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                  <text>12 _ The oaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u., ruesoay, J11ty 15, 1980

..

I

Area deaths

,

Litter control program now Ohio low

By JOHN W. CHALFANT
Associated Press Wrtler
and Dorothy Vine.
.
COLUMBUS,
Ohio (AP) - Eight
Surviving are her husband, Paul;
Mrs. Paul McElhaney
months
after
voters
rejected a mana daughter, Loraine; a son, Palil L.,
datory
can
·and
bott\e
deposit bil~
all of Johnstown, Ohio; three sisters,
Mrs. Paul Nellis Stanley
Ohio
has
a
new
law
creating a
Mrs. Tom (Leta) McDaniel,
MeElhaney, 43, Johnstown, Ohio
statewide
litter
control
program.
Cleveland, Ohio; Helen Gibbs,
died Saturday morning at UniverGov. James A. Rhodes signed the
Mason; Mrs. Andrew (Martina)
sity Hospi~, Columbus.
bill
into law MOhday, but vetoed one .
VanMaire, Clifton; two brothers,
Mrs. Mcelhaney was born August Kenneth and Martin Stanley, section. The vetoed portion would
23, 1936, the daughter of the late
Mason; several neices and nephews. have outlawed plastic ring tops on
Martin and Lula Grey Stanley of
Services will be held Tuesday, 2:30 beverage six-packs uniess made of
Mason. She was also prededed in
p.m. at the Crouse and Son Funeral photodegradable material, which
death by two brothers, Robert and
Home, Johnstown, with burial · disintegrates after prolonged exHarley Stanley and three · sisters,
following in the Johnstown posure to the sun.
Gertrude Harding, Barbara Grimn'l, cemetery.
The l!leasure, which took effect as
soon as Rl!odes signed it, "addresses
the can of Ohioans for a practical litter law," he said. The measure had
been touted as an alternative to the
ill-fated November 1979 ballot
proposal which would have mandilled !!kent deposits on beverage
cans and bottles.
Sponsored by Rep. Thomas J. CarDETROIT ( AP) - Fol!f years
younger than Reagan.
ney, D-Boardman, the new law
ago, Gerald R. Ford needed Ronald
He got an elder stateSman's af. levies a Htw()-tiered" tax which is
Reagan. Now it's the other way
fectionate ovation. After a half·
I
around·,
dozen convention speeches that left
As the 1980 Republican presidenthe delegates conversing in disin- OSU staff member
tial nominee, Reagan needs con·
teres!, Ford's appearance got their resigns after check
vention and campaign help from the
attention.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An
fanner president he chaUenged nil·
Many are the same delegates who
successfully in 1976. And Ford is
almost demed him norniliati.on ·in · Ohio State University Development
promising to go aU-out for the elecfavor of Reagan last time, but that's Fund staff member resigned after a
lion of his former rival.
forgotten now. Ford flirted with 1980 routine check indicated that he may
There are. Ford associates who
candidacy, deCided against it, and have used university funds imstiU bristle at what they contend was
obviously is through running for of- properly.
The employee, Patrick H. Welsh,
a half-hearted Reagan effort to help
fice. He's no threat .to any
33,
of Lancaster, resigned Monday
politician's job or ambitions.
elect the president in the last cam·
paign.
.
.
But he is a key figure in Reagan's after four years with the university.
"This is a terribly unfortunate
Reagan always tlaimed he did his
quest for Republican unity, and he
best for Ford, although his cam·
can be a highly villible and valuable situation," said Rick Buxton, the
university's vice president for
paign schedule was a llrnited one.
campaigner in the fall.
But if Ford resented it, there's no
He's basically a conservative, but development. "We intend to get to
evidence now, ail he tries to unify
tlis credentials and his appeal reach the bottom of ·.this as soon as
to the moderate middle of the possible."
Republicans behind his one-time
Art investigation ill continuing into
challenger~ and promises intensive
Republican Party. That makes him
campaign efforts or his own.
all the more important to Reagan the situation.
"This Republican is goiqg to do
today, as the former California
•
everything in hill power to elect our
governor tries to broaden his own
Soybean producers
nominee to the presidency of the
appeal so as to align moderate and
will vote on issue
United States," he said Monday
even liberal Republicans behind the
night, to ·the cheers of the
ticket.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
Mter his nomination four years soybean producers will be asked to
Republican National Convention.
"We've got a lot of work to do, and
ago, Ford sought out Reagan for a vote within 90 days on creation of a
you are looking at one volunteer who
reconciliation. Now the gestures are soybean marketing program.
will try harder, work longer, ·and
corning from Reagan. One of his fir·
More than 2,000 soybean growers
speak with more conviction to get · st stops in Detroit on Monday was at si~ed petitions requesting such a
this country a competent president . Ford's hotel suite, to pay birthday program. The pro)IOied system was
$gain... .
,.
respects. They're to meet ·again designed by an adVisory committee
"sQ, when you field the team for
today, this time for the serious .or 30 soybean producers.
Governor Reagan, count me in,"
business of disfussing Reagan's vice
Voting on the program, which
Ford said.
·
preside~tial selection.
calls for a 1~ent charge per bushel
The former president made a
Ford said access to the president of soybeans for market promotion
point of saying that he's not ready to
and his high command is the key to
and development, is set for Sept. 11&gt;become an elder statesman and sit
influence for an unofficial adviser.
18.
on the sidelines. At 67 _.. Monday
And he's .obviously been promised
was his birthday- he's two years
thathewillhavethat.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL
Whatever Ford's future role as a
Art ice cream social will be held at
coLinselor, it is ciEI(lr that Reagan the Forest Run Methodist Church
and his managers ~ anxious to July 18, beginning at 6 p.m.
make sure that his current rlile is as
To place orders call Virginia
' a campaigner, for Republican unity Davis at 992-7609 or Marcia Arnold
and then for the Republican ticket.
992-2249. The event will be held in the
basement of the church.

Reagan needs help
\hom president Ford

.

ADMIRAL

DEHUMIDIFIERS

An

Admiral

dehumidifier can

make vour basement or other
..dam,D area more comfortable by
taking the e)(cess moisture out ot
the air. It helps protect ~ turniture
and woodwork from the damag ~
ing effects of constant dampness.
It retards mildew, mold, musty
odors and rust- gives your home
more.living area.

Baker Furniture
Middleport, Ohio

REVIVAL SLATED
A weekend revival beginning July
18 and lasting through J lily 20 will be
held at the Faith Tabernacle Church, Baileys Run Road, Point
Pleasant with the Reverencj Bob
Hall. Services will begin at 7:30
nightly with the public cordially invited to attend.

END MARRIAGES
Dissolutions of marriage were
granted to Roger and Barbara
Shultz and Marshall and JeweU
Blake Logston in Meigs County Common Pleas Court.

expected to raille an estimated $13
million to finance the program.
The law imposes a fractional boost
on aU businesses paying the cor·
porate franchise tax and a slightly
steeper increase on manufacturers
of certain products which become
part of the litter stream. No business
assessed both parts of the tax wolild
pay more than $10,000 a year,
Revenue yielded by the tax will be
used by the state Natural Resources
Department to assist communities
in establishing litter coUection and
recycling programs.
In addition; the law bans pullaway
snap-tab cans after July 1, 1982. It
had proposed to ban the pla~ic ring
. connectors unless they are
photodegradable after 180 days' exposure to swilight, but Rhodes said
that is not feasible.
"While I support the efforts of the
Genera!.Assembly in its attempt to
address the problems created by
this fonn of potential litter, I believe

the mandate which has been imposed iS impossible to . meef with
current technology," Rhodes said in
his veto message.
The governor said he was concerned about the bill's definition of
photodegradable items as material
which is capable of being decomposed into "basic elements. " He
said he was unaware of any present
technology \hat would ' aUow in· .
dustry to meet that goal by the July
1983 deadtine.
"If the intent of the General
Assembly is to require · the use of
plastic riJJgs which become brittle
and break apart into pieces of sandlike consistency. after lengthy , ex·

GOP Will nominate Reagan tonight

posure to"the sun, the intent has not
been carried out by the bill's
language," he said.
·
Rhodes also signed a bill requiring
non-government shippecs of nuclear
materials to notify Ohio officials
before · transporting such items
through the state. It, too, took .effect
irrunediately.
The new law, sponsored by Sen.
Thomas E. Carney, D-Girard,
requires companies to . provide
routes and 'destinations of the ship.
ments l;lefore sending them into or
through the state. The measure ill
designed to avoid possible accidents
which colild expose peJ!ple to
radioactive danger.

-By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
AP Political Writer

- DETROIT (AP) - Ronald
Reagan's long-sought moment of
tnwnph and decision arrives tonight
when the Republican National Convention nominates him for President
of the United States and then awaits
his choice of a running mate.
While the outcome of the ~residen·
tial balloting is a 'foregone conclusion with Reagan the only surviving candidate from a oncecrowded field,. his choice for second
spot on the ticket remaiJJg the con·
vention's only guessing game.
Will it be George Bush, the man
who gave him the toughest fight in
the Republican primaries? Or Rep.
Guy Vander Jagt of Michigan,

Reg . Ret•llt1.79

IIAIR

...,.

PLARS

Reg . Attllll3 .06

lA. SPRAY

Surgeons study Shah's condition

IIG\K.AI Oll11'1A MOlD

'

I: W
I
·~'
l~~

CAIRO, Egypt - A French surgeon arrived in Cairo today to decide
whether the deposed Shah of Iran must undergo surgery again, this
time to drain an abscess in his left leg, an Egyptian doctor treating the
fanner Iranian monarch said.
·
But the Egyptian doctor, who has proved reliable in the past, denied
reports in the Cairo newspapers AI Abram and AI Akhbar that the
surgery already had been perfonned. "H~ arrived at three in the mornipg today," the Egyptian doctor said of the French surgeon. "He
hasn't done anything yet."
AI Abram said the abscess was " the size of an orange," had
developed at the top of the thigh and that doctors considered surgery
necessary because they.feared a blOod clot could develoP, and block
circulation.

R-.g . Aellll S1 .VV

SOLARCAINE
LOTION

WELCH'S
GRAPE JUIC~

~. $139

~-.$·1 39
..

Aet . Ritllll1 .14

20-26

WASH UP
TOWELEI IES

....

GAL.
l.U MIL.

Reg. Retail 1.ee

Wife believes husband was moved
ELYRIA, Ohio - The wife of one of the American hostages in Iran
believes her husband was moved from the U.S. Embassy in Tehran to
an undisclosed site.
· Cherlynn Hall, 28, recently· received a let!Pr from her husband,
Joseph HaU, in which he said that although he was well treated, he
didn't know where he was. Port.ions of the letter were printed in a
copyright story in Tuesday's editions of the Elyria ChronicleTelegram.
· "I am with two fellows- where, I do not know," Hall wrote his wife
in a letter dated June 11 . "I do know that I am healthy, exercise daily,
have fresh air, books, gOOd fOOd, toilet facilities and can keep clean."
Portions of Hall's letter were disclosed to the newspaper by Mrs .
HaU's mother, Patricia Boggs of Elyria. The newspaper said Mrs.
Hall has been complying with a State Department request not to
discuss the Iranian situation.

WINDSHIELD
WASHER

JOHNSON &amp; JOIIIISON

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From th~ Associated Press

RAVE

~

Reg , Aetlll11 .14

Reg . Ret.us2 .13

AIKA

SELTZEI
Ill POll

-

a
_
s.M•
c;...
..M•

COLUMBUS, Ohio - S.tate Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson said
Tuesday that 609 local governments in Ohio ended fiscal 1978 with
deficits in funds they control.
That included 193 townships, 106 vUages, 88 cities, 88 local school
districts, 56 counties, 48 city school districts; 1li joint vocational school
districts, eight exempted village school districts, one library, and one
county board of education, he said.
·
Ferguson said 744 units of government ended fiscal 1977 with
deficits. Although a state statute prohibits deficit financing and
requires prosecution of violators of that law, prosecution of such cases
has been non-existent or negligible in the past, he said.

..

3.."•

-·
$259
...

Reg. Rttllll-4 .00

Rtg . Retl!ll1. Itt

CEPACOL

WHAT A lAIII

MOUTHWASH

DUITAIILOIMIII 01 Oil

1

5 19
llfl.

609 local governments had deficits

FIUZEI
COIITAINEIS

PIII&amp;IMf

H1.

Last working mill closes doors
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio - The last working miD at U.S. Steel Corp.'s
Youngstown operations, which have been pouring steel in the
Mahoning VaUey since the early part of the century, has been closed.
When the whistle ending work soWided at 10 a.m. Tuesday, about 8li
steelworkers completed their last day in the No. 14 miD at the company's plant in the village of McDonald.
Another 200 workers will remain .for another week to complete shi!)"
ments and clean up the plant.
U.S, Steel last year announced the closing of the McDonald and Ohio
Wor~ as part of a nationwide /retrenchment that shut lli plants and
cost about12,000 jobs..
•1
The McDonald Works was built in 1916. The small community,
depending on the steel industry for its livelihOOd, became a company
town.

-

Ret . AIIIIIS2.08

EATEIS

"JNI·1UIPf 1180LD

Reg . Attell S2.32

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY

__......

---.

n ....

.

Bank"

·

Beverly Hills trial in second day
CINCINNATI - Attorneys for Beverly Hills Supper Club fire victims say that polyvinyl chloride, a wiring insulation, gives off
poisonous gas when burning and tur'!ed the club's Cabaret Room into
a gas chamber.
·
Defense attorneys for 15 companies on trial in U.S. District Court
said PVC has a gOOd s.afety record and disputed the plaintiffs' contention. ·
The jury in the second civil trial stemming from the JMay 28, 1977,
Beverly Hills Supper Club fire wlU determine PVC's role in the 16li
deaths ,and approximaiely :;o· injuries that resulted when the
Southgate; Ky., club burned tothe ground.
A jury in the first trial decided in February that alwninum electrical
wire was not to blame for the fire, although four alwninwn wire
manufacturers agreed to a $3.6 million out-of~ourt settlement during
the trial.

DUTTON'S
NOW FILLS
PCS
PRESCRIPTIONS

FIDDLE
FAlKE

Just regular deposits into a good, solid
savings plan will do ...one that offers
the highest interest rates allowed by
law. We have a number of plans to fill
"The the bill . ... one's just right for v.ou!
.

SILII-1
SHAMPOO
llGIUI
Dl IIllA _ ,

79°

BARGAIN MATfNEES ON SAT &amp; SUN1
All SEATS JUST St.SD

You Don't Need a Ma~c Fonnula
to Make Money Grow!

-

•4L55°

Open M·W ., 9 Ill J

•.

Weather forecast
'

Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday with a chance of thunderstorots
tonight and Thursday morning. Lows tonight 7l&gt;-75. Highs Thursday in
the upper 80s and lower 90s. Chance of rain 40 percent tonight and 30
percent Thursday. Northwesterly winds 1().)5 mph Thursday.

Thurs. a, ·sat. v r1112
Frictay9flll&amp;Stll7

@THE CENT!!~JR~~T CO., .NA.

,

)

J

(Continued on page 14 }

•

IL• •ID
PAPER

,

criticized Reagan for failing to
respond to an invitation to address
the NAACP convention in Miaini.
Reagan blamed the incident on a
staff error.
Hooks appealed to the delegates to
support economic and civil ·rights
program to wipe out "rac\Slll.
sexism and poverty in the best manner possible." He also asked them to
"seek out and support black
Republicans for public office."
The delegates gave one of their
most emotional greetings to Sen.
Barry Goldwater of Arizona, the
1964 GOP · presidential nominee,
whose campaign gave Reagan his
first national exposure.
The Arizona coruiervattve blamed

FIFTEEN .CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1980

Violence erupts
in·. Miami streets

Reg. Aet.U 11.56

THURSDAY PICNIC
The Rock Springs Better Health
Club will have a picnic Thursday at
noon at Francis Goeglein's residen·
ce. Meat will be furnished by the
. club and members should bring
table service and a covered dish.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

' '' &lt;:I

VETERANS MEMORIAL
AdmissionsDonald Elliott, Guysville; Robert
Milburn, Middleport; Thelma
Chase, Albany; Thelma HyseU,
Rutland; Mary Lawhorn, Mason;
Charles Jones, Pomeroy.
DischargesLori Brooks, Audrey Swett.

REGISTER COPY
Travis Gray, Mason, was awarded
a $25 gift certificate from R&amp;R
Market in Hartford for winning tbe
closest-to-the-pin contest on the 14th
hole during the final round of the
Riverside Open Golf Tournament
Sunday.

VOL. 31 NO. 65

DIPILA-Y
WI1111Ait 011 1011011

children, Maureen and Michael, at·
foreign policy, broad tax cuts, boosts
tended Tuesday night's session.
in defense spending and restraints
They were welcomed by cheering on growth of goverrunent in other
delegates and chants of "Viva, Ole"
areas.
from the Texas delegation.
Potential fig)lts over two planks The chants reminded many
one dropping party support for the
onlookers of the moment four years
Equal Rights Amendment, the other
ago when Nancy Reagan and Betty
endorsing a constitutional amendFord arrived at the convention haD
ment banning abortions except to
in Kansas City with the presidential
save the life of the.mother - didn't
contest between their husbands still · materialize.
undecided and delegates on both
Opponents had failed to muster
sides started up competing demon· · enough support to get a roll caD vote
strations.
on the platform. A majority in at
Before Mrs. Reagan took her seat
least six state delegations is
at one enil of the hall this time, the
required to force a ron can vote.
convention had quickly approved a
It was a night of speeches, 24 in aU,
conservative platform spiced with
including one by Benjamin Hooks,
sharp attacks.on President Carter's
president of the NAACP, a late adrecord and calling for a tougher
dition to the program. Hooks had

en tine

at

Emergency squad runs
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reported the following runs
made by local units Monday.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called at 9:35a.m. to 301 Wright
St. for .Gladys Moore who was taken
to Holzer Medical Center.
The Syracuse was called at 9:45
a.m. to Snowville for Thelma Chase
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial. The Racine unit was
caUed at 11 :35 p.m. to Great Bend
· for Gene Lemley who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

had not made up his mind.
ForReagan, (he balloting 'on the
presidenQal nomination '!ill be like
a moment out of one of his
HoUywOod movies.
Beattn in two earlier tries for the .
nomination, he tried again, his last
chance at age 69, and this time he
overwhein\ed the opposition.
The fanner California governor,
following tradition, has i\o plans to
go to Joe Louis Arena until Tnursday
night when he will accept the
nomination with a speech, already
written, which wiD make a strong
appeal to DemocratS to cross party
lines and · vote for the Republican
ticket.
But Nancy Reagan, the can'
dictate's wife, and his two oldest

•

CAMERA DEPT., 1ST FLOOR

Fnendly

whose convention keynote speech
was put off until tonight when
Tuesday night's program ran past
midnight. Or Rep. Jack Kemp of
New York, whose supporters staged
a noisy, sign-waving demonstration
when he addressed the convention
Tuesday night.
Others on most speculative lists
include Sens. Richard Lugar of Indiana and Palil Laxalt of Nevada,
and former Cabinet members
Donald Rwnsfeld and William
Simon.
Party leaders streamed in and out
of Reagan's suite on the 69th floor of
the Detroit Plaza Hotel on TuesdaY
to. discuss the vice presidential
nomination and most came away
with the .same impression : Reagan

Exten~ Ohio Forec~~t-Friday through Sunday: Warm with a chance of showers or thunderstorms each day.·Highs in the upper 80s to low
90s and lows in the 60s.
.

.

..

MIAMI (AP) - Gangs of black May 17 riots) has not eased. It is still
youths roamed the streets of Liberty acute..''
However, George Knox, Miami
City overnight after five white
policemen were shot and wounded, city attorney and a leader in the
and 500 officers in riot gear cordoned black conununity, said the conoff a ~square-mile area of nor- siderable "pollee presence" could
thwestern Miami. Police said most keep violence .from reaching the
of the youths had gone home by proportions of the May rioting.
. Marvin Dunn, a leader in Miami's
dawn and streets were empty.
More than25 people were reported black community, said Liberty City
injured dliring a night of rock-and residents were "scared of. what's
bottle-throwing, sporadic looting, happening, and they're scared the
pollee officers are going to march
arson, firebombing and sniper fire.
Police said " under a dozen" down and shoot them.
"My concern is that the pollee will
1people had been arrested by early
today but could .riot give an exact be so fearful we won't be able to get
number. Pollee reported the Liberty any protection down there.' '
Commul]ity Relations Board
City area was quiet at6 a.m.
The nightlong violence by hun- · member Preston W. Marshall said
!lreds of youths was triggered many black teen-agers told him they
TuesdaY, by a plainclothes officer's participated in street violence
attempt to stop two black youths because they were dissatisfied with
from ·robbing a white motorist in the low-paying summer jobs and the
same neighborhoOd devastate&lt;: by federal aid provided by the Carter
race riots two montbs ago, officials administration after the May riots.
Dade County Lt. Robert Fortney
said.
A smaller area in Coconut Grove said police reported more gunfire
in southwestern Miami also was Tuesday than in the May riots,
sealed off by police carrying perhaps because of the looting of
·g unshops during the riots that left 18
shotguns and automatic weapons.
"Hell, man, we're fighting back," people dead. Some of the victims
were motorists caug)lt in the blOOdy
one black teen-ager said.
"Blacks have to stand up, man," outpouring.
Terrified white drivers raced
said 17-year-old Jerry Pounder.
"The way they fthe police) handle through Liberty City as bricks and
things is aU wrong. It's just a rocks pelted their cars Tuesday. "I
disgrace. They come in here bluffihg thought I · wouldn't make it out
alive," said Jose Fernandez, 26.
somebody down." .
Firefighters were battling three "It's just not fair."
Pollee fired tear gas to disperse
fires, including one at.a gasoline ser·
vice station where youtlf shoved a' throngs of black youths. Several
tow truck into the middle of a street people, including a 7-month-old
baby, were treated for gas
and set it afire.
Police, ham~red by sporadic inhalation,
Much of the violence Tuesday was
gunfire, a~o were trying to move
several garbage bins that had been !limed at police, who were not
shoved into the path of a freight caUing it a racial problem, actrain. The · train stopped before cording to Sgt. Peter Cuccaro.
The violence erupted late in the af·
reaching the bins.
ternoon
after three officers on a
"We've had nwnerous sniping incidents reported throughout the stakeout broke up the robbery of a
night," said Dade County Central white motorist by a pair. of black
Dilltrict officer Jim Bigler. "But for youths. Sgt. Fred Pelny, 39;- and of·
the most part, we've been trying to ficers Les Blumen and Michael
stay out of the area and let things Cummings chased two suspects into
·•
calm down. The tension (from the a Liberty City housing project.

SWORN tN - Phitip Roberts, left, newly appointed engineer for
. Meigs County, was sworn in Tuesday by Common Pleas Judge John C.
Bacon. Roberts fills the vacancy created by the recent death of Wesley
Buehl. Buehl had the remainder of this year on his current tenn. A 1!162
graduate of Southern High School, Roberts received his bachelor of science degree in civil engineering&gt;from Ohio University in 1!167. He is married ·
to the former Karen Leigh Dailey, who received her degree in nursing at
Ohio University this year. She is a nursing supervisor at the Holzer
Medical Center. Roberts is the son of Mrs. Frances Roberts, Racine, and ·
the late Marvin Roberts.

Motorcycle driver
injured in mishap
Two motorists were cited and one cited on an assured clear distance
person was injured in three area ac- charge following a collision on Mill
cidents rePorted Tuesday by the Creek Rd. , around 1:35 p.m.
Gallia·Meigs Post, State Highway Tuesday.
Patrol.,
Patrol reports Karl Halley, 18, Rt.
The injury mishap took place at 1, Gallipolis, was stopped for inud on
11:15 p.m. on Rt. 124 in Meigs Coun- Mill Creek Rd. Hill vehicle was hit in
ty, twomileseastofRt. 33.
the rear by the Lucas vehicle. There
According to the patrol, David G.
was moderate damage · to both
Dodson, 'J:l, Middleport, was westvehicles.
.
bound on a motorcycle. Dodson los~
At 6:40p.m. Tuesday on Webster
control of the cycle and hit a guard'
Rd., one and 3/10 miles south of Rt.
rail on the left side of the road. He
141, vehicles driven by Earl Ross,31,
was taken to Holzer Meflical Center · Rt.l, Patriot, and Junior E. Massie,
tiy the Pomeroy Emergency Squad.
23, Pedro, collided. Ross was cited
The vehicle had moderate damage.
for failure to yield the right~f-way.
Dodson was admitted at 12:20 a.m.
There were11o injuries. Damage was
today for multiple contusions and
minor to the Ross auto and moderate
abrasions and released at2:20 a.m.
to the Massie vehicle.
Ora G. Lucas, 'J:l, Gallipolis, was

Mercury climbs, .highWays buckle

By TIIOMAS RIZZO
slowed down, but there were no accidents.
Associated Press Writer
Record_high temperatures Wrap.
The stifling weather caused three
ped Ohio in a sticky blanket of heat similar problems in central Ohio
and hwnidity Tuesday, ·keeping almost at the same time, according
people indoors where they could be to U. Carl Brown of Highway Patrol
headquarters in Colwnbus.
protected by air conditioning units.
Few serious health problems were
At about 5:15 p.m., the roaaway
buckled
on westbound Interstate 70
reported across the state Tuesday as
temperatures pushed into the high at the border between Madison and
90s in most areas and cracked the Clark counties, on I-70 near the
century barrier in one citY.
Muskingum County line and on I-'J:/0
The state's hot spot was Dayton, near the I-71 interchange, he said.
"The eruptions created some temwhere a 101-d,egree reading ·broke a
record set in 1936 by 2 degrees. ,
porary problems and we had to
Records also were set in reroute traffic along the benn,"
·
Cleveland, where it was 97, Brown said.
Youngstown, with a 92-degree temBob Paddock, a meteorologiSt for
perature, and zanesville, with a the National Weather Service in
reading of 94. Temperatures of 97 Cleveland, · said the humidity "is
and 93 tied high marks in Colwnbus 1118king an uncomfortable situation
worse' ' and expects niore of the
and Mansfield respectively.
Portions of the state's highway same throughout the week.
system buckled from the oppressive
"!don't know if we'll have record
heat, causing traffic problems.
breakers, but it wiU continue wann
Southbound Interstate 77, one mile and hwnid," he said.
Ohioans weren't prepared for the
east of Ohio 800 in Stark County, ex·
panded and buckled across both ' sudden change in the weather,
lanes, said Lt. Don Mack of the state mainly because of the relativ~ly cool
1
Highway Patrol. The state Tran- spring, Paddock said.
"We've
had
very
few
80-or
even
7().
sportation Department has made
temporary repairs and plans per- ·degree days in April, May and
June," he said. "Suddeilly, this very
manent .repairs today, he said. .
The bu~kling was not a major · typical warm, humid July weather
problem because the concrete, 1s rather a contrast to what we have
though broken accoss boll. lanes, been used to. So it's not too abnormal. We just haven't had . too
~id(l 't rise up, he said. Traffic was

.

. I

much of it, and ' consequently,
weren't really prepared for it."
In Cincinnati, where the high
reached !16, area hospital spokesmen
said they did not notice an increase
iii the nwnber of heat-related
illnesses. Heavy demands for elee:
tricity caused a power outage for 2t ·

hours in some parts of the Cincinnati suburb of Delhi Township.
Jerry Lindsey, a National
Weather Service weather specialillt,
caUed the heat typical for an Oliio
VaUey surruner. Lindsey said the
· vaUey norrnaUy has 26 days a year
·with temperatures above 90.

Commission approves
'81 deficit budget
1

Meigs County Commissioners of the highW'\Y department.
Tuesday adoptetl a 1981 budget
Roberts said the gradall has not
showing a $221,249 deficit:
'
been repaird satisfactorily ahd is not
yet in operatt~n .
The 1981 budget wiD be submitted
to the county budget commission for
The commissioners voted to adIts approval. No individual a~ency
v.ertise for a new 1980-81 truck (flat·
appeared for the hearing on the
bed) for the highway department
budget based on figures furnished by
with bids to be opened at 2 p.m. on
Aug.5.
each office holder:
1
The commissioners said ·a comAlso meeting with the complete review of departmental missioners was Jack Bartrum who
budgets would have to be made with
requested the county clean out the
office holders before Jan. 1, and creek along county road 13 in
some drastic cuts would have to be Rutland Township. The commade in anticipated expenditures in missioners and ~ngineer will view
1981.
the site with Bartrwn.
Meeiing with the commissioners -· Don'Watson a~d Rosalie Whitlatch
were Philip Roberts; county met with the board to make ap.
engineer, and assistant, Charley plication to the county to receive
Smith \o dif:uss various operations
(Con(lnued on page IAI

�I

Bench sets recOrd··as
R ,eds defeat.Montreal

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, July 16, 1960

Opinions&amp;.
Comments

'

1111! DAILY SENTINEL
lUSPSIU.•l
DEV&lt;m:D TO 111E
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASoN AREA
Lttcen of opiaioli an welcomed. They Jboukl be le11 diaD 3110 wordi Joq (or tub jed to reducu.. by the ed.ltor) aad must be liped Wltb tbe 1lpee'1 addms. N&amp;lllet IDlY~ withheld upon
pQUcatioa.. Hawe"u, oa reqlltlt, illmH .wW be dllclottd. Lrtcen abould be in go.t taste, addra•iq ii1DH, D01 penolllaUtiee.
· hbUJIItd daD)' ueept Saturday by Tbc Oblo Valle7 PublllbiDg Compaa.y· Mllldm~... lat., ·
111 Counst, Pomeror,-Pbio 4$71f. Butoe.• Offire Pbope m- zu.. Ed.liortal Pboat! M-2157.
;;
SteOaddaupoa:ta~e Plld at Pomeroy, Oblo.
•
NatloaalltdnrUJing fqll'ftfDtatl\'e, LIDdoa AISDCUI&amp;es, 3101 EucUd Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
.•
ltlll.
·'
1111! Auocia~ Prets ll exdulvely eatltled to tft 1111e lor pubiJcaUoo of all ne'llr! dispatches
:
~led ta tbe DfiWipe~r ud altO tile local.ews pubU•hed'henlo.
~ PubUI•er
Robert Wlo.xcl1
• GftcnJMgr.&amp;:CityEdJtor
Rober1Hoentcb
~,.""'
DaleRotbceb, Jr.
• NewaEdJtor
· • Adv. Manager
..,.~
Carl Gbeea

C~ ... C}'}ON ...

YJ,Pif W.,.{/
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- - ~mSJ ~'--~·~c::J·~

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....

fThe VP problem continues
POMEROY'S PIRA'J'ES - Members of tile
Pomeroy Pirates UtUe League team are, front, l·r,
Rex Haggy, Chip Werry, Kenny Lundsford, Rodney
Harrison, and Brian Freeman ; second row, Greg

-·····-· ·-----. ..,

;..

Witil the seconds ticking away, Ronald Reagan and his staff are still in a
t quandary over selection of the Republican vice-presidential · nominee;
Everyone in the campaign agrees that the fanner California governor's
• 'chances in November may well depend on that choice, but exhaustive
.1; studies and publi~pinion samplings have failed to produce a running mate.
:
The Reagan campaign commissioned three national polls that asked
; voters, Republicans and Democrats, who Reagan's rwming mate should .be.
~ C!tmpaign manager William Casey and otilers in tile campaign hierarchy
~ hoped those findings would be clear enough to make their choice simple. But,
!: in tact, the poll results have only deepened tile problem.
::: To start with, the polls found that Reagan's election chances were helped
., by one one of all the potential vice pesidential candidates: former President
:;: Gerald Ford, who has taken ~If out of the running for the second spot.
&lt;
~ Witil any other running mate, Reagan would likely gather fewer votes than
C he would by running alone.
t Of the remaining possibilities matched with Reag.an, the one who voters
: found least .0bjectionable was former Ambassador George Bush. The tv:o
: who provoked the most voter animosity ,were Sen. Howard Baker of TenNorman Hill, president of the Ran- and blew - in 1~'16.
By Julian Bond
election prospects· are further
;: nessee and Rep. Jack Kemp of New York, who were perceived respectively
dolph
Institute, in attempting to conNEW
YORK
(
NEA'Some
1,300
Meanwhile, New York Gov . Hugh darkened by the growing chances of
$:. as the most liberal and the most conservative of the potential nominees.
vince unionists to convince blacks to Carey has predicted that his state Reagan's sweeping their states.
black trade unionists meeting here
~
But that does not remove Baker - or Kemp, for that matter - from the
go to the polls in November.
recently
were
exhorted
to
begin
the
will be won by independent.John Ah- · Hamilton Jordan, diFector-in-fact
running. The polls also showed that the greatest opposition tO tile TenThat was an offhand derson, denying the Democrats the of the Carter campaign, has said the
process
of
insuring
a
large
black
tur"' nesseean came from tile most conservative voters, those most committed to .
acknowledgement of the , ancient second-largest bloc of votes in the president will lose Texas and
nout on Election Day. The occasion
::: Reagan. Most of tllem would doubtless vote for Reagan in November even
chestnuts being roasted by blacks Electoral College.
was
the
lith
national
conference
of
California if brown and black voters
:-; 'with Baker .on tile ticket.
.
and other traditionally Democratic
the
A.
Philip
Randolph
Institute,
Another
prediction
comes
from
stay
home from the polls. And Tim
~ Which brings up the Anderson factor. It is widely believed that the invoters this year. Among them: "He Senate 'Minority Leader Howard Kraft, a chief Carter's strategist,
whose
180
affiliates
in
36
states
con~ dependent candidacy of Rep. John Anderson hurts President Carter far
is the lesser of two'evils." "Rather Baker, R·Tenn. , who says his party ·-·tms said that the "cen tral
duct voter-registration and voter..., more than it hurts Reagan. But the polls showed clearly that under certain
ihe devil we know than the devil we will capture the House and the challenge" of the president's fall
education drives in minority com·
· -· circwnstances Anderson could take more votes from Rea ian than fjbm Cardon't."
"He may,be a fool, but he's Senate in a landslide propelled by
·.
munities
.
campaign will be to build en. ter in some states.
our fool." "Things , auld be worse;
The
Joint
Center
for
Political
"'
d
ouble-dtgit
inflation,
double-digit
thusiasin among black and brown
_... This would be the case among voters ·who refuse to support Carter because
Nixon
could
be
running."
Studies
estiamtes
that
about
17
unemployment
and
double-digit
in·
voters.
;r tlley disapprove of his job performance. These voters also distrust Reagan million blacks will have reached
Despite the spread of such logic, · terest rates." The fact that Baker is
But will the Carter campaign be
~ because of his age or his conservatism. If Reagan had a strong running mate
election prospecis could hardly be hardly an unbiased observer does
voting age by Nov. 4. The task of gel·
able to build that enthusiasm - even
s; who was perceived as more liberal - say, Howard Baker - these people ling
as many of them as possible to grirruner for the party in power.
not negate the real possibility of big
with the help of the major black
;:= would likely vote Republican. But if Reagan ran with another conse·rvative tile polls
Three recent national polls Republican gains in both houses of
will
fall
largely
on
the
Ranorganizations
'?
!:; -say, Kemp ,or former Treasury Secretary William Simon- they might dolph Institute, the National showed Ronald Reagan defeating
Congress
this
November.
Certainly
it
cannot do so by poin·
: well turn to Anderson.
Carter if the election were held
Association
for
the
Advancement
of
Among
the
Democratic
senators
ting
·
with
pride
to the adj; In Texas, for example, one poll showed that Regan, with a conservative Colored People, the National Urban 'today. Gallup had the former goverwho
may
lose
their
seats
are
Idaho's
ministration's
"accomplislunents'.
~ running mate, would lose three votes to Anderson for evey two votes tha!
nor of Ca lifornia turning the former Frank Church, South Dakota's
League, Operation PUSH a~d a few
- the black unemployment rate, for
"" Carter would Jose. Texas is a critical state in Reagan's election strategy.
governor
of Georgia into the former George McGovern, Iowa's John
lesser-known
groups.
instance. Instead, the Carter camp
;
The poll findings have led a nwnber of Reagan's advisers to reconunend
president of the United States by a Culver, Indiana 's Bircl: 'layh aa~ must resort to viewing with alarm
With
polls
showing
that
a
majority
;: choosing a relatively unknown who has few enemies. This strategy is being
margin of 47 percent to 42 percent.
Americans disapprove of Jimmy
rse world th91' would result
California's Alan Cranston. They '-tn~o
j:: called "The Lugar Option" after Indian Sen ..Richard Lugar. Though Lugar of
Carter's
performance
~s president,
The
20-point
erosion
in
Carter's
are
running
for
their
political
lives
from
Reagall.Jll'eSldency. Only the
);: has been widely mentioned as the best choice in this regard, the polls showed
support since Ja~uary reminds not only against their Republican
these organizations have a difficult
fear
o
nal(f Reagan ma y be able
l; that many voters perceived him as being almost as conservative as Kemp,
Democrats with ' four-year-long challengers but against a nationally
task
ahead
of
them.
to spur the sluggish black electorate
;: Therefore, if the Reagan brain trust adopts this strategy, the choice may
memories of the 30,poirit lead over funded right-wing campaign to un·
"We have never had a perfect canthis year:
::1; hi! not Lugar but an even less familiar face. One such face belongs to didate
Gerald Ford that Carter enjoyed and
we
never
will,"
noted
seat
targeted
liberals.
Their
re·
·"' Michigan Rep. Guy Vander Jagt, a compelling carilpaigner and stwnp
:: speaker, a behind:tile-scenes Republican power in tile House and a politician
;:. who the public does not perceive as either too liberal or too conservative. As
:: a better-known alternative, many in the Reagan camp would push Chicago
;; businessman Donald Rwnsfeld, the former White House chief of staff and
:; secretary of defense. Rumsfeld is lobbying hard for the second spot.
:.:
There are still as many guesses about the identify of the Republican
;~ vice-presidential nominee as there are campaign insiders: Baker or Bush if
acres, but the reserve is dwindling tation and other forms of enBy Robert Walters
that problem, offers this equally
:: Reagan's advisers are really worried about Anderson, "The Lugar Option"
rapidly. Remaining are only about vironmental degradation . The
DES MOINES (NEA) - The pessimistic view:
::-if tiley decide on a relatively unknown who will do the least damage, or a
sprawling tract of the southern edge
"Every day in the United States, 4 ~million acres with a high potential resulting higher production costs
;. Kemp-Simon conservative if they think Reagan will win in November regarfor conversion to crop land.
lead directly to increased prices
of this city was fertile farm land not square miles of our nation's prime
;; dless and might as well have the running mate with whom he is politically
"For
the
first
time
in
this
nation
's
paid by urban consumers at the
,; most comfortable.
.
long ago. But today \hose fields of farm land are shifted .to uses other
·~
~.
... corn are only a memory, replaced than agriculture. The thief is urban history," says Charles Little, supermarkets.
president of the American Land
If land losses continue at their
by a suburban housing development sprawl.
Forum,
'·
each
new
subdivision,
·
current rate, all food produced in the
"Today there are highways and
:~a
~~AP-"
1 called Greenfield Plaza.
factory, power plant or shop- United States by th~ end of this cen~
~
I The metamorphosis of that houses, airports and shopping cen· dam,
ping center threatens permanently tury will be consumed in this coun.property is 'significant because it ters on land that onoe produced an
to
reduce the productive capacity of try, exacerbating a world hunger
I· typifies a disturbing pattemthat has abundance of grin and• timber, · American
agriculture~;.
problem that already has reached
become evident all across the nation forage, vegetables and fruits.
1
The
implications
of that trend are intolerable levels.
., .
- the irrevocable loss of the coun''There are motels and reservoirs,
truly awesome. Sale of agriculture
"Continued destruction of crop
try's most productive agricultural industrial parks and power plants on
products to other nations, currently land," says Bergland, "is wanton
our culture here. This attitude has land.
land where farmers once grazed
valued at more than $32 billion an- squandering of an irreplace~blc
kept oilr county from growing and
"The United States is losing . 1 tneir cattle and harvested cotton and
·• Dear Ben Batey, · ·
nually, represents by far the coun· resource tht invites futur e. tragedy
competing socially, economically million acres of the world's best and · · flax ...
.• I feel I must respond to your
try's largest category of e&gt;&lt;ports.• not only nationally but on a global
and intellectually. Must we promote flattest agricultural land each year
::question as to whetiler we have
"As prime farm land disappears,
Any reduction · invariably will in- scale.''
from the "inside" all of the time?
·:people smart enough to "look after
to urban .sprawl" says Agriculture food is not our only loss. The quality
crease
the United Stales' already
Mister,
my
family
needs
and
apSecretary Bob Bergland.
::some of !IIese things without going
of.our lives is diminished. There are
Shopping~enter developers and
overwhelming·balance-of
payments . real-estate subdividers are not j)le
preciates
all
tile
help
we
can
get
;; out of Meigs County."
·
"In my lifetime, we've paved over garish signs and glaring storefronts
from that lovely lady's talents, the equivalent of all the crop land in where leaves once caught the rain deficit and further weaken the only villains in the saga ..Countless
.,. I believe you were referring direcdollar.
,
whether
she is from Meigs County or Ohio. Before this century is out, we and filtered the sunlight. There is
Uy to the library situation. I may be
government departments and agen· ·
As
prime
agricultural
land
disapnot.
And
I
hope
our
county
continues
outnumbered in my opinion, but I
will pave over an area the size of In- asphalt where fields and woods once
cies have pumped billions of dollari
pears, farmers are forced to into sewer, dam, highway and othei:
::.am pleased to have industrious new to "import" many more people of diana," Bergland adds.
beckoned and refreshed the spirit."
cultivate
marginally productive federal projects that encourage min;
her quality. After all, this country
:~ people come into our county.
The National Agricultural Lands
Estimates of the land now under
land
that
requires
more fertilizer dless development of the coun'
didn't belong to any of us an)'way, if Study, a joint effort of 12 federa l cultivation throughout the country
:: I didn't realize that we residents of
and
tractor
fuel
and
that is more trvside.
you want to really get technical.
::.Meigs County were members of a
departments and agencies to study range from 380 million to 410 million
vulnerable
to
soil
erosion,
sedimenBy the way, J have people buried
:• private club. Whetiler we have
in this county's cemeteries since
!• people in our county who are
.. ,,
before this country was a nation
:~capable of running our libraries is
called U.S.A. I feel that gives me a
::: not the question as I see it.
right to say :•Welc(!me,
;~.. I'm sure that we do.
;! The real Issue as I see it is tile newcomers! ''
•
Sincerely. - Jan Groggel, Por;: typical jealousy concerning " outtland.
to permeate
. ,.,,. siders" tllat appears
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t:

Three more teams ousted;
Syracuse tourney continues

E

:~------------------------ 1

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·••• 411~...

t4ltift:
''Vl·
-·

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...I A reader responds

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Washington report

·vice presidency only GOP suspense

~~ Today in history. ..
mstr~ng,

:i:~

Today is Wednesday, July 16, the
Buzz Aldri1i and Mid1ad
!96th day of 19l)O. There arc 168 days C"llins -- ~·as launciJcd from Cape
::left in the year.
Cauaveral to attempt tiJc first Ian·: Today's highlight in histury:
uiug 1111 tiJc niiK•n.
:: On July 16, 1945, the atomic age
Ju' 1913, the White H11usc con·
:• began with the wurld's first alumic · finfJed that nearly ull of President
.; bum() cxplu.siorl. uver tile Uc.scrt ir\
N ix~,,, ·s rncclings,and tclcpholl.c cor1~
IA,sAJamtjs, N.M.
vcrsatit•rrs at the cxccuLJvc rnansJc,JJ
t On this elate :
l 1 a~ l&gt;t:cu secretly rcct •rdcd!
a It• 1790, .tile District uf Columbi~
Je ll "years ilgo. llrit"in's l'rincc.
:was establistJL'&lt;.! GIS tlte scat uf tile
L'li&lt;Jric!'i and Prlm:css A1111e tirrho·cU
·: AmeriCan guvcrmncnt.
1
11, \\ ;.~sJii ngt1111 ft II' · thelr fm.;t \'is il '''·
.• In1918, [(ussia's Czar Nidmlils If, l11c ullilt'd Sl&lt;1lcs.
· ~u1c E111prcss Alcx~t1drla LAIH..I ti1Cir
' FH:c \'l'&lt;JI:-. agt1, 1! \\tts dJ~od dscc.J

f

:efive

chiJUrCn were cxct:utcd by

·t I'UvuJutiouarics.
1 Iul969, UIt' Apt~UI • XV H Sj)l.Jl"l'l'l'aft
~

-

mann~d

hy

astrunau~. Ne1t Ar-

1 J :&lt;.~l tJ ;c Su\·al!t'

li..Ad w:uh· a
dull 11.1 lJU} \·asl quautJill'."' " ' wla.:CJI
f i •IJ. , 1\\ •' r\ 11:n:t·;,,, J..!l" iJII I t '.\j)nrt l'l s.
LJl!Hi t

~

By WALTER R. MEARS
White House.
AP Special Correspondent . ·
The Republican National ConDETROIT i AP) - When thiQgs vention has Ronald Reagan. And
are done the old-fashioned way, Reagan has forbidden that kind of
prospective vice ' presidenti al walk-on role for the prospects on his
nominees usually go, ln turn, to call vice presidential list. Even the list
upon the man .who will be selecti ng 'depends on who's doing the talking;
one of them for the ticket.
for the record, ·Reagan spokesmen
No, each of them Says on the way say nobody has been ruled in and
out, he doesn't know whether he's it. · nobody has been ruled out.
Yes, he'd accept if asked, although
Since Rea11an has to make his
it's a job he never sought, being , choice the night after tomorrow,
delighted to be a senator, or guvet'· that almost certainly is not so.
nur, ur whatever the case may be.
Reagan has told aides he found it
And yes, the ticket is ccrt_a in t11 be appalling that Jimmy Carter
a winner in t:1e fall , whcl)Jcr he 's ull publicly summoned a lineup of vi~e
it ur not.
'
~ presidential possibilities to Plains,
That makes good politic&gt;illheater, Ga., for personal interview~ ; before
particular!) wltcll the vice presidell· the 1976 Democratic convention. By
cy is the unly s uspcn~e available at a the tillle the Democrats gut to Ne.w .
rJatiunal pulitk~.il l'tlllYcrtlion wh ich
Yurk to nominate" Carter, he had a
already IJas its nuu'iitlee fur the

..

list of four finalists for the spot that cent of the delegates say they're for:
went to Walter F. Mondale.
him. In an Associated Press-NBC
, Reagan contends that was News poll, Bush got 21 percent, wittJ:
demeaning, to all the publicly-listed no one else close.
•
prospects who didn't get the
Reagan will make the decision an~
nomination.
the convention will do his bidding. :
"I don 't want to use these people,"
Sometime late Wednesday:;
Reagan told aides who suggested Reagan will sit down with his cam:
that some·tantalizing vice presiden- paign high conunand, talk it over:
tial interviews, announced in ad- and tell them who he.wants.
•
vance, might serve to. heighten in- . At 10 a.m. J'hhrsday, the presiden!
terest in the nCK:ontest convention tial nominee and his lieutenants will·
that opened today.
telephone key party figures - and'
-· He may meet privately with·some spurned prospects - to tell them of
of the prospects, but aides say the decision. The odds are good thaf
\hey've been told there is to be no they'll already know by then.
,.
public parade displaying the
And at 11 a.m., Reagan ·and hi!!:
prospects.
running mate will appear together: .
.There's mofe evidence of support to announce formally what the party:
for George Bush, R~agan's la~t and anyone else · who's intere~te&amp;:
challenger for the nomination, than will already have heard.
•
for any utlocr pr~pect. Twenty per•'

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coaches. Absent were Mark Elliott, Chris Smith and
coach Gary Freeman. The team's curent record is 16-6.

.

Organizations have difficult tasks

Urban sprawl attack~ farms in Iowa

Fields, Todd Cullums, J&lt;le Fields, Huey Eason and Phil
King; third row, Uoyd ,J&lt;:ing and Phil Harrison,

I

By Scott Wolle
and four walks. The duo combined
just as teammate Steve Musser did
SYRACUSE - . A highly com- fOr a one-hitter which knocked in
moments . before. Brent Zirkle was
petitive spirit was in the air at Gallia 's only run following an error the hero with the winning RBI.
Syracuse Tuesday evening as local and a walk.
Chris Shank went the distance for
youngsters felt the thrill of victory,
Middleport's Wise helped his Pomeroy fanning IS and walking
some the agony of defeat.
cause with a home run, Scott Gheen
just four in picking up the win.
After two games in which the Mid- a home run and single, Steve Crow
Artie Hunnell doubled while Steve
dleport Braves defeated Gallipolis' · two singles and double, Jeff Hood a Musser singled for the winners. John
White Sox and Pomeroy's GiantS single and double, Frazier a single, Diddle suffered the loss. Wayne Diddowned· Rutland's Dodgers, Condufl a single.
dle doubled and Joe Browning
Pomeroy's Tigers posted a hard
.Catnbl.e Grant suffered the Joss singled for the Vinton team,
fought come-from-behind win over with relief from Aaron Miller. They
Here's tonight's schedule:
Vinton.
· fanned eight and walked eight. .
Reedsville Bombers vs. Racine
In the evening's first game, MidKyle Saundefl! collect¢&lt;! the only !Jeds at 6:15p.m.; Gallipolis Padres
dleport's Indi~ns rolled to a ~I vic- White SOx hit in the third irming.
vs. Green II, 7:30 p.m., and (;!ouster
Pomeroy's Giants rolled to a 12·1 Mathews vs. Gallipolis Tigers at
tory over Gallia 's White Sox. Rick
Wise with the aid of Scott Gheen win over the Rutland Dodgers, 8:45p.m.
picked )IP t~ win with 11 strike outs highlighted by a no hit performance
Second ro1111d p)ay begins Thuroff tile hands of winning pitcher sday. Games leature Bidwell vs.
Bryijn ·Korn, and relievers Rod New Haven Cubs at 1): 15 p.m.;
Roush and Gerald Moore. The ttio
Albany vs. Cheshire, 7:30 p.m., and
fanned 12· and walked eight while Rutland Reds vs. Tuppers Plains at
quieting the Dodger hats.
8:45p.m.
Gerald Moore had a double and
home run, Bryan Korn a home run,
Rod Roush a double, Lee Powell a
LATONIA RESULTS
•
triple, Kevin Mowery a single, Scott
The Tuppers Plains Pony Pullers
FLORENCE,
Ky. (AP) - Miss
Association held its third pull of the Powell a triple and single.
Zero
won
the
featured
one-mile conMark Norman and Scott Williap!S
year with Claude Dray, Gallpolis,
ditioned
pace
at
Latonia
on Tuesday
and Leonard Cremeans, Coolvllle, pitched very well as they struck out and paid $)8.40, $7.80 and $7 .20.
12, but walked seven.
apnouncing the pull.
Rusty Nail placed for $3.80 and
The night's thi~ gam7 was a very
Judges were Leonard Cremeans
f3
,40, and tile show borse, Miss Kit
and Bill Pullins, Coolville; Buster exciting game from the start. The
Tarrain
returned $10.40.
Barrett, Rutland; Jack Rankins, line score illustrates the closeness of
Corky
Ahnahurst and Edith M
Reedsville; Junior Biars, Jeff tile game. Pomeroy had seven runs,
Shadow
comoo.d
to return $68 in
Clagg, Therill Clagg, and Bob Clagg, two hits and no errors while Vinton · the 3-4 daily double.
had six runs, two hits and no errors.
all of Galliilolis:
The quinella of s-7, ~paid $4!i5.40.
A bases loaded walk forced home
Winners · of the pull were as
Acrowd of 983 wagered $83,5!i5. ·
follows: 1,100 lb. class : first place, Artie Hunnell With the winning run,
Paul Biars, Gallipolis; second plaL-e,
Wayne McGuire, Gallipolis; tllird 'IIIII•••
place, Lewis Clagg, Gallipolis; four- I
til place, Clois Rigsby, Jackson; fif!11 place, Bob Calaway. Coolville. ~
1,400 lb. class: first place, Jimmi~
McGuire and Sons, Crown City;
second place, Wilbur Pullins,
Coolville; third place, John Lowers,
Stockport, Ohio; fourth place, Bill
Estep and Junior Cremeans,
Gallipolis; fifth place, Bob Calaway,
24
Coolville.
·
In the 1,2700 lb. class, first place,
.. --Jimmie McGuire and Sons, Crown
City, Ohio; second place, Larry
Nolan, Gallipolis; third and fourth
places, Claude Dray, Gallipolis; fif·
til place, Wayne Warren and Jack
•92-2556
Dray, Gallipolis.
S70W.
Main
The next pony pull will be August
Porn
0.
16 at 10 a.m. at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds.

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
It had been well publicized. Cincinnati Reds catcher Johnny Bench
was closing in on another milestone
- Yogi Berra's career home run
record for catchers. When it finally
was over, Bench was un·
derstandably pleased.
He stood watching the ball as it
sailed deep into the left field seats at
Cincinnati's Riverfront Stadium No.314 as a catcher, 347 lifetime and
15for the year.
" As soon as I hit it, I knew it was
gone," Bench said. "I don 't even
know where I threw my bat, but I
knew I jwnped high in the air."
As tile hall cleared the fence, Benen raised his anns.
"I never remember doing that
before," Be-nch said of his
melodramatics. "I don't want tp
show a pitcher up, but I think he understands why."
The hil!toric .two-run blast came on
the first pitch from Montreal rightbJLnder Dave Palmer, 6-3, and capIlli a five-run, fifth-inning rally that
helped the Reds to an 11-7 victQry
over tile Expos. It followed a threerun homer by George. Foster and
helped snap a four-game Cincinnati
losing streak.
Bench had tied Berra's record .
Saturday, and he said tile toughest
part about breaking it "was the long
walk to-theplate every time with the
crowd cheering for me .... "
"The fans wanted it, and on that ·
trip l said, ~Please let's get it over"
witil,''' Bench said.
Palmer got two homers in support,
from · Ellis Valentine and ano~er
from Andre Dawson. For his own
p;~rt, he was puzzled. '
"I just can't understand what happened," Palmer said. "I · was
breezing along, and it seems I just
· lost my location. But giving up home
runs to powerlul swingers like Bench and Foster is nothing to be upset.

and dropped the - Phils to third
about."
Paul Moskau; 7-2, pitched Cin- behind Pittsburgh.
cinnati's first complete game since
Joe Sambito, 4-1, picked up the
the Fourth of July, yielding nine hits
victory with one scoreless inning in
but benefitting by 13 Reds hits agd
relief of Nolan Ryan, who yielded
three Montreal ·errors. Two errors
one earned tun in eight innings
were by Expos third baseman Larry
Parrish in the third innin)l and .led to
two unearned runs.
·
Elsewhere in tile National League,
Houston edged Philadelphia :1-2, Pittsburgh 'downed San Francisco f&gt;-2,
New York whippep Atlanta 9-2, St.
Louis beat San Diego .S.3 and Los
Angeles defeated Chicago 6-2.
Astros 3, Pbils 2
A win would have tied
Philadelphia witil Montreal for the
NL East lead, but a balk and an
error by Phillies right-hander Dick
Ruthven gave the game to Houston

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V

A

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.

lnstsllstion A tiBIIsble
French's Sunoco Station

.Pomeroy Motor Co:
308 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio

Gilbert' s Garage
State Route 7
Middleport, Ohio

\

Smith Nelson Motors
SOO E. Main Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

Codner' s Texaco Station
SyraCuse, Ohio

Bir,..J Service Station

State Route 7

C &amp; A Garage
Racine, Ohio

Tuppers Pl'ains, Ohio

Newell 'S Sunoco Station

Bill Hoback' s Garage

State Rout e 7
Chester, Ohio

Syracuse, Ohio

'

Old s Cad .
Pomeroy, OhiO

·~tmmon ' s

•

.

Ponieroy, Ohio

'I .
J

.

pomeroy Home &amp; 4uto

•

�I

Bench sets recOrd··as
R ,eds defeat.Montreal

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, July 16, 1960

Opinions&amp;.
Comments

'

1111! DAILY SENTINEL
lUSPSIU.•l
DEV&lt;m:D TO 111E
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASoN AREA
Lttcen of opiaioli an welcomed. They Jboukl be le11 diaD 3110 wordi Joq (or tub jed to reducu.. by the ed.ltor) aad must be liped Wltb tbe 1lpee'1 addms. N&amp;lllet IDlY~ withheld upon
pQUcatioa.. Hawe"u, oa reqlltlt, illmH .wW be dllclottd. Lrtcen abould be in go.t taste, addra•iq ii1DH, D01 penolllaUtiee.
· hbUJIItd daD)' ueept Saturday by Tbc Oblo Valle7 PublllbiDg Compaa.y· Mllldm~... lat., ·
111 Counst, Pomeror,-Pbio 4$71f. Butoe.• Offire Pbope m- zu.. Ed.liortal Pboat! M-2157.
;;
SteOaddaupoa:ta~e Plld at Pomeroy, Oblo.
•
NatloaalltdnrUJing fqll'ftfDtatl\'e, LIDdoa AISDCUI&amp;es, 3101 EucUd Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
.•
ltlll.
·'
1111! Auocia~ Prets ll exdulvely eatltled to tft 1111e lor pubiJcaUoo of all ne'llr! dispatches
:
~led ta tbe DfiWipe~r ud altO tile local.ews pubU•hed'henlo.
~ PubUI•er
Robert Wlo.xcl1
• GftcnJMgr.&amp;:CityEdJtor
Rober1Hoentcb
~,.""'
DaleRotbceb, Jr.
• NewaEdJtor
· • Adv. Manager
..,.~
Carl Gbeea

C~ ... C}'}ON ...

YJ,Pif W.,.{/
'

- - ~mSJ ~'--~·~c::J·~

'

~~

;

'

•'

....

fThe VP problem continues
POMEROY'S PIRA'J'ES - Members of tile
Pomeroy Pirates UtUe League team are, front, l·r,
Rex Haggy, Chip Werry, Kenny Lundsford, Rodney
Harrison, and Brian Freeman ; second row, Greg

-·····-· ·-----. ..,

;..

Witil the seconds ticking away, Ronald Reagan and his staff are still in a
t quandary over selection of the Republican vice-presidential · nominee;
Everyone in the campaign agrees that the fanner California governor's
• 'chances in November may well depend on that choice, but exhaustive
.1; studies and publi~pinion samplings have failed to produce a running mate.
:
The Reagan campaign commissioned three national polls that asked
; voters, Republicans and Democrats, who Reagan's rwming mate should .be.
~ C!tmpaign manager William Casey and otilers in tile campaign hierarchy
~ hoped those findings would be clear enough to make their choice simple. But,
!: in tact, the poll results have only deepened tile problem.
::: To start with, the polls found that Reagan's election chances were helped
., by one one of all the potential vice pesidential candidates: former President
:;: Gerald Ford, who has taken ~If out of the running for the second spot.
&lt;
~ Witil any other running mate, Reagan would likely gather fewer votes than
C he would by running alone.
t Of the remaining possibilities matched with Reag.an, the one who voters
: found least .0bjectionable was former Ambassador George Bush. The tv:o
: who provoked the most voter animosity ,were Sen. Howard Baker of TenNorman Hill, president of the Ran- and blew - in 1~'16.
By Julian Bond
election prospects· are further
;: nessee and Rep. Jack Kemp of New York, who were perceived respectively
dolph
Institute, in attempting to conNEW
YORK
(
NEA'Some
1,300
Meanwhile, New York Gov . Hugh darkened by the growing chances of
$:. as the most liberal and the most conservative of the potential nominees.
vince unionists to convince blacks to Carey has predicted that his state Reagan's sweeping their states.
black trade unionists meeting here
~
But that does not remove Baker - or Kemp, for that matter - from the
go to the polls in November.
recently
were
exhorted
to
begin
the
will be won by independent.John Ah- · Hamilton Jordan, diFector-in-fact
running. The polls also showed that the greatest opposition tO tile TenThat was an offhand derson, denying the Democrats the of the Carter campaign, has said the
process
of
insuring
a
large
black
tur"' nesseean came from tile most conservative voters, those most committed to .
acknowledgement of the , ancient second-largest bloc of votes in the president will lose Texas and
nout on Election Day. The occasion
::: Reagan. Most of tllem would doubtless vote for Reagan in November even
chestnuts being roasted by blacks Electoral College.
was
the
lith
national
conference
of
California if brown and black voters
:-; 'with Baker .on tile ticket.
.
and other traditionally Democratic
the
A.
Philip
Randolph
Institute,
Another
prediction
comes
from
stay
home from the polls. And Tim
~ Which brings up the Anderson factor. It is widely believed that the invoters this year. Among them: "He Senate 'Minority Leader Howard Kraft, a chief Carter's strategist,
whose
180
affiliates
in
36
states
con~ dependent candidacy of Rep. John Anderson hurts President Carter far
is the lesser of two'evils." "Rather Baker, R·Tenn. , who says his party ·-·tms said that the "cen tral
duct voter-registration and voter..., more than it hurts Reagan. But the polls showed clearly that under certain
ihe devil we know than the devil we will capture the House and the challenge" of the president's fall
education drives in minority com·
· -· circwnstances Anderson could take more votes from Rea ian than fjbm Cardon't."
"He may,be a fool, but he's Senate in a landslide propelled by
·.
munities
.
campaign will be to build en. ter in some states.
our fool." "Things , auld be worse;
The
Joint
Center
for
Political
"'
d
ouble-dtgit
inflation,
double-digit
thusiasin among black and brown
_... This would be the case among voters ·who refuse to support Carter because
Nixon
could
be
running."
Studies
estiamtes
that
about
17
unemployment
and
double-digit
in·
voters.
;r tlley disapprove of his job performance. These voters also distrust Reagan million blacks will have reached
Despite the spread of such logic, · terest rates." The fact that Baker is
But will the Carter campaign be
~ because of his age or his conservatism. If Reagan had a strong running mate
election prospecis could hardly be hardly an unbiased observer does
voting age by Nov. 4. The task of gel·
able to build that enthusiasm - even
s; who was perceived as more liberal - say, Howard Baker - these people ling
as many of them as possible to grirruner for the party in power.
not negate the real possibility of big
with the help of the major black
;:= would likely vote Republican. But if Reagan ran with another conse·rvative tile polls
Three recent national polls Republican gains in both houses of
will
fall
largely
on
the
Ranorganizations
'?
!:; -say, Kemp ,or former Treasury Secretary William Simon- they might dolph Institute, the National showed Ronald Reagan defeating
Congress
this
November.
Certainly
it
cannot do so by poin·
: well turn to Anderson.
Carter if the election were held
Association
for
the
Advancement
of
Among
the
Democratic
senators
ting
·
with
pride
to the adj; In Texas, for example, one poll showed that Regan, with a conservative Colored People, the National Urban 'today. Gallup had the former goverwho
may
lose
their
seats
are
Idaho's
ministration's
"accomplislunents'.
~ running mate, would lose three votes to Anderson for evey two votes tha!
nor of Ca lifornia turning the former Frank Church, South Dakota's
League, Operation PUSH a~d a few
- the black unemployment rate, for
"" Carter would Jose. Texas is a critical state in Reagan's election strategy.
governor
of Georgia into the former George McGovern, Iowa's John
lesser-known
groups.
instance. Instead, the Carter camp
;
The poll findings have led a nwnber of Reagan's advisers to reconunend
president of the United States by a Culver, Indiana 's Bircl: 'layh aa~ must resort to viewing with alarm
With
polls
showing
that
a
majority
;: choosing a relatively unknown who has few enemies. This strategy is being
margin of 47 percent to 42 percent.
Americans disapprove of Jimmy
rse world th91' would result
California's Alan Cranston. They '-tn~o
j:: called "The Lugar Option" after Indian Sen ..Richard Lugar. Though Lugar of
Carter's
performance
~s president,
The
20-point
erosion
in
Carter's
are
running
for
their
political
lives
from
Reagall.Jll'eSldency. Only the
);: has been widely mentioned as the best choice in this regard, the polls showed
support since Ja~uary reminds not only against their Republican
these organizations have a difficult
fear
o
nal(f Reagan ma y be able
l; that many voters perceived him as being almost as conservative as Kemp,
Democrats with ' four-year-long challengers but against a nationally
task
ahead
of
them.
to spur the sluggish black electorate
;: Therefore, if the Reagan brain trust adopts this strategy, the choice may
memories of the 30,poirit lead over funded right-wing campaign to un·
"We have never had a perfect canthis year:
::1; hi! not Lugar but an even less familiar face. One such face belongs to didate
Gerald Ford that Carter enjoyed and
we
never
will,"
noted
seat
targeted
liberals.
Their
re·
·"' Michigan Rep. Guy Vander Jagt, a compelling carilpaigner and stwnp
:: speaker, a behind:tile-scenes Republican power in tile House and a politician
;:. who the public does not perceive as either too liberal or too conservative. As
:: a better-known alternative, many in the Reagan camp would push Chicago
;; businessman Donald Rwnsfeld, the former White House chief of staff and
:; secretary of defense. Rumsfeld is lobbying hard for the second spot.
:.:
There are still as many guesses about the identify of the Republican
;~ vice-presidential nominee as there are campaign insiders: Baker or Bush if
acres, but the reserve is dwindling tation and other forms of enBy Robert Walters
that problem, offers this equally
:: Reagan's advisers are really worried about Anderson, "The Lugar Option"
rapidly. Remaining are only about vironmental degradation . The
DES MOINES (NEA) - The pessimistic view:
::-if tiley decide on a relatively unknown who will do the least damage, or a
sprawling tract of the southern edge
"Every day in the United States, 4 ~million acres with a high potential resulting higher production costs
;. Kemp-Simon conservative if they think Reagan will win in November regarfor conversion to crop land.
lead directly to increased prices
of this city was fertile farm land not square miles of our nation's prime
;; dless and might as well have the running mate with whom he is politically
"For
the
first
time
in
this
nation
's
paid by urban consumers at the
,; most comfortable.
.
long ago. But today \hose fields of farm land are shifted .to uses other
·~
~.
... corn are only a memory, replaced than agriculture. The thief is urban history," says Charles Little, supermarkets.
president of the American Land
If land losses continue at their
by a suburban housing development sprawl.
Forum,
'·
each
new
subdivision,
·
current rate, all food produced in the
"Today there are highways and
:~a
~~AP-"
1 called Greenfield Plaza.
factory, power plant or shop- United States by th~ end of this cen~
~
I The metamorphosis of that houses, airports and shopping cen· dam,
ping center threatens permanently tury will be consumed in this coun.property is 'significant because it ters on land that onoe produced an
to
reduce the productive capacity of try, exacerbating a world hunger
I· typifies a disturbing pattemthat has abundance of grin and• timber, · American
agriculture~;.
problem that already has reached
become evident all across the nation forage, vegetables and fruits.
1
The
implications
of that trend are intolerable levels.
., .
- the irrevocable loss of the coun''There are motels and reservoirs,
truly awesome. Sale of agriculture
"Continued destruction of crop
try's most productive agricultural industrial parks and power plants on
products to other nations, currently land," says Bergland, "is wanton
our culture here. This attitude has land.
land where farmers once grazed
valued at more than $32 billion an- squandering of an irreplace~blc
kept oilr county from growing and
"The United States is losing . 1 tneir cattle and harvested cotton and
·• Dear Ben Batey, · ·
nually, represents by far the coun· resource tht invites futur e. tragedy
competing socially, economically million acres of the world's best and · · flax ...
.• I feel I must respond to your
try's largest category of e&gt;&lt;ports.• not only nationally but on a global
and intellectually. Must we promote flattest agricultural land each year
::question as to whetiler we have
"As prime farm land disappears,
Any reduction · invariably will in- scale.''
from the "inside" all of the time?
·:people smart enough to "look after
to urban .sprawl" says Agriculture food is not our only loss. The quality
crease
the United Stales' already
Mister,
my
family
needs
and
apSecretary Bob Bergland.
::some of !IIese things without going
of.our lives is diminished. There are
Shopping~enter developers and
overwhelming·balance-of
payments . real-estate subdividers are not j)le
preciates
all
tile
help
we
can
get
;; out of Meigs County."
·
"In my lifetime, we've paved over garish signs and glaring storefronts
from that lovely lady's talents, the equivalent of all the crop land in where leaves once caught the rain deficit and further weaken the only villains in the saga ..Countless
.,. I believe you were referring direcdollar.
,
whether
she is from Meigs County or Ohio. Before this century is out, we and filtered the sunlight. There is
Uy to the library situation. I may be
government departments and agen· ·
As
prime
agricultural
land
disapnot.
And
I
hope
our
county
continues
outnumbered in my opinion, but I
will pave over an area the size of In- asphalt where fields and woods once
cies have pumped billions of dollari
pears, farmers are forced to into sewer, dam, highway and othei:
::.am pleased to have industrious new to "import" many more people of diana," Bergland adds.
beckoned and refreshed the spirit."
cultivate
marginally productive federal projects that encourage min;
her quality. After all, this country
:~ people come into our county.
The National Agricultural Lands
Estimates of the land now under
land
that
requires
more fertilizer dless development of the coun'
didn't belong to any of us an)'way, if Study, a joint effort of 12 federa l cultivation throughout the country
:: I didn't realize that we residents of
and
tractor
fuel
and
that is more trvside.
you want to really get technical.
::.Meigs County were members of a
departments and agencies to study range from 380 million to 410 million
vulnerable
to
soil
erosion,
sedimenBy the way, J have people buried
:• private club. Whetiler we have
in this county's cemeteries since
!• people in our county who are
.. ,,
before this country was a nation
:~capable of running our libraries is
called U.S.A. I feel that gives me a
::: not the question as I see it.
right to say :•Welc(!me,
;~.. I'm sure that we do.
;! The real Issue as I see it is tile newcomers! ''
•
Sincerely. - Jan Groggel, Por;: typical jealousy concerning " outtland.
to permeate
. ,.,,. siders" tllat appears
'

t:

Three more teams ousted;
Syracuse tourney continues

E

:~------------------------ 1

~·~

·••• 411~...

t4ltift:
''Vl·
-·

::a

...I A reader responds

..

.

:i

:o.

..

Washington report

·vice presidency only GOP suspense

~~ Today in history. ..
mstr~ng,

:i:~

Today is Wednesday, July 16, the
Buzz Aldri1i and Mid1ad
!96th day of 19l)O. There arc 168 days C"llins -- ~·as launciJcd from Cape
::left in the year.
Cauaveral to attempt tiJc first Ian·: Today's highlight in histury:
uiug 1111 tiJc niiK•n.
:: On July 16, 1945, the atomic age
Ju' 1913, the White H11usc con·
:• began with the wurld's first alumic · finfJed that nearly ull of President
.; bum() cxplu.siorl. uver tile Uc.scrt ir\
N ix~,,, ·s rncclings,and tclcpholl.c cor1~
IA,sAJamtjs, N.M.
vcrsatit•rrs at the cxccuLJvc rnansJc,JJ
t On this elate :
l 1 a~ l&gt;t:cu secretly rcct •rdcd!
a It• 1790, .tile District uf Columbi~
Je ll "years ilgo. llrit"in's l'rincc.
:was establistJL'&lt;.! GIS tlte scat uf tile
L'li&lt;Jric!'i and Prlm:css A1111e tirrho·cU
·: AmeriCan guvcrmncnt.
1
11, \\ ;.~sJii ngt1111 ft II' · thelr fm.;t \'is il '''·
.• In1918, [(ussia's Czar Nidmlils If, l11c ullilt'd Sl&lt;1lcs.
· ~u1c E111prcss Alcx~t1drla LAIH..I ti1Cir
' FH:c \'l'&lt;JI:-. agt1, 1! \\tts dJ~od dscc.J

f

:efive

chiJUrCn were cxct:utcd by

·t I'UvuJutiouarics.
1 Iul969, UIt' Apt~UI • XV H Sj)l.Jl"l'l'l'aft
~

-

mann~d

hy

astrunau~. Ne1t Ar-

1 J :&lt;.~l tJ ;c Su\·al!t'

li..Ad w:uh· a
dull 11.1 lJU} \·asl quautJill'."' " ' wla.:CJI
f i •IJ. , 1\\ •' r\ 11:n:t·;,,, J..!l" iJII I t '.\j)nrt l'l s.
LJl!Hi t

~

By WALTER R. MEARS
White House.
AP Special Correspondent . ·
The Republican National ConDETROIT i AP) - When thiQgs vention has Ronald Reagan. And
are done the old-fashioned way, Reagan has forbidden that kind of
prospective vice ' presidenti al walk-on role for the prospects on his
nominees usually go, ln turn, to call vice presidential list. Even the list
upon the man .who will be selecti ng 'depends on who's doing the talking;
one of them for the ticket.
for the record, ·Reagan spokesmen
No, each of them Says on the way say nobody has been ruled in and
out, he doesn't know whether he's it. · nobody has been ruled out.
Yes, he'd accept if asked, although
Since Rea11an has to make his
it's a job he never sought, being , choice the night after tomorrow,
delighted to be a senator, or guvet'· that almost certainly is not so.
nur, ur whatever the case may be.
Reagan has told aides he found it
And yes, the ticket is ccrt_a in t11 be appalling that Jimmy Carter
a winner in t:1e fall , whcl)Jcr he 's ull publicly summoned a lineup of vi~e
it ur not.
'
~ presidential possibilities to Plains,
That makes good politic&gt;illheater, Ga., for personal interview~ ; before
particular!) wltcll the vice presidell· the 1976 Democratic convention. By
cy is the unly s uspcn~e available at a the tillle the Democrats gut to Ne.w .
rJatiunal pulitk~.il l'tlllYcrtlion wh ich
Yurk to nominate" Carter, he had a
already IJas its nuu'iitlee fur the

..

list of four finalists for the spot that cent of the delegates say they're for:
went to Walter F. Mondale.
him. In an Associated Press-NBC
, Reagan contends that was News poll, Bush got 21 percent, wittJ:
demeaning, to all the publicly-listed no one else close.
•
prospects who didn't get the
Reagan will make the decision an~
nomination.
the convention will do his bidding. :
"I don 't want to use these people,"
Sometime late Wednesday:;
Reagan told aides who suggested Reagan will sit down with his cam:
that some·tantalizing vice presiden- paign high conunand, talk it over:
tial interviews, announced in ad- and tell them who he.wants.
•
vance, might serve to. heighten in- . At 10 a.m. J'hhrsday, the presiden!
terest in the nCK:ontest convention tial nominee and his lieutenants will·
that opened today.
telephone key party figures - and'
-· He may meet privately with·some spurned prospects - to tell them of
of the prospects, but aides say the decision. The odds are good thaf
\hey've been told there is to be no they'll already know by then.
,.
public parade displaying the
And at 11 a.m., Reagan ·and hi!!:
prospects.
running mate will appear together: .
.There's mofe evidence of support to announce formally what the party:
for George Bush, R~agan's la~t and anyone else · who's intere~te&amp;:
challenger for the nomination, than will already have heard.
•
for any utlocr pr~pect. Twenty per•'

'

coaches. Absent were Mark Elliott, Chris Smith and
coach Gary Freeman. The team's curent record is 16-6.

.

Organizations have difficult tasks

Urban sprawl attack~ farms in Iowa

Fields, Todd Cullums, J&lt;le Fields, Huey Eason and Phil
King; third row, Uoyd ,J&lt;:ing and Phil Harrison,

I

By Scott Wolle
and four walks. The duo combined
just as teammate Steve Musser did
SYRACUSE - . A highly com- fOr a one-hitter which knocked in
moments . before. Brent Zirkle was
petitive spirit was in the air at Gallia 's only run following an error the hero with the winning RBI.
Syracuse Tuesday evening as local and a walk.
Chris Shank went the distance for
youngsters felt the thrill of victory,
Middleport's Wise helped his Pomeroy fanning IS and walking
some the agony of defeat.
cause with a home run, Scott Gheen
just four in picking up the win.
After two games in which the Mid- a home run and single, Steve Crow
Artie Hunnell doubled while Steve
dleport Braves defeated Gallipolis' · two singles and double, Jeff Hood a Musser singled for the winners. John
White Sox and Pomeroy's GiantS single and double, Frazier a single, Diddle suffered the loss. Wayne Diddowned· Rutland's Dodgers, Condufl a single.
dle doubled and Joe Browning
Pomeroy's Tigers posted a hard
.Catnbl.e Grant suffered the Joss singled for the Vinton team,
fought come-from-behind win over with relief from Aaron Miller. They
Here's tonight's schedule:
Vinton.
· fanned eight and walked eight. .
Reedsville Bombers vs. Racine
In the evening's first game, MidKyle Saundefl! collect¢&lt;! the only !Jeds at 6:15p.m.; Gallipolis Padres
dleport's Indi~ns rolled to a ~I vic- White SOx hit in the third irming.
vs. Green II, 7:30 p.m., and (;!ouster
Pomeroy's Giants rolled to a 12·1 Mathews vs. Gallipolis Tigers at
tory over Gallia 's White Sox. Rick
Wise with the aid of Scott Gheen win over the Rutland Dodgers, 8:45p.m.
picked )IP t~ win with 11 strike outs highlighted by a no hit performance
Second ro1111d p)ay begins Thuroff tile hands of winning pitcher sday. Games leature Bidwell vs.
Bryijn ·Korn, and relievers Rod New Haven Cubs at 1): 15 p.m.;
Roush and Gerald Moore. The ttio
Albany vs. Cheshire, 7:30 p.m., and
fanned 12· and walked eight while Rutland Reds vs. Tuppers Plains at
quieting the Dodger hats.
8:45p.m.
Gerald Moore had a double and
home run, Bryan Korn a home run,
Rod Roush a double, Lee Powell a
LATONIA RESULTS
•
triple, Kevin Mowery a single, Scott
The Tuppers Plains Pony Pullers
FLORENCE,
Ky. (AP) - Miss
Association held its third pull of the Powell a triple and single.
Zero
won
the
featured
one-mile conMark Norman and Scott Williap!S
year with Claude Dray, Gallpolis,
ditioned
pace
at
Latonia
on Tuesday
and Leonard Cremeans, Coolvllle, pitched very well as they struck out and paid $)8.40, $7.80 and $7 .20.
12, but walked seven.
apnouncing the pull.
Rusty Nail placed for $3.80 and
The night's thi~ gam7 was a very
Judges were Leonard Cremeans
f3
,40, and tile show borse, Miss Kit
and Bill Pullins, Coolville; Buster exciting game from the start. The
Tarrain
returned $10.40.
Barrett, Rutland; Jack Rankins, line score illustrates the closeness of
Corky
Ahnahurst and Edith M
Reedsville; Junior Biars, Jeff tile game. Pomeroy had seven runs,
Shadow
comoo.d
to return $68 in
Clagg, Therill Clagg, and Bob Clagg, two hits and no errors while Vinton · the 3-4 daily double.
had six runs, two hits and no errors.
all of Galliilolis:
The quinella of s-7, ~paid $4!i5.40.
A bases loaded walk forced home
Winners · of the pull were as
Acrowd of 983 wagered $83,5!i5. ·
follows: 1,100 lb. class : first place, Artie Hunnell With the winning run,
Paul Biars, Gallipolis; second plaL-e,
Wayne McGuire, Gallipolis; tllird 'IIIII•••
place, Lewis Clagg, Gallipolis; four- I
til place, Clois Rigsby, Jackson; fif!11 place, Bob Calaway. Coolville. ~
1,400 lb. class: first place, Jimmi~
McGuire and Sons, Crown City;
second place, Wilbur Pullins,
Coolville; third place, John Lowers,
Stockport, Ohio; fourth place, Bill
Estep and Junior Cremeans,
Gallipolis; fifth place, Bob Calaway,
24
Coolville.
·
In the 1,2700 lb. class, first place,
.. --Jimmie McGuire and Sons, Crown
City, Ohio; second place, Larry
Nolan, Gallipolis; third and fourth
places, Claude Dray, Gallipolis; fif·
til place, Wayne Warren and Jack
•92-2556
Dray, Gallipolis.
S70W.
Main
The next pony pull will be August
Porn
0.
16 at 10 a.m. at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds.

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
It had been well publicized. Cincinnati Reds catcher Johnny Bench
was closing in on another milestone
- Yogi Berra's career home run
record for catchers. When it finally
was over, Bench was un·
derstandably pleased.
He stood watching the ball as it
sailed deep into the left field seats at
Cincinnati's Riverfront Stadium No.314 as a catcher, 347 lifetime and
15for the year.
" As soon as I hit it, I knew it was
gone," Bench said. "I don 't even
know where I threw my bat, but I
knew I jwnped high in the air."
As tile hall cleared the fence, Benen raised his anns.
"I never remember doing that
before," Be-nch said of his
melodramatics. "I don't want tp
show a pitcher up, but I think he understands why."
The hil!toric .two-run blast came on
the first pitch from Montreal rightbJLnder Dave Palmer, 6-3, and capIlli a five-run, fifth-inning rally that
helped the Reds to an 11-7 victQry
over tile Expos. It followed a threerun homer by George. Foster and
helped snap a four-game Cincinnati
losing streak.
Bench had tied Berra's record .
Saturday, and he said tile toughest
part about breaking it "was the long
walk to-theplate every time with the
crowd cheering for me .... "
"The fans wanted it, and on that ·
trip l said, ~Please let's get it over"
witil,''' Bench said.
Palmer got two homers in support,
from · Ellis Valentine and ano~er
from Andre Dawson. For his own
p;~rt, he was puzzled. '
"I just can't understand what happened," Palmer said. "I · was
breezing along, and it seems I just
· lost my location. But giving up home
runs to powerlul swingers like Bench and Foster is nothing to be upset.

and dropped the - Phils to third
about."
Paul Moskau; 7-2, pitched Cin- behind Pittsburgh.
cinnati's first complete game since
Joe Sambito, 4-1, picked up the
the Fourth of July, yielding nine hits
victory with one scoreless inning in
but benefitting by 13 Reds hits agd
relief of Nolan Ryan, who yielded
three Montreal ·errors. Two errors
one earned tun in eight innings
were by Expos third baseman Larry
Parrish in the third innin)l and .led to
two unearned runs.
·
Elsewhere in tile National League,
Houston edged Philadelphia :1-2, Pittsburgh 'downed San Francisco f&gt;-2,
New York whippep Atlanta 9-2, St.
Louis beat San Diego .S.3 and Los
Angeles defeated Chicago 6-2.
Astros 3, Pbils 2
A win would have tied
Philadelphia witil Montreal for the
NL East lead, but a balk and an
error by Phillies right-hander Dick
Ruthven gave the game to Houston

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State Route 7
Middleport, Ohio

\

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Bir,..J Service Station

State Route 7

C &amp; A Garage
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Tuppers Pl'ains, Ohio

Newell 'S Sunoco Station

Bill Hoback' s Garage

State Rout e 7
Chester, Ohio

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•

•

.

5- The Dail:, Senijnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, J uly 16, 1980

4-'-The.Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. July 16,1980

•••
•• ••
'" •
•••

Flag ·decision angers U·-S.

•••••
•• ••
• ••

.

Yo~

New
St. U,uis

·42
37

42
49

49

3)

w~ 411

Ctticago

Houston .
Lc.l6 Anj!eles

4:1

.500

4

.430
.415

10
II

.~76

3'1

~

570

CinciMaU
14 42
.512
5\.0,
San Francisco
43 44
.494
7
Atlanta
38 ti
.452 lO Y.z
San Diego
37 :ll
.425 13
1\laaday'tGam.ea
Los Ang el~ 6, Chica~et 2
Pittsbu.rih $, San Frand.sco2
New York 9, Atlanta 2
Cincinnati 11, Montreal ?
St.LouisS,SaFI Oiego3
Houston 3, Philadelphia 2
Weduesday'aGamrs
IA6 Angeles (Rt!uss IG-2) at Chicago

llleuschel ~9 )

San Francisco (Whitson 8-31 at Pittsburgh'
(Blyk!ven J..7 ), (n )
New York (Swan 5-7 ) at \Atlanta ( Mc-

WllliamsS-6),( n)

1

Montreal (Rogers 10-0 ) at Cincinnati (Soto
2-3), ( n ) .
San Diego (Wise 3-4 or Lucas a.-4) at
St.i..outs (Vuckovlch 7-6), &lt;n&gt;
Philadelphia (Walk 5-{1 ) at Houston
(K.For'sch B-81. ln l

AMERiCAN LEAGUE

EAST

W L

New York
Milwaukee
Detroit
Baltimore

55

48
4.1

Pet.
"'

'11
'11

4S J9
44 ' 40
39 43
$
47

Boston

Qeveland
Toronto

GB

.655
.565
.538
.538
.524

-

.476

15

.4Z7

19

.605

-

.471
.471

lllk

71;
IO
IO
II

WEST

Kansas City

Olicago

Minnesota

Texas

Oakl~nd

Seattle ·

California

52 .
40
40
40
..
:.;
32

34
45
45
45
47
49
52
Tueaday'a Games

.471
.400

.424
.33I

11~
ll~

I21;
151;
I9

Kansas City 8, Boston 4
Minnesota 3, New York 4
Baltimore 7, Milwaukee 3
Chicago 2, Texas J
Callfomia 1, Cleveland 1

Only games scheduled

Wedoead.ay '1 Game~

Kansa.s City (Leonard 3-7} at Boston
(Eckersley &gt;7), (nJ
MinneSota (Jackson 7--4 ) at New York
(T.UrtderwoodHi) , (n)
Baltimore (Stone l:W) at MilWaukee
IC.IdwellS.O), In )
·
Chicago (Dolson 7-4 ) at Texas (MaUacj S5),(n)

aeveland (Garland :J-.2) at California

IAaseS-!I), (n)
Detroit (Wilcox 8-6) at Oakland ( Keo~h 9i), (n)
·
Toronto (Stieb U ) at Seattle (Abbott 7-4)
In)
'
Tbursday'1 Games

Baltimore at Milwaukee
Detroit at Oakland
Kansas City ilt Boston, (n)

Minnesota at New York, (n)

Chicago at Texas (n)

ct.eveland at Caiiltlrnia, (nl

Toronto at Seattle, ( [1 )

TODA Y'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAG UE

BATTING 1200 at bats): R.Smith, Los

Angeles, .328; TriUo, Philadelph.ia, .328;
Templeton, St. Louis, .32.); Cromartie, Mon~rea l, . 3~ : K.Herna ndez, St . ~uis • .320 .
RU NS: Cli:trk, San FranciSCo, 60 : R05e,
Philad elphia, 58; Templeton, SL.Louls, .lft:
LeFlore, Montreal, 57; K.Her!landez, St.
Louis, 57; Murphy , Allan~ . 57.
RBI : Garvey, Los Angeles, 70; Hendrick,
St.Louis , 69: Sctunidt, Philadelphia, 61:
Kni15ht, Clndnne~ti , :;6 : Baker, LA&gt;s Ant:des,
56.
.
HITS: Templeton.. St.Louis, 112 ; Garvey,
Los Angeles. lOS ; Hendn ck, St.LouiS, 104 ;
Cromartie, Montreal , 102 ; K.Hernandcz,
St.Louis, 101.
DOUBLES : Rose, Philadelphia, 28 ;
Knight , Cincinnati, 1Ji; Stearns, New York ,
23 ; K.Hernandez, St.I,.oui..s, ZJ : Chambliss,
Atlanta , 21.

TRlPLES: R.Scott, Montreal, 6; LeFlore,
Montreal. 6: McBride, Philadelphia, 6;
O.Moreno , Pittsbu rgh, 6: Landestoy,
Houston, ti ; Clari , San Franciscoti.
HOME RUNS : Schmidt, Ph.iladelphia, 22;
Hend'hck, St.Louis, U; Baker, Los Angeles,
19; Garvey, Los Allgclcs, 18; Clark, San
Francisco,17.
STOLEN BASES: LeFlore, Montreal, 50:
O.Moreno, Pittsburgh, 0 ; Colllns, Cin·
cinnah, 45 ; R.Scott,. Montreal, 31; Richards, ·
San Diego, :f().
PitCIJING 18 D«isions) ' Bibby, Pittsburgh, 11·1, .917, 3.05 ; Reuss, Los.Angeles,
1~2, .833, 1.84 ; Ctarlton, Philadelphia , 14-4,
.778, 2.20; G.Jack.!lon, Pittsburgh, 7·2, .n8,
2.2(1; Moskau, Cincinnati, 7-2, .778, 3.91;
Welch, Los Angele.!l, 9-3, .7~, 2.40; Bomback,
New York, 6-2, .750, U-t ; Ruhle, Houston, 62, .750, a76.
STRIKEOUTS ; Carlton, Philadelphia,
153; Richard, Houston , 119; Ryan, fJouston
103 ; P.Niekro, Atlanta, .IOO; Blyleven, Pit·
tsburgh, 93.
TODAV'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BAmNG (?110 at bats) : B.Bell, Texas,
.344; Cooper, Milwaukee, .342; Paciorek,
Seattle, .333; Bumbry, Baltimore, .325;
Care,w, California, .32-t.
RUNS : Wils&lt;ln, KanSas City, 66; YoWlt.
Milwaukee, 65; Tranunell, Detroit, 64; }\'ills,
Teus, 63; Bumbry·, Baltimore, 62; Ran·
dolph, New York, 6~ ..
RBI : Perez, Boston, 67; Qglivie,
Milwaukee, 64; Re.Jackson, New York, &amp;4 ;
Oliver, Texas, 6t; Hebner, Detroit, !H.
HITS : Wilson, Kansa.s City, 124 ; Rivers,
Teus, 112; Cooper, Milwaukee, 109 : Bwnbry, Baltimore, 106; Burleson, Boston,lOJ.
DOUBLES: Yount, Milwaukee, 27;
Morrison, Chicago, 26; D. Garcia, Toronto,
21. Carew. California, 21; McRae, Kansas
City, 21; Oliver, Texas, 21.
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 8; Wilson,
Ka~ City, Bo Bumbry, Baltimore, 7;
Washindn, Kansas City, 7; Hebner, Detroit,
6; Randolph, New York, 6; Walhan, Kansas
City, 8.
HOME RUNS : Oglivie, Milwaukee, -23 ~
Re.Jackson, New York, Zl; Thomas,
Milwaukee, 11; Annas, Oakland, 18; Netues,
New York, 15 ; Mayberry, Toronto, 15.
STOLEN BASES: Henderson, Oakland,
42; Wilson, Kunsas City, 40; Dilone,
Qeveland, 29; J .Crw:, Seattle, Z4; Bwnbry,
Baltimore, 23; Wills, Teus, 23.
PITCHJNG (8 Decisions) : Stone,
Baltimore, 13-3, .813, 3.00; John, ·New York,
13-3, .813, 2.88; Trave111, MilWaukee, 9-3, :750,
3.03 ; Corbett, Minnesota, 6-2, .750, 2JM;
Gura, Kansas City, 11-4, .733, 2.Z2; ~iney ,
Boston, 8-3, ~7Z/, U6; R.May, New York, 7-3,
.700, 1.91 ; Guidry, Ne"! York, lo-5, .667. 3.46.
STRIKEOUTS , Gwdry, New York, IOI;
M.Norris, Oak..land, 99; Haas, Milwaukee,
87; Koosman, Minnesota, 8Ti Keough,
O,akland, 86; F .Bannister. SeatUe,86.

ee

ment."
A spokesman for the State Department in Washington said the United
States objected to the flag-raising
and would contact the IOC about it.
However, there appeared to be
nothing that the
could to do to
stop its flag from being used at the
Games, the boycott of which has
been President Carter's most visible
form of protest against the Soviet
Union's military intervention in
Afghanistan.
Soviet Deputy Prime Miltister
Ignaty Novikov said representatives
of the U.S. government had written
twice_. oofore requesting that the
American flag not be flown at the
XXII Summer Games.
"This is not our decision," said
Noviko~. "The objection was raised
by the uluted States. But it Is not our
problem because the closing
ceremony belongs to the IOC." He
added that the Soviet Union will send
athletes to the Los Angeles Games if
invited to do so.
Novikov told the IOC Tuesday that
preparations for the Games, which
begin with the opening ceremonies
Saturday and full slate of events
Sunday, are complete.
Today, it will be Ueberroth's tUrn

·u.s.

a

Healthy R
. 0 yaIS W h. }p
e

TENNIS
of Spain . bea t Geoff Masters of
BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP) - Jim- Australia, 6-1, 6-2; Victor Pecci of
Paraguay oliSied Alvard Betancur
my Connors survived an ea rly scare
of
Cnlombia, 6·3, 6-2; Mike Cahill
from Christophe Freyss and battled
topped
Corrado ·Barazzutti 7-jj, 6-4 ;
back for a 3-&lt;;, 6-3, 6-il triwnph in the
ahd
Marty
Riessen adva nced with a
opening round of the $175,000 U.S.
7-jj,
6-4
wm
over
Francisco Gonzales .
Pro Tennis Championships .
Orantes
lost his ·first set to
·Manuel
In other action, Gene Mayer advanced with a 6-0, 6-i victory over , Fernando Luna of Spain , 7-5, and,
apparently affected by the heat ,
Fernando Maynetto; Jose Higueras

.

MOSCOW (AP) - The openlng
1
ceremonies for the Moscow Olym·
pies are just three days away, but
il'·s the closing ceremonies that have
~lrea~y angered the United States
because of the International Olympic Conuniltee's decisi9n to raise the
American flag at those festivities
Aug. 3.
Monique Berliotlx, director of tl)e
IOC, told . a news conference
Tuesday that Olympic protocol
requires ending the Games by
raising the flag of the next host coun·
try. The 1984 Swruner Games are
scheduled to be held in Los Angeles.
Peter Ueberroth, general
manager of the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee
(LAOOc), who was to update the
IOC today on Los Angeles'
preparations for the 1984 Games,
said the decision to hl&gt;ist the Stars
ahd Stripes here was strictly an IOC
matter.
'
" That's an ,. IOC ceremony,"
Ueberroth sajd. " We're not part of
that decision."
At. President Carter's Georgia
vacation . retreat, presidential
spokesman Jody Powell said: "If
they do that, it will be against
wishes of the Ame~;,ican govern-

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Major LeagH Baseball
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EA$1"
W L
Pet.
GB
Montrea l
45 11
.119 Pittsburgh
tG ll
Philadel hia
« :11 ..5.'~1 71 1'r:!

Sports briefs. . .

B

check me'five limes than allow what
lines and num er ous delays .
to appraise the JOC of the
happened in Munich to happen
officials
manning
the
Generally,
the
preparations for the Los Angeles
here." Arab terrorists killed II
equipment
were.
cordia
l
electronic
Games. · He said Tuesday that he
members of the Israeli team atthe
gracious
about
the
constant
and
didn't expect any sanctions imposed
1972 SununerGames.
checks.
against the U.S. Olympic ComBeglov also "charged that_ the
A
veteran
Soviet
commentator
mitte~. and certainly not against the
press is attempting to enwestern
weStern
reporters
for
their
·
criticized
LAOOC because of its unique in·
the
Moscow_Games in a cloud
vNop
complaints; abo ut s~ curit y
dependent stuclure.
of
misinformation.
" As the last
measures. Spartak Beglov, writing
''For the first time. in Olympic
.in the s~mi-official Soviet news paroxysms of the sponsors of the
history, the Games were awarded
inglorious boycott subside; western
agency Novosti, said :- " What has
not to a city but to a private cor·
adepts of lies and insinuations take
become a norm, acceptable to
poration," he said.
over from them," he wrote.
everyone in other countries, is unacAll;o scheduled for today's IOC
Tass, the Soviet news ageltcy, also
session .was the election of a new ' ceptable · for certain western
criticized the United States Tuesday
maligncrs 'only because it takes
president to suaceed Lord Killanii) of
for sponsoring a track and field meet
place in MoscOw.''
Ireland, who is stepping down after
in Philadelphia beginning today.
He
quoted
one
foreign
journalist
eight years in office, ·Five can·
"Irrespective of the results
as
telling
him
:
"
Better
to
let
them
didates have emerged. · They are
at ihe Philadelphia conproduced
Juan Antonio Samaranch of Spain,
tests,
they
Will in no way over·
Marc Hodlf Canada and Lance Cross
SCIOTO RESULTS
shadow
the
international Olympic
Dawne of. West Gennany, James
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Crown
in
the
Soviet capital,... Tass
festival
Worralltof Canada and Lance Cross
Sterling posted a 12t-lenglh victory
said.
of New Zealand.
over Daisys Blizzard in 1:59 3-5
A clear majority is needed for vicTuesday night in the feature pace at
tory . If no majority is gained on a
Scioto Downs.
ballot, the low vote-getter drops out
Terry Haughton drove the winning
for the next ballot. · .,'
horse, who p;lid $2.60, $2.20 and \ lt
~
Samaranch, Spain's ambassador
,..
$2.20. Daisys Blizzard returned $3
to the Soviet Union, is the favorite.
and $3. Brets Jay Kay was third,
~ DRAFT
LADIES :
His strength was expected to come
paying $$5.40.
~ ·· NITE
NITE ·
from Latin Americans and Eastern
The 'ninth race lrifecta of 5-1·7 paid
bloc representatives of the IOC. His
$1,142.40.
~ nJESDAYS THURSDAYS
strongest challenger was expected
The crowd of 4,772 wagered
lt
9 P.M. to
9 P.M. Ia .' "'
to be Hodler, longtime president ri
lt 12 Midnight
12'Midnlght ~
$317,095.
the International Ski Federation,
whose support comes principally
ENGLISH LANGUAGE
from European IOC members.
"
English
is spoken by about 358
Meanwhile, athletes and visitors
lt748 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, 0 . ~
million
people
in the world.
continued to arrive here. Forty
members from an expected French
· delgation of 130 athletes arrived
Tuesday. The French team, along·
with several other western
European delegations, will not parto.
ticipate in the opening ceremonies in
protest of the Soviet ' military intervention in Afghanistan. In all,
nearly 6,000 athletes and some 2,000
team officials were housed in the
Olympic Village.
at the
Among the many journalists on
hand, the major topics of conversation were the weather and
security - things they could do
nothing about except complain.
'
The weather, cloudy with a cold
200 West
Main Street - Pomeroy,
.
. Ohio
chill in the air, was more typical of
the kind that greets th~ American
footb811 season. The Soviets call ll
•
"horseradish weather," like the harsh and bitter taste oi horseradish.
'
The Soviet weather station's chief
said cloud-seeding techniques were
not sophisticated eno\lgh to tum the
skies sunny.
But newsmen are finding the
Soviets '
security
highly
sophisticated. Metal detection

:

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the International Olympic Committee said that because of those
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over the Moscow Games thai begin
Sa turday . ·

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\ •*****************

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
· Don't look now, but the Kansas
City Royals have George Brett and
· Rich Gale back, and a whopping
lead in the American League West.
"We went through a perioil of
about two weeks ~&gt;!:fore the All.Star
break when we were getting hits and
couldn't score," Kansas City
Manager Jim Frey said. "Since the
break it seems we've turned it
around and are scoring runs. The
one big thing that has happened since the break is we got George Brett

I

equal •.'&lt;! Cue 's mark fo r the 1,50().
meters in the Oslo Games.
Ovett was ti!ncd in 3 minutes 32 .09
seconds . Under the rules of the In·
tcrn a'ti onal Am ateur Athlet ic
Federation, that will officially be
recorded as 3:32.1 - lying the ma rk
set by Coe, a fellow Briton , ai
Zurich. Switzerland, Aug. 15, 1979.
Earlier, Mary Decker, running the
first 3,000-meter race of her career,
broke her second American record
in three days with a time of 8::l8.73.

.

0 S ton ~~e~~~:ic~~~~c~w=:;::a~~~:th~ca:eus~em~~t~~an~s:::~e~to~10~~:1f~~~~N~ig~h~t~ly~7::3:0:P~M::::S:un~d:a:y::l0:A~M::a~n~d~6~P~M~~~=-t

and Frank White two apiece against
"Maybe he needed the little rest to
rejuvenate his arm. His control is Renko and relievers Win Remmerswaal and Skip Lockwood.
better than it was early . in the
Wblte Sox 2, Rangers I
season, but maybe the fact we're
Rookie
Britt Burns outdueled
getting him a lead once in a while
veteran
Ferguson.
Jenkins in
has helped."
Chica&amp;o's
victory
over
Texas. Both
Kansas City, 18 games over .500
pitchers gave up seven hits and
with a &gt;I record since the All.Star
Jenkins struck out 13, his best as a
break, leads the Chicago White Sox,
the Minnesota Twins and the Texas . Ranger, before being relieved in the
ninth,
.
Rangers by lit games in the AL
Burns, 10-7, got a fifth-inning
West.
In othei' AL games Tuesday, Min- home run from Bob Molinaro and
outstanding defensive support from
nesota edged the New York Yankees
shortstop
Todd Cruz.
back. ~ '
1&gt;-4, Chicago nipped Texas 2-1,
Molinaro's
homer in the fifth gave
,
Baltimore stopped Milwaukee 7-3
Tuesday night, Gale, the Royals'
Ch,icago
its
winning
margin.
and California topped Cleveland 7-1.
big right-hander, returned with a
·
Twins
5,
Yankeefi
4
Gale allowed only five hits for
winning performance as Kansas
A
suicide
squeeze
bunt
by Mike
eight innings before needing · relief
City slopped the Boston Red Sox 8-4.
Cubbage scored Ron Jackson from
"He hadn't pitched in a couple of · help in the ninth as the Royals poWJthird base in the eighth inning,
ded out 15 hits. He \vas making his
weeks, but he threw the ball well and
giving Mimesota its victory over
first apP,earance sine~ being
with good control," · Frey said. "I
New York.
stricken by shoulder tendinitis July 2
really didn't expect him to go as long
Two of the Twins' runs were tainfor the second tiffie in three years.
as he did, hoping he'd go just slx or
ted. Ron Jack!!on singled to left in
"It's something I thought was over
seven innings.
the second inning and continued all
when I felt great all last summer,"
the way to third when Lou Piniella
- - - - - - - - - - - - - , Gale said. "However, it's there and
let
the ball go !&gt;etween his legs and
I'm a little concerned about it. I also
all
the way to the left field wall.
feel a little frustrated because it's
~
Jackson
·scored on a single.
the.second time in two years."
ln the seventh, Sal Butera
Then,
Amos Otis staked Gale to a 1-ll lead
siitgled
home
Pete Mackanin and
with a homer off Steve Renko, 1)-3, in
\;o
second
when right fielder
went
the second and Hal McRae made it 3Reggie
Jaekson
fell
down and bob0 with a two-run shot in the third.
bled'
the
ball.
Pinch-runner
Rick
Otis finished with three hits and
Sofield replaced Butera and evenWillie Wilson, Brett, Willie Aikens
scored.

retired before the second set.
MON TREAL lAP ) - Martina .
Nav rati)ova defea ted C;~n d y
Reynolds 6-1, 6-3 i11 her Hrst matc h
at the Player's Cha llenge ttJ UI'·
namcnt.
In other matches, Anne Smith
overpowered Duk Hee Lee of Korea
6-L Il-l and Ann Kiyomura downed ·
Sherry Acker 6-3, 6-4 .
TRACK
OSLO, Norway· I AP) - Steve Ovett
of Britain, who two weeks aMO broke
sebastian Coe's record for the mile,

'

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.

5- The Dail:, Senijnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, J uly 16, 1980

4-'-The.Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. July 16,1980

•••
•• ••
'" •
•••

Flag ·decision angers U·-S.

•••••
•• ••
• ••

.

Yo~

New
St. U,uis

·42
37

42
49

49

3)

w~ 411

Ctticago

Houston .
Lc.l6 Anj!eles

4:1

.500

4

.430
.415

10
II

.~76

3'1

~

570

CinciMaU
14 42
.512
5\.0,
San Francisco
43 44
.494
7
Atlanta
38 ti
.452 lO Y.z
San Diego
37 :ll
.425 13
1\laaday'tGam.ea
Los Ang el~ 6, Chica~et 2
Pittsbu.rih $, San Frand.sco2
New York 9, Atlanta 2
Cincinnati 11, Montreal ?
St.LouisS,SaFI Oiego3
Houston 3, Philadelphia 2
Weduesday'aGamrs
IA6 Angeles (Rt!uss IG-2) at Chicago

llleuschel ~9 )

San Francisco (Whitson 8-31 at Pittsburgh'
(Blyk!ven J..7 ), (n )
New York (Swan 5-7 ) at \Atlanta ( Mc-

WllliamsS-6),( n)

1

Montreal (Rogers 10-0 ) at Cincinnati (Soto
2-3), ( n ) .
San Diego (Wise 3-4 or Lucas a.-4) at
St.i..outs (Vuckovlch 7-6), &lt;n&gt;
Philadelphia (Walk 5-{1 ) at Houston
(K.For'sch B-81. ln l

AMERiCAN LEAGUE

EAST

W L

New York
Milwaukee
Detroit
Baltimore

55

48
4.1

Pet.
"'

'11
'11

4S J9
44 ' 40
39 43
$
47

Boston

Qeveland
Toronto

GB

.655
.565
.538
.538
.524

-

.476

15

.4Z7

19

.605

-

.471
.471

lllk

71;
IO
IO
II

WEST

Kansas City

Olicago

Minnesota

Texas

Oakl~nd

Seattle ·

California

52 .
40
40
40
..
:.;
32

34
45
45
45
47
49
52
Tueaday'a Games

.471
.400

.424
.33I

11~
ll~

I21;
151;
I9

Kansas City 8, Boston 4
Minnesota 3, New York 4
Baltimore 7, Milwaukee 3
Chicago 2, Texas J
Callfomia 1, Cleveland 1

Only games scheduled

Wedoead.ay '1 Game~

Kansa.s City (Leonard 3-7} at Boston
(Eckersley &gt;7), (nJ
MinneSota (Jackson 7--4 ) at New York
(T.UrtderwoodHi) , (n)
Baltimore (Stone l:W) at MilWaukee
IC.IdwellS.O), In )
·
Chicago (Dolson 7-4 ) at Texas (MaUacj S5),(n)

aeveland (Garland :J-.2) at California

IAaseS-!I), (n)
Detroit (Wilcox 8-6) at Oakland ( Keo~h 9i), (n)
·
Toronto (Stieb U ) at Seattle (Abbott 7-4)
In)
'
Tbursday'1 Games

Baltimore at Milwaukee
Detroit at Oakland
Kansas City ilt Boston, (n)

Minnesota at New York, (n)

Chicago at Texas (n)

ct.eveland at Caiiltlrnia, (nl

Toronto at Seattle, ( [1 )

TODA Y'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAG UE

BATTING 1200 at bats): R.Smith, Los

Angeles, .328; TriUo, Philadelph.ia, .328;
Templeton, St. Louis, .32.); Cromartie, Mon~rea l, . 3~ : K.Herna ndez, St . ~uis • .320 .
RU NS: Cli:trk, San FranciSCo, 60 : R05e,
Philad elphia, 58; Templeton, SL.Louls, .lft:
LeFlore, Montreal, 57; K.Her!landez, St.
Louis, 57; Murphy , Allan~ . 57.
RBI : Garvey, Los Angeles, 70; Hendrick,
St.Louis , 69: Sctunidt, Philadelphia, 61:
Kni15ht, Clndnne~ti , :;6 : Baker, LA&gt;s Ant:des,
56.
.
HITS: Templeton.. St.Louis, 112 ; Garvey,
Los Angeles. lOS ; Hendn ck, St.LouiS, 104 ;
Cromartie, Montreal , 102 ; K.Hernandcz,
St.Louis, 101.
DOUBLES : Rose, Philadelphia, 28 ;
Knight , Cincinnati, 1Ji; Stearns, New York ,
23 ; K.Hernandez, St.I,.oui..s, ZJ : Chambliss,
Atlanta , 21.

TRlPLES: R.Scott, Montreal, 6; LeFlore,
Montreal. 6: McBride, Philadelphia, 6;
O.Moreno , Pittsbu rgh, 6: Landestoy,
Houston, ti ; Clari , San Franciscoti.
HOME RUNS : Schmidt, Ph.iladelphia, 22;
Hend'hck, St.Louis, U; Baker, Los Angeles,
19; Garvey, Los Allgclcs, 18; Clark, San
Francisco,17.
STOLEN BASES: LeFlore, Montreal, 50:
O.Moreno, Pittsburgh, 0 ; Colllns, Cin·
cinnah, 45 ; R.Scott,. Montreal, 31; Richards, ·
San Diego, :f().
PitCIJING 18 D«isions) ' Bibby, Pittsburgh, 11·1, .917, 3.05 ; Reuss, Los.Angeles,
1~2, .833, 1.84 ; Ctarlton, Philadelphia , 14-4,
.778, 2.20; G.Jack.!lon, Pittsburgh, 7·2, .n8,
2.2(1; Moskau, Cincinnati, 7-2, .778, 3.91;
Welch, Los Angele.!l, 9-3, .7~, 2.40; Bomback,
New York, 6-2, .750, U-t ; Ruhle, Houston, 62, .750, a76.
STRIKEOUTS ; Carlton, Philadelphia,
153; Richard, Houston , 119; Ryan, fJouston
103 ; P.Niekro, Atlanta, .IOO; Blyleven, Pit·
tsburgh, 93.
TODAV'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BAmNG (?110 at bats) : B.Bell, Texas,
.344; Cooper, Milwaukee, .342; Paciorek,
Seattle, .333; Bumbry, Baltimore, .325;
Care,w, California, .32-t.
RUNS : Wils&lt;ln, KanSas City, 66; YoWlt.
Milwaukee, 65; Tranunell, Detroit, 64; }\'ills,
Teus, 63; Bumbry·, Baltimore, 62; Ran·
dolph, New York, 6~ ..
RBI : Perez, Boston, 67; Qglivie,
Milwaukee, 64; Re.Jackson, New York, &amp;4 ;
Oliver, Texas, 6t; Hebner, Detroit, !H.
HITS : Wilson, Kansa.s City, 124 ; Rivers,
Teus, 112; Cooper, Milwaukee, 109 : Bwnbry, Baltimore, 106; Burleson, Boston,lOJ.
DOUBLES: Yount, Milwaukee, 27;
Morrison, Chicago, 26; D. Garcia, Toronto,
21. Carew. California, 21; McRae, Kansas
City, 21; Oliver, Texas, 21.
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 8; Wilson,
Ka~ City, Bo Bumbry, Baltimore, 7;
Washindn, Kansas City, 7; Hebner, Detroit,
6; Randolph, New York, 6; Walhan, Kansas
City, 8.
HOME RUNS : Oglivie, Milwaukee, -23 ~
Re.Jackson, New York, Zl; Thomas,
Milwaukee, 11; Annas, Oakland, 18; Netues,
New York, 15 ; Mayberry, Toronto, 15.
STOLEN BASES: Henderson, Oakland,
42; Wilson, Kunsas City, 40; Dilone,
Qeveland, 29; J .Crw:, Seattle, Z4; Bwnbry,
Baltimore, 23; Wills, Teus, 23.
PITCHJNG (8 Decisions) : Stone,
Baltimore, 13-3, .813, 3.00; John, ·New York,
13-3, .813, 2.88; Trave111, MilWaukee, 9-3, :750,
3.03 ; Corbett, Minnesota, 6-2, .750, 2JM;
Gura, Kansas City, 11-4, .733, 2.Z2; ~iney ,
Boston, 8-3, ~7Z/, U6; R.May, New York, 7-3,
.700, 1.91 ; Guidry, Ne"! York, lo-5, .667. 3.46.
STRIKEOUTS , Gwdry, New York, IOI;
M.Norris, Oak..land, 99; Haas, Milwaukee,
87; Koosman, Minnesota, 8Ti Keough,
O,akland, 86; F .Bannister. SeatUe,86.

ee

ment."
A spokesman for the State Department in Washington said the United
States objected to the flag-raising
and would contact the IOC about it.
However, there appeared to be
nothing that the
could to do to
stop its flag from being used at the
Games, the boycott of which has
been President Carter's most visible
form of protest against the Soviet
Union's military intervention in
Afghanistan.
Soviet Deputy Prime Miltister
Ignaty Novikov said representatives
of the U.S. government had written
twice_. oofore requesting that the
American flag not be flown at the
XXII Summer Games.
"This is not our decision," said
Noviko~. "The objection was raised
by the uluted States. But it Is not our
problem because the closing
ceremony belongs to the IOC." He
added that the Soviet Union will send
athletes to the Los Angeles Games if
invited to do so.
Novikov told the IOC Tuesday that
preparations for the Games, which
begin with the opening ceremonies
Saturday and full slate of events
Sunday, are complete.
Today, it will be Ueberroth's tUrn

·u.s.

a

Healthy R
. 0 yaIS W h. }p
e

TENNIS
of Spain . bea t Geoff Masters of
BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP) - Jim- Australia, 6-1, 6-2; Victor Pecci of
Paraguay oliSied Alvard Betancur
my Connors survived an ea rly scare
of
Cnlombia, 6·3, 6-2; Mike Cahill
from Christophe Freyss and battled
topped
Corrado ·Barazzutti 7-jj, 6-4 ;
back for a 3-&lt;;, 6-3, 6-il triwnph in the
ahd
Marty
Riessen adva nced with a
opening round of the $175,000 U.S.
7-jj,
6-4
wm
over
Francisco Gonzales .
Pro Tennis Championships .
Orantes
lost his ·first set to
·Manuel
In other action, Gene Mayer advanced with a 6-0, 6-i victory over , Fernando Luna of Spain , 7-5, and,
apparently affected by the heat ,
Fernando Maynetto; Jose Higueras

.

MOSCOW (AP) - The openlng
1
ceremonies for the Moscow Olym·
pies are just three days away, but
il'·s the closing ceremonies that have
~lrea~y angered the United States
because of the International Olympic Conuniltee's decisi9n to raise the
American flag at those festivities
Aug. 3.
Monique Berliotlx, director of tl)e
IOC, told . a news conference
Tuesday that Olympic protocol
requires ending the Games by
raising the flag of the next host coun·
try. The 1984 Swruner Games are
scheduled to be held in Los Angeles.
Peter Ueberroth, general
manager of the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee
(LAOOc), who was to update the
IOC today on Los Angeles'
preparations for the 1984 Games,
said the decision to hl&gt;ist the Stars
ahd Stripes here was strictly an IOC
matter.
'
" That's an ,. IOC ceremony,"
Ueberroth sajd. " We're not part of
that decision."
At. President Carter's Georgia
vacation . retreat, presidential
spokesman Jody Powell said: "If
they do that, it will be against
wishes of the Ame~;,ican govern-

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Major LeagH Baseball
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EA$1"
W L
Pet.
GB
Montrea l
45 11
.119 Pittsburgh
tG ll
Philadel hia
« :11 ..5.'~1 71 1'r:!

Sports briefs. . .

B

check me'five limes than allow what
lines and num er ous delays .
to appraise the JOC of the
happened in Munich to happen
officials
manning
the
Generally,
the
preparations for the Los Angeles
here." Arab terrorists killed II
equipment
were.
cordia
l
electronic
Games. · He said Tuesday that he
members of the Israeli team atthe
gracious
about
the
constant
and
didn't expect any sanctions imposed
1972 SununerGames.
checks.
against the U.S. Olympic ComBeglov also "charged that_ the
A
veteran
Soviet
commentator
mitte~. and certainly not against the
press is attempting to enwestern
weStern
reporters
for
their
·
criticized
LAOOC because of its unique in·
the
Moscow_Games in a cloud
vNop
complaints; abo ut s~ curit y
dependent stuclure.
of
misinformation.
" As the last
measures. Spartak Beglov, writing
''For the first time. in Olympic
.in the s~mi-official Soviet news paroxysms of the sponsors of the
history, the Games were awarded
inglorious boycott subside; western
agency Novosti, said :- " What has
not to a city but to a private cor·
adepts of lies and insinuations take
become a norm, acceptable to
poration," he said.
over from them," he wrote.
everyone in other countries, is unacAll;o scheduled for today's IOC
Tass, the Soviet news ageltcy, also
session .was the election of a new ' ceptable · for certain western
criticized the United States Tuesday
maligncrs 'only because it takes
president to suaceed Lord Killanii) of
for sponsoring a track and field meet
place in MoscOw.''
Ireland, who is stepping down after
in Philadelphia beginning today.
He
quoted
one
foreign
journalist
eight years in office, ·Five can·
"Irrespective of the results
as
telling
him
:
"
Better
to
let
them
didates have emerged. · They are
at ihe Philadelphia conproduced
Juan Antonio Samaranch of Spain,
tests,
they
Will in no way over·
Marc Hodlf Canada and Lance Cross
SCIOTO RESULTS
shadow
the
international Olympic
Dawne of. West Gennany, James
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Crown
in
the
Soviet capital,... Tass
festival
Worralltof Canada and Lance Cross
Sterling posted a 12t-lenglh victory
said.
of New Zealand.
over Daisys Blizzard in 1:59 3-5
A clear majority is needed for vicTuesday night in the feature pace at
tory . If no majority is gained on a
Scioto Downs.
ballot, the low vote-getter drops out
Terry Haughton drove the winning
for the next ballot. · .,'
horse, who p;lid $2.60, $2.20 and \ lt
~
Samaranch, Spain's ambassador
,..
$2.20. Daisys Blizzard returned $3
to the Soviet Union, is the favorite.
and $3. Brets Jay Kay was third,
~ DRAFT
LADIES :
His strength was expected to come
paying $$5.40.
~ ·· NITE
NITE ·
from Latin Americans and Eastern
The 'ninth race lrifecta of 5-1·7 paid
bloc representatives of the IOC. His
$1,142.40.
~ nJESDAYS THURSDAYS
strongest challenger was expected
The crowd of 4,772 wagered
lt
9 P.M. to
9 P.M. Ia .' "'
to be Hodler, longtime president ri
lt 12 Midnight
12'Midnlght ~
$317,095.
the International Ski Federation,
whose support comes principally
ENGLISH LANGUAGE
from European IOC members.
"
English
is spoken by about 358
Meanwhile, athletes and visitors
lt748 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, 0 . ~
million
people
in the world.
continued to arrive here. Forty
members from an expected French
· delgation of 130 athletes arrived
Tuesday. The French team, along·
with several other western
European delegations, will not parto.
ticipate in the opening ceremonies in
protest of the Soviet ' military intervention in Afghanistan. In all,
nearly 6,000 athletes and some 2,000
team officials were housed in the
Olympic Village.
at the
Among the many journalists on
hand, the major topics of conversation were the weather and
security - things they could do
nothing about except complain.
'
The weather, cloudy with a cold
200 West
Main Street - Pomeroy,
.
. Ohio
chill in the air, was more typical of
the kind that greets th~ American
footb811 season. The Soviets call ll
•
"horseradish weather," like the harsh and bitter taste oi horseradish.
'
The Soviet weather station's chief
said cloud-seeding techniques were
not sophisticated eno\lgh to tum the
skies sunny.
But newsmen are finding the
Soviets '
security
highly
sophisticated. Metal detection

:

i

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LUCIT ®INTERIOR
ENAMEL

I.

the International Olympic Committee said that because of those
Games the American flag will fly
over the Moscow Games thai begin
Sa turday . ·

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BOWLING
TOHRANCE, Calif. 1AP I - Steve
Martin closed with a strike and a
spare to nip Jilll Winkl eplcck 196-193
and win the PBA Southern California Open.
Martin ea rned $9,000 fo r' his
second · PBA cham pionship of the
year ; while Winklepleck collected
$!),000.
OLYMPI CS
MOSCOW lAP ) - The RlliiSians
said ihey still want to compete in the
Los Angeles Olympics in 1984, and

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\ •*****************

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
· Don't look now, but the Kansas
City Royals have George Brett and
· Rich Gale back, and a whopping
lead in the American League West.
"We went through a perioil of
about two weeks ~&gt;!:fore the All.Star
break when we were getting hits and
couldn't score," Kansas City
Manager Jim Frey said. "Since the
break it seems we've turned it
around and are scoring runs. The
one big thing that has happened since the break is we got George Brett

I

equal •.'&lt;! Cue 's mark fo r the 1,50().
meters in the Oslo Games.
Ovett was ti!ncd in 3 minutes 32 .09
seconds . Under the rules of the In·
tcrn a'ti onal Am ateur Athlet ic
Federation, that will officially be
recorded as 3:32.1 - lying the ma rk
set by Coe, a fellow Briton , ai
Zurich. Switzerland, Aug. 15, 1979.
Earlier, Mary Decker, running the
first 3,000-meter race of her career,
broke her second American record
in three days with a time of 8::l8.73.

.

0 S ton ~~e~~~:ic~~~~c~w=:;::a~~~:th~ca:eus~em~~t~~an~s:::~e~to~10~~:1f~~~~N~ig~h~t~ly~7::3:0:P~M::::S:un~d:a:y::l0:A~M::a~n~d~6~P~M~~~=-t

and Frank White two apiece against
"Maybe he needed the little rest to
rejuvenate his arm. His control is Renko and relievers Win Remmerswaal and Skip Lockwood.
better than it was early . in the
Wblte Sox 2, Rangers I
season, but maybe the fact we're
Rookie
Britt Burns outdueled
getting him a lead once in a while
veteran
Ferguson.
Jenkins in
has helped."
Chica&amp;o's
victory
over
Texas. Both
Kansas City, 18 games over .500
pitchers gave up seven hits and
with a &gt;I record since the All.Star
Jenkins struck out 13, his best as a
break, leads the Chicago White Sox,
the Minnesota Twins and the Texas . Ranger, before being relieved in the
ninth,
.
Rangers by lit games in the AL
Burns, 10-7, got a fifth-inning
West.
In othei' AL games Tuesday, Min- home run from Bob Molinaro and
outstanding defensive support from
nesota edged the New York Yankees
shortstop
Todd Cruz.
back. ~ '
1&gt;-4, Chicago nipped Texas 2-1,
Molinaro's
homer in the fifth gave
,
Baltimore stopped Milwaukee 7-3
Tuesday night, Gale, the Royals'
Ch,icago
its
winning
margin.
and California topped Cleveland 7-1.
big right-hander, returned with a
·
Twins
5,
Yankeefi
4
Gale allowed only five hits for
winning performance as Kansas
A
suicide
squeeze
bunt
by Mike
eight innings before needing · relief
City slopped the Boston Red Sox 8-4.
Cubbage scored Ron Jackson from
"He hadn't pitched in a couple of · help in the ninth as the Royals poWJthird base in the eighth inning,
ded out 15 hits. He \vas making his
weeks, but he threw the ball well and
giving Mimesota its victory over
first apP,earance sine~ being
with good control," · Frey said. "I
New York.
stricken by shoulder tendinitis July 2
really didn't expect him to go as long
Two of the Twins' runs were tainfor the second tiffie in three years.
as he did, hoping he'd go just slx or
ted. Ron Jack!!on singled to left in
"It's something I thought was over
seven innings.
the second inning and continued all
when I felt great all last summer,"
the way to third when Lou Piniella
- - - - - - - - - - - - - , Gale said. "However, it's there and
let
the ball go !&gt;etween his legs and
I'm a little concerned about it. I also
all
the way to the left field wall.
feel a little frustrated because it's
~
Jackson
·scored on a single.
the.second time in two years."
ln the seventh, Sal Butera
Then,
Amos Otis staked Gale to a 1-ll lead
siitgled
home
Pete Mackanin and
with a homer off Steve Renko, 1)-3, in
\;o
second
when right fielder
went
the second and Hal McRae made it 3Reggie
Jaekson
fell
down and bob0 with a two-run shot in the third.
bled'
the
ball.
Pinch-runner
Rick
Otis finished with three hits and
Sofield replaced Butera and evenWillie Wilson, Brett, Willie Aikens
scored.

retired before the second set.
MON TREAL lAP ) - Martina .
Nav rati)ova defea ted C;~n d y
Reynolds 6-1, 6-3 i11 her Hrst matc h
at the Player's Cha llenge ttJ UI'·
namcnt.
In other matches, Anne Smith
overpowered Duk Hee Lee of Korea
6-L Il-l and Ann Kiyomura downed ·
Sherry Acker 6-3, 6-4 .
TRACK
OSLO, Norway· I AP) - Steve Ovett
of Britain, who two weeks aMO broke
sebastian Coe's record for the mile,

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�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P9meroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 16, 1980

To marry Saturday
Roush - Fortune

Diana Wheeler
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan A. Wheeler,
Dexter, are announcing the
engagement a nd f.orthcomin g
marriage ol their daughter, Diana
Lynn, to William James Meek, Jr.,
son of Mr. and Mrs. William James
Meek, Bidwell.
The wedding will be an event pf
Saturday; July 19, at 6 p.m. at the
Dexter Church of Christ.

Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Roush,
Pomeroy, are announCing the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Shelly,
to Charles 0 ..-Fortune, son of Mrsr
Margaret Fortune, Elizabethtown,
Ky ., and Mr: Jim Fortune, Jackson.
The bride-elect is a 1911() graduate
of Meigs High School. Mr. Fortune is
employed at Louisville Civic Center,
Louisville, Ky.
Attendants for the couple will be,
matron of honor, Mrs. Lura Swiger,
maid of honor, Miss Joyce Porter.
and bridesmaid, Miss Connie Smith,
all of Pomeroy. Flower girl will .be
Miss Angie Swiger, Pomeroy. Best
man, Steve Coffman, Racine;
ushers, Robin Fortune, Racine ; and
Jiin Mayes, Louisville, Ky .
Ringbear er, Brandon Roush,
Pomeroy. Organist will be Rose Ann
Jenkins, Racine. Receptionists for
the wedding will be Mrs. Sue Miller,
Pomeroy, and Miss Paula Wolfe,
Racine.
The Rev. Don Walker, Racine, will
perform the open church wedding,
which will be an event of July 19, at
7:30p.m. at the Racine First Baptist
Church.
A reception will be held in the
church social room immediately
following the ceremony. .

Riffle - Hawthorne
BAS HAN T Plans have been completed :for '"e open church·wedding
of (Betsy ) Marga ret Evelyn Riffle,
daughtel· of Mr. and Mrs. Roy F. Riffle, Bashan, a.nd Timothy Dwane
Hawthorne, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Darrell Hawthorne, Long 8ottoll1.
The .double ring .ceremony will
taK'e place on Saturday, July 19, 2:30
p.m. at the Chester Ghurch of the
Nazarene.

The Reverend Herbert Grate will
perform the ceremony. Maid of
honor will be Beth Headley, Tuppers
Plains, and the bridesmaids will be
Donna Bennett, Tuppers Plains,
Brenda Riffle and Pamela
Buchanan, Reedsville, sisters of the
bride-elect.
Flower girls will be Julie Riffle,
another sister of the bride, and the
ringbcarer will be Tony !}rate.
James Hawthorne; Long Bottom,
will serve .as best man for his .
brother, and the ushers will be Mark
Hunnel, Columbus, Mark Gillilan,
Tuppers Plains; and David Jones,
Cheshire.
·
An open reception will immediately follow the ceremony at
the Royal Oak Park Recreational
Building. All friends and relatives
are cordially invited.

Family moves
to Dayton
The familY- of the late Gurney and
Florence Michael met at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Pa rker, July 6.
They honored T.Sgt. Joseph Poole
and Will who have recently moved
from San Antonio, Texas, to WrightPatterson, AFB, near Dayton. Their
address is now 1125 Middy Drive,
Woodland Hills, W-P AFB, Ohio
45433.
The family held a cookout at noon,
followed by homemade ice crea m
and cake. Gary Michael asked the
blessing.
Others present were Samuel
Michael, Cora Hilton, Linda First,
Louise Michael, Mrs. Gary Michael,
Matthew , Kimberly,' ana Todd, Mr.
and 'Mrs. Roger Leifheit, Dorothy,
and Mike.

ATTEND SERVICES
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley James,
Toledo, attended the graveside services for Mrs. James' sister, Mary
Eynon Heiiert, Saturday at Letart
Falls Cemetery.
While· here they visited with
George and Alice Freeland,
Syracuse.

Past Councilors
Club meets, ·
installs officers
Wednesday
' The Past Councilors' Club of
Chester, Council No. 323, met Wednesday evening at the lodge hall with
Margaret Tuttle, vice president,
presiding. Mrs. Tuttle read from the
book of John, chapter 8, with the
group reciting .the Lord's Prayer
and the pledge of allegiance in
unison.
.
Officers were installed by Mrs.
Tuttle. Installed were Inzy Newell,
president; Opal Hollon, vice
pres ident ; Erma Cleland,
sec retary ; Marcia Keller.•
treasurer; Ethel Orr, flower committee; Mae McPeek, sentinel;
Mary K. Holter, miwsreporter.
Each member present answered
the roll call by telling whatthey did
for the Fourth of July. The
treasurer's report was gwen by
Goldie Frederick.
Leda Mae Krauter and Laura Mae
Nice served as the hostesses for the
meeting. Games were conducted by .
Dorothy Myers and Marcia ·Keller .
In ~z Newell won the door prize.
The next meeting will be held
August 13, with a picnic to be held at
the Royal Oak Park shelter house at
6 p.m. Members are to bring their
own table service and food. Each
member is asked to bring a guest. ·
Those attending besides those
mentioned were Thelma White,
Charlotte Grant, Ada Bissell, and
Leona Hensley.

BmLE SCHOOL BEGINS
Bible school will be held at Heath
United Methodist Chilrch, Middleport, beginning Sunday, July 20,
through Thursday, July '24, from 7 to
9p.m.
The event is being provided in the
evening for the benefit of the community. There will be classes for
pre-schoolers through adults. The
theme for this year is "Jesus, I
Believe in You." The program will
offer Bible study, handcrafts,
fellowship, songs, and worship.
For additional information call
992-3009.

..

Polly's Pointers

Sermonette

Washing painted .walls

SEHJi.JON FOR THE WEEK
During a cruel and bloody wa r, a conm~ndc r took an oath in the
presence of his troops that he would slaughter the entire population of
a certain town, and in due course the blood hounds o(war were let
loose on the defenseless peor,le.
.
·
Now it so happened that a fugitive, seeking for a shelter, saw a sight
which was the indirect means of saving both his own life and lives of
others. He spied a number of soldiers as they broke into a house, the inmates of which they .put to the sword . But on leaving it, they fastened
up the place again, 'and one of them, dipping a cloth into a pool of
blood, splashed it on the door, as token to any, who might follow , of
what had taken place inside.
· ' Quick as his fee t could carry him, ·the poor fugitive sped away to a
large house ·in the center of the town, where a number of his friends
were concealed and breathlessly told them what he had seen. At once
it flashed upon them how to act. A goat was in the yard. Immediately it
was killed, and its blood sprinkled ort the door. Scarcely could they
close the door again when a band of soldiers rushed into the street, and
began to slay the people. But when they came to the blood marked
door they mape no attempt to enter ! The sword - so they thought had already entered therein and performed its work. Thus, while
many around were slain, all within the blood-sprinkled door were
saved.
· You and l are, in a sense, in the same shape as the people in this con. demned town in that we are sinners and Romans 6:23 says that "the
wages of sin is death." Like the people in this cerl;lin house ln the condemned town, we have substitute blood available to save our lives.
An example of this is seen in the Old Testament feast of Passover.
When the Children of Israel were about ready to leave Egypt, the Lord
told them that on the last night;the angel of death would stalk the land,
and the only way for them to avoid death.for the first-born son of their
families would be to get some blood and sprinkle it on the doorposts of
their houses. When the angel of death saw the blood, he would pass
over their houses without executing the sentence of death. (Exodus
12:1-13).

This sacrifice pointed forward to that of Jesus Christ. First of all,
they were to use a lamb, which represented Jesus Christ, the Lamb of
God. "The next day he (John the Baptist) saw Jesus coming toward
him, and said, 'Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the
world!' " (John 1:29). The lamb was to be without blemish (Exodus
12 :5) . Jesus Christ also met this requirement. "You know that you
were ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your fathers, not
with perishable things such as silver or gold, but with the precious
bloOd ofChrist; lilse that of a lamb without blemish." (I Peter 1: 18,19).
Thus, anyone who accepts Jesus Christ into his or her heart is like
the people .in the condemned town who were sa ved from extinction
through the blood of the slain goat. - Albert Dittes, Pastor, SeventhDay Adventist Church, Pomeroy.

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - l know it was in
the paper sometime ago, but please
repeat the · .method for washing
walls.-O. H.
DEARO. H. -I
presume you are
referring to painted walls and do
remember there
are different kinds of paint. Test a
small area first.
Avoid stronger
cleansers.
A good detergent should remove
average soli. First dust off any loose
dirt and then use a sponge or soft
cloth to wash in a circular motion.
Start at the bottom and work up to
avoid streaks.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY ,- When doing
spring cleaning and washing wood·
work, use an old toothbrush to clean
comers fu door paneling, etc. This
eliminates dirty corners and roWlded corners when painting .
When a box of brown sugar starts
to crystalize l put the box in a tightly
closed bread box and leave fiJI'
atime, and it becomes just as soft as
when new.- VIRGINIA
DEAR POLLY - When l finish
reading my various women's
mllgazines I take .them to the laundromat and leave them so others can
enjoy them whlle doing their !aWl-

Pierce and Miss Barbra Lambert Qf
Salem Center, Carol F. Pierce of
Salem Center; Mr. and Mrs,Kimmy
Pierce ' an'd son franklin of
Wilkesville; Mr. and Mrs. David
Pierce of Mansfield.
,
· In honor of his father's birthday on ·
July 5, Mr. and Mrs. David Pierce of
Mansfield took the honoree, Carol
Pierce, Sr., and brother " Rusty"
Pi erce to the Cincinnati Reds and
Houston Astros ball game.
Miss Jody Newton of Waverly also
stayed for a week with her grandparents.

1111··········•1/~

dry.

.I get lots of junk mail, as we all do,
and when plant catalogs come l cut
out the pretty small pictures of
flowers and apply thein to plain
writing paper and tbe envelopes,
This makes letters to friends more
attractive and when possible !leave
the mime of flower under the picture
and this often acquaints them with
fl owers new to them.
I fill an empty hand cream dispenser bottle with liquid dishwashing
detergent and keep such bottles handy in the bathtoom and by the sink
for washing· grubby g~asy hands.
This works better than a messy bar
of soap and eliminates the brown
dirty marks left on the dishwashing
liquid bottle when it is squeezed in
the middle. Having such a bottle in
the bathroom discourages washing
dirty hands in the kitchen over a sink
full of dishes. - AVirginia Reader
Polly will send you one - of . niir
signed thailk-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care·of this newspaper.

·. CDUifTrtY STORES·

DALE'S KITCHEN ·CE
"HOME OF BEAUTIFUL KITCHENS"
286-3786
675-2318

JACKSON, 0~10

POINT PLEASANT

Black &amp; Decker.
FREEl

.t:tO&lt;JfP
~J-eler.s
m

E . MAIN • POMEROY '

USDA CHOICE

••
••
•

ROUND STEAK

All -purpose work center and visA

LB.
1·1I I IiI II I I

$1'5 money-back

CIRCUlAR
SAW
PLUS •..

rebate offer.
Black &amp; Decker factory rebate is available
on two WORKMATE models:
Model 79-001 $15 Rebate

HOLY GHOST REVIVAL
and DEDICATION SERYICES
. THURS.-SUNDAY, JULY 17-20
At 7:30P.M.
SINGING GROUP JULY 18th-LORE;TTA CARTER
AND THE SOUNDS OF PRAISE
lnterdenomination- Everyone Welcome
New Pastor, A·. A. Hughes

69

$

Workmate ®

0

# 7300

'9 9
6 ~
....

••
••
••

Offer good only when product is purchased
between June 30, 1980-September 27., 1980.
Rebate claim must be postmarked not later
than October 27, 1980.
To qualify:
1. Complete registration card packed in
carton.
2. Remove front cover of owner's manual
3. OIJ a 3" x 5" piece of paper, list the
store name and address where your
WORKMATE was purchased and sign
y,our full name.
4. Along with the daCed sales receipt
from your WORKMATE purcha·se.
place items 1, 2. and 3 in an envelope
and mail to:
INCREDIBLE WORKMATE REBATE
P. 0. Box 9740
St. Paul, Minn. 55197

••
16 QT. TUCKER
PlASTIC

24"x60"

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••• ~~}1.19

•••
•

ASSORTED

40%

OFF

I ............ I. I

Arched cathedral
doors in knot!)! alder.
Coimtry Classic
cabinets lly Riviera.

DAIRY

PRODUCE

24 oz. Broughton

Ctn.

Jib. Yellow

COTTAGE CHEES£ ..51.29 ONIONS .......... ~~~.. 7'1

FOR SUPER SAVIN,G S!

lib. Kraft

MARGARINE ~~~~!?~.s 7'1

6 oz. Kraft Pimiento

·· · ~

,

• eI

Golden Ripe

Individual Sliced

CHEESE ...........~~~:.89t BANANAS ......... ~.~:.35'

PORK-n-BEANS•••••.•••••••••••••• 2/99~
PUFFS
FACIAL TISSUES•••••••. 2/s1.59
16 oz . Lucky Leaf
APPLE
SAUCE ••••••••••••••••••••• 2/89c
44 oz.
HEINZ
KETCHUP
..............
~~!'~:.$1.69
.023 oz. Regular'
KOOL·AID
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 6/89'
10'12 oz. Plochman's
-SQUEEZED MUSTARD •••·••••••••• 2/8f

and out. Th ismake~ &lt;..otm tr y

at)d swing-out swrage units.

All of which might make
you think you can't aff ord ·
ca binets like these.
Bu t,you can . Come in and
lei "' ·J;rovc it.
1

RIVIERR PRODUCTS

.. DMJ~Drt.,..®•-.~~

. ..

.

'I I I

I I I

I

.....................

~,,,,,. . . . I

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

•••

GRAPE JELLY.•••••••••••••• ~u ~ 89'
12's Ball
DOME JAR FLATS· •••••••
3 .Pkgs. For $1.29
'a Count Glad 2 Pty
.
·
..
TRASHof Rich-h
BAGS
•••• ~ ••••••••• ~ 1· •••
~~~ •.s1.49
· Ready
,,., · · .. '"
ORANGE DRINK••••••••••••••••J.u.~ $1.29

~ With
Coupon
Price Without Coupon 51.39
OFFER EXPIRES 7-20·80

LIMIT
6 QTS.

69
.

••

~ With

Price W!thout Coupon 94c
FFER EXPIRES·T-20·80

•••••••••••••••

I I I l l I l l 1 ,1 I I I

:
•
11

re1aileh and not to exceed the Value .of the item . Limit one
double coupr''ln pP.r manufacturer ' &lt;; roup•l t1.

Coupon Expires Sun. July 20, 1980

'

Limll2 Coupons Per CuSiomer
for Cigarette or Free 'oupons
.".~..

•'

..

11~1 I l l 1'/ ,.. _t::~~~

m

BIC LIGHTERS

••
••

' 2 ·9~With
Coupon

__

Price Without Coupon 69c
FER EXPIRES 7-20-80
"'Ol'OR OIC

8it I • • I . • • 111111111

__,

:ll.1l'll • • • • • • • • ••• _. l l i l a_l I ••• ii

JONES BOYS

THIS WEEK AT JONES BOYS! ! !
SUPER DOUBLE COUPON
Prosent this coupon along with ony one manufocturer's
·WE'LL DOUBLE THE VALUE ON All MANUFACTURER'S
•
'.' Cenh Off" toulion and jtlt double file Hvlngs at J •
Boys. Nol lo Include Jonu Boys Couot Otllor
COUPONS WITH OUR "DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS"'! !
• rtlallors and nol lo exceed lhe value of lila llem. Llmltono
.. dCMfbt• coupon per manufacturer's coupon . ·
NOT VALID ON CIGAREITES OR FREE COUPONS! ! !
Coupon Expires Sun .. July 20, 1980
EACH OF THESE TWO COUPONS PLUS ANY MANUFACTURER'S
Limit 2 Coupons Per Cuslomor
Nol Vii lid lor CIIOroHo or Free coupons
•
COUPON 'MEANS DOUBLE SAVJNGS! ! !.

or-·

Present this coupon alo~g with any one manufaciurer;s
" Cents Off" coupon and get doullle the sa \lings at Jones
Boys . Not to include Jones Boys Coupons or those ' of o1her

Not Valid

eI

'··• I&gt;(

••

POPULAR

, coupon

.DOUBLE COUPON SAVINGS
•

I I I • • • •a •

.•...

I

•••• • •

•1"

48 oz.
With
Makes
coupon
15 Quarts
LIMIT ONE
Price Without Coupon $3.19
OFFER EXPIRES f ·21J-Il0

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

MOTOR OIL

.

I

LEMONADE MIX

••
••

Ill~~~~~~~

VALVOLINE 10W30

75

I I I I

••

JONES BOYS .
SUPER COUPON

9 INCH
IRONSTONE BOWL

I I I

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

COUPON

LEMON TREE

Price Without Coupon
Offer Expires

,

....

SUPE~

, HOT DOGS
12oz . 99~With
Coupon
2 pkgs.

Price Without CoOpon $1 .59
OFFER EXPIRES 7-20-80

............

• • • • • • ••JONES
• • ••••BOYS
••• •• •oo11111.

TASTEE

COTTAGE CHEESE
24
~ With
oz. 99
Coupon

&lt;•'•

.

Nl~'·n••

I I I I Ill I I I Ill

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUrON

18 oz. Smucker.s

~allons

ti

BROUGHTON

FROZEN

200 Count White or Assorted ·

They're so beauti fll l Cla ss ic handsomer ' and
.
you're apt 10 overloo k stro nger.
iheir practical s id~.
You get a lot ·of options.
The facl ihat each of the • Ro\1-oul shelves, lazy susans

I I I I I I II II I II I II

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

HASH BROWN POTATOIS •••••• ~~:.s9~

.,

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

I Ill. I I. II

By the Piece LB 89~
JOWL .BACON •••••••••••••••••••••••••

12 oz. Ore-Ida

finishes is also stain ' resistant.
Or, thai you ca n opt lo
do I he finishing yqurself.
Either. wn. please notQ.
that ca~in et s ar 1maJ c &lt;)f
1 selected hardwoods. l':'sidu

EACH

French City

LIST PRICE
ON RIVIERA CABINETS!
15 STYLES 6 STAINS

· five luxurio us hand -rubbed

PEACHES

$239

$] o~u

Eckrich

SOUtHERN GROWN

RUG RUNNER

SELF ADHESIVE

HAM ·&amp;CHEESE LOAF. ••••••• !-.~·. $1.97

MA G NE l

·Keepsake®

••

PRICES GOOD TODAIY·THRU SUNDAY, JULY 20

NO CLASSES
There will be no adult basic
education classes this week at the
·Pomeroy-Middleport Libraries due
to instructors attending an A B. E.
workshop at Shawnee State Park.
Classe., will resume on Tuesday,
July22.

Homemade

Keepsake

yo ur lovr , whe n it's fo r keeps.

•••
••
••
•

•

18" X 3 YDS.

rings ...

Cho ose Keepsake rings. the pt:rfect way to show

••
•

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I l l ••

Your love
deserves
the finest

Keep sa ke guara ntee d pe rfect dia.m o n~ engagement ri ngs a nd 14 Kara t go ld wcddmg rm gs co me
in a large rt~n gc of styles and prices .

We Reser ve
The Right
To Limit
Quantiti es

137 PINE STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO.
700 W. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

21 oz. Van Camp

IJ'EA NA O E TlE

~

FOOD STAMP
ORDERS
WELCOMED!

Langsville, OH .

•

~

·SMOKED
PlCNICS

f ,:..·

MIDWAY COMMUNITY C:HUfK:H

Cookout hqnors Pierce
A picnic dinner and cookout was
held July 6 at the home of Carol Pierce, Sr. in honor of his birthday.
Those attending were:
Mr. and Mrs. Charles (Sandra )
Newton, daughter' Jody and son
Scott, Waverly ; Mr. and Mrs, ·
William (Dolores) Johnson and son
Phillip of Carroll ; Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Davison of Lancaster; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Baker of Groveport ;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Pierce, Sr.
of. Groveport ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
E. Pierce, Jr., daughters Sa rah and
Courtney of Charlotte, N. C.; Ricky

7- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O:, Wednesday, July 16, 1980

'"1, 1

,,

I

il' ea ••• ·

\1

•

·· · • • • I I 1.1111

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P9meroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 16, 1980

To marry Saturday
Roush - Fortune

Diana Wheeler
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan A. Wheeler,
Dexter, are announcing the
engagement a nd f.orthcomin g
marriage ol their daughter, Diana
Lynn, to William James Meek, Jr.,
son of Mr. and Mrs. William James
Meek, Bidwell.
The wedding will be an event pf
Saturday; July 19, at 6 p.m. at the
Dexter Church of Christ.

Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Roush,
Pomeroy, are announCing the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Shelly,
to Charles 0 ..-Fortune, son of Mrsr
Margaret Fortune, Elizabethtown,
Ky ., and Mr: Jim Fortune, Jackson.
The bride-elect is a 1911() graduate
of Meigs High School. Mr. Fortune is
employed at Louisville Civic Center,
Louisville, Ky.
Attendants for the couple will be,
matron of honor, Mrs. Lura Swiger,
maid of honor, Miss Joyce Porter.
and bridesmaid, Miss Connie Smith,
all of Pomeroy. Flower girl will .be
Miss Angie Swiger, Pomeroy. Best
man, Steve Coffman, Racine;
ushers, Robin Fortune, Racine ; and
Jiin Mayes, Louisville, Ky .
Ringbear er, Brandon Roush,
Pomeroy. Organist will be Rose Ann
Jenkins, Racine. Receptionists for
the wedding will be Mrs. Sue Miller,
Pomeroy, and Miss Paula Wolfe,
Racine.
The Rev. Don Walker, Racine, will
perform the open church wedding,
which will be an event of July 19, at
7:30p.m. at the Racine First Baptist
Church.
A reception will be held in the
church social room immediately
following the ceremony. .

Riffle - Hawthorne
BAS HAN T Plans have been completed :for '"e open church·wedding
of (Betsy ) Marga ret Evelyn Riffle,
daughtel· of Mr. and Mrs. Roy F. Riffle, Bashan, a.nd Timothy Dwane
Hawthorne, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Darrell Hawthorne, Long 8ottoll1.
The .double ring .ceremony will
taK'e place on Saturday, July 19, 2:30
p.m. at the Chester Ghurch of the
Nazarene.

The Reverend Herbert Grate will
perform the ceremony. Maid of
honor will be Beth Headley, Tuppers
Plains, and the bridesmaids will be
Donna Bennett, Tuppers Plains,
Brenda Riffle and Pamela
Buchanan, Reedsville, sisters of the
bride-elect.
Flower girls will be Julie Riffle,
another sister of the bride, and the
ringbcarer will be Tony !}rate.
James Hawthorne; Long Bottom,
will serve .as best man for his .
brother, and the ushers will be Mark
Hunnel, Columbus, Mark Gillilan,
Tuppers Plains; and David Jones,
Cheshire.
·
An open reception will immediately follow the ceremony at
the Royal Oak Park Recreational
Building. All friends and relatives
are cordially invited.

Family moves
to Dayton
The familY- of the late Gurney and
Florence Michael met at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Pa rker, July 6.
They honored T.Sgt. Joseph Poole
and Will who have recently moved
from San Antonio, Texas, to WrightPatterson, AFB, near Dayton. Their
address is now 1125 Middy Drive,
Woodland Hills, W-P AFB, Ohio
45433.
The family held a cookout at noon,
followed by homemade ice crea m
and cake. Gary Michael asked the
blessing.
Others present were Samuel
Michael, Cora Hilton, Linda First,
Louise Michael, Mrs. Gary Michael,
Matthew , Kimberly,' ana Todd, Mr.
and 'Mrs. Roger Leifheit, Dorothy,
and Mike.

ATTEND SERVICES
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley James,
Toledo, attended the graveside services for Mrs. James' sister, Mary
Eynon Heiiert, Saturday at Letart
Falls Cemetery.
While· here they visited with
George and Alice Freeland,
Syracuse.

Past Councilors
Club meets, ·
installs officers
Wednesday
' The Past Councilors' Club of
Chester, Council No. 323, met Wednesday evening at the lodge hall with
Margaret Tuttle, vice president,
presiding. Mrs. Tuttle read from the
book of John, chapter 8, with the
group reciting .the Lord's Prayer
and the pledge of allegiance in
unison.
.
Officers were installed by Mrs.
Tuttle. Installed were Inzy Newell,
president; Opal Hollon, vice
pres ident ; Erma Cleland,
sec retary ; Marcia Keller.•
treasurer; Ethel Orr, flower committee; Mae McPeek, sentinel;
Mary K. Holter, miwsreporter.
Each member present answered
the roll call by telling whatthey did
for the Fourth of July. The
treasurer's report was gwen by
Goldie Frederick.
Leda Mae Krauter and Laura Mae
Nice served as the hostesses for the
meeting. Games were conducted by .
Dorothy Myers and Marcia ·Keller .
In ~z Newell won the door prize.
The next meeting will be held
August 13, with a picnic to be held at
the Royal Oak Park shelter house at
6 p.m. Members are to bring their
own table service and food. Each
member is asked to bring a guest. ·
Those attending besides those
mentioned were Thelma White,
Charlotte Grant, Ada Bissell, and
Leona Hensley.

BmLE SCHOOL BEGINS
Bible school will be held at Heath
United Methodist Chilrch, Middleport, beginning Sunday, July 20,
through Thursday, July '24, from 7 to
9p.m.
The event is being provided in the
evening for the benefit of the community. There will be classes for
pre-schoolers through adults. The
theme for this year is "Jesus, I
Believe in You." The program will
offer Bible study, handcrafts,
fellowship, songs, and worship.
For additional information call
992-3009.

..

Polly's Pointers

Sermonette

Washing painted .walls

SEHJi.JON FOR THE WEEK
During a cruel and bloody wa r, a conm~ndc r took an oath in the
presence of his troops that he would slaughter the entire population of
a certain town, and in due course the blood hounds o(war were let
loose on the defenseless peor,le.
.
·
Now it so happened that a fugitive, seeking for a shelter, saw a sight
which was the indirect means of saving both his own life and lives of
others. He spied a number of soldiers as they broke into a house, the inmates of which they .put to the sword . But on leaving it, they fastened
up the place again, 'and one of them, dipping a cloth into a pool of
blood, splashed it on the door, as token to any, who might follow , of
what had taken place inside.
· ' Quick as his fee t could carry him, ·the poor fugitive sped away to a
large house ·in the center of the town, where a number of his friends
were concealed and breathlessly told them what he had seen. At once
it flashed upon them how to act. A goat was in the yard. Immediately it
was killed, and its blood sprinkled ort the door. Scarcely could they
close the door again when a band of soldiers rushed into the street, and
began to slay the people. But when they came to the blood marked
door they mape no attempt to enter ! The sword - so they thought had already entered therein and performed its work. Thus, while
many around were slain, all within the blood-sprinkled door were
saved.
· You and l are, in a sense, in the same shape as the people in this con. demned town in that we are sinners and Romans 6:23 says that "the
wages of sin is death." Like the people in this cerl;lin house ln the condemned town, we have substitute blood available to save our lives.
An example of this is seen in the Old Testament feast of Passover.
When the Children of Israel were about ready to leave Egypt, the Lord
told them that on the last night;the angel of death would stalk the land,
and the only way for them to avoid death.for the first-born son of their
families would be to get some blood and sprinkle it on the doorposts of
their houses. When the angel of death saw the blood, he would pass
over their houses without executing the sentence of death. (Exodus
12:1-13).

This sacrifice pointed forward to that of Jesus Christ. First of all,
they were to use a lamb, which represented Jesus Christ, the Lamb of
God. "The next day he (John the Baptist) saw Jesus coming toward
him, and said, 'Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the
world!' " (John 1:29). The lamb was to be without blemish (Exodus
12 :5) . Jesus Christ also met this requirement. "You know that you
were ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your fathers, not
with perishable things such as silver or gold, but with the precious
bloOd ofChrist; lilse that of a lamb without blemish." (I Peter 1: 18,19).
Thus, anyone who accepts Jesus Christ into his or her heart is like
the people .in the condemned town who were sa ved from extinction
through the blood of the slain goat. - Albert Dittes, Pastor, SeventhDay Adventist Church, Pomeroy.

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - l know it was in
the paper sometime ago, but please
repeat the · .method for washing
walls.-O. H.
DEARO. H. -I
presume you are
referring to painted walls and do
remember there
are different kinds of paint. Test a
small area first.
Avoid stronger
cleansers.
A good detergent should remove
average soli. First dust off any loose
dirt and then use a sponge or soft
cloth to wash in a circular motion.
Start at the bottom and work up to
avoid streaks.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY ,- When doing
spring cleaning and washing wood·
work, use an old toothbrush to clean
comers fu door paneling, etc. This
eliminates dirty corners and roWlded corners when painting .
When a box of brown sugar starts
to crystalize l put the box in a tightly
closed bread box and leave fiJI'
atime, and it becomes just as soft as
when new.- VIRGINIA
DEAR POLLY - When l finish
reading my various women's
mllgazines I take .them to the laundromat and leave them so others can
enjoy them whlle doing their !aWl-

Pierce and Miss Barbra Lambert Qf
Salem Center, Carol F. Pierce of
Salem Center; Mr. and Mrs,Kimmy
Pierce ' an'd son franklin of
Wilkesville; Mr. and Mrs. David
Pierce of Mansfield.
,
· In honor of his father's birthday on ·
July 5, Mr. and Mrs. David Pierce of
Mansfield took the honoree, Carol
Pierce, Sr., and brother " Rusty"
Pi erce to the Cincinnati Reds and
Houston Astros ball game.
Miss Jody Newton of Waverly also
stayed for a week with her grandparents.

1111··········•1/~

dry.

.I get lots of junk mail, as we all do,
and when plant catalogs come l cut
out the pretty small pictures of
flowers and apply thein to plain
writing paper and tbe envelopes,
This makes letters to friends more
attractive and when possible !leave
the mime of flower under the picture
and this often acquaints them with
fl owers new to them.
I fill an empty hand cream dispenser bottle with liquid dishwashing
detergent and keep such bottles handy in the bathtoom and by the sink
for washing· grubby g~asy hands.
This works better than a messy bar
of soap and eliminates the brown
dirty marks left on the dishwashing
liquid bottle when it is squeezed in
the middle. Having such a bottle in
the bathroom discourages washing
dirty hands in the kitchen over a sink
full of dishes. - AVirginia Reader
Polly will send you one - of . niir
signed thailk-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care·of this newspaper.

·. CDUifTrtY STORES·

DALE'S KITCHEN ·CE
"HOME OF BEAUTIFUL KITCHENS"
286-3786
675-2318

JACKSON, 0~10

POINT PLEASANT

Black &amp; Decker.
FREEl

.t:tO&lt;JfP
~J-eler.s
m

E . MAIN • POMEROY '

USDA CHOICE

••
••
•

ROUND STEAK

All -purpose work center and visA

LB.
1·1I I IiI II I I

$1'5 money-back

CIRCUlAR
SAW
PLUS •..

rebate offer.
Black &amp; Decker factory rebate is available
on two WORKMATE models:
Model 79-001 $15 Rebate

HOLY GHOST REVIVAL
and DEDICATION SERYICES
. THURS.-SUNDAY, JULY 17-20
At 7:30P.M.
SINGING GROUP JULY 18th-LORE;TTA CARTER
AND THE SOUNDS OF PRAISE
lnterdenomination- Everyone Welcome
New Pastor, A·. A. Hughes

69

$

Workmate ®

0

# 7300

'9 9
6 ~
....

••
••
••

Offer good only when product is purchased
between June 30, 1980-September 27., 1980.
Rebate claim must be postmarked not later
than October 27, 1980.
To qualify:
1. Complete registration card packed in
carton.
2. Remove front cover of owner's manual
3. OIJ a 3" x 5" piece of paper, list the
store name and address where your
WORKMATE was purchased and sign
y,our full name.
4. Along with the daCed sales receipt
from your WORKMATE purcha·se.
place items 1, 2. and 3 in an envelope
and mail to:
INCREDIBLE WORKMATE REBATE
P. 0. Box 9740
St. Paul, Minn. 55197

••
16 QT. TUCKER
PlASTIC

24"x60"

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••• ~~}1.19

•••
•

ASSORTED

40%

OFF

I ............ I. I

Arched cathedral
doors in knot!)! alder.
Coimtry Classic
cabinets lly Riviera.

DAIRY

PRODUCE

24 oz. Broughton

Ctn.

Jib. Yellow

COTTAGE CHEES£ ..51.29 ONIONS .......... ~~~.. 7'1

FOR SUPER SAVIN,G S!

lib. Kraft

MARGARINE ~~~~!?~.s 7'1

6 oz. Kraft Pimiento

·· · ~

,

• eI

Golden Ripe

Individual Sliced

CHEESE ...........~~~:.89t BANANAS ......... ~.~:.35'

PORK-n-BEANS•••••.•••••••••••••• 2/99~
PUFFS
FACIAL TISSUES•••••••. 2/s1.59
16 oz . Lucky Leaf
APPLE
SAUCE ••••••••••••••••••••• 2/89c
44 oz.
HEINZ
KETCHUP
..............
~~!'~:.$1.69
.023 oz. Regular'
KOOL·AID
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 6/89'
10'12 oz. Plochman's
-SQUEEZED MUSTARD •••·••••••••• 2/8f

and out. Th ismake~ &lt;..otm tr y

at)d swing-out swrage units.

All of which might make
you think you can't aff ord ·
ca binets like these.
Bu t,you can . Come in and
lei "' ·J;rovc it.
1

RIVIERR PRODUCTS

.. DMJ~Drt.,..®•-.~~

. ..

.

'I I I

I I I

I

.....................

~,,,,,. . . . I

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

•••

GRAPE JELLY.•••••••••••••• ~u ~ 89'
12's Ball
DOME JAR FLATS· •••••••
3 .Pkgs. For $1.29
'a Count Glad 2 Pty
.
·
..
TRASHof Rich-h
BAGS
•••• ~ ••••••••• ~ 1· •••
~~~ •.s1.49
· Ready
,,., · · .. '"
ORANGE DRINK••••••••••••••••J.u.~ $1.29

~ With
Coupon
Price Without Coupon 51.39
OFFER EXPIRES 7-20·80

LIMIT
6 QTS.

69
.

••

~ With

Price W!thout Coupon 94c
FFER EXPIRES·T-20·80

•••••••••••••••

I I I l l I l l 1 ,1 I I I

:
•
11

re1aileh and not to exceed the Value .of the item . Limit one
double coupr''ln pP.r manufacturer ' &lt;; roup•l t1.

Coupon Expires Sun. July 20, 1980

'

Limll2 Coupons Per CuSiomer
for Cigarette or Free 'oupons
.".~..

•'

..

11~1 I l l 1'/ ,.. _t::~~~

m

BIC LIGHTERS

••
••

' 2 ·9~With
Coupon

__

Price Without Coupon 69c
FER EXPIRES 7-20-80
"'Ol'OR OIC

8it I • • I . • • 111111111

__,

:ll.1l'll • • • • • • • • ••• _. l l i l a_l I ••• ii

JONES BOYS

THIS WEEK AT JONES BOYS! ! !
SUPER DOUBLE COUPON
Prosent this coupon along with ony one manufocturer's
·WE'LL DOUBLE THE VALUE ON All MANUFACTURER'S
•
'.' Cenh Off" toulion and jtlt double file Hvlngs at J •
Boys. Nol lo Include Jonu Boys Couot Otllor
COUPONS WITH OUR "DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS"'! !
• rtlallors and nol lo exceed lhe value of lila llem. Llmltono
.. dCMfbt• coupon per manufacturer's coupon . ·
NOT VALID ON CIGAREITES OR FREE COUPONS! ! !
Coupon Expires Sun .. July 20, 1980
EACH OF THESE TWO COUPONS PLUS ANY MANUFACTURER'S
Limit 2 Coupons Per Cuslomor
Nol Vii lid lor CIIOroHo or Free coupons
•
COUPON 'MEANS DOUBLE SAVJNGS! ! !.

or-·

Present this coupon alo~g with any one manufaciurer;s
" Cents Off" coupon and get doullle the sa \lings at Jones
Boys . Not to include Jones Boys Coupons or those ' of o1her

Not Valid

eI

'··• I&gt;(

••

POPULAR

, coupon

.DOUBLE COUPON SAVINGS
•

I I I • • • •a •

.•...

I

•••• • •

•1"

48 oz.
With
Makes
coupon
15 Quarts
LIMIT ONE
Price Without Coupon $3.19
OFFER EXPIRES f ·21J-Il0

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

MOTOR OIL

.

I

LEMONADE MIX

••
••

Ill~~~~~~~

VALVOLINE 10W30

75

I I I I

••

JONES BOYS .
SUPER COUPON

9 INCH
IRONSTONE BOWL

I I I

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

COUPON

LEMON TREE

Price Without Coupon
Offer Expires

,

....

SUPE~

, HOT DOGS
12oz . 99~With
Coupon
2 pkgs.

Price Without CoOpon $1 .59
OFFER EXPIRES 7-20-80

............

• • • • • • ••JONES
• • ••••BOYS
••• •• •oo11111.

TASTEE

COTTAGE CHEESE
24
~ With
oz. 99
Coupon

&lt;•'•

.

Nl~'·n••

I I I I Ill I I I Ill

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUrON

18 oz. Smucker.s

~allons

ti

BROUGHTON

FROZEN

200 Count White or Assorted ·

They're so beauti fll l Cla ss ic handsomer ' and
.
you're apt 10 overloo k stro nger.
iheir practical s id~.
You get a lot ·of options.
The facl ihat each of the • Ro\1-oul shelves, lazy susans

I I I I I I II II I II I II

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

HASH BROWN POTATOIS •••••• ~~:.s9~

.,

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

I Ill. I I. II

By the Piece LB 89~
JOWL .BACON •••••••••••••••••••••••••

12 oz. Ore-Ida

finishes is also stain ' resistant.
Or, thai you ca n opt lo
do I he finishing yqurself.
Either. wn. please notQ.
that ca~in et s ar 1maJ c &lt;)f
1 selected hardwoods. l':'sidu

EACH

French City

LIST PRICE
ON RIVIERA CABINETS!
15 STYLES 6 STAINS

· five luxurio us hand -rubbed

PEACHES

$239

$] o~u

Eckrich

SOUtHERN GROWN

RUG RUNNER

SELF ADHESIVE

HAM ·&amp;CHEESE LOAF. ••••••• !-.~·. $1.97

MA G NE l

·Keepsake®

••

PRICES GOOD TODAIY·THRU SUNDAY, JULY 20

NO CLASSES
There will be no adult basic
education classes this week at the
·Pomeroy-Middleport Libraries due
to instructors attending an A B. E.
workshop at Shawnee State Park.
Classe., will resume on Tuesday,
July22.

Homemade

Keepsake

yo ur lovr , whe n it's fo r keeps.

•••
••
••
•

•

18" X 3 YDS.

rings ...

Cho ose Keepsake rings. the pt:rfect way to show

••
•

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I l l ••

Your love
deserves
the finest

Keep sa ke guara ntee d pe rfect dia.m o n~ engagement ri ngs a nd 14 Kara t go ld wcddmg rm gs co me
in a large rt~n gc of styles and prices .

We Reser ve
The Right
To Limit
Quantiti es

137 PINE STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO.
700 W. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

21 oz. Van Camp

IJ'EA NA O E TlE

~

FOOD STAMP
ORDERS
WELCOMED!

Langsville, OH .

•

~

·SMOKED
PlCNICS

f ,:..·

MIDWAY COMMUNITY C:HUfK:H

Cookout hqnors Pierce
A picnic dinner and cookout was
held July 6 at the home of Carol Pierce, Sr. in honor of his birthday.
Those attending were:
Mr. and Mrs. Charles (Sandra )
Newton, daughter' Jody and son
Scott, Waverly ; Mr. and Mrs, ·
William (Dolores) Johnson and son
Phillip of Carroll ; Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Davison of Lancaster; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Baker of Groveport ;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Pierce, Sr.
of. Groveport ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
E. Pierce, Jr., daughters Sa rah and
Courtney of Charlotte, N. C.; Ricky

7- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O:, Wednesday, July 16, 1980

'"1, 1

,,

I

il' ea ••• ·

\1

•

·· · • • • I I 1.1111

�9- TheDailySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy •.~..· =~"e. :
r--------·
- --1
-=-dn~es~d~a)~·,~Ju~ly~l~6,~19~80~~::':;::.:=;:=~~~~~~~~~-----~-----::::--~~--------~,

8- The Da ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, f!., \VedneSday, July 16,1980

News Notes

'

National Smoker Study:

l
j
•

'.

~~Best tasting low tar I've tried7report

MERITsmokers in latest survey.
,,

Taste Quest Ends

cealed, a significant majority of smokers rated
the taste of low tar MERIT as good as ·- or better
than-leading high tar brands. Even cigarettes
having twice the tar!
Smoker Preference: Among
the 95% of smokers stating a
preference, the MERIT low tar/
good taste combination was
favored 3 to 1 over high tar
Menthol
leaders when tar levels were
\fevealed!
. MERIT is the proven alternative to high tar. smoking. And
you can taste 1t.

Latest reseirch provides solid evidence that _
MERIT is a satisfying -long~term taste alternative to
high tar cigarettes.
·
Long-Term Satisfaction: In
the latest survey of former high
tar smokers who nave switched to
MERIT,'9 out of 10 reported they
. continue to enjoy smoking, are
glad they switched, and reported _
·Filter
MERIT is the best tasting low tar
lhey've ever tried!
,. ',..,·r .... ...,.

"

· · MERIT

MERIT

·

Smoker'Thsts Offer
More Proof
I

Kings: 8 mg ''tar;· 0.6 mgni cotine.- 100's Reg: 10 mg ''1ar; · 0.7mg nicoti ne100's Men: 1 mg "tar;' 0.8 mg ni coline av.per cigarette , FTCReport0ec:79

LOW TAR-'ENRICHED FLAVOR'

•

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
~bat Cigarettll';pmoking / ~ _Dangerous to Yow Health.
.• ' .
_--.. J.,''

.,

,~~

1,.,

. __ _ _ __ _·; _- - - - - - - : - - - ; - - - - - - - - - ' €;1 l'h ili l' Morris J n~'. l'iiiO

I

i

SPECIAL POTLUCK SUNDAY
MASON,W.Va.-Onbehalfofthe .
congregation of Mason United
Methodist Church, the chairman !i
Pastor Parish Relationship Committee wishes to welcome Dr. John
and MaDora Wi\dman and family
back for another year. A potluck din- .
ner will be held next Sunday, July 20,
at 12 noon in their honor in the church social room.
Bring a covered dish and enjoy the
fellowship and food.

·-

.,'
'

._ Kings.&amp;lOO's,,
I

'

.

Store Hours: ,
•

Mon.·Sal 8 am·10 pm
Sunday 10_am-10 pm

·e

298 SEalND ST;
POMEROY, 0•

I,

i

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1980

1

r

.,

USDA CHOICE

$

.

Chuck Steak .....L~

•••

9

12

i

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

$
159

LB

Chuck Roast .......·..
USDA CHOICE-

$

.

Ground Beef..... ~~ ...

GRADE A

39 '

'

Whole Fryers .......L!~
Chicken Breasts..L~

.•

Chicken Thighs... ~.

Cantaloupe ....... ~~
BORDEN'S

Fru i,t ·Drinks .......G!~·
J'-

,',T.

•

,.

..J

FLAVORITE

¢

Dawn DetergenU

TWIN PAK
GALLON

$159

2% Milk ••••••••••••••••
•

' "-"

$ 29

'·.
4/$
oz
Argo Peas......... .;.. . . Ice Cream........~~!~ ...l ·
BORDEN'S ELSIE .

17

--

.,

'

LOW TAR-' ENRICHED FLAVOR'

v

NEW HAVEN PERSONAL
Mrs.' Rena Johnson visited her
daughter, Mae Robinson, Beat·
tyviUe, Ky., who has been ill. She
was accompanied by her daughter,
and son-in-law; Ada and Robert Hartman of Elkhart, Ind., and another
daughter, Anna Phillips of Belle, W.
Va .; they spent four days visiting
Mae, and her husband, Rev. Simon
Robinson, who is ~e pastor of the
First Church of God, Beattyville,
Ky.
,
HAVE GERMAN GUEST
CLIFTON, W. Va. - Unter Adler
(nicknamed Archie) !i Heilbronn,
Gy., was a guest of Randy Lewis and
his grandmother, Mrs. Laurene
Lewis, at their home in Clifton for a
month. Lewis and Adler became
good friends while Lewis was
stationed in the Anny in Germany.
Unter enjoyed swimming and
boating on the Ohio, and was .
especially impressed with the
beauty of the river.
Before his departure for Germany, he was taken sight seeing by
his friends, Randy and Greg Lewis,
Bob Rickard, and ltoger Fisher.
They went to Virginia Beach where
they enjoyed a swim in the ocean
and on to Washington, D. C. where
he saw our Capital.
Unter was honored with a goingaway dinner by Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Cartwright at their home in
Clifton. Attending were Unter, Mr.
and Mrs. John Sheets, Chris Grogan,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis, Mrs.
Katie Bass, K~ndra Bass, Mr. and
· - Mrs. Donald Smith and There!ill,
Mrs. Laurene Lewis, hosts, Mr. and
Mrs. Cartwright.
Unter received several gifts from
his many friends .

REUNION SLATED
MASON, W. Va. - The James .
· Wolfe 32nd resunion will be held on
August 10, at Racine, Ohio· at 'the
home of Mr. and Mrs. William
(Mickey ) Hoback, A covered dish
dinner will be served at I p.m.

Blind Taste Tests: In tests
_where brand ident!ty was conI

I

: Mason County
By Alma Marshall
Speeial Correspondent
WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va. - Mr.
and Mrs. J . C. Roush, West Columbia, entertained with a family picnic
. and swimming party on Sunday,
honoring Master Sgt. and Mrs. T. E.
Nicholson and daughter, Am!Jer,
who have transferred from McGuire
Air Force Base to Scott Air Force
Base in Illinois.
Those attending were Hallie and
Nellie Zerkle, Middleport; Mrs.
Margie Cartwright and ~ Chris
Grogen, Clifton; Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Rob1nson and family of Gallipolis;
Cheryl Robinson, a student at Ohio
.University; Mark Jensen, Columbus; May Kemp, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Bergdoll and family,
· Gallipolis; Mr. . and Mrs. Chester
R.oush and son, pt, Pleasant; Mr.
and Mrs. Curtis Roush and sons,
West Columbia; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Buckley, Hebron, Ohio; Mrs. Evelyn
Nicholson, ·Clifton ; Mary Roush,
Mason; Mike Roush, Rutland, 0.;
Connie Humphreys, Coalton, 0.;
Sherry Humphreys, of Michigan.
Mason and Clifton News
Amber Nicholson is staying with
her grandmother, Mrs. Evelyn
Nicholson while her parents, M;~ster
Sgt. and Mrs. T. E. Nicholson are
finding a place to live at Scott Air
Force Base, Ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Don. ~uissenberry
and daughters, Kim and Linda, of
South Charl,eston, visited recently
with her mother, Mrs . Thelma
Henry. They also visited his father,
Ben Quisenberry, a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Sherry Caraway of Ho~ton,
Texas spent a week visiting her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Posey at
Clifton.
·
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Landon
Smith recently included Mrs.
Smith's brother and family , Mr. and
Mrs. Charles King and son, Kirby, .
WoUforth, Texas; Mr. and Mrs. Curtis King and son of Chester, 0 .; Mr.
and Mrs. Carroll Shinn, Lowell and
Alisa, Leon; Mr. and Mrs . John
Gothard, Malvern, Pa.; ·Phillip
Gothard, Owensboro, Ky .; R. C.
King, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs.
Nelson Reynolds, Chester, Ohio;
Kenneth Reynolds, Mason.
Mr. and Mrs . Ray Proffitt and
Nancy visited this past week· with
their daughter and son-in-law and
grandchildren, Dr. and Mrs. Robert
E. McBride, Julie, Robbie a:- ~ Greg,
at Michigan City , Indiana
'

I'

•

SERVICES TODAY
'
' warFuneral services for Herman
ner were held this morning at 10.
a.m. at Ewing Cl\apel. The family
requests thilt in cli~jl of flowers
donations be made to St. Paul
Lutheran Church.

COUPON

CHEER

Bathroom Tissue·
4 ROll
PAK

¢
.
89
.

DtrERGENT

49

oz. $159
!

"l'i , lY80

·,

t , •I I

•' .

tn !t.•• : ~.

·

1}~

~; :~ ; ;~:

,,.

1. 1 :

·t l

19, 1'180

:e!

COUPON

TENDERLEAF

HYLAND qiUNI(

TEA BAGS
100
$}69
COUNT

.DOG FOOD ·

n ,,
,,

1 f' ~'f L d '

,. \

t •• n L' r

·, . l i . .. ~ . •

Utter Ex,,res Ju

li

19, 19'80

25LB.
.BAG

$299

L1m1t 1 t&gt;cr Customer
G 0od Only at Pow ell 's
Ottf'!r E . ires Jul 19, 1980

;

..

�9- TheDailySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy •.~..· =~"e. :
r--------·
- --1
-=-dn~es~d~a)~·,~Ju~ly~l~6,~19~80~~::':;::.:=;:=~~~~~~~~~-----~-----::::--~~--------~,

8- The Da ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, f!., \VedneSday, July 16,1980

News Notes

'

National Smoker Study:

l
j
•

'.

~~Best tasting low tar I've tried7report

MERITsmokers in latest survey.
,,

Taste Quest Ends

cealed, a significant majority of smokers rated
the taste of low tar MERIT as good as ·- or better
than-leading high tar brands. Even cigarettes
having twice the tar!
Smoker Preference: Among
the 95% of smokers stating a
preference, the MERIT low tar/
good taste combination was
favored 3 to 1 over high tar
Menthol
leaders when tar levels were
\fevealed!
. MERIT is the proven alternative to high tar. smoking. And
you can taste 1t.

Latest reseirch provides solid evidence that _
MERIT is a satisfying -long~term taste alternative to
high tar cigarettes.
·
Long-Term Satisfaction: In
the latest survey of former high
tar smokers who nave switched to
MERIT,'9 out of 10 reported they
. continue to enjoy smoking, are
glad they switched, and reported _
·Filter
MERIT is the best tasting low tar
lhey've ever tried!
,. ',..,·r .... ...,.

"

· · MERIT

MERIT

·

Smoker'Thsts Offer
More Proof
I

Kings: 8 mg ''tar;· 0.6 mgni cotine.- 100's Reg: 10 mg ''1ar; · 0.7mg nicoti ne100's Men: 1 mg "tar;' 0.8 mg ni coline av.per cigarette , FTCReport0ec:79

LOW TAR-'ENRICHED FLAVOR'

•

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
~bat Cigarettll';pmoking / ~ _Dangerous to Yow Health.
.• ' .
_--.. J.,''

.,

,~~

1,.,

. __ _ _ __ _·; _- - - - - - - : - - - ; - - - - - - - - - ' €;1 l'h ili l' Morris J n~'. l'iiiO

I

i

SPECIAL POTLUCK SUNDAY
MASON,W.Va.-Onbehalfofthe .
congregation of Mason United
Methodist Church, the chairman !i
Pastor Parish Relationship Committee wishes to welcome Dr. John
and MaDora Wi\dman and family
back for another year. A potluck din- .
ner will be held next Sunday, July 20,
at 12 noon in their honor in the church social room.
Bring a covered dish and enjoy the
fellowship and food.

·-

.,'
'

._ Kings.&amp;lOO's,,
I

'

.

Store Hours: ,
•

Mon.·Sal 8 am·10 pm
Sunday 10_am-10 pm

·e

298 SEalND ST;
POMEROY, 0•

I,

i

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1980

1

r

.,

USDA CHOICE

$

.

Chuck Steak .....L~

•••

9

12

i

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

$
159

LB

Chuck Roast .......·..
USDA CHOICE-

$

.

Ground Beef..... ~~ ...

GRADE A

39 '

'

Whole Fryers .......L!~
Chicken Breasts..L~

.•

Chicken Thighs... ~.

Cantaloupe ....... ~~
BORDEN'S

Fru i,t ·Drinks .......G!~·
J'-

,',T.

•

,.

..J

FLAVORITE

¢

Dawn DetergenU

TWIN PAK
GALLON

$159

2% Milk ••••••••••••••••
•

' "-"

$ 29

'·.
4/$
oz
Argo Peas......... .;.. . . Ice Cream........~~!~ ...l ·
BORDEN'S ELSIE .

17

--

.,

'

LOW TAR-' ENRICHED FLAVOR'

v

NEW HAVEN PERSONAL
Mrs.' Rena Johnson visited her
daughter, Mae Robinson, Beat·
tyviUe, Ky., who has been ill. She
was accompanied by her daughter,
and son-in-law; Ada and Robert Hartman of Elkhart, Ind., and another
daughter, Anna Phillips of Belle, W.
Va .; they spent four days visiting
Mae, and her husband, Rev. Simon
Robinson, who is ~e pastor of the
First Church of God, Beattyville,
Ky.
,
HAVE GERMAN GUEST
CLIFTON, W. Va. - Unter Adler
(nicknamed Archie) !i Heilbronn,
Gy., was a guest of Randy Lewis and
his grandmother, Mrs. Laurene
Lewis, at their home in Clifton for a
month. Lewis and Adler became
good friends while Lewis was
stationed in the Anny in Germany.
Unter enjoyed swimming and
boating on the Ohio, and was .
especially impressed with the
beauty of the river.
Before his departure for Germany, he was taken sight seeing by
his friends, Randy and Greg Lewis,
Bob Rickard, and ltoger Fisher.
They went to Virginia Beach where
they enjoyed a swim in the ocean
and on to Washington, D. C. where
he saw our Capital.
Unter was honored with a goingaway dinner by Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Cartwright at their home in
Clifton. Attending were Unter, Mr.
and Mrs. John Sheets, Chris Grogan,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis, Mrs.
Katie Bass, K~ndra Bass, Mr. and
· - Mrs. Donald Smith and There!ill,
Mrs. Laurene Lewis, hosts, Mr. and
Mrs. Cartwright.
Unter received several gifts from
his many friends .

REUNION SLATED
MASON, W. Va. - The James .
· Wolfe 32nd resunion will be held on
August 10, at Racine, Ohio· at 'the
home of Mr. and Mrs. William
(Mickey ) Hoback, A covered dish
dinner will be served at I p.m.

Blind Taste Tests: In tests
_where brand ident!ty was conI

I

: Mason County
By Alma Marshall
Speeial Correspondent
WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va. - Mr.
and Mrs. J . C. Roush, West Columbia, entertained with a family picnic
. and swimming party on Sunday,
honoring Master Sgt. and Mrs. T. E.
Nicholson and daughter, Am!Jer,
who have transferred from McGuire
Air Force Base to Scott Air Force
Base in Illinois.
Those attending were Hallie and
Nellie Zerkle, Middleport; Mrs.
Margie Cartwright and ~ Chris
Grogen, Clifton; Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Rob1nson and family of Gallipolis;
Cheryl Robinson, a student at Ohio
.University; Mark Jensen, Columbus; May Kemp, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Bergdoll and family,
· Gallipolis; Mr. . and Mrs. Chester
R.oush and son, pt, Pleasant; Mr.
and Mrs. Curtis Roush and sons,
West Columbia; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Buckley, Hebron, Ohio; Mrs. Evelyn
Nicholson, ·Clifton ; Mary Roush,
Mason; Mike Roush, Rutland, 0.;
Connie Humphreys, Coalton, 0.;
Sherry Humphreys, of Michigan.
Mason and Clifton News
Amber Nicholson is staying with
her grandmother, Mrs. Evelyn
Nicholson while her parents, M;~ster
Sgt. and Mrs. T. E. Nicholson are
finding a place to live at Scott Air
Force Base, Ill.
Mr. and Mrs. Don. ~uissenberry
and daughters, Kim and Linda, of
South Charl,eston, visited recently
with her mother, Mrs . Thelma
Henry. They also visited his father,
Ben Quisenberry, a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Sherry Caraway of Ho~ton,
Texas spent a week visiting her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Posey at
Clifton.
·
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Landon
Smith recently included Mrs.
Smith's brother and family , Mr. and
Mrs. Charles King and son, Kirby, .
WoUforth, Texas; Mr. and Mrs. Curtis King and son of Chester, 0 .; Mr.
and Mrs. Carroll Shinn, Lowell and
Alisa, Leon; Mr. and Mrs . John
Gothard, Malvern, Pa.; ·Phillip
Gothard, Owensboro, Ky .; R. C.
King, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs.
Nelson Reynolds, Chester, Ohio;
Kenneth Reynolds, Mason.
Mr. and Mrs . Ray Proffitt and
Nancy visited this past week· with
their daughter and son-in-law and
grandchildren, Dr. and Mrs. Robert
E. McBride, Julie, Robbie a:- ~ Greg,
at Michigan City , Indiana
'

I'

•

SERVICES TODAY
'
' warFuneral services for Herman
ner were held this morning at 10.
a.m. at Ewing Cl\apel. The family
requests thilt in cli~jl of flowers
donations be made to St. Paul
Lutheran Church.

COUPON

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·-

10-The D~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesdn)' , July 16,!'98o

Miss Morris~turns nine

GBC graduation held
Graduating ceremonies were held
June 20- lit the Gallipolis Business
College with 12 graduates receiving
_ diplomas and associate degrees.
Usted are the following recipients:
Paul Black, Racine, associate
degree in business administration;
Connie Evans, Cheshire, general office diploma; William Linn, Letart,
W.Va., associate degree in business
administration; Gary Mitch,
Pomeroy, associate degree in
business administration; Rapdy

Tara Morris, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack MorrL•, observed her nin·
th birthday on July 11 with a pool
party at the home of her parents.
Gifts were presented and refreshments of cake, pop, and chips were
served to the. guests along · with
favors being given to each child. Attending were Robbie, Donna C.,
Melissa, Donna Y., Wanda, Eric,
and Deena Jacks; Sharon and Sonya
Wise; Jeremiah and' Israel Grimm;
Grace Welch; Ay Mora; Michfle
Garfield; Laura Hawthorne; Christi
and Michael .Hoffman, and Donna
Lambert.
Sending gifts, but unable to attend,
_ wj&gt;re Jan Smith, Tara's grand·
parents, Mr. and 'Mrs. Marvin
Morris and _ her uncle, Theron
Morris.

Mulford, Cheshire, associate degree
in blisiness administration; Peggy
Murphy, Pomeroy, general office
diploma ; Becky Phillips, Rutland,
general office diploma; Drema
Roach, Pomeroy, general office
'diploma ; Sur Turley, Crown City;
general office diploma; Jill
Walburn, Middleport, general office
diploma; Donald Whaley. Shade,
associate degree in business administration; · Norma Wilson,
Pomeroy, general office diploma.

.

Amateur Garden -Club carries
out Hawaiian theme recently
The July meeting of the Amateur
Gardeners was held at the home of
Mrs. Harold Lohse with Mrs. Lohse
_ and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee serVing as
' hostesses.
Erma Smith, president, opened
the meeting with the club collect.
Mrs. Blakeslee had devotions. She
read the first chapter of Psalm first
through fifth verses and "Daisies of
Dedication."

Roll call was to name a bulb to
plant. A Hawaiian theme was
carried out with members dressed in
Hawaiian attire.
The slate of officers were present~d by Grace Pratt and accepted by
the members.
·Officers for the corning year are
Erma Smith, president, Mrs. Lillian
Moore, vice president, Mrs. Jean
Moore, secretary, _and Mrs. Veda
Davis, treasurer.
Cards were signed for Veda Davis
,who just returned home from the
hospital and for R~se Reynolds who
is ill and presently staying with her
sister, .Mrs. ·Conroy. A book was
shown that was purchased for the
library, " Complete Flow'e r
Arranging," by Shelia Macqueens.

\

A £ilm from the library, "Garden
of God" was shown by Mrs. Ruth
Powers.
·
Jared Sheets, grandson of Mrs.
Lohse, gave a safety speech on
bicycles that won in the county
safety 4-H speaking contest. The
title of his speech' was "To Be Safe
Be Seen."
Guests attending were-Mrs. Cora
Beegle, Mrs. Gladys Cumings, Mrs.
Ruth Powers, Jared Sheets and Mrs.
Jennifer Sheets who entertained
with Hawaiian music on the organ
and assisted in passing out Hawaiian
seed necklaces to each member and
, guest.
_
A Hawaiian theme was carried out
with a salad course and centerpiece
by the hostesses, Mrs. Lohse and
Mrs. Blakeslee.
The next meeting will be a family
picnic at the Mason Park on Aug. 13
at6:30 p.m. '
Others attending In addition to
those named were Jean Moore,
Kathryn Hysell, Grace Pratt, Bernice Ann Durst, Maxine Gaskill,
EliZabeth Burkett, Kate Swanson
and Marjorie Fetty.

·Health Review.

• •

Is aspirin good for arthritis
By Robert~- Stockmal,
D.O.,Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
of Family Medicine
Ohio University C~llege
of Osteopathic Medicine

\

.

.QUESTION: My doctor told me to
take aspirin for my arthritis. We
always used aspirin fur headaches
and for Cold . s:ymptums and
somehow by reconunending aspirin,
I get the impression that my doctor
isn 't taking my condition very
seriously, Is aspirin good fur arthritis?
ANSWER: Aspirin is actually the
"drug of first choice" fur many forms of arthritis. In addition to its pain
relieving and fever redu_cing properties it also has the important effect
of reducing inflanunatiun. "Arthritis" means joint inflammation
and the control of this inflammation
is a key part uf any treatment
program. Aspirin belongs to a group
uf anti-inflammatory agents called
"salicylates."
QUESTION: What about all those
new modern medicines for arthritis?
A'NSWER : The. must frequently
used category nf arthritis
medications is the "nunsteuriudal

TOPS meets
Nancy Powell lost the most
weight, and there was a tie for runner-up at the Monday evening
Mason class of Slinderella.
In the Tuesday morning Mason
class Lois Cunningham lost the most
weight and received her 20 pound
ribbon and certificate. Nita Conde
was runner-up and one new member
was accepted into membership.
At the Middleport Tuesday night
class Isabel Lewis lost the most
weight while the Chester class tQOk
in two new members and Melissa
Barker was the runner-up.
New members are always accepted and infonnation may .be otr
tained by calling Jo Ann Newsome,
lecturer, at 992-3382. '
'
BARBECUE PLANNED
The New Haven Volunteer Fire

Department Auxiliary will hold a
chicken barbecue on July 19, from 11
am. until all chicken is sold. ..
The event will be held aHhe fire
station in New Haven. The lhenu includes chicken, hot dogs, baked
beans, cole slaw and tolls.

Tara Morris

HOW TO REMOVE ODOR
Run the blade of a knife through a
potato in order to remove the odor of
onion or garlicfrom it. -

McLis~a

Walters oldest
at annual V ar~...:e reun1on
I•

The Vance family reunion, descendants of the late Eli Nelson and Mag·
gie Perry Vance, was held recently
at the home of Mrs. Judy McGraw,
Racine.
The oldest family member attending was Mrs. MeLissa Waters,
Vinton. Miss Stacy Ann Warden of
Shadyside wsa the youngest.
Others attending were Eli arid
Esther Vance; Linda Wise and son,
Chris , Santana, Fla.; Brenda
Bruce, son and daughter, H. Duane
and Stephanie, West Palm"Beach,
' Fla.; Doug and Bunni Warden and
da_ughter, Sta'cy, Shadyside; Fred
Waters, Ray, Ohio; Winfield and
Sara Rutherford Vinson, Fred and
Dora Harshbarger, ·Larry and Pat
Townsend, daughter Amy, Milton,
W. Va. ; Delores Rutherford, Huntington, W.Va.; Ermond and Oretha

Vance, daughter, Dianna, Crown
City ; J.'hil and Lola Bright,
Wellston; Obe Bright, Daytona
Beach, Fla.; Bill and Betty McGinnis, Sue Davis, son Tom, daughter
Jennifer, Colwnbus; Lawrence and
Ute Vance, Charleston; P~tul and
~oyce Brooks, sons, James and Jeff,
Logan, W. Va.; Andy Hale, sons
Shawn and Bjon, Germany; Stan
Bowman, Crown City; Jim Evans ,
and daugfiters, Daria, Jessica and
Sharon, and sons, Jeff and Tim,
Tracy McGraw and Scott Frederick,
Racine; Sonny and Linda Pitt,
daughter, Shery, and son, Jason,
Wellston.
Games were played and music enjoyed by members of the family,
Grace was led by Larry Townsend .
with the family enjoying a potluck
dinner in the afternoon.
'

Happy Harvesters class meets

anti-inflammatory'' 'group which includes the salicylates mentioned
above and the newer non-salicylates
The s!)Cretary and tr~asurer
The Happy Harvesters class
which include the cununonly used :
reports
were given and approved. A
meeting
was
held
July
11
at
1'
p.m.,
Nalfun, Mutrin, Naprosyn, lndocin,
rummage
sale held by the class was
__
in
the
,
!IOCial
room
of
the
Trinity
Tolectin, Clinoril, Butazolidin, and
Church,
with
nine
members
and
one
reported
to
have been succe5sful.
TandeariL These newer medications
guest
present
.
Silk
roses
with
greenery will be sent
are as effective as the salicylates,
The meeting opened with prayer
to members who are confined to the
but are often used as substitutes
because they have fewer side ef- and devotions by President Erma hospital.
The meeting was closed with
fects. In general, the non-salicylates Smith and group singing. A welcome
have fewer stomach and intestinal was extended to Lillie Hauck, who in members reciting the Lord'&gt;
Prayer. Refreslunents were served
s1de effects, less chance uf causing turn thanked everyone for flowers,
by Mrs. Philp Meinhart and Miss Erhearing and balance problems and a cards, and prayers during her con·
·
valescence
following
her
accident.
A
ma
Smith. Hostesses for the next
convenience feawre of less frequent
meeting
will be Wilma Terrell and
note
was
read
from
Caryl
Cook
who
dosage. These drug's, however, do
Stella
Kloes,
with devotions by Eva
is
visiting
her
daughter
and.
family
have some side effects uf t11eir own
'in
Connecticut,
and
the
group
sang
Dessauer.
which make them undesirable fur
happy birthday to Ruth Massar.
certain persons. They also usually
cost more than aspirin and require a
physician's pescription. The pain
relieving acetamlnophens 1Tylenol
and others i are nut anti•
inflanunatory ~ubstitutes fur aspirin
and the other members of this
category.
QUESTION: Whatshuuldldo?
Out-of-town relatives and friends Forrest Clark, Patricia Clatworthy,
ANSWER : Take your physician's ·
·attending
the funeral services for Charlene Stephens, i\llen Swindell,
advice and take the recotnmended
Wayne
Swisher
held Saturday were Mr. and Mrs. Roy Donovan, Mr. and
number uf aspirins at the directed
Mrs.
Ralph
Painter,
Bill Barker, Mrs. Mark Stuller, Mr. and Mrs.
times. Remember to take them
Dave
Hall,
Roger
Gilkey,
Bob Robert Cross, Jeanne Hines, Jeff
regularly even when you think you
Wingett,
Curtis
Roush,
Charles
Gibbs, Mr. and·Mrs. Joe Sabino, Mr.
dun 't need them. Don't substitute
Whisler,
Dan
Landstrom,
Mr.
and
and Mrs. Fred Kanbtice, Mr. and
another drug without consulting
Mrs.
David
Swisher,
Mrs.
WiUiam
Mrs. Claude Rupe, Joe Bradbury, ·
your physician. Tell your physician
Tripp,
,Mr.
and
Mrs.
Vitus
HarUey,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bradbury, Ray
if you experience ringing in your
·
Jr.,
Paul
Somerville,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hines, Perry Rupe and Mr. and Mrs.
cars or any ususual side effects.
William
Peck,
Dr.
and
Mrs.
Steve
Paul Adkins.
Take your aspirins with a full glass
Lowell,
Michael
Whalen,
Mr.
and
Pallbearers were Ken Mcuf water ur other fluid. Don't be
!'&gt;VsLayton
Stewart,
Laura
Ann Cullough, Charles Riffle, Richard
f&lt;HIIed into thinking that aspirin is
nut a real medication with· Flowers, Geneva Durst, Jean Bar- Jones, Ted Reed, Robert Cross, W.
ney, Sara Suskin, Linda Barney, Mr. , A. Gibbs, Paul Kloes, and Paul
significant benefit just because it's
and
Mrs. John Hood, Mrs. Annabelle Chitpman.
been available for a lung time and
Fellure,
Paul Kerns, J,ucille Bauer,
Honorary pallbearers were
without a prescription. Dun 't forget
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Milton
Houdashelt,
Richard Follrod, Allton Lucke, Ferthat aspirin -has been .in use fur
Jean
Forlus,
Charlie
Deal,
Mr.
and
man Moore, CliffQrd Hill, f!arry
almost 80 years and is safe and efMrs.
Homer
Hankins,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hill,
Russell QuiUen, George--Harris,
fective when taken correctly. ·
Ed Tewksbarry, Mr. and Mrs . . Harold Lohse, Les Fultz, Thereon
Charles Lanham,. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, Roy Donovan, Don HwnDallas Kayser, Mrs. Charlie Brown, phrey, Bobby Dill, Fred Crow, Roy
Karen Finnicum, Mr. and Mrs. Betzing, Rolland Neutzling, Paul
Craig Barnes, Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Eich, Don Kelly, Fred Smith and
Parks, Mr. and Mrs. Rick Northup, Bob Carsey.
WEDNESDAY
SOUTHERN LOCAL Board of
Education ·Wednesday at 7 ·p.m. in
the cafeteria at the high schooL All
interested petsons of the district are
BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
invited to review the budget for the
ALL SEArs JUST$ 1.50
calendar year of 1961 prior to the
meeting.

Many out-of-towners meet
to honor late Mr. Swisher

-~-- Social Calendar

Church honors minister
- na , Mrs. Sina Murphy, AIT1 and
The Ches ter United Methodist , Tracey, Mrs. Jackie Frost, Mrs. LinChurch honored the Hev. and Mrs.
Richard Tt10mas following Bible da King, Mrs. Grace Gumpf, Mrs.
Debbie Chevalier , Mrs. Altona Karr,
Study Thursday evening, July 10,
Mrs. Inez Ca rson, Mrs. Pat Koblentz
with a reception and social hour.
and Susan, Mrs. Kathryn Mora,
On behalf of the congr~gation ,
Mrs. Betty Roush, Mrs. Mildred
Mrs. Betty Roush welcomed the
Thomas,
and ihe-)lonor~d guests,
honored couple and presented them
Rev, and Mrs. Thomas.
a gift.
The Rev. Thomas, who is beginning his third year as pastor of the
Chester ·United Methodist Church
spoke briefly. The pastor offered
prayer after which refreshments
were served by the women of the
church. Those attending were Mr .
and Mrs. James Hoffman, Mr. and
Mrs. George Wolf, Mr. and Mrs.
Roscoe Hollon, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Roush, Mr. an~ Mrs. Paul Ka1·r and
David, Lawrence Stewart, Mrs.
Marilyn Spencer, Trisha and Donnie, Mr : and Mrs. Patrick Morrisey.
With rough, tough leather
Tom and Carrie, Mrs. Gayann Clay.
moccasins with just. your
Mrs. Jenny Machir, Sara and Shan-

Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Of my three mol;her~ --:- my
natural one who · ran away
from Dad when I was three
and I' never saw again; my
first st~mother (Rae ); and
my second, I like the first
step-mom best. In fact, I consider Rae my real mother.
She'and Dad divorced when I
was 14, but I see her at least
once a week and take all my
problems to her. She's one
terrific person. She really
cares for me, and I couldn't
'do without her.
Everything was okay until
Dad started thinking I wasn't
being very considerate of
New Step-mother because I
turned to No. 1 most. He says
I should cut down my visits to
Rae, as Nora (No. 2) might
feel left out. We're pretty
good friends, but really; Rae
is my mother. She raised me.
Must I change my allegiance
just because Dad changed
wives?- DOTTIE .

A pre-registration party has been
planned for those who will be attend·
ing Bible school at Midldeport
Church of Christ, corner of 5th and
Main. The party will be Saturday,July 19 from 11 :30 a.m. to 1 p.m.,
with previews of carnival games
thii[ will be held at the end of Bible
school. Refreshm~nts
be served.
The theme of this year's Bible
school is "Jesus and You The Winning Team" and will be held July 28,
through August I, from 9 a.m.-11 :30
a.m. daily. A contest will be staged
. throughout the week to help accumulate points toward tickets for
the carnival that will be held August
2.

.-

CAPTAIN EASY

in

BORN LOSER

stock!

I'IA T~.. .I DIDIJ'T
(.,6.TCJ.I ~ !JAM~-

will

-

:ll

ANNIE :

c

-HERE IT IS, KIDctl! THE OF COURS~ .
COMPUTER READ-OUT ,1 ALL , MR.
THE COMPANY'S RECORDS BANGAVEL.
IN CODE ! THINK YA C'N
MEMORIZE IT?
____,..,_

m

' OF LIBERTY"
"VOICES
TO APPEAR

The Voices of Liberty have been·
invited to appear at the annual Rio
Grande Bean· Dinner to be held at
Bob Evans Farm on Saturday,
August 9, 1980. They will be presenting selections from the musical,
"Ring All The Bells of f'reedom:"
Rehearsal will be at 8 p.m. this
evening at the ·Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. 'All former members are urged to attend the rehearsal.

Dr. Lamb

0

Cl

ATTA GIRL! FE~ ANOTHER THING,
YOU'LL REALLY DRESS UP THE 01!
PLACE! MY LAST 5EKKATE~RY
HADDA FACE THAT LOOKED LIKE
IT WORE OUT TWO

BODIES!

Woman refuses to take estrogen

- 1 HOPE HEY! t'IHADDAYA AFRAID I'M
THI5 JOB GOHNA CHASE YA AROUND
DOE6N'T Tti' DESK? BE COOL, DOLL,'
ENTAILTH15 15 A
CLASS OUTFIT!

CHAPMAN
SHOES.

"Nextto E lberfelds
in Pomeroy,Oh."

ALLEYOOP
waL, I FIGURED
IT'D KEEP 'EM
8t.ISI" FOR A WHil-E ...

.. . BUT WE'RE NOT

.

OUTATH'~

?

YliT! SOONER OR
LAilOR, THEY'LL
COME LC()I(IN'

FOR US!

More Reductions# ·
"'~,r'\

,

o "'c{'

ENTIRE STOCK

FAVORITE PHOTOS

PAINT

FRAME

pt~lm .

doesn't

MENS SUMMER

!&amp;;now where

MESH BALL

'1. .

CAPS .

Outtldl wr.ltt, porch tncl floor
.,11'1'111, IIH'I~ ptiN, 11 .. 1
wtll

tn ell on ..11.

30%m.

I

IIi IS .

Sh es
. ..

Csob).qone!

ilhere,
~
Yiilu jes' needs
some food in

40U!

$166

PRICE

WOMEN$
SUMMER

ALL
WOMENS
SHORTS

HANDBAGS

-1;2

we do, that the woman who ·
raised you should have. fir.st
priority in your life.
Your father can't expect
you to change mothers, just
because he changed wives. HELEN

hits just where your top back.
bone protrudes most.
_
Why can't manufactur~rs ·
put their labels on a sld&amp;seam - and stop liSing ny~on.,
in them? Sure, those washing
instructions are necessary,..
but not where they cause
NOTE FROM SUE : But be twitchy, itchy bitchiness!
sure you don't make com· LABEL LOATHER
parisons or otherwise create
jealousy. You've a right to DEARL.L.:
your preferences, but keep
Either manufactu_ers and
your prejudices (if you have designers have very tough
any) to yourself.
necks or else they don't wear
"labeled" cloths. Otherwise,
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
this neck torture would have
Here's a whyohwhy for been eliminated long ago. .
you: Why do manufacturers
Let's hope your letter is
torture us by sewing those it· ead in the clothing industry.
chy, s~ratchy labels into gar· It's long overdue! - HELEN
ment necklines? When they ANDSUE
'
were made of cotton, they at
least softened with washing, DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
and when 'they were stitched
What's the difference bet·,
with cotton thread, it didn't ween first cousin, and oncecut into you like wire ~ removed cousin?
Besides, they were easy, to CURIOUS
remove, but now they're
practically a part of the CURIOUS:
material, and if you cut them
It's a generational diF
off, you've still got residue ference: If your first cousin
DEAR DO'ITIE:
Since you're pretty good "scratch."
has a child, then he is your
Of
all
places
to
put
a
label,
friends with Nora, why not
first _cousin, once removed. ·
discuss the situation with the neckline is worst, as it Okay? -HELEN AND SUE her? Perhaps she'll feel, as

kind of style. Thick crepe
soles with adjustable lacing and fashionable looks.
Many other
styles

School registration set

REDUCED

%

PRICE

of the menopause while
By'Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
others
do.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I've
Women
who have had a
read a nwnber of articles ·
hysterectomy
should be ababout the use of estrogen in
the menopause but it's solutely certain what the
usually in women who have surgery included. A comhad a normal menopause. plete hysterectomy does not
What about women who have mean that the ovaries have
had a hysterectomy at 49 or been removed. It means that
even yoWJger as in my case? · all of the uterus, cervix and
I don't want to take hormone body of the uterus, has been
shots so I was given removed. If the ovaries are
Bellergal S which does left in and are normal, they
nothing for me. The flashes will function like normal
are pretty bad but I won't ovaries. That also means
take hormones because of all that they'll quit at the usual
the side effects, known and age of the menopause.
. The reason it's so im·
unknown.
portanUo
know if the ovaries
I weigh 129 pounds and am
are
still'
"
in
is that cancer of
5 foot 2. I only weighed 119
PQunds before the surgery. I the ovaries can and does oc·
was up to 132 within a month cur. It's not as common as
after the su~gery. , It sure is cancer of the uterus but,
hard not to ptck at food, even nevertheless, it's all too com·
knowing I'm not hungry and · mon. Women who still have
shouldn't. Are there any their ovaries need to have a
regular examination direcpamphlets on our problem?
ted
tpward as early detection
DEAR READER - The
loss of normal function of the of ovarian cancer as possible
ovaries, whether through should it occur.
I'm sending you The
normal involution with the
Health
Letter nwnber 14-12,
usual menOf)ause or from
surgical ·removal, has essen· Hysterectomy, Cystocele
tially the same effects. Some And Rectocele, to give you
women produce enough more information about the
female hormones from the problems related to
adrenal gland to prevent hysterectomy and female
some of the changes that are surgery. Other readers who
seen with ovarian failure. want this issue can send 75
That's one of the reasons why cents with a long, stamped,
some women don't need self-addressed envelope for
female honriones at the time it. Send your request to me,

in care of this newspaper, P:
0. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.

Now I'm not too happy with
your adamant decision not to
use any female hormones.
Let your doctor decide
whether you need them or.
not. They are very helpful ip
eliminating hot flashes. If
you no longer have a uterus,
there's no danger of your getting cancer of the uterus.
That's the main concern in
using female hormones for
relief · of hot flashes or
menopause symptoms. The
other unanswered question is
what their relationship is tci'.
breast cancer but, ap· _
parently, if you do not have lwnpy breasts to begin with :
and don't develop lwnPY:
breasts, that is not an im-·
portant consideration either.
Unless you have a breast
problem, I woulcJ. rather see '
you take a small amount of-.
female hormones to relieve-:
your symptoms than to take:
Be:Jergal S. Why? Because '
Bellergal S contains·
phenobarbital and if yo!J take ·
that regularly in reasonable ·
amounts, it can be habit for- ·
ming. Also it contains
another ingredient which
sometimes causes con·
striction of arteries and a.
tendency to develop high' .
blood pressure.

,WINNIF;
)()IJ 'VE GOT A

E vtr)lone
goes .
Harw,lt' plenten , ltoor
~=~ · o~e Sft, 'l'ou'll

30 % m.

r-"

lj2

PRICE

BROTHER,

MY

you

SURf HAl?

ME WORRIED
FO R

-e,oo

Cil Ut!JIJ (lliliDilii GJ NEWS
CIJ ROSSBAGLEYHOURIJOINED
IN PROGRESS!
(]) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
Cil ABC NEWS
rtJ (J:j) ZOOM
6 :30 C2J 8 C!J NBC NEWS
{]) I LOVE LUCY
- ClJ CAROL BURNETT AND

Ci!"'Jort Top!
Regul" 39'

1 PRICE

FRIENDS- ·
liiCIJ®l CBS NEWS
rtJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
illJ VILLA ALEGRE
iUl Ql ABC NEWS
6 :58 CII NEWS UPDATE
7:00 C2J G C!J 1980REPUBLICANIIA·
TIONAL CONVENTION The exact
starting time and length of conven-

BARNEY

YOU GITONE
END AN' I'LL
GIT T'OTHER

LET'S TOTE
THIS 01: LOG
OVER TO
TH. WOODPILE I
TATER--·

12 Pack
STYIOFO.M

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SOME CeOUD5

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•

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' I

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$117

' REG. 11.00
Th11 Last

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.·

@ MOVIE -(WESTERN)

JULY 16. 19BQ,

'

t~nel

Evening television listings

A

MINUTE !

NYLONS

h&lt;tflfol lng SPIICI' , K1

Illest s~tmmct• pllnt~
J~.ir\1 11 big u vlngs

IS

WffEW/

KNEE HI

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tt~h e

M.Y TWIN

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WOMENS

VON 1T HAVE

TO I'.ORRY 'THOUGH...

ME.· YO U ANI? MY
TWIN BROTHE.R ...

PANTS
And
SKIRTS
........,_
...

We

)()lJ

CONFESSION TO
MAKE ? i?O~I'T TELL

Women• Summer

. . .r ....

&lt;,

Her favorite 'mother' not anymore.

TO SCHOOL!

LAWN
. CHAIR'
•

614/992·2133
.

DID YOU

IN THERE?

Rea. •2!29

. .BANK ONE:. _

BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA

HOW L.ONG

~EEP

FOR BACK

. MULTICOLOR

I

Helen Help Us

WHAT TINII= IS IT?

GEITING READY

THURSDAY
MAGNOLIA CLUB THursday 6:30
p.m. at park on 1-J. S. 33. Bring own
table serviee, · covered dish jlnd
beverage.

. . .TO BUSINESS. INDUSTRY,
- -AND THE PROFESSIONS

'

I
7- f{•

,.

•

~..

Coll'en~ge

is

subject

to

change.
CIJ BIBLE BOWL
1JJ HOGAN'S HEROES
•
CIJ GlJ ID FACE THE MUSIC
lii (J) TICTACDOUGH
C8J MACNEIL,LEHRER REPORT
@I NEWS
(j] DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 CIJ ATHOMEWITHTHEBIBLE
(!l ·WHODUNIT? 'Greeleal UnsolvBd Mysteri es ' The world's
mosl widely -publi cize d mystery
c ases · Jack Ihe Ripper. Lizzie Borden, Amelia Earhar~ ana others on
this e,;olusive . Arme d with some
previously undis c losed clues,
you' re the detect ive on the case ot
these unsolved puzzles .
(]) ALLIN THE FAMILY
CIJ (j])GJ THE 'BOVOTE: REPUB·
' LICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION
fhe exact sta rting time and length
of convent ion coverage is sUbJect
to change . 1
Iii @ CAMPAIGN '80: REPUB·
LICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION
The exact slarting lim e and length~
of convent ion c overag e i s subJect
to change .
(9l DICK CAVETT SHOW
(101 THE JUDGE
. (11l .MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
7 :5 8 ( 3 1 NEWSUPO I\ T E
6 :00 13 ) FOCUSONTH E f .\ MILY

•

••y,

" St.!iecoach" 1966
•
ltJ(ll) GREAT PERFORMANCES
'Abide With Me' Cathleen Neabittia
featured in Julian Mitchell' s drama11 za tion ot 1he c ompl eK rei atlon ship
between a strict. lonely dowager
and the young girl who is hired.as
her housekeeper . (90 mlna.)
@I CAMPAIGN 'SO: REPUBLICAN
. NATIONAL CONVENTION The
exact starting time and lenQth of
convention colo'erage Is subje ct to
change .
8 '30 CIJ PRESENCE OF GOD
(J) MOVIE ·(DRAMA! "Yo'
11
Ufeguard" 1976
6:58 'CIJ NEWS UPDATE
9 :00 Cil 700 CLUB
9:30 (J) (j] DIVINE MADNESSThialilm
ia about a theater ·dance c amp in
Steamb oat Springs, Colorado ,
rounded in 1913byPonla Mansfield
and Charlott e Perry.
10:00 CII GENERATIONONTHEWINDA
documentEHY. film on the planning
alld construction of the world ' s ta r·
geatandmostpo:tJertutwindmill, oft
!he cOset at New Bedford, Mass .
(6.0mins.)
illJ NEWS
10:28 Cil NEWS UPDATE
!0:30 .
MAX MORRIS
I]) JOHNNY MATHIS IN CONC!AT Taped at the Royal Albert
Hallin London , this apec lalcon cert
per.lormen ce stars Johnny Mathi s
singing his sentimental songs and
romantic ballads that have moved
listeners for more than two
decades.
(1) SOCCERAtlenta OhiefsvaSan
Oieg'o Sockeirs
CID OVER EASY 'Pre -.Retirement
Planning' Host : Hugh Downs .
(Closed C,aptioned)
10:58 I]) NEWS UPDATE
11 :00 Cil G C!J @J NEWS
,CIJ JEWISH VOICE
(J) DAVE IIILLEN AT LARGE
&lt;llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
1 L28 l1.J NEWS UPDATE
·
11 :30 (2) 0 (fJ THE TONiGHT SHOW
' B'es t 0 1Car s·on Guest s· Andv WI\hH ·ms . Burlf HtHH 9. F . l ee B ailey .

CD

·.~

"'

(

'

I

(Due to convention coverage , the
staningtime of Tl'1e Tonight Show is
subject to change.
CII ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
C!J MOVIE ·(AOVENTUREI"'I'o

"Killer Flah" 1979

CII

ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
@JMOVIE-(MUSICALI"I'o "New "

Moon"1040
12:00 CIJ iiiCIJIUJGJ NEWS
12:30 {]) MOVIE ·(COMEDY! •• "It 's '
Your Move" 1968
I1J iUl GJ
ABC
NEWS
NIGHTLINE
Iii CIJ CBS LATE MOVIE 'THE •
SAINT: locate And Destroy' The
Saiht, attemptin"g to avert a simple ~
holdufl, steps into the drama of a
sear ch bv lstaeli &amp;llents for a
former Nazi. 'BLACK SHEEP
SQUADRON : The Sh ow Must Go
On ' Slars : Robert Conrad . Simon
Oak Iand. (Due to convent ion cover·
age the starting time of The CBS
LATE Movie ls subjec t to c hange.
12,50 IUJQ) NEWS
1:00 CDO TOMORRQW
Cil GOODNEWS
C!J NEWS"
1:30 Cil REX HUMBARD
2'00 (IQ) I BELIEVE
2 :30 CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
{]) NEWS
2 :35 IJJ MOVIE ·(DRAMAI ' "KIIIoro

Three" 1968

4 :00
4 :35

CII 700 CLUB
IJJ MOVIE 1MYSTERYI"

" Char- -

IIi Chon In Shanghai " 1935

5 :30

Cil

BOB GASS

STATUE OF UBERTY
. Since 1886, the Statue of Liberty •
enlightening the world, has stood as
a symbol of freedot'n in New York ;
harbor. It also cominemorates French-American friendship, For it . was

given by the people of Fra n.c •:. The
1

s{8tU4.:.'"'" was designed by F'. rccil'rk
Au ~us t e

Burlholdi 11334-19041.

�-'
·-

10-The D~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesdn)' , July 16,!'98o

Miss Morris~turns nine

GBC graduation held
Graduating ceremonies were held
June 20- lit the Gallipolis Business
College with 12 graduates receiving
_ diplomas and associate degrees.
Usted are the following recipients:
Paul Black, Racine, associate
degree in business administration;
Connie Evans, Cheshire, general office diploma; William Linn, Letart,
W.Va., associate degree in business
administration; Gary Mitch,
Pomeroy, associate degree in
business administration; Rapdy

Tara Morris, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack MorrL•, observed her nin·
th birthday on July 11 with a pool
party at the home of her parents.
Gifts were presented and refreshments of cake, pop, and chips were
served to the. guests along · with
favors being given to each child. Attending were Robbie, Donna C.,
Melissa, Donna Y., Wanda, Eric,
and Deena Jacks; Sharon and Sonya
Wise; Jeremiah and' Israel Grimm;
Grace Welch; Ay Mora; Michfle
Garfield; Laura Hawthorne; Christi
and Michael .Hoffman, and Donna
Lambert.
Sending gifts, but unable to attend,
_ wj&gt;re Jan Smith, Tara's grand·
parents, Mr. and 'Mrs. Marvin
Morris and _ her uncle, Theron
Morris.

Mulford, Cheshire, associate degree
in blisiness administration; Peggy
Murphy, Pomeroy, general office
diploma ; Becky Phillips, Rutland,
general office diploma; Drema
Roach, Pomeroy, general office
'diploma ; Sur Turley, Crown City;
general office diploma; Jill
Walburn, Middleport, general office
diploma; Donald Whaley. Shade,
associate degree in business administration; · Norma Wilson,
Pomeroy, general office diploma.

.

Amateur Garden -Club carries
out Hawaiian theme recently
The July meeting of the Amateur
Gardeners was held at the home of
Mrs. Harold Lohse with Mrs. Lohse
_ and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee serVing as
' hostesses.
Erma Smith, president, opened
the meeting with the club collect.
Mrs. Blakeslee had devotions. She
read the first chapter of Psalm first
through fifth verses and "Daisies of
Dedication."

Roll call was to name a bulb to
plant. A Hawaiian theme was
carried out with members dressed in
Hawaiian attire.
The slate of officers were present~d by Grace Pratt and accepted by
the members.
·Officers for the corning year are
Erma Smith, president, Mrs. Lillian
Moore, vice president, Mrs. Jean
Moore, secretary, _and Mrs. Veda
Davis, treasurer.
Cards were signed for Veda Davis
,who just returned home from the
hospital and for R~se Reynolds who
is ill and presently staying with her
sister, .Mrs. ·Conroy. A book was
shown that was purchased for the
library, " Complete Flow'e r
Arranging," by Shelia Macqueens.

\

A £ilm from the library, "Garden
of God" was shown by Mrs. Ruth
Powers.
·
Jared Sheets, grandson of Mrs.
Lohse, gave a safety speech on
bicycles that won in the county
safety 4-H speaking contest. The
title of his speech' was "To Be Safe
Be Seen."
Guests attending were-Mrs. Cora
Beegle, Mrs. Gladys Cumings, Mrs.
Ruth Powers, Jared Sheets and Mrs.
Jennifer Sheets who entertained
with Hawaiian music on the organ
and assisted in passing out Hawaiian
seed necklaces to each member and
, guest.
_
A Hawaiian theme was carried out
with a salad course and centerpiece
by the hostesses, Mrs. Lohse and
Mrs. Blakeslee.
The next meeting will be a family
picnic at the Mason Park on Aug. 13
at6:30 p.m. '
Others attending In addition to
those named were Jean Moore,
Kathryn Hysell, Grace Pratt, Bernice Ann Durst, Maxine Gaskill,
EliZabeth Burkett, Kate Swanson
and Marjorie Fetty.

·Health Review.

• •

Is aspirin good for arthritis
By Robert~- Stockmal,
D.O.,Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
of Family Medicine
Ohio University C~llege
of Osteopathic Medicine

\

.

.QUESTION: My doctor told me to
take aspirin for my arthritis. We
always used aspirin fur headaches
and for Cold . s:ymptums and
somehow by reconunending aspirin,
I get the impression that my doctor
isn 't taking my condition very
seriously, Is aspirin good fur arthritis?
ANSWER: Aspirin is actually the
"drug of first choice" fur many forms of arthritis. In addition to its pain
relieving and fever redu_cing properties it also has the important effect
of reducing inflanunatiun. "Arthritis" means joint inflammation
and the control of this inflammation
is a key part uf any treatment
program. Aspirin belongs to a group
uf anti-inflammatory agents called
"salicylates."
QUESTION: What about all those
new modern medicines for arthritis?
A'NSWER : The. must frequently
used category nf arthritis
medications is the "nunsteuriudal

TOPS meets
Nancy Powell lost the most
weight, and there was a tie for runner-up at the Monday evening
Mason class of Slinderella.
In the Tuesday morning Mason
class Lois Cunningham lost the most
weight and received her 20 pound
ribbon and certificate. Nita Conde
was runner-up and one new member
was accepted into membership.
At the Middleport Tuesday night
class Isabel Lewis lost the most
weight while the Chester class tQOk
in two new members and Melissa
Barker was the runner-up.
New members are always accepted and infonnation may .be otr
tained by calling Jo Ann Newsome,
lecturer, at 992-3382. '
'
BARBECUE PLANNED
The New Haven Volunteer Fire

Department Auxiliary will hold a
chicken barbecue on July 19, from 11
am. until all chicken is sold. ..
The event will be held aHhe fire
station in New Haven. The lhenu includes chicken, hot dogs, baked
beans, cole slaw and tolls.

Tara Morris

HOW TO REMOVE ODOR
Run the blade of a knife through a
potato in order to remove the odor of
onion or garlicfrom it. -

McLis~a

Walters oldest
at annual V ar~...:e reun1on
I•

The Vance family reunion, descendants of the late Eli Nelson and Mag·
gie Perry Vance, was held recently
at the home of Mrs. Judy McGraw,
Racine.
The oldest family member attending was Mrs. MeLissa Waters,
Vinton. Miss Stacy Ann Warden of
Shadyside wsa the youngest.
Others attending were Eli arid
Esther Vance; Linda Wise and son,
Chris , Santana, Fla.; Brenda
Bruce, son and daughter, H. Duane
and Stephanie, West Palm"Beach,
' Fla.; Doug and Bunni Warden and
da_ughter, Sta'cy, Shadyside; Fred
Waters, Ray, Ohio; Winfield and
Sara Rutherford Vinson, Fred and
Dora Harshbarger, ·Larry and Pat
Townsend, daughter Amy, Milton,
W. Va. ; Delores Rutherford, Huntington, W.Va.; Ermond and Oretha

Vance, daughter, Dianna, Crown
City ; J.'hil and Lola Bright,
Wellston; Obe Bright, Daytona
Beach, Fla.; Bill and Betty McGinnis, Sue Davis, son Tom, daughter
Jennifer, Colwnbus; Lawrence and
Ute Vance, Charleston; P~tul and
~oyce Brooks, sons, James and Jeff,
Logan, W. Va.; Andy Hale, sons
Shawn and Bjon, Germany; Stan
Bowman, Crown City; Jim Evans ,
and daugfiters, Daria, Jessica and
Sharon, and sons, Jeff and Tim,
Tracy McGraw and Scott Frederick,
Racine; Sonny and Linda Pitt,
daughter, Shery, and son, Jason,
Wellston.
Games were played and music enjoyed by members of the family,
Grace was led by Larry Townsend .
with the family enjoying a potluck
dinner in the afternoon.
'

Happy Harvesters class meets

anti-inflammatory'' 'group which includes the salicylates mentioned
above and the newer non-salicylates
The s!)Cretary and tr~asurer
The Happy Harvesters class
which include the cununonly used :
reports
were given and approved. A
meeting
was
held
July
11
at
1'
p.m.,
Nalfun, Mutrin, Naprosyn, lndocin,
rummage
sale held by the class was
__
in
the
,
!IOCial
room
of
the
Trinity
Tolectin, Clinoril, Butazolidin, and
Church,
with
nine
members
and
one
reported
to
have been succe5sful.
TandeariL These newer medications
guest
present
.
Silk
roses
with
greenery will be sent
are as effective as the salicylates,
The meeting opened with prayer
to members who are confined to the
but are often used as substitutes
because they have fewer side ef- and devotions by President Erma hospital.
The meeting was closed with
fects. In general, the non-salicylates Smith and group singing. A welcome
have fewer stomach and intestinal was extended to Lillie Hauck, who in members reciting the Lord'&gt;
Prayer. Refreslunents were served
s1de effects, less chance uf causing turn thanked everyone for flowers,
by Mrs. Philp Meinhart and Miss Erhearing and balance problems and a cards, and prayers during her con·
·
valescence
following
her
accident.
A
ma
Smith. Hostesses for the next
convenience feawre of less frequent
meeting
will be Wilma Terrell and
note
was
read
from
Caryl
Cook
who
dosage. These drug's, however, do
Stella
Kloes,
with devotions by Eva
is
visiting
her
daughter
and.
family
have some side effects uf t11eir own
'in
Connecticut,
and
the
group
sang
Dessauer.
which make them undesirable fur
happy birthday to Ruth Massar.
certain persons. They also usually
cost more than aspirin and require a
physician's pescription. The pain
relieving acetamlnophens 1Tylenol
and others i are nut anti•
inflanunatory ~ubstitutes fur aspirin
and the other members of this
category.
QUESTION: Whatshuuldldo?
Out-of-town relatives and friends Forrest Clark, Patricia Clatworthy,
ANSWER : Take your physician's ·
·attending
the funeral services for Charlene Stephens, i\llen Swindell,
advice and take the recotnmended
Wayne
Swisher
held Saturday were Mr. and Mrs. Roy Donovan, Mr. and
number uf aspirins at the directed
Mrs.
Ralph
Painter,
Bill Barker, Mrs. Mark Stuller, Mr. and Mrs.
times. Remember to take them
Dave
Hall,
Roger
Gilkey,
Bob Robert Cross, Jeanne Hines, Jeff
regularly even when you think you
Wingett,
Curtis
Roush,
Charles
Gibbs, Mr. and·Mrs. Joe Sabino, Mr.
dun 't need them. Don't substitute
Whisler,
Dan
Landstrom,
Mr.
and
and Mrs. Fred Kanbtice, Mr. and
another drug without consulting
Mrs.
David
Swisher,
Mrs.
WiUiam
Mrs. Claude Rupe, Joe Bradbury, ·
your physician. Tell your physician
Tripp,
,Mr.
and
Mrs.
Vitus
HarUey,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bradbury, Ray
if you experience ringing in your
·
Jr.,
Paul
Somerville,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hines, Perry Rupe and Mr. and Mrs.
cars or any ususual side effects.
William
Peck,
Dr.
and
Mrs.
Steve
Paul Adkins.
Take your aspirins with a full glass
Lowell,
Michael
Whalen,
Mr.
and
Pallbearers were Ken Mcuf water ur other fluid. Don't be
!'&gt;VsLayton
Stewart,
Laura
Ann Cullough, Charles Riffle, Richard
f&lt;HIIed into thinking that aspirin is
nut a real medication with· Flowers, Geneva Durst, Jean Bar- Jones, Ted Reed, Robert Cross, W.
ney, Sara Suskin, Linda Barney, Mr. , A. Gibbs, Paul Kloes, and Paul
significant benefit just because it's
and
Mrs. John Hood, Mrs. Annabelle Chitpman.
been available for a lung time and
Fellure,
Paul Kerns, J,ucille Bauer,
Honorary pallbearers were
without a prescription. Dun 't forget
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Milton
Houdashelt,
Richard Follrod, Allton Lucke, Ferthat aspirin -has been .in use fur
Jean
Forlus,
Charlie
Deal,
Mr.
and
man Moore, CliffQrd Hill, f!arry
almost 80 years and is safe and efMrs.
Homer
Hankins,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hill,
Russell QuiUen, George--Harris,
fective when taken correctly. ·
Ed Tewksbarry, Mr. and Mrs . . Harold Lohse, Les Fultz, Thereon
Charles Lanham,. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, Roy Donovan, Don HwnDallas Kayser, Mrs. Charlie Brown, phrey, Bobby Dill, Fred Crow, Roy
Karen Finnicum, Mr. and Mrs. Betzing, Rolland Neutzling, Paul
Craig Barnes, Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Eich, Don Kelly, Fred Smith and
Parks, Mr. and Mrs. Rick Northup, Bob Carsey.
WEDNESDAY
SOUTHERN LOCAL Board of
Education ·Wednesday at 7 ·p.m. in
the cafeteria at the high schooL All
interested petsons of the district are
BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
invited to review the budget for the
ALL SEArs JUST$ 1.50
calendar year of 1961 prior to the
meeting.

Many out-of-towners meet
to honor late Mr. Swisher

-~-- Social Calendar

Church honors minister
- na , Mrs. Sina Murphy, AIT1 and
The Ches ter United Methodist , Tracey, Mrs. Jackie Frost, Mrs. LinChurch honored the Hev. and Mrs.
Richard Tt10mas following Bible da King, Mrs. Grace Gumpf, Mrs.
Debbie Chevalier , Mrs. Altona Karr,
Study Thursday evening, July 10,
Mrs. Inez Ca rson, Mrs. Pat Koblentz
with a reception and social hour.
and Susan, Mrs. Kathryn Mora,
On behalf of the congr~gation ,
Mrs. Betty Roush, Mrs. Mildred
Mrs. Betty Roush welcomed the
Thomas,
and ihe-)lonor~d guests,
honored couple and presented them
Rev, and Mrs. Thomas.
a gift.
The Rev. Thomas, who is beginning his third year as pastor of the
Chester ·United Methodist Church
spoke briefly. The pastor offered
prayer after which refreshments
were served by the women of the
church. Those attending were Mr .
and Mrs. James Hoffman, Mr. and
Mrs. George Wolf, Mr. and Mrs.
Roscoe Hollon, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Roush, Mr. an~ Mrs. Paul Ka1·r and
David, Lawrence Stewart, Mrs.
Marilyn Spencer, Trisha and Donnie, Mr : and Mrs. Patrick Morrisey.
With rough, tough leather
Tom and Carrie, Mrs. Gayann Clay.
moccasins with just. your
Mrs. Jenny Machir, Sara and Shan-

Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Of my three mol;her~ --:- my
natural one who · ran away
from Dad when I was three
and I' never saw again; my
first st~mother (Rae ); and
my second, I like the first
step-mom best. In fact, I consider Rae my real mother.
She'and Dad divorced when I
was 14, but I see her at least
once a week and take all my
problems to her. She's one
terrific person. She really
cares for me, and I couldn't
'do without her.
Everything was okay until
Dad started thinking I wasn't
being very considerate of
New Step-mother because I
turned to No. 1 most. He says
I should cut down my visits to
Rae, as Nora (No. 2) might
feel left out. We're pretty
good friends, but really; Rae
is my mother. She raised me.
Must I change my allegiance
just because Dad changed
wives?- DOTTIE .

A pre-registration party has been
planned for those who will be attend·
ing Bible school at Midldeport
Church of Christ, corner of 5th and
Main. The party will be Saturday,July 19 from 11 :30 a.m. to 1 p.m.,
with previews of carnival games
thii[ will be held at the end of Bible
school. Refreshm~nts
be served.
The theme of this year's Bible
school is "Jesus and You The Winning Team" and will be held July 28,
through August I, from 9 a.m.-11 :30
a.m. daily. A contest will be staged
. throughout the week to help accumulate points toward tickets for
the carnival that will be held August
2.

.-

CAPTAIN EASY

in

BORN LOSER

stock!

I'IA T~.. .I DIDIJ'T
(.,6.TCJ.I ~ !JAM~-

will

-

:ll

ANNIE :

c

-HERE IT IS, KIDctl! THE OF COURS~ .
COMPUTER READ-OUT ,1 ALL , MR.
THE COMPANY'S RECORDS BANGAVEL.
IN CODE ! THINK YA C'N
MEMORIZE IT?
____,..,_

m

' OF LIBERTY"
"VOICES
TO APPEAR

The Voices of Liberty have been·
invited to appear at the annual Rio
Grande Bean· Dinner to be held at
Bob Evans Farm on Saturday,
August 9, 1980. They will be presenting selections from the musical,
"Ring All The Bells of f'reedom:"
Rehearsal will be at 8 p.m. this
evening at the ·Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. 'All former members are urged to attend the rehearsal.

Dr. Lamb

0

Cl

ATTA GIRL! FE~ ANOTHER THING,
YOU'LL REALLY DRESS UP THE 01!
PLACE! MY LAST 5EKKATE~RY
HADDA FACE THAT LOOKED LIKE
IT WORE OUT TWO

BODIES!

Woman refuses to take estrogen

- 1 HOPE HEY! t'IHADDAYA AFRAID I'M
THI5 JOB GOHNA CHASE YA AROUND
DOE6N'T Tti' DESK? BE COOL, DOLL,'
ENTAILTH15 15 A
CLASS OUTFIT!

CHAPMAN
SHOES.

"Nextto E lberfelds
in Pomeroy,Oh."

ALLEYOOP
waL, I FIGURED
IT'D KEEP 'EM
8t.ISI" FOR A WHil-E ...

.. . BUT WE'RE NOT

.

OUTATH'~

?

YliT! SOONER OR
LAilOR, THEY'LL
COME LC()I(IN'

FOR US!

More Reductions# ·
"'~,r'\

,

o "'c{'

ENTIRE STOCK

FAVORITE PHOTOS

PAINT

FRAME

pt~lm .

doesn't

MENS SUMMER

!&amp;;now where

MESH BALL

'1. .

CAPS .

Outtldl wr.ltt, porch tncl floor
.,11'1'111, IIH'I~ ptiN, 11 .. 1
wtll

tn ell on ..11.

30%m.

I

IIi IS .

Sh es
. ..

Csob).qone!

ilhere,
~
Yiilu jes' needs
some food in

40U!

$166

PRICE

WOMEN$
SUMMER

ALL
WOMENS
SHORTS

HANDBAGS

-1;2

we do, that the woman who ·
raised you should have. fir.st
priority in your life.
Your father can't expect
you to change mothers, just
because he changed wives. HELEN

hits just where your top back.
bone protrudes most.
_
Why can't manufactur~rs ·
put their labels on a sld&amp;seam - and stop liSing ny~on.,
in them? Sure, those washing
instructions are necessary,..
but not where they cause
NOTE FROM SUE : But be twitchy, itchy bitchiness!
sure you don't make com· LABEL LOATHER
parisons or otherwise create
jealousy. You've a right to DEARL.L.:
your preferences, but keep
Either manufactu_ers and
your prejudices (if you have designers have very tough
any) to yourself.
necks or else they don't wear
"labeled" cloths. Otherwise,
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
this neck torture would have
Here's a whyohwhy for been eliminated long ago. .
you: Why do manufacturers
Let's hope your letter is
torture us by sewing those it· ead in the clothing industry.
chy, s~ratchy labels into gar· It's long overdue! - HELEN
ment necklines? When they ANDSUE
'
were made of cotton, they at
least softened with washing, DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
and when 'they were stitched
What's the difference bet·,
with cotton thread, it didn't ween first cousin, and oncecut into you like wire ~ removed cousin?
Besides, they were easy, to CURIOUS
remove, but now they're
practically a part of the CURIOUS:
material, and if you cut them
It's a generational diF
off, you've still got residue ference: If your first cousin
DEAR DO'ITIE:
Since you're pretty good "scratch."
has a child, then he is your
Of
all
places
to
put
a
label,
friends with Nora, why not
first _cousin, once removed. ·
discuss the situation with the neckline is worst, as it Okay? -HELEN AND SUE her? Perhaps she'll feel, as

kind of style. Thick crepe
soles with adjustable lacing and fashionable looks.
Many other
styles

School registration set

REDUCED

%

PRICE

of the menopause while
By'Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
others
do.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I've
Women
who have had a
read a nwnber of articles ·
hysterectomy
should be ababout the use of estrogen in
the menopause but it's solutely certain what the
usually in women who have surgery included. A comhad a normal menopause. plete hysterectomy does not
What about women who have mean that the ovaries have
had a hysterectomy at 49 or been removed. It means that
even yoWJger as in my case? · all of the uterus, cervix and
I don't want to take hormone body of the uterus, has been
shots so I was given removed. If the ovaries are
Bellergal S which does left in and are normal, they
nothing for me. The flashes will function like normal
are pretty bad but I won't ovaries. That also means
take hormones because of all that they'll quit at the usual
the side effects, known and age of the menopause.
. The reason it's so im·
unknown.
portanUo
know if the ovaries
I weigh 129 pounds and am
are
still'
"
in
is that cancer of
5 foot 2. I only weighed 119
PQunds before the surgery. I the ovaries can and does oc·
was up to 132 within a month cur. It's not as common as
after the su~gery. , It sure is cancer of the uterus but,
hard not to ptck at food, even nevertheless, it's all too com·
knowing I'm not hungry and · mon. Women who still have
shouldn't. Are there any their ovaries need to have a
regular examination direcpamphlets on our problem?
ted
tpward as early detection
DEAR READER - The
loss of normal function of the of ovarian cancer as possible
ovaries, whether through should it occur.
I'm sending you The
normal involution with the
Health
Letter nwnber 14-12,
usual menOf)ause or from
surgical ·removal, has essen· Hysterectomy, Cystocele
tially the same effects. Some And Rectocele, to give you
women produce enough more information about the
female hormones from the problems related to
adrenal gland to prevent hysterectomy and female
some of the changes that are surgery. Other readers who
seen with ovarian failure. want this issue can send 75
That's one of the reasons why cents with a long, stamped,
some women don't need self-addressed envelope for
female honriones at the time it. Send your request to me,

in care of this newspaper, P:
0. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.

Now I'm not too happy with
your adamant decision not to
use any female hormones.
Let your doctor decide
whether you need them or.
not. They are very helpful ip
eliminating hot flashes. If
you no longer have a uterus,
there's no danger of your getting cancer of the uterus.
That's the main concern in
using female hormones for
relief · of hot flashes or
menopause symptoms. The
other unanswered question is
what their relationship is tci'.
breast cancer but, ap· _
parently, if you do not have lwnpy breasts to begin with :
and don't develop lwnPY:
breasts, that is not an im-·
portant consideration either.
Unless you have a breast
problem, I woulcJ. rather see '
you take a small amount of-.
female hormones to relieve-:
your symptoms than to take:
Be:Jergal S. Why? Because '
Bellergal S contains·
phenobarbital and if yo!J take ·
that regularly in reasonable ·
amounts, it can be habit for- ·
ming. Also it contains
another ingredient which
sometimes causes con·
striction of arteries and a.
tendency to develop high' .
blood pressure.

,WINNIF;
)()IJ 'VE GOT A

E vtr)lone
goes .
Harw,lt' plenten , ltoor
~=~ · o~e Sft, 'l'ou'll

30 % m.

r-"

lj2

PRICE

BROTHER,

MY

you

SURf HAl?

ME WORRIED
FO R

-e,oo

Cil Ut!JIJ (lliliDilii GJ NEWS
CIJ ROSSBAGLEYHOURIJOINED
IN PROGRESS!
(]) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
Cil ABC NEWS
rtJ (J:j) ZOOM
6 :30 C2J 8 C!J NBC NEWS
{]) I LOVE LUCY
- ClJ CAROL BURNETT AND

Ci!"'Jort Top!
Regul" 39'

1 PRICE

FRIENDS- ·
liiCIJ®l CBS NEWS
rtJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
illJ VILLA ALEGRE
iUl Ql ABC NEWS
6 :58 CII NEWS UPDATE
7:00 C2J G C!J 1980REPUBLICANIIA·
TIONAL CONVENTION The exact
starting time and length of conven-

BARNEY

YOU GITONE
END AN' I'LL
GIT T'OTHER

LET'S TOTE
THIS 01: LOG
OVER TO
TH. WOODPILE I
TATER--·

12 Pack
STYIOFO.M

COOLER

CHEST

•merican Made .

tion

Small Lot
VINYL

PINIC
'
JUGS

CHAIR

Yellow or Green

Reduced

Foam Filled

$744

7· /b

PADS

PEANUTS

SOME CLOUDS
ARE UGL'( ..

SOME CeOUD5

CLOUDS ARE
FASCINATING .
•

ARE A650LUTEL'{
BEAUTIFUL ...

' I

BOSTON FERN
66~

•Lt

LAWN
CHAIR'

.f~-~9

$117

' REG. 11.00
Th11 Last

BEST

.·

@ MOVIE -(WESTERN)

JULY 16. 19BQ,

'

t~nel

Evening television listings

A

MINUTE !

NYLONS

h&lt;tflfol lng SPIICI' , K1

Illest s~tmmct• pllnt~
J~.ir\1 11 big u vlngs

IS

WffEW/

KNEE HI

'"

tt~h e

M.Y TWIN

? ?? ?

WOMENS

VON 1T HAVE

TO I'.ORRY 'THOUGH...

ME.· YO U ANI? MY
TWIN BROTHE.R ...

PANTS
And
SKIRTS
........,_
...

We

)()lJ

CONFESSION TO
MAKE ? i?O~I'T TELL

Women• Summer

. . .r ....

&lt;,

Her favorite 'mother' not anymore.

TO SCHOOL!

LAWN
. CHAIR'
•

614/992·2133
.

DID YOU

IN THERE?

Rea. •2!29

. .BANK ONE:. _

BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA

HOW L.ONG

~EEP

FOR BACK

. MULTICOLOR

I

Helen Help Us

WHAT TINII= IS IT?

GEITING READY

THURSDAY
MAGNOLIA CLUB THursday 6:30
p.m. at park on 1-J. S. 33. Bring own
table serviee, · covered dish jlnd
beverage.

. . .TO BUSINESS. INDUSTRY,
- -AND THE PROFESSIONS

'

I
7- f{•

,.

•

~..

Coll'en~ge

is

subject

to

change.
CIJ BIBLE BOWL
1JJ HOGAN'S HEROES
•
CIJ GlJ ID FACE THE MUSIC
lii (J) TICTACDOUGH
C8J MACNEIL,LEHRER REPORT
@I NEWS
(j] DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 CIJ ATHOMEWITHTHEBIBLE
(!l ·WHODUNIT? 'Greeleal UnsolvBd Mysteri es ' The world's
mosl widely -publi cize d mystery
c ases · Jack Ihe Ripper. Lizzie Borden, Amelia Earhar~ ana others on
this e,;olusive . Arme d with some
previously undis c losed clues,
you' re the detect ive on the case ot
these unsolved puzzles .
(]) ALLIN THE FAMILY
CIJ (j])GJ THE 'BOVOTE: REPUB·
' LICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION
fhe exact sta rting time and length
of convent ion coverage is sUbJect
to change . 1
Iii @ CAMPAIGN '80: REPUB·
LICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION
The exact slarting lim e and length~
of convent ion c overag e i s subJect
to change .
(9l DICK CAVETT SHOW
(101 THE JUDGE
. (11l .MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
7 :5 8 ( 3 1 NEWSUPO I\ T E
6 :00 13 ) FOCUSONTH E f .\ MILY

•

••y,

" St.!iecoach" 1966
•
ltJ(ll) GREAT PERFORMANCES
'Abide With Me' Cathleen Neabittia
featured in Julian Mitchell' s drama11 za tion ot 1he c ompl eK rei atlon ship
between a strict. lonely dowager
and the young girl who is hired.as
her housekeeper . (90 mlna.)
@I CAMPAIGN 'SO: REPUBLICAN
. NATIONAL CONVENTION The
exact starting time and lenQth of
convention colo'erage Is subje ct to
change .
8 '30 CIJ PRESENCE OF GOD
(J) MOVIE ·(DRAMA! "Yo'
11
Ufeguard" 1976
6:58 'CIJ NEWS UPDATE
9 :00 Cil 700 CLUB
9:30 (J) (j] DIVINE MADNESSThialilm
ia about a theater ·dance c amp in
Steamb oat Springs, Colorado ,
rounded in 1913byPonla Mansfield
and Charlott e Perry.
10:00 CII GENERATIONONTHEWINDA
documentEHY. film on the planning
alld construction of the world ' s ta r·
geatandmostpo:tJertutwindmill, oft
!he cOset at New Bedford, Mass .
(6.0mins.)
illJ NEWS
10:28 Cil NEWS UPDATE
!0:30 .
MAX MORRIS
I]) JOHNNY MATHIS IN CONC!AT Taped at the Royal Albert
Hallin London , this apec lalcon cert
per.lormen ce stars Johnny Mathi s
singing his sentimental songs and
romantic ballads that have moved
listeners for more than two
decades.
(1) SOCCERAtlenta OhiefsvaSan
Oieg'o Sockeirs
CID OVER EASY 'Pre -.Retirement
Planning' Host : Hugh Downs .
(Closed C,aptioned)
10:58 I]) NEWS UPDATE
11 :00 Cil G C!J @J NEWS
,CIJ JEWISH VOICE
(J) DAVE IIILLEN AT LARGE
&lt;llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
1 L28 l1.J NEWS UPDATE
·
11 :30 (2) 0 (fJ THE TONiGHT SHOW
' B'es t 0 1Car s·on Guest s· Andv WI\hH ·ms . Burlf HtHH 9. F . l ee B ailey .

CD

·.~

"'

(

'

I

(Due to convention coverage , the
staningtime of Tl'1e Tonight Show is
subject to change.
CII ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
C!J MOVIE ·(AOVENTUREI"'I'o

"Killer Flah" 1979

CII

ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
@JMOVIE-(MUSICALI"I'o "New "

Moon"1040
12:00 CIJ iiiCIJIUJGJ NEWS
12:30 {]) MOVIE ·(COMEDY! •• "It 's '
Your Move" 1968
I1J iUl GJ
ABC
NEWS
NIGHTLINE
Iii CIJ CBS LATE MOVIE 'THE •
SAINT: locate And Destroy' The
Saiht, attemptin"g to avert a simple ~
holdufl, steps into the drama of a
sear ch bv lstaeli &amp;llents for a
former Nazi. 'BLACK SHEEP
SQUADRON : The Sh ow Must Go
On ' Slars : Robert Conrad . Simon
Oak Iand. (Due to convent ion cover·
age the starting time of The CBS
LATE Movie ls subjec t to c hange.
12,50 IUJQ) NEWS
1:00 CDO TOMORRQW
Cil GOODNEWS
C!J NEWS"
1:30 Cil REX HUMBARD
2'00 (IQ) I BELIEVE
2 :30 CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
{]) NEWS
2 :35 IJJ MOVIE ·(DRAMAI ' "KIIIoro

Three" 1968

4 :00
4 :35

CII 700 CLUB
IJJ MOVIE 1MYSTERYI"

" Char- -

IIi Chon In Shanghai " 1935

5 :30

Cil

BOB GASS

STATUE OF UBERTY
. Since 1886, the Statue of Liberty •
enlightening the world, has stood as
a symbol of freedot'n in New York ;
harbor. It also cominemorates French-American friendship, For it . was

given by the people of Fra n.c •:. The
1

s{8tU4.:.'"'" was designed by F'. rccil'rk
Au ~us t e

Burlholdi 11334-19041.

�'-

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

-------

----- -- - - -- - - - --13- The Dally Senbne}. Middlcpurt-Pomeroy, 0 , Wcdnesclb},
July 16, 1980 ___________....;.____..j•
..__....;._....;.....;.

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u , Wednesda;, July 16, 1980

Farmers can
expprt record
•

gra1n exports

-

WASillNGTON (APl - Amer1can
farmers can expect 12 more months
of record gram exports despite the
Russ1an embargo and good crops
elsewhere m the world, the
Agnculture Department says
'For the second consecutive year,
world coarse gram utilizallon IS expected to exceed world coarse gram
production," USDA analysts say
"S1gnif1cant detenorabon of the
gram crop outlook m Canada as well
as somewhat reduced grain export
availability from that of a year ago
m Australia and mcreased unports
by China currently pomt towards
prospects for record U S wheat and
corase gram exports," the analysts
sa1d Tuesday m the departments
monthly World Gram SituatiOn
Outlook.
They added, however, that the
demand on the U S supplies could
force the nation's domesllc stores or
coarse grams to a four-year low
The report estunated world gram
productiOn, Including milled n ee,

at! 41&gt; billion metr1c tons durmg the
year that ends June 30, 1981, well

for gram after President Carter Im- year, IS now expected to (all below
posed the sales suspension m previous yearly levels, promptmg a
January
significant m~reasc m IDlports, the
But as that IS happerung, they Agriculture Department says.
"Sov1et meat unports durmg 1980
sind, "other unporters such as Chma
and several European countnes may be about a:; percent above those
have turned toward the Umted or 1979," the department said
States for a larger portion of their Tuesday m 1ts quarterly report on
the world meat outlook. "Record ununport supplies "
The Chinese, the report Sllld, are ports of both pork and poultry are
expected to unport a record II forecast "
But worldWide, the report said,
rrullion tons of wheat durmg the
commg year, and the Uruted States 1980 meat IDlports should~ do\\?! as
already has more thim three tunes production m othennaJor unportmg
the e;q&gt;Ort coffiffiltment to that coun- countries, mcluding the Uruted
States, IS expected to set a record.
try 11 had a year earlier
Total meat productiOn In the
The report also said the s1tatwon
will require the Russ1ans to Import a Umted States, Canada, Japan and
greater proportiOn of wheat than the European Commwi1ty was put at
they have Ill the past when mucli of 50 1 rrullion metnc tons, 3 percent
their needs were met by the._Umted higher than last year Ametric ton 15
States, which accounts for some 30 2,201&gt; pounds.
percent of world coarse gram
While the four countnes are exproductiOn
pected to post a 5 percent decline m
WASillNGTON (AP) - Russian beef and veal production, the report
meat production, runrung well said that would be more than offset
ahead of 1979 at the begmrung of this by mcreased productiOn of pork,

within the department's preVIous
forecasts and only 20 million tons
below the record 1978-1979 productiOn A metnc ton IS 2,205 pounds,
equaling 36 7 bushels of wheat and
39 4 bushels of corn
World demand m the next year IS
expt"Cted to .push Amencan wheat
exports t3 a record 39.5 ffilllion
metnc tons anti With a record 1980
crop expected the domestic wheat
stocks should riSe as well, the report
sa1d
The report proJected U S. exports
of a SIXth consecutive record 74
million metr1c tons of coarse grams
m the coffilng marketmg year, but
said that would probably reduce the
stock of those commodities substanllally smc~ this year's harvest IS
expected to be below the 1979 record.
USDA analysts said they expect to
see a continuation of the shift m
global trade patterns that has sent
the Sov1et Uruon to other countnes

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ad~

r----------------------,
I
Curb Inflation. 1
•

I

4

WANT AD INFORMATION

Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., PomeroY&gt;,
45769

o.,

eRENlALS

l-Announcements

torRent
44-Apartmtnt tor Rent

4-Give•w•y
s-HappyAas

Phone~--------------~

l
l
l
)

9-WantedtoBuy

eMERCHANDISE

U-

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

ca Re,.lr

THREE family yard sale
Thurs and Frt • June 26
and 27 9 a m 5 p m on
r.ght on top of Chester Htll
Maple bar stools, house
patnl, toys, mise

6l-Wa11Nd ID •uy
n- Trucll:s tor Salt
u-Livtttoctl:

Op~rtunity

M-Ha., &amp; Grain
65- I Mil I Ftrtlli1er

23-Profnslonll

services

•TRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE
lor SIMI#
l2-MottiltoHomes
torhlt

THE
SOUTHERN
Cheerleaders wtll have a
yard sale Tuesday, July 2.
at the Bob Roy restdence
All kinds of 1lems Starts at

7)-Vans&amp;4W D

Slartlng July 8 10 from 9 5
datly, lots Of clothmg,
ultltly !able and lots of
whatnots Address 185 s
Front St, Mtddleport

7+-Matorcvctn
rt&amp;

l l-ll=arms for Salt
l4-lusintu Buildings
U --Lob I Acrttte

Auto Perb

Acetssorlts

n - Auro liltpair

31- Atll Estate Wanhd
U'-lllultors

eSERVICES
11 -Homtlmprr~emet~ts

Want-Ad AdvertiSing
Deadlines
Dally
SaturQv
for Monday

4PM

10 ·- - - - -

31 _ __ _ __

11
12
13
14
15
16

32 _ _ __ __

12 Noon

1.

11-Ptumblne &amp; Eaunt1111

Two·Skirt Suit!

11-e:Jit:aVIHftJ
M-EIKtrlal
a R etrlttranon
as--a..eral Muting

16-M H. R.,.lr
17- Upholstery

,,..

cash

1 day

.....

,"'..
"'
'"

Charge

100

lNys

ldays
6CS.ys

I

EICh word over the minimum 15 wenlsls 4 cenfl•r word per day
Alb running other than consKullve d&lt;~vs will bt Chii'"Otd at "~' 1 day

rete

In memory, Cud of Thank' and Obituary
minimum cash In advance

4 ctnts per

word,l3 oa

Sltlltinel

-

IN THE
COMMON P~EAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
COMMUNITY BANK ET
AL
Pla1nt1ffs,
vs
EARL L FAUDREE, ET
AL
Defendants
No 17.420
NOTICE OF SHERIFF' S
SALE AND
PROOF OF
PUBLICATION
In pursuance of an alias
order of sale to me direc ted
from the Clerk of Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs
county, Oh1o, 1 w111 offer
far sale at public auct•on,
at the door of the cour
thouse 10 Pomeroy Me1gs
County. Ohto, on the 26th
day of July, 1980, at 10
a m , the f ollowmg real
estate
PARCEL NO
The
follpw 1ng
real
estate
Stluated tn the County of
Me•gs, •n the State of Oh1o
and tn the Tolllnshtp of
Ol•ve, and bounded and
descr.bed as follows Betng
tn One Hundred Acre Lot
No 103, tn Sections Nos 3
and 9, Town No 4, Range
No 11, of the Ohto Com
pany 's Purchase, and
bounded on the south of I an
ds Of Pearl Ktbble, on th e
east by lands of Pearl Ktb
ble on the north by lands
of Fred Shumway, on th e
west by State H1ghway No
124, and beginnmg at a
stone 2171!1 feet south of th e
sout h west corner of lot
deeded by W H' Smar t and
w 1fe To Edward !:i•mmons,
I hence east 150 teet th ence
south 72 1n feet
thence
west 1 ~0 teet , mence north
12 , fee t to the place of
beg .nnmg. conta1nmg one
f9urth ( 1.. ) ot an acre

oo

_P~):lJI ~ I'!_Otl ~

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

Pubhc Not•ce

_,,,,,., .,

t hos 30th day of May, 1980

~~------~~--------------~
-- - -Public Nottce
_

PARCEL NO 2 Betng 1n
100 Acre Lot No 103 m Sec
t1on s Nos 3 and 9, Town
No 4 Range No 11 of the
Oh•o compa ny s Purchase
and beglnn•ng at the nor
theast corn er of lands for
merly owned by Pearl K1b
b le and southeast corner of
lands of Fred Shumway ,
then ce S(..Uth 72 1h. fee t ,
th ence west 85 fe et , thence
north n•o f eet, thence east
85 feet to the place of begt n
n1ng conta 1n1ng 141 100 of
an acre, more or less
Ref er ence Deed
Vol
172, Page 590 Me1gs Coun
ty Deed Rac.or ds
Sa1d real esta te Is ap
pra •sed at $16,500 00 Ter
ms of sa le cash, w•th
mm1mum bid two Th •rd s
appra •scd va lue
Jam ei J Proffitt,
Shenff of
Me1QS County Oh1o
\6) 25 (/) 2, Y, 16, 41
Comptroller of
the Currency
Treasury Department
otthe
Umted States
Wash1ng_ton, o c
WHEREAS saTISf ac tor y
ev 1dence has been presen
ted lo th e Comptroller of
the Currency that BANK
ONE
OF
POMEROY,
N A l oca ted m Pomeroy,
State Of Oh 10, has comrll ed
Wllh all prOV ISIOOS 0 the
st atule s of t he Un tted
s ta tes req u• red to be com
plied w 1th before be •ng
aut hon zed to com m ence
the busmess at bank1ng as
a
Na11onal
Ba nk• ng
Assoc •at •on
NOW, rHEREF ORE, I
hereby cerl1 f y mar th e
ab)ove nam ed assoc1a t10n •s
au honzed to com m ence
1t1e bus1ness ot banking as
a
Nat1o na l
Ba nk•ng
Assoc •at1on
IN
rE~ rtMON)
WH EREOF Witness. my
s1gna 1u1 e and sea l ol ott1ce

·

rr Xlt I I I l
(.,._,.ll&gt;monowl

1

Jumbles IMPEL LAlHE LAVISH STYMIE
Answer
A hu sband li ke yours must have been hard

to fmd -

HE SiiLLISI

1-----------1~----------t
7

Yard Sale

Wednesday and Thursday'
from 8 4 at 698 Laurel St,
Mtddleport
At Glen Caton restdence off
124 ,to left on County Road 1
about one m1le to top of htll
on Salem Twp 34, or off 124
at 325 then rtght on Salem
Tw 34 Clothmg of all stzes,
gutenas $1 00 and up,
ch1cks, 50c, stone 1ars.
Avon and many things
Wednesday, Thursday and
Frtday

GARAGE SALE July 17
and 18 9 4 at the Guy Spen
cer res1dence 10 Tuppers
Pla1ns snow ttres H 78 x 14
mounted trail er wheels
400x12,pressure pump tnch
hose tratler
htlch tub,
mowmg scythe, grtll wtth
oven, Texasware
cof
feepot,school desk, chairs,
davenport, new gloves,
drapes, some c lothes 011
heater

Mobile Homesales anet Y~rd sa lea are accepted OftiY with cash with
order 25 cent charge for ads carrying loa Number In car• ol Ttw
Mail This Coupon with Rem1ttance
The DallY Sentmel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Print answer here

YARD SALE July 17, 18,19
from 9 II on county road 28
at Hayward B1ssellres1den
ce
Baby clothes, boys
clothes. SIZe I 3, playpen ,
car seats, etc ,m1sc 1tems

15 Words or Under

35 _ _ _ __

"""""canoon

t._t,_ __,H~e.,lr:p_,W~a~n~ted~--

3

John G He 1mann
Comptroller of th e
currency
Charter Number 16859
(6) 11. 18 . 25 (7) 2. 9 16 23
30 (8) 6, 9t c

~

~

Announcement•

Needed RD or LPN for 11 to
7 30 shtft Part time or full
t•me Good work.ng con
dtltons Contact Mr Ztdtan
at the Pomeroy Health
Care Center 992 6606 Mon
day through Frtday from 9

ICE CREAM

~ PA Y
ht ghest pr tces
liosstbl e for gold and Si lver
cams nngs, 1ew elry, etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport

I

POMEROY
,LANDMARK

Mam St .
Pomeroy
992·2181

Experienced front end
alignment and atr con
d1t1onmg techn1c1an W1ll
pay for experience Ex
penenced persons only
Two R•vers Ford , Pt
Pleasant, w Va . Phone
675 1490
Someone to help care for
aged lady wtlh arthritis
Call992 7226

Sutt news IS DOUBLY good

news when you can team a great
tackel wtlh two sktrts one slim
the other flared
e $50 and
more sew lhe tno tn tweeds
Pnnted Patletn 4700 Mtsses
Stzes B 10 12 14 !6 lB 20
Stze 11 (busl 34) Jacket 114 yds
45 , s!1m sktrt I 718 flared 211.

s..

$1 75 tor uo:h palllrn. Add 50C
lor uch pattem tor first-class
atrmatl and handltna. Send to
Anne~dams

Pattem O.pl

t "l 1

The Datly Senttnel
243 West 17 Sl,

lin Yotll, NY

10011. Pnnt NAM~L ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, and STYu. NUMBER
Busy women t~e fastest to-sow
lash tOns are tn oLr NEW SPRING

SU MMER PAmRN CATAlOG'

Dresses lops tackets ponts
Plus $1 75 free pattew coupon
Send $1 lor Calalog.
127 Atrhans 'n' Domes $1 50
129-Qutck/U., Transtor• $1 50
130-Swuters·Stm ll 56 $1 50
U2-QuUI Ori1Jnals
$1 50

DOWNING CHILDS AGENC'L~~C.
INSURANCE _

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US

992-2342

DOWNINGstHILDS AG~NCY, I.NC•.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

D1tc h d•gg .ng serv1ce Ca li
773 5839 or 173 51H8
Magg•e s Up holstery
Reb ulld•ng, Refln• sh.ng
Reuphol st er;..y F abnc and
vony l sampl es Call 141
2852

1111

Homes tor Sale

Excellent loca t1on on SR
124 Three bedroom home
on ap prox •m a t e l y
two
acres Many ex t ra s Call
992 7255

**'!.***********
:~$$$$:
! MONEY · MONEY !
ll- Ftrst

mortgages,*
:second mortgages , !
,._and
ref1nancert
rt cases. Call Com-*
! p lete
Mortgag e !
,..servtc;,es
1n rt
lt-Galhpohs, Ohto at~
!446- 1517 for more,._
* 1nlormatton
a ndll* vour appo.ntment.

a hea lalalor
beautiful lawn Out"•ndln11l
tamll v home May anvme mor
wilh

lljl&amp;ljle Pr1ced In lhe IQ.W l-«1 S

Crtlirlts M

H•yes RHitCN'

Ne.cU E Caney lr Mgr
P" tt2 2403 or tt2 2710

We

have
your

HOBSTETTER

REALTY

+AKQ9

+106~

• J 10 9 6

• QJ9 3

+J 962

.J

tlOH
+ Q83

SOUTH

42
.AQ8 52
tAK7
10.

+

Vulnerable Ne1ther
Dealer South

.....

Nortll

E1.11

p,,.
Pass
Pass

South

first three spade tricks, one
heart tnck and a diamond
Thts Soutb realized thai if
East had four hearts, the contract was still safe

p..,.

queen of hearts not a low

I,..

Opemng lead • K

By Oswald Jacoby
&amp;bd Alan Sootq

Declarer

*•***********•·
NEW 3 bedroom home tor
sa l e
Buil t •n k1tchen
d•n •n g
room ,
l ar g e
recreat1 on room fi r ep lace
lots a t stor age 2_ baths
garage 1 acr e lot 992 3454

was slightly

MOB I ~E

home for sale,
$6500, land contract wtlh
$500 down or Will negohate
cash
sa 1e
Also one
bedroom , bUilt .n bunks
48x 10 mobtle home, S2800
land contract $300 down
Wr1te J Bowland, 15068
Emptre Rd , Thornvtlle,
OH 43076,

NEWLISrtNG -

LOrS
'i.
bedr ooms n1 ce l1v1ng
r oo1T1 utii•IY part base
!llc nr, ~6 {1cr e M e1gs
:,c. t1 o0 1
D s tr• ct
UF REMUDE LING

NEW LISriNG
Fu
Po111 ts
J b('droom
mo bil e home on one
b(.•a ut,tu t ac re w llh
q~ rag e
wor k s h op
• 1c l nl storage bulld1ng
~as 11cr
drye r
&gt;11 , 0000
NEW
LIS riNG
Remode led lhtoughoutl
~ · room
:.1
bedroom
t1ome
new paneli ng
1ew ~..a r p('t mg vmy l ' "'
k.1l chen a nd ba Th ther
mopane w1ndows ver
t1ca 1s ding S21 SOU 00
NEW
LI S riNG
fHERMOPA NE WIN
oows 1
5 room , 3
bed f oom home on 1 acre
lot ha rdwood tl oor.ng
ne w pa ne l 1ng new wall
and base c ab 1ners •n k 1
ct1cn pa rl•al l y fln 1shed
lull IJCISf' nlC ll 11"J bath
Re a lt y n1 ce • S'i.5 uoo 00
ACREAGE
ro
DE
VELOP
i n Eas tern
D st r cr 'i..S acres wood
nncl! homes •res 4 lots
sur veyed tor hom es •t es
w 11L r a n ct eiL Cir• c to
pr oper!(
ava•lab l c

Reaf Estate- ~neral

:FREE LIVING - 3 pro
•pertii?S L •ve 1n onP q nd
'u sc the other two t or
wn te off Dril l ed w ell J
b aths on 1 J AC RE
' REAL
BUY
;bed r oom home bath al l
ut •llt •es 2 l ots tor on ly
$11000
FAMILY - N1 ce large 4
bedr ooms 1117 bath s hoi
water hea t alt utll •t •es
modern k• t carpe t1ng
and full baseme nt
FIRST
AD
5
bedrooms 3 k1n g SI Ze 2
tu ll baths modern kt t
forma l d1n .n g full base
m ent nat gas furn ace
1 acre
FIRST AD 13 lois
ut111 t1es availabl e On l y
56 500
SPEC IAL - 1 lots and
ol d house n ~a r J on es
Boys 53 500 ,
BARGAIN - One st ory
bulld1ng 24XBO
w lh
bath tor fl ea m a rk e t or
home Sll ooo
YOU CAN BUY - fh &gt;S
one t1 J bedroom hom e
a ll utlltt •'es ba th flu e
for woodburne r and l
lots
WE WORK FULL TIME
ON SE~LING YOUR
HOM E,
NO
5 1DE
LINES REA L ESTATE
IS
OUR
ONLY
BUSINESS SO I F YOU
HAVE A PROBLEM,
CALL US AT 9n 3325 or
~Y2 3876

1969 Two Bedroom 12x60
HollyparK tra11er fur
n•shed, a1r cond1hOn1ng
washer,
underp1nnmg
sma ll metal butldtng
$7300 00 Ca II 992 2881

33

Farms for Sale

Eight~ Acres. 2 acres bot
tom, 68 pasture, blacKtop
road
three bedrooms,
liv1ng room, bath k1tchen,
d.n1ng room, three car. car
port ,
cellar
part
b ase ment , good barn
Charles Kong, Rt
1,
Rutland, Qhto 45775 Call
742 2229

Lots 11, Acreage

35

One ac r e gorund and full
basement Phone 667 3826
1 AC RE LOTS Sec luded 1n
th e heart of Pom eroy 992
6279 after 5 p m

'&gt;U ;uu uu

GAS BI~LS• Ap
prox 10 ad"e ta rm Wlfh
110d crn 4 bed home
proc, ry has .r s own
op1 rd llllg gasd
we lt
new ly r emodel ed b uil t
n kll c hen l ull base
mc nr c en tral a1r s tock
co pond hor se s table
C(l ! Ti e
b.un
on 1er
bud clmgs Country 1 1~
11\U tor you r t a rnlly
V 1vc us ,, ca ll to sec
!Il l S1
HU r ~ U MMER"' Dial
your own wea th er • Cen
!r rll a •r 111 lh s J
bedroo m ran ch on a
tar g( l ~vc l to t t ull y
cqu ppcd kll chen F •vc
Pu1 lli S
rlrca
l or
::.Ju :,uu uo
EA~ r ERN
OlsrRter
Com l or t 1s w hal
count s • r'\ nd th1 S J bed
ran c t1 ~1 as all II c lh•ng s
you nccct 10 ! ( cl R1 Qhl
1t H om e
On n 1 ncr c
lot l or :.J-4 VUU uu
II ~ rHE
Ltr r LE BIT
MORE
fHAr
CO UN T~
' SO
WE
~fRIVE fUOOMURE•
R A~ rOR
Hl..' nry E C l e l ~l nd , Jr
NO

~y~

Housing
Head uarters
..............

__ -

__ __
_......,.__

Real Estal'!;: Ge!'~a l_

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
COU~p BE YOUR DREAM HOM E - 2 slory w oth
db lc ga r age, ho m e .ncludes 3 B R s w1 tt1 large bath
up and 11 ba t h on man fl oo r Many exi r a nt ce
features 1n qu1 et a r ea Ask• ng :l.SI 500

TR:AILE R - 2 BR on r • n•{)- sm alf ou tbulld•ng t or
storage, on qu et stree t SU\. ~ J
GOOD STARTER HOM E - J BR ko t , LR DR &amp;
f aliiTiy room w 1th woodburn 1119 stove on good s•ze
lot, room lor ga rden well landsca ped Carport S.
stora ge b ld g $3/,000
INV ESTM!i' N r PROPERTY
Over I OU acres,
could be hnu s1ng devel opment
gas al r ea dy dril l
ed, on pro perty wat er lines clbse All rn•n er al n g ht s
go w th properl y 11mbcr r ead y 10 be cut Ca ll lor
more mformat.on
NEW L-ISrtNG - 1n clean ne•gllborh ood J BR
al um s1d 1ng &amp; storm w•ndows Pr• cc d 1n SJU s
NEEOEO L,».V Cos I ~1 nd LOW Pncc Homes Have
Ready Buye~·

• ~ c.l ll Nancy J aspcrSt As sot: •ate
Y4Y 165&lt; 0 1 Y4Y 2SY I

rufled, South would pttch hm
diamond loser If he relused
to
South would liCOre h1S
last trump lor the ntnth trock
Then EaSt's bt&amp;b trump and
West s high diamond would
lalllot!elher at trick 13

rurr

I'J178 ~ 1df X 19 t our ~l1n
der tour speed em con
d •llonmg , run s or. r eg lar
gas 30 plus mpg Ca ll •2

l&amp;l

Trucks for Sal e

12

1975 Chevrol et P c kup w 1t h
topper
Ex ce llent con
d111on Ca ll 949 2537

E1ght piece old fash1oned
dmmg room su1te Old
couch Phone 992 2779
Building Suppltes
55
318 onch rebar- llc per foot
by 20 II section only D
Bumgardner Sales, NOble
Summ1t Rd , Mtddleport,
OH 992 5724

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 JIJ7 7220
HILLCREST KENNELS
Boardtng, all breeds Clean
.ndoor outaoor fac1hhes
Also
AKC
regiStered
Dobermans 614 &lt;146 7795
HOOF· HOLLOW Horses
and pon~es and ndmg
lessons
Everythtng
1magmable •n hor se equ1p
ment
Blankets, belts,
boots, etc Engltsh and
western
Ruth Reeves
(614) 698 3290
MUSICal
Instruments

57

We are p•ckmg up several
repossessed and trade 'n
p1anos and prgans 1n your
area Pnces from $250 and
up Call credtl manwr
today 304 485 2170

7] _ _ _v~,ns_&amp; 4_W D

76

I

House for rent Four rooms
a nd bath Depostt requtred
No •ns•de pets Call 992
3090
House for rent Four rooms
a nd bath DeQOStl requtred
No ms1de pets Ca ll 992
3090
Th r ee bedroom house for
rent wtlh two baths two
car garage m ftle Eastern
L oca l Sc hool DtSirtcl
Phone 614 98~ 4323
42

Mob•le Homes
_ __;f:;~
\V"R
=.~
enr,_ _.:_

TWO b edroom trail er
Adults
o nly
Brown's
Trader Cou r t Call992 3324
44
Apartment
_____!f~orRe~n~'---3 A ND 4 RM furntshed ap
I s Phone 992 5434

---------, RENTER 'S aSSIStance for

Sen 1or C•fJZens 10 Village
Manor a pts Ca ll992 7787
PARTIALLY l ~rntShed
a partm ent. 4 rooms and
ba lh Ca ll 992 5908
TWO bedroom furn1 shed
.J partm en! m Middleport
N o chtldren 1 304 882 2566
Fur nished apartm ent, four
rooms and bath , adults
on ly no pets, tn Mtd
dleport Phone 991 3B74
-..,....
' .--TwO room turn1shed apart
m ent a ll ulll•t•es pa1d
worktng men only Call
991 5007
Also sleepong
room

--

~-

--

--

_.. _-

--~ -

Will hcwe vacancy July
15th for e lderly lady, room
board
l au ndry
re.:~ so n db l e ~honeYY:.! 6022

Reiit -

COUN rRY .MO U LE Hume
Park Route JJ. Norlh of
Pomeroy Lr~rgc lots Call
YY'J. 7479
'""

..

Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 10 ' on largest
end $12 per ton Bundled
slab $10 per ton Del overed
to Ohto Pallet Co , Rl 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689

OLD COl NS, pocket wat
che s, class nngs, weddtng
bands, dtamonds Gold or
sliver Call J A Wamsley,
742 2331
Treasure Chest
Com Shop, Athens, OH 592
6462

Superoor Vtnyl Products

f

~
~ f"':~51
X. ,\~ ,..-. . . -

GOLO
AND
SILVE'R
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS,
JEWELR Y,
STER L ING SILVER AND
MISC
ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH ,
H IG HEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CO NTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER.
SHOP
MiDDLEPORT
OH 10, OR CA~L 992 3476
_....___~-

63

-

- - - ---'-

L1vestock

'.iONES:..Meat Pat ktng slaughtertng
c u s tom
process•nQ, retad m ea t
wa sntnglt&gt;n Co Rd 248,
Lottie Hoc~ mg. OH IJ&lt;J7
6133

ALL STEEL

s.zes
'From JOxJo

S1z es from 4x0 to l2x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt J,Boi(S4
Rac•ne , Oh
Ph 614 84J 25Y I
6 14 1 mo

COMPlETE
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE
Grad.ng Seed •ng

Water well drtllmg Tom
Lewo s
304 895 3802
seasonal Q1scount on all
~Ltmps and accessor1es
Dozer , Endloader a nd
dump truck Ty pe work 1n
eludes basemenTs ponds,
l a nd cleanmg
and
ex
cavat1ng
Dt sc ount s
avatlable through July F til
dlft also available Ra ndy
or Roger Butch er Phone
742 2940

Electncal
&amp; Refr1gerat1on

SEWING
MACHINE
Repa1rs.
serv1ce,
a ll
makes
992 2284
The,
Fabr. c Shop , Pomeroy
Authorized Smg er Sales
and Serv1ce We sharpen
Sossors
ELWOOD
BOWE!RS
RE PAl R
Sweepers ,
toasters, 1rons, all sma ll
appliances Lawn mower
Next to Stal e Htghway
Garage on Route 7, 985
3825
General Hauhng

WILL HAUL lomestone and
gravel Also, 11me hauling
and spreadmg L ea Morns
Trucktng P ~ ne 742 2455

________
_
.

SMALL

1976 Oodge Charger S E
37,000 actual m •les, good
t"adli'11S, good cond 1l•on
Cdl l M arc1a Hovdas helf ,1 1
YY2 J611 alter 4 30

-

IY / 8
Mustdng,
pow er
stce r •ng, .,,r con d1t1on.ng
Jm t•11 r dd io, tour speed ,
ll ,OvU miles, exce llent cor
tlttlfl tQr S3SUU OU. C~ ll ~92

611Y f'

•

"

.

.

'4"

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

- !:ihop

Summer
Enroll
ment

For

and

CARPENTER'S
DANCE
STUDIO

I)Ort&lt;Jble

we ld•n g
- Con cre te work
-C om m e r e •&lt;~ I plu mb

I S NOW UNDERWAY
Th e Lt~s t Day to S•g n
U p ts July 14 th

Ill ~

- U nderground
tu el
storaq e 111 stall atwn
- F•berg lass poo l s

BALLEr

F o• More tnlorm at•on
CAL b. 94 9 27 't0

M IDDL EPOR r 0

Real E state Loans
11' :z uo Interest 30 Yrs
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Aufomat1c
Loans No Down Pay
ment Federal Housmg
Loans, 3 0) down on
S2S,OO O 5{Jo down on
b.llance, FHA 26S Sub
s•dY Program FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort
Open M W F 9 oo to 1 00
By Appomtment
Offlce992 7S44
Home 992 6191
10 7 Syc amore St
Pomeroy OH

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES
Tl-IE POOL PEOPLE
31711 Noble Sum •t Rd
Middl eport Oh •o
992 5724
Sal es, serv1ce and sup
pli es
In ground and
rt bove ground pools
5 1 ti c

•995

DOWN
1 Nmny
6 DISOrderly
2 Footpront
II 'Good Ntght" J Take holy
lady
orders
12 Stupod
(Bnt )
13 Intends
4 Gorl's name
H Sl ag
5 ije knows
15 Cushion
no ' no
16 - de mer
6 Confound
18 Cambodia's
7 Minister's
Angkor talk (abbr )
19 Contrtbute
8 Be expen
%1 Wrttten letter enced
2% English nv•r 9 Attempted
Z3 God to
10 London
the Chinese
-district
H Fteld
ll Consumed
260neol
Olarhe's
Angels"
27 Time out
Z8 High-strung
30 Neroruan
greetlllg
31 Really
au courant
33- esprtt
34&amp;rap
35 Reporter s
question
31 Due to gel
39 Son of Jacob
41 Rettnue
ACROSS

1 Meander

Yesterday s Aollwer
:!9 Sttclt on

20 Wtthout
th e chaser
Z3 Skid to
the stde
24 Mideast

e&lt;pert
Z5 Income
28 Seaman

31 ' Pizza Tn
angle" star
32 1 told you 1
36 Russta11 c1ty
38 Indian
40 Japanese
measure

)
1---1--1-t--+-

DAILY CRYPTOOUOTE - H• r e's how.
AXVDLBAAXR
lo LONGFElLOW

Stl Yd
and up
w/ ppdd Jng

mo

by THOMAS JOSEPH

43 Mortise fttter
41 Sales
convention
setttng

1ln ~talled

b lB l

~~'fH;(/

42 Burn (var

SHA G
CARPET

rAP

&amp; JAZZ

992-7354

992 6215 or 99 2 7314
Pomeroy Oh

-

CCIII tor Fre e S1dmg
E st mate, Y49 2801 or
949 2860
No Sunday
ca li s
6 lJ 1 mo

Rt 3B OK54
Ractne , Oh
Ph 614 84o 25Yl
6 15 tt c

V.C. YOUNG II

Sq Yd
Cash N Carry

-

S1z es f rom 4x6 to lh.:lO

- Brtck hoe and dump
truck serv1 ce

- Addon s and
remodeling
- Roofing and gutt er
work
- Concrete work
- Piumbmg and
el ectnc a l work
(Free E Sf1m a t esJ

•4"

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

Utility Buildings

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

"Onve A Ltttle Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED

Sq Yd
Cash N Carry

Stdmg

S1zes

Shrubbery
N ew
D r•ve w a y s
Gravel or Concrete
Regrade dr •veways C&amp;
repatr) S•dewalks .and
P a t1o s
Comp l e t e
mob1le home hook up
Bru sh clear.ng work
CALL
9Y2 63 2J or 992 6011
7 10 I mo

Slue &amp; Gold
RUBBER
B.ACK

Vinyl and Aluminum

From JOI(JO

CARPET SHOP
1 ROLL
CANDY
STRIPE

6 30 1 mo

Farm Buildings

RUTLAN-D FURNITURE'S

---

Free Esttm ates
Ph (304) 773-5131
c.r ( 304) 992 2276

ALL 5rEEL

M H Repa1r

NOW IS THE T IME for
prevent1v e
ma1n
tenance-rnobde hom e roof
coat1ng
l abo r
and
m ater 1al 14' w1de $2 per
foot , 12 wode, $1 75 per
foot. 10' w1de, $1 50 per
fOot See us also for free
est1mates on awnmgs, car
,arts and s1&lt;trt1ng We are
your authonzed d ealer for
the best awnmgs on t he
market by Urban t n
dustr1es Kmgsbury Home
Sa les, 1100 E Matn St
Pomeroy, Ohi O Ca ll 992
7034
__..

D&amp;M
CONTRACTORS
-DRY WAUING
-·ROOFING
-REMODELING
-CONCRETE

• New Homes - ex tenscve remodettng
• Electncal work
• Ma sonr y work
12 Y ears
Expertence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992· 7583
6 JO 1 mo

Utility BUildings

Excavaltng

992 3795
~ .:1 '2 ti c

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Farm Buildings

Now IS the 11me for hom e
1mprovement Beat th e bad
weather We wtll do any
SIZe tOb; barns
roofs,
houses, etc W111 prov•d e
free
est1mates
Ex
per. e nc ed
and
have
references Call 992 5126,
992 3941 or 992 3519

1912 Vega 2 t;loor four
speetl lor ~200 00 Ca ll ~92
512/-·
- ----,
- _. 1976 F tat 128 Excell enl
condtt1o~ Call 949 2537

r sh•rt d nd nove lt y
sh•rts tor po 1tt1C1.ans,
bnlt team s bus tness or
1nd1V IdUdiS
Sh•r t s $4 00 Each
We
pr nt ALMOST
anyfh1n g on ALMOS r
anyt hm g•
Ph 614 949 nsa
Ev enmqs &amp; Weekend s
6 16 tic

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

Floor.ng, ce•l•ng. panel•ng,
doors and wmdows. a Iso
patnltng Call992 2759

Auto• ttl Sale

Shop

and Corporattons
Payrools, proltt and loss statements, all
I ed e r a! and state forms

Pomeroy , Oh

Pnnt

•

Bu st n ess- F a rms-P artnersh t ps

- --~----

71

ft

1

'!k.iB~i[!,

Cement work,
V1nton
Cement Floor Company,
Bidwell, Oh1o, 388 9877 All
concrete work, basement,
dnveways, etc , etc

I FIRSif'ttatiBA

1 10 1 mo

Tri-Counfy
Bookkeeping
Service

li"' · ~

S &amp; G Carpet Clean .ng
Steam
cleaned
Free
est1mate
Reasonable
rates
Scolchguard
992
6309 or 742 22H

86

Most Dat es
No Sunday Calls
6 9 1 mo

-

Home
Improvements

85

949-2801

~===;==============~================~~==========~~~~
Custom

AuroParts
&amp; Access on es

4

SILVER
DOLLARS

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322

618 E. Matn

ANTIQUES,
FUR
NITURE, glass. chtna,
anythmg See or call Ruth
Gosney, ant•ques, 26 ~
2nd, Mtddleport, OH 992
3161

-

is ~ ~ F u r m shed RoomS .,.

sPace far

62

STILL PAYING
EXTREMELY HIGH
PRICES FOR

For Free Est1mate Call

Motorcycles

83

I "II I l l

Servtng your area for 25 years
Call Now for Large Savtngs

1972 Monte Carlo body par
ts, one hood, Two doors one
trunk l 1d, assorted front
end parts, rear g la ss 992
2779

81

C.J rl Reed 667 3327
rom Burrou ghs 667 61SO
6 I 1 fT"\0 pd

'1 'I lboJ
y,.. I.J Z1bU

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

1974 Jeep J20 ptckup,
power steertng
power
brakes. a1r cond1t1on •ng
ltlt wheel, am fm ster eo,
good condttton $3 ooo oo
Phone Terry L•fe at 667

'

FREE ESTIMATES

VINYL SIDING

1970 Dodge van 6 cy11nder
thr ee speed, good t1 rcs and
body M ot or r uns good
Racks on top, new brakes
all arou nd pn ce $1350 00
Ca ll or see a t 742 2263
Rutlan d, Matn St, by Stans
Old Barga•n Land

84

Two bedroom furnished
home Call 992 59 14, 992
3129 992 5434

Free E~t1m&lt;1te ~ '+a
Reo1 ~ on~1bl c Pr 1ces
( (lH How Hd

Free Esltmate
Jam es Keesee
Ph 992 2772
6 2:, I n

Pels for Sale

56

A ll work gu.1ranreed

Wmdow s

1961 Ford Ptckup four
speed transm 1SS1 0n New
t tr es, heavy duty suspen
s1on W1ll t ake car go tra •ler
10 w •th dea l Call 614 985
4109

Gutter &amp;
R e ptacement
Wtndows and
Roottng

or repa1r gutl~r !'.
a • d downspo uts gutt ~ r
&lt;:H!clfllf1r:J arid pc"l1ntu1q

,l 1

e ~ fo rm Doo
• ~ torm W.nd
• Rcpl.l &lt;:e mcnl

MISC Merchan1se

LADIES' beoUitfUI htgh
qual1ty s1ze 16 dresses,
brands
Davtd Crystal,
Verona, Ltlly Pulttzer One
IS 100% s olk $10 each
Never been worn 992 3283

SIDING, SOFFIT

n ~.:w

ei 11S

SJ

54

T. L. BURROUGH'S

All type s o l ro ot work ,

1979 Honda HawK. s4oooo
and take over payments
ca llafter3 3o 992283o

ATTENTION
(IM
POR TANT TO YOU l Wtll
pay cash or cerhf•ed check
for ant1ques and collec
t1bles or ent.re estates
Nothtng too large Also,
guns. pock et watches and
co1n co11ect1ons Call 61.4
767 3167 or 557 3411

fH.LWRITESEL
I ROOFING

~LOWN

INSULATION

5454

74
3544

Anhques

Servi(~es

Busi1tess

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

Houses tor Rent

41

46

WANT TO SEU? GIVE US ACALL! !

~M I .

Bulldozer work, small 10bs
a spec tally Call742 2753

61 Ill

ASSOCIA I ES
Roger &amp; Oottw rurncr
1&lt;1 2414
Je.1n rru sse ll949 1660
OFFICE YY1 225Y

heart, and West showed out
lle&lt;;larer played tb~ ace and
ktng of cfubs and trumped a
low club Tben be cubed the
ace of diamonds and led a
!rump to dummy's king (the
~f entry) for h1s fmaJ club

·----------.,------------1

&gt;u;oouu

HOUSE FO R Sa l e by
owner exc loca t•on •n M•d
dleport 3 bedroom s fu ll
basement 9«n 5792

AI lrtck " ' South led the

East was helpless If he

unhappy when he saw the
dummy lie realized that
three notrump was a playable
contract 1f the opposlns
spades were davaded 4-3 All

~92 225~

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

be'droom' 2 lull ba t h~ t am lly
room lul l baemenl

.,

• 862
.AKH
EAST

bed roo m 197 1 L1berty 14 x 1
65 two bed r oom
1968 ,.
Ati ant c
11 x 60 two
32
Mobtle Hpme•
be droom
1968
New
ior Sale
Moon 12 x 60 w1fh expando,
two bedroo m 1967 Buddy
1973 Fa•rpo1nt, 14x65 2
12 x 50 2 bedroom
bedroom
1971 Came ron
14x65 2
bedr
1971 Fleetwood l4x65 3
bdrl, bath 'h
1971 ShaKes pear 14x65 ~
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood 12x63. 2
Bdr
B
8. S MOBILE HOME
606 E
SA L ES PT PLEASANT
['II A IN
wv 304 675 4424
POMEROY, 0

216 E Second Street

NEW LISTING - NRU New
hOme 1n the R lvgs. Edll1on J

•Ko

WEST

1977 Sc hultz mobile hom e
and lot 14x70 wrth three
bedrooms l'h baths at
1041• :. St 2nd Ave M1d
dl cport Oh oo Ca l i 992 2457
1975 west ern M ans1on 14 :&lt;
70 three bedroom
1971
Cameron
14 x 64 two

declarer )Vould need Ill a 3 2
diviSIOn ln hearts
However, the contract was
three hearts and nol three
notrump Could anylh1ng bad
happen to three hearts' West
casfted the first three spade
tracks and switched to the dia
mond queen
Declarer won wllh tbe king
and cashed tbe ace of trumps
If declarer carelessly leads a
small trump to the king at
tnck six - as n1ne out of 10
players would be can no long
er make three hearts He
would then have to lose t hose

•s 1 s

Fourteen toot w de thr ee
bedroom 1112 baths f ur
n1 shed Must see to ap
prec 1ate Pn ce d to sell
Call i 304 675 6466

Three bedroom br1ck r anch
sty le home w1th l'h bath
and built n k1tch en full
basement w1 th wood stove
large garage b•g l ot w •th
n1 c-e
garden
spo t
$52,000 00 Phone 667 32 88

•

Superior technique wins
NORTH

Autos lw

11

PI!/ P(1 nt1 I(
~ un1J1rtl
sunrout ,wt om'l t• c un 1111
rad• O, e)(ccl len r con d 1100
good tg,iS md c t~ gc ~.J~OO 00
or best OliN C ~ ~~ '11!5 JS"J6

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Mob•le Homes
tor SCJ 1e

~~~~~-:w
Pomeroy,O

BRIDGE

Mortg age
Money
Ava ilable
ConventiOnal 5
Pet down VA
no down
payment 2nd morTgages
Cunn,nghama nd Assoc1ate
s •n c Mortgage Bankers
Ca II 991 7000 for ap
po1ntment

Three year ol d, ftve room
house w1t h ce ntra l a.r and
heat, carpe1 throughout 24
acr es wt th fru t trees
Located on Eagl e R1 dge
Rd Phone 949 2793

!

r

Thr ee be dr~o m house W1 t h
bath Large lot Insu lated
storrn w• ndows carpet gas
turn~Ke
base ment
c1ty
wa t er
sept1c sys tem
~ 14 500 00 Ca ll 741 3074

Real Estate
31

Homes tor Sale

Bedutlful large home Low
util1t1 eS br iCk ranch sty l e
:.1
bed r ooms
J baths
f•replacc lull basement
tdmdy room
a1r con
ct.r .oner
3 ca r garage
Ba um Add .t.on
M e1gs
County Ca ll 985 4169

Housing
Headquarters

IMMEDIATE opentng for
Soc i al
Worker
wtlh
Bac he lor' s degree , ex
per1ence 1n crisis coun
selong. based In Meigs
County, willing to travel to
ne,ghbor.ng counhes Must
I
Publtc Sale
be htghly orgamzed , wtll
&amp; Auctoon
have
d1 verse
respon 1
Stblllltes
Half time
BRADFORD, AUcttoneer,
poSttton to start, posstble 1 GeorgeS HobsteHer Jr.
Complete Serv1ce Phone
Broker
•ncrease to 3;.,. or full Send
949 2487 or 949 2000 racine,
resume to Planned P~ren
Ohto, Crttt Bradford
NEW LISTlNG On
!hood Of Southeast Ohto, 8 Bradbury Rd Lovely 3
North Court St., Athens, bedroom hOme w1th 2
wanted to Buy
Ohto &lt;1.5701 Must be post
full baths, dtntng room
marKed no later than July
Iron and brass beds, old
and fam1ly room. 2 car
25, 1980 An Equal Op
furn1ture, desks, gold
garage and shed, also II
portuntly Employer
rengs, tewelry, Sliver
Only $41,000 00
dollars. sterling, etc • wood
POMEROY - Large 2
1ce boxes, antiques, etc
story home on Un1on
Complete
households
Avenue Home has 3
12
Situation• Wonted
Wrtte M D Mtller, Rt 4,
bedrooms, gas forced
Home nee!flng pa inted&gt;
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992
a1r furnace Garage for
Guters tn neetd of repair? Is
7760
•
off street parktng Sell
that roOf beglnntng to leak?
mg pnce $26,500 00
Call 992 3519, 992 3'141 , or
POMEROY - On Con
10 karat, 14 karat, 18 Karat,
992 5126 and gel th.ngs all
dar Sl Extra ntce 3
gold Dental gold and QOid
f ixed . up before that bad
bedroom home Large
ear Pt ns 675 3010
weather htls By the way,
sPac1ous rooms g1ve you
est1mates are
f ree
that 'down home feel
Gold, Stiver or foretgn
provided
lng Asktng $26,500 00
COlDS Or any gold or Stiver
BUILDING SITES •terns Antique furntture,
We have some II Give us
Will do house cleaning,
glass or chtna, w1ll pay top
a call
$3 00 per hour , have
dollar, or com plete estates
RUTLAND
Ex~a
references Phone 992 5094
No ttem too large or too
well Kept 3 bedroom
small Check pr•ces before
home
Alum1num
ll
Insurance
selltng Also do appratSinQ
siding
Home
IS
Osby &lt;Oss1el Marlin 992
mamtenance free On
AUTOMOBILE
IN
~370
noce lot $36,500 00
SURANCE
been
can •
RUTLAND - Large 2
ce lled'
Lost
your
WILL BUY old Iran
operator s license'&gt; Phone , story home on Mam
Street ExtenSive 1nStde
SmiSSIOOS,
batterieS ,
992 2143
engmes, or scrap metals,
remodeling The new
etc Call245 9188
furnace, blown m m
sulalton are only a few
ntce thmgs about thiS
home Gtve It a lOOk''
Pnce
reduc ed
to
$35,000 00
ATHENA ACRES - 24
acres w1th a beautiful
home, swlmmmg pool ,
annex bu•ldmg fully
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
heated and atr condt
!toned
Orchard has
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?
many trutl and nut
trees All mmerals m
eluded w ith property
Shown by aQpt only
HYSELL RUN RD - 8
acres wtth 2 bedroom
dwelltng
Asktng
$21,500 00
Velma N1c1nsky Assoc
• "
Phone 74)·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742·3171
'

'

ce

FREE!

For Rent the form er War
ners Barber and Beauty
Shop bulldtng on Second st
m Pomeroy Bvslness or
protesstonal blldlng with
approx•mately 1100 square
It of worK space Also an
upstairs furn1shed apart
menr with two bedrooms
Rent wlth the opt ton to buy
Call 992 2528 or 992 2117
before 5 •

PHONE 742-2003

PICKtnQ up an~ bUytng 1unk
autos and bodtes Buytng
clean copper 60c I b
radiators 40c ear, yellow
brass JOe lb, alum•num 15c
lb Rtders Salvage, Rt 4,
Sl Rt 124, Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992 5468

Pubhc Not1ce
IN THE
P1ano Tuning
Lane
COMMON PLEAS COURT
Danoels 742 2951·' Tu1ung
OF MEIGS COUNTY
and Repa1r Serv1ce since
OHIO
'
1965 If nc answer phone
CATHERINE
K
SCHNEIDER,
- 992 2082
Plamt•ff,
vs
GOLD,
SILVER,
THOMAS E SCHNEIDER
S TERLING ,
ETC,
Defendant.
'
BROWN'S Ml DDLEPORT,
Case No 17,510
NOTICE BY
OHIO PHONE
614992
PUBLICATION
5113
Sc hoetder
Thoma s E
w h ose
r es 1dence
1s
Jones M eat Packing will
unknown, but whose last
known address was p 0
reopen July 9 havtng been
Box 134, Tuppers Platns
closed due to the death of
Oh1o 45783, W•fl take not1
E T Jones Call 614 667
rhat on t he 6th day of June
6133 for your slaugher.ng
1980, that Ca thertne 1&lt;'
appomtment Hours Man
Sch neider Pla•nllff t1led
d
ay
9 8,
Wednesday
her Complamt aga 1nst h•m
thro ugh Sa turday 9 5
'" th e Me1gs County Com
mon Pleas C::ourt, Me1gs
Closed Tuesdays and Sun
County, Oh1o, Case No
days
17 51 0 pray mg for d 1vorce
upon the grounds of gross
neg lect of duty and ex
4
G1veaway
treme cru elty , tor custody
of the m•nor c h1ld of th e M.n1ature collie pupp1es
part•es, for a limony and
All colors, SIX weeks old
Support and w1ll further
and ready to go Call
1aKe not1ce tha t thls ' ca use
anyt1m e
at
985 3528,
can be heard at anyt1me
f ollowmg twenty e1gh t days
Chester, OhiO
from the date of the last
publi ca tion of th1 s notiCe
a nd
tha t
th e
last
pubhcat•on Will be m ade on
th e 16th day of July , 1980
Larry E Spencer.,
Clerk of Court
M e•gs Cout'1fy, Ohto
,
With Any UN ICO
(6) 11, 18, 1 ~. 111 1, 9, 16 6tc
FREEZER PLUS:
S2S DISCOUNT
Stllp 1n for Deta•ls
3
Announcements
,;

Level lot on Condor St •
Pomeroy 129' frontage 72'
deep, has concrete block
butldlng tor shop or storage
approxtmately 2500 square
feet Call992 3921, S20 000

GET VALUABLE lralntng
as a young busmess person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
, .nel route carrier Phone
us r.ght away and get on
the eliglblltly list at 992
2151&gt; or 992 2157

5
Rates and Other Information

34 _ _ _ _ __

1J I

Thursday. July 17. on old
Rt 33, between Co Rd 18
andt9

.

33. _ _ _ _ __

Now arrange the clrded IM!ers to
ronn lhe surpnse anawer as aug
gestod by the

9a m

71-Aufot fOr hit

li-HOmlll

tHANKESI

Yeslerday 9

Bus.ness
OpportuntiY

A frame business butldtng
w1th concrete parkmg area
at 514 E
Matn St ,
Pomeroy
Ca II '192 3921,
$20.000

I I K

Yard Safe

1

2l

r] I

235~

61-Ftrm l!qvlp"'Mit

2:2-Money to Lan

9

5

U-Bulk:llrtg Suppllt5
56---Pth for Salt

eFINANCIAL
u - &amp;uslneu

23
24
25
26
27
28
29
JO

6
7
8

TV Radio Equipment
U-Antiqllll
54-Mise Mtrchandlu

11-Winttd To Do

22

3
4

~n-ell ,

Rtdlo TV
&amp;

843

51-Houuholcl lioods

u-luslnt ss Training
1s-Scbools Instruction

21
1
2

u-S ~Nee tor Rent
47-WinltciiCI Rent
41-Equlpml'nl for Rent

IJ-Insurlnce

17
18
19
20

Wanted •
For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

45- FRooms

12-Siluat" Wantecl

I,SEDUE

-,

Miscellaneous

Lo51and Found

Male Beagle, mostly blacK,
10 M1le Htll area , Racme
Nott ce d m•ss mg Wed
nesday morn1ng, ch1ld's
pet, would appre c 1ate
knowmg any 1niormat1on
alall Phone9492413

~---

31

F 1ve room house 1n Brad
bury modern kitchen and
bath Carpe t and a1r con
d•t•on,ng across WM P O
Cal l 992 5310

For Sale
two General
Electrtc (etectr.c l apart
ment s1z ranges '" superb
condttlon can see at305 w
Matn St , located at the bot
tom of Monkey Run Can
see anyltme day or n1ghl

Female Walker
Fox
Hound
In
Vlc•n•tyof
Delrottts Run One front
leg brown, others whtle
EKfremely shy, 1f seen call

6-LOSIInd Found
7-YirdSale
I - Public S.le
&amp;Aucr.on

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11-Htlpw1 nttcl

These cash rates
mclude d1scount

,

41 - HotJsn lor Renl
4l-Mobllt Homes

2- ln Mtmorr1m

Pnnt one word m each
space below Each tn
1hal or group of f1gures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number 1f used
-1 You'll get better results
I tf you descnbe fully,
1 gtve pr.ce The senltnel
1 reserves the r.ght to
I classify, edt! or re1ec1
• any ad Your ad wtll be
1 put ·~ the proper
I classtltcatton tf you II
~ check the proper box
below

6

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS
1-CardofThtnks

11

Gtveaway

Twelve pupptes to good
home So( tern er pups
ready 1n 56 weeks, 6 mt xe d
breed ready tn 1 2 weeks
Also s1x ktftens ready 1n
about one weeK Call 992
3760

PHONE 992-2156

Write your own ad and order by mall w1th th1s
coupon~ Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

!

poultry, lamb and mutton
As a result; net meat unports to
the four countnes should drop from
the 1979 estimate of 1.6 ffilllion
metric tons to less than 1.3 million
this year, the report said.
Amencan beef ImpOrts are also
expected to decline despite an anticipated 2 percent drop m domestic
production, the report said, because
"lower U S unport pnces for beef
are not attractmg beef from many.
exportmg countnes, especially as
many of these countries are
rebwlding their beef cattle herds."
At the same tlme, the report said,
beef production IS expected to be off
m the maJor exporting nations,
falling 10 percent m Australia and 7
percent m Argentina while riSmg a
scant 2 percent m MeXIcO.
In the SoVIet Union, the report
sa1d, overall meat production dunng
the first two months this year was
runrung 13 percent ahead of 1979, but
then dropped below 1979 levels m
March, April and May.

23 - - -----pr:ofeSS .Onal
Serv1ces

to

work tl'

Ont: \•Her 111mply stands for another In thiS Sllmple A IS

JU LY CARPET SALE
ALL CAR PET AT DISCOUNT PRICES
Any regular carpet 10bs mstalled w •th fr ee pad

used foi':;.thc three L s X for the t"o 0 s pt r Smglc le tters

apostropnes the t-ength and formn ~IOn of the ~A or ci s ere all
hmts Earh day the code l etters ar!?" rl•ffcrf'nl
CR YI'TO Ql'OTF.S

Ntce Select1on of Carpet R emnants a11d
I.moleum Remnants at B1 Dt scounts

A YX

A YN O P

RKBBZL

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Q7

~,R

EOQ

AT

OTA

X E A
q T T Q c T G
G N z R T 0
Yesterday's Cryptoquote A GOOD USTENER 1~ NOT ONLY
.._~M,;;a;.;,l;,;,t'i~~~._ _ _...;,._ _...;....___' 7:.,;4:.,:2;_;-2::,:2.:,1l:....J ~ POPULAR EVERYWIIERE, ' BOT AFTER A 1WHILE, HI!
.-:'
1 KNOWS SOMETHING - WILSON MIZNER
!&lt;;.

,

y

o\T

SNPYA

,

,,

�'-

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

-------

----- -- - - -- - - - --13- The Dally Senbne}. Middlcpurt-Pomeroy, 0 , Wcdnesclb},
July 16, 1980 ___________....;.____..j•
..__....;._....;.....;.

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u , Wednesda;, July 16, 1980

Farmers can
expprt record
•

gra1n exports

-

WASillNGTON (APl - Amer1can
farmers can expect 12 more months
of record gram exports despite the
Russ1an embargo and good crops
elsewhere m the world, the
Agnculture Department says
'For the second consecutive year,
world coarse gram utilizallon IS expected to exceed world coarse gram
production," USDA analysts say
"S1gnif1cant detenorabon of the
gram crop outlook m Canada as well
as somewhat reduced grain export
availability from that of a year ago
m Australia and mcreased unports
by China currently pomt towards
prospects for record U S wheat and
corase gram exports," the analysts
sa1d Tuesday m the departments
monthly World Gram SituatiOn
Outlook.
They added, however, that the
demand on the U S supplies could
force the nation's domesllc stores or
coarse grams to a four-year low
The report estunated world gram
productiOn, Including milled n ee,

at! 41&gt; billion metr1c tons durmg the
year that ends June 30, 1981, well

for gram after President Carter Im- year, IS now expected to (all below
posed the sales suspension m previous yearly levels, promptmg a
January
significant m~reasc m IDlports, the
But as that IS happerung, they Agriculture Department says.
"Sov1et meat unports durmg 1980
sind, "other unporters such as Chma
and several European countnes may be about a:; percent above those
have turned toward the Umted or 1979," the department said
States for a larger portion of their Tuesday m 1ts quarterly report on
the world meat outlook. "Record ununport supplies "
The Chinese, the report Sllld, are ports of both pork and poultry are
expected to unport a record II forecast "
But worldWide, the report said,
rrullion tons of wheat durmg the
commg year, and the Uruted States 1980 meat IDlports should~ do\\?! as
already has more thim three tunes production m othennaJor unportmg
the e;q&gt;Ort coffiffiltment to that coun- countries, mcluding the Uruted
States, IS expected to set a record.
try 11 had a year earlier
Total meat productiOn In the
The report also said the s1tatwon
will require the Russ1ans to Import a Umted States, Canada, Japan and
greater proportiOn of wheat than the European Commwi1ty was put at
they have Ill the past when mucli of 50 1 rrullion metnc tons, 3 percent
their needs were met by the._Umted higher than last year Ametric ton 15
States, which accounts for some 30 2,201&gt; pounds.
percent of world coarse gram
While the four countnes are exproductiOn
pected to post a 5 percent decline m
WASillNGTON (AP) - Russian beef and veal production, the report
meat production, runrung well said that would be more than offset
ahead of 1979 at the begmrung of this by mcreased productiOn of pork,

within the department's preVIous
forecasts and only 20 million tons
below the record 1978-1979 productiOn A metnc ton IS 2,205 pounds,
equaling 36 7 bushels of wheat and
39 4 bushels of corn
World demand m the next year IS
expt"Cted to .push Amencan wheat
exports t3 a record 39.5 ffilllion
metnc tons anti With a record 1980
crop expected the domestic wheat
stocks should riSe as well, the report
sa1d
The report proJected U S. exports
of a SIXth consecutive record 74
million metr1c tons of coarse grams
m the coffilng marketmg year, but
said that would probably reduce the
stock of those commodities substanllally smc~ this year's harvest IS
expected to be below the 1979 record.
USDA analysts said they expect to
see a continuation of the shift m
global trade patterns that has sent
the Sov1et Uruon to other countnes

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ad~

r----------------------,
I
Curb Inflation. 1
•

I

4

WANT AD INFORMATION

Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., PomeroY&gt;,
45769

o.,

eRENlALS

l-Announcements

torRent
44-Apartmtnt tor Rent

4-Give•w•y
s-HappyAas

Phone~--------------~

l
l
l
)

9-WantedtoBuy

eMERCHANDISE

U-

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

ca Re,.lr

THREE family yard sale
Thurs and Frt • June 26
and 27 9 a m 5 p m on
r.ght on top of Chester Htll
Maple bar stools, house
patnl, toys, mise

6l-Wa11Nd ID •uy
n- Trucll:s tor Salt
u-Livtttoctl:

Op~rtunity

M-Ha., &amp; Grain
65- I Mil I Ftrtlli1er

23-Profnslonll

services

•TRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE
lor SIMI#
l2-MottiltoHomes
torhlt

THE
SOUTHERN
Cheerleaders wtll have a
yard sale Tuesday, July 2.
at the Bob Roy restdence
All kinds of 1lems Starts at

7)-Vans&amp;4W D

Slartlng July 8 10 from 9 5
datly, lots Of clothmg,
ultltly !able and lots of
whatnots Address 185 s
Front St, Mtddleport

7+-Matorcvctn
rt&amp;

l l-ll=arms for Salt
l4-lusintu Buildings
U --Lob I Acrttte

Auto Perb

Acetssorlts

n - Auro liltpair

31- Atll Estate Wanhd
U'-lllultors

eSERVICES
11 -Homtlmprr~emet~ts

Want-Ad AdvertiSing
Deadlines
Dally
SaturQv
for Monday

4PM

10 ·- - - - -

31 _ __ _ __

11
12
13
14
15
16

32 _ _ __ __

12 Noon

1.

11-Ptumblne &amp; Eaunt1111

Two·Skirt Suit!

11-e:Jit:aVIHftJ
M-EIKtrlal
a R etrlttranon
as--a..eral Muting

16-M H. R.,.lr
17- Upholstery

,,..

cash

1 day

.....

,"'..
"'
'"

Charge

100

lNys

ldays
6CS.ys

I

EICh word over the minimum 15 wenlsls 4 cenfl•r word per day
Alb running other than consKullve d&lt;~vs will bt Chii'"Otd at "~' 1 day

rete

In memory, Cud of Thank' and Obituary
minimum cash In advance

4 ctnts per

word,l3 oa

Sltlltinel

-

IN THE
COMMON P~EAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
COMMUNITY BANK ET
AL
Pla1nt1ffs,
vs
EARL L FAUDREE, ET
AL
Defendants
No 17.420
NOTICE OF SHERIFF' S
SALE AND
PROOF OF
PUBLICATION
In pursuance of an alias
order of sale to me direc ted
from the Clerk of Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs
county, Oh1o, 1 w111 offer
far sale at public auct•on,
at the door of the cour
thouse 10 Pomeroy Me1gs
County. Ohto, on the 26th
day of July, 1980, at 10
a m , the f ollowmg real
estate
PARCEL NO
The
follpw 1ng
real
estate
Stluated tn the County of
Me•gs, •n the State of Oh1o
and tn the Tolllnshtp of
Ol•ve, and bounded and
descr.bed as follows Betng
tn One Hundred Acre Lot
No 103, tn Sections Nos 3
and 9, Town No 4, Range
No 11, of the Ohto Com
pany 's Purchase, and
bounded on the south of I an
ds Of Pearl Ktbble, on th e
east by lands of Pearl Ktb
ble on the north by lands
of Fred Shumway, on th e
west by State H1ghway No
124, and beginnmg at a
stone 2171!1 feet south of th e
sout h west corner of lot
deeded by W H' Smar t and
w 1fe To Edward !:i•mmons,
I hence east 150 teet th ence
south 72 1n feet
thence
west 1 ~0 teet , mence north
12 , fee t to the place of
beg .nnmg. conta1nmg one
f9urth ( 1.. ) ot an acre

oo

_P~):lJI ~ I'!_Otl ~

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

Pubhc Not•ce

_,,,,,., .,

t hos 30th day of May, 1980

~~------~~--------------~
-- - -Public Nottce
_

PARCEL NO 2 Betng 1n
100 Acre Lot No 103 m Sec
t1on s Nos 3 and 9, Town
No 4 Range No 11 of the
Oh•o compa ny s Purchase
and beglnn•ng at the nor
theast corn er of lands for
merly owned by Pearl K1b
b le and southeast corner of
lands of Fred Shumway ,
then ce S(..Uth 72 1h. fee t ,
th ence west 85 fe et , thence
north n•o f eet, thence east
85 feet to the place of begt n
n1ng conta 1n1ng 141 100 of
an acre, more or less
Ref er ence Deed
Vol
172, Page 590 Me1gs Coun
ty Deed Rac.or ds
Sa1d real esta te Is ap
pra •sed at $16,500 00 Ter
ms of sa le cash, w•th
mm1mum bid two Th •rd s
appra •scd va lue
Jam ei J Proffitt,
Shenff of
Me1QS County Oh1o
\6) 25 (/) 2, Y, 16, 41
Comptroller of
the Currency
Treasury Department
otthe
Umted States
Wash1ng_ton, o c
WHEREAS saTISf ac tor y
ev 1dence has been presen
ted lo th e Comptroller of
the Currency that BANK
ONE
OF
POMEROY,
N A l oca ted m Pomeroy,
State Of Oh 10, has comrll ed
Wllh all prOV ISIOOS 0 the
st atule s of t he Un tted
s ta tes req u• red to be com
plied w 1th before be •ng
aut hon zed to com m ence
the busmess at bank1ng as
a
Na11onal
Ba nk• ng
Assoc •at •on
NOW, rHEREF ORE, I
hereby cerl1 f y mar th e
ab)ove nam ed assoc1a t10n •s
au honzed to com m ence
1t1e bus1ness ot banking as
a
Nat1o na l
Ba nk•ng
Assoc •at1on
IN
rE~ rtMON)
WH EREOF Witness. my
s1gna 1u1 e and sea l ol ott1ce

·

rr Xlt I I I l
(.,._,.ll&gt;monowl

1

Jumbles IMPEL LAlHE LAVISH STYMIE
Answer
A hu sband li ke yours must have been hard

to fmd -

HE SiiLLISI

1-----------1~----------t
7

Yard Sale

Wednesday and Thursday'
from 8 4 at 698 Laurel St,
Mtddleport
At Glen Caton restdence off
124 ,to left on County Road 1
about one m1le to top of htll
on Salem Twp 34, or off 124
at 325 then rtght on Salem
Tw 34 Clothmg of all stzes,
gutenas $1 00 and up,
ch1cks, 50c, stone 1ars.
Avon and many things
Wednesday, Thursday and
Frtday

GARAGE SALE July 17
and 18 9 4 at the Guy Spen
cer res1dence 10 Tuppers
Pla1ns snow ttres H 78 x 14
mounted trail er wheels
400x12,pressure pump tnch
hose tratler
htlch tub,
mowmg scythe, grtll wtth
oven, Texasware
cof
feepot,school desk, chairs,
davenport, new gloves,
drapes, some c lothes 011
heater

Mobile Homesales anet Y~rd sa lea are accepted OftiY with cash with
order 25 cent charge for ads carrying loa Number In car• ol Ttw
Mail This Coupon with Rem1ttance
The DallY Sentmel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Print answer here

YARD SALE July 17, 18,19
from 9 II on county road 28
at Hayward B1ssellres1den
ce
Baby clothes, boys
clothes. SIZe I 3, playpen ,
car seats, etc ,m1sc 1tems

15 Words or Under

35 _ _ _ __

"""""canoon

t._t,_ __,H~e.,lr:p_,W~a~n~ted~--

3

John G He 1mann
Comptroller of th e
currency
Charter Number 16859
(6) 11. 18 . 25 (7) 2. 9 16 23
30 (8) 6, 9t c

~

~

Announcement•

Needed RD or LPN for 11 to
7 30 shtft Part time or full
t•me Good work.ng con
dtltons Contact Mr Ztdtan
at the Pomeroy Health
Care Center 992 6606 Mon
day through Frtday from 9

ICE CREAM

~ PA Y
ht ghest pr tces
liosstbl e for gold and Si lver
cams nngs, 1ew elry, etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport

I

POMEROY
,LANDMARK

Mam St .
Pomeroy
992·2181

Experienced front end
alignment and atr con
d1t1onmg techn1c1an W1ll
pay for experience Ex
penenced persons only
Two R•vers Ford , Pt
Pleasant, w Va . Phone
675 1490
Someone to help care for
aged lady wtlh arthritis
Call992 7226

Sutt news IS DOUBLY good

news when you can team a great
tackel wtlh two sktrts one slim
the other flared
e $50 and
more sew lhe tno tn tweeds
Pnnted Patletn 4700 Mtsses
Stzes B 10 12 14 !6 lB 20
Stze 11 (busl 34) Jacket 114 yds
45 , s!1m sktrt I 718 flared 211.

s..

$1 75 tor uo:h palllrn. Add 50C
lor uch pattem tor first-class
atrmatl and handltna. Send to
Anne~dams

Pattem O.pl

t "l 1

The Datly Senttnel
243 West 17 Sl,

lin Yotll, NY

10011. Pnnt NAM~L ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, and STYu. NUMBER
Busy women t~e fastest to-sow
lash tOns are tn oLr NEW SPRING

SU MMER PAmRN CATAlOG'

Dresses lops tackets ponts
Plus $1 75 free pattew coupon
Send $1 lor Calalog.
127 Atrhans 'n' Domes $1 50
129-Qutck/U., Transtor• $1 50
130-Swuters·Stm ll 56 $1 50
U2-QuUI Ori1Jnals
$1 50

DOWNING CHILDS AGENC'L~~C.
INSURANCE _

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US

992-2342

DOWNINGstHILDS AG~NCY, I.NC•.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

D1tc h d•gg .ng serv1ce Ca li
773 5839 or 173 51H8
Magg•e s Up holstery
Reb ulld•ng, Refln• sh.ng
Reuphol st er;..y F abnc and
vony l sampl es Call 141
2852

1111

Homes tor Sale

Excellent loca t1on on SR
124 Three bedroom home
on ap prox •m a t e l y
two
acres Many ex t ra s Call
992 7255

**'!.***********
:~$$$$:
! MONEY · MONEY !
ll- Ftrst

mortgages,*
:second mortgages , !
,._and
ref1nancert
rt cases. Call Com-*
! p lete
Mortgag e !
,..servtc;,es
1n rt
lt-Galhpohs, Ohto at~
!446- 1517 for more,._
* 1nlormatton
a ndll* vour appo.ntment.

a hea lalalor
beautiful lawn Out"•ndln11l
tamll v home May anvme mor
wilh

lljl&amp;ljle Pr1ced In lhe IQ.W l-«1 S

Crtlirlts M

H•yes RHitCN'

Ne.cU E Caney lr Mgr
P" tt2 2403 or tt2 2710

We

have
your

HOBSTETTER

REALTY

+AKQ9

+106~

• J 10 9 6

• QJ9 3

+J 962

.J

tlOH
+ Q83

SOUTH

42
.AQ8 52
tAK7
10.

+

Vulnerable Ne1ther
Dealer South

.....

Nortll

E1.11

p,,.
Pass
Pass

South

first three spade tricks, one
heart tnck and a diamond
Thts Soutb realized thai if
East had four hearts, the contract was still safe

p..,.

queen of hearts not a low

I,..

Opemng lead • K

By Oswald Jacoby
&amp;bd Alan Sootq

Declarer

*•***********•·
NEW 3 bedroom home tor
sa l e
Buil t •n k1tchen
d•n •n g
room ,
l ar g e
recreat1 on room fi r ep lace
lots a t stor age 2_ baths
garage 1 acr e lot 992 3454

was slightly

MOB I ~E

home for sale,
$6500, land contract wtlh
$500 down or Will negohate
cash
sa 1e
Also one
bedroom , bUilt .n bunks
48x 10 mobtle home, S2800
land contract $300 down
Wr1te J Bowland, 15068
Emptre Rd , Thornvtlle,
OH 43076,

NEWLISrtNG -

LOrS
'i.
bedr ooms n1 ce l1v1ng
r oo1T1 utii•IY part base
!llc nr, ~6 {1cr e M e1gs
:,c. t1 o0 1
D s tr• ct
UF REMUDE LING

NEW LISriNG
Fu
Po111 ts
J b('droom
mo bil e home on one
b(.•a ut,tu t ac re w llh
q~ rag e
wor k s h op
• 1c l nl storage bulld1ng
~as 11cr
drye r
&gt;11 , 0000
NEW
LIS riNG
Remode led lhtoughoutl
~ · room
:.1
bedroom
t1ome
new paneli ng
1ew ~..a r p('t mg vmy l ' "'
k.1l chen a nd ba Th ther
mopane w1ndows ver
t1ca 1s ding S21 SOU 00
NEW
LI S riNG
fHERMOPA NE WIN
oows 1
5 room , 3
bed f oom home on 1 acre
lot ha rdwood tl oor.ng
ne w pa ne l 1ng new wall
and base c ab 1ners •n k 1
ct1cn pa rl•al l y fln 1shed
lull IJCISf' nlC ll 11"J bath
Re a lt y n1 ce • S'i.5 uoo 00
ACREAGE
ro
DE
VELOP
i n Eas tern
D st r cr 'i..S acres wood
nncl! homes •res 4 lots
sur veyed tor hom es •t es
w 11L r a n ct eiL Cir• c to
pr oper!(
ava•lab l c

Reaf Estate- ~neral

:FREE LIVING - 3 pro
•pertii?S L •ve 1n onP q nd
'u sc the other two t or
wn te off Dril l ed w ell J
b aths on 1 J AC RE
' REAL
BUY
;bed r oom home bath al l
ut •llt •es 2 l ots tor on ly
$11000
FAMILY - N1 ce large 4
bedr ooms 1117 bath s hoi
water hea t alt utll •t •es
modern k• t carpe t1ng
and full baseme nt
FIRST
AD
5
bedrooms 3 k1n g SI Ze 2
tu ll baths modern kt t
forma l d1n .n g full base
m ent nat gas furn ace
1 acre
FIRST AD 13 lois
ut111 t1es availabl e On l y
56 500
SPEC IAL - 1 lots and
ol d house n ~a r J on es
Boys 53 500 ,
BARGAIN - One st ory
bulld1ng 24XBO
w lh
bath tor fl ea m a rk e t or
home Sll ooo
YOU CAN BUY - fh &gt;S
one t1 J bedroom hom e
a ll utlltt •'es ba th flu e
for woodburne r and l
lots
WE WORK FULL TIME
ON SE~LING YOUR
HOM E,
NO
5 1DE
LINES REA L ESTATE
IS
OUR
ONLY
BUSINESS SO I F YOU
HAVE A PROBLEM,
CALL US AT 9n 3325 or
~Y2 3876

1969 Two Bedroom 12x60
HollyparK tra11er fur
n•shed, a1r cond1hOn1ng
washer,
underp1nnmg
sma ll metal butldtng
$7300 00 Ca II 992 2881

33

Farms for Sale

Eight~ Acres. 2 acres bot
tom, 68 pasture, blacKtop
road
three bedrooms,
liv1ng room, bath k1tchen,
d.n1ng room, three car. car
port ,
cellar
part
b ase ment , good barn
Charles Kong, Rt
1,
Rutland, Qhto 45775 Call
742 2229

Lots 11, Acreage

35

One ac r e gorund and full
basement Phone 667 3826
1 AC RE LOTS Sec luded 1n
th e heart of Pom eroy 992
6279 after 5 p m

'&gt;U ;uu uu

GAS BI~LS• Ap
prox 10 ad"e ta rm Wlfh
110d crn 4 bed home
proc, ry has .r s own
op1 rd llllg gasd
we lt
new ly r emodel ed b uil t
n kll c hen l ull base
mc nr c en tral a1r s tock
co pond hor se s table
C(l ! Ti e
b.un
on 1er
bud clmgs Country 1 1~
11\U tor you r t a rnlly
V 1vc us ,, ca ll to sec
!Il l S1
HU r ~ U MMER"' Dial
your own wea th er • Cen
!r rll a •r 111 lh s J
bedroo m ran ch on a
tar g( l ~vc l to t t ull y
cqu ppcd kll chen F •vc
Pu1 lli S
rlrca
l or
::.Ju :,uu uo
EA~ r ERN
OlsrRter
Com l or t 1s w hal
count s • r'\ nd th1 S J bed
ran c t1 ~1 as all II c lh•ng s
you nccct 10 ! ( cl R1 Qhl
1t H om e
On n 1 ncr c
lot l or :.J-4 VUU uu
II ~ rHE
Ltr r LE BIT
MORE
fHAr
CO UN T~
' SO
WE
~fRIVE fUOOMURE•
R A~ rOR
Hl..' nry E C l e l ~l nd , Jr
NO

~y~

Housing
Head uarters
..............

__ -

__ __
_......,.__

Real Estal'!;: Ge!'~a l_

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
COU~p BE YOUR DREAM HOM E - 2 slory w oth
db lc ga r age, ho m e .ncludes 3 B R s w1 tt1 large bath
up and 11 ba t h on man fl oo r Many exi r a nt ce
features 1n qu1 et a r ea Ask• ng :l.SI 500

TR:AILE R - 2 BR on r • n•{)- sm alf ou tbulld•ng t or
storage, on qu et stree t SU\. ~ J
GOOD STARTER HOM E - J BR ko t , LR DR &amp;
f aliiTiy room w 1th woodburn 1119 stove on good s•ze
lot, room lor ga rden well landsca ped Carport S.
stora ge b ld g $3/,000
INV ESTM!i' N r PROPERTY
Over I OU acres,
could be hnu s1ng devel opment
gas al r ea dy dril l
ed, on pro perty wat er lines clbse All rn•n er al n g ht s
go w th properl y 11mbcr r ead y 10 be cut Ca ll lor
more mformat.on
NEW L-ISrtNG - 1n clean ne•gllborh ood J BR
al um s1d 1ng &amp; storm w•ndows Pr• cc d 1n SJU s
NEEOEO L,».V Cos I ~1 nd LOW Pncc Homes Have
Ready Buye~·

• ~ c.l ll Nancy J aspcrSt As sot: •ate
Y4Y 165&lt; 0 1 Y4Y 2SY I

rufled, South would pttch hm
diamond loser If he relused
to
South would liCOre h1S
last trump lor the ntnth trock
Then EaSt's bt&amp;b trump and
West s high diamond would
lalllot!elher at trick 13

rurr

I'J178 ~ 1df X 19 t our ~l1n
der tour speed em con
d •llonmg , run s or. r eg lar
gas 30 plus mpg Ca ll •2

l&amp;l

Trucks for Sal e

12

1975 Chevrol et P c kup w 1t h
topper
Ex ce llent con
d111on Ca ll 949 2537

E1ght piece old fash1oned
dmmg room su1te Old
couch Phone 992 2779
Building Suppltes
55
318 onch rebar- llc per foot
by 20 II section only D
Bumgardner Sales, NOble
Summ1t Rd , Mtddleport,
OH 992 5724

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 JIJ7 7220
HILLCREST KENNELS
Boardtng, all breeds Clean
.ndoor outaoor fac1hhes
Also
AKC
regiStered
Dobermans 614 &lt;146 7795
HOOF· HOLLOW Horses
and pon~es and ndmg
lessons
Everythtng
1magmable •n hor se equ1p
ment
Blankets, belts,
boots, etc Engltsh and
western
Ruth Reeves
(614) 698 3290
MUSICal
Instruments

57

We are p•ckmg up several
repossessed and trade 'n
p1anos and prgans 1n your
area Pnces from $250 and
up Call credtl manwr
today 304 485 2170

7] _ _ _v~,ns_&amp; 4_W D

76

I

House for rent Four rooms
a nd bath Depostt requtred
No •ns•de pets Call 992
3090
House for rent Four rooms
a nd bath DeQOStl requtred
No ms1de pets Ca ll 992
3090
Th r ee bedroom house for
rent wtlh two baths two
car garage m ftle Eastern
L oca l Sc hool DtSirtcl
Phone 614 98~ 4323
42

Mob•le Homes
_ __;f:;~
\V"R
=.~
enr,_ _.:_

TWO b edroom trail er
Adults
o nly
Brown's
Trader Cou r t Call992 3324
44
Apartment
_____!f~orRe~n~'---3 A ND 4 RM furntshed ap
I s Phone 992 5434

---------, RENTER 'S aSSIStance for

Sen 1or C•fJZens 10 Village
Manor a pts Ca ll992 7787
PARTIALLY l ~rntShed
a partm ent. 4 rooms and
ba lh Ca ll 992 5908
TWO bedroom furn1 shed
.J partm en! m Middleport
N o chtldren 1 304 882 2566
Fur nished apartm ent, four
rooms and bath , adults
on ly no pets, tn Mtd
dleport Phone 991 3B74
-..,....
' .--TwO room turn1shed apart
m ent a ll ulll•t•es pa1d
worktng men only Call
991 5007
Also sleepong
room

--

~-

--

--

_.. _-

--~ -

Will hcwe vacancy July
15th for e lderly lady, room
board
l au ndry
re.:~ so n db l e ~honeYY:.! 6022

Reiit -

COUN rRY .MO U LE Hume
Park Route JJ. Norlh of
Pomeroy Lr~rgc lots Call
YY'J. 7479
'""

..

Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 10 ' on largest
end $12 per ton Bundled
slab $10 per ton Del overed
to Ohto Pallet Co , Rl 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689

OLD COl NS, pocket wat
che s, class nngs, weddtng
bands, dtamonds Gold or
sliver Call J A Wamsley,
742 2331
Treasure Chest
Com Shop, Athens, OH 592
6462

Superoor Vtnyl Products

f

~
~ f"':~51
X. ,\~ ,..-. . . -

GOLO
AND
SILVE'R
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS,
JEWELR Y,
STER L ING SILVER AND
MISC
ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH ,
H IG HEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CO NTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER.
SHOP
MiDDLEPORT
OH 10, OR CA~L 992 3476
_....___~-

63

-

- - - ---'-

L1vestock

'.iONES:..Meat Pat ktng slaughtertng
c u s tom
process•nQ, retad m ea t
wa sntnglt&gt;n Co Rd 248,
Lottie Hoc~ mg. OH IJ&lt;J7
6133

ALL STEEL

s.zes
'From JOxJo

S1z es from 4x0 to l2x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt J,Boi(S4
Rac•ne , Oh
Ph 614 84J 25Y I
6 14 1 mo

COMPlETE
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE
Grad.ng Seed •ng

Water well drtllmg Tom
Lewo s
304 895 3802
seasonal Q1scount on all
~Ltmps and accessor1es
Dozer , Endloader a nd
dump truck Ty pe work 1n
eludes basemenTs ponds,
l a nd cleanmg
and
ex
cavat1ng
Dt sc ount s
avatlable through July F til
dlft also available Ra ndy
or Roger Butch er Phone
742 2940

Electncal
&amp; Refr1gerat1on

SEWING
MACHINE
Repa1rs.
serv1ce,
a ll
makes
992 2284
The,
Fabr. c Shop , Pomeroy
Authorized Smg er Sales
and Serv1ce We sharpen
Sossors
ELWOOD
BOWE!RS
RE PAl R
Sweepers ,
toasters, 1rons, all sma ll
appliances Lawn mower
Next to Stal e Htghway
Garage on Route 7, 985
3825
General Hauhng

WILL HAUL lomestone and
gravel Also, 11me hauling
and spreadmg L ea Morns
Trucktng P ~ ne 742 2455

________
_
.

SMALL

1976 Oodge Charger S E
37,000 actual m •les, good
t"adli'11S, good cond 1l•on
Cdl l M arc1a Hovdas helf ,1 1
YY2 J611 alter 4 30

-

IY / 8
Mustdng,
pow er
stce r •ng, .,,r con d1t1on.ng
Jm t•11 r dd io, tour speed ,
ll ,OvU miles, exce llent cor
tlttlfl tQr S3SUU OU. C~ ll ~92

611Y f'

•

"

.

.

'4"

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

- !:ihop

Summer
Enroll
ment

For

and

CARPENTER'S
DANCE
STUDIO

I)Ort&lt;Jble

we ld•n g
- Con cre te work
-C om m e r e •&lt;~ I plu mb

I S NOW UNDERWAY
Th e Lt~s t Day to S•g n
U p ts July 14 th

Ill ~

- U nderground
tu el
storaq e 111 stall atwn
- F•berg lass poo l s

BALLEr

F o• More tnlorm at•on
CAL b. 94 9 27 't0

M IDDL EPOR r 0

Real E state Loans
11' :z uo Interest 30 Yrs
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Aufomat1c
Loans No Down Pay
ment Federal Housmg
Loans, 3 0) down on
S2S,OO O 5{Jo down on
b.llance, FHA 26S Sub
s•dY Program FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort
Open M W F 9 oo to 1 00
By Appomtment
Offlce992 7S44
Home 992 6191
10 7 Syc amore St
Pomeroy OH

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES
Tl-IE POOL PEOPLE
31711 Noble Sum •t Rd
Middl eport Oh •o
992 5724
Sal es, serv1ce and sup
pli es
In ground and
rt bove ground pools
5 1 ti c

•995

DOWN
1 Nmny
6 DISOrderly
2 Footpront
II 'Good Ntght" J Take holy
lady
orders
12 Stupod
(Bnt )
13 Intends
4 Gorl's name
H Sl ag
5 ije knows
15 Cushion
no ' no
16 - de mer
6 Confound
18 Cambodia's
7 Minister's
Angkor talk (abbr )
19 Contrtbute
8 Be expen
%1 Wrttten letter enced
2% English nv•r 9 Attempted
Z3 God to
10 London
the Chinese
-district
H Fteld
ll Consumed
260neol
Olarhe's
Angels"
27 Time out
Z8 High-strung
30 Neroruan
greetlllg
31 Really
au courant
33- esprtt
34&amp;rap
35 Reporter s
question
31 Due to gel
39 Son of Jacob
41 Rettnue
ACROSS

1 Meander

Yesterday s Aollwer
:!9 Sttclt on

20 Wtthout
th e chaser
Z3 Skid to
the stde
24 Mideast

e&lt;pert
Z5 Income
28 Seaman

31 ' Pizza Tn
angle" star
32 1 told you 1
36 Russta11 c1ty
38 Indian
40 Japanese
measure

)
1---1--1-t--+-

DAILY CRYPTOOUOTE - H• r e's how.
AXVDLBAAXR
lo LONGFElLOW

Stl Yd
and up
w/ ppdd Jng

mo

by THOMAS JOSEPH

43 Mortise fttter
41 Sales
convention
setttng

1ln ~talled

b lB l

~~'fH;(/

42 Burn (var

SHA G
CARPET

rAP

&amp; JAZZ

992-7354

992 6215 or 99 2 7314
Pomeroy Oh

-

CCIII tor Fre e S1dmg
E st mate, Y49 2801 or
949 2860
No Sunday
ca li s
6 lJ 1 mo

Rt 3B OK54
Ractne , Oh
Ph 614 84o 25Yl
6 15 tt c

V.C. YOUNG II

Sq Yd
Cash N Carry

-

S1z es f rom 4x6 to lh.:lO

- Brtck hoe and dump
truck serv1 ce

- Addon s and
remodeling
- Roofing and gutt er
work
- Concrete work
- Piumbmg and
el ectnc a l work
(Free E Sf1m a t esJ

•4"

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

Utility Buildings

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

"Onve A Ltttle Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED

Sq Yd
Cash N Carry

Stdmg

S1zes

Shrubbery
N ew
D r•ve w a y s
Gravel or Concrete
Regrade dr •veways C&amp;
repatr) S•dewalks .and
P a t1o s
Comp l e t e
mob1le home hook up
Bru sh clear.ng work
CALL
9Y2 63 2J or 992 6011
7 10 I mo

Slue &amp; Gold
RUBBER
B.ACK

Vinyl and Aluminum

From JOI(JO

CARPET SHOP
1 ROLL
CANDY
STRIPE

6 30 1 mo

Farm Buildings

RUTLAN-D FURNITURE'S

---

Free Esttm ates
Ph (304) 773-5131
c.r ( 304) 992 2276

ALL 5rEEL

M H Repa1r

NOW IS THE T IME for
prevent1v e
ma1n
tenance-rnobde hom e roof
coat1ng
l abo r
and
m ater 1al 14' w1de $2 per
foot , 12 wode, $1 75 per
foot. 10' w1de, $1 50 per
fOot See us also for free
est1mates on awnmgs, car
,arts and s1&lt;trt1ng We are
your authonzed d ealer for
the best awnmgs on t he
market by Urban t n
dustr1es Kmgsbury Home
Sa les, 1100 E Matn St
Pomeroy, Ohi O Ca ll 992
7034
__..

D&amp;M
CONTRACTORS
-DRY WAUING
-·ROOFING
-REMODELING
-CONCRETE

• New Homes - ex tenscve remodettng
• Electncal work
• Ma sonr y work
12 Y ears
Expertence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992· 7583
6 JO 1 mo

Utility BUildings

Excavaltng

992 3795
~ .:1 '2 ti c

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Farm Buildings

Now IS the 11me for hom e
1mprovement Beat th e bad
weather We wtll do any
SIZe tOb; barns
roofs,
houses, etc W111 prov•d e
free
est1mates
Ex
per. e nc ed
and
have
references Call 992 5126,
992 3941 or 992 3519

1912 Vega 2 t;loor four
speetl lor ~200 00 Ca ll ~92
512/-·
- ----,
- _. 1976 F tat 128 Excell enl
condtt1o~ Call 949 2537

r sh•rt d nd nove lt y
sh•rts tor po 1tt1C1.ans,
bnlt team s bus tness or
1nd1V IdUdiS
Sh•r t s $4 00 Each
We
pr nt ALMOST
anyfh1n g on ALMOS r
anyt hm g•
Ph 614 949 nsa
Ev enmqs &amp; Weekend s
6 16 tic

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

Floor.ng, ce•l•ng. panel•ng,
doors and wmdows. a Iso
patnltng Call992 2759

Auto• ttl Sale

Shop

and Corporattons
Payrools, proltt and loss statements, all
I ed e r a! and state forms

Pomeroy , Oh

Pnnt

•

Bu st n ess- F a rms-P artnersh t ps

- --~----

71

ft

1

'!k.iB~i[!,

Cement work,
V1nton
Cement Floor Company,
Bidwell, Oh1o, 388 9877 All
concrete work, basement,
dnveways, etc , etc

I FIRSif'ttatiBA

1 10 1 mo

Tri-Counfy
Bookkeeping
Service

li"' · ~

S &amp; G Carpet Clean .ng
Steam
cleaned
Free
est1mate
Reasonable
rates
Scolchguard
992
6309 or 742 22H

86

Most Dat es
No Sunday Calls
6 9 1 mo

-

Home
Improvements

85

949-2801

~===;==============~================~~==========~~~~
Custom

AuroParts
&amp; Access on es

4

SILVER
DOLLARS

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322

618 E. Matn

ANTIQUES,
FUR
NITURE, glass. chtna,
anythmg See or call Ruth
Gosney, ant•ques, 26 ~
2nd, Mtddleport, OH 992
3161

-

is ~ ~ F u r m shed RoomS .,.

sPace far

62

STILL PAYING
EXTREMELY HIGH
PRICES FOR

For Free Est1mate Call

Motorcycles

83

I "II I l l

Servtng your area for 25 years
Call Now for Large Savtngs

1972 Monte Carlo body par
ts, one hood, Two doors one
trunk l 1d, assorted front
end parts, rear g la ss 992
2779

81

C.J rl Reed 667 3327
rom Burrou ghs 667 61SO
6 I 1 fT"\0 pd

'1 'I lboJ
y,.. I.J Z1bU

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

1974 Jeep J20 ptckup,
power steertng
power
brakes. a1r cond1t1on •ng
ltlt wheel, am fm ster eo,
good condttton $3 ooo oo
Phone Terry L•fe at 667

'

FREE ESTIMATES

VINYL SIDING

1970 Dodge van 6 cy11nder
thr ee speed, good t1 rcs and
body M ot or r uns good
Racks on top, new brakes
all arou nd pn ce $1350 00
Ca ll or see a t 742 2263
Rutlan d, Matn St, by Stans
Old Barga•n Land

84

Two bedroom furnished
home Call 992 59 14, 992
3129 992 5434

Free E~t1m&lt;1te ~ '+a
Reo1 ~ on~1bl c Pr 1ces
( (lH How Hd

Free Esltmate
Jam es Keesee
Ph 992 2772
6 2:, I n

Pels for Sale

56

A ll work gu.1ranreed

Wmdow s

1961 Ford Ptckup four
speed transm 1SS1 0n New
t tr es, heavy duty suspen
s1on W1ll t ake car go tra •ler
10 w •th dea l Call 614 985
4109

Gutter &amp;
R e ptacement
Wtndows and
Roottng

or repa1r gutl~r !'.
a • d downspo uts gutt ~ r
&lt;:H!clfllf1r:J arid pc"l1ntu1q

,l 1

e ~ fo rm Doo
• ~ torm W.nd
• Rcpl.l &lt;:e mcnl

MISC Merchan1se

LADIES' beoUitfUI htgh
qual1ty s1ze 16 dresses,
brands
Davtd Crystal,
Verona, Ltlly Pulttzer One
IS 100% s olk $10 each
Never been worn 992 3283

SIDING, SOFFIT

n ~.:w

ei 11S

SJ

54

T. L. BURROUGH'S

All type s o l ro ot work ,

1979 Honda HawK. s4oooo
and take over payments
ca llafter3 3o 992283o

ATTENTION
(IM
POR TANT TO YOU l Wtll
pay cash or cerhf•ed check
for ant1ques and collec
t1bles or ent.re estates
Nothtng too large Also,
guns. pock et watches and
co1n co11ect1ons Call 61.4
767 3167 or 557 3411

fH.LWRITESEL
I ROOFING

~LOWN

INSULATION

5454

74
3544

Anhques

Servi(~es

Busi1tess

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

Houses tor Rent

41

46

WANT TO SEU? GIVE US ACALL! !

~M I .

Bulldozer work, small 10bs
a spec tally Call742 2753

61 Ill

ASSOCIA I ES
Roger &amp; Oottw rurncr
1&lt;1 2414
Je.1n rru sse ll949 1660
OFFICE YY1 225Y

heart, and West showed out
lle&lt;;larer played tb~ ace and
ktng of cfubs and trumped a
low club Tben be cubed the
ace of diamonds and led a
!rump to dummy's king (the
~f entry) for h1s fmaJ club

·----------.,------------1

&gt;u;oouu

HOUSE FO R Sa l e by
owner exc loca t•on •n M•d
dleport 3 bedroom s fu ll
basement 9«n 5792

AI lrtck " ' South led the

East was helpless If he

unhappy when he saw the
dummy lie realized that
three notrump was a playable
contract 1f the opposlns
spades were davaded 4-3 All

~92 225~

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

be'droom' 2 lull ba t h~ t am lly
room lul l baemenl

.,

• 862
.AKH
EAST

bed roo m 197 1 L1berty 14 x 1
65 two bed r oom
1968 ,.
Ati ant c
11 x 60 two
32
Mobtle Hpme•
be droom
1968
New
ior Sale
Moon 12 x 60 w1fh expando,
two bedroo m 1967 Buddy
1973 Fa•rpo1nt, 14x65 2
12 x 50 2 bedroom
bedroom
1971 Came ron
14x65 2
bedr
1971 Fleetwood l4x65 3
bdrl, bath 'h
1971 ShaKes pear 14x65 ~
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood 12x63. 2
Bdr
B
8. S MOBILE HOME
606 E
SA L ES PT PLEASANT
['II A IN
wv 304 675 4424
POMEROY, 0

216 E Second Street

NEW LISTING - NRU New
hOme 1n the R lvgs. Edll1on J

•Ko

WEST

1977 Sc hultz mobile hom e
and lot 14x70 wrth three
bedrooms l'h baths at
1041• :. St 2nd Ave M1d
dl cport Oh oo Ca l i 992 2457
1975 west ern M ans1on 14 :&lt;
70 three bedroom
1971
Cameron
14 x 64 two

declarer )Vould need Ill a 3 2
diviSIOn ln hearts
However, the contract was
three hearts and nol three
notrump Could anylh1ng bad
happen to three hearts' West
casfted the first three spade
tracks and switched to the dia
mond queen
Declarer won wllh tbe king
and cashed tbe ace of trumps
If declarer carelessly leads a
small trump to the king at
tnck six - as n1ne out of 10
players would be can no long
er make three hearts He
would then have to lose t hose

•s 1 s

Fourteen toot w de thr ee
bedroom 1112 baths f ur
n1 shed Must see to ap
prec 1ate Pn ce d to sell
Call i 304 675 6466

Three bedroom br1ck r anch
sty le home w1th l'h bath
and built n k1tch en full
basement w1 th wood stove
large garage b•g l ot w •th
n1 c-e
garden
spo t
$52,000 00 Phone 667 32 88

•

Superior technique wins
NORTH

Autos lw

11

PI!/ P(1 nt1 I(
~ un1J1rtl
sunrout ,wt om'l t• c un 1111
rad• O, e)(ccl len r con d 1100
good tg,iS md c t~ gc ~.J~OO 00
or best OliN C ~ ~~ '11!5 JS"J6

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Mob•le Homes
tor SCJ 1e

~~~~~-:w
Pomeroy,O

BRIDGE

Mortg age
Money
Ava ilable
ConventiOnal 5
Pet down VA
no down
payment 2nd morTgages
Cunn,nghama nd Assoc1ate
s •n c Mortgage Bankers
Ca II 991 7000 for ap
po1ntment

Three year ol d, ftve room
house w1t h ce ntra l a.r and
heat, carpe1 throughout 24
acr es wt th fru t trees
Located on Eagl e R1 dge
Rd Phone 949 2793

!

r

Thr ee be dr~o m house W1 t h
bath Large lot Insu lated
storrn w• ndows carpet gas
turn~Ke
base ment
c1ty
wa t er
sept1c sys tem
~ 14 500 00 Ca ll 741 3074

Real Estate
31

Homes tor Sale

Bedutlful large home Low
util1t1 eS br iCk ranch sty l e
:.1
bed r ooms
J baths
f•replacc lull basement
tdmdy room
a1r con
ct.r .oner
3 ca r garage
Ba um Add .t.on
M e1gs
County Ca ll 985 4169

Housing
Headquarters

IMMEDIATE opentng for
Soc i al
Worker
wtlh
Bac he lor' s degree , ex
per1ence 1n crisis coun
selong. based In Meigs
County, willing to travel to
ne,ghbor.ng counhes Must
I
Publtc Sale
be htghly orgamzed , wtll
&amp; Auctoon
have
d1 verse
respon 1
Stblllltes
Half time
BRADFORD, AUcttoneer,
poSttton to start, posstble 1 GeorgeS HobsteHer Jr.
Complete Serv1ce Phone
Broker
•ncrease to 3;.,. or full Send
949 2487 or 949 2000 racine,
resume to Planned P~ren
Ohto, Crttt Bradford
NEW LISTlNG On
!hood Of Southeast Ohto, 8 Bradbury Rd Lovely 3
North Court St., Athens, bedroom hOme w1th 2
wanted to Buy
Ohto &lt;1.5701 Must be post
full baths, dtntng room
marKed no later than July
Iron and brass beds, old
and fam1ly room. 2 car
25, 1980 An Equal Op
furn1ture, desks, gold
garage and shed, also II
portuntly Employer
rengs, tewelry, Sliver
Only $41,000 00
dollars. sterling, etc • wood
POMEROY - Large 2
1ce boxes, antiques, etc
story home on Un1on
Complete
households
Avenue Home has 3
12
Situation• Wonted
Wrtte M D Mtller, Rt 4,
bedrooms, gas forced
Home nee!flng pa inted&gt;
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992
a1r furnace Garage for
Guters tn neetd of repair? Is
7760
•
off street parktng Sell
that roOf beglnntng to leak?
mg pnce $26,500 00
Call 992 3519, 992 3'141 , or
POMEROY - On Con
10 karat, 14 karat, 18 Karat,
992 5126 and gel th.ngs all
dar Sl Extra ntce 3
gold Dental gold and QOid
f ixed . up before that bad
bedroom home Large
ear Pt ns 675 3010
weather htls By the way,
sPac1ous rooms g1ve you
est1mates are
f ree
that 'down home feel
Gold, Stiver or foretgn
provided
lng Asktng $26,500 00
COlDS Or any gold or Stiver
BUILDING SITES •terns Antique furntture,
We have some II Give us
Will do house cleaning,
glass or chtna, w1ll pay top
a call
$3 00 per hour , have
dollar, or com plete estates
RUTLAND
Ex~a
references Phone 992 5094
No ttem too large or too
well Kept 3 bedroom
small Check pr•ces before
home
Alum1num
ll
Insurance
selltng Also do appratSinQ
siding
Home
IS
Osby &lt;Oss1el Marlin 992
mamtenance free On
AUTOMOBILE
IN
~370
noce lot $36,500 00
SURANCE
been
can •
RUTLAND - Large 2
ce lled'
Lost
your
WILL BUY old Iran
operator s license'&gt; Phone , story home on Mam
Street ExtenSive 1nStde
SmiSSIOOS,
batterieS ,
992 2143
engmes, or scrap metals,
remodeling The new
etc Call245 9188
furnace, blown m m
sulalton are only a few
ntce thmgs about thiS
home Gtve It a lOOk''
Pnce
reduc ed
to
$35,000 00
ATHENA ACRES - 24
acres w1th a beautiful
home, swlmmmg pool ,
annex bu•ldmg fully
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
heated and atr condt
!toned
Orchard has
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?
many trutl and nut
trees All mmerals m
eluded w ith property
Shown by aQpt only
HYSELL RUN RD - 8
acres wtth 2 bedroom
dwelltng
Asktng
$21,500 00
Velma N1c1nsky Assoc
• "
Phone 74)·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742·3171
'

'

ce

FREE!

For Rent the form er War
ners Barber and Beauty
Shop bulldtng on Second st
m Pomeroy Bvslness or
protesstonal blldlng with
approx•mately 1100 square
It of worK space Also an
upstairs furn1shed apart
menr with two bedrooms
Rent wlth the opt ton to buy
Call 992 2528 or 992 2117
before 5 •

PHONE 742-2003

PICKtnQ up an~ bUytng 1unk
autos and bodtes Buytng
clean copper 60c I b
radiators 40c ear, yellow
brass JOe lb, alum•num 15c
lb Rtders Salvage, Rt 4,
Sl Rt 124, Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992 5468

Pubhc Not1ce
IN THE
P1ano Tuning
Lane
COMMON PLEAS COURT
Danoels 742 2951·' Tu1ung
OF MEIGS COUNTY
and Repa1r Serv1ce since
OHIO
'
1965 If nc answer phone
CATHERINE
K
SCHNEIDER,
- 992 2082
Plamt•ff,
vs
GOLD,
SILVER,
THOMAS E SCHNEIDER
S TERLING ,
ETC,
Defendant.
'
BROWN'S Ml DDLEPORT,
Case No 17,510
NOTICE BY
OHIO PHONE
614992
PUBLICATION
5113
Sc hoetder
Thoma s E
w h ose
r es 1dence
1s
Jones M eat Packing will
unknown, but whose last
known address was p 0
reopen July 9 havtng been
Box 134, Tuppers Platns
closed due to the death of
Oh1o 45783, W•fl take not1
E T Jones Call 614 667
rhat on t he 6th day of June
6133 for your slaugher.ng
1980, that Ca thertne 1&lt;'
appomtment Hours Man
Sch neider Pla•nllff t1led
d
ay
9 8,
Wednesday
her Complamt aga 1nst h•m
thro ugh Sa turday 9 5
'" th e Me1gs County Com
mon Pleas C::ourt, Me1gs
Closed Tuesdays and Sun
County, Oh1o, Case No
days
17 51 0 pray mg for d 1vorce
upon the grounds of gross
neg lect of duty and ex
4
G1veaway
treme cru elty , tor custody
of the m•nor c h1ld of th e M.n1ature collie pupp1es
part•es, for a limony and
All colors, SIX weeks old
Support and w1ll further
and ready to go Call
1aKe not1ce tha t thls ' ca use
anyt1m e
at
985 3528,
can be heard at anyt1me
f ollowmg twenty e1gh t days
Chester, OhiO
from the date of the last
publi ca tion of th1 s notiCe
a nd
tha t
th e
last
pubhcat•on Will be m ade on
th e 16th day of July , 1980
Larry E Spencer.,
Clerk of Court
M e•gs Cout'1fy, Ohto
,
With Any UN ICO
(6) 11, 18, 1 ~. 111 1, 9, 16 6tc
FREEZER PLUS:
S2S DISCOUNT
Stllp 1n for Deta•ls
3
Announcements
,;

Level lot on Condor St •
Pomeroy 129' frontage 72'
deep, has concrete block
butldlng tor shop or storage
approxtmately 2500 square
feet Call992 3921, S20 000

GET VALUABLE lralntng
as a young busmess person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
, .nel route carrier Phone
us r.ght away and get on
the eliglblltly list at 992
2151&gt; or 992 2157

5
Rates and Other Information

34 _ _ _ _ __

1J I

Thursday. July 17. on old
Rt 33, between Co Rd 18
andt9

.

33. _ _ _ _ __

Now arrange the clrded IM!ers to
ronn lhe surpnse anawer as aug
gestod by the

9a m

71-Aufot fOr hit

li-HOmlll

tHANKESI

Yeslerday 9

Bus.ness
OpportuntiY

A frame business butldtng
w1th concrete parkmg area
at 514 E
Matn St ,
Pomeroy
Ca II '192 3921,
$20.000

I I K

Yard Safe

1

2l

r] I

235~

61-Ftrm l!qvlp"'Mit

2:2-Money to Lan

9

5

U-Bulk:llrtg Suppllt5
56---Pth for Salt

eFINANCIAL
u - &amp;uslneu

23
24
25
26
27
28
29
JO

6
7
8

TV Radio Equipment
U-Antiqllll
54-Mise Mtrchandlu

11-Winttd To Do

22

3
4

~n-ell ,

Rtdlo TV
&amp;

843

51-Houuholcl lioods

u-luslnt ss Training
1s-Scbools Instruction

21
1
2

u-S ~Nee tor Rent
47-WinltciiCI Rent
41-Equlpml'nl for Rent

IJ-Insurlnce

17
18
19
20

Wanted •
For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

45- FRooms

12-Siluat" Wantecl

I,SEDUE

-,

Miscellaneous

Lo51and Found

Male Beagle, mostly blacK,
10 M1le Htll area , Racme
Nott ce d m•ss mg Wed
nesday morn1ng, ch1ld's
pet, would appre c 1ate
knowmg any 1niormat1on
alall Phone9492413

~---

31

F 1ve room house 1n Brad
bury modern kitchen and
bath Carpe t and a1r con
d•t•on,ng across WM P O
Cal l 992 5310

For Sale
two General
Electrtc (etectr.c l apart
ment s1z ranges '" superb
condttlon can see at305 w
Matn St , located at the bot
tom of Monkey Run Can
see anyltme day or n1ghl

Female Walker
Fox
Hound
In
Vlc•n•tyof
Delrottts Run One front
leg brown, others whtle
EKfremely shy, 1f seen call

6-LOSIInd Found
7-YirdSale
I - Public S.le
&amp;Aucr.on

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11-Htlpw1 nttcl

These cash rates
mclude d1scount

,

41 - HotJsn lor Renl
4l-Mobllt Homes

2- ln Mtmorr1m

Pnnt one word m each
space below Each tn
1hal or group of f1gures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number 1f used
-1 You'll get better results
I tf you descnbe fully,
1 gtve pr.ce The senltnel
1 reserves the r.ght to
I classify, edt! or re1ec1
• any ad Your ad wtll be
1 put ·~ the proper
I classtltcatton tf you II
~ check the proper box
below

6

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS
1-CardofThtnks

11

Gtveaway

Twelve pupptes to good
home So( tern er pups
ready 1n 56 weeks, 6 mt xe d
breed ready tn 1 2 weeks
Also s1x ktftens ready 1n
about one weeK Call 992
3760

PHONE 992-2156

Write your own ad and order by mall w1th th1s
coupon~ Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

!

poultry, lamb and mutton
As a result; net meat unports to
the four countnes should drop from
the 1979 estimate of 1.6 ffilllion
metric tons to less than 1.3 million
this year, the report said.
Amencan beef ImpOrts are also
expected to decline despite an anticipated 2 percent drop m domestic
production, the report said, because
"lower U S unport pnces for beef
are not attractmg beef from many.
exportmg countnes, especially as
many of these countries are
rebwlding their beef cattle herds."
At the same tlme, the report said,
beef production IS expected to be off
m the maJor exporting nations,
falling 10 percent m Australia and 7
percent m Argentina while riSmg a
scant 2 percent m MeXIcO.
In the SoVIet Union, the report
sa1d, overall meat production dunng
the first two months this year was
runrung 13 percent ahead of 1979, but
then dropped below 1979 levels m
March, April and May.

23 - - -----pr:ofeSS .Onal
Serv1ces

to

work tl'

Ont: \•Her 111mply stands for another In thiS Sllmple A IS

JU LY CARPET SALE
ALL CAR PET AT DISCOUNT PRICES
Any regular carpet 10bs mstalled w •th fr ee pad

used foi':;.thc three L s X for the t"o 0 s pt r Smglc le tters

apostropnes the t-ength and formn ~IOn of the ~A or ci s ere all
hmts Earh day the code l etters ar!?" rl•ffcrf'nl
CR YI'TO Ql'OTF.S

Ntce Select1on of Carpet R emnants a11d
I.moleum Remnants at B1 Dt scounts

A YX

A YN O P

RKBBZL

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Q7

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EOQ

AT

OTA

X E A
q T T Q c T G
G N z R T 0
Yesterday's Cryptoquote A GOOD USTENER 1~ NOT ONLY
.._~M,;;a;.;,l;,;,t'i~~~._ _ _...;,._ _...;....___' 7:.,;4:.,:2;_;-2::,:2.:,1l:....J ~ POPULAR EVERYWIIERE, ' BOT AFTER A 1WHILE, HI!
.-:'
1 KNOWS SOMETHING - WILSON MIZNER
!&lt;;.

,

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SNPYA

,

,,

�'
14- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 16. 1980

•

l

Reagan ·selects .Bush
as GOP ·running. mate

Government says loan guarantees
may be needed .by en4 of this year
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Chrysler
Corp., facing more risks in its
struggle to survive, will Jo'se more
than $1.22 billion in 1980 and may
need up to tw&lt;&gt;-thirds of its federal
Joan guarantees before ·year's end,
the government says.
The troubled automaker received
preliminary approval Tuesday from
the Chrysler Loan Guarantee Board
-for up to $300 million in new Joan
guarantees as the second in·
stallment in a $1.5 billion gqvern·
ment bailout package.
The board, which approved the fir·
st $500 million June 24, said that
despite the deteriorating financial
picture, it still believes,Chrysler can
recover ifthe company's new line of
compact cars sell well next !aU.
The loan board endorsed $250
million in loan gl!Brantees pending a
congressional okay within 15 days. It
also favored another $50 million in
gua,rantees if Chrysler can match
that with private financing.

Chrys ler has informed the
Treasury Department it wants to
sell the new guara nteed bonds on
July 31.
.
The Joan board said government
analysts now believe that despite
public denials, Chrysler could need
up to $1 billion in government Joan
guarantees before the end o( 1980
and $1.2 billion by sometime in 1981.
"They are going to try to hold their
request (this year) to $800 million,"
:;aid Treasury Secre\ary G. William
Miller, who heads the board. But he
said this " would sq11eeze them a lit·
tie tight. We see the prospect for $200
million more.''
The board stressed that the risks
facing Chrysler have mounted in the
past month, with the nation's third·
largest automaker hit particularly
hard by the general slwnp in auto
sales and publicity of its financial
struggles.
Chrysler on Tuesday reported a
Joss of $1.017 billion for the first six

f!utcher gets 5-25 year term

months ol1980- about $146 million
more than estimated as recently as
May.
The Joan board's revised projec·
lion forecasts another Joss in the
third quarter, but a profit in the fourth quarter, with an overall1980 loss
of more than $1.22 billion.
Chrysler, which lost $1.097 billion
hist year, estimates its 1980 lo5s at
almost $1.04 biUioo, worse than its ·
earlier hopes of about $850 million.
"Market demand for Chrysler's
Omni,Horizon line has weakened
and the inventory levels of these
cars have increased," the loan
board said.
HEALTH CARE OFFICIAL.S MEET - Officials
from Health Care Centers around Southern Ohio met at
the Pomeroy Health Care Center Tuesday with the
director of a new state reimbursement program, Mrs.
Betty Haubner. Pictured above, seated left to right are
Sherriann Wood, director of nursing at Jackson Care
Center, Jackson, Ohio, Judy Barcus, director of nur-

TOURNAMENT OFF
. The golf tournament to be held
Thursday at Jayrnar Golf Course
sponsored by the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce has been ~ancelled.

Pomeroy Care
CIRCULATE PETITIONS
A Portland resident, Louis
DeLuz, will be circulating
petitions Tbursday In front of the
Pomeroy Kroger Store regarding
inadequate blgbway conditions
on the OHio side of the new
Ravenswood bridge.
Deluz will be seeking
signatures for presentation to the
Meigs County Commissioners.

Dennis C. Butcher, Pomeroy, was chased and the testimony of several
sentenced to a term of five to 25 witnesses to support its case. Butyears in a state penal institution af· cher, through his own attorneys,
ter being convicted of Aggravated called several witnesses but did not
Trafficking in Drugs Tuesday. But- take the stand in his own behalf.
cher is required by statute to serve
Aggravated Trafficking in Drugs
no Jess than five years.
is a felony of the first degree. Due to
The defendant waived his right to the type of drug and the amount in·
a jury trial and the case was heard valved (99 tablets), the offense for
by Judge Bacon alone.
which Butcher was convicted is the
The charge came as a result of the most serious drug conviction
alleged sale of LSD to an undercover
possible in Ohio. It carries a Emergency squad runs
agent from the Bureau of Criminal
maximwn sentence of 25 years and
Investigation in July,.,! 1979 in
the court cannot put him on
The Meigs County Emergency
Pomeroy. The agent made the
probation nor can the Parolr Board Medical Services rej)orted the
initial contact for the drug purchase
release him for at least five years.
following runs by local units
in Gallia County, but was brought to
Butcher has been remanded to the Tuesday.
Pomeroy for the actual exchange.
custody of the .sheriff for execution
At 3:25 p.m. the Tuppers Plains
In the tw&lt;&gt;-day trial, the state, · ofthesentence.
unit transported Clarence Norris·to
through Meigs County Prosecuting
Meigs County Prosecuting At- O'Bleness Memorial Hospital,
Attorney Fred W. Crow III, proved torney Fred W. Crow III represented Athens; at 7:47 p.m. the Syracuse
that Butcher was the person from
the State of Ohio and James Casey, unit went to Kings Field for Aaron
whom the drug was obtained.
Raymond Musgrave and . Damon Miller who _was taken to Veterans .
The state presented the LSD pur·
Morgan represented the defendant.
. Memorial Hospital and at 11 :25 p.m.
the Pomeroy Sq~ad was called to
Syracuse for David Dotson who was
involved in a car accident. He was
'Laura Marsh
' taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Four defendants were fined and 21
others forfeited bonds in the court of
Word been received of the death of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Mrs. Laura Marsh, 91, Cynthiana,
·
Tuesday night.
(Cont inued fro m page 1)
Fined were Doug Burns, Kentucky. She was the mother of
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, public in· Mrs. Gay Perrin, Pomeroy. She is the divided state of the party for his
toxication; Greg Walker, Rutland, survived by her husban&lt;j,, Harry landslide defeat and said he would
have done better with "a little Jess
$350 and costs, DWl ; Eli Ebersbach, Marsh, one son, Jack Marsh, five
carping,
a little Jess nitpicking, a litdaughters,
Mrs:
Margaret
Smith,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, open flask;
Mrs.
Virginia
Bell,
Mrs.
Emily
tle
more
willingness to share, a little
Keith Musser, Pomeroy, $50 and
Wilcox,
Mrs.
Jay
Rice
and
Faith
more
willingness
to give in." ·
costs, open flask, $300 and costs.
Marsh,
23
grandchildren
and
13
But
the
speeches
that the
resisting arrest.
•
great
grandchildren.
·
..
·
Republican
convention
planners
had
·Forfeiting bonds were Nellie
Services
will
be
at
Cynthiana,
reserved
lor
television
prime
.
t
ime
Frede•ick, Racine, Gina Thompsop,
were those by Henry A. Kissinger
Pomeroy, Robert Jeffers, Syracuse, Friday, July 18
and Rep. Guy Vander J agt.
Joy Morarity, Racine, and Jeffrey
Gibbs, Wothington, $30 bond each,
speed; Abra Ohlinger, Minersville, Ohio, $28, speed; Tommy L.· Kraut$28, speed; Ronald Zidian, Pomeroy , ter, Pomeroy, $25, running a red
Dillard Ferrell, Syracuse, $27, light; Theodore C. Fisher, Pomeroy,
(Cont inued from pagel )
speed; Paul Greer, Pl. Pleasnat, $25, failure to yield right of way;
Timmy
R.
Adams,
Circleville,
$25,
funds
derived from the $If marriage
$50, open flash, Gina Thompson,
left of center; Jo A. Payton, Dexter, license for victims of domestic
Pomeroy, $30, speed ; Kathy
Carleton, Racine, $26, speed; Jef- $25, defective exhaust; J .P. Warner, violence.
Middleport, $25, spinning tires;
The board of trustees ri " My
frey DeLong, Pomeroy, $27, speed;
Theodore
V.
Thompson,
Vicksburg,
Sisters
Place", Athens, is making
George Baker Neal, Mineral Wells,
Mississippi,
$50,
allowing
an
unlicen.'
the
application
in order to receive
W. Va., $2.1, speed; Terry Lewis, .
sed
person
to
drive;
Damon
J.
Let~
funds
to
purchase
the house
the
West Columbia, $27, speed; Barbara
Jr.,
Nitro,
W.Va.,
$50,
loitering;
where
the
shelter
is
now
located.
Dugan, $29 speed, Racine; Kevin
Lester
W.
Harper,
Little
Hocking,
Commissioners
will
act
on
the apDailey, Middleport, $27, ~peed;
$34,
speed;
Andrew
·Batey,
Midplication by Aug. 15.
·
Sharon Loper, Shade, $31, speed;
dleport,
$28,
spe~d;
Helen
N.
Ralph Batey, New Haven, $26,
Bonecutter, Henderson, W.Va., $25,
speed; David Williams, Mason, $27,
running stop sign; Herschel
speed; Gilberta Starcher, Pomeroy,
LeMaster, Guysville, $50, expired
$26 speed; Tonya Davis, Pomeroy,
license tags; Thomas K. Bruce,
VETERANS MEMORIAL
$26, speed.
Charleston, W, Va., $25, expired
Admissions-Robert Knotts, VinSixteen persons were fined and 21 license; Sonia L. Ash, Syracuse, $25, ·
driving
a
weaving
course;
Sigle
E.
ton;
Brenda Templeton, Pomeroy;
forfeited bonds in the court of Mid·
Chafin,
Rutland,
$25,
expired
tags;
Natalie Sigler, Rutland; •Thurmond
dieport Mayor Fred Hoffman. .
Ralph Bush, Addison, $50, disorderly Paynter, Charleston; Malcolm
Fined were Cynthia R. Mcmanner; Jerry L. Stewart, Mid- Ingram, RutlBRd; Donnie Sue
Clintock, Racine, $17 and costs,
speed; Steven Kalinowski; Cheshire, dleport, $50, disorderly manner; · Collins, Middleport; Virginia Oiler,
$200 and costs, fleeing,an officer, $25 Hansueli Munger, Gallipolis, $25, Racine; Gladies .Mullins, DeMler;
left of center; Rex Douglas Hurley, Eli White, . Minersville; Hattie
and costs, no motorcycle helmet, $25
Cheshire,
$50, open flask ; Charles J . Ridgway, Pomeroy; Betty Bailey,
and costs, no motorcycle en·
Thomas,
)VIiddleport, $25, expired Vinton.
dorsemen~ $25 and costs, use of
license tags ; Betty W. Schneeman,
Discharges-Luanne Friend, Ffed
illegal license plates; Geoo·ge Me·
Colwnbus,
$25,
failure
to
yield
right
Mack,
Margaret Justice, Arch
Danlol, Middleport, $50 and costs
way.
of
Markin.
each lor three charges of disorderly
manner; Bob Dugan, Middleport,
$50 and costs each for three charges .
of disorderly manner, $200 and
costs, -t~ublic indecency; Charles
Mullen, Middleport, $5 and costs,
allowing a dog to bark ; Paul David
Mitchell, Langsville, $100 and costs
each lor two cha rges of criminal
trespassing; Richard Herman, MiddleQOrl, $25 and costS, menacing
threats, $25 and costs, exploding a
firecracker in a building ; James
Lu gc Grot .r ~J
Will, Jr., Pomeroy, $25. and costs,
lj30FF
disturbing the peace ; Anthony E.
. 1j3 OFF
(plclm, platd, pnn! S, str fpe!.J
Little, Akron, $225 and costs and
three days in jail, DWI; Leonard M.
, AU Ll::
b lJ ll oC h
Fitzpatrick, Middleport, $225 and
A ~~O iol l t:.D
1
costs and three days in jail, DWl ;
PRICE
j30FF
Donald Taylor, $25 and costs, disor·
derly manner: Eddie R. McClure,
(;r uu IJ
~ · ~ 1 ·_• .. 1 Gri11 q J 6U ' '
$25 and costs, consuming beer in a
1
1J3oFF
car; Gary Fife, Middleport, $25 and
j30FF.
costs, disturbing the peace, $50 and
costs, disturbing the peace; Amanda
HardwiCk; Middleport, · $100 and
. '· costs, Jittering, $10 and costs, dis tur·
bing the peace; Mike Hlndy, Mid·
dleport, $100 and costs_.assault.
The following defendants forfei te~
115 W. 2nd . ' 992-2?.44 .
bon\IS: Debra Chevalier, Vinton.

Mayor's court

'

The Pomeroy Health Care Center
hosted a one-day meeting of
Southern Ohio nursing home ad·
ministrators, directors of nursing
and nursing personnel Tuesday. Tl)e
session was conducted by Mrs. Betty
Haubner, field supervisor of the
Ohio Department of Public
Welfare's new assessment program.
The program, which went into effect
July .J will reimburse the homes on
the nursing care given on a day-t&lt;&gt;day basis.
This new system is designed to be
a fairer reimbursement plan. It is
hoped it will funnel more money to
homes to compete with wages and
services offered in other health care
facilities.
Participants in the program in·
eluded Chet Bradeen, vice president

52 FIRE CALLS

The Middleport Fire Department,
during the month of June, answered
52 calls, Jeff Darst, fire chief repor·
ts . .
There were eight fire arid rescue
calls and 44 emergency runs. Of the
44 emergency calls, 34 were in town
and 10 outside of town. Five of the
calls involved motor vehicle accidents. All vehicles were driven a
total of 1,142.6 miles.

GOP...

41ARRFSTS
The Middleport Police Depart·
ment made 41 arrests during the
month of June accordmg to Chief J .
J . Cremeans.
The department also investigated
11 accidents, collected $763.50 in
parking tickets, and $109 from merchant police.
The department iss ued 404
parking tickets and drove 3,584
. miles.

.----_...;----------------------1

summer

.. Yard"

coNTINU.ESI

Sale

WOVENS

TERRY

GABARDINE

FABRICS

.

OIANA

THE FABRIC SHOP

lfi

~enter

hosts event

of development, Americare Corporati on ; Bruce Pinkney,
Americare Corporation; Carol Campbell, Americare Corporation; Mrs.
Nancy VanMeter and all nurses
lrom·Pomeroy Health Care Center;
Shirley Kidd, administrator; Susan
Gough, director of nursing, Sara
Rowley, L.P.N. , from Woodsfield
Health Care Center; Jana
Hazelbaker, administrator, Judy
Young, director of nursing, Lan·
caster Health Care Center; Clair
Barrett, administrator, Wilde Cox,
director of nursing, Randi Kiphen,
J:t.N., Homestead Nursing Home,
Charles Bradley, administrator
Jackson C~re Center·..and ..Jenkins
Memorial Health Facility; Theresa
Womeldorf, director of nursinll,

Meigs County happenings ••

r--A:~e-a-n~;.-iiiS"-1

Commission

sing at Pinecrest Care Center, Gallipolis, Ohio, Nancy
VanMeter, director of nursing, Pomeroy Health Care
Center, Betty Haubner,- Ronald E. Zidian, . ad·
.ministrator, Pomeroy Health Care Center; Shirley
Kidd, administrator at Woodsfield Health Care Center,
Woodsfield, Ohio. Susan Gough, director of nursmg,
Woodsfield Health Care Center.

of Mr. and Mrs. John Rankin. Needs
are as follows : girls size 10 and 12,
boys sizes 10, 3 and 4. Those wishing
to help should contact 'Joann McClintock at 992-3641. .

MEETS THURSDAY
Syracuse Village Council will
meet in ·special session Thursday
night at 7 :30 p. m. with members &lt;I
the Board of Public Affairs and local
business establishments.
THURSDAY SESSION
A Democrat committee meeting
will be held Thursday at8 p.m. at the
Carpenters Union Hall, Pomeroy.

Jenkins Memorial Health Facility,
Sherriann Wood, director of nursin{,
Jackson. Care Center, Greg Jev·
nikar, administrator, Judy Barcus,
director of nursing, Alicia Tucker,
R.N., Pine'crest Care Center,
Wiinojean Maue, administrator and
Janel Maue, R.N·., Russell Nursing
Home.
The event was co-ordinated by
Mrs. Helene Zidian,, director of
social services. Welcome was given
by Mr. Ronald E. Zidian, Ad·
ministrator of Pomeroy Health Care

DETROIT - Ronald Reagan
reached the Republican sununit
Wedneday, sweepmg unchallenged
to the GOP Presidential nominatin
before making an unprecedented
. post-midnight appearance to. ask
that the conv.enllon . nommate
George Bush as his runnmg mate.
Reagan, talking to the GOP
National Convention, said he had
dectded oo Bush. It was not 1mmediately clear what had torpedoed
negotiations between Reagan and
·Ford.
Word on the choice of Bush
reached the convention floor shortly
after Reagan w~s no~nated by the
~--- liV'~' to be thetr prestdential standard-bearer.
· Earlier, Gov. William Milliken of
Michigan told reporters tn the con~~ntion fl~r that Ford had.agreed to
)Om to JOID the Reagan .ticket. this
fall. However, other top fiepublicans
satd later Reagan had settled on
Bush, the former CIA director.
Sen. Paul Laxalt. R-Nev.. said

e

MERCHANDISE
(Dresses, .. shorts, tops,
skirts, blazers, slacks,
·terry joggers)

lWO'S COM~ANY
DRESS SHOP
118 E. Main
. Pomeroy, o.

From tht Associated PreBB

Shah U.ndergoes surgery Wednesday
CAIRO, Egypt - The former Shalm of Iran underwent a minor :;
operation Wednesday to clean an abscess that had formed on his thigh ,
one of this doctors said.
The abscess, caused when doctors .took a blood sample for a
routine test, had caused Mohammed Reza Pahlavi's leg to swell and
temperature to rise. After the lancing, doctors reported the 00-yearold former monarch's condition had improved and his fever dropped.
Pahlavi underwent surgery June 30 to drain an abdominal abscess
that developed following removal in March of his cancerous spleen.

Won't serve rest of sentence
CIDCAGO - After 25 years as a I1Jgitive from an Alabama prison
road gant. James Cowen can breathe a little easier. Now, he knows
that he will remain a free man.
Cowsen, 61 , has lived quietly in Chicago since 1955, working and
Jiving -among peale who never knew that he escaped from prison,
where he was sent for stealing a lew yards of scrap copper wire.
But for months ago, Cowsen was found out. Since then, he ~been
un~rtain if he would have to finish his three-year sentence.
On Tuesday, he got the word he was waiting for - at the request of
Illinois Gov. James R. Thompson, Alabama withdrew its request for
extradition.

Soviet crop production down
MOSCOW - Soviet citizens may have to rely on cabbage, bread
and potatoes to keep their stomachs full this winter. Figures releaed
yesterday show milk and meat production down the first six months &lt;i:
1980, and hthe weather apparently is playing havoc with vegetables.
J .S. agricultural observers said the low production statistics cannot be directly linked to the. American wheat embargo agains the
Soviet Union as a protest over the invasion of Afghanistan last December.

Weather forecast,
A little bit fuller cut through the
hips a~d legs for a more com ~
fortable fit. pre-washed denims,
100% cotton. G~~d selection of ..
basic style and ~shion jeans in
sizes 32 to SO w(\ist - lengths 30
to 36 · inches. Stop in, .see these
Wranglers for men. You'll like
them .

Also a fine selection of Wrangler
No _F ault 14 ounce denim jeans ..
Basic sty.le straight leg or boot
flare, and , many new fashion
looks. Not quite so full cut. Sizes
27 to 42 waist - 30 to ~61engths.

~tate

FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1980

"·
Eastern's Local Board of
Education adopted a deficit budget
for 1981 in a regular meeting earier
this week.
The budget includes a total expenditure of $1,694;263 plus out·
standing encwnberances of $80,000
which create a deficit of $1!2,046.15.
The board also acc~pted the
resignations of four employees and
hired three others.
Resignations were accepted from
Thomas Gwnpf, teacher at Tuppers
Plains, John Boston, teacher at
Eastern High School, Gale Douthitt,
teacher at Eastern High School and

Cindy Scyoc, assistant treasurer.
Employed were Mary Kesterson,
sub-custodian, Mrs. Cleo Smith, sui;
c~\Qdian and Arch Rose, assistapt
varsity football coach.
The board decided to take bids on
bread, milk, fuel oil, gas, tires and ·
tWO&gt;I!ChOOJ buses.
The board approved CoggeshallSirrunons for bus insurance for the
remainder of 1980, and voted to pur·
cbase new music books for grades
three through live.
Meanwhile, Southern's Local
Board of Education Wednesday

night adopted the its budget for 1981
showing a year end balance in the
black.
Anticipated receipts total
$1,439,070 while anticipated expenses will be $1,431,070, leaving a
balance of $8,070.
The board hired Paula Cochran as
speech and hearing therapiSt;
Donald Salmons as learing disability ,
teacher and senior-play advisor, and '
Kim Grueser as assistant basketball
coach for the girls' squad.
The following bids were accepted :
Sand Hill Coal Co., for coal; Ashland
Petroleum for permanent anti-

freeze, gasoline, fuel oil and transmission grease ; Betsy Ross
Bak~ries, baked goods; Best Office
Machines for repair of office
machines, and Roseberry's Permzoil
for motor oil.
The board agreed to readvertise
for bids lor tire and dairy products.
They a)so employed Dan Riffle as
bus meehanic. The board. recessed
·unit! July 28, at 7p.m.
Attending were Shirley Johnson,
president, Sue Grueser, Charles
Pyles, Dennie Evans and pan Smlth1
board members, Nancy Carnahan,
clerk and Bob Ord, superintendent.

Hundreds ()f Iranians expected _ to die
By 1be Associated Press
Many of the hundreds of Iranians
accused of plotting against the
revoiutionary regime are expected
to die before firing squads after brief
televised trials beginning today or
Friday.
Iran's justice minister, Ayatollah
Mohamma&lt;\ Beheshti, announced he
would lead a high council of judges
in trying the accused and that the
proceedings would be open to the
public and broadcast on state tell!"
vtsi.on.
"The plotters are facing the death
penalty," Beheshti said. ''Their trial
will begin within two days."
President Abolhassan BaniSadr,
who met Wednesday )VIth 'Iran's
revolutionary leader, Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeinl, confirmed the
trials would take place. .
Khomeini's regime announced
late last week it had uncovered a
military plot to overthrow the
government and by !Iunday, some
500 Iranians, many of them military
men from the southern city of Ahwaz, were arrested.

The government said their plans
called for air force planes to bomb
Khomeini's home and a number of
other targets in Tehran and other
cities.
A spokeJ!man for the ruling
Revolutionary Council said Iran had
asked Turkey to extradite two
Iranian air force lieutenants
allegedly involved in the conspiracy
who flew a helicopter to Turkey over
the weekend and requested asylwn.
The regime also closed the
country's borders for .two days
beginning Wednesday in attempts to
prevent the escapes of conspirators
it said were still at Ja~~ge . There were
no reports of further arrests by early
today.
Beheshti, who has blamed the
' coup attempt on Israel and the
United States, also said the U.S.
presidential election campaign did
not alter Iran's position on the 52
American hostages, in their 257th
day of captivity today.
"The nomination of Ronald
Reagan ... or Jimmy Carter makes
no difference," he said.

"We would like to speak to the
American nation rather than in·
dividuals. We want to have relations
with the people of AJ.llerica," .aaid

Behesti, a leader of the powerful
Islamic Republican Party which
controls the Parliament that Is to
decide the Americans' fate.

Applications being
accepted for program
Head Start Director Christopher
Zirruner announced today the Gallia·
Meigs CAA Head Start Child
Development Program is accepting
enrollment applications for children
to enter head start for the 1~1981
school year.
Head start is a program for low income pre-school children. Children
with a handicapping condition are
also accepted.
Avariety of iearning activities are
presented to tl11! children. The
program also provides nutritious
meals and snacks as well as health

and dental screening and follow-up.
Applications may be picked up at
the Gallia County Welfare Office,
the Gallia County Children's Services Office, the Gallia COW1ty Court
House, the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Conununity Mental Health Offices,
the Meigs County Welfare Office, the
Meigs County Court House and the
CAA office in Cheshire.
·
Head Start is funded by the U.S.
Department of Health and Hwnan
Services and is operated locally
through the Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency.

and local

.Mostly sunny today, with highs in the 90s. Clear tonight, with lows
in the mid 50s to the low 60s. Sunny tomorrow, witl! highs in the mid 80s
tonear90.
·
EXTENDED OHIO WEATHER - 1bunday througb Mooday.
Continued hot. and humid lhrougb tbe period wltb showers and thUDderslorms each day, mainly over the oortbem balf of the·state. Hlgbs
are expected In the 90s wllb overolghtlOW8 In the mid 60s or low 70s .

..

1:
I

••

_.MW": ,~

'

I

IN POMERO-Y

enttne

at

•

board okays deficit ·budget;
Southern's '81 budget given approval

WlESBADEN, West Germany ~ Freed American hostage
Richard Queen, suffering from multiple scler\)Sis, will go home today
to recuperate in Maine and then resume his foreign srvice career, of·
flcials said.
Meanwhile, ·the wife of Joseph Hall, one of the 52 remaining
hostages in Iran, ~eceiv ed a letter from her husband, dated June 11,
saying he doesn't know where he is being held captive but he's healthy
and " determined to see it rhoughand come back fit and sane."

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

Ea~terti

Queen leaving for home today

APPEAL MADE
An appeal for clothing has been
made lor a Rutland family who
recently lost their home because of
fire.
Clothing is needed for the children

Ronald

,_

JULY
CLEARANCE
SALE

ON AU SUMMER

The nominating address signaled
delegates and Reagan marchers to
stage the convention's big floor
demonstration; to the tune of the
band and the din of horns. It went on
for nearly a half-hour, while Nancy
Reagan stood applauding and
smiling in her convention box.
Gov. William G. Milliken of
Michigan, GJov. Robert D~ Ray of
Iowa and former Sen. Robert Griffin
of Michigan all said Reagan and
Ford had agreed on tenns that
would put the former president on
the 1980 ticket.
"The word I got is that Ford will
accept," said Ray.
"!have it on very reliable sources
within the Ford camp that it is put
together " said Gov. Pierre S.
DuPont iv of Delaware.
Developments came suddenly last
night. After insisting for days that he
wouldn't run, Ford suddenly talked
as though he wanted the No. 2 job
again.

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'-·

Center~

.. SAVE
20%.to 30%

.

'

" the bottom line is Ford no, Bush
Delegates and youthful Reagan
yes."
recruits packed the floor to wave
Ther 'l_ was unconfirmed Reagan placards and banners, burst
speculation that if agreement were balloons and cheered the foregone
reached, Reagan and Ford might conclusion.
·
make the rare - if not unMontana's delegates put his count
precedented- gesture of appearing past he nominating -majority, and
togethef" before convention the delegates burst into cheers
delegates · after Reagan's -over- again.
whelming nomination as the GOP's ·
The final roll call count: Reagan
1980presidel)tialcandidate.
1,939 votes, Rep . .John B. Anderson
While an array of party leaders of Illinois 37, George Bush 13, former
had said a Reagan-Ford ticket was ambassador to Great Britain Anne
set, others called those reports Armstrong 1, and 4 abstentions.
premature and said tenns were still
' Twenty-one holdout delegates
under negotiaton. Ford had said he from Illinois; 9 Massachusetts, 6
wouldn't be interested -··iii a from Wisconsin · and I from
figurehead vice presidency, but in a .. Washington voted for Anderson, who
role that would give him some say in quitthe Republican campaign and is ,
policy and decision making for a
running as an independent. Those
new administration.
votes drew of jeers.
The traditional roll call of the
Laxalt of Nevada delivered the
states . was but a fonnality at the
nominating speech for the candidate
32nd Republican National Conhe said "represents the public
vention, for Reag11n's triumph had
dream that is bandwagoning across
long been guaranteed.
America tonight."

'

VOL. 31·· NO. 66

.

I

ffiGHEST YET - Pomeroy got a taste of Texas as summer tern·
peratures rose to 106 degrees downtown yesterday, the highest yet this
summer.
\

\

CAMP ENDS FRIDAY - Ninety-one girl scouts from eight units ar~ par·
. ticipating in a week-long day camp that ends Friday.The three Brownie
units, four Junior 11nits and one Cadet unit are taking part in a wide range
of activities at Camp Kiashuta near Chester.
Each unit has cooked out of doors and set up their own camp.The
Cadets have done advanced compass work ana built a one-rope bridge.

.
1

Dan eramer, naturalist from Forked Run State Park taught the gu-IS
about plants and.Margaret Lewis has ~n teaching crafts that go along
with scout badges.
Wednesday night senior citizens came to the amp and conducted a
square dance.
.
..
.1•.
. ·
·
• · Ahayrtde, weiner roast and song fest are scheduled for Thursday night.
The camp ends Friday with an awards ceremohy.

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