Each year the department buys a
vanely of conunodiltes mcludmg
poultry for donatiOn under Its school
lunch program

Dorothy Hawk to Timothy
Hawthorne Margaret Evelyn Riffle
1 09 acres Chester
ENTERS GUILTY PLEA
COLUMBUS Ohto (AP)- A Lon
don Ohio man entered a plea of
gutlly to one count of grand theft m
connectton with Illegally obtammg
Medtcatd Medtcare funds
Mtchael H Maddobne III 26 ad
nutted he transported palLents m a
sulrcompact car and then btlled
both the Oh1o Welfare Department
and Nationwide Insurance the
Medtcare
mtermed1ary
for
provtdmg ambulance servtces He
entered his plea m Franklm County
Common Pleas Court on Tuesday
He agreed to pay back $2 000 to
Medtcatd and $8 000 to Medicare

Homes for Sale

Mall ThiS Coupon With Remittance
The Datly Sentmel
Box 72'1
Pomeroy Oh 45769

tJ---------"9--------·-·--·-·-·-;;.J,"'rfl

ELWOOD

BOWERS

REPA R
Sweepers
tl)as ers rons all small
app! ances Lawn mower

Next a Stale H ghway
Garage on Route 7 985
3815

87
A&amp;H Upholster ng Now
lie Upholstertng Car
Seats Ph 992 3752 or 992
3743

�·12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, June 19, 1980

Judge terminates 42 cases
Fifteen defendents forfeited bonds
and 27 paid fines Wednesday tn the
Meigs County Court of Judge
P.dlrick O'Brien. •
Forfeiting bonds were Jeffrey 0 .
Peckham, Middleport, unsafe
vehicle, $30.5(]; Guy J . Walker ,
Grand Junction, Col., . reckless
operation, $60 .50; Jennie A.
Williams, Marietta, speeding,

Sandra Wy benga,
Charles E. Branuner,
. Proctorville; Karen S. Buckley,
Adrian, Mich.; Bruc'C Kuhn, Logan;
Edward Metheney, Cuyahoga Falls;
David L. Williamson, Rutland;
Larry Shipler, Gallipolis; Wanda
Chaffin , Hopedale ; Raymond A.
Huff, Columbus; and Salldra S.
Stewart, West Columbia, W.Va ., all
Tal~twdge;

I

Freda Grega

James McCausland ·

Mrs. Freda.Grega, 72,209 E. Main
St.. Amanda, formerly ui. Meigs
County, was killed Monday night in
an auto accident on Route 159 south
of Amanda.
Also killed in the accident was
Mrs . Grega's great-granddaughter, Katrina Schumacher, 9, of
1727 Gray lock Ave., Lancaster.
Mrs. Grega was born June 7, 1908
in Meigs County. She wa s a member
of the Amanda United Methodist
Church and was an active member
of the Amanda Senior Citizens Club.
Surviving are two daughters, Mrs.
Holly (Joan) O'Neil of Amanda aznd
Mrs. Joseph (Mary ) Grega of Rootstown, nine grandchildren, nine
great-grandchildren, three brothers ,
Alva Will . and Jesse Will , both of
Pomeroy, and Walter Will, California , and a sister, Mrs. Carl (Lena )
Heilman of Pomeroy.
Joint funeral services wtll be held
at 11 a.m. Friday at the Taylor
Funeral Home in Amanda .
Graveside tiles will be conducted for
Mrs. Grega all p.m. Saturday at the
St. Joseph Cemetery in Suffield.
Friends may call at the funeral
home at anytime.

Funeral services for James Terry
McCausland, 18, 412 Lewis St., Pl.
Pleasant, who was found dead in a
wooded area in back of Pl. Pleasant
Wednesday morning, will be Saturday at 1:30 p.m . at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home.
Burial will be in the Suncrest
Cemetery with the Rev. Kenneth
Coleman officiating.
Mr. McCausland was born July 22,
1961 in Mason County to Hilda Simpkins McCausland, 412 Lewis St.,
arid the late Robert E . McCausland,
who died in 1969.
He atlended the Grace Bible Church and was a 1980 graduate of Pl.
Pleasant High School.
Survtving in addition to his mother
are three sisters, Mrs. Patricia
Lane, Columbus; Mrs. Susan
James, Centerville; an_d Mrs. Tina·
Thornton, Mentor, Oh; and two
brothers, Robert McCausland and
Jackie Simpkins, both
of Pl.
Pleasant.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 5 p.m. Friday.

•

Complaint filed
Herbert Parker, president of the
board of trustees of Carleton College, reminded Syracuse residents
that Monday, June 2.'1, is the deadline
for completed applications for the
1980 Carleton Memorial Scholarship
to be submitted.
.
The applications are still available
from Milton Varian, treasurer of the
board. Only legal residents of
Syracuse are eligible to apply . Up to
$1,000 in scholarship funds will be
awarded to one or more applicants
this year.

ull charges of speeding, wtlh bo11d of
$40.5(]; Milo B. Hutchisu11, Rulla11d,
driving while itlluxicated, $360.5(];
Kevin Wolfe, Racine, failure to
display valid r egistration, $35.5(].
Paying fines were .B rett C. Friend,
Long Bottom, speeding, $20 and
costs; Raymond Maxson, Reedsville, speeding, $46 and costs;
Gerald Mason, Vienna, W. Va .,
speeding, $26 and cO.sts; William Ar·
baugh, Tuppers Plains, speeding,
$21 and costs; William Barber, New
Marshfield, speeding, $25 and costs;
Matthew Weaver, Middleport,
fa tlure to stop for a stop sign, $10 and
costs; Mark A. Combs, Racine,
possessing and selling a wild raccuun without a cQnnnerciaJ game
propagator's license, $25 and costs;
Richard Couch, Pomeroy, speeding,
$21 and costs ; Danny Smith, Huntington, W.Va., $24 and costs; Nancy
Roy, Racine, speeding, $26 and

$30.50;

Area deaths

Deadline near

ELBERFELD$ IN -POMEROY

Meigs County sheriff's deputies
are investigating the enlery of the
Edtth Welsh residence at Pagetown.
Mrs. Welsh reported that the
house was ransacked. A C.B. base
statton, two clock radios, and one
clock were among the missing
items .
Entry was gained by removing a
screen from an open window.
In other action, Kevin Clark,
Ractne, reported a Canon AEI 35
mm camera was taken from his auto
while it was parked at the Snider
residence in Racine.
Investigation of both incidents is
continuing.

costs;

Francis Foster,

Racine,

driving left of center, $10 and costs;
Daniel :Wooten, Albany, parking on
highway, $10 and costs; Judy Pugh,
Long Bottom, unsafe vehicle, $5 and
cost.&lt;;; Dorothy M. Clark, Route 3,
Pomeroy, failure to yield, $10 and
costs; Patsy G. Ingels, Middleport,
speeding, $22 and costs; Frank
Samatoritz, Long Bottom, speedmg,
$22 and costs; Ronald S. Haggy,
Pomero)', overloading , $223 and
costs; Donald R. Folmer, Jr., Route
3, Pomeroy, speeding, $29 and costs;
Frank Haggy, Pomeroy. defective
exhaust, $15 and costs; Thomas A.
Myers, Langsville, overloading, $45(]
and cost.&lt;;; David Shuler, Rutland,
disorderly condurt, $20 and costs;
Shawn Bell, Racine, driving while
intoxicated, $200 and costs, license
suspension for 30 days, and 3 days
confinement; Frank Herald, Jr.,
Route I, Middlepo~t. physical harm,
$25 and cost.&lt;;; Joseph Justis, Middleport, fishing without a license, $20 .
and costs; Benjamin F. Upton,
Reedsville, failing to yield right ct
way, $35 and costs~ Steve McGrath,
Rutland, 2 charges of assault, 10
days in jail on each count and costs;
Ronald L. IVJiller, Racine, driving
while intoxicated, $15(], 3 days confinement, and license suspension for
30days.

NETWORK OF CITIES
In its heyday, the Maya
civilization was a network of
populous cities graced by soaring
pyramid-temples, stretching from
the mountains and rain forests of
Guatemala north to the parched
plain of Mextco's Yucatan Peninsula.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Angela
Hatfield,
Pomeroy; Marie Pursley, Racine;
Richard DeMoss, Pomeroy; Bobbie
Roy, Racine; Margaret Neuman,
Pomeroy; Joshua Henry, Pomeroy ;
Irene Russell: Middleport; Maude
Moore, Long Bottom; Howard
Searles, Middleport; Thelma Dill,
Syracuse; Margaret McDaniel, Middleport ; Frances King, Middleport;
Alma Young, Pomeroy; Earl Glass,
Middleport; Mary Braley, Pomeroy.
Discharged-Vivian Phelps, Betty
Hutchison, I.AJvie Lee, Edna Haning,
Helen Knapp, Opal Pugh, James
Meadows, Mary Sheron, Genevieve
Demoskey.

TOURNAMENT SET
SYRACUSE - The City Limits
Softball Team is sponsoring a Class
"B" and "C" ASA sanctioned tournament June 28 and 29 at Syracuse
Park. Entry fee is $65 and two balls.
Trophies go to the top four teams
plus individual trophies to the top
three teams. Also trophies tor MVP
home runs, hits, defensive playe;
and team sportsmanship. For in·
formation call Chuck Hannahs at
992-3119 OJ 992-3132, Pat O'Brien at
992-2720 or 992-2509.

LADIES'

SPORTSWEAR

macy.

•
CLINIC CANCELLED
The weekly inullunization clinic
held by ~ Meigs County Department of Health has been cancelled
for Tuesday, June 24, b)lt will be
reswned on the following Tuesday,

.

.

To 50%

-TOPS -JACKETS
-PANTS -SKIRTS

HURRY IN!

a

Medical Cente~ ·

·
1

CHILDREN'S

.

_

SUMMER TOPS

Weekend Savings on little boys' and girls'
knit tops, shirts and blouses .
Name Brand Quality.. ...
·
Special Sale Prices!

l
rI

Select from -our big selection of
samples by Decorator Industries
or Cortley . Excellent quality and
prompt delivery .
Drap~ry Department-1st Floor

!

30% OFF
REG. PRICE
ALL GIRLS

WHITE PATENT
DRESS
.
. SHOES
30% OFF .

MEN'S

I!

Select group of Pre-Teen, .klnior and
Misses Sportswear.
Devon, Red -i, Bradley, Russteen, Trissi
and Aileen .
Hurry in and SAVE!

Blue Label is a comfort bl end of 75% cotton, 25% polyester . Briefs in sizes 30 to 44.
T -shirts S, M, L, XL .

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

REG. 17.49 T·SHIRTS ............... SS.99 PKG.
REG. 16.79 BRIEFS ................. SS.43 PKG.

-· .... ---..--·
--------SALEI MEN'S
WRANGLER $1995
BASIC JEANS

_.._.._.._.._.._..

N. 2ND AVE. ,
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

~ouse

OF SHOES

$12 .00
$15.00
521.00
$28.00
$34.00

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

!
I
!

BEDROOM FURNITURE
(J

-4 Drawer chests

-s Drawer chests

-Double dressers

- 6 Drawer chests

-Tri ple 'd ressers
- Night stands
- Beds

SPORT SHIRTS
Solid colors and patterns and this sale include's all of our men's Western Shirts.

-Va let chests
- Bunk beds

20% OFF

_..

Judge expects to enter guilty plea

.

I

SPECIAL SALE GROUP

j

ANGEL TREADS
SLIPPERS

I

REG. '4.00 AND '5.00

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t

l

ST. GEORGE 'S, Grenada - A bomb exploded at a governmentsponsored political rally Thursday, killing at least two people and
wounding 20, but missed its apparent target - leftist Prime Minister
Maurice Bishop.
Police said the charge was placed under a podium on which Bishop,
other government leaders and the Cuban ambassador were to have
been standi~g. One witness said Bishop was standing on the podium at
the time of the explosion but was not hurt.
A gun fight broke out in a suburb four hours after the bomb blast,
and witnesses heard the sound of sporadic rifle and automatic
weapons fire for at least two hours .

WILLOUGHBY, Ohio - Firemen were able to bring under control a
blaze at a propane gas plant after a four-block area was evacuated in
this Cleveland suburb.
One serious injury resulted Thursday when some 200 propane gas
cyliners shot into the air after an initial blast at a loading dock of
Propane Industrial Service Inc.
Rich Zalanka, 23, of Painesville, was transferred from Lake County
Memorial Hospital West to the burn unit a t Metropolitan General
Hospital in Cleveland, with second-degree burns over 40 pe rcent of his
•
body, officials said. He was in critical condition.

'

-Single dressers

AKRON, Ohio - Surnn'iit County Probate Judge James V. Barbuto,
who's left the bench while facing charges of sexual misconduct and
misuse of guns, was expected to enter a plea today in the guns ' case.
BarbutQ, who will be 59 on Tuesday, faces six counts of mishandling
firearms which had been confiscated as evidence in criminal cases.
He was convicted last week of intimidation and gross sexual imposition after a trial before Common Pleas Judge George J . McMonagle, who is also to preside at the gun trial. ·The trial is to begin
Monday.

Glider pilot dies in accident
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio - A glider pilot who was competing in the
U.S. National Soaring Championships was killed Thursday while
trying to make an emergency landing in a Pickaway County field
during a storm.
His glider was one of 15 forced down by the weather in the western
part of the county. None of the other pilots was hurt, the sheriff's office
said. •
'
Officials identified the victim as Joseph N. Bearden Jr., 53, of Cincinnati.
The 15 gliders were among 65 which took off from the Springfield airport to fly a triangular course to Lebanon, Circleville and back to
Springfield.

SEVERAL STYLES IN SIZES S-M-L-XL

SALE
PRICES
YOUR CHOICE $299
----:.. ,..__.._.._.___..._.__T-______. . . . .,., __.._..
BOYS' JEANS

(

All of our boys jeans are on sale this
weekend .

Regular, slim and husky sizes 8 to 18 and
ltudent sizes 26 to 30 waist (Se lect your
length) .

BABY DOLL PAJAMAS

Highs in the low to mid 70s. Clea r tonight, with lows in the low 50s.
Sunny Saturday, with highs in the mid to upper 70s. The chance of rain
is near zero today, tonight and Saturday.

.. ----· ..... - ..... ._._....,__________________-1_

EXTRA SIZE

AS~~!'!u~~F I,,~;,~~~~~,~~"'
REGUlAR PRICES 15' TO ii,59
HOUSEWARES DEPARTMENT - 1ST R.OOR

llL

PRICE

-~- ·- .!.~ ·~ ·-·- ·~

I
ii
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SKEIN

register. The tournamenl was held at Riverside Golf Course, Mason, W.
Va . See more coverage Pages 3-4-5.

Ohio's employment outlook
continues to remain
bleak
..
COLUMBUS, Ohio I.AP J - The
latest figures show Ohio's employment took a statistical turn for
the better last week over the
previous one, but still looks bad
when compared with jobless rates of
a year ago.
Adrhinistrator Alllert G. Giles of
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services said the number of persons
making their first-time claims fOr
jobless benefits dropped 31 percent
in the week ending June 14.
The 30,991 people filing initial
claims under the Ohio unemployment compensation rules compares with 44,885 who made initial
claims the previous week.
Giles estimated that 320,758
jobless Ohioans filed claims for
unemployment compensation last
week under all state and federal
programs. That's down 11.5 percent

from the previous week's total of
362,555.
An examination of the statistics indicate that the more fortunate
recession-era workers are those employed in Ohio 's non-manufacturing
industrtcs. More of them have jobs,
a s ·opposed to manufacturing

workers.
Employment in the nunmanufacturing segment of the
economy actually, climbed 1.4 percent in comparsion with May 1979
and May 1980, the employment services office said Thursday. The increase resulted in an overall level of
3,176,000 workers.
Meanwhile, factory employment
continues to be hardest hit by the
recession. the office said. The
fabricated metal product.&lt;; sector
reported a decline of II percent the sharpest drop in employment

among categories of Ohio factories.
Overall unemployment in Ohio
during May was up 80 percent over
the level of May 1979, the service·
reported. The ranks of out-of-work
persons swelled from 245,000 in May
a year ago to 439,000 last month.
That equates to 4.9 percent unemployed a year ago and 8. 7 percent
jobless last month.
Overall, the agency estimated that
for the week ending June 14 , there
were 2.'13,000 claimants fur compensation who were out of work for
one week or more. That's down from
238,004 similar claimants in the
week ending June 7.
The agency also reported that
Ohio factory workers are hit hardest
by the recession. Between May 1979
and May 1980, manufacturing employment fell 9.8 percent - by
nearly 137,000 - to 1,254,000, it ad-

ded.
The pnmary metal industries laid
off 26 ,000 workers from such jobs as
blast furnace and basic steel production, according to the agency. And
fabricat ed metal products companies had 20 ,000 fewer employees
than in Ma y 1979, it added.
Nearly every manUfacturing industry in Ohio lost workers, except
for producers of communication
equipment, aircraft and parts, and
food and related products, the agency said.
Non-manufacturing industries in
Ohio fared much better than factories, however , showing an in·
crease of 1.4 percent in employment
10 the May-to-May comparison. The
non-manufacturing category includes service, sales, maintenance,
clerical, government and transportation workers.

Despite adverse economic conditions,

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday through Tuesday: Fair Sunday and Monday, with scattered
showers or thunderstorms Tuesday. Highs in the 80s, and Jgws from
the mld 50s to inid 60s.

may be even bleaker than the
system's trustees indicated in their
arm ual report to Congress on Thursday.
The trustees said the Old Age and
Survivors trust fund , which paid out
almost three-quarters of the $124 .9
billion in Social Security benefits in
1979, could run out of money in late
1981 or early 1982 unless it is able to

WASHINGTON (AP ) - Congress
will move quickly to shore up the
financially fragile Social Se~urity
system and make sure that
retirement benefits continue to be
paid on time, the chairman of a key
House subcommittee promises.
However, an analyst for a senior
citizens' group said the outlook for
Social Security in the next few

Trissi extra size sportswear .

REG . 514 · 00 ... - .......... SALE 510 · 49
REG. $17.00 .............. SAI,.E $12.79 .

-----+...::::::. . .:.: .........

COATS AND CLARK
RED HEART 51.49
WINTUK YARN
$119

!

SIGNING IN - Golfers participating in the second annual Dave Dile
Celebrity Golf Tournament were on hand early Thursday morning to

Social Security program to continue

Weather forecast

REG.$ 8.00 .... .... .. ..... SALE $6.39
REG. $11.00 .. .. ........... SALE $8.79
REG. 516.00 .. , ...... . .... SALE 512.79

SALE PRICES
-~----·-

SALE

Special savings on light and cool babydoll
pajamas.
• Permanent Press, Nylon or Knit
• Sizes Petite, Small, Medium, Large

Basic No -Fault denim jeans, pre-washed,
carpenters jeans and. fashion denims .

hurt as bomb explodes

Propane gas fire now under control

Special Sale of quality open stock maple
bedroom furniture.
Buy an entire
bedroom suite or one piece at a time.

_...._.__..,....._.._.._.._._.._....,..._..

MEN'S

SALE 5 8 .39
SALE 510.49
SALE $14.69
SALE 519.59
SALE 523. 79

SALEI

I ___ __ ·- -.

99
s1s
_

FIFTEEN CENT~

ROME - President Carter and his aides are mininuzing their differences with allies over Sovie.t a ggress ion as they· begin a week of
talks in Europe-.
·
During the long flight from Washington that brought Carter to this
l)nctent capital late Thursday night, Secretar~ of State Edmund S.
Muskie told reporters that he believed one potential point of major
friction with West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt will
evaporate.
,
Carter and Schmidt will meet in Venice on Saturday, the eve uf the
sevcn-;nation economic s ummit conference around which the
president 's trip was built.

Two' die, 20

---------~~---~-·-------------~-~-··-1

..-..-.

No-fault pre -washed 14 ounce denim that
won't shrink, stretch or pucker at seams.
SIZES 27 to 42 waist, lengths 30 to 36 in·
ches . Straight leg or boot flare style . .

FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1980

Differences being minimized

SPORTSWEAR SALE

!

T-SHIRTS AND BRIEFS

100% Virgin Orion Acrylic fi~er, 3'12
ounce skeins. Big selec tion of colors .
Stock up now .

·REG. PRICE
SEE YOU THIS
WEEKEND

POM EROY-MIDOLEP(!R I. OH IO.

From the Associated Press

~

HANES BLUE LABEL

enttne

DRAPERY SALE

20%
OFF
t
. 30% OFF .
- - - - - - _, _ _; __ ..;... _ _ _, _______ ·---------.....--1
SA VE 20%

at

-·-

•

SPRING FLOWERS

WHITE SHOES &amp; PURSES

NO. 48

•

CUSTOM MADE

ARTIFICIAL

WEEKEND SPECIAl.$

-· -· -

---.--.---------~.--1-..------

--

heritage

EMERGENCY CALL
. The MlddlejJort Emergency Squad .
answered call to298Mulberry Ave.
lit 7; 3111 .m. Tl)ursdaY for Mrs. Not•
· mall Baxter wlio was taken to Holzer

- OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE

UP

VOL 31

FRIDAY, JUNE 20 - SATURDAY, JUNE 21

FAMOUS BRAND NAMES

WOMEN'S .
NAMESOMITfED
Unintentionally omitted from a
list of friends and relatives attending the graduation of Richard
Alan Couch at Ohio State University
on June 13 were his grandmother,
Mrs. Ellen Couch, and Mrs. Alice
Wamsley, Pomeroy.
Couch
graduated swruna cum laude with a
bachelor of science degree in phar-

SPECIAL SALE PRICES

Sizes small (14· 14112 ), medium (15-15112 ),
large (16· 161h ).extra large (17 -17 1/ 2).

HOSPITAL NEWS

e

•

borrow from the Disability Insurance and Hospital Insurance
tMedicaid J funds.
And under adverse economic circumstances, the trustees said, the
three funds together might not have
enough money to pay benefits on
time beginning in 1983.
Rep. J.J. P ickle, D- Texas , chairman of the House Ways and Means
subcommittee on Social Security,
said his panel is "concerned about
the report, but the word should go
out that there is nothing to be alarmed about. "
" The Social Security program will
continue, as it has for 40 years, to
pay benefits on time," he vowed.

"The report is the Congress' warning signal and the Congress will
act."
Pickle said the subcommittee will
meet next Thursday to consider the
Carter administration's proposal to
allow interfund borrowin!!- and also
tu shift some of the payroll tax from
the burgeoning disability fund to the
old-age fund .
Pi ckle's optimistic outlook wasn 't
shared by James M. Hacking,
assistant legislative counsel for the
American Association of Retired
Persons.
" The immediate future looks
rather pessimistic," he said. "What
(Continued on page 12)

REG.$22.'00 ........... . .. SALE$16.49

!

Two Southern teachers quit _

ALE s23.99

MUSIC DEPT.

·TAPE SALE

I

•

Sale prices on all of our 8·track and cassette tapes.
Many st11 1esot music includ ing : Country, religious,
pop, rock, bluegrass , instrumentals and sound

Tracks.
REG.
REG .
REG.
REG .

.'
$3.79 ................
55.79 ............ : •••
58 :79 ..... ..... r _..,_ __ •
511.79 ......... , .... .

SALE $2.95
SALE $4. 65
SALE $7.05
S~LE $9.45

.......-............ .......... ........... ..... ......... .......

_._,.................,..~-..-~..~...-......._.,_,___-:--::----t
OPEN SATUADAY 9-.30 TO 5 P.M.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

'

' . '•

.
SURPRISE VISITOR - Golfing activities were prematurely halloo
Thursday afternoon at Riverside Gulf Course in Mason whcnl a hdicup-

1

I

.

•

.j.'

ter landed on the course. It made twu slops before leaving the area, where
~he Sccund Annual Dave Diles G&lt;Jif Classic was being played.
~

.

•

'

The resignations of two teachers
were accepted and two teachers
were employed when the Southern
Local School District Board of
Education met in regular sessi on
Tuesday night.
The board accepted the
resignations of Deborah Hoff,
business and office education instructor and William Hensler as
junior high football coach.
The board hireJ Sandra Cobb as
business and office education instructor and as yearbook and
cheerleader advisor. A former
teacher, Mrs. Lee Lee was hired as
vocal music teacher and to produce
a variety show at the high school. ,
Head cooks harned include
Durothy Sayre, Esther Wolfe, Anna
Obits, , Eleanor Wingett, Mary
Easterday, Anna Oiler who will also
serve as ;~nchroom supervisor.

Substitute bus drivers named were
William Downie, Jr. , Hilton Wolfe,
Jr., Aaron Sayre, Ernest Spencer,
Raymond Oliver, Ray Proffitt,
Kathleen Mortris, Lois Wolfe and
Opal Huff.
Named substitute custodians were
Robert Lewis, Lois Mugrage and
Catherine Grady and Violet Bush,
Virginia Davis, .Lois &amp;ugrage,
Florence Thornton, Catherine
Grady, Dorothy Johnson, Lizzie
Wood, Linda Holter, and Anna
Wjnes.
The board approved new salary
schedules for the next year for certified and non certified employes.
The school calendar was a,lso adopted with teachers to meet on
Tuesday, Sepi. 2, and classes to
begin on Wednesday, Sept. 3. The
last day of school for the new year
will be on J!llle 3.
-.11

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