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VOL 31 NO. 74·
---------------------~--~--~-~-M~
~~O~
Y :M~,I~DD~L~
EP_OR~T~,O~H~IO~·~TU~E~SD~A~Y. JUL_Y_29_._19_80__~--------~-----------=~-F~IIT_E_EN~CE~N~~
··-~

At Ravenswood bridge project

Letter campaign
will Urge ·action·
0

.,

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

.

.

BY BOB HOEFUCH

•d .

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Ovb i
u Ufor o
l or
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corn fOrt.
&amp;d

The Meigs County Regional Plan·
nlng Commission will ' express its
displeasure at Ohio's failure to
develop highway plans at the site of
the new Ravenswood bridge in the
Big Bend area.
Commission members Monday
night decided to send letters to Ohio
Governor James Rhodes and David
Weir, director of the Ohio Depart·
ment of Transportation.
In their lett~rs. members will
state that plans for a new highway or
an improved road should have been
developed to the new Ravenswood
bridge which is expected to be open
to traffic next year.
The commission will ask Rhodes
and Weir to visit the site so they will
understand the problems involved.
The commission will also offer to
send representative to Columbus to
conf¢r with the two state officials on
the matter should they choose not to
visit the site.
'
'

OIIIIIN STAll

ENViLOPES. ..
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NILION'S . . . . . . .

'
The commission's
action came af.

ter Meigs County Commissioner
Richard Jones had said failure to
improve or develop new highways at
the bridge site "will be one of the
most embarrassing moments in the
history of the Ohio Department ci
Transportation." .
Jones said, ''Weir had promised to
visit the site, but has not done so. He
said Ohio will be embarrassed
especially since so much has happened on the West Virginia side of
the new bridge in highway tie-ins
and development while nothing has
taken place in Ohio.
Jones said he has been advised
that there are no plans for any highway development in the Ohio area
near the bridge. He termed the
situation "a tragedy."
Jones has urged that every Meigs
County organization should go on
· record expressing their disapproval
of the lack of highway plans for

CRAYOLA
CRAYONS

MARKERS

J

NILSON'S

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BIC INK CRAYONS

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Vesco implicated in 7lillygate'

BIC/CLIC PENS

WASHINGTON - As Senate investigators try to fiild out whether
the Billy Carter-Libyan affair is merely a case of a ''boob" brother or
one of White House influence peddling, two senatori; say fugitive financier Robert Vesco claims to have engineered the whole deal to em·
barrass President_Carter.
Sens.Dennis DeConcinl, D-Ariz., and Orrin Hatch, R·Utah, who in·
terviewed Vesco in the Bahamas over the weekend, said Monday they
were skeptical about the Vesco story.
DeConcini said he wasn't convinced, but Hatch said Vesco has been
righi before and he thinks further investigation might bear out the
allegation that '!esco arranged Libyan payments of $220,000 to Billy
Carter that the president's brother said was a loan.

•24 Padt
• Brilliant Colors

f
PACKAGE

Midwest
'
.may have. more tremors

. A Middletown, Ohio, psychic predicts that the Midwest Is due for
more eart))quakes because of a rare allgrunent of the planets due in .
!982.
But, an Ohio State University scientist disagrees, while the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources says that even if the earth moves
again soon in the state, the trembling will be slight.
Barry Bowman, an NCR Inc. employee who has been giving psychic
readings to area residents for 10 years, predicted the earthquake that
occurred Sunday.
... .His forecast was published in Sunday morning's editions of the Mid·
dleto\Vn Journal. The tremor that caused ground in much of Ohio to
tremble, but resulted in no injuries or serious damage, occurred Sun·
day afternoon.

NILSON'S REG. $1.69

·NELSON'&amp; RIO. 113.ft

.• APIIWAID

CO,FEE PILTIRS

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W oother forecast

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Clear tonight. Lows in the low 60s. Sunny Wednesday. Highs in the
mi~. Chance of rain 10 percent tonight and near zero percent Wed·
nesday.. Winds westerly to northwesterly around 10 mph tonight.

GREE NSTAR

PENCILS

• ~1110.
~ flAt

futil'nded Ohio Fo=ast- Thursday through Saturday:Scattered
sho_wers or thunderstonns through the period. Highs in the 80s and
lows in the 60s.
·

12 Pl. .

Meigs County in the area where
there is so much potential growth. ·
In other actions, the commission
named L. W. McComas, Middleport,
as permanent secretary replacing
Edison Baker. Roy Miller was
named to replace McComas as the
commission's representative on the
area water ·quality advisory committee.
Application Approved
The planning conunission approved a rural health application for
$428,000 which would provide
medical and dental health in an area
including Meigs County. It has been
filed by the Ohio Valley Health Services.
Jaines Jennings, Jennings
Associates, Columbus, a consulting
firm used by the commission
frequently, reported on the Farmers
Home Administration Comprehensive Planning Project. He
said housing has been given top
priority with economic development, water and sewage and highways to also be considered during
the followup in the next year. It was
agreed to sign an application for funding for the second year study and
that the Jennings firm will carry out
the study if financing is approved.
Jeffrey Burt of Buckeye Hills·
Hocking Valley Regional Develop-'
ment District, reviewed the status of
a 701 planning project application
filed by Meigs County. HUb funds
have ·_been reduced. It is not known
at this point if Meigs will receive the
grant which would provide fo~ updating too comprehensive plaMing
done in 1972.
Greg Keller of Buckeye Hills
outlined the 601 energy impacted
area · development assistance
program pointing out that demand
for Ohio's coal and uranium enrich.ment capacity is expected to in·
crease as oil and natural gas supplies become increasingly scarce
'and expensive.
While the exploitation of these
resources will result in prosperity
for some sectors of the economy.
conununities may suffer from lack
of revenues to provide new employes
with adequate housing and com·
munity facilities.
The program provides com-·
munities impacted by an influx of
new coal mining related employes
with finanial assistance to plan for
and · provide housing, conununity
facilities and service provision
needs. keller reviewed the steps ·
which have been formulated to at·
lain the program goals. Meigs Coun·
ty could readily be affected by the
program, Keller pointed out.
Fred Morrow, Ohig;'Power Co.
manager, reported his company has
begun using the new rural address
system compiled by the commission
and has found it "very beneficial."
Thereon Johnson, chairman ,
presided over the meeting with C. E.
Blakeslee , executive director,
giving a financial report and
outlining the current projects.
Others attending were McComas,
Jones, Morrow, Jennings, Chester
Wells, H. E. Shields, Burt, Archie
Stegal, Keller, E. F. Robinson, Mrs .
Eleanor Thomas, Jones and John
Rice.
.I

NELSON 'S
REG.

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New 8mbouH ·vln1l Is a
w•lc'ome edition to C1f1Y decor .
Paddod lid, bright metaitte
medallion on l~l"bo h&lt;l.;.,ler,..

aculf proof, easy core vinyl.

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NELSON'S REG. 69'

• Home
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NILION'I
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NELSON'S
DRUG STORES

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NANCARROW'S
.

PARTICIPATE IN DAY - Chester Wells, Rich
Jlmes and Henry Wells, Meigs County commissioners,
are shown with John· Rice, County Extension Agent

.

PH.A rfMACY

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Coli f o r c . loo~t
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Agriculture at' County Conunissioner's Day held .)'uly
24 at the North Appalachian Experimentaf Watershed
and Pomerene Forestry Laboratory in Coshocton
County. (SeestoryPage8.)

· DAMAGED - The front of this apartment house

own~d by Paul Casci on Mill St. , Middleport, was ex:
tens1vely damaged early Sunday morning when it was

,struck by a car driven by Michael W. Marcwn, Middleport. Marcus was taken to Holzer Medical Center
for treatment of minor injuries. He is charged with
reckless operation of a motor vehicle.

Meigs County's population
up according to '80 census
Meigs County's population rose 17.2 percent from 1970 to 1980 according to preliminary figures
from the latest census.
In 1970, the county's population was placed at 19,799 while this year's census sets_the population
at 23,212. The greatest increase in percentage took place in Scipio Township which gained 59.3 per,
cent during the 10 years between the last census.
'
According to the initial figures, Middleport Village increased 5.2 percent, growing from 2,784 to
2,930 while Pomeroy gl!ined only .4 of one percent, from 2,672 to 2,68.'1.
Racine gained 16.5percent while Syracuse Village gained a whopping 33.6 percent in too 10 years.
Rutland Village was down 7.7 percent froin the last census. Letart Township also showed a loss,
8.3 percent.
The table below shows each township and village and the 19110 count compared to the 1970 count:
Township
Bedford
Chester
Colwnbia
Lebanon
Letart
Olive
Orange
Rutland Twp.
Rutland Vii.
Salem
Salisbury
Middleport
Pomeroy
Scipio
Sutton
Racine
Syracuse

Population

··~--

.. .

1970
975
2,061
750
823
779
1,658
858
2,395
612
957
7,986
2,930
. 2,683
1,1121
3,029
679
914

Percentage
1980

7rrl

30.0
31.0
21.2
5.2
-41.3
18.0
21.4

1,874

27.8

663

-7.7
37.5
8.3
5.2

750
1,573
619
782
854

1,401i

696
7,303
2,784
2,672
641
2,595
583
684

.4

59.3
16.7
16.5
33.6

Dry vote may be undertaken

Tavern crackdown promised
Marvin Kelly, William Walters and.
Middleport residents may be that if the situation at the cafe
Allen Lee King with Councilman
operated
by
Marsha
Terry,
does
noi
asked soon to vote the community
Cat:!
Horky abstaining.
straighten
up,
then
a
petition
should
"dry" if tavern owners "don't
Two
Middleport Hill r&amp;identa
straighten up their act".
be circulated to put measures on the
complainted
abdut water l'l111l1iOg ·
ballot so that the conununity can
This was the consensus when a
onto
their
properties
because of a
delegation of some 30 residents met vote to have the town go dry so that
with Middleport Village Council no taverns can operate. It _was the drainage problem. It was agreed to
Monday night voicing strong com· consensus that tavern owners must ask the County Engineer Phil Rober- .
plaints against the Blue Tartan iri · operate with judgement or the Issue ··· Is to check tlie situation and make .
recommendations.
. lower Middleport.
will be placed on the ballot.
Complaints lodged last night as · . John Kobel, ~olumbia Gas of Ohio ·
Several residents charged that
Blue Tartan·clientele is creating a well as the complaints lodged with manager, reviewed aspects of a new
nuisance in t~e neighborhood : police over the past few months contract with the village. The mat·
against the Blue Tartan will be for· ter was referred to the utilities comCustom~rs going into and leaving
the 'establislunent are using loud
warded to the Ohio Department of mittee which will report at the next •
meeting. .
Liquor Control.
'
profanity, drinking outside the
Mayor ijofflll8n read a letter from
business location, throwing bottles
The department will be asked to
Solicitor
Bernard Fultz to the Point..
do whatever necessary to see that
against nearby buildings, littering
oreler is restored in the operation of View Television Cable Co.,noting
yards of residenls near the business
the low~· M;~-neport bar. Mayor 1\lat council - wants customers to
and are creating excessive noise
have written and personal
Hoffr.~&amp;n indicated it is hoped that
with motor vehicles. Residents
some action will be forthcoming by notification of cutoffs ana a colleccharge that customers come and go
. lion agency in the village.
from t)le establislunent as early.as 5 the department in a week or so.
The mayor also indicated that
a.m. in the mornings.
In other actionS, council awarded
Kim
Shields, conununity developa contract to the Holley Brothers
' "On Sunday morning, it was as
ment
advisor, would like to meet
Construction Co., Rodney, on the
bad as Times Square'on New Year's
with
coWJcil
to discuss possible a~
Eve", one resident commented.
Powell Street ·Sewer Improvement
plications
for
federal programs.
Project. The bid of the company,
The complaining group said it was
Councilman King discussed
one of seven bidding, was $165,783.
not going to continue tolerating the
mowing of the levee area and the
The information on ~ bids was
situation at the tavern and stressed
need for a trash container there,
prepared by Floyd Browne
that action must be taken.
weeds in the Powell St. area and
ASsociates
which
serves
as
an
Council voted unanimously to file
parking problems near the Mida complaint with the Oi)io Depart·
engineering consulting finn for the
dleport
park.
nlent of Liquor Control and Mayor
village. The CO!Ilpany will provide a
.
Mayor
Hoffman advised council
Fred Hoffman, who said he is In
100 percent perfonnance bond on the
that
a
representative
of the Corps of
job.
agreement :With the residents filing
Engineers
will
be
1o
Middleport
the .complamts, stated he will also
Council also appointed Jack Sat·
Wednesday
to
observe
erosion
terfield to serve on village coWJcil
contact the department in reference
problems
along
the
Ohio
river.
to the matter.
replacing Charles Mullen who
Also attending the meeU!!g was
Council agreed with the residents
resigned recently. Sat~rfield was
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck.
named to ~oo post by Councilmen

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July29, 1980

Opinions &amp;
Comments

______,_

~-*----­

')l

'~
Anonymous dumpers - ~ ::;;;.
raise cleanup cost ·
HaZardous waste cleanup is going to cost a lot more in
Ohio because .of culprits who seal it in unmarked barrels
which they dump or abandon.
;
State Rep. Michael A. Fox, R-Hamilton, says there are
·thousands of such barrels at a hazardous waste site in his
city.
That site, along with a similar facility at Deerfield, near
Akron, will cost about $15 million to clean up, legislators
studying the problem have been told.
·
.
The .wunarked barrels either have to be individually
tested and analyzed to determine content - at a cost of
, $2,000 a barrel - or the different types of wastes dumped
and combined, making disposal cost$ the same as for the
most toxic of all substances in the mixture.
'
Fox is a member of the joint conference committee
working on legislation le\Tfing a fee on hazardous waste
producers to finance cleanups and establish control
programs.
He says there are 12,000 hazardous waste producers in ·
the state, including 1,700 with disposal sites on their own
premises.

Gov Rhodes -says
Gov. James A. RhOdes, commenting on the importance
of political party platforms at the GOP National Conv~ntion in Detroit: "Platforms are something you walk on,
not run on."

Today in .history.
Today is Tu'"esdliy, July 29, the
211th day of 1980. There are 155 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On this date in 1959,. Hawaii held
its first election as a state.
..
On this date: -In 1883, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini was born in
Dovia, Italy.
-In 1890, Dutch painter Vincent
Van Gogh shot himself to death.
-In 1914, transcontinental
telephone service began with a conversation carried between · New
York and San Francisco.
-In 1940, Germany began its allout blitz against Britain during
World Warn.
-Ten years ago: A crippling two- .
week dock strike was called off in
Britain.

••

'- Five ·years ago: The
Organization of American States en·
ded its . 11-year embargo against
Cuba.
-One year ago: Basque
separatists in Spain dealt one of
their bloodiest blows to the ruling
govenunent, with bomb blasts that
left four dead and more than 100
wounded in Madrid.
Today' s
birthdays:
Choreographer and dancer Paul
Taylor is 50. Attorney Melvin Belli is
73. Cincinnati Reds' first baseman
Dan Driessen is 29.
Thoughtfor today: When you have
got a thing where you want it, it is a
good thing to leave it where it is. Sir Winston Churchill, British
sll\tesman (1874-1965 ).

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"If yoq were to cast your ballot today, who
would you cons/dar to be the lesser-of~two­
svl/s?"

I

Jeff Hood, Eric Johnson, J . R. Kitchen; baqk, l' arl
McKinley, holding the trophy; F'rank Gheen, coach·
Brian Decker, Rick Wise, Scott F'razier, Scott Gheen.
James Keesee and Coach Ed Kitchen. The team wo11
the Syracuse LL toumament Friday night.

SECOND PLACE - The Middleport Central Trust

J ones, Allen Tripp, Jeff Cal&lt;twell, Todd Wilson;
second, ito r, Jeff Sayre, Kevin Barber, Brent Bissell,
Royce Bissell, Larry Spencer, Eddie Collins, Bryan
burst; back, coaches, Jim Caldwell, Charlie ColliRj
and Gary Durst.

team took second place honors winning individual
trophies and a large trophy in the final play of the
Powell little league tournament on the Meigs High
fields Saturday evening. Pictured, front, l to r, Todd
Hood, Scott McKinley, Robbie Cundiff, Paul Melton,

7'-

~ 'Z.z~f.····•
"We'll have seen everything if we see it fly."

•

Bankruptcies. s"e t record during 1980
.

NEW YORK (AP) - Bankrupt·
cies this year are occuring at a
greater rate than in 1975, when a
record 224,000 were filed, and some
lenders are blaming the Bankruptcy
Refonn Act, which took effect last
October!.
"Consumer Bankruptcies Grow ...
Is Greed A Reason?" asks the
National Consumer Finance
Association in one of a series of
position and background papers sent
to news people during the past week.
The associstion concedes the
recession's role in the increase,
which it estimates at 24 percent
greater than a year ago, but it
suggests the public is exploiting the
law rather than merely seeking its
protection.
It asks · provocatively: "Ar'e
Americans becoming less concerned
about their financial responsibiliies

and any possible social stigma at·
tached to bankruptcy?" Other
suggestions are also POSed as
questions.
"Are· consumers rushing to this
traditional last resort merely to
avoid paying debts?" it asks. " Are
others ' motivated by greed en·

.

It suggests also that people are

being encouraged to declare
bankruptcy wlien it is not really
necessary. "I am not suggesting
that bankrupty should never be
used, but it is a last resort," Walter
Kurth, NCFA president said. "Alter-natives should be explored first.' '

Business mirror
couraging people to declare
bankruptcy when it is not
necessary"? 1 '
The association, made up of consumer finance and other loan companies, appears to place much
blame on lawyers who advertise
their "bankruptcy expertise" and
urge clients to exploit the new, more
liberal law.

One attraction of the new federal
law is the liberal list of exemptions,
or properties that cannot be taken in
a bankruptcy action.
Among exemptions under the law
are $7,500 in the value of a residence,
$1,200 in a motor vehicle's value,
$700 in professional tools or books,
$500 in jewelry, and $4,000 of accrued
dividends.

Under the law, a consumer can file
for personal bankruptcy under two
plans. Chapter 7 involves liquidation
of personal effects to pay debts.
Chapter 13 enables a person with a
regular income to reorganize, under
court protection, his or her financial
obligations to creditors.
Under Chapter 13, the debtor must
design a monthly budget and adhere
to it for three years. Any amount
remaining after court-allowed sums
for food, clothing, housing, leisure
and the like is used to reimburse
creditors through a court-appointed
trustee.
Mter the three-year period, the
debtor is discharged from previous
obligations. The amount repaid
within that time, according to the
court-approved plan, become:. the
. debtor's total liability.

PIRATES Tfi!RD - The Pome roy Pirates won
third place honors in a little league tournament span·
sored by La rry Powe ll and concluded Sa turday
evening on the Meigs High fields. Pirates with their
. . trophy include front, 1 to r, Brian F'reeman, Danny
'

Editorial comment

By Don Graff
If you'd like to gt away from the
problems of this world for a bit, consider those of another- Venus.
Although it · is not because of a
problem that Earth's sister planet is
currently news, but as a consequence of the resolution of one the mystery of what lies beneath its
thick cover of clouds.
Thanks to the electronic probing of
the Pioneer spacecraft that has been
orbiting Venus since December 1978,
we now have a good idea.
Topographically, Venus bears
striking similarities to Earth. It has
uplands and lowlands and mountain
ranges, some of these configurations
approaching the extent _of Earth's
. smaller continents: The super-hot
surface has no water, however, and
what corresponds to the oceans on
Earth- the "sea level" of Venus-

are vast, relatively flat ptaifis
instrwnents - a radar altimeter covering some 60 percent of the
was adapted for surface scanning
planet.
and proved amazillgly precise in
And there also are indications that
revealing to the computers what the
Venus - like Earth, as Mount ..St.
clouds obscure from the eye.
Helens is so vividly demonstrating,
Getting back to earth, there might
and Io, the volcanic moon Jupiter be a useful spinoff application for
may be geologically active. I! may
the device down here - trained on
be just beginning a process similar
the political situation.
to that caused on Earth by tectonic
plates. Rising out of the interior and
WHAT'S IN A NAME
interacting with each other, the
plates shape the continents and are
And there's more about Venus.
responsible for most earthquake and
Now that its surface features are
volcanic activity.
becoming known, there comes the
All of this information, and much
task of naming them. Since the
more, has recently been made
planet itself bears the name of a
public by the National Aeronautics
Roman goddess, it was decided to
and Space A~aiton. It is the
carry on with that theme. A large
unexpected bonus from the Pioneer·- crater at the point where radar surmission, originally programmed
veying conunenced and which was
primarily to study the Venusian atfixed as the Venusian zero longitude
mosphere. One of the spacecraft's
was appropriately named Eve.

By Robert J. Wagman
DETROIT (NEA) - There is
probably no U. S. city more in touch
with today's economic realities than
Detroit. Local unemployment is
pushing 15 percent, and minority
unemployment is clD~!fr to 50 per·
cent.
Yet it was in Detroit that the
Republicans chose to unveil an elec- ·
tion strategy that would more
properly have been unveiled at Fantasyland in Walt Disney's Magic
Kingdom.
Throughout the recent Republican
1
. National Convention, certain buzz
words cropped up in the
vocabularies of party strategists
when discussing the faD campaign.
Their two favorite expressions
seemed to be "broadening the base"
and "reaching out to the center."
The meanlnl oi,those phrases is
obvloul. For a lnbiority party to win
a two- or even three-candidate election, it must appeal to more than its
own members. For RepubUcans,
who are more than ever a party of
the right, this means attracting independenl• and Democrats.
So how did four days of prime-time
exposure on all three networks further this extension of Republican·ap-

J:M\111? U the American electorate
was listening carefuly, probably not
very well.
As the Republicans were meeting
here, the news came out" of
Washington that the federal budget
deficit for the current fiscal · year
may well approach $60 billion due to
the worsening economy. Against the
· background of this depressing
disclosure, consider the campaign

rates. .
"Every major tax cut of this cen- ·
tury ... ended up yielding new
revenues for the govenunent," said
Reagan in his acceptance speech.
But even the most enthusiastic supporter of Kemp-Roth admits there
would be a tlme lag between the
initial loss of federal revenues and
the later gain brought about by the
tax cuts. The best estimate is that a

'

Today's commentary
promises of presidential nominee
Ronald Reagan.
Reagan promiaed to implement a
Kemp-Roth style tax cut immediately upon hl.s election. · He
would slash taxes by 1il percent in
the first year with additio!)81 reduC.
lions phased in until overall taxes
are 30 percent lower than they are
today. He pointed out that these cuts
should result in a massiv~ spurt in
the economy so that federal receipts
would increase despite lower tax
.•

10 percent reduction wouid cost the
federal government about $30 'billion
in revenue the first year.
Coupled with the tax-cut proposal
is Reagan's promise to add at least
$10 billion in real dollars 'to the
defense budget - plus a few billion
more to raise military salaries.
Cutting taxes and in~slng
military spending would thus eost
the U. S. Treasury more than $40
billion
a year.• -1
.

Carl, Rex Haggy, Rod Harrison, Darren Hayes;
second, l .to r, Mark Elliott, Greg F'ields, Joe Fields,
Huey Eason, Phil King; back, ito r, Lloyd King, Phil
Harrison, and Gary Freeman, coaches. Team mem·
bers not pictured are Todd Cullums, Chip Werry and
Kenny Lllllsford . ·

At Summer Olympics

Venus: a .break from earthly problems

FOURTH PLACE - The Pomeroy Giants placed
fourth in a little league tournament' which concluded
Saturday on the Meigs High School fields. Pictured
with their trophy are: front, l to r, James Norman,
Todd Powell, Bracy Korn, Joey Roush, bat boy; Jack

Norman, Bryan Korn, Gerald Moore; second row , I t•
r, George Korn, coach; Rodney Roush, Gary Colema n.
Lee Powell, Scott Powell, Kevin Mowery, and La rn
Powell, coach, who sponsored the tournament.

.../'

Track stars at different ends of careers

Appropriately, that is, to the International Astronomical Union but
not to the National Organization for
Women . The latter read the
preference for female Ill mes from
the mythological past as a tyhpical
male chauvinistic response.
Names of real women from
history should be used instead.
NOW made its point and it is likely
that Mounts Amelia Earhart and
Florence Nightingale will soon join
volcanic peaks earlier destr-·ated
Diana and Aphrodite.

a~ American team, moved into
MOSCOW - Two track stars who
today's program with the Soviet
stand today with Olympic gold
Union the runaway medals leader
medals around their necks areal dif·
with 46 golds and 124 total, one short
ferent stages in their · athletic
of their Olympic record haul at the
careers. After receiving the highest
Montreal Games. East Germany,
recognition in amateur sports, one is
with one-fifteenth Qle population of
talking retirement and the other is
the
Soviet Union, was second.with 88
looking forward to his next major
medals,
including 34 golds.
meet.
Today,
the Sov!et basketball team,
Pietro Mennea of Italy is 28. The
the
pre-tournament
favorite, needed
gold medal he won Mondsy in the
to
beat
Cuba
and
have
S(lllin beat
200-meter dash was the culmination
Italy
to
advance
into
Wednesday's
of a decade ri. sacrifice and
gol d-m edal game against
dedication. His is the perspective ri.
Yugoslavia. Both Italy and
the man who has won the war but
Yugoslavia
upset the Soviets over
has grown tired of the fight.
the
weekend.
"I won the race I wanted to. win.
Another highlight of today's
This caps my career. I've won
schedule
was the second bout for
everything. Now I can consider
two-time
defending heavyweight
retiring," he said. "Mter 10 years of
champion
Teofilo
Stevenson. The 29competition, if they offered me $6
year-old
Cuban
has
won all eight of
million dollars to start all over
his
fights
,
over
the
course of three
again, I wouldn't accept. "
Olympics,
inside
the
three-round
.Lutz Dombrowski is a 21-year-old
limit.
He
was
matched
against Gr·
from East Germany , a nation fierzegorz
Skrze~
of
Poland.
cely devoted to excellence in.sporl
Today is an off day for track and
F'rom the age of nine, when he starfield.
ted jumping, Dombrowski has been
A new Olympic category, food·
on a schedule programmed to win·
throwing,
was unofficially added to
ning Monday's Olympic long jump
the
program
Monday. About ao-4o
competition. His is the perspective
athletes
in
Australian,
Briiish and
of the warrior who lives to fight.
Brazilian
jackets,
frustrated
by the
"My next ambition is to compete
II
p.m.
closing
of
the
disco,
went
on
In next year's World Cup," he said.
a
rampage
in
the
dining
hall
at
the
Meanwhile, while 111ennea and
Dombrowski were reaching their Olympic Village" They left a mess,
goals, America's disenfranchised · but no real damage. ·
"They came througl) the exit and
Olympic tea m a rriv ed j n
Washington for a 5-&lt;lay honor .started hollering 'Music, Music,
program as guests of the JJ.S. Olym· Music'," said Mike Perry, the
pic Conunittee. The U.S. team is American coaching the Swedish
boycotting the Moscow Games as a basketball team who witnessed the
protest against the Soviet in· incident. "Then they went to one end
· of the dining hall hollering
· tervention in Afghanistan.
"Russians out &lt;i Mghani.Stan,
In a,statement signed by 81 members of the team, the athletes said Russians out of Afghanistan."
Perry, who said there were an
there is'_no greater honor for an
equal
number of male and female .
amateur· athlete than to represent
iiwolved in the food ,fight,
athletes
his country at the Olympics.
·attributed
the rowdyism to Olympic
"While we strongly 'deplore overt
steam-blowing
and boredom.
aggressive acts by one nation again·
" It's really the first thing that's
et another, we q11estion whether the
boycott of the Olympic Games is the happened here in terms of exbest means available to .assist the citement at the Village. One of the
cause of peace," the statement said. . reasons, I think, is that many
The Games, the first ever without athlef JS have finished competing,

Carrying this development a bit
further and considering that Venus
is now believed to be in the early
stages of geological activity with a
long, long way to go before completion, some thought might be
given to renaming the entire planet.
· It might be called ERA .

Detroit-: reality and the GOP ·c onvention

•

CHAMPS - The Tuppers Plains Tigers were
"number 1" in the Larry Powell little league tour·
nament which concl uded Saturday evening on the
Meigs High fiel ds. Pictured with their awards are
front, 1 to r. Jirruny Caldwell, Sean Clemson, Charles

·'

Now consider what was pernaps
Reagan's most emphatic promise: a
balanced budget in his first year [I)
office. How could Reagan accomplish this if he intends to subtract another $40 billion from a
budget that is likely to ·already be
badly in the red?
The only answer is by massive
slashing somewhere in the budget. If
that som~where is not defense, It
will have to be domestic social
programs in such fields as health,
housing, education and fiscal
assistance that cities depehd upon
for their sorvival, In other words,
the cuts would come in· programs
r that most di~y touch the live~~ of
the very voters that party planners
talk about "broadening the base" to
capture.
To win in November, Reagan
clearly must extend his folio~
beyond the true believers Ulte thoee
cheering delegates who gathered
here in Detroit. · But . carefu1
eJIIIIIlination of the party's platfom.
and the candidate's promises causes
one to wonder if Reagan will be able
to convince enough Americans to
vote against what may well be their
own self-interest, at least in the
short term.
.

.

'

and now it's partytime.
"I'm afraid . for the rest of the
week it's gonna be a lot like this.
There's nothing for them to do - the
disco closes at lt. All the cartoons
and movies are in Russian.
"They wanted something to do.
What you had was a lot of young
people with a lot of energy."
But most of the athletes expended
energy in more conventional ways
Monday. Dombrowski recorded the
second longest jump, winning the
event with a leap of 28 feet and one:
quarter inch). Mennea blew by 100-

meter champion Allan Wells of
Great Britain in the final strides to
win the 200 title in 20.19.
Dombrowski didn't know until
three weeks ago that he would be
able to compete here. He had suf·
fered a pulled leg ll)USCle earlier in
the year, and he did not compete until the East Gerrn;an Athietic
Federation arranged a special meet
July 5 to test his condition.
He responded with a leap of 27~'10,

TENNIS '

,NORTH CONWl\.Y, N.H. (AP) -

in 'the 200 at 19.72, but he was not at
peak mental form for these Game.'
He has .said that he would not ha v&lt;·
objected if Italy followed America·,
lead and supported the Olymp_k
boycott. .
''The resporu,;ibiiity of being_ tlir
heavy favorite aft.er the Ameri ean
boycott, and the bitterness for
having to compete in a crippletl
event, have just cracked my ncr·
yes," he said.

1jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
G&amp;J
Parts

third
best in place
the world,
andonmoved
into second
aUtlme
Mon- I1 _ _
day, actually becoming the first

Sports briefs.
BASEBALL
NEW YORK (AP) - Bob Horner
of the Atlanta Braves, continuing his
torrid long-ball spree, was named
National League player of the week
for the period ending July ?:/, while
Jason Thompson of the California
Angels and Joe Charboneau of the
Cleveland I~dians were named cowinners for the American League.
Horner blasted folir home runs
during the July 21-?:/ period and has
14 for the month.
Thomp~on batted .560 during that
period. ,Charboneau hit safely in all
five Cleveland games, hitting a
grand slam and a two run homer
against Seattle on July 23.

athlete to land near the 28-foot mark.
World record holder Bob Beamon
of the United States didn't touch
down ,until he had reached 29 feet ,
2_ inches in 1\is mind-boggling leap
into never-never land at the Mexico
City Games in 1968.
"I never thought of challenging
Bob Beamon's world record and I
don't think I ever will break it,"
Dombrowski said.
Mennea is the world record holder

• •

Top-seeded Jimmmy Connors
defeated Joao Soares of Brazil6-3, 63 in the first round of the $175,000
men's international tennis tour·
nament at the Mount Crai)ITlore Ten·
nis Club.
Second-seeded Hl!rold Solomon
beat Sashi Menon of India 6-1, 7-5
while Hank P£ister upset fifth·
seeded Rosco Tanner6-7, 7-6, 7-5 .

AUTO
PARTS

Plus

''A utostore'

: :~:
AITENDCAMP
Attending basketball school at
O.U. this week are Loww Powell,
Brian Hou&lt;!ashelt, Brian and Brett ·
Korn, Chris Kennedy, Chris Shank
and Huey Eason .

WAGNER

Pads &amp;Brake Shoes
for
Foreign Cars!!
Brake Shoes
Disc Pads ·

W.2nd
Pomeory, 0 .

. I

Rt. 33
Mason,WV

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July29, 1980

Opinions &amp;
Comments

______,_

~-*----­

')l

'~
Anonymous dumpers - ~ ::;;;.
raise cleanup cost ·
HaZardous waste cleanup is going to cost a lot more in
Ohio because .of culprits who seal it in unmarked barrels
which they dump or abandon.
;
State Rep. Michael A. Fox, R-Hamilton, says there are
·thousands of such barrels at a hazardous waste site in his
city.
That site, along with a similar facility at Deerfield, near
Akron, will cost about $15 million to clean up, legislators
studying the problem have been told.
·
.
The .wunarked barrels either have to be individually
tested and analyzed to determine content - at a cost of
, $2,000 a barrel - or the different types of wastes dumped
and combined, making disposal cost$ the same as for the
most toxic of all substances in the mixture.
'
Fox is a member of the joint conference committee
working on legislation le\Tfing a fee on hazardous waste
producers to finance cleanups and establish control
programs.
He says there are 12,000 hazardous waste producers in ·
the state, including 1,700 with disposal sites on their own
premises.

Gov Rhodes -says
Gov. James A. RhOdes, commenting on the importance
of political party platforms at the GOP National Conv~ntion in Detroit: "Platforms are something you walk on,
not run on."

Today in .history.
Today is Tu'"esdliy, July 29, the
211th day of 1980. There are 155 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On this date in 1959,. Hawaii held
its first election as a state.
..
On this date: -In 1883, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini was born in
Dovia, Italy.
-In 1890, Dutch painter Vincent
Van Gogh shot himself to death.
-In 1914, transcontinental
telephone service began with a conversation carried between · New
York and San Francisco.
-In 1940, Germany began its allout blitz against Britain during
World Warn.
-Ten years ago: A crippling two- .
week dock strike was called off in
Britain.

••

'- Five ·years ago: The
Organization of American States en·
ded its . 11-year embargo against
Cuba.
-One year ago: Basque
separatists in Spain dealt one of
their bloodiest blows to the ruling
govenunent, with bomb blasts that
left four dead and more than 100
wounded in Madrid.
Today' s
birthdays:
Choreographer and dancer Paul
Taylor is 50. Attorney Melvin Belli is
73. Cincinnati Reds' first baseman
Dan Driessen is 29.
Thoughtfor today: When you have
got a thing where you want it, it is a
good thing to leave it where it is. Sir Winston Churchill, British
sll\tesman (1874-1965 ).

Berry's World
•

~~·

,.

...1---ta\1

::;..;~!""'

.'( ~-~nur ·

~ '~

~

~·

\~
-tqLv,..

"If yoq were to cast your ballot today, who
would you cons/dar to be the lesser-of~two­
svl/s?"

I

Jeff Hood, Eric Johnson, J . R. Kitchen; baqk, l' arl
McKinley, holding the trophy; F'rank Gheen, coach·
Brian Decker, Rick Wise, Scott F'razier, Scott Gheen.
James Keesee and Coach Ed Kitchen. The team wo11
the Syracuse LL toumament Friday night.

SECOND PLACE - The Middleport Central Trust

J ones, Allen Tripp, Jeff Cal&lt;twell, Todd Wilson;
second, ito r, Jeff Sayre, Kevin Barber, Brent Bissell,
Royce Bissell, Larry Spencer, Eddie Collins, Bryan
burst; back, coaches, Jim Caldwell, Charlie ColliRj
and Gary Durst.

team took second place honors winning individual
trophies and a large trophy in the final play of the
Powell little league tournament on the Meigs High
fields Saturday evening. Pictured, front, l to r, Todd
Hood, Scott McKinley, Robbie Cundiff, Paul Melton,

7'-

~ 'Z.z~f.····•
"We'll have seen everything if we see it fly."

•

Bankruptcies. s"e t record during 1980
.

NEW YORK (AP) - Bankrupt·
cies this year are occuring at a
greater rate than in 1975, when a
record 224,000 were filed, and some
lenders are blaming the Bankruptcy
Refonn Act, which took effect last
October!.
"Consumer Bankruptcies Grow ...
Is Greed A Reason?" asks the
National Consumer Finance
Association in one of a series of
position and background papers sent
to news people during the past week.
The associstion concedes the
recession's role in the increase,
which it estimates at 24 percent
greater than a year ago, but it
suggests the public is exploiting the
law rather than merely seeking its
protection.
It asks · provocatively: "Ar'e
Americans becoming less concerned
about their financial responsibiliies

and any possible social stigma at·
tached to bankruptcy?" Other
suggestions are also POSed as
questions.
"Are· consumers rushing to this
traditional last resort merely to
avoid paying debts?" it asks. " Are
others ' motivated by greed en·

.

It suggests also that people are

being encouraged to declare
bankruptcy wlien it is not really
necessary. "I am not suggesting
that bankrupty should never be
used, but it is a last resort," Walter
Kurth, NCFA president said. "Alter-natives should be explored first.' '

Business mirror
couraging people to declare
bankruptcy when it is not
necessary"? 1 '
The association, made up of consumer finance and other loan companies, appears to place much
blame on lawyers who advertise
their "bankruptcy expertise" and
urge clients to exploit the new, more
liberal law.

One attraction of the new federal
law is the liberal list of exemptions,
or properties that cannot be taken in
a bankruptcy action.
Among exemptions under the law
are $7,500 in the value of a residence,
$1,200 in a motor vehicle's value,
$700 in professional tools or books,
$500 in jewelry, and $4,000 of accrued
dividends.

Under the law, a consumer can file
for personal bankruptcy under two
plans. Chapter 7 involves liquidation
of personal effects to pay debts.
Chapter 13 enables a person with a
regular income to reorganize, under
court protection, his or her financial
obligations to creditors.
Under Chapter 13, the debtor must
design a monthly budget and adhere
to it for three years. Any amount
remaining after court-allowed sums
for food, clothing, housing, leisure
and the like is used to reimburse
creditors through a court-appointed
trustee.
Mter the three-year period, the
debtor is discharged from previous
obligations. The amount repaid
within that time, according to the
court-approved plan, become:. the
. debtor's total liability.

PIRATES Tfi!RD - The Pome roy Pirates won
third place honors in a little league tournament span·
sored by La rry Powe ll and concluded Sa turday
evening on the Meigs High fields. Pirates with their
. . trophy include front, 1 to r, Brian F'reeman, Danny
'

Editorial comment

By Don Graff
If you'd like to gt away from the
problems of this world for a bit, consider those of another- Venus.
Although it · is not because of a
problem that Earth's sister planet is
currently news, but as a consequence of the resolution of one the mystery of what lies beneath its
thick cover of clouds.
Thanks to the electronic probing of
the Pioneer spacecraft that has been
orbiting Venus since December 1978,
we now have a good idea.
Topographically, Venus bears
striking similarities to Earth. It has
uplands and lowlands and mountain
ranges, some of these configurations
approaching the extent _of Earth's
. smaller continents: The super-hot
surface has no water, however, and
what corresponds to the oceans on
Earth- the "sea level" of Venus-

are vast, relatively flat ptaifis
instrwnents - a radar altimeter covering some 60 percent of the
was adapted for surface scanning
planet.
and proved amazillgly precise in
And there also are indications that
revealing to the computers what the
Venus - like Earth, as Mount ..St.
clouds obscure from the eye.
Helens is so vividly demonstrating,
Getting back to earth, there might
and Io, the volcanic moon Jupiter be a useful spinoff application for
may be geologically active. I! may
the device down here - trained on
be just beginning a process similar
the political situation.
to that caused on Earth by tectonic
plates. Rising out of the interior and
WHAT'S IN A NAME
interacting with each other, the
plates shape the continents and are
And there's more about Venus.
responsible for most earthquake and
Now that its surface features are
volcanic activity.
becoming known, there comes the
All of this information, and much
task of naming them. Since the
more, has recently been made
planet itself bears the name of a
public by the National Aeronautics
Roman goddess, it was decided to
and Space A~aiton. It is the
carry on with that theme. A large
unexpected bonus from the Pioneer·- crater at the point where radar surmission, originally programmed
veying conunenced and which was
primarily to study the Venusian atfixed as the Venusian zero longitude
mosphere. One of the spacecraft's
was appropriately named Eve.

By Robert J. Wagman
DETROIT (NEA) - There is
probably no U. S. city more in touch
with today's economic realities than
Detroit. Local unemployment is
pushing 15 percent, and minority
unemployment is clD~!fr to 50 per·
cent.
Yet it was in Detroit that the
Republicans chose to unveil an elec- ·
tion strategy that would more
properly have been unveiled at Fantasyland in Walt Disney's Magic
Kingdom.
Throughout the recent Republican
1
. National Convention, certain buzz
words cropped up in the
vocabularies of party strategists
when discussing the faD campaign.
Their two favorite expressions
seemed to be "broadening the base"
and "reaching out to the center."
The meanlnl oi,those phrases is
obvloul. For a lnbiority party to win
a two- or even three-candidate election, it must appeal to more than its
own members. For RepubUcans,
who are more than ever a party of
the right, this means attracting independenl• and Democrats.
So how did four days of prime-time
exposure on all three networks further this extension of Republican·ap-

J:M\111? U the American electorate
was listening carefuly, probably not
very well.
As the Republicans were meeting
here, the news came out" of
Washington that the federal budget
deficit for the current fiscal · year
may well approach $60 billion due to
the worsening economy. Against the
· background of this depressing
disclosure, consider the campaign

rates. .
"Every major tax cut of this cen- ·
tury ... ended up yielding new
revenues for the govenunent," said
Reagan in his acceptance speech.
But even the most enthusiastic supporter of Kemp-Roth admits there
would be a tlme lag between the
initial loss of federal revenues and
the later gain brought about by the
tax cuts. The best estimate is that a

'

Today's commentary
promises of presidential nominee
Ronald Reagan.
Reagan promiaed to implement a
Kemp-Roth style tax cut immediately upon hl.s election. · He
would slash taxes by 1il percent in
the first year with additio!)81 reduC.
lions phased in until overall taxes
are 30 percent lower than they are
today. He pointed out that these cuts
should result in a massiv~ spurt in
the economy so that federal receipts
would increase despite lower tax
.•

10 percent reduction wouid cost the
federal government about $30 'billion
in revenue the first year.
Coupled with the tax-cut proposal
is Reagan's promise to add at least
$10 billion in real dollars 'to the
defense budget - plus a few billion
more to raise military salaries.
Cutting taxes and in~slng
military spending would thus eost
the U. S. Treasury more than $40
billion
a year.• -1
.

Carl, Rex Haggy, Rod Harrison, Darren Hayes;
second, l .to r, Mark Elliott, Greg F'ields, Joe Fields,
Huey Eason, Phil King; back, ito r, Lloyd King, Phil
Harrison, and Gary Freeman, coaches. Team mem·
bers not pictured are Todd Cullums, Chip Werry and
Kenny Lllllsford . ·

At Summer Olympics

Venus: a .break from earthly problems

FOURTH PLACE - The Pomeroy Giants placed
fourth in a little league tournament' which concluded
Saturday on the Meigs High School fields. Pictured
with their trophy are: front, l to r, James Norman,
Todd Powell, Bracy Korn, Joey Roush, bat boy; Jack

Norman, Bryan Korn, Gerald Moore; second row , I t•
r, George Korn, coach; Rodney Roush, Gary Colema n.
Lee Powell, Scott Powell, Kevin Mowery, and La rn
Powell, coach, who sponsored the tournament.

.../'

Track stars at different ends of careers

Appropriately, that is, to the International Astronomical Union but
not to the National Organization for
Women . The latter read the
preference for female Ill mes from
the mythological past as a tyhpical
male chauvinistic response.
Names of real women from
history should be used instead.
NOW made its point and it is likely
that Mounts Amelia Earhart and
Florence Nightingale will soon join
volcanic peaks earlier destr-·ated
Diana and Aphrodite.

a~ American team, moved into
MOSCOW - Two track stars who
today's program with the Soviet
stand today with Olympic gold
Union the runaway medals leader
medals around their necks areal dif·
with 46 golds and 124 total, one short
ferent stages in their · athletic
of their Olympic record haul at the
careers. After receiving the highest
Montreal Games. East Germany,
recognition in amateur sports, one is
with one-fifteenth Qle population of
talking retirement and the other is
the
Soviet Union, was second.with 88
looking forward to his next major
medals,
including 34 golds.
meet.
Today,
the Sov!et basketball team,
Pietro Mennea of Italy is 28. The
the
pre-tournament
favorite, needed
gold medal he won Mondsy in the
to
beat
Cuba
and
have
S(lllin beat
200-meter dash was the culmination
Italy
to
advance
into
Wednesday's
of a decade ri. sacrifice and
gol d-m edal game against
dedication. His is the perspective ri.
Yugoslavia. Both Italy and
the man who has won the war but
Yugoslavia
upset the Soviets over
has grown tired of the fight.
the
weekend.
"I won the race I wanted to. win.
Another highlight of today's
This caps my career. I've won
schedule
was the second bout for
everything. Now I can consider
two-time
defending heavyweight
retiring," he said. "Mter 10 years of
champion
Teofilo
Stevenson. The 29competition, if they offered me $6
year-old
Cuban
has
won all eight of
million dollars to start all over
his
fights
,
over
the
course of three
again, I wouldn't accept. "
Olympics,
inside
the
three-round
.Lutz Dombrowski is a 21-year-old
limit.
He
was
matched
against Gr·
from East Germany , a nation fierzegorz
Skrze~
of
Poland.
cely devoted to excellence in.sporl
Today is an off day for track and
F'rom the age of nine, when he starfield.
ted jumping, Dombrowski has been
A new Olympic category, food·
on a schedule programmed to win·
throwing,
was unofficially added to
ning Monday's Olympic long jump
the
program
Monday. About ao-4o
competition. His is the perspective
athletes
in
Australian,
Briiish and
of the warrior who lives to fight.
Brazilian
jackets,
frustrated
by the
"My next ambition is to compete
II
p.m.
closing
of
the
disco,
went
on
In next year's World Cup," he said.
a
rampage
in
the
dining
hall
at
the
Meanwhile, while 111ennea and
Dombrowski were reaching their Olympic Village" They left a mess,
goals, America's disenfranchised · but no real damage. ·
"They came througl) the exit and
Olympic tea m a rriv ed j n
Washington for a 5-&lt;lay honor .started hollering 'Music, Music,
program as guests of the JJ.S. Olym· Music'," said Mike Perry, the
pic Conunittee. The U.S. team is American coaching the Swedish
boycotting the Moscow Games as a basketball team who witnessed the
protest against the Soviet in· incident. "Then they went to one end
· of the dining hall hollering
· tervention in Afghanistan.
"Russians out &lt;i Mghani.Stan,
In a,statement signed by 81 members of the team, the athletes said Russians out of Afghanistan."
Perry, who said there were an
there is'_no greater honor for an
equal
number of male and female .
amateur· athlete than to represent
iiwolved in the food ,fight,
athletes
his country at the Olympics.
·attributed
the rowdyism to Olympic
"While we strongly 'deplore overt
steam-blowing
and boredom.
aggressive acts by one nation again·
" It's really the first thing that's
et another, we q11estion whether the
boycott of the Olympic Games is the happened here in terms of exbest means available to .assist the citement at the Village. One of the
cause of peace," the statement said. . reasons, I think, is that many
The Games, the first ever without athlef JS have finished competing,

Carrying this development a bit
further and considering that Venus
is now believed to be in the early
stages of geological activity with a
long, long way to go before completion, some thought might be
given to renaming the entire planet.
· It might be called ERA .

Detroit-: reality and the GOP ·c onvention

•

CHAMPS - The Tuppers Plains Tigers were
"number 1" in the Larry Powell little league tour·
nament which concl uded Saturday evening on the
Meigs High fiel ds. Pictured with their awards are
front, 1 to r. Jirruny Caldwell, Sean Clemson, Charles

·'

Now consider what was pernaps
Reagan's most emphatic promise: a
balanced budget in his first year [I)
office. How could Reagan accomplish this if he intends to subtract another $40 billion from a
budget that is likely to ·already be
badly in the red?
The only answer is by massive
slashing somewhere in the budget. If
that som~where is not defense, It
will have to be domestic social
programs in such fields as health,
housing, education and fiscal
assistance that cities depehd upon
for their sorvival, In other words,
the cuts would come in· programs
r that most di~y touch the live~~ of
the very voters that party planners
talk about "broadening the base" to
capture.
To win in November, Reagan
clearly must extend his folio~
beyond the true believers Ulte thoee
cheering delegates who gathered
here in Detroit. · But . carefu1
eJIIIIIlination of the party's platfom.
and the candidate's promises causes
one to wonder if Reagan will be able
to convince enough Americans to
vote against what may well be their
own self-interest, at least in the
short term.
.

.

'

and now it's partytime.
"I'm afraid . for the rest of the
week it's gonna be a lot like this.
There's nothing for them to do - the
disco closes at lt. All the cartoons
and movies are in Russian.
"They wanted something to do.
What you had was a lot of young
people with a lot of energy."
But most of the athletes expended
energy in more conventional ways
Monday. Dombrowski recorded the
second longest jump, winning the
event with a leap of 28 feet and one:
quarter inch). Mennea blew by 100-

meter champion Allan Wells of
Great Britain in the final strides to
win the 200 title in 20.19.
Dombrowski didn't know until
three weeks ago that he would be
able to compete here. He had suf·
fered a pulled leg ll)USCle earlier in
the year, and he did not compete until the East Gerrn;an Athietic
Federation arranged a special meet
July 5 to test his condition.
He responded with a leap of 27~'10,

TENNIS '

,NORTH CONWl\.Y, N.H. (AP) -

in 'the 200 at 19.72, but he was not at
peak mental form for these Game.'
He has .said that he would not ha v&lt;·
objected if Italy followed America·,
lead and supported the Olymp_k
boycott. .
''The resporu,;ibiiity of being_ tlir
heavy favorite aft.er the Ameri ean
boycott, and the bitterness for
having to compete in a crippletl
event, have just cracked my ncr·
yes," he said.

1jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
G&amp;J
Parts

third
best in place
the world,
andonmoved
into second
aUtlme
Mon- I1 _ _
day, actually becoming the first

Sports briefs.
BASEBALL
NEW YORK (AP) - Bob Horner
of the Atlanta Braves, continuing his
torrid long-ball spree, was named
National League player of the week
for the period ending July ?:/, while
Jason Thompson of the California
Angels and Joe Charboneau of the
Cleveland I~dians were named cowinners for the American League.
Horner blasted folir home runs
during the July 21-?:/ period and has
14 for the month.
Thomp~on batted .560 during that
period. ,Charboneau hit safely in all
five Cleveland games, hitting a
grand slam and a two run homer
against Seattle on July 23.

athlete to land near the 28-foot mark.
World record holder Bob Beamon
of the United States didn't touch
down ,until he had reached 29 feet ,
2_ inches in 1\is mind-boggling leap
into never-never land at the Mexico
City Games in 1968.
"I never thought of challenging
Bob Beamon's world record and I
don't think I ever will break it,"
Dombrowski said.
Mennea is the world record holder

• •

Top-seeded Jimmmy Connors
defeated Joao Soares of Brazil6-3, 63 in the first round of the $175,000
men's international tennis tour·
nament at the Mount Crai)ITlore Ten·
nis Club.
Second-seeded Hl!rold Solomon
beat Sashi Menon of India 6-1, 7-5
while Hank P£ister upset fifth·
seeded Rosco Tanner6-7, 7-6, 7-5 .

AUTO
PARTS

Plus

''A utostore'

: :~:
AITENDCAMP
Attending basketball school at
O.U. this week are Loww Powell,
Brian Hou&lt;!ashelt, Brian and Brett ·
Korn, Chris Kennedy, Chris Shank
and Huey Eason .

WAGNER

Pads &amp;Brake Shoes
for
Foreign Cars!!
Brake Shoes
Disc Pads ·

W.2nd
Pomeory, 0 .

. I

Rt. 33
Mason,WV

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Tuesday, July 20,1980

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., Tuesday, July 29, 198o

I

Meigs Count)r Gardeners to again
exhibit at ·this year's -fair shows

Eight &amp; Fo_rty recei1)es three
trophies at Salon 23 -la m·arche

Norman, Murray, Fryman
.. get revenge
·with 5-4 victory
.
.

.•
't •.

.,,

MONTREAL (AP) - After losing
the first game of a doubleheader
Monday night, the Montreal Expos
put their fate in the hands of two pitchers who have a combined total of
27 years of major-league baseball
experience.
Fred Nonnan, 37, fired a fivehitter over the first seven innings
and .40-year-old Woodie Fryman
retired the final three batters to help
the Expos defeat the Cincinnati
Reds_iH after dropping the opener 32.
"You try to pick the club up,
especially after you've lost the first
game, " said Nonnan, who has
struggled in the bullpen this season

but was handed the ball for his first
muscle and Dale Murray yielded a
start because of the Expos depleted run-scoring single before finishing
pitching ranks.
the eighth.
" I enjoy relieving, even though
"We were hoping to get five inI've had my problems," Norman ad~ nings out of Fred and he gave us
ded. "But I find relieving much seven," said Montreal Manager
tougher than starting. "
Dick Williams. "He'll definitely get
The Expos staked Norman to a 4-() another start sometime soon."
lead in the first twO" innings as CinWilliams wasn't nearly as pleased
cinnati conunitted three en'ors, all after the first garpe as rookie starter
of which led to runs.
Charlie Lea turned over a 2·1lead to
When Norman gave up a solo
reliever Elias Sosa only to watch it
home run to Ron Oester, the first of
disappear as Collins delivered a twohis major-league career, reducing
out, two-run double in the ninth inthe Expos lead to !&gt;-3, he was
ning.
relieved' by Stan Bahnsen. After putSosa had entered the game with
ting two runners on base Bahnsen ' runners at first and second and none
aggravated a sore hamstring
out and proceeded to fumble
Oester's sacrifice bunt to load the
bases.
He then retired pinch-hitter Johnny Bench on a force play at the plate
and struck out Dave Concepcion.
•
••
But Collins ripped a double inside
the bag at third to provide the
margin of victory.
"That bunt would have been handled if it was executed properly,"
said Williams. "Sosa came in for it
instead of moving towa!'(l the line. I
STRIKEOUTS : Guidry, New York , 113;
had just got through telling him that
M.Norris, Oakland, 113; F. Bannister, Seattle, 98; Keough, Oakland, 96; Haas,
and
hedidn'tdo it."
Milwaukee, 94.
Collins said he didn't produce his
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BAITING (240 at bats): Templeton,
timely blow without a battle from
St.Louis, .326; Buckner, Chicago, .325; Hen-

•••
• ••
•••••

•••••
••
•••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Major League Ba!!leball
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W . L Prl.
New York
Baltimore
Detroit
Milw11uk.ee
Boston

Cleveland
Toronto

Kansas City
Texas
Oakland

.. -

..

Minnes.Gta
Chicago
SeatUe
California

62
53

35
43

51

42
&gt;14

53
49
47
... 43

&lt;1
&lt;1
53

WEST
60 311
43 ~
49

&gt;14

52
54
54

39

Ill

45

GB

.639

.552
.543
.540

9

.SIO

12~

.500
.441

13\1
18\1

.612
.49!:1
.48&gt;
.4:1»
.&gt;149
.398
.36S

35 61
Monday'sGames
Oakland 5, Toronto 3, 7~ innings, rain
Cleveland 7, Seattle!
Caillomia 3, Detroit 2
New York 10, MiMesota 6, lOinnings

'•

8\'.
9

drick, St.Louis .324 ; K.Hernandez, St.Louis,
.323; R.Smith, Los Angeles, .323.
RUNS: LeFlore, Montreal, 67; Rose,
Philadelphia, 67; Clark, San Francisco, GG;
Templeton, St.Lruis, 65; K.Hemandez, St.
Louls,64.
RBI : Garvey, Los Angeles, 79; Hendrick,
St.Louis, 17; Sctunidt, Philadelptlia, 69; Carter, Montreal, 65; Baker, Los Angeles, 62.
HITS: Templeton, StLouil, 133; Garvey,
Lns Angeles, 127; Hem:lrick, St.Lotilii, 120:
Cromartie, Montreal, 117; K.Hernandet,
St.Louis, 117.
DOUBLES: Rose, Philadelphia, 30 ;
Knight, Cincinnati, 29; K. Hernandez,
St.LOui!, 'l7; Steams, New York. 25; "Maz·
zilli, New York, 23; Reitz, St.Louis, 23.
TRIPLES : LeFlore, Montreal , 8; Templeton, St.LoWs, 8; Landestoy, Houston, 8;
McBride, Philadelphja, 7; O.Moreno, Pitt:Jburgh , 7; Clark, San Francisco, 7.
HOME RUNS , Schmid~ Philadelphia. 26;
Horner, AUan~, 21; Carter, Montre.al , 20;
Hendrick, St.Louis, 20; Garvey, Los
Angeles, 1!1 ; Baker, Los Angeles , 19; Clark,
San Francisco, 19.
STOLEN BASES: LeFlore, Montreal, 62;
O.Moreno, Pittsburgh, 58; Collins, Cincinnati, 50; R.Scolt, Montreal, 35; Richards,
San Diego, lS.
PITCHING (9 Decisions) : Bibby, Pit·
tsburgh, 13-l, .929, 2.1!9; LaCorte, Houston, 72, .778_,1.61 ; Carlton, Philadeklhia, 1&amp;-S, .762,
2.28; Hooton, Los Angele.s, 9-3, .750, 3.2:9;
G.JackstJn, Pittsburgh, 8-3, ,72'1, 2.31 ;
Richard, Houston, 1~ , . 71~, 1.90; Reuss, Los
Angeles, lB-4, .714, 2.21; Moskau, Cincinnati,
7-'!, .700, 3.82. •
.
&gt;TRlKEOUTS ' Carlton, Pltiladelphia,
181; Richard, Howton, 119; Blyleven, Pittsburgh, 118 ; Ryan, Hou.~ton , 115 ; P.Niekro,
,
Atlanta, 113.
MoDday's Spot1s Transaetl008
By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
American l-eague
TEXAS RANGERS : Acquired Ed
Figueroa, pitcher, from the New York
Yankees for an undisclosed amoWlt of cash.
Optioned Steve Comer, pitcher to Tulsa of
the Tens L&lt;:aguc.
BASKETBALL
NatloiLI..l BasketbaU As11oclaUon
SAN .DIEGO CLIPPERS, Signed Ed
Odom, guard, and Tony Price, forward.

lllh
121&gt;
15~

18
21
24

Only game.s scheduled
Tuesday 's Games
Oakland (McCatty 8-9) at Toronto (Clancy

9-71,(n)
Seattle (Honeycutt B-9 ) at Cleveland
CSoWner7-8orGrimsley 1-0) , (n)
CaWornia (Martinez 1-3) at Detroit (lfo~
bins l~l),ln l ·
Milwaukee (Mitchell 2-&lt;I J at Chlcago (OctIJ(In 7-5), {n)
New York (~y 7--5) at Minnesota (Zahn 912), (n)
Booton (Ojeda IH) at Kansas City (Split·
tor!U-7) , (n)
Baltl.rncire (McGregor 10-5) at Texas
(Hough 1.0 orCon1er2-4), (n)

'

NATIONALLEAGUE
EAST
W L Prl. GB
Pitt. burgh.
56 42
.S71 Montreal

Phlladelphill
New York
St. Louis
Chicago

·.

·. Houston
Los Angeles
Cin&lt;lnnau

52
00
43
&gt;14

44 ·
46
51
53

39 56
WEST
56 42
53
53

..
47

.$42
.521
.171
.454
.415

3
s
9\1
Il l&gt;
ll

.571

-

.~

.530

San Francisco
II 50
•400
AUanta
43 52
.439
San0ieg4J
u 57
. 42~
Mooday'sGames
CincinnaU 3-4, Montreal2-5
Houston 3, Philadelphia 2, 10 ihnings
Atlanta&amp;, New York3
San Diego4, Chicago2, 11 inning~
Plttoburgb6, Los Angeles 4
Only games scheduled

3\oli

4
8
10
l41h

FOOTBALL

Natiou.l Football League
BALTIMORE OOLTS, Released Ron Lee,
rtuUl.i.h~ back ; Keith Brown,' Harold Perry,
and Mike Dunn, defensive backs; EU8ene
Jacobs and Gerald Huggins, linebackers:
Bobby Mitchell and Steve Young, receivers:
Scott Collins, offensive guard; Casey Mur·
phy 11rxl Neil Clabo, punters; Lee GrllS.S, cen-

'l'llesday'sGames
CincinnaU (LaCoss &gt;9) at Montreal
(GuiUcbon 1-3), (n)

Houstm (Andujar 1-4) at Philadelphia
(I..reh !-12), (n)
Atlanla (McWilliarru: 7-6) at New York
·(Bootbact 1&gt;3), (n)
Chicago {Capilla 2--3) at San Diego ( ~ones
5-9), (n)
Pittsburgh (Blyleven 5-7) at l...os Angeles
(Hooton 9-3), (n)
Sl Louis (Martinez 3-3) at San Francisco
(Rlpley4-4)",(n)

ter.

BUFFALO BILLS : Released Mike
Patrick, punter; Larry Reid, running back ;
Steve t:arpenter and John Quinn, running
baCks; and Mark Robbins and Aaron Wyley,
wide re«iver.s. Acquired Kenny Bown, wide
receiver.
CffiCA.GO BEARS: Acqulred Randy
Harrison, safety, frClm the Pittsburgh

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMEJUCAN LEAGUE
BAniNG (240 at bats) : Brett, Kans.as

' .

,,

Steelen~.

City, .l73_; Cooper, Milwaukee, .339; Wilson,
Kansas ctty, .333; B.Bell, Texas, .332;
DUone, CleveLand, .332.
RUNS: Wil.son, Ka1181ls City, 80; Yount,
Milwaukee. 74: Wilb, Texas, 72; Bwnbry,
Baltimore, 71; Rivers, Te~. 71.
RBI: Pere2, Boston, 76; Oliver, Tens, 76;
Re.,facklon, New York, 7~: Oglivie,
MllwaLikee, 71; Armaa, Oakland, 71.
HITS: Wil.son, Ka~s City, H2; Rivers,
Texas, 130; Cooper, Milwaukee, 123; Bwnbry,BalUmor!, 1J9; Burleson, Boston, 116.
baUBLES : Yount , Milwaukee, 30;
Morrison, Chicago, 30; McRae, Kansas City,
25; O.Garcia, Toronto, 24; Bochte, Seattle,
24; Ol.iver, Teu.s,24.

DALLAS COWBOYS: Released Maurier
Winston, cri"fensive lineman; Mike Vaughn,
wide rceiver ; and Mackel Harris, dererui!ve
bllck.

' LOS ANGELES RAMS : Released Eddie
Brown, Safety; Robert Farrell and Brian
Nelson, wide re1:1::ivers; Les Petroff, placekicker; Dan Melville, punter; Darrell Black·
wood, offensive tackle.
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Released MJckey
Elam and Joe Gasper, running back!!!; Johnny Stoutam.ire and Sam Smith, defensive
back:!; Brian SchWartz, .strong safety; Ron
Taylor, linebacker; Rick Jafre, de£erulive
tackle.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS: Released Mike
Armand, Elvis Bradley and Jeff George,
defensive backs; Don Carter and Ron Barnes, tackles; Dave Gunder, guard; Ray
Smith, wide reciever ; and Joe Walstad, cen-

TRIPLES; Griffin, Toronto, II ; Wilson,
Kamas City, 9; Brett, Kali.'WI City, 8; Bwnbry, Baltimore, 7; Yoont, Milwaukee, 7;
Wuhington, Kansas City, 7; Landreaux,
Minnesota, 7.

..

'.

-••
"'•
·.

.

.''

ter.

HOME RUNS: Rc .Jackson, New York, 28;
OlllVIe, Milwaukee, 24; Annas, Oakland, 23;
Thomas, Milwaukee, 21; Mayberry, Toron--

to, lB.
STOLEN BASES: HenderiOll, Oakland,
50; WUson, Ka11J41.s City, 44 ; Dllone,
Cleveland,34; Wills, Texas, 28; J.Cruz, Seal·

Ue, 26.

.

PITCIDNG (9 Dedsions) : Darwin, Ttnt!l,
9-1, .900, 2.35; Stone, Baltlmore, 16-3, .642,
3.09; John, New York, 15-4, .78:9, 2.94; Gura,
Kansas Clty, lt-4, .178, 2.01; Corbett, Min·
nesota, 7-2, .778, 2.07; Rainey, Boston, &amp;-3,
.7'll, 4.1111; Looez. Delrol\, lhl, .7'll. 3.'ll;
M.N4Jnis, Oakland, 14-6, .700, 2:.43.

NEW YORK GIANTS: Released Tony
Dungy, safety; Charlie McShane,
linebacker: Jim Moreen, wide receiver ; Bcb
Hurley, guard.
•
NEW YORK JETS ; Placed Brian Doheriy,
rwming ba1=k, and Scott Paplham, tlsht end,
on the injured reserve list. Cut Ge4lrge
Thomas, wide receiver.
PITISBURGHSTEELERS+ Traded Mille
Kruczek, quarterback, to the Washington
Redskins for an llRdisclosed future drart
pick. '
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: Released Jeff
Mast and Frank Garcia, punters.

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
At.t. SEATS JUST$ r.SO

Sosa.

"He threw me a good pitch. He's
got a good fastball and slider, and
don't forget he retired two good hitters before that." ,
While Cincinnatl paid the price for
sloppy fielding in the second game,
the Expos, and center!ielder Andre
Dawson in particular, sparkled
defensively.
Dawson leaped against the centerfield wall to rob Ray Knight of an extra-base hit in the fifth inning and
outran a long fly by Bench in the
eighth.
"You never know when a catch
could make a difference in a team
having a big inning," said Dawson,
who had hits in both games. He has
collected at least one hit in 26 of the
club'slast27 games.

•

Manley, Wendi Kloes, Shelly Triplett, Kenda Kloes ;
back, 1 to r, Mary Woods, coach; Missy Woods, Beth
Mayer, Debi Downie, Darcie Hysell, Health Woods,
Melinda Smith and Sharon Wright, manager.

Padres manager speechless
By The Associated Press
It finally happened: San Diego's

loquacious manager , Jerry
Coleman, was lost for words. Still, it
seemed understandable after the
biZarre double play the Chicago
Cubs pulled off against his Padres.
It came in the loth inning of 'a
game eventually won 4-2 by San
Diego Monday night. The bases were
full of Padres when Dave Winfield
tapped to Chicago third baseman
Mick Kelleher.
Kelleh~ stepped on third to force
Gene Richards and had a double
play on his mind when he threw to
caicher Tim Blackwell in an effort to
get Dave Cash at home.
That's where things got muddled.
When Kelleher stepped on third, he
eliminated possible force plays at
any other base but first. That rule
seemingly escaped the memory of
Cash, who simply stopped running
when Kelleher's t_hrow reached
Blackwell at the plate.
Cash, asswning he was out,

headed across the diamond toward
the San Diego dugout and ended up
being out for running out of the
basepath.
"When you threw it to me, I
figured you didn't touch third," said
Blackwell to Kelleher citing one
possible explanation. '
"I didn't see the play. I just saw
him throw home and assumed I was
out," said Cash.
·"It was a crazy play. I've never
seen it before," said Coleman, who
then was asked if.he said anything to
Cash.
"I said nothing," said Coleman,
who usually has something to say to
everyone about everything. "What
can you say.?"
Coleman argued Cash would not
have run out of the baseline if the
umpire hadn't incorrectly signalled _
..he was out. The Padres, however,
· did not file an official protest of the
game.
Cubs Manager Joe Amalfitano, a
former infielder and the voice of

-Stein spoils Barker's no hit bid
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
One of these days Len Barker is
goi~g!Q.take one of his no-hit gaines
aU the way.
"I'm starting to learn how to pitch'," the Cleveland Indians' right·
bsnder said Monday night after flirting with a no-hitter for the second
time in six nights, both of them
against Seattle.
·
On July 22 he pitched five perfect
innings in the weatherproof
Kingdome before losing his nohitter. Thai time he finished with a
four-hit, 4-() triumph.
.This time, in a game delayed at
the start and hampered in the late
innings by rain, Barker went 62-3 in-

nings before Bill Stein singled·. And
he didn't even finish what he started.
But he was delighted nonetheless
with his 72-3 innings of four-hit work
and the 7·3 victory that gave him an
11·7 record .
"I'm 25. It's taken me a long time
(to become a successful pitcher),
but it's worth it, " he said.
Elsewhere in the American
League, New York outlasted Minnesota Hi in 10 innings, California
edged Detroit 3-2 and, in a rainshortened 72-3 innings, Oakland beat
Toronto :&gt;-3.
Victor Cruz came to Barker's aid
in the eighth and notched his fifth

Rookie fu11back breaks wnst
WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP) - Xrays showed Monday that rookie
fullback Mark Lyles, the Cincinnati
Bengals' eighth-round draft choice,
has broken two bones in his right
hand.
•
Lyles, from Florida State, said he
worked out Monday unaware of the
fractures.
"I think I can play on it," Lyles
said. "I played on it today. I broke it
this morning and I thought it was
just jammed and kept playing."
Lyles was expected to challenge
for a reserve·running back spot. The
Bengals already have Pete Johnson,
who led the team in, rushing the last
three years, and 1979 first-round
draft choice charles Alexander in
line for the fuilback position.
Veteran defensive end Gary
Burley, hospitalized since Friday .
with high blood pressure, returned
to training camp Monday. Burley
was released from Christ Hospital in
Cincinnati and returned to

Wilmington ju.tl as the afternoon
workout was ending.
Burley was barred from practice
'last week because his blood pressure
was 180 over 90. Norinal is about 120
over 30, doctors said.
The Bengals will monitor Burley's
blood pressure before and after
every practice.
Anthony Munoz, the first-round
draft choice from the University of
Southern California, joined the first·
string offensive line in workouts
Monday. Munoz is trying to win the
left tackle spot.
"As they did their job last week, it
became obvious that he did the best
job at left tackle," said coach
Forrest Gregg. "We put him on the
No. 1 unit and we have Mike Wilson
(the previous left tackle) and Vernon Holland at right tackle now."
Munoz reported to camp one day
late, with the Bengals' permission,
after a contract dispute with the
club.

Sports briefs.
OLYMPICS
MOSCOW (,-\P) - Western
nations posted their second medals
sweep of a major event at these
Eastern bloc dominated Olympic
Games as Italy's Pietro Mennea, a
reluctant participant, e~ged Allan
Wells of Britsin in the 200-meter
dash in the ninth day of competition
·at the Summer Olympics.
Don Quarrie of Jamaica took the
bronze.
In other events, Viktor Rasshchupkin ofthe USSR won the discus
with a toss of 218 feet, 8 inches, and
Lutz Dumbrowski of East Germany
won the long Jwnp with a leap of 230§.
Vera Komisova of the USSR won
the women's 1()0-meter. hurdles in
12.56 seconds, an't&gt;lympic record.

•

GIRLS' SOFTBALL - Pictured is the 1980 Jim's
Gulf Station team in Pomeroy this season. Included
are : front, 1 to r, Julie Baity, Tammy Wright, Dena

Meigs County Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, was awarded three trophies
at the recent Eight and Forty,
Departemental d' Ohio, Salon 23 la
marche held in Columbus.
The local salon received the Aree
Marshall trophy for the most outstanding event fOr cystic fibrosis,
namely the fund drive which
brought in $1,100. It was the Salon's
ninth time in 15 years to -receive the
trophy. The Salon also received the
.Maybelle Gambell Trophy awarded
to the best all-around salon in the
state with partnership of 10 to 36.
Mrs. Mary Martin received the Aim
Eshelman trophy in recognition of
being the partner collecting the most
American Legion Auxiliary dues.
The Salon also took first place on
history and will receive a trophy ala
~ter time.' The presentation If.
trophies was by Pearl Knapp, Meigs
Salon, state chainnan; Mary Moose,
Junction City, and Helen Peeples,
Bradford.
A highlight of the meeting was the
installation of the newly elected of.
fleers. Mrs. Violet Aichholz was the

•

Falk Hoffman of East Germany
won the men's plaUorm diving competition with 835.650 points. Marlta
Koch or East Gennany won the
women's 400-meter dash in 48.88. .
Sergei Soukhoroutchenkov of the
Soviet Union won the individual road ·
race cycling gold medill.
Yachtsmen from Spain and Brazil
captured the first two gold medals of
the regatta at Tallinn on the Baltic
Sea. Spain led the Flying Dutchman
fleet from start to finish and Brazil
took the tornado class medal.
The Soviet Union had 48 gold
medals; 11nd 123 overall, more than
the Ioiii! fou any team in a full Olympics exc~pt the · 12li medals the
Soviets won at Montreal four years
ago. East Germany was second w1th
34 go_ld and 88 total medals.

save.
The Indians got a first-inning run
off Jim Beattie when Miguel Dilone
tripled and Jorge Orta singled. Then
they struck for five in the sixth, the
last three on Rick Manning's first
homer of the year, off reliever By,ron
McLaughlin.
Yankees 7, Twins 6·
. Ca.tcher Rick Cerone crashed two
homers, a three-run blast in the
eighth inning that put the Yanks on
top 6-5 and a leadoff belt in the loth
off John Verhoeven for the victory.
.A defensive gem by right fielder
Reggie Jackson in the bottom of the
ninth gave Cerone the chance to play
hero. With the bases loaded, Rob
Wilfong singled for the tying run, but
Reggie's throw to Cerone at the
plate nailed Jose Morales trying to
score the Twins' winning run from
second base.
Augels 3, Tigers 2
You can go home again. Rick
Miller did - and for a change, he did
something worthwhile.
"I was a little surprised tonight,
frankly," Miller said after rapping
out three hits, including the tiebreaking single in the Angels' tworun seventh inning. "I've never bit
well here in Tiger Stadium, probably
because my family's always here,"
said the native of Grand Rapids,
Mich.
'The Tigers fell into third place in
the East, nine games behind the
Yankees.
A's 5, Blue Jays 3
Although" Jim Essian drove in
three of Oakland's runs, one of them
with a homer, it was a typical vic·
tory for the A's - and not because it
was achieved in a rain-flhortened 723innings.
They scrambled for their runs and
had two runners thrown out at the
plate, one on · an unsuccessful
squee2e bunt.
Mike Norris pitched a six-hitter
for \Us seventh consecutive complete
game while Esslan singled home
Oakland's first run in the first in·
ning, homered in the second and.
· doubled --home Rickey Henderson
with the winning run In the seventh.

Q

reason In
confusion, may
have said it best.
" If it had been me," he said, " I
would have touched third and
thrown to first base."
In the other National League
games, the Cincinnati Reds beat the
Montreal Expos 3-2 in the opener
before losing the nightcap of their
twi-nighter IH, the Houston Astros
edged the Philadelphi,a Phiutes 3-2 in
10 innings, the Atlanta Braves beat.,.
the New York Mets 6-3 and the Plttsburgh Pirates topped the Los
Angeles Dodgers 6-4.
The Padres won the game in the
lith inning on a two-run ~omer by
Gene Tenace of! Cubs reliever
George Riley.
Astros 3, Phlllles 2
Cesar Cedeno's loth-inning triple
drove in Jose Cruz with the run that
gave Houston its victory over
Philadelphia.
Jose Cruz collected a two-out walk
from Ron Reed before Cedeno rifled
a 1-1 pitch to the right-field corner.
Braves 6, Mets 3 ·
Dale Murphy had three hits , including a seventh-inning homer,
while Gary Matthews had three hits,
including a two-run single in the !ifth, to back Doyle Alexander's seven·
hit pitching and carry Atlanta over
New York.
The Mets' .Pete Falcone, who has
made his 17 starts this season but
still hasn 't pitched a complete game,
gave up three first-inning runs to
start New York to its eighthloss in 11
games.
The Braves' Chris Chambliss
struck out four times in five atbats and had his U)·game hitting
streak stopped.
·Pirates 6, Dodgers 4
Ed Ott hit two home runs to power
Pittsburgh's 13th victory in 16
games. Ott's long ball display gave
the Pirates' Rick Rhoden his second
victory iq three decisions this
season ; both have come over his former Los Angeles teammates and
both have come in the last two
weeks.
The loss for Bob Welch, ~. was
his fourth in five decisions.

ENTERTAIN RECENTLY

JOHN SI"OUT, a 1m graduate
of Meigs High School, has been
named to the dean's, com·mandant's and superintendent's
lisls for the second semester at
lbe U. S. Air Force Academy at
Colorado Sprlugs; Colorajlo. The
dean's list is for blgb academic
·accompllsbment wblle the commandant's U..l is for blgh mllltary
performance. Cadels named to
both are tben on the superinteodent's .U..t. John is enrolled iD
lbe honors English and matb
courset at · the academy aDd
recenUy took part in three week
couries in noD-ColllllliBslooed of·
fleers training in Tens aDd survival evasion training In
Colorado. He is currenUy spending a leave with bls parents, Mr.
·aDd Ml'!l. Blllle -C. Stout and
brother, Scott, Route 2, Albany,
and will be attending the wedding
of bts brother, Bill, in Charlotte,
N.C.

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Tf;LEPHONE 485'·5484
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Mon., ;rues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to s: 00 Thursday tilll2 Noon

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773-5592

Legion Auxiliary 'president; Clem
Dombrowski, Department of Ohio,
American Legion, COffillUinder; E.
H. Huels, •nd Eight Grand Chef de
Gare; and Glaub, grand correspondent, Forty and Eight.
Mrs. Lucille Woodland reported
that publicity this year reach 2,586
inches with Meigs coming in second
with 227 inches. Mrs. Lula Hampton
is the local chainnan. Among.those
remembered during the mi!Jilorial
service was Mrs. Dollie Hayes. Mrs.
Martin and Mrs. Knapp participated
in the ceremony.
At the banquet Mrs. Hazel Elliott
was mistress of ceremonies with
Mrs. Hartline as the speaker. She
talked about God and Country.
At the chapeau passe luncheon
Mrs. Bowman was initiated into the
Chapeau Passe Club. The Purple
Martin theme was carried out in the
table decorations.
Going · from here were Mrs.
Zuelelia Smith, newly elected
chapeu of Meigs Salon 710, Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, Mrs. Martin, and
Mrs. Knapp.

Chicken barbecue
enjoyed by group

Area goings on noted

HELMET FmiNG
There will be hebnet fitting for all
Eastern High School Varsity football
players (grades ~12 ) on Thursday,
July 31, at 5:15 p.m. at the high
school.

We're new in the Middleport·
Pomeory area. We specialize in
Quality Dry Cleaning, Laundry,
Carpet &amp; Furniture Cleaning,
Wedding Gown Preservation,

installing officer with Mrs. Mary
Martin, Meigs Salon, as l'aumonier,
and Mrs. Doris Stanriff, Ia concierge. Mrs. Aichholz presented Joy
Bowman with ·her chapeau passe
pin, and George Glaub of the Forty
and Eight presented the newly installed chapeau, Shirley Davis, with
her chapeau.wings.
The new officers are Mrs. Davis,
chapeau; Lucille Woodling, first
demi chapeau; Ruth Kruger, seeond
demi-chapeau; Patricia Henthorne,
l'aumonier; Linda Edmondson, Ia
archiviste; and Jane Willis, Ia con·
cierge.
The conference got underway with
the ritualistic opening and
procassional of officers. There were
greetings from Mrs. Martin,
national partnership cha~ who
congratulated Ohio for being a goal
salon and reported that nationally
there are only 282 needed for goal.
Mrs. Dorothy Brady, national
pouvior member, and Mrs. Aichholz,
le demi chapeau nationale also
brought greetings, as did Mrs.
Lawrence Hartline, American

Mason, W.Va.

·•

ATI'ENDS ,SKI . SCHOOL
Willoughby Keith Hill, eight year
old son of Larry and Joe Hill, has
returned alter speodlng five days
at lbe Siders' Paradise Ski
School, operated by Bea Debus,
Hocldogport. . AI the school
stuileots are taught jumpiDg,
slalom and trick sldlog by Ml'!l.
Debus and her husband, Cblp,
. who have been tournamentsldlog
for about l2 years. Tbey have
both sided in the Natiooal Water
Skl Competition. Hlll begao
water sldlog about two years ago
aDd then started slalom sldlog after bls grandfather, Willoughby
F. Hill, got him a slalom for bls
seventh birthday.
SMITH COMPLETES
NAVAL TRAINING
Navy Seaman Recruit David E.
Smith, son of Charles F: and Betty L.
Smith of S28 Sycamore St., Middleport, has completed recruit
training at the Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, IU.
During the eight-week training
cycle, he studied general military
subjects designed to prepare him for
further academic and on-the-job
training in one of the Navy's 85 llaslc
occupational fields.
Included in hi$ studies were
seamanship, close-order grill, Naval
history and first aid.
A 1979 graduate of Meigs High
School, Pomeroy, he joined the Navy
in April,l980.

Mrs. Barbara Mullen entertained
recently with a swimming party at
the home of Dr. and Mrs. Ray
Pickens.
Attending were Mrs. Flo
Strickland, Mrs. Nettie Boyer, Mrs.
Lenora McKnight, Mrs. Betty
Wehrung, Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore,
Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel, Mrs. Pan- dora Collins, and a gUest, Mrs.
. Lucille Strickland, Portland,
Oregon. Mrs. Mullen assisted by .her
granddaughter, Kellee, served a
dessert course.
Plans were made for another
swimming party Wednesday
I!Vening with husbandS as guests
preceded by a potluck dinner.
HAS SLUMBER PARTY
. DanieUe Scott entertained with a
slumber party recently at her Five
Points home.
Pizza and chips were served. At-'
tending were Luciana Scott, Susanne Ctay, Jill r.,oore, Chester;
Corissa Mulford and Shands
Mulford, Cheshire; Lee Ann
Redovian and Michele Malhotra,
FlatwoOds.

SPEND WEEKEND HERE
Mr. and Mrs. William Houck and
daughters, Beth, tarot and Lynn,
Marion, spent the weekend here
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Perry Mitch
and other relatives in Gallipolis.
Other recent visitors 9f Mr. and Mrs.
Mitch were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mitch of Wheeling.

SPEAK AT CHURCH
Bruce McKelvey of the Portland
United Methodist Church and Larry
Fisher of the Racine Church have
been speakers at'the St. Paul United
M~thodist Church for the past two
Sundays. Next Sunday, the Rev. Arthur 'Diehl will have charge or the
services with conununion to be observed.
The Ministerial Association will
hold religious services on Monday,
Aug. 11, at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds. On Aug. 10 th~e will
beahymnsingat2p.m. at st. Paul's
Church, Tuppers Plains. On July 20,
65 attended Sunday school and the
worship service, and on Juy 27, 54 attended the worship service.

25th anniversary fare
honors Kennedy couple
Mr. and Mrs. William Kennedy entertained with a picnic at their Route
33 residence honoring Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Kennedy on their :!lith wedding anniversary.
Gifts and cards of congratulations
were prese~ted to the honored
couple. Attending were the honored
couple· and thei~ children, Debbie,
Cheryl, Chuck, David and Mike, Mr.
and Mrs. Claude Lynch .of Toledo,

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Strauss, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Strauss, and Kitty
Mees, Pomeroy; Mrs. Alice
Robeson, Middleport; Mrs. Lucille
Schwarz, Mason; Judson Price,
Spencer, w. Va., and the hosts, Bill
and Carrie Kennedy.
Calling in the afternoon were Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Bowen, Pomeroy, and
Kevin King, Bradbury.

KNIGHT TAKES PART
IN MANEUVERS
Marine Lance Cpl. Dale W.
Knight, son of Venedla M. Knight of
Route 3, Box 45, Racine, recently
participated in "Combined Anns
Exercise 6-M" was designed to emphasize fire support coordination
between air, tank, artillery, mortar
and anti-tank missile units.
Knight joined the Marine Corps in
November, 1978.

I

FRANCE ARRIVES
FOR DUTY
DAYTON - Staff Sergeant Walter
G. France, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter E. France of Rural Route'l,
Rutland, has arrived for duty at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
Sergeant France, a metal
fabrication special'ist , was .
previously assigned at Myrtle Beach
:Air Force Base, S.C.
RETURN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Buckley have
returned to their home ln New
Brighton, Pa. after spending the
weekend here with his brother, Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Buckley at their
home in Cheshire. They came
especially to attend the 43rd aMual
Buckley reunion held at the Bellevue
Dam in Reedsville.

I

*Social Calendar

entries as long as each entry is a dif- classes open to club and non-club ·
Meigs County gardeners will
ferent variety or type. No artificial . exhibitors are ''Dad Looks at the
agllin demonstrate their talent for
plant materials are allowed in any · Livestock," inte\-pretive; "And On
growing and their skill in showing
class, although artlficllllly colored To the Races," a modem design;
beautiful flowers at the two flower
or treated plant material is allowed " For Peace and Quiet," inshows to be staged at the Meigs
spirationlll design; "They all Meet
in aU modem classes.
County Fair.
Judging by the standard system for Lunch," exhibition lWJCheon
"The Fair" is the theme of the two
according to the Ohio Association of table picture; "We Look Over the
shows with the artistic class titles
Quilts," a mass design; and "The
ranging from livestock to lunches to -Garden Clubs' Handbook will begin School's Science Exhibits," abat 2p.m, each show day.
depict the week on the fairgrounds.
At each show a best of show and stract.
Mrs. Joe Bolin is chairman for \he
In each of the shows there Is a·
reserve best of show will be awarshow which is being staged by the
class
in artistic design for Junior
ded, along with a horticultliral
F!!ir Board .in cooperation with the
exhibitors
(those under 19). They
sweepstakes award and a Junior gar·
Meigs County Garden Clubs
are
"On
To
the Rides," a favorite .
dener award. Ribbons and
Association.
arrangement
in the Wednesday .
premiums will be awarded in all
All classes of the show are open to
classes with $1.25 for blue, $1 for red, ctass, and "Cotton Candy for All,"
all residents of Meigs County and to
featuring bright colors.
and
75 cents for white.
all membj!rs of a Meigs County GarA best of show and reserve best of
.
In
both
shows
the
·
artistic
den Club. One does not need to be a.
show
will be selected from the Inarrangement classes include one
member of a garden club to enter.
dividual
class blue ribbons on both
class which is open to anyone who is
Purchase of a membership ticket is
Wednesday
and Friday by the judge.
not a resident of Meigs County as
the only entry fee required.
well as residents. The invitational
To enter an exhibit, entry forms
artistic
arrangement class in the
must be prepared by the exhibitor
Wednesday
show is "Up With the
and taken to the fair board office on
Chickens,"
a design including
the Rock Springs fairgrounds no
while
the Friday class is
feathers,
later than 4 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 8.
"Mom
Heads
for
the Fancy Work,"
Entries may be made by mail, but
Members of the American Legion
emphasizing
textures.
no telephone entries will be acAuxiliary ·of Drew Webster Post 39,
The artistic arrangements for club
cepted.
Pomeroy, enjoyed a chicken barmembers and county residents in
The first show will be staged on
becue Tuesday night at the home of
the
Wednesday show are "Looks
Wednesday, Aug. 13 and entries
Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins.
Like A Sunny Day," featuring
must be in the hands of the show
FolloWing the cookout, homemade
yellows;
"A Crowd Will Be There,"
conunittee before 1 p.m. They are to
ice cream and cake were served.
a n\ass design; "We'll Have Breakbe left in place until 8 p.m. The
Mrs. Pearl Knapp presided at the
fast First," a tray setting; "And
second show will be staged on
meeting during which time itema
Park at the Fairgrounds," lnFriday, Aug. 15, with entries to be in
left over from the Regatta Weekend
the hands of the committee at 1 p.m . te~retive; "Before Making the
were put on sale. It was noted that
Rounds," a stamobile; "A Picnic is
and left in place until 4 p.m. on
Mrs. Veda Davis is ill. Mrs. Gemma
in Order" using basket or baskets;
Saturday. In the artistic division,
Casci who has been hospitalized waa
and
"Feels Good to Relax Under the
exhibitors are permitted only one
at the meeting, ~nd guests included
Trees," including wood.
entry in each case. In the horMrs. Patty Might and daughter,
The Friday artistic arrangement'
ticultore and educational classes, an
Amy.
.
exhibitor may make as many_ I!S 25
A repot1 was given on the recent
Eighth -District party held at the
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital. Mrs.
Knapp, Mrs. Mary Martin and Mrs.
Dorothy Wells represented the unit
1
at the party attended by approximately 175 veterans. The unit
took candies and cake along with a
large cake donated by . Powell's
Super.Yalu in Pomeroy.
Mrs. Lorrene Snyder of Lancaster
BY HELEN BOTl'EL
PEAR UN:
gave the welcome to the veterans.
Special correspoodent
In these unorthodox days,
The juniors of the Pomeroy unit
DEAR HELEN: Our upcoming whatever the bride and bridegroom
provided four money awards for the
25th auniversary is very special to choose for their wedding is "all
party.
us because we were married in our right," no matter what etiquette
late 405. It's like a golden to anyone bookssay.
·
else.
But isn't "present" better than
Our families are plauning a big "give in marriage?" After all,
celebration. Last night my daughter you're not, and never were, your
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Raycraft of
and her husband, who will also have ex's to giveaway.- H.
Johnstown and family visited Mrs.
a :!lith anniversary in the same
Hattie Woodard.
month, suggested that we combine DEAR HELEN:
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Woodard and
· the two parties.
May I answer the mother who
children of Jackson spent a day with
This means two cakeii, inviting
wrote about the single-parent bully
his mother, Mrs. Hattie Woodard.
two groups of friends, theirs and
in het neighborhood?
Another caller was CarofLee Bailey
ours, splitting costs, etc. Is it
First, there are many bullies in
of Middleport.
proper? - MR. AND MRS. A. Z.
two-parent homes, but no one refers
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Rife and
DEAR MR. AND MRS. Z:
to them as two-parent bullies; and
daughters of Columbis were guest!
Proper, yes, but I suspect your
there are plenty of super kids in
of Mr. and Mrs. James Hobstetter
question really means, "How can we
single-parent homes, but no one
over Fourth of July.
r.efuse without hurt-feelings?"
gives the credit to their being raised
Mildred Hayes of Newark was
If I've read you right, then why not
by a single.
Wednesday guest of Mae CraWler.
explain to your daughter that this
Second, this mother herself coUld
Mrs. Mae Lynch has returned to
very special day is more gold than . help. The greatest difficulty for a
her home after spending several ·
silver and you want it for yours
single parent (next to money) is the
weeks in the" hospital and at the
alone? I think she and her husband
isolation and loneliness one finds in a · home of her daughter-In-law, Mrs.
will understand. - H.
predominately "Mr. and Mrs."
Harry Surface, Middleport.
neighborhood. The other mothers
The children and families of Mrs.
DEAR HELEN:
could and should invite the single
Elvira Barr spent the weekend here
I'm very friendly with my exmolber over for coffee; or stop in for
and celebrated Mrs. Barr's and
husband. He happens to also be a
a chat. Mother and son should be Ingrandson Micki's birthday on Sungood friend of tlje man I'll soon
cluded in cook-outs and picnic. day.
marry.
Being "different" and left-out
Beth and Cathy Jo Hobstetter
My ex Is 18 years older than I, and
makes a child resentful or show- spent..a week with Terry and Tenia .
I sort of look to him as the father I
offish.
Rife of Columbus.
never hod. Nothing romantic Is left
Third, a note to the single mother:
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Levingston and ·
on either side -. he's happily
I recommend she join .Parents daughter, Jody, spent last weekend
married, and the four of us go
Without Partners to find the support visiting friends in Mansfield.
around together.
and social life she needs. If her local
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Crouser of
Here's my question: Would it be
chapter has ' a strong family Charleston, W. Va. spent Sunday
all right for my ex to walk down the ' program, her son's friends will wish with Mrs. Mae Crouse.
church aisle with me and "give me
they could join too. - CAROLINE
Mrs. Susie Levingston of
away?" I didn't have B fel\1 wedding
Falmouth, Ky. spent Saturday night
before and I've always wanted one,
Got a problem? An adult subject with her son and daughter-In-law,
but there's no other male who could
for discussion? You can talk it over Mr. and Mrs. Dan Levingston.
escort me to my bridegroom. in her column if you write to Helen
UNORTHODOX BUT HOPEFUL
Bolte!, care or this newspaj)er.

WEDNESDAY
MEETING OF Southern Local
School District OAPSE, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at high school. ·
PAST COMMANDERS and
Trustees of D.JeW Webster Post 39,
American Legion, meeting Wednesday night with dinner to be served at 7 followed by business
session.

Helen Help Us
She S not keen on sharing
her anniversary,
limelight
.

Langsville

Attend funeral
WEAVER REUNION
The 22nd annual Weaver reunion
will be Sunday at the New Haven
Roadside Park ,located on the lower
end of New Haven, right side of
road, traveling north on Route 33. A
basket dinner will be served at 1
p.m. AU friends and relatives are in·
vited. Those attending are to take
their own lawn chairs.

TO MEET FRIDAY
A mveting of all Southern High
School girls in grlldes nine through
12 interested in playing volleyball
this fall has been set for 8 p.m.
Friday in the high school cafeteria.

Nwnerous friends and relatives
were here for the Saturday funeral
services of John Vinson Martin at
the Ewing Funeral Home. Burial
was in the Riverview Cemetery at
Middleport. The Rev. Bob Melton officiated.
Here for the services were Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Martin, Beaver; Mr. and
Mrs. Everett See, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd George, Mrs. Bessie Mitchell,
Mrs. Steven Drown, Miss Patricia
Martin, all of Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Matthews, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Newman, Mrs. Harry ,Reapp,

YOU'LL LIKELY Ind.HAV&amp;Ii FIRE,
BUT JUST IN CAS£.1011-.110,

Of'! DEAN'S LIST
MOREHEAD, Ky. - One student
from Meigs County is among the
Morehead State University students
recognized m 1111! 1980 Spring
Semester President's List.
The list includ!!s: Kimberly Sue
Jones, Pomeroy. ·
.REI:JNION
SUNDAY
The 56th annual Hayes-YoungHoliday School Reunion will be held
Sunday on the, old Holiday school
grounds.

Gallipolis; Robert Martin, Steven
and Stephanie of Alliance; Mr. and
·Mrs. Tom Thomas, Norton; Mr. and
Mrs .
Lowell
Thompson,
Chesapeake; Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Martin, Jr., VIncent; Mr. and Mrs.
Foyster Williams, Mary Ellen Mills,
Artemus, Ky. ; Mr. and Mrs. John
Williams, Galloway, and Foyster
Williams, Jr., Galloway.

Pomeroy Elementary
PTA Presen_ts
Walt Disney's
SNOWBALL EXPRESS
FRI., AUG. i.
.
7:30P.M.
At The
Pomeroy Elementary
Admission $1.00 For All
Supervised • chaperoned
by adults.
Refreshments of
Pop· Popcorn· Pizza
Available

NOTICE THERE WILL BE NO

W£ GUMMTIE-10U'UIJIEVER'IE-

BOlli BROKE MD HOMElESS roo:

j

EVENING HOURS AT THE

.

.

MEIGS CO. MEDICAL CLINIC.
TH.IS WEEK ONLYl

REUTER
INSURANCE SERVICE
214 E. Main
POMEROY
992·51-31
. or
. 992·5739

~~---

�,
6- The Dally Sentinel, MiddlePort· Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 29,1980
11

GET

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Help Wanted
VA~UABLE

tra ining
as a young business person
and earn gOOd money plus
some great glfts as a Sen·
tine! route carrier . Phone
us r ight away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
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. . . .1'1!.

Public Notice

. NOTICE
Offers w iII be received at
the office of Bernard v.
Fultz, · Bank One of
Pomeroy
bu i lding,
Pomeroy , Ohio, until 9:00
O'clock A .M ., August 1,
1980, for . the sale of the

Essie B. Russell residence

situated at 244 North
·s econd
Avenue , Mid ·
dleporl, Ohio. J he real
estate consists of a two·"
story frame dwell ing with
10 rooms and 2 baths. In ad·
ditlon, there is a 3·room

garage apartment over a

double garage on the real
estate. Written offers may

be submitted at an~ time..
until tne time set above ·
The property may be seen
by appointment only, by
calling the undersigned at
742 ·2095. The Executor '

reserves the right to reject

any or all bids.
Joe M. Solin,
E)(ecutor,
Estate of
Essie Russell

(7) 23, 24, 25, 27, 28, 29, 6tc

3

Announcements

1 PAY highest prices
possible tor gold and silver·

coins, rings, jewelry, etc .

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport. ·

Piano Tuning · Lane
Daniels 742·2951. Tuning
aild Repair Service since
1965. II no answer phone
992·2082 .

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

~

~·

FINAL WUK
FREE
ICE CREAM
With Any UNICO
FREEZER PLUS:
$25 DISCOUNT·
Stop in for Details

·POMEROY
LANDMARK
Main St. ·
Pomeroy

992·2181

Giveaway

4

9 - . k old pari Australian
border collie. 949·2016 after
6 weekdays,
·
~ARGE

YARD Sale. ~ol
above Church of God InSide
city limits of Rutland on
Rt. 124. Aug . 1 I 2. All kinds
of gOOd clothing cheap, lots
of white milk glass, what·
nots, I misc.
2 FAMI~ Y yard sale, Men/
women's clothes I shoes,
various sizes, other misc.
items. Mon ., July 28 until ?
or sold out, 10 :30-3. Corner
ol61h I John St., Syracuse.
3 family, July 31, Aug. 1·2·
3. Water I Apple Sl.,
Syracuse, Oh. Grace Oiler.
8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

BP.ADFDRD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949-2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crltt Bradford.
9

Wanted lo Buy

Iron and brass beds, old
, furniture, desks, · gold
rings,
jewelry , sliver
dollars, sterling, etc., wood
Ice boxes, antiques, etc.
Complete
households .
Write M. D . Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992776/J.

10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold. Dent a I gold and gold
ear pins. 675-3010.
Gold, silver or foreign
coins or any gold or sliver
Items. Antique furniture,
glass or china, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No Item too large or too
small. Check prices· before ~
selling , Also do appraising . '
Osby !Ossiel Martin. 992·
6370.
WI~~
BUY old tran -·
smlsslons,
batteries,
engines, or scrap metals,
etc . Call245·9188.

RESUME 'S ARE now
being accepted tor the
following
postions : 3
Teachers, I · floor super·
visor for ad\.llt training
program, 1 Adult workshop
director .
These
are
professional
positions
requiring a bachelor' s
degree and or related ex·
per ience In the field of
trainable mental retar·
dation . Interested persons
should send resume' no
later than Aug. 5th to Meigs
County Board of Mental
Retardation, Court House.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769. ·· An
Equal Opportunity Emplayer .
•

12

Mobile -Hom ·es tor Sal,_
e _ __

1975 Western....Mansion 14 x
70 three bl&gt;d room; 1971
Cameron, 14 x 64 two
bedroom ; 197 1 Liberty , 14 X
65 two bedroom ; 1968
Atlantic,
12 x 60 two
bedroom ;
1968
New
Moon, 12 x 60 with expando,
two bedroorn ; 1967 Buddy,
12 &gt;&lt;so, 2 bedroom .
B&amp;S
MObile Home Sales
Pt. Pleasant, W.VA.
675·4424 .

DUPLEX
HOME
to
responsible party, will rent
the entire house plus renter
has the option to sublease
the other apt. tor sup·
Plement income, large
yard, . newly· remodeled.
Contact 1-803-772·0237 .
42

BEDROOM
Mob i le
I
Home. Adults only 992·2598.

'"-===:;c::;:;:==:=:;==
4

RENTER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens in Village
Manor apts. Call992·7787 ,

TWO BEDROOM apart·
ment In Middleport. 1-304·
882-2566

BUILDING lqt lor sale.
Rock Springs area . 992·
2719.

WOULD LIKE to do your
housework. Call anytim~
992·3429.

FURNISHED
APART ;
MENT tour rooms and bath
adults only no pets in Mid·
dleporl . 992·3874.

lfentals

WILL YOUR
HOUSE
withstand another hard
winter? How about that
roof and barn, that snow
gets pretty heavy. ~et us
do any general main·
tanence work for you, painting, gutter repair, patch
work, Odds and ends, sa you
can sit back In front of that
warm fire this winter and
not have to worry . Call 9923941, 992·5126, or 9jl2·3519
and we ' ll come and give
you a free estimate.

I BEDROOM, Furnished
apt. wall to wall carpet .
Rent by week or month.
Phone 1·614·423·8257.

UNFUR-NISHED house for
rent. Deposit required . 992 ..
3090.

3 BEORibOM house with 2
baths, 2 car garage. In 5 room apt. near · court
Eastern Local .School hou~e, ~ Office or living .
Adults, no pets . 992 -3201.
District. 614-985·4323.
4S

13

46
POMEROY,O.
• C1'11r1es M. Hay•s , Realtor
NHCII E. Carsey, Br. Mtr.
Ph. tn·240J or H2 ·2710

Insurance

l7

~~!IL 8. SR.~~
216 E. second street

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325
rvM~t&lt;ut,

NEW ~ISTING - Ex·
cellent location, close
in, Meigs school district,
nice rec. room in base·
ment, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, ,olmost 1 acre, 4
years old, equipped kit·
chen,
many
other
features. $38,500.00,
NEW ~!STING - Har·
rlsonvllle · 7 room
home. 3 bedrooms, bath,
oo nice lot, garden
space, with 12x24
storage building, cellar.
$29,500.00.
POMEROY - 7 room
house in town w ith 3
bedrooms, llh baths,
bullt· in kitchen, ne'N
carpeting, central air
cond. $38,000.
NEW LISTING- NEW
CONSTRUCTION!
5
room home with over an
acre of
land,
3
bedrooms, bath, utility,
allached garage, elec·
I ric
B. B .
hea -t.
dishwasher , $39,900.00.
BUS I NESS
Truss
and rafter business,
with approx. I acre
land, building, enough
tools and a truck to run
business. Owner will ·
help finance. $28,000.00.
· ~OOK 1 Eastern Oislrlcl
- 3 bedroom home on
approx. 1 acre, with
fireplace,
washer,
dryer, range, refr ig.
Enclosed rear porch.
OWNER WANTS AN
OFFER!
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-4191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
742·2474
,OFFICE 992·2259

Business
Opportunity

Professional
Services

"Maggie ' s Upholstery "
Rebuilding, Refinishing,
Reupholstery, Fabric and
vinyl samples. Call 742·
2852 .

Ilea• estate
Homes for Sale

Beautiful large home . Low
utilities, brick ranch style,
3 bedrooms, 2112 baths,
filleplace, full basement,
family rQOm, air con·
ditloner, 3 car garage,
Baum Addition , Meigs
Count~ . Call985·4169 ,
Three year old, five room
house With central air and
heal, carpet throughout, 24
acres wiTh fruit trees.
Located on Eagle Ridge
Rd. Phone 949' 2793.

U

992~12.5.2-

FOR RENT the former
Warners
Barber
and
Beauty Shop building on
Second St. in Pomeroy .
Business or prOfessional
building
with
ap proximately 1100 square 11.
of work space. Also an up·
stairs furnished apartment
with two bedroomss. Rent
with the option to buy . Call
992·2528 or 992·2117 before
5,

31

COUNTRY MOBI~E Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. ~arge lots, Call
' 992·7479.

Miscellaneous

Financial

23

- - - --.--

SPECIA~

-

Pay lor
like rent after your
down payment . Has 6
rooms, batf1, new forced·
air furnace, excellent
drilled well and on
blacktop road . Asking
' $12,000.
FIRST AD - 30 acres
plus on Rt. 33, suitable
for subdlvison . Builders
don't pass this up. T.P.
water available.
NEW PRICE - 7 room
house with 3 bedrooms,
bath, lots of carpeting,
natural gas he~!, utility
room, equipped kitchen,
and on corner lot. Walk
to the stores. Reduced to
$16,500.
A BUY - 3 bedroom
frame home, natural
gas furnace·, birch kit·
chen, full basement, and
city water. Only $16,500 .
A gOOd buy!
3 ACRES PLUS - 4
bedroom country home.
10 room frame home
with large tamiiy room
on goad country road
near
Rutland with
natural gas heat and
~.c . water. Peaceful!
HOME PLUS - I rental
and }Qmore possible. A
fine setup if your money
m inded . over 3 acres
with workshop and
garage. A real possibili·
ty of self emplyment.
~AND River front,
woods, hardtop road,
water , g,
electric
available . $2,500 up.
BUY WHI~E YOU

Business Services

Antiques

' ATTENTION :
(IM '
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
libles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
76~ · 3167 or 557·3411 .
54

Re.ll

CANNING Corn, pull your
own, bring yoUr own container 50 cents doz. George
Hill.
CANNING Tomatoes, pick
your own, $3.00 bu . Bring
your
own
container. ,
George Hill .

FREE

A'I'PfO

Co&gt;rr~l:~~~1;~;:~:'!
TomB

56

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 614·367-7220.

HOOF HOLLOW: Horses
and ponies and riding
lessons .
Everything
imaginable in horse equjpment. Blankets, bells,
boots, etc. English and
Western. Ruth Reeves
(614) 698·3290 .
PUT A COLD nose in your
f uture.
Shots, wormed,
healthy dogs of all sizes .
Meigs County Humane
Society 992·626/J.
Three
beautiful male shephards,
one while, a blue-tick type,
young irish setter, one
pomerian type.
26 week old Peckegnese
puppies. AKC registered, 1
white, 1 brown. 949-2890 at·
ter 6.

A lh"tSjdEH
61

ALL S.TEEL

w&lt;~ .

e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equipment.·

CAPTAIN

\TUBECKj

EASY

7-17-1 mo. pd .

I I [

WHAT 011! E-ARTH GIVE5 YOU

SR. LOOK, Mi55 RITZI~SHAM!
I Ri:CKON IT'5 TOO ~AT&amp;
TO APOLOISIZE -

992·2478

VJNYr SIDING

Farm Buildings
Sizes
"From 3Dx30"
SMALL

THE- IDEA ANYO~Ei' WOULD EVE-R
MI~TAKE- YOU FOR A &amp;!NTLtllllfNT

Farm Equipment

BUILD INGS!! All steel
c lear·span buildings . Our
lowest price in over 2
years .
Examples!!
30' X48'X12 ' !Or $3,892 .; .
40'x72'x1.4' for $5,97,:1:. ;
48' x72 ' x14' tor $6,804 .;
61J'xl25'x16' lor $15,857. Call
coll~ct today
for price
guarantees. 1-614·294·2675
til8 p.m.
ONE NEW Idea 7 II. Cat·
Dilioner. Sale priced at
$2,950. Offer Good through
Aug. 10, 1980. Meigs Equip·
ment Co., Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph . 614·992·21 76.

WHAI 'THE RA~H

IAI\..0~ PFitE55ED.

I
KIJ

,.

.

'

'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

IF 'b-&gt;'14:; 001.10 10 (J..W{
roR ~. 11-IA.T MI?AIJ'?
COLliJTI fJ({) MY &lt;?tl&lt;Ol&lt;P7.

Superior Vinyi_Products

\-ION MlX.H ,.,;:;
~~){I

MID BICt'HT"?

Oswald

i~

992·3795

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

Shop .

Tltt POOL PEOPLE
31711 Noble Sum it Rd .
Middleport, Oh10
992-5714
service and supplies. In ground and
above ground pools .
5·1·tfc
S~les,

""":'Addons ana
remodeling
- Roofing and gu"er
work .
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrica I WQrk
(Free Estimates)

H. L WHITESEL

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

All types of roof work,
new
repair gutters
an'd downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed .

Call for Free Siding
Estimate, 949·2801 or
"9·2860. No Sunday
calls.
7·13·1 mo.

.

D&amp;M_
CONTRACTORS
-DRY WAU.ING
.:..-ROOFING
.-REMODELING
~CONCRETE

. Free Estimates
Ph. (304) 773·5131
or(. 304) 992·2276
6·30·1 mp.

61
Farm Equipment
ANTIQUES ,
FUR ':"
NITURE , glass, china,
anything . See or call Ruth I
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161.

Housing
Headquarters

tKJ4
.AK5
t K ioz
+QJ 104

MIDD~EPORT,

1·22-lfc

SUNBIRD.
.

1977 PONTIAC
Exc . cond. 29 m .p.g.,
automatic, am·fm radio,
sun root, low mileage. 985·
3596 .
1976 MATADOR.
992-7369.
72

$1 ,300.

Trucks lor Sale

1978 KAWASAKI Motor cycle· 650KZ, like new
$1,600 .
Frank
Riffle,
Bashan 949·2042.
76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

. 1 International truck cab,
2000.- 0 series, 1-2 speed
rear end, 1805 straight air,
2-landom rear end, straight
air with walking beams, 1-4
speed auxiliary, 2-alr
grease gunss. 985·4207~11er
6p.m.
·
·
78

Camping
Equipment

7· 13· 1

0. .

mO:·

3NT

Pass

•.'.LET'S TEAR IT
DOJ&amp;I!AND FIND

~EY

SURE l"OOK GREAT
PAINS lO i"AKE IT ~OOK
LIKE THE REST OF IHE
CAVE, DIDN'T THEYf'

By Olwlld Jacoby

aDd Alu SoDtag
Today's hand involves , a
rather unusual hold-up play.
You bold up with the
secqpd-best card, not the top.
Of course, you do have the
third-best card to back up the

Now see what happens if
South holds up with his kingjack of spades. East leads the
suit back. South's jack forces ·
the ace and now South can
lose the club finesse and still
be .sure of · nine tricks, game
and rubber.
·
·
Someone may note .that if
East holds the first trick and
sbifta to a diamond the hand
can collapse against certain
card combinations that find
West with both queen and jacll
of that suit, but that is most
unlikely while the actual bold·
ings are very likely.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

•·.

1

81

~

The bank's

Don't qet l)Our
hopes up, Joel!

name

by

is

. onthe

wrappers!

Home
Improvements

ZBoidered
3 Dec1alm

5 Gambol
10 Crea~
an earner
11 Sans peer

4 Man's
nickname
5 Covered
I Mel or Steve·
7 Bltie grass

1% Everywhere
15 Evert's

Flooring, ceiling, paneling,
doors and windows, also
painting . Call992·2759.

barrier

HOME NEEDING pain·
ted? Gutters in need of
repair? Is that roof begin· •
nlng to leak? Call 992·3519,
9'12·3941, or 992-5126 and get
things all fixed up tor that
bad weather thats on its
way ,
By the way , free
estimates are pro\tided .

WINNl_t,;
WELL, 01[;&gt; 'riJU
GET )OUR LECTURE
ABOUT HOW 'CRUEL'
THE OUT51Df WORW 15 ...

13UT 1 WON' 1"

ANI/ HOW YOU'[;&gt;
BEHER TOE THE
LINE OR ~·~ 6E

~

a&lt;ICK,

ZZ Squeal

YOU CAN COUNT ON rHAT/
THI~ TIME I

ZZ Check

Z3 Ochs in "Der Z3 Oxlllte
· Rollen- ,
nunlnant

HAVE

CONNEC7101V9/

RIGHT BACK

8 Praises
9 SmeWng

11 Imlta~
strongly
17 Turkish
13 With cargo
weight •
oo board
1B Muffle
14 Man1h plant
to In the center 19 A Fennl
n Do a !ann job Interest

HERE?

Yestenlay'• Anlwer
Z4 Perplexed
·ZS Contract

31 Career for

a Price

stipulation 3Z Martin TV

26 cOnflg·
oration·
ZIWine

311 Wbere
Knossos is

offering
36Sketch of
ooe's roots
38 Color
S9 Uttle Edgar

kavaller"

W i II do remodeling,
rooting, painting 1 elect .
Free
estimates.
Call
Charles Sinclair, 985-4121.

,!8 "Life Upon
the Wicked

.- ''
Z7 Detail
%I GueVara
Zl Jose or Luis

Oblapo
311 vociferate
33 Hispanic
huzzah

UClout

. JlARNE'i'

35 Jardiniere
37 Not even

IF YOU LEAVE ANYTHING
ON TH' FLOOR WITH
TEETH IN' VOUN6·UN5 AROUND,
THEII'LL CHAW IT ~TO' PIECES
,.....

stallation, water and gas
lines.
Excavating work
and transit layout . 992 ·720!.
BU~~DOZER work, smail
lobs a specialty. Call 7422753.
'

84

THOMAS_JPSEPH

ACROSS
. 1 Lumpkin

S &amp; G Carpel Cleaning .
Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard . 992·
63090r742·2211 .

' close

to Cook
UGaeUc

I! Hall
t3 Tryst
DOWN
1 Chew the fat

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -Here's how to work

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
makes. 992 ·2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomerov .
Authorized Singer Salo:s
and Service. we sharpen
Scissors.

ELWOOD
BOWER ·s
REP!loiR sweepers,
1970 25 FOOT TRAVE~
trailer,
sell -contained . toasters, Irons, all small
appliances . Lawn mower .
$13,000.00. 992·3726.
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985 ·
TRUCK CAMPER,l975, : 3825
.
clean, new condition with ;
bathroom, refrigerator, ,
furnace, oven .SISOO. Phone 1
General Hlullng
992-7888
' IS '
WIL~ HAU~ llrnestoneand
gravel. Also, lime hauling
1970 25 ft. Travel trailer,
self·conlalned $1.300. 992· ' and spreading. Leo Morris
3726.
Trucking . Phone 742;2455.

.

p ...
p ...

Soatlt
I NT
Pass

Opening lead:• 6

TI-US Tl·IING PLASTERED IT
OVER Wl~ MUD!

SEA~ ED BIOS will be ac·
cep.ted · at the Racine
VIII ace Hall till Augusts at · 83
Excavating
12 noon lor sale ol 1967
Chevrolet tanker · truck.
Water well drilling. Tom
Can be seen at Fire Station.
Lewis .
304 -895'· 3802 .
Seasonal discount on all
. pumps and accessories.
74
Motorcycles
J X F BACKHOE SER ·
1979 SUZUKI 250PE, 200
VICE llscensed and bonmiles, very gOOd cond. 992 · ded,
septic tank In-

3453.

Ellt

AUEYOOP

6-Jo'-1 mo.

Autos for Sale

Nortlt

:

ROUSH

71

West

secqnd·best so you are really
treating the two cards
involved in the flay as if they
were ace-smal rather ' than
king-jack.
South Ana.lyzes the lead as
fourth best. He Counts
winners and losers and sees
that the only way he can lose
his contract is to take the
queen of spades that East has
p!Jlyed at trick one with his
kmg.
If·be does Ibis he will be set.
He will have lc! take the club
finesse on his way to collecting nine tricks. East will get
in with the king and lead his •
last spade to give West four
spade tricks.

.992-7354 . : .

94Y· 2861
94Y·2160

• New Homes - ex·
tensive remodeling
e-Electrical work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience .,
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583

s

SOUTH

&lt;

- Back hoe and dum..,• :
truck service
:
- Shop and portable.
welding
- Concrete ~ork
,
- Commercial plumb- t
ing
- Underground
fuel'
~forage installation
-Fiberglass pools

Re~1sonable

CONSTRUCTION

!

1

ULE_B
CONSTRUCTION

Free EsTimates
Prices
Call Howard

j

EAST
.Q9
.1084
tJ87 6
+K83

• :12

1

992·6215 or 992·7lH
Pomero Q.~_.

or

\

~~

·J

V.C. YOUNG II

ROOFING

'I

t'•!

l-IOH'T BE GOON
E~OUE!H '"

WEST
tA 10762
.J96
tQS3

Vulnerable: Nqrtb-South
Dealer: South

. i..OOKS' LIKE' WHOEVER BUILT

Vinyl and Aluminu111
Siding ·

•

"'I' M AFRAID THAT

t-\R, GARR! CO ~E
CALL THE
1
QUICIQY . MR. BANI5Avtll EMERGENCY
COLLAPSED! ... AND
MEDICAL ~ERV ICE ,
HE'S UHCOI'ISCIOUS!! MRS. FLOWERS.'
I'LL HAVE ALOOK!

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

NORm
53
•Qf2
tA94
+A976

L.J2:=~~--------~==~----~!L.~~:~:·--~~~==ji~~-

ANNIE

4·2-tfc

•8

Ia

AXYDLBAAXIt
LONG- FELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. ·In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apottropltea, the length and formation of the words are _all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilferent.

'
1

CltYPTOQUOTES

·•

CURSE YOU,
BARON!

NO, I

H

BONQHMVFEAS

60€55 NOT
MVHM'B
1

,,

HB

.FM

xes

FB
OCP

JCABT'M

H

XAWWCZ

HB
GC .BM

(ft). ABC NEWS
8:58 (}) NEWS UPDATE
7:00 Ill. CROSSWITS
(l) PUPPET TREE GANG
([) HOGAN'S HEROES
Cll&lt;ft&gt;. FACETHE MUSIC
(!) LUCY SHOW
TICTACDOUGH ·
Cl) MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
!liD NEilS
.
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 Ill 8
!liD
HOUYWOOD
SQUARES
(}) FAITHTHAT~IVES
Cii BASEBALL: RACE FOR THE
PENNANT This weekly baseball
aeries steps up to ba_t for ita third
aeaaon . Len Berman and Maury
Willa recap the week' s ba·a&amp;ball
action and summarize the critical
~ya and players.
W ALLIN THE FAMILY
(j) SHANANA
crJ ABBOTT AND COSTEUO
• Cll JOKER'S WILD
Cl) DICK CAVETT SHOW
(jj) MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
(12) Ill
SHA NA NA 'The

e ·Cil

and Alan Sontag

i

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

T · shirt and novelty
shirts tor pohtic1ans,
ball teams, business or
indiv id.Lials .
. '
Shirts 54.00 Each
-- we pnnt ALMOST
anything on ALMOST
anything!"
Ph. 614·949-2358
- !
Evenings &amp; weekends
J
6·16·tfc '

Jaco~y

tE

Ca~tloned)

Declarer thwarts defense

and Corporations
Payrolls profit and loss statements,_all_
federal and state forms:

Custom
Print

'

BRIDGE

IJ\00

~~~~:Far;~s-Partnerships

Pomeroy, Oh.

Jumbles: OEMON PAGAN . NAPKIN ALMOST
Answer: It brin~s a lump tQ a guy's throatADAM SAPPLE

BORN LOSER

Tri:-County
Bookkeeping
Service

618 E. Main

(Answers tomorrow)

t I, oonhllftiiiQ110puzziH, It •••11oblelor".75pooljMIId
INfiiJumble,clothltMWI~ lr,80Jt:S4, Norwood, N.J.07141.1rtel.:ra:
n~~me, eddtwa,llp oodla mekl ciMICka PIYabl• lo Nnras.

Eugene ~~ (614) 843-3322

Rf. J, Box S4
Racine, Oh.
· Ph. 614-8,3·2591
•
• ·
6·'15-tf c,

(IXJ(II'IJ

--No.

Yestelday s

·serving your area for 25 ye11rs
Call Now for Large Savings
For Free Estimate Call

Sizes frpm 4Xf:; to 12)(40

.I

.

REP~ENTWIN~

Utility Buildings

No., arrange the circled letters to
form the surp(lee answer, as suggested by lhe above canoon.

Print answer here:

ROOFING
·- -···-- -

...........
...... .. ·-·. . .......

MiddlePOrt,

I I K

·\ DETUIL

~~~~R~~~T. ~~~~~

RODNEY DOWNING-BROKER

Elc:Miing

IHEO IN PROGAESBI
ANDY CllllfFITH SHOW
-...scNEWS
.
Cl)(jj) ZOOM
8:30 (}).(!)NBC NEWS
CIIWHOOUNIT?'TheGreateatUn·
aolved Myateriea' A doaaler Qf the
'world' a moat widely ·publlclz:ed
- myatery cases · Jack the Ripper, ·
Uzzle Borden, Amelia Earhart and
otherala era eked open on thia thrill·
lng excluaive . Armed with aome
previously undisclosed ctuea,
you,' re the detective on the case of
these Intriguing unsolved punlea.
([) I LOVELUCV
([)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
• Cll !'iiD CBS NEWS
Cl) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(jj) OYER EASY 'Future ol Aging·
Holt: Hugh Downs. (Cioaed
.

Experienced Operators
available for local work .
• 2 rubber tire backhoes
el exc~vator hoe 1'4

·

rn•m•rnilblltli•
NEws
(})
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

8:oo

Building Supplies

3/ 8 inch rebar- 17c per foot
by 20 fl. section. only . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Noble
Summit Rd. , Middleport,
OH . 992·5724.

JULY28, 1880

Pul'ns

Loans

PARK FINANciA~
VA 11. VA Automatic
Loans, No .Down Pay·
menf. Federa·t Housing
Loans, 3% down on
S2S,OOO; 5% down on
bolance, FHA 265 SubSidy Program . FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort .
Open M·W· F 9:00 lo I :00
By Appointment
Ollice 992·7544
Home9'12 ·6191
107 Sycamore 51.
Pomeroy, OH .

-Alum: &amp; Vinyl Sldlng
-Soffit· Gutter
-Storm windows &amp;
doors
-Replocement
windows ·
-All types of
remodeling
-Roofing· Goroges
-Add·ons • Porches

TRACTOR SALE I Buy any ' GOLD AND
SILVER
International Harvester fc OINS OF THE WOR~D .
tractor 36 h.p. or larger 1 RINGS , · JEWELRY,
finance through 1HCC in- STER~ING Si~VER AND
terest free until March 1, MISC . ITEMS, PAYING
1981. Meigs Equipment Co., RECORD
HIGH ,Pomeroy, Oh . Ph . 614·992· HIGHEST UP·TO· DATE
2176.
MAY BE A LOT DIF·
PRICES , CONTACT ED
FERENT. 91&gt;2·3325 or ·
B'U RKETT
BARBER
992-387~.
-A~~ HAY &amp; Forage Equip·
SHOP, Ml DD~EPORT,
meot reduced for.-~ quick OH 10, O"R CALL 992·3476,
sale. Buy now 1 finance
through 1HCC interest free 63
L i vestock
until April 1, 1981 . Meigs
Equipment C,o., Pomeroy, JONES Meat Packing
Oh . Ph. 614·992·2176.
slaughtering, custorl)
processing, retai l meat.
Washington
Co. Rd. 248,
APPROXIMATE~Y
~
acres of land $500. an acre, Little Hocking, OH . 667·
20·acre of timber. 1974 MO· 6133.
8 John Deere skidder
$12,000., 420 John Deere ENGLISH SHEPHARD
Dozer $4,000, 2 ton heavy farm puppies, readY to go
~uty
1972 · Ford truck In 2 weeks, 1 806 diesel !rae·
$1,800, L ton GMC truck tor, silage wagon, New
)953 5600., 1 ton 1949 Chevy Holland chopper. 949·2680,
pickup with racks $600.,
1950 Ferguson tractor wllh
'. '
winch plows, grain drill
$1,600., fuel oil tank with
stand sso., new Royce CB
S50, 1953 Hardtop Pontiac 71
Autos for-sale
$700. has been restored. 1977 PONTIAC TRANS·
985·3590. Ezra Sheets, AM, fire mist red, 400 cubic
Reedsville.
· . inch motor, averages 17
m!les per gallon, power
·62
Wanted to Buy
brakes, 1111 wheel, power
·steering, am·fm stereo
CHIP WOOD. Poles max. radlo·tape player (eight
diameter 10" on largest track) fuzz buster, has 40
end. $12 p·er ton. , Bundled
channel c.b. radio with SSB
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
burglar alarm system, and
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt . 2,
20,800 actual miles. One
Pom~~oy 992·2689.
OWI\Ilr auto must be seen to
·,..
:i
be appreciated. Call 992·
· · o~o·' co;Ns, pocket waf-, 3061 . .
. ches. class rings, wedding · @19of9 LIN€9L~· fY;e doOr
bands, diamonds. Gold or
coupe. 62,154 actual miles.
silver. Call J. A . Wamsley,
Minimum effort to restore.
. 742·2331. • Treasure Chest
Wilma Hinerman, 6
~io
I Coin Shop, A then~ , OH . 592·
Fourth -Street, New Haven '
6462.
WV Ph . 304·882 ·?494

CALl BILL.GHILDS 992-2342

Est~te

11 '1, % lnlerest-30 Yrs •

Misc. Mercnanise

BRAND NEW girls 10
speed bike, AMF road·
master ' Scorcher' 985·43Al
aller 4:30p.m .

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unacramblt lh..., lour Jumbles .
one letter to each square, to form
. four Ofdin&amp;ry wqrda.

~ 3 cubic tool chest type
freezer. Phone992·5867,

UPRIGHT DEEP Freeze,
mantel grate for fireplace solid oak, 23" color TV,
1973 Vega wagon, 65,000
Warm Morning gas ~ heater,
20,000 gas heater . camper
t~r pickup. 742·2174.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

~ THATSCRAMB~EDWORD GAME

EVENING.

REAL ESTATE

BARTELS,Loan
Repres~V~Iatlve, 1100 East
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh.
Mortgage
money
available. All types home
financing,
new,, old, .
refinancing, and 2na mortgages. Phone 992· 7000 or
992·5732.

1t'i1llrul ID~

'

~~~~~~~~~~:~~::~~~~~~~-

sale
NEW. 3 Built·
bedroom
in home
kitchen,
tor
dining
room ,
large
recreation room, fireplace, ·
lots Of storage, 2_ baths, ·
garage, 1 acre lot. 992·3454.

-- --..

Housenold GOOds

..

~ ~ ~~ -

- ~·

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
Indoor-outdoor facilities .
AlsQ
AKC
registered
DObermans. 614·446·7795.

BIG SAVINGS on name
brand BEE~INE clothes.
Assorted sizes, current
summer styles, all reduced
to unbelievable prices.
Several
oulliiS
and
separate pieces on hand,
reason for selling, to make
room for fabulous new win·
ter line. Don't miss this
chance to expand yqur •
summer wardrobe with
beautiful , first rate quality
BEELINE clothes.
992·
3941.

21

Space tor Rent

' TRA I ~E R LOT for rent on
Kingsbury Road. 742·3122.

IN ·
SURANCE been 1 can your
celled?
~est
operator's license? Phone
992·2143.
AUTOMOBI~E

.~

MAYTAG
automatic
washer. Runs good $75. 773·
5013 alter 5 p.m .

SS
WILL CARE lor an elderly
person in my home. 99261J22.

THE MEIGS County Board
Retardation is
now filling a position as •
full lime secretary . Per·
sons interested in this
position should send a
resume! !summary of APARTMENT HOUSE lor
sale in Pomeroy . 992·61J22 .
education and experience)
to Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardalion, Court ' 1 STORY older home. 3
House, Pomeroy, Oh. 45769. · bedrooms, bath, insulation,
Resume' s will be accepted stprm w indows, central
until Aug. 5th. Meigs. Co. · heat, carport and garage
Brd. of Mental Retardation on lar ge lot on Long Street
Is an Equal Opportunity in Rutland , $14,500, 742Employer.
3074 .
of Mental

Furnisned 'Rooms

ROOM AND Board tor
working man only , $150.00
per month. 992-5007 ,

ED

Help Wanted •

51

53

Lots &amp; Acreage
35
1 ACRE of ground, full
basement consisting of
blocks only, near Tuppers
Plains. 667·3826.

Situations Wanted

-.

TRAILER ON large lot in
Syracuse, Ohio, no pets, tor
more information call 992·
3525, no Sunday cal ls . 12.8 Gibson upright deep
_please.
freeze . 992·3726 .

UNFURNISHED 12 x 60
BUDDY mobile home
located n.ear Chester with
finished 8 x 14 room . Com· 4
Apartment
pletely set up and .can be
for Rent
rented on premises. 985· ·
3510,
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts, Phone 992·5434 .

~

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

USED REFRIGERATOR
$20.00, ca n be seen at .400
Lasl'ey Street, Pomeroy.

MOB ILE HOME. Adults
only, utilities paid . 2 m iles
ott 7 on 143, Deposit 1
references req uired . 992·
3647 or see Steve or Sandy
Henderson .

.-DICK TRACY

--Wanted to Rent

COUPLE WI TH children
want farm to caretake in
exchange for rent. 8 years
experience
and
have
references. !='refer Metqs,
Athens, or Vinton ~ounlies.
1·614· 758·56 13.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

TWO bedroom tra i ler.
Ad ults only .
Brown 's
Trailer Court. Call992·3324.

JUNK CARS also pick up
car bodies,clean copper;
FIVE ROOM house, bath,
.6/J lb, radiators, .401b,
clean aluminum, 15 lb.
utility room, 'wall to wall
Riders Salvage, Rt. 4, St.
Carpet, storm doors and
Rl 124, Pomeroy, Ohio 992·
windows, aluminum siding,
54611.
. ·one car garage. Located on
Brownell Avenue, Middleport, Phone992·5204.

11

-·
47

41

MOBILE home tor sale,
$6500, land contract with
$500 down or will negot iate
cash sale . Also one
bedroom, built-in .bunks ,
48x10 mobile home, $2800,
land contract. $300 down .
Wri te J . Bowland , 15068
Empire Rd., Thornville,
OH . 43076.

REGI STER E D NUR SES.
Immediate opening tor
r ~ g i stered
nurses ex·
perienced in I.C.U., C.C. U.
as well as general staff
duty .
Sa lary
co m mensurate with exp. Con·
tact Teresa Collins RN,
Veterans
M emorial
Hospital, Pomeroy, Oh. 1·
614·,992·2104 .

'I -: TheU8.1lySentinel, Middleport:PomeroJ•, o., Tuesday, July 29, 1980

W CT l
1 VFN

l i t O M V F T I . - YF · T
VPK.KHSJ
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A FRIEND IS SOMEONE WHO CAN
SEE THROUGH YOU A,ND STILL ENJOYS THE SHOW.FARMERS'ALMA~AC

Lettermen'

7:58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
8:00 CI&gt;8(!) THE MISADVENTURES
OF SHERIFF ~OBO
(}) OIIAL ROBERTS .
CII MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ••Ill "Tilt
Aco" 11178
Cll BASEBALL Atlanta Bravoe vo
New York Meta
(1)(12)8 HAPPY DAYSChaclli'a
errantly thrown apron Ianda on Ar·
nold 'a grill and soon the place Ia
ablaze~·trapping Ralph ,Potaieand
the Fonz In the men's room .

r.•fit~

G.I.'S A World War II
comedy focuaing on a aquad of
American soldiers who aerve a a
'mop·up' troops during the Italian
camJ!aign .
Cll!Ul NOVA 'A lslorAiom,Biefor
Bomb' The 'father of the H·bomb',
Dr. Edward Teller, diacuasea hie
controverelal theories. (Closed
Captlonedf(60 min a.)
8:30 (}) GOOD NEWS ·
CllLAVERNEANDSHIRLEYWhen
Laverneand Shirley board a train to
Canada, a man with a knife in his
back lalla dead In their compart·
mant sending them in the wildest
whodunit ever. (Pt. I. of a two~part
!J!Iaodel
(I) !liD SP!CIAL MOVIE PR£·
$ENTATION 'Network· 1976
Stars: Faye Dunaway, William Hoi·
den.
(ft) Ill THAT'S INCREDIBLE
Tonighta show will feature a fear·
lea a femalewho attempts 1 fantaa·
tic teat in ahot·airbaltoon, adentlat
who cures pain using clotheaplna,
and a young daredevil who jumpa
over carl speeding towards him at
over 80 miles per hour. (60 min a.)
8:58 (}) NEWS UPDATE
11:00 (l] 8 (!) SHARKS: THE DEATH
MACHINES Henry Fonda narratee
thla real-life adventure ap8cial faa ·
turing apectacularunderwaterfoo·
taga of sharks and chronicling the
story of Rodney Fox,tha only man
knowntohaveaurvlvedanaHackby
.~~a!_white ~hark . (86 mine.) ·
(1) 700CLUB
Cll (ft) Ill THREE'S COMPANY
Chrieay ia dying to l~arn who Ia
sending her secret love notea. eo
ahe eat a up a rendezvous at the •
Reagle
Beagle .
(Repeal)
(Gioaed·Captioned)
·
·
Cl)(jj)FLAMBARDS'PointloPolnt'
Auaaelland WJIIIam argUe, and aa 1
result, William decides to leave
Flambarda . (Closed Ceptloned)
.
, ~Omlna . )
8:30 Cll&lt;ft&gt;. TAXIThocabbieadecide
to enter the art world by buying a ·
painting at an auction hoping to
cash In big when the artist diaa.
(RtJ1!at)
10:00 lllaffi EISCHIEDEiechleduncovera evidence that the gangland
slaying ole famous disco owner
may have been the work of a veter·
an deteot:ve involved with the
mob .
Cii COMEDY TONIGHT ·Here
Coma a· Summer· Swing Into aum·
merwllhfavorlteMartlnMull .lnzany
aketchea, th la exclusive a81utee
the aunnieet and funniest days of
· aummer.
Cll&lt;ft&gt;.HAR.TTOHART Jonalhan
and Jennltar are on opposite ends
of amurdercaaeaa they try to solve
a baffling mystery in Which their
beat friends are the accused .
(Hepeat; 60 mina.)
Cl) LORD MOUNTBATTEN: MAN
FOR THE CENTURY Whan Chur·
chill torgea the Grand Alliance,
Mountbatten relinquishes. hia a a·
aiQnment locating enemy airfield I
to become Chief of Combined
Operat ions and Is designated
Honorary Lt . GeneralandHanorary
Air Marshall . (Closed Captioned)
W_Omins.)
(jj) NEWS
10:28 (}) NEWS UPDATE
10:30 (})FAITH 20
(I) TB$ EVENING NEWS
(jj) OVER EABY 'Futuro of Aging·
Hoat: Hugh.. Oowna . (Cioaed
·
Capllonod)
10:88 (}) NEWSUPDAT~""'""'.
11:00
ct
\J!J \llll ' " '
NEWS
(}) TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
(II BASEBALL: RACE FOR THE
PENNANT Thi s weekly baoeball
aerie a steps up to bat for ita third
aaaaon . Len Berman and Maury
Willa recap the week 's baaeball
action and eummarize the critical
~ya and playera.
W DAVEAUENATLARGE
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
11 :28 (})NEWS UPDATE
11 !30 llleC!l THE TONIGHT SHOW
'Beat Ot Caraon' (Repeat ; 90
mlna.)' ,
(}) ROBS BAGLEY SHOW
CII MOYIE · (BIOGRAPHY) .. 1'1
"He•rt h•t·" 1880
([)MOVIE-(COMEOY·WESTERN)
"Pard!!__.,.... 1156

a

m•

m•

••t,\

oU 1910 King F••turu Syndlc•te. Inc .

-~--

.,

�,
6- The Dally Sentinel, MiddlePort· Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 29,1980
11

GET

J2

Help Wanted
VA~UABLE

tra ining
as a young business person
and earn gOOd money plus
some great glfts as a Sen·
tine! route carrier . Phone
us r ight away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .

GET

1!1111011

. . . .1'1!.

Public Notice

. NOTICE
Offers w iII be received at
the office of Bernard v.
Fultz, · Bank One of
Pomeroy
bu i lding,
Pomeroy , Ohio, until 9:00
O'clock A .M ., August 1,
1980, for . the sale of the

Essie B. Russell residence

situated at 244 North
·s econd
Avenue , Mid ·
dleporl, Ohio. J he real
estate consists of a two·"
story frame dwell ing with
10 rooms and 2 baths. In ad·
ditlon, there is a 3·room

garage apartment over a

double garage on the real
estate. Written offers may

be submitted at an~ time..
until tne time set above ·
The property may be seen
by appointment only, by
calling the undersigned at
742 ·2095. The Executor '

reserves the right to reject

any or all bids.
Joe M. Solin,
E)(ecutor,
Estate of
Essie Russell

(7) 23, 24, 25, 27, 28, 29, 6tc

3

Announcements

1 PAY highest prices
possible tor gold and silver·

coins, rings, jewelry, etc .

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport. ·

Piano Tuning · Lane
Daniels 742·2951. Tuning
aild Repair Service since
1965. II no answer phone
992·2082 .

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

~

~·

FINAL WUK
FREE
ICE CREAM
With Any UNICO
FREEZER PLUS:
$25 DISCOUNT·
Stop in for Details

·POMEROY
LANDMARK
Main St. ·
Pomeroy

992·2181

Giveaway

4

9 - . k old pari Australian
border collie. 949·2016 after
6 weekdays,
·
~ARGE

YARD Sale. ~ol
above Church of God InSide
city limits of Rutland on
Rt. 124. Aug . 1 I 2. All kinds
of gOOd clothing cheap, lots
of white milk glass, what·
nots, I misc.
2 FAMI~ Y yard sale, Men/
women's clothes I shoes,
various sizes, other misc.
items. Mon ., July 28 until ?
or sold out, 10 :30-3. Corner
ol61h I John St., Syracuse.
3 family, July 31, Aug. 1·2·
3. Water I Apple Sl.,
Syracuse, Oh. Grace Oiler.
8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

BP.ADFDRD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Phone
949-2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crltt Bradford.
9

Wanted lo Buy

Iron and brass beds, old
, furniture, desks, · gold
rings,
jewelry , sliver
dollars, sterling, etc., wood
Ice boxes, antiques, etc.
Complete
households .
Write M. D . Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992776/J.

10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold. Dent a I gold and gold
ear pins. 675-3010.
Gold, silver or foreign
coins or any gold or sliver
Items. Antique furniture,
glass or china, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No Item too large or too
small. Check prices· before ~
selling , Also do appraising . '
Osby !Ossiel Martin. 992·
6370.
WI~~
BUY old tran -·
smlsslons,
batteries,
engines, or scrap metals,
etc . Call245·9188.

RESUME 'S ARE now
being accepted tor the
following
postions : 3
Teachers, I · floor super·
visor for ad\.llt training
program, 1 Adult workshop
director .
These
are
professional
positions
requiring a bachelor' s
degree and or related ex·
per ience In the field of
trainable mental retar·
dation . Interested persons
should send resume' no
later than Aug. 5th to Meigs
County Board of Mental
Retardation, Court House.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769. ·· An
Equal Opportunity Emplayer .
•

12

Mobile -Hom ·es tor Sal,_
e _ __

1975 Western....Mansion 14 x
70 three bl&gt;d room; 1971
Cameron, 14 x 64 two
bedroom ; 197 1 Liberty , 14 X
65 two bedroom ; 1968
Atlantic,
12 x 60 two
bedroom ;
1968
New
Moon, 12 x 60 with expando,
two bedroorn ; 1967 Buddy,
12 &gt;&lt;so, 2 bedroom .
B&amp;S
MObile Home Sales
Pt. Pleasant, W.VA.
675·4424 .

DUPLEX
HOME
to
responsible party, will rent
the entire house plus renter
has the option to sublease
the other apt. tor sup·
Plement income, large
yard, . newly· remodeled.
Contact 1-803-772·0237 .
42

BEDROOM
Mob i le
I
Home. Adults only 992·2598.

'"-===:;c::;:;:==:=:;==
4

RENTER'S assistance for
Senior Citizens in Village
Manor apts. Call992·7787 ,

TWO BEDROOM apart·
ment In Middleport. 1-304·
882-2566

BUILDING lqt lor sale.
Rock Springs area . 992·
2719.

WOULD LIKE to do your
housework. Call anytim~
992·3429.

FURNISHED
APART ;
MENT tour rooms and bath
adults only no pets in Mid·
dleporl . 992·3874.

lfentals

WILL YOUR
HOUSE
withstand another hard
winter? How about that
roof and barn, that snow
gets pretty heavy. ~et us
do any general main·
tanence work for you, painting, gutter repair, patch
work, Odds and ends, sa you
can sit back In front of that
warm fire this winter and
not have to worry . Call 9923941, 992·5126, or 9jl2·3519
and we ' ll come and give
you a free estimate.

I BEDROOM, Furnished
apt. wall to wall carpet .
Rent by week or month.
Phone 1·614·423·8257.

UNFUR-NISHED house for
rent. Deposit required . 992 ..
3090.

3 BEORibOM house with 2
baths, 2 car garage. In 5 room apt. near · court
Eastern Local .School hou~e, ~ Office or living .
Adults, no pets . 992 -3201.
District. 614-985·4323.
4S

13

46
POMEROY,O.
• C1'11r1es M. Hay•s , Realtor
NHCII E. Carsey, Br. Mtr.
Ph. tn·240J or H2 ·2710

Insurance

l7

~~!IL 8. SR.~~
216 E. second street

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325
rvM~t&lt;ut,

NEW ~ISTING - Ex·
cellent location, close
in, Meigs school district,
nice rec. room in base·
ment, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, ,olmost 1 acre, 4
years old, equipped kit·
chen,
many
other
features. $38,500.00,
NEW ~!STING - Har·
rlsonvllle · 7 room
home. 3 bedrooms, bath,
oo nice lot, garden
space, with 12x24
storage building, cellar.
$29,500.00.
POMEROY - 7 room
house in town w ith 3
bedrooms, llh baths,
bullt· in kitchen, ne'N
carpeting, central air
cond. $38,000.
NEW LISTING- NEW
CONSTRUCTION!
5
room home with over an
acre of
land,
3
bedrooms, bath, utility,
allached garage, elec·
I ric
B. B .
hea -t.
dishwasher , $39,900.00.
BUS I NESS
Truss
and rafter business,
with approx. I acre
land, building, enough
tools and a truck to run
business. Owner will ·
help finance. $28,000.00.
· ~OOK 1 Eastern Oislrlcl
- 3 bedroom home on
approx. 1 acre, with
fireplace,
washer,
dryer, range, refr ig.
Enclosed rear porch.
OWNER WANTS AN
OFFER!
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-4191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
742·2474
,OFFICE 992·2259

Business
Opportunity

Professional
Services

"Maggie ' s Upholstery "
Rebuilding, Refinishing,
Reupholstery, Fabric and
vinyl samples. Call 742·
2852 .

Ilea• estate
Homes for Sale

Beautiful large home . Low
utilities, brick ranch style,
3 bedrooms, 2112 baths,
filleplace, full basement,
family rQOm, air con·
ditloner, 3 car garage,
Baum Addition , Meigs
Count~ . Call985·4169 ,
Three year old, five room
house With central air and
heal, carpet throughout, 24
acres wiTh fruit trees.
Located on Eagle Ridge
Rd. Phone 949' 2793.

U

992~12.5.2-

FOR RENT the former
Warners
Barber
and
Beauty Shop building on
Second St. in Pomeroy .
Business or prOfessional
building
with
ap proximately 1100 square 11.
of work space. Also an up·
stairs furnished apartment
with two bedroomss. Rent
with the option to buy . Call
992·2528 or 992·2117 before
5,

31

COUNTRY MOBI~E Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. ~arge lots, Call
' 992·7479.

Miscellaneous

Financial

23

- - - --.--

SPECIA~

-

Pay lor
like rent after your
down payment . Has 6
rooms, batf1, new forced·
air furnace, excellent
drilled well and on
blacktop road . Asking
' $12,000.
FIRST AD - 30 acres
plus on Rt. 33, suitable
for subdlvison . Builders
don't pass this up. T.P.
water available.
NEW PRICE - 7 room
house with 3 bedrooms,
bath, lots of carpeting,
natural gas he~!, utility
room, equipped kitchen,
and on corner lot. Walk
to the stores. Reduced to
$16,500.
A BUY - 3 bedroom
frame home, natural
gas furnace·, birch kit·
chen, full basement, and
city water. Only $16,500 .
A gOOd buy!
3 ACRES PLUS - 4
bedroom country home.
10 room frame home
with large tamiiy room
on goad country road
near
Rutland with
natural gas heat and
~.c . water. Peaceful!
HOME PLUS - I rental
and }Qmore possible. A
fine setup if your money
m inded . over 3 acres
with workshop and
garage. A real possibili·
ty of self emplyment.
~AND River front,
woods, hardtop road,
water , g,
electric
available . $2,500 up.
BUY WHI~E YOU

Business Services

Antiques

' ATTENTION :
(IM '
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
libles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
76~ · 3167 or 557·3411 .
54

Re.ll

CANNING Corn, pull your
own, bring yoUr own container 50 cents doz. George
Hill.
CANNING Tomatoes, pick
your own, $3.00 bu . Bring
your
own
container. ,
George Hill .

FREE

A'I'PfO

Co&gt;rr~l:~~~1;~;:~:'!
TomB

56

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 614·367-7220.

HOOF HOLLOW: Horses
and ponies and riding
lessons .
Everything
imaginable in horse equjpment. Blankets, bells,
boots, etc. English and
Western. Ruth Reeves
(614) 698·3290 .
PUT A COLD nose in your
f uture.
Shots, wormed,
healthy dogs of all sizes .
Meigs County Humane
Society 992·626/J.
Three
beautiful male shephards,
one while, a blue-tick type,
young irish setter, one
pomerian type.
26 week old Peckegnese
puppies. AKC registered, 1
white, 1 brown. 949-2890 at·
ter 6.

A lh"tSjdEH
61

ALL S.TEEL

w&lt;~ .

e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equipment.·

CAPTAIN

\TUBECKj

EASY

7-17-1 mo. pd .

I I [

WHAT 011! E-ARTH GIVE5 YOU

SR. LOOK, Mi55 RITZI~SHAM!
I Ri:CKON IT'5 TOO ~AT&amp;
TO APOLOISIZE -

992·2478

VJNYr SIDING

Farm Buildings
Sizes
"From 3Dx30"
SMALL

THE- IDEA ANYO~Ei' WOULD EVE-R
MI~TAKE- YOU FOR A &amp;!NTLtllllfNT

Farm Equipment

BUILD INGS!! All steel
c lear·span buildings . Our
lowest price in over 2
years .
Examples!!
30' X48'X12 ' !Or $3,892 .; .
40'x72'x1.4' for $5,97,:1:. ;
48' x72 ' x14' tor $6,804 .;
61J'xl25'x16' lor $15,857. Call
coll~ct today
for price
guarantees. 1-614·294·2675
til8 p.m.
ONE NEW Idea 7 II. Cat·
Dilioner. Sale priced at
$2,950. Offer Good through
Aug. 10, 1980. Meigs Equip·
ment Co., Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph . 614·992·21 76.

WHAI 'THE RA~H

IAI\..0~ PFitE55ED.

I
KIJ

,.

.

'

'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

IF 'b-&gt;'14:; 001.10 10 (J..W{
roR ~. 11-IA.T MI?AIJ'?
COLliJTI fJ({) MY &lt;?tl&lt;Ol&lt;P7.

Superior Vinyi_Products

\-ION MlX.H ,.,;:;
~~){I

MID BICt'HT"?

Oswald

i~

992·3795

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

Shop .

Tltt POOL PEOPLE
31711 Noble Sum it Rd .
Middleport, Oh10
992-5714
service and supplies. In ground and
above ground pools .
5·1·tfc
S~les,

""":'Addons ana
remodeling
- Roofing and gu"er
work .
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrica I WQrk
(Free Estimates)

H. L WHITESEL

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

All types of roof work,
new
repair gutters
an'd downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed .

Call for Free Siding
Estimate, 949·2801 or
"9·2860. No Sunday
calls.
7·13·1 mo.

.

D&amp;M_
CONTRACTORS
-DRY WAU.ING
.:..-ROOFING
.-REMODELING
~CONCRETE

. Free Estimates
Ph. (304) 773·5131
or(. 304) 992·2276
6·30·1 mp.

61
Farm Equipment
ANTIQUES ,
FUR ':"
NITURE , glass, china,
anything . See or call Ruth I
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161.

Housing
Headquarters

tKJ4
.AK5
t K ioz
+QJ 104

MIDD~EPORT,

1·22-lfc

SUNBIRD.
.

1977 PONTIAC
Exc . cond. 29 m .p.g.,
automatic, am·fm radio,
sun root, low mileage. 985·
3596 .
1976 MATADOR.
992-7369.
72

$1 ,300.

Trucks lor Sale

1978 KAWASAKI Motor cycle· 650KZ, like new
$1,600 .
Frank
Riffle,
Bashan 949·2042.
76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

. 1 International truck cab,
2000.- 0 series, 1-2 speed
rear end, 1805 straight air,
2-landom rear end, straight
air with walking beams, 1-4
speed auxiliary, 2-alr
grease gunss. 985·4207~11er
6p.m.
·
·
78

Camping
Equipment

7· 13· 1

0. .

mO:·

3NT

Pass

•.'.LET'S TEAR IT
DOJ&amp;I!AND FIND

~EY

SURE l"OOK GREAT
PAINS lO i"AKE IT ~OOK
LIKE THE REST OF IHE
CAVE, DIDN'T THEYf'

By Olwlld Jacoby

aDd Alu SoDtag
Today's hand involves , a
rather unusual hold-up play.
You bold up with the
secqpd-best card, not the top.
Of course, you do have the
third-best card to back up the

Now see what happens if
South holds up with his kingjack of spades. East leads the
suit back. South's jack forces ·
the ace and now South can
lose the club finesse and still
be .sure of · nine tricks, game
and rubber.
·
·
Someone may note .that if
East holds the first trick and
sbifta to a diamond the hand
can collapse against certain
card combinations that find
West with both queen and jacll
of that suit, but that is most
unlikely while the actual bold·
ings are very likely.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

•·.

1

81

~

The bank's

Don't qet l)Our
hopes up, Joel!

name

by

is

. onthe

wrappers!

Home
Improvements

ZBoidered
3 Dec1alm

5 Gambol
10 Crea~
an earner
11 Sans peer

4 Man's
nickname
5 Covered
I Mel or Steve·
7 Bltie grass

1% Everywhere
15 Evert's

Flooring, ceiling, paneling,
doors and windows, also
painting . Call992·2759.

barrier

HOME NEEDING pain·
ted? Gutters in need of
repair? Is that roof begin· •
nlng to leak? Call 992·3519,
9'12·3941, or 992-5126 and get
things all fixed up tor that
bad weather thats on its
way ,
By the way , free
estimates are pro\tided .

WINNl_t,;
WELL, 01[;&gt; 'riJU
GET )OUR LECTURE
ABOUT HOW 'CRUEL'
THE OUT51Df WORW 15 ...

13UT 1 WON' 1"

ANI/ HOW YOU'[;&gt;
BEHER TOE THE
LINE OR ~·~ 6E

~

a&lt;ICK,

ZZ Squeal

YOU CAN COUNT ON rHAT/
THI~ TIME I

ZZ Check

Z3 Ochs in "Der Z3 Oxlllte
· Rollen- ,
nunlnant

HAVE

CONNEC7101V9/

RIGHT BACK

8 Praises
9 SmeWng

11 Imlta~
strongly
17 Turkish
13 With cargo
weight •
oo board
1B Muffle
14 Man1h plant
to In the center 19 A Fennl
n Do a !ann job Interest

HERE?

Yestenlay'• Anlwer
Z4 Perplexed
·ZS Contract

31 Career for

a Price

stipulation 3Z Martin TV

26 cOnflg·
oration·
ZIWine

311 Wbere
Knossos is

offering
36Sketch of
ooe's roots
38 Color
S9 Uttle Edgar

kavaller"

W i II do remodeling,
rooting, painting 1 elect .
Free
estimates.
Call
Charles Sinclair, 985-4121.

,!8 "Life Upon
the Wicked

.- ''
Z7 Detail
%I GueVara
Zl Jose or Luis

Oblapo
311 vociferate
33 Hispanic
huzzah

UClout

. JlARNE'i'

35 Jardiniere
37 Not even

IF YOU LEAVE ANYTHING
ON TH' FLOOR WITH
TEETH IN' VOUN6·UN5 AROUND,
THEII'LL CHAW IT ~TO' PIECES
,.....

stallation, water and gas
lines.
Excavating work
and transit layout . 992 ·720!.
BU~~DOZER work, smail
lobs a specialty. Call 7422753.
'

84

THOMAS_JPSEPH

ACROSS
. 1 Lumpkin

S &amp; G Carpel Cleaning .
Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard . 992·
63090r742·2211 .

' close

to Cook
UGaeUc

I! Hall
t3 Tryst
DOWN
1 Chew the fat

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -Here's how to work

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
makes. 992 ·2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomerov .
Authorized Singer Salo:s
and Service. we sharpen
Scissors.

ELWOOD
BOWER ·s
REP!loiR sweepers,
1970 25 FOOT TRAVE~
trailer,
sell -contained . toasters, Irons, all small
appliances . Lawn mower .
$13,000.00. 992·3726.
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985 ·
TRUCK CAMPER,l975, : 3825
.
clean, new condition with ;
bathroom, refrigerator, ,
furnace, oven .SISOO. Phone 1
General Hlullng
992-7888
' IS '
WIL~ HAU~ llrnestoneand
gravel. Also, lime hauling
1970 25 ft. Travel trailer,
self·conlalned $1.300. 992· ' and spreading. Leo Morris
3726.
Trucking . Phone 742;2455.

.

p ...
p ...

Soatlt
I NT
Pass

Opening lead:• 6

TI-US Tl·IING PLASTERED IT
OVER Wl~ MUD!

SEA~ ED BIOS will be ac·
cep.ted · at the Racine
VIII ace Hall till Augusts at · 83
Excavating
12 noon lor sale ol 1967
Chevrolet tanker · truck.
Water well drilling. Tom
Can be seen at Fire Station.
Lewis .
304 -895'· 3802 .
Seasonal discount on all
. pumps and accessories.
74
Motorcycles
J X F BACKHOE SER ·
1979 SUZUKI 250PE, 200
VICE llscensed and bonmiles, very gOOd cond. 992 · ded,
septic tank In-

3453.

Ellt

AUEYOOP

6-Jo'-1 mo.

Autos for Sale

Nortlt

:

ROUSH

71

West

secqnd·best so you are really
treating the two cards
involved in the flay as if they
were ace-smal rather ' than
king-jack.
South Ana.lyzes the lead as
fourth best. He Counts
winners and losers and sees
that the only way he can lose
his contract is to take the
queen of spades that East has
p!Jlyed at trick one with his
kmg.
If·be does Ibis he will be set.
He will have lc! take the club
finesse on his way to collecting nine tricks. East will get
in with the king and lead his •
last spade to give West four
spade tricks.

.992-7354 . : .

94Y· 2861
94Y·2160

• New Homes - ex·
tensive remodeling
e-Electrical work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience .,
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583

s

SOUTH

&lt;

- Back hoe and dum..,• :
truck service
:
- Shop and portable.
welding
- Concrete ~ork
,
- Commercial plumb- t
ing
- Underground
fuel'
~forage installation
-Fiberglass pools

Re~1sonable

CONSTRUCTION

!

1

ULE_B
CONSTRUCTION

Free EsTimates
Prices
Call Howard

j

EAST
.Q9
.1084
tJ87 6
+K83

• :12

1

992·6215 or 992·7lH
Pomero Q.~_.

or

\

~~

·J

V.C. YOUNG II

ROOFING

'I

t'•!

l-IOH'T BE GOON
E~OUE!H '"

WEST
tA 10762
.J96
tQS3

Vulnerable: Nqrtb-South
Dealer: South

. i..OOKS' LIKE' WHOEVER BUILT

Vinyl and Aluminu111
Siding ·

•

"'I' M AFRAID THAT

t-\R, GARR! CO ~E
CALL THE
1
QUICIQY . MR. BANI5Avtll EMERGENCY
COLLAPSED! ... AND
MEDICAL ~ERV ICE ,
HE'S UHCOI'ISCIOUS!! MRS. FLOWERS.'
I'LL HAVE ALOOK!

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

NORm
53
•Qf2
tA94
+A976

L.J2:=~~--------~==~----~!L.~~:~:·--~~~==ji~~-

ANNIE

4·2-tfc

•8

Ia

AXYDLBAAXIt
LONG- FELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. ·In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apottropltea, the length and formation of the words are _all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilferent.

'
1

CltYPTOQUOTES

·•

CURSE YOU,
BARON!

NO, I

H

BONQHMVFEAS

60€55 NOT
MVHM'B
1

,,

HB

.FM

xes

FB
OCP

JCABT'M

H

XAWWCZ

HB
GC .BM

(ft). ABC NEWS
8:58 (}) NEWS UPDATE
7:00 Ill. CROSSWITS
(l) PUPPET TREE GANG
([) HOGAN'S HEROES
Cll&lt;ft&gt;. FACETHE MUSIC
(!) LUCY SHOW
TICTACDOUGH ·
Cl) MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
!liD NEilS
.
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 Ill 8
!liD
HOUYWOOD
SQUARES
(}) FAITHTHAT~IVES
Cii BASEBALL: RACE FOR THE
PENNANT This weekly baseball
aeries steps up to ba_t for ita third
aeaaon . Len Berman and Maury
Willa recap the week' s ba·a&amp;ball
action and summarize the critical
~ya and players.
W ALLIN THE FAMILY
(j) SHANANA
crJ ABBOTT AND COSTEUO
• Cll JOKER'S WILD
Cl) DICK CAVETT SHOW
(jj) MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
(12) Ill
SHA NA NA 'The

e ·Cil

and Alan Sontag

i

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

T · shirt and novelty
shirts tor pohtic1ans,
ball teams, business or
indiv id.Lials .
. '
Shirts 54.00 Each
-- we pnnt ALMOST
anything on ALMOST
anything!"
Ph. 614·949-2358
- !
Evenings &amp; weekends
J
6·16·tfc '

Jaco~y

tE

Ca~tloned)

Declarer thwarts defense

and Corporations
Payrolls profit and loss statements,_all_
federal and state forms:

Custom
Print

'

BRIDGE

IJ\00

~~~~:Far;~s-Partnerships

Pomeroy, Oh.

Jumbles: OEMON PAGAN . NAPKIN ALMOST
Answer: It brin~s a lump tQ a guy's throatADAM SAPPLE

BORN LOSER

Tri:-County
Bookkeeping
Service

618 E. Main

(Answers tomorrow)

t I, oonhllftiiiQ110puzziH, It •••11oblelor".75pooljMIId
INfiiJumble,clothltMWI~ lr,80Jt:S4, Norwood, N.J.07141.1rtel.:ra:
n~~me, eddtwa,llp oodla mekl ciMICka PIYabl• lo Nnras.

Eugene ~~ (614) 843-3322

Rf. J, Box S4
Racine, Oh.
· Ph. 614-8,3·2591
•
• ·
6·'15-tf c,

(IXJ(II'IJ

--No.

Yestelday s

·serving your area for 25 ye11rs
Call Now for Large Savings
For Free Estimate Call

Sizes frpm 4Xf:; to 12)(40

.I

.

REP~ENTWIN~

Utility Buildings

No., arrange the circled letters to
form the surp(lee answer, as suggested by lhe above canoon.

Print answer here:

ROOFING
·- -···-- -

...........
...... .. ·-·. . .......

MiddlePOrt,

I I K

·\ DETUIL

~~~~R~~~T. ~~~~~

RODNEY DOWNING-BROKER

Elc:Miing

IHEO IN PROGAESBI
ANDY CllllfFITH SHOW
-...scNEWS
.
Cl)(jj) ZOOM
8:30 (}).(!)NBC NEWS
CIIWHOOUNIT?'TheGreateatUn·
aolved Myateriea' A doaaler Qf the
'world' a moat widely ·publlclz:ed
- myatery cases · Jack the Ripper, ·
Uzzle Borden, Amelia Earhart and
otherala era eked open on thia thrill·
lng excluaive . Armed with aome
previously undisclosed ctuea,
you,' re the detective on the case of
these Intriguing unsolved punlea.
([) I LOVELUCV
([)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
• Cll !'iiD CBS NEWS
Cl) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(jj) OYER EASY 'Future ol Aging·
Holt: Hugh Downs. (Cioaed
.

Experienced Operators
available for local work .
• 2 rubber tire backhoes
el exc~vator hoe 1'4

·

rn•m•rnilblltli•
NEws
(})
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

8:oo

Building Supplies

3/ 8 inch rebar- 17c per foot
by 20 fl. section. only . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Noble
Summit Rd. , Middleport,
OH . 992·5724.

JULY28, 1880

Pul'ns

Loans

PARK FINANciA~
VA 11. VA Automatic
Loans, No .Down Pay·
menf. Federa·t Housing
Loans, 3% down on
S2S,OOO; 5% down on
bolance, FHA 265 SubSidy Program . FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort .
Open M·W· F 9:00 lo I :00
By Appointment
Ollice 992·7544
Home9'12 ·6191
107 Sycamore 51.
Pomeroy, OH .

-Alum: &amp; Vinyl Sldlng
-Soffit· Gutter
-Storm windows &amp;
doors
-Replocement
windows ·
-All types of
remodeling
-Roofing· Goroges
-Add·ons • Porches

TRACTOR SALE I Buy any ' GOLD AND
SILVER
International Harvester fc OINS OF THE WOR~D .
tractor 36 h.p. or larger 1 RINGS , · JEWELRY,
finance through 1HCC in- STER~ING Si~VER AND
terest free until March 1, MISC . ITEMS, PAYING
1981. Meigs Equipment Co., RECORD
HIGH ,Pomeroy, Oh . Ph . 614·992· HIGHEST UP·TO· DATE
2176.
MAY BE A LOT DIF·
PRICES , CONTACT ED
FERENT. 91&gt;2·3325 or ·
B'U RKETT
BARBER
992-387~.
-A~~ HAY &amp; Forage Equip·
SHOP, Ml DD~EPORT,
meot reduced for.-~ quick OH 10, O"R CALL 992·3476,
sale. Buy now 1 finance
through 1HCC interest free 63
L i vestock
until April 1, 1981 . Meigs
Equipment C,o., Pomeroy, JONES Meat Packing
Oh . Ph. 614·992·2176.
slaughtering, custorl)
processing, retai l meat.
Washington
Co. Rd. 248,
APPROXIMATE~Y
~
acres of land $500. an acre, Little Hocking, OH . 667·
20·acre of timber. 1974 MO· 6133.
8 John Deere skidder
$12,000., 420 John Deere ENGLISH SHEPHARD
Dozer $4,000, 2 ton heavy farm puppies, readY to go
~uty
1972 · Ford truck In 2 weeks, 1 806 diesel !rae·
$1,800, L ton GMC truck tor, silage wagon, New
)953 5600., 1 ton 1949 Chevy Holland chopper. 949·2680,
pickup with racks $600.,
1950 Ferguson tractor wllh
'. '
winch plows, grain drill
$1,600., fuel oil tank with
stand sso., new Royce CB
S50, 1953 Hardtop Pontiac 71
Autos for-sale
$700. has been restored. 1977 PONTIAC TRANS·
985·3590. Ezra Sheets, AM, fire mist red, 400 cubic
Reedsville.
· . inch motor, averages 17
m!les per gallon, power
·62
Wanted to Buy
brakes, 1111 wheel, power
·steering, am·fm stereo
CHIP WOOD. Poles max. radlo·tape player (eight
diameter 10" on largest track) fuzz buster, has 40
end. $12 p·er ton. , Bundled
channel c.b. radio with SSB
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
burglar alarm system, and
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt . 2,
20,800 actual miles. One
Pom~~oy 992·2689.
OWI\Ilr auto must be seen to
·,..
:i
be appreciated. Call 992·
· · o~o·' co;Ns, pocket waf-, 3061 . .
. ches. class rings, wedding · @19of9 LIN€9L~· fY;e doOr
bands, diamonds. Gold or
coupe. 62,154 actual miles.
silver. Call J. A . Wamsley,
Minimum effort to restore.
. 742·2331. • Treasure Chest
Wilma Hinerman, 6
~io
I Coin Shop, A then~ , OH . 592·
Fourth -Street, New Haven '
6462.
WV Ph . 304·882 ·?494

CALl BILL.GHILDS 992-2342

Est~te

11 '1, % lnlerest-30 Yrs •

Misc. Mercnanise

BRAND NEW girls 10
speed bike, AMF road·
master ' Scorcher' 985·43Al
aller 4:30p.m .

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unacramblt lh..., lour Jumbles .
one letter to each square, to form
. four Ofdin&amp;ry wqrda.

~ 3 cubic tool chest type
freezer. Phone992·5867,

UPRIGHT DEEP Freeze,
mantel grate for fireplace solid oak, 23" color TV,
1973 Vega wagon, 65,000
Warm Morning gas ~ heater,
20,000 gas heater . camper
t~r pickup. 742·2174.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

~ THATSCRAMB~EDWORD GAME

EVENING.

REAL ESTATE

BARTELS,Loan
Repres~V~Iatlve, 1100 East
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh.
Mortgage
money
available. All types home
financing,
new,, old, .
refinancing, and 2na mortgages. Phone 992· 7000 or
992·5732.

1t'i1llrul ID~

'

~~~~~~~~~~:~~::~~~~~~~-

sale
NEW. 3 Built·
bedroom
in home
kitchen,
tor
dining
room ,
large
recreation room, fireplace, ·
lots Of storage, 2_ baths, ·
garage, 1 acre lot. 992·3454.

-- --..

Housenold GOOds

..

~ ~ ~~ -

- ~·

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
Indoor-outdoor facilities .
AlsQ
AKC
registered
DObermans. 614·446·7795.

BIG SAVINGS on name
brand BEE~INE clothes.
Assorted sizes, current
summer styles, all reduced
to unbelievable prices.
Several
oulliiS
and
separate pieces on hand,
reason for selling, to make
room for fabulous new win·
ter line. Don't miss this
chance to expand yqur •
summer wardrobe with
beautiful , first rate quality
BEELINE clothes.
992·
3941.

21

Space tor Rent

' TRA I ~E R LOT for rent on
Kingsbury Road. 742·3122.

IN ·
SURANCE been 1 can your
celled?
~est
operator's license? Phone
992·2143.
AUTOMOBI~E

.~

MAYTAG
automatic
washer. Runs good $75. 773·
5013 alter 5 p.m .

SS
WILL CARE lor an elderly
person in my home. 99261J22.

THE MEIGS County Board
Retardation is
now filling a position as •
full lime secretary . Per·
sons interested in this
position should send a
resume! !summary of APARTMENT HOUSE lor
sale in Pomeroy . 992·61J22 .
education and experience)
to Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardalion, Court ' 1 STORY older home. 3
House, Pomeroy, Oh. 45769. · bedrooms, bath, insulation,
Resume' s will be accepted stprm w indows, central
until Aug. 5th. Meigs. Co. · heat, carport and garage
Brd. of Mental Retardation on lar ge lot on Long Street
Is an Equal Opportunity in Rutland , $14,500, 742Employer.
3074 .
of Mental

Furnisned 'Rooms

ROOM AND Board tor
working man only , $150.00
per month. 992-5007 ,

ED

Help Wanted •

51

53

Lots &amp; Acreage
35
1 ACRE of ground, full
basement consisting of
blocks only, near Tuppers
Plains. 667·3826.

Situations Wanted

-.

TRAILER ON large lot in
Syracuse, Ohio, no pets, tor
more information call 992·
3525, no Sunday cal ls . 12.8 Gibson upright deep
_please.
freeze . 992·3726 .

UNFURNISHED 12 x 60
BUDDY mobile home
located n.ear Chester with
finished 8 x 14 room . Com· 4
Apartment
pletely set up and .can be
for Rent
rented on premises. 985· ·
3510,
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts, Phone 992·5434 .

~

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

USED REFRIGERATOR
$20.00, ca n be seen at .400
Lasl'ey Street, Pomeroy.

MOB ILE HOME. Adults
only, utilities paid . 2 m iles
ott 7 on 143, Deposit 1
references req uired . 992·
3647 or see Steve or Sandy
Henderson .

.-DICK TRACY

--Wanted to Rent

COUPLE WI TH children
want farm to caretake in
exchange for rent. 8 years
experience
and
have
references. !='refer Metqs,
Athens, or Vinton ~ounlies.
1·614· 758·56 13.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

TWO bedroom tra i ler.
Ad ults only .
Brown 's
Trailer Court. Call992·3324.

JUNK CARS also pick up
car bodies,clean copper;
FIVE ROOM house, bath,
.6/J lb, radiators, .401b,
clean aluminum, 15 lb.
utility room, 'wall to wall
Riders Salvage, Rt. 4, St.
Carpet, storm doors and
Rl 124, Pomeroy, Ohio 992·
windows, aluminum siding,
54611.
. ·one car garage. Located on
Brownell Avenue, Middleport, Phone992·5204.

11

-·
47

41

MOBILE home tor sale,
$6500, land contract with
$500 down or will negot iate
cash sale . Also one
bedroom, built-in .bunks ,
48x10 mobile home, $2800,
land contract. $300 down .
Wri te J . Bowland , 15068
Empire Rd., Thornville,
OH . 43076.

REGI STER E D NUR SES.
Immediate opening tor
r ~ g i stered
nurses ex·
perienced in I.C.U., C.C. U.
as well as general staff
duty .
Sa lary
co m mensurate with exp. Con·
tact Teresa Collins RN,
Veterans
M emorial
Hospital, Pomeroy, Oh. 1·
614·,992·2104 .

'I -: TheU8.1lySentinel, Middleport:PomeroJ•, o., Tuesday, July 29, 1980

W CT l
1 VFN

l i t O M V F T I . - YF · T
VPK.KHSJ
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A FRIEND IS SOMEONE WHO CAN
SEE THROUGH YOU A,ND STILL ENJOYS THE SHOW.FARMERS'ALMA~AC

Lettermen'

7:58 CIJ NEWS UPDATE
8:00 CI&gt;8(!) THE MISADVENTURES
OF SHERIFF ~OBO
(}) OIIAL ROBERTS .
CII MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ••Ill "Tilt
Aco" 11178
Cll BASEBALL Atlanta Bravoe vo
New York Meta
(1)(12)8 HAPPY DAYSChaclli'a
errantly thrown apron Ianda on Ar·
nold 'a grill and soon the place Ia
ablaze~·trapping Ralph ,Potaieand
the Fonz In the men's room .

r.•fit~

G.I.'S A World War II
comedy focuaing on a aquad of
American soldiers who aerve a a
'mop·up' troops during the Italian
camJ!aign .
Cll!Ul NOVA 'A lslorAiom,Biefor
Bomb' The 'father of the H·bomb',
Dr. Edward Teller, diacuasea hie
controverelal theories. (Closed
Captlonedf(60 min a.)
8:30 (}) GOOD NEWS ·
CllLAVERNEANDSHIRLEYWhen
Laverneand Shirley board a train to
Canada, a man with a knife in his
back lalla dead In their compart·
mant sending them in the wildest
whodunit ever. (Pt. I. of a two~part
!J!Iaodel
(I) !liD SP!CIAL MOVIE PR£·
$ENTATION 'Network· 1976
Stars: Faye Dunaway, William Hoi·
den.
(ft) Ill THAT'S INCREDIBLE
Tonighta show will feature a fear·
lea a femalewho attempts 1 fantaa·
tic teat in ahot·airbaltoon, adentlat
who cures pain using clotheaplna,
and a young daredevil who jumpa
over carl speeding towards him at
over 80 miles per hour. (60 min a.)
8:58 (}) NEWS UPDATE
11:00 (l] 8 (!) SHARKS: THE DEATH
MACHINES Henry Fonda narratee
thla real-life adventure ap8cial faa ·
turing apectacularunderwaterfoo·
taga of sharks and chronicling the
story of Rodney Fox,tha only man
knowntohaveaurvlvedanaHackby
.~~a!_white ~hark . (86 mine.) ·
(1) 700CLUB
Cll (ft) Ill THREE'S COMPANY
Chrieay ia dying to l~arn who Ia
sending her secret love notea. eo
ahe eat a up a rendezvous at the •
Reagle
Beagle .
(Repeal)
(Gioaed·Captioned)
·
·
Cl)(jj)FLAMBARDS'PointloPolnt'
Auaaelland WJIIIam argUe, and aa 1
result, William decides to leave
Flambarda . (Closed Ceptloned)
.
, ~Omlna . )
8:30 Cll&lt;ft&gt;. TAXIThocabbieadecide
to enter the art world by buying a ·
painting at an auction hoping to
cash In big when the artist diaa.
(RtJ1!at)
10:00 lllaffi EISCHIEDEiechleduncovera evidence that the gangland
slaying ole famous disco owner
may have been the work of a veter·
an deteot:ve involved with the
mob .
Cii COMEDY TONIGHT ·Here
Coma a· Summer· Swing Into aum·
merwllhfavorlteMartlnMull .lnzany
aketchea, th la exclusive a81utee
the aunnieet and funniest days of
· aummer.
Cll&lt;ft&gt;.HAR.TTOHART Jonalhan
and Jennltar are on opposite ends
of amurdercaaeaa they try to solve
a baffling mystery in Which their
beat friends are the accused .
(Hepeat; 60 mina.)
Cl) LORD MOUNTBATTEN: MAN
FOR THE CENTURY Whan Chur·
chill torgea the Grand Alliance,
Mountbatten relinquishes. hia a a·
aiQnment locating enemy airfield I
to become Chief of Combined
Operat ions and Is designated
Honorary Lt . GeneralandHanorary
Air Marshall . (Closed Captioned)
W_Omins.)
(jj) NEWS
10:28 (}) NEWS UPDATE
10:30 (})FAITH 20
(I) TB$ EVENING NEWS
(jj) OVER EABY 'Futuro of Aging·
Hoat: Hugh.. Oowna . (Cioaed
·
Capllonod)
10:88 (}) NEWSUPDAT~""'""'.
11:00
ct
\J!J \llll ' " '
NEWS
(}) TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
(II BASEBALL: RACE FOR THE
PENNANT Thi s weekly baoeball
aerie a steps up to bat for ita third
aaaaon . Len Berman and Maury
Willa recap the week 's baaeball
action and eummarize the critical
~ya and playera.
W DAVEAUENATLARGE
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
11 :28 (})NEWS UPDATE
11 !30 llleC!l THE TONIGHT SHOW
'Beat Ot Caraon' (Repeat ; 90
mlna.)' ,
(}) ROBS BAGLEY SHOW
CII MOYIE · (BIOGRAPHY) .. 1'1
"He•rt h•t·" 1880
([)MOVIE-(COMEOY·WESTERN)
"Pard!!__.,.... 1156

a

m•

m•

••t,\

oU 1910 King F••turu Syndlc•te. Inc .

-~--

.,

�8- The Dail~ Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. Julyj!9, 1980 ·

Heavy _ security su~ounds
£00eral for deposed Shah

"''

•

. . CAIRO (AP l _:_ President Anwar
Sadat gave his old friend deposed
Shah Mohanunad Reza Pahlavi a
Moslem state funeral todaY surroun·
ded by one ri the heaviest security
guards ever seen iri Cairo to protect
the dead man's family from

1

0

~Uon.

White-unifoFilled police · armed
with semi·automatic rifles and carbines lined "the !~mile route along
which Sadat·and the Pahlavi family
walked beh$1 - the closed, flag·
draped coffin to the AI Rifaie

Hostages' fate remains dark

MoSque wllwe It was to be entombed.'
Most of the police stood shoulder
to shoulder and held ropes to contain
the expected crowds. But there were
few spectatOrs behind the police
lines as six ,J1orses pulled the coffin
on a caisson through the streets.
Sadat led the procession behind
the caisson, flanked by former
President Richard Nixon and the
dead man's oldest son and heir, for·
mer Crown PJ:ince Reza, 19.
Plainclothesmen were in side
streets and on rOQftops along the
route. Machine-gun crews were
, stationed on the roofs at strategic
points. Truckloads of riot police
were parked in side streets, and
military police and riot police were
deployed throughout the area.
The body of the 66-year-old former
monarch was brought in a closed
coffin this morning from the
military hospital where he died Sun·
day to the Abdeen Palace, where
Sadat's offices are located in the
center of Cairo.
·
Draped in the red, green and white
imperial flag of Iran, it was placed
on a two-foot-high dais in the center
of the Ioo-foot·square marble central
ball and lay in state. Four Egyptian
officers in khaki drfSS uniform fro~ :
the corrunandos, army, navy and 811'
force stood at each comer, and a
brass incense burner seven feet
from the head of the catafalque per·
fumed the hall.
The shah's widow, fonner Empress Farah Diba, arrived in a black
limousine with Prince Reza. The
shah's twin sillier, Princess Ashraf,
came after her in a separate car.
Both women were dreSsed in black,
with black scarves on their heads.
,, They were met by Sadat, wearing
the uniform of the commander·in·
chief of the Egyptian armed forces,
and his wife, Jihan, in black with a
long black scarf around her head.
The two families paused briefly by
the coffin, went upstairs to Sadat's
. office, then came back down again
for the silent reading of prayers .
from the Koran after the arrival of
other relatives and close friends of
the Pahlavis, Egyptian officials and
representatives of foreign govern·
ments.
The most prominent foreign mour·
ners were two out-of·power former
allies of the dead man, Nixon and ex·
King Constantine of Greece. Foreign
governments either designated their
ambassadors in Cairo to represent
them or sent no one to the funeral for
fear of angering the revolutionary
regime that drove Pahlavi from his
throne 17 months ago.
Nixon came as a Rrivate citizen, to
pay his "last respects to a friend for
30 years, a loyal friend and ally of
the U.S.," he said on his arrival
Monday. He told reporters the Car·
ter administration 's failure to give
decisive support to the shah during
the revolution against him was "one
of the black pages of American
foreign policy" and his treatment by
the administration after he left Iran

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
qualifications of nominees for the
The speaker of the Iranian
premiership and ministerial posts.
Parliament says parliamentary
It said because of this, Bani-Sadr
Committees will begin discussing
asked the Majlis to leave the vote on
what to do with the American
Mir-Salim "dormant until further
notice."
hostages early next month, according to a Japanese report. But '
The newspap e r Islamic
,Tehran Radio announced a new
Revolution, which 1$ close to Bani·
i'l , delay, the postponement of the Sadr, said in an editorial that the
lawmakers' vote to confirm the
death in Cairo Sunday of the deposed
Iranian republic 's first prime
shah solved one problem for the
minister.
United States, but it must still return
Japan's Kyodo news Sljrvice said 'his assets before the hostages can be
Speaker Ali Akbar Rarsanjanl told a
released. The pilper urged the
religious meetjng Sunday the death
United States to "come to its sen·
of Shah Mohammad. Reza Pahlavi · ses" and "transfer all of the shah's
assets to Iran.~·
changed the problem of the 52 captive Americans somewhat, and a
The Iranian government has filed
a suit in New York demanding $56.5
committee of the Majlis, the new
YESTERYEAR - An old fashioned ' ice cream
housed a service station and has housed,several other
:Parliament, would take up the
billion which it contends· the shah
businesses over the years. The restaurant is open from ·
parlor has been created at Max's Restaurant at the
problem in early August.
and ,his family diverted from the
· corner of Third and Main Sts., in Middleport. Articles
&amp;.a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday through Saturday. En·
Later, however, Tehran Radio annational treasury and transferred
joying "an ice cream" in the new parlor are Abby
from old homes and auction sales were used to
.nounced that President Abothassan· . abroad. But Robert Armao, the
recreate the ice cream parlor at the restaurant which
Blake, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.'John Blake, and Amy
Bani-Sadr asked the Majlis to post·
American public relations man who
Blake, rigl)t, daughter of the owners. In the
opened recently and is operated by Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
pone its vote on his nomination of
was the shah's principal spokesman
Blake. The quick order restaurant, named for the
background is Ruth Ann Blake, also a daughter of the
national police chief Mostafa Mlr·
during his,exile, said in Cairo that he
Blakes' son, is located in the structure which was for·
owners, who is dipping ice cream as an employe of the
Salim to be prime minister. Since a
left a fortune of between $50 million
merly the Tracy Fire Equipment Co. Many years ago it · new establishments.
prime minister must be installed .and $75 million.
before· the Majlis can get down to
Today was the 5_2 American
other business, the new delay inhostages' 269th day in captivity.
dicated discussion of the hostages
In another development, six more
would also be postponed.
people ' were reported executed by
The postponement of the vote
the revolutionary regime. Radio
touched off s~tion tbat the . Tehran said they included an Iraqi
spy in Abadan, the oil refinery cen·
COSHOCI'ON - me effects &lt;t
stl'l!lllent, possibly the only one of its
colation, and actual crop use of nomination of Mir-Salim had run into
opposition,
and
that
more
weeks
ter in the southwest; two drug
agriculture on water quality are
kind in the world, has an 8-foot deep
water. They were given the option of
of
political
deadlock
anll
·
dealers
in the southeastern province
being investigated in a joint effort by
natural soil block equipped to
taking the tours during either the
maneuvering
were
in
prospect.
of Baluchistan, a man and a woman.
the.Ohio Agricultural· Research and
measure surface runoff, per·
morning or afternoon.
Press
reports
received
in
London
convicted
of adultery, corruption
Development Center(OARDC) and
said
he
apparently
was
opposed
by
and
prostitution
in the northeast
the USDA Science and Education
town
of
Neyshabur
and a man
some
fundamentalist
members
ci
Administration (SEA). Ohio County
the
Islamic
Republican
Party,
in
the
western
city of Ker·
executed
Conunissioners, including those
which
has~·
majority
in
the
Majlis.
man
for
distributing
heroin
and
from Meigs County, got a first·hand
resisting
officers.
Radio
Tehran
said
the
Majlis
had
look at this important researth
set up a conunittee to examine the
recently during 1980 County ComROBERT
MARTIN
FREE
CLOTHING
DAY
missioners Day at the North ApE. R. Martin received word MonFree clothing day will be held at
palacruan Experimental Watershed
day
afternoon of the death of his
The Salvation Army Thursday, July
near Coshocton.
brother,
Robert Martin of ColumbuS
Leslie Fultz, Pomeroy Cement
Commissioners also had an op- 31, from 10 a.m. until noon. All area
at
Mount
Carmel Hospital West.
Block Co., is the Meigs County
portunity to visit · the Pomerene residents in need of clothing are
Other local surviv9rs include Osby
Chairman for the Ohio Retail Har·
Forest Laboratory during the day's welcome.
and
Albert
Martin.
Two
brothers,
dwa'rd Political Action Committee
program, which was spons~red by
Herbert
and
Vinson
Martin,
which recently held a membership
the Ohio Cooperative Extension
him
in
d&lt;;!!th.
preceded
ASK
TO
REPORT
drive
here. The group, known as
Sesrvice and OARDC in cooperation
Meigs
Local
Band
students,
in·
ORHPAC,
was formed to channel
with the County Commissioner
eluding
flags
,
rifles
and
majorettes,
private
campaign
contributions
Atbe01
Uves1o&lt;to
Salet
A5sociation of Ohio and the County
Milk contract given .
to
report
to
the
high
school
band
from
members
of
the
hardware inare
Commisioners of Coshocton County.
Ju.ly Zl, ltiG
room
Thursday
at
6
p.m.
Band
camp
CATI'LE
PRICES
:
to
those
candidates
for state
dustry
A contract for providing dairy
USDA and OARDC scientists have
Fe&lt;der Steers: (Good and Choice) J00.600 lbs.
will
be
and
fair
information
office who have shown an unproducts to the district was awarded
been conducting land and water use
00.71: 50t-71101bs. :MoM.
derstanding of industry needs and
Feeder Reiten: {Good and Choice) 300-600 lbs.
research at Coshocton for more than · distributed. "!'he balance for band to Valley Bell Products when the
5UL50; lOt-700 lbs. 50-U.7i.
camp may be paid at this time . .
problems.
Southern Local School District
40 years. Thirty small watersheds,
Feeder Bulls: (Good and Choice ) J00.600 lbs.
64-73;
100'7001bs.
IU9.7i.
Since corporate political con·
Board
of
Education
met
in
recessed
ranging from I to 300 acres in size I
,
lbughter Bulls : COver I,IIOOibs.) i0-52
- MEETSWEDNESDAY
tributions
are prohibited by Ohio
session Monday night.
are instrumented with runoff and
Slaughter Cows: UUilties 41.50-45.75; Canners
The Long Bottom Community
and Cutter!31 .2$-43.
law, political action committees like
The board agreed to give 12-month
precipitation gauges, automatic
Cow and Call Pairs: (ByllleUnii)44HOO.
Association will hold its monthly
ORHPAC have been formed to supemployes the day off on Aug. 15 so
flow samplers, and soil moisture
Veals: (Choice and prime ) 77-91.
meeting at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the
port their group's position. This is
&amp;by Calves: (By the Head) 71).112.50.
that they can attend the Meigs Counmeasurement sites.
HOG PRICES :
.
community
building.
All
residents
s
imilar to the political efforts that
ty
Fair.
·
Commissioners were given wagon
HOf!&gt; (No. I, Barrows and GUu ) :IIJ0.230 lbs.
invited.
are
.:!.5CJ.t3.110.
unions and professiqna I
labor
It
was
agreed
alSo
·to
fill
certain
tours of research sites where studies
Butcher Sows21-37 .35.
organizations
have conducted for
positions
such
as
cheerleading
ad·
were explained in stripmine
Butcher Boars21-34.2$.
many
years.
visor,
coaching,
etc.·
with
non·
Pig:!
:
I
By
the
Head
I
41i()o41.
Feeder
reclamation, control of pollution
was "shameful."
SHEEP PRICES:
NIGHT SWIMMING
certified personnel if certified per·:
from barnlot runoff, n()otillage com
Feeder Lambs 541.ZMIO.
The White House declined to an·
Starting Sunday, the Middleport
sonnei· for such posts are not
production, and no-tillage pasture
swer
Nixon, and the State Depart·
.
.
available. An adv1111ce draw was aprenovation. One unique facility the Pool will have night swimming for
ment
designated Ambassador
adults only from 7to 9p.m., weather
proved and a supplement to the ap·Visitors exas;nined closely w the
Alfred
Atherton to attend the
permitting. .
.
propriatioll!l was adopted. The next
weighing lysimeter. This in·
Corbett• Patterson has agreed to funeral.
meeting was set for 7 p.m. on Aug .
LONDON FAVORITE
the chairmanship of _the St. Jude
The shah died after a six·year bat·
19.
Americans Uvlng · in Europe
Children's Research Hospital Bike- tie against lymph cancer which
named London··as ohe Of the three
A·Thon in Syracuse, to raise funds to resulted in removal of his gall bladcities they ,would like best as an
support the hospital, according to der and his spleen and·spread to his
overseas home. The other two
William J. Kirwen, Director of liver. Chemotherapy for the cancer
TOURISf VISITS UP
favorites
were
Geneva
and
Zurich.
Development
at the internationally so weakened his body's resistance
More than 800,000 tourists visited
The
several
hundred
families
which
recognized
hospital.
that he developed a series of inChina in 1979, ·30 percent more than
took
part
in
the
survey
based
their
' St. Jude Children's Research fections, and it was a hemorrhage
in 1978, according to the China
choice on weather, food, cultural Hospital was founded by entertainer from one of these, an abscess on the
Travel and Tourism Administrative
amenities and working conditions.
Danny Thomas. The institution pancreas, that killed him.
Bureau.
opened its doors to the public in 1962
His lO-man team of doctors in a
to combat catastrophic diseases ·- sl.!j~ement Monday said death was .
which affect our children. St. Jude's due to a "shock to the circulatory
is non-sectarian, non-discriminatory system" brought on by , com·
and completely free of charge to all plications from cancer.
patients. ·
·

Commissioner"Day observed
Meigs County

happ~nings

Chairman named·

-··-

•

Suppl~t to 1be GalliiiOlis DallY Tribune, The_Dally Senw;el, aod Pl. P!!!~~~~·
OPEN DAILY
'

HERE'S THE
KEY I
·to FINANCING

~

YOUR NEW CAR

T

J.\ to'lv cos·r
J.\u·ro lOJ.\i'l

JEWELRY STORE
OF POMEROY

·wear" now . buy1ng your old gold and
silver. We pay you tne nignest possible
price. We also acce~t trade·ins
towards tne purcnase of new mercnan·
dise. •

TlST DRIVE A

1980

AT ~OUR

In A New

Non-Aerosol Spray!

WE WILL BUY - OR TRADE

LOCAL

NO CHARGE
-FoRSOUR OFFER

DEALER
We'II'Arrange the Most Convenient Terms
. ·For Your Budget
Open M-w., 91113
Thurs. &amp; Sal. 91il12 Friday 91il 3 &amp; S Iii 7

•
'

'.

MlDDLEPORT,OH • .
~eposlts Insured to S100,ooo

1.1 FL. OZ.·

$275

IN EMERAUDE. U\IMANT.
LORIGAN,

SELL TO THE JEWELRY PROFESSIONALS .

'

THE CENTRAL TRUST .CO., NA. ·
Member FDIC

. -10KGold
-14 KGold
-18 KGold
..::.oentill Gold
-Silver Coins
-Old Pocket Watcnes
-Platinum

Special ·

•VISA

•M/C
•LAYAWAY
Your Diamond Jeweler
Court
Pomeroy

Ill

Hours:
M.-w. 9-5
Thur. 9· 12
Fri . 9-8
Sat. 9·5
992-7054

~------~

COTY C~SMETICS ON 2nd FLOOR

ClOSED THURSDAY, JULY'31 FOR INVENTORY

ELBERFELD$

IN -PoMEROY

.
BAVINCi , PL.A.C~'m

· WED. THRU SAT. SALE
J _ ,.

'

3

129
.

97

'G·Pr. Pkg.
&gt;Qur 5.88 .
Men's crew socks. .Cot·
ton/stretch nylon .

1200
6PACKS
ONLY
Your Cholce :·

~.
fQR

-

..P

. Diet, Mt. Dew

·~

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                  <text>8- The Dail~ Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. Julyj!9, 1980 ·&#13;
&#13;
Heavy _ security su~ounds&#13;
£00eral for deposed Shah&#13;
&#13;
"''&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
. . CAIRO (AP l _:_ President Anwar&#13;
Sadat gave his old friend deposed&#13;
Shah Mohanunad Reza Pahlavi a&#13;
Moslem state funeral todaY surroun·&#13;
ded by one ri the heaviest security&#13;
guards ever seen iri Cairo to protect&#13;
the dead man's family from&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
~Uon.&#13;
&#13;
White-unifoFilled police · armed&#13;
with semi·automatic rifles and carbines lined "the !~mile route along&#13;
which Sadat·and the Pahlavi family&#13;
walked beh$1 - the closed, flag·&#13;
draped coffin to the AI Rifaie&#13;
&#13;
Hostages' fate remains dark&#13;
&#13;
MoSque wllwe It was to be entombed.'&#13;
Most of the police stood shoulder&#13;
to shoulder and held ropes to contain&#13;
the expected crowds. But there were&#13;
few spectatOrs behind the police&#13;
lines as six ,J1orses pulled the coffin&#13;
on a caisson through the streets.&#13;
Sadat led the procession behind&#13;
the caisson, flanked by former&#13;
President Richard Nixon and the&#13;
dead man's oldest son and heir, for·&#13;
mer Crown PJ:ince Reza, 19.&#13;
Plainclothesmen were in side&#13;
streets and on rOQftops along the&#13;
route. Machine-gun crews were&#13;
, stationed on the roofs at strategic&#13;
points. Truckloads of riot police&#13;
were parked in side streets, and&#13;
military police and riot police were&#13;
deployed throughout the area.&#13;
The body of the 66-year-old former&#13;
monarch was brought in a closed&#13;
coffin this morning from the&#13;
military hospital where he died Sun·&#13;
day to the Abdeen Palace, where&#13;
Sadat's offices are located in the&#13;
center of Cairo.&#13;
·&#13;
Draped in the red, green and white&#13;
imperial flag of Iran, it was placed&#13;
on a two-foot-high dais in the center&#13;
of the Ioo-foot·square marble central&#13;
ball and lay in state. Four Egyptian&#13;
officers in khaki drfSS uniform fro~ :&#13;
the corrunandos, army, navy and 811'&#13;
force stood at each comer, and a&#13;
brass incense burner seven feet&#13;
from the head of the catafalque per·&#13;
fumed the hall.&#13;
The shah's widow, fonner Empress Farah Diba, arrived in a black&#13;
limousine with Prince Reza. The&#13;
shah's twin sillier, Princess Ashraf,&#13;
came after her in a separate car.&#13;
Both women were dreSsed in black,&#13;
with black scarves on their heads.&#13;
,, They were met by Sadat, wearing&#13;
the uniform of the commander·in·&#13;
chief of the Egyptian armed forces,&#13;
and his wife, Jihan, in black with a&#13;
long black scarf around her head.&#13;
The two families paused briefly by&#13;
the coffin, went upstairs to Sadat's&#13;
. office, then came back down again&#13;
for the silent reading of prayers .&#13;
from the Koran after the arrival of&#13;
other relatives and close friends of&#13;
the Pahlavis, Egyptian officials and&#13;
representatives of foreign govern·&#13;
ments.&#13;
The most prominent foreign mour·&#13;
ners were two out-of·power former&#13;
allies of the dead man, Nixon and ex·&#13;
King Constantine of Greece. Foreign&#13;
governments either designated their&#13;
ambassadors in Cairo to represent&#13;
them or sent no one to the funeral for&#13;
fear of angering the revolutionary&#13;
regime that drove Pahlavi from his&#13;
throne 17 months ago.&#13;
Nixon came as a Rrivate citizen, to&#13;
pay his "last respects to a friend for&#13;
30 years, a loyal friend and ally of&#13;
the U.S.," he said on his arrival&#13;
Monday. He told reporters the Car·&#13;
ter administration 's failure to give&#13;
decisive support to the shah during&#13;
the revolution against him was "one&#13;
of the black pages of American&#13;
foreign policy" and his treatment by&#13;
the administration after he left Iran&#13;
&#13;
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS&#13;
qualifications of nominees for the&#13;
The speaker of the Iranian&#13;
premiership and ministerial posts.&#13;
Parliament says parliamentary&#13;
It said because of this, Bani-Sadr&#13;
Committees will begin discussing&#13;
asked the Majlis to leave the vote on&#13;
what to do with the American&#13;
Mir-Salim "dormant until further&#13;
notice."&#13;
hostages early next month, according to a Japanese report. But '&#13;
The newspap e r Islamic&#13;
,Tehran Radio announced a new&#13;
Revolution, which 1$ close to Bani·&#13;
i'l , delay, the postponement of the Sadr, said in an editorial that the&#13;
lawmakers' vote to confirm the&#13;
death in Cairo Sunday of the deposed&#13;
Iranian republic 's first prime&#13;
shah solved one problem for the&#13;
minister.&#13;
United States, but it must still return&#13;
Japan's Kyodo news Sljrvice said 'his assets before the hostages can be&#13;
Speaker Ali Akbar Rarsanjanl told a&#13;
released. The pilper urged the&#13;
religious meetjng Sunday the death&#13;
United States to "come to its sen·&#13;
of Shah Mohammad. Reza Pahlavi · ses" and "transfer all of the shah's&#13;
assets to Iran.~·&#13;
changed the problem of the 52 captive Americans somewhat, and a&#13;
The Iranian government has filed&#13;
a suit in New York demanding $56.5&#13;
committee of the Majlis, the new&#13;
YESTERYEAR - An old fashioned ' ice cream&#13;
housed a service station and has housed,several other&#13;
:Parliament, would take up the&#13;
billion which it contends· the shah&#13;
businesses over the years. The restaurant is open from ·&#13;
parlor has been created at Max's Restaurant at the&#13;
problem in early August.&#13;
and ,his family diverted from the&#13;
· corner of Third and Main Sts., in Middleport. Articles&#13;
&amp;.a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday through Saturday. En·&#13;
Later, however, Tehran Radio annational treasury and transferred&#13;
joying "an ice cream" in the new parlor are Abby&#13;
from old homes and auction sales were used to&#13;
.nounced that President Abothassan· . abroad. But Robert Armao, the&#13;
recreate the ice cream parlor at the restaurant which&#13;
Blake, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.'John Blake, and Amy&#13;
Bani-Sadr asked the Majlis to post·&#13;
American public relations man who&#13;
Blake, rigl)t, daughter of the owners. In the&#13;
opened recently and is operated by Mr. and Mrs. Eddie&#13;
pone its vote on his nomination of&#13;
was the shah's principal spokesman&#13;
Blake. The quick order restaurant, named for the&#13;
background is Ruth Ann Blake, also a daughter of the&#13;
national police chief Mostafa Mlr·&#13;
during his,exile, said in Cairo that he&#13;
Blakes' son, is located in the structure which was for·&#13;
owners, who is dipping ice cream as an employe of the&#13;
Salim to be prime minister. Since a&#13;
left a fortune of between $50 million&#13;
merly the Tracy Fire Equipment Co. Many years ago it · new establishments.&#13;
prime minister must be installed .and $75 million.&#13;
before· the Majlis can get down to&#13;
Today was the 5_2 American&#13;
other business, the new delay inhostages' 269th day in captivity.&#13;
dicated discussion of the hostages&#13;
In another development, six more&#13;
would also be postponed.&#13;
people ' were reported executed by&#13;
The postponement of the vote&#13;
the revolutionary regime. Radio&#13;
touched off s~tion tbat the . Tehran said they included an Iraqi&#13;
spy in Abadan, the oil refinery cen·&#13;
COSHOCI'ON - me effects &lt;t&#13;
stl'l!lllent, possibly the only one of its&#13;
colation, and actual crop use of nomination of Mir-Salim had run into&#13;
opposition,&#13;
and&#13;
that&#13;
more&#13;
weeks&#13;
ter in the southwest; two drug&#13;
agriculture on water quality are&#13;
kind in the world, has an 8-foot deep&#13;
water. They were given the option of&#13;
of&#13;
political&#13;
deadlock&#13;
anll&#13;
·&#13;
dealers&#13;
in the southeastern province&#13;
being investigated in a joint effort by&#13;
natural soil block equipped to&#13;
taking the tours during either the&#13;
maneuvering&#13;
were&#13;
in&#13;
prospect.&#13;
of Baluchistan, a man and a woman.&#13;
the.Ohio Agricultural· Research and&#13;
measure surface runoff, per·&#13;
morning or afternoon.&#13;
Press&#13;
reports&#13;
received&#13;
in&#13;
London&#13;
convicted&#13;
of adultery, corruption&#13;
Development Center(OARDC) and&#13;
said&#13;
he&#13;
apparently&#13;
was&#13;
opposed&#13;
by&#13;
and&#13;
prostitution&#13;
in the northeast&#13;
the USDA Science and Education&#13;
town&#13;
of&#13;
Neyshabur&#13;
and a man&#13;
some&#13;
fundamentalist&#13;
members&#13;
ci&#13;
Administration (SEA). Ohio County&#13;
the&#13;
Islamic&#13;
Republican&#13;
Party,&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
western&#13;
city of Ker·&#13;
executed&#13;
Conunissioners, including those&#13;
which&#13;
has~·&#13;
majority&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Majlis.&#13;
man&#13;
for&#13;
distributing&#13;
heroin&#13;
and&#13;
from Meigs County, got a first·hand&#13;
resisting&#13;
officers.&#13;
Radio&#13;
Tehran&#13;
said&#13;
the&#13;
Majlis&#13;
had&#13;
look at this important researth&#13;
set up a conunittee to examine the&#13;
recently during 1980 County ComROBERT&#13;
MARTIN&#13;
FREE&#13;
CLOTHING&#13;
DAY&#13;
missioners Day at the North ApE. R. Martin received word MonFree clothing day will be held at&#13;
palacruan Experimental Watershed&#13;
day&#13;
afternoon of the death of his&#13;
The Salvation Army Thursday, July&#13;
near Coshocton.&#13;
brother,&#13;
Robert Martin of ColumbuS&#13;
Leslie Fultz, Pomeroy Cement&#13;
Commissioners also had an op- 31, from 10 a.m. until noon. All area&#13;
at&#13;
Mount&#13;
Carmel Hospital West.&#13;
Block Co., is the Meigs County&#13;
portunity to visit · the Pomerene residents in need of clothing are&#13;
Other local surviv9rs include Osby&#13;
Chairman for the Ohio Retail Har·&#13;
Forest Laboratory during the day's welcome.&#13;
and&#13;
Albert&#13;
Martin.&#13;
Two&#13;
brothers,&#13;
dwa'rd Political Action Committee&#13;
program, which was spons~red by&#13;
Herbert&#13;
and&#13;
Vinson&#13;
Martin,&#13;
which recently held a membership&#13;
the Ohio Cooperative Extension&#13;
him&#13;
in&#13;
d&lt;;!!th.&#13;
preceded&#13;
ASK&#13;
TO&#13;
REPORT&#13;
drive&#13;
here. The group, known as&#13;
Sesrvice and OARDC in cooperation&#13;
Meigs&#13;
Local&#13;
Band&#13;
students,&#13;
in·&#13;
ORHPAC,&#13;
was formed to channel&#13;
with the County Commissioner&#13;
eluding&#13;
flags&#13;
,&#13;
rifles&#13;
and&#13;
majorettes,&#13;
private&#13;
campaign&#13;
contributions&#13;
Atbe01&#13;
Uves1o&lt;to&#13;
Salet&#13;
A5sociation of Ohio and the County&#13;
Milk contract given .&#13;
to&#13;
report&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
high&#13;
school&#13;
band&#13;
from&#13;
members&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
hardware inare&#13;
Commisioners of Coshocton County.&#13;
Ju.ly Zl, ltiG&#13;
room&#13;
Thursday&#13;
at&#13;
6&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Band&#13;
camp&#13;
CATI'LE&#13;
PRICES&#13;
:&#13;
to&#13;
those&#13;
candidates&#13;
for state&#13;
dustry&#13;
A contract for providing dairy&#13;
USDA and OARDC scientists have&#13;
Fe&lt;der Steers: (Good and Choice) J00.600 lbs.&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
and&#13;
fair&#13;
information&#13;
office who have shown an unproducts to the district was awarded&#13;
been conducting land and water use&#13;
00.71: 50t-71101bs. :MoM.&#13;
derstanding of industry needs and&#13;
Feeder Reiten: {Good and Choice) 300-600 lbs.&#13;
research at Coshocton for more than · distributed. "!'he balance for band to Valley Bell Products when the&#13;
5UL50; lOt-700 lbs. 50-U.7i.&#13;
camp may be paid at this time . .&#13;
problems.&#13;
Southern Local School District&#13;
40 years. Thirty small watersheds,&#13;
Feeder Bulls: (Good and Choice ) J00.600 lbs.&#13;
64-73;&#13;
100'7001bs.&#13;
IU9.7i.&#13;
Since corporate political con·&#13;
Board&#13;
of&#13;
Education&#13;
met&#13;
in&#13;
recessed&#13;
ranging from I to 300 acres in size I&#13;
,&#13;
lbughter Bulls : COver I,IIOOibs.) i0-52&#13;
- MEETSWEDNESDAY&#13;
tributions&#13;
are prohibited by Ohio&#13;
session Monday night.&#13;
are instrumented with runoff and&#13;
Slaughter Cows: UUilties 41.50-45.75; Canners&#13;
The Long Bottom Community&#13;
and Cutter!31 .2$-43.&#13;
law, political action committees like&#13;
The board agreed to give 12-month&#13;
precipitation gauges, automatic&#13;
Cow and Call Pairs: (ByllleUnii)44HOO.&#13;
Association will hold its monthly&#13;
ORHPAC have been formed to supemployes the day off on Aug. 15 so&#13;
flow samplers, and soil moisture&#13;
Veals: (Choice and prime ) 77-91.&#13;
meeting at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the&#13;
port their group's position. This is&#13;
&amp;by Calves: (By the Head) 71).112.50.&#13;
that they can attend the Meigs Counmeasurement sites.&#13;
HOG PRICES :&#13;
.&#13;
community&#13;
building.&#13;
All&#13;
residents&#13;
s&#13;
imilar to the political efforts that&#13;
ty&#13;
Fair.&#13;
·&#13;
Commissioners were given wagon&#13;
HOf!&gt; (No. I, Barrows and GUu ) :IIJ0.230 lbs.&#13;
invited.&#13;
are&#13;
.:!.5CJ.t3.110.&#13;
unions and professiqna I&#13;
labor&#13;
It&#13;
was&#13;
agreed&#13;
alSo&#13;
·to&#13;
fill&#13;
certain&#13;
tours of research sites where studies&#13;
Butcher Sows21-37 .35.&#13;
organizations&#13;
have conducted for&#13;
positions&#13;
such&#13;
as&#13;
cheerleading&#13;
ad·&#13;
were explained in stripmine&#13;
Butcher Boars21-34.2$.&#13;
many&#13;
years.&#13;
visor,&#13;
coaching,&#13;
etc.·&#13;
with&#13;
non·&#13;
Pig:!&#13;
:&#13;
I&#13;
By&#13;
the&#13;
Head&#13;
I&#13;
41i()o41.&#13;
Feeder&#13;
reclamation, control of pollution&#13;
was "shameful."&#13;
SHEEP PRICES:&#13;
NIGHT SWIMMING&#13;
certified personnel if certified per·:&#13;
from barnlot runoff, n()otillage com&#13;
Feeder Lambs 541.ZMIO.&#13;
The White House declined to an·&#13;
Starting Sunday, the Middleport&#13;
sonnei· for such posts are not&#13;
production, and no-tillage pasture&#13;
swer&#13;
Nixon, and the State Depart·&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
available. An adv1111ce draw was aprenovation. One unique facility the Pool will have night swimming for&#13;
ment&#13;
designated Ambassador&#13;
adults only from 7to 9p.m., weather&#13;
proved and a supplement to the ap·Visitors exas;nined closely w the&#13;
Alfred&#13;
Atherton to attend the&#13;
permitting. .&#13;
.&#13;
propriatioll!l was adopted. The next&#13;
weighing lysimeter. This in·&#13;
Corbett• Patterson has agreed to funeral.&#13;
meeting was set for 7 p.m. on Aug .&#13;
LONDON FAVORITE&#13;
the chairmanship of _the St. Jude&#13;
The shah died after a six·year bat·&#13;
19.&#13;
Americans Uvlng · in Europe&#13;
Children's Research Hospital Bike- tie against lymph cancer which&#13;
named London··as ohe Of the three&#13;
A·Thon in Syracuse, to raise funds to resulted in removal of his gall bladcities they ,would like best as an&#13;
support the hospital, according to der and his spleen and·spread to his&#13;
overseas home. The other two&#13;
William J. Kirwen, Director of liver. Chemotherapy for the cancer&#13;
TOURISf VISITS UP&#13;
favorites&#13;
were&#13;
Geneva&#13;
and&#13;
Zurich.&#13;
Development&#13;
at the internationally so weakened his body's resistance&#13;
More than 800,000 tourists visited&#13;
The&#13;
several&#13;
hundred&#13;
families&#13;
which&#13;
recognized&#13;
hospital.&#13;
that he developed a series of inChina in 1979, ·30 percent more than&#13;
took&#13;
part&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
survey&#13;
based&#13;
their&#13;
' St. Jude Children's Research fections, and it was a hemorrhage&#13;
in 1978, according to the China&#13;
choice on weather, food, cultural Hospital was founded by entertainer from one of these, an abscess on the&#13;
Travel and Tourism Administrative&#13;
amenities and working conditions.&#13;
Danny Thomas. The institution pancreas, that killed him.&#13;
Bureau.&#13;
opened its doors to the public in 1962&#13;
His lO-man team of doctors in a&#13;
to combat catastrophic diseases ·- sl.!j~ement Monday said death was .&#13;
which affect our children. St. Jude's due to a "shock to the circulatory&#13;
is non-sectarian, non-discriminatory system" brought on by , com·&#13;
and completely free of charge to all plications from cancer.&#13;
patients. ·&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
Commissioner"Day observed&#13;
Meigs County&#13;
&#13;
happ~nings&#13;
&#13;
Chairman named·&#13;
&#13;
-··-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Suppl~t to 1be GalliiiOlis DallY Tribune, The_Dally Senw;el, aod Pl. P!!!~~~~·&#13;
OPEN DAILY&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
HERE'S THE&#13;
KEY I&#13;
·to FINANCING&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
YOUR NEW CAR&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
J.\ to'lv cos·r&#13;
J.\u·ro lOJ.\i'l&#13;
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JEWELRY STORE&#13;
OF POMEROY&#13;
&#13;
·wear" now . buy1ng your old gold and&#13;
silver. We pay you tne nignest possible&#13;
price. We also acce~t trade·ins&#13;
towards tne purcnase of new mercnan·&#13;
dise. •&#13;
&#13;
TlST DRIVE A&#13;
&#13;
1980&#13;
&#13;
AT ~OUR&#13;
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In A New&#13;
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Non-Aerosol Spray!&#13;
&#13;
WE WILL BUY - OR TRADE&#13;
&#13;
LOCAL&#13;
&#13;
NO CHARGE&#13;
-FoRSOUR OFFER&#13;
&#13;
DEALER&#13;
We'II'Arrange the Most Convenient Terms&#13;
. ·For Your Budget&#13;
Open M-w., 91113&#13;
Thurs. &amp; Sal. 91il12 Friday 91il 3 &amp; S Iii 7&#13;
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MlDDLEPORT,OH • .&#13;
~eposlts Insured to S100,ooo&#13;
&#13;
1.1 FL. OZ.·&#13;
&#13;
$275&#13;
&#13;
IN EMERAUDE. U\IMANT.&#13;
LORIGAN,&#13;
&#13;
SELL TO THE JEWELRY PROFESSIONALS .&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
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THE CENTRAL TRUST .CO., NA. ·&#13;
Member FDIC&#13;
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. -10KGold&#13;
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-Old Pocket Watcnes&#13;
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Fri . 9-8&#13;
Sat. 9·5&#13;
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COTY C~SMETICS ON 2nd FLOOR&#13;
&#13;
ClOSED THURSDAY, JULY'31 FOR INVENTORY&#13;
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ELBERFELD$&#13;
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IN -PoMEROY&#13;
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BAVINCi , PL.A.C~'m&#13;
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· WED. THRU SAT. SALE&#13;
J _ ,.&#13;
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Men's crew socks. .Cot·&#13;
ton/stretch nylon .&#13;
&#13;
1200&#13;
6PACKS&#13;
ONLY&#13;
Your Cholce :·&#13;
&#13;
~.&#13;
fQR&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
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&#13;
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�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Tuesday, July 20,1980&#13;
&#13;
5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., Tuesday, July 29, 198o&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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exhibit at ·this year's -fair shows&#13;
&#13;
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Norman, Murray, Fryman&#13;
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MONTREAL (AP) - After losing&#13;
the first game of a doubleheader&#13;
Monday night, the Montreal Expos&#13;
put their fate in the hands of two pitchers who have a combined total of&#13;
27 years of major-league baseball&#13;
experience.&#13;
Fred Nonnan, 37, fired a fivehitter over the first seven innings&#13;
and .40-year-old Woodie Fryman&#13;
retired the final three batters to help&#13;
the Expos defeat the Cincinnati&#13;
Reds_iH after dropping the opener 32.&#13;
"You try to pick the club up,&#13;
especially after you've lost the first&#13;
game, " said Nonnan, who has&#13;
struggled in the bullpen this season&#13;
&#13;
but was handed the ball for his first&#13;
muscle and Dale Murray yielded a&#13;
start because of the Expos depleted run-scoring single before finishing&#13;
pitching ranks.&#13;
the eighth.&#13;
" I enjoy relieving, even though&#13;
"We were hoping to get five inI've had my problems," Norman ad~ nings out of Fred and he gave us&#13;
ded. "But I find relieving much seven," said Montreal Manager&#13;
tougher than starting. "&#13;
Dick Williams. "He'll definitely get&#13;
The Expos staked Norman to a 4-() another start sometime soon."&#13;
lead in the first twO" innings as CinWilliams wasn't nearly as pleased&#13;
cinnati conunitted three en'ors, all after the first garpe as rookie starter&#13;
of which led to runs.&#13;
Charlie Lea turned over a 2·1lead to&#13;
When Norman gave up a solo&#13;
reliever Elias Sosa only to watch it&#13;
home run to Ron Oester, the first of&#13;
disappear as Collins delivered a twohis major-league career, reducing&#13;
out, two-run double in the ninth inthe Expos lead to !&gt;-3, he was&#13;
ning.&#13;
relieved' by Stan Bahnsen. After putSosa had entered the game with&#13;
ting two runners on base Bahnsen ' runners at first and second and none&#13;
aggravated a sore hamstring&#13;
out and proceeded to fumble&#13;
Oester's sacrifice bunt to load the&#13;
bases.&#13;
He then retired pinch-hitter Johnny Bench on a force play at the plate&#13;
and struck out Dave Concepcion.&#13;
•&#13;
••&#13;
But Collins ripped a double inside&#13;
the bag at third to provide the&#13;
margin of victory.&#13;
"That bunt would have been handled if it was executed properly,"&#13;
said Williams. "Sosa came in for it&#13;
instead of moving towa!'(l the line. I&#13;
STRIKEOUTS : Guidry, New York , 113;&#13;
had just got through telling him that&#13;
M.Norris, Oakland, 113; F. Bannister, Seattle, 98; Keough, Oakland, 96; Haas,&#13;
and&#13;
hedidn'tdo it."&#13;
Milwaukee, 94.&#13;
Collins said he didn't produce his&#13;
NATIONAL LEAGUE&#13;
BAITING (240 at bats): Templeton,&#13;
timely blow without a battle from&#13;
St.Louis, .326; Buckner, Chicago, .325; Hen-&#13;
&#13;
•••&#13;
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BASEBALL SCOREBOARD&#13;
Major League Ba!!leball&#13;
AMERICAN LEAGUE&#13;
EAST&#13;
W . L Prl.&#13;
New York&#13;
Baltimore&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Milw11uk.ee&#13;
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Monday'sGames&#13;
Oakland 5, Toronto 3, 7~ innings, rain&#13;
Cleveland 7, Seattle!&#13;
Caillomia 3, Detroit 2&#13;
New York 10, MiMesota 6, lOinnings&#13;
&#13;
'•&#13;
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8\'.&#13;
9&#13;
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drick, St.Louis .324 ; K.Hernandez, St.Louis,&#13;
.323; R.Smith, Los Angeles, .323.&#13;
RUNS: LeFlore, Montreal, 67; Rose,&#13;
Philadelphia, 67; Clark, San Francisco, GG;&#13;
Templeton, St.Lruis, 65; K.Hemandez, St.&#13;
Louls,64.&#13;
RBI : Garvey, Los Angeles, 79; Hendrick,&#13;
St.Louis, 17; Sctunidt, Philadelptlia, 69; Carter, Montreal, 65; Baker, Los Angeles, 62.&#13;
HITS: Templeton, StLouil, 133; Garvey,&#13;
Lns Angeles, 127; Hem:lrick, St.Lotilii, 120:&#13;
Cromartie, Montreal, 117; K.Hernandet,&#13;
St.Louis, 117.&#13;
DOUBLES: Rose, Philadelphia, 30 ;&#13;
Knight, Cincinnati, 29; K. Hernandez,&#13;
St.LOui!, 'l7; Steams, New York. 25; "Maz·&#13;
zilli, New York, 23; Reitz, St.Louis, 23.&#13;
TRIPLES : LeFlore, Montreal , 8; Templeton, St.LoWs, 8; Landestoy, Houston, 8;&#13;
McBride, Philadelphja, 7; O.Moreno, Pitt:Jburgh , 7; Clark, San Francisco, 7.&#13;
HOME RUNS , Schmid~ Philadelphia. 26;&#13;
Horner, AUan~, 21; Carter, Montre.al , 20;&#13;
Hendrick, St.Louis, 20; Garvey, Los&#13;
Angeles, 1!1 ; Baker, Los Angeles , 19; Clark,&#13;
San Francisco, 19.&#13;
STOLEN BASES: LeFlore, Montreal, 62;&#13;
O.Moreno, Pittsburgh, 58; Collins, Cincinnati, 50; R.Scolt, Montreal, 35; Richards,&#13;
San Diego, lS.&#13;
PITCHING (9 Decisions) : Bibby, Pit·&#13;
tsburgh, 13-l, .929, 2.1!9; LaCorte, Houston, 72, .778_,1.61 ; Carlton, Philadeklhia, 1&amp;-S, .762,&#13;
2.28; Hooton, Los Angele.s, 9-3, .750, 3.2:9;&#13;
G.JackstJn, Pittsburgh, 8-3, ,72'1, 2.31 ;&#13;
Richard, Houston, 1~ , . 71~, 1.90; Reuss, Los&#13;
Angeles, lB-4, .714, 2.21; Moskau, Cincinnati,&#13;
7-'!, .700, 3.82. •&#13;
.&#13;
&gt;TRlKEOUTS ' Carlton, Pltiladelphia,&#13;
181; Richard, Howton, 119; Blyleven, Pittsburgh, 118 ; Ryan, Hou.~ton , 115 ; P.Niekro,&#13;
,&#13;
Atlanta, 113.&#13;
MoDday's Spot1s Transaetl008&#13;
By The Associated Press&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
American l-eague&#13;
TEXAS RANGERS : Acquired Ed&#13;
Figueroa, pitcher, from the New York&#13;
Yankees for an undisclosed amoWlt of cash.&#13;
Optioned Steve Comer, pitcher to Tulsa of&#13;
the Tens L&lt;:aguc.&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
NatloiLI..l BasketbaU As11oclaUon&#13;
SAN .DIEGO CLIPPERS, Signed Ed&#13;
Odom, guard, and Tony Price, forward.&#13;
&#13;
lllh&#13;
121&gt;&#13;
15~&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
21&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Only game.s scheduled&#13;
Tuesday 's Games&#13;
Oakland (McCatty 8-9) at Toronto (Clancy&#13;
&#13;
9-71,(n)&#13;
Seattle (Honeycutt B-9 ) at Cleveland&#13;
CSoWner7-8orGrimsley 1-0) , (n)&#13;
CaWornia (Martinez 1-3) at Detroit (lfo~&#13;
bins l~l),ln l ·&#13;
Milwaukee (Mitchell 2-&lt;I J at Chlcago (OctIJ(In 7-5), {n)&#13;
New York (~y 7--5) at Minnesota (Zahn 912), (n)&#13;
Booton (Ojeda IH) at Kansas City (Split·&#13;
tor!U-7) , (n)&#13;
Baltl.rncire (McGregor 10-5) at Texas&#13;
(Hough 1.0 orCon1er2-4), (n)&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
NATIONALLEAGUE&#13;
EAST&#13;
W L Prl. GB&#13;
Pitt. burgh.&#13;
56 42&#13;
.S71 Montreal&#13;
&#13;
Phlladelphill&#13;
New York&#13;
St. Louis&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
·.&#13;
&#13;
·. Houston&#13;
Los Angeles&#13;
Cin&lt;lnnau&#13;
&#13;
52&#13;
00&#13;
43&#13;
&gt;14&#13;
&#13;
44 ·&#13;
46&#13;
51&#13;
53&#13;
&#13;
39 56&#13;
WEST&#13;
56 42&#13;
53&#13;
53&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
47&#13;
&#13;
.$42&#13;
.521&#13;
.171&#13;
.454&#13;
.415&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
s&#13;
9\1&#13;
Il l&gt;&#13;
ll&#13;
&#13;
.571&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
.~&#13;
&#13;
.530&#13;
&#13;
San Francisco&#13;
II 50&#13;
•400&#13;
AUanta&#13;
43 52&#13;
.439&#13;
San0ieg4J&#13;
u 57&#13;
. 42~&#13;
Mooday'sGames&#13;
CincinnaU 3-4, Montreal2-5&#13;
Houston 3, Philadelphia 2, 10 ihnings&#13;
Atlanta&amp;, New York3&#13;
San Diego4, Chicago2, 11 inning~&#13;
Plttoburgb6, Los Angeles 4&#13;
Only games scheduled&#13;
&#13;
3\oli&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
8&#13;
10&#13;
l41h&#13;
&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
&#13;
Natiou.l Football League&#13;
BALTIMORE OOLTS, Released Ron Lee,&#13;
rtuUl.i.h~ back ; Keith Brown,' Harold Perry,&#13;
and Mike Dunn, defensive backs; EU8ene&#13;
Jacobs and Gerald Huggins, linebackers:&#13;
Bobby Mitchell and Steve Young, receivers:&#13;
Scott Collins, offensive guard; Casey Mur·&#13;
phy 11rxl Neil Clabo, punters; Lee GrllS.S, cen-&#13;
&#13;
'l'llesday'sGames&#13;
CincinnaU (LaCoss &gt;9) at Montreal&#13;
(GuiUcbon 1-3), (n)&#13;
&#13;
Houstm (Andujar 1-4) at Philadelphia&#13;
(I..reh !-12), (n)&#13;
Atlanla (McWilliarru: 7-6) at New York&#13;
·(Bootbact 1&gt;3), (n)&#13;
Chicago {Capilla 2--3) at San Diego ( ~ones&#13;
5-9), (n)&#13;
Pittsburgh (Blyleven 5-7) at l...os Angeles&#13;
(Hooton 9-3), (n)&#13;
Sl Louis (Martinez 3-3) at San Francisco&#13;
(Rlpley4-4)",(n)&#13;
&#13;
ter.&#13;
&#13;
BUFFALO BILLS : Released Mike&#13;
Patrick, punter; Larry Reid, running back ;&#13;
Steve t:arpenter and John Quinn, running&#13;
baCks; and Mark Robbins and Aaron Wyley,&#13;
wide re«iver.s. Acquired Kenny Bown, wide&#13;
receiver.&#13;
CffiCA.GO BEARS: Acqulred Randy&#13;
Harrison, safety, frClm the Pittsburgh&#13;
&#13;
TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS&#13;
AMEJUCAN LEAGUE&#13;
BAniNG (240 at bats) : Brett, Kans.as&#13;
&#13;
' .&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
&#13;
Steelen~.&#13;
&#13;
City, .l73_; Cooper, Milwaukee, .339; Wilson,&#13;
Kansas ctty, .333; B.Bell, Texas, .332;&#13;
DUone, CleveLand, .332.&#13;
RUNS: Wil.son, Ka1181ls City, 80; Yount,&#13;
Milwaukee. 74: Wilb, Texas, 72; Bwnbry,&#13;
Baltimore, 71; Rivers, Te~. 71.&#13;
RBI: Pere2, Boston, 76; Oliver, Tens, 76;&#13;
Re.,facklon, New York, 7~: Oglivie,&#13;
MllwaLikee, 71; Armaa, Oakland, 71.&#13;
HITS: Wil.son, Ka~s City, H2; Rivers,&#13;
Texas, 130; Cooper, Milwaukee, 123; Bwnbry,BalUmor!, 1J9; Burleson, Boston, 116.&#13;
baUBLES : Yount , Milwaukee, 30;&#13;
Morrison, Chicago, 30; McRae, Kansas City,&#13;
25; O.Garcia, Toronto, 24; Bochte, Seattle,&#13;
24; Ol.iver, Teu.s,24.&#13;
&#13;
DALLAS COWBOYS: Released Maurier&#13;
Winston, cri"fensive lineman; Mike Vaughn,&#13;
wide rceiver ; and Mackel Harris, dererui!ve&#13;
bllck.&#13;
&#13;
' LOS ANGELES RAMS : Released Eddie&#13;
Brown, Safety; Robert Farrell and Brian&#13;
Nelson, wide re1:1::ivers; Les Petroff, placekicker; Dan Melville, punter; Darrell Black·&#13;
wood, offensive tackle.&#13;
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Released MJckey&#13;
Elam and Joe Gasper, running back!!!; Johnny Stoutam.ire and Sam Smith, defensive&#13;
back:!; Brian SchWartz, .strong safety; Ron&#13;
Taylor, linebacker; Rick Jafre, de£erulive&#13;
tackle.&#13;
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS: Released Mike&#13;
Armand, Elvis Bradley and Jeff George,&#13;
defensive backs; Don Carter and Ron Barnes, tackles; Dave Gunder, guard; Ray&#13;
Smith, wide reciever ; and Joe Walstad, cen-&#13;
&#13;
TRIPLES; Griffin, Toronto, II ; Wilson,&#13;
Kamas City, 9; Brett, Kali.'WI City, 8; Bwnbry, Baltimore, 7; Yoont, Milwaukee, 7;&#13;
Wuhington, Kansas City, 7; Landreaux,&#13;
Minnesota, 7.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
'.&#13;
&#13;
-••&#13;
"'•&#13;
·.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.''&#13;
&#13;
ter.&#13;
&#13;
HOME RUNS: Rc .Jackson, New York, 28;&#13;
OlllVIe, Milwaukee, 24; Annas, Oakland, 23;&#13;
Thomas, Milwaukee, 21; Mayberry, Toron--&#13;
&#13;
to, lB.&#13;
STOLEN BASES: HenderiOll, Oakland,&#13;
50; WUson, Ka11J41.s City, 44 ; Dllone,&#13;
Cleveland,34; Wills, Texas, 28; J.Cruz, Seal·&#13;
&#13;
Ue, 26.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
PITCIDNG (9 Dedsions) : Darwin, Ttnt!l,&#13;
9-1, .900, 2.35; Stone, Baltlmore, 16-3, .642,&#13;
3.09; John, New York, 15-4, .78:9, 2.94; Gura,&#13;
Kansas Clty, lt-4, .178, 2.01; Corbett, Min·&#13;
nesota, 7-2, .778, 2.07; Rainey, Boston, &amp;-3,&#13;
.7'll, 4.1111; Looez. Delrol\, lhl, .7'll. 3.'ll;&#13;
M.N4Jnis, Oakland, 14-6, .700, 2:.43.&#13;
&#13;
NEW YORK GIANTS: Released Tony&#13;
Dungy, safety; Charlie McShane,&#13;
linebacker: Jim Moreen, wide receiver ; Bcb&#13;
Hurley, guard.&#13;
•&#13;
NEW YORK JETS ; Placed Brian Doheriy,&#13;
rwming ba1=k, and Scott Paplham, tlsht end,&#13;
on the injured reserve list. Cut Ge4lrge&#13;
Thomas, wide receiver.&#13;
PITISBURGHSTEELERS+ Traded Mille&#13;
Kruczek, quarterback, to the Washington&#13;
Redskins for an llRdisclosed future drart&#13;
pick. '&#13;
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: Released Jeff&#13;
Mast and Frank Garcia, punters.&#13;
&#13;
BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN&#13;
At.t. SEATS JUST$ r.SO&#13;
&#13;
Sosa.&#13;
&#13;
"He threw me a good pitch. He's&#13;
got a good fastball and slider, and&#13;
don't forget he retired two good hitters before that." ,&#13;
While Cincinnatl paid the price for&#13;
sloppy fielding in the second game,&#13;
the Expos, and center!ielder Andre&#13;
Dawson in particular, sparkled&#13;
defensively.&#13;
Dawson leaped against the centerfield wall to rob Ray Knight of an extra-base hit in the fifth inning and&#13;
outran a long fly by Bench in the&#13;
eighth.&#13;
"You never know when a catch&#13;
could make a difference in a team&#13;
having a big inning," said Dawson,&#13;
who had hits in both games. He has&#13;
collected at least one hit in 26 of the&#13;
club'slast27 games.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Manley, Wendi Kloes, Shelly Triplett, Kenda Kloes ;&#13;
back, 1 to r, Mary Woods, coach; Missy Woods, Beth&#13;
Mayer, Debi Downie, Darcie Hysell, Health Woods,&#13;
Melinda Smith and Sharon Wright, manager.&#13;
&#13;
Padres manager speechless&#13;
By The Associated Press&#13;
It finally happened: San Diego's&#13;
&#13;
loquacious manager , Jerry&#13;
Coleman, was lost for words. Still, it&#13;
seemed understandable after the&#13;
biZarre double play the Chicago&#13;
Cubs pulled off against his Padres.&#13;
It came in the loth inning of 'a&#13;
game eventually won 4-2 by San&#13;
Diego Monday night. The bases were&#13;
full of Padres when Dave Winfield&#13;
tapped to Chicago third baseman&#13;
Mick Kelleher.&#13;
Kelleh~ stepped on third to force&#13;
Gene Richards and had a double&#13;
play on his mind when he threw to&#13;
caicher Tim Blackwell in an effort to&#13;
get Dave Cash at home.&#13;
That's where things got muddled.&#13;
When Kelleher stepped on third, he&#13;
eliminated possible force plays at&#13;
any other base but first. That rule&#13;
seemingly escaped the memory of&#13;
Cash, who simply stopped running&#13;
when Kelleher's t_hrow reached&#13;
Blackwell at the plate.&#13;
Cash, asswning he was out,&#13;
&#13;
headed across the diamond toward&#13;
the San Diego dugout and ended up&#13;
being out for running out of the&#13;
basepath.&#13;
"When you threw it to me, I&#13;
figured you didn't touch third," said&#13;
Blackwell to Kelleher citing one&#13;
possible explanation. '&#13;
"I didn't see the play. I just saw&#13;
him throw home and assumed I was&#13;
out," said Cash.&#13;
·"It was a crazy play. I've never&#13;
seen it before," said Coleman, who&#13;
then was asked if.he said anything to&#13;
Cash.&#13;
"I said nothing," said Coleman,&#13;
who usually has something to say to&#13;
everyone about everything. "What&#13;
can you say.?"&#13;
Coleman argued Cash would not&#13;
have run out of the baseline if the&#13;
umpire hadn't incorrectly signalled _&#13;
..he was out. The Padres, however,&#13;
· did not file an official protest of the&#13;
game.&#13;
Cubs Manager Joe Amalfitano, a&#13;
former infielder and the voice of&#13;
&#13;
-Stein spoils Barker's no hit bid&#13;
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS&#13;
One of these days Len Barker is&#13;
goi~g!Q.take one of his no-hit gaines&#13;
aU the way.&#13;
"I'm starting to learn how to pitch'," the Cleveland Indians' right·&#13;
bsnder said Monday night after flirting with a no-hitter for the second&#13;
time in six nights, both of them&#13;
against Seattle.&#13;
·&#13;
On July 22 he pitched five perfect&#13;
innings in the weatherproof&#13;
Kingdome before losing his nohitter. Thai time he finished with a&#13;
four-hit, 4-() triumph.&#13;
.This time, in a game delayed at&#13;
the start and hampered in the late&#13;
innings by rain, Barker went 62-3 in-&#13;
&#13;
nings before Bill Stein singled·. And&#13;
he didn't even finish what he started.&#13;
But he was delighted nonetheless&#13;
with his 72-3 innings of four-hit work&#13;
and the 7·3 victory that gave him an&#13;
11·7 record .&#13;
"I'm 25. It's taken me a long time&#13;
(to become a successful pitcher),&#13;
but it's worth it, " he said.&#13;
Elsewhere in the American&#13;
League, New York outlasted Minnesota Hi in 10 innings, California&#13;
edged Detroit 3-2 and, in a rainshortened 72-3 innings, Oakland beat&#13;
Toronto :&gt;-3.&#13;
Victor Cruz came to Barker's aid&#13;
in the eighth and notched his fifth&#13;
&#13;
Rookie fu11back breaks wnst&#13;
WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP) - Xrays showed Monday that rookie&#13;
fullback Mark Lyles, the Cincinnati&#13;
Bengals' eighth-round draft choice,&#13;
has broken two bones in his right&#13;
hand.&#13;
•&#13;
Lyles, from Florida State, said he&#13;
worked out Monday unaware of the&#13;
fractures.&#13;
"I think I can play on it," Lyles&#13;
said. "I played on it today. I broke it&#13;
this morning and I thought it was&#13;
just jammed and kept playing."&#13;
Lyles was expected to challenge&#13;
for a reserve·running back spot. The&#13;
Bengals already have Pete Johnson,&#13;
who led the team in, rushing the last&#13;
three years, and 1979 first-round&#13;
draft choice charles Alexander in&#13;
line for the fuilback position.&#13;
Veteran defensive end Gary&#13;
Burley, hospitalized since Friday .&#13;
with high blood pressure, returned&#13;
to training camp Monday. Burley&#13;
was released from Christ Hospital in&#13;
Cincinnati and returned to&#13;
&#13;
Wilmington ju.tl as the afternoon&#13;
workout was ending.&#13;
Burley was barred from practice&#13;
'last week because his blood pressure&#13;
was 180 over 90. Norinal is about 120&#13;
over 30, doctors said.&#13;
The Bengals will monitor Burley's&#13;
blood pressure before and after&#13;
every practice.&#13;
Anthony Munoz, the first-round&#13;
draft choice from the University of&#13;
Southern California, joined the first·&#13;
string offensive line in workouts&#13;
Monday. Munoz is trying to win the&#13;
left tackle spot.&#13;
"As they did their job last week, it&#13;
became obvious that he did the best&#13;
job at left tackle," said coach&#13;
Forrest Gregg. "We put him on the&#13;
No. 1 unit and we have Mike Wilson&#13;
(the previous left tackle) and Vernon Holland at right tackle now."&#13;
Munoz reported to camp one day&#13;
late, with the Bengals' permission,&#13;
after a contract dispute with the&#13;
club.&#13;
&#13;
Sports briefs.&#13;
OLYMPICS&#13;
MOSCOW (,-\P) - Western&#13;
nations posted their second medals&#13;
sweep of a major event at these&#13;
Eastern bloc dominated Olympic&#13;
Games as Italy's Pietro Mennea, a&#13;
reluctant participant, e~ged Allan&#13;
Wells of Britsin in the 200-meter&#13;
dash in the ninth day of competition&#13;
·at the Summer Olympics.&#13;
Don Quarrie of Jamaica took the&#13;
bronze.&#13;
In other events, Viktor Rasshchupkin ofthe USSR won the discus&#13;
with a toss of 218 feet, 8 inches, and&#13;
Lutz Dumbrowski of East Germany&#13;
won the long Jwnp with a leap of 230§.&#13;
Vera Komisova of the USSR won&#13;
the women's 1()0-meter. hurdles in&#13;
12.56 seconds, an't&gt;lympic record.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
GIRLS' SOFTBALL - Pictured is the 1980 Jim's&#13;
Gulf Station team in Pomeroy this season. Included&#13;
are : front, 1 to r, Julie Baity, Tammy Wright, Dena&#13;
&#13;
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight and&#13;
Forty, was awarded three trophies&#13;
at the recent Eight and Forty,&#13;
Departemental d' Ohio, Salon 23 la&#13;
marche held in Columbus.&#13;
The local salon received the Aree&#13;
Marshall trophy for the most outstanding event fOr cystic fibrosis,&#13;
namely the fund drive which&#13;
brought in $1,100. It was the Salon's&#13;
ninth time in 15 years to -receive the&#13;
trophy. The Salon also received the&#13;
.Maybelle Gambell Trophy awarded&#13;
to the best all-around salon in the&#13;
state with partnership of 10 to 36.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Martin received the Aim&#13;
Eshelman trophy in recognition of&#13;
being the partner collecting the most&#13;
American Legion Auxiliary dues.&#13;
The Salon also took first place on&#13;
history and will receive a trophy ala&#13;
~ter time.' The presentation If.&#13;
trophies was by Pearl Knapp, Meigs&#13;
Salon, state chainnan; Mary Moose,&#13;
Junction City, and Helen Peeples,&#13;
Bradford.&#13;
A highlight of the meeting was the&#13;
installation of the newly elected of.&#13;
fleers. Mrs. Violet Aichholz was the&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Falk Hoffman of East Germany&#13;
won the men's plaUorm diving competition with 835.650 points. Marlta&#13;
Koch or East Gennany won the&#13;
women's 400-meter dash in 48.88. .&#13;
Sergei Soukhoroutchenkov of the&#13;
Soviet Union won the individual road ·&#13;
race cycling gold medill.&#13;
Yachtsmen from Spain and Brazil&#13;
captured the first two gold medals of&#13;
the regatta at Tallinn on the Baltic&#13;
Sea. Spain led the Flying Dutchman&#13;
fleet from start to finish and Brazil&#13;
took the tornado class medal.&#13;
The Soviet Union had 48 gold&#13;
medals; 11nd 123 overall, more than&#13;
the Ioiii! fou any team in a full Olympics exc~pt the · 12li medals the&#13;
Soviets won at Montreal four years&#13;
ago. East Germany was second w1th&#13;
34 go_ld and 88 total medals.&#13;
&#13;
save.&#13;
The Indians got a first-inning run&#13;
off Jim Beattie when Miguel Dilone&#13;
tripled and Jorge Orta singled. Then&#13;
they struck for five in the sixth, the&#13;
last three on Rick Manning's first&#13;
homer of the year, off reliever By,ron&#13;
McLaughlin.&#13;
Yankees 7, Twins 6·&#13;
. Ca.tcher Rick Cerone crashed two&#13;
homers, a three-run blast in the&#13;
eighth inning that put the Yanks on&#13;
top 6-5 and a leadoff belt in the loth&#13;
off John Verhoeven for the victory.&#13;
.A defensive gem by right fielder&#13;
Reggie Jackson in the bottom of the&#13;
ninth gave Cerone the chance to play&#13;
hero. With the bases loaded, Rob&#13;
Wilfong singled for the tying run, but&#13;
Reggie's throw to Cerone at the&#13;
plate nailed Jose Morales trying to&#13;
score the Twins' winning run from&#13;
second base.&#13;
Augels 3, Tigers 2&#13;
You can go home again. Rick&#13;
Miller did - and for a change, he did&#13;
something worthwhile.&#13;
"I was a little surprised tonight,&#13;
frankly," Miller said after rapping&#13;
out three hits, including the tiebreaking single in the Angels' tworun seventh inning. "I've never bit&#13;
well here in Tiger Stadium, probably&#13;
because my family's always here,"&#13;
said the native of Grand Rapids,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
'The Tigers fell into third place in&#13;
the East, nine games behind the&#13;
Yankees.&#13;
A's 5, Blue Jays 3&#13;
Although" Jim Essian drove in&#13;
three of Oakland's runs, one of them&#13;
with a homer, it was a typical vic·&#13;
tory for the A's - and not because it&#13;
was achieved in a rain-flhortened 723innings.&#13;
They scrambled for their runs and&#13;
had two runners thrown out at the&#13;
plate, one on · an unsuccessful&#13;
squee2e bunt.&#13;
Mike Norris pitched a six-hitter&#13;
for \Us seventh consecutive complete&#13;
game while Esslan singled home&#13;
Oakland's first run in the first in·&#13;
ning, homered in the second and.&#13;
· doubled --home Rickey Henderson&#13;
with the winning run In the seventh.&#13;
&#13;
Q&#13;
&#13;
reason In&#13;
confusion, may&#13;
have said it best.&#13;
" If it had been me," he said, " I&#13;
would have touched third and&#13;
thrown to first base."&#13;
In the other National League&#13;
games, the Cincinnati Reds beat the&#13;
Montreal Expos 3-2 in the opener&#13;
before losing the nightcap of their&#13;
twi-nighter IH, the Houston Astros&#13;
edged the Philadelphi,a Phiutes 3-2 in&#13;
10 innings, the Atlanta Braves beat.,.&#13;
the New York Mets 6-3 and the Plttsburgh Pirates topped the Los&#13;
Angeles Dodgers 6-4.&#13;
The Padres won the game in the&#13;
lith inning on a two-run ~omer by&#13;
Gene Tenace of! Cubs reliever&#13;
George Riley.&#13;
Astros 3, Phlllles 2&#13;
Cesar Cedeno's loth-inning triple&#13;
drove in Jose Cruz with the run that&#13;
gave Houston its victory over&#13;
Philadelphia.&#13;
Jose Cruz collected a two-out walk&#13;
from Ron Reed before Cedeno rifled&#13;
a 1-1 pitch to the right-field corner.&#13;
Braves 6, Mets 3 ·&#13;
Dale Murphy had three hits , including a seventh-inning homer,&#13;
while Gary Matthews had three hits,&#13;
including a two-run single in the !ifth, to back Doyle Alexander's seven·&#13;
hit pitching and carry Atlanta over&#13;
New York.&#13;
The Mets' .Pete Falcone, who has&#13;
made his 17 starts this season but&#13;
still hasn 't pitched a complete game,&#13;
gave up three first-inning runs to&#13;
start New York to its eighthloss in 11&#13;
games.&#13;
The Braves' Chris Chambliss&#13;
struck out four times in five atbats and had his U)·game hitting&#13;
streak stopped.&#13;
·Pirates 6, Dodgers 4&#13;
Ed Ott hit two home runs to power&#13;
Pittsburgh's 13th victory in 16&#13;
games. Ott's long ball display gave&#13;
the Pirates' Rick Rhoden his second&#13;
victory iq three decisions this&#13;
season ; both have come over his former Los Angeles teammates and&#13;
both have come in the last two&#13;
weeks.&#13;
The loss for Bob Welch, ~. was&#13;
his fourth in five decisions.&#13;
&#13;
ENTERTAIN RECENTLY&#13;
&#13;
JOHN SI"OUT, a 1m graduate&#13;
of Meigs High School, has been&#13;
named to the dean's, com·mandant's and superintendent's&#13;
lisls for the second semester at&#13;
lbe U. S. Air Force Academy at&#13;
Colorado Sprlugs; Colorajlo. The&#13;
dean's list is for blgb academic&#13;
·accompllsbment wblle the commandant's U..l is for blgh mllltary&#13;
performance. Cadels named to&#13;
both are tben on the superinteodent's .U..t. John is enrolled iD&#13;
lbe honors English and matb&#13;
courset at · the academy aDd&#13;
recenUy took part in three week&#13;
couries in noD-ColllllliBslooed of·&#13;
fleers training in Tens aDd survival evasion training In&#13;
Colorado. He is currenUy spending a leave with bls parents, Mr.&#13;
·aDd Ml'!l. Blllle -C. Stout and&#13;
brother, Scott, Route 2, Albany,&#13;
and will be attending the wedding&#13;
of bts brother, Bill, in Charlotte,&#13;
N.C.&#13;
&#13;
1\eslerstin&#13;
1726 LATROBE STREET&#13;
Parl&lt;ersburg, W.Va. 2601&#13;
Tf;LEPHONE 485'·5484&#13;
TRY US!&#13;
&#13;
Suede Cleaning, Draperies, and&#13;
&#13;
.•'&#13;
&#13;
Shirts.&#13;
Bring your cleilning needs to&#13;
Carousel Confections, 317 N. Se·&#13;
cond Ave., Middleport.&#13;
Shecule your carpet &amp; furniture&#13;
cleaning fhere also, or c111 Area&#13;
Code 304·485·5485 tor more in·&#13;
formation on our Steamway&#13;
Cleaning Process .&#13;
"We're No. 1 in&#13;
Service Quaflly"&#13;
&#13;
SHOP&#13;
&#13;
MASON FURNITURE&#13;
FOR THE BEST DEA.LS IN THE&#13;
TRISTATE AREA&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
M8SON FURNITURE&#13;
Mon., ;rues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.&#13;
8:30 to s: 00 Thursday tilll2 Noon&#13;
&#13;
OPEN' EVEN·INGS BY APPOINTMENT O-NLY&#13;
Herman Grate&#13;
773-5592&#13;
&#13;
Legion Auxiliary 'president; Clem&#13;
Dombrowski, Department of Ohio,&#13;
American Legion, COffillUinder; E.&#13;
H. Huels, •nd Eight Grand Chef de&#13;
Gare; and Glaub, grand correspondent, Forty and Eight.&#13;
Mrs. Lucille Woodland reported&#13;
that publicity this year reach 2,586&#13;
inches with Meigs coming in second&#13;
with 227 inches. Mrs. Lula Hampton&#13;
is the local chainnan. Among.those&#13;
remembered during the mi!Jilorial&#13;
service was Mrs. Dollie Hayes. Mrs.&#13;
Martin and Mrs. Knapp participated&#13;
in the ceremony.&#13;
At the banquet Mrs. Hazel Elliott&#13;
was mistress of ceremonies with&#13;
Mrs. Hartline as the speaker. She&#13;
talked about God and Country.&#13;
At the chapeau passe luncheon&#13;
Mrs. Bowman was initiated into the&#13;
Chapeau Passe Club. The Purple&#13;
Martin theme was carried out in the&#13;
table decorations.&#13;
Going · from here were Mrs.&#13;
Zuelelia Smith, newly elected&#13;
chapeu of Meigs Salon 710, Mrs.&#13;
Catherine Welsh, Mrs. Martin, and&#13;
Mrs. Knapp.&#13;
&#13;
Chicken barbecue&#13;
enjoyed by group&#13;
&#13;
Area goings on noted&#13;
&#13;
HELMET FmiNG&#13;
There will be hebnet fitting for all&#13;
Eastern High School Varsity football&#13;
players (grades ~12 ) on Thursday,&#13;
July 31, at 5:15 p.m. at the high&#13;
school.&#13;
&#13;
We're new in the Middleport·&#13;
Pomeory area. We specialize in&#13;
Quality Dry Cleaning, Laundry,&#13;
Carpet &amp; Furniture Cleaning,&#13;
Wedding Gown Preservation,&#13;
&#13;
installing officer with Mrs. Mary&#13;
Martin, Meigs Salon, as l'aumonier,&#13;
and Mrs. Doris Stanriff, Ia concierge. Mrs. Aichholz presented Joy&#13;
Bowman with ·her chapeau passe&#13;
pin, and George Glaub of the Forty&#13;
and Eight presented the newly installed chapeau, Shirley Davis, with&#13;
her chapeau.wings.&#13;
The new officers are Mrs. Davis,&#13;
chapeau; Lucille Woodling, first&#13;
demi chapeau; Ruth Kruger, seeond&#13;
demi-chapeau; Patricia Henthorne,&#13;
l'aumonier; Linda Edmondson, Ia&#13;
archiviste; and Jane Willis, Ia con·&#13;
cierge.&#13;
The conference got underway with&#13;
the ritualistic opening and&#13;
procassional of officers. There were&#13;
greetings from Mrs. Martin,&#13;
national partnership cha~ who&#13;
congratulated Ohio for being a goal&#13;
salon and reported that nationally&#13;
there are only 282 needed for goal.&#13;
Mrs. Dorothy Brady, national&#13;
pouvior member, and Mrs. Aichholz,&#13;
le demi chapeau nationale also&#13;
brought greetings, as did Mrs.&#13;
Lawrence Hartline, American&#13;
&#13;
Mason, W.Va.&#13;
&#13;
·•&#13;
&#13;
ATI'ENDS ,SKI . SCHOOL&#13;
Willoughby Keith Hill, eight year&#13;
old son of Larry and Joe Hill, has&#13;
returned alter speodlng five days&#13;
at lbe Siders' Paradise Ski&#13;
School, operated by Bea Debus,&#13;
Hocldogport. . AI the school&#13;
stuileots are taught jumpiDg,&#13;
slalom and trick sldlog by Ml'!l.&#13;
Debus and her husband, Cblp,&#13;
. who have been tournamentsldlog&#13;
for about l2 years. Tbey have&#13;
both sided in the Natiooal Water&#13;
Skl Competition. Hlll begao&#13;
water sldlog about two years ago&#13;
aDd then started slalom sldlog after bls grandfather, Willoughby&#13;
F. Hill, got him a slalom for bls&#13;
seventh birthday.&#13;
SMITH COMPLETES&#13;
NAVAL TRAINING&#13;
Navy Seaman Recruit David E.&#13;
Smith, son of Charles F: and Betty L.&#13;
Smith of S28 Sycamore St., Middleport, has completed recruit&#13;
training at the Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, IU.&#13;
During the eight-week training&#13;
cycle, he studied general military&#13;
subjects designed to prepare him for&#13;
further academic and on-the-job&#13;
training in one of the Navy's 85 llaslc&#13;
occupational fields.&#13;
Included in hi$ studies were&#13;
seamanship, close-order grill, Naval&#13;
history and first aid.&#13;
A 1979 graduate of Meigs High&#13;
School, Pomeroy, he joined the Navy&#13;
in April,l980.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Barbara Mullen entertained&#13;
recently with a swimming party at&#13;
the home of Dr. and Mrs. Ray&#13;
Pickens.&#13;
Attending were Mrs. Flo&#13;
Strickland, Mrs. Nettie Boyer, Mrs.&#13;
Lenora McKnight, Mrs. Betty&#13;
Wehrung, Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore,&#13;
Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel, Mrs. Pan- dora Collins, and a gUest, Mrs.&#13;
. Lucille Strickland, Portland,&#13;
Oregon. Mrs. Mullen assisted by .her&#13;
granddaughter, Kellee, served a&#13;
dessert course.&#13;
Plans were made for another&#13;
swimming party Wednesday&#13;
I!Vening with husbandS as guests&#13;
preceded by a potluck dinner.&#13;
HAS SLUMBER PARTY&#13;
. DanieUe Scott entertained with a&#13;
slumber party recently at her Five&#13;
Points home.&#13;
Pizza and chips were served. At-'&#13;
tending were Luciana Scott, Susanne Ctay, Jill r.,oore, Chester;&#13;
Corissa Mulford and Shands&#13;
Mulford, Cheshire; Lee Ann&#13;
Redovian and Michele Malhotra,&#13;
FlatwoOds.&#13;
&#13;
SPEND WEEKEND HERE&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. William Houck and&#13;
daughters, Beth, tarot and Lynn,&#13;
Marion, spent the weekend here&#13;
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Perry Mitch&#13;
and other relatives in Gallipolis.&#13;
Other recent visitors 9f Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Mitch were Mr. and Mrs. Robert&#13;
Mitch of Wheeling.&#13;
&#13;
SPEAK AT CHURCH&#13;
Bruce McKelvey of the Portland&#13;
United Methodist Church and Larry&#13;
Fisher of the Racine Church have&#13;
been speakers at'the St. Paul United&#13;
M~thodist Church for the past two&#13;
Sundays. Next Sunday, the Rev. Arthur 'Diehl will have charge or the&#13;
services with conununion to be observed.&#13;
The Ministerial Association will&#13;
hold religious services on Monday,&#13;
Aug. 11, at the Meigs County&#13;
Fairgrounds. On Aug. 10 th~e will&#13;
beahymnsingat2p.m. at st. Paul's&#13;
Church, Tuppers Plains. On July 20,&#13;
65 attended Sunday school and the&#13;
worship service, and on Juy 27, 54 attended the worship service.&#13;
&#13;
25th anniversary fare&#13;
honors Kennedy couple&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. William Kennedy entertained with a picnic at their Route&#13;
33 residence honoring Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Edward Kennedy on their :!lith wedding anniversary.&#13;
Gifts and cards of congratulations&#13;
were prese~ted to the honored&#13;
couple. Attending were the honored&#13;
couple· and thei~ children, Debbie,&#13;
Cheryl, Chuck, David and Mike, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Claude Lynch .of Toledo,&#13;
&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Strauss, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Don Strauss, and Kitty&#13;
Mees, Pomeroy; Mrs. Alice&#13;
Robeson, Middleport; Mrs. Lucille&#13;
Schwarz, Mason; Judson Price,&#13;
Spencer, w. Va., and the hosts, Bill&#13;
and Carrie Kennedy.&#13;
Calling in the afternoon were Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Tom Bowen, Pomeroy, and&#13;
Kevin King, Bradbury.&#13;
&#13;
KNIGHT TAKES PART&#13;
IN MANEUVERS&#13;
Marine Lance Cpl. Dale W.&#13;
Knight, son of Venedla M. Knight of&#13;
Route 3, Box 45, Racine, recently&#13;
participated in "Combined Anns&#13;
Exercise 6-M" was designed to emphasize fire support coordination&#13;
between air, tank, artillery, mortar&#13;
and anti-tank missile units.&#13;
Knight joined the Marine Corps in&#13;
November, 1978.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
FRANCE ARRIVES&#13;
FOR DUTY&#13;
DAYTON - Staff Sergeant Walter&#13;
G. France, son of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Walter E. France of Rural Route'l,&#13;
Rutland, has arrived for duty at&#13;
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.&#13;
Sergeant France, a metal&#13;
fabrication special'ist , was .&#13;
previously assigned at Myrtle Beach&#13;
:Air Force Base, S.C.&#13;
RETURN HOME&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Buckley have&#13;
returned to their home ln New&#13;
Brighton, Pa. after spending the&#13;
weekend here with his brother, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Eugene Buckley at their&#13;
home in Cheshire. They came&#13;
especially to attend the 43rd aMual&#13;
Buckley reunion held at the Bellevue&#13;
Dam in Reedsville.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
*Social Calendar&#13;
&#13;
entries as long as each entry is a dif- classes open to club and non-club ·&#13;
Meigs County gardeners will&#13;
ferent variety or type. No artificial . exhibitors are ''Dad Looks at the&#13;
agllin demonstrate their talent for&#13;
plant materials are allowed in any · Livestock," inte\-pretive; "And On&#13;
growing and their skill in showing&#13;
class, although artlficllllly colored To the Races," a modem design;&#13;
beautiful flowers at the two flower&#13;
or treated plant material is allowed " For Peace and Quiet," inshows to be staged at the Meigs&#13;
spirationlll design; "They all Meet&#13;
in aU modem classes.&#13;
County Fair.&#13;
Judging by the standard system for Lunch," exhibition lWJCheon&#13;
"The Fair" is the theme of the two&#13;
according to the Ohio Association of table picture; "We Look Over the&#13;
shows with the artistic class titles&#13;
Quilts," a mass design; and "The&#13;
ranging from livestock to lunches to -Garden Clubs' Handbook will begin School's Science Exhibits," abat 2p.m, each show day.&#13;
depict the week on the fairgrounds.&#13;
At each show a best of show and stract.&#13;
Mrs. Joe Bolin is chairman for \he&#13;
In each of the shows there Is a·&#13;
reserve best of show will be awarshow which is being staged by the&#13;
class&#13;
in artistic design for Junior&#13;
ded, along with a horticultliral&#13;
F!!ir Board .in cooperation with the&#13;
exhibitors&#13;
(those under 19). They&#13;
sweepstakes award and a Junior gar·&#13;
Meigs County Garden Clubs&#13;
are&#13;
"On&#13;
To&#13;
the Rides," a favorite .&#13;
dener award. Ribbons and&#13;
Association.&#13;
arrangement&#13;
in the Wednesday .&#13;
premiums will be awarded in all&#13;
All classes of the show are open to&#13;
classes with $1.25 for blue, $1 for red, ctass, and "Cotton Candy for All,"&#13;
all residents of Meigs County and to&#13;
featuring bright colors.&#13;
and&#13;
75 cents for white.&#13;
all membj!rs of a Meigs County GarA best of show and reserve best of&#13;
.&#13;
In&#13;
both&#13;
shows&#13;
the&#13;
·&#13;
artistic&#13;
den Club. One does not need to be a.&#13;
show&#13;
will be selected from the Inarrangement classes include one&#13;
member of a garden club to enter.&#13;
dividual&#13;
class blue ribbons on both&#13;
class which is open to anyone who is&#13;
Purchase of a membership ticket is&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
and Friday by the judge.&#13;
not a resident of Meigs County as&#13;
the only entry fee required.&#13;
well as residents. The invitational&#13;
To enter an exhibit, entry forms&#13;
artistic&#13;
arrangement class in the&#13;
must be prepared by the exhibitor&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
show is "Up With the&#13;
and taken to the fair board office on&#13;
Chickens,"&#13;
a design including&#13;
the Rock Springs fairgrounds no&#13;
while&#13;
the Friday class is&#13;
feathers,&#13;
later than 4 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 8.&#13;
"Mom&#13;
Heads&#13;
for&#13;
the Fancy Work,"&#13;
Entries may be made by mail, but&#13;
Members of the American Legion&#13;
emphasizing&#13;
textures.&#13;
no telephone entries will be acAuxiliary ·of Drew Webster Post 39,&#13;
The artistic arrangements for club&#13;
cepted.&#13;
Pomeroy, enjoyed a chicken barmembers and county residents in&#13;
The first show will be staged on&#13;
becue Tuesday night at the home of&#13;
the&#13;
Wednesday show are "Looks&#13;
Wednesday, Aug. 13 and entries&#13;
Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins.&#13;
Like A Sunny Day," featuring&#13;
must be in the hands of the show&#13;
FolloWing the cookout, homemade&#13;
yellows;&#13;
"A Crowd Will Be There,"&#13;
conunittee before 1 p.m. They are to&#13;
ice cream and cake were served.&#13;
a n\ass design; "We'll Have Breakbe left in place until 8 p.m. The&#13;
Mrs. Pearl Knapp presided at the&#13;
fast First," a tray setting; "And&#13;
second show will be staged on&#13;
meeting during which time itema&#13;
Park at the Fairgrounds," lnFriday, Aug. 15, with entries to be in&#13;
left over from the Regatta Weekend&#13;
the hands of the committee at 1 p.m . te~retive; "Before Making the&#13;
were put on sale. It was noted that&#13;
Rounds," a stamobile; "A Picnic is&#13;
and left in place until 4 p.m. on&#13;
Mrs. Veda Davis is ill. Mrs. Gemma&#13;
in Order" using basket or baskets;&#13;
Saturday. In the artistic division,&#13;
Casci who has been hospitalized waa&#13;
and&#13;
"Feels Good to Relax Under the&#13;
exhibitors are permitted only one&#13;
at the meeting, ~nd guests included&#13;
Trees," including wood.&#13;
entry in each case. In the horMrs. Patty Might and daughter,&#13;
The Friday artistic arrangement'&#13;
ticultore and educational classes, an&#13;
Amy.&#13;
.&#13;
exhibitor may make as many_ I!S 25&#13;
A repot1 was given on the recent&#13;
Eighth -District party held at the&#13;
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital. Mrs.&#13;
Knapp, Mrs. Mary Martin and Mrs.&#13;
Dorothy Wells represented the unit&#13;
1&#13;
at the party attended by approximately 175 veterans. The unit&#13;
took candies and cake along with a&#13;
large cake donated by . Powell's&#13;
Super.Yalu in Pomeroy.&#13;
Mrs. Lorrene Snyder of Lancaster&#13;
BY HELEN BOTl'EL&#13;
PEAR UN:&#13;
gave the welcome to the veterans.&#13;
Special correspoodent&#13;
In these unorthodox days,&#13;
The juniors of the Pomeroy unit&#13;
DEAR HELEN: Our upcoming whatever the bride and bridegroom&#13;
provided four money awards for the&#13;
25th auniversary is very special to choose for their wedding is "all&#13;
party.&#13;
us because we were married in our right," no matter what etiquette&#13;
late 405. It's like a golden to anyone bookssay.&#13;
·&#13;
else.&#13;
But isn't "present" better than&#13;
Our families are plauning a big "give in marriage?" After all,&#13;
celebration. Last night my daughter you're not, and never were, your&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Raycraft of&#13;
and her husband, who will also have ex's to giveaway.- H.&#13;
Johnstown and family visited Mrs.&#13;
a :!lith anniversary in the same&#13;
Hattie Woodard.&#13;
month, suggested that we combine DEAR HELEN:&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Woodard and&#13;
· the two parties.&#13;
May I answer the mother who&#13;
children of Jackson spent a day with&#13;
This means two cakeii, inviting&#13;
wrote about the single-parent bully&#13;
his mother, Mrs. Hattie Woodard.&#13;
two groups of friends, theirs and&#13;
in het neighborhood?&#13;
Another caller was CarofLee Bailey&#13;
ours, splitting costs, etc. Is it&#13;
First, there are many bullies in&#13;
of Middleport.&#13;
proper? - MR. AND MRS. A. Z.&#13;
two-parent homes, but no one refers&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Rife and&#13;
DEAR MR. AND MRS. Z:&#13;
to them as two-parent bullies; and&#13;
daughters of Columbis were guest!&#13;
Proper, yes, but I suspect your&#13;
there are plenty of super kids in&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. James Hobstetter&#13;
question really means, "How can we&#13;
single-parent homes, but no one&#13;
over Fourth of July.&#13;
r.efuse without hurt-feelings?"&#13;
gives the credit to their being raised&#13;
Mildred Hayes of Newark was&#13;
If I've read you right, then why not&#13;
by a single.&#13;
Wednesday guest of Mae CraWler.&#13;
explain to your daughter that this&#13;
Second, this mother herself coUld&#13;
Mrs. Mae Lynch has returned to&#13;
very special day is more gold than . help. The greatest difficulty for a&#13;
her home after spending several ·&#13;
silver and you want it for yours&#13;
single parent (next to money) is the&#13;
weeks in the" hospital and at the&#13;
alone? I think she and her husband&#13;
isolation and loneliness one finds in a · home of her daughter-In-law, Mrs.&#13;
will understand. - H.&#13;
predominately "Mr. and Mrs."&#13;
Harry Surface, Middleport.&#13;
neighborhood. The other mothers&#13;
The children and families of Mrs.&#13;
DEAR HELEN:&#13;
could and should invite the single&#13;
Elvira Barr spent the weekend here&#13;
I'm very friendly with my exmolber over for coffee; or stop in for&#13;
and celebrated Mrs. Barr's and&#13;
husband. He happens to also be a&#13;
a chat. Mother and son should be Ingrandson Micki's birthday on Sungood friend of tlje man I'll soon&#13;
cluded in cook-outs and picnic. day.&#13;
marry.&#13;
Being "different" and left-out&#13;
Beth and Cathy Jo Hobstetter&#13;
My ex Is 18 years older than I, and&#13;
makes a child resentful or show- spent..a week with Terry and Tenia .&#13;
I sort of look to him as the father I&#13;
offish.&#13;
Rife of Columbus.&#13;
never hod. Nothing romantic Is left&#13;
Third, a note to the single mother:&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Levingston and ·&#13;
on either side -. he's happily&#13;
I recommend she join .Parents daughter, Jody, spent last weekend&#13;
married, and the four of us go&#13;
Without Partners to find the support visiting friends in Mansfield.&#13;
around together.&#13;
and social life she needs. If her local&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Crouser of&#13;
Here's my question: Would it be&#13;
chapter has ' a strong family Charleston, W. Va. spent Sunday&#13;
all right for my ex to walk down the ' program, her son's friends will wish with Mrs. Mae Crouse.&#13;
church aisle with me and "give me&#13;
they could join too. - CAROLINE&#13;
Mrs. Susie Levingston of&#13;
away?" I didn't have B fel\1 wedding&#13;
Falmouth, Ky. spent Saturday night&#13;
before and I've always wanted one,&#13;
Got a problem? An adult subject with her son and daughter-In-law,&#13;
but there's no other male who could&#13;
for discussion? You can talk it over Mr. and Mrs. Dan Levingston.&#13;
escort me to my bridegroom. in her column if you write to Helen&#13;
UNORTHODOX BUT HOPEFUL&#13;
Bolte!, care or this newspaj)er.&#13;
&#13;
WEDNESDAY&#13;
MEETING OF Southern Local&#13;
School District OAPSE, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday at high school. ·&#13;
PAST COMMANDERS and&#13;
Trustees of D.JeW Webster Post 39,&#13;
American Legion, meeting Wednesday night with dinner to be served at 7 followed by business&#13;
session.&#13;
&#13;
Helen Help Us&#13;
She S not keen on sharing&#13;
her anniversary,&#13;
limelight&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Langsville&#13;
&#13;
Attend funeral&#13;
WEAVER REUNION&#13;
The 22nd annual Weaver reunion&#13;
will be Sunday at the New Haven&#13;
Roadside Park ,located on the lower&#13;
end of New Haven, right side of&#13;
road, traveling north on Route 33. A&#13;
basket dinner will be served at 1&#13;
p.m. AU friends and relatives are in·&#13;
vited. Those attending are to take&#13;
their own lawn chairs.&#13;
&#13;
TO MEET FRIDAY&#13;
A mveting of all Southern High&#13;
School girls in grlldes nine through&#13;
12 interested in playing volleyball&#13;
this fall has been set for 8 p.m.&#13;
Friday in the high school cafeteria.&#13;
&#13;
Nwnerous friends and relatives&#13;
were here for the Saturday funeral&#13;
services of John Vinson Martin at&#13;
the Ewing Funeral Home. Burial&#13;
was in the Riverview Cemetery at&#13;
Middleport. The Rev. Bob Melton officiated.&#13;
Here for the services were Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Ralph Martin, Beaver; Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Everett See, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Thomas Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Floyd George, Mrs. Bessie Mitchell,&#13;
Mrs. Steven Drown, Miss Patricia&#13;
Martin, all of Columbus; Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Jack Matthews, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Robert Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie&#13;
Newman, Mrs. Harry ,Reapp,&#13;
&#13;
YOU'LL LIKELY Ind.HAV&amp;Ii FIRE,&#13;
BUT JUST IN CAS£.1011-.110,&#13;
&#13;
Of'! DEAN'S LIST&#13;
MOREHEAD, Ky. - One student&#13;
from Meigs County is among the&#13;
Morehead State University students&#13;
recognized m 1111! 1980 Spring&#13;
Semester President's List.&#13;
The list includ!!s: Kimberly Sue&#13;
Jones, Pomeroy. ·&#13;
.REI:JNION&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
The 56th annual Hayes-YoungHoliday School Reunion will be held&#13;
Sunday on the, old Holiday school&#13;
grounds.&#13;
&#13;
Gallipolis; Robert Martin, Steven&#13;
and Stephanie of Alliance; Mr. and&#13;
·Mrs. Tom Thomas, Norton; Mr. and&#13;
Mrs .&#13;
Lowell&#13;
Thompson,&#13;
Chesapeake; Mr. and Mrs. Albert&#13;
Martin, Jr., VIncent; Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Foyster Williams, Mary Ellen Mills,&#13;
Artemus, Ky. ; Mr. and Mrs. John&#13;
Williams, Galloway, and Foyster&#13;
Williams, Jr., Galloway.&#13;
&#13;
Pomeroy Elementary&#13;
PTA Presen_ts&#13;
Walt Disney's&#13;
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FRI., AUG. i.&#13;
.&#13;
7:30P.M.&#13;
At The&#13;
Pomeroy Elementary&#13;
Admission $1.00 For All&#13;
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by adults.&#13;
Refreshments of&#13;
Pop· Popcorn· Pizza&#13;
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evaluation, drainage improvements, Soil Conservation Service, United&#13;
Commissioners have agreed to a and other public works.'&#13;
States Department of Agriculture&#13;
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James Roush, Divison of Soil and&#13;
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representatives wiU he supplied with&#13;
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vice; Carol Costanzo and Archie&#13;
agricultural programs, soil and&#13;
c90perative agreement be signed Stegal of Farmers Home Adwater conservation programs, land&#13;
between the commissioners and the&#13;
ministration; Thereon Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
DAILY 9-9; SAT.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
SALE ENDS SATUR&#13;
&#13;
SUN. 1.-6&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
.e&#13;
VOL 31 NO. 75&#13;
&#13;
supervisor of Meigs Soil and Water&#13;
Conservation District; Crow, Philip&#13;
Roberts, county engineer; Pete&#13;
Shields, retired employe of ASCS;&#13;
Charles Blakeslee, Meigs County&#13;
Regional Planning ColllJIIission ;&#13;
Keith Huffman, Soil Conservation&#13;
Service; Richard B. Jones, Ohio&#13;
Divison Lands and Soil, and George&#13;
F. Hale, Ohio Agricultural Research&#13;
and Development Center.&#13;
In other business, Manning Wei;&#13;
ster, 169 Board Chairman and Chris&#13;
Layh, administrator of Mental&#13;
Retardation, discussed operating&#13;
costs of the Mental Retardation&#13;
school for the 1980-411 school year.&#13;
Webster reported that school will&#13;
be starting in five weeks at the for-&#13;
&#13;
at y&#13;
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO&#13;
&#13;
merPomeroyJuniorHighBuilding.&#13;
road project between Union Ave.,&#13;
Layh said the second stage of the&#13;
and · the Multi-Purpose Health&#13;
schematic-design of the new school&#13;
facility,&#13;
and workshop to be located in&#13;
Page presented ·the final design&#13;
Syracuse, was completed and the arplans and stated that the plans will&#13;
chiteet was preparing specifications&#13;
be reviewed by FHA by Aug. 4.&#13;
and bid fonns.&#13;
The access road project is ex·&#13;
The project in Syracuse is expeeled to be ready to go to bid by the&#13;
peeled to be ready to bid by early&#13;
middle of AuguSt.&#13;
September it was indicated.&#13;
Bob Bailey, EMS coordinator, told&#13;
County Engineer, Philip Roberts,&#13;
the commissioners that the emegendiscuss~ a slip oq county road 75,&#13;
cyvehiclewhichcoughtonfirecould&#13;
hospital hlll, and presented an&#13;
be repaired.&#13;
estimate for the necessal)' repair ~ · Attending in addiUon to those&#13;
work.&#13;
named were Richard Jones&#13;
Upon Roberts' reconunendation&#13;
president•.Henry Wells and Cheste;&#13;
the boa.rd agreed·to proceed as soon&#13;
Wells, commissioners, Mary Hobas posSJble on an emergency basis.&#13;
stetter, clerk, and Martha ChamJim Page, consulting engineer,&#13;
hers.&#13;
reviewed progress of the access&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
enttne&#13;
FIFTEEN CENTS&#13;
&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1980&#13;
&#13;
Orlando hit&#13;
by violence&#13;
escapees ca1:&gt;tured&#13;
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Police lobbed tear gas canisters into a&#13;
laltefront house early today and captured three condemned killers who&#13;
had walked out of Georgia's maximum security prison. 1be fourth&#13;
escapee was found dead, floating in a river in the next county.&#13;
FBI Agent Cecil Moses said the dead man, found in the Catawba&#13;
River in Gaston County, had been identified as Troy Leon Gregg, 32, of&#13;
York;S.C.&#13;
.&#13;
He said the cause of death had not been established.&#13;
1be capture of the three other escal&gt;ees came after officials issued a&#13;
nationwide alert for the prisoners, who were described as "extremely&#13;
dangerous" men with "nothing to lose." .&#13;
&#13;
Injuri~&#13;
&#13;
\ ,&#13;
&#13;
1. llrttloll hont diK b~Gi.e pod• D!l.d llnlnt• o n re01 r&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON - An Ohio teen-ager died here Tuesday from injuries received in an automobile accident Monday night.&#13;
. Police in suburban Prince Gearge'a County, Md., said C'.athe!'ine&#13;
Ahlborn, 17, d. 21159 Blue Rock Drive in Xenia, Ohio, was riding in a car&#13;
that cruhed into a telephorie pole and fence.&#13;
The driver of the car, John Frederick Vance, 16, of Cllnton, Md., told&#13;
·pollee that he crashed after avoiding a car that had swerved into his&#13;
lane.&#13;
.&#13;
Ms. Ahlbom was flown by helicopter to the Washington Hospital&#13;
Center following the accident. She died of internal injuries Tuesday&#13;
evening, police said.&#13;
Vance and two other passengers in the car, Richard LeeGunnell,19,&#13;
and Linda Ragimo, l6, both of Cllnton, received only minor injuries.&#13;
&#13;
Save on&#13;
Disc/Drum&#13;
Brake Special&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Carter will visit Cleveland&#13;
&#13;
whNI1&#13;
&#13;
2. leturlalo dr~o~mt and hv o rAton&#13;
S. l.,sp.ct hont c ollpers ~&#13;
• · lellulhl roar wh-1 t ~ l lnd.:,. , II pou.lblo;&#13;
ropiA&lt;o , If n.~;onary , at addiUvnal pGrh c:otl IM•&#13;
wh..J qllndor&#13;
l . lepa~lt lnnorond oo.tt.. 'earlng1&#13;
6. lnap.c:.t malfor crllndtl&#13;
&#13;
7. ltoplac;o front gr•a•• t •&#13;
I , loUII h droullc ,,,.,.,...&#13;
&#13;
claim Ohio teenager&#13;
&#13;
Save on disc/drum brake job for&#13;
many U.S. cars. Additional parts&#13;
and services which may be needed&#13;
are at eKtra cost. Shop at K mart for&#13;
your automotive needs.&#13;
&#13;
CLEVELAND - The White House has confirmed that President&#13;
Carter will visit Cleveland to attend a Democratic fund-raiser next&#13;
Monday.&#13;
The event will be a $2,5t)G.a-couple dinner at the home of Milton Wolf&#13;
in suburban Shaker Heights. Wolf is former U.S. ambassador to&#13;
Austria.&#13;
The White House said the president also wiU visit New York Aug. 6 to&#13;
address the Urban League.&#13;
Jerry Alilltin, who was Ohio coordinator for Carter's primary campaign, said Tuesday,that Carter aides are CO!lSidering also having a&#13;
smaller fund-raiser in Cleveland for those who cannot afford the&#13;
Shaker Heights affair. But the pbins are stiU tentative. Austin said&#13;
such an event would be somethi!)g like a $!().a-person party before the&#13;
Wolf dinner.&#13;
&#13;
Spy naming now costly venhire&#13;
&#13;
··~. 59.88&#13;
Hydraulic&#13;
&#13;
F~oor&#13;
&#13;
Jack&#13;
&#13;
1V.-tori capacity with 5-15"1ifllhg range.&#13;
360"swiveieaddla. For home,~&#13;
&#13;
WASHINGTON- The Senate Intelligence Committee gave 12-(lapproval Tuesday night to a bill that calls for jailing or fining Americans&#13;
who publicly identify U.S. secret agents . .&#13;
The action, aimed at professional spy-exposers and at agents who&#13;
have turned against the CIA, foUows close on the heels of the House Intelligence Committee's approval of.slmilar legislation last week.&#13;
CIA officials and a number of legislators contend the legislation is&#13;
needed to protect the lives of American spies and. to keep U.S. intellige.nce operations running. The bill got a boost earlier this month&#13;
wben gunmen fired into the home of a man recenUy alleged to be&#13;
"station chief" for CIA operations in Jamaica.&#13;
&#13;
South Korean ship still missing&#13;
MANILA, Philippines- A South Korean ore ship with a crew of 29&#13;
has been missing off the central Philippines for a week and searchers&#13;
&#13;
fear It may have sunk in Typhoon Kim, the ship's agent said today.&#13;
The agent said the bulk carrier Haedangwh8 left Dlimpier,&#13;
Australia, July 17 for Pohang, South Ko~. and w~ last heard from&#13;
Wednesday. It reported then it was about 185 miles south of the&#13;
tyuhoon. He said the ship was carrying 98,000 tons of iron ore.&#13;
&#13;
ORLANDO, Fla. (APJ - Police&#13;
removed most barricades and rush. hour traffic moved without incident&#13;
today through a predominantly&#13;
black Orlando neighborhood wbere&#13;
sporadic violence broke out in the&#13;
pre-dawn hours.&#13;
But four blocks of one street&#13;
remained sealed off in the heart of&#13;
the area where an angry crowd of&#13;
about 100 people pelted police and&#13;
passers-by with rocks and bottles&#13;
and some stores were looted.&#13;
The violence erupted after police&#13;
arrested a rqbbery suspect at Sister&#13;
Reed's bar in the central part of the·&#13;
city, according to police spokesman&#13;
Rick deTreville.&#13;
At least one car was set on fire, but&#13;
firemen were forced to withdraw&#13;
from the arll!!J!Ild~ a. hail of rocks,&#13;
pOlice said.&#13;
At least six people were arrested,&#13;
deTreville said, including 11\ree&#13;
people arrested at the Sister Reed's&#13;
bar.&#13;
It was the thjrd. Fiorida city&#13;
rocked by racial disturbances since&#13;
the Miami riots In May left 18'people&#13;
dead. In the wake of the Miami riots,&#13;
gangs of black youths prowled the&#13;
streets of Tampa several nights,&#13;
tO&amp;Sing rocks and bottles. Then,&#13;
earlier this month, violence erupted&#13;
again in the predominantly black&#13;
Liberty Cty section of Miami. .&#13;
In Orlando, four ministers walked&#13;
the streets of the troubled neighborhood helping restore order.&#13;
Ministers ted by the Rev. W.D.&#13;
Judge, a leader in the Orlando black&#13;
community, . walked through the&#13;
area and urged young blacks to stay&#13;
calm. The ministers said a general&#13;
community meeting would be held&#13;
today to allow blacks to air their&#13;
grievance(!.&#13;
1be incident began when police attempted to arrest two robbery&#13;
suspects, Nursey said. One suspect&#13;
resisted arrest, drawing an angry&#13;
crowd of 100 to 150 people who threw&#13;
rocks and bottles at .officers, the&#13;
chief said. ,&#13;
crowd broke up into smaller&#13;
groups and roalited the area, police&#13;
said.&#13;
· Two Orlando police officers were&#13;
slightly injured wben they were&#13;
struck by flying bottles, said Nur·&#13;
sey. One was hit in the back by a bottle while another suffered a cut on&#13;
his arm.&#13;
As the violence broke out, Orlando&#13;
police caUed ill reinforcements from&#13;
the Orange County Sherifrs Department and the Florida Highway&#13;
Patrol to guard the sealecklff area.&#13;
, Police permitted no one but the&#13;
ministers and a few reporters to enter.&#13;
&#13;
:fhe&#13;
&#13;
Six die in Communist attack&#13;
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - About 50 communist insurgents attacked a patrol of civilians and police guarding a roa!l. construction&#13;
project in northern Thailand, klUed six men in the patrol and wounded&#13;
12 the Thai Military Supreme Command reported today.&#13;
·rebels escaped into the jungle with the dead patrolmen's&#13;
automatic rifles apd ammunition, a spokesman sald.&#13;
1be occurred in the Umpang district of Tak province, 2.io miles north of Bangkok,.a spokesman said.&#13;
&#13;
· irhe&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Weather forecast _&#13;
Clear tonight. Lows in the upper 60s. Increasing cloudiness Thursday. Highs near 90. Chance of rain near zero percent tonight and 20&#13;
. percent Thursday. Winds variable.10 mph or less tonight.&#13;
EJ:Ielllled Ohio For~ast Friday through Sunday:Scattered&#13;
showers and thunderstonns·Friday. Fair Saturday and Sunday. Highs&#13;
In the low to mid-l!Os. Lows in the 608.&#13;
.&#13;
f&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Rhodes asks for&#13;
extra relief funds&#13;
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - Gov.&#13;
James A. Rhodes has asked for extra disaster relief for fanners who&#13;
S\lffered extensive crop damage&#13;
during severe storms in southwest&#13;
and central Ohio July 12.&#13;
Rhodes wrote to James Wahner,&#13;
regional !~!rector of the Federal .&#13;
Emergency ~nagement Agency In&#13;
Chicago, asking for a review of the&#13;
damage and emergency aid .&#13;
. Rhodes made the request Tuesday&#13;
because he said assistance from the&#13;
Farmers Home Administration wiU&#13;
not adequately meet the needs of&#13;
tarmers in the affected areas.&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
SEMINAR - Twenty-eight participants in the&#13;
the sessions. Receiving an explanation from the iwo inMeigs County Commissioners CETA Program atstructors are four participants, I to r, Terry Stobart,&#13;
tended a two-day readiness semiQar Monday and_ , Paul G~~lrl!u:Y. B~y - aa.d , Floy!l 0b1iJ!w.&#13;
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn. Standing are Peg Thomas&#13;
Another seminar will be held later for the other 28 parand John Malacos, counselors at Rio Grande College&#13;
ticipants in the program . .&#13;
and Rio Grande Conununity College, who conducted&#13;
&#13;
Hoffa case remains mystery&#13;
despite FBI's 5-year probe&#13;
DETROIT (AP) - Five years ago&#13;
today, Jimmy Hoffa vanished after&#13;
leaving a suburban Detroit&#13;
restaurant, and thus began one of&#13;
the FBI's most famous unsolved&#13;
cases.&#13;
And while .the government's&#13;
strategy to snare the presumed&#13;
killers of the former Teamsters boss&#13;
hasn't worked, authorities haven't&#13;
changed their tlieory on who is&#13;
behind Hoffa's disappearance.&#13;
·&#13;
They believe he w.as the target in a&#13;
contract murder arranged by&#13;
organized crime bosses to protect&#13;
what federal investigators say are&#13;
long-standing business arrangements with the Teamsters.&#13;
"We're no more hopeful now than&#13;
we were two years ago," \!IIYS 0.&#13;
Franklin Lowie, head of the Detroit&#13;
FBI office. · "We're no more&#13;
pessimistic either. The case is open&#13;
but unsolved. We're still working on&#13;
&#13;
it. "&#13;
&#13;
Among the government's efforts&#13;
to solve. the highly publicized case&#13;
was a barrage of criminal&#13;
prosecutions ;in the hope .of persuading a suspect to trade testimony&#13;
for a light sentence and protective&#13;
·custody.&#13;
Four reputed underworld figures&#13;
and their associates were convicted&#13;
of a dozen crimes, but the FBI has&#13;
been unable to implicate them in the&#13;
disappearance of Hoffa; who at the&#13;
time of his disappearance was plan·&#13;
ning a campaign to oust Frank Fitzsimmons as president of the ·&#13;
nation's largest labor union.&#13;
Judges meted out more than 80&#13;
years in sentences including one of&#13;
life imprisonment, but most of the&#13;
suspected Hoffa. case figures are&#13;
eligible for parole in a few years. AU&#13;
are appealing their convictions, a&#13;
&#13;
few are free on bond and one has served his sentence.&#13;
Hoffa was last seen getting In a&#13;
car with several men outside the&#13;
Machos Red Fox Restaurant in&#13;
Bloomfield Township.&#13;
FBI agents believe fonner New&#13;
Jersey Teamsters boss Anthony&#13;
Provenzano, 63, wanted Hoffa out rl&#13;
the way and reputed northeastern&#13;
Pennsylvania crime boss Russell&#13;
Bufalino, 76, approved a killing.&#13;
Reputed Detroit underworld&#13;
figure Anthony Giacalone and his&#13;
brother Vito, federal agents believe,&#13;
lured their friend Hoffa to the&#13;
restaurant on the pretext of settling&#13;
an old feud between Hoffa and&#13;
Provenzano.&#13;
Provenzano, Bufalino, . and the&#13;
Giacalone brothers are all serving&#13;
jail terms, convicted of charges&#13;
unrelated to the Hoffa case.&#13;
&#13;
Heavy rains drench I;Jelawarf!. area,&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
sizzling heat evident in Oklahoma&#13;
By Tbe Associated Press&#13;
Record downpours drenchl!d parts&#13;
of the Northeast with much-needed&#13;
rain, swamping streets and homes,&#13;
triggering power failures In New&#13;
York and wreaking havoc on city&#13;
transportation systems.&#13;
But in the "heat zone," Oklahoma&#13;
residents were sizzling under the&#13;
hottest temperatures of the year 108 degrees in. Oklahoma City on&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
•&#13;
·&#13;
Delaware's Lake Como, swollen&#13;
with 5.1 inches of rain, overflowed&#13;
and covered U.S. Route 13 with up to&#13;
4 feet of water Tuesday. But sandbagging saved the Lake Como&#13;
bridge from collapsing and prevented more flooding.&#13;
The highway was to reopen later&#13;
today, said State Highway DireCtor&#13;
Robert Bewick.&#13;
Flood waters isolated a soda shop&#13;
&#13;
in Smyrna, Del., sweeping away&#13;
parts of its parking lot and leaving a&#13;
comer of the building hanging 15&#13;
feet above an eroded pit.&#13;
High water also knocked out a&#13;
sewage pumping station, halting&#13;
service to many of the town's 1,500&#13;
homes.&#13;
·&#13;
..OSmage estima.tes were not immediately available.&#13;
New York rains stalled Manhattan's morning commuters in the air,&#13;
on the roads and in~ subways. The&#13;
deluge forced thrf!l highways to&#13;
close for several hours, and New&#13;
York's LaGuardia airport and&#13;
Newark airport .in New Jersey&#13;
reported two-hOur delays.&#13;
. Underground, some subway trains&#13;
were delayed and others halted as&#13;
water cascaded from the streets into&#13;
subway stations.·&#13;
Manhattan got a record 3.47 inches&#13;
.of rain, according to the Nation~ I&#13;
&#13;
Weather Service. 1be old record for&#13;
July 29 was 1.40 inches, set in 1930.&#13;
Consolidated Edison reported&#13;
wide power outages throughout the&#13;
day, but almost all service was&#13;
restored by Tuesday evening. Roads&#13;
were back to nonnal by the evening&#13;
rush hour.&#13;
In New Jersey, highways were&#13;
flooded and traffic inched along in&#13;
poor visibility. Transit off4cials&#13;
reported delays of up to an hour on&#13;
trains originating in Philadelphia,&#13;
where downed trees and power lines&#13;
cut off power.&#13;
Weather service officials said 1.93&#13;
inches of rain fell on Newark, with&#13;
1.87 inches coming in one hour&#13;
Tuesday morning.&#13;
New Jersey farmers, meanwhile,&#13;
welcomed the rain as a salvage for&#13;
crops that had been suffering und~&#13;
several weeks of hot, dry weather.&#13;
&#13;
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