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                  <text>AUTOMATIC

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VOL 31 NO. 41

·aly
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO,

en tine

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

USIIDA11
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Spending reductions
may·overcome defic

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Legislative leaders say they think an
expected state budget deficit of $264
million or more can be made up with
spending reductions which won't
cost jobs or affect state services.
Reductions totaling that amount
would be 2 percent to 3 percent of the
general revenue fund budget of $10.7
billion for the 1979-1981 biennium.
But the Senate Finance Com·
qlittee wants more information
before it recommends for cuts, 511id
Chairman Harry Meshel, DYoungstown.
His panel was briefed Tuesday
night by Richard G. Sheridan, director of the Legislative Budget Office,
who listed $264 million as his
estimate of the revenue shortfall in
the second fiscal year of the bien·
riium, which begins July 1.
Senate President Oliver Ocasek,
D-Akron, quoted Kelp earlier as
saying the state's financial situation
is more bleak than painted by LBO.
The governor's finance chief has
talked about a deficit of about $310
million, Ocasek said.
There is general agreement bet·
ween tbe two agencies that the
revenue slump is attributable to the

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current recession, especially the
loss of sales tax revenues in today's
stagnant auto sales market. Of
Sheridan's projected $264 million
deficit, nearly $124 million will not
be received as a result of lower than
anticipiated auto sales, he told the
committee.
Other revenue drops, based on his
projections, include $11 million in
non-auto sales tax revenues, $9.3
million in the personal income tax,
$46 million in the corporate franchise tax and $22.4 million in utility
taxes. The balance of the deficit is
expected to reflect declines in lesser
tax sources.
Ocasek said the finance committee may be able to come Up with
$100 million to $150 million of the
deficit. Among other things, he
would tap funds of those agencies
which spent less than expected in the
first year of the biennium.
But the education department, for
instance, is allowing $23 million to
lapse at the end of the fiscal year, he
said. That surplus was realized from
declining enrollments, which meant
lower than expected school subsidies. That money can be re-

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WASHINGTON - Final congressional action on renewal of
peacetime draft registration was temporarily block~ today as the
Senate, after meeting through the night, remamed locked m
parliamentary wrangling.
Every major test vote pointed toward eventual approval of a Housepassed program requiring an estimated 4 million young men to
register this swruner.
But opponents fought efforts to bring it to a resolution and there was
no indication when a final vote would come.ln theory, the Senate could
stay in session around the clock until noon Saturday before a vote
could be forced on1he issue.

Carter would debate Anderson

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SAN FRANCISCO - John B. Anderson says he will gladiy accept
President Carter's condition for debating him this fall, and attributes
the chief executive's reversal of a once-flat refusal to "the hot breath
of public opinion."
An obviously elated Anderson said Tuesday he is convinced his
name will be on enough ballots in November as an independent to
make him a credible challenger to Carter and Republican Ronald
Reagan.

Weather forecast
Sunny today, with highs in the upper 60s to low 70s. Clear tonight,
with lows from 45 to 50. Mostly sunny Thursday, with highs in the mid
to upper 7M. The chance of rain is near zero tod, tonight and Thursday.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday: Fair and warm, with highs from the mid
Ills to low 90s. Lows in the mid to upper 50s early Friday, warming to
the low 70s by early Sunday.

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to be installed on King Field at the Syracuse Municipal
Park. The scoreboard has arrived and will be erected
later this month.

Another .oil price _h ike set in motion
ALGIERS, Algeria (APJ - The
world oil cartel, after a bitterly
divisive three-day meeting, set in
motion today another round of price
increases that could eventually force American consumers to pay as
much as 3 cents a galion more for
gasoline and home heating fuel.
Kuwait and Venezuela quickly an·
nounced price increases of $2 a
barrel effective July I. Sheik Ahmed
Zaki Yamani of Saudi Arabia, the
leading price dove and world's
largest oil exporter, said the Saudi
price might go up $1 or $2, but the
world oil glut probably would rule
that out for the moment.
The l~nation Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries set
a reference, or benchmark price of
$32 a barrel - roughly halfway bet·
ween Saudi Arabia's ~ and Iran's
$35. OPEC also fixed a ceiling of $37
a barrel, which will prevent hawks
Algeria, Nigeria and · Libya from
making large price hikes ·in a new
round of "leapfrogging."
But the "compromise" agreement

was mostly for public consumption,
would not raise prices at this time,
because individual members may
although conference sources said a
wait as long as they like before putSaudi increase would come in the
ting their prices in line with the new
next few months. Iran, which sells
benchmark.
oil virtually identicial to that of
Oil industry analysts in New York ·Saudi Arabia and Iraq, said it would
said the latest OPEC decision will
not decrease the cost of oil.
not immediately affect prices in the
As a result, OPEC prices will
United States as long as Saudi
remain disunited as they have been
Arabia does not raise its prices. But
since early 1979.
the energy commissioner of the
Over five sessions, the conference
nine-nation European Common
bounced from discord to agreement
Market, Guido Brunner, said in
as some ministers, like Iranian Oil
Brussels that the new price standard Minister Ali Akbar Moinfar, anwas "a further considerable burden
nounced they ·had achieved
for the world economy" that would
unanimity. Others, like United Arab
worsen "the tendencies toward
Emirates Oil Minister Mana Saeed
recession and inflation."
ai-Otaiba, said there was no
Under the accord, middle-priced agreement on anything.
countries, led by Iraq and including
Many OPEC members argue
Kuwait and Venezuela, are to raise production must be reduced to
current prices, about $30 a barrel, by eli!oinate the current world oil glut
$2 .
and prevent another. A production
But prices at the lower and upper cutback would help support high
ends of the spectrum will remain un- prices charged by Iran and other
changed- at least for now.
OPEC hawks.
Saudi Arabia, for one, said it
The Saudis appeared to have sue-

cessfully resisted demands they cut
their daily 9.5 million barrels
production back by I million.' The
desert kingdom increased production, as did Iraq, to offset the short·
fall in oil supplies following the
Iranian revolution.
Saudi Oil Minister Sheikh Aluned
Zaki Yamani, who has predicted oil
prices will decrease by fall because
of reduced demand caused in part by
the U.S. recession, told reporters he
would not boost · prices "under
current market conditions.
However, Libyan Oil Minister
Abulssalam Mohanuned Zagaar and
several other ministers said they understood that Saudi Arabia, the
world's leading oil exporter and
producer of one-third of all OPEC
oil, would lift its price to $32 within
several months.
According to industry analysts,
gasoline and heating oU prices in the
United States go up about It cents a
gallon for every $1 increase in the
price of an OPEC 42-gallon barrel.

President inclined to prosecute Clark
WASHINGTON (AP)- President
Carter says he would be inclined to
prosecute former Attorney General
Ramsey Clark for traveling to Iran,
but will leave the final decision to
the present attorney general.
Clark responded that the
president's remarks have effectively poisoned any case the
government might have had.
In an impromptu news conference
aboard Air Force One, Carter said
Tuesday that the trip by Clark and
nine others to a conference on "The
Crimes of America" against Iran
was "damaging to the nation's
foreign policy and to carrying out
sanctions against Iran.''
But the president said the decision
of how and whether to proceed
against Clark and his companions
would be up to Attorney General
Benjamin R. Civiletti.
"My guess would be he would seek
civil penalties," Carter said.
Conviction for violating the
criminal section of the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act,
which Carter invoked to ban travel

to Iran, is punishable by up to 10
years in prison and a $50,000 fine.
The president's talk of prosecuting
Clark and the others contrasted with
a statement Sunday by Secretary of
State Edmund S. Muskie, who said
the travel ban was intended to
prevent people' from going to Iran
rather than punishing people who
violate the policy.
However, Carter noted that it is
Civiletti and himself - not Muskie
- who bear the responsibility for
deciding who to prosecute. "And my
own inclination is to enforce my
directiv~. which I presume to be
legal, and when people violate .it, to
see that an appropriate punishment
is levied," he said.
The president referred to Clark as
a "misguided American" whose in-

terference threa:tened to "exacerbate an already serious situation."
Clark, reached in Paris by CBS
News, had this response to the
president's comments:
"Well, I'm saddened by it, a litUe
bit. I love our country and I believe
in the. presidency, but I don't think

President Carter understands what
law is. He's a poli~cian. He can't be
talking about criminal cases. It's absolutely improper. Suppose there
really was a case against me. For
him to talk about it poisons the case.
Doesn't he believe in the rule of law?
More important, I don't think he understands freedom.''
Carter tried to send Clark to
Tehran as his special emissary last
November to seek release of the
American hostages who had just
been seized in the takeover of 'he
U.S. Embassy there. The mission
failed to get off the ground because
the Iranians refused to admit Clark.
Clark, who served as attorney
general in Lyndon B. Johnson 's
Cabinet, had spoken out previously
in favor of the Iranian revolution
that brought the Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini to power last year and
ousted Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi.
The question-and-answer session
caine as Carter was returning from
a two-day, 8,000-mile trip in which he
met with community leaders in

Miami, addressed the U.S. Con-

ference of Mayors in SeatUe and met
with local disaster relief officials on
the Mount St. Helens volcano eruption.
The president, in shirtsleeves,
walked to the rear of the presidential
jet for the unusual session with
reporters in a scene reminiscent of
his days as a presidential candidate
in 1976.
After answering questions on a
wide range of subjects for 40
minutes, Carter landed in Grand
Island, Neb., to tour the damage
caused by recent tornadoes that
swept away several blocks of the
city of 40,000 inhabitants.
He promised homeless residents
the federal goverrunent would not
forget them and praised their
courage, their "pioneer spirit" and
their " unselfish attitude" toward
each other.
During the session with reporters
aboard the plane, Carter:
-Said his administration has not
&lt;Continued on page 16)

fmmttoplft

By The Associated Press

DUI'Y

...,lOW• ....

....

BANK BUYS SCOREBOARD - Tom Wolfe,
president of the Racine Home National Bank, right,
presents a $1,563 check to Syracuse Councilman Mick
Ash to pay for an elaborate Nevo baseball scoreboard

Ohioans believe cuurt too easy on criminals

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appropriated for other purposes, he
added.
Sheridan noted that the welfare
department is owed about $43
million in federal subsidies and that
the state should receive another $46
million in federal reyenue sharing
funds.
The state also has a large nwnber
of self-sustaining rotary funds,
representing fees paid for slate ser·
vices which might be tapped.
Ocasek said he does not anticipate
a need to cut payment levels for
welfare recipients. In welfare, as in
the other agencies, savings from a
hiring freeze, reductions in spending _
for supplies and equipment, and
holding the line on other administrative costs can do the job, he
said.
Rhodes is expected to meet with
le~islative leaders lat~r this week in
an effort to put ftmshing touches on
the austerity package.

........
MBMCO

•7••
NEWPOUC~CHIEF- Charles R. M~ey, Lancaster, has
begun his duties·as the newPomeroy Chief of Pollee. Chief McKinney se~
ved four years with the military police in the United States Marines and
prior to coming to Pomeroy was chief of police at Thurston, near Lancaster. Chief McKinney, his wife, Betty, and a grandson, Joey, who
resides with them, will be moving into the Nardei property, 3&amp;1 E. Mam
st., Pomeroy, Thursday.

Justice and conducted by the
Polymetrics Laboratory of Ohio
A majority of. Ohioans believe · State University. It was aimed at
courts go easier on criminals today
filling out previous, but fragmenthan in the past and that police
tary, studies of attitudes about
should have shotguns within easy
crime and the courts.
reach, a survey released by the Ohio
Department of Economic and ComThose persons questioned
munity Development indicates.
represented 52 of Ohio's 88 counties
State officials say the survey was · and wererandomly selected, survey
the first cornpehensive project of its officials said. All were at least 18
kind in Ohio concerning crime and years old, involving a roughly equal
crimi!tal justice.
number of men and women.
According to the survey, 76 perThree out of four persons
cent of 803 persons questioned say
criminal court sentences today are questioned in the surv:y said
ligbter than th~y were 10 years ago. juvenile courts are too lement and
And 71 percent of those polled said that juveniles who commit serious
police should be allowed to carry crimes should be tried as adults.
Other questions In the poll inshotguns in their cruisers.
The survey was sponsored by the
volved capital punislunent and .
whether people feel safe in their ,
department's Division of Crin1e
Prevention and Offic~ of Criminal
neighborhoods.

Capital punislunent should be administered for some crimes, said 81
percent of those questioned. Capital
,punishment is a deterrent to cririle,
said 69 percent.
A majority, 72 percent, said the&gt;:

feel safe in their neighborhoods. And
43 percent said they thought crime in

their neighborhoods was committed
by outsiders. Aminority, 34 percent, .
said crime in their neighborhood
was committed by their neighbors.

Bridge repair report given
Char1ey Smith, acting county
engineer, meeting with the board rJ.
county commiSsioners Tuesday
discussed progess being made on the
repair at Hobson Bridge.
Smith also reviewed' other aspects
of the county highway road
program.
The board passed a resolution
authorizing the lijJplication and
hearing for a Meigs County Park
District. The resolution 811 passed

would exempt all county in·
corporated villages.
Mike Swl!!her, county walfare
director, reviewed the i!llurance
program at the county welfare office.
.
Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells and Chester
Well,s, commissioners Mary Hobstetter-, clerk, and Martlia CJham..
hers.

0

'

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerpy, 0., W~esday, June 11, 1980

2- The Daily Sentinel, Ml(!dleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 11, 1980

Opinions
&amp;Comments
'

'

•

I SeE..RCN~I..t&gt; R!AG~N W\T"' OOt&gt;I..ES
0~ G.O.~ t&gt;ELEGATES ••••

--

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------------- Letters to editor
Let's settle now
Dear Editor:
Whew!!!! These make-up June
school days are certainly hot.
Students, as well as teachers and
other staff members, are struggling
through each day. Perhaps, in some
classes, nothing more is being accomplished other than making up
days.
As many of you know, OAPSE 's
(cooks, bus drivers, janitors, etc.)
negotiations concerning a re-opener
:Clause on salary and calamity days
:are scheduled to begin this month_
Jo be sure a re-occurrence of this
current situation does not develop
next June, talk to Mr. Gleason and
all the board members. Try to per·
·suade them to settie with OAPSE

.
•.

before school starts next Fall. (Encourage talks NOW if not sooner)_
Continue to urge them to deal with
the situation now so that a problem
(strike) won't develop later. No one
likes to be sitting in a classroom in
June.
Remember your input can be a
great influence to ward-off a strike
by OAPSE next Fall. Please don't let
this happen again! Show your child
that you care ... contact someone
today. In addition, this letter is not
meant for you to lake sides, but to
help get you involved and hopefully
voice your opinion about school
problems. - Margaret Suzanne
Teaford, Rutland Elementary
Teacher_

Signatures needed

I,

Dear Editor,
I would like to alert the concerned
citizens of Meigs County that a
petition is circulating through which
-we hope to alert John H. Ackerman,
:ohio Dept. of Health to extend the
:Maternal and Child Division of the
'Ohio Dept. of Health grant.
In our community this grant
provides our Well Child Clinic. We

believe this clinic is very vital for
our children who are the citizens of
tomorrow and all of our futures.
We do need the community's
signatures and support in order to
let John H. Ackerman aware of our
desires to extend the Maternal and
Chlld Division of the Ohio Dept. of
Health grant
Sincerely. - Rctta Day.

Today in history.
Today is Wednesday, June 11, the
163rd day of 1980. There are 203 days
left in the year.
: Today's highlight in history:
: · On June 11, 1859, a prospector laid
-claim to a silver deposit in Nevada's
-Six-Mile Canyon. The claim turned
out to be the Comstock Lode, one of
the richest of all time, yielding ore
. -worth hundreds of millions of
:ctollars.
: On this date:
· In 1942, a lend-lease agreement
between the United States and
Soviet Union - designed to aid the
Soviet war effort in World War II was made public.
: In 1963, under the eyes of National
~uardsmen, Gov. George Wallace
:Stepped aside to let blacks register
·at the University of Alabama.
In 1967, Israel and Syria settled into a cease-fire after the Six-Day
War, with Israeli troops still holding
·positions inside Syria.
: In 1977, Dutch marines stormed a

• •

train hijacked by South Moluccan
terrorists in the Netherlands,
freeing 49 hostages. Two hostages
and six of their captors were killed
in the attack.
Ten years ago, the U.S. presence
in Libya ended two weeks ahead of
schedule when the last detachment
left Wheelus Air Base, the last major
U.S. military facility in North
Africa.
Five years ago, the White House
was seeking comments from top of·
ficials, including the secretary of
state and the CIA director, to the
Rockefeller Commission's critical
report on the CIA.
Last year, actor John Wayne died
at the age of 72 after a lengthy battle
with cancer.
Today's birthday: French deep
sea explorer Jacques Cousteau is 70.
Thought For Today : Always
forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much - Oscar Wilde
(1856-1900.)

Berry's World

Equal opportunity a recipe for overwork
By Robert Wallen
WASHINGTON (NEAl - If
misery loves company, the millions
of American women who work two
shifts - one on the job and the other
managing a household - will be
happy to learn that their burden is
shared by a worldwide sisterhood.
"Equal opportunity for women
will tum out to be a recipe for overwork" if they must continue to
juggle the responsibilities of career,
marriage, motherhood and
housework without additional
assistance from their spouses, warns a new study.
The report on "Women, Men and
the Division of Labor," written by
Kathleen Newland, has just been
published by the Worldwatch In·
stitute, a Washington-based
organization devoted to public policy
research.
The report documents what
homemarkers (single or married)
have long known - their work not
only is unpaid but usually
unrecognized and unappreciated as
well.
In less~r developed countries, for
example, women invariably are
assigned the indispensible task of
hauling water from the village well
or a nearby stream to their homes
for use by members of their

families.
But one authoritative survey of
how gross national product is
measured in 70 developing countries
found that "only six counted the
value of carrying water to its point
of use in their GNPs and only two
countries assigned any economic
value to housewives• services."

produced by the burden of
work that goes on outside of it," the
housework in the United States was
report says in proposing a "symillustrated in a 1967~ survey of
metrical family' • relationship.
husbands and wives employed full·
Only in magazine advertisements
time. The total work-week was 71 · and television commercials does
hours for women and 55 hours for
there exist the "superwoman" who
men.
zips through a glamorous workd,ay
A 1975 United Nations survey of 12
in the dress-for-success tailored suit,
countries - including the United
briefly dons an apron to whip up a .
gourmet dinner for her family, then ·
slips into a· $400 dress for a fastpaced evening of entertainment in a
theater, disco or nightclub.
The working wives and mothers of
the world already know that's a
myth, but the hllllbands and fathE:'S
haven't fully discovered - or accepted
- the need for shared
States and Soviet Union as well as
household
resporuJibillties.
France, Germany and other
"A few governments - China,
European nations - produced
similar results: The work-week for Cuba and Sweden being the most
employed women was slightiy more . prominent eU!Jiples - have made
the sharing of ho.usework a tenet of
than 70 hours compared with 60
official policy. But all three
hours for working men.
Despite all the publicity devoted to recognize that official endorsement
·· female entry and advancement in of the idea is a rhetorical device and
the labor market, "the sharing of un- that the policy is impossible to enpaid household labor receives only a force in practical terms."
The division of household labor
fraction of the attention given to
"remains
a privately determined
equality in formal employment,"
matter,
a
subject for comsays the Worldwatch styity.
munication
and
negotiation between
"If women are to take full adthe
man
and
woman
directly invantage of newly won access to the
volved,"
the
Worldwatch
Institute
formal labor market, men must inconcludes.
report
crease their share of the essential

Today's commentary
In the rural communities of impoverished nations, that work often
is "extremely arduous", says tb•
report. One study of activity in a
Pakistani village showed that
women typically devoted 14~ hours
daily to domestic chores.
Communist
theoretician
Frederick Engels argued ahnost 100
years ago that "the emancipation of
women become possible only when ..
.domestic duties require their attention only to a minor degree." But
the average working women in the
Soviet Union today must spend three
or four additional hours on
housework.
The disparity between the sexes

Business mirror

Economic sun shines on Arizona
PHOENIJC;' Ariz. (AP)
Recession clouds the future for most
Americans but the sun, only slightly
faded, still shines on Arizona.
"Most Arizonans will survive with
minimum disruption," said an
economist. He forecasts continued if
diminished growth.
The economy will be hurt, he conceded, but not to the point where activity is likely to go into reverse, as
in the country as a whole. There is
simply too niuch faith in the 'future,
and too much hwnan energy, to be
stopped by recession.
Attracted by the ever-present sun
and a multiplicity of opportunities
under it, a flood of domestic immigrants - 1,000 households a week
in Phoenix - swelled the population
by 51 percent to 2.7 million in the

Instruments, Memorex and National
Semiconductor.
Elliott Pollack, 35, vice president
and economist of the Valley National
Bank, whose own growth as a Southwest regional hanll makes it the 28th
largest in the country, documents
some of the other reasons for optimism about jobs.
He notes that government emThe high technology !inns now
ployment
- in military, birder
building or expanding in this city or .
patrol,
and
park jobs, among others
in the "urban villages" around it
accounts
for 21 percent of the
make up a list of blue chips: Digital,
total.
"Government;"
he says, "has
ITI, Spe!'I'Y, General Telephone,
never
had
a
decline
in
total jobs in
General Instruments, Litton,
the
past
15
years."
Motorola, Sperry.
Services, including those in stores
In the Tucson area, untll recentiy
and
restaurants - . accounting for
not as eager as Phoenix for industry,
new or expansion projects include ahnost 20 percent of employment lliM, Hughes, Fluor, Burr Brown " ~ continue to grow regardless of
Research, GE, Gates Learjet, Veeco the economic situation," he says.

past decade.
In the same time, personal income
rose 253 percent and the value of
manufacturing jumped 'l'/7 percent,
a good deal of it resulting from the
growth of the electronics industry
here and around Tucson, 116 mlles
south.

·The question, he contends, is bet·
ween slow or rapid growth.
Trade, which accounts for about a
quarter of jobs, seems also to be
recession-resistant. "Whlle this sector grows slowly during recessions,
there are rarely massive layoffs,"
Pollack observes.
But there are sectors that Will be
hurt. Construction, in houalng
especially, Ia expected to fall sllarply, not only because of high prices
and difficult borrowing terms, but
because the in-migration might
slow. And there is a question about the
future of agriculture. Arlzona ranks;
behind only'Texaa and California in
cotton income, but cotton uses a lot
of water.

When did the Senate buy its·first auto!

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

cz:,-

@ 1080 by NEA, Jnc,

"HELP/ I am In a /arid experiencing decreased
productivity and aging technology. "

••

WASHING'rON (AP) - What
senator was the author of "How to
Hold an Audience Without a Rope?"
When dld the Senate buy its first
automobile?
What does "pro tempore" mean?
If you're stumped, drop around to
the Capitol some Thursday cr
Friday and lake in one of the regular
weekly lectures by Robert C. Byrd.
Byrd, the West Virginia Democrat
and majority leader, has been
taking the floor at approximately
one-week intervals since March 21 to
speak on the history of the Senate. ·
Aides say Byrd conceived the Idea
as a preparation for the 200\h an·
niversary of the body nine years off.
''As far as I know, .he intends to
keep on going,'' said one assistant.

"He keeps coming up with new
material."
In each talk, Byrd lakes up an
aspect of his subject. One week, for
instance, he talked about the 14
senators who have held the office of
secretary of the Democratic conference. One of them, Josh Lee of

use of ihe vice president. '!'he Senate.
now owns four automoblles and

leuesl3.
Another lecture dealt with the of.
flee of president pro tempore. "Pro
tempore,'' Byrd explained, "is a
Latin term meaning 'for the time
"-1-n·
~-a,

temporarily ."'.

Capital Ideas~ Oklahoma, became a hit in
vaudeville lifter leaving the Senate
and wrote that book about how to
rope 11n audience. ·
In discussing the Senate sergeant
at arms, who oversees such matters
as the purchase of automobUea,
Byrd noted that the first car waa
bought in 191;1 and was for the officiil

Among other Udbits Byrd has
come up with:
-The finlt Senate telephone
operator was hired in 1882.
-Because of a rebellion by
progressive Republicans, It took the
Senate 15 ballot. to elect a president
pro tempore in 1911.
-When tbe first . Col)gress ad-

I .urned in 1791, it directed the
-:ienate doorkeeper, James Mathers,
to _"make the necessary provision of
firewood fodhe next Session." ·
An orange juice bottle full · of
slightly cloudy water waa the center
of attention at one point in a recent
senate hearing.
Wltnessea from Jackson Township, N.J., brought the ezhlbit to
ill\lllt1'8te their argument !hal their
water supply Is contaminated by a
nearby chelhieal dump.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, [).
Mass., preaidlng at the Senate
Judiciary Coounittee hearing, IIDacrewed the top of the bottle and
!lniffed the water.
"We'll give It to the staff to drink,"
he said.

Injured·Brett lost to Royals
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chalk one up to e~perience for
Kansas City Manager Jim Frey.
He'll be penciling Dave Chalk's
name - and a few others - onto the
Royals' lineup card for the next few
games because he gave George
Brett the "go" sign once too often.
"I thought, 'There's one guy I wish
I hadn't sent (to steal)," Frey said
after Brett's theft of second base- a
wholly unnecessary theft, as it turned out- resulted in an ankle injury
Tuesday rught. The injury will keep
the all-star third baseman, his .337
batting average and his eight home
runs on the bench for a while.
"H e 's an ex~ellent, aggressive
and alert baserunner," Frey said_ "I
just hope he'll be out only a week or
so. In the meantime, I'll be usin2
Dave Chalk (.283, no homers), Jerry
Terrell (.091, no homers) and also
maybe Jamie Quirk ( .206, one
homer) at third base."
Brett, who had hit homer No.8 in
the first inning to start the Royals on
the way to their 8-4 victory over the
Cleveland Indians, suffered
ligament damage to his right ankle
as he arrived at second base in the
third inning. Instantly, he was
rolling around in pain 3nd he had to
be carried off the field on a stretcher.
.
Moments after Brett's steal of
second, Wlllie Aikens unioaded his
third home run of the season. He' also
singled and doubled, driving in four
runs to lead the demolition of the Indians.
Aikens hit 21 homers and ba.tted
•2BO in 1979, before the California
Angels dealt him to the Royals for AI
Cowens (since traded to Detroit).
Aikens' three hits nudged his 1980
average up to .258.
Rangers 3, Brewen 1
Whlle AI Oliver provided Texas'
punch with a homer in the fourth inning and a game-winning single in
the eighth, Ferguson Jenkins muffled Mllwaukee with a five-hitter in
his first start since suffering a May
25 shoulder injury.

Tlgen 8, Twins 3
Whlle Jenkins was finding his old
form, Detroit's Milt Wilcox was
refining his new one.
"I used to try to nibble the corners
- I was pitching too defensively
because I wasn't too confident about
the defense behind me," the
righthander said after he checked
the Twins on six hits, striking out six
batters along the way.
While Aikens is having his
problems in Kansas City, Cowens is
doing just fine in Detroit. He had a
\w()-run double (as did Lance
Parrish) in a decisive four-run third
inning and, since coming to the
Tigers from the Angels, is hitting a
hefty .324. "Whenever you join a new
team, you want to get off to a good
start," he said.
·
Red Sox 5, Mariners 4 '
Boston cracked four home runs
over the Kingdome fences to beat
the Mariners.
Rick Burleson's twMun shot in
the third inning and solos by Carlton
Fisk in the seventh and Jim Rice in
the ninth came off Seattle starter
Floyd Bannister. But the killer was
Fred Lynn's leadoff shot in the 11th
on a full-count pitch from Rob
Dressler.
Angels 5, Yankees 4
Freddie Patek put the Angels back
in their game with his first homer of
the year, a tw()-run blast off Rudy
May in the eighth inning. Rod Carew
then put them on top to stay later in
the inning with a tie-breaking single
off Rich Gossage for only his third
RBI in the last 17 games.
California had been held to just
one hit by May since the third inning
before Bobby Clark started the
comeback with a single that
preceded Patek's homer.
A's 7, Orioles 4
Mario Guerrero and Jeff Newman
drove in two runs apiece and
Dwayne Murphy collected four hits
to help the A's halt Baltimore's fourgame winning streak. Steve MeCatty got the victory, settling down

after yielding consecutive home
runs to Ken Singleton and Eddie
Murray in the first inning_
Blue Jays 1, Wblle Sox 0
Barry BonneU and John Mayberry
hit consecutive doubles in the second
inning and Jim Clancy made the run
sland up with a four-hitter in his
second shutout of the year and
second consecutive complete game.
Mels 5, Dodgers 4
Doug Flynn's sixth-inning single
capped New York's comeback from
a four-run deficit and gave the Mets
a brawl-marred victory.
The fracas tavk place in the
second inning, when - after Dusty
Baker and Steve Garvey had hit consecutive home l'l1f1S - New York pitcher Pat Zachry plunked Ron Cey on
the hip with an inside pitch.
Cey headed for first base, began
jawing at Zachry, then charged the
pitcher's mound. Naturally, each
participant offered different reasons
for melee that ended with both benches and bullpens cleared.
"He provoked me by saying, 'Let's
go,' and waved his hand, so I went,''
said Cey, who was ejected for being
the instigator of the wresUing match. "lfl didn't, I would~ gutiess."
"I really didn't know what to do,''
said Zachry. "I was turning the
other way, I had my back to him,
and I heard him screaming. When I
tilrned around, he was coming at
me, sol said, 'Let's go."'
And so they went.
The Mets survived two home runs
by Baker and the one by Garvey,
tied it 4-4 with four runs in the fourth, and won it on Flynn's single.
Expos 8, Padres 4
Montreal recorded its seventh consecutive victory and its 20th in the
last 25 games by erupting for five
sixth-inning runs and beating the
Padres.
Pinch-hitter Tony Bernazard had
a tw()-run homer and Rodney Scott
and Andre Dawson added RBI
triples as the Expos overcame a 3-0
deficit.
Bernazard's homer came in his

first at-bat in 17 days.
" That's what it takes to be a winner,'' said Montreal catcher Gary
Carter. "You've got to have guys
coming off the bench, and the people
we have are doing a great job."
Dawson has also been hot. His first-inning double marked his seventh
consecutive hit.
Aatros 5, Cubll-2
Houston also won its seventh consecutive contest, getting strong pitching from Vern Ruhle and a key
tw&lt;&gt;-run double from Jose Cruz.
Ruhle retired the first 12 Chicago
batters and allowed just two hits in
the seven innings he worked while
Cruz cracked his double in a threerun Astros third.
Plllllles 4, Glanls 3
Home runs by Greg Luzinski and
Garry
Maddox
powered
Philadelphia to victory. San Francisco scored three first-inning runs,
but Luzinski hit his homer in the bottom of the inning, the Phillies pulled
within a run in the fifth and then
went ahead in the sixth on a \w()-run
blast by Maddox.
Bob Knepper, ~. suffered his
seventh road loss in as many
decisions this season and the Giants
lost for the 24th time in 32 road
games.
Braves 5, Cardinals 2
Atlanta knuckleballer Phll Niekro
had been given only five runs of support over his last four starts, and
four of those runs had come in the
only victory. Tuesday night he got
five runs in his behalf - three on
Dale Murphy's homer- and responded with a three-hit triumph .
One of his victims was Ken Reitz,
who went l).for-4.
"I wouldn't want to have to hit off
him for a living," said Reitz. "If I
did, I'd probably be sweeping the
stands."
The loss was the Cardinals' 22nd in
the last 28 games and their first under Manager Whitey Herzog, who
replaced the deposed Ken Boyer
Monday.

•

Browns sign Charles White
CLEVELAND (AP) - Veteran
Cleveland Browns running back
Greg Pruitt is no longer assured of a
starting role on the team, in light of
the Browns' signing of their No.1
draft choice, Heisman Trophywinner Charles White.
White, who starred in USC's Rose
Bowl victory over Ohio State this
year, signed a six-year pact with the
Browns Tuesday worth more than $1
mlllion. If he performs exceptionally
in the National Football League, his
contract could be worth more than
$2 million because of incentive
clauses it contains, said his agent,
Mike Trope.
Trope said the agreement was

A bonus for signing was included,
reached after several weeks of conthe team said, though precise tenns
centrated negotiations.
'"I'm glad to be here in Cleveland were not disclosed.
Coach Sam Rutigliano said he was
for good, and to reach a setUement. I
impressed
by White's reputation for
can't wait urttil the 17th of July (the
start of the Browns' summer
camp)," White said. ·
He had walked out of a mini-camp
for Cleveland rookies in May while
his contract talks were still up in the
air.
In local LitUe League action,
"When it's time to go to work, the
Racine's Reds claimed a 22-9 victory
fans will get a different look at the
over Chester's Chieftains with a 13-type of player and person I am,"
run seventh inning. Scott Wickline,
White said.
Browns owner Art Modell added: · now H on the year, picked up the
win with five strike outs. Lea~
"Mter his first 200-yard day, we'll
hitters for the winners were Tracy
forget all this business."
Cleland with a home run and single
and Wickline's two triples and a
single. Brian Warden and Bostick
smacked two doubles apiece. For
Chester, Matt Harris took the loss
while J. Miller smacked a home run,
D. Enynon two triples and two
teres! in Sims. Thomas and Argovitz
doubles, and Miller two doubles.
met over the weekend, and then
Sims joined them oo Monday to
TupperS Plains' Tigers downed
hammer out a final contract.
Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse !H.
Arg~vitz had nothing but praise
B. Durst picked up the win fanning
lor Thomas.
"Russ Thomas said he would draft five and walking five. Mike Chancey
Billy Sims No.I, that he would sign took the loss, ftrilting out seven. For
the winners, Eddie Collins and B.
him and that he would make him the
highest paid player to ever come in- Durst hit hom runs whlle Royce
to the league, and he lived up to his Bissell and Tripp each slammed
doubles. Barry McCoy hit a double
word," Argovitz said.
for Syracuse.
Sims wlll join a team that finished
with the worst record in the NFL last
In Big Bend LitUe League action,
season at2-14.
"I believe in miracles," Sims said. the Middleport Braves defeated the
"They need a sparkplug and some Hartford Hornela by a 1i&gt;-3 margin.
motivation. You need motivation Middleport collected 13 hits, led by
and a feeling of pulling together to Shawn Baker's home run, Steve
win. Football is a job, but it should Cassell's triple and double and
triples by Jason Bush and Troy
be fun."
The &amp;-foot, 211)-pounder rushed for Cassell. Winning pitcher Jeff Nelson
3,813 yards, 7.1 yards a.carry and 50 struck out seven and walked seven.
Hornet Jim Tumbsll fanned three
touchdowns at Oklahoma.

Summer league results

Sims finally signs
By MIKE STANTON
Aasociated Press Writer
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - Billy
Sims examined the gold replica of a
dollar bill hanging around his neck
and said he was relieved to sign
finally with the Detroit Lions.
"I don't play negotiations- I play
football,'' Sims said Tuesday, after
he had signed an undisclosed contract that his agent says makes him
the highest-paid rookie in pro football history.
The Lions made Sims, the 1978
Heisman Trophy winner, their No.I
pick in the NationBl Football League
draft Aprll 29. But as contract
discussions dragged on, it appeared
the former Oklahoma running back
might defect to. the Canadian Foot-ball League as did last year's No.I
NFL draftee, Tom Cousineau.
Not so, according to Sims, who
says he considered himself a Lion
"in my heart" since he was drafted
and attended a Detroit mini-camp
for rookies.
"I'm glad it's over," said Detroit
Coach Monte Clark, who presented
Sims with a Lions jersey with the
number20.
1
Noting that he has worn the number 20 since ·his high school days in
Hook.'!, Tex., Sims predicted, "I see
some pretty good things coming
from this number."
Jerry Argovltz, Sims' agent, was
happy with the contract.
"!.wouldn't trade it for the contract of any other player. in the
league," Argovitz said.
Argovitz says he is bound not to
reveal any specifics of the contract
by a confidentiality clause written
into the agreement. But he said, "I
got everything I wanted.''
The negotiations began with
Argovitz demanding $4.5 million for
three· years. Detroit General
Manager RU88 Thomas countered
with a $700,000, four-year deal.
Argovitz says a breakthrough in
the stalemate came last week, when
Montre81 of the CFL expressed .in-

durability at Southern California,
something the injury-plagued Pruitt
has not displayed: The cosch said he ·
did not intend to alternate Pruitt and
White this Season.

CARRIERS NEEDED
FOR THE DAILY SENTINEL
ROUTES OPEN
2 IN POMEROY

FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL 992·2156
'

BElWEEN 8:30 &amp; 5:00

••••••••••••••••••••

and walked two before getting relief
froi:n Dale DeWeese who fanned six.
Jay Roush had the one Hornet
single.
In Pee Wee action, the Middleport
Cubs rallied to defeat RuUand 1().1;.
Luke Burdette's grand slam home
run provided the winning margin
and boost Cubs' pitcher JaSon Drenner to a Victory. Drenner fanned 13
and walked nine. W. Howard and B.
Haggy had doubles for RuUand. B.
Johnson went the distance for
RuUand walking 13 and striking out
eight.

Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse
pee wee leaguers defeated Powell's
19-1. Winnint pitcher Chris Stout and
reliever Shane Simpson combined
for 10 KO's and five base on halls.
Todd Lisle led Syracuse with two
singles. Hank Cleland, Terry Fields
and Mike MuUord combined for five
strikeouts and 24 walks.

Rookie survives camp
to kill Cincinnati
By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - Mike
Easler wasn't supposed to survive
rookie camp, but 10 years later, the
Pittsburgh outfielder is proving the
scouts wrong_
"When I graduated from high
school in Cleveland, a scout told me I
wouldn't last a week in rookie
camp," said Easler, whose con·
tinned hot hitting keyed a s-3 Pirate

victory Tuesday over the Cincinnati
Reds. "All that did was put
something in my heart to try bar·
der."

Easler raised his average to _364
Monday with an RBI triple, a single
and a solo home run, his ninth this
season. He has seven hits in his last
12 at-bats, including four homers.
"I'm just thankful to God I'm getting a chance to play now,'' said
Easler, who bounced around various
minor league organizations for 10
years. "I've waited a long time.
"Whlle I was sitting, I got a chance to talk to guys like (Willie)
Stargell and (Dave ) Parker. Now,
I'm getting a chance to use what I
learned."

Easler's triple off Cincinnati starter Mario Soto, 1).1, highlighted a
tw()-run fourth inning WhiCh tied the
game, 2·2- The Reds jumped on John
Candelaria, 3-5, in the first for three
hits and two runs, one of them unear.
ned.
Candelaria then settled down,
.surrendering just two other hits until
Ken Griffey's lead-off homer in the
ninth. Kent Tckulve finished up.
Stargell's tw()-rup homer in the
sixth and Easler's solo homer in the
eighth finished the scoring for Pit-

BASKETBALL
NEW YORK (AP) - The Golden
State Warriors opened the 1980 NBA
draft by selecting Joe Barry Carroll,
the 7-foot-1 center who led Purdue to
the NCAA semifinals last season.
The Utah Jazz, picking second,
took Louisville guard Darrell Griffith while Boston made Minnesota
center Kevin McHale the third
choice in the draft.

tsburgh.
Although he led the International
League in hitting in 1978 with a .330
average at Columbus, Easler is only
now getting a chance to play
regularly in the majors_ Pirates
Manager Chuck Tanner has alternated him in left field with hot··
hitting Lee Lacy.
·
"I don 't know if it's a hitting binge
or if that's how Mike hits
(regularly) ," Tanner said. "He just
crunches the ball every time he
plays."
The Reds, awake until 2:30 a.m.
Tuesday when a rain-delayed game
with San Diego was finally canceled,
couldn't mount a scoring threat between the first and ninth innings.
"I was just getting the ball up in
the first inning," Candelaria said.
"I'm not that overpowering that I
can keep getting the ball up and not
get hurt. Maybe J .R. (Richard) or
Nolan (Ryan) can, but! can't."
Frank Pastore, 7-2, the winningest
pitcher on the Cincinnati staff, faces
Pittsburgh's Bert Blyleven, 1-5,
tonight.
SanctiMed Softball

TOURNAMENT
Sponsored by: City Limits
at the Syracuse Park.

JUNE 28 .&amp; 29
Entry fee: $65.00 plus 2·
balls. Trophies awarded to
top 4 teams. Individual
trophies to top 3 teams.
Also trophies for: M.V.P .
most hits, home runs,
defensive play, and team
sportsmanship.
For More Information
Call or Visit

CITY UMITS BAR .
&amp; DRIVE THRU
Ph. 992·9978
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FROM

The Middleport Midgets defeated
the New Haven Twins by a 20-9
(Continued on page 4)

J

PANELING
SPECIAL
RED OAK
1/8"x4'x9'

A
SHEET .

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerpy, 0., W~esday, June 11, 1980

2- The Daily Sentinel, Ml(!dleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 11, 1980

Opinions
&amp;Comments
'

'

•

I SeE..RCN~I..t&gt; R!AG~N W\T"' OOt&gt;I..ES
0~ G.O.~ t&gt;ELEGATES ••••

--

c

.·I

..

------------- Letters to editor
Let's settle now
Dear Editor:
Whew!!!! These make-up June
school days are certainly hot.
Students, as well as teachers and
other staff members, are struggling
through each day. Perhaps, in some
classes, nothing more is being accomplished other than making up
days.
As many of you know, OAPSE 's
(cooks, bus drivers, janitors, etc.)
negotiations concerning a re-opener
:Clause on salary and calamity days
:are scheduled to begin this month_
Jo be sure a re-occurrence of this
current situation does not develop
next June, talk to Mr. Gleason and
all the board members. Try to per·
·suade them to settie with OAPSE

.
•.

before school starts next Fall. (Encourage talks NOW if not sooner)_
Continue to urge them to deal with
the situation now so that a problem
(strike) won't develop later. No one
likes to be sitting in a classroom in
June.
Remember your input can be a
great influence to ward-off a strike
by OAPSE next Fall. Please don't let
this happen again! Show your child
that you care ... contact someone
today. In addition, this letter is not
meant for you to lake sides, but to
help get you involved and hopefully
voice your opinion about school
problems. - Margaret Suzanne
Teaford, Rutland Elementary
Teacher_

Signatures needed

I,

Dear Editor,
I would like to alert the concerned
citizens of Meigs County that a
petition is circulating through which
-we hope to alert John H. Ackerman,
:ohio Dept. of Health to extend the
:Maternal and Child Division of the
'Ohio Dept. of Health grant.
In our community this grant
provides our Well Child Clinic. We

believe this clinic is very vital for
our children who are the citizens of
tomorrow and all of our futures.
We do need the community's
signatures and support in order to
let John H. Ackerman aware of our
desires to extend the Maternal and
Chlld Division of the Ohio Dept. of
Health grant
Sincerely. - Rctta Day.

Today in history.
Today is Wednesday, June 11, the
163rd day of 1980. There are 203 days
left in the year.
: Today's highlight in history:
: · On June 11, 1859, a prospector laid
-claim to a silver deposit in Nevada's
-Six-Mile Canyon. The claim turned
out to be the Comstock Lode, one of
the richest of all time, yielding ore
. -worth hundreds of millions of
:ctollars.
: On this date:
· In 1942, a lend-lease agreement
between the United States and
Soviet Union - designed to aid the
Soviet war effort in World War II was made public.
: In 1963, under the eyes of National
~uardsmen, Gov. George Wallace
:Stepped aside to let blacks register
·at the University of Alabama.
In 1967, Israel and Syria settled into a cease-fire after the Six-Day
War, with Israeli troops still holding
·positions inside Syria.
: In 1977, Dutch marines stormed a

• •

train hijacked by South Moluccan
terrorists in the Netherlands,
freeing 49 hostages. Two hostages
and six of their captors were killed
in the attack.
Ten years ago, the U.S. presence
in Libya ended two weeks ahead of
schedule when the last detachment
left Wheelus Air Base, the last major
U.S. military facility in North
Africa.
Five years ago, the White House
was seeking comments from top of·
ficials, including the secretary of
state and the CIA director, to the
Rockefeller Commission's critical
report on the CIA.
Last year, actor John Wayne died
at the age of 72 after a lengthy battle
with cancer.
Today's birthday: French deep
sea explorer Jacques Cousteau is 70.
Thought For Today : Always
forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much - Oscar Wilde
(1856-1900.)

Berry's World

Equal opportunity a recipe for overwork
By Robert Wallen
WASHINGTON (NEAl - If
misery loves company, the millions
of American women who work two
shifts - one on the job and the other
managing a household - will be
happy to learn that their burden is
shared by a worldwide sisterhood.
"Equal opportunity for women
will tum out to be a recipe for overwork" if they must continue to
juggle the responsibilities of career,
marriage, motherhood and
housework without additional
assistance from their spouses, warns a new study.
The report on "Women, Men and
the Division of Labor," written by
Kathleen Newland, has just been
published by the Worldwatch In·
stitute, a Washington-based
organization devoted to public policy
research.
The report documents what
homemarkers (single or married)
have long known - their work not
only is unpaid but usually
unrecognized and unappreciated as
well.
In less~r developed countries, for
example, women invariably are
assigned the indispensible task of
hauling water from the village well
or a nearby stream to their homes
for use by members of their

families.
But one authoritative survey of
how gross national product is
measured in 70 developing countries
found that "only six counted the
value of carrying water to its point
of use in their GNPs and only two
countries assigned any economic
value to housewives• services."

produced by the burden of
work that goes on outside of it," the
housework in the United States was
report says in proposing a "symillustrated in a 1967~ survey of
metrical family' • relationship.
husbands and wives employed full·
Only in magazine advertisements
time. The total work-week was 71 · and television commercials does
hours for women and 55 hours for
there exist the "superwoman" who
men.
zips through a glamorous workd,ay
A 1975 United Nations survey of 12
in the dress-for-success tailored suit,
countries - including the United
briefly dons an apron to whip up a .
gourmet dinner for her family, then ·
slips into a· $400 dress for a fastpaced evening of entertainment in a
theater, disco or nightclub.
The working wives and mothers of
the world already know that's a
myth, but the hllllbands and fathE:'S
haven't fully discovered - or accepted
- the need for shared
States and Soviet Union as well as
household
resporuJibillties.
France, Germany and other
"A few governments - China,
European nations - produced
similar results: The work-week for Cuba and Sweden being the most
employed women was slightiy more . prominent eU!Jiples - have made
the sharing of ho.usework a tenet of
than 70 hours compared with 60
official policy. But all three
hours for working men.
Despite all the publicity devoted to recognize that official endorsement
·· female entry and advancement in of the idea is a rhetorical device and
the labor market, "the sharing of un- that the policy is impossible to enpaid household labor receives only a force in practical terms."
The division of household labor
fraction of the attention given to
"remains
a privately determined
equality in formal employment,"
matter,
a
subject for comsays the Worldwatch styity.
munication
and
negotiation between
"If women are to take full adthe
man
and
woman
directly invantage of newly won access to the
volved,"
the
Worldwatch
Institute
formal labor market, men must inconcludes.
report
crease their share of the essential

Today's commentary
In the rural communities of impoverished nations, that work often
is "extremely arduous", says tb•
report. One study of activity in a
Pakistani village showed that
women typically devoted 14~ hours
daily to domestic chores.
Communist
theoretician
Frederick Engels argued ahnost 100
years ago that "the emancipation of
women become possible only when ..
.domestic duties require their attention only to a minor degree." But
the average working women in the
Soviet Union today must spend three
or four additional hours on
housework.
The disparity between the sexes

Business mirror

Economic sun shines on Arizona
PHOENIJC;' Ariz. (AP)
Recession clouds the future for most
Americans but the sun, only slightly
faded, still shines on Arizona.
"Most Arizonans will survive with
minimum disruption," said an
economist. He forecasts continued if
diminished growth.
The economy will be hurt, he conceded, but not to the point where activity is likely to go into reverse, as
in the country as a whole. There is
simply too niuch faith in the 'future,
and too much hwnan energy, to be
stopped by recession.
Attracted by the ever-present sun
and a multiplicity of opportunities
under it, a flood of domestic immigrants - 1,000 households a week
in Phoenix - swelled the population
by 51 percent to 2.7 million in the

Instruments, Memorex and National
Semiconductor.
Elliott Pollack, 35, vice president
and economist of the Valley National
Bank, whose own growth as a Southwest regional hanll makes it the 28th
largest in the country, documents
some of the other reasons for optimism about jobs.
He notes that government emThe high technology !inns now
ployment
- in military, birder
building or expanding in this city or .
patrol,
and
park jobs, among others
in the "urban villages" around it
accounts
for 21 percent of the
make up a list of blue chips: Digital,
total.
"Government;"
he says, "has
ITI, Spe!'I'Y, General Telephone,
never
had
a
decline
in
total jobs in
General Instruments, Litton,
the
past
15
years."
Motorola, Sperry.
Services, including those in stores
In the Tucson area, untll recentiy
and
restaurants - . accounting for
not as eager as Phoenix for industry,
new or expansion projects include ahnost 20 percent of employment lliM, Hughes, Fluor, Burr Brown " ~ continue to grow regardless of
Research, GE, Gates Learjet, Veeco the economic situation," he says.

past decade.
In the same time, personal income
rose 253 percent and the value of
manufacturing jumped 'l'/7 percent,
a good deal of it resulting from the
growth of the electronics industry
here and around Tucson, 116 mlles
south.

·The question, he contends, is bet·
ween slow or rapid growth.
Trade, which accounts for about a
quarter of jobs, seems also to be
recession-resistant. "Whlle this sector grows slowly during recessions,
there are rarely massive layoffs,"
Pollack observes.
But there are sectors that Will be
hurt. Construction, in houalng
especially, Ia expected to fall sllarply, not only because of high prices
and difficult borrowing terms, but
because the in-migration might
slow. And there is a question about the
future of agriculture. Arlzona ranks;
behind only'Texaa and California in
cotton income, but cotton uses a lot
of water.

When did the Senate buy its·first auto!

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

cz:,-

@ 1080 by NEA, Jnc,

"HELP/ I am In a /arid experiencing decreased
productivity and aging technology. "

••

WASHING'rON (AP) - What
senator was the author of "How to
Hold an Audience Without a Rope?"
When dld the Senate buy its first
automobile?
What does "pro tempore" mean?
If you're stumped, drop around to
the Capitol some Thursday cr
Friday and lake in one of the regular
weekly lectures by Robert C. Byrd.
Byrd, the West Virginia Democrat
and majority leader, has been
taking the floor at approximately
one-week intervals since March 21 to
speak on the history of the Senate. ·
Aides say Byrd conceived the Idea
as a preparation for the 200\h an·
niversary of the body nine years off.
''As far as I know, .he intends to
keep on going,'' said one assistant.

"He keeps coming up with new
material."
In each talk, Byrd lakes up an
aspect of his subject. One week, for
instance, he talked about the 14
senators who have held the office of
secretary of the Democratic conference. One of them, Josh Lee of

use of ihe vice president. '!'he Senate.
now owns four automoblles and

leuesl3.
Another lecture dealt with the of.
flee of president pro tempore. "Pro
tempore,'' Byrd explained, "is a
Latin term meaning 'for the time
"-1-n·
~-a,

temporarily ."'.

Capital Ideas~ Oklahoma, became a hit in
vaudeville lifter leaving the Senate
and wrote that book about how to
rope 11n audience. ·
In discussing the Senate sergeant
at arms, who oversees such matters
as the purchase of automobUea,
Byrd noted that the first car waa
bought in 191;1 and was for the officiil

Among other Udbits Byrd has
come up with:
-The finlt Senate telephone
operator was hired in 1882.
-Because of a rebellion by
progressive Republicans, It took the
Senate 15 ballot. to elect a president
pro tempore in 1911.
-When tbe first . Col)gress ad-

I .urned in 1791, it directed the
-:ienate doorkeeper, James Mathers,
to _"make the necessary provision of
firewood fodhe next Session." ·
An orange juice bottle full · of
slightly cloudy water waa the center
of attention at one point in a recent
senate hearing.
Wltnessea from Jackson Township, N.J., brought the ezhlbit to
ill\lllt1'8te their argument !hal their
water supply Is contaminated by a
nearby chelhieal dump.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, [).
Mass., preaidlng at the Senate
Judiciary Coounittee hearing, IIDacrewed the top of the bottle and
!lniffed the water.
"We'll give It to the staff to drink,"
he said.

Injured·Brett lost to Royals
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chalk one up to e~perience for
Kansas City Manager Jim Frey.
He'll be penciling Dave Chalk's
name - and a few others - onto the
Royals' lineup card for the next few
games because he gave George
Brett the "go" sign once too often.
"I thought, 'There's one guy I wish
I hadn't sent (to steal)," Frey said
after Brett's theft of second base- a
wholly unnecessary theft, as it turned out- resulted in an ankle injury
Tuesday rught. The injury will keep
the all-star third baseman, his .337
batting average and his eight home
runs on the bench for a while.
"H e 's an ex~ellent, aggressive
and alert baserunner," Frey said_ "I
just hope he'll be out only a week or
so. In the meantime, I'll be usin2
Dave Chalk (.283, no homers), Jerry
Terrell (.091, no homers) and also
maybe Jamie Quirk ( .206, one
homer) at third base."
Brett, who had hit homer No.8 in
the first inning to start the Royals on
the way to their 8-4 victory over the
Cleveland Indians, suffered
ligament damage to his right ankle
as he arrived at second base in the
third inning. Instantly, he was
rolling around in pain 3nd he had to
be carried off the field on a stretcher.
.
Moments after Brett's steal of
second, Wlllie Aikens unioaded his
third home run of the season. He' also
singled and doubled, driving in four
runs to lead the demolition of the Indians.
Aikens hit 21 homers and ba.tted
•2BO in 1979, before the California
Angels dealt him to the Royals for AI
Cowens (since traded to Detroit).
Aikens' three hits nudged his 1980
average up to .258.
Rangers 3, Brewen 1
Whlle AI Oliver provided Texas'
punch with a homer in the fourth inning and a game-winning single in
the eighth, Ferguson Jenkins muffled Mllwaukee with a five-hitter in
his first start since suffering a May
25 shoulder injury.

Tlgen 8, Twins 3
Whlle Jenkins was finding his old
form, Detroit's Milt Wilcox was
refining his new one.
"I used to try to nibble the corners
- I was pitching too defensively
because I wasn't too confident about
the defense behind me," the
righthander said after he checked
the Twins on six hits, striking out six
batters along the way.
While Aikens is having his
problems in Kansas City, Cowens is
doing just fine in Detroit. He had a
\w()-run double (as did Lance
Parrish) in a decisive four-run third
inning and, since coming to the
Tigers from the Angels, is hitting a
hefty .324. "Whenever you join a new
team, you want to get off to a good
start," he said.
·
Red Sox 5, Mariners 4 '
Boston cracked four home runs
over the Kingdome fences to beat
the Mariners.
Rick Burleson's twMun shot in
the third inning and solos by Carlton
Fisk in the seventh and Jim Rice in
the ninth came off Seattle starter
Floyd Bannister. But the killer was
Fred Lynn's leadoff shot in the 11th
on a full-count pitch from Rob
Dressler.
Angels 5, Yankees 4
Freddie Patek put the Angels back
in their game with his first homer of
the year, a tw()-run blast off Rudy
May in the eighth inning. Rod Carew
then put them on top to stay later in
the inning with a tie-breaking single
off Rich Gossage for only his third
RBI in the last 17 games.
California had been held to just
one hit by May since the third inning
before Bobby Clark started the
comeback with a single that
preceded Patek's homer.
A's 7, Orioles 4
Mario Guerrero and Jeff Newman
drove in two runs apiece and
Dwayne Murphy collected four hits
to help the A's halt Baltimore's fourgame winning streak. Steve MeCatty got the victory, settling down

after yielding consecutive home
runs to Ken Singleton and Eddie
Murray in the first inning_
Blue Jays 1, Wblle Sox 0
Barry BonneU and John Mayberry
hit consecutive doubles in the second
inning and Jim Clancy made the run
sland up with a four-hitter in his
second shutout of the year and
second consecutive complete game.
Mels 5, Dodgers 4
Doug Flynn's sixth-inning single
capped New York's comeback from
a four-run deficit and gave the Mets
a brawl-marred victory.
The fracas tavk place in the
second inning, when - after Dusty
Baker and Steve Garvey had hit consecutive home l'l1f1S - New York pitcher Pat Zachry plunked Ron Cey on
the hip with an inside pitch.
Cey headed for first base, began
jawing at Zachry, then charged the
pitcher's mound. Naturally, each
participant offered different reasons
for melee that ended with both benches and bullpens cleared.
"He provoked me by saying, 'Let's
go,' and waved his hand, so I went,''
said Cey, who was ejected for being
the instigator of the wresUing match. "lfl didn't, I would~ gutiess."
"I really didn't know what to do,''
said Zachry. "I was turning the
other way, I had my back to him,
and I heard him screaming. When I
tilrned around, he was coming at
me, sol said, 'Let's go."'
And so they went.
The Mets survived two home runs
by Baker and the one by Garvey,
tied it 4-4 with four runs in the fourth, and won it on Flynn's single.
Expos 8, Padres 4
Montreal recorded its seventh consecutive victory and its 20th in the
last 25 games by erupting for five
sixth-inning runs and beating the
Padres.
Pinch-hitter Tony Bernazard had
a tw()-run homer and Rodney Scott
and Andre Dawson added RBI
triples as the Expos overcame a 3-0
deficit.
Bernazard's homer came in his

first at-bat in 17 days.
" That's what it takes to be a winner,'' said Montreal catcher Gary
Carter. "You've got to have guys
coming off the bench, and the people
we have are doing a great job."
Dawson has also been hot. His first-inning double marked his seventh
consecutive hit.
Aatros 5, Cubll-2
Houston also won its seventh consecutive contest, getting strong pitching from Vern Ruhle and a key
tw&lt;&gt;-run double from Jose Cruz.
Ruhle retired the first 12 Chicago
batters and allowed just two hits in
the seven innings he worked while
Cruz cracked his double in a threerun Astros third.
Plllllles 4, Glanls 3
Home runs by Greg Luzinski and
Garry
Maddox
powered
Philadelphia to victory. San Francisco scored three first-inning runs,
but Luzinski hit his homer in the bottom of the inning, the Phillies pulled
within a run in the fifth and then
went ahead in the sixth on a \w()-run
blast by Maddox.
Bob Knepper, ~. suffered his
seventh road loss in as many
decisions this season and the Giants
lost for the 24th time in 32 road
games.
Braves 5, Cardinals 2
Atlanta knuckleballer Phll Niekro
had been given only five runs of support over his last four starts, and
four of those runs had come in the
only victory. Tuesday night he got
five runs in his behalf - three on
Dale Murphy's homer- and responded with a three-hit triumph .
One of his victims was Ken Reitz,
who went l).for-4.
"I wouldn't want to have to hit off
him for a living," said Reitz. "If I
did, I'd probably be sweeping the
stands."
The loss was the Cardinals' 22nd in
the last 28 games and their first under Manager Whitey Herzog, who
replaced the deposed Ken Boyer
Monday.

•

Browns sign Charles White
CLEVELAND (AP) - Veteran
Cleveland Browns running back
Greg Pruitt is no longer assured of a
starting role on the team, in light of
the Browns' signing of their No.1
draft choice, Heisman Trophywinner Charles White.
White, who starred in USC's Rose
Bowl victory over Ohio State this
year, signed a six-year pact with the
Browns Tuesday worth more than $1
mlllion. If he performs exceptionally
in the National Football League, his
contract could be worth more than
$2 million because of incentive
clauses it contains, said his agent,
Mike Trope.
Trope said the agreement was

A bonus for signing was included,
reached after several weeks of conthe team said, though precise tenns
centrated negotiations.
'"I'm glad to be here in Cleveland were not disclosed.
Coach Sam Rutigliano said he was
for good, and to reach a setUement. I
impressed
by White's reputation for
can't wait urttil the 17th of July (the
start of the Browns' summer
camp)," White said. ·
He had walked out of a mini-camp
for Cleveland rookies in May while
his contract talks were still up in the
air.
In local LitUe League action,
"When it's time to go to work, the
Racine's Reds claimed a 22-9 victory
fans will get a different look at the
over Chester's Chieftains with a 13-type of player and person I am,"
run seventh inning. Scott Wickline,
White said.
Browns owner Art Modell added: · now H on the year, picked up the
win with five strike outs. Lea~
"Mter his first 200-yard day, we'll
hitters for the winners were Tracy
forget all this business."
Cleland with a home run and single
and Wickline's two triples and a
single. Brian Warden and Bostick
smacked two doubles apiece. For
Chester, Matt Harris took the loss
while J. Miller smacked a home run,
D. Enynon two triples and two
teres! in Sims. Thomas and Argovitz
doubles, and Miller two doubles.
met over the weekend, and then
Sims joined them oo Monday to
TupperS Plains' Tigers downed
hammer out a final contract.
Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse !H.
Arg~vitz had nothing but praise
B. Durst picked up the win fanning
lor Thomas.
"Russ Thomas said he would draft five and walking five. Mike Chancey
Billy Sims No.I, that he would sign took the loss, ftrilting out seven. For
the winners, Eddie Collins and B.
him and that he would make him the
highest paid player to ever come in- Durst hit hom runs whlle Royce
to the league, and he lived up to his Bissell and Tripp each slammed
doubles. Barry McCoy hit a double
word," Argovitz said.
for Syracuse.
Sims wlll join a team that finished
with the worst record in the NFL last
In Big Bend LitUe League action,
season at2-14.
"I believe in miracles," Sims said. the Middleport Braves defeated the
"They need a sparkplug and some Hartford Hornela by a 1i&gt;-3 margin.
motivation. You need motivation Middleport collected 13 hits, led by
and a feeling of pulling together to Shawn Baker's home run, Steve
win. Football is a job, but it should Cassell's triple and double and
triples by Jason Bush and Troy
be fun."
The &amp;-foot, 211)-pounder rushed for Cassell. Winning pitcher Jeff Nelson
3,813 yards, 7.1 yards a.carry and 50 struck out seven and walked seven.
Hornet Jim Tumbsll fanned three
touchdowns at Oklahoma.

Summer league results

Sims finally signs
By MIKE STANTON
Aasociated Press Writer
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - Billy
Sims examined the gold replica of a
dollar bill hanging around his neck
and said he was relieved to sign
finally with the Detroit Lions.
"I don't play negotiations- I play
football,'' Sims said Tuesday, after
he had signed an undisclosed contract that his agent says makes him
the highest-paid rookie in pro football history.
The Lions made Sims, the 1978
Heisman Trophy winner, their No.I
pick in the NationBl Football League
draft Aprll 29. But as contract
discussions dragged on, it appeared
the former Oklahoma running back
might defect to. the Canadian Foot-ball League as did last year's No.I
NFL draftee, Tom Cousineau.
Not so, according to Sims, who
says he considered himself a Lion
"in my heart" since he was drafted
and attended a Detroit mini-camp
for rookies.
"I'm glad it's over," said Detroit
Coach Monte Clark, who presented
Sims with a Lions jersey with the
number20.
1
Noting that he has worn the number 20 since ·his high school days in
Hook.'!, Tex., Sims predicted, "I see
some pretty good things coming
from this number."
Jerry Argovltz, Sims' agent, was
happy with the contract.
"!.wouldn't trade it for the contract of any other player. in the
league," Argovitz said.
Argovitz says he is bound not to
reveal any specifics of the contract
by a confidentiality clause written
into the agreement. But he said, "I
got everything I wanted.''
The negotiations began with
Argovitz demanding $4.5 million for
three· years. Detroit General
Manager RU88 Thomas countered
with a $700,000, four-year deal.
Argovitz says a breakthrough in
the stalemate came last week, when
Montre81 of the CFL expressed .in-

durability at Southern California,
something the injury-plagued Pruitt
has not displayed: The cosch said he ·
did not intend to alternate Pruitt and
White this Season.

CARRIERS NEEDED
FOR THE DAILY SENTINEL
ROUTES OPEN
2 IN POMEROY

FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL 992·2156
'

BElWEEN 8:30 &amp; 5:00

••••••••••••••••••••

and walked two before getting relief
froi:n Dale DeWeese who fanned six.
Jay Roush had the one Hornet
single.
In Pee Wee action, the Middleport
Cubs rallied to defeat RuUand 1().1;.
Luke Burdette's grand slam home
run provided the winning margin
and boost Cubs' pitcher JaSon Drenner to a Victory. Drenner fanned 13
and walked nine. W. Howard and B.
Haggy had doubles for RuUand. B.
Johnson went the distance for
RuUand walking 13 and striking out
eight.

Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse
pee wee leaguers defeated Powell's
19-1. Winnint pitcher Chris Stout and
reliever Shane Simpson combined
for 10 KO's and five base on halls.
Todd Lisle led Syracuse with two
singles. Hank Cleland, Terry Fields
and Mike MuUord combined for five
strikeouts and 24 walks.

Rookie survives camp
to kill Cincinnati
By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - Mike
Easler wasn't supposed to survive
rookie camp, but 10 years later, the
Pittsburgh outfielder is proving the
scouts wrong_
"When I graduated from high
school in Cleveland, a scout told me I
wouldn't last a week in rookie
camp," said Easler, whose con·
tinned hot hitting keyed a s-3 Pirate

victory Tuesday over the Cincinnati
Reds. "All that did was put
something in my heart to try bar·
der."

Easler raised his average to _364
Monday with an RBI triple, a single
and a solo home run, his ninth this
season. He has seven hits in his last
12 at-bats, including four homers.
"I'm just thankful to God I'm getting a chance to play now,'' said
Easler, who bounced around various
minor league organizations for 10
years. "I've waited a long time.
"Whlle I was sitting, I got a chance to talk to guys like (Willie)
Stargell and (Dave ) Parker. Now,
I'm getting a chance to use what I
learned."

Easler's triple off Cincinnati starter Mario Soto, 1).1, highlighted a
tw()-run fourth inning WhiCh tied the
game, 2·2- The Reds jumped on John
Candelaria, 3-5, in the first for three
hits and two runs, one of them unear.
ned.
Candelaria then settled down,
.surrendering just two other hits until
Ken Griffey's lead-off homer in the
ninth. Kent Tckulve finished up.
Stargell's tw()-rup homer in the
sixth and Easler's solo homer in the
eighth finished the scoring for Pit-

BASKETBALL
NEW YORK (AP) - The Golden
State Warriors opened the 1980 NBA
draft by selecting Joe Barry Carroll,
the 7-foot-1 center who led Purdue to
the NCAA semifinals last season.
The Utah Jazz, picking second,
took Louisville guard Darrell Griffith while Boston made Minnesota
center Kevin McHale the third
choice in the draft.

tsburgh.
Although he led the International
League in hitting in 1978 with a .330
average at Columbus, Easler is only
now getting a chance to play
regularly in the majors_ Pirates
Manager Chuck Tanner has alternated him in left field with hot··
hitting Lee Lacy.
·
"I don 't know if it's a hitting binge
or if that's how Mike hits
(regularly) ," Tanner said. "He just
crunches the ball every time he
plays."
The Reds, awake until 2:30 a.m.
Tuesday when a rain-delayed game
with San Diego was finally canceled,
couldn't mount a scoring threat between the first and ninth innings.
"I was just getting the ball up in
the first inning," Candelaria said.
"I'm not that overpowering that I
can keep getting the ball up and not
get hurt. Maybe J .R. (Richard) or
Nolan (Ryan) can, but! can't."
Frank Pastore, 7-2, the winningest
pitcher on the Cincinnati staff, faces
Pittsburgh's Bert Blyleven, 1-5,
tonight.
SanctiMed Softball

TOURNAMENT
Sponsored by: City Limits
at the Syracuse Park.

JUNE 28 .&amp; 29
Entry fee: $65.00 plus 2·
balls. Trophies awarded to
top 4 teams. Individual
trophies to top 3 teams.
Also trophies for: M.V.P .
most hits, home runs,
defensive play, and team
sportsmanship.
For More Information
Call or Visit

CITY UMITS BAR .
&amp; DRIVE THRU
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The Middleport Midgets defeated
the New Haven Twins by a 20-9
(Continued on page 4)

J

PANELING
SPECIAL
RED OAK
1/8"x4'x9'

A
SHEET .

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Mu:trut:yt.u ~ .. .,............. u 1 , v.,

Meigs wins fifth, loses first

PEE WEE TEAM - Members of the Hubbard's
Greenhouse Pee Wee team at Syracuse are, first row, I·
r, Jolm VanMeter, Chris Stewart, Todd Lisle; Jared
Stewart, bat boy, Kevin Burgess, David Custer, Chad

i

~

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Major Wgue Baseball

I

(Gullikson Q-0), n
San Francisco

NATIONAL LEAGUE

EAST

W. L.Pd. GB
30 00 .600

Montreal

.sn 1
'E'/23.~3
24 'll .m 60,

Pitt.!lbuq!:h

'

Taylor; second row, Jerod Moore, Eber Pickens, Doug
lavender, Kevin Grueser, Brian Weaver, Chris Stout,
Shane Simpson, Ray Sayre; back, John Lisle and Mike
Stewart, coaches. Absent was Michael Adkins.

:~o

Phillldel!&gt;hio
New Yorlt
Chicago
St. Loui!

2:2

22 :&gt;Jl .44&lt;! 8
19 35 .352 13

WEST

Houston
Los Angeles
Cincinnati
San Diel!:o

32 21 .G&lt;H
31 22 .S93

( Whitson

2-7)

at

Philadelphia ( Lerch2-7i , n
St. l.oiWI (8 . Forsch 4-4 ) at AUanta (Mc-

Willia.rns3-4 ), n
L&lt;1:i An"eles ( Welch~~ or RellSS 3-U at
Ne~· York (Zachry 1·2 or Swan 4-4), n
Pitl.\lburgh (Blyleven 1-5) at CinCinnati
(Pastorc7-2),n
Chicago (Reuschel 5-5) nt Houston

·"' ,..,

30 24
25 30 .455 8
Atlanta
22 30 .423 8 ~
San Francisco
Z2 3J .400 11
'1'\tesday's Gamel
Philadelphia 4, San f'ra.n dscu .1
Atlanta 5, St. Louis 2

New York 5!Los Angeles 1

Pittaburgh , Cincinnati 3

Houston 5, Chicago 2

Wedntldly'i Games
San Diego, (Curtis 3-4 } at Montreal

W. L.Pct. GB

Minnesota (0 . Jackson 2-3) at Detroit
(Rozcma2-2), n
Texas (MaUack 4-S) at Chicago (Dotson 6-

33 211 .623
28 23 .549 4
'l1 'n .:,00

22 32 .407 12
21 31 .404 12
TUe8day's Games

Kansas City (Leonard 5--5 and Splittortr 43) at Cleveland (Waits 4-S and Spillner :'t-3),
2, t-n

EAST

Milwaukee
Baltimore
Toronto
Bo3ton
Cleveland
Detroit

26 'll .m 81&gt;
25 'll .463 9

NorriS 6-4)

AMERICAN LEAGUE

New York

u

Toronto 1, Chicaso 0
Texas3, Milwaukee 1
Oakland 7, Baltimore 4
California 5, New York4
Boston 5, Seatlle 4, 11 innings
Wed.ne1day'11 Games
Baltimore (Palmer &gt;3) at Oakland (M.

Thursday's Games
Pittsburgh a t Cinc1nnali
San Diego at Montreal, n
Only tS:ames scheduled

Montreal8, San DiegQ4

3&gt;1 211 .630
21J -~ 19 6
'll :&gt;Jl .481 7h

Kanso.s City 8, Cleveland 4
Detroit 8, Minnesota 3

(llich.ard 7-J ), n
~

WEST

Kansa s City
Chicago
Oakland
Seattle
Texas
Minnesota
California

6~

2),11

26 21J .100 61&gt;

Teus (Matlack 3--2) at Milwaukee (Sc rensenJ-4),n
New York (Jotu1 8-2) at Ca lifornia (Ebon

26 'l1 .491 7
2.5 2fi .490 7
23 27 .460 3 ~

3-S ), n

Boston (Rainey 6-1 ) at Seattle (Beattie 30), n

Thursday's Games

Summer ·league results
(Conti nued from page

J)

score, raising Middleport's record to
4-1 on the year. Wendy Barker,
Teresa Whittington, Lisa Whit·
tington, and Polly Chadwell all
slammed home runs for the winners.
Jody Taylor, Barker, L. WHit·
tington, Amy Radikan, and Christy
'lichmond also collected extra base
hits. Lisa Whittington was the win·
ning pitcher. Lynn Arthur took the

Texas al Milwaukee

and only one walk. Derron Jewett
went the distance striking out nine
and walking only two for Eastern. J .
Newell had a double and a single,
Maxson, Probert, and Gaul two
singles.

Minne.sut.ll at ~lroit , n
Bost on a t California. n
Baltimore at Seattle, n
Only games scheduled

TODAY'S
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATIING ( ll5 at bats ): S: Hender!Wn,

New York , .344; K. J:lemandet, St. Louis,

SAVE ON CLOTHING

loss.

1n the Senior Softball League,
Dravo defeated Pomeroy 6-3 on a 2().
hit petiormance. Leading hitters for
Dravo were Lori Warden with two
doubles and a single, and Debbie
Michael a double and a single. Traci
Mearns picked up the win for Dravo,
while Kellie Rought took the loss.
Sandy Jones was the leading hitter
for Pomeroy with a double and two
singles, Dravo is now 2·1 while
Pomeroy fell to ~2.

Make your own
clothes with the
various fabrics
for every occasion.

nightcap Logan look a one run lead
in U1e second when Heft singled,
went to second on a passed bail and
scored on an single by Later..
Bob Foster singled, Cliff Kennedy
sacrificed him to second, and Roger
Gaul singled to tie the game in the
bottom of the frame .
Logan took a 3-1 lead in the third
when Jackson drove in one run with
a tw&lt;Hln, none-out fielder's choice
and a throwing error ...
In the·fifth, Logan and Meigs each
added a run.
The locals' came when King
reached on a fielder's choice, stole
second and rode home on Art
Foglestrom's double.
Cliff Kennedy and Brown singled
in the sixth to put runners on first
and tbird. Steve LitUe singled home
Kennedy for Meigs' final run. But
Myers ended the threat with two
runners on base.
Meigs put runners aborad on a
walk and a single with one out in the
seventh. But Myers forced Roger
Kovalchik to hit into a fielder's

BY SCOTIW.OLFE
SYRACUSE
The Meigs
American Legion baseball squad
went down to its first defeat of the
season, 6-3, after taking its fifth viclory during the opener of a double
header against Logan 1-0 Tuesday.
The first game of the twilight bill
took seven innings to decide a win·
ner as a pair of hard throwers Tommy Owens of Meigs and Bill
Ruggles of Logan - hooked up in a
scorless pitchers' duel through six.
Meigs releiver Kenny Brown took
and quickly retired Logan in the
seventh, while Steve LitUe led off the
bottom of the inning with a single,
stole second and moved to third on a
Kent WoHe sacrifice bunt.
Off a big lead, Little scored on a
fielder's choice by Brown to win the
game.
Owens collected eight strikeouts
and waiked only one.
Brown, Fields, Foster, 1'. Wayland
and Little collected the Meigs hits,
all singles.
After a scoreless first inning of the

•

choice on a 3-2 pitch and recorded
the final out of the game on a grounder.
Kent Wolfe banged two singles,
Bob Foster a double and single and
Cliff Kennedy two singles for Meigs.
Logan 's Myers walked three and
fanned four in going the distance for •
the victory.
Meigs travels to The Plains •
(Athens High School) to face Athens
Saturday at 1 p.m. Meigs is
scheduled to play Glouster Sunday,
but that game is tentative.

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F...- AAA Road ~Atlae

SPECIAL •

· EDITION

ROADATLAS

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While St.PI)Iitl L&amp;~t

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•ices and d'ozens of benefit• you ~
use-Emergency .IIDm" SerYice, Pllrlorili Atllldent Insurance, ,.ortd famous Trip Planning 4rit:
morel And thfough Juty .t, new muter., _ . .
wilt recel•e AAA'e colooul Roed Atr.. F.REE, I'*
by bringing or m~lltng In .t hla 4111. LOW ~
·. ·
membership IS· LESS THAN 12.!10 a MONTH PI!"
COUPLE, plus entrance lee (IM. detalla below), IQ
.cell or vlalt to JOIN THE ClUBI· . '-. ·
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PUU OU' AND PO..D ON DOTTID LIN.
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Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans,as a
single and efficient source. can provide qualified
companies with a total group benefits pacl&lt;age.
And as the leaders in health care protection,
they can offer you options in benefits designed
to provide the right balance between coverage
and cost.
Of course, a Blue Cross and Blue Shield bene·
fits package includes more than just coverage for
hospital and doctors' services and major medical
expenses. It can·also include dental benefits, and
coverages for hearing and vision care and pre·
scription drugs. ·
And now, group life insurance with accident
benefits for employees and dependents along
with employee disability income protection is
available. It can be designed right into a package
to give you a complete benefits program.
Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield representa·
live can reView all these options with you and ··
help you design the most flexible and efficient ·
package for your company.

lianCiueit

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There are some
pretty good reasons why
your Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans
should be considered as your
single source.

--Arrow~..

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with the leaders. Call your Blue Cros~
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In Meigs-Mason Pony League ac-

tion, Middleport downed the Eastern
Reds !1-7. D. Reuter had three singles
for the winners while E. Bishop had
a double and single and Mike
WUHord hit two doubles. S. Eads
also had a single and double. John
Cremeans picked up the win and
Cris Burdette came on in relief.
They combined for five strike outs

......

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.

.325;

STRIKEOUTS : Carllon, PhiJadelphilt,
105; R1c:ha rd, Howton, 90; Ryetn, Houston,
~ -; P. N1ekro, Atlanta, 58; Rogers, Montreal,

z

•

.338; R. Smith, Los Angeles, .333; J . Cruz
Houston, .3~ ; , Trillo, Philadel phia ,
Reitz, St. Lou1s, .32.5.

RUNS: Schmidt, Philadelphia, 41 ; K. He,...
mutdez, St. Louis, 41 ; Dawson, Montreal,~ ;
Rose, Philadelphia, 46 ; Hendrick, St. Louis,
45 ; Garvey, Los Angeles, 43; R. Smith, Los
Angeles, 37; McBride, Philadelphia, 36;
Clark, San Francisco,36.
HITS : K. Hernandez, St. Louis, 69; Templeton, St. Louis, 69; Reilt, st. Louis, 68; J.
Cnu. Houston. 63: TavP.rll.&lt;{ Nt&gt;w Vnrk IH ·
0. Moreno, Pitt.sbur~th . 61: R. Smilh, Los
Angeles,61.
DOUBLES: Stearns, New York, 18; Rose,
Philadelphia, 17; Knight, Cin cinnati, IS; K.
Hernandez, St. Louis, U; Clll:lmbliss, Atlanta,l4 .
TRIPLES : 0 . Mureno, Pittsburgh, 6; R.
Scott, Montrea , 4; Trillo, Philadelphia, t ;
McBride, Philadel phliJ, 4; Km!!:hl, Cincinnati , 4.
HOME RUNS: Sdunidt, Phih,delphia; 18;
LulinsJti, Philadelphia, 13; Carter, Montreal, 12; Hendrick, St. Louis, 12; Garvey,
Los Angeles, 12; Baker, Loo Angeles, 12.
STOLEN BASES: LeFlore, Montreal, :u ;
0 . MOrenu, Pittsburgh, 30; Collins, Cincinna ti, 2:0; R. Scott, Montreal, 18 ; R. Law,
Los Angeles,l7; 0 . Smi th, San Diego,17.
PI TCHING: (6 Dedsioll3): Reuss, Los
Angele:~ , 7-1. .875, 2.40; Bibby, Pitt.-lburgh, S1, .8S7, 2.98; Cu-lton, Philadelphia, 1~2 •.833,
1.83 ; Bahnsen_. Montreal, !)..J, .833, I .» ;
Shirley, San Diego, 5-l, .1133, 2.37; Blue, San
Francisco, 8-2, .800, 2.76; Pastore, Cincinrw li, 7·2, . 778, 2.81 ; Welch, Los Ange les, 62, .750, 2.46.

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�5- The Daily Sentinel, Mu:trut:yt.u ~ .. .,............. u 1 , v.,

Meigs wins fifth, loses first

PEE WEE TEAM - Members of the Hubbard's
Greenhouse Pee Wee team at Syracuse are, first row, I·
r, Jolm VanMeter, Chris Stewart, Todd Lisle; Jared
Stewart, bat boy, Kevin Burgess, David Custer, Chad

i

~

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Major Wgue Baseball

I

(Gullikson Q-0), n
San Francisco

NATIONAL LEAGUE

EAST

W. L.Pd. GB
30 00 .600

Montreal

.sn 1
'E'/23.~3
24 'll .m 60,

Pitt.!lbuq!:h

'

Taylor; second row, Jerod Moore, Eber Pickens, Doug
lavender, Kevin Grueser, Brian Weaver, Chris Stout,
Shane Simpson, Ray Sayre; back, John Lisle and Mike
Stewart, coaches. Absent was Michael Adkins.

:~o

Phillldel!&gt;hio
New Yorlt
Chicago
St. Loui!

2:2

22 :&gt;Jl .44&lt;! 8
19 35 .352 13

WEST

Houston
Los Angeles
Cincinnati
San Diel!:o

32 21 .G&lt;H
31 22 .S93

( Whitson

2-7)

at

Philadelphia ( Lerch2-7i , n
St. l.oiWI (8 . Forsch 4-4 ) at AUanta (Mc-

Willia.rns3-4 ), n
L&lt;1:i An"eles ( Welch~~ or RellSS 3-U at
Ne~· York (Zachry 1·2 or Swan 4-4), n
Pitl.\lburgh (Blyleven 1-5) at CinCinnati
(Pastorc7-2),n
Chicago (Reuschel 5-5) nt Houston

·"' ,..,

30 24
25 30 .455 8
Atlanta
22 30 .423 8 ~
San Francisco
Z2 3J .400 11
'1'\tesday's Gamel
Philadelphia 4, San f'ra.n dscu .1
Atlanta 5, St. Louis 2

New York 5!Los Angeles 1

Pittaburgh , Cincinnati 3

Houston 5, Chicago 2

Wedntldly'i Games
San Diego, (Curtis 3-4 } at Montreal

W. L.Pct. GB

Minnesota (0 . Jackson 2-3) at Detroit
(Rozcma2-2), n
Texas (MaUack 4-S) at Chicago (Dotson 6-

33 211 .623
28 23 .549 4
'l1 'n .:,00

22 32 .407 12
21 31 .404 12
TUe8day's Games

Kansas City (Leonard 5--5 and Splittortr 43) at Cleveland (Waits 4-S and Spillner :'t-3),
2, t-n

EAST

Milwaukee
Baltimore
Toronto
Bo3ton
Cleveland
Detroit

26 'll .m 81&gt;
25 'll .463 9

NorriS 6-4)

AMERICAN LEAGUE

New York

u

Toronto 1, Chicaso 0
Texas3, Milwaukee 1
Oakland 7, Baltimore 4
California 5, New York4
Boston 5, Seatlle 4, 11 innings
Wed.ne1day'11 Games
Baltimore (Palmer &gt;3) at Oakland (M.

Thursday's Games
Pittsburgh a t Cinc1nnali
San Diego at Montreal, n
Only tS:ames scheduled

Montreal8, San DiegQ4

3&gt;1 211 .630
21J -~ 19 6
'll :&gt;Jl .481 7h

Kanso.s City 8, Cleveland 4
Detroit 8, Minnesota 3

(llich.ard 7-J ), n
~

WEST

Kansa s City
Chicago
Oakland
Seattle
Texas
Minnesota
California

6~

2),11

26 21J .100 61&gt;

Teus (Matlack 3--2) at Milwaukee (Sc rensenJ-4),n
New York (Jotu1 8-2) at Ca lifornia (Ebon

26 'l1 .491 7
2.5 2fi .490 7
23 27 .460 3 ~

3-S ), n

Boston (Rainey 6-1 ) at Seattle (Beattie 30), n

Thursday's Games

Summer ·league results
(Conti nued from page

J)

score, raising Middleport's record to
4-1 on the year. Wendy Barker,
Teresa Whittington, Lisa Whit·
tington, and Polly Chadwell all
slammed home runs for the winners.
Jody Taylor, Barker, L. WHit·
tington, Amy Radikan, and Christy
'lichmond also collected extra base
hits. Lisa Whittington was the win·
ning pitcher. Lynn Arthur took the

Texas al Milwaukee

and only one walk. Derron Jewett
went the distance striking out nine
and walking only two for Eastern. J .
Newell had a double and a single,
Maxson, Probert, and Gaul two
singles.

Minne.sut.ll at ~lroit , n
Bost on a t California. n
Baltimore at Seattle, n
Only games scheduled

TODAY'S
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATIING ( ll5 at bats ): S: Hender!Wn,

New York , .344; K. J:lemandet, St. Louis,

SAVE ON CLOTHING

loss.

1n the Senior Softball League,
Dravo defeated Pomeroy 6-3 on a 2().
hit petiormance. Leading hitters for
Dravo were Lori Warden with two
doubles and a single, and Debbie
Michael a double and a single. Traci
Mearns picked up the win for Dravo,
while Kellie Rought took the loss.
Sandy Jones was the leading hitter
for Pomeroy with a double and two
singles, Dravo is now 2·1 while
Pomeroy fell to ~2.

Make your own
clothes with the
various fabrics
for every occasion.

nightcap Logan look a one run lead
in U1e second when Heft singled,
went to second on a passed bail and
scored on an single by Later..
Bob Foster singled, Cliff Kennedy
sacrificed him to second, and Roger
Gaul singled to tie the game in the
bottom of the frame .
Logan took a 3-1 lead in the third
when Jackson drove in one run with
a tw&lt;Hln, none-out fielder's choice
and a throwing error ...
In the·fifth, Logan and Meigs each
added a run.
The locals' came when King
reached on a fielder's choice, stole
second and rode home on Art
Foglestrom's double.
Cliff Kennedy and Brown singled
in the sixth to put runners on first
and tbird. Steve LitUe singled home
Kennedy for Meigs' final run. But
Myers ended the threat with two
runners on base.
Meigs put runners aborad on a
walk and a single with one out in the
seventh. But Myers forced Roger
Kovalchik to hit into a fielder's

BY SCOTIW.OLFE
SYRACUSE
The Meigs
American Legion baseball squad
went down to its first defeat of the
season, 6-3, after taking its fifth viclory during the opener of a double
header against Logan 1-0 Tuesday.
The first game of the twilight bill
took seven innings to decide a win·
ner as a pair of hard throwers Tommy Owens of Meigs and Bill
Ruggles of Logan - hooked up in a
scorless pitchers' duel through six.
Meigs releiver Kenny Brown took
and quickly retired Logan in the
seventh, while Steve LitUe led off the
bottom of the inning with a single,
stole second and moved to third on a
Kent WoHe sacrifice bunt.
Off a big lead, Little scored on a
fielder's choice by Brown to win the
game.
Owens collected eight strikeouts
and waiked only one.
Brown, Fields, Foster, 1'. Wayland
and Little collected the Meigs hits,
all singles.
After a scoreless first inning of the

•

choice on a 3-2 pitch and recorded
the final out of the game on a grounder.
Kent Wolfe banged two singles,
Bob Foster a double and single and
Cliff Kennedy two singles for Meigs.
Logan 's Myers walked three and
fanned four in going the distance for •
the victory.
Meigs travels to The Plains •
(Athens High School) to face Athens
Saturday at 1 p.m. Meigs is
scheduled to play Glouster Sunday,
but that game is tentative.

....

a I
a I
L4J
.....

.LAJ
L4J

''

0

-

0
Nlll

'

.

....

-·

-w-CL..

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..

'

·-...
Ill

!

"·~~._,~·~:;;;;T:.E~i;d,:t

.:

F...- AAA Road ~Atlae

SPECIAL •

· EDITION

ROADATLAS

i
:..

!
'

.

·. ;. Qtfet good UHOOgn" Jul~ 1
While St.PI)Iitl L&amp;~t

-.

{

.'

Yo~...can't beat AAA Jor.personal Auto Club •
•ices and d'ozens of benefit• you ~
use-Emergency .IIDm" SerYice, Pllrlorili Atllldent Insurance, ,.ortd famous Trip Planning 4rit:
morel And thfough Juty .t, new muter., _ . .
wilt recel•e AAA'e colooul Roed Atr.. F.REE, I'*
by bringing or m~lltng In .t hla 4111. LOW ~
·. ·
membership IS· LESS THAN 12.!10 a MONTH PI!"
COUPLE, plus entrance lee (IM. detalla below), IQ
.cell or vlalt to JOIN THE ClUBI· . '-. ·
' •

en

.........

ANOTHIER UNIQUIE AAA MIEMBIRaHIP •llllflrl' ,:· :, •. ,
COLUMBUS AIRPORT DISCOUN-TS FOR PARKING I LODGING:

.

Moen.,
........

.. You •••• time end money with theee convenient extra benefits from

AAA.

-

-

.J

'(IS;)' Your - - • '

w

"""""""'* C::J
· Gallipolis, Ohio

For.membership tnlormltlon ell/ or vlt/1: .

P"''"-" .

I'LJPA'-..s't:.l • .._9ct.GA'-'U&gt;A1_,UA'V• ...... ·

,

-

00

.
........
&gt;

!1-.

'

TojalnbJmells.ndi2Splu•S10e8chlor....-.enctctt....,.,...lt...._IID...,_._... .•
li'IChtdi lt'tll •dllor fREE AUU. Ae ....ll 0U&gt;M IN OfttJ 111.10 ,_· ,..,.
I

i·lllll!o.

oo

a I

o;;,"• , ,'

' membera IIYI 20% at CCC Valet Parl&lt;lng and tho Shoroton Airport Inn

,

..

Now;pac
group bene
the leaders.

'.. .1' Cll 1 10G NO. G10• ClltY .lftO' nlld

.. ... .

INn •a••oa
--.------.
....... ...- ..---------...--.--·--------------------------------·
PUU OU' AND PO..D ON DOTTID LIN.
~

'

-IIO' G1QI~tllli¥;,1ft0 . ,1fW,
-~-~-~----~·----:·-~..;....:...,.,
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-.;.;
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.
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-::IE

FABRIC SHOP
U)

Ci

Q...l

_.

z:
L4J
::::E

N

o u ·
.._ - en ~
.... :or:
...lz:
c: -a::

POME -ROY, OHIO

Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans,as a
single and efficient source. can provide qualified
companies with a total group benefits pacl&lt;age.
And as the leaders in health care protection,
they can offer you options in benefits designed
to provide the right balance between coverage
and cost.
Of course, a Blue Cross and Blue Shield bene·
fits package includes more than just coverage for
hospital and doctors' services and major medical
expenses. It can·also include dental benefits, and
coverages for hearing and vision care and pre·
scription drugs. ·
And now, group life insurance with accident
benefits for employees and dependents along
with employee disability income protection is
available. It can be designed right into a package
to give you a complete benefits program.
Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield representa·
live can reView all these options with you and ··
help you design the most flexible and efficient ·
package for your company.

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There are some
pretty good reasons why
your Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans
should be considered as your
single source.

--Arrow~..

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dollar, package your group benefits
with the leaders. Call your Blue Cros~
and Blue Shield representative.

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Value added.

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New Yorl
Clothing House

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Short lleeves U.01:

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The right dress shirt means
a lot and that means this
Cotton-Ease •• by Arrow.
Its placket. T-Josh collar,
and fashionably solid
colors put this short
sleeve dress shirt ahead
of the class, In c sloss by
ltselfll~ 100% cotton. Soft.
Comfortable, cool ... and
with the convenience of
Sanfor·Set®. it comes out
of the dryer looking so
good it virtually needs no
Ironing! That's a CottonEase'" for you.
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your best foot forward put
your best shirt forward.

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you Join to ~.. •

You'll also need

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In Meigs-Mason Pony League ac-

tion, Middleport downed the Eastern
Reds !1-7. D. Reuter had three singles
for the winners while E. Bishop had
a double and single and Mike
WUHord hit two doubles. S. Eads
also had a single and double. John
Cremeans picked up the win and
Cris Burdette came on in relief.
They combined for five strike outs

......

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.325;

STRIKEOUTS : Carllon, PhiJadelphilt,
105; R1c:ha rd, Howton, 90; Ryetn, Houston,
~ -; P. N1ekro, Atlanta, 58; Rogers, Montreal,

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.338; R. Smith, Los Angeles, .333; J . Cruz
Houston, .3~ ; , Trillo, Philadel phia ,
Reitz, St. Lou1s, .32.5.

RUNS: Schmidt, Philadelphia, 41 ; K. He,...
mutdez, St. Louis, 41 ; Dawson, Montreal,~ ;
Rose, Philadelphia, 46 ; Hendrick, St. Louis,
45 ; Garvey, Los Angeles, 43; R. Smith, Los
Angeles, 37; McBride, Philadelphia, 36;
Clark, San Francisco,36.
HITS : K. Hernandez, St. Louis, 69; Templeton, St. Louis, 69; Reilt, st. Louis, 68; J.
Cnu. Houston. 63: TavP.rll.&lt;{ Nt&gt;w Vnrk IH ·
0. Moreno, Pitt.sbur~th . 61: R. Smilh, Los
Angeles,61.
DOUBLES: Stearns, New York, 18; Rose,
Philadelphia, 17; Knight, Cin cinnati, IS; K.
Hernandez, St. Louis, U; Clll:lmbliss, Atlanta,l4 .
TRIPLES : 0 . Mureno, Pittsburgh, 6; R.
Scott, Montrea , 4; Trillo, Philadelphia, t ;
McBride, Philadel phliJ, 4; Km!!:hl, Cincinnati , 4.
HOME RUNS: Sdunidt, Phih,delphia; 18;
LulinsJti, Philadelphia, 13; Carter, Montreal, 12; Hendrick, St. Louis, 12; Garvey,
Los Angeles, 12; Baker, Loo Angeles, 12.
STOLEN BASES: LeFlore, Montreal, :u ;
0 . MOrenu, Pittsburgh, 30; Collins, Cincinna ti, 2:0; R. Scott, Montreal, 18 ; R. Law,
Los Angeles,l7; 0 . Smi th, San Diego,17.
PI TCHING: (6 Dedsioll3): Reuss, Los
Angele:~ , 7-1. .875, 2.40; Bibby, Pitt.-lburgh, S1, .8S7, 2.98; Cu-lton, Philadelphia, 1~2 •.833,
1.83 ; Bahnsen_. Montreal, !)..J, .833, I .» ;
Shirley, San Diego, 5-l, .1133, 2.37; Blue, San
Francisco, 8-2, .800, 2.76; Pastore, Cincinrw li, 7·2, . 778, 2.81 ; Welch, Los Ange les, 62, .750, 2.46.

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7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, June 11, 1980

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0

Contest winners announced

,,..

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Mei8a County children have been
awarded Prizes that were contributed by area businesses fo•· a
poster contest sponsored by the
Alternatives Program of the Meig~~
Community Mental Health Center.
The prizes were presented by Mayor
Andrews of Pomeroy on June 2 at
Salem Center Elementary School
and at Sailsbury Elementary School.
Salem Center Elementary School
winners received their prizes at a
special assembly with the whole
student body in attendance. Winners
were Ben Davies, who won a $10 gift
certlflcate from Elberfeld's; Rich
VanHouten, who won a pizza from
the Meigi!IM Pizza Shack; Tammy
Gilkey, who received a game from
Swisher and Lohse Drugs, and
KrlBtle Maynard, who was awarded
a clutch purse from the Pomeroy
National Bank. Tammy Gardner
won a bracelet and earrings set that
was donated by K and C Jewelers.
Cothy Neulzllng, Anne Barrett,
Christopher Cross, Vanessa Rife and
Missy Longstreth won cartons of R.
C. Cola contributed by the R. C. Bottling Company, and Peggy Barrett
and Missy Primmer won frisbees,
also contributed by R. C. Cola.

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Angel accepted at Potomac State

:

At the Sallsbury Elementary
School, winners were all fourth
graders. Michele Folmer, Cynthia
Kauff, Allison Jones, Gina Scarberry, Krista Roush, and Charlotte
Hart all won jewelry-bracelebl or
necklaces fr&lt;m K and C Jewelers.
Joe Parker and David Beegle won
toys frMl Swisher and Lohse, and
Angie Sloan won a "Baby Grows
Up" from Nelson's Drugs. Greg
Shamblin and Reece Ruch won
·coupons from Burger Chef.
Dee Dorst, Artie Hlinnel, Kevin V.
King, Jody Will, Danny Hall and
KeVin King won prizes from R. C.
Cola Bottling Company.
Accompanying the mayor to each
of the assemblies was David
Krasner, Coordinator of the Meigs
Community Health Center and Bonnie McLain, Education/Prevention
Specialist with the Alternatives

'
success and praised the entries
which were based on the theme
"Meigs County." Eight of the winning posters hae been mounted in
the new Multipurpose Facility on
Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy.

Program. Alternatives is a drug
abuse prevention program which
provides activities including
programs in schools and a sununer
camp for area youth .
McLain felt that the contest was a

Terry Wayne Angel of New Haven
W. Va. has bee.n accepted for ad:
mission to Potomac State College for
the academic year beginning August
21,1980.
Potomac State College is the only
junior calling branch ci West
Virginia University and is located in
Keyser, W. Va.
A fully-accredited liberal arts

Program given
'•ordinary Days and His Extra·
ordinary Ways" was the program
topic used by Mrs. Opal Kloes at the
recent meeting of the Asbury United
Methodist Church Women at the
home of Mrs. Helen Teaford. Mrs.
April Harmon was the assisting
hostess for the meeting attended by
10 members and two guests.
Mrs. Mary Cundiff presided at the
meetin11 opening with "He Leadeth

Me." Mrs. Margaret Eichinger's
devotions were entitled "Are You
Good News?" A total of 57 sick and
shut-in visits were reported.
Reading program hooks were exchanged. Mrs. Irene Parker, Mrs.
Mary Lisle, and Mrs. Eichinger
assisted Mrs. Kloes with the
program which closed with prayer
and a spiritual life closing "Father's
Love.''

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FATHERS DAY

, JUNFJl5 ·

Hold charity dance

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PERUPRESS SPORT AND

, Mrs. Virgil Roush recentiy received word of the death of Mrs. George
(Elsie) Garden in Nashville, Tenn .
The GardeRB have been frequent
Visitors here and attended the
Cheater Methodist Church where she
will be remembered by her many
friends.
Mrs. John Hayes and Esther
Ridenour called at the Willis
Funeral Home in Gallipolis to pay
their respects to their cousin, Edgar

'11'!.

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-

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PAMPO POP
-PAMPER POP AT SIIFFLEI'J- (

-PAMPfR POP ON HIS DAV-

TAKE YOUR CHOICE
STRAIGHT OR FLARE

-PAMPER POP AT

MEN'S LACE TO TOE

MEN'S COMFORTABLE

GYM OHFOROS

JOGG~RS

American made gym or tenn is oxfords with moulded
soles and cushion Insoles. Lace to the toe style. s tur·
ely ctnvaa uppers. All srzes .

L~UI'S

Blue !liuede leather and nylon uppers . Gl'o'e
Dad ' s feet a treat. Sizes 6'h to 12.

'3~.?

JfANS

Spec ial 5ale pr ice on men 's famous Le~rs
straight leg or flare leg st yle aer. lm jeana.
A~ situ In stock. Hurry to St iff ler' s and
save during th is sale.

'7~.?

WITH THESe UALUES

"A ROBE FIT FOR A KING"
COMFORTABLE LO~NGING

-PAMPER POP ON HIS DAYMEN'S PERMANENT PRESS
·FANCY BROADCLOTH

ROSES

PAJAMA$

Man 'a wash tnd wear robea In no-Iron
Iabrie a. Good aelectloo . Robes fit lor a
king come from Stillier's. Comforttbll
lnd rel~lng .

ALL KINOS Of GIFTS-FOR ALL KINOS Of DAD'S
-PAMPfR POP AT STiffl£A'SBOSTON BRAND
ASSORTED FASHION

8ELTS

Shop now lor men 's fashion belts In
aaaorted colora, s1yles and width!!
Pamper Pop on thl! speci al day,
with gilt !I from Stifllar's.

'10~.~.
UNDERWEAR

MEN'S ASSORTED
SPORT ,CASUAL AND

ClEW N£CII
SJ41t
TEE SHIRTS
Pka.
Chooae from a wide aeleclion of
(REGULAR '5.39 )
famous brands, dress and casual
aocka In lltoNed llylea, colora and
,WHIT£ COTTON
ptttema. A real Pop pleaser!
KNIT IIIEFS
(REGULAR 14.29)
IRIADCLOTH
J
SHORTS
Ae'JI~.I~~.,.-----(REGULAR ,6_29 )
-PAMPER POP ON HIS DAYGRIPPER AND BOXER STYLES
PACK~GE OF THREE
WHITE FRUIT-OF·LDOM
-PAMPER PIP ON Hl5 DAY-

DRESS SOCKS

FAMOUS SCAMPS

HOUSE SLIPPERS
Pamper Pop on hll tpecial day wltl\ tuper scamp
Houn SUQPifl from Btllfltr't. Sevtral ttvlea to

choo" from . Alwayt a favorite .

4

J ·~NDUP

.

•

TOPATROLAREA
Effective ' immediately a
,policeman will patrol the new Mini·
Park In the viJ1a8e of Pomeroy.
Persons found drinking or · .
destrOying properly at the park will
be aJTellted.
- '

SWIM TRUNKS

Great aaleetiOfl of men 's new CampuS
brand sw im su lta In your choice of styles ,
colors and fabrics. A gilt Dao can use al l
summer .

THREE TO PACKAGE
Here 's i Pop Saver, Fruit ol the Loom
underwear.

Hanes

-PAMP£R POP ON HIS DAYMEN'S CAMPUS BRAND
BOXER &amp; BRIEF STYLE

'5!.!

-PAMPER P., AT STIFFLEI'I-

clerk of Syracuse Village, by Blll
Hubbard wu donated by the
Syracuse-Minersville Baseball
Auoclation and proceeds from sponsored bueball tournaments held at
Syracuse.
.
Each group gave $800 to be applied
·to the coet o1 the new bleachers.

.

SHORTS

For desen~lng dada, men' I permanen t
shorts and joggers.
and Dlllerna. Give
His
I

FLARE

Todav's
best
I · buy!

..

MEN'S POPULAR SUMMER
WALKING AND JOGGING

-PAII'Pfl POP ON HIS DAV-

t~SHIRTS .~_,
All cotton white
T·8hlr1t. 3 to t
pkg.

00
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TO

SHRTSWEAR UALUES FROM STIFFLER-S-JUST FOR DAD! .

PRE-WASHED

nJNl)SCIARIFIED
The $1,200 given to Janice Lawson,

••
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399 s'-oo

'17!~.

AUtOmAt~C ...S
Forgetsnrlnklng, forget wrinkling, forget
puckering forever! All cotton jeans with
Slnfor·Set, lrtlted to remember their
ahtpa. Straight leg or !lares. Pamper Pop
thla year!

brand knit shirts In aeaorted styles , col · t11'&lt;...1t,
ors and patterns. Give Dad our boat on
his day.
•

Theae Haggar polyester knit slacks are
the boat wardtobo lnveatm&amp;nt you can
make. Ouallty tailoring. Handaome atyl·
lng. Comtort·p lua fit. "•sorted solid col·
ors.

AND UP

IllaVENCK®

ChOoae tro'm a goOd aelec11on of famous

MEPI'S COMFORT PLUS
POLYESTER KNIT

The beat lor Dad ... He deserves It!
Famoua Brand apon ahlrta In
taaortad atytes. colora tnd patterns.
Slve II Stllfler'a.

-PAMPER POP ON HIS DAV-

KNIT SHIRTS

SLACKS

DRESS SHIRTS

IIDGET PIKED

...

-PAMPER POP AT STIFFLU'SMEN'S PLAIN AND FANCY

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

«

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DAY-

Weekend guests of Mrs. Opal
Eichinger were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Eichinger and Susie, ColumbJlS, and Mr. ·and mrs. Don
Eichinger, Rio Grande.
Sunday diMer guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Wood were Miss Sandy
Wood, Belpre, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Beegle, Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Wood, Charlie and Amy,
Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. John Ridenour and
sons have moved to their new home
near Five Points.
- -Mr. and-·Mrs. Hugh Daniels of
Miami, Fla., who are · Visiting
relatives in Pomeroy, visited friends
in Racine and went to see the new
Baptist church.
Dr. and Mrs. Allen Brown (the
former Dorothy Philson) of
Rochester, MiM. and Mrs. Mabel
(Philson) Blakley and son, Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Blakley and son of Columbus were guests Sunday of Mrs. Addie Petrel and other relatives and
friends.
Mrs. Helen Slmpeon spent a week
with Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson,
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace and
Mrs. Pearl Adams visited Mrs. Fred
Brace in Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Birch and
family of Bellevue visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch and her
mother, Mrs. Emma Salser, Sunday,
Guests of Mrs. Emma Salser and
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Salser and
~onja were Mr. and Mrs. James
Thompson Warner Robbins, Ga.,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Salser of Johnstown, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Birch and fliDiily of Bellewe; Ohio,
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Evans and
family of Rio Grande, Mr. and Mrs.
Cbarles Mathews and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Grover Salaer, Jr., local.
Mrs. Maril)'n (Rice) · Willlamaon,
daughter and friend, Joined them
SUnday 111 the family get-together.

00

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WE HAUE AWIDE SELECTION OF

Atkins.

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News Notes

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Tickets for a benefit dance being
held by the Royal Oak Ballroom
Dance Club may be purchased at the
New York Clothing House and the K.
and C. Jewelry Store in Pomeroy,
and Ingels Furniture in Middleport•
Proceeds from the dance, to be held
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. on Thursday,
July 3, will go to the Awdllary fi
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Music
will be provided by the Ray Cinclnnoe Band. Ticket cost is $15 a
couple.

~--·····.
-=

college, Potomac State offers an
Associate in Arts degree in twenty· one pre-professional fields and
twelve aress in arts and sciences.
Terry is a graduate of Wallama
High School and the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Angel, 501 4th Street. He
plans to major in forestry at the •
college.

15~!
(REGULAR ''&amp;.99)

I

8RIEFS
All cotton wl\ltt

brltft. 3 to a pkg .

1

4~k~

(REGULAR '5.99)

TO WEAR WITH PRIDE!
NEWEST STYLE

NECK TIES
Gift ties tfllt Dad will enjoy in
assorted ao il da and atrlpes tnd
patlerna. Choose from 4·in ·hand
or reddle·tlld stylas. He will lOOk

great !

·

5

Great Ideal

Up

-PAMPIII POP ON HIS DAYGOOD QUALITY
LERTHER LIKE VINYL
'

HANDKERCHIEFS
Gin Cad our Beat on Hit Speelll Dey!
Plcklge of thrM famoua Fruit of the
L.oom wh itt perm praa handktrch lefa.

3°~d

81LLFOLDS
Your choice of line l.. ther l ike
I:IIIIOICII. Attoned ttyiH.
Shop early for bitt atiRtlon 1

~~n~l

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�,

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, June 11, 1980

-z...
0

Contest winners announced

,,..

,.'"
,.z

Mei8a County children have been
awarded Prizes that were contributed by area businesses fo•· a
poster contest sponsored by the
Alternatives Program of the Meig~~
Community Mental Health Center.
The prizes were presented by Mayor
Andrews of Pomeroy on June 2 at
Salem Center Elementary School
and at Sailsbury Elementary School.
Salem Center Elementary School
winners received their prizes at a
special assembly with the whole
student body in attendance. Winners
were Ben Davies, who won a $10 gift
certlflcate from Elberfeld's; Rich
VanHouten, who won a pizza from
the Meigi!IM Pizza Shack; Tammy
Gilkey, who received a game from
Swisher and Lohse Drugs, and
KrlBtle Maynard, who was awarded
a clutch purse from the Pomeroy
National Bank. Tammy Gardner
won a bracelet and earrings set that
was donated by K and C Jewelers.
Cothy Neulzllng, Anne Barrett,
Christopher Cross, Vanessa Rife and
Missy Longstreth won cartons of R.
C. Cola contributed by the R. C. Bottling Company, and Peggy Barrett
and Missy Primmer won frisbees,
also contributed by R. C. Cola.

Ill

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II&gt;

Angel accepted at Potomac State

:

At the Sallsbury Elementary
School, winners were all fourth
graders. Michele Folmer, Cynthia
Kauff, Allison Jones, Gina Scarberry, Krista Roush, and Charlotte
Hart all won jewelry-bracelebl or
necklaces fr&lt;m K and C Jewelers.
Joe Parker and David Beegle won
toys frMl Swisher and Lohse, and
Angie Sloan won a "Baby Grows
Up" from Nelson's Drugs. Greg
Shamblin and Reece Ruch won
·coupons from Burger Chef.
Dee Dorst, Artie Hlinnel, Kevin V.
King, Jody Will, Danny Hall and
KeVin King won prizes from R. C.
Cola Bottling Company.
Accompanying the mayor to each
of the assemblies was David
Krasner, Coordinator of the Meigs
Community Health Center and Bonnie McLain, Education/Prevention
Specialist with the Alternatives

'
success and praised the entries
which were based on the theme
"Meigs County." Eight of the winning posters hae been mounted in
the new Multipurpose Facility on
Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy.

Program. Alternatives is a drug
abuse prevention program which
provides activities including
programs in schools and a sununer
camp for area youth .
McLain felt that the contest was a

Terry Wayne Angel of New Haven
W. Va. has bee.n accepted for ad:
mission to Potomac State College for
the academic year beginning August
21,1980.
Potomac State College is the only
junior calling branch ci West
Virginia University and is located in
Keyser, W. Va.
A fully-accredited liberal arts

Program given
'•ordinary Days and His Extra·
ordinary Ways" was the program
topic used by Mrs. Opal Kloes at the
recent meeting of the Asbury United
Methodist Church Women at the
home of Mrs. Helen Teaford. Mrs.
April Harmon was the assisting
hostess for the meeting attended by
10 members and two guests.
Mrs. Mary Cundiff presided at the
meetin11 opening with "He Leadeth

Me." Mrs. Margaret Eichinger's
devotions were entitled "Are You
Good News?" A total of 57 sick and
shut-in visits were reported.
Reading program hooks were exchanged. Mrs. Irene Parker, Mrs.
Mary Lisle, and Mrs. Eichinger
assisted Mrs. Kloes with the
program which closed with prayer
and a spiritual life closing "Father's
Love.''

tWif
AIM

FATHERS DAY

, JUNFJl5 ·

Hold charity dance

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"11

..

mmous

00
00

PERUPRESS SPORT AND

, Mrs. Virgil Roush recentiy received word of the death of Mrs. George
(Elsie) Garden in Nashville, Tenn .
The GardeRB have been frequent
Visitors here and attended the
Cheater Methodist Church where she
will be remembered by her many
friends.
Mrs. John Hayes and Esther
Ridenour called at the Willis
Funeral Home in Gallipolis to pay
their respects to their cousin, Edgar

'11'!.

.

..... .
-

'

~~ . '

v.

PAMPO POP
-PAMPER POP AT SIIFFLEI'J- (

-PAMPfR POP ON HIS DAV-

TAKE YOUR CHOICE
STRAIGHT OR FLARE

-PAMPER POP AT

MEN'S LACE TO TOE

MEN'S COMFORTABLE

GYM OHFOROS

JOGG~RS

American made gym or tenn is oxfords with moulded
soles and cushion Insoles. Lace to the toe style. s tur·
ely ctnvaa uppers. All srzes .

L~UI'S

Blue !liuede leather and nylon uppers . Gl'o'e
Dad ' s feet a treat. Sizes 6'h to 12.

'3~.?

JfANS

Spec ial 5ale pr ice on men 's famous Le~rs
straight leg or flare leg st yle aer. lm jeana.
A~ situ In stock. Hurry to St iff ler' s and
save during th is sale.

'7~.?

WITH THESe UALUES

"A ROBE FIT FOR A KING"
COMFORTABLE LO~NGING

-PAMPER POP ON HIS DAYMEN'S PERMANENT PRESS
·FANCY BROADCLOTH

ROSES

PAJAMA$

Man 'a wash tnd wear robea In no-Iron
Iabrie a. Good aelectloo . Robes fit lor a
king come from Stillier's. Comforttbll
lnd rel~lng .

ALL KINOS Of GIFTS-FOR ALL KINOS Of DAD'S
-PAMPfR POP AT STiffl£A'SBOSTON BRAND
ASSORTED FASHION

8ELTS

Shop now lor men 's fashion belts In
aaaorted colora, s1yles and width!!
Pamper Pop on thl! speci al day,
with gilt !I from Stifllar's.

'10~.~.
UNDERWEAR

MEN'S ASSORTED
SPORT ,CASUAL AND

ClEW N£CII
SJ41t
TEE SHIRTS
Pka.
Chooae from a wide aeleclion of
(REGULAR '5.39 )
famous brands, dress and casual
aocka In lltoNed llylea, colora and
,WHIT£ COTTON
ptttema. A real Pop pleaser!
KNIT IIIEFS
(REGULAR 14.29)
IRIADCLOTH
J
SHORTS
Ae'JI~.I~~.,.-----(REGULAR ,6_29 )
-PAMPER POP ON HIS DAYGRIPPER AND BOXER STYLES
PACK~GE OF THREE
WHITE FRUIT-OF·LDOM
-PAMPER PIP ON Hl5 DAY-

DRESS SOCKS

FAMOUS SCAMPS

HOUSE SLIPPERS
Pamper Pop on hll tpecial day wltl\ tuper scamp
Houn SUQPifl from Btllfltr't. Sevtral ttvlea to

choo" from . Alwayt a favorite .

4

J ·~NDUP

.

•

TOPATROLAREA
Effective ' immediately a
,policeman will patrol the new Mini·
Park In the viJ1a8e of Pomeroy.
Persons found drinking or · .
destrOying properly at the park will
be aJTellted.
- '

SWIM TRUNKS

Great aaleetiOfl of men 's new CampuS
brand sw im su lta In your choice of styles ,
colors and fabrics. A gilt Dao can use al l
summer .

THREE TO PACKAGE
Here 's i Pop Saver, Fruit ol the Loom
underwear.

Hanes

-PAMP£R POP ON HIS DAYMEN'S CAMPUS BRAND
BOXER &amp; BRIEF STYLE

'5!.!

-PAMPER P., AT STIFFLEI'I-

clerk of Syracuse Village, by Blll
Hubbard wu donated by the
Syracuse-Minersville Baseball
Auoclation and proceeds from sponsored bueball tournaments held at
Syracuse.
.
Each group gave $800 to be applied
·to the coet o1 the new bleachers.

.

SHORTS

For desen~lng dada, men' I permanen t
shorts and joggers.
and Dlllerna. Give
His
I

FLARE

Todav's
best
I · buy!

..

MEN'S POPULAR SUMMER
WALKING AND JOGGING

-PAII'Pfl POP ON HIS DAV-

t~SHIRTS .~_,
All cotton white
T·8hlr1t. 3 to t
pkg.

00
00

TO

SHRTSWEAR UALUES FROM STIFFLER-S-JUST FOR DAD! .

PRE-WASHED

nJNl)SCIARIFIED
The $1,200 given to Janice Lawson,

••
w

399 s'-oo

'17!~.

AUtOmAt~C ...S
Forgetsnrlnklng, forget wrinkling, forget
puckering forever! All cotton jeans with
Slnfor·Set, lrtlted to remember their
ahtpa. Straight leg or !lares. Pamper Pop
thla year!

brand knit shirts In aeaorted styles , col · t11'&lt;...1t,
ors and patterns. Give Dad our boat on
his day.
•

Theae Haggar polyester knit slacks are
the boat wardtobo lnveatm&amp;nt you can
make. Ouallty tailoring. Handaome atyl·
lng. Comtort·p lua fit. "•sorted solid col·
ors.

AND UP

IllaVENCK®

ChOoae tro'm a goOd aelec11on of famous

MEPI'S COMFORT PLUS
POLYESTER KNIT

The beat lor Dad ... He deserves It!
Famoua Brand apon ahlrta In
taaortad atytes. colora tnd patterns.
Slve II Stllfler'a.

-PAMPER POP ON HIS DAV-

KNIT SHIRTS

SLACKS

DRESS SHIRTS

IIDGET PIKED

...

-PAMPER POP AT STIFFLU'SMEN'S PLAIN AND FANCY

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

«

~-

Gl~

DAY-

Weekend guests of Mrs. Opal
Eichinger were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Eichinger and Susie, ColumbJlS, and Mr. ·and mrs. Don
Eichinger, Rio Grande.
Sunday diMer guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Wood were Miss Sandy
Wood, Belpre, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Beegle, Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Wood, Charlie and Amy,
Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. John Ridenour and
sons have moved to their new home
near Five Points.
- -Mr. and-·Mrs. Hugh Daniels of
Miami, Fla., who are · Visiting
relatives in Pomeroy, visited friends
in Racine and went to see the new
Baptist church.
Dr. and Mrs. Allen Brown (the
former Dorothy Philson) of
Rochester, MiM. and Mrs. Mabel
(Philson) Blakley and son, Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Blakley and son of Columbus were guests Sunday of Mrs. Addie Petrel and other relatives and
friends.
Mrs. Helen Slmpeon spent a week
with Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson,
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace and
Mrs. Pearl Adams visited Mrs. Fred
Brace in Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Birch and
family of Bellevue visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch and her
mother, Mrs. Emma Salser, Sunday,
Guests of Mrs. Emma Salser and
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Salser and
~onja were Mr. and Mrs. James
Thompson Warner Robbins, Ga.,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Salser of Johnstown, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Birch and fliDiily of Bellewe; Ohio,
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Evans and
family of Rio Grande, Mr. and Mrs.
Cbarles Mathews and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Grover Salaer, Jr., local.
Mrs. Maril)'n (Rice) · Willlamaon,
daughter and friend, Joined them
SUnday 111 the family get-together.

00

ro

WE HAUE AWIDE SELECTION OF

Atkins.

N00

J

.A

Chester
News Notes

Ill

r

_t ..

D'-

IWA

&lt;Q

I•..

. IHn . on•oa I!IO.CncN GNY !ftO j1n.j .

I .£.:A

Tickets for a benefit dance being
held by the Royal Oak Ballroom
Dance Club may be purchased at the
New York Clothing House and the K.
and C. Jewelry Store in Pomeroy,
and Ingels Furniture in Middleport•
Proceeds from the dance, to be held
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. on Thursday,
July 3, will go to the Awdllary fi
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Music
will be provided by the Ray Cinclnnoe Band. Ticket cost is $15 a
couple.

~--·····.
-=

college, Potomac State offers an
Associate in Arts degree in twenty· one pre-professional fields and
twelve aress in arts and sciences.
Terry is a graduate of Wallama
High School and the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Angel, 501 4th Street. He
plans to major in forestry at the •
college.

15~!
(REGULAR ''&amp;.99)

I

8RIEFS
All cotton wl\ltt

brltft. 3 to a pkg .

1

4~k~

(REGULAR '5.99)

TO WEAR WITH PRIDE!
NEWEST STYLE

NECK TIES
Gift ties tfllt Dad will enjoy in
assorted ao il da and atrlpes tnd
patlerna. Choose from 4·in ·hand
or reddle·tlld stylas. He will lOOk

great !

·

5

Great Ideal

Up

-PAMPIII POP ON HIS DAYGOOD QUALITY
LERTHER LIKE VINYL
'

HANDKERCHIEFS
Gin Cad our Beat on Hit Speelll Dey!
Plcklge of thrM famoua Fruit of the
L.oom wh itt perm praa handktrch lefa.

3°~d

81LLFOLDS
Your choice of line l.. ther l ike
I:IIIIOICII. Attoned ttyiH.
Shop early for bitt atiRtlon 1

~~n~l

'2~.

�.

~·

•

r .

·~-1be ~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 11, 1980

Annual children 's program conducted

Helen Help Us

From one extreme to
the other--what do you do?
BY HELEN BOTI'EL
Speclal correspondent
DEAR HELEN:
When we were engaged, Roland
was so huggy-kissy he almost embarrassed me. After marriage , I'm
lucky to get a peck on the cheek. If I
hug him, he takes it as a signal I
want ~x. though sometimes I just
crave affection. Tbe only time he
ever even pats me, it means he's
ready for action.
Would you please tell him and
other males. that women can't be
ignored aU day and suddenly turn on
after the li8hts are out. Also that we
don't enjoy being noticed only
because our husbands are horny . ACHIN'G FORA TOUCH
DEAR ACHING:
I've told 'em and told 'em! Yours
is just about the commonest complaint wives make to advice columns, and the one most often ignored
by husbands.
If only these undemonstrative
. men could foresee the great dividen·
ds they'd reap from just a little t.l .c.
(tender , loving, care), well, maybe
we'd
premeditated
have hugs
a lotandmore
kisses unin
homes across America.
On the other hand, why don't more
wives tell th~ir husbands exactly
how they feel? Too often women
retire in hurt silence or resigned acceptance rather than make real efforts for change. - li
DEAR HELEN:
Let me tell you how I almost fell
into a meaningless affair and didn 't.
I thought my husband was pretty
dull compared to this fellow at the
office who asked me on a sneak
weekend - just for fun. I'd never
been wlfaithful, but excused myself
by saying I needed to recharge my
batteries.
So we cooked up a rather simple
ruse: I:ct attend a convention (true)
and the other man would be there
.(not mentioned ).
One of the reasons why I decided
for the affair was that Douglas (my
husband) was farfrom romantic. He
never said the things I wanted to

'the program with readings by Missy
McMillian, Zandra Vaughan , and P.
J. Harris. Cindy Crooks had a piano
solo, and there were recitations by

The annual children 's day
program at the Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church was
held Sunday.
Pam CrookS was announcer for

hear, though his actions proved he
loves me.
Well, everything went as planned.
I checked in at the hotel, and was
waiting for my soon-to-be lover
when - a beautiful bouquet arrived.
You guessed : it was from
Douglas, and the message read, "I
hope !Iiese flowers will say what I
sometimes can't express - I love
you with all my heart. "
You·also guessed: I met the other
man at the door with, "Sorry, I've
~banged my mind. "
Have I regretted the loss of an experience I may now never have?
Truthfully: at times, yes. But, I'm
also secure in the love of a wonderful
man, and I wouldn't chance that for
a week of exciting games. - IN
TIME 'S NICK

Harrisonville Social News

PERSONAL TO "TOO ASHAMED
TO SIGN": Your letter is a bit too
kinky for a family newspaper,
although your problem isn't as uncommon as you think. My advice :
Since this girlfriend is a rral dog, get
rid of her and try psychiatric counseling.- H.

Mr. and Mrs. Daune Stanley and
scM, Steve, enjoyed a picnic at Pin·
nacle Point near Bluefield, W. Va. on
Memorial Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Chapman
of Maryland visited a week with
Stella Atkins and Ruby Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Douglas spent
two months at their daughter's and
son-in-law's, Dr. and Mrs. Don Gilr
son, Potomac, Md.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman and
granddaughter, Tamra Clark, at-

ddaughter, Jan Wiseman, at Lima
on Saturday.
Mr. ·and Mrs. Bob Alkire visited
over weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Gibson in Colwnbus.
Mrs. Bessie Graham is visiting in
Iowa with her son, Harold and
family.
Mrs. Sally Welsh and daughter,
Kent, visited Thursday with Mrs.
Sue Payne and Mrs . Kathy
Branham.

GROUP VISITS
Mrs. Annie Will, Mrs. Faye Smith,
and Mrs. Barbara Baker, Jim and
Cle of Jessup, Ga. have returned
home after visiting at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Kloes of Syracuse
and Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen and
Billy Cleland, Chester.

SHAEFFER HOSPITALIZED
Francis.E. (Red) Shaeffer of Flatwoods Road suffered a heart attack
a week ago and is confined to the intensive care unit at the Medical Cen·
ter Hospital in Chillicothe. He expects to be confined there for several
weekS. Mr. Shaeffer specialized in
growing dahlias at his home.

tended the graduation of their gran-

Nicki Mills, P. J. Harris, Kelly Sat·
terfleld, Ryan Harper, Aaron Har&gt;"'•, Mary Beth Stein, Eddie Crooks,
Amy Sa.tterfield, and· Donald Stein.

Refreshments were served in the
dining room following the program.

REUNION SUNDAY
The annual Vineyard Family
Reunion will be held Sunday at the
recreation building, Royal Oak
Park. All relatives and friends are
invited.

Friday and Saturday at the Americna Legion hall in Middleport by the
Junior Ameri~an Legion Auxiliary.
The sale will begin at 9 a .m. each
morning. Donations may be left at
the hall.

SoCial Calendar

RUMMAGE SALE SLATED
A rummage sale will be held

.

ADOLPH•s
DAIRY VALLEY

Each of these adventMd 1t1tms IS rkluned to be
re&amp;dW., ava1lab'e lOt sale 1n each Kroger ~tore , excepl as
~ rntad 111 this ad . tt 'Ne dO run out &lt;M an IIMrtMd
rte~ . wt Will otfet 'f'O\l vour choice of a c ompa~able item,
~available , reflect1ng the same savtnos o r a ra1ncheck.
wf'ltch will M l itle )'OUIO PUICI\ase the ad\leftised item I I the
-'vllrtlaed priCe with1n lJ days ,

Pomeroy, 0.

, •• , .,,. AVG. WH,OLE

Kroger
Meat Wien·ers

Everything you buy at Kroger 11 guaranteed lor ';'OUr to tal
llt1sfact10n r8JQ8rdlesa ol manulacturm . II 'fOU are not satis·
fled. Kroger will replace yoor 11em wnh the sanw bland or a

ONLY AT

CO!Tipllrab'fl bland or retul'\d your purc naae pt'lce.

VAUGHN'S

1

VAUGHAN 5

CORRECTION
The advertising pages In
Tuesday's Daily Sentinel pertainlng
to the Sentinel's Security Sweepstakes erroneously listed Shlrley
Lockhart, New Haven, as a winner
this week. Mrs. Lockhart was a win·
ner In the sweepstakes several
weekS ago but not a winner this
week.

' hcept Nillt011, Wlllh s.tpllllr, 7111. AM.
Cllertem. &amp; ...... 011

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

Fresh Picnic
Pork Roast

CO PYRIGHT 1'10 ·- THE KROGU CO . ITlMS AND PIICES
GOOD SUNOA V JUN E I THRU SJATUROAV JUNE 1.4 . I f lO IN

POMEROY AND GALL IPOLI S STORES.

WE RE S U V~ THE RICH( TO LIM IT QUANTl fl £$. NONE SOlD
TO DI AlERS.

EARL.Y BIRD
·SAL.EI
·tHURSDAY MORNING
-

BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 6 AM AND 9 AM

FRIENDliEST SERVICE IN TOWN
BIGGEST BA~GAINS IN

(IN THE COOL OF THE MORNING)

FREE COFFEE AND DONUTS
STOP AND SHOP OR

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

JUST DROP IN TO SAY
"GOOD MORN."

---

\

•

1

l-Ib
51•tced Bacon ....... Pks
:
$119
Quarter Pork Loin .. lb.

\

'-....._ '
- ~

SLICED INTO CHOPS FRESH

,_......,.
e 8
U.S. GOY'T GRADED
BEEF CHUCK ARM

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK
ANYSIZEPKG .

LB.

'

PLASTIC GAL

GRADE A MEDIUM

LIMIT 4
-

COFFEE

-

LIMIT 12

SOME
-

-

- ---MORE

-

STRAWBERRIES
.

WHIPPED

,, ••
'

PLASTIC GAL
..

6 AM
--

$

NESnE'S CHOC. or STRAWBERRY

CAN

Pak

Polar Pak
Ice Cream
VlllAGIIAKERY
.
22o-o• .
•
B
d
Wh ite. rea ... ' Ln.
IN THE HUSK FRESH YELLOW

Sweet Corn ............ Ear

JOHNSON'S

·Baby
16-ol.
Shampoo .. Btl.
30' OFF LAIIEl , SCOPE
$12 9
Mouthwash ..... _ ~iT."·

52.09

15 C

1

KIOGEI

CoHage Cheese 1ft:.~·

Spotlight
$769
Bean Coffee.3 ~!~
KROGER
.
$399
Peanut BuHer . 5 ~~~~
EMBASSYSTRAWBERRY
.preserves .. .. .... 4 -lb.
Jar

18

oz.

99~

22 to 25 LB. AVG.

WATERMELONS

EACH

TASTY-FROZEN
11

oz.

KIIOGEit

Hi Nu 2%
Lowfat Milk

$189

t 58

49~

Gal.
Paper or
Plutfc Ctll.

..

INSTANT ICE TEA

119 NESTEA

Texas
Cantaloupe

Til 9 AM

JUICHICIOUS WHOLE 22 TO 25 LB. AVG.

WAFFLES

LB. WHIPPED STICKS

1 LB.

2% MILK
.
-

WHEATIES

EGGO

BLUE BONNET
~ MARGARINE

LBS.

GENERAl. MILLS C~REAL

9
¢
8

PlUSDIPOSIT

99~

.

UMIT 2

ELEC. PERK, DRIP,
REG., OR FLAKED (13 OL)

·. . $ .:11
•
.

CARDINAL FRESH

SUNRISE SURPRISES
FROM
-

QT.

Sprite, Tab .
or. Coca Col•

.

6roR99~

80Z.CAN

RED RIPE CALIFORNIA

QUIK

6

BISCUITS

39~

DOl

FOLGER'S

89~

BALLARDS, SWEET or BUlTERMILK

·EGGS

PINT RETURNABLE IOnlfS

BANANAS

CHOCOLATE MILK DRI_N~

89~

1f2 GAL

89C
Single
Roll

GOLDEN RIPE

-.CHOC-O~LITE

ORANGE JUICE

..... .... IIJ.

3/99C

LIMIT 3

GARVIN$

GARVIN$ FRESH

Viva Towels

LARGE.20 OZ. _LOAF

89~

LB.

I 0~ SHEETS PER ROLL

$149

IN THE PIECE KROGER

BREAD

SAUSAGE

49~

LIMIT 5

Ground Beef.. ......... lb .

BRAND

BACON

,

·Boneless Boston $199
Roll Roast ....... lb. ·

'

CRISPY SERVE
SLICED

ggc

THORN APPLE VALLEY

.•

All men's dress,
tennis shoes,
AMCE boots and
Daniel Green
slippers.

'

·LAST YEAR

ADVERT ISED ITEM POLICY

Y¥2 ·2556
570 w. Ma in

ANOTHER EXCLUSIVE

staff is a former Wahama High
School coach.

'OPiir
24 HRS.
ADAY*

I'

v

jewelry, sewing machine, milk cans
and wide variety of articles. Carr
celled if it rains.
FRIDAY
CARRIERS singing group, 7:30
p.m. Fnday at Jubilee Christian
Center.

29
.WIJH .FRlE_S.
••••••••
$1
.

2Q%0FF

"Next to
Elberfelds in Pomeroy"

EXECUTIVE COMMITIEE of
Meigs County Unit, American Cancer Society, will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday at Vetera·ns Memorial
Hospital.
TRINITY CHRISTIAN Assembly
will hold a yard sale at Ebersbach
home, two miles north of Chester on
Route 7, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday and Friday. Clothes, albums,

MethOfilist Church, Huntingotn, were
injured in a head-on collision on a
bypass leading into. Huntington
recently . Rev . Grandstaff received
chest injuries and a fractured ankle .
Mrs. Grandstaff wsa.also injured in
the chest and ankle .
Mrs. Grandstaff lias been released
f~om St. Mary 's Hospital, but her
nusband remains a patient there,
They reside at 5800 E. Pea Ridge
Rd., Huntington, W. V.a . Rev. Grand·

PIZZA BURGER ..• ~ age_

FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY

SHOES

MfNISTER INJURED
Rev. and Mrs. John Grandstaff,
minister of the Pea Ridge United

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAl.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

Middleport, Ohio

Chapter 134 OES, THursday at home
of Ralph and Cora Webb at 7:30 p..

'";~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
j1

r;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;iiiiii_____;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil

NO DEALERS
PLEASE

CHAPMAN

I

9 - 1be Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 11, 1980
8:30 p.m. Wednesday, regular
meeting, Bosworth Council 40,
F&amp;SM, election of officers.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
MIDDLEPORT Amateur GarLions Club meeting noon Wedde.n en, 8 p.m, Wednesday at the
nesday,atMeigsinn. '
Middleport Fire Department. Miss
Bernice Ann Durst and Mrs. Beulah
TIIURSDAY
Strauss will be the hostesses.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
REGULAR MEETING, Pomeroy
Thursday 7:30 p.m. at the Thri.l\
Chapter 80, RAM, 7:30 p.m. WedShop in Middleport.
nesday with officers to be elected;
PAST OFFICERS Club, Racine

$239
~~:::n~~~~~. 2;~~. .

.

FROZEN

. 3 OZ. JAR

'.. .

:.

·.u•••• A·.- .

IIIOOH U% lOWI'AI MIUC
OAI.. PlASTIC CTN .... IAt

&amp;sc

.
.
.....
· ·r··········
o.·.,...........
...... _
_ ItA _ _

75

C

UICe

3
Pak

89

�.

~·

•

r .

·~-1be ~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 11, 1980

Annual children 's program conducted

Helen Help Us

From one extreme to
the other--what do you do?
BY HELEN BOTI'EL
Speclal correspondent
DEAR HELEN:
When we were engaged, Roland
was so huggy-kissy he almost embarrassed me. After marriage , I'm
lucky to get a peck on the cheek. If I
hug him, he takes it as a signal I
want ~x. though sometimes I just
crave affection. Tbe only time he
ever even pats me, it means he's
ready for action.
Would you please tell him and
other males. that women can't be
ignored aU day and suddenly turn on
after the li8hts are out. Also that we
don't enjoy being noticed only
because our husbands are horny . ACHIN'G FORA TOUCH
DEAR ACHING:
I've told 'em and told 'em! Yours
is just about the commonest complaint wives make to advice columns, and the one most often ignored
by husbands.
If only these undemonstrative
. men could foresee the great dividen·
ds they'd reap from just a little t.l .c.
(tender , loving, care), well, maybe
we'd
premeditated
have hugs
a lotandmore
kisses unin
homes across America.
On the other hand, why don't more
wives tell th~ir husbands exactly
how they feel? Too often women
retire in hurt silence or resigned acceptance rather than make real efforts for change. - li
DEAR HELEN:
Let me tell you how I almost fell
into a meaningless affair and didn 't.
I thought my husband was pretty
dull compared to this fellow at the
office who asked me on a sneak
weekend - just for fun. I'd never
been wlfaithful, but excused myself
by saying I needed to recharge my
batteries.
So we cooked up a rather simple
ruse: I:ct attend a convention (true)
and the other man would be there
.(not mentioned ).
One of the reasons why I decided
for the affair was that Douglas (my
husband) was farfrom romantic. He
never said the things I wanted to

'the program with readings by Missy
McMillian, Zandra Vaughan , and P.
J. Harris. Cindy Crooks had a piano
solo, and there were recitations by

The annual children 's day
program at the Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church was
held Sunday.
Pam CrookS was announcer for

hear, though his actions proved he
loves me.
Well, everything went as planned.
I checked in at the hotel, and was
waiting for my soon-to-be lover
when - a beautiful bouquet arrived.
You guessed : it was from
Douglas, and the message read, "I
hope !Iiese flowers will say what I
sometimes can't express - I love
you with all my heart. "
You·also guessed: I met the other
man at the door with, "Sorry, I've
~banged my mind. "
Have I regretted the loss of an experience I may now never have?
Truthfully: at times, yes. But, I'm
also secure in the love of a wonderful
man, and I wouldn't chance that for
a week of exciting games. - IN
TIME 'S NICK

Harrisonville Social News

PERSONAL TO "TOO ASHAMED
TO SIGN": Your letter is a bit too
kinky for a family newspaper,
although your problem isn't as uncommon as you think. My advice :
Since this girlfriend is a rral dog, get
rid of her and try psychiatric counseling.- H.

Mr. and Mrs. Daune Stanley and
scM, Steve, enjoyed a picnic at Pin·
nacle Point near Bluefield, W. Va. on
Memorial Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Chapman
of Maryland visited a week with
Stella Atkins and Ruby Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Douglas spent
two months at their daughter's and
son-in-law's, Dr. and Mrs. Don Gilr
son, Potomac, Md.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman and
granddaughter, Tamra Clark, at-

ddaughter, Jan Wiseman, at Lima
on Saturday.
Mr. ·and Mrs. Bob Alkire visited
over weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Gibson in Colwnbus.
Mrs. Bessie Graham is visiting in
Iowa with her son, Harold and
family.
Mrs. Sally Welsh and daughter,
Kent, visited Thursday with Mrs.
Sue Payne and Mrs . Kathy
Branham.

GROUP VISITS
Mrs. Annie Will, Mrs. Faye Smith,
and Mrs. Barbara Baker, Jim and
Cle of Jessup, Ga. have returned
home after visiting at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Kloes of Syracuse
and Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen and
Billy Cleland, Chester.

SHAEFFER HOSPITALIZED
Francis.E. (Red) Shaeffer of Flatwoods Road suffered a heart attack
a week ago and is confined to the intensive care unit at the Medical Cen·
ter Hospital in Chillicothe. He expects to be confined there for several
weekS. Mr. Shaeffer specialized in
growing dahlias at his home.

tended the graduation of their gran-

Nicki Mills, P. J. Harris, Kelly Sat·
terfleld, Ryan Harper, Aaron Har&gt;"'•, Mary Beth Stein, Eddie Crooks,
Amy Sa.tterfield, and· Donald Stein.

Refreshments were served in the
dining room following the program.

REUNION SUNDAY
The annual Vineyard Family
Reunion will be held Sunday at the
recreation building, Royal Oak
Park. All relatives and friends are
invited.

Friday and Saturday at the Americna Legion hall in Middleport by the
Junior Ameri~an Legion Auxiliary.
The sale will begin at 9 a .m. each
morning. Donations may be left at
the hall.

SoCial Calendar

RUMMAGE SALE SLATED
A rummage sale will be held

.

ADOLPH•s
DAIRY VALLEY

Each of these adventMd 1t1tms IS rkluned to be
re&amp;dW., ava1lab'e lOt sale 1n each Kroger ~tore , excepl as
~ rntad 111 this ad . tt 'Ne dO run out &lt;M an IIMrtMd
rte~ . wt Will otfet 'f'O\l vour choice of a c ompa~able item,
~available , reflect1ng the same savtnos o r a ra1ncheck.
wf'ltch will M l itle )'OUIO PUICI\ase the ad\leftised item I I the
-'vllrtlaed priCe with1n lJ days ,

Pomeroy, 0.

, •• , .,,. AVG. WH,OLE

Kroger
Meat Wien·ers

Everything you buy at Kroger 11 guaranteed lor ';'OUr to tal
llt1sfact10n r8JQ8rdlesa ol manulacturm . II 'fOU are not satis·
fled. Kroger will replace yoor 11em wnh the sanw bland or a

ONLY AT

CO!Tipllrab'fl bland or retul'\d your purc naae pt'lce.

VAUGHN'S

1

VAUGHAN 5

CORRECTION
The advertising pages In
Tuesday's Daily Sentinel pertainlng
to the Sentinel's Security Sweepstakes erroneously listed Shlrley
Lockhart, New Haven, as a winner
this week. Mrs. Lockhart was a win·
ner In the sweepstakes several
weekS ago but not a winner this
week.

' hcept Nillt011, Wlllh s.tpllllr, 7111. AM.
Cllertem. &amp; ...... 011

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

Fresh Picnic
Pork Roast

CO PYRIGHT 1'10 ·- THE KROGU CO . ITlMS AND PIICES
GOOD SUNOA V JUN E I THRU SJATUROAV JUNE 1.4 . I f lO IN

POMEROY AND GALL IPOLI S STORES.

WE RE S U V~ THE RICH( TO LIM IT QUANTl fl £$. NONE SOlD
TO DI AlERS.

EARL.Y BIRD
·SAL.EI
·tHURSDAY MORNING
-

BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 6 AM AND 9 AM

FRIENDliEST SERVICE IN TOWN
BIGGEST BA~GAINS IN

(IN THE COOL OF THE MORNING)

FREE COFFEE AND DONUTS
STOP AND SHOP OR

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

JUST DROP IN TO SAY
"GOOD MORN."

---

\

•

1

l-Ib
51•tced Bacon ....... Pks
:
$119
Quarter Pork Loin .. lb.

\

'-....._ '
- ~

SLICED INTO CHOPS FRESH

,_......,.
e 8
U.S. GOY'T GRADED
BEEF CHUCK ARM

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK
ANYSIZEPKG .

LB.

'

PLASTIC GAL

GRADE A MEDIUM

LIMIT 4
-

COFFEE

-

LIMIT 12

SOME
-

-

- ---MORE

-

STRAWBERRIES
.

WHIPPED

,, ••
'

PLASTIC GAL
..

6 AM
--

$

NESnE'S CHOC. or STRAWBERRY

CAN

Pak

Polar Pak
Ice Cream
VlllAGIIAKERY
.
22o-o• .
•
B
d
Wh ite. rea ... ' Ln.
IN THE HUSK FRESH YELLOW

Sweet Corn ............ Ear

JOHNSON'S

·Baby
16-ol.
Shampoo .. Btl.
30' OFF LAIIEl , SCOPE
$12 9
Mouthwash ..... _ ~iT."·

52.09

15 C

1

KIOGEI

CoHage Cheese 1ft:.~·

Spotlight
$769
Bean Coffee.3 ~!~
KROGER
.
$399
Peanut BuHer . 5 ~~~~
EMBASSYSTRAWBERRY
.preserves .. .. .... 4 -lb.
Jar

18

oz.

99~

22 to 25 LB. AVG.

WATERMELONS

EACH

TASTY-FROZEN
11

oz.

KIIOGEit

Hi Nu 2%
Lowfat Milk

$189

t 58

49~

Gal.
Paper or
Plutfc Ctll.

..

INSTANT ICE TEA

119 NESTEA

Texas
Cantaloupe

Til 9 AM

JUICHICIOUS WHOLE 22 TO 25 LB. AVG.

WAFFLES

LB. WHIPPED STICKS

1 LB.

2% MILK
.
-

WHEATIES

EGGO

BLUE BONNET
~ MARGARINE

LBS.

GENERAl. MILLS C~REAL

9
¢
8

PlUSDIPOSIT

99~

.

UMIT 2

ELEC. PERK, DRIP,
REG., OR FLAKED (13 OL)

·. . $ .:11
•
.

CARDINAL FRESH

SUNRISE SURPRISES
FROM
-

QT.

Sprite, Tab .
or. Coca Col•

.

6roR99~

80Z.CAN

RED RIPE CALIFORNIA

QUIK

6

BISCUITS

39~

DOl

FOLGER'S

89~

BALLARDS, SWEET or BUlTERMILK

·EGGS

PINT RETURNABLE IOnlfS

BANANAS

CHOCOLATE MILK DRI_N~

89~

1f2 GAL

89C
Single
Roll

GOLDEN RIPE

-.CHOC-O~LITE

ORANGE JUICE

..... .... IIJ.

3/99C

LIMIT 3

GARVIN$

GARVIN$ FRESH

Viva Towels

LARGE.20 OZ. _LOAF

89~

LB.

I 0~ SHEETS PER ROLL

$149

IN THE PIECE KROGER

BREAD

SAUSAGE

49~

LIMIT 5

Ground Beef.. ......... lb .

BRAND

BACON

,

·Boneless Boston $199
Roll Roast ....... lb. ·

'

CRISPY SERVE
SLICED

ggc

THORN APPLE VALLEY

.•

All men's dress,
tennis shoes,
AMCE boots and
Daniel Green
slippers.

'

·LAST YEAR

ADVERT ISED ITEM POLICY

Y¥2 ·2556
570 w. Ma in

ANOTHER EXCLUSIVE

staff is a former Wahama High
School coach.

'OPiir
24 HRS.
ADAY*

I'

v

jewelry, sewing machine, milk cans
and wide variety of articles. Carr
celled if it rains.
FRIDAY
CARRIERS singing group, 7:30
p.m. Fnday at Jubilee Christian
Center.

29
.WIJH .FRlE_S.
••••••••
$1
.

2Q%0FF

"Next to
Elberfelds in Pomeroy"

EXECUTIVE COMMITIEE of
Meigs County Unit, American Cancer Society, will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday at Vetera·ns Memorial
Hospital.
TRINITY CHRISTIAN Assembly
will hold a yard sale at Ebersbach
home, two miles north of Chester on
Route 7, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday and Friday. Clothes, albums,

MethOfilist Church, Huntingotn, were
injured in a head-on collision on a
bypass leading into. Huntington
recently . Rev . Grandstaff received
chest injuries and a fractured ankle .
Mrs. Grandstaff wsa.also injured in
the chest and ankle .
Mrs. Grandstaff lias been released
f~om St. Mary 's Hospital, but her
nusband remains a patient there,
They reside at 5800 E. Pea Ridge
Rd., Huntington, W. V.a . Rev. Grand·

PIZZA BURGER ..• ~ age_

FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY

SHOES

MfNISTER INJURED
Rev. and Mrs. John Grandstaff,
minister of the Pea Ridge United

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAl.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

Middleport, Ohio

Chapter 134 OES, THursday at home
of Ralph and Cora Webb at 7:30 p..

'";~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
j1

r;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;iiiiii_____;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil

NO DEALERS
PLEASE

CHAPMAN

I

9 - 1be Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 11, 1980
8:30 p.m. Wednesday, regular
meeting, Bosworth Council 40,
F&amp;SM, election of officers.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
MIDDLEPORT Amateur GarLions Club meeting noon Wedde.n en, 8 p.m, Wednesday at the
nesday,atMeigsinn. '
Middleport Fire Department. Miss
Bernice Ann Durst and Mrs. Beulah
TIIURSDAY
Strauss will be the hostesses.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society
REGULAR MEETING, Pomeroy
Thursday 7:30 p.m. at the Thri.l\
Chapter 80, RAM, 7:30 p.m. WedShop in Middleport.
nesday with officers to be elected;
PAST OFFICERS Club, Racine

$239
~~:::n~~~~~. 2;~~. .

.

FROZEN

. 3 OZ. JAR

'.. .

:.

·.u•••• A·.- .

IIIOOH U% lOWI'AI MIUC
OAI.. PlASTIC CTN .... IAt

&amp;sc

.
.
.....
· ·r··········
o.·.,...........
...... _
_ ItA _ _

75

C

UICe

3
Pak

89

�11- The Dally SentlneJ, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 11, 19110
10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 11, 1980

~~on~ea

~~~~~===;==;==T~~~

personals
GOLDEN

RIPE
'

BANANAS
FOOD STAMP
ORDERS
WELCOMED!!

COURTlY STOBES

LBS•.
FOR

WE RESERVE
THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES

700 W. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

Boot Leg

SHIRTS

$ 99

$ 97

Straight Leg or

PAIR

••

...

,•.............

~

:•

PORK &amp; BEANS

.

EACH

~

Special Purchase#
BLACK &amp; DECKER

,,~

SCOT LAD

·~
~
:
:

~:N~'1oo

..

••

COTTONELLE
BATHROOM TISSUE

••
•••
•••
,_

HOMELITE XL12

.

99

~

·

~·~.........................;~..............~ ~~~:;~..

DRILL
BIT
SHARPENER

••
••

12' OFF LABEL

99~

ROLL
PKG.

EACH

'II••··· ••••••••

I ••••••••••••••• ,

EASCO

ARMOUR

70 PIECE

C_ENnJRY
RSHING REEL

SOCKET &amp; TOOL SET

$3997
.
SET

REG.
$9 ..99

..•
••

2

$688
EACH

VIENNA
SAUSAGE
~~~·s 79~

r· ·
I

jJ

I

I

FOR SUPER SAVINGS!

L----~------~~--g-D~----------~
--~·
.....................
.
-..
~~~t··

111111 I I II .1111.1111

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

JONES BOYS
....SUPER COUPON
LYN.DI:Iii'FARM CRINKLE

ROYAL
.
- CREST
2.% M_ILK

PAPER GALLON

FRENCH FRIES

••
••

2P~g-:39' ~!~~on

LIMiT$149 With
ONE .
Coupon

LIMIT ONE
Price WithoufC:oupon 93c
Offer Expires 6· 15·80

Price Without Coupon $1.69
'~::?.
Offer Expires 6·15·80

.;

_1_____.." •••••••••••••••

I I •• I Ill IIII Ill Ill

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I • I I

•ij-t:l-{1~~

li ti I

Jones Boys
Super Coupon
21 PIECE
114" &amp; 3/8"
SAE or METRIC -

MEN'S OR WOME!fS

TIMEX WATCHES .

H7104

.
Coupon
Offer Expires 6·15·80

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

'#61UI11111111111111·····

JONES BOYS

· sUPER DOUBLE COUPON ..
Preslfll tills coupon 110119 with •nv one manutacturer's
"Ciflls Oft" coupon lncl vet double tile savings at Jones
IO'fi.' Nol to Include Jones loys Coupons or tllose of other
' retalleruncl not to exceed tile;value of tlleltem . Ll mit one
1
double coupon per manuf•cturer's coupon.
~

~- 4.

--~

••

·-

··'

Coupon Expires Sun., June 15, 1910
Llmli 2 c;oupons 'er Cuotomtr.
Not Valid lor Cl. .rtlll or Fr• Coupons
'
.
.

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

:·· ! ·,:..

.

1\~~-

3/8" DRIU

••

$300 ~r,~

. .

Sunday 10 am-10 pru

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAnJRDAY, JUNE 14, 1980

$·
59
CHUCK ROAST.. ........~; •

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

A birthday ·party was held at
Forked Run Lake recently for Traci
Casto.
A potluck dinner was enjoyed at
noon and games were played in the
afternoon.
Attending were Mrs. Hilda White,
Mrs. Ruby Halli!fay, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Jewell and daughter, Cheryl,
Cline and Jackelyn Dailey and
daughters, Melissa and Malinda,
and son, Matthew, Pauline Atkins,
Jack and Jean Seidenabel, Clara
Milhoon, Mike and Bonnie Milhoan,
Terry Smith, Mr. and Mrs Albert
Goeglein, Terry and Elaine Congo
and daughter, Terri, Joan Simpson.

The Mason City Historical Society
members decided that it is
necessary to increase the yearly
dues, beginning August 1980, from $1
to $2.50 per perosn. Other action at
the June meeting : The society voted
to enter a float in the Fourth of July
Parade in the Town of Mason; a
nominating committee consisting ri
Sarah Spencer, Joyce Carson and
Delores Taylor was appointed to
present a slate or officers for election in July; committee to consider
By-Laws changes, Ula Zerkle,
Mildred Gibbs and Carol Alexander;
the yearly audit or books will be
made by Doris Roberts, Bessie
Ingels and Evelyn Proffitt.
'An invitation was extended to the
society to attend the 54th wedding
anniversary of Hazel and Hervin
Lieving June 29, 1980. ·
Those present were : Hazel
.Lieving, Bessie Ingels, Sarah Spen-.
cer, Catherine Smith, Delores
Taylor, Helen Barton, Hazel Smith
and granddaughter, Julie Harris,
and Evelyn Proffitt.

.! ·

FRANKIE
12 0~

WIENERS ·········u····~K:~.
SAVORY

Mason group meets

BACON•••••••••••••••••••
LB. PKG.

AI

GRADE A WHOLE

FRYERS••••••••••.••••••••• ~••~
~.

Chicken Thighs .••••••.• ~·•.
USDA CHOICE BOTTOM

.

ROUND ROAST. ~N-~~-

$2 29

....L!..

.

.

~·,•-·········· ~~~

SOCKET SET

$89() ·With
coupon

$399

.. .......•..·············

················
··
····
..........
,,
DOUBLE COUPON SAVINGS
.

'

THIS WEEK AT JONES SOYS! ! .
WE'll OOU_B_i:E-~fy~E ON All MANUFACTuRER'S :
OOUPONS WITH OUR "DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS"'! !
_NOT VAUD ON.CIGARmEs Olt' FREE COUPONS! 11 . ,
EACH Of THESE TWo COUPONS PWS -ANY MANUFACTURER's:
·-·
-'--- · ~
I!Q~PON MEANS DOUBLE SAVINGS! ! !

r,

'

;

' •

With

Coupon
Price Witnou_t Co.!!Pon S6.99
Offer Exoires 6·15·80

Price Without ColtPqr~ s1i. 97
Offer ExpireU-15·80

, , a • •··ii ......'U ·ii·Wttiiil•
JONES BOYS
-- -.SUPER
OOUBLE OOUPON
.

~resent th!~ coupon along wltii •.ny

on• rftanui•ciUreris ·-

Cents Oil coupon and get dou~le tile savings at Jones
lloys. Not to Include Jones Boys Coupons or those ol otll
retoller.s and not to exc- tile value ol tlleltem Limit "
•
one
double cou~ "!': .~•nulacturor's coupon.
·

Coupon Explris Sun., Junl 1
5,' i9ii
· Llinll2 Coupons Per Customer

. Not Valid tor Clllrette or FrM Coupons

-- -

The Intensive Office Education
Steno Club of Meigs High School
recently visited Columbus on a field
trip. The State Capitol offices were
toured, guided by Charles Wolfe, of·
ficial tour guide. The State Depart·
ment building and the State Tax
Department were toured with all of·
flees and their functions explained.
These tours were led by Misll Carol
Crofut and Miss Janice Wolfe.
Club members and chaperones
had luncheon at the Top of the Center.
Drivers and chaperones were
Donald Wolfe (CLub Sponsor), Mrs.
ErUne Wolfe, Mrs. Dottle Pierce,
Mrs. Rachelle Lefebre, and Mrs.
Margaret Parker.
Misll Cherie Lightfoot is president
'of the club.

Rizer birth
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Rizer, Sr.,

or Portland, are announcing the bir·

.............-•••••••-, •..,o

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

'

Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm

Club tours capitol

.!R

,,,.•.

SIDfe Hours:

Birthday party.
honors Ms. Casto

'2~~
~~~~~~•...................~ ........,.....,

MEN'S
SHORT SLEEVE
PLACKET FRONT
PUU.OVER

JEANS

••

STEAK

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU SUNDAY, JUNE 15

WRANGLER

••
••
•••

BEEF RIB

137 PINE STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

MEN'S
14 OZ. BWE DENIM

•••

USDA .CHOICE ·

Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart
held a cookout at their home on Sun· ·
day, June 8. Attending were his two
sisters, Mrs. Louise Rosenbawn,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Lee Richardson
Mason; Mr. and Mrs. John Sisson:
Mary Allee and Marcia, Mrs. Jack
Troy and sons, Johnny and Tinuny.
Clayton Russell, 80,- or West
Colwnbia was bitten by a poisonous
snake recently in the yard at his
home. He was treated at Pleasant
Valley Hospital and returned home.
Mrs: Joann Bennett and daughter,
Christi, Westland, Mich., visited
over the weekend with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs, Chester Oliver at Clif.
ton. · Christi's fourth birthday was
celebrated Sunday with ice cream
and cake, a weekend earlier than
June 14. Her aunt, Mrs. Luther
Tucker and Todd visited Christi, and
helped celebrate her birthday.
Mrs. Ethel Rayburn or Letart, W.
Va. is in intensive care at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.

. •-•• •. ••L9.• .•nuauuuo

-

th of their third son, Matthew Todd.
The infant weighted eight poWlds, 13
ounces, and was born May :10.
Michael was welcomed home by
his brothers, James, age two; arid
Kenneth, Jr., age five.
Maternal grandmother is Mrs .
Lizzle.Wood, Racine. Paternal grl\fidparents are Mr. and Mrs. William
, E. Rizer, Minersvj]]e..
'
Great-grandmother is Mrs. Zelma
Hawley, also of Minersville.

... ~ ...........4~$1
2 $1
EGGS................. ~~. I

·BANANAS

GRADE A MEDIUM
JIF

PEANUT BUTTER...~.~...~

IVORY liQUID ••••••••••••••
CHEER DETERGENT

MEMORIAL BOOK REMIND.,:R
The Mason City Historical Society
reminds the faniilies of deceased

MaSon residents to register their
names in the Memorial Book at the
Lewis Houae at a cost or one dollar
per name. Pl~ase include date of b,ir- '
th date of death and pwce or buriaL
These names may be sent to Doris
Roberts, treasurer, or Evelyn Prof·
fitt, secretary.
·

49 COTTAGE CHEESE •••••2!~~-

$ 19__

DETERGENT

84 oz.

FLAVORITE

ICE CREAM,••••••••••• ~.G.A;

$}79

••• .

CRISCO

SUGAR·
5 LB.
BAG

$}19

BORDEN'S ELSIE

'

25 LB.

. BAG

Limit 1 Per custot:ner
Good Only at Powell's
Offt~r E'x pires June 14, 1980

'•

,,

�11- The Dally SentlneJ, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 11, 19110
10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 11, 1980

~~on~ea

~~~~~===;==;==T~~~

personals
GOLDEN

RIPE
'

BANANAS
FOOD STAMP
ORDERS
WELCOMED!!

COURTlY STOBES

LBS•.
FOR

WE RESERVE
THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES

700 W. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

Boot Leg

SHIRTS

$ 99

$ 97

Straight Leg or

PAIR

••

...

,•.............

~

:•

PORK &amp; BEANS

.

EACH

~

Special Purchase#
BLACK &amp; DECKER

,,~

SCOT LAD

·~
~
:
:

~:N~'1oo

..

••

COTTONELLE
BATHROOM TISSUE

••
•••
•••
,_

HOMELITE XL12

.

99

~

·

~·~.........................;~..............~ ~~~:;~..

DRILL
BIT
SHARPENER

••
••

12' OFF LABEL

99~

ROLL
PKG.

EACH

'II••··· ••••••••

I ••••••••••••••• ,

EASCO

ARMOUR

70 PIECE

C_ENnJRY
RSHING REEL

SOCKET &amp; TOOL SET

$3997
.
SET

REG.
$9 ..99

..•
••

2

$688
EACH

VIENNA
SAUSAGE
~~~·s 79~

r· ·
I

jJ

I

I

FOR SUPER SAVINGS!

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JONES BOYS
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JONES BOYS
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ROYAL
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FRENCH FRIES

••
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LIMiT$149 With
ONE .
Coupon

LIMIT ONE
Price WithoufC:oupon 93c
Offer Expires 6· 15·80

Price Without Coupon $1.69
'~::?.
Offer Expires 6·15·80

.;

_1_____.." •••••••••••••••

I I •• I Ill IIII Ill Ill

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I • I I

•ij-t:l-{1~~

li ti I

Jones Boys
Super Coupon
21 PIECE
114" &amp; 3/8"
SAE or METRIC -

MEN'S OR WOME!fS

TIMEX WATCHES .

H7104

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Offer Expires 6·15·80

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JONES BOYS

· sUPER DOUBLE COUPON ..
Preslfll tills coupon 110119 with •nv one manutacturer's
"Ciflls Oft" coupon lncl vet double tile savings at Jones
IO'fi.' Nol to Include Jones loys Coupons or tllose of other
' retalleruncl not to exceed tile;value of tlleltem . Ll mit one
1
double coupon per manuf•cturer's coupon.
~

~- 4.

--~

••

·-

··'

Coupon Expires Sun., June 15, 1910
Llmli 2 c;oupons 'er Cuotomtr.
Not Valid lor Cl. .rtlll or Fr• Coupons
'
.
.

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

:·· ! ·,:..

.

1\~~-

3/8" DRIU

••

$300 ~r,~

. .

Sunday 10 am-10 pru

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAnJRDAY, JUNE 14, 1980

$·
59
CHUCK ROAST.. ........~; •

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

A birthday ·party was held at
Forked Run Lake recently for Traci
Casto.
A potluck dinner was enjoyed at
noon and games were played in the
afternoon.
Attending were Mrs. Hilda White,
Mrs. Ruby Halli!fay, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Jewell and daughter, Cheryl,
Cline and Jackelyn Dailey and
daughters, Melissa and Malinda,
and son, Matthew, Pauline Atkins,
Jack and Jean Seidenabel, Clara
Milhoon, Mike and Bonnie Milhoan,
Terry Smith, Mr. and Mrs Albert
Goeglein, Terry and Elaine Congo
and daughter, Terri, Joan Simpson.

The Mason City Historical Society
members decided that it is
necessary to increase the yearly
dues, beginning August 1980, from $1
to $2.50 per perosn. Other action at
the June meeting : The society voted
to enter a float in the Fourth of July
Parade in the Town of Mason; a
nominating committee consisting ri
Sarah Spencer, Joyce Carson and
Delores Taylor was appointed to
present a slate or officers for election in July; committee to consider
By-Laws changes, Ula Zerkle,
Mildred Gibbs and Carol Alexander;
the yearly audit or books will be
made by Doris Roberts, Bessie
Ingels and Evelyn Proffitt.
'An invitation was extended to the
society to attend the 54th wedding
anniversary of Hazel and Hervin
Lieving June 29, 1980. ·
Those present were : Hazel
.Lieving, Bessie Ingels, Sarah Spen-.
cer, Catherine Smith, Delores
Taylor, Helen Barton, Hazel Smith
and granddaughter, Julie Harris,
and Evelyn Proffitt.

.! ·

FRANKIE
12 0~

WIENERS ·········u····~K:~.
SAVORY

Mason group meets

BACON•••••••••••••••••••
LB. PKG.

AI

GRADE A WHOLE

FRYERS••••••••••.••••••••• ~••~
~.

Chicken Thighs .••••••.• ~·•.
USDA CHOICE BOTTOM

.

ROUND ROAST. ~N-~~-

$2 29

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.

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SOCKET SET

$89() ·With
coupon

$399

.. .......•..·············

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DOUBLE COUPON SAVINGS
.

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THIS WEEK AT JONES SOYS! ! .
WE'll OOU_B_i:E-~fy~E ON All MANUFACTuRER'S :
OOUPONS WITH OUR "DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS"'! !
_NOT VAUD ON.CIGARmEs Olt' FREE COUPONS! 11 . ,
EACH Of THESE TWo COUPONS PWS -ANY MANUFACTURER's:
·-·
-'--- · ~
I!Q~PON MEANS DOUBLE SAVINGS! ! !

r,

'

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' •

With

Coupon
Price Witnou_t Co.!!Pon S6.99
Offer Exoires 6·15·80

Price Without ColtPqr~ s1i. 97
Offer ExpireU-15·80

, , a • •··ii ......'U ·ii·Wttiiil•
JONES BOYS
-- -.SUPER
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.

~resent th!~ coupon along wltii •.ny

on• rftanui•ciUreris ·-

Cents Oil coupon and get dou~le tile savings at Jones
lloys. Not to Include Jones Boys Coupons or those ol otll
retoller.s and not to exc- tile value ol tlleltem Limit "
•
one
double cou~ "!': .~•nulacturor's coupon.
·

Coupon Explris Sun., Junl 1
5,' i9ii
· Llinll2 Coupons Per Customer

. Not Valid tor Clllrette or FrM Coupons

-- -

The Intensive Office Education
Steno Club of Meigs High School
recently visited Columbus on a field
trip. The State Capitol offices were
toured, guided by Charles Wolfe, of·
ficial tour guide. The State Depart·
ment building and the State Tax
Department were toured with all of·
flees and their functions explained.
These tours were led by Misll Carol
Crofut and Miss Janice Wolfe.
Club members and chaperones
had luncheon at the Top of the Center.
Drivers and chaperones were
Donald Wolfe (CLub Sponsor), Mrs.
ErUne Wolfe, Mrs. Dottle Pierce,
Mrs. Rachelle Lefebre, and Mrs.
Margaret Parker.
Misll Cherie Lightfoot is president
'of the club.

Rizer birth
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Rizer, Sr.,

or Portland, are announcing the bir·

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JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

'

Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm

Club tours capitol

.!R

,,,.•.

SIDfe Hours:

Birthday party.
honors Ms. Casto

'2~~
~~~~~~•...................~ ........,.....,

MEN'S
SHORT SLEEVE
PLACKET FRONT
PUU.OVER

JEANS

••

STEAK

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU SUNDAY, JUNE 15

WRANGLER

••
••
•••

BEEF RIB

137 PINE STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

MEN'S
14 OZ. BWE DENIM

•••

USDA .CHOICE ·

Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart
held a cookout at their home on Sun· ·
day, June 8. Attending were his two
sisters, Mrs. Louise Rosenbawn,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Lee Richardson
Mason; Mr. and Mrs. John Sisson:
Mary Allee and Marcia, Mrs. Jack
Troy and sons, Johnny and Tinuny.
Clayton Russell, 80,- or West
Colwnbia was bitten by a poisonous
snake recently in the yard at his
home. He was treated at Pleasant
Valley Hospital and returned home.
Mrs: Joann Bennett and daughter,
Christi, Westland, Mich., visited
over the weekend with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs, Chester Oliver at Clif.
ton. · Christi's fourth birthday was
celebrated Sunday with ice cream
and cake, a weekend earlier than
June 14. Her aunt, Mrs. Luther
Tucker and Todd visited Christi, and
helped celebrate her birthday.
Mrs. Ethel Rayburn or Letart, W.
Va. is in intensive care at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.

. •-•• •. ••L9.• .•nuauuuo

-

th of their third son, Matthew Todd.
The infant weighted eight poWlds, 13
ounces, and was born May :10.
Michael was welcomed home by
his brothers, James, age two; arid
Kenneth, Jr., age five.
Maternal grandmother is Mrs .
Lizzle.Wood, Racine. Paternal grl\fidparents are Mr. and Mrs. William
, E. Rizer, Minersvj]]e..
'
Great-grandmother is Mrs. Zelma
Hawley, also of Minersville.

... ~ ...........4~$1
2 $1
EGGS................. ~~. I

·BANANAS

GRADE A MEDIUM
JIF

PEANUT BUTTER...~.~...~

IVORY liQUID ••••••••••••••
CHEER DETERGENT

MEMORIAL BOOK REMIND.,:R
The Mason City Historical Society
reminds the faniilies of deceased

MaSon residents to register their
names in the Memorial Book at the
Lewis Houae at a cost or one dollar
per name. Pl~ase include date of b,ir- '
th date of death and pwce or buriaL
These names may be sent to Doris
Roberts, treasurer, or Evelyn Prof·
fitt, secretary.
·

49 COTTAGE CHEESE •••••2!~~-

$ 19__

DETERGENT

84 oz.

FLAVORITE

ICE CREAM,••••••••••• ~.G.A;

$}79

••• .

CRISCO

SUGAR·
5 LB.
BAG

$}19

BORDEN'S ELSIE

'

25 LB.

. BAG

Limit 1 Per custot:ner
Good Only at Powell's
Offt~r E'x pires June 14, 1980

'•

,,

�. 0~~ ~';;!ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 11, 1980

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 11, 1900

Presentations highlight convention
District chairmen were appointed,
awards were presented, and reports
were given on service and activity
progrBJIIS at the Eighth District
American Legion Auxiliary sununer
convention held Thursday at
":Jackson.
Mrs. Lorrene Snyder, Lancaster,
district president, presided at the
session and appointed Mrs. Florence
Richards, Americanism chainnan;
Mrs. Edward Pri!ner, children and
youth chainnan; Mrs. W. A. Irion,
community service; Mrs. Becky
Tyree, junior activities; and Mrs.
James Knapp, veterai)S affairs.
Mrs. Snyder anounced the Depart-

ment of Ohio convention for July 11- and youth chairman, reported that
13 at the Neil House in Columbus
$7,013,92 had been spent in the
with Mrs. Catherine Welsh,
district for children and youth
Pomeroy, to attend the children and
programs with 2,842 volunteer
youth pre-&lt;;onvention session, and
hours.
Mrs. Tyree, the junior activities preMrs. Marvin Roberts, community
convention session.
service, presented awards to
Awards were pesented by the
Pomeroy Unit 39, Middleport Units
various chairmen. Mrs. Clifford · 263 and 128, and Racine 602.
Atkins, CrooksvUle, reported that 51
The Pomeroy unit's report on
girls in the district will attend
community service with Mrs. Ruby
Buckeye Girls' State, that no one atMarshall as local chainnan, placed
tended the Valley Forge Teachers
first in the district and has gone on to
Conference. She presented a district
state competition.
award to Middleport Unit 128 for
For junior activiiies, Mrs. Mary
Americanism.
Martin reporied expenditures of $520
Mrs. James Gatewood, children
and 32() hours of volunteer service.
She spoke on the need. for en·
couraging junior membership and
programs. It was noted that Mrs.
Harry Davis, advisor for the
Pomeroy juniors, had received the
award for the best all-around junior
program in the district.
The poppies purchased, as repor·
ted by Mrs. Nelson Mowery, was
25,800 regular size, and 110 large
poppies bringing $14,706.50 for the
In charge of the sweepstakes
district.
award in the horticulture division
Certificates for outstanding work
will be Miss Ruby Diehl and Mrs.
in
veterans affairs went to Unit 39,
Eugene Atkins. Mrs. Eva Robson
Pomeroy,
Middleport 128, and Midand Mrs. Ann Webster will handle
dleport
283.
It was noted that
the horticulture classes, Mrs.
Pomeroy
received
first in the
Thelma Moore and Mrs. Russell Litrep(lrt
is entered in
district
and
the
tle, the junio~ division; and Mrs.
Harvey Erlewine and Mrs. Robert
Canaday, the staging. Mrs. Bernard
Ledlie, Mrs. Marvin Wilson, and
Mrs. Harry Williamson will have
charge of placement.
The show will include twelve hor·
ticulture classes nine artistic
arrangement divisions and several
educational displays. There will also
be several non-competitive displays
including OAGC publications, books,
magazines, and publications, and
crafts by the Crafty Ladies.

Garden club
schedule~ show
"Sununer Weather" will be theme
of the flower show to be staged July
19 and 2() by the Rutland Garden
Club at the Rutland United
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis is show
chairman, and serving on the other
ocmmittees arc Mrs. Reba
Snowden, ways and means; Mrs.
Csrl Denison and Mrs. Dayton Parsons, registration ; Mrs. C. 0 . Chal"
man, Mrs. James Titus, Mrs.
. Everett Colwell, Mrs. C. E. Bishop,
and Mrs. Lawrence Milhoan
- hospitality.
•
Mrs. Ralph Turner, Mrs. Chris
Diehl and Mrs. James Nicholson are
on the publicity book committee,
and serving as clerks for the judge
will be Mrs. Albert Woodard, Mrs.
Vernon Weber.

Pomeroy PTA meets
Regatta Weekend fund raiSing
projects were discussed at the Monday night meeting of the Pomeroy
PTA.
The possibility of a games booth as
well as selling refreshments during
the talent show will be checked into
by a conunittee of Susie Soulsby,
Dina Gryszka and Mary Lou Durst.
The PTA also decided to sponsor
· movies at the school each Saturday
evening during the 198().81 school
year, and to give some assistance
with expenses for the sixth grade

Powers to wed
· The open church wedding of Miss
Pam Powers, son of Mr. and Mrs.
. Frank Powers, and Charlie Marshall, son of Mr. and Mrs: Charles
Marshall will be held Saturday at
the Middleport Church of Christ.
The ceremony will be performed
at 6:30p.m. by the Rev. Bob Melton,
. following a half-hour program ri
· · nuptial music by Mrs. Clarice Erwin, organist, and Cathy and Don
ErWin, soloists. A reception will be
held inunediately following the wedding in the church social room.

Kingsbury
News Notes
The Carleton Church honored each
mother on Mother's Day following
· Sunday School. The men of the chur. ch had a special song and there were
several Mother's Day remembrances in verse read by the young
cbildren and Olen Harrison aftger
which the superintendent, Ralph
Carl, presented each mother with a
potted plant.
• Mrs. Virgil King has been a recent
vlaitor in Kankakee, Ill. Returning
home with her were Mrs. Geneva
McElroy and son,IUchard.
VIsitors over the weekend of Mr.
. and Mrs. Wayne Beat were Mr. and
Mrs. Jolm Perdas, Mary and Usa of
Chambenburg, Pa. Other visitors
were Mr. and Mn. Roger Young,
Wesley and Yv~tte. Mr. and Mrs.
Kirk Chevalier and Jessica, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Well and Heather, all of

trip next spring.
Robert Barton, president, asked
for money to be spent on playground
equipment improvements during the
swruner months. Book shelves to be
built in the library will be done when
school starts in the fall, it was
decided. Named to the auditing committee were Judge Robert Buck,
Mrs. Margaret .Johnson, and Mrs.
Darla Hawley. The PTA presented
gifts of appreciation for assistance
to several teachers, Robert Morris,
principal, April Smith, secretary,
the librarian, and Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Soulsby.
Barton urged a stronger support
for the PTA next year. A concert
was presented by the fifth and sixth
grades under the direction of David
Bowen, following the meeting.
Cub Scouts of Pack 249 gave the
flag salute, officers' reports were
given, and refreshments were served by parents of the first graders.

NORMA JEAN HYSELL

state competition.
Mrs. Bernard Cooley reported on
the Athens Mental Health Center
program for veterans noting that
currently there are DillY two
vetera1:s who can attend parties confined there. She reported units which
have participated with the work
there and noted that the balance in
her fund is $90.64.
National citations for membership
and the birthday roll call certificates
were given to all four Meigs County
units, and Mrs. Gemma Casci
received a goal apple for membership.
Mrs. Snyder announced that next
party at the Chillicothe Veterans
H()Spital Will be on July 19. She noted
that the department has reached
membership goal and also that the
national goal plus 85 has been
reached. She reported that the 8th
district is in 13th place in membership in the state.
District past presidents introduced were Mrs. Mabel Brown,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Jane Bowles,
Wilkesville; and · Mrs. Richards,
Middleport. Mrs . .Vree Marshall, a
past district president, was reported
ill and unable to attend.
Mrs. Frank Holcshuh of Mahoning
County, department treasurer,
talked on the moving of the Department of Ohio headquarters from
ZanesvUle to Columbus. She also
discussed dues, and the purchase of
greeting cards by members.
A memorial service was held for
deceased members. The place committee reported that the junior con·
ference in the spring of 1981 will be
held at Middleport with Unit 128 as
host, the girls state tea will be hosted
by Middleport Unit 283, the fall conference at Crooksville on Oct. 23 ·
hosted by Unit 222, and the sununer
convention at Lancaster on June 4
,
hosted by Unit 11.
Mrs. Cleo Green was chainnan of
registration, and Mrs. Alvin Robbins
called the meeting to order. Mter
the advancement of the colors, Mrs.
Alvin Robbins led in the pledge with
Mrs. Myron Callahan giving the
welcome and leading in the pream- ·
ble. Mrs. Richards gave the response.

Going from here were Mrs. Eunie
Brinker, Mrs. Julia Norris and Mrs.
Roberts, Racine; Mrs. Zuelelia
Smith," Mrs. Florence Richards, and
Mrs. (.ula Hampton, Middleport 283;
Mrs. Veda Davis, Mrs. Mary Martin, Mrs. Catherine Welsh, and Mrs.
Loretta Tiemeyer, Pomeroy 39; and
Mrs. Becky Tyree, Peggy Caton,
and Mary Madden, Middleport 128.

10% OFF On All Perms
Entire Month of June

STORE
HOURS
OPEN MON.-SAT.
8 AM TO 10 PM
SUN. 8 AM TO 6 PM

CAPTAIN EASY
L-1 .JUI)T CAt.J'i

Chester.

PEOP~E GIST IN Tie&gt;HT
5-POT~ FI~ANCIA~~y~

ltii!~DFI.UM !OVS~

PULLI'-IC!l ANY
HOLI7:JP~ I HE'~
A RHPECTAB~E
LAWYE!l AND

ALL POCI&lt;EiT--

ANP MAY&amp;E IT

A~SO EXPLAIN~

'lOUR FATHcR '.S

1980 CHEVY CHEVETTE
1980 V.W. RABBIT
1980 CHEVY MONZA
1978 RABBIT 4 Speed
1978 RABBIT Automatic
978 MERCURY ZEPHYR
1977 FORD GRANADA
1977 NOVA CONCOURS
1977 MONTE CARLO
1977 VOLAR£ WAGON

..

showcasing Shields and Yarnell ,
Yacow Noy and several other great ·
masters or mime.

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

Cil I LOVE LUCY
Cil CAROL BURNETT ANO

(I I I TO rx I)

FRI~Q.S

Q (I)(JD) CBS NEWS
CIJ WILO WILO WORLO OF
ANIMALS
VILLA ALEGRE
CD ABC NEWS
7:00
0 CROSS WJTS
ClJ BIBLE BOWL
Cil HOGAN'S HEROES
CIJ(j2) Gl FACE THE MUSIC
CD LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
Ill ()) TIC TAC OOUGH
CIJ MACNEIL'LEHRER REPORT
®J NEWS
(jJJ OICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 ill D COUNTRY ROAOS
Cil AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
ffi MOVIE -(CARTOON) ••• "Dot
And The Kang1roo"
ALLINTH
. EFAMILY
MATCH GAME
'WILD KINGDOM
(I) JOKER' S WILO
CIJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
®J THE JUDGE
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
FAMIUFEUO
8:00
CD REAL PEOPLE A golho,.

(Answers tomorrow)

~

Jumbles . SAN DY COUPE BROKEN ABDUCT
Answer: When he ordered f ish, he told the cook to
make thi s-" NO BONES ABOUT IT"

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

W

Trucks

NORTH

6·11·30

+KJ 6
.AJ96
t KJ 9
+A 10 9

1979 LUV 4X4
1977 DODGE D-200
1976 CHEVY C-10

WEST

EAST
+to 5
• 75 3

+9R742

•o

1974 CHEVY C-10

t QB 7
+Q64

Plus many

• 6432

+ 8 7 53
SOUTH

+AQ3
• K Q 10 8

many more

t A 10 5
+KJ2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

Nortb

Pass
Pass
Pass

2
3t
4•

Pass

+

Pass

Ea•t

Soutb
I NT
2•
3 NT
6•

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead:+ 9
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan SGntag .
South believed that God had
given him the greatest possible card-playing ability.
Hence, he opened a 19-point
notrump so as to make sure
that if the hand played in
notrump he would be manipulating the&lt;lummy.

Homemade ·

II

North did not share South's
co.nfidencein his dummy play.
W1th 17 htgh-card points he
did use Stayman and make
one mild slam try, but signed
off at four hearts after South's
three-notrump bid.
That four-heart call
inflamed South as a red rag
excites a bull.
He checked to see that he
would play a heart contract
and bid the heart slam.
He won the spade lead and
picked up trumps by three
leads. Then he cashed the
spades and noted that East
had followed to three trumps
and discarded a diamond on
the third spade. This meant
that East had been dealt eight
minor suit cards and West
only six. Now South cashed
dummy's king ".1 diamonds,
led the jack of dtamonds and
finessed against East.
West took his queen and led
back a third diamond.
Now South had to try to
locate the queen of clubs.
Again he went wrong and had
cbucked the slam.
The play had been bad. All
South needed to do was to
play ace-king, small of either
minor suit. Whoever won
would have been endplayed
and the slam would be a sure
thing.

ing of mystics in Florida, a racing
boatmadeofemptymilk ca rtona ,an
ugly dog contest , and a vlalt to a
dime-a-dance hall are featured .
(RePeat;
60
mine.)

~

HAM SAI.AO•••• ~···············~~;j$1.19

;'~ ®J CAPTAIN AMERICA An

athletic young ex-Marine becomes
cri mefighter Captain America aa
his father had, years earlier, and,
augmented by a secret super·
steroid, purauea an arch-criminal
whoplanstodeclmatePhoeniKwith
a neutron bomb. (Conclusion; 60
min!!J

CIJCUJ GREAT PERFORMANCES

'Dance in America: Trallbluera of
Modern Dance' The hietory of the
modern dance movement from the
turn Qf the century through the early
30's is traced, ualng documentary
footage, photography and draw!l!.ga.
min a.)
'

ceo

8:30 11.! THE PRESENCE OF GOO
8:00 IIJDCD OIFF'RENTSTROKES
ClJ 700CLUB
ffi MOVIE . ·(SUSPENSE) •••
"Silent Partner'' 1979
(j) li2lGI CHARLIE'S ANGELS~ .
Ill CIJ ®J WEONESOAY NIGHT
MOVIE: 'Getting ·Married ' 1978
Stars: Richard Thomae, BeaaArm·
atro.ng.

CIJ (ll)

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

SLICED BACON•••••••••••••••• ~:~. sl.09
HAM &amp;CHEESE LOAF. •••••••~~}l.89
...

PRODUCE
NewGreen

_

e CABBAGE .........~~-.. 25•
MARGARINE.~~:..79

...
...

16 oz. Cello Bag

12 oz. Kraft Sliced
Individual
.Wrapped

CARROtS..........~~~- 25•

$

CHEESE .. -~-~~:..

1.59

3 lb. New Yellow

.'

ONIONS...........~~~.. 99'

.

'I

o

...• •

''

MACKERAL
•••••• ~···············•••~~~. 5gt
3 oz. Armour
POTTED MEAT. •••••••••••••••••~~~. 2/Sgt

.
. BARNEY

DADBURN
NEWFANGLED
CHILD-PROOF CAPS!!

ROAST
BEEF. •••••••••••••••••• ~:~. sl.79
Stokely - ·- ·
_46 oz~

PORK-N-BEANS..ou ••••••••••••••• 2/9gt
48 Count Tenrler Leal

TEA BAGS •••••••••••••••••••••••a.o:. $1.29
Twin Pack

BOUNTY TOWELS .............~~!~. sl.19
29 oz.

OSAGE PEACHES•••••••.•.••••. 2/s1.39
l .

John
O'Grady, Hollywood's
Number One Private Eye describes
his life a!j!e and work.

Cil li2l

C1J

GUESS WHO'S PREGNANT·
AN UPOATE Many of I he ex porta

Yesterday's AIIBwer
23 Be agree·
32 WWI
able to
battle site
24 Partiality
33 Inviting
2S Authorize
word
26 Keg
38 Beachboy's
28 Atelier
hue
30 Portion
39 Fatten
31 "Good Night" the
girl
bill

revl·

who appeared in the 1977 program
'Gueas Who's Pregnant?' are
sited and uked for their aeeeaamente of the current teenage pregnancy criaia. (60 min a.)
NEWS

10:30

~

11:oo

m•

BED CHECK? WHAT
THE WORLD IS
SED CHECK?

CABBAGE

MAIIBE THElt' nl!NK

WE'RE ALL 601N6 TO
RUN AUJAI( OR SOMETI11N6

I THINK IT'S J05T
ANOT~ER ONE OF THEIR
PENNL{ ANNOVANCES!

~. 19~.
...

/

••

Ll1 rn 111 CIJ ®I (If) •

NEWS
ClJ JEWISH VOICE

@MOYIE -(DRAMA) •••• .. Deer
Hunt•r" 1178
&lt;IJ LAST OFTHEWI~D 'Vonomouo
Snakes'
DAVE ALLEN AT LAROE
DICK CAVETT SHOW
I 1:30
• aJ THE TONIGHT SHOW
Hoat: Johnny Coroon. (9&lt;) mlno.)
ClJ ROBS BAGLEY SHOW
CIJ MOVIE -(WESTERN) ... "R• .
m•l•nd tht.._Str•nver" 1. . .
llJ li2l •
ABC NEWS
NIGHTUNE
DCIJ YOURTURN:LETTERSTO
BNEWS

ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
MOVIE -(MYSTERY) •• "Hoot- •
~moonwlth1Str.n8flr" 1111
11:110 (JJ{j2). LOVEIOAT-BAAI!TTA
Love Boat--'Oh Dale' A guy board a ·

tho ohlp lndrog to be with a gl~who
can't
~tand
him.
Baretta-·' Everybody Paye The
Fare' The deathb8d confneton of
animprlaonedgangateretlraBaretta to I'Venge hla own father'a death.
&lt;BOQ!at; 2 hro., t 6 mine.)

.
1:00

X SF AT J B ,V F Q

MVA

BMSATIMVATB

•
••

Host: Hqh Downe.

~

MVA

FB

ALATFTI

-

ZFMV

MVA

1:30
1:35
2:00
2:011
2:30
3:30

i l l . TOMORROW Hoot: Tom ·

Snydor. Guaot: Anthony Summora, I'
l~~~~~:lvo reporter for tho BBC. ,

l

l

GOODNEWS
NEWS
REXHUMIARO
N!WS
:
MOVII!-(SUSP!NSE)•• "WIIo
wAunlll Roo?" 1871
IJI!U!VE
• NI!WB
'
ROB$ BAGLEY SHOW
I
IIOVI! -(DRAMA) •• "Deoll'a
1067
.
700 CLUB
MAVERICK
B08QAU

' 18111"

CRYPTOQUOTES

C X

MAX MORRIS
OVER EASY Guoal: Irwin Shaw.

~

to
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, ·
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different

';

1111 VEGA$ Don Tanna

desperately atrempte to prevent
Bea, his beautifulaaaistant, from
marrying a in an who plana to kill her
to gain control of her daughter' a
inheritance. (R,peat: 60 mlna.)

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELL(,IW

HOME GRCMN

QUINCY Teonego al-

CIJ AMERICANS 'Tho Private Eye'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

.

--

1 Foundation
Z Rock singer
Cooper
3 Lazeabout
4 The way,
in China
5 Granular
6 Called back
into session
7 Japanese
statesman
8 Royal beef?
9 Apprentice
12 Presbyters
16 Kept
19 Fuel
Z2 Haven

'ltJ

driving

by THOMAS JOSEPH
43 Ruminant
DOWN

ACROSS
1 Lure
5 Mill
material
J:J~~~;;} 10 Joe Tynan
in the movie
11 Quit
13 Fann sight
14 Without
conscience
15 Bag, pack
or pick
16 Hasten
17 Cap
18
Ophidian
THIS LOOKS LIKf
OH , I 'M :0 GLAD WE
28 "-Man's
A NICE PLACE .
KISSED AND AMDE UP.
Family"
LET ME CHECK
I CAN'T IMAGINE
21
Ron who
IT OUr.
LIFE WITHOUT
played Tai"ZIIn
HIM I
22 Wharf
23 Supplicate
26 Nose and
ice cream
27 Church
season
28 Needlefish
29 Consume
38 Avocation
34 Blackbird
35Vex
' 3f Did
~::~!:~::-------,~--~------------------,
roadwork
IF VOU
WA1T TILL VE TRY TO
37Grandma,
THINK
OPEN TATER'S MOUTH
at times
THAT'S
39 Saucy
TOUGH-40 Interweave
n Mark's
princess
42 French
playwright

;,~~;:;;~i::n::i~=rk.
(t)

coholism ialnvolvedwhenaetudent '
is killed in a traffic mishap, and
Quincy must establish whether the
niece of his bose, Dr. Aeten. was
theca rand Ia poaslblygullty
of manslaughter. (Repeat; 60 ·
mine.)

~

You're qoinq
wear those
sil/4 boots~

HENRY MOORE Thlo pro·

gram is a portrayal of sculptor

i:30

Sure! rt
told me to

1

accepted by fourcollegei, but pre·
tends that ehe ha abean rejected by
all of them because she Isawed by
the prospect of leaving home. (60

· 10:00

French City lib. Vacuum Packed

osed-Captioned)

FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
MOVIE •(ADVENTURE) •••
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Skelton'aFunny Faces' Old friend a
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few of your favorites on hand when
Red Skelton hosts this exclusive

Jum"1e Book No. 14, contain in; 110puzztes,lsavallablt t0rS1.75poatp.~ld
from Jumble, Clothla newspaper, Box 34, No~ood , N.J.07648.1nclude your
name, addreu, zip 9ode and make checks paytble to Newapaperboob.

SWEET PEAS••••••••••••••••• :.a."•• 2/6gt

VPTBIE ·
ACAD.IEMY

-

1

I

~~dJ~~CNEWB

6:30

'TH5 MAN M05'T
'-1K51..Y 'TO SUC:C.EEt?'

ISAYMUL I
Yeste,day·s

_)7 oz. Teen Queen

-u~

()) ABC NEWS

Answerhere: THE

TOMATO -JUICE ~ ••••••••••••••••:~~ •• .79~

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IN PROGRESS)

&lt;IJ ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW

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me Cl5 IE)(W • Nl!wr
ClJ ROSSIAGLEYHOUR(JotNI!r.

KX]J
ENTINY I
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FINE!
OOP? DID HE
MAKI': HIMSELF THAT

DAIIiY

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e:oo m •

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BAROAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST S 1.50

· Mlas Helen King and David King
have returned home from college in
Florida and are spending some time
·with thdr parents, Mr. and Mn.
VirgO King.
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Dean, Mr.
and Mrs. John W. Dean, Jeremy and
JameJ, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
MarkiJ?a Gl Racine were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ried and David
at Pataakala. other guests were
. Walter Terrell, ROO!Iey Ried,
P.tl!ka!a; Mrs. Eva Randolph,
Mn. Pauline Bentz, Mrs. Debbie
FarreU, Rachel and Arily, all of HuntiJICton; Mr. and Mn. Bruce Ried,
' Qlarles and Robert Gl Burlingham;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ried and Miss
IINnda Schultz of Westerville. They
• CelebnlteciJohnDean'sandKenneth
, llariliDI'a liirthdaya, also an·: a-ry Gl Mr. and Mrs. Ried, the
1: bolt and bolte8a and Mr. and Ms:s.
• Marldnll'l!nnlverlary.

THAT'5 PRO BAll~Y WHY HE
lOOK 01'1' HI!&gt; SiG&gt;NET 1'{11110
AND STUCK IT IN HIS COVER-

EVEN REj;PeC.TASLIO

PICTUI'l!O JUDIO

DEBBIE POWELL - OWNER &amp;OPERATOR
BEV BISHOP • OPERATOR

.-

Viewin.r
~VEiiiNG

OPEN TUESDAY thru SATURDAY
Thursday Evenings by Appointment

Come to the Salon where styles are individualized and
not mere copies!

Televi~illn
JUNE I I , 11180

Eckrich

Corner 3rd &amp; Cherry Streets
Syracuse, Ohio
Phone 992-3982 for App_
o intment

byHenriAmoldandBobLee

b

ESSOU

hono~ed

FOR THE BOTH OF YOU
BEAUTY SALON

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME

~ ~~

Unscramble these tour Jumbles
one letter to each square, to foml
four ordinary words.

Surprise party
held for daughter
Norma Jean Hysell was recently
with a surprise wiener roast
and party on her 12th birthday at the
home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.J
Nonnan E. Hysell.
Ice cream and cake were served
following the wiener roast. Atlending were Darlene, Gloria, and
Martha Nelson, Connie and Kim
Searles, Darlene Eblin, Rutland;
Mary Klein and Pam Lawrence,
Minersville; Rhonda Jeffers ,
LaTisha Price, Kathy and Melody
King, the honored guest and her
parents, Pomeroy.

'ftftltNt ID'il

Q;!J

BVHJCl.

1:00
1:15
5:30

ZVFGV
llAMMFTI

BPT
CX
WFXA.- WH
XCTMHFTA
Yesterday's Cryp&amp;oquote: BLESSED ARE TiiOSE WHO 00
AROUND IN CIRCLES FOR THEY SHALL BE CALLED BIG
WHEELS. - WISE WORDS
It) 1910 Kina Ftatur" ~'r• r-· .. ~

BEST BUYS
PUEBLO, Colo. lAP)- Best sale&amp;
buys In July and August are 111r CGDo
ditiQDel"', batblna IUita, bedclt.l&amp;
camping equipment, hardware and
school clothea, aays a COIIIlUilel' J.n.
formaUoo grOUD.

'

I

�. 0~~ ~';;!ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 11, 1980

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 11, 1900

Presentations highlight convention
District chairmen were appointed,
awards were presented, and reports
were given on service and activity
progrBJIIS at the Eighth District
American Legion Auxiliary sununer
convention held Thursday at
":Jackson.
Mrs. Lorrene Snyder, Lancaster,
district president, presided at the
session and appointed Mrs. Florence
Richards, Americanism chainnan;
Mrs. Edward Pri!ner, children and
youth chainnan; Mrs. W. A. Irion,
community service; Mrs. Becky
Tyree, junior activities; and Mrs.
James Knapp, veterai)S affairs.
Mrs. Snyder anounced the Depart-

ment of Ohio convention for July 11- and youth chairman, reported that
13 at the Neil House in Columbus
$7,013,92 had been spent in the
with Mrs. Catherine Welsh,
district for children and youth
Pomeroy, to attend the children and
programs with 2,842 volunteer
youth pre-&lt;;onvention session, and
hours.
Mrs. Tyree, the junior activities preMrs. Marvin Roberts, community
convention session.
service, presented awards to
Awards were pesented by the
Pomeroy Unit 39, Middleport Units
various chairmen. Mrs. Clifford · 263 and 128, and Racine 602.
Atkins, CrooksvUle, reported that 51
The Pomeroy unit's report on
girls in the district will attend
community service with Mrs. Ruby
Buckeye Girls' State, that no one atMarshall as local chainnan, placed
tended the Valley Forge Teachers
first in the district and has gone on to
Conference. She presented a district
state competition.
award to Middleport Unit 128 for
For junior activiiies, Mrs. Mary
Americanism.
Martin reporied expenditures of $520
Mrs. James Gatewood, children
and 32() hours of volunteer service.
She spoke on the need. for en·
couraging junior membership and
programs. It was noted that Mrs.
Harry Davis, advisor for the
Pomeroy juniors, had received the
award for the best all-around junior
program in the district.
The poppies purchased, as repor·
ted by Mrs. Nelson Mowery, was
25,800 regular size, and 110 large
poppies bringing $14,706.50 for the
In charge of the sweepstakes
district.
award in the horticulture division
Certificates for outstanding work
will be Miss Ruby Diehl and Mrs.
in
veterans affairs went to Unit 39,
Eugene Atkins. Mrs. Eva Robson
Pomeroy,
Middleport 128, and Midand Mrs. Ann Webster will handle
dleport
283.
It was noted that
the horticulture classes, Mrs.
Pomeroy
received
first in the
Thelma Moore and Mrs. Russell Litrep(lrt
is entered in
district
and
the
tle, the junio~ division; and Mrs.
Harvey Erlewine and Mrs. Robert
Canaday, the staging. Mrs. Bernard
Ledlie, Mrs. Marvin Wilson, and
Mrs. Harry Williamson will have
charge of placement.
The show will include twelve hor·
ticulture classes nine artistic
arrangement divisions and several
educational displays. There will also
be several non-competitive displays
including OAGC publications, books,
magazines, and publications, and
crafts by the Crafty Ladies.

Garden club
schedule~ show
"Sununer Weather" will be theme
of the flower show to be staged July
19 and 2() by the Rutland Garden
Club at the Rutland United
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis is show
chairman, and serving on the other
ocmmittees arc Mrs. Reba
Snowden, ways and means; Mrs.
Csrl Denison and Mrs. Dayton Parsons, registration ; Mrs. C. 0 . Chal"
man, Mrs. James Titus, Mrs.
. Everett Colwell, Mrs. C. E. Bishop,
and Mrs. Lawrence Milhoan
- hospitality.
•
Mrs. Ralph Turner, Mrs. Chris
Diehl and Mrs. James Nicholson are
on the publicity book committee,
and serving as clerks for the judge
will be Mrs. Albert Woodard, Mrs.
Vernon Weber.

Pomeroy PTA meets
Regatta Weekend fund raiSing
projects were discussed at the Monday night meeting of the Pomeroy
PTA.
The possibility of a games booth as
well as selling refreshments during
the talent show will be checked into
by a conunittee of Susie Soulsby,
Dina Gryszka and Mary Lou Durst.
The PTA also decided to sponsor
· movies at the school each Saturday
evening during the 198().81 school
year, and to give some assistance
with expenses for the sixth grade

Powers to wed
· The open church wedding of Miss
Pam Powers, son of Mr. and Mrs.
. Frank Powers, and Charlie Marshall, son of Mr. and Mrs: Charles
Marshall will be held Saturday at
the Middleport Church of Christ.
The ceremony will be performed
at 6:30p.m. by the Rev. Bob Melton,
. following a half-hour program ri
· · nuptial music by Mrs. Clarice Erwin, organist, and Cathy and Don
ErWin, soloists. A reception will be
held inunediately following the wedding in the church social room.

Kingsbury
News Notes
The Carleton Church honored each
mother on Mother's Day following
· Sunday School. The men of the chur. ch had a special song and there were
several Mother's Day remembrances in verse read by the young
cbildren and Olen Harrison aftger
which the superintendent, Ralph
Carl, presented each mother with a
potted plant.
• Mrs. Virgil King has been a recent
vlaitor in Kankakee, Ill. Returning
home with her were Mrs. Geneva
McElroy and son,IUchard.
VIsitors over the weekend of Mr.
. and Mrs. Wayne Beat were Mr. and
Mrs. Jolm Perdas, Mary and Usa of
Chambenburg, Pa. Other visitors
were Mr. and Mn. Roger Young,
Wesley and Yv~tte. Mr. and Mrs.
Kirk Chevalier and Jessica, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Well and Heather, all of

trip next spring.
Robert Barton, president, asked
for money to be spent on playground
equipment improvements during the
swruner months. Book shelves to be
built in the library will be done when
school starts in the fall, it was
decided. Named to the auditing committee were Judge Robert Buck,
Mrs. Margaret .Johnson, and Mrs.
Darla Hawley. The PTA presented
gifts of appreciation for assistance
to several teachers, Robert Morris,
principal, April Smith, secretary,
the librarian, and Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Soulsby.
Barton urged a stronger support
for the PTA next year. A concert
was presented by the fifth and sixth
grades under the direction of David
Bowen, following the meeting.
Cub Scouts of Pack 249 gave the
flag salute, officers' reports were
given, and refreshments were served by parents of the first graders.

NORMA JEAN HYSELL

state competition.
Mrs. Bernard Cooley reported on
the Athens Mental Health Center
program for veterans noting that
currently there are DillY two
vetera1:s who can attend parties confined there. She reported units which
have participated with the work
there and noted that the balance in
her fund is $90.64.
National citations for membership
and the birthday roll call certificates
were given to all four Meigs County
units, and Mrs. Gemma Casci
received a goal apple for membership.
Mrs. Snyder announced that next
party at the Chillicothe Veterans
H()Spital Will be on July 19. She noted
that the department has reached
membership goal and also that the
national goal plus 85 has been
reached. She reported that the 8th
district is in 13th place in membership in the state.
District past presidents introduced were Mrs. Mabel Brown,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Jane Bowles,
Wilkesville; and · Mrs. Richards,
Middleport. Mrs . .Vree Marshall, a
past district president, was reported
ill and unable to attend.
Mrs. Frank Holcshuh of Mahoning
County, department treasurer,
talked on the moving of the Department of Ohio headquarters from
ZanesvUle to Columbus. She also
discussed dues, and the purchase of
greeting cards by members.
A memorial service was held for
deceased members. The place committee reported that the junior con·
ference in the spring of 1981 will be
held at Middleport with Unit 128 as
host, the girls state tea will be hosted
by Middleport Unit 283, the fall conference at Crooksville on Oct. 23 ·
hosted by Unit 222, and the sununer
convention at Lancaster on June 4
,
hosted by Unit 11.
Mrs. Cleo Green was chainnan of
registration, and Mrs. Alvin Robbins
called the meeting to order. Mter
the advancement of the colors, Mrs.
Alvin Robbins led in the pledge with
Mrs. Myron Callahan giving the
welcome and leading in the pream- ·
ble. Mrs. Richards gave the response.

Going from here were Mrs. Eunie
Brinker, Mrs. Julia Norris and Mrs.
Roberts, Racine; Mrs. Zuelelia
Smith," Mrs. Florence Richards, and
Mrs. (.ula Hampton, Middleport 283;
Mrs. Veda Davis, Mrs. Mary Martin, Mrs. Catherine Welsh, and Mrs.
Loretta Tiemeyer, Pomeroy 39; and
Mrs. Becky Tyree, Peggy Caton,
and Mary Madden, Middleport 128.

10% OFF On All Perms
Entire Month of June

STORE
HOURS
OPEN MON.-SAT.
8 AM TO 10 PM
SUN. 8 AM TO 6 PM

CAPTAIN EASY
L-1 .JUI)T CAt.J'i

Chester.

PEOP~E GIST IN Tie&gt;HT
5-POT~ FI~ANCIA~~y~

ltii!~DFI.UM !OVS~

PULLI'-IC!l ANY
HOLI7:JP~ I HE'~
A RHPECTAB~E
LAWYE!l AND

ALL POCI&lt;EiT--

ANP MAY&amp;E IT

A~SO EXPLAIN~

'lOUR FATHcR '.S

1980 CHEVY CHEVETTE
1980 V.W. RABBIT
1980 CHEVY MONZA
1978 RABBIT 4 Speed
1978 RABBIT Automatic
978 MERCURY ZEPHYR
1977 FORD GRANADA
1977 NOVA CONCOURS
1977 MONTE CARLO
1977 VOLAR£ WAGON

..

showcasing Shields and Yarnell ,
Yacow Noy and several other great ·
masters or mime.

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

Cil I LOVE LUCY
Cil CAROL BURNETT ANO

(I I I TO rx I)

FRI~Q.S

Q (I)(JD) CBS NEWS
CIJ WILO WILO WORLO OF
ANIMALS
VILLA ALEGRE
CD ABC NEWS
7:00
0 CROSS WJTS
ClJ BIBLE BOWL
Cil HOGAN'S HEROES
CIJ(j2) Gl FACE THE MUSIC
CD LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
Ill ()) TIC TAC OOUGH
CIJ MACNEIL'LEHRER REPORT
®J NEWS
(jJJ OICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 ill D COUNTRY ROAOS
Cil AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
ffi MOVIE -(CARTOON) ••• "Dot
And The Kang1roo"
ALLINTH
. EFAMILY
MATCH GAME
'WILD KINGDOM
(I) JOKER' S WILO
CIJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
®J THE JUDGE
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
FAMIUFEUO
8:00
CD REAL PEOPLE A golho,.

(Answers tomorrow)

~

Jumbles . SAN DY COUPE BROKEN ABDUCT
Answer: When he ordered f ish, he told the cook to
make thi s-" NO BONES ABOUT IT"

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

W

Trucks

NORTH

6·11·30

+KJ 6
.AJ96
t KJ 9
+A 10 9

1979 LUV 4X4
1977 DODGE D-200
1976 CHEVY C-10

WEST

EAST
+to 5
• 75 3

+9R742

•o

1974 CHEVY C-10

t QB 7
+Q64

Plus many

• 6432

+ 8 7 53
SOUTH

+AQ3
• K Q 10 8

many more

t A 10 5
+KJ2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

Nortb

Pass
Pass
Pass

2
3t
4•

Pass

+

Pass

Ea•t

Soutb
I NT
2•
3 NT
6•

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead:+ 9
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan SGntag .
South believed that God had
given him the greatest possible card-playing ability.
Hence, he opened a 19-point
notrump so as to make sure
that if the hand played in
notrump he would be manipulating the&lt;lummy.

Homemade ·

II

North did not share South's
co.nfidencein his dummy play.
W1th 17 htgh-card points he
did use Stayman and make
one mild slam try, but signed
off at four hearts after South's
three-notrump bid.
That four-heart call
inflamed South as a red rag
excites a bull.
He checked to see that he
would play a heart contract
and bid the heart slam.
He won the spade lead and
picked up trumps by three
leads. Then he cashed the
spades and noted that East
had followed to three trumps
and discarded a diamond on
the third spade. This meant
that East had been dealt eight
minor suit cards and West
only six. Now South cashed
dummy's king ".1 diamonds,
led the jack of dtamonds and
finessed against East.
West took his queen and led
back a third diamond.
Now South had to try to
locate the queen of clubs.
Again he went wrong and had
cbucked the slam.
The play had been bad. All
South needed to do was to
play ace-king, small of either
minor suit. Whoever won
would have been endplayed
and the slam would be a sure
thing.

ing of mystics in Florida, a racing
boatmadeofemptymilk ca rtona ,an
ugly dog contest , and a vlalt to a
dime-a-dance hall are featured .
(RePeat;
60
mine.)

~

HAM SAI.AO•••• ~···············~~;j$1.19

;'~ ®J CAPTAIN AMERICA An

athletic young ex-Marine becomes
cri mefighter Captain America aa
his father had, years earlier, and,
augmented by a secret super·
steroid, purauea an arch-criminal
whoplanstodeclmatePhoeniKwith
a neutron bomb. (Conclusion; 60
min!!J

CIJCUJ GREAT PERFORMANCES

'Dance in America: Trallbluera of
Modern Dance' The hietory of the
modern dance movement from the
turn Qf the century through the early
30's is traced, ualng documentary
footage, photography and draw!l!.ga.
min a.)
'

ceo

8:30 11.! THE PRESENCE OF GOO
8:00 IIJDCD OIFF'RENTSTROKES
ClJ 700CLUB
ffi MOVIE . ·(SUSPENSE) •••
"Silent Partner'' 1979
(j) li2lGI CHARLIE'S ANGELS~ .
Ill CIJ ®J WEONESOAY NIGHT
MOVIE: 'Getting ·Married ' 1978
Stars: Richard Thomae, BeaaArm·
atro.ng.

CIJ (ll)

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

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CHILD-PROOF CAPS!!

ROAST
BEEF. •••••••••••••••••• ~:~. sl.79
Stokely - ·- ·
_46 oz~

PORK-N-BEANS..ou ••••••••••••••• 2/9gt
48 Count Tenrler Leal

TEA BAGS •••••••••••••••••••••••a.o:. $1.29
Twin Pack

BOUNTY TOWELS .............~~!~. sl.19
29 oz.

OSAGE PEACHES•••••••.•.••••. 2/s1.39
l .

John
O'Grady, Hollywood's
Number One Private Eye describes
his life a!j!e and work.

Cil li2l

C1J

GUESS WHO'S PREGNANT·
AN UPOATE Many of I he ex porta

Yesterday's AIIBwer
23 Be agree·
32 WWI
able to
battle site
24 Partiality
33 Inviting
2S Authorize
word
26 Keg
38 Beachboy's
28 Atelier
hue
30 Portion
39 Fatten
31 "Good Night" the
girl
bill

revl·

who appeared in the 1977 program
'Gueas Who's Pregnant?' are
sited and uked for their aeeeaamente of the current teenage pregnancy criaia. (60 min a.)
NEWS

10:30

~

11:oo

m•

BED CHECK? WHAT
THE WORLD IS
SED CHECK?

CABBAGE

MAIIBE THElt' nl!NK

WE'RE ALL 601N6 TO
RUN AUJAI( OR SOMETI11N6

I THINK IT'S J05T
ANOT~ER ONE OF THEIR
PENNL{ ANNOVANCES!

~. 19~.
...

/

••

Ll1 rn 111 CIJ ®I (If) •

NEWS
ClJ JEWISH VOICE

@MOYIE -(DRAMA) •••• .. Deer
Hunt•r" 1178
&lt;IJ LAST OFTHEWI~D 'Vonomouo
Snakes'
DAVE ALLEN AT LAROE
DICK CAVETT SHOW
I 1:30
• aJ THE TONIGHT SHOW
Hoat: Johnny Coroon. (9&lt;) mlno.)
ClJ ROBS BAGLEY SHOW
CIJ MOVIE -(WESTERN) ... "R• .
m•l•nd tht.._Str•nver" 1. . .
llJ li2l •
ABC NEWS
NIGHTUNE
DCIJ YOURTURN:LETTERSTO
BNEWS

ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
MOVIE -(MYSTERY) •• "Hoot- •
~moonwlth1Str.n8flr" 1111
11:110 (JJ{j2). LOVEIOAT-BAAI!TTA
Love Boat--'Oh Dale' A guy board a ·

tho ohlp lndrog to be with a gl~who
can't
~tand
him.
Baretta-·' Everybody Paye The
Fare' The deathb8d confneton of
animprlaonedgangateretlraBaretta to I'Venge hla own father'a death.
&lt;BOQ!at; 2 hro., t 6 mine.)

.
1:00

X SF AT J B ,V F Q

MVA

BMSATIMVATB

•
••

Host: Hqh Downe.

~

MVA

FB

ALATFTI

-

ZFMV

MVA

1:30
1:35
2:00
2:011
2:30
3:30

i l l . TOMORROW Hoot: Tom ·

Snydor. Guaot: Anthony Summora, I'
l~~~~~:lvo reporter for tho BBC. ,

l

l

GOODNEWS
NEWS
REXHUMIARO
N!WS
:
MOVII!-(SUSP!NSE)•• "WIIo
wAunlll Roo?" 1871
IJI!U!VE
• NI!WB
'
ROB$ BAGLEY SHOW
I
IIOVI! -(DRAMA) •• "Deoll'a
1067
.
700 CLUB
MAVERICK
B08QAU

' 18111"

CRYPTOQUOTES

C X

MAX MORRIS
OVER EASY Guoal: Irwin Shaw.

~

to
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, ·
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different

';

1111 VEGA$ Don Tanna

desperately atrempte to prevent
Bea, his beautifulaaaistant, from
marrying a in an who plana to kill her
to gain control of her daughter' a
inheritance. (R,peat: 60 mlna.)

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELL(,IW

HOME GRCMN

QUINCY Teonego al-

CIJ AMERICANS 'Tho Private Eye'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

.

--

1 Foundation
Z Rock singer
Cooper
3 Lazeabout
4 The way,
in China
5 Granular
6 Called back
into session
7 Japanese
statesman
8 Royal beef?
9 Apprentice
12 Presbyters
16 Kept
19 Fuel
Z2 Haven

'ltJ

driving

by THOMAS JOSEPH
43 Ruminant
DOWN

ACROSS
1 Lure
5 Mill
material
J:J~~~;;} 10 Joe Tynan
in the movie
11 Quit
13 Fann sight
14 Without
conscience
15 Bag, pack
or pick
16 Hasten
17 Cap
18
Ophidian
THIS LOOKS LIKf
OH , I 'M :0 GLAD WE
28 "-Man's
A NICE PLACE .
KISSED AND AMDE UP.
Family"
LET ME CHECK
I CAN'T IMAGINE
21
Ron who
IT OUr.
LIFE WITHOUT
played Tai"ZIIn
HIM I
22 Wharf
23 Supplicate
26 Nose and
ice cream
27 Church
season
28 Needlefish
29 Consume
38 Avocation
34 Blackbird
35Vex
' 3f Did
~::~!:~::-------,~--~------------------,
roadwork
IF VOU
WA1T TILL VE TRY TO
37Grandma,
THINK
OPEN TATER'S MOUTH
at times
THAT'S
39 Saucy
TOUGH-40 Interweave
n Mark's
princess
42 French
playwright

;,~~;:;;~i::n::i~=rk.
(t)

coholism ialnvolvedwhenaetudent '
is killed in a traffic mishap, and
Quincy must establish whether the
niece of his bose, Dr. Aeten. was
theca rand Ia poaslblygullty
of manslaughter. (Repeat; 60 ·
mine.)

~

You're qoinq
wear those
sil/4 boots~

HENRY MOORE Thlo pro·

gram is a portrayal of sculptor

i:30

Sure! rt
told me to

1

accepted by fourcollegei, but pre·
tends that ehe ha abean rejected by
all of them because she Isawed by
the prospect of leaving home. (60

· 10:00

French City lib. Vacuum Packed

osed-Captioned)

FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
MOVIE •(ADVENTURE) •••
"LI!!!lJDI Hundrod Mile a" I 067
OOIWUI FAMILYBuddyhatboon

6&gt;- II

21 oz. Van Camp

I·

ODDI..Y ENOUG-H.

BRIDGE

NEW AA'i'

1 lb. Kraft Parkay
Quarters

(2] STANDING ROOM ONLY 'Rod

Skelton'aFunny Faces' Old friend a
like Freddie the Freeloader end
Clem Kaddlddlehopper are Juet a
few of your favorites on hand when
Red Skelton hosts this exclusive

Jum"1e Book No. 14, contain in; 110puzztes,lsavallablt t0rS1.75poatp.~ld
from Jumble, Clothla newspaper, Box 34, No~ood , N.J.07648.1nclude your
name, addreu, zip 9ode and make checks paytble to Newapaperboob.

SWEET PEAS••••••••••••••••• :.a."•• 2/6gt

VPTBIE ·
ACAD.IEMY

-

1

I

~~dJ~~CNEWB

6:30

'TH5 MAN M05'T
'-1K51..Y 'TO SUC:C.EEt?'

ISAYMUL I
Yeste,day·s

_)7 oz. Teen Queen

-u~

()) ABC NEWS

Answerhere: THE

TOMATO -JUICE ~ ••••••••••••••••:~~ •• .79~

MAaA&amp;I•E

IN PROGRESS)

&lt;IJ ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW

'--'-'"""""-.....J..-.L......J.--.J1

Used Ccir Specials

.

me Cl5 IE)(W • Nl!wr
ClJ ROSSIAGLEYHOUR(JotNI!r.

KX]J
ENTINY I
I (]
f\__ _A

FINE!
OOP? DID HE
MAKI': HIMSELF THAT

DAIIiY

I

e:oo m •

V 'l

RA~CH!Oill

12oz. Armo!Lr .

BAROAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST S 1.50

· Mlas Helen King and David King
have returned home from college in
Florida and are spending some time
·with thdr parents, Mr. and Mn.
VirgO King.
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Dean, Mr.
and Mrs. John W. Dean, Jeremy and
JameJ, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
MarkiJ?a Gl Racine were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ried and David
at Pataakala. other guests were
. Walter Terrell, ROO!Iey Ried,
P.tl!ka!a; Mrs. Eva Randolph,
Mn. Pauline Bentz, Mrs. Debbie
FarreU, Rachel and Arily, all of HuntiJICton; Mr. and Mn. Bruce Ried,
' Qlarles and Robert Gl Burlingham;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ried and Miss
IINnda Schultz of Westerville. They
• CelebnlteciJohnDean'sandKenneth
, llariliDI'a liirthdaya, also an·: a-ry Gl Mr. and Mrs. Ried, the
1: bolt and bolte8a and Mr. and Ms:s.
• Marldnll'l!nnlverlary.

THAT'5 PRO BAll~Y WHY HE
lOOK 01'1' HI!&gt; SiG&gt;NET 1'{11110
AND STUCK IT IN HIS COVER-

EVEN REj;PeC.TASLIO

PICTUI'l!O JUDIO

DEBBIE POWELL - OWNER &amp;OPERATOR
BEV BISHOP • OPERATOR

.-

Viewin.r
~VEiiiNG

OPEN TUESDAY thru SATURDAY
Thursday Evenings by Appointment

Come to the Salon where styles are individualized and
not mere copies!

Televi~illn
JUNE I I , 11180

Eckrich

Corner 3rd &amp; Cherry Streets
Syracuse, Ohio
Phone 992-3982 for App_
o intment

byHenriAmoldandBobLee

b

ESSOU

hono~ed

FOR THE BOTH OF YOU
BEAUTY SALON

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME

~ ~~

Unscramble these tour Jumbles
one letter to each square, to foml
four ordinary words.

Surprise party
held for daughter
Norma Jean Hysell was recently
with a surprise wiener roast
and party on her 12th birthday at the
home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.J
Nonnan E. Hysell.
Ice cream and cake were served
following the wiener roast. Atlending were Darlene, Gloria, and
Martha Nelson, Connie and Kim
Searles, Darlene Eblin, Rutland;
Mary Klein and Pam Lawrence,
Minersville; Rhonda Jeffers ,
LaTisha Price, Kathy and Melody
King, the honored guest and her
parents, Pomeroy.

'ftftltNt ID'il

Q;!J

BVHJCl.

1:00
1:15
5:30

ZVFGV
llAMMFTI

BPT
CX
WFXA.- WH
XCTMHFTA
Yesterday's Cryp&amp;oquote: BLESSED ARE TiiOSE WHO 00
AROUND IN CIRCLES FOR THEY SHALL BE CALLED BIG
WHEELS. - WISE WORDS
It) 1910 Kina Ftatur" ~'r• r-· .. ~

BEST BUYS
PUEBLO, Colo. lAP)- Best sale&amp;
buys In July and August are 111r CGDo
ditiQDel"', batblna IUita, bedclt.l&amp;
camping equipment, hardware and
school clothea, aays a COIIIlUilel' J.n.
formaUoo grOUD.

'

I

�\4 - !1leDailySenUnei,Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 11,1980

15 - The Daily Sentinel, Mi!ltiJe:~~~~-~~,~~~;Y~,;o~.•~~~~Y: June 11, 1980
Re•l Est1te

WASHINGTON (AP) - A new
study showing another sharp Ill·
crease in fanners ' production costs
this year is expected to help stir up
further calls for the Carter ad·
mJnistration to boost federal price
supports for key crops such as wheat
and com.
The cost figures were reported
Tuesday at a White House meeting
by Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland to Vice President Walter
s F. Mondale and to Stuart E. EIZenstat, presidential assistant for
domestic affairs and policy.
A summary of the report that
Bergland delivered to the White
House - which was also was sent to
agncultural committees of Congress
- showed that casts ·per acre of
producing the major crops are
proJected to climb 18 percent to 26
percent, compared with an average
hike of 17 percent in 1979.
Fanners have complamed of
nsmg costs and declining profits for
months, and Agriculture Depart·
ment
economists
have
acknowledged that net farm income
in 1980 could decline at least 25 per·
cent from last year.
Bergland said m an interview
following the meeting that the
figures confirmed " what everybody
In the gram busmess already knew"

Study
pes ult

•

,

•

stzr Up
calls

about spiraling production costs, ad·
ding they were no great surprise to
Mondale and Eizenstat.
" They had been forewarned that
these numbers were going to be
rather unpleasant news," Bergland
said. " The report was simply to m·
form them. We have not proposed
any legislative remedies."
Bergland added, however, that he
and farm leaders In Congress are
looking ir1 the possibility of boosting
some federal price support loan
rates ·as a way to help farmers offset
at least part of nslng production
costs. But he said this would be dif·
ficult because m seeking a balanced
federal budget, any increase in one
program would require offsetting
reductions in others.
Loan rates are how much farmers
can borrow from the government by
using their crops as collateral. In ef·
feet, they provide a " floor price" for
commodities sold on the open
market.
The new figures show production
expenSes rising this year by 20 per·
cent to 40 percent from 1979, depen·
ding on the crop and where it IS
grown, Bergland said.
"All of 11 (the increase) is
chargeable to fuel and-&lt;&gt;r interest
charges, directly or mdirectly," he
said. "The fuel penalty comes not

only in the cost of diesel fuel, but m
the costs of fertilizers and pesticides
- which are energy-based - and
freight rate increases, of course, are
added to the farm input costs. "
Bergland said the riSing production costs are hitting gram
producers pa•ticularly hard. Wheat
and com, along with the oilseeds,
are the major U.S. grains both as a
foundation of human and animal
food and for export to foreign countries.
Com ts the largest and most important U.S. grain since it's is the
bas is for most animal feed used to
produce meat, milk, poultry and
eggs for American consumers.
The report, prepared by USOA:s
Economics,
Statishcs
and
Cooperatives Serv1ce, looked at
farm production costs in two ways costs of producing an acre of a crop
and costs translated m units of har·
vests, such as bushels per acre.
For example, the analysis projected corn costs In 1980 at $215.13 per
acre planted, compared w1th $173.49
estimated for 1979.
The 1979 average corn y1elds are
known. Therefore the U.S. cost of
producing a bushel of corn last year,
according to the report, was $1.59 a
bushel.
But the 1980 crop ts months from

harvest , so y1elds were estimated in
a range r eflecting " trends" of
r ecent years. On that basis, this
year's corn productton costs could
be between $2 and $2.35 a bushel,
depending on final yields, the report
said.
In the same manner, wheat
production costs this year could be
between $3.31 and $3.79 a bushel,
compared wlth$2.741n 1979.
The soybean costs were projected
at $4.37 to $4.89 a bushels, up from
$3.591ast year; and cotton, 72.4 to 88
cents a pound, compared with 59.9
cents a pound m 1979.

The suspension affected the
delivery to the Sovtet Uruon of about
10 million metric tons of corn - approximately 390,4 million bushels that had been ordered from private
U.S. export companies.

- FOR SALEThe Ida M. Christie real
estate cons isting of 29.8
acres
In
Bedford
Township, me home ot
Ida M . Christie, which Is
located near the new
nursing home. appra1s·
ed at $22,200,00, and the

•

•

'I•.

.

1J 1h acre parcel of real
estate in Salisbury

I

•'

A metric ton iS about 2,205 pounds
and is equal to 39.4 bushels of corn.
The latest purchases were equal to
about 879,000 metric tons.

Township near lhe 1van
Carman saw mill, ap·
praised at $2,200.00, will
be sold by the under·
signed at the Court
House steps:, Pomeroy ,
Ohio, at 1. 30 P M. on
Tuesday, June 171h,
1980. Said parcels to be
sold separately and can·
not be sold tor less than
the appraised value .

•

••
i'
I

''

Admimstration officials said the
purchases - along with a program
to get farmers to store additional
corn - will contmue until enough is
"isolated from the market" to offset
the amount embargoed from
delivery to the Soviets.
Fanners have stored about 277
million bushels of corn in the govern·
ment's reserve program since Car·
ter' s order, makmg a total of around
427 million bushels either stored or
purchased. That is more corn than
was suspended from delivery to the
Sovtets.
But corn market prices have not
recovered as experts had expected,
and the effort to remove gram from
the market is expected to continue,
at least for the time bemg.

WASIDNGTON (AP) - An ad·
dittonal 34.6 million bushels of corn
have been bought by the Agriculture
Department to help offset the effects
on farmers of President Carter's
partial embargo of grain sales to the
Soviet Union.
Officials said Tuesday that the
purchases raised to 150.4 million
bushels the amount of corn bought

32

call J .e . at 1·246 6047.

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
REPAIR OF ROOFS
FOR
MIDDLEPORT
ELEMENTARY
HARRISONVILLE
ELEMENTARY
GYMNASIUM
SALISBURY
ELEMENTARY
GYMNASIUM
IN
MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT

Comptroller of

LOST : Boy ' s d,gilal watch
with leather band Lost at

the Currencv

Treasury Department

otlhe
United Stales

e vrdence has been presen
Ied to the Comptroller of
Ihe Currency that "BANK
ONE OF POMEROY ,

N A " located in Pomeroy ,

s tate ot Oh10, has comfl 1ed

wrth all provisrons o the
s tatutes of the Unrted
states requ1red to be com ·
p iled with before be1ng
a uthorized to commence
t he business of bank rng as
a
Natrona!
Banking
Associatron .

Local School D1strict of
Middleport, Oh10 at th e
Treasurer's Off•ce unti I
12 00 Noon on July 3. 198 0
NOW. THEREFORE, I
and at that t•me opene d hereby
certtly that the
and read bv the Treasure r a bove·named
association is
•mmeolately
thereafter
tabulated, itnd a r epor t Ia uthorized to commence
he business of banking as
thereof made by the
Nat1ona 1 Bank1ng
Treasurer to sa1d Board a t a
Assoc1afion.
rts ne)(f meetrng .
IN
TESTIMONY
Description
of
rm
provement located at Mid sWHEREOF, witness my
r~nature and seal of office
dleport Elementar y t hiS
30th day ot May, 1980
School,
Har,sonvr!l e
Elementary G_ymnasrum
G . Heimann
and Salisbury Elementar y cJ ohn
of the
Gymnasium . The Roofrng c omptroller
urrency
Cootrator shall bid as a

.

.

.

Prime Contractor. This in
eludes all labor, materials
equrpment, and service s
required to comr,iete thi s
Section which mc udes new
replacement ot roofs on

may be obtained at the Of

fice of the Treasurer, M1d

dleport, Oh1o.
A cerlified check payabl e
to the Treasurer of th e

above board of education
or a satisfactory b1d bond

executed by lhe bidder and
the surety company, in a n
amount equal to frve per

cent of the bid sha ll be sub
mitted with each brd. 1.

Said board ot edutation
reserves the right to warve
informalities, to accept o r
reject any and all, or part s
of any and all b1ds .

No bids may be with .
drawn for at least thirt v

days

atier

th e
scheduled c1os1ng time to r
rece1pt of b1ds.

~_.

~.

Card ot Thanks

1
We,

the

Me1gs

The Family of Carl 0 .
Gheen WISh to thank Dr .

Jane Wagner, Treasurer
South Third Avenue

W1therell and the nurses of
Veterans
Memor1al
Hospital for their care and
k 1ndness dunng
Mr .
Gheen's illness. We also ex ·

Middleport, Ohio
~760

161 11. 18, 25 (7) 2, 4tc

I end

our thanks to the

many fnends and the mem·

Public Notice

,
IN THE
" COMMON PLEAS COURT
'
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
.
OHIO
· CATHERINE
K
· SCHNEIDER,
Plaintiff,
vs.
THOMAS E. SCHNEIDER
Defendant.
Case No. 17,51 0
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
· ' Thomas E. Schneide r
" whose
residence
is
: unknown, but whose Ia st

.

• known address was P. 0

" Box 134, TuDpers Plain s.
Ohio .45783, wHI !eke notice
that on lhe 6th day of June
1980, that Catherine K
_Schnelder Plalnilff, flied

.

Jler Comp 1aint against him

-In . the Meigs County Com .

-mon Pleas Court, Melg s
'County, Ohio, Case No
17,510 praying for dlvorce
upon the grounds of pross ,
neglect of duty and e x·
treme cruelty, tor custOd y
of the minor child of the
parties, for alimony an d
supporr, and will turthe r
.taKe notice that this cause
.can be heard at anytim e
~ollowlng twenty elgh day s
'from the date ot the Ia sl
}Jubllcatlon of this notic e
,;~nd
that the las I
publication will be made on
the 16th day~ July, 1980.
Larry E. ~pence
Clerk of Cou ~~
Meigs County, Oh io

16) 11, 18, 25, 17) 2, 9, 16, 6t c

·.

Gold, srlver or fore1gn
c oms or any gold or silver
it ems. Antrque turnrture,
g lass or chrna , w11! pay top
d ollar, or complete est ates
No item too large or too
s maiL Check pnces before
s elling Also do apprarsrng
0 sby {OSSJe) Martrn 992
370 .

M ason across

Sa le.
from

F uneral Home Antique
d ishes, some furn1ture, etc .
starts 10. lues , Wed,
Thurs.
SALE

•

In

1

bers ot lhe First Baptlsl
c hurch of Racine for the
f Iewers, cards, food and
p rayers. Your krndness
a nd sympathy rs deeply ap·
preciated.

rmel

route carrier Phone
u s rrght away and get on
t he eligibility list at 992

2156or992 2157 .
G arage

Sale

Wed

and

T hurs
across
from
B radury School C.R 5. Dot
t e rent rtems have been ad·
d ed Everything going real
c heap.

Grr!l cook and wartress
wanted Apply rn person.
Crew ' s Steak
House.
Pomeroy
Wanted : Someone to care

2 Famrly Yard Sale
c hildren ' s
clothes ,
household 1tems, etc . End
0t S. 5th St . at 377 Lincoln
s t Wed, June 11 and June
12 9·4

for semr ·mvalid lady Tues
Fn .. 985·3580 or 992 5703.
Janrtor

for Middleport
Church of Christ . 992 2914

or992·52BI.

2 Fam1ly Yard Sale Frr,
June 13, 10 3 102 Park Sl ,

Medical Secretary needed .

Exp required . 992 6633.

Mrddleport. Rarn cancels

12
B ack

Thurd

Yard Sale. 191
Ave .,

Mrddleport
rot1sser1e,
folding doors, clothing, etc

counter

top

Miller 992·6338.
Interror and E)(tenor Pam·

y ard Sale at Ina Ellrs,
c heshrre, Oh
Old
fashroned sewing machine,
Iawn charr, curta1ns, rugs,
p iHow slips, many more
t h1ngs. On Rt. 7 across rom
Betty's Carryout Wed. and
T hurs.

wed . and Thurs. Only

PAY highest price s
posstble tor gold and sllve r
1

too smal l. 949·2379 .
W1ll mow grass . Paul
Pearm. Pomeroy Middlep·
orl area . 992-7590.
13

Lots

contacl Ed Burkett Barbe r
Shop. Middleport.
Piano

Tuning

Daniels 742-2951.

Lan e

Tunln g

and Repair Service sine e
1965. It no answer phon e

992·2082.

'

Save Money! Now you ca n

teach your children or
adults to play golf in
prlvale. John Teaford 61 4·
98S·J&lt;/61
BAL L.
9· 1.
Royal Oak Lodge Joe
Lavlnger
and
t~ e
Tunetimers.
T i cke ts
available al: Simons PIC k·
a· Palr, 992·3830; Chamber
Office, 992·5005; New Yo rk
Clothing House, 992·2049.
Regatta -FROG

Saturday,

4

June

28,

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

0 f children's clothing, 212

Rock St. 4th righl turn off
Spring Ave . Follow
s rgns. Odds and ends,

992·2143

Finane Ia!

13

at 876 South Third Ave .
9 3.
BEAT HIGH PRICES at
T hrift Shop. Gigantic In·
ven tory 305 N. Second
A ve ., Middleport. Open
wed .· Sat.9·4.

I N·
can ·

celled?
Lost
your
operator' s license? Phone

y ard Sale will be held June

coins, rings, jewelry, etc

Deluxe F ord fiberglass top
per to t1t eight toot bed

Business
Opportunity

2
l

Future Heirloom

Call 992·7201
J and F Backhoe Service
LICensed and bonded Sep
tic tank installation Water
and gas lrnes Excavatmg
work and trans rt layout
Call992 7201.

Loan never repay ,
details, A . L . Lutton,

•.; l i

Large tra ct

Pomeroy .

Drtch drgging servr ce. Cal l

773 5839 or 773 5788 .

Large Garage Sale. Lett
from an Estate ot Mrs
Allen Brewer. Stiversville,
June 12, 13, 14, Thurs , Fri ,

Sat. Turn at foot ot Stiver·
sville Hill . Watch for signs.

Public Sale
8------------

&amp; Auction
----------BRADFORD, Auctioneer,

Giveaway
Complete Service. Phone
-~ -----· 1973 356 Massey Ferguson 949·24117 or 949·2000. racine.
Ohio, Crill Bradford.
1nloader. 992·3681.

bdr, , bath 1h

••

36

Homes for Sale

NEW 3 or 4 Bed r oom home,
21fz baths , r ec room,

consider renting.

Real Estate

fir e pla c e ,

garage

At Mornmg Star

Hts ., Lee Construction, 992 ·
3454 or 992 ·5455.

5310
Luxur1ous large modern
country
home .
Pool,
acreage pr rvate. 3 d1git
c l ass ,
tn
Pomeroy ·
Ga llipol rs area For appt

caii992·76BO.
6 rooms,
1 1f:~
baths,
paneled, carpeted, garbage
d rsposal, ~form windows,
doors, exc. window air con ditiOner, f1n1shed basement
w·bar , tile bath w shower
Reasonable . 115 Ebeneezer
St 992 5566
Beautiful large home . Low
ut rltt1es, bnck ran ch style,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
fireplace, full basement,
family room , air con·
drt1oner, 3 car garage .
Baum Addil ron , M eigs

County Call985 4169
3 Bedroom brick ranch.
Tuppers Plains. 11h bath,

built in

kitchen.

lull

basement with wood stove,
large garage . Big lot w ith
nrce garden spot. S52,000 .

667 3288
8
Pet .
Assumpt 10n ,
Beautiful large bri ck ranch
style, low ut rlities, 3
bedrooms,
211:1 baths,
f1replace, full basement,
famtly room, air con·
drtioner, 3 c ar garage
Baum Addtt1on, Me r g~ Co.

985 4169
8 Room Two Story Home ,
1112 garage, barn on 2112
acres of levelland . 11f2 mile

up St Rt 143 Off Rt . 7 by
pass $25,000. 992-3857
'
Older House, partly
remodeled with large lot in
handy localion . In Tuppers

Pla ins. Pri ced to sell 985
3353

NEW LISTING- 3 BR
home on 21t2 acres of
land . 3 miles below Mid·

7577

fxtAeu'B~
Frohck1ng lambs k1ttens. puppy
add c~a~m~ng touch to covetlet
EASY filet etochet covetlet
th;t s su•e to be&lt;:ome a lam1ly
he11loom Ctochet squares sepa13tely lot p1llowtops. p1ctures or
panel. Pattetn 7577 dHect1ons.
charts, covetlel 4!x55".
$1.75 for each paltetn Add 501
each pattetn 101 IHst-class all
ma~l and handlmg Send lo:
Alice BIOIIIos
fteedleet1ft Dept
~
The DaBy SenUoel
Box 163, Old Chelsu St.., New
Ycttll, Nf 10011. Pnnt Name,
Address, Zip, Pattem Number.
EXCITING' New 1980 NH DLE·
CRAFT CATALOG w1th "'" 170
designs 1n great vauety ol C13ftS
3 ltei! pattems InSide Send $1 00
132-Qullt Drilioab
. $1.50
131-Add a Bloct Quilts ... $1.50
130-Swuftts.Sim 31-56 .$1.50
129-Quid/Easy Ttanslets .$1.50
121-l'atchwlttll Quilts . .. $1.50
127-AIP.ns •n• Dailies ... $1.50
126-Crafty Rowers . . $1.50
125-Pet.l ~ilts . . . . .. •$1.50
124-Gifts 'n OtNments .. $1.50
123-Stilth 'n' Palth Quilb$1.50
122-SiuH 'n' PuH Quilts . $1.50
121-Pillew Show-Oils ... . $1.50
120-(nrchot a W.rdtobe .. $1.50
119-Rowe• Cnrchet
$1.50
lii.Cntelltt with Squares. $1.50
116-Nifly Fifty Quilts ... $1.50
115-Ripple Crochet
.. $1.50
114-Comptele Afpans .. . $1.50
112-Prin Afabans . . .. $1.50
107-lnsllnt Snin1 .. ... . $1.50
105-lnst.nt Cnrchet.
$1.50
102-Museulll Quilts ... $1.50
101-Quilt CoiiKtion ... $1.50

Money to LOan

OOWNINGOULDS
INC '
... - AGENCY
.
:*!*r\*\*\**~* .
_INSUIIANCE .
: MONEY • MONEY l SERVING SOUTHEASTERft OHIO SINCE 1868,
A.RE YOU PAYING. TOO MUCH? DCf
*First mortgages;~
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?
. 1

¢second mortgages,~
,.and
refinanceJII
•h:ases. Call Com~:
:plete
Mortgag ,..
~Services
i ,.:
~Gallipolis, Ohio at~
*444·1517 for more*
*information and*
Jtrour appoiotm.ent.

FOR Au YOUR- INSURANCE
NEED~
- -CALL US.

992-2342
·DOWNING-CHILDs AGENGY.
MIDDLfPORT, OHIO

nic.

··

dleport off Rt 7. Also
trailer hookup for addt·
tiona11ncome.

NEW LISTING-1 floor
plan, 3 or
home, nice
chen With
.oven on

4 bedroom
bullt·rn kit·
rang e and
Rt . 7 in

Pomeroy , Oh .
2 BEDROOM COT·
TAGE · SOl.O . rust off
Route 7
BUSINESS B-UILDING

:l

rear

~!' E. S.J:Ona str..t
Phone
':(t1_4).:_?92:~3_2i
80ACRE FARM - GPQd
10 room house with
balh . lots ot good
buildings. Land Is about
halt fenced Md T.P.
water available. Good
laying land for subdlvi·

1n

downtown
Rutland, 0., approx. 10

years

old .

Use

as

business or convert to
living quarters. See to
appreciate.

NEW LISTING- 3 BR
cottage wrth 2 acres of
quiet countryside . 5
minutes from Mid ·

dleport, 0 .
3 BEDROOM HOME Carpeted and paneled.
on Vrne Street in
Racine, very clern,
ready to move Into. Nrce
lev~l lot. Will also con·
sider rent1ng.

1 ACRE IN MIDDLE·.
PORT - 4 room cot·

and

bed r

Fleetwood, 14x65 3

sewer

&amp;

lot that Is 64'x238' . Out
of all fiPQds . Asking
$30,000,
A BREAK HAS COME
IN INTEREST RATES,
BUY WHILE YOU
CAN, WE NOW HAVE
SOME REAL NICE
PROPERTIES'.

porch , 7/ 8 acre near
Harr1sonv rlle . $1.4,500. 992·
5970 before 12 or after 5
General

HOBSTffiER
. REALTY · ··

Housmg
Headquarters

r

'

carport and workshop,·

a

situated on 20 acres with;
a good barn. On Co. Rd.•
13, Asklng$49.500.00.
;
ACREAGE -185 acres, .

·~
~I

-

'f

:I
•I
:I

Jt

bedroom, total electric :
home. Off New Lima ~

Rd., call tOday .
:
MEIGS HI - Lovely J ,

I

~·

bedroom home on near· ~
ly an acre Selling price ,

$39,900.00.
' !IRICK- Beautiful bl .;
level, 3 oedrooms. 2112
baths, living room, din· :
ing room, very nice kit ~
chen
with
bullt· in ~
miCrowave,
family .
room wrth fireplace, 2112
car garage, situated on •
corner with approx. 4

acres . Only $69,000
SYRACUSE Nice
remodeled home, 3
bedroom, 11v1ng room,
dining room, large kit·

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

't
·I
.I

1

Service Station for lease

$300

investment required. Good
location with good potentral
for sharp
aggress1ve
operator . For interview

record a must . Substanl1al

call Mr . Adams, 1·304·375·
41193, B 30 a .m .·4 p.m M·F

) Announcement
J For Rent

Furn. for rent in Chester,
carpeted,
newly

51

remOdeled, full basement,
prefer to rent to worker or
establiShed
person,

ditioner, new $425. 985·4323
after 5p.m.

~

1.

2.

5•·

I
I
I

f1

13.
14.
15.
' , : 16.

:!l i
li
t•

• •

7891 .

~

~

l
I
I

ite m $2,800 Must se ll 992·
5190.

Trucks for Sale
1974 Ford Pl &lt;;kup, 6 cyl., 3
speed $900. 992·5057

12

Truck for Sale B Model
Mack tractor. E xcellent
cond1tron Call 992·7354 af·
ter 7

e ANNDUNCEME ~TS

61

Farm Equipment

BUILDINGS
SPRING
CLeARANCE!! All steel
clear

span

buildtngs

30x4Bx12 tor $3,672 ;
40x4Bx 14 for $4,496 .
48x72x14 for $6,594 ,
60xl25x16 for $15,447 F B
Factory . Call collecl9 a m
to 8 p.m . 614·294·2675

bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J . A Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH 592·
6462.
GOLD
AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD .
RINGS.
JEWELRY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP · TO DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIO , OR CALL 992·3476 .

41-Piooma
..,_SPICt for Rtnl

3'12 fl . by 7ft. ut1ilty
992·3726

---~-

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
,,_ ,.,m IIIUIPflltnt

-··ly
.......

62-WMtMiteiUY
72-Truckl.., hit

~., .....

.,_Livettodl
...,_..ey&amp;Oreln

•s-s..a a lltrfiHltr

"

eTRANSPORTATIDN
J1-A•t.a .... hit

eREALESTATE

7J-Vanl &amp; 4 W.D.
74-M...,.CYCtti

Jt-HomH tor lllel

Jt-Mobflt+femfl
for Sate

1~

Aula ft•rh

11-M..,.eiMprtYtftltfttl

l]W

STIU PAYING

On any Chevy or
GM true~ . align·
ment by
Randy
Carpenter, factory
ftrained
frontend I
I alignment
spe·l
cialist.

1

FOR
SILVER
DOUARS
949-2801

I LANDMARK I

N-e~&amp;Avefl,..

-Free Estimates
-Interior &amp; Extp.rior

Work.
949·2686
5 23·1 mo

STAnON!
Ca II I614 I 992-9932
•-·-·-P-o.m._e,:»~ ~ __

I

81

school

-CLUB REPAIRPlaying items. clubs,
bags, balls, shoes ~ carts,
1. Professtonal teaching
certificate.

2. Played professional
tournaments rn Ohio, W.

Va ., Kentucky .
• JOHN TEAFORD
614·985·3961
6·3·1 mo .

Home
Improvements

If you want to buy a cam·
per and you want to k.now

the pr ice on this beauty, it

Rooting, Sldrng, room ad
dltions, all types of general
repairs, 25 vears exp. 992

is

3406 .

low . 1978

and tub $4.000. 698 8218 or
69~ · 8219 .

FLOORING.

ce iling ,

paneling, doors and win
dows. also parnt!ng Call

lEes

Home
Improvements

EMcavating

Water well dnlling

Lewis

Tom

304· 895 · 380 2.

S &amp; G Urpet Cleaning
Steam cleaned .
Free
estJ mate .
Reasonable

Seasonal discount on all
pumps and accessories.

rates. Scotchguard . 992
6309or742·2211

84

lay

GOOD SUPPLY
SHRUB$
&amp; TREES
20% OFF
POMEROY
LANDMARK

high

students."

J

Camping

concrete,

lor

31711 Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
992-5724
Sales, service and sup-plies. In ground and
above ground PQOis.
5·1·tfc

Equ1pmenr

very, very

GOLF LESSt•NS

Beginning &amp; Advanced
"Scholarships possible

11'12% lnterest-30 Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic
Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing
Loans, 3% down on
$25,000; 5% down on

SEWING
Repairs ,

MACH I NE
serv1ce ,

al l

makes . 992 2284
The
Fabr ic Shop, Pomeroy

MAINTENANCE

balance. FHA ~65 Subsidy Program . FHA 245Gradual Payment Mort.
Open M-W-F 9:00 to 1:00
Other Times
By Appointment
Office 992-7544
Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore St.
OH .

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

HOME

BS
General Hauling
WILL HAUL limes tone and
gravel. Also, lime haulrng
t~nd spread ing . Leo Morrrs
Trucking . Phone 742·245S

AI Tromm

f4nstruction
742·2328
~5-tfc

Upholstery

87

A&amp;H Upholstering

" Now

Re Upholster~ng
Car
Seats" Ph . 992 l752 or 992·
3743.

Authorized Singer Sales
and Service We sharpen
Scissors .

ELWOOD
R EPA I R

BOWERS
Sweepers,

toasters, rrons, all small
appl rances. Lawn mower .
Next to State Highway

Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

The Gravely 30-inch rowy mower cuts

8S

General Hauling

L r vestock
anywhere ,

Haultng,
anypla c e,

anytime . 30 yrs. exp. 1·593·
8883 collecl

right through the toughest grass and weeds
and does a good job on your lawn as well.
The mower is tough, Wlthall-geardtreet
drive, all-steel deck and antt-scalping
roller. The tractor is also all-gear driven.
Call us for a free demonstration.

a Rtfflftratklft
I.

· u-a Merat HtU!Itftt

" Drive A l.ittle Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKEO

N-M.H.R.,.Ir

17-U!IMistetY

............
, a...

Colh

33.~--~-

--::--

CARPET
2 black padded
Clio,...

..us..
I.H

Ul

. ...

••ch..,.. enr lht mlnlmvm llwerliltll-4 cents...,. wont 'er ..y.
Alh ruflnlnt ....,r ttt.en cannc~o~thrt dllys will W cfNir.... •t ttw 1 My

,

lrr m.,..wy, Cerd llf TheM" aM C*ltvery r f
ltllltlmuM. CaM 1ft Mvanu.

~GRAVELY.

CARPET SHOP

,._.tedrkall

Rates and Other lnform•tion

etfth,., ..,.., J3.11

MMtM tt.me utH.,.. Y~N Ultl ere ece.tMII e~~ty wltttultl wltfl
Hs cer,.i"'' . .Ill NuftiW 1rr cere ofT~
ltttHMI.

eN,... ..,

Roller, Brush and Spray
Work.
-Fully Insured

etc.

MosTDates
No Sunday Calls
~- 9 · 1 mo.

CANDY STRIPED

.,...,, 11 Ctftt

1

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES
THE POOL PEOPLE;

S2CJII &amp; UP

1

78

Gheen's
Painting
&amp;
Sandblasting Co!

Discount

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

12-,..luml*tl I lxcevetlne

ISWtniiiN"UI'Hitr

II

Racine, Oh.

Ph . 614-843·2591
5·14·1 mo.

4-2·11&lt;

.SERVICES

Want·Ad Advertising
Dud fines

80)( 729

Rl. J, Box S4

We service what we sell.

~RNIIs..teWented
J7-RNitwl

4 ,..M . O.lly
12 NMn hNt'UY
ferMtftNY

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

This Coupon
Worth

Main St.
Pomeroy 992·2181

&amp; Accnaorift
n-Avteae_.jlr

P-,ern11 for S.le
M-IUII""I lulltll"fl
JJ-Lott&amp;Ac,.....

Sizes from 4•4 to 12x40

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LO~A '(IQN
0111 e. Main
Pomeroy, Oh.
992·3795

block and bnck . Call 992
3406

M-Pttl tor lelt

JJ-~rotn••••

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The D•llv Sentinel

.

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

M-MIIc. MwcHndlst

21--MOMY to LNn

--

Auto Repair

77

•MERCHANDISE

S5-1UIIdlnt s.,.ltl

•FINANCIAL

Si1es
"From 30x30"

Utility Buildings

Tri-Courlty
Bookkeeping
Service

tra~ler .

Wil l pour

J)-l•••r•nce
1,._1usln"s Trelnlttl
ACIRt~Nir

- ---

Farm Buildings

Auto Parts

4t-Rqulpment for IMit

52-(:1, TV, hello IQUipment
ss-Antiqun

RMIIo, TV

ALL STEEL

- s-..

83

J1-H.vNMkl 000111

11-WentR Te De

. JS.

5-29·1 mo .

Rutland, o.
Ph. 742·2455
21 - 1-

14 Ft. Aluminum v·shaped

ser

15-kMotllltltniCfton

, 3(....::: -

POMEROY , O
992-62H o
99Hl14
1·28·1 mo .

'MORRIS

Boats and

tamed and awning, shower

,,_"..,w.m•
12-lltuetell Wentttl

I!

V. C. YQUNG Ill

LEO

Motors for Sale

47-W•ntH to Rtnl

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

--~-~ !1

' (FREE ESTIMATES)

SMALL

Wilderness 23 fl . fully con·

eRENTALS

J-HI,YAtill

I Auctl•
11--WamNloBIQI

31.
32. _,__ _ _ _

vans &amp; 4 w.o.

7S

Wanted to Buy

41-HCMIMI for Rent
U-MobUt HOII'Itl
forR.nt
44-Apartmet~l for Ret~t

~~bllcl•l•

' 30.

and

&amp; Accessories

1-carct of Ttle11111
2-ln MtmOrlem
)-Anntltnctmtntl
4-Qiw. . .ey

v.

do• •

wor•,
walks
driveways.

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOP
e V-CHISEl.
PLOW

1974 Jeep CJ5 $1 ,900 949
2545

81

2:1-

work,

spouts , some concrere

Eugene Loog (614) 843-3322
Superior Vinyl Prof!ucts

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

16-

Gutter

Serving your area for 25 rears.
Call Now for Large Savings
For Free Estimate Call

992·2759.

6-Lnt •M f'louncl
7- Yenl hit

28.
29.

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

1965 Mustang, 6 cyl. , 3
speed, body perfect, no
rusr. 25 mpg . Collector' s

76

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

1:

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

VINYL SIDING

992·

motor. Sears heavy duty

PHONE 992-2156

••
I'

$950

trailer. 742·2656.

WANT AD INFURMAnON

li
I'

mil eage

hull boat. 9'12 Evinrude h p

l t t;::==~;;;;;:;;±;:::;====::J

26:

.

I· 10: - - - - - f
I I I 11 .
I , 12.

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US ACAU

53
A~tlques
ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check

767 3167 or 557 3411.

2.4.
25.

I ' 7.
I s.
I. 9.

•,

18,000 BTU Amana air con·

guns, pocket watches and

22.
23.

' . 6.

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Over 100 acres,
could oe housing deveiOP"1ent - gas already drill ·,
ed, on property water lines close. All mineral rights
gowltn properly . Also Timber ready to be cut. Calli

Household Goods

coin collections . Call 614·

20.

, ; 3.

LOTS - Bordering Pomeroy. 1 to 75 acres .
'POMEROY - 3 BR home, city water. vinyl siding •
on lit. 33 . ~14,900 .
·

Black 5 month old male
Poodle. AKC reg1stered.
S50 . 992·3618.

deposit

21.

'

Low

ches, class rings, wedding

17.
18.
19.

J wanted
J For Sale

1971 F ord P rckup with top·

OLD COINS, pocket wat·

41

required. $195 a monlh .
Call 1·866·1731. Will be
shown by appolntmenl,
Sat, June 14 from 2-5.

I ~=====::::::::::+.:==--::.::=====::::+==========

per. 6 cyl., std., B tt. bed .

73
Registered male walker
coon hound Will run and

62

Phone ______________

1:

storage bldg , $37 ,000.

Pomeroy

Associates

and

Call Howard
949·2862
?49·2160
1·22-ttc

Registered Quarter Pony

I'

1:

lot, ioomfor garden, well landscaped . Carport &amp;

monthly .

Roger &amp; oonle Turner
742·2474
Jean Trussell, 949·2660
Full Time
Office Phone 992-2259

references

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

Au los for Sale
1973 Dats un. 4 spe_e d . Good
m ileage. $230. Call 992·3149
or 992 2705 .

11

Gelding . 2 yr . old, show

1973 JS6 Massey Ferguson
end·l&lt;&gt;ader. 992 3681.

For Lease

49

Addreu...__ _ _ _ _~....... I

t.

GOOD STARTER HOME - 3 BR, kil., LR , DR, &amp;
fam1lyroom with wpodburnlng stove on good size

Portland Grade School $50
and $60 per month. 1·304·
273 3623.

t

~

lJP and 1/2 bath on main floor . Manoy exira nice
features in quiet area . Asking $57,500 .

Tuesday, emergency calls
only .

Trailer Lots for rent In
Great Bend area new
bndge site and acros from

area . Good credit and work

Pomeroy, Oh.-45769

,_

2 story. 5

and
beautiful.
$22,300.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
992·6191

I
I
I Print one word In each
t space below. Each In·
1 ltlal or group of ligures
f counts as a word. Count
and address or
I name
phone number If used.
I You'll get bener results
I If you describe fully,
1 give price. The Senllnel
·1 reserves the rlghl to
edit or reject
I classify,
any ad. Your ad will be
I put In the proper
,I classlflcalion If you'll

r.I'

992

$30 per

46
Space tor Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33, North ot
Pomeroy. Large lois. Call
992 ·7479.

J!

'I

,.

required

lree 949·2545

utility .

Write your ·own ad and order by mall with this
coupOri, cancel your ad by phone when you get
resulls. Money not refundable .

I
I

NEW LISTING - Overlooking Oh io River &amp; ~ ,,ser
Alum . Plant, 3 lg . BR's, plenty of closels. full base·
f'(lent &amp; family room. on 3 beautiful acres. Asking
$65.000.
TRAILER - 2 BR, on nice lot, small outbuildings
tor storage. on au let street . $10,500
COULD BE YOUR DREAM HOME - 2 story with
dble. garage, home Includes 3 BR 's with large bath

Room

remodeled,

. ~below.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

Furnished Rooms

992 ·6022.

baths,

cleanjng and painting.
All work guaranteed.

* N~w homes • ex·
tensive remodeling
* E lectrica I works
*Masonry work
12 Years
E)(perience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
5·15·1 mo.

furn,shed.

bedrooms,

•f lcheck the proper box

General

6260 , noon· 7 p.m ., except

week or SlOO per month

Save I-TT

'I

on VanZandt Rd1, some•
minerals. Call for info. :

Boarding, all breeds . Clean
indoor -outdoor factl!tres

2 Bedroom Apartment 1n

house on 3;_.. A. with S

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Claulflads and

NEW LISTING- Nice 7,
room home, 2 baths.-

KENNELS .

Deposit $50. 949·2875.

Nothing too large. Also,

Broker

HILLCREST

Also
AKC
regiSiered
Dobermans. 614 446· 7795.

tibles or entire estates.

PHONE 742·2003

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor . 614·367·7220

CONSTRtJCnON

ROOFING
All types of roof work,
new or repair gutters
·and downspouts, gutter

Pets for Sale

45

2

2nd . Middl eport, OH. 992·
31 61 .

1978 R.abb
G a sol! ne
powered
Call' t949·2273.

for antiques and collec·

Georges. Hobslener Jr :

Call Jimmy Deem, Associale 949·2318
or Nancy Jaspers, Associate 949·26S4

Plants, Tomaro, cucumber,
flowers , hanging baskets,
pots Cleland Greenhouse,
Gera ldine Clell!lnd , Ra cine ,

ROUSH ·

H. L WHITESEL

In

HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a homeless pet
Healthy, s~ots. wormed

Sleeping

F UR ·

N IT URE , g lass, Ch 1na,
anything See or ca11 Ru th
Gosney, antiQues, 26 N.

Quisenberry Build'"g, Rt.
124. I Formerly Goldies)
992·5205.

S6

A;pt.

Business Services

Clothing

Items

remOdelinQ, large lot.
$16,200
CHESTER - B room

end Dad, over an acre of

bath , furn iShe d, 8x l4 tronl

for more Information.

Used

Household

4· H project. Call Karen
Griffith, 992 5782 atler 5
p.m .

rooms built on, plus 12
acres land, secluded

CENTER
Nice J
bedroom , 1112 bath ,
ranch style home. For
Mom a stepsaver kit·
chen with formal dining ,

Bdr .

Real Estale

CHE ' S)

7.

hunting ara. S23,900.00.
LANGSVILLE - 10 yr .
old mobile home w1th 2

$3 ,500,
SALEM
AREA

2

Ph. 742-2003
General

Open in Syracuse {PAT·

floor plan, 2 bedrooms,
some carpeting and

acres, pasture, woods,
and building sites Good

near .

gas, and on sewer.
Would
you believe

1965 Yanor 12x52. 2 bedr .

Ph. 742·30'12

Real Estate

6342 or 992·2583 .

Apartment

utilit1es paid, no drunks
Sleeping room for rent.
John Sheets, Jlh mtles

repair. $8,000.00.
PORTLAND- About 56

lots, city water, natural

bedroom

Branch Mgr.
PhOI'e 991· 111ii9A

hookup,

A NTI Q U ES .

Oh.

3 Rm.

equipped

rooms, 1112 baths, lots of
storage, needs some

home in Pomeroy with 2

1971 Shakespear , 14x65 2

· reduced to $8,000.
TAKING LISTINGS! .,
Hobart Dillon. BrokeriFay Manley

trailer

Decorated cake s for all oc
cas ions . Chara cter cakes
and s heel cakes. Call 992

prospect, started under
saddle and harness. Super
disposition, make excellent

basement.
$17,500.
IN TOWN -

Located In Pomeroy.
Want $24,500.
NEW LISTING 2
bedroom
repairable

2

chen, utll1ty and garage.
Situated on nice lot. Sell·
ing prlce$28,000.
GIVE US A CALL
OAYOR EVENING.

tage,

lo OhiO Pall et Co. Rl 2.
Po meroy 992 ·2689 .

South of Middleport on Rt

downstairs

sion .

12 x63,

porch,

CHIP WOOD Poles max.

Second Ave .. M1ddlepor1,
992·2751 .

D, co Daily Sentinel,
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Middleport. 1·304·882·2566

Should VA or FHA.
$28,000 00.
MIDDLEPORT -

14x65 2

NICE

d rameter 10" on la rgest
end Sl 2 p er ton. Bund led
slab. $10 per ron . Del 1ver ed

Donations

kitchen, washer, dryer.

17 ACRES - Wllh water

Cameron . 14x65,

EXTRA

MAY 23 to June 30, J09'o ott
greenware sale Bring a
container. 9 a. m. 10 9 p m.
Orehel ' s Cer am ics 59 N

2 Bedroom furnished apl

stone cottage on approx .
1112 A., w .b.f.p., enclosed

gas, ctty water, large
basement, garge, and

REAL ESTATE

monlh.

$150 plus ut ilities, or S50
week,
utilities
pard .

REDUCED! - Eastern
district - J bedroom

1973 3 bedroom, 1 complete

DILLON

$160

Manor apts Call 992· 7787

new metal roof on ap·
prox. '12 acre. $9,000.00.

I

1971

Real Estate

Gener111

992·225?
NEW LISTING - Com
mercial40x60 glazed tile
building with double
floor and full basement.

General

1969

General

preferred .

Send inquiries to Box 729

Senior Cltrzens in Village

wOOded land. All this for
iusl$29,500.
RACINE - One floor
ranch style 3 bedroom
home with bath, natural

Real Estate

2 Bedroom . 1'12 balhs,
house tra iler. Working per·
sons or retrred persons

Estate of

1976 Holly Park Brown and
w hr te In exc cond Must
see to apprecrate (can b~
seen don Hrgh St , Mid·
dleport). c entr al arr, por
c h, underpinn rng 992·6375 '

ning 992 2881.

2 Bedroom Mobile Home,
turn1shed kllchen, elderly
couple preferred Deposit
required. No pets. 992·2749.

RENTER ' S assistance for

a1r, deep f eeze, partly fur
nished, all underpinned
and blocks Lol rt se ts on
can be rented . $7. 500 992
5057 or 992·6057

Hollypark Trailer
Fur ·
nished, a.c , washer, m eta l
out ·bu1ld1ng, under pin

basement ,

Home. Adults only. 992 ·
3324.

3 AND 4 RM turn1s~ed ap
ts. Phone 992·5434.

•

32

2 Oedroom

MObile '

for Rent

•

S MOBILE HOME
SALE S. PT . PLEA SANT.
w v 304-1&gt;7 5 4424

12x60,

Bedroom

Administratrix of the

Real Estate

1972 Indy Mobil e Home

31

Real Estale
Wanted

Wanled to buy on land con·
tract . 1'12 bath or 2 bath
home. j$500. down and $300
per month. 992·6022. would

•

1968

Mobile Homes

high

Two

Teaford Realty . 992·3325.

Deceased

Fa irpo'"t,

Fl ee twood

of

water . Can be financed .

Ida M. Christie,

1973

1971

Out

in

Edna N. Wood,

Room House on ap
proximately 2 acr es. St . Rt
124. Lois of extras. 992 7255

12 'X 60 '. Frreplace, central

!
----------- ~***********"':
-r.

middle $40,000. 992-5792 or
992 2606 for appl.

for Sale

t r"t-..·
P 0 . Box 766. GallipoliS.
Oh.

22

bedr oo m

land

and place aforesaid .

tor Sale

CompleTely red ecor ated
older home Very nice
locat1on •n Mrddleport 3
bedrooms
an d
ful l
basement Owner askr ng

of

for Rent

by the Common
Pleas Court, Probate
Division. All interested
bidders be at the time

Mobile Homes

32

Homes tor Sale

B

YARD SALE : Mlddleporl,
75 Elm St .• June 11 , 12, 13,
10? Sewrng machine, jeans
all sizes, baby clothes and
nick·nacks.

31

B

ting , also barn roofs No 10b

clean, reasonable

Announcements

Situations Wanted

Wi II do odds and ends
Panel rng, floor t1le, and
ceiling tile
Call Fred

~-

0t

3

Help Wanted

GET VALUABLE training
a sa young busmess person
a nd earn good money pi us
s ome great gifts as a Sen ·

4 Family Garage Sale June
12 13. Tuppers Plams. Ar
ba ugh Addn 9 4 Children's
c lothmg all srzes, men's
s Uits lrke new, Avon bol
II es, toys, m1sc .

Professional
Serv1ces

Carpeted 5 room house 1n
Bradbury Has modern kit·
chen and bath, garage, car
port, 2 utility bl dgs and
garden space . Across from
WMPO Srgn in yar d. 992·

syracuse, corner of College

County

Headstart Parent Com
m1ttee, e)(tend our sincere
g ratitude to the busmess
c ommun1ty for the ex·
t ensive support during the
past year It has been
Ihrough your generosity
I hat the children in the
Head Start Program have
r eceived many extras , lrke
0 ur
holiday
part1es,
e specially the large Christ·
mas
celebra1 r on,
e nlightening field tnps,
e ducatronal toys and last
b ut
not
least
our
g raduat1on on June 9th and
1Oth Again, we thank you
0 n behalf of our children,
t or w•thout your assistance
we could not have ac·
c omplished so much.

Board of Education

ot Meigs Local
School District

3

R oad and 124. June 9 14, 10
a m till dark .

- ····· · ~····----···

WILL BUY Old Iran
s missJons , batteries ,
eng rnes, or scrap metals,
e lc Caii245 ·91BB .

g lasses

( 61

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

10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,
g old . Denial gold ahd gold
e ar p•ns 675·3010.

LOST . Dog 5 months old,
m ale, named Tony . Part
E lk Hound and German
s hepherd Lost on
K1ngsbury Rd. Co Rd .
18 .992 5629
evenings
L ook s 11 k.e
he wears

M OVl NG

11. lB. 25 171 2, 9. 16. 23.
30 (8 1 6, 91c

Write M . D. Miller, Rf 4,
p omeroy, OH 1 or ca II 992·
7760 .

LOST . White gold ladies
d ress watch wrth srlver
c ord band
Sliver an·
n 1versary g III from
h usband
Sent1mental
value. Pomeroy Moddlepo·
r area 992 2469 .

c harter Number 16859

Elementary

School,
Harrrsonv li le
Elementary Gymnasium
and Salisbury Elementary
Gymnasium . Bidders w111I
be bidding on the rn
stallation of the Trocal o r
built·up rooting system. AI I
roofs to be brd separately ,
Detailed specrfication s
and instructions to bidder s

. 1301

Ball Park Thurs.
n IQht, Reward . Any 1nfo.
ca 11667·3639

Yard Sale
FAm1ly' Yard

23

l ron and brass beds, old
f urniture , desks , gold
r ings, 1ewelry, srlve r
d ollars, sterling , etc , wood
Ice boxes, antiQues, etc.
c omplete
household s

syracuse1

7

Wanted to Buy

9

Washington, D. c.

WHEREAS satiSfactory

Sealed proposals will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Me1g s

Middleporl

Lost and Found

Mobile Homes

Lots &amp; Acreilge

112 ~ ~ ~~a~ l!d- t!f[ui_ =_.=_

~---

3 Bedroom Home, Riggs
Crest Manor . $32S. month.
985 4323 alter 5 p.m
42

3S

5-4- - M.Sc.-M erchanlse
--- - - - -

Said sales must be con-

'"
6

Houses tor Rent

t~rmed

For Good Buys Shop The Sentinel Classifieds
Pub! ic NOtiCe

41

for: boat, motor and fraile r .

•

Public Not1ce

Mobile Homes
for Sale

MOBILE HOME · 45XB.
Will sell tor $2,000 or trade

by the department smce Ca rter an·
nounced the sales suspension Jan. 4.

Comparatively, the government's
pnce support loan rate for 1980 corn
currently is $2.10 a bushel; wheat,
$2.50 a bushel ; soybeans, $4.50 a
bushel; and cotton, 48 cents a pound.

Gener•l

Sq. Yd.

$499

VINYL FLOOR
COVERINGS
Sq. Yd.$499

JUNE CARPET SAL£
ALL CARPET AT DISCOUNT PRICES
Any r~t~~uLir carpet jobs lnstolled with tree pad.
Nice Selection o
arpet
.Linoleum Remnants at Bl

emnants an
Discounts.

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Main St.

742·2211

t.

·50" Mower when
you buy a
Riding Tractor

FitEEIIJ

30" Mower when
you buy •
W•Iklng T·r1ctor ·

MANNING ROUIIII.

�\4 - !1leDailySenUnei,Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 11,1980

15 - The Daily Sentinel, Mi!ltiJe:~~~~-~~,~~~;Y~,;o~.•~~~~Y: June 11, 1980
Re•l Est1te

WASHINGTON (AP) - A new
study showing another sharp Ill·
crease in fanners ' production costs
this year is expected to help stir up
further calls for the Carter ad·
mJnistration to boost federal price
supports for key crops such as wheat
and com.
The cost figures were reported
Tuesday at a White House meeting
by Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland to Vice President Walter
s F. Mondale and to Stuart E. EIZenstat, presidential assistant for
domestic affairs and policy.
A summary of the report that
Bergland delivered to the White
House - which was also was sent to
agncultural committees of Congress
- showed that casts ·per acre of
producing the major crops are
proJected to climb 18 percent to 26
percent, compared with an average
hike of 17 percent in 1979.
Fanners have complamed of
nsmg costs and declining profits for
months, and Agriculture Depart·
ment
economists
have
acknowledged that net farm income
in 1980 could decline at least 25 per·
cent from last year.
Bergland said m an interview
following the meeting that the
figures confirmed " what everybody
In the gram busmess already knew"

Study
pes ult

•

,

•

stzr Up
calls

about spiraling production costs, ad·
ding they were no great surprise to
Mondale and Eizenstat.
" They had been forewarned that
these numbers were going to be
rather unpleasant news," Bergland
said. " The report was simply to m·
form them. We have not proposed
any legislative remedies."
Bergland added, however, that he
and farm leaders In Congress are
looking ir1 the possibility of boosting
some federal price support loan
rates ·as a way to help farmers offset
at least part of nslng production
costs. But he said this would be dif·
ficult because m seeking a balanced
federal budget, any increase in one
program would require offsetting
reductions in others.
Loan rates are how much farmers
can borrow from the government by
using their crops as collateral. In ef·
feet, they provide a " floor price" for
commodities sold on the open
market.
The new figures show production
expenSes rising this year by 20 per·
cent to 40 percent from 1979, depen·
ding on the crop and where it IS
grown, Bergland said.
"All of 11 (the increase) is
chargeable to fuel and-&lt;&gt;r interest
charges, directly or mdirectly," he
said. "The fuel penalty comes not

only in the cost of diesel fuel, but m
the costs of fertilizers and pesticides
- which are energy-based - and
freight rate increases, of course, are
added to the farm input costs. "
Bergland said the riSing production costs are hitting gram
producers pa•ticularly hard. Wheat
and com, along with the oilseeds,
are the major U.S. grains both as a
foundation of human and animal
food and for export to foreign countries.
Com ts the largest and most important U.S. grain since it's is the
bas is for most animal feed used to
produce meat, milk, poultry and
eggs for American consumers.
The report, prepared by USOA:s
Economics,
Statishcs
and
Cooperatives Serv1ce, looked at
farm production costs in two ways costs of producing an acre of a crop
and costs translated m units of har·
vests, such as bushels per acre.
For example, the analysis projected corn costs In 1980 at $215.13 per
acre planted, compared w1th $173.49
estimated for 1979.
The 1979 average corn y1elds are
known. Therefore the U.S. cost of
producing a bushel of corn last year,
according to the report, was $1.59 a
bushel.
But the 1980 crop ts months from

harvest , so y1elds were estimated in
a range r eflecting " trends" of
r ecent years. On that basis, this
year's corn productton costs could
be between $2 and $2.35 a bushel,
depending on final yields, the report
said.
In the same manner, wheat
production costs this year could be
between $3.31 and $3.79 a bushel,
compared wlth$2.741n 1979.
The soybean costs were projected
at $4.37 to $4.89 a bushels, up from
$3.591ast year; and cotton, 72.4 to 88
cents a pound, compared with 59.9
cents a pound m 1979.

The suspension affected the
delivery to the Sovtet Uruon of about
10 million metric tons of corn - approximately 390,4 million bushels that had been ordered from private
U.S. export companies.

- FOR SALEThe Ida M. Christie real
estate cons isting of 29.8
acres
In
Bedford
Township, me home ot
Ida M . Christie, which Is
located near the new
nursing home. appra1s·
ed at $22,200,00, and the

•

•

'I•.

.

1J 1h acre parcel of real
estate in Salisbury

I

•'

A metric ton iS about 2,205 pounds
and is equal to 39.4 bushels of corn.
The latest purchases were equal to
about 879,000 metric tons.

Township near lhe 1van
Carman saw mill, ap·
praised at $2,200.00, will
be sold by the under·
signed at the Court
House steps:, Pomeroy ,
Ohio, at 1. 30 P M. on
Tuesday, June 171h,
1980. Said parcels to be
sold separately and can·
not be sold tor less than
the appraised value .

•

••
i'
I

''

Admimstration officials said the
purchases - along with a program
to get farmers to store additional
corn - will contmue until enough is
"isolated from the market" to offset
the amount embargoed from
delivery to the Soviets.
Fanners have stored about 277
million bushels of corn in the govern·
ment's reserve program since Car·
ter' s order, makmg a total of around
427 million bushels either stored or
purchased. That is more corn than
was suspended from delivery to the
Sovtets.
But corn market prices have not
recovered as experts had expected,
and the effort to remove gram from
the market is expected to continue,
at least for the time bemg.

WASIDNGTON (AP) - An ad·
dittonal 34.6 million bushels of corn
have been bought by the Agriculture
Department to help offset the effects
on farmers of President Carter's
partial embargo of grain sales to the
Soviet Union.
Officials said Tuesday that the
purchases raised to 150.4 million
bushels the amount of corn bought

32

call J .e . at 1·246 6047.

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
REPAIR OF ROOFS
FOR
MIDDLEPORT
ELEMENTARY
HARRISONVILLE
ELEMENTARY
GYMNASIUM
SALISBURY
ELEMENTARY
GYMNASIUM
IN
MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT

Comptroller of

LOST : Boy ' s d,gilal watch
with leather band Lost at

the Currencv

Treasury Department

otlhe
United Stales

e vrdence has been presen
Ied to the Comptroller of
Ihe Currency that "BANK
ONE OF POMEROY ,

N A " located in Pomeroy ,

s tate ot Oh10, has comfl 1ed

wrth all provisrons o the
s tatutes of the Unrted
states requ1red to be com ·
p iled with before be1ng
a uthorized to commence
t he business of bank rng as
a
Natrona!
Banking
Associatron .

Local School D1strict of
Middleport, Oh10 at th e
Treasurer's Off•ce unti I
12 00 Noon on July 3. 198 0
NOW. THEREFORE, I
and at that t•me opene d hereby
certtly that the
and read bv the Treasure r a bove·named
association is
•mmeolately
thereafter
tabulated, itnd a r epor t Ia uthorized to commence
he business of banking as
thereof made by the
Nat1ona 1 Bank1ng
Treasurer to sa1d Board a t a
Assoc1afion.
rts ne)(f meetrng .
IN
TESTIMONY
Description
of
rm
provement located at Mid sWHEREOF, witness my
r~nature and seal of office
dleport Elementar y t hiS
30th day ot May, 1980
School,
Har,sonvr!l e
Elementary G_ymnasrum
G . Heimann
and Salisbury Elementar y cJ ohn
of the
Gymnasium . The Roofrng c omptroller
urrency
Cootrator shall bid as a

.

.

.

Prime Contractor. This in
eludes all labor, materials
equrpment, and service s
required to comr,iete thi s
Section which mc udes new
replacement ot roofs on

may be obtained at the Of

fice of the Treasurer, M1d

dleport, Oh1o.
A cerlified check payabl e
to the Treasurer of th e

above board of education
or a satisfactory b1d bond

executed by lhe bidder and
the surety company, in a n
amount equal to frve per

cent of the bid sha ll be sub
mitted with each brd. 1.

Said board ot edutation
reserves the right to warve
informalities, to accept o r
reject any and all, or part s
of any and all b1ds .

No bids may be with .
drawn for at least thirt v

days

atier

th e
scheduled c1os1ng time to r
rece1pt of b1ds.

~_.

~.

Card ot Thanks

1
We,

the

Me1gs

The Family of Carl 0 .
Gheen WISh to thank Dr .

Jane Wagner, Treasurer
South Third Avenue

W1therell and the nurses of
Veterans
Memor1al
Hospital for their care and
k 1ndness dunng
Mr .
Gheen's illness. We also ex ·

Middleport, Ohio
~760

161 11. 18, 25 (7) 2, 4tc

I end

our thanks to the

many fnends and the mem·

Public Notice

,
IN THE
" COMMON PLEAS COURT
'
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
.
OHIO
· CATHERINE
K
· SCHNEIDER,
Plaintiff,
vs.
THOMAS E. SCHNEIDER
Defendant.
Case No. 17,51 0
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
· ' Thomas E. Schneide r
" whose
residence
is
: unknown, but whose Ia st

.

• known address was P. 0

" Box 134, TuDpers Plain s.
Ohio .45783, wHI !eke notice
that on lhe 6th day of June
1980, that Catherine K
_Schnelder Plalnilff, flied

.

Jler Comp 1aint against him

-In . the Meigs County Com .

-mon Pleas Court, Melg s
'County, Ohio, Case No
17,510 praying for dlvorce
upon the grounds of pross ,
neglect of duty and e x·
treme cruelty, tor custOd y
of the minor child of the
parties, for alimony an d
supporr, and will turthe r
.taKe notice that this cause
.can be heard at anytim e
~ollowlng twenty elgh day s
'from the date ot the Ia sl
}Jubllcatlon of this notic e
,;~nd
that the las I
publication will be made on
the 16th day~ July, 1980.
Larry E. ~pence
Clerk of Cou ~~
Meigs County, Oh io

16) 11, 18, 25, 17) 2, 9, 16, 6t c

·.

Gold, srlver or fore1gn
c oms or any gold or silver
it ems. Antrque turnrture,
g lass or chrna , w11! pay top
d ollar, or complete est ates
No item too large or too
s maiL Check pnces before
s elling Also do apprarsrng
0 sby {OSSJe) Martrn 992
370 .

M ason across

Sa le.
from

F uneral Home Antique
d ishes, some furn1ture, etc .
starts 10. lues , Wed,
Thurs.
SALE

•

In

1

bers ot lhe First Baptlsl
c hurch of Racine for the
f Iewers, cards, food and
p rayers. Your krndness
a nd sympathy rs deeply ap·
preciated.

rmel

route carrier Phone
u s rrght away and get on
t he eligibility list at 992

2156or992 2157 .
G arage

Sale

Wed

and

T hurs
across
from
B radury School C.R 5. Dot
t e rent rtems have been ad·
d ed Everything going real
c heap.

Grr!l cook and wartress
wanted Apply rn person.
Crew ' s Steak
House.
Pomeroy
Wanted : Someone to care

2 Famrly Yard Sale
c hildren ' s
clothes ,
household 1tems, etc . End
0t S. 5th St . at 377 Lincoln
s t Wed, June 11 and June
12 9·4

for semr ·mvalid lady Tues
Fn .. 985·3580 or 992 5703.
Janrtor

for Middleport
Church of Christ . 992 2914

or992·52BI.

2 Fam1ly Yard Sale Frr,
June 13, 10 3 102 Park Sl ,

Medical Secretary needed .

Exp required . 992 6633.

Mrddleport. Rarn cancels

12
B ack

Thurd

Yard Sale. 191
Ave .,

Mrddleport
rot1sser1e,
folding doors, clothing, etc

counter

top

Miller 992·6338.
Interror and E)(tenor Pam·

y ard Sale at Ina Ellrs,
c heshrre, Oh
Old
fashroned sewing machine,
Iawn charr, curta1ns, rugs,
p iHow slips, many more
t h1ngs. On Rt. 7 across rom
Betty's Carryout Wed. and
T hurs.

wed . and Thurs. Only

PAY highest price s
posstble tor gold and sllve r
1

too smal l. 949·2379 .
W1ll mow grass . Paul
Pearm. Pomeroy Middlep·
orl area . 992-7590.
13

Lots

contacl Ed Burkett Barbe r
Shop. Middleport.
Piano

Tuning

Daniels 742-2951.

Lan e

Tunln g

and Repair Service sine e
1965. It no answer phon e

992·2082.

'

Save Money! Now you ca n

teach your children or
adults to play golf in
prlvale. John Teaford 61 4·
98S·J&lt;/61
BAL L.
9· 1.
Royal Oak Lodge Joe
Lavlnger
and
t~ e
Tunetimers.
T i cke ts
available al: Simons PIC k·
a· Palr, 992·3830; Chamber
Office, 992·5005; New Yo rk
Clothing House, 992·2049.
Regatta -FROG

Saturday,

4

June

28,

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

0 f children's clothing, 212

Rock St. 4th righl turn off
Spring Ave . Follow
s rgns. Odds and ends,

992·2143

Finane Ia!

13

at 876 South Third Ave .
9 3.
BEAT HIGH PRICES at
T hrift Shop. Gigantic In·
ven tory 305 N. Second
A ve ., Middleport. Open
wed .· Sat.9·4.

I N·
can ·

celled?
Lost
your
operator' s license? Phone

y ard Sale will be held June

coins, rings, jewelry, etc

Deluxe F ord fiberglass top
per to t1t eight toot bed

Business
Opportunity

2
l

Future Heirloom

Call 992·7201
J and F Backhoe Service
LICensed and bonded Sep
tic tank installation Water
and gas lrnes Excavatmg
work and trans rt layout
Call992 7201.

Loan never repay ,
details, A . L . Lutton,

•.; l i

Large tra ct

Pomeroy .

Drtch drgging servr ce. Cal l

773 5839 or 773 5788 .

Large Garage Sale. Lett
from an Estate ot Mrs
Allen Brewer. Stiversville,
June 12, 13, 14, Thurs , Fri ,

Sat. Turn at foot ot Stiver·
sville Hill . Watch for signs.

Public Sale
8------------

&amp; Auction
----------BRADFORD, Auctioneer,

Giveaway
Complete Service. Phone
-~ -----· 1973 356 Massey Ferguson 949·24117 or 949·2000. racine.
Ohio, Crill Bradford.
1nloader. 992·3681.

bdr, , bath 1h

••

36

Homes for Sale

NEW 3 or 4 Bed r oom home,
21fz baths , r ec room,

consider renting.

Real Estate

fir e pla c e ,

garage

At Mornmg Star

Hts ., Lee Construction, 992 ·
3454 or 992 ·5455.

5310
Luxur1ous large modern
country
home .
Pool,
acreage pr rvate. 3 d1git
c l ass ,
tn
Pomeroy ·
Ga llipol rs area For appt

caii992·76BO.
6 rooms,
1 1f:~
baths,
paneled, carpeted, garbage
d rsposal, ~form windows,
doors, exc. window air con ditiOner, f1n1shed basement
w·bar , tile bath w shower
Reasonable . 115 Ebeneezer
St 992 5566
Beautiful large home . Low
ut rltt1es, bnck ran ch style,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
fireplace, full basement,
family room , air con·
drt1oner, 3 car garage .
Baum Addil ron , M eigs

County Call985 4169
3 Bedroom brick ranch.
Tuppers Plains. 11h bath,

built in

kitchen.

lull

basement with wood stove,
large garage . Big lot w ith
nrce garden spot. S52,000 .

667 3288
8
Pet .
Assumpt 10n ,
Beautiful large bri ck ranch
style, low ut rlities, 3
bedrooms,
211:1 baths,
f1replace, full basement,
famtly room, air con·
drtioner, 3 c ar garage
Baum Addtt1on, Me r g~ Co.

985 4169
8 Room Two Story Home ,
1112 garage, barn on 2112
acres of levelland . 11f2 mile

up St Rt 143 Off Rt . 7 by
pass $25,000. 992-3857
'
Older House, partly
remodeled with large lot in
handy localion . In Tuppers

Pla ins. Pri ced to sell 985
3353

NEW LISTING- 3 BR
home on 21t2 acres of
land . 3 miles below Mid·

7577

fxtAeu'B~
Frohck1ng lambs k1ttens. puppy
add c~a~m~ng touch to covetlet
EASY filet etochet covetlet
th;t s su•e to be&lt;:ome a lam1ly
he11loom Ctochet squares sepa13tely lot p1llowtops. p1ctures or
panel. Pattetn 7577 dHect1ons.
charts, covetlel 4!x55".
$1.75 for each paltetn Add 501
each pattetn 101 IHst-class all
ma~l and handlmg Send lo:
Alice BIOIIIos
fteedleet1ft Dept
~
The DaBy SenUoel
Box 163, Old Chelsu St.., New
Ycttll, Nf 10011. Pnnt Name,
Address, Zip, Pattem Number.
EXCITING' New 1980 NH DLE·
CRAFT CATALOG w1th "'" 170
designs 1n great vauety ol C13ftS
3 ltei! pattems InSide Send $1 00
132-Qullt Drilioab
. $1.50
131-Add a Bloct Quilts ... $1.50
130-Swuftts.Sim 31-56 .$1.50
129-Quid/Easy Ttanslets .$1.50
121-l'atchwlttll Quilts . .. $1.50
127-AIP.ns •n• Dailies ... $1.50
126-Crafty Rowers . . $1.50
125-Pet.l ~ilts . . . . .. •$1.50
124-Gifts 'n OtNments .. $1.50
123-Stilth 'n' Palth Quilb$1.50
122-SiuH 'n' PuH Quilts . $1.50
121-Pillew Show-Oils ... . $1.50
120-(nrchot a W.rdtobe .. $1.50
119-Rowe• Cnrchet
$1.50
lii.Cntelltt with Squares. $1.50
116-Nifly Fifty Quilts ... $1.50
115-Ripple Crochet
.. $1.50
114-Comptele Afpans .. . $1.50
112-Prin Afabans . . .. $1.50
107-lnsllnt Snin1 .. ... . $1.50
105-lnst.nt Cnrchet.
$1.50
102-Museulll Quilts ... $1.50
101-Quilt CoiiKtion ... $1.50

Money to LOan

OOWNINGOULDS
INC '
... - AGENCY
.
:*!*r\*\*\**~* .
_INSUIIANCE .
: MONEY • MONEY l SERVING SOUTHEASTERft OHIO SINCE 1868,
A.RE YOU PAYING. TOO MUCH? DCf
*First mortgages;~
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?
. 1

¢second mortgages,~
,.and
refinanceJII
•h:ases. Call Com~:
:plete
Mortgag ,..
~Services
i ,.:
~Gallipolis, Ohio at~
*444·1517 for more*
*information and*
Jtrour appoiotm.ent.

FOR Au YOUR- INSURANCE
NEED~
- -CALL US.

992-2342
·DOWNING-CHILDs AGENGY.
MIDDLfPORT, OHIO

nic.

··

dleport off Rt 7. Also
trailer hookup for addt·
tiona11ncome.

NEW LISTING-1 floor
plan, 3 or
home, nice
chen With
.oven on

4 bedroom
bullt·rn kit·
rang e and
Rt . 7 in

Pomeroy , Oh .
2 BEDROOM COT·
TAGE · SOl.O . rust off
Route 7
BUSINESS B-UILDING

:l

rear

~!' E. S.J:Ona str..t
Phone
':(t1_4).:_?92:~3_2i
80ACRE FARM - GPQd
10 room house with
balh . lots ot good
buildings. Land Is about
halt fenced Md T.P.
water available. Good
laying land for subdlvi·

1n

downtown
Rutland, 0., approx. 10

years

old .

Use

as

business or convert to
living quarters. See to
appreciate.

NEW LISTING- 3 BR
cottage wrth 2 acres of
quiet countryside . 5
minutes from Mid ·

dleport, 0 .
3 BEDROOM HOME Carpeted and paneled.
on Vrne Street in
Racine, very clern,
ready to move Into. Nrce
lev~l lot. Will also con·
sider rent1ng.

1 ACRE IN MIDDLE·.
PORT - 4 room cot·

and

bed r

Fleetwood, 14x65 3

sewer

&amp;

lot that Is 64'x238' . Out
of all fiPQds . Asking
$30,000,
A BREAK HAS COME
IN INTEREST RATES,
BUY WHILE YOU
CAN, WE NOW HAVE
SOME REAL NICE
PROPERTIES'.

porch , 7/ 8 acre near
Harr1sonv rlle . $1.4,500. 992·
5970 before 12 or after 5
General

HOBSTffiER
. REALTY · ··

Housmg
Headquarters

r

'

carport and workshop,·

a

situated on 20 acres with;
a good barn. On Co. Rd.•
13, Asklng$49.500.00.
;
ACREAGE -185 acres, .

·~
~I

-

'f

:I
•I
:I

Jt

bedroom, total electric :
home. Off New Lima ~

Rd., call tOday .
:
MEIGS HI - Lovely J ,

I

~·

bedroom home on near· ~
ly an acre Selling price ,

$39,900.00.
' !IRICK- Beautiful bl .;
level, 3 oedrooms. 2112
baths, living room, din· :
ing room, very nice kit ~
chen
with
bullt· in ~
miCrowave,
family .
room wrth fireplace, 2112
car garage, situated on •
corner with approx. 4

acres . Only $69,000
SYRACUSE Nice
remodeled home, 3
bedroom, 11v1ng room,
dining room, large kit·

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

't
·I
.I

1

Service Station for lease

$300

investment required. Good
location with good potentral
for sharp
aggress1ve
operator . For interview

record a must . Substanl1al

call Mr . Adams, 1·304·375·
41193, B 30 a .m .·4 p.m M·F

) Announcement
J For Rent

Furn. for rent in Chester,
carpeted,
newly

51

remOdeled, full basement,
prefer to rent to worker or
establiShed
person,

ditioner, new $425. 985·4323
after 5p.m.

~

1.

2.

5•·

I
I
I

f1

13.
14.
15.
' , : 16.

:!l i
li
t•

• •

7891 .

~

~

l
I
I

ite m $2,800 Must se ll 992·
5190.

Trucks for Sale
1974 Ford Pl &lt;;kup, 6 cyl., 3
speed $900. 992·5057

12

Truck for Sale B Model
Mack tractor. E xcellent
cond1tron Call 992·7354 af·
ter 7

e ANNDUNCEME ~TS

61

Farm Equipment

BUILDINGS
SPRING
CLeARANCE!! All steel
clear

span

buildtngs

30x4Bx12 tor $3,672 ;
40x4Bx 14 for $4,496 .
48x72x14 for $6,594 ,
60xl25x16 for $15,447 F B
Factory . Call collecl9 a m
to 8 p.m . 614·294·2675

bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J . A Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH 592·
6462.
GOLD
AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD .
RINGS.
JEWELRY,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP · TO DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIO , OR CALL 992·3476 .

41-Piooma
..,_SPICt for Rtnl

3'12 fl . by 7ft. ut1ilty
992·3726

---~-

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
,,_ ,.,m IIIUIPflltnt

-··ly
.......

62-WMtMiteiUY
72-Truckl.., hit

~., .....

.,_Livettodl
...,_..ey&amp;Oreln

•s-s..a a lltrfiHltr

"

eTRANSPORTATIDN
J1-A•t.a .... hit

eREALESTATE

7J-Vanl &amp; 4 W.D.
74-M...,.CYCtti

Jt-HomH tor lllel

Jt-Mobflt+femfl
for Sate

1~

Aula ft•rh

11-M..,.eiMprtYtftltfttl

l]W

STIU PAYING

On any Chevy or
GM true~ . align·
ment by
Randy
Carpenter, factory
ftrained
frontend I
I alignment
spe·l
cialist.

1

FOR
SILVER
DOUARS
949-2801

I LANDMARK I

N-e~&amp;Avefl,..

-Free Estimates
-Interior &amp; Extp.rior

Work.
949·2686
5 23·1 mo

STAnON!
Ca II I614 I 992-9932
•-·-·-P-o.m._e,:»~ ~ __

I

81

school

-CLUB REPAIRPlaying items. clubs,
bags, balls, shoes ~ carts,
1. Professtonal teaching
certificate.

2. Played professional
tournaments rn Ohio, W.

Va ., Kentucky .
• JOHN TEAFORD
614·985·3961
6·3·1 mo .

Home
Improvements

If you want to buy a cam·
per and you want to k.now

the pr ice on this beauty, it

Rooting, Sldrng, room ad
dltions, all types of general
repairs, 25 vears exp. 992

is

3406 .

low . 1978

and tub $4.000. 698 8218 or
69~ · 8219 .

FLOORING.

ce iling ,

paneling, doors and win
dows. also parnt!ng Call

lEes

Home
Improvements

EMcavating

Water well dnlling

Lewis

Tom

304· 895 · 380 2.

S &amp; G Urpet Cleaning
Steam cleaned .
Free
estJ mate .
Reasonable

Seasonal discount on all
pumps and accessories.

rates. Scotchguard . 992
6309or742·2211

84

lay

GOOD SUPPLY
SHRUB$
&amp; TREES
20% OFF
POMEROY
LANDMARK

high

students."

J

Camping

concrete,

lor

31711 Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
992-5724
Sales, service and sup-plies. In ground and
above ground PQOis.
5·1·tfc

Equ1pmenr

very, very

GOLF LESSt•NS

Beginning &amp; Advanced
"Scholarships possible

11'12% lnterest-30 Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic
Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing
Loans, 3% down on
$25,000; 5% down on

SEWING
Repairs ,

MACH I NE
serv1ce ,

al l

makes . 992 2284
The
Fabr ic Shop, Pomeroy

MAINTENANCE

balance. FHA ~65 Subsidy Program . FHA 245Gradual Payment Mort.
Open M-W-F 9:00 to 1:00
Other Times
By Appointment
Office 992-7544
Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore St.
OH .

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

HOME

BS
General Hauling
WILL HAUL limes tone and
gravel. Also, lime haulrng
t~nd spread ing . Leo Morrrs
Trucking . Phone 742·245S

AI Tromm

f4nstruction
742·2328
~5-tfc

Upholstery

87

A&amp;H Upholstering

" Now

Re Upholster~ng
Car
Seats" Ph . 992 l752 or 992·
3743.

Authorized Singer Sales
and Service We sharpen
Scissors .

ELWOOD
R EPA I R

BOWERS
Sweepers,

toasters, rrons, all small
appl rances. Lawn mower .
Next to State Highway

Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

The Gravely 30-inch rowy mower cuts

8S

General Hauling

L r vestock
anywhere ,

Haultng,
anypla c e,

anytime . 30 yrs. exp. 1·593·
8883 collecl

right through the toughest grass and weeds
and does a good job on your lawn as well.
The mower is tough, Wlthall-geardtreet
drive, all-steel deck and antt-scalping
roller. The tractor is also all-gear driven.
Call us for a free demonstration.

a Rtfflftratklft
I.

· u-a Merat HtU!Itftt

" Drive A l.ittle Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKEO

N-M.H.R.,.Ir

17-U!IMistetY

............
, a...

Colh

33.~--~-

--::--

CARPET
2 black padded
Clio,...

..us..
I.H

Ul

. ...

••ch..,.. enr lht mlnlmvm llwerliltll-4 cents...,. wont 'er ..y.
Alh ruflnlnt ....,r ttt.en cannc~o~thrt dllys will W cfNir.... •t ttw 1 My

,

lrr m.,..wy, Cerd llf TheM" aM C*ltvery r f
ltllltlmuM. CaM 1ft Mvanu.

~GRAVELY.

CARPET SHOP

,._.tedrkall

Rates and Other lnform•tion

etfth,., ..,.., J3.11

MMtM tt.me utH.,.. Y~N Ultl ere ece.tMII e~~ty wltttultl wltfl
Hs cer,.i"'' . .Ill NuftiW 1rr cere ofT~
ltttHMI.

eN,... ..,

Roller, Brush and Spray
Work.
-Fully Insured

etc.

MosTDates
No Sunday Calls
~- 9 · 1 mo.

CANDY STRIPED

.,...,, 11 Ctftt

1

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES
THE POOL PEOPLE;

S2CJII &amp; UP

1

78

Gheen's
Painting
&amp;
Sandblasting Co!

Discount

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

12-,..luml*tl I lxcevetlne

ISWtniiiN"UI'Hitr

II

Racine, Oh.

Ph . 614-843·2591
5·14·1 mo.

4-2·11&lt;

.SERVICES

Want·Ad Advertising
Dud fines

80)( 729

Rl. J, Box S4

We service what we sell.

~RNIIs..teWented
J7-RNitwl

4 ,..M . O.lly
12 NMn hNt'UY
ferMtftNY

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

This Coupon
Worth

Main St.
Pomeroy 992·2181

&amp; Accnaorift
n-Avteae_.jlr

P-,ern11 for S.le
M-IUII""I lulltll"fl
JJ-Lott&amp;Ac,.....

Sizes from 4•4 to 12x40

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LO~A '(IQN
0111 e. Main
Pomeroy, Oh.
992·3795

block and bnck . Call 992
3406

M-Pttl tor lelt

JJ-~rotn••••

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The D•llv Sentinel

.

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

M-MIIc. MwcHndlst

21--MOMY to LNn

--

Auto Repair

77

•MERCHANDISE

S5-1UIIdlnt s.,.ltl

•FINANCIAL

Si1es
"From 30x30"

Utility Buildings

Tri-Courlty
Bookkeeping
Service

tra~ler .

Wil l pour

J)-l•••r•nce
1,._1usln"s Trelnlttl
ACIRt~Nir

- ---

Farm Buildings

Auto Parts

4t-Rqulpment for IMit

52-(:1, TV, hello IQUipment
ss-Antiqun

RMIIo, TV

ALL STEEL

- s-..

83

J1-H.vNMkl 000111

11-WentR Te De

. JS.

5-29·1 mo .

Rutland, o.
Ph. 742·2455
21 - 1-

14 Ft. Aluminum v·shaped

ser

15-kMotllltltniCfton

, 3(....::: -

POMEROY , O
992-62H o
99Hl14
1·28·1 mo .

'MORRIS

Boats and

tamed and awning, shower

,,_"..,w.m•
12-lltuetell Wentttl

I!

V. C. YQUNG Ill

LEO

Motors for Sale

47-W•ntH to Rtnl

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

--~-~ !1

' (FREE ESTIMATES)

SMALL

Wilderness 23 fl . fully con·

eRENTALS

J-HI,YAtill

I Auctl•
11--WamNloBIQI

31.
32. _,__ _ _ _

vans &amp; 4 w.o.

7S

Wanted to Buy

41-HCMIMI for Rent
U-MobUt HOII'Itl
forR.nt
44-Apartmet~l for Ret~t

~~bllcl•l•

' 30.

and

&amp; Accessories

1-carct of Ttle11111
2-ln MtmOrlem
)-Anntltnctmtntl
4-Qiw. . .ey

v.

do• •

wor•,
walks
driveways.

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOP
e V-CHISEl.
PLOW

1974 Jeep CJ5 $1 ,900 949
2545

81

2:1-

work,

spouts , some concrere

Eugene Loog (614) 843-3322
Superior Vinyl Prof!ucts

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

16-

Gutter

Serving your area for 25 rears.
Call Now for Large Savings
For Free Estimate Call

992·2759.

6-Lnt •M f'louncl
7- Yenl hit

28.
29.

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

1965 Mustang, 6 cyl. , 3
speed, body perfect, no
rusr. 25 mpg . Collector' s

76

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

1:

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

VINYL SIDING

992·

motor. Sears heavy duty

PHONE 992-2156

••
I'

$950

trailer. 742·2656.

WANT AD INFURMAnON

li
I'

mil eage

hull boat. 9'12 Evinrude h p

l t t;::==~;;;;;:;;±;:::;====::J

26:

.

I· 10: - - - - - f
I I I 11 .
I , 12.

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US ACAU

53
A~tlques
ATTENTION:
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check

767 3167 or 557 3411.

2.4.
25.

I ' 7.
I s.
I. 9.

•,

18,000 BTU Amana air con·

guns, pocket watches and

22.
23.

' . 6.

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Over 100 acres,
could oe housing deveiOP"1ent - gas already drill ·,
ed, on property water lines close. All mineral rights
gowltn properly . Also Timber ready to be cut. Calli

Household Goods

coin collections . Call 614·

20.

, ; 3.

LOTS - Bordering Pomeroy. 1 to 75 acres .
'POMEROY - 3 BR home, city water. vinyl siding •
on lit. 33 . ~14,900 .
·

Black 5 month old male
Poodle. AKC reg1stered.
S50 . 992·3618.

deposit

21.

'

Low

ches, class rings, wedding

17.
18.
19.

J wanted
J For Sale

1971 F ord P rckup with top·

OLD COINS, pocket wat·

41

required. $195 a monlh .
Call 1·866·1731. Will be
shown by appolntmenl,
Sat, June 14 from 2-5.

I ~=====::::::::::+.:==--::.::=====::::+==========

per. 6 cyl., std., B tt. bed .

73
Registered male walker
coon hound Will run and

62

Phone ______________

1:

storage bldg , $37 ,000.

Pomeroy

Associates

and

Call Howard
949·2862
?49·2160
1·22-ttc

Registered Quarter Pony

I'

1:

lot, ioomfor garden, well landscaped . Carport &amp;

monthly .

Roger &amp; oonle Turner
742·2474
Jean Trussell, 949·2660
Full Time
Office Phone 992-2259

references

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

Au los for Sale
1973 Dats un. 4 spe_e d . Good
m ileage. $230. Call 992·3149
or 992 2705 .

11

Gelding . 2 yr . old, show

1973 JS6 Massey Ferguson
end·l&lt;&gt;ader. 992 3681.

For Lease

49

Addreu...__ _ _ _ _~....... I

t.

GOOD STARTER HOME - 3 BR, kil., LR , DR, &amp;
fam1lyroom with wpodburnlng stove on good size

Portland Grade School $50
and $60 per month. 1·304·
273 3623.

t

~

lJP and 1/2 bath on main floor . Manoy exira nice
features in quiet area . Asking $57,500 .

Tuesday, emergency calls
only .

Trailer Lots for rent In
Great Bend area new
bndge site and acros from

area . Good credit and work

Pomeroy, Oh.-45769

,_

2 story. 5

and
beautiful.
$22,300.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
992·6191

I
I
I Print one word In each
t space below. Each In·
1 ltlal or group of ligures
f counts as a word. Count
and address or
I name
phone number If used.
I You'll get bener results
I If you describe fully,
1 give price. The Senllnel
·1 reserves the rlghl to
edit or reject
I classify,
any ad. Your ad will be
I put In the proper
,I classlflcalion If you'll

r.I'

992

$30 per

46
Space tor Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33, North ot
Pomeroy. Large lois. Call
992 ·7479.

J!

'I

,.

required

lree 949·2545

utility .

Write your ·own ad and order by mall with this
coupOri, cancel your ad by phone when you get
resulls. Money not refundable .

I
I

NEW LISTING - Overlooking Oh io River &amp; ~ ,,ser
Alum . Plant, 3 lg . BR's, plenty of closels. full base·
f'(lent &amp; family room. on 3 beautiful acres. Asking
$65.000.
TRAILER - 2 BR, on nice lot, small outbuildings
tor storage. on au let street . $10,500
COULD BE YOUR DREAM HOME - 2 story with
dble. garage, home Includes 3 BR 's with large bath

Room

remodeled,

. ~below.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

Furnished Rooms

992 ·6022.

baths,

cleanjng and painting.
All work guaranteed.

* N~w homes • ex·
tensive remodeling
* E lectrica I works
*Masonry work
12 Years
E)(perience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
5·15·1 mo.

furn,shed.

bedrooms,

•f lcheck the proper box

General

6260 , noon· 7 p.m ., except

week or SlOO per month

Save I-TT

'I

on VanZandt Rd1, some•
minerals. Call for info. :

Boarding, all breeds . Clean
indoor -outdoor factl!tres

2 Bedroom Apartment 1n

house on 3;_.. A. with S

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Claulflads and

NEW LISTING- Nice 7,
room home, 2 baths.-

KENNELS .

Deposit $50. 949·2875.

Nothing too large. Also,

Broker

HILLCREST

Also
AKC
regiSiered
Dobermans. 614 446· 7795.

tibles or entire estates.

PHONE 742·2003

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor . 614·367·7220

CONSTRtJCnON

ROOFING
All types of roof work,
new or repair gutters
·and downspouts, gutter

Pets for Sale

45

2

2nd . Middl eport, OH. 992·
31 61 .

1978 R.abb
G a sol! ne
powered
Call' t949·2273.

for antiques and collec·

Georges. Hobslener Jr :

Call Jimmy Deem, Associale 949·2318
or Nancy Jaspers, Associate 949·26S4

Plants, Tomaro, cucumber,
flowers , hanging baskets,
pots Cleland Greenhouse,
Gera ldine Clell!lnd , Ra cine ,

ROUSH ·

H. L WHITESEL

In

HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a homeless pet
Healthy, s~ots. wormed

Sleeping

F UR ·

N IT URE , g lass, Ch 1na,
anything See or ca11 Ru th
Gosney, antiQues, 26 N.

Quisenberry Build'"g, Rt.
124. I Formerly Goldies)
992·5205.

S6

A;pt.

Business Services

Clothing

Items

remOdelinQ, large lot.
$16,200
CHESTER - B room

end Dad, over an acre of

bath , furn iShe d, 8x l4 tronl

for more Information.

Used

Household

4· H project. Call Karen
Griffith, 992 5782 atler 5
p.m .

rooms built on, plus 12
acres land, secluded

CENTER
Nice J
bedroom , 1112 bath ,
ranch style home. For
Mom a stepsaver kit·
chen with formal dining ,

Bdr .

Real Estale

CHE ' S)

7.

hunting ara. S23,900.00.
LANGSVILLE - 10 yr .
old mobile home w1th 2

$3 ,500,
SALEM
AREA

2

Ph. 742-2003
General

Open in Syracuse {PAT·

floor plan, 2 bedrooms,
some carpeting and

acres, pasture, woods,
and building sites Good

near .

gas, and on sewer.
Would
you believe

1965 Yanor 12x52. 2 bedr .

Ph. 742·30'12

Real Estate

6342 or 992·2583 .

Apartment

utilit1es paid, no drunks
Sleeping room for rent.
John Sheets, Jlh mtles

repair. $8,000.00.
PORTLAND- About 56

lots, city water, natural

bedroom

Branch Mgr.
PhOI'e 991· 111ii9A

hookup,

A NTI Q U ES .

Oh.

3 Rm.

equipped

rooms, 1112 baths, lots of
storage, needs some

home in Pomeroy with 2

1971 Shakespear , 14x65 2

· reduced to $8,000.
TAKING LISTINGS! .,
Hobart Dillon. BrokeriFay Manley

trailer

Decorated cake s for all oc
cas ions . Chara cter cakes
and s heel cakes. Call 992

prospect, started under
saddle and harness. Super
disposition, make excellent

basement.
$17,500.
IN TOWN -

Located In Pomeroy.
Want $24,500.
NEW LISTING 2
bedroom
repairable

2

chen, utll1ty and garage.
Situated on nice lot. Sell·
ing prlce$28,000.
GIVE US A CALL
OAYOR EVENING.

tage,

lo OhiO Pall et Co. Rl 2.
Po meroy 992 ·2689 .

South of Middleport on Rt

downstairs

sion .

12 x63,

porch,

CHIP WOOD Poles max.

Second Ave .. M1ddlepor1,
992·2751 .

D, co Daily Sentinel,
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Middleport. 1·304·882·2566

Should VA or FHA.
$28,000 00.
MIDDLEPORT -

14x65 2

NICE

d rameter 10" on la rgest
end Sl 2 p er ton. Bund led
slab. $10 per ron . Del 1ver ed

Donations

kitchen, washer, dryer.

17 ACRES - Wllh water

Cameron . 14x65,

EXTRA

MAY 23 to June 30, J09'o ott
greenware sale Bring a
container. 9 a. m. 10 9 p m.
Orehel ' s Cer am ics 59 N

2 Bedroom furnished apl

stone cottage on approx .
1112 A., w .b.f.p., enclosed

gas, ctty water, large
basement, garge, and

REAL ESTATE

monlh.

$150 plus ut ilities, or S50
week,
utilities
pard .

REDUCED! - Eastern
district - J bedroom

1973 3 bedroom, 1 complete

DILLON

$160

Manor apts Call 992· 7787

new metal roof on ap·
prox. '12 acre. $9,000.00.

I

1971

Real Estate

Gener111

992·225?
NEW LISTING - Com
mercial40x60 glazed tile
building with double
floor and full basement.

General

1969

General

preferred .

Send inquiries to Box 729

Senior Cltrzens in Village

wOOded land. All this for
iusl$29,500.
RACINE - One floor
ranch style 3 bedroom
home with bath, natural

Real Estate

2 Bedroom . 1'12 balhs,
house tra iler. Working per·
sons or retrred persons

Estate of

1976 Holly Park Brown and
w hr te In exc cond Must
see to apprecrate (can b~
seen don Hrgh St , Mid·
dleport). c entr al arr, por
c h, underpinn rng 992·6375 '

ning 992 2881.

2 Bedroom Mobile Home,
turn1shed kllchen, elderly
couple preferred Deposit
required. No pets. 992·2749.

RENTER ' S assistance for

a1r, deep f eeze, partly fur
nished, all underpinned
and blocks Lol rt se ts on
can be rented . $7. 500 992
5057 or 992·6057

Hollypark Trailer
Fur ·
nished, a.c , washer, m eta l
out ·bu1ld1ng, under pin

basement ,

Home. Adults only. 992 ·
3324.

3 AND 4 RM turn1s~ed ap
ts. Phone 992·5434.

•

32

2 Oedroom

MObile '

for Rent

•

S MOBILE HOME
SALE S. PT . PLEA SANT.
w v 304-1&gt;7 5 4424

12x60,

Bedroom

Administratrix of the

Real Estate

1972 Indy Mobil e Home

31

Real Estale
Wanted

Wanled to buy on land con·
tract . 1'12 bath or 2 bath
home. j$500. down and $300
per month. 992·6022. would

•

1968

Mobile Homes

high

Two

Teaford Realty . 992·3325.

Deceased

Fa irpo'"t,

Fl ee twood

of

water . Can be financed .

Ida M. Christie,

1973

1971

Out

in

Edna N. Wood,

Room House on ap
proximately 2 acr es. St . Rt
124. Lois of extras. 992 7255

12 'X 60 '. Frreplace, central

!
----------- ~***********"':
-r.

middle $40,000. 992-5792 or
992 2606 for appl.

for Sale

t r"t-..·
P 0 . Box 766. GallipoliS.
Oh.

22

bedr oo m

land

and place aforesaid .

tor Sale

CompleTely red ecor ated
older home Very nice
locat1on •n Mrddleport 3
bedrooms
an d
ful l
basement Owner askr ng

of

for Rent

by the Common
Pleas Court, Probate
Division. All interested
bidders be at the time

Mobile Homes

32

Homes tor Sale

B

YARD SALE : Mlddleporl,
75 Elm St .• June 11 , 12, 13,
10? Sewrng machine, jeans
all sizes, baby clothes and
nick·nacks.

31

B

ting , also barn roofs No 10b

clean, reasonable

Announcements

Situations Wanted

Wi II do odds and ends
Panel rng, floor t1le, and
ceiling tile
Call Fred

~-

0t

3

Help Wanted

GET VALUABLE training
a sa young busmess person
a nd earn good money pi us
s ome great gifts as a Sen ·

4 Family Garage Sale June
12 13. Tuppers Plams. Ar
ba ugh Addn 9 4 Children's
c lothmg all srzes, men's
s Uits lrke new, Avon bol
II es, toys, m1sc .

Professional
Serv1ces

Carpeted 5 room house 1n
Bradbury Has modern kit·
chen and bath, garage, car
port, 2 utility bl dgs and
garden space . Across from
WMPO Srgn in yar d. 992·

syracuse, corner of College

County

Headstart Parent Com
m1ttee, e)(tend our sincere
g ratitude to the busmess
c ommun1ty for the ex·
t ensive support during the
past year It has been
Ihrough your generosity
I hat the children in the
Head Start Program have
r eceived many extras , lrke
0 ur
holiday
part1es,
e specially the large Christ·
mas
celebra1 r on,
e nlightening field tnps,
e ducatronal toys and last
b ut
not
least
our
g raduat1on on June 9th and
1Oth Again, we thank you
0 n behalf of our children,
t or w•thout your assistance
we could not have ac·
c omplished so much.

Board of Education

ot Meigs Local
School District

3

R oad and 124. June 9 14, 10
a m till dark .

- ····· · ~····----···

WILL BUY Old Iran
s missJons , batteries ,
eng rnes, or scrap metals,
e lc Caii245 ·91BB .

g lasses

( 61

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

10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,
g old . Denial gold ahd gold
e ar p•ns 675·3010.

LOST . Dog 5 months old,
m ale, named Tony . Part
E lk Hound and German
s hepherd Lost on
K1ngsbury Rd. Co Rd .
18 .992 5629
evenings
L ook s 11 k.e
he wears

M OVl NG

11. lB. 25 171 2, 9. 16. 23.
30 (8 1 6, 91c

Write M . D. Miller, Rf 4,
p omeroy, OH 1 or ca II 992·
7760 .

LOST . White gold ladies
d ress watch wrth srlver
c ord band
Sliver an·
n 1versary g III from
h usband
Sent1mental
value. Pomeroy Moddlepo·
r area 992 2469 .

c harter Number 16859

Elementary

School,
Harrrsonv li le
Elementary Gymnasium
and Salisbury Elementary
Gymnasium . Bidders w111I
be bidding on the rn
stallation of the Trocal o r
built·up rooting system. AI I
roofs to be brd separately ,
Detailed specrfication s
and instructions to bidder s

. 1301

Ball Park Thurs.
n IQht, Reward . Any 1nfo.
ca 11667·3639

Yard Sale
FAm1ly' Yard

23

l ron and brass beds, old
f urniture , desks , gold
r ings, 1ewelry, srlve r
d ollars, sterling , etc , wood
Ice boxes, antiQues, etc.
c omplete
household s

syracuse1

7

Wanted to Buy

9

Washington, D. c.

WHEREAS satiSfactory

Sealed proposals will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Me1g s

Middleporl

Lost and Found

Mobile Homes

Lots &amp; Acreilge

112 ~ ~ ~~a~ l!d- t!f[ui_ =_.=_

~---

3 Bedroom Home, Riggs
Crest Manor . $32S. month.
985 4323 alter 5 p.m
42

3S

5-4- - M.Sc.-M erchanlse
--- - - - -

Said sales must be con-

'"
6

Houses tor Rent

t~rmed

For Good Buys Shop The Sentinel Classifieds
Pub! ic NOtiCe

41

for: boat, motor and fraile r .

•

Public Not1ce

Mobile Homes
for Sale

MOBILE HOME · 45XB.
Will sell tor $2,000 or trade

by the department smce Ca rter an·
nounced the sales suspension Jan. 4.

Comparatively, the government's
pnce support loan rate for 1980 corn
currently is $2.10 a bushel; wheat,
$2.50 a bushel ; soybeans, $4.50 a
bushel; and cotton, 48 cents a pound.

Gener•l

Sq. Yd.

$499

VINYL FLOOR
COVERINGS
Sq. Yd.$499

JUNE CARPET SAL£
ALL CARPET AT DISCOUNT PRICES
Any r~t~~uLir carpet jobs lnstolled with tree pad.
Nice Selection o
arpet
.Linoleum Remnants at Bl

emnants an
Discounts.

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Main St.

742·2211

t.

·50" Mower when
you buy a
Riding Tractor

FitEEIIJ

30" Mower when
you buy •
W•Iklng T·r1ctor ·

MANNING ROUIIII.

�16- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Jw&gt;e ll, 1930

Israeli settlements criticized
deadlock in Palestinian autonomy
talks.
An Egyptian foreign ministry
spokesman read a formal statement
to reporters in Cairo criticizing
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem
Begin for saying in an interview with
ABC News on Tuesday that Israel
would build 10 more settlements in
the West Bank of the Jordan River
and enlarge existing outposts.
Egypt cited Israel's settlement
Charges of falsifying infonnation claimed she had been taken by two
policy as one reason for breaking off
were filed Tuesday against a Pl. men in a red Pontiac, bearing Texas
the year-old Palestinian autonomy
Pleasant woman who claimed Montalks last mQnth. U.S. Secretary of
license plates, to a gravel road off
day she had been abducted in SR 141, where, she said, she was
State EdmundS. Muskie, in a speech
Gallipolis and raped in an isolated
this week, also criticized Israel's
sexually assaulted.
area off SR 141.
settlement policy.
City police charged McClellan
Charges were filed Tuesday afThe Egyptian statement accused
Tuesday with, " ... knowingly making
ternoon against Joyce McClellan, 19,
the Israeli administration of once
a false statement. .. with purpose to
by Investigator Michael Tucker of
again setting pre-conditions to the
mislead a public official in the perthe Gallipolis City Police Departdeadlocked autonomy negotiations.
formance of his official function."
ment.
The chief of the settlements
Investigator Tucker said Tuesday
McClellan told police Monday
program,
Agriculture Minister Ariel
the charge stenuned from a followevening she had been forcibly abSharon,
explained
in Jerusalem that
up investigation of McClellan's
ducted while walking along Fourth
Istael
had
planiled
to raise the nwnstatement and a negative medical
Avenue. The Pl. Pleasant woman
ber
of
settlements
to
85 from the 25
finding.
that existed when Begin took office
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . , three years ago. Sharon said there

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Egypt accused Israel today of intentionally "creating more 00stacles in the way of a just and CO!fl•
· prehensive peace" in the Middle
East by its determination to build
more settlements in occupied

territories.
Meanwhile, Common Market
sources said the Europeans had
ruled out recognition of Palestinian
demands for statehood as well as
any Mideast move that might endanger U.S. efforts to break the

New hope--hostage crisis may be resolved

Becky James and _B eth Mooney
receive ·special nursing awards

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Iranian Foreign Minister Sadegh
Gl~otbzadeh said today he hoped the
cnsls over the American hostages
held ill his COWI!ry will be resolved
next month or as soon as possible.
He said he doubted that the
Iranian ruler, Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini, would make any recommendation to the Iranian parliament
about what it should decide, "but obviously if he gives any recom·
mendation, that will be the determining factor. "
Ghotbzadeh said his office was

No rape, but woman charged

I

.4. rea deaths

[
•

.

Charles C. Brooks
Charles C. Brooks, 66, 32581 Smith
Ridge Road, Portland, died Tuesday
morning at his residence.
He was preceded in death by his
father, Charles C. Brooks, Sr., and
two sisters. Surviving are his
mother, Winnie Brooks, East uverpool; a sister, Sarah Mercer, East
Liverpool; two daughters, Charlotte
Davis, Orient, and . Carol Pickens,

~~~~re 75 settlements in the West

Portland,IO grandchildren and
several nieces.
Mr. Brooks was a life member of
the Veterans of Foreign Wars and
the American Legion. He was a
retired steel worker.
Funeral services will be held at II
a.m. Friday at the Dawson Funeral
Home in East Liverpool. Burial will
be in Colwnbiaria Memorial Gardens, East uverpool. Friends may
call at the Dawson Funeral Home at
6 p.m. and any time on Thursday.

Queen applications sought
. Applications are being accepted
for the title of Big Bend Regatta
Queen.
Girls competing for the title this
year must be 16 years of age by June
2a and should not be any older than
19. They must eside in Meigs County.
Entry deadline is June 20.
The queen will be crowned Saturday afternoon, June 28, and the contestants will ride on a special float
in the parade at noon Saturday.
The queen will receive a crown,

flowers, a trophy, two $50 savings
bonds and a gift. The first, second
and third runners-up will receive
trophies and flowers with the first
runner-up also to receive a crown
anda $50 bond.
Girls interested in taking part are
to complete the applicaiton fonn
printed in today's Sentinel and send
it to Tanya Davis, Route 3,
Pomeory, Ohi o. ·Anyone with
questions may also call Mrs. Davis
at 985-3501.

Big Bend Regatta Queen Appllcalloo
Name .. .. . .. ....................... ... ......... . ... . ....... ... .... .
Age ............... ... .. .. ..... Phone No ... . ...... .. .. . ........... . .
Address .. , .. .. ........ .. ..................... ... . ...... . .. .. .. .... .
0

•••

••

•••

•

••••••

'

••••••

•

•

••••••••••••••••••

•

••••••

•

••••••••••••

••

••

Bush straw vote veep choice
George
Bush easily has won a straw poll of
Cuyahoga County Republican
leaders as their choice to be Ronald
Reagan's vice presidential tl!lllling
mate this year.
Of 491 GOP central committee
members voting during a party convention Tuesday, Bush was favored
as the vice presidential candidate by
248 people, or 50.5 percent ; Sen.
Howard Baker of Tennessee got 104
votes, or 21.9 percent; and Gerald
Ford earned 96 votes, or 19.6 percent. Tbe rest were split among
CLEVELAND (AP) -

ivestock

Emergency squad runs

Atbeol Uvestock S.ln
Markel Report
Juae1,1t80

CA1TLEPRICES:
Feeder Steers: (Good and Choice) 300-liCXJ Jbo.
F_.Jieifon: (Good an&lt;! Choice) 300-liCXJibo.
li.IHI; *-7110 lllo.IOJIHQ.

ll.lCHI; *-7W lbi . IO .:i~HiJ .
Feeder Bullo (Good and Choice) 300-liCXJ lbs.
12»77·h*-1GOlbo. M.:i~HiJ.

SJauc ter Bulls: (Over 1,1100 lbo.) 48.7~7.
Slluahter Cowa: UUiiUes 38.50-46.25; Canners

andCU!tonl$.7~1.75.

CowondCalfPO!n : (by the unit)~ .
Veob: (ChoicHnd Prime) 72-9(;.
" Baby CO!voo: (by the h&lt;od) 10-110.

HOG PRICES :
Hop: (No. 1, Ban()wJJ and Gilts)

several candidates, including U.S.
Rep. Jack Kemp of New York, former ambassador to Great Britain
Anne Armstrong, former Treasury·
Secretary William Simon and
others.
Robert E. Hughes, party chairman in Ohio's largest county, said
. the poll results would be forwarded
to Reagan, Ohio Gov. James A.
Rhodes, the state GOP and
Republican National Committee.
" A Reagan-Bush ticket would be
excellent and would have the support of many local Republicans,"
said Hughes, who said he did not
vote in the straw poll.
Bush was Reagan 's last major
GOP opponent before withdrawing
from the race for the presidential
nomination last month.

~250

lbs .

• 30.1if,li.IO.

Butdler SoWI ZU0·25.
Feeder Pip(By lheh&lt;od) ~24 .
SIIEEPPRlCES:
SlazrLambi5H4.
F
Lornbl ~2 .75

H()I!PITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
•
Dllcbarges, June 10
• Jeffrey Blevins, Estallne Boswell,
Mary Boyer, Deborah Bush, Mrs.
Jolin Canter and son, ~oan Durst,
banzil Endicott, Luther Endicott,
'Fratlk Fitch, Florence Fowler, Ann
Gllhn, James Goff, C.trrie ·Harder,
·Helen Jones, Teresa Kight, Kenna
Knotta, John Uoyd, ·Nancy Long,
Tbe)rna Mecham,.Marcella Phillips,
Radcliffe, Carolyn Rether·
~Althea Ridenour, Alma Ridge,
Earl Roberts, Cecil Sayre, Robin
Sha,.r, Fred Slenker, Robin Styles,
Mrl. Teddy Strartz and son, William

:r.ec1ra

Willford, IW'en Wayan.
lllrtll, Jue '111
· Mr. and Mn. Carl Clarkson, BQ111
ooHIU.
•
\

The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Headquarters
reports four runs by units on
Tuesday.
At 7:10p.m., the Racine Unit went
to Cross St. for Sam Logan who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. The Pomeroy Unit took
Franklin Huff and Audrey Seyler, injured in an auto accident, from Nye
Ave. to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; the Rutland Unit took Ar·
nold Brown from Township Road 282
to Veterans Memorial Hospital at
7:08 and at 8 p.m. took Jerry Frum
from his home near Harrisonville to
the Holzer Medical Center.

FUNDS RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson reported the June
distribution of $9,443,511 in local
government fund money to Ohio's 88
COWitles and 424 citles and villages
levying local income taxes. Meigs
County's portion wsa $12,500.

-FREE
.
CLOTHING DAY
Tbe Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency . will stage its free
clothing da..Y for low Income persons
on ThurSilay from 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
The' agency's clothing bank is
located in the. former high school
building i'l &lt;;heshire.

A sniper wounded an Israeli
policeman in the Old City d.
Jerusalem in an apparent escalation
of Palestinian revenge attacks for
the maiming of two Arab mayors on
the West Bank.

Mayor's court
Eleven defendants forfeited bonds
and three others were fined Tuesday
night in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews.
Forfeiting bonds were Ina Bass,
Clifton·, W. Va., $28; Frank Wood,
Gallipolis, $27 ; William . Forrest,
Middleport, $22; Franklin Giles,
Rutland, $26, all on speeding
charges ; Thomas J. Martin,
Pomeroy, $250, reckless operation,
and $100, leaving the scene of an accident; Richard Friend, Syracuse,
$29; forrest Gangwer, Stockport,
$33; Francis Biron, $30, all on
speeding charges; Steven Boso, Portland, $50, failure to yield the right of
way; Eddie Fife, Middleport, $100,
intoxication, and Alan Cummings,
Pomeroy, $50, open flask.
Fined were Wayne Williams,
Pomeroy, $300 and costs, possession
of a dangerous weapon, and $50 and
costs, discharging a firearm on a
public road ; Frank Haggy ,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, open flask,
and William Reeves, Pomeroy, $250
and costs, seeking favors from a 14year-old girl.
Four defendants were fined and
four others forfeited bonds in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were George McDaniels
Middleport, $25 and costs, disorder!;
manner; Samuel E. McKinney, Jr. ,
no address recorded, $2a and costs
disorderly manner, and $100 and
costs, assault; Thomas E. Batey, no
address recorded, $2a and costs
disorderly manner, and Clifford
Plantz, Middleport, $10 and costs
'
assured clear distance.
Forfeiting bonds were David R.
Wells, Reedsville, $28; Rogert L.
Dent, Middleport, $27; Allen L .
Jago, Amesville, $30, all posted on
speeding charges, and John K. Gordon, Letart, W. Va ., $2a, assured
clear distance.

Three people hurt
in traffic mishap

e

I
BETH JO HARRISON
MOONEY
RECIPIENT of the Scholastic
Award, indicating the highest
grade point average In the Class
of 19811.

Two young women in the 57th classmates. A graduate of Minford
graduating class of the Holzer High School, she served as vice
Medical Center School of Nursing president of the senior class. Her
received special awards at the con- monetary award was presented
clusion of the commencement exer- from the Holzer Clinic, Ltd.
Twenty-one young women
cises at the Faith Baptist Church in
received their diplomas during the
Rodney Friday.
Presented awards by Hugh P. commencement program, presented
Kirkel, President of the Holzer to them by Charles E. Holzer, Jr.,
Medical Center, were Becky Jane' M.D., Pesident of the Medical Staff
James and Beth J o Harrison of the Holzer Medical Center. The
graduates received their pins from
Mooney.
Mrs. Mooney achieved the highest Anne W. Bowers, R.N., ·Associate
grade point average for her three Director of Nursing Education.
Featured speaker was Thomas W.
years at the School of Nursing. She is
.
Morgan,
M.D., Chairman of the
the wife of Marlin Mooney and the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lynas Department of Surgery at the Holzer
Harrison of Gal,lipolis. Mrs. Mooney Medical Center.
Dr. Morgan has just completed his
has a six month old daughter,
Jessica. Her scholastic achievement year as President of the Ohio State
earned her the monetary award Medical Association. His subject
from the Gallia County Medical was "A Changing Profession in
Changing Times." He gave a brief
Society.
Miss James, daughter of Dr. and history of the hospital and the Holzer
Mrs. Donovan G. James of Medical. Center School of Nursing,
Sciotoville, Ohio, wsa named the paying special tribute to thre.,..
Best All Around Student from the "Almas," noting the great influence
Class of 1980. Her selection was asserted by them in the development
made by both the faculty and her of the school, established 60 years

•

a1y

The broadcast said the anny unit involved was in Piranshahr, near the
border with Iraq, an area where
renewed turmoil this week was said
by Iran's interior minister to have
left "a large number" of persons
dead. Kurds in the region want to
make Kurdistan an independent
province.
Tehran Radio·also reported a daylong series of clashes Wednesday
between Iranian guards and Iraq's
Baath anny troops near two border
posts. The broadcast sai&amp;the Iraqis

launched the attack and suffered
heavy milillary losses. It said two
Iranian guards were killed.
·
Tehran Radio' quoted a foreign
ministry spokesman as saying two
Iraqi diplomats 'were arrested on a
Tehran street Tuesday while
receiving official documents. The
broadcast said the two were taken to
the foreign ministry and an official
there informed the. Iraqi charge
d'affaires that the two diplomats
had been ordered to leave Iran as
soon as possible.

en tine
FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1980

44,885 newly unemployed file claims

ago. They were Alma Vornholt •
Holzer, Alma McCormick and Ahna
D. VanPelt.
Dr. Morgan reviewed duties of a .
floor nurse written in 1887. This;
prefaced the theme of his remarks,
showing clearly the changes in the
world of nursing in that time. He
spoke of the greater changes in the
nurse's role and in patient care it·
self, now and in the years ahead. He
commended the graduates who
follow the 'tradition of the hospital's
school of nursing reputation for
producing nurses with character,
professional competence, dedication
to their profession and overall skill
in bedside nursing. He emphasized
the importance of consistently
upgrading nursing skills.
· In his closing comments, Dr.
Morgan said, "Y~u are indeed a part
of a . great tradition in nursing
education and.in the medical history
of this area. Your future cannot be
anything but bright in view of the
fact that many needed changes in
the profession are already underway
and you are part of a profession
whose services are urgently
needed."
After the ceremonies, the
graduates, their families and friends
attended a reception in the
Fellowship Hall at Faith Baptist
Church.

A total of 44,885 newly unemployed
persons in Ohio filed initial claims
for benefits under the Ohio Unemployment Compensation Law during
the week ending June 7, a 38.0 per·
cent increase over the previous
week, and the highest single week of
filing initial claims aince the week
ending January 12th ofthis year, Ad·
ministrator Albert G. Giles of the
Ohio Bureau of Unemployment Services (OBES ), said today.
Giles reported more than 12,000
claims were filed last week because
of scattered layoffs in the auto and

make 27 arrests
Twmty-seven arrests were made
by the Middleport Police Department during May, according to the
monthly report of Middleport Pollee
Chief J. J . Cremeans.
Speeding led the list with eight,
and five persons were charged with
disorderly manner while three
others were charged with failing to
have a driver's license. There was
one arrest each for trespassing,
destruction of property, menacing
threats, failure to yield the right of
way, leaving scene of acciaent,
assault, disobeying traffic signal,
spinning tires, possession of
marijuana, possession. of a controlled substance, and carrying a
concealed weapon.
Parking meter collections totaled
$793 and the police cruiser was
driven 4,929 miles during the month.

SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to 359 N. Front'S!. at 3:12
p.m. Tuesday for Mrs. Lena
McKinley who had fallen. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At5:30the unit was called for Paul
Grady, Racine, who had injured a
hand . He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

OFFICIAL AUTHOR- Dllvid Cumings, noted historian and writer of
many feature articles, was officially designated as a writer of short
stories on frog.. by Tbe Ohio Society For Tbe Promotion of the BU\Ifrog,
Inc. His first assignment is to prepare articles entitled "Where Do Tbe
Tadpoles Go" and also "SieepiJig Habits, Eating Habits, and Mating
Habits of Frogs." Tbe annual frog jump will be beld on Saturday, June28,
at the Meigs Football Stadium in Pomeroy. This is the highlight of events
at the Big.Bend Regatta staged annually.

..

I

President•••

'I

I'
I.

(Continued from page 1)
abandoned hopes for reaching a
strategic arms limitation agreement
with the S(&gt;viets and already is "ex·
ploring SALT UI" even while the
SALT II pact lies dormant and
unratified by the Senate in the wake
of the Soviet drive into Afghanistan.
- Indicated he is reconsidering his
decisi011 not to debate Rep. John B.
Anders'on during the 1980 presiden·
tial campaign, but continued to rule ,
out a debate with Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy.
-Said he · expects the stalled
Palestinian autonomy talks between
Egypt and Israel to resume in
Washington later this month.
-Acknowledged that his inability
to prevent Congress from killing his
dime-a-gallon gasoline fee shows
America's allies, "Obviously, I'm
not as effective as I like."

Draft registration vote slated
WASHINGTON - With the long debate over and Senate approval
practically a foregone conclusion, peacetime draft registration of men
could resume as early as next month.
The Senate scheduled a vote on the plan today after opponents gave
up their futile fight to derail it with a five-day filibuster and then an all·
night session- the first in three years and the 14th this century.

Prosecution rests in judge's

case

AKRON, Ohio - The prosecution 11811 rested its case In the sexual
misconduct trial of Swrunit County Probate Judge James V. Barbuto
after questioning women who claim they had sexual encounters with
the judge in his chambers.
Tbe defense prepared to question witnesses today, the fourth day of
the judge's non-jury trial.
The prosecution rested Wednesday after examining 17 witnesses, including several women who claimed they had sexual relations or were
sexually attacked by the judge in his chambers. Also testifying was a
convicted felon.

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
A NEW BOUNCE
IN COMFORT
.

Large Ford recall under study

.

WASHINGTON - The federal government appears on the verge of
ordering the lilrgest motor vehicle recall ever. Until it does, it is war·
ning owners of 16 million Fords that the cars and light trucks, all with
automatic transmissioos, may suddenly lurch into reverse.
More than 98 deaths, 1,700 injuries and 6,1Dl accidents have been attributed to the transmissions, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said Wednesday in issuing its warning and In 1\0tifying
Ford of its intention to proceed with steps leading to a recall.

..

U.OYD SPRING-BASE CHAIRS
FAMOUS LLOYD WICKER-liKE-FIBERCRAFT SPRING-BASE
CHAIRS ADO A NEW DIMENSION Of COMFORT TO
OUTDOOR LIVING. ATERRIFIC VALUE IN SUPERB COMFORT
AND QUALITY. BITTtRSWEET, GREEN, YELLOW, BROWN
OR WHITE.

Second sniper victim dies
CINCINNATI -A police search for a sniper was set back after the
second of two shooting vlctimll died before detectives could talk to
him.

SAVE ON THESE
GREAT CHAIRS FOR
FATHER'S DAY

Dante Evans, 13, died Wednesday night of his wounds.
Pollee had hoped to talk with the youth, but the boy had underwent a
second session of ertensive surgery at Cincinnati General Hospital on
Tuesday.
Evans was wounded and his cousin, Darrell Lane, 14, was killed Sunday night as they walked near a railroad overpus in the city's North
Avondale l!cllon.

•

.
I

2Q%0FF

.

Weather forecast
MCIItly cloudy today and Friday. Highs today in the mid 70s. Clear

EXTENDED FORECAST
By Tile Auodaled Prllll
Satunllly lllroiiPMIIaday: Falrllalllnlllyul&amp;ulday, wltbubaDce" .,._.or tlludenterm Moaday. Hllblln the Me. Lowala the

upperlll·. ..tlll.
L

(TRA) .

The total number of initial claims
filed last week, 52,215, represented a
34.7 percent increase over the 38,769
total for the week ending May 31.
An estimated 365,918 jobless
Ohioans filed claims for unem-

A total of $156,993.43 in first-half
1979 property ta:x reimbursements
· has been distril;luted to Meig.. County, its political ·subdivisions and
school districts, State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson announced
today.
Meigs County and its political subdivisions received $47,361.70 while
school districts within the county
received $109,631.73.
Additionally, the county, its
political subdivisions and school
districts received $10,101).63 for
granting 2.5 per cent ta:x reductions
on owner • occupied residential
property.
Through a division in the appropriations bill, the state board of
education and state auditor are
required to send the reimbursement
checks directly to local taxing

ployment compensation last week
·under all programs, federal and
state, up 11.0 percent over the
previous week's total of 329,799.
Continued claims of those unemployed one or more weeks were
estimated at 313,703 last week, including 241,000 und~r the Ohio Law,
a 7.8 percent increase over the
291,030 total for the week ending
May31.
Administrator Giles said 10,004
jobless workers exhausted their
benefits under all programs for the
week ending May 31, which included

authorities.
following the amount reimbursed for
Under the rollback program, in ef- the
10
fect aince 1972, counties reduce
rollback and homestead exemption
ta:xes owed by property owners by 10 allowances.
and the stae reimburses the taxing
Reimbursement checks to Meigs
districts for the lost revenue. The County and its subdivisions were as
homestead exemption for elderly follows : Meigs County, $20,617
and disabled homeowners, based on · ($1,275.54); Middleport, $3,355.41
the person 's income,' also calls for
($255.85 ) ; Pomeroy, $2,948.71
the state to reimburse the taxing
($194.29); Racine, $890.79 ($74.34);
districts for the reduction of local
Rutland, $610.81 ($48.84); Syracuse,
revenue.
$1153.84 ($88.37); Bedford Twp.,
Tbe Ohio Ge~eral Assembly, in $316.06 ($22.34); Chester Twp.,
1979, enacted. )egialaUon to provide
s9'79.07 .($81U9); ·Columbia Twp.,
an
additional
2. 5 $487.23 ($10.30); Lebanon Twp.,
ta:x reduction on owner - occupied $455.25 ($16.39); Letart Twp., $463.58
residential property.
($23.37); Olve Twp., $739.61,
In the following swrunary of reim($50.74); Orange Twp., $509.49
bursements to the county, the 2.5 ($31.07); Rutland Twp., $697.37
tax reduction is shown in paren- ($44.38); Salem Twp., $796.05
theses for each political subdivision.
($12.06); Salisbury Twp., $742.34

3,187 under the Ohio law, 78 under
Title 5, 6,632 under Extended
Benefits and 107 under the Trade Acts of 1962 and 1974.
The OBES Administrator said the
Bureau through its state wide offices
filled 9,908 jobs in April, all but 145 in
nonagricultural positions. · The
placements included 5,598 for men
and 4,185 for women. The number of
jobs filled in the eight metropolitan
areas were: Akron, 574 ; Canton,
522; Cincinnati, 714; Cleveland, 868;
Columbus, 697; Dayton, 273; Toledo,
sa;!, andYoungstown, 434.

($58.19); Scioto Twp., $349.85
($15.82 ); Sutton Twp., $813.13
($62.46); and Sutton Twp., $813.13
($62.46).
Distributions to the Special
Districts were as follows : Emergency Levy, $3,821.60 ($238.43); Meigs
County Hospital, $479.46 ($29.66);
Mental Retardation Bonds, $479.47
($29,66); Rio Grande Community
College, $3,655.39 ($226.15); TriCounty Mental Health, $766.75
($47.45); Tuberculosis Hospital.
$1,528.64 ($94.57).
Distributions to the school districts were as follows : Alexander,
$6,058.44 ($128.04); Eastern,
$20,29f.34 ($1,438); Meigs, $59,741.73
($3,893.72) ; Southern f22,957 .62
($1,605.88); Tri County NS, $579.60
($12.2a).

Plan·aimed at softening cutbacks
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The the proposal.
Ohio faces a projected deficit of at
impact of across-the-board spending
cuts needed to keep Ohio's revenue- . least $264 million in the second year
short budget in balance would be of biennial budget which begins
July 1, said Richard G. Sheridan,
reduced by a plan approved by -a
director of the Legislative Budget
Senate committee.
The plan calls for the state to tap Office, to the panel. The deficit
surplus funds from this year and stems from a drop in revenue
produced by the sales ta:x on cars
delay some of next year's spending
and from declines in the personal into reduce the size of a projected
come, corporate franchise and
deficit by $93.9 million.
utility lalles.
Members of the Senate Finance
Approval of the committee's plan
Committee, headed by Sen. Harry
would mean any spending cuts orMesbel, O.Youngstown, approved
dered by Gov. James A. Rhodes to
the package Wednesday in the fonn
keep the budget in balance, as
of four amendments to a measure
required
by law, could be kept to a
funding a residential property tax
·
minimum.
rollback.
But the final percentage depends
Tbe bill goes to the rules comon
the size of the deficit. Although
mittee to await assigrunent to a floor
Sheridan
put the fii{Ure at $264
vote. Tbe House also must approve

a

Patrol recruiting underway
Tbe Ohio State Highway Patrol is
recruiting qualified applicants for
the next Academy class which
begins in October, Lt. Wigglesworth,
the Gallia • Meigs, Post Commander, announced today.
" Tbe Patrol is especially interested in hiring qualified women,"
Lt. Wigglesworth said. "Despite active recruiting of women during he
past five years, a large portion of the
female population could not meet
the previous height standard. Now,
any person who applies will find
height Is no barrier for employment
if it is in proportion to body weight."
Applicants for officer training
must be between 21 and 35 years of
age; have a valid. driver's license;

and have graduated from high
school or be able to show satisfactory completion . of the G.E.D. or
equivalent.
"Recruits experience approximately 28 weeks of intensive
training , both in the classroom and
on-ihe-job under the guidance of an
officer • coach before being assigned
to one of 57 posts located throughout
Ohio," Lt. Wigglesworth said.
People who feel they meet the
qualifications, particularly women
and members of minority groups,
are urged to go to the Gallipolis
Highway Patrol post where an of·
fleer will discuss the profession, answer questions, and provide an application for employment.

.

tonight, with lows in the low 50s. Highs Friday in the low 80s. Tbe chance of rain Is near zero today, tonight and Friday.

ELBERFELDS
WAREHOUSE
..

auto parts industry. He said 7,330
initial claims were filed under all
other programs last week, including
378 under Title 5 (ex-government
employees . and ex-service personnel), 4,065 under the Ohio Extended Benefits (EB) and 2,887 under the Trade Act of 1962 and 1974

Meigs County gets tax reimbursements

Middleport police

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Paul Clark, Middleport; Gregory Stewart, Rutland ;
ullie Dyke, Middleport; Barbara
Chappelear, Pomeroy; Genevieve
Demoskey, Middleport; Mona Neal,
Middleport; Opal Pugh, Middleport;
James Meadows, Portland; James
King, Middleport; Ivor Logan,
Racine;
Patricia Cleland,
Langsville; Arnold Brown,
Pomeroy.
·Discharged-Darla Combs, Nancy
Walker, Salim Yates, Charles Cockcroft.

•

not see the hostages.
In Tehran, Darioush F'orohar, a
member of Iran's new Parliament,
renewed a call for the hostages to be
held and. tried. "Those (hostages)
found guilty should be punished accordingly," Forohar told Iran's official Pars news agency.
Tbe Iranian army's revolutionary
tribunal announced today a "plot"
was uncovered in an anny unit in the
Kurdish region and II soldiers were
seized, Tehran Radio reported.
No details of the plot were given.

DR. 1110MAS W. MORGAN

BECKYJANEJAMES
RECIPIENT of the Best All
Arouud Student Award, selected
by both tbe faculty and her classmates in the Class of 191!0.

Three people were injured and one
driver cited following a two-vehicle
accident investigated Tuesday by
the Gallia·Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol.
Called to the scene on SR 7 in
Meigs County, at the junction of SR
681, at 7:50a.m., officers report an
east bound auto operated by Benjamin Upton, 60, Reedsville, failed
to stop at the intersection and
traveled into the path of a south
bound vehicle driven by David
Cleland, 40, Belpre.
Both drivers and a passenger in
the Cleland auto, Diane Cleland, 10,
Belpre, claimed injury, but were not
lmrr)ediately treated.
Upton was cited on a charge of
failure to obey a traffic control
device . Both vehicles · incurred
moderate damage.

hostages who spent their 222nd dily
in captivity in Iran today.
•·· ·
Reports indicated the meeting, in
a hotel during the night, may have
been more successful than the
meetings Ghotbzadeh ·held with
Kreisky and other socialist leaders
in Tehran last month.
Kreisky was the only Western
leader to visit Iran since the hostage
crisis began with the takeover of tbe
U.S. Embassy in Tehran Nov. 4. He
and socialist leaders fr&lt;IJI Sweden
and Spain discussed the crisis with
Iranian leaders last month, but did

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO,

VOL 31 NO. 42

Two hurt
in mishap
A car was heavily damaged and
two persons were injured in an accident on Nye Ave., at 7:40 p.m.
Tuesday.
·
Pomeroy Police said a car driven
by Doug Seyler, Columbus, went out
of control and struck a utility pole.
Taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the Pomeroy Emergency Squad were passengers, Franklin
Huff and Audrey Seyler.
Seyler is charged wsith reckless
operation and driving a motor
vehicle while under suspension.

preparing a file with recommendations for the parliament on
the hostages that he expect~!&lt;~ to
have ready in a couple of weeks.
His comments came in an interview with the NBC "Today"
program in New York via satellite
from Oslo, Norway, where he is at·
tending a meeting of the Socialist International.
Ghotbzadeh renewed his private
dialogue with Austrian Chancellor
'Bruno Kreisky, reportedly
discussing ways of resolving the
deadlock over the 53 American

Deputies find missing truck
A 1978 Chevrolet three quarter ton
pickup truck was found by Meigs
County .sheriff's deputies.abandoned
and stripped Wednesday morning on
county road two, just off SR 325.
Tbe truck was owned to Thoma9
M. Potter, Jr., Rt. l, Dexter. Potter
had notified the sheriff's uffice that
his truck had been taken from his
1 .

residence. Tile incident is under investigation.
Mark Beegle, Rt. 2, Racine, informed the sheriff's department that
a seven and one-hal( horsepower
Mercury bQat motor and a three
gallon gas tank were taken from his
. boat un Olde Town Creek.

..

million, Rhodes' top budget officer,
William D. Keip, was quoted by
Senate President Oliver Ocasek, l).
Akron, as saying it was about $310
million.
"We're trying to avoid across-theboard cuts for eVerything," Sen.
Marigene Valiquette, O.Toledo, said
of the finance panel's proposal.
Sen. Sam Speck, R-New Concord,
added that the plan would not result
in job losses or reductions in benefits
under state programs.
Meanwhile, Rhodes and
legislative leaders continue private
meetings to decide what cuts are
needed and when to impose them.
Tbe committee trimmed the
state's financial problem by : _
-Transferring to the general fund
$48 milljon in previously appropriated but unspent money, in·
eluding $23 million not used by the
education department due to lowerthan-anticipated pupil enrollments.
-Delaying the date by which funds for state pension·systems must be
certified as available, a bookeeping
change that frees $14.3 million:
- Transferring tq the general fund
$20 million officials say won't be
needed to provide jobless benefits
for employees of non-public schools.
- Delaying implementation of a

new formula for providing Medicaid
reimbursements to nursing homes,
saving $11.6 million.
Although the Medicaid-related.
amendment called for a delay of six
montha, Sen. Jerome Stano, l).
Pamlll, said it could be as long as a
year. He said he will try to avoid the
delay by offering a substitute amendment to cut salaries of elected state
offficials 2 percent.
Other optioflll for reducing the
deficit include raising the state's
liquor monopoly prices by much as 5
percent, Sheridan said. This would
yield an estimated extra· $20.8
million.
Another possibility is to change
the payment schedule for nonnursing Medicaid bills to save
another $20 million.
PURCHASES BANK
CINCINNATI (AP) - Tbe Fifth
Third Bancorp. says It has an
agreement to acquire the Farmers
Bank in West Union, the lilrgest in
Adams County.
Details of the purchase were not
revealed, and the ~ansaction was
subject to regulating agencies.
Tbe Adams County bank, located
in southern Ohio, has three branches
and assets of $37.58 million.

Gallipolis auto firm
offers $8,800 prize
Riverside AMC.Volkswagen of informed of the Riverside AMC:.
Gallipolis announced today It will Volkswageh promotion, "It's just
give a new $8,800 . four-wheel the type of thing we need to keep
drive Eagle to the first · person · interest growing in our tourney
who cards a hole-in-one on the where the proceeds 110 to
No. 9 hole at Riverside Golf Club charity."
during the Secmd Annual Dave
In another related development
Diles Celebrity GoU Tounwnent today, Ben Ewing, operator cl
next Thursday at Riverside Golf Ewinll Funeral Home (alias
Club.
Ewiall~s Ulldergrouild Novelty
The No. 9 hole at Riverside is a Shop) revealed plans to give a
par3, 179 yanler.
.
coffin to the golfer hlttinll c1oeest
"I'm elated over this offer," to the pin on No. 14.
'remarked Dave Diles upon being

.•
••

'
't

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