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                  <text>Leaders agree ·coal production must double
b Dick Ca·valli

WINTHROP
'YOU'RE A DI~~NIV&amp;I..-IN~~
'YE:L.I..ON-BE.LL.I~ COWAf&lt;.D/

'

VENICE, !tidy (AP) - President
Carter and leaders of six other industrialized nations are climaxing
their economic swrunit by agreeing
· that coal production should be
doubled by 1990 and that fresh efforts must be made to reduce their
oil imports.
In addition, Carter personally
assured his swrunit colleagues that
the United States will resist
pressures for " premature or excessive stimulation of the American
economy.''

White ijouse press secretary Jody
Powell reported Sunday l)ight, on
the eve of the conference windup,
that Carter's pledge was welcomed
by the leaders of Britain, France,
Germany, Italy, Japan and Canada.
The American president
scheduled individual private
sessions today with the leaders of
Britain, Japan ll!ld Canada as the

summit nations were holding their
sunuuit participants agreed that oil
final business session before issuing
conservation goals set a year ago at
a joint policy statement.
. the last economic swrunit in Tokyo
Powell said in advance that the
will be made obsolete because of an
leaders were agreed inflation
anticipated reduction in world oil
remains the No.1 economic problem
output in the years ahead.
for the non-communist inAs a consequence, they reported,
dustrialized world and that energy
the leaders have decided to call for a
.concerns rank second. Carter adfurther oil import cutb:lck of 4
dressed both topics in his initial
million barrels a day, to about 22
statement to the swrunit conference
million barrels, by 1985.
Sunday.
The summit schedule was derailed
Well-placed sources who asked not a bit Sunday because of a claim by
to be identified said the representhe Soviet Union that it will begin a
tatives of the seven nations were in
partial withdrawal 9f troops from
accord that the production and use
Afghanistan.
.
of coal, long a neglected energy
Carter and his colleagues had
resource, should be doubled in the
planned all along to issue a fresh
coming decade. Any such develop- condemnation here of the Soviet inment would inean boom times for
tervention in Afghanistan, but they
the coal mining sections of the
speeded their timetable by 24 hours
United States, which have a and issued their declaration Sunday.
significant export trade.
As Carter put it in chatting with
In addition, the sources said, the
American reporters, ''this Soviet an-

..

VOL. 31

e

NO. 49

•

nouncement can only be judged as
significant if it's accurate, if it's permanent, and if it's a first sfep
toward tutal withdrawal. A partial
withdrawal of Soviet forces, of
carefully selected units, would have
very little significance."
Reading a statement on behalf of
all swrunit participants, Italian
Prime Minister Francesco Cossiga
said that " the Soviet military occupation of Afghanistan is . unacceptable now and that we are determined not to accept it in the future.''
The summit statement said that
Soviet intervention was incompatible with detente, "undermines the very foundations of
peace," and that " we are resolved to
do everything in our power" to bring
about permanent and complete
troop withdrawal. The Soviets have
an estimated 85,000 troops in the
Southwest Asian country.

at y
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO,

Asked about the timing of the
Soviet announcement, Carter said:
"My belief is that it's much more
associated with a desire to get Olympic participation than it is to modify
the wording of the communique to be
issued here in Venice. The Soviets
want very much to have athletes
come to Moscow. The Olympic
boycott has hurt them very badly in
world opinion and also within their
own country.''

Cossiga also read a joint
statement that, without directly
referring to Iran, pronused that the
summit participants are determined
to combat "the taking of hostages
and attacks on diplomatic and consular premises and personnel." The
leaders said they would adopt
policies "to deny terrorists any
benefits from such criminal acts."
The swruni t participants also

deplored the " ever increasing number of refugees throughout the
world " and said the problem must
be "attacked at its roots" by appealing to "the governments responsibile... to remove the causes of this
widespread human tragedy and not
to pursue policies which drive large
numbers of their people from their
own countries. "
Ca rter's Sunday began with a 7:30
a.m. Roman Catholic Mass at the
Church of St. Eufemia, in a workins
class neighborhood along the Grand
Canal. Mrs. Carter and daughter
Amy were with him.
The day ended with a reception
and dinner at the fabled Doges
Palace, with the leaders gathering
in a brilliant dusk that highlighted
the onion domes of St. Mark's
Ca thedral looming in the
background of the palace courtyard.

•

enttne

MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

Skepticism greets withdrawal reports
MOSCOW (APJ - The Communist
Party newspaper Pravda said today
that Soviet tanks , annored personnel carriers and infantry have
begun w,i thdrawing from
Afghanistan · in keeping with the
Kremlin's announced partial pullout
- a withdrawal that has been
greeted with heavy skepticism in t.he
West.
The official Tass news agency
reported from the Afghan capital of
Kabul Sunday that "according to in-

Priscilla's Pop
DAI&lt;NED I~ I

WHERE
DID HE

GET IT

7

HOSPITAUZATION CHECI( PRESENTED - "Kermit", the frog,
owned by Kennit Walton is slowly recovering from injuries sustained in
the recent storms that hit the area. Kermit (the frog) suffered senous
bodily injuires but is reported to be improved. Walter Grueser, front left,
of Frog Insurance Co., presented Walton witll a check in the amount of
5500 for expenses to date. In back , 1-r, Ed Slater, Grand Croaker and
Paul Gerard, Grand Croaker in charge of vice.

A
ANYi=HING ON IT. I
GUESS.'
By Tbe Alloclaled Prell

First negotiations untlenoay
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The first round of negotiations in what is expected to be a statewide fight for uniform natural gas rates from
Columbia Gas of Ohio Inc., will begin next month.
Fourteen communities in Franklin County are preparing for
hearings that begin July 17 before the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio. Columbia is seeking a $1.57 million revenue increase from the
conununities, a 13 percent hike over current rates.
These hearings mark the first time the PUCO has agreed to consider
a single rate for several municipalities.

Vietnamese troops overrun village
ARANYAPRATHET, Thailand - Vietnamese troops, backed by ~r­
tillery today slammed across the border into Thailand, overrunrung
one Thai village, shelling others and sending an estimated 100~000
panic-stricken Cambodian refugees fleeing from border camps mto
Thailand Thai military sources said.
.
in this town on the Thai-Cambodian frontier sa1d more than
30 Thai soldiers were killed and about 100 wounded since the early
morning offensive besan.'

Source;

· Two ·men die in vintage aircraft
BOWLING GREEN Ohio - Two men died Sunday when the World
War Jl-vintage airpla~e they were flying in after a flying exhibition by
members of the COnfederate Air Force plunged into the ground, officials said.
Parts of the single-engine two-seater AT-9 plane, like ones used by
the Army Air Corps for training pilots during WW II, were buned
several feet into the ground by the impact, officials said.

GOING TO SAVI WITH THESE INSTANT FOOD$!"

"THE TROUBLI f1 THAT l"f~ AI.IIDINQ HIAf!T LIBERAL.
~ I'M A.I.UDING Ul.oa OONti'IVATIVEI"

TOM

0.'.

Russian soldiers saying goodbye to
grizzled Mghan viilagers after battling anti-conununist Moslem rebels
for six months and "fulfilling their
international duty. "
"Early this morning from the
city's outskirts a long line of tanks
and infantry began to stretch out.
The residents of the villages and
towns came out to see them off. The
Soviet and Afghan friends made
their parting handshakes and embraces," Mironov said in a dispatch
dated Sunday.
He said after all the farewells
were said the Soviet troops and war
machines began their 300-mile journey home by road. He did not say
how many of the estimated 85,000
troops who poured into Afghanistan
in December were leaving, however.
President Carter said he and the
day services.
other Western heads of state
" Everybody started screaming
meeting
in Venice believed the
and they saw it was for real,"
Greaves said. ''Then I saw this poor Soviet announcement " can only be
little girl lying in a puddle of blood. judged as significant if it's accurate,
if it's permanent and if it's the first
The littie girl was sitting next to us
step toward total withdrawal." He
in the baclt row. I'll never forget
suggested it was· designed to lnthat. There she lay. "
crease participation in the Olympic
Police said the gunman fired at
Games
next month in Moscow but
random, hitting 13 people in the first .
U.S. boy cott was
said
the
fusillade. Of those,. Gina Linam, 7,
"irrevocable."
and Thelma Richardson, 78, were
Zbigniew Brzezinski, Carter's
killed immediately. Both were shot
national
security adviser, told reporin the head.

Five members killed
in church massacre

KNOWl BUT I
WANT ONE, TOOl

''WH~T ACHECK-OUT LINEII LOIT ~L THE TIME I W~S

formation from the command of
Soviet military contingents now
staying in Afghanistan, some anny
units whose sta·y in Mghanistan is
not necessary at present are being
withdrawn these days to the
territory of the Soviet Union on
agreement with the Afghan government."
In a followup labeled an eyewitness account from the Afghan
capital, .Pravda correspondent L.
Mironov described suntanned

~.

Chicage men under examilUltion
· AKRON, Ohio - Two Akron detectives are to question three men in
Chica11o about the disappearance one week ago of Hazel Hylton, the 49year-old wife of a church pastor.
The resident of Springfield Township, a suburb of Akron, has not
been found since witnesses saw her dragged into her own car by two
·men last Monday, but that car has since turned up in Chicago.
Three men; occupants of the car, were arr~sted by Chicago police,
butbave not discussed the whereabouts of Mrs. Hylton, police said.

Weather forecast
.

'

Pal'lly cloudy tonight and Tuesday with scattered showers or
lhunderstorJid. Low tonight in the mid 60s. High Tue8day in the mid
Ms. The chance of rain is tiO preen! tonight and 40 percent Tuesday.
By Tbe Auoclaled Press
. · .
WedaeldaythroapFrlday
.
A cbaace af abewen or lhudentorma Wednesday Iiod Thursday.
Fair Friday. HJ&amp;ba 1D ~ lew lh Wedaeaday dropping 10 the low 10
mid 1108 by Friday. Lon •• tile ....

t

DAINGERFIELD, Texas (AP)Alvin King III was supposed to go on
trial today. His daughter had filed a
charge of incest, and King needed
some character witnesses. But
several members of the First Baptist Church, where he used to so to
services, had turned him down.
On Sunday, police say, King
kicked open the doors of the church
as the congregation sang " More
About Jesus." People in the back
rows turned around and saw a man
in steel helmet and flak jacket,
carrying two · rifles and two handguns.
He shouted, "This is war! " and
opened fire . ·
In the next few moments five
people, inclqding a 7-year-old girl,
were killed or fatally shot. Ten
others were wounded. King was
wrestled outside by two ushers who
were killed in the struggle, pollee
said, and then he ended it by
shooting himself in the head.
He was in critical condition early
today, but expected to survive.
King, 45, 11 fanner high school
math teacher with a Ph.D. in
psychology who had quit teaching
seven years ago and become a farmer, was charged with capital murder.
The tragedy in this east Texas
town of 2,600 began at about 1! : 20
a .m. with the gunman 's 'abrupt entrance into the church. Police said
he carried M-1 and AR-15 rifles and
.38&lt;aliber and .22-caliber revolvers.
He fired first with an M-1 rifle.
"Those bullets were flying ," said
Arthur Greaves, 69, who was shot in
the shoulder. " Some of the
Congregation started falling in between the pews · and some ' started
jumping up and down. People were
screaming and crying and taking on.
Boy, was it pitiful! "
The sounds of the shooting were
broadcast live on radio station
KEGG, which normally carries Sun-

ters, " It is much too early to label
this as the beginning of a peace offensive." Secretary of State Edmund Muskle added: "Don 't believe
anything you don 't see."
And the seven Western leaders attending the two-day sununit in
Venice called the Soviet intervention
in Afghanistan "unacceptable" and
demanded the complete withdrawal
of Soviet forces. Some 85,000 Soviet
troops have been in Afghanistan since December helping the Marxist
goverrunent battle anti-communist
Moslem rebels.
Tass responded to the American
statements in Venice with scorn,
labeling them "slanderous" and an
attempt to "camoflauge with verbiage U.S. actions aimed at
heightening tension ... "
Without specifically mentioning
Muskie by name, Tass said: "A
spokesman for the U.S. State Deparlment commented on the report
from Kabul in a slanderous tone
characterstic of him, concerning the
policy of the Soviet Union in Southwest Asia ." ·
Leading diplomats here
speculated the partial pullback announcement was timed to cause
dissension among Western leaders
meeting in Venice and might be
more cosmetic than real.

Traffic accidents claim 24 lives
By The Associated Press
A triple fatality accident in
Delaware on Sunday raised Ohio's
weekend death toll to at least 24 persons, according to the Ohio Highway
Patrol.
The patrol records traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
NEWARK - James Roush, 40, of
Newark, in a one-car crash on State
Route 664 early Sunday morning.
BLUFFTON - Jeffery Hackworth, 19 ; David Barth, 19; and
Daniel Oberly, 18; in a one-car accident on Columbus-Grove Bluffton
Road in Allen County.
ENGLEWOOD - Mark E.
Bowman, 43, West Milton, in a onecar accident in Montgomery County.
WARREN - Paul. H. Jewell, 22,
of Burghill, in a motorcycle-train accident on Route 7 in Trumble County DELAWARE- James F. Gatton,
31, of Ashley; Paul R. Umbs, 45, of

Delaware, and Martha E. Rainey,
21, of Powell, in a car-motorcycle accident on a city street in Delaware.
HAMILTON - Michael R. Lampert, 28, of West Chester, in a twocar accident on a city street in
Butler County.
SATURDAY
TIFFIN - Robert T. Zeisler, 44,
and his wife Marilyn, 43, of Galion,
in a three-car accident on Ohio 4 in
Seneca County .
Mary D.
BATAVIA
Glassmeyer, 26, of Cincinnati, in a
tw&lt;&gt;-car accidenton U.S. 52 in Clermont County.
CANFIELD - William F. Britt,
25, of Wayland, in a motorcycle accident on a rural road in Mahoning
County.
COLUMBUS - Yvette Echols, 32,
of Columbus, in a one-car crash on
Interstate 70 in Franklin County .
CAMBRIDGE
Darwin
Dillingham, 20, of Summerfield, in a
one-car accident on a rural road in
Noble County.
TOLEDO - Nicholas J. Walinski

III, 17, of Toledo, in a motorcycleaC' .
cident on a rural road in Lucas County.
ClllLLICOTHE - Woodrow W.
Thompson, 32, of Orgas, W.Va ., in a
four-car accident on Ohio 35 in Ross ·
County.
BEDFORD HEIGHTS - Daniel A
McGee, 19, of Solon, in a one-car accident in Cuyahoga County.
CANTON - Stella L. Botchzaroff,
25 of Canton, in a tw&lt;&gt;-car accident
in 'Stark County.
COLUMBUS
Daniel B.
Livingstone, 23, Belle Vernon, Pa.,
in a ·motorcycle accident in Columbus.

FRIDAY NIGHT
FINDLAY - Irene Wykes, 56, of
Findlay, in a tw~H:ar crash on a city
street.
COLUMBUS - Bruce M. Nibert,
30 of Point Pleasant, W.Va., m a
o~e-car crash on a city street.
WARREN - WilliamS. Rowland,
38, of Warren, in a one car accident
on OhioS in Trumbull County.

Trash removal
request noted
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
requests citizens not pile trash and
dirt along street curbs.
This causes problems with sewers
when rains wash the materials into
the catch basins along the roads.
An effort has been made to sweep
streets by village workers and this
putting of materials into the street
cerfufniy di&gt;es not help.
·
The village is not in the trash
pickup business and according to
village prdinances, residents can be
cited to court for•putting trash ahd
dirt in the streets.
.
The mayur asks that the public
L'ooperate in order that streel!l cal•
oo kept cleaner and court action n(,(
liavt tube used .

GETI'ING A TRIM - Ully-de Pad was at the
.Chateau Frog Style Center recently getting her bair
!rimed and curled for the up coming Big Bend Regatta.
Doing the hunurs were Kay Proffitt left and sandy

Miller, rig~Jt. Looking on Is Bill Young, co-chainnan af
the annual "frog jwnp", which will be held 'at
Marauder Staudiwn on saturday,. June 28. UUy na
well pleased with her coiffure.

�•
. ~-Tile Daily Sentinel, Milltllcporl·Powcrur, 0 .. Munllay. June 2:1. 1980

:1--The DMUy Sentinel, Middlepurl-Pomcruy, v., Munday, June 23, 1980

Major league standings.

'T VOESN'T SEEM l=AIR TO MAKE
US WA•T UMTIL FALL TO FIN\' OUT•• •
NOW 'n\"T \T'6' ~U•.Et:&gt;
t'OWN TO T~Ree
CAN'l\PATES

)

7

•

laki'DIIUoaaJ l ~a&amp;ue
By 11M: A11oclated Pre••
W. L. Pel. G8
41 23 .&amp;41

Tol~o

7

Rictvnond

34 32

Rochester

3l 3l ,500 10

Cbarleal&lt;in
Tidewater
P11wtJJCket

Nt.!w Yurk
Milwaukee
Boston
Clevei.Hnd

29 36 .466 12"
:JO ~ .462 u--.
Zf) 3'1 .413 14'1z

BaiUmore
Turon to

\i

.~IS 8

'D 4Cl .463 151ta

S.tu.rdly'• Retulta

Columbus 44, Rictunond l-2 {1st uame g
0

Rocllea1er3-2, Tidewater 1·1

The Wall Street Journal, as legions of devoted readers
well know, is a gold mine of fascinating information on our
times and lifestyles.
And not all of the nuggets are in the news columns.
Take the auto advertisement that appeared in a recent
edition. It is not just any old set of wheels being pushed to
the Journal's readership, but a "VIP Security Sedan" that
is both bullet and bomb proof. And that's far from all.
Special features include a remote ignition, effective up
to a quarter-mile distance, to provide safety against any
explosive devices that business competitors of the VIP
owner might be inclined to plant in the vehicle. Also a "kidnap recovery system'' to track down an abducted
passenger and-are you with us 007?-an "oil slick emission
device to deter vehicles in pursuit."
Not to mention a device to detect electronic bugs, recording and emergency communication systems, ram bumpers an&lt;l a hidden escape vehicle.
Well!
And here, in these geared-down, energy-short times,
we've been wondering if we could make do without air conditioning.

_
;Letter
to
the
editor
'
•

Beaten team wins fans

.
:: Dear Editor:
• On June 13, 14 and 15, the RC Cola
: : SoftbaU Team from Middleport
· traveled 300 miles to Seymour, In: : diana, to compete in the prestigious
· : Seymour Invitational Softball Tour: narnent. The tounarnent is con:; sidered one of the best in the mid·
:: west for the quality of teams par: : ticipating.
.
: in the first game, RC Cola met
:· Waco's, the 1978 national champions·
:: in Industrial League Softball out of
• • LouisviUe, Ky. The final score was
: : RC Cola 21 an~ Waco's 4. RC then
:- went on to play Zip Express of In·
:: dianapolis, a former regional cham. : pion in open league pay and won 19:; 2. At this point of the tournament
: • things were going good.
•: G. B. Wilcher's a team from
: : Seymour, and the 1978 and 1979 In: · diana state champs were the next
:: obstacle. Wilcher's is presently
· :ranked fifth in the country with its
· : sponsor spending nearly $75,000 this
:· year on players and traveling ex: · penses. RC Cola was beaten 42-2. It
· : was during this game that RC Cola
: · won over many fans in Seymour and
:; became the talk of the tournament.
. : I have never seen a team get beat
: that bad and look so very good. Mter
. ; the first three innings the guys knew
:· they were beaten and the fans at the
:. game were very bored. Tom Woods,
· : the pitcher, aU of a sudden threw an
:: iUegal fast pitch that got the fans
:• laughing. The scorekeeper on the
.: bench threw the score book into the
·; bleachers for a laugh. Another
: • player on the bench threw a towel
:: onto the playing field. All four out.: fielders went to left field and clim:: bed atop tbe 10 foot outfield fence as
:· Wilcher's were hitting towering
::horne run after horne run out of the
: playing area. The fans all during the
: remaining innings laughed at dif: ferent antics. One Wilcher player
:. swung and missed the ball and the
:: pitcher fell down on the mound as if
·; knocked down by tbe wind of the bat.
··This may sound clownish to you avid
: fans but It llvened up a boring game.
: It was at this point of the tour.: nament on Saturday night that many
· town's people began talking of RC
:eola and on Sunday cheered and
; pulled for tbern. From Friday's
• unknown team, RC Cola had become
; the crowd favorite by Sunday.

Several players gave hats and shirts
to fans in the stands with several
fans not missing an RC Cola game
and beginning to learn the names of
all the players. Many, many people
are still talking this Monday after
the tournament of the RC Cola team
and how they took a bad loss so good,
and came back to heat still another
team on Sunday morning, this time a
Valley Homes team from BrookviUe, Indiana, who had just beaten
last year's runner-up, St. Louis Mer·
chants.
The final game for RC Cola was a
heart-breaking 2()-19 loss to Capitol
Oil of Indianapolis for a fourth place
finish .. After that game Gene Wise,
the RC coach, was told by Mr. G. B.
Wilcher; sponsor of the eventual
tournament champion, that he didn't
have the best ball team he ever saw
but that no one he ever saw ever had
more heart nor hustle. The RC Cola
team has been invited to participate
in a tournament of 100 teams in
Louisville, Ky. and a large tournament in Middletown, Ohio, since
playing in the Seymour Invitational
Tournament.
I was asked in October of 1979 to
see if the RC Cola team could be entered in the Seymour Invitational
SoftbaU Tournament by my friend,
Tom Woods. At that time I spoke
with Artie Robertson, the tournament director, who on my word
.entered the RC Cola team. The team
members arrived and told me " We
don't want to embarrass you in this
tournament."
Now that the tournament is over
and the team has returned home I
must say I am very proud of them
and their performance. Many of my
friends are already talking of having
them come back next year. I just
talked to Robertson, the tournament
director, and he assured me they
would be invited to come back.
It is seldom that an unknown team
can come into a large town from so
far away and make so many friends
and fans in only two days as the RC
Cola team did. I was very proud to .
say that they are irom my
hometown.
Detective Bruce Simpson
Seymour Police Dept.
Former Pomeroy High School
·
Athlete

•

Today zn history• • •
Today is Monday, June 23, the
:11Mb d&amp;y ·of 1980. There are 1Q1 days
; left In tbe year.
·
- Today's highlight in history:
; On June 23, 1967, President Lyn;don Johnlon and Soviet Preinier
•Alex! K011ygin beld a summit
:lneetlnf! on a college campus in
: GJaaboro, N.J.
: On th1i date:
.
• , .In 1183, Wllliarn PeM signed a
:friendlblp treaty with Indians In tbe
:Pennsylvania region.
The
:agreement was kept falthfull.y by
·both sides for more than 60-years.
'

a

In 1836, $28 million surplus in the
United .States treasury was divided
among the states.
In 1938, Congress created the Civil
Aerollautics Authority to regulate
air traffic.
In 1974, Israel withdrew from the
last remaining section of land captured from Syria during the October
1973war.
Ten years ago, Israeli Prime
Minister Golda Meir rejected any
pr0110f18l lor a temporary ceasefire
with tbe Arabs.

Molld.ly'11 Gamet
SyraCUBe at Tidewater

Richmond at CharleSton
Toledo at Colwnbwl
Rochester at Pawtucket

FlN~

?

Tuadlly'a Gamtl
Syral'WJe at Tidewater
Richm9fld at Charleston
Toledo at Colwnbua

WHO .;HOT J. R.

rr.-~?

OUT...

.

$

I

Rochester at Pawtucket

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. W. Pet.

28 33 .419
28 3l .444

St. Louis

Milwaukee (Keetoo

40 24 .&amp;2&gt;
38 26 .57&amp; 3
34 32 .515 7
31] 38 .4a:i 11
28 36 .638 12
26 38 .4l3 12 ~

By Julian Bond
The threat by the Congressional
Black Caucus to withhold support
from President Carter's re-election
campaign unless his economic
pelicies are reversed is too little, too
late, and too weak.
Rep. Augustus Hawkins, D-Calif.,
the caucus dean, reported the 17member organization of black members of the House of Repesentatives
has asked Carter for "an immediate
end" to economic policies that trade
jobs for reductions in the inflation
rate.
11

There are far more humane and

whelmingly supported the
president's re-election. In all but a
few contests, black voters did the
same.

In 1976, only then Rep. Andrew
Young of Georgia gave early and
consistent support to the unknown
ex-governor of Georgia, whose only
civil rights credential was the portrait of Martin Luther King Jr. he'd
hung outside his office.

unemployment,

monetary restrictions and high in·
terest rates," caucus members
could have said to the president.
Unfortunately, candidate Carter
said it first himself, in Apri11976.
The caucus pledge to direct black
support away from Carter comes
four years after most of them supported other candidates in 1976's
Democratic primaries.
And it occurs after 37 primaries in
which black leadership over-

~2)

at Oakland

with 4.

HOME RUNS: O)tlivie, Milwaukee, 18 ; R.
Jackson, New YOrK, 17; Rice, Boston, 13 ;.....Mayberry, Toronto,l3; Armas, Oakland, 13.
STOLEN BASES: Hender11on, Oakland
31 ; Wilson, Kansas City, 30; Dilone:
Cleveland, 20; J. Cruz , SeaUe, 20; Wills,
Texas,20.
PITCHING: ~J ~isions) : John, New
YOrk,lD-~ •. B33, 3.11; Gura, Kansas City, 9-2,
.818, 2.16; ~'tone, Balliinore, 8-3, .750, 3.46l
Fahner, Chica~u, S-2:, .714, 2.78; Rainey ,
Boston,7·3, .700, 4.97; Spillne, Cleveland,
.700, 4.60 ; Guidry, New York, 7-3, .700, 3.22;
Medich, Texas, 7-3, .700,3 .87 .
SI'RIKEOUTS - Guidry, New York, 88;
M. Norri~. Oakl and, 73; Keuugh, Oak.hmd,
73; F. Bannister, Seattle, n; Matlack,
Texas, 71.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING (150 at bats): Hernandex, St.
Louis, l37; Smith, Los An11eles, .333; Henderson, New York., .325; Cruz, Houstun, .321;
Cromartie, Monbtreal, .317.
RUNS: Schmidt, Philadelphia, :'II; Hernandez, St. Louis, 49; Rose, Philadelhia, 45;
Tcmpldon, St. Luuis, 43; LeFlore, Montreal,
42 ; MoreniJ, Pitllburgh, 42 ; Murphy, Atlanta, 42; Clark, San Francisco, 42.
RBJ : Hendrick, St. Louis, ~; Sctunidt,
Phlludelphia, 43; Garvey, Los Angeles, 53;
Baker: Los Angdes, 46; Smith, l...oti Angeles,

St. l.ooi.! 12, Cincinnati 2
New York 9, Los Angeles 8
Montreal2, San Diego 0
Philadelphia 4, San Franci.st1J 3
Chicago 3, Atlanta 1
Moaday's Games
Los Angeles (Sutc:Wfe 1-4) at HOI.l.Ston (Andular~2J. (n).
.
Ptttaburgh (Sohmoo +()) at St. l.AJuis
(Syk"" 1-&lt;1), (n) .

Weekelld Sports TrauacUOWi
By Tilt ..\ioclated Press
BASEBALL
Amerlcao Leag~.~e
BOSTON REO SOX - Placed Jim Rice
outfielder on the 15-day disabled list:
RecaUed Garry Hancock, outfielder from
Pawtucket of the l.nternati ona l l~gue:
Recalled John Tudor, pitcher, . , from
Pawtucket of the International League.
Waived Jack Billingham, pitcher, for the
p.urpose of giving him hi! 111lCOndition.al
rclase.

44.

(Only games scheduled)

HITS: Templeton, St Louis, S6; He[lnandez, St. Louis, 83; Chambliss, Atlanta,
78 ; Moreno, Pittsburgh, 77: Cromaritie,
Mootreal, 76.
DOUBLES: Rose, Philadelphia W; Chambliss, Atlanta, 20;· Steams, New' York, 19;
Knight, Cincinnati, 19 ; Hernandz, St. Louis,
18.

Tllesda)'' 1 Games
New York at Chicqo
Montreal at Philadelphia (n)
Atlanta at Clncinnati, (n)
Pittsburgh at St. L.ouil, (n)

Los .Angeles at Houston, (n)

San F rancisco at San Diego, (nJ

Young, and other black
Georgians, criss-crossed America in
1976 selling black voters an empty
slate their political dreams could be
written on.
Carter's religiosity, freshness and
Southerness endeared him to black
voters. His extravagant promises
were seconded by his bold
Christianity .
Black voters helped rescue Carter's failing campaign against
Gerald Ford by proving the victory

,

nor was it espoused by other members.
Committee members, some of
Finally, committee Chairman
whom are up for re-election this
Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown, en·
year, winced. ''No way,' ' they said.
-Ending the exemption which - ded the futile discussions.
"I, personaUy, am not going to
newspapers and magazines have
vote
for any amendment that raises
from Ohio's 4 percent sales tax, in a
taxes
or takes away anyone's exemmove that would bring in $12.7
said the veteran senator,
ptions,"
miUion a year.
who
is
running
for Congress this
The reaction was one of silence.
year in the state's 19th District.
-Extending state utility taxes to
It will be coats and ties for the men
cover municipally owned utilities in
and dresses, business suits or pants
charter cities for the first time, thus
suits for women staffers at the Ohio
pickin~ up about $40 miUion.
House this summer.
The arrival of warm weather
More silence.
prompted Catherine Ashley, House
Sen. Jerome Stano, D-Parma,
executive secretary, to issue a
mentioned that a 25 percent increase
memo spelling out proper dress
in thf state's wholesale tax on beer,
regulations lor any employee who
boosting it to 48 cents a case from 36
may have had a memory lapse.
cents, would produce $12.5 million.
But the regulations have rankled
But he didn't propose it formally,
.

Sailing ships the wave of-the
PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP )
Surrounded by graphs and desktop
models in his busy office-lab just
across from Stanford University,
Frank Shallenberger pronounces
sailing ships the wave of the future.
"I'm absolutely convinced," said
the former professor, who has
degrees froni and has taught at both
Harvard and Stanford, and who has
a long record of launchlflg successful small companies.
In terms of aerodynamics, cargo
capacity, speed, and energy efficiency, saya ShaUenberger, now
retired from teaching, sailing ships
make sense. More sense, he says,
that most people realize.
The popular image of tall ships is
that they .are beaJitiful, romantic
and impractical. Shallenberger
agrees. In :act he feels the the fabled
old clip'per ships were
aerodynamically inefficient.

The mode is that his company,
DynaShip Corp., have helped design
and test 1!_re another matter
altogether, with tiers of solid,
squared, automatically furled sails
mounted on swivel masts. •
"The old ships were ·great down- .
wind, but ·not' otherwise," said
Shallenberger. He maintains that
much wind escaped through their
triangular sails, and that the sails,
rigidly mounted, often left the ships
becalmed.
Right now, he says, DynaShips
can outperform many oil-powered
cargo vessels, hauling wood and
pulp from the American Northwest
to Japan, and taking pulp from the
East Coast to Europe.
The primary rl*lson, of course, is
the cost of fuel. If one of his ships
were built and operating, he said, it
might haul up to 30,000 tons at 12
k11ots, using 10 percent of the fuel

some staffers in the lower chamber.
Although there has been no
disagreement with the ban on blue
jeans, tennis shoes or shorts for men
or women, some other · restrictiorL~
have produced grumbling.
For example, the regulations say
it is aU right for men to remove their
suit jackets in offices because of the
heat, but they have to put them on if ·
they step into the hallwa~.

needed by a diesel slnp ot the same
time Administration by tbe Universize running at no more than 14 or 15
sity ol Michigan · showed that
knots.
sallpower still was feasible but
The problem, he says with
econornicaUy marginal. ·
frustration, Is that even those who
But now, says ShaUenberger, oills
should be knowledgeable can't seem
three times that price and the people ·
to accept the notion that, in an age of
at the administration . failed to
technological complexity, simpler
change their position ·until three
could be better.
'
months ago, when they decided to
Mter years of plugging away,
update tbe older study.
ShaUenberger says '.'the shipping inNow, says Shallenbergtir. "To my
dustry is one of the most reac- mind it wiU take 12 months lor t11e
tionary," although be is more
new study, and no builder will ronforgiving of them than he is of tbe
siderasailingshipuntilthen."
Maritime Administration.
Meanwhile, Shallenberger is turThe industry, be explained, is in
ning his attention to improving .tbe
the doldrums because of overdesign of DynaShip, which Is based
capacity. Few owners are making . on plans ol a German E118ineer,
money, so few have the luxury of ex· . Wilhelm Prolss, who began experimenting with ideas that have
periments in tbe 11160.
been demonstrated in model form
When the orders come in, and he Is
only.
sure they wiU, DynaShlp will comWhen the price of oil was $1J.50 a . mission d recognized builder to
bar~el in 1975, a stud.v for the Ma~- \ produce the ships.

PLANS FOR WALTON
SAN DIEGO (APJ - BiU Walton,
plagued by the latest in a long list of
injuries, mis.Sed 68 of the 82 games
played by the San Diego Clippers in
the 1979-atl season. The front office
had a special sneaker designed to
protect his foot and ankle for tbe
1980-81 season.
"Walton says he wants to play,
and we assume he is going to play,"
commented the vice-president of the
Clippers, Irv Kaze. "But at this point
I don't think we would deliberately
go out and try to build a team around
him."

STORE HOURS
Open Mon. thru Sat.
8 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Open Sunday
8 A. M. to 6 P. M.

NEW YORK

$2
'
39
LB.

BONELESS STRIP STEAK
fR~~-LEAN

SUPERIOR

GROUND
BEEF

FRANKIE
WIENERS
12 oz.
PKG.

:I
I

DAIRY LANE

ICE CREAM

shirts.

fut~re? ·

losing to number four ranked open
team in the United States, G. B.
Wilcher's in the nightcap.
Sunday the " pop company"
knocked off Valley House of
BatesviUe, Ind., 12-5. In its final
game RC Lost to Capitol Oil of Indianapolis by a score of 21)-19 in what
most observers called the most exciting game of the tournament. ·
The team's fine showing led to invitations to some of the finest tournaments in this part of the country
including the Armco Invitational in
Middletown, Ohio; the Hamilton Invite in Hamilton, and a 100 team
tourney in LouisviUe, Ky .

MONDAY
THRU
SUNDAY

Meanwhile, women employees "at
no time" may wear halter tops or T·
"In addition, no female House em- •
ployee should report to work without
a bra," the memo states. One alert
staffer pointed out that the order
make~ no mention of whether the
bra must actually be worn or simply
must be available.

Royal Crown came horne with an
impressive fourth place finish in the
nationally heralded "Seymour Invitational" softball tournament.
The tournament included G. B.
Wilcher's of Seymour, Indiana,
Waco's of LouisviUe, Ky., Capitol Oil
of Indianapolis, Ind., the St. Louis
Merchants of St. Louis, and many
other well known powerhouse.
In the first game last Saturday
morning, RC carne out smoking by
defeating WACO, the 1978 U. S. Industries champions and 1979 nmnerup. The final score was 21-4.
RC then defeated Kentucky Fried
· Chicken of Indianapolis 19-5 before

PRICES EFFECTIVE

State lawmakers ·face harsh reality,
$30 million.

RC returns with4th place·finish

also a Daytona 500 veteran.
The speedway was in " great
shape" according to Bob Adams,
Jr., who beat some of the midwest's
best drivers. Adams literally flew
around the clay oval waiting for his
chance to overtake the leaders.
Pennsboro, W.Va.'s Frank Wilson
won the semi-late model feature
over Homer Wright, Ray Gorrell, .
Doc Holliday, John Harris, and
another Meigs c-ountian Roger
Adkins.
Mark Dickson won the Street
Stock feature which was Red
flagged on the tenth lap due to a
violent flip by Jinunie Lanham.
Lanham barrel rolled four times In
the second turn after breaking a
spindle. His ca r was demolished but
a safe roll cage fortunately let
Lanham walk away uninjured.
Fast time in the respective
divisions went to Earl Hill, Frank
Wilson, and Mark Dickson.
Heat races went to Hill, Wilson,
"Buckwheat" Shutts, Max Roush,
Harry Yoho, and Jinunie Lanham.
Racing resumes this Friday
evening on the 3/8 mile clay oval.
For further details and information
look for the speedway advertisement later this week in The
Dally Sentinel.

.I

Ohio perspective

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
lawmakers were faced once again
this week with an awful truth: The
only way for governments to raise
money is to increase taxes, cut spending, or take away sorneone's tax
exemption.
Members of the Senate Finance
Committee. were grappling with
legislation to head off a $266 million
state deficit during. the next fiscal
year. The deficit would be the result
pf sharp drops in revenues caused by
the recession.
Legislative Budget Office Director
Richard G. Sheridan read off a list of
alternatives, among which were the
following :
-Ending tax credits for horne improvements, which were approved
by the Legislature only last year, for
a savings of between $10 miUion and

STEWART ~ Bob " Buckshot"
'!'he trio battled bumper to burnAdams, Jr. from Racine, captured
per at speeds over 100 miles per hour
the 25-lap grand opening Late Model
bringing the near-capacity crowd to
feature race at Bond's Speedway
its feet for the exciting finish . With
here Friday evening.
two laps remaining Robinson slid
Track owner and promoter Ronnie
high into the third turn. Adams took
Bond was very pleased with the
advantage, powersliding below
crown turnout, the high quality race
Robinson and into the lead.
cars, and the exciting races at the
Going into the white flag lap sidespeedway's opener.
by-side the Racine racer had the
Local drivers did very well againslight edge and pulled away to take
st · some of the best Midwestern
the checkered flag despite a serious
United States competition.
threat from Hill, who slipped past
The young Adams in his number
Robinson for second.
A55 Camaro led only two laps, but he
Atomic. Speedway Champion Bud
made them count, as they were the
Frazier was fourth, Racine's Gene
final two laps of the race.
Adkins fifth and Wellston 's Don
'Early leader Earl Hill looked like
Clark sixth. Bob "Bobby Joe"
a sure winner, but Marietta's Dave
Adams, Sr., who was running a
Robinson and Adams battled Hill aU
strong third had to go to the pits with
tbe way pressuring him for the lead.
mechanical difficulties.
Mter a caution flag tightened up ' Four times National USAC
tbe field , on lap 20 Hill's 1980 Monte
(United States Auto Club ) Champion
Carlo -momentarily got sideways
Butch Hartman was on hand , but
allowiljg Robinson to take the lead
had to leave the race with
with Adams streaking into second. · mechanical problems. Hartman is

I

Today's commentary

economicaUy sound solutions to curbing inflation than enforced
recession,

Complaints were raised, but none
margin in 13 states.
Unfortunately, the candidate .who translated into political action. Con·
knew the words to blacks' favorite ferences and demonstrations subhymns became the president who stituted for progr;~ms and
forgot the numbers · on their strategies, Rhetoric replaced action.
Carter's chief chaUenger, Sen. Edpaychecks.
His prominent placement of black · ward Kennedy, had a superior
faces in high places was erased by record in civil rights and economic
economic policies which placed tbe justice, but the personal baggage he
major burden of budget balancing carried pulled him down.
Black lead~rs provided no ·alter·
on the backs and pocketbooks of tbe
1)8tive for their followers.
The caucus threat comes at the
close of the president's numerically
successful re-nomination campa'ign,
and at a time when his Republican
opponent proposes a return to 18th
century eponornic and social
policies.
American poor.
And it comes at a time when
· Every poll and survey this year
blacks
in one American city have reshowed that black voters admired
diccovered
bricks and bottles as a
the president's personality as much
noisy
if
ineffective
- method of
as they despised his performance.
political
protest.
Yet his incumbent's powers immediately cemented black mayors
It is too late to demand "huniane
to the Carter campaign. Nothing
could move these ,politicians away and economically sound solutions"
!Tom the federal trough their cities to tbe pessing problem ol inflation.
American blacks may be forced to .
needed to survive.
live
· anotber lour years with a
Other black leaders shied away
president
they helped create.
from confrontation with power.

.350;

TODAY 'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
By The AIIOfJated Press

Sllllday'a GaiDH

Black Caucus reaction: too little, too late

AMERICAN LEAGUE

B.a.TIING 1150 :.t bah J: Molitor
Milwaukee, 3.3M!; Carew, Cl:lllfomia,
Brett, K&lt;~ruscas City, .337; Ort.a, Cleveland,
.336; Trammel, ~truit , .333.
RUNS : Yoont , Milwaukee, :'11; Randolph,
New York, SO; Wllstlo, Karu;as City, 50;
WiJJ:;, Texas, 49; Trammell, Detroit, 47;
Ow,livie, Milwauk ee. 47: Hendersof!,
Oakland, 47.
RBI : Perez, Boston, :tl ; Ogli11er, Texas,
50; Oglivie, Milwaukee, 49 ; Armas, O&lt;~k:!and,
47 ; Cooper, Milwaukee, 46.
HITS: Wilson, Kansas City, 91; Bwnbry,
Baltimore, 83; Carew, Californha, 83; River
Teus, 8.2; Oliver, Teus, 81.
'
DOUBLES : Morrison, Ch.ica.~go22; Yount,
Milwaukee, 20; Carew, Califomiu, 19; D.
Garcia, Toronto, 18; Oliver, Texas·,J7.
TRIPl.ES: Griffin, Toronto, 8; Bwnbry,
Baltimore, S; Brett, Kansas City, :!; 12: lied

!Kin l(man 3-6), (n)
(Only games !JCheduled)
Tuesday's Game~
Kansas City at Minnesota, 2, (nJ
T«Jronloat Baltimore, (nJ
Detroit at Cleveland, ( n)
Boston at New York (n)
Chicago at California, (n)
Milwaukee at Oakland, (n )

Cincinnati
San Francisco
Atlanta
San Diego
S.turdl)''a Games
Cincinnati&amp;, St. Louis 5
San Francbco9, Philadelphia 3
AUanla S, Chicago 0
Houston t , Pittsburgh 2
lAs Angeles5, New YorkO
· Monlreai7,SanDiego4

•

Pasture, Cmcinnati, 9-3, .700,3. 11; Hichard,
Howton, 9-3, .7$0, .151; Jttcksur!, Pitt£burgh,
S.2, .714, 1.~ ; Sultoo, Los A~eles, ~2 • .714,
2.65.
STrt~KEOUTS : tarlt.vn, Ph!Wdelphla,
135; Richard, Houston, 106; R}'lln, Huuslon,
82; Niekro, Atlanta, 75; Blylevan. Pittoburgh, 74.

Z1 3B .41:'1 12¥1
%1 41 .359 16

tKoosmans.&lt;; J, In ).

WEST

14 Angeles

30 :.; .455 10
:wJ 37 .448 JOiola

Bostoo (Ecken~ley 3.-5) at New York
(Guidry 7-JJ. tnJ_
Kansas City ~G un 9-2) at Minnesota

81&gt;

Los An~t!les,

8-l, .889, 2.08 ; Cctrllt!n, Phlladelptua, 13-2,
.867, J .83; Wt!lch, Loti An~s:elc~ . 7-2, .178, 2.13;

i0wchinko~2 J,[ n ).

25 40 .385 12\-!1

lloustoo

Llbur~h. ~I .. 1189, 3.01 ; HEtW,

. Mouday'1 Gamet

35 30 .538 2~
7\;

Chicago
New York

PITI'SBURG~ 17 Deci.'iiuru:1; Biddy; Pit·

40 26 -1101!
31 36 .4G3 91&gt;

Detroit (Underwood H l at Cleveland

GB
36 2S .581
34 'l7 .557 l\-!1

Monireal
l'llilade1phia
Pitlsburgh

...

31 32 .492 11

New YorkS, Oakland 3
Detroi14, Chicago I
Minnesota 3, Cleveland 2
Califurnla 4, Boston2
Baltlmore"9, Seattle9
Milwaukee~. KIUUIWJ City I
Texas 2, Torontv 1
SUDCI...I'• Games
Det-!"oil 7-6, Chicago 11
&amp;ittle 7, Baltimore5
Boston 6, CaUfomia 3
Oakland5, New York 2
Cleveland 11, Minrnlot.a 6
Kan&amp;llsCity 7, Milwaukee 4
Turonto6, Texas:"~

Syracuse5,Paw1uckett

YtAHj WE'LL JU~T
\1AV~ TO WA\T TO

HOM£ HUNS: Sctuuidt. Philadelphia. 20 ;
Ba_ker , Los Angel~s . IS ; LuzinskJ ,
Ph!laLil'lphua, 1:'1 ; Gctr11ey , l,u,; Angelt.'S, I~ ;
fhmt.lrit•k, St. Luuls, 14 .
STOJ.EN BI\S£S : Moreno Pil~b~ rgh,39 ·
l.t:t'lur~t, Mnntr~tal, 38; Cot!ins. Cindnrn:~ ti',
'll; Scvlt, Munlrcal. 21; l .~:~w, l..o.s An~s:eb, 21.

SIIUrda)''l Gamet

Owrleaton ~1. ToledoJ-2
Columbus 6, Rictunond 5

:B ut what does it
get to a gallon

34 32 .$15

WEST

Seattle
Minnesota
Cl:llifornia

.Somdo&gt;'• R...Uu

CI$4.:0, ~ -

35 )) .538 8
33 :IJ .b24 9

Texas

Tidewaterl,Rochester 1111 inn~s)
Srracuae t-3, Pawtucltd 2-4 1!nd game 11

lnnlfll!l )

W. L.. Pet GB
'-1 32 .662
3:1 29 - ~·4"7 7..,

Kcm&amp;i:ls Cily
Ocddand

Toledo t. Chorl.. ton 3

innlnl!sJ

dcstvy, Huustuu, 6; Scull, Mvntrt!&lt;il, :i; McHrtr.W, l'luladdphht, 5; &lt;.:lark, San Fnm-

EAST

:11 22 .639

Syra~

l'l t!Pll:S : Muri!Uo, l '&amp;ttslrur)lll, ti; l.&lt;lO.

AMER ICAN LEAGUE

Coiwnbua

Adams
captures
25
lap
race
••

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�•
. ~-Tile Daily Sentinel, Milltllcporl·Powcrur, 0 .. Munllay. June 2:1. 1980

:1--The DMUy Sentinel, Middlepurl-Pomcruy, v., Munday, June 23, 1980

Major league standings.

'T VOESN'T SEEM l=AIR TO MAKE
US WA•T UMTIL FALL TO FIN\' OUT•• •
NOW 'n\"T \T'6' ~U•.Et:&gt;
t'OWN TO T~Ree
CAN'l\PATES

)

7

•

laki'DIIUoaaJ l ~a&amp;ue
By 11M: A11oclated Pre••
W. L. Pel. G8
41 23 .&amp;41

Tol~o

7

Rictvnond

34 32

Rochester

3l 3l ,500 10

Cbarleal&lt;in
Tidewater
P11wtJJCket

Nt.!w Yurk
Milwaukee
Boston
Clevei.Hnd

29 36 .466 12"
:JO ~ .462 u--.
Zf) 3'1 .413 14'1z

BaiUmore
Turon to

\i

.~IS 8

'D 4Cl .463 151ta

S.tu.rdly'• Retulta

Columbus 44, Rictunond l-2 {1st uame g
0

Rocllea1er3-2, Tidewater 1·1

The Wall Street Journal, as legions of devoted readers
well know, is a gold mine of fascinating information on our
times and lifestyles.
And not all of the nuggets are in the news columns.
Take the auto advertisement that appeared in a recent
edition. It is not just any old set of wheels being pushed to
the Journal's readership, but a "VIP Security Sedan" that
is both bullet and bomb proof. And that's far from all.
Special features include a remote ignition, effective up
to a quarter-mile distance, to provide safety against any
explosive devices that business competitors of the VIP
owner might be inclined to plant in the vehicle. Also a "kidnap recovery system'' to track down an abducted
passenger and-are you with us 007?-an "oil slick emission
device to deter vehicles in pursuit."
Not to mention a device to detect electronic bugs, recording and emergency communication systems, ram bumpers an&lt;l a hidden escape vehicle.
Well!
And here, in these geared-down, energy-short times,
we've been wondering if we could make do without air conditioning.

_
;Letter
to
the
editor
'
•

Beaten team wins fans

.
:: Dear Editor:
• On June 13, 14 and 15, the RC Cola
: : SoftbaU Team from Middleport
· traveled 300 miles to Seymour, In: : diana, to compete in the prestigious
· : Seymour Invitational Softball Tour: narnent. The tounarnent is con:; sidered one of the best in the mid·
:: west for the quality of teams par: : ticipating.
.
: in the first game, RC Cola met
:· Waco's, the 1978 national champions·
:: in Industrial League Softball out of
• • LouisviUe, Ky. The final score was
: : RC Cola 21 an~ Waco's 4. RC then
:- went on to play Zip Express of In·
:: dianapolis, a former regional cham. : pion in open league pay and won 19:; 2. At this point of the tournament
: • things were going good.
•: G. B. Wilcher's a team from
: : Seymour, and the 1978 and 1979 In: · diana state champs were the next
:: obstacle. Wilcher's is presently
· :ranked fifth in the country with its
· : sponsor spending nearly $75,000 this
:· year on players and traveling ex: · penses. RC Cola was beaten 42-2. It
· : was during this game that RC Cola
: · won over many fans in Seymour and
:; became the talk of the tournament.
. : I have never seen a team get beat
: that bad and look so very good. Mter
. ; the first three innings the guys knew
:· they were beaten and the fans at the
:. game were very bored. Tom Woods,
· : the pitcher, aU of a sudden threw an
:: iUegal fast pitch that got the fans
:• laughing. The scorekeeper on the
.: bench threw the score book into the
·; bleachers for a laugh. Another
: • player on the bench threw a towel
:: onto the playing field. All four out.: fielders went to left field and clim:: bed atop tbe 10 foot outfield fence as
:· Wilcher's were hitting towering
::horne run after horne run out of the
: playing area. The fans all during the
: remaining innings laughed at dif: ferent antics. One Wilcher player
:. swung and missed the ball and the
:: pitcher fell down on the mound as if
·; knocked down by tbe wind of the bat.
··This may sound clownish to you avid
: fans but It llvened up a boring game.
: It was at this point of the tour.: nament on Saturday night that many
· town's people began talking of RC
:eola and on Sunday cheered and
; pulled for tbern. From Friday's
• unknown team, RC Cola had become
; the crowd favorite by Sunday.

Several players gave hats and shirts
to fans in the stands with several
fans not missing an RC Cola game
and beginning to learn the names of
all the players. Many, many people
are still talking this Monday after
the tournament of the RC Cola team
and how they took a bad loss so good,
and came back to heat still another
team on Sunday morning, this time a
Valley Homes team from BrookviUe, Indiana, who had just beaten
last year's runner-up, St. Louis Mer·
chants.
The final game for RC Cola was a
heart-breaking 2()-19 loss to Capitol
Oil of Indianapolis for a fourth place
finish .. After that game Gene Wise,
the RC coach, was told by Mr. G. B.
Wilcher; sponsor of the eventual
tournament champion, that he didn't
have the best ball team he ever saw
but that no one he ever saw ever had
more heart nor hustle. The RC Cola
team has been invited to participate
in a tournament of 100 teams in
Louisville, Ky. and a large tournament in Middletown, Ohio, since
playing in the Seymour Invitational
Tournament.
I was asked in October of 1979 to
see if the RC Cola team could be entered in the Seymour Invitational
SoftbaU Tournament by my friend,
Tom Woods. At that time I spoke
with Artie Robertson, the tournament director, who on my word
.entered the RC Cola team. The team
members arrived and told me " We
don't want to embarrass you in this
tournament."
Now that the tournament is over
and the team has returned home I
must say I am very proud of them
and their performance. Many of my
friends are already talking of having
them come back next year. I just
talked to Robertson, the tournament
director, and he assured me they
would be invited to come back.
It is seldom that an unknown team
can come into a large town from so
far away and make so many friends
and fans in only two days as the RC
Cola team did. I was very proud to .
say that they are irom my
hometown.
Detective Bruce Simpson
Seymour Police Dept.
Former Pomeroy High School
·
Athlete

•

Today zn history• • •
Today is Monday, June 23, the
:11Mb d&amp;y ·of 1980. There are 1Q1 days
; left In tbe year.
·
- Today's highlight in history:
; On June 23, 1967, President Lyn;don Johnlon and Soviet Preinier
•Alex! K011ygin beld a summit
:lneetlnf! on a college campus in
: GJaaboro, N.J.
: On th1i date:
.
• , .In 1183, Wllliarn PeM signed a
:friendlblp treaty with Indians In tbe
:Pennsylvania region.
The
:agreement was kept falthfull.y by
·both sides for more than 60-years.
'

a

In 1836, $28 million surplus in the
United .States treasury was divided
among the states.
In 1938, Congress created the Civil
Aerollautics Authority to regulate
air traffic.
In 1974, Israel withdrew from the
last remaining section of land captured from Syria during the October
1973war.
Ten years ago, Israeli Prime
Minister Golda Meir rejected any
pr0110f18l lor a temporary ceasefire
with tbe Arabs.

Molld.ly'11 Gamet
SyraCUBe at Tidewater

Richmond at CharleSton
Toledo at Colwnbwl
Rochester at Pawtucket

FlN~

?

Tuadlly'a Gamtl
Syral'WJe at Tidewater
Richm9fld at Charleston
Toledo at Colwnbua

WHO .;HOT J. R.

rr.-~?

OUT...

.

$

I

Rochester at Pawtucket

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. W. Pet.

28 33 .419
28 3l .444

St. Louis

Milwaukee (Keetoo

40 24 .&amp;2&gt;
38 26 .57&amp; 3
34 32 .515 7
31] 38 .4a:i 11
28 36 .638 12
26 38 .4l3 12 ~

By Julian Bond
The threat by the Congressional
Black Caucus to withhold support
from President Carter's re-election
campaign unless his economic
pelicies are reversed is too little, too
late, and too weak.
Rep. Augustus Hawkins, D-Calif.,
the caucus dean, reported the 17member organization of black members of the House of Repesentatives
has asked Carter for "an immediate
end" to economic policies that trade
jobs for reductions in the inflation
rate.
11

There are far more humane and

whelmingly supported the
president's re-election. In all but a
few contests, black voters did the
same.

In 1976, only then Rep. Andrew
Young of Georgia gave early and
consistent support to the unknown
ex-governor of Georgia, whose only
civil rights credential was the portrait of Martin Luther King Jr. he'd
hung outside his office.

unemployment,

monetary restrictions and high in·
terest rates," caucus members
could have said to the president.
Unfortunately, candidate Carter
said it first himself, in Apri11976.
The caucus pledge to direct black
support away from Carter comes
four years after most of them supported other candidates in 1976's
Democratic primaries.
And it occurs after 37 primaries in
which black leadership over-

~2)

at Oakland

with 4.

HOME RUNS: O)tlivie, Milwaukee, 18 ; R.
Jackson, New YOrK, 17; Rice, Boston, 13 ;.....Mayberry, Toronto,l3; Armas, Oakland, 13.
STOLEN BASES: Hender11on, Oakland
31 ; Wilson, Kansas City, 30; Dilone:
Cleveland, 20; J. Cruz , SeaUe, 20; Wills,
Texas,20.
PITCHING: ~J ~isions) : John, New
YOrk,lD-~ •. B33, 3.11; Gura, Kansas City, 9-2,
.818, 2.16; ~'tone, Balliinore, 8-3, .750, 3.46l
Fahner, Chica~u, S-2:, .714, 2.78; Rainey ,
Boston,7·3, .700, 4.97; Spillne, Cleveland,
.700, 4.60 ; Guidry, New York, 7-3, .700, 3.22;
Medich, Texas, 7-3, .700,3 .87 .
SI'RIKEOUTS - Guidry, New York, 88;
M. Norri~. Oakl and, 73; Keuugh, Oak.hmd,
73; F. Bannister, Seattle, n; Matlack,
Texas, 71.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING (150 at bats): Hernandex, St.
Louis, l37; Smith, Los An11eles, .333; Henderson, New York., .325; Cruz, Houstun, .321;
Cromartie, Monbtreal, .317.
RUNS: Schmidt, Philadelphia, :'II; Hernandez, St. Louis, 49; Rose, Philadelhia, 45;
Tcmpldon, St. Luuis, 43; LeFlore, Montreal,
42 ; MoreniJ, Pitllburgh, 42 ; Murphy, Atlanta, 42; Clark, San Francisco, 42.
RBJ : Hendrick, St. Louis, ~; Sctunidt,
Phlludelphia, 43; Garvey, Los Angeles, 53;
Baker: Los Angdes, 46; Smith, l...oti Angeles,

St. l.ooi.! 12, Cincinnati 2
New York 9, Los Angeles 8
Montreal2, San Diego 0
Philadelphia 4, San Franci.st1J 3
Chicago 3, Atlanta 1
Moaday's Games
Los Angeles (Sutc:Wfe 1-4) at HOI.l.Ston (Andular~2J. (n).
.
Ptttaburgh (Sohmoo +()) at St. l.AJuis
(Syk"" 1-&lt;1), (n) .

Weekelld Sports TrauacUOWi
By Tilt ..\ioclated Press
BASEBALL
Amerlcao Leag~.~e
BOSTON REO SOX - Placed Jim Rice
outfielder on the 15-day disabled list:
RecaUed Garry Hancock, outfielder from
Pawtucket of the l.nternati ona l l~gue:
Recalled John Tudor, pitcher, . , from
Pawtucket of the International League.
Waived Jack Billingham, pitcher, for the
p.urpose of giving him hi! 111lCOndition.al
rclase.

44.

(Only games scheduled)

HITS: Templeton, St Louis, S6; He[lnandez, St. Louis, 83; Chambliss, Atlanta,
78 ; Moreno, Pittsburgh, 77: Cromaritie,
Mootreal, 76.
DOUBLES: Rose, Philadelphia W; Chambliss, Atlanta, 20;· Steams, New' York, 19;
Knight, Cincinnati, 19 ; Hernandz, St. Louis,
18.

Tllesda)'' 1 Games
New York at Chicqo
Montreal at Philadelphia (n)
Atlanta at Clncinnati, (n)
Pittsburgh at St. L.ouil, (n)

Los .Angeles at Houston, (n)

San F rancisco at San Diego, (nJ

Young, and other black
Georgians, criss-crossed America in
1976 selling black voters an empty
slate their political dreams could be
written on.
Carter's religiosity, freshness and
Southerness endeared him to black
voters. His extravagant promises
were seconded by his bold
Christianity .
Black voters helped rescue Carter's failing campaign against
Gerald Ford by proving the victory

,

nor was it espoused by other members.
Committee members, some of
Finally, committee Chairman
whom are up for re-election this
Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown, en·
year, winced. ''No way,' ' they said.
-Ending the exemption which - ded the futile discussions.
"I, personaUy, am not going to
newspapers and magazines have
vote
for any amendment that raises
from Ohio's 4 percent sales tax, in a
taxes
or takes away anyone's exemmove that would bring in $12.7
said the veteran senator,
ptions,"
miUion a year.
who
is
running
for Congress this
The reaction was one of silence.
year in the state's 19th District.
-Extending state utility taxes to
It will be coats and ties for the men
cover municipally owned utilities in
and dresses, business suits or pants
charter cities for the first time, thus
suits for women staffers at the Ohio
pickin~ up about $40 miUion.
House this summer.
The arrival of warm weather
More silence.
prompted Catherine Ashley, House
Sen. Jerome Stano, D-Parma,
executive secretary, to issue a
mentioned that a 25 percent increase
memo spelling out proper dress
in thf state's wholesale tax on beer,
regulations lor any employee who
boosting it to 48 cents a case from 36
may have had a memory lapse.
cents, would produce $12.5 million.
But the regulations have rankled
But he didn't propose it formally,
.

Sailing ships the wave of-the
PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP )
Surrounded by graphs and desktop
models in his busy office-lab just
across from Stanford University,
Frank Shallenberger pronounces
sailing ships the wave of the future.
"I'm absolutely convinced," said
the former professor, who has
degrees froni and has taught at both
Harvard and Stanford, and who has
a long record of launchlflg successful small companies.
In terms of aerodynamics, cargo
capacity, speed, and energy efficiency, saya ShaUenberger, now
retired from teaching, sailing ships
make sense. More sense, he says,
that most people realize.
The popular image of tall ships is
that they .are beaJitiful, romantic
and impractical. Shallenberger
agrees. In :act he feels the the fabled
old clip'per ships were
aerodynamically inefficient.

The mode is that his company,
DynaShip Corp., have helped design
and test 1!_re another matter
altogether, with tiers of solid,
squared, automatically furled sails
mounted on swivel masts. •
"The old ships were ·great down- .
wind, but ·not' otherwise," said
Shallenberger. He maintains that
much wind escaped through their
triangular sails, and that the sails,
rigidly mounted, often left the ships
becalmed.
Right now, he says, DynaShips
can outperform many oil-powered
cargo vessels, hauling wood and
pulp from the American Northwest
to Japan, and taking pulp from the
East Coast to Europe.
The primary rl*lson, of course, is
the cost of fuel. If one of his ships
were built and operating, he said, it
might haul up to 30,000 tons at 12
k11ots, using 10 percent of the fuel

some staffers in the lower chamber.
Although there has been no
disagreement with the ban on blue
jeans, tennis shoes or shorts for men
or women, some other · restrictiorL~
have produced grumbling.
For example, the regulations say
it is aU right for men to remove their
suit jackets in offices because of the
heat, but they have to put them on if ·
they step into the hallwa~.

needed by a diesel slnp ot the same
time Administration by tbe Universize running at no more than 14 or 15
sity ol Michigan · showed that
knots.
sallpower still was feasible but
The problem, he says with
econornicaUy marginal. ·
frustration, Is that even those who
But now, says ShaUenberger, oills
should be knowledgeable can't seem
three times that price and the people ·
to accept the notion that, in an age of
at the administration . failed to
technological complexity, simpler
change their position ·until three
could be better.
'
months ago, when they decided to
Mter years of plugging away,
update tbe older study.
ShaUenberger says '.'the shipping inNow, says Shallenbergtir. "To my
dustry is one of the most reac- mind it wiU take 12 months lor t11e
tionary," although be is more
new study, and no builder will ronforgiving of them than he is of tbe
siderasailingshipuntilthen."
Maritime Administration.
Meanwhile, Shallenberger is turThe industry, be explained, is in
ning his attention to improving .tbe
the doldrums because of overdesign of DynaShip, which Is based
capacity. Few owners are making . on plans ol a German E118ineer,
money, so few have the luxury of ex· . Wilhelm Prolss, who began experimenting with ideas that have
periments in tbe 11160.
been demonstrated in model form
When the orders come in, and he Is
only.
sure they wiU, DynaShlp will comWhen the price of oil was $1J.50 a . mission d recognized builder to
bar~el in 1975, a stud.v for the Ma~- \ produce the ships.

PLANS FOR WALTON
SAN DIEGO (APJ - BiU Walton,
plagued by the latest in a long list of
injuries, mis.Sed 68 of the 82 games
played by the San Diego Clippers in
the 1979-atl season. The front office
had a special sneaker designed to
protect his foot and ankle for tbe
1980-81 season.
"Walton says he wants to play,
and we assume he is going to play,"
commented the vice-president of the
Clippers, Irv Kaze. "But at this point
I don't think we would deliberately
go out and try to build a team around
him."

STORE HOURS
Open Mon. thru Sat.
8 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Open Sunday
8 A. M. to 6 P. M.

NEW YORK

$2
'
39
LB.

BONELESS STRIP STEAK
fR~~-LEAN

SUPERIOR

GROUND
BEEF

FRANKIE
WIENERS
12 oz.
PKG.

:I
I

DAIRY LANE

ICE CREAM

shirts.

fut~re? ·

losing to number four ranked open
team in the United States, G. B.
Wilcher's in the nightcap.
Sunday the " pop company"
knocked off Valley House of
BatesviUe, Ind., 12-5. In its final
game RC Lost to Capitol Oil of Indianapolis by a score of 21)-19 in what
most observers called the most exciting game of the tournament. ·
The team's fine showing led to invitations to some of the finest tournaments in this part of the country
including the Armco Invitational in
Middletown, Ohio; the Hamilton Invite in Hamilton, and a 100 team
tourney in LouisviUe, Ky .

MONDAY
THRU
SUNDAY

Meanwhile, women employees "at
no time" may wear halter tops or T·
"In addition, no female House em- •
ployee should report to work without
a bra," the memo states. One alert
staffer pointed out that the order
make~ no mention of whether the
bra must actually be worn or simply
must be available.

Royal Crown came horne with an
impressive fourth place finish in the
nationally heralded "Seymour Invitational" softball tournament.
The tournament included G. B.
Wilcher's of Seymour, Indiana,
Waco's of LouisviUe, Ky., Capitol Oil
of Indianapolis, Ind., the St. Louis
Merchants of St. Louis, and many
other well known powerhouse.
In the first game last Saturday
morning, RC carne out smoking by
defeating WACO, the 1978 U. S. Industries champions and 1979 nmnerup. The final score was 21-4.
RC then defeated Kentucky Fried
· Chicken of Indianapolis 19-5 before

PRICES EFFECTIVE

State lawmakers ·face harsh reality,
$30 million.

RC returns with4th place·finish

also a Daytona 500 veteran.
The speedway was in " great
shape" according to Bob Adams,
Jr., who beat some of the midwest's
best drivers. Adams literally flew
around the clay oval waiting for his
chance to overtake the leaders.
Pennsboro, W.Va.'s Frank Wilson
won the semi-late model feature
over Homer Wright, Ray Gorrell, .
Doc Holliday, John Harris, and
another Meigs c-ountian Roger
Adkins.
Mark Dickson won the Street
Stock feature which was Red
flagged on the tenth lap due to a
violent flip by Jinunie Lanham.
Lanham barrel rolled four times In
the second turn after breaking a
spindle. His ca r was demolished but
a safe roll cage fortunately let
Lanham walk away uninjured.
Fast time in the respective
divisions went to Earl Hill, Frank
Wilson, and Mark Dickson.
Heat races went to Hill, Wilson,
"Buckwheat" Shutts, Max Roush,
Harry Yoho, and Jinunie Lanham.
Racing resumes this Friday
evening on the 3/8 mile clay oval.
For further details and information
look for the speedway advertisement later this week in The
Dally Sentinel.

.I

Ohio perspective

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
lawmakers were faced once again
this week with an awful truth: The
only way for governments to raise
money is to increase taxes, cut spending, or take away sorneone's tax
exemption.
Members of the Senate Finance
Committee. were grappling with
legislation to head off a $266 million
state deficit during. the next fiscal
year. The deficit would be the result
pf sharp drops in revenues caused by
the recession.
Legislative Budget Office Director
Richard G. Sheridan read off a list of
alternatives, among which were the
following :
-Ending tax credits for horne improvements, which were approved
by the Legislature only last year, for
a savings of between $10 miUion and

STEWART ~ Bob " Buckshot"
'!'he trio battled bumper to burnAdams, Jr. from Racine, captured
per at speeds over 100 miles per hour
the 25-lap grand opening Late Model
bringing the near-capacity crowd to
feature race at Bond's Speedway
its feet for the exciting finish . With
here Friday evening.
two laps remaining Robinson slid
Track owner and promoter Ronnie
high into the third turn. Adams took
Bond was very pleased with the
advantage, powersliding below
crown turnout, the high quality race
Robinson and into the lead.
cars, and the exciting races at the
Going into the white flag lap sidespeedway's opener.
by-side the Racine racer had the
Local drivers did very well againslight edge and pulled away to take
st · some of the best Midwestern
the checkered flag despite a serious
United States competition.
threat from Hill, who slipped past
The young Adams in his number
Robinson for second.
A55 Camaro led only two laps, but he
Atomic. Speedway Champion Bud
made them count, as they were the
Frazier was fourth, Racine's Gene
final two laps of the race.
Adkins fifth and Wellston 's Don
'Early leader Earl Hill looked like
Clark sixth. Bob "Bobby Joe"
a sure winner, but Marietta's Dave
Adams, Sr., who was running a
Robinson and Adams battled Hill aU
strong third had to go to the pits with
tbe way pressuring him for the lead.
mechanical difficulties.
Mter a caution flag tightened up ' Four times National USAC
tbe field , on lap 20 Hill's 1980 Monte
(United States Auto Club ) Champion
Carlo -momentarily got sideways
Butch Hartman was on hand , but
allowiljg Robinson to take the lead
had to leave the race with
with Adams streaking into second. · mechanical problems. Hartman is

I

Today's commentary

economicaUy sound solutions to curbing inflation than enforced
recession,

Complaints were raised, but none
margin in 13 states.
Unfortunately, the candidate .who translated into political action. Con·
knew the words to blacks' favorite ferences and demonstrations subhymns became the president who stituted for progr;~ms and
forgot the numbers · on their strategies, Rhetoric replaced action.
Carter's chief chaUenger, Sen. Edpaychecks.
His prominent placement of black · ward Kennedy, had a superior
faces in high places was erased by record in civil rights and economic
economic policies which placed tbe justice, but the personal baggage he
major burden of budget balancing carried pulled him down.
Black lead~rs provided no ·alter·
on the backs and pocketbooks of tbe
1)8tive for their followers.
The caucus threat comes at the
close of the president's numerically
successful re-nomination campa'ign,
and at a time when his Republican
opponent proposes a return to 18th
century eponornic and social
policies.
American poor.
And it comes at a time when
· Every poll and survey this year
blacks
in one American city have reshowed that black voters admired
diccovered
bricks and bottles as a
the president's personality as much
noisy
if
ineffective
- method of
as they despised his performance.
political
protest.
Yet his incumbent's powers immediately cemented black mayors
It is too late to demand "huniane
to the Carter campaign. Nothing
could move these ,politicians away and economically sound solutions"
!Tom the federal trough their cities to tbe pessing problem ol inflation.
American blacks may be forced to .
needed to survive.
live
· anotber lour years with a
Other black leaders shied away
president
they helped create.
from confrontation with power.

.350;

TODAY 'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
By The AIIOfJated Press

Sllllday'a GaiDH

Black Caucus reaction: too little, too late

AMERICAN LEAGUE

B.a.TIING 1150 :.t bah J: Molitor
Milwaukee, 3.3M!; Carew, Cl:lllfomia,
Brett, K&lt;~ruscas City, .337; Ort.a, Cleveland,
.336; Trammel, ~truit , .333.
RUNS : Yoont , Milwaukee, :'11; Randolph,
New York, SO; Wllstlo, Karu;as City, 50;
WiJJ:;, Texas, 49; Trammell, Detroit, 47;
Ow,livie, Milwauk ee. 47: Hendersof!,
Oakland, 47.
RBI : Perez, Boston, :tl ; Ogli11er, Texas,
50; Oglivie, Milwaukee, 49 ; Armas, O&lt;~k:!and,
47 ; Cooper, Milwaukee, 46.
HITS: Wilson, Kansas City, 91; Bwnbry,
Baltimore, 83; Carew, Californha, 83; River
Teus, 8.2; Oliver, Teus, 81.
'
DOUBLES : Morrison, Ch.ica.~go22; Yount,
Milwaukee, 20; Carew, Califomiu, 19; D.
Garcia, Toronto, 18; Oliver, Texas·,J7.
TRIPl.ES: Griffin, Toronto, 8; Bwnbry,
Baltimore, S; Brett, Kansas City, :!; 12: lied

!Kin l(man 3-6), (n)
(Only games !JCheduled)
Tuesday's Game~
Kansas City at Minnesota, 2, (nJ
T«Jronloat Baltimore, (nJ
Detroit at Cleveland, ( n)
Boston at New York (n)
Chicago at California, (n)
Milwaukee at Oakland, (n )

Cincinnati
San Francisco
Atlanta
San Diego
S.turdl)''a Games
Cincinnati&amp;, St. Louis 5
San Francbco9, Philadelphia 3
AUanla S, Chicago 0
Houston t , Pittsburgh 2
lAs Angeles5, New YorkO
· Monlreai7,SanDiego4

•

Pasture, Cmcinnati, 9-3, .700,3. 11; Hichard,
Howton, 9-3, .7$0, .151; Jttcksur!, Pitt£burgh,
S.2, .714, 1.~ ; Sultoo, Los A~eles, ~2 • .714,
2.65.
STrt~KEOUTS : tarlt.vn, Ph!Wdelphla,
135; Richard, Houston, 106; R}'lln, Huuslon,
82; Niekro, Atlanta, 75; Blylevan. Pittoburgh, 74.

Z1 3B .41:'1 12¥1
%1 41 .359 16

tKoosmans.&lt;; J, In ).

WEST

14 Angeles

30 :.; .455 10
:wJ 37 .448 JOiola

Bostoo (Ecken~ley 3.-5) at New York
(Guidry 7-JJ. tnJ_
Kansas City ~G un 9-2) at Minnesota

81&gt;

Los An~t!les,

8-l, .889, 2.08 ; Cctrllt!n, Phlladelptua, 13-2,
.867, J .83; Wt!lch, Loti An~s:elc~ . 7-2, .178, 2.13;

i0wchinko~2 J,[ n ).

25 40 .385 12\-!1

lloustoo

Llbur~h. ~I .. 1189, 3.01 ; HEtW,

. Mouday'1 Gamet

35 30 .538 2~
7\;

Chicago
New York

PITI'SBURG~ 17 Deci.'iiuru:1; Biddy; Pit·

40 26 -1101!
31 36 .4G3 91&gt;

Detroit (Underwood H l at Cleveland

GB
36 2S .581
34 'l7 .557 l\-!1

Monireal
l'llilade1phia
Pitlsburgh

...

31 32 .492 11

New YorkS, Oakland 3
Detroi14, Chicago I
Minnesota 3, Cleveland 2
Califurnla 4, Boston2
Baltlmore"9, Seattle9
Milwaukee~. KIUUIWJ City I
Texas 2, Torontv 1
SUDCI...I'• Games
Det-!"oil 7-6, Chicago 11
&amp;ittle 7, Baltimore5
Boston 6, CaUfomia 3
Oakland5, New York 2
Cleveland 11, Minrnlot.a 6
Kan&amp;llsCity 7, Milwaukee 4
Turonto6, Texas:"~

Syracuse5,Paw1uckett

YtAHj WE'LL JU~T
\1AV~ TO WA\T TO

HOM£ HUNS: Sctuuidt. Philadelphia. 20 ;
Ba_ker , Los Angel~s . IS ; LuzinskJ ,
Ph!laLil'lphua, 1:'1 ; Gctr11ey , l,u,; Angelt.'S, I~ ;
fhmt.lrit•k, St. Luuls, 14 .
STOJ.EN BI\S£S : Moreno Pil~b~ rgh,39 ·
l.t:t'lur~t, Mnntr~tal, 38; Cot!ins. Cindnrn:~ ti',
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Columbus 6, Rictunond 5

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34 32 .$15

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35 )) .538 8
33 :IJ .b24 9

Texas

Tidewaterl,Rochester 1111 inn~s)
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25
lap
race
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·-

W~~J;i;gt~;·;; bat comes alive;Redsbombed
It had been a dreadful slump for a
man who brought a .280 career bat·
ting average with him when he
joined the New.York Mets.
Claudell Washington had not had a
hit since he singled in the ninth in·
ning of a five-run Mets rally that
beat the San Francisco Giants Hi a
week ago Saturday.
Traded to the Mets from the
Chicago White So• on June 7 for a
minor league pitcher, Washington
had gone 1-for-17 as a National
Leaguer.
"I don't know the pitchers in this
league very well, so I've been
struggling," Washington said. His
struggle ended Sunday when he
slallUDed three home runs, driving
in five runs, to help beat the Los
Angeles· Dodgers 9-6 and end a

For Matt Keough, there's just no
Mariners came from behind to
defeat
the Baltimore Orioles 7·5, the
relief.
Boston
Red Sox whipped the Califor·
The Oakland A's right-hander pit·
nia Angels 6-3, the Cleveland Indians
ched his 12th complete game, high in
bombed the Minnesota Twins 11~,
the majors, in stopping the New
the Kansas City Royals trinuned the
York Yankees~2Sunday . He ran his
Milwaukee Brewers ·7-4 and the
record to IH and stopped the
Yankees' nine-game winning streak, Toronto Blue Jays beat the Texas
Rangers 6-5 in 10 innings.
their best since they won 10 in a row
Oakland scored a run in an
12 years ago.
Oakland Manager Billy Martin,
unusual way in the seventh when
facing the Yankees in New York for
Dave McKay singled, went to third
on Rickey Henderson's bunt double
the first time since he was fired last
year, has said that if the A's had a that trickled into right field past
relief pitcher as good as New York's New York 's charging infielders and
Rich Gossage, they would be leading scored on Dwayne Murphy's
the American League West instead sacrifice ny.
of being tt games behind.
Royals 7, Brewers 4
After his 132-pitch performance
U.L. Washington, Amos Otis and
Sunday, Keough said he is a "little Willie Aikens homered and Rich
leg weary and a little arm weary. Gale pitched a six-hitter despite a
I'm not satisfied with myself the last 'shaky start as Kansas City stopped
few games. The West Coast to East Milwaukee. The Brewers took a 3-ll
Coast travel is tough. You can't "lead off Gale, but the Royals reboun·
sleep."
ded with the three homers and two
In a conversation before Sunday's RBI sihgles by Frank White.
game with Yankees' pitcher TollUDy
"Gale gave us three runs on lour
John, who got a victory Saturday hits the first two innings and then
with seven i!Ulings of pitching, shut the door in our face until the
Keough said, "If I had Gossage in ninth," said Milwaukee Manager
the bullpen, I'd get out after seven George Bamberger. " It looked like
irmings, too.''
we had him early, but he bounced
But he doesn 't, so Keough pitches back."
on and on in every game he starts.
Red Sox 6, AngelS 3
On Sunday, Martin left him in
Tony Perez, who leads the AL with
although he gave up 10 hits and lour 51 RBI, drove in three runs with a
walks.
twD-run homer and a single and
"It's pretty easy (to face the Dave Rader hit his first American
Yankees)," a tongue-in-cheek League homer to power Boston past
Keough said. " Just get the live left· the California Angels. The Red So•
handers without hitting a home were playing without Jim Rice,
fWl,"
Carlton Fisk and Butch Hobson, all
In other American League games, injured.
the Detroit Tigers swept a doubleMariners 7, Orioles 5
header from the Chicago White Sox
"'It's tough lor me to gel into the
bf 7·1 and &amp;-4 ' scores, the Seattle lineup. I've got to realize my role

Local little league action · saw
Chester's Chieftains take a 6-2 come
from behind win from Reedsville's
Rockets. Tracy Taylor took the win
with relief from Toni Chrisman.
' Hitters for the winners were Tracy
Taylor a double and two singles,
Toney Chapman and Brian Beeler
. three singles, Tom Chrisman a
triple, and Danny Leonard a double.
Doug Beaver singled twice, while
Neil Chri.vnan, Gary Curtis, and
Cory Carnahan s~led.
Reedsville 's pitchers were
Barringer and Johnson. Hitters for
the Rockets were Jeff Johnson,
Brian Bailey, and Alan Reed with
singles and Mitchel Barringer
peving the way with two singles.
'

19· LOAVES TO SLICE

singled twice.

two singles for Middleport.
T. Herman was the American
Legion Hurler. P. Ewing tripled
while A. Batey and D. Reeves
singled accounting lor the only
American Legion hils. Middleport is
now 3-ll and A.M. is 1·3 on the season.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A reco.rd
crowd saw Nano Second take the
featured Athena Stakes on Sunday at
River Downs.
The horse, ridden by Terry War·
ner, took the lead at the quarter pole
of the six-furlong, $10,000-added race
and finished ahead by two lengths
with a time of I : 12.8. The horse paid
$6, $4.20 and $3.40.
In second was Gray on Gray,
which paid $4.40 and $3.60. In third
was Cesar's Expense, paying $4.60.
The daily double combination was
Wee Eagle in the first race and
Magic Dust in the second, paying
$53.40.
The attendance was 10,588. The
handle totaled $1,036,302, the best of
the year.

U.S.D .A . CHOICE ARM POT OR

ENGLISH CUT ROASt •••••••••••.•
CHUCK ROAST.••••.•.•••••.••••.•..•

The Syracuse Indians rallied to
defeat Racine's Reds 7-2. Doug · winners, Andrea Riggs tripled and
Owens was Syracuse's leading doubled, S. Herdman tripled, Robin
slugger with a triple. Jimmy Wolfe Buffington doubled, and N, Smith
picked up the Win for Syracuse. Scott had two singles. S. Jones, L.
Wickline hit a hard double lor Faulkner, and Gloeckner added
Racine. Jay Bostick wlls the Reds' singles.
Pomeroy pitcher was R. Rougpt.
pitcher.
D. White homered for Letart, Elaine
The Pomeroy Giants kept on track Smith doubled, and Mindy Morris,
with a 9-8 win over Rutland's Edna Greene, and Darla· Evans
Dodgers. Rod Roush went the singled. D. White was ihe losing pit·
•
distance . picking up the win. He cher.
stnlck out 11 and walked nine.
The Middleport Superstars took a
Lemaster tripled, D. Fry doubled,
convincing
. 24-9 . win over the
and Brian Korn singled twice for
American
Legion
girls. WiMing pit·
Pomeroy. Jim Norman, G. Moore;
cher
was
Natalie
Lambert of the
·and S. Powell also singled.
·
Superstars.
-April
King
smacked a
Scott WilliamB went the distance
grand
slam
home
run,
a
double and
for Rutland fanning 10 and walking
two
singl~s.
Cindy
Crooks,
Pam
011e. Scott Wllliams doubled and
O'ooks,
and
Paula
Horton
each
had
tripled for Rutland while Rick Little
&gt;
f
tl-

Lb.

$1 ••
s169

$}69
GROUND CHUCK........~~-.....
FRESH AND LEAN

•

VAUGHAN•s

FALTERS MEATSI ·

that lor three or four years," Mayer
said.
Tracy Austin won the last warmup
women's event, at Eastbourne, by
overcoming Wendy Turnbull 7-6, 6-2
in a troublesome wind.
·
She faltered in each set, losing a ~
I lead in the first and missing a mal·
ch point at 5-ll in the second.
Austin, 17, hopes to be the
youngest Wimbledon champion sin·
ce Lottie Dod, who was 15t when she
won the title nearly 100 years ago.
Martina Navratilova, seeking her
third straight Wimbledon crown, is
seeded No.I with Austin No.2. The
women's singles begin Tuesday.
Borg's ruthlessness and punishing
topspin forehand looked more
menacing than ever as he won the
French Open on slow clay in Paris
two weeks ago.
In switching to the faster English
turf he believes in avoiding the warmup tournaments and concentrating
on practice. For ten days he has·
been hitting tennis balls for four
hours a day in private and getting
used to the tricks played by the
grass.
Like most of the 128 men going into
Monday's first round, Borg has not
played on grass courts for almost a
year.

WIMBLEDON, England (AP ) "This is a very important Wim·
bledon for me," said Bjorn Borg as
he prepared to meet Ismail El Shafei
of Egypt in Monday's first round of
the world's major tennis tour·
nament.
''II I reach the quarterfinals I will
beat Rod Laver's record. Winning
the tournament itself is the most im·
portant thing, that's for sure," he
added shyly. " If I win the title lor
the fifth year in succession, that will
be amazing.''
Laver's record was winning 31
matches at Wimbledon in a row though it was a row stretched over
nine years.
The red-haired Australian won the
Wimbledon title in 1961 and 1962. He
was locked out as a professional for
s!. years. Then, when tennis went
open, he came back to win again in
1968 and 1969 and finally lost to
Britain's Roger Taylor in the fourth
round in 1970.
Borg, 24 earlier this month, has
won Wimbledon for the last four
years and has had"a run of 28 vit'tories. He is a heavy favorite to take
the title again.
Four Americans were expected to
present the strongest challenge to
the athletic, niuscular Swede. In order of seeding, they were John
McEnroe, Jimmy Co!Ulors, Vilas
Gerulaitts and Roscoe Tanner.
Tanner took Borg to live close sets
in last year's final.
Among the unseeded players,
Brian Gottfried came to Wimbledon
loojting good. After a palch of indifferent fonn, he bounced· back
Saturday to beat Sandy Mayer 6-3, 63 in the final ol the Surrey Grass
Courts Championships at Surbiton.
Even though Wimbledon's top live
were not competing, Gottfried's sut'cess was impressive.
"I haven't seen Brian play like

THE SILENT STORM
PffiLADELPffiA (AP) - "Silent
Storm" is the nickname slapped on
cornerback Roynell Young by his
teaiTUDates at AlCOfll State last
year.
Young was the No. I draft choice
of the Philadelphia Eagles in April.
Young's nickname was occasioned
by his personality, qulet and introspective off the field but
aggressive on it. He is alert against
the pass and a . stinging tackler
against the run.

NESTEA

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BATHROOM

INSTANT

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Can

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OR WHITE

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ROLLS$1

4
9¢
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1

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CAMPBELL'S

LIMAS
•
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BEANS

13•oz. Cut or French Cut Green Beans
14 Yo-oz. Cream Style Colo
12-oz. Whole Kernel Corn ·
1412-oz. Sweet Pe81.~~

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$ 69

FROSTY ACRES

ORANGE FROZEN
JUICE 16 oz. CAN

89~

FRENCH FRIES

TUNA

5-LB.

FUDGE

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COOKIES················
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PER BUNCH 79~
BROCCOLI .••• .:.......................
FIRST OF SEASON

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PLUMS ··········!·····............... .69

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_ICE CREAM ........... X~.~. $}49

To Hit This Area

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$}19 ·

18 OZ.

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59~ ­
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Borg says Wimbledon

LB.

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HOTDOGS ........... ..~?..~~. 69e

Keith Hernandez

Claudell Washington

...

CHUCK

INTRODUCING

Middleport, Ohio

IJAitOAIN MATWEES ON SAT &amp; stM

ALL SEATS JIJST S 1.50

Lb .

U.S.D.A . CHOICE BONELESS

Local Pee Wee league action
provided Middleport's Cubs with ~
29-19 slugfest victory over Powell's.
Winning pitcher Melton fanned four
in going the distance. Joey Loving
and Eddie Crooks took turns behind
the plate. Middleport's Todd Hood
The Middleport Dusters swiped a
singled twice and hit a home run, P.
double-header
from two different opJ . Richmond also singled twice and
ponents
Wednesday
evening. In the
homered, and David Smith tripled
first
game
they
downed
Pomeroy
and singled.
Jim's
Gulf
2:;..2.
Shannon
Hindy
was
Terry Fields and Hank Cleland
the
winning
pitcher,
Tanuny
Wright
took to the mound for Powell's. They
fanned eight and got into trouble by the loser. Tammy Cremeans,
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) walking 24. Terry Fields singled Margie Smith, and Julie Roush each
Heriberto
Rivera Jr., rode Sham
had
home
runs
for
the
Dusters
inthree times, Decker Cullums singled
cluding
a
grand
slam
by
Julie
·
Over
to
a
first
place finish to capture
twice , along with Todd Smith. Hank .
Cleland hit a home run and single Hysell. Shannon Hindy had a double the $26,745 Geisha Stakes run at
Thistledown Race Track.
while John Anderson also hit a and Kim Stewart four singles.
Misy Wood and TallUDy Wright
Sham Over went the mile and onehomer.
had hits for Jim's Gulf. The nightcap sixteenth for 3-year-old fillies Sun·
was won by the Dusters 21f-1 over day in 1:46 and paid $7 to win, $5.20
In the Senior softball league
Syracuse.
Home runs were hit by to place a nil $2.60 to show. .
Zirkle's winning home run proved to
The second horse, Plenty Smart,
Kim
Stewart,
Cindy RifOe, and
be the winning margin in Syracuse's
paid
$7.40 and $2.80, and Midnight
Margie
Smith.
Other
·hitters
were
6-5 victory over Forest Run. Carla
Pumpkin
ran third to return$2.40.
Kelly
Stewart,
Sherry
Cooper,
Elsie
Morris was the winning hurler. For
The
day's
last trifecta comMeier,
Amy
Roush,
Cindy
Holly,
Syracuse Tonia Ash homered along
bination
of
1-6-10
was the best bet of
Julie
Roush,
Amy
Blake,
TallUDy
with Zirkle. Kim Dugan doubled for
the
day,
paying
$954.90.
The track
Cremeans,
ShaMon
Hindy,
Julie
the winners. For Forest Rlill Jody
of
6,689
wagered
reported
a
crowd
and
Samantha
Roush.
Hysell,
Gru~r hit a seventh inning homer,
$923,156
on
Sundav's
rae
...
Cindy Thompsori a triple, and
Teresa McDermit a double. Terti .------------------~-----~-i
Wilson also suigled lor Forest Run,
Tonia Sl!lser was the Forest Run
hurler.
Also in Senior softball league play
Pomeroy. defeated Letart Hi. Beth
Gloeckner had a home run for the

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Racing results

Summer league results. • •

3.

,.. LUNCH M'EA T ,

Table Trimmed and ready to

Keough completes 12th

In a Meigs-Mason pony league
make-up . game Eastern's Reds
posted a ~7 win over the visiting
New Haven club. Winning pitcher
Brian WeU was relieved in the sixth
by Deroo Jewett. They combined to
fan seven and walks!..
Dave Carl slanuned two triple11
and a double, Brian Collins a triple
and single, Deroo Jewett two
siflgles, Troy Guthrie and Brian Well
singles for the winners.-Su.snar, Simpton, and Spradling were the New
Haven hurlers Ianning seven and
walking three.
Weaver and E. Zirkle had triples
for New Haven. Eastern's Reds are
now 3-5 while New Haven drops to 4-

··,

seven-game Mets losing streak.
ncr in relief, and Neil Allen pitched
Washington als~ had a single in
U1ree scoreless innings £or the save,
the game to go 4-for-5, and he called
his 11th.
it the greatest day of his seven-year
Elsewhere in the league, the St.
major league career.
Louis Cardinals clobbered Cin·
Washington hit a twD-run homer in
cinnati 12·2, th~ Montreal Expos
the first , another twD-run shot in the
blanked San Diego 2-ll, Philadelphia
fifth, and his solo homer in the
edged""the San Francisco Giants 4-J,
seventh gave the Mets a 9-3 lead as
the Chicago Cubs got by Atlanta 3-2
the Dodgers saw a four-game win- and the Pittsburgh Pirates trimmed
ning streak come to an end.
Houston 2·1.
Washington became only the third
Cards 12, Reds 2
player in Mets history to hit three · Keith Hernandez ripped a threehomers in one game. Jim Hickman run homer and drove in a fourth run
did it in 1965, and Dave Kingman in with a sacrifice fly to pace St. Louis'
1976.
.
\s-hit attack. Pete Vuckovich, 7-5,
Washington's first two homers tossed a four-hitter, surrendering
came off the Dodgers' $3 million free
both Cincinnati runs on a homer by
agent, Dave Goltz, ~. who hasn 't Ken Griffey in the first inning.
won since May II.
The Cards kayoed Reds starter
Mark Bomback, 4-1, was the win- Mike LaCoss, 4-7, in the fourth with
three runs on sin!!les by Ted Sim-

mons and George Hendrick and a
double by Ken Reitz.
Hernandez homered fur the seven·
th time this season in the sixth when
the Cards scored six runs.
Expos 2, Padres 0
Right-hander Stev~ Rogers, 9-5,
battled a balky" ann and scattered
eight hits for his second shutout of
the season and 22nd of his career.
The victory was Rogers' eighth in
nine starts against only one loss.
Warren Cromartie. and Bob Pate
drove in the .Montreal runs with
singles. Tony Bernazard doubled .
and scored on.Cromartie's single off
Gary Lucas, 3-4, in the sixth, and
Pate singled home Gary Carter in
the eighth.
Phils 4, Giants 3
Steve Carlton won his 13th game
against only two losses, outdueling
Vida Blue, who tried unsuccessfully
for the second time to become a !Ifgame winner.
Carlton scattered eight hits,
struck out eight ad walked three.
Mike Schmidt and Greg Luzinski
and mine is a utility player," said drove in seventh-inning runs as the
Larry Milbourne, who entered the Phils rallied from a 3-2 deficit.
game batting .only .123. But he broke
Cubs 3, Braves 2 ·
a ~5 tie with a two-run triple in the
Bill Buckner and Jerry Martin
ninth inning and Tom Paciorek each homered in the sixth inning to
knocked in three runs with a homer rally the Cubs to their fourth victory
and single to lead Seattle over in five games. Right-hander Dennis
Baltimore.
Lamp, 7~ . went 7-1-3 innings lor the
Indians 11, Twins 6
win, and Dick Tidrow earned his
Rookie Joe Charboneau capped a thrd save.
·
five-run sixth inning with a two-run
Jeff Burroughs had given the
homer and Cleveland rattled Min· Braves a 2·1 lead in the fourth with
nesota for 19 · hits. Charboneau's his second homer of the year, a twDhomer was one of six in a row lor the run blast.
Indians in their big inning, which
Both Chicago homers came off
also saw a two-run triple by Dell Phil Niekro, :...10.
Alston and a run-scoring single by
Cubs left fielder Ken Henderson
Mike Hargrove."
made a game-saving throw to the
Tigers 7-6, Wblte Sox 1-4
plate in the seventh inning when he
Detroit's double-header sweep nailed Larvell Blanks, who was
handed Chicago its fifth and sixth trying to score from second on a
losses in a row. Tom Brookens had a single by Mike Lum.
pair of doubles and two RBI to back
Pirates 2, Astros 1
the seven-hit pitching of Dave
John Milner provided the eventual
RO'lema in the opener, which winning run with his sixth-inning
featured a triple play by Chicago.
home run, and Pittsburgh ended a
Two-run doubles by Richie Hebner six-game losing streak by beating
and Jim Lentine and four Chicago the Astros and Joe Niekro. At the
errors led to live Detroit unearned same time, Houston saw a six-game
runs as the Tigers won the second winning streak come to an end, as
game.
well as a streak of 14 wins at the
Blue Jays 6, Rangers 5
Astrodome.
Lloyd Moseby's lOth-inning
Jim Bibby claimed his eighth vit'sacrifice ny completed a Toronto tory in nine decisions, going eight incomeback alter Texas took a ~I lead nings before he was lifted for a pinch
through seven innings. Four hitter. Bibby allowed just four hits,
relievers gave up three runs in the struck out five and walked none
eighth, one in the ninth and ••ne in before Grant Jackson relieved.
the loth as the Blue Jays avoided a
Bill Madlock's bases-loaded single
sweep. Garth lorg had a two-run-" in the first got Pittsburgh started.
homer in the eighth; two hit batsman Terry Puhl gave Houston its only
led to John Mayberry's sacrifice fly run with a solo homer in the sixth.
in the same inning and Alfredo Grif·
fin singled with two outs in the ninth
to tie the score.

.

.

Pllis Tax &amp; Deposit

8-16 OZ. RET.
.f~ STUHI&gt;

4 $}00
FOR

-.

• CAHOINAt FOOD STORES

-X;( ell) ilt•UJ""

ililiBEUIGER
HELP
Elf
2 $1 09

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�5- 1" he Daily Scntlllcl, ~htltllcpul t· l '"" '"'""), 0 .• Muuduy, J uuc 23, 1!160

•

·-

W~~J;i;gt~;·;; bat comes alive;Redsbombed
It had been a dreadful slump for a
man who brought a .280 career bat·
ting average with him when he
joined the New.York Mets.
Claudell Washington had not had a
hit since he singled in the ninth in·
ning of a five-run Mets rally that
beat the San Francisco Giants Hi a
week ago Saturday.
Traded to the Mets from the
Chicago White So• on June 7 for a
minor league pitcher, Washington
had gone 1-for-17 as a National
Leaguer.
"I don't know the pitchers in this
league very well, so I've been
struggling," Washington said. His
struggle ended Sunday when he
slallUDed three home runs, driving
in five runs, to help beat the Los
Angeles· Dodgers 9-6 and end a

For Matt Keough, there's just no
Mariners came from behind to
defeat
the Baltimore Orioles 7·5, the
relief.
Boston
Red Sox whipped the Califor·
The Oakland A's right-hander pit·
nia Angels 6-3, the Cleveland Indians
ched his 12th complete game, high in
bombed the Minnesota Twins 11~,
the majors, in stopping the New
the Kansas City Royals trinuned the
York Yankees~2Sunday . He ran his
Milwaukee Brewers ·7-4 and the
record to IH and stopped the
Yankees' nine-game winning streak, Toronto Blue Jays beat the Texas
Rangers 6-5 in 10 innings.
their best since they won 10 in a row
Oakland scored a run in an
12 years ago.
Oakland Manager Billy Martin,
unusual way in the seventh when
facing the Yankees in New York for
Dave McKay singled, went to third
on Rickey Henderson's bunt double
the first time since he was fired last
year, has said that if the A's had a that trickled into right field past
relief pitcher as good as New York's New York 's charging infielders and
Rich Gossage, they would be leading scored on Dwayne Murphy's
the American League West instead sacrifice ny.
of being tt games behind.
Royals 7, Brewers 4
After his 132-pitch performance
U.L. Washington, Amos Otis and
Sunday, Keough said he is a "little Willie Aikens homered and Rich
leg weary and a little arm weary. Gale pitched a six-hitter despite a
I'm not satisfied with myself the last 'shaky start as Kansas City stopped
few games. The West Coast to East Milwaukee. The Brewers took a 3-ll
Coast travel is tough. You can't "lead off Gale, but the Royals reboun·
sleep."
ded with the three homers and two
In a conversation before Sunday's RBI sihgles by Frank White.
game with Yankees' pitcher TollUDy
"Gale gave us three runs on lour
John, who got a victory Saturday hits the first two innings and then
with seven i!Ulings of pitching, shut the door in our face until the
Keough said, "If I had Gossage in ninth," said Milwaukee Manager
the bullpen, I'd get out after seven George Bamberger. " It looked like
irmings, too.''
we had him early, but he bounced
But he doesn 't, so Keough pitches back."
on and on in every game he starts.
Red Sox 6, AngelS 3
On Sunday, Martin left him in
Tony Perez, who leads the AL with
although he gave up 10 hits and lour 51 RBI, drove in three runs with a
walks.
twD-run homer and a single and
"It's pretty easy (to face the Dave Rader hit his first American
Yankees)," a tongue-in-cheek League homer to power Boston past
Keough said. " Just get the live left· the California Angels. The Red So•
handers without hitting a home were playing without Jim Rice,
fWl,"
Carlton Fisk and Butch Hobson, all
In other American League games, injured.
the Detroit Tigers swept a doubleMariners 7, Orioles 5
header from the Chicago White Sox
"'It's tough lor me to gel into the
bf 7·1 and &amp;-4 ' scores, the Seattle lineup. I've got to realize my role

Local little league action · saw
Chester's Chieftains take a 6-2 come
from behind win from Reedsville's
Rockets. Tracy Taylor took the win
with relief from Toni Chrisman.
' Hitters for the winners were Tracy
Taylor a double and two singles,
Toney Chapman and Brian Beeler
. three singles, Tom Chrisman a
triple, and Danny Leonard a double.
Doug Beaver singled twice, while
Neil Chri.vnan, Gary Curtis, and
Cory Carnahan s~led.
Reedsville 's pitchers were
Barringer and Johnson. Hitters for
the Rockets were Jeff Johnson,
Brian Bailey, and Alan Reed with
singles and Mitchel Barringer
peving the way with two singles.
'

19· LOAVES TO SLICE

singled twice.

two singles for Middleport.
T. Herman was the American
Legion Hurler. P. Ewing tripled
while A. Batey and D. Reeves
singled accounting lor the only
American Legion hils. Middleport is
now 3-ll and A.M. is 1·3 on the season.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A reco.rd
crowd saw Nano Second take the
featured Athena Stakes on Sunday at
River Downs.
The horse, ridden by Terry War·
ner, took the lead at the quarter pole
of the six-furlong, $10,000-added race
and finished ahead by two lengths
with a time of I : 12.8. The horse paid
$6, $4.20 and $3.40.
In second was Gray on Gray,
which paid $4.40 and $3.60. In third
was Cesar's Expense, paying $4.60.
The daily double combination was
Wee Eagle in the first race and
Magic Dust in the second, paying
$53.40.
The attendance was 10,588. The
handle totaled $1,036,302, the best of
the year.

U.S.D .A . CHOICE ARM POT OR

ENGLISH CUT ROASt •••••••••••.•
CHUCK ROAST.••••.•.•••••.••••.•..•

The Syracuse Indians rallied to
defeat Racine's Reds 7-2. Doug · winners, Andrea Riggs tripled and
Owens was Syracuse's leading doubled, S. Herdman tripled, Robin
slugger with a triple. Jimmy Wolfe Buffington doubled, and N, Smith
picked up the Win for Syracuse. Scott had two singles. S. Jones, L.
Wickline hit a hard double lor Faulkner, and Gloeckner added
Racine. Jay Bostick wlls the Reds' singles.
Pomeroy pitcher was R. Rougpt.
pitcher.
D. White homered for Letart, Elaine
The Pomeroy Giants kept on track Smith doubled, and Mindy Morris,
with a 9-8 win over Rutland's Edna Greene, and Darla· Evans
Dodgers. Rod Roush went the singled. D. White was ihe losing pit·
•
distance . picking up the win. He cher.
stnlck out 11 and walked nine.
The Middleport Superstars took a
Lemaster tripled, D. Fry doubled,
convincing
. 24-9 . win over the
and Brian Korn singled twice for
American
Legion
girls. WiMing pit·
Pomeroy. Jim Norman, G. Moore;
cher
was
Natalie
Lambert of the
·and S. Powell also singled.
·
Superstars.
-April
King
smacked a
Scott WilliamB went the distance
grand
slam
home
run,
a
double and
for Rutland fanning 10 and walking
two
singl~s.
Cindy
Crooks,
Pam
011e. Scott Wllliams doubled and
O'ooks,
and
Paula
Horton
each
had
tripled for Rutland while Rick Little
&gt;
f
tl-

Lb.

$1 ••
s169

$}69
GROUND CHUCK........~~-.....
FRESH AND LEAN

•

VAUGHAN•s

FALTERS MEATSI ·

that lor three or four years," Mayer
said.
Tracy Austin won the last warmup
women's event, at Eastbourne, by
overcoming Wendy Turnbull 7-6, 6-2
in a troublesome wind.
·
She faltered in each set, losing a ~
I lead in the first and missing a mal·
ch point at 5-ll in the second.
Austin, 17, hopes to be the
youngest Wimbledon champion sin·
ce Lottie Dod, who was 15t when she
won the title nearly 100 years ago.
Martina Navratilova, seeking her
third straight Wimbledon crown, is
seeded No.I with Austin No.2. The
women's singles begin Tuesday.
Borg's ruthlessness and punishing
topspin forehand looked more
menacing than ever as he won the
French Open on slow clay in Paris
two weeks ago.
In switching to the faster English
turf he believes in avoiding the warmup tournaments and concentrating
on practice. For ten days he has·
been hitting tennis balls for four
hours a day in private and getting
used to the tricks played by the
grass.
Like most of the 128 men going into
Monday's first round, Borg has not
played on grass courts for almost a
year.

WIMBLEDON, England (AP ) "This is a very important Wim·
bledon for me," said Bjorn Borg as
he prepared to meet Ismail El Shafei
of Egypt in Monday's first round of
the world's major tennis tour·
nament.
''II I reach the quarterfinals I will
beat Rod Laver's record. Winning
the tournament itself is the most im·
portant thing, that's for sure," he
added shyly. " If I win the title lor
the fifth year in succession, that will
be amazing.''
Laver's record was winning 31
matches at Wimbledon in a row though it was a row stretched over
nine years.
The red-haired Australian won the
Wimbledon title in 1961 and 1962. He
was locked out as a professional for
s!. years. Then, when tennis went
open, he came back to win again in
1968 and 1969 and finally lost to
Britain's Roger Taylor in the fourth
round in 1970.
Borg, 24 earlier this month, has
won Wimbledon for the last four
years and has had"a run of 28 vit'tories. He is a heavy favorite to take
the title again.
Four Americans were expected to
present the strongest challenge to
the athletic, niuscular Swede. In order of seeding, they were John
McEnroe, Jimmy Co!Ulors, Vilas
Gerulaitts and Roscoe Tanner.
Tanner took Borg to live close sets
in last year's final.
Among the unseeded players,
Brian Gottfried came to Wimbledon
loojting good. After a palch of indifferent fonn, he bounced· back
Saturday to beat Sandy Mayer 6-3, 63 in the final ol the Surrey Grass
Courts Championships at Surbiton.
Even though Wimbledon's top live
were not competing, Gottfried's sut'cess was impressive.
"I haven't seen Brian play like

THE SILENT STORM
PffiLADELPffiA (AP) - "Silent
Storm" is the nickname slapped on
cornerback Roynell Young by his
teaiTUDates at AlCOfll State last
year.
Young was the No. I draft choice
of the Philadelphia Eagles in April.
Young's nickname was occasioned
by his personality, qulet and introspective off the field but
aggressive on it. He is alert against
the pass and a . stinging tackler
against the run.

NESTEA

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13•oz. Cut or French Cut Green Beans
14 Yo-oz. Cream Style Colo
12-oz. Whole Kernel Corn ·
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Borg says Wimbledon

LB.

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HOTDOGS ........... ..~?..~~. 69e

Keith Hernandez

Claudell Washington

...

CHUCK

INTRODUCING

Middleport, Ohio

IJAitOAIN MATWEES ON SAT &amp; stM

ALL SEATS JIJST S 1.50

Lb .

U.S.D.A . CHOICE BONELESS

Local Pee Wee league action
provided Middleport's Cubs with ~
29-19 slugfest victory over Powell's.
Winning pitcher Melton fanned four
in going the distance. Joey Loving
and Eddie Crooks took turns behind
the plate. Middleport's Todd Hood
The Middleport Dusters swiped a
singled twice and hit a home run, P.
double-header
from two different opJ . Richmond also singled twice and
ponents
Wednesday
evening. In the
homered, and David Smith tripled
first
game
they
downed
Pomeroy
and singled.
Jim's
Gulf
2:;..2.
Shannon
Hindy
was
Terry Fields and Hank Cleland
the
winning
pitcher,
Tanuny
Wright
took to the mound for Powell's. They
fanned eight and got into trouble by the loser. Tammy Cremeans,
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) walking 24. Terry Fields singled Margie Smith, and Julie Roush each
Heriberto
Rivera Jr., rode Sham
had
home
runs
for
the
Dusters
inthree times, Decker Cullums singled
cluding
a
grand
slam
by
Julie
·
Over
to
a
first
place finish to capture
twice , along with Todd Smith. Hank .
Cleland hit a home run and single Hysell. Shannon Hindy had a double the $26,745 Geisha Stakes run at
Thistledown Race Track.
while John Anderson also hit a and Kim Stewart four singles.
Misy Wood and TallUDy Wright
Sham Over went the mile and onehomer.
had hits for Jim's Gulf. The nightcap sixteenth for 3-year-old fillies Sun·
was won by the Dusters 21f-1 over day in 1:46 and paid $7 to win, $5.20
In the Senior softball league
Syracuse.
Home runs were hit by to place a nil $2.60 to show. .
Zirkle's winning home run proved to
The second horse, Plenty Smart,
Kim
Stewart,
Cindy RifOe, and
be the winning margin in Syracuse's
paid
$7.40 and $2.80, and Midnight
Margie
Smith.
Other
·hitters
were
6-5 victory over Forest Run. Carla
Pumpkin
ran third to return$2.40.
Kelly
Stewart,
Sherry
Cooper,
Elsie
Morris was the winning hurler. For
The
day's
last trifecta comMeier,
Amy
Roush,
Cindy
Holly,
Syracuse Tonia Ash homered along
bination
of
1-6-10
was the best bet of
Julie
Roush,
Amy
Blake,
TallUDy
with Zirkle. Kim Dugan doubled for
the
day,
paying
$954.90.
The track
Cremeans,
ShaMon
Hindy,
Julie
the winners. For Forest Rlill Jody
of
6,689
wagered
reported
a
crowd
and
Samantha
Roush.
Hysell,
Gru~r hit a seventh inning homer,
$923,156
on
Sundav's
rae
...
Cindy Thompsori a triple, and
Teresa McDermit a double. Terti .------------------~-----~-i
Wilson also suigled lor Forest Run,
Tonia Sl!lser was the Forest Run
hurler.
Also in Senior softball league play
Pomeroy. defeated Letart Hi. Beth
Gloeckner had a home run for the

-HONEY LOAF
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Racing results

Summer league results. • •

3.

,.. LUNCH M'EA T ,

Table Trimmed and ready to

Keough completes 12th

In a Meigs-Mason pony league
make-up . game Eastern's Reds
posted a ~7 win over the visiting
New Haven club. Winning pitcher
Brian WeU was relieved in the sixth
by Deroo Jewett. They combined to
fan seven and walks!..
Dave Carl slanuned two triple11
and a double, Brian Collins a triple
and single, Deroo Jewett two
siflgles, Troy Guthrie and Brian Well
singles for the winners.-Su.snar, Simpton, and Spradling were the New
Haven hurlers Ianning seven and
walking three.
Weaver and E. Zirkle had triples
for New Haven. Eastern's Reds are
now 3-5 while New Haven drops to 4-

··,

seven-game Mets losing streak.
ncr in relief, and Neil Allen pitched
Washington als~ had a single in
U1ree scoreless innings £or the save,
the game to go 4-for-5, and he called
his 11th.
it the greatest day of his seven-year
Elsewhere in the league, the St.
major league career.
Louis Cardinals clobbered Cin·
Washington hit a twD-run homer in
cinnati 12·2, th~ Montreal Expos
the first , another twD-run shot in the
blanked San Diego 2-ll, Philadelphia
fifth, and his solo homer in the
edged""the San Francisco Giants 4-J,
seventh gave the Mets a 9-3 lead as
the Chicago Cubs got by Atlanta 3-2
the Dodgers saw a four-game win- and the Pittsburgh Pirates trimmed
ning streak come to an end.
Houston 2·1.
Washington became only the third
Cards 12, Reds 2
player in Mets history to hit three · Keith Hernandez ripped a threehomers in one game. Jim Hickman run homer and drove in a fourth run
did it in 1965, and Dave Kingman in with a sacrifice fly to pace St. Louis'
1976.
.
\s-hit attack. Pete Vuckovich, 7-5,
Washington's first two homers tossed a four-hitter, surrendering
came off the Dodgers' $3 million free
both Cincinnati runs on a homer by
agent, Dave Goltz, ~. who hasn 't Ken Griffey in the first inning.
won since May II.
The Cards kayoed Reds starter
Mark Bomback, 4-1, was the win- Mike LaCoss, 4-7, in the fourth with
three runs on sin!!les by Ted Sim-

mons and George Hendrick and a
double by Ken Reitz.
Hernandez homered fur the seven·
th time this season in the sixth when
the Cards scored six runs.
Expos 2, Padres 0
Right-hander Stev~ Rogers, 9-5,
battled a balky" ann and scattered
eight hits for his second shutout of
the season and 22nd of his career.
The victory was Rogers' eighth in
nine starts against only one loss.
Warren Cromartie. and Bob Pate
drove in the .Montreal runs with
singles. Tony Bernazard doubled .
and scored on.Cromartie's single off
Gary Lucas, 3-4, in the sixth, and
Pate singled home Gary Carter in
the eighth.
Phils 4, Giants 3
Steve Carlton won his 13th game
against only two losses, outdueling
Vida Blue, who tried unsuccessfully
for the second time to become a !Ifgame winner.
Carlton scattered eight hits,
struck out eight ad walked three.
Mike Schmidt and Greg Luzinski
and mine is a utility player," said drove in seventh-inning runs as the
Larry Milbourne, who entered the Phils rallied from a 3-2 deficit.
game batting .only .123. But he broke
Cubs 3, Braves 2 ·
a ~5 tie with a two-run triple in the
Bill Buckner and Jerry Martin
ninth inning and Tom Paciorek each homered in the sixth inning to
knocked in three runs with a homer rally the Cubs to their fourth victory
and single to lead Seattle over in five games. Right-hander Dennis
Baltimore.
Lamp, 7~ . went 7-1-3 innings lor the
Indians 11, Twins 6
win, and Dick Tidrow earned his
Rookie Joe Charboneau capped a thrd save.
·
five-run sixth inning with a two-run
Jeff Burroughs had given the
homer and Cleveland rattled Min· Braves a 2·1 lead in the fourth with
nesota for 19 · hits. Charboneau's his second homer of the year, a twDhomer was one of six in a row lor the run blast.
Indians in their big inning, which
Both Chicago homers came off
also saw a two-run triple by Dell Phil Niekro, :...10.
Alston and a run-scoring single by
Cubs left fielder Ken Henderson
Mike Hargrove."
made a game-saving throw to the
Tigers 7-6, Wblte Sox 1-4
plate in the seventh inning when he
Detroit's double-header sweep nailed Larvell Blanks, who was
handed Chicago its fifth and sixth trying to score from second on a
losses in a row. Tom Brookens had a single by Mike Lum.
pair of doubles and two RBI to back
Pirates 2, Astros 1
the seven-hit pitching of Dave
John Milner provided the eventual
RO'lema in the opener, which winning run with his sixth-inning
featured a triple play by Chicago.
home run, and Pittsburgh ended a
Two-run doubles by Richie Hebner six-game losing streak by beating
and Jim Lentine and four Chicago the Astros and Joe Niekro. At the
errors led to live Detroit unearned same time, Houston saw a six-game
runs as the Tigers won the second winning streak come to an end, as
game.
well as a streak of 14 wins at the
Blue Jays 6, Rangers 5
Astrodome.
Lloyd Moseby's lOth-inning
Jim Bibby claimed his eighth vit'sacrifice ny completed a Toronto tory in nine decisions, going eight incomeback alter Texas took a ~I lead nings before he was lifted for a pinch
through seven innings. Four hitter. Bibby allowed just four hits,
relievers gave up three runs in the struck out five and walked none
eighth, one in the ninth and ••ne in before Grant Jackson relieved.
the loth as the Blue Jays avoided a
Bill Madlock's bases-loaded single
sweep. Garth lorg had a two-run-" in the first got Pittsburgh started.
homer in the eighth; two hit batsman Terry Puhl gave Houston its only
led to John Mayberry's sacrifice fly run with a solo homer in the sixth.
in the same inning and Alfredo Grif·
fin singled with two outs in the ninth
to tie the score.

.

.

Pllis Tax &amp; Deposit

8-16 OZ. RET.
.f~ STUHI&gt;

4 $}00
FOR

-.

• CAHOINAt FOOD STORES

-X;( ell) ilt•UJ""

ililiBEUIGER
HELP
Elf
2 $1 09

.....-=

;j •

u .-onp ""' • """""

L"'"'- Me wttfl fiOIIP"ft

• •

OM _.,... ,.. ........

""

~ .

lo•"
. . . . 1111110

•c.... ...... -.. .....

f:

........ ,.
OU11100

v

CARDINAl\~

·

'I

•

�·'

6- The Daily Scntu1cl, MludlqJul·!·l'ulo I&lt;'I'") , 0 ., Mulida), Juul' 23, 1\Jt!O

POOL SPEED
MILWAUKEE (APJ - Why is one
swimming pool "[aster" than-.
another?
'
" One reason is that the faster pool
. will create less turbulence from the
water splashed and pushed against
the walls " says Ray Essick, ad·
minlstrat~r for U.S. Swimrl\ing,
which ts supported by Philipps
Petroleum.
"One of the fastest pools in the
' U.S. is at the Walter Schroeder
Aquatic Center here, because its 14[oot to 17-foot depth eliminates muc;JI
turbulence," Essick said.

Janet Duffy recipient
of 'Pixie Award' here
Janet Duffy was presented the
Pixie Award at the Thursday night
picnic of the Middleport Child Con·
se..Vation League held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. James Souls~y.
The Pixie Award is made annually
to the member who contributes the
most during the year to the CCL
program.
New officers for the 1980-111 year
were installed in an impressive can·
dle lighting ceremony by Judy
Isaac, So uth Central District
president.
Installed were Mrs. Peggy Harris,
president ; Mrs. Peggy Houdashelt,
first vice president; Mrs. Thelma
Osborne, secretary; ·Mrs. Clarice
Kennedy, treasurer; Mrs. Nancy
Morris, reporter; and Mrs. Susie Abbott, historian.
·
Mrs . Helen Blackston, Mrs .

Morris and Mrs. Houdashelt repor·
ted on the May 17 South Central
spring conference held at Rodney. A
floral arrangement was presented to
Mrs. Houdashelt, retiring president.
Mrs. Morris had devotions using "A
Mother's Prayer." Members enjoyed swinuning in the Soulsby pool
following the meeting.
Attending were Skip, Clarice,
Chris and Cliff Ke!llledy, Mrs.
Harris, Travis Grate, Mrs; Thelma
Osborne, Mrs. Debbie Thomas, Jim,
Susie, Jimmer, Cindy and Pat
Soulsby, Susie, Roger and Travis
Abbott, Janet, Patty and Tina Duffy,
Julie Sisson, Judy Isaac, Helen and
Harold Blackston, Dan an(! Eloise
White, Gene, Peggy and Randy
Houdashelt, Teresa Van Meter, and
Nancy Morris.

7- The Da ily .St:nlllit_'i, Multllepu1t - l ll ll l •l'l ") , U.• ,\'It 111tl u) , J Ill I t . Z3, i 980 •

DICKTRACY

-

lt1f)}f.\rOID'\t

Tel~vision

~ THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

by Henri Arnold and Bob lee

Unscramble these tour Jumbles ,
one fet1er to each square . to form
four ordinary words.

Viewing

GOT AN

JUNE 23, 1980

UNUSUAL
PURSE
SNATCHeR
WE'Re

EVENING
6 :00 ( 2) 0 ['[) 0 ({J@J(W EJ NEWS
~J
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(JOINED IN PROGRESS)
(5) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
(§) ABC NEWS
IJJ (1.1) ZOOM
6 :30 m O CIJ NBC NEWS
(~J I LOVE LUCY
((I
CAROL BURNETT AND

TRYING TO
COLLAR." .

THANKS TO A
QUICK A6515T
FROM CORY
DEAI'J •• 6ASY

We'Ll. ~EeP Al&gt;l
f'YE; 01&gt;1 THE5E
TWO J0~ER6 TILl.
THE LAW 9HOIY5

!SABL E: TO
CONK ...&gt;UOE
MELDRUM WITH
TH E SHOVEL!
... KEEFER
REVIVE$ FIR6T!

b

\KUEBER

KJ I I

UP!

Answer:

FRIENDS Gue st · Alan King .

WHAT THE C.R'OOI&lt; ,
TURNED RAILWAY
WORKE~ WANTED
VEFI:Y MUCH 10 DO.

0 (8)@1 CBS NEWS

CiJ

WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(!j) VILLA Al.EGRE
&lt;I2J EJ ABC NEWS
6 :58
NEWS UPDATE
7:00
CROSS WITS
THE THIRD STORY
GJ NASHVILl-E COUNTRY POP
FE STIVAlHead south to the Grand

m

m0
rn

Now arr.,ge the circled letters lo

form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

"[I I I JK I 1 I XI

r

0 1dOpry H ous e I o r I h is high· eO erg

(Answers tomorrow)
.
S~tur day s

I J umbles

GUILT

LOONY

ROSARY

lynn Anderson, singer-comedian
J im Stalford and Johnny Cash ' s
countrv-rocking daughter. Ro-

PENMAN

Answer· Tne freeloader's favorite cake - " SPONGE"

MORNING CLASS - First r ow: Scott Jason
Moore, Paul Jonathan Anspach , James Nathan Biggs,
Michael Todd Thomas , Sharla Kay Cooper, Dodie
Marie Cleland, Charles Louis Cunningham. Second
row: Terri Marie Currence, John David Bechtle, Lisa
Danielle Poulin, Amy Marie Searls , Dennis Gene Lit·
tje, Angda Dawn Goody, Sally Ann Miller. Third row :

J erry Scott Stone, Brian Allen Randolph, Emily Irene
llrown , Nicole Renee Meier, Billie Love Batey,
Melanie Elaine Qualls, Tabitha Marie Phillips, Robby
Wayne Wyatt. Fourth row : John Martin Harrison,
Rachael Ann Roush, Kimberly Dawn Ha nning, Stacey
Ann Dunca n, Daron Wayne Yeauger, Steve Matthew
Wood, Jeffrie Scott Burke.

Riggs welcomed into club
Mrs. Kathy Riggs was welcomed
as a new member when the Electa
Circle of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of the Mid·
dleport First Baptist Church met
Tuesday afternoon at the home of
Mrs. Mary Brewer.
Plans were made to remember a
shut-in on her birthday in July. The
circle members also will save
universal price codes from cans to
help the senior citizens on one of
their projects.
A picnic was set for the July

It Could Be
THEONE
Insurance Package
For You

meeting at the home of Mrs. Fran·
ces Smart at 1 p.m. Mrs. Brewer had
the program using a quiz on famous
travelers from the Bible.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess to those named and Mrs.
Kathreryn Metzger, Mrs. Ethel
Hughes, Mrs. Una Dotson, Mrs.
Elizabeth Searles, Mrs. Smart, Mrs.
Lillian Demoskey, Mrs. Golda
Roush, Mrs. Gwinnie White, Mrs.
Texanna Well, Mrs. Freda Hood,
and Miss Rhonda Hall.

A wheelchair was purchased with
funds contributed to the Laurel Cliff
Better Health Club in memory of
Mrs. Hattie Powell.
Meeting recently at the home of
Mrs. Ann Mash, it was noted that the
contribution in tribute to Mrs.
Powell totaled $211.
Mrs. Doris Shook opened the
meeting with the club creeed, and
Sherrie Higgenbotham led in
prayer. Members gave the Lord's
Prayer in unison. Games were
played with Tammy Mash and Mrs.
Higgenbotham winning prizes. Mrs .

r--

I

AFTERNOON CLASS - First row: Michael Joe
Cremeans, William J ames Wilkinson, Jeri Lynn
Hawley, Shannon Ray Roush, John Roger Reynolds,
Mary Elizabeth Stein, Jacinda Dawn Mullen, Michael
Munzo Reynolds, Philip Victor Hovatter. Second r ow:
Ryan Keith Cowan, Fank Edward Blake, Darin Paul

Middle~&gt;ort
'J:'

Logan, Sherry Ann Michael, Robert Steven Caruthers,.
Tara Michelle Gerlach, Robin Dawn Hall, Heathe
Christen Davenport, Patrick Neal J acks. Third row :
Heather Renee Mitchell, Christina Gail Weaver, Larry
Lee Mitch, Junior, Tricia Danielle Baer, Benny Ray
Bryant, Tammi JoStahl, Roger Edward Partlow.
,

Bertha Parker won th door prize.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. DOnna Gilmore and Mrs. Mash.
Others attending were Mrs. Della
Curtis, Mrs. Ruby Frick, and Mrs.
Susan Mash Pullins, Tammy Mash,
and Mrs. Higgenbotham, guests.

CHANGE NOTED
The annual meeting of the Ohio
Valley Commandery for election of
officers has been changed to Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Please take all
rituals for replacement. All Sir
Knights are urged to attend.

SHORT

ORGANIZATIONAL

Sensual slam scores high
NORTH

GEE ... Y'SENT OUT ALL NOT ONE
THOSE RESUMES AN'
OF THE
YOU DIDN'T GET A
COfJPANIES
SINGLE BITE, MAY? EVEN BOTHERED
TO ANSI'IER ...

·.

... 1 ~IGHT JUGT STRANGE ...AG A
QS t-IELL HAVE RULE, V· HAIL
BEEN MAILING IS REMARKABLY
THEM INTO
EFFICIENT ...
DEEP SPACE•• CONSIDERING
CONDITIONS ••

'K954 3
t K 10 8 6
+A 107
WE'.'&gt;T
EAST
tQJ986
+A l07532
.10 8 2

.

YOU DONE
GOOD!
HER
TO BRING ANY APPLICANTS
NAME 15
WITH A PHOT06RAPHIC
MAY
FLOWERS,
IIEI10RY TO YOUR
ATTENTION, 8. e.... ~~ RIGHT? '

Middleport First Baptist Church,
will present hte invocation and ·
benediction. Robert B. Morris, prin·
c1pal, will present he diplomas and .
refreshments will be served.
Students of each class recently
celebrated !he completion of thir
kindergarten year with a picnic and

swimming party held at the Mid·
dleport pool and park. Mrs. Mary
Rose is the kindergarten teacherj
and her aide is Mrs. Adeline
Snowden. Kindergarten students absent when the pictures were taken
were Misty Lynn Kirkpatrick, Tina
Marie Smith, a nd Jason Michael
Yeauger .

.....

'AQJ 76

+AQ J75!2

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East
Wesl
6

...

Jenning~~s;Se;ho~la=rs~.~lbe~~5ii~~~ii~~i~:i~

, ...,~;:.~'''''''&gt;'
•.·
tl2ti~~ ~ ,

selected on
.as the campua of Obio
lectures
80. These lectures

t..adie~ ~~art~~~~r

The
Memorial Hospital will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the hospita~. The
group is planning sponsorship of a
dance to be held July 3 at Royal Oak

h~~~\~~~~Thc
dan·
ar
a rc fur
New York Cl otllin ~
Clothiers, K and C.

+

7

+

Easl

Soulb

Obi.

Pass

3+

;+

Pass

: ALLEYOOP
Opening lead:• K

---------

Oswald: "South had a real
problem. He could cue bid but
he assumed that North would
bid clubs . So South jumped to
five diamonds. West got into
the act with a six-spade bid ."
Alan: " North looked a t his
.big hand and couldn't tell
what was going dn. He wanted
to double six spades, but final ·
ly decided that he could bid
seven diamonds and get East

to seven spades. t•
Oswald: " East would proba·
bly have fallen into the trap,
but he was void of hearts and
doubled to ask for an unusual
lead ."
Alan: "West looked at five
clubs and just three hearts.
Obviously, East was void of
clubs. West led a club and the
grand slam wheeled in."
Oswald: "One North-South
pair wandered into seven •
hearts by North. It was dou·
bled for a diamond lead and
the defense took the first
three tricks for plus 800 and a

poor score."
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alu Sontag
Alan: "Here is one of the
most unusual hands of all
time. It was played in the
finals of Grand National
Pairs. East's three spades
started the action and really
backfired against him''

NAME
ADDRE SS

:..::_"'~_·---J

Alan: "The reason that plus
BOO for East-West was a poor
score is that at most tables
the final contract was six
spades by East-West doubled
and made for 1210; some
3,540 points away from the ..
2,330 for North-South at seven
diamonds."

•• !h

m

rn

rn

ANSWER:

8 /LL ANP TUTU LEARN

THAT TIPPY IG MARRitP.

J US T
TELL M Y
HUS BAN O I

~;;:::::::=~ STOPPEl? L&gt;Y'

CHOSEN AS JENNINGS SCHOLAR - Pictured with Dr. Richard
Anderson is Carla Shuler, who was chosen as a Jennings Scholar to
participste in a series of lectures co-sponsored by the College of
Education, Ohio University, and the Martha Holden Jennings Foun·
dation of Cleveland. The scholars attended the lecture given by Dr.
Richared Anderson. The topic was, "Redesigning America."
Following the lecture, Ms. Shuler had lunch with Dr: Anderson at the
Ohio University Inn. The J ennings Scholar award was established in
1959 by the Martha Holden J ennings Foundation of Cleveland to give
recognition to outstanding elementary and secondary classroom
teachers. Some :i50 outstandirig teachers in Southeasern Ohio wre

Nortb

Pass

consonant
40 Glorify
41 Belgian
newspaper
river
name
13 Max or Buddy
DOWN
1t Ancient
Yerllerday's Allswer
1 Junto
rnWtary
2 Degrade
8 Fair-t~
U Kafka's
device
3 Greet
middling
homeland
15 Quadruped
in a way 9 Foot lever !5 Track event
II One of
1% MOI!t
%7 Pristine
1 Otalgia
the Abbot\3
111 tts pain
desiccated 30 Straighten
17 Italian
5 One kind 11 Ulger
31 Hydro!·
TV ·Radio
of crew 19 Akvavit
ogist's topic
network
1 Afford
drinker
33 Snarl
11 Minimize
7 Peruvian
Selected
M "Said - me"
ze Give up
city'
!3 Dress style 37 Cunning
n wu in the red ,.,.....,.,........,....,.%% Dutch painter

WINNIE

ttl've tried hard
to conserve
natural gas.
But is it
helping?"

•

+I

WEDNESDAY
ANNUAL
INSPECTION,
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
the Eastern .Star, Middleport, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday. Doris Conley, wor·
thy grand matron of the Grand
Chapter of Ohio, to be the inspecting
officer .

QUESTION:

t9t

+KQ813
+J96 52
SOUTH

...
_ ·-_-_,
...

to graduate in ceremonies tonight

.....

....

Pieose tell me more about the
SERIES ONE Business Polley.

H1gh School football program 111vited to attend to hear Coach Buddy
Moore outline fall plans, 6:30p.m.
nJESDAY
SOUTHEASTERN LOCAL
Athletic Boosters meeting 8 p.m.
Tuesday at high school in Racine.

&amp;·23·80

+K

102 w. Main 992·2143 Pomeroy, 0.
STATE
AUTOMOBILE
MUTUAL
. INSURANCE
COMPANY_

PHONE

rn

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Representing

Elementar11
Kinderuarteners
~~t;!a~~~~:r::iedoo;~ :~~ r-•::.....ponso_red_by_th_eass_oe_ia_tio_n._--~..:.:.:.":.~:·:
J
0 '

MIDDLEPORT - Students of the
Middleport Elementary School Kin·
dergarten will graduate in formal
ceremoniejs at 7:30 tonight.
Graduation will carry the Peanuts
theme : " Happiness is Walking Hand
in Hand." THe Rev . Mark McClung,

BRIDGE

DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE

MEETS WEDNESDAY
The Long Bottom Community
Association willmeetat8p.m. Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the community
building. There will 11e election or of·
fleers and a discussion of plans will
be made for upcoming events to be

sea nne Cash
® HOGAN 'S HEROES
CJJ~ EJ FACE THE MUSIC
ffi LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
0 00 TICTACDOUGH
IIJ MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
®J NEWS
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30
0 THAT GOOD OLE NASHVILLE MUSIC Guest Tommy
Overstreet.
WORDS OF HOPE
® ALLIN THE FAMILY
00 MUPPETS SHOW Guests :
Shields and YarnelL
(I) NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
0 ([) JOKER'S WILD
Cil DICK CAVETT SHOW
®J~ EJ FAMILY FEUD
(jj) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
7:58 (3) NEWS UPDATE
8 :00 m O CIJ l.ITTl.E HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE When telephones are in stalled in Walnut "'G rove , s noopy
Mrs . Oleson liste ns in on her neigh bo rs ' catts and learns a secret tha t
threa ten s to destroy the marriage
of Jonathan and Alice Garvey .
(8epea t; 60 mins.)
W ROCK CHURCH
® MOVIE ·(COMEDY!'' " Pari&amp;
When It Sizzles" 1964
(j) ~ EJ ONE IN A MILLION
Cushing t hinkslhat he isridot Shirley atlas! when a st ranger claims t o
be the illegitim ate son of the lat e
Jona th an Grayson, and is enti tl ed
to be chairm an of the board.
0 CJJ (JQ) WKRP IN CINCINNATI
Specia l guest -star Sparky Anderson returns to Cincinnatitowo r!l. for
o ne o l radio ' s wo r st managers
when Arth ur Carlson makes him
host o f WK RP's newest spo rt s
show. {Repeat)
Cil (jj) MOLDERS OF TROY Th;s
d ocu -drama retlecls the Spirit of a
strong -willed Irish immigrant famil y
w orking hard to carve a niche lor
th emse lves du ring th e American
Indust rial Revolution of the 1860's
(90 mins.) (C losed captioned)
8:30 (!) MOVIE ·(DRAMA)
" Nun·
zlo"
(j) ~
MONDAY NIGHT
BASEBALL
0 00 ®J PHYL AND MIKHY
Bec ause o f his inexperience with
his new language, Mikhysayssome
th ings in a nat ionally televised in terview wh ich embarras ses Max
and Truck .
8:58
NEWS UPDATE
9:00 m O CIJ DEBBY BOONE ... SAME
OLD BRAND NEW ME Grammv
Wi nne r Debby floone, h eadlining
her first variety special , is j oin ed by
Bob Hope.Gene.Kelly, Greg Evig an •
and Jose F er rer. (60 mins.)
(_glosed-Ca ptioned)
700CLUB
0 00 ®1 M.A.S.H. Co lone l Potier
tu rn scrochet ywhen hec atches the
mumps, and his cond ition is wor sened when Winchester gets th e
same dise ase and ha s to move in
with him. (Repeat)
@ CHOOSING SUICIDE
9 :30 OCBJ~ID HOUSECALLSA pa l ;ent.
wh o ,is a well -known c riminal,
causes problem s for Dr. Michae ls.
(Re_Q_eat )
IIJ(!J) ANTARCTICA : DESERT OF
ICE . SEA OF LIFE Using ar c hi ~al
foo tage, on -lo c at ion film material
and inter¥iews. this program
documents the past and present ot
man 's gro wing involvement in th e
pristine environm ent and the
fascinating eco-system of the
region .
10:00 CIJ O CD TOMSNYDER' SCELE·
BRITY SPOTLIGHT Tom Snyder
spea ks with JamesCagney, Carroll
O ' Conno r, Prisc illa Presley and
Erik Estrada . {60 mms .)
(!} TENNIS 'Wimbledon ~igh · :
tight s' Th1s thrilling ex c lusive pre·
sents the most extensive on -air ..
c overage of the event wit h same day act ion highlights and comprehensive semi-final match -play
cove rajli'.
O CI H:UV LOU GRANTRossi' sin tervi ew with a ch ild tele'o'ision star
giveshime storyhecan 'tu se about ..
what her lif e is really like . (Repeat; ..
60mins.)
C1)' JAZZ AT THE MAINTENANCE :
SHOP ' Phil Woo&amp;sOuarlel ' Par! II ...
(60mins.)
(jj) NEWS
10:28 ffi NEWS UPDATE
10:30 ffi RISE AND BE HEALED
.
@ MOVIE ·(THRILLER) ••• " The .
Onion Field" 1979
•
@ THE COMMANDERS 'Georg; .
Zhukov' , Marshal ol th e So~iet '"
Union.
:
ill) OVER EASY Guest Jessica •
Milford . Hos t: Hugh Dow ns. "'
(_g_losed captioned)
10:58 CIJ NEWS UPDA 1E
11 :00
®J
NEWS
FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
(I) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
11 :28 (I) NEWS UPDATE
11 :30 ill 0 CD THE TONIGHT SHOW
Guest host : Burt Reyn olds. Guests:
Dom Delui se. Anne Murray ,
Charles Nel son Reilly. (90 minsJ
CIJ ROSS DAGLEY SHOW
(l) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) ' " .
''Roua!:!.IY S~aklng " 1945
(j) CUJ ID
AdC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
0 @ CBSLATEMOVIE 'HARRY
0 : Material Witness' Harry is hired
to protect the sole witne ss to a
gangland slaying. (Repeat) ' HE~
~AMSEY : Hangman' s Noose
St ars : Richard Boone, Stella
Stevens .
·
CIJ ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
IJID MOVIE ·(COMEDY·MYSfi!RY)
••• 'I! " No Way to Treat a lady"
1988 .
11:50 ([) (l2J EJ
BARNEY MILLER
Barney· s squact of men resort to
wearing dreues during a heat
wave to help female detectlvea
BaiJev and Wentworth catch a
rapist. (Repeat)

m

mail the handy coupon_.

Social Calendar

MONDAY
VACATION Bible School begin·
ning Monday through Friday at
Syracuse Asbury Methodist Church
from 9 a.m. to 11 :30 a.m.

Jumble Book No. 14, contalnlng1 10 puzzles , It lVI IIable tor $1.15 pottpald
!rom Jumble, Clo this newt paper, Box :14, Norwooel, N.J. 07648.1ncludlyour
name, addre .., tip coele t nd makt check &amp; payable to Newspaperbooks.

Do you own or operate a
small or medium·slze
. retail store, office, apart·
mentor church?
Then - you may qualify
for State Auto Mutual's .
SERIES ONE Business
Policy ... a modern-as·
tomorrow package plan
that combines an array of
broad property and liablll·
tv coverages required to
safeguard your opera·
tions. All for a·ver.y attrac·
tive, affordable premium .
Let us explain the
superior
features of
SERIES ONE ... the ..""'rtl'
time we spend together
could prove Interesting
and rewarding to you .
Just give us a call or

Funds help purchase chair

v

country-pop music festival featuring st ar s like Barba ra Mandrell,

HOlY
MACKtRcl.!
ODES WENPY

KOOW"

I 'M GU RE S HE
llOEG N 'T •• . 8f.IT
I:tl GONNA HAVE

TO TEU HERl

zo

t~es!

Usage is doWn. 15%,
a savings that helps
all of us now •..
and for the future!'

ratianal
!5 Musical
piece

ztHaving

color
%71rlallman's

uluck."

Thanks to your conservation efforts, natural
gas usage by residential customers has actually
decreased-down approximately 15% since 1972.
That's progress.
This doesn't mean, howeveT, that the need for
conservation is any less pressing: It is important
that we continue to find ways to use energy
more efficiently.
And while you continue to conserve at home and
a~ work, Columbia is continuing and expanding
efforts to add to our natural gas supply capabilities.
We've stepped up our drilling programs. New pipelines are planned. Vastly expanded storage facihties
are under construction. And new gas-producing
technologies are being researched and develppedwith synthetic gas already a factor in our supply
picture.
All of the effort-yours and ours-has been
worth it. Conservation is helping to keep natural
gas the best buy for your energy dollar. Continued
conservation will help keep it a value .. . and avail·
able. For ideas on ways to save energy, ask for our

BARNEY

Z9 Rustle

VO'RE
NEXT,
TATER

STOP HOGGIN'
TH'SWING AN'

TV fare
3ZBelglan
town

SS "Heater"

TAKE TURNS!!

m o oo mo rn
rn

34- king
35 Does
roadwork
37 Veucteville.
sketch

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

PEANtri'S

.

'

Zl To be, to Livy

JUGHAID!!

l{ES, MA'AM,I'D LIKETO
U5E THE TELEPHONE .. Ml(

LOOK AT TI115, SII&lt;: ... IT'S
A DRAWING OF TI1E NEW

,,, THE ENO OF THE WORLD...

CAMP TI1E\''I&lt;:E Tl&lt;:i'ING
TO RAISE MONEl/ FOR ...

free booklet, "The Evweyday Energy Saver'l Guide."
1

t:::-+-t--+-

!3 More

,. DA~ ~A5N'T HEARD ASOVT
.,

'l

t~Aa

'"

Still your best energy value.
And we want to keep it that way.

FOR6ET THE ft!ONE~..MA'AM !
MA't'BE TI1E WORLv WILL
EtljO TOMORROW, BUT I
W~N'T BORN I{E5TEf&lt;DA4'!

One letter almply atanda lor another. ln thia sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X lor tbe two O's, etc. Single letlers,
apoatrophea, the length and lormati?n of the words are all
hinta. Each day the code )etten are dllterent.
caYPTOQUOTES
IS

XCGT

CV

UA ,

HA
CGCV

XQCX TUGGV

'I·

'·
I

1/

/')/

''/'.

''·

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

TUGGUPZ
UX

ISFSP'X

XU N S,
· XUNS

DV.- CGBQHPVS ' CGGCUV

Yelkday•i CtJPh,alle: WOES CLUSTER; RARE Afti ', ·
SOUTARY W()ES; 'l1IEY LOVE A TRAIN, THEY TREAD
EACH OTHER'S HEEI3.- EDWARD YOUNG

...

wm

�8- 111t: Dati\ ~IIL!Jil:l !\liddlq.Jutt l' II ti l\ 0

i\1•

J•ti&lt;J \

Cattle grazing on national
forest land may he allowed
WASHINGTON tAP) - A small
mcreasc tn the nwnber of cattle and
other livestock allowed to graze on
' natiOnal forest land could be per
nutted over the next hal£ century
says a new report sent to Congress
The report was de!Jvercd to
Capitol Htll last Fnda) and
prunanly addresses the problems of
managing
timber
mining
recreatiOn and other resources
1hrough the year 2000
Rangeland Is mcluded m the
natwnal forest system admtmstcred
by the US Forest Servtce. an agency of the Agrtculture Department
Most of 1! 1s m the West and the
Great Plams
Farmers and ranchers pay annual
fees to let their ammals graze on the
, rangelands The fees a1 e based on
'•· ' anunal umt months or AUMs as
f';
thos are called One AUM IS the
grazmg for one month by one bull

cow or horse or fn e sheep or goats
Last ) ear the Forest Service
ISSUed about 16 000 perrn1ts for the
):razmg of about I 3 nulhon cattle
I 2 mtlhon sheep and goats and
H,OOO horses and burros
The fees are adjusted annually to
reflect the economic val ue of the
forage eaten Thts years fees are
expected to total around $22 nulllon
~ $4 rmlhon boost from last season
Accordmg to the report the F ores!
Servtce would work to ll11provmg
range condttwns su that the land can
be brought back to full productllttv
ln the commg years
On land where tl ts clear!)
economical to produce forage, ever)
-effort would be made to achieve O(&gt;tll11wn prorluctwn, as nattonal
policy reqmres 'tl satd
Then a balance would be sought
between forage productiOn and
grazmg use
Land that proved to
;be submargmal for grazmg would be
put to some other use
By 2030, the report smd livestock
grazmg would be mcreased by a b~l!l

6 percent from less than 10 unlllon
AU Ms to nearly 11 nulhon
As would be expected, demand
for forag e follo"s demand for red
m ea t, although at a slower rate 11
satd W1th the o\ erall 11se m per
captta consumphon of beef and the
pruJeded growth m populatiOn
demand for beef IS expected to
double b&gt; 2030
I he Sterra Clubs Rocky Moun tam
chaple1 m Denver ftled COllll11ents
on the report stgncd by ,Connally
Mew s tllc chapter s wtldet ness
com dmator
Mears sa1d the proJeCtiOn for beef
produdwn stnkes a consumer like
myself as JUSt plam stlly because
a lot of people are cuttmg back on
beef consumptwn for dietary and

pn{;e reasons
But Mears acknowledged the
Sterra Club understands the need
for careful grazmg on selected
publtc lands as long as grazmg fees
ate m hne wtth those on compa rable
pnvate land
I he State of Utah, tntls statement
tuok anothet Hew and complamed
that exts lmg upward trends m
range grazmg fall far shod of
meebng proJected future demands
The livestock mdustry m the
West IS heavtly dependent on federal
gra zmg lands It satd There lot e,
Ills Important that range conditiOns
be gtven adequate attentwn
WASHINGTON 1AP1
The
NatiOnal Meat AssociatiOn a trade
grou p, says a recent court ruling on
sodtum mtnte represents a btg VIctory for the meat mdustry, which
the assoctatwn represents
John
Mohay
assocta lt on
president satd a U S Dtslnct Court
dtsnussed a la \\su•t last week that
would have declared mtnte a color
addtltve, thus shiftmg )Unsdtclwn
fo r Its use from the Agnculture
Department to the Food and Drug

Ad.rmmstratwn

I he lawsuit, he said, was flied
Oec I 7 by Pubhc Ctttzcn whtch
MHhay descnbed as a Ralph Nader
g1 uup
1 he deciSion by Judge
Harold Greene, he sa1d, must be
conSidered a maJor setback for
Pubhc Ctllzen 111 Its crusade to get
mtnte banned
Nttnte has been used 111 meat
pruce~smg

fur many years as a

preservative, a colormg agent and a
pre\enll\e of orgamsms that can
lead to botulism, a deadly furm uf
food pmsomng
Judge Greene noted that the FDA
IS 111 the m1dst of admmtstraltve
proceed111gs to resolve the q uestwn
uf whtch federal agency should
regulate mtnte use, Mohay satd
Studies also are under way to help
determme whether + as some have
claimed + sodtwn mtnte, by 1tself

can c.:ause cancer It can combme
wtth other substances, particularly
when bacon IS fned at htgh heat to
form mtrosammes, whzch studies
have shown to be carcmogemc
WASHINGTON 1APJ - Meat tm
ports are runmng about 20 percent
below a vea r ago reflect111g a
general crunch on beef supphss m
much of the world
Accordmg to the latest figures by
the Agnculture Department, 1m
ports of meat subject to U S quotas
totaled about 555 3 rmlhon pounds m
the ftrst ftve months of this year
compared to 693 5Imllwn m January
through Ma} of 1979
The quota law covers Imports of
fresh chilled and frozen beef, veal
mutton and goat meat But most IS
• beef Imported for process111g 11110
hamburger and other products
Australia the lead111g supplier
provtded about 293 9 nulhon pounds
down from 397 8 rmllton 111 the first
five months of 1979 Imports from •
Ne" Zealand, at 108 6 nulhon poun
ds compared wtlh 130 8 mtlllon a
year ear her

Weekend victories extend
Meigs' season mark to 10-2
By SCOTT WOLFE
ROCK SPRINGS Over the
weekend Metgs' Amencan Leagwn
baseball team swept three games
from opponents, a double headet
from V111ton County and a smgle
game over New Haven , Meigs IS now
11}-2 this season
Saturday agamst Vmton County
Metgjs Juntped mto an early :Hl lead
which theyh held go111g 111to the fmal
mmng Metgs got four of those runs
m the th1rd when Steve Little
doubled, and Phil K111g walked
followed by back to back home runs
F trst a three-run shot by Kenn}
Brown and second a tremendous
blast by Jerry F1elds
Flaunt10g a ftve-run lead 10 the
seventll mmng Metgs found them
selves 10 trouble when Vmton Coun
ty carne to l1fe to score fl\ e lliiles
and tie the score
Wtlh Its younger players m the
game Metgs responded at the plate
\lnd carne back to w111 the game
Nick Leonard led the 1rm111g off wtth
a s mgle stole second and was
sacrificed to lhtrd by John Beaver
Leonard then rode home on R~ndy
Murray s game w1rmmg s 10gle, the
scoe 6-5
Jell Wayland ptcked up the wm m

rehef of T01runy Ownes and Starter
Roger Kovalchik They combmed
for 8 stnke outs and three walks
Pa)1on suffered the loss m relief of
C Noms Timms had t"o of the Vm
ton county hits
In the mghtcap Metgs handily
defeated Vmton County 13-4 Greg
Wtgal went the distance for the w111
Wtgal fanned 12 and walked two
Oney suffered the loss with relief
help from Hall
Metgs Jwnped out 111to a three run
lead on smgles by !title Wolfe ,
Brown and a double by Ftelds 111 the
first ummg The lead which "as
never rehnqutshed was wtdened to
five runs before Vmton Cunty scored
a s mgle run 111 the third
Httlers for the w111ners Kent Wolfe
wtth a double, tnple, and two
smgles, Jerry Ftelds a double and
home run Wtgal two smgels, Art
Fogelstrom a home run Ltltlc ,
Brown Foster and Kennedy each
had home runs
Sunday s 5.() v1ctory came at the
hands of Kenny Brown who went the
dtstance fanmng mne and walkmg
five I his was one of several complete games p1tched by Brown
Ftelds, Russell, and Van Meter
were the New Haven hurlers

Kenny Brown helped his cause m
the ftrst mnmg w1th a run scormg
stngle that bnrought home Kent
Wolfe who had double This proved
to be a ll Metgs needed although Kent
Wolfe had two RBI s m the ftflh,
dnvmg home L1ttle and Kmg Then
m the sixth Jerry Ftelds blasted his
third home run m two days to dnve
home Art Foglesll om who had
doubled
Wolfe had a double and two
smgles Ftelds a double and home
run Little a smgle and double
Brown two smgles, Foglestrom a
double Gauland Wtgal smgles
For New Haven Weaver doubled
while F1elds Sayre, and Powell each
had smgles
Metgs wtll host Wellston m a
twilight doubleheader at Syraucse
on Wednesday Game time Will be
5 30
Lmescorcs
VC
000 000 5- 5 5 0
Me1gs
004 001 0- 6 7 I
VC
Mmgs

001 021 0- 4 6 5
323 410 X- 13 13 I

New Haven
Metgs

000 000 0- 0 4 2
100 022 X- 5 12 0

Contents of house trailer
·ordinance revealed today
Due to the nwnerous house
trailers wh1ch are m the comrnumty ,
the Middleport Planmng Com
rmss10n, as a pubhc service to
VIllage residents has offered the
followmg mformatwn on procedUI es
to be followed m movmg a house
trailer

House trailers arc permitted only
111 R 3 distncts and shall conform to
the setbacks of other structures m
the area or wtth a nummum front
yard of 20 feet, rear yard of 20 feet,
and stde yards of five feet
Mmunwn Jut width shall be 50 feet
wtlh a nummum lot area of 2500

'G0 d' S Ch•ldr
1 en
UMW
discusses
•
: Mrs Evelyn Hollon presented a
wogram taken from DIDlenstons of
MISSIOns", usmg the tOpiC For All
God's Children", when the Umted
Methodist Women of the Forest Run
Church mel recently
1Purpose of the program was to ex
pand a sense of partlctpatwn m the
!Iuman farmly THe econonucs of
Af.nca, Tatwan, Smgapore, Hong
Kong, and South Korea, were
sludled, and takmg par were Mrs
Ann Watson, Mrs Mary Nease, Mrs
Betty Blackwood, Mrs Edith Sisson, '
and Mrs Kathleen Scott
Mrs Edith Sisson and Mrs Elma
!loiter were hosteses for the m ectmg
'WhiCh openc'\1 w1th group smgmg of

9- The Da•ly Scn tmd Mtudlcpllll P"'"""'}. 0 , Monduy. June 23, J!l&amp;l
j1 - Ho.Ttes tor s.ie 3l
Farms for Sale
32
Mob1le Homes

Jtlll21 J1J&amp;J

Love DIYine All Love Excelling
Mrs Hollon gave devolwns usmg
Exodus 38, verse 8, wtth the topic,
Mirrors
and
the
theme,
Selflessness
1 he special taken
from the buok, I Dtdn t Know
That by Derrtc J ohnson was ghtven
by Mrs Black\\ood The story of
Ebenezer Buttenck , ongmator of
Buttenck patterns, was read a loQg
wtth a story of Jewish 1mtn1gant

from Bavaria, Germany, who made
the ftrst lev1 pants
Forly·SIX shut-m vtsl!J;
reported Attcndmg bestdes
named were Naunu Wyatt,
Veauger I eah Nease, and
Holter

were
those
Hilda
Mae

square feet
It IS the dut) of the property owner
to obtam a zonmg perm1t from
Vtllage Hall The zomng mspector
s hall determme by on site m
s pecllon If the trailer conforms to
the zomng ordmance If so, the per
nut apphcatwn wtll be approved
Penalhes for vwlatton and other
'zomng requirements are found m
VIllage ordmance No 871A A copy
of thts ordmance along wtlh the
zumng map IS on f1le at Vtllage Hall
Thts ordmance was enacted with
tlle mterest of promotmg the orderly
and planned growtll uf the VIllage
and IS not mtended tube restncttve

DECISION NEAR
WASHINGTON (APJ - TheUS
Department of Energy Is expected
to decide wtthm the n ext two mont11s
whether tu fund a project to recover
some of the excess heat crea ted at
the uramum ennchment plant at
Ptkcton
'I he pruflU!!&lt;ll calls fur money
"!ready authonzed m the federal
Its a! 1980 !Judget, but not yet spent

- -NEW 3 or 4 Bedroom home,

Publ c Nottce

Yard Sale
June 27 from 9 to dark at
th e
Gordon
Holt e rs
restdence on Count Y Rd 28
above Eastern H1gh
School
Baby
th•ngs
ctoth•ng a •r co nd•ll oner
truck bed tool box and
m1SC 985 4:.115

1

PubliC NOIICe

SUMMI;R YOU rH
EMPLOY/"EN r
PROGKAM

LEGAL NOflCE
fhc Department ot Ad
m•n•strat•ve scrv• ces 01
rhe Departme nt ot A d
1 ce ol Ma npower De velop
n un1 s trat•ve Sen1 1CCS Ot
mcnt (OMD ) has pre:senred
t• c~ o t Manpowe r Develop
a prel•m•nary CETA grant
rnenr (MD) •s announc•ng
appl cat•on tQr Ftscal Year
th e FISCd\ Year IYHU rrrle
1981 to the Department of
VI Sumi'J'I er Youth Em
Labor to prov•de e llg1ble
plo:t_ment
Program
•nd• v•dua ls wlfh e m
!SYEP I
ploy ment and tra .nm9 ser
Through
the
Com
111 ces n the 5~ count1es of
prehens ve E mployment
the Balance at State
and rram•ng Ac t (CErA)
The ptanntng allocat.on
tnc Oepanmen t at labor
are as tallows T •Ti e 11 B
has a ll ocat ed $6 180 210 tor
$11611000
T"l e l iD
th e SYE P •n th e 56 county
511965000
T •tle VI
Bal a nce ot State reg,on • Sl3 421 uoo
Fund,ng for
The purpose at the SYEP 1s
r1t1 c IV youth programs
to p rov•de economtcaliy
are de pendent upon
d•sadva ntaged youth w th
1eg1stat•ve act•on however
work exper• ence and op
a t preSS t1me deCISIOnS
porrunt11es tor vocatiOnal
had not bee n announced
ex ptorat•on tra 1ntng and
The Comprehenstve Em
access to career .n
ployment and
rretlntng
torma t• on and counse l•n!il
Plan and a companson of
Addi tiOna l
•nformaf10n
perlormance aga•nst the
may be obtatned from
pnor years pl a n through
Chester D Wh te Ptanntng
lhe most recent quarter
may be rev 1ewed between
Supcrvtsor JU E Broad
8 00 am and 5 00 PM 1n
Street
Columbus
Oh •o
4311 5
the OMO L brary 30 E
Broad Street 27th floor
(6) 13 lt c
Columbus
Oh10 43215
phone614 466 6788
PUBLIC NOTICE
Wrttten
comments
should be d1rected to Mr
Th e Department of Men
Leonard Blanton at the
tal Hea lth and Menta l
sa me addre~s by August 1
RetardatiOn D VISIOn of
1980 Interes ted groups
Mental Retardat.on and
organ1zat•ons
or
1n
DevelopmenTal D1Sab IIIICS
d1V1dua ts may not1fy th
proposes to 1ssue a l1cense
Pr1me Sponsor of the1
tor a Family Home to ac
des re to rev ew any sub
co mmodate 2 deve op
seq uent
mod ftcat on
mentally diSabled es•dent5
dur ng the gran1 year
ThiS Family Home IS
located a t Box 39759 Silver
161 23 lie
R•dge Road Reedsv lie
Oh o Wr1tten comments
and ob tec t•ons concer n ng
the 1ssuance of th•s li cense
can be sent no ta ter than 3----Announcements
August 2 1980 to Rudy
-----Magnone
Ph D
Com
1 PAY h•ghest pnces
m•sstoner D•v•s on ot Men
pOSSibl e for gold a nd Silv er
ta t Retardatton and co.ns
nngs 1ewelry etc
Qe...,elopmen tal D•sabd t1e
s c/ o Ted Fry 30 East Con tact Ed Burkett Barber
Broad Street Room 1257 Shop M•dd leport
Col umbus OH 43215
P•ano Tun ng
Lane
16) 23 lie
Dan1els 742 2951 Tun•ng
and Repa r Serv•ce s1nce
1965 If no answer phone
NOTICE
992 2082
FOR THE SALE OF
CO UN TY OWNED
VEHICLE
Regat t a FROG
BALL
f'ursuant to Sec t• on
Sa tu rday June 28 9 I
301 12 0 R C the Me•9s
Roya l Oak Lodge Joe
County Comm•ss oners will
Lavtnger
and
th e
rece 1ve sea led b•ds unt1l 12
noon on Tuesday July 8
Tunet1mers
TICkets
1980 1n the ott•ce of the
ava1lable at S1mons P•ck
Mei~S
Co unty Com
a Patr 992 3830 Chambe•
miSSioners located m the
Off 1ce 992 5005 New York
Court house
Pomeroy
Cloth 1ng House 992 2049
Oh•o w.th b•ds to be opened
at 2 30 P M and read
aloud tor the sale of the
P lants To matoes cucum
fo ll ow•ng veh•cle
ber
flowers
hang ng
One 1972 lnternat•onal
bas kets
pots Cle land
Front Load1ng Garbage
Green house
Gerald•ne
Truck
Cle land
Rac1ne
Oh10
Sa1d veh 1c te may be
v•ewed at The Me•gs County
45771
Sa n•tary Landf •ll located
off State Rou te 143 10
Reduce safe and fast w1 th
Sal•sbury Townsh•P be
tween the hours of 7 30
GoBese Tablet s and E Va p
am and 4 30 p m
water pills from Nelson
TrucK to be so ld as IS
Drug Store
w1 th no guarantees Sa•d
b• ds to be subm•tted 1n
sea led e nvelopes marked
4
G •vea'-'w-"a~y'--B1d on 1972 Garbage
One blonde 21f2 mon th old
Truck
The Board of Me1gs
k1tten One t•ger k1tten and
County Comm •ss.oners
mother cat blonde Call
rese rve the r1ght to re ,ect
742 2328
any or all b•ds
Me•gs County
Large dog
ge rman
Comm•ss•oners
Mary Hobstetter
shepherd st
bernard
C erk
m• xed Approx•mately 10
mon ths old Ge ntle Call
161 13 ltc
992 5983

-----Public Nottce
--RESOL\JTION

Woodrow Fortney s County
Road 28 Basdhan Keno
Rd June 24 25 26 and 27
fmm 9 7

&amp; Auct1on

BRADFORD Auct•oneer
Complete Serv•ce Phone
94Y 2487 or 949 2000 rac •ne
Oh1o Cr1tt Bradford

_ _j'!'_b_t_•£_~otoce_ _
PUBLIC NOTICE
A Proposed Use Hear1ng
tor revenue shartng tund
tor the year IYtll will b
held by the V1llage of Mtd
dleporr on Monday July 7,
lYtiO at I JO P M •n lh
lO unc .t chambers at 2'JI
Race ~t M•ddleport Oh o
All
nte rested C1t1zens
are •mnted to attend and
will be g ven an op
portun•fy to make wntten
and oral co ruments or
suggcs t.ons regard.ng the
use ot revenue st1dr 1ng tun
ds
rhc vil lage ex pects to
lt.: Ct:•ve
approxm il le ty
') l.t uuo 111 rc11enuc Shdr111g
tunds to bl.! alloc.,llud 111
IYM I

.J UI t: LJ

----------_
__
-----~

9

_wa'!_t~_!o_B_!!.L

Iron and brass beds old
furn ture
desks
gold
r1ngs
tewe lry
Silver
dollars ster lmg e tc wood
1ce boxes ant•ques etc
Complete
households
wr.te M o M•ller Rt 4
OHl
11 992
Pomeroy
or ca
7760
10 karat 14 karat 18 karat

gold Dental gold and gold
ear p•n s 675 3010
Gold sliver or fore1gn
co•ns or any go ld or silver
1tems Ant1que furn1ture
glass or ch.na w1 11 pay top
dollar or complete estates
No 1tem too large or too
small Check pnces before
sellmg Also do appra1s1ng
Osby IOss1e) Mart n 992
6370
WILL BUY o ld Iran
sm •ss 1ons
bat1er •es
eng.nes or scrap meta ls
elc Call 245 9188

11
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE tra n,ng
as a young bj.ISI ness person
and earn good money plu s
some great Q•fts as a Sen
t1ne1 route earner Phone
us nght away et nd get on
the el Q1b11ity 11st a t 992
2156 or 992 2157
EXCELLENT
EAR
N 1NGS 1 Mall1ng C•rcu lars
Postage and Supplies
Free
wnte
Box 82
Owosso M l 48867
Needed ROor LPN tor II to
7 30 sh•ft Part t•me or full
t1me Good workmg con
d t•ons Con tact Mr Z d1an
at the Pomero y Health
Care Center 992 6606 Mon
day through Fnday from 9
5

1-2-

s.tUatton s Wanted

Wdl do odds and ends
Paneling floor tile and
ce•llng til e
Call Fred
M 1 Iter 992 6338
Will do odds and ends tobs
such as 1 ght hauling pa1n
t.ng tear.ng down houses
a nd bu ld •ngs
c leanng
lots and mow1ng lawns
Have tools a nd tran ·
sportat1on Ca I 742 3074

-

AUTHOR I ZING THE
APPLICATION AND
HEARING OF THE
MEIGS COUNTY
PARK DISTRICT
WHEREAS •I appears
tha t there 1S substantial 1n
lerest 1n an app l• ca t on for
the crcat1on at a Me 1gs
County Park 0 stnct pur
sua nt to the Oh o Rev sed
Code
wh•ch will en
compass a ll ot Me gs Coun
ty e xcept the tncorporated
v1 11 ages ot Me1gs Coun ty
excep t at suc h t1me as sa •d
v•llage or v• tages shall
detcrm.ne 11 to be 1n the
best .nterest of The Village
or villages to 101n the Mctgs
County Park D•stnct and
WHEREAS at fh1s h me
11 a ppe?trs that the appllca
t1on for crea hon of the
Me1gs Cou nty Pa rk 01s
tr ct pursuant to the Oh•o
Rev •sed Code wil l be prac
t ca ble and Wtll subscrve
the publ•c welfare of all
Me gs oount•ans
now
therefore be 1t
REsOLVED and hereby
determ1ned that sa•d ap
pll cat•on tor c reat•on of The
Me •gs
County
Park
D str1c1 exc ludmg the •n
corporat ed villages of
Me1gs County exce pt at
such t1me as sa•d v•llage or.
v•llages determtne 11 lobe
'" the best ntercsts of the
v• ll age or v llages to 1010
sa 1d Metgs County Park
O •str•ct
•s
h ereby
au thor•zed and that sa•d
a pplt cat on be 5et tor hear
.ng purs uan t to Law
Authonzed th1s loth day
at June IYt!U
rhc hear.ng on th•s ap
pl• cat on wil l be held m the
Me1gs County Common
Pleas Court room 1n the
Mc1gs County Cou rt House
Pomeroy Oh 10 on July n
~~~0 at IU uu o clock A M
All •ntcrested pan• es
should be present to vo•ce
the r a ppro11al or d1sap
proval ot the cstablt.shment
a t the Mc•gs County Park
Dt str iC t
(6)23 ftc

PUbl.c s"ite

8

Lost and Found
Large shaggy sheep type
dog Tan gray and black
answers to Barn ey In
Depot St reet Leadmg
Creek a rea outs1de of
Rolland Ca ll 742 2249

6

Wanted Stud sen11ce for
AKC reg1stered German
Shepard Call 992 5&lt;&gt;23

7

Some part t1me 1obs 10 Pt
Pleasant come w•th a
51 500 bonus' Plus tree
col lege tu t•on• lfyou are
age 17or older a 1un1or or
sen•or 1n h1gh school or a
h 1g h
schoo l
d •p loma
graduate you may qualify
The West v.rg1n1a Nat1onal
Gua rd ·~ no ord1nary pa rt
t•me tOb' Good pay, good
benef •ts 1 For de tails call
SFC YohO at 304 675 3950

Garage Sale
Ernest
Wh•tehead res1dence at
Reedsv lie June 24 25
G1rl S C Othmg In Jr SIZeS 5
and 7 Bedspreads lawn
turn1ture d•shes
m1sc
•terns
Patto Sale Fn and Sat
June 27 and 28 Ra1n or
sh •n e M•sc
household
1tems
Kat hryn B•um
Chester Oh
11

Wanted to Buy Earn Corn
Ca ll949 2472

Help Wanted

HOUSEPARENTS
Mature couple preferred for Ch•ldren s Restdent.al
rrcatme nt Program Supervtston of adolescents
ages 13 17 Apartment mclud ed sa lary and ex
cellent tnnge benefits Should have ex pertence
workmg w tth chtldren An equal e mplo yment/ at
flrm.llllle ac t•on emp loyer It quahfted contact
Juan•ta Atha Personne l Admm1strator
G J M Commun tty Mental Health Center Inc
412 Vu1ton Ptke Galhpolts, Oh•o 45631
or Call614 446 5500

7

---

15

Schools 1nstruct1on
Anyone mterested tn Trum
pet lessons for begmners
grades 4 6 call 949 2066 af
ter noon

Yard Sale

Yard Sale Tuesday June 24
at the corner of 124 and
Cetrroll
Streets
1n
Syracuse at the Na t han
Roush res•dence Large
family Also a boat for sa le
Ca ll 992 725ll

"·~-"-'M
"-'"'-"c"
el..::la::.:n-"e"o"u"'s__

One set ot left handed golf
clubs Call 742 3154

Mov.ng Sa le everyth.ng
goes ' Sunday June 22 24
25 26from 1 to 6 on Sunday
and 9 3 the other days Two
miles past Fa1rgrounds
Foil ow s•gns
lltnsura!!~

_ _

13

Insurance

AUTOMOB ILE
IN
SURANCE been can
cel led')
Lost
your
operator s 11cense? Phone
992 2143

_

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

SERVING SOUntEASTERN OHIO SINCE 18681
'

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOUHAVETHEtOVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS!
CALL US.

992·2342
OOWNING.QIILDS AGENCY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

If

:

Bus mess
Oppor-fumty
CASH Loan ne ver repay
tree details A L Lutton
p O Box 766 Ga llipOliS
Oh

21

22

--==--===-==
Mone"Y fo _L~!!_-

**'!.*~*********
:~~$$$]
: MONEY • MONEY*
• F1rst mortgages,:
• second mortgages,,.
:and
ref1nance,.
• cases ca II com-:
plete
Mortgag~•
,.servtces
'""'
lt-GalltpOIIS, OhiO at~
:446 1517 for more,.
Jt.Information and Jt.
*your appomtment

!

-!

*************•'
Professtona
23
I

Servtces
De luxe Ford fiberglass top
per to f1t e1ght foot bed
Call 992 7201

2V1 baths
rec room,
fireplace,
basement
garage At Mornmg Star
Hts , Lee Con~truchon 992
~45 4 or 9'12 5455

BeautifUl large home Low
ut111ties, bnck ranch style,
3 bedrooms 2 baths
fireplace full basement,
tam11y room, a1r con
d•t•oner. 3 car garage
Baum Addition, Meigs
County Call 985 4169
Pet
Assumpt1on
Beaut1fullarge brick ranch
style, low utllthes 3
bedrooms
2 112
baths,
llreplace full basement
tam•IY room, a1r con
dlttoner, 3 car garage
Baum Addtt•on Metgs Co
985 4169

8

32

Mob1le Homes
-~--''"'
or S-=
a.:.:le,___

PAP on the camera and t he
name ~nd address on the
case II found call 992 2264
LOSt In the VICIO!ty of
Nelsons Drug Store and
Adol ph s Datry Valley

IIRGtLB SR .~~~~
•2f' E Siconcl Strttl

Phone
l:! 614 J-992-332~

Ditch d•gg1ng serv1ce Call
773 5839 or 773 5788

RUTLAND
4
bedroom family home 2
baths, furnace, nat gas
c•ty water formal dm
1ng 2 ca r garage and
corner lot
Also 2
bus•ness rooms Only
$35 000
BEAUTIFUL - 12x60
Holly Par k 12x39 Rec
room w1th wood burner
gas forced a1r heat lots
of ca rpetmg, T P water
on one n1ce lay1ng acre
on blacKtop road Only
$35 000
POMEROY
3
bedrooms. 2 baths nat
gas furnace lot 100x125
above all floods wtth
v•ew of nve r Only
$12,500
2'1:t ACRES N1 ce
wOOdy spot tor YQUr
comfort Modern k• t
che n
ut1llfy room
cedar lmed close ts
beam Cell lOg 10 the IIV
1ng rm
w•th wood
burnmg firepl ace L1ke
new 1ns1de gs furnace
water and sewer Only
520 000 cash
MOBILE HOME OR
BUILDING LOTS - 1
acre S2500 00
Three
S5,000 00 or ten acres
$10 000 00 Trees and
water on hard road
FREE
PARKING
HOME PROTECTION
PLAN TO SAVE YOU
HEADACHES IN SELL
lNG

I · Magg•e s UpholStery
Rebuild ng
Ref n1Sh1ng
Reupholstery Fabnc and
v.nyl samp les Call 742
2852

8 Room House on ap
pro x•mately 2 acres St Rt
124 Lots of extras 992 7255
Assumable mortgage 9112
Pet 3 bedrooms 2 baths
full basement 2 car
garage R1ggscrest Manor
614 985 4329
THREE bedroom house tcfr
sate Two bath centra l
heat and a•r woodburner
complete carpeted huge
two ca r garage and
works hop
Loca ted .n
5yacose Ca ll992 3502
LOCATED 10 excellent
res1dent•al commun1ty
SpaCIOUS aTTraCtiVe maiO
tenetnce fr ee home located
on lovely acre lot Modern
k•tchen
family room
several bedrooms 2 baths
basement garage Low
ut ll11es 992 7727

General

HOBSTETTER

REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
Georges Hobstetter Jr
Broker
NEW LISTING - 24
acres of lu xunous coun
tr y estate Beau t•lul 3
bedroom home Ha ll
mark pool
orchard
garage and workshop
Many many features
too num erous to men
Tton Ca ll for more 1nto
Shown by appo~ntment
only
NEW LISTING
Large well built 2 story
home on Un on Avenue
3 bedrooms gas forced
a•r furna ce NICe s1ze
lot Garage tor ott street
park1ng Se ll1ng pnce
$16 500 DO
NEW LISTING - Large
11 room bn ck home 1n
Rutland Blown 1n 10
sulat1on modern k1t
chen w•th dtshwasher
Must see to apprec iate
Ask•ng $45 000 00
NEW LISTING
Acreage tor thar new
home• 1 Se llmg n 1 acre
trac ts A t1tfle b•t coun
try but not far from
town
Located on
Lead tng Creek Rd Call
for more deta•ls
MIDDLEPORT - Love
ly 2 story home on H1gh
St J bedrooms liVIng
room w•th f1rep lace k1t
c he n dtn1ng and l'h
baths Garage apart
ment for extra 10come
Only $53 ooo 00
POMEROY
Sot.d
bnck home on Condor
1 St
Well
worth
$26 500 DO
NEW HOME - Tota l
e lectnc 3 bedtoom on
an acre tn tHe country
$43 000 DO
FARM - 20 acres wtth
ntce home S49 500 oo
185 ACRES - Mlllerats
etnd house With old
bU1Id1ngs
En1ov your stJmmer and
let us worry about sell
mg your home We wtll
help buyers fmd fmanc
mg JUSt gtve us a call
Vetma N1c1nsky , Assoc
Phone 742 3092
Cheryl Lemley Assoc
Phone 742 3171

Loll and or Tra11er 10 M1d
dleport 647 S 2nd 773 9506

41 -

Hou··:s"'e""
s 1o:-:r:-;R""e"'n" t;---------3 Bedroom Home. R 1ggs

1973 Starcralt travel
trader
Fully
self
contatned w1th extras 992
5434,992 3129 or 992 59 !a

Crest Manor $'325 month
98S 4323

Housmg
I Headquarters

Real Estale

General

!
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Savelll

!

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to Buy
CHIP WOOD Poles max
d1ameter 10 on largest
end S 12 p er ton Bundled
stab $10 per ton Delivered
to Ohto Pallet Co Rt 1,

Oecoratect cakes for all oc
caslons Character cakes
and sheet cakes Call 992
6342 or 9'12 2583

ANTIQUES
FUR
NtTURE glass ch •na
anyth1ng See or call Ruth
Gosney ont1ques 26 ~
2nd, Mtddleport OH 992
3161

6 tf double duty Fngtda•re
meat case w new com
7

-~

Four bedroom house for
rent No pets Call 949 2253

30«

GOOD SUPPLY
SHRUBS
&amp; TREES

Homes
for Rent
2 Bedroom Mobtle Home,
furntshed kitchen elderly
couple preferred Depos1t
requ&lt;red No pets 992 2749
Mob1le Home, uttltt•es
paod, 1 ktd accepted No
pets, no drunks Steep10g
room for rent SO acres of
pasture John Sheets, 3112
mttes South Mtddleport
Rl 7

m

Barbecue
d tw1ce
m excellent condt
Sell
at 112 pnce Platform c
and arm cha1r New afghan
and other ttems Call 9'12
2961 any morntng before
10 00

M~bole

42

POMEROY
lANDMARK
POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220

RENTERS assiStance for
Sen1or Citizens In Vtllage
Manor apts Call 992 7787
1 bedroom, turn1shed apar
tment S12S month uhllt•es
not tnctuded 992 2288
Three room upsta1rs apart
ment with b•th C•ll 9'12
5&lt;&gt;21
46

Space lor Rent

...

.,_,

52

. . .. ..... . .
~

. . . . ...... .

CB TV, Radto
Equopment

Good used sound des1gn
stereo AM FM rad•o etght
tracK tape player, turn
table two speakers and
head phones Call 992 75~
53
Anttques
ATTENTION
liM
PORTANT TO YOU) Wtll
pay cast'! or cert1f1ed check
lor anttques and collec
t1bles or enttre estates
Nothmg TOO large Also,
guns pocket watches and
coin collections Call 614
767 3167 or SS! 3411

..'11

f

Stzes
From 30x30'
SMALL.

THE POOL PEOPLE

Utility Bu11d1ngs
Sttes from 4x4 to 1b40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

--SILVER

GOLD AN' D
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS
JEWELRY
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
Ml DDLEPORT
OH 10, DR CALL 9'12 3476

R:t l, Box S4

Rac1ne, Oh
Ph 614 843 2591
6 1s tfc

Ho~u:::
se:c;h::o70
Id GOOds

New Three Potnt post hole
diggers $225 00 New three
point wheel raKes S600 00
New three point five loot
rotary mower S430 00 Stx
foot three point $575 00
Boom poles US 00 Several
used stckle mowers Call
698 4061 Charles Chase

HILLCREST KENNELS
Board.ng all breeds Clean
1ndoor outdoor fac•lit1es
Also
AKC r eg1 stered
Dobermans 614 «0 779S
HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a homeless pet
Healthy , shots wormed
Oonattons requ•red 99!2
6260 noon 7 p m except
Tuesday, e mergency ca lls
only

GOLF LESSONS
Beginning &amp; Advanced
Scholarshops possllllt
for
high
school
students."
-CL UII REPAIRPiaytnt tfems clubS,
bags, t;Jalls, shoes, c•rts,
etc
1 Professional teachlnt
certtftcate
2 Played professional
tournaments In Ohio, W
\Ia , Kentucky
JOHN TEAFORD
614 985·3961
631 mo

mmer
For

T. L BURROUGH'S

SIDING, SOFFIT
Gutter&amp;
Replacement
Wmdowsand
Roofing

FREE ESTIMATES

CARPENTER'S
DANCE
STUDIO
IS NOW UNDERWAY
The Last Day To Stgn
Up Is July 14th
BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAZZ '
For More 1ntormat1on

Print
Shop
T shtrt and novelty
shtrts tor pollltcans,llall
tams, busmesses or In
dtvtduats
Sh1rts S4 00 Each
"We print ALMOST
anythong on ALMOST
anyth1ng•
Ph 614 949 2351
E vemngs &amp; Weekends
6 16 tfc

19 7S Mer c ury Bobcat
Wagon, standard, good
m1leage a~o~ocado w1th
woodlook tnm GOOd con
d•t•on
$1 SOD 00 f•rm
Grover Wh1te Jr Bashan
Keno Road Long Bottom
OhiO 1 614 949 2824

eHOWARD
ROTOVATO~

e V-CHISEL
PLOW

LEO

MORRIS
Rutland, 0 .
Ph. 742· 2455

Ph yr old male red Dober

S 21 1 mo

HOOF HOLLOW Horses
and ponies and ndmg
lessons
Everythtng
Imaginable In horse eqUip
ment
Blankets. belts ,
boots, etc Engtlsh and
Western
Ru t h Reeves
16141 698 3290
REGISTERED
m•te
walker coon hOund Wtll
run and tree Call 949 2545
57

73

Vans&amp;4W 0

SMALL

1974 JEEP CJ5 $1900 00
Ca II 949 2545
74

Business-Farms-ParrnersnlpS
and Corporat1ons
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state torms.-

Motorcycles

1979 740cc Yamaha Special
w extras low m tleage 992
576/J

Musical
Instruments

618 E Mam

we are ptck&lt;ng up severat
repossessed and trade 10
ptanos and organs In your
area Prtces from S25C and
up Call cred1t manager
today 304 485 2170

&amp; bl"tSfBEk

Si1es from 4K6 to UK...,

P&amp;S BUilDINGS
Rt 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph 614·143 2591
6 14 t mo

992-3795

otft

1974 KawasaKo 100 5300
Exc cond 742 2747

VINYL SIDING

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

ROOFING

All types of roof work,
new or repatr guHers
and downspouts, guHer
cteanJng and palnllng
All work guaranteed

Farm Equipment

BUILDINGS' I All steel
clear span build1ngs Our
lowest pnce m over two
years
Examples••
30 x48 x12 for $3 672 00
40'x72'x14 for S5 752 00
48 x72 xU for $6 594 oo,
60 x125 xl6 lor $15 «7 00
Call collect today for pnce
guaranteed 1 614 294 2675
t1ll8pm

Pomeroy, Oh.

1974 360 Yamaha Enduro
S45C 992 3844

1979 Kawasakt motorcycle
400 LTD t.ke new wtth 1200
miles Lots of extras Call
742 3154

Farm suppues

UtMity Buiklinp

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATIO_It

For larger Sizes

REP~ENT WIN~
Serving your area for 25 years.
Call Now f11r Large Savmgs
For Free Estimate Call

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2142
949-2160
1 22-lfc

$2()11' &amp; UP

WANT AD INFORMATION

FOR

SILVER
DOllARS
949-2801

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept
111 Court St., PomeroY', 0., 45769

Supenor Vmyl Products

5 29 1 mo

Vinyl and Aluminum

Siding

BISSEll
SIDING 00.

Roller, Brush and Spray •
Work
- Fully Insured
- Free Eshmates
- Inlerlor &amp; Exterior
Work

Most Dates
r..o ~unday Calls

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322
Gheen's
Painting
&amp;
Sandblasting Co.

STILL PAYING

Wnte your own ad and order by mail with thts
coupon cancel your ad bY phone when you get
results Money not refundable

31711 Noble Summrl Rd
Moddleport Ohto
9'12 5724
Sales service and supplies In ground and
above ground pools
51 lfc

CALL 949-2710

call for Free Siding
Est1mate, 949~21G1 or
949-2160 No Sunday
ails

949-2AA'

6 13 1 mo

s 23 1 mo

1 Addreu _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I
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Phon•~---------------

I

I I Wanted
I 1 For Sale
1 1 Announcement
1 1 For Rent

I
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I 2
I 3
I 4
I s
I 6
I
I· 7

II :
1
I

II
I1
I
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I

J
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J-A.,.,.,nc.,.,Mts

4-Giv..way

Four

, • ..,...
41-l...ce for ltl'll

14-lua/nna Tr•ll'llfll

RHIO TV

eMERCHANOISE
51- HtuHfle-.ONft
52--CI, TV, Rdio lctVIPRttnl
D-Antf41HI
S+-Miac M.,dNndl••
SJ-Iu114111nt SUJtlfiUH

•FINANCIAL
U-MMey to LNn

2J-I'rtfftll01'1at

u- s..-a rtrttllatt

eREALESTATE

J1-Aut.s ttr ....

s.r1111cn

I
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-----·
I

-----1

------:11

-----,--1
- - - - •.

7)-Vat&amp;&lt;IWD

32--Md/ltftomtt
ffW ,.,.
Q-,.armsforSalt
M-•u•l1111a aun•l~tts
J5-Lon a Acr..,.

74-Matwqctft
7,__
..... '•"'

J7- Rtaltorl

Ul'iRVtCI'iS

•

Here 11t the ltlltt n •

want-Ad Advarttsfng
Dtadllnts

~IOf'lft

11-Mtmetffl,ronmentl
1)-PiulftiM•t I llCIII'all"t
Q--I"CIII'atlnt
14-IIKtrleal

llefrl...-atiCII'I

4' M D.-ily
11NMftlaturdi!J

lf-GtRerll MIUIIfll
11-MM l .... lr

ferMoMIY

17-Y.......tery

30
32 _ _ _ __

33•: - - - - - -

14

34 - - - - - - , - - 35 _ _ _ ___;_

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Datly Sentmel
Box 729
Pomerov, Oh. 45769

Rates and Other Information

..

1SWitnllaorU ......

,, •• .,.y.
I d.,

......
...'"

c...

6Ny1

....

CIMr..

Ill
,,.
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AIM AMI
The Dally Sentinel

Cement work
v.nton
Cement Floor Company,
Bidwell, Ohio, 388 9877 All
concrete work basement,
driveways, etc , etc

zo
Wilt 17 Sl; ... '"" '"
111011 Prill IIAIIl, lllllllSS,

83

1~1

ZIP, Sill, Mil sm£ - · ·
Btlsy womt11 the fostest to-sew
fesh1011s ere tn ovr NEW SPRING

SIJMMER PATTERN CATAlOG'
Dresses tops )ICI!eb panb

lt11 tMMtry taN t1 tM~tln aN O.ltulty • Clfth ,... wwt1. SJ N

Send Sl lor Cat.loi.
IZ7.AIIIIali '1' Dliiitl $1.!10
lft.4111Cl!Ealr T....... $1 50

Plvs $1 75 "" 1111ttrn coupon

rwlnln"'"' Cath lft HlllaMD
M•nt Home Mlft •N Y:t,. ..... ar•

acc~tt~tW ~~t~IJ •Uti ca... wlftt

hniiMI

,.core., ...

u~s-..sa.

;...- ---- -~---------·-·------·~'"1'11..--------------~--,---~

'

and
electpamhno
Free Esttmates
roofmg
plumbtng
Call Chorles Smclatr 985
4121
Flooring, ce11ing paneling,
dOOrs and Windows also
p•Intmg 9'12 2759

IMftwttftwtttMmw.ltnum ,,...,.. ••• clfttl,.rwont,.ray
" ' ' runrtlne • .._. thM mnHCUIIII't NYt Win . . CMr~Nat tN 1.. ,

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

- Addonsand
remodllng
-Roofmg and gutter
work
-Concrete work
- Plumbing and
electr1ca1 work
(Free Eshmatesl

UZ.q.Jit Ori;Mls

,._,. suo

-

$1.50

- V.C. YOUNG Ill

;:;
992 62 U or
Pomeroy, Oh
992 7314

Steam c lea ned
Free ~;=::::;;~;;~::~~~;=::::iT.~~~:::::estJmate
Reasonable 1
Electnc•l
84
ra tes Scotchguard 992 84
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration
6309 or 742 2211
&amp; Refngerat•on
_
SEWING
MACHINE
Roofing siding, room ad
BOWERS
Rep,;urs, servtce, all ELWOOD
dtllons all types of general makes
Sweepers, ,
992 2284
The REPAIR
repairs, 25 years exp 992 Fabrtc Shop
toasters Irons, .all smell
Pomeroy
3406
Authonzed Singer Sl!les apptoances Lawn mower
and Ser~o~1ce We sharpen Next to Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985
Will do remodeltng , Sc1ssors
3825

$175flriiCII ...........
fir lldl ,.tllrll fir IIIII rim
linuil Mil hodlh a. $M!I t.:
hllont O.,l

31 _ _ _ __

lops

IOU II loooe Jusl IS muc:h nut
INIOII IS IOU do Soft
SieMS, SCIIt lltllers softly lilred
to pop ower pants, skirts.
Pnntecl Pllllrn 4529 Hill
Silts 12\1, 14\1 16\1 18\1,
20\1 Womens SIZes 34 36 38
40 42, 44 46 48

77- AutDRIINir

,._.......... w.. ...

'19

Home
Improvements
s &amp; G carpet Cteanmg

•TRANSPORTATION

l1-HM1ft for, ...,

----~ .

81

72-Truct~:s tor llle
tJ-LIVMtoO
M-Hiy 1 Gral~t

:n - IUslrtett

Rea state ..a.na
11'1•% Interest 30 Yrs
PARK Fl NANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automellc
Loans, No Down P11y·
ment Federal Housing
Loans, 3% dawn on
S2S,OOO, .5% down on\
balance FHA 265 Subsidy Program FNA :J45.
Gradual Paymtnt Mon.
OpenM W Ft 001o1 00
OlhtrTimH
BY Appointment
Office 992·7544
'"'
Home H2-6191
~
107 Sycamore 51
;
Pomero OH
..

1..,1

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp;LIVISTOCK
•t-Parm
u-wanttd••"'"'~~'~'
to luy

~tUI'IIty

17
18
19
20

new

u-Pitl tor Salt

I CIRt,.lr
1t-W•ntec1Te Dt

These cash rates
Include diScount

l1ke

One wh1te topper for an
etght foot bed pickup $100
Call 992 7019

1s-sctJOetstnltntctt~n
1.,_

tires

4329

47-W•ntecltoWent
• ~Equi~MM~~t for Rfftt

11-HIIII W•ltttcl

"YOUMGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

6 00x14 6 ply nylon $25 985

4

12-SitvatH wu,_,
1)-Insurance

Auto Parts
&amp; A.ccessones

..,_jLAprertmtl'lt lor Rent

a.,

12
13
15
16

.... ,. .....

76

• .,.,

_.,_MoltUt Homes

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28

10 ·- - - - - 11

eRENTALS
'1-Moulfl tor

5--Halti"Acls
t-Lost anct PMIMI
7- YarciS.II•
t-PuiNkSall
&amp; Auct5on
1&gt;-WIUIIod 10

Print one word 111 each
space below Each Ill
1 &lt;l&lt;al or group ofl&lt;oures
1 counts as a word Count
name and address or
I phone number If used
I You'll get better results
I tl you describe fully
1 give prtce The Senttnel
I reserves the right to
ctasstly, edit or reject
I any ad Your ad will be
I put m the proper
I classtltcallon II you II
11check the proper box
1 below

I
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I
I

•ANNOUNCEMENTS
1-tarGoiTfltnlu
2-ln Memoriam

I

/

Farm Buildings

OLD COINS pocket wat
ches, class rings wedd1ng
bands d1amonds Gold or
s11ver Call J A Wamsley
142 2331 Treasure Chest
Cotn Shop Athens, OH 592
6462
---~~---

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

Pels tor Sale

61
5-1-

ALL STEEL

man w&lt;th papers 5100 773
9506

COUNT-RY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy Large lois Call
992 7479
0 . ..... . . ... "

___ _

1979 Honzon automatiC
p s p b am fm stereo
cassette player 992 2580 at
fer4p m

Mam St.
Pomeroy 992 -2181

44

3 AND 4 RM furntshed ap
ts Phone 992 5434

~o~~~Y-IJ!1_2~!

Business Services

71.~--~A~u~t~o~s~lo~r~S~a~t•~~

56

Apartment
for Rent

Woinfed

61

20% OFF

TWO bedroom tr all er
Adults only
Brown s
Trailer Court Call 9'12 3324

992 " "
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949 :2660
Roger or Dott1e Turner
742 2474
Offoce Phone 992 2259

Curb Inflation.Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and

Mac Merchantse
MAY 23 to June 30 lll"o off
greenware sale Brmg a
contatner 9 e m to 9 p m
Drehel s Ceram1~5 59 N
Second Ave, Middleport
992 2751

pressor

NEW LISTING - NEW
CO NSTR UCTION
NEW SU BDIVI SO N - 6
rooms, 111.- story, 3
bedroom home w1th 1•12
baths on a beaut1ful
wooded 1 75 Acre lot on
Golf Course Road
F 1replace back deck
overlooking wooded lot
All for only $42 ooo 00
NEW LISTING- MID
OLE PORT - 5 room 2
story home With base
ment
2 3 bedrooms
bath F A gas furnace
on a 62x52 tot $19 000 00
LET*RT 12x60
MObtl~ Home on 60x120
lot 3 bedrooms utlltty
bUJid1ng Close to nver
new
br.dge
etnd
hydroptant $16 000 00
CLOSE IN - 1'h story
frame on 6lr.. acres 5
rooms~ 2 bedrOt\ms part
basement, forced atr
heal Just 527 500 00
VERY NICE
3
bedroom. full basement
w b f p Sttttng porch
wtt h v1ew of nver 1112
s ton es of excellent
l1veablltty
Must be
seen Only $28 500 00
BEAUTIFUL 315 ACRE
YAR o - 2 story bnck &amp;
frame house Has 2
fireplaces
ongmal
woodwork 2 baths, 4
bedrooms dtn1ng room
family room and part
basement S27 000 00
WE HAVE A BIG
SELECTION OF PRO
PERTIES, JUST DROP
IN'
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland Jr

-rr--------·--'·;;..·-·-,-·-·-·---,~.·---

I

ce~s_S7500

wv

Kodak Camera Wtth bUilt

D1tch d•gg,ng serv 1ce Call
773 5839 or 773 5788

Real Estate

There wtll be a sale ot
property
formerly
belongtno to Vtctor Letfheit
on the Courthouse steps tn
Pomeroy al 10 a m Mon
day June 30 Property
located one mile from
Courthouse on Sprino
Avenue, 1n Pomeroy Seven
acres of ground old farm
house and old barn
Mtntmum that would be ac

1969 12x60 two bedroom
Hollypark tratler
Fur
n1shed ac washer metal
outbutldmg under plnmng
Ca II 992 2881

-

54

Sale
----for
-1973 F••rpotnt Ux65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron 14x65 2
bedr
tY/1 Fleetwood, 14x6S 3
bdr bafh 1n
19'11 Shake5pear, l4x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12xS2, 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood 12x63 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES PT PLEASANT,
304 675 4424

m flash With the 1n1t1als

J and F Backhoe Serv.ce
L1censed and bonded Sep
t1 c tank 1nstallat•on Water
a nd gas lmes Excavat1ng
work and trans1t layout
Call 992 7201

Well cared tor home ca r
pet throughout w•t h fhree
bedrooms P t 2 baths witfi
shower l•v•ng room for
mal d1n10g room large eat
1n k1tchen Refr1gera tor
electr 1c stove water sot
tener
draper•es
tour
rooms 1n basement two
fin shed
Furnace room
and workshop Mu5t see to
apprec•ate Call992 5865

'

~;==~~§~;;~~~;§§~;;;.~i:iii~:;f
RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

CARPOSHOP
"Drive A Li"le Sal.te A Lot"
SHOPtSFULLYSTOCKED
CANDY STRIPED
2 black f'Hded
Sq Yd

Excavat1ng

VINYL Fl80R
COVERINGS
Sq Yd $41J

CARPET

$49t -

Water well drilling Tom
Lewis
30• 895 3802
Seasonal discount on all
pumps and accessones

~

=

G!n! rat}iaull!'i
WILL HAUL tomestone and
gravel Also, lime haulmg
and spreading Leo Morns
Truckti'U Phone 742 24.55

-----..--- -- ---

Main St.

742-2211

,

�8- 111t: Dati\ ~IIL!Jil:l !\liddlq.Jutt l' II ti l\ 0

i\1•

J•ti&lt;J \

Cattle grazing on national
forest land may he allowed
WASHINGTON tAP) - A small
mcreasc tn the nwnber of cattle and
other livestock allowed to graze on
' natiOnal forest land could be per
nutted over the next hal£ century
says a new report sent to Congress
The report was de!Jvercd to
Capitol Htll last Fnda) and
prunanly addresses the problems of
managing
timber
mining
recreatiOn and other resources
1hrough the year 2000
Rangeland Is mcluded m the
natwnal forest system admtmstcred
by the US Forest Servtce. an agency of the Agrtculture Department
Most of 1! 1s m the West and the
Great Plams
Farmers and ranchers pay annual
fees to let their ammals graze on the
, rangelands The fees a1 e based on
'•· ' anunal umt months or AUMs as
f';
thos are called One AUM IS the
grazmg for one month by one bull

cow or horse or fn e sheep or goats
Last ) ear the Forest Service
ISSUed about 16 000 perrn1ts for the
):razmg of about I 3 nulhon cattle
I 2 mtlhon sheep and goats and
H,OOO horses and burros
The fees are adjusted annually to
reflect the economic val ue of the
forage eaten Thts years fees are
expected to total around $22 nulllon
~ $4 rmlhon boost from last season
Accordmg to the report the F ores!
Servtce would work to ll11provmg
range condttwns su that the land can
be brought back to full productllttv
ln the commg years
On land where tl ts clear!)
economical to produce forage, ever)
-effort would be made to achieve O(&gt;tll11wn prorluctwn, as nattonal
policy reqmres 'tl satd
Then a balance would be sought
between forage productiOn and
grazmg use
Land that proved to
;be submargmal for grazmg would be
put to some other use
By 2030, the report smd livestock
grazmg would be mcreased by a b~l!l

6 percent from less than 10 unlllon
AU Ms to nearly 11 nulhon
As would be expected, demand
for forag e follo"s demand for red
m ea t, although at a slower rate 11
satd W1th the o\ erall 11se m per
captta consumphon of beef and the
pruJeded growth m populatiOn
demand for beef IS expected to
double b&gt; 2030
I he Sterra Clubs Rocky Moun tam
chaple1 m Denver ftled COllll11ents
on the report stgncd by ,Connally
Mew s tllc chapter s wtldet ness
com dmator
Mears sa1d the proJeCtiOn for beef
produdwn stnkes a consumer like
myself as JUSt plam stlly because
a lot of people are cuttmg back on
beef consumptwn for dietary and

pn{;e reasons
But Mears acknowledged the
Sterra Club understands the need
for careful grazmg on selected
publtc lands as long as grazmg fees
ate m hne wtth those on compa rable
pnvate land
I he State of Utah, tntls statement
tuok anothet Hew and complamed
that exts lmg upward trends m
range grazmg fall far shod of
meebng proJected future demands
The livestock mdustry m the
West IS heavtly dependent on federal
gra zmg lands It satd There lot e,
Ills Important that range conditiOns
be gtven adequate attentwn
WASHINGTON 1AP1
The
NatiOnal Meat AssociatiOn a trade
grou p, says a recent court ruling on
sodtum mtnte represents a btg VIctory for the meat mdustry, which
the assoctatwn represents
John
Mohay
assocta lt on
president satd a U S Dtslnct Court
dtsnussed a la \\su•t last week that
would have declared mtnte a color
addtltve, thus shiftmg )Unsdtclwn
fo r Its use from the Agnculture
Department to the Food and Drug

Ad.rmmstratwn

I he lawsuit, he said, was flied
Oec I 7 by Pubhc Ctttzcn whtch
MHhay descnbed as a Ralph Nader
g1 uup
1 he deciSion by Judge
Harold Greene, he sa1d, must be
conSidered a maJor setback for
Pubhc Ctllzen 111 Its crusade to get
mtnte banned
Nttnte has been used 111 meat
pruce~smg

fur many years as a

preservative, a colormg agent and a
pre\enll\e of orgamsms that can
lead to botulism, a deadly furm uf
food pmsomng
Judge Greene noted that the FDA
IS 111 the m1dst of admmtstraltve
proceed111gs to resolve the q uestwn
uf whtch federal agency should
regulate mtnte use, Mohay satd
Studies also are under way to help
determme whether + as some have
claimed + sodtwn mtnte, by 1tself

can c.:ause cancer It can combme
wtth other substances, particularly
when bacon IS fned at htgh heat to
form mtrosammes, whzch studies
have shown to be carcmogemc
WASHINGTON 1APJ - Meat tm
ports are runmng about 20 percent
below a vea r ago reflect111g a
general crunch on beef supphss m
much of the world
Accordmg to the latest figures by
the Agnculture Department, 1m
ports of meat subject to U S quotas
totaled about 555 3 rmlhon pounds m
the ftrst ftve months of this year
compared to 693 5Imllwn m January
through Ma} of 1979
The quota law covers Imports of
fresh chilled and frozen beef, veal
mutton and goat meat But most IS
• beef Imported for process111g 11110
hamburger and other products
Australia the lead111g supplier
provtded about 293 9 nulhon pounds
down from 397 8 rmllton 111 the first
five months of 1979 Imports from •
Ne" Zealand, at 108 6 nulhon poun
ds compared wtlh 130 8 mtlllon a
year ear her

Weekend victories extend
Meigs' season mark to 10-2
By SCOTT WOLFE
ROCK SPRINGS Over the
weekend Metgs' Amencan Leagwn
baseball team swept three games
from opponents, a double headet
from V111ton County and a smgle
game over New Haven , Meigs IS now
11}-2 this season
Saturday agamst Vmton County
Metgjs Juntped mto an early :Hl lead
which theyh held go111g 111to the fmal
mmng Metgs got four of those runs
m the th1rd when Steve Little
doubled, and Phil K111g walked
followed by back to back home runs
F trst a three-run shot by Kenn}
Brown and second a tremendous
blast by Jerry F1elds
Flaunt10g a ftve-run lead 10 the
seventll mmng Metgs found them
selves 10 trouble when Vmton Coun
ty carne to l1fe to score fl\ e lliiles
and tie the score
Wtlh Its younger players m the
game Metgs responded at the plate
\lnd carne back to w111 the game
Nick Leonard led the 1rm111g off wtth
a s mgle stole second and was
sacrificed to lhtrd by John Beaver
Leonard then rode home on R~ndy
Murray s game w1rmmg s 10gle, the
scoe 6-5
Jell Wayland ptcked up the wm m

rehef of T01runy Ownes and Starter
Roger Kovalchik They combmed
for 8 stnke outs and three walks
Pa)1on suffered the loss m relief of
C Noms Timms had t"o of the Vm
ton county hits
In the mghtcap Metgs handily
defeated Vmton County 13-4 Greg
Wtgal went the distance for the w111
Wtgal fanned 12 and walked two
Oney suffered the loss with relief
help from Hall
Metgs Jwnped out 111to a three run
lead on smgles by !title Wolfe ,
Brown and a double by Ftelds 111 the
first ummg The lead which "as
never rehnqutshed was wtdened to
five runs before Vmton Cunty scored
a s mgle run 111 the third
Httlers for the w111ners Kent Wolfe
wtth a double, tnple, and two
smgles, Jerry Ftelds a double and
home run Wtgal two smgels, Art
Fogelstrom a home run Ltltlc ,
Brown Foster and Kennedy each
had home runs
Sunday s 5.() v1ctory came at the
hands of Kenny Brown who went the
dtstance fanmng mne and walkmg
five I his was one of several complete games p1tched by Brown
Ftelds, Russell, and Van Meter
were the New Haven hurlers

Kenny Brown helped his cause m
the ftrst mnmg w1th a run scormg
stngle that bnrought home Kent
Wolfe who had double This proved
to be a ll Metgs needed although Kent
Wolfe had two RBI s m the ftflh,
dnvmg home L1ttle and Kmg Then
m the sixth Jerry Ftelds blasted his
third home run m two days to dnve
home Art Foglesll om who had
doubled
Wolfe had a double and two
smgles Ftelds a double and home
run Little a smgle and double
Brown two smgles, Foglestrom a
double Gauland Wtgal smgles
For New Haven Weaver doubled
while F1elds Sayre, and Powell each
had smgles
Metgs wtll host Wellston m a
twilight doubleheader at Syraucse
on Wednesday Game time Will be
5 30
Lmescorcs
VC
000 000 5- 5 5 0
Me1gs
004 001 0- 6 7 I
VC
Mmgs

001 021 0- 4 6 5
323 410 X- 13 13 I

New Haven
Metgs

000 000 0- 0 4 2
100 022 X- 5 12 0

Contents of house trailer
·ordinance revealed today
Due to the nwnerous house
trailers wh1ch are m the comrnumty ,
the Middleport Planmng Com
rmss10n, as a pubhc service to
VIllage residents has offered the
followmg mformatwn on procedUI es
to be followed m movmg a house
trailer

House trailers arc permitted only
111 R 3 distncts and shall conform to
the setbacks of other structures m
the area or wtth a nummum front
yard of 20 feet, rear yard of 20 feet,
and stde yards of five feet
Mmunwn Jut width shall be 50 feet
wtlh a nummum lot area of 2500

'G0 d' S Ch•ldr
1 en
UMW
discusses
•
: Mrs Evelyn Hollon presented a
wogram taken from DIDlenstons of
MISSIOns", usmg the tOpiC For All
God's Children", when the Umted
Methodist Women of the Forest Run
Church mel recently
1Purpose of the program was to ex
pand a sense of partlctpatwn m the
!Iuman farmly THe econonucs of
Af.nca, Tatwan, Smgapore, Hong
Kong, and South Korea, were
sludled, and takmg par were Mrs
Ann Watson, Mrs Mary Nease, Mrs
Betty Blackwood, Mrs Edith Sisson, '
and Mrs Kathleen Scott
Mrs Edith Sisson and Mrs Elma
!loiter were hosteses for the m ectmg
'WhiCh openc'\1 w1th group smgmg of

9- The Da•ly Scn tmd Mtudlcpllll P"'"""'}. 0 , Monduy. June 23, J!l&amp;l
j1 - Ho.Ttes tor s.ie 3l
Farms for Sale
32
Mob1le Homes

Jtlll21 J1J&amp;J

Love DIYine All Love Excelling
Mrs Hollon gave devolwns usmg
Exodus 38, verse 8, wtth the topic,
Mirrors
and
the
theme,
Selflessness
1 he special taken
from the buok, I Dtdn t Know
That by Derrtc J ohnson was ghtven
by Mrs Black\\ood The story of
Ebenezer Buttenck , ongmator of
Buttenck patterns, was read a loQg
wtth a story of Jewish 1mtn1gant

from Bavaria, Germany, who made
the ftrst lev1 pants
Forly·SIX shut-m vtsl!J;
reported Attcndmg bestdes
named were Naunu Wyatt,
Veauger I eah Nease, and
Holter

were
those
Hilda
Mae

square feet
It IS the dut) of the property owner
to obtam a zonmg perm1t from
Vtllage Hall The zomng mspector
s hall determme by on site m
s pecllon If the trailer conforms to
the zomng ordmance If so, the per
nut apphcatwn wtll be approved
Penalhes for vwlatton and other
'zomng requirements are found m
VIllage ordmance No 871A A copy
of thts ordmance along wtlh the
zumng map IS on f1le at Vtllage Hall
Thts ordmance was enacted with
tlle mterest of promotmg the orderly
and planned growtll uf the VIllage
and IS not mtended tube restncttve

DECISION NEAR
WASHINGTON (APJ - TheUS
Department of Energy Is expected
to decide wtthm the n ext two mont11s
whether tu fund a project to recover
some of the excess heat crea ted at
the uramum ennchment plant at
Ptkcton
'I he pruflU!!&lt;ll calls fur money
"!ready authonzed m the federal
Its a! 1980 !Judget, but not yet spent

- -NEW 3 or 4 Bedroom home,

Publ c Nottce

Yard Sale
June 27 from 9 to dark at
th e
Gordon
Holt e rs
restdence on Count Y Rd 28
above Eastern H1gh
School
Baby
th•ngs
ctoth•ng a •r co nd•ll oner
truck bed tool box and
m1SC 985 4:.115

1

PubliC NOIICe

SUMMI;R YOU rH
EMPLOY/"EN r
PROGKAM

LEGAL NOflCE
fhc Department ot Ad
m•n•strat•ve scrv• ces 01
rhe Departme nt ot A d
1 ce ol Ma npower De velop
n un1 s trat•ve Sen1 1CCS Ot
mcnt (OMD ) has pre:senred
t• c~ o t Manpowe r Develop
a prel•m•nary CETA grant
rnenr (MD) •s announc•ng
appl cat•on tQr Ftscal Year
th e FISCd\ Year IYHU rrrle
1981 to the Department of
VI Sumi'J'I er Youth Em
Labor to prov•de e llg1ble
plo:t_ment
Program
•nd• v•dua ls wlfh e m
!SYEP I
ploy ment and tra .nm9 ser
Through
the
Com
111 ces n the 5~ count1es of
prehens ve E mployment
the Balance at State
and rram•ng Ac t (CErA)
The ptanntng allocat.on
tnc Oepanmen t at labor
are as tallows T •Ti e 11 B
has a ll ocat ed $6 180 210 tor
$11611000
T"l e l iD
th e SYE P •n th e 56 county
511965000
T •tle VI
Bal a nce ot State reg,on • Sl3 421 uoo
Fund,ng for
The purpose at the SYEP 1s
r1t1 c IV youth programs
to p rov•de economtcaliy
are de pendent upon
d•sadva ntaged youth w th
1eg1stat•ve act•on however
work exper• ence and op
a t preSS t1me deCISIOnS
porrunt11es tor vocatiOnal
had not bee n announced
ex ptorat•on tra 1ntng and
The Comprehenstve Em
access to career .n
ployment and
rretlntng
torma t• on and counse l•n!il
Plan and a companson of
Addi tiOna l
•nformaf10n
perlormance aga•nst the
may be obtatned from
pnor years pl a n through
Chester D Wh te Ptanntng
lhe most recent quarter
may be rev 1ewed between
Supcrvtsor JU E Broad
8 00 am and 5 00 PM 1n
Street
Columbus
Oh •o
4311 5
the OMO L brary 30 E
Broad Street 27th floor
(6) 13 lt c
Columbus
Oh10 43215
phone614 466 6788
PUBLIC NOTICE
Wrttten
comments
should be d1rected to Mr
Th e Department of Men
Leonard Blanton at the
tal Hea lth and Menta l
sa me addre~s by August 1
RetardatiOn D VISIOn of
1980 Interes ted groups
Mental Retardat.on and
organ1zat•ons
or
1n
DevelopmenTal D1Sab IIIICS
d1V1dua ts may not1fy th
proposes to 1ssue a l1cense
Pr1me Sponsor of the1
tor a Family Home to ac
des re to rev ew any sub
co mmodate 2 deve op
seq uent
mod ftcat on
mentally diSabled es•dent5
dur ng the gran1 year
ThiS Family Home IS
located a t Box 39759 Silver
161 23 lie
R•dge Road Reedsv lie
Oh o Wr1tten comments
and ob tec t•ons concer n ng
the 1ssuance of th•s li cense
can be sent no ta ter than 3----Announcements
August 2 1980 to Rudy
-----Magnone
Ph D
Com
1 PAY h•ghest pnces
m•sstoner D•v•s on ot Men
pOSSibl e for gold a nd Silv er
ta t Retardatton and co.ns
nngs 1ewelry etc
Qe...,elopmen tal D•sabd t1e
s c/ o Ted Fry 30 East Con tact Ed Burkett Barber
Broad Street Room 1257 Shop M•dd leport
Col umbus OH 43215
P•ano Tun ng
Lane
16) 23 lie
Dan1els 742 2951 Tun•ng
and Repa r Serv•ce s1nce
1965 If no answer phone
NOTICE
992 2082
FOR THE SALE OF
CO UN TY OWNED
VEHICLE
Regat t a FROG
BALL
f'ursuant to Sec t• on
Sa tu rday June 28 9 I
301 12 0 R C the Me•9s
Roya l Oak Lodge Joe
County Comm•ss oners will
Lavtnger
and
th e
rece 1ve sea led b•ds unt1l 12
noon on Tuesday July 8
Tunet1mers
TICkets
1980 1n the ott•ce of the
ava1lable at S1mons P•ck
Mei~S
Co unty Com
a Patr 992 3830 Chambe•
miSSioners located m the
Off 1ce 992 5005 New York
Court house
Pomeroy
Cloth 1ng House 992 2049
Oh•o w.th b•ds to be opened
at 2 30 P M and read
aloud tor the sale of the
P lants To matoes cucum
fo ll ow•ng veh•cle
ber
flowers
hang ng
One 1972 lnternat•onal
bas kets
pots Cle land
Front Load1ng Garbage
Green house
Gerald•ne
Truck
Cle land
Rac1ne
Oh10
Sa1d veh 1c te may be
v•ewed at The Me•gs County
45771
Sa n•tary Landf •ll located
off State Rou te 143 10
Reduce safe and fast w1 th
Sal•sbury Townsh•P be
tween the hours of 7 30
GoBese Tablet s and E Va p
am and 4 30 p m
water pills from Nelson
TrucK to be so ld as IS
Drug Store
w1 th no guarantees Sa•d
b• ds to be subm•tted 1n
sea led e nvelopes marked
4
G •vea'-'w-"a~y'--B1d on 1972 Garbage
One blonde 21f2 mon th old
Truck
The Board of Me1gs
k1tten One t•ger k1tten and
County Comm •ss.oners
mother cat blonde Call
rese rve the r1ght to re ,ect
742 2328
any or all b•ds
Me•gs County
Large dog
ge rman
Comm•ss•oners
Mary Hobstetter
shepherd st
bernard
C erk
m• xed Approx•mately 10
mon ths old Ge ntle Call
161 13 ltc
992 5983

-----Public Nottce
--RESOL\JTION

Woodrow Fortney s County
Road 28 Basdhan Keno
Rd June 24 25 26 and 27
fmm 9 7

&amp; Auct1on

BRADFORD Auct•oneer
Complete Serv•ce Phone
94Y 2487 or 949 2000 rac •ne
Oh1o Cr1tt Bradford

_ _j'!'_b_t_•£_~otoce_ _
PUBLIC NOTICE
A Proposed Use Hear1ng
tor revenue shartng tund
tor the year IYtll will b
held by the V1llage of Mtd
dleporr on Monday July 7,
lYtiO at I JO P M •n lh
lO unc .t chambers at 2'JI
Race ~t M•ddleport Oh o
All
nte rested C1t1zens
are •mnted to attend and
will be g ven an op
portun•fy to make wntten
and oral co ruments or
suggcs t.ons regard.ng the
use ot revenue st1dr 1ng tun
ds
rhc vil lage ex pects to
lt.: Ct:•ve
approxm il le ty
') l.t uuo 111 rc11enuc Shdr111g
tunds to bl.! alloc.,llud 111
IYM I

.J UI t: LJ

----------_
__
-----~

9

_wa'!_t~_!o_B_!!.L

Iron and brass beds old
furn ture
desks
gold
r1ngs
tewe lry
Silver
dollars ster lmg e tc wood
1ce boxes ant•ques etc
Complete
households
wr.te M o M•ller Rt 4
OHl
11 992
Pomeroy
or ca
7760
10 karat 14 karat 18 karat

gold Dental gold and gold
ear p•n s 675 3010
Gold sliver or fore1gn
co•ns or any go ld or silver
1tems Ant1que furn1ture
glass or ch.na w1 11 pay top
dollar or complete estates
No 1tem too large or too
small Check pnces before
sellmg Also do appra1s1ng
Osby IOss1e) Mart n 992
6370
WILL BUY o ld Iran
sm •ss 1ons
bat1er •es
eng.nes or scrap meta ls
elc Call 245 9188

11
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE tra n,ng
as a young bj.ISI ness person
and earn good money plu s
some great Q•fts as a Sen
t1ne1 route earner Phone
us nght away et nd get on
the el Q1b11ity 11st a t 992
2156 or 992 2157
EXCELLENT
EAR
N 1NGS 1 Mall1ng C•rcu lars
Postage and Supplies
Free
wnte
Box 82
Owosso M l 48867
Needed ROor LPN tor II to
7 30 sh•ft Part t•me or full
t1me Good workmg con
d t•ons Con tact Mr Z d1an
at the Pomero y Health
Care Center 992 6606 Mon
day through Fnday from 9
5

1-2-

s.tUatton s Wanted

Wdl do odds and ends
Paneling floor tile and
ce•llng til e
Call Fred
M 1 Iter 992 6338
Will do odds and ends tobs
such as 1 ght hauling pa1n
t.ng tear.ng down houses
a nd bu ld •ngs
c leanng
lots and mow1ng lawns
Have tools a nd tran ·
sportat1on Ca I 742 3074

-

AUTHOR I ZING THE
APPLICATION AND
HEARING OF THE
MEIGS COUNTY
PARK DISTRICT
WHEREAS •I appears
tha t there 1S substantial 1n
lerest 1n an app l• ca t on for
the crcat1on at a Me 1gs
County Park 0 stnct pur
sua nt to the Oh o Rev sed
Code
wh•ch will en
compass a ll ot Me gs Coun
ty e xcept the tncorporated
v1 11 ages ot Me1gs Coun ty
excep t at suc h t1me as sa •d
v•llage or v• tages shall
detcrm.ne 11 to be 1n the
best .nterest of The Village
or villages to 101n the Mctgs
County Park D•stnct and
WHEREAS at fh1s h me
11 a ppe?trs that the appllca
t1on for crea hon of the
Me1gs Cou nty Pa rk 01s
tr ct pursuant to the Oh•o
Rev •sed Code wil l be prac
t ca ble and Wtll subscrve
the publ•c welfare of all
Me gs oount•ans
now
therefore be 1t
REsOLVED and hereby
determ1ned that sa•d ap
pll cat•on tor c reat•on of The
Me •gs
County
Park
D str1c1 exc ludmg the •n
corporat ed villages of
Me1gs County exce pt at
such t1me as sa•d v•llage or.
v•llages determtne 11 lobe
'" the best ntercsts of the
v• ll age or v llages to 1010
sa 1d Metgs County Park
O •str•ct
•s
h ereby
au thor•zed and that sa•d
a pplt cat on be 5et tor hear
.ng purs uan t to Law
Authonzed th1s loth day
at June IYt!U
rhc hear.ng on th•s ap
pl• cat on wil l be held m the
Me1gs County Common
Pleas Court room 1n the
Mc1gs County Cou rt House
Pomeroy Oh 10 on July n
~~~0 at IU uu o clock A M
All •ntcrested pan• es
should be present to vo•ce
the r a ppro11al or d1sap
proval ot the cstablt.shment
a t the Mc•gs County Park
Dt str iC t
(6)23 ftc

PUbl.c s"ite

8

Lost and Found
Large shaggy sheep type
dog Tan gray and black
answers to Barn ey In
Depot St reet Leadmg
Creek a rea outs1de of
Rolland Ca ll 742 2249

6

Wanted Stud sen11ce for
AKC reg1stered German
Shepard Call 992 5&lt;&gt;23

7

Some part t1me 1obs 10 Pt
Pleasant come w•th a
51 500 bonus' Plus tree
col lege tu t•on• lfyou are
age 17or older a 1un1or or
sen•or 1n h1gh school or a
h 1g h
schoo l
d •p loma
graduate you may qualify
The West v.rg1n1a Nat1onal
Gua rd ·~ no ord1nary pa rt
t•me tOb' Good pay, good
benef •ts 1 For de tails call
SFC YohO at 304 675 3950

Garage Sale
Ernest
Wh•tehead res1dence at
Reedsv lie June 24 25
G1rl S C Othmg In Jr SIZeS 5
and 7 Bedspreads lawn
turn1ture d•shes
m1sc
•terns
Patto Sale Fn and Sat
June 27 and 28 Ra1n or
sh •n e M•sc
household
1tems
Kat hryn B•um
Chester Oh
11

Wanted to Buy Earn Corn
Ca ll949 2472

Help Wanted

HOUSEPARENTS
Mature couple preferred for Ch•ldren s Restdent.al
rrcatme nt Program Supervtston of adolescents
ages 13 17 Apartment mclud ed sa lary and ex
cellent tnnge benefits Should have ex pertence
workmg w tth chtldren An equal e mplo yment/ at
flrm.llllle ac t•on emp loyer It quahfted contact
Juan•ta Atha Personne l Admm1strator
G J M Commun tty Mental Health Center Inc
412 Vu1ton Ptke Galhpolts, Oh•o 45631
or Call614 446 5500

7

---

15

Schools 1nstruct1on
Anyone mterested tn Trum
pet lessons for begmners
grades 4 6 call 949 2066 af
ter noon

Yard Sale

Yard Sale Tuesday June 24
at the corner of 124 and
Cetrroll
Streets
1n
Syracuse at the Na t han
Roush res•dence Large
family Also a boat for sa le
Ca ll 992 725ll

"·~-"-'M
"-'"'-"c"
el..::la::.:n-"e"o"u"'s__

One set ot left handed golf
clubs Call 742 3154

Mov.ng Sa le everyth.ng
goes ' Sunday June 22 24
25 26from 1 to 6 on Sunday
and 9 3 the other days Two
miles past Fa1rgrounds
Foil ow s•gns
lltnsura!!~

_ _

13

Insurance

AUTOMOB ILE
IN
SURANCE been can
cel led')
Lost
your
operator s 11cense? Phone
992 2143

_

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

SERVING SOUntEASTERN OHIO SINCE 18681
'

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOUHAVETHEtOVERAGE?

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS!
CALL US.

992·2342
OOWNING.QIILDS AGENCY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

If

:

Bus mess
Oppor-fumty
CASH Loan ne ver repay
tree details A L Lutton
p O Box 766 Ga llipOliS
Oh

21

22

--==--===-==
Mone"Y fo _L~!!_-

**'!.*~*********
:~~$$$]
: MONEY • MONEY*
• F1rst mortgages,:
• second mortgages,,.
:and
ref1nance,.
• cases ca II com-:
plete
Mortgag~•
,.servtces
'""'
lt-GalltpOIIS, OhiO at~
:446 1517 for more,.
Jt.Information and Jt.
*your appomtment

!

-!

*************•'
Professtona
23
I

Servtces
De luxe Ford fiberglass top
per to f1t e1ght foot bed
Call 992 7201

2V1 baths
rec room,
fireplace,
basement
garage At Mornmg Star
Hts , Lee Con~truchon 992
~45 4 or 9'12 5455

BeautifUl large home Low
ut111ties, bnck ranch style,
3 bedrooms 2 baths
fireplace full basement,
tam11y room, a1r con
d•t•oner. 3 car garage
Baum Addition, Meigs
County Call 985 4169
Pet
Assumpt1on
Beaut1fullarge brick ranch
style, low utllthes 3
bedrooms
2 112
baths,
llreplace full basement
tam•IY room, a1r con
dlttoner, 3 car garage
Baum Addtt•on Metgs Co
985 4169

8

32

Mob1le Homes
-~--''"'
or S-=
a.:.:le,___

PAP on the camera and t he
name ~nd address on the
case II found call 992 2264
LOSt In the VICIO!ty of
Nelsons Drug Store and
Adol ph s Datry Valley

IIRGtLB SR .~~~~
•2f' E Siconcl Strttl

Phone
l:! 614 J-992-332~

Ditch d•gg1ng serv1ce Call
773 5839 or 773 5788

RUTLAND
4
bedroom family home 2
baths, furnace, nat gas
c•ty water formal dm
1ng 2 ca r garage and
corner lot
Also 2
bus•ness rooms Only
$35 000
BEAUTIFUL - 12x60
Holly Par k 12x39 Rec
room w1th wood burner
gas forced a1r heat lots
of ca rpetmg, T P water
on one n1ce lay1ng acre
on blacKtop road Only
$35 000
POMEROY
3
bedrooms. 2 baths nat
gas furnace lot 100x125
above all floods wtth
v•ew of nve r Only
$12,500
2'1:t ACRES N1 ce
wOOdy spot tor YQUr
comfort Modern k• t
che n
ut1llfy room
cedar lmed close ts
beam Cell lOg 10 the IIV
1ng rm
w•th wood
burnmg firepl ace L1ke
new 1ns1de gs furnace
water and sewer Only
520 000 cash
MOBILE HOME OR
BUILDING LOTS - 1
acre S2500 00
Three
S5,000 00 or ten acres
$10 000 00 Trees and
water on hard road
FREE
PARKING
HOME PROTECTION
PLAN TO SAVE YOU
HEADACHES IN SELL
lNG

I · Magg•e s UpholStery
Rebuild ng
Ref n1Sh1ng
Reupholstery Fabnc and
v.nyl samp les Call 742
2852

8 Room House on ap
pro x•mately 2 acres St Rt
124 Lots of extras 992 7255
Assumable mortgage 9112
Pet 3 bedrooms 2 baths
full basement 2 car
garage R1ggscrest Manor
614 985 4329
THREE bedroom house tcfr
sate Two bath centra l
heat and a•r woodburner
complete carpeted huge
two ca r garage and
works hop
Loca ted .n
5yacose Ca ll992 3502
LOCATED 10 excellent
res1dent•al commun1ty
SpaCIOUS aTTraCtiVe maiO
tenetnce fr ee home located
on lovely acre lot Modern
k•tchen
family room
several bedrooms 2 baths
basement garage Low
ut ll11es 992 7727

General

HOBSTETTER

REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
Georges Hobstetter Jr
Broker
NEW LISTING - 24
acres of lu xunous coun
tr y estate Beau t•lul 3
bedroom home Ha ll
mark pool
orchard
garage and workshop
Many many features
too num erous to men
Tton Ca ll for more 1nto
Shown by appo~ntment
only
NEW LISTING
Large well built 2 story
home on Un on Avenue
3 bedrooms gas forced
a•r furna ce NICe s1ze
lot Garage tor ott street
park1ng Se ll1ng pnce
$16 500 DO
NEW LISTING - Large
11 room bn ck home 1n
Rutland Blown 1n 10
sulat1on modern k1t
chen w•th dtshwasher
Must see to apprec iate
Ask•ng $45 000 00
NEW LISTING
Acreage tor thar new
home• 1 Se llmg n 1 acre
trac ts A t1tfle b•t coun
try but not far from
town
Located on
Lead tng Creek Rd Call
for more deta•ls
MIDDLEPORT - Love
ly 2 story home on H1gh
St J bedrooms liVIng
room w•th f1rep lace k1t
c he n dtn1ng and l'h
baths Garage apart
ment for extra 10come
Only $53 ooo 00
POMEROY
Sot.d
bnck home on Condor
1 St
Well
worth
$26 500 DO
NEW HOME - Tota l
e lectnc 3 bedtoom on
an acre tn tHe country
$43 000 DO
FARM - 20 acres wtth
ntce home S49 500 oo
185 ACRES - Mlllerats
etnd house With old
bU1Id1ngs
En1ov your stJmmer and
let us worry about sell
mg your home We wtll
help buyers fmd fmanc
mg JUSt gtve us a call
Vetma N1c1nsky , Assoc
Phone 742 3092
Cheryl Lemley Assoc
Phone 742 3171

Loll and or Tra11er 10 M1d
dleport 647 S 2nd 773 9506

41 -

Hou··:s"'e""
s 1o:-:r:-;R""e"'n" t;---------3 Bedroom Home. R 1ggs

1973 Starcralt travel
trader
Fully
self
contatned w1th extras 992
5434,992 3129 or 992 59 !a

Crest Manor $'325 month
98S 4323

Housmg
I Headquarters

Real Estale

General

!
I
I

Savelll

!

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

to Buy
CHIP WOOD Poles max
d1ameter 10 on largest
end S 12 p er ton Bundled
stab $10 per ton Delivered
to Ohto Pallet Co Rt 1,

Oecoratect cakes for all oc
caslons Character cakes
and sheet cakes Call 992
6342 or 9'12 2583

ANTIQUES
FUR
NtTURE glass ch •na
anyth1ng See or call Ruth
Gosney ont1ques 26 ~
2nd, Mtddleport OH 992
3161

6 tf double duty Fngtda•re
meat case w new com
7

-~

Four bedroom house for
rent No pets Call 949 2253

30«

GOOD SUPPLY
SHRUBS
&amp; TREES

Homes
for Rent
2 Bedroom Mobtle Home,
furntshed kitchen elderly
couple preferred Depos1t
requ&lt;red No pets 992 2749
Mob1le Home, uttltt•es
paod, 1 ktd accepted No
pets, no drunks Steep10g
room for rent SO acres of
pasture John Sheets, 3112
mttes South Mtddleport
Rl 7

m

Barbecue
d tw1ce
m excellent condt
Sell
at 112 pnce Platform c
and arm cha1r New afghan
and other ttems Call 9'12
2961 any morntng before
10 00

M~bole

42

POMEROY
lANDMARK
POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220

RENTERS assiStance for
Sen1or Citizens In Vtllage
Manor apts Call 992 7787
1 bedroom, turn1shed apar
tment S12S month uhllt•es
not tnctuded 992 2288
Three room upsta1rs apart
ment with b•th C•ll 9'12
5&lt;&gt;21
46

Space lor Rent

...

.,_,

52

. . .. ..... . .
~

. . . . ...... .

CB TV, Radto
Equopment

Good used sound des1gn
stereo AM FM rad•o etght
tracK tape player, turn
table two speakers and
head phones Call 992 75~
53
Anttques
ATTENTION
liM
PORTANT TO YOU) Wtll
pay cast'! or cert1f1ed check
lor anttques and collec
t1bles or enttre estates
Nothmg TOO large Also,
guns pocket watches and
coin collections Call 614
767 3167 or SS! 3411

..'11

f

Stzes
From 30x30'
SMALL.

THE POOL PEOPLE

Utility Bu11d1ngs
Sttes from 4x4 to 1b40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

--SILVER

GOLD AN' D
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS
JEWELRY
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
Ml DDLEPORT
OH 10, DR CALL 9'12 3476

R:t l, Box S4

Rac1ne, Oh
Ph 614 843 2591
6 1s tfc

Ho~u:::
se:c;h::o70
Id GOOds

New Three Potnt post hole
diggers $225 00 New three
point wheel raKes S600 00
New three point five loot
rotary mower S430 00 Stx
foot three point $575 00
Boom poles US 00 Several
used stckle mowers Call
698 4061 Charles Chase

HILLCREST KENNELS
Board.ng all breeds Clean
1ndoor outdoor fac•lit1es
Also
AKC r eg1 stered
Dobermans 614 «0 779S
HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a homeless pet
Healthy , shots wormed
Oonattons requ•red 99!2
6260 noon 7 p m except
Tuesday, e mergency ca lls
only

GOLF LESSONS
Beginning &amp; Advanced
Scholarshops possllllt
for
high
school
students."
-CL UII REPAIRPiaytnt tfems clubS,
bags, t;Jalls, shoes, c•rts,
etc
1 Professional teachlnt
certtftcate
2 Played professional
tournaments In Ohio, W
\Ia , Kentucky
JOHN TEAFORD
614 985·3961
631 mo

mmer
For

T. L BURROUGH'S

SIDING, SOFFIT
Gutter&amp;
Replacement
Wmdowsand
Roofing

FREE ESTIMATES

CARPENTER'S
DANCE
STUDIO
IS NOW UNDERWAY
The Last Day To Stgn
Up Is July 14th
BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAZZ '
For More 1ntormat1on

Print
Shop
T shtrt and novelty
shtrts tor pollltcans,llall
tams, busmesses or In
dtvtduats
Sh1rts S4 00 Each
"We print ALMOST
anythong on ALMOST
anyth1ng•
Ph 614 949 2351
E vemngs &amp; Weekends
6 16 tfc

19 7S Mer c ury Bobcat
Wagon, standard, good
m1leage a~o~ocado w1th
woodlook tnm GOOd con
d•t•on
$1 SOD 00 f•rm
Grover Wh1te Jr Bashan
Keno Road Long Bottom
OhiO 1 614 949 2824

eHOWARD
ROTOVATO~

e V-CHISEL
PLOW

LEO

MORRIS
Rutland, 0 .
Ph. 742· 2455

Ph yr old male red Dober

S 21 1 mo

HOOF HOLLOW Horses
and ponies and ndmg
lessons
Everythtng
Imaginable In horse eqUip
ment
Blankets. belts ,
boots, etc Engtlsh and
Western
Ru t h Reeves
16141 698 3290
REGISTERED
m•te
walker coon hOund Wtll
run and tree Call 949 2545
57

73

Vans&amp;4W 0

SMALL

1974 JEEP CJ5 $1900 00
Ca II 949 2545
74

Business-Farms-ParrnersnlpS
and Corporat1ons
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state torms.-

Motorcycles

1979 740cc Yamaha Special
w extras low m tleage 992
576/J

Musical
Instruments

618 E Mam

we are ptck&lt;ng up severat
repossessed and trade 10
ptanos and organs In your
area Prtces from S25C and
up Call cred1t manager
today 304 485 2170

&amp; bl"tSfBEk

Si1es from 4K6 to UK...,

P&amp;S BUilDINGS
Rt 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph 614·143 2591
6 14 t mo

992-3795

otft

1974 KawasaKo 100 5300
Exc cond 742 2747

VINYL SIDING

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

ROOFING

All types of roof work,
new or repatr guHers
and downspouts, guHer
cteanJng and palnllng
All work guaranteed

Farm Equipment

BUILDINGS' I All steel
clear span build1ngs Our
lowest pnce m over two
years
Examples••
30 x48 x12 for $3 672 00
40'x72'x14 for S5 752 00
48 x72 xU for $6 594 oo,
60 x125 xl6 lor $15 «7 00
Call collect today for pnce
guaranteed 1 614 294 2675
t1ll8pm

Pomeroy, Oh.

1974 360 Yamaha Enduro
S45C 992 3844

1979 Kawasakt motorcycle
400 LTD t.ke new wtth 1200
miles Lots of extras Call
742 3154

Farm suppues

UtMity Buiklinp

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATIO_It

For larger Sizes

REP~ENT WIN~
Serving your area for 25 years.
Call Now f11r Large Savmgs
For Free Estimate Call

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2142
949-2160
1 22-lfc

$2()11' &amp; UP

WANT AD INFORMATION

FOR

SILVER
DOllARS
949-2801

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept
111 Court St., PomeroY', 0., 45769

Supenor Vmyl Products

5 29 1 mo

Vinyl and Aluminum

Siding

BISSEll
SIDING 00.

Roller, Brush and Spray •
Work
- Fully Insured
- Free Eshmates
- Inlerlor &amp; Exterior
Work

Most Dates
r..o ~unday Calls

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322
Gheen's
Painting
&amp;
Sandblasting Co.

STILL PAYING

Wnte your own ad and order by mail with thts
coupon cancel your ad bY phone when you get
results Money not refundable

31711 Noble Summrl Rd
Moddleport Ohto
9'12 5724
Sales service and supplies In ground and
above ground pools
51 lfc

CALL 949-2710

call for Free Siding
Est1mate, 949~21G1 or
949-2160 No Sunday
ails

949-2AA'

6 13 1 mo

s 23 1 mo

1 Addreu _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I
I
I
I
I

Phon•~---------------

I

I I Wanted
I 1 For Sale
1 1 Announcement
1 1 For Rent

I
I
I
I 2
I 3
I 4
I s
I 6
I
I· 7

II :
1
I

II
I1
I
I
I

J
I
I

J-A.,.,.,nc.,.,Mts

4-Giv..way

Four

, • ..,...
41-l...ce for ltl'll

14-lua/nna Tr•ll'llfll

RHIO TV

eMERCHANOISE
51- HtuHfle-.ONft
52--CI, TV, Rdio lctVIPRttnl
D-Antf41HI
S+-Miac M.,dNndl••
SJ-Iu114111nt SUJtlfiUH

•FINANCIAL
U-MMey to LNn

2J-I'rtfftll01'1at

u- s..-a rtrttllatt

eREALESTATE

J1-Aut.s ttr ....

s.r1111cn

I
I

-----·
I

-----1

------:11

-----,--1
- - - - •.

7)-Vat&amp;&lt;IWD

32--Md/ltftomtt
ffW ,.,.
Q-,.armsforSalt
M-•u•l1111a aun•l~tts
J5-Lon a Acr..,.

74-Matwqctft
7,__
..... '•"'

J7- Rtaltorl

Ul'iRVtCI'iS

•

Here 11t the ltlltt n •

want-Ad Advarttsfng
Dtadllnts

~IOf'lft

11-Mtmetffl,ronmentl
1)-PiulftiM•t I llCIII'all"t
Q--I"CIII'atlnt
14-IIKtrleal

llefrl...-atiCII'I

4' M D.-ily
11NMftlaturdi!J

lf-GtRerll MIUIIfll
11-MM l .... lr

ferMoMIY

17-Y.......tery

30
32 _ _ _ __

33•: - - - - - -

14

34 - - - - - - , - - 35 _ _ _ ___;_

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Datly Sentmel
Box 729
Pomerov, Oh. 45769

Rates and Other Information

..

1SWitnllaorU ......

,, •• .,.y.
I d.,

......
...'"

c...

6Ny1

....

CIMr..

Ill
,,.
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AIM AMI
The Dally Sentinel

Cement work
v.nton
Cement Floor Company,
Bidwell, Ohio, 388 9877 All
concrete work basement,
driveways, etc , etc

zo
Wilt 17 Sl; ... '"" '"
111011 Prill IIAIIl, lllllllSS,

83

1~1

ZIP, Sill, Mil sm£ - · ·
Btlsy womt11 the fostest to-sew
fesh1011s ere tn ovr NEW SPRING

SIJMMER PATTERN CATAlOG'
Dresses tops )ICI!eb panb

lt11 tMMtry taN t1 tM~tln aN O.ltulty • Clfth ,... wwt1. SJ N

Send Sl lor Cat.loi.
IZ7.AIIIIali '1' Dliiitl $1.!10
lft.4111Cl!Ealr T....... $1 50

Plvs $1 75 "" 1111ttrn coupon

rwlnln"'"' Cath lft HlllaMD
M•nt Home Mlft •N Y:t,. ..... ar•

acc~tt~tW ~~t~IJ •Uti ca... wlftt

hniiMI

,.core., ...

u~s-..sa.

;...- ---- -~---------·-·------·~'"1'11..--------------~--,---~

'

and
electpamhno
Free Esttmates
roofmg
plumbtng
Call Chorles Smclatr 985
4121
Flooring, ce11ing paneling,
dOOrs and Windows also
p•Intmg 9'12 2759

IMftwttftwtttMmw.ltnum ,,...,.. ••• clfttl,.rwont,.ray
" ' ' runrtlne • .._. thM mnHCUIIII't NYt Win . . CMr~Nat tN 1.. ,

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

- Addonsand
remodllng
-Roofmg and gutter
work
-Concrete work
- Plumbing and
electr1ca1 work
(Free Eshmatesl

UZ.q.Jit Ori;Mls

,._,. suo

-

$1.50

- V.C. YOUNG Ill

;:;
992 62 U or
Pomeroy, Oh
992 7314

Steam c lea ned
Free ~;=::::;;~;;~::~~~;=::::iT.~~~:::::estJmate
Reasonable 1
Electnc•l
84
ra tes Scotchguard 992 84
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration
6309 or 742 2211
&amp; Refngerat•on
_
SEWING
MACHINE
Roofing siding, room ad
BOWERS
Rep,;urs, servtce, all ELWOOD
dtllons all types of general makes
Sweepers, ,
992 2284
The REPAIR
repairs, 25 years exp 992 Fabrtc Shop
toasters Irons, .all smell
Pomeroy
3406
Authonzed Singer Sl!les apptoances Lawn mower
and Ser~o~1ce We sharpen Next to Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985
Will do remodeltng , Sc1ssors
3825

$175flriiCII ...........
fir lldl ,.tllrll fir IIIII rim
linuil Mil hodlh a. $M!I t.:
hllont O.,l

31 _ _ _ __

lops

IOU II loooe Jusl IS muc:h nut
INIOII IS IOU do Soft
SieMS, SCIIt lltllers softly lilred
to pop ower pants, skirts.
Pnntecl Pllllrn 4529 Hill
Silts 12\1, 14\1 16\1 18\1,
20\1 Womens SIZes 34 36 38
40 42, 44 46 48

77- AutDRIINir

,._.......... w.. ...

'19

Home
Improvements
s &amp; G carpet Cteanmg

•TRANSPORTATION

l1-HM1ft for, ...,

----~ .

81

72-Truct~:s tor llle
tJ-LIVMtoO
M-Hiy 1 Gral~t

:n - IUslrtett

Rea state ..a.na
11'1•% Interest 30 Yrs
PARK Fl NANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automellc
Loans, No Down P11y·
ment Federal Housing
Loans, 3% dawn on
S2S,OOO, .5% down on\
balance FHA 265 Subsidy Program FNA :J45.
Gradual Paymtnt Mon.
OpenM W Ft 001o1 00
OlhtrTimH
BY Appointment
Office 992·7544
'"'
Home H2-6191
~
107 Sycamore 51
;
Pomero OH
..

1..,1

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp;LIVISTOCK
•t-Parm
u-wanttd••"'"'~~'~'
to luy

~tUI'IIty

17
18
19
20

new

u-Pitl tor Salt

I CIRt,.lr
1t-W•ntec1Te Dt

These cash rates
Include diScount

l1ke

One wh1te topper for an
etght foot bed pickup $100
Call 992 7019

1s-sctJOetstnltntctt~n
1.,_

tires

4329

47-W•ntecltoWent
• ~Equi~MM~~t for Rfftt

11-HIIII W•ltttcl

"YOUMGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

6 00x14 6 ply nylon $25 985

4

12-SitvatH wu,_,
1)-Insurance

Auto Parts
&amp; A.ccessones

..,_jLAprertmtl'lt lor Rent

a.,

12
13
15
16

.... ,. .....

76

• .,.,

_.,_MoltUt Homes

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28

10 ·- - - - - 11

eRENTALS
'1-Moulfl tor

5--Halti"Acls
t-Lost anct PMIMI
7- YarciS.II•
t-PuiNkSall
&amp; Auct5on
1&gt;-WIUIIod 10

Print one word 111 each
space below Each Ill
1 &lt;l&lt;al or group ofl&lt;oures
1 counts as a word Count
name and address or
I phone number If used
I You'll get better results
I tl you describe fully
1 give prtce The Senttnel
I reserves the right to
ctasstly, edit or reject
I any ad Your ad will be
I put m the proper
I classtltcallon II you II
11check the proper box
1 below

I
I
I
I

•ANNOUNCEMENTS
1-tarGoiTfltnlu
2-ln Memoriam

I

/

Farm Buildings

OLD COINS pocket wat
ches, class rings wedd1ng
bands d1amonds Gold or
s11ver Call J A Wamsley
142 2331 Treasure Chest
Cotn Shop Athens, OH 592
6462
---~~---

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

Pels tor Sale

61
5-1-

ALL STEEL

man w&lt;th papers 5100 773
9506

COUNT-RY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy Large lois Call
992 7479
0 . ..... . . ... "

___ _

1979 Honzon automatiC
p s p b am fm stereo
cassette player 992 2580 at
fer4p m

Mam St.
Pomeroy 992 -2181

44

3 AND 4 RM furntshed ap
ts Phone 992 5434

~o~~~Y-IJ!1_2~!

Business Services

71.~--~A~u~t~o~s~lo~r~S~a~t•~~

56

Apartment
for Rent

Woinfed

61

20% OFF

TWO bedroom tr all er
Adults only
Brown s
Trailer Court Call 9'12 3324

992 " "
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949 :2660
Roger or Dott1e Turner
742 2474
Offoce Phone 992 2259

Curb Inflation.Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and

Mac Merchantse
MAY 23 to June 30 lll"o off
greenware sale Brmg a
contatner 9 e m to 9 p m
Drehel s Ceram1~5 59 N
Second Ave, Middleport
992 2751

pressor

NEW LISTING - NEW
CO NSTR UCTION
NEW SU BDIVI SO N - 6
rooms, 111.- story, 3
bedroom home w1th 1•12
baths on a beaut1ful
wooded 1 75 Acre lot on
Golf Course Road
F 1replace back deck
overlooking wooded lot
All for only $42 ooo 00
NEW LISTING- MID
OLE PORT - 5 room 2
story home With base
ment
2 3 bedrooms
bath F A gas furnace
on a 62x52 tot $19 000 00
LET*RT 12x60
MObtl~ Home on 60x120
lot 3 bedrooms utlltty
bUJid1ng Close to nver
new
br.dge
etnd
hydroptant $16 000 00
CLOSE IN - 1'h story
frame on 6lr.. acres 5
rooms~ 2 bedrOt\ms part
basement, forced atr
heal Just 527 500 00
VERY NICE
3
bedroom. full basement
w b f p Sttttng porch
wtt h v1ew of nver 1112
s ton es of excellent
l1veablltty
Must be
seen Only $28 500 00
BEAUTIFUL 315 ACRE
YAR o - 2 story bnck &amp;
frame house Has 2
fireplaces
ongmal
woodwork 2 baths, 4
bedrooms dtn1ng room
family room and part
basement S27 000 00
WE HAVE A BIG
SELECTION OF PRO
PERTIES, JUST DROP
IN'
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland Jr

-rr--------·--'·;;..·-·-,-·-·-·---,~.·---

I

ce~s_S7500

wv

Kodak Camera Wtth bUilt

D1tch d•gg,ng serv 1ce Call
773 5839 or 773 5788

Real Estate

There wtll be a sale ot
property
formerly
belongtno to Vtctor Letfheit
on the Courthouse steps tn
Pomeroy al 10 a m Mon
day June 30 Property
located one mile from
Courthouse on Sprino
Avenue, 1n Pomeroy Seven
acres of ground old farm
house and old barn
Mtntmum that would be ac

1969 12x60 two bedroom
Hollypark tratler
Fur
n1shed ac washer metal
outbutldmg under plnmng
Ca II 992 2881

-

54

Sale
----for
-1973 F••rpotnt Ux65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron 14x65 2
bedr
tY/1 Fleetwood, 14x6S 3
bdr bafh 1n
19'11 Shake5pear, l4x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12xS2, 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood 12x63 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES PT PLEASANT,
304 675 4424

m flash With the 1n1t1als

J and F Backhoe Serv.ce
L1censed and bonded Sep
t1 c tank 1nstallat•on Water
a nd gas lmes Excavat1ng
work and trans1t layout
Call 992 7201

Well cared tor home ca r
pet throughout w•t h fhree
bedrooms P t 2 baths witfi
shower l•v•ng room for
mal d1n10g room large eat
1n k1tchen Refr1gera tor
electr 1c stove water sot
tener
draper•es
tour
rooms 1n basement two
fin shed
Furnace room
and workshop Mu5t see to
apprec•ate Call992 5865

'

~;==~~§~;;~~~;§§~;;;.~i:iii~:;f
RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

CARPOSHOP
"Drive A Li"le Sal.te A Lot"
SHOPtSFULLYSTOCKED
CANDY STRIPED
2 black f'Hded
Sq Yd

Excavat1ng

VINYL Fl80R
COVERINGS
Sq Yd $41J

CARPET

$49t -

Water well drilling Tom
Lewis
30• 895 3802
Seasonal discount on all
pumps and accessones

~

=

G!n! rat}iaull!'i
WILL HAUL tomestone and
gravel Also, lime haulmg
and spreading Leo Morns
Truckti'U Phone 742 24.55

-----..--- -- ---

Main St.

742-2211

,

�10-l'hc l&gt;ail) Seullucl, Maddkp1 •rt- 1'&lt;&gt;1~&gt;~11 •) , U.. Mullllil)', Juuc :!:1, l!IIJO

Milkman's death
strange case for
Jackson ·coroner

: I
I

.I

JACKSON, Ohio (AP) ..:. Jackson
County coroner Charles Gaskill has
handled a lot of cases in the 43 years
he's held the job, but the one he
remembers best was the milkman
who was'scared to death.
It took Gaskill a long time to convince anybody that dying of fright is
possible.
But pathologists now believe fear
can cause heart damage and
sometimes death. Gaskill knew it all
along.
The inciden( took place about 35
years ago during . World War II,
GaskiU recaUs.
Milk still was sold in bottles, 'and
there :was a shortage of the glass
containers. Empty bottles were left
for the milkman to return to the
dairy.
One Jackson County man believed
· that when he bought' the milk, he
also bought the bottles and refused
to return them. Eventually he had a
horde of empties sitting on his back
porch.
The milkman was dispatched
retrieve the bottles, Gaskill .said,
and early one morning he approached the porch. The milkman
picked up a half dozen bottles and
was leaving when the resident fired
a sh~tgun blast behind him.

MU ...-LER CRACKDOWN
A crackdown ,..111 take place lmmedlately lo Pomeroy agahut loud
mufflers aod squeallug of lire•,
Pollee Chief Charles R. McKinDey;
warned today .
.
Chief McKinney reports that a
new part·tlme patrolmao, WIUlam
~·hite of Bidwell, has begun his
duties with the Pomeroy Pollee
Department.

The milkman collapsed forward
on his face, dead and still clutching
the bottles.
" He died ·standing up," Gaskill
said. "He made no instinctive attempt to break his fall. "
As cause of death, the coroner
wrote fright on the death certificate,
after determining the milkman was
in' good health and seeing no other
apparent reason.
Gaskill said he sent the certificate
off to Ohio health department officials, who promptly returned it
with the cause of death circled in
red.
,
The milkman's wife and children
were denied workmen's compensation because health department officials wouldn't accept fright
as the reason.
Gaskill, now the only coroner in
Ohio who isn't a doctor, had the
milkman's body exhumed and an
autopsy conducted by a pathologist.
Gaskill said the pathologist told
him the victim "could have lived to
be 100. " However, they still didn't
have a cause of death.
"The pathologist paused for a
moment and then said fright was as
good as anything," Gaskill said. The
doctor filled in the death certificate
and the document was accepted.

Area deaths ·
Bruce Nibert
Bruce M. Nibert, 30, a resident of
2620 Mt. Vernon Ave., Pt. Pleasant,
died in Columbus Saturday following
an automobile accident.
He was an employee for the Indiana and Michigan Electric Co. and
attended St. Paul Lutheran Church
iniomeroy.
He was born Nov. 29, 1949, in Mansfield, son of Dr. George D. Nibert,
Jr. and Anna Mae Brown Nibert, Pt.
Pleasant.
One brother, Byron J. Nibert,
Philadelphia, Pa., survives, along
with one son, Matthew Nibert, Pt.
Pleasant.
Mrs. Freda Miller, Pt. Pleasant, a
grandmother, survives.
Funer!ll services will be held I
p.m. Tuesday at the Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home with Rev. William
Middlesworth and Rev. George
Weirick officiating.
·Burial will be in Kirkland
Memorial Gardens. Friends may
call at the funeral home today from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

Draft may
be abolished
•
ln France
PARIS (AP) - While Americans
talk about bringing back the draft,
the French Parliament is talking
about shortening conscription - and
perhaps even abolishing it.
Pacifists want the draft abolished
on moral grounds, while some
generals and civilian ·defense ex·
perts are saying it should be
eliminated because it nets far more
recruits than France needs.
The most concrete proposal before
the parliamentary committee
probing France's military readiness
is to shorten the period of conscription from 12 montha to four.
The proposal was made by committee . head Yves Lancien, a
Ga~t ·and veteran of France's Indochina wars. Lancien complains
that the anny that made Napoleon
great is today "half-motivated, halftrained, half~uipped for half·dear

Charlie Huber
C. (Charlie) Huber, ril, a resident
of 35 Grape St., Gallipolis, died
Saturday at 3 p.m. at his son's home
in Silver Springs, Md.
He was born April 10, 1892, in
Pomeroy, son of the late Jacob and
Elizabeth Start Huber.
He married Dora NWUJenkamp in
Gallipolis on Dec. 25, 1919. She
preceded him in death on Jan. 23,
1978.
One son survives, Charles Huber
Sr., Silver Springs; three grand and
five great-grandchildren survive.
Charles Huber II, Gallipolis, is a
local grandson.
Two brothers preceded him in
death.
Mr. Huber was a World War I
veteran, and was a member of the
Gallipolis Elks Lodge, Lafayette
post No. 27, American Legion and
Presbyterian Church. ·
Mr. Huber was active in Boy Scout
work for several )'Mrs.
The Hubers owned and operated
Eddie's Place on the 400 block of
Second Ave., for several years.
Private funeral services will be
held 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at the
McCoy-Wetherholt-Moore Funeral
Home, Gallipolis with Rev. Frank
Hayes officiating.
'
Burial wil be in Mound Hill.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Tuesday from 6 until9 p.m.

fought on the ground see conscription as a vital factor.
Former Defense Minister Pierre
Messmer proposed to the Lancien
committee that it abolish the draft
and depend wholly on volunteers.
Lancien believes the elite strike
forces used to protect France's overseas interests can be manned by
paid volunteers. A four-month conscription period, he says, would give
recruits ample basic training.
without disrupting their studies or
work prospects. He even suggests
that recruits choose their own date
for being drafted.
The most recent opinion poll finds
that 64 percent Of Frenchmen favor
a draft. But the Sl!me poll shows that
50 percent think the system is inefficient.

month,

I FI'IIICII military. generals are

l!llarpJ)' divided on the draft iBBue.
TJIQI8 who beijeve F~nce's security
dependa Clll ita nuclear power think
the sovef.nment II drafting far more
yoaU. than It needs. 1'lw8e who exped another Europeap , war to he

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions-Wendell
Barrett, Langsville; Mary Day,
Middleport; Mearlene Arnett,
Pomeroy: Phyllis Whaley, Shade;
Nina Craddock, Middleport; Ron
Capehart, Pomeroy; Charlotte
Clark, Racine.
Saturday Discharges-Patricia
Custer, Thelma Dill, Nettie Hemsley, John Moon, Nellie Perry,
Lucille Wise, Martha Haggerty, Joe
Moore.
Sunday Admissions-Ronald Hanson, Middleport; Bonnie LeMaster,
Pomeroy; John Koehler, Pomeroy;
Pauline CWUJingham, Minersville;
Homer Graham, Racine; Debora
Ridgway, New Haven; Paul Andrews, Long Bottom.
Sunday Discharges-Ivor Logan,
Barbara Lewis, Irene Russell, ClarcieWebb.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES JUNE 20
Mrs. Micahel Blankenship and
daughter, Everett Bridges, Edna
Burnett, Alice Casto, Sharon
Cooper, Almila Corwin, Todd Cox,
Lawhana Goodnight, Rhoda Hoffman, Amanda Humphreys, Chrystal
Israel, Suzanne Jackson, Jennifer
J~ffers, Albert Keeton Jr., Donald
Kirk, Darla Mahone, Jean Martin,
Brandace McComb, Hazel McCoy,
Everett McQuire, Cora Miller, Mrs.
James Mitchell and son, Jbe Moore,
Albert Pierce, Walter Pope, Clara
Powell, Cheryl Pugh, Michael Riley,
Cheryl Roble, Kenneth Robinette,
Phyllis Rowland, John Sower, Belva
Smith, Albert Sowards, Mabel
Swann, Edda thompson, Larry VanCooney, Liziie Walker.
BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. Don Saunders,
daughter, Scottown.
'
DISCHARGES
Robert Austin, Landolph Blackburn, Eileen Cahoon, Dorothy
Camp, Myrtle Coon, Margaret
Dlckeos, Gladys Grant, Ken Gray,
David Hoke, Jeff Holley, Mary Mc-Carley, Gall McCalskey, Naoole
·M,.rcer, Mn. Dayrus Mimtgomery
and daughter, Lori Oliver, Joyce
Peterson, Bill Riley, Sharon Russell,
Edward Ryan, Amanda Sturgill,
Clyde Summers Jr., Clara Thomas,
.JobD Walton.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Bailey,
daughter, Pt. Pleasant; Mr. and
Mrs. Geroge Kilgour, son, Oak Hill;
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Saunders, son,
Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Work·
man, daughter, Jackson.
DISCHARGES
Mrs. Micahel Berne and daughter,
Mrs. Ron Denny and son, Patricia
Gerrard, Ray Harbolt, Mrs. Jeff
Howell and twin daughters, Mrs.
Nand Labha and daughter, Mrs.
Richard Shadau and son, Don
Sprague, Alden Weidemeyer, BIR·
THS
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Arthurs,
daughter, Ironton; Mr. and Mrs.
Brent Cooper, daughter, .Oak Hill;
Mr. and Mrs. John Lusher, son,
Crown City; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Manuel, daughter, Racine.
LAYOFF ON WAY
WARREN, Ohio CAP) - Warren
officials are hoping to avert the
layoff of more than two dozen city
workers with a compromise
agreement reached with council's
finance committee.
City Auditor Hannah Cickell said
legislation is being prepared for the
full council to authorize a $98,000
transfer of funds. Mrs. Cickell said
the finance committee agreed to
reshuffle money from the police and
firefighters severance fund and
from law department, auditor and
waste water treatment budgets.

Carter reaffinns comrnibnent

booked by contacting McClung. Making up the' group
YOUNG BELIEVERS - This relatively new CO!'·
are: front, I to r, Jayne Hoeflich, Lori Kloes; second
t.emporary Chistlan vocal group of the Middleport Firrow, 1 to r, tina East, Lynh Kloes, Cindy Parl!;er,
st Baptist Church has been making numerous appearances at various churches in Meigs County. They . ·Vickie Boyles, Joy Hudson; third, I tor, Craig Darst,
Angie Houchins, Stephanie Houchins, and Randy
are under direct of the Rev. Mark McClung and may be
Osborne.

Meigs County happenings
TUESDAY MEETING
The Long Bottom Senior Citizens
Club will meet at the Long Bottom
United Methodist Church Tuesday
morning for a ·free blood presSure
clinic from 10 a.m. to noon. The
clinic is open for persons of all ages.
ASK TOWED
A marriage license was issued to
Donald Lawrence Stivers, 22, Middleport, and Betsy Lee Amsbary, 21,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy.

POMEROY

FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1980

TUPPERS PlAINS

• •·
••'

:I00-71111lbs. :;o,7H2.61l.

Slaugher Bulls (over 1,000 ltE.. ) 43 . 7~ . 20 ;
SlBughter Cows : utilities 41.7&gt;47 , Canners-·
CUUets 37-4:3.50.
Cow-calf Pairs (by the unit) ~. Veals
(choice-prime ) 'l().M.60, Baby Calves (by the

beadl 113-95.

Hogs (No. 1 Rarrows-Gilts ) Zlt).230 lbs. 33.50,

.NATIONAL BANK

SOUTHGATE, Ky. - Lawrence Kane Jr., trustee of the settlement
fund for victims of the 1977 Beverly HiUs Supper Club fire, said he feels
no pressure to sell the 43-acre site where the night spot stood. •
The Richard Schilling family , former owners of the night club site,
transferred ownership Monday to plaintiffs in lawsuits stemming
from the May 28, 1977, fire that killed 165 people.
The transfer was part of their $3 millipn out-of-court settlement. The
Schillings agreed to turn over either $1 .2 million, the appraised value
of the site, or the land by Monday.

Two hurt in three accidents .:

Statue target ·of thieves
CLEVELAND - A 250-pound statue of Jesus was the latest target of
thieves who cut through a fence at St. Joseph Church in Cleveland,
police say.
The 4t-foot-tall copper statue was moved, but the thief was unable to
get away with it. It was the second such attempt, said Rev. Albert
Men:.
Robbers four weeks earlier made off with a smaller copper statue of
Saint Francis from'the same courtyard, according to Men:.
The base of the statue of Jesus sustained minor damage in the incident Sunday, but the statue, estimated to be worth $2,500, was unscathed, Men: said.

Sheriff Cardarelli steps down
AKRON, Ohio- Summit County Sheriff Anthony J. Cardarelli, who
has promised never to seek public office again in Ohio, steps down
from his job on July 4.

Cardarelli, 41, submitted his resignation to county commissioners
on Monday, and they named David Troutman, 38, as interim sherlff.
On June 6, Cardarelli agreed to resign within 30 days alter pleading
guilty to three counts of dereliction of duty and one count of obstruction of official business in connection with a public corruption investjgation.

Weather forecast

· OFFICIALPARADEENTRYFORM
.
'

NAME : .................................... ·... . .. . ........... ..

TYPE OF ENTRY •.... ' . . ••.. ' ...... •. . .. ' .. ' ..•.. ' ... ' .. ' .. ' .. ''

Mostly cloudy tonight with a chance of showers and thWlderstorms. Low tonight in the mid to upper 60s. Mostly sunny Wednesday with a chance of thunderstorms. High in the mid to upper 80s.
The chance of rain is 50 percent tonight and 30 percent Wednesday.

ADDRES.S .••.•• •• .....••• ••• , ••• . ~ .•• •••....•• •• ...... • ,,, ...... .
PHONE .... .. ..... . ..... . ... .. .............. : ....... .. . . ... ... .
Parade starts at 11 a ..m. at Middleport, on South Second Ave. Parade
lineup Is at 10 a. m. The parade ends In Plimeroy on Condor Street.

Thursday through Saturday: Fair though the period. Highs In the
80s. Lows In the mld to upper 60s early Thursday and the upper 60s to
mJd 80s early Saturday.

Butcher Sows2t7~UO,
Butcher Boars 25.80-26, Feeder Pigs (by the
bead) 6.50-29.

TOMBSTONES VANDALIZED
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department Is investigating an act of vandalism that occurred at Greenwood
Cemetery.
The department was notlfied
Saturday morning that six tombstones had been overturned.
Apparently the vandals were on
foot as there were no vehicle tracks
near the stones.

,.

ELBERFELD$
WAREHOUSE

PATIO TURF

J;

-12FT. and 6FT. WIDTHS IN~
-GRASS GREEN AND BlACK/GREEN lWEED
-PERFECT FOR PORCHES, PATIOS, POOlS,

MIDDLEPORJ, 0.
.

THE CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY
POMEROY, 0.

1.~. .
. ..............-·. .~·-· -----~-----....... .

ONLY

•495 Sit

.'

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.

6

ELBERFELD$
WAREHOUSE

~

'

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~

'·

Mechanic St., Pomny
'

.

,.
I

·.~ ;
'

Price Index, it said.
Tbereportalso.showed:
- Substantial declines in the price
of beef, pork, and eggs, which offset
.
for rrm,s,
·•· vegetab!
ancreases
· es,
dairy products, cereal, bakery
products and sugar. Restaurant
meals and alcoholic beverages rose
0.5 percent and 0.7 percent, respec·
tave
' 1y, m
· May .
.
.
- Home fmancmg costs shot up 3
· of homes
percen1, wh'1le th e pnce
rose 1.3 percent. Although govern·
ment-backed FHA and VA mortgage
.
rates dropped substanltally, con·
ventional rates continued to rise.
- Natural gas and electricity
·
d
charges mcrease
4.8 percent and
2.5 percent, respec t·ave1Y, wh'l
il
1e o

Settlement fund trustee won't sell

Regatta participants sought

IUNE 21, 1180
Fetder Steers: (good-choice ), 300-500 lbs.
63.S0..79, 500-700 lba. $-70; Feeder Heifers (goodchoice/ 300-000 lbs . ~UQ-70, 500-700 lbs. ~ . 50-00 ;
Fe«&lt;er Bulls lgoockhoice). · ~ Ills. 67·71,

nings adjusted for inflation 'have
dropped7.7percent.
The moderating inflation trend in
May was led by gasoline, which
decun
" ed m
· pnce
· by 0.6 percent and
foosl , which increased a slight 0.3
percent, two-tenths of a percentage
point less than the month before.
.
These figures are seasonally ad·
· ted .
JUS
.
.
.
The drop m gasoline pnces was
th e 1·1rst smce
·
August 1977, the
departmentsaad.
Only housing costs jwnped sharply - 1.5 percent - as recent drops
in mortgage rates have yet to show
up in the Conswner Price Index the
. '
department reported. Housmg
expenses accounted for thre~uarters

NEW YORK - It was the kind of blaze big-city firefighters have
.learned to dread - Hames spurting from a 42-story Park Avenue
skyscraper, more than 100 firefighters felled by toxic smoke and heat
and an unknown number of people trapped inside the concrete and
glass tower.
The fire in the Westvaco Building, opposite the fasbionable Waldorf·
Astoria Hotel in midtown Manhattan, raged out of control for three
hours Monday night as shards of glass fell onto the street below.
Streams of water gushed from the 20th floor executive offices of the
Bank of America, where the blaze apparently began.

hours alinounced

.

· THE RACINE HOME

,.
'

Middleport pool

ATIIENS LI~ESTOCK SALES
MARKET REPORT

prices rose 0.9 percent in May, the
same as in April and far less than
therampantpacesetduringthefirst
three months of 1980, the govern·
men t .saa'd tod ay.
If May 's price rise continues lor
an entire year, the annual iliflation
rate would be a compound 10.9 per·
,
cent, t he Labor Department saad.
F rom J anuary throug h Marc h, t hat
rate exceeded 18 percent.
Sorne .econonus
· Is pr edi ct that the
annualmflat10n rate could fall to 8
percent or less by the end ·of the
.
.
year, as mterest rates continue to
fall and the recession continues.
In a companion report, the Labor
Department reported that
·
· May
take-home pay m
Amencans'

Skyscraper fire fells 100 firemen

SQUAD RUNS
CHAMBER SESSION .
;
The Middleport Emergency Squad
A special meeting of the Mid- '
was called to Maple St. atl2:27 a.m. , dleport Chamber of Commerce will •
Sunday for Penny Smith who had be held at 7 this eveiling at the of- "
fallen. She was taken to Pleasant !ices of Columbia Gas. All mer- ~·
Valley Hospital. At 5:16p.m. Satur- chants are urged to attend.
'
day the unit went to South Third
Ave., lor Nina Craddock, a medical
SPECIAL SESSION
.patient, who was taken to Veterans
A special meeting of Pomeroy :.
Memorial Hospital.
Village Council will be held at 8 p.m. ,
Tuesday at.!'omeroy Village HalL '
.,

FARMERS BANK
RUTlAND

"'·
,,

.

BOATS.OR DECKS

BANK ONE

BELGRADE, Yugoslavia - President Carter arrived in Belgrade
today, reaffirming Ame~ica 's collllhitment to "a strong, independent
. and non-aligned Yugoslavia'' and its support for detente.
Emphasizing his backing for Yugoslavia's unique role in Eastern
Europe, Carter paid tribute to the late Josip Broz Tito, the architect of
the communist country's in.dependent policies.
"My pleasure in visiting this proud and beautiful land is tempered
by the sorrow we all feel at _the passing of'President Tito.

Pomeroy Police investigated failing to yield the right of way. ·
There were medium damages and .
three accidents Sunday evening.
At 7: 31 p.m., a· car driven by both drivers were taken to Veterans ·
Patricia Corsi, Route 2, Pomeroy Memorial Hospital for treatment of ·
was struck in the rear by a motor- injuries.
At 8:19p.m. the third aCcident oc- .
. cycle driven by Don Price, Cheshire.
curred near the intersection of :
Corsi
was
attempting
to
make.
a
Starting July 1st the Middleport
Routes 33 and 7 north of Pomeroy ·
turn into the 3-In-1 · fWgtaurant.
Pool will be open Monday through
wbere a car driven by James Fisher, :
There
were
light
damages
and
Price
Friday from 12 noon to 5 p.m, and J.G
was charged witli not having a Hurricane, W.Va., was attempting a ·
p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays.
motorcycle endorsement. He was left turn from 33 onto Route 7 and ·
June 30 - July 11 - Basic Rescue
taken
to Veterans Memorial turned into the path of a car driven
and Water Safety (Jr. Life Saving),
by Nancy Collins, Columbus.
Hospital
lor treatment of injurijlS.
ages 11 and up; adults 18 and over;
There were medium damages and
At
3:57p.m.,
a
car
driven
by
Enest
advanced beginner, beginners and
Bowers, Etna, traveling south on Fisher was cited on a charge of .
babies.
Ebenezer St. eased onto Main St., af- failing to yield the right of way.
July 14-25- Advanced Life Saving
ter stoppilig at a stop sign. The Collins and Fisher were taken to
(Sr. 15 and older; intennediate, ad·
Bowers
car was struck by a car Veterans Memorial Hospital for
vanced beginners and beginners.
driven by Marvel Quillen, Route 1, treatment of injuries.
July 28-Aug. 8- Basic Rescue and
Middleport. Bowers was cited for
Water Safety (Jr. Life Saving),
adults, Intermediate, advanced
beginner, beginners and babies.
Aug. 11·22 - Advanced Life
Saving (Sr.), intennediate, ad·
vanced beginner and beginner.
Anyone Interested in participating in the Big Bend Regatta Parade is
For more information and to
asked to fill out the entry blank below and mall to the Pomeroy Chamber
register for classes call the Pool
of Commerce, P. 0. Box ~:j&amp;, Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769. The parade is on
(992-9968) or stop by. Kellee BurSaturday, June 28.
·
dette is the swimming instructor.

THE FOLLOWING
BANKS WILL NOT BE OPEN
...
JULY 4 &amp; 5, 1980

RACINE, 0.

enttne

POMEROY MIDDLEPORI. OHIO,

From the Associated Press

----"tu~~OTICE------

I

at

HOSPITAL NEWS

missions."

In testimony before Lancien 's
committee, Defense Minister Yvon
Bourges said he was in favor of
keeping the year-long ·period. "It
shows the enemy that the will to
resist him' will go as far and last as
long as Is needed," he said.
France has the biggest anned for·
ce In W1111tern Europe.• Britain,
Irellnd and LuXembourg are the
only Western Eur~ countries
that have no draft. The rest conscript their young men for periods
ranging fran up to 32 months in
Greece to u little as six months in
Austria and three in Finland.
The Lanelen committee's work
ties in with other critical military
choices facing this c~, such liS
whether to build the neutron
weapon. A decision is expected next

e
VOL 31 NO. 50

•

•

',J

•

.

FREE MEMBERSHIP GIVEN - Membership
tickets to the Ohio Society for the Promotion of the
Bullfrog were presented to the residents of the
Pomeroy Health Care Center Monday by Bill Young,
c&lt;&gt;&lt;:hairman of the frog ev~nts, and Professor Charles

Frog Wayland. Pictured, l·r, Frog Wayland, Henry
Cunningham, resident, Bill Young and Linda Willis,
resident. Linda stated that she could not believe she
was going to be a member of the Bullfrog Society .

f

pnc~ w~e 0 ~·
t
- Den ·/ose t:'/cen ·
t
t~ ~stpa e re. . e prtog:amsd t 0
s unu a e an aa1mg au 0 1R us ryt,
1
newt carb.lpr1ces
A
f were
. upha percen
Is .
u ~mo ~ ~ anancmg c bs~est' all 0
con '; ue 0 ;"crease su
n ta y,
4
up .T pekrcen · bl' t - h rtat '
- a mg pu IC rauopo IOn
t 1•
t
Ia t
th
.•· percen more srti mon
.
.cos
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uia
1 s 1ncrease was pa c r1y
.d 1 f
. .
d . t 't
eva
or aar1me
trainentravelers
as an
well m
aserca
taxiy
'd
'
n eArs.
.
d k
ts
- ppare 1pnces an up eep cos
t fl t'
d r ed 0 2
ec m · percen 're ec mg ear1Y
1
t
sumnMJedirsa ,es.
05
th - e llca t ca
. re rose . .th percen
Ia 12•
e sma es mcrease m e st
months.
- Entertainment cost 0.6 percent
more in Ma y than April, but that was
the smallest monthly increase this
year.
The drop in real spendable earnings - what is left after deductions
for Social Security and federal income taxes - was slightly less in
May than in April, when it fell 1.1
percent.
As a result of double-digit inflation
and now the recession , this measure
of take·home pay has now fallen for
12 consecutive monthS.
The Consumer Price Index stood
at 244 .9 in May , before seasonal ad· ·.
justments. This means that goods
and services that cost consumers
$100 in the 1967 base period cost
$244 .90 last month.
The index was 14.4 percent ahead
of the level in May 1979, the Labor
Department said.
April's 0.9 percent increase in the
index was the smallest since
January 1979 .
The easing in prices has occurred
as the recession intensifies. Unemployment has risen from 6.2 percent
in March to 7.8 percent last month
and is expected to reach 8.5 percent
by ea rly neXt year, Labor Secretary
Ray Marshall said last week.

Middleport to. seek sewer project bids
. BY BOB HOEFLICH
Two major sewer constniclion
projects costing more than $400,000
will be advertised for bids immediately, Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman announced at Monday's ·
Middleport Village Council meeting .
One sewer construction job,
known as the Powell St. project, wiU
cost an estimated $165,480. The
second job, known as the West
Marina project, will cost an
estimated $243,495.
Funds for the two jobs are being
provided by Housing and Urban
Development and Appalachian
Regional Commission monies.
Original grants totaled $518,300 with
funds for the surveys and
engineering studies being included.
CONSIDERS REVOCATION
Mayor Hoffman also reported the
United States Environmental
Protection Agency has indicated it
will consider revocation of the com·
munity's permit to continue
operation of the lagoon sewage

disposal system unless a step I grant
amendment is filed by July 3.
Necessary papers are ready to be
filed but the mayor is waiting instruction from tbe Middleport Board
of Public Affairs. Involved in the
filing is a sewage system eva luation
survey which would cost an
estimated $44,000.
.
The village will have to provide
$11,000 of that cost. Mayor Hoffman
is expected to file the amendment
prior to the deadline.
Council renewed a· mutual aid fire
contract with Gallipolis and gave
final approval to an ordinance which
increases the costs of lots, perpetual
care and opening and closing graves
at the village cemeteries. A second
reading was given to another ordinance which increases 20 percent
the sewage charge paid by residents
each month.
Another ordinance which would in·
crease water rates and the cost to
reconnect for water service failed in
its second reading and council w(ll
have to start again on the

legislation. Voting in favor of the
second reading were Councilmen
Carl Horky and Charles Mullen
while Councilmen Marvin Kelly and
William Walters voted against the
second reading. The two other coun·
cil members were not present for the
session.
Walters and Kelly said they opposed the ordinance because they
feel the increase from $3 to $10 for
reconnection to the water service is
too great.
CoWlcil discussed distribution of
next year's revenue sharing funds

and agreed to set aside $10,000 on the
new street department truck and
$4,000 into the general government
services fund . A public hearing
before July 7 on the distribution.
Mayor Hoffman also announced
that the proposed budget must be approved at the July 14 meeting. CoWl·
cil approved a housing and land use
elements action required for the
village to participate in HUD funds .
AORTA SPACE
The group infonnally agreed upon

the establishment of a regular stop
location for the AORTA bus which is
traveling to Middleport several
times a day and is making four trips
daily to Athens. The space for the
bus will be located in front of the
Martin Antique Shop on Second Ave.
Council discussed several complaints receive d about cable
television service and will look into ·
the matter .
Council President Kelly outlined
streets in the community that should
be repaved this summer. Estimates
will he secured on the recommended·
work to see how extensive the resurtacing program can be.
Council also discussed the misuse
by the public of a parking lot of a
local business establishment after
closing hours.
Mayor Hoffman will check with
Solicitor Bernard Fultz to determine
what actions can be taken to curb
the situation by the police.
Also attending the meeting was
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck.

Quick release of hostages
dampened by rad~cal party
By Tbe Alllioclated Press
Iran's foreign minister said ' the
U.S. hostage crisis may be·resolved
in about a month and the State
Department granted an exemption
to Barbara Timm to see her captive
son again. But any optimism about a
quick release for the Americans was
dampened by a radical Islamic party which urged Parliament to have
the hostages tried as spies.
"Imalil Kbomeini and the Iranian
nation believe lhst the hostages are
spies and must be tried," the
Struggling Moslems' Movement,
which is close to the Americans' captors, said in its party newspaper
Onunal "Those deputies who do not
ask l&lt;ir trying the hostages are in
fact compromisers who resist the
demands of Imam Khomeini."
Meanwhile, the official Pars news
agency reported the executions of 15
insurgents in northwest Iran. It said
they were found guilty of killinl,l the ·
governor general of Khoy, a town in
Iran's northwest Azerbaijal&gt; province,. and six revolutionary guards intluding the town's guard commander.
In an interview· Monday witli

Frencli television, Iranian Foreign
Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh said
the hostage issue would be taken up
by the Iranian Parliament after it
chooses a new prime minister. The
hostage crisis " could be settled in
four or five weeks," he said.
He declined to answer questions
on conditions Iran might set for ·
release of the 53 Americans, in their
234th day in captivlty today. "We'll
see,'' he said.
Speaking with reporjers later
before his departure from Paris for
Tehran, Ghotbzadeh said the
Islamic militants holding the
hostages " have already
given ... assurance" they will abide
by the Parliament's decision.
Iranian revolutionary leader
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomelni has
ordered Parliament to decide the
fate of the Americans; its members
are divided over whether to place
them on trial as '·spies."
In Washi'ngton, a State Depart·
ment 'spokesman said Mrs. Tin1m, of
Oak Creek, Wis ., was granted . the
exemption from President Carter 's
ban on travel to Iran fur
hwnimitarian reasons.

"She requested permission to go
with her ~orney and it was granted
... It was granted to get her child out,
nothing political," the spokesman
said.
Mrs. Tirrun, who met with her 20,
year-old son, Marine Sgt. Kevin Hermening during a 10-&lt;lay trip to
Tehran in April, said she had not
decided if she would return. '·At this
moment I can truthfully say I do not
know if I'll go," she said.

May cut funds
WASHINGTON (APi - Federal
revenue sharing checks going to the
states next month may be cut in half
under a $15.9 billion emergency
spending bill before the Senate.
The legislation, approved by the
Senate Appropriations Committee
Munday, would cut $572 million from
the revenue sharing program fur the
fourth quarter of the fiscal ybr July through September.
, · That would wipe out the states
purtlnn uf federal revenue sliuring
f!Jr lhc remetindcr uf tit is fist .a I ycHI' ,

. FLOAT BEING CONSTRUCTED - An example of
the many floats to be found in this year's Reg~tta
Grand Pa1·ade, Saturday at 11 a :m., is shown here in
c11nstruction by members of the Middelport First BaP.

list Church. The float will feature numerous flogs lind a
waterfall, and will have the theme, "There's A Pad for
Every Frog at the First Baptist Church." Last year the
church built another elaborate float for the parade,

'

I

'

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