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                  <text>President hopes report will end rumors
'

b Dick Cavalli

WINTHROP
! rAQN'r WANi TO Be.

~U~WIFEi WH~

A

I tX,POW
UP. iHAT5 A DUMB WtlilO,
. ANYWAY... ·

By JAMES GE!tSTENZANG
Auocialed Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ President
Carter, eager to get his side of the
story before Congress and the
public, is rushing to complete a
report on his brotl!er's Libyan connection as a special Senate committee begins hearings on the Billy
Carter affair.
Carter, in a precarious political
position with the Democratic
National Convention just a week

away, said Sunday he hopes the
report will put an end to weeks of
rumors and revelations about White
House involvement in the Billy Car-·
ter-Libyan matter.
Mter spending the weekend with
top aides at his Camp David, Md.,
retreat, the presidenttold reporters
upon returning to Washington that
ihe document was "ju:;t about" complete.
Alfred Moses, one of the lawyers
working on the ac.count, described it

NO. 78

of the special Senate cbnunlttee,··

urged the president to make sure hll
report is complete, even if it mealll
delaying it.
" Rather than rushing to teU all on
Monday - and risk a spate ol
denials and clarification•
throughout the rest of the week - I
would suggest that the president
might do well to take hili time untll
he is sure he has worked out thll
definitive version," Dole said.
(Continu ed on page 10)

enttne

at

P,OMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-Justice Department three weeks ago
as a representative of Libya and
disclosed that he had received
$220,000 in installments on a $500,000
loan.
One of the president's key political
aUies, Democratic National Chair·
man John G. White, tried Sunday to
play down the political fallout.
''There's no fire . · Not even any
smoke. Just a lot of hot air," White
said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., a member

•

•

e
VOL 31

The special Senate conunittee was
opening its public hearings today
with a review · of U.S.-Libyan
relations.
Senate Majority Leader Robert C.
Byrd, !).W.Va., predicted the investigation will show "bad judgment
and rather amateurish handling of
foreign policy'"' in the Billy Carter
case, but he said he doubted it would
find evidence of wrongdoing by the
president or his staff.
Billy Carter registered with the

as "a full report to the Senate" containing no surprises. ·However,
White House press secretary Jody
Powell said the report would include
some previously undisclosed
documents to support the
president's case.
"It should be delivered to the
Senate late" today, Moses said. By
that timetable, Carter then would
hold a natiomilly televised, primetime news conference this evening to
answer questions about the report.

Fl FTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 1980

Retribution
11

YOUR MAJ~TY. 11

sought by
Iranians
Springfield workers OK contract
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio. - Striking non-uniformed municipal
employees voted Sunday to accept a three-year contract with the city,
ending a week-old walkout.
· The 200 workers, who walked off the job Monday, were scheduled to
.
return to their jobs beginning at midnight Sunday.
The agreement will provide pay raises of 52 cents per hour in the first year, 44 cents in the second year and 54 cents in the third year.
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees
Local 1608 President Allen Kurtz said the raises are retroactive to
Au11. 1.
Agreement was reached following a 3\'z-hour bargaining session
Saturday.
Wages under the old contract ranged from $5.14 to$9.31 an hour.
Supervisory personnel performed ali the strikers' tasks, except for
garbage collection.

•

Priscllla•s Po

Urban League opens70th session

r

THINK
HE WANTS
10 TELL
, "rrU

NEW YORK - The National Urban League opened its 70th annual
conference here Sunday with its acting head warning" presidential candidates to pay attention to black problems when they speak to the
gathering.
John E..Jacob, the league's executi,ve vice president, told reporters
before the·convention began that the black vote was important for any
contender who wanted to win in November. About 15,000 people are expeeled to attend the annual meeting.
"We are saying that while the candidates come here to talk to us, we
insist that they also listen to us," said ,Jacob, who was standing in
during the weeklong event for"Vernon E. Jordan Jr., the league's
president, who was still hospitalized.
Jordan, who was critically wounded in a May 29 shooting in Fort
Wayne',Jnd., was reported by his doctors to be greatly improved but
not yet well enough recovered to attend the conference.
Jordan was expected to be released from a hospital here within a
few weeks and back at his desk after Labor Day, Jacob said.

lfOlJ
GO FIR~T,
POP.'

.

~

PiqUJJ parents mlk about girls
DAYTON, Ohio - It's not a coincidence the nearly six-weeks-old
Siamese twins from Piqua share the same middle name.
" Ifigure if they can share parts of their bodies now, they can share a
middle name. They're going to have to share something the rest of
their lives;" said their mother, 2:&gt;-year-old Rebecca Wackier.
Valerie Renee and Natalie Renee Wackier remain in critical but
stable condition in an intensive care nursery at Children's Medieal
Center in Dayton. Doctors are considering separating the twins, who
are joined at the base of their spines, at the end of October or in early
November, Mrs. Wa~kler said.
.
Hospital spokesman .Phil Stoffan said they remain in critical condition only. because Valerie is receiving supplemental oxygen and is
being fed through a naS()ogastric tube through her nose and into her
stomach. Natalie is being fed with a bottle, and both girls now weigh a
total of 10 pounds, seven ounces.
,
·"That's an ounce and a half higher than yesterday," Mrs. Wackier
said Saturday. "That means they're getting their baby fat," added her
26-year-old husband, Randy. •.
The couple said they were shocked after the premature delivery of
the twins. Doctors don't know what causes Siamese twins. The chan·
~es of such a delivery are one in 50,000.

"HARRY AND I SHARE THE RESPONSIBIL•TY FOR
' MEALS. HALF 'tHE TIME HE COOK.AND
HALF THE TIME WE EAT OUTih

Nineteen die in traffic mishaps
COLUMBUS - A dozen of' Ohio's 19 traffic fatalities this weekend
occured in single-car accidents,,the Highway Patrol said.
Two victims were pedestrians and Two others wer~motorcyclists . .
The patrol counts weekend traffic deaths from 6 p.m. Friday until
midnight Sunday.

Weather forecast

"I'M IOMY I TOOK 80 LoNG ON MY LUNCH HOUR,
MR. PEAkiNSII WAS TRYING To MATCH ACRESS
WITH THISALARIES THEY PAY AROUND tiEREI"

Extended Ohlo Forecast- Wednesday through Friday:Warm and
humid with a chance or thunderstorms each day. Highs in the 80s north
and eentral to 90s south. Lows in the 70s.
''

•

,
•

'

'

v

CREATIVE ARTS - Both Amy Ritchie, left, and
Alice Ritchie of the Tuppers Plair)s Country Cousins,

made latch hook wall hangings in their 4-H club work
this swruner. The sisters also had refinishing projects,
plants and flowers, and livestock.

Officials -wind up pre-fair judging

Hurricane Allen lashes Barbados
BRIDGETOWN, Barbados - Hurricane Allen, the first hurricane"'!
the season, lashed this Caribbean island with gusty winds and heavy
rain Sunday night, toppling power lines and flooding low-lying areas.
There were reportS of roads blocked by fallen trees in the sparsely
populated northern part of the island.
Hundreds of Barbadians went to community hurricane shelters but
thousands more remained in theirhomes, and traffic was still moving
on streets with the eye of the hurricane less than 4Q miles to the east.
Much of the Bridgetown area was without electricity and the
island's television station was knocked off the air by the power failure.
Bridgetown's international airport was shut down Sunday afternoon.
Supermarkets and liardware stores, usually closed on Sundays,
opened for business in the morning so people could make last-minute
preparations for the storm. Windows in some houses were boarded up
as officials put the island on full hurricane alert.
Barbados, with a population of 250,000, is loc11ted 1,700 miles northeast of Venezuela.

"SOM!'rHINQ THI FATHER 01 A4-YEAA.QLD
CAN PUT BACK ToGETHER!"

By Tbe Associated Press
Iranian anger mounted Sunday
over the detention of almost · 200
countrymen in the United States,
and bitter demonstrators in one
Iranian city demanded that the
American hostages be put on trial
immediately in reprisal, Tehran
Radio reported.
U.S. immigration authorities were
preparing
for deportation
proceedings against the detained
Iranians - 169 men in a federal
prison in New York State, 20 women ·
in a New York City federal detention
center, and three hospitalized men.
They were arrested a week ago
when their Washington demon·
stration in support of Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini 's Iranian
regime ended in clashes with antiKhomeini protesters and police.
The Iranians' lawyers contend
they were brutalized by police, and
many have refused to eat in prison,
Iranian officials warned last week
that the alleged mistreatment of the
U.S.-jailed protesters would influence the fate of the 52 Am~rican
hostages, who on Sunday began their
40th week in captivity in Iran.
Tehran Radio, in a broadcast
monitored in London, said thousands
of people staged a sit-in at a mosque
in the northwestern Iranian city of
Gerrni on Sunday in protest of
"America's fascist action."

The final pre-fail11 judginl! of 4-H
Cl,v!J projects took place Saturday at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds.

Club members brought in model
rockets and airplanes, rope projects,
electrical projects, creative arts,

small motors, and refinished furniture as well as projects pertaining
to communications and conservations. Judges in ~he respective

r-------~--------------------..:.._..;_

I

Branot arrested

David S. Branot, 28, Columbus,
will appear in Meigs County Court
today on charges of trafficking in
drugs according to Sheriff James J.
Proffitt.
Branot was arrested by deputies
Lou Osbo~e , Clifford Longenette
and investigator Gary Wolfe Saturday when an alleged sale of Valiwn
which was to have taken place at a
local estab'lishrnent.
Brenot was taken into cusotdy after allegedly selling Valiums to one
of the deputies working as a plain
clothes officer.
In other activities the department
· investigated a hit-skip that occurred
Saturday at 2:15a.m. on the parking

£

10r

tra££iCking

___1

lot at Tall Timbers.
by a vehicle that was backing out of
According to the sheriff's depart- . the lot.
ment a vehilce owned by Wayne
The incident is under inBright, Rt. I, Gallipolia was struck vestigation.

fields were on hand to interview the
club members and evaluate their
projects.
The projects will be on exhibit In
the junior fair bililding during the
Meigs County Fair next week.
Tuesday evening at 7:30p.m. at
Eastern High School, the annual
style revue sewing projects will be
staged. Judging of sewing proJects
took place Thursday.

· Ohio free of
showers today ·

By Tbe Associated Press
Ohio, under the influence of a high
pressure area, was. free of showers
and thllilderstonns this morning.
But it was foggy across the state,
with visibilities below one mile at
Canton-Akron, Youngstown, Mansfield and Zanesville.
Early morning temperatures were
in the 60s in most of the state, except
in the low 70s in the extreme south.
The temperature extremes at dawn
were 60 degrees at both Cleveland
and Youngstown and 72 degrees at
Marietta .
Ohio was to get a breather from
the showers and thunderstorms, but
only for today. A cold front in the
Central Plains will move to northwest Ohio by Tuesday morning
and central Ohio by Tuesday night.
This will bring a return to showers,
thunderstorms and humid conditions.
EMS TO MEET

The Racine Emergency Squad will
hold a special meeting at 7:30 tliis
evening at the quartrs. All members
ure asked to be present.

ROPE PROJECfS are popular with many of the
younger 4-H Club members. Here, Steve Musser of the

Country Clovers, has hili . rope project judged by
Everett Holcomb .

�2- The

Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 4, 19110
~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. t, 19110

Carpenter Personals

Opinions &amp;
Comments

Mr. and Mrs. Glen Gassaway,
P,owell, visited their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. William

'BILLY'S
1\.1 A ~IG
01." l'ICKLE
WITI-I TI-IAT

LIBYA

DEAL!
;·'

.

,.,
,.•

..••••

, -,-

Miller and family.
Mrs. Mary Dye Kepnar and
Valerie, Hartford~ spent a few days

AUG.
4-9,
1980

EM8A1&lt;~ASSIN'

roR

JiMMY...

----

VAUGHAN'S

11
r_J

..

5 POUND SPECIALS

Middleport, Ohio
MIXED

;; Political conventions:
,.,,
r) same ol~ story !etold
••
Political conventions inevitably are a retelling of the
.story, efforts to capitalize on the same national year...,•••'•• same
nings and frustrations. Only the names and dates change.

--,

r,

FRIENDLIEST SfRVICE IN TOWN
Blt;GEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

i,l '•

8 AM TILL 10 PM

Today is Monday, August 4, the
217th day of 19110. There are 149 days
left In the year. '
: Today' s highlight in history:
· On Aug. 4, 1914, Britain declared
:war on Germany at the beginning of
:the World War I.
On this date :
In 1~90, a naval force was formed
:that later became the'Coast Guard.
: In . 1892, Lizzie Borden was
·arrested in Fall River, Milss., for the

' and
hatchet murders of her father
stepmother.
In 1944, Nazi police captured 14year-old Anne Frank and seven
other Jews in their hiding place in
Amsterdam.
In 1972, Arthur Bremer was found
guilty and sentenced to 63 year~
behind bars for the shooting of
Alabama Gov. George Wallace and
three others at a political rally in a
Laurel, Md., shopping center.

y

...._ _...

Industrial research thriving in U. S.
NEW YORK (AP) - There is no
shortage of research and development funds, nor of ideas, inventions
and ingenuity in the United States,
said E.E. David Jr., president of
Exxon Research and Engineering
Corp.
"Overall, industrial research and
development in the United States is
thriving," said David. "There is a
spirit of vitality."
Why, then, has the U.S. growth
rate shrunk? Why can other nations,
West Gennany, Japan and, in
isolated instances, even less
developed nations, so effectively
challenge U.S. industrial leader·
ship?
David, former presidential science adviser and past president of the
American Association for the Ad·
vancement of Science, laid it on the
line recently in a talk to engineers at
the University ofCaUfornia.
While recognizing the truth of
some of the usual explanations, and
agreeing that they contribute to the

Today'~

problem, he dismissed them as the
fundamental cause.
.Inadequate spending for research
and development is often the first to
be mentioned.
Nonsense, said David. Real spen·
ding for inqustrial research and
development turned up in 1972 and

disagree. But he said we must luok
for an even more basic reason.
Still withholding from his audience what he considered this reason to
be, David went on to list what he
called two other symptoms·. for the
slow rate of economic growth in the
United States.

-Business mirror
since then has been rising at 5 per·
cent a year in deflated dollars.
"In 1979 industry spent some $24
billion of its own funds on RXD. Ven·
lure capital was readily available in
the late 1970s, and new small en·
terprises have been playing their .accustomed innova live role.''
Inflation, the low savings rate and,
compared with other nations, the
low level of capital investment, are
frequently cited. David didn't

He described rather 'han labeled
the first of these two.
"Hewlett-Packard Co. tested 3,000
'16-K random-access-memories'
manufactured by three U.S. and
three Japanese firms. The failure
rate of the best Japanese product
was onHixth that of the best U.S.
product, while the failure rate of the
worst Japanese product was onetwenty-seventh that of the worst
U.S. product."

Of the second; he simply said:
"The U.S. has four times as many
lawyers per capita as West Ger·
many, and 20 times as many as
Japan."
Also mentioned as a reason for the
poor U.S. economic growth rate is a
stagnation in the growtft of scientific
manpower. .While David said the
pool is again growing, he also agreed
we have lost plenty of ground.
"Between the years 1968 to 1978
the relative fraction of scientists and
engineers found in the U.S. labor for·
ce declined by 13 percent," he said.
"Meanwhile, the Soviet Union, West
Germany and Japan were boosting
their technical manpower by 55 per·
cent or more. "

FRANKS---~~-~.~;~.1

AND

SPARE RIB$ .....•..... .'~,.'1
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BOi.OGN A ...........~.!~~

29

'3"

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Not -sur- news.
prisingly, Jody Powell's daily
Powell replied dryly, "The -world
briefings for reporters lately have tonight? The whole damned thing in
been dominated by Billy ·Carter's
one evening? Fifteen minutes.''
ties with Libya and the White House
+++
involvement in the situation . .
Then there are the "ghosts." Since
The episode is causing great the White House has begun anproblems for President Carter at the
swering questions about· its inworst possible time, so there has
volvement in the Billy Carterbeen little humor from the
Libyan affair, there have been many
president's chief spokesman during
press reports about how it is or is not
these drawn-out sessions.
like the Watergate scandals that
Last week, after the Whit~ House drove Richard M. Nixon from office.
released its first statement on White
But in the White House briefings,
House involvement with the
through several discussions between
president's brother and his relationPowell and reporters about how the
ship to Libya, the briefing droned on
White House handling of the episode
so long that it drew close to the
compares with 'that of Watergate,
evening deadlines of television net·
that word has almost never been
work correspondents.
used.
"Can we have a !~minute filing
At one point a reporter reminded
break because we have "The World
Tonight?" a correspondent asked, Powell that some of the words . he
referring to ABC-TV's evening , was using, such as "full disclosure,"

were the same as those used during
Nixon's era.
Powell said: "God knows, if I
could think of a way to say it that
didn't raise those ghosts I would. But
I don't know. I don •'t know of any
other way to say it. That is the way
folks talk, I guess."

+++
There have been persistent repor·
ts that the president plans to return
to Georgia for a week or so iJn.
mediately after the Democratic
National Convention Aug. 11-14.
After the Billy affair sprouted,
Powell, also a Georgian, committed
what must have been . akin to a
sacrilege when he suddenly declared
he hoped the president would change
his mind and go North to rest.
"I never thought I'd hear myself
say that," he added.

+++

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
litigated, arid to an Ohio 8 project In liturgy on the latter subject for
James A. Rhodes' campaign against
Swrunit County, unfinished since reporters at the Republican
federal environmental regulations
1972, which has involved reloc;~ting a National Convention in Detroit last
now includes a claim that a duck
duck which was nesting in the -path month. He is aware there are people
altered'the course of history - well, · of the new highway.
who don't agree with him, he said,
a highway, at least.
"Unless we start now to do away adding : "I know I'm a provocative,
In a prepared statement this
with unnecessary regulations that controversial !ll!rson."
week, in which he mentioned how
inhibit progress and growth, we can
the r~gulations add to high,way
expect to see increases in all of the
State Rep. Marie Tansey, R·
costS, the governor said in part:
SOCial ills which stem from a no Vermilion, has been nominated for
"We recognize that the er&gt;vironment must be considered in the
~rspective
construction of highway projects,
but it gets a little ridiculous when 'growth society," the governor asser- Harper's Bazaar "Diamond Super·
important highways are delayed for
ted.
woman Award."
yea rs because a •.swarm of
Most of Rhodes' complaints in·
The award will be given in Novemmosquitoes or one duck have to be
volvc the federal Environmental ber to six women in the nation who
resettled llefore construction can
Protection Agency, which he says ))ave taken time out to raise a
continue."
,...
boosted the cost of the Alaska
Rhodes referred, he said, to the pipeline from $900 million to $9 family, then re-entered the business
Warren 011terbelt project which was
billi on, "mostly .w protect the world and became successful in
tlelayed several y~ars while the l'~l'l ~UU .
their selected fields.
·
relocation of a mosquito bog was
The governor ran through his
Each o[ the winners will receive a

Ohio

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SHORTENING

Little humor lately at White House

ECK.ICH

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VEGETABLES

In an age when countries must Uve
by their wits and brainpower, and
not through any corner on
technology or natural resources, all
these deficiencies can be translated
into economic problems , he
suggested.

political rounaup

'

· ECKRICH

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There was a time when agents
would rush into the Oval Office when
the alarm sounded. But, after
several false alarms due to defects,
things seem to have become a bit
less rigid.
The alarm went off repeatedly one
day this week, and even though the
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The Ohio Oil and Gas Association
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oldest, dating ba·ck to 1859.
In a new pamphlet describing.the
industry, the group notes that· the
state ranks 19th among the 50 states
in Qil production. .
It produced 11 .9 million barrels of
oil and 124 .6 billion cubic feet of
natural gas in 1979, the best year since the famous Morrow .County oil
boom in 1964-1965.
Although the state falls short of
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dependent on foreign oil, which accounts for nearly150 percent of U.S.
petroleum requirements-, the
association says.

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••
On that climactic night he accepts the presidential
••
••
, _ nomination of the out-of-power party, the challenger tells
r· of his travels across Aiilerica, of the greatness he has seen,
t.... and
bemoans the lack of leadership.
••
An incumbent seeking renewal of his White Ho1111e lease,
&gt;.
··~
no matter how high or low his standing in the polls, talks of
";. the need to continue his work .
r, .
\
.
When Richard M. Nixon accept~ the Republican
" nomination for a second term, he talked of his first four
years and said, "We can _be proud'of that record, but we
shall never be satisfied. Arecord is not something to stand
. ~j on, it's something to build on."
ij
Four years and Nixon's resignation later, Gerald R.
:: Ford accepted the Republican nomination with reference
,. to "the challenge of a job well-begun, but far fro111
~: finished."
:·
If President Carter is nominated for a second term at the
, ;:: Democratic National Convention, he undoubtedly will ac·~. cept with a speech citing the work he has begun and the
:~
need to carry it forward with another four years in the
::: White House.
·
::The themes and appeals change so little from convention
~ to convention that it sometimes sounds like the candidates,
::; regardless of party, are working from the same text.
t-·
Take Jinuny Carter and Ronald Reagan. N:o one is likely
.~; to accuse them of agreeing on much. Yet as challengers
·~
-~ for the presidency they had remarkably similar views of
·. · the nation.
·
At the 1976 Democratic Convention, Carter spoke of how
he took his campaign "directly to the people.of America, to
homes and shopping centers, factory shift lines and .
colleges, to barber shops and beauty parlors, to farmers'
·markets and union halls."
And where did Reagan campaign in 1980?
"From one end of this great nation and to the other, over
many mo11ths and thousands and thousands of miles ... in
the big cities, the small towns and in l'1,1ralAmerica."
And what did they find?
"A new mood in America," said Carter. "Our people are
seeking new voices, new ideas and new leaders."
"A party ready to build a new consensus with all those
across the land who share a community of values," said
Reagan.
Are these troubled times?
"Never before in our history," said Reagan, "have
Americans' been called upo11 to face three grave threats to
our very existence, any one of which could destroy us. We
face a disintegrating economy, a weakened defense and an
energy policy based on the sharing of scarcity.''
"We have been shaken by a tragic war abroad and by
scandals and broken promises at home," said Carter.

Mr. and 11frs. Roger Speigel, sustained while playing ball but still
Colwnbus, were guests of her sister has a serious eye problem.
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Cheadle.
OPRAHOUSE
Rexle Cheadle Is somewhat iJn.
New York's ·Metropolitan Opera
proved from an accident he · House was inaugurated in 1883.

family members, in the Waterford,
Bakersfield area, then went with
their son by motor home to Rio Rico
and other sections of Arizona, then
back to CaUfomia, before returning
home by plane.

... ~EAL

- - - .. .

•',.

here with her father, Dale Dye.
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers have
returned .from a vacation in .the
western states. They flew to California to visit their son and daughter-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Jeffers and

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Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 4, 19110
~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. t, 19110

Carpenter Personals

Opinions &amp;
Comments

Mr. and Mrs. Glen Gassaway,
P,owell, visited their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. William

'BILLY'S
1\.1 A ~IG
01." l'ICKLE
WITI-I TI-IAT

LIBYA

DEAL!
;·'

.

,.,
,.•

..••••

, -,-

Miller and family.
Mrs. Mary Dye Kepnar and
Valerie, Hartford~ spent a few days

AUG.
4-9,
1980

EM8A1&lt;~ASSIN'

roR

JiMMY...

----

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11
r_J

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Middleport, Ohio
MIXED

;; Political conventions:
,.,,
r) same ol~ story !etold
••
Political conventions inevitably are a retelling of the
.story, efforts to capitalize on the same national year...,•••'•• same
nings and frustrations. Only the names and dates change.

--,

r,

FRIENDLIEST SfRVICE IN TOWN
Blt;GEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

i,l '•

8 AM TILL 10 PM

Today is Monday, August 4, the
217th day of 19110. There are 149 days
left In the year. '
: Today' s highlight in history:
· On Aug. 4, 1914, Britain declared
:war on Germany at the beginning of
:the World War I.
On this date :
In 1~90, a naval force was formed
:that later became the'Coast Guard.
: In . 1892, Lizzie Borden was
·arrested in Fall River, Milss., for the

' and
hatchet murders of her father
stepmother.
In 1944, Nazi police captured 14year-old Anne Frank and seven
other Jews in their hiding place in
Amsterdam.
In 1972, Arthur Bremer was found
guilty and sentenced to 63 year~
behind bars for the shooting of
Alabama Gov. George Wallace and
three others at a political rally in a
Laurel, Md., shopping center.

y

...._ _...

Industrial research thriving in U. S.
NEW YORK (AP) - There is no
shortage of research and development funds, nor of ideas, inventions
and ingenuity in the United States,
said E.E. David Jr., president of
Exxon Research and Engineering
Corp.
"Overall, industrial research and
development in the United States is
thriving," said David. "There is a
spirit of vitality."
Why, then, has the U.S. growth
rate shrunk? Why can other nations,
West Gennany, Japan and, in
isolated instances, even less
developed nations, so effectively
challenge U.S. industrial leader·
ship?
David, former presidential science adviser and past president of the
American Association for the Ad·
vancement of Science, laid it on the
line recently in a talk to engineers at
the University ofCaUfornia.
While recognizing the truth of
some of the usual explanations, and
agreeing that they contribute to the

Today'~

problem, he dismissed them as the
fundamental cause.
.Inadequate spending for research
and development is often the first to
be mentioned.
Nonsense, said David. Real spen·
ding for inqustrial research and
development turned up in 1972 and

disagree. But he said we must luok
for an even more basic reason.
Still withholding from his audience what he considered this reason to
be, David went on to list what he
called two other symptoms·. for the
slow rate of economic growth in the
United States.

-Business mirror
since then has been rising at 5 per·
cent a year in deflated dollars.
"In 1979 industry spent some $24
billion of its own funds on RXD. Ven·
lure capital was readily available in
the late 1970s, and new small en·
terprises have been playing their .accustomed innova live role.''
Inflation, the low savings rate and,
compared with other nations, the
low level of capital investment, are
frequently cited. David didn't

He described rather 'han labeled
the first of these two.
"Hewlett-Packard Co. tested 3,000
'16-K random-access-memories'
manufactured by three U.S. and
three Japanese firms. The failure
rate of the best Japanese product
was onHixth that of the best U.S.
product, while the failure rate of the
worst Japanese product was onetwenty-seventh that of the worst
U.S. product."

Of the second; he simply said:
"The U.S. has four times as many
lawyers per capita as West Ger·
many, and 20 times as many as
Japan."
Also mentioned as a reason for the
poor U.S. economic growth rate is a
stagnation in the growtft of scientific
manpower. .While David said the
pool is again growing, he also agreed
we have lost plenty of ground.
"Between the years 1968 to 1978
the relative fraction of scientists and
engineers found in the U.S. labor for·
ce declined by 13 percent," he said.
"Meanwhile, the Soviet Union, West
Germany and Japan were boosting
their technical manpower by 55 per·
cent or more. "

FRANKS---~~-~.~;~.1

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WASIDNGTON (AP) - Not -sur- news.
prisingly, Jody Powell's daily
Powell replied dryly, "The -world
briefings for reporters lately have tonight? The whole damned thing in
been dominated by Billy ·Carter's
one evening? Fifteen minutes.''
ties with Libya and the White House
+++
involvement in the situation . .
Then there are the "ghosts." Since
The episode is causing great the White House has begun anproblems for President Carter at the
swering questions about· its inworst possible time, so there has
volvement in the Billy Carterbeen little humor from the
Libyan affair, there have been many
president's chief spokesman during
press reports about how it is or is not
these drawn-out sessions.
like the Watergate scandals that
Last week, after the Whit~ House drove Richard M. Nixon from office.
released its first statement on White
But in the White House briefings,
House involvement with the
through several discussions between
president's brother and his relationPowell and reporters about how the
ship to Libya, the briefing droned on
White House handling of the episode
so long that it drew close to the
compares with 'that of Watergate,
evening deadlines of television net·
that word has almost never been
work correspondents.
used.
"Can we have a !~minute filing
At one point a reporter reminded
break because we have "The World
Tonight?" a correspondent asked, Powell that some of the words . he
referring to ABC-TV's evening , was using, such as "full disclosure,"

were the same as those used during
Nixon's era.
Powell said: "God knows, if I
could think of a way to say it that
didn't raise those ghosts I would. But
I don't know. I don •'t know of any
other way to say it. That is the way
folks talk, I guess."

+++
There have been persistent repor·
ts that the president plans to return
to Georgia for a week or so iJn.
mediately after the Democratic
National Convention Aug. 11-14.
After the Billy affair sprouted,
Powell, also a Georgian, committed
what must have been . akin to a
sacrilege when he suddenly declared
he hoped the president would change
his mind and go North to rest.
"I never thought I'd hear myself
say that," he added.

+++

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
litigated, arid to an Ohio 8 project In liturgy on the latter subject for
James A. Rhodes' campaign against
Swrunit County, unfinished since reporters at the Republican
federal environmental regulations
1972, which has involved reloc;~ting a National Convention in Detroit last
now includes a claim that a duck
duck which was nesting in the -path month. He is aware there are people
altered'the course of history - well, · of the new highway.
who don't agree with him, he said,
a highway, at least.
"Unless we start now to do away adding : "I know I'm a provocative,
In a prepared statement this
with unnecessary regulations that controversial !ll!rson."
week, in which he mentioned how
inhibit progress and growth, we can
the r~gulations add to high,way
expect to see increases in all of the
State Rep. Marie Tansey, R·
costS, the governor said in part:
SOCial ills which stem from a no Vermilion, has been nominated for
"We recognize that the er&gt;vironment must be considered in the
~rspective
construction of highway projects,
but it gets a little ridiculous when 'growth society," the governor asser- Harper's Bazaar "Diamond Super·
important highways are delayed for
ted.
woman Award."
yea rs because a •.swarm of
Most of Rhodes' complaints in·
The award will be given in Novemmosquitoes or one duck have to be
volvc the federal Environmental ber to six women in the nation who
resettled llefore construction can
Protection Agency, which he says ))ave taken time out to raise a
continue."
,...
boosted the cost of the Alaska
Rhodes referred, he said, to the pipeline from $900 million to $9 family, then re-entered the business
Warren 011terbelt project which was
billi on, "mostly .w protect the world and became successful in
tlelayed several y~ars while the l'~l'l ~UU .
their selected fields.
·
relocation of a mosquito bog was
The governor ran through his
Each o[ the winners will receive a

Ohio

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Little humor lately at White House

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In an age when countries must Uve
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There was a time when agents
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The alarm went off repeatedly one
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The Ohio Oil and Gas Association
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In a new pamphlet describing.the
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state ranks 19th among the 50 states
in Qil production. .
It produced 11 .9 million barrels of
oil and 124 .6 billion cubic feet of
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Although the state falls short of
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••
On that climactic night he accepts the presidential
••
••
, _ nomination of the out-of-power party, the challenger tells
r· of his travels across Aiilerica, of the greatness he has seen,
t.... and
bemoans the lack of leadership.
••
An incumbent seeking renewal of his White Ho1111e lease,
&gt;.
··~
no matter how high or low his standing in the polls, talks of
";. the need to continue his work .
r, .
\
.
When Richard M. Nixon accept~ the Republican
" nomination for a second term, he talked of his first four
years and said, "We can _be proud'of that record, but we
shall never be satisfied. Arecord is not something to stand
. ~j on, it's something to build on."
ij
Four years and Nixon's resignation later, Gerald R.
:: Ford accepted the Republican nomination with reference
,. to "the challenge of a job well-begun, but far fro111
~: finished."
:·
If President Carter is nominated for a second term at the
, ;:: Democratic National Convention, he undoubtedly will ac·~. cept with a speech citing the work he has begun and the
:~
need to carry it forward with another four years in the
::: White House.
·
::The themes and appeals change so little from convention
~ to convention that it sometimes sounds like the candidates,
::; regardless of party, are working from the same text.
t-·
Take Jinuny Carter and Ronald Reagan. N:o one is likely
.~; to accuse them of agreeing on much. Yet as challengers
·~
-~ for the presidency they had remarkably similar views of
·. · the nation.
·
At the 1976 Democratic Convention, Carter spoke of how
he took his campaign "directly to the people.of America, to
homes and shopping centers, factory shift lines and .
colleges, to barber shops and beauty parlors, to farmers'
·markets and union halls."
And where did Reagan campaign in 1980?
"From one end of this great nation and to the other, over
many mo11ths and thousands and thousands of miles ... in
the big cities, the small towns and in l'1,1ralAmerica."
And what did they find?
"A new mood in America," said Carter. "Our people are
seeking new voices, new ideas and new leaders."
"A party ready to build a new consensus with all those
across the land who share a community of values," said
Reagan.
Are these troubled times?
"Never before in our history," said Reagan, "have
Americans' been called upo11 to face three grave threats to
our very existence, any one of which could destroy us. We
face a disintegrating economy, a weakened defense and an
energy policy based on the sharing of scarcity.''
"We have been shaken by a tragic war abroad and by
scandals and broken promises at home," said Carter.

Mr. and 11frs. Roger Speigel, sustained while playing ball but still
Colwnbus, were guests of her sister has a serious eye problem.
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Cheadle.
OPRAHOUSE
Rexle Cheadle Is somewhat iJn.
New York's ·Metropolitan Opera
proved from an accident he · House was inaugurated in 1883.

family members, in the Waterford,
Bakersfield area, then went with
their son by motor home to Rio Rico
and other sections of Arizona, then
back to CaUfomia, before returning
home by plane.

... ~EAL

- - - .. .

•',.

here with her father, Dale Dye.
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers have
returned .from a vacation in .the
western states. They flew to California to visit their son and daughter-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Jeffers and

ARCHWAY -_

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�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 4, 1980

4--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monda y, Aug. 4, 1980

Community Corner
Former area resident dies
Many area residents are sure to
remember Ray E. McCurdy who
moved into the Bend during World
War II and was supeMntendent of
construction for the TNT plant at
Point Pleasant.' The McCurdy
family Uved in Po!Jleroy, the old
Rawlings home · on Uncoln Hill
which burned about two years ago,
and Ruth later married Jim
Lochary.
.
Mr. McCurdy, 93, died recently in
Portland, Tenn. at the home of his
son, Ray, where he and his wile,
Lee, have made their home for the
past several years. He was buried in
Fannington, Mich.
The time of the TNT construction
was a time of a great influx of people
here. The Pomeroy-Mason bridge
was freed from toll during that time,
partially because of the many TNT
workers living in the PomeroyMiddleport community and using
the bridge daily.
Workers by the thousands came
into the valley with their families,
and not only did Mr. McCurdy have
the tremendous task of constructing
the plant, but his wile served as
social activities coordinator for the
professionals' wives.
From Pomeroy, the McCurdy
family moved to England, and then,
Still during the war, went to Russia.
There McCurdy built two oil
refineries for the United States
beyond the Ural MoUntains. Besides
his wife, daughter Ruth, and son,
· Ray, another son, Ehner of Guam

sutvives .

·Rookie Smith burns Reds with speed

Helen Help · Us
Is this the menopause or
a pause from me-??? .

New display areas are being
prepared in the senior fa ir building
BY HELEN BOITEL
She gets very frustrated, angry and
on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds in
SP&lt;'!'ial correspondent
hurt. Then she wi!hdraws from me,
preparation for the Aug. .12 opening DEAR HElEN:
avoiding sex. She cah't talk about
of the fair.
I've been married to a wonderful what's both.eMng her. Doctors say
Addalou Lewis, a Fair Board woman for over 24 years. We raised we have a good marriage.
.
member, advises that slant boards a nice family, own a fine horne, have
We have two children, and I have a
have been installed in one section everything that goes with living, vasectomy, so fear of pregnancy
and shelves are being built in loving and workiilg hard together.
isn't the problem. What's the
another so. that domestic arts
There has never been argl!ing or trouble? Suggestions, please? el&lt;hibits can be more attractively fighting in aU this time.
JOHNIN L.A.
displayed this year. Usually several
I love my wile very much and she DEAR JOHN ~
hundred articles are el&lt;hibited and
felt the same about me until she
A woman can he non-orgasmic for
laying them out so that fairgoers can
started the change of life. She now many reasons:
really see the work has been a
tells me she does not love me, is
Perhaps she and her husband
problem. Addalou thinks that will aU
unhappy being married, plans on
aren't attuned to female responses.
be solved with the new boards and
moving out.
They can learn about various forms
shelving.
Helen, does a menopausal woman
.of stimulation from books or a
Incidentally, that work was done
come back to the way she was, after
qualified counselor. (Try Alex Comby Retired Senior Volunteers.
it's over?- WONDERING
fort's ' 'The Joy of Sex.")
Another improvement this year· DEAR WON:
She may have hang-ups, fears and
will he in the display of paintings.
Happy, fuHilled women usually
repressions stemming from childPat Thoma, chairman, advises that
don't let menopause addle their
hood . These Often require
wire frames for hanging have )leen
brains. But a wile who hasn't argued ·professional unraveling ..
made, and that there will be
0r fought in ,a quarter-century may
adequate space for aU the pictures to
have bottled up a lot more resenthe attractively displayed. The painment than you imagine: she's ripe
Possibly she can't relax - she's
tings, by the way, will be in the
for an explosion.
trying too hard. As with a man,
Coonhunters building inst~d of the
Stop acting so surprised and hurt female worry about response and
senior fair building this year.
and understand how she really feels. performance, shuts down the works.
And, one'·fnore reminder ...
If you two work toward a true
She could subconsciously fear
Entries in aU divisions are to be
"change of life" for her, I think your · losing control.
made Thursday or Friday from 9 'Jnarriage can he saved. - R
Whatever you wife's basic
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Fair Board ofproblem, if she learns to talk it out
fice on the Rock Springs fairgrounDEAR HElEN:
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ds. Entries may be made by maiL
I'm 28 and my wile is 25. We've counselor, she has an excellent
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.

Chester HS class of 19 31
meets for recent reunion
CHESTER - The Chester High
· School Class of 1931 held its annual
picnic July 'll a I the Chester
: Firehouse. Attending were nine
: members of the class, two teachers,
and 19 other guests.
. A basket dinner was enjoyed at
· noon. John Bailey had the blessing.
: After visiting and picture taking, the
' group enjoyed ice cream made by
Opal and John Wickman and a cake
made by Ann Fausnaugh and
presented to the class by Mae
Vineyard. The cake. was decorated
_ with the class flower, 49 yellow
- roses, one for each year since the
: class graduated.

Others present were Mildred
Collins, Canton; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Poole and Bill, Wright-Patterson
AFB; Esther knd Raymond Gooch,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Parker, Bobby and Kelli, Marietta;
Mrs. John Bailey, Irene-and Herbert
Parker, Ina Massar, Lenora Bet·
zing, Virgil McElroy, Mary Buck,
Lucille Smith, Nellie and Wilber
Parker, Earl Knight, Thelma and
Clifford Hayes, Erma Cleveland,
Willoughby Hill, Arville Frecker, all
local.
The 1981 picnic will be held at the
Chester firehouse on the last Sunday
in July.

;\SSISTANT- Scott Saltsman, a graduate of the Great Lakes Bible
College, Lansing, Mich., has been named assistant pastor of the Middleport Church of Christ. DUe to the increased activities and growth of the
church, Mr. Saltsman has been named to assist Robert Melton, pastor. In
swruner months, Mr. Saltsman will serve as manager of.the Chilrch of
Christ camp, formerly the Bedford School. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Saltsman, Peru, Ind., the new assistant pastor and his wife, Mitzi, are
residing in the church parsonage at 674 High St. in Middleport. The elder
Mr. Saltsman is also a Church of Christ minister.

Nelsons have reunion
The Nelson reunion was held July

Rutland.
Lunch was served at noon with
grace being given by Walter Nelson.
Darts and softbail were played
during the day. Gifts were presented
. to the oldest attending, Mrs. Pauline
Nelson, Proctorville; the family
with the most children attending,
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Smith and
Brown, Greg Van Meter, Emma Mcfamily, Bucyrus; the ones traveling
Donald, Myrville Brown, Kathy
the most miles, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Stewal't, Shirley McDonald.
Pupils attending were Beverly Vanaman and family, San Antonio;
Texas.
Stewart, Jyl Birchfield, Rebecca
Elliott, Jessica Cockren, Donnie
Tillis, Missy Sisson, Bobby Wright,
Others attending fromout-of-town
Jodi Grate, Amy ternley, Andrea
besides those named were Mr. and
McDonald, Jim Bill Stewart, Mat·
Mrs. Richard Nelson, Lloyd and
thew Clark, Beth Ann Clar.k, Jeff
Jack Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Birchfield; Johnny Rose, Amy
Blosser, Mr. and Mrs. William
Elliott, Sonya Johnson, Ryan
Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Nelson
Walker, Karrie Johnson, Shannon
and Aaron, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Walker, Jeannette McDonald,, Stewart, Odas Nelson, Marilyn
George, and Tim.
Jamie Tissls, Rayan Lemley, Mike
Fink, Stephanie - Walker, --Angie
Elliott, Derek Miller, MeMnda
Others attending were Mr. and
Nicholson, Billy Ellis, JB'son Black, - Mrs. Richard Dill and Tanya, BonTracey Wright, Shelly Black, Carl
nie Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Williams, Latisha Price, Angie
Miller and Jeff, Mark Fry, Mr. and
Russell, Daisy Happy, J. R. Walker,
Mrs. Davey Joe Miller, Tammy and
Usa ·Darst, Tara Clark, Tracie RichMickie, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Walker
mond, Chrissy Richmond, Usa
and Stephanie, Mrs. Flossie Nelson
Miller and Diana Williamson. ·
and Johnny, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Certificates of appreciation for
Nelson and Darlene, Mr. and Mrs.
their work was presented to each
James Miller, Jinuny, Jr., Sally and
teacher and helper by the director.
Charlie, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Leach,
Victor Braley had a short devotion
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Smith, Mrs.
at the close of the program and an
Debbie Rose, Tyson and Archie,
invitational hymn was sung. Work of
Mrs. Janice Grirrun, Jeremy and
the children was on display for those
Israel, Mr. and Mrs. John Yost,
attending to view.
Retha, Tina and Tim Basham, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Yost and Donnie, Jr.,
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Yost and Ricky,
Jr., Wilma and Kenny Hysell, Kay
and Gary Gilmore, Mrs. Diana Tillis
and Dusty, Mr. and Mrs. William
TOPS l&lt;WG, Rutland.
Each member agreed to jog one- Smith, Carla and Ed Bishop, Charles
quarter mile daily or ride a bicycle Smith, Ronnie Smith, Unda, Regina
the same distance. Scores were ad- and Mike, Mrs. Jo Gilmore and
ded to the baseball ·chart with the Travis.
Fat Alberts now having a woman on
second, and the Incredible Hulks
Sid Taylor was unable to attend
bave no players on base. The team
due to being confined to Veterans
having the highest score at the end
Memorial Hospital. Bonnie Miller
of seven innings will receive inand June Yost were re-elected as
dividual charms for their bracelets.
secretary and treasurer. Jeff Miller
Weight loss is the determining factor
celebrated his birthday at the
in player advancement.
reunion.
Mrs. Shorty Wright presided at the
·The .1981 Nelson reunion will be
meeting which opened with the
held on July 26 at .the Number 2
TOPS pledge and the officers'· reporshelter house at the park.
ts. Nellie Haggy was queen for a
week, her second week in july, and
she was honored by the group. She
received a dollar and a ribbon and
members sang the club weight song.
Phyllis Clay was runner-up. TOPS
bingo was played. Anyone interested
in joining the club can call742-3062.

Attend Hess-0nch vows
Numerous relatives and friends of donderry ; Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Jen: Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Edward Lyn· son, Allison and Derek, Diamond;
- ch (Christi Hess) were in· Pomeroy Mr. and Mrs. Leo Casey, Sr., Mr.
: for ·their July 5 wedding at the and Mrs. Paul Miller, Mr: and Mrs.
· Sacred Heart Church.
Gary Kaczowka , Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Included were Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mansfield, Rick Wagner, Bob
Drumniond, Jay and Jill, Addison;
Rarnunno, John Joyce , Bar&amp;
Cathy Yoho, Gallipolis; _ Mrs. Decapua, Youngstown.
~ Virginia Hartenbach, Mr. and Mrs. . Mr. and Mrs. Michael Casey, Jan
: Kip Hartenbach and Jamie, Point Drummond, Dante · Colaserneo,
-Pleasant, W.Va. ; Dr. and Mrs. John Columbus; Carol 'Lynch, Harry
: wudman, Mason, W. Va.; David Eagens, Cincinnati; Mrs. T: H.
:Fowler, Mason; Terry Lynch, Baker, Bucyrus; Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Reston, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Dave Hendriksen, Pennsylvania; Mr. and
Aiken and Jessica, Lorie Stewart, Mrs. Robert Needham, Pittsburgh,
Kim Weidner, Mr .and Mrs. Bill pa .; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J . Lynch,
: Rothman, Mr. and Mrs. Marc Mary Ann and Meg, Northville,
: Newman, Athens.
Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
: Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dfljiiiiiiond, Howard, Arlington, Mass.; Mr. and
•Brian and Scott, Mr. al)d Mrs. Larry Mrs. Harold Wolie and Beth, Ft.
Hopkins and Raleigh, Logan; Mr. Myers, Fla. and Ann Gillespie,
and Mrs. Lei! Hatlestad, Lon- Washington, D. C.

RUTLAND TOPS

RUTLAND - j\n exercise
program on the honor system was
initiated at the recent meeting of

r---------------------------1
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Mike Schmidt hit his National
League-leading 27th home run
Tuesday, and the Phillies haven't
had one in 34 innings since. ·
Smith and veteran Pete Rose at
the top of the batting order have
given the Phillies a speedy one-two
punch. Twice Sunday, Rose singled
up the middle to drive in Smith after

" The only thing different (hitting
second instead of lead off ) is now
I'm more aware of the situation,
patient - givirrg him (Smith) more
time to make something happen,"
said Rose, 3-for4 with a stolen base
himSelf Sunday.
" I've never been a first-ball hitter
anyway," Rose added.
Smith bunted safely to open the
Phillies' fifth and stole second for

he had stolen second.
Smith now has a club-leading .20
steals and 10 in a row without being
caught. Since June 22, he has
pilfered 16 bases, going on to score
13 times.
" I don 't have power, so I have to
make up for it this way (stealing).
I've been lucky so far, " said Smith,
last caught by the Pirates' Steve
Nicosia July 12.

Snider enshrined
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) When Duke Snider was one of the
"Boys of Summer" for the Brooklyn
Dodgers in the 1950s, he was always
being compared to two other classy
center fielders in New York- Willie
Mays of the Giants and Mickey Mantle of the Yankees.
The s&lt;H!alled "Duke of Flatbush"
had his hard-line partisans, as much
as the other two, and now he has his
place with Mays and Mantle in the
Hall of Fame.
The silver-haired Snider was
among four people inducted into the
Hall Sunday. The others included, AI
Kaline, a 3,000-hit man for the
Detroit Tigers, oldtirne slugger
Chuck Klein and Torn Yawkey, the
popular longtime owner of the
Boston Red Sox.
Two teammates. of Snider's, pit·
chers Ralph Branca and Carl Erskine, were among some 3,000
people at this baseball shrine who
watched the onetime Brooklyn great
thank former Dodger players,
managers, the press and the fans for
the honor.
In conjunction with the induction,
Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
made reference to the three-sided
argument-that raged in New York
during Snider's salad days.
" It was one of the rare times
Casey Stengel was laconic when he
was asked who was the better of the
three center fielders," Kuhn pointed

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the third straight time. Rose singled · Namara. " You've got to give your .
up the middle to score ~mlth, a car- fielders a chance to help you."
bon copy of the Phillies' run. in the
Nino Espinosa, 2-2, got the win
third.
with the help of four double plays.
After Rose stole second, Berenyi Ron Reed pitched the last three inwalked Greg Gross and Schmidt to nings to gain his seventh save,
load the bases. Garry Maddox's RBI
Singles by Ray Knight, Ken Gritsacrifice fly greeted reliever Mario fey and Dan Driessen gave the Reds
Soto, who then intentionally walked a run in the seventh. In the eighth,
Manny Trillo and unintentionally Dave Collins and George Foster
wa.lked Ramon Aviles to force in singled and scored on Driessen's
Gross.
double to right. Joe Nolan bad an
Boone then lined down the left RBI single in the second inning for
field line to clear the bases.
the Reds' first run.
"You .can't walk five men in four·
The Phillies won two of the three
plus innings and win in this league, games over the weekend, but the '
said Reds manager John Me- Reds took the season series 7-5.

out. "His answer was, he would take
all thre of them."
If Stengel had needed another out· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....:..__ _ __
fielder, Kaline wouldn't have been a
bad choice, either. Only the IQth
player ever elected in his first year
of eUgibility, Kaline posted 3,007 hits
in his fine career with the Tigers.
·" This is the proudest moment of
my life," said Kaline, who paid
tribute to his wife, two sons, and
father and mother who were in the
audience.
Retired Detroit catcher Bill
Freehan was the only Tiger team~te of Kaline's to attend the
ceremonies in this bucolic community ·where baseball was supposedly invented in ~839.
Klein, the only man to collect 200
or more hits in his first six seasons,
received the. honor with his great
nephew, Robert Klein, accepting for
him. "Entrance into the Hall means
that Chuck will live on forever," said
his great nephew .
· Hall of Farner Ted Williams ac·
cepted the plaque for Yawkey, the
late owner of the Red Sox.
~' He was a man I loved,'' said
Williams, "and a great sportsman.
When I would sign a contract with
him, he would always ask me if I
was satisfied."
The four new induc.tees made a
total of 173 players, umpires and
executives in the Hall.

PRICES GOOD

TOPS news reported...
POMEROY TOPS
When the Meigs TOPS CLub OH·
570 met recently at the Rock SpMngs
fairgrounds, there were 22 members
reporting·a total loss of just over 10
pounds. Carla Andrus and Shirley
Wolfe were the weekly queens.
Members were reminded to bring
in jewelry for the pot-()f-gold contest. ·
It was noted that there ivill be no
meeting on Aug. 12 due to the Meigs
County Fair, but that KOPS Night
will be observed on Aug. 19. Mem·
bers were asked to take a weight
chart in every week or pay the fine.
Al! _gainers are required to pay fines .
Those planning to graduate next
year are asked to rel!Fh their goal by
Sept. 30.
.

wait. ''

CINCINNATI (AP) - In case the have to be tape-delayed until the
situation calls for it, Coach Gerry following Tuesday "unless they
Faust has set up guidelines for made it worth our while (finantelevising the games of his Cin- cially). "
cinnati Moeller High School football
SecQndl~, Faust said television
squad.
would have to meet his undisclosed
The appeal of the Crusaders is ob- fee, no matter when the game would
Vious. They have won four of the last be carried.
five Ohio Class AAA playoff titles
The Moeller coach also would
and carry a 1JJ-garne winning streak select the game or games to he
into the 1980 season.
televised, with the consent of the opMoeller, an aU-boys parochical position.
school, has lost once in its last 58
F11ust says he has strict television
games and has a 17-year record of rules because he wants to keep fans
161-17·2 under Faust.
attending the Moeller games. He
The TVS television network con- thinks television will cut into at·
tacted the Moeller coach this sum- ~ndance, especially if the contests
mer about carrying the Crusaders · are shown ·on the same night as the
on a delayed basis.
games.
"They felt we had a pretty good
"I figure if you're going to do
national appeal, but they're trying to anything for kids, you should do it
get us for peanuts," Faust said.
firSt class, do it all the way. This is
Faust had heard from two Cin- no different," said Faust.
"
cinnati stations, independent WXIX
At this point, Moeller's game with
and NBC affiliate WLWT, about host Centerville is the only 1980
doing the Crusaders' games in the Crusader contest being offered on
past.
television. That game will he shown
As a result, he has set up some on a dela yed basis by WKEF-TV in
ground rules for television.
Daytori.
First, he says the games would

Believing in ]estfs
Bible school theme

CHESTER CLASS OF 1931 - Members of the Chester class of '31 attending a reunion Sun(lay were left to right, seated, Clifford Hayes,
Esther Gotlch, Irene Parker, Opal Wickham, and Lenora Betzing; and
· standing, Mi.ldrecj Collins, Virgil McElroy (Earl Knight and Lucille
Smith, teachers) ,'John Bailey, and Nellie Parker.

Bob Boone's three-run double.
"I don't care if we don't hit
another home run," said Phillies
manager Dallas Green. "We don't
have any home-run hitters other .
than one guy, and he's not hitting
them .now. We can' t sit back and

Moeller games on .TV

'll at Forest Acres Park near

"Jesus, I Believe in You" was the
theme of the daily vacation Bible
school of the Rutland Church ol
Christ with pre.Sentation of cer·
tificates to the children enrolled
highlighting the closing program.
The children entered the church
carrying flags with the congregation
standing and singing "My Country
Tis of Thee." Pledges were made to
the American and Christian flags
and the Holy Bible. Herbert Elliott
had prayer following congregational
singing of "More Like the Master"
and "In the Garden."
Karla Brown led the childien in
singing songs which they learned in
the school. Victor Braley had
devotions each night for the school,
Jane Wise was pianist, secretary
and treasurer, and Teresa Van
Meter was her assistant.
Mabel Oliver and Edna May Swick
made up the refreshment committee
ana Barbara Van Meter was in
charge of the picnic. Thehna Hysell
was director for the school. •
Teachers were Herbert Elliott,
nursery; Karla Brown, beginners;
Kelly Brown, primary; Sheila Bir·
chfield, middler; Merle Jolmson,
junior class. Helpers were Teresa

PIDLADELPIDA (AP) - The
Philadelphia Phillles aren·~ waiting
for their horne run hitters to get back
in the groove.
Not with a guy like Lonnie Smith
in.the lineup.
The speedy 23-year-old rookie,
playing for the injured Greg Luzinski, .stole three bases Sunday and
scored three times as the Phillies
ran and walked past the Cincinnati
Reds 11-4.
Reds starter Bruce Berenyi, 2-2,
exited with no outs in the fifth.after
two straight walks filled the bases
and one run already in. The Phillies
exploded for five more, climaxed by

'

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4--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monda y, Aug. 4, 1980

Community Corner
Former area resident dies
Many area residents are sure to
remember Ray E. McCurdy who
moved into the Bend during World
War II and was supeMntendent of
construction for the TNT plant at
Point Pleasant.' The McCurdy
family Uved in Po!Jleroy, the old
Rawlings home · on Uncoln Hill
which burned about two years ago,
and Ruth later married Jim
Lochary.
.
Mr. McCurdy, 93, died recently in
Portland, Tenn. at the home of his
son, Ray, where he and his wile,
Lee, have made their home for the
past several years. He was buried in
Fannington, Mich.
The time of the TNT construction
was a time of a great influx of people
here. The Pomeroy-Mason bridge
was freed from toll during that time,
partially because of the many TNT
workers living in the PomeroyMiddleport community and using
the bridge daily.
Workers by the thousands came
into the valley with their families,
and not only did Mr. McCurdy have
the tremendous task of constructing
the plant, but his wile served as
social activities coordinator for the
professionals' wives.
From Pomeroy, the McCurdy
family moved to England, and then,
Still during the war, went to Russia.
There McCurdy built two oil
refineries for the United States
beyond the Ural MoUntains. Besides
his wife, daughter Ruth, and son,
· Ray, another son, Ehner of Guam

sutvives .

·Rookie Smith burns Reds with speed

Helen Help · Us
Is this the menopause or
a pause from me-??? .

New display areas are being
prepared in the senior fa ir building
BY HELEN BOITEL
She gets very frustrated, angry and
on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds in
SP&lt;'!'ial correspondent
hurt. Then she wi!hdraws from me,
preparation for the Aug. .12 opening DEAR HElEN:
avoiding sex. She cah't talk about
of the fair.
I've been married to a wonderful what's both.eMng her. Doctors say
Addalou Lewis, a Fair Board woman for over 24 years. We raised we have a good marriage.
.
member, advises that slant boards a nice family, own a fine horne, have
We have two children, and I have a
have been installed in one section everything that goes with living, vasectomy, so fear of pregnancy
and shelves are being built in loving and workiilg hard together.
isn't the problem. What's the
another so. that domestic arts
There has never been argl!ing or trouble? Suggestions, please? el&lt;hibits can be more attractively fighting in aU this time.
JOHNIN L.A.
displayed this year. Usually several
I love my wile very much and she DEAR JOHN ~
hundred articles are el&lt;hibited and
felt the same about me until she
A woman can he non-orgasmic for
laying them out so that fairgoers can
started the change of life. She now many reasons:
really see the work has been a
tells me she does not love me, is
Perhaps she and her husband
problem. Addalou thinks that will aU
unhappy being married, plans on
aren't attuned to female responses.
be solved with the new boards and
moving out.
They can learn about various forms
shelving.
Helen, does a menopausal woman
.of stimulation from books or a
Incidentally, that work was done
come back to the way she was, after
qualified counselor. (Try Alex Comby Retired Senior Volunteers.
it's over?- WONDERING
fort's ' 'The Joy of Sex.")
Another improvement this year· DEAR WON:
She may have hang-ups, fears and
will he in the display of paintings.
Happy, fuHilled women usually
repressions stemming from childPat Thoma, chairman, advises that
don't let menopause addle their
hood . These Often require
wire frames for hanging have )leen
brains. But a wile who hasn't argued ·professional unraveling ..
made, and that there will be
0r fought in ,a quarter-century may
adequate space for aU the pictures to
have bottled up a lot more resenthe attractively displayed. The painment than you imagine: she's ripe
Possibly she can't relax - she's
tings, by the way, will be in the
for an explosion.
trying too hard. As with a man,
Coonhunters building inst~d of the
Stop acting so surprised and hurt female worry about response and
senior fair building this year.
and understand how she really feels. performance, shuts down the works.
And, one'·fnore reminder ...
If you two work toward a true
She could subconsciously fear
Entries in aU divisions are to be
"change of life" for her, I think your · losing control.
made Thursday or Friday from 9 'Jnarriage can he saved. - R
Whatever you wife's basic
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Fair Board ofproblem, if she learns to talk it out
fice on the Rock Springs fairgrounDEAR HElEN:
with you and a marriage and sex
ds. Entries may be made by maiL
I'm 28 and my wile is 25. We've counselor, she has an excellent
None will be accepted by telephone.
been married over seven years, and . chance to solve it. Ask your doctor
she. has never yet had an orgasm. for a referral. - fl.
•

.'

.

Chester HS class of 19 31
meets for recent reunion
CHESTER - The Chester High
· School Class of 1931 held its annual
picnic July 'll a I the Chester
: Firehouse. Attending were nine
: members of the class, two teachers,
and 19 other guests.
. A basket dinner was enjoyed at
· noon. John Bailey had the blessing.
: After visiting and picture taking, the
' group enjoyed ice cream made by
Opal and John Wickman and a cake
made by Ann Fausnaugh and
presented to the class by Mae
Vineyard. The cake. was decorated
_ with the class flower, 49 yellow
- roses, one for each year since the
: class graduated.

Others present were Mildred
Collins, Canton; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Poole and Bill, Wright-Patterson
AFB; Esther knd Raymond Gooch,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Parker, Bobby and Kelli, Marietta;
Mrs. John Bailey, Irene-and Herbert
Parker, Ina Massar, Lenora Bet·
zing, Virgil McElroy, Mary Buck,
Lucille Smith, Nellie and Wilber
Parker, Earl Knight, Thelma and
Clifford Hayes, Erma Cleveland,
Willoughby Hill, Arville Frecker, all
local.
The 1981 picnic will be held at the
Chester firehouse on the last Sunday
in July.

;\SSISTANT- Scott Saltsman, a graduate of the Great Lakes Bible
College, Lansing, Mich., has been named assistant pastor of the Middleport Church of Christ. DUe to the increased activities and growth of the
church, Mr. Saltsman has been named to assist Robert Melton, pastor. In
swruner months, Mr. Saltsman will serve as manager of.the Chilrch of
Christ camp, formerly the Bedford School. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Saltsman, Peru, Ind., the new assistant pastor and his wife, Mitzi, are
residing in the church parsonage at 674 High St. in Middleport. The elder
Mr. Saltsman is also a Church of Christ minister.

Nelsons have reunion
The Nelson reunion was held July

Rutland.
Lunch was served at noon with
grace being given by Walter Nelson.
Darts and softbail were played
during the day. Gifts were presented
. to the oldest attending, Mrs. Pauline
Nelson, Proctorville; the family
with the most children attending,
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Smith and
Brown, Greg Van Meter, Emma Mcfamily, Bucyrus; the ones traveling
Donald, Myrville Brown, Kathy
the most miles, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Stewal't, Shirley McDonald.
Pupils attending were Beverly Vanaman and family, San Antonio;
Texas.
Stewart, Jyl Birchfield, Rebecca
Elliott, Jessica Cockren, Donnie
Tillis, Missy Sisson, Bobby Wright,
Others attending fromout-of-town
Jodi Grate, Amy ternley, Andrea
besides those named were Mr. and
McDonald, Jim Bill Stewart, Mat·
Mrs. Richard Nelson, Lloyd and
thew Clark, Beth Ann Clar.k, Jeff
Jack Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Birchfield; Johnny Rose, Amy
Blosser, Mr. and Mrs. William
Elliott, Sonya Johnson, Ryan
Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Nelson
Walker, Karrie Johnson, Shannon
and Aaron, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Walker, Jeannette McDonald,, Stewart, Odas Nelson, Marilyn
George, and Tim.
Jamie Tissls, Rayan Lemley, Mike
Fink, Stephanie - Walker, --Angie
Elliott, Derek Miller, MeMnda
Others attending were Mr. and
Nicholson, Billy Ellis, JB'son Black, - Mrs. Richard Dill and Tanya, BonTracey Wright, Shelly Black, Carl
nie Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Williams, Latisha Price, Angie
Miller and Jeff, Mark Fry, Mr. and
Russell, Daisy Happy, J. R. Walker,
Mrs. Davey Joe Miller, Tammy and
Usa ·Darst, Tara Clark, Tracie RichMickie, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Walker
mond, Chrissy Richmond, Usa
and Stephanie, Mrs. Flossie Nelson
Miller and Diana Williamson. ·
and Johnny, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Certificates of appreciation for
Nelson and Darlene, Mr. and Mrs.
their work was presented to each
James Miller, Jinuny, Jr., Sally and
teacher and helper by the director.
Charlie, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Leach,
Victor Braley had a short devotion
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Smith, Mrs.
at the close of the program and an
Debbie Rose, Tyson and Archie,
invitational hymn was sung. Work of
Mrs. Janice Grirrun, Jeremy and
the children was on display for those
Israel, Mr. and Mrs. John Yost,
attending to view.
Retha, Tina and Tim Basham, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Yost and Donnie, Jr.,
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Yost and Ricky,
Jr., Wilma and Kenny Hysell, Kay
and Gary Gilmore, Mrs. Diana Tillis
and Dusty, Mr. and Mrs. William
TOPS l&lt;WG, Rutland.
Each member agreed to jog one- Smith, Carla and Ed Bishop, Charles
quarter mile daily or ride a bicycle Smith, Ronnie Smith, Unda, Regina
the same distance. Scores were ad- and Mike, Mrs. Jo Gilmore and
ded to the baseball ·chart with the Travis.
Fat Alberts now having a woman on
second, and the Incredible Hulks
Sid Taylor was unable to attend
bave no players on base. The team
due to being confined to Veterans
having the highest score at the end
Memorial Hospital. Bonnie Miller
of seven innings will receive inand June Yost were re-elected as
dividual charms for their bracelets.
secretary and treasurer. Jeff Miller
Weight loss is the determining factor
celebrated his birthday at the
in player advancement.
reunion.
Mrs. Shorty Wright presided at the
·The .1981 Nelson reunion will be
meeting which opened with the
held on July 26 at .the Number 2
TOPS pledge and the officers'· reporshelter house at the park.
ts. Nellie Haggy was queen for a
week, her second week in july, and
she was honored by the group. She
received a dollar and a ribbon and
members sang the club weight song.
Phyllis Clay was runner-up. TOPS
bingo was played. Anyone interested
in joining the club can call742-3062.

Attend Hess-0nch vows
Numerous relatives and friends of donderry ; Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Jen: Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Edward Lyn· son, Allison and Derek, Diamond;
- ch (Christi Hess) were in· Pomeroy Mr. and Mrs. Leo Casey, Sr., Mr.
: for ·their July 5 wedding at the and Mrs. Paul Miller, Mr: and Mrs.
· Sacred Heart Church.
Gary Kaczowka , Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Included were Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mansfield, Rick Wagner, Bob
Drumniond, Jay and Jill, Addison;
Rarnunno, John Joyce , Bar&amp;
Cathy Yoho, Gallipolis; _ Mrs. Decapua, Youngstown.
~ Virginia Hartenbach, Mr. and Mrs. . Mr. and Mrs. Michael Casey, Jan
: Kip Hartenbach and Jamie, Point Drummond, Dante · Colaserneo,
-Pleasant, W.Va. ; Dr. and Mrs. John Columbus; Carol 'Lynch, Harry
: wudman, Mason, W. Va.; David Eagens, Cincinnati; Mrs. T: H.
:Fowler, Mason; Terry Lynch, Baker, Bucyrus; Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Reston, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Dave Hendriksen, Pennsylvania; Mr. and
Aiken and Jessica, Lorie Stewart, Mrs. Robert Needham, Pittsburgh,
Kim Weidner, Mr .and Mrs. Bill pa .; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J . Lynch,
: Rothman, Mr. and Mrs. Marc Mary Ann and Meg, Northville,
: Newman, Athens.
Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
: Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dfljiiiiiiond, Howard, Arlington, Mass.; Mr. and
•Brian and Scott, Mr. al)d Mrs. Larry Mrs. Harold Wolie and Beth, Ft.
Hopkins and Raleigh, Logan; Mr. Myers, Fla. and Ann Gillespie,
and Mrs. Lei! Hatlestad, Lon- Washington, D. C.

RUTLAND TOPS

RUTLAND - j\n exercise
program on the honor system was
initiated at the recent meeting of

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Mike Schmidt hit his National
League-leading 27th home run
Tuesday, and the Phillies haven't
had one in 34 innings since. ·
Smith and veteran Pete Rose at
the top of the batting order have
given the Phillies a speedy one-two
punch. Twice Sunday, Rose singled
up the middle to drive in Smith after

" The only thing different (hitting
second instead of lead off ) is now
I'm more aware of the situation,
patient - givirrg him (Smith) more
time to make something happen,"
said Rose, 3-for4 with a stolen base
himSelf Sunday.
" I've never been a first-ball hitter
anyway," Rose added.
Smith bunted safely to open the
Phillies' fifth and stole second for

he had stolen second.
Smith now has a club-leading .20
steals and 10 in a row without being
caught. Since June 22, he has
pilfered 16 bases, going on to score
13 times.
" I don 't have power, so I have to
make up for it this way (stealing).
I've been lucky so far, " said Smith,
last caught by the Pirates' Steve
Nicosia July 12.

Snider enshrined
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) When Duke Snider was one of the
"Boys of Summer" for the Brooklyn
Dodgers in the 1950s, he was always
being compared to two other classy
center fielders in New York- Willie
Mays of the Giants and Mickey Mantle of the Yankees.
The s&lt;H!alled "Duke of Flatbush"
had his hard-line partisans, as much
as the other two, and now he has his
place with Mays and Mantle in the
Hall of Fame.
The silver-haired Snider was
among four people inducted into the
Hall Sunday. The others included, AI
Kaline, a 3,000-hit man for the
Detroit Tigers, oldtirne slugger
Chuck Klein and Torn Yawkey, the
popular longtime owner of the
Boston Red Sox.
Two teammates. of Snider's, pit·
chers Ralph Branca and Carl Erskine, were among some 3,000
people at this baseball shrine who
watched the onetime Brooklyn great
thank former Dodger players,
managers, the press and the fans for
the honor.
In conjunction with the induction,
Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
made reference to the three-sided
argument-that raged in New York
during Snider's salad days.
" It was one of the rare times
Casey Stengel was laconic when he
was asked who was the better of the
three center fielders," Kuhn pointed

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the third straight time. Rose singled · Namara. " You've got to give your .
up the middle to score ~mlth, a car- fielders a chance to help you."
bon copy of the Phillies' run. in the
Nino Espinosa, 2-2, got the win
third.
with the help of four double plays.
After Rose stole second, Berenyi Ron Reed pitched the last three inwalked Greg Gross and Schmidt to nings to gain his seventh save,
load the bases. Garry Maddox's RBI
Singles by Ray Knight, Ken Gritsacrifice fly greeted reliever Mario fey and Dan Driessen gave the Reds
Soto, who then intentionally walked a run in the seventh. In the eighth,
Manny Trillo and unintentionally Dave Collins and George Foster
wa.lked Ramon Aviles to force in singled and scored on Driessen's
Gross.
double to right. Joe Nolan bad an
Boone then lined down the left RBI single in the second inning for
field line to clear the bases.
the Reds' first run.
"You .can't walk five men in four·
The Phillies won two of the three
plus innings and win in this league, games over the weekend, but the '
said Reds manager John Me- Reds took the season series 7-5.

out. "His answer was, he would take
all thre of them."
If Stengel had needed another out· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....:..__ _ __
fielder, Kaline wouldn't have been a
bad choice, either. Only the IQth
player ever elected in his first year
of eUgibility, Kaline posted 3,007 hits
in his fine career with the Tigers.
·" This is the proudest moment of
my life," said Kaline, who paid
tribute to his wife, two sons, and
father and mother who were in the
audience.
Retired Detroit catcher Bill
Freehan was the only Tiger team~te of Kaline's to attend the
ceremonies in this bucolic community ·where baseball was supposedly invented in ~839.
Klein, the only man to collect 200
or more hits in his first six seasons,
received the. honor with his great
nephew, Robert Klein, accepting for
him. "Entrance into the Hall means
that Chuck will live on forever," said
his great nephew .
· Hall of Farner Ted Williams ac·
cepted the plaque for Yawkey, the
late owner of the Red Sox.
~' He was a man I loved,'' said
Williams, "and a great sportsman.
When I would sign a contract with
him, he would always ask me if I
was satisfied."
The four new induc.tees made a
total of 173 players, umpires and
executives in the Hall.

PRICES GOOD

TOPS news reported...
POMEROY TOPS
When the Meigs TOPS CLub OH·
570 met recently at the Rock SpMngs
fairgrounds, there were 22 members
reporting·a total loss of just over 10
pounds. Carla Andrus and Shirley
Wolfe were the weekly queens.
Members were reminded to bring
in jewelry for the pot-()f-gold contest. ·
It was noted that there ivill be no
meeting on Aug. 12 due to the Meigs
County Fair, but that KOPS Night
will be observed on Aug. 19. Mem·
bers were asked to take a weight
chart in every week or pay the fine.
Al! _gainers are required to pay fines .
Those planning to graduate next
year are asked to rel!Fh their goal by
Sept. 30.
.

wait. ''

CINCINNATI (AP) - In case the have to be tape-delayed until the
situation calls for it, Coach Gerry following Tuesday "unless they
Faust has set up guidelines for made it worth our while (finantelevising the games of his Cin- cially). "
cinnati Moeller High School football
SecQndl~, Faust said television
squad.
would have to meet his undisclosed
The appeal of the Crusaders is ob- fee, no matter when the game would
Vious. They have won four of the last be carried.
five Ohio Class AAA playoff titles
The Moeller coach also would
and carry a 1JJ-garne winning streak select the game or games to he
into the 1980 season.
televised, with the consent of the opMoeller, an aU-boys parochical position.
school, has lost once in its last 58
F11ust says he has strict television
games and has a 17-year record of rules because he wants to keep fans
161-17·2 under Faust.
attending the Moeller games. He
The TVS television network con- thinks television will cut into at·
tacted the Moeller coach this sum- ~ndance, especially if the contests
mer about carrying the Crusaders · are shown ·on the same night as the
on a delayed basis.
games.
"They felt we had a pretty good
"I figure if you're going to do
national appeal, but they're trying to anything for kids, you should do it
get us for peanuts," Faust said.
firSt class, do it all the way. This is
Faust had heard from two Cin- no different," said Faust.
"
cinnati stations, independent WXIX
At this point, Moeller's game with
and NBC affiliate WLWT, about host Centerville is the only 1980
doing the Crusaders' games in the Crusader contest being offered on
past.
television. That game will he shown
As a result, he has set up some on a dela yed basis by WKEF-TV in
ground rules for television.
Daytori.
First, he says the games would

Believing in ]estfs
Bible school theme

CHESTER CLASS OF 1931 - Members of the Chester class of '31 attending a reunion Sun(lay were left to right, seated, Clifford Hayes,
Esther Gotlch, Irene Parker, Opal Wickham, and Lenora Betzing; and
· standing, Mi.ldrecj Collins, Virgil McElroy (Earl Knight and Lucille
Smith, teachers) ,'John Bailey, and Nellie Parker.

Bob Boone's three-run double.
"I don't care if we don't hit
another home run," said Phillies
manager Dallas Green. "We don't
have any home-run hitters other .
than one guy, and he's not hitting
them .now. We can' t sit back and

Moeller games on .TV

'll at Forest Acres Park near

"Jesus, I Believe in You" was the
theme of the daily vacation Bible
school of the Rutland Church ol
Christ with pre.Sentation of cer·
tificates to the children enrolled
highlighting the closing program.
The children entered the church
carrying flags with the congregation
standing and singing "My Country
Tis of Thee." Pledges were made to
the American and Christian flags
and the Holy Bible. Herbert Elliott
had prayer following congregational
singing of "More Like the Master"
and "In the Garden."
Karla Brown led the childien in
singing songs which they learned in
the school. Victor Braley had
devotions each night for the school,
Jane Wise was pianist, secretary
and treasurer, and Teresa Van
Meter was her assistant.
Mabel Oliver and Edna May Swick
made up the refreshment committee
ana Barbara Van Meter was in
charge of the picnic. Thehna Hysell
was director for the school. •
Teachers were Herbert Elliott,
nursery; Karla Brown, beginners;
Kelly Brown, primary; Sheila Bir·
chfield, middler; Merle Jolmson,
junior class. Helpers were Teresa

PIDLADELPIDA (AP) - The
Philadelphia Phillles aren·~ waiting
for their horne run hitters to get back
in the groove.
Not with a guy like Lonnie Smith
in.the lineup.
The speedy 23-year-old rookie,
playing for the injured Greg Luzinski, .stole three bases Sunday and
scored three times as the Phillies
ran and walked past the Cincinnati
Reds 11-4.
Reds starter Bruce Berenyi, 2-2,
exited with no outs in the fifth.after
two straight walks filled the bases
and one run already in. The Phillies
exploded for five more, climaxed by

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6-TheDaily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 4, 1980

Astros back in NL West lead

Legion
tourney
opens

Robinson loses plate as Padres sweep Pirates
By The Associated Press
There's no place like home. Cesar
Cedeno is looking forward to getting
back to it. Don Robinson is still
looking for it.
Cedeno hit a loth-inning home run
Sunday to propel Houston to a 3-2
victory over the New York Mets and
back into first place in the·National
League West, one-half game ahead
of Los Angeles. The Astros now head
for a homestand in the Astrodome.
"We play much better at home in
the Dome," said the 29-year-{)ld
Cedeno. "We have 60 games left, and
how we do in those games will determine whether we win the West"
Robinson, meanwhile, couldn't
firld home in Pittsburgh. With the
bases loaded in the sixth inning, the
Pirates' pitcher walked his counterpart, San Diego's Bob Shirley, to
force in the tie-breaking run as the
Padres won 4-1 to complete a
doubleheader sweep that dropped
Pittsburgh two games behind first·

place Montreal in. the East. The
Padres took the opener f&gt;-2.
Elsewhere in the NL Sunday, Mon·
treal edged AUanta &amp;-5, St. Louis
beat Los Angeles 4-1, Philadelphia
ripped Cincinnati 34 and, in another
doubleheader, Chicago beat San
Francisco 3-2 twice.
Cedeno had missed the Astros' fir·
st two games in New York .- both
losses - with a bad back. "I took 15
minutes of batting practice and felt
that I could go," he said. "I punched
two hits to right field earlier and felt
pretty good."
One of Utem was a. third-inning
single that produced the Astros' first
run. Then came the game-winning
homer on a two-strike pitch from
Jeff Reardon.
"In late innings or extra innings
with the score tied, no matter what
the count is, I try to drive the ball for
extra bases a!least," Cedeno said.
Padres H, Pirates Z.l
In the first game, successive

triples by Gene Richards and Ozzie
Smith.gave the Padres a first-inning
run, Tim Flannery's bases-loaded
single was worth a run in the fourth ,
then Smith singled, stole second and
came home ·on Dave Winfield's
double for the decisive run in the fif.
thinning. Winfield also scored in the
fifth on a Willie Montanez sinele.
John Curtis, meanwhile, scattered
five Pirate hits.
"I feel good beating a team like
Pittsburgh. To beat them you know
you have to pitch well," Curtis said.
San Diego scored three runs in the
sixth inning of the nightcap, wiping
out Pittsburgh's 1~ lead built on
doubles by Willie Stargell and Bill ·
Madlock.
Singles by Jerry Turner, Mon·
tanez and Bill Fahey tied it and
Flannery's grounder moved the runners ahead, Robinson walked Dave
Cash intentionally to get to the pit·
cher. But he also walked Shirley to.
force home the tie-breaking run.

preseason contest since the Pit·
tsburgh Steelers beat the College
All-stars ~ in Chicago In 1976,
could be cOstly for the Packers.
Green Bay starting quarterback
Lynn Dickey sprained his left arch,
while David Whitehurst, the No. 2
man, went out with a left knee in·
jury. Bill Troup finished the ·game at
the position.
"We're very con~med about our
quarterback situation," said Starr.
The Green Bay coach would not
conunent on the decision oi National
Football League Executive Director
Don Weiss to call the game with 5:29
left in the fourUt quarter.
But San Diego Coach Don Coryell
said he liked it, even if the Chargers
were about to try a field goal. They
faced fourth down at the Packers 2f&gt;.
yard line when play was stopped.
"It was the wise and safe thing to

do. Lightning kills pe'ople. We never
would have practiced in condituons
like that," Coryell said of the light·
ning, wind and heavy rain.
Hall of Fame sJX11tesman Don
Smith said, "The foreeast called for
continued rain and the possibility of
more lightning. We called It for the
safety of the players,"
The Fawcett Stadium crowd of
19,972, second-largest in the Hall of
Fame series, booed lustily when the
players left the field.
Rolf Benirschke muffed a 39-yard
field goal for San Diego with 29
seconds left in the third quarter.
Green Bay's Tim Birney missed a
field goal try from 40 yards out early ·
in the fourth period.
·
In muggy sunshine earlier in the
day, Bob Lilly, Jim otto, David
"Deacon" Jones and Herb Adderley
joined the Hall Of Fame, pushing its
membership to 106.

EVENING
0:00 Cll eCllGCIJ®HlflGI NEWS
ClJ RAIN.,OW FACTORY
([) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
CIJ ABC NEWS

Grant Jackson then replaced Robin- maintain my average at .300. And if
son and gave up Richards' run· I do that the other things will fall into
·
scoring single. Smith's triple and place.''
Cardlaals t, Dodgers 1
Winfield's single wrapped up the
Keith Hernandez's tw~&gt;-run homer
Padres' scoring in the ninth.
A mENS, Ohio (AP) - Twl&gt;-time
and Silvio Ma~ez's seven-hitter
Expos 6, Braves 5
defending
champion Steubenville
Ellis Valentine saved one of his dropped the Dodgers out of, first
was to meet Euclid this morning as
better games for his 'folks and frien· place in the West after a one-day Ute annual Ohio American Legion
ds, paying a visit tn Montreal's stay at the top. Tom Herr's single
Tournament got under way with
Olympic Stadium. "I'd love to !lave preceded Hernandez's homer that . sevengames.
halted Burt Hooton's:peronal seven·
them stay the rest of the summer,"
Steubenville1ook a 3&amp;-10 record inhe said after hitting an RBI double game winning streak, then Herr's to the 9 a .m. contest with EQclid, 3:1and a twcrrun homer. "They've only squeeze bunt' wrapped up the Car· 4. Other games in the early morning
seen me once since they came here dlnals' scoring in the ninth.
round pitted Lancaster, 3U, against
Cubo 3-3, Giani&amp; Z.2
last Sunday."
Ashley,~. and Portsmouth, 23-24,
TwD-run singles by Jerry Martin
Andre Dawson was the Expos'
against
Fostoria, 31-9.
other big gun with an RBI double imd Mike Krukow were the big hits
In
a
trio
of 1 p.m. contests, Columand an infield hit just before Valen- In Chicago's sweep of the Giants bus
Southway,
2:..12, was to play Cintine homered as Montreal extended but Krukow also pitched a three- cinnati ·Budde, 2'1-ll, Belpre, 1&amp;-6,
hitter in his opening-game triumph.
its winning streak to six games.
clashed with Ashtabula, 22-12, and
"I felt at the start of the season I He finished with a fiourish, retiring Ottawa, 22-8, was to meet Lima, 34could hit .300," Dawson said after San Francisco's final 15 batters.
Mter his hit in the second inning 10.
raising his average to .312. "I'm just
At 4 p.m., Piqua, 30-3, was to play
trying to go out there each day and off Alan Ripley that gave the Cubs a the Euclid.Steubenville winner.
utilitize my God-given skill and · M lead, he sacrificed to help build
The double-elimination event will
what proved to be the run on Ivan
ability to the fullest ... I want to
continue
through Friday.
DeJesus'
in the fourth.

U·-~·
EAST

Woo Loot
51 44
56 f1
54 17
50 $!
Ill .' 57

Montreal
Pittsburgh
Phllade~bia

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58

WEST

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Lo6Anseles

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YOUR H€1\p, MY

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SN:-1&lt; ltJ ...

80'&lt;... 010 A
we~HOtzJ

Saturday's

I

5
I

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

Kl I XJ'D [I XX'X)

Answer here:

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: MINUS HAIRV ALKALI DEMISE
Answer: How an illiterate managed to make a
success 'o f .h is life-HE MADE HIS MARK

Jwmble look No. 14,contllnlng 110puzzl11, lttv1ll1ble for$1.75 po~tpeld
from Jumble,cJothlt newtpaper, Box 3-4, Norwood, N.J. 07848. Include your
n1m1, addretl, zip code 1nd m1k1 chec:kl payable to New1p1ptrbookl•

•
l

ANNIE

i
!

_ _ __, ..

'--~=_;::;;:..:;...:::.:::.;;,;,;..;_

_

BRIDGE

_;;;._,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

.

~==~ ALLO~

ME T' lHTE'RDUCE TH' BOYS,
... MAY MEETS LIITLE LADY... THIS IS MR.. MUENSTER ..,
BOARD OF MR. ROQUEFORT... MR. TI LSITER • .r----;
DIRECTORS OF MR. GORGONZOLA .., AHD MfG CHEESE
I'MCHEDDAR ! r=----:_
IHTERHATIQHA[1

'"THOSE ARE ALL

OF CKfESE~OH, I SEE!
YOUR NAMEG ARE IN
CODE TOO!

AHYT'IHG
1 DON'T GUEGG GO -- SINCE
WIT' ~R. BAHGAVEL PUT THE
COMPANY'S RECORDS INTO
CODE, IHCOM~ HAS TlliPLEP·~

Attacking two-suit hands

\'jRQN~

I

all the enemy trumps."
Alan: "Declarer ruffs the
NORTH
.Q 101

formation

Seallle (Abbolt&amp;-7) at Calilomla (Tanana H),
a

•uz

.J

wur
•Hz

plan to 1113rd against any and
all4·1 he.art breaks."
Oswald: "The winning tech-

EAST

••

•Q 10 e 1
.Al063
tKJU2
•QJ 107 5
+est
SOllTB
.HJIII

nique il to cash tbe ace and
ten of trumps and then leave
trumps alone and go alter

hearts.''

.....

Alan: "The band is

•u111

Ol ·ly SameJIChedllled.

any good."

Well

N-

Eul

p,.
p..
Pus

2NT

P111

••
P..

p. .
PaJI.

SM..

u
3.
u

not declarer's.'

trumr:·

Alan: "Let's dUcuss the
play of two-suit bands. Here i.s
a oimple, but very imlr)lctlve,
one to start"
Oswald; "II shon that you
must cort11ider wortlng on

water

rate.
It's called Electric Thermal
Storage. ETS, for short.
ETS Ia a revolutionary new
home heating system. It Includes
a furnace, a water heater, and
Individual room heaters for use
with or In place of the furnace.

~badlllleand
While ETS Is
new to Am,erlc:an:s,
Europeans
·
used It for years,
Not long ago we
helped bring lt to
United S~ates
we Improved lt.
To test Its reliability, Ohio
Power and other American ·
Electric Power System com·
.
panles conducted the largest
home testing program ever In·
volvlng 5 states In our part of the
country over a 3-year period. The
test customers said ETS was
effective, dependable and com·
fortable. What's more, ETS has
been approved by Underwriters'
Laboratory as safe.
Homeowner satisfaction ex·
ceeded our greatest expectations
with 9 out of every 10 users ·
stating they preferred ETS to all
other fypes of heating systems.

~r:ro.==.~
Although ETS

equipment
differs from
conventional
equipment,
there are
some slmllarl·
ties. An ETS
furnace, for example, uses the
same ductwork as a conventional
furnace. An ETS water haatet,
evan with Ita 120 gallon capacity
that's larger than most, uses the
same plumb- r.=='=
' =;&lt;===5&lt;==;iil
lng. Converting
to ETS can be
simple In an
older home.
And Installing
ETS In a new
home Is Ideal.

How much money an ETS
system can save you, of course,
depends on your Individual home
heating needs. But since space'
heating and water heating are .
usually your home's major
energy users, the savings can be
s~bstantlal.

•

t!il61ft11Af

New bakery bun
- our
special touch.

"*If

Tender,
all-white
chickenseasoned just right.

WiNNIE WINKLE'S ARCh"EI\IEMr
V/VI/11\1 VIXEN, IS' RELEASEO
PRISON.

slices of plump,
juicy tomato.

HERE'S THE PHONY

A S I BAlD, IT AIN'T
THE RITZ, BUT IT ~.U RE

)OJ ASKE'C7 FOR,
BUT I STILL DON'T

BEATS Ttjf SlAMMER .

5URE YOU'LL
BE Cffi\FORTABlf
HERE ?

I'LL BE ALL

KNOW WHY...

RI6HT.

)OlJ

SVI!tn'lll. ~.

·-------------y-------------1
BUY ONE
BUY ONE

II GET ONE' FREE!
New Chicken Club - the bacon

~ SAVEer$1.49

I

I

Ono coupon per cuawmw

:.,~::..:~-1I Good
only at
6ts w. M•ln St, Pome!OV
I

Offer good llvough .,• • " · ,...

~
®

I
I

UN17ER THE NAME

VlVIAN VIKEN, DO )OU?

I

GET ONE'FREE!
Buy Any Large Sandwich - Get A

II

II ~~:..:,:.-::-'"
Good only at
w.
lt.
I

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f'omerov

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•

Offer good through .,,. " · ""

®

I
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11

·
'
GET ONE
FREE!

Buy One Chicken Club SandwichGet A Salad Free .
~,..
,

I

SAVE · $1. ·· _ ,·· ~ I
59
Offer Not Good Thru I
Drive Thru
eN .,_n per cuetcmer

1
.I ::~:':0.:~-..
Good only at

~
·

·

Sf

Fries and One Large Coke.

1I
I

One coupon per CUI!Iomor

, . .. I :,::;.:,:.·~-"'

I .,SW. Milln~~- Pom.,oy
1 Offer good through ., • . " · ,,..

®

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Good Only at

69SW. Milln Sl. Pemeroy

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011er good through.,,_" · · -

®

11
1

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of l.orael

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lflm

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the old
IDWn tonight

--ONE IS
WHEN 'IOU GIT

CROWNED KING
LIKE THIS

WHAT'S
THE
OTHER
TIME?

WHEN THE OTHER
FELLER AIN'T
LOOK IN'

·PAW!t

ill Blacllboard
Item
17 Microwave
appliance
IIWeallh
II Wnlll away

• Bsmboozled
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CIIYnOQUOTES

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Yesterday 's Cryptoquote :MAKE SOMEONE HAPPY- MIND
YOUR OWN BUSINESS.-SOURCE UNKNOWN
.
f

I'

whoaewildimaginationsarnfamus·
lng whim a have ted them to offbeat

ways of earning a living.
·
([) THE AMERICAN GAME Thla
documentary examines the friend·
ship and re11pact that develops
between two seventeen yeai' old
baaketball teammates with culturally different be ckgrounde .One ie a
blue-eyed, small town lfl~iana boy,
and the other Is a black youth who
live a with his sister in Brooklyn. (90
min~
·
D C1J ®l WKRP IN CINCINNATI
Lea Nessman is turned on when a
female groupie telephones and lnt.Jites him to dinner. {Repeat)
8:18 ClJ NEWS UPOATE
0:00 CllDCllMONDAYNIGHTATTHE
MOVIES ' From Here To Eternity :
Croaeroade and Secreta' 1980
Stare : William Devane, Barbara
Hershey . In Hawaii during World
War II, U.SArmy aergeantMIItWar·
den Ia transferred t_o a combat unit,
but retuses an officer's commis·
otonandplaceahimaelfinjeopardy.
(g_hrs.)
CD 700CLUB
ill MOVIE ·(MYSTERY)
"Death 011 The Nile" 187.8
CIIIJ2l. MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
'Intimate Strangers' 1977 Stare:
Dennie Weat.Jer, Sally Struthers.
D (I) ®l M.A.S.H. The 40771h
can 'tescapetheKoreanWar,even
In Ita dfeams. (Repeat)
Cil WINDOW ON THE WORLD
'Rosa Kennedy: The Best ofTimee,
The Worst of Timee'
8:30 DCIJ®lHOUSECALLSJuneAIIy·
eon guest atara as a patient whoia
.Charley 's favorite until the turna
out to be a con artist aHemptlng to
extort money from him and the ho·
!2.~•1. (Repeal)
(1f) DOC: OLDEST MAN IN THE
SEA . On September 14, 1979,
James 'Doc' Counallman became
the oldest person to conquer the
Engllah Channel by swimming It In
13 hours and7 minutes.Narrated by
Counailman,thlsfilmwlllehowhlgh1ighta of h ia training techn iquee and
the swim.
tO;OO ([) TBS EVENING NEWS
D C1J ®l LOU GRANT A 51. Pa·
trick 's Day partv at ~cKenna ' e bar
seta off a Tribuna inqulrv into the
support in money and weapona
given the warring lriah by well ·
meaning Americana. (Repeat; 60
mlna.)
()) JAZZ AT THE MAINT£NANCE
SHOP 'Woody Shaw Quintet' Pan
II. (60 min a.)
(fi) NEWS
10:28 CD NEWS UPDATE
10:30 ClJ RISE AND BE HEALED
(fi) OVER EASY Gu . .t: George
Jeeaei.Hoet:HughOOwne.(Ctoaed
Captioned)
10:68 (J) NEWS UPDATE
11
Cll • CIJ
CIJ il111J2l
NEWS
Cll FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
([) LAST OF 'rilE WILD
C1J DAVE AU.EN AT LARGE
(fi) DICK CAVETT SHOW
1t ;28 (J) NEWS UPDATE
11:30 ClJ D
THE TONIGHT SHOW
Guest Host: Bill Cosby . Gueate :
Edd ie Harris, Rita Moreno, Lorna
Patterson. (90 mine.)
Cll ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
ill MOVIE ·(ADVENTUREt••u

••!&gt;

ma

m

([)
MOVIE
·(ADVENTRE·WESTERN)· •••

One Jetter simply 1tt1nds for another. In this sample A l1
wed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sin1le letten,
apostrophes, the lencth 1nd lorm1tion of the words 1re 11\
hiat1. Each day the code letters are different

DOI-.I'T MIND 1-liM, SIR ..
HE FAINTS AFTER
EVERI{ LANDING!

mlnei.)
(llJ
MEANINGS OF MODERN
ART
.
8 ;30 ill CRAZY AND WONDERFUL
This ex elusive ta kea alighthearted
look at some tun· l~'ting character• ·

"From RUIIII With Love" 1863

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

'.

tDl.

cp

·DAlbY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

lADIES AND GENTLEMEf.J,
WE I-lAVE ARRIVED AT
OUR DESTINATION ...

CIJ (fi) ZOOM
8:30 Cll D Cil NBC NEWS
IJl MUSIC
C1J I LOVE LUCY
CIJ
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
OCII®l CBS NEWS
(J) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
, (llJ VILLA ALEGRE
AIIC NEWS
8 ;18 IJl NEWS UPDATE
7 :00 CllG CROSS WITS
IJl NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
CIJ HOGAN'S HEROES
CIJIJ2lat FACE THE MUSIC
(Il LUCY SHOW
O CII TICTACOOUGH
C1J MACNI!'IL·LEHRER REPORT
®NEWS
(llJ OICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 CllD THAT GOOO OLE NASHVILLE MUSIC G.uest: Billie Joe
§eeare.
LV W9RDS OF HOPE
ill HARRY BLACKSTONE'S
MAGICAL TOUR
CIJ ALL IN THE FAMILY
C1J MUPPETSSHOWGueatDizzy
Gillelpie.
·
Cll NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
8(1) JOKER'S WILD
(J) DICK CAVETT SHOW
®I (lf) at FAMILY FEUD
(llJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
7:58 CD NEWS UPOAT£
8:00 CllUCll LITTLE HOUSE ON THf
PRAIRIE On a camping trip witt
their fam! lies. Laura I ng aII aand Nel·
.lie Oleson are swept awavin a ragl.!lg river. (Repeat; 60 mine.)
LV ROCK CHURCH
([) LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
CIIIJ2l Q) THAT'S INCREDIBLE
Tonight's show will feature an eerie
encounter wit~ the ghost of the firSt
woman to be hanged by the U.S .
GO\Iernmenl, a Wisconsin woman
who recfeates faces from skulls,
and a man who, arte( 14 years of
alienee, finds himself on the thre·
shold of rega ining his hearing .
(~e_lllta·t · 60 min a.)
llliJiiOl FLOLeathe piano player
ea11es Farley from choking but
when Flo tries to make him a town
hero, he disappears and everyone
wonders what sort of mysterious
f_!!gitlve he might be. (Repeal)
liJ EVENING AT POPS Claaaical
guit&amp;riat Lions Boyd jolna conductor John Williams and the Boafon
POp a Orchestra to play Alblnoni'e
'Adagio for Gui'tar and Strings' and
VIvaldi ' s 'Concerto in 0' . (SO

,oo

sa Wllat there'll

I

II
1
I

• DI-mon·
nered

character
34Sped
through
31Andreso

legi.llator)

be In

1I

I
I
I
I
1.

IG Chicago pro
1! Ancient
kingdom

31 Barrie

.a Precepl

~~-I

I ON OUR .
-· .
I CHICKEN COMBO ONLY $2.49
1 Includes our new Chicken Club
1 Sandwich, One Large Order of French

H.L. -

Zf Mu&gt;moib
!I LAUCblnc
1IOU1Id
II ConJundlve
!7 ''The Slge
d. CcDcord''

1-------------~-----~-------t
I BUYONE .
I SAVE,~~ I
I

book

II Well-bred
• Kind of tie

JlAR NEY

SAVEb F$i.49 ~ ~ '
I
I pn•~~r ~ I
eN coupon

170 N'T THINK

WINKLE BJ;(OAP'S
GONNA HI RE ME BACK
THE

hillq&gt;

2t Survived
31Modlly

Ill Groek COfllest !5 F. Edward 11 Pulled tight
(l..oolalana

......toner
ZZ Tommy'o gun

BURGER CHEF
I

Nest"
number

II Noted

device

u MIIUOIIIire,

library

!1 Kitty

OUR~ CHICKEN CUJB- CJ-UX AT

!3 Torture

again, u a

n ''Cuckoo's

I. D.

Plenty of crispy bacon - the bacon makes i1 better.

@ 1a80 Bwg11r Chel

11 a.ect out

II 'l'lbelln
sheep

WINNIE

Yesterday's Answer
..

ua-ctimt

1f Kettleclruma

Aithough we've
been
.;,·-~~
heavily
Involved
In devel·

V•lulble Energj

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

ACROIIS
! Allotber Ume
1 TV favorite
I Primeval
5 Beor
oubltanee
11 Pla7 the
I Lend a band
tlruplore
5 Aqtbor, Irs . cowboy
I IDvd.
n Bring
1 owup to date
perelliiW
U Qmet part
llleauty~over
' U Clrcumatancea I Uoed-car

shredded lettuce .

u:ae
=.wr.e-=:-

'Ia~• Amt~ICI'l

heart. Then he can pull West's

last trump and claim."

.. , THOMAS JOSEPH

While a lull ETS system costs
more than conventional equip·
ment to Install, our teats show It
can pay for Itself, usually within
live years, because ol the new
lower "Off-Peak" electric rate.

oping and testing ETS systems
lor American homes, we don't
manufacture or sell them. Nor
do we have any financial In·
teres! In the companies that do.
Our Interest lies purely In mak·
lng more efficient use of elec·
trlclty . .. and helping our
customers lower thelr energy
costs.
Wt fHiatrongly about the
advantages of ETS. So atrongly
that WI aDDIItd lor and rKeiVId
approval from tha Public Utllltlee
Cclmmlaalon of Ohio to olltr a
new 1-r coat "Time-of· Day"
rate to ETS UMI'I. From Monc:tay
throuah Friday, tht lower rate Ia
avalliblt tor nighttime "011·
Peek" UH. On WHktndathe ·
. lower l'lte Ia In tlttct around the
clock atartlng Friday night and
ending Monday morning. Thla
ICIWtr ralt r.aulla In auliatantlal
. aavtnaa on all electricitY a home
UBII ilurtng !hell hOIII'I whlclladd up to mort thin halt
the-N. .
Contact us If you'd like to
learn more about ETS. There's
milch more we can tell you and
we'll give you our special ETS
SAVE booklet.' If you're Inter·
est~, we'll estimate how much
money an ETS system could
save·you and provide the names
of local ETS equipment dealers.
Electric 1hermal Storage ... we
think It's the best thing to hap·
pen In a long, long time.

your side sulfbef""' you draw

Burger Chef® introduces the new Chicken Club. It's so much more
than just another chicken sai\Cfwich, because we've made 11 better with bacon.
And now. we'll help pay your way to the Club when you bring these
coup&lt;&gt;ns to any participating Burger Chef Restau,ant.

Alan: "South simply leads
the ace and a low bear!. II
t ruffs, the last low he.art
will be played from dummy:
Later· on. South cau cult
dummy's ldng of hearts and
ruff another he.art with the
queell of
Oswald' "I West doesn't
ruff, South scores dummy'•
kiDc and teads a tl!ird heart.
Eaot wino, but can't lead a
trump and South gets to ruff a

w..

By Oswald Jaeoby
udAluS..tq

GASOLINE ALLEY

Oswald: ·"Tbis involves

wortiDg· tbinp out 110 that iJ
Wost dOes ruff with it, he will
be ruffiDg his partner's trtek,

Opening lead:• A

r

a

his laat trump 1o do hi.s side ·

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer; South

on our Steamway

DOW

sure thing as long as hearts
don't split 5--0. SOuth can make
it impooslble lor West to uoe

+AK

"We're No. 1 in
Sent ice &amp; Quality"

6-9) , ( n)

Needless to say, a lop-flight
declarer will try to work out a

tQOT4

CleaninG Prpcess.

Minnesota (Zalvi 111-12) at Ookland (McCatty

diamond lead. II he plays
three or more rounds of
trump, the 4·1 heart bruk·
will leave bim one trick short.

t-t·IIO

•Kn

We're new in the MiddleportPomeory ar.ea .. We speciali1e in
Quality .Dry Cleaning, Laundry,
Carpet &amp; Furniture Cleanlnt.
Wedding Gown Preservation,
Suede Cleaning, Draperies~ and
Shirts.
·
Bring your cleaning needs to
Carousel Conlections, 317 N. Second Ave., Middleport.
Schedule your carpet &amp; furnlt•urel
cleaning there also, or
Code 304-485-5485 for more

7), (.II)

SF~: lNG~ A LUMP
10 A G&gt;U'Y'S
iH~OAI.

317 N. 2i1G AYt:.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PH. 992·6342
TRY US!

KllllMll Qly !BIIIby 11-2) a!. Detroit (Sella&gt;
loeder6-7),(n)
Teus(Pe'Tf5-4) at New York (Underwoocl&amp;(n)

I

KU

l\eslers8n

!Stilllner &amp;-

byHenriAmoldandBobloe

' !0::~~:!:,-"y ~-···... ""'

.' · V1,5 1\0R!

'---~.;;..;;~,.,.,.;:.....;..

M~ 'sGames

8), (n)

[JJ

.

Sunday'sGilQ'leS
Detroit I. Seattle I
Toronto 3, Callfom.ia 1
Ballimore 7. Mlnnelota 2
Oakland 11·2, ClevelandJ..I
Chicago 5, Kansas City 3
Milwaukee 2, Ne" York 0
Bostool. Tewl

Torooto (SUeb IIHI) at Cleveland

WELL,THERE
HE 19! WHAi
DO 'IOU THINK
OF HI~~

U:B; Haa!l, Milwaukee, 1~ ; Bart.er, Cleveland,
100.

4), (n)

Monday's Games

"'- KN O W 'IOU
."'
HAD A

UH-OICAY!
H- HOW D'YA
DO, M199·ei1MUFFY-

DAHLIN&amp;, IT'5 ALL RISHT!

DO COME !N! MUFFY WON'T
&amp;ITE! WE &amp;OTH EN..IO'IEO
YOUR COLORFUL LANGUAGE!

STRIKEOUTS ' Gllidry, New Yorlc Ill;
M.Norria. Oakland. 115; F.Bannlller, S..we,

Milwaukee (CleveWidS-4) at Bolton { Renko~
New York (Zachry 6-i JUICI Dornback 7-3) at
Montreal ( flot!e,.ll&lt;landl.ee ~), 2, (tofl)
San otego (Jones s-9 and Wise :J.:i) at· Cin.cinnaU tSeaverJ-4 and Prtce2-2), 2, (t-n)
Loo Allieles (Reuss Il-l) at Atlanta (ll&lt;&gt;QI 56), (n)
·
San FrlUICiaco (~ U ) at Houston
(Ryan 5.fl), (n)
Only games JCheduled

- EXCLIS6
"" OH
ME! DIDN'r

3, .701),2.12, 1

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
Woo Loot Pel. GB
II&gt; 311
.531
New York
.5119 61&gt;
58 44
Baltimore
.580 71&gt;
56 44
Detroit
.534 Ill
5li 48
Milwaukee
.~10
121&gt;
52 50
Bostoo
.5116 13
50 Ill
Cleveland
15 58
.116 19
Toronto
WEST
61 . Ill ..
.615
Kansas City
.500 12
53 53
Ooklaild
.115 131&gt;
T....,
50 53
__ , !
17 51
.152 17
Minnesota
Ill 51
.117 17 1&gt;
Chica~~:o
.375 ll&gt;
39 116
Seattle
38 64
.373 ll&gt;
Calilomla

SWlday'sGames
Montreal&amp;, Atlanta 5
Phllodelphla ]1, CinclnnaU I
San Diego 11-4, Pittsburgh 2-1
HoustonS, NewYork2, lOinnings
Chicago 3-3, San Francisco 2--2
St.Louis I, LooAngeleal

''' ' CAPTAIN EASY

l, .900, 2.35; Stone, Baltimore, 1._., .100, 3.21;
John, New York, 15-4, .78t, 3.C»; Gura, KaNu
City, 111-4, .789, Z.07 ; Rainey, - · w. .7'l/ ,
US; Lope%, Detroit, 1-3, .771, 3.SI; McGrege~r ,
BaiUmore, 12-6, .708, U1; Corbett, Minnesota, 7·

L·~~

'fja THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME

Unscramble these~ iou r Jumbles,
one Ieder to eac;:h square, to form
four ordi!1Bry words.

Pri'cHJNG (10 DecJslonJ)' Darwin, TeuJ, Il-

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL ·
NATIONAL LEAGUE

ftiJ~. f.\..O®'ft

~ ~ ~~ ~

FOR. r1&lt;5Hit-l0 WI&lt;MS, 'jg~tJ l:

~-:•;;;.!]
:• r;:i.l
:• :•

Packers, Chargers deadlock
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - For Bart
Starr, the 1980 Pro Football Hilll of
Fame game was nothing like his perfonnance as a player In the same
contest 11 years ago.
The current Green Bay coach
passed for 1M yards in the Packers'
38-24 · victory over the Atlanta
Falcons in the 1969 Hall of Fame
c1aah. Start's yardage 11 years ago
was 18 more than the combined total
of the Packers and San Diego
Chargers in their weather-shortened
scoreless tie Saturday.
"The defense did some things
well. I say this because there really
wasn't anything to say about the of·
fense," starr said of a meager at·
tack that matched the Chargers' 83
yBrds.
The game, the first rain-shortened

AUG.4, 1880

•• Alon.A..Came Jonea'' 1145

C1J IW ' .
ABC NEWS
NfGHTUNE
G C1J CBS LATE MOVIE 'HARRY
0 : Forty Reasons To Kill ' Harry Or·
well ie framed for the murder of hie
friend . (Ropeat) 'lliE CONVERSA·
TION' 19H Stars : Gene Hackman,
Cindy Wllllamo.
C1J ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
Cia) MOVIE -(ORAMA) ••• I&gt; "W..
terti&gt;o Bridge" 11140
11'110 .CIIIJ2l.BAANI!'YMILLERWojola
'burled al/\'e , the precinct's telephonee are dead and Harris still
hitoan't found an apartment wilh a
~rr8ce . (Repeat; 70 mlna.)
liOO CllD TOMORROW
ClJ TRANSFORMED
Cll(lf)e NEWS
1,30 (J) 0 . JAMES KENNEDY
([)
MOVIE
-(ADV!NTURI!'·ROMANCE) u~;
11

The COftaplrltOrt" 1144

2'00 (!D) I BELIEVE.
2:30 (J) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
I

'.

�, t -1Ut:: uau1

o.~e.au•.&amp;..ult".t. 1 "u':'~cyva ~,.-..,

Vluc:a v1 , v.,

.

,uvd~,«;~/ 1 nY~·

..

-., "'"vv

DICK TRACY

'

TELEVISION
VIEWING

6-TheDaily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 4, 1980

Astros back in NL West lead

Legion
tourney
opens

Robinson loses plate as Padres sweep Pirates
By The Associated Press
There's no place like home. Cesar
Cedeno is looking forward to getting
back to it. Don Robinson is still
looking for it.
Cedeno hit a loth-inning home run
Sunday to propel Houston to a 3-2
victory over the New York Mets and
back into first place in the·National
League West, one-half game ahead
of Los Angeles. The Astros now head
for a homestand in the Astrodome.
"We play much better at home in
the Dome," said the 29-year-{)ld
Cedeno. "We have 60 games left, and
how we do in those games will determine whether we win the West"
Robinson, meanwhile, couldn't
firld home in Pittsburgh. With the
bases loaded in the sixth inning, the
Pirates' pitcher walked his counterpart, San Diego's Bob Shirley, to
force in the tie-breaking run as the
Padres won 4-1 to complete a
doubleheader sweep that dropped
Pittsburgh two games behind first·

place Montreal in. the East. The
Padres took the opener f&gt;-2.
Elsewhere in the NL Sunday, Mon·
treal edged AUanta &amp;-5, St. Louis
beat Los Angeles 4-1, Philadelphia
ripped Cincinnati 34 and, in another
doubleheader, Chicago beat San
Francisco 3-2 twice.
Cedeno had missed the Astros' fir·
st two games in New York .- both
losses - with a bad back. "I took 15
minutes of batting practice and felt
that I could go," he said. "I punched
two hits to right field earlier and felt
pretty good."
One of Utem was a. third-inning
single that produced the Astros' first
run. Then came the game-winning
homer on a two-strike pitch from
Jeff Reardon.
"In late innings or extra innings
with the score tied, no matter what
the count is, I try to drive the ball for
extra bases a!least," Cedeno said.
Padres H, Pirates Z.l
In the first game, successive

triples by Gene Richards and Ozzie
Smith.gave the Padres a first-inning
run, Tim Flannery's bases-loaded
single was worth a run in the fourth ,
then Smith singled, stole second and
came home ·on Dave Winfield's
double for the decisive run in the fif.
thinning. Winfield also scored in the
fifth on a Willie Montanez sinele.
John Curtis, meanwhile, scattered
five Pirate hits.
"I feel good beating a team like
Pittsburgh. To beat them you know
you have to pitch well," Curtis said.
San Diego scored three runs in the
sixth inning of the nightcap, wiping
out Pittsburgh's 1~ lead built on
doubles by Willie Stargell and Bill ·
Madlock.
Singles by Jerry Turner, Mon·
tanez and Bill Fahey tied it and
Flannery's grounder moved the runners ahead, Robinson walked Dave
Cash intentionally to get to the pit·
cher. But he also walked Shirley to.
force home the tie-breaking run.

preseason contest since the Pit·
tsburgh Steelers beat the College
All-stars ~ in Chicago In 1976,
could be cOstly for the Packers.
Green Bay starting quarterback
Lynn Dickey sprained his left arch,
while David Whitehurst, the No. 2
man, went out with a left knee in·
jury. Bill Troup finished the ·game at
the position.
"We're very con~med about our
quarterback situation," said Starr.
The Green Bay coach would not
conunent on the decision oi National
Football League Executive Director
Don Weiss to call the game with 5:29
left in the fourUt quarter.
But San Diego Coach Don Coryell
said he liked it, even if the Chargers
were about to try a field goal. They
faced fourth down at the Packers 2f&gt;.
yard line when play was stopped.
"It was the wise and safe thing to

do. Lightning kills pe'ople. We never
would have practiced in condituons
like that," Coryell said of the light·
ning, wind and heavy rain.
Hall of Fame sJX11tesman Don
Smith said, "The foreeast called for
continued rain and the possibility of
more lightning. We called It for the
safety of the players,"
The Fawcett Stadium crowd of
19,972, second-largest in the Hall of
Fame series, booed lustily when the
players left the field.
Rolf Benirschke muffed a 39-yard
field goal for San Diego with 29
seconds left in the third quarter.
Green Bay's Tim Birney missed a
field goal try from 40 yards out early ·
in the fourth period.
·
In muggy sunshine earlier in the
day, Bob Lilly, Jim otto, David
"Deacon" Jones and Herb Adderley
joined the Hall Of Fame, pushing its
membership to 106.

EVENING
0:00 Cll eCllGCIJ®HlflGI NEWS
ClJ RAIN.,OW FACTORY
([) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
CIJ ABC NEWS

Grant Jackson then replaced Robin- maintain my average at .300. And if
son and gave up Richards' run· I do that the other things will fall into
·
scoring single. Smith's triple and place.''
Cardlaals t, Dodgers 1
Winfield's single wrapped up the
Keith Hernandez's tw~&gt;-run homer
Padres' scoring in the ninth.
A mENS, Ohio (AP) - Twl&gt;-time
and Silvio Ma~ez's seven-hitter
Expos 6, Braves 5
defending
champion Steubenville
Ellis Valentine saved one of his dropped the Dodgers out of, first
was to meet Euclid this morning as
better games for his 'folks and frien· place in the West after a one-day Ute annual Ohio American Legion
ds, paying a visit tn Montreal's stay at the top. Tom Herr's single
Tournament got under way with
Olympic Stadium. "I'd love to !lave preceded Hernandez's homer that . sevengames.
halted Burt Hooton's:peronal seven·
them stay the rest of the summer,"
Steubenville1ook a 3&amp;-10 record inhe said after hitting an RBI double game winning streak, then Herr's to the 9 a .m. contest with EQclid, 3:1and a twcrrun homer. "They've only squeeze bunt' wrapped up the Car· 4. Other games in the early morning
seen me once since they came here dlnals' scoring in the ninth.
round pitted Lancaster, 3U, against
Cubo 3-3, Giani&amp; Z.2
last Sunday."
Ashley,~. and Portsmouth, 23-24,
TwD-run singles by Jerry Martin
Andre Dawson was the Expos'
against
Fostoria, 31-9.
other big gun with an RBI double imd Mike Krukow were the big hits
In
a
trio
of 1 p.m. contests, Columand an infield hit just before Valen- In Chicago's sweep of the Giants bus
Southway,
2:..12, was to play Cintine homered as Montreal extended but Krukow also pitched a three- cinnati ·Budde, 2'1-ll, Belpre, 1&amp;-6,
hitter in his opening-game triumph.
its winning streak to six games.
clashed with Ashtabula, 22-12, and
"I felt at the start of the season I He finished with a fiourish, retiring Ottawa, 22-8, was to meet Lima, 34could hit .300," Dawson said after San Francisco's final 15 batters.
Mter his hit in the second inning 10.
raising his average to .312. "I'm just
At 4 p.m., Piqua, 30-3, was to play
trying to go out there each day and off Alan Ripley that gave the Cubs a the Euclid.Steubenville winner.
utilitize my God-given skill and · M lead, he sacrificed to help build
The double-elimination event will
what proved to be the run on Ivan
ability to the fullest ... I want to
continue
through Friday.
DeJesus'
in the fourth.

U·-~·
EAST

Woo Loot
51 44
56 f1
54 17
50 $!
Ill .' 57

Montreal
Pittsburgh
Phllade~bia

NcwVo

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·

12

58

WEST

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Lo6Anseles

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YOUR H€1\p, MY

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SN:-1&lt; ltJ ...

80'&lt;... 010 A
we~HOtzJ

Saturday's

I

5
I

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

Kl I XJ'D [I XX'X)

Answer here:

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: MINUS HAIRV ALKALI DEMISE
Answer: How an illiterate managed to make a
success 'o f .h is life-HE MADE HIS MARK

Jwmble look No. 14,contllnlng 110puzzl11, lttv1ll1ble for$1.75 po~tpeld
from Jumble,cJothlt newtpaper, Box 3-4, Norwood, N.J. 07848. Include your
n1m1, addretl, zip code 1nd m1k1 chec:kl payable to New1p1ptrbookl•

•
l

ANNIE

i
!

_ _ __, ..

'--~=_;::;;:..:;...:::.:::.;;,;,;..;_

_

BRIDGE

_;;;._,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

.

~==~ ALLO~

ME T' lHTE'RDUCE TH' BOYS,
... MAY MEETS LIITLE LADY... THIS IS MR.. MUENSTER ..,
BOARD OF MR. ROQUEFORT... MR. TI LSITER • .r----;
DIRECTORS OF MR. GORGONZOLA .., AHD MfG CHEESE
I'MCHEDDAR ! r=----:_
IHTERHATIQHA[1

'"THOSE ARE ALL

OF CKfESE~OH, I SEE!
YOUR NAMEG ARE IN
CODE TOO!

AHYT'IHG
1 DON'T GUEGG GO -- SINCE
WIT' ~R. BAHGAVEL PUT THE
COMPANY'S RECORDS INTO
CODE, IHCOM~ HAS TlliPLEP·~

Attacking two-suit hands

\'jRQN~

I

all the enemy trumps."
Alan: "Declarer ruffs the
NORTH
.Q 101

formation

Seallle (Abbolt&amp;-7) at Calilomla (Tanana H),
a

•uz

.J

wur
•Hz

plan to 1113rd against any and
all4·1 he.art breaks."
Oswald: "The winning tech-

EAST

••

•Q 10 e 1
.Al063
tKJU2
•QJ 107 5
+est
SOllTB
.HJIII

nique il to cash tbe ace and
ten of trumps and then leave
trumps alone and go alter

hearts.''

.....

Alan: "The band is

•u111

Ol ·ly SameJIChedllled.

any good."

Well

N-

Eul

p,.
p..
Pus

2NT

P111

••
P..

p. .
PaJI.

SM..

u
3.
u

not declarer's.'

trumr:·

Alan: "Let's dUcuss the
play of two-suit bands. Here i.s
a oimple, but very imlr)lctlve,
one to start"
Oswald; "II shon that you
must cort11ider wortlng on

water

rate.
It's called Electric Thermal
Storage. ETS, for short.
ETS Ia a revolutionary new
home heating system. It Includes
a furnace, a water heater, and
Individual room heaters for use
with or In place of the furnace.

~badlllleand
While ETS Is
new to Am,erlc:an:s,
Europeans
·
used It for years,
Not long ago we
helped bring lt to
United S~ates
we Improved lt.
To test Its reliability, Ohio
Power and other American ·
Electric Power System com·
.
panles conducted the largest
home testing program ever In·
volvlng 5 states In our part of the
country over a 3-year period. The
test customers said ETS was
effective, dependable and com·
fortable. What's more, ETS has
been approved by Underwriters'
Laboratory as safe.
Homeowner satisfaction ex·
ceeded our greatest expectations
with 9 out of every 10 users ·
stating they preferred ETS to all
other fypes of heating systems.

~r:ro.==.~
Although ETS

equipment
differs from
conventional
equipment,
there are
some slmllarl·
ties. An ETS
furnace, for example, uses the
same ductwork as a conventional
furnace. An ETS water haatet,
evan with Ita 120 gallon capacity
that's larger than most, uses the
same plumb- r.=='=
' =;&lt;===5&lt;==;iil
lng. Converting
to ETS can be
simple In an
older home.
And Installing
ETS In a new
home Is Ideal.

How much money an ETS
system can save you, of course,
depends on your Individual home
heating needs. But since space'
heating and water heating are .
usually your home's major
energy users, the savings can be
s~bstantlal.

•

t!il61ft11Af

New bakery bun
- our
special touch.

"*If

Tender,
all-white
chickenseasoned just right.

WiNNIE WINKLE'S ARCh"EI\IEMr
V/VI/11\1 VIXEN, IS' RELEASEO
PRISON.

slices of plump,
juicy tomato.

HERE'S THE PHONY

A S I BAlD, IT AIN'T
THE RITZ, BUT IT ~.U RE

)OJ ASKE'C7 FOR,
BUT I STILL DON'T

BEATS Ttjf SlAMMER .

5URE YOU'LL
BE Cffi\FORTABlf
HERE ?

I'LL BE ALL

KNOW WHY...

RI6HT.

)OlJ

SVI!tn'lll. ~.

·-------------y-------------1
BUY ONE
BUY ONE

II GET ONE' FREE!
New Chicken Club - the bacon

~ SAVEer$1.49

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Ono coupon per cuawmw

:.,~::..:~-1I Good
only at
6ts w. M•ln St, Pome!OV
I

Offer good llvough .,• • " · ,...

~
®

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UN17ER THE NAME

VlVIAN VIKEN, DO )OU?

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GET ONE'FREE!
Buy Any Large Sandwich - Get A

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GET ONE
FREE!

Buy One Chicken Club SandwichGet A Salad Free .
~,..
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SAVE · $1. ·· _ ,·· ~ I
59
Offer Not Good Thru I
Drive Thru
eN .,_n per cuetcmer

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Fries and One Large Coke.

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1 Offer good through ., • . " · ,,..

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the old
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--ONE IS
WHEN 'IOU GIT

CROWNED KING
LIKE THIS

WHAT'S
THE
OTHER
TIME?

WHEN THE OTHER
FELLER AIN'T
LOOK IN'

·PAW!t

ill Blacllboard
Item
17 Microwave
appliance
IIWeallh
II Wnlll away

• Bsmboozled
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CIIYnOQUOTES

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Yesterday 's Cryptoquote :MAKE SOMEONE HAPPY- MIND
YOUR OWN BUSINESS.-SOURCE UNKNOWN
.
f

I'

whoaewildimaginationsarnfamus·
lng whim a have ted them to offbeat

ways of earning a living.
·
([) THE AMERICAN GAME Thla
documentary examines the friend·
ship and re11pact that develops
between two seventeen yeai' old
baaketball teammates with culturally different be ckgrounde .One ie a
blue-eyed, small town lfl~iana boy,
and the other Is a black youth who
live a with his sister in Brooklyn. (90
min~
·
D C1J ®l WKRP IN CINCINNATI
Lea Nessman is turned on when a
female groupie telephones and lnt.Jites him to dinner. {Repeat)
8:18 ClJ NEWS UPOATE
0:00 CllDCllMONDAYNIGHTATTHE
MOVIES ' From Here To Eternity :
Croaeroade and Secreta' 1980
Stare : William Devane, Barbara
Hershey . In Hawaii during World
War II, U.SArmy aergeantMIItWar·
den Ia transferred t_o a combat unit,
but retuses an officer's commis·
otonandplaceahimaelfinjeopardy.
(g_hrs.)
CD 700CLUB
ill MOVIE ·(MYSTERY)
"Death 011 The Nile" 187.8
CIIIJ2l. MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
'Intimate Strangers' 1977 Stare:
Dennie Weat.Jer, Sally Struthers.
D (I) ®l M.A.S.H. The 40771h
can 'tescapetheKoreanWar,even
In Ita dfeams. (Repeat)
Cil WINDOW ON THE WORLD
'Rosa Kennedy: The Best ofTimee,
The Worst of Timee'
8:30 DCIJ®lHOUSECALLSJuneAIIy·
eon guest atara as a patient whoia
.Charley 's favorite until the turna
out to be a con artist aHemptlng to
extort money from him and the ho·
!2.~•1. (Repeal)
(1f) DOC: OLDEST MAN IN THE
SEA . On September 14, 1979,
James 'Doc' Counallman became
the oldest person to conquer the
Engllah Channel by swimming It In
13 hours and7 minutes.Narrated by
Counailman,thlsfilmwlllehowhlgh1ighta of h ia training techn iquee and
the swim.
tO;OO ([) TBS EVENING NEWS
D C1J ®l LOU GRANT A 51. Pa·
trick 's Day partv at ~cKenna ' e bar
seta off a Tribuna inqulrv into the
support in money and weapona
given the warring lriah by well ·
meaning Americana. (Repeat; 60
mlna.)
()) JAZZ AT THE MAINT£NANCE
SHOP 'Woody Shaw Quintet' Pan
II. (60 min a.)
(fi) NEWS
10:28 CD NEWS UPDATE
10:30 ClJ RISE AND BE HEALED
(fi) OVER EASY Gu . .t: George
Jeeaei.Hoet:HughOOwne.(Ctoaed
Captioned)
10:68 (J) NEWS UPDATE
11
Cll • CIJ
CIJ il111J2l
NEWS
Cll FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
([) LAST OF 'rilE WILD
C1J DAVE AU.EN AT LARGE
(fi) DICK CAVETT SHOW
1t ;28 (J) NEWS UPDATE
11:30 ClJ D
THE TONIGHT SHOW
Guest Host: Bill Cosby . Gueate :
Edd ie Harris, Rita Moreno, Lorna
Patterson. (90 mine.)
Cll ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
ill MOVIE ·(ADVENTUREt••u

••!&gt;

ma

m

([)
MOVIE
·(ADVENTRE·WESTERN)· •••

One Jetter simply 1tt1nds for another. In this sample A l1
wed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sin1le letten,
apostrophes, the lencth 1nd lorm1tion of the words 1re 11\
hiat1. Each day the code letters are different

DOI-.I'T MIND 1-liM, SIR ..
HE FAINTS AFTER
EVERI{ LANDING!

mlnei.)
(llJ
MEANINGS OF MODERN
ART
.
8 ;30 ill CRAZY AND WONDERFUL
This ex elusive ta kea alighthearted
look at some tun· l~'ting character• ·

"From RUIIII With Love" 1863

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

'.

tDl.

cp

·DAlbY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

lADIES AND GENTLEMEf.J,
WE I-lAVE ARRIVED AT
OUR DESTINATION ...

CIJ (fi) ZOOM
8:30 Cll D Cil NBC NEWS
IJl MUSIC
C1J I LOVE LUCY
CIJ
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
OCII®l CBS NEWS
(J) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
, (llJ VILLA ALEGRE
AIIC NEWS
8 ;18 IJl NEWS UPDATE
7 :00 CllG CROSS WITS
IJl NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
CIJ HOGAN'S HEROES
CIJIJ2lat FACE THE MUSIC
(Il LUCY SHOW
O CII TICTACOOUGH
C1J MACNI!'IL·LEHRER REPORT
®NEWS
(llJ OICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 CllD THAT GOOO OLE NASHVILLE MUSIC G.uest: Billie Joe
§eeare.
LV W9RDS OF HOPE
ill HARRY BLACKSTONE'S
MAGICAL TOUR
CIJ ALL IN THE FAMILY
C1J MUPPETSSHOWGueatDizzy
Gillelpie.
·
Cll NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
8(1) JOKER'S WILD
(J) DICK CAVETT SHOW
®I (lf) at FAMILY FEUD
(llJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
7:58 CD NEWS UPOAT£
8:00 CllUCll LITTLE HOUSE ON THf
PRAIRIE On a camping trip witt
their fam! lies. Laura I ng aII aand Nel·
.lie Oleson are swept awavin a ragl.!lg river. (Repeat; 60 mine.)
LV ROCK CHURCH
([) LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
CIIIJ2l Q) THAT'S INCREDIBLE
Tonight's show will feature an eerie
encounter wit~ the ghost of the firSt
woman to be hanged by the U.S .
GO\Iernmenl, a Wisconsin woman
who recfeates faces from skulls,
and a man who, arte( 14 years of
alienee, finds himself on the thre·
shold of rega ining his hearing .
(~e_lllta·t · 60 min a.)
llliJiiOl FLOLeathe piano player
ea11es Farley from choking but
when Flo tries to make him a town
hero, he disappears and everyone
wonders what sort of mysterious
f_!!gitlve he might be. (Repeal)
liJ EVENING AT POPS Claaaical
guit&amp;riat Lions Boyd jolna conductor John Williams and the Boafon
POp a Orchestra to play Alblnoni'e
'Adagio for Gui'tar and Strings' and
VIvaldi ' s 'Concerto in 0' . (SO

,oo

sa Wllat there'll

I

II
1
I

• DI-mon·
nered

character
34Sped
through
31Andreso

legi.llator)

be In

1I

I
I
I
I
1.

IG Chicago pro
1! Ancient
kingdom

31 Barrie

.a Precepl

~~-I

I ON OUR .
-· .
I CHICKEN COMBO ONLY $2.49
1 Includes our new Chicken Club
1 Sandwich, One Large Order of French

H.L. -

Zf Mu&gt;moib
!I LAUCblnc
1IOU1Id
II ConJundlve
!7 ''The Slge
d. CcDcord''

1-------------~-----~-------t
I BUYONE .
I SAVE,~~ I
I

book

II Well-bred
• Kind of tie

JlAR NEY

SAVEb F$i.49 ~ ~ '
I
I pn•~~r ~ I
eN coupon

170 N'T THINK

WINKLE BJ;(OAP'S
GONNA HI RE ME BACK
THE

hillq&gt;

2t Survived
31Modlly

Ill Groek COfllest !5 F. Edward 11 Pulled tight
(l..oolalana

......toner
ZZ Tommy'o gun

BURGER CHEF
I

Nest"
number

II Noted

device

u MIIUOIIIire,

library

!1 Kitty

OUR~ CHICKEN CUJB- CJ-UX AT

!3 Torture

again, u a

n ''Cuckoo's

I. D.

Plenty of crispy bacon - the bacon makes i1 better.

@ 1a80 Bwg11r Chel

11 a.ect out

II 'l'lbelln
sheep

WINNIE

Yesterday's Answer
..

ua-ctimt

1f Kettleclruma

Aithough we've
been
.;,·-~~
heavily
Involved
In devel·

V•lulble Energj

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

ACROIIS
! Allotber Ume
1 TV favorite
I Primeval
5 Beor
oubltanee
11 Pla7 the
I Lend a band
tlruplore
5 Aqtbor, Irs . cowboy
I IDvd.
n Bring
1 owup to date
perelliiW
U Qmet part
llleauty~over
' U Clrcumatancea I Uoed-car

shredded lettuce .

u:ae
=.wr.e-=:-

'Ia~• Amt~ICI'l

heart. Then he can pull West's

last trump and claim."

.. , THOMAS JOSEPH

While a lull ETS system costs
more than conventional equip·
ment to Install, our teats show It
can pay for Itself, usually within
live years, because ol the new
lower "Off-Peak" electric rate.

oping and testing ETS systems
lor American homes, we don't
manufacture or sell them. Nor
do we have any financial In·
teres! In the companies that do.
Our Interest lies purely In mak·
lng more efficient use of elec·
trlclty . .. and helping our
customers lower thelr energy
costs.
Wt fHiatrongly about the
advantages of ETS. So atrongly
that WI aDDIItd lor and rKeiVId
approval from tha Public Utllltlee
Cclmmlaalon of Ohio to olltr a
new 1-r coat "Time-of· Day"
rate to ETS UMI'I. From Monc:tay
throuah Friday, tht lower rate Ia
avalliblt tor nighttime "011·
Peek" UH. On WHktndathe ·
. lower l'lte Ia In tlttct around the
clock atartlng Friday night and
ending Monday morning. Thla
ICIWtr ralt r.aulla In auliatantlal
. aavtnaa on all electricitY a home
UBII ilurtng !hell hOIII'I whlclladd up to mort thin halt
the-N. .
Contact us If you'd like to
learn more about ETS. There's
milch more we can tell you and
we'll give you our special ETS
SAVE booklet.' If you're Inter·
est~, we'll estimate how much
money an ETS system could
save·you and provide the names
of local ETS equipment dealers.
Electric 1hermal Storage ... we
think It's the best thing to hap·
pen In a long, long time.

your side sulfbef""' you draw

Burger Chef® introduces the new Chicken Club. It's so much more
than just another chicken sai\Cfwich, because we've made 11 better with bacon.
And now. we'll help pay your way to the Club when you bring these
coup&lt;&gt;ns to any participating Burger Chef Restau,ant.

Alan: "South simply leads
the ace and a low bear!. II
t ruffs, the last low he.art
will be played from dummy:
Later· on. South cau cult
dummy's ldng of hearts and
ruff another he.art with the
queell of
Oswald' "I West doesn't
ruff, South scores dummy'•
kiDc and teads a tl!ird heart.
Eaot wino, but can't lead a
trump and South gets to ruff a

w..

By Oswald Jaeoby
udAluS..tq

GASOLINE ALLEY

Oswald: ·"Tbis involves

wortiDg· tbinp out 110 that iJ
Wost dOes ruff with it, he will
be ruffiDg his partner's trtek,

Opening lead:• A

r

a

his laat trump 1o do hi.s side ·

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer; South

on our Steamway

DOW

sure thing as long as hearts
don't split 5--0. SOuth can make
it impooslble lor West to uoe

+AK

"We're No. 1 in
Sent ice &amp; Quality"

6-9) , ( n)

Needless to say, a lop-flight
declarer will try to work out a

tQOT4

CleaninG Prpcess.

Minnesota (Zalvi 111-12) at Ookland (McCatty

diamond lead. II he plays
three or more rounds of
trump, the 4·1 heart bruk·
will leave bim one trick short.

t-t·IIO

•Kn

We're new in the MiddleportPomeory ar.ea .. We speciali1e in
Quality .Dry Cleaning, Laundry,
Carpet &amp; Furniture Cleanlnt.
Wedding Gown Preservation,
Suede Cleaning, Draperies~ and
Shirts.
·
Bring your cleaning needs to
Carousel Conlections, 317 N. Second Ave., Middleport.
Schedule your carpet &amp; furnlt•urel
cleaning there also, or
Code 304-485-5485 for more

7), (.II)

SF~: lNG~ A LUMP
10 A G&gt;U'Y'S
iH~OAI.

317 N. 2i1G AYt:.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PH. 992·6342
TRY US!

KllllMll Qly !BIIIby 11-2) a!. Detroit (Sella&gt;
loeder6-7),(n)
Teus(Pe'Tf5-4) at New York (Underwoocl&amp;(n)

I

KU

l\eslers8n

!Stilllner &amp;-

byHenriAmoldandBobloe

' !0::~~:!:,-"y ~-···... ""'

.' · V1,5 1\0R!

'---~.;;..;;~,.,.,.;:.....;..

M~ 'sGames

8), (n)

[JJ

.

Sunday'sGilQ'leS
Detroit I. Seattle I
Toronto 3, Callfom.ia 1
Ballimore 7. Mlnnelota 2
Oakland 11·2, ClevelandJ..I
Chicago 5, Kansas City 3
Milwaukee 2, Ne" York 0
Bostool. Tewl

Torooto (SUeb IIHI) at Cleveland

WELL,THERE
HE 19! WHAi
DO 'IOU THINK
OF HI~~

U:B; Haa!l, Milwaukee, 1~ ; Bart.er, Cleveland,
100.

4), (n)

Monday's Games

"'- KN O W 'IOU
."'
HAD A

UH-OICAY!
H- HOW D'YA
DO, M199·ei1MUFFY-

DAHLIN&amp;, IT'5 ALL RISHT!

DO COME !N! MUFFY WON'T
&amp;ITE! WE &amp;OTH EN..IO'IEO
YOUR COLORFUL LANGUAGE!

STRIKEOUTS ' Gllidry, New Yorlc Ill;
M.Norria. Oakland. 115; F.Bannlller, S..we,

Milwaukee (CleveWidS-4) at Bolton { Renko~
New York (Zachry 6-i JUICI Dornback 7-3) at
Montreal ( flot!e,.ll&lt;landl.ee ~), 2, (tofl)
San otego (Jones s-9 and Wise :J.:i) at· Cin.cinnaU tSeaverJ-4 and Prtce2-2), 2, (t-n)
Loo Allieles (Reuss Il-l) at Atlanta (ll&lt;&gt;QI 56), (n)
·
San FrlUICiaco (~ U ) at Houston
(Ryan 5.fl), (n)
Only games JCheduled

- EXCLIS6
"" OH
ME! DIDN'r

3, .701),2.12, 1

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
Woo Loot Pel. GB
II&gt; 311
.531
New York
.5119 61&gt;
58 44
Baltimore
.580 71&gt;
56 44
Detroit
.534 Ill
5li 48
Milwaukee
.~10
121&gt;
52 50
Bostoo
.5116 13
50 Ill
Cleveland
15 58
.116 19
Toronto
WEST
61 . Ill ..
.615
Kansas City
.500 12
53 53
Ooklaild
.115 131&gt;
T....,
50 53
__ , !
17 51
.152 17
Minnesota
Ill 51
.117 17 1&gt;
Chica~~:o
.375 ll&gt;
39 116
Seattle
38 64
.373 ll&gt;
Calilomla

SWlday'sGames
Montreal&amp;, Atlanta 5
Phllodelphla ]1, CinclnnaU I
San Diego 11-4, Pittsburgh 2-1
HoustonS, NewYork2, lOinnings
Chicago 3-3, San Francisco 2--2
St.Louis I, LooAngeleal

''' ' CAPTAIN EASY

l, .900, 2.35; Stone, Baltimore, 1._., .100, 3.21;
John, New York, 15-4, .78t, 3.C»; Gura, KaNu
City, 111-4, .789, Z.07 ; Rainey, - · w. .7'l/ ,
US; Lope%, Detroit, 1-3, .771, 3.SI; McGrege~r ,
BaiUmore, 12-6, .708, U1; Corbett, Minnesota, 7·

L·~~

'fja THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME

Unscramble these~ iou r Jumbles,
one Ieder to eac;:h square, to form
four ordi!1Bry words.

Pri'cHJNG (10 DecJslonJ)' Darwin, TeuJ, Il-

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL ·
NATIONAL LEAGUE

ftiJ~. f.\..O®'ft

~ ~ ~~ ~

FOR. r1&lt;5Hit-l0 WI&lt;MS, 'jg~tJ l:

~-:•;;;.!]
:• r;:i.l
:• :•

Packers, Chargers deadlock
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - For Bart
Starr, the 1980 Pro Football Hilll of
Fame game was nothing like his perfonnance as a player In the same
contest 11 years ago.
The current Green Bay coach
passed for 1M yards in the Packers'
38-24 · victory over the Atlanta
Falcons in the 1969 Hall of Fame
c1aah. Start's yardage 11 years ago
was 18 more than the combined total
of the Packers and San Diego
Chargers in their weather-shortened
scoreless tie Saturday.
"The defense did some things
well. I say this because there really
wasn't anything to say about the of·
fense," starr said of a meager at·
tack that matched the Chargers' 83
yBrds.
The game, the first rain-shortened

AUG.4, 1880

•• Alon.A..Came Jonea'' 1145

C1J IW ' .
ABC NEWS
NfGHTUNE
G C1J CBS LATE MOVIE 'HARRY
0 : Forty Reasons To Kill ' Harry Or·
well ie framed for the murder of hie
friend . (Ropeat) 'lliE CONVERSA·
TION' 19H Stars : Gene Hackman,
Cindy Wllllamo.
C1J ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
Cia) MOVIE -(ORAMA) ••• I&gt; "W..
terti&gt;o Bridge" 11140
11'110 .CIIIJ2l.BAANI!'YMILLERWojola
'burled al/\'e , the precinct's telephonee are dead and Harris still
hitoan't found an apartment wilh a
~rr8ce . (Repeat; 70 mlna.)
liOO CllD TOMORROW
ClJ TRANSFORMED
Cll(lf)e NEWS
1,30 (J) 0 . JAMES KENNEDY
([)
MOVIE
-(ADV!NTURI!'·ROMANCE) u~;
11

The COftaplrltOrt" 1144

2'00 (!D) I BELIEVE.
2:30 (J) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
I

'.

�9-- The Datly Sentmel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Aug 4 1980

8- The Datly Sen tmel M ddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Aug 4 1980

I Hoofs and Paws
lly Marlon C Crawford

•

Meigs .County
Humane Soc ety
POMEROY
We ll bke the TV
programs I am go ng to have to
repeat myself
Some of the quesltons that our
work ng members are asked n
dicates that not all the public knows
exactly what our Humane Soc ely ts
what l does what t cannot do and
what tt hopes to accomplish
To start from the beg nmng we
have a board of dtrectors and we
have three off cers Prestdent Dor
thea F sher (one of the founders
tresurer Be tty Baron ck a nd
secretary Rtta Lewts Coordina or
of Act vtt es MaJOr E Joyce M ller
Pubhctty and Pub! c Relat ons your
truly Mar on Crawford Thrtft Shoppe m M ddlcport Manager Dorothy
Dav s
The other valuable hard workers
are Goldie D ll Mtdgte Abbott Ntta
Miller Nonga Roberts and Ann e
Ae ker I really don t know what
we d do w thout this group who
spend many hours n that shoppe
cleamng sortmg and sell ng Next
we have a cowt appomted Humane
Agent Harold Norman and four
road agents
myself Carol
Trtplett Doug Rees and MaJOr
Miller We are the crew that has to
go out and ptck up anunals occastonally and take mjured or stck
ammals to the vet
Drs Notter
Boster and Krawsczyn

But I have left the most rrnportant
person bll last to tell you about
Mary Ann We would all be m
trouble f t were not for her She
handies all ncommg phone calls to
the Hwnane Soctety sometrrnes JUSt
gtvmg out nformatton others t mes
dispatching agents out on the road
but most unportant of all - she
cares for poor homeless dogs and
cats unt I ether Hoofs and Paws or
other pubhctty ts able to brmg folks
forward who will gtve them good
homes
She names all her charges and
gtves them more love and attendton
than probably most of those anrrnals
have ever had m thetr lives She
keeps them clean well fed ad
rrumsters thetr distemper shots dips
them to nd them of bcks and fleas
checks the r ears and eyes etc for
any mdicat on of llrress puts fresh
flea and tick collars on them and
feeds them tw ce datly unless pupptes and them s he feeds three and
four times a day
Further Mary Ann screens each
mdivtdual and fanuly that appears
to look for a pet and when the mn IS
ftlled which happens often as our
space ts luruted she talks mce
people mto carmg for strays they
fmd unt 1 she notif es them that
there ts space at which time she asks
them to br ng the ammal to her if
they have any possible way You
see there are so many runs that are
made by the Humane Soc ety agents

that the soctety does not expect the
agents to pay for the r own gas so
expenses are pa d to these people A
good round ftgure ci rruleage
covered each month would be
probab y over I 000 m Jes wtth our
vet btlls averagmg between 200 and
500 dollars per month We used to
loan money to folks to pay for
neutermg and spaymg but bad to
discontmue that program because
most of these people sort of forgot to
pay us back Unt)l they remember
thetr responstb !tty and retmburse
us we wtll not be able to loan any
more funds for this purpose
And speakmg of funds - how do
we operate fmanctally' We have
over 300 members donors and con
trtbutors We use the proftts from
the Thrift Shoppe the change that
you drop nto our antmal banks
located throughout Middleport and
Pomeroy and of course the ammals
when placed are brmgmg m some
money from the donahons new
owners provtde We come out about
even m expendttures and mcommg
funds most months
but worry
some months so any of you that
have not yet contnbuted to your
Me gs County Hwnane Soc ety - we
would certamly apprectate anything
you do (P 0 Box 682 Pomeroy 0

45769)
And for those of you who demand
so much from our authortzed road
agents remember they are volun
teers not patd or salaned em
ployees The only people patd to
elmunate the antmal problem are
your publtc servants whom you tax
payers pay to do this
the county
comnusstoners and the dog warden
They are responstble for that county

pound - we of the Hwnane Soctety
have nothmg whatsoever to do wtth
that place I wtsh we had unltmtted
space so that the publtc never had to
call the dog warden
Many vtllages are puttmg arltcles
m the paper recently about ptckmg
up dogs and eats that nm loose We
have tried like mad to convmce the
pubhc that thetr pets belong at home
where they are safe and do not
worry other people Dogs ptcked up
by county or vtllage law en
forcement people w ll be placed mto
the pound and systematically and
wtthout attempt to fmd the or gmal
owners killed
I have no tdea what they mtend to
do wtth those poor cats and ktttens
because the county provtdes
nowhere for them The law provtdes
that ANY anunal ptcked up must be
held for a pertod of at least three
days and be cared for which IS supjlOSed to gtve responstble pet owners
a chance to reclatm Licenses should
be purchased to reclatm dogs
Avotd a lot of hassel folks by
keepmg your pets at home wt!h you
It could cost you money m court and
cost your pet tts life if you don t pay
attentton to all the well mtenttoned
warmngs
Please remember folks that we
recetve no county state or federal
funding we extst solely through
your fmanctal assiStance - through
cuntnbut ons
and we need help
very badly
Animals available for adoptton
this week are A teacup Chihuahua
male four f ve ar stx years old
that s been badly neglected mce
dispostl on A medium stzed female
Insh Setter about II months qld who

IS very gentle and lovmg A large
beautiful male Shepherd a small
black and white Cocker Sparuel who
s adorable a sweet dispostttoned
mediwn stzed female part Blue Tick
but looks like a small odd colored
Shepherd We have a hiler of pupptes that are cuter than the dickens
about etght weeks old - all colors
and both sexes and we have some
ruce cats and ktltens several colors
to mclude a Monuna and her four
cute black ktttens Mom IS a blue
gray and so pretty If you would like
this family we wtll take the ktltens
when they have been weaned
Anyone mterested m any of these
arumals please call 992-6260 any day
noon until 7 p m

1

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Jack Bolen Helen Bolen to
Buckeye Rural Elec Coop me
Right of Way Salem
Patrtck H 0 Brten Mary E
0 Brten to Alfred 0 Roush 1 75
acres Salisbury

Alice Faye Gardner to ijarold T
Anderson Margaret Marte An
derson Lot 12 Crow s Sub Chester
Charles D Burke Rosemary
Burke to S W Jack Drilling Co
Right of Way Colwnbta
Vtctor'H Cremeans Mar]orte A
Cremeans to Harold M Bolen
Juaruta Bolen 13 10 acres Rutland
Herald Oil and Gas Co and Board
of Trustees Salisbury Twp Rtght or
Way Agreement Salisbury
George E Moms Mary E MorriS
to Larry C Powell Jean S Powell
Lot 522 Pomeroy
Neva Ntcholson to Amos Ttllis
Ruth Tillis ~'• acre Rutland

00 00 tee t to the po nt ot

beg nn ng and con a n ng

4000 squa e feet o wh ch

2000 squa e

ee

s n sa d

Lot Numbe 145 and 2000
squa re ee s n sa d Lot
Numbe 146

deg ees 40

eas

25

feet

a ong a ence to a 2 nch
h ckory th ence south 64
deg ees 35 east 95 feet
a ong a fence hence south

32 deg ees 30 west 30 teet
a ong a t ence th ence south

55 degrees 25 east 76 feel
a ong a f en e thence no th

35 deg ees 35
a eng a fence
54 deg ees 55
a eng a f ence
d deg ees 25
a ong a fence

eas 32 fe e
thence south

east 235 fe e

th ence south
east 32 fee
thence no th

86 deg ees 40 eas t 172 tee

by pass ng some fence and
a ga e to a fence pas then
e no h 73 deg ees 55 eas
02 ee a eng a fence then
ce no th 78 deg ees 25 eas
64 feet along a f ence o a
hence south
ga e co ne
27 dgg ees 0 east 12 tee to
a ga e post
hence
sou heasterly o a ha f sec
an
ne along a en e
a eng
he
fo ow ng
bea ngs and d stances
th ence south 49 degrees 55
hence south
east 232 fee
56 deg ees 50 east 153 feet
th ence south 60 degrees 50
east 65 fee
hence south

58 deg ces 20 cast 112 feet
thence south 68 deg ees 55

east 173 feet thence south
72 deg ees 03 east S7 feet
hence south 76 deg ees 15
eas t 77 ee and thence
sou h 79 degrees 25 east
.430 f ee
hence nor h 1240
teet a ong he ha f sec on

neto he pon otbegn

n ng conta n ng 60 3 acres
more or less

PARCEL NO 2

The to ow ng r ea estate
s tuated n he Townsh p of
Orange County of Me gs
and Sta e o Oh o more
pa cu ar y descr bed as
fo ows S tuated n Sect on
No 5 Town No 4 and n

Range No

2

he ex st ng wester y r ght
at way ne ot State Route

7 62 30 fee to the rea po nt

o
beg nn ng fo
th e
ase ment here n descr bed
th ence no th 85 degrees 46

west a ong sa d cen
ne 75 85 feet o a po nt

00

te

the e

and

Sub eel o a

ega h gh

vey by
R cha d
G asgow R S 516

ds

sub eel

o

restr ct ons
sa d ecord

bu

Announcements

J

P a no

Dan els

d~g

conta ned

and

depos Is

o he

No

FULL BLOOD'ED Br I any

p a sed a

000 00
app

$ 79

STILL OFFERING
ICE CREAM
Wtth Any Untco
FREEZER OR
REFRIGERATOR
PLUS
$25 DISCOUNT

eANNOUNCEMENTS

Pomeroy

G

s

Happy Ad

6-L.os and Found
7 Ya cl he
1-Pub c So11 e
&amp;Au

u.

2-S
l-

ed Wtn td

4-l!lus ness T 1 n ng
5-Sc:ttoo s ns r.tc on
6-R•d o TV

1
I
I
I

o ll:tn

I

Ft m Equ pmtn

,

61 Wented o luy
2TuksfoSit
u L estoctl
64 Hly&amp;G 1 n
's-Seeci&amp;Ft!
ll

aus nen
Oppo un y
22 Money to LOin

n-Pro en ona
St

HOUIIhO d Good

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

eFINANCIAL

te

J

"

eSERVICES

Wanted

I For Sale
&gt;Announceme '
) For' Rent

3

Home mp ovemtn s
12-P umbint &amp; EJ. • • "'
IJ-EttUVI ng

4

5

ICf Cl

tt at on
15-0tnt a Haul na
116-MH •epa
17 up111o ••• y
&amp; R•

6

7
8
9

10: _ _ _ _ __

to an on stake set n the
wes te y g ht of way ne
0 Oh o Sta e Rout e 7 then

Rates ancH&gt;ffier lnformatton

ce no !h 5 degrees 41 eas
o 78 9 feet a o ng the

' Wo ds CH" Unda
doy
dl't'l
days
days

..

II

:

s at on

Soh o

.('nt que

tables cloth ng and other
m scel aenous

FIVE FAM LY yard sale
at he Ernest Van lnwagen
res dence Bradbury Coun

ty Road 5
from IQ-5

Cha 1•

JOO

Eachworclo e htmnmum Swods s4censl)e wodpe day
Ads unn nt ol'ber han consec:u e dan w be cha ged • he day

n memo y Ca do Thank and Ob fua y 6 cen s pe word
m n mum Cash n ad ance

n

00

Mob eHoma a as andY:. dlllt'sa eacr:tl"ldOnyw flr:..hw n
o de 2S r:tn hi If o 1ds Cl y nt I!Jox Numbe n C• eo The
Sen ne

11
12
13
14
15
16

guile~

Let us

repa

patch

canst back n front of that

warm f re th s w nter and
not hatJe to wo rv Ca I 992
3941 992 5 26 or 992 3519
and we
come and g ve
vou a tree est mate
13
Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
SU RANCE been

N

ca n

ce led?
Lost
your
operator s I cense? Phone

992 2143

THREE BEDROOM house
121.3 s ory $1 000 down and
take ove payments W
he p f nance 674 L nco n

He ghts 304 752 9482
ENERGY EFF C ENT 3
bedroom 2 bath Bu t n s

CANN NG TOMATOES
Le art Fa ls247 3644

meta

APPLES
35

76 WOODED ACRES n
Me gs Coun y w th s x
ac es
c eared
w th
m nera r ghts for $27 000

992 73 2 992 5632
2990

land .cont act w h
$500 down a w
negot a e
cas h sa e
Also one
bedroom bu t n bunks

Bow and

good es

Furn

cto h ng

glasswa e

15068

Thornv le

EASTERN

ron

A eal Estate

kett es ant ques etc Ra n

3 FAM LY Yard Sa e Aug
4 56 8 9 Ch dren and adult
clothes of all s zes D shes
and m sc

terns

Located

on Sf R! 124 go no toward
Rutland th rd house on
r ght
after
Evelyn s
G ocery 9 6

Street

n

31

Homes for Sale

Th ee year old f ve room
house w th centra a r and

heat carpet th oughou
acres

w th

fru t

spr ng

NEW 3 bedroom home for
sa e
Bu
n k tchen
d n ng
room
Ia ge
ec eat on room f replace

ots of sto age 2 baths
ga age 1 acre lot 992 3454

Md

YARD SALE

160 S 7th

Ave M ddleport Lots of
n ce c othes a s zes Aug
59 9?

FAM LY

Yard

bedroom

Mo tgage

BRADFORD Auct oneer
comp ere Serv ce Phone
949 2487 or 949 2000 ac ne
Oh o Cr II Bradford
9

ron and brass beds o d
fu n ture
desks
god
r ngs
ewe l y
s ve
do a s ster ng etc wood
ce bO)(eS ant ques e c
Camp e e
househo ds

VERY

Wr !e M D M e R! 4
Pome oy OHl or ca 992
7760

pay top

do ar or camp e e estates
No tem too large or too
sma Check pr ces be ore
se ng A so do app a s ng

Osby (Oss e&gt; Mar n 992
6370
W LL

BUY

od

I an
sm ss ens
batter es
eng nes or scrap meta s

JUNK CARS a so p ck up
car

bodes c lean copper

60

b

rad ators

40 b
15

b

R ders Salvage Rt 4 Sf
R 24 Pomeroy Oh o 992

Genera

HAYES

REALTY

BR CK
a nch

GET VALUABLE I a n ng
as a young bus ness person

and earn good money plus

2156 or 992 2157
REG STEREO
lmmed a1e
reg stered

NURSES

open ng
nurses

pe enced n

for
e)(

CU CCU

as welt as genera staff
duty
Salary
com
mensurate w th e)(p Con
ta ct Teresa Coli ns RN

Veterans
Memor al
Hosp tal Pome oy Oh
614 992 2104

n ce Holly Pa k Ha s
ec room 12 xJ9 two ca
bock garage and on
one acre of and

COALMINERS CAS,.
TLE
N ce 3 bed oom

Real Estate

even ngs

FEMALE

wa k n c osets
2
ba hs modern k chen
tu
s ze b ase m e nt
Garage w h 2 ooms
and
bath above
could be renta or of
t ce Ca fa deta s

LISTING

G ace y
sto e and
equ pm en
w th apt
ren a on 2nd s cry On v

$21 200
ACREAGE

5 ac es on

Hyse
Run Rd
n ce
bu d ng s te and some

mbe $7 000
REDUCED

Three

608 E
MA "
POMEROY 0

room home w th app ox
2 ac es of eve y a d
w h b g ees and a p c
n 't
she fer
t1as
bea ut fu
knotty p ne
wa s and
a
gas

f replace $38 500 00
NEW LIST NG
23
equ pped

k c h en
w h
d shwashe
a nd ap
p ox
a re o Ask ng

$47 500 00
BRADBURY Mode n 3

one f oar p an home

Two

sto y 3 bedroom hme on
un on Ave
a ge ot
and
garage
On y

N ce 3

$25 000 00
RUTLAND
Love y
emode ed 2 story br ck
home $35 000 00
POMEROY
Beaut ul
2 s ory br ck home 3
BR
LR
DR and
(TlOdern

k

c hen

$26 500 00
ATHENA ACRES

24

ac es
beaut fu
3
poo
bedroom home

a nnex b dg BUILDING
SITES
One acre ots
- 3m es from Route 7

Velma N c nsky Assoc
Phone 742 3092
Cheryl Lemley Assoc

Phone 742 3 n

NEW L STING
SYRACUSE
5 rooms

w h 2 beaut lui

o s

new ca pet ng
nsu a
ton
and pane ng
Washer dryer go w h

house $26 900 00
NEW LISTING

Mob e home on 2 ots n
town 2 bedrooms A C
w ndow un
a fur
n tu e goes $6 100 00
44 Ac es

w th a 60x24 modu a

bu d ngs

I
I
I
I
I

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

s~rYICe

SRB Get all tM facts
Ca I Navy now

Toll Free
1 800 282 384
Mon Wed 9 AM to 2 PM

A

barn

shed fru I tree&gt; Ext a
t a

er

e

Hea Ithy

wormed

an ma s
Me gs County
Humane Soc ely 992 6260
Donat ons
requ red
Shepherd types Blue T ck
type plot hound red Dober
man
male
m n ature

neutered
coli e

Da lma! on Beagle type
the dog from
L ttle
Rascals
co ors

all s zes shapes
Also t ger and

ongha red cats and k t
tens I male Labrador

7

gorgeous pupp es Long
short ha red k !tens all
shapes and s zes

6

62

ant ques

26

pocke

hookup

ft

T sh rl and novelty
sh rts tor polltlclans
ball teams busmess or
1nd veduals

Shorts $4 00 Each
We pront ALMOST
anyth ng on ALMOST
anyth ng
Ph 614 949 2358
Even ngs &amp; Weekends
6 16 tic

J% down on $25 000 5%
down on balance FHA
265 Subs dy ProgPam
FHA 245 Gradual Pay

Ofloce 992 7544
Home 992 6191
107 Sycamore St
Pomeroy OH

wa!

TWO
s

bedroom

Ira ler

on y

B own s

Mob le

Home k tchen turn shed
E der y coupe preferred
Depos t eq u ed no pets

bedroom

tra

742 2474
OFFICE '92 2259

Real Estate- General

REAL ESTATE

on

pools

• 2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
A I related 90U pment

Vtnyl &amp;
Alumtnum S1dtng
elnsulat on
• Storm Doors
• Storm W ndows

• Replacement

7 21 1 mo

S &amp; G Carpe

Space for Rent

74

Scotchguard
742 22 1

Motorcvc es

HONDA CB360
$650 99;, 2897

COUNTRY MOB LE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pome oy Large lots Call
992 7479

248
607

Water we I dr I ng Tom
Lew s
304 895 3802
Seasona d scount on a 1
pumps and accessor es

EV NRUDE OUTBOARD
Mo o 50 h p
d cond
$200 See at Dou

s Ma ne

51

Household Goods

TRUCK CAMPER 1975
clean new cond t on w th
bathroom
refr gerato
furnace oven $1500 Phone

TRUCK

MAY TAG
automat c
washer Runs good $75 773
5013 af e 5 p m

6 5

Fou th Street New Haven

WV Ph 304 882 2494

for IKh Plltom for first elm
11111111nd hindi "' Stnd to:
Anno Ad.lms

ded

sept c

tank

n

and t ans t layout 992 7201

Camp ng

CAMPER 975

clean new cond t on w th
ba hroom
r e gerato
furnace oven S 500 Phone

81

1974
DODGE
CHALLENGER
new
wheels and t res 318 4
barre
w th
headers
automa c transm ss on
w th b and m sh f k t 247

3861

HOME

Electr cal
&amp; Refr gerat1on

SEW NG

MACHINE

Repa rs

serv ce

makes
Fabr c

NEED NG

Gutters

a

992 2284
Shop

and Se v
Sc sso s

ce

ELWOOD
REPA R

Home
Improvements

ted'

BULLDOZER work sma
obs a spec ally Call 742
2753

Au hor zed

serv1ees

M n mum effort to restor e

new comfortab e ag an
shou de and fla e sleeves No
wa st seam sash softly
P nted Patte n 494 M sses
Szes8 0 1Z 14 16 18 Sze
1Z (bus 34) akes Z 1 8 ya ds
60 nch tab c
$1 75 for ooch Pllttfn Add !*

J X F BACKHOE SER
V CE I scensed and bon
sta Ia on wate and gas
Excavat ng work
nes

992 7888

Autos for Sale
1949 L NCOLN two doo
coupe 62 154 actua m es

Ihe

992

gd cond

Boats and
Motors for Sale

7S

71

BE THER E quck as a wok n
th s p-and go sh rtQ ess w lh

C ean ng

S eam
c leaned
Free
es t mate
Reasonable

992 7888

46

Home

Equ pment

Hay &amp; Graon

H nerman

7 31 1 mo

mprovements

78

L vestock

w lma

Free Esttmate
James Keesee
Ph 992 2772

Tom Burroughs 667 6150

·~

adu ts only no pe s n M d
d e~orl 992 387 4

W ndows

FREE
ESTIMATES
Carl Reed 667 3327

•• •_.__I
. . . ...... .... . .
• I I ... I ' o • o• I • I IO 'o I

FURN SHED
APART
MENT tour rooms and bath

681

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

remodeling
Roofing Garages
-Add ons Porches

63

STRAW FOR sate 992 5437

TWO BEDROOM apart
men! n M dd epo I 1 304
882 2566

on

Call698 3113
7 31 1 mo pd

- Replacement
w ndows
--AIIIypes of

orca 1742 2795

64

Oho

North
22 Years Exper ence
Fu y Guaranteed

81

44

3 AND 4 RM turn shed ap
Is Phone 992 5434

Located 6 m les north of

f no answer

Wanted to Buy

Wash nglon Co Rd
L l!le Hock ng OH
6133

for Rent

Repaers

Seal Jobs
Albany

GOLD AND
S LVER
CO NS OF THE WORLD
RINGS
JEWELRY
STERL NG SILVER AND
M SC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH
H GHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
M DDLEPORT
OH 0 OR CALL 992 3476

Henry E Cleland Jr

Roger &amp; Dott e Turner

yd

Bebu

-storm wmdows &amp;
doors

Syracuse 992 2897

$42 000 00
REALTOR
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949 2660

Exper ~need Operators
ava table for local work
• 2 rubber t re backhoes
el excavator hoe 1 4

DEAN'S
TRANSMISSION
SPECIALISTS
Its

-Soft I Gutter

sl aughter ng
custom
process ng
ret a I meat

Apartment

Ph 614 843 2591
6 15 tfc

Pullins
Excavating

JONES Meat Pack ng
2

Racene Oh

CALL
992 6323 or 992 6011
71

&amp;

CH P WOOD Poles max
d a meter 10 on largest
end $ 2 per ton Bundled
slab $10 pe ton Del vered
to Oh o Pallet Co Rt 2
Pomeroy 992 2689

TWO BEDROOM I a ler on
east Ma n St n Pomeroy
742 3155

Rl 3 Box 54

Brush clear ng work

T.L
BURROUGH'S
- Alum
V nyl Sod ng

MIDDLEPORT 0
7 13 1 mo

BEDROOM Mob le
Home Adu son y 992 2598

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Pat os
Complete
mob le home hook up

- Com mere at ptumbng
Underground
fuel

62

(&amp;

Sedewalks and

7 17 1 mo pd

Tra e cour Call992 3324

BEDROOM

repa r)

Utility Butld1ngs
S zes from 4x6 to 12X40

992 2478

992-7354

Mob le Homes
for Rent

Adu

New Dr veways

Gravel or Concrte
Regrade drovew~ys

-Concrete work

bedroom

S1zes

From 30x30
SMALL

See~

-Shop and portable
weld ng

nstall~t

Farm Buildings

Shrubbery

-Backhoe and dump
truck servacc

storage

ALL STEEL

Ph 664 6370

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION

ches c ass r ngs wedd ng

bands d amends Gold or
s lver Ca J A Wamsley
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Co n Shop A lhens OH 5'12
6462

22 ttc

COMPLETE
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE ng
Grading

Custom
PrNlt
Shop

2nd M dd eport OH 992
3 61
OLD CO NS

949 2662
949 2160

I~:::::P:o:m::e:ro:y::O:h::::::4-::::::::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::::::::=:

N

!h 992 3714
42

949 2801 or
No Sunday

..

ANT QUES
FUR
N TURE
g ass ch na
any h ng See or ca 1 Ruth
Gosney

Free Estimates
Reasonable Pr ces
Call Howard

S d ng

7 13 1 mo

mentMort
OpenM W F9 OOtol 00
By Appotntment

Wanted to Buy

Free

cal s

Loans No Down Pay
ment Federal Hous ng

USED R 40 d lch w lch
w !h trencher 1 6 4 694
7842

tor

Est mate
949 2860

z% Interest 30 Yrs
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automafoc

Farm Equopmenf

new or repa1r gutters
and downspouts gutter
clean ng and pa nt ng
All work guaranteed

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

Real Estate Loans

fu n shed
house
n
Pomeroy $250 00 per mon

bedrooms 2 baths 40

The

Pomeroy

S nger

Sales

We sharpen

BOWER S
sweepers

toasters
rons a I sma
app ances Lawn mower

pan

n need o

repa r
s that roof beg n
n ng to teak? Cal 992 35 9
992 3941 or 992 5126 a nd get
th ngs a t I xed up to tha
bad wea he !hats on s
way
By he way free
est mates are p ov ded

Next to State H ghway
Garage on Rou e 7 985
3825

W LL HAUL

mestone and

gravel A so I me haul ng
and spread ng Leo Morr s

Truck ng Phone 742 2455

RUTLAND FURNITUREoc

1971 CHEVROLET
M
PALA tour door n good
cond ton for the year 949

CARPET SHOP

2063 after 6 p m or Satur
day

Pottom Depl
E LECTR C

STOVE

washer and drye Reason
fa se ng mov ng 992

enl stment opt on
n
eludes cho1ces ot home

Conhnuous

THREE

992 2749

spec all es
Op
porlun t es to lake ad
vantage of full Navy
benet ts
Spec al re

I

NEW

$450000
NEW L STING

de k

Reeves

Houses for Rent

2

FARM -

Eng sh and

23

1mmed ate open ngs for
veterans
n
many

Bonus of up to 75% of

41

bedrooms 1 b ath on
seven ten hs acre c ose
n
g a rd e n space
ca pe ng
pane ng

ATTENTION
NAVY
VETERANS

of sh1p or chance to
tra n n a new rat ng
You may be el g ble for
Broken serv ce Selec
t ve
Re enl stment

992 6215 or 992 7314

etc

belts

ROOFING
All types of raot work

(Free Esflmates)

-Foberglass

bedrooms 2 car ga age

$22 000 00

$41 000 00
POMEROY

mo

H. L WHITESEL

Vtnyl and AlumiRum
Sidtng

Call

boots

Blankets

A 7

bedroom home on 2
acres n n ce coun y
sett ng w th a ge ba n
bedroom to a e ec c
home garage and shed
on app ox
ac e

electriCal work

ASw1fty'

NEW LISTING

a

r d ng

VC YOUNG 11

991 225'L

c entra

Horses

and

Housing
Headquarters

com

port duty stat on type

and bab b ng brook 1
oor plan home on Sta e

Route tor us! $29 500
HAVING TROUBLE
BECOMING
A
HOMEOWNER• CALL
992 3325 or 992 3876

pan on

34 - - "
35 _ _ _ __;_

Ma11 Th1s Coupon wtth Remtttance
The Dally Senttnel
Box 729
Pomeroy Oh 45769

L ve n

arge lot Has Ia II I ees

General

LISTING

Pome oy ove y 2 story
home w th oak wood
work throughout La ge
v ng
oom
w th
1 rep ace t o ma d n ng
room
am y oom 3

pon es

very

OLD RT 3;1 - 12x60 rea

7

SOMEONE TO put up hay
on shares or cash 949 2531

3 bed oom

home

am y oom fu base
n ent cent al a r and
heat carper and one
acre

Br.oker

bedroom home on co
ner lo P e redu ced o

Help Wanted

Fam y

home of 4 bed ooms
Modern
k chen
ca rpe ng
fu
base
ment ho wa e heat
near p ayg ound and
stores

home w th 2 baths and

George 5 Hobstelter Jr

$26 500 00
SYRACUSE
1

REASONABLE

on y $12 000
VERY NICE -

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

NEW

sold

modern bull n k chen

bcdooms w h 4 bg

Go d s ve
or fore gn
cons or any gold or s ver
t:ms An que fLrn ture

and

- Th s2 bed oom ame
has ba h na ura gas
c ty wa er second ot
and near shopp ng fo

367 0584 after 5 p m

Rea Estate- General

NEW

can be sub

separate
One wa e
sys em serves three
paces 4 enta s na

wo full baths

PHONE 742 2003

wanted to Buy

o

d v ded

cent a a r underp nn ng
sun po ch and total elec
r c
E)(cel ent cond ton

f nanc ng
new
o d
ref nanc ng and 2nd mor
tgages Phone 992 7000 or

7 10

work

-Concrete\vork
-Plumbing and

PUT A COLD NOSe n your

mob e home w h th ee

types home

Supenor Vtnyl Products

-Addonsand
remodeling
-Root ng and gutfer

lessons
Every!h ng
mag nable n horse equ p

futu

home

money

ava able A

HILLCREST KENNELS
Board ng all breeds C ean
ndoor outdoor lac I t es
Also AKC
reg stered
Dobermans 614 446 7795

Ruth
(6 4 698 3290

and

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

POODLE GROOM NG
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220

Western

B R STOL

Rea Estate -

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322

5 1 tic

ment

INVESTMENT -

bed ooms

Sates serv ce and sup
pies In ground and

above ground pools

and

675 4424

14 x 70 1975

servtng your area ror 25 years
Call Now for Large Sav1ngs
For Free Est1mate Call

peppers 247 2192

HOOF HOLLOW

1971

8

Some great g fts as a Sen
t nel route carr er Phone
us r ght away and get on
the el g b I ty I st at 992

32 - - - - - - - - 33 _ __ __

2__

4 x

Sae

Aug 56 F om9 5

I

21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30

mber

R dge $450 an acre 985
3595

992 5732

5468

18
19
20

and

m es off Route 7 on S ver

t ees

Located on Eagle R dge
Rd Phone 949 2793

31711 Noble Sum 1 Rd
M ddleporl Oh o
992 5724

School

Mob e Hom e Sa es
Pt P easant W VA

24

ED
BARTELS Loan
Rep esen at ve 1100 East
Ma n St
Pome oy Oh

~

These cash rates
nc ude d scoun t

Loca

D st ct 38 acres F ee
gas royalt es Has pond

64 two
bedroom 971 L ber y 4 x
65 two bedroom
1968
A ant c
12 x 60 two
bedroom
968
New
Moon 12 x 60 w h expando
two bedroom 1967 Buddy
12 x 50 2 bed com
B&amp;S

uggage

cancels 173 Hudson 51
M ddlepor!

hree

Cameron

'

TOMATOES

P eked br ng con a ners
$4 00 per bu Also sweet

W th

1975 Western Mans on 14 x
YARD SALE Aug 5 6 9 4
We f nally dec ded o c ean
house Found a ot ot

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINIXMS

THE POOL PEOPLE

already

OH 43076
70

Nelson Drug

VINYL SIDING

sale

56500

Rd

D BUMGARDNER
SALES

698 6021

for Sale

Emp re

water p lis

992

0

Road

ap

REDUCE Safe Fast w !h
Go Sese Tablets
E Vap

CANN NG

ac es

for

basement prev ously dug

Mob te Homes

Wr te J
Profession a I

Exc

Call F tzpatr ck

Orchard 669 3785

7 m es south of Albany 3 7

and cant act $300 down

aPove the Nazarene Chur

clean alum num

I
I
I

Lois &amp; Acreage

( Prev ous
nqu res ex
c uded) Sy acuse 992 5704

48xl0 mob e home $2800

Flnaeelal

p esauce

sa e reduced to $40 900

32

Business Services

Summe Pr ces Ex ce so

Co 6 4 992 2205

nc uded

ch n Rut and

t'
I

bu d ng

--

6094

40 ACRES for sa e $'i00
anac e 985 4116

MOB LE home fa

23

980 L BERTY ALL e ec
c
a e w th 4 x 52
~92

M sc Merchan se

HE! AT NG 0 L Buy now at

ga age
co v ered pa o
arge ot Exc cond Qu ck

M see laneous

17

P GS AND STRAW for
sa e 985 4104

RUTLAND Chu ch of God
w
be hold ng an
Everyth ng Goes yard
sate at 9 a m on F r day
Aug 8 All you can gel n a
sack tor 50 3rd house

w h centra a r and heat
ga age a nd sto age ocated
n M ddlepor on large ot
ave ook ng v e c ose o
sc hoo and town 992 376-4
afte .dp m

establ shed

August 4 5 6

etc Ca 1245 9188

3

.. ."
.. "''"

Cash

1

l

bet ow

1

se t
hence south 85
deg ees 28 5 eas 98 4 fee

c oth ng
d shes
s lver
s one toys too s Avon
sma I app ances lots of
m see aneous

reserves the right to
class fy ed t or retec
any ad Your ad w II be
put
n the
proper
class I ca on 1 you
check the proper box

2 . _ _ _ __

14-.

GARAGE SALE August 5th
and 6th on route 7 n Tup
pers P a ns ned tp he

YARD SALE at 8 0 S
Se&lt;:ond Stree M dd epon
Oh o August 4th through
lOth
bedd ng
nens

Phon•----------------~

Au DlfO Sa e
3 Vtns&amp;&lt;tWD
4 Mo 8rcyc •
s- AuoPa s
&amp;Acttno 11
Au ORIPI

e REAL EST AT~

to an on stake set thence
south 5 deg ees 32 wes
66 2 fee to an r"on stake

more

Address, _ _ _ _ _ _ _~ II

eTRANSPORTAT!ON

4P M Dt y
2 Noon St u d..,fo Mond•V

5th and Pear Racine
Alvarez flat top guitar
push garden plow and lots

I Pr nt one word n each
I space be ow Each n
1 t a or group of I gures
1 counts as a word Coun
name and address or
I phone
number f used
I You get better resu ts
I f you descr be fu ly
1 g ve P ce The Sent ne

S6-Ptt o he

1 ce AtlNI
t-Wan ed To Do

glassware n ck

---------------------:

52 Cl TV Rad o Equ pmen
53 An QUtl
J4 M c Me chand e
J5-Bu 11 ng supp "

nsu anc•

10 2 at B ondena Hudson
res dence af the corner of

resu ts Money not efundab e

eMERCHANDISE
S

He PW11n ed

HUGE YARD sale Fr day
August 1st f om 10 ? and
Saturday August 2nd from

coupon cance your ad by phone when you get

•
W•n HI o Rtn
•t-E'\,u pmen o Ren

e EMPLI!&gt;Y ME NT
SERVICES

992

sa e

Wr te your own ad and order by ma I w th th s

on

degrees 08 wes 199 5 teet

b d

i
~

6-5put to Rtn

9--Wanted to Buy

992 7839 o

Yard

7

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savelll

t

o Rtn
44 Ap• men
•s-F Rooms

to11WII';'

want Ad Advertls ng
Dead I nes

de

992 2181

eRENTALS

l-Announcemen

work odds and ends so you

glass or ch na w

J

Houses lo Ren
2 Mobl e Homes

westerly
ght of way
ma ker for Oh o State
Route 7 thence nor h 89

Townsh p d R nge 12
0 d ge TownSh p Me gs
Coun y Oh o n me v a ge
o Tu ppe s P a ns a nd

Cha e
7814

b ue t ck n the snowba 1
H I area n Syracuse Ca
949 2336 or 992 3728

~----------------------,

LANDMARK
MamSt

Cotrd o Tlltnk

4

black

and a n ne year old wa ker

StoPOMoEROY1Is

2 nMemo am

south 5 degrees 41 west 22 8
feet from the 733 + 31 8

5

Male

Dachshund n Mulberry
Reward
Answe s
to

CLASSiFIED AD INDEX

beg nn ng be ng

Es a e
T RAC NO
e n

LOST

Pa

westerly gh! of way ne
of Oh o Slate Route 7 sa d

1- u he
ex ep g he
t o ow ng wo ac sof Rea

Lostand Found

LOST Blue T ck lema e
New L rna Rd
Ru land
area Call Robert Stewa I
742 3006

or Wrtte Daily Sentmel Classlfted Dept
111 Court St PomerOY' 0 45769

and Sta e ot Oh o be no n
Sec t on 5 Town 4 North
Range 12 West of he Oh o

css

949 2531 even ng s

PHONE 992-2156

The fo ow ng ea estate
s tvated n he Townsh p of
0 ange Coun y ot Me !IS

wester l y r g ht of way ne
o Oh o Sta e Rou e 7 to he
po n of beg nn ng con
la n ng o ~ ac es more or

FREE WOOD and manu e

6

WANT AD INFORMATION

Dona d Lee Head ey and
Mary J a ne Head ey

o

992 3694 or 992 3361

Lawrenc::e
Everyone

n

ce No 2 was
a sed at
$7 1 500 00 Parce No 3 was
pp d sed a t $9 500 00
Tc msof Sa e Cash
James J Pro!f tt
She r If of
Me gs Coun y
4 1 3 c

wes aboull60 ods to land

po n

span e ma e one year o d

FULL
GOSPEL
REV VAL Mount 0 ve
Commun ly Ch Aug 10 18
Daymond
Adams

was ap

onghared

TWO COON dogs one
b ack and tan two year old

home 247 2841

desc be d n vot 250 Page
151 Me gs County Deed
Reco ds
Pa ce

G veawa y

ha f go den ret eve
ab ado pupp es to good

Be ng
estate

I ng

dews

Kath een Wards Po t and

HA LF BLACK and an and

dev sed

p ev OUSIY
Deed Rete ence
part of th e rea

Tun ng

992 2082

m nera

complete bed wooden w n

2
4

Evangel st
Bush Pastor
welcome

do any general ma n
tanence wo k for you pa n

L nco n
dlepo t

Lane

742 2951

nch co lor tv carpet and
padd ng foot stool one

992 5867

and Repa r Serv ce s n ee
1965 1 no answer phone

EXCEPT NG
AND
RESERV NG a coa o

gas

Tun ng

gets p etty heavy

s m ar to a Cock a poo

C

Deed Reference
Vo
262 Page 187 Meg~ Coun
y Deed Records
PA RCEL NO 3
Los Numbe 4 8 and 10
o
H cko y Acres Sub
d v son be ng n Sect on 5
Town 4 Nort h Range 12
Wes Oh o Company sPur
c hase as desc bed n P at
Book d Pages 58 and 59
Me gs Cou nty Pat Reco

Company s
Pu chase
descr bed a s fo ows
Beg nn ng 6 rods south of
the sou th east co ne
of
and fo me y owned by
Dav d Wha ey, on the I ne
between the Townsh ps of
Orange and 0 ve hence

Company s Purchase and
desc bed as to ows
Beg nn ng at a po n north
84 deg ees 30 west about
480 fee and sou h 5 degrees
53 wes 568 2 fee t and no
h 84 deg ees 07 west 55
teet and sou h 5 degrees 41
west 22 8 ee t from he nor
heas co ne o sa d Sec
on 5 sa d po nt o beg n
n ng be ng ma ked by an
ron stake set
n the

erm nate

ways and easements of
reco d
Desc pt on o
above
tr ac t be ng esu Is of su

n the Oh o

owned by Char es Whaley
hence south about 74 rods
a and owned by Edw n P
Stout th ence east abou 99
ads to and now owned by
Da v d Has ott e
hence
no h abou 140 feet hence
eas o th e ce n er of the
Tupper s P a ns Road o
and owned by he he r s of
R Ba a d hence north o
he no hwest co ne
of
and o
he he rs of R
Ba ard
hence east o
Townsh p ne hence no
h abou 62 rod s to the p ace
of beg nn ng can t an ng 70
Ac es mo e or ess
Except ng a nd rese v ng
he f a low ng ea estate
wh ch wsa conveyed to

o

BLACK

match ng cha r z&amp;n th 25

THREE BEDROOM house

s.q

Mob le Honles
for Sale

32

Ch d s res dence on 444

6~--~L~o~s~
t=
a~
nd
~F~o=u~
n=
d____

•• , 1, .... I I , .. ..to 1. , _.,, , I 6
- l l l t l ' t ' IIO"'...,."'"''•r

w nte ? How about that
roof and barn that snow

YARD SALE Wednesday
August 6th from 9 5 at the

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
way ne o sa d unnamed
a ey th en e no h 27 deg
oo 00 eas a ong he west
ne o sad Lot Number 46
and 45 and the ex st ng
g ht of way ne
eas ter y
o an unna med a ey and
pass ng he nor hwest cor
ne at sad Lot Number 46
and the sou hwest co ner of
sad La Numbe 145 at
50 00 feet a to a d s ance of

Street M dd epa t Green
crushed velvet sofa and

g Is and womens

Hom es for Sal e

3

W LL YOUR
HOUSE
w lhstand another hard

nacks bedspreads 140 000
BTU Amana forced a r fur
nace lots lo s more

John E Canter Rebecca A Canter to Buckeye Rural Elec Coop
Inc Right of Way Bedford
Jack Krautter Cmdy Krautter to
Buckeye Rural Elec Coop Inc
Rtght of Way Rutland

S1tuaflons Wanted

B GYARDSALEA ugus!4
56 from 9 &gt; at 778 Dl ver

cloth ng

GOLF ASSN MEETS
The Women s Golf Assoctatton
held tts weekly meeting Tuesday
mormng at the JayMar Golf Course
Members drew numbers for part
ners Pnze wtnners were Garren
Snyder best chips and Pearl
Welker longest dnve
Other wmners were Garren
Snyder and Mtldred Kart;. long
score Members recetved an m
vtlatton from the Rtverstde Golf
Course for a tournament slated
August6
Attending were Velma Rue NeUte
Brown Elizabeth Lohse Kathy
Gard Betty Fultyz Mary MorriS
Norma Custer and Peggy Moore
Area Golfers aiiC welcome to attend
meetmgs ftny Tuesday morrung at 9
am attheJayMarGolfCourse

112

Yard sale

M DOLE POR r - A rea estate barga n Sol d bu It
th ee bedroom home on y one bock from center o

town p ced to Se ll $25 000

CALL BILL CHILDS 992 2342
RODNEY DOWNING-BROKER

Mtddleport, OhMl

5769
53
ATTENTION
IM
PORTANT TO YOU) WI
pay cash or cert f ed check
to ant ques and collec
t b es or en re es ates

Noth ng too large

Also

guns pocket watches and
co n co lect ons Ca 614

767 3167 0 557 3411

The Daoly Sent nel

243 West 17 Sl Now Yod, NY
10011 rnnt NAME ADIHIESS.
ZIP SIZE 1nd Sill£ NUMBER
Why pu up w h h gh p ces
sate do Ia s get bette qual !Y
Send fo ou NEW FALL WNTER
PATIERN CATALOG 94 patte ns
Fee Patte n Coupon worth
$1 75) Catalog $1 00
133 Fosluon HonotQu It nt$1 75
1:JO.Swoo1t..Size Jl.56 $1 75
1:!9-Qvtck [osy T IM1ers $1 75
127-Aflillns n Doiltes $1 75

SPORTS CAR 1979 brown
1 at Xl9 30 mpg 14 000
m les ask ng $5 800 675
6986
1971

CHEVY

Suburban

fa r cond Runs good Spare

gas tank $600 773 5254

1977 CHEVY Luv oxce e nt

Ntce Selechon of Carpet Remnants an
Lmoleum Remnants at B1 Dtscounts

cond t on
low m eage
wh te mo ave wheels and
rad al t res a nd topper

RUTLAND FURNITURE

72

Trucks for Sa e

Benny W Ison 949 2322

Mam St

742 2211

�9-- The Datly Sentmel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Aug 4 1980

8- The Datly Sen tmel M ddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Aug 4 1980

I Hoofs and Paws
lly Marlon C Crawford

•

Meigs .County
Humane Soc ety
POMEROY
We ll bke the TV
programs I am go ng to have to
repeat myself
Some of the quesltons that our
work ng members are asked n
dicates that not all the public knows
exactly what our Humane Soc ely ts
what l does what t cannot do and
what tt hopes to accomplish
To start from the beg nmng we
have a board of dtrectors and we
have three off cers Prestdent Dor
thea F sher (one of the founders
tresurer Be tty Baron ck a nd
secretary Rtta Lewts Coordina or
of Act vtt es MaJOr E Joyce M ller
Pubhctty and Pub! c Relat ons your
truly Mar on Crawford Thrtft Shoppe m M ddlcport Manager Dorothy
Dav s
The other valuable hard workers
are Goldie D ll Mtdgte Abbott Ntta
Miller Nonga Roberts and Ann e
Ae ker I really don t know what
we d do w thout this group who
spend many hours n that shoppe
cleamng sortmg and sell ng Next
we have a cowt appomted Humane
Agent Harold Norman and four
road agents
myself Carol
Trtplett Doug Rees and MaJOr
Miller We are the crew that has to
go out and ptck up anunals occastonally and take mjured or stck
ammals to the vet
Drs Notter
Boster and Krawsczyn

But I have left the most rrnportant
person bll last to tell you about
Mary Ann We would all be m
trouble f t were not for her She
handies all ncommg phone calls to
the Hwnane Soctety sometrrnes JUSt
gtvmg out nformatton others t mes
dispatching agents out on the road
but most unportant of all - she
cares for poor homeless dogs and
cats unt I ether Hoofs and Paws or
other pubhctty ts able to brmg folks
forward who will gtve them good
homes
She names all her charges and
gtves them more love and attendton
than probably most of those anrrnals
have ever had m thetr lives She
keeps them clean well fed ad
rrumsters thetr distemper shots dips
them to nd them of bcks and fleas
checks the r ears and eyes etc for
any mdicat on of llrress puts fresh
flea and tick collars on them and
feeds them tw ce datly unless pupptes and them s he feeds three and
four times a day
Further Mary Ann screens each
mdivtdual and fanuly that appears
to look for a pet and when the mn IS
ftlled which happens often as our
space ts luruted she talks mce
people mto carmg for strays they
fmd unt 1 she notif es them that
there ts space at which time she asks
them to br ng the ammal to her if
they have any possible way You
see there are so many runs that are
made by the Humane Soc ety agents

that the soctety does not expect the
agents to pay for the r own gas so
expenses are pa d to these people A
good round ftgure ci rruleage
covered each month would be
probab y over I 000 m Jes wtth our
vet btlls averagmg between 200 and
500 dollars per month We used to
loan money to folks to pay for
neutermg and spaymg but bad to
discontmue that program because
most of these people sort of forgot to
pay us back Unt)l they remember
thetr responstb !tty and retmburse
us we wtll not be able to loan any
more funds for this purpose
And speakmg of funds - how do
we operate fmanctally' We have
over 300 members donors and con
trtbutors We use the proftts from
the Thrift Shoppe the change that
you drop nto our antmal banks
located throughout Middleport and
Pomeroy and of course the ammals
when placed are brmgmg m some
money from the donahons new
owners provtde We come out about
even m expendttures and mcommg
funds most months
but worry
some months so any of you that
have not yet contnbuted to your
Me gs County Hwnane Soc ety - we
would certamly apprectate anything
you do (P 0 Box 682 Pomeroy 0

45769)
And for those of you who demand
so much from our authortzed road
agents remember they are volun
teers not patd or salaned em
ployees The only people patd to
elmunate the antmal problem are
your publtc servants whom you tax
payers pay to do this
the county
comnusstoners and the dog warden
They are responstble for that county

pound - we of the Hwnane Soctety
have nothmg whatsoever to do wtth
that place I wtsh we had unltmtted
space so that the publtc never had to
call the dog warden
Many vtllages are puttmg arltcles
m the paper recently about ptckmg
up dogs and eats that nm loose We
have tried like mad to convmce the
pubhc that thetr pets belong at home
where they are safe and do not
worry other people Dogs ptcked up
by county or vtllage law en
forcement people w ll be placed mto
the pound and systematically and
wtthout attempt to fmd the or gmal
owners killed
I have no tdea what they mtend to
do wtth those poor cats and ktttens
because the county provtdes
nowhere for them The law provtdes
that ANY anunal ptcked up must be
held for a pertod of at least three
days and be cared for which IS supjlOSed to gtve responstble pet owners
a chance to reclatm Licenses should
be purchased to reclatm dogs
Avotd a lot of hassel folks by
keepmg your pets at home wt!h you
It could cost you money m court and
cost your pet tts life if you don t pay
attentton to all the well mtenttoned
warmngs
Please remember folks that we
recetve no county state or federal
funding we extst solely through
your fmanctal assiStance - through
cuntnbut ons
and we need help
very badly
Animals available for adoptton
this week are A teacup Chihuahua
male four f ve ar stx years old
that s been badly neglected mce
dispostl on A medium stzed female
Insh Setter about II months qld who

IS very gentle and lovmg A large
beautiful male Shepherd a small
black and white Cocker Sparuel who
s adorable a sweet dispostttoned
mediwn stzed female part Blue Tick
but looks like a small odd colored
Shepherd We have a hiler of pupptes that are cuter than the dickens
about etght weeks old - all colors
and both sexes and we have some
ruce cats and ktltens several colors
to mclude a Monuna and her four
cute black ktttens Mom IS a blue
gray and so pretty If you would like
this family we wtll take the ktltens
when they have been weaned
Anyone mterested m any of these
arumals please call 992-6260 any day
noon until 7 p m

1

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Jack Bolen Helen Bolen to
Buckeye Rural Elec Coop me
Right of Way Salem
Patrtck H 0 Brten Mary E
0 Brten to Alfred 0 Roush 1 75
acres Salisbury

Alice Faye Gardner to ijarold T
Anderson Margaret Marte An
derson Lot 12 Crow s Sub Chester
Charles D Burke Rosemary
Burke to S W Jack Drilling Co
Right of Way Colwnbta
Vtctor'H Cremeans Mar]orte A
Cremeans to Harold M Bolen
Juaruta Bolen 13 10 acres Rutland
Herald Oil and Gas Co and Board
of Trustees Salisbury Twp Rtght or
Way Agreement Salisbury
George E Moms Mary E MorriS
to Larry C Powell Jean S Powell
Lot 522 Pomeroy
Neva Ntcholson to Amos Ttllis
Ruth Tillis ~'• acre Rutland

00 00 tee t to the po nt ot

beg nn ng and con a n ng

4000 squa e feet o wh ch

2000 squa e

ee

s n sa d

Lot Numbe 145 and 2000
squa re ee s n sa d Lot
Numbe 146

deg ees 40

eas

25

feet

a ong a ence to a 2 nch
h ckory th ence south 64
deg ees 35 east 95 feet
a ong a fence hence south

32 deg ees 30 west 30 teet
a ong a t ence th ence south

55 degrees 25 east 76 feel
a ong a f en e thence no th

35 deg ees 35
a eng a fence
54 deg ees 55
a eng a f ence
d deg ees 25
a ong a fence

eas 32 fe e
thence south

east 235 fe e

th ence south
east 32 fee
thence no th

86 deg ees 40 eas t 172 tee

by pass ng some fence and
a ga e to a fence pas then
e no h 73 deg ees 55 eas
02 ee a eng a fence then
ce no th 78 deg ees 25 eas
64 feet along a f ence o a
hence south
ga e co ne
27 dgg ees 0 east 12 tee to
a ga e post
hence
sou heasterly o a ha f sec
an
ne along a en e
a eng
he
fo ow ng
bea ngs and d stances
th ence south 49 degrees 55
hence south
east 232 fee
56 deg ees 50 east 153 feet
th ence south 60 degrees 50
east 65 fee
hence south

58 deg ces 20 cast 112 feet
thence south 68 deg ees 55

east 173 feet thence south
72 deg ees 03 east S7 feet
hence south 76 deg ees 15
eas t 77 ee and thence
sou h 79 degrees 25 east
.430 f ee
hence nor h 1240
teet a ong he ha f sec on

neto he pon otbegn

n ng conta n ng 60 3 acres
more or less

PARCEL NO 2

The to ow ng r ea estate
s tuated n he Townsh p of
Orange County of Me gs
and Sta e o Oh o more
pa cu ar y descr bed as
fo ows S tuated n Sect on
No 5 Town No 4 and n

Range No

2

he ex st ng wester y r ght
at way ne ot State Route

7 62 30 fee to the rea po nt

o
beg nn ng fo
th e
ase ment here n descr bed
th ence no th 85 degrees 46

west a ong sa d cen
ne 75 85 feet o a po nt

00

te

the e

and

Sub eel o a

ega h gh

vey by
R cha d
G asgow R S 516

ds

sub eel

o

restr ct ons
sa d ecord

bu

Announcements

J

P a no

Dan els

d~g

conta ned

and

depos Is

o he

No

FULL BLOOD'ED Br I any

p a sed a

000 00
app

$ 79

STILL OFFERING
ICE CREAM
Wtth Any Untco
FREEZER OR
REFRIGERATOR
PLUS
$25 DISCOUNT

eANNOUNCEMENTS

Pomeroy

G

s

Happy Ad

6-L.os and Found
7 Ya cl he
1-Pub c So11 e
&amp;Au

u.

2-S
l-

ed Wtn td

4-l!lus ness T 1 n ng
5-Sc:ttoo s ns r.tc on
6-R•d o TV

1
I
I
I

o ll:tn

I

Ft m Equ pmtn

,

61 Wented o luy
2TuksfoSit
u L estoctl
64 Hly&amp;G 1 n
's-Seeci&amp;Ft!
ll

aus nen
Oppo un y
22 Money to LOin

n-Pro en ona
St

HOUIIhO d Good

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

eFINANCIAL

te

J

"

eSERVICES

Wanted

I For Sale
&gt;Announceme '
) For' Rent

3

Home mp ovemtn s
12-P umbint &amp; EJ. • • "'
IJ-EttUVI ng

4

5

ICf Cl

tt at on
15-0tnt a Haul na
116-MH •epa
17 up111o ••• y
&amp; R•

6

7
8
9

10: _ _ _ _ __

to an on stake set n the
wes te y g ht of way ne
0 Oh o Sta e Rout e 7 then

Rates ancH&gt;ffier lnformatton

ce no !h 5 degrees 41 eas
o 78 9 feet a o ng the

' Wo ds CH" Unda
doy
dl't'l
days
days

..

II

:

s at on

Soh o

.('nt que

tables cloth ng and other
m scel aenous

FIVE FAM LY yard sale
at he Ernest Van lnwagen
res dence Bradbury Coun

ty Road 5
from IQ-5

Cha 1•

JOO

Eachworclo e htmnmum Swods s4censl)e wodpe day
Ads unn nt ol'ber han consec:u e dan w be cha ged • he day

n memo y Ca do Thank and Ob fua y 6 cen s pe word
m n mum Cash n ad ance

n

00

Mob eHoma a as andY:. dlllt'sa eacr:tl"ldOnyw flr:..hw n
o de 2S r:tn hi If o 1ds Cl y nt I!Jox Numbe n C• eo The
Sen ne

11
12
13
14
15
16

guile~

Let us

repa

patch

canst back n front of that

warm f re th s w nter and
not hatJe to wo rv Ca I 992
3941 992 5 26 or 992 3519
and we
come and g ve
vou a tree est mate
13
Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
SU RANCE been

N

ca n

ce led?
Lost
your
operator s I cense? Phone

992 2143

THREE BEDROOM house
121.3 s ory $1 000 down and
take ove payments W
he p f nance 674 L nco n

He ghts 304 752 9482
ENERGY EFF C ENT 3
bedroom 2 bath Bu t n s

CANN NG TOMATOES
Le art Fa ls247 3644

meta

APPLES
35

76 WOODED ACRES n
Me gs Coun y w th s x
ac es
c eared
w th
m nera r ghts for $27 000

992 73 2 992 5632
2990

land .cont act w h
$500 down a w
negot a e
cas h sa e
Also one
bedroom bu t n bunks

Bow and

good es

Furn

cto h ng

glasswa e

15068

Thornv le

EASTERN

ron

A eal Estate

kett es ant ques etc Ra n

3 FAM LY Yard Sa e Aug
4 56 8 9 Ch dren and adult
clothes of all s zes D shes
and m sc

terns

Located

on Sf R! 124 go no toward
Rutland th rd house on
r ght
after
Evelyn s
G ocery 9 6

Street

n

31

Homes for Sale

Th ee year old f ve room
house w th centra a r and

heat carpet th oughou
acres

w th

fru t

spr ng

NEW 3 bedroom home for
sa e
Bu
n k tchen
d n ng
room
Ia ge
ec eat on room f replace

ots of sto age 2 baths
ga age 1 acre lot 992 3454

Md

YARD SALE

160 S 7th

Ave M ddleport Lots of
n ce c othes a s zes Aug
59 9?

FAM LY

Yard

bedroom

Mo tgage

BRADFORD Auct oneer
comp ere Serv ce Phone
949 2487 or 949 2000 ac ne
Oh o Cr II Bradford
9

ron and brass beds o d
fu n ture
desks
god
r ngs
ewe l y
s ve
do a s ster ng etc wood
ce bO)(eS ant ques e c
Camp e e
househo ds

VERY

Wr !e M D M e R! 4
Pome oy OHl or ca 992
7760

pay top

do ar or camp e e estates
No tem too large or too
sma Check pr ces be ore
se ng A so do app a s ng

Osby (Oss e&gt; Mar n 992
6370
W LL

BUY

od

I an
sm ss ens
batter es
eng nes or scrap meta s

JUNK CARS a so p ck up
car

bodes c lean copper

60

b

rad ators

40 b
15

b

R ders Salvage Rt 4 Sf
R 24 Pomeroy Oh o 992

Genera

HAYES

REALTY

BR CK
a nch

GET VALUABLE I a n ng
as a young bus ness person

and earn good money plus

2156 or 992 2157
REG STEREO
lmmed a1e
reg stered

NURSES

open ng
nurses

pe enced n

for
e)(

CU CCU

as welt as genera staff
duty
Salary
com
mensurate w th e)(p Con
ta ct Teresa Coli ns RN

Veterans
Memor al
Hosp tal Pome oy Oh
614 992 2104

n ce Holly Pa k Ha s
ec room 12 xJ9 two ca
bock garage and on
one acre of and

COALMINERS CAS,.
TLE
N ce 3 bed oom

Real Estate

even ngs

FEMALE

wa k n c osets
2
ba hs modern k chen
tu
s ze b ase m e nt
Garage w h 2 ooms
and
bath above
could be renta or of
t ce Ca fa deta s

LISTING

G ace y
sto e and
equ pm en
w th apt
ren a on 2nd s cry On v

$21 200
ACREAGE

5 ac es on

Hyse
Run Rd
n ce
bu d ng s te and some

mbe $7 000
REDUCED

Three

608 E
MA "
POMEROY 0

room home w th app ox
2 ac es of eve y a d
w h b g ees and a p c
n 't
she fer
t1as
bea ut fu
knotty p ne
wa s and
a
gas

f replace $38 500 00
NEW LIST NG
23
equ pped

k c h en
w h
d shwashe
a nd ap
p ox
a re o Ask ng

$47 500 00
BRADBURY Mode n 3

one f oar p an home

Two

sto y 3 bedroom hme on
un on Ave
a ge ot
and
garage
On y

N ce 3

$25 000 00
RUTLAND
Love y
emode ed 2 story br ck
home $35 000 00
POMEROY
Beaut ul
2 s ory br ck home 3
BR
LR
DR and
(TlOdern

k

c hen

$26 500 00
ATHENA ACRES

24

ac es
beaut fu
3
poo
bedroom home

a nnex b dg BUILDING
SITES
One acre ots
- 3m es from Route 7

Velma N c nsky Assoc
Phone 742 3092
Cheryl Lemley Assoc

Phone 742 3 n

NEW L STING
SYRACUSE
5 rooms

w h 2 beaut lui

o s

new ca pet ng
nsu a
ton
and pane ng
Washer dryer go w h

house $26 900 00
NEW LISTING

Mob e home on 2 ots n
town 2 bedrooms A C
w ndow un
a fur
n tu e goes $6 100 00
44 Ac es

w th a 60x24 modu a

bu d ngs

I
I
I
I
I

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

s~rYICe

SRB Get all tM facts
Ca I Navy now

Toll Free
1 800 282 384
Mon Wed 9 AM to 2 PM

A

barn

shed fru I tree&gt; Ext a
t a

er

e

Hea Ithy

wormed

an ma s
Me gs County
Humane Soc ely 992 6260
Donat ons
requ red
Shepherd types Blue T ck
type plot hound red Dober
man
male
m n ature

neutered
coli e

Da lma! on Beagle type
the dog from
L ttle
Rascals
co ors

all s zes shapes
Also t ger and

ongha red cats and k t
tens I male Labrador

7

gorgeous pupp es Long
short ha red k !tens all
shapes and s zes

6

62

ant ques

26

pocke

hookup

ft

T sh rl and novelty
sh rts tor polltlclans
ball teams busmess or
1nd veduals

Shorts $4 00 Each
We pront ALMOST
anyth ng on ALMOST
anyth ng
Ph 614 949 2358
Even ngs &amp; Weekends
6 16 tic

J% down on $25 000 5%
down on balance FHA
265 Subs dy ProgPam
FHA 245 Gradual Pay

Ofloce 992 7544
Home 992 6191
107 Sycamore St
Pomeroy OH

wa!

TWO
s

bedroom

Ira ler

on y

B own s

Mob le

Home k tchen turn shed
E der y coupe preferred
Depos t eq u ed no pets

bedroom

tra

742 2474
OFFICE '92 2259

Real Estate- General

REAL ESTATE

on

pools

• 2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
A I related 90U pment

Vtnyl &amp;
Alumtnum S1dtng
elnsulat on
• Storm Doors
• Storm W ndows

• Replacement

7 21 1 mo

S &amp; G Carpe

Space for Rent

74

Scotchguard
742 22 1

Motorcvc es

HONDA CB360
$650 99;, 2897

COUNTRY MOB LE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pome oy Large lots Call
992 7479

248
607

Water we I dr I ng Tom
Lew s
304 895 3802
Seasona d scount on a 1
pumps and accessor es

EV NRUDE OUTBOARD
Mo o 50 h p
d cond
$200 See at Dou

s Ma ne

51

Household Goods

TRUCK CAMPER 1975
clean new cond t on w th
bathroom
refr gerato
furnace oven $1500 Phone

TRUCK

MAY TAG
automat c
washer Runs good $75 773
5013 af e 5 p m

6 5

Fou th Street New Haven

WV Ph 304 882 2494

for IKh Plltom for first elm
11111111nd hindi "' Stnd to:
Anno Ad.lms

ded

sept c

tank

n

and t ans t layout 992 7201

Camp ng

CAMPER 975

clean new cond t on w th
ba hroom
r e gerato
furnace oven S 500 Phone

81

1974
DODGE
CHALLENGER
new
wheels and t res 318 4
barre
w th
headers
automa c transm ss on
w th b and m sh f k t 247

3861

HOME

Electr cal
&amp; Refr gerat1on

SEW NG

MACHINE

Repa rs

serv ce

makes
Fabr c

NEED NG

Gutters

a

992 2284
Shop

and Se v
Sc sso s

ce

ELWOOD
REPA R

Home
Improvements

ted'

BULLDOZER work sma
obs a spec ally Call 742
2753

Au hor zed

serv1ees

M n mum effort to restor e

new comfortab e ag an
shou de and fla e sleeves No
wa st seam sash softly
P nted Patte n 494 M sses
Szes8 0 1Z 14 16 18 Sze
1Z (bus 34) akes Z 1 8 ya ds
60 nch tab c
$1 75 for ooch Pllttfn Add !*

J X F BACKHOE SER
V CE I scensed and bon
sta Ia on wate and gas
Excavat ng work
nes

992 7888

Autos for Sale
1949 L NCOLN two doo
coupe 62 154 actua m es

Ihe

992

gd cond

Boats and
Motors for Sale

7S

71

BE THER E quck as a wok n
th s p-and go sh rtQ ess w lh

C ean ng

S eam
c leaned
Free
es t mate
Reasonable

992 7888

46

Home

Equ pment

Hay &amp; Graon

H nerman

7 31 1 mo

mprovements

78

L vestock

w lma

Free Esttmate
James Keesee
Ph 992 2772

Tom Burroughs 667 6150

·~

adu ts only no pe s n M d
d e~orl 992 387 4

W ndows

FREE
ESTIMATES
Carl Reed 667 3327

•• •_.__I
. . . ...... .... . .
• I I ... I ' o • o• I • I IO 'o I

FURN SHED
APART
MENT tour rooms and bath

681

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

remodeling
Roofing Garages
-Add ons Porches

63

STRAW FOR sate 992 5437

TWO BEDROOM apart
men! n M dd epo I 1 304
882 2566

on

Call698 3113
7 31 1 mo pd

- Replacement
w ndows
--AIIIypes of

orca 1742 2795

64

Oho

North
22 Years Exper ence
Fu y Guaranteed

81

44

3 AND 4 RM turn shed ap
Is Phone 992 5434

Located 6 m les north of

f no answer

Wanted to Buy

Wash nglon Co Rd
L l!le Hock ng OH
6133

for Rent

Repaers

Seal Jobs
Albany

GOLD AND
S LVER
CO NS OF THE WORLD
RINGS
JEWELRY
STERL NG SILVER AND
M SC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH
H GHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
M DDLEPORT
OH 0 OR CALL 992 3476

Henry E Cleland Jr

Roger &amp; Dott e Turner

yd

Bebu

-storm wmdows &amp;
doors

Syracuse 992 2897

$42 000 00
REALTOR
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949 2660

Exper ~need Operators
ava table for local work
• 2 rubber t re backhoes
el excavator hoe 1 4

DEAN'S
TRANSMISSION
SPECIALISTS
Its

-Soft I Gutter

sl aughter ng
custom
process ng
ret a I meat

Apartment

Ph 614 843 2591
6 15 tfc

Pullins
Excavating

JONES Meat Pack ng
2

Racene Oh

CALL
992 6323 or 992 6011
71

&amp;

CH P WOOD Poles max
d a meter 10 on largest
end $ 2 per ton Bundled
slab $10 pe ton Del vered
to Oh o Pallet Co Rt 2
Pomeroy 992 2689

TWO BEDROOM I a ler on
east Ma n St n Pomeroy
742 3155

Rl 3 Box 54

Brush clear ng work

T.L
BURROUGH'S
- Alum
V nyl Sod ng

MIDDLEPORT 0
7 13 1 mo

BEDROOM Mob le
Home Adu son y 992 2598

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Pat os
Complete
mob le home hook up

- Com mere at ptumbng
Underground
fuel

62

(&amp;

Sedewalks and

7 17 1 mo pd

Tra e cour Call992 3324

BEDROOM

repa r)

Utility Butld1ngs
S zes from 4x6 to 12X40

992 2478

992-7354

Mob le Homes
for Rent

Adu

New Dr veways

Gravel or Concrte
Regrade drovew~ys

-Concrete work

bedroom

S1zes

From 30x30
SMALL

See~

-Shop and portable
weld ng

nstall~t

Farm Buildings

Shrubbery

-Backhoe and dump
truck servacc

storage

ALL STEEL

Ph 664 6370

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION

ches c ass r ngs wedd ng

bands d amends Gold or
s lver Ca J A Wamsley
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Co n Shop A lhens OH 5'12
6462

22 ttc

COMPLETE
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE ng
Grading

Custom
PrNlt
Shop

2nd M dd eport OH 992
3 61
OLD CO NS

949 2662
949 2160

I~:::::P:o:m::e:ro:y::O:h::::::4-::::::::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::::::::=:

N

!h 992 3714
42

949 2801 or
No Sunday

..

ANT QUES
FUR
N TURE
g ass ch na
any h ng See or ca 1 Ruth
Gosney

Free Estimates
Reasonable Pr ces
Call Howard

S d ng

7 13 1 mo

mentMort
OpenM W F9 OOtol 00
By Appotntment

Wanted to Buy

Free

cal s

Loans No Down Pay
ment Federal Hous ng

USED R 40 d lch w lch
w !h trencher 1 6 4 694
7842

tor

Est mate
949 2860

z% Interest 30 Yrs
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automafoc

Farm Equopmenf

new or repa1r gutters
and downspouts gutter
clean ng and pa nt ng
All work guaranteed

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

Real Estate Loans

fu n shed
house
n
Pomeroy $250 00 per mon

bedrooms 2 baths 40

The

Pomeroy

S nger

Sales

We sharpen

BOWER S
sweepers

toasters
rons a I sma
app ances Lawn mower

pan

n need o

repa r
s that roof beg n
n ng to teak? Cal 992 35 9
992 3941 or 992 5126 a nd get
th ngs a t I xed up to tha
bad wea he !hats on s
way
By he way free
est mates are p ov ded

Next to State H ghway
Garage on Rou e 7 985
3825

W LL HAUL

mestone and

gravel A so I me haul ng
and spread ng Leo Morr s

Truck ng Phone 742 2455

RUTLAND FURNITUREoc

1971 CHEVROLET
M
PALA tour door n good
cond ton for the year 949

CARPET SHOP

2063 after 6 p m or Satur
day

Pottom Depl
E LECTR C

STOVE

washer and drye Reason
fa se ng mov ng 992

enl stment opt on
n
eludes cho1ces ot home

Conhnuous

THREE

992 2749

spec all es
Op
porlun t es to lake ad
vantage of full Navy
benet ts
Spec al re

I

NEW

$450000
NEW L STING

de k

Reeves

Houses for Rent

2

FARM -

Eng sh and

23

1mmed ate open ngs for
veterans
n
many

Bonus of up to 75% of

41

bedrooms 1 b ath on
seven ten hs acre c ose
n
g a rd e n space
ca pe ng
pane ng

ATTENTION
NAVY
VETERANS

of sh1p or chance to
tra n n a new rat ng
You may be el g ble for
Broken serv ce Selec
t ve
Re enl stment

992 6215 or 992 7314

etc

belts

ROOFING
All types of raot work

(Free Esflmates)

-Foberglass

bedrooms 2 car ga age

$22 000 00

$41 000 00
POMEROY

mo

H. L WHITESEL

Vtnyl and AlumiRum
Sidtng

Call

boots

Blankets

A 7

bedroom home on 2
acres n n ce coun y
sett ng w th a ge ba n
bedroom to a e ec c
home garage and shed
on app ox
ac e

electriCal work

ASw1fty'

NEW LISTING

a

r d ng

VC YOUNG 11

991 225'L

c entra

Horses

and

Housing
Headquarters

com

port duty stat on type

and bab b ng brook 1
oor plan home on Sta e

Route tor us! $29 500
HAVING TROUBLE
BECOMING
A
HOMEOWNER• CALL
992 3325 or 992 3876

pan on

34 - - "
35 _ _ _ __;_

Ma11 Th1s Coupon wtth Remtttance
The Dally Senttnel
Box 729
Pomeroy Oh 45769

L ve n

arge lot Has Ia II I ees

General

LISTING

Pome oy ove y 2 story
home w th oak wood
work throughout La ge
v ng
oom
w th
1 rep ace t o ma d n ng
room
am y oom 3

pon es

very

OLD RT 3;1 - 12x60 rea

7

SOMEONE TO put up hay
on shares or cash 949 2531

3 bed oom

home

am y oom fu base
n ent cent al a r and
heat carper and one
acre

Br.oker

bedroom home on co
ner lo P e redu ced o

Help Wanted

Fam y

home of 4 bed ooms
Modern
k chen
ca rpe ng
fu
base
ment ho wa e heat
near p ayg ound and
stores

home w th 2 baths and

George 5 Hobstelter Jr

$26 500 00
SYRACUSE
1

REASONABLE

on y $12 000
VERY NICE -

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

NEW

sold

modern bull n k chen

bcdooms w h 4 bg

Go d s ve
or fore gn
cons or any gold or s ver
t:ms An que fLrn ture

and

- Th s2 bed oom ame
has ba h na ura gas
c ty wa er second ot
and near shopp ng fo

367 0584 after 5 p m

Rea Estate- General

NEW

can be sub

separate
One wa e
sys em serves three
paces 4 enta s na

wo full baths

PHONE 742 2003

wanted to Buy

o

d v ded

cent a a r underp nn ng
sun po ch and total elec
r c
E)(cel ent cond ton

f nanc ng
new
o d
ref nanc ng and 2nd mor
tgages Phone 992 7000 or

7 10

work

-Concrete\vork
-Plumbing and

PUT A COLD NOSe n your

mob e home w h th ee

types home

Supenor Vtnyl Products

-Addonsand
remodeling
-Root ng and gutfer

lessons
Every!h ng
mag nable n horse equ p

futu

home

money

ava able A

HILLCREST KENNELS
Board ng all breeds C ean
ndoor outdoor lac I t es
Also AKC
reg stered
Dobermans 614 446 7795

Ruth
(6 4 698 3290

and

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

POODLE GROOM NG
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220

Western

B R STOL

Rea Estate -

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322

5 1 tic

ment

INVESTMENT -

bed ooms

Sates serv ce and sup
pies In ground and

above ground pools

and

675 4424

14 x 70 1975

servtng your area ror 25 years
Call Now for Large Sav1ngs
For Free Est1mate Call

peppers 247 2192

HOOF HOLLOW

1971

8

Some great g fts as a Sen
t nel route carr er Phone
us r ght away and get on
the el g b I ty I st at 992

32 - - - - - - - - 33 _ __ __

2__

4 x

Sae

Aug 56 F om9 5

I

21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30

mber

R dge $450 an acre 985
3595

992 5732

5468

18
19
20

and

m es off Route 7 on S ver

t ees

Located on Eagle R dge
Rd Phone 949 2793

31711 Noble Sum 1 Rd
M ddleporl Oh o
992 5724

School

Mob e Hom e Sa es
Pt P easant W VA

24

ED
BARTELS Loan
Rep esen at ve 1100 East
Ma n St
Pome oy Oh

~

These cash rates
nc ude d scoun t

Loca

D st ct 38 acres F ee
gas royalt es Has pond

64 two
bedroom 971 L ber y 4 x
65 two bedroom
1968
A ant c
12 x 60 two
bedroom
968
New
Moon 12 x 60 w h expando
two bedroom 1967 Buddy
12 x 50 2 bed com
B&amp;S

uggage

cancels 173 Hudson 51
M ddlepor!

hree

Cameron

'

TOMATOES

P eked br ng con a ners
$4 00 per bu Also sweet

W th

1975 Western Mans on 14 x
YARD SALE Aug 5 6 9 4
We f nally dec ded o c ean
house Found a ot ot

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINIXMS

THE POOL PEOPLE

already

OH 43076
70

Nelson Drug

VINYL SIDING

sale

56500

Rd

D BUMGARDNER
SALES

698 6021

for Sale

Emp re

water p lis

992

0

Road

ap

REDUCE Safe Fast w !h
Go Sese Tablets
E Vap

CANN NG

ac es

for

basement prev ously dug

Mob te Homes

Wr te J
Profession a I

Exc

Call F tzpatr ck

Orchard 669 3785

7 m es south of Albany 3 7

and cant act $300 down

aPove the Nazarene Chur

clean alum num

I
I
I

Lois &amp; Acreage

( Prev ous
nqu res ex
c uded) Sy acuse 992 5704

48xl0 mob e home $2800

Flnaeelal

p esauce

sa e reduced to $40 900

32

Business Services

Summe Pr ces Ex ce so

Co 6 4 992 2205

nc uded

ch n Rut and

t'
I

bu d ng

--

6094

40 ACRES for sa e $'i00
anac e 985 4116

MOB LE home fa

23

980 L BERTY ALL e ec
c
a e w th 4 x 52
~92

M sc Merchan se

HE! AT NG 0 L Buy now at

ga age
co v ered pa o
arge ot Exc cond Qu ck

M see laneous

17

P GS AND STRAW for
sa e 985 4104

RUTLAND Chu ch of God
w
be hold ng an
Everyth ng Goes yard
sate at 9 a m on F r day
Aug 8 All you can gel n a
sack tor 50 3rd house

w h centra a r and heat
ga age a nd sto age ocated
n M ddlepor on large ot
ave ook ng v e c ose o
sc hoo and town 992 376-4
afte .dp m

establ shed

August 4 5 6

etc Ca 1245 9188

3

.. ."
.. "''"

Cash

1

l

bet ow

1

se t
hence south 85
deg ees 28 5 eas 98 4 fee

c oth ng
d shes
s lver
s one toys too s Avon
sma I app ances lots of
m see aneous

reserves the right to
class fy ed t or retec
any ad Your ad w II be
put
n the
proper
class I ca on 1 you
check the proper box

2 . _ _ _ __

14-.

GARAGE SALE August 5th
and 6th on route 7 n Tup
pers P a ns ned tp he

YARD SALE at 8 0 S
Se&lt;:ond Stree M dd epon
Oh o August 4th through
lOth
bedd ng
nens

Phon•----------------~

Au DlfO Sa e
3 Vtns&amp;&lt;tWD
4 Mo 8rcyc •
s- AuoPa s
&amp;Acttno 11
Au ORIPI

e REAL EST AT~

to an on stake set thence
south 5 deg ees 32 wes
66 2 fee to an r"on stake

more

Address, _ _ _ _ _ _ _~ II

eTRANSPORTAT!ON

4P M Dt y
2 Noon St u d..,fo Mond•V

5th and Pear Racine
Alvarez flat top guitar
push garden plow and lots

I Pr nt one word n each
I space be ow Each n
1 t a or group of I gures
1 counts as a word Coun
name and address or
I phone
number f used
I You get better resu ts
I f you descr be fu ly
1 g ve P ce The Sent ne

S6-Ptt o he

1 ce AtlNI
t-Wan ed To Do

glassware n ck

---------------------:

52 Cl TV Rad o Equ pmen
53 An QUtl
J4 M c Me chand e
J5-Bu 11 ng supp "

nsu anc•

10 2 at B ondena Hudson
res dence af the corner of

resu ts Money not efundab e

eMERCHANDISE
S

He PW11n ed

HUGE YARD sale Fr day
August 1st f om 10 ? and
Saturday August 2nd from

coupon cance your ad by phone when you get

•
W•n HI o Rtn
•t-E'\,u pmen o Ren

e EMPLI!&gt;Y ME NT
SERVICES

992

sa e

Wr te your own ad and order by ma I w th th s

on

degrees 08 wes 199 5 teet

b d

i
~

6-5put to Rtn

9--Wanted to Buy

992 7839 o

Yard

7

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savelll

t

o Rtn
44 Ap• men
•s-F Rooms

to11WII';'

want Ad Advertls ng
Dead I nes

de

992 2181

eRENTALS

l-Announcemen

work odds and ends so you

glass or ch na w

J

Houses lo Ren
2 Mobl e Homes

westerly
ght of way
ma ker for Oh o State
Route 7 thence nor h 89

Townsh p d R nge 12
0 d ge TownSh p Me gs
Coun y Oh o n me v a ge
o Tu ppe s P a ns a nd

Cha e
7814

b ue t ck n the snowba 1
H I area n Syracuse Ca
949 2336 or 992 3728

~----------------------,

LANDMARK
MamSt

Cotrd o Tlltnk

4

black

and a n ne year old wa ker

StoPOMoEROY1Is

2 nMemo am

south 5 degrees 41 west 22 8
feet from the 733 + 31 8

5

Male

Dachshund n Mulberry
Reward
Answe s
to

CLASSiFIED AD INDEX

beg nn ng be ng

Es a e
T RAC NO
e n

LOST

Pa

westerly gh! of way ne
of Oh o Slate Route 7 sa d

1- u he
ex ep g he
t o ow ng wo ac sof Rea

Lostand Found

LOST Blue T ck lema e
New L rna Rd
Ru land
area Call Robert Stewa I
742 3006

or Wrtte Daily Sentmel Classlfted Dept
111 Court St PomerOY' 0 45769

and Sta e ot Oh o be no n
Sec t on 5 Town 4 North
Range 12 West of he Oh o

css

949 2531 even ng s

PHONE 992-2156

The fo ow ng ea estate
s tvated n he Townsh p of
0 ange Coun y ot Me !IS

wester l y r g ht of way ne
o Oh o Sta e Rou e 7 to he
po n of beg nn ng con
la n ng o ~ ac es more or

FREE WOOD and manu e

6

WANT AD INFORMATION

Dona d Lee Head ey and
Mary J a ne Head ey

o

992 3694 or 992 3361

Lawrenc::e
Everyone

n

ce No 2 was
a sed at
$7 1 500 00 Parce No 3 was
pp d sed a t $9 500 00
Tc msof Sa e Cash
James J Pro!f tt
She r If of
Me gs Coun y
4 1 3 c

wes aboull60 ods to land

po n

span e ma e one year o d

FULL
GOSPEL
REV VAL Mount 0 ve
Commun ly Ch Aug 10 18
Daymond
Adams

was ap

onghared

TWO COON dogs one
b ack and tan two year old

home 247 2841

desc be d n vot 250 Page
151 Me gs County Deed
Reco ds
Pa ce

G veawa y

ha f go den ret eve
ab ado pupp es to good

Be ng
estate

I ng

dews

Kath een Wards Po t and

HA LF BLACK and an and

dev sed

p ev OUSIY
Deed Rete ence
part of th e rea

Tun ng

992 2082

m nera

complete bed wooden w n

2
4

Evangel st
Bush Pastor
welcome

do any general ma n
tanence wo k for you pa n

L nco n
dlepo t

Lane

742 2951

nch co lor tv carpet and
padd ng foot stool one

992 5867

and Repa r Serv ce s n ee
1965 1 no answer phone

EXCEPT NG
AND
RESERV NG a coa o

gas

Tun ng

gets p etty heavy

s m ar to a Cock a poo

C

Deed Reference
Vo
262 Page 187 Meg~ Coun
y Deed Records
PA RCEL NO 3
Los Numbe 4 8 and 10
o
H cko y Acres Sub
d v son be ng n Sect on 5
Town 4 Nort h Range 12
Wes Oh o Company sPur
c hase as desc bed n P at
Book d Pages 58 and 59
Me gs Cou nty Pat Reco

Company s
Pu chase
descr bed a s fo ows
Beg nn ng 6 rods south of
the sou th east co ne
of
and fo me y owned by
Dav d Wha ey, on the I ne
between the Townsh ps of
Orange and 0 ve hence

Company s Purchase and
desc bed as to ows
Beg nn ng at a po n north
84 deg ees 30 west about
480 fee and sou h 5 degrees
53 wes 568 2 fee t and no
h 84 deg ees 07 west 55
teet and sou h 5 degrees 41
west 22 8 ee t from he nor
heas co ne o sa d Sec
on 5 sa d po nt o beg n
n ng be ng ma ked by an
ron stake set
n the

erm nate

ways and easements of
reco d
Desc pt on o
above
tr ac t be ng esu Is of su

n the Oh o

owned by Char es Whaley
hence south about 74 rods
a and owned by Edw n P
Stout th ence east abou 99
ads to and now owned by
Da v d Has ott e
hence
no h abou 140 feet hence
eas o th e ce n er of the
Tupper s P a ns Road o
and owned by he he r s of
R Ba a d hence north o
he no hwest co ne
of
and o
he he rs of R
Ba ard
hence east o
Townsh p ne hence no
h abou 62 rod s to the p ace
of beg nn ng can t an ng 70
Ac es mo e or ess
Except ng a nd rese v ng
he f a low ng ea estate
wh ch wsa conveyed to

o

BLACK

match ng cha r z&amp;n th 25

THREE BEDROOM house

s.q

Mob le Honles
for Sale

32

Ch d s res dence on 444

6~--~L~o~s~
t=
a~
nd
~F~o=u~
n=
d____

•• , 1, .... I I , .. ..to 1. , _.,, , I 6
- l l l t l ' t ' IIO"'...,."'"''•r

w nte ? How about that
roof and barn that snow

YARD SALE Wednesday
August 6th from 9 5 at the

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
way ne o sa d unnamed
a ey th en e no h 27 deg
oo 00 eas a ong he west
ne o sad Lot Number 46
and 45 and the ex st ng
g ht of way ne
eas ter y
o an unna med a ey and
pass ng he nor hwest cor
ne at sad Lot Number 46
and the sou hwest co ner of
sad La Numbe 145 at
50 00 feet a to a d s ance of

Street M dd epa t Green
crushed velvet sofa and

g Is and womens

Hom es for Sal e

3

W LL YOUR
HOUSE
w lhstand another hard

nacks bedspreads 140 000
BTU Amana forced a r fur
nace lots lo s more

John E Canter Rebecca A Canter to Buckeye Rural Elec Coop
Inc Right of Way Bedford
Jack Krautter Cmdy Krautter to
Buckeye Rural Elec Coop Inc
Rtght of Way Rutland

S1tuaflons Wanted

B GYARDSALEA ugus!4
56 from 9 &gt; at 778 Dl ver

cloth ng

GOLF ASSN MEETS
The Women s Golf Assoctatton
held tts weekly meeting Tuesday
mormng at the JayMar Golf Course
Members drew numbers for part
ners Pnze wtnners were Garren
Snyder best chips and Pearl
Welker longest dnve
Other wmners were Garren
Snyder and Mtldred Kart;. long
score Members recetved an m
vtlatton from the Rtverstde Golf
Course for a tournament slated
August6
Attending were Velma Rue NeUte
Brown Elizabeth Lohse Kathy
Gard Betty Fultyz Mary MorriS
Norma Custer and Peggy Moore
Area Golfers aiiC welcome to attend
meetmgs ftny Tuesday morrung at 9
am attheJayMarGolfCourse

112

Yard sale

M DOLE POR r - A rea estate barga n Sol d bu It
th ee bedroom home on y one bock from center o

town p ced to Se ll $25 000

CALL BILL CHILDS 992 2342
RODNEY DOWNING-BROKER

Mtddleport, OhMl

5769
53
ATTENTION
IM
PORTANT TO YOU) WI
pay cash or cert f ed check
to ant ques and collec
t b es or en re es ates

Noth ng too large

Also

guns pocket watches and
co n co lect ons Ca 614

767 3167 0 557 3411

The Daoly Sent nel

243 West 17 Sl Now Yod, NY
10011 rnnt NAME ADIHIESS.
ZIP SIZE 1nd Sill£ NUMBER
Why pu up w h h gh p ces
sate do Ia s get bette qual !Y
Send fo ou NEW FALL WNTER
PATIERN CATALOG 94 patte ns
Fee Patte n Coupon worth
$1 75) Catalog $1 00
133 Fosluon HonotQu It nt$1 75
1:JO.Swoo1t..Size Jl.56 $1 75
1:!9-Qvtck [osy T IM1ers $1 75
127-Aflillns n Doiltes $1 75

SPORTS CAR 1979 brown
1 at Xl9 30 mpg 14 000
m les ask ng $5 800 675
6986
1971

CHEVY

Suburban

fa r cond Runs good Spare

gas tank $600 773 5254

1977 CHEVY Luv oxce e nt

Ntce Selechon of Carpet Remnants an
Lmoleum Remnants at B1 Dtscounts

cond t on
low m eage
wh te mo ave wheels and
rad al t res a nd topper

RUTLAND FURNITURE

72

Trucks for Sa e

Benny W Ison 949 2322

Mam St

742 2211

�-

10-Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 4, 19110

.

..

.

President. .

J

(Cont inued from pcige 1)

Sentinel Social Walker joins Wiseinan staff
E. M. Wiseman of the Wiseman
sales staff of the Wiseman Real
Calendar
Agency, Gallipolis, announced today
Estate Agency.

Powell also alluded to that before
joining Carter, Mose,s, White House
that Clyde Walker has
the
counsel Lloyd Cutler and long-time
MONDA v
Carter adviser Charles .Kirbo at-----REG1JbAR-SElSSI0N; -R:ac·ln-e~Camp David.
Chapter 34, Order of Eastern Star,
"What we have been de;~ling with Monday evening, 7:3(), at Masonic
here is a tremendous quantity of Temple.
·
material and paperwork and
.
BRADFORD Church of Christ,
peoples' recollections and the White
House counsel's office has had to . vacation Bible sc~~l, Aug. ~· 9
a.m. to 11 :3() a.m., Jesus, I Believe
talk to a lot of people" the
spokesman said. "They've 'had to
in You" will be the theme.
have a lot of people combing back
TUESDAY
through records, notes .... There is
SUTTON Township Trustees
always a possibility that there is Tue~d~y R . P;m. at Syracuse
something that does not show up Municipal Bwlding.
there "
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
·
Daughters of America, 8 p.m.
Initiation with members to wear
HOSPITAL NEWS
white dresses.
·
VETERANS HOSPITAL NEWS
POMEROY Chapter 186, Order of
Saturday
Admissions--James
the Eastern Star, 7:45p.m. Tuesday
Reynolds, Pomeroy; Regina l'lorst,
evening at the Masonic Temple. All
Pomeroy; Delmar Grady, Racine;
officers are to wear gowns.
Charles Jones, Pomeroy; E'thel
CLYDE WALKER
·Bush, Pomeroy; Edwin · Cozart,
UCENSE ISSUED
Racine; April Snider, Racine.
A
marriage
license was issued to
Saturday
Discharges--Cora
TO MEET TONIGHT
Roger
Kevin
Marcinko,
20, ·Tuppers
Folmer, Louise Matlack, David
The Eastern Athletic Boosters will
Plains, and Belinda Dee Adkins, 18, meet this evening at 8 p.m. at the
Huddles~on , Henry Werry, Andrea
Charleston.
Fields, Denny Roberts, Michael
high school. Plans for the fair will be
Barker, Straud McDermitt, Opal
made.
Cremeans, Karen Neff, Earl Denny,
TO MEET WEDNESDAY
Elizabeih De~. George Christy,
All girls interested in playing TO MEET TUESDAY
Norma Parker.
Drew Webster Post 39, American
volleyball at Eastern High School
Sunday
Admissions-James are to meet.at the high school Wed- Legion, will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m.
Sweeney, Athens; Rhonda Markin,
at the post home.
nesday at 8 p.m.
Cheshire; Sybil Riffle, Syracuse ;
Cynthia Conkle, Cheshire; Gertru!le
Pellegrino, Middleport; Brenda
MOVE FAILED
Haley, Pomeroy; Loretta Imboden,
In 1776, Britain landed 10,000
Middleport; Elizabeth Meeham,
troops on Long Island in a move to
Dayton.
quell the American Revolution.
Sunday Discharge-Brenda Haley.

Mr. Walker has spent the last ~ ­
years financing farms and making
rural housing loans. For the past 13
years he has managed the Federal
Land Bank office in Gallipolis which
covers an eight county area. Prior to
that he was with the Jackson
Production Credit Associaton.
Walker graduated from Ohio State
University in 1947, with a B.S.
degree in Agriculture Engineering.
He is a member of the grange, farm
bureau, Thurman United Methodist
Church, director of Buckeye Rpral
Electric, and past member of Gallia
County Junior Fair Board.
Wiseman stated that Mr. Walker
has already compl~ted three courses
in Reid Estate Principles, Law and
Finance, as well as 60 hours of salesmimship classes 11t the E.R.A.
. training academy.
.
Walker is fully qualified to offer
. E.R.A. home buyers seller proteCtion plans as well as to list, sell arid
appraise real estate.
"We are very fortunate to have
someone like Clyde join us because
of his experience, education and outstanding reputation in our community," Wiseman said.
Mr. andiMrs. Walker live on their
farm at Thursday. Two of their
seven children are still home.

•

Carter insists nothing.illegal or Improper
, WASlUNGTON (AP) - President
:Carter's extraordinary defense of
his handling of brother Billy's
; Libyan connection doesn't close the
:cue that has rocked his presidency
;and his party in the final days of his
•rae~~ for nomination to a second

:term.

The president's own account Monday night to the public and to the
Senate subconunlttee investigating
,the affair acknowledged that it is
:"not definitive or final." Members
·of the pan~! indicated they would
· :withhold jultgment until their probe
18 C!llJIPI$!.
And in the highly charged' at;mosphere of an election campaign,
.Carter's opponents could hardly be
.expected to let the matter rest.
. But in his 9&amp;-page ~rt and the
·hour-long nationally broadcast news
:conference .that followed, the
:president inalsted that although he

may have made some mistakes in
getting information about the case
out in the open, none of his actions in
dealing with Bllly and the Libyans
was illegal or improper.
The president said - and 'excerpts
from his personal diary confirm that he tried repeatedly, if 1!11·
su~essfully, to dissuade his bead·
strong brother from making a return
trip to Libya last year.
"I'm not trying to make excuses,"
the older brother said. But "anyone
who knows Billy knows that no one
can push him around."
The president defended ilsing Billy
to get to the Libyan government in
the early days of the Iranian hostage
crisis and said the mission was at
least partly successful in obtaining
the support of the radical Islamic
regime for U.S. efforts .to free tbe
American captives. ' He conceded,
however, that "It may have been

FURNITURE REFINISIDNG - This antique dresser, refinished by
BWy Dyer, a 4-H club member for 10 years, belonged to his greatgrandmother. Billy hauled the dresser to the fail"grounds Saturday for
judging. _ _,____________________
·
"'.:,_.:_.:_
'1'
1

•

1

A •e·a deaths .

l· ·

I ,

Mearlene Arnett
Mearlene Hale Arnett, 49,
Pomeroy, died on July 28 at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Arnett was born Feb. 21, 1931
in Magoffin County, a daughter of
Yearns and Esta Wheeler Hale.
Sbe was married to Cleatus Arnett
and to this union six children were
born. Her eldest daughter, Cleta
F:aye, preceded her in death on Dec.
28,1972.
Surviving besides her hujsband
are two sons, Vinson Arnett of
Ashland, Ky., and Gregory Arnett,
Bradley, Ky., an(j three daughters,
Tina Arnett and Gina Arnett, at
home, and Cheryl Ann Arnett Call of
Pomeroy; a brother, ·Hershell Hale
of Dayton; two sisters, Mrs. Anna
Howard, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Clara
Howard, Rutland; three grandchildren, Stacy, Channa Marie and
Robin, and a number of nieces and
nephews.
.
Mrs. Arnett was a member of the
Pomeroy Church of God.
Funeral services were held at the

Dunn and Kelly Funeral "Home in
Salyersville, Ky. Burial was in the
Hale Cemetery at Wheelersburg.

Ruth Karr
Mrs. Ruth E. Karr, 73, Route 1,
Middleport, died early Monday at
the Camdeh-Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg.
Mrs. Karr was born in Pomeroy, a
daughter of the late William and
Margaret Ohlinger Neutzling. She
was a member of the Middleport
Church of Christ.
'
Surviving are her husband, Otho
E. Karr, Route I, Middleport; a
daughter and son-in-law, Joan R.
and Robert Morris, Pomeroy; two
sons, Roland 0. Karr, Owensboro, ~
Ky., and Donald R. Karr, Route I,
Middleport; nine grandchildren;
three great-grandchildren; three
sisters, Mrs. Robert (Louise )
McElhinney, Middleport; Mrs.
Hilda Rose, Indiana, Pa., and Mrs. ·
Fern Berkheimer, Worthington, and
two brothers, Rolland Neutzling,
Pomeroy, and Clarence Neutzling,
Long Bottom.
Several nieces,

her husband,
Jack, is the Landmark
Manager
in Pomeroy.

ANNEXA TIOJII
The annexation of New Mexico as
United States territory was
proclaimed at Santa Fe in 11146.
MONA LISA STOLEN
In 1911, Leonardo da · Vinci's
"Mona Lisa" was stolen from the
Louvre in Paris. It was recovered a
year later in Italy . .

MR. REmEL CONFINED
Donley Reibel is confined to the intensive ~!are unit at the Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis. He suf·
fered a heart attack Thursday
evening.

DIVORCE FfLED
Kevin V. Wolfe, Racine, filed for
divorce in M~igs County Common
Pleas Couri against Marilyn Denise
Wolfe, Glouster.
·

in the state of Ohio at the close of business on June 30, 1980 published in response to call
made by Comptroll~r of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.
Charter number 16851

N'atlonal Bank Region Number 4

Statement of Resources and Liabilities
Cash and due from depository institutions . ..... . .. . .. . . ... . ... •. . ... ,
$1,652,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities .................... . .. . ............. . •.......... 9,136,000.00
Obligations of other U.S. Gvvernment
agencies and corporations .......... . . .. . ... . . ... ; . .... .. . .. . .. . .. . . .. . 2,023,000.00
Obligations of States and political
· subdivisions in the United States ·.. . . . . ..... . •. . .. . .. .• .. . ... . •.. . .. ..... 3,030,000.00
Other bonds, notes, and debentures ........ . .....•.. , .. . . ...... . ..... .. . .. . .. 2,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock .. . . .. . .. ...... , ... . . .. . .. ........ 58,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ... . .. . ... . .... . .. . . . . . .. ·. .. . . . ..... ... .... . . 1,02S,OOO.OO
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income ). . .... . .•.• . . . ..... 16,729,000.00
•
Less:•Allowance for possible loan losses . ..... . . . .. .. ... , ..... 103,000.00
Loans, Net .. . ..... . ...... , .. , .. : .. . ... . ..... . .... . .. .. .......... . .. . 16,626,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures , and
other assets representing bank premises ... . ... . •........ . ...... . .......... 288,000.00
Other assets . ... . ..... .. ........... .. ........ . .. .. ... ..... . .. . .... . . .. ... 382.000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ..... . .. . . . .. . ... , .. .. ... . ........... . ...... .. . ... .... $34,222,000.00

...

vt
Ill

vt
vt

c

Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps...... , ..•. .. .. :. .
$5,761,000.00
.Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corps ....... . ." .. . ..... . ... . . .. . ... ... . ... . ......... . 22,262,000.00
Deposits ofUnited States Government .......... .. . .. . . . . ... . .... . . . ... . .... . . 4,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
.
in ,the United States .. , . .. .............. .... . , .......... . .......•. . ..... 2,416,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ........ . ........ . ••....................... . . . 288,000.00
Total Deposits .. ... .... .. . . ..... .. .. .. ... . . .. .. . . .. . ... ........ ... ... . . 3(),731,000.00
Total demand deposits ......... . . . .. . . . ... , ......... . .... . .. 6,797,000.00
Totaltime and savings deposits . ............ . .. . ......... ... 23,934,000.00
Other liabilities :................ . ...... . ... . ......... . •. , .. .... . , .... . ... . 593,000.00
TOTAL UABIUTIES (excluding subordinated notes
and debentures) ........ , ....... . , .... .. ........... . . .. .. . ........... $31,324,1100.00

--c
Ill

. .I
1111

. .I

,.... ....

.,.c
_.,..
:::::~-

0 ...
lllc
u

Common stock:
No. shares authorized 16,000
No. shares outslanding 16,000
( par value) ............ •. . .. .. . . .. . .... $400,000.00
Surplus ........ . .............. . ......... .. ....... . , ... .• .... .. •. ..... . . 1,520,000.00 ·
Undivided profits . . . .. . . ...... . ... . ......... . .. . ....... . . .. . . ............ 958,000.00
· Reserve for contingencies an~ other capital reserves . .. . . .... . . . .. . .•. . ... . ... 20.000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .. , ......... . . . . . . ........... . ... .. . . ........ $2,898,000.00
TOTAL UABII,JTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL .... . .. . ... . .. .... . •..... , . $34I222,000.00
.Amounts outstanding as of report date:
Time certificates of deposit in denominations of $100,000 or more . . . . . .
$1,397,000.00
Other time deposits in amounts of$100 ,000 or more . . . .. . ...... , .. , .. , .. , .... 435,000.00
Average for 30 calendar cays (or calendar month) ending with report date :
Cash and due from depositpr~ institu(j_ons .... . ........... .. . . . . ...... , . . 1,847,000.00
Federal funds sold ahd securities purchased under agreements to resell- ...... 941,000.00
rota11oa~s....... ' ·: .c . .:: .,........; . ·.:_:_:. ·~~ .. :.:: ·.:..: . :.:c.:.:.: . ........ ' 16,083,000.00
Tune cert1f~cates of deposits m cfenommations of $100,000 or more ......... . . 1,269,000.00
_Total deposits .. .. .. ...... , .. .... .. ...... .. . . . .. . .... . . ·. . .. .... ....... 29.814.000.110
~ederal funds pur~hased and securities sold unde; agreemtns to repurchase ... 83,000.00
rota!
assets . .... .... ... ' ............... .... ........ ... . ....... .... $33,218,000.00
I

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"Ill

0

::e
::e

Ill

Farmers
Bank

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

BANK ONE OF POMEROY, N.A.

....

The Farmers Bank is a full ~er ­
vicc bank that ca n handl e all
o f your banking and financial
needs. The Farmers Bank is
a lso one of you. They are
o ne of you because they are
co mmunity owned and operated &gt; Co me in to the full
se rvi ce bank tha t's o ne of
~ou--Thc Farm ers Bank.

slop in and see our selections for boys and girls
- young men and women. Buy early for best
selections.

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

vt

The Farmers Bank,
the full service bank
that's one of you.

OF YOUR BACK TO SCHOOL NEEDS

REPORT OF CONDITION

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Southern Athletic Boosters
will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. at
Southern High Scl_Iool. All members
are urged to attend.

nephews and cousins also survive.
Besides her parents, Mrs. Karr was
pr&amp;eded in death by a sister and
three brothers.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Wednesday at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home with
Mr. Robert Melton officiating.
Burial will be in Beech Grove·
Cemetery. Frienda may call at the
funeral home fmn 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Tuesday.

MAKE ELBERFELD$ YOUR
SHOPPING CENTER FOR ALL

I, Joan Wolfe, Assistant Cashier, of the above-named blink do hereby declare that this.
Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and ~lief.
·
Joan Wolfe
July 22, 1980

'

I

I

Pomeroy, Ohio

Mlml&gt;trfDI.C

The Community Owned Bank

I.

We, .the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this ·statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has-been examined by us, and to the besl of our knowledge and
belief is true and correct.
EDISON HOBSTETTER
PHILUP W KELLY - DIREctORS
WARRENPICKENS ,

•

I

e.
VOL 31 NO. 79

planation was cautious.
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., chairman of ·the special Senate subcommittee, declined comment, but
his vice chairman, Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., said, "We have heat"d
the president's side of the matter;
now we will hear the witnesses and
maybe hear the other side."
Sen. Bob Doie, R-Kali., perhaps
the president's sharpest critic on the
committee, said there still is "a lot
to explore.'' He expressed particular
interest in a conversation between
Carter and Attorney General Benjamin R. Civiletti in which Civiletti
told the president that Billy Carter
would not be prosecuted if be
registered as a Libyan agent. •
Carter acknowledged he made a "highly technical" mistake when
Civiletti and the White House denied
the two men had discussed the 13illy
Carter matter before a thorough

at. y

record search, revealed they had.
But the president insisted nothing in
the brief conversation was improper
or could be considered an·attempt to
influence the Justice Department investigation .
Included in the report was the note
Carter wrote after the June 17
meeting recounting that Civiletti
had wid him ''Billy ought to
acknowledge" that he was an agent
for Libya and "there would be no
punishment for him. "
Billy himself, who watched the
televised news· conference at an
Americus, Ga., motel, said his
brother told the truth.
"I won't go so far as to say I enjoyed it," Billy Carter said. "But it
was a good news conference."
The voluminous report to the
Senate contained dictated notes
from Carter's daily journals, handwritten letters and statements

from top aides, including national ·
security adviser Zbigniew Brzezmski and ·White House counsel
Lloyd Cutler.
In it, the president made clear he
did not approve of his brother's flirtation with the Libyan regime and
said Billy's receipt of funds and
possible ensuing obligation "will
govern my relationships with Billy
so long as l am president. ''
Carter sai.d he has not gained in
any way from the $220,000 his
brother received, an&lt;! " my trustees
and I will see to it that no direct or
indirect benefit will flow to me in the
future." He also said he has asked
liis lawyers to draft a rule barring
federal employee's . from any
dealings with a member of the ·
president's family "that create
either the reality of the appearance
of improper favor or influence." ·

en tine

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

New band
director
employed ·

ELBERFELD$

COMPLETES TRAINING
Neacil E. Carsey, 825 Park Street,
Middleport, recently completed a
two week training school in Columbus to become a Nationwide Insurance Agent in Pomeroy. She will
handle all lines of insurance such as
Life, Health, Augo, Fire, Business
and Estate Planni,ng.
Carsey has an office at 382 E. 2nd
Street, Pomeroy. Her office hours
are 9:3() a.m. to 5 P·Ill· daily or
ev,~ning by lljintrnent.
Neacil isJa kie
e mother
of and
two
dabghters,
and Diane,

bad judgment" to have "enhanced
.Billy's stature in the minds of the
Libyans."
•
In his statement, Carter
reiterated: · " I can state
categorically that my brother.Billy
has had no "influence on my decisions
or on any U.S. government pillicy or
action concerning Libya.- I can also
state that Billy has never asked me
to take any step that would affect
any of these actions or Policies."
The president also made these
sweeping points :
- He never tried to influence the
Justice Department investigation of
B!llyCarter.
- He did not learn until it was
made public last month that the
Libyan government had paid his
brother $220,000.
- He never receivf4 any ·of Bllly
Carter's LibJan money .
Initial reaction to Carter's ex-

Say amendment will be on ballot
COLUMBUS - Supporters of a proposed redistricting amendment
said Monday that they have obtained enough signatures to assure its
placement on the Nov. 4 general election ballot.
Tile Conunlttee for Fair and Impartial Redistricting said it has
secured 317,235 signatures on petitions asking that the proposal be on
the ballot. They needed a minimum of 284,335 signatures by Aug: 6.
They will continue petition efforts today. The committee is hoping to
gain an additional30,000 signatures so it can bring the total to 350,000
and assure that enough signatures are valid.
The amendment wou)d establish a non-partisan, independent
procedure for determining legislative districts, with population
equality and compactness of districts detennining boundary lines.
Diatricta presently are determined by the Legislature and the state
Reapportionment Board. The conunittee says present practice favors
the party that controls the Legislature.

Toledo workers remain on strike
TOLEDO- NO!!otiations resumed Monday as a strille by 375 Toledo
Edison meter readers and office workers continued.

There had been no formal talks since Friday, when representatives
of the COOIJiany and Office and Professional Employees Local19 met
with a federal mediator.
Edison spokesman Roger Buehrer said construction workers returned to their jobs at the Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Plant site Monday.
Most of the workers refused to cross a picket line set up at the plant'
on Thunday, when the strike began, and Friday. This forced a halt to
w&lt;irk 0!1 an emergency planning bnilding there.
The union removed pickets at the site over the weekend in what offic:iala said was a move to create a better bargaining climate.

Absentee rates high in Cleveland
CLEVE;J.AND - Public school pupils in Cleveland have been falling
in their studies at an alanning rate, according to statistics revealed by
the district's board of education.
Those figures show that 38 percent of the 7,862 loth graders were not
promoted to the 11th grade after the recently concluded school year.,
Overall, about 11,000 pupils, almoSt 13 percent of the enrollment in
grades one through 12, did not perform well enough in the classroom to
earn a promotion to a higher grade.
The failures were matched by an unusually high rate of absenteeism
in Ohio's largest public school system, officials said.
The 1979-80 school year in Cleveland .marked the start of partial
desegregation and crosstown busing for about 16,000 pupils. The year
was marred frOOI October to January by an 11-week strike by
teachers.
Superintendent Peter P. Carlin and Dr. Margaret Fleming, deputy
superintendent for desegregation implementation, had no immediate
public response to the statistics. •

Communists join demonstrations
ROME - Italy;s Communists and other leftist political parties, after suffering at the polls because of Red Brigades violence, have
organized their full forces to protest tpe suspected neo-fascist bombing at the Bologna railroad station.
· .
l..eft-wing parties .and unions took tbe lead in organizing Monday's
demonstrations and strikes to denounce the presumed terrorist attack
Saturday, which killed 76 people and injured 160. Red banners were
prominently displayed at most of the assemblies and marchers
shouted leftist slogans.
More than 40,000 people assembled in the Communist "showcase"
city of Bologna while 30,000 marched to the Colosseum in Rome. Other
demoi)Strations were held in Milan, Venice, Genoa, Palermo, and
many smaller cities.
For the past four years Italy's chronic urban guerrilla violence has
tended to weaken the left and particularly the Communists, the 18rgest
Marxist party in the West.

Hurricane Allen claims eight
CASTRIES, St. Lucia - Hurricane Allen thrashed across the Caribbean with winds up to 170 miles an hour today, leaving at least eight
dead, hundreds homeless, and much of the important banana crop in
st. Lucia dev.nated.
St. Lucia's officials said they were in the midst of a "national
diaastel'" and that'they feared the death toll would rise. The storin left
the island's main hospital powerless and minus part of itS roof.
The U.S. National Weather Service labe.led Allen "the most intense
(Conlinued on pa~e 12)

State forecast, local weather
Variable cloudiness, quite wann and humid with a chance of
showers or thunderstonns Wednesday. Highs in the upper 80s.&lt; l..o"\'I'S
tonight near 70. Chance of rain 30 percent tonight and Wednesday.
Southerly winds 10 mph or less tonight.
.

ExteDded Oblo Forecast :..._ Thursday through Saturday: Wann and
humid with a chance of thunderstorms each day. Highs in the mid to
upper aos. Lows from the mid-60s to low 70s.
\

Douglas Hill, a former student
teacher at Meigs High School, was
employed as band director when the
Meigs Local Board of Education met
in special session Monday night.
Hill,-who also attended the University of Illinois, has been teaching at
Fairborn. He was hired after Ed
Kitchen, representing the band
boosters, appealed to the board to
employ a band director since it is
time for band activities to begin.
Hill has been working with the Meigs
Band even though he was not hired
until last night. The board voted
unanimously to hire Hill for the post.
Brord members attending were
Robert Snowden, Larry Powell, Dr.
Keith Riggs and Richard Vaughan.
The board also stipulated that
Supt. David Gleason make attempts
to locate an assistant director of the
band. The two vacancies were
created by the resignations of Randy
Hunt and Alan Hunt recently.
The board also hired Tobie Yates
of Jackson as an elementary Iearl Conlinued on page 12)

Interest rates
•
•
mcrease
agam
NEW YORK (AP) - Interest
rates are on the upswing after a
four-month decline, and the trend
may continue despite the sluggish
pace of borrowing by businesses and
consumers, analysts say. .
Chemical Bank boosted its prime
rate to top-rated business customers
by one-quarter .of a percentage point
Monday to 11 percent. The move
came lesa than two weeks after the
nation's sixtb-largest commercial
bank cut the fee to 10.75 percent.
It was the first time any major
bank has raised its prime since early
April, when it peaked at20 percent. .
The jump has a direct effect only
on business borrowers, but Wall
Street analysts said it could
foreshadow higher loan rates for
consumers in coming weeks .
For example, home mortgage
rates are already rising in California ·
and moved a notch higher on Monday. Great Western Savings I Loan
'l'.ssociaiion of Beverty Hills raised
its rate by one-quarter .percentage
point to 12.75 percent.
Chemical Bank said it boosted its
prime rate because the cost of
acquiring funds has risen recently.
One such cost is the rate it pays on
six-month savings certificates, .
which are pegged bJ the rate on :!&amp;week Treasury bills. That rate rose
at the government's Monday auction
to 8.877 percent · from last week's
8.221 percent.

Two Daily Sentinel
routes are now Qpen
Two DailY Sentinel carier routes
are now open.
One of the routes is on Lincoln Hill,
Po111eroy, and the carrier will have
some 42 customers and will make
about $13 a week. The second route
is in the Village of Syracuse and has
52 customers. The carrier .will make
approximately $16 a week.
. In addition, carriers receive
coupons for prompt payment of their
bills each week and these coupons
can be traded for nice prizes.
·
V oung poople interested in the
routes should contact The Sentinel,
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, phone 9922156.

RACE PROGRAM - Howard Sayre is pictured
working out one of the four horses of the Sayre Family
to be taking part in the twilight harness horse racing ri.

the Meigs County Fair next week. Twilight racing will
begin at 4:30p.m. on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday
evenings next week.

Brown says law enforcement
'sagging in .downtown area'
By Katie Crow
Sentinel reporter
" It appears that law enforcement
is sagging in the downtown area,' '
Harold Brown, president of
Pomeroy Council, stated Monday
niglt at the regular monthly
meeting.
Brown's statement came as a
result of a safety committee
meeting. He cited that people are
walking in the streets · and ordinances are not being enforced. He
also charged th&amp;t at least 50
violations are made a day at the "no
left turn" at the intersection of Main
and Butternut Ave.
Brown !idded it is the responsibility of council to enforce the ordinances. Some persons are. being
forced to comply to the law and

others are not, Brown charged. Law ·
enforcement is inconsistent, Brown
also stated.
Larry Wehrung observed that the
iJlw enforcement is 50 percent improved. Brown added i.t is "better at
time s. "
Brown also said . for years they
(the council) had been led along on
the same excuses. Brown
questioned, "Are are we confined to
budget problems or authority
problems?"
Brown further opined that if the .
council is not going to enforce the ordinances, the no loitering signs be
removed from the parking lot.
Brown felt that law enforcement is
not consistant. He reminded councU
that the fire department asked for a
flashing light at the no left turn off

Butternut onto Main and no action
has been taken.
Wehrung agreed that the police
department at times has a lack of
manpower: Betty Baronick added
that there is a limited number of officers and council cannot expect
them to be on all four corners at one
time.
Brown also added that he was not
criticizing the chief of police but the
results. Wehrung stated thst the
chief has his blinds tied and he doing .
what he can with what he has to
work with.
It was suggested by Chief McKinney that part time help be replaced
with full time employes. He felt this
would help the situation.
Brown asked Chief McKinney,
(Cont in'ued on page 121

Postpone hostage debate
By The Associated Press
"In this respect, the Maills has
Iran's Parliament put off the
suggested a plan that the Supreme
hostage debate and urged trials for
Judicial Council should be asked to
the 52 Americans to retallite for the
prepare the grounds for the trial of
detention of nearly 200 Iranian ' the hostages," Hashemi Rafsanjani
demonstrators in New York jails. :· said according to the state radio.
Iran's president said the United
Rafsanjani made no mention of
States has created a "new problem
any date for the beginning of a trial,
to keep the original problem of the ·which the United States has said
hostages insoluble."
would constitute a grave violation of
"I have said many times that
internationallaw.
America itself is preventing the
Meanwhile, State Department ofproblem of the hostages from being
ficials in Washington denied Iranian
solved,'' President Abolhassan
charges that the detainees were
Bani-Sadr said in a message sent . being brutally mistreated. They
Monday bJ the Iranian Islamic
were arrested July 27th in
Society in America and Canada.
Washington during clashes wiih
His statement, broadcast on
police and opponents of Ayatollah
Tehran radio, also contained a call
Ruhollah Khomeini, Iran 's ·
to the Iranian detainees imprisoned ·revolutionary leader.
on suspicion of violating U.S. imOriginally, the Iranians were
migration laws that they "Try not to
charged with disorderly conduct.
The charges were dropped Friday
surrender 1..
"If they (U.S. officials) are going
and the Iranians were transferred to
to deport you, resist as far as
the custody of Immigration and
possible, so that they have to drag
Naturalization Service officials for
you into the planes,'' Bani-Sadr said. possible deportation hearings.
The speaker of the Majlis, or
State Department spokesman
Iranian Parliament, told the assemJohn Trattner said the United States
bly that the debate on the hostages'
welcomed a demand by Iranian
fate' was being postponed because of Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbl
thedetentions.
zadeh tlut U.N. Secretary-General

Kurt Waldheim investigate the
detentions.
Last March, a U.N. commission of
inquiry to Iran was barred from
visiting the hostages, who began
their 276th day of captivity today.
Wardens at the federal prison in
Otisville, 60 miles northwest of New
York City, said 32 of the 1721ranian
men being held there were being fed
a liquid nourishment because their
_prolonged hunger strike had left
. .m in a " life-threatening "
situation.
··
Twenty Iranian women arrested
in the same demonstration are being
held at a correctional facility in New
York City.
In London, some 150 Iranians
protesting, the detentions in the
United States fought with police in
what was described as a "pitched
battle" outside the U:S. Embassy.
Scotland Yard said 20 Iranians were
arrested.
Meanwhile, Iranian sk1le rocliu
reported that four men were
executed at dawn today in the police
prison at Borujerd, in southwest
Iran, after being found guilty of
adultery, drug trafficking and
sodomy.

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