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                  <text>_1~.::~~~!~~~-=~~~~~'P.?~·Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. June 17. 191!0.

IEvaArea
Deaths I Teacher resignations
Knopp
Eva Ire~e Knopp, 75, Mason, died
Monday m the Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Born Aug. 28, 1904, in West Colum·
bia, she was li daughter of the late
Franklin and Della Hoffman Knapp.
She was a member of the Spillman
United Methodist Church, and was
preceded i.n death by her husband,
Carl Clarence Knopp in 1953, and a
son, Charles.
Surviving are a daughter and sonin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
(Eileen) Duncan, Mason; a son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. An·
drew Carl Knopp, Colwnbus, Ohio;
daughter-in-law, Mrs. Phyllis N.
Knopp, Mason; two sisters, Mrs.
Vanda Kapp, West Columbia; Mrs.
Velda Sims, Crown City, Ohio; three
brothers, Albert and Don Knapp,
West Columb(il; Harry Knapp,
Mason; II grandchildren and 16
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be conducted Thursday, 1:30 p.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home Mason
w{th the Rev. James H. i.,ewis or:
ficiating. Burial will follow in the
Suncrest Cemetery, Point Pleasant.
Friends may call at the funeral
homeafter4:30p.m. Wednesday.

Wayne C. Powell
Wayne G. Powell, 59, Route I, Por·
tland, died Sunday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
He was born Feb. 24, 1921, a son of
Simon Powell and the late Edna
Sloter Powell. Graveside services
will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at
the Bald Knob Cemetery.
GRADUATING TOO
Penny Jacks, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Jacks, Langsville, is a
member of the 1980 graduating class
of Meigs High School.
Commencement will be tonight. Miss
Jacks name has been unintentionally omitted from the list of
graduates twice in The Daily Sen·
tine!.

&lt;Conr •nued 'rom page II
superintendent that authority.
employed Gordon Ft$her, John ArA special meeting was set for June
noll, Jan Burner and Mike Gerlach
27 to fill current vacancies and
as teachers in the swruner five week
another special meeting was set for
youth employment training
July 14 to adopt the budget.
program.
FINANCIALCRIMP
The treasurer, Jane Wagner, was
Treasurer Jane Wagner gave a
authorized to advertise for bids on
financial report indicating that over·
student accident insurance, fleet inspending has O&lt;.'Curred in several accounts, parti.cularly utilities and bus
surance, tires and tubes, gasoline,
oil and anti-freeze, fuel oil, coal,
maintenance.
milk and dairy products, break and · Sup! Gleason indicated that
baker products, meat and produce ... ·,; (lP~i!io 11 s :·,: mi~ht have to . be
The board approved the Po~~~ ·. •':~te&lt;~·: abd~ ~jof cutting will
Mtddleport Library budg~ •.oot . ,.- hav\l tQ ~ p'raa~ m every account. .
tabled a resolutwn which . w~: t.;.,.' .ShoWdi'".said it is Indefinite yet
change the name of the ii!JraJ'jl'' :' .fa what the district will receive lrom
distrid from . Meigs Local ·_ Sdl)F,it' ': ,\he-state and that threatened cuts in
Dtstnd Pubhc Ltbrary t~: M•n~~ ~··.. sta,te funds might just be stories
CountyD1stnct Pubhc L1br~
· t~;·. ,w,ri!ten to sell newspapers.
resolutiOn would have re~.
. , ~ ·~ . ;,/:He further stated.that talk of cut~ppmntment of ?'ember~. ~,
'.~ ·: ling positions and operations is only
library from the JUrtsdiCt\O.
-II~
upsettmg to people and should be
Metgs Local Board of Educlit.i'Eito!: ;·
confined to executive sessions.
Jason Huffman was released as a
The board did transfer $6,000 from
tu1t10n student to the. Alexander
the salary fund to transportation. A
Local Board of Educatron and the
performance bond was purchased
for the superintendent and sevPral
board adopted the Talented and Gifted Council structure, objectives and
possible school calendars for the
IdentificatiOn procedures as outlined · next year were reviewed. These will
by . Dan Morris, director of
be placed in schools for opinions
curnculwn. The board considered
from teachers.
Mrs. Maxine
nominating a board member as a
Goeglein gave a report on last
candidate for the All Ohw School
week's band tripto Nashville.
Board,( Dr. Ke1th R1ggs) but no
The board then went into
.
executive session to discuss persecond was made.
It was agreed to advertise for
sonnel and negotiations with the noncertified employes.
sealed bids on a building located on
Pearl St. The structure was at one
time used for storage.
The board will reserve the right to
reject all bids. At this point, Dr.
Riggs indi cated that in the future, he
is against giving any ground or
buildings to any community or
group as has been done in the past.
MOTION TABLED
.
The board tabled a policy changed
recorruneijded by Supt. Gleason on
the expulsion and reinstatement of
Maynard A. Clark, Marjorie J.
students. Snowden maintained that
Clark to Steven Frost, Jackalyn
the school board and only the school
Frost, 1.290 acres, 1.467 acres,
board should have the right to reinChester.
state an expelled student. The
Athco, Inc. to Dennis Miller,
change would have given . the
Cheryl Miller, 90 acres, Olive.
Sixteen Easements, Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District.
Mary Frances Woodyard, dec. to
Waldo E. Woodyard, Mary Frances
Cowan, aff. for .tans.; Bedford.
Waldo E. Woodyard, Lucille
Woodyard to Ruth Runyon, Int. in
parcel, Bedford.

Welcome, visitors, to Second Annual Dave Diles Classic

e
VOL. 31

NO. 46

Meigs
Property
Transfers

PRESENTED CERTIFICATES- Members of the
Pomeroy Fire Department with 47 years to 27 years of
service were presented cetificates at Muster Day services Sunday held at the Pomeroy Fire Station.·
Presented certificates were front row, l·r, George
Hicks, 38 years and past chief ; Harold Ebersbach, 27
years, Dick Vaughan, 35 years, Charles M. Werry, 41
years, and Ralph Sisson, 42 years, past chief; back,

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

180 seniors
:! get diplomas

Henry Werry, f2 years, past cblef; Carl Moore, 42
years,.John Terrell, 47 yeal'll, Dwight Parker, f2 yeal'!l,
Anton Lucke, 46 years, Emmerson Well, 30 yeal'll, past
chief, Bob Hysell, 31 years and Charles Legar, 31 yeani
and present chief. Absent were Rolland Neutzllng, 38
years, Reed Will, 30 years, William Grue.ser, 30 yeal'!l
and Jed Will, 41 years.

1

THREE SQUAD RUNS
The :Meigs County Emergency
Service Headquarters reports three
runs on Monday.
t 11:07 a.m., the Syracuse Unit
went to Water St. for Opal Cumings,
who was taken to Veteran s
Memorial Hospital. At ll :35 p:m. the
unit went to Second St. for Sue Hubbard who was also taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 11:09 a.m. the Racine Unit went
to the Bashan Road for Judith Holter
who was also taken to Veterans
Memorial.
CELEBRITY DINNER
All golfers, members of the committee and their wives and all media
are invited to the Dave Diles
Celebrity Dinner to be held at Royal
Oak Park Wednesday at 6:30p.m.
The park is located three miles
north of the Pomeroy Corporation on
Route 7. Those attending are to turn
right at Five Points onto Wells Road
and travel for one mile to the dinner
location.

SLO PITCH TOURNEY
The Wahama Athletic Boosters
are sponsoring the 1980 Big Bend Sof.
tball Tournament on June 21 and 22.
This wili be a double elimination
tournament consisting of 12 teams.
All teams must be sanctioned by the
A.S.A. The entry fee is $60 plus two
A.S.A. approved softballs. All fees
must be paid before the first game.
Team8 wishing to enter the tournament of wanting additional infonnation are to call 773 )5152 or 773·
5145.

SQUAD CAlLED
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Hamilton St. at 4:01
p.m. Monday for John Tillis who was
taken to Holzer Medical Center. AI
12:46 p.m. Monday, the unit went to
Beech St. for Richard Qualls w.ho
was also taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

WEIGH INSET
TOPS OH570 in Pomeroy will have
weigh-in one hour ~rlier fromn 5 to

FRIGIDAIRE
WEEK

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30 • Electric Range
Clock an&lt;l Minute Timer
Full-width Storage Orawei
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SPill- Saver TOil
• Removable Sur1ace Un~s

And spoiled you 'll be with these hand -crafted
knives from Chicago Cutlery. Just one knife will
convince you .. . it's the only knife you'll want to use.
Elegant and Practical. Only the best wood and
steel, shaped by the hands of Proud American
Craftsm'en, earns the name Chicago Cutlery.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-&lt;&gt;ris Hubba1d, SyraCUSI!;
George Clonch, Gallipolis; Patricia
Custer, Pomeroy i Nellie Perry,
Long Bottom; Judith Holter, Long
Bottom; Clarey Webb, Athens; Opal
Cumings, Syraucse; Nona Awalt,
Tuppers Plains.
Discharged-Ralph Ours, Richard
Winebrenner, Milo Hutchison, Thurmand Poynter, Max Eichinger.

6 this evening due to Meigs
graduation. There will be no
meeting.

•

DEGREE WORK SLATED
held at 7:30p.m. this evening at the
hall. Work will be in the E.A.
Degree. All Masons are invited.

"·

.

-~Sales
-~~~
,Jae l4,llll
CATI'LE PRICES,
Feeder Sleers: (Good-Cholcel JOO.IOO lbo.
74.2~·71: 800-100 lbo.l3..75.
Feeder Hellen : iGoocKboice) JOO.IOO lbo.
:;6.- ; iNJ0.100 lbo. IW3.
Feeder Bulla: (Good-Cholcel-lba. Sl-71;
501).70111ba. ~70.
.
Sla.ughter Bulla: (Over l,OOOibs.) :.0.1$.64.75.
Slaughter Cow!J: UWities tO.&amp;$-M. 75; Canner•

READY FOR THE BIG MOMENT - Meigs High School Seniors 1-r,
Chris Ebersbach, Rhonda Snider, Cherie Lighfoot, Beth Bartrum and

Springer COWl: (By the H..d) 2SW'IO.
COw.C.~ Pairs (By the Unltlll~.
Veals' (Cboice-Prime) 15-111.50.
.
Baby Cal'""' (By the Head I 31.10-17.10.

Moore hired as Eastern grid coach

HOG PRICES :
Hop : (No.1, Borrows· Gills I 1»-230 lbo. :li35.10.
.
.
Butcher Sows :IH7 21.
Butcher Boon IMU8.
Feeder Pip: !By the Hood I 5.10-17.

From tbe Associated Press

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MIDDUPORT, OHIO

· OPEIU til 5

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - South Africa's police commissioner declared his men will shoot to kill anyone found looting, bur·
ning or endangering lives, just as they did in clashes that reportedly
left more than 15 colored rioters dead and 100 wounded and flared
again this morning.
The new violence erupted in Elsies River, a colored, or mixed-race,
township outside Cape Town, as young men stoned cars and set fire to
a shop, and police opened fire to disperse mobs so that firemen could
fight the blaze, the Cape Argus newspaper reported.

Natives block airfield runways
PORT VILA, New Hebrides - Rebellious natives on the island of
Espiritu Santo blocked airfield runways with oil drums and trucks
today to keep goverrunent negotiatiors away. The goverrunent warned
its effort at bargaining was the last before military intervention.
Three higl'lolevel government negotiators, accompanied by three
planeloads of reporters, were forced to tum back from the island after
the control tower radioed that the runway had been blocked.
The tower said the negotiators could not land because they did not
have the' permission of the Vemerana Republic, as rebel leader Jim·
my Stevens has nam,.. his seccessionist island.

Moslem

~bels

assassinating people

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - Anti-communist Moslem rebels are
assassinating members of Afghanistan,'s ruling pro-Moscow party at
an average rate of 10 a day in the capital of Kabul, Western diplomats
reported.
Most of the assassination victims are described as low-ranking
members and officials· of the Khalq (People's) Party. But Afghan
exiles said the rebels also have killed politicians' relatives with no con·
nection to the ruling party.
The sources said the victims include supporters and opponents of
President Babrak Katmal, installed when the Soviets began pouring
in tens of thousands of troops to fight the rebels in December.

More officers assigned to case

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From the very beginning
we've established a full
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benefit of our depositors.
· Get to know us.

Donna Freeman make last minute preparations as a few of the young
men of the class look on. A huge crowd attended the graduation exercises
held at Meigs High School Tuesday night.

anything we do.
'We know our abilities vary and
that we will be engaged in work of
different types, some of that work
may be low in pay and low on the
social ladder while other work will
be of the highest type.
'' No matter what we do, if we work
at our jobs to the best of our ability,
we can be considered successful iil
life. In other words if we are going to
be ditch diggers, let's be the best we
can. If we are going to be skilled
mechanics, let's be the best we can.
If we are going to be lawyers, doctors, or teachers, let's be the best
that our talents allow us to be. That
is true success," Mrs. McLaughlin
re{llarked.
In conclusion, the salutatorian
commented, "Learning from books
is not enough. We need to become
whole people, well balanced and in
possession of knowledge of our
chosen fields and blessed with those
qualities that make us well liked ,
dependable , cooperative and trustworthy ."
The baccalaureate sermon was
delivered by Rev. James Corbitt,
IContinued on page I 41

Eichinger new cage coach

CUtters~J . 50.

Heavy Duty Washer

Long on quality ... Long on Value .
Go ahead and SPOIL YOURSELF!

liY KATIE CROW
"The day we waited for with great
anticipation for so many years is
finally upon us," thus said Tonia
Ash, valedictorian of the Meigs High
School graduating class m her
opening remarks during the annual
commencement exercises Tuesday
night at Larry Morrison Gym.
" Now that It is here we find ourse lves with mixed emotions, con·
cerning our ability to cope with the
future. As former students of Meigs
High School, we have had many
cherished memories m various ac·
tivities such as athletics, music,
social events as well as our learning
experiences," Toniaconunented.
"The class of 1980 must evaluate
the problems that confront our
nation, adopt a plan of action
possibly based oo that of our
forefathers and fight hard to bring
our country back to its righUul place
among the nations of the world , under God," she concluded.
Ter ry
Y.
McLaughlin,
salutatorian, in her a'ddress,
opinioned, "first, I ·would hope that
we have developed the quality of
working to the best of our abilities at

A special meeting of Shade River
Masonic Lodge t53 F&amp;AM will be

'329

,

.

Meigs County happenings •••

WINNING TICKETS- Kyle Allen, right, of Ewing Funeral Home is
pictured with the winning tickets in the weekly drawing of The Sentin~l's
Security Sweepstakes. With Allen is Tim Halstead of the advertising
depa.rtrnent of The Daily Sentinel. Winners in this week's drawing will
receive a $50 savmgs bond and $50 in script money which can be spent at
the stores of participating merchants. Winners are announced in the advertisements of those merchants in today's Sentinel. Winners must notify
The Sentinel within four days to pick up their prizes.

•

enttne
At Meigs High School

,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

al y
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO,

Looters will be shot by police

We have an excellent selection ·
of Chicago Cutlery Knlve$ In the
' Housewares 'D ept· Jst floor.

•

as ·

SEPARATE ENVOYS
Byelorussia and the Ukraine, con·
stituent republics of the USSR, have
separate representation in the
United Nations General Assembly.
This is the result of a compromise
after the Soviet Union protested
against the separate admission &lt;:l
members of the British Common·
wealth during the fonnative days of
the UN .

Spoil Yourself

•

CINCINNATI - Cincinnati homicide Sgt. Thomas Oberschmidt
says the number of officers assigned to his sqaad today in the hunt for
the sniper who killed two teen-agers is the largest ever for a single investigation.
'
Lt. Col. Josep~ Start also said Tuesday that the police department
will add 15 officers drawn from the city's five police districts, plus a
civilian clerk typist to augment the regular 13-person homicide squad.
'l'he squad additions will include two sergeants and 10~nvestigators
to research records, process physical evidence and follow up leads,
•
Startsaid.
The youths, Dante Evans Brown, 13, and his cousin Darrell Lane, 14,
were shot near a railroad overpass Jwte 8 by someone with a .«caliber rifle, police said.

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy today, with highs in the mid to upper 70s. mostly
cloudy tonight, with a chance of showers or thunderstorms. Lows in
the mid 50s. Considerable cloudiness Thursday, with a chance of
showers or thunderstorms. Highs in t~e luw to mid 70s. The chance of
rain is 20 percent tQday, 40 percent tonight and 30 percent Thursday.
.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday; Fair, wjtb highs In the upper &amp;Os to low
70s Friday, readlillg the mid 70s t9Iow 80s by Sunday. Lows from the
40s to mid 50s•
----------------~------~

fDd

Willard L. · (Buddy) Moore, formerly of Middleport, was given a
one-year contract as head football
coach and a high school biology
teacher Tuesday night by the
Eastern Local Board of Education.
Moore, who began his teaching and
coaching career at Gallia Academy
High School, formerly served as
head football coach of that school
prior to his resignation there in
April, 1978.

He served the Gallipolis School
System eight years, the last three as
head coach.
During 'that tenure, his GAHS
teams finished with an overall 15-15
record.
In other Sp&lt;)rts·releated activities,
the board apj,ointed iorrner Eastern
basketball star Dennis Eichinger as
head basketball coach succeeding
John Boston, who resigned last month.

Also employed as a teacher to
fill existing vacancies in the high
school year was Wayne Caudill,
given a one year ·contract, as a
mathematics instructor.
Other supplemental contracts
were awarded to Ralph Wigal ,
athletic director; Eichinger ,
assistant football coach; Tim Simpson, reserve boys basketball
coach ; Sue Thompson, girls head
varsity basketball coach and girls ·

Commission discusses EMS matter
•

Bob Bailey, EMS coordinator,
meeting with Meigs County Commissioners Tuesday discussed a
problem concerning emergency
calls from parts of Meigs County
that are not on the Pomeroy exchange.
The board has received several
complaints that the EMS number is
not toll free from some outlying
areas in the county.
Bailey said the phone company
had not offered an alternative other
than a Watts line which would be
costly.
The board and Bailey agreed that
calls from outlying areas should be
collect calls.
Person~ calling for emergency
service should call 992~ collect
and state that is an emergency and
give the callers name.
Bailey agreed to again contact
General Telephone and request a
written summary of all alternatives
to the present system.
Also meeting with the commissioners was Charley Smith, acting founty engineer, who reported
that the structural repair on Hobson
Bridge i~ completed and painting is
underway.
Smith also told the board that patching is almost completed on CR 10.
Smith requested permission to
patch approximatley one-half mile
of CR 16, .Beech Gmve Road, in

Rutland Township and CR 3, New
Lima Road. Request was granted.
Smith reported that county employes are in the process of mowing
along county roads. He said ail cutting will be completed, but the work
is slow due to the fact that the county
has only one mower.
Ed Fisher and Joho Ours who own
property next to T-40 in Lebanon
Township discussed a petition for
vacating a portion of the road.
Fisher stated his objection in
vacating the road was that it would

.

Youth program in full swing
The Meigs County Youth Employment Program is in full swing
and the Pomeroy office of the Ohio
J ob Services is looking for em:
ployers to help put youth to work.
Heading the program is Bill Ar·
noll, Syracuse, summer youth coon·
selor.
According to Arnott and Edith
Adkins, local job services director,
the summer goal is to place at least
one youth each day in an employment situation.
"No job is too large or too small"
said Arnott. The program is open to
all youth of the area.
Youth can Qe employed in such
jobs as lawn care, handy' persons,

.AORTA grant given approval
The county consortiwn of Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Perry and Vinton
has received approval of a grant 31&gt;'
plica lion providing a total of $251 ,827
in Federal, State and local fund s to
secure transportation with the Aj)palachian Ohiu Regional Tronsit
Association (AORTA ) fur the fiscal
year 1980-81. The application had
been submitted under Sectiun 18 of
the Surfaee Transportation Act of
1978.
Clyde Bronson, former AORTA
Board of Trustees President, whu
was instrumental in securing the
bl'U IIt's fmul uppruvai, relayed thto

present a problem in that his property would be iand'locked.
Ours also stated his opiniun as to
why the road should be closed.
The board asked Carson Crow,
assistant prosecutor, to review the
legal aspects before they make a
decision. Crow will render an
opinion by next Tuesday.
Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells, and Cpester
Wells , commissioners, Mary Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha Chambers.

forma l ypprovalto AORTA officials.
Approval of t~e application means
that AORTA should soon be on more
stable financial ground pending
receipt of nearly $38,000 owed the '
system for January through April
1980. Encwnbrances are now being
established, and muney should start
flowing tu the county co~·
missioners'· offices within the next
few weeks ..
Priur tu the aplication's approval,
the AORTA system had been ·
"pcruling almost entirely through
reimbursement fur Athens City ser"icc and sumc eharter revenue .

clerks, painting and general fix·up .
Youth are available on a daily basis.
Arnott stressed that the youth involved in the program are eager to
work and added that the rate of
payment will be worked out between
the participant in the program and
the employer.
The Summer Youth Program will
be operative through the end of September.
·
Prospective employers and par·
ticipants should contact Arnott at
the Ohio Job Services office by
phoning 992~71 or by visiting the of·
lice located at 39350 Union Ave., at
the intersection of Union Ave . and
Slh

reserve basketball coach ; Donna
Chadwell 'll!d Gayle Douthitt, junior
cla ss advisors; Arch Rose,
sophomore class advisor, and Carol
King , freshman class advisor.
The board adopted a calendar for
the 1980-81 school year. This calendar is similar to the 1979-&lt;10 calendar.
Teachers will meet on Monday,
Aug . 25, with the first day of classes
to be held on Aug. 26. There will be a
·spring break and the last day of
classes will be on May 29.
RAISE APPROVED
A mandated raise of .063 percent
for non-certified employes effective
July I was approved and the board
purchased textbooks including
science books for seventh, eighth
and ninth grades; new social studies
texts for grades one through six, and
some learning disability and other
special texts.
It wa§ agreed to participate in all
federal title programs. A special
meeting was set for 6 p.m. next
Tuesday to begin negotiations with
the non-certified employes of the
district.
Job descriptions for head teachers
and the athletic director were ai&gt;'
proved and the board approved the
transfer of money remaining from
the Class of 1979 into the science fund
which will be used for the purchase
of equipment.
The Eastern Athletic Boosters
were given permission to use . the
high school kitchen in conjunrtion
with their annual July 4th
celebration.
Attending the meeting were Dor·
sel Larkins, president; Deryl Well,
Roger Gaul , James Caldwell and
Bernard Shrivers, members; Supt.
Richard Roberts, and ClerkTreasurer Eloise Boston.

BIDOPENINGSET r
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The Ohio
Department of Transportation will
open bids June 24 for federal aid
projeets to reswiace highways in
eight counties plus a federal aid
pavement marking project in 11
counties and one pavement repair
project in Vinton County.
The department gave no estimate
on what the work might cost.

FISHING DERBY
All persons taki.rig part in Salur·'
day's Meigs County fishing derby
are tu take their OjVIl pole, bait and
other fish~ equipment.

•

~DDYMOORE

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 18. 1980

~

...r - - - - - - - - - , . . . - - . ,
Opinions
&amp; Comments

•,

'•

Second annual Diles event tomorrow

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 18,111110

.

.,
" 1

DIE DAILY SEN'IlNEL

~USPS I - I
DEVOTED TO 111E
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
. Let&amp;en of optmoo are w~lcomed, Tbey sboukl be leu tllaAIII wordi .loae (or' 111bj«l kt rene.
. tioo by lH ed.l&amp;orl and murt be slped wlt.b the slpee '1 addraa. Na.metiPIJ be 'lritbhdd qp.a
pu.bUcatloo. Howenr, oa teqlletl, Damet wW bt clUdo.e4. Ldten abould be lo lt}Cld tute addrr:s•I~Ji IJJUtl, not persOILllftlea.
'
PubliJbecl dilly ea:cept S.tanlay by Tbr: Ohio Vall~,. Publilblq Compuy- Ma.IUmeclla, lat.,
IIJ Cou.rtSl, Pomeroy, Ohio mtl. BullMis Offlet PboDe 1ft. %151. EdUorial Pbooe m-llS7.
Suood da11 poata&amp;e ~ld al Pomeroy, Ohio,
44 ~~~tnllll adnnlalag represeotative, Laadoo AIJ.ciatel, 1111 Euclid Ave. , aevel..d, Obit

-·-

Tbe Aaaoela~ Preta ll exclwlY~Iy enul.led to tbe ue for pubUeatloo of aU ae"' dllz-~btl
•edited kl the newspaper •Bd also tbe local oews pubU.bedbtnlo.
PublJaber
Robert Wl.lqett

Geoend Mgr. &amp; City EdUor

Ntws Edftor

Robert H.nlth

"""'"
1117
~~

Adv. Manager

~~

DaleRotQeb, Jr.

CarfGben ·

,..,...._,.._....... ,,..,..._d,=

COACH DAN DEVINE jolDed
. bost Dave DUes just before tee up
lime at Riverside last year.

Contagious hatred

f
t.

:·•.•- .

.·

the editor

lnfonnation sought

.·;

June 12,1980
pear Editor:
• We would like to conunent on how
Leautiful Sand Hill Cemetery at
l-ong Bottom, Ohio looked Memorial
Oay with all the beauWul flowers
a»d flags. It is maintained solely by
ilontributions and we are proud of
Qow well it is kept up and wish to
!hank all who have helped to make it
Possible down through the years.
: The cemetery trustees are comOiling a history of it and would ap-

preciate any help on such as how
many generations of families are
buried there, etc. The Fred Swan
Family now has six generations
buried there and we wonder if any
one can top that. Any infonnation
would be greatly appreciated.
Leona Hensley, Chairperson, Dorsel Larkins, John Hensley, Mae McPeek, Secre~ry and Treasurer, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Bissell and Kellheth,
Caretakers, All, Long Bottom, Ohio
45743.

.
•,

Berry's World
•

•

,.

•

"I understand."

U. S. and Turkey: new pact with old ally
By Don Graff
Item: The United .states has
signed a new pact with an old ally .
Turkey.
A five-year Agreement for
Cooperation on Defense and
Economy concluded in March updates an association that has endured through ups and downs mostly the latter of late - through
·thi'ee postwar decades.
It provides for the usual U. S.
military assistance to Turkey and U.
S. military facilities in Turkey, plus
measures to shore up the sagging
Turkish economy, without which the
country could very rapidly be in no
position to cooperate with anyone.
Item : Amnesty International
charges that torture has become
"widespread and systematic" under
martial law that has been in effect in
much of Turkey since 1978 in an ef·
fort to surpress widespread political
and religious unrest and violence.
It has become routine, according
to the organization that .keeps a
vigilant eye on basic hwnan rights
around the world, to subject
jletainees of the police and military
authorities to turture, with fatal con·
sequences in some cases.
It might appear that there is no

frequently a logical partner for
political and strategic purposes is
also an embarrassing one. on moral
grounds.
Turkey in that respect is by no
means the worst of the lot, past or
present. There was, of course, the
Iran of the shah, a particularly intimate associati9n that the present

Today's commen_tary
Turkey has been, in fact, in a state
of economic collapse and political
crisis for more than a year and a
subject of great concern among its
Western associates. Terrorism has
claimed more than 3,000 victims and
industry is slowing to a halt. Sixteen
nations have put together a $1.6
billion aid package and the United
States is already committed .to $452
million in military and economic
assistance during the 1981 fiscal
year.
And for another thing, the two
news items point up a basic problem
of the United States in doing political
business around the world. All too

authorities - if that is the word for
them - in Tehran ·are not about to
forget or allow us to. There was also
the decades-long acconunodation of
the Somoza dictatorship . in
Nicaragua. And there is the continuing uneasy tie with a South
Korea apparently congenitally
unable to kick the military dictatorship habit.
But back to the Turkish connection, a State Department release
says it all on the jusWication for continuance: ·
A valued and strategically located
ally, Turkey fonns part of NATO's
southeastern flank,
. .helps guard ac-

cess to the Mediterranean from the

Black Sea and faced the Soviet
Union across the longest common
land border of any NATO natlon.
But Amnexty International also
has plenty to say. It cites figures
from Turkish sources putting
political detainees during the first
four months of 1980 alone at more
than 40,000.
The organization's represen·
tatives in a recent visit to Turkey interviewed many who had been
released and the resulting report
names ·names and cites incidents.
Torture methods "included electric
shocks, beating the soles of the feet .
and violent assaults on all ~
the body, including sexual organis.''
There's mo,-e, but that's enough to
make Iilii poitit. Turkey may have its
value ~ an ally, but not as a
humllnitarlan society. It is not, as
presently run, the type of regime
with which a conscientious
democracy, given the choice, would
want to associate.
The trouble is that in a very lm. perlect world that choice is frequently not available. What is, as here, is
the necessity of making do with the
best, for one prigiiii!Uc reason or
another, of a gener&amp;it:y bad lot.

Business mirror

Shopping malls: small city rehabilitation '
EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP )- The
weary retail areas of smaller cities
often can be rehabilitated with shopping malis, says the man who has
built more of them in downtown
areas than anyone else.
He gets results. Some of his big·
city centers have outdrawn
Disneyland by up to 80 percent. Fox
Hills Mall, a large center opened
several years ago in Los Angeles
County, has drawn 19 million people
a year.
On a lesser scale, says Emest W.
Hahn, an entrepreneur whose name
is associated with some of the
largest, most innovative, and suc·
cessful malls, smaller cities have
relatively equal poSsibilities.
Hahn, the intellse, 00-year-&lt;Jld
founder and chairman of Emest W.

W~IUNGTON

'House
Republicans are needling House
Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill by get·
ting off a round of short blasts at
Democrats almost every day the
House is In session.
They're making use of a House
rule allowing members to speak for
one minute at the beginning of each
day's session on any subject they
choose.

,.•

.•,.'

:;.

Hahn Inc., which owns and operates
25 retail centers, is building 11
others and has 21 in the planning
stage. He says three things are
essential.
First, a city must be accessible to
the entire mar.ket, including the
surrounding towns, by means of
superior streets or freeways or both.
And then it must provide plenty ri
free parking.
The third requirement is where
dreamers are separated from
realists. The developer must, .he
said, have a subsidy, perhaps in the
form of a city agency buying up
properties and "recycling" them for
retail.
·
f
· There is a good reason for the subsidy, says Hahn, and it becomes
evident once the shopping center

I·,.

'

r
I
I:

•

(AP) -

And, as might be expected, the
subject the Republicans are
ch0011ing tbe most is a litany of
reasons why President Carter and
the Democratic congressional
majority should be replaced.
Usually four or five Republicans
.speak in rapid succession. O'Neill,
increasingly irritated by having to
begin each day listening to what a

Today in history. ..

.:

I

connection between the two developments other than that both focus on
Turkey.
But there is. For one thing, the
domestic disarray that necessitated
the strong countermeasures giving
rise to 'the torture allegations has
also shaped the new pact, par·
ticularly its economic provisions.

begins to do its work, drawing
people into town, catering to them,
and involving them in the community.
Hahn believes that much of "Middle America, " cities with
populations of as little as 35,000 but
with trade areas of at least 100,000,
can be Improved by retail malls,
aesthetically, culturally and fJnan.
cially.
He does throw in two caveats,
however.
·
1. The older the city the denser the
population is likely to be, and
therefore the harder to build a mall
that requires acres of space.
2. In some larger cities, their
retail markets devastated by poverty, it might be lm)IOIIBlble· to construct and oj)erate a mall profitably.

&lt;1P
l'i

"

Today is Wednesday., June 18, the
!70th clay of 1980. There are 196 days
leftintheyear.
Today's highlight in history : in
1815, the· Battle of Waterloo in
Belgium ended in a decisive defeat •

of Napoleon's forces by the British
and the Prussians.
Onthisclate:
In 1778, colonial troops moved into
Philadelphia as the British withdrew
dufing the Revolutionary' War.

lousy job he and Carter are doing,
has dubbed the GOP speakers "the
• white sheet gang." .
He claimll that's because they
don't make up their own speechs,
but read prepared texts from white
sheets of paper handed them by
GOP staff speech-writers.
The Republlcans claim they've
onlY' refined what O'Neill and other
Democratic leaders did when
Republican presidents Richard M.
Nixon and Gerald R. Ford were In
the White House.
One of O'Neill's major Irritants Is
Rep. Robert E. Bawnan, R-Md., one
of the . most frequent Democratbaiters among the minority ranb ..
"Carter got out thjl old mud bucket
8j!d threw tbe f!rd-lllUd])all of the

By Associated Press
The Cincinnati Reds had their
backs to the wall. So did Pittsburgh
left fielder Bill Robinson ... looking
up at ninth-inning home runs by
Johnny Bench and Ray Knight that
lifted the Reds to a 4-3 victory over
the Pirates Tuesday night.
"Gosh, we needed it. We needed a
performance like that, " said Bench,
who capped a +for-4 game by hitting
a screwqall off reliever Enrique
Romo for the homer that tied the
score.
Knight, the next batter, was

Bengals
to sign

..

The fewer soctal problems the better
the prospects, Hahn says.
Ogden, Utah, is largely free of
them. The Ogden City Mall, to open
this fall, typically will include name
department stores, Bon Marcile and
J. c. Penney among them, along with
124 shops and restaurants.
The n-acre site demonstrates a
concept that Hahn strives to
achieve: though the mall Is seUeontained, some of Its stores also
tine the main street of the business
district. It mingles.
The same co~Ppt was sought In
other middle market cities, such as
Pueblo, Colo., Greenville, S.C.,
Billings, Mont., and most recently in
a juSt-approved development in
Palm Desert, Calif.

•

GOP speakers: .the.white sheet gang

.

,

Coach Tom Reed; ex·Redskins Billy
Kilmer and Ron McDole; PGA pro
Bill Uzelac; Miami of Ohio Basket·
ball Coach Darrell Hedric; ABC
Sportscaster Chris Schenkel; and
Colwnbus Journalist Kay Kessler.
Executive Eddie Rosenburg, PGA
pro Ray McGuire, Notre Dame Foot·
ball Coach Dan Devine; Budweisher
executive BarryOary; W.V.U. Football coach Don Nehlen; nation's
biggest auto dealership owner; Hoot
Mcinerney; PGA pro Jerry Meek:
PGA pro Gary Dixon; OU A. D.
Harold McElhany1 Insurance
executive Gene Mitchell: Marshall
University Football Coach Sonny
Randall; Washington Redskin Bill
Brundige; Duane Bobick; Notre
Dame assistant Gene Smith; GM
executive Art Moran; Attorney John
Morrad; ABC vice president John
Spence; Dave Diles; WOWK·TV
manager ·Leo MacCourtney; Horse

owner C. W. SMith; and WOWK-TV
sportscaster BiU Patrick.
Plenty of tickets are still available
for the event at $3 per person and $5
per family. All proceeds go to
charities in the Meigs-Mason area.
All proceeds will stay in the community and it is reported that last
year's tournament ratsed$6,000.
Pre-tournament festivities will
begin with a dinner for competitors,
committee people, and their
families at Royal Oak Park, outside
Pomeroy, on Wednesday evening at
6:30p.m.
At this time, Dave Diles who also
will compete in the classic will
present several "Good Guy" awards. The "Good Guy" awards have
developed as a tournament tradition
and honor its recipients for donating
their time for charity.
The tournament will begin promptly at 10 a.m. Prizes will be awarded

campaign by calling Ronald Reagan

a demagogue," Bawnan said recently.

Bauman said be wu curious and
looked up demagogue in a dictionary
only to find the word's orlglnal
meaning lo be: "A leader or orator·
in ancient ~ea who championed
tiE cause of Ole conunon people." . .
Thus, Bawnan, said:· "May the
best demagOfllle win In November in the ancient sense and beat senae ol
the word ... "
O'Nelll found hla own ancient word
for BaUiftiiii'Upeecb.
·
"Stupid," the Ma~~ach111etta
DemOCl"llt said to himleU In a aolt
voice that •was picted by hla'
microphone and ampllllfd
throughout the H - chamber.

linebacker
CINCINNATI (AP ) - linebacker
Kirby Criswell, a second-round draft
choice, today planned to sign with
the Cincinnati Bengals. And he says
he's eager to get into professional
football.
•
"I want to play over my potential
- unlimited," said Criswell, a 23&amp;pound Kansas linebacker.
"This is probably the biggest thing
to happen to me in my life," he ad·
ded. "I didn't want to go to Canada.
I'm real happy with the deal. They
started out with zero incentives, but
we worked out some really enticing
incentives.
"I can't wait for training camp.
I've put on nine pounds since the
•! · ·'t and it's not beer. I don 't have
a.t inner tube arounu my waist. It's

m·.scle.''
~riswell's agent was scheduled to
sign the contract today at St. Louis,
Mo., with Mike Brown, assistant
general manager.
The signing will bring the 11th of
14 players selected jn the National
Football League college draft.
But those selections don't include
the Bengals' No. I draft choice, An·
thony Munoz, an offensive tackle
from the University of Southern
California.
Munoz' . agent, Mike Trope, has
threatened to file suit against the
Bengals alleging bad faith
bargaining.
Also unsigned are third-round
choice Rod Horn, a defensive back
from Nebraska, and loth-round
selection Sandro Vitiello, a kicker
from Massachusetts.

guessing that Romo would throw a
allowed two hits a~d struck out eight
fast ball. He guessed right.
but left after five innings because of
· The sudden triwnph ended Cin·
ann trouble, although the report
cinnati's three-game losing streak
from the clubhouse was that he was
and kept the third-place Reds within
not Injured.
four games of the National League
The Astros scored three runs in
West-leading Houston Astros, who
the first inning on a single by Denny
defeated the Chicago Cubs 7-1, and
Walling, a double by Joe Morgan, an
one game behind the Los Angeles
intentional walk to Cruz, a two-run
Dodgers, who bowed to the
single by Enos Cabell and a runPhiladelphia Phillies 6-5.
scoring single by Alan Ashby. Cruz
In other NL games, the Montreal
hit his third homer of the season in
Expos edged the San Francisco
the second inning following a walk to
Giants 2-1, the San Diego Padres nipTerry Puhl and a single by Walling.
ped the New York Mets 2-1 and the
PblWes &amp;, Dodgers 5
St. Louis Cardinals shaded the
Eighth-inning singles ~Y Larry
Atlanta Braves 3-2.
Bowa, Manny Trillo and pinch hitter
The Pirates took a :Hllead against
Greg Gross produced the winning
Cincinnati on Dave Parker's RBI
run. The Dodgers led 5-3 entering the
· single in the first inning and two
seventh but the Phillies tied the
runs in the third on an RBI double by score on Pete Rose's bunt single, a
Willie Stargell and a throwing error
walk to Mike Sclunidt, Greg Lozin·by Cincinnati shortstop Dave Con·
ski's double and Bob Boone's groun·
cepcion.
der. Solo homers by Ron Cey and
The Reds began their comeback
Dusty Baker and a three-run shot by
against Jim Bibby with two runs in
liteve Garvey accounted for aU the
the fourth on an RBI double by
Los Angeles scoring.
Knight and Junior Kennedy's ·
Expos 2, Glaots 1
sacrifice fly.
Woodie Fryman pitched out of a
Astros 7, Cubs I
bases-loaded, one-out jam in the
J.R. Richard and Joaquin Andujar
eighth inning to save the victory for
combined on a three-hitter and Jose
David Palmer as Montreal ended a
Cruz hit a thi-ee-run homer to lead
three-game losing streak. The Ex·
Houston. Richard, 9-3, who had pit· pos dealt Vida Blue, 9-3, his first loss
ched three consecutive shutouts.

on both a team and lndi vidual basis
for low net and low gross per·
formance.

Swimmer
Nyad wants
to reach shore
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Marathon
swimming great Diana Nyad wants
to reach one more shore before
retirement.
In August 1981, she will attempt to
become the first person to swim
across the Aegean Sea, a lOO.mile
stretch from the mainland of Greece
to the island of Chios.
She will be capping a career w)th
what might be th~ ultimate endurancetest.
''My manager and my friends say
you don 't need this swim. But I've
always had this tfiing about doing
100 miles. That's what I want before
I retire," said Nyad, in Las Vegas
this week to participate in the
Dewar's Sports Celebrity Tennis
Tournament.
The 30-year-old Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla. native achieved international
acclaim last August by becoming
the first person to swim the 89-mile
straits · between the Bahama~ and
Florida.
The feat ranks as the longest swim
ever in open water. In comparison, it .
is more than four times longer than
the distance Gertrude Ederle of the
U.S. covered when she shocked the
world in 1926 by ·conquering the
English Channel in 14 hours and 34

•

Back to back ho·mers give Reds

Move over, Khomeini-you've got competition as the
man Americans love to hate.
Ramsey Clark.
The former attorney general's mission to Iran in an effort to resolve the hostage crisis has drawn about as
critical a press as is possible these days for anyone who is
not an active presidential candidate or doing public
relations for an oil company.
And not only in the United States. As thanks for his efforts, which included a denunciation of 25 years of
American wrongs against the Iranian people through support of the shah, the revolutionary radio labeled him a CIA
;• agent. Not just any old operative, mind you, but the " vilest
· agent of them all."
~ If anyone has lost in this round, it is he-his convictions,
;. or illusions as the case may be.
. There are lessons to be learned in the incident, not only
: by Clark and his companions but by the broader public.
: First is the basic miscalculation that there is anything to
· · be gained in negotiation with the existing Iranian power
structure. The interest of the extremist religious forces
•. -that hold if not the upper hand at least veto power is in ex:; ploiting the existing situation, not ending it.
~ Second is the problem of personal diplomacy. It has its
•; uses at times; but, it also has its potentially disastrous
~ disadvantages, particularly when conducted in the full
:: glare of publicity as was the case with the Clark mission.
:: Clark could not bring the revolutionaries what they
;: claim they want-the shah himself. But he did bring them
~ what, pragmatically, they know they can get and use to advantage-attention. They derive this benefit from the mere
).
.· presence of a controversial celebrity such as Clark,
:: without needing to put themselves out even to the extent of
·. granting him good intentions.
~
r
In the long run, the Clark affair will be little more than a
:: footnote to the chapter history eventually writes on the
Iranian revolution.
It has certainly not improved the situation, but it is
;; questionable that it has made it measurably worse-what
( could.
•·: About the best, and the worst, that can be said of it is that
~ it has been an exercise in utter futility, and its author more
..t; to be pitied than censured.
.

etter to
...:.L
·
.·

By Scott WoUe
Professional heavyweight boxer
Duane Bobick' will head a star·
studded line-up of celebrities who
will be teeing off at the second an·
nual Dave Diles Celebrity Golf
Classic, Thursday at the Riverside
GolfClubinMason, W.Va.
Bobick, thirty-one other notable
figures, and area pet:~~onalities wiU
make up the field of 144 golfers. The
group will tee off with a shotgun
startat10a.m. Thlln!Jiay.
Other celebrities are pro bowler
Nelson BurtonJr.; Kent State
Basketball Coach Ed Downa; Ohio
U. basketball Coach Danny Nee : for·
mer Detroit Lion Coach Rick For·
zani; WLW.C brOadcaster Jimmy
Crwn; Ohio Univefllity Football
Coach Brian Burke: Chrysler
executive Tom Mcinerney; pro
bowler Dick Weber; Toledo Football
Coach Chuck Stobart; Miami of Ohio

WID

since May 5 after seven straight
triwnphs. They scored in the second
inning on singles by Warren
Cromartie, Bob Pate and Ken
Macha and 'Jerry White homered in
the sixth for what proved to be the
winning run.
Padres 2, Melli I
Gene Richards singled home pinch
runner Paul Dade with two out and
the bases loaded in the bottom of the
ninth inning. With one out, Bill
Fahey singled off the glove of loser
Tom Hausman. Dade ran for Fahey
and moved to third when third
baseman Elliott Maddox fielded
Dave Cash's grounder and threw
wildly trying for a force at second.
Pinch hitter Tim Flalljlery was
given an intentio1111l walk !o load the
bases and Gene Tenace, another pinch hitter, struck out before Richards
slapped the first pitch past short.
Canlloals 3, Braves Z
Ted Simmons, who hit a solo
homer in the first inning, doubled
home the winning run with one out in
the bottom of the ninth following
Garry Templeton 's single, a
sacrifice and an intentional walk to
Keith Hernandez. The teams had
been tied since Dale Murphy hit a
two-run homer for the Braves in the
third.

Open.
Nicklaus, fresh from one of the
most important triwnphs of his unmatched career, will attempt to
correct that oversight this week in
the 71st Canadian national championship, which begins Thursday on
the 6,62&amp;-yard, par 70 Royal Montreal Golf Club course in suburban
Montreal.
Although he can expect a normal
letdown in the wake of his U.S. Open
victory, Nicklaus isn 't taking this
one lightly.
" You always want to win any tour·
nament you enter," he has said.
" And a national championship, rl.
course, has added importance.'
Nicklaus has come close in the
Canadian. The closest he ever came
was in 1975, the last time the tour·

Sports briefs. . •

begin June 23

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Middleport, Ohio

WINDOW

nament was played here. He
bogeyed the last hole to drop back in·
to a tie with Tom Weiskopf, then lost
a one-hole sudden death playoff.
It was one of four second-place
finishes he has recorded in the
Canadian.
While Nicklaus almost certainly
will receive most of the gallery at·
tention, he faces the definite
possibility of a letdown. Should that
occur, the 156-man field offers a
variety of strong contenders for the
$63,000 first prize. The total purse is
$350,000.
Chief among them are Lee
Trevino and Tom Watson.
Trevino is the defending titleholder and a three-time Canadian
champion. He's won once·this year
and has been in contention tin an
almost weekly basis.
Watson, of course, is the dominant
player in the game today . A fivetime winner this year, he is the
leading contender for Player of the
Year honors, tops the money·
winners with $376,000 and leads in
stroke average at 69.8. He's the
favorite in almost every tournament
he enters.
Other major standouts in the ex·
tremely strong field include Tom
Weiskopf, a two-time Canadian win·
ner; Ben Crenshaw, Ray Floyd,
Hubert Green, John Mahaffey, Hale
Irwin, Lon Hinkle, Johnny Miller,
South Mrican Gary Player and former Canadian Open champions
Bruce Lietzke and Jerry Pate.
Portions of the final. two rounds
Saturday and Sunday will be
televised nationally in the United
States by CBS. ·

autosto...

CITY LIMITS
BAR &amp; DRIVE THRU

swims throughout the:_;;-L!~=--~-~~.-~~~~~~

.._Its

MILAN; ~~

To The
CITY LIMITS
SOFTBALL TEAM
On Winning
The Rutland Slow
Pitch Softball Tournament

Nyad clea~ly thrives on a
,
challenge.
Covering great distances in water
has been an obsession with her since
1973, when she began competing in

BOWLING
TENNIS
FREMONT, Calif. (AP) - Tom
SURBITON, England (AP) - Ac- Baker captured his first PBA cham·
tion in the men's grass courts tennis pionship when he surged from .fifth
tournament was postponed because place to take the champiOnship ll1
of rain.
the $80,000 Northern California
EASTBOURNE, England - Mar- Open .
tina Navratilova defeated Tanya
Baker beat Tonuny Hudsol;l 213Harford of South Mrica, 6-4, 6-1 and
182 in the final ·and averaged 239 in
Betty Stove of the Netherlands tophis four-match ~weep to the title.
An abbreviated session of swim
ped Yvonne Vennaak of South
GENERAL
lessons will be held at the MidMrica,
6-2, 7-6 in the second round of
DETROIT (AP) - Former
dleport Pool June ~27 .
Detroit halfback Bob Hoer·
Classes will include: babies, five- a women's grass court tournament.
In other matches, Betsy Nagelsen
nschemeyer, who played o~ two
years and under; adults, 18 and
Lions championship teams, died at
over, and a new swimmers aid cour· topped Rosalyn Fairbank of South
52 following a two-year bout with
se offered this year for the first time. · Mrica, 6-2, 6-2; Andrea Jaeger beat
Rosie Casals, 6-0, 6-3; Wendy White
The class is for others and fathers
upset Virginia Ruzici of Romania, 6- .... · cancer.
who would like to help a child with
beginning 11\ssons. It is not 4, 6-1 ; Diane Desfor toppled Virginia r;::::~~~~:::~:~~~~~:::::::::;~l
Wade of Britain, 6-4, 6-7, 6-2; and II
necessary to know how to swim for
•
PIUS
the course. The cost is $2 for a six Tracy Austin topped Anne Smith, s..
NPROFIIIIONAL
0,
6-3.
'"""
hour course and an assistant's card
PAIITS
will be issued following completion.
(AP)
Class times are: swiinmers' aid, 9Czechoslovakia
.held
Holland
to a 1·1
10; adults, 11)·11: babies, 11·12. The
'tie
in
their
Group
One
match
of the
cost for the babies and adult courses
European Soccer Championships
is $10.
On June 30 regular two week and gained a berth in the playoffs in ,
Your Choice
lesson sessions will begin. The Naples for third place.
TURIN, Italy (AP) + West Ger·
classes and times are: advanced
swimmer, 8-3:30 B.lll ; . ~immer many and Greece played a scoreless
aid, 8:30-9 a.m. ; tntl!mediate, 9- tie in a European championship
Group One match. ·
9:30; advanced beginner, .9:30-10
FOOTBALL
Each
a.m.; beginner, 1().10:30 a.m.;
OAKLAND (AP) - The Oakland
beginner, 10:30-11; babies, 11; 11:30;
Pl.ll$1
Raiders, apparently accepting the
babies ' 11 :30-12noon. .Tbecostis$10
.
.
legal obstacles to an immediate
A basic water safety course,
junior and senior life saving will be move to Los Angeles, announced
given later. To register for lessons that the team would play in the
Oakland Colisewn this season.
or anyone needing further inThe team said invoices were being
Route 33
114 w. 2nd St .
formation about classe!t should call
mailed
out
for
1980
season
tickets
to
MASON, W. VA .
POMEROY,
OH
.
the Middleport Pool, 992-9968. Kellee
games in the Colisewn.
Burdette is the instructor.

Swim lessons

Congratulations

minutes.

Nicklaus invades
ILE BIZARD, Quebec (AP)
Jack Nicklaus has done it all
almost.
He's regarded as the greatest
player golf has ever known.
He capped his comeback last
weekend with a thrilling exhibition
that brought him a record-tying
fourth U.S. Open championship. He
won it with an Open record score.
He 's acquired a record accumulation of 16 major professional
titles - four U.S. Opens, three
British Opens, five Masters and four
PGA national championships .
He won the Australian Open six
times. He's scored multiple victories
in the World Cup and the World
Series.
· But he hasn't won the Canadian

world.
Her accomplishinents • include
swims across Lake Ontario, Lake ·
Michigan, the Nile, the Great
Barrier Reef and from Capri to
Naples.
Her Bahamas-to-Florida swim,
negotiated in tricky currents and
eight-foot swell, took 41 hours and 49
minutes. It came two weeks after
she was stung by a sometimesdeadly Portugeuse Man of War
"which sends a chemical into your
nervous central system,'' she said.
By the time she finished she lost 26
pounds, despite gulping huge
amounts of yogurt heavily supplemented with glucose.

us

-'------~-

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 18. 1980

~

...r - - - - - - - - - , . . . - - . ,
Opinions
&amp; Comments

•,

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Second annual Diles event tomorrow

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 18,111110

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DIE DAILY SEN'IlNEL

~USPS I - I
DEVOTED TO 111E
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
. Let&amp;en of optmoo are w~lcomed, Tbey sboukl be leu tllaAIII wordi .loae (or' 111bj«l kt rene.
. tioo by lH ed.l&amp;orl and murt be slped wlt.b the slpee '1 addraa. Na.metiPIJ be 'lritbhdd qp.a
pu.bUcatloo. Howenr, oa teqlletl, Damet wW bt clUdo.e4. Ldten abould be lo lt}Cld tute addrr:s•I~Ji IJJUtl, not persOILllftlea.
'
PubliJbecl dilly ea:cept S.tanlay by Tbr: Ohio Vall~,. Publilblq Compuy- Ma.IUmeclla, lat.,
IIJ Cou.rtSl, Pomeroy, Ohio mtl. BullMis Offlet PboDe 1ft. %151. EdUorial Pbooe m-llS7.
Suood da11 poata&amp;e ~ld al Pomeroy, Ohio,
44 ~~~tnllll adnnlalag represeotative, Laadoo AIJ.ciatel, 1111 Euclid Ave. , aevel..d, Obit

-·-

Tbe Aaaoela~ Preta ll exclwlY~Iy enul.led to tbe ue for pubUeatloo of aU ae"' dllz-~btl
•edited kl the newspaper •Bd also tbe local oews pubU.bedbtnlo.
PublJaber
Robert Wl.lqett

Geoend Mgr. &amp; City EdUor

Ntws Edftor

Robert H.nlth

"""'"
1117
~~

Adv. Manager

~~

DaleRotQeb, Jr.

CarfGben ·

,..,...._,.._....... ,,..,..._d,=

COACH DAN DEVINE jolDed
. bost Dave DUes just before tee up
lime at Riverside last year.

Contagious hatred

f
t.

:·•.•- .

.·

the editor

lnfonnation sought

.·;

June 12,1980
pear Editor:
• We would like to conunent on how
Leautiful Sand Hill Cemetery at
l-ong Bottom, Ohio looked Memorial
Oay with all the beauWul flowers
a»d flags. It is maintained solely by
ilontributions and we are proud of
Qow well it is kept up and wish to
!hank all who have helped to make it
Possible down through the years.
: The cemetery trustees are comOiling a history of it and would ap-

preciate any help on such as how
many generations of families are
buried there, etc. The Fred Swan
Family now has six generations
buried there and we wonder if any
one can top that. Any infonnation
would be greatly appreciated.
Leona Hensley, Chairperson, Dorsel Larkins, John Hensley, Mae McPeek, Secre~ry and Treasurer, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Bissell and Kellheth,
Caretakers, All, Long Bottom, Ohio
45743.

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Berry's World
•

•

,.

•

"I understand."

U. S. and Turkey: new pact with old ally
By Don Graff
Item: The United .states has
signed a new pact with an old ally .
Turkey.
A five-year Agreement for
Cooperation on Defense and
Economy concluded in March updates an association that has endured through ups and downs mostly the latter of late - through
·thi'ee postwar decades.
It provides for the usual U. S.
military assistance to Turkey and U.
S. military facilities in Turkey, plus
measures to shore up the sagging
Turkish economy, without which the
country could very rapidly be in no
position to cooperate with anyone.
Item : Amnesty International
charges that torture has become
"widespread and systematic" under
martial law that has been in effect in
much of Turkey since 1978 in an ef·
fort to surpress widespread political
and religious unrest and violence.
It has become routine, according
to the organization that .keeps a
vigilant eye on basic hwnan rights
around the world, to subject
jletainees of the police and military
authorities to turture, with fatal con·
sequences in some cases.
It might appear that there is no

frequently a logical partner for
political and strategic purposes is
also an embarrassing one. on moral
grounds.
Turkey in that respect is by no
means the worst of the lot, past or
present. There was, of course, the
Iran of the shah, a particularly intimate associati9n that the present

Today's commen_tary
Turkey has been, in fact, in a state
of economic collapse and political
crisis for more than a year and a
subject of great concern among its
Western associates. Terrorism has
claimed more than 3,000 victims and
industry is slowing to a halt. Sixteen
nations have put together a $1.6
billion aid package and the United
States is already committed .to $452
million in military and economic
assistance during the 1981 fiscal
year.
And for another thing, the two
news items point up a basic problem
of the United States in doing political
business around the world. All too

authorities - if that is the word for
them - in Tehran ·are not about to
forget or allow us to. There was also
the decades-long acconunodation of
the Somoza dictatorship . in
Nicaragua. And there is the continuing uneasy tie with a South
Korea apparently congenitally
unable to kick the military dictatorship habit.
But back to the Turkish connection, a State Department release
says it all on the jusWication for continuance: ·
A valued and strategically located
ally, Turkey fonns part of NATO's
southeastern flank,
. .helps guard ac-

cess to the Mediterranean from the

Black Sea and faced the Soviet
Union across the longest common
land border of any NATO natlon.
But Amnexty International also
has plenty to say. It cites figures
from Turkish sources putting
political detainees during the first
four months of 1980 alone at more
than 40,000.
The organization's represen·
tatives in a recent visit to Turkey interviewed many who had been
released and the resulting report
names ·names and cites incidents.
Torture methods "included electric
shocks, beating the soles of the feet .
and violent assaults on all ~
the body, including sexual organis.''
There's mo,-e, but that's enough to
make Iilii poitit. Turkey may have its
value ~ an ally, but not as a
humllnitarlan society. It is not, as
presently run, the type of regime
with which a conscientious
democracy, given the choice, would
want to associate.
The trouble is that in a very lm. perlect world that choice is frequently not available. What is, as here, is
the necessity of making do with the
best, for one prigiiii!Uc reason or
another, of a gener&amp;it:y bad lot.

Business mirror

Shopping malls: small city rehabilitation '
EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP )- The
weary retail areas of smaller cities
often can be rehabilitated with shopping malis, says the man who has
built more of them in downtown
areas than anyone else.
He gets results. Some of his big·
city centers have outdrawn
Disneyland by up to 80 percent. Fox
Hills Mall, a large center opened
several years ago in Los Angeles
County, has drawn 19 million people
a year.
On a lesser scale, says Emest W.
Hahn, an entrepreneur whose name
is associated with some of the
largest, most innovative, and suc·
cessful malls, smaller cities have
relatively equal poSsibilities.
Hahn, the intellse, 00-year-&lt;Jld
founder and chairman of Emest W.

W~IUNGTON

'House
Republicans are needling House
Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill by get·
ting off a round of short blasts at
Democrats almost every day the
House is In session.
They're making use of a House
rule allowing members to speak for
one minute at the beginning of each
day's session on any subject they
choose.

,.•

.•,.'

:;.

Hahn Inc., which owns and operates
25 retail centers, is building 11
others and has 21 in the planning
stage. He says three things are
essential.
First, a city must be accessible to
the entire mar.ket, including the
surrounding towns, by means of
superior streets or freeways or both.
And then it must provide plenty ri
free parking.
The third requirement is where
dreamers are separated from
realists. The developer must, .he
said, have a subsidy, perhaps in the
form of a city agency buying up
properties and "recycling" them for
retail.
·
f
· There is a good reason for the subsidy, says Hahn, and it becomes
evident once the shopping center

I·,.

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r
I
I:

•

(AP) -

And, as might be expected, the
subject the Republicans are
ch0011ing tbe most is a litany of
reasons why President Carter and
the Democratic congressional
majority should be replaced.
Usually four or five Republicans
.speak in rapid succession. O'Neill,
increasingly irritated by having to
begin each day listening to what a

Today in history. ..

.:

I

connection between the two developments other than that both focus on
Turkey.
But there is. For one thing, the
domestic disarray that necessitated
the strong countermeasures giving
rise to 'the torture allegations has
also shaped the new pact, par·
ticularly its economic provisions.

begins to do its work, drawing
people into town, catering to them,
and involving them in the community.
Hahn believes that much of "Middle America, " cities with
populations of as little as 35,000 but
with trade areas of at least 100,000,
can be Improved by retail malls,
aesthetically, culturally and fJnan.
cially.
He does throw in two caveats,
however.
·
1. The older the city the denser the
population is likely to be, and
therefore the harder to build a mall
that requires acres of space.
2. In some larger cities, their
retail markets devastated by poverty, it might be lm)IOIIBlble· to construct and oj)erate a mall profitably.

&lt;1P
l'i

"

Today is Wednesday., June 18, the
!70th clay of 1980. There are 196 days
leftintheyear.
Today's highlight in history : in
1815, the· Battle of Waterloo in
Belgium ended in a decisive defeat •

of Napoleon's forces by the British
and the Prussians.
Onthisclate:
In 1778, colonial troops moved into
Philadelphia as the British withdrew
dufing the Revolutionary' War.

lousy job he and Carter are doing,
has dubbed the GOP speakers "the
• white sheet gang." .
He claimll that's because they
don't make up their own speechs,
but read prepared texts from white
sheets of paper handed them by
GOP staff speech-writers.
The Republlcans claim they've
onlY' refined what O'Neill and other
Democratic leaders did when
Republican presidents Richard M.
Nixon and Gerald R. Ford were In
the White House.
One of O'Neill's major Irritants Is
Rep. Robert E. Bawnan, R-Md., one
of the . most frequent Democratbaiters among the minority ranb ..
"Carter got out thjl old mud bucket
8j!d threw tbe f!rd-lllUd])all of the

By Associated Press
The Cincinnati Reds had their
backs to the wall. So did Pittsburgh
left fielder Bill Robinson ... looking
up at ninth-inning home runs by
Johnny Bench and Ray Knight that
lifted the Reds to a 4-3 victory over
the Pirates Tuesday night.
"Gosh, we needed it. We needed a
performance like that, " said Bench,
who capped a +for-4 game by hitting
a screwqall off reliever Enrique
Romo for the homer that tied the
score.
Knight, the next batter, was

Bengals
to sign

..

The fewer soctal problems the better
the prospects, Hahn says.
Ogden, Utah, is largely free of
them. The Ogden City Mall, to open
this fall, typically will include name
department stores, Bon Marcile and
J. c. Penney among them, along with
124 shops and restaurants.
The n-acre site demonstrates a
concept that Hahn strives to
achieve: though the mall Is seUeontained, some of Its stores also
tine the main street of the business
district. It mingles.
The same co~Ppt was sought In
other middle market cities, such as
Pueblo, Colo., Greenville, S.C.,
Billings, Mont., and most recently in
a juSt-approved development in
Palm Desert, Calif.

•

GOP speakers: .the.white sheet gang

.

,

Coach Tom Reed; ex·Redskins Billy
Kilmer and Ron McDole; PGA pro
Bill Uzelac; Miami of Ohio Basket·
ball Coach Darrell Hedric; ABC
Sportscaster Chris Schenkel; and
Colwnbus Journalist Kay Kessler.
Executive Eddie Rosenburg, PGA
pro Ray McGuire, Notre Dame Foot·
ball Coach Dan Devine; Budweisher
executive BarryOary; W.V.U. Football coach Don Nehlen; nation's
biggest auto dealership owner; Hoot
Mcinerney; PGA pro Jerry Meek:
PGA pro Gary Dixon; OU A. D.
Harold McElhany1 Insurance
executive Gene Mitchell: Marshall
University Football Coach Sonny
Randall; Washington Redskin Bill
Brundige; Duane Bobick; Notre
Dame assistant Gene Smith; GM
executive Art Moran; Attorney John
Morrad; ABC vice president John
Spence; Dave Diles; WOWK·TV
manager ·Leo MacCourtney; Horse

owner C. W. SMith; and WOWK-TV
sportscaster BiU Patrick.
Plenty of tickets are still available
for the event at $3 per person and $5
per family. All proceeds go to
charities in the Meigs-Mason area.
All proceeds will stay in the community and it is reported that last
year's tournament ratsed$6,000.
Pre-tournament festivities will
begin with a dinner for competitors,
committee people, and their
families at Royal Oak Park, outside
Pomeroy, on Wednesday evening at
6:30p.m.
At this time, Dave Diles who also
will compete in the classic will
present several "Good Guy" awards. The "Good Guy" awards have
developed as a tournament tradition
and honor its recipients for donating
their time for charity.
The tournament will begin promptly at 10 a.m. Prizes will be awarded

campaign by calling Ronald Reagan

a demagogue," Bawnan said recently.

Bauman said be wu curious and
looked up demagogue in a dictionary
only to find the word's orlglnal
meaning lo be: "A leader or orator·
in ancient ~ea who championed
tiE cause of Ole conunon people." . .
Thus, Bawnan, said:· "May the
best demagOfllle win In November in the ancient sense and beat senae ol
the word ... "
O'Nelll found hla own ancient word
for BaUiftiiii'Upeecb.
·
"Stupid," the Ma~~ach111etta
DemOCl"llt said to himleU In a aolt
voice that •was picted by hla'
microphone and ampllllfd
throughout the H - chamber.

linebacker
CINCINNATI (AP ) - linebacker
Kirby Criswell, a second-round draft
choice, today planned to sign with
the Cincinnati Bengals. And he says
he's eager to get into professional
football.
•
"I want to play over my potential
- unlimited," said Criswell, a 23&amp;pound Kansas linebacker.
"This is probably the biggest thing
to happen to me in my life," he ad·
ded. "I didn't want to go to Canada.
I'm real happy with the deal. They
started out with zero incentives, but
we worked out some really enticing
incentives.
"I can't wait for training camp.
I've put on nine pounds since the
•! · ·'t and it's not beer. I don 't have
a.t inner tube arounu my waist. It's

m·.scle.''
~riswell's agent was scheduled to
sign the contract today at St. Louis,
Mo., with Mike Brown, assistant
general manager.
The signing will bring the 11th of
14 players selected jn the National
Football League college draft.
But those selections don't include
the Bengals' No. I draft choice, An·
thony Munoz, an offensive tackle
from the University of Southern
California.
Munoz' . agent, Mike Trope, has
threatened to file suit against the
Bengals alleging bad faith
bargaining.
Also unsigned are third-round
choice Rod Horn, a defensive back
from Nebraska, and loth-round
selection Sandro Vitiello, a kicker
from Massachusetts.

guessing that Romo would throw a
allowed two hits a~d struck out eight
fast ball. He guessed right.
but left after five innings because of
· The sudden triwnph ended Cin·
ann trouble, although the report
cinnati's three-game losing streak
from the clubhouse was that he was
and kept the third-place Reds within
not Injured.
four games of the National League
The Astros scored three runs in
West-leading Houston Astros, who
the first inning on a single by Denny
defeated the Chicago Cubs 7-1, and
Walling, a double by Joe Morgan, an
one game behind the Los Angeles
intentional walk to Cruz, a two-run
Dodgers, who bowed to the
single by Enos Cabell and a runPhiladelphia Phillies 6-5.
scoring single by Alan Ashby. Cruz
In other NL games, the Montreal
hit his third homer of the season in
Expos edged the San Francisco
the second inning following a walk to
Giants 2-1, the San Diego Padres nipTerry Puhl and a single by Walling.
ped the New York Mets 2-1 and the
PblWes &amp;, Dodgers 5
St. Louis Cardinals shaded the
Eighth-inning singles ~Y Larry
Atlanta Braves 3-2.
Bowa, Manny Trillo and pinch hitter
The Pirates took a :Hllead against
Greg Gross produced the winning
Cincinnati on Dave Parker's RBI
run. The Dodgers led 5-3 entering the
· single in the first inning and two
seventh but the Phillies tied the
runs in the third on an RBI double by score on Pete Rose's bunt single, a
Willie Stargell and a throwing error
walk to Mike Sclunidt, Greg Lozin·by Cincinnati shortstop Dave Con·
ski's double and Bob Boone's groun·
cepcion.
der. Solo homers by Ron Cey and
The Reds began their comeback
Dusty Baker and a three-run shot by
against Jim Bibby with two runs in
liteve Garvey accounted for aU the
the fourth on an RBI double by
Los Angeles scoring.
Knight and Junior Kennedy's ·
Expos 2, Glaots 1
sacrifice fly.
Woodie Fryman pitched out of a
Astros 7, Cubs I
bases-loaded, one-out jam in the
J.R. Richard and Joaquin Andujar
eighth inning to save the victory for
combined on a three-hitter and Jose
David Palmer as Montreal ended a
Cruz hit a thi-ee-run homer to lead
three-game losing streak. The Ex·
Houston. Richard, 9-3, who had pit· pos dealt Vida Blue, 9-3, his first loss
ched three consecutive shutouts.

on both a team and lndi vidual basis
for low net and low gross per·
formance.

Swimmer
Nyad wants
to reach shore
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Marathon
swimming great Diana Nyad wants
to reach one more shore before
retirement.
In August 1981, she will attempt to
become the first person to swim
across the Aegean Sea, a lOO.mile
stretch from the mainland of Greece
to the island of Chios.
She will be capping a career w)th
what might be th~ ultimate endurancetest.
''My manager and my friends say
you don 't need this swim. But I've
always had this tfiing about doing
100 miles. That's what I want before
I retire," said Nyad, in Las Vegas
this week to participate in the
Dewar's Sports Celebrity Tennis
Tournament.
The 30-year-old Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla. native achieved international
acclaim last August by becoming
the first person to swim the 89-mile
straits · between the Bahama~ and
Florida.
The feat ranks as the longest swim
ever in open water. In comparison, it .
is more than four times longer than
the distance Gertrude Ederle of the
U.S. covered when she shocked the
world in 1926 by ·conquering the
English Channel in 14 hours and 34

•

Back to back ho·mers give Reds

Move over, Khomeini-you've got competition as the
man Americans love to hate.
Ramsey Clark.
The former attorney general's mission to Iran in an effort to resolve the hostage crisis has drawn about as
critical a press as is possible these days for anyone who is
not an active presidential candidate or doing public
relations for an oil company.
And not only in the United States. As thanks for his efforts, which included a denunciation of 25 years of
American wrongs against the Iranian people through support of the shah, the revolutionary radio labeled him a CIA
;• agent. Not just any old operative, mind you, but the " vilest
· agent of them all."
~ If anyone has lost in this round, it is he-his convictions,
;. or illusions as the case may be.
. There are lessons to be learned in the incident, not only
: by Clark and his companions but by the broader public.
: First is the basic miscalculation that there is anything to
· · be gained in negotiation with the existing Iranian power
structure. The interest of the extremist religious forces
•. -that hold if not the upper hand at least veto power is in ex:; ploiting the existing situation, not ending it.
~ Second is the problem of personal diplomacy. It has its
•; uses at times; but, it also has its potentially disastrous
~ disadvantages, particularly when conducted in the full
:: glare of publicity as was the case with the Clark mission.
:: Clark could not bring the revolutionaries what they
;: claim they want-the shah himself. But he did bring them
~ what, pragmatically, they know they can get and use to advantage-attention. They derive this benefit from the mere
).
.· presence of a controversial celebrity such as Clark,
:: without needing to put themselves out even to the extent of
·. granting him good intentions.
~
r
In the long run, the Clark affair will be little more than a
:: footnote to the chapter history eventually writes on the
Iranian revolution.
It has certainly not improved the situation, but it is
;; questionable that it has made it measurably worse-what
( could.
•·: About the best, and the worst, that can be said of it is that
~ it has been an exercise in utter futility, and its author more
..t; to be pitied than censured.
.

etter to
...:.L
·
.·

By Scott WoUe
Professional heavyweight boxer
Duane Bobick' will head a star·
studded line-up of celebrities who
will be teeing off at the second an·
nual Dave Diles Celebrity Golf
Classic, Thursday at the Riverside
GolfClubinMason, W.Va.
Bobick, thirty-one other notable
figures, and area pet:~~onalities wiU
make up the field of 144 golfers. The
group will tee off with a shotgun
startat10a.m. Thlln!Jiay.
Other celebrities are pro bowler
Nelson BurtonJr.; Kent State
Basketball Coach Ed Downa; Ohio
U. basketball Coach Danny Nee : for·
mer Detroit Lion Coach Rick For·
zani; WLW.C brOadcaster Jimmy
Crwn; Ohio Univefllity Football
Coach Brian Burke: Chrysler
executive Tom Mcinerney; pro
bowler Dick Weber; Toledo Football
Coach Chuck Stobart; Miami of Ohio

WID

since May 5 after seven straight
triwnphs. They scored in the second
inning on singles by Warren
Cromartie, Bob Pate and Ken
Macha and 'Jerry White homered in
the sixth for what proved to be the
winning run.
Padres 2, Melli I
Gene Richards singled home pinch
runner Paul Dade with two out and
the bases loaded in the bottom of the
ninth inning. With one out, Bill
Fahey singled off the glove of loser
Tom Hausman. Dade ran for Fahey
and moved to third when third
baseman Elliott Maddox fielded
Dave Cash's grounder and threw
wildly trying for a force at second.
Pinch hitter Tim Flalljlery was
given an intentio1111l walk !o load the
bases and Gene Tenace, another pinch hitter, struck out before Richards
slapped the first pitch past short.
Canlloals 3, Braves Z
Ted Simmons, who hit a solo
homer in the first inning, doubled
home the winning run with one out in
the bottom of the ninth following
Garry Templeton 's single, a
sacrifice and an intentional walk to
Keith Hernandez. The teams had
been tied since Dale Murphy hit a
two-run homer for the Braves in the
third.

Open.
Nicklaus, fresh from one of the
most important triwnphs of his unmatched career, will attempt to
correct that oversight this week in
the 71st Canadian national championship, which begins Thursday on
the 6,62&amp;-yard, par 70 Royal Montreal Golf Club course in suburban
Montreal.
Although he can expect a normal
letdown in the wake of his U.S. Open
victory, Nicklaus isn 't taking this
one lightly.
" You always want to win any tour·
nament you enter," he has said.
" And a national championship, rl.
course, has added importance.'
Nicklaus has come close in the
Canadian. The closest he ever came
was in 1975, the last time the tour·

Sports briefs. . •

begin June 23

FAN·s ·
VARimOF
MODELS TO

CHOOSE FROM
"

PICKENS HARDWARF
W.VA.

•3 COPY Prints :::~:.
Prints trom Slides
or
•&amp; Prints "::::..:~:: ..

:a

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Your Choice Coupon
o i'P~~;·; 'i;o·; 's';i~· ~~ 99C:
1

· 0 3 Copy Prints

I

- ·- -

-

0 !rom
6 Reprints
"'""'''"
yaur tOlO!
nt c;~a t o vf 5

1
I
I

VIUAGE PHARMACY

BOND'S
Speedway
Stewart, OH .

r,.-,;?};;:t;::;;:~ Every Fri. N lght

TOP DIRTRACKERS
Guaranteed Purse
Adults $4.00
Children under 12 free

Time Tras 7 PM
RacinJ 8:00 PM

Located 20 Minutes East of Athens,
35 Minutes West of Parkersburg
on
50· at cti. Rd. 53
PHONES: Trac ('614) 662:4111
Home614·667·3478

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VALID JUNE 11 THAU JUNE 30. ttao.-

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".

.

Middleport, Ohio

WINDOW

nament was played here. He
bogeyed the last hole to drop back in·
to a tie with Tom Weiskopf, then lost
a one-hole sudden death playoff.
It was one of four second-place
finishes he has recorded in the
Canadian.
While Nicklaus almost certainly
will receive most of the gallery at·
tention, he faces the definite
possibility of a letdown. Should that
occur, the 156-man field offers a
variety of strong contenders for the
$63,000 first prize. The total purse is
$350,000.
Chief among them are Lee
Trevino and Tom Watson.
Trevino is the defending titleholder and a three-time Canadian
champion. He's won once·this year
and has been in contention tin an
almost weekly basis.
Watson, of course, is the dominant
player in the game today . A fivetime winner this year, he is the
leading contender for Player of the
Year honors, tops the money·
winners with $376,000 and leads in
stroke average at 69.8. He's the
favorite in almost every tournament
he enters.
Other major standouts in the ex·
tremely strong field include Tom
Weiskopf, a two-time Canadian win·
ner; Ben Crenshaw, Ray Floyd,
Hubert Green, John Mahaffey, Hale
Irwin, Lon Hinkle, Johnny Miller,
South Mrican Gary Player and former Canadian Open champions
Bruce Lietzke and Jerry Pate.
Portions of the final. two rounds
Saturday and Sunday will be
televised nationally in the United
States by CBS. ·

autosto...

CITY LIMITS
BAR &amp; DRIVE THRU

swims throughout the:_;;-L!~=--~-~~.-~~~~~~

.._Its

MILAN; ~~

To The
CITY LIMITS
SOFTBALL TEAM
On Winning
The Rutland Slow
Pitch Softball Tournament

Nyad clea~ly thrives on a
,
challenge.
Covering great distances in water
has been an obsession with her since
1973, when she began competing in

BOWLING
TENNIS
FREMONT, Calif. (AP) - Tom
SURBITON, England (AP) - Ac- Baker captured his first PBA cham·
tion in the men's grass courts tennis pionship when he surged from .fifth
tournament was postponed because place to take the champiOnship ll1
of rain.
the $80,000 Northern California
EASTBOURNE, England - Mar- Open .
tina Navratilova defeated Tanya
Baker beat Tonuny Hudsol;l 213Harford of South Mrica, 6-4, 6-1 and
182 in the final ·and averaged 239 in
Betty Stove of the Netherlands tophis four-match ~weep to the title.
An abbreviated session of swim
ped Yvonne Vennaak of South
GENERAL
lessons will be held at the MidMrica,
6-2, 7-6 in the second round of
DETROIT (AP) - Former
dleport Pool June ~27 .
Detroit halfback Bob Hoer·
Classes will include: babies, five- a women's grass court tournament.
In other matches, Betsy Nagelsen
nschemeyer, who played o~ two
years and under; adults, 18 and
Lions championship teams, died at
over, and a new swimmers aid cour· topped Rosalyn Fairbank of South
52 following a two-year bout with
se offered this year for the first time. · Mrica, 6-2, 6-2; Andrea Jaeger beat
Rosie Casals, 6-0, 6-3; Wendy White
The class is for others and fathers
upset Virginia Ruzici of Romania, 6- .... · cancer.
who would like to help a child with
beginning 11\ssons. It is not 4, 6-1 ; Diane Desfor toppled Virginia r;::::~~~~:::~:~~~~~:::::::::;~l
Wade of Britain, 6-4, 6-7, 6-2; and II
necessary to know how to swim for
•
PIUS
the course. The cost is $2 for a six Tracy Austin topped Anne Smith, s..
NPROFIIIIONAL
0,
6-3.
'"""
hour course and an assistant's card
PAIITS
will be issued following completion.
(AP)
Class times are: swiinmers' aid, 9Czechoslovakia
.held
Holland
to a 1·1
10; adults, 11)·11: babies, 11·12. The
'tie
in
their
Group
One
match
of the
cost for the babies and adult courses
European Soccer Championships
is $10.
On June 30 regular two week and gained a berth in the playoffs in ,
Your Choice
lesson sessions will begin. The Naples for third place.
TURIN, Italy (AP) + West Ger·
classes and times are: advanced
swimmer, 8-3:30 B.lll ; . ~immer many and Greece played a scoreless
aid, 8:30-9 a.m. ; tntl!mediate, 9- tie in a European championship
Group One match. ·
9:30; advanced beginner, .9:30-10
FOOTBALL
Each
a.m.; beginner, 1().10:30 a.m.;
OAKLAND (AP) - The Oakland
beginner, 10:30-11; babies, 11; 11:30;
Pl.ll$1
Raiders, apparently accepting the
babies ' 11 :30-12noon. .Tbecostis$10
.
.
legal obstacles to an immediate
A basic water safety course,
junior and senior life saving will be move to Los Angeles, announced
given later. To register for lessons that the team would play in the
Oakland Colisewn this season.
or anyone needing further inThe team said invoices were being
Route 33
114 w. 2nd St .
formation about classe!t should call
mailed
out
for
1980
season
tickets
to
MASON, W. VA .
POMEROY,
OH
.
the Middleport Pool, 992-9968. Kellee
games in the Colisewn.
Burdette is the instructor.

Swim lessons

Congratulations

minutes.

Nicklaus invades
ILE BIZARD, Quebec (AP)
Jack Nicklaus has done it all
almost.
He's regarded as the greatest
player golf has ever known.
He capped his comeback last
weekend with a thrilling exhibition
that brought him a record-tying
fourth U.S. Open championship. He
won it with an Open record score.
He 's acquired a record accumulation of 16 major professional
titles - four U.S. Opens, three
British Opens, five Masters and four
PGA national championships .
He won the Australian Open six
times. He's scored multiple victories
in the World Cup and the World
Series.
· But he hasn't won the Canadian

world.
Her accomplishinents • include
swims across Lake Ontario, Lake ·
Michigan, the Nile, the Great
Barrier Reef and from Capri to
Naples.
Her Bahamas-to-Florida swim,
negotiated in tricky currents and
eight-foot swell, took 41 hours and 49
minutes. It came two weeks after
she was stung by a sometimesdeadly Portugeuse Man of War
"which sends a chemical into your
nervous central system,'' she said.
By the time she finished she lost 26
pounds, despite gulping huge
amounts of yogurt heavily supplemented with glucose.

us

-'------~-

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pome1oy, 0 ., Wednesday. June 18. 191!0

4-The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 1~,1980

Bumper crops expected by Ohio fruit -growers

Racine drivers will race
at Bond Speedway opening
STEWART' - "Gentlemen, start
your engines!" will be the words
local stock car driVing ace Bob
Adams, Jr., Bob Adams, Sr., Gene
•· • Adkins, Roger Adkins, and Street
• Stocker Lee Richards will hear this
Friday evening at the grand opening
of Bond's Speedway in Stewart,

These local drivers will help launch the grand opening by competing
against some of the Midwest's
National Late Model Champions on
the ~ighths mile clay oval.
Barring mechanical difficulties
other area drivers Bruce Neigler,
Hilton Wolfe, and Benny Hickle will

Ohio.

Tiger pitcher hurls 3-0

win over Brewers
By Associated Press
For a while, it was "no sweat" for
Detroit Tigers' pitcher Jack Morris.
Then things got better.
"When I was warming up in u._
bullpen, I felt like I had nothing,"
.. the right-hander said Tuesday night.
· " But after I broke a sweat, I felt I
;,, .was going to pitch a good game."
~:· : He did - a five-hit beauty for his
:.;: ~ond major league shutout and
:: second consecutive complete game,
• helping the Tigers to defeat th~
Milwaukee Brewers~Elsewhere in the American
League, the New York Yankees beat
Seattle 8-2, Kansas City shaded
Texas 3-2, Minnesota outlasted
·· Toronto 11-6, Baltimore beat California f&gt;.J , Boston beat Oakland &amp;-2 and
Chicago trinuned Cleveland :f-3.
The only run the Tigers needed to
·• halt the personal three-game win·
•. . ning streak of Milwaukee left.• llander Mike Caldwell came in the
: first inning - and it was unearned.
::-: 'Third baseman Don Money booted
&lt;•'JlmLentine'sleadoff grounder, Len: : tine then took third on Alan Tram~ · mell's single and scored on Steve
Kemp's sacrifice fly.
Trammell drQve the final two nails
in the Brewers' coffin with a homer
in the eighth inning after Lentine
had walked.
Yaub 8, Marillers 2
".
Dennis Werth, a sometime player
~
with the Yankees, drove in three
•. runs to help New York Tom Un·. derwood post his sixth straight win.
..
"I'm used to the role of coming off
: . the bench," said Werth, a right:- bander who plays only, against left• · banders. "I even did it down in the
- . "
..- ~ 'IIl1JlOfS,
:;:: : Werth is batting .412 in 22 games
·::-:with eight RBis on 14 hits. "It's my
: . job to produce," he said. "I'm glad
for the opportunity. There are a lot
, • of everyday players around here."
•
Royals 3, Ra~~gers Z
• · Kansas City's Jamie Quirk was
c· stuck with a batherudn'tlike- until
•• "Texas pitcher Jim Kern broke it for

..

• .him.

~ • Mter getting a new bat and

ap-

'· plying more pine tar to the handle,
• Quirk lifted a fly ball to center field,
the bases-loaded sacrifice fly in the
&gt;.'.bottom of ihe ninth that beat the
·:.- .Rangers.

..
.
•-. ;
TwiDB 8, Blue Jay&amp; I
f: •. John Castino drove in three Min-

Orioles 5, Angels 3
Baltimore's Al Bumbry hit a tworun homer - barely - in the seven·
th .inning which saddled the Angels
with their seventh straight loss.
"I thought he caught the ball,"
Bumbry said after watching center
fielder Bob Clark come within a
whisker of a spectacular, leaping
catch. "But when I saw him get up
and not throw the ball back in, I
knew it was a homer."
RedSox6,A's2
Carlton Fisk capped a four-run fif.
th inning with a two-run double and
Mike Torrez scattered seven hits to
help Boston beat the A's and give the
Red Sox their seventh victory in
· eight games.
Mter Rickey Henderson's leadoff
single in the first inning, Torrez
retired 13 successive batters before
Jeff Newman homered in the fifth inning.
White Soll 5, Indians 3
Two Cleveland errors, two walks
and a passed ball gave Chicago the
tying run in the eighth inning, then
Todd Cruz's two-out, bases-loaded
single in the same inning gave the
White Sox their winning margin.
Dewey Hoyt, just called up from the
minors, helped halt the Indians' fivegame winning streak, picking up his
first major league victory with 22-3
innings of scoreless relief.

al.sQ compete at the speedway, later
this year.
The track, fonnerly the old
"Skyline Speedway," has been im·
proved under its new owner and
promoter Ronnie Bond from
Coolville. The name has been
changed to Bond's Speedway in
hopes of kicking off a new era of
racing in the community.
Bond over the years has been one
of the area's top Late model drivers
and still competes locally along with
his 18-year old son, Larry.
The Adams' racing team from
Racine, Ohio competes both
nationally and locally always
providing excitementfor the fans.
Ticket prices are $4 per person
with children under 12 admitted
free. Thr'ee divisions, late model,
semi-late model,I!Jld street stockers
are featured. The guaranteed purse
which has drawn drivers from all
across the tri-state area.
The racing program consists of
eight qualifying heat races, and
three 25 lap "A". Main features in
the respective divisions. Time trials
begin at seven and races at 8 p.m.

-· pitched 41-3 innings of scoreless
:~ relief to drop the Blue Jays into last
place in the AL East.
•• Corbett, a 28-year-old rookie right,. bander, is 4-2, has six of the Twins'
i- eight saves and a 1.96 earned run
!· average.

Major Leape Gamea
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Montreal
Pitta burgh
Philadel hia

32 24
Z1 31
24 32
23 :r1

NewY~

Ch.icBg()

St. Louis

.571 I \;
.466 7\\
.429 91;

Houston 7, Chicago 1
Cincinnati 4, Plttsburgh3

St. I.A.luis 3, Atlanta 2
San Dielo2, New Yort 1
Philadelphia 6, Los Angeles !I

Swonl fighting
demonstration set

Montreal2, San Francisco 1
Wedacsd.ly'1 Games

Cincinnati (Liebrandt

6-3)

at Chicago

(Lamp~)

New York (Burris 4-5) at San Francisco

There will be a Kendo demonstration, the art of Japanese sword
fighting, given by Dr. Sado Kotako,
Columbus, at Meigs Junior High
School, Middleport, Saturday, June
21, at 2:30p.m.
The demonstration will include
full contact Kendo. Master kotako
and two of his students will be giving
the demonstration.
Kotako "teaches Kendo at Ohio
University and OHio State Univer·
sity. He Is a master from the
Samurai line of ancient Japan and
an expert on the Samurai swords
and sword fighting.
Persons who wish to see true Kendo are urged to attend. The demonstration is free and any interested
person in the county is invited to attend.

(Montefusco 2--5)

Pittaburjh (Solomon 4-IJ and Rhoden 0.0)

at Atlanta (P . Niekro 5-9) and McWilliams

(!H J.I.n

St. l...oois (Kaat 1-3) at Houston (J. Niekro

~ J .n

Philadelphia (Car lton 11-2) at San Diego
(Rasmussen 1-6), n

Montreal (RogersM ) at Los Angeles (Sutton~!) ,

n

'1'11un41iy's Gama
CincinnaU at Olicagu
Philadelphia at San Diego

New York at San Francisco
Pittaburgh at Atlanta, n
St. Louis at Houston, n
Mootrea.l at Los Angeles, n
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

W. L:. P~L GB

39 21 .1150
32 27 .1&gt;12 61;
32 27 .1&gt;12 6\;

New York
Milwaukee
Boston
aeveland
Baltimore

30
31
28
28

Detroit

Toronto

28 .!117 I
30 .501 II&gt;
Z9 .191 91;
30 .ta:l 10

WEST

Kansas City

31 23 .623

Chicago

30 29 .5011 7
30 :J2 .Ill 81;
28 31 .1&gt;2 10\;
Z1 34 .~ 11
Zi 36 .41() 13
21 31 .35616

Oakland

SeatUe
Teus

POTSHOTS
Teapots tend to be low and wide
because tea leaves rise and expand
in hot water. Coffee grounds, on the
other hand, tend to sink to the bot·
tom of the pot, leaVing the pure
clean brew at the top. Thus, coffee
pots are generaUy tall and narrow.

Minnesota
CaUfomla

Taaday's Games
Baltimore 5, California 3

Booton 6, Oakland 2
MinnUota 6, Toronto 6

Chicago 5, Cle\leland 3
New Yort 8, Seattle 2

Oetroitl, Milwaukee 0
Kansas City 3, Texas 2
Wedaetday'1 Gamel
Chicago (l&gt;ot.son G-2 and Trout 2-G} at
Torooto (Stieb}lond Juceki&gt;O),I, t.n
Oakland (Kingman U).. at Baltimore

(Flanagan&gt;5 ),n
SeiWe. (Abbott 6-2) at Boston (Eckersley
:h\), n

Swnmer league results

California ( Aa&amp;e .W) at New York. (Guidry

•'

·' · In Meigs-Mason Pony League ac:- ·lion Middleport claimed a 2-1 victory
•• over Coolville.
C. Burdette pitched six innings to
pick up the victory -while E. Bishop
came in to seal the win. Burdette
struck out · 11 allowing just one
Coolville hit. D. Follrod and D.
.Thoams were the Middleport hitters.
Gerald Singer and Benny Bennet
. took to the mound for Coolville.
Singer fanned two in five innings and
Bennet fanned one in his three innings of work. Ritchie Hayes was the
~Y Coolville hitter.
'
In Big Bend action the Middleport
Indians slipped past Pomeroy's
Tigers 2-1. Scott McKinley's line
'drive single in the home half of the
-seventh drove home the winning

run.

Fine pitching by both teams made
the game close right down to the
' wire. Hitters for the Indians were E.
~ Kltchen, R. Wise, Scott Gheen, S.
'· Crow, B. Decker, and S. McKinley.
~ lUck Wise picked up the win in relief
•• of Brian
. Decker. Decker fanned six •· and Wise two for the winners.
Parker Long suffered the loss in
~ relief of Chris Shanks who fanned 13
' Indian batters. Tiger )litters 'were J.
Holtz, Cl!rls Shanb, A. Hunnel, T.
t Jeffers, and P~rker Long.

..

r·

..

The Pomeroy Giants scored an iJn..
' pressive 21..0 shut out over Hartford.
Bryan Kom carried a hot bat with a
tlouble and two singles, James Nor·.
man four singles, Scott Powell two
T

I

6-.l),n
Cleveland (Denny 7-4 ) at Kansas City

singles, Gerald Moore, Rodney
Roush, Lee Powell, Kevin Mowery,
and Gary Coleman each with
singles. Brian Kom 'was the winning
pitcher striking out 11, walking six,
and hurling a no hitter for the Giants. J. Turnbull, T. Smith, S. Zirkle,
and E. Anderson took turns on the
mound for Hartford .
The Chester Warriors bowed down
to Syracuse-Hubbard's Greenhouse
by a 12-10 score. Todd Adams and
Mike Chancey combined for 9 KO's
and 10 walks to pick up the victory.
Syracuse hitters were Mike Chancey
three singles and a trip!~, Jimmy
Wolfe single and triple, Doug Owens
two singles, Todd Adams a double,
and Tim Willis, Chris Baer, Scott
Grueser, Mike Klees, Barry McCoy.
Matt Harris was the pitcher for
Chester. John Miller, Matt Harris,
Eynon, Norton, and Carpenter each
had singles for Chester.
In the Senior Softball League
Pomeroy scored a S-8 win over
Mason. Kellie Rought picked up the
win for Pomeroy with three strikeouts. B. Grueser and A. Riggs
smacked three singles, N. Smith,
Kellie Rought and Beth Gloeckner
two singles, and R. Buffington, S.
Herdman each with a single. Mel
Sisson banged a home run for M11son
along with Miriam Sisson, J . Taylor,
and M. Elias who all had two singles
apiece. K. Brown suffered the loss
for Mason.

ENTER EV~NT- Bob Adams, Jr. and his father
Bob "Bobby Joe" Adams, Sr., Racine, have entered
Friday night's grand opening at Bond's Speedway in
Stewart. The younger Adams recently completed a

FOOTIIALL
Natlooal Football League
NEW YORK GIANTS - Waived Jotm
Mendenhall, defensive tackle.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS - Signed Nick
Bebout, offcnsi\'C tackle.

( Gura~l ), n

Det.r&lt;lit (P. Underwood 1-U, at Minnesota
(KOOSITUi n~ l.n

Milwaukee (Keeton 2-1 ) at Texas (Medich
6-3), n
~y'sGamts

Detroit at Mlnnesot.a
Oakland at Baltimore, n

SeatUe at Boston, n

~cagoalToronto, n

California at New York, n
Cleveland at K.anaas Clty, n
Milwaukee at Teus, n

'flteSd.1'• Sport TraJDactiolll
BASEBALL
Amerl&lt;o•Leopo
DETROIT TIGERS - Ac\ivated Dan
Schal.zeder, pitcher. Optioned Dave Tobik,
pitcher, to Evansville of the American
Association.

CHICAGO

Nado.ILape
CUBS Placed Dave

K.ingman, ouUielder, on \Itt 15-4ay dlJabled
list. R~alled Geor11e Riley, pitcher, from

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Hasty
Decision surged into the lead in the
stretch and held on to edge Entree
by a neck in the featured race at
Scioto Downs on Tuesday night.
TQe winner returned $5.20, $3 and
$2.60. Entree paid $4 and $2.80 for
second, while Hi Kee Ho pald $2.60
for show.
The 111-5-1 ninth race trifecta was
worth $1,104.60.
A crowd of 5,135 wagered $376,059.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BAITING (125 at bats) : Hernandez, St.
Lou.is, .338; Vail, Chicago, .336; Henders.on,
New York, .330; Crux, Houskln , .329; Sm1th,
Los Angeles, .3Z9.
RUNS : Schmidt, Philadelphia, 49; Hernandez, St. Louis, 45; Rose, Ph.iJ.adelphia,42 ;
Templeton, St. Lo.ui.s, 4:0: Murphr. Atlanta,
38; Collins, Clncmnati, 38; Griffey, Cmcinnati, 38.
RBI : Hendrick, St. Louis, 51 ; Schmidt,
Philadelphia, 50; Garvey, Los Angeles, 48 ;
Smith, Los Angeles, 43; Lu:r. insk i,
Philadelphia, 41.
HITS: Templeton, St. Louis, 81 : Her·
nandez, St. Louis, n : Reitz, St. Loois, 71 ;
Cruz, Houston, 71; Chambliss, Atlanta, 70 ;
Garvey, Los Angeles, 70.
DOUBLES: Stearns, New York, 18; Rose,
Philadelphia, 19; Chambliss, Atlanta, 18;
Hernande:r., st. Louts, 17; Kni~ht, Cincinnati,
17.
TIUPLES: Moreno, Pittsburgh, 6; &amp;.'Ott,
Montreal, 4; LeFlore, Montrea~ 4; Trillo,
Philadelphia, f; McBride, Philadelphia, 4;
Herr, St. Louis, 4; Knight, Cincinnati, 4;
Landestoy, H005ton, 4.
HOME RUNS' Sclunidt, Philadelphia, 20;
Lw.lnski, Philadelphia, 15 ; Baker, Los
Angeles, 15 ; Garvey, Los Angeles, 14 ; Carter, Montreal, 13; Hendrick, St. Louis, 13 ,
STOLEN BASES : Moreno, , Pitts~llh, 36.;
Ld'lore, Montreal, 35; Collins, Cmcmnat.i,
24; Scott, Montual, )9; Law, Lo5 Angeles,

RUTLAND.
DEPARTMENT
STORE

POMEROY AND GALL I POLIS STORES .
WE ltUER\11 THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOLD TO DflAEIS

12-0Z. PIIG•.• 89'

,.
U.S. GOV'T GRADED
CHOICE, BONE-IN

.•

Full Cut
Round Steak

Prices Effective Thru Saturday, June 21st
French City

Homemade

•

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
5--7·LB. AVG.

$ 79

•

HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••••••••~~~.s1.19
Eckrict1

JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••••••••• !-.~·. s1.49

Luncheon Meat ....

Mixed Fryer Parts .. lb. 49

'

''

U.S. GO\I'T GRADED CHOICE

LDNGHORN $
CHEESE ..........

1.89

ORANGES ....

Boneless Bottom
Round Roast ..... lb.

•

6/69e

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

1 lb. Blue Bonnet

e

99

79

l-Ib .

CELERY.............

Pork 5ausage ........ Rein

45e

59ggc

I

C

• d Bacon.......... Pkg
1-lb.
511ce
.
$129
•
1-lb.
Meat W1eners ...... Pkg .
OSCAR MAYER CHEESE. JUMBO OR

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

Northern
·.Bath Tissue

$149

BALLARD'S

MARGARINE
QUARTERS .........

C

$2 39

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK . ANY SIZE PKG.

lb.

GWALTNEY

1-lb.
Pkg.

HOLLY FARMS , U.S.D.A.INSPECTED

PRODUCE
88 Count California

~~:::s~~-~-~~~ . .

ALL VARIETIES. SERVE 'N' SAVE SLICED

•
•
•

Ohio Colvy

Fresh
Pork Loin

ltiO IN

Phone 742 -!100

DAit{Y

~Whole

COPYRIGHT 1..(1 • THE KIOGEI CO . lll,.,S AND F'IIC:fS
GOOD SUNDAY , JUNE 15 THitU SATUIDAY , JUNE 21 .

TODAV'S

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

Kroger
Meat Wieners

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

C

.

19.

PITCHING {6 Decisioos}: Bibby, PittsburRh, 7·1, .175, 3.16 ; Reuss, Los Angeles,
H , .i7s, 2.33 ; Carlton, Philadelphia, 11-2,
.1116, 1.78; Bahnsen, Montreol, ~I • .1133,1.36 ;
Re&lt;d, Philadelphia, H .1133, 2.25; MO!luiu.
Cincinnati, 5-l, .833, 3.62; Welch, los
Angeles, 7-2, .nB, 2.22; Richard, Houston, 93, .7SO, l.Sl.

STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Philadelphia,
118; Richard, Houston, 106; Ryan, Hooston,
75; Blylenn, Pittsburgh, 71 ; Niekro, Allanla, 611.
AMERICAN LEAGUE

BAITING ( 125 at bats): Molitor,
Milwaukee, .358; Swnmer5, Detroit, .341 ;
Orta, Cleveland, .340; Brett, Kali8B.s City,
.337; Bwnbry, Baltimore, .333; trammell,
Detroit, .333.
..
RUNS : YOunl, Milwaukee, Sl; Willon,
Kansas City, 47; Wills, Texas, 47 ; Randolph,
New York, 45; Bwnbry, Baltimore, '-1;
Tranunell, Detroit. 43; Henderson, oakland,
~3 .

RBI : Perez, Boston, 46; Ogl~vie,
Milwaukee, 45; Armas, Oakland, f4 : Oliver,
Texas, « ; Cooper, Milwaukee, 43.
WTS: Wibon, Kansas City, 82; Bumbry,
Baltimore, 79; 't'OWlt, Milwauk~. 78 ;
Burleam , Boston, 75: Landreaux, Mlnnesota, n; Rivers, Texas, 75.
DOUBLES: Morri.aon, C1licago,22; Yount,
Mil, 20; Garcia, Toronto,17 ; Carew, California, 17; Oliver, Teus,16.
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 8; Bwnbry,
Baltimore, 5; Brett, Kansas City, 5; 9 Tied

With4 .

HOME RUNS: Oglivie, Milwaukee, 16;
Jackson, New York, 15; Rice, Boston, 13;
Mayberry, Toronto, 13; Thomu,
MilwauJree, 12: Velez, Toronto, 12; Rudi ,
California, 12.
STOLEN BASES: Henderson , Oakland,
30; Wilson, Kansas City, 71; Cruz, SeatUe,
19; Wills, Texas, 18; Bumbry, Baltimore,l7 ;
Randolph, New York,l7.
PITCHlNG (6 Decisions) : Farmer,
Chicago, ~I , .6.13, 2.45; John, New York, 9-2,
.811, 3.07; Gura , Karwas City, 1-2, .1100 ; 2.17;
Rainey, BoBton, 7-2, .Tl8, 4.88; Dot,on,
chlcuo, 6-2, .750, 3.72; Abbott, Seattle, 6-2,
.750, 2.112; Stone. Baltimore, 8-3. .m. 3.11 ;
Spillner, Clevellmd, 7·1, .700,4.75.
STRIKEOUTS : Guidry, New Yort, 80 ;
K~,Oakland , 68; Banniater, SeatUe.~,67;
Noms, Oakland, 66 ; Leonard, Kansas ~,.;ity,
iS.

7 oz. 50 count Solo

IN THE DAIRY DEPT.

FOAM CUPS •••••••••••••••••••••~~~~. 594
oz.
ARMOUR TREET. •••••••••~:!~~?!~. s1.19

Kroger Fresh
• '!.-Gal
0 range Ju1ce
ctn.

12

NESCAFE COFFEE ••••••••••••~:r...S5.49

STRAWBERRY GLAZE•••••••••••• 2/85~
Dial Bath White ·

BAR SOAP. •••••••••••••••••••••••••. 2/8!r
140 Count

WuhJ;;

KROGER

320-oJ 119

Bread. ........ Lvs .
Northern Napkins'::~'·
ASSORTED

.

Fresh
Cantaloupes. Each

C

FRESH SOUTHERN

69 C

Cottage Cheese .. 'l;~:.· 75
UOGER

VIVA NAPKINS................ :.~ ;•• 794

ggc

Peaches ................ ·lb.

RED RIPE,

Whole
Watermelons

59 C

$ 99

Green Peppers ... 4For S

9

2 lb. Fireside

FIG BARS.·••••.•••••••••••••••••~~~~ $1.15

KIOGEI

GRADEl
MEDIUM EGGS

49c

Dt••

Grade A
Hi Nu 2%

Large Eggs

PARK .RESERVED ·

Lowfat·Milk

UNTIL 5 P .M.

SATURDAY-JUNE 2.1 st
FOR

3

For

CAKE MIXES.•••••••••••••••••••• .:~~~.9gc
16 oz. Wicks

DEODORANT

LONG GREEN, FRESH

19 oz. Duncan Hines

DOUBLE CHEESE PIZZA••••••B.~x•• s1.59

ggc

Pert . 7·01.
Shampoo ....... Btl.

age
2
9
9
C
Right Guard ......... c~~Kroger Buns ... :k~~-.
5
$1
o;;;;ii Batteries~~~~ $1 19
Cucumbers.............

10 oz. Instant

28.5 oz. Jeno

·g9C

SESAME SEED

1.

CARDIGAN
The 7t)i Earl of Cardigan, who led
the Charge of the Light Brigade in
the Crimean War, got tired of pulling
a sweater over his head. Tradition
says he designed the sweater jacket
with buttons that has carried his
name down thl:ough history.

OPEN
s 24 HRS.
ADAY*
R
LAST YEAR
'hcept Kinton, White Sulphur, 7th . Ave.
,....,,,." &amp; WiHiaiiiiOft

ben Of theM advertiaed items ia raqutred to be
~ IValllble fOf Mle 1n each Krogvr Store, except as
~t noted f1 thia ad . It we dO run out of an ect.&lt;lrtiud
item, we will off• vou vour choice of a comparable item,
when av~Nbie, rehec:ting the same savings or a reinc:heck
wnict1 will tnbde vou to purchase the edvertiled item at the
ldvertited price within J') devs .

racing trip to Florida where he did well unW an accident sidelined him from further competition. Adams
has two feature wins to his credit this year.

BULK WIENERS ••••••••••.••••L.~-.s1.39

.383 12h

34 Z1 .557 3
33 28 .541 I
San Diego
!/ 3S .43S 10 ~
San FranciscQ
36 3S .426 11
24 34 .414 11 ~
Atlanta
T\ttsdlly's Games

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

36 23 .610

Houston
Loe Angeles
Cincinnati

This year 's crop is expec~ to
reach 12 million pounds, 'the blot in
lour years , sai!t Kenneth Acketi; of
the Ohio Crop Reporting Service.
Conditions have been so good that
some orchard owners like John
Bergman, who farms about 140
acres near Port Clinton, have been
forced to thin out the large number

mers abo~t this year's strawberry
crop concern the possibility that
weather may have been too good.
Paul Molyet, who farms about 1100
acres between Fremont and Tiffin,
said he is worried that last
weekend 's warm temperatures may
have ripened a lot of small •berries
too quickly.
Along with the peaches and
strawberries, fruit lovers also are
expected to get their fill of sweet and
sour cherries this sununer.

'hcept Closed Setw. ., Mldnlgltt nl9aM Sund.y .

Wlcttita of the American Association.

W. L.PcL GB
34 23 .596
34 Z5 .576 1

The quantities are expected to
keep price levels about the same as
in 1979, if not slightly lower.
Peach yields have been down the
last Iwo years - 4 million pounds in
1979 and 5 million in 1978. Growers
blame freezing temperatures during
the cold winters and springs that
damaged and killed some trees.

KRO

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

,•

:~

while cherries, strawberri es and apples also are expected to have
greater yields.
"The weather was almost perfect
this year ... no winter damage, no
frost damage - just a little wind
damage," said Julius Gerhardstein,
operator of Starlife Orchards in
Clyde.
'

~ yOu buy at KrOQel' is guaranteed for ~r total
11tiltection reger~ of manufacturer . II you are not utis·
fied. Kroger wil rllpl.ttce your item With the aame bland or 1
oomper~ brand or refund your purc:twe price .

:1: 4lesota runs with a single, a double
~; and a squeeze but and Doug Corbett

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP ) - While
some farmers across Ollio have ex·
perienced setbacks from th is
spring's heavy rains, Ohio's fruit
growers are . predicting bumper
crops.
Nearly ideal growing conditions
should result in a threefold increase
in peach production over last year,

of peaches on their trees.
Strawberry production is expected
to surpass last yejlr's 8.3 million
pounds, and growers claim taste will
be excellent.
"The quality of fl~ 'or ls the best
it's been in years," said Phil
Gasteler, who operates Strawberry
Hill Farm near Sandusky. He said
he expects yields to be up about 1,000
quarts from the average of 5,500
quarts in 1979.
The only fears expressed by far·

.

Gal.
Paper or

"SUMMER OUTING"
OF

$

58

Plastic Ctn.

LARGE' INDUSTRIAL CONCERN

UOGII 0.5% LOWFAT Mill
GAt.

OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P.M . .

KROGER

Natural Flavor 1;.~$179
Ice Cream ....... . Ctn.

CAMDEN PARK .
U.S. 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT HOLIDAYS

F;;~ch Onion ·

.

I

rumcm ... sa.ct

Onion Dip.. .. .... . ~::.·

$119

AV~T=~~:-.T.rr!!~:""·
CONfAINI.,IECll OF CtttdEN

w;;h;~e

fried Chi~ktn ......... Eoch

LiMoN . COCONUT. IANANAOI

Chocolate Cr1a111 Pie ·~:h

$229

• cow
$179
· Chopped Ham.................. ••. .

F-;;;h 8reacL ......2 't:.· 5119

'
• I

•

$399

.

·'

•

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pome1oy, 0 ., Wednesday. June 18. 191!0

4-The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 1~,1980

Bumper crops expected by Ohio fruit -growers

Racine drivers will race
at Bond Speedway opening
STEWART' - "Gentlemen, start
your engines!" will be the words
local stock car driVing ace Bob
Adams, Jr., Bob Adams, Sr., Gene
•· • Adkins, Roger Adkins, and Street
• Stocker Lee Richards will hear this
Friday evening at the grand opening
of Bond's Speedway in Stewart,

These local drivers will help launch the grand opening by competing
against some of the Midwest's
National Late Model Champions on
the ~ighths mile clay oval.
Barring mechanical difficulties
other area drivers Bruce Neigler,
Hilton Wolfe, and Benny Hickle will

Ohio.

Tiger pitcher hurls 3-0

win over Brewers
By Associated Press
For a while, it was "no sweat" for
Detroit Tigers' pitcher Jack Morris.
Then things got better.
"When I was warming up in u._
bullpen, I felt like I had nothing,"
.. the right-hander said Tuesday night.
· " But after I broke a sweat, I felt I
;,, .was going to pitch a good game."
~:· : He did - a five-hit beauty for his
:.;: ~ond major league shutout and
:: second consecutive complete game,
• helping the Tigers to defeat th~
Milwaukee Brewers~Elsewhere in the American
League, the New York Yankees beat
Seattle 8-2, Kansas City shaded
Texas 3-2, Minnesota outlasted
·· Toronto 11-6, Baltimore beat California f&gt;.J , Boston beat Oakland &amp;-2 and
Chicago trinuned Cleveland :f-3.
The only run the Tigers needed to
·• halt the personal three-game win·
•. . ning streak of Milwaukee left.• llander Mike Caldwell came in the
: first inning - and it was unearned.
::-: 'Third baseman Don Money booted
&lt;•'JlmLentine'sleadoff grounder, Len: : tine then took third on Alan Tram~ · mell's single and scored on Steve
Kemp's sacrifice fly.
Trammell drQve the final two nails
in the Brewers' coffin with a homer
in the eighth inning after Lentine
had walked.
Yaub 8, Marillers 2
".
Dennis Werth, a sometime player
~
with the Yankees, drove in three
•. runs to help New York Tom Un·. derwood post his sixth straight win.
..
"I'm used to the role of coming off
: . the bench," said Werth, a right:- bander who plays only, against left• · banders. "I even did it down in the
- . "
..- ~ 'IIl1JlOfS,
:;:: : Werth is batting .412 in 22 games
·::-:with eight RBis on 14 hits. "It's my
: . job to produce," he said. "I'm glad
for the opportunity. There are a lot
, • of everyday players around here."
•
Royals 3, Ra~~gers Z
• · Kansas City's Jamie Quirk was
c· stuck with a batherudn'tlike- until
•• "Texas pitcher Jim Kern broke it for

..

• .him.

~ • Mter getting a new bat and

ap-

'· plying more pine tar to the handle,
• Quirk lifted a fly ball to center field,
the bases-loaded sacrifice fly in the
&gt;.'.bottom of ihe ninth that beat the
·:.- .Rangers.

..
.
•-. ;
TwiDB 8, Blue Jay&amp; I
f: •. John Castino drove in three Min-

Orioles 5, Angels 3
Baltimore's Al Bumbry hit a tworun homer - barely - in the seven·
th .inning which saddled the Angels
with their seventh straight loss.
"I thought he caught the ball,"
Bumbry said after watching center
fielder Bob Clark come within a
whisker of a spectacular, leaping
catch. "But when I saw him get up
and not throw the ball back in, I
knew it was a homer."
RedSox6,A's2
Carlton Fisk capped a four-run fif.
th inning with a two-run double and
Mike Torrez scattered seven hits to
help Boston beat the A's and give the
Red Sox their seventh victory in
· eight games.
Mter Rickey Henderson's leadoff
single in the first inning, Torrez
retired 13 successive batters before
Jeff Newman homered in the fifth inning.
White Soll 5, Indians 3
Two Cleveland errors, two walks
and a passed ball gave Chicago the
tying run in the eighth inning, then
Todd Cruz's two-out, bases-loaded
single in the same inning gave the
White Sox their winning margin.
Dewey Hoyt, just called up from the
minors, helped halt the Indians' fivegame winning streak, picking up his
first major league victory with 22-3
innings of scoreless relief.

al.sQ compete at the speedway, later
this year.
The track, fonnerly the old
"Skyline Speedway," has been im·
proved under its new owner and
promoter Ronnie Bond from
Coolville. The name has been
changed to Bond's Speedway in
hopes of kicking off a new era of
racing in the community.
Bond over the years has been one
of the area's top Late model drivers
and still competes locally along with
his 18-year old son, Larry.
The Adams' racing team from
Racine, Ohio competes both
nationally and locally always
providing excitementfor the fans.
Ticket prices are $4 per person
with children under 12 admitted
free. Thr'ee divisions, late model,
semi-late model,I!Jld street stockers
are featured. The guaranteed purse
which has drawn drivers from all
across the tri-state area.
The racing program consists of
eight qualifying heat races, and
three 25 lap "A". Main features in
the respective divisions. Time trials
begin at seven and races at 8 p.m.

-· pitched 41-3 innings of scoreless
:~ relief to drop the Blue Jays into last
place in the AL East.
•• Corbett, a 28-year-old rookie right,. bander, is 4-2, has six of the Twins'
i- eight saves and a 1.96 earned run
!· average.

Major Leape Gamea
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Montreal
Pitta burgh
Philadel hia

32 24
Z1 31
24 32
23 :r1

NewY~

Ch.icBg()

St. Louis

.571 I \;
.466 7\\
.429 91;

Houston 7, Chicago 1
Cincinnati 4, Plttsburgh3

St. I.A.luis 3, Atlanta 2
San Dielo2, New Yort 1
Philadelphia 6, Los Angeles !I

Swonl fighting
demonstration set

Montreal2, San Francisco 1
Wedacsd.ly'1 Games

Cincinnati (Liebrandt

6-3)

at Chicago

(Lamp~)

New York (Burris 4-5) at San Francisco

There will be a Kendo demonstration, the art of Japanese sword
fighting, given by Dr. Sado Kotako,
Columbus, at Meigs Junior High
School, Middleport, Saturday, June
21, at 2:30p.m.
The demonstration will include
full contact Kendo. Master kotako
and two of his students will be giving
the demonstration.
Kotako "teaches Kendo at Ohio
University and OHio State Univer·
sity. He Is a master from the
Samurai line of ancient Japan and
an expert on the Samurai swords
and sword fighting.
Persons who wish to see true Kendo are urged to attend. The demonstration is free and any interested
person in the county is invited to attend.

(Montefusco 2--5)

Pittaburjh (Solomon 4-IJ and Rhoden 0.0)

at Atlanta (P . Niekro 5-9) and McWilliams

(!H J.I.n

St. l...oois (Kaat 1-3) at Houston (J. Niekro

~ J .n

Philadelphia (Car lton 11-2) at San Diego
(Rasmussen 1-6), n

Montreal (RogersM ) at Los Angeles (Sutton~!) ,

n

'1'11un41iy's Gama
CincinnaU at Olicagu
Philadelphia at San Diego

New York at San Francisco
Pittaburgh at Atlanta, n
St. Louis at Houston, n
Mootrea.l at Los Angeles, n
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

W. L:. P~L GB

39 21 .1150
32 27 .1&gt;12 61;
32 27 .1&gt;12 6\;

New York
Milwaukee
Boston
aeveland
Baltimore

30
31
28
28

Detroit

Toronto

28 .!117 I
30 .501 II&gt;
Z9 .191 91;
30 .ta:l 10

WEST

Kansas City

31 23 .623

Chicago

30 29 .5011 7
30 :J2 .Ill 81;
28 31 .1&gt;2 10\;
Z1 34 .~ 11
Zi 36 .41() 13
21 31 .35616

Oakland

SeatUe
Teus

POTSHOTS
Teapots tend to be low and wide
because tea leaves rise and expand
in hot water. Coffee grounds, on the
other hand, tend to sink to the bot·
tom of the pot, leaVing the pure
clean brew at the top. Thus, coffee
pots are generaUy tall and narrow.

Minnesota
CaUfomla

Taaday's Games
Baltimore 5, California 3

Booton 6, Oakland 2
MinnUota 6, Toronto 6

Chicago 5, Cle\leland 3
New Yort 8, Seattle 2

Oetroitl, Milwaukee 0
Kansas City 3, Texas 2
Wedaetday'1 Gamel
Chicago (l&gt;ot.son G-2 and Trout 2-G} at
Torooto (Stieb}lond Juceki&gt;O),I, t.n
Oakland (Kingman U).. at Baltimore

(Flanagan&gt;5 ),n
SeiWe. (Abbott 6-2) at Boston (Eckersley
:h\), n

Swnmer league results

California ( Aa&amp;e .W) at New York. (Guidry

•'

·' · In Meigs-Mason Pony League ac:- ·lion Middleport claimed a 2-1 victory
•• over Coolville.
C. Burdette pitched six innings to
pick up the victory -while E. Bishop
came in to seal the win. Burdette
struck out · 11 allowing just one
Coolville hit. D. Follrod and D.
.Thoams were the Middleport hitters.
Gerald Singer and Benny Bennet
. took to the mound for Coolville.
Singer fanned two in five innings and
Bennet fanned one in his three innings of work. Ritchie Hayes was the
~Y Coolville hitter.
'
In Big Bend action the Middleport
Indians slipped past Pomeroy's
Tigers 2-1. Scott McKinley's line
'drive single in the home half of the
-seventh drove home the winning

run.

Fine pitching by both teams made
the game close right down to the
' wire. Hitters for the Indians were E.
~ Kltchen, R. Wise, Scott Gheen, S.
'· Crow, B. Decker, and S. McKinley.
~ lUck Wise picked up the win in relief
•• of Brian
. Decker. Decker fanned six •· and Wise two for the winners.
Parker Long suffered the loss in
~ relief of Chris Shanks who fanned 13
' Indian batters. Tiger )litters 'were J.
Holtz, Cl!rls Shanb, A. Hunnel, T.
t Jeffers, and P~rker Long.

..

r·

..

The Pomeroy Giants scored an iJn..
' pressive 21..0 shut out over Hartford.
Bryan Kom carried a hot bat with a
tlouble and two singles, James Nor·.
man four singles, Scott Powell two
T

I

6-.l),n
Cleveland (Denny 7-4 ) at Kansas City

singles, Gerald Moore, Rodney
Roush, Lee Powell, Kevin Mowery,
and Gary Coleman each with
singles. Brian Kom 'was the winning
pitcher striking out 11, walking six,
and hurling a no hitter for the Giants. J. Turnbull, T. Smith, S. Zirkle,
and E. Anderson took turns on the
mound for Hartford .
The Chester Warriors bowed down
to Syracuse-Hubbard's Greenhouse
by a 12-10 score. Todd Adams and
Mike Chancey combined for 9 KO's
and 10 walks to pick up the victory.
Syracuse hitters were Mike Chancey
three singles and a trip!~, Jimmy
Wolfe single and triple, Doug Owens
two singles, Todd Adams a double,
and Tim Willis, Chris Baer, Scott
Grueser, Mike Klees, Barry McCoy.
Matt Harris was the pitcher for
Chester. John Miller, Matt Harris,
Eynon, Norton, and Carpenter each
had singles for Chester.
In the Senior Softball League
Pomeroy scored a S-8 win over
Mason. Kellie Rought picked up the
win for Pomeroy with three strikeouts. B. Grueser and A. Riggs
smacked three singles, N. Smith,
Kellie Rought and Beth Gloeckner
two singles, and R. Buffington, S.
Herdman each with a single. Mel
Sisson banged a home run for M11son
along with Miriam Sisson, J . Taylor,
and M. Elias who all had two singles
apiece. K. Brown suffered the loss
for Mason.

ENTER EV~NT- Bob Adams, Jr. and his father
Bob "Bobby Joe" Adams, Sr., Racine, have entered
Friday night's grand opening at Bond's Speedway in
Stewart. The younger Adams recently completed a

FOOTIIALL
Natlooal Football League
NEW YORK GIANTS - Waived Jotm
Mendenhall, defensive tackle.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS - Signed Nick
Bebout, offcnsi\'C tackle.

( Gura~l ), n

Det.r&lt;lit (P. Underwood 1-U, at Minnesota
(KOOSITUi n~ l.n

Milwaukee (Keeton 2-1 ) at Texas (Medich
6-3), n
~y'sGamts

Detroit at Mlnnesot.a
Oakland at Baltimore, n

SeatUe at Boston, n

~cagoalToronto, n

California at New York, n
Cleveland at K.anaas Clty, n
Milwaukee at Teus, n

'flteSd.1'• Sport TraJDactiolll
BASEBALL
Amerl&lt;o•Leopo
DETROIT TIGERS - Ac\ivated Dan
Schal.zeder, pitcher. Optioned Dave Tobik,
pitcher, to Evansville of the American
Association.

CHICAGO

Nado.ILape
CUBS Placed Dave

K.ingman, ouUielder, on \Itt 15-4ay dlJabled
list. R~alled Geor11e Riley, pitcher, from

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Hasty
Decision surged into the lead in the
stretch and held on to edge Entree
by a neck in the featured race at
Scioto Downs on Tuesday night.
TQe winner returned $5.20, $3 and
$2.60. Entree paid $4 and $2.80 for
second, while Hi Kee Ho pald $2.60
for show.
The 111-5-1 ninth race trifecta was
worth $1,104.60.
A crowd of 5,135 wagered $376,059.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BAITING (125 at bats) : Hernandez, St.
Lou.is, .338; Vail, Chicago, .336; Henders.on,
New York, .330; Crux, Houskln , .329; Sm1th,
Los Angeles, .3Z9.
RUNS : Schmidt, Philadelphia, 49; Hernandez, St. Louis, 45; Rose, Ph.iJ.adelphia,42 ;
Templeton, St. Lo.ui.s, 4:0: Murphr. Atlanta,
38; Collins, Clncmnati, 38; Griffey, Cmcinnati, 38.
RBI : Hendrick, St. Louis, 51 ; Schmidt,
Philadelphia, 50; Garvey, Los Angeles, 48 ;
Smith, Los Angeles, 43; Lu:r. insk i,
Philadelphia, 41.
HITS: Templeton, St. Louis, 81 : Her·
nandez, St. Louis, n : Reitz, St. Loois, 71 ;
Cruz, Houston, 71; Chambliss, Atlanta, 70 ;
Garvey, Los Angeles, 70.
DOUBLES: Stearns, New York, 18; Rose,
Philadelphia, 19; Chambliss, Atlanta, 18;
Hernande:r., st. Louts, 17; Kni~ht, Cincinnati,
17.
TIUPLES: Moreno, Pittsburgh, 6; &amp;.'Ott,
Montreal, 4; LeFlore, Montrea~ 4; Trillo,
Philadelphia, f; McBride, Philadelphia, 4;
Herr, St. Louis, 4; Knight, Cincinnati, 4;
Landestoy, H005ton, 4.
HOME RUNS' Sclunidt, Philadelphia, 20;
Lw.lnski, Philadelphia, 15 ; Baker, Los
Angeles, 15 ; Garvey, Los Angeles, 14 ; Carter, Montreal, 13; Hendrick, St. Louis, 13 ,
STOLEN BASES : Moreno, , Pitts~llh, 36.;
Ld'lore, Montreal, 35; Collins, Cmcmnat.i,
24; Scott, Montual, )9; Law, Lo5 Angeles,

RUTLAND.
DEPARTMENT
STORE

POMEROY AND GALL I POLIS STORES .
WE ltUER\11 THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOLD TO DflAEIS

12-0Z. PIIG•.• 89'

,.
U.S. GOV'T GRADED
CHOICE, BONE-IN

.•

Full Cut
Round Steak

Prices Effective Thru Saturday, June 21st
French City

Homemade

•

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
5--7·LB. AVG.

$ 79

•

HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••••••••~~~.s1.19
Eckrict1

JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••••••••• !-.~·. s1.49

Luncheon Meat ....

Mixed Fryer Parts .. lb. 49

'

''

U.S. GO\I'T GRADED CHOICE

LDNGHORN $
CHEESE ..........

1.89

ORANGES ....

Boneless Bottom
Round Roast ..... lb.

•

6/69e

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

1 lb. Blue Bonnet

e

99

79

l-Ib .

CELERY.............

Pork 5ausage ........ Rein

45e

59ggc

I

C

• d Bacon.......... Pkg
1-lb.
511ce
.
$129
•
1-lb.
Meat W1eners ...... Pkg .
OSCAR MAYER CHEESE. JUMBO OR

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

Northern
·.Bath Tissue

$149

BALLARD'S

MARGARINE
QUARTERS .........

C

$2 39

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK . ANY SIZE PKG.

lb.

GWALTNEY

1-lb.
Pkg.

HOLLY FARMS , U.S.D.A.INSPECTED

PRODUCE
88 Count California

~~:::s~~-~-~~~ . .

ALL VARIETIES. SERVE 'N' SAVE SLICED

•
•
•

Ohio Colvy

Fresh
Pork Loin

ltiO IN

Phone 742 -!100

DAit{Y

~Whole

COPYRIGHT 1..(1 • THE KIOGEI CO . lll,.,S AND F'IIC:fS
GOOD SUNDAY , JUNE 15 THitU SATUIDAY , JUNE 21 .

TODAV'S

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

Kroger
Meat Wieners

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

C

.

19.

PITCHING {6 Decisioos}: Bibby, PittsburRh, 7·1, .175, 3.16 ; Reuss, Los Angeles,
H , .i7s, 2.33 ; Carlton, Philadelphia, 11-2,
.1116, 1.78; Bahnsen, Montreol, ~I • .1133,1.36 ;
Re&lt;d, Philadelphia, H .1133, 2.25; MO!luiu.
Cincinnati, 5-l, .833, 3.62; Welch, los
Angeles, 7-2, .nB, 2.22; Richard, Houston, 93, .7SO, l.Sl.

STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Philadelphia,
118; Richard, Houston, 106; Ryan, Hooston,
75; Blylenn, Pittsburgh, 71 ; Niekro, Allanla, 611.
AMERICAN LEAGUE

BAITING ( 125 at bats): Molitor,
Milwaukee, .358; Swnmer5, Detroit, .341 ;
Orta, Cleveland, .340; Brett, Kali8B.s City,
.337; Bwnbry, Baltimore, .333; trammell,
Detroit, .333.
..
RUNS : YOunl, Milwaukee, Sl; Willon,
Kansas City, 47; Wills, Texas, 47 ; Randolph,
New York, 45; Bwnbry, Baltimore, '-1;
Tranunell, Detroit. 43; Henderson, oakland,
~3 .

RBI : Perez, Boston, 46; Ogl~vie,
Milwaukee, 45; Armas, Oakland, f4 : Oliver,
Texas, « ; Cooper, Milwaukee, 43.
WTS: Wibon, Kansas City, 82; Bumbry,
Baltimore, 79; 't'OWlt, Milwauk~. 78 ;
Burleam , Boston, 75: Landreaux, Mlnnesota, n; Rivers, Texas, 75.
DOUBLES: Morri.aon, C1licago,22; Yount,
Mil, 20; Garcia, Toronto,17 ; Carew, California, 17; Oliver, Teus,16.
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 8; Bwnbry,
Baltimore, 5; Brett, Kansas City, 5; 9 Tied

With4 .

HOME RUNS: Oglivie, Milwaukee, 16;
Jackson, New York, 15; Rice, Boston, 13;
Mayberry, Toronto, 13; Thomu,
MilwauJree, 12: Velez, Toronto, 12; Rudi ,
California, 12.
STOLEN BASES: Henderson , Oakland,
30; Wilson, Kansas City, 71; Cruz, SeatUe,
19; Wills, Texas, 18; Bumbry, Baltimore,l7 ;
Randolph, New York,l7.
PITCHlNG (6 Decisions) : Farmer,
Chicago, ~I , .6.13, 2.45; John, New York, 9-2,
.811, 3.07; Gura , Karwas City, 1-2, .1100 ; 2.17;
Rainey, BoBton, 7-2, .Tl8, 4.88; Dot,on,
chlcuo, 6-2, .750, 3.72; Abbott, Seattle, 6-2,
.750, 2.112; Stone. Baltimore, 8-3. .m. 3.11 ;
Spillner, Clevellmd, 7·1, .700,4.75.
STRIKEOUTS : Guidry, New Yort, 80 ;
K~,Oakland , 68; Banniater, SeatUe.~,67;
Noms, Oakland, 66 ; Leonard, Kansas ~,.;ity,
iS.

7 oz. 50 count Solo

IN THE DAIRY DEPT.

FOAM CUPS •••••••••••••••••••••~~~~. 594
oz.
ARMOUR TREET. •••••••••~:!~~?!~. s1.19

Kroger Fresh
• '!.-Gal
0 range Ju1ce
ctn.

12

NESCAFE COFFEE ••••••••••••~:r...S5.49

STRAWBERRY GLAZE•••••••••••• 2/85~
Dial Bath White ·

BAR SOAP. •••••••••••••••••••••••••. 2/8!r
140 Count

WuhJ;;

KROGER

320-oJ 119

Bread. ........ Lvs .
Northern Napkins'::~'·
ASSORTED

.

Fresh
Cantaloupes. Each

C

FRESH SOUTHERN

69 C

Cottage Cheese .. 'l;~:.· 75
UOGER

VIVA NAPKINS................ :.~ ;•• 794

ggc

Peaches ................ ·lb.

RED RIPE,

Whole
Watermelons

59 C

$ 99

Green Peppers ... 4For S

9

2 lb. Fireside

FIG BARS.·••••.•••••••••••••••••~~~~ $1.15

KIOGEI

GRADEl
MEDIUM EGGS

49c

Dt••

Grade A
Hi Nu 2%

Large Eggs

PARK .RESERVED ·

Lowfat·Milk

UNTIL 5 P .M.

SATURDAY-JUNE 2.1 st
FOR

3

For

CAKE MIXES.•••••••••••••••••••• .:~~~.9gc
16 oz. Wicks

DEODORANT

LONG GREEN, FRESH

19 oz. Duncan Hines

DOUBLE CHEESE PIZZA••••••B.~x•• s1.59

ggc

Pert . 7·01.
Shampoo ....... Btl.

age
2
9
9
C
Right Guard ......... c~~Kroger Buns ... :k~~-.
5
$1
o;;;;ii Batteries~~~~ $1 19
Cucumbers.............

10 oz. Instant

28.5 oz. Jeno

·g9C

SESAME SEED

1.

CARDIGAN
The 7t)i Earl of Cardigan, who led
the Charge of the Light Brigade in
the Crimean War, got tired of pulling
a sweater over his head. Tradition
says he designed the sweater jacket
with buttons that has carried his
name down thl:ough history.

OPEN
s 24 HRS.
ADAY*
R
LAST YEAR
'hcept Kinton, White Sulphur, 7th . Ave.
,....,,,." &amp; WiHiaiiiiOft

ben Of theM advertiaed items ia raqutred to be
~ IValllble fOf Mle 1n each Krogvr Store, except as
~t noted f1 thia ad . It we dO run out of an ect.&lt;lrtiud
item, we will off• vou vour choice of a comparable item,
when av~Nbie, rehec:ting the same savings or a reinc:heck
wnict1 will tnbde vou to purchase the edvertiled item at the
ldvertited price within J') devs .

racing trip to Florida where he did well unW an accident sidelined him from further competition. Adams
has two feature wins to his credit this year.

BULK WIENERS ••••••••••.••••L.~-.s1.39

.383 12h

34 Z1 .557 3
33 28 .541 I
San Diego
!/ 3S .43S 10 ~
San FranciscQ
36 3S .426 11
24 34 .414 11 ~
Atlanta
T\ttsdlly's Games

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

36 23 .610

Houston
Loe Angeles
Cincinnati

This year 's crop is expec~ to
reach 12 million pounds, 'the blot in
lour years , sai!t Kenneth Acketi; of
the Ohio Crop Reporting Service.
Conditions have been so good that
some orchard owners like John
Bergman, who farms about 140
acres near Port Clinton, have been
forced to thin out the large number

mers abo~t this year's strawberry
crop concern the possibility that
weather may have been too good.
Paul Molyet, who farms about 1100
acres between Fremont and Tiffin,
said he is worried that last
weekend 's warm temperatures may
have ripened a lot of small •berries
too quickly.
Along with the peaches and
strawberries, fruit lovers also are
expected to get their fill of sweet and
sour cherries this sununer.

'hcept Closed Setw. ., Mldnlgltt nl9aM Sund.y .

Wlcttita of the American Association.

W. L.PcL GB
34 23 .596
34 Z5 .576 1

The quantities are expected to
keep price levels about the same as
in 1979, if not slightly lower.
Peach yields have been down the
last Iwo years - 4 million pounds in
1979 and 5 million in 1978. Growers
blame freezing temperatures during
the cold winters and springs that
damaged and killed some trees.

KRO

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

,•

:~

while cherries, strawberri es and apples also are expected to have
greater yields.
"The weather was almost perfect
this year ... no winter damage, no
frost damage - just a little wind
damage," said Julius Gerhardstein,
operator of Starlife Orchards in
Clyde.
'

~ yOu buy at KrOQel' is guaranteed for ~r total
11tiltection reger~ of manufacturer . II you are not utis·
fied. Kroger wil rllpl.ttce your item With the aame bland or 1
oomper~ brand or refund your purc:twe price .

:1: 4lesota runs with a single, a double
~; and a squeeze but and Doug Corbett

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP ) - While
some farmers across Ollio have ex·
perienced setbacks from th is
spring's heavy rains, Ohio's fruit
growers are . predicting bumper
crops.
Nearly ideal growing conditions
should result in a threefold increase
in peach production over last year,

of peaches on their trees.
Strawberry production is expected
to surpass last yejlr's 8.3 million
pounds, and growers claim taste will
be excellent.
"The quality of fl~ 'or ls the best
it's been in years," said Phil
Gasteler, who operates Strawberry
Hill Farm near Sandusky. He said
he expects yields to be up about 1,000
quarts from the average of 5,500
quarts in 1979.
The only fears expressed by far·

.

Gal.
Paper or

"SUMMER OUTING"
OF

$

58

Plastic Ctn.

LARGE' INDUSTRIAL CONCERN

UOGII 0.5% LOWFAT Mill
GAt.

OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P.M . .

KROGER

Natural Flavor 1;.~$179
Ice Cream ....... . Ctn.

CAMDEN PARK .
U.S. 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT HOLIDAYS

F;;~ch Onion ·

.

I

rumcm ... sa.ct

Onion Dip.. .. .... . ~::.·

$119

AV~T=~~:-.T.rr!!~:""·
CONfAINI.,IECll OF CtttdEN

w;;h;~e

fried Chi~ktn ......... Eoch

LiMoN . COCONUT. IANANAOI

Chocolate Cr1a111 Pie ·~:h

$229

• cow
$179
· Chopped Ham.................. ••. .

F-;;;h 8reacL ......2 't:.· 5119

'
• I

•

$399

.

·'

•

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 18, 1980

Apple Grove
News Notes

Dayton teachers take extra jobs
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Tom Vincent has been fanning 6S acres for
the last 15 years.
Kenneth Lambert started his own
business and also works during"the
sununer for a temporary employment service.
Both are teachers in the Dayton
public school district who, like other
instructors, say they've been forced
to moonlight to maintain an average
standard of living.
Dayton school officials don't keep
track of how many teachers hold
second jobs, teach summer school or
coach to supplement their incomes,
but they say it's a si_gnificant number .

·

Salaries in the system range from
a low ri $10,800 for a first-year
teacher with a bachelor's degree to
$22,000 for a 1:&gt;-year veteran with a
doctorate.
The Bureau of Labor Stati.stics
figures the average family of four
needs $20,517 a year to maintain a
moderate standard of living.

Some teachers said infla lion has
caused them to dip into the outside
job market, while others said
they've been doing it for years.
"I couldn'tmake it on my teaching
salary, " said Sam Dean, who adds
about $8,000 a year to his $20,000
school income with the Tlpp City
carpet and upholstery cleaning
business he runs.
Dean, a teacher for 18 years, supports his wife and mother-in-law.
. Most teachers said they could survive without the second jobs, but
many added that their spouses also
work . Most of the instructors interviewed said the extra cash helps
them enjoy some luxuries their
teaching salaries won't cover.
"I could have made ends meet by
not doing some oC the things I like to
do - like not bowling, not buying a
new car for a couple of years and not
taking my girl out to dinner," said
Lambert, a history, goverrunent and
mathematics teacher at Belmont

Helen Help Us

Man. . 's home is his. castle,.
don 't peek and reveal all
BY HELEN BO'ITEL
Special correspondent
DEAR HELEN:
I live next door to a nice couple,
but I'm very upset by one thing. He
walks by their open window wearing
his wife's bra, panties and slip.
Should I report this to the pollee, as I
understand cross-dressing i.s against
the law ? - HOUSEWIFE
1
OEARHOUSEWIFE:
... And risk being labeled a
Peeping Thomasina?
What a man does in the privacy of
his own home is only the neighbors'
business if he harms others by doing
it.
(But you might suggest that he
pull the shades, if you can't pull
yourself to pull yours.) - H.

packet from Orlando F. Campesi, a
child study supervi.sor for the New
Jersey Department of Education. he
writes:
"All professional personnel are
held responsible to report all cases
of child abuse or neglect ... and are
held immune regarding legal aspects in their reporting ...
"Anyone may report cases of child
abuse or neglect to the Division of
Youth and Family Services or to thf
attorney general's office in each
county.
"Every state has a component
similar to ours, but known by
various names. It i.s best that interested persons wanting to know
their own state's operation contact
either their state department of
education or their county medical
society.''

DEAR HELEN :
You publish letters often from
emotionally or physically battered
children. Why don 't people who
know them recognize the signs and
report their cases to authorities? It's
a law in every state, I believe, that
observers must alert family service
agencies if they observe child abuse
- and their reports will be kept confidential, with the fami lies of the
children having no recourse for
lawsuits.
I wonder why our state (and
uthers) doesn 't provide schools with
information on child abuse and
neglect so that more teachers would
be reminded of their responsibilities? Too often , the youngsters
themselves won't ask for help, but if
adults have eyes 'they can recognize
a battered child. - WilliAM
DEAR WILUAM:
Your state (New Jersey) does
provide schools with Child Abuse
and Neglect Report forms, together
with in-depth information on how to
use them.
I recently received such a report

Cookout held Sunday
A cookout was' held Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry, Reibel
in celebration of Father's Day, the
birthdays of Mrs. Donna Shato and
her daughter, Kristin, and the wedding anniversary of Jim and Donna
Shato, Gallipoli.s.
Birthday cakes and homemade ice
cream were served following the
dinner. Attending were those nained
and Mr. and Mrs. Donley Reibel,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Craig and daughter, Sara, Miqersville; Mr. and Mrs. J oe Estep, Cammy and Tracy, Mrs. Wanda Beaver
and Vincent, Gallipolis; Mrs. Althea ·
Strong and Diane, Mrs. Evelyn
DeVault, Danny Saunders, Wilkesville, and Mrs. J ean Craig, Beverly.

I can only add that it is everyone's
responsibility to be alert for child
abuse. Don't leave it to the
professionals, readers, if you see a
youngster in trouble! - H.
DEAR HELEN:
People cry out against rape, but
how about rape at birth? I mean circumcision! Doctors are telling us
how tht circwncision isn't good. Why
i.sn't it outlawed• I personally have
nothing to do with my parents in .
protest of this mutilation. - BRIAN
DEAR BRIAN :
Disowning your parents because
they had you circumci.sed? Either
the doctor completely bungled the
job ( did his knife slip?) or you're
nursing an unfounded grudge. Most
physicians still approve circumci.sion as an aid in preventing in·
fection, etc.~ H.
Got a problem? An adult subject
(or discussion? YOu can talk it over
in her colUITUl if you write to Helen
Hottel, care of this newspaper.

Dilly clunker planned
At a recent meeting of the Meigs
County Jaycees plans for the dilly
dunker, which will be used at the Big
Bend Regatta, were made.
Also discussed was a Bluegrass
show and the l!lllll frog jump. The
group will be selling tickets to the
frong jwnp.
The meetings during the summer
will be held at 8 p.m. Attending were
Bill Young, Mick Reed, Sherman
White, Paul Gerard, Terry Spencer,
Mitch Meadows, Dave Jenkins, G.
Francis and the Little Hocking
Jaycees.

High School. He earns nearly $18,000
a year at the·school. ·
Industrial arts teacher Allan Abell
said the $9,000 to $12,000 extra he
earns from the upholstery business
he operates out of his garage has
allowed him to afford "extras" and
will make it easier to send his child
to college.
Paul Ressler, Dayton's school personnel director, said that in addition
to moonlighting , teachers also are
taking advantage of extra work
available through the system. About
100 s.wnmer positions for teachers
and counselors are in "great
demand, u. he said.

But while the second jobs may
help out financially, Ward Rountree
of the Dayton Education Association
said the extra work also may hurt in
other areas.
Moonlighting limits the time
available for class preparation and
can limit creativity, he said. In addition, several teachers said some
people might be discouraged from a
teaching career by the difficulty of
supporting a family on the current
salaries.

BOWERS HOSPITALIZED
Eileen Bowers, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, i.s
a surgical patient al Holzer Medical
Center.

THE FABRIC SHOP FOR CRAFT ITEMS.
-ANIMAL CUTOUTS - "EVEN FROGS"
-PlACE MAT FABRIC AND TRIMS
To Sew Yo~self

298

Second St

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Infant Brickles
• Mr. and Mrs. Steve Brickles of
Gaithersburg, Md. are announcing
the birth of a son, Michael David,
May 'rl. The infant weighed nine
pouilds, one ounce and was 20 inches
long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Wood, Pomeroy,
and the maternal greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Weber Wood,- Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Goldie Wyant Lynch, Athens.
Paternal grandparents are Iona
Brickles, Pomeroy, and Donald
Brickles, Glouster. Paternal greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Brick!es, Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs .
Brickles have another son, Jeffery,
two.

BUY
DIRECT
F·ROM THE
.TRUCK!
CASES
ONLY!

E"NTER
SUPERIOR'S FRANKIES
DOLO RUSH SWEEPSTAKES

In the Slinderella Diet program
news, Beverly Rickard received a 20
pound ribbon for weight loss at the
Monday night Mason class while
Betty Berkley lost the most weight
and Lois Young was runner-up.
At the Tuesday morning Mason
class held at 10:30 a.m. Darlene Cunningham and Kate Stone tied for
losing the most weight while Beverly
Codner and Nita Conde tied for runner-up. Isabel Lewis !sot the most
weight and Peggy Lewis was run- .
ner-up at the Thursday morning
Middleport class with four new
members being welCOOied. At the
Thursday night class :St Chester,
Betty Gaul and Vera Weber lost the
most weight, and Libby Sayre and
Karla Chevalier tied as runners-up.
One new member was welcome. Jo
Aim Newsom has charge of the

F!IIIT ll'llltll

6 OZ. GOLD INQOT
lf:CONO l'tlllll

3 OZ. GOLD INOOT
TMIIIID

•~!till

2 OZ. OOLD IN ClOT
1- fOUIIITH,.IJIZQ

1 OZ. OOLD INGOT
10- fWTH jtf!IILZU

V. OZ. OOLD INOOT

(WHILE SU!PLIES LAST)

FREE CUP OF R.C.

FIGHT INFLATION

r! osses.

Meat Prices Lower
Than 1979 WHOLESALE

10c HOT DOG SALE

ITEM

12 lb. Box

WHOLE

14
SUPERIORS

A

~944

FRANKIES

$4.12
$3.84

CASE

59• PKG.

SUPERIORS
A

BACON

CASE
89• LB.

a

85• LB.
A

$1.44

-CASE

LUNCHEON
MEATS

Jumbo-Bologna

Fire Department Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at fire house. Kitchen shower.
POMEROY WDGE No. 164 F.
and A.M. will have special meeting
June 19 at 7:30p.m. with work in the
Third Degree. All Master Masons
are invited.

CASE

SUPERIORS
1 LB. VAN PAC
99• LB.

15 LB. AVG.

muRSDAY

MAGNOUA CLUB will meet
ThursdaY evening at 7:30p.m. at the
borne of Ellen Couch. Georgie Wataoh will have devotions, and Bernice
Ann Durst will give the program.
WIUJNG WORKERS Class of the
Enterprise Urilted Methodist Church
will hold their meeUng June 19 at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Maybelle Moore.

15 lb. Stick

SUPERIORS
SMOKED SlAB

BACON

$}.60

10 lb. Whole
Slab

POMEROY
I

v

I

.THIGHS .............. ~~.
FRENCH CITY

WIENERS......... !!~~-

cENTER. CUT RIB

PORK CHOPS ........~.~l

'

39

-$ 49

CENTER CUT LOIN .

PORK CHOPS .......~a••.l
FRESH

PORK STEAK ........~B~

'

I'

MIDDLEPORT CHILD Conservation League, 6 p.m. Thursday
at the home of Mrs. Susie Soulsby.
Mrs. Clarice Kennedy to have
devotions. Members to take their
own table service and a swim suit.
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club, 1•15 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Nancy Grueser. Members to meet at
the !WCk Springs Church at 12:30
P·!D- for the trip to the Gru~r
bOOJe.
• I

•

.

BANANAS........ ~8 4/

$

••

FLAVORITE
TWIN PAK

.}

$
169

2% MILK ........... ~~~...
FLAVORITE INDIVID~AL

WEDNESDAY
LADIES AUXIUARY of Rutland

A

SMOKED

CHICKEN

T~-Soc----ia-1ca-1-en-da.....
r "--I

SUPERIORS

POLISH SAUSAGE

Whole Fryers...... ~4

A wiener roast and potluck dinner
was held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Racine,
Tuesday evening With Cindy Roush
as c~hostess, in honor of Kimberly
Lynn Roush, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Roush who celebrated
her second birthday on June 13.
The evening was spent playing
volleyball.
She received many gifts and
money, and two cakes inscribed
"~ppy Birthday Kimberly" with
pink roses, and yellow motifs baked
by her mother.
·
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Lewis and Ike Lewis of Clifton, Mrs.
Chuck Mugrage and sons Travis and
Tyson, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell
and children Mandy and Michael,
Edward Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush, Chuck Michaels, Cindy Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush.

$3.36

LB.

•

Potluck honors
second birthday

SAVE
$117

GRADE

Diet program
news reported

Fri., June 20th 10 to 8
Sat., June 21st 10 to 6

E-Z CARVE
HAMS

HOUB:

Mo11.-Sal 8 am-10 pm

'

-BELTING AND BUCKLES

FABRIC SHOP

Store

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATl!RDAY, JUNE 21, 1980

Thurs., June 19th 10 to 6

SUPERIORS

-PURSE HANDLES
-POLYESTER BAITS
-PRINTED QUILl FABRIC AND
QU_I~TING FRAMES
.

New arrival

FffiESHOWERPLANNED
A household shower will be held
for Tom and Pam Diddle, whose
mo bile home was recently damaged
by fire. Several friends and neighbors of the couple are hosting the
shower which will be held Saturday
night at 7:30p.m. at the American
Legion hall in Racine. For the con·
veni ence of those who are unable to
attend Saturday night, the hall will
be open all day so that residents may
leave gifts. The public is invited.

298 SECOND ST.
POME"OY, 0.

POMEROY,
OHIO

-EMBROIDERY SUPPUES
To Fashion Your own Belts

7- t1le Daily Sentinel, MiddleportPomeroy, 0., Wednesday, JUQe 18, 19110

· visited the family at the EganCurti.ss Funeral Home , Columbua.

'

12 LB. BOX

MAl(£ IT YOURSELF!

115 W. 2ND

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Russell oC
Newark were Memorial weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fox and
son, David.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Melvin of
Tampa, Fla. were Monday through
Tuesday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons.
· Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman
were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Jewell and family at Letart,
W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDade of
Troy, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
visited a recent Sunday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Henderson at
Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Wells and
daughters, Mandy and Amy, oC
Gallipolis were Sunday dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons.
The Rev. Florence Smith attended
United Methodist Conference at
Lakeside the past week.
Mr, and Mrs. Roger Roush and
daughter, Kimberly, vi.sited. Mrs.
Edna Roush . and Mrs. Gladys

Shields Sunday evening a t Raci ne.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell were dinner
guests Sunday of Mrs. Kathryn
Hunt, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wickline,
Scott and Kyle. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell spent
Friday night with Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Hart at Columbus, and on
Saturday moved Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Grimm to · Racine from
Columbus to the former Mrs. Mary
Cleek residence they recently purchased from her. On Tuesday Mr.
and Mrs. Bell returned to Columbus
due to the death of Mrs. Earl
Grimm's sister, Mrs. Macy Jo Curtiss. They and Mrs. Harold Grimm

~ Cheese Shces... !.o:•••.l

FLAVORITE

1

Salad· Dressing. :.o:.
3

FLAVORITE

.
•
-Potato Ch 1ps..~~~. /
'

TWIN PAK

ARMOUR TREET

HEINZ:

.LUNCH MEAT

VINEGAR

12

oz.

gg~

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Otter Expir~ June 21, 1980

No 030x7
GALLON

$ Qg

.

$}

'119

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at -Powell's
res June 21,1980
Offer

$
199

FLAVORITE

ICE CREAM........ :~~ ...
CHARM IN

SUGAR SWEETEt&lt;IED

.KOOL-AID

TOILET TISSUE

FAMILY PACK
. 6 ROLL .

$139

I

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Ju.ne 21, 1980

10 QT. CAN -$~29
No. 1749-1·»7 ·
Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer E res June 21, 198~

'
~

l

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 18, 1980

Apple Grove
News Notes

Dayton teachers take extra jobs
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Tom Vincent has been fanning 6S acres for
the last 15 years.
Kenneth Lambert started his own
business and also works during"the
sununer for a temporary employment service.
Both are teachers in the Dayton
public school district who, like other
instructors, say they've been forced
to moonlight to maintain an average
standard of living.
Dayton school officials don't keep
track of how many teachers hold
second jobs, teach summer school or
coach to supplement their incomes,
but they say it's a si_gnificant number .

·

Salaries in the system range from
a low ri $10,800 for a first-year
teacher with a bachelor's degree to
$22,000 for a 1:&gt;-year veteran with a
doctorate.
The Bureau of Labor Stati.stics
figures the average family of four
needs $20,517 a year to maintain a
moderate standard of living.

Some teachers said infla lion has
caused them to dip into the outside
job market, while others said
they've been doing it for years.
"I couldn'tmake it on my teaching
salary, " said Sam Dean, who adds
about $8,000 a year to his $20,000
school income with the Tlpp City
carpet and upholstery cleaning
business he runs.
Dean, a teacher for 18 years, supports his wife and mother-in-law.
. Most teachers said they could survive without the second jobs, but
many added that their spouses also
work . Most of the instructors interviewed said the extra cash helps
them enjoy some luxuries their
teaching salaries won't cover.
"I could have made ends meet by
not doing some oC the things I like to
do - like not bowling, not buying a
new car for a couple of years and not
taking my girl out to dinner," said
Lambert, a history, goverrunent and
mathematics teacher at Belmont

Helen Help Us

Man. . 's home is his. castle,.
don 't peek and reveal all
BY HELEN BO'ITEL
Special correspondent
DEAR HELEN:
I live next door to a nice couple,
but I'm very upset by one thing. He
walks by their open window wearing
his wife's bra, panties and slip.
Should I report this to the pollee, as I
understand cross-dressing i.s against
the law ? - HOUSEWIFE
1
OEARHOUSEWIFE:
... And risk being labeled a
Peeping Thomasina?
What a man does in the privacy of
his own home is only the neighbors'
business if he harms others by doing
it.
(But you might suggest that he
pull the shades, if you can't pull
yourself to pull yours.) - H.

packet from Orlando F. Campesi, a
child study supervi.sor for the New
Jersey Department of Education. he
writes:
"All professional personnel are
held responsible to report all cases
of child abuse or neglect ... and are
held immune regarding legal aspects in their reporting ...
"Anyone may report cases of child
abuse or neglect to the Division of
Youth and Family Services or to thf
attorney general's office in each
county.
"Every state has a component
similar to ours, but known by
various names. It i.s best that interested persons wanting to know
their own state's operation contact
either their state department of
education or their county medical
society.''

DEAR HELEN :
You publish letters often from
emotionally or physically battered
children. Why don 't people who
know them recognize the signs and
report their cases to authorities? It's
a law in every state, I believe, that
observers must alert family service
agencies if they observe child abuse
- and their reports will be kept confidential, with the fami lies of the
children having no recourse for
lawsuits.
I wonder why our state (and
uthers) doesn 't provide schools with
information on child abuse and
neglect so that more teachers would
be reminded of their responsibilities? Too often , the youngsters
themselves won't ask for help, but if
adults have eyes 'they can recognize
a battered child. - WilliAM
DEAR WILUAM:
Your state (New Jersey) does
provide schools with Child Abuse
and Neglect Report forms, together
with in-depth information on how to
use them.
I recently received such a report

Cookout held Sunday
A cookout was' held Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry, Reibel
in celebration of Father's Day, the
birthdays of Mrs. Donna Shato and
her daughter, Kristin, and the wedding anniversary of Jim and Donna
Shato, Gallipoli.s.
Birthday cakes and homemade ice
cream were served following the
dinner. Attending were those nained
and Mr. and Mrs. Donley Reibel,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Craig and daughter, Sara, Miqersville; Mr. and Mrs. J oe Estep, Cammy and Tracy, Mrs. Wanda Beaver
and Vincent, Gallipolis; Mrs. Althea ·
Strong and Diane, Mrs. Evelyn
DeVault, Danny Saunders, Wilkesville, and Mrs. J ean Craig, Beverly.

I can only add that it is everyone's
responsibility to be alert for child
abuse. Don't leave it to the
professionals, readers, if you see a
youngster in trouble! - H.
DEAR HELEN:
People cry out against rape, but
how about rape at birth? I mean circumcision! Doctors are telling us
how tht circwncision isn't good. Why
i.sn't it outlawed• I personally have
nothing to do with my parents in .
protest of this mutilation. - BRIAN
DEAR BRIAN :
Disowning your parents because
they had you circumci.sed? Either
the doctor completely bungled the
job ( did his knife slip?) or you're
nursing an unfounded grudge. Most
physicians still approve circumci.sion as an aid in preventing in·
fection, etc.~ H.
Got a problem? An adult subject
(or discussion? YOu can talk it over
in her colUITUl if you write to Helen
Hottel, care of this newspaper.

Dilly clunker planned
At a recent meeting of the Meigs
County Jaycees plans for the dilly
dunker, which will be used at the Big
Bend Regatta, were made.
Also discussed was a Bluegrass
show and the l!lllll frog jump. The
group will be selling tickets to the
frong jwnp.
The meetings during the summer
will be held at 8 p.m. Attending were
Bill Young, Mick Reed, Sherman
White, Paul Gerard, Terry Spencer,
Mitch Meadows, Dave Jenkins, G.
Francis and the Little Hocking
Jaycees.

High School. He earns nearly $18,000
a year at the·school. ·
Industrial arts teacher Allan Abell
said the $9,000 to $12,000 extra he
earns from the upholstery business
he operates out of his garage has
allowed him to afford "extras" and
will make it easier to send his child
to college.
Paul Ressler, Dayton's school personnel director, said that in addition
to moonlighting , teachers also are
taking advantage of extra work
available through the system. About
100 s.wnmer positions for teachers
and counselors are in "great
demand, u. he said.

But while the second jobs may
help out financially, Ward Rountree
of the Dayton Education Association
said the extra work also may hurt in
other areas.
Moonlighting limits the time
available for class preparation and
can limit creativity, he said. In addition, several teachers said some
people might be discouraged from a
teaching career by the difficulty of
supporting a family on the current
salaries.

BOWERS HOSPITALIZED
Eileen Bowers, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, i.s
a surgical patient al Holzer Medical
Center.

THE FABRIC SHOP FOR CRAFT ITEMS.
-ANIMAL CUTOUTS - "EVEN FROGS"
-PlACE MAT FABRIC AND TRIMS
To Sew Yo~self

298

Second St

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Infant Brickles
• Mr. and Mrs. Steve Brickles of
Gaithersburg, Md. are announcing
the birth of a son, Michael David,
May 'rl. The infant weighed nine
pouilds, one ounce and was 20 inches
long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Wood, Pomeroy,
and the maternal greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Weber Wood,- Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Goldie Wyant Lynch, Athens.
Paternal grandparents are Iona
Brickles, Pomeroy, and Donald
Brickles, Glouster. Paternal greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Brick!es, Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs .
Brickles have another son, Jeffery,
two.

BUY
DIRECT
F·ROM THE
.TRUCK!
CASES
ONLY!

E"NTER
SUPERIOR'S FRANKIES
DOLO RUSH SWEEPSTAKES

In the Slinderella Diet program
news, Beverly Rickard received a 20
pound ribbon for weight loss at the
Monday night Mason class while
Betty Berkley lost the most weight
and Lois Young was runner-up.
At the Tuesday morning Mason
class held at 10:30 a.m. Darlene Cunningham and Kate Stone tied for
losing the most weight while Beverly
Codner and Nita Conde tied for runner-up. Isabel Lewis !sot the most
weight and Peggy Lewis was run- .
ner-up at the Thursday morning
Middleport class with four new
members being welCOOied. At the
Thursday night class :St Chester,
Betty Gaul and Vera Weber lost the
most weight, and Libby Sayre and
Karla Chevalier tied as runners-up.
One new member was welcome. Jo
Aim Newsom has charge of the

F!IIIT ll'llltll

6 OZ. GOLD INQOT
lf:CONO l'tlllll

3 OZ. GOLD INOOT
TMIIIID

•~!till

2 OZ. OOLD IN ClOT
1- fOUIIITH,.IJIZQ

1 OZ. OOLD INGOT
10- fWTH jtf!IILZU

V. OZ. OOLD INOOT

(WHILE SU!PLIES LAST)

FREE CUP OF R.C.

FIGHT INFLATION

r! osses.

Meat Prices Lower
Than 1979 WHOLESALE

10c HOT DOG SALE

ITEM

12 lb. Box

WHOLE

14
SUPERIORS

A

~944

FRANKIES

$4.12
$3.84

CASE

59• PKG.

SUPERIORS
A

BACON

CASE
89• LB.

a

85• LB.
A

$1.44

-CASE

LUNCHEON
MEATS

Jumbo-Bologna

Fire Department Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at fire house. Kitchen shower.
POMEROY WDGE No. 164 F.
and A.M. will have special meeting
June 19 at 7:30p.m. with work in the
Third Degree. All Master Masons
are invited.

CASE

SUPERIORS
1 LB. VAN PAC
99• LB.

15 LB. AVG.

muRSDAY

MAGNOUA CLUB will meet
ThursdaY evening at 7:30p.m. at the
borne of Ellen Couch. Georgie Wataoh will have devotions, and Bernice
Ann Durst will give the program.
WIUJNG WORKERS Class of the
Enterprise Urilted Methodist Church
will hold their meeUng June 19 at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Maybelle Moore.

15 lb. Stick

SUPERIORS
SMOKED SlAB

BACON

$}.60

10 lb. Whole
Slab

POMEROY
I

v

I

.THIGHS .............. ~~.
FRENCH CITY

WIENERS......... !!~~-

cENTER. CUT RIB

PORK CHOPS ........~.~l

'

39

-$ 49

CENTER CUT LOIN .

PORK CHOPS .......~a••.l
FRESH

PORK STEAK ........~B~

'

I'

MIDDLEPORT CHILD Conservation League, 6 p.m. Thursday
at the home of Mrs. Susie Soulsby.
Mrs. Clarice Kennedy to have
devotions. Members to take their
own table service and a swim suit.
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club, 1•15 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Nancy Grueser. Members to meet at
the !WCk Springs Church at 12:30
P·!D- for the trip to the Gru~r
bOOJe.
• I

•

.

BANANAS........ ~8 4/

$

••

FLAVORITE
TWIN PAK

.}

$
169

2% MILK ........... ~~~...
FLAVORITE INDIVID~AL

WEDNESDAY
LADIES AUXIUARY of Rutland

A

SMOKED

CHICKEN

T~-Soc----ia-1ca-1-en-da.....
r "--I

SUPERIORS

POLISH SAUSAGE

Whole Fryers...... ~4

A wiener roast and potluck dinner
was held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Racine,
Tuesday evening With Cindy Roush
as c~hostess, in honor of Kimberly
Lynn Roush, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Roush who celebrated
her second birthday on June 13.
The evening was spent playing
volleyball.
She received many gifts and
money, and two cakes inscribed
"~ppy Birthday Kimberly" with
pink roses, and yellow motifs baked
by her mother.
·
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Lewis and Ike Lewis of Clifton, Mrs.
Chuck Mugrage and sons Travis and
Tyson, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell
and children Mandy and Michael,
Edward Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush, Chuck Michaels, Cindy Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush.

$3.36

LB.

•

Potluck honors
second birthday

SAVE
$117

GRADE

Diet program
news reported

Fri., June 20th 10 to 8
Sat., June 21st 10 to 6

E-Z CARVE
HAMS

HOUB:

Mo11.-Sal 8 am-10 pm

'

-BELTING AND BUCKLES

FABRIC SHOP

Store

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATl!RDAY, JUNE 21, 1980

Thurs., June 19th 10 to 6

SUPERIORS

-PURSE HANDLES
-POLYESTER BAITS
-PRINTED QUILl FABRIC AND
QU_I~TING FRAMES
.

New arrival

FffiESHOWERPLANNED
A household shower will be held
for Tom and Pam Diddle, whose
mo bile home was recently damaged
by fire. Several friends and neighbors of the couple are hosting the
shower which will be held Saturday
night at 7:30p.m. at the American
Legion hall in Racine. For the con·
veni ence of those who are unable to
attend Saturday night, the hall will
be open all day so that residents may
leave gifts. The public is invited.

298 SECOND ST.
POME"OY, 0.

POMEROY,
OHIO

-EMBROIDERY SUPPUES
To Fashion Your own Belts

7- t1le Daily Sentinel, MiddleportPomeroy, 0., Wednesday, JUQe 18, 19110

· visited the family at the EganCurti.ss Funeral Home , Columbua.

'

12 LB. BOX

MAl(£ IT YOURSELF!

115 W. 2ND

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Russell oC
Newark were Memorial weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fox and
son, David.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Melvin of
Tampa, Fla. were Monday through
Tuesday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons.
· Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman
were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Jewell and family at Letart,
W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDade of
Troy, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
visited a recent Sunday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Henderson at
Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Wells and
daughters, Mandy and Amy, oC
Gallipolis were Sunday dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons.
The Rev. Florence Smith attended
United Methodist Conference at
Lakeside the past week.
Mr, and Mrs. Roger Roush and
daughter, Kimberly, vi.sited. Mrs.
Edna Roush . and Mrs. Gladys

Shields Sunday evening a t Raci ne.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell were dinner
guests Sunday of Mrs. Kathryn
Hunt, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wickline,
Scott and Kyle. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell spent
Friday night with Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Hart at Columbus, and on
Saturday moved Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Grimm to · Racine from
Columbus to the former Mrs. Mary
Cleek residence they recently purchased from her. On Tuesday Mr.
and Mrs. Bell returned to Columbus
due to the death of Mrs. Earl
Grimm's sister, Mrs. Macy Jo Curtiss. They and Mrs. Harold Grimm

~ Cheese Shces... !.o:•••.l

FLAVORITE

1

Salad· Dressing. :.o:.
3

FLAVORITE

.
•
-Potato Ch 1ps..~~~. /
'

TWIN PAK

ARMOUR TREET

HEINZ:

.LUNCH MEAT

VINEGAR

12

oz.

gg~

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Otter Expir~ June 21, 1980

No 030x7
GALLON

$ Qg

.

$}

'119

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at -Powell's
res June 21,1980
Offer

$
199

FLAVORITE

ICE CREAM........ :~~ ...
CHARM IN

SUGAR SWEETEt&lt;IED

.KOOL-AID

TOILET TISSUE

FAMILY PACK
. 6 ROLL .

$139

I

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Ju.ne 21, 1980

10 QT. CAN -$~29
No. 1749-1·»7 ·
Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer E res June 21, 198~

'
~

l

�,

Art show entries to
be received tomorrow ·

Health Review
Pregnancy and I.U.D .s
By Roberg G. Stockmal,
D.O., Ph. D.
Assistant Professor of

Mr. and Mrs. john Greenaway

Family.Medlcine
Obio University College
of Osteopathic Medlclne
Special correspondent
QUESTION : I have an I. U.D. but I
missed my last period and I feel the
way .I did when I was pregnant
before. Could I be pregnant?
ANSWER : Yes. l.U .D.s (the al&gt;breviation lor intrauterine device)
have been known to come louse and
to fall out of the womb. Also, in rare
instances, pregnancy has occurred
even With the l.U.D. in place.
QUESTION : What should I do?
ANSWER : The first step would be
to check for the presence of the
I.U.D. string. If it's there then you
can assume that the I.U.D. is in
place. The next step would be to
have a urine pregnancy test .ll#&gt;ne.
This test usually becomes usefiil af·
ter at least two weeks have passed
since the missed period. II the test is
positive, it is very likely that you are
pregnant. II the results are negative
you may have to be rechecked· or
have a special serum pregnancy test
done .
QUESTION : Suppose I am

pregnant and the LU.D. is In pla ce?
Both professional and amateur ar- Thursday, June 26, with the selecANSWER : For the safety of the
tists from throu~:hout the area who tion of purchase awards on Monday
developing fetus it is best to remove
are entering their work in this year's June 30. A strict adherence to thi
the I.U.D. as svon as possible. This is
River Recreation Festival Art schedule is necessary for proper
not witlwut risk to the fetus since the
Exhibit
sponsored by the French Art cataloguing, preceding the judging.
procedure has been known to cause
Jan Thaler, who is chairing this
Colony, may begin to deliver their
spontaneous abortion (miscarriage)
.
year's
exhibit, reminds everyone
entries at 10 a.m. tomorrow morning
in about one quarter of the cases. II
that
he
must complete an entry
atRiverby.
the I.U. D. is not removed or cannot
blank,
available
at Riverby or at
Those who plan to exhibit in the
be removed spontaneous abortion
PJ's
in
downtown
Gallipolis, for
July lth Art Show to be held in the
occurs in a bout haH of the cases and
those
who
have
not
already
acquired
City Park in downtown Gallipolis,
there is also the possibility of comone.
AU
works
of
art
in
the
show
must deliver their entries within the
plications such · as infections,
must
be
labeled
with
French
Art
next week. They will be received at
premature labor or bleeding.
Colony
labels
attached.
For
the
conRiverby tomorrow between 10 a.m.
It is must important lor you and
venience of the participating artists,
and
3 p.m., on Saturday and Sunday
any other woman who thinks she is
·
the
French Art Colony will make
between I p.m. aod 5 p.m., and the
pregnant and that the l.U.D. might
available
protective acetate to cover
final day to submit art for the show
be in place to go early to see their
unprotected
art work at 60 cents a
will be Tuesday, June 24, between 10
family physician or obstetrician.
running
foot.
Artists will find the
a .m. and 3 p.m.
This is to insure the safely of your
acetate both at Riverby and at PJ's.
After 3 p.m. on Tuesday, June 24,
unborn child and also to prevent any
All entries must be frames or matno
additional
entries
in
the
show
will
problems with your own health.
ted
and securely wired for hanging
be
ac(\Cpted.
This
will
be
a
jurored
(Editor's note: Although Dr.
when
delivered to Riverby, Mrs.
show,
and
judging
will
tak~
place
on
Stockmal cannot answer individual
Thaler
said.
letter.s, he will answer those
questions submitted by readers
which are of general interest. Please . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.
send questions to: Carl Jon Denbow,
Ph.D., Medical Information Director, Colleg~ of Osteopa !hie
Medicine, Ohio University, Athens,
Ohio 45701.)

Hanover, Pa. and a graduate of the
Williamson Trade School at Media,
Pa. He is a retired construction
engineer and architect, with
training in building trade analysis,
building superintendence, and architectural design, and is a member
of
sever a l
professional
organizations in New York, New
Jersey, and Florida.
Notable among his construction
credits is the structure lor the
Metropolitan Opera House at the
Uncoln Center for Music and Performing Arts in New York City.
Mr. and Mrs. Greenaway plan a
scenic trip through mountains of the
United States and Canada. They will
return to a retirement residence in
Ohio and spend their winters in the
Palm Beach area ofFinrida.

Whitehead
•
recezves
award

Richard Couch

:Man graduates
~ with honors
Richard Alan Couch, son of Robert
and Isabelle Coqch, Route 2,
· Pomeroy, graduated summa cum
: laude with a bachelor of science
: degree in pharmacy at Ohio State
: University on June 13.
: At an awards banquet held the
• evening prior to graduation ,
Richard received the Most
. Prestigious Award from the Ohio
• State University College of Phar: macy Faculty. The award was in
; recognition of outstanding scholar·
~ ship and l~dership.
Attending the banquet and
graduation were Richard's parents,
. Robert and Isabelle Couch, his
• sisters, Jennifer Couch and Janice
: Fetty and her son, David; June Ann
; Wamsley, all of Pomeroy.

Juli Whitehead, Reedsville,
received the Clara DeLand Special
Education award at the Ohio University's Sixth Annual Student
Recognition Reception given by the
College of Education during commencem-ent weekend. The reception
was held Friday evening in the
ballroom of the Student Center.
The Deland Award is presented to
an outstanding junior or senior
majoring in special education who
has high scholastic achievement,
has demonstrated interested ·in exceptional children, and has evidenced high achievement in the area of
education.
other recipients of the award were
Ann Williams, Toledo, and Eleanor
Slavin, Bevey. Miss Whitehead has
completed her junior year at the
University.
Preceding the reception, the
honorees and parents were dinner
guests of Dr. Sally Schaal at tbe
University Inn, and following the
reception were party guests at the
home of Dr. Elsie Helsel.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead
attend~ the Friday evening events
with their daughter.

..
'

11080 RECtlJIEI(ATING
t Vicki Boso of Portland · is
~ recupe111ting at her home folloWing
• IIUier)' at St. Joseph Hospital. She
' llld IUriii'Y for the removal of a
fl'lm the left aide of her brain.
1 -

•

$1·

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS·
Route33
Mason, W. Va.

700 W. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

Y2''· CQX PLYWOOD
A SHEET
lh"x4'x8'

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
:M,;.1son, W. Va. •

.romeroy Motor Co.
308 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Smith Nelson Motors
500 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

B...., Service Station
Slate Route 7

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

SPECIAL PURCHASE

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ARMOUR

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•

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~~~riAr1 • •·• a •••••••••••••••••••

DOUBLE COUPON SAVINGS
. . THIS WEEK AT JONES BOYS!. ! !

SUPER DOUBL£ COUPON
Present this coupon along with ony one manufacturer's
"Cants Off" coupon and get double the savings at Jones
Boys Not to Include Jones Boys Coupons or tiiOst of other
retoliers one! not to excHCI the value of the item. Limit one
double coupon per manutoctvrer•s coupon.

HOUSE PAINT
White
Only

With
Coupon

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· Expires 6-22-80

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Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
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lfflof.!!;41/ i5o

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Codner's Tex1co Station
Syrocuse. Ohio

#II

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SHOWER
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Middleport, OhiO

Bill Hoblck's Go rote
Syrocuse, Ohio

Ohio

PACKAGE

12 oz.
Foil
Bag
LIMIT ONE
Price Without Coupon 1.49
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Z~l.,l#jla • •• ••• • • • •••••••••••••

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Middleport, Ohio

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Newell's 5unoco Sllllon
Slate Route 7
Che1ter, Ohi'o
Pome~oy,

991
...........
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®[pleman

DELTA
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TISSUE

69e

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DETERGENT

42 oz.
GIANT
SIZE

!!!!!!!!!!!~!~

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POTATO CHIPS

._&gt;v~ AVAILABLE AT THESE NEIGHBORHOOD SERVICE CENTERS
!7
.
ln•t;alllltlon A vellllble

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P_RICES GOOD TODAY THRU SUNDAY, JUNE 22

99.

144 2nd St.
Pomeroy, o.

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Delta

Each

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•

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•
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.•

''CALIFORNIA HERE WE COME"

DEADWOOD, S.D. (AP) - DeadLocal law enforcement · officers
216 WEST MAIN, POMEROY, OHIO
wood's houses of prostitution have have been accused for years of
\
been in business since Wild Bill ignoring the prostitution. Police
See films and slides on our California tours.
Hickok was shot to death in a nearby Chief Robert Kelley said he is often
•
saloon. Now their doors have been chided for picking up drunks instead
padlocked, but some folks in this old of ''cleaning up the cat houses.''
gold mining town say they'll fight to
But authorities say there has
keep alive a colorful remnant of the never been a public outcry against
Old West.
the brothels. State officials had to
33 Court Street
More than a century of tradition
take initial action without local help.
Gallipolis,
Ohio
ended Tuesday when a circuit judge Finally, Lawrence County States At446-0699
signed an injunction allowing
torney Craig Grotenhouse reversed
authorities to close the controversial
an earlier stand and signed a combrothels. The houses, which have
OhioTA 0134
plaint saying the brothels were a
opera ted since 1876 while city
nuisance to the community.
lathers looked the other way, will be
closed at least through theswiuner. r------~------'------------------------A hearing on a peiTII8nent injunction is expected sometime in
September. In the meantime, debate
fiPROFESSIONAL
over the issue will continue in the
PARTS
Black Hills tourist town of 2,500.
Supporters of the women who earn
their living in the brothels collected
more than 1,000 petition signatures
in an effort to keep the houses open.
They contend the dozerHJr-so
houses attract business to the area,
and they potnt out that local
madams have always given
generously to local charities.
But others say the town can do
without the reputation it has earned
through the brothels.
"! don't want to take away from
what has happened," said resident
Thomas Blain of the role of
prostitution in Deadwood's history.
"But we don't have opium dens
anymore, they don't shoot people on
the streets anymore. Heritage is a
thing of the past, we should leave it
there."
Some businessmen have warned
that a peiTII8nent shutdown will hurt
the town financially. One madam
estimates her business at $5,1100
week. Annually, the figure approaches an estimated$! million.
"During hunting season, a lot of
guys don't even bring their rifles,"
said Gary Keehn, manager of the
Old Style Saloon, where Hickok died
in 1876. Keehn said it's not unsual to
get 30-40 inquiries a night.
Blain is not swayed by those
arguments.
"If they're good for business,
maybe we should franchise them
like Colonel Sanders,'' he says.

•"
,.•

SERVICE TIIURSDAY
On Thursday evening, June 19, a
," mid-week worship service will be
held at' the Pomeroy United
' • · Methoill.st Church at 8:30p.m.
'lbi5 service is designed for those
~ who cannot attend the 10:30 a.m.
: 'worship service on "Sqnday. These
lei"Yices will continue Uu:ough the
IIUIIIIIl8f' on Thursday evening. A
; decllloo will be made in the faU as to
• whether the mid-week services will
' tonllnue. Everyone Ill welcome.

USDA CHOICE

FREE TRAVEL SHOW

Husted-Greenaway wed Remnant of Old West?
in Rock Springs vows
Brothel laid to rest

Martha Brown Husted and J ohn A.
Greenaway were married at 10 a. m.
Tuesday morning at the Rock
Springs United Methodist Church.
The Rev. James E. Corbitt per·
formed the private ceremony.
. The new Mrs. Greenaway is a
~ retired teacher, having taught in the
· Pomeroy schools for 2S years. Prior
to that she taught in Chicago for nine
years, and several more years in
Ohio schools. She is a graduate of
Ohio State University and has com. pleted graduate work at both Ohio
: State and Ohio University.
: She is a member of the Delta Kap• pa Gamma, Women 's International
' Honorary Society, the American
Association of University Women,
and the Enterprise United Methodist
· Church.
Mr. Greenaway is a native of

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 18, 1911l

••
•

WE'U DOUBLE THE VAWE ON ALL MANUFACTURER'S .
COUPONS WITH OUR "DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS"'! ! !
NOT VA!-ID ON CIGARIDES OR FREE COUPO..S! ! !
EACH OF THESE
- TWO COUPONS PLUS .ANY M..UFAC.'TURER'S
COUPON MEANS DOUBLE _SAVINGS! ! !

•
•
•

Presenr ·this cou.,O,. 11- with ony ;,onutociirr;,.'•
"Ciflts Off" coupon one! ... double lhll ..vtnts ar Jones
Boys. Not to Include Jones Boys Coupons or those of ather
retailers and not to excHCI tilt votue of 11M 1i.m. Limit one
double coupon per monulactvr•r•s coupon.
·

.

.

Coupon Exl'lros Sun., June zz, tfiO
Limit 2 Coupons Per C•itomor.
Not Volld lor Cllorette or l'rH Caupon1

.._

.....,_._.,...········'·

�,

Art show entries to
be received tomorrow ·

Health Review
Pregnancy and I.U.D .s
By Roberg G. Stockmal,
D.O., Ph. D.
Assistant Professor of

Mr. and Mrs. john Greenaway

Family.Medlcine
Obio University College
of Osteopathic Medlclne
Special correspondent
QUESTION : I have an I. U.D. but I
missed my last period and I feel the
way .I did when I was pregnant
before. Could I be pregnant?
ANSWER : Yes. l.U .D.s (the al&gt;breviation lor intrauterine device)
have been known to come louse and
to fall out of the womb. Also, in rare
instances, pregnancy has occurred
even With the l.U.D. in place.
QUESTION : What should I do?
ANSWER : The first step would be
to check for the presence of the
I.U.D. string. If it's there then you
can assume that the I.U.D. is in
place. The next step would be to
have a urine pregnancy test .ll#&gt;ne.
This test usually becomes usefiil af·
ter at least two weeks have passed
since the missed period. II the test is
positive, it is very likely that you are
pregnant. II the results are negative
you may have to be rechecked· or
have a special serum pregnancy test
done .
QUESTION : Suppose I am

pregnant and the LU.D. is In pla ce?
Both professional and amateur ar- Thursday, June 26, with the selecANSWER : For the safety of the
tists from throu~:hout the area who tion of purchase awards on Monday
developing fetus it is best to remove
are entering their work in this year's June 30. A strict adherence to thi
the I.U.D. as svon as possible. This is
River Recreation Festival Art schedule is necessary for proper
not witlwut risk to the fetus since the
Exhibit
sponsored by the French Art cataloguing, preceding the judging.
procedure has been known to cause
Jan Thaler, who is chairing this
Colony, may begin to deliver their
spontaneous abortion (miscarriage)
.
year's
exhibit, reminds everyone
entries at 10 a.m. tomorrow morning
in about one quarter of the cases. II
that
he
must complete an entry
atRiverby.
the I.U. D. is not removed or cannot
blank,
available
at Riverby or at
Those who plan to exhibit in the
be removed spontaneous abortion
PJ's
in
downtown
Gallipolis, for
July lth Art Show to be held in the
occurs in a bout haH of the cases and
those
who
have
not
already
acquired
City Park in downtown Gallipolis,
there is also the possibility of comone.
AU
works
of
art
in
the
show
must deliver their entries within the
plications such · as infections,
must
be
labeled
with
French
Art
next week. They will be received at
premature labor or bleeding.
Colony
labels
attached.
For
the
conRiverby tomorrow between 10 a.m.
It is must important lor you and
venience of the participating artists,
and
3 p.m., on Saturday and Sunday
any other woman who thinks she is
·
the
French Art Colony will make
between I p.m. aod 5 p.m., and the
pregnant and that the l.U.D. might
available
protective acetate to cover
final day to submit art for the show
be in place to go early to see their
unprotected
art work at 60 cents a
will be Tuesday, June 24, between 10
family physician or obstetrician.
running
foot.
Artists will find the
a .m. and 3 p.m.
This is to insure the safely of your
acetate both at Riverby and at PJ's.
After 3 p.m. on Tuesday, June 24,
unborn child and also to prevent any
All entries must be frames or matno
additional
entries
in
the
show
will
problems with your own health.
ted
and securely wired for hanging
be
ac(\Cpted.
This
will
be
a
jurored
(Editor's note: Although Dr.
when
delivered to Riverby, Mrs.
show,
and
judging
will
tak~
place
on
Stockmal cannot answer individual
Thaler
said.
letter.s, he will answer those
questions submitted by readers
which are of general interest. Please . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.
send questions to: Carl Jon Denbow,
Ph.D., Medical Information Director, Colleg~ of Osteopa !hie
Medicine, Ohio University, Athens,
Ohio 45701.)

Hanover, Pa. and a graduate of the
Williamson Trade School at Media,
Pa. He is a retired construction
engineer and architect, with
training in building trade analysis,
building superintendence, and architectural design, and is a member
of
sever a l
professional
organizations in New York, New
Jersey, and Florida.
Notable among his construction
credits is the structure lor the
Metropolitan Opera House at the
Uncoln Center for Music and Performing Arts in New York City.
Mr. and Mrs. Greenaway plan a
scenic trip through mountains of the
United States and Canada. They will
return to a retirement residence in
Ohio and spend their winters in the
Palm Beach area ofFinrida.

Whitehead
•
recezves
award

Richard Couch

:Man graduates
~ with honors
Richard Alan Couch, son of Robert
and Isabelle Coqch, Route 2,
· Pomeroy, graduated summa cum
: laude with a bachelor of science
: degree in pharmacy at Ohio State
: University on June 13.
: At an awards banquet held the
• evening prior to graduation ,
Richard received the Most
. Prestigious Award from the Ohio
• State University College of Phar: macy Faculty. The award was in
; recognition of outstanding scholar·
~ ship and l~dership.
Attending the banquet and
graduation were Richard's parents,
. Robert and Isabelle Couch, his
• sisters, Jennifer Couch and Janice
: Fetty and her son, David; June Ann
; Wamsley, all of Pomeroy.

Juli Whitehead, Reedsville,
received the Clara DeLand Special
Education award at the Ohio University's Sixth Annual Student
Recognition Reception given by the
College of Education during commencem-ent weekend. The reception
was held Friday evening in the
ballroom of the Student Center.
The Deland Award is presented to
an outstanding junior or senior
majoring in special education who
has high scholastic achievement,
has demonstrated interested ·in exceptional children, and has evidenced high achievement in the area of
education.
other recipients of the award were
Ann Williams, Toledo, and Eleanor
Slavin, Bevey. Miss Whitehead has
completed her junior year at the
University.
Preceding the reception, the
honorees and parents were dinner
guests of Dr. Sally Schaal at tbe
University Inn, and following the
reception were party guests at the
home of Dr. Elsie Helsel.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead
attend~ the Friday evening events
with their daughter.

..
'

11080 RECtlJIEI(ATING
t Vicki Boso of Portland · is
~ recupe111ting at her home folloWing
• IIUier)' at St. Joseph Hospital. She
' llld IUriii'Y for the removal of a
fl'lm the left aide of her brain.
1 -

•

$1·

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS·
Route33
Mason, W. Va.

700 W. MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

Y2''· CQX PLYWOOD
A SHEET
lh"x4'x8'

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
:M,;.1son, W. Va. •

.romeroy Motor Co.
308 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Smith Nelson Motors
500 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

B...., Service Station
Slate Route 7

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

SPECIAL PURCHASE

97
'

~,,,,

•

ARMOUR

STANLEY
16 OUNCE

..• PUSH BROOM
••
$144

TREET

HAMMER

LUNCHEON MEAT

•2•'

I l l I I I l l I I II I I I

Ill I I I Ill Ill I I I I " I I I I 1 I I

• • • • • • • • • • •• • • 111111

r··

:OW

- - I R I!rit!SRlB &amp;m!f B . ,

I
I

I

I

I

I

.

I
L a

m

a

~,~,··

Dill

a

•

a

m M:®

1!¥1i •

M B

a n m •

110

59--

4 . ~~~~on
~I I I

No Return
4with
2 Liter
coupon
Bot!le LIMIT ONE
Price Without coupon 1.09
Offer Expires 6-22-80
I . I I I I I I II I II I II I 0 Oil"~

ROYAL CREST

FRUIT DRINK

••

69t

Plaitic
With
Gallon
Coupon
LIM! TONE
Price Withoutco· ,UPCI'n
Offer Expires

••••••••••••••

I I I 111111 I I 111111111111

I I I I I I I I I I I 111111111

JO.N ES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON
INSIDE FROST

POTTING SOIL

••

•

With
coupon

LIGHT BULBS
2 Bulbs •
Per Pack

294

DUPONT EASY CARE

••

iili,•·••••r,.

Ex~iri!S Sun., J un~ 22, 1980
Llm1~2 Coupons Per Customer

Coupon

.

.

Not Valid for Clprtltt or Free covP.,ns

.
•

•

······~········ ··········

$499

Price Without Coupon
Offer Expires 6·22·80
~~~riAr1 • •·• a •••••••••••••••••••

DOUBLE COUPON SAVINGS
. . THIS WEEK AT JONES BOYS!. ! !

SUPER DOUBL£ COUPON
Present this coupon along with ony one manufacturer's
"Cants Off" coupon and get double the savings at Jones
Boys Not to Include Jones Boys Coupons or tiiOst of other
retoliers one! not to excHCI the value of the item. Limit one
double coupon per manutoctvrer•s coupon.

HOUSE PAINT
White
Only

With
Coupon

Price Without Coupon
· Expires 6-22-80

~"til ••••••• •·· ••••·• -- -..-..JONES BOYS

E.l

JONE6 BOYS
SUPER COUPON

FAYGO POP
ALL FLAVORS

m u

I I I I I I l l I I 1111111111111

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

SUPER COUPON
IOQUART

49

m

J!JJ!I

I I I I I I I I I I I 111111111 I l l

• • • • • • • • • 1111111111111

4

I

FOR
SUPER
SAVINGS!
a • m~»
mw • •
W~m.
.~'i:t e a • . ~m'

•••••• • I I I I I I 1111,111111111

'

••

LIGHTWEIGHT COMPRESSOR

PATIO

••

.

••
•

• • I • • 1111 I I 1111111 I l l

Gilbert'S Garogt

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Pomeroy, Ohio

COLEMAN'S ANSWER TO INFLATION!.

lfflof.!!;41/ i5o

14 INCH SIZE

..•

Rocine, Ohio

••
•

EACH

Fi-ench's Sunoco Station

Simmon' s Olds Cad.

•

••

$ 99

•.•.•..........
c:==========i
JONES BOYS

C&amp;AGirogt

••

EACH

WITH
EIGHT POCKETS

88

Codner's Tex1co Station
Syrocuse. Ohio

#II

•••
•

'24

••

SHOWER
CURTAINS

'

Middleport, OhiO

Bill Hoblck's Go rote
Syrocuse, Ohio

Ohio

PACKAGE

12 oz.
Foil
Bag
LIMIT ONE
Price Without Coupon 1.49
Offer Expires 6-22-80
Z~l.,l#jla • •• ••• • • • •••••••••••••

Stole Route 7
Middleport, Ohio

~·
~

N425E499

CAMP STOVE

PICTURE
FRAMES
'

,,,~

6

4 ROLL

5K7 AND 8xl0
METAL
FILAGREE
-

~\\;

···············~··

TWO BURNER

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

Newell's 5unoco Sllllon
Slate Route 7
Che1ter, Ohi'o
Pome~oy,

991
...........
............................
®[pleman

DELTA
BATHROOM
TISSUE

69e

•

DETERGENT

42 oz.
GIANT
SIZE

!!!!!!!!!!!~!~

SNYDER'S
POTATO CHIPS

._&gt;v~ AVAILABLE AT THESE NEIGHBORHOOD SERVICE CENTERS
!7
.
ln•t;alllltlon A vellllble

LA~NDRY

P_RICES GOOD TODAY THRU SUNDAY, JUNE 22

99.

144 2nd St.
Pomeroy, o.

ALL TEMPERATURE HEAVY-DUTY

••
••

JONES BOYS
SUPER COUPON

AVAILABLE AT THESE AUTO PARTS STORES

..;;::=:;;.____
••
PUREX
•

:---~~~-------~. . . . . . . . . . . . . .

137 PINE STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Delta

Each

LB.

WE RESERVE
THE RIGHT •
TO LIMIT
:
QUANTITIES •

CDUHT!Y

SALE

Try on America's best selling
shock, MonrO-Matlc® and feel
the firm, smooth ride.

,..773-5554

•

AlHENS COUNTY SAVINGS &amp; LOAN COMPANY

HEAVY. DUTY

FULl
CUT
BONE-IN

FOOD STAMP •
ORDERS
•
WELCOMED!! •

PEOPLE

~

I

•••

lHURSDAY, JUNE 19, 7:30 PM

a

66

•

AAA GAWPOUS TRAVEL

•

r

~

CorDnet

SHOCK ABSORBER

ROUND STEAK

.•

''CALIFORNIA HERE WE COME"

DEADWOOD, S.D. (AP) - DeadLocal law enforcement · officers
216 WEST MAIN, POMEROY, OHIO
wood's houses of prostitution have have been accused for years of
\
been in business since Wild Bill ignoring the prostitution. Police
See films and slides on our California tours.
Hickok was shot to death in a nearby Chief Robert Kelley said he is often
•
saloon. Now their doors have been chided for picking up drunks instead
padlocked, but some folks in this old of ''cleaning up the cat houses.''
gold mining town say they'll fight to
But authorities say there has
keep alive a colorful remnant of the never been a public outcry against
Old West.
the brothels. State officials had to
33 Court Street
More than a century of tradition
take initial action without local help.
Gallipolis,
Ohio
ended Tuesday when a circuit judge Finally, Lawrence County States At446-0699
signed an injunction allowing
torney Craig Grotenhouse reversed
authorities to close the controversial
an earlier stand and signed a combrothels. The houses, which have
OhioTA 0134
plaint saying the brothels were a
opera ted since 1876 while city
nuisance to the community.
lathers looked the other way, will be
closed at least through theswiuner. r------~------'------------------------A hearing on a peiTII8nent injunction is expected sometime in
September. In the meantime, debate
fiPROFESSIONAL
over the issue will continue in the
PARTS
Black Hills tourist town of 2,500.
Supporters of the women who earn
their living in the brothels collected
more than 1,000 petition signatures
in an effort to keep the houses open.
They contend the dozerHJr-so
houses attract business to the area,
and they potnt out that local
madams have always given
generously to local charities.
But others say the town can do
without the reputation it has earned
through the brothels.
"! don't want to take away from
what has happened," said resident
Thomas Blain of the role of
prostitution in Deadwood's history.
"But we don't have opium dens
anymore, they don't shoot people on
the streets anymore. Heritage is a
thing of the past, we should leave it
there."
Some businessmen have warned
that a peiTII8nent shutdown will hurt
the town financially. One madam
estimates her business at $5,1100
week. Annually, the figure approaches an estimated$! million.
"During hunting season, a lot of
guys don't even bring their rifles,"
said Gary Keehn, manager of the
Old Style Saloon, where Hickok died
in 1876. Keehn said it's not unsual to
get 30-40 inquiries a night.
Blain is not swayed by those
arguments.
"If they're good for business,
maybe we should franchise them
like Colonel Sanders,'' he says.

•"
,.•

SERVICE TIIURSDAY
On Thursday evening, June 19, a
," mid-week worship service will be
held at' the Pomeroy United
' • · Methoill.st Church at 8:30p.m.
'lbi5 service is designed for those
~ who cannot attend the 10:30 a.m.
: 'worship service on "Sqnday. These
lei"Yices will continue Uu:ough the
IIUIIIIIl8f' on Thursday evening. A
; decllloo will be made in the faU as to
• whether the mid-week services will
' tonllnue. Everyone Ill welcome.

USDA CHOICE

FREE TRAVEL SHOW

Husted-Greenaway wed Remnant of Old West?
in Rock Springs vows
Brothel laid to rest

Martha Brown Husted and J ohn A.
Greenaway were married at 10 a. m.
Tuesday morning at the Rock
Springs United Methodist Church.
The Rev. James E. Corbitt per·
formed the private ceremony.
. The new Mrs. Greenaway is a
~ retired teacher, having taught in the
· Pomeroy schools for 2S years. Prior
to that she taught in Chicago for nine
years, and several more years in
Ohio schools. She is a graduate of
Ohio State University and has com. pleted graduate work at both Ohio
: State and Ohio University.
: She is a member of the Delta Kap• pa Gamma, Women 's International
' Honorary Society, the American
Association of University Women,
and the Enterprise United Methodist
· Church.
Mr. Greenaway is a native of

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 18, 1911l

••
•

WE'U DOUBLE THE VAWE ON ALL MANUFACTURER'S .
COUPONS WITH OUR "DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS"'! ! !
NOT VA!-ID ON CIGARIDES OR FREE COUPO..S! ! !
EACH OF THESE
- TWO COUPONS PLUS .ANY M..UFAC.'TURER'S
COUPON MEANS DOUBLE _SAVINGS! ! !

•
•
•

Presenr ·this cou.,O,. 11- with ony ;,onutociirr;,.'•
"Ciflts Off" coupon one! ... double lhll ..vtnts ar Jones
Boys. Not to Include Jones Boys Coupons or those of ather
retailers and not to excHCI tilt votue of 11M 1i.m. Limit one
double coupon per monulactvr•r•s coupon.
·

.

.

Coupon Exl'lros Sun., June zz, tfiO
Limit 2 Coupons Per C•itomor.
Not Volld lor Cllorette or l'rH Caupon1

.._

.....,_._.,...········'·

�•
111-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 18, 1980

Regatta participants sought
Anyo~e interested in participating

in the Big Bend Regatta Parade is
asked to fill out the entry blank below and mail to the Pomeroy Chamber
of Corrunerce, P. 0 . Box ~26 . Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769. The parade is on
Saturday, June 28.

OFFICIAL PARADE ENTRY FORM
NAME . . .. .• ..•.. . .• •. . • .. ...•.•..•................. . . •....•....
TYPE OF ENTRY ... ..... ........... . ... .. ... ... .. .. . ....... .... .
ADDRESS .. .. ,, ..... . ... .. . I

. . . . • : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .. .

PHONE ............ ............................. .... ........... .
Parade starts at II a.m. at Middleport, on South Second Ave. Parade
lineup is at 10 a . m. The parade ends in PomejOY on Condor Street.

NEW YORK (AP)- The death of
Harper's magazine, the nation's
oldest monthly, is being mourned as
the end of an American tradition by
scholars and writers across the
COUntry.
"! just heard the news ... and I'm
heartbroken," said Roger Angell,
senior fiction editor of The New
Yorker magazine, after Tuesday's
announcement that Harper's will
fold in August.
·
Founded in 1850, the magazine of
literary and social commentary
published new authors ranging from
He~an Melville and Henry James
to George Plimpton and Tom Wolfe.
other notable contributors included
Mark Twain, Stephen Crane, E.B.
White, William F. Buckley and Joan
Didion.
"We're really sad about it, it's the
loss of a real American tradition "
said Mortimer B. Zuckerma~.
publisher of The Atlantic Monthly,
Harper's main competitor. "We feel
particularly sensitive because we
are the last bearer of the tradition of
the serious magazine."
"The narrowing of the numbers of
magazines being published is a bad
sign for writers and readers themselves," lamented Angell. "It's very
bad for young writers, too."
Lewis H. Lapham, Harper's
editor, said he received word
Tuesday morning from the Minneapolis Star and Tribune Co., the
magazine's owner since 1965, that
the end had arrived. But he said he

Abortion to be big issue at conference
WASHINGTON (AP) - Abortion
is shapin~ up as a big issue at the
second segment of the national
White House Conference on
Families opening Thursday in Minndapolis.
Mary Turney, Ohio coordinator
for the event, said she's rec.eived
many telephone calls on the abortion
issue from delegates of other states.
Most of the calls have been proabortion, Mrs. Turney said. But she
isn't certain her sampling is

representative because rJ. her
position as deputy · director for
program development in the Ohio
Welfare Department.
" People are trying to size up
where you come from and get you
aligned with their point of view," she
said. "Working where I do, I think
they would envision me as favoring
that cause (abortion)."
The ~.states and seven territories
have been divided into three ·areas

Polly's ·Pointers

Suitcase smells bad

Harper's death mourned
wasn't cynical about the demise of
the_magazine wbose circulation had
climbed to 325,000.
" It had a long and illustrious
history, and it's never made money
+ not in more than 10 of its 130
years," Lapham said. He added that
he had organized a groop to buy the
magazine, but that the owners rejected the bid because "they didn't
think it was heavily enough
capitalized."
"The game has changed," said
Lapham, "and you have to be able to
pitch the magazine to the right level
of audience." He said advertisers
viewed Harper's as a "general interest " magazine without a
narrowly defined audience they
could address.
otto A. Silha, board chairman of
the Star and Tribune Co.; said the
company had tried in vain to sell
Harper's for six months. " It was no
longer desirable for the company to
support its operation in the light of
increased costs of such items as
paper and postage," he said.
In the past few decades, Harper's
has shifted its emphasis from
literature to social corrunentary.
" Gradually, Harper's became
almost an organ of politics,
sociology and economics," wrote
Frederick Lewis Allen, editor during
the World War II years.
For its 18 writers and editors, the
news that Harper's was doomed
came as no surprise, according to
Laphall,\.

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY- My problem is
that my luggage gets smelly and
mildew sets in even though I set it
out in the summer sun and spray it
with a disinfectant. Nothing seems
to help. I have had to discard one
piece completely as it was so bad I
could never put clothes in it.
Luggage stores have no help to offer.
- ELEANOR
DEAR ELEANOR - Are you
storing your luggage in the
basement? If so, be sure the pieces
are up off the floor, standing on end
and with air space between the
pieces. You might try filling each
bag with crushed newspaper
(protect the !ining from the
newsprint) and leave it a couple of
weeks. Replace with fresh paper if
needed. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY
- For musty
trunk odors and
for linen closets I
.use the fabric softener sheets that
usually go in the
clothes dryer. HILDA

Cramer

Virginia who is having trouble getting a handmade rug to lay flat on
the floor. It must have been made
that way. Working on a flat surface
is important, so one can see where
increases are needed. For a
croche. ted rug one would put two
crothets to increase on the rounded
ends where needed.
I have made about45 braided rugs
from strips (usually wool) thai I cut
on the straight of the material. I
wash the fabric, tear it into the
desired width strips while .wet, dry
them and sew together on the bias so
there are no lumps where the seams
are.
I lace the braids together allowing
increases around the rounded ends. I
do not recommend nylon fishing line
for the sewing together as I do not
think it stays joined as well as linen
thread. The joining knots do not stay
together when the rug is walked on a
lot. Going through the loops while
sewing together conceals the thread.
There is no wear on the thread and it
lasts the lift of the rug. - EILEEN ·
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of this newspaper.

Scouts attend camporee
Cub scouts or" Chester Pack Zl5 attended the Saturday afternoon activities at the camporee being held
at Camp Kiashuta.
The cubS were invited to test their
firebuilding ski! and required to
build a fire hot enough to burst a
balloon full of water. Taking part
were Timmy Clark, Chris LaDeaux,

CWBTOMEET
The Rock Springs Better Health
Club will meet at I: 15 p.m. Thursday
at the home of Nancy Grueser.
Members are to meet at the Rock
Springs church at 12:30 p.m. and will
travel in a group to the Grueser
home. Mrs. Ethel Grueser will have
the program, and Beuna Grueser,
the col)tesl.

Michl King, David King, Eric Sim,
Allen Curtis, Gary Curtis, Brian
Beeler, Brian Bailey, Tony Lee,
Todd Lee, Del Laudennilt, and
Floyd Ridenour.
At a recent meeting of the Pack, .
Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes, deputy of
Ch~ster Council 323, Daughters of
America, presented a Bible.to Frank
Newsome, committee chairman.

SALI INOS SUNDAY - -

HYMNSINGSUNDAY
1
There will be a benefit hymn slng
,tundoy at 1:30 p.m. at the Rutland
.Yflle'Will Baptist Chln'ch, Salem St.
Proceeds from the sing will be
!~~led in the crusade against
.!ilc.oholism and homo~exuality.
P.astor ill Chuck McPherson.

'IISSES AND WOMEN$

MILTI

I.. KJ

JOGGING SHORTS
it Ttrry

cloth M poly-cotton
V-lpltt leg , tlrlpe
trim. ' colors. Medium and
large lites.

olllil.td Plntlt Ams
oDol~t Illite• Lep

:-:-r8-"lin 2 $5
~-

_
' Rt&amp;ular 'IG.79

.

S.IL~I

THE ROMANS
COUNTED HA!..F A

I'D !!EEN WOU~DED DURING . . _ , . . ~ KEEFER. TACICLEP
THE HOLDIJP- NOT BADLY, Bl.IT'
YOIJR PAD-- TO KEEP
fNOUeiH TO !I LOW ME: DOWN!
HIM FROM CAWNIS
THe- LAW I THEY l!OT'H
WENT' DOW~· ­

DOZEN

tSWERKEI

. IJ I

Hiff(Pf

FII:OM

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Yesle tda ys

Now airange the circled leHers to
form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above canoon .

II

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Prlntanswerhere:

(Answers lomOfrow)

Jumbles: LLA~A FOLIO BEFOR~ AUTUMN
Answer: What his w ife expected him to do when she
brought home all that 9&gt;CpenbiVe foot wear"FOOT" THE BILL

Jumble Book No. 14,contalnlng 110puulla, ls avallablafor11 .75poatpald
tram Jumble, clo thlt newapaper, Bo• :W, No1'1111ood, N.J.0764&amp;.1rK:Iudeyour

n•me, addreaa, zip code and make checka pa.,able to New&amp;pa~rbooka .

lCA~JCI\'

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BRIDGE

I~TIOIJ ...

I SEE. BUT WHEREVER IT
15, NO ONE'G WAITING Fffi
DEPI:f'iDSi.\ YOU, AND 'rOU'RE IN HO
HURRY TO 6ET THERE ,..
AM I GETTING THE DRIFT?

PASSING THRMiH" I DIDN'T
!sTOP TO THINK!- TELL ME THE
•·TRUTH, ANNIE- ME YOU A

WOMENS T£RRY

WEST

EAST

+109 6
"10853
tK8732
+7

+KQ43
.642

West

SHORT
SETS
T•ftt
or tiMwteu

Pass
Pass

IOIIdt . Good weight.

Big Prla. ReductiGnt.

1trl~1.

t~ ,

tap

H1s diamond lead was
normal. East's jack held the
trick and he continued with
the queen . South had to duck
for a second time and now
Mike overtook with his king
and shifted to ttie I 0 of
spades.
Mike had seen that he was
not going to defeat the contract with diamond tricks.
That wasn't too difficult to
figure out. He had no entry
anywhere.
Wouldn 't a passive defense
of sticking with diamonds be
best in any event• Wouldn't a
spade shift be a giveaway ?
Mike never worried about
overtric~s. He concentrated
on contracts. He knew that
South liked to bid notrump
and wouldn 't let a little thing
like not having a spade
stopper deter him. Then Mike
counted (OOm for 12 high-card
points in the South hand with·
out a spade honor.
So Mike overtook that
queen and shifted to the 10 of
spades. South played dummy's
Jack, but East just won the
trick and led back a low spade
to nail down South's coffin.

s

3 NT

East
Pass
Pass

Soutb
2NT
Pass

Opening lead:+ 3

:ALLEYOOP

T-,;~· rs"''oo ··~:~~ 566
18.99

contract.

.QJI

Nortb

t+

matching shorts

1

_his own suil lo defeat a game

+a n

IWO PIECE

If

Today we give an example
of Mike going one step further
and deliberately shifting from

+Ks 3
SOUTH

VELOUR
BATH
T()WELS
t3 -"
~rrect .

'IOU 80'(5 COME Willi

By Oswald Jacoby
Alan Sontag

and

A lot of old -timers have
credited with the state·
ment: "When both sides play
the same suit, one is probably
crazy.': But we can tell you
that Mike Gottlieb made it.
~n

6 Dtsi&amp;ns
REG ~ 'U9

•..:
'7.3t

W-118

~£tu•CHrd'

CASH SAVINGS ON NfiDID SUMMfR ITfMSI
• REGUlAR '1.79-

0

CAR WAX

9

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Hlah
Ytllllw

9 DL Pltlt or
16

RAY-0-VAC

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$ 222

FLEA AND TICK COLLAR

BATTERIES

SEIIGENTS SENTRY Y
for
Llr11 Dois ·

C011 D SIZE
For

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 ~~-! poor
1 Soviet sea
2 Vichy
Yorick"
premier
5 Not kept

SOMONIZ

DOUILE PETAL
UWN DAISY

2

44~

Clls • .

Medium

'WINNIE

SALE PRICED

lWO RING

JERGENS
SOAP

WADING

l.otltl 1114
19' VALUE

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INFlATABLE
WITH HEAD PiLlOW

· AIR
MAnRESS

POOL
:•o·•

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPR ISE ASSN.)

PISIGNS$

REG. '4.99

dalmeter, I"

NO SEN BE TAKIN6 WENDY TO
ANOTHER RESTAURANT. Ml6HT
RUN INTO SOMEBOI/Y ELSE
FRO'Y\ MY PAST.

_ VINYL

SWIM
RINGS

I KNOW TOO MANY
PEOPLE IN THI~
13U81NE88!

MINCl IF I !/RIVE yOU HOME ?
I... I. .. [70N 1T FEEL VERY WELL.

I 'M BEGINNING
TO TI11NK I KNOW
WHY/
ANCl

Round ot split i•ll
'IYift . Save :uc on

liMp. S.W11.11on
_,,..,

11KtJ OM. 4 !Iitvin

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BARNEY

I JEST PUT
OUR OL'CAT
"SNOWFLAKE"
IN TH'BARN,
PAW--

NOW, WATCH
THEM MICE
SKEDADDLE!!

3 Crest
busy
I Lilt:e hen's
4 In a state
teeth
of peace
10 Bauble
5 Imagine
13 Affirm
• Mrs. Levi
14 New York city 7 Bulgarian
Yesterday's ADiwer
15 Type of pass
town
22 Like socks 27 Capital
17 Pewter
8 Rare or first
and gloves
of TIWJ18IIi&amp;
ingredient
II Word form 23 Shout
Z9 Alma 18 Mercy
meaning best at La Scala 30 Nedda's ldller
19 Follower
lZ Robespierre's 24 Gave
31 Pipe, barrel
of an ism
adversary
support
or reed
!II Nice season 11 Ritual
(to)
34 OUord
Z1 I..orre role
Z1 Diego Rivera 25 Finnish
scholar
22 Noted
was one
poetry
36 Girl's name
clergyman
Z5 Chatter
incessanUy
21 Warhol
Z7 Heston role

700CLUB
BASEBALL Atlanta Braves ve
Pitt&amp;bi!UJh Pirates
CIJilZJWCHAALIE'SANGELSThe
Angels go back to college and put
, themselves up a a tempting bait tor
white slavers Who havealready ab·
ducted two beautifu l coeds and
who now nave their signta set on
Tiffany. (Repeat; 60 mine.)
(jj) HENRY MOORE
8:30 I]) O (I) THE FACT'S OF LIFE
I]) ® CHINA: LAND Cf MY
FATHER Thi s documentary on
youn:g work ing couples In China
feat urea the personal insights of
Asian-American journalist Felicia
!,&amp;we.
10:00 liJ 0 (I) QUINCY When en oopir·
ing Olympic gymnast sutferaafatal
fall in practice, Quincy discovers
amphetamines in her body and
launches
an
investigation.
(Bepeat ; 60 mins.)
C!J MOVIE -( SUSPENSE)'"~

apostrophes. the length and form ation of the. words are aU

hints. Each day the code leiters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

ME TO W~AT? LEAD
IN PRA'iER?OUTLOUO?!
?
.
ME . BUT....

ISCORE AN EAGLE - WIN 'AN EAGLE
This Eqli Ia V1lued At 11,11&amp;• And Ia Sponsored a, ·
'

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP--ENAULT
liaUipolls,

o..'
I

''NOW I lAI( U5

~WN TO SLEEP. .."

ETDSBEVJZV

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ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
Q CIJ CBS LATE MOVIE 'BLACK
SHEEP SQUADRON : Operation
Stand-Down' When Pappy'a men
take routine re9ualification exama,
they all flunk ·and are grounded .
(Repeat)'MEDICALSTORV:Quall·
ty Of Mercy' 1976 Stars ~ Tony Musante , Scott Hylanda•
({) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
(j]) MOVIE ~REUGIOUS.DRAIIA)

--

60 AHEAD, StiLL'f.•.
'(OU CAN 00 IT..

•

CIJ w ID VEGA$ When mllliono or
dollars of phony gambl ing chips
rtood the Lea Vegas strip, the ..
caainos are shut down end Dan -::
Tanna hits the streets to flush out a bri lliant counterfeiter. (Repeat; 60 ~
mina.) (Ciosed ·Captioned)
..
({) PRESUMED INNOCENT Tho •
House of Detention for men lathe ..
setting lor this documentary that
examines the Issues that accom·
pany pre·trlal detention practices.
mina.)
·
NEWS
10:30
MAX MORAIS
(jj) OVER EASY Gueol: Ceaar
Romero. Hoat: ~h Downs.
11
CIJ
Ill ®l ll2l
NEWS
CIJ JEWISH VOICE
OAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
OICK CAVET'T SHOW
11:30
G (I) THE TONIGHT SHOW
'Beat Of Carson ' Gueats: David
Steinberg , Kelly Garren, Johr1 Ben·
noll . (Repeat: 90 mine.)
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) MOVIE~ADVENT'URE]" "Big

'

home
3Z Fishy Item
.... . . ...
33French
theologian
' 35 Offset gaffes
r----;------''--:~~:::-:-----.-07-=:=,.....-----, 37 "Picnic"
playwright
38 Kipling's
unarmy -"
39Thailand
of old
to Rush
41 Randall
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR ,
II LONGFELLOW
One letter Jimp1y atands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for th e three L's. X for the two O's, etc: Single letters,

!.{ES, SlR? 'r'OU WANT

osed ·C aptioned}

" Dr. No" 1163

Z9 caroline's

--·--

4469100

CIJ ROSSBAGLEYHOUR(JOINED
IN PROGRESS)
C!J MOVIE ~COMEOY)''~ "Frioeo Kid' ' 1t7Q
ffi BASEBALL Atlanta Bravet Yf
Pittsburgh Pirates
CIJ ABC NEWS
Ill liD ZOOM
6 :30 ffi 0 (I) NBC NEWS
CIJ CAROl BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
0 11J(j]) CaS NEWS
IJl WILD WilD WORlO OF
ANIMALS
liD VILLA AlEGRE
il2l 18 ABC NEWS
7 :00 I]) 0 CROSS WITS
CIJ BIBlE BOWl
CIJ I1ZJ 18 FACE THE MUSIC
(I) LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
O ill TICTACDOUGH
(j) MACNEil·LEHRER REPORT
®J NEWS
(jj) OICK CAVETT SHOW
7 :30 (J) O COUNTRY ROADS
AT' HOME WITH T'HE BIBLE
MATCH GAME
WILD KINGDOM 'SweneofRed
Rock Lakes ' Pert I
0 11J JOKER' S WILD
({) DICK CAVETT SHOW
®J THE JUDGE
®~ACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
. li2J FAMILY FEUD
8:00 I]) (I) REAlPEOPLEAmonkey
that guards a pigpen, e cOnvention
ofhoboa, a visit to a loggers camp,
and a frisbee demonstration bv a
champion are featured . (Repeat ;
60 min a.) (Closed-Captioned)
CIJ FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
C!JMO VIE ~D AAMA) ' ' ''Return of
1 M1n C1lled Hora•" 1176
ill I1ZJ 18 FAMILY Annie !rleo to ·
hide her intelligence from her
jeal ou s clsnmates and be just like
the other kids, While Buddy strug - •
gles to prepare for her college en- ,
trance
exams .
(60
mins .)
(Closed-Captioned)
Q I1J(j]) ETHELISAN ELEPHANT
It ' stove at first ai ght between Ethai ,
alovelyb.,byelephant, and a young
NewYorkpl'lotographerwhohasto
take his landlord to court in order to
kaaQ_Ethel in his apanmi"t.
I]) l1lJ GREAT PERFORMANCES '
' Solt i Conducts Schubert ' The
Chicago Symphony Orchestra,
under ita permanent Music Dirac·
tor , Sir Georg Solti, will perform two
symphon ies by Viennese com·
g_Qaer Frenz Schuben . (90 mins.)
8 :30 W T'HE PRESENCE OF GOD
CIJ BETWEEN GAMES SHOW
0 ill (j]) SPECIAL MOVIE PRE· ·
SENTATION 'That 's Entertain ·
ment Par12 ' 1976
11:00 (})
(I) DIFF'RENT STROKES
Arnold and Willis start a cookiebuaineaa tha t begins t o crumble when
thei r manl!facturer cannot supply
their
demand.
(Repeat)

· :ZSGennan
pronoun

* Winner is responsible lor all taxes and registration .

r

~ULERS

&amp;CANDINAVIA .

Eagle

Upper Riter R01d

Viewing
EVENING

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

AMC ,..

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CAPTAL&lt; EASY ·.

Ptir

ON THE 179 YARD No. 9HoLE DURING THE DAVE DILES CELEBRITY GOLF TOURNAMENT
RIVERSIDE GOLF Cl.UB, .MASDN, W., VA. - THURSDAY JUNE 19,

.992-2556
570 w. Main

'

JUNE 18, 1980

"A Q7
• A96
+QJ 62

HOI.E • IN· ONE

..

f;n~

Tel~vision

e:oo C2J 8 (!) Q Cil (jD)(iJJ II NEWS

: RUNAWAY~

Reular '3.99

1'0 THE FIRST GOLFER TO SCORE A

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLIY

b

.:-...::...~·-··--

.•I'IHEN YOU SAID YOU '1/ERE .

.FREE 1980 AMC EAGLE

FISH TAIL .•••• ... ~- W
WITH FRIES • ••••• $139

four ordmary words.

NORTH
6-18·80
+AJ2
"'K J7
• 10'
+Al09 54

SPECIAL

(

WHEN WE MOVED ·
TO THE CITY
THI$ WINTER-

... .

PICTURES MAY BE
PICKED UP
The Carpenter Dance Studio pictures have arrived and will be at the
studio at 7 p.m. this evening.

.---:""'

-

ouR amu mu WEI
LAWN CH

Tacquardt,

TROLLEYS EVERYWHERE
By 1918, some 110,000 trolleys were
traveling over 45,000 miles rJ. track
in the United States. Enlerprlsinfl
passengers could board a car in upstate New York and by transferring
from one connecting inter-urban line
to the next ride the ralls all the way
to Wisconsin. ·

one lett~r to each square , to torrrl

Final 4 Days

Say cheese with a .smile

THIS WEEK'S
GRAND OPENING POSTPONED
Due to the conversion of Spencer's
Grocery, Racine, to a Fas Check
S!Jper Market the grand opening
planned for June 20 and 21 has been
p«JJItponed to a later date which1will
bearmounced in the near future.

MONTH OF SCHOOL-

Unscrarnt:&gt;kt these four Jumbles

!'OINT PLIAIANT or MAlON

Food for Thought
have many important functions.
Cheese is good for your health
because it provides all of these
nutrients.
When cooking with cheese,
remember to use low heat for a short
period of time. Overcooking cheese
causes it to become tough, stringy,
and greasy. Sometimes recipes will
call for grated or finely chopped
A.
cheese. It is helpful to know that oneEach of the nutrients that cheese
fourth pound cheese equals one cup
supplies has several important funcof grated cheese ( 'lc lb = 1 c.
tions in the body that help us ~in­
grated).
lain good health. Following is a list
Cheese should always be stored in
showing the functions of the nutrien- . the refrigerator. Cottage cheese
ts found in cheese. Protein: becomes
may be stored for three to five days .
part of each cell in the body and supCream cheese and other soft cheese
plies energy for the body. Fat:
usually last for two weeks and hard
needed for healthy skin and pr&lt;Jt.ides
cheese such as cheddar and swiss
energy for the body. Calcium :
may be stored for several months. U
needed for strong bones and teeth,
mold grows on hard natural cheese,
helps with normal clotting of blood,
it may be trimmed off completely
needed for muscle contractions, and
before the .cheese is eaten. Process
assists in transmission of neural imcheese products should be thrown
pulses from the brain to the rest of
out if mold is found. Sometimes
the Dody. Phosphorus: needed for
cheese dries out if it Is not properly
strong bones and teeth and helps
wrapped in plastic wrap, wax wrap.
release energy for body from
or aluminum foil. Dried·out cheese
protein, carbohydrate, and fat
may be finely chopped and stored in
Vitamin A: helps with vision in dim
a lightly covered jar. The chopped
light and needed for healthy skin.
cheese may· be used in cooked foods
You can see that protein fat
such as casseroles.
calcium, phosphorus, and vita~ A

YOUR OLDER
GOING.., TOOYOU, WILLIE

Declarer deftly defeated

CAliON QUAUTJ

DECOYS
A thousand years ago, Indians
made the first decoys in order to
trick birds down to within arrow
shot. They were made of bulrushes,
woven and twisted into duck shapes.
This Indil!n invention was quickly
adopted by North America's first
white hunters. In the Old World, they
had used tame live birds to trap wild
ones in a cage the Dutch called an
"ende kooi"- what the Englishman

YOU KNOW VERY
WELLLSETH-WE
MISSED QVER A

'ftfl\}~ fii)'il j'jl THAT SCRAMBLED WOAO GAME
~ ~ ~~
by Henri Asnol&lt;l ond Bob Lee

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

DEAR POLLY - I am answering

pronounced "decoy."
SPECIAL MEETING THURSDAY
The Middleport Masonic Temple
will hold a special meeting Thursday, June 19 at6 p.m. Work will be in
the Master Mason Degree, and all
Master Masons are invited to attend.

home.
"I've had any number of letters
saying there doesn't need to be a
government conference on the
family," she said. " Many people.
have asked Gov. (James) Rhodes
not to send a d~legation ."
The proposals of the Baltimore
convention include development of
preventive programs to combat
drug and alcohol abuse, tax benefits
to encourage families to care for the
elderly at home rather than in institutioDS and elimination of the
" marriage tax" through fairer tax
treaiment of married couples who
both work .
The 670 delegates also supported
ratification of the Equal Rights
Amendment and urged an enil to
discrimination, including that against homosexuals.
The last item was approved by a
one-vote margin. But Jim Guy
Tucker, national chairman of the
conference, said it probably would
not have passed if a " pro-family"
coalition of 30 to ~ persons had not
walked out.
The coalition, which opposed abortion, women's rights and sex
education, left after charging that
they had been shut out of the con·
ference proceedings.

for national conferences designed to
IJIIIke recommendations on what the
govel'llll,\ent and others can do to
strengthen the American family.
The White House is expected to coordinate efforts to put some of the
recorrunendatlons into legislative
form, while spurring the private sector to take action on others.
Organizers predict about 500 to 700
persons will attend the Minneapolis
convention, including delegates
from Ohio and 14 other midwestern
states.
The third regional conference will
be held in Los Angeles July 16-12.
Delegates to the first conference
earlier this month in Baltimore
adopted a ~7-P.Oint program, aimed
at helping people trying to cope with
the problems facing the American
family. One of their recommendations was to make abortion
available "to all who freely make
the choice."
Meanwhile, family violence, child
abuse and family Unity emerged as
top concerns of Ohio's 76-member
delegation during local conferences
and a state meeting in April.
Mrs. TUrney says she also hears
many people saying they want less
government ilivolvement ·and that
family problems should be solved at

By Myrtle Clark
and Allllle Mooo
EFNEP Nulritloo Aides
Meigs County ·
Cooperative Exteosive Service
Cheese is made from whole or
skim milk and provides many of the
nutri~nts that milk provides. Cheese
is a good source of protein fat
calcium, phosphorus, and vita~

MRS. ELIZABETH Hayes, deputy of Chester.Council323, Daughters
of America, recently presented a Bible to Frank Newsome, committee
chairman for the Pack.

h:cK~:Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 18, l980

••• ~

"Samaon and Delll•h"

1851

il2l 8
LOVE
BOAT-BARETT A ·
12:00 C!J MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) "\!i ;

11:150

ill
11

1:00

. 1:05
1:30
2:00.
2:011
2:30
3:35
4:00
4 :45
5 :30

EY.!.! Of L1ura Mare" 1078

llHU

TOMORROW Hoof: Tom '
Snyder. Guaat: Wayne Newton. (60 ,
mlna.)
GOOD .NEWS
CIJ N!WS
ATLANTA BRAVES ' BA·
BALLREPLAY
REX HUM8ARD
!BELIEVE .
8 NEWS
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
MOVI!-(MYSTERY)" " Citar·
111 Chon In Dlld Mon T'oll'' 11141
~ 700CLUB
MAVERICK
.
BOB GASS

~

I

EJVCDVH-

NATURAL WINNER
Tom Longboat, an Onondaga Inw. dian from the Six, Nations ReServ~
KRPBW.- SHJRAX
RY
EZSD
near Brant{ord, Ontario, and worln ,·
. champion Icing-distance nmner in
LASML.RI
Yesterday'• Crypteqaote: IF YOU MEET TROUBLE · 1908, raced a horse over a 12-rnile
PROMPTLY AND WimOUT FLINCHING, YOU REDUCE
course and won. He also won the 2$THE PROBLEM BY HALF .-WINSTON CHURCJULL
. mile Boston Marathon in 1907 in ·
() lMO Klnt FtltiH'H SyncUut.. Inc.
record lime.
EVJZV

EM

BWV

LHVSBVMB

WSJX·

�•
111-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 18, 1980

Regatta participants sought
Anyo~e interested in participating

in the Big Bend Regatta Parade is
asked to fill out the entry blank below and mail to the Pomeroy Chamber
of Corrunerce, P. 0 . Box ~26 . Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769. The parade is on
Saturday, June 28.

OFFICIAL PARADE ENTRY FORM
NAME . . .. .• ..•.. . .• •. . • .. ...•.•..•................. . . •....•....
TYPE OF ENTRY ... ..... ........... . ... .. ... ... .. .. . ....... .... .
ADDRESS .. .. ,, ..... . ... .. . I

. . . . • : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .. .

PHONE ............ ............................. .... ........... .
Parade starts at II a.m. at Middleport, on South Second Ave. Parade
lineup is at 10 a . m. The parade ends in PomejOY on Condor Street.

NEW YORK (AP)- The death of
Harper's magazine, the nation's
oldest monthly, is being mourned as
the end of an American tradition by
scholars and writers across the
COUntry.
"! just heard the news ... and I'm
heartbroken," said Roger Angell,
senior fiction editor of The New
Yorker magazine, after Tuesday's
announcement that Harper's will
fold in August.
·
Founded in 1850, the magazine of
literary and social commentary
published new authors ranging from
He~an Melville and Henry James
to George Plimpton and Tom Wolfe.
other notable contributors included
Mark Twain, Stephen Crane, E.B.
White, William F. Buckley and Joan
Didion.
"We're really sad about it, it's the
loss of a real American tradition "
said Mortimer B. Zuckerma~.
publisher of The Atlantic Monthly,
Harper's main competitor. "We feel
particularly sensitive because we
are the last bearer of the tradition of
the serious magazine."
"The narrowing of the numbers of
magazines being published is a bad
sign for writers and readers themselves," lamented Angell. "It's very
bad for young writers, too."
Lewis H. Lapham, Harper's
editor, said he received word
Tuesday morning from the Minneapolis Star and Tribune Co., the
magazine's owner since 1965, that
the end had arrived. But he said he

Abortion to be big issue at conference
WASHINGTON (AP) - Abortion
is shapin~ up as a big issue at the
second segment of the national
White House Conference on
Families opening Thursday in Minndapolis.
Mary Turney, Ohio coordinator
for the event, said she's rec.eived
many telephone calls on the abortion
issue from delegates of other states.
Most of the calls have been proabortion, Mrs. Turney said. But she
isn't certain her sampling is

representative because rJ. her
position as deputy · director for
program development in the Ohio
Welfare Department.
" People are trying to size up
where you come from and get you
aligned with their point of view," she
said. "Working where I do, I think
they would envision me as favoring
that cause (abortion)."
The ~.states and seven territories
have been divided into three ·areas

Polly's ·Pointers

Suitcase smells bad

Harper's death mourned
wasn't cynical about the demise of
the_magazine wbose circulation had
climbed to 325,000.
" It had a long and illustrious
history, and it's never made money
+ not in more than 10 of its 130
years," Lapham said. He added that
he had organized a groop to buy the
magazine, but that the owners rejected the bid because "they didn't
think it was heavily enough
capitalized."
"The game has changed," said
Lapham, "and you have to be able to
pitch the magazine to the right level
of audience." He said advertisers
viewed Harper's as a "general interest " magazine without a
narrowly defined audience they
could address.
otto A. Silha, board chairman of
the Star and Tribune Co.; said the
company had tried in vain to sell
Harper's for six months. " It was no
longer desirable for the company to
support its operation in the light of
increased costs of such items as
paper and postage," he said.
In the past few decades, Harper's
has shifted its emphasis from
literature to social corrunentary.
" Gradually, Harper's became
almost an organ of politics,
sociology and economics," wrote
Frederick Lewis Allen, editor during
the World War II years.
For its 18 writers and editors, the
news that Harper's was doomed
came as no surprise, according to
Laphall,\.

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY- My problem is
that my luggage gets smelly and
mildew sets in even though I set it
out in the summer sun and spray it
with a disinfectant. Nothing seems
to help. I have had to discard one
piece completely as it was so bad I
could never put clothes in it.
Luggage stores have no help to offer.
- ELEANOR
DEAR ELEANOR - Are you
storing your luggage in the
basement? If so, be sure the pieces
are up off the floor, standing on end
and with air space between the
pieces. You might try filling each
bag with crushed newspaper
(protect the !ining from the
newsprint) and leave it a couple of
weeks. Replace with fresh paper if
needed. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY
- For musty
trunk odors and
for linen closets I
.use the fabric softener sheets that
usually go in the
clothes dryer. HILDA

Cramer

Virginia who is having trouble getting a handmade rug to lay flat on
the floor. It must have been made
that way. Working on a flat surface
is important, so one can see where
increases are needed. For a
croche. ted rug one would put two
crothets to increase on the rounded
ends where needed.
I have made about45 braided rugs
from strips (usually wool) thai I cut
on the straight of the material. I
wash the fabric, tear it into the
desired width strips while .wet, dry
them and sew together on the bias so
there are no lumps where the seams
are.
I lace the braids together allowing
increases around the rounded ends. I
do not recommend nylon fishing line
for the sewing together as I do not
think it stays joined as well as linen
thread. The joining knots do not stay
together when the rug is walked on a
lot. Going through the loops while
sewing together conceals the thread.
There is no wear on the thread and it
lasts the lift of the rug. - EILEEN ·
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of this newspaper.

Scouts attend camporee
Cub scouts or" Chester Pack Zl5 attended the Saturday afternoon activities at the camporee being held
at Camp Kiashuta.
The cubS were invited to test their
firebuilding ski! and required to
build a fire hot enough to burst a
balloon full of water. Taking part
were Timmy Clark, Chris LaDeaux,

CWBTOMEET
The Rock Springs Better Health
Club will meet at I: 15 p.m. Thursday
at the home of Nancy Grueser.
Members are to meet at the Rock
Springs church at 12:30 p.m. and will
travel in a group to the Grueser
home. Mrs. Ethel Grueser will have
the program, and Beuna Grueser,
the col)tesl.

Michl King, David King, Eric Sim,
Allen Curtis, Gary Curtis, Brian
Beeler, Brian Bailey, Tony Lee,
Todd Lee, Del Laudennilt, and
Floyd Ridenour.
At a recent meeting of the Pack, .
Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes, deputy of
Ch~ster Council 323, Daughters of
America, presented a Bible.to Frank
Newsome, committee chairman.

SALI INOS SUNDAY - -

HYMNSINGSUNDAY
1
There will be a benefit hymn slng
,tundoy at 1:30 p.m. at the Rutland
.Yflle'Will Baptist Chln'ch, Salem St.
Proceeds from the sing will be
!~~led in the crusade against
.!ilc.oholism and homo~exuality.
P.astor ill Chuck McPherson.

'IISSES AND WOMEN$

MILTI

I.. KJ

JOGGING SHORTS
it Ttrry

cloth M poly-cotton
V-lpltt leg , tlrlpe
trim. ' colors. Medium and
large lites.

olllil.td Plntlt Ams
oDol~t Illite• Lep

:-:-r8-"lin 2 $5
~-

_
' Rt&amp;ular 'IG.79

.

S.IL~I

THE ROMANS
COUNTED HA!..F A

I'D !!EEN WOU~DED DURING . . _ , . . ~ KEEFER. TACICLEP
THE HOLDIJP- NOT BADLY, Bl.IT'
YOIJR PAD-- TO KEEP
fNOUeiH TO !I LOW ME: DOWN!
HIM FROM CAWNIS
THe- LAW I THEY l!OT'H
WENT' DOW~· ­

DOZEN

tSWERKEI

. IJ I

Hiff(Pf

FII:OM

I

Yesle tda ys

Now airange the circled leHers to
form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above canoon .

II

"IT)-[ J I XI]"

Prlntanswerhere:

(Answers lomOfrow)

Jumbles: LLA~A FOLIO BEFOR~ AUTUMN
Answer: What his w ife expected him to do when she
brought home all that 9&gt;CpenbiVe foot wear"FOOT" THE BILL

Jumble Book No. 14,contalnlng 110puulla, ls avallablafor11 .75poatpald
tram Jumble, clo thlt newapaper, Bo• :W, No1'1111ood, N.J.0764&amp;.1rK:Iudeyour

n•me, addreaa, zip code and make checka pa.,able to New&amp;pa~rbooka .

lCA~JCI\'

&lt;;A'( H6

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BRIDGE

I~TIOIJ ...

I SEE. BUT WHEREVER IT
15, NO ONE'G WAITING Fffi
DEPI:f'iDSi.\ YOU, AND 'rOU'RE IN HO
HURRY TO 6ET THERE ,..
AM I GETTING THE DRIFT?

PASSING THRMiH" I DIDN'T
!sTOP TO THINK!- TELL ME THE
•·TRUTH, ANNIE- ME YOU A

WOMENS T£RRY

WEST

EAST

+109 6
"10853
tK8732
+7

+KQ43
.642

West

SHORT
SETS
T•ftt
or tiMwteu

Pass
Pass

IOIIdt . Good weight.

Big Prla. ReductiGnt.

1trl~1.

t~ ,

tap

H1s diamond lead was
normal. East's jack held the
trick and he continued with
the queen . South had to duck
for a second time and now
Mike overtook with his king
and shifted to ttie I 0 of
spades.
Mike had seen that he was
not going to defeat the contract with diamond tricks.
That wasn't too difficult to
figure out. He had no entry
anywhere.
Wouldn 't a passive defense
of sticking with diamonds be
best in any event• Wouldn't a
spade shift be a giveaway ?
Mike never worried about
overtric~s. He concentrated
on contracts. He knew that
South liked to bid notrump
and wouldn 't let a little thing
like not having a spade
stopper deter him. Then Mike
counted (OOm for 12 high-card
points in the South hand with·
out a spade honor.
So Mike overtook that
queen and shifted to the 10 of
spades. South played dummy's
Jack, but East just won the
trick and led back a low spade
to nail down South's coffin.

s

3 NT

East
Pass
Pass

Soutb
2NT
Pass

Opening lead:+ 3

:ALLEYOOP

T-,;~· rs"''oo ··~:~~ 566
18.99

contract.

.QJI

Nortb

t+

matching shorts

1

_his own suil lo defeat a game

+a n

IWO PIECE

If

Today we give an example
of Mike going one step further
and deliberately shifting from

+Ks 3
SOUTH

VELOUR
BATH
T()WELS
t3 -"
~rrect .

'IOU 80'(5 COME Willi

By Oswald Jacoby
Alan Sontag

and

A lot of old -timers have
credited with the state·
ment: "When both sides play
the same suit, one is probably
crazy.': But we can tell you
that Mike Gottlieb made it.
~n

6 Dtsi&amp;ns
REG ~ 'U9

•..:
'7.3t

W-118

~£tu•CHrd'

CASH SAVINGS ON NfiDID SUMMfR ITfMSI
• REGUlAR '1.79-

0

CAR WAX

9

~·
Hlah
Ytllllw

9 DL Pltlt or
16

RAY-0-VAC

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Uquid

$ 222

FLEA AND TICK COLLAR

BATTERIES

SEIIGENTS SENTRY Y
for
Llr11 Dois ·

C011 D SIZE
For

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 ~~-! poor
1 Soviet sea
2 Vichy
Yorick"
premier
5 Not kept

SOMONIZ

DOUILE PETAL
UWN DAISY

2

44~

Clls • .

Medium

'WINNIE

SALE PRICED

lWO RING

JERGENS
SOAP

WADING

l.otltl 1114
19' VALUE

~

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INFlATABLE
WITH HEAD PiLlOW

· AIR
MAnRESS

POOL
:•o·•

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPR ISE ASSN.)

PISIGNS$

REG. '4.99

dalmeter, I"

NO SEN BE TAKIN6 WENDY TO
ANOTHER RESTAURANT. Ml6HT
RUN INTO SOMEBOI/Y ELSE
FRO'Y\ MY PAST.

_ VINYL

SWIM
RINGS

I KNOW TOO MANY
PEOPLE IN THI~
13U81NE88!

MINCl IF I !/RIVE yOU HOME ?
I... I. .. [70N 1T FEEL VERY WELL.

I 'M BEGINNING
TO TI11NK I KNOW
WHY/
ANCl

Round ot split i•ll
'IYift . Save :uc on

liMp. S.W11.11on
_,,..,

11KtJ OM. 4 !Iitvin

~

0

~

BARNEY

I JEST PUT
OUR OL'CAT
"SNOWFLAKE"
IN TH'BARN,
PAW--

NOW, WATCH
THEM MICE
SKEDADDLE!!

3 Crest
busy
I Lilt:e hen's
4 In a state
teeth
of peace
10 Bauble
5 Imagine
13 Affirm
• Mrs. Levi
14 New York city 7 Bulgarian
Yesterday's ADiwer
15 Type of pass
town
22 Like socks 27 Capital
17 Pewter
8 Rare or first
and gloves
of TIWJ18IIi&amp;
ingredient
II Word form 23 Shout
Z9 Alma 18 Mercy
meaning best at La Scala 30 Nedda's ldller
19 Follower
lZ Robespierre's 24 Gave
31 Pipe, barrel
of an ism
adversary
support
or reed
!II Nice season 11 Ritual
(to)
34 OUord
Z1 I..orre role
Z1 Diego Rivera 25 Finnish
scholar
22 Noted
was one
poetry
36 Girl's name
clergyman
Z5 Chatter
incessanUy
21 Warhol
Z7 Heston role

700CLUB
BASEBALL Atlanta Braves ve
Pitt&amp;bi!UJh Pirates
CIJilZJWCHAALIE'SANGELSThe
Angels go back to college and put
, themselves up a a tempting bait tor
white slavers Who havealready ab·
ducted two beautifu l coeds and
who now nave their signta set on
Tiffany. (Repeat; 60 mine.)
(jj) HENRY MOORE
8:30 I]) O (I) THE FACT'S OF LIFE
I]) ® CHINA: LAND Cf MY
FATHER Thi s documentary on
youn:g work ing couples In China
feat urea the personal insights of
Asian-American journalist Felicia
!,&amp;we.
10:00 liJ 0 (I) QUINCY When en oopir·
ing Olympic gymnast sutferaafatal
fall in practice, Quincy discovers
amphetamines in her body and
launches
an
investigation.
(Bepeat ; 60 mins.)
C!J MOVIE -( SUSPENSE)'"~

apostrophes. the length and form ation of the. words are aU

hints. Each day the code leiters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

ME TO W~AT? LEAD
IN PRA'iER?OUTLOUO?!
?
.
ME . BUT....

ISCORE AN EAGLE - WIN 'AN EAGLE
This Eqli Ia V1lued At 11,11&amp;• And Ia Sponsored a, ·
'

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP--ENAULT
liaUipolls,

o..'
I

''NOW I lAI( U5

~WN TO SLEEP. .."

ETDSBEVJZV

•
•

..
"

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m

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Steal"1~8

ill !l2i ID

ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
Q CIJ CBS LATE MOVIE 'BLACK
SHEEP SQUADRON : Operation
Stand-Down' When Pappy'a men
take routine re9ualification exama,
they all flunk ·and are grounded .
(Repeat)'MEDICALSTORV:Quall·
ty Of Mercy' 1976 Stars ~ Tony Musante , Scott Hylanda•
({) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
(j]) MOVIE ~REUGIOUS.DRAIIA)

--

60 AHEAD, StiLL'f.•.
'(OU CAN 00 IT..

•

CIJ w ID VEGA$ When mllliono or
dollars of phony gambl ing chips
rtood the Lea Vegas strip, the ..
caainos are shut down end Dan -::
Tanna hits the streets to flush out a bri lliant counterfeiter. (Repeat; 60 ~
mina.) (Ciosed ·Captioned)
..
({) PRESUMED INNOCENT Tho •
House of Detention for men lathe ..
setting lor this documentary that
examines the Issues that accom·
pany pre·trlal detention practices.
mina.)
·
NEWS
10:30
MAX MORAIS
(jj) OVER EASY Gueol: Ceaar
Romero. Hoat: ~h Downs.
11
CIJ
Ill ®l ll2l
NEWS
CIJ JEWISH VOICE
OAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
OICK CAVET'T SHOW
11:30
G (I) THE TONIGHT SHOW
'Beat Of Carson ' Gueats: David
Steinberg , Kelly Garren, Johr1 Ben·
noll . (Repeat: 90 mine.)
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) MOVIE~ADVENT'URE]" "Big

'

home
3Z Fishy Item
.... . . ...
33French
theologian
' 35 Offset gaffes
r----;------''--:~~:::-:-----.-07-=:=,.....-----, 37 "Picnic"
playwright
38 Kipling's
unarmy -"
39Thailand
of old
to Rush
41 Randall
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR ,
II LONGFELLOW
One letter Jimp1y atands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for th e three L's. X for the two O's, etc: Single letters,

!.{ES, SlR? 'r'OU WANT

osed ·C aptioned}

" Dr. No" 1163

Z9 caroline's

--·--

4469100

CIJ ROSSBAGLEYHOUR(JOINED
IN PROGRESS)
C!J MOVIE ~COMEOY)''~ "Frioeo Kid' ' 1t7Q
ffi BASEBALL Atlanta Bravet Yf
Pittsburgh Pirates
CIJ ABC NEWS
Ill liD ZOOM
6 :30 ffi 0 (I) NBC NEWS
CIJ CAROl BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
0 11J(j]) CaS NEWS
IJl WILD WilD WORlO OF
ANIMALS
liD VILLA AlEGRE
il2l 18 ABC NEWS
7 :00 I]) 0 CROSS WITS
CIJ BIBlE BOWl
CIJ I1ZJ 18 FACE THE MUSIC
(I) LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
O ill TICTACDOUGH
(j) MACNEil·LEHRER REPORT
®J NEWS
(jj) OICK CAVETT SHOW
7 :30 (J) O COUNTRY ROADS
AT' HOME WITH T'HE BIBLE
MATCH GAME
WILD KINGDOM 'SweneofRed
Rock Lakes ' Pert I
0 11J JOKER' S WILD
({) DICK CAVETT SHOW
®J THE JUDGE
®~ACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
. li2J FAMILY FEUD
8:00 I]) (I) REAlPEOPLEAmonkey
that guards a pigpen, e cOnvention
ofhoboa, a visit to a loggers camp,
and a frisbee demonstration bv a
champion are featured . (Repeat ;
60 min a.) (Closed-Captioned)
CIJ FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
C!JMO VIE ~D AAMA) ' ' ''Return of
1 M1n C1lled Hora•" 1176
ill I1ZJ 18 FAMILY Annie !rleo to ·
hide her intelligence from her
jeal ou s clsnmates and be just like
the other kids, While Buddy strug - •
gles to prepare for her college en- ,
trance
exams .
(60
mins .)
(Closed-Captioned)
Q I1J(j]) ETHELISAN ELEPHANT
It ' stove at first ai ght between Ethai ,
alovelyb.,byelephant, and a young
NewYorkpl'lotographerwhohasto
take his landlord to court in order to
kaaQ_Ethel in his apanmi"t.
I]) l1lJ GREAT PERFORMANCES '
' Solt i Conducts Schubert ' The
Chicago Symphony Orchestra,
under ita permanent Music Dirac·
tor , Sir Georg Solti, will perform two
symphon ies by Viennese com·
g_Qaer Frenz Schuben . (90 mins.)
8 :30 W T'HE PRESENCE OF GOD
CIJ BETWEEN GAMES SHOW
0 ill (j]) SPECIAL MOVIE PRE· ·
SENTATION 'That 's Entertain ·
ment Par12 ' 1976
11:00 (})
(I) DIFF'RENT STROKES
Arnold and Willis start a cookiebuaineaa tha t begins t o crumble when
thei r manl!facturer cannot supply
their
demand.
(Repeat)

· :ZSGennan
pronoun

* Winner is responsible lor all taxes and registration .

r

~ULERS

&amp;CANDINAVIA .

Eagle

Upper Riter R01d

Viewing
EVENING

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

AMC ,..

Pomeroy, 0.

\ I"

...

CAPTAL&lt; EASY ·.

Ptir

ON THE 179 YARD No. 9HoLE DURING THE DAVE DILES CELEBRITY GOLF TOURNAMENT
RIVERSIDE GOLF Cl.UB, .MASDN, W., VA. - THURSDAY JUNE 19,

.992-2556
570 w. Main

'

JUNE 18, 1980

"A Q7
• A96
+QJ 62

HOI.E • IN· ONE

..

f;n~

Tel~vision

e:oo C2J 8 (!) Q Cil (jD)(iJJ II NEWS

: RUNAWAY~

Reular '3.99

1'0 THE FIRST GOLFER TO SCORE A

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLIY

b

.:-...::...~·-··--

.•I'IHEN YOU SAID YOU '1/ERE .

.FREE 1980 AMC EAGLE

FISH TAIL .•••• ... ~- W
WITH FRIES • ••••• $139

four ordmary words.

NORTH
6-18·80
+AJ2
"'K J7
• 10'
+Al09 54

SPECIAL

(

WHEN WE MOVED ·
TO THE CITY
THI$ WINTER-

... .

PICTURES MAY BE
PICKED UP
The Carpenter Dance Studio pictures have arrived and will be at the
studio at 7 p.m. this evening.

.---:""'

-

ouR amu mu WEI
LAWN CH

Tacquardt,

TROLLEYS EVERYWHERE
By 1918, some 110,000 trolleys were
traveling over 45,000 miles rJ. track
in the United States. Enlerprlsinfl
passengers could board a car in upstate New York and by transferring
from one connecting inter-urban line
to the next ride the ralls all the way
to Wisconsin. ·

one lett~r to each square , to torrrl

Final 4 Days

Say cheese with a .smile

THIS WEEK'S
GRAND OPENING POSTPONED
Due to the conversion of Spencer's
Grocery, Racine, to a Fas Check
S!Jper Market the grand opening
planned for June 20 and 21 has been
p«JJItponed to a later date which1will
bearmounced in the near future.

MONTH OF SCHOOL-

Unscrarnt:&gt;kt these four Jumbles

!'OINT PLIAIANT or MAlON

Food for Thought
have many important functions.
Cheese is good for your health
because it provides all of these
nutrients.
When cooking with cheese,
remember to use low heat for a short
period of time. Overcooking cheese
causes it to become tough, stringy,
and greasy. Sometimes recipes will
call for grated or finely chopped
A.
cheese. It is helpful to know that oneEach of the nutrients that cheese
fourth pound cheese equals one cup
supplies has several important funcof grated cheese ( 'lc lb = 1 c.
tions in the body that help us ~in­
grated).
lain good health. Following is a list
Cheese should always be stored in
showing the functions of the nutrien- . the refrigerator. Cottage cheese
ts found in cheese. Protein: becomes
may be stored for three to five days .
part of each cell in the body and supCream cheese and other soft cheese
plies energy for the body. Fat:
usually last for two weeks and hard
needed for healthy skin and pr&lt;Jt.ides
cheese such as cheddar and swiss
energy for the body. Calcium :
may be stored for several months. U
needed for strong bones and teeth,
mold grows on hard natural cheese,
helps with normal clotting of blood,
it may be trimmed off completely
needed for muscle contractions, and
before the .cheese is eaten. Process
assists in transmission of neural imcheese products should be thrown
pulses from the brain to the rest of
out if mold is found. Sometimes
the Dody. Phosphorus: needed for
cheese dries out if it Is not properly
strong bones and teeth and helps
wrapped in plastic wrap, wax wrap.
release energy for body from
or aluminum foil. Dried·out cheese
protein, carbohydrate, and fat
may be finely chopped and stored in
Vitamin A: helps with vision in dim
a lightly covered jar. The chopped
light and needed for healthy skin.
cheese may· be used in cooked foods
You can see that protein fat
such as casseroles.
calcium, phosphorus, and vita~ A

YOUR OLDER
GOING.., TOOYOU, WILLIE

Declarer deftly defeated

CAliON QUAUTJ

DECOYS
A thousand years ago, Indians
made the first decoys in order to
trick birds down to within arrow
shot. They were made of bulrushes,
woven and twisted into duck shapes.
This Indil!n invention was quickly
adopted by North America's first
white hunters. In the Old World, they
had used tame live birds to trap wild
ones in a cage the Dutch called an
"ende kooi"- what the Englishman

YOU KNOW VERY
WELLLSETH-WE
MISSED QVER A

'ftfl\}~ fii)'il j'jl THAT SCRAMBLED WOAO GAME
~ ~ ~~
by Henri Asnol&lt;l ond Bob Lee

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

DEAR POLLY - I am answering

pronounced "decoy."
SPECIAL MEETING THURSDAY
The Middleport Masonic Temple
will hold a special meeting Thursday, June 19 at6 p.m. Work will be in
the Master Mason Degree, and all
Master Masons are invited to attend.

home.
"I've had any number of letters
saying there doesn't need to be a
government conference on the
family," she said. " Many people.
have asked Gov. (James) Rhodes
not to send a d~legation ."
The proposals of the Baltimore
convention include development of
preventive programs to combat
drug and alcohol abuse, tax benefits
to encourage families to care for the
elderly at home rather than in institutioDS and elimination of the
" marriage tax" through fairer tax
treaiment of married couples who
both work .
The 670 delegates also supported
ratification of the Equal Rights
Amendment and urged an enil to
discrimination, including that against homosexuals.
The last item was approved by a
one-vote margin. But Jim Guy
Tucker, national chairman of the
conference, said it probably would
not have passed if a " pro-family"
coalition of 30 to ~ persons had not
walked out.
The coalition, which opposed abortion, women's rights and sex
education, left after charging that
they had been shut out of the con·
ference proceedings.

for national conferences designed to
IJIIIke recommendations on what the
govel'llll,\ent and others can do to
strengthen the American family.
The White House is expected to coordinate efforts to put some of the
recorrunendatlons into legislative
form, while spurring the private sector to take action on others.
Organizers predict about 500 to 700
persons will attend the Minneapolis
convention, including delegates
from Ohio and 14 other midwestern
states.
The third regional conference will
be held in Los Angeles July 16-12.
Delegates to the first conference
earlier this month in Baltimore
adopted a ~7-P.Oint program, aimed
at helping people trying to cope with
the problems facing the American
family. One of their recommendations was to make abortion
available "to all who freely make
the choice."
Meanwhile, family violence, child
abuse and family Unity emerged as
top concerns of Ohio's 76-member
delegation during local conferences
and a state meeting in April.
Mrs. TUrney says she also hears
many people saying they want less
government ilivolvement ·and that
family problems should be solved at

By Myrtle Clark
and Allllle Mooo
EFNEP Nulritloo Aides
Meigs County ·
Cooperative Exteosive Service
Cheese is made from whole or
skim milk and provides many of the
nutri~nts that milk provides. Cheese
is a good source of protein fat
calcium, phosphorus, and vita~

MRS. ELIZABETH Hayes, deputy of Chester.Council323, Daughters
of America, recently presented a Bible to Frank Newsome, committee
chairman for the Pack.

h:cK~:Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 18, l980

••• ~

"Samaon and Delll•h"

1851

il2l 8
LOVE
BOAT-BARETT A ·
12:00 C!J MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) "\!i ;

11:150

ill
11

1:00

. 1:05
1:30
2:00.
2:011
2:30
3:35
4:00
4 :45
5 :30

EY.!.! Of L1ura Mare" 1078

llHU

TOMORROW Hoof: Tom '
Snyder. Guaat: Wayne Newton. (60 ,
mlna.)
GOOD .NEWS
CIJ N!WS
ATLANTA BRAVES ' BA·
BALLREPLAY
REX HUM8ARD
!BELIEVE .
8 NEWS
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
MOVI!-(MYSTERY)" " Citar·
111 Chon In Dlld Mon T'oll'' 11141
~ 700CLUB
MAVERICK
.
BOB GASS

~

I

EJVCDVH-

NATURAL WINNER
Tom Longboat, an Onondaga Inw. dian from the Six, Nations ReServ~
KRPBW.- SHJRAX
RY
EZSD
near Brant{ord, Ontario, and worln ,·
. champion Icing-distance nmner in
LASML.RI
Yesterday'• Crypteqaote: IF YOU MEET TROUBLE · 1908, raced a horse over a 12-rnile
PROMPTLY AND WimOUT FLINCHING, YOU REDUCE
course and won. He also won the 2$THE PROBLEM BY HALF .-WINSTON CHURCJULL
. mile Boston Marathon in 1907 in ·
() lMO Klnt FtltiH'H SyncUut.. Inc.
record lime.
EVJZV

EM

BWV

LHVSBVMB

WSJX·

�12- The Daily Sentinel, M1ddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 18, 1980
'

WASHINGTON ( AP ) As
Agriwlture Secretary Bob Bergland
sees 1t, Canada IS " the critical link"
to the survival of the partial U.S.
embargo of gram sales to the Sov iet
Union.
If the Canadian government caves
m to pressure and steps up gram
sales to the Soviet Umon, the entire
embargo w11l be in jeopardy,
Bergland said Tuesday.
President Carter is expected to
discuss the gram embargo w1th
Canadian Pri1Jie MinLSter Pierre
Trudeau and others at an economic
summit meeting in Vemce next Sunday and Monday, Bergland said.
Le~ders of France, Germany,
Great Britain, Japan and Italy also
will attend the conference.
Bergland said the new Trudeau
government has been put under Increasing pressure from Canadian
grain farmers to abandon 1ts
previous commitment to support the
U.S. embargo.
"If the Canadians can hold the hne
politically and say they will stay
w1th the Umted States, I'm convinced the rest of the world w1ll stay
hitched," he sa1d m an mterv1ew
with a group of reporters.
" But if the Canadians dec1de for
the1r reasons that the~ have to p1ck

Canada .
critical

'link'
-

Support for continuing the embargo, inctutlmg U1c monitoring of
transshipments of U.S. grain, also
has been provided by Common
Market leaders, Bergland said.
·'If Canada ·kicks over the traces
and decides to pick up the slack (in
supplying grain to the Soviets),
that'll put heavy pressure on the
Australians. It'll put heavy pressure
on us, matter of fact ."
The pledges of support being
sought by the United States affect
the fifth year of a U.S.-8oviet Union
grain agreement, which will begin
on Oct. I.
Under it, the United States agreed
to ·supply the Soviets with at least 8
nullion metric tons of corn and
wheat annually, and more than that
if 11 was mutually agreeable.
Last fall, the Soviet Union was
given permission to buy up to 25
million metric tons of grain in the
1979-M agreement year, and the
Soviets were expected to take the
full amount to help make up for a
short 1979 harvest.
Carter canceled deliveries of 1'1
milliOn metric tons, but honored the
basiC agreement enabling Russia to
buy 8 ffiiUion. Further, the administration liBYS it will allow the
sale of 8 million metric tons m the

up as much of the slack as they can
s hip (to the Soviet Union), ... that
heightens the pressure on the
Australians and that heightens the
pressure on us and e verybody else."
Carter imposed the partial embargo on gram sought by the Soviet
Umon on Jan. 4 hi retaliation for 1ts
occupation of Mghanistan. Canada ,
Australia and the European Common Market countries pledged not to
exceed their normal sales of grain to
the Soviets.
Argentma, the only other major
world grain exporting country, did
not agree to the embargo and has
been supplying the Soviet Union with
some gram needed to make up the
s hortfall created by the U.S. act10n.
Argentina was asked agam recently at a meeting in Brussels to
cooperate w1th the embargo and indicated it would "take 11 under advisement ," Bergland said.
Bergland said he met with
Australian officials here last week
and asked them to continue their
policy of restraining sales to the
Soviets.
The Australians provided
qualified support for contmumg the
embargo " to the extent they can,"
Bergland said.

final year of the pact, beginnmg Oct.
I.
So far, however, Moscow has not
indicated it wants to buy any gram
at all from the United States next
year, Bergland said.
As he has previously, Bergland
said there LS no plan by the adnunistration to remove the• curbs
and enable the Soviets to buy grain
in excess of the 8 million metric tons
until " the president finds they 're no
longer a threat to our security."

1

WASHINGTON (AP)- A team rl.
visitors from China will be here next
month, but Agriculture Secretary
Bob Bergland says he has no evidence that a bilateral pact for Importing
U.S. grain will be on the agenda.
Rwnors have circulated that
China may want to talk ·a bout the
possibility of having a formal
agreement under which it would buy
U.S. grain over the next few years.
" We don't have any official
request from the Chinese on this
matter," Bergland said Tuesday.
But he acknowledged that Chinese
offiCials during Bergland's visit to
China in 1978 expressed an interest
in the workings of such agreements,
particularly one between the United
States and the Soviet Union.

13-The Daily Sentinel, Middle port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedne,sda1y, June !8, 1980

Bergland also said he was ~ware
of " trade reports" and other information that suggested China may
want to talk about a silrular
agreement with the Uruted States.
A team headed by Huo Shilian,
China' s l)linister of agriculture and
deputy to the NatiOnal People's
Congress, will visit the Uruted States
July !&gt;-22, Bergland said.
The Chinese will be in Washington
July 7-8 for meetings with U.S. officials and then vLSit farms a nd other
agricultural operations in Georgia,
Illinois, Misso\ll'i, Colorado and
California.

Mobile Homes
for Sale
1973 Falrpotnt, 14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron . 14&gt;&lt;65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleefwood, 14• 65 J
bdr ., ba1h 1f2
1971 Shakespear, 14 x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 FleefwOOd 12• 63, 2
Bdr.
B a. S MOB ILE HOME
SALES, PT . PL EASANT ,
wv. 304-675·4424.

Mobile Homes
lor Sale
Lo1t a nd or Tra •le r in Mtd
dle port . 647 S 2nd 77 3-9506.
Real Estote

MIDDLEPORT - N1ce
tnside, newly remodel ·
ed, 3 bedrooms, bath,
util tty room, equtpped
kitchen , and on corner
lot. As k1ng $24,500
POMEROY
3
bedroom home 10 subdiviSIOn w1fh plenty of
playmates for your
children
Has bath ,
natural gas furnac e, full
basement, and birch kit
chen . $18,500.
REPAIRABLE 3
bedroom frame home
with Syracuse wa ter.
natural gas, and Ohio
· Power. 3 level lots Only
$5 ,500.
BARGAIN - ·5 rooms,
bath , natural gas, ctty
water , Ohto Power,
chimney for woodburner on leiJel lot. Only
$12,000
•
RUTLAND - H1gh a.
DRY 6 room frame
home, bath, natural gas,
city water, a nd .4 large
woOded lots on Rt 124 .
Need $25.500
3 IN 1 SALE - Has
large 5 bedroom home
w1th centra l heat, c ity
water, and Ohio Power.
Ntce 3 car garage with
apartment over. Also 2
room business building
11/.. acres. Just$28,000.
PLAN
NOW
FOR
YOUR NEXT TEN
YRS . WHILE IN·
TEREST RATES ARE
LOW.

1973 Starcraft' travel
trailer .
Fu ll y
self ·
contained with extras 992
5434,992-3129 or 9'12 5914 .

Real Estate r General

HOBSTffiER
REALTY

NOTICETO
BIDDERS
REPAI'}g~ ROOFS
MIDDLEPORT
ELEMENT ARY
HARRISONVILLE.
ELEMENTARY

Public Notice

School,
Harnsonv111e
Elementary Gy mnaSIUm,
and Sa lisbury Elementary
Gymnasium. Bidders Will
be b idding on the installation of the Trocal or
built-up roof ing system . All
roofs tobeb1d separatel y.
De tailed specifications
and instructions to bidders

&lt;;l\:"1~~t~~r

ELEMENTARY
ma y be obtai nec:t at the Of·
GYMNAS
IN IUM
fice of the Treasurer, M td
MEIGS LOCAL
dleport, OhiO.
SCHOOL DISTRICT
A cert1f1 ed check payable
Sealed proposals will be to the Treasurer of !he
recei ved by the Board 0f above b~a rd of ed_u catton
Education of the Mei
or a sattsfactory . b•d bond
Local School District ~ execu ted by the b 1dd e~ and
Middleport Ohio at fh the surEf'ty compan y, tn an
Treasurer •$ Office unt~ amount equ ¥~ 1 to ftve per
12 :00 Noon on July 3 1980 ce ntott~ebld s ha!Jbesu b
and at that lime ope'n d m1tted w1th each b1d .
,
and read bv th T
e
Satd board of educat1on
t_mmeaiately e th~~:;f{e~r , reserves t~e r i~h t to watve
tabulated .lnd c1 repo f tnformal tt tes, o accept or
thereof ·made by
re1ect any and all, or parts
Treasurer to said Board ~ of any and alf bids.
.
Its ne•t meeting
a
No b1ds mar. be w.tthDescription
of
tm - drawn for at east th1rty
provement located at M id · ('30) days afte_r the
dleport Element
scheduled closi ng ttme tor
School,
HansonvTI~~ rece•ptofbtds.
Elementary Gymnasium
· and Saltsburu Elementar ~ Board of Education
G
·
'
, of Meigs Local
. ymnastum . The Roofing School Dis trict
: Conln!tot shall b1d as a
Prime contractor. ThtS 10 J ane Wa9ner , Treasu rer
eludes all labor, materials South Th 1rd Aven ue
equipment, and serviceS Mtddle port, OhtO
requ~red to complete th 1s 45760
Section which includes new (6) 11 , 18,25 (7) 2. .rc
replacement of roots on
M1ddleport Elementary

rri

-

.

.

..,--- .--------~-----------,

l

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash fot

:r
·I

Classlfleds and
Savelll

II
I·
1

Write your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon, Cancel your ad bY phone when you get
results. Mooey not refundable .

I

I

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
CATHERINE
K
SCHNEIDER ,
.
Plaintiff,
vs.
THOMAS E. SCHNEIDER,
Defendant.
Case No. 17,510
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
Thomas E . Schneider
whose
re stde n ce
is
unknown, but whose last
known address was P . o.
Bo~ 134, TuJJpers Plains,
Ohto 45783, wtrl take notice
That on the 6th day of June
1980, that Catherine K:
Schnetder, Plamt1ft, filed
her Complaint against htm
rn the Meigs County Com-.
mon Pleas Court, Meigs
County, Ohio, Case No.
17,510 praying for divorce
upon the grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme crue lty, tor custody
of the minor child of the
parties. for alimonv and
Support, and will further
taKe notice that this cause
can be heard at anyttme
following fwenty eight days
from the date of the last
publication of this notice
and that
the last
publication wtll be made on
the 16th day of July, 1980.
Larry E. ;:,pencer,
Clerk of Court
Me igs County, Ohio
(6) 11 , 18, 25,

( 7)

2, 9, 16, 6tc

1
~

!
I

mission of Ohio, 180 E.

Broad St., Columbus, Oh ro
43215.
The Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio
By : David M. Polk,
Secretary
(6) n, 11, 2s, 3tc

WANT AD INFORMATION

Public Notice
Comptroller of
the Currency
Treasury Department
of the
United States
Washington, D. C.
WHEREAS satisfactory
evidence has been presen·
ted to the Comptroller of
the Currency that "BANK
ONE OF POMEROY ,
N.A. " located in Pomeroy ,
State of Ohio, has complied
with all provisions of the
statutes of the United
States reQutrecl to be comPlied with before being
authorized to commence
the business of banking as
a National Bankin g
Association.
NOW, THEREFORE, I
hereby certify that the
above named association 1s
authorized to commence
the business of bank1ng as
a National Bank1ng
ASSOCiation.
IN
TESTIMON Y
WHEREOF , witness my
si~nature and seal of office
th,s30th day of May, 1980.
John·G. Hetmann
comptroller of the
currency
Charter Number 16859
(6) 11, 18, 25 (7) 2, 9, 16, 23.
JO (8 ) 6, 9tc
•

WTStoSHAVE
The average man's
beard has 13,000 w~ers
- 390 per square inch on
his cheeks and 580 per
square inch on his chin.

SUNNY YUMA

Yuma, Ariz.,

receives
more than 4,000 hours of
sunshine a rear, twice 88
, much as Seattle, Wash.

PHONE 992-2156

I•1
1
1

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Case No. 80·202-TP·PEX
Notice IS hereby given
that Mr . Gary Basham ,
43230 Elk Run Road,
Cool•ille, Ohio, 45723, and
other subscribers of the
Shade
Exchange of
General Telephone Com pany of Ohio has filed a
compla int with the Com ·
mission requesting the
establishment of nonopllonal. fwo way ••tended
area telephone service between the Shade E•change
and the Pomeroy Ex c hang e of
General
Telephone
The Com ·
miss1on has scheduled this
matter for public hearing
on Thursday, July 10, 1980,
at 10 .00 A M . at the Lodi
Grange Hall, Route 33,
Shade, Ohio 45776 . At this
hearing all part1es Of Interest will be afforded an
opportun1ty to present
evidence ma te rial to the
specific Issues relevant tn
th1s proceeding. Further
information regard ing this
matter may be obtained by
address tng an inquiry to
the Public Utilities Com·

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

1:

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

I

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

II
I

Addreu

Phone

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

I- Card of Thanlls

42-Mo..llt "'"'"

J-Ji rlntvncements

for rllent

4-0 i'INWiy

44-Aputmtnt for • tftt

1-HippyAch
6----L.Oit ''"' "CH.Ind
7- Yinl hit
t-Publlc Slit

4J-.f:Rooms

oi6-SPKtforllttnt
47-Wenttcllo Rettt

41-Equl,.,tnl for Rent

&amp; AvctiCMt

t-WantedtoBur _

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sl-HCNHhokl Goods
52-CI, TV, •ldloiQulpm.nt
Sl-Ant6qUII
M-MIIC. Mlf'CINindlll
U- IUUcllntiYppllfl

•'- ""' Weniecl
12-Sit"lttd WlnttG

ll-lnsurance
14-B"IIMII Trllfl!."l
11-SchOolllnstrucUon
ItRadio, TV
I Cl rllep~lr

M-Pttt. for lilt

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

11-WentH To Do

These cash rates
Include discount

" - '"'" •lf'lpment
42-Wanted to ••Y
n-Trvclts for Slit

e FINANCIAL
n- euslnns

il-Liwut.ck
....._HiyiGreln
U - leed6 Ftrtlllllr

Opportunity

1 &gt;wanted

(}ForSale

22-MoMy to L..n

17.
.

I &gt; Announcement
1 &gt; For Rent

2l-ProfHikH\II

Servicu

lB.
19.
20.
21 . _ _ _ _ __ I, .

22. - - -- - - 1
23. - - - - - 1
24.
:25.
26.
27.
211.
29.

30.

. I!

- - - - - 1,
I
----- ~·

' 34. _ _ __

_

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

Mllll This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
•
Box 729 ·

( ..

4P .M DillY
12 Noon lat\lrciiY
torMondly

1:

' 1:
I'
I•

11- Homtlmprtnmttttt
12- Piuen~"' I RXCI'IItinl
ll-R~CI'If'•tlnl

In lovtng memory of Ralph
Triplett k illed in Vietnam
June 18, 1970 and his father ,
Morgan Triplett, who died
June 9, 1969 We will
always keep you in our
memories Mary Triplett,
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Bass
and David, Phil and Barb
Bearhs .
3

Announcements

Main St.
Pomeroy 992-2181

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport
8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Servfce. Phone
949 2487 or 949-2000. raci ne,
Oh1o, Crltt Bradford.

Plano Tuning · Lane
Dan1els 742·2951. Tuning
and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone
992 2082
Regatta- FROG
BA·LL .
Saturday, June 28, 9·1.
Royal Oak LOdge . Joe
Lavinger
and
1he
Tunettmers .
Tickets
l\Vai lable at : Simons Pick·
a· Pair, 992·3830; Chamber
Office, 992·5005, New York
Clothing House, 992·2049.
The Meigs County Fish and
Game Club will ha•e Its
Annual Children ' s Fishing
Derby Saturday, June 21st
from 8 a.m til 2 p.m. at
Shade Valley Club House
and lake. Age to fish from 1
to 16 ooe pole perchild.
Bring own bait. Prizes for
boys and girl and free
refreshments. There will
be a membership chicken
barbecue at 6:30 p m. Any
questiOns call RoyHowell
at9'12·5421.

In remembrance of Anita
!B uckley ) Balls onher 23rd
birthday, J une 18.
1 Her ltfe tS a beauttful
me mory
Her absence a silent grief .
She sleeps in God ' s
Beautiful garden ,
In the sunshine of perfect
peace .
Missed by Mom. Dad,
sister, brothers, Nanny and
Dad Dad. Husband ,
Tomahd son Christopher.

6

Iron and brass beds. old
·turn•ture, desks, gold
rings , jewelry, silver
dollars, sterling, etc., wOOd
ice boxes, antiques , etc.
Complete
households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OHl or call 991·
7760.
'10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,

Gold, silver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
items. AntiQue furniture,
glass or china, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No item too large or too
small . Check prices before
selling . r.lso do appraising.
Osby (Ossie) Marlin. 992·
6370.

15-0tntrll HIUIIItf
14-M.H. Rtp~ ir

Lost and Found

11

Help Wanted

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 9922156or992 2157 .

7
Yard Sale
Barn Sale: George E . King
farm flve·e ighth mile off .
Rt. 7. Baby clothes, adult
clothes, lots of misc. 1956
Case tractor. Wed. though
Sat. 9-9, 992·3737.

VETERANS! If you can
Moving Sale : E•erythlng
goes. June 19 and 21 from . spare 39 days a year, It
9:30 to 3:00 Two miles past could be worth over $1,-400
to you. Plus free tuition
fairgrounds. Follow signs
assistance to any west
onold33.
VIrginia college or ac·
· credited business or trade
House and Yard Sale . 26 school. Continue your
Railroad Street, Midleport
retirement benefits.Help
(down by the Marina) . your community In times of
Clothing, Avon dolls , emergency. Th National
glassware,
what-nots,
Guard needsyour e)( some furniture, rings, etc. perlence. Good pay, good
Follow the signs, rain or
benefi1s. For details call
shine.
SFC. Yoho304·675·3950.
123 Park Drl•e, Point
Pleasant,
Wednesday,
Thursday, Fiday and Sat.
from 8·3. Furniture, large
clothing, maternity, baby
clothes, formals.

....

ISWorctaorunHr

2claya
:ldiYl
Ulyt

l!lth'wonl ovtrthl minimum II

,.,.

,.
........

C11h

12

1.25

'·"

FOR

'·"
wonts It 4 ctfttl ,.rword per.,..,,

l lj

Mobile Home Mitt IIMI Yitrd .. ,.. .,,accepted OfiiY wttfl cailt with
Drd.,.. 1'1 c"t dYr .. for Hs cerrylrll ••• Hu1nbH" In Cart ol The

Will mow lawns and will do
wall papring . 992·3760.

YOUK INSURANCE NEED9.

Wll

-- ·--- --

do baby sitting In my
hoine. 773-5254.

992-2342 .

Will do odd and endS Jobs,
sucp as llgllt hauling, pain·
ting,. tearing down houses
and bulldlnvs. ctearint
lots, and mowing lawns.
Have tools and tr&amp;nsportatlon. Cati74N07~ .

. ildt'INING-C:HII.bS-AGENC'
. . I. INC.

•.1
\

.

- MIDOI.EPORT, uniO .

IMfiMI.
I

'

Deluxe Ford fiberglass top·
per to fit eight foot bed .
Call992·7201. ·
J and F Backhoe Service ~
Licensed and bonded. Septic 1ank installation. Water
and gas lines. Excavating
work and transit layou t.
Call992-7201.
Ditch diggmg serv1ce. Cal)
773· 5839 or 773·5788
Ditch digging servi ce. Ca ll :
773·5839 or 773·5788 .

31

Homes for Sale

NEW 3 or 4 Bedroom home,
2111 baths, rec room,
fireplace ,
b;tsement ,
garage. At Morn~ng Star
Hts. , Lee Construction, 992·
34Sior992·5455.

8 Pet . Ass umption ,
Beautifu l iarge brick ranch
style, low utiltties, . J
bedrooms, 21h
baths,
ftreplace, full basement,
family room, air con·
dltloner, 3 car garage.
Baum Addition, Meigs Co
985·4169.

8 Room House oo ap· .
pro•lmately 2 acres. St. Rt .
124. Lots of exlras. 992-7255.
Pomeroy, 3 nice large lots.
River frontage , 2 story, 7
rooms and bath. firepla ce,
toll basement . Priced in
the S20's. Call after 6, 992·
7284.
Assumable Mortgage
9'1&gt;% . 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, ·
full basement, 2 car
garage. Rlggscrest Manor
614-985·4329.
2 story, 5 rooms, and bathr:
Large lot. In Syracuse 992~...,
3981
•••
•

~

,.

--- - ----··

rrt*f\*\*\**
ll-

-

!i

and
refinen~~
eses. Call Com
lete
Mortgag
ervlces
1
. Gelllpolls, Ohio
446-1517 for mor11
,~nformatlon end
. our eppol.tJ.tiMIItL .

i

•1

I

****-*~**** ••
L

Real E•tate

General

.DILLON
REAL ESTATE
NEW LISTING- J. BR
'. home on 2112 acres of
'ahd . 3 miles below Mid·
~leport off Rt 7. Also
tr.:-tler hookup for addi
tiof .•;~l income.
NEW LISTING-I floor
plan. 3 or 4 bedroom
home, nice bullt·ln kit·
chen with range and
-oven on Rt. 7 In
1 Pomeroy, Oh .
2 BEDROOM COTTAGE - SOLD , just off
Rou1e 7.
: BUSINESS -~UILDING
In
downtown
Rutland, 0 ., approx. 10
years old . Use as
business· or convert to
living quarters. See to
appreciate.
NEW LISTING - 3 BR
cottage with 2 acres of
quiet countfyside . 5
minutes from M1d · 1
dleport, o
3 BEDROOM HOME Carpeted and paneled;
on Vine Street in.
Racine, very clern,
ready to move 1nto. Nice
level lot. Will also con·
slder renting.
1 ACRE IN MIDDLE-,
PORT - 4 room cot·
tage, trailer hookup,
reduced to $8,000.
. fAKING LISTINGS I ••
Hobart omon. Broker I·
•
Fay Manley
Branch Mgr.
Pho"P. 90~-,&lt;9R
Real Estate-General

-.

Two Bedroom Mob :le
Home. Adults only . 992
3324
2 Bedroom Mobtle Home,
furnished kitchen, elderly
couple preferred . Depos1t
required . No pets . 992·2749

Mobile Home, utilities
paid , 1 kid accepted . No
pets, no drunks Sleeping
room for rent 50 acres of
pasture. John Sheets, 3'12
mi les South Middleport,
Rt 7.

73 Ac re farm w·6 room

house . Near
423-7663 '

44

Reedsville .

RENTER ' S as!ffstance for
Senter Ctttzens in Village
Manor apts . Call992 ·7787.

apartment 992 5621.

·

bedroom furnished
apartment. 992·5434, 992 ·
3129 or992 5914.
Two

H{Jadc;uarters

46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots . Ca;l
992 7479 .

1

NEW LISTING 5
room block house with
part basement and
situated on 1 1/ 3 acre
Does need some repair.
$7,000 00
SPLIT LEVEL RANCH
- This 3 bedroom home
also has a den , 2 baths,
dining
room, cozy
ftre place and ts qual ity
bu ilt throughout. 5 acres
of ni ce la ying, cleared
land. $58,700.00
BUSINESS Mid ·
dleport Lunc h Room All equipment, licenses,
and inventory. Quick
Sale Price $11,000.00 .
WHAT A PRESENT
FOR FATHER - New
carpeti ng, new baths,
nice front
porch ,
workshop in basement
ts just a few of the
features of thts 7 room
house Must see to a p
preciate . $38,000.00 .
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- l'h story, 2·.4 bedroom
home w•th a full base·
ment, that has been
re model ed la tely Nice
101. $25,000 .00.
ALL CLEAR EO - and
is fairly level •with at
least 4 building si tes
Approx 10 Acres. Will
Subdi•ide $11.500.00.
OLD ST. RT . 33 - 3
acres and a 1 story, 5
room home tha t needs
some repairs Reduced
to $6,000.00.
LAND CONTRACT This 11f2 story home has
3 lots, alum . sid ing, full
base ment, 5 roo ms, and
is spotless. Call for
more
informa tion .
$25.000.00.
DON'T SAY LATER, " I
COULD
HAVE
BOUGHT IT"; OWN IT
NOWI DON'T WAITI
CALL OR COME IN TO·
DAY .
REALTOR
Henrv E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Associates
Jean Trussell, 949-2660
Dottie &amp; Roger Turner
742-2474
Office Phone 992-2259
Real Estate- General

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
·
.
a.

NEW LISTING - Overlooking Ohio River Kaiser ,
Alum. Plant, 3 lg. BR 's, plenty of closets, full basement a. family room. On 3 beautiful acres. Asking
$65,000.
TRAILER - 2 BR , on nice lot. small outbuildings
for storage, on Quiet street $10,500.
COULD BE YOUR DREAM HOME "- 2 story with
dble. garage, home mcludes 3 BR 's with large bath
up and 'h bath on ma in floor . Many extra nice
features in Quiet area . Asking S57,500.

LOTS - Bordering "omeroy . 1 to 75 acres .
POMEROY - 3 B~ home, city water, vinyl siding ·
on fit . 33. S14,90D.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Over 100 acres,
could be housing developmenl - gas already drill ed, on property water lines close. All mineral rights,
go with property. Also Timber ready to be cut. Call'
for more Information .

WAftT TO SELL? .- . GIVE.

A CALL

US
-Call Jimmy Deem, ASSOCI Itt 9~! - ZHI
or Nancy Jaspers, Auoclate 949-2654

72

F lve P•ece Victon an Liv 1ng
room su1te . E mpirf! chest
M• sc a nt tques Call 992·
5933

fr uck tor Sale .. 8 Model
Mack trac tor Excelle nt
condtti on Cal l 99 2 7354 af
ter 7

S.! __ ~~s_! ~ .!_a_!e_ _

197 4 Da ts un p1ck up, ra di o,
ta pe dec k, some rust W1tl
throw •n a used topper
$1700 00 Ca ll 992 3710 aft e r
5 or 9'12-3662 da ys

POOOLE G ROOM ING
Judy Ta ylor 614 367,-722()
HILLCREST KENNEL S
Baard1ng , all breeds Clean
tndoor outdoor la ~ tltt •es .
Also AKC
re giste re d
Dober mans. 614 446·7795 .
HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Heal thy , shots, ,wormed
DonatiOns requtred. 992
6260, noon 7 p m , except
Tuesday, eme rgency call s
only
AKC Registered Cocker
Spaniel, black ma le chamPIOn bloodline 843 2684
Cock·a Poo pupp1es. Male
and female . Black, blac k
and wh1te. 843-2684
1'12 yr. old male red Dober·

man with papers $100. 773
9506

Put a cold nose 1n your
future . Assorted kt1te ns
and cats. dogs and puppies
Shots, wormed To see
these beautiful dogs wil l
make you want to grab
oneup and take it home . All
varieties Humane Society ,
992·6260.
MUSICal
Instruments

We are picking up severa l
repossessed and trade·tn
pianos and organs 1n you r
area. Pr tces from $250 a nd
up. Call credtt ma nager
today . 304·485 2170

1 bedroom. furnished apar
tmen1. $125 month, uti lit1es
not included. 992-2288
3 rooms and bath Upstai rs

Trai le r Lots for re nt tn
Great Bend area new
bridge site and acros from
Portland Grade Sc hool. $50
and $60 per month I 304·
273 3623 , 1-614-843 -2353

Merenandlse
S3
Antiques
ATTENTION :
l iM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Woll
pay cash or certtfled check
for antiques a nd collec·
flbles or e nt tre estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
co1n collections. Cal l 614 767 3167 or 557 ·3411.
54

Misc. Merchanise

MAY 23 to June 30, 30% off
gree nware sale Bring a
con tainer . 9 a. m to 9 p. m.
Drehel 's Ceram1cs. 59 N.
Second Ave , Middleport ,
'1!12 2751.
Deco rated cakes tor all oc·
casions. Character ca kes
and sheet cakes. Call 992·
6342 or 992·2583
Tram 0201 CB. 949 2010.
Goldtone
Whirlpool
automatic washer and
dryer. One year old good
conditton. $300.00. Leblanc
cl ai ri net, gOOd condition.
$75 .00 Yamaha gu1tar
model No. G55A with case
SIOO .OO like new. Ca ll 992 ·
2413 after 5 p.m.
Stx Ctnc tnnat• Reds t tck.ets.

Sat ., June 11, vs St Louts.
Wtll sell a t discount. 949·
2065.
,
6ft . double duty Frigidaire
mea t case w·new com ·
pressor . 992-3044
Two m eterham radio
eq u1pment One Heathk tt
transce tver with sh&lt; tran·
smit and receive channels
Also
addit1onal
four
receive channels. Power
supply for this Included .
Also Heathkit amplifier
With power supply. One
vertical and one bea m an·
tenna for two meters.
Phone 992-3061 .
one Amana a.r con ·
ditioner. One camper to f•t
e1ght foot bed tr uck. 992
3090 .

Business Services
-4.

'2000 &amp; UP
FOR
SILVER
DOllARS
949-2801

73

vans &amp; 4 w.o.

1971 Jeep Wagoneer 4x4 .
Lock out huhs 1967 F 100
p!ckup, both tn exc. cond
614 985 4209
Motorcycles
1972 Honda 350 needs a Itt
tie work $400 00 Ca ll 985
3301 or 985 ·4140

Gheen's
Painting
&amp;
Sandblasting Co.

1979 740cc Ya maha Spec1al
w-extras, low m1leage 992
5760
1974 360 Yamaha Enduro
$450 992 ·3844

Roller , Brush and Spray
Work .
- Fully Insured
-Free Est1mates
- Interior &amp; Exterior
Work .

!974 Kawasaki 100. $300
E•c. cond 742 2747
Boa ts and
Motors for Sale

75

Farm Equipment

GOLF LESSONS
Beg1nnmg &amp; Ad•anced
"Scholars hips poss ible
f or
h i gh
sc hool
students ."
-CLUB REPAIRPlaying items : clubs,
ba gs, ba IIs, s hoes, carI s,
etc.
1. Profess1onal teaching
cert1ttcate.
2. Played professional
tourname nts in Ohto, W.
va .. Kentucky .
JOHN TEAFORD
614-985-3961

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessones

Tilt bed, l1ght duty 6'xl0'
utility trader $400 00 Call
985 3301 or 985 4140
Four ttres , l1ke new,
6.00x14-6 ply nylon $25 . 985·
4329
Auto Repair

---~-.,

1

lne rnatio na l Har11este r
Combine 64R ·6 loot cut,
Gratn tank, new rubberized
canvas, new cyltnder belts,
smooth runntng, r eady to
work. Pa ul Say re, Por
!land, Ohio Rt. 338 Great
Bend Road, Phone 843 ·4591
call a fte r 5 p m
62

This Week Only
This Coupon
Worth

SJD

Wanted 1o Buy

CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 10" on largest
end S12 p·e r ton Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Del1vered
to Ohio Pall et Co, Rt 2.
Pomeroy 992·2689 .
ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE. glass. ch ina,
anythtng. See or call Ruth
Gosney, ant,qu es. 26 N
2nd, M1ddleporf, OH 9923161.
OL 0 COINS, pocket wat
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds . Gold or
silver. Call J . A Wamsley ,
742-2331 Trea su re Chest
Coin Shop , A!he ns, OH 592
6462
GOLD ANO S I LVER
COINS OF THE WORLD .
RINGS,
JEW E LRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC . ITEM S. PAY ING
RECORD
H IG H,
HIGHEST UPTODATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BAR BER
SHOP, MIDDLEP ORT ,
OHIO~ OR CALL992 3476
63

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Ltvestock

P1gsfor Sa le . Call843 4734.
Re g iS ter ed
Polled
Hereford bull , 14 months
old. Last of our Superol
ca lves RRS Farm992·5565
Registered
Polled
Hereford Bull. 18 mo nths
old . Oscar Webe r 985 3906.

Autos for Sale
1973 Datsun, 4 speed. GOOd
mileage . $230 Call '1'12·3149
or 992 2705
1977 Chevrolet Impa la , 4
door, 350 e ng . a m tm, a . c.,
p s, p b , goOd cond $2,700
992-3854

I

19 72 Bela~r a nd 1973
Camaro. Call992 ·7869
1979 Horizon, a utomat ic ,
p.s., · p.b ., am·fm ste reo
cassette pl aye r. 9'12-2580 af ·
ter 4 p m
1971 Super Beetle, newly
rebuilt engine GOOd body
and interior Call992-5482
1971 Super Beetle, newly
rebuilt engine, good body
and interior . Call992 5482

JUNE 20, 1910 FRIDAY 7:00 P.M.
Harrisonville Elementary School, St. Rt.
143, Harrisonville.
All . proceeds go to Harrisonville P .T.O ..
for playground equipment and repairs.
T .V ., 112 bed frames. electric
broom ,
books, chest of
di-awers,
bookshelf, dishes, several basement
jacks, lamps, VW wheels and tires, tricy·
cle, child's chord organ, clothing, pony
bridle, buckets misc. bolts .-and pipe fit ·
tings, bottle capper, misc .

B&amp;W

Many Items Coming in Daily
Auctioneer :
Positive I.D.
Laurence Donohue
742-30~8

REMODELING

AI Tromm
742-2328
5-25·tfc

FREE ESTIMATES
carl Reed 667-3327
Tom Burroughs 667--6150
6·15·1 mo. pd.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSlJ•LftA'TION
Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
• 1nsuliition
• Storm Ooors
• storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph . 992-2772

BURROUGH'S

Gutter &amp;
Replacement
Windows and
Roofing

MAINTENANCE

Construction

L

SIDING, SOFFIT

HOME

Farm Buildings
Sires
"F rom 30x30"
SMALL

Discount

H. L WRITESEL

ROOFING
All types ot root work,
new or repair gutters
' and downspouts, guHer 1
cleaning and pa inting.
AI I work guaranteed .
Free Estimate•
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949 . 2842
949-216ll

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box S4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614 - 8~3 - 2591
6141mo.

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

Call (6t4l 992-9932
Pomeroy, 0 .

,

THE POOL PEOPLE
31711 Noble Summit Rd .
Middleport, Ohio
· 992-5724
Sales, service and supplies . In ground and
above ground pools.
S-l ·tfc

Home
lmpro•ements

S &amp; G Carpet Clean1ng.
Steam cleaned
Free
est 1mate .
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard 992·
6309 or 742 22 11.
Will pour concrete, la y
block and brick Ca ll 992
3406

Superior Vinyl Pr·oduct§

ALL STEEL
arm Ul'ld'lngs
StieS
"From 3h30 "

F

8

SMALL
'lity
B 'ld'
Ut1
Ul lngs
Stzes from 4x6 to 12x 4o
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3, Box S4
Ractne, Oh.
Ph. 614 -843~2.591
6 15 tfc

ea

5·29-t mo.

s ate ~oans

ll l/2% lnterest-30 Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA a. VA Automatic
Loans, No Down Pay·
ment. Federal Housing
Loans, 3% down on
$25,000; 5% down on
balance. FHA 2U Subsidy Program. FH~ 245
Gradual Payment Mort.
OpenM-W-F9 :00tol : OO
Other Times
By Appointment
Offlce992·7S44
Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore St.
Pomero ,OH.

Vinyl and Aluminum

CARPENTER
SERVICES"
- Addons and
remodling
- Roofing and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- PIUmblngand
electrical work
(Free Est1mates)
YOUNG
"2-621Sor

Will do remodel1ng,
roofing, painting, p lumb tng
and e lec t. Free Est1mates
Call Charles Sinclair, 985
4121 .

v.c.

Ill

Print
Sh
op
T -shirt and novelty
shirts for politicans, ball
tams, bus1nesses or indiv•dual s.
Shtrts $4.00 Each
" We pnnt ALMOST
anything on ALMOST
anything!"
Ph. 61,49-2358
Evenings Weekends

Siding

1

'

6

6

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
Call tor Free Sldlfl9
Estimate/ 949-2801 or
949-2860. No Sunday
ca lis.
6· 13~ 1 mo.

t"I !:;Po~m;,;;;;er~o~y~,;O;h~.:=;;99~2~-7~3~14~+======::::'::::·t::fc=J=========='
Summer Enrollment
For

Excavating
"

Water well drtlltng. Tom
LewiS
304 · 895 -3802
Seasona l dtscount on all
pumps and accessor1es

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
e V- CHISEl,
PLOW

CARPENTER'S
DANCE
STUDIO

Electncal

&amp; Retngeratton

SEWING
MACHINE
Repa•rs, service, allmak es. 992 ·2284 . The
Fabric Shop. Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. W e sharpen
Sctssors.

General Hauling
IS
WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742·2455.

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322

"YOUMGS

3406

ELWOOD
BOWER S
REPAIR sweepers,
toasters. irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to Sta te Highway
Ga rage on Route 7, 9853825

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

~=========1~::;;;::;~~===~~~~~~~~~=2
~' Custom

Roof tng, Stdtng, room ad ·
d itions, all types of general
repa1rs, 25 years ex p 992·

Floonng, cetl tng, pane ling,

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINIXMS

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4x6 to 12x4C.

l
1
J
'---------servlees

84

T.

ROOFING

ALL STEEL

LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION!

83

992-3795
4·2·1fc

Pomeroy, Oh.

-;·:':m:o·~~======~5·~·8~-~~m~o~·~::::~::::::l-~22~-~~fc:
II~~==~~~;
I
VINYL SIDING
I

doors
windows, a Iso
pa mtlnga nd
. 992-2759.
71

6 3

On any alignment
by
Randy
Carpenter,
factory
trained
frontend
alignment
specialist.

81

618 E. Maon

5·2J· l mo

~

61

1-t&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION '

949·2~16

Ten foot speed boat with a
35 hp Mercury eng 1ne W1th
trailer $750 00 Ca ll 985·
J30l or 985 4140 .
76

Business- Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls , profit and loss statements, all
federal and statP torms . •
_

Most Dates
No Sunda y Calls
6 y 1 mo

74

_ ..__..,

Tri-Counfy
Bookkeeping1
Service

STILL PAYING

1980 Datsun P1c1&lt;up w1th
topper, excelent cond1t ton,
low mileage, lots of ext ras .
Ca ll992-2015 atte r 6 p.m

77

AUCTION

Eats

for Sal e
-Trucks
-- -- -

Sl

S7

Apartment
for Rent

3 AND 4 RM furniSh ed a p
ts Phone992 ·5434

- Hous•ng
I

Farms for Rent

43

~

GOOO STARTER HOME - 3 BR , kit., LR, DR, a.
familyroom with woodburnlng stove on good size
lot, roomfor garden, well landscaped Carport a.
storage bldg. $37,000 .

: MONEY • MONEY
*First mortgeges;
second mortgeges,

I

'

I•

Assumable mortgage 91,.::
Pet. 3 bedrooms, 2 bathSI ;
lull basement , 2 ca~.
garage . Rlggscrest Manor. •
614·985·4329 .
I'

Situations Wanted

Will dO general • hOuse
cleaning, SJ .OO hour. 992·
$094 or 992-5207 after 5.

CALL US.

Ads r WIMiftl Oltttl thl" CCMIHCUtl'll tttYI Will bl cNr8fd II Hit 1 Clly

In memory, CatCI Df ntank• ana ObHvlt\1' : 1 cttttt,.,. woteii, IJ OCI
mlnlr1111nt. Ca1h In ad~;~ance.

All

Professional
Services

23

Will do Odds and ends.
Paneling, floor tile, and
ceiling tile. Call Fred
Miller 992·6338 .

ARE
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

2.21
J.7J

CASH - Loan never re pay,
free details, A. L. Lutton,
P. 0 . Bo• 766, Gallipolis,
Oh .

3861.

SERVING
Chlr..

Business
Opportunity
~-

Tn.1ck driver, timber cut·
ters. skidder operators.
Tri·State Chipping Inc. 992·

SOUTHEASTERN
- ..
. -OHIO
-· SINCE
- - --·l&amp;W,
YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO

Rates and Other Information

21

----------------~~,.

IXMNIN&amp;atll.DS
--- AGENCY INC. '.
INSUIWU

11- U~tltry

AUTOMOBILE
IN
su RANCE been can
ce ll ed?
Lost
your
operator's ltcense? Phone
9'12·2143

Beautiful large home. Low
WILL BUY Old Iran· utilities, brick ranch style,
smissions,
batteries, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
engines, or scrap metals, fireplace, full basement,
etc. Call245·9188.
family room, air con ·
dltioner, 3 car garage
Baum Addttion, Meigs
County. Call985 4169.

&amp;Rttrtterlt....
\.

131nsurance .

gold . Dental gold and gold
ear pins 675·3010.

White male fox hound, old
town area of Portland and
Racine. If found call 843·
2354

In memory of Harvey Gene
Wh itlatch who passed
away two years ago today,
June 18, 1978.
What we would give to see
your smile,
To sit and talk wtth you for
awhtle .
The blow was sudden, the
shock severe,
.
To part wtth you, we loved
so dear,
We often stt and think of
you,
The th ings you used to say
and do,
And we wonder why you
had to die,
Withou1 a c hance to say
gOOdbye .
Sadly missed by wife and
c hildr e n, SISters and
brothers .

Wanted to-Buy

9

14-R:IKfr'ICII

li

~_:_:_~-~me~~~~~:6~-~-~-J!

GOOD SUPPLY
SHRUBS
&amp;.TREES
20% OFF
POMEROY
LANDMARK

~ -

I'
I)
I•

eSERVICES

Want· Ad AdVtrllslnt
Deadlines

I

II
II

Jl-Vans &amp; 4 w o
74-Motorcyctts
71AYIO P1rts
&amp; ACCIIIOrlea
77-Auto R... lr

U-MM!It+tomn
terSatt
ll-,lrms tor Silt
M-auslntla •ullcUnts
JS- Lots&amp;AcrH ..
»--•Miattlte W1r1tec1
l7- RMihtrt

- - - - - 1'
----~ 11
I

JI--AUfOs IDf' Sata

11- Homts for Slltt

- - -- - 1

31. _ __ __
32. _ _ __ __
33. _ _ _ __

eTRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE

--~-- 1

eRENTALS
41 - HCH.IIft tor Rtnt

l-In M..,ort1 rn

In Mer.1oriam

2

In Memoriam

Plants, tomato, cucumber,
flowers, hanging baskets,
pots. Cleland Greenhouse,
Geraldine Cleland, Racine,
Ohi045771.

~ ····· ··· ·

I~

2

PHONE
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
NEW LISTING - Ex·
cellent Buy!! ! GOOd
location in Middleport.
Lovely 3 bedroom home, ,
l'h baths. liv ing and d tn·
ing rooms. Enclosed sun
porch and full base
ment. includes extra
rental property for addi
tlonhl Income. Sells for
ONLY $53,000.00.
NEW LISTING - large
solid brick home on Con
dor St . '" Pomeroy·. 3
bedrooms. dining room.
living room, kttchen.
Must see to app rec iate.
Well worth $26,500.00 .
MAINTENANCE
FREE - Lovely brick
bi level. Mohawk carpet
and hand stained wood·
work throughout. Really
a dream home! 1 Sells
for S69,000.00
SYRACUSE Nice
large J bedroom home
on corner lot . Alum1num
Stding . Seltng prtce
$28,000 00.
185 ACRES Some
min e rals and old
buildings and house .
Asking S65,000 00
ALMOST 8 ACRES On Hysell Run Rd. 2
bedroom hOme. Has 2
septic systems and 2
water taps . Asking
$21,500.00 .
En1ov your summer and
let us worry about selling your house I !
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3Df2
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·3171

Mobtle Homes
for Rent

42

1973 3 bedroom, 2 complete
ba1hs, furn ished, 8xl4 fron1
porch. 7/B acre near
Harrisonville. $14,500 992
5970 before 12 or after 5.

Shop The Sentinel Classifieds For Good Buys
Publtc Not.ce

General

3 Bedroom Home, R1ggs
Crest Manor, $325 month
985 4323 .

742-2003

Public Notice

41
Houses tor Rent
Hou se lor Rent : Loca ted on
Mam St at th Logan
Monument Co . di splay . In·
teres ted party. man or
woman , mus t be sales
on e nted to help us sel l
monu me nt s on the lot. Con
tacT Leq L. vaughan , 992·
2588.

1969 12x60, 2 bedroom
Hollypark Tra1ler . Fur
nished, a c. , washe r, metal
out-butldlng, under pin
nlng 992-2881.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Planting
of the nation's 1980 corn crop was
"virtually completed" by mid-June,
says a govenunent report.
The weekly report, issued
Tuesday. by the National Weather
Service and the Agriculture Department, said corn plants ranged in
height from 10 mches in Wisconsin to
20inches in Illinois by June 15.
That was " up to 9 inches more"
than the average height of corn plants at this time a year ago, the report
said. The USDA's first production
estimate of the 1980 corn crop will be
- ·
issued on July II.

- HoUSehold GOodS ·------- - ---

32

L£0
'MORRIS

IS NOW UNDERWAY
The Last Day To Sign
Up Is July 14th
"BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAZZ"
For More Information
CALL 949-2710
-6-18·1 mo.

Rutland, 0.
Ph. 742-2.455
5· 21 · 1 mo

1---....--------t-------....,.-----------

Upholstery
87
A&amp;H Upholsten~g " Now
Re Upholstertng
Car
Seats". Ph 992 3752 or 992
3743

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

CARPET SHOP
"Drive A Liffle Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKEO
CANDY STR I PEO .
CARPET
2 bfack pi,dded
SQ . Yd :

$499

VINYL

FLOOR

COVERINGS
Sq.

Yd.$499

JUNE CARPET SALE
ALL CARPET AT DISCOUNT PR iCES
Any re Jar carpet iobl installed with free pad .
Nice Sele~tion of Cerpet
,Linoleum Remnants at Bi

emnan s an
Discounts. '

RUnAND FURNITURE
Main St.

742-221 1&gt;'

FREEl J f

FREEl II
50" mower when you
buy a riding tractor.

,

30" mower when
you buY a
walking mower.

"Manning Roush-Owner"

GRAVELY TRACIOR SAl E~

�12- The Daily Sentinel, M1ddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 18, 1980
'

WASHINGTON ( AP ) As
Agriwlture Secretary Bob Bergland
sees 1t, Canada IS " the critical link"
to the survival of the partial U.S.
embargo of gram sales to the Sov iet
Union.
If the Canadian government caves
m to pressure and steps up gram
sales to the Soviet Umon, the entire
embargo w11l be in jeopardy,
Bergland said Tuesday.
President Carter is expected to
discuss the gram embargo w1th
Canadian Pri1Jie MinLSter Pierre
Trudeau and others at an economic
summit meeting in Vemce next Sunday and Monday, Bergland said.
Le~ders of France, Germany,
Great Britain, Japan and Italy also
will attend the conference.
Bergland said the new Trudeau
government has been put under Increasing pressure from Canadian
grain farmers to abandon 1ts
previous commitment to support the
U.S. embargo.
"If the Canadians can hold the hne
politically and say they will stay
w1th the Umted States, I'm convinced the rest of the world w1ll stay
hitched," he sa1d m an mterv1ew
with a group of reporters.
" But if the Canadians dec1de for
the1r reasons that the~ have to p1ck

Canada .
critical

'link'
-

Support for continuing the embargo, inctutlmg U1c monitoring of
transshipments of U.S. grain, also
has been provided by Common
Market leaders, Bergland said.
·'If Canada ·kicks over the traces
and decides to pick up the slack (in
supplying grain to the Soviets),
that'll put heavy pressure on the
Australians. It'll put heavy pressure
on us, matter of fact ."
The pledges of support being
sought by the United States affect
the fifth year of a U.S.-8oviet Union
grain agreement, which will begin
on Oct. I.
Under it, the United States agreed
to ·supply the Soviets with at least 8
nullion metric tons of corn and
wheat annually, and more than that
if 11 was mutually agreeable.
Last fall, the Soviet Union was
given permission to buy up to 25
million metric tons of grain in the
1979-M agreement year, and the
Soviets were expected to take the
full amount to help make up for a
short 1979 harvest.
Carter canceled deliveries of 1'1
milliOn metric tons, but honored the
basiC agreement enabling Russia to
buy 8 ffiiUion. Further, the administration liBYS it will allow the
sale of 8 million metric tons m the

up as much of the slack as they can
s hip (to the Soviet Union), ... that
heightens the pressure on the
Australians and that heightens the
pressure on us and e verybody else."
Carter imposed the partial embargo on gram sought by the Soviet
Umon on Jan. 4 hi retaliation for 1ts
occupation of Mghanistan. Canada ,
Australia and the European Common Market countries pledged not to
exceed their normal sales of grain to
the Soviets.
Argentma, the only other major
world grain exporting country, did
not agree to the embargo and has
been supplying the Soviet Union with
some gram needed to make up the
s hortfall created by the U.S. act10n.
Argentina was asked agam recently at a meeting in Brussels to
cooperate w1th the embargo and indicated it would "take 11 under advisement ," Bergland said.
Bergland said he met with
Australian officials here last week
and asked them to continue their
policy of restraining sales to the
Soviets.
The Australians provided
qualified support for contmumg the
embargo " to the extent they can,"
Bergland said.

final year of the pact, beginnmg Oct.
I.
So far, however, Moscow has not
indicated it wants to buy any gram
at all from the United States next
year, Bergland said.
As he has previously, Bergland
said there LS no plan by the adnunistration to remove the• curbs
and enable the Soviets to buy grain
in excess of the 8 million metric tons
until " the president finds they 're no
longer a threat to our security."

1

WASHINGTON (AP)- A team rl.
visitors from China will be here next
month, but Agriculture Secretary
Bob Bergland says he has no evidence that a bilateral pact for Importing
U.S. grain will be on the agenda.
Rwnors have circulated that
China may want to talk ·a bout the
possibility of having a formal
agreement under which it would buy
U.S. grain over the next few years.
" We don't have any official
request from the Chinese on this
matter," Bergland said Tuesday.
But he acknowledged that Chinese
offiCials during Bergland's visit to
China in 1978 expressed an interest
in the workings of such agreements,
particularly one between the United
States and the Soviet Union.

13-The Daily Sentinel, Middle port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedne,sda1y, June !8, 1980

Bergland also said he was ~ware
of " trade reports" and other information that suggested China may
want to talk about a silrular
agreement with the Uruted States.
A team headed by Huo Shilian,
China' s l)linister of agriculture and
deputy to the NatiOnal People's
Congress, will visit the Uruted States
July !&gt;-22, Bergland said.
The Chinese will be in Washington
July 7-8 for meetings with U.S. officials and then vLSit farms a nd other
agricultural operations in Georgia,
Illinois, Misso\ll'i, Colorado and
California.

Mobile Homes
for Sale
1973 Falrpotnt, 14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron . 14&gt;&lt;65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleefwood, 14• 65 J
bdr ., ba1h 1f2
1971 Shakespear, 14 x65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 FleefwOOd 12• 63, 2
Bdr.
B a. S MOB ILE HOME
SALES, PT . PL EASANT ,
wv. 304-675·4424.

Mobile Homes
lor Sale
Lo1t a nd or Tra •le r in Mtd
dle port . 647 S 2nd 77 3-9506.
Real Estote

MIDDLEPORT - N1ce
tnside, newly remodel ·
ed, 3 bedrooms, bath,
util tty room, equtpped
kitchen , and on corner
lot. As k1ng $24,500
POMEROY
3
bedroom home 10 subdiviSIOn w1fh plenty of
playmates for your
children
Has bath ,
natural gas furnac e, full
basement, and birch kit
chen . $18,500.
REPAIRABLE 3
bedroom frame home
with Syracuse wa ter.
natural gas, and Ohio
· Power. 3 level lots Only
$5 ,500.
BARGAIN - ·5 rooms,
bath , natural gas, ctty
water , Ohto Power,
chimney for woodburner on leiJel lot. Only
$12,000
•
RUTLAND - H1gh a.
DRY 6 room frame
home, bath, natural gas,
city water, a nd .4 large
woOded lots on Rt 124 .
Need $25.500
3 IN 1 SALE - Has
large 5 bedroom home
w1th centra l heat, c ity
water, and Ohio Power.
Ntce 3 car garage with
apartment over. Also 2
room business building
11/.. acres. Just$28,000.
PLAN
NOW
FOR
YOUR NEXT TEN
YRS . WHILE IN·
TEREST RATES ARE
LOW.

1973 Starcraft' travel
trailer .
Fu ll y
self ·
contained with extras 992
5434,992-3129 or 9'12 5914 .

Real Estate r General

HOBSTffiER
REALTY

NOTICETO
BIDDERS
REPAI'}g~ ROOFS
MIDDLEPORT
ELEMENT ARY
HARRISONVILLE.
ELEMENTARY

Public Notice

School,
Harnsonv111e
Elementary Gy mnaSIUm,
and Sa lisbury Elementary
Gymnasium. Bidders Will
be b idding on the installation of the Trocal or
built-up roof ing system . All
roofs tobeb1d separatel y.
De tailed specifications
and instructions to bidders

&lt;;l\:"1~~t~~r

ELEMENTARY
ma y be obtai nec:t at the Of·
GYMNAS
IN IUM
fice of the Treasurer, M td
MEIGS LOCAL
dleport, OhiO.
SCHOOL DISTRICT
A cert1f1 ed check payable
Sealed proposals will be to the Treasurer of !he
recei ved by the Board 0f above b~a rd of ed_u catton
Education of the Mei
or a sattsfactory . b•d bond
Local School District ~ execu ted by the b 1dd e~ and
Middleport Ohio at fh the surEf'ty compan y, tn an
Treasurer •$ Office unt~ amount equ ¥~ 1 to ftve per
12 :00 Noon on July 3 1980 ce ntott~ebld s ha!Jbesu b
and at that lime ope'n d m1tted w1th each b1d .
,
and read bv th T
e
Satd board of educat1on
t_mmeaiately e th~~:;f{e~r , reserves t~e r i~h t to watve
tabulated .lnd c1 repo f tnformal tt tes, o accept or
thereof ·made by
re1ect any and all, or parts
Treasurer to said Board ~ of any and alf bids.
.
Its ne•t meeting
a
No b1ds mar. be w.tthDescription
of
tm - drawn for at east th1rty
provement located at M id · ('30) days afte_r the
dleport Element
scheduled closi ng ttme tor
School,
HansonvTI~~ rece•ptofbtds.
Elementary Gymnasium
· and Saltsburu Elementar ~ Board of Education
G
·
'
, of Meigs Local
. ymnastum . The Roofing School Dis trict
: Conln!tot shall b1d as a
Prime contractor. ThtS 10 J ane Wa9ner , Treasu rer
eludes all labor, materials South Th 1rd Aven ue
equipment, and serviceS Mtddle port, OhtO
requ~red to complete th 1s 45760
Section which includes new (6) 11 , 18,25 (7) 2. .rc
replacement of roots on
M1ddleport Elementary

rri

-

.

.

..,--- .--------~-----------,

l

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash fot

:r
·I

Classlfleds and
Savelll

II
I·
1

Write your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon, Cancel your ad bY phone when you get
results. Mooey not refundable .

I

I

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
CATHERINE
K
SCHNEIDER ,
.
Plaintiff,
vs.
THOMAS E. SCHNEIDER,
Defendant.
Case No. 17,510
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
Thomas E . Schneider
whose
re stde n ce
is
unknown, but whose last
known address was P . o.
Bo~ 134, TuJJpers Plains,
Ohto 45783, wtrl take notice
That on the 6th day of June
1980, that Catherine K:
Schnetder, Plamt1ft, filed
her Complaint against htm
rn the Meigs County Com-.
mon Pleas Court, Meigs
County, Ohio, Case No.
17,510 praying for divorce
upon the grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme crue lty, tor custody
of the minor child of the
parties. for alimonv and
Support, and will further
taKe notice that this cause
can be heard at anyttme
following fwenty eight days
from the date of the last
publication of this notice
and that
the last
publication wtll be made on
the 16th day of July, 1980.
Larry E. ;:,pencer,
Clerk of Court
Me igs County, Ohio
(6) 11 , 18, 25,

( 7)

2, 9, 16, 6tc

1
~

!
I

mission of Ohio, 180 E.

Broad St., Columbus, Oh ro
43215.
The Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio
By : David M. Polk,
Secretary
(6) n, 11, 2s, 3tc

WANT AD INFORMATION

Public Notice
Comptroller of
the Currency
Treasury Department
of the
United States
Washington, D. C.
WHEREAS satisfactory
evidence has been presen·
ted to the Comptroller of
the Currency that "BANK
ONE OF POMEROY ,
N.A. " located in Pomeroy ,
State of Ohio, has complied
with all provisions of the
statutes of the United
States reQutrecl to be comPlied with before being
authorized to commence
the business of banking as
a National Bankin g
Association.
NOW, THEREFORE, I
hereby certify that the
above named association 1s
authorized to commence
the business of bank1ng as
a National Bank1ng
ASSOCiation.
IN
TESTIMON Y
WHEREOF , witness my
si~nature and seal of office
th,s30th day of May, 1980.
John·G. Hetmann
comptroller of the
currency
Charter Number 16859
(6) 11, 18, 25 (7) 2, 9, 16, 23.
JO (8 ) 6, 9tc
•

WTStoSHAVE
The average man's
beard has 13,000 w~ers
- 390 per square inch on
his cheeks and 580 per
square inch on his chin.

SUNNY YUMA

Yuma, Ariz.,

receives
more than 4,000 hours of
sunshine a rear, twice 88
, much as Seattle, Wash.

PHONE 992-2156

I•1
1
1

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Case No. 80·202-TP·PEX
Notice IS hereby given
that Mr . Gary Basham ,
43230 Elk Run Road,
Cool•ille, Ohio, 45723, and
other subscribers of the
Shade
Exchange of
General Telephone Com pany of Ohio has filed a
compla int with the Com ·
mission requesting the
establishment of nonopllonal. fwo way ••tended
area telephone service between the Shade E•change
and the Pomeroy Ex c hang e of
General
Telephone
The Com ·
miss1on has scheduled this
matter for public hearing
on Thursday, July 10, 1980,
at 10 .00 A M . at the Lodi
Grange Hall, Route 33,
Shade, Ohio 45776 . At this
hearing all part1es Of Interest will be afforded an
opportun1ty to present
evidence ma te rial to the
specific Issues relevant tn
th1s proceeding. Further
information regard ing this
matter may be obtained by
address tng an inquiry to
the Public Utilities Com·

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

1:

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

I

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

II
I

Addreu

Phone

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

I- Card of Thanlls

42-Mo..llt "'"'"

J-Ji rlntvncements

for rllent

4-0 i'INWiy

44-Aputmtnt for • tftt

1-HippyAch
6----L.Oit ''"' "CH.Ind
7- Yinl hit
t-Publlc Slit

4J-.f:Rooms

oi6-SPKtforllttnt
47-Wenttcllo Rettt

41-Equl,.,tnl for Rent

&amp; AvctiCMt

t-WantedtoBur _

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sl-HCNHhokl Goods
52-CI, TV, •ldloiQulpm.nt
Sl-Ant6qUII
M-MIIC. Mlf'CINindlll
U- IUUcllntiYppllfl

•'- ""' Weniecl
12-Sit"lttd WlnttG

ll-lnsurance
14-B"IIMII Trllfl!."l
11-SchOolllnstrucUon
ItRadio, TV
I Cl rllep~lr

M-Pttt. for lilt

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

11-WentH To Do

These cash rates
Include discount

" - '"'" •lf'lpment
42-Wanted to ••Y
n-Trvclts for Slit

e FINANCIAL
n- euslnns

il-Liwut.ck
....._HiyiGreln
U - leed6 Ftrtlllllr

Opportunity

1 &gt;wanted

(}ForSale

22-MoMy to L..n

17.
.

I &gt; Announcement
1 &gt; For Rent

2l-ProfHikH\II

Servicu

lB.
19.
20.
21 . _ _ _ _ __ I, .

22. - - -- - - 1
23. - - - - - 1
24.
:25.
26.
27.
211.
29.

30.

. I!

- - - - - 1,
I
----- ~·

' 34. _ _ __

_

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

Mllll This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
•
Box 729 ·

( ..

4P .M DillY
12 Noon lat\lrciiY
torMondly

1:

' 1:
I'
I•

11- Homtlmprtnmttttt
12- Piuen~"' I RXCI'IItinl
ll-R~CI'If'•tlnl

In lovtng memory of Ralph
Triplett k illed in Vietnam
June 18, 1970 and his father ,
Morgan Triplett, who died
June 9, 1969 We will
always keep you in our
memories Mary Triplett,
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Bass
and David, Phil and Barb
Bearhs .
3

Announcements

Main St.
Pomeroy 992-2181

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport
8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Servfce. Phone
949 2487 or 949-2000. raci ne,
Oh1o, Crltt Bradford.

Plano Tuning · Lane
Dan1els 742·2951. Tuning
and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone
992 2082
Regatta- FROG
BA·LL .
Saturday, June 28, 9·1.
Royal Oak LOdge . Joe
Lavinger
and
1he
Tunettmers .
Tickets
l\Vai lable at : Simons Pick·
a· Pair, 992·3830; Chamber
Office, 992·5005, New York
Clothing House, 992·2049.
The Meigs County Fish and
Game Club will ha•e Its
Annual Children ' s Fishing
Derby Saturday, June 21st
from 8 a.m til 2 p.m. at
Shade Valley Club House
and lake. Age to fish from 1
to 16 ooe pole perchild.
Bring own bait. Prizes for
boys and girl and free
refreshments. There will
be a membership chicken
barbecue at 6:30 p m. Any
questiOns call RoyHowell
at9'12·5421.

In remembrance of Anita
!B uckley ) Balls onher 23rd
birthday, J une 18.
1 Her ltfe tS a beauttful
me mory
Her absence a silent grief .
She sleeps in God ' s
Beautiful garden ,
In the sunshine of perfect
peace .
Missed by Mom. Dad,
sister, brothers, Nanny and
Dad Dad. Husband ,
Tomahd son Christopher.

6

Iron and brass beds. old
·turn•ture, desks, gold
rings , jewelry, silver
dollars, sterling, etc., wOOd
ice boxes, antiques , etc.
Complete
households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OHl or call 991·
7760.
'10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,

Gold, silver or foreign
coins or any gold or silver
items. AntiQue furniture,
glass or china, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No item too large or too
small . Check prices before
selling . r.lso do appraising.
Osby (Ossie) Marlin. 992·
6370.

15-0tntrll HIUIIItf
14-M.H. Rtp~ ir

Lost and Found

11

Help Wanted

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 9922156or992 2157 .

7
Yard Sale
Barn Sale: George E . King
farm flve·e ighth mile off .
Rt. 7. Baby clothes, adult
clothes, lots of misc. 1956
Case tractor. Wed. though
Sat. 9-9, 992·3737.

VETERANS! If you can
Moving Sale : E•erythlng
goes. June 19 and 21 from . spare 39 days a year, It
9:30 to 3:00 Two miles past could be worth over $1,-400
to you. Plus free tuition
fairgrounds. Follow signs
assistance to any west
onold33.
VIrginia college or ac·
· credited business or trade
House and Yard Sale . 26 school. Continue your
Railroad Street, Midleport
retirement benefits.Help
(down by the Marina) . your community In times of
Clothing, Avon dolls , emergency. Th National
glassware,
what-nots,
Guard needsyour e)( some furniture, rings, etc. perlence. Good pay, good
Follow the signs, rain or
benefi1s. For details call
shine.
SFC. Yoho304·675·3950.
123 Park Drl•e, Point
Pleasant,
Wednesday,
Thursday, Fiday and Sat.
from 8·3. Furniture, large
clothing, maternity, baby
clothes, formals.

....

ISWorctaorunHr

2claya
:ldiYl
Ulyt

l!lth'wonl ovtrthl minimum II

,.,.

,.
........

C11h

12

1.25

'·"

FOR

'·"
wonts It 4 ctfttl ,.rword per.,..,,

l lj

Mobile Home Mitt IIMI Yitrd .. ,.. .,,accepted OfiiY wttfl cailt with
Drd.,.. 1'1 c"t dYr .. for Hs cerrylrll ••• Hu1nbH" In Cart ol The

Will mow lawns and will do
wall papring . 992·3760.

YOUK INSURANCE NEED9.

Wll

-- ·--- --

do baby sitting In my
hoine. 773-5254.

992-2342 .

Will do odd and endS Jobs,
sucp as llgllt hauling, pain·
ting,. tearing down houses
and bulldlnvs. ctearint
lots, and mowing lawns.
Have tools and tr&amp;nsportatlon. Cati74N07~ .

. ildt'INING-C:HII.bS-AGENC'
. . I. INC.

•.1
\

.

- MIDOI.EPORT, uniO .

IMfiMI.
I

'

Deluxe Ford fiberglass top·
per to fit eight foot bed .
Call992·7201. ·
J and F Backhoe Service ~
Licensed and bonded. Septic 1ank installation. Water
and gas lines. Excavating
work and transit layou t.
Call992-7201.
Ditch diggmg serv1ce. Cal)
773· 5839 or 773·5788
Ditch digging servi ce. Ca ll :
773·5839 or 773·5788 .

31

Homes for Sale

NEW 3 or 4 Bedroom home,
2111 baths, rec room,
fireplace ,
b;tsement ,
garage. At Morn~ng Star
Hts. , Lee Construction, 992·
34Sior992·5455.

8 Pet . Ass umption ,
Beautifu l iarge brick ranch
style, low utiltties, . J
bedrooms, 21h
baths,
ftreplace, full basement,
family room, air con·
dltloner, 3 car garage.
Baum Addition, Meigs Co
985·4169.

8 Room House oo ap· .
pro•lmately 2 acres. St. Rt .
124. Lots of exlras. 992-7255.
Pomeroy, 3 nice large lots.
River frontage , 2 story, 7
rooms and bath. firepla ce,
toll basement . Priced in
the S20's. Call after 6, 992·
7284.
Assumable Mortgage
9'1&gt;% . 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, ·
full basement, 2 car
garage. Rlggscrest Manor
614-985·4329.
2 story, 5 rooms, and bathr:
Large lot. In Syracuse 992~...,
3981
•••
•

~

,.

--- - ----··

rrt*f\*\*\**
ll-

-

!i

and
refinen~~
eses. Call Com
lete
Mortgag
ervlces
1
. Gelllpolls, Ohio
446-1517 for mor11
,~nformatlon end
. our eppol.tJ.tiMIItL .

i

•1

I

****-*~**** ••
L

Real E•tate

General

.DILLON
REAL ESTATE
NEW LISTING- J. BR
'. home on 2112 acres of
'ahd . 3 miles below Mid·
~leport off Rt 7. Also
tr.:-tler hookup for addi
tiof .•;~l income.
NEW LISTING-I floor
plan. 3 or 4 bedroom
home, nice bullt·ln kit·
chen with range and
-oven on Rt. 7 In
1 Pomeroy, Oh .
2 BEDROOM COTTAGE - SOLD , just off
Rou1e 7.
: BUSINESS -~UILDING
In
downtown
Rutland, 0 ., approx. 10
years old . Use as
business· or convert to
living quarters. See to
appreciate.
NEW LISTING - 3 BR
cottage with 2 acres of
quiet countfyside . 5
minutes from M1d · 1
dleport, o
3 BEDROOM HOME Carpeted and paneled;
on Vine Street in.
Racine, very clern,
ready to move 1nto. Nice
level lot. Will also con·
slder renting.
1 ACRE IN MIDDLE-,
PORT - 4 room cot·
tage, trailer hookup,
reduced to $8,000.
. fAKING LISTINGS I ••
Hobart omon. Broker I·
•
Fay Manley
Branch Mgr.
Pho"P. 90~-,&lt;9R
Real Estate-General

-.

Two Bedroom Mob :le
Home. Adults only . 992
3324
2 Bedroom Mobtle Home,
furnished kitchen, elderly
couple preferred . Depos1t
required . No pets . 992·2749

Mobile Home, utilities
paid , 1 kid accepted . No
pets, no drunks Sleeping
room for rent 50 acres of
pasture. John Sheets, 3'12
mi les South Middleport,
Rt 7.

73 Ac re farm w·6 room

house . Near
423-7663 '

44

Reedsville .

RENTER ' S as!ffstance for
Senter Ctttzens in Village
Manor apts . Call992 ·7787.

apartment 992 5621.

·

bedroom furnished
apartment. 992·5434, 992 ·
3129 or992 5914.
Two

H{Jadc;uarters

46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots . Ca;l
992 7479 .

1

NEW LISTING 5
room block house with
part basement and
situated on 1 1/ 3 acre
Does need some repair.
$7,000 00
SPLIT LEVEL RANCH
- This 3 bedroom home
also has a den , 2 baths,
dining
room, cozy
ftre place and ts qual ity
bu ilt throughout. 5 acres
of ni ce la ying, cleared
land. $58,700.00
BUSINESS Mid ·
dleport Lunc h Room All equipment, licenses,
and inventory. Quick
Sale Price $11,000.00 .
WHAT A PRESENT
FOR FATHER - New
carpeti ng, new baths,
nice front
porch ,
workshop in basement
ts just a few of the
features of thts 7 room
house Must see to a p
preciate . $38,000.00 .
SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- l'h story, 2·.4 bedroom
home w•th a full base·
ment, that has been
re model ed la tely Nice
101. $25,000 .00.
ALL CLEAR EO - and
is fairly level •with at
least 4 building si tes
Approx 10 Acres. Will
Subdi•ide $11.500.00.
OLD ST. RT . 33 - 3
acres and a 1 story, 5
room home tha t needs
some repairs Reduced
to $6,000.00.
LAND CONTRACT This 11f2 story home has
3 lots, alum . sid ing, full
base ment, 5 roo ms, and
is spotless. Call for
more
informa tion .
$25.000.00.
DON'T SAY LATER, " I
COULD
HAVE
BOUGHT IT"; OWN IT
NOWI DON'T WAITI
CALL OR COME IN TO·
DAY .
REALTOR
Henrv E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Associates
Jean Trussell, 949-2660
Dottie &amp; Roger Turner
742-2474
Office Phone 992-2259
Real Estate- General

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
·
.
a.

NEW LISTING - Overlooking Ohio River Kaiser ,
Alum. Plant, 3 lg. BR 's, plenty of closets, full basement a. family room. On 3 beautiful acres. Asking
$65,000.
TRAILER - 2 BR , on nice lot. small outbuildings
for storage, on Quiet street $10,500.
COULD BE YOUR DREAM HOME "- 2 story with
dble. garage, home mcludes 3 BR 's with large bath
up and 'h bath on ma in floor . Many extra nice
features in Quiet area . Asking S57,500.

LOTS - Bordering "omeroy . 1 to 75 acres .
POMEROY - 3 B~ home, city water, vinyl siding ·
on fit . 33. S14,90D.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Over 100 acres,
could be housing developmenl - gas already drill ed, on property water lines close. All mineral rights,
go with property. Also Timber ready to be cut. Call'
for more Information .

WAftT TO SELL? .- . GIVE.

A CALL

US
-Call Jimmy Deem, ASSOCI Itt 9~! - ZHI
or Nancy Jaspers, Auoclate 949-2654

72

F lve P•ece Victon an Liv 1ng
room su1te . E mpirf! chest
M• sc a nt tques Call 992·
5933

fr uck tor Sale .. 8 Model
Mack trac tor Excelle nt
condtti on Cal l 99 2 7354 af
ter 7

S.! __ ~~s_! ~ .!_a_!e_ _

197 4 Da ts un p1ck up, ra di o,
ta pe dec k, some rust W1tl
throw •n a used topper
$1700 00 Ca ll 992 3710 aft e r
5 or 9'12-3662 da ys

POOOLE G ROOM ING
Judy Ta ylor 614 367,-722()
HILLCREST KENNEL S
Baard1ng , all breeds Clean
tndoor outdoor la ~ tltt •es .
Also AKC
re giste re d
Dober mans. 614 446·7795 .
HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a homeless pet.
Heal thy , shots, ,wormed
DonatiOns requtred. 992
6260, noon 7 p m , except
Tuesday, eme rgency call s
only
AKC Registered Cocker
Spaniel, black ma le chamPIOn bloodline 843 2684
Cock·a Poo pupp1es. Male
and female . Black, blac k
and wh1te. 843-2684
1'12 yr. old male red Dober·

man with papers $100. 773
9506

Put a cold nose 1n your
future . Assorted kt1te ns
and cats. dogs and puppies
Shots, wormed To see
these beautiful dogs wil l
make you want to grab
oneup and take it home . All
varieties Humane Society ,
992·6260.
MUSICal
Instruments

We are picking up severa l
repossessed and trade·tn
pianos and organs 1n you r
area. Pr tces from $250 a nd
up. Call credtt ma nager
today . 304·485 2170

1 bedroom. furnished apar
tmen1. $125 month, uti lit1es
not included. 992-2288
3 rooms and bath Upstai rs

Trai le r Lots for re nt tn
Great Bend area new
bridge site and acros from
Portland Grade Sc hool. $50
and $60 per month I 304·
273 3623 , 1-614-843 -2353

Merenandlse
S3
Antiques
ATTENTION :
l iM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Woll
pay cash or certtfled check
for antiques a nd collec·
flbles or e nt tre estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
co1n collections. Cal l 614 767 3167 or 557 ·3411.
54

Misc. Merchanise

MAY 23 to June 30, 30% off
gree nware sale Bring a
con tainer . 9 a. m to 9 p. m.
Drehel 's Ceram1cs. 59 N.
Second Ave , Middleport ,
'1!12 2751.
Deco rated cakes tor all oc·
casions. Character ca kes
and sheet cakes. Call 992·
6342 or 992·2583
Tram 0201 CB. 949 2010.
Goldtone
Whirlpool
automatic washer and
dryer. One year old good
conditton. $300.00. Leblanc
cl ai ri net, gOOd condition.
$75 .00 Yamaha gu1tar
model No. G55A with case
SIOO .OO like new. Ca ll 992 ·
2413 after 5 p.m.
Stx Ctnc tnnat• Reds t tck.ets.

Sat ., June 11, vs St Louts.
Wtll sell a t discount. 949·
2065.
,
6ft . double duty Frigidaire
mea t case w·new com ·
pressor . 992-3044
Two m eterham radio
eq u1pment One Heathk tt
transce tver with sh&lt; tran·
smit and receive channels
Also
addit1onal
four
receive channels. Power
supply for this Included .
Also Heathkit amplifier
With power supply. One
vertical and one bea m an·
tenna for two meters.
Phone 992-3061 .
one Amana a.r con ·
ditioner. One camper to f•t
e1ght foot bed tr uck. 992
3090 .

Business Services
-4.

'2000 &amp; UP
FOR
SILVER
DOllARS
949-2801

73

vans &amp; 4 w.o.

1971 Jeep Wagoneer 4x4 .
Lock out huhs 1967 F 100
p!ckup, both tn exc. cond
614 985 4209
Motorcycles
1972 Honda 350 needs a Itt
tie work $400 00 Ca ll 985
3301 or 985 ·4140

Gheen's
Painting
&amp;
Sandblasting Co.

1979 740cc Ya maha Spec1al
w-extras, low m1leage 992
5760
1974 360 Yamaha Enduro
$450 992 ·3844

Roller , Brush and Spray
Work .
- Fully Insured
-Free Est1mates
- Interior &amp; Exterior
Work .

!974 Kawasaki 100. $300
E•c. cond 742 2747
Boa ts and
Motors for Sale

75

Farm Equipment

GOLF LESSONS
Beg1nnmg &amp; Ad•anced
"Scholars hips poss ible
f or
h i gh
sc hool
students ."
-CLUB REPAIRPlaying items : clubs,
ba gs, ba IIs, s hoes, carI s,
etc.
1. Profess1onal teaching
cert1ttcate.
2. Played professional
tourname nts in Ohto, W.
va .. Kentucky .
JOHN TEAFORD
614-985-3961

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessones

Tilt bed, l1ght duty 6'xl0'
utility trader $400 00 Call
985 3301 or 985 4140
Four ttres , l1ke new,
6.00x14-6 ply nylon $25 . 985·
4329
Auto Repair

---~-.,

1

lne rnatio na l Har11este r
Combine 64R ·6 loot cut,
Gratn tank, new rubberized
canvas, new cyltnder belts,
smooth runntng, r eady to
work. Pa ul Say re, Por
!land, Ohio Rt. 338 Great
Bend Road, Phone 843 ·4591
call a fte r 5 p m
62

This Week Only
This Coupon
Worth

SJD

Wanted 1o Buy

CHIP WOOD Poles max
dtameter 10" on largest
end S12 p·e r ton Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Del1vered
to Ohio Pall et Co, Rt 2.
Pomeroy 992·2689 .
ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE. glass. ch ina,
anythtng. See or call Ruth
Gosney, ant,qu es. 26 N
2nd, M1ddleporf, OH 9923161.
OL 0 COINS, pocket wat
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds . Gold or
silver. Call J . A Wamsley ,
742-2331 Trea su re Chest
Coin Shop , A!he ns, OH 592
6462
GOLD ANO S I LVER
COINS OF THE WORLD .
RINGS,
JEW E LRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC . ITEM S. PAY ING
RECORD
H IG H,
HIGHEST UPTODATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BAR BER
SHOP, MIDDLEP ORT ,
OHIO~ OR CALL992 3476
63

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Ltvestock

P1gsfor Sa le . Call843 4734.
Re g iS ter ed
Polled
Hereford bull , 14 months
old. Last of our Superol
ca lves RRS Farm992·5565
Registered
Polled
Hereford Bull. 18 mo nths
old . Oscar Webe r 985 3906.

Autos for Sale
1973 Datsun, 4 speed. GOOd
mileage . $230 Call '1'12·3149
or 992 2705
1977 Chevrolet Impa la , 4
door, 350 e ng . a m tm, a . c.,
p s, p b , goOd cond $2,700
992-3854

I

19 72 Bela~r a nd 1973
Camaro. Call992 ·7869
1979 Horizon, a utomat ic ,
p.s., · p.b ., am·fm ste reo
cassette pl aye r. 9'12-2580 af ·
ter 4 p m
1971 Super Beetle, newly
rebuilt engine GOOd body
and interior Call992-5482
1971 Super Beetle, newly
rebuilt engine, good body
and interior . Call992 5482

JUNE 20, 1910 FRIDAY 7:00 P.M.
Harrisonville Elementary School, St. Rt.
143, Harrisonville.
All . proceeds go to Harrisonville P .T.O ..
for playground equipment and repairs.
T .V ., 112 bed frames. electric
broom ,
books, chest of
di-awers,
bookshelf, dishes, several basement
jacks, lamps, VW wheels and tires, tricy·
cle, child's chord organ, clothing, pony
bridle, buckets misc. bolts .-and pipe fit ·
tings, bottle capper, misc .

B&amp;W

Many Items Coming in Daily
Auctioneer :
Positive I.D.
Laurence Donohue
742-30~8

REMODELING

AI Tromm
742-2328
5-25·tfc

FREE ESTIMATES
carl Reed 667-3327
Tom Burroughs 667--6150
6·15·1 mo. pd.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSlJ•LftA'TION
Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
• 1nsuliition
• Storm Ooors
• storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph . 992-2772

BURROUGH'S

Gutter &amp;
Replacement
Windows and
Roofing

MAINTENANCE

Construction

L

SIDING, SOFFIT

HOME

Farm Buildings
Sires
"F rom 30x30"
SMALL

Discount

H. L WRITESEL

ROOFING
All types ot root work,
new or repair gutters
' and downspouts, guHer 1
cleaning and pa inting.
AI I work guaranteed .
Free Estimate•
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949 . 2842
949-216ll

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box S4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614 - 8~3 - 2591
6141mo.

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

Call (6t4l 992-9932
Pomeroy, 0 .

,

THE POOL PEOPLE
31711 Noble Summit Rd .
Middleport, Ohio
· 992-5724
Sales, service and supplies . In ground and
above ground pools.
S-l ·tfc

Home
lmpro•ements

S &amp; G Carpet Clean1ng.
Steam cleaned
Free
est 1mate .
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard 992·
6309 or 742 22 11.
Will pour concrete, la y
block and brick Ca ll 992
3406

Superior Vinyl Pr·oduct§

ALL STEEL
arm Ul'ld'lngs
StieS
"From 3h30 "

F

8

SMALL
'lity
B 'ld'
Ut1
Ul lngs
Stzes from 4x6 to 12x 4o
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3, Box S4
Ractne, Oh.
Ph. 614 -843~2.591
6 15 tfc

ea

5·29-t mo.

s ate ~oans

ll l/2% lnterest-30 Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA a. VA Automatic
Loans, No Down Pay·
ment. Federal Housing
Loans, 3% down on
$25,000; 5% down on
balance. FHA 2U Subsidy Program. FH~ 245
Gradual Payment Mort.
OpenM-W-F9 :00tol : OO
Other Times
By Appointment
Offlce992·7S44
Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore St.
Pomero ,OH.

Vinyl and Aluminum

CARPENTER
SERVICES"
- Addons and
remodling
- Roofing and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- PIUmblngand
electrical work
(Free Est1mates)
YOUNG
"2-621Sor

Will do remodel1ng,
roofing, painting, p lumb tng
and e lec t. Free Est1mates
Call Charles Sinclair, 985
4121 .

v.c.

Ill

Print
Sh
op
T -shirt and novelty
shirts for politicans, ball
tams, bus1nesses or indiv•dual s.
Shtrts $4.00 Each
" We pnnt ALMOST
anything on ALMOST
anything!"
Ph. 61,49-2358
Evenings Weekends

Siding

1

'

6

6

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
Call tor Free Sldlfl9
Estimate/ 949-2801 or
949-2860. No Sunday
ca lis.
6· 13~ 1 mo.

t"I !:;Po~m;,;;;;er~o~y~,;O;h~.:=;;99~2~-7~3~14~+======::::'::::·t::fc=J=========='
Summer Enrollment
For

Excavating
"

Water well drtlltng. Tom
LewiS
304 · 895 -3802
Seasona l dtscount on all
pumps and accessor1es

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
e V- CHISEl,
PLOW

CARPENTER'S
DANCE
STUDIO

Electncal

&amp; Retngeratton

SEWING
MACHINE
Repa•rs, service, allmak es. 992 ·2284 . The
Fabric Shop. Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. W e sharpen
Sctssors.

General Hauling
IS
WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742·2455.

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322

"YOUMGS

3406

ELWOOD
BOWER S
REPAIR sweepers,
toasters. irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to Sta te Highway
Ga rage on Route 7, 9853825

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

~=========1~::;;;::;~~===~~~~~~~~~=2
~' Custom

Roof tng, Stdtng, room ad ·
d itions, all types of general
repa1rs, 25 years ex p 992·

Floonng, cetl tng, pane ling,

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINIXMS

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4x6 to 12x4C.

l
1
J
'---------servlees

84

T.

ROOFING

ALL STEEL

LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION!

83

992-3795
4·2·1fc

Pomeroy, Oh.

-;·:':m:o·~~======~5·~·8~-~~m~o~·~::::~::::::l-~22~-~~fc:
II~~==~~~;
I
VINYL SIDING
I

doors
windows, a Iso
pa mtlnga nd
. 992-2759.
71

6 3

On any alignment
by
Randy
Carpenter,
factory
trained
frontend
alignment
specialist.

81

618 E. Maon

5·2J· l mo

~

61

1-t&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION '

949·2~16

Ten foot speed boat with a
35 hp Mercury eng 1ne W1th
trailer $750 00 Ca ll 985·
J30l or 985 4140 .
76

Business- Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls , profit and loss statements, all
federal and statP torms . •
_

Most Dates
No Sunda y Calls
6 y 1 mo

74

_ ..__..,

Tri-Counfy
Bookkeeping1
Service

STILL PAYING

1980 Datsun P1c1&lt;up w1th
topper, excelent cond1t ton,
low mileage, lots of ext ras .
Ca ll992-2015 atte r 6 p.m

77

AUCTION

Eats

for Sal e
-Trucks
-- -- -

Sl

S7

Apartment
for Rent

3 AND 4 RM furniSh ed a p
ts Phone992 ·5434

- Hous•ng
I

Farms for Rent

43

~

GOOO STARTER HOME - 3 BR , kit., LR, DR, a.
familyroom with woodburnlng stove on good size
lot, roomfor garden, well landscaped Carport a.
storage bldg. $37,000 .

: MONEY • MONEY
*First mortgeges;
second mortgeges,

I

'

I•

Assumable mortgage 91,.::
Pet. 3 bedrooms, 2 bathSI ;
lull basement , 2 ca~.
garage . Rlggscrest Manor. •
614·985·4329 .
I'

Situations Wanted

Will dO general • hOuse
cleaning, SJ .OO hour. 992·
$094 or 992-5207 after 5.

CALL US.

Ads r WIMiftl Oltttl thl" CCMIHCUtl'll tttYI Will bl cNr8fd II Hit 1 Clly

In memory, CatCI Df ntank• ana ObHvlt\1' : 1 cttttt,.,. woteii, IJ OCI
mlnlr1111nt. Ca1h In ad~;~ance.

All

Professional
Services

23

Will do Odds and ends.
Paneling, floor tile, and
ceiling tile. Call Fred
Miller 992·6338 .

ARE
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

2.21
J.7J

CASH - Loan never re pay,
free details, A. L. Lutton,
P. 0 . Bo• 766, Gallipolis,
Oh .

3861.

SERVING
Chlr..

Business
Opportunity
~-

Tn.1ck driver, timber cut·
ters. skidder operators.
Tri·State Chipping Inc. 992·

SOUTHEASTERN
- ..
. -OHIO
-· SINCE
- - --·l&amp;W,
YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO

Rates and Other Information

21

----------------~~,.

IXMNIN&amp;atll.DS
--- AGENCY INC. '.
INSUIWU

11- U~tltry

AUTOMOBILE
IN
su RANCE been can
ce ll ed?
Lost
your
operator's ltcense? Phone
9'12·2143

Beautiful large home. Low
WILL BUY Old Iran· utilities, brick ranch style,
smissions,
batteries, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
engines, or scrap metals, fireplace, full basement,
etc. Call245·9188.
family room, air con ·
dltioner, 3 car garage
Baum Addttion, Meigs
County. Call985 4169.

&amp;Rttrtterlt....
\.

131nsurance .

gold . Dental gold and gold
ear pins 675·3010.

White male fox hound, old
town area of Portland and
Racine. If found call 843·
2354

In memory of Harvey Gene
Wh itlatch who passed
away two years ago today,
June 18, 1978.
What we would give to see
your smile,
To sit and talk wtth you for
awhtle .
The blow was sudden, the
shock severe,
.
To part wtth you, we loved
so dear,
We often stt and think of
you,
The th ings you used to say
and do,
And we wonder why you
had to die,
Withou1 a c hance to say
gOOdbye .
Sadly missed by wife and
c hildr e n, SISters and
brothers .

Wanted to-Buy

9

14-R:IKfr'ICII

li

~_:_:_~-~me~~~~~:6~-~-~-J!

GOOD SUPPLY
SHRUBS
&amp;.TREES
20% OFF
POMEROY
LANDMARK

~ -

I'
I)
I•

eSERVICES

Want· Ad AdVtrllslnt
Deadlines

I

II
II

Jl-Vans &amp; 4 w o
74-Motorcyctts
71AYIO P1rts
&amp; ACCIIIOrlea
77-Auto R... lr

U-MM!It+tomn
terSatt
ll-,lrms tor Silt
M-auslntla •ullcUnts
JS- Lots&amp;AcrH ..
»--•Miattlte W1r1tec1
l7- RMihtrt

- - - - - 1'
----~ 11
I

JI--AUfOs IDf' Sata

11- Homts for Slltt

- - -- - 1

31. _ __ __
32. _ _ __ __
33. _ _ _ __

eTRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE

--~-- 1

eRENTALS
41 - HCH.IIft tor Rtnt

l-In M..,ort1 rn

In Mer.1oriam

2

In Memoriam

Plants, tomato, cucumber,
flowers, hanging baskets,
pots. Cleland Greenhouse,
Geraldine Cleland, Racine,
Ohi045771.

~ ····· ··· ·

I~

2

PHONE
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
NEW LISTING - Ex·
cellent Buy!! ! GOOd
location in Middleport.
Lovely 3 bedroom home, ,
l'h baths. liv ing and d tn·
ing rooms. Enclosed sun
porch and full base
ment. includes extra
rental property for addi
tlonhl Income. Sells for
ONLY $53,000.00.
NEW LISTING - large
solid brick home on Con
dor St . '" Pomeroy·. 3
bedrooms. dining room.
living room, kttchen.
Must see to app rec iate.
Well worth $26,500.00 .
MAINTENANCE
FREE - Lovely brick
bi level. Mohawk carpet
and hand stained wood·
work throughout. Really
a dream home! 1 Sells
for S69,000.00
SYRACUSE Nice
large J bedroom home
on corner lot . Alum1num
Stding . Seltng prtce
$28,000 00.
185 ACRES Some
min e rals and old
buildings and house .
Asking S65,000 00
ALMOST 8 ACRES On Hysell Run Rd. 2
bedroom hOme. Has 2
septic systems and 2
water taps . Asking
$21,500.00 .
En1ov your summer and
let us worry about selling your house I !
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3Df2
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·3171

Mobtle Homes
for Rent

42

1973 3 bedroom, 2 complete
ba1hs, furn ished, 8xl4 fron1
porch. 7/B acre near
Harrisonville. $14,500 992
5970 before 12 or after 5.

Shop The Sentinel Classifieds For Good Buys
Publtc Not.ce

General

3 Bedroom Home, R1ggs
Crest Manor, $325 month
985 4323 .

742-2003

Public Notice

41
Houses tor Rent
Hou se lor Rent : Loca ted on
Mam St at th Logan
Monument Co . di splay . In·
teres ted party. man or
woman , mus t be sales
on e nted to help us sel l
monu me nt s on the lot. Con
tacT Leq L. vaughan , 992·
2588.

1969 12x60, 2 bedroom
Hollypark Tra1ler . Fur
nished, a c. , washe r, metal
out-butldlng, under pin
nlng 992-2881.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Planting
of the nation's 1980 corn crop was
"virtually completed" by mid-June,
says a govenunent report.
The weekly report, issued
Tuesday. by the National Weather
Service and the Agriculture Department, said corn plants ranged in
height from 10 mches in Wisconsin to
20inches in Illinois by June 15.
That was " up to 9 inches more"
than the average height of corn plants at this time a year ago, the report
said. The USDA's first production
estimate of the 1980 corn crop will be
- ·
issued on July II.

- HoUSehold GOodS ·------- - ---

32

L£0
'MORRIS

IS NOW UNDERWAY
The Last Day To Sign
Up Is July 14th
"BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAZZ"
For More Information
CALL 949-2710
-6-18·1 mo.

Rutland, 0.
Ph. 742-2.455
5· 21 · 1 mo

1---....--------t-------....,.-----------

Upholstery
87
A&amp;H Upholsten~g " Now
Re Upholstertng
Car
Seats". Ph 992 3752 or 992
3743

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

CARPET SHOP
"Drive A Liffle Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKEO
CANDY STR I PEO .
CARPET
2 bfack pi,dded
SQ . Yd :

$499

VINYL

FLOOR

COVERINGS
Sq.

Yd.$499

JUNE CARPET SALE
ALL CARPET AT DISCOUNT PR iCES
Any re Jar carpet iobl installed with free pad .
Nice Sele~tion of Cerpet
,Linoleum Remnants at Bi

emnan s an
Discounts. '

RUnAND FURNITURE
Main St.

742-221 1&gt;'

FREEl J f

FREEl II
50" mower when you
buy a riding tractor.

,

30" mower when
you buY a
walking mower.

"Manning Roush-Owner"

GRAVELY TRACIOR SAl E~

�14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Juhe 18, 19110

Mason County authorities ·
checking possible homicide

Lawmakers back
away from plans
COLUMBUS, Ohio t AP ) - Some
Ohio Ia wmakers have backed away
from a plan to delay increases in
nursing home substdies n~xt fiscal
yea r to help alleviate a sUite budget
crunch.
The unanutlous vote Tuesday by
the Senale Ftnance Conumttee
means slate fiscal planners now wtll
have to come up wtth $17 nullton, Illstead of $ti rmllion, to projecl balanced books for the fiscal year starling
July I.
Under an agreement by top
legislattve leaders and Gov. James
A. Rhodes, the state would have
delayed increases in Medtcatd
payments to nursing homes totaltng $11 .8 million - from July I,
1911(), to July I, 1981.
The deferment was announced
last week as part of an a ustenty
package in a pending appropnatwns
btll, which was to get Senate floor
ac!ton today. The bill s!tll must be
considered by the House. It would go
wtlh a 3 percent state spendmg cut
and a 5 percent hike tn liquor pnces
- already betng Implemented by the
administration - to resolve the
money ptnch, at least for now.
All told, the series of moves were
to make up all but $ti million of an
anhctpated deficit of $260 million in
the 1981 fiscal year. Now that nurstng home funds are restored, only
$249 mtllion will come m, said
Rtchard G. Sheridan, dtrector of the
Leg ts lative Budge t Office.
Several lawmakers who sponsored
the brll hikmg Medicaid payments
and calling for broad nursmg home
reforms were ·angry about the
decision to delay. It was made by
Rhodes and legislative · leaders,
without rank-and-file members get-

De~psey

Funeral services for Mrs. George
Dempsey, Huntington, a former
Pomeroy resident, were held Monday afternoon at the KlingeiCarpenter Funeral Home in Huntington. Mrs. Dempsey died at
Cabell Huntington Hospital after a
lingering illness.
She wsa the former Garnet Bartels, daughter of the late C. A. Bar-

The Commerce Department said
housing starts plunged 11.5 percent
last month, the fifth consecutive
monthly decrease. May 's seasonally
adjusted, annual rate of 920,000 starts was the third lowest level in
history, and was 49 percent below a
year ago.
Not since February 197&gt;-during
the depths of the last recession- have
housing starts been so low.
"I would not underplay the difficulties facmg homebUilders. They

are en tical,' '

said Commerce

Secretary Philip Klutzmck.
Michael Sumichrast, chtef
economtsl of the National
Association of Homebuilders,
estunates that unemployment in the
housrng industry has reached
926,000, and he anttcrpates little job
rehef until later this year.
At the current pace, It will take 12
months to sell off the inventory of
homes, he satd.
Sumichrast said the housing
slump may be bottonung out, but the
recovery will be slow and agonizing.
Klutznick also pornted to a slight
increase in building permits in May
as a srgn that construction activity
may be stabilizing.
However, James Christian, a
seni'1!ieconomist for the U.S. League
of Savings Associations, was more
pessimistic . He predicted the
housmg slump wtll not end untrl late
s ummer, partly due to the recession
but also because mortgage rates will
not soften much more.
He satd mortgage rates, which
peaked at 16 percent, wtll remain at
about 12 percent, and would not dip
below 11 percent anytime soon desprte fast falling short-term rates.

tels, and Mrs. Sidney Bartels, who
survives along wrth her husband,
George Dempsey, and a sister, Ruth
Bartels. She was preceded in death
by her father, one sister, Mrs . Mark
Roller, and "her first husband,
Claude Q'.Brien. Other survivors include an aunt, Mrs. Carl Weese,
Syracuse, a niece, Mrs. Charles Gibbs of Sewell, N. J . and several local

cousins.
Burial was in " the Woodmere
Cemetery rn Huntington.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Mabel
Neimeyer,
Letart, W. Va.; Barbara Lewis,
West Columbia; Agnes Brown,
Pomeroy; Stella Brady, Albany.
Discharged--Robert
Warren,
"Jenda Lawson, Nellie Roush, Glenna Soul!lby, Judith Huller, Lloyd
Moore.
'HOLZER~ICALCENTER

DISCHARGESJUNE17
Issac Barnett, Connie Boster,
ThomU Canter, Virgil Caudill,
Enelola Copley, Todd Daniel, Mrs.
Ronald Duncan and son; Karen
t:versbach, Jason Evays, Mary
Lena Fox, Ruger Gil t :

tersuoo.

Scholarship
• •
recipient

But the chatrman r e jected
Mahoney's proposal to ta ke the
needed $11.8 rmllion from nursing
home profits, saymg that would ·
" only discourage nursmg homes
from dmng a better job.''
There were other proposals to
save or rarse money, but all were
rejected .
Sen. Jerome Stano, D-Parma,
menltoned a 25 percent boost in the
sUite's wholesale tax on beer. But he
declined to propose it formally .
Sheridan, among other things,
mentioned an end to a new tax credit
that homeowners may claim for improvrng the1r property . or cance llation of the exemption that
mag~zines and newspapers have
from Ohio sales tax.
Meshel ended the discussion by
calling for a vole on the revised bill.

Area death·s
Mrs. George

JAYNE LEE HOEFLICH

" pow-wow," agreed.

Americans now saving
more, spending less
WASHINGTON
( AP )
-Americans are saving more and
spending less as the deepening
recession staggers income and further decimates a reeling housing mdustry, government ftgures show.
The Commerce Department
reported Tuesday that people saved
3.9 percent more of thetr rncome in
MV AY THAN IN April and spent 0.1
percent less.
At the same time, personalmcome
+ mcludmg wages, salartes, rents,
stock dividends and interest, mmus
Social Security payments + actually
increased a scant $3.1 billion , or 0.1
percent. But that did no more than
offset an Aprtl decline, the frrst smce
July 1975, and leave the annual rate
the same as two months ago at $2.07
trrliion .
The figures represent a reversal
over the last few months as
Americans swttch from hedgmg
agaiast mflalton to cushionmg
against recession .
The growth in savings, marking
the third straight month of mcrease,
means that Americans saved 4.5
percent of their Jncome in May, compared with only 3.3 percent as recenUy as February, when rampant inflation was 1 sowing a "buy now"
philosophy.
May was the second straight morr
th of decrease in personal spendmg .
The purchase of long-lasting items
such as appliances, furmture and
cars, declined more than $23 billion
in April and May .
Savings traditionally increase
during a recession, as people try to
prepare for posstble job layoffs or
cuts in overtime pay, economists
say.

PT . PlliASANT - Honucidc ts
suspected in the death of a Pl.
Pleasant man whose body was fuund
this mutmng on a heavily wooded
htllside belnnd the Pleasant Valley
Apartments under constructwn on
12th Street.
The body of James Terry McCausland, 16, of 412 Lewis St., was

tmg a chance to ~ole on it, they satd.
Sen. John K. Mahoney, ().
Spnngf1eld, a member of the
Lc~isli::ltu·re 's nursmg home t'Oillmisston, called the decrston
" morally mdefensible." The earlier
bill's chtef sponsor, Rep. John A.
Begala, D-Kent, called tt " stck
public policy ."
Mahoney and Begala, along wrth
varwus senior ctttzen and welfare
lobbyists , waged a spmted fight to
: get the delay shelved, saymg the top
leaders had nul fully understood the
ramifications of thetr action. The
delay would be counterproductive
because it would hold back. nursmg
home reforms cuntamed m the new
law, whtch Begala satd will save the
state "nulhons of dollars."
Senate Ftnance Chatrman Harry
Meshel, D-Yotingstown, who said he
was not in on the top level budget

Joseph Hale, Louise Hawkins,
Delores Humphreys, Charles Kiser,
Elonora Knl~, John Landaker,
DOnna Lewis, Betty Matney, James
McDamel, Mary McFarland, Enos
Mc-Guire, Anirta Nchl, lliimrod
Pauley, Mark Price, TraviS Ratltff,
Sharon Russell, Annise Sorrell,
Everett · Sharp, Merrill SHriver,
Stephen Tabor, Eric Thompson,
Audrey Tipton, Jesse West, Mrs.
Frank Williams and daughter, Dawn
Wtllis, Leta Wrseman, Michelle
Wuuwcr.

'
BIRTH
Mr. wtd Mrs. Dayrus Mun·
tgumcry, daughter, Pumtruy.

Jayne Lee Hoeflrch, Pomeroy, has
been awarded at $1,100 C. Paul and
Beth K. Stocker Endowment
Scholarship by Ohto University for
the 1980-81 acadenuc year. The
scho lar ship rs awarded rn
recognition of excellence tn
academic endeavors a nd demonstrated talent.
Granted early admissiOn to Ohio
Umverstly late last fall, Ms.
HoeOtc h has just completed her
second quarter studies as a physiCs
major wtth an accumulative fourpoint grade average m the university's Honors Tutonal College.
Earlier, she was awarded a $750
armual renewable Peace Fund
Scholarshtp awarded by the South
Carolina Fow1dation of Independent
Colleges, on behalf of Multimedia,
Inc., and a scholarship by the Ladi~s
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, in Pomeroy. The
daughter of Charlene and Bob
Hoeflich, Pomeroy. Jayne ts
working m The Sentinel's edttorial
department for the swruner months.

Seven juveniles
draw court fines
Sevelj juveniles were f10ed upon
appearance before Meigs County
Juvenile Judge Robert E. Buck on
traffic charges.
Fined were, Charles Stewart, 16,
Danville, $50 and costs, unsafe
vehicle, $45 suspended providing the
vehicle is repaired; Douglas Neece,
16, Rt. I, Middleport, $5 and costs,
driv10g privileges suspended seven
days, reparrs ordered, unsafe
vehicle; Scott Hartinger, 16, Middleport, $22 and costs, speed; Herbert Noel, 17, Rt. 1, Pomeroy, $15
and costs, driving the wrong way on
a one way street, fine and costs
suspended; Craig Sinclair, 14, Rt. I,
Shade, $50 and costs, $40 suspended,
operat10g a motorcycle wtlhout
operator's license; Gene Oiler, 16,
Middleport, $16 and costs, speeding;
David Kennedy, 17, Pomeroy, $11
and costs. speeding.
Meanwhile, Carl R. Hysell,
juvenile officer, said today that
during the summer months there
bas been an 10crease 10 motorcycle
related cases.
Most complaints are ftl~d by law
enforcement offrcers whnse duty is
to enforce such laws commonly
violated by cyclist such as no
operator's license, no registration,
and no safety equipment, Hysell
satd.
All parents with teenagers, who
have motorcycles, should exercise
their parental authority over their
children and their motorcycle,
therefore prevening a possible court
appearance, Hysell conunents.
Residents are reminded thatimbrkes and motorcycles must have
license plates to operate on the
streets and highways. The operators
must also have a motorcycle
operator's license or endorsement to
their regular license to operate the
motorcycle on the streets and highways.

I

TWO SQUAD RUNS
The Meigs County Emergency
Servrce Headquarters reports two
runs by the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad on Tuesday. The unit went
to Peach Fork Road fur Denver Carman and to 247 Mulberry Heighls for
Mrs. Hardin Warner. Both patien ts were taken to Holzer Medical Center.

discovered about 7: 15 a.m. by hiS
brother, Robert; and Mark Bennett .
The .Jictirnls shirt had been
removed and tied around his wrists
and apparently used to drag the
body 100-200 feet down the hillstde
through brush and woods.
The body was found lymg face
down 10 a dry creek bed.
It was badly scratched from being

Mayor's court

Anderson feels U~ S.
must rebuild cities
InCLEVELAND tAP)
dependent presidential candidate
Jolm Anderson satd today that the
United States must rebuild tts
decaymg older ctltes.
Anderson addressed the annual
convention of the United States
Jaycees in Cleveland.
·'The captUII plants - the bridges,
the streets and the sewers - of our
older ctlies, hke the one in which you
are meeting, are decaying. Unless
we are prepared to re-inv~st in the
decllnmg caprtal plants of these
ciltes, we must then accept the
ulltma te collapse of our urban environments and the industrial
capactty that they ought to be able to
support," Anderson said.
He told the convention that the
country must renew Its conumtment
to sxral justice and equality under
the law and urged the Jaycees to
support ratification of the Equal
Rrghts Amendment in their respecltve states.
That conunent drew mild applause and some boos.
The Jaycees do not have women
members. Their women 's auxiliary
group was holdmg a separate
meeting and was unable to hear Anderson speak.
Anderson 's conunents dtd not
dwell on his two major opponents,
Prestdent Carter and former
California Gov . Ronald Reagan .
He said that rf voters are satisfied
wtth the performance of the United
Stales in the past three-and-a-half
years, they need look no closer than
Carter.
He said those who feel there is a
need fur a change must look
elsewhere.
" If you are satiSifed wtlh the
merely glib and, up to this pomt,
general promises of yet another former governor ... 1f you are prepared
to believe the Reagan thesis that we
can tax-cut our way to prosperity or

that we can, m the span of a few
short yea rs, produce our way out of
the energy crisis .. . or tf you are
prepared to accept generalization
and, I think, very s rmplistic answers
to complex problems, then Y.OU need
look no further than the ex-governor
of California," Anderson added.

Passenger
injured in
~:J,Uto crash
One person was injured and two
drivers ci~d as the result of two accidents mvestigated Tuesday by the
Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway Patrol.
Officers were called to the scene of
a two-vehicle accident on TR 8, just
north of SR 141, at 9 p.m. , the patrol
reports a south bound auto operated
by Roger Gilbert, 19, Patriot Star
Route, and a north bound vehicle
driven by Kenn~th R. Bloomer, 40,
Gallipolis, collided in a curve.
A passenger in the Gilbert auto,
Gail Gilbert, 18, PSR, claimed injury and was transported by a
relative to Holzer Mcdtca l Center for
treatment.
Bloomer was cited on a charge of
failure to yield one-ruilf the roadway.
The patrol 10vestigated a onevehicle accident tn Meigs County 011
SR 33, just east of SR 681, at 6 a.m.
Officers report a west bound auto
operated by Dwayne Qualls, 20, Middleport, went out of control tn a curve, passed off the left side of the
roadway ~ver a guardrail and overturned .
There were no injunes. Qualls was
ctted on a charge of no operator's
license.

Dr. Thesing begins practice
Thomas A. Thesrng, D.O.,
Associate Professor ci Family
Medicine at the Ohio University
College· of Osteopathic Medicine,
began providing serviCes at the Vinton County Health Clinic in McArthur, two day• per week effective
Monday, June 16.
A native of Lancaster, Dr. Thesmg
graduated from Ohio State University and the College of Osteopathic
Medicine and Surgery in Des
Moines, Iowa, and served his internship at Grandview Hospital in
Dayton .
After over 16 years 10 private
practice in Centerville, three years
10 the Atr Force and a brief practice
m Florida and West Virginia, Dr.
Thesing joined the Ohio Umversity
College of Osteopathic Medictne on

dragged. Cause of death was not immediately known.
The body was transferred to
Charleston by Shenff James D. Hall
and Mason County Coroner J ohn
Grubb, where tl will be examined by
the state medical examiner .
The vtcltm was a 19110 graduate of
Point Plea'"!nt Htgh School.

June I, 19110.
He IS a member of the American
Osteopathic Association,
the
American College of General Practitioners in Osteopathic Physicians
and Surgeons, and the Ohio Society
of Osteopathic General Practitioners.
According to Dr. W1lliam H. Ailen,
Jr., President of the Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation Board
of Trustees in Athens, Dr. Thesing
will be sharing duties at the McArthur clinic with Dr. Christopher D.
Olson, also with the Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine.
Each physician will be at the clime
two days per week, makmg services
available Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday each week.

One defendant forfeited a bond
and four others were fined Tuesday
night tn the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman.
ForfeitiQg a $50 bOnd posted on a
disorderly manner charge was
Tunothy Lee Mayes, Point Pleasant.
Fined were V1rgtl Philips, Middleport, $25 a nd costs, diSorderly
manner; Carla D. , McFarland ,,
Mason, $25 and costs, unsafe manner; Paul J . Grady, Racine, $100 and
costs, destructiOn of pro~rty, and ,
Robert E. Petrie, Middleport, $100
and costs, ~rinunal !repassing.
Four defendants were fined and 12
others forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Fined were David Dtles, Southfield , Mich., $50, costs s uspended, on
a charge M passing on a double
yellow line ; Danny Buffington,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, squealing
bres; $300 and costs, fleemg a police
officer, and a $50 forfeiture on a
speeding charge; John Partlow, no
address recorded, $50 and costs,
disorderly conduct, and Richard ·
Giimore, no address recorded, $250
and costs, reckless operation.
Forfeiting bonds were Betty Kern,
Shade, $30, posted on a charge of
failing to register a motor vehicle;
Ronald K. Browning, Pomeroy, $30,
stop sign violation ; Bobby
Schoonover, Gallipolis, $33; Carol
Richmond, Middleport, $32 ; Craig
Swick, Middleport, $30 ; Lawrence
McGill, St. Albans, W. Va., $28 ;
Brtan
Conde,
Pomero~.
$31; Mitchell Chapman, Pomeroy,
$35; Corbett Cleek, Racine, $34, all
posted on speeding charges;
Ri chard Hermann, Mtddleport, $50,
traffic light violation; Douglas
Seyler, Columbus, $250, reckless
operation, and $50, operating a
motor vehicle while under susperr
slon.

WORKERS FURLOUGHED
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP)- Armco Inc. reported that 142 more
steelworkers will be furloughed Sunday, bringing layoffs at the Middletown Works to 670.
At the same time, Sorg Paper Co.
confirmed that 74 percent of its
hourly workers have been laid off
this week with the remaining 26 percent, about 120 paperrnakers, still on
the job.

minister of the Enterprise United
Methodist Church, Pomeroy. He
also gave the invocation a nd
benedictiOn.
The processional, " Pomp and Circumstance," was presented by the
Mei gs Band as well as the
recessional.
Introductions were made by Paul
Matson , president of the graduating
class. The presentabon of the class
was made by James A. Diehl, Jr.,
principal and the acceptance of the
class, Jll() students, was made by
Davtd Gleason, s upenntendent.
The pesentalton uf diplomas was
made by Carol F. Pierce, president
of the board uf education.

.
.

~

,,

.'

STANDING OVATION- Chris Schenkel, ABC sportscaster, holds
gift as Dave Diles, his colleague, smiles durmg Wednesday's banquet
kicking off the Dave Diles Celebrity Classic. Schendel was given a
standing ovation when mtroduced to the 300 prsons attending.

VOL. 31

NO. 47

From the Associated Press

Terrorists takeover doesn't last
NICOSIA, Cyprus - Three terrorists stormed and briefly occupied
the British Embassy m Ba ghdad today before Iraqi security men shot
their way in and killed the mtruders, the offtctallraqr news agency
reported.
No other casualties were reported.
It satd the three men hurled grenades into the embassy and then
rushed in with automatrc weapons blazmg.
lraqr securrty forces obtamed permission from the Bntish ambassador to storm the building and ktlled the intruders in a shootout,
the news agency said.

ERA fails again in Illinois
SPRINGFIELD, Ill.- After a day of fevensh lobbymg, includmg
telephone calls from the White House, the Illinois House agam rejected the Equal Rights Amendment. But ERA supporters say their battie for this state's ratification isn't over yet.
"We're detcrrruned people, we 're not the kind of people who fold up
our tents and go away," satd Eleanor Smeal, president of the Nattonal
Organizalton for Women , after a proposal to ratify the amendment fell
five votes short of the 107 needed to pass the House.

Four day spree leaves 42··dead
JOHANNESBURG , $outh Afnca- The four-&lt;lay spasm of nolmg,
looting, arson and vandalism in South Africa's black and colored townships reportedly left at least 42 people dead in the worst racial clashes..
this whtle-ruled nalton as seen smce 1976. Damage was esltmated in
the nullions.
But Police commissioner Gen. Mike Geldenhuys satd reports from
around the country Wednesday indicated the situation was " qureter
than it has been smce the begtnning of the current wave of unrest" on
Sw1day in the sprawling black ghetto of Soweto outside Johannesburg.

Cincy. man given life sentence

Cullom DehumlciHier with
25 Pint Weter Remov'l
Cepeclty•

BATAVIA, Ohio - A 1g:.year-old Cinc1nnalt man, one of three accused in the brutal revenge slaying of Johnny Ray Miller, was sentenced to life after a jury convicted him of aggravated murder.
Dale L. Slusher was sentenced, while trials for Cheryl Johnson, 18,
and James Ashurst, both of Cincinnati, were scheduled later 10 Cler·
mont County Common Pleas Court. . .'
The prosecution claimed Miller, 17, of Cincinnati, was shot, stabbed
and beaten because Ms. Johnson allegedly believed he was responsible for the theft arrest or her conunon-law-husband, Rrcky J ohnson,
21, in Cincirmati.
·

0 Recessed wheels and
caster for easy mo b•llty
0 Steel cab•net with walnut
woodgrai n fintsh
0 Louvered a~r-intake grille
with decorator panels
0 Automatic signal lightshuts off unil when bucket
IS full
0 Automatic humidistat
0 10-quart. high-tmpact
styrene bucket
0 Threaded hose connection
0 Electrical cord w•th
grounded safely plug

Weather foreca~t

*(Per 2• hr)

25 Pint Capacity , ONLy
15 Pint Capacity

'2 29.00

ONLY 'lM.OO

ELBERFELD$
WAflEHOUSEf
'. .

.

' .

A SPECIAL AWARD was presented to Dave Diles , nght, from Bill
Nelson at the Dave Dtles Celebnty banquet Wednesday mght. Dtles
was presented a gold plated putter.

·•

at y

enttne

THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

Bani-Sadr given more power
as Iranian military changes

NORFOLK, Neb. - A woman apparently shot and stabbed her four
daughters to death ahd then turned the gun on herself, police said
today.
Stella Delores Almarez, 29, the mother of the victims , was in stable
conditiOn at a hospital where she was being treated for a gunshot
wound in the head. Police said they were waiting to question her, but
said there had been no arrests.
Officers said two of the children were shot with a ,J2-caliber
revolver and the other two apparently died 411f knife wounds We dnesday mght.

White-Westinghouse

•

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO,

Mother kills children, herself

Prevent Damage from Excess
Moisture in the air-with this
White-Westinghouse Dehumidifier!

CHECK PRESENTED - Dan Devine, left, was presented a $500
check to grve to hjs favorite chanty. Tom Wolfe, president of the
Racine Home National Bank, presented the check from the proceeds
of the Dave Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament. Dave Diles is in the mtddle.

e

WASIUNGTON - President Carter, leavmg on , an eight-&lt;lay
European trip aimed at restoring unity to the Wes\ern alliance, called
today for the allies to present a unified front against Soviet aggression .
"I will be totally frank with you, as I will be" with leaders of the
alliance, the president satd m his statement for a White House departureceremony. " The industrial democracies are being tested . ... We
must sustain world opposition to Soviet agression and not allow the
Soviets to derive any permanent benefits fr~m their invasions of a
neutral nation."

HOLD BACK THE
"INVISIBLE FLOOD"I

Nationwide

..

. ..
" ' ...

President calls for unified front

180 seniors
(Continued from page 1l

'

Partly cloudy today, with highs in the low 80s. Variable cloudiness
tonight, with a chance of showers or thunderstorms. Lows near 60.
Mostly.sunnY. Friday, with ~Ughs in the upper 70s. The chance of ram is
20 percent today, 30 percent tonight and 10 percent Friday.
OhJo Extended Outlook
By The Associated Press
Saturday thro118h Mooday: Fair and gradually warming, with highs
near 8G Saturday and from 85 to·90 by Monday. Lows in the low to mid
50s Saturday aoci In the low to mid 60s by Monday.

•

.r

A major shakeup in the Iranian
military was announced today by
the off;cial Pars news agency, but it
was not imlnediately clear whether
the move further eroded or
strengthened President Abolhassan
Bani-Sadr's authority agamst
Moslem hardlmers seekmg to undermine him.
Pars said Bani.Sadr accepted the

res ignation of the acting military
chief of staff , Gen. fo1ohanunad Hadi
Shadmehr, and that Gen. Vahollah
Fallahi was made the new actmg
chief of staff. It said Shadmehr
became Bani-&amp;dr's military adviser.
The news agency also sa id Gen.
Ghasemali Zahirnejad has been appointed conunander of land forces

and of the lslanuc republic gendarmerie, and Col. Javad Fakoun
was named the atr force chref. The
news agency dtd not say who they
replaced.
Bani-&amp;dr, fighting efforts by
Islamic fundamentalists to strip him
of his dwmdlmg powers, urged the
revolutionary guards Wednesday to
close ranks behind hinn after his

Voters may face two plans
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Senate committee has set the stage
for a November election in which
Ohio voters could be confronted with
.
two tax-relief plans.
The Senate Ways and Means Committee recommended for passage
Wednesday a proposed consttlutional amendment that would
allow the Legislature to tax restdential and agricultural property differently than other rea l estate. All
classes of property now must be
taxed at uniform rates.
The conuruttee voted to indefmitely postpone actton - m effect, killing, 1n the Legislature - a
cttizen-mittaled bill that would make
more sweeping changes m the
state's tax structure.
That gtves the Ohio Publt c In-

teres! Campaign, which circulated
pelttwns for the proposal, extra tune
to obtain 85,301 signatures more to
quahfy for the fall ballot
Had the ways and means panel,
headed by Sen. Neal F. Zinuners Jr.,
D-Dayton, not acted, th e group
would have had less time to ctrculate petiltons in advanc-e of Ute
Aug. 6 fall election frling.
He said the vote· to postpone consideration of the measure was "an
effort to be fair and remov e the btU
from this particular arena.''
Supporters gathered the names of
more than 97,000 voters on petitions
to enable the bill to be mtroduced in
the Senate last March.
Under state law, legislators had
up to 120 days to act on the btll before
attempts could be launched to place

it on the ballot . That time period exptres June 27, a week from Fnday.
" I think tt's a shame that we
couldn't get a vote from the full
Senate," said Mary Lynne Cappelletti, OPIC spokeswoman.
Stte disagreed with suggesltons
that the constitutional amendment
would be an alternative to her
group's plan .
" Th e trouble wtlh any
classificah on amendment ts tt's a n
empty shell," she said , an apparent
reference to need for legis la ttve actwn to unplement the tax rehef tf the
amendment were adopted.
Her group's proposa l would give
about $150 millton worth of property
tax rehef for low-and moderatemcome homeowners and renters. It
{ Conttnued on pag e 8)

Reject anti litter measure
.

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -An anti-htter measure, billed as a substitute for a proposal defeated by
Ohio's voters last November. has
suffered a setback tn the House.
Members refused 42-53 Wednesday to accept a jomt conference
committee's version of the proposal.
The Senate has yet to acton the committee report, but rejeclion by the
House all but assures it will have to
go to a new joint panel in the closing
days of the Legislature's June

said .
The vole clearly came as a s urprise to many in the chamber .
" I have no explanation," said Rep.
Thomas J . Carney, D-Boardman,

the btll's sponsor . He was among
those pushmg the b1ll as a substitute
by a mandatory beverage contamer
deposit btl! rejected by voters in
1979.

newspaper reported Moslem hardlmers were plotting to oust htm as a
' 'toolof America.' '
Tehran Radio said Bani-Sadr went
to a revolutionary guards' barracks
to a ppeal for an end to the feuding
tha t prompted the resrgna twn of his
hand-ptcked guard commander, Abu
Sharif. The radio also said BamSadr rejected Sharif's resignation.
The report did not say who was
flghtmg whom in the guards, but the
sq uabbling was presumed to be between Bani.Sadr's moderate supporter~ and the extreme Moslem
fundamentahsts who back the
I s l amic
c ler gy-domtnated
Republican Party, which controls
Ira n's Parliament.
A party leader , Dr. Hassan Ayat,
was reported Wednesday to be plotlin g the overthrow of Bani.Sadr and
was quoted as labeling him "a tool of

Amen ca.''
The Tehran newspaper Enghlab
Es lam t, owned by Bani-Sadr, ·
(Con t inued on pa ge B)

MANSHOTTODEATH
Several people are being
questioned as the investigation of
the dea th of James Terry McCausland intensifies according to
Mason Couinty Sheriff James Hall.
Preliminary examination of the
body by the state medical examiner
has shown a bullet wound in the victim's chest. The bullet was probably
fired from a 22 calibre rifle, Hall
said.
According to Mason County
Coroner Dr. John Grubb, the official
reports of the examinations will not
be completed for two- three weeks.

sess10n.
Sununer adjournment now is
scheduled for the end of next week.
House opponents clauned Wednesday that the measure imposes an
unfair tax on all businesses when it
should be confined to litter stream
products.
The proposal calls for the franchise tax patd by aU compames to be
increased slightly to raise $13
nullion for a statewide litter control
program. fn addition, makers of socalled litter stream products would
face a second tax increase.
Revenue ytelded by the tax wodld
be used by the natural resources
department to make grants to local
communities for setting up litter
pickup and recycling programs.
Rep. Paul R. Leonard, D-Dayton,
said the btU would not raise enough
money to solve the state's litter
problem and charged it did not have
department support.
Rejection of the report 1aised the
possibility of nanung a new conference conmuttee in an attempt to
reach an acceptable verston ..
House Speaker Ver'l"l G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, would,nut say if
ur when the proposal mt;,:ht reach
the floot agam.
" We jus t take that day by day," he

..,.,v'""""' -

Kermit (the frog) was injured recenUy during one of the severe storms that hi\ the area.
Kermit was taken to the Meigs County Board fo Health
tube exanuned. Debbie Lavalley, R.N ., second from
left, and Carol Tannehill, R.N . are shown taking Ke\·
mit's bluod pressure . On left is Frank Petrie, deputy
hea lth conm1isswner, on the right, Paul Gerard, Grand

Croaker in charge of vice. It is hoped that Kernlit .will
be much improved by Big Bepd Reg~tta time. The
Regatta wih be held June 26, 'J:I, 28 and 29. The frog
jump will be held on Saturday, Jun 28, at Marauder
Stadium in Pomeroy. Kermit Walton, owner of Kermit,
ts keeping his fingers crossed hoping that Kermit will
be hop~ing by June 28.

.,

j

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