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                  <text>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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YO. •

.

6

ELBERFELD$
WAREHOUSE

~

'

:•

~

'·

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
.hi
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

'

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 24, 1980

.Opinions
&amp; Comments

IWI&gt;ort WID&amp;ett
Robert Hoeflich
DalelloCUR, Jr.
carl~

•

Will to surVIve
A recent brief report from the Mount St. Helens area is
in a way more dramatic than the eruptions that are
keeping that particular-story on the front pages.
Even as the volcano continues to blow its top, life insists
upon returning to its slopes. Vegetation, a National Forest
Service biologist reports, is poking up through the ashes. ·
The survivors are perennial plants that had not yet
emerged from winter dormancy at the time of the initial
eruptions. Also some hardy varieties that lost their tops
but had deep enough, and thus protected, roots to enable
them to make a comeback. It is possible that if the agitated
peak gets it all out of its system shortly, the area will be
green again-admittedly a weedy green for the most partby the end of the surruner.
More, returning animal life should not be far behind the
plants. Tracks are already being spotted.
·
Welcome and reassuring news. Apparently there is no
disaster so cataclysmic that nature, which includes man,
cannot snap back.
And that, if we're lucky, might even include the current
presidential campaign.

,.'

On hotdogs and hamburgers

I

And now fQr a message on hamburgers and hotdogs.
More to the point, those who prefer one over the other.
Psychiatrist Dr. Leo Wollman finds two very different
psychologies at work.
Your average hotdog eater, Wollman observes in the
July issue of OUU1i magazine, tends to be an outgoing,
aggressive, ambitious extrovert given to lunching "grab it
and go" style.
The hamburger eaters, on the other hand, are quieter,
more conServative and better-dressed executive types who
are "used to making decisions-well done, rare, ketchup or
mustard."
·
There may be some significance to such an observation,
but we doubt it. Our general reaction to such information
is-to quote a well-worn and time-honored phrase-"Big
deal."

Today in history.
Today is Tuesday, June 24, the
!76th day of 1980. There are 190 day~
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On June 24, 1497, the first recorded
discovery of the mainland of North
America occurred as explorer John
Cabot sighted land between what is
now Halifax and southern Labrador.
On this date:
In 1940, during World War II, the
French government of Marshall
Petain signed an annistice with
Italy.
In 1948, the Soviet Union began the
Berlin blockade by halting road and
rail traffic between Berlin and West
Germany. The confrontatiornwas ended by the Berlin Airlift.
In 1956, Col. Gamal Abdell!asser

• •

was elected president of Egypt.
In 1968, Congress set the observance of five annual national
holidays on Mondays to increase the
nwnber of three-day weekends.
Five years ago, an Eastern
Airlines jetliner carrying 124 people
from New Orleans to New York
crashed in flames at the edge of Kennedy International Airport. A total
of 110 people were killed.
Last year, dozens of people were
hurt and 100 were arrested as 1,000
motorists and truckers, angered by
a gas station closing, blocked an intersection in suburban Philadelphia.
Today's birthdays: Entertainer
Jack Carter is 57.. Magazilie editor
Norman Cousins is 68. Pro golfer
Billy Casper is 49.

.l

~-;=IH~===td=tE.=HOME=::::;:J '=~~~
Demand for workers in technology industry
WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) to employees who recruited friends.
Earlier this year, prospective emASA got eight new programmers.
ployers visited Raymond Cronin on
- Companies like Wang
the campus of Worcester
Laboratories and Data General offer
Polytechnic Institute. In all,
workers "bounties" of $200 to $300 if
r_,resentatives of 21 corupanies
they bring people into the company.
gave Cronin the grand tour of New
Wang is considering an in-company
York and Massachusetts firms, and
campaign exhorting employees to
flew him to Houston, Cleveland,
·•Turn in Your Friends."
Detroit and Santa Clara; Calif.
The 22-year-old senior from
Scituate, Mass., who was still mon· .
ths away from his bachelor's degree
in electrical engineering when the
wooing began, settled on a job with a
- Advanced Micro Devices, a SunCalifornia company at a salary
nyvale , Calif., semiconductor .
"somewhere over $21,000 a year."
manufacturer spent over $200,000 on
"I didn 't think it would go as well
a "Catch the Wave" recruitment
as it did ," he said, "but once I saw
program that carried the message
the the need for engineers, I got to
on billboards, television and radio
expect it."
and national magazines.
At a time when economic in·
- Texas Instruments personnel ofdicators point to recession,
ficers invade cities rich in
engineers, programmers and comengineering talent for "hire-ins,"
puter technicians are in demand.
held at local hotels and advertised
The boom in the high iechnology in·
on !ocal television.
dustry has made then! the sellers in
"lt became apparent two years
a sellers' market and has forced
ago
that our normal means of
COfDpanies to use new recrui ling tac·
tics.
recruitment was not working," said
Ed Haynes, a TI employment
Many companies have abandoned
manager.
traditional want adl in favor of
television comme{.cials, open
Haynes, whose Dallas office spor·
ts the sign "Recession• Hell no!
houses, and lucrative bonuses to
We're too busy," leads teams to
draft college gradua;es and lure
cities as far away as Boston in sear·
help from other comPI!ilies.
- When there was ljh response to ch of new talent. Such promotions
r.ost about $70,000 each, but they get
its want ads, ASA lnc4 a Boston sol·
results.
tware firm, offered free Bermuda
'" We used to take out an ad in a
vacations to lhose joining the comcity, put a personnel guy and two
pany. The same deal was available

engineers in a hotel and wait for the
phone to ring," said Haynes. "We'd
get 15 or 20 people and wind up
hiring one or two for $15,000. Now we
talk to300 people.''
Wang Laboratories turned over
recruitment to its marketing department. "Everybody hires through
want ads," says Ted Ladnsis,

TodJJy's commentary
Wang's public relations manager.
"We thought we could get more
people through marketing-oriented
ads."
Recruiters are turning to the
Madison Avenue approach because
of the sharp competition among employers. "There is just ; 'inite num·
ber of people out there that are
trained," says John Custy, a Wang
personnel officer. " If you're good,
you have no problem picking your
own company."
What caused the shortage?
Haynes blames universities for not
counseling students on the realities
of the job market.
"You can sit in the lobby of my office and talk to the sociology and
psychology majors who can't find
work and have no skills," he says."!
classify it as one of the biggest con-·
sumerfrauds in the country."
Others say no one could predict
the boom. "Growth has been faster
than anyone expected," says Custy,

who expects his company to double
its staff of 10,000 employees next,
year.
Custy and Haynes say the shor·
tage will continue through the mid·
80s.

Once they have hired workers,
some companies resort to perks and
self-promotion to keep employees
from wandering.
Advanced Micro Devices, which '
boasts the lowest employee turnover
in California's "Silicon Valley," of·
fers a generous profit-sharing plan ·
and in-company contests to employees.
AMD, which record~d $225 million
in sales this year, staged a "Christ·
mas in May" party last month,
holding drawings on wall-screen
televisions and Cadillac Scvilles.
One worker won $20,000 .a year for
life.
" We developeq these things
because our biggest asset is our
people," said George Weaver,
AMD's personnel chief. "We want to
retain them and encourage others to
join the company."
Not all find themselves swept up in
the rush. Brian Huntley, a Wor·
cester Polytech senior from Sheepscott, Maine, opted for graduate
school despite six job offers.
" It was disillusioning," he says.
·'Most students are used to living on
$2,000 a year and suddenly they were
getting fancy dinners and offers of
big salaries. A lot of them were get·
ting sidetracked from their normal
selves by the green stuff."

-a:

~

•

LL.

Opinion

No government
PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP) - There
are various institutiof1!11 approaches
to solving the problems of health, of
. financing the arts and humanities, of
providing equal opportunity and improving international relations.
You can seek results through
governmental action, said Richard
W. Lyman, but "our cherished
freedoms rest in part upon the fact
that we deny gov~rnment a
monopoly on the pursuit of public iri·
teres!."
Should business, then, be depended upon to solve social problems?
"Business should be able to per·
form in a socially acceptable way
and not operate as a social welfare
agency," said Lyman. "Business
should not be required to provide all

m~nopoly

on public interest

population problems, health and the
the goodies of society."
Perhaps then the nation's non- diseases of the world, the arts and
profit institutions, its universities humanties, equal opportunity; and
and its foundations, should bear the international relations .
"Despair?" he repeated when it
burden? Lyman will tell that of cour·
se they do, that all institutions have was suggested he might. So absurd
he grinned at tbe suggestion.
a role and none a monopoly.
But considering his career direc- "Despair is convsive," to be
tion, it appears Lyman, a former avoided, " for your own and
history professor, has a very strong everyone's sake."
Too much has been accomplished,
faith in the ability of private, non·
he said~ too niany problems over·
profit institutions to improve the
come, to feel that chall~nges cannot
human condition.
Lyman, 56, leaves the presidency
be~t.
There is, for example, he said,
of Stanford University on August 1to
"very little poverty left in.Arnerica
become president of the Rockefeller
Foundation, an organization whose · and the statistics don't tell.the whole
goals he said in an interview will in· story." Progress bas been made, he
valve him in:
·
said, "more . than most people
Hunger around the world, realize."

Still, he concedes that confidence
in institutions may be waning, but he
also feels people may demand too
much from them. In an address
several years ago, he t0011ed tbe ball
to critics, telling them :
"Any organization, provided It's
large enough to be visible and to be
suspected of having disposable
assets und~r its control, is asked to
solve any problem, however
irrelevant to its mission, experience
or capacity ...
"An institution, asked to perform
a service it is not equipped to per·
form, responds ineptly. The ineptitude is not seen as a predictable
result of a misdirected request, but
of the incompetence or worse of the'
institution and its leadership."

Law defines oil and _gas drillers as utilities
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
lawmakers are moving promptly to
correct a legal problem which has
virtually dried up financing for
small scale oil and gas drillers in
Ohio.
· The Senate is expected to complete passage this week of a bill,
already approved by the House,
which will do away with an archaic
law causing the fiasco.
'
Rep. William J . Healy, D-Canton,
who presented the proposal last
week to a Senate committee, said
the old law defines oil and gas
drillers as utilities.
Althoug~ ignored lot y~ars, recent
legal opinions brought to the at·
tention . of lenders maintain the old
law requtres drillers who apply for

financing to have their securities approved by the Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio.
Sheldon Taft of Columbus, counsel
for certain banks concerned about

Chairman Kenneth R. Cox, DBarberton, said the proposal corrects the problem by saying that PUCO
no longer must approve the drillers'
securities as a condition for a loan.
Cox added that "as we look f
ways to decrease our depeudence
foreign energy supplies, the ro e
bt
small gas and oil producers
, here in Ohio Is beco · an in·
creasingly important one."
He noted that the number of
drilling operations in the state has
increased tremendously in recent
1
years.
H. James, D-Proctorville, as chief
" If we want to reap the benefits of
sponsor, was recorruneilded for ap- such efforts, we must make it
possible for thl!se small
proval by the· committee after only businessmen to obtain financin10or
one hearing.
their efforts.'' be said.

were to wiibdraw its approval after
·a loan was made "the whole Iran·
saction .would be void. The banks
would be stuck."
The pendirut bill. with Rep. Ronald

.B usiness mirror
the Ia w, described the problems to
the Senate Energy and Public
Utilities Committee.
He said the financial institutions
stopptld lending because if the POCO '

~

•

Q

w

;:

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 24, 1980

.Opinions
&amp; Comments

IWI&gt;ort WID&amp;ett
Robert Hoeflich
DalelloCUR, Jr.
carl~

•

Will to surVIve
A recent brief report from the Mount St. Helens area is
in a way more dramatic than the eruptions that are
keeping that particular-story on the front pages.
Even as the volcano continues to blow its top, life insists
upon returning to its slopes. Vegetation, a National Forest
Service biologist reports, is poking up through the ashes. ·
The survivors are perennial plants that had not yet
emerged from winter dormancy at the time of the initial
eruptions. Also some hardy varieties that lost their tops
but had deep enough, and thus protected, roots to enable
them to make a comeback. It is possible that if the agitated
peak gets it all out of its system shortly, the area will be
green again-admittedly a weedy green for the most partby the end of the surruner.
More, returning animal life should not be far behind the
plants. Tracks are already being spotted.
·
Welcome and reassuring news. Apparently there is no
disaster so cataclysmic that nature, which includes man,
cannot snap back.
And that, if we're lucky, might even include the current
presidential campaign.

,.'

On hotdogs and hamburgers

I

And now fQr a message on hamburgers and hotdogs.
More to the point, those who prefer one over the other.
Psychiatrist Dr. Leo Wollman finds two very different
psychologies at work.
Your average hotdog eater, Wollman observes in the
July issue of OUU1i magazine, tends to be an outgoing,
aggressive, ambitious extrovert given to lunching "grab it
and go" style.
The hamburger eaters, on the other hand, are quieter,
more conServative and better-dressed executive types who
are "used to making decisions-well done, rare, ketchup or
mustard."
·
There may be some significance to such an observation,
but we doubt it. Our general reaction to such information
is-to quote a well-worn and time-honored phrase-"Big
deal."

Today in history.
Today is Tuesday, June 24, the
!76th day of 1980. There are 190 day~
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On June 24, 1497, the first recorded
discovery of the mainland of North
America occurred as explorer John
Cabot sighted land between what is
now Halifax and southern Labrador.
On this date:
In 1940, during World War II, the
French government of Marshall
Petain signed an annistice with
Italy.
In 1948, the Soviet Union began the
Berlin blockade by halting road and
rail traffic between Berlin and West
Germany. The confrontatiornwas ended by the Berlin Airlift.
In 1956, Col. Gamal Abdell!asser

• •

was elected president of Egypt.
In 1968, Congress set the observance of five annual national
holidays on Mondays to increase the
nwnber of three-day weekends.
Five years ago, an Eastern
Airlines jetliner carrying 124 people
from New Orleans to New York
crashed in flames at the edge of Kennedy International Airport. A total
of 110 people were killed.
Last year, dozens of people were
hurt and 100 were arrested as 1,000
motorists and truckers, angered by
a gas station closing, blocked an intersection in suburban Philadelphia.
Today's birthdays: Entertainer
Jack Carter is 57.. Magazilie editor
Norman Cousins is 68. Pro golfer
Billy Casper is 49.

.l

~-;=IH~===td=tE.=HOME=::::;:J '=~~~
Demand for workers in technology industry
WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) to employees who recruited friends.
Earlier this year, prospective emASA got eight new programmers.
ployers visited Raymond Cronin on
- Companies like Wang
the campus of Worcester
Laboratories and Data General offer
Polytechnic Institute. In all,
workers "bounties" of $200 to $300 if
r_,resentatives of 21 corupanies
they bring people into the company.
gave Cronin the grand tour of New
Wang is considering an in-company
York and Massachusetts firms, and
campaign exhorting employees to
flew him to Houston, Cleveland,
·•Turn in Your Friends."
Detroit and Santa Clara; Calif.
The 22-year-old senior from
Scituate, Mass., who was still mon· .
ths away from his bachelor's degree
in electrical engineering when the
wooing began, settled on a job with a
- Advanced Micro Devices, a SunCalifornia company at a salary
nyvale , Calif., semiconductor .
"somewhere over $21,000 a year."
manufacturer spent over $200,000 on
"I didn 't think it would go as well
a "Catch the Wave" recruitment
as it did ," he said, "but once I saw
program that carried the message
the the need for engineers, I got to
on billboards, television and radio
expect it."
and national magazines.
At a time when economic in·
- Texas Instruments personnel ofdicators point to recession,
ficers invade cities rich in
engineers, programmers and comengineering talent for "hire-ins,"
puter technicians are in demand.
held at local hotels and advertised
The boom in the high iechnology in·
on !ocal television.
dustry has made then! the sellers in
"lt became apparent two years
a sellers' market and has forced
ago
that our normal means of
COfDpanies to use new recrui ling tac·
tics.
recruitment was not working," said
Ed Haynes, a TI employment
Many companies have abandoned
manager.
traditional want adl in favor of
television comme{.cials, open
Haynes, whose Dallas office spor·
ts the sign "Recession• Hell no!
houses, and lucrative bonuses to
We're too busy," leads teams to
draft college gradua;es and lure
cities as far away as Boston in sear·
help from other comPI!ilies.
- When there was ljh response to ch of new talent. Such promotions
r.ost about $70,000 each, but they get
its want ads, ASA lnc4 a Boston sol·
results.
tware firm, offered free Bermuda
'" We used to take out an ad in a
vacations to lhose joining the comcity, put a personnel guy and two
pany. The same deal was available

engineers in a hotel and wait for the
phone to ring," said Haynes. "We'd
get 15 or 20 people and wind up
hiring one or two for $15,000. Now we
talk to300 people.''
Wang Laboratories turned over
recruitment to its marketing department. "Everybody hires through
want ads," says Ted Ladnsis,

TodJJy's commentary
Wang's public relations manager.
"We thought we could get more
people through marketing-oriented
ads."
Recruiters are turning to the
Madison Avenue approach because
of the sharp competition among employers. "There is just ; 'inite num·
ber of people out there that are
trained," says John Custy, a Wang
personnel officer. " If you're good,
you have no problem picking your
own company."
What caused the shortage?
Haynes blames universities for not
counseling students on the realities
of the job market.
"You can sit in the lobby of my office and talk to the sociology and
psychology majors who can't find
work and have no skills," he says."!
classify it as one of the biggest con-·
sumerfrauds in the country."
Others say no one could predict
the boom. "Growth has been faster
than anyone expected," says Custy,

who expects his company to double
its staff of 10,000 employees next,
year.
Custy and Haynes say the shor·
tage will continue through the mid·
80s.

Once they have hired workers,
some companies resort to perks and
self-promotion to keep employees
from wandering.
Advanced Micro Devices, which '
boasts the lowest employee turnover
in California's "Silicon Valley," of·
fers a generous profit-sharing plan ·
and in-company contests to employees.
AMD, which record~d $225 million
in sales this year, staged a "Christ·
mas in May" party last month,
holding drawings on wall-screen
televisions and Cadillac Scvilles.
One worker won $20,000 .a year for
life.
" We developeq these things
because our biggest asset is our
people," said George Weaver,
AMD's personnel chief. "We want to
retain them and encourage others to
join the company."
Not all find themselves swept up in
the rush. Brian Huntley, a Wor·
cester Polytech senior from Sheepscott, Maine, opted for graduate
school despite six job offers.
" It was disillusioning," he says.
·'Most students are used to living on
$2,000 a year and suddenly they were
getting fancy dinners and offers of
big salaries. A lot of them were get·
ting sidetracked from their normal
selves by the green stuff."

-a:

~

•

LL.

Opinion

No government
PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP) - There
are various institutiof1!11 approaches
to solving the problems of health, of
. financing the arts and humanities, of
providing equal opportunity and improving international relations.
You can seek results through
governmental action, said Richard
W. Lyman, but "our cherished
freedoms rest in part upon the fact
that we deny gov~rnment a
monopoly on the pursuit of public iri·
teres!."
Should business, then, be depended upon to solve social problems?
"Business should be able to per·
form in a socially acceptable way
and not operate as a social welfare
agency," said Lyman. "Business
should not be required to provide all

m~nopoly

on public interest

population problems, health and the
the goodies of society."
Perhaps then the nation's non- diseases of the world, the arts and
profit institutions, its universities humanties, equal opportunity; and
and its foundations, should bear the international relations .
"Despair?" he repeated when it
burden? Lyman will tell that of cour·
se they do, that all institutions have was suggested he might. So absurd
he grinned at tbe suggestion.
a role and none a monopoly.
But considering his career direc- "Despair is convsive," to be
tion, it appears Lyman, a former avoided, " for your own and
history professor, has a very strong everyone's sake."
Too much has been accomplished,
faith in the ability of private, non·
he said~ too niany problems over·
profit institutions to improve the
come, to feel that chall~nges cannot
human condition.
Lyman, 56, leaves the presidency
be~t.
There is, for example, he said,
of Stanford University on August 1to
"very little poverty left in.Arnerica
become president of the Rockefeller
Foundation, an organization whose · and the statistics don't tell.the whole
goals he said in an interview will in· story." Progress bas been made, he
valve him in:
·
said, "more . than most people
Hunger around the world, realize."

Still, he concedes that confidence
in institutions may be waning, but he
also feels people may demand too
much from them. In an address
several years ago, he t0011ed tbe ball
to critics, telling them :
"Any organization, provided It's
large enough to be visible and to be
suspected of having disposable
assets und~r its control, is asked to
solve any problem, however
irrelevant to its mission, experience
or capacity ...
"An institution, asked to perform
a service it is not equipped to per·
form, responds ineptly. The ineptitude is not seen as a predictable
result of a misdirected request, but
of the incompetence or worse of the'
institution and its leadership."

Law defines oil and _gas drillers as utilities
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
lawmakers are moving promptly to
correct a legal problem which has
virtually dried up financing for
small scale oil and gas drillers in
Ohio.
· The Senate is expected to complete passage this week of a bill,
already approved by the House,
which will do away with an archaic
law causing the fiasco.
'
Rep. William J . Healy, D-Canton,
who presented the proposal last
week to a Senate committee, said
the old law defines oil and gas
drillers as utilities.
Althoug~ ignored lot y~ars, recent
legal opinions brought to the at·
tention . of lenders maintain the old
law requtres drillers who apply for

financing to have their securities approved by the Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio.
Sheldon Taft of Columbus, counsel
for certain banks concerned about

Chairman Kenneth R. Cox, DBarberton, said the proposal corrects the problem by saying that PUCO
no longer must approve the drillers'
securities as a condition for a loan.
Cox added that "as we look f
ways to decrease our depeudence
foreign energy supplies, the ro e
bt
small gas and oil producers
, here in Ohio Is beco · an in·
creasingly important one."
He noted that the number of
drilling operations in the state has
increased tremendously in recent
1
years.
H. James, D-Proctorville, as chief
" If we want to reap the benefits of
sponsor, was recorruneilded for ap- such efforts, we must make it
possible for thl!se small
proval by the· committee after only businessmen to obtain financin10or
one hearing.
their efforts.'' be said.

were to wiibdraw its approval after
·a loan was made "the whole Iran·
saction .would be void. The banks
would be stuck."
The pendirut bill. with Rep. Ronald

.B usiness mirror
the Ia w, described the problems to
the Senate Energy and Public
Utilities Committee.
He said the financial institutions
stopptld lending because if the POCO '

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Our 9.116. Shag terry or
print tops .... . . .... 7.88 ea.

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• Plug~ in operat1on (subject to loca l
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full light

_Colemon6

Model AHA-020-2

PR ICED FOR
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USCG

MODEL

AT604-FM

lof ·o lbe season Styles 11m!
5a'I\D9S On G\r\s' fasb\ons\

~our ang~s

"Brigl1ten" up
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same time you .. tigl1ten' up on your purse·
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colors. caretree tabrics.

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"""7--

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• 4,000 BTU
• Built-in Handle

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Pee Wee • Child's
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------·
Kmar(Page 7

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Our Reg.
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Fashion Matchmates
Enhance Wardrobe!
Misses' coordinated separates in solids,
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NOT SHOWN:
Our Reg . 7.96.
Matchmate sweaters . . ..•.. . 5.88
Our 8.96. Plaid pants , pleated skirts , . . . . . . . . . 6.88 ea .
Our 9.116. Shag terry or
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full light

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Model AHA-020-2

PR ICED FOR
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• Leether pouch
• Latex tubing-

USCG

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lof ·o lbe season Styles 11m!
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• 4,000 BTU
• Built-in Handle

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a Ball, net, poles
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• Adults' nylon veal
Pee Wee • Child's
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'

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesdlly, June 24, 1980
'

•

.

Red
Sox
dump
Yankees;
LA
stops
Astros
....
•

;: '

By Associated Press
:::: : Pennis Eckersley says the Boston
Sox were catching heat from
·.- . writers and other clubs, and they
;;-·:deserved it. Now, though, things
~ : look a little bright.er.
; "Earlier iq the year, our pitching
!stunk," the righf·handed pitcher
. , said. " We were getting buried - by
: the writers and other teams -

because of our pitching, and we
deserved it."
The Red SoK have won 11 of their
last 14 games, and pitching has
played a key role. Eckersley tossed
a seven-hitter Monday night to beat
· the New York Yankees 1·2, the only
damage coming on a pair of homers
by Yankees rookie Joe Lefebvre.
" Now our pitching's coniin~

;; :Red
I

'I
(

around. I've won three in a · ruw,

(Mike)

Torre~

and we're winning," Eckers ley said.

Eckersley now has two straight
complete games after snffenng
through early season back trouble ,
and Torrez has won his last three
starts.
In other American League games,

•

''

; Wagner believes Reds lack desire to win this year

,.

I

CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds President' Dick Wagner says
the Reds seem to lack the same
: desire to win that carried them to a
; National League West title a year
' ago.
"There jwt doesn't seem to be the
general hunger in this club to go gel
the division title that I saw last
year," Wagner told the Cincinnati
Post.
"Our outfield play hasn't been up'
to the standqrd that brings a pen·
nant. We're seeing other clubs run
more and more this year. Our base
running has lacked aggressiveness.
" But our basic problem comes
down to the fact that we're not
' scoring runs the way we should. This
puts all the more pressure on the
fielding and the pitching," Wagner
· said.
· The Reds have fallen off in run
: production from a year ago. Over
the first 66 games last season, the
Reds scored 308 runs. Only 285 have
, crossed the plate this year.
. Meanwhile, Reds' pitchers have
, allowed 303 runs this season, up by
; nine (,om last year.
, At this lime last year, the Reds
~ were 3&amp;-30 and trailed Houston by
• 2_ games. Today 1 they are 34-32 and

.

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National Ltagu.e
CHICAGO CUBS - Acquired Cliff Johnson,

~
,
•
'

catcher, from U.e Cleveland Indians from two
players to De named ~ter.
NEW YORK METS - Acquired Randy
McGiJbeiT)', pitcher, trom Kansas City as the
playr to be named later in the trade of Kevin
Kobel, pitcher, to the Royal.'i on JWle 17.
Assigned McGilberry W Tidewater of lhe In·

Tigers 5, Indians 4
Champ Sununers capped a tw&lt;r
run ra lly in the eighth mning with an
HBI-grounder to boost Detroit over
Cleveland.
Steve Kemp started the rally with
a single. One out later, pinch-hitter
Richie Hebner singled, and Tom

Jim Gantner, filling m for the in·
jured Paul Molitor, hit his first
homer of the season, a grand slam,
and drove in six runs to power
Milwaukee over the A's .
Reggie Cleveland, 5-2, making
only his third start in three years,

The loss, New York 's second in a
row after nine straight victories, left
the Yankees seven games ahead of
both Milwaukee and Boston in the
AI. East.
"The Yankees will be tough to
beat," Eckersley said, " but we can
catch them if good things happen to

waivers on various players no w, but

quality players are very seldom on
waivers.''

The Reds begin a tw&lt;rga me se ries
tonight against the Atlanta Braves,
the team they beat 1 out of 8 games
at the ·start of the season. Charli e
Leibrandt, 6-4, will pitch against
Atlanta 's Larry McWilliams, 3-4.

us.''

homer, his ninth .

Wag ner seemed tu rule out any
outside help for the Reds, either
through the farm system or from the
waivers list.
" I don't sec any cha nges at thi s
point . that would involve the In·
diana polis (farm) team," he sat d.
" M&lt;ijor league clubs are seeking

~

The
Pomeroy

MODdly'1 Spot18 Trusacti01l5
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BASEBALL

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trail Houston by 6_
Wagner refused,to use injuries as
an excuse for the offensive decline,
saying, " All clubs have injuries."
"We've got to get our heads out of
the sand and go get the opposition,"
Wagner said. "We've had so much
success winning over the years that
other teams love to knock us on our
fannies. If we're going to keep them
from doing it, we've got to field better, take advantage of scoring opportumlies and get strong pitching.
" I still believe we've got the
ingredients to get the job done.
Seven or eight players can't do it.
ll'sajobtha!requires25." .

llruukens drove in the fin;t run to
chase loser Mike Stanton, H. Heir
ner had gone to third and Brookens
to second on the throw.
Sid Monge then came on m relief,
and Summers' grounder to second
brought home a second run, making
a winner of reliever Dan Schatzeder,
34&gt;.
....
Alan Bannister hit a tw\&gt;-run
homer, his first, for the Indians.
Twins 4, Royal~ 1
J erry Koosman struck out 15 bat·
ters, tying a club record, and
repeatedly pitched out of trouble as
the Twins handed Kansas City their
fourth loss in fiv e ga mes. Koosman
scattered 10 hits, but on seven occasions he struck out the final man
in an inning.
Roy Smalley clubbed a tw&lt;rrun
homer in the third io give Minnesota
a 3-0 lead.

Detrult edged Cleveland ~-4. Minnesota whipped Kansas City 4-1 and
Milwaukee wtutewashedUakland 80. In the National League, Los
Angeles blanked Huu,;ton 3-0 and St.
Louis clobbered Pittsburgh 6·1.
Eckersley got all the support he
needed when Boston put together a
four-run ·fifth inning against Ron
Guidry, 7·5, who lost for to the Red
Sox for the first time since September 1975. Carl Yastrzemsk i
drove in two of the rw1s wiU1 a

is throwing better

•

1snow

tema tional League.

Brewers 8, A's 0

pitched a six·hitler for the shutout It
was Cleveland's first complete
game since 1977 .
Gantner drove in his other runs
with a pair of singles.
Dodgers 3, Astros 0
Rick Sutcliffe, 2-4, started his first
game since May 9 and responded ·
with a three-hitter to beat the
Astros. Sutcliffe, who had been
relegated to the bullpen because ol
his fat 7.04 ERA, walked two and
struck out two and came to his own
aid with a tw&lt;rrun single in the fifth.
Joaquin Andujar was sailing along
with a n&lt;rhitter throagh four innings
before things fell apart. He wa.lked
two men in the fifth and yielded.hits
to Stev.e Garvey, Bill RusseU and
Sutcliffe. Russell's double drove in
the first run of the inning.
Cards 6, Pirates 1
George Hendrick slugged a three- ·
run horner in the eighth inning,
giving him a major league-leading
57 RBI , as St. Louis dealt Pittsburgh
its seventh loss in eight games.
Jim Kaat, 2-4, scattered seven hits
for his 266th lifetime win. Ted Simmons also homered for St. Louis in
the fourth.

of

Bank
of

Japuese BaaebaU .
PacUJc League

,,

m

SEIBU UONS - Signed Steve Ontiveros, third
Daseman.

•

BASKETBALL
NaUtaaJ Ba1ketball At:sodatloa

NEW YORK JETS .:.._ Signed Rich FDrce a nd
Jim Zidd, linebakcers; Saladin Ma rtin, cor·
• nerback; Lawrence Cole, safel)'; Bob North,
· quarkrbeck ; andGeneMuriaty,pw1l.er .
HOCI&lt;J'Y
Na'boul Hocke)l League .
QUEBEC NORDiqUES - Signed Pierre
Aubry, fO!'WIIrd.

COLLEGE

IOWA -

• bask,etball coach.
• LOUISVILLE - Named Bill Olsen athletic
: director.

..

...

~

• cep t a position at University of Texas at Sa n An• tonio .

•
•

"

,
:'
'

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DownsMonday.
The winner, ridden by Benjamin
Bealrnear, paid $12, $5.~ and $4.80. .
In second was White Lark, which
paid $4.80 and $4.20. The show horse
was Petadear, which paid $4.60.
The ninth race trifecta of 3-1-5 was
worth $180.60 .
:' The daily double of Gabba Flight
and Saltsman, 2-4, paid $114.So.
A crowd of 3,633 bet a . total of
$432,864.

..

;;:

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t..

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en

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'

"'

TOURNMENT SET
The Meigs County Jaycees will
: sponsor an ASA sanctioned Class B
~ and C Tournament July 4, 5, 6 at the
, Syracuse Park. Entry fee $60 plw
' two ASA approved baUs. Jackets
" will go to winners, trophies to run·
:·· ners-up along with four sponsQI'
trophies. For more information con• tact Dave Foxat 992-6646 or 247-2548,
' Sherm White at 992-5335, or PaJ,ll
Gerad at 99)!-3189.

:1:1

en

CD
CD

n
a I

I

1.

I

tt.'- .:.

,'

POMEROYNAnONALBA~

-

*·... .'.

CD

CL

BANK ONE OF POMEROY
FORMERLY
.

~

~

~·

ft~~:~~w·.:.~.:;m&amp;'(}.l:%%'*"'""{~

.

CINCINNATI (AP ) - Diglick ran

: the mile and 70 yard:! in 1: 45 2-:i to
-;: win the eighth feature race at River

I•

.

SCIOTO DOWNS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Trader
Hanover, ridden by . Jay Picciano,
ran the mile in 2:01 to win the
featured eighth race at Scioto Downs
Monday and pay $17.80, $9.20 and
$6.20 .
In second was Popamatic, which
paid $15.80 and $8.80. The show horse
was Andy Lane, which paid $6.60.
The seventh trifecta, eight and
nine, was worth $1,196.70.
A crowd of 4,134 bet a total of
$357,350.
RIVERDOWNS

·:.~

~

•

GA-: !d '' Corky " Oglt!shy, roach, so he may ac-

...

~

I

... TEXAS TECH - Announced the resignation ci

...

;-

Named Jim Rosborough a~i:sta nt

•
I

•

•

ATSYRACUSE
::!. The tennis tournament to be
;;l:; staged this weekend during Regatta
l't•'Z will be held at the tennis courts in'

--; :; Syracuse.

'

1\.l.;:

,

·

Preliminary matches will be helc;l
at 5 P·lll· oq thursday; 5 p.m. on
Friday; semi·finals 9 a.m. Saturday,
and finals Sunday at 9 a.m.
The courts will be closed to the
public durihg the above hours:

'.

Member f'?!C

BANKONETM

-·-

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesdlly, June 24, 1980
'

•

.

Red
Sox
dump
Yankees;
LA
stops
Astros
....
•

;: '

By Associated Press
:::: : Pennis Eckersley says the Boston
Sox were catching heat from
·.- . writers and other clubs, and they
;;-·:deserved it. Now, though, things
~ : look a little bright.er.
; "Earlier iq the year, our pitching
!stunk," the righf·handed pitcher
. , said. " We were getting buried - by
: the writers and other teams -

because of our pitching, and we
deserved it."
The Red SoK have won 11 of their
last 14 games, and pitching has
played a key role. Eckersley tossed
a seven-hitter Monday night to beat
· the New York Yankees 1·2, the only
damage coming on a pair of homers
by Yankees rookie Joe Lefebvre.
" Now our pitching's coniin~

;; :Red
I

'I
(

around. I've won three in a · ruw,

(Mike)

Torre~

and we're winning," Eckers ley said.

Eckersley now has two straight
complete games after snffenng
through early season back trouble ,
and Torrez has won his last three
starts.
In other American League games,

•

''

; Wagner believes Reds lack desire to win this year

,.

I

CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds President' Dick Wagner says
the Reds seem to lack the same
: desire to win that carried them to a
; National League West title a year
' ago.
"There jwt doesn't seem to be the
general hunger in this club to go gel
the division title that I saw last
year," Wagner told the Cincinnati
Post.
"Our outfield play hasn't been up'
to the standqrd that brings a pen·
nant. We're seeing other clubs run
more and more this year. Our base
running has lacked aggressiveness.
" But our basic problem comes
down to the fact that we're not
' scoring runs the way we should. This
puts all the more pressure on the
fielding and the pitching," Wagner
· said.
· The Reds have fallen off in run
: production from a year ago. Over
the first 66 games last season, the
Reds scored 308 runs. Only 285 have
, crossed the plate this year.
. Meanwhile, Reds' pitchers have
, allowed 303 runs this season, up by
; nine (,om last year.
, At this lime last year, the Reds
~ were 3&amp;-30 and trailed Houston by
• 2_ games. Today 1 they are 34-32 and

.

'

,-

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National Ltagu.e
CHICAGO CUBS - Acquired Cliff Johnson,

~
,
•
'

catcher, from U.e Cleveland Indians from two
players to De named ~ter.
NEW YORK METS - Acquired Randy
McGiJbeiT)', pitcher, trom Kansas City as the
playr to be named later in the trade of Kevin
Kobel, pitcher, to the Royal.'i on JWle 17.
Assigned McGilberry W Tidewater of lhe In·

Tigers 5, Indians 4
Champ Sununers capped a tw&lt;r
run ra lly in the eighth mning with an
HBI-grounder to boost Detroit over
Cleveland.
Steve Kemp started the rally with
a single. One out later, pinch-hitter
Richie Hebner singled, and Tom

Jim Gantner, filling m for the in·
jured Paul Molitor, hit his first
homer of the season, a grand slam,
and drove in six runs to power
Milwaukee over the A's .
Reggie Cleveland, 5-2, making
only his third start in three years,

The loss, New York 's second in a
row after nine straight victories, left
the Yankees seven games ahead of
both Milwaukee and Boston in the
AI. East.
"The Yankees will be tough to
beat," Eckersley said, " but we can
catch them if good things happen to

waivers on various players no w, but

quality players are very seldom on
waivers.''

The Reds begin a tw&lt;rga me se ries
tonight against the Atlanta Braves,
the team they beat 1 out of 8 games
at the ·start of the season. Charli e
Leibrandt, 6-4, will pitch against
Atlanta 's Larry McWilliams, 3-4.

us.''

homer, his ninth .

Wag ner seemed tu rule out any
outside help for the Reds, either
through the farm system or from the
waivers list.
" I don't sec any cha nges at thi s
point . that would involve the In·
diana polis (farm) team," he sat d.
" M&lt;ijor league clubs are seeking

~

The
Pomeroy

MODdly'1 Spot18 Trusacti01l5
By Tbe Asaoeilled Prtll
BASEBALL

••
... c:

0.

trail Houston by 6_
Wagner refused,to use injuries as
an excuse for the offensive decline,
saying, " All clubs have injuries."
"We've got to get our heads out of
the sand and go get the opposition,"
Wagner said. "We've had so much
success winning over the years that
other teams love to knock us on our
fannies. If we're going to keep them
from doing it, we've got to field better, take advantage of scoring opportumlies and get strong pitching.
" I still believe we've got the
ingredients to get the job done.
Seven or eight players can't do it.
ll'sajobtha!requires25." .

llruukens drove in the fin;t run to
chase loser Mike Stanton, H. Heir
ner had gone to third and Brookens
to second on the throw.
Sid Monge then came on m relief,
and Summers' grounder to second
brought home a second run, making
a winner of reliever Dan Schatzeder,
34&gt;.
....
Alan Bannister hit a tw\&gt;-run
homer, his first, for the Indians.
Twins 4, Royal~ 1
J erry Koosman struck out 15 bat·
ters, tying a club record, and
repeatedly pitched out of trouble as
the Twins handed Kansas City their
fourth loss in fiv e ga mes. Koosman
scattered 10 hits, but on seven occasions he struck out the final man
in an inning.
Roy Smalley clubbed a tw&lt;rrun
homer in the third io give Minnesota
a 3-0 lead.

Detrult edged Cleveland ~-4. Minnesota whipped Kansas City 4-1 and
Milwaukee wtutewashedUakland 80. In the National League, Los
Angeles blanked Huu,;ton 3-0 and St.
Louis clobbered Pittsburgh 6·1.
Eckersley got all the support he
needed when Boston put together a
four-run ·fifth inning against Ron
Guidry, 7·5, who lost for to the Red
Sox for the first time since September 1975. Carl Yastrzemsk i
drove in two of the rw1s wiU1 a

is throwing better

•

1snow

tema tional League.

Brewers 8, A's 0

pitched a six·hitler for the shutout It
was Cleveland's first complete
game since 1977 .
Gantner drove in his other runs
with a pair of singles.
Dodgers 3, Astros 0
Rick Sutcliffe, 2-4, started his first
game since May 9 and responded ·
with a three-hitter to beat the
Astros. Sutcliffe, who had been
relegated to the bullpen because ol
his fat 7.04 ERA, walked two and
struck out two and came to his own
aid with a tw&lt;rrun single in the fifth.
Joaquin Andujar was sailing along
with a n&lt;rhitter throagh four innings
before things fell apart. He wa.lked
two men in the fifth and yielded.hits
to Stev.e Garvey, Bill RusseU and
Sutcliffe. Russell's double drove in
the first run of the inning.
Cards 6, Pirates 1
George Hendrick slugged a three- ·
run horner in the eighth inning,
giving him a major league-leading
57 RBI , as St. Louis dealt Pittsburgh
its seventh loss in eight games.
Jim Kaat, 2-4, scattered seven hits
for his 266th lifetime win. Ted Simmons also homered for St. Louis in
the fourth.

of

Bank
of

Japuese BaaebaU .
PacUJc League

,,

m

SEIBU UONS - Signed Steve Ontiveros, third
Daseman.

•

BASKETBALL
NaUtaaJ Ba1ketball At:sodatloa

NEW YORK JETS .:.._ Signed Rich FDrce a nd
Jim Zidd, linebakcers; Saladin Ma rtin, cor·
• nerback; Lawrence Cole, safel)'; Bob North,
· quarkrbeck ; andGeneMuriaty,pw1l.er .
HOCI&lt;J'Y
Na'boul Hocke)l League .
QUEBEC NORDiqUES - Signed Pierre
Aubry, fO!'WIIrd.

COLLEGE

IOWA -

• bask,etball coach.
• LOUISVILLE - Named Bill Olsen athletic
: director.

..

...

~

• cep t a position at University of Texas at Sa n An• tonio .

•
•

"

,
:'
'

•

.' •
'~

~

•

...,.

:
:"
'

..

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•·

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DownsMonday.
The winner, ridden by Benjamin
Bealrnear, paid $12, $5.~ and $4.80. .
In second was White Lark, which
paid $4.80 and $4.20. The show horse
was Petadear, which paid $4.60.
The ninth race trifecta of 3-1-5 was
worth $180.60 .
:' The daily double of Gabba Flight
and Saltsman, 2-4, paid $114.So.
A crowd of 3,633 bet a . total of
$432,864.

..

;;:

.t'"'.'•
t..

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r.
••
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§.c..
en

6

'

"'

TOURNMENT SET
The Meigs County Jaycees will
: sponsor an ASA sanctioned Class B
~ and C Tournament July 4, 5, 6 at the
, Syracuse Park. Entry fee $60 plw
' two ASA approved baUs. Jackets
" will go to winners, trophies to run·
:·· ners-up along with four sponsQI'
trophies. For more information con• tact Dave Foxat 992-6646 or 247-2548,
' Sherm White at 992-5335, or PaJ,ll
Gerad at 99)!-3189.

:1:1

en

CD
CD

n
a I

I

1.

I

tt.'- .:.

,'

POMEROYNAnONALBA~

-

*·... .'.

CD

CL

BANK ONE OF POMEROY
FORMERLY
.

~

~

~·

ft~~:~~w·.:.~.:;m&amp;'(}.l:%%'*"'""{~

.

CINCINNATI (AP ) - Diglick ran

: the mile and 70 yard:! in 1: 45 2-:i to
-;: win the eighth feature race at River

I•

.

SCIOTO DOWNS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Trader
Hanover, ridden by . Jay Picciano,
ran the mile in 2:01 to win the
featured eighth race at Scioto Downs
Monday and pay $17.80, $9.20 and
$6.20 .
In second was Popamatic, which
paid $15.80 and $8.80. The show horse
was Andy Lane, which paid $6.60.
The seventh trifecta, eight and
nine, was worth $1,196.70.
A crowd of 4,134 bet a total of
$357,350.
RIVERDOWNS

·:.~

~

•

GA-: !d '' Corky " Oglt!shy, roach, so he may ac-

...

~

I

... TEXAS TECH - Announced the resignation ci

...

;-

Named Jim Rosborough a~i:sta nt

•
I

•

•

ATSYRACUSE
::!. The tennis tournament to be
;;l:; staged this weekend during Regatta
l't•'Z will be held at the tennis courts in'

--; :; Syracuse.

'

1\.l.;:

,

·

Preliminary matches will be helc;l
at 5 P·lll· oq thursday; 5 p.m. on
Friday; semi·finals 9 a.m. Saturday,
and finals Sunday at 9 a.m.
The courts will be closed to the
public durihg the above hours:

'.

Member f'?!C

BANKONETM

-·-

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June lo, 1980

9- The Daily Sel)tinel, Mlddlcporl·Pou.cruy, 0 ., Tuesday, June ~4 . 1 980

Summer baseball results.
In recent Meigs-Mason pony
league action, Coolville spotted
Racine four runs, then scored single
FWIS in the second, third, and fifth innings before scoring two more in the
seventh1ntake a 5-4 lead.
With two out and an apparent win
for Coolville, Wade Connolly singled,
stole second and third, and Nick
Bostick singled him home for a tie.
After a pitching change, Racine's
John Porter walked and Terry Patterson singled him to third . Steve
Fisher's perfect sacrifice squeeze
bunt brought him home with the winning run.
Zane Beegle, the"winning pitcher,
had gotten himself out of trouble in
the top of the eighth when Coolville
tried the same squeeze play that ended up in a double play.
Chris Bostick had three RBI's with
a triple for Racine. Gillian Jed
Coolville with two singles.
Also in pony action Eastern's ln. dians scored a 7-4 win over the host

New Haven squad.
Eastern grabbed a 1-illead in the
fist but fell shurt at 3-1 in the secund.
-Eastern rebounded with a big five
run seventh inning in which Jerry
Larkins doubled home two runs, and
Mark Holter singled in the winning
run.
Mike Collins got the win in relief of
Mark Holter.
·
Singles for Eastern were collected
by Larry Cowdry with two, Jerry
Lartkins, Holter, J . Carpenter, and
Jim Weber each with one.
Larkins and J_immy Carter
doubled. Weaver doubled for New
Haven while Gilland, Da wson and
Scott singled. Gilland was the New
Haven pitcher going the distance
and fanning twelve. Eastern is three
and four .
New Haven's Cubs defeated the
Pomeroy Yankees by a :&gt;-3 score.
Leading hitters for the Cubs were
Clark with a single and three home
run, Gandee a triple, Smith a single,

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
BaaeballAt A Glaace

Baltim&lt;Jre

By Tb,e A11otlakd Prelill

EAST
W. L. Pet.

Montreal
Pittsburgh

35 31 .530
?.II 3J .-459
2B 36 .4+4
26 w . J~

New York
Sl. Louis

Hooaton
Los Angeles
Cincinnati
San Francl.sco

&lt;HI 25 .615
39 28 .!182 2
34 32 .515 fjl,oz
30 36 .455 10 ~

Allan til

2ll 36 .438 11 '-':

San Diego

I

3
71.,
81,oz
12

29 38 .433 12

Mooday'a Games
lAs 1\ngeles 3, II DUSton 0

1 ).

r,..

Montreal (Palmer 4-1 ) at Phi41del!)hia 1.Noles
1}.2J,i nl .
1
Atlanta (McWilliams 3-4 J a l Cinctnnati
(leibnmdt6--4) , (nJ .
Pittsburgh (Rhoden 0-0 ) at Robinson 2--3) at St.
Lolli.s (8 . F'orsch ~ ) . ( n).
Loa An11eles t Hooton 6-3 ) at llou.ston 1Ryan&gt;

5). (n ).

San Franci.scu (Knepper s.-8 1 at San Diet~o
(Rumussen J"' J. ( n) .

Wednesday'• Games
New York at Chicago, 2

Montreal at Philadelphia, 1n J
Atlanta at Cincinnati, tnJ
Pittsburgh at St. Louis , I n)

Minnesota

•. 28 3ll .4 2~ 11 '-2
Mtaday' sGames

5, Cleveland 4

Boston 7, New York2
Minrlesota 4, Kansas City 1
Milwaukee 8. Oakland 0
1Only ~amesschedulffil
lueaday's Games
Kansas City (Leonard 8-5 and Martin 7-4 ) e~t
Minnesota (Erickson Hand Jackson4-4 ), 2, t n ).
Tcronto tStieb EH ) at Baltimore i McGregor 6·

k

Buston \Stanley 6-3 ) at New York tFiguer01:1 2·
21, tn) .
. Seattle t Ablxltt S.3 ) at Texas ( Med.ich 7-3 l, ( n 1.
ChicH~&lt;l (Burne 7~ ) at California (Aase 4-0 l,
( ll) .

'"

(Travers fl-3 ) &lt;~I
t Langsford t-7), \O J.
WedDesday 's Games
Milwau-ee

Oak land

Toronto at Baltimore, 1n )
Detroit at Cleveland, ( n)
Boston at New York, (O)
Kansas City at Minnesota , 1n)
Seattle at Texas, tn )
Chicago at Caliiomia, ( n)
Milwaukee at Oakland, (n)

BA'li'ING (lfMI at bats ): Molitor, Milwaukee,
.lsa ; Carew, California, .350; Hurdle, Kt1n.sa:1

EAST

W. t .. U 2 GB
43 23 .Gfl:!
36 211 .55&lt; 6
36 3l) .5&lt;5 1

33

3l) .52&lt; 8..,
33 31 .fl\6 9

Cleveland

~ttle

AMERICA.N LEAGUE

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Boston

! ] !1 .&lt;541 9..,
!0 36 .455 9..,
30 37 .413 10

Te""'

TOOAV"S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
By 1be Anoc.laled Press

In)

San Francisco at San Diego, (n)

Detroit

.S97

i ll ) .

New York (Burris 4-6 ) at Chicago tKrukow

Milwaukee

:n

t:H:truit 1Petry 4-3 ) at Cleveland (Bar er 7-(1,

(Only games schedul@d 1
Tunday's Games

New York

40

30 35 .&lt;62 9

3J,t n l.

St. l.Quis 6, Pitlsbllrgh I

~Angel e.satHouston ,

WEST

Kansas City
ChJL&gt;ago

~ troi t

32 .Sl5 9

31 32 .492 Olt:t

Oukland
1~

34 27 .557

Chicag o

'

GB

36 2ll .531

Philadelphia

3~

Turor1tu

NATION A[ LEAGUE

City, .312; Bratt, Kansas City, .337; Orta.
Clevelar1d, .336.
RUNS ; YoWll, Milwaukee, .Sl ; Roi11dolph, Ne111
York, 50; Wilson, Kan.!J6s Cit)·, 50; Ogiivie,
Milwaukee, 49; Wills, Texas, 49.
RBI : Perez, Boston, 53; Oliver, Texas, 60;
Oglivie, Milwallkee, 48; Annas, Oakland, 17 ;
Cooper, Milwaukee, 46.

• •

McKnight a single.
Leading hitters for the Yankees
were C. Kenne&lt;)y, with two singles,
Dave Hendricks two singles, John
Henry a nd Don Darst each with
singles. Gress pitched fiv e and onethird innings to pick up the win fanning twelve and walking 10. Clark
came in the sixth in ~elief. Brian
Willis was the Pomeroy hurler
striking out 13.
~

NOTHING, TO lUJY

POLISH SAUSAGE

The Pomeroy Royals rema ined
undefeated in Meigs-Masun pony
league action by posting a:&gt;-! victory
over Syracuse. The Royals are now
6-ll on the year.
.J. R. Wamsley picked up the victory in relief uf s\4rter Randy
Stewart . Pitching ace Roger
Kovalchik iced the victory w1th a
perfect sixth inning relief performan ce.
The trio combined for 10 strikeouts
and seven walks.
Pomeroy jumped into a 3-1l third
inning lead and never were seriously
threatened. Pomeroy hitters were
Wamsley with a double and single,
Riggs two singles, Kovalchik a
double, Gilmore and Milhoan
singles. Robbie Cunningham had a
guod uuting despite the loss, striking
out seven and walking two. The lone
Syracuse hit was a single by Tony
Riffle.

Superior Frankies
PKG.

LARGE

79~

SAUSAGE

Shop Marie V

LB.

99~LB.

and Say "Hello"

KNOCKWURST

BEEF CUBE

·srEAK

To Rudy Musser,
.

The New Haven Hitters of the
Senior softball league defeated
Dravo 19-18 despite being out hit '!:119. When opportunity knocked New
Haven took advantage scoring five
times in the last inning to overtake
Dravo. Joni Clark was the winning
pitcher.
Leading hitters for the winners
were Dona Gillman with a home run
and two doubles, Brenda Allensworth a home run and single, Barbara Gordon a double, triple, and
three singles, Dee Kimes a triple,
two doubles, and single, Misty Gandee a double and three singles,
Pasgasa Dayo four singles, Tammy
Allensworth a triple and single, Rose
Kimes and Loretta Miller singles.
Laren Wolfe was Dravo's leading
hitter with four doubles, Becky
Michael a triple and single, Tracie
Mearns three doubles and single,
and Missy CUmmins four singles.
Other hitters were Pam Milliron,
Michelle Johnson, Linda O'Brien,
Lori Warden, Debbie Michael, and
Tina Hill.

ECURITY

STOREMADE

BOLOGNA

•2 39 lB.

Our New

SLAB BACON

WEEPSTAKE

EYE ROUND

eat Manager

69~LB.

STEAK
S259 LB.

7-UP
AND

FABULOUS
LAS VEGAS~

16 OZ. 8 PAK
THURS. ONLY

'119

8 PACK 16 OZ.

Barrelhead
ROot Beer

DR. PEPPER

W1111a

The hucel that offers you eve'Yihint!
IIUT 0101'11&amp; It e 1Dr II ill

iiE&amp;I'ZII - ·••• t
II
...
TEE ILl . tm•f¥ L1Mi&amp; ........

Jli$t to mentioo a few.

'

•

and

8 PACK 16 OZ.

Orange Crush

ALL WEEK

•119

Middleport, Ohio

IPEU ltm, ' •1111 a.-. . ,liE
If YIII·UFE IT TIE •au IEII&amp;id .:.._

2 VACATIONS TO

RC &amp; DIET RITE

DIET 7-UP

THE FL.EA BAG
309 North Front

69~

ADULTS ONLY

THE
DAILY
SENTINEL

'1 09LB.
12 oz.
PKG.

*

16 OZ. 8 PAK

THURS. ONLY
~

COME PAR
WITH US

HI-DRI

COKE

TISSUE

2 LITER PLASTIC BOrnE

DURING OUR

'119

(Also Stereo Music)

4 ROLL
PAK

EACH

BATHSIZE

FIRST
BIG BEND
REGATTA

VIENNA
SAUSAGE
43~ CAN

BATH SIZE ·

DIAL. :.......... 49$

12 OZ. CAN

WELCH'S

-

FRIDAY

-

TIDE

GRAPE
JELLY

" 49 oz.

'13'.

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
WEDNESDAY

79~
LIBBY

SOAP
29C

TREET

HI-DR I

THURSDAY

BROUGHTON

BROUGHTON

SATURDAY

Buttermilk

2% MILK

.'

JUMBO
ROLL'

GAllON

$~ }79

49~

ZESTA
1-1.8.
BOX

69~

•

.CAMPBELL'S

TOMATO
SOUP

BE A WINNER!

4 '1 00

Register at the Businesses
shown on the following pages

*

'

ICE

THIS ONE IS

-

69~

PRODUCE

((ItA PIIOOOC I IO .. !&gt; fi! AIIflNA.l I D~~

.
f

•

.

OF

LrAotl~t ! IH

()l(rlo•rO'-V'

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Clip and Deposit at any of the participating businesses.
.

THERE WILl BE RANDOM DRAWINGS EACH WEEK OF THIS 11).
WEEK PROGRAM .
lA 1 Each we ek th e fouo,..u'!g wo lf be awarded
a l ~ O. OO m SttcYriiY s -epstake&amp; Scnp . (Total ol $500.00 tor
Program 1All w1nner s must redeem thrs scriot nolaler than 7 tlan
all e r the ot! rcra l end o! th os Program
•
b Ooe $25 00 US. Sa~rng s Bond (Totalol S250.00 in Bondalorthe
Pn;&gt;Qram)
( 8 1 I"' ADDIT IO N . TH E lAS VEG AS VACATI O N WINNE~S will be nlectt'd
hom drawrngs durr rt g t he 511'1 we ~k and al~ th~ 10th week ol the
ptogra m (All wrnrte rs must use the se vacaliona wrthin 3 month• alter
the end ot t he Pr011r1m ) Aeserv ahons myst t&gt;e made 111e11t 30dl)'lln
lldvance. and are suble&lt;:l 10 prrOI' commrlmenls.
ucn v~cat l o n wirmer will receivu i 911nerous rooa IIIOWinc
w hil e 10 LU V egU, .ii iSO a r O UriOtrill ~ i tl l nl! t iC:kflt. •
(C) IN ADDI TION. THE WINN ERS OF lH E SAVINGS ACCOUN rSwlll be
sel•t ted lrom dr avnngs C·mng l he

~o u ..,,s n. lhe areu
partrcrpa\trrg business's d rsplaymQ the ·seCU RITY SWE EPSTA~E S' banne r
Clea rly prrnl your Socral S tH: urrly ~m oe r namfJ ann anoren on tne ·ou rcral
Enl ry f'orm ' pi'O~rded by ear:l'l p.art reroalrng bolrl1e!l5 ano:l lhrs Newspaper

t . YOU AFIE ENCOURAGED TO VISIT, as olten as

2

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. You musl be arr a&lt;lul1 Ent rre) a re lrmrl eO 10
one oer a!Jult · oer vistt Emplcyee s of 1nts Newspafll!r are nol elrgrble 10 play

3

ENTER OnEN. There w in be •rnrnns eath "'"k The odds ol "' 'nnrng
de oe nd s ort I he ntJmber of entnes SjnCtl tnr s l)logramis strrclly local rn na1ure.
11'18 od&lt;IS ara more ta ~or able lhan a com pa rable SUiewlde or Natronwrd e
prog,am

.t

EAC:H ENTRY must t.e on the 'OFFICI-'l. ENTRY FORM' u pro~r ded . a11d
mual be tegrbiy wrtlten or hand prtnled M ac:hrne du plrca t ron or mechenrcatly
rtHlfod iJC I'd enlties wrll be delcar.cl vo te!

* ALL WINNERS WILL BE LISTED IN THIS NEWSPAPER EACH WEEK .
*ALL WINNERS MUST

cLAN

6

'

NO SUBSTrTunON OF PRIZES AlLOWED. UnclairMd pr;zas win~~ be
awaro:l&amp;d All entrias become tl1e oroperty ol IhiS Newspaper, arld nona-?" be
returned.

1
THEIR PRIZES WON BY APPEARING AT THE OFFICE OF THIS NEWSPAPER NO LATER Tl:fAN 4 DAYS

*

WINNERS MUST CLAIM AND UTILIZE THEIA PRI ZES WITHIN THE TIME SPE CIF I ED

.

* Register at the participating businesses shown on the following·pag~ ~- many times as you like. No purchaSe
necessary .to win. You must be 18·yrs. of age _or older to win.
*WINNERS ARE NOT NOTIFIED. Winners names will' be published every week in .the store's advertjsement
where they won. You must read the ads every Tuesday t~J~n~_ out if you have won. If you are a winner your
nam~ and address will appear in ,the advertisement and you have four days to notify The Daily Sentinel.

w4~LBS:..s..!l_oo....::===~~·
•

~OMPLIMENTS

5

OFFIClAL "SECURlTY SWEEPSTAKES" RULES

AFTER THE PUBLICATlON OF THEIR RESPECTJVE NAMES. ALL PRJZES A11E FOR WlNNERS ONLY. THEY ARE NOT TRAHSFERABLEI.

BANANAS

CARRVOUl Ot-BEER AND ICf

*

YOU 'LL FIND EXCE PTIONAL VALUES ,
AND YO U MAY BE ONE OF THE
·~ MANY WINNERS!

LARGE BAG

..

-

50.00 SAVINGS ACCOUNJS

CRACKERS

-.

1h GALLON

ENJOY THE MUSIC AND
ICE COLD-FROSTED MUGS
.•.
.
BOATERS ·DON~T FORGET THE COLD

TOW ELLS

I.

•

..

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June lo, 1980

9- The Daily Sel)tinel, Mlddlcporl·Pou.cruy, 0 ., Tuesday, June ~4 . 1 980

Summer baseball results.
In recent Meigs-Mason pony
league action, Coolville spotted
Racine four runs, then scored single
FWIS in the second, third, and fifth innings before scoring two more in the
seventh1ntake a 5-4 lead.
With two out and an apparent win
for Coolville, Wade Connolly singled,
stole second and third, and Nick
Bostick singled him home for a tie.
After a pitching change, Racine's
John Porter walked and Terry Patterson singled him to third . Steve
Fisher's perfect sacrifice squeeze
bunt brought him home with the winning run.
Zane Beegle, the"winning pitcher,
had gotten himself out of trouble in
the top of the eighth when Coolville
tried the same squeeze play that ended up in a double play.
Chris Bostick had three RBI's with
a triple for Racine. Gillian Jed
Coolville with two singles.
Also in pony action Eastern's ln. dians scored a 7-4 win over the host

New Haven squad.
Eastern grabbed a 1-illead in the
fist but fell shurt at 3-1 in the secund.
-Eastern rebounded with a big five
run seventh inning in which Jerry
Larkins doubled home two runs, and
Mark Holter singled in the winning
run.
Mike Collins got the win in relief of
Mark Holter.
·
Singles for Eastern were collected
by Larry Cowdry with two, Jerry
Lartkins, Holter, J . Carpenter, and
Jim Weber each with one.
Larkins and J_immy Carter
doubled. Weaver doubled for New
Haven while Gilland, Da wson and
Scott singled. Gilland was the New
Haven pitcher going the distance
and fanning twelve. Eastern is three
and four .
New Haven's Cubs defeated the
Pomeroy Yankees by a :&gt;-3 score.
Leading hitters for the Cubs were
Clark with a single and three home
run, Gandee a triple, Smith a single,

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
BaaeballAt A Glaace

Baltim&lt;Jre

By Tb,e A11otlakd Prelill

EAST
W. L. Pet.

Montreal
Pittsburgh

35 31 .530
?.II 3J .-459
2B 36 .4+4
26 w . J~

New York
Sl. Louis

Hooaton
Los Angeles
Cincinnati
San Francl.sco

&lt;HI 25 .615
39 28 .!182 2
34 32 .515 fjl,oz
30 36 .455 10 ~

Allan til

2ll 36 .438 11 '-':

San Diego

I

3
71.,
81,oz
12

29 38 .433 12

Mooday'a Games
lAs 1\ngeles 3, II DUSton 0

1 ).

r,..

Montreal (Palmer 4-1 ) at Phi41del!)hia 1.Noles
1}.2J,i nl .
1
Atlanta (McWilliams 3-4 J a l Cinctnnati
(leibnmdt6--4) , (nJ .
Pittsburgh (Rhoden 0-0 ) at Robinson 2--3) at St.
Lolli.s (8 . F'orsch ~ ) . ( n).
Loa An11eles t Hooton 6-3 ) at llou.ston 1Ryan&gt;

5). (n ).

San Franci.scu (Knepper s.-8 1 at San Diet~o
(Rumussen J"' J. ( n) .

Wednesday'• Games
New York at Chicago, 2

Montreal at Philadelphia, 1n J
Atlanta at Cincinnati, tnJ
Pittsburgh at St. Louis , I n)

Minnesota

•. 28 3ll .4 2~ 11 '-2
Mtaday' sGames

5, Cleveland 4

Boston 7, New York2
Minrlesota 4, Kansas City 1
Milwaukee 8. Oakland 0
1Only ~amesschedulffil
lueaday's Games
Kansas City (Leonard 8-5 and Martin 7-4 ) e~t
Minnesota (Erickson Hand Jackson4-4 ), 2, t n ).
Tcronto tStieb EH ) at Baltimore i McGregor 6·

k

Buston \Stanley 6-3 ) at New York tFiguer01:1 2·
21, tn) .
. Seattle t Ablxltt S.3 ) at Texas ( Med.ich 7-3 l, ( n 1.
ChicH~&lt;l (Burne 7~ ) at California (Aase 4-0 l,
( ll) .

'"

(Travers fl-3 ) &lt;~I
t Langsford t-7), \O J.
WedDesday 's Games
Milwau-ee

Oak land

Toronto at Baltimore, 1n )
Detroit at Cleveland, ( n)
Boston at New York, (O)
Kansas City at Minnesota , 1n)
Seattle at Texas, tn )
Chicago at Caliiomia, ( n)
Milwaukee at Oakland, (n)

BA'li'ING (lfMI at bats ): Molitor, Milwaukee,
.lsa ; Carew, California, .350; Hurdle, Kt1n.sa:1

EAST

W. t .. U 2 GB
43 23 .Gfl:!
36 211 .55&lt; 6
36 3l) .5&lt;5 1

33

3l) .52&lt; 8..,
33 31 .fl\6 9

Cleveland

~ttle

AMERICA.N LEAGUE

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Boston

! ] !1 .&lt;541 9..,
!0 36 .455 9..,
30 37 .413 10

Te""'

TOOAV"S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
By 1be Anoc.laled Press

In)

San Francisco at San Diego, (n)

Detroit

.S97

i ll ) .

New York (Burris 4-6 ) at Chicago tKrukow

Milwaukee

:n

t:H:truit 1Petry 4-3 ) at Cleveland (Bar er 7-(1,

(Only games schedul@d 1
Tunday's Games

New York

40

30 35 .&lt;62 9

3J,t n l.

St. l.Quis 6, Pitlsbllrgh I

~Angel e.satHouston ,

WEST

Kansas City
ChJL&gt;ago

~ troi t

32 .Sl5 9

31 32 .492 Olt:t

Oukland
1~

34 27 .557

Chicag o

'

GB

36 2ll .531

Philadelphia

3~

Turor1tu

NATION A[ LEAGUE

City, .312; Bratt, Kansas City, .337; Orta.
Clevelar1d, .336.
RUNS ; YoWll, Milwaukee, .Sl ; Roi11dolph, Ne111
York, 50; Wilson, Kan.!J6s Cit)·, 50; Ogiivie,
Milwaukee, 49; Wills, Texas, 49.
RBI : Perez, Boston, 53; Oliver, Texas, 60;
Oglivie, Milwallkee, 48; Annas, Oakland, 17 ;
Cooper, Milwaukee, 46.

• •

McKnight a single.
Leading hitters for the Yankees
were C. Kenne&lt;)y, with two singles,
Dave Hendricks two singles, John
Henry a nd Don Darst each with
singles. Gress pitched fiv e and onethird innings to pick up the win fanning twelve and walking 10. Clark
came in the sixth in ~elief. Brian
Willis was the Pomeroy hurler
striking out 13.
~

NOTHING, TO lUJY

POLISH SAUSAGE

The Pomeroy Royals rema ined
undefeated in Meigs-Masun pony
league action by posting a:&gt;-! victory
over Syracuse. The Royals are now
6-ll on the year.
.J. R. Wamsley picked up the victory in relief uf s\4rter Randy
Stewart . Pitching ace Roger
Kovalchik iced the victory w1th a
perfect sixth inning relief performan ce.
The trio combined for 10 strikeouts
and seven walks.
Pomeroy jumped into a 3-1l third
inning lead and never were seriously
threatened. Pomeroy hitters were
Wamsley with a double and single,
Riggs two singles, Kovalchik a
double, Gilmore and Milhoan
singles. Robbie Cunningham had a
guod uuting despite the loss, striking
out seven and walking two. The lone
Syracuse hit was a single by Tony
Riffle.

Superior Frankies
PKG.

LARGE

79~

SAUSAGE

Shop Marie V

LB.

99~LB.

and Say "Hello"

KNOCKWURST

BEEF CUBE

·srEAK

To Rudy Musser,
.

The New Haven Hitters of the
Senior softball league defeated
Dravo 19-18 despite being out hit '!:119. When opportunity knocked New
Haven took advantage scoring five
times in the last inning to overtake
Dravo. Joni Clark was the winning
pitcher.
Leading hitters for the winners
were Dona Gillman with a home run
and two doubles, Brenda Allensworth a home run and single, Barbara Gordon a double, triple, and
three singles, Dee Kimes a triple,
two doubles, and single, Misty Gandee a double and three singles,
Pasgasa Dayo four singles, Tammy
Allensworth a triple and single, Rose
Kimes and Loretta Miller singles.
Laren Wolfe was Dravo's leading
hitter with four doubles, Becky
Michael a triple and single, Tracie
Mearns three doubles and single,
and Missy CUmmins four singles.
Other hitters were Pam Milliron,
Michelle Johnson, Linda O'Brien,
Lori Warden, Debbie Michael, and
Tina Hill.

ECURITY

STOREMADE

BOLOGNA

•2 39 lB.

Our New

SLAB BACON

WEEPSTAKE

EYE ROUND

eat Manager

69~LB.

STEAK
S259 LB.

7-UP
AND

FABULOUS
LAS VEGAS~

16 OZ. 8 PAK
THURS. ONLY

'119

8 PACK 16 OZ.

Barrelhead
ROot Beer

DR. PEPPER

W1111a

The hucel that offers you eve'Yihint!
IIUT 0101'11&amp; It e 1Dr II ill

iiE&amp;I'ZII - ·••• t
II
...
TEE ILl . tm•f¥ L1Mi&amp; ........

Jli$t to mentioo a few.

'

•

and

8 PACK 16 OZ.

Orange Crush

ALL WEEK

•119

Middleport, Ohio

IPEU ltm, ' •1111 a.-. . ,liE
If YIII·UFE IT TIE •au IEII&amp;id .:.._

2 VACATIONS TO

RC &amp; DIET RITE

DIET 7-UP

THE FL.EA BAG
309 North Front

69~

ADULTS ONLY

THE
DAILY
SENTINEL

'1 09LB.
12 oz.
PKG.

*

16 OZ. 8 PAK

THURS. ONLY
~

COME PAR
WITH US

HI-DRI

COKE

TISSUE

2 LITER PLASTIC BOrnE

DURING OUR

'119

(Also Stereo Music)

4 ROLL
PAK

EACH

BATHSIZE

FIRST
BIG BEND
REGATTA

VIENNA
SAUSAGE
43~ CAN

BATH SIZE ·

DIAL. :.......... 49$

12 OZ. CAN

WELCH'S

-

FRIDAY

-

TIDE

GRAPE
JELLY

" 49 oz.

'13'.

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
WEDNESDAY

79~
LIBBY

SOAP
29C

TREET

HI-DR I

THURSDAY

BROUGHTON

BROUGHTON

SATURDAY

Buttermilk

2% MILK

.'

JUMBO
ROLL'

GAllON

$~ }79

49~

ZESTA
1-1.8.
BOX

69~

•

.CAMPBELL'S

TOMATO
SOUP

BE A WINNER!

4 '1 00

Register at the Businesses
shown on the following pages

*

'

ICE

THIS ONE IS

-

69~

PRODUCE

((ItA PIIOOOC I IO .. !&gt; fi! AIIflNA.l I D~~

.
f

•

.

OF

LrAotl~t ! IH

()l(rlo•rO'-V'

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Clip and Deposit at any of the participating businesses.
.

THERE WILl BE RANDOM DRAWINGS EACH WEEK OF THIS 11).
WEEK PROGRAM .
lA 1 Each we ek th e fouo,..u'!g wo lf be awarded
a l ~ O. OO m SttcYriiY s -epstake&amp; Scnp . (Total ol $500.00 tor
Program 1All w1nner s must redeem thrs scriot nolaler than 7 tlan
all e r the ot! rcra l end o! th os Program
•
b Ooe $25 00 US. Sa~rng s Bond (Totalol S250.00 in Bondalorthe
Pn;&gt;Qram)
( 8 1 I"' ADDIT IO N . TH E lAS VEG AS VACATI O N WINNE~S will be nlectt'd
hom drawrngs durr rt g t he 511'1 we ~k and al~ th~ 10th week ol the
ptogra m (All wrnrte rs must use the se vacaliona wrthin 3 month• alter
the end ot t he Pr011r1m ) Aeserv ahons myst t&gt;e made 111e11t 30dl)'lln
lldvance. and are suble&lt;:l 10 prrOI' commrlmenls.
ucn v~cat l o n wirmer will receivu i 911nerous rooa IIIOWinc
w hil e 10 LU V egU, .ii iSO a r O UriOtrill ~ i tl l nl! t iC:kflt. •
(C) IN ADDI TION. THE WINN ERS OF lH E SAVINGS ACCOUN rSwlll be
sel•t ted lrom dr avnngs C·mng l he

~o u ..,,s n. lhe areu
partrcrpa\trrg business's d rsplaymQ the ·seCU RITY SWE EPSTA~E S' banne r
Clea rly prrnl your Socral S tH: urrly ~m oe r namfJ ann anoren on tne ·ou rcral
Enl ry f'orm ' pi'O~rded by ear:l'l p.art reroalrng bolrl1e!l5 ano:l lhrs Newspaper

t . YOU AFIE ENCOURAGED TO VISIT, as olten as

2

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. You musl be arr a&lt;lul1 Ent rre) a re lrmrl eO 10
one oer a!Jult · oer vistt Emplcyee s of 1nts Newspafll!r are nol elrgrble 10 play

3

ENTER OnEN. There w in be •rnrnns eath "'"k The odds ol "' 'nnrng
de oe nd s ort I he ntJmber of entnes SjnCtl tnr s l)logramis strrclly local rn na1ure.
11'18 od&lt;IS ara more ta ~or able lhan a com pa rable SUiewlde or Natronwrd e
prog,am

.t

EAC:H ENTRY must t.e on the 'OFFICI-'l. ENTRY FORM' u pro~r ded . a11d
mual be tegrbiy wrtlten or hand prtnled M ac:hrne du plrca t ron or mechenrcatly
rtHlfod iJC I'd enlties wrll be delcar.cl vo te!

* ALL WINNERS WILL BE LISTED IN THIS NEWSPAPER EACH WEEK .
*ALL WINNERS MUST

cLAN

6

'

NO SUBSTrTunON OF PRIZES AlLOWED. UnclairMd pr;zas win~~ be
awaro:l&amp;d All entrias become tl1e oroperty ol IhiS Newspaper, arld nona-?" be
returned.

1
THEIR PRIZES WON BY APPEARING AT THE OFFICE OF THIS NEWSPAPER NO LATER Tl:fAN 4 DAYS

*

WINNERS MUST CLAIM AND UTILIZE THEIA PRI ZES WITHIN THE TIME SPE CIF I ED

.

* Register at the participating businesses shown on the following·pag~ ~- many times as you like. No purchaSe
necessary .to win. You must be 18·yrs. of age _or older to win.
*WINNERS ARE NOT NOTIFIED. Winners names will' be published every week in .the store's advertjsement
where they won. You must read the ads every Tuesday t~J~n~_ out if you have won. If you are a winner your
nam~ and address will appear in ,the advertisement and you have four days to notify The Daily Sentinel.

w4~LBS:..s..!l_oo....::===~~·
•

~OMPLIMENTS

5

OFFIClAL "SECURlTY SWEEPSTAKES" RULES

AFTER THE PUBLICATlON OF THEIR RESPECTJVE NAMES. ALL PRJZES A11E FOR WlNNERS ONLY. THEY ARE NOT TRAHSFERABLEI.

BANANAS

CARRVOUl Ot-BEER AND ICf

*

YOU 'LL FIND EXCE PTIONAL VALUES ,
AND YO U MAY BE ONE OF THE
·~ MANY WINNERS!

LARGE BAG

..

-

50.00 SAVINGS ACCOUNJS

CRACKERS

-.

1h GALLON

ENJOY THE MUSIC AND
ICE COLD-FROSTED MUGS
.•.
.
BOATERS ·DON~T FORGET THE COLD

TOW ELLS

I.

•

..

�• June 24.1980

•
•

·cROSS
ROUND STEAK

...
..."'

SUPERIOR

t

SUPERIOR

....
•.

.
~

I,

$ 49

LB.

SMOKED SAUSAGE

~~

12 oz .

WIENERS

.

&amp;gc

HOMEGROWN

CUQJMBERS .

~

*....t
~ ·

•

~

i.
~
~

MR .

POTAlO CHIPS
MORTON

FROZEN
VELVEETA .CHEESE

2-LB. BOX

$f

15 oz.

HUNT'S

~II.,

·f-

3· LB . CAN

·.•.
'•.

'\.

'\.
•,
·.,.·
·&gt;

't

'
'

'
'

'
I

••
~

HARDWARE

USDA Choice

..

:~

~

·'•.
'
•

9

IS YOUR
HARDWARE
HEADQUARTERS
FOR ALL OF YOUR
HARDWARE NEEDS:
Electrical Supplies
.Plumbing Supplies
Paint &amp; Wallpaper
Glass Cut to Order
Power Tools Hand Tools
Home Appliances
Garden Tools

11- Tile Dally S..'llllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June24.

•••

Dainty Flnwer IJusket
Bouquets .fi1r Bridesmaids.

1977 Buick Regal
Ford Motor Co. Rebates are still on until
July 12th and Pat Hill Ford is offering the
biggest discount ever. Up to $~00 . 00 Cash
Rebate on Cars and up to $100ll'.oo Rebate
on Trucks. ·

4 dr. Extra Clean

Wl111 FREE ICE CREAM

FROM

976 Chevrolet Vega Nomad

LANDMARK

Conversion
5 speed 4 cyl.

1980 PIN10 3 DOOR RUNABOUT
.4 cyl.,
auto.
trans .• radio , P .S:, P .B.,
WSW tires, rear window
'
1
defroster .
. DISCOUNT -318.00
REBATE-200 .00

'2195
1974 Chev•. Monte Carlo
'995
1974 Chev. Pickup
'1495
1973 Buick Estate
Wagon
'895
1972 Pontiac Ventura
.
'695

$5113 00
•••

BUY A 1980 T-BIRD FOR LESS
THAN $6800

Just Because it's Tuesday .. , or
Just Because I love you ...

PRICE INCLUDES DISCOUNT
AND REBATE
Air cond., AM/FM/Stereo, vinyl roof,
plus more.

1980 F-150 4X4

Just Bet•ause you never needed a reason to
send flowers.

THE

PAT HILL FORD, INC.

Open Mon . thru Fri. 9 to S
Sat. 9 to 4
71 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
992-3831

For A Fr11 'll dly Dr · t~l . ~' ,, ( l l f lr• .
J!·nlun ,on or Pd1 Hil · c,,·n t.hp .
Jrd Ave
Pl1 997 1196
M.ctdi• 'P&lt;HI 0

Ph. 992·2039
106 Butternut Ave.
Or 992·5721
Pomeroy, Ohio
We Accept All Major Credit Cards
And We Wire Flowers Almost Anywhere

..

.•

••
..••
••
••
•
•
•

PLUS ·

'25·
DI$COUNT
'

.

..
.••
"
..
..
.-·

'

•

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

DISCOUNT - 1612.00 t7"S,jlftll0
REBATE-1000,00
~~~

••

...••

JUST BECAUSE"

6 cy l. Eng ., 4 spd. trans ., 1u·tone paint, AM/ FM
ra d io, 10xl5 RWL all terrain fires, gauges, sliding
band glass, lim rted sli p r ec r axle, p lu s lots more.

Cl2()ii llAV()WA\11:/If

Get a han. gallon
FREE w~h each
Cubic Foot of
Space 1011 buy
in a UNICO
FREEZER! .

.

$451500

1/ " I' ' u/ /1r d •.\.' , /,r, ·nt/1
W/f/J!III/, "I IIII ' lrl 'fiiii Pr~.
r u'''' · l'll rll n / i" l! ~ ... ,

!!• lnl' '" /11 1/
/IIII I •'' '

~
~

~

i

20"

l.

FANS

.

·-

II /, i l&lt;' /m ~I..P/ .

·~

••••
•.
,•
..

.-•
.-

..'.

..
.-...
.
.. .••••
'

.;

••..

9" fans

ONEY.

••

up to 30% with Certain-teed

.•••

9" OSCILLATING FANS
ALSO
AND

PICNIC SUPPLIES
AMERICAN FLAGS
From 85c

'

..
.••

Take a day or less to install
Certain-teed F1ber Glass
Att1c Insulation between
the joists 1n your attic floor .
It's the most economical
way to save big money on ·
those skyrocketing heating
and cooli ng costs. You 'll
be warmer in winter and
cooler in summer. too.
Come in now. We 'll show
you how to do the job
quickly and easily.

Fiber CU..

Attic
llnsld ticM
e"thlck A-18

'

•'•

..

..

'

FOR ALL OF YOUR
WEDDING NEEDS
PROMPT iJtLIVERY

Ph. 992· 2644 or 992·6298
Helping You Say It Right

SPECIALS

SPRITE,
PIBB
TAB

USDA
CHOICE '

&amp; ·

CHUCK
ROAST
$]1~
LB•

Mid-Summer Clearance Sale!

'

.

•

&gt;:.i... . ..

$50 Script Winner
Emma Rogers
Rt. 2, Box BO
Letart, W.Va .
s.s . 232·70·8935

COCA·
COLA
8 PACK
16 OZ. BTI.S. 1

99~

FOR THE LADIES!

..

POWELL'S

% PRICE

HANDBAGS -

FOR THE MENI

JOYCE - COVER GIRL - EASY SJREET - MEYERS

HUSH PUPPIES. FLORSHEIM- JARMAN
SHP EARLY AND SAVE
SHOES
DISPLAYED !=.OR
EASY SELECTION
ALL SALES FINAL

POMEROY ·cEMENT
BLOCK CO.

AT THE LOCAL PARTICIPATING MERCHANTS

SALE
PRICES

VALUES TO sso
It 10 TO
•

'2918

SEBAGO - SCHOOl
VALUES TO 135.00

SALE PRICES

'1010'15

HARTLEY 'SHOES, INC.

The Department Store of Building Since 1915

W/WhiteVVestinghouse
•

HAMS
29

$50.00 BOND WINNER
JANE WAGNER
28020 Tanners Run Rd.
Racine, Oh.
ss 282-52·5865

K..INGSBURY
HOME SALES, INC.

heritage house
OF SHOES

'1100 E. .MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

N. 2NI,I AVE .
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

992-7034

•

an. CTN.

GAUON PLASTIC

MODEL
AK085A1
.

· $ 119

I

.

2,-.
MILK

BROUGHTON

••'.

$229.95

RC or DIET RITE COLA
8 PACK 16 OZ.

'11)~7~
~E~
~ ·~

••

8,000 BTU

LB. $

WHOLE HAM

•
•

Model
ACOS3A7A
5,000 BTU .
Only $179.95

SUPERIOR BONELESS TAVERN

Say "yes" to Yo· Yos - CONNIE YO· YOS
from heritage house. Yessiree, the shoes
with the holes in the soles can fi II the gaps
in your wardrobe.

'.

ROOM AIR
CONDITIONERS

••

AVAILABLE

-VA LOANS·AVAILABLE
ON LINCOLN PARK AND
SKYLINE MOBILE HOMES.
.-No Money Down •
All Paper Work·
Handled Here.

&lt;

.,•,

.

J'S:t 1£. MAIN • POMEROY, 01110 .. 51'"

THI$/WfEK'$/SPiCIA L

,,

''.

BE SURE TO
REGISTERJ· J I

: MONEY

",.•

"

-LAS VEGAS TRIP
-$5000 SCRIPT MONEY
-$5000 SAVINGS
. BOND
-$50• SAVINGS ACCOUNT

SUMMER TOYS

.'

Fiber Glass Attic Insulation

Drawings will be made
Friday for the following:

AND

..

"
•

'

LANDMARK

" Strvlng Mtllt, G•lll•. •nd Mo~son Countlt• ·
· M4Jn Stnet
Pomeroy
Store Hours : I:JOtoS :JO
Mill Clond •t 5 : 00P.M •
Phf)nt 992 -2 111

'·

Cut ·heating and cooling costs

Security Sweepstakes

'\.
'1.

...•
•

M&lt; fll lff'GIY

OF THE DAILY SENTINEL

3-SPEED

..."
~

~·
,,,'·.

SAVE · C~HW
.

FINAL WEEK

...
:·...,.

,·,ft.,.,JIIrr 'fi

cfl.,l'(/ d i lll!. /rm n 11

-

t·

u/

'

'

POMEROY .

~

.,

'3695

8,000 BTU

.•
'

ONLY

LOWFAT

'349

'1 79

95

AS247A2K
24,000 BTU
ONLY

TAVERN
HAMS

$53995 .

Half 'Hom ................... lb. S1.39
Qtr. Ham ...... .. ... ........ .lb. s 1.49
Boneleu Ham Slices ib. •1.69 ·.

'

-•.

Sth St.

on aNew Ford 3600 Tractor
Now Through June 30, 19801

MODEL

SUPERIOR BONELESS

Save up 10 $650.

New Haven, w. va.

.
I

Now ltlht lime to come In and make • deal for a new
For4 3800 triCior. Buy betwten now and June 30.
1810 IOd eave up to $8501 FortfelpKlal cuh lncen·
!Ivett to dtalers •llow Ul IO pan on theM sartngs IO

you during thltllmlt.cl time oflwr.
1IW! H you're concerned aboUt the availability or
flhancl(lg, better SH ua. We .have BOTH a "pricebullwr" dNJ pn a new Ford 3800 tractor AND the
fl~ you ntldl

.'

DALE HILL FORD
TRACIOR; INC.

251 w. Motn "2·2668 M.. Tu .. n .. F.l til
Pomeroy, o
Wed 11' 1

$15000

~AEDrig~~G SET

out
VISIT US FIRST
AND TAKE ALONG
SOME OF
OUR
TOP QUALITY,

When it comes to watches,
choose a name you know .

You can
· depend
on it.

LOW.PRICED

GENTS BAND AVAILABLE

Simplicity'IJ/'tkslgn i3'combined
with an elegantly brwJhed-finish
10 highlight ehe3e lo~ matched
,. wedding sel5.
"
Available In white Inc;! y.llow gold,
ILLUSTIIATIONS ENLAAGEO TQ SHOW DETAILS

•

COOKOUT
SPECIALS

, I'I
A Bulova watch IS a forever 'lnend It keeps you hme
whereve'r yOu go W11h a minimum of car~, And in
goo d style .

·

.

•

we cons1der Bulova a first-choice watch. For quality,
accuracy, beauty and dependability. You 'llllnd

precisely the WC~tch you want in our new Bul ova
co llection. Fo r {Ourselt or for a gilt.

�• June 24.1980

•
•

·cROSS
ROUND STEAK

...
..."'

SUPERIOR

t

SUPERIOR

....
•.

.
~

I,

$ 49

LB.

SMOKED SAUSAGE

~~

12 oz .

WIENERS

.

&amp;gc

HOMEGROWN

CUQJMBERS .

~

*....t
~ ·

•

~

i.
~
~

MR .

POTAlO CHIPS
MORTON

FROZEN
VELVEETA .CHEESE

2-LB. BOX

$f

15 oz.

HUNT'S

~II.,

·f-

3· LB . CAN

·.•.
'•.

'\.

'\.
•,
·.,.·
·&gt;

't

'
'

'
'

'
I

••
~

HARDWARE

USDA Choice

..

:~

~

·'•.
'
•

9

IS YOUR
HARDWARE
HEADQUARTERS
FOR ALL OF YOUR
HARDWARE NEEDS:
Electrical Supplies
.Plumbing Supplies
Paint &amp; Wallpaper
Glass Cut to Order
Power Tools Hand Tools
Home Appliances
Garden Tools

11- Tile Dally S..'llllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June24.

•••

Dainty Flnwer IJusket
Bouquets .fi1r Bridesmaids.

1977 Buick Regal
Ford Motor Co. Rebates are still on until
July 12th and Pat Hill Ford is offering the
biggest discount ever. Up to $~00 . 00 Cash
Rebate on Cars and up to $100ll'.oo Rebate
on Trucks. ·

4 dr. Extra Clean

Wl111 FREE ICE CREAM

FROM

976 Chevrolet Vega Nomad

LANDMARK

Conversion
5 speed 4 cyl.

1980 PIN10 3 DOOR RUNABOUT
.4 cyl.,
auto.
trans .• radio , P .S:, P .B.,
WSW tires, rear window
'
1
defroster .
. DISCOUNT -318.00
REBATE-200 .00

'2195
1974 Chev•. Monte Carlo
'995
1974 Chev. Pickup
'1495
1973 Buick Estate
Wagon
'895
1972 Pontiac Ventura
.
'695

$5113 00
•••

BUY A 1980 T-BIRD FOR LESS
THAN $6800

Just Because it's Tuesday .. , or
Just Because I love you ...

PRICE INCLUDES DISCOUNT
AND REBATE
Air cond., AM/FM/Stereo, vinyl roof,
plus more.

1980 F-150 4X4

Just Bet•ause you never needed a reason to
send flowers.

THE

PAT HILL FORD, INC.

Open Mon . thru Fri. 9 to S
Sat. 9 to 4
71 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
992-3831

For A Fr11 'll dly Dr · t~l . ~' ,, ( l l f lr• .
J!·nlun ,on or Pd1 Hil · c,,·n t.hp .
Jrd Ave
Pl1 997 1196
M.ctdi• 'P&lt;HI 0

Ph. 992·2039
106 Butternut Ave.
Or 992·5721
Pomeroy, Ohio
We Accept All Major Credit Cards
And We Wire Flowers Almost Anywhere

..

.•

••
..••
••
••
•
•
•

PLUS ·

'25·
DI$COUNT
'

.

..
.••
"
..
..
.-·

'

•

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

DISCOUNT - 1612.00 t7"S,jlftll0
REBATE-1000,00
~~~

••

...••

JUST BECAUSE"

6 cy l. Eng ., 4 spd. trans ., 1u·tone paint, AM/ FM
ra d io, 10xl5 RWL all terrain fires, gauges, sliding
band glass, lim rted sli p r ec r axle, p lu s lots more.

Cl2()ii llAV()WA\11:/If

Get a han. gallon
FREE w~h each
Cubic Foot of
Space 1011 buy
in a UNICO
FREEZER! .

.

$451500

1/ " I' ' u/ /1r d •.\.' , /,r, ·nt/1
W/f/J!III/, "I IIII ' lrl 'fiiii Pr~.
r u'''' · l'll rll n / i" l! ~ ... ,

!!• lnl' '" /11 1/
/IIII I •'' '

~
~

~

i

20"

l.

FANS

.

·-

II /, i l&lt;' /m ~I..P/ .

·~

••••
•.
,•
..

.-•
.-

..'.

..
.-...
.
.. .••••
'

.;

••..

9" fans

ONEY.

••

up to 30% with Certain-teed

.•••

9" OSCILLATING FANS
ALSO
AND

PICNIC SUPPLIES
AMERICAN FLAGS
From 85c

'

..
.••

Take a day or less to install
Certain-teed F1ber Glass
Att1c Insulation between
the joists 1n your attic floor .
It's the most economical
way to save big money on ·
those skyrocketing heating
and cooli ng costs. You 'll
be warmer in winter and
cooler in summer. too.
Come in now. We 'll show
you how to do the job
quickly and easily.

Fiber CU..

Attic
llnsld ticM
e"thlck A-18

'

•'•

..

..

'

FOR ALL OF YOUR
WEDDING NEEDS
PROMPT iJtLIVERY

Ph. 992· 2644 or 992·6298
Helping You Say It Right

SPECIALS

SPRITE,
PIBB
TAB

USDA
CHOICE '

&amp; ·

CHUCK
ROAST
$]1~
LB•

Mid-Summer Clearance Sale!

'

.

•

&gt;:.i... . ..

$50 Script Winner
Emma Rogers
Rt. 2, Box BO
Letart, W.Va .
s.s . 232·70·8935

COCA·
COLA
8 PACK
16 OZ. BTI.S. 1

99~

FOR THE LADIES!

..

POWELL'S

% PRICE

HANDBAGS -

FOR THE MENI

JOYCE - COVER GIRL - EASY SJREET - MEYERS

HUSH PUPPIES. FLORSHEIM- JARMAN
SHP EARLY AND SAVE
SHOES
DISPLAYED !=.OR
EASY SELECTION
ALL SALES FINAL

POMEROY ·cEMENT
BLOCK CO.

AT THE LOCAL PARTICIPATING MERCHANTS

SALE
PRICES

VALUES TO sso
It 10 TO
•

'2918

SEBAGO - SCHOOl
VALUES TO 135.00

SALE PRICES

'1010'15

HARTLEY 'SHOES, INC.

The Department Store of Building Since 1915

W/WhiteVVestinghouse
•

HAMS
29

$50.00 BOND WINNER
JANE WAGNER
28020 Tanners Run Rd.
Racine, Oh.
ss 282-52·5865

K..INGSBURY
HOME SALES, INC.

heritage house
OF SHOES

'1100 E. .MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

N. 2NI,I AVE .
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

992-7034

•

an. CTN.

GAUON PLASTIC

MODEL
AK085A1
.

· $ 119

I

.

2,-.
MILK

BROUGHTON

••'.

$229.95

RC or DIET RITE COLA
8 PACK 16 OZ.

'11)~7~
~E~
~ ·~

••

8,000 BTU

LB. $

WHOLE HAM

•
•

Model
ACOS3A7A
5,000 BTU .
Only $179.95

SUPERIOR BONELESS TAVERN

Say "yes" to Yo· Yos - CONNIE YO· YOS
from heritage house. Yessiree, the shoes
with the holes in the soles can fi II the gaps
in your wardrobe.

'.

ROOM AIR
CONDITIONERS

••

AVAILABLE

-VA LOANS·AVAILABLE
ON LINCOLN PARK AND
SKYLINE MOBILE HOMES.
.-No Money Down •
All Paper Work·
Handled Here.

&lt;

.,•,

.

J'S:t 1£. MAIN • POMEROY, 01110 .. 51'"

THI$/WfEK'$/SPiCIA L

,,

''.

BE SURE TO
REGISTERJ· J I

: MONEY

",.•

"

-LAS VEGAS TRIP
-$5000 SCRIPT MONEY
-$5000 SAVINGS
. BOND
-$50• SAVINGS ACCOUNT

SUMMER TOYS

.'

Fiber Glass Attic Insulation

Drawings will be made
Friday for the following:

AND

..

"
•

'

LANDMARK

" Strvlng Mtllt, G•lll•. •nd Mo~son Countlt• ·
· M4Jn Stnet
Pomeroy
Store Hours : I:JOtoS :JO
Mill Clond •t 5 : 00P.M •
Phf)nt 992 -2 111

'·

Cut ·heating and cooling costs

Security Sweepstakes

'\.
'1.

...•
•

M&lt; fll lff'GIY

OF THE DAILY SENTINEL

3-SPEED

..."
~

~·
,,,'·.

SAVE · C~HW
.

FINAL WEEK

...
:·...,.

,·,ft.,.,JIIrr 'fi

cfl.,l'(/ d i lll!. /rm n 11

-

t·

u/

'

'

POMEROY .

~

.,

'3695

8,000 BTU

.•
'

ONLY

LOWFAT

'349

'1 79

95

AS247A2K
24,000 BTU
ONLY

TAVERN
HAMS

$53995 .

Half 'Hom ................... lb. S1.39
Qtr. Ham ...... .. ... ........ .lb. s 1.49
Boneleu Ham Slices ib. •1.69 ·.

'

-•.

Sth St.

on aNew Ford 3600 Tractor
Now Through June 30, 19801

MODEL

SUPERIOR BONELESS

Save up 10 $650.

New Haven, w. va.

.
I

Now ltlht lime to come In and make • deal for a new
For4 3800 triCior. Buy betwten now and June 30.
1810 IOd eave up to $8501 FortfelpKlal cuh lncen·
!Ivett to dtalers •llow Ul IO pan on theM sartngs IO

you during thltllmlt.cl time oflwr.
1IW! H you're concerned aboUt the availability or
flhancl(lg, better SH ua. We .have BOTH a "pricebullwr" dNJ pn a new Ford 3800 tractor AND the
fl~ you ntldl

.'

DALE HILL FORD
TRACIOR; INC.

251 w. Motn "2·2668 M.. Tu .. n .. F.l til
Pomeroy, o
Wed 11' 1

$15000

~AEDrig~~G SET

out
VISIT US FIRST
AND TAKE ALONG
SOME OF
OUR
TOP QUALITY,

When it comes to watches,
choose a name you know .

You can
· depend
on it.

LOW.PRICED

GENTS BAND AVAILABLE

Simplicity'IJ/'tkslgn i3'combined
with an elegantly brwJhed-finish
10 highlight ehe3e lo~ matched
,. wedding sel5.
"
Available In white Inc;! y.llow gold,
ILLUSTIIATIONS ENLAAGEO TQ SHOW DETAILS

•

COOKOUT
SPECIALS

, I'I
A Bulova watch IS a forever 'lnend It keeps you hme
whereve'r yOu go W11h a minimum of car~, And in
goo d style .

·

.

•

we cons1der Bulova a first-choice watch. For quality,
accuracy, beauty and dependability. You 'llllnd

precisely the WC~tch you want in our new Bul ova
co llection. Fo r {Ourselt or for a gilt.

�I

12- The paily Sentinel, M iddlepo~t-1-'ome roy , 0 ., Tuesday, J une 24, 1980

United Metho~sts plan hymn sing
Plans for a county-wide picnic and
an old fashioned hymn sing June 29
were announced when the Meigs
County United Methodist Council on
Ministries met recently at the Car·
mel United Methodist Church. The
picnic will be held at the Portland
Park, beginning at 5 p.m. Sunday.
The meal will be covered dish and
will begin at 6 p.m . The hymn sing is
scheduled for 7 p.m. and will be at
the Portland United Methodist Chur·
ch. In case of rain, aU activities will
be at the Portland Church. Honored
guests will be the Rev. and Mrs.
Stanley Merrifield and family,
newly assigned to the Syracuse
Charge. Also honored will be the
Rev. Robert Mcgee of Pomeroy and
the Rev. James Corbitt of the En·
terprise-Rock Springs Charge, both
of whom were ordained elder and
deacon respectively at the recent
West Ohio Annual Conference.
The meeting began with devotions
by the host pastor, the Rev. Mark
Flynn, who spoke briefly on Ezekie l
18. Rev . Flynn led in prayer. Group
singing was led by Mrs. FayS:. • .
council president, accompanied by

the k ev. Florence Smith ot the
piano.
Memberships a re still being
received for the Food Co-op. June is
members hip m onth . For persons un·
der 60 years of age, the cost is $5.
Those over 60 pay only $2.50. Please
send applications to either Meigs
Cooperative Parish, Box 207, MicJ..
dleport, Ohio or the Rev. Robert
Robinson, 349 South Third, Mid·
dleport, Ohio 45760. The next food coop order will arrive July 3.
The Rev. Paul Hawks , formerly of
Gallipolis, · will conduct a county·
wide revival September 21-26 at the
Po meroy
Church . Further
arrangements will be made by the
E vangelism Committee and a
special task force set up to coordinate the services.
·
The School of Religion , scheduled
for late October at Chester, wa s
shortened one day. The W.tes are
now Oct. 26-23, 1980. The registration
fee was reduced to $4.
The Rev. David Harris, county
youth coordinator, announced a
county-wide swim party for all
youth. The date will be July 10. THe

Grueser hosts Health Club
'

..'

Mrs. Nancy Grueser hosted a
meeting of the Rock Springs Better
Health Club at her home Thursday
afternoon.
The Lord's Prayer and the pledge
to the flag opened the meeting
presided over by Mrs. Nancy
Morris, president. Mrs. Beuna
Grueser read "What Makes Our
Country Great" , and " Confide in a
Friend." Officers reports were
given along with a report from the
card committee. Martha King noted
that flowers had been planted at the
Rock Springs Cemetery.
Mrs. Ethel Grueser had the
program with the articles including
" Vitamin E for Preventing Catarac·
ts " by Teresa Abbott; "Alcoholic
Brain Damage Reversed" by Mrs.
Frances Goeglein, " Body Produces

CLATWORTHY ENTERTAINS
CLUB
Mrs. Enuna Kay Claiworthy en·
tertained the Past Matrons Club of
Evangeline Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star.
Mrs. Virginia Buchanan presided
at the meeting and Mrs. Marie'
Hawkins gave the card report.
Games were played with Mrs. Clat·
worthy, Mrs. Buchanan, Mrs. Helen
Reynolds, Mrs. Marie Hawkihs,
Mrs. Kathryn Knight, Mrs. Dorothy
Young, Mrs. Katie Anthony, Mrs.
Mary Hughes and Mrs. Rosemary
Lyons winning prizes. Refreshments
were served. Mrs. Young will host
ttie next meeting.

place will be London Pool · at
Syr acuse.
The July issue of the Conwct will
feature a sermonette by the Rev .
Carl Hi cks. The dj'adline for news
items is the last Tuesday of each
month.
Vernon Nease announced the next
meeting of the County United Methjodist Men. It is planned for Monday,
June 30 at Asbury United Methodist
Church in Syracuse. A round of dart·
ball will follow the meeting.
Parish Coordinator, Rev. Ri chrd
Thomas, noted that 1980 seems to be
a banner year for Vacation Bible
Schools a cross Meigs County. Local
congr egations and groups of
congregations are having grea t
response from the corrununity.
County Cookbooks a re almost aU
gone. The parish will have a booth at
the Meigs County Fair as in past
years.
Following adjournment, s pecial
music was provided by the Rev. and
Mrs. Carl HHicks, and their
daughter, Carlotta . The next .county
council wil lie July 14 at the Long
Bottom United Methodist Church.

r---Social Calendar

25 Times More Nitrate Than You
Eat" by Phyllis Skinner, "Scares
Risk" by Judy Humphreys ,
" Nature's Remedy " by Martha
Kmg, with safety tips by Suzie
Pullins.
The contest conducted by Mrs.
Beuna Grueser was won by Ethele
Grueser and Nancy Morris. The an·
nual picnic was set for July 17 at the
home of Mrs. Goeglein. Members
are to take a covered dish and their
own table service. Meat wiU be fur·
nished by the club. There will be no
meeting in August.
The September meeting will be at
the home of Mrs. Humphreys with
Beuna Grueser to have the program,
and Mrs. Ethel Grueser, the contest.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess.

BAKER REUNION SUCCESS
First-reunion of the Walter Baker
family of Long Bottom was held
June 15. Attending were Seldon E .
Baker, Walter and Dorothy Baker
and Mike, David and Jeanne Baker
and Jeremy, Rodney Baker, Cathy
Maxey, Steve and Deanna Shepard
and Carrie.

SALE CONTINUES
Book sale continues at the Mid·
dleport Public Library and for
Regatta Weekend, a sale will be held
at the Pomeroy Library, 10:30 a.m.
to 5 p.m. on Saturday.
·

TUESDAY
SOUTHEASTERN LO C AL
Athletic Boosters meeting 8 p.m.
Tuesday at high school in Racine .
WEDNESDA\'
AN NUA L
INS P E C TION ,
Evangeline ChaptP.r 172, Order uf
the Easte rn Star, Middleport, 7:3()
p.m. Wednesday. Duris Conley , worthy grand matron uf the Grand
Chapter of Ohio, to be the inspecting
uHicer.
SHORT
ORGANIZATIONAL
meeting for all boys, ninth through
12th grades interested in Eastern
High School football program in·
vited to attend to hear Coach Buddy
Moore outline fall plans, 6:30p.m.
PYTHIAN SISTERS at K of P Hall
7:3fl p.m. for regular meeting. Mem·
bers urged to attend.
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club meeting, Wednesday,
noon at Meigs Inn.
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club
meting, 8 p.m. Wednesday at home
of Hilda Yeauger.

'
MUSICAL THUR.SDA
Y
A chorus group made up of seventh grade students from Meigs Junior
High School will present a musical,
" Wheels", on the stage on the upper
parking lot on Thursday, June 26, at
7p.m.
The musical is under the direction
of T. Edwin Harkless, vocal in·
structor at Meigs Junior and Senior
High Schools.

••

Holter demonstrates rose arrangzng
Mrs. Roy Holter, Region 11 direc·
tor, gave
demonstration un
ar ranging roses a t the recent

a

Wedding
plans made

c

meeting of the Star Garden lu~
held at the home of Mrs. Eqgene
Atkins and Miss Ruby Diehl.
Mrs. Holter used flowers from her
h C
garden, Queen Elizabet • rysta1
Imperial, Hordes Perfecto and Tif·
fany . She also discussed drying
flowers in a microwave oven and
recommended Phatan for control of
the Japanese beetle.
A club flower show was held with
those exhibiting specimens being
Miss Diehl, Mrs. G. A. Radekin, and
Mrs. Lawrence Chapman. Those
making arrangements were Mrs.
James Nicholson, Mrs. G. A.
Radekin, Miss Diehl, and Mrs.
Robert Jewell. Mrs. Holter commented on the specimens and
arrangements.
Mrs. Nicholson conducted the
meeting with devotions being given
by the hostesses. Miss Diehl read

HiUs District of the Ohio Nurse's
Monthly meeting
theatSouthern
6 p.m.
Association
will be of
held
Thtirsday at Mel Schneider's home,
46 Eden Place, Athens. Beverages
and table ;service will be furnished.
A report wiU be given on the recent
convention .
All registered nurses are invite to
attend. The membership includes
registered nurses from Hocking,
Athens, Meigs and Gallia Counties.
Those attending are to take a
covered dish.

RUTlAND

THE RACINE HOME
NATIONAL BANK

J~T AS E-A?Y
AND THE- D· IMR
FORE-MAN ARE
!IP:INSING THe

JUST GE-T

Me A DOCTO~

P~O~TO, SHERIFF ••

THAT DeAN WITCH
8Lir-JDED Me
WITH GRIT AIJD

PR150NE~ o~r
Of' THE 1,\IIJJ! • •
THE SHfRIFf'

GRAVI!L. L ,

Al&gt;lP CORY
ARRIVE!

EVENING

IREFERT
I
I I I

WHAI NAVY CHAPLAIN$

ARE AL-e;O EXPECTED
TO KNOW HOW TO Dq.
IN AD'Cl'ITION TO

EVERYTHING ELSE .

IASTUNE
I
riJ (]

Now arrange the circled lehers to

form the surprise answer, as suggested by the abov~ canoon.

(X I] l XI XI)

Print answer here :

(Answers tomorrow)

control, sprays, and removing the
things which attract insects, Prayer ·
by Mrs. Nicholson closed the.
meeting. Refreshments were ser·
ved.

Yest erdays

I

Jumbles: CANAL

STEED

KISMET

REBUKE

An swer: What the crook, turned railway worker,
wanted very much to d o - " MAKE TRACK S"

BORN LOSER
... .&amp;a;&gt;

I

BRIDGE

~'(,MY

FRI~...

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Dynamic defense depicted

•

ANNIE
Hfo\M .. I I'IOULD
HAVE PREFERRED
6REEN· BUT GREEN
HA5 GCttE TO WAR-

KELLO'?-- YES, MAY FLOWERS r'---..
RESIDES HERE ··YOU I'IOULD POPPY!
LIKE TO INTERVIEW HER
GIVE
FOR A JQS'? .. YOURSIS HE THAT!!

- EVEN CIGARETTE JU5T JUNK ... [
PACKAGES HAD. ID CHECKED T'SEE
IF TKERE '(jERE
STOP USING IT...
ANY AN5yjER5 ,TO
ER .. """'"''"'

AVITAL 1HDU5TRY, I

YOUR RESUMES,

'IIAIIG.IlN IIATWEES OHSAT&amp;SUH

ALL SEATS .JIIST SI.!JO

BUT,..

TRUST ··/f;;~(

is one of those horrible bids
that is likely to prove costly.
It seldom pays to take aggresNORTH
6-24-80
sive
action with 4-3-3-3 distri+Q98
bution.
•1o 53
Eric threw in a monkey
+AKQ5
wrench with his weak three+65 4
club jump.
·
WEST
EAST
North
got
into
the giveaway
+3
.. +1016542
by
jumping
to fQur
spirit
.94
.AQ76
hearts with 4-3-3-3 distribu+J863
.12
tion of his own and the defend ·
+AQJ973
+K
er proceeded to pick his bones
SOUTH
down to the bare skeleton.
+AKJ
The spade lead was won in
.KJ 8 2
dummy and a heart Jed.
• 10 9 4
Moore hopped right up with
+ 10 8 2
his ace and led the king of
Vulnerable: North-South
clubs. Eric failed to overtake
Dealer: North
so Arthur Jed a spade which
' Eric ruffed .
Wesl
Not1b Ea.SI
Soutb
That made three tricks for
Pass
Pass
the
defense. Now Robinson
Pass Pass
3+
took his ace and queen of
Pass
clubs while Moore discarded
the seven and deuce of
Opening lead:+ 3
diamonds. Sc Eric gave him a
diamond ruff for the sixth
defensive trick.
They weren 't through .
Arthur Jed a spade. South had
tO win in his own hand and
By Oswald Jacoby
couldn't get to 'dummy to
and Alan Sontag
finesse against the queen of
Here is a hand \hat helped hearts.
Plus 400 on a hand where
Eric Robinson and Arthur
they could make one of some·
Moore in this year 's Grand
thing against good defense.
National.
.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
South's third-hand opening

... ~EN 'IOU TWO BETTER RIDE
BACK AN' GET TH' REST OF TH'
BOYS! WE MIGHT NEED ALL TH'
HELP WE CAN GET n:oRAAL
THIS CRITTER!

6' 00 (]) 0 (!) 0 CIJ ®J(l21 Q) NEWS
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(JOINED IN.PROGRESS)
(~ ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
CIJ ABC NEWS
CIJ (jJJ ZOOM
6' 30 CIJ 0 (!) NBC NEWS .
00 I LOVE LUCY
Q0 CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS Gue st : Betty Wh it e .
O CIJ®J CBS N~WS
@
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
@ OVER EASY Gu es t : Gay lo rd,
Perry . Host : Hu gh Downs . (C losed
c aptioned)
@ Q) ABC NEWS
6' 58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
1,00 I]) f) CROSS WITS
CIJ PUPPET TREE GANG
® HOGAN' S HEROES
Q0 ilZI Q) FACE THE MUSIC
ffi LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
O CIJ TICTACDOUGH
00 MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
®J NEWS
@ DICK CAVETT SHOW
7,30 I]) 0
®J
HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES
CIJ FAITHTHATLIVES
(!] SNEAK.PREVIEW , JULY
® ALLIN THE FAMILY
CIJ SHANA NA
ffi ABBOTT AND COSTELLO
0 00 JOKER' S WILD
@ DICK CAVETT SHOW
@ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
lllJ ID SHA NA NA Guest : Jay
Johnson.
7,58 Cil NEWS UPDATE
B' OO l]) f) ffi THE MISADVENTURES
OF SHERIFF LOBO When Orly ' s
most tam ous citizen, Se nat or Ca l- .
v in Fl ower s, exp ires in a swirling
bath attheHot Springs spa ,his corrupt c ampa ign mana ge r trie s t o
cover up his d emise until after the

polls are closed. (R epeat: 60
mir~s . )

(1) ORAL ROBERTS

I.

4.

8 '30

8:5B

g,oo

' ~l."t,(
wuz about t' tell me

there
isn't am~
"""'-- voice'

TODAY'S

wher'Witches'Spill is'

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 "AI Bistro
of Honey"
5 Gaucho's
to- out
weapon
(just got by) •
10 Asian l'lver
DOWN
11 Fill the

1 Alimentary
or Erie
2 "Give

suitcase
again

n

12 "Peter Pan" .. - horse . .. "

3 Sbady
13 Sagacious
practices
14 Darrow of
c.Memorable
"King Kong"
period
IS Morsel
5 Outdo
16 Persian rose 1 Choose
17 Brethren
7 Mocked one
member.
8 Rouse
IJ Pillbox
9 "The mean
%0 Occupied
widdle kld"
Z! VIc DaiDone's U Like monsoon

y estenlay's Auwer

dog

DECORATE

WITH
FLAIR

MY FIRST

HI,

6UYS 1

1MPUU3E IS

1 WA5

TO BEA'T HIM
TO A PULP-'

PA5SI NG

JUST ,

FO R HEAVEN 'S
SAKE, WHAT'S

WRON5?

eNe&gt; ...

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

RACINE, 0.

JUNE 24, 1980

I I K J

WED.· SAT. SALE

THE CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY NA

b
I

KJ

Mrs. Eupha· Treadway, Mrs. Dena
Hoffman, Mw Hazel Henson, Miss
Cheryl , Lynn JeweU, Mrs. Ada
Holter, and Mrs. Roy Holler. Mrs.
Ada Holler present.,P Mrs. Eugene
Atkins · and Mrs. James Nicholson
blooming cactus.
Taking flowers to their churches
during the past month were Mrs. G.
A. Radekin, ·Mrs. Nonnan Will and
Mrs . James Nicholson .' Mrs.
Radekin's topic was on bush and
climbing roses. She said that
f the old
fashioned roses were more ragrant.
She discussed soil, mulching and fertilizing and talked about prunilig and
propagation.
. Mrs. JeweU commented on insect

Ma4be

POMEROY, 0.

TUPPERS PLAINS

byHenri Arnold and Bob l ee

I ENKLE

WIFTOMEET
Marg Woolreth, representative of
the Statewide Parent Inforamtion
Network, will be speaker at the bi·
monthly meeting of Women for Infanned Mothering to be held Thur·
sday, 7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. Mrs.
Woolreth will speak on the legal
rights of handicapped children and
their parents. A guest at the meeting
will be Chris Layh of the Meigs
School for the Mentally Retarded.

FARMERS BANK

Television
Viewing

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
40ne letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

Mrs. Lawrence Chapman was won
by Mrs. Eugene Atkins. Mrs. C. E ,
Stout got the hostess gift.
Guests at the meeting were Mrs.
Ann Williams, Mrs. Ardis Wagner,

~--~,~~~~~~~~:~~:~:~:~~,~--

/

.

'ftj'Jj}1Mf j1;}~

~ ~ ~~ ®

ONATOMEET

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

(

.

outstanding garden clubm~mber.
The traveling prize donated by

Plans have been completed for the
weddng of Miss Tina Rae Smith,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Smith, Cheshire, and Douglas Allen
Rosenbaum, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Rosenbaum, Danville,
Ca lif.
The wedding wll be held.Saturday
at 2:30 p.m. at hte'Trinity Church,
Pomeroy. The Rev. W. ·H. Perrin
will perform the double-ring
ceremonyh following a program of
,
v
,
organ music by Mis Lori Wood
"Shakespeare s r 1owers oo pan·
sies taken from the Mid.Swruner
beginning at2 p.m.
Night's Dream, and Mrs. Atkins had
Miss Beverly Hoffman, Mid·
• a Bible quiz.
dlcport, will be the maid of honor for
M Norman Will was named out·
the bride and the bridesmaids will
stan~~g
amateur gardener by the
be Mrs. Terri Yeauger McLaughlin,
club,
and
Mrs .. G. A. Radekin, the Pomeroy, and Miss Linda Rosen·
baum, Danville. Calif. Laura Smith,
Cheshire, will be the flowergirl.
Joe Rosenbaum, Columbus, will
serve as bestman for the groom, and
the ushers wiU be Jim Rosenbaum,
Danville, Calif.; Ray Smith, Jr., An·
thony Smith, Cheshire, and Jeff
Glass. Eric Smith will be the acolyte
and Matthew Smith, the ring bearer.
Guests will be registered by Sherri
Osborne.
A reception will follow the
ceremony in the church social room.

---NOTICE---

BANK ONE

13- lhe_!?aily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, June 24, 1960

DICK, TRACY

real first
name
ZZ Tickle
: the fancy
2U'roplcal
ault fabric
%5 Imprudent

IS Dastardly
18 Dog..,led
term
21 Famed
Hollywood
street
2% Near
East
expert
23 Tropical

24 100
centesimi
%t Sta~ in VIrgo
29 Tenth part
30 E:Etln·
guished
3% Swampy

grow!d

9,30

35 Crisscross
31 Marsh

:dis:;:'se:as:;se~,_.;;....:;;::,,.......,

weather

!tTum
informer

n Pugwatic

Assorted

Value!
Now ... our lowest price ever on quality Road
King fiberglass belted Premium* 78 2+2.
Comfortable riding, good handling, 7 rib de~ign
gives great performance at an affordable pnce.

34 Peaceful

Size

Only ..-.

E78X14
F78X 14

$3 2~~es. ~hite;

G78xl .S
H78x15

G78xl4

L78X15

F.E.T.

Price

33.95 I
34.95
36.95
36.95
40.95
42.95

I

2.21
2.37
2.54
2.62

EXTRA SPECIAL ON BOTH PREMIUM PLUS AND

• 24 beautiful decorator pattems
• Ideal for kitchens and baths·
• Sponge clean with soap and wat8f

-.

3.1 J

plus 1.76 FET
•Premium is our ~igOation. No industry-wide standard exists fDf' prerm~m hres.

PREMIU~ 78 2X2

MEIGS TI.RE CENTER, INC.
700 E. MAIN . ,.
~~~~_:--~~---~::~:21=0:1J
~------·----ND_T_ro~~R-~-E-R'S~,1 v
L

Made of washable,
tear-resistant
Du Pont TYVEK®

b-4--4--ffl

3'7 Canaanite
COIIIDI8Dder
38 'lbrob

prepasted wallcovering

• No paste or special tools needed

2.84

3aLucreUa-

r~,.

• Easy to handle 12 inch squares

A78x13

!tCbopcbop
3llnter·
diction
3Z Mila Farrow
33 Tuesday'• god

Patterns-

air

10'00

"name

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

It's easy ... just dip
each "Flair Square"
in water, slip into
place and sponge
smooth. Ideal for ,
difficult areas like
and baths.

.11.

Per piCk of 15'
one h. squares

it:

"One Flew Over the CuCkoo'e ·
Naet" 1975

One letter simply •hinds for another. In this somple A is
used for the three L's, X for the t~o O's, ete. SlnJle letters,
apostrophes, the lencth and format!on· of the worda are oll
hints. Eoch day the code letters are dllferent.

'

10,28
10,30

CRYPI'OQUOTBS

Cii

Hfl{ Pl'ltHER, WHI( DON'T
'(OIJ,61VE 11115 6UV lliE
OL' SCMMVCKlE 6ALL?

SCHMUGKLE BALL?

NOT '(fL. WAIT 'TIL I
OUT OF THE WAI{!

ENS

NMMXP

PMMLMY

D p

IM

.

ENS

SQ

ES

D

TDPE
NMMXJ?

""

Y R M E ? - MDKT ,
Yaterdly'1 CISPittMfe: WE TALK OF

QRVM

RZ

UDVDERSQ

DP

TSQC

8

Q

D

N.RTPSQ

Kii.LmG TIME,· AS

IF, ALAS IT WEREN'T TIME '111AT XDLS US:-ALPHONSE
.o\lLAIS

RAT PATROL

(I) CAMERA THREE 'Shodo: Tho
.,...

P.ath of Writing'

{ll) OVER EASY Guesl : Gaylord
Perry . Host: Hugh Downs. (Closed
2!_Ptioned)
•
10,58 1.1.1 NEWS UPDATE
""' ..,

1 MO

NSJTYQ'E

.
@ MOVIE-(DR'AMA)•• ' 'Returno1
a Man Called Horse" 1976
ffi BASEBALL All antB Breves vs .
Cincinnati Red s
(]) W Q) HAPPY DAYS Wilh I he
helpol Richie 's Un cl e Joe ,the gang
is transported back to the colorlul
da y s o f the Ro aring Twenties ,
where distric t a Horne y Ric hie and
hoodlum Fonz ie battle overthe love
of Lori Beth . (Repeat)
0 CIJ(JID THE WHITESHAOOWAn
embitt er ed bla ck yo uth sows
ssed s of r.ebet lio n amo ng the
Carver ba sketball players when he
ca ll s Co a ch Re eve s a ra c is t
(8 e_p_~ at ; 60 min s.)
Cl)l11) NOVA 'ADesertPia ce' De·
spite an almost total ta ck of rainfall
ee c h year andthegreat eKtremes in
temperature , some plant and
animal life continues to flo uris h in
southern Arizona 's Sonoran De·
sert .
(60
mins.)
(Closed
captioned)
(1) GOOD NEWS
('{)!lZIQ) LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY ,
-Movie stardom comes to Laverne
and Shirley when they are c ho sen
to be in an Army training film .
(Repeat)
(1) NEWS UPDATE
(II 0 (!) ALONE AT LAST
Contempor ary co medy about a
mi.ddle-aged docto r' s attempt to
mediate the feud between his wife
and hi s mo ther, and his problems
with his teenage. mu sician son .
Stars: Eugene Roche , Susan Bay
C1J 700CLUB
CIJ@ Q) THREE 'S COMPANY
When Jack inadvertently displays'
his great pas sion lor the opposite
s ex to apartment manager Relph
Furley, his cover is blown-·lorcing _
him int o th e most o utlandish act
ever.
(R epeat)
(Closed-Captioned)
0 (])®J THE DEFECTION OF .
SIMAS KUOIRKA The s to r y of 8 ·
Lithuanian seaman who made a ·
daring , but ab ortive , attempt lor:
free dom by leaping from a Russian·
ship to the dec k ol an Am eri can
C oast Guard c utter. St ars: Alan Ar·.
kin, Shirley Knight. (2 hrs.)
00® SEARCH FOR SOLUTIONS
' Theory, Modeling and Predi ction'
The subjec ts expl ored are: theor·
ies , stor'1e s or "flypotheseS we find:
and then tr y·t o eJ~.p l ain ; modeling ,.
using simpl e repres entations 10'
test a theo ry or predicti on : and'
prediction . try ing to forsee the un·
lo rs een. (60 mins .) (Closed
captioned)
CIJ 0 (!) NBC WHITE PAPER 'II
Japan Can, WhyCan 'tWe ?' An NBC
News special eumining the slow
g ro wth of Amer ic an produc tivity,
and why it mu st be increased . The'
program pr o bes some po s sible'
reasons why the U.S. has slipped
from being number one in per c apita
Gross Nat ional Produ c t t o the
number seven poSition. (90 mlns.)
CII WID TAXI Goaded by a beau·
tlful snow bunriy. Alex attacks lila
with hilarious new vengeance by
crashing down a steep ski jump,
jumping out of an airplane and·
c limbing into the ring with a boxer.
(Repeat)
ffi TENNIS 'Wimbledon High-'
l ights' This thrilling exclus ive pre·
sent s the· mo s t e xtensive on -air
coverage of the event with same·
day action highlights and com-,
prehensive semi-final match -play ·
cove"r~e .
·•
GOWWHARTTOHART Jonathan :
and Jennifer jet deep into South ·
America to pay a million dollar ran -~
sorTi , but wind up mounting a raid :
e gain st the private army of a power-.
rutembeztler who has kidnapped a
brilliant Hart Industries scientist .
03epeat ; 60 mins.)
(I) CITY NOTEBOOK
@NEWS
(I) NEWS UPDATE
(I) FAITH 20
ffi MOVIE -jCOMEDY·DRAMAI" '

CIJ • (]) C!J • C1J ®J ""' ..,
NEWS

(I) TODAY IN BIBLI!' PROPHECY
CIILAST OF THE WILD 'Girafli'
C1J DAVE ALLEN AT L.ARGE
{ll) DICK CAVETT SHOW
1U8 (I) !'I.EWSUPDATE
11,30 CIJ8 (!) THE TONIGHTSHOW
'Beat Of Carson' Gueata: David
Stelnbarg,MarlanneBroome,Kelly
Garrett, John 8ennett 1 (Repeat; 90
mina.)
Cll ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
C1J MOVIE 1DRAMA) ••• ''Strow•
llerry Blonde" 11142
.
C1J llJ) •
ABC NEW'
NICJHniNE

�I

12- The paily Sentinel, M iddlepo~t-1-'ome roy , 0 ., Tuesday, J une 24, 1980

United Metho~sts plan hymn sing
Plans for a county-wide picnic and
an old fashioned hymn sing June 29
were announced when the Meigs
County United Methodist Council on
Ministries met recently at the Car·
mel United Methodist Church. The
picnic will be held at the Portland
Park, beginning at 5 p.m. Sunday.
The meal will be covered dish and
will begin at 6 p.m . The hymn sing is
scheduled for 7 p.m. and will be at
the Portland United Methodist Chur·
ch. In case of rain, aU activities will
be at the Portland Church. Honored
guests will be the Rev. and Mrs.
Stanley Merrifield and family,
newly assigned to the Syracuse
Charge. Also honored will be the
Rev. Robert Mcgee of Pomeroy and
the Rev. James Corbitt of the En·
terprise-Rock Springs Charge, both
of whom were ordained elder and
deacon respectively at the recent
West Ohio Annual Conference.
The meeting began with devotions
by the host pastor, the Rev. Mark
Flynn, who spoke briefly on Ezekie l
18. Rev . Flynn led in prayer. Group
singing was led by Mrs. FayS:. • .
council president, accompanied by

the k ev. Florence Smith ot the
piano.
Memberships a re still being
received for the Food Co-op. June is
members hip m onth . For persons un·
der 60 years of age, the cost is $5.
Those over 60 pay only $2.50. Please
send applications to either Meigs
Cooperative Parish, Box 207, MicJ..
dleport, Ohio or the Rev. Robert
Robinson, 349 South Third, Mid·
dleport, Ohio 45760. The next food coop order will arrive July 3.
The Rev. Paul Hawks , formerly of
Gallipolis, · will conduct a county·
wide revival September 21-26 at the
Po meroy
Church . Further
arrangements will be made by the
E vangelism Committee and a
special task force set up to coordinate the services.
·
The School of Religion , scheduled
for late October at Chester, wa s
shortened one day. The W.tes are
now Oct. 26-23, 1980. The registration
fee was reduced to $4.
The Rev. David Harris, county
youth coordinator, announced a
county-wide swim party for all
youth. The date will be July 10. THe

Grueser hosts Health Club
'

..'

Mrs. Nancy Grueser hosted a
meeting of the Rock Springs Better
Health Club at her home Thursday
afternoon.
The Lord's Prayer and the pledge
to the flag opened the meeting
presided over by Mrs. Nancy
Morris, president. Mrs. Beuna
Grueser read "What Makes Our
Country Great" , and " Confide in a
Friend." Officers reports were
given along with a report from the
card committee. Martha King noted
that flowers had been planted at the
Rock Springs Cemetery.
Mrs. Ethel Grueser had the
program with the articles including
" Vitamin E for Preventing Catarac·
ts " by Teresa Abbott; "Alcoholic
Brain Damage Reversed" by Mrs.
Frances Goeglein, " Body Produces

CLATWORTHY ENTERTAINS
CLUB
Mrs. Enuna Kay Claiworthy en·
tertained the Past Matrons Club of
Evangeline Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star.
Mrs. Virginia Buchanan presided
at the meeting and Mrs. Marie'
Hawkins gave the card report.
Games were played with Mrs. Clat·
worthy, Mrs. Buchanan, Mrs. Helen
Reynolds, Mrs. Marie Hawkihs,
Mrs. Kathryn Knight, Mrs. Dorothy
Young, Mrs. Katie Anthony, Mrs.
Mary Hughes and Mrs. Rosemary
Lyons winning prizes. Refreshments
were served. Mrs. Young will host
ttie next meeting.

place will be London Pool · at
Syr acuse.
The July issue of the Conwct will
feature a sermonette by the Rev .
Carl Hi cks. The dj'adline for news
items is the last Tuesday of each
month.
Vernon Nease announced the next
meeting of the County United Methjodist Men. It is planned for Monday,
June 30 at Asbury United Methodist
Church in Syracuse. A round of dart·
ball will follow the meeting.
Parish Coordinator, Rev. Ri chrd
Thomas, noted that 1980 seems to be
a banner year for Vacation Bible
Schools a cross Meigs County. Local
congr egations and groups of
congregations are having grea t
response from the corrununity.
County Cookbooks a re almost aU
gone. The parish will have a booth at
the Meigs County Fair as in past
years.
Following adjournment, s pecial
music was provided by the Rev. and
Mrs. Carl HHicks, and their
daughter, Carlotta . The next .county
council wil lie July 14 at the Long
Bottom United Methodist Church.

r---Social Calendar

25 Times More Nitrate Than You
Eat" by Phyllis Skinner, "Scares
Risk" by Judy Humphreys ,
" Nature's Remedy " by Martha
Kmg, with safety tips by Suzie
Pullins.
The contest conducted by Mrs.
Beuna Grueser was won by Ethele
Grueser and Nancy Morris. The an·
nual picnic was set for July 17 at the
home of Mrs. Goeglein. Members
are to take a covered dish and their
own table service. Meat wiU be fur·
nished by the club. There will be no
meeting in August.
The September meeting will be at
the home of Mrs. Humphreys with
Beuna Grueser to have the program,
and Mrs. Ethel Grueser, the contest.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess.

BAKER REUNION SUCCESS
First-reunion of the Walter Baker
family of Long Bottom was held
June 15. Attending were Seldon E .
Baker, Walter and Dorothy Baker
and Mike, David and Jeanne Baker
and Jeremy, Rodney Baker, Cathy
Maxey, Steve and Deanna Shepard
and Carrie.

SALE CONTINUES
Book sale continues at the Mid·
dleport Public Library and for
Regatta Weekend, a sale will be held
at the Pomeroy Library, 10:30 a.m.
to 5 p.m. on Saturday.
·

TUESDAY
SOUTHEASTERN LO C AL
Athletic Boosters meeting 8 p.m.
Tuesday at high school in Racine .
WEDNESDA\'
AN NUA L
INS P E C TION ,
Evangeline ChaptP.r 172, Order uf
the Easte rn Star, Middleport, 7:3()
p.m. Wednesday. Duris Conley , worthy grand matron uf the Grand
Chapter of Ohio, to be the inspecting
uHicer.
SHORT
ORGANIZATIONAL
meeting for all boys, ninth through
12th grades interested in Eastern
High School football program in·
vited to attend to hear Coach Buddy
Moore outline fall plans, 6:30p.m.
PYTHIAN SISTERS at K of P Hall
7:3fl p.m. for regular meeting. Mem·
bers urged to attend.
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club meeting, Wednesday,
noon at Meigs Inn.
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club
meting, 8 p.m. Wednesday at home
of Hilda Yeauger.

'
MUSICAL THUR.SDA
Y
A chorus group made up of seventh grade students from Meigs Junior
High School will present a musical,
" Wheels", on the stage on the upper
parking lot on Thursday, June 26, at
7p.m.
The musical is under the direction
of T. Edwin Harkless, vocal in·
structor at Meigs Junior and Senior
High Schools.

••

Holter demonstrates rose arrangzng
Mrs. Roy Holter, Region 11 direc·
tor, gave
demonstration un
ar ranging roses a t the recent

a

Wedding
plans made

c

meeting of the Star Garden lu~
held at the home of Mrs. Eqgene
Atkins and Miss Ruby Diehl.
Mrs. Holter used flowers from her
h C
garden, Queen Elizabet • rysta1
Imperial, Hordes Perfecto and Tif·
fany . She also discussed drying
flowers in a microwave oven and
recommended Phatan for control of
the Japanese beetle.
A club flower show was held with
those exhibiting specimens being
Miss Diehl, Mrs. G. A. Radekin, and
Mrs. Lawrence Chapman. Those
making arrangements were Mrs.
James Nicholson, Mrs. G. A.
Radekin, Miss Diehl, and Mrs.
Robert Jewell. Mrs. Holter commented on the specimens and
arrangements.
Mrs. Nicholson conducted the
meeting with devotions being given
by the hostesses. Miss Diehl read

HiUs District of the Ohio Nurse's
Monthly meeting
theatSouthern
6 p.m.
Association
will be of
held
Thtirsday at Mel Schneider's home,
46 Eden Place, Athens. Beverages
and table ;service will be furnished.
A report wiU be given on the recent
convention .
All registered nurses are invite to
attend. The membership includes
registered nurses from Hocking,
Athens, Meigs and Gallia Counties.
Those attending are to take a
covered dish.

RUTlAND

THE RACINE HOME
NATIONAL BANK

J~T AS E-A?Y
AND THE- D· IMR
FORE-MAN ARE
!IP:INSING THe

JUST GE-T

Me A DOCTO~

P~O~TO, SHERIFF ••

THAT DeAN WITCH
8Lir-JDED Me
WITH GRIT AIJD

PR150NE~ o~r
Of' THE 1,\IIJJ! • •
THE SHfRIFf'

GRAVI!L. L ,

Al&gt;lP CORY
ARRIVE!

EVENING

IREFERT
I
I I I

WHAI NAVY CHAPLAIN$

ARE AL-e;O EXPECTED
TO KNOW HOW TO Dq.
IN AD'Cl'ITION TO

EVERYTHING ELSE .

IASTUNE
I
riJ (]

Now arrange the circled lehers to

form the surprise answer, as suggested by the abov~ canoon.

(X I] l XI XI)

Print answer here :

(Answers tomorrow)

control, sprays, and removing the
things which attract insects, Prayer ·
by Mrs. Nicholson closed the.
meeting. Refreshments were ser·
ved.

Yest erdays

I

Jumbles: CANAL

STEED

KISMET

REBUKE

An swer: What the crook, turned railway worker,
wanted very much to d o - " MAKE TRACK S"

BORN LOSER
... .&amp;a;&gt;

I

BRIDGE

~'(,MY

FRI~...

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Dynamic defense depicted

•

ANNIE
Hfo\M .. I I'IOULD
HAVE PREFERRED
6REEN· BUT GREEN
HA5 GCttE TO WAR-

KELLO'?-- YES, MAY FLOWERS r'---..
RESIDES HERE ··YOU I'IOULD POPPY!
LIKE TO INTERVIEW HER
GIVE
FOR A JQS'? .. YOURSIS HE THAT!!

- EVEN CIGARETTE JU5T JUNK ... [
PACKAGES HAD. ID CHECKED T'SEE
IF TKERE '(jERE
STOP USING IT...
ANY AN5yjER5 ,TO
ER .. """'"''"'

AVITAL 1HDU5TRY, I

YOUR RESUMES,

'IIAIIG.IlN IIATWEES OHSAT&amp;SUH

ALL SEATS .JIIST SI.!JO

BUT,..

TRUST ··/f;;~(

is one of those horrible bids
that is likely to prove costly.
It seldom pays to take aggresNORTH
6-24-80
sive
action with 4-3-3-3 distri+Q98
bution.
•1o 53
Eric threw in a monkey
+AKQ5
wrench with his weak three+65 4
club jump.
·
WEST
EAST
North
got
into
the giveaway
+3
.. +1016542
by
jumping
to fQur
spirit
.94
.AQ76
hearts with 4-3-3-3 distribu+J863
.12
tion of his own and the defend ·
+AQJ973
+K
er proceeded to pick his bones
SOUTH
down to the bare skeleton.
+AKJ
The spade lead was won in
.KJ 8 2
dummy and a heart Jed.
• 10 9 4
Moore hopped right up with
+ 10 8 2
his ace and led the king of
Vulnerable: North-South
clubs. Eric failed to overtake
Dealer: North
so Arthur Jed a spade which
' Eric ruffed .
Wesl
Not1b Ea.SI
Soutb
That made three tricks for
Pass
Pass
the
defense. Now Robinson
Pass Pass
3+
took his ace and queen of
Pass
clubs while Moore discarded
the seven and deuce of
Opening lead:+ 3
diamonds. Sc Eric gave him a
diamond ruff for the sixth
defensive trick.
They weren 't through .
Arthur Jed a spade. South had
tO win in his own hand and
By Oswald Jacoby
couldn't get to 'dummy to
and Alan Sontag
finesse against the queen of
Here is a hand \hat helped hearts.
Plus 400 on a hand where
Eric Robinson and Arthur
they could make one of some·
Moore in this year 's Grand
thing against good defense.
National.
.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
South's third-hand opening

... ~EN 'IOU TWO BETTER RIDE
BACK AN' GET TH' REST OF TH'
BOYS! WE MIGHT NEED ALL TH'
HELP WE CAN GET n:oRAAL
THIS CRITTER!

6' 00 (]) 0 (!) 0 CIJ ®J(l21 Q) NEWS
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(JOINED IN.PROGRESS)
(~ ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
CIJ ABC NEWS
CIJ (jJJ ZOOM
6' 30 CIJ 0 (!) NBC NEWS .
00 I LOVE LUCY
Q0 CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS Gue st : Betty Wh it e .
O CIJ®J CBS N~WS
@
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
@ OVER EASY Gu es t : Gay lo rd,
Perry . Host : Hu gh Downs . (C losed
c aptioned)
@ Q) ABC NEWS
6' 58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
1,00 I]) f) CROSS WITS
CIJ PUPPET TREE GANG
® HOGAN' S HEROES
Q0 ilZI Q) FACE THE MUSIC
ffi LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
O CIJ TICTACDOUGH
00 MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
®J NEWS
@ DICK CAVETT SHOW
7,30 I]) 0
®J
HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES
CIJ FAITHTHATLIVES
(!] SNEAK.PREVIEW , JULY
® ALLIN THE FAMILY
CIJ SHANA NA
ffi ABBOTT AND COSTELLO
0 00 JOKER' S WILD
@ DICK CAVETT SHOW
@ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
lllJ ID SHA NA NA Guest : Jay
Johnson.
7,58 Cil NEWS UPDATE
B' OO l]) f) ffi THE MISADVENTURES
OF SHERIFF LOBO When Orly ' s
most tam ous citizen, Se nat or Ca l- .
v in Fl ower s, exp ires in a swirling
bath attheHot Springs spa ,his corrupt c ampa ign mana ge r trie s t o
cover up his d emise until after the

polls are closed. (R epeat: 60
mir~s . )

(1) ORAL ROBERTS

I.

4.

8 '30

8:5B

g,oo

' ~l."t,(
wuz about t' tell me

there
isn't am~
"""'-- voice'

TODAY'S

wher'Witches'Spill is'

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 "AI Bistro
of Honey"
5 Gaucho's
to- out
weapon
(just got by) •
10 Asian l'lver
DOWN
11 Fill the

1 Alimentary
or Erie
2 "Give

suitcase
again

n

12 "Peter Pan" .. - horse . .. "

3 Sbady
13 Sagacious
practices
14 Darrow of
c.Memorable
"King Kong"
period
IS Morsel
5 Outdo
16 Persian rose 1 Choose
17 Brethren
7 Mocked one
member.
8 Rouse
IJ Pillbox
9 "The mean
%0 Occupied
widdle kld"
Z! VIc DaiDone's U Like monsoon

y estenlay's Auwer

dog

DECORATE

WITH
FLAIR

MY FIRST

HI,

6UYS 1

1MPUU3E IS

1 WA5

TO BEA'T HIM
TO A PULP-'

PA5SI NG

JUST ,

FO R HEAVEN 'S
SAKE, WHAT'S

WRON5?

eNe&gt; ...

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

RACINE, 0.

JUNE 24, 1980

I I K J

WED.· SAT. SALE

THE CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY NA

b
I

KJ

Mrs. Eupha· Treadway, Mrs. Dena
Hoffman, Mw Hazel Henson, Miss
Cheryl , Lynn JeweU, Mrs. Ada
Holter, and Mrs. Roy Holler. Mrs.
Ada Holler present.,P Mrs. Eugene
Atkins · and Mrs. James Nicholson
blooming cactus.
Taking flowers to their churches
during the past month were Mrs. G.
A. Radekin, ·Mrs. Nonnan Will and
Mrs . James Nicholson .' Mrs.
Radekin's topic was on bush and
climbing roses. She said that
f the old
fashioned roses were more ragrant.
She discussed soil, mulching and fertilizing and talked about prunilig and
propagation.
. Mrs. JeweU commented on insect

Ma4be

POMEROY, 0.

TUPPERS PLAINS

byHenri Arnold and Bob l ee

I ENKLE

WIFTOMEET
Marg Woolreth, representative of
the Statewide Parent Inforamtion
Network, will be speaker at the bi·
monthly meeting of Women for Infanned Mothering to be held Thur·
sday, 7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. Mrs.
Woolreth will speak on the legal
rights of handicapped children and
their parents. A guest at the meeting
will be Chris Layh of the Meigs
School for the Mentally Retarded.

FARMERS BANK

Television
Viewing

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
40ne letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

Mrs. Lawrence Chapman was won
by Mrs. Eugene Atkins. Mrs. C. E ,
Stout got the hostess gift.
Guests at the meeting were Mrs.
Ann Williams, Mrs. Ardis Wagner,

~--~,~~~~~~~~:~~:~:~:~~,~--

/

.

'ftj'Jj}1Mf j1;}~

~ ~ ~~ ®

ONATOMEET

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

(

.

outstanding garden clubm~mber.
The traveling prize donated by

Plans have been completed for the
weddng of Miss Tina Rae Smith,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Smith, Cheshire, and Douglas Allen
Rosenbaum, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Rosenbaum, Danville,
Ca lif.
The wedding wll be held.Saturday
at 2:30 p.m. at hte'Trinity Church,
Pomeroy. The Rev. W. ·H. Perrin
will perform the double-ring
ceremonyh following a program of
,
v
,
organ music by Mis Lori Wood
"Shakespeare s r 1owers oo pan·
sies taken from the Mid.Swruner
beginning at2 p.m.
Night's Dream, and Mrs. Atkins had
Miss Beverly Hoffman, Mid·
• a Bible quiz.
dlcport, will be the maid of honor for
M Norman Will was named out·
the bride and the bridesmaids will
stan~~g
amateur gardener by the
be Mrs. Terri Yeauger McLaughlin,
club,
and
Mrs .. G. A. Radekin, the Pomeroy, and Miss Linda Rosen·
baum, Danville. Calif. Laura Smith,
Cheshire, will be the flowergirl.
Joe Rosenbaum, Columbus, will
serve as bestman for the groom, and
the ushers wiU be Jim Rosenbaum,
Danville, Calif.; Ray Smith, Jr., An·
thony Smith, Cheshire, and Jeff
Glass. Eric Smith will be the acolyte
and Matthew Smith, the ring bearer.
Guests will be registered by Sherri
Osborne.
A reception will follow the
ceremony in the church social room.

---NOTICE---

BANK ONE

13- lhe_!?aily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, June 24, 1960

DICK, TRACY

real first
name
ZZ Tickle
: the fancy
2U'roplcal
ault fabric
%5 Imprudent

IS Dastardly
18 Dog..,led
term
21 Famed
Hollywood
street
2% Near
East
expert
23 Tropical

24 100
centesimi
%t Sta~ in VIrgo
29 Tenth part
30 E:Etln·
guished
3% Swampy

grow!d

9,30

35 Crisscross
31 Marsh

:dis:;:'se:as:;se~,_.;;....:;;::,,.......,

weather

!tTum
informer

n Pugwatic

Assorted

Value!
Now ... our lowest price ever on quality Road
King fiberglass belted Premium* 78 2+2.
Comfortable riding, good handling, 7 rib de~ign
gives great performance at an affordable pnce.

34 Peaceful

Size

Only ..-.

E78X14
F78X 14

$3 2~~es. ~hite;

G78xl .S
H78x15

G78xl4

L78X15

F.E.T.

Price

33.95 I
34.95
36.95
36.95
40.95
42.95

I

2.21
2.37
2.54
2.62

EXTRA SPECIAL ON BOTH PREMIUM PLUS AND

• 24 beautiful decorator pattems
• Ideal for kitchens and baths·
• Sponge clean with soap and wat8f

-.

3.1 J

plus 1.76 FET
•Premium is our ~igOation. No industry-wide standard exists fDf' prerm~m hres.

PREMIU~ 78 2X2

MEIGS TI.RE CENTER, INC.
700 E. MAIN . ,.
~~~~_:--~~---~::~:21=0:1J
~------·----ND_T_ro~~R-~-E-R'S~,1 v
L

Made of washable,
tear-resistant
Du Pont TYVEK®

b-4--4--ffl

3'7 Canaanite
COIIIDI8Dder
38 'lbrob

prepasted wallcovering

• No paste or special tools needed

2.84

3aLucreUa-

r~,.

• Easy to handle 12 inch squares

A78x13

!tCbopcbop
3llnter·
diction
3Z Mila Farrow
33 Tuesday'• god

Patterns-

air

10'00

"name

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

It's easy ... just dip
each "Flair Square"
in water, slip into
place and sponge
smooth. Ideal for ,
difficult areas like
and baths.

.11.

Per piCk of 15'
one h. squares

it:

"One Flew Over the CuCkoo'e ·
Naet" 1975

One letter simply •hinds for another. In this somple A is
used for the three L's, X for the t~o O's, ete. SlnJle letters,
apostrophes, the lencth and format!on· of the worda are oll
hints. Eoch day the code letters are dllferent.

'

10,28
10,30

CRYPI'OQUOTBS

Cii

Hfl{ Pl'ltHER, WHI( DON'T
'(OIJ,61VE 11115 6UV lliE
OL' SCMMVCKlE 6ALL?

SCHMUGKLE BALL?

NOT '(fL. WAIT 'TIL I
OUT OF THE WAI{!

ENS

NMMXP

PMMLMY

D p

IM

.

ENS

SQ

ES

D

TDPE
NMMXJ?

""

Y R M E ? - MDKT ,
Yaterdly'1 CISPittMfe: WE TALK OF

QRVM

RZ

UDVDERSQ

DP

TSQC

8

Q

D

N.RTPSQ

Kii.LmG TIME,· AS

IF, ALAS IT WEREN'T TIME '111AT XDLS US:-ALPHONSE
.o\lLAIS

RAT PATROL

(I) CAMERA THREE 'Shodo: Tho
.,...

P.ath of Writing'

{ll) OVER EASY Guesl : Gaylord
Perry . Host: Hugh Downs. (Closed
2!_Ptioned)
•
10,58 1.1.1 NEWS UPDATE
""' ..,

1 MO

NSJTYQ'E

.
@ MOVIE-(DR'AMA)•• ' 'Returno1
a Man Called Horse" 1976
ffi BASEBALL All antB Breves vs .
Cincinnati Red s
(]) W Q) HAPPY DAYS Wilh I he
helpol Richie 's Un cl e Joe ,the gang
is transported back to the colorlul
da y s o f the Ro aring Twenties ,
where distric t a Horne y Ric hie and
hoodlum Fonz ie battle overthe love
of Lori Beth . (Repeat)
0 CIJ(JID THE WHITESHAOOWAn
embitt er ed bla ck yo uth sows
ssed s of r.ebet lio n amo ng the
Carver ba sketball players when he
ca ll s Co a ch Re eve s a ra c is t
(8 e_p_~ at ; 60 min s.)
Cl)l11) NOVA 'ADesertPia ce' De·
spite an almost total ta ck of rainfall
ee c h year andthegreat eKtremes in
temperature , some plant and
animal life continues to flo uris h in
southern Arizona 's Sonoran De·
sert .
(60
mins.)
(Closed
captioned)
(1) GOOD NEWS
('{)!lZIQ) LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY ,
-Movie stardom comes to Laverne
and Shirley when they are c ho sen
to be in an Army training film .
(Repeat)
(1) NEWS UPDATE
(II 0 (!) ALONE AT LAST
Contempor ary co medy about a
mi.ddle-aged docto r' s attempt to
mediate the feud between his wife
and hi s mo ther, and his problems
with his teenage. mu sician son .
Stars: Eugene Roche , Susan Bay
C1J 700CLUB
CIJ@ Q) THREE 'S COMPANY
When Jack inadvertently displays'
his great pas sion lor the opposite
s ex to apartment manager Relph
Furley, his cover is blown-·lorcing _
him int o th e most o utlandish act
ever.
(R epeat)
(Closed-Captioned)
0 (])®J THE DEFECTION OF .
SIMAS KUOIRKA The s to r y of 8 ·
Lithuanian seaman who made a ·
daring , but ab ortive , attempt lor:
free dom by leaping from a Russian·
ship to the dec k ol an Am eri can
C oast Guard c utter. St ars: Alan Ar·.
kin, Shirley Knight. (2 hrs.)
00® SEARCH FOR SOLUTIONS
' Theory, Modeling and Predi ction'
The subjec ts expl ored are: theor·
ies , stor'1e s or "flypotheseS we find:
and then tr y·t o eJ~.p l ain ; modeling ,.
using simpl e repres entations 10'
test a theo ry or predicti on : and'
prediction . try ing to forsee the un·
lo rs een. (60 mins .) (Closed
captioned)
CIJ 0 (!) NBC WHITE PAPER 'II
Japan Can, WhyCan 'tWe ?' An NBC
News special eumining the slow
g ro wth of Amer ic an produc tivity,
and why it mu st be increased . The'
program pr o bes some po s sible'
reasons why the U.S. has slipped
from being number one in per c apita
Gross Nat ional Produ c t t o the
number seven poSition. (90 mlns.)
CII WID TAXI Goaded by a beau·
tlful snow bunriy. Alex attacks lila
with hilarious new vengeance by
crashing down a steep ski jump,
jumping out of an airplane and·
c limbing into the ring with a boxer.
(Repeat)
ffi TENNIS 'Wimbledon High-'
l ights' This thrilling exclus ive pre·
sent s the· mo s t e xtensive on -air
coverage of the event with same·
day action highlights and com-,
prehensive semi-final match -play ·
cove"r~e .
·•
GOWWHARTTOHART Jonathan :
and Jennifer jet deep into South ·
America to pay a million dollar ran -~
sorTi , but wind up mounting a raid :
e gain st the private army of a power-.
rutembeztler who has kidnapped a
brilliant Hart Industries scientist .
03epeat ; 60 mins.)
(I) CITY NOTEBOOK
@NEWS
(I) NEWS UPDATE
(I) FAITH 20
ffi MOVIE -jCOMEDY·DRAMAI" '

CIJ • (]) C!J • C1J ®J ""' ..,
NEWS

(I) TODAY IN BIBLI!' PROPHECY
CIILAST OF THE WILD 'Girafli'
C1J DAVE ALLEN AT L.ARGE
{ll) DICK CAVETT SHOW
1U8 (I) !'I.EWSUPDATE
11,30 CIJ8 (!) THE TONIGHTSHOW
'Beat Of Carson' Gueata: David
Stelnbarg,MarlanneBroome,Kelly
Garrett, John 8ennett 1 (Repeat; 90
mina.)
Cll ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
C1J MOVIE 1DRAMA) ••• ''Strow•
llerry Blonde" 11142
.
C1J llJ) •
ABC NEW'
NICJHniNE

���16,:. The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jun~ 24 .

••

51 unzts
collected
Fifty-one units of blood were
received Monday at the American
Red Gross Bloodmobile held at the
Pomeroy Elementary School with 55
people attending .
Of the SJ unil s, 13 we re
replacements and there were four
first time donors.
Charles Searles was a nine gallon
donor and Joan Edwards a first time
donor.
Nurses were Ferndora Story and
Lenora Leifheit. Doctors were Dr.
L.D. Telle and Dr . Wilma Mansfield .
In charge of the cantees were
Mildred Fry, Janice Daniels, Clara
Burris and Eula Jeffers.
Clerical workers were Mary
Nease, Jean Nease, Juanita Sayre,
Grace Drake, Emma K. Clatworthy,
Virninia Buchanan, and Erma
Roush.
Retired Senior Volunteer
Program workers were Dick Karr,
Grace Turner, Clarence Struble,
Bernadine Meier, Eva Dessain,
Kate Jarrell, Edith Williamson, and
Marcia Denison.
Donors were Louise Myers, Patty
Barton, Mary Starcher, Nancy Jeffers, Leo L. Vaughan, Rowena
Vaughan, Homer Hysell, Howard
Logan, Mary K. Spencer, Billy J.
Spencer, Homer B. Smith, Larry
Fisher, Gerald Rought, Virgil Windon, William K. Radford, Geoffrey
A. Wilson, Carolyn A. Charles,
David M. King, Margo Martin, Ida
Mae Martin, Lois J. Wyant ,
Frederick R. Thompson, Dorothy J.
'o liver, and James R. Couch,
Pomeroy; Randall Roberts, Clarence M. Lawrence, David A. Hensler,
and Roy F. VanMeter, Racine;
Tei-ry G. Barrett, Rutland; Joan Edwards, Patrica Logan, Joyce V. Barton, Timothy J . King, Joe M. Chapman, Sarah J. Fowler, Leafy
Chasteen, Robert V. King, Debra J .
Carter, and Carl Horky, Middleport;
Mary Voss, Pam B3rber, and
Clarence Mcintyre, Minersvllle;
Alberta Hubbard, Syracuse; Henry
Bahr, Long Bottom; Charles C.
King, Shorty E. Wright, Danna M.
Davidson, and Mary E. Davidson,
Rutland ; William Myers, and Ellis
E. Myers, Langsville; Richard Barton and Macil Barton, Reedsvllle;
Charles W. Searles, and Rodney
Spires, Cheshire; Martha J .
Nicholson, Belpre.

•

WINNING TICKETS - Dave Fox, right, holds two wiMing tickets
in the weekly drawing of The Sentinel's Security Sweepstakes. With
him ts Carl Gheen of The Sentinel advertising department. The two
wiMers will receive a $50 savings bond and $50 in script money which
may be spent at the stores of participting area merchants. Winners
are announced in the advertisements of those merchants in today's
SentineL Winners must notify The Sentinel within four days to pick up
their prizes.

Mahoning County
project approved
I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
The
state Controlling Board has approved the release of more than
$350,000 for development projects in
the economically depressed region
of Mahoning County in northeast
Ohio.
The board's action Monday came
in response to a request from the
state Department of Economic and
Conununity Development to transfer $250,000 from its industrial
facilities establishment fund to the
Mahoning Valley Economic
Development Corp.
The corporation and other local
groups have created a revolving industrial loan program aimed at
combatting long-term economic
deterioration in the area.
Goals of the loan program include
retaining and expanding existing industry, as well as attracting new industries, the agency said.
The board also approved a request
from the development department
Monday to release $55,000 to the
Warren and Trumbull Counties Improvement Corp.
A total of $523,000 has already
been released to the group, which
will use the money to rehabilitate
and construct railroad facilities to
serve a major K-Mart distribution
center . and future industrial concerns . Rising costs, however,
created the need for additional funds, the department said.
Controllers also OK'd a $57,600
department contract with consultant
George Wilson, who was hired to
help coordinate various development programs in 17 northeastern
counties.
The board waded through a
lengthy, l~itemagenda in an effort
to meet the June 30 deadline for
closing the bookS on the state's
current fiscal year .
Board members deferred a
decision on a department of administrative services proposal to
award a $1,064,000 contract to Arthur Anderson and Co., for an audit
of federal comprehensive employment and training act
programs.
, A second firm, Main Hurdman
&amp;Cranstoun, claims it should have
won the contract because its $979,500
bid )Vas the lowest subrilitted.
Department officials said an
evaluation-point system created ·by
the U.S. Department of Labor was
used to choose the Anderson firm,
even though its bid was higher.
The system takes into account
such factors as experience,
organizational size and structure,
qualification of staff assigned to the
audit and bidders' understanding of
· t11e work to be performed, agency officials said.
But there was disagreement over
0

•

•

whether use of the evaluation
system was mandatory, and the
request - which involves federal
funds - was tabled pending further
study.
In other action, the board approved an education department
request for a $405,000 emergency
loan to the Springfield Local School
District in Swrunit County to help
the financially troubled district
·
avoid a deficit.
Controllers had approved a
$213,773 lor the system last March,
but an amended request for the
higher amount was filed when officials learned original revenue
estimates were incorrect.

r:--Ar~~-n~~~il~-1
Mary Bumside

Seven emergency

Mrs. Leslie (Mary) Burnside,
Athens, died Sunday evening at her
home following a lingering illness.
She was preceded in death by her
husband. Sbrviving are four
children, Roy of Athens, Jack of
South Charleston, W. Va., Arlene of
Colorado, and Shirley of Athens.
Also surviving are six grandchildren
and several great-grandchildren,
and two sisters-in-law, Mrs. Frances
Eskew and Mrs. Ruby Burnside,
Pomeroy.
.
Friends may call at the Hughes
Funeral Home in JAthens on
Tuesday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p·.m.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 3 p.m . at the Rolling Hills
Church on Route 50.

runs recorded
The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Headquarters
reported seven runs by local
emergency squads on Monday.
The Pomeroy Unit handled four of
the calls going early Monday morning to Route I, Minersville, for
Richard Ka ufl who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 9: OS
a.m., the Pomeroy Unit went to
County Road 59 lor Hazel Mayer,
who was also taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Pomeroy Unit picked up
Ullian Schenkle at the Pomeroy
Health Care Center at 9:55a.m. and
took her to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and at 8:01 p.m. the unit
took James Ferguson, Pomeroy
Cliff Apartments to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
At 1:51 a.m., the Rutland Unit
went to Meigs Mine I for Steven
Cremeans who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center and at 10:47 a.m. the
unit went to Meigs Mine 2 lor Jerry
Martindill who was also taken to
Holzer Medical Center. The Tuppers
Plains Unit at I :42 p.m. went to
Route 2 Coolville for Gayann Burke
who was taken to the office of Dr.
James Conde in Middleport.

SUPPLEMENT TO THE r MADISON· PRESS
SENTINEL,
SHOP·
PER'S REVIEW, PT. PLEASANT REGISTER,
DAILY S.ENTINEL.

JA(KSON-WAUERLY
BUSY NEW LEHINGTON
STORES: LONDON-POM~ROY
MtARTHUR-WELLSTON
GEORGETOWN
PT. PLEASANT -MIDDLEPORt

10

3 BIG DAYS

ThursdaJ-Fridar-Saturdar
June 26th, 2lth, 28th
BUSY MAKING FLOWERS - Residents of
Pomeroy Health Care Center were busy Monday
making red, white and blue flowers to be used as centerpieces at the center. The program was under the

-POT ·0-C.OLD DOOR BUSTER

VETERANS MEMORIAL

Monday
admissions--J ohnna
Rhodes, Bidwell; Marjorie Grimm,
Racine; Linda CUMingham, Letart,
W.Va.; Mary Pugh, Minersville ;
Hazel Maier, Pomeroy ; Eugene
Fink, Rutland ; Lillian Schenkle,
Pomeroy ;Walter Bunce, Cheshire;
Richard Qualls, Middleport ;
!.1argaret Barrett, Middleport ;

I

E~ENI~GS

1·oPEN
.
773,5592

Herman Grate
0

·
Mason,

Credit Association, Gallipolis, filed a
foreclosure suit against Kenny Wilt,
Doris Wilt, and Kenny Wilt, Jr.,
Minersville ; Ohio Valley Mfg . Corp.,
Tuppers Plains, against United
States Internal Revenue Service,
Columbus, State Department of
Taxation , H. A. Cole Lumber Co.,
Tuppers Plains, et al.
David T. Grueser, Rt. 1, Cheshire,
and Thl!lma Grueser, Pomeroy,
filed for dissolution of marriage,

BROGAN
INSURANCE SE~VICE
214 E. Main
POMEROY
992-5131
or
992-5739

-~-.....

....'

0

!I

AIR CONDITIONERS
IN STOCK

sa vel

CUTFROM
FULL POLTS

•
•'
•

~

~

•·

9,700 BTU
17,900 BTU
22,500· BTU

....
-...

YARD

tOSS PILLOWS

Middleport, 0.
Deposits Insured To 1100,000

ELBERFELDS I.N POMEROY
MECHANIC ST., POMEROY

•

•

SELECT FROM POPULAR STYlES,
LADIES' AND MISSES'

J~ANS

.-

-POT ·O·GOLD DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL--

LADIES' CREP£ SOLE

M.EN'S KNIT AND BROADCLOTH
SHORT SLEEVE DRESS AND

THONG SURFfRS

Ladies' popular thong style eurfers
made with thick crepe soles for e•tra

SPORT SHIRTS

comfort and long wear. Save now I

Regular values to $5.99. Men's short sleeve
shirts In a variety of styles and colors. Sol id
• · c01or poly cotton fabrics and solid arid laney

15·1nch square soft · velvet covered toss
pillows In your choice of. colors. A Pot·O·
Gold Special Value. Shop now and save!

s

00

_;PO~T~-0~-G;OL~D~D;OO~R~B;US~Tf;R~~:S~r~-=-~POT ~0-GOLD DOOR BUSTfR SPf(I-IAL--....
11111

lr'""&lt;J..i

D~CORATOA

AREA R

A mill assortment of loop and shag area rugs In a variety

.

STRIPED

TRIM

MILt ASST. 24"x36" AND 24"x48"
of colors and patterns. In two popular sizes. 24" • 36"
and 24 11 , 48" .

ASSORTED
PATTERNS

PAIR
DOOR BUST£R SPECIAL-

PAGE-I&amp; SHEET MAGN

MEN'S STRIPED TOP

UJHITf TU8£ SOCKS

EACH

FANCY
COVERS

:-POT ·0-C.OLD DOOR lUSTER SHCIAL-

QUILTED FANCY PRINTED

8iDSPAEAOS

PHOTO AL

An ~ssortment of magnetic style .photo
albums with attractive fancy cover. Eight
sheete - 16 page1: A great value.
Backed by Oependa·ble Factory Authorized Service.
credit Terms Available .

-POT ·O·GOLD DOOR BUSTER SPfCIAL-

Values to $10.99. Popular denim fashion jeans In
your choice of several styles. In misses and
women's sizes. Shop early for best selection. Slight

·~

•

EACH

GOOD RANGE
OF SIZES

Comfortable blue denim shons with elastic waist
band. Contrasting stripe trim and pocket. Ladles' and
misses sizes.
·
•

...
...~.

00

8LU£ ·DENIM

s 00

SLUE DENIM.SHORTS
~

s

sizes for women and misses.

Irregulars.

AND MISSES ELASTIC WAIST~

-..

PRs.J
FOR

P EARLY

1NCH SQUARE ASSORTED DECORATIVE
SOFT VELVET COVERED

•-

SP~CIAL­

TERRY ROMPERS

scarves In 32-lnch and 42·1nch sizes. An outstan·
ding value. Shop early!

-POT ·O·GOLD DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL...;..-

0

i 00

Be cool and comfortable this summer In these
popular ierry rompers. They are available In one and
two piece styles In a wide assortment ol colors . In ·

A'SS~lRlEl~.,~~lf.I,.I(;H AND 42-INCH FANCY
O~£SSfR SCARU£S
A special purchase assortment of fancy dresser

Fine quality easy care polyester doubleknlt
fabrics In a wid~ choice of laney patterns
and popular solid colors. 60 Inches wide
and cut from fu ll bolts. Now Is the time to

~

7,800 BTU

An assortment of famous brand
no-iron pillow cases In solid colors
and fancy print patterns. Regular
size 42x36.

ASSORTED
STYLES- 'COLORS

SLeKNIT FAB.RICS

4,000 BTU
1

.

ONE AND TWO PIECE STYLES
LADIES' AND MISSES

~AR~Y

60 INCHES WIDE-PLAIN· .- . ."!&amp;,,:,"/""
FANCY POLYESTER

READY f.OR DELIVERY

5,000 BTU

PILLOW CAS~S

·sHOP

'
..
..
ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUS-E ••

•

•

''

SELECTED COLORS-PATTERN
63" &amp; 84" LINED ·

--POT-0-GOLO DOOR

,

.,

!-------------------------

Bruce Swift, Portland; Helen Slack,
Racine; David Wolfe, Reedsville;
Ann Cook, Pomeroy; Hilah Jones,
Middleport; Cor Runnion, Syracuse;
Martha Roush, Rutland.
Discharged--Effie Pyle, Ron
Capehart, Margaret Neuman,
Vassel! Dillar , Mat y Pickens,
Ronald Hanson, Deborah Ridgway.

THE CENTRAL TRUST CO., NA.
Member FDIC

irregulars.

-POT ·O·GOLO DOOR BUSTER

NO·IRON SOLID &amp;FANCY

SAVE!

•
•...

REUlE~

"The Friendly Bank"

w. Va.

-POT ·O·GOLD DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL-

~....,,.

WINDOW DRAP£S

..•

'

BY APPOINTMENT ONL

\

Select from a good assortment of decorator
window draperies In 63 inch and 84 Inch sizes.
These draperies are .fully lined and ready to
nang , Slight irregulars.
·

0

our drive thru window will not

•

. ...

, ,,

.

be open Saturday, June 28, 1980

Mon., Tues., wecL, Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to 5:00 Thursday tlll12 Noon

·

Men's cool knit cotton tee shirts In assorted solid
colors with novelty printed designs on the front in
sizes, small, medium, large and extra large. Slight

MEN'S SIZES
S·M·L·XL

..
..

FOR THE BEST DI!ALS IN THE

MASON FURNITURE

PRINTfO T££ SHIRTS

:\

cool summer knit tops . Take your choice of plain col·
ors _and fancy patterns at this low sale price. Regular
$2.99 values. Save now!

.

Due to the Regatta Parade

TRISTATE AREA

KNIT SUMM£R TOPS

-

-NOTICE·--

MASON FURNITURE

POPULAR FOR SUMMER WEAR
MEN'S .NOVELTY FRONT

•

BUDGET DISCUSSION
The Lebanon Township TrloStees
have set a meeting for July 7 to
discuss the budget for the new fiscal 1 - - - - - - - - - _ . :_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
year and the use of revenue sharing.
The session will begin at 7 p.m. at
the township garage.

SHOP

. -POT-0-GOLD DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL-

A special purchase assortmen t of ladies' and misses

rate - 35 percent of appraised ' bill's chief sponsor, Rep. Terry M.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio's
Tranter, 0-CinciMati.
value.
Ia wmakers faced proposals dealing
In other business, the House
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
with tax relief, organized crime and
Finance Committee called for
Jr. , D-New Boston, said he hopes
state government solvency today, as
testimony today on a Senatethat before the two chambers adthey convened for the final week of
approved measure to shore up stale
journ - on Thursday or Friday their June session.
finances in the lace of sharp
they will write a new organized
Senators were huddling on a
recessionary declines in tax
crime statute to replace a law
House-passed proposal protecting
revenues.
•
.
declared unconstitutional June 18 by
homeowners from property hikes
Generally,
the
proposal
the
Ohio
Supreme
Court.
tied to inflation-triggered increases
redistributes
funds
unSI'fnt
by
The
high
court
disallowed
the
old
in real estate values.
various
agencies
in
the
fiscal
year
law
on
grounds
it
was
too
vague,
and
Expected to emerge was a comtherefore jeopardized the due ending June 30, delays payments on
promise between the original House
process rights of those charged un- certain bills and makes other
proposal and a similar one worked
bookkeeping changes to try to make
der it.
out last week by a Senate comup
an expected $266 million shortfall
The decision led to the dismissal of
mittee.
charges against Cleveland Council in the fiscal year ending June 30,
Legislative approval could mean
President George Forbes and of- 1981.
the proposed constitutional amendThe legislation, which Riffe said
ficials of that city in an old case in
ment will appear on the November
•
which they were accused of ac- he expects the House to approve,
ballot alongside a more sweeping
cepting kickbacks from amusement would work in tandem with an
tax change proposal being pushed by
austerity package being laid out by
ride and carnival illterests.
a petition-circulating citizens '
The proposed new statute more Gov. James A. Rhodes.
group.
He Is ordering a 3 percent, acrossclearly defines what constitutes con- '
The latter includes property tax
the-board
spending cut and perspiracy,
and
provides
additional
reductions, but also calls for sharp
mitting
a
5
percent hike in prices at
persqns
who
might
protections
for
increases in the taxes paid by big
state
liquor
stores to make up $147
in
orga
nized
crime
be
implicated
businesses and Ohioans who earn in
million
o(
the
shortfall.
without
their
knowledge,
said
the
excess of $30,000 a year. Pushed by
the Ohio Public Interest Campaign, .------'--------------------~
'
the proposal is regarded as overly
•
ambitious by the Legislature, which
4
considered but rejected it.
•
....
If voters approve the plan now
before the Legislature, it would permit the enactment of laws protecting
YOU'LL LIKELY NEVER HAVE A FIRE
owners of residential and
•
BUT
JUST IN CASEYOU DO, '
'
agricultural real esta~-e - the har'
WE GUARANTEE-YOU'Ll NEVER BEdest hit groups - from the ravages
0'•
of inflation. Currently, all classes of
BOTH BROKE AND HOMELESS TOO.
•l
property must be taxed at a uniform
'

HOSPITAL NEWS

FREE CWTHING DAY
The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency will hold its Free
Clothing Day for low income persons
on Friday, June 27, from 9 a.m. until
12 noon. The agency's clothing bank
is now locted n the old high school
building in Cheshire.

"~'""'·.,"'~~~~

ASSORTED PATTERNS - COLORS
LADIES~ AND MISSES

Ohio lawmakers face
tax relief proposals

$45,900 damages sought
A suit in the amount of $45,900 was
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Ronald J. Uvely, Rt. !,
Langsville, against David M. Gall,
Albany, and Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
Athens.
The suit is for injuries · and
damages as a result oT an accident
that occurred Nov. 14, 1979 on SR 123
in Meigs County.
Also filed were two suits for
foreclosure. Jackson Production

COME-BUY-AND ·SAVE!

direction of the Senior Friends program. The residents
donated one of the arrangements to the Frog
Association to be used at a frog event. ·

s 00

EACH .

An assortment of quilted bedopi'Mda In fancy printed patterne. In twin and full bed lizes.
Slightly Irregular.

TWINS
FULLS

s

Men's white tuba socks with striped
tops In assorted colors. Slight lr·
regulars of high quality socks at a low·
low price. ·

OFS

PKG.
2 PAIRS

·

�16,:. The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jun~ 24 .

••

51 unzts
collected
Fifty-one units of blood were
received Monday at the American
Red Gross Bloodmobile held at the
Pomeroy Elementary School with 55
people attending .
Of the SJ unil s, 13 we re
replacements and there were four
first time donors.
Charles Searles was a nine gallon
donor and Joan Edwards a first time
donor.
Nurses were Ferndora Story and
Lenora Leifheit. Doctors were Dr.
L.D. Telle and Dr . Wilma Mansfield .
In charge of the cantees were
Mildred Fry, Janice Daniels, Clara
Burris and Eula Jeffers.
Clerical workers were Mary
Nease, Jean Nease, Juanita Sayre,
Grace Drake, Emma K. Clatworthy,
Virninia Buchanan, and Erma
Roush.
Retired Senior Volunteer
Program workers were Dick Karr,
Grace Turner, Clarence Struble,
Bernadine Meier, Eva Dessain,
Kate Jarrell, Edith Williamson, and
Marcia Denison.
Donors were Louise Myers, Patty
Barton, Mary Starcher, Nancy Jeffers, Leo L. Vaughan, Rowena
Vaughan, Homer Hysell, Howard
Logan, Mary K. Spencer, Billy J.
Spencer, Homer B. Smith, Larry
Fisher, Gerald Rought, Virgil Windon, William K. Radford, Geoffrey
A. Wilson, Carolyn A. Charles,
David M. King, Margo Martin, Ida
Mae Martin, Lois J. Wyant ,
Frederick R. Thompson, Dorothy J.
'o liver, and James R. Couch,
Pomeroy; Randall Roberts, Clarence M. Lawrence, David A. Hensler,
and Roy F. VanMeter, Racine;
Tei-ry G. Barrett, Rutland; Joan Edwards, Patrica Logan, Joyce V. Barton, Timothy J . King, Joe M. Chapman, Sarah J. Fowler, Leafy
Chasteen, Robert V. King, Debra J .
Carter, and Carl Horky, Middleport;
Mary Voss, Pam B3rber, and
Clarence Mcintyre, Minersvllle;
Alberta Hubbard, Syracuse; Henry
Bahr, Long Bottom; Charles C.
King, Shorty E. Wright, Danna M.
Davidson, and Mary E. Davidson,
Rutland ; William Myers, and Ellis
E. Myers, Langsville; Richard Barton and Macil Barton, Reedsvllle;
Charles W. Searles, and Rodney
Spires, Cheshire; Martha J .
Nicholson, Belpre.

•

WINNING TICKETS - Dave Fox, right, holds two wiMing tickets
in the weekly drawing of The Sentinel's Security Sweepstakes. With
him ts Carl Gheen of The Sentinel advertising department. The two
wiMers will receive a $50 savings bond and $50 in script money which
may be spent at the stores of participting area merchants. Winners
are announced in the advertisements of those merchants in today's
SentineL Winners must notify The Sentinel within four days to pick up
their prizes.

Mahoning County
project approved
I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
The
state Controlling Board has approved the release of more than
$350,000 for development projects in
the economically depressed region
of Mahoning County in northeast
Ohio.
The board's action Monday came
in response to a request from the
state Department of Economic and
Conununity Development to transfer $250,000 from its industrial
facilities establishment fund to the
Mahoning Valley Economic
Development Corp.
The corporation and other local
groups have created a revolving industrial loan program aimed at
combatting long-term economic
deterioration in the area.
Goals of the loan program include
retaining and expanding existing industry, as well as attracting new industries, the agency said.
The board also approved a request
from the development department
Monday to release $55,000 to the
Warren and Trumbull Counties Improvement Corp.
A total of $523,000 has already
been released to the group, which
will use the money to rehabilitate
and construct railroad facilities to
serve a major K-Mart distribution
center . and future industrial concerns . Rising costs, however,
created the need for additional funds, the department said.
Controllers also OK'd a $57,600
department contract with consultant
George Wilson, who was hired to
help coordinate various development programs in 17 northeastern
counties.
The board waded through a
lengthy, l~itemagenda in an effort
to meet the June 30 deadline for
closing the bookS on the state's
current fiscal year .
Board members deferred a
decision on a department of administrative services proposal to
award a $1,064,000 contract to Arthur Anderson and Co., for an audit
of federal comprehensive employment and training act
programs.
, A second firm, Main Hurdman
&amp;Cranstoun, claims it should have
won the contract because its $979,500
bid )Vas the lowest subrilitted.
Department officials said an
evaluation-point system created ·by
the U.S. Department of Labor was
used to choose the Anderson firm,
even though its bid was higher.
The system takes into account
such factors as experience,
organizational size and structure,
qualification of staff assigned to the
audit and bidders' understanding of
· t11e work to be performed, agency officials said.
But there was disagreement over
0

•

•

whether use of the evaluation
system was mandatory, and the
request - which involves federal
funds - was tabled pending further
study.
In other action, the board approved an education department
request for a $405,000 emergency
loan to the Springfield Local School
District in Swrunit County to help
the financially troubled district
·
avoid a deficit.
Controllers had approved a
$213,773 lor the system last March,
but an amended request for the
higher amount was filed when officials learned original revenue
estimates were incorrect.

r:--Ar~~-n~~~il~-1
Mary Bumside

Seven emergency

Mrs. Leslie (Mary) Burnside,
Athens, died Sunday evening at her
home following a lingering illness.
She was preceded in death by her
husband. Sbrviving are four
children, Roy of Athens, Jack of
South Charleston, W. Va., Arlene of
Colorado, and Shirley of Athens.
Also surviving are six grandchildren
and several great-grandchildren,
and two sisters-in-law, Mrs. Frances
Eskew and Mrs. Ruby Burnside,
Pomeroy.
.
Friends may call at the Hughes
Funeral Home in JAthens on
Tuesday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p·.m.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 3 p.m . at the Rolling Hills
Church on Route 50.

runs recorded
The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Headquarters
reported seven runs by local
emergency squads on Monday.
The Pomeroy Unit handled four of
the calls going early Monday morning to Route I, Minersville, for
Richard Ka ufl who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 9: OS
a.m., the Pomeroy Unit went to
County Road 59 lor Hazel Mayer,
who was also taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Pomeroy Unit picked up
Ullian Schenkle at the Pomeroy
Health Care Center at 9:55a.m. and
took her to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and at 8:01 p.m. the unit
took James Ferguson, Pomeroy
Cliff Apartments to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
At 1:51 a.m., the Rutland Unit
went to Meigs Mine I for Steven
Cremeans who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center and at 10:47 a.m. the
unit went to Meigs Mine 2 lor Jerry
Martindill who was also taken to
Holzer Medical Center. The Tuppers
Plains Unit at I :42 p.m. went to
Route 2 Coolville for Gayann Burke
who was taken to the office of Dr.
James Conde in Middleport.

SUPPLEMENT TO THE r MADISON· PRESS
SENTINEL,
SHOP·
PER'S REVIEW, PT. PLEASANT REGISTER,
DAILY S.ENTINEL.

JA(KSON-WAUERLY
BUSY NEW LEHINGTON
STORES: LONDON-POM~ROY
MtARTHUR-WELLSTON
GEORGETOWN
PT. PLEASANT -MIDDLEPORt

10

3 BIG DAYS

ThursdaJ-Fridar-Saturdar
June 26th, 2lth, 28th
BUSY MAKING FLOWERS - Residents of
Pomeroy Health Care Center were busy Monday
making red, white and blue flowers to be used as centerpieces at the center. The program was under the

-POT ·0-C.OLD DOOR BUSTER

VETERANS MEMORIAL

Monday
admissions--J ohnna
Rhodes, Bidwell; Marjorie Grimm,
Racine; Linda CUMingham, Letart,
W.Va.; Mary Pugh, Minersville ;
Hazel Maier, Pomeroy ; Eugene
Fink, Rutland ; Lillian Schenkle,
Pomeroy ;Walter Bunce, Cheshire;
Richard Qualls, Middleport ;
!.1argaret Barrett, Middleport ;

I

E~ENI~GS

1·oPEN
.
773,5592

Herman Grate
0

·
Mason,

Credit Association, Gallipolis, filed a
foreclosure suit against Kenny Wilt,
Doris Wilt, and Kenny Wilt, Jr.,
Minersville ; Ohio Valley Mfg . Corp.,
Tuppers Plains, against United
States Internal Revenue Service,
Columbus, State Department of
Taxation , H. A. Cole Lumber Co.,
Tuppers Plains, et al.
David T. Grueser, Rt. 1, Cheshire,
and Thl!lma Grueser, Pomeroy,
filed for dissolution of marriage,

BROGAN
INSURANCE SE~VICE
214 E. Main
POMEROY
992-5131
or
992-5739

-~-.....

....'

0

!I

AIR CONDITIONERS
IN STOCK

sa vel

CUTFROM
FULL POLTS

•
•'
•

~

~

•·

9,700 BTU
17,900 BTU
22,500· BTU

....
-...

YARD

tOSS PILLOWS

Middleport, 0.
Deposits Insured To 1100,000

ELBERFELDS I.N POMEROY
MECHANIC ST., POMEROY

•

•

SELECT FROM POPULAR STYlES,
LADIES' AND MISSES'

J~ANS

.-

-POT ·O·GOLD DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL--

LADIES' CREP£ SOLE

M.EN'S KNIT AND BROADCLOTH
SHORT SLEEVE DRESS AND

THONG SURFfRS

Ladies' popular thong style eurfers
made with thick crepe soles for e•tra

SPORT SHIRTS

comfort and long wear. Save now I

Regular values to $5.99. Men's short sleeve
shirts In a variety of styles and colors. Sol id
• · c01or poly cotton fabrics and solid arid laney

15·1nch square soft · velvet covered toss
pillows In your choice of. colors. A Pot·O·
Gold Special Value. Shop now and save!

s

00

_;PO~T~-0~-G;OL~D~D;OO~R~B;US~Tf;R~~:S~r~-=-~POT ~0-GOLD DOOR BUSTfR SPf(I-IAL--....
11111

lr'""&lt;J..i

D~CORATOA

AREA R

A mill assortment of loop and shag area rugs In a variety

.

STRIPED

TRIM

MILt ASST. 24"x36" AND 24"x48"
of colors and patterns. In two popular sizes. 24" • 36"
and 24 11 , 48" .

ASSORTED
PATTERNS

PAIR
DOOR BUST£R SPECIAL-

PAGE-I&amp; SHEET MAGN

MEN'S STRIPED TOP

UJHITf TU8£ SOCKS

EACH

FANCY
COVERS

:-POT ·0-C.OLD DOOR lUSTER SHCIAL-

QUILTED FANCY PRINTED

8iDSPAEAOS

PHOTO AL

An ~ssortment of magnetic style .photo
albums with attractive fancy cover. Eight
sheete - 16 page1: A great value.
Backed by Oependa·ble Factory Authorized Service.
credit Terms Available .

-POT ·O·GOLD DOOR BUSTER SPfCIAL-

Values to $10.99. Popular denim fashion jeans In
your choice of several styles. In misses and
women's sizes. Shop early for best selection. Slight

·~

•

EACH

GOOD RANGE
OF SIZES

Comfortable blue denim shons with elastic waist
band. Contrasting stripe trim and pocket. Ladles' and
misses sizes.
·
•

...
...~.

00

8LU£ ·DENIM

s 00

SLUE DENIM.SHORTS
~

s

sizes for women and misses.

Irregulars.

AND MISSES ELASTIC WAIST~

-..

PRs.J
FOR

P EARLY

1NCH SQUARE ASSORTED DECORATIVE
SOFT VELVET COVERED

•-

SP~CIAL­

TERRY ROMPERS

scarves In 32-lnch and 42·1nch sizes. An outstan·
ding value. Shop early!

-POT ·O·GOLD DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL...;..-

0

i 00

Be cool and comfortable this summer In these
popular ierry rompers. They are available In one and
two piece styles In a wide assortment ol colors . In ·

A'SS~lRlEl~.,~~lf.I,.I(;H AND 42-INCH FANCY
O~£SSfR SCARU£S
A special purchase assortment of fancy dresser

Fine quality easy care polyester doubleknlt
fabrics In a wid~ choice of laney patterns
and popular solid colors. 60 Inches wide
and cut from fu ll bolts. Now Is the time to

~

7,800 BTU

An assortment of famous brand
no-iron pillow cases In solid colors
and fancy print patterns. Regular
size 42x36.

ASSORTED
STYLES- 'COLORS

SLeKNIT FAB.RICS

4,000 BTU
1

.

ONE AND TWO PIECE STYLES
LADIES' AND MISSES

~AR~Y

60 INCHES WIDE-PLAIN· .- . ."!&amp;,,:,"/""
FANCY POLYESTER

READY f.OR DELIVERY

5,000 BTU

PILLOW CAS~S

·sHOP

'
..
..
ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUS-E ••

•

•

''

SELECTED COLORS-PATTERN
63" &amp; 84" LINED ·

--POT-0-GOLO DOOR

,

.,

!-------------------------

Bruce Swift, Portland; Helen Slack,
Racine; David Wolfe, Reedsville;
Ann Cook, Pomeroy; Hilah Jones,
Middleport; Cor Runnion, Syracuse;
Martha Roush, Rutland.
Discharged--Effie Pyle, Ron
Capehart, Margaret Neuman,
Vassel! Dillar , Mat y Pickens,
Ronald Hanson, Deborah Ridgway.

THE CENTRAL TRUST CO., NA.
Member FDIC

irregulars.

-POT ·O·GOLO DOOR BUSTER

NO·IRON SOLID &amp;FANCY

SAVE!

•
•...

REUlE~

"The Friendly Bank"

w. Va.

-POT ·O·GOLD DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL-

~....,,.

WINDOW DRAP£S

..•

'

BY APPOINTMENT ONL

\

Select from a good assortment of decorator
window draperies In 63 inch and 84 Inch sizes.
These draperies are .fully lined and ready to
nang , Slight irregulars.
·

0

our drive thru window will not

•

. ...

, ,,

.

be open Saturday, June 28, 1980

Mon., Tues., wecL, Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to 5:00 Thursday tlll12 Noon

·

Men's cool knit cotton tee shirts In assorted solid
colors with novelty printed designs on the front in
sizes, small, medium, large and extra large. Slight

MEN'S SIZES
S·M·L·XL

..
..

FOR THE BEST DI!ALS IN THE

MASON FURNITURE

PRINTfO T££ SHIRTS

:\

cool summer knit tops . Take your choice of plain col·
ors _and fancy patterns at this low sale price. Regular
$2.99 values. Save now!

.

Due to the Regatta Parade

TRISTATE AREA

KNIT SUMM£R TOPS

-

-NOTICE·--

MASON FURNITURE

POPULAR FOR SUMMER WEAR
MEN'S .NOVELTY FRONT

•

BUDGET DISCUSSION
The Lebanon Township TrloStees
have set a meeting for July 7 to
discuss the budget for the new fiscal 1 - - - - - - - - - _ . :_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
year and the use of revenue sharing.
The session will begin at 7 p.m. at
the township garage.

SHOP

. -POT-0-GOLD DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL-

A special purchase assortmen t of ladies' and misses

rate - 35 percent of appraised ' bill's chief sponsor, Rep. Terry M.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio's
Tranter, 0-CinciMati.
value.
Ia wmakers faced proposals dealing
In other business, the House
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
with tax relief, organized crime and
Finance Committee called for
Jr. , D-New Boston, said he hopes
state government solvency today, as
testimony today on a Senatethat before the two chambers adthey convened for the final week of
approved measure to shore up stale
journ - on Thursday or Friday their June session.
finances in the lace of sharp
they will write a new organized
Senators were huddling on a
recessionary declines in tax
crime statute to replace a law
House-passed proposal protecting
revenues.
•
.
declared unconstitutional June 18 by
homeowners from property hikes
Generally,
the
proposal
the
Ohio
Supreme
Court.
tied to inflation-triggered increases
redistributes
funds
unSI'fnt
by
The
high
court
disallowed
the
old
in real estate values.
various
agencies
in
the
fiscal
year
law
on
grounds
it
was
too
vague,
and
Expected to emerge was a comtherefore jeopardized the due ending June 30, delays payments on
promise between the original House
process rights of those charged un- certain bills and makes other
proposal and a similar one worked
bookkeeping changes to try to make
der it.
out last week by a Senate comup
an expected $266 million shortfall
The decision led to the dismissal of
mittee.
charges against Cleveland Council in the fiscal year ending June 30,
Legislative approval could mean
President George Forbes and of- 1981.
the proposed constitutional amendThe legislation, which Riffe said
ficials of that city in an old case in
ment will appear on the November
•
which they were accused of ac- he expects the House to approve,
ballot alongside a more sweeping
cepting kickbacks from amusement would work in tandem with an
tax change proposal being pushed by
austerity package being laid out by
ride and carnival illterests.
a petition-circulating citizens '
The proposed new statute more Gov. James A. Rhodes.
group.
He Is ordering a 3 percent, acrossclearly defines what constitutes con- '
The latter includes property tax
the-board
spending cut and perspiracy,
and
provides
additional
reductions, but also calls for sharp
mitting
a
5
percent hike in prices at
persqns
who
might
protections
for
increases in the taxes paid by big
state
liquor
stores to make up $147
in
orga
nized
crime
be
implicated
businesses and Ohioans who earn in
million
o(
the
shortfall.
without
their
knowledge,
said
the
excess of $30,000 a year. Pushed by
the Ohio Public Interest Campaign, .------'--------------------~
'
the proposal is regarded as overly
•
ambitious by the Legislature, which
4
considered but rejected it.
•
....
If voters approve the plan now
before the Legislature, it would permit the enactment of laws protecting
YOU'LL LIKELY NEVER HAVE A FIRE
owners of residential and
•
BUT
JUST IN CASEYOU DO, '
'
agricultural real esta~-e - the har'
WE GUARANTEE-YOU'Ll NEVER BEdest hit groups - from the ravages
0'•
of inflation. Currently, all classes of
BOTH BROKE AND HOMELESS TOO.
•l
property must be taxed at a uniform
'

HOSPITAL NEWS

FREE CWTHING DAY
The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency will hold its Free
Clothing Day for low income persons
on Friday, June 27, from 9 a.m. until
12 noon. The agency's clothing bank
is now locted n the old high school
building in Cheshire.

"~'""'·.,"'~~~~

ASSORTED PATTERNS - COLORS
LADIES~ AND MISSES

Ohio lawmakers face
tax relief proposals

$45,900 damages sought
A suit in the amount of $45,900 was
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Ronald J. Uvely, Rt. !,
Langsville, against David M. Gall,
Albany, and Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
Athens.
The suit is for injuries · and
damages as a result oT an accident
that occurred Nov. 14, 1979 on SR 123
in Meigs County.
Also filed were two suits for
foreclosure. Jackson Production

COME-BUY-AND ·SAVE!

direction of the Senior Friends program. The residents
donated one of the arrangements to the Frog
Association to be used at a frog event. ·

s 00

EACH .

An assortment of quilted bedopi'Mda In fancy printed patterne. In twin and full bed lizes.
Slightly Irregular.

TWINS
FULLS

s

Men's white tuba socks with striped
tops In assorted colors. Slight lr·
regulars of high quality socks at a low·
low price. ·

OFS

PKG.
2 PAIRS

·

�SUN OR£SS£S

Misses cotton·polyester stretch terry
sun dresses. Some strapless styles ,
some with straps. Summer bright col ors.
S, M, and L.

-POT 0' GOLO SALfMILL ASSORTMENT-60"

00

POLY£ST£R OOUSL£KNITS
Special purchase! 60" mill lengths assortment of single
knits and doubleknlts In patterns and solid colors. Buy
now and save !

-POT 0' GOLD SALf80-0UNCE CLEAR CRYSTAL

.f'
I

. GLASS PITCH£RS

EACH

-SUMMfRTIME SALEDECORATOR COLOI{S .
BIG ROOM -SIZE

Special purchase for this Summertime Sale. 80 ounce,
clear crystal gla ss pitcher.

81/2' H ll 1/2' RUGS
Polypopylene pile with textured loop patterns.
No padding needed . Resists staining .

Easy to clean .
8 Vz x 111/z

FOR BfST SfLfCTION-8f HERf ·

8

-POT 0.' GOLO SALE72X27 INCH VINYL

AIR MATTR£SS£S

A

Complete with headrest. 27 x 72" sturdy vinyl air mat·
tress. Buy now and save during our Summertime Sa le!

#

. KNIT OR£SS£S

SKIRTS

Special purchase! Large assortment of sum·
mer tops and blouses . Some samples and

Misses popular cotton spandex tube tops in
assorled stripes and solid colors. One size fit s
all . Buy seve ~al at th is price.

-SUMMfRTIMf SALfMISSES SUMMER
POLYESTER STRETCH

SALECOMFORTABLE
ELASTIC WAIST

TOPS-SLOUS£S

TUS£ TOPS

polyoester skirts in pretty
prints. jAs;s ort•od colors. Elastic waist.

M··~i'"'r·

Misses polyeSter knit dresses. Permanent press,
machine washable. Assorted colors to choose
from. Sizes S, M &amp; L.

ssoo

P ., ~
.!~&lt;.-~· .
. .

______

...._ "EACH

~;,;;;;)

-POT 0' GOLD SALEGIRL'S BRIEF STYLE

NYLON PANTI£S

-SUMMfRTIME SALfLADIES' AND MISSES
POLYESTER GABARDINE

Girl's brief style nylon panties, with cotton crotch . Prints
and solid colors. Sizes 4 to 14.

STR£TCH SLACKS

Ladies· polyester·gabard ine fashion
.slacks in new fashion colors ..Elastic back
with front zipper. Regular sizes .

'5~A~

EACH

..

.'

J olom i . s s ·

DAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY

-SUMMfRTIME SALEMISSES ASSORTED
SUMMER STYLE

-SUMMERTIME SALEMISSES POPULAR
ELASTIC KNIT .

THf DOORS· OPfN AT '):00 A.M.

~

-SUMMERTIMf .,,..,,,_--:
CHILDREN'S SUMMER
ASSORTMENT

SPRING AND SUMMER

SPRING AND SUMMER
Special assortment
styles. Good range of
now while there Is
choose from .

Famous brand s, ladies' sportswear at reduced prices.
Good assortment of summer styles, colors and most
sizes. Come early for best select ion. Save during this

I

Summertime Sale!

Special purchase lor this sale . Assorted green, red or
yel low plaid design . " Bean" filled to stay put!

-SUMMfRTIME SALf13" SQUARE ASSORTED
VELVET COVERED

TOSS PILLOWS
13·1nch square assorted
velvet covere d toss
pillows. Acrylic filled.

s 00

I ·R£tffAR

PILLOW FORMS

of spring and, summer
sizes to choose from . Buy
still a nice selection to
·

s 00

Off

-SUMMfRTIMf SALfMEN'S 'MAVERICK'
PRE-WASHED

SHORTS
Men's permanent press
walking shorts and joggers .
Assorted colors and pat·
terns . Most sizes.

99

MEN'S MAVERICK
"AUTOMATICK"

O£NIM J£ANS

O£NIM J£ANS

Forget shrinking, forget
wrinkling, forget puckering
forever!
Maverick
"Automat lck" denim jeans.
All sizes.

Al l cotton jeans with San tor.
Set , treated to retain their
shape . Pre·washed flare style.
All sizes.

50

Jean Clothes
Your nnnv
Like A Glove.
PAIR
And keep on fitting. .. .

S£0 PILLOWS

J

'I~A~

PAIR

SPECIAL PURCHASE-STURDY

Value. Outdooin fsny ago ·e rial sale price.

FIVE PIECE ASSORTMENT

PLASTICWAR~

-SUMMfRTIMf SAUMEN'S AND BOY'S AMERICAN MADE
LACE TO THE TOE

Household plastic assortment. Choose from 14 Qt. dish
pan, laundry basket, 11 Qt . pall, 10" rectangular or round
waste basket.

GYM OHFOROS
Ladles' American made sport
sneakers. Made with molded
sole and cushioned Inner
soles . Navy and while. Sizes 5

lO.

s

99
PAIR

-POT 0' GOLD SALELADIES' STRETCH NYLON

-SUMMfRTIMf SAUBOY'S REGULAR 89'
WHITE STRIPED TOP

KN££-HI HOS£

TUB£ SOCKS

One size fils all. Ladles· first ·quality stretch nylon knee·
hi hose. Comes In several shades. Save now!

4PAIRS
fOR

J

r

"PAIR

j

-SUMMfRTIMf SALI:SOLID FOAM CORE
PERFECT REST

-POT 0' GOLD SALf3"h OZ. SKEINS COATS AND CLARK

S£0 PILLOWS

WINTUCK. KNITTING YARN

The Perlect Rest bed pillow for sleepIng comfon . Polyester fiber with solid .
·
loam core. Regular $4.99.

1 '700

FOR

-SUMMfRTIMf SALELADIES' AMERICAN MADE
CANVAS SPORT

. SN£AK£RS

EACH

-POT 0' GOLD SUMMfRTIM£ $AU-

-POT 0' GOLD SUMMfRTIMf SALE-

EXCELLENT QUALITY PRINTED TERRY

FAMOUS BRAND-BEAUTIFUL PRINT

First quality, printed terry towel ensemble, 22K42" bath towel
16x20" hand towel and t2 x11" wash cloth.
.
'

~~]9

WASH
(LOTH

Special sale group of famous Coats and Clark Wintuk
knltling yarn In all colors . Regular $1 .59 value.

American made gym or tennis
oxfords with moulded soles and
cushion insoles. Sturdy canvas
uppers. All sizes.

•NYLON RfUfRSI8LE
OUST MOPS

TOWfL ENSfMBLf

Boy' s first quality while tube socks with
assorted color striped tops. Stretch
sizes. Stock up nowl

.l ..f

•SPLIT -TIP
8ROOMS
•HYLON

FOAM

Big one pound bag of shredded
loam . Use for pi llows, dolls and
toys, chair seats, boat seats,
upho lst ery or packing.

Men 's high bulk acrylic and
nylon stretch socks In assorted
colors. One size fits 10 to 13.

-POT 0' GOLO SUMMERTIMf SALE-

Crown Royal foam fi lled bed pi llows.
Great lor sleeping comfort. Pretty print
co~Jers . Save now!

FOR

-SUMMfRTIMf SALEONE-POUND BAG
SOFT SHREDDED

STR£TCH SOH

99

-POT 0' GOLD SUMMfRTIMf SALf-

Boy 's popular polyester·cotton jogging shorts. Assorted
styles, sizes and colors.

EACH

-SUMMfRTIME SALEMEN'S ASSORTED
ACRYLIC-NYLON

PAIR

JOGGING SHORTS

choose from .

'

SUMMfRTIMf SALEMEN'S WALKING
AND JOGGING

-POT 0' GOLD SALfBOY'S POLYESTER-COTTON

Urethane roam , odorless, dustless ,
washable pillow forms. Ready to cover.
14" round and sq uare shapes to

R£GULAR
PRit£

-SUMMfRtiMf SAL£-~~~
LARGE FOAM FILLED
fA
CROWN ROYAL

-POT 0' GOLO SALE9-INCH ASSORTED VINYL

-SUMMfRTIME SALfTAKE YOUR CHOICE
14" ROUND OR SQUARE

·DRfSSES

. SPORTSWEAR

S£AN SAG ASH TRAYS

Big colorful laney vinyl play balls. 9" size. Regular 79¢

-POT 0' GOLO SUMMfRTIMf SALeSPECIAL GROUP-MISSES &amp; JUNIORS

KNIT TOPS

-POT 0' GOLD SALf4-INCH PLAID DESIGN

PLAY SALLS

-POT 0' GOLD SUMMERTIMf SALfSELECTED GROUP-LADIES' &amp; MISSES

PfRMA-PRfSS SHEfTS
TWIN J
·- ~~~L .,99

Thomaston no·lron beautiful printed sheets In Hat anq Htted styles, twin
and lull sizes.

SIZ£

PAIR
LADIES' "POM-POM"
CUSHIONED SOLE

SPORTS S'CKS .

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

s 00

PAIR

-POT 0' GOLD SALEMILL ASSORTMENT

18"H24" RUG MATS
Special purchase tor the Pot 0 ' Gold Sate. Mill assort·
ment of 18 x 24" rug mats. A11orted colors.
.

�SUN OR£SS£S

Misses cotton·polyester stretch terry
sun dresses. Some strapless styles ,
some with straps. Summer bright col ors.
S, M, and L.

-POT 0' GOLO SALfMILL ASSORTMENT-60"

00

POLY£ST£R OOUSL£KNITS
Special purchase! 60" mill lengths assortment of single
knits and doubleknlts In patterns and solid colors. Buy
now and save !

-POT 0' GOLD SALf80-0UNCE CLEAR CRYSTAL

.f'
I

. GLASS PITCH£RS

EACH

-SUMMfRTIME SALEDECORATOR COLOI{S .
BIG ROOM -SIZE

Special purchase for this Summertime Sale. 80 ounce,
clear crystal gla ss pitcher.

81/2' H ll 1/2' RUGS
Polypopylene pile with textured loop patterns.
No padding needed . Resists staining .

Easy to clean .
8 Vz x 111/z

FOR BfST SfLfCTION-8f HERf ·

8

-POT 0.' GOLO SALE72X27 INCH VINYL

AIR MATTR£SS£S

A

Complete with headrest. 27 x 72" sturdy vinyl air mat·
tress. Buy now and save during our Summertime Sa le!

#

. KNIT OR£SS£S

SKIRTS

Special purchase! Large assortment of sum·
mer tops and blouses . Some samples and

Misses popular cotton spandex tube tops in
assorled stripes and solid colors. One size fit s
all . Buy seve ~al at th is price.

-SUMMfRTIMf SALfMISSES SUMMER
POLYESTER STRETCH

SALECOMFORTABLE
ELASTIC WAIST

TOPS-SLOUS£S

TUS£ TOPS

polyoester skirts in pretty
prints. jAs;s ort•od colors. Elastic waist.

M··~i'"'r·

Misses polyeSter knit dresses. Permanent press,
machine washable. Assorted colors to choose
from. Sizes S, M &amp; L.

ssoo

P ., ~
.!~&lt;.-~· .
. .

______

...._ "EACH

~;,;;;;)

-POT 0' GOLD SALEGIRL'S BRIEF STYLE

NYLON PANTI£S

-SUMMfRTIME SALfLADIES' AND MISSES
POLYESTER GABARDINE

Girl's brief style nylon panties, with cotton crotch . Prints
and solid colors. Sizes 4 to 14.

STR£TCH SLACKS

Ladies· polyester·gabard ine fashion
.slacks in new fashion colors ..Elastic back
with front zipper. Regular sizes .

'5~A~

EACH

..

.'

J olom i . s s ·

DAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY

-SUMMfRTIME SALEMISSES ASSORTED
SUMMER STYLE

-SUMMERTIME SALEMISSES POPULAR
ELASTIC KNIT .

THf DOORS· OPfN AT '):00 A.M.

~

-SUMMERTIMf .,,..,,,_--:
CHILDREN'S SUMMER
ASSORTMENT

SPRING AND SUMMER

SPRING AND SUMMER
Special assortment
styles. Good range of
now while there Is
choose from .

Famous brand s, ladies' sportswear at reduced prices.
Good assortment of summer styles, colors and most
sizes. Come early for best select ion. Save during this

I

Summertime Sale!

Special purchase lor this sale . Assorted green, red or
yel low plaid design . " Bean" filled to stay put!

-SUMMfRTIME SALf13" SQUARE ASSORTED
VELVET COVERED

TOSS PILLOWS
13·1nch square assorted
velvet covere d toss
pillows. Acrylic filled.

s 00

I ·R£tffAR

PILLOW FORMS

of spring and, summer
sizes to choose from . Buy
still a nice selection to
·

s 00

Off

-SUMMfRTIMf SALfMEN'S 'MAVERICK'
PRE-WASHED

SHORTS
Men's permanent press
walking shorts and joggers .
Assorted colors and pat·
terns . Most sizes.

99

MEN'S MAVERICK
"AUTOMATICK"

O£NIM J£ANS

O£NIM J£ANS

Forget shrinking, forget
wrinkling, forget puckering
forever!
Maverick
"Automat lck" denim jeans.
All sizes.

Al l cotton jeans with San tor.
Set , treated to retain their
shape . Pre·washed flare style.
All sizes.

50

Jean Clothes
Your nnnv
Like A Glove.
PAIR
And keep on fitting. .. .

S£0 PILLOWS

J

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SPECIAL PURCHASE-STURDY

Value. Outdooin fsny ago ·e rial sale price.

FIVE PIECE ASSORTMENT

PLASTICWAR~

-SUMMfRTIMf SAUMEN'S AND BOY'S AMERICAN MADE
LACE TO THE TOE

Household plastic assortment. Choose from 14 Qt. dish
pan, laundry basket, 11 Qt . pall, 10" rectangular or round
waste basket.

GYM OHFOROS
Ladles' American made sport
sneakers. Made with molded
sole and cushioned Inner
soles . Navy and while. Sizes 5

lO.

s

99
PAIR

-POT 0' GOLD SALELADIES' STRETCH NYLON

-SUMMfRTIMf SAUBOY'S REGULAR 89'
WHITE STRIPED TOP

KN££-HI HOS£

TUB£ SOCKS

One size fils all. Ladles· first ·quality stretch nylon knee·
hi hose. Comes In several shades. Save now!

4PAIRS
fOR

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j

-SUMMfRTIMf SALI:SOLID FOAM CORE
PERFECT REST

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S£0 PILLOWS

WINTUCK. KNITTING YARN

The Perlect Rest bed pillow for sleepIng comfon . Polyester fiber with solid .
·
loam core. Regular $4.99.

1 '700

FOR

-SUMMfRTIMf SALELADIES' AMERICAN MADE
CANVAS SPORT

. SN£AK£RS

EACH

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EXCELLENT QUALITY PRINTED TERRY

FAMOUS BRAND-BEAUTIFUL PRINT

First quality, printed terry towel ensemble, 22K42" bath towel
16x20" hand towel and t2 x11" wash cloth.
.
'

~~]9

WASH
(LOTH

Special sale group of famous Coats and Clark Wintuk
knltling yarn In all colors . Regular $1 .59 value.

American made gym or tennis
oxfords with moulded soles and
cushion insoles. Sturdy canvas
uppers. All sizes.

•NYLON RfUfRSI8LE
OUST MOPS

TOWfL ENSfMBLf

Boy' s first quality while tube socks with
assorted color striped tops. Stretch
sizes. Stock up nowl

.l ..f

•SPLIT -TIP
8ROOMS
•HYLON

FOAM

Big one pound bag of shredded
loam . Use for pi llows, dolls and
toys, chair seats, boat seats,
upho lst ery or packing.

Men 's high bulk acrylic and
nylon stretch socks In assorted
colors. One size fits 10 to 13.

-POT 0' GOLO SUMMERTIMf SALE-

Crown Royal foam fi lled bed pi llows.
Great lor sleeping comfort. Pretty print
co~Jers . Save now!

FOR

-SUMMfRTIMf SALEONE-POUND BAG
SOFT SHREDDED

STR£TCH SOH

99

-POT 0' GOLD SUMMfRTIMf SALf-

Boy 's popular polyester·cotton jogging shorts. Assorted
styles, sizes and colors.

EACH

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ACRYLIC-NYLON

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JOGGING SHORTS

choose from .

'

SUMMfRTIMf SALEMEN'S WALKING
AND JOGGING

-POT 0' GOLD SALfBOY'S POLYESTER-COTTON

Urethane roam , odorless, dustless ,
washable pillow forms. Ready to cover.
14" round and sq uare shapes to

R£GULAR
PRit£

-SUMMfRtiMf SAL£-~~~
LARGE FOAM FILLED
fA
CROWN ROYAL

-POT 0' GOLO SALE9-INCH ASSORTED VINYL

-SUMMfRTIME SALfTAKE YOUR CHOICE
14" ROUND OR SQUARE

·DRfSSES

. SPORTSWEAR

S£AN SAG ASH TRAYS

Big colorful laney vinyl play balls. 9" size. Regular 79¢

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KNIT TOPS

-POT 0' GOLD SALf4-INCH PLAID DESIGN

PLAY SALLS

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PfRMA-PRfSS SHEfTS
TWIN J
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Thomaston no·lron beautiful printed sheets In Hat anq Htted styles, twin
and lull sizes.

SIZ£

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LADIES' "POM-POM"
CUSHIONED SOLE

SPORTS S'CKS .

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

s 00

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18"H24" RUG MATS
Special purchase tor the Pot 0 ' Gold Sate. Mill assort·
ment of 18 x 24" rug mats. A11orted colors.
.

�I

State budget chief warns of more cuts
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acrylic blanket In colorful floral print pattern
In full bed size 72x90. Made with 31nch nylon
binding. Lay·a·way now!

-LAY-A-lDAY BLANKET SAL£-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Unless
Ohio's economic situation improves
by the first of next year, state school
subsidies will have to be slashed, according to a state official.
William D. Kelp, Gov. James A.
Rhodes' wdget chief, issued the
warning Tuesday to a House committee consi&lt;lering an austerity plan
to keep the state's books in balance
in the fiscal year stamng July 1.
Keip reiterated earlier statements
by Rhodes and legislative readers
that for now, there will be no reductions in school payments ·or welfare

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COLORFUL INDIAN PRINT

BEACON 72X90 SIZE
NEEDLEWOVEN SOLID COLOR

NAUAJO

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100% Acrylic needtawoven blari~eta In color·
lui Navajo Indian design with whip stitch bin·
ding. 72 x 90 full bed size. A small deposit will
hold until needed.

Beacon's " Monterey" -60% Polyester·40%
Acrylic needlewoven In three beautiful plain
colors, gold, blue and _champaign. Full bed
slzo 72 x 90.

J. 99

EACH

benefits. But the 3 percent spending
cut ordered by Rhodes - as part of
the belt tightening plan - is being
applied to both programs just the
same, he added.
What happens to welfare depends
to a great extent on whether the
caseload increases, Keip said, adding that it probably will. ile said he
thinks the worst of the recession, in
terms of welfare . and unemployment, is yet to come in Ohio.
A 3 percent reduction would mean
that the welfare department would
have to get by on about $24 million

EACH

e

REMEMBER LAST WINTER? BE PREPARED THIS YEAR
VOL. 31 NO. 51

-LAYAWAY $AUBEACON 12X90 SIZE
FLORAL PRINT

72X90 SOLID COLOR

99

MADRID, Spain - President Carter proposed a transitional
arrangement for governing Afghanistan to prevent "a mass
slaughter" of pro-Soviet elements if Soviet troops are withdrawn, a
senior Carter administration official said today.
He said assurances that a slaughter would be prevented and that a
staunch anti.SOvlet government would not emerge might be necessary
ingredients for an eventual Soviet withdrawal, and disclosed that Carter's proposal had been presented to the Soviets last month.

-STIFFL£R'S LAY-A-WAY SLANKn SAUlBLANKETS BY BEACON A NAME YOU KNOW AND TRUST
BEAUTIFUL FASHION DESIGNS FOR BEDROOM DECOR IN

Man loses citizenship battle
NEW YORK -Still haunted by the petty crimes of hls youth, a 56yeaN)ld man has apparently lost his fight for U.S. citizenship because
, he stole olives and some tree bark to feed and wann his family in war~ torn'Sicily.
·
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday told Michele
Chiaramonte it sympathized with him but could not overrule the lm·
migration and Naturalization Service's denial of his citizenship application.
·
lt was not inunedlately clear whether Chiaramonte, who has been
seeking U.S. citizenship for nine years, could be deported. .

LUXURIOUS ·8£ACON BLANK£TS

72X90 NEEDLEWOVEN
ROYAL GARDEN-MEADOW FLOWERS

72X90 NEEDLEWOVEN
BARONESS-SPRINGTIME

Take your choice of two very attractive floral print . patterns,
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special lay~a-way price. Full bed size 72 x 90. Needlewoven
for long wear.

Two beautiful floral print blankets by Beacon. Baroness
and Springtime. Full bed size 72 x 90, 100% .
needlewoven acrylic with 4 Inch nylon bindings. Use our
easy lay·a·way plan now I

Large diStillery firm gives grant

EACH

99

-SrtfFUR'S LAY-A-lDAY ILANHn SAL£LAY-A-WAY NOW
BE READY FOR WINTER

BEACON 72X90 SIZE
FLORAL PRINTS

UERSAILLES
OAifNTAL FLOUJ£AS

BEACON 72X90 LOOM WOVEN

TH£RMAL
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Take your choice of two of Beacons popular
floral print needlewoven blankets In color
combinations that are sure to please. Full
bed size with 41nch nylon binding. Lay·a·way
now at Stiffler's.

Streaker says he is innocent
lJMA, Ohio.- In the last eight months, a Lima man has spent $3,300
in legal expenses to fight a $75 conviction of a crime he claims he never
committed.
"My whole life has been ruined by a case of mistaken identity," said
Rnss Waltman, who was arrested, went to trial and was found guilty of
public indecency.
Although the offense Is only a fourtiHiegree misdemeanor, Waltman
vows to "take this as far as I can to prove I'm innocent."
The case is now awaiting action by the 3rd District Court of Appeals
inLima.
.

"Confetti" by Beacon. 100% acrylic loom woven the,1rma1
blankets In heather design, full 72x90 bed size at lOW
way price during Stiffler's tay~a~ way sale.

LAY·A-WAY
EACH

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - seagram's and Sons, the world's largest
distillery, gave Harvard University $5.8 million Tuesday for research
into the disease of alcoholism.
"Alcoholism comes from people not from bottles," said Jonathon
Rinehart, public relations counselor for the Montreal-based distillery
which had sales last year of more than $2.5 billion.
Seagram's, through the Seagram-Samuel Bronfman Foun&lt;\ation
named after its founder, gave $6 million to Harvard Medical School to
support research by Dr. Bert Vallee, Luxembourg-born biochemist,
that the body's chemical enzymes rather than psycho-social reasons
are a cause of alcoholism.

EACH

-STIFFLeR'S LAY-A-lDAY BLANKfl SAUBEACON 72X9.0 SIZE
A SMALL DEPOSIT WILL
FLORAL PRINT
HOLD UNTIL NEEDED!

100% Acrylic needlewoven blankets In full
hed size 72x90. Beacons popular Hathaway
Collage pallern. A colo(fUI floral print with
four inch nylon binding. A small deposit will
hold In lay~a·way until needed. ·

enttne
WEDNESDAY, JUNE '25, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

Transitional arrangement proposed

EACH

HATHAWAY
COTTAGE

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO,

•

BANGKOK, Thailand- Vietnamese forces appear to have widened
their military moves along Thai-Cambodian ,border, with clashes
reported in atleasttwo more areas today.
•
The Thai command said Vietnamese troops fought a group of anticommunist "Free Khmer" guerrillas in the northern Cambodian
province of Oddar Mean Chey, and sent them fleeing across the frontier into Thailand.
The corrunand spokesman also reported Vietnamese clashes with
guerrillas in rugged southwestern Cambodian border areas, but had
no inunediate details of the outcome of the battles.

Beacons colorful "Gabin Quilt" 100%
acrylic needlewoven blankets. Pretty
quilt block pattern In full bed size. Made
with 3 Inch nylon binding.

"Fantasy" by Beacon. A 100% acrylic needlewoven
blanket In assorted solid co lors with 4 Inch nylon
binding. Full bed size. Now Is the time to use our
lay·a~way plan.

at

Rep. Robert E. Netzley, R-Laura,
who said he has no doubt the
economy is going to worsen, said

political course.
Rhodes' 3 percent spending slash
is to save $126 million, with the qther
$?1l million to come from a 5 percent
hike, effective July 7, in prices at
Ohio's monopoiy liquor stores.
Veteran House Finance Chaiqpan
Myrl H. Shoemaker, [).Bourneville,
interjected that Keip, like himself,
had been "handed a blueprint" by '
the state's top leaders.
"We're good soldiers,'' said'
Shoemaker, whose panel is expected
to ready the bill for floor action
Thursday "pretty much intact."

Rhodes and the leaders were "ill advised." He referred to published
reports that Kelp had made projections earlier showing the state's
deficit to be $50 million higher than
those counted on in the Senate bill.
Kelp didn 't deny il.
"I have said publicly that I am not
comfortable with those estimates at
all," he said, referring to figures
supplied by the Legislative Budget
Office and accepted by the swiunil.
But he disagreed with Netzley's
suggestion that the summit members had taken the shakier but safer

Vietnamese wi4enoo military moves

CABIN QUILT

FANTASY

••

would result in some stale savings
by deferring state obligations and
reappropriating monies unspent by
various agencies in tbe current bienniwn.
Several committee members were
sharply critical of the decisions by
Rhodes and legislative leaders, at a
series of s&lt;H:alled sUilln'ljt meetings,
to opt for small cuts now at the risk
of larger cuts.

F'.rom tbe Associated Press ·

BEACON 12X90 SIZE
FANCY PRINT

BEACON NEEDLEWOVEN

SILHOUETTE
Beacon "Silhouette" pattern In 72x90 full
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-LAYAWAY SAL£-

-STIFFLeR'S LAY-A-lDAY SAL£ OF SLANKnS-

less than it budgeted between now'
and July I, 1981, he said. Conceivably, this could be accomplished
if there was a leveling off or drop in
caseload, he added.
But in the case of public education,
the 3 percent figure~ out at $53
million, Keip said. Some of this can
be saved by reductions in non. subsidy programs and administration, but the bulk of the $53
rrullion .. just isn't there," he added.
Keip appeared before the House
Finance ·Committee, which is considering a Senate-approved bill that

NOW

J1.. 99

v

EACH

EACH

-STifFLfR'S LAY-A-lDAY SAU OF 8LANKUS-

READY TO GO - The Flying Alflusement Co. will be operating during the Big Bend Regatta starting this evening. The carnival will
be located behind the Pomeroy First Baptist Church, E. Main St.

Pomeroy c~uncil supports. new chief
Pomeroy council Tuesday night in
special session gave 100 percent support to the new Police Chief. Charles

T-40 issue
•
• •
comnnss1on
topic here .
Vacating a portion of T-40 in
Lebanon Township was was again
brought before the board of commissioners at their meeting
Tuesday.
Letters were received frcm John
Ours and Ed Fisher requesting that
the board delay any action to vacate
a portion of the highway.
A letter was also received from
the Lebanon Township Trustees
stating that the trustees do net wish
to have the road vacated.
An opinion was received from Carson Crow, assistant prosecutor,
stating that it is not mandatory that
the board vacate the road, but the
petitioner has recourse to the Common Pleas Court to obtain the road.
A letter of recommendations from
the State Fire Marshal was read
concerning findings at the Meigs
County Home.
The board will set up a meeting
with Mrs. Mildred Jacobs, superintendent, to discuss corrective
measures.
A letter was received frcm James
Jennings proposing the dates of July
1 or July 8 for a meeting to discuss
the development of the county
property on Mulberry Heights for
elderly housing. The board set the
meeting for July 8,
John Rice, county extension
agent, met with the board to extend
invitations to the conunissioners to
attend the annual county commissioners day to be held at Coshoc·
ton on July 24.
'
Bids for bituminous materials for
the highway department were
(Conti nued on page 12 }

EACH

EACH

EACH

MYSTERY FROG .- Can you guess the Identity of the MYSTERY
FROG? If you can id~ntify and write, 25 words or less why you would
like to be an honorary Grand Croaker, you will receive a $25 ·bond.
Here are some clues. He was born between UIOO and 1925, well known
as a gospel singer, graduated from the schoqj of hard knpc~ during
the Indian uprising at Blennerhasset Island.

'•

•

WARNING ISSUED
Junk and abandoned cars wlll
not he tlllerated In Pomeroy,
Cblef of Pollee Cbarles R. MeKJD.
ney wamed today. Sucb veblcles,
wbetber on village streets or on
private property will be towed
away, efleellve Monday, and the
owners will be cited to court.

McKinney in the operation of his
duties.
•
The chief outlined the following
rules for officers of the department.
There are eight officers on the police
force.
The new rules for officers are as
follows: all officers are to arrive 10
minutes before each shift change;
patrolman are to be on.the streets at
appointed hour; unifonns, badges
and leather will be cleaned; there

will be no loafing in coffee shops or
police headquarters .on or off duty;
there will be no drinking on or off
duty in the village of Pomeroy;
when officers are to he be present in
court they are to be in unifonn and
well groomed; there is to be no
profanity; officers will conduct
themselmes with dignity at all
times.
"It is my job to protect this town
and I intend to do so" Chief McKin-

neysiated.
Council alsll discussed complaints
received in regard to rodents behind
a local business establishment. Jane
Walton, clerk, will contact village
solicitor, Fred Crow, in regard to
legal action.
Attending were Harold Brown,
president of council who presided,
Betty Baroniclt, Lou Osborne, Bill
Young and Larry Wehrung, council
members and Mrs. Walton.

Oil and gas producers get help
•
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio court interpretations of the law, said
lawmakers needed only two wee~. Sen. Kenneth R. Cox, [).Barberton.
to change a state law threatening to .
Those rulings prompted some •
dry up a source of capital for infinancial
institutions to suspend len·
dependent oil and gas producers.
ding
any
more
money out of concern
The bill, . sponsored by Rep.
that
the
tra081lctions
could be voided
Ronald H. James, [).Proctorville,
if
the
agency
were
to
withdraw its
exempts small producers from
approval
later.
As
a
result,
about $2()
having to obtain approval of the
million
in
loans
for
drilling
projects
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
was
held
up,
J8IIES
said.
for loans to finance drilling
In addition, requiring the PUCO to
operations.
act
on each of the loans would have
The existing law classifies such
increased
the regulatory agency's
operations as public utilities,
caseload
by
an estimated 20 percent,
making their indebtedness subject
said
Cox,
the
Senate noor manager
to review by the PUCO.
of
the
bill.
The measure was introduced June
measure sent to Gov. James
' the House, cleared the lower A.·TheRhodes
10 m
provides that the
chamber June 17 and unanimously
requirement
of
prior commission
was approved by the Senate on
approval
does
not
apply to stoc~.
Tuesda'y.
bonds
or
other
loans
used to finance
Much of the impetus was derived
drilling
by
a
producer
supplying no
from the significant progress which
more
than
20
purchasers
in Ohio.
small drillers have made in helping
An emergency clause in the bill
the state meet its energy needs.
~ allow it to take effect imAlthough the current statute has
mediately
upon Rhodes' signature.
generally been ignored, it was
In
other
action as lawmakers
brought to the attention of lending
returned
from
a weekend recess, the
institutions as a result of recent
Senate voted 18-8 to broaden mem-

bership of a council established to
aid in planning a National Museum
of Afro-American History and
Culture at Wilberforce.
Sen. Neal F. Zimmers Jr., 0.
Dayton, said the change would make
the council, an advisory panel to the
Ohio Historical Society, more
nationally-oriented.
But Sen. Sam Speck, R-New Concord, said the present group had
"fairly strongly" opposed the bill.
Its stand was apparentiy based on
pending federal legislation that
would create a national council and
because only Ohio funds have been
committed to the project so far, he
said.
The bill would increase membership ol the council from 15 to 18.
Included would be a state representative and a senator who would serve as non-voting members.
Present requirements regarding
institutions that must be represented on the council wonl(l be removed
and replaced by . a list of 16
organizations that would submit
names from which the governor
would have to select appointees.

Brisker named K C principal
Dan L. Brisker, 33, Oak Hill,
,jithletic director for the past two
years for the Gallipo&amp; City Schools
has been named principal at Kyger
Creek High School. ~risker succeeds
Dr. David Miller who resigned In
April.
Brisker is a graduate of Oak Hill
High School, Capital University,
Columbus and Ohio State University
where he majored in educational administration at the secondary level
He did 'post Master's Degree work
from 1975-78.
Brisker began Iii~ teaching career

as a coach in the Bishop Ready High
School. He served as an assistant
coach in basketball, football and
baseball. ·
Frcm 19'10.78 Brisker was at Canel
Winchester High School where he
served as head basketball coach
from 19'16-78. He was alsll athletic
director there fnm 19'12-78 and served as assistant principal two years.
During • his career as a helid
basketball coach his team .finished
first twice and were sectional champs, six times. In addition, Brisker's

teams were district fllllllers-up
twice.
At Galipolil, his main dulles were
with the athletic programs,
however, he alsll served as transportation supervisOr.
In other board activity, Alfred A.
Scarberry, Jr., Thurman, fanner
high schooiiJI'incipal at Middleport,
who for the past ,four yeari' baa served as principal at Addaville
Elementary School, was naliled
EMR auperviaor. He wt11 W9rk out II
the central office on Jacbon Pike;
west ol Galllpolia,

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