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                  <text>16-The Daily Sentinel, MiddleP,Ort-Pomeroy, u., weanesday , Aug. 13, 1980

f

Area deaths

. ,•.•
·

Odell A. Gregory

Richard P. Roush

Richard P. Roush, 50, Rt. 1,.
Letart, died Tuesday on his farm.
Born June 2, 1930, in the Union
Community, he was a son of the late
He was a veteran of World War II
Otmer and Katie Roush Roush.
and a former engineer with the
He was a farmer.
Mar!itime Union.
Surviving are his wife, Fannie
Survivors include a son, Robert of · Boston Roush; three sons, Richard
L. of Huntington, Danny R. and JefBaton Rouge, La.; two daughters,
frey P., both at home; three sisters,
·Sandra McConnick, Barboursville,
Mrs. Margaret Thompson, Mrs .
. Mrs. Patricia Roush, Huntington;
Naomi Ohlinger, both of Letart,
mother, Mrs. Lucy Gregory, ColumMrs.
Mary Duncan, Columbus,
bus, Ohio; brother, Olin Lee, ColwnOhio;
one brother, Otmer Lee
bus, Ohio; and six grandchildren.
Roush, Letart; and two grand-.
He is also survived by several children. •
Funeral services will be conrelatives in Mason County, including
ducted Friday, 1 p.'m., at the
two aunts, Mis. Alpha Herdman,
Foglesong Funeral Home with the
Leon, and Mrs. Velma Zuspan,
Rev. Bobby Woods and Rev. Gerald
Mason, whq attended funeral serSayre officiating. Bllfial will foUow
vices Monday.
in the Cedar Hill Cemetery, Vernon
Rev. Kenneth Armantrout officiated the services, which were
Community.
Friends may call at the funeral
held in Colwnbus, and burial followhome Thursday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
ed in the Green Lawn Cemetery.
Odell A. Gregory, S2, 1533 Tracy
Circle, Colwnbus, Ohio, died Friday,
Aug. 8, of an apparent heart attack.

Man sentenced to 2-10 years
Dennis Riffle, 22, Pomeroy, ap- twice in the chest following an
peared Tufl!day in Meigs County argument.
Felonious assault is a felony of the
Common Pleas Court before Judge
second
degree for which the penalty
John C. Bacon and was sentenced to
is
not
less
than two years·nor more
a term of not less than t)lree nor
'
than
10
years
in prison.
more than 10 years in prison
W.
Crow,
II, prosecuting atFred
following his voluntary plea of guilty
torney
represented
the state of Ohio.
to a charge of felonious assault.
Rifle
was
remanded
to the custody
Charges stemmed from an inof
the
sheriff
who
will
be taken to
cident which occurred Thursday,
Aug.7, at which time Dennis Riffle prison later this week.
allegedly stabbed Robert Alger

Six accidents investigated
in past 24 hours by patrol
Gallia-Meigs Post, State Highway
Patrol investigated six accidents
during the past 24 hours.
One driver, Joseph E. Bowers, 17,
Rt. 1, Reedsville, was cited on a
charge of speed for conditions in a
11:30 p.m. mishap Tuesday on Rt.
124 near Reedsville.
According to the patrol, Bowers
was eastbound on Rt. 124, topped a
hill, and then his vehicle ran off the
right side of the road. The car hit a
sign and landed in a field.
There was moderate damage to
the vehicle. The driver was not injured.
No one was injured ot cited in a
two-c81' mishap on Rt. 218 around
9:20 a.m. Tuesday. Patrol said
vehicles driven by Greg T. Webb, 16,
Rt. 2, Crown
and Armand
Hoafat, . 48, Rt. 1, Crown City,
collided. There w minor damage
to the Webb vehicle and no damage
tO the Hoafat vehicle.
At 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, vehicles
driven by Caron c. Dodrill, 41,
' Cleveland, and Nora E. McMillin,
51, Rt. 2, Bidwell, collided on Rt. 160.
There was moderate damage to the
Dodrill auto and minor damage to
the McMillin vehicle. No one was in-

t'l'

Emergency runs

~~:~:~~orl:~~~ .
and four others were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting was William D.
Stewart, Rutland, $25 bond posted on
a charge of passing in a no passing
zone. Fined were ·Roger L. Nelson,
Pomeroy, $16 and costs, speeding;
James 0. Clark, Pomeroy, $100 and
costs, leaving the scene of an accident, and $50 and costs, reckless
operation; Russell Ashley, Middleport arid Gary Nelson, Middleport, $50 and costs, each, disorderly manner.

. Five defendants were fined and 13
others forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andiew8 "
Tuesday night.
Fined were James Will, Jr.,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, failure to
appear on earlier charge; James
Hayes, Pomeroy, $300 and costs and
90 days in jail, assault; John
Schuerger, Cleveland, intoxication,
$100 and costs; Keith Musser,
Pomeroy, $200 and costs, and oo
days in jail, assaulting a minor, and
$50 and costs, disorderly conduct;
David C. Krebs, Lynchburg, Ky., $2S
and costs, speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were K. Reed
JUdy, Bridgeport, W. Va., $50, no
operator's license; Jamie Johnson,
Pomeroy, $27; Charles ~ey, Portland, $26; Russell Morris,
Pomeroy, $30; John· Philson,
Syracuse, $31, all speeding; .Mike
Eddy, Parkersburg, $30, stop sign
violation; Terry Rieber, Racine,$31,
speeding; Patricia Pape, Racine,
$30, stop sign violation; Carl
Stewart, Chester, $30, assured clear
disiance; Donna Carr, Pomeroy,
$26, speeding; Veronica Cl!fllutt,
Letart, W. Va., $30, stop sign
violation; Penny Mullen, Middleport, $30, stop sign violation, and .
Mary Pickens, Middleport, $30, stop }
sign violation. ·
-..__/

jured or cited.
Patrol probed another accident at
4:2S p.m. Tuesday on the GalliaVETERANS MEMORIAL
Jackson County border on County
Admitted-John Dill, Middleport;
Rd. 49, three-tenths of a mile south
of Rt. 279. Vehicles driven by Minnie Clark, Middleport; Sharon
Stephen L. Schott, 22, Rt. 1, Cald- Cunningham, Syracuse; Linda
well, and Norma R. Kingery, 36, Rt. Roberts, Middleport.
Discharged-Carol Cross, Loretta
2, Vinton, collided. There was minor
damage to the vehicles. No one was lmboden, Shirley Roush, Eulonda
Haley, Sybil Riffle, Wilbur Wininjured or cited.
At 9:10p.m. on County Rd. 28, one dland, Helen Carpenter, John Dill.
and two-tenths miles east of Rt. 124
in Meigs County, vehicles driven by
Carles W. Craig, 33, Rt. 2, Racine,
Jeff A. WoHe, 17, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
CORRECTION
et on a curve on a hillcrest. There
·Members of Drew Webster Post
w heavy damage to both vehicles.
39, American Legion, for parking
Mi el Craig, 3, a passenger, was
assigmnents at the Meigs County
M,....,.out--mrn·ftlll. ediately Fair are to contact Joe Zwilling not
.....__....__....At•Y ZwiUing as was reported.

'

.,

1L.
TOP GRANGE - Star Grange tgok first place awarded the grange along with the top prize money.
honors in the annual grange exhibit competition at the With him are Bernice Midkiff and Nina Macomber.
Meigs County Fair. Waid Nicholson holds the rosette

100 arrests recorded
One hundred arrests were made
by the Middleport Police Department during July.
Of the total, 23 persons were
arrested on disorderly manner
charges; eight for speeding; five for
driving while intoxicated; four for
assault and four for defective
exhaust on motor ·vehiCle and three
each for open flask, running stop
signs, expired tags, spinning tires.
The remainder of arrests were on a
number of other charges.
During the month, the police
cruiser was driven 3,778 miles and
parking meter collections totaled

. SUNDAY REUNION
The Curtis reunion will be held
Sunday, Aug. 17, at Parker Park at
Alexandria, Ohio.

WORKERS NEEDED
Members of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, are reminded
that the . post is again handling
parking at the Meigs County Fair.
Workers are needed. To get assignments workers are to contact
Charles Swatzel, Paul Casci,
Leonard Jewell or Joe Zwilling.
QUARTEI'TOSING
The Gabriel Quartet of Cheshire
will be featured at the Mt. Hennon
U. S. CHurch Sunday, Aug. 17, at
7:30p.m. The public is invited to at- .
tend.

ELBER.FELDS

VANDALISM
Meigs Sheriff's deputies report
that some time last weekend · vandals shot out a headlight, and made
two holes in a fender of a logging
truck owned by Clutus Dalton, Rt. 2,
Albany. The logging equipm~nt was
parked on township road 83 when the
incident occurred.

CLOSED ALL DAY
THURSDAY, AUG. 14TH
FOR THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

MONDAY PRACTICE
AU girls at Eastern High School in-

OPEN FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. J0 8 P.M.

terested in playing volley hall are to
report for practice Monday, Aug. 2S
at 1:30 p.m. at the highschool .

--LEASING
--EQUIPMENT

SoMETHING NEW
HAs BEEN ADDED To
CHECKING AT
CENTRAL TRUST.

=TO BUSINESS. INDUSTRY,
AND THE PROFESSI9NS
BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA

614/992·2133

tonight with the formal
when the Texas delegation an- stir in the Massachusetts delegation
renomination
of Vice President
nounced shortly after midnight that and .Lt. Gov. Thomas O'Neill, the
.,
Walter F .·Mondale and the winners'
its 108 votes had put Carter over the speaker's son who had been Kennedy's New England campaign cooracceptance speeches.
1,666 he needed for renomination.
dinator,
asked for recognition.
And while there was no definite
At that, the delegates waved Car.
He
told
the delegates that he .had
word, it was widely' assumed Kentl!r-Mondale signs and shouted and
just·spoken
with Kennedy and "it is
nedy would seal his sbpport with a
stomped about the fioor as Carter's
liis
wish
in
the
interest of harmony
closing appearance on the podiwn
wife Rosalynn, his mother, Lillian
with the ticket he wanted to
Carter, and other members of his and unity and success in 1980" that
displace.
family watched in Madison Square Carter's ·nomination be made
unanimous.
For Carter, Wednesday night's
Garden.
With a roar of approval, the
co vention session was a triumBut .the cheers of these unityP t · moment in his embattled
hungry delegates grew into a roar of delegates acceded to Kennedy's
pres ency but one he was forced to
relief a few minutes later when request.
e with his defeated rival.
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill . The platform adopted earlier in
As the roll call of the states was
Jr. , the convention chairman, in- the day was the key to Kennedy's enread for the presidential nomination
terrupted the demonstration with a , dorsement. Carter had defeated
balloting, the cheers often were 'message from Kennedy: "I Kennedy with unexpected ease in a
louder for Kennedy than for Carter.
congratulate Pr~dent Carter ·on his string of early primaries. By the end
When the heads of delegations · renomination. I endorse the plat- of the P,rimary election season, !lie
called out their votes, they conform of the Democratic Party," president had amassed more than
sistently referred to Carter as "the
O'Neill read from ·the five-sentence the convention majority he needed
next president o( the United States."
statement. "I will support and work for renomination. But Kennedy
For Kennedy, they used words' like
for the re-eiJ'tlon of President Car- refUsed to quit.
Only after failing to defeat a rule
"gaUant...eloquent ...courageous."
ter. It is imperative that we defeat
The loudest cheer for Carter came
Ronald Reagan in 1980. I urge all that required delegates to abide by
preconvention conunltments did
Democrats to join in that effort."
Then, the speaker added, " And so, Ken,nedy give up. Carter had the·
votes and he was certain of keeping
united we stand."
them, but he still didn't get theqt all.
That was only mostly true.
The roll-call vote on the
A short tlme later, when the Min· was 2,129 for Carter,
nominatiop
nesota delegation offer'ed the
'
1,146.5
for
Kennedy, 2.5 for Rep.
traditional motion to make Carter's
Ronald
Dellums
of California and 51
nomination unanimous, delegates
for
others.
shouted, "No, No, No."
Only Carter's and Dellum's names
There was a pa.use: Delegates
!Continued on page 12)
milled about. Finally, there was a
El Townson, owned by Paul Sayr~. Racine, and driven by his
brother, Brooks Sayre, in the Wednesday evening harness horse
racing program at the Meigs County Fair broke not only the track
record for trotters but the track record for pacers on the local track,
Bill Downie, fair board member, reports. The owner will be presented
a check for an additional $100 following tradition. of the fair board in
providing special recognition for horses which do break the track

By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
AP Political Wrller
NEW YORK (AP) - President
Carter is launcltiDg his fall reelection campaign today with the endorsement he sought so fervently
from ~n. Edward M. Kennedy and,
at least seemingly, the party unity
he needed to meet the twin
challenges from Republican Ronald
Reagan and independent John An·
derson.
''I will support and work for the reelection of President Carter," Kennedy said in a post-midnight
statement.
That, perhaps even more than the
declaration of nomination, was what
Carter and his.lieutenants wanted to
hear to cap their anxious ·efforts to
bring the Massachusetts senator
aboard the campaign after the long
and bitter struggle for the
nomination.
The often.turbulent Democratic
National Convention concludes

Accomplishment
to be recognized

Blue· ribbons,

•
premiUJn
~oney
given at fair

records:
Meanwhile, Banjoist Wendy Holcombe, nationally known entertainer, will be' featured at the free grandstand entertairunent of the
Meigs County Fair at 8 this evening.
Another feature of the fair this evening will be a district Holstein
show beginning at 8 p.m. in the show ring.
On Friday, junior fair demonstrations will begin at 9 a.m: and the
annual pet show will be held at 1 p.m., also in the show ring. Twilight
harness racing will be staged for the third and final tlme at 4:30 p.m.
on Friday.
The annual junior fair market ster, lamb and pig sale will be held at
7 p.m. on Friday in the show ring and the free grandstand entertainment will be the Sonny James Show. The second flower show of
this year's fair will be judged at 2 p.m. on Friday.
Last night the vocal group, Vicksburgs, provided the free grandstand entertairunent and the open class horse show was held in the
center field lasting until about I a.m. this morning.

.

Numerous Meigs Countians have
been awarded · blue ribbons and
premium money for their farm
crops exhibited at th !17th annual
Meigs County Fair.
Edison Hollon, Minersville~ won
two first place ribbons in com and
Elsie Folmer, Pomeroy, won three
firsts in potatoes with other firsts
going to Herman Carson, two, Long
Bottom, and Melanie Stethem,
Pomeroy. Carson took two first
places in sweet potatoes.
In the vegetables category, first
place honors went to T. K. Workman, Ruttan~ green cabbage;
Dora! Hill, Pomeroy, egg plant;
Marcia Guess, Tuppers Plains,
tomatoes, red; Jlm King, Minersville, tomatoes yellow; Patricia
Wolf, Chester, cherry tomatoes;
Fred b. Smith, Pomeroy, green pod

Weather forecast
Showers and thunderstorms likely tonight. Lows tonight in the mid
to upper 60s. Partly cloudy Friday with a chance of showers or thunderstorms Friday morning. Highs in the low to mid-l!Os. Chance of rain
60 percent tonight and 30 percent Friday. Northerly to northwesterly
winds 10-15 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecast- Saturday through Monday :Fair through
the period. Highs in the mid-70s to low 80s Saturday and Sunday anq in
the 80s Monday. Lows in the mid-50s to low 60s.

CHoicE.

WE WILL BE CLOSING
AT 12:00 NOON ON
THURSDAY, AUGUST 14TH
SO OUR EMPLOYEES CAN
ATTEND THE
MEIGS COUNTY FAIR.

'

There was a time when one checking plan could fit just
about everyone's banking needs. But today that's simply no
longer true. That's why, beginning September l at Central
.
Trust, we'll offer you a choice in checking plans.

And the right choice can save you money.
· · For those who write only a few checks each month and
prefer to maintain a small balance, we recommend the Economy
Account. The service charge is only 7Sit per month, plus M
for each check paid.
·
If you write quite a few checks each month and maintain
a larger average checking balance, you'll want the Balance
Account. The service charge is determined by your average
monthly balance, and there are no additional charges, no matter
how many checks you write. The absolute maximum charge
is $3.00 per month, but if you maintain an average monthly
balance of only $400 there will be no 'service charge for
that month.
And one of the best things about checking at Central
Trust is that with both the Economy Account and the Balance
Account, you can eliminate ~II checking service charges just
by keeping a minimum balance of $1,000 in a regular Central
Trust savings account\
·
Come in to any1Central Trust office and pick the plan
that's right for you. A choice in checking. It's just one more better
1 banking service from Central Trust.

SEE YOU THERE!

Appealing
decision

.

59FffiECAU.S
The Middleport Fire Department
answered a total of 59 calls in July
with 43 being emergency runs and 16
fire and rescue calls, according to
the monthly report of J elf Darst, fire
chief. AU vehicles were driven a
total of2,162.5 miles during the month and of the 43 emergency runs,
eight calls involved motor vehicle
accidents.

$889.

-.-.NOTICE--

.. -.

. FIFTEF!N CENTS

Carter gets lo,n g-sought
endorsement from Kennedy

local emergency units Tuesday, the r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
Meigs County Emergency Medical 1
Services HeadqUarters reports.
They include,: Middleport Unit,
,
9:19 a.m., to North Fourth Ave, for
Minnie Clark, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; I : 14 p.m., to 982
Hysell St., for Lucille Casto, to
Holzer Medical Center; 6:30 p.m. to
llO N. Third, for .Stephanie Rickmlm, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland Unit, 5:f&gt;4 a.m.,
Mine I for Harry Warrington, to
Holzer Medical Center; 7:08 p.m.,
for Mrs. Richard ·Grueser to Holzer
.
.
Medical Center; 9:58p.m., for Mary
Lambert to Holzer Medical Center;
~cine Unit, 6:13 p.m., Peggy Reitmire from the fairgrounds to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; 9:50
p.m, from fairgrounds Doris Hayes
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
.
.
Syracuse Unit, 9:49 p.rn., Second St.,
for Jerome Imboden to Pleasant
Valley Hospital; Tuppers Plains,
1:50 p.m., Richard Winebrenner
from his home on West Main St.,
Pomeroy, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and return to home.

'\

en tine

at

POMEROY.MIDDLEPUKi, ~OHI O , THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 1980

VOL. 31 NO. 86

~BANK ONE ..--..

. RACINE
HOME

e
.

A number of runs were made by

Two seperate notices of appeal
against the Board of Review,, Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services,
Albert Giles, administrator, Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services,
and Meigs ·Local School District
'BoardofEducation.
'
Filing the notices were Ted Hat, field, Dexter, et a!, and Lois M.
airlstian, Rt. 4, Pomerqy, and
Roger Holman, Rutland.
Mary Ann Nonnan, · Rt. 4,
Plmeroy, and John R. Norman, Rt.
t, Pomeroy, filed for dissolll.l!on of
marriage and Juanita M. Linville,
Minersville, filed for divorce against
James Franklin Linville, no address\
recorded,
.
I
The marriage of Barbara Johnson
and O,na Johnson was dissolved.

•

\

1HE '

BANK
teacine, Oh1 ..
.- ..... .,.
~

MlDDLEPO~T,

OHIO

Jimmy Carter

Water recedes,
looters problem
By JAMES HANNAH
· likely to flood the area. She said the
Associated Press Writer
depth of water in front of her house
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (AP) - Light was frightening motorists.
rains fell on this flooded city·early
"We we[e lucky to get out of there
today, but did not affect the with our cars," she said.
drainage of high w~ter which drove
William Grace, assistant director
residents from their homes earlier ·of the Ohio Disaster Services Agenin the week.
cy, said unofficial estimates show
The Guernsey County sheriff's that water has caused $23 million
department said today that water damage to 20 or 2S businesses.
dropped about 2 feet overnight from
Grace said residents predict that
the 24.5-foot depth at which it ha4 · damage to homes' in Cambridge
peaked.
alone may top $3.7S million. He also
Thunderstorms Sunday and Mon- said there is more than $2 million
day caused the flood, and residents damage to public property.
had feared Wednesday that more
Gov. James A. Rhodes said he has
rain would agitate the p~oblem.
asked the agency to do whatever
Sheriff's deputies said the light over- possible to provide relief.
night rainfall had no effect on the
waters.
Houses and businesses remained.
'
flooded, however, and families who
left their homes to escape rising
By Tbe Associated Press
water continued to staY. with friends
Thunderstorms
and high winds
on higher ground.
buffeted
northeast
Missouri,
The sheriff's department has been
directing traffic away from water southeast Iowa and weskentral
Illinois. Thunderstorms also were
covered roads.
.
.
Ohio 40 eastbound, Ohio 209 south scattered over the Great Lakes, the
and Guernsey County Road 35 are Ohio Valley and from the southern
Plateau through western Texas.
closed.
In Cambridge, Ohio, thunThe National . Weather Service
said showers arxf thunderstorms derstorms caused the worst flooding,
were expected in Ohio through in nearly half a century, officials
tonight, stemming from a warm said, and more storms were predic•
front which entered the state early ted.
Two
normally
waist-deep
creeks
today and a cold front that was to
reach the state tonight. Drier con- were swelled to more. th&amp;n 24 feet,
ditions were forecast for Friday, forcing 300 people to leave their
however, with slightly cooling tem- homes. Officials said . the flood
caused more than $2S million of
peratures, it said.
Daisy McFarland, a mother of damage.
One resident, Daisy McFarland,
two, left her home Monday night and
temporarily returned by boat Wed- left her home Monday night and
nesday to move some pictures up- returned by boat Wednesday to find
all her kitchen appliances and downstairs, away from the water.
She found that ati her kitchen ap-· stairs furniture soaked.
"The water was above my hips in
pliances and downstairs furniture
kitchen," she said. "We're exthe
were soaked.
pecting
more rain, and if it ctoes I'll
"The water was above my hips in
have lost evei'ything."
the kitchen," she said. "We're exShowers and thunderstorms also
pecting more rain, and if it does I'll
were widely ' scattered from
have lost everything."
Mrs. McFarland and her familY Wyoming and Colorado across the
left their home after police said central Plains, the eastern Gulf
water rising in a nearby road was states and Florida.

Thunderstorms
gam momentum

.

MEIGS FAIRjROYALTY- Colin Maiden, ·son of

:Mr. and Mrs. Dale Maiden, Racine, and Michelle
Frash, daoghter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Frash, Middleport, were selectod Little Miss and Mister Meigs
County in competition Wednesday. The two seven year
olds were selected from among 22 girls and 12 boys in
the contest. Dene Wagner · of WJEH and WYPC,
(fallipolis, and Janet Kom interviewed the youngsters\

NEW YORK (AP)- Ohio's Carter strategy to defeat the GOP presidendelegates helPed the president tial candidate, Ronald Reagan, in
November.
salvage some of his platfonn
Increased defense spending is a
proposals from the feisty troops of
Reagan Ca!llSen, Bdwiird M. Kennedy, Carter's I ker aromise in
palgn.
quondam rival for tlie Democratic
1
The letter also said the missile " Is
presidential nomination.
crucial to America's strategic forThe 161-member contingent;" in
ces."
which Carter has a slight delegate
Kennedy backers, and a few scatedge of 84-77, voted their respective
tered
Carter people .from other ·
allegiances late Wednesday· as the
states
who opposed the missile, ·
COI'\Vention defeated a Kennedy
argued
it would cost $60 billion
amendment opposing deployment of
which
more
wisely would be spent
the MX missile.
for
jobs
and
other domestic
State Rep. Sherrod Brown, Man~ ·
programs.
sfield, a Carter Qelegate, said the
The MX language, as adopted by
president "sent all of lis a Jetter" in·
the
convention, sets no timetable for
which he. stressed his firm opthe weapon's development, nor does
position to the Kennedy amendment .
The letter' said in part that a it mention il specific cost figure.
Ohio's delegation Wednesday morstatement of intent to !levelop and
ning had l!.een urged by Joe Smith,
~loy the weapon is vital in party

th:

r
.

CENIRAL 1RUST
COMPANY

pole beans; Mary Taylor, Pomeroy,
green pod bush beans; Melanie
Stethem, yellow pod bush beans;
Fred B. Smith, lima beans; Mary
Taylor, yellow · ooions; Mary K.
Rose, Long Bottom, hot peppers;
Melanie Stethem, sweet peppers;
Elsie Folmer, beets; Fred B. Smith,
carrots; Helman · Carson, turnips;
Linda Edwards, Long Bottom, green
cucwnbers; Mary Taylor, white
cucwnbers; Elsie Folmer, pickle
plate; Larry Cowdery, Long Bottom, field pwnpkin and pie pumpkin; Artie Houdashelt, Bidwell,
zucchini; Alice Thompson ,'
Pomeroy, swnmer squash.
Firsts in melons went to Fred B.
. Smit!J and Do~al Hill and firsts in a~
pies to Doral Hill, three, and Evelyn
HoUon, Minersville. First places in
the other fruits judging went to
Dora! pill, two; Mary Taylor and
Roy Holter and Melanie Stethem
won a first in the best-display of garden produce judging.
.
In ·awards for the 18rgest fruit or
vegetable first places went to
Rolland Will,. Pomeroy, potato;
Larry Cowdery, pumpkin; Fred B.
Snlitii, watermelon; Doral Hill, a~
pie; Mary Taylor, tomato; Patricia
WoH, ·cabbage; Dorsal IUU, beet ;
Rolland Will, cucumber; Donald W.
Manuel, Racine, longest cucumber;
Mary Taylor, onion; Herman Carson, sweet potato; Melanie Stethem,
squa~h; Fred b. Smith, cantaloupe,
and Edison Hollon, com. Melanie
Stethem received first place in the
freak vegetable category. .

'

Buckeye delegates side
.with ·c arter on MX missile

Better Banking Service. That's the Central Idea.

N~TIONAL

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as they were judged by Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt, Mrs. ·
Lavera Yeauger, and'Mrs. Agnes Roush, all of Mason, ·
W. Va. The winners received $50 gift certificates' from
the Elberfeld Department Store, and eac!t participant
was presented a blue ribbon. Members of the Middleport Business and Professional .Women's Club,.with
Mrs. Alwilda Werner as general chairman, had charge
of the contest.
\!

an Oregon delegate, to vote for the
Kennedy anti-missile language.
He was pennitted to speak in
rebuttal to Interior Secretary Cecil
Andrus, who carried to the Ohioans
at their daily caucus the same
message they later received in the
president's letter.
Top aides of Carter and Kennedy
continued negotiations tOday to
determine if they can reach accord
on other amendments Kennedy got
into the platform after his widely a~
plauded "economic justice" speech
to the convention Tuesday night.
Ohio's Kennedy delegates said
that Carter's acceptance of the Kennedy planks, especially one that
calls for a '12 billion jobs program,
probably. wpuld determine whether
they would be willing to work for
Carter'sfe-election. I '

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug.I4, 1980

Opin'i ons &amp;
Com1nents

ou~roL.~s
01110 ftVEIZ,
VA.
lotOLI\IDSVIUE,~

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Le~n Ill optaloa art welcomed'. Thty sbould be Ins U..n 301 words long 1or 1ubjec1 to redutUoa "'I Ute editor) aad masl be slpcd with the slgore'1 addre111. Names may be wt&amp;bbeld 11 n
publlcadol.. Howtnr, OD request, .1111me, will be di1cl01ed. Letten 1.bould be IJI.good taste ~ddreulac luaet, DGt ptnuoalltie•.
'
PubUJMd: daOy ncept Saturday by Tbe Ohio VaUe)' Pu.blishlog Compaay· MuldmedtM lm·
Ill Clllli1Sl, Pomeroy, 01Uot57•. Bwl~~ess Office Ph.ooe m.- %IS$. Edllorlal Pbooe992-2157:
·
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H~~~ul ~dverUJiag n;preseotadve, IADdon ,A!soclatn, 3101 Eurlld A\'t. ,&lt;liflc\.'t'lanrt , ()hio

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fair traCk 'record

"'

l l ;
II' o

WAS~It-JGTO~

11 + ,
I I ! \

10 Wl-liP
INFLATION,., A""'
DOE~~'r KtJOJJ W~AT
TO DO A~OUT TJ.IE
RECESSIOt-t..

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'r

.'I.•' '.

• WHO CARES ?f
I WANNA
KNOW WHO
SHOT J.'R.!

r :

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The AlaOdalcd Preas is exclwllvely enUtled tel the use for pubUcaHon of all Dl:'ws diSpat&lt;."ht:M
4'ed.!&amp;td Co tbt newspapec "nd also tbe I(teal news publlshed'1!ierein.
·
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Cimrl'lll Mgr. s City Editor
New• EcUtor
Adv. Miuulaer
A~
~m""
\;a;

[:)'

~..

R~

.

o rt Wm~~u
.
R1tbert H~nlt'b •
DaleRothgeb, _Jr:

-·' .

Carl Ghe"'

~L-""'T""I~c:::fl~

Election -year economics

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ByRobertW. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA)- A staple of U.S. politics is
- what might be called "election-year economics." It is
· usually considered mandatory for a president .~eeking
re-election to pursue an economic policy tbat atteml?ts
to maximize American£' personal income and mininuze
unemployment on the oft-proved theory that a
prosperous electorate is a happy electorate that will
: return the incumbent to office.
But for the last year and a half, President Carter and
his economic advisers have made much of ·pursuing an
economic policy based not on what is best for an in.· cumbent seeking re-election but on what is best for the
nation as a whole. Faced with raging inflation, the White
· House chose to trigger a deepening cecession with ac·
companying unemployment.
. Alfred Kalm, chief White House inflation fighter, is
fond of saying things like: "We are doing what is right
for the co~try_. W~ can only ho!?El that the people wi_ll
see that while It w1ll .hurt S()me m the short term, it IS
what's best for all of us over the long term. It is not good
. • politics, but it is good economics."
·
.· . But now has appeared the first indication that elec: : tion-year politics may have begun to influence Carter's
·
·
:: economic polic:y.
: The White House and the Carter-Mondale Presidential
:~ Committee had for some weeks ~n quietly telling their
:· farm-state operatives and leaders of farm organizations
;: that the president was preparing to do something major
·: for the hard-pressed farmer.
:: That something has now been announced. It is a major
boost in federal price supports for grain that will add
perhaps $1 billion next year to farm income. At the same
time, of course, higher price supports - essentially,
; higher floors on grain prices - will substantially in·
·. · crease the costs to consumers not only of grain products
;: but of products such as beef, which is grain fed.
; lnc~easing price ~uppo~ thus ap~ars clearly at od; ds With the administration's previous strategy of
. fighting inflation at all costs.
·
· . In a press conference following the price-support an. nouncement, Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland exr-· • .Plained that the , huge jump in price supports is
.;; necessary because "farmers are in a serious cost-price
(. squeeze that has depressed farm income over the last 18
: months aild this increase is designed to give fanners
needed relief."
·
f Meanwhile, administration officials are trying to play
~ down the inflationary impact of the price-supporter rise.
• While it may add $1 billiOn or .so to farm income, they
1: argue, the impact on the consumer will likely be "only
~ about $100 million in the first year."
;;
Bergland and other White House advisers insist the
~ decision was made "on the economic merits," not on
:: political ones. "We have no way of knowing what the
:: political impact will be," says Bergland.
.
•· But Carter-Mondale planners can pretty well guess
f what would have happened had the billion dollars not
:: been put .into fanners' pockets. It does not take a long
• memory to recall the "tractorcades" of irate fanners
~ circling the White House to voice . their outrage at
~ sinking farm profits.
~
While Carter did well with farm voters in 1976, his
campaign workers in farm states and Democratic
, congressmen with large farm constituencies had begun
• bombarding the White House with warnings that unless
~ the president did something major for fanners - and
did 1t quickly - the Republican could sweep the farm
vote in November.
So, how "non-political" was the increase in price SUJr
ports? Well, the decision was personally announced by
" Carter to the leaders of 16 fanner organizations who had
~ been invited to the White House for the occasion. The
~ meeting was att811ded not only by administration of: ficials but by major Carter-Mondale campaign workers
': who deal with farm states.
·
,
:
To most observers here, the decision on price supports
' seems !!!most purely political. Many believe that, it
~· · signals a return to election-year economics as the
t president starts to sink out of sight in the polls.

t

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To.d ay in history.

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Lines separating financial firms blurring
'

$1 trillion.
Savings and loan associations are
known for home mortgage loans.
·They traditionally have been
allowed to pay slightly higher in·
terest rates than commercial banks,
but have been limited in the types of
services they ~auld offer. A3 of the
end of 1979, there were 4,709 savings
and loan associations with assets of
about $579 biUion. Savings and loan
associations in New Englar.:l started
offering interest-bearing checking
accounts known as NOW accounts on
an experimental basis eight years
ago and the accounts spread to New
York and New Jersey. Next
January, all savings and loan
associatiqns - as well as commercial banks - will be able to offer
NOW accounts.
Credit unions are non-profit membership organizations. The members must have a common bond,
such as.employment. There are over
20,000 credit unions with assets of
over $00 billion. In 1974, credit
unions started offering share drafts
- also a kind of interest-bearing
checking. Legal challenges delayed
the expansjon of the share drafts,
but· the spring deregulation bill insured their continuation.
There are several fact6rs to consider when deciding where to put
your money , How much interest can
you get? How much will you be
~harged? The figures may seem
complicated, but it is often worth
while to wade through them. Here
are some of the details:

Mutual funds start
off '80s with bang ·
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Rates on time-deposits - in·
Existing NOW accounts pay 5 pereluding
the popular $10,000, sixcent interest. Regulators are still
considering what interest rate to month certificate and the 2 and a
allow on the NOW accounts that will half year certificate - are linked to
come into being in January, but it is · rates the U.S. Treasury Department
expected to be in the range of 5 per· pays on the certificates it issues.
The Depository Institutions
cent. Credit union share drafts pay
Deregulation. Committee, set up by
an interest rate of about 6 percent,
Congress to oversee the
depending on the individual
deregulation process, rules in May
organization.
that thrift associations like savings
Before you put in an interestand loans can pay the same rate as
bearing checking account, however,
the Treasury Department does for 2
check the cost. Most commercial
and
a-half year certificates, up to a
banks and some savings and loans
of 12 (&gt;ercent. Banks can
maximwn
are expected to set substantial fees
pay
on~uarter
of a percentage
for small accotints. If you do not
point
less
than
the
Treasury
rale, up
maintain a mimimwn balance of,
to
a
maximwn
of
11.75
percent.
The
say, $1,500 or more, you may be
thrifts
are
allowed
to
pay
9.5
percent
required to pay a monthly service
interest on the certificates and
charge, plus a fee for each check.
banks are allowed to pay 9.25 per·
Passbook accounts pay a
cent, even if the rates for Treasury
relatively low rate of interest, but
securities go below that level.
generally allow you to take your
Rates for six-month certificates
money out whenever you want. Time
are set just below rates on six-month
deposits pay more interest, but you
Treasury bills. Thrift institutions
must leave your money in the. accan PIIY on~uarter of a percentage
count for a fixed period.
point more than COilllljercial banks
Passbook savings accounts
as
long as the rate on six-month
currenUy earn a maximwn of 5.5
Treasury
bills is between 7.5 percent
percent in savings and loan
and
8.5
percent.
Above and below
associations and a maximum of 5.25
those
limits,
the
differential
disap·
percent in conunercial banks. Those
pears.
ceilings will be eliminated in 1986 unNo matter where you put your
der the deregulation bill. In the in·
money, you ;.vill have to pay for what
terim, the legislation encourages but does not require - a special "you get. William B. O'Connell ;.
executive vice president of the U.s: ·
board of federal regulators to in·
League of Savings AssOciations,
crease maximum interest rates on
passbook accounts by 2.25 per- · warned: •· our institutions and the.
commercial banks are very, very
rentage points. Federally chartered
cost-&lt;:onscious - much more than
credit unions pay a maximwn of 7
they've been in the past. There are
percent interest on (JIIssbook-type
fewer
financial institutions that
savings; most state-ehartered credit
provide
free services ... "
unions also are allowed to offer liP to
7 percent.

I

BY BOB HOEFUCH
El Townson, a three-year-old trotter, locally owned and locally
driven, broke the track record at the
Meigs County Fair Wednesday
evening .
Owned by Paul Sayre, Racine, and
. driven by Brooks Sayre, Syracuse,
brother of the owner and a harness
horse trainer, El To.wnson raced to
first place in both the second and
seventh races. He set a new track
record of 2:08 for the local track
breaking the 2:10 record set by
Yankee Voloin 1959.
Yankee Volo was owned and
driven by the late Sidney S(&gt;encer of
Pomeroy.
Second in both the second and
seventh races was Utile Turtle,
owned by Don and Sandy S(&gt;encer of
Vincent. He was driven by Don Spencer, who is a son of the late Sidney

SAYRE WINS - Brooks Sayre, Syracuse, is shown
driving El Townson, owned by Paul Sayre, Racine,
across the finish line in the second hea t of Meigs Coun-

ty Fair harness racing, Wednesday. El ToWnson was
the winner in both the second and seventh races,
breaking the local track time record at the fairgrounds.

Big Bend All-Stars
capture 4-0 victory

In the first division of the tw()-year
old pacers, third and eighth races,
Royal Ed, owned by William Miller
and R. A. Woolridge, Piketon, was

SOFrBALL TOURNAMENT
The Racine Youth League will
sponsor an A.S.A. sanctioned tournament for softball August 23-24. En·
try Fee is $60 plus two regulation softballs. First and second place in·
dividual awards will be given along
with team trophies to the first three
·teams. The first 10 teams will be .entered by calling 94S.2571 or 94S.2537.
also for further ihnformationcontact
the above nwnbers.

DH.
But, it'~ coming. Larry Claiborne,
the St. Louls Car:dinals general
manager who voled for it, and Bill .
Giles, the Philadelphia Phillies vice
president who abstained from
voting, !Y't.h are certain the rule will
(JIIss eventually.
"By the next year, I expect the
National League to have the DH
rule," said Claiborne, who fonnerly
worked for Boston and Oakland in
the American League and who was
responsible for placiilg the issue on
the agenda this week. "I'm going to
keep putting it on the agenda until
they pass it."

.

first in the third and second in the
eighth; Bent Fender, oWned by Ray
and Paul Newhart, Marietta, was
second in the third and first in the
eighth.
Third in the third was Naut's Bret;
owned by Daniel Walton, and third
int he eighth was Wolf Creek Andy,
owned by Richard Morgan, Waterford.
·
Friendly Mel, owned by Merrill
Elliott, Jackson, was first in both the
fourth and ninth race in the second
division of the tw()-year-old pacers.
Second in the fourth was Rustic
Rustier, owned and driven by Guy
Malone, Waterford, and third in botli
the fourth and nir)th was Rasuli;
owned by AI Jones, Springfield:
Second in the ninth was Lakewater
Jilley, owned by Mary Owen,
Marietta.
The trophy blanket, entitled the
Sid Spencer Memorial Trophy,
donated by Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Wells, went to Friendly Mel.
First in the fifth race and SCC9nd
in the tenth races for three-year old
filly trotters, was Middies Pet owned
by Wald and Edward Humphrey of
Pomeroy and driven by Ed Hum-

S(&gt;encer. Third in both races was
McPaco, owned by Billy Ratcliffe,
Frankford, Ohio. . The trophy
blankets donated by Swisher-Lohse
Pharmacy went to El Townson.
Show Byrd owned by Merrill
EUiott, Jackson, and driven by Dick
Elliott, was first in both the first and
sixth races for two year old filly
(JIIcers.
Second in both races Katrina Lea,
owned and driven by 1;. Van Rhoden,
MI. Vernon, and third in both was
Mona Carol, owned by Howard
Sayre, Syracuse and driven by
Brooks Sayre. The trophy blanket
donated by Marchi Distributors,
Falls City Beer, went to Show Byrd.

DH out in National League
DETROIT ' (AP) - Baseball
purists may recoil, but the
designated hitter rule appears certain to be adopted by the National
Lel!gue within two years.
For the time being, however, the
senior circuit will continue to Jet pitchers bat for themselves rather than
allow another player to bat for him
as the American League - and most
of the rest of organized baseball has done since 1973.
National League owners voted
down the Dl:l rule at the conclusion
of the sununer meetings Wednesday, leaving the NL and the Cen. tral Lel!gue in Japan as virtually the
only two leagues anywhere in
organized baseball to eschew the

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spokesman for the trade association.
. Mter the bull market of the 1960s
and the letdown that followed, the
fund industry fell into disfavor. The
promises of big performance that
were made or inferred during the
"g()-go" 1960s left a bitter aftertaste
when the stock market collapsed.
But now a new generation of investors
apparently has arrived on
,
the scene, attracted by such in'
nbvations as the· money funds ·and
the
fanning of fund "families" that
•
allow investors to switch their
money around among funds of
Business
mirror
varying types ani! investment ob•' Today is Thursday, Aug. 14, the
break and resumed diplomatic of performance well above the stockjectives.
:· 227th day of 1980. There are 139 days relations.
·market averages.
"A lot of people have forgotten the ·
left in tM year.
. Five years ago, the president of•
old problems, or weren't around to
At
the
same
time,
the
floodtlde
of
t; Today's highlight in history:
Bangladesh was killed in a coup that money out of the funds seems to
experience them," said A. Michael
:. • On Aug. 14, 1945, World War II en- overthrew the country's.3'f.!-year-old
Lipper, president of Lipper
have been reversed. One special
' : )led with the surrender of Japan.
goverrunent.
Analytical Distributors, a firm· that
category, money-market funds, has
:· : On this date:
Last year, hurricane-force winds been growing rapidly all along, of
tracks the industry, "Time is a great
· .: ; In 1784, tbe first Russian colony In
slashed through a fleet of more.than ·course, and today has some $80
healer of wounds."
~ Alaska was fOWJded on Kodiak
300 vessels taking part in the Fastnet billion in assets.
So is a healthy stock market. The
' · 1sland. '
race off the coast of England. · But. other types of 'funds have
rise in stock prices that pushed most
r· · In 1856, the first.American patent Eighteen were reported killed in lately begun to ' attract money as market indicators to record highs
~: ~or an accordian 'Wfs granted.
yachting's worst disaster.
this summer has provided a
well. According to the Investment
~ : In 1935, Congress passed the Social
TO(!ay 's birthdays: Circus im- Company Institute, funds other than
favorable climate for managers of
C' ~urity Act.
presario John Ringling North Is !7. the money-market variety ~ad net
stock funds.
; • In 1973, American bombing of
Jockey Robyn Smith is 36. Pitcher sales (new shares sold minus
But in many ways bond funds have
:: bunbodia came to a !Jalt, ·marking · Mark Fidrych is 26.
fared
even better in the (JIISt few
existing shares C81lhed in) of $1.75 ·
~: the official end to 12 years of U.S.
Thought for today: We don't know biUion in the first halfpl this year.
months. Funds Investing in taxable
i·. combat action in Indochina.
one-millionth of I percent about
bonds had net sales of J444 million in
"That's the largest net sales for a
Ten years ago, the Vatican and
anything. - Thomas Edison (1847- half-year (&gt;eriod in a long time, if
the first half; lax.free municipal
Yf'lgoslavia patched ;,.P a:j IS-year
1931).
IJ
\]ond funds $451 million.
·
ever," said Harry Guinivan, a

••t.

EL TOWNSEND GETS TROPHY - Brooks Sayre, Swisher-Lohse were Chuck Riffle and Ken McSyracuse, drove El Townson, owned by Paul Sayre, Cullough, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McCullough, of
' Racine, to victory and a trophy blanket, donated by Pomeroy. Sayre's El Townson bnrlle the track speed
Swisher-Lohse Phannacy, Pomeroy. Representing . record set in 1959 by Sid Spencer'• Yankee Volo.

~·.'~'.

By The Associated Press
The competition for your money is
getting fiercer.
The lines that separate of financial
institutions are blurring.
Banks , savings and loan
associations and credit unions are
offering new services to attract
billions of dollars from American
consumers.
Deregulation is coming to the
banking industry, just as it came to
the airlines. The result - just as in
.the airline business - will be
bargains for some, higher prices for
others and confusion for many.
"What the consumer has to do is
shop around," said Curt Prins, staff
director of the Conswner Affairs
Subcommittee of the House Banking
Committee.
A, deregulation bill passed by
Congress in March will spur the
spread of interest-bearing checking
accounts. It will end ceiling~ on
passbook savings accounts and will
allow savings and loan associations
to offer things like credit cards and
conswner loans.
There are three major types of
financial institutions in the battle for
your money: commercial banks,
savings and loan associatiOns and
credit unions.
Commercial banks handle financial tran&amp;actions for both businesses
and individuals. There are nearly
14,500 commercial banks, about tw()thirds of which are chartered by individual states and one-third of
which are chartered by the federal ·
govennent. They have assets of over

El Townson breaks

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~OW

!USPS 145-fMI
DE.OTEDTOTIIE

Secoadc:lasspo~~tagep.ldaiPomeroy, Ohio.

-.

·"DO~N'r lc:NOW

DIE DAILY SENTINEL

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phn!y.
Second in the fifth and first in the
tenth was Ohio Valley Hick, owned
by S. W. Howe, Marietta, and driven
by Dick Morgan. Third in bOth races
was Drema, owned by Howard
Sayre and driven again by Brooks
Sayre of Meigs County.
The trophy blanket for the best
time of the two races went to Ohio
Valley Hick.
Harness racing will be held at 4: 30
p.m. today and Friday at the county
fair.

,.

MODULAR
HOMES

· Mobile Home lrades Welcome
Show Models

Tournament entry fortn
XI GAMMA MU SOROJUTY OPEN TENNIS TOURNAMENT
SYRACUSE, OWO, AUGUST Zl-24

in the fourth g()-round adding to the
.BELPRE - The Big Bend All
winning margin.
Stars kept their championsilip hopes
Richie Clark singled twice for the
alive last evening with a thrilling 4-0
shut out victory over Marietta "B"
Big Bend squad while Scott Gheen
and Shawn Baker doubled, Donnie
team in the Bepre all star classic.
Becker, Rick Wise, Trey Cassell,
Pitching ace Rodney Long went
the distance fanning six and walking · and Rodney Long singled. Mark
Bradley suffered the loss despite
one. Coach Charles Cassell's aU
stars got to Marietta 's pitcher early fanning five and not walking a single
batter. ·..
plating three runs the fi rst inning to
Marietta's Andy Amrine led his
pave the way to victory. The locals
team with two singles while team·
later scored a single insurance run
)
mate mark Bradley singled.

· ~GSBURY

HOME SALES &amp;SERVICE -.

"For the First in Manufacuted Housing"
.
1100 E; Main
992·7034
Pomeroy, 0.

Men's and Women's Singles, Men's and Women's Doubles, Mixed and
I~year-old and Younger Bracket. Entry fee $5 singles, $10 double
team.
Name
Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - Phone No. _ _ _ _ __ _ Divison(s)
Partner's Name if Double Entry - - - - -- - - - - Deadline to register and pay entry fee, Aug. 18. Mail to Kathy Fry,

Horse judging winners ~amed L-~_ou:_t_ic_Hi_·n_s._Sy-r-ac_us_e._O_H_.4-57-79_.Call_99Z-5085
__
· _o_r_992_-M6_7-fo_rm_o_re_in_ _j
Horse confonnation ·judging was
held Wednesday at the llith annual
Meigs County Fair.
First place winners included:
Western horse, mare, three years
and under, Third Time Charn1,
owned by ·Jeannie Welsh, Mid·
dleport; Western mare, four and
older, Cozy Honeymoo, owned by
Debbie Lewis, Route I, Letart, W.
Va. ; Western gelding, any age, Top
of the hill, owned by Cole Stables,

Tup(&gt;ers Plains; Western stallion,
any age, Top Exhibit, owned by Cole
Stables ; Western yearling, Third
Time Chann, owned by Jeannie
Welsh; mares and geldings, any
age, Trible Win, owned by Cole
Stables; Appaloosa stallions, any
age; Bandit Talent, owned by Cole
Stables; pony, 48 to .56 inches, Poco
Buck, owned by Shorty Meeks,
Athens.

J

l~\J..tJI~

Health Is
Happiness

()I( '110~

)I()N'I11

Berry's World

By CHET CURRIER
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - In the 1960s
they thrived; in the 1970s they
languished. Now mutual funds are
starting off the 1980s,as though they
are headed for a new era ri
popularity among American investors.
A few years ago the industry was
regularly getting lambasted by its
critics for its poor investment
record. Now many funds can boast

YOU 'QE UNIQlJ_E
YOU l2E TODt\Y. ..

QUANTITIES

LIMITED

We Care About .·
Your Health!

now

8.88

We're the pharmacists
you can depend on in
emergencies to fill all
of your health needs.
We .also have natural
vitamins! Come in!

• ••

,...

26-IN. 8-PT. CROSS
CUT HAND SAW
Professional quality of nickel alloY steel
has 4-way taper8d grind and. is precision bevt:tl filed and set. Also features
a walnut-stained hardwood h~ndle
and a blade guord.
MM10080

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You ' re th e new
. \\omen . hrcalin g
doV\ n lrf.l diti o nal
.. doing Tuda)l

harri e r!~

wh:tt

o n L:c

might

ha v~

w;1itnl until Tomorrow .

Tnduy·., Arm y ha~ fine np·
porlunit ics fo r w otlh.' ll .
Tra i n i n ~ in lnc aningfu ll'&lt;lrcrr ~
v. ith nne nf the worli..J' s fine st
t 1rg:ti1ita ti tms .
Wc ' rt: unt Ill' \\ . hu t we an.: unique~
Ftlr in lormatiot1 ."ithout, uhliga ti&lt;• n. t"al!

@ U180 by NEA. Inc.

(blrlfl Rtfflt.·· A:.
· Ronald H•nnlnv. A. Ptt

K••n•t• Mc Cullbugft . R . Ph .

.

Mon thru Sat I : OOa .m . to9p .m.

·s und.,ylO , lOto 1'L 30.1nd Sto•p.m.

PRE '&gt;C ~IPTJONS

,,

PH . 9''2 ·2' .i S

Friendly Serv•ce ·

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY '.'
CORPORATION
_
923 s. Jrd Ave .
Middleport, 0.
992· 2709 or 992·6611
Open: 7:00 to 5: 00 Mon. thru Fri.
7: DO to 3:00 Saturday

593-3022
" We're playing 'Mount , St. Helens' ·with flour,
sugar an' salt."

.,

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�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug.I4, 1980

Opin'i ons &amp;
Com1nents

ou~roL.~s
01110 ftVEIZ,
VA.
lotOLI\IDSVIUE,~

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Le~n Ill optaloa art welcomed'. Thty sbould be Ins U..n 301 words long 1or 1ubjec1 to redutUoa "'I Ute editor) aad masl be slpcd with the slgore'1 addre111. Names may be wt&amp;bbeld 11 n
publlcadol.. Howtnr, OD request, .1111me, will be di1cl01ed. Letten 1.bould be IJI.good taste ~ddreulac luaet, DGt ptnuoalltie•.
'
PubUJMd: daOy ncept Saturday by Tbe Ohio VaUe)' Pu.blishlog Compaay· MuldmedtM lm·
Ill Clllli1Sl, Pomeroy, 01Uot57•. Bwl~~ess Office Ph.ooe m.- %IS$. Edllorlal Pbooe992-2157:
·
.

H~~~ul ~dverUJiag n;preseotadve, IADdon ,A!soclatn, 3101 Eurlld A\'t. ,&lt;liflc\.'t'lanrt , ()hio

..

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,

fair traCk 'record

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II' o

WAS~It-JGTO~

11 + ,
I I ! \

10 Wl-liP
INFLATION,., A""'
DOE~~'r KtJOJJ W~AT
TO DO A~OUT TJ.IE
RECESSIOt-t..

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• WHO CARES ?f
I WANNA
KNOW WHO
SHOT J.'R.!

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'

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The AlaOdalcd Preas is exclwllvely enUtled tel the use for pubUcaHon of all Dl:'ws diSpat&lt;."ht:M
4'ed.!&amp;td Co tbt newspapec "nd also tbe I(teal news publlshed'1!ierein.
·
~~

Cimrl'lll Mgr. s City Editor
New• EcUtor
Adv. Miuulaer
A~
~m""
\;a;

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.
R1tbert H~nlt'b •
DaleRothgeb, _Jr:

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Carl Ghe"'

~L-""'T""I~c:::fl~

Election -year economics

.

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ByRobertW. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA)- A staple of U.S. politics is
- what might be called "election-year economics." It is
· usually considered mandatory for a president .~eeking
re-election to pursue an economic policy tbat atteml?ts
to maximize American£' personal income and mininuze
unemployment on the oft-proved theory that a
prosperous electorate is a happy electorate that will
: return the incumbent to office.
But for the last year and a half, President Carter and
his economic advisers have made much of ·pursuing an
economic policy based not on what is best for an in.· cumbent seeking re-election but on what is best for the
nation as a whole. Faced with raging inflation, the White
· House chose to trigger a deepening cecession with ac·
companying unemployment.
. Alfred Kalm, chief White House inflation fighter, is
fond of saying things like: "We are doing what is right
for the co~try_. W~ can only ho!?El that the people wi_ll
see that while It w1ll .hurt S()me m the short term, it IS
what's best for all of us over the long term. It is not good
. • politics, but it is good economics."
·
.· . But now has appeared the first indication that elec: : tion-year politics may have begun to influence Carter's
·
·
:: economic polic:y.
: The White House and the Carter-Mondale Presidential
:~ Committee had for some weeks ~n quietly telling their
:· farm-state operatives and leaders of farm organizations
;: that the president was preparing to do something major
·: for the hard-pressed farmer.
:: That something has now been announced. It is a major
boost in federal price supports for grain that will add
perhaps $1 billion next year to farm income. At the same
time, of course, higher price supports - essentially,
; higher floors on grain prices - will substantially in·
·. · crease the costs to consumers not only of grain products
;: but of products such as beef, which is grain fed.
; lnc~easing price ~uppo~ thus ap~ars clearly at od; ds With the administration's previous strategy of
. fighting inflation at all costs.
·
· . In a press conference following the price-support an. nouncement, Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland exr-· • .Plained that the , huge jump in price supports is
.;; necessary because "farmers are in a serious cost-price
(. squeeze that has depressed farm income over the last 18
: months aild this increase is designed to give fanners
needed relief."
·
f Meanwhile, administration officials are trying to play
~ down the inflationary impact of the price-supporter rise.
• While it may add $1 billiOn or .so to farm income, they
1: argue, the impact on the consumer will likely be "only
~ about $100 million in the first year."
;;
Bergland and other White House advisers insist the
~ decision was made "on the economic merits," not on
:: political ones. "We have no way of knowing what the
:: political impact will be," says Bergland.
.
•· But Carter-Mondale planners can pretty well guess
f what would have happened had the billion dollars not
:: been put .into fanners' pockets. It does not take a long
• memory to recall the "tractorcades" of irate fanners
~ circling the White House to voice . their outrage at
~ sinking farm profits.
~
While Carter did well with farm voters in 1976, his
campaign workers in farm states and Democratic
, congressmen with large farm constituencies had begun
• bombarding the White House with warnings that unless
~ the president did something major for fanners - and
did 1t quickly - the Republican could sweep the farm
vote in November.
So, how "non-political" was the increase in price SUJr
ports? Well, the decision was personally announced by
" Carter to the leaders of 16 fanner organizations who had
~ been invited to the White House for the occasion. The
~ meeting was att811ded not only by administration of: ficials but by major Carter-Mondale campaign workers
': who deal with farm states.
·
,
:
To most observers here, the decision on price supports
' seems !!!most purely political. Many believe that, it
~· · signals a return to election-year economics as the
t president starts to sink out of sight in the polls.

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To.d ay in history.

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Lines separating financial firms blurring
'

$1 trillion.
Savings and loan associations are
known for home mortgage loans.
·They traditionally have been
allowed to pay slightly higher in·
terest rates than commercial banks,
but have been limited in the types of
services they ~auld offer. A3 of the
end of 1979, there were 4,709 savings
and loan associations with assets of
about $579 biUion. Savings and loan
associations in New Englar.:l started
offering interest-bearing checking
accounts known as NOW accounts on
an experimental basis eight years
ago and the accounts spread to New
York and New Jersey. Next
January, all savings and loan
associatiqns - as well as commercial banks - will be able to offer
NOW accounts.
Credit unions are non-profit membership organizations. The members must have a common bond,
such as.employment. There are over
20,000 credit unions with assets of
over $00 billion. In 1974, credit
unions started offering share drafts
- also a kind of interest-bearing
checking. Legal challenges delayed
the expansjon of the share drafts,
but· the spring deregulation bill insured their continuation.
There are several fact6rs to consider when deciding where to put
your money , How much interest can
you get? How much will you be
~harged? The figures may seem
complicated, but it is often worth
while to wade through them. Here
are some of the details:

Mutual funds start
off '80s with bang ·
.

I

.

Rates on time-deposits - in·
Existing NOW accounts pay 5 pereluding
the popular $10,000, sixcent interest. Regulators are still
considering what interest rate to month certificate and the 2 and a
allow on the NOW accounts that will half year certificate - are linked to
come into being in January, but it is · rates the U.S. Treasury Department
expected to be in the range of 5 per· pays on the certificates it issues.
The Depository Institutions
cent. Credit union share drafts pay
Deregulation. Committee, set up by
an interest rate of about 6 percent,
Congress to oversee the
depending on the individual
deregulation process, rules in May
organization.
that thrift associations like savings
Before you put in an interestand loans can pay the same rate as
bearing checking account, however,
the Treasury Department does for 2
check the cost. Most commercial
and
a-half year certificates, up to a
banks and some savings and loans
of 12 (&gt;ercent. Banks can
maximwn
are expected to set substantial fees
pay
on~uarter
of a percentage
for small accotints. If you do not
point
less
than
the
Treasury
rale, up
maintain a mimimwn balance of,
to
a
maximwn
of
11.75
percent.
The
say, $1,500 or more, you may be
thrifts
are
allowed
to
pay
9.5
percent
required to pay a monthly service
interest on the certificates and
charge, plus a fee for each check.
banks are allowed to pay 9.25 per·
Passbook accounts pay a
cent, even if the rates for Treasury
relatively low rate of interest, but
securities go below that level.
generally allow you to take your
Rates for six-month certificates
money out whenever you want. Time
are set just below rates on six-month
deposits pay more interest, but you
Treasury bills. Thrift institutions
must leave your money in the. accan PIIY on~uarter of a percentage
count for a fixed period.
point more than COilllljercial banks
Passbook savings accounts
as
long as the rate on six-month
currenUy earn a maximwn of 5.5
Treasury
bills is between 7.5 percent
percent in savings and loan
and
8.5
percent.
Above and below
associations and a maximum of 5.25
those
limits,
the
differential
disap·
percent in conunercial banks. Those
pears.
ceilings will be eliminated in 1986 unNo matter where you put your
der the deregulation bill. In the in·
money, you ;.vill have to pay for what
terim, the legislation encourages but does not require - a special "you get. William B. O'Connell ;.
executive vice president of the U.s: ·
board of federal regulators to in·
League of Savings AssOciations,
crease maximum interest rates on
passbook accounts by 2.25 per- · warned: •· our institutions and the.
commercial banks are very, very
rentage points. Federally chartered
cost-&lt;:onscious - much more than
credit unions pay a maximwn of 7
they've been in the past. There are
percent interest on (JIIssbook-type
fewer
financial institutions that
savings; most state-ehartered credit
provide
free services ... "
unions also are allowed to offer liP to
7 percent.

I

BY BOB HOEFUCH
El Townson, a three-year-old trotter, locally owned and locally
driven, broke the track record at the
Meigs County Fair Wednesday
evening .
Owned by Paul Sayre, Racine, and
. driven by Brooks Sayre, Syracuse,
brother of the owner and a harness
horse trainer, El To.wnson raced to
first place in both the second and
seventh races. He set a new track
record of 2:08 for the local track
breaking the 2:10 record set by
Yankee Voloin 1959.
Yankee Volo was owned and
driven by the late Sidney S(&gt;encer of
Pomeroy.
Second in both the second and
seventh races was Utile Turtle,
owned by Don and Sandy S(&gt;encer of
Vincent. He was driven by Don Spencer, who is a son of the late Sidney

SAYRE WINS - Brooks Sayre, Syracuse, is shown
driving El Townson, owned by Paul Sayre, Racine,
across the finish line in the second hea t of Meigs Coun-

ty Fair harness racing, Wednesday. El ToWnson was
the winner in both the second and seventh races,
breaking the local track time record at the fairgrounds.

Big Bend All-Stars
capture 4-0 victory

In the first division of the tw()-year
old pacers, third and eighth races,
Royal Ed, owned by William Miller
and R. A. Woolridge, Piketon, was

SOFrBALL TOURNAMENT
The Racine Youth League will
sponsor an A.S.A. sanctioned tournament for softball August 23-24. En·
try Fee is $60 plus two regulation softballs. First and second place in·
dividual awards will be given along
with team trophies to the first three
·teams. The first 10 teams will be .entered by calling 94S.2571 or 94S.2537.
also for further ihnformationcontact
the above nwnbers.

DH.
But, it'~ coming. Larry Claiborne,
the St. Louls Car:dinals general
manager who voled for it, and Bill .
Giles, the Philadelphia Phillies vice
president who abstained from
voting, !Y't.h are certain the rule will
(JIIss eventually.
"By the next year, I expect the
National League to have the DH
rule," said Claiborne, who fonnerly
worked for Boston and Oakland in
the American League and who was
responsible for placiilg the issue on
the agenda this week. "I'm going to
keep putting it on the agenda until
they pass it."

.

first in the third and second in the
eighth; Bent Fender, oWned by Ray
and Paul Newhart, Marietta, was
second in the third and first in the
eighth.
Third in the third was Naut's Bret;
owned by Daniel Walton, and third
int he eighth was Wolf Creek Andy,
owned by Richard Morgan, Waterford.
·
Friendly Mel, owned by Merrill
Elliott, Jackson, was first in both the
fourth and ninth race in the second
division of the tw()-year-old pacers.
Second in the fourth was Rustic
Rustier, owned and driven by Guy
Malone, Waterford, and third in botli
the fourth and nir)th was Rasuli;
owned by AI Jones, Springfield:
Second in the ninth was Lakewater
Jilley, owned by Mary Owen,
Marietta.
The trophy blanket, entitled the
Sid Spencer Memorial Trophy,
donated by Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Wells, went to Friendly Mel.
First in the fifth race and SCC9nd
in the tenth races for three-year old
filly trotters, was Middies Pet owned
by Wald and Edward Humphrey of
Pomeroy and driven by Ed Hum-

S(&gt;encer. Third in both races was
McPaco, owned by Billy Ratcliffe,
Frankford, Ohio. . The trophy
blankets donated by Swisher-Lohse
Pharmacy went to El Townson.
Show Byrd owned by Merrill
EUiott, Jackson, and driven by Dick
Elliott, was first in both the first and
sixth races for two year old filly
(JIIcers.
Second in both races Katrina Lea,
owned and driven by 1;. Van Rhoden,
MI. Vernon, and third in both was
Mona Carol, owned by Howard
Sayre, Syracuse and driven by
Brooks Sayre. The trophy blanket
donated by Marchi Distributors,
Falls City Beer, went to Show Byrd.

DH out in National League
DETROIT ' (AP) - Baseball
purists may recoil, but the
designated hitter rule appears certain to be adopted by the National
Lel!gue within two years.
For the time being, however, the
senior circuit will continue to Jet pitchers bat for themselves rather than
allow another player to bat for him
as the American League - and most
of the rest of organized baseball has done since 1973.
National League owners voted
down the Dl:l rule at the conclusion
of the sununer meetings Wednesday, leaving the NL and the Cen. tral Lel!gue in Japan as virtually the
only two leagues anywhere in
organized baseball to eschew the

.......

spokesman for the trade association.
. Mter the bull market of the 1960s
and the letdown that followed, the
fund industry fell into disfavor. The
promises of big performance that
were made or inferred during the
"g()-go" 1960s left a bitter aftertaste
when the stock market collapsed.
But now a new generation of investors
apparently has arrived on
,
the scene, attracted by such in'
nbvations as the· money funds ·and
the
fanning of fund "families" that
•
allow investors to switch their
money around among funds of
Business
mirror
varying types ani! investment ob•' Today is Thursday, Aug. 14, the
break and resumed diplomatic of performance well above the stockjectives.
:· 227th day of 1980. There are 139 days relations.
·market averages.
"A lot of people have forgotten the ·
left in tM year.
. Five years ago, the president of•
old problems, or weren't around to
At
the
same
time,
the
floodtlde
of
t; Today's highlight in history:
Bangladesh was killed in a coup that money out of the funds seems to
experience them," said A. Michael
:. • On Aug. 14, 1945, World War II en- overthrew the country's.3'f.!-year-old
Lipper, president of Lipper
have been reversed. One special
' : )led with the surrender of Japan.
goverrunent.
Analytical Distributors, a firm· that
category, money-market funds, has
:· : On this date:
Last year, hurricane-force winds been growing rapidly all along, of
tracks the industry, "Time is a great
· .: ; In 1784, tbe first Russian colony In
slashed through a fleet of more.than ·course, and today has some $80
healer of wounds."
~ Alaska was fOWJded on Kodiak
300 vessels taking part in the Fastnet billion in assets.
So is a healthy stock market. The
' · 1sland. '
race off the coast of England. · But. other types of 'funds have
rise in stock prices that pushed most
r· · In 1856, the first.American patent Eighteen were reported killed in lately begun to ' attract money as market indicators to record highs
~: ~or an accordian 'Wfs granted.
yachting's worst disaster.
this summer has provided a
well. According to the Investment
~ : In 1935, Congress passed the Social
TO(!ay 's birthdays: Circus im- Company Institute, funds other than
favorable climate for managers of
C' ~urity Act.
presario John Ringling North Is !7. the money-market variety ~ad net
stock funds.
; • In 1973, American bombing of
Jockey Robyn Smith is 36. Pitcher sales (new shares sold minus
But in many ways bond funds have
:: bunbodia came to a !Jalt, ·marking · Mark Fidrych is 26.
fared
even better in the (JIISt few
existing shares C81lhed in) of $1.75 ·
~: the official end to 12 years of U.S.
Thought for today: We don't know biUion in the first halfpl this year.
months. Funds Investing in taxable
i·. combat action in Indochina.
one-millionth of I percent about
bonds had net sales of J444 million in
"That's the largest net sales for a
Ten years ago, the Vatican and
anything. - Thomas Edison (1847- half-year (&gt;eriod in a long time, if
the first half; lax.free municipal
Yf'lgoslavia patched ;,.P a:j IS-year
1931).
IJ
\]ond funds $451 million.
·
ever," said Harry Guinivan, a

••t.

EL TOWNSEND GETS TROPHY - Brooks Sayre, Swisher-Lohse were Chuck Riffle and Ken McSyracuse, drove El Townson, owned by Paul Sayre, Cullough, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McCullough, of
' Racine, to victory and a trophy blanket, donated by Pomeroy. Sayre's El Townson bnrlle the track speed
Swisher-Lohse Phannacy, Pomeroy. Representing . record set in 1959 by Sid Spencer'• Yankee Volo.

~·.'~'.

By The Associated Press
The competition for your money is
getting fiercer.
The lines that separate of financial
institutions are blurring.
Banks , savings and loan
associations and credit unions are
offering new services to attract
billions of dollars from American
consumers.
Deregulation is coming to the
banking industry, just as it came to
the airlines. The result - just as in
.the airline business - will be
bargains for some, higher prices for
others and confusion for many.
"What the consumer has to do is
shop around," said Curt Prins, staff
director of the Conswner Affairs
Subcommittee of the House Banking
Committee.
A, deregulation bill passed by
Congress in March will spur the
spread of interest-bearing checking
accounts. It will end ceiling~ on
passbook savings accounts and will
allow savings and loan associations
to offer things like credit cards and
conswner loans.
There are three major types of
financial institutions in the battle for
your money: commercial banks,
savings and loan associatiOns and
credit unions.
Commercial banks handle financial tran&amp;actions for both businesses
and individuals. There are nearly
14,500 commercial banks, about tw()thirds of which are chartered by individual states and one-third of
which are chartered by the federal ·
govennent. They have assets of over

El Townson breaks

·- '.;

. I 1 '\

~OW

!USPS 145-fMI
DE.OTEDTOTIIE

Secoadc:lasspo~~tagep.ldaiPomeroy, Ohio.

-.

·"DO~N'r lc:NOW

DIE DAILY SENTINEL

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5

..

phn!y.
Second in the fifth and first in the
tenth was Ohio Valley Hick, owned
by S. W. Howe, Marietta, and driven
by Dick Morgan. Third in bOth races
was Drema, owned by Howard
Sayre and driven again by Brooks
Sayre of Meigs County.
The trophy blanket for the best
time of the two races went to Ohio
Valley Hick.
Harness racing will be held at 4: 30
p.m. today and Friday at the county
fair.

,.

MODULAR
HOMES

· Mobile Home lrades Welcome
Show Models

Tournament entry fortn
XI GAMMA MU SOROJUTY OPEN TENNIS TOURNAMENT
SYRACUSE, OWO, AUGUST Zl-24

in the fourth g()-round adding to the
.BELPRE - The Big Bend All
winning margin.
Stars kept their championsilip hopes
Richie Clark singled twice for the
alive last evening with a thrilling 4-0
shut out victory over Marietta "B"
Big Bend squad while Scott Gheen
and Shawn Baker doubled, Donnie
team in the Bepre all star classic.
Becker, Rick Wise, Trey Cassell,
Pitching ace Rodney Long went
the distance fanning six and walking · and Rodney Long singled. Mark
Bradley suffered the loss despite
one. Coach Charles Cassell's aU
stars got to Marietta 's pitcher early fanning five and not walking a single
batter. ·..
plating three runs the fi rst inning to
Marietta's Andy Amrine led his
pave the way to victory. The locals
team with two singles while team·
later scored a single insurance run
)
mate mark Bradley singled.

· ~GSBURY

HOME SALES &amp;SERVICE -.

"For the First in Manufacuted Housing"
.
1100 E; Main
992·7034
Pomeroy, 0.

Men's and Women's Singles, Men's and Women's Doubles, Mixed and
I~year-old and Younger Bracket. Entry fee $5 singles, $10 double
team.
Name
Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - Phone No. _ _ _ _ __ _ Divison(s)
Partner's Name if Double Entry - - - - -- - - - - Deadline to register and pay entry fee, Aug. 18. Mail to Kathy Fry,

Horse judging winners ~amed L-~_ou:_t_ic_Hi_·n_s._Sy-r-ac_us_e._O_H_.4-57-79_.Call_99Z-5085
__
· _o_r_992_-M6_7-fo_rm_o_re_in_ _j
Horse confonnation ·judging was
held Wednesday at the llith annual
Meigs County Fair.
First place winners included:
Western horse, mare, three years
and under, Third Time Charn1,
owned by ·Jeannie Welsh, Mid·
dleport; Western mare, four and
older, Cozy Honeymoo, owned by
Debbie Lewis, Route I, Letart, W.
Va. ; Western gelding, any age, Top
of the hill, owned by Cole Stables,

Tup(&gt;ers Plains; Western stallion,
any age, Top Exhibit, owned by Cole
Stables ; Western yearling, Third
Time Chann, owned by Jeannie
Welsh; mares and geldings, any
age, Trible Win, owned by Cole
Stables; Appaloosa stallions, any
age; Bandit Talent, owned by Cole
Stables; pony, 48 to .56 inches, Poco
Buck, owned by Shorty Meeks,
Athens.

J

l~\J..tJI~

Health Is
Happiness

()I( '110~

)I()N'I11

Berry's World

By CHET CURRIER
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - In the 1960s
they thrived; in the 1970s they
languished. Now mutual funds are
starting off the 1980s,as though they
are headed for a new era ri
popularity among American investors.
A few years ago the industry was
regularly getting lambasted by its
critics for its poor investment
record. Now many funds can boast

YOU 'QE UNIQlJ_E
YOU l2E TODt\Y. ..

QUANTITIES

LIMITED

We Care About .·
Your Health!

now

8.88

We're the pharmacists
you can depend on in
emergencies to fill all
of your health needs.
We .also have natural
vitamins! Come in!

• ••

,...

26-IN. 8-PT. CROSS
CUT HAND SAW
Professional quality of nickel alloY steel
has 4-way taper8d grind and. is precision bevt:tl filed and set. Also features
a walnut-stained hardwood h~ndle
and a blade guord.
MM10080

1..

.

~~--· t~!~... .-:.. ::-.. .
You ' re th e new
. \\omen . hrcalin g
doV\ n lrf.l diti o nal
.. doing Tuda)l

harri e r!~

wh:tt

o n L:c

might

ha v~

w;1itnl until Tomorrow .

Tnduy·., Arm y ha~ fine np·
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Ftlr in lormatiot1 ."ithout, uhliga ti&lt;• n. t"al!

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PRE '&gt;C ~IPTJONS

,,

PH . 9''2 ·2' .i S

Friendly Serv•ce ·

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY '.'
CORPORATION
_
923 s. Jrd Ave .
Middleport, 0.
992· 2709 or 992·6611
Open: 7:00 to 5: 00 Mon. thru Fri.
7: DO to 3:00 Saturday

593-3022
" We're playing 'Mount , St. Helens' ·with flour,
sugar an' salt."

.,

jjjjj;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-

:

l

&gt;)

..

•

�-

.

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 14, 1980

Young arms help Red1
regain NL west lead

r

SANiiiEGO (AP)- Thanks to the
young anns of Cincinnati pitchers
such as Mario Soto and Mike
LaCoss, the ·Big Red Machine has
geared up and swept into first place
in the National League West.
Solo hurled three nl&gt;'hit innings as
the Reds came from behind on a two- ··
run homer by Ray Knight in the
eighth to defeat the San Diego
Padres 4-3 Wednesday night and
sweep the three-game series.
"The way this cl11b hits, if you
come in one or two runs behind you
have a good chance to win," said
Solo, 6-li, who entered the game in
the seventh inning trailing 3-2.
With two outs in the sixth, Jerry
Mumphrey blasted a . three-run
homer off starter LaCoss. It .was
only the third.hit of the game for the
Padres, who also managed just
three hits the previous night.
"In my last five or six starts, I've
thrown well and only won once,"
said the 24-year-old LaCoss. "The
important thing is to keep the club
close. We score a lot of runs in the ·
seventh, eighth and ninth.''
The Reds' staff has been plagued
with injuries. Frank Pastore and
Bill Bonham are currently on the
disabled list, and Tom Seaver returned to the rotation last week after
missing more than four weeks with
tendonitis.
"Going into the year, we IQought
the pitching was outstanding. Now
we are getting pitching from guys
you never heard of," said veteran .
catcher Johnny Bench.
A sore neck forced Bench to miss
the series finale, but free-agent
acquisition Joe Nolan came through
once again for the Reds with a tworun single in the fourth olrloser Bob
Shirley,N.
"I didn't think I would be playing
as much as I have," said the 29-yearold Nolan, who has hit .341 for the
Reds since joining the team June 14
after gaining free-agent status from
the Atlanta Braves.
The victory was the 12th in 14
games for the Reds over the Padres
this season. San Diego manager
Jerry Coleman had no explanation
for the Reds' dominance .

"It's a mystery to me," said
Coleman, after the third straight
one-run defeat at the hands of the

~ 5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 14, 1980

~]

Pat Holter top win·ner at flower fare
nials: Mrs. Buny Kuhl, first, second
Addalou Lewis, second and third.
Dahlia, pompon: Addalou Lewis, and third.
Period Type arrangemf''lt: MrS.
Alice K. Thompson, and Addalou
Suzy Carpenter, first and second,
Lewis.
Marigold: Elsie Folmer, first and and Janet Bolin, third.
second, Bunny Kuhl, Pomeroy, , - - third. PO'ITED PLANTS
Cacti and/or succulents : Alice
Thompsona and Joyce Manuel, firsts, Bunny Kuhl, second, and Joyce
Manuel, third.
Ferns: Joyce Manuel, first, Ruth
Sellers, Portland, second, no third.
Any other foliage plant: Bunny
Kuhl, Joyce Manuel, and Alice
Thompson, in one variety per pot;
and Lois Allen, Racine, first, and
Joyce Manuel, second, in more than
one variety per pot.
Any hanging potted foliage plant:
Joyce Manuel, first.
African violet: Allee Thompson,
Bunny Kuhl, second and third.
Begonias : Joyhce Manuel, first,
second and third.
Any other potted flowering pot;
Joyce Manuel, first and third, and
Ada Holter, second.
Any hanging potted flowering
plant: Joyce Manuel, first. , .
Collection of six or mote peren-

Your " Extra Touch"
Florist Since 1957

Reds.

Cincinnati moved past the Los
Angeles Dodgers to · take sole
pPSSession of first place for the first
tiihe since May 16. The Dodgers host
the Reds in a three-game series
opening Friday night with Seaver, 46, facing Jerry Reuss, 13-1.

FLORIST

PH. 992-2644
352 E . Main, Pomeroy
v ·o ur FTD Florist·

,_1-....,......,..-------.......l'-----------

liARNESS RACING - The Meigs County Fair offers an exciting program of harness racing, which will

..

,

'· '

,._,,...

· ~ +: ,.

~-

. •• ..

be taking place again this afternoon and Friday, begin·
ning at 4:30p.m. Above is a scene from one of the ten
races which took place Wednesday afternoon.

,-_ .•

' ·•

'

•

••
~:

COMES IN FIRST - Ed Humphrey, Pomeroy,
was victorious in the fifth race in the Meigs County

~

"

'•'."'

BASEBALL

I

.:- -SCOREBOARD
.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
Won
69
66
i9

NewYort .

Ba,ltimore
Detroit
Milwaukee
Cleveland

-

43
tl
Sl

60
57

!W

..

5I
64

sa

Torooto

Lost Pet. GB

.616
.5116
.Ml
.526
.523
.511
.429

[&gt;2

WEST
72 42

Kansu Cltt

Oaklind
ChiCIIj!O

i9
S3
49
t&amp;

C&amp;lllomia

..

u;

SeaiUe

41

72

Teua

MinnoJOia

31&gt;
8'k

w

10 1&gt;

II
21

.632

$
!'ll

64
64 .

.513
.477
.434
.429
.414
.3113

131&gt;
17~
?.!\;
Zl
241;

:Ill;

Wedueaday's G•me•

Cleveland It, Teus3

Detroit 2, Boston 1
0Ucago4, New York 1

Fair harness racing program Wednesay, driving Middies Pet, a 3-year-old filly owned by Ed and his brother
Waid Humphrey, also of Pomeroy.

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNlTURE
. Mon., Tues., Wed., Frida·y &amp; Sat.
· 8:3Q to'5:00 Thursday till 12 Noon
'

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
· Herman Grate
773·5592

Mason, W.Va.

\
SHARE

Mrs. Pat Holter received the "best
of show" and Mrs. Alice Thompson,
the "reserve best of show" in ar..
listie arrangements displayed in the
first flower show at the Meigs Collllty Fair Wednesday.
"The Fair" was the theme of the
show judged by Mrs. Dorothy Bates
of Reynoldsburg, an Ohio Associaton
o' Garden Clubs accredited judge.
The other two awards of the show
went to Joyce Manuel of near
Racine , the horticulture sweepstakes awards, and her daughter,
Donita Manuel, the junior gardener
award.
Ribbons and · premiums were
awarded in three places. A second
flower show will be held Friday with
exhibitors to have their entries iii
place by I p.m.
In the various classes of the show
the winners, listed first, second and
third respectively, were as follows.

YIIJR

------------,
Extra Set ol Prints

I
I
I

E•lra prrns must be oraere&lt;l when
t.lm 11 d&amp;v&amp;lopea 1 10 . 1~6 . 1J5
lfll tc.odllk 01' c:ompahble t6iol' pont
him Oflly E•cludmg POill olo JS

FREE

COUPON MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER.

L- -V~I~U!.!.!. !!!R~A!!._O·..!!·..!.~-...!

VILLAGE PHARMACY

Racing results

SCIOTO DOWNS
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP )
Preferred Bid posted a length vic·
tory in Wednesday night's feature
pace ~I Scioto Downs.
The winning horse, driven by Jay
Picciano, paced the mile in 2:03 and
returned $18.80, $5.80 and $2.20.
Second-place Tillie Brewster paid
$4 and $2.20. Noon Fiddler finished
third and returned $2.20.
The niflth race trifecta of 2-7-5 paid
$1,690.50.
The crowd of 4,111 wagered
$306,248.

PARTS

RIVERDOWNS
CINCINNATI (AP ) - Mister
Truxton beat Gusting Wind by a nose
to win the featured race Wednesday
at River Downs.
Ridden by Eugene Sipus, the horse
covered 5t furlongs in 1:06 2-6 to pay
$8.80, $4.20 and $3. Gusting Wind
paid $5.40 and $4 to place and
Domilee came in at $2.60 to show.
Gallant Lt. and CasUe Doll combined for a 7-I daily double worth

..

PEOPLE

THURSDAY
:
AUGUST meeting of Past Officers
" Club of Racine Chapter 134 Thur• sday 6 p.m. at Racine Shrine Park.
'
FRIDAY
'
ANY MEIGS IDGH School student
' who is interested in trying out for the
J91J0.31 golf team is asked to meet
': with Coach Oliver Fiiday at River·; side Golf Course in Mason at II a.m.
• to begin practice.
•
~
PAST MATRONS, Evangeline
,. Chapter OES, 7:30 Friday at the
• home of Mrs. Roma Hawkins.
·•
SUNDAY
,
PROFESSOR Donald Nash will be ·
at Hemlock Grove Christian Church
•••· Sunday.
'•
Morning worship at 9;30
~
a.m. and evening services at 7:30

$34.40.

Acrowd of 4,974 bel $615,975.

Toronto 4
Kansas City 6, Baltimore 1
Oakland6, Minnesota 2
CalJtomla 10, Seattle4, 10 lnnings
Tbursday'a Games
Oakland (Norris 15-7) at Minnesota (Jackson

.

Toronto (Stieb 10-8) at Milwaukee (Haas13-9)
New York (Underwood 9-a) at Baltimore
(Sione1H), In)
Texas (Figueroa 3.5) at aeveland (Barker 12--

1), (n)

Botton I Renl&lt;o~Jat Detroit (&amp;hatzeder!HI ),

In)

C.Ufomia (Martinez 2-4) al Seattle (Honeycutt
&amp;-12), In )
Only games scheduled
NATIONAL LEAGUE

EAST

Won lAst Pet. GB

-ttul

64
114
57
:;s
50

Plttabur&amp;h

Philadelphia
New Yocl:
St. LouU
Chicaao

t&amp;

WEST

Clndnnati

50
Sl
53

.$1
.561
.518

61

u;

.450

.411

11

62 53
.539
61 53
.$35
60 53
. ~l
56 S8
.491
Atlanta
53 00
.t&amp;9
San Diego
SO 65 · .435
WetlaJeaclily'• Gamel
Cticago2, Philadelphia 1
San Francl!co 6, Houston 5, 12 innings

los Angeles
How:tm
San Francisco

THIS WEEKEND
AT THE
.INN PLACE

:1

GABRIEL . QUARTET from
.. Cheshire at Mt. Herman U.B. Chur·
chSundayat7 :30p.m.

Reg. S19.95 Mfgr's. Suggested List. ···

'k
1
S'f.r:

8
t2

I

lOW

St.Louls7 Monlreal$

Cin&lt;lnniUI, San Dleao 3
Allanta 2, Los Angele. 0

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHT

Only g~Unes ~e heduled

••

WedMid.ly '1 Spor11!1 Traosactiona
BASEBALL

~)

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

Syracuaeofthe lntemallonal League.

Natloitai League
NEW YORK METS: Wajved Jose Gardena!,
.. _.ooUiekter, for lhe purpose Of giving him his Wl-

THE

.. .conditional releiise.

;·
f'Otmi..\LL

.· .

PHILAOELPHfA

EAGLES :

Released

Cleveland Jackson, tight end, for tailing to p.ass a
Dhnical examination.·Announced that Oudlous
Lee, middle guard, left camp. ·
ST. LOlliS CAROJ NALS1 Released Keith
• .SimOOJ, tackJe.
WASHIN.G'f.ON RE DS KI NS : Cut. Sam

MEIGS INN
PH. 992-3629
POMEROY, OHIO

.~

lbomas, rullning ba ck; Mark F'ret! rnan, s~ fety;

:. and Allen White, plllll.t!i'.

,.

-

-

Pomeroy Motor Company
308 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
Smith Nelson Motors
Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

soo E.

•

::

·:
.;

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

~~

Rt. 33, Mason, W.Va.
2nd St•, Pomeroy, Oh.
._..,~ AVAILABLE AT TH~SE NEIGHBORHOOD SERVICE CENTERS .
!:/
lnsts/latlon A vsllsble

NaUonal FootbaU League

DETROJT UON.S: Signed Tom Turnure, cen·
ler.
· .;.
r ~ ANGELES RAMS: Released Sid Justin,
·&lt; • ...wnerbac:k; Don Hubbard, deferudve tackle ·
,~.~ • Marvin Smith, llneback.er; and Durwn Tucker'
saf~y. Placed Kirk Collins, cornerback, on thf
injured reerve Jist.
NEW YORK JETS: Placed Barrett Paige, runnin(l back, on the Injured reserve Jist.

•

AVAILABLE AT THESE AUTO PARTS STORES

American League

TEXAS RANGERS: Traded Gaylord Perry,
pitcher, tel the New York Yank~ for Ken Clay,
pitcher, and a player to be named later.
tORONTO BLUE JAYS ' Placed Bart'y 1Jon.
· neU, outfielder, on the 15-day disabled list.
Recalled Danny Alnge, outfielder, rrom

.:..._;7:

"Before Making the Rounds", a
stamobile : Bernice Carpenter,
Melanie Stethem, Shade Valley and
Pat Holter.
"A. Picnic is In Order", using a
basket: Betty Dean, Chester and
Shade Valley, Pat Holter, Bernice
Carpenter.
"Feels Good to Relax Under the
Trees", including wood: Alice K.
Thompson, Winding Trail and Shade
Valley, Bernice Carpenter, and
Evelyn Hollon, Wildwood Garden
Club.
JUNIOR DIVISION
"On to the Riders", a favorite
design: Jay Carpenter, Robin
Manuel and Donita Manuel, Route 2,
Racine.
Zinnia, dahlia flowred: Jay Carpenter, Cheryl Folmer, Pomeroy,
and Jay Carpenter.
Zinnia, cactus flowered: Cheryl
Folmr, Robin Manuel and Donita
Manuel.
Marigold: Cheryl Folmer, Donita

BACK-TONEEDS•••

•LEVI DENIMS

•StiiRTS

•SOCKS

•UNDERWEAR

•T·SHIRTS

•BLOUSES

•LADIES' BENDOVER LEVIES
'

,MANY ITEMS ARE
STILL AT SALE PRICES
•

BAHR CLOTHIERS .
N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IT PLAYS UP THE FUN OF NEW SHOES
'

a

. /'

'

Stitching does a loop-the-loop and gets bright accent
from the perky tie. The one-piece traction sole does its
good deed with a sporty look. Cherry or brown.

Manuel, second and third.
Potted Plant: Donita Manuel, first
and third, Robin Manuel, second.
Dish garden: Donita Manuel,
Robin Manuel, and Jay Carpenter.
HORTICULTURESPECDKENS
Rose, hybrid tea: •Betty Dean,
Robert A. Bailey, and Betty Dean.
Floribunda rose : Wendy Car·
penter, Pomeroyi Betty Dean,
second and third. /
Grandiflora rose: Janet Koblentz,
Betty Dean and Pat Holter.
Gladiolus: RobertA. Bailey, Janel
Bolin, Rutland, no third.
Zinnia, dahlia flowered: Elsie M.
Folmer, Pomeroy, Ada Holter, Ad·
dalou Lewis.
Zinnia, cactus flowered: Elsie
Folmer, first and second, Addalou ·
Lewis.
Dahlia, decorative: Ada Holter,
Addalou Lewis, no third.
Dahlia, cactus type: Ada Holter,

..

-'¥

Friday, August 15
9:00 A.M.-Jr. Fair DemonstrationsIndividual and Team
(Show Arena)
l :00 P.M.-Pet Show- Show Ar~na
2:00 P.M.-Floy.:erShow Judging
·
· 4:30 P.M.-Twilight Horse Harness Racing
7:00 P.M. -J unio! F'air Market Steer,
Lamb and Pig Sale
8:00 P.M.-Sonny James

BOB EVANS
FARMS RESTAURANTS
HAVE SOME I HING NEW

TO CROWABOUT.
CHICKEN •.

restaurant, hot biscuits and honey,
and a big helping of green beans.
You can have a farm-size
A~elicious , deep-fried
. chicken dinner any night after
chicken dinner at Bob Evans
4 p.m., and all-day Sunday Or if
Restaurants isn't just something
you like, try Bob Evans boneless
nevv. lt's something very special.
barbequed ribs with our own
You see, our breasts of chicken specia l sauce.
are more than just tender. They're
In fact, there's a whole flock of
boneless. And we prepare them
special reasons to have dinner at
with our own speci al breading
Bob Evans Restaurants. And the
and seasoning.
newest one is chicken.
Then we serve them up right.
WE DO IT
With a freshly baked potato,
coleslaw thats made fresh in each
R:'

RIGHT.
OR WE DON'T DO

•

B&amp;J Service Station
State Route 7
Tupper~ Plains, Ohio

....

BPW PICNIC MONDAY
The Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club will hold
"' a family picnic on Aug. 18, at 6:30
•' p.m. at the roadside park, west side,
•· on U.S. 33. Members re to provide
:: · their own food, beverage and table
~ . service.

,,...' •

~·

Newell's Sunoco Station
StateR oute 7
Chester, Ohio •
Simmons Olds-Cadillac
242 W. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

;:
••
~-·

ANNIVERSARYSUNDAY
•
The golden wedding anniversary
of Mr. and Mrs. OrveyGainer will be
observed on Aug. 17 with an opeq
house from 2 to 4 p.m. at their home,
4720 Cristland Hill Road, Hebron,
43025. They formerly lived in the
Chester-Bashan
conununity.
I
•

-

French's Sunoco Station
51 oN. Second Avenue·
Middleport, Ohio

..

..'...

BACK TO
SCHOOL

SPfCIAL .

Now Save '500 Off Any
School Shoe During the Month
of August Onlyl

heritage house

'

TO MEET TONIGHT
The Meigs County Humane
Society will meet at 7:30 this evening
•• at the Thrift Shoppe in Middleport.

C&amp;AGarage
Racine,,Otiio

•'

'·

OF SHOES
N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Noon

Junior &amp; Senior
MEIGS COUNTY

..'••

1().8), ( n)

, •

.'

REVIVAL BEGINS SUNDAY
The Mount Moriah Church of God,
Racine Route 2, will begin a revival
• on Aug. 17 with services at 7:30 each
evening. The Rev. Donald Stacy of
Cincinnati will be the evangelist.
·: The publicis invited.

Houston (Ryan&amp;.a ) at San Diego (Curtis 4-7 )
AtlaJ'lta (P.Nieltro 9-14) at San Francisco
(Harpshelmer 2-2)

·

REUNION
descendants
~ and
Joanna of
Bailey
Sunday ofatJohn
the
·: . Shrine Park in Racine; basket lunch
al12noon.
'•

Tbui"IKI.y'1 GamH

Chicaeo (Lamp lo-9) at St.Louis (Vuckovich

ARTISTIC ARRANGEMENTS
" Up .with the Chickens",
arrangement including feathe\S:
Bernice Carpenter, Bend 0' · the
River Garden Club; Peggy Jo
Crane, Winding Trail and Shade
VaUey Council of Floral Arts; alid
Pat Holter, Chester Garden Club.
"Looks Like a Sunny Day",
featuring yellows: Ruth Erwin,
Chester Garden·Club; Anna E . Tur·
ner, Rutland Garden Club; and
Crystal Rayburn, Chester Garden
Club.
"A Crowd will Be There", a mass
design: Pauline . Atkins, Rutland
Garden Club; Crystal Rayburn, AnneE. Turner.
"We'll 'Have Breakfast First", a
tray setting; Ada Holter, Wildwood
and Chester Garden Clubs ; Janet
Koblentz, Chester and Shade Valley;
and Jay Carpenteri Reedsville.
"And Park at the Fairgrounds",
interpretive : Pat Holter, Ruth Erwin, and Bernice Carpenter.

~

OILY

New Yorks, Pittsburgh 3

Philadelphia (Espinosa 2--3 ) at New York

CURTIS REUNION Sunday at

~ Parker Park, Alexandria, Ohio.

-

(Zachry&amp;-l), (n)

MOTHER-DAUGHTER WINNERS- Mrs. Joyce Manuel of near
Racine received the horticulture sweepstakes award, and her
daughter, Donlta, the junior gardener award at the Wednesday flower
show at the Meigs County Fair. Mrs. Dorothy Bates of Reynoldsburg,
pictured right, an OAGC accredited judge, judged the show.

:· p.m.

.•

5

7~
121&gt;

.496

$l

Sentinel
Social
Calendar

f¥ PROFESSIONAL

Milwaukee~ .

~7)

TOP AWARD WINNERS - Pat Holter, center, won the "best of
show" in artistic 'arrangements at the flowe; show staged Wednesday
at the Meigs County Fair. Her arrangement in "Parking at the Fair"
featured Tropicana roses, red caladium, grape vine, and wild teasel
balls. Takng the " reserve best of shoW award" was Alice Thompson
with her arrangement in "R.elax Under the Trees", featuring
weathered wood, wild dock and zinnias in a traditional design. Mrs.
. Janet Bolin, show chairman, right, presented rosettes to Mrs. holler
,and Mrs. Thompson.

==== ==-=-

TRY OUR OtiCKEN DINNER AT:
I

•
© 191:10 80U !:VA,N5FARM FOODS INC

BOB EVANS FARM
RIO GRANDE

�-

.

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 14, 1980

Young arms help Red1
regain NL west lead

r

SANiiiEGO (AP)- Thanks to the
young anns of Cincinnati pitchers
such as Mario Soto and Mike
LaCoss, the ·Big Red Machine has
geared up and swept into first place
in the National League West.
Solo hurled three nl&gt;'hit innings as
the Reds came from behind on a two- ··
run homer by Ray Knight in the
eighth to defeat the San Diego
Padres 4-3 Wednesday night and
sweep the three-game series.
"The way this cl11b hits, if you
come in one or two runs behind you
have a good chance to win," said
Solo, 6-li, who entered the game in
the seventh inning trailing 3-2.
With two outs in the sixth, Jerry
Mumphrey blasted a . three-run
homer off starter LaCoss. It .was
only the third.hit of the game for the
Padres, who also managed just
three hits the previous night.
"In my last five or six starts, I've
thrown well and only won once,"
said the 24-year-old LaCoss. "The
important thing is to keep the club
close. We score a lot of runs in the ·
seventh, eighth and ninth.''
The Reds' staff has been plagued
with injuries. Frank Pastore and
Bill Bonham are currently on the
disabled list, and Tom Seaver returned to the rotation last week after
missing more than four weeks with
tendonitis.
"Going into the year, we IQought
the pitching was outstanding. Now
we are getting pitching from guys
you never heard of," said veteran .
catcher Johnny Bench.
A sore neck forced Bench to miss
the series finale, but free-agent
acquisition Joe Nolan came through
once again for the Reds with a tworun single in the fourth olrloser Bob
Shirley,N.
"I didn't think I would be playing
as much as I have," said the 29-yearold Nolan, who has hit .341 for the
Reds since joining the team June 14
after gaining free-agent status from
the Atlanta Braves.
The victory was the 12th in 14
games for the Reds over the Padres
this season. San Diego manager
Jerry Coleman had no explanation
for the Reds' dominance .

"It's a mystery to me," said
Coleman, after the third straight
one-run defeat at the hands of the

~ 5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 14, 1980

~]

Pat Holter top win·ner at flower fare
nials: Mrs. Buny Kuhl, first, second
Addalou Lewis, second and third.
Dahlia, pompon: Addalou Lewis, and third.
Period Type arrangemf''lt: MrS.
Alice K. Thompson, and Addalou
Suzy Carpenter, first and second,
Lewis.
Marigold: Elsie Folmer, first and and Janet Bolin, third.
second, Bunny Kuhl, Pomeroy, , - - third. PO'ITED PLANTS
Cacti and/or succulents : Alice
Thompsona and Joyce Manuel, firsts, Bunny Kuhl, second, and Joyce
Manuel, third.
Ferns: Joyce Manuel, first, Ruth
Sellers, Portland, second, no third.
Any other foliage plant: Bunny
Kuhl, Joyce Manuel, and Alice
Thompson, in one variety per pot;
and Lois Allen, Racine, first, and
Joyce Manuel, second, in more than
one variety per pot.
Any hanging potted foliage plant:
Joyce Manuel, first.
African violet: Allee Thompson,
Bunny Kuhl, second and third.
Begonias : Joyhce Manuel, first,
second and third.
Any other potted flowering pot;
Joyce Manuel, first and third, and
Ada Holter, second.
Any hanging potted flowering
plant: Joyce Manuel, first. , .
Collection of six or mote peren-

Your " Extra Touch"
Florist Since 1957

Reds.

Cincinnati moved past the Los
Angeles Dodgers to · take sole
pPSSession of first place for the first
tiihe since May 16. The Dodgers host
the Reds in a three-game series
opening Friday night with Seaver, 46, facing Jerry Reuss, 13-1.

FLORIST

PH. 992-2644
352 E . Main, Pomeroy
v ·o ur FTD Florist·

,_1-....,......,..-------.......l'-----------

liARNESS RACING - The Meigs County Fair offers an exciting program of harness racing, which will

..

,

'· '

,._,,...

· ~ +: ,.

~-

. •• ..

be taking place again this afternoon and Friday, begin·
ning at 4:30p.m. Above is a scene from one of the ten
races which took place Wednesday afternoon.

,-_ .•

' ·•

'

•

••
~:

COMES IN FIRST - Ed Humphrey, Pomeroy,
was victorious in the fifth race in the Meigs County

~

"

'•'."'

BASEBALL

I

.:- -SCOREBOARD
.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
Won
69
66
i9

NewYort .

Ba,ltimore
Detroit
Milwaukee
Cleveland

-

43
tl
Sl

60
57

!W

..

5I
64

sa

Torooto

Lost Pet. GB

.616
.5116
.Ml
.526
.523
.511
.429

[&gt;2

WEST
72 42

Kansu Cltt

Oaklind
ChiCIIj!O

i9
S3
49
t&amp;

C&amp;lllomia

..

u;

SeaiUe

41

72

Teua

MinnoJOia

31&gt;
8'k

w

10 1&gt;

II
21

.632

$
!'ll

64
64 .

.513
.477
.434
.429
.414
.3113

131&gt;
17~
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241;

:Ill;

Wedueaday's G•me•

Cleveland It, Teus3

Detroit 2, Boston 1
0Ucago4, New York 1

Fair harness racing program Wednesay, driving Middies Pet, a 3-year-old filly owned by Ed and his brother
Waid Humphrey, also of Pomeroy.

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. Mon., Tues., Wed., Frida·y &amp; Sat.
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773·5592

Mason, W.Va.

\
SHARE

Mrs. Pat Holter received the "best
of show" and Mrs. Alice Thompson,
the "reserve best of show" in ar..
listie arrangements displayed in the
first flower show at the Meigs Collllty Fair Wednesday.
"The Fair" was the theme of the
show judged by Mrs. Dorothy Bates
of Reynoldsburg, an Ohio Associaton
o' Garden Clubs accredited judge.
The other two awards of the show
went to Joyce Manuel of near
Racine , the horticulture sweepstakes awards, and her daughter,
Donita Manuel, the junior gardener
award.
Ribbons and · premiums were
awarded in three places. A second
flower show will be held Friday with
exhibitors to have their entries iii
place by I p.m.
In the various classes of the show
the winners, listed first, second and
third respectively, were as follows.

YIIJR

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Extra Set ol Prints

I
I
I

E•lra prrns must be oraere&lt;l when
t.lm 11 d&amp;v&amp;lopea 1 10 . 1~6 . 1J5
lfll tc.odllk 01' c:ompahble t6iol' pont
him Oflly E•cludmg POill olo JS

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VILLAGE PHARMACY

Racing results

SCIOTO DOWNS
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP )
Preferred Bid posted a length vic·
tory in Wednesday night's feature
pace ~I Scioto Downs.
The winning horse, driven by Jay
Picciano, paced the mile in 2:03 and
returned $18.80, $5.80 and $2.20.
Second-place Tillie Brewster paid
$4 and $2.20. Noon Fiddler finished
third and returned $2.20.
The niflth race trifecta of 2-7-5 paid
$1,690.50.
The crowd of 4,111 wagered
$306,248.

PARTS

RIVERDOWNS
CINCINNATI (AP ) - Mister
Truxton beat Gusting Wind by a nose
to win the featured race Wednesday
at River Downs.
Ridden by Eugene Sipus, the horse
covered 5t furlongs in 1:06 2-6 to pay
$8.80, $4.20 and $3. Gusting Wind
paid $5.40 and $4 to place and
Domilee came in at $2.60 to show.
Gallant Lt. and CasUe Doll combined for a 7-I daily double worth

..

PEOPLE

THURSDAY
:
AUGUST meeting of Past Officers
" Club of Racine Chapter 134 Thur• sday 6 p.m. at Racine Shrine Park.
'
FRIDAY
'
ANY MEIGS IDGH School student
' who is interested in trying out for the
J91J0.31 golf team is asked to meet
': with Coach Oliver Fiiday at River·; side Golf Course in Mason at II a.m.
• to begin practice.
•
~
PAST MATRONS, Evangeline
,. Chapter OES, 7:30 Friday at the
• home of Mrs. Roma Hawkins.
·•
SUNDAY
,
PROFESSOR Donald Nash will be ·
at Hemlock Grove Christian Church
•••· Sunday.
'•
Morning worship at 9;30
~
a.m. and evening services at 7:30

$34.40.

Acrowd of 4,974 bel $615,975.

Toronto 4
Kansas City 6, Baltimore 1
Oakland6, Minnesota 2
CalJtomla 10, Seattle4, 10 lnnings
Tbursday'a Games
Oakland (Norris 15-7) at Minnesota (Jackson

.

Toronto (Stieb 10-8) at Milwaukee (Haas13-9)
New York (Underwood 9-a) at Baltimore
(Sione1H), In)
Texas (Figueroa 3.5) at aeveland (Barker 12--

1), (n)

Botton I Renl&lt;o~Jat Detroit (&amp;hatzeder!HI ),

In)

C.Ufomia (Martinez 2-4) al Seattle (Honeycutt
&amp;-12), In )
Only games scheduled
NATIONAL LEAGUE

EAST

Won lAst Pet. GB

-ttul

64
114
57
:;s
50

Plttabur&amp;h

Philadelphia
New Yocl:
St. LouU
Chicaao

t&amp;

WEST

Clndnnati

50
Sl
53

.$1
.561
.518

61

u;

.450

.411

11

62 53
.539
61 53
.$35
60 53
. ~l
56 S8
.491
Atlanta
53 00
.t&amp;9
San Diego
SO 65 · .435
WetlaJeaclily'• Gamel
Cticago2, Philadelphia 1
San Francl!co 6, Houston 5, 12 innings

los Angeles
How:tm
San Francisco

THIS WEEKEND
AT THE
.INN PLACE

:1

GABRIEL . QUARTET from
.. Cheshire at Mt. Herman U.B. Chur·
chSundayat7 :30p.m.

Reg. S19.95 Mfgr's. Suggested List. ···

'k
1
S'f.r:

8
t2

I

lOW

St.Louls7 Monlreal$

Cin&lt;lnniUI, San Dleao 3
Allanta 2, Los Angele. 0

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHT

Only g~Unes ~e heduled

••

WedMid.ly '1 Spor11!1 Traosactiona
BASEBALL

~)

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

Syracuaeofthe lntemallonal League.

Natloitai League
NEW YORK METS: Wajved Jose Gardena!,
.. _.ooUiekter, for lhe purpose Of giving him his Wl-

THE

.. .conditional releiise.

;·
f'Otmi..\LL

.· .

PHILAOELPHfA

EAGLES :

Released

Cleveland Jackson, tight end, for tailing to p.ass a
Dhnical examination.·Announced that Oudlous
Lee, middle guard, left camp. ·
ST. LOlliS CAROJ NALS1 Released Keith
• .SimOOJ, tackJe.
WASHIN.G'f.ON RE DS KI NS : Cut. Sam

MEIGS INN
PH. 992-3629
POMEROY, OHIO

.~

lbomas, rullning ba ck; Mark F'ret! rnan, s~ fety;

:. and Allen White, plllll.t!i'.

,.

-

-

Pomeroy Motor Company
308 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
Smith Nelson Motors
Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

soo E.

•

::

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.;

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

~~

Rt. 33, Mason, W.Va.
2nd St•, Pomeroy, Oh.
._..,~ AVAILABLE AT TH~SE NEIGHBORHOOD SERVICE CENTERS .
!:/
lnsts/latlon A vsllsble

NaUonal FootbaU League

DETROJT UON.S: Signed Tom Turnure, cen·
ler.
· .;.
r ~ ANGELES RAMS: Released Sid Justin,
·&lt; • ...wnerbac:k; Don Hubbard, deferudve tackle ·
,~.~ • Marvin Smith, llneback.er; and Durwn Tucker'
saf~y. Placed Kirk Collins, cornerback, on thf
injured reerve Jist.
NEW YORK JETS: Placed Barrett Paige, runnin(l back, on the Injured reserve Jist.

•

AVAILABLE AT THESE AUTO PARTS STORES

American League

TEXAS RANGERS: Traded Gaylord Perry,
pitcher, tel the New York Yank~ for Ken Clay,
pitcher, and a player to be named later.
tORONTO BLUE JAYS ' Placed Bart'y 1Jon.
· neU, outfielder, on the 15-day disabled list.
Recalled Danny Alnge, outfielder, rrom

.:..._;7:

"Before Making the Rounds", a
stamobile : Bernice Carpenter,
Melanie Stethem, Shade Valley and
Pat Holter.
"A. Picnic is In Order", using a
basket: Betty Dean, Chester and
Shade Valley, Pat Holter, Bernice
Carpenter.
"Feels Good to Relax Under the
Trees", including wood: Alice K.
Thompson, Winding Trail and Shade
Valley, Bernice Carpenter, and
Evelyn Hollon, Wildwood Garden
Club.
JUNIOR DIVISION
"On to the Riders", a favorite
design: Jay Carpenter, Robin
Manuel and Donita Manuel, Route 2,
Racine.
Zinnia, dahlia flowred: Jay Carpenter, Cheryl Folmer, Pomeroy,
and Jay Carpenter.
Zinnia, cactus flowered: Cheryl
Folmr, Robin Manuel and Donita
Manuel.
Marigold: Cheryl Folmer, Donita

BACK-TONEEDS•••

•LEVI DENIMS

•StiiRTS

•SOCKS

•UNDERWEAR

•T·SHIRTS

•BLOUSES

•LADIES' BENDOVER LEVIES
'

,MANY ITEMS ARE
STILL AT SALE PRICES
•

BAHR CLOTHIERS .
N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
IT PLAYS UP THE FUN OF NEW SHOES
'

a

. /'

'

Stitching does a loop-the-loop and gets bright accent
from the perky tie. The one-piece traction sole does its
good deed with a sporty look. Cherry or brown.

Manuel, second and third.
Potted Plant: Donita Manuel, first
and third, Robin Manuel, second.
Dish garden: Donita Manuel,
Robin Manuel, and Jay Carpenter.
HORTICULTURESPECDKENS
Rose, hybrid tea: •Betty Dean,
Robert A. Bailey, and Betty Dean.
Floribunda rose : Wendy Car·
penter, Pomeroyi Betty Dean,
second and third. /
Grandiflora rose: Janet Koblentz,
Betty Dean and Pat Holter.
Gladiolus: RobertA. Bailey, Janel
Bolin, Rutland, no third.
Zinnia, dahlia flowered: Elsie M.
Folmer, Pomeroy, Ada Holter, Ad·
dalou Lewis.
Zinnia, cactus flowered: Elsie
Folmer, first and second, Addalou ·
Lewis.
Dahlia, decorative: Ada Holter,
Addalou Lewis, no third.
Dahlia, cactus type: Ada Holter,

..

-'¥

Friday, August 15
9:00 A.M.-Jr. Fair DemonstrationsIndividual and Team
(Show Arena)
l :00 P.M.-Pet Show- Show Ar~na
2:00 P.M.-Floy.:erShow Judging
·
· 4:30 P.M.-Twilight Horse Harness Racing
7:00 P.M. -J unio! F'air Market Steer,
Lamb and Pig Sale
8:00 P.M.-Sonny James

BOB EVANS
FARMS RESTAURANTS
HAVE SOME I HING NEW

TO CROWABOUT.
CHICKEN •.

restaurant, hot biscuits and honey,
and a big helping of green beans.
You can have a farm-size
A~elicious , deep-fried
. chicken dinner any night after
chicken dinner at Bob Evans
4 p.m., and all-day Sunday Or if
Restaurants isn't just something
you like, try Bob Evans boneless
nevv. lt's something very special.
barbequed ribs with our own
You see, our breasts of chicken specia l sauce.
are more than just tender. They're
In fact, there's a whole flock of
boneless. And we prepare them
special reasons to have dinner at
with our own speci al breading
Bob Evans Restaurants. And the
and seasoning.
newest one is chicken.
Then we serve them up right.
WE DO IT
With a freshly baked potato,
coleslaw thats made fresh in each
R:'

RIGHT.
OR WE DON'T DO

•

B&amp;J Service Station
State Route 7
Tupper~ Plains, Ohio

....

BPW PICNIC MONDAY
The Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club will hold
"' a family picnic on Aug. 18, at 6:30
•' p.m. at the roadside park, west side,
•· on U.S. 33. Members re to provide
:: · their own food, beverage and table
~ . service.

,,...' •

~·

Newell's Sunoco Station
StateR oute 7
Chester, Ohio •
Simmons Olds-Cadillac
242 W. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

;:
••
~-·

ANNIVERSARYSUNDAY
•
The golden wedding anniversary
of Mr. and Mrs. OrveyGainer will be
observed on Aug. 17 with an opeq
house from 2 to 4 p.m. at their home,
4720 Cristland Hill Road, Hebron,
43025. They formerly lived in the
Chester-Bashan
conununity.
I
•

-

French's Sunoco Station
51 oN. Second Avenue·
Middleport, Ohio

..

..'...

BACK TO
SCHOOL

SPfCIAL .

Now Save '500 Off Any
School Shoe During the Month
of August Onlyl

heritage house

'

TO MEET TONIGHT
The Meigs County Humane
Society will meet at 7:30 this evening
•• at the Thrift Shoppe in Middleport.

C&amp;AGarage
Racine,,Otiio

•'

'·

OF SHOES
N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Noon

Junior &amp; Senior
MEIGS COUNTY

..'••

1().8), ( n)

, •

.'

REVIVAL BEGINS SUNDAY
The Mount Moriah Church of God,
Racine Route 2, will begin a revival
• on Aug. 17 with services at 7:30 each
evening. The Rev. Donald Stacy of
Cincinnati will be the evangelist.
·: The publicis invited.

Houston (Ryan&amp;.a ) at San Diego (Curtis 4-7 )
AtlaJ'lta (P.Nieltro 9-14) at San Francisco
(Harpshelmer 2-2)

·

REUNION
descendants
~ and
Joanna of
Bailey
Sunday ofatJohn
the
·: . Shrine Park in Racine; basket lunch
al12noon.
'•

Tbui"IKI.y'1 GamH

Chicaeo (Lamp lo-9) at St.Louis (Vuckovich

ARTISTIC ARRANGEMENTS
" Up .with the Chickens",
arrangement including feathe\S:
Bernice Carpenter, Bend 0' · the
River Garden Club; Peggy Jo
Crane, Winding Trail and Shade
VaUey Council of Floral Arts; alid
Pat Holter, Chester Garden Club.
"Looks Like a Sunny Day",
featuring yellows: Ruth Erwin,
Chester Garden·Club; Anna E . Tur·
ner, Rutland Garden Club; and
Crystal Rayburn, Chester Garden
Club.
"A Crowd will Be There", a mass
design: Pauline . Atkins, Rutland
Garden Club; Crystal Rayburn, AnneE. Turner.
"We'll 'Have Breakfast First", a
tray setting; Ada Holter, Wildwood
and Chester Garden Clubs ; Janet
Koblentz, Chester and Shade Valley;
and Jay Carpenteri Reedsville.
"And Park at the Fairgrounds",
interpretive : Pat Holter, Ruth Erwin, and Bernice Carpenter.

~

OILY

New Yorks, Pittsburgh 3

Philadelphia (Espinosa 2--3 ) at New York

CURTIS REUNION Sunday at

~ Parker Park, Alexandria, Ohio.

-

(Zachry&amp;-l), (n)

MOTHER-DAUGHTER WINNERS- Mrs. Joyce Manuel of near
Racine received the horticulture sweepstakes award, and her
daughter, Donlta, the junior gardener award at the Wednesday flower
show at the Meigs County Fair. Mrs. Dorothy Bates of Reynoldsburg,
pictured right, an OAGC accredited judge, judged the show.

:· p.m.

.•

5

7~
121&gt;

.496

$l

Sentinel
Social
Calendar

f¥ PROFESSIONAL

Milwaukee~ .

~7)

TOP AWARD WINNERS - Pat Holter, center, won the "best of
show" in artistic 'arrangements at the flowe; show staged Wednesday
at the Meigs County Fair. Her arrangement in "Parking at the Fair"
featured Tropicana roses, red caladium, grape vine, and wild teasel
balls. Takng the " reserve best of shoW award" was Alice Thompson
with her arrangement in "R.elax Under the Trees", featuring
weathered wood, wild dock and zinnias in a traditional design. Mrs.
. Janet Bolin, show chairman, right, presented rosettes to Mrs. holler
,and Mrs. Thompson.

==== ==-=-

TRY OUR OtiCKEN DINNER AT:
I

•
© 191:10 80U !:VA,N5FARM FOODS INC

BOB EVANS FARM
RIO GRANDE

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., '!"ursday, Aug. H, 1980

Annual Ginther reunion spans 2 days
The seventh biennial Ehlenbach
Ginther reunion was held · on
National Family Reunion Weekend,
Aug. 9 and 10 in the Pomeroy, Meigs
County, community.
On Aug. 9, a meeting was held in
the Riverboat Room of the Athens
County Savings and Loan ·Co. to
show slides and old pictures, and to
exchange family information.
Eligible to attend were the·descendants of George Ehlenbach of Arcola, Ill. and Wolf Diedrich Ginther,

I
Patti Dugan

Patti Dyer

Bill Dyer

their ~wn land use plan.
At the end of camp, each group
presented the plan they developed,
utiliziqg .the conservation information they had learned in their
subject matter sessions.
A highlight of the Conservation
Camp was a bus tour of three counties in each central Ohio, during
which campers viewed land use and
conservation practices in operation.
Activities throughout the week included ·a visit to a strip mine, an
electricity generating plant, a fish
hatchery, and a sawmill. Four-H'ers
spent an evening in New
Philadelphia enjoying a performance of "Trwnpet In The
Land:''

neapolis, Minn., the Ohio 4-H Foundation; and the Ohio Federation of
Soil Conservation. The Meigs County
sponsor for the trip was the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
District.

Pomeroy, Ohio, who died in 1856 and
is buried in the Pine Grove
Cemetery.
Wolf Diedrich Ginther and his
children lived in Pomeroy in the
1850's with only William Ginther who
died in 1927, spending his life in the
Pomeroy area. Some of Wolf Ginther's descendants still reside in
Meigs County. One son, John, moved
to Hartford, W. Va., where he was
mayor for mariy years prior to his
1915death.

devotions entitled "Discipline of
Decision" using' ~cripture from
Jere. 4: ;!5. The material was taken
from the book, " The Discipline of
Life" by Raymond Edman. Prayer
closed the meeting.

Royal Oak Park with four members and twu ad·
visors in attendance. Terry Smith demonstrated
the different positions to shoot a. gun. Andy Lyl e
was the guest speaker. He spoke on gun safety
and the laws of fishing, hunting and trapph1~.
Refreshments were served by Terry Sm1th. -

Doug Beaver, Reporter.

The Five Point Bucks 4-d-1 Club met July 17 at

Scenes from the 1980 Meigs County Fair

The reunion was held Sunday at
Royal Oak; Park and attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Stiles and family,
Mrs. Nina Craddock and •on, Middleport, and Mrs. Barbara Fry,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Phillip
Boyes, Tuppers Plains; Mr. and
Mrs. William Ginther, Mr. and Mrs.
Douglass Salamonsen and family,
Beverly: Mrs. Estelle Shipley and
family, Norwich ; john Schaefer,
Dayton; Mrs. Kathryn Ward, Mr.
and Mrs. Alex Dobosh, Mr. and Mrs.
George Conroy, Pittsburgh, Pa.:
Mrs. Rosaltha Ginther of Harveysburg, and Mr. and Mrs. James
Ginther, Waynesville, former
residents of Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
George Ehlenbach of Brighton,
Mich.: Mrs. Amelia Roy of Detroit;
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Wainscott and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wainscott,
Decatur, IU.

BAROAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
AU SEATS JUST $1.50
SJ1 ~~~SON PIKE · HLJ5NORTH -Phone 446 · ·~

demonstration on the use of Ole camera and

Terry Smith gave a demonstration on bikes. The
Rerreshmt!nl-. were served by Mrs. Beaver. The
next meeling will be at the home of advisors,
Nick and Eleanor Leonard. - Doug Beaver,

Reporter.

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Thur. 9· 12

Fri. 9·8·
Sat. 9·S
• 992· 70S4

BACHEWR BOY RETURNS - Mica Jones, 7- Allensworth, Middleport. Bachelor Boy 1188 c -"t the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Jones, Racine, outrider horse of the Meigs County Fair horse harness
. is pictured riding Bachelor Boy, owned by Mrs. Flossie races for many years.
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Stiver,s, left; and Terry Gardner, of the Middleport
Emergency Squad, which was on duty Wednesday.

show of the Meigs County Fair. All of the entries will
remain on exhibit through Saturday for viewing by
fairgoers. With the three winners, pictured left to right,
is Mrs. Pat Thoma, the show chairman. Jack Slavin
judged the exhibits.

group played , neshlight tag for recreation.

TRS-804K
Levell

NO'CHARGE

SQUADS ON DUTY - Dedicated area emergency
volunteers are providing around-the-clock service at
the Meigs County Fair this week. Pi~ured are Don

AMATElJR ART SHOW WINNERS- Best of show
awrds were given to Rhojean McClure for her· still life
in water color, Betsy .Stivers for her modem design,
and Rebecca Circle for her acrylic in the amateur art

The biggest t;1ame
in little computers™

tthe Beaver res idence with six members and tw o
advisors in attendance. John Beaver gave a

J

..

of Garden Clubs, judged the exhibits awardsing a
grand champion, reserve gand champion, and a blue
ribbon to both Becky Edwards and Carrie Karr. Both
~iris featured the use of wildflowers in their
arrangements.

ConServation Camp is sponsored
by the Ohio Cooperative Extension
Service with support from the
Federal Cartridge Company, Min-

Our Prices
Are Falling

.

4-H FWWER SHOW WINNERS - Becky Edwards, left, and Carrie Karr were the grand champions
of the 4-H flower show staged Wednesday at the Meigs
County Fair. Mrs. Dorothy Bates, an Ohio Asociation

·

Meigs 4-H News
The Five Point Bucks l-H Club met July 2 at

I

Temperance Union meets

The annual picnic of the Pomeroy
Women's Christian Temperance
Union was held Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Elsie Roush.
Mrs. Ada Warner gave table
grace. There was an opening hymn
and the group gave the Lord's
Prayer in unison. Letters were read
from Sen. Strom Thunnan and Martha Rountree concerning getting
prayer back into the schools. Mrs.
Caryl Cook gave an inspirational
talk on her visit to an 'Episcopal
Church in Connecticut which she attended during a visit there with her
daughter.
Mrs . Lula Hamnton gave

:Three youths return from 4-H camp
Three Meigs County youth have
• recently returned home from Ohio 4; H Conservation eainp. Patti Dugan,
: daughter of Mrs. Phyllis Dugan of
• Rutland attended the camp along ·
with Bill Dyer, son of Mrs. Maxine
· Pyer of Bidwell. Patty Dyer, one of
. Bill's sisters, was also selected to at: tend as a counselor for the 4-H Con- servation Camp.
: Conservation camp is an in-depth
leaming experience for Ohio 4-H
boys and girls. Young people study
the interdependence of land, water,
forests and wildlife and how they are
essential to our daily living as sources of energy and outdoor recreation
facilities.
The campers attended subject
· matter sessions conducted by
teachers from Ohio State. While attending these sessions, the 4-H'ers
worked in groups of four to design

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug.l4, 1980

...

~
-~
'!';~

1980·YEAR OF THE
SCHOOLS IN OHI~
.,

* STOCKPAK is a t rad~mark of Standard &amp; Poor's Corp.
This un ique packag\0! not o nly contains a complete stock portfolio analysis
system, but uses Standard &amp; Poo'r·s monthly Common Stock Data Service,
available to TRS-80 owners on a paid s ubscription basis (not included) .
Each month, subscribers -receive a disketle with information on
approximately 900 common s tocks! You may examine each of these
stocks, c hoosing those that meet your specified conditions or criteria and
create your own portfolio for analysis and comparison. Set your own test
criteria and design your own reports! Comes with an actual sample of
Standard &amp; Poor's Da ta Base for you to try. The TAS-80 system you buy
wo n't be limited to stock analysis, ho weve r. With our wide-raljlge ra nge of
ready-to-run software it will handle a variety of tasks from wor,j
processin g to inventory control.
.
STOCKPAK Bll&amp;ilable separately. 2&amp;-1sor :. . ..•.... ............•••.•.• 49.95

Ready-to-Run Software That'll
Make Your TRS-80 a Valuable
Member of Your Work Force

VLI!ASil

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Word Processing Dlek. 28-1513 •.•• •• 99.95
Word Proce11lng Tape. 28-1505 ..•.•. 89.95
Inventory Control I. 28· 1H3 ••••.•.•• 99.95
Bualne• Mailing Liat. ~:1551 • . .•.•. 99.95
General Ledger 1. 28-1552 •. ••••••• •• 99.95
Dlak Payroll. 28-1551 ...•.•.•..•• •. 199.95
Account• P1y1ble. 28-1154 .•• ••••• 149.95
Accounta Receivable . 26-1sn : . ..• 149.95

. Check Your Phone Book for the ltlldie lllaek Store or Dealer Nearest You
•

TAKES FIVE - Young Michael Andrew Bailey, son of Robert and
Cheryl Bailey, Chester, "took five" from the busy fun of the Meigs
County Fair to enjoy a huge mound of cotton candy.

SPECIAL DISPLAY ~ This display deals with "198&amp;-Year of the

Schools in Ohio" and was arranged by the Meigs County Superintendent
of Schoola staff and the Ohio Department of Education. Through the
booth, questionnaires are being distributed giving people an opportunity
to elq)ress their views on schools in this locality and in Ohio .

RIDES - Despite a recession, rides at the Meigs County Fair were
·doing a big business Tuesday night on a crowded midway . Free rides are
included in the price admission to the fair. Here Kewana Singer and
Heather Singer of Pomeroy are pictured on a novel kangaroo ride.
Assisting them upon the completion of their ride are Ron Cocanougher,
left, and James Echenrod, employes of the Bates Brothers Amusement
Co.

-- Fair photos by Bob, Charlene
and Jayne Hoeffich and Katie Crow
. I

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., '!"ursday, Aug. H, 1980

Annual Ginther reunion spans 2 days
The seventh biennial Ehlenbach
Ginther reunion was held · on
National Family Reunion Weekend,
Aug. 9 and 10 in the Pomeroy, Meigs
County, community.
On Aug. 9, a meeting was held in
the Riverboat Room of the Athens
County Savings and Loan ·Co. to
show slides and old pictures, and to
exchange family information.
Eligible to attend were the·descendants of George Ehlenbach of Arcola, Ill. and Wolf Diedrich Ginther,

I
Patti Dugan

Patti Dyer

Bill Dyer

their ~wn land use plan.
At the end of camp, each group
presented the plan they developed,
utiliziqg .the conservation information they had learned in their
subject matter sessions.
A highlight of the Conservation
Camp was a bus tour of three counties in each central Ohio, during
which campers viewed land use and
conservation practices in operation.
Activities throughout the week included ·a visit to a strip mine, an
electricity generating plant, a fish
hatchery, and a sawmill. Four-H'ers
spent an evening in New
Philadelphia enjoying a performance of "Trwnpet In The
Land:''

neapolis, Minn., the Ohio 4-H Foundation; and the Ohio Federation of
Soil Conservation. The Meigs County
sponsor for the trip was the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
District.

Pomeroy, Ohio, who died in 1856 and
is buried in the Pine Grove
Cemetery.
Wolf Diedrich Ginther and his
children lived in Pomeroy in the
1850's with only William Ginther who
died in 1927, spending his life in the
Pomeroy area. Some of Wolf Ginther's descendants still reside in
Meigs County. One son, John, moved
to Hartford, W. Va., where he was
mayor for mariy years prior to his
1915death.

devotions entitled "Discipline of
Decision" using' ~cripture from
Jere. 4: ;!5. The material was taken
from the book, " The Discipline of
Life" by Raymond Edman. Prayer
closed the meeting.

Royal Oak Park with four members and twu ad·
visors in attendance. Terry Smith demonstrated
the different positions to shoot a. gun. Andy Lyl e
was the guest speaker. He spoke on gun safety
and the laws of fishing, hunting and trapph1~.
Refreshments were served by Terry Sm1th. -

Doug Beaver, Reporter.

The Five Point Bucks 4-d-1 Club met July 17 at

Scenes from the 1980 Meigs County Fair

The reunion was held Sunday at
Royal Oak; Park and attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Stiles and family,
Mrs. Nina Craddock and •on, Middleport, and Mrs. Barbara Fry,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Phillip
Boyes, Tuppers Plains; Mr. and
Mrs. William Ginther, Mr. and Mrs.
Douglass Salamonsen and family,
Beverly: Mrs. Estelle Shipley and
family, Norwich ; john Schaefer,
Dayton; Mrs. Kathryn Ward, Mr.
and Mrs. Alex Dobosh, Mr. and Mrs.
George Conroy, Pittsburgh, Pa.:
Mrs. Rosaltha Ginther of Harveysburg, and Mr. and Mrs. James
Ginther, Waynesville, former
residents of Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
George Ehlenbach of Brighton,
Mich.: Mrs. Amelia Roy of Detroit;
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Wainscott and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wainscott,
Decatur, IU.

BAROAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
AU SEATS JUST $1.50
SJ1 ~~~SON PIKE · HLJ5NORTH -Phone 446 · ·~

demonstration on the use of Ole camera and

Terry Smith gave a demonstration on bikes. The
Rerreshmt!nl-. were served by Mrs. Beaver. The
next meeling will be at the home of advisors,
Nick and Eleanor Leonard. - Doug Beaver,

Reporter.

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r
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software programs. you can put your own TRS-80 to work
immediately- jobs that are now ted ious and time-consuming
can be handled quickly and acc urate ly. At home, you can do
budget computations, figure the value of investment and savings
plans. store and update data of ail kinds. tutor in math, and.
also play computer games. Chess, anyone ? In the office.
expanded TRS-80 systems can zip through bookkeeping,
payroll , billing and inventory control. Ali this , with no previous ·
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Find out how it can grow with your needs and see why over
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.

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We are now buying your old gold and
silver. We pay you tne nignest possible
price. We also accept trade-ins
towards tne purcnase of new mercnandise .

WE WIU BUY - OR TRADE
- 10 K Gold
- 14 K Gold
'\ - 18 K Gold
~ - Deqta 1 Gold
- Silver Coins
.
- Old Pocket Watcnes
- Platinum

SEU TO THE JEWELRY PROFESSIONALS
.•VISA
•M!C
•LAYAWAY

Hours:

M.· W. 9-5
Thur. 9· 12

Fri. 9·8·
Sat. 9·S
• 992· 70S4

BACHEWR BOY RETURNS - Mica Jones, 7- Allensworth, Middleport. Bachelor Boy 1188 c -"t the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Jones, Racine, outrider horse of the Meigs County Fair horse harness
. is pictured riding Bachelor Boy, owned by Mrs. Flossie races for many years.
year~ld

.

' ''

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Stiver,s, left; and Terry Gardner, of the Middleport
Emergency Squad, which was on duty Wednesday.

show of the Meigs County Fair. All of the entries will
remain on exhibit through Saturday for viewing by
fairgoers. With the three winners, pictured left to right,
is Mrs. Pat Thoma, the show chairman. Jack Slavin
judged the exhibits.

group played , neshlight tag for recreation.

TRS-804K
Levell

NO'CHARGE

SQUADS ON DUTY - Dedicated area emergency
volunteers are providing around-the-clock service at
the Meigs County Fair this week. Pi~ured are Don

AMATElJR ART SHOW WINNERS- Best of show
awrds were given to Rhojean McClure for her· still life
in water color, Betsy .Stivers for her modem design,
and Rebecca Circle for her acrylic in the amateur art

The biggest t;1ame
in little computers™

tthe Beaver res idence with six members and tw o
advisors in attendance. John Beaver gave a

J

..

of Garden Clubs, judged the exhibits awardsing a
grand champion, reserve gand champion, and a blue
ribbon to both Becky Edwards and Carrie Karr. Both
~iris featured the use of wildflowers in their
arrangements.

ConServation Camp is sponsored
by the Ohio Cooperative Extension
Service with support from the
Federal Cartridge Company, Min-

Our Prices
Are Falling

.

4-H FWWER SHOW WINNERS - Becky Edwards, left, and Carrie Karr were the grand champions
of the 4-H flower show staged Wednesday at the Meigs
County Fair. Mrs. Dorothy Bates, an Ohio Asociation

·

Meigs 4-H News
The Five Point Bucks l-H Club met July 2 at

I

Temperance Union meets

The annual picnic of the Pomeroy
Women's Christian Temperance
Union was held Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Elsie Roush.
Mrs. Ada Warner gave table
grace. There was an opening hymn
and the group gave the Lord's
Prayer in unison. Letters were read
from Sen. Strom Thunnan and Martha Rountree concerning getting
prayer back into the schools. Mrs.
Caryl Cook gave an inspirational
talk on her visit to an 'Episcopal
Church in Connecticut which she attended during a visit there with her
daughter.
Mrs . Lula Hamnton gave

:Three youths return from 4-H camp
Three Meigs County youth have
• recently returned home from Ohio 4; H Conservation eainp. Patti Dugan,
: daughter of Mrs. Phyllis Dugan of
• Rutland attended the camp along ·
with Bill Dyer, son of Mrs. Maxine
· Pyer of Bidwell. Patty Dyer, one of
. Bill's sisters, was also selected to at: tend as a counselor for the 4-H Con- servation Camp.
: Conservation camp is an in-depth
leaming experience for Ohio 4-H
boys and girls. Young people study
the interdependence of land, water,
forests and wildlife and how they are
essential to our daily living as sources of energy and outdoor recreation
facilities.
The campers attended subject
· matter sessions conducted by
teachers from Ohio State. While attending these sessions, the 4-H'ers
worked in groups of four to design

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug.l4, 1980

...

~
-~
'!';~

1980·YEAR OF THE
SCHOOLS IN OHI~
.,

* STOCKPAK is a t rad~mark of Standard &amp; Poor's Corp.
This un ique packag\0! not o nly contains a complete stock portfolio analysis
system, but uses Standard &amp; Poo'r·s monthly Common Stock Data Service,
available to TRS-80 owners on a paid s ubscription basis (not included) .
Each month, subscribers -receive a disketle with information on
approximately 900 common s tocks! You may examine each of these
stocks, c hoosing those that meet your specified conditions or criteria and
create your own portfolio for analysis and comparison. Set your own test
criteria and design your own reports! Comes with an actual sample of
Standard &amp; Poor's Da ta Base for you to try. The TAS-80 system you buy
wo n't be limited to stock analysis, ho weve r. With our wide-raljlge ra nge of
ready-to-run software it will handle a variety of tasks from wor,j
processin g to inventory control.
.
STOCKPAK Bll&amp;ilable separately. 2&amp;-1sor :. . ..•.... ............•••.•.• 49.95

Ready-to-Run Software That'll
Make Your TRS-80 a Valuable
Member of Your Work Force

VLI!ASil

'l'A.!Ui 111111

Word Processing Dlek. 28-1513 •.•• •• 99.95
Word Proce11lng Tape. 28-1505 ..•.•. 89.95
Inventory Control I. 28· 1H3 ••••.•.•• 99.95
Bualne• Mailing Liat. ~:1551 • . .•.•. 99.95
General Ledger 1. 28-1552 •. ••••••• •• 99.95
Dlak Payroll. 28-1551 ...•.•.•..•• •. 199.95
Account• P1y1ble. 28-1154 .•• ••••• 149.95
Accounta Receivable . 26-1sn : . ..• 149.95

. Check Your Phone Book for the ltlldie lllaek Store or Dealer Nearest You
•

TAKES FIVE - Young Michael Andrew Bailey, son of Robert and
Cheryl Bailey, Chester, "took five" from the busy fun of the Meigs
County Fair to enjoy a huge mound of cotton candy.

SPECIAL DISPLAY ~ This display deals with "198&amp;-Year of the

Schools in Ohio" and was arranged by the Meigs County Superintendent
of Schoola staff and the Ohio Department of Education. Through the
booth, questionnaires are being distributed giving people an opportunity
to elq)ress their views on schools in this locality and in Ohio .

RIDES - Despite a recession, rides at the Meigs County Fair were
·doing a big business Tuesday night on a crowded midway . Free rides are
included in the price admission to the fair. Here Kewana Singer and
Heather Singer of Pomeroy are pictured on a novel kangaroo ride.
Assisting them upon the completion of their ride are Ron Cocanougher,
left, and James Echenrod, employes of the Bates Brothers Amusement
Co.

-- Fair photos by Bob, Charlene
and Jayne Hoeffich and Katie Crow
. I

�: t - 1 U t;: UdU.)' ..lt:IIU11t i 1 ' '41UWt:l)Ut ~· 1 V U&amp; C I UJ 1 u . 1 .1 j u.u .")Ua) 1 1 ~'-'b· .n, ....uv

DICKTRACY

8-The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePort-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 14, !saO

lt\1\}f.\.0 m'il. ~. THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

.

~ ~ ~~ r.;

byHenri ArnotdandBoble e

Unscra.nble these lour Jumbles ,
Or'!e letter to each square. to form
four ordinary words.

Scenes from the 1980 Meigs County Fair

TELEVISION
VIEWING
AUG. 14, 1D80

0

10
'·

I I I

JLJ5T MAKE YOUR~HF' COMF- Y
A~OARD.

DAHLit.IG-- WHILE I
GO FILE A FLIGHT PLAN-AND POWDER MY NOSE

.....9

~

WHAT'5 SHE L)P
TO, TURr.liN' SO
~WE;ET ·ALL OF
A IJUDDEN 'I

QUE5T10t.l-- WHY
DO I Ml!i&gt;TRUST
THAT FeMALE

8:00

•••

t
I J ·I

IMOYPLE

~

KJ

WHAI YOU NEED
"TO KeEP YOUR:
SALANCE.

gested by the abOve cartoon.

.
Y ester day s
.

I

rI I

(]) MOVIE ·(DRAMA)
"Deflaftce"1SNIO
([\ ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
([\ ABC NEWS
(J) IDJ ZOOM
8:30 CIJ .Cl) NBC NEWS
Cil MUSIC
([\ I LOVELUCY
([\
CAROL BURNEn AND
FRIENDS
0 (J) !l1J CBS NEWS
(J)
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS

(fil OVEA EASY Guest: Anna Maria

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug -

Print answer here:

. ... . ...,

tiJ IJ (1).ii)®)!DJ. NEWS
CIJ BACKYARD
.

••l!o

b

FOMIT

CAPTAIN EASY

EVENING

I1I J

8:58
7 :00

{Answers tomorrOw)
Jumllles: GUILD PROVE CLEAVE APIECE
Answer: Avoided publicity when they formed their
partnership-ELOPED
7:30

.,

.

·,

:-: • • '

·• • &gt;" ·

, ;.~ ·;~ti: '1

.

.lutnl*look No. 14,conlainlftg ,10 puzNs,lsavallablefarS1.TIJ,_tpll._.

daring Meigs County fair-goers. The ride features· 8
gigantic circular track around which a closed car
travelll, and is upside-do~ at the top of the loop.

SUPER-UJOPS POPULAR - The Super-Loops a
new ride attraction of the Bates Brothers Amusem~nt
Company, has ·been providing thrills to the more

tromJumb.. ,clothlanew•peper,BoxM,Norwood, N.J.07&amp;ca.lncfudeyour
name. addrtll, alp oodt and mlltt cMcltt payable ta Newap.pelhooka.

BORN LOSER

... ..

HAV~

A&lt;oJ5tJ
'{OLlR~L..~ OOI..IAL TO
F{;W M\D &lt;?U~IOR
'(Ot.J

' CHAMPION BULL
'
GRAND
Taking
grand·
champion honors at the Meigs County Fair Wednesday, polled Herefords, open class beef judging, was
the animal owned by David Gloeckner, "Country Road

Farm" Rt. 2, Racine. The animal tipped the stales of
2,600 pounds. This is the second consecutive year the ·
animal has taken grand champion honors.

"'1

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

10~!

"~

End play drives home slam

.
'~

NORTH

!

1· 14-80

+864

\fAK2

tQJ97
+AH

WEST

't'E5, ANNIE ..J'~E BEEN
GOING OVER AND OVER
TKESE FIGURES ·~ THERE
MUST BE Ai'l ERROR BUT
[CAN'T fiND IT! ...

··IF THESE FIGURES !iERE A(CIJMTE,
"BI6 CHEESE IHTERHATIONAL'S"
INCOME OOJLD COtltE TO
AQUARTER OF THE GROGG

EAST

+ K 10702

+9 3

\fQlOB

+as

\fu

+JIP9

• 10 8 4 3
+QB632

SOUTH
+AQJ

\fU743

MATIOHAL PRODUCT!

· +AK2

+K7

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

'

'

...
:.\
'
'·.'

West

Nor!~

Pass
Pass
Pass

2\f

Eut
Pass
Pass

s\f
Pass

Pass

I+

Pus

Opening lead:+ J
ALLEYOOP
judging, at the Meigs County Fair Wednesday was the
animal owned by David Gloeckner, "Country Road
Farm", Rt. 2, Racine.

RESERVE GRAND cHAMPION - The reserve
grand champion bull, polled Hereford, open class beef

TAKE' THE INTRUDER.." '

PRISONER! .TONir:: .i

OUR. FATHER,ES', '.iBAN ,

WIU DETERMINE
'THEIR

TOP CHAMPION STEER - The grand champion
steer, 4-H division was won by an animal owned by
David Gaul of Chester. David was alllo ~rand cham-

By Oswald Jacoby
ud Alu Sontag

FATE.'

Here is a hand from a rubher bridse game in Manchester, England, as reported IJy
International Popular Bridge.
As you can see, Phillip
Laddin, the declarer, would

pion showman. Rodney Tripp was reser-Ve champion
showman and third place showman was Lea Ann Gaul.

~
f

_ _ _ _"'_

_

_

_

by lHOMAS JOSEPH
40 Helmut Sdunldl,
1 Seaaonlng
for one (abbr.)
5 City in Peru 41 Aiconqulan

Me or

It was

lady?

Wh4 are 401..1
Clovia's
holed --~c::t suqqestion r
L.IP

8COmer

it IAI&lt;+ch

rent

out

mone4~

Slim?

.· WINNIE
I'M

THINKIN'
ABOUT
IT!

BUT WE GOT
PlENTY GOIN I
FOR US
RIGHT NOW

~URE, BUT·
WHAT V IXEN'S
GOT IN MIND IS

LEGITIMATE. AND
IT COULP MEAN

tJ/6 8UCK6.~~1

DOWN

BESIVES, IT'S A
PERFECT PLACE FOR
US TO LAUNPER OUR
SYNI71CATE

DOUGH/

Rae" 1171
([\ MOVIE -(COMEDY) •• "H•m-

meramlth Ia Out".1Q72
IIJ(J)(j)J CAMPAIGN '80: DEMoCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION The exact ataning tjm&amp; and
length of con~ention coverage Ia

aubject to change.
(J) U.S.CHRONICLE 'AtlanllcCity:
Wlnnera and Loaars'

IDl BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL 'Our
Tlmea' A Bill Moyera eaaay,liateri'· '
lno and responding to a variety of
thoughtful points of 'llliaw on the
atateofthenation in the 1980's. Ita
recent pnt and ita near future. (60

mtnY

il2l. THE '80VOTE:DEMOCRA·
TICNAnDNALCONYENTIONThe
exact starting time and length of
convention coverage ia subject to

change . 20·20 may be broadcast
8:30
8:58
8:00
11:30
10:00

Rt. a; Pomeroy. The animal was judged Wednesday at
the Meigs County Fair.

''Crtmebu•t•r•"

!l1J

tlectlon of Fe•r"

12:30

D(J) CBSLATEMOVIE'GRAND

JURY' 1~77 Stars: Lealie Nielsen,
Barry Sulll~an . Bobby and .lenny
ire 1 young couple trying to make a
life tor themselves when they meet
anotderandmoreexperiencedman
who helps them out both socially
and financially .
CIJ KOINONIA
CllNEWS
([\
ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBALLREPLAY
CIJ ROBERT SCHULLER
!l1J I BELIEVE
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
([\ MOVIE -(WESTERN) •• ~
"Seven Waye from Sundown"

11180

4:00 CIJ 700 CLUB
5:30 Cil SOUND OF THE SPIRIT
5:40 ([\RAT PATROL

S4 Mountain

pus

I'D BE PLUMB
TICKLED TO,
JUGHAID

"fORE AUNT
LOWEEZV MUST
BE PUTTIN' ON A
BODACIOUS FEED

NOPE--SHE'S OFF
VISITIN'-- UNK SNUFFY
FIXED SUPPER

3li Shun

3'7Soup

inlredlent
• Receiving
guests
II Take up

TONIGHT

. .__.......___.

AXYDLBAAXB
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply atanda for another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten . .
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are aU
hints. Each day the code !etten are dll!'erent.

1

.

"
""·
:0: :PEANUTS

..•••

NEWS

'
MOVIE
-(MYSTERY-SUSPENSE) •• "R8-

.

II

CBYPTOQUOTES

I DON'T KNOW IF I'M
STANOIN6 ON A PITCJ.IER'S
MOUND OF. IN TI-lE
MIDDLE OF TI-lE ...

NCS LR 0 G

X QH

CS L

By J WV

SPICY DETAIL
.SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)
•
Most Mexican food recipes call forone-half teaspoon of chili powder. ·
Maria Casias is not the average ,
cook, and so she uses a bit more chili·
- nearly 100 tons annually.
•,
As the head spice checker lor a:
Mexican food firm , Ms. Casias is
responsible for spicing !Tiillions of:
tacos, enchiladas, tamales and other~
Mexican varieties.

TOBACCO STATE
WINSTON.SALEM, N.C. (AP) ...;
A replica here. of the Uberty Bell in'

· ~~~;! ?·~ u~s., ~.•~.;~:·~~~~&amp;:~ ~.''; ~.~ y c • •.;.~~~~ of more than
l"g V
·

Q CFL

B YJ W V

JQ

:M R

M iH'st'R
0 Q L MS

X Q It ·

N

cs ,

csL RoG .

- CYOQHS YRWRHXR
Yeaterday'a Cryploqaote: COURAGE IS LOOKING A
SALESCLERK STRAIGIIT IN TilE EYE AND SAYING YOU'D
LIKE SOMETHING 1\ LITTLE CHEAPER.-ANON
.
'

\.

''BreaklngPolnt"197T

(I)IIJ(J)

1:30
2:00
2:30
3:45

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

l

lc" 1853

11:28 Cil NEWS UPDATE
11:30 CIJ.fl2l8 NEWS
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
ClJ
PROGRAMMING
UNANNOUNCED
(J) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
!l1J MCGUFFEY LANE
12:00 CIJD TOMORROW Hoat : Tom
Snyder. Gueet: Jimmy Piersall. (60
mina.)
(]) MOVIE -(SUSPENSE) .. \!o

1:15'

lodgiDga ·

~

IIams and Janie Fricke' (Cioaed
Coplioned) (60 mino.)
1DJ NEWS
([\ TBS EVENING NEWS
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CIJ NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
1DJ OVER EASY Guest: Anno Marla
Alberghetti. Host: Hugh Downs .
(Qloaed Caplionad)
Cil NEWS UPDATE
Cil JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
ClJ(jD) NEWS
(J) DAVEALLENATLARGE
1DJ DICK CAVEn SHOW
([\ MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• "ntoot-

1:00

%1 Flnt
Clnemucope
film

.aARNEY

.Rt. 3~ Pomeroy. She took thii:d place In showmilnship.
Judgmg took place Wednesday at the Meigs County
Fair.

1 1: 15

(poetpcne)

PARSON TUTTLE-·
WOULD 1/0U COME
OVER TO OUR
HOUSE AN'AST
TH' BLESSIN'?

aa part ot the convention
coverage.
CIJ DR. JACK VAN IMPE
(J) FOR THE RECORD 'Harvaat•
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CIJ 700 CLUB
IDJ THIS IS EPHEMERA Part II.
(J) GOOD NEIGHBORS
IDJ CAMERA THREE 'Kendo: Paih
ot the Sword'
(]) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) •• \!o

(J) AUSTINCinUMITS'DonWil·

charges
!'I WitneSsed
!I Put on-

32 Aida's "0
Patrie-"
13Frotlmove

OUTSTANDING FEl\IALE OF the Open Class a'nd
4-:H division, Polled Hereford at the Meigs County Fair
Wednesday was the animal owned by Lea Ann Gaul,

MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
ffiMOVIE-(DRAMA) ..•• "Norm•

10:58
11 :00

I Swampy place l Subway
U Love object
entrance
14 Teenager's
ZEve or forest
CGOeem
I Ty Cobb's
6 CelUc
nlclmame
Yesterday's Allawer
Neptune
4 Lamprey
11 Bueball 's
5 Intrude
!'I Bride's
II Cooked
[)ryldale
I Ntlmlsthrough
party
17 Indite
matist'a
18
Decays
Z9
One
kind
18 Abeorb
concerns
ZZ
Pintado
fish
afsong
28 Headed up
7 Ready
Zl Black Sea
10 Carried
Z1 Lytton
for war
peninsula
31 Fill
heroine
10 Country
Z4
Intolerant
'
with pride
ZZ Wine
boy (sl.)
011e
•Grab
quality (Fr.) U Record
~. (11.)
!I Sotmd from '
Z3Fllvver
cover
37 Grampus
tbe nest
25 Stingy
12 Maller
one (sl. )
r.-'T.""''"ft"'"""T'r'""'
!I Criminal

here.

..
'
·
and presented awards were , 1-r, "'erri Pullins and
OUTSTANDING MEMB
EllS-Selected as out- RaJ h
'
standing representatives of their respective
P Jordan both 4-H members, Scott McKinney,
o~ganizations at the Meigs County Fair Wednesday VICA, Bob Lee, FFA, and Kim Bi~chfield, FHA."

~hange .

Cil

( (NEWSPAPJ:R ENTERPRISE ASST'I.I

ACROSS

GASOLINE ALLEY

SECOND CHAMPION FEMALE of the open class
and 4-H division was the polled Hereford of Rogie Gaul,

7:58
8:00

~

10:15
10:28
1D:30

'·

TAKES CHAMPION STEER HONORS - Tbe reserve champion steer, 4-H divison, was won by an
animal owned by Lori Robinson, Rt. 2, Coolville.

have a cinch i!' the heart
queen would drop doubleton
or the spade king were held by
East. Neither of those favorable situations existed, but
Phillip was able to retain the
spade finesse option and find
a lucky end play that let him
avoid the spade finesse.
He won the club in his hand
and cashed dummy's ace and
king of trumps. Then he.took
dummy's ace of clubs and
ruffed the last club.
That eliminated the clubs
from his band and dummy and
got rid of three clubs from
each defen4fr. Then be pla,yed
bill ace and king of diamonds.
Finally he led a small trump.
West was in with the queen
of trumps. He didn't have any
cards left except SJlades and
had to lead the suit. That took
care of the first spade finesse.
The second spade finesse was
unnecessary since .one spade
would go on dummy's fourth
diamond.
Note, that this end play was
a lucky one. West·had to have
that exact 5-3-2-3 distribution.
On the other hand, it could not
cost South anything. If West
had held an extra club or diamond he would have led it.
South would still get to discard one spade on the long
diamond and take the spade
finesse.
.

Alberghetti. Host : Hugh Downs.
oaed Captioned)
ID ABC NEWS
NEWS UPDATE
CIJ D CROSS WITS
CIJ COMETOTHEWATEII
ill HOGAN'S HEROES
(I) !DJID FACE THE MUSIC
CD LUCY SHOW
Ill([\ TIC TAC DOUGH
(J) ·MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
!l1J. NEWS
IDJ DICK CAVEn SHOW
CIJ. HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
CIJ ZOLA LEVIn
ill ALLIN TIE FAMILY
(I) THE '80VOTE:DEMOCRATIC
NATIONAL CONVENTION The
exact starting time and length of
convention coverage is subject to
change. 20·20 may be broadcast
aa part of the convention
coverage.
Cll COUNTRY ROADS
IIJ(I) JOKER'S WILD
(J) DICK CAvEn SHOW
!l1J!ALL THAT JAZZ
IDJ, MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
!l2l 8
NASHVILLE ON THE
ROAD
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CIJ.Cll 1D80DEMOCRATICNA·
TIONAL CONVENTION The e•acl
starting time and length of convention coveJaoe ia subject to

'

', ~' '11111 Mte Is the center o(.

'mnerlt'll's tobacco industry, ac.
counting for'1l3 percent of total u.s;
production. Some 270,000 · people
grow the cash crop and 26,800 more
are employed in manufacturing
cigarettes and other tobacco products, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco reports.

�: t - 1 U t;: UdU.)' ..lt:IIU11t i 1 ' '41UWt:l)Ut ~· 1 V U&amp; C I UJ 1 u . 1 .1 j u.u .")Ua) 1 1 ~'-'b· .n, ....uv

DICKTRACY

8-The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePort-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 14, !saO

lt\1\}f.\.0 m'il. ~. THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

.

~ ~ ~~ r.;

byHenri ArnotdandBoble e

Unscra.nble these lour Jumbles ,
Or'!e letter to each square. to form
four ordinary words.

Scenes from the 1980 Meigs County Fair

TELEVISION
VIEWING
AUG. 14, 1D80

0

10
'·

I I I

JLJ5T MAKE YOUR~HF' COMF- Y
A~OARD.

DAHLit.IG-- WHILE I
GO FILE A FLIGHT PLAN-AND POWDER MY NOSE

.....9

~

WHAT'5 SHE L)P
TO, TURr.liN' SO
~WE;ET ·ALL OF
A IJUDDEN 'I

QUE5T10t.l-- WHY
DO I Ml!i&gt;TRUST
THAT FeMALE

8:00

•••

t
I J ·I

IMOYPLE

~

KJ

WHAI YOU NEED
"TO KeEP YOUR:
SALANCE.

gested by the abOve cartoon.

.
Y ester day s
.

I

rI I

(]) MOVIE ·(DRAMA)
"Deflaftce"1SNIO
([\ ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
([\ ABC NEWS
(J) IDJ ZOOM
8:30 CIJ .Cl) NBC NEWS
Cil MUSIC
([\ I LOVELUCY
([\
CAROL BURNEn AND
FRIENDS
0 (J) !l1J CBS NEWS
(J)
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS

(fil OVEA EASY Guest: Anna Maria

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug -

Print answer here:

. ... . ...,

tiJ IJ (1).ii)®)!DJ. NEWS
CIJ BACKYARD
.

••l!o

b

FOMIT

CAPTAIN EASY

EVENING

I1I J

8:58
7 :00

{Answers tomorrOw)
Jumllles: GUILD PROVE CLEAVE APIECE
Answer: Avoided publicity when they formed their
partnership-ELOPED
7:30

.,

.

·,

:-: • • '

·• • &gt;" ·

, ;.~ ·;~ti: '1

.

.lutnl*look No. 14,conlainlftg ,10 puzNs,lsavallablefarS1.TIJ,_tpll._.

daring Meigs County fair-goers. The ride features· 8
gigantic circular track around which a closed car
travelll, and is upside-do~ at the top of the loop.

SUPER-UJOPS POPULAR - The Super-Loops a
new ride attraction of the Bates Brothers Amusem~nt
Company, has ·been providing thrills to the more

tromJumb.. ,clothlanew•peper,BoxM,Norwood, N.J.07&amp;ca.lncfudeyour
name. addrtll, alp oodt and mlltt cMcltt payable ta Newap.pelhooka.

BORN LOSER

... ..

HAV~

A&lt;oJ5tJ
'{OLlR~L..~ OOI..IAL TO
F{;W M\D &lt;?U~IOR
'(Ot.J

' CHAMPION BULL
'
GRAND
Taking
grand·
champion honors at the Meigs County Fair Wednesday, polled Herefords, open class beef judging, was
the animal owned by David Gloeckner, "Country Road

Farm" Rt. 2, Racine. The animal tipped the stales of
2,600 pounds. This is the second consecutive year the ·
animal has taken grand champion honors.

"'1

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

10~!

"~

End play drives home slam

.
'~

NORTH

!

1· 14-80

+864

\fAK2

tQJ97
+AH

WEST

't'E5, ANNIE ..J'~E BEEN
GOING OVER AND OVER
TKESE FIGURES ·~ THERE
MUST BE Ai'l ERROR BUT
[CAN'T fiND IT! ...

··IF THESE FIGURES !iERE A(CIJMTE,
"BI6 CHEESE IHTERHATIONAL'S"
INCOME OOJLD COtltE TO
AQUARTER OF THE GROGG

EAST

+ K 10702

+9 3

\fQlOB

+as

\fu

+JIP9

• 10 8 4 3
+QB632

SOUTH
+AQJ

\fU743

MATIOHAL PRODUCT!

· +AK2

+K7

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

'

'

...
:.\
'
'·.'

West

Nor!~

Pass
Pass
Pass

2\f

Eut
Pass
Pass

s\f
Pass

Pass

I+

Pus

Opening lead:+ J
ALLEYOOP
judging, at the Meigs County Fair Wednesday was the
animal owned by David Gloeckner, "Country Road
Farm", Rt. 2, Racine.

RESERVE GRAND cHAMPION - The reserve
grand champion bull, polled Hereford, open class beef

TAKE' THE INTRUDER.." '

PRISONER! .TONir:: .i

OUR. FATHER,ES', '.iBAN ,

WIU DETERMINE
'THEIR

TOP CHAMPION STEER - The grand champion
steer, 4-H division was won by an animal owned by
David Gaul of Chester. David was alllo ~rand cham-

By Oswald Jacoby
ud Alu Sontag

FATE.'

Here is a hand from a rubher bridse game in Manchester, England, as reported IJy
International Popular Bridge.
As you can see, Phillip
Laddin, the declarer, would

pion showman. Rodney Tripp was reser-Ve champion
showman and third place showman was Lea Ann Gaul.

~
f

_ _ _ _"'_

_

_

_

by lHOMAS JOSEPH
40 Helmut Sdunldl,
1 Seaaonlng
for one (abbr.)
5 City in Peru 41 Aiconqulan

Me or

It was

lady?

Wh4 are 401..1
Clovia's
holed --~c::t suqqestion r
L.IP

8COmer

it IAI&lt;+ch

rent

out

mone4~

Slim?

.· WINNIE
I'M

THINKIN'
ABOUT
IT!

BUT WE GOT
PlENTY GOIN I
FOR US
RIGHT NOW

~URE, BUT·
WHAT V IXEN'S
GOT IN MIND IS

LEGITIMATE. AND
IT COULP MEAN

tJ/6 8UCK6.~~1

DOWN

BESIVES, IT'S A
PERFECT PLACE FOR
US TO LAUNPER OUR
SYNI71CATE

DOUGH/

Rae" 1171
([\ MOVIE -(COMEDY) •• "H•m-

meramlth Ia Out".1Q72
IIJ(J)(j)J CAMPAIGN '80: DEMoCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION The exact ataning tjm&amp; and
length of con~ention coverage Ia

aubject to change.
(J) U.S.CHRONICLE 'AtlanllcCity:
Wlnnera and Loaars'

IDl BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL 'Our
Tlmea' A Bill Moyera eaaay,liateri'· '
lno and responding to a variety of
thoughtful points of 'llliaw on the
atateofthenation in the 1980's. Ita
recent pnt and ita near future. (60

mtnY

il2l. THE '80VOTE:DEMOCRA·
TICNAnDNALCONYENTIONThe
exact starting time and length of
convention coverage ia subject to

change . 20·20 may be broadcast
8:30
8:58
8:00
11:30
10:00

Rt. a; Pomeroy. The animal was judged Wednesday at
the Meigs County Fair.

''Crtmebu•t•r•"

!l1J

tlectlon of Fe•r"

12:30

D(J) CBSLATEMOVIE'GRAND

JURY' 1~77 Stars: Lealie Nielsen,
Barry Sulll~an . Bobby and .lenny
ire 1 young couple trying to make a
life tor themselves when they meet
anotderandmoreexperiencedman
who helps them out both socially
and financially .
CIJ KOINONIA
CllNEWS
([\
ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBALLREPLAY
CIJ ROBERT SCHULLER
!l1J I BELIEVE
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
([\ MOVIE -(WESTERN) •• ~
"Seven Waye from Sundown"

11180

4:00 CIJ 700 CLUB
5:30 Cil SOUND OF THE SPIRIT
5:40 ([\RAT PATROL

S4 Mountain

pus

I'D BE PLUMB
TICKLED TO,
JUGHAID

"fORE AUNT
LOWEEZV MUST
BE PUTTIN' ON A
BODACIOUS FEED

NOPE--SHE'S OFF
VISITIN'-- UNK SNUFFY
FIXED SUPPER

3li Shun

3'7Soup

inlredlent
• Receiving
guests
II Take up

TONIGHT

. .__.......___.

AXYDLBAAXB
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply atanda for another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten . .
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are aU
hints. Each day the code !etten are dll!'erent.

1

.

"
""·
:0: :PEANUTS

..•••

NEWS

'
MOVIE
-(MYSTERY-SUSPENSE) •• "R8-

.

II

CBYPTOQUOTES

I DON'T KNOW IF I'M
STANOIN6 ON A PITCJ.IER'S
MOUND OF. IN TI-lE
MIDDLE OF TI-lE ...

NCS LR 0 G

X QH

CS L

By J WV

SPICY DETAIL
.SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)
•
Most Mexican food recipes call forone-half teaspoon of chili powder. ·
Maria Casias is not the average ,
cook, and so she uses a bit more chili·
- nearly 100 tons annually.
•,
As the head spice checker lor a:
Mexican food firm , Ms. Casias is
responsible for spicing !Tiillions of:
tacos, enchiladas, tamales and other~
Mexican varieties.

TOBACCO STATE
WINSTON.SALEM, N.C. (AP) ...;
A replica here. of the Uberty Bell in'

· ~~~;! ?·~ u~s., ~.•~.;~:·~~~~&amp;:~ ~.''; ~.~ y c • •.;.~~~~ of more than
l"g V
·

Q CFL

B YJ W V

JQ

:M R

M iH'st'R
0 Q L MS

X Q It ·

N

cs ,

csL RoG .

- CYOQHS YRWRHXR
Yeaterday'a Cryploqaote: COURAGE IS LOOKING A
SALESCLERK STRAIGIIT IN TilE EYE AND SAYING YOU'D
LIKE SOMETHING 1\ LITTLE CHEAPER.-ANON
.
'

\.

''BreaklngPolnt"197T

(I)IIJ(J)

1:30
2:00
2:30
3:45

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

l

lc" 1853

11:28 Cil NEWS UPDATE
11:30 CIJ.fl2l8 NEWS
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
ClJ
PROGRAMMING
UNANNOUNCED
(J) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
!l1J MCGUFFEY LANE
12:00 CIJD TOMORROW Hoat : Tom
Snyder. Gueet: Jimmy Piersall. (60
mina.)
(]) MOVIE -(SUSPENSE) .. \!o

1:15'

lodgiDga ·

~

IIams and Janie Fricke' (Cioaed
Coplioned) (60 mino.)
1DJ NEWS
([\ TBS EVENING NEWS
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CIJ NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
1DJ OVER EASY Guest: Anno Marla
Alberghetti. Host: Hugh Downs .
(Qloaed Caplionad)
Cil NEWS UPDATE
Cil JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
ClJ(jD) NEWS
(J) DAVEALLENATLARGE
1DJ DICK CAVEn SHOW
([\ MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• "ntoot-

1:00

%1 Flnt
Clnemucope
film

.aARNEY

.Rt. 3~ Pomeroy. She took thii:d place In showmilnship.
Judgmg took place Wednesday at the Meigs County
Fair.

1 1: 15

(poetpcne)

PARSON TUTTLE-·
WOULD 1/0U COME
OVER TO OUR
HOUSE AN'AST
TH' BLESSIN'?

aa part ot the convention
coverage.
CIJ DR. JACK VAN IMPE
(J) FOR THE RECORD 'Harvaat•
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CIJ 700 CLUB
IDJ THIS IS EPHEMERA Part II.
(J) GOOD NEIGHBORS
IDJ CAMERA THREE 'Kendo: Paih
ot the Sword'
(]) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) •• \!o

(J) AUSTINCinUMITS'DonWil·

charges
!'I WitneSsed
!I Put on-

32 Aida's "0
Patrie-"
13Frotlmove

OUTSTANDING FEl\IALE OF the Open Class a'nd
4-:H division, Polled Hereford at the Meigs County Fair
Wednesday was the animal owned by Lea Ann Gaul,

MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
ffiMOVIE-(DRAMA) ..•• "Norm•

10:58
11 :00

I Swampy place l Subway
U Love object
entrance
14 Teenager's
ZEve or forest
CGOeem
I Ty Cobb's
6 CelUc
nlclmame
Yesterday's Allawer
Neptune
4 Lamprey
11 Bueball 's
5 Intrude
!'I Bride's
II Cooked
[)ryldale
I Ntlmlsthrough
party
17 Indite
matist'a
18
Decays
Z9
One
kind
18 Abeorb
concerns
ZZ
Pintado
fish
afsong
28 Headed up
7 Ready
Zl Black Sea
10 Carried
Z1 Lytton
for war
peninsula
31 Fill
heroine
10 Country
Z4
Intolerant
'
with pride
ZZ Wine
boy (sl.)
011e
•Grab
quality (Fr.) U Record
~. (11.)
!I Sotmd from '
Z3Fllvver
cover
37 Grampus
tbe nest
25 Stingy
12 Maller
one (sl. )
r.-'T.""''"ft"'"""T'r'""'
!I Criminal

here.

..
'
·
and presented awards were , 1-r, "'erri Pullins and
OUTSTANDING MEMB
EllS-Selected as out- RaJ h
'
standing representatives of their respective
P Jordan both 4-H members, Scott McKinney,
o~ganizations at the Meigs County Fair Wednesday VICA, Bob Lee, FFA, and Kim Bi~chfield, FHA."

~hange .

Cil

( (NEWSPAPJ:R ENTERPRISE ASST'I.I

ACROSS

GASOLINE ALLEY

SECOND CHAMPION FEMALE of the open class
and 4-H division was the polled Hereford of Rogie Gaul,

7:58
8:00

~

10:15
10:28
1D:30

'·

TAKES CHAMPION STEER HONORS - Tbe reserve champion steer, 4-H divison, was won by an
animal owned by Lori Robinson, Rt. 2, Coolville.

have a cinch i!' the heart
queen would drop doubleton
or the spade king were held by
East. Neither of those favorable situations existed, but
Phillip was able to retain the
spade finesse option and find
a lucky end play that let him
avoid the spade finesse.
He won the club in his hand
and cashed dummy's ace and
king of trumps. Then he.took
dummy's ace of clubs and
ruffed the last club.
That eliminated the clubs
from his band and dummy and
got rid of three clubs from
each defen4fr. Then be pla,yed
bill ace and king of diamonds.
Finally he led a small trump.
West was in with the queen
of trumps. He didn't have any
cards left except SJlades and
had to lead the suit. That took
care of the first spade finesse.
The second spade finesse was
unnecessary since .one spade
would go on dummy's fourth
diamond.
Note, that this end play was
a lucky one. West·had to have
that exact 5-3-2-3 distribution.
On the other hand, it could not
cost South anything. If West
had held an extra club or diamond he would have led it.
South would still get to discard one spade on the long
diamond and take the spade
finesse.
.

Alberghetti. Host : Hugh Downs.
oaed Captioned)
ID ABC NEWS
NEWS UPDATE
CIJ D CROSS WITS
CIJ COMETOTHEWATEII
ill HOGAN'S HEROES
(I) !DJID FACE THE MUSIC
CD LUCY SHOW
Ill([\ TIC TAC DOUGH
(J) ·MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
!l1J. NEWS
IDJ DICK CAVEn SHOW
CIJ. HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
CIJ ZOLA LEVIn
ill ALLIN TIE FAMILY
(I) THE '80VOTE:DEMOCRATIC
NATIONAL CONVENTION The
exact starting time and length of
convention coverage is subject to
change. 20·20 may be broadcast
aa part of the convention
coverage.
Cll COUNTRY ROADS
IIJ(I) JOKER'S WILD
(J) DICK CAvEn SHOW
!l1J!ALL THAT JAZZ
IDJ, MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
!l2l 8
NASHVILLE ON THE
ROAD
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CIJ.Cll 1D80DEMOCRATICNA·
TIONAL CONVENTION The e•acl
starting time and length of convention coveJaoe ia subject to

'

', ~' '11111 Mte Is the center o(.

'mnerlt'll's tobacco industry, ac.
counting for'1l3 percent of total u.s;
production. Some 270,000 · people
grow the cash crop and 26,800 more
are employed in manufacturing
cigarettes and other tobacco products, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco reports.

�----- -------------·

(

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug.l4, 1980
I

11- The l&gt;aily Sentinel, Mto~dl epu•rh~ornel·ov.O .. Thur..t•v. Aue.1( 1980
7
Yard Sale--·--GLANCES
by Gill Fox

Rising feed prices put crunch on profits
WASIDNGTON (AP ) - Cattle a nd
hog producers, currently seeing
some improvement in market
prices, are being saddled with rising
feed costs which will put a crunch on
profit margins, says the Agric ulture
Department.
That may lead to some slowdown
in meat production over the next six
months from what had been anticipated earlier. It also could add
further to retail costs of beef and
pork, which have been rising s ince
late spring.
A major !actor in g rain becoming
• more expensive is this summer's
heat wave and drought, whi ch have
cut deeply into harvest prospects for
corn and soybeans.
" Livestock prices, particula rly
hog prices, rose sharply in July and
early August, raising gross returns
to producers," the department 's

outlook board said Wednesday.
" However , feed costs a lso increased
rapidly, offsetting much of the

gain.''
In a related report, the department said the number ofcattle being
fed for the slaug hter market as of
Aug . I in seven major beef states
totaled about 6.89 million head, down
4 percent from a year-ago.
Marketings or " fed" cattle in July,
at 1.3!&gt; million head, were down 8
percent from a year earlier. Tnat
was the smallest number sold during
the month since 1975, the report said.
But apparently recent im·
provements in fed cattle prices have
stimulated feedlot operators and
fanners. Also, as pastures have burned from drought a nd heat, many
producers have been forced to sell
younger cattle to the feedlots.
Last month, the report said,
placements of new cattle and calves

in feedlots rose t o 1.52 million head,
a 25 percent' gain from a year
earlier. ·
Looking a t the livestock 'and meat
situation in general, the outlook ·
board's report said :
" Hog prices at Omaha, Neb., incr eased from $43 per 100 pounds in
ea rly July to aimost $50 in mid·
Aug ust. Prices increased as hog
slaughter declined from spring and
year-earlier levels ."
However, it added, hog s laughter
is expected "to begin increasing substantia lly" in September, with a further seasonal increase in October.
Thus, hog prices could drop shar·
ply to the " mid-to-upper $30s" per
100 pounds before rising later in the
year as production of hogs and
-broiler chickens declines seasonally
aga in.
But the rise in production costs -

including higher feed prices - •'may
result in less pork being produced in
1981 than earlier expected," the
report said.
' 'Since many hogs are produced on
livestock-grain fanns, some farmers may elect to sell their com
directly (for cash) rather than
market it through hogs. "
For feedlot catUe, the report said
placements of new animals In fattening pens ·~ will increase above
year-earlier levels" the remainder
of 1980, but rising feed expenses
" will moderate the rate of in·

crease.' '
In its feedlot report, the department said the Aug. 1 inventory included the number of cattle · and
their percentage of year-earlier
numbers in the following states:
Arizona, 297,00() head in feedlots
on Aug. I and 118 percent of year·
earlier inventories; California, ·
590,000 and 64; Colorado, 700,000 and
87; Iowa, 1,13!&gt;,000 and 100; Kansas,
1,225,000 and 100; . Nebraska,
1,300,000 and 101; and Texas,
1,640,000 and 96.
WASIDNGTON (AP)- This year's
reduced U.S. corn harvest is having
a big impact on world grain reser-

YARD SALE August 13, 14,
. and 15th at 685 \-OCUSI
' • Street, Middleport . Many
• . YARD SALE

Public Notice

. on Pine Grove Road near
· Five Points. The Rapp
t • residence, 992·5344.

: · YARD

PUBLIC NOTICE
The ann ual report Form
990 PFofor the Kibble Foun. dation , Bernard Fultz ,
trustee. is avai lable for
public inspection at Bernard Fultz, Law Office, 2nd

St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
during regular business
hours for a period of 180

days

subsequent

publ ica tion of fh1s notice .

to

(8) 11 , 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17,

ltc

INTHECOURTOF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
Gwen D. Husk, '

Brenda Callaway, teens entertain; Pam Rie~l, quick
meals; Terrie Starcher, outdoor cookery I; Erica
Kessinger, tricks for treats.

· August15 x 16.

V,

Case No . 17577
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

James E. Husk, whose

last known address was 201
Sou.t h Union Street, Galion.
Oh1o
and
whose
w~ereabouts are unknown,
Will take notice that on

August 6, 1980, Gwen D,.
whose address

Piano

iS

Det4verv
Grove,
Ohu)
45738,_toted her Complain\

for D1vorce against him in'

Evangelist .
Lawrence
Bush Pastor. Everyone
we lcome .

STILL OFFERING
ICE CREAM
With Any Unico
FREEZER OR .
REFRIGERATOR
PLUS:
S25 DISCOUNT

:1

rlI

Write .vo~&gt;r own ad and order by mail with this
coupon. cancel your ad by phone when you get
res ults. Money not refundable.

I
I

:a

StoPOMERQYils

!

LANDMARK

Main St.
Pomeroy 992·2181

t'

· YARD SALE . Leiving Rd.
· West Columbia, W.Va . 10·?
. ,Aug . 14. 15, 16, 17, 18.
c lethes, dishes, books,

toaster, Mr. Coffee, Avon
bot.tles, and lots of m isc.

YARD SALE on College

II

Address

1· '

Phone·
CLOTIDNG WINNERS-In the clothing division the
following will represent Meigs County at the State
Fair. Front row, 1-r , Renee Kaylor, tip to toe, mini
modes ; Susan Danner, dress up day wear; Renee

Trussell, lounging clothes; back, Tammy Calaway,
clothes for _school; Conrue Stout, coats and jackets;
Beth Ritchie, loungmg clothes ; Cindy Pitzer, clothing
complements; Lisa Collins, active sports clothes. ·

Print one word in each ·
space below. ·each In - ·

r - Yard Sale

9-Wanted to Buy

give price. The Sentinel
to

. 1~!5chool t lnttructlor~

classify , edit or reject

Raellt, TV
&amp;CI Rtpalr
lt-Yfantad To Oo

16----

any ad . Your ad will be

in

the

proper

classification if ;you ' ll

I
I
I

I
)
)
)

l

23.
24.

4,

25.

5.

I

.~

.1.

"

----- - - .!

gold
silver

Pomeroy, OHl or call 992·
776(),

10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold . Dental gold and gold
ear pins . 675 ·3010.

FOR

lease, 8,300 sqUare feet in

Middleport, Ohio. $2.90 per
square

feet ,

equipment

lease, s1,000 .r&gt;er ·month.
Box 729A, Daity Sent ine l.

land contract. S300 down .
Write J. Bow land, 15068

Empire Rd., Thornville,
OH. 43076 . .

ll

n ice

" Maggie ' s

New Lisllng- NR ·U , '7 8 W ind·
sor trailer , like new, a ll bullt-l
ki tchen with ba r, living room ,
bedroom s, l ur nlture Included.

Muslsee to a

recla te. S1V100.

---_ __

forMenctay ·

Reupholstery, Fabr ic and
vinyl samples. Call 742·
2852 .
.
Real Estate

General

Housing
Headquarters

T;.~~~w
216 E. Second Street

Phone
1· ( 614 )-992·3325
REDUCED - A nice little country home with
batn, natural gas fur ·
nace, concrete front
porch, vinyl siding , utili ·

ly bldg. and large lot.
NOW$17,900.
FAMILY - 9 rooms, 3
bedrooms , 2 ba ths, fur·
nace, formal din ing ,

equipped kitchen, full
basement. 2 car garage
and 2 busin ess room s.

CHEAPIE

-

80' x24'

busi ness building with
bath, natura l gas. ci ty
water, and flue for wood

burne r . ldeallor shopor
small business.

13 LOTS -

With all uti I·

ities nearby . Will sell al l

dollar, or comptete estates.

Mostly alt fenced and a ll

pasture and farm land.

No item too large or too

minera l s

selling. Also do appra ising.

Highway.
SPACIOUS -

:H

lf-llllttllntlvHIItl
M-Pttl for Salt . "'

: GET VALUABLE training

'eFARM SUPPt.l ES

; and earn good money plus

Help Wanted

· as a young business person
t

some great gifts as a Sen ·

' llnel route carrier. Phone
: us right away and get on

. the eligibility list at 992·
· 2156 or 992·2157 .
: LADY OR girlliv~ in at109
• .S. 3rd Avenue, Moddleport,
· Ohio 992-2686
per hour, no ex·
: perlence necessary, start
. Immediately, for complete

· Information write to
: Bollns, Route 6, Box 221A,
. Athens, Ohio 45701

.

on

St ate

Good 10

room frame home . 3
king size bedrooms, 2

608 E.
MAif'!
11
.-·
POMEKOY, 0

- ...

992-~ll't.

NEW CONSTRUCTION
- NEW SUBDIVISION
- 6 room s, 11J2 story, J
bedroom hOme with Ph
ba ths on a beautiful

wooded

lot

on

Golf

- Thi s 3 bed room home
ha s a den, 2 baths, d in·
ing room, with a cozy
fireplace in living room ,
nice basem ent, on 5
acres
l e ve l
land .
Storage shed, 3 green

houses. $58,700.00 .
FARM- 25 acres w i th 1
floor plan, 2 bedroom
home, recently
re ·

modeled with a bUilt·in
kitchen . Paneling and

ca rpeting. $38,950 .00.
MIDDLEPORT basement,

2-3

bed ·

Housing
Headquarters

I,

I
I
I

I

.. l '

- ~---~ ~-....- _;..,;----------~ -~~·',

•

(II"

........
....
0.10

2 clan
Sdlya

••v•

...

Clllrge •

1.21

2. 2S '
l.7S

R.ch wont tVti' thtmlnlmwm 1S __... 114 cHfl Ptrworct 111rdly.

Ada rnnlntother thtn.consecutlwt dar• •111M cftarfH at ttlt 1 dly
r•tt.

Job?

·

In mtmery, Clrd ot Think\ and Oblhltry 1 'ctnfl par word, Sl.OO · I
' 1

mlnlmum . CIIhl~ttdVIftCt .

RT. 124·, Minersvil.l e. 1
acre/ ss ~ ooo . Septic, city
water, natural gas. 304-773·

5875.
65ACRES IN Meigs County
near Harrisonville, Ohio. 30
acres of t i l lable ground,

rest in pasture. Wood. two
ponds,

air

strip,

p lane

shed, $56,500. 742-2577 .

$3.500.00.
VERY NICE 3
bedroo m hOme, full
basement , WB FP , real·
ly neat, with garage and
work shop . Beautiful
rive r vi ew for S28,500.00.

A REAL BUY- 1 floor
plan, 2 bedroom home
with electric heat, utili·
ty
room , ga rage .

s- also open

9 to

Mon·

p.m . Full time staff!

REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trusset1949-2660
· Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

742-2474
OFFICE 992 ·22S9
STOP BY OUR EX ·
HI BIT AT THE MEIGS
1
\

FAIR!!

FOUR BEDROOM house,
949·2253
THREE BEDROOM house

District.
4323.
42

Phone

614-985·

Mobile Homes
tor Rent
BEDROOM

Mobile

Home, kitchen furnished .

Elderly couple preferred .
Deposit required, no pets .
992 ·2749,
THREE
mobile

BEDROOM
home
ap -

proximately

five

from Pomeroy or
d leport . 99:1-5858.

travel trailer with extras .

, agency Intake to complete
'•an application. Gallla·
' fiV\elgs C.A.A. Ceta Intake
, Unit, North Second and
, east Main Streets; Box 272,
. · Cheshire, Ohio 367·7342 or
;992-6629. An Equal Op·
,

: EXPERIENCED beauto co·
· an with managers liscen~e.
Located in Pomeroy, Ohoo.
992·{606.

Apartment
for Rent

44

home, real nice. Brown's

apartment

with

three

rooms and a ba.th in Mid·
dleport. t.arge rooms, tv
w ith cable, all utilities fur-

nished. Call M-F from 9·
4:30 at 992·3381.
46
Space lor Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7479 .

51
Household Goods
2 PIECE Gold nylon living

room suite . 8 months old .

$150. 992·73-46.

FOR SALE Brown hide·a ·
wav couch and matching

22 CUBIC INCH" self
defrosting refrigerator, 30
Inch drop end electric

range in excellent condition. Phone367·7209 .

53
Antiques
ATTENTION:
(IM PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.

Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections . Catl 614767·3167 or 557·3411 .
54

Misc. Merchanise

MIDO~E POR_T - Energy eff icient with insulated
&lt;.~lummum Sldmg. Very comfortable three bedroom
~ bath home, lull basement. $40,000.00.
'

CGII Bill Childs, M.g r.
992-2342

Rodney _Downing Broker.

FURNISHED apartment,
four rooms and bath . Call
992-5908.
_

DOUBLE , 2 bedroom

furnished . Adults
Noschildren
or

onlv.
pets .

Deposit . 992·2749 .
TWO BEDROOM apart·
ment co mp letely fur ·
nished, will conSider one
child, two miles ..out on 143 .

Deposit
required.

and.

references

Fulty Guaranteed
Ph . 664-6370

992· 2478

If no answer

Call698-3113
7·311 mo.- pd.

7-17·1 mo. pd .

3% down on $25,000; 5%

.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·2591
6·15-tfc

down on balance, FHA
-265 Subsidy Program .

FHA 245 Gradual PaymentMorl.
Open M·W·F 9:00 to 1: DO
By Appointment
Office 992·7544
Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore St.

ROOFING

J

new or repair guners
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and JHtintlng.
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

Call Howard
949-2862
949-2160
1-22-ttc

Pomeroy , OH .

ft

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT &amp;
TRUCKING
-Haul
Limestone ,

Custom
Print
Shop

and

novelty

shirts for politicians;
ball teams, business or
individuals.

Shirts $4.00 Each
"We print ALMOST
anything on ALMOST
anything!"

Ph. 614-949-2358

gravel, fill dirt
-Agric. lime spreading
- Backhoe work
-New and used farm
equipment
-Mechanical work on
farm equip., cars,
trucks.

742-2455

Evenings &amp; Weekends

56

8-8·1 mo .

· 63

Pets for Sale

HILLCRE ST

KENNELS.

Boarding , all breeds. Clean
indoor ·outdoor fac i lities .
A lso
AKC
registered

Cross,

Model, mower I su lky in·

eluded. 992-7549 .

David Yost or Patterson

Vegetable Stand on Rt. 338,
Ravenswood-Ferry Rd.

BUILDINGS ! I Atl steel
years. Exa mples ! I 30' x 48'
x 12' for $3,892 .00. 40' x 72'
x 14' for $5,972 .00. 48' x 72'
x 14' for $6,804 .00 . 60' x 125"
x 16' for $15 .857.00. Catl
for

2770.
Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
diameter 1011 on largest

end . $12 p-er ton. Bundled
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689.

QUILTS FOR sate , $25.00
each. Pearl Garnes, 669·
5141

bands, diamonds. Gold_pr
sliver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 5926-462.

Ford pi ckup, will trade or

55
Building Supplies
3/ 8 inch rebar- 17c per foot
by 20 ft . section o,nly . D.
Bumgardner Sales. Noble
Summit Rd ., Midd leport,
OH . 992·5724.
56
Pets for Sale
POODLE GROOM ING .
Judy Taylor . 614·367-7220.

Motorcycles

1974 SUZUKI $600. or trade
for car of equal va lu,e .

ches, class rings, weddlr;19

GOLD AND SILVE R
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS ,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,.
HIGHEST UP ·TO· DATE
PRICES , C:ONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP ,' MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL 992·3476.

--"'-

63

Livestock

GOAT KIDS for sale. 742·
2015.

81

Home

lots of new parts. S7oo. Both

I mprovf!ments

ca rs m ust be sold, will take
any reasonable offer. 992 ·

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning .
Steam cleaned.
Free

3273 .

estimate .

1978 DODGE MAGNUM .
A.C., am ·fm, low mileage,
exc . cond . 992-5094 .

1967 PONTIAC with a 1972
400 engine . 992·2640 .
1975 Oldsmobile Delta
. Roya le 88. Call Robert
Stewart a t 742-3006.
1972 CH EVELLE Mat ibu,
v-8 automatic for $275.00,
good work car . 949·2042.
1964 CHEVELLE six c ylin ·
der automatic tran ·
smission
new r ebuilt
motor, runs good, body
fai r, ma ke. exce llent wo rk
ca r . Can be seen at Roger

Hysell's garage or ca ll 992·
5388 .
1972 FORD T-Bi rd. Full

HOME

terpr ise Rd. , Pomeroy, Oh.

1973 MONTE Carlo, 74 ,000
miles, all extra's, excellent
running cond ition. Phone

367-7209

pain·

Gutters in need of

estim ates

are

provided.

83
excavating
J X F BACKHOE SER VICE liscensed and bonded, septic tank ln stall~tion,

water and gas

lines.
Excavating work
and transit layout. 992-7201.
BULLDOZER work, small
jobs a specially. Call 7422753.
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWI NG
Repairs,

MACHINE
service,

all

makes . 992-2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and service . We sharpen
Sc issors.

74

Motorcycl es

1980 YAMAHA XT250 on·
off motorcycle. Exc . cond .
m iles

NEEDING

992·

repai r? Is that roof beginning to leak? Call 992-3519,
992-3941. or 992·5126 and get
things a ll fixed up for that
bad weather thats on its
way . By the way, free

power, craguer s all the
way around , am·fm 1 e . 84
track, bOdy in f air cond.

5600 . 992·3661 . 42099 En-

Reasonable

rates. Scotchguard.
6309 or 742 ·2211 .
ted?

slab. SlOper ton . Delivered

OLD COl NS , pocket wal·

setl . Contact Gary Fife ,
992·2582

Sales, service and sup-

plies. In gt.,ound and
. above ground pools.
5-1-tfc

good work car, $500. Also

price

SET OF' Junior golf clubs.
John r eaford61h85-3961

VARIOUS . T.YPES of
musical equipment. 1978

slaughtering, cu s tom
processi ng / retail meat.

1973 Plymouth Satellite, 318

clear -span bUildings. Our
lowest p1·ice in over two

62
pick. 843·2242 or contact

992-S724

74

JONES Meat Packi ng

auto. , p. s., p .b ., exc.: cond .

Letart Falls, Ohio 247-2852.
corn. Silver Queen. You

Middleport, Ohio

• • • I I . . I " &amp; 0 1 - 0 ° 00 0 ' •0

1975 GRAVELY 612 tracto r
Andrew

31711 Noble sum II Rd.

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

with 50 inch mower. 742·

picked,

THE POOL PEOPLE

Washi ngton Co. Rd . 248, Gas range. $200 . new. 742·
Little Hocki ng , OH . 667· 24 16.
6133 .
75
Boats and
HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
Motors for Sale
BRUDE SOW, 14 months
and ponies and rid ing
old approximately 425 18 fl. Aluminum bOat. 20
le ssons.
Everything
imaginable in horse equip· . pounds, Hampshire, has horse Evinrude. 949· 2273.
had OM Iiiier. $175 .00 985·
ment . Blankets, belts,
boots, ett. English and 43-46 .
1976 GLAST RON boat 15 2f.J
Western . Ruth Re eve s
loot
lri-hau I 85 h.p. Mer(614) 698-3290.
FOR SALE or trade, suf. cury motro, power trim·
• folk ram. 7'42·3133 after 6 and tilt e.z. load trailer. All
p.m .
Farm Supplies
the extras. 742·2595.
&amp; blvestUEII
64
Ha y &amp; Grain
77
Camping
STRAW FOR sa le . 949-2822
Equipment
6'-'1___c_
F,_
a '-'
rm
= E, q,_,u::Jip"'m
= e::.
nl: __
1978 AMER·ICAN Traveler
.....
,_"
USED R-40 ditch witch
5th wheel camper trailer 31
with trencher . 1·6U·694·
foot. Like new. 742·2770
7842.
71
Autos for Sale
GRAVELY Tractor. 1971
1972 NOVA , 6 cy l.. auto ..

CANNING

Tomatoes,

Livestock

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

Dobermans. 614·446·7795 .

co. 614-992·2205.

Manor apts. Call992-7787.
FURNISHED
AP·ART MENT four rooms and ~alh
adults only no pets in Middleport . 992-3874.

22 Years Experience

Aft related equipment.

All types of root work,

collect today
qvarantees.

Summer Pri ces. Excelsior

CANNING &amp; FREEZING

Senior Citizens in Village

681

Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing,

Utility Buildings

COMPLETELY furn ished

Trailer Park . 992·3324
44Apartment
for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished apts. Phone992·5434.

on

Oho

Sizes
"From 30x30"

T-shirt

992 ·5434, 992 ·5914 or 9923129,

· RENTER'S assistance for

aide, cust(!dia l
,· aide.
If . you have
: previously applied: contact
, Gall ill ·Meigs Community
• Action AI)Emcy intake to
· have your application
: reevalutated.
New ap•plicants: contact Gallia-

~ Meigs community action

129-Qvick/ Easy TransfelS . $1.75

HEATING OIL. Buy now at
21 ft. fully self·contained

TWO BEDROOM mobile

REAL ESTATE

130-Swulei1-Sizes 38-56 .$1.75,

miles

Mid -

Albany,
North .

133-feshion llorneQuilting $1.75

cha ir . 992 -3139 after 5 p.m .

for rent with two baths;
two ca r garage in the
Eastern
L oca l School

Seat Jobs

Located 6 mile~ north of

H. L WRITESEL

Sizes from 4x6 to 12X40

Why put up with high pricessave dollaos. get bette~ quality!
Send for our NEW FALL-WINTER
PATTERN CATALOG. 94 patterns.
Foee Pattem Coupon (worth
SU 5). Catalog, $1.00.

DEAN'S
TRA'4.SMISSION
SPECIALISTS
Bebuilts·Repairs

PARK Fl NANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic

-

10011. Poinl NAME, ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, and STYU NUMBER.

7·31-fmo.

Farm Buildings
SMALL

243 West 17 SL, New Yorl, NY

Free Estimate
James Keesee
ph. 992· 2772

Real Estate Loans
11 1f:z% lnterest·30 Vrs.

191

Merenandlse

deposit · required . No pets.

2

yd.
e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks

ALL STEEL

llnlell name of yoorr lfipe~

Reatals
Houses for Rent

Windows

Experienced Operators
available for local work.
e2 rubber tire backhoes
el excavator hoe 11/4

Anne Adams
Pattern Depl

• Storm Windows
• Replacement

V.C. YOUNG II

8·7-l ·mo ..

'·

elnsulation
• Storm Doors

work
- concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estimates)

6·16-ttc

. te~chers

I

•I

rem~eling

- Roofing and gutter

• New Homes · ex·
tensive ren't_o deling
• Electri·cal work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

60-inch faboic.
$1.75 for uch Pltltrn. ~dd 51K
for uch patteon lor li11l-cflss
•!•mail and haftdli"' Send to:

timber. 2_

2 BEDROOM furnished
house. 992-5434, 992·5914 or
992·3129.

Gallia ·

1portun1ty EmploYer.

....~--~~------.-----------.J

and

m iles off Route 7 on Silver

41

: van dr'iver, cook's aide,

11 Wontt or Unftr
I day

A

gas , royalties . Has pond,

furnace. with a 62x52
lot. $19,000.00 .
BUILDING LOTS -

day and Friday until 8

WE NOW HAVE NICE
HOMES AND BAR·
GAINS FOR ·you TO
SEE . ALL PRICES
AND SIZE .' WHAT
WOULD YOU LIKE?
CALL 992 -3325 or
992-3876.

35
Lots &amp; Acreage
EASTERN Local School
District . 38 acres. Free

roo ms, bath, F .A . gas

New subdivision, close
in, large lots, wooded
se tting .
Start
at

' som ygoes the sh irtma ke~-•
.gatherong of fabro c at shoulders.
yoke lo&lt; a gently femin ine effect .
No waist seam-sash it or freefloat it. Send now I
Pronted Patte~n 4959: Misses
Sizes 8. 10. 12. 14. 16, 18. 20.
Size 12 (bust 34) takes 2'4 yards

127-Afghans 'n' Doilies ... $1.75

5

level lot
garage .

car

Ohio, Main street, ap·
prox imately 140 feet fran·
tage, business bui lding and
home on property . Phone

room, 2 story house w ith

kitchen, large shaded
2

PRIME COMMER1 CAL
PROPERTY, Pomeroy ,

Ridge, $450 an acre. 9853594.

$17,200.00.
OPEN 6 days a week -

and

Business Buildings

back dec k. full base·
men I. $42 .000.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT

· positions: Teachers aide-

Rates and Other lnformatjon

two bedroom; 1967 Bu,ddy ,
.12 x so. 2 bedroom.
B&amp;S

spring

. pl ications for tht! following

•!

bedroom;
1968
New
Moon,12 x 60 with eKpando,

Course Road . F ir eplace,

; Agency is accepting ap·

I'

two

after 5:30p.m . 992 ·3779.

· Meigs Community Action

i

II

'I
I
I
I
I

: NEED

11- u,.........,

M

1

· $9.85

'

a:

I-

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box729
.
Pomeroy, oh·. 45769

1.

x

bedroom ; 1971 Liberty , 1-4 x
two bedroom; 196l!
Atlantic,
12 x 60 two

34

Refinishing,

baths, natural gas fore·

I lltfrleeretlllt
IJ-OMtral H.. llnt
116-M.H. R.,.lr

l4

x

1971

65

Upholstery "

Rebuilding,

ed air furnace, modern

11-PI•mblnf&amp; EIICIWitlng
11-llp:IWiftllt
14-lltetrtcal

three bedroom;

Cameron,

Professional
Services

for only $6,500.
FARM LANO - 70 ac ·
· res of nice land. Woods,

OSby (Ossie) Martin, 9926370.

.'

1975 Western Mansion l-4

70

Pt. Pleasant. W.VA.
675·4424.

Gold, silver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
items. Antique furniture ,
glass or china, will pay top

small . Check prices before

e Sl!fltVICIIS

4 P .M. Dilly
12 Noon llhttllrt

--,.......--~. 1 :

35. _ _ _ _ _...:_

'

desks,

jewelry ,

Complete
households .
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,

H - Auto Repair

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

----:-----...,, I;

33. _ . _

-

48x10 mob ile home, S28oo,

11-Hamtlmprovemantl

------------ I:

12.
13.
14.
15.
16.

Wanted to Buy

U- AntiCIUft
M- MIIc. MtrcMndiae

&amp; Acc'enorln

36---Rul Rlfatt WtntH
37- Roalton

29.
30. -----~ 1 1
II
31. _____
.. 32.

9

lee boxes, antiques, etc .

U - LOIIIAcr. . tt

8.

' 11'

• -lioneer , Osby A. Martin.
_(no junk)

eRENTALS

,,_ ""to,,,.,.,

IOf'SIIt
.
n - Farms for Salt
l4-luslnns lullclllntl

28 .

----

..every Friday night at 7
. p .m . Auctioneer Howard
· ·aeasley, apprentice auc-

dollars, sterling, etc ., wood

ri-AUtos ter Slit
PJ--VHI &amp; 4 W. D.
P4- Mottrcyclts

Jl - Homll for Salt'
32-Mobllt+tomn

7.

1

vice, call 992·6370 or in
:West Virginia 773-5471 . Sale

OLD HOUSE &amp; yard sale .

eTRANSPORTATION

eREALESTATE

26.
27 .

10.·

bicycle ; Eddie Collins, adventures in woodworking;
Doug Beaver, learning and building; back, . Terry
Smith, fishing ; Kila Young, refinished furniture; Tom
Pullins, the craftsman; Lisa Riggs; let's explore the
outdoors, II; Teresa Dorst, a redecorated room.

Sen len

6.

9. _ __

MIS CE LLANE OUS WINNERS - -- In th e
miscellaneous division the following will represent
Meigs County a t the State Fair. Front, 1-r, Donia
Crane, eKploring our insect world ; Scott Starcher,

Opportunity

22 .

2.
3.

New, used, or antiques, in ·
eluding homes, farms, or
liqu idation sales . Get top
dollar ~ List with the man
who has over 25 years in
the new, used and antique
furniture business.
We
take consignments. For in·
formation and pickup ser·

Yord Sale

12- Trvc1t1 for Salt
U- Liv.ttoclt
64-Har I Grain
61-S... I Ptrtlllltr

n-Mon.,y to Loan
2J- Proffttlonal

:t:l.

1. _______

OSSI E'S AUCT ION House,
. 20 N. 2nd Street, Middleport, Ohio. We sell one
piece or entire households.

6136. Snowvi lie· Harrisonv ille area .

61 - Pirm ltiVtJmtnt
61- Wantect to lwv ·

IIUslntu

21 -

17,
18.
19.
20.

Wanted
For Sate
Announcement
For Rent

Complete Service. PhOne

cocker spaniel. 985-4189.

&amp; LIVESTOCK

eFINANCIAL

These cash ra tes
include discount

1check the proper box
, j'_below.

&amp;Auction

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,

Part miniature collie, part

~ome
antiques . Mrs .
Or land Gilland , 50720
Osborn Rd. (2168 Old
Lickskillet Rd .) Reed sville, Oh. Just off Success
Rd. Starts Thurs ., Aug . 14
9·6 1111 everything Is gone :
Closed Sundays.

lhe old brewe ry , makes
garage, plu s storage.

Opportunity

SUPERMARKET

23

si - Houttholtt Goordt
U-cl, TV, RaGioEqulpmtnt

J1 - HIIpw1 nttd
12-SituatH Wanted
1l-lnluranu
14- Busintu Trtlnlnt

if you desc r ibe fully,

Public Sale

••

TWO 10 week old puppies.

furniture ,

21

$6500, land contract with
$500 down or will negotiate
cash ' sale . Also one
bedroom, built-in bunks,

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

- Addonsand

Pullins
Excavating

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Mobile Home Sales

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

You' ll get better results

put

. household furnishings, car·
pet. beds, refrigerator,
· · stove, sink, storm windows
~ and doors, pictures and ac·
· cessories, outside doors
· and shutters.

41 - NIM.IIftfOrRit'lt
41- MHUe Hornet
lor Rent
44-AINrfm.ntlorRent
4i-PRoomt
.._SINICt,., II ant
47-WIIItMI to Rlftt
• 4t-Rflwlpmlftt for Rent

1-Pubtlc Slit
1 Auction

ltial or group of figures
counts as a word : Count
name and address or
phone number If used .

reserves the right

1- C.nt of Tluln111
2- lnMernorlam
J-AI"'nouMtments
4-Givnway
5--Happy Ads
6--Lost•nd ~ound

HAYES
REALTY
Ph . 992-1~03 or fn -2110
New U sting-NR ·,7, Form7rlv

Business

32

Rt. 1, Porlland, Oh.
8-13-1 mo.

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSUlATION

. ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

7378

843-2803

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

bedroomS, basement with
wood burner, 2 car garage .
Over 2 acres of land. 992·

MOB ILE home for sale,
General

Cha r.Je' M . Haves, Realtor
NeaeU E. Carsey, Br . .Mgr.

FIA3REI31

on old route 7, two houses

· above the Pepsi Cola plant.
.. Monday
August 18th
· through Wednesday August
20th . . New clothing, many

Iron and brass beds, old

eANNOUNCEMENTS

Chester water . $15,700 .00.
614·843·2971.

POMEROY, 0 .

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

I

house with slightly over
one acre of ground, fenced
in area with bu ilding, small
garden, Tuppers · Plains·

Real Estate

Insurance

YARD SALE in Cheshire

Giveaway

toys,

TWO BEDROOM 1 2f.J bath

TWO FAMILY yard sale at AUTOMOB I LE
IN ·
591 Broadway, tots of good SU RANCE
be en can ·
cloth ing , odds and ends, celled?
Lost
your
Friday onty from 9·3. Most operator' s l icense? Phone
i tems go for 25 cents.
992-2143 .

949-24117 or 949·2000 . racine,
Ohio, Critt Bradford.

Clothes ,

in my home. 992-6022 .

13

warm fire this winter and

7

HAVE vacancy ca r e for
disabled or e lderly person

til everything is sold .

work, odds and ends, so you
can sit back In front of that

4

1~2~~S~i~
tu"'a~•·'-'·o"'
n_,_s-'-W"'a"'n~te"'d'-­

WI LL DO babysitting in
Street. Starts August 14 un· my home. 992-3915

do any general maintanence work for you, painting, gutter repa i r, patch

8-14-1 mo . pd .

cart Reed 667-3327
Tom Burroughs 667-61 so
7·21 -1 mo .

ONE YEAR old all electric
s pl it entry home with 3

Road in Syracuse, 2nd
house on right· above -4th

WILL
YOUR
House
withstand another hard
winter? How about that
root and barn, that snow
gets pretty heavy! Let us

992· 2478

8·14-1 mo .

FREE __ESIIMATES'

or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
,111 Court St., Pomero.,.. 0., 45769

1:

s ider land contract with
responsible person . Down ·
payment.

-Adcl-ons - Porches

PHONE 992-2156

I'
I'
1':

21 years experience. All
work g'ua'ranteed .
Free Estimate

Call After S P.M .

e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equipment .

remodeling
-Roofing· Garages

WANT AD INFORMAnON

I

~·lY

Gerald Clark
797-4847

EIGHT ROOMS with two
baths, approx i mate!~ one
a cre . 985-3526. Will con·

INSIDE &amp; OUT

yd .

- All types of

furniture,

1:

797·2432 Athens
Tom Hoskins or

doors

- rings,

l

I

-Replacement
windows

FOUND : Collie dog , 992 ·

11 , 18,

1

!gages. Phone 992-7000 or
992·5732 .

BELl
House Painting

Experienced Operators
available for local work .
e .2 rubber fire backhoes
el excavator hoe Jl/.s.

-Storm windows &amp;

not have to worry. Call992·
3941,992-3519, or 992-5126

FULL
GOSPEL
REVIVAL, Mount Olive
Community Ch. Aug. 10-18.
Daymond
Adams ,

BATILEOFLAKEERIE
In 1913, an American
flotilla defe~ted British
ships in the Battle of Lake
Erie, giving the U. S. command of the lake.

financing ,
new ,
old.
refinancing, and 2nd mer·

- Alum. &amp; Vinyl Siding
-Soffit-Gutter .

CANOY SUPPLIES on and we'll come and give
sale .
Ann's
Cake you a free estimate .
Decoralln.g Supplies, 50716 Reference!. are provided
Osborn Rd., Reedsville, ·u~n request.
Oh. 667-6485 .

Athens. Ohio 45701
Phone (614) 590558

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savel II

,!

Lane

Tuning

992-2082.

.r-------~ ·--~.- --~-----~--::-'1'

I

·

and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone

Street

4,

prices

Daniels 742·2951.

The Oefendant is hereby
notified that he is req~lred

(8) 14, 21. 28, (9)
6tc

highest

Tuning

All types of roofing, new
and repair, gutters,
downspouts / com tne rcial &amp; residential .
949·2160 Pomeroy

ava ilable. All types home

I

Pullins
Excavating ·

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

BARTELS,Loan

T.L BURROUGH'S

Ann.ouncements

3

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

Patric k C. McGee,
Attorney
for
Plaintiff
24112 West Union

James E. Husk,
Defendant.

Husk.

Decree of Divorce on
grounds of gross neg lect of
duty and extr eme cruelty
towards her, temporary
and permanent custody of
the minor ch ildren born as
issue of this marriage, tem porary and permanent
child support and for all
other and further relief as
is Lust and equitable .

SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO LE GAL
SERVICES

Plaintiff,

G~nerat
Hemlo ~ k

1 PAY

SALE · Leamond

,, residence,
Broadw a y
., Street,
Racine,
Ohio

a

possible for gold and silver
coins, rings; · jewelry, etc.

to answer said Complaint
within 28 days after the last
publication of this notice.

Public Notice

STATE FAIR PARTICIPANT&amp;-In the food division
the following will represent Meigs County at the State
Fair. Left to right, Kila Young, special yeast breads:

the Court ot Common Pleas

of Meigs County, Ohio,
demandong a Judgment'

ED

Business Services

Printed Pattern

Represenfa, ive, 1100 East
M ain St. , Pomeroy , Oh.
Mortgage
money

Thursday,

die, odds and enojs: locaiE&gt;d

Softly Does It!

Rice

Announcements

3

-

many items, clothes, car
' parts, franklin stove, air
• conditioner, tv

Small investment,·large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Notice

Items tpchoose from .

,.

Homes for Sale

NEW 3 bedroom home for
sa le. Built -i n kitch en ,
dining
room ,
large
r ecreati on r oom/ fireplac e,
lots of storage, 2112 baths,
fila r age, 1 acre lot. 992-3-454.

2 FAMILY Yard Sa le. Good
c lothing, odds I ends. 591
Broadway, Middleport . 9·3.

prospects last montn anct 14 percent
below 1979 production.
.
Coupled with crop deterioratioo in
some other parts of the world from
prospects a month ago, including
harvests in the Soviet Union and
Eastern Europe, total world production in 1980-81 is not as large as It had
appeared, the report said.
That has helped lloo{lt grain
prices, particularly for com and
other coarse grains. Despite the increases, the report said "overall
conswnption outside the U.S. is still
expected to rise moderately" in the
year ahead.
The wheat and coarse grain
figures do not include rice, one of the
world's major food grains. The
report said the global rice outlook
"is ~tially unchanged" from
1
last month.
production is forecast at a
record of 394 million metric tons " as
production prospects continue
favorable throughout the important
South and Southeast Asian rice
producing regions," it said.
The United States Is expected to
produce reeord rice harvest this
year, estimated at 146.1 million 100pound bags, equal to more than 6.6
million metric tons.

ves, which could dip to their lowest
level in five years by mid-1981.
Agriculture Department projections issued Wednesday showed that
global stocks of wheat and so-called
coarse grains such as com and
barley may be about 164.9 million
metric tons, down 7 percent from an
estimated 176.7 million on hand this
July 1.
- According to USDA statistics, that
would be the lowest grain stocks in
the world's major producing and
trading nations since 1975 and 1976
when reserves ebbed to historic lows
of about 119 million metric tons in .
each of those two years.
Improved lu\rvests subsequently
help rebuild stockpiles, reaching a
peak of 200.9 million metric tons on
July 1, 1979. But world grain use also
has been Increasing and has helped
squeeze the supply.
A inetric ton, which is used commonly in world grain trade, is about
2,205 pounds and, as an example, is
equal to 36.7 bushels of wheat or 39.4
bushels of com.
Earlier this week, the 1980 com
harvest, hit severely by heat and dry
weather, was estimated a 6.65 btllion
bushels - 168.8 lilillion metric tons
- which was down sharply from

31

2,300

Take

over

payments. 742 ·2972. Ask for
Charlie.

'I

E LWOOD
REPAIR -

BOWERS
Sweepers,

toasters, irons ~ all small
appl iances . Lawn mower .

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
j825.·.

�----- -------------·

(

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug.l4, 1980
I

11- The l&gt;aily Sentinel, Mto~dl epu•rh~ornel·ov.O .. Thur..t•v. Aue.1( 1980
7
Yard Sale--·--GLANCES
by Gill Fox

Rising feed prices put crunch on profits
WASIDNGTON (AP ) - Cattle a nd
hog producers, currently seeing
some improvement in market
prices, are being saddled with rising
feed costs which will put a crunch on
profit margins, says the Agric ulture
Department.
That may lead to some slowdown
in meat production over the next six
months from what had been anticipated earlier. It also could add
further to retail costs of beef and
pork, which have been rising s ince
late spring.
A major !actor in g rain becoming
• more expensive is this summer's
heat wave and drought, whi ch have
cut deeply into harvest prospects for
corn and soybeans.
" Livestock prices, particula rly
hog prices, rose sharply in July and
early August, raising gross returns
to producers," the department 's

outlook board said Wednesday.
" However , feed costs a lso increased
rapidly, offsetting much of the

gain.''
In a related report, the department said the number ofcattle being
fed for the slaug hter market as of
Aug . I in seven major beef states
totaled about 6.89 million head, down
4 percent from a year-ago.
Marketings or " fed" cattle in July,
at 1.3!&gt; million head, were down 8
percent from a year earlier. Tnat
was the smallest number sold during
the month since 1975, the report said.
But apparently recent im·
provements in fed cattle prices have
stimulated feedlot operators and
fanners. Also, as pastures have burned from drought a nd heat, many
producers have been forced to sell
younger cattle to the feedlots.
Last month, the report said,
placements of new cattle and calves

in feedlots rose t o 1.52 million head,
a 25 percent' gain from a year
earlier. ·
Looking a t the livestock 'and meat
situation in general, the outlook ·
board's report said :
" Hog prices at Omaha, Neb., incr eased from $43 per 100 pounds in
ea rly July to aimost $50 in mid·
Aug ust. Prices increased as hog
slaughter declined from spring and
year-earlier levels ."
However, it added, hog s laughter
is expected "to begin increasing substantia lly" in September, with a further seasonal increase in October.
Thus, hog prices could drop shar·
ply to the " mid-to-upper $30s" per
100 pounds before rising later in the
year as production of hogs and
-broiler chickens declines seasonally
aga in.
But the rise in production costs -

including higher feed prices - •'may
result in less pork being produced in
1981 than earlier expected," the
report said.
' 'Since many hogs are produced on
livestock-grain fanns, some farmers may elect to sell their com
directly (for cash) rather than
market it through hogs. "
For feedlot catUe, the report said
placements of new animals In fattening pens ·~ will increase above
year-earlier levels" the remainder
of 1980, but rising feed expenses
" will moderate the rate of in·

crease.' '
In its feedlot report, the department said the Aug. 1 inventory included the number of cattle · and
their percentage of year-earlier
numbers in the following states:
Arizona, 297,00() head in feedlots
on Aug. I and 118 percent of year·
earlier inventories; California, ·
590,000 and 64; Colorado, 700,000 and
87; Iowa, 1,13!&gt;,000 and 100; Kansas,
1,225,000 and 100; . Nebraska,
1,300,000 and 101; and Texas,
1,640,000 and 96.
WASIDNGTON (AP)- This year's
reduced U.S. corn harvest is having
a big impact on world grain reser-

YARD SALE August 13, 14,
. and 15th at 685 \-OCUSI
' • Street, Middleport . Many
• . YARD SALE

Public Notice

. on Pine Grove Road near
· Five Points. The Rapp
t • residence, 992·5344.

: · YARD

PUBLIC NOTICE
The ann ual report Form
990 PFofor the Kibble Foun. dation , Bernard Fultz ,
trustee. is avai lable for
public inspection at Bernard Fultz, Law Office, 2nd

St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
during regular business
hours for a period of 180

days

subsequent

publ ica tion of fh1s notice .

to

(8) 11 , 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17,

ltc

INTHECOURTOF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
Gwen D. Husk, '

Brenda Callaway, teens entertain; Pam Rie~l, quick
meals; Terrie Starcher, outdoor cookery I; Erica
Kessinger, tricks for treats.

· August15 x 16.

V,

Case No . 17577
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

James E. Husk, whose

last known address was 201
Sou.t h Union Street, Galion.
Oh1o
and
whose
w~ereabouts are unknown,
Will take notice that on

August 6, 1980, Gwen D,.
whose address

Piano

iS

Det4verv
Grove,
Ohu)
45738,_toted her Complain\

for D1vorce against him in'

Evangelist .
Lawrence
Bush Pastor. Everyone
we lcome .

STILL OFFERING
ICE CREAM
With Any Unico
FREEZER OR .
REFRIGERATOR
PLUS:
S25 DISCOUNT

:1

rlI

Write .vo~&gt;r own ad and order by mail with this
coupon. cancel your ad by phone when you get
res ults. Money not refundable.

I
I

:a

StoPOMERQYils

!

LANDMARK

Main St.
Pomeroy 992·2181

t'

· YARD SALE . Leiving Rd.
· West Columbia, W.Va . 10·?
. ,Aug . 14. 15, 16, 17, 18.
c lethes, dishes, books,

toaster, Mr. Coffee, Avon
bot.tles, and lots of m isc.

YARD SALE on College

II

Address

1· '

Phone·
CLOTIDNG WINNERS-In the clothing division the
following will represent Meigs County at the State
Fair. Front row, 1-r , Renee Kaylor, tip to toe, mini
modes ; Susan Danner, dress up day wear; Renee

Trussell, lounging clothes; back, Tammy Calaway,
clothes for _school; Conrue Stout, coats and jackets;
Beth Ritchie, loungmg clothes ; Cindy Pitzer, clothing
complements; Lisa Collins, active sports clothes. ·

Print one word in each ·
space below. ·each In - ·

r - Yard Sale

9-Wanted to Buy

give price. The Sentinel
to

. 1~!5chool t lnttructlor~

classify , edit or reject

Raellt, TV
&amp;CI Rtpalr
lt-Yfantad To Oo

16----

any ad . Your ad will be

in

the

proper

classification if ;you ' ll

I
I
I

I
)
)
)

l

23.
24.

4,

25.

5.

I

.~

.1.

"

----- - - .!

gold
silver

Pomeroy, OHl or call 992·
776(),

10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold . Dental gold and gold
ear pins . 675 ·3010.

FOR

lease, 8,300 sqUare feet in

Middleport, Ohio. $2.90 per
square

feet ,

equipment

lease, s1,000 .r&gt;er ·month.
Box 729A, Daity Sent ine l.

land contract. S300 down .
Write J. Bow land, 15068

Empire Rd., Thornville,
OH. 43076 . .

ll

n ice

" Maggie ' s

New Lisllng- NR ·U , '7 8 W ind·
sor trailer , like new, a ll bullt-l
ki tchen with ba r, living room ,
bedroom s, l ur nlture Included.

Muslsee to a

recla te. S1V100.

---_ __

forMenctay ·

Reupholstery, Fabr ic and
vinyl samples. Call 742·
2852 .
.
Real Estate

General

Housing
Headquarters

T;.~~~w
216 E. Second Street

Phone
1· ( 614 )-992·3325
REDUCED - A nice little country home with
batn, natural gas fur ·
nace, concrete front
porch, vinyl siding , utili ·

ly bldg. and large lot.
NOW$17,900.
FAMILY - 9 rooms, 3
bedrooms , 2 ba ths, fur·
nace, formal din ing ,

equipped kitchen, full
basement. 2 car garage
and 2 busin ess room s.

CHEAPIE

-

80' x24'

busi ness building with
bath, natura l gas. ci ty
water, and flue for wood

burne r . ldeallor shopor
small business.

13 LOTS -

With all uti I·

ities nearby . Will sell al l

dollar, or comptete estates.

Mostly alt fenced and a ll

pasture and farm land.

No item too large or too

minera l s

selling. Also do appra ising.

Highway.
SPACIOUS -

:H

lf-llllttllntlvHIItl
M-Pttl for Salt . "'

: GET VALUABLE training

'eFARM SUPPt.l ES

; and earn good money plus

Help Wanted

· as a young business person
t

some great gifts as a Sen ·

' llnel route carrier. Phone
: us right away and get on

. the eligibility list at 992·
· 2156 or 992·2157 .
: LADY OR girlliv~ in at109
• .S. 3rd Avenue, Moddleport,
· Ohio 992-2686
per hour, no ex·
: perlence necessary, start
. Immediately, for complete

· Information write to
: Bollns, Route 6, Box 221A,
. Athens, Ohio 45701

.

on

St ate

Good 10

room frame home . 3
king size bedrooms, 2

608 E.
MAif'!
11
.-·
POMEKOY, 0

- ...

992-~ll't.

NEW CONSTRUCTION
- NEW SUBDIVISION
- 6 room s, 11J2 story, J
bedroom hOme with Ph
ba ths on a beautiful

wooded

lot

on

Golf

- Thi s 3 bed room home
ha s a den, 2 baths, d in·
ing room, with a cozy
fireplace in living room ,
nice basem ent, on 5
acres
l e ve l
land .
Storage shed, 3 green

houses. $58,700.00 .
FARM- 25 acres w i th 1
floor plan, 2 bedroom
home, recently
re ·

modeled with a bUilt·in
kitchen . Paneling and

ca rpeting. $38,950 .00.
MIDDLEPORT basement,

2-3

bed ·

Housing
Headquarters

I,

I
I
I

I

.. l '

- ~---~ ~-....- _;..,;----------~ -~~·',

•

(II"

........
....
0.10

2 clan
Sdlya

••v•

...

Clllrge •

1.21

2. 2S '
l.7S

R.ch wont tVti' thtmlnlmwm 1S __... 114 cHfl Ptrworct 111rdly.

Ada rnnlntother thtn.consecutlwt dar• •111M cftarfH at ttlt 1 dly
r•tt.

Job?

·

In mtmery, Clrd ot Think\ and Oblhltry 1 'ctnfl par word, Sl.OO · I
' 1

mlnlmum . CIIhl~ttdVIftCt .

RT. 124·, Minersvil.l e. 1
acre/ ss ~ ooo . Septic, city
water, natural gas. 304-773·

5875.
65ACRES IN Meigs County
near Harrisonville, Ohio. 30
acres of t i l lable ground,

rest in pasture. Wood. two
ponds,

air

strip,

p lane

shed, $56,500. 742-2577 .

$3.500.00.
VERY NICE 3
bedroo m hOme, full
basement , WB FP , real·
ly neat, with garage and
work shop . Beautiful
rive r vi ew for S28,500.00.

A REAL BUY- 1 floor
plan, 2 bedroom home
with electric heat, utili·
ty
room , ga rage .

s- also open

9 to

Mon·

p.m . Full time staff!

REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trusset1949-2660
· Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

742-2474
OFFICE 992 ·22S9
STOP BY OUR EX ·
HI BIT AT THE MEIGS
1
\

FAIR!!

FOUR BEDROOM house,
949·2253
THREE BEDROOM house

District.
4323.
42

Phone

614-985·

Mobile Homes
tor Rent
BEDROOM

Mobile

Home, kitchen furnished .

Elderly couple preferred .
Deposit required, no pets .
992 ·2749,
THREE
mobile

BEDROOM
home
ap -

proximately

five

from Pomeroy or
d leport . 99:1-5858.

travel trailer with extras .

, agency Intake to complete
'•an application. Gallla·
' fiV\elgs C.A.A. Ceta Intake
, Unit, North Second and
, east Main Streets; Box 272,
. · Cheshire, Ohio 367·7342 or
;992-6629. An Equal Op·
,

: EXPERIENCED beauto co·
· an with managers liscen~e.
Located in Pomeroy, Ohoo.
992·{606.

Apartment
for Rent

44

home, real nice. Brown's

apartment

with

three

rooms and a ba.th in Mid·
dleport. t.arge rooms, tv
w ith cable, all utilities fur-

nished. Call M-F from 9·
4:30 at 992·3381.
46
Space lor Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7479 .

51
Household Goods
2 PIECE Gold nylon living

room suite . 8 months old .

$150. 992·73-46.

FOR SALE Brown hide·a ·
wav couch and matching

22 CUBIC INCH" self
defrosting refrigerator, 30
Inch drop end electric

range in excellent condition. Phone367·7209 .

53
Antiques
ATTENTION:
(IM PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.

Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections . Catl 614767·3167 or 557·3411 .
54

Misc. Merchanise

MIDO~E POR_T - Energy eff icient with insulated
&lt;.~lummum Sldmg. Very comfortable three bedroom
~ bath home, lull basement. $40,000.00.
'

CGII Bill Childs, M.g r.
992-2342

Rodney _Downing Broker.

FURNISHED apartment,
four rooms and bath . Call
992-5908.
_

DOUBLE , 2 bedroom

furnished . Adults
Noschildren
or

onlv.
pets .

Deposit . 992·2749 .
TWO BEDROOM apart·
ment co mp letely fur ·
nished, will conSider one
child, two miles ..out on 143 .

Deposit
required.

and.

references

Fulty Guaranteed
Ph . 664-6370

992· 2478

If no answer

Call698-3113
7·311 mo.- pd.

7-17·1 mo. pd .

3% down on $25,000; 5%

.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·2591
6·15-tfc

down on balance, FHA
-265 Subsidy Program .

FHA 245 Gradual PaymentMorl.
Open M·W·F 9:00 to 1: DO
By Appointment
Office 992·7544
Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore St.

ROOFING

J

new or repair guners
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and JHtintlng.
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

Call Howard
949-2862
949-2160
1-22-ttc

Pomeroy , OH .

ft

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT &amp;
TRUCKING
-Haul
Limestone ,

Custom
Print
Shop

and

novelty

shirts for politicians;
ball teams, business or
individuals.

Shirts $4.00 Each
"We print ALMOST
anything on ALMOST
anything!"

Ph. 614-949-2358

gravel, fill dirt
-Agric. lime spreading
- Backhoe work
-New and used farm
equipment
-Mechanical work on
farm equip., cars,
trucks.

742-2455

Evenings &amp; Weekends

56

8-8·1 mo .

· 63

Pets for Sale

HILLCRE ST

KENNELS.

Boarding , all breeds. Clean
indoor ·outdoor fac i lities .
A lso
AKC
registered

Cross,

Model, mower I su lky in·

eluded. 992-7549 .

David Yost or Patterson

Vegetable Stand on Rt. 338,
Ravenswood-Ferry Rd.

BUILDINGS ! I Atl steel
years. Exa mples ! I 30' x 48'
x 12' for $3,892 .00. 40' x 72'
x 14' for $5,972 .00. 48' x 72'
x 14' for $6,804 .00 . 60' x 125"
x 16' for $15 .857.00. Catl
for

2770.
Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
diameter 1011 on largest

end . $12 p-er ton. Bundled
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689.

QUILTS FOR sate , $25.00
each. Pearl Garnes, 669·
5141

bands, diamonds. Gold_pr
sliver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 5926-462.

Ford pi ckup, will trade or

55
Building Supplies
3/ 8 inch rebar- 17c per foot
by 20 ft . section o,nly . D.
Bumgardner Sales. Noble
Summit Rd ., Midd leport,
OH . 992·5724.
56
Pets for Sale
POODLE GROOM ING .
Judy Taylor . 614·367-7220.

Motorcycles

1974 SUZUKI $600. or trade
for car of equal va lu,e .

ches, class rings, weddlr;19

GOLD AND SILVE R
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS ,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,.
HIGHEST UP ·TO· DATE
PRICES , C:ONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP ,' MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL 992·3476.

--"'-

63

Livestock

GOAT KIDS for sale. 742·
2015.

81

Home

lots of new parts. S7oo. Both

I mprovf!ments

ca rs m ust be sold, will take
any reasonable offer. 992 ·

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning .
Steam cleaned.
Free

3273 .

estimate .

1978 DODGE MAGNUM .
A.C., am ·fm, low mileage,
exc . cond . 992-5094 .

1967 PONTIAC with a 1972
400 engine . 992·2640 .
1975 Oldsmobile Delta
. Roya le 88. Call Robert
Stewart a t 742-3006.
1972 CH EVELLE Mat ibu,
v-8 automatic for $275.00,
good work car . 949·2042.
1964 CHEVELLE six c ylin ·
der automatic tran ·
smission
new r ebuilt
motor, runs good, body
fai r, ma ke. exce llent wo rk
ca r . Can be seen at Roger

Hysell's garage or ca ll 992·
5388 .
1972 FORD T-Bi rd. Full

HOME

terpr ise Rd. , Pomeroy, Oh.

1973 MONTE Carlo, 74 ,000
miles, all extra's, excellent
running cond ition. Phone

367-7209

pain·

Gutters in need of

estim ates

are

provided.

83
excavating
J X F BACKHOE SER VICE liscensed and bonded, septic tank ln stall~tion,

water and gas

lines.
Excavating work
and transit layout. 992-7201.
BULLDOZER work, small
jobs a specially. Call 7422753.
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWI NG
Repairs,

MACHINE
service,

all

makes . 992-2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and service . We sharpen
Sc issors.

74

Motorcycl es

1980 YAMAHA XT250 on·
off motorcycle. Exc . cond .
m iles

NEEDING

992·

repai r? Is that roof beginning to leak? Call 992-3519,
992-3941. or 992·5126 and get
things a ll fixed up for that
bad weather thats on its
way . By the way, free

power, craguer s all the
way around , am·fm 1 e . 84
track, bOdy in f air cond.

5600 . 992·3661 . 42099 En-

Reasonable

rates. Scotchguard.
6309 or 742 ·2211 .
ted?

slab. SlOper ton . Delivered

OLD COl NS , pocket wal·

setl . Contact Gary Fife ,
992·2582

Sales, service and sup-

plies. In gt.,ound and
. above ground pools.
5-1-tfc

good work car, $500. Also

price

SET OF' Junior golf clubs.
John r eaford61h85-3961

VARIOUS . T.YPES of
musical equipment. 1978

slaughtering, cu s tom
processi ng / retail meat.

1973 Plymouth Satellite, 318

clear -span bUildings. Our
lowest p1·ice in over two

62
pick. 843·2242 or contact

992-S724

74

JONES Meat Packi ng

auto. , p. s., p .b ., exc.: cond .

Letart Falls, Ohio 247-2852.
corn. Silver Queen. You

Middleport, Ohio

• • • I I . . I " &amp; 0 1 - 0 ° 00 0 ' •0

1975 GRAVELY 612 tracto r
Andrew

31711 Noble sum II Rd.

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

with 50 inch mower. 742·

picked,

THE POOL PEOPLE

Washi ngton Co. Rd . 248, Gas range. $200 . new. 742·
Little Hocki ng , OH . 667· 24 16.
6133 .
75
Boats and
HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
Motors for Sale
BRUDE SOW, 14 months
and ponies and rid ing
old approximately 425 18 fl. Aluminum bOat. 20
le ssons.
Everything
imaginable in horse equip· . pounds, Hampshire, has horse Evinrude. 949· 2273.
had OM Iiiier. $175 .00 985·
ment . Blankets, belts,
boots, ett. English and 43-46 .
1976 GLAST RON boat 15 2f.J
Western . Ruth Re eve s
loot
lri-hau I 85 h.p. Mer(614) 698-3290.
FOR SALE or trade, suf. cury motro, power trim·
• folk ram. 7'42·3133 after 6 and tilt e.z. load trailer. All
p.m .
Farm Supplies
the extras. 742·2595.
&amp; blvestUEII
64
Ha y &amp; Grain
77
Camping
STRAW FOR sa le . 949-2822
Equipment
6'-'1___c_
F,_
a '-'
rm
= E, q,_,u::Jip"'m
= e::.
nl: __
1978 AMER·ICAN Traveler
.....
,_"
USED R-40 ditch witch
5th wheel camper trailer 31
with trencher . 1·6U·694·
foot. Like new. 742·2770
7842.
71
Autos for Sale
GRAVELY Tractor. 1971
1972 NOVA , 6 cy l.. auto ..

CANNING

Tomatoes,

Livestock

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

Dobermans. 614·446·7795 .

co. 614-992·2205.

Manor apts. Call992-7787.
FURNISHED
AP·ART MENT four rooms and ~alh
adults only no pets in Middleport . 992-3874.

22 Years Experience

Aft related equipment.

All types of root work,

collect today
qvarantees.

Summer Pri ces. Excelsior

CANNING &amp; FREEZING

Senior Citizens in Village

681

Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing,

Utility Buildings

COMPLETELY furn ished

Trailer Park . 992·3324
44Apartment
for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished apts. Phone992·5434.

on

Oho

Sizes
"From 30x30"

T-shirt

992 ·5434, 992 ·5914 or 9923129,

· RENTER'S assistance for

aide, cust(!dia l
,· aide.
If . you have
: previously applied: contact
, Gall ill ·Meigs Community
• Action AI)Emcy intake to
· have your application
: reevalutated.
New ap•plicants: contact Gallia-

~ Meigs community action

129-Qvick/ Easy TransfelS . $1.75

HEATING OIL. Buy now at
21 ft. fully self·contained

TWO BEDROOM mobile

REAL ESTATE

130-Swulei1-Sizes 38-56 .$1.75,

miles

Mid -

Albany,
North .

133-feshion llorneQuilting $1.75

cha ir . 992 -3139 after 5 p.m .

for rent with two baths;
two ca r garage in the
Eastern
L oca l School

Seat Jobs

Located 6 mile~ north of

H. L WRITESEL

Sizes from 4x6 to 12X40

Why put up with high pricessave dollaos. get bette~ quality!
Send for our NEW FALL-WINTER
PATTERN CATALOG. 94 patterns.
Foee Pattem Coupon (worth
SU 5). Catalog, $1.00.

DEAN'S
TRA'4.SMISSION
SPECIALISTS
Bebuilts·Repairs

PARK Fl NANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic

-

10011. Poinl NAME, ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, and STYU NUMBER.

7·31-fmo.

Farm Buildings
SMALL

243 West 17 SL, New Yorl, NY

Free Estimate
James Keesee
ph. 992· 2772

Real Estate Loans
11 1f:z% lnterest·30 Vrs.

191

Merenandlse

deposit · required . No pets.

2

yd.
e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks

ALL STEEL

llnlell name of yoorr lfipe~

Reatals
Houses for Rent

Windows

Experienced Operators
available for local work.
e2 rubber tire backhoes
el excavator hoe 11/4

Anne Adams
Pattern Depl

• Storm Windows
• Replacement

V.C. YOUNG II

8·7-l ·mo ..

'·

elnsulation
• Storm Doors

work
- concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estimates)

6·16-ttc

. te~chers

I

•I

rem~eling

- Roofing and gutter

• New Homes · ex·
tensive ren't_o deling
• Electri·cal work
• Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

60-inch faboic.
$1.75 for uch Pltltrn. ~dd 51K
for uch patteon lor li11l-cflss
•!•mail and haftdli"' Send to:

timber. 2_

2 BEDROOM furnished
house. 992-5434, 992·5914 or
992·3129.

Gallia ·

1portun1ty EmploYer.

....~--~~------.-----------.J

and

m iles off Route 7 on Silver

41

: van dr'iver, cook's aide,

11 Wontt or Unftr
I day

A

gas , royalties . Has pond,

furnace. with a 62x52
lot. $19,000.00 .
BUILDING LOTS -

day and Friday until 8

WE NOW HAVE NICE
HOMES AND BAR·
GAINS FOR ·you TO
SEE . ALL PRICES
AND SIZE .' WHAT
WOULD YOU LIKE?
CALL 992 -3325 or
992-3876.

35
Lots &amp; Acreage
EASTERN Local School
District . 38 acres. Free

roo ms, bath, F .A . gas

New subdivision, close
in, large lots, wooded
se tting .
Start
at

' som ygoes the sh irtma ke~-•
.gatherong of fabro c at shoulders.
yoke lo&lt; a gently femin ine effect .
No waist seam-sash it or freefloat it. Send now I
Pronted Patte~n 4959: Misses
Sizes 8. 10. 12. 14. 16, 18. 20.
Size 12 (bust 34) takes 2'4 yards

127-Afghans 'n' Doilies ... $1.75

5

level lot
garage .

car

Ohio, Main street, ap·
prox imately 140 feet fran·
tage, business bui lding and
home on property . Phone

room, 2 story house w ith

kitchen, large shaded
2

PRIME COMMER1 CAL
PROPERTY, Pomeroy ,

Ridge, $450 an acre. 9853594.

$17,200.00.
OPEN 6 days a week -

and

Business Buildings

back dec k. full base·
men I. $42 .000.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT

· positions: Teachers aide-

Rates and Other lnformatjon

two bedroom; 1967 Bu,ddy ,
.12 x so. 2 bedroom.
B&amp;S

spring

. pl ications for tht! following

•!

bedroom;
1968
New
Moon,12 x 60 with eKpando,

Course Road . F ir eplace,

; Agency is accepting ap·

I'

two

after 5:30p.m . 992 ·3779.

· Meigs Community Action

i

II

'I
I
I
I
I

: NEED

11- u,.........,

M

1

· $9.85

'

a:

I-

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box729
.
Pomeroy, oh·. 45769

1.

x

bedroom ; 1971 Liberty , 1-4 x
two bedroom; 196l!
Atlantic,
12 x 60 two

34

Refinishing,

baths, natural gas fore·

I lltfrleeretlllt
IJ-OMtral H.. llnt
116-M.H. R.,.lr

l4

x

1971

65

Upholstery "

Rebuilding,

ed air furnace, modern

11-PI•mblnf&amp; EIICIWitlng
11-llp:IWiftllt
14-lltetrtcal

three bedroom;

Cameron,

Professional
Services

for only $6,500.
FARM LANO - 70 ac ·
· res of nice land. Woods,

OSby (Ossie) Martin, 9926370.

.'

1975 Western Mansion l-4

70

Pt. Pleasant. W.VA.
675·4424.

Gold, silver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
items. Antique furniture ,
glass or china, will pay top

small . Check prices before

e Sl!fltVICIIS

4 P .M. Dilly
12 Noon llhttllrt

--,.......--~. 1 :

35. _ _ _ _ _...:_

'

desks,

jewelry ,

Complete
households .
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,

H - Auto Repair

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

----:-----...,, I;

33. _ . _

-

48x10 mob ile home, S28oo,

11-Hamtlmprovemantl

------------ I:

12.
13.
14.
15.
16.

Wanted to Buy

U- AntiCIUft
M- MIIc. MtrcMndiae

&amp; Acc'enorln

36---Rul Rlfatt WtntH
37- Roalton

29.
30. -----~ 1 1
II
31. _____
.. 32.

9

lee boxes, antiques, etc .

U - LOIIIAcr. . tt

8.

' 11'

• -lioneer , Osby A. Martin.
_(no junk)

eRENTALS

,,_ ""to,,,.,.,

IOf'SIIt
.
n - Farms for Salt
l4-luslnns lullclllntl

28 .

----

..every Friday night at 7
. p .m . Auctioneer Howard
· ·aeasley, apprentice auc-

dollars, sterling, etc ., wood

ri-AUtos ter Slit
PJ--VHI &amp; 4 W. D.
P4- Mottrcyclts

Jl - Homll for Salt'
32-Mobllt+tomn

7.

1

vice, call 992·6370 or in
:West Virginia 773-5471 . Sale

OLD HOUSE &amp; yard sale .

eTRANSPORTATION

eREALESTATE

26.
27 .

10.·

bicycle ; Eddie Collins, adventures in woodworking;
Doug Beaver, learning and building; back, . Terry
Smith, fishing ; Kila Young, refinished furniture; Tom
Pullins, the craftsman; Lisa Riggs; let's explore the
outdoors, II; Teresa Dorst, a redecorated room.

Sen len

6.

9. _ __

MIS CE LLANE OUS WINNERS - -- In th e
miscellaneous division the following will represent
Meigs County a t the State Fair. Front, 1-r, Donia
Crane, eKploring our insect world ; Scott Starcher,

Opportunity

22 .

2.
3.

New, used, or antiques, in ·
eluding homes, farms, or
liqu idation sales . Get top
dollar ~ List with the man
who has over 25 years in
the new, used and antique
furniture business.
We
take consignments. For in·
formation and pickup ser·

Yord Sale

12- Trvc1t1 for Salt
U- Liv.ttoclt
64-Har I Grain
61-S... I Ptrtlllltr

n-Mon.,y to Loan
2J- Proffttlonal

:t:l.

1. _______

OSSI E'S AUCT ION House,
. 20 N. 2nd Street, Middleport, Ohio. We sell one
piece or entire households.

6136. Snowvi lie· Harrisonv ille area .

61 - Pirm ltiVtJmtnt
61- Wantect to lwv ·

IIUslntu

21 -

17,
18.
19.
20.

Wanted
For Sate
Announcement
For Rent

Complete Service. PhOne

cocker spaniel. 985-4189.

&amp; LIVESTOCK

eFINANCIAL

These cash ra tes
include discount

1check the proper box
, j'_below.

&amp;Auction

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,

Part miniature collie, part

~ome
antiques . Mrs .
Or land Gilland , 50720
Osborn Rd. (2168 Old
Lickskillet Rd .) Reed sville, Oh. Just off Success
Rd. Starts Thurs ., Aug . 14
9·6 1111 everything Is gone :
Closed Sundays.

lhe old brewe ry , makes
garage, plu s storage.

Opportunity

SUPERMARKET

23

si - Houttholtt Goordt
U-cl, TV, RaGioEqulpmtnt

J1 - HIIpw1 nttd
12-SituatH Wanted
1l-lnluranu
14- Busintu Trtlnlnt

if you desc r ibe fully,

Public Sale

••

TWO 10 week old puppies.

furniture ,

21

$6500, land contract with
$500 down or will negotiate
cash ' sale . Also one
bedroom, built-in bunks,

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

- Addonsand

Pullins
Excavating

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Mobile Home Sales

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

You' ll get better results

put

. household furnishings, car·
pet. beds, refrigerator,
· · stove, sink, storm windows
~ and doors, pictures and ac·
· cessories, outside doors
· and shutters.

41 - NIM.IIftfOrRit'lt
41- MHUe Hornet
lor Rent
44-AINrfm.ntlorRent
4i-PRoomt
.._SINICt,., II ant
47-WIIItMI to Rlftt
• 4t-Rflwlpmlftt for Rent

1-Pubtlc Slit
1 Auction

ltial or group of figures
counts as a word : Count
name and address or
phone number If used .

reserves the right

1- C.nt of Tluln111
2- lnMernorlam
J-AI"'nouMtments
4-Givnway
5--Happy Ads
6--Lost•nd ~ound

HAYES
REALTY
Ph . 992-1~03 or fn -2110
New U sting-NR ·,7, Form7rlv

Business

32

Rt. 1, Porlland, Oh.
8-13-1 mo.

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSUlATION

. ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

7378

843-2803

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

bedroomS, basement with
wood burner, 2 car garage .
Over 2 acres of land. 992·

MOB ILE home for sale,
General

Cha r.Je' M . Haves, Realtor
NeaeU E. Carsey, Br . .Mgr.

FIA3REI31

on old route 7, two houses

· above the Pepsi Cola plant.
.. Monday
August 18th
· through Wednesday August
20th . . New clothing, many

Iron and brass beds, old

eANNOUNCEMENTS

Chester water . $15,700 .00.
614·843·2971.

POMEROY, 0 .

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

I

house with slightly over
one acre of ground, fenced
in area with bu ilding, small
garden, Tuppers · Plains·

Real Estate

Insurance

YARD SALE in Cheshire

Giveaway

toys,

TWO BEDROOM 1 2f.J bath

TWO FAMILY yard sale at AUTOMOB I LE
IN ·
591 Broadway, tots of good SU RANCE
be en can ·
cloth ing , odds and ends, celled?
Lost
your
Friday onty from 9·3. Most operator' s l icense? Phone
i tems go for 25 cents.
992-2143 .

949-24117 or 949·2000 . racine,
Ohio, Critt Bradford.

Clothes ,

in my home. 992-6022 .

13

warm fire this winter and

7

HAVE vacancy ca r e for
disabled or e lderly person

til everything is sold .

work, odds and ends, so you
can sit back In front of that

4

1~2~~S~i~
tu"'a~•·'-'·o"'
n_,_s-'-W"'a"'n~te"'d'-­

WI LL DO babysitting in
Street. Starts August 14 un· my home. 992-3915

do any general maintanence work for you, painting, gutter repa i r, patch

8-14-1 mo . pd .

cart Reed 667-3327
Tom Burroughs 667-61 so
7·21 -1 mo .

ONE YEAR old all electric
s pl it entry home with 3

Road in Syracuse, 2nd
house on right· above -4th

WILL
YOUR
House
withstand another hard
winter? How about that
root and barn, that snow
gets pretty heavy! Let us

992· 2478

8·14-1 mo .

FREE __ESIIMATES'

or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
,111 Court St., Pomero.,.. 0., 45769

1:

s ider land contract with
responsible person . Down ·
payment.

-Adcl-ons - Porches

PHONE 992-2156

I'
I'
1':

21 years experience. All
work g'ua'ranteed .
Free Estimate

Call After S P.M .

e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equipment .

remodeling
-Roofing· Garages

WANT AD INFORMAnON

I

~·lY

Gerald Clark
797-4847

EIGHT ROOMS with two
baths, approx i mate!~ one
a cre . 985-3526. Will con·

INSIDE &amp; OUT

yd .

- All types of

furniture,

1:

797·2432 Athens
Tom Hoskins or

doors

- rings,

l

I

-Replacement
windows

FOUND : Collie dog , 992 ·

11 , 18,

1

!gages. Phone 992-7000 or
992·5732 .

BELl
House Painting

Experienced Operators
available for local work .
e .2 rubber fire backhoes
el excavator hoe Jl/.s.

-Storm windows &amp;

not have to worry. Call992·
3941,992-3519, or 992-5126

FULL
GOSPEL
REVIVAL, Mount Olive
Community Ch. Aug. 10-18.
Daymond
Adams ,

BATILEOFLAKEERIE
In 1913, an American
flotilla defe~ted British
ships in the Battle of Lake
Erie, giving the U. S. command of the lake.

financing ,
new ,
old.
refinancing, and 2nd mer·

- Alum. &amp; Vinyl Siding
-Soffit-Gutter .

CANOY SUPPLIES on and we'll come and give
sale .
Ann's
Cake you a free estimate .
Decoralln.g Supplies, 50716 Reference!. are provided
Osborn Rd., Reedsville, ·u~n request.
Oh. 667-6485 .

Athens. Ohio 45701
Phone (614) 590558

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savel II

,!

Lane

Tuning

992-2082.

.r-------~ ·--~.- --~-----~--::-'1'

I

·

and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone

Street

4,

prices

Daniels 742·2951.

The Oefendant is hereby
notified that he is req~lred

(8) 14, 21. 28, (9)
6tc

highest

Tuning

All types of roofing, new
and repair, gutters,
downspouts / com tne rcial &amp; residential .
949·2160 Pomeroy

ava ilable. All types home

I

Pullins
Excavating ·

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

BARTELS,Loan

T.L BURROUGH'S

Ann.ouncements

3

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

Patric k C. McGee,
Attorney
for
Plaintiff
24112 West Union

James E. Husk,
Defendant.

Husk.

Decree of Divorce on
grounds of gross neg lect of
duty and extr eme cruelty
towards her, temporary
and permanent custody of
the minor ch ildren born as
issue of this marriage, tem porary and permanent
child support and for all
other and further relief as
is Lust and equitable .

SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO LE GAL
SERVICES

Plaintiff,

G~nerat
Hemlo ~ k

1 PAY

SALE · Leamond

,, residence,
Broadw a y
., Street,
Racine,
Ohio

a

possible for gold and silver
coins, rings; · jewelry, etc.

to answer said Complaint
within 28 days after the last
publication of this notice.

Public Notice

STATE FAIR PARTICIPANT&amp;-In the food division
the following will represent Meigs County at the State
Fair. Left to right, Kila Young, special yeast breads:

the Court ot Common Pleas

of Meigs County, Ohio,
demandong a Judgment'

ED

Business Services

Printed Pattern

Represenfa, ive, 1100 East
M ain St. , Pomeroy , Oh.
Mortgage
money

Thursday,

die, odds and enojs: locaiE&gt;d

Softly Does It!

Rice

Announcements

3

-

many items, clothes, car
' parts, franklin stove, air
• conditioner, tv

Small investment,·large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Notice

Items tpchoose from .

,.

Homes for Sale

NEW 3 bedroom home for
sa le. Built -i n kitch en ,
dining
room ,
large
r ecreati on r oom/ fireplac e,
lots of storage, 2112 baths,
fila r age, 1 acre lot. 992-3-454.

2 FAMILY Yard Sa le. Good
c lothing, odds I ends. 591
Broadway, Middleport . 9·3.

prospects last montn anct 14 percent
below 1979 production.
.
Coupled with crop deterioratioo in
some other parts of the world from
prospects a month ago, including
harvests in the Soviet Union and
Eastern Europe, total world production in 1980-81 is not as large as It had
appeared, the report said.
That has helped lloo{lt grain
prices, particularly for com and
other coarse grains. Despite the increases, the report said "overall
conswnption outside the U.S. is still
expected to rise moderately" in the
year ahead.
The wheat and coarse grain
figures do not include rice, one of the
world's major food grains. The
report said the global rice outlook
"is ~tially unchanged" from
1
last month.
production is forecast at a
record of 394 million metric tons " as
production prospects continue
favorable throughout the important
South and Southeast Asian rice
producing regions," it said.
The United States Is expected to
produce reeord rice harvest this
year, estimated at 146.1 million 100pound bags, equal to more than 6.6
million metric tons.

ves, which could dip to their lowest
level in five years by mid-1981.
Agriculture Department projections issued Wednesday showed that
global stocks of wheat and so-called
coarse grains such as com and
barley may be about 164.9 million
metric tons, down 7 percent from an
estimated 176.7 million on hand this
July 1.
- According to USDA statistics, that
would be the lowest grain stocks in
the world's major producing and
trading nations since 1975 and 1976
when reserves ebbed to historic lows
of about 119 million metric tons in .
each of those two years.
Improved lu\rvests subsequently
help rebuild stockpiles, reaching a
peak of 200.9 million metric tons on
July 1, 1979. But world grain use also
has been Increasing and has helped
squeeze the supply.
A inetric ton, which is used commonly in world grain trade, is about
2,205 pounds and, as an example, is
equal to 36.7 bushels of wheat or 39.4
bushels of com.
Earlier this week, the 1980 com
harvest, hit severely by heat and dry
weather, was estimated a 6.65 btllion
bushels - 168.8 lilillion metric tons
- which was down sharply from

31

2,300

Take

over

payments. 742 ·2972. Ask for
Charlie.

'I

E LWOOD
REPAIR -

BOWERS
Sweepers,

toasters, irons ~ all small
appl iances . Lawn mower .

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
j825.·.

�Carter and Mondale on warpath

Carter. ..
I Continued from page 1l

were placed in nomination. Kennedy
fonnally released his delegates
from their obligation to him, but
most supported him anyway.
Ahd even in losing, Kennedy put
his stamp on the platform, including
a call for a $12 billion anti-recession
program to 800,000 jobs that Carter
eventually accepted in principle if
not in particulars.
There had been reports after Carter flew to New York on Wednesday
that Kennedy made the jobs
program the price of his endorsement.
Finally, in compliance with a party rule the president had accepted in
an earlier concession to Kennedy,
Carter issued a statement in which
he said he supported the "thrust and
ideals" of the platform.
On the jobs program, C&amp;rter said,
"I support the intent ... and plan to
pursue policies that will implement
its spirit and aims."
He promised to soon announce his
own prQgram to create "hundreds of
thousands of jobs in the next year,"
but said the cost "will necessarily
depend upon economic conditions."
That proved enough lor Kennedy
and for organized labor. The AFLCIO issued a statement saying, "We
are glad the president's statement
accepts the principles and objectives" of the jobs plank.
The setting for Carter's .victorious
night was the same arena where he
won the presidential nomination
four years earlier at a Democratic
convention I!UU'ked by an extraordinary degree of unity.
Carter left that convention with a
30 percent lead in public opinion
polls over incumbent' Republican
Gerald R. Ford.
He will leave this convention as
the underdog to Reagan and the
most vulnerable candidate to Anderson's · courtship of disaffected
Democrats.
Anderson met for one hour on
Wednesday in New York with former Wisconsin Gov. Pat Lucey, former deputy campaign chairman for
Kennedy. Lucey said he would study
Anderson's record and then decide if
he could support him.

Probe theft case
The sheriff's department reported
the theft of two fans, one desklamp,
and one sweeeper taken from the
Behtleham Church at Great Bend
sometime last Sunday. The theft was
discovered Wednesday.The incident
is under investigation.
Sheriff James J. Proffitt urges
fairgoers to lock their vehicles while
attending the Meigs County Fair. He
advised resident not to leave
valuables lying in the open but to
lock them in the trunk.

Harold Lee Hysell
Graveside rites for Harold Lee
Hysell, stillboi'll son of Harold E.
and Odessa Hysell botn at Holzer
Medical Center Wednesday will be
held at 10 a.m. Friday at the Bald
Knob Cemetery.
Surviving besides the parents are
six brothers and sisters, paternal
· grandparents, Leopold and Amilia
Hysell, Pomeroy, and maternal
grandmother, Irene Hupp of Stiversville.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

home.
She was a member of the Old
Kyger Church.
Other survivors include two
brothers, Wade Saunders, Merritt
Island, Fla, and Wayne Saunders,
Daytona, Fla.
Funeral services will be Saturday
at 2 p.m. at the Old Kyger Church
with the Rev. William Curfman officiating.
Burial wiD be in Ohio Valley
MemoryGardens. .
Friends may call from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Friday at Miller's Home for
, Funerals.
The body will lie in state one hour
prior to the service at the church.

.

NEW YORK (AP) -With obvious
relish, Jimmy Carter and Walter F.

Mondale are plunging into their

.··

1' ...,,

~..

$--.- -::::

.

by portraying the Republican
presidential nominee as "radical
and irresponsible'' and by raising
the specter of "the final madness of
a nuclear holocaust.''
This rhetoric of attack brought
cheers loud and long on the final
night of the Democratic National
Convention, but ironically not as
deafening as those for Carter's
defeated rival, Sen. Edward M. Ken-

..

Drought leads to water problems
BERRYVILLE, Ark. - The severe heat and drought plaguing
Arkansas are starting to take their toll on the water supplies of several
small towns - most seriously in Berryville where about 700 workers
· will have their pay cut because of a water shortage.
Kings River, which supplies the city with water, is running dry and
Chafin says, "its getting worse every day."
The state Public Health Department in Little Rock is monitoring a
number of water systems where ·shortages have been a problem.
Bruno Kirsch, director of engineering, said residents in at least five
towns have been instructed to boil water before drinking it as a
precaution against hepatitis, typhoid an~ cholera.

nedy.

MIAMI - The second Air Florida conunuter jet in four days was
hijacked to Havana on Wednesday, and Cuban authorities detained
seven suspects believed to be Cubans who had taken part in the recent
Freedom Flotilla, the FBI said.
The 6i other passengers and six crew members returned safely to
Miami less than six hours after the incident began.
Ah eighth man, who tried to slip a toy metal gun past security guards, was arrested minutes before the plane took off from Key West for
what was to IJe a !!&gt;-minute flight to Miami, agents said.
The Boeing 737 was conunandeered about 10 minutes a(ter its 10:30
a.m. takeoff. The hijackers dumped gasoline on the plane's floor,
pulled out their cigarette lighters, and demanded to go to Cuba,
special FBI agent William Nettles said,

Mayor sees good results in policy
CHESTER, Pa. - Fighting a wave of 100 arson fires this year, the
mayor said Wednesday he has already seen good results from his new
policy of ordering police to shoot to wound fleeing adult suspects as a
last resort.
"We had 35 fires in the past month; we had two over the weekend,"
said Mayor Joseph F. Battle. "That directive went into effect Monday
morning. We haven't had an arson since the order went ouV'
No one has been shot as a result of the new policy, but the mayor.
said, "I've gotten support from everybody who's called in.
Battle announced the formation of a special arson stakeout squad
Tuesday and said the officers, whose nwnber was not disclosed, would
be equipped with shotgWIS as well as service revqlvers.

Closing p,.Otest enters filth day
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - The occupation of a west side school by a
group of neighborhood residents protesting its closing went into the fif·
th day Wednesday but there were signs of a thaw in the standoff with
the school board.
A group oilS to 30 residents seized the West Business-Management
Center, formerly West High School, last Friday, ordered the staff out
of the building and chained the doors shut. Food and drink were being
supplied them by neighborhood sympathizers.
Protesters complain that without a secondary school of its own the
neighborhood stands to lose its identity.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Robert Hoover, Middleport; Melissa Collins, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Margaret Jones,
Genevieve Demo'sky, Loretta Rose,
Doris Adams, Nellie NelSon.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES AUGUST 13
Judy Adkins, Adam Allie, Walter
Bunce, Heidi Campbell, Scott CArsey, Gladys Casto, Jackie Edwards,
Charles Exline,' PatSy Grose, Jessie
Hennesy, Albert Hill Jr., Carolyn
Layne, Thelma MacKenzie, Michael
Null, Mary Proffitt, Warren Skidmore, Mary Smith, Celia Spires,
Diana Thomas, Virginia Wallace,
Grady Waugh, Charles White.
BffiTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Robin Fisher, son,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Hysell, son, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Jeffrey Nichols, da,ughter, \ Thurman; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Owsley,
son, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
Schinke, daughter, Pl. Pleasant.

Emergency runs
Local units made three runs Wednesday, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services Headquarters
reports. At 8:17p.m., the Syracuse
Unit went to Flatwoods Road for
James Lightfoot who was -taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
7:59p.m. the Pomeroy Unit went to
210 Spring Ave., for Louise Hawkina
who was taken to Holzer Medical
Center. At 9:30a.m., the Rutland
Unit transfered Nellie Nelson from
Veterans Memorial Hospital to the
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
35 A1TEND FREE CLINIC
Thirty-five persons had their blood
pressure taken at the Harrisonville
Senior Citizens' free blood pressure .
clinic held Tuesday at the
townhouse. Mrs. Ferndora Story and
Mrs. Bernadette Anderson had
charge of the clinic. Next one will be
held Sept. 9, 10 a.m. to 12 noon.

i

.

'

Hush PUPI?.!!St'l
back to school value
Morn ... Hush Puppies•· a re the val ue answer
lor your ch ildren 's back -lo-school shoes
Breath in ' Brushed Pigskin'' leather makes 'em
durable. Ready to lake 11. Cleanable.
Lightweight, too. with steel shank
support for growing feel
and cushiooed comfort inside.
Plus kid-pleasing style .
A pleasing answer

.e

AUG. 15 and 16
SAVE ON JEANS FOR THE
UPCOMING SCHOOL YEAR!
VOL. 31 · NO. 87

WOMEN'S JEANS

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

REG. 513.00......... SALE '10.49
REG. 516.00•••••••• SALE 512.89
REG. '21.00•••••••• SALE 516.89
REG. '24.00•••••••• SALE '19.29
MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S

JEANS
Denims - corduroys · cotton poly blends
painters jeans in basic and fashion s'tyles.
A tremendous selection in sizes 27 to 42
and extra sizes 44 to 50. Save Friday and
Saturday.

dairy class, were the Jersey animals of Brent and Ritchie Hayes, 1-r, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hayes,
Guysville, at the Meigs County Fair Thursday.

GRAND AND RESERVE CHAMPIONS - Taking
grand champion and reserve champion honors, open

MEN'S '12.95 JEANS ••••••••'10.35
MEN'S '17.95 JEANS •••••••• '14.35
MEN'S '18.95 JEANS•••••••• '15.15
MEN'S '19.95 JEANS •••••••• '15.95

Shootings
leave one
dead, one
critical

BOYS' JEANS
Blue denim including Wrangler No Fault
denims · corduroys - cotton poly blends
painters jeans. Our entire stock included.

Theatre fire kills 59 children

Regular Sizes 8 to 18
Slim Sizes 8 to 18
Husky Sizes 8 to 18
Student Sizes 26 to JO waist

BEIRUT, Lebanon - A fire in a movie theater in a suburb of Baghdad, the Iraqi capital, ltilled 59 children and injured45 others, the Iraqi
Interior Ministry announced today.
The Iraqi news agency quoted a ministry spokesman as saying the
fire was caused by electrical short circuit in the AI Baida Cinema
on Thursday, the third day of the feast marking the end of the Moslem
holy month of Ramadan.
There was no mention of any politic!lllY motivated sabotage.
Iraqi cities have suffered from violent sabotage that involved
several bombings in the last six months.
Authorities in Baghdad blamed the violence on supporters of
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's Islamic revolutionary regime in
neighboring Iran.

an

BOYS' '11.95 JEANS •••• SALE '10.15
BOYS' '12.95 JEANS •••• SAL£ '11.00
. BOYS' S14.95 JEANS •••• SALE '12.70
BOYS' $15.95 JEANS•••• SALE '13.55

Hijacked plane going to Cuba
MIAMI - A National Airlines DC-10 bound from Miami to Puerto
Rico with 223 people aboard was hijacked Thursday night and ~verted
to Cuba, the third jetliner hijacked this week, Federal AVIation Administration officials said.
.
National flight872 was conunandeered at about 7:40p.m. EDT alter
leaving Miami International Airport at 6:38, FAA spokesman Jack
Barker said in Atlanla.
The National DC-10 jet had 211 passengers and 12 crew members,
Barker said. ·

CHILDREN'S JEANS
Easy care denim jeans ir) regular and
slim cuts. Buy your jeans for school
and Save!
Little Boys' Sizes 1 to 7
Uttle Girls' Sizes 1 to 4
4to6x
7 to 14

Jury deliberations underway
CINCINNATI- Jurors in the Beverly Hills Supper Club civil trial
entered the first full dsy of deUberations today to determine if
polyvinyl chloride is extremely dangerous and whether its producers
had a duty to wam their customers of any danger.
United States District Judge Carl Rubin gave those instructions to
the jury of io women and two men Thursday following final argwnents
by lawyers for the estates Qf 165 victims of the 1977 fire and the 15
defendants representing the wire industry and PVC manufacturers.
Lawyers for the families of the victiiils who died in the May 28, i977,
fire at nearby.Southgate, Ky., filed suit claiming negligence. PVC is
used ail a retardant to electrical fires. •
The.victims' lawyers claim that when heated, the insulation gives
off a toxic gas called polyvinyl chloride and that the gas contributed to

thedeaths.

en tine
FRIDAY, AUGUST 15. 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

Suicide is suspected in the Thursday evening shotgun death of a
Route 1, Cheshire, man, reports the
Gallia County Sheriff's Department.
Dead of an apparent self-inflicted
wound is Marion Paul Darnell, 63.
Called to the scene, at the Darnell
residence just off SR 554, at 8:38
p.m., Gallia deputies report DameU
was found in an office-study of his
home with a shotgun blast to the
chest, in the area of the heart.
Officers report evidence at the
scene indicates Darnell butted a 12guage shotgun against a wall and
pulled the tr;gger with a yard stick.
Darnell was pronounced dead at
the scene by Gallia County Coroner
Dr. Donald R. Warehime. The body
was removed to · Miller's Funeral
Home.
. .
The original investigation was
spurred by a report of a possible
suicide logged by a family friend.
A spokes.-nan for the sheriff's
department said this morning that
Darnell had been speaking to his
son, Thomas Darnell,, North
Carolina, over the phone at the time
of the suspectea suicide.
The son phoned family friend Gordon Swisher and advised that he'
feared his father had shot himself.
Swisher notified the Gallia depart-

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Inflation
at the wholesale level raced ahead
1.7 percent in July - the biggest
jump in nearly six years - mainly
as a result of a sharp, drought-influenced spurt in food prices, the
government said today.
The huge increase dramatically
halted montlis of an easing inflation
trend. In JU!le, wholesale, or
producer, prices rose 0.8 percent.
Not since November 1974 have
producer prices risen so fast, .the
Labor Department said. July's boost
outpaced even the dizzying levels set
earlier this year when inflation was
so severe that credit controls were
imposed.
If July's seasonally adjusted rate
continues for an entire year, inflation at the wholesale level would
exceed 22 percent ann1111lly, far
more than the 10 percent yearly
pace set in June.
However, this spurt was called
"temporary" by Allen Sinai, vice
president of Data Resources Inc.,
the Lexington, Mass., economic
forecasting firm.

"This is a shock due primarily to
food. The overall backdrop for inflation, because conswner demand
is down so, due to the recession,'ts
favorable," he said.
The Labor Department reported
that food was the major culprit at all
three levels of the Producer Price
Index: finished goods, intermediate
items and raw products.
In sharp contrast, gasoline prices
fell 1.2 percent in July, while home
heating fuel remained the same.
"Up even through June, food was
a very strong moderating influence
on prices, while energy had been the
major thrust for pwnping up inflation," said John Early, a Labor
Department economist. "Now, it's
getting to place where they are
reversing roles."
The price of finished food products
- ready for sale to ·consumers rose 3.8 percent last month, far more
than the 0.7 percent increase in
June, the department said.
Processed poultry prices shot up
23.5 percent. Millions of chickens
were killed in the heat wave.

a

Prices for beef, meanwhile, jumped 7.4 percent, compared with 3.9
percent the month before, while
pork prices increased percent, far
more than the 0.8 percent boost in
June, the department said.
Compared with food, all other'
finished goods at the wholesale level
rose 1.1 percent in July.
·
The sharp acceleration in food was
evident at the intermediate and
crude stages- a signal that the worst may be yet to come as these jumps are passed on through processing
and sale to consumers in coming
months, say private economists.
At the crude, or unprocessed
stage, food prices shot up 9 percent ·
in July, pushing the prices for all
raw products at the wholesale level
up 6.3 percent, the department said.
Grain prices shot up.i3.7 percent
in July, after falling in four of the first six months of 19110. Sharply higher
corn prices resulting from the
drought were primarily responsible
for this turnaround.
Prices for live poultry and hogs increased more than 25 percent.

Cattle judging completed
Lea Ahn Gaul, Route 3, Pomeroy,
Road Farm took six firsts in the
dairy cattle has been completed at exhibited the grand champion
Hereford judging with Lea Ann Gaul
female and Rogie Gaul, the reserve
taking three and Rogie Gaul taking
the 117th annual Meigs County Fair.
In dairy cattle, Brown Swiss, champion female. The Country
one first.
Hayes Family Farm at Guysville ~ , . - - - - - - - - - · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
exhibited the grand champion and
the junior champion females in addition to exhibiting the best senior
heifer and best junior heifer calves.
In Jerseys, the Hayes Family
Sonny James, recently named "Male Artist of the Decade" in counFarm exhibited the champion bull
try music by Record World Magazine will be the free grandstand atand the senior and junior champion
traction at the Meigs County Fair at 8 this evening.
females. The farm took eight first
· Also being held this evening at 7·p.m. will be the junior fair market
places in the various ~ategories of
steer, lambandpigsale.
judging among the jerSP.ys. Leland,
Saturday attractions will include a pony pull starting at 10 a.m..and
of Pomeroy took two first• and John
a chain saw contest, a new attraction, will be sta~ed beginning at 12
Colwell of Route 1, Vinton, took
noon.
three firsts.
The annual pretty baby contest will held held in the show ring at 1
In beef cattle, Country Road Fann
p.m. Saturday and weigh in time for the horse pulling contest' which
(David Gloeckner) of Racine
starts at 4 p.m. will be between 1and 3 p.m. The annual tractor pull
exhibited the grand champion and
will be staged at 7 p.m. Saturdsy.
reserve champion bulls.
Open class judging of beef and

Meigs fair program

( Continued on page 12 f. ;,

.

I

Weather forecast

Partly cloudy with a chance of showers or thunderstorms tonight

SATURDAY TIL 5:00.

and Satu.-day. Lows tonight in the mid-60s. Highs Satlirday near 80.
Chance of rail) 50 percent tonight and 30 percent Saturday. Winds nor,
theasterly around 10 JJ1ph tonight.
Exteoded Ohio Forecast- SWJday through Tuesday: Chance of

_.__,......__

EL-BERFELDS IN POMEROY

sday night's speeches.
our children will inherit, it is the fear
Carter referred to Reagan as that somehow, for some reason that
talking about "a world of tinsel and no one will·remember;'the world will
make-believe.'.'
resort to the final madness of a
He said the new leaders of the nuclear holocaust."
Republican Party " have now
Turning to Reagan's · domestic
promised to launch an all-out n u c 1 policies, the Democratic ticket cone a r arms race ... There can be no centrated its heaviest fire on his
winners in such an arms race - and proposal for a 30 percent cut in tax
all the people on earth could be the rates phased in over three years.
losers.
Carter called it "a bizarre '
" The Republican nominee ad- _ program of massive tax cuts for the
vocates abandoning arms control rich." He also noted that during the
policies which have been supported Republican presidential campaign,
by every Democratic president sin- George Bush, now Reagan's runce Truman and every· Republican ning-mate, had called till! tax cut
president since Dwight Eisenhower. pr:oposal''economic voodoo."
This radical and irresponsible courMondale said that under the
se would threaten our security Reagan proposal "If you're an
and could put thr whole world in executive earning $200,000 a year,
peril.' '
you get back enough to buy a MerMondale sounded a similar theme , cedes. If you're a teacher, you get
saying, " If there is one thing that back enough to buy a hubcap."
(Continued on page 12)
concerns me most about the world

Inflation zncrease
biggest in 6 years

JUNIOR SIZES 3 to 15
MISSES· SIZES 6 to 20
EXTRA SIZES 32 to 42

.

John Anderson to be far more
damaging to Carter ln states like
New York, Massachusetts: Connecticut, Michigan and Illinois.
That Reagan strategy made it all
the more crucial to Carter to gain
the Massachusetts senator's active
support in the states where he has a
strong following .
With their internal party squabbles quieted by a truce, if not
necessarily a lasting peace, Carter
and Mondale lost no time jumping to
the attack.
Their acceptance speeches refiec·
ted a strategy that follows the 1964
Democratic campaign against
Barry Goldwater, in which .the conservative senator from Arizona was
successfully portrayed as triggerhappy 1111d as a radical who would
try to repeal progressive programs
dating back to the New Deal.
Those themes were clear in Thur-

••

Quality denim straight legs, flare cinch waists
in regular and fashion jean styles.

SHOP FRIDAY
TIL 8:00

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

minutes. He spoke not a word to the
said early today that at some point ·
· delegates who loudly cheered each
he and Kennedy would meet in
Washington.
time he waved with the understated
There was no word yet when or
clenched-fist gesture he used so often during his ill-starred presidenwhere he would fonnaliy open his
tial campaign . .
fall campaign. Four years ago, CarCarter held his hand out. Kennedy
ter and Mondale launched their
campaign with a rally in Warm
grasped it. There was no embrace.
No suggestion that \his was a
Springs, Ga., the resort where
meetiilg between old friends. They ' Franklin Delano Roosevelt often
vacationed and where he died.
looked rather like two generals who
had fought a long war and were
Carter campaign aides already
tr}ring to bring about peace among
have said the president will con·
centrate on the industrial states of
their followers as well as between
themselves.
the Noi-theast and upper Midwest,
It was an extraordinary end to a
areas where Reagan also intends to
make his principal effort.
political convention at which the
loudest cheers were for the defeated
Reagan believes his conservative
programs are becoming inDemocratic candidate.
CFeasingly attractive to blue-collar
After a stop at today's postconvention meeting of the
workers who traditionally have
Democratic National Committee,
voted Democratic. In addition, the
Ca~ planned to fly to the presidenRepublican nominee also expects independent presidential candidate .
tial retreat at Camp David, Md. He

lWO DAYS ONLY

REG. '6.00••••••••• SALE '5.09
REG. '8.00••••••• ~. SALE '6.79
.R~G. '11.~ ....... SALE '9.39
REG. '14.00 •••;•••••$ALE '11.89

THE SHOE BOX

.

After Mondale's and Carter's acceptance s~, Kennedy joined
the two candidates on the podium at
Madison Square Garden on Thursday night.
He was there for less than five

Florida commuter jet hijacked

AsK TOWED
Marriage licenses were issued to
Jeffrey Keith Sno)Vden, 28, Rutland,
and Carolyn Sue Mwnmey, 26,
Rutland; Terry Ray PhiiJips, 24,
Pomeroy, and Marie Elizabeth
Pickens, 19, Racine.
SEEKS DIVORCE
Sharon Reiber, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, filed suit for divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court againat Terry Reiber, Rt. 1, RaCIDe.

AP PoUUcal Writer

campaign against Ronald Reagan

Ada E. Trout
Ada Earlen Trout, 52, Cheshire,
died at 9:30 a.m. at HMC after a
stroke suffered the .night before.
She was one of three children born
May 22, 1928, to in Gallia County to
Charles and Nellie Greenlee Saunders who survive.
She was a graduate of GAHS and
worked at Grover Real Estate and
the Hallmark Card Shop, Kanauga.
She was married to Miles Trout iri
1945, to which union three children ·
were bOrn: James Earl Trout,
Melbourne, Fla; Ellen Sue Neal,
Cocoa, Fla; and Mark Lee Trout, at

By DONAlD IM- ROTHBERG

.,

showers or thunderstorms SWlday and Monday. Clearing Tuesday.
Highs in the low to mi~. J:.ows in the mid to upper 50s early Sunday
and in the 60s Monday and Tuesday.

L....,_ __ _ .. · - - - . . , . - - - - - - - - - - - - '

i,

LO'ITERY NUMBERS
Dally number: 793
Pyramid

. TwOM!lglt- 89
Three-digit- 052
FouNilglt- 3714

JERSEY GRAND AND RESERVE CHAMPIONS
- Taking the grand and reserve champion honors,
dairy +H division, were the animals of ~an Colwell,
~

son df Mr. and Mrs. John Colwell, Vinton. Pictured left
to right are.John and Dean. The animals were judged '
Thursday at the Meigs County Fair.
·~

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