<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15097" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15097?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-01T19:59:52+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47875">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/57bd168b429e8c25e2252a5010486797.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8650c7157cff5307f4b555d0abbd77b4</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="48492">
                  <text>12- The Daily Sentinel, M iddleport-Pome ro~, 0. , W edncsda~, J une 25, 1980

House debates energy bill
WASHINGTON (AP) - A debate
was under way this morning by supporters of a uranium enriclunent
plant at Piketon, Ohio, on whether to
push for floor action in the House t o
restore 1981 funding to keep the big
projtkt rolling along on schedule.
They were encouraged by a House
vote Tuesday evening which broke
through the ceiling that had been set
b~ the House Appropriations Committee for the ener~ bill package.
Budget trlnuning by the Carter
Administration earlier this year
reduced fWlding for the Piketon
• project by more than half and the
Appropriations Committee held the
figure at $149 million when it acted ·
on the Department of Energy
·package last week.
. But a staff aide to Rep. Clarence
: Brown, R-Dhio, said the ceiling set
• by the conunittee on the $11.8 billion
energy and water resources
development bill was cracked
Tuesday evening when the fulf
·House approved the amendment of·
fered by Rep. Don Fuqua, D-Fla. His
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admitted-Linda Lou Parsons,
Parkersburg; Cora Mae Folmer ,
Pomeroy; Brenda Barber, Portland; Phyllis Vining, Middleport;
Gladys Knotts, Vinton; Carl Auther·
son, Syracuse; Lois Brooks, Mid·
dleport; Alice Globokar, Pomeroy ;
Artie Houdashelt, Colwnbus.
Discharged-Earl Glass, Brady
:Knapp, James Webb, Billy Brewer,
Wendell Barrett, Cbarlotte Clark ,
Linda CWlningham, Marie Pursley.
REGATIA PROGRAM
ntURSDAY
The musical " Wheels" will be
presented at 7 p.m. Thursday at the
stage on the upper parking lot in
Pomeroy as a part of the Big Bend
Regatta.
The production is Wlder the direction of Ed Harkless, vocal music in·
structor in the Meigs Local School
District and members of the seventh
grade class of the Meigs Junior High
School will be taking part. Soloists
will be Susan Barker, Mike Cline,
Mark Mayes and Amy Erwin.
Narrators will be Trina Reeves and ,
Ruth Ann Fry.

EMERGENCY RUNS
The Middleport Emergency
Squade was called to Williams St., at
3:30 a.m. Wednesday for Alma
Frazier who had a possible broken
leg in a fall. She was taken to
Veterans . Memorial Hospital.

amendment . provides for $107 .4
million for research on solar,
magnetic and other energ~ r esear·
ch.
The Department of Ener~ says
$269 million is needed for fiscall981
to keep construction of the massive
Piketon plant on schedule.
Brown, trying to get fWlds
restored to the project in the Appropriations Corrunlttee, enlisted
the support of Rep. Ralph Regula , R·
Ohio, and other key representatives
a couple of weeks ago.
The conunittee, which had slashed
the Piketon project an additional $18
million, boosted it back to the $149
million figure called for in President
Jinuny Carter's revised budget.
Regula said, however, there was
not enough support to break the
ceiling that the economy-minded
committee members set on the
energy package.
Since then, supporters of the
Piketon project have been debating
whether to try to get the total ap-

Parade to highlight
July 4th activities
A parade will be held July 4 in
Racine beginning at10: 15a.m.
· Activities will be sponsored by the
Racine Fire Department, Racine
Auxiliary and the Racine Emergen·
cySquad.
Flag raising ceremonies start at
10 a .m. followed by the parade.
Anyone having a float in the
Regatta are welcome to enter the
parade in Racine.
There will be two categories,
theme and non-theme. Prizes will be
awarded in each category, first ,
second and third respectively, $50,

$30,$20.
Pony rides, grease pole and bike
races are scheduled for the af·
ternoon activities.
A chicken barbecue will be held at
11 a.m. at the fire station.
Homemade ice cream wiU be sold
and there will be a country store. A
flea market wil also be held at the
fire station.
A fireworks display will be held at
10p.m.
·
FIRE REPORTED
The Pomeroy Fire Department
was called Tuesday at 8:55 p.m. to
the Ronald Clonch residence, Flat·
woods Road, where a dryer was on
fire.
TRUSTEES TO MEET
The board of Carleton College
Trustees will hold their annual
meeting this evening at 7:30p.m. at
the Syracuse Municipal Building.

propriatlon restored on the House
floor or to take the .Cight to the
Senate.
Sen. J ohn Glenn, D-Ohio, sent a
letter Tuesda~ to Sen. J . Bennett
Johnston, chairman of the subcommittee on energy and water
development, urging restoration of
the Piketon fWlds.
He said a cut to $149 million would
result in at least a one-year delay in
the project.
Glenn predicted that the $170
million cut offered by the ad·
ministration would result in " much
larger expenditures in the long run."
He also warned that a delay in this
country ' s nuclear enrichment
capacity " could encourage the
development of enrichment plants in
other coWJtries.
" A major component of our
struggle to stem · proliferation of
nuclear weapons is our ability to
s upply enriclunent services at
reasonable costs• to other nations,"
Glenn added.

HERITAGE SUNDAY
Refreslunents will be sold all afternoon Sunday at the observance of
Heritage SWlday at the Meigs
Museum. Fea1ures of observance
will include an old photo shop, the
village emporium, music of
yesteryear, and residents can pick
up their pictures from the history
book in the library. In the mini
theater, a film on the history of
Meigs County will be shown .
, ICE CREAM SALE
Members of St. Paul Lutheran
Chuch are making homemade ice
cream to be sold during Regatta.
Persons may purchase ice cream
by the quart this evening. Persons
wishing to place orders may call 992·
2010 this evening between 6:30p.m.
and 9:30 p.m. Orders may be picked
up at any time.
Flavors include vanilla, chocolate,
lemon, strawberry, pineapple,
banana and knee-deep.
FLAG STOLEN

The new flag recently donated to
the village of Syracuse by the
Daughters of Arnercia Lodge has
been stolen Mayor Eber Pickens
reported today.
The flag , which was placed on a
pole in front of the Municipal Builid·
ng, was taken sometime over the
weekend. Mayor Pickens stated that
he would appreciate very much that
the flag be returned. He expressed
. great disappointment in the taking
of the flag.

VOL 31 NO. 52

$~ +

-6

-·~ ;~~ .• CtAV1:e·r:
SWlday at 3 p.m . That strike came folowing a 196 to 35
vote to reject a new contract offered by management.
The old, three-year contract between the company and
'
the local expired on JWle 20 .

Area deaths

.'I T-40 Issue
.

. ·
and Mmnie Adams Pri~ of Portland
a!'d was also preceded lll death by a
Sillier. . .
. .
Sumvmg are his wlfe, Margaret;
two da~ghters, Mrs. Jean Redmond
and Mrs. Barbara Graham, San An·
tomo, Texas, and several local
cousUIS.
He was a veteran of World War I.
Graveside services will be held at
10 a.m. Thursday at the Beech
Grove Cemetery with the Rev.
Robert McGee officiating.

Margie Hunt

Mrs. Margie Hunt, ~ 84, Route 2,
Racine, died Wednesday at the home
of a son in Apple Grove.
Mrs. Hunt was a daughter of the
late Henry and Margaret Kiser. She
was also preceded in death by her
husband, Bert; two sons, James 0 .
and Wellington Lee Hunt, and eight
brothers and sisters.
Surviving are a son, James L.
Hunt, R,oute 2, Racine; a grand·
daughter, Beverlee Wickline, Route
2, Racine ; three great-grandsons,
Richard Qualls
Scott and Kyle Wickline and Brian
Richard Qualls, 94, Beech St., MidHunt, Racine; two great·
dleport died Wednesday at Veterans
granddaughters, Tersa and Brenda
Memorial Hospital.
HWlt, Route 2, Racine, and several
Mr. Qnalls was born Sept. 6, 1885
nieces and nephews.
in Meigs CoWJty.
Mrs. Hunt attended the Letart
Surviving is a daughter, Mrs.
Falls United Methodist Church and
(Freda) White of Colwnbus.
Chester
was a member of Ohio Valley
Funeral services will be held at I
Grange 2612.
p.m. Friday at the Rawlings-CoatFWJeral services will be held at 10
a.m. Friday at the Ewing FWleral · Blower FWleral Home with burial to
be in the Middleport Hill Cemtery.
Home with the Rev. Raymond
Friends
may call ·at the fWleral
Skeens and the Rev. David Harris
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m .
officiating. Burial will be in the
Thursday.
Letart Falls Cemtery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday.

(Continueo rrompaget&gt;
received from Asphalt Materials
Co., and Shelly and Sands, Inc.
The commissioners accepted the
bid of Shelly and Sands for pur·
chases during the month of July.
Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells, and Chester
Wells, commissioners, Mary Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha Chambers.

SHOOTING UNDERWAY
VANDALIA, Ohio (AP)
Shooting began today in the 94th an·
nual Ohio State Trapshooting Tour·
nament, with overall participation
expected to be the lowest in 13 years
because of the depressed economy,
officials said.
Two preliminary events were on
tap today, while the tournament of·
ficially opens Thursday with 200
Class Day targets and the
Presidf!11t's Handicap.

PART OF REGATIA - The 44th Ohio Volunteer Infantry
Regiment, a band from Springfield, will be playing "Wlder the trees"
near the Meigs Museum at I :30 and 3:30p.m. Sunday as part of the an·
nual Heritage program of the Meigs CoWlty Pioneer and Historical
Society. Residents are invited to bring their own chairs for the concert. Springfield's only municipal band, was organized in 1962 at the

WAS!llNG:OON (AP) - An ·Ohio
congressman is strongly opposed to
proposed changes in the way water
projects are authorized because it
would create " a federal grant

program."

chambers without much trouble.
Several Ohio projects listed in the
current bill have been sidetracked
for several weeks while the bill has
been slalled in the Senate Public
Works subcommittee.

''That would take it completely out
of the control of Congress ," said
Rep. William Harsha, R-Dhio, who is
retiring after 20' years on Capitol
Hill.
The system proposed by Sen.
Daniel P . Moynihan, D-N.Y.+ the
new chairman of the Water Resour·
ces subcommittee - would permit
states to·decide which projecta they
want built.
President Carter, however, appears to be succeeding in fighting
such a system that has previously
allowed members of Congress to
push such projects through both

Included in the bill are two projec·
ts in Harsha's district . They are the
$66 million Caesar Creek project and
the $18.5 million East Fork Lake
project, both part of the Southwest
Ohio Water Plan for the Portsmouth
area.
Although Harsha is " ~till
hopeful," he admits the prospects of
obtaining approval of t}le projects
" don't look too good."
Another project included in the bill
is a plan to prepare Cleveland Har·
bar for a new generation of 1,000-foot
ore carriers. It is hung up by a policy

REUNION SET
The annual Hill Family Reunion
will be held at the Portland Park
Sunday with a basket dinner to be
held at noon. All relatives and friends are invited .

· From lbe Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines - · The U.S. aircraft carrier Constellation
collided with a me.r.cbant ship flying the Bangladesh flag m the
Arabian Sea early Thursday, the U.S. Navy satd.
There were no reports of casualties on either vessel but the Con·
stellation was damaged on its port side above th~ water. hne, the Navy
said. The condition of the merchant ship was not lllUIIedt?tely known.
A u.S. 7th Fleet spokesman at Subic Naval Base, 50nules nort_hwest
of Manila, said the collision occurred shortly after mJdnight while the
carrier was being resupplied by the oiler Passumpstc.

Church .relaxes death stand
· VATICAN CITY- The Roman Catholic Church today relaxed its
stand on euthanasia in a major docwnent which made concessions to
"precarious and burdensome prolongation of life."
While reaffirming the traditional Vatican teaching which bans mer·
cy killings and counsels against " intensive use" of painkillers, the
document, issued by the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine.of the
Faith and approved by Pope John Paul II, blazed new trails in tHe area
of extension of life in the light of modem scientlfic advances.

for the entire family.

•Flares

RIPPERS PLAINS

POMEROY, 0.

•High-Fashion
•

ElBERFElDS IN POMEROY CO.
1M)

DOllARS

This coupon worth $1.00 towords the
purchase of • pair of any Wrangler

THE IOCINE HOME
NAnONAL BANK
RACINE, 0.

THE CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY -NA

TEL AVIV, Israel - Israeli gunboats pounded Palestinian guerrilla
bases about 30 miles north of the border in southern Lebanon. A
Lebanese captive told Israeli interrogators that two U.N.
peacekeepers aided guerrillas who Killed three Israelis in a cross·
border raid in April.
There were no immediate reports of casualties in the Wednesday
night gunboat raid along Lebanon's Mediterranean coast. The Israeli
military corrunand gave no details of the attack, the latest in a series
aiined atkel',l)ing the guerrillas on the defensive .

•Basic

FARMERS BANK
RUTlAND .

Israeli gunbOats pound bases

•Pre-Washed

THE FOLLOWING BANKS WILL NOT BE OPEN
JULY 4 &amp; 5, 1980

jeans In stock.
Men's, Boys, Girls, Women' s.

Charge regulations were violated
NEWARK, Ohio - The Ohio Civil Service Employees Association
has accused the Ohio Department of Transportation of violating civil
service regulations In appointing a safety director in its District 5 of·
fice.
In a suit filed Wednesday in ticking County Common Pleas Court,
the OCSEA asks that Richard Baker, a former Newark mayor, be
removed from the job and that the department be required to post the
·
position.

Shop at Elberfelds
while enjo~ th1' Regatta.

Save 12 on any pair of Jeans
now thru June 30
by dippiug this coupon.

Weather forecast

'

. ' 'The way they' ve done business in
the past, they (committee leaders)
load up the bill with something for
everyone," he said. Even though in·
dividual congressmen may oppose
parts of the bill, they have to go
along with it to get projects through
for their districts.
" Representative Oakar never
voted 'no' on any water projects bill,
no matter how bad," said Black·
welder. "She was told she'd better
come around if she wants the
Cleveland harbor project.' '
The administration has called for
increased cost-sharing by the states
on water projects and also wants the
projects studied more closely to
determine their economic and environmental impact.
Moynihan's proposal would
authorize up to $1 billion a year for
five years, with the fWlds allocated
to the states under a formula in·
eluding population and area factors.

Offer Expires JunelO, 1910

·

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Officers were reelected and a
scholarship conunittee was named
when the trustees of Carleton
College held their annual meeting
Wednesday night.
Officers reelected were Herb
Parker, president, Richard Ash,
vice president, Milton Varian,
secretary and Carl Weese treasurer.
Officers will serve on the college
scholarship committee while Robert
Wingett will serve as member at
large .
This year, $1,000 is in the scholar·
ship fund.
Scholarship or scholarships will be
awarded to an eligible student or
students who reside in the village of
Syracuse.
The scholarship funds, which
derives from interest from the
proceeds received from the sale of
Carleton College, following selec·
lion, will be forwarded to the college
of the student's choke.
The trustees received three applications. The selection conunittee
will meet and make a determination
as to whom will receive the scholar·
ship.
On the Carlton College property,
which contains approximately five
acres, a school for the mentally
retarded will be constructed. It is
hoped that bids on the school project
will be let In July.
In other business, Hennan London
was named to the board to fill the
vacancy created by the death of

public on his eight-day European
tour. However , before leaving Spain
this morning, he told a group a(
American employees at the U.S.
Embassy in Madrid that he has constantly raised the issue in his tallts
with officials of all nations.
" I urge them to do everything they
possibly can, " Carter said.
President Antonio Ramalho ·
Eanes, in his banquet toast, did refer
to the hostages, saying they " remain
victims of an intolerable violation of ·
human rights and of a complete con- •
tempt for the most elementary rules
of international relations."
" It is urgent for the international
· conununity to mobilize all efforts
and to adopt efficient measures for
the quick solution of this problem,"
he said.
Carter's plane, Air Force One, ian·
ded at Usbon's Portela Airport, the
(Continued on page 12 }

Piketon issue
going .to Senate

WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep.
Clarence Brown, R..Qhio, says he
hopes to get the Senate to restore the
money needed to keep the Piketon
uranium enriclunent plant con·
struction on schedule.
The House approved an $11 .7
billion energy and water development appropriations bill Wednesday
which included only $149 million for
1981 construction at Piketon.
The amount is far below the $269
million the Department of Energy
says is needed to keep the plant on
schedule.
Supporters of the Piketon project
had considered offering an amend·
OSeDmcnt on the House floor to bring the
project back on schedule.
But Brown, after conferring with
Ralph Radcliffe.
Rep. Ralph Regula, R-Dhio, said a
Trustees reinstated were Herb
decision was made not to attempt a
Parker, John Savage, Carrol
floor fight even though the House did
Neigler, Dana Winebrenner and
approve one amendment, offered by
JohnUsle.
Rep.· Don Fuqua, [).Fla., which
Attending were Parker, Ash,
broke the ceiling set by the ApWeese, Varian, Bill Eichinger, Usle,
propriations Committee on energy
Milton Roush, Winebrenner, Aaron
spending.
Sayre, Kathryn Crow, Wingett, Cor·
Brown said Piketon supporters
belt Patterson, Savage, Don
hadn 'I done enough " missionary
Houdashelt, and Fred Crow.
work," and it appeared there was

not enough backing to get an amend' .'
ment through the House.
Chances of getting an amendment
approved also were hurt by the fact
that some influential Ohio represen· ·.
tatives went on record Tuesday op&gt; '
posing the Fuqua amendmen~
Brown noted.
He said it was feared that defeat of
a Piketon amendment in the House
.would hurt chances of getting the
proposal approved in the Senate.
Brown said he will join Sen. John
Glenn, D-Ohio, in trying to convince
Sen. J . Bennett Johnston, chainnan
of the Senate subcommittee on
energy and water development, of
the importance of keeping the
Piketon project on schedule.
Glenn has sent Johnston a letter
saying the cutback would delay completion of the Piketon project for one
year Wltil 1989 and would add
signlficanUy to the cost of the
project.
President Carter originally asked .
for $319 million for Piketon In the ·
1981 budget but cut the figure blick to
$149 million in his proposal for a
balanced budget.

Beaver new airport manager
Larry D. Beaver, formerly of
Sissonville, W.Va., has been appointed by the Gallia-Meigs
Regional Airport Authority to serve
as manager of the Eastern Avenue
air terminal.
A 24-year veteran of the military,
Beaver is qualified in single and
multiple engine, as well as in·
strwnent ratings.

Formerly a ·Master Sargent with
Army Intelligence, Beaver 's
position with the Airport Authority
consists of the management of all
terminal related activities, in·
eluding upkeep and maintenance .
Beaver and his partner, Vernon
Levisay, will also operate B and L
Aviation at the airport facility. B
and L offers flight training for all

ratings but multiple engine.
Additionally, B and L will make
available charter services for fWl
flying and photo runs.
Beaver says he sees, with the continuing growth of the commWlity,
great potential for area aviation .
Excluding flight training, the air·
port is currently \landling between
15 and 30 transports a day, Beaver
said.

•

Minor mishap checked
A minor accident was investigated
by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department Wednesday at 10 a .m .
- According to deputies, Charles E .
Nease, 39, Syracuse, pulled into a
private drive on SR 124 and the right
door struck the end of a guardrail.
There was minor damage to the
pickup truck and none to the guar·
drail.

Partly cloudy tonight with a low 65 to 70. Mostly sWJny Friday with

a high 110 to 85. The chance of rain is 20 percent tonight and near zero
percent FridaY.

,
' I

battle in Congress.
Echoing Harsha's comments,
Rep . Mary Rose Oakar, D-Ohio, also
is not optimistic about the $31.2
million harbor bill for Cleveland.
" Unfortunately, it was lumped in
with some programs the president
doesn't approve of," she said.
Also included in the water projects
bill which the House sent to the
Senate is $6.1 million for extension of
the Great Lakes navigation season,
$365,000 for studies of Ashtabula bar·
bor enlargement, $1.5 million for
reconstruction and repairs to two
bridges in Massillon.
According to Brent Blackwelder of
the Environmental Policy Center,
the Carter administration has been
highly successful in the past four
years in blocking sG-Called pork
barrel projects
political
patronage appropriations
becaUse the system is sinking under
its own weight.

LISBON, Portugal (API
President Carter arrived in Lisbon
today to offer encouragement to
Portugal's six-year-old democracy
and thank the government for being
"among the first of the world's
nations to recognize and respond to
the threat posed to democratic
societies everywhere by aggression
in Afghanistan and offi cial
terrorism in Iran. "
In a toast prepared for a state lun·
cheon given in his honor, Carter
said, "People who value freedom
cannot stand idly by while others '
rights are ruthlessly suppressed and
while a system of international or·
der, so dearly won and delicately
maintained, is so callously at·
tacked."
Although he referred to terrorism
in Iran, Carter did not mention the 53
American hostages being held there.
He has seldom talked about them in

Scholarship committee Ch

We have Jeans

-- ----NOTICE---

beginning of the Civil War Centennial to particpate in historical activities, re-enactments and parades . Under the original direction of
Charles Haynes and present direction of Norman Carey, the hand has
appeared in 15 s(&lt;jtes and has for several years been an official selec·
ted band at Greenfield Village in Dearborn, Mich.

Ohio's water projects on back burner

r

the upcoming Big Bend Regatta. The collection of well
over 100 frogs belongs to Nancy Vaughan, Gallipolis, a
sister of Joe Ciark, manager ot the local jewelry store.

·1.!_..

OHIO VOlUNTEER
IMFANTRY REGIMENT

,stiUJ(E ·

FEDERAL-MOGUL STRIKE - Local 1685 of the
United Auto Workers weni out on strike against the
Federal-Mogul Corporation , Eastern Ave ., Gallipolis,

44~

Aircraft carrier, ship collide

POMEROY

President
on last
stopover

~

ELBERFELDS IN PO

BANK ONE

FIFTEEN CENTS

POMEROYMIIJDU t''·'lj! OH IO. THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1980

:·; STRI(E

Earle A. Price, 87, 365 Pythin St. ,
Hawthorne, N. Y., formerly of Meigs
CoWJty, died this week in New York.
He was a son of the late George

•

enttne

UAW

Earle Price

COLLECTION- This colorful collection of frogs is
being featured in a display window at the Ciark
Jewelry Store, Court St., Pomeroy, in observance of

at

e
-

•

•

EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday through Monday: Fair Saturday and Monday and a
cllance of sbowen or lhunilerstorms Sunday. High &amp;ID the 70s Saturdly aDd Ill die iiiiB Stmclay and Monday. Lows iD the 508 Saturday and
iD tbelhSwlday andMoaday.
1

FINALLY CLOSING
Meigs Local Sehoul District
schools will close fur the school year
at 1 p.m. Friday afternoon . There
will be no afternoon kindergarten
and morning kindergarten children.
will ride the regular buses in retur·
r.ing tutheir homes .

.

.

~ -·

Gallla-Melgs Airport Manager Larry D.

�3- Th!' Dally Sentinel, • ' •ddlepur(-Pu111e ruy, 0, Tlmrsdu"y, June 26, i!Jii()

Hard -hitting legion ,
squad posts two wins

2 'I' he IJ"" l ~r : ::.: .l'i, :vtuJdlcpurl-l'umcruy, 0., Thursday, June 26, 1900

Opinions &amp;
Comments

,-------------------~ OAA

By SI.:OTT WOLFt;
THE DAILY SEfiTINEL
!USPS 161101 ,

DEVOTED TO 1liE
I_NTEIU!ST OF
MEIGS-~N AREA.
I...etcen ol IJPI.DJaa are wl~ed. They lbould be 'lei:B tbla 3011 wonk 1oag Ior 111bjed lei redaactl:oa by~ a:fJtor) alld must be 1lped wl&amp;b lkllpet's addra1 . Namet ~ay be withheld upoa
PI~CIIUoa. However, oa req~t, aauritl w:W be dbeiOied. Letten should bf- Ia cood lat k, ad-

W~ltr

DO I

n\lw~
()\::

dreutq llftlel. 1101 penouJJau.
Publilltecl daUy Ueept Sa1udly by Tht Ohio Valley PubllabJ.Dc Compauy· Mu.ltimfllta, Inc.,
Ul CGunSL, Pomeroy, Obio tf788. Bua1Mt1 &lt;Hflce Phooe tsz.. Zlif. Edltort.l Phone 9St·2157.
Sec.adcbu posl.lge paid at PomerOy. OIIJt~.
Nltio•l adwrtil_bag repmea&amp;IUW", I...adoo A11odates, Sltl Eudld Ave., Cle\lelaod, Olllo

CA~E~?

MUS.

1'bte

Auocia&amp;ed Prenll oclwdvely entitled to the UR for pubHeatloo of all oews dispatches ·
dl'ed!ted to die DeW'IINiptT aad abo the ltt'al HWI publlshecthereln.
Publlabtr
Robert Will(ett
Gcuend MJr. I City EdltGr
Robtrt Hoeflich
Newa Editor
Dale Rothgeb, Jr.
Adv. Maucer
Carl Gheen

"~

· Bm~

~ ~v

SYKACUSE • The hard -hitting
Meigs legioN team pulled &lt;Jut twu

••• N\1,\ SON UP
I~ 0~10

WAS

victories over

0~~ ... Mt&gt;
GRA~OSONS ARE'

I..AIO

SCC~RED
M~

Ol: HIE

SO~RI,)

O~til="f. ..

l
ASKED ...

SOCIAL SECURI'rt,l
Cl-IECK Sll~ O~E BAG Ot=
GROCB&lt;IES- A~' 1 JUST
BROKt A TOOT~ - 00

~-

1&gt;E~~OT B~ITILE ...

......__..._""T",....,...c::::l,""'

;':
•.

RACINE 'S REBE'r.s recently captured the Pee Wee
tournament at Middleport team members were front
row, I. tor., Jason Quillen, Jim Carpener, Jerry Smith',
; _ . Chris Murphy, Jamie CUmmins, Todd Johnson and
..., Shannon Williams. Second row, I. to r., Dee Booth,

Ohio ed comment

'

.

\

Here is some editorial comment from Ohio newspapers
during the past week:
CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER: ''A catastrophic
comedown has hit the construction industry. Housing starts hit a new five-year low in May ... Unemployment due to
this shrinkage has reached 900,000, and ... those jobless
will number 1.6 million later this year.
"Grim as those figures are, they are sure to be replaced
by happier ones in the decade of the 1980s. Population will
increase demand for housing soon. ,..
"This does not mean that prosperity for home building is
just around the corner. 'Soon' will not be soon enough to
bring good times for carpenters and mortgage and realty
people before the November election. The recovery will be
slow ....
"Today's recession still has to be coped with, however,
before the glory days promised by the Census Bureau
arrive. It should mean cost and price and rate cutting to
keep the housing business from complete paralysis."
.
YOUNGSTOWN VINDICATOR: "The closing of Ford
Motor Co.'s big assembly plant at Mahwah, N.J.,
illustrates how much damage can be done by a small
minority of workers if they hold grudges against the company- and if their fellow-workers let them get away with
it.
"Operating costs ... were one consideration in selecting
the Mahwah plant for abandonment, but (a Ford official)
... called attention to the order in which he listed factors in
the decision- 'quality and cost' ....
One example concerned the frequent appearance of dents in truck doors. An inspector ... found an angry worker
who closed truck doors by slamming his fist into them .. ,
That worker was fired, but apparently enough ... shared
his attitude that the whole plant got a bad rating for
quality. The decision that wiped out 5,000 jobs came later.
"This is only one of many plants that have died , .
because of bad employee morale. Both management and
labor contribute to morale - both should realize fully how
important it is to their ... welfare."

Today in history.
, Today is Thursday, June 26, the
- 178th day of 1980. There are 188 days
; left in the year.
• Today's highlight in history :
. On June 26, 1945, delegates from 50
· nations, meeting in San Francisco,
; signed the United Nations charter.
· On this date:
• In 1284, according to legend, the
• Pied Piper of Hamelin, Gennany,
: lured 130 children from the town.
: Their fate was never determined.
• In 1844, President John Tyler
· married Julie Gardiner in a secret
; ceremonyinNewYork.
; In 1937, Britain's Duke of Windsor,
: having abdicated the throne,
• married Wallis Simpson in France.
· In 1963, Pre.1ident John F. Ken; nedy received a tumultuous
; welcome from more than I million

• •

persons during his visit to West
Berlin.
Ten years ago, Alexander Dubcek
was expelled from Czechoslovakia's
Communist Party.
Five years ago, the Supreme
Court ruled that the mentally ill
could not be confined against their
will and without treatment unless
they are dangerous or incapable of
survivaL
Last year, President Carter held a
town meeting in the city of Shimoda,
Japan, and was greeted with courteous questions.
Today 's birthday : Actress
Eleanor Parker is 58.
Thought for today: The United
Nations was set up not to get us to
heaven, but only to save us from hell
- Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965 ).

Berry's World
''

Chris Jewell, Brent Wilson, Shawn Diddle, Steve ,
Grady, Danny Gheen, Mark Porter and Jeremy
Lawrence. Back row, I. tor., Chuck Williams, Benny
Wilson, John Murphy , Ronnie Quillen.
n ,

..,...- .
-'

'

..

Kennedy pins hopes ·on platform challenge
for a miracle victory in New York.
His fragile strategy is that one or
more of the disputes over what
Democrats should promise on jobs,
the economy, energy prices and
other items will somehow trigger a

In Washington
rebellion among delegates now SUi&gt;"
porting Carter's renomination.
That isn'~ likely. It has been tried
before. A dozen years ago, in a more
bitterly divided party, opponents of
then-Vice Presi!lent Hubert H. Humphrey tried to force through a platform plank disavowing the Vietnam
War policies of the administration .
They got nowhere. The convention
endorsed Lyndon B. Johnson's

policies, and nominated Humphrey.
In 1976, at the closely contested
Republican convention, Ronald
Reagan's forces set up 'a platform
confrontation with then-President
Gerald R. Ford over foreign policy.
They wrote in a plank critical of
the foreign stance of a Republican
administration, and dared the Ford
people to fight them on the convention floor. Instead, the
president's side decided it wasn't
worth the risk and let it stand
without challenge. They figured the
nomination was won, and there was
no point in picking a fight about
anything else. So Ford ran on what
was, in part, Reagan's platform.
Hardly anyone noticed.
That's because platforms are written to be forgotten, not followed. The
candidate who wins the nomJnation
says what he stands for, and that is
all that counts.

Ohio perspective

Psychiatrists must supply criminal info
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A and that so far as he knows, nothing therefore, that no privileged
psychiatrist who is appointed by a
has been developed from the com- relationship was intended."
court to evaluate a criminal defenments about homicides elsewhere.
Brown noted there are two
dant has a duty to report any inBut he said the information was situations where a court may order
formation obtained during his
relayed to appropriate authorities.
an evaluation of a defendant's menevaluation concerning felony
Brown determined that state law tal condition: when there is doubt
criminal offenses.
concerning the privileged relation- the defendant to a criminal action is
Attorney GeneraJ William J.
ship between doctor and patient does mentally competent to stand trial,
Brown gave that opinion on a
not apply in cases where an
and when the defendant pleads not
question raised by Lucas County
examiner is retained by a court for • guilty by reason of insanity.
Prosecutor Anthony G. Pizza. Pizza
examination purposes.
He said both circumstances
said a defendant in his jurisdiction
require an examiner or examiners
who was examined by a psychiatrist
"When the purpose of a mental
to make a written report to the court
had made a comment about mur- examJnation is not treatment or
detailing their findings and conders that may have been committed diagnosis looking toward treatment,
clusions.
in Germany and in other states.
then there is no privileged relationHe said the psychiatrist who ship," Brown stated. ",, The .fact
"Obviously, the purpose of a
examined the unnamed defendant that the purpose of the examination court-ordered
psychiatric
raised the question of his obligation is to ·provide infonnation to someone examination ... is not advice, treat- ·
to reveal information beyond the im- other than the person being ment, or diagnosis for the purpose of
mediate evaluation to authorities.
examined is evidence that the purtreatment," Brown stated. " Rather,
Without naming the defendant,
pose of the examination is not treat- the purpose is to determine whether
Pizza said his case was completed -ment, diagnosis, or advice, and,
a person was insane at the time of

the crime or whether he is competent to stand triaL
" There is no evidence of a
legislative intent to permit the
privilege ... to attach to the persons
involved in a court-ordered mental

examination.

1
'

He concluded that an examJner
who performs a psychiatric
·evaluation of a criminal defendant
pursuant to state law "has a duty to
report to Ia w enforcement
authorities any information obtained during the evaluation concerning criminal offenses that are
felonies.
"The duty to report also extends to
the private organization employing
the examiner and to any other employee of the organization who has
knowledge of such information."

''
'

Some of that old Senate

court~sy

is gone

.•'

.-

.'

.• .
•
•

•

''

Ucp ublicwtS, who nuw liuld 41 seats,

majority leader. I am jusf curious as
tu his view of Itow the Senate ought
to do its business and whether it is a

l'Ould seize coutrul of the 100ll WI!lbcr Senate with a net gain of 10
scats.
It' s the closest they've been in

.. •

.

Minority Leader Howard Baker of
Tennessee has started salting his
remark• witll phrases like "'were we
in the majority ... "
·
At one point, it was just too much
fur Sen. Paul S. Sarbanes, D-Md.,
whutoldBaker :
" I tiav~ a great dea l of respect for
lite minority l e~der . f know he is now
engaged in the effort to try to be the

"lan't It great? Mr. and M~. Wren ·are $ettlng
up hOUI6k81JfJ/ng and wHI have a traditional
family."

n .:ars.
· ,\ J:d GUI' tSCnaltJrs arc nol lcttirlg
tllt·H IJcmocrotit: l'ullcagues, whu
l';J \ L t. ' . aollcU thu cham!Jvr fur :l5
:•· , l i

."! ,

1111 ~~ d

it.

the Senate.
The Senate's current majority
leader, Robert C. Byrd, D-W,Va. , observed dryly : " It is true ·that the
distinguished minority leader and
the minority do cooperate with the
majority, but only a little bit at a
time. ·
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, seen
back in Washington more and more
1

Today's political roundup
!iCI'IOUS

iiJ!:itilution . 1 '

S:1 id llaker : " I reply~" my friend
fn ,IIJ Mttl'j ld11d tlt(tl, of eours~, il is a

these duys now that the primaries.
are over, told a Senate hearing over
which he was presiding : " ... the untied states must be strong enough to
deter any nuckar attack against
us.

..

-

St:I' I11IIS li !StltUtJOJI . · ·

.\w ! IJ~ikt • J \ \ &lt;J!'U't about to

deny

!I.e· p:ot l :il&gt;&lt; •ut Itis ,ccking the N(l.l
h.c tulll

~t.:II.J~t,; JHh . · il l$ nut~ .lil!,"

Somclhing didn't sound right.
Kennedy luuk a closer louk at the
JJreparL-d speech. ."'The United

'

States," he corrected himself,
Rep. George E. Danielson, DCalif., was filling in as House
speaker on a day when the chamber
was in a particularly uproarious
mood. ·
He pounded the · gavel several
times and gave what had to be the
most unusual instructions ·of the
day :
"All those who have desire to
speak willpleasespeaksilently." ·
The Senate may be the nation•s
most exclusive club- bit its"newest
member,Sen. George J. Mitchell, 0Maine, seems una wed .
Mitchell said .he misses one
feature of the federal judge's job he
left to fill out the Senate term (}f
Secretary c:l · Stale Edmund l'l.
Muskic. "Then there was one votb
that counted. Now I'm jus't one of

Ftelds a double and single, Wolfe
twu singles, Greg Wigal and Steve
Little singles.
In Wednesday 's nightcap Meigs
blew the game upen Ill the third uy
platmg four runs. It was highlighted
by Art Fogelstrulll 's tuwring home
run that sailed over the fence in the
right-center field pow er alley.
l-' uglestrorn pi cked up the win wttiJ
the relief help from Bruwn . They
had nine KO' s and tw o free passes.
Canunell and Montgomery fanned

eight and walked four .
Meigs hitters were Wolfe two
si11 gles, Fields two doubles,
Fuglestrom a home run, Nick
Leonard, Randy Murray, Rogie
Ga ul , Roger Kovalchik, John
Beaver, and Terry Wayland with
contributing stngles.
Butcher, who had four hits for the
evening led Wellston hitters. Shoo~
aml Sinuns also singled for Wellston.
Meigs tra ve ls to Logan, Saturday
to play a double header starting at 1
p.m.

Mctgs took the lead in the third
when Kent Wolfe singled, Foster
walked. They rode home 011 Jerry
Fields' double.
The see-saw battle saw Wellston
come back to tie' the scoring in the
fourth, then rally again to regain
their early lea d with one run m the
fifth , the score now 4-3.
In the bottom of that go-round
Kenny Brown launched a tremendous drive over the ni~ht field fence
4-4.

I

SECOND PLACE - Hawk's Pennzoil, Tuppers
Plains, took second place in the Middleport Pee Wee
Tournament. Members were: front row, I. tor. , Brett
Rood, Mike Weber, Richard Deem, Shaun Savoy, Scott

McDonald and Scott Fitch. Second row, I. tor., Kenny
Caldwell, Dan Tripp, Scottie Phillips, Jay Blackwood,
Chad Sinclair and Amy Hager . Back row, l. tor. , Gary
McDonald and Terry Deem.

Racine
Rebels win
tourney

J

\~\IJ1JI~

()I( '1,111~

Against very tough competition
Racine's Rebels fought through a
select field of Pee Wee teams to
emerge as the tournament champions at Middleport.
First round game scores were
Racine :; Letart 3; Middleport
Mustangs 4 Syracuse 2; Middleport
Cubs 18 Stewart 16; and Tuppers
Plains 6 Gallipolis 3.
While advancing to the final
round, Racine downed Middleport's
Mustangs 11-6, and Tuppers Plains
downed the Middleport Cubs 9-8.
In the consolation contest between
the Mustangs and Cubs, the Middleport rivalry was won by a tough
· Mustang club, 1M.
.
The Mustangs grabbed an early
lead aM never let go. Scott Gibbs
had two singles and a triple, M. Erwin a single and double, and M.
Baker a triple and single.
Matt Baker picked up the win with
eight strikeouts while Chris Becker
relieved. Joey Loving, Eddie Crooks
and F. Qualls were the Cub hitters
and Crooks smacking a triple.
Loving Smith and Melton were the
PLACES THIRD - Middleport's Mustangs placed
Jay McCarty and P. J . Gibbs. Back row, left to right,
cub pichers.
• third in a recent Pee Ww Tournament. Team memSean Gibbs, Chris Davis, Matt Ervin, Matt Baker,
In the Championsltip thriller the
bers were, Chris Becker, Chris Barker, Randy CarMike Sowthers, Scott Neigler , Brett Little, Coach Bob
fujcine
Rebels posted a 7-4 comepenter, Heath Richmond, Sue Cassell, Billy Milliron.
Southern, Gregg Gibbs and Don Erwin.
from-behind victory.
C. Jewell and Porter combined for
twelve
KO's for Racine. Booth and
TRACK
LATONIA RESULTS
STU.L WORKING
Diddle
tripled
for the winners while
EUGENE, Ore. ( AP ) - OutFLORENCE, Ky. (AP)
Porter and Gheen singled.
spoken Mac Wilkins, the 1976 Olym- Macadamia won the featured sixth
The world's first three-color, fourT. P. hitter was Tripp. McDonald
pic champion and former world race at Latonia Tuesday.
·
way traffic light is still at work, and Sinclair were the Tuppers
record holder, beat an outstanding
Macadamia went the one-mile
directing pedestrian traffic in the Plains hitters.
discus field including four-time
conditioning trot and paid $5.40 to
Henry Ford Musewn at Dearborn,
Games' gold medalist AI Oerter at win , $3.80 to place and $3 to show.
Mich.
The light, designed by a
the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Mabalis paid $4.20 to place and $2.80
Detroit
Police Department officer,
Trials.
· to show, and Arrow Princess ran
was
originally
installed at a downWilkins ' toss of 22:i feet, 41nches thi1 d to return $5.
town
Detroit
intersection
in 1920. It
and Oerter's fourth place finish in
Night Oliver, no. 2 in the first race,
went on exhibit at the museum in
the discus - overshadowed severaJ and Patsy Patron, no. 3 in the second
other notable developments on and race, were the daily double for. 1938, 14 years after it had ceased of,.
ficial service.
$12.20.
off the track .
In other events, Larry Myricks

)I)N'l,ll

While
Supplies
Last

R~gular

17.95

1

12-Pc. Drive Socket Set
Nickel ch rom e pl ated set inc ludes 7 3!8·in. dri-ve
sockets from 318 in. to 314 in .. 5f8*in. spark plug socket
3-in . socket exten.iion. reversible ratc het and a 3/8 in.

dnv e speeder disc-all in a fitted box.
Quantities limited

MM812

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

GOLF CLINIC AND EXHIBITION

. of
won2'1-2;
the men's
long jwnp
with a leap
Stephanie
Hightower
won

BY LADY PROFESSIONAL GOLfER

r;~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~if1

the women's 100-meter hurdles in
12.90 seconds; James Butler capo
tured the men's 200-meter dash in
20.49, and Sherri Howard took the
women's 400-meter in 51.48 .

NANCY TAWNEY

BOND'S

•

WASHINGTON
lAPi
Hcpublicans and Democrats fight
like cats and dogs in the House, but
in the Senate their relations
traditionally have betn more cordial
- until recently.
As the November elections approach, Senate Democrats arc getting increasingly edgy. Some of that
old Senate courtesy is evaporating.
Of the 34 Senate seats up for grabs,
2,1 are Ocnwc ratlc a nd
10
Hcpubli~an .
That means the

and homer,

The stag e was then set for Kennedy 's heroics when Jerry Fields
singled, then was thrown out on a
force play that allowed Greg Wi~al
to reach "safely . Foster reached on
an error that moved Wigal to third
prior to Kennedy' s hit.
Brown gained the victory after
relieving Jeff Wayland. They combined for eight strikeouts and two
walks.
Brian Swann suffered the loss.
Meigs hitters were Kennedy two

·-..

WASHINGTON (AP) - Because
It really doesn't make much difpresidential campaign platforms
ference what the platform says. The
are essentially word games anyhow,
one Carter wants to run on this time
there is more sound than substance
is studded with contradictions of the
to the dispute over just what the
one he had drafted to run on last
Democratic Party will say in its 1980
time.
edition.
President Carter has the votes to
write the platform his way . Sen. Edward M. Kermedy wants the issues ·
raised as frequently and as
vigorously as possible, the better to
fight those battles again when the
Democratic · National Convention
takes up the platform Aug . 12.
Kennedy's platform proposals are
That's why a corps of Kennedy
far more in tune with traditional
issues aides has been hustling about
Democratic doctrine on economic
the
platform
committee
programs and priorities than are the
proceedings, writing and lobbying
majority, Carter planks. And while
for minority planks. They can't win,
Kennedy lacks the votes to write
because Carter supporters firmly
them into the platform now, there's
control the panel. But they can, and
always 1984.
are, creating an agenda for platform
Still, Kennedy hopes the future is
controversy at the New York City
now and that his platform
convention.
· challenges will lay the groundwork

squad here

si n ~h~

g &lt;:~me.

lockin~

•I

W t: ll~ton

Wednesday , with respect(vc 5-4, and
9-0 wins.
Meigs is nuw 12-2 011 the year while
Wdlstu11 drops tu 10-8.
Cliff Kennedy's game winmng
single, went through Wellston's
drawn in infteld scoring Greg Wi gal
to capture a :i-4 extra inning opener
for Meigs.
Earlier in the game, a ft er
Wellston took the lead on sing les by
Jeff Montgonwry and Settles,
Meigs' Kennedy drove home Bob
Foster with a line smgle tying the

smgles, Bruwn a

Sp~edway

FROM AUSTRALIA.

Stewart, OH.

FORMERLY FROM GALLIPOLIS

.

DIESEL
SPECIAL

Every Fri. Night

PUBLIC INVITED

s2.00 per person

TOP DIRTRACKERS

Now·Th.r u July 2

Highway Oil Co.
··1188 &amp;asternAvemlfl

Guaranteed Purse
Adults 54.00
Children under 12 free

Time Trials 7 PM
Racing 8:00 PM

SAlURDAY, JUNE 28th AT -9:00 A.M.

Located 20 Minutes East of Athe11s.
35 Minutes West of Parkers'burg
On US 50 · at Cty . Rd. 53
PHONES: Track "(6f4) 662-4111
Home 614 -667 -3478

JAVMAR GOLF CLUB
'

many .11

"

'I

�3- Th!' Dally Sentinel, • ' •ddlepur(-Pu111e ruy, 0, Tlmrsdu"y, June 26, i!Jii()

Hard -hitting legion ,
squad posts two wins

2 'I' he IJ"" l ~r : ::.: .l'i, :vtuJdlcpurl-l'umcruy, 0., Thursday, June 26, 1900

Opinions &amp;
Comments

,-------------------~ OAA

By SI.:OTT WOLFt;
THE DAILY SEfiTINEL
!USPS 161101 ,

DEVOTED TO 1liE
I_NTEIU!ST OF
MEIGS-~N AREA.
I...etcen ol IJPI.DJaa are wl~ed. They lbould be 'lei:B tbla 3011 wonk 1oag Ior 111bjed lei redaactl:oa by~ a:fJtor) alld must be 1lped wl&amp;b lkllpet's addra1 . Namet ~ay be withheld upoa
PI~CIIUoa. However, oa req~t, aauritl w:W be dbeiOied. Letten should bf- Ia cood lat k, ad-

W~ltr

DO I

n\lw~
()\::

dreutq llftlel. 1101 penouJJau.
Publilltecl daUy Ueept Sa1udly by Tht Ohio Valley PubllabJ.Dc Compauy· Mu.ltimfllta, Inc.,
Ul CGunSL, Pomeroy, Obio tf788. Bua1Mt1 &lt;Hflce Phooe tsz.. Zlif. Edltort.l Phone 9St·2157.
Sec.adcbu posl.lge paid at PomerOy. OIIJt~.
Nltio•l adwrtil_bag repmea&amp;IUW", I...adoo A11odates, Sltl Eudld Ave., Cle\lelaod, Olllo

CA~E~?

MUS.

1'bte

Auocia&amp;ed Prenll oclwdvely entitled to the UR for pubHeatloo of all oews dispatches ·
dl'ed!ted to die DeW'IINiptT aad abo the ltt'al HWI publlshecthereln.
Publlabtr
Robert Will(ett
Gcuend MJr. I City EdltGr
Robtrt Hoeflich
Newa Editor
Dale Rothgeb, Jr.
Adv. Maucer
Carl Gheen

"~

· Bm~

~ ~v

SYKACUSE • The hard -hitting
Meigs legioN team pulled &lt;Jut twu

••• N\1,\ SON UP
I~ 0~10

WAS

victories over

0~~ ... Mt&gt;
GRA~OSONS ARE'

I..AIO

SCC~RED
M~

Ol: HIE

SO~RI,)

O~til="f. ..

l
ASKED ...

SOCIAL SECURI'rt,l
Cl-IECK Sll~ O~E BAG Ot=
GROCB&lt;IES- A~' 1 JUST
BROKt A TOOT~ - 00

~-

1&gt;E~~OT B~ITILE ...

......__..._""T",....,...c::::l,""'

;':
•.

RACINE 'S REBE'r.s recently captured the Pee Wee
tournament at Middleport team members were front
row, I. tor., Jason Quillen, Jim Carpener, Jerry Smith',
; _ . Chris Murphy, Jamie CUmmins, Todd Johnson and
..., Shannon Williams. Second row, I. to r., Dee Booth,

Ohio ed comment

'

.

\

Here is some editorial comment from Ohio newspapers
during the past week:
CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER: ''A catastrophic
comedown has hit the construction industry. Housing starts hit a new five-year low in May ... Unemployment due to
this shrinkage has reached 900,000, and ... those jobless
will number 1.6 million later this year.
"Grim as those figures are, they are sure to be replaced
by happier ones in the decade of the 1980s. Population will
increase demand for housing soon. ,..
"This does not mean that prosperity for home building is
just around the corner. 'Soon' will not be soon enough to
bring good times for carpenters and mortgage and realty
people before the November election. The recovery will be
slow ....
"Today's recession still has to be coped with, however,
before the glory days promised by the Census Bureau
arrive. It should mean cost and price and rate cutting to
keep the housing business from complete paralysis."
.
YOUNGSTOWN VINDICATOR: "The closing of Ford
Motor Co.'s big assembly plant at Mahwah, N.J.,
illustrates how much damage can be done by a small
minority of workers if they hold grudges against the company- and if their fellow-workers let them get away with
it.
"Operating costs ... were one consideration in selecting
the Mahwah plant for abandonment, but (a Ford official)
... called attention to the order in which he listed factors in
the decision- 'quality and cost' ....
One example concerned the frequent appearance of dents in truck doors. An inspector ... found an angry worker
who closed truck doors by slamming his fist into them .. ,
That worker was fired, but apparently enough ... shared
his attitude that the whole plant got a bad rating for
quality. The decision that wiped out 5,000 jobs came later.
"This is only one of many plants that have died , .
because of bad employee morale. Both management and
labor contribute to morale - both should realize fully how
important it is to their ... welfare."

Today in history.
, Today is Thursday, June 26, the
- 178th day of 1980. There are 188 days
; left in the year.
• Today's highlight in history :
. On June 26, 1945, delegates from 50
· nations, meeting in San Francisco,
; signed the United Nations charter.
· On this date:
• In 1284, according to legend, the
• Pied Piper of Hamelin, Gennany,
: lured 130 children from the town.
: Their fate was never determined.
• In 1844, President John Tyler
· married Julie Gardiner in a secret
; ceremonyinNewYork.
; In 1937, Britain's Duke of Windsor,
: having abdicated the throne,
• married Wallis Simpson in France.
· In 1963, Pre.1ident John F. Ken; nedy received a tumultuous
; welcome from more than I million

• •

persons during his visit to West
Berlin.
Ten years ago, Alexander Dubcek
was expelled from Czechoslovakia's
Communist Party.
Five years ago, the Supreme
Court ruled that the mentally ill
could not be confined against their
will and without treatment unless
they are dangerous or incapable of
survivaL
Last year, President Carter held a
town meeting in the city of Shimoda,
Japan, and was greeted with courteous questions.
Today 's birthday : Actress
Eleanor Parker is 58.
Thought for today: The United
Nations was set up not to get us to
heaven, but only to save us from hell
- Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965 ).

Berry's World
''

Chris Jewell, Brent Wilson, Shawn Diddle, Steve ,
Grady, Danny Gheen, Mark Porter and Jeremy
Lawrence. Back row, I. tor., Chuck Williams, Benny
Wilson, John Murphy , Ronnie Quillen.
n ,

..,...- .
-'

'

..

Kennedy pins hopes ·on platform challenge
for a miracle victory in New York.
His fragile strategy is that one or
more of the disputes over what
Democrats should promise on jobs,
the economy, energy prices and
other items will somehow trigger a

In Washington
rebellion among delegates now SUi&gt;"
porting Carter's renomination.
That isn'~ likely. It has been tried
before. A dozen years ago, in a more
bitterly divided party, opponents of
then-Vice Presi!lent Hubert H. Humphrey tried to force through a platform plank disavowing the Vietnam
War policies of the administration .
They got nowhere. The convention
endorsed Lyndon B. Johnson's

policies, and nominated Humphrey.
In 1976, at the closely contested
Republican convention, Ronald
Reagan's forces set up 'a platform
confrontation with then-President
Gerald R. Ford over foreign policy.
They wrote in a plank critical of
the foreign stance of a Republican
administration, and dared the Ford
people to fight them on the convention floor. Instead, the
president's side decided it wasn't
worth the risk and let it stand
without challenge. They figured the
nomination was won, and there was
no point in picking a fight about
anything else. So Ford ran on what
was, in part, Reagan's platform.
Hardly anyone noticed.
That's because platforms are written to be forgotten, not followed. The
candidate who wins the nomJnation
says what he stands for, and that is
all that counts.

Ohio perspective

Psychiatrists must supply criminal info
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A and that so far as he knows, nothing therefore, that no privileged
psychiatrist who is appointed by a
has been developed from the com- relationship was intended."
court to evaluate a criminal defenments about homicides elsewhere.
Brown noted there are two
dant has a duty to report any inBut he said the information was situations where a court may order
formation obtained during his
relayed to appropriate authorities.
an evaluation of a defendant's menevaluation concerning felony
Brown determined that state law tal condition: when there is doubt
criminal offenses.
concerning the privileged relation- the defendant to a criminal action is
Attorney GeneraJ William J.
ship between doctor and patient does mentally competent to stand trial,
Brown gave that opinion on a
not apply in cases where an
and when the defendant pleads not
question raised by Lucas County
examiner is retained by a court for • guilty by reason of insanity.
Prosecutor Anthony G. Pizza. Pizza
examination purposes.
He said both circumstances
said a defendant in his jurisdiction
require an examiner or examiners
who was examined by a psychiatrist
"When the purpose of a mental
to make a written report to the court
had made a comment about mur- examJnation is not treatment or
detailing their findings and conders that may have been committed diagnosis looking toward treatment,
clusions.
in Germany and in other states.
then there is no privileged relationHe said the psychiatrist who ship," Brown stated. ",, The .fact
"Obviously, the purpose of a
examined the unnamed defendant that the purpose of the examination court-ordered
psychiatric
raised the question of his obligation is to ·provide infonnation to someone examination ... is not advice, treat- ·
to reveal information beyond the im- other than the person being ment, or diagnosis for the purpose of
mediate evaluation to authorities.
examined is evidence that the purtreatment," Brown stated. " Rather,
Without naming the defendant,
pose of the examination is not treat- the purpose is to determine whether
Pizza said his case was completed -ment, diagnosis, or advice, and,
a person was insane at the time of

the crime or whether he is competent to stand triaL
" There is no evidence of a
legislative intent to permit the
privilege ... to attach to the persons
involved in a court-ordered mental

examination.

1
'

He concluded that an examJner
who performs a psychiatric
·evaluation of a criminal defendant
pursuant to state law "has a duty to
report to Ia w enforcement
authorities any information obtained during the evaluation concerning criminal offenses that are
felonies.
"The duty to report also extends to
the private organization employing
the examiner and to any other employee of the organization who has
knowledge of such information."

''
'

Some of that old Senate

court~sy

is gone

.•'

.-

.'

.• .
•
•

•

''

Ucp ublicwtS, who nuw liuld 41 seats,

majority leader. I am jusf curious as
tu his view of Itow the Senate ought
to do its business and whether it is a

l'Ould seize coutrul of the 100ll WI!lbcr Senate with a net gain of 10
scats.
It' s the closest they've been in

.. •

.

Minority Leader Howard Baker of
Tennessee has started salting his
remark• witll phrases like "'were we
in the majority ... "
·
At one point, it was just too much
fur Sen. Paul S. Sarbanes, D-Md.,
whutoldBaker :
" I tiav~ a great dea l of respect for
lite minority l e~der . f know he is now
engaged in the effort to try to be the

"lan't It great? Mr. and M~. Wren ·are $ettlng
up hOUI6k81JfJ/ng and wHI have a traditional
family."

n .:ars.
· ,\ J:d GUI' tSCnaltJrs arc nol lcttirlg
tllt·H IJcmocrotit: l'ullcagues, whu
l';J \ L t. ' . aollcU thu cham!Jvr fur :l5
:•· , l i

."! ,

1111 ~~ d

it.

the Senate.
The Senate's current majority
leader, Robert C. Byrd, D-W,Va. , observed dryly : " It is true ·that the
distinguished minority leader and
the minority do cooperate with the
majority, but only a little bit at a
time. ·
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, seen
back in Washington more and more
1

Today's political roundup
!iCI'IOUS

iiJ!:itilution . 1 '

S:1 id llaker : " I reply~" my friend
fn ,IIJ Mttl'j ld11d tlt(tl, of eours~, il is a

these duys now that the primaries.
are over, told a Senate hearing over
which he was presiding : " ... the untied states must be strong enough to
deter any nuckar attack against
us.

..

-

St:I' I11IIS li !StltUtJOJI . · ·

.\w ! IJ~ikt • J \ \ &lt;J!'U't about to

deny

!I.e· p:ot l :il&gt;&lt; •ut Itis ,ccking the N(l.l
h.c tulll

~t.:II.J~t,; JHh . · il l$ nut~ .lil!,"

Somclhing didn't sound right.
Kennedy luuk a closer louk at the
JJreparL-d speech. ."'The United

'

States," he corrected himself,
Rep. George E. Danielson, DCalif., was filling in as House
speaker on a day when the chamber
was in a particularly uproarious
mood. ·
He pounded the · gavel several
times and gave what had to be the
most unusual instructions ·of the
day :
"All those who have desire to
speak willpleasespeaksilently." ·
The Senate may be the nation•s
most exclusive club- bit its"newest
member,Sen. George J. Mitchell, 0Maine, seems una wed .
Mitchell said .he misses one
feature of the federal judge's job he
left to fill out the Senate term (}f
Secretary c:l · Stale Edmund l'l.
Muskic. "Then there was one votb
that counted. Now I'm jus't one of

Ftelds a double and single, Wolfe
twu singles, Greg Wigal and Steve
Little singles.
In Wednesday 's nightcap Meigs
blew the game upen Ill the third uy
platmg four runs. It was highlighted
by Art Fogelstrulll 's tuwring home
run that sailed over the fence in the
right-center field pow er alley.
l-' uglestrorn pi cked up the win wttiJ
the relief help from Bruwn . They
had nine KO' s and tw o free passes.
Canunell and Montgomery fanned

eight and walked four .
Meigs hitters were Wolfe two
si11 gles, Fields two doubles,
Fuglestrom a home run, Nick
Leonard, Randy Murray, Rogie
Ga ul , Roger Kovalchik, John
Beaver, and Terry Wayland with
contributing stngles.
Butcher, who had four hits for the
evening led Wellston hitters. Shoo~
aml Sinuns also singled for Wellston.
Meigs tra ve ls to Logan, Saturday
to play a double header starting at 1
p.m.

Mctgs took the lead in the third
when Kent Wolfe singled, Foster
walked. They rode home 011 Jerry
Fields' double.
The see-saw battle saw Wellston
come back to tie' the scoring in the
fourth, then rally again to regain
their early lea d with one run m the
fifth , the score now 4-3.
In the bottom of that go-round
Kenny Brown launched a tremendous drive over the ni~ht field fence
4-4.

I

SECOND PLACE - Hawk's Pennzoil, Tuppers
Plains, took second place in the Middleport Pee Wee
Tournament. Members were: front row, I. tor. , Brett
Rood, Mike Weber, Richard Deem, Shaun Savoy, Scott

McDonald and Scott Fitch. Second row, I. tor., Kenny
Caldwell, Dan Tripp, Scottie Phillips, Jay Blackwood,
Chad Sinclair and Amy Hager . Back row, l. tor. , Gary
McDonald and Terry Deem.

Racine
Rebels win
tourney

J

\~\IJ1JI~

()I( '1,111~

Against very tough competition
Racine's Rebels fought through a
select field of Pee Wee teams to
emerge as the tournament champions at Middleport.
First round game scores were
Racine :; Letart 3; Middleport
Mustangs 4 Syracuse 2; Middleport
Cubs 18 Stewart 16; and Tuppers
Plains 6 Gallipolis 3.
While advancing to the final
round, Racine downed Middleport's
Mustangs 11-6, and Tuppers Plains
downed the Middleport Cubs 9-8.
In the consolation contest between
the Mustangs and Cubs, the Middleport rivalry was won by a tough
· Mustang club, 1M.
.
The Mustangs grabbed an early
lead aM never let go. Scott Gibbs
had two singles and a triple, M. Erwin a single and double, and M.
Baker a triple and single.
Matt Baker picked up the win with
eight strikeouts while Chris Becker
relieved. Joey Loving, Eddie Crooks
and F. Qualls were the Cub hitters
and Crooks smacking a triple.
Loving Smith and Melton were the
PLACES THIRD - Middleport's Mustangs placed
Jay McCarty and P. J . Gibbs. Back row, left to right,
cub pichers.
• third in a recent Pee Ww Tournament. Team memSean Gibbs, Chris Davis, Matt Ervin, Matt Baker,
In the Championsltip thriller the
bers were, Chris Becker, Chris Barker, Randy CarMike Sowthers, Scott Neigler , Brett Little, Coach Bob
fujcine
Rebels posted a 7-4 comepenter, Heath Richmond, Sue Cassell, Billy Milliron.
Southern, Gregg Gibbs and Don Erwin.
from-behind victory.
C. Jewell and Porter combined for
twelve
KO's for Racine. Booth and
TRACK
LATONIA RESULTS
STU.L WORKING
Diddle
tripled
for the winners while
EUGENE, Ore. ( AP ) - OutFLORENCE, Ky. (AP)
Porter and Gheen singled.
spoken Mac Wilkins, the 1976 Olym- Macadamia won the featured sixth
The world's first three-color, fourT. P. hitter was Tripp. McDonald
pic champion and former world race at Latonia Tuesday.
·
way traffic light is still at work, and Sinclair were the Tuppers
record holder, beat an outstanding
Macadamia went the one-mile
directing pedestrian traffic in the Plains hitters.
discus field including four-time
conditioning trot and paid $5.40 to
Henry Ford Musewn at Dearborn,
Games' gold medalist AI Oerter at win , $3.80 to place and $3 to show.
Mich.
The light, designed by a
the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Mabalis paid $4.20 to place and $2.80
Detroit
Police Department officer,
Trials.
· to show, and Arrow Princess ran
was
originally
installed at a downWilkins ' toss of 22:i feet, 41nches thi1 d to return $5.
town
Detroit
intersection
in 1920. It
and Oerter's fourth place finish in
Night Oliver, no. 2 in the first race,
went on exhibit at the museum in
the discus - overshadowed severaJ and Patsy Patron, no. 3 in the second
other notable developments on and race, were the daily double for. 1938, 14 years after it had ceased of,.
ficial service.
$12.20.
off the track .
In other events, Larry Myricks

)I)N'l,ll

While
Supplies
Last

R~gular

17.95

1

12-Pc. Drive Socket Set
Nickel ch rom e pl ated set inc ludes 7 3!8·in. dri-ve
sockets from 318 in. to 314 in .. 5f8*in. spark plug socket
3-in . socket exten.iion. reversible ratc het and a 3/8 in.

dnv e speeder disc-all in a fitted box.
Quantities limited

MM812

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

GOLF CLINIC AND EXHIBITION

. of
won2'1-2;
the men's
long jwnp
with a leap
Stephanie
Hightower
won

BY LADY PROFESSIONAL GOLfER

r;~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~if1

the women's 100-meter hurdles in
12.90 seconds; James Butler capo
tured the men's 200-meter dash in
20.49, and Sherri Howard took the
women's 400-meter in 51.48 .

NANCY TAWNEY

BOND'S

•

WASHINGTON
lAPi
Hcpublicans and Democrats fight
like cats and dogs in the House, but
in the Senate their relations
traditionally have betn more cordial
- until recently.
As the November elections approach, Senate Democrats arc getting increasingly edgy. Some of that
old Senate courtesy is evaporating.
Of the 34 Senate seats up for grabs,
2,1 are Ocnwc ratlc a nd
10
Hcpubli~an .
That means the

and homer,

The stag e was then set for Kennedy 's heroics when Jerry Fields
singled, then was thrown out on a
force play that allowed Greg Wi~al
to reach "safely . Foster reached on
an error that moved Wigal to third
prior to Kennedy' s hit.
Brown gained the victory after
relieving Jeff Wayland. They combined for eight strikeouts and two
walks.
Brian Swann suffered the loss.
Meigs hitters were Kennedy two

·-..

WASHINGTON (AP) - Because
It really doesn't make much difpresidential campaign platforms
ference what the platform says. The
are essentially word games anyhow,
one Carter wants to run on this time
there is more sound than substance
is studded with contradictions of the
to the dispute over just what the
one he had drafted to run on last
Democratic Party will say in its 1980
time.
edition.
President Carter has the votes to
write the platform his way . Sen. Edward M. Kermedy wants the issues ·
raised as frequently and as
vigorously as possible, the better to
fight those battles again when the
Democratic · National Convention
takes up the platform Aug . 12.
Kennedy's platform proposals are
That's why a corps of Kennedy
far more in tune with traditional
issues aides has been hustling about
Democratic doctrine on economic
the
platform
committee
programs and priorities than are the
proceedings, writing and lobbying
majority, Carter planks. And while
for minority planks. They can't win,
Kennedy lacks the votes to write
because Carter supporters firmly
them into the platform now, there's
control the panel. But they can, and
always 1984.
are, creating an agenda for platform
Still, Kennedy hopes the future is
controversy at the New York City
now and that his platform
convention.
· challenges will lay the groundwork

squad here

si n ~h~

g &lt;:~me.

lockin~

•I

W t: ll~ton

Wednesday , with respect(vc 5-4, and
9-0 wins.
Meigs is nuw 12-2 011 the year while
Wdlstu11 drops tu 10-8.
Cliff Kennedy's game winmng
single, went through Wellston's
drawn in infteld scoring Greg Wi gal
to capture a :i-4 extra inning opener
for Meigs.
Earlier in the game, a ft er
Wellston took the lead on sing les by
Jeff Montgonwry and Settles,
Meigs' Kennedy drove home Bob
Foster with a line smgle tying the

smgles, Bruwn a

Sp~edway

FROM AUSTRALIA.

Stewart, OH.

FORMERLY FROM GALLIPOLIS

.

DIESEL
SPECIAL

Every Fri. Night

PUBLIC INVITED

s2.00 per person

TOP DIRTRACKERS

Now·Th.r u July 2

Highway Oil Co.
··1188 &amp;asternAvemlfl

Guaranteed Purse
Adults 54.00
Children under 12 free

Time Trials 7 PM
Racing 8:00 PM

SAlURDAY, JUNE 28th AT -9:00 A.M.

Located 20 Minutes East of Athe11s.
35 Minutes West of Parkers'burg
On US 50 · at Cty . Rd. 53
PHONES: Track "(6f4) 662-4111
Home 614 -667 -3478

JAVMAR GOLF CLUB
'

many .11

"

'I

�Reds come alive against Atlanta

,

5- The Daily Sentinel, MJdulcpnrt·l'lllneruy, 0 ., Thursda y, JunL• 26, !98ll

I

MEIGS ASSOCIATON - These members of the
Meigs County Fish and Game Association were on
hand Saturday to clean the grounds a nd conduct the an·
nual fishing derby for Meigs youngsters. Membership
of the associatino·stands at 75 . Meetings are held on the

·
.
:
:

fi rst Saturday of each month a t the association groun·
cis, on the West Shade River, thee roles northwest of
Chester on Township Road 156. Funds for staging the
Saturday evening came from a small amount that the
association receives frum hunting and fishing licenses
sold in the county.

35 28 .SSG I 1 &lt;o!
35 33 .515 4

P 1 t t.sbur ~ h

Chu:agu
St. Luu1s

:ll 36 4~ 8
29 J5 .453 8
28 4U .41 2 II

Hull!:itun
I.us Anl:(t!lt·s

II

() nn nnatt

36 32
J1 38

26 .612

40 29 .580 2

SanD•egu
Scm fra nctst'l•
Alla11Wl

.aZ9

.U~

a~

II

30 33 .ol41 II'-;:
28 38 . 4 2 ~ 12 1"i
Wt.-'dnesday's Gamt·s
New York 'J.I , Chtt:&lt;:l!Jll I--4
Phtl&lt;!dclphta 2, Montreal! , 10 muir~ g s
Cmd mla lt 15, Atl&lt;wl&lt;:i 3

St. Loui s 4, Pittsburgh I
Ins Angeles 9, Houston 2
Soln U1cg o 7, San FranciSCo 3

Thursday 's Games
New York 1 Swe~n :J.-5 1 &lt;1l Chicagu i Lamp 66 J.

...

Montreal 1&amp;-inderson 6-4 ) &lt;o~ t Philade lph l.!l
t l.erch:.!-91, 111 1.
,
San F rancts co 1Wh1t.son S.:7I at San Diell: O
1Mura 1·2t, Hlt.
1On ly games scheduled 1

DERBY WI NNERS - These are the Meigs &lt;l&gt;unty youngsters
who won prizes for their catches at the annual fishing derby held
Saturday at the grounds of the Meigs County Fish and Game Assn.
They are, front, I to r, Brian Tannehill, Steve Tracy , Tri cia Burke ;
back , Huey Eason, Ma rk Gocglem and Scott Newell.

.•
•
'
~.•

.·:

Friday 's Gaml:'s
Sl. J.jjUJsa t Chicago
Pltt.sburgh at Montreal , 1n 1

~

~hortstop race close contest

MAJOR t E AG UE BASEBALL
AM ERI CAN L EAGUE

t.:A ST

,•

,. NEW YORK I AP I - Mllwaukee's
:ll.obin Yount held less than a 10,000·Vote lead over New York's Bucky
;Dentforthe shortstop position on the
!American League All.Star team m
:Voting results announced Thursday
1&gt;Ythe Baseball Commissioner 's of:fi.ce.
• Yount led Dent, 767,090 votes to
, 759,732, . in the computerized voting
~me by the fans and underwritten
':t\f Gillette.
: :,: California first baseman Rod
i~rew led all A.L. vote-getters with
tf07,326 votes .· Carew's closest com·
,,petition at first base was Boston's
"'Carl Yastrzemski with 810,090 votes .
~· Milwaukee's Paul Molitor led a ll
:$econd basemen with 932,416 votes,
: ahead of California's Bobby Grich,
twho had 769,351. Kansas City's
~George Brett led the third ba~eme n
~ith 1,374,873 votes, fa r a head of
!:New York's Graig Nettles, with
:,80i ,l27 . At catchtr, Boston 's Carlton
~F•sk held a 1,263,722·1,048,304 ad::Vantage over Kansas City's Darrell
;l&gt;orter.
"': Boston 's Fred Lynn led all out·
f ielders with 1,205,100 votes, while
o,;t eammate J im Rice was third with
&lt;0:1,019,025 . New York 's Reggie
~ckson was second at 1,098,882.

...

W. L. Pel. GB
-44 24 .641
:JB 29 .5fi7 5 1--.:

New Yurk
Milwaukee

The voting ended Wednesday , With
the starting teams for both leagues
to be announced on Tuesday, July I.
The A)l.Star Game will be played at
Dodger Sta dium in Los Angeles on
July 8.

ll-o~ t on

l 7 31 .5·H 7

Detroit
Baltmwre

l5 3(1 .53ll 7 12
ll 32 .529 8
l.1 33 .500 10
31 34 . ~ 77 11 1'1.

C lcv~land

Turont u
Wt:.ST

Kar1!)as C1ty

42 2t! .600
32 35 .478 fl 1-;:

Ch lca~u

Texas
Q;Jk.land

Wl"dnesda}''s Sports Transat'llons
RASEBA LL
NaliollBI League
•
NEW YORK ME TS - Signed Judy Jotm~tun .

Signed

Cleveland P i ttsbuq~h Cros b)', ddcnsr vc end .
lu il sencs uf foor ont-'-)e&lt;tr cunlracls .
KA;.I SAS CITY CHI E F'S - St ~nL'&lt;.I James

tTa mura3-7i,l n l
1Only games scheduled •

Friday·s Gamt'S

ii&lt;ldnul , fl.illba ck , to a series of ttlree u ne-

ycur contract:&gt;.
NEW ENG LA ND PATHIOTS [..(IJT) Mt{j rew . hnebackn .

29 40 .420 121--z '

Texa~ 6,

BASKETBALL
Nat!ollill Basketball Assucialioo
DETHOIT P I STo~· s Si!!ned Todd
Krut•ger , qua rtNba ck , and J nc Gur don ,
dcfcnsr \'Ctackl e.

-

Mlllll t!SUt.a

Ku nsas City 4, Minnesota 1
Seattle 1
~
Ol icago5, Ca lirornia 2
Thursday's Games
Toron t 111 C~ncy 6-J1 at Baltimore !Stone
9-J 1, I ll I
Scuttle 1Bann ister H 1 at Texas 1MaUitck
~-3 1 ,! n J
Lh cagu 1 Baumgarten 14 1 a t Ca hforrua

of the

Appa l &lt;~ chian l ..c a~ u c .

BROW NS

St•a ttlt•

Raltm•oru6, Toronlol
Detro1t 13, C!evelandJ '' -r
Buslon 4, New York3,10 innings ,

!Jttle r..,lls of the NY -Penn L...ea gul:! . Si gned
Scutt Meri11Ck and Dorulld Magdziult, prt-

CLEVELAND

9

ZJ 43 .348 17
Wed!lesday's Gam es
MilwaukeeS. OaklandZ ~

pitcher. and Duane Evcms ond Wil lie

Kmg ~ port

~71

31 39 .443 11
30 39 .435 ll'-2

Co1lifurma

Boone, first Uascman. i:l nd n~ i g rrL'I.J thi!lll to
chers, and a ssigned them to

32 343

i)ct rolt at To ronto, f n1
Baltunore a t Boston, 1 ll /
Clcv!'la nd at Ne\ol." York , til/
MmnestJlli at Texas, ! n1
Milwaukee &lt;o~ t Ca lifo rnia , 1n 1
Chkagoa l Oukland,\ n t
Ktw sa s Cn y at Se&lt;itlle. 1 n 1

' Sl ~n e d

BOATlNG
NEWPORT, R.I. lAP ) - Philip
Weld ofGiouchester, Mass., won the
Singlehanded Transatlantic fulcc
with a new time record for the
crossing .
Weld 's trimaran Moxie crossed
the finish line nearly 18 days after
leav ing Plymouth, England .

PLUS/

rl amle:~. , Sl.

IAJI!.!S, ."11 · RnSE&gt; , Philadelphia, 46;
Temp leton, Sl. l...ouis, 46 ; Griffe}", Cinl'lnllatl, 45.
HHI : Hendrick , St. Louis, ~7 ; Garvey, Lo.s

1\n~clcs, 57 ; Sc hmidt, Philadelphia, 56 ;
llcJkcr, Lo!i An~eles, *6; R . Smith, Los
An)Sclcs, 4 ~ .
HITS : Templeton, St. Louis, 92; K. Hernandez, St. Louis, 86 ; Cromartie, Mon treal,
79 : 0 . Mureno, Pittsburgh , 79 ; Chambliss.
At!tmt.a, 79 ; Garvey, Los Angeles, 79.
OOUBLES ; lliJSc , Philatlt:lphia, 21;
Kmgh t, Cincinna ti, 21 : Stearns, New York ,
20 ; Chambliss, Atlanta , 20; K. H~rn.andez,

Palmer scores two victories Wednesday
By Associated Press
Jim Palmer scored a pair of vic·
tories Wednesday night.
First the 34-year-old Baltimore
right·han~er scattered eight hits as
the Orioles beat the Toronto Blue
Jays 6-3 for Palmer's 232nd career
triumph . Then, after the game, it
was announced that he had agreed to
a two-year contract extension with
the club.
Contract terms were not
disclosed, but Palmer previously
had-rejected a three-year extension
valued at about $1.3 million. He has
complained that his $260,000 salary
was no longer commensurate with
what was. being paid other pitchers
of his stature.
"! think this indicates the new
management is more progressive in
paying higher salaries," Pa~ner
said, referring to Edward Bennett
Williams, who took control of the
Ori&lt;*s last winter. " It indicates
that other players, if they need a job
over the long haul , will be paid in
line with what other players are

75' Cash Refund
YOUR
AfTERNIETFCOIUNDT
R

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

IV

MAIL

94•

'

'

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

144 W 2nd 51.

Route ll
Mason, W. Va.

Pomeroy

TH IPI~ : R ScQtl, Montrea l, 6; McBride , Phil1:1delphia, 6; 0 . Moreno, Pil·
1..-lburgh, 6; l...clndestoy, Houston, 6; Griffey ,
Cmd mtati , ~: Le Master, San Fran cisco, 5;
Cl&lt;~rk , $(In Francisco, 5.
HOME RUNS : Sctunidt, Philadelphia, 21;
Ba ker, Los Ang eles, 16; Luzin s ki.

Philt~dt!lphia, 15; Hendrick, St. Louis, 15;
Garvey, Los An~cles ,l5 .

STO LEN BASES : 0 . Moreno, PiltsburHh.
39 : l.t!F lnre, Montreal, 38: Collins, Cincmn&lt;o~ti, ~ ;

R. Scott, Montreal, 25; R. Law,
l...os Angeles, 23.
PI TCHING 11 Decisions) . Bibby, P itt.sburJ;lh , 8-1 , .889 , 3.01; RellS.'l, lM; Angeles,

Mlwauk ee, .3:..8; Carew, California, .347;
Cwpcr, Milwauket:, .l37 ; Brett, Kansas
City , .:m ; Orw, Cleve land, .3.12.
HUNS : Tranm1el , DetrOit, 51; Yount,
Milwaukee, 51; Randolph, New York, 51;
W1lson , Kansa~ Cit)' , 51 ; Wills, Texas, ~ 1.
RBI: Perez, Boston . 54 . Og livi e,
Milw&lt;tukee, 51: Oli ver, Texas, 51; Annas,
Ortkland , ~9 ; Hebner, Detroit, 48.
HlTS : Wilson, Kansas City , 95; Rivers,
Texas, 87; 8umbry, Baltim ore, 86 ; Carew ,
Ca liforma , 85; Burleson, Boston, 84: Oliver,
TeXa!i,6o\.
OOU BLES : Morrison, Chicago, 24; Yount,
I\1Jlwaukee, 20 ; Carew, Ca lifornia , 19 ; D.
Gcucia, Toron to, 18; Oliver, Texa s, 17.
TRIPLES : Griirin, Torooto, 8; Bwnbry,
Baltunore, S; Brett, Kansas City, S; Wilson ,
K&lt;1nsas City.~; Jl tied with 4.
HOME RUNS : Oglivie, Milwaukee, lB;
Re . J ackson , New York, 18 ; Annas,
Oa kland, 14; Rice, Boston, lJ; Nettles, "New
York,l3; Ma)'bcrry, Toronto, JJ.
STOLEN BASES : Wilson, Karisa.s City, 31;
Henderson, Oakland, 31; Dilone, Cleveland ,
Z3 ; J. Cruz , Se~tlle, 20; Wills, Te:tas, 20.
PITCHI NG: 17 Decisions): John, New
York, la.J, .769, JJII ; Stone, &amp;ltimorc, 9-3,
750, 3.46; Gura, K~:~nsas City, 9-3, .750, 2.23;
Clevela nd, Mi l wa~ ee . :'r2, .714, 3.76: R.
May, Ne w York, :J.-2, .714, 2.24; Fanner,
Chicago , 5-2 . . 714 , 2.60; McGregor,
Baltimore, 7-3, .700, 3.38; Rainey, Boston, 73·
'. 700, 4.97 .
STRIKEOUTS: Guidry , New York, 91; M.
Norris, Oakland, 73; Keough , Oakland, 72;
B. Bannister, Seattle , 72; l..eunard. Kansas
City . 71: M a ~a ek , Texas7L

paid. The key tu 1Iavi11g a good
ballcl ub is to keep guud players
here."
One of those good players, Ken
Singleton, continuted his hot hitting
against the Blue Ja ys . He had two
hits and drove in two runs, giving
him 23 hits in 46_times at bat over the
last 13 games.
He also has had 10 walks and 12
RBI during that span while raising
his batting average from .236 to .286.
In other American League games,
the Boston Red Sox edged the New
York Yankees 4-3 in 10 innings, the
Detroit Tigers clobbered the
Cleveland Indians 13·3, the
Milwaukee Brewers beat the
Oakland A's 5-2, the Ka~sas City
Royals defeated the Minnesota
Twins 4-1 , the -Texas Rangers topped
the Seattle Mariners IH and the
Chicago White Sox beat the California Angels 5-2.
The triumph was the eighth for the
Orioles in their last 10 games and
their 12th in a row over Toronto sin·

Sports briefs.

St. Lou1.s, 18.

6-1, .889, 2.00 : Carlton. Philadelphia , ll-2,
.S67, 1.83 ; Reed, Philadelphia, 6- 1, .85, 2.83 ;
Welch, Los Angeles, a-2, .800, 2.16: P&lt;tslorc,
Cmctnnat1, 9-3, .750 , 1.51. Bahnsen, Muntrcal , ~2 • .714, 2.~ .
•
STRIKEOUTS : Carlton , Philadelia, 13a;
Hichanl . Houston. 106 : Ryan, Houston, 87;
P. Niekro, Allanta , 75; Blyle\len , P ittsburgh,
74
.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BAT II NG 050 a t bats ) : Molitor,

New York at Philadelphia, r n 1
Cmcmnat1 at Houston , 1n 1
Atlanta il l Sitn DieJ;:o , l n 1
I A t~ An geles &lt;ll &amp;In Fri:lnCJSl"ll , 1111

just trying to work my way through
it."
Ken Griffey, leading the Reds with
a .318 average, knocked in four runs
with three hits in the game, which
the Reds broke open in the first two
innings.
Braves starter Rick Matula, 5-6,
lasted just 11·3 innings, long enough
for the Reds to score 7 runs. Matula
loaded the bases in the first on walks
to Dave Collins and Griffey and a
single by Junior Kennedy, and Ray
Knight followed one out later with
his second grand slam of the season.
Griffey, Dan Driessen and Knight
singled home runs in the second, and
the Reds added solo runs in the third
and fourth. Griffey's two run homer
in the seventh and a four·run eighth
finished off the Braves.

SPECIAL $18 9
PIICE

HUNS ; Schmidt , Philadelphi&lt;1, 42; K. Her-

W. L P&lt;·t.
GR
J7 '!.7 .578

:'&gt;l ew York

the Reds' lineup while he waits out a
month·hmg hitting slump, pointed to
his two doubles Wednesday as a s ign
uf better things to come.
" Tonight I gut two doubles. I know
that pretty soon I'll be hitting the
ball out of the ball park, " t"oster
said. "Now , I've just got to start
with base hits. The homers will
. come."
Tom Seaver, 3·4, struggled
through seven innings with a tender
shoulder to notch his fi,rst victory
since May 10.
" The shoulder hurts on some of
the pitches I throw if my mecha nics
aren't right," Seaver said.
" One of the things a pitcher likes
to do when you're having trouble is
to pitch through it and get some time
under your belt," Seaver said. " I'm

Cru111arlie, Montreal. .316.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
Muntre&lt;J I
P h iladelphia

CINCINNATI 1Al'1 - Sc.., ing the
Atlm•ta Bra ves wa s just the elixir
needed by the Cincinnati Heds'
ailing bats.
The previously ~truggling Reds
expluded for their highest run total
of the season Wednesday, mer·
dlcssly pounding live Atla nta pit·
cl•m·s f11r 18 hits in a 15-3 victory .
Combined with a 16-hit, 8-2 drubbing of Atlanta the night before, the
victory left the Reds believing their
recent offensive slump had ended.
.. We'll probably break out of it,
starting last night," said Ray
Knight, who drove in .5 runs with a
grand-s lam homer and a single.
" I don't think the Braves pitchers
were that bad. It's just a matter of
us having guys on this club who can
hit when they get it together, no ma t·
tcr who is out there, pitching,"
Knight said. ·
Atlanta manager Bob Cox, who
was ejected from the game in the
eighth inning, was in a sour mood
over his club's ninth loss to Cin·
cinna ti in 10 games this season.
" It was a clear case of getting the
hell beat out of us," Cox said. " They
play dead for a month, then explode
against us."
George Foster, dropped to sixth in

WHY IN THE WORLD

WOULD ANYONE GO

TO A STEAK HOUSE
FOR BREAKFAST?

When it's a Bob Evans Steak House
that's reason enough!
.
Because at Bob Evans we serve great tastmg
farm breakfasts you can 't get anyvvhere else
Fresh, fluffy hot biscu its with our own
sausage gravy
Fned mush made from wholesome cornmeal
and served with delicious warm syrup .
How about an order of delicious farm fresh
Bob Evans'Sausage with .. you name it ... eggs,
hotcakes waffles, french toast.
And everything is served with all the good
1
coffee you can drink.
Of course, if yo•J'v€ got the appetite you can
always order steak and eggs.
If you want a real hearty, old-fashioned farm
breakfast come to the Steak House. It's so good
you'll want to stay for lunch and dinner

TENNIS
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) Hank Pfister upset Victor Amaya, 36, 6-4, IHJ, ~. 6-3; while Shlomo
Glickstein of Israel upset Raul
Ramirez of MeKico, &lt;Hi, &amp;-2 , ~ . 7-5,
11-6 at the Wimbledon tennis cham·
pionships.
In other matches, Stan Smith
defeated Andrew Pattison, 5-7, &amp;-3 , &amp;3, 6-4 ; Jose-Luis Clerc of Argentina
overcame Vijay Amritraj of India, I·
6, ~. -7-5, 7-5, 6-4; Pat DuPre ·
downed Vince Van Patten, 6-4, 3-il, &amp;1, 6-4; Dick Stockton topped Sandy
Mayer, 7-&lt;;, ~. &lt;Hi, &amp;-3, &amp;-2; Brian
Teacher beat Tim Wilkison, 6-4, 7-il,
7-5; and Italy's Adriano Panatta
beat Erik van Dillen , ~ . 2-&lt;;, 7-ii, 7-5,
!1-7.
In women's play, Andrea Jaeger
defeated Britain 's Anthea Cooper,&amp;3, &amp;-3; Evonne Goolagong of
Australia had an easy &amp;-1, &amp;-2 triumph over Sharon Walsh ; Britain's
Virginia Wade defeated Ivanna
Madruga of Argentina, 6-4, 6-4 ; Pam
Teeguarden beat Mary Car illo, S.2,

I AJUJs, .337: R. Smith , Los An~cles , .336 ;
Va ll, Olitagu, .327; Griffey, Cmt:tnnati, .316:

• •

6-1 ; and Bettina Bunge topped Jo
Durie of Great Britain, .6-4. &lt;Hi, 6-4.

Scott Harrison had two doubles for
Pomeroy,
Roger
Kovalchik ,
Stewart: and Milhoan two singh!s,
and Gilmore one single. Gerald
Singer suffered the loss, Benny Ben·
nett and Pat Tabler came on in
relief. They fanned nine and walked
eight. The lone Coolville hit was by
Pat Taber. Pomeroy is now 7~.

to express exactly

(SLIGHT IRR.)

3 $1 00

SIMPLICITY

..

EAGll THE ONlY FAMilY COMPACT
I WITH AUTOMATIC 1-WI/EEl ORNl

A....
BEAUTIFUL
PRICE ON EAGLE AIR CONDITIONING: $29!/* ~~EPA1ce
.
'

'

' Special 1111 com1111on1ng liS I price a.pphes 10 Eagle mode ls eQuipped
wilh lactorv·inslallea air coM itlomng SOld and delivered by J'-J iy 5, 1980
t See you r dealer l or warranty and rust prog ram del a1 15

FillEt 1'15' AMERICAN
f"t Alumlntzed e•hau st syslem Is warrant eel tor 12 months or 12.000 miles
RAG WITH A TEST DRIVE. llebart Is a 'tOisttred trltdem11k ol llebart !nternallon a1 Co1P01ai10n
IIY ff PROUDLY.
US PARTS AND SERVICE SPECIALS.
NOW THRU JULY 5TH
'E A1.L THREEGIE. SPIRIT AND
'CORD-AT

RIVERS,DE AMC • JEEP

Upper River Ro1d

'

IIIIYE1I lttoTBmfJIII I'I.AM'
• IIIITII111f IIRriiJU 11-I!IIIITW
,,..,._ -.....rY.

PATTERNS
Y2 PRICE

SALE
VALUES TO 117.95
LADIES' ·
•

Co¥er5~~tmY part eicept llres.

WRANGLER
SHORTS
'

Even If II just wears OUt. t
• 11f7111Xt:tUSit'E l/EJMr
FA1:7'1MY /IU$1 1"11Dm7JDI.1
• ,
THI. UCI.U!INllfll. IWf-nM

,--.;--

$199

l6J /I!IJST- T1IIIU ........,., • tt

SWIMWEAR

SK.EIN

• AU AT 11/J um4 COST.

Gallipolis, Ohio

GROUP WOMEN'S - GIRLS'

~~AL~S~s...

DRESS • SPORT • CANVAS

'400

PAIR

GROUP

MEN'S SHOES
INCLUDES ENTIRE STOCK OF WHITE DRESS SHOES

'400

PAIR

SALE
Reg. S12.95

TUBE
TOPS

$995

GROUP
MEN'S-WOMEN'S
CHILDREN'S

.....

--~·,·------·

lh

CONVERSE-JOX-KEDS

'700

heritage house
.OF SHOES
OHIO

1 RACK MEN'S

LADIES'
WEATHER &amp; PANT

SUITS &amp;
SPORT COATS

COATS
REDUCED

30%

REDUCED40% TO 70%
LAD I

GIRLS'
SUMMER

Also Small Flare
Blue

REDUCED 20%
ME

LEVI CASUALS
&amp; PRE-WASHED

SHORTS &amp;
KNIT TOPS

REDUCED 20%
LADIES'

MEN'S BIB

LADIES'

1 RACK MEN'S
Long Sleeve Western, Etc .

SLEEPWEAR
SIZE 3-14

NOW

Missy &amp;

KNIT PULLOVER

TERRY &amp; KNIT

SHI_RTS

TOPS
ONLY
VAlUES TO 8.00

-·

SizeS, M,

REDUCED

'444

-~--

_,______
II

,..........
' •"

SHIRTS

REDUCED

20%

SPORTSWEAR
1h price
MEN'S

LAOIES'

'

Sport

1 RACK LADIES'

1 RACK MEN'S

L~D

1

Sizes

REDUCED 30%

1f2 PRICE

$

SALE
Reg.$19.95

JOGGING SUITS

Sjze 8 • 20

SizeS, M, L,'&amp; XL

~.

REDUCED

~-'

--.

-:--~ ---

REDUCED

30%

1 RACK

KNIT TOPS
&amp; SHELLS
REDUCED 40%
MEN 'S SHORT SLEEVE
COLOR OR WHITE

DRESS SHIRTS
REDUCED 20%
LADIES'

PANT SUITS
'
·~

MMER

SLACKS

OVERALLS
32·48

REDUCED 20%

DRESSES
Half

Sz.6·18

BEND OVER
PANTS &amp; JEANS

Size

·88'

PRICE

SUMMER PURSES 40% OFF REG. PRICES

WINDBREAKERS

•

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

DRESS &amp;
CASUALS

TENNIS SHOES

BAHR
----·- · -'"'f"=---

GROUP MEN'S

REDUCED 30%

MEN'S UNLINED

OFF
REG. PRICE

40%

LADIES '

Missy and Half Sizes

99'

DRESS SHOES .

. LEVI'S
SALE
$}588
Reg. $18.00

LADIES'

.. ''\4.

i

~ 2°~ALR

GROUP CHILDREN'S SHOES

20%

JANTZEN
MERCHANDISE
ARRIVING FOR FAll

IE·RS
W. 2nd AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

OPEN MON .·SAT. 9:30to S

•

. • ..

MEN'S COLOR ED

REDUCED20%

WINTUK
YARN

Ke nneth McCullough . R. Ph .
Charles Riffle . R. Ph .
Ronald Hanning . R . Ph
Man thru Sat . 8 :00 a . m . lcJ 9 p . m .
Sunday 10 :30to 12 : 30and 5to '9'p .m .
PRE &gt;C RIPTIONS
PH . 9''2; 29j5
Friendly Se rvice
Pome,oY o.
f . Mr1111
tsflll•

n American Motors
RENAULT
.,

446-taoo

LADIES'

COATS &amp; CLARK

PANTY HOSE

'

Eagles make tracks In th'e sand, thro ugh mud and over
the s lickest roads. Even with a trailer in tow. So e njoy
Eagle's unique kind of 4-wheel -drive freedom. While
staying cool for leAs.

Syracuse Hubbard 's Greenhouse
beat Middleport's Mustangs 11).5.
Syracuse is still holding down first
place with an 8-1 record. ·
Chris Stewart, Shane Simpson,
Eber Pickens, Chad Taylor, Bryan
Weaver, and Chris Stout were the
Syracuse hitters along with team
leaders Todd Lisle with three singles
and Kevin Grueser with a home run.
Todd Lisle was the winning pitcher fanning ten. Scott Neigler, Matt
·Baker, P. J . Gibbs and Chis Becker
accounted fo the Middleport hits.
Matt Baker was the Mustang pitcher ·
"'
fanning ten .

PANTS

WRANGLER
JEANS

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

President Nellie Brown an·
nounced that a professional
Australian golfer, Nancy Tawney,
will conduct a clinic at the Jaymar
Golf Course beginning at 9 a .m.
Saturday when the Pomeroy
Women's Golf Association met
Tuesday.
The clinic is open to the pubtic at
$2 a person. Ms. Tawley has played
in the LPGA, the U.S. Open anc! is
one of the top 20 women golfers in
California.
Mrs. Brown thanked members for
their contributions of food and for
their work with a reception held at
the Jaymar Course folowing the
Dave Diles tournament.
Prizes for the day went to
Charldene Hanning, low score, and
to Peggy Moore and Garren Snyder.
Twelve members and a guest at·
tended.

In htUe action Tracy Cleland's
home run led Racine to a 13-3 win
ovr Tuppers Plains Bears. Cleland,
whose record is ~ from the mound
picked up the win for Racine. Racine
is now 11).2.

•
•

SENSATIONAL VALUES!

• •

REDUCED 30%

LADIES'

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

Willford hit a long home run to keep
Middleport in the game. Bishop and
Cremeans combined on the mound
for Middleport.

c 19SO 608 [ VA.T\JS FARM FOODS 1NC

.'I',.

'

Golf clinnic set

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

·~

'

dians won a 6-5 decision over Middleport. Mark Holter in retief of
Jerry Larkins picked up the win.
They fanned 12 and Walked two. The
game was decided when Mark Gad·
dis drew a bases loaded walk to for·
ce home the winning run for
Eastern.
Jimmy Carter tripled for Easter,
Jay Carpenter doubled, and Mark
Holter, Vic Gillilan and Mark Gaddis singled.
D. Hoffman doubled and singled
lor Middleport, Burdette singled
twice, while Eads, Cremeans,
Reuter, and Thomas singled. Mr.

ku4GSBURY HOME SALES &amp; SERVICE

EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

•

WOMEN'S SUMMER

The talented Pomeroy Royals
remained undefeated with a 11-2 victory over Coolville in the M&amp;M pony
Iague. Wining pitcher was J.R.
Wamsley with relief help from Scott
Harrison.
The duo combined for 11 KO's and
six walks .

Mobile Home Trades .Welcome
Show Models

STEAK HOUSE

f1vc t:unsccutlvc wa lks IJy C lcvcl~ud
starter Dan Spillner and t11e Indians
never caught up.
Milt Wilcox , 11-1, scattered nin e
hits in posting his sixth t.:unsecuttv c
Ct1mplete-game vidury .
Rangers 6, Mariners I
Ferguson Jenkins scattered nine
hils, struck out two and walked one
as Texas beat · Seattle while
sweltering at 101 degrees.
Richie Zisk drove in three runs
with a pair of singles to lead the
Rangers' attack .
Royals 4, Twins I
Paul Splittorff shut out Minnesota
until Jose Morales' double with two
out in the ninth, when Dan Quisenberry came on to get the last out.
The two combined for a six-hitter.
Hal McRae slammed a two-run
homer to pace the Kansas City at·
tack, and the Royals supported Split·
torff with three double plays.
White Sox 5, Angels 2
Chet Lemon hit a two-run homer,
Wayne Nordhagen belted a solo shot
and Jlm Morrison doubled home two
more runs for the White Sox.
Chicago starter Richard Dotson, 7·
3, held the Angels hitless for 52·3 in·
nings before giving way to Ed Farmer in the seventh. Farmer went on
to post his 16th save, tops in the
American League.

Summer league results.

MODULAR
HOMES

howyOufeeL ·u·

/lOW FROM AMERICAN MOTORS -

Stapleton hit a tw&lt;&gt;-uut double in the
lOth inning to drive in Gary Allenson
with the winning run lor Boston.
Allenson had reached second when
his one-out grounder went through
the legs of third baseman Graig Net·
ties and then was bobbled by left
fielder Dennis Werth. Allenson advanced to third on Rick Burleson's
grounder and scored when Stapleton
pulled Tommy John's first-pitch i~
tpe left field corner.
Boston reliever Tom Burgmeier
got the victory, stifling the Yankees
on one hit over the 'Tina! 42-3 innings
and striking out eight.
Brewers 5, A's 2
Ninth-inning home runs by Sixto
Lezcano, Mark Brouhard and Buck
Martinez, plus a run-scoring single
by Cecil Cooper, gave Milwaukee a
sweep of the three-game series and
dealt the A's their 11th loss in the
last 13 games .
Moose Haas, 11-6, pitched a four·
hitter lor Oakland and struck out 12.
Tigers 13, lodlaos 3
Cleveland's pitchers gave up 14
walks, five of them with the bases
loaded, to make Detroit's seventh
straight victory an easy one. The
Tigers got three runs in the first inning on a single by Steve Kemp and

Also in M&amp;M play Eastern's In·

-g,&amp; 6YfAAttl

Greeting cants

NATIONAL LEAG UE

BATTING 115«h!.t balS I: K. Hernandez, St.

'

Houklc secund bascn 1.r.m Dave

MEN'S SUMMER

TOUA \''S MAJOR l;EAGUE, LEAD E RS

·.

ce Julv. 197B.

Regatta Week End
SIDEWALK SALE!

•

�Reds come alive against Atlanta

,

5- The Daily Sentinel, MJdulcpnrt·l'lllneruy, 0 ., Thursda y, JunL• 26, !98ll

I

MEIGS ASSOCIATON - These members of the
Meigs County Fish and Game Association were on
hand Saturday to clean the grounds a nd conduct the an·
nual fishing derby for Meigs youngsters. Membership
of the associatino·stands at 75 . Meetings are held on the

·
.
:
:

fi rst Saturday of each month a t the association groun·
cis, on the West Shade River, thee roles northwest of
Chester on Township Road 156. Funds for staging the
Saturday evening came from a small amount that the
association receives frum hunting and fishing licenses
sold in the county.

35 28 .SSG I 1 &lt;o!
35 33 .515 4

P 1 t t.sbur ~ h

Chu:agu
St. Luu1s

:ll 36 4~ 8
29 J5 .453 8
28 4U .41 2 II

Hull!:itun
I.us Anl:(t!lt·s

II

() nn nnatt

36 32
J1 38

26 .612

40 29 .580 2

SanD•egu
Scm fra nctst'l•
Alla11Wl

.aZ9

.U~

a~

II

30 33 .ol41 II'-;:
28 38 . 4 2 ~ 12 1"i
Wt.-'dnesday's Gamt·s
New York 'J.I , Chtt:&lt;:l!Jll I--4
Phtl&lt;!dclphta 2, Montreal! , 10 muir~ g s
Cmd mla lt 15, Atl&lt;wl&lt;:i 3

St. Loui s 4, Pittsburgh I
Ins Angeles 9, Houston 2
Soln U1cg o 7, San FranciSCo 3

Thursday 's Games
New York 1 Swe~n :J.-5 1 &lt;1l Chicagu i Lamp 66 J.

...

Montreal 1&amp;-inderson 6-4 ) &lt;o~ t Philade lph l.!l
t l.erch:.!-91, 111 1.
,
San F rancts co 1Wh1t.son S.:7I at San Diell: O
1Mura 1·2t, Hlt.
1On ly games scheduled 1

DERBY WI NNERS - These are the Meigs &lt;l&gt;unty youngsters
who won prizes for their catches at the annual fishing derby held
Saturday at the grounds of the Meigs County Fish and Game Assn.
They are, front, I to r, Brian Tannehill, Steve Tracy , Tri cia Burke ;
back , Huey Eason, Ma rk Gocglem and Scott Newell.

.•
•
'
~.•

.·:

Friday 's Gaml:'s
Sl. J.jjUJsa t Chicago
Pltt.sburgh at Montreal , 1n 1

~

~hortstop race close contest

MAJOR t E AG UE BASEBALL
AM ERI CAN L EAGUE

t.:A ST

,•

,. NEW YORK I AP I - Mllwaukee's
:ll.obin Yount held less than a 10,000·Vote lead over New York's Bucky
;Dentforthe shortstop position on the
!American League All.Star team m
:Voting results announced Thursday
1&gt;Ythe Baseball Commissioner 's of:fi.ce.
• Yount led Dent, 767,090 votes to
, 759,732, . in the computerized voting
~me by the fans and underwritten
':t\f Gillette.
: :,: California first baseman Rod
i~rew led all A.L. vote-getters with
tf07,326 votes .· Carew's closest com·
,,petition at first base was Boston's
"'Carl Yastrzemski with 810,090 votes .
~· Milwaukee's Paul Molitor led a ll
:$econd basemen with 932,416 votes,
: ahead of California's Bobby Grich,
twho had 769,351. Kansas City's
~George Brett led the third ba~eme n
~ith 1,374,873 votes, fa r a head of
!:New York's Graig Nettles, with
:,80i ,l27 . At catchtr, Boston 's Carlton
~F•sk held a 1,263,722·1,048,304 ad::Vantage over Kansas City's Darrell
;l&gt;orter.
"': Boston 's Fred Lynn led all out·
f ielders with 1,205,100 votes, while
o,;t eammate J im Rice was third with
&lt;0:1,019,025 . New York 's Reggie
~ckson was second at 1,098,882.

...

W. L. Pel. GB
-44 24 .641
:JB 29 .5fi7 5 1--.:

New Yurk
Milwaukee

The voting ended Wednesday , With
the starting teams for both leagues
to be announced on Tuesday, July I.
The A)l.Star Game will be played at
Dodger Sta dium in Los Angeles on
July 8.

ll-o~ t on

l 7 31 .5·H 7

Detroit
Baltmwre

l5 3(1 .53ll 7 12
ll 32 .529 8
l.1 33 .500 10
31 34 . ~ 77 11 1'1.

C lcv~land

Turont u
Wt:.ST

Kar1!)as C1ty

42 2t! .600
32 35 .478 fl 1-;:

Ch lca~u

Texas
Q;Jk.land

Wl"dnesda}''s Sports Transat'llons
RASEBA LL
NaliollBI League
•
NEW YORK ME TS - Signed Judy Jotm~tun .

Signed

Cleveland P i ttsbuq~h Cros b)', ddcnsr vc end .
lu il sencs uf foor ont-'-)e&lt;tr cunlracls .
KA;.I SAS CITY CHI E F'S - St ~nL'&lt;.I James

tTa mura3-7i,l n l
1Only games scheduled •

Friday·s Gamt'S

ii&lt;ldnul , fl.illba ck , to a series of ttlree u ne-

ycur contract:&gt;.
NEW ENG LA ND PATHIOTS [..(IJT) Mt{j rew . hnebackn .

29 40 .420 121--z '

Texa~ 6,

BASKETBALL
Nat!ollill Basketball Assucialioo
DETHOIT P I STo~· s Si!!ned Todd
Krut•ger , qua rtNba ck , and J nc Gur don ,
dcfcnsr \'Ctackl e.

-

Mlllll t!SUt.a

Ku nsas City 4, Minnesota 1
Seattle 1
~
Ol icago5, Ca lirornia 2
Thursday's Games
Toron t 111 C~ncy 6-J1 at Baltimore !Stone
9-J 1, I ll I
Scuttle 1Bann ister H 1 at Texas 1MaUitck
~-3 1 ,! n J
Lh cagu 1 Baumgarten 14 1 a t Ca hforrua

of the

Appa l &lt;~ chian l ..c a~ u c .

BROW NS

St•a ttlt•

Raltm•oru6, Toronlol
Detro1t 13, C!evelandJ '' -r
Buslon 4, New York3,10 innings ,

!Jttle r..,lls of the NY -Penn L...ea gul:! . Si gned
Scutt Meri11Ck and Dorulld Magdziult, prt-

CLEVELAND

9

ZJ 43 .348 17
Wed!lesday's Gam es
MilwaukeeS. OaklandZ ~

pitcher. and Duane Evcms ond Wil lie

Kmg ~ port

~71

31 39 .443 11
30 39 .435 ll'-2

Co1lifurma

Boone, first Uascman. i:l nd n~ i g rrL'I.J thi!lll to
chers, and a ssigned them to

32 343

i)ct rolt at To ronto, f n1
Baltunore a t Boston, 1 ll /
Clcv!'la nd at Ne\ol." York , til/
MmnestJlli at Texas, ! n1
Milwaukee &lt;o~ t Ca lifo rnia , 1n 1
Chkagoa l Oukland,\ n t
Ktw sa s Cn y at Se&lt;itlle. 1 n 1

' Sl ~n e d

BOATlNG
NEWPORT, R.I. lAP ) - Philip
Weld ofGiouchester, Mass., won the
Singlehanded Transatlantic fulcc
with a new time record for the
crossing .
Weld 's trimaran Moxie crossed
the finish line nearly 18 days after
leav ing Plymouth, England .

PLUS/

rl amle:~. , Sl.

IAJI!.!S, ."11 · RnSE&gt; , Philadelphia, 46;
Temp leton, Sl. l...ouis, 46 ; Griffe}", Cinl'lnllatl, 45.
HHI : Hendrick , St. Louis, ~7 ; Garvey, Lo.s

1\n~clcs, 57 ; Sc hmidt, Philadelphia, 56 ;
llcJkcr, Lo!i An~eles, *6; R . Smith, Los
An)Sclcs, 4 ~ .
HITS : Templeton, St. Louis, 92; K. Hernandez, St. Louis, 86 ; Cromartie, Mon treal,
79 : 0 . Mureno, Pittsburgh , 79 ; Chambliss.
At!tmt.a, 79 ; Garvey, Los Angeles, 79.
OOUBLES ; lliJSc , Philatlt:lphia, 21;
Kmgh t, Cincinna ti, 21 : Stearns, New York ,
20 ; Chambliss, Atlanta , 20; K. H~rn.andez,

Palmer scores two victories Wednesday
By Associated Press
Jim Palmer scored a pair of vic·
tories Wednesday night.
First the 34-year-old Baltimore
right·han~er scattered eight hits as
the Orioles beat the Toronto Blue
Jays 6-3 for Palmer's 232nd career
triumph . Then, after the game, it
was announced that he had agreed to
a two-year contract extension with
the club.
Contract terms were not
disclosed, but Palmer previously
had-rejected a three-year extension
valued at about $1.3 million. He has
complained that his $260,000 salary
was no longer commensurate with
what was. being paid other pitchers
of his stature.
"! think this indicates the new
management is more progressive in
paying higher salaries," Pa~ner
said, referring to Edward Bennett
Williams, who took control of the
Ori&lt;*s last winter. " It indicates
that other players, if they need a job
over the long haul , will be paid in
line with what other players are

75' Cash Refund
YOUR
AfTERNIETFCOIUNDT
R

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

IV

MAIL

94•

'

'

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

144 W 2nd 51.

Route ll
Mason, W. Va.

Pomeroy

TH IPI~ : R ScQtl, Montrea l, 6; McBride , Phil1:1delphia, 6; 0 . Moreno, Pil·
1..-lburgh, 6; l...clndestoy, Houston, 6; Griffey ,
Cmd mtati , ~: Le Master, San Fran cisco, 5;
Cl&lt;~rk , $(In Francisco, 5.
HOME RUNS : Sctunidt, Philadelphia, 21;
Ba ker, Los Ang eles, 16; Luzin s ki.

Philt~dt!lphia, 15; Hendrick, St. Louis, 15;
Garvey, Los An~cles ,l5 .

STO LEN BASES : 0 . Moreno, PiltsburHh.
39 : l.t!F lnre, Montreal, 38: Collins, Cincmn&lt;o~ti, ~ ;

R. Scott, Montreal, 25; R. Law,
l...os Angeles, 23.
PI TCHING 11 Decisions) . Bibby, P itt.sburJ;lh , 8-1 , .889 , 3.01; RellS.'l, lM; Angeles,

Mlwauk ee, .3:..8; Carew, California, .347;
Cwpcr, Milwauket:, .l37 ; Brett, Kansas
City , .:m ; Orw, Cleve land, .3.12.
HUNS : Tranm1el , DetrOit, 51; Yount,
Milwaukee, 51; Randolph, New York, 51;
W1lson , Kansa~ Cit)' , 51 ; Wills, Texas, ~ 1.
RBI: Perez, Boston . 54 . Og livi e,
Milw&lt;tukee, 51: Oli ver, Texas, 51; Annas,
Ortkland , ~9 ; Hebner, Detroit, 48.
HlTS : Wilson, Kansas City , 95; Rivers,
Texas, 87; 8umbry, Baltim ore, 86 ; Carew ,
Ca liforma , 85; Burleson, Boston, 84: Oliver,
TeXa!i,6o\.
OOU BLES : Morrison, Chicago, 24; Yount,
I\1Jlwaukee, 20 ; Carew, Ca lifornia , 19 ; D.
Gcucia, Toron to, 18; Oliver, Texa s, 17.
TRIPLES : Griirin, Torooto, 8; Bwnbry,
Baltunore, S; Brett, Kansas City, S; Wilson ,
K&lt;1nsas City.~; Jl tied with 4.
HOME RUNS : Oglivie, Milwaukee, lB;
Re . J ackson , New York, 18 ; Annas,
Oa kland, 14; Rice, Boston, lJ; Nettles, "New
York,l3; Ma)'bcrry, Toronto, JJ.
STOLEN BASES : Wilson, Karisa.s City, 31;
Henderson, Oakland, 31; Dilone, Cleveland ,
Z3 ; J. Cruz , Se~tlle, 20; Wills, Te:tas, 20.
PITCHI NG: 17 Decisions): John, New
York, la.J, .769, JJII ; Stone, &amp;ltimorc, 9-3,
750, 3.46; Gura, K~:~nsas City, 9-3, .750, 2.23;
Clevela nd, Mi l wa~ ee . :'r2, .714, 3.76: R.
May, Ne w York, :J.-2, .714, 2.24; Fanner,
Chicago , 5-2 . . 714 , 2.60; McGregor,
Baltimore, 7-3, .700, 3.38; Rainey, Boston, 73·
'. 700, 4.97 .
STRIKEOUTS: Guidry , New York, 91; M.
Norris, Oakland, 73; Keough , Oakland, 72;
B. Bannister, Seattle , 72; l..eunard. Kansas
City . 71: M a ~a ek , Texas7L

paid. The key tu 1Iavi11g a good
ballcl ub is to keep guud players
here."
One of those good players, Ken
Singleton, continuted his hot hitting
against the Blue Ja ys . He had two
hits and drove in two runs, giving
him 23 hits in 46_times at bat over the
last 13 games.
He also has had 10 walks and 12
RBI during that span while raising
his batting average from .236 to .286.
In other American League games,
the Boston Red Sox edged the New
York Yankees 4-3 in 10 innings, the
Detroit Tigers clobbered the
Cleveland Indians 13·3, the
Milwaukee Brewers beat the
Oakland A's 5-2, the Ka~sas City
Royals defeated the Minnesota
Twins 4-1 , the -Texas Rangers topped
the Seattle Mariners IH and the
Chicago White Sox beat the California Angels 5-2.
The triumph was the eighth for the
Orioles in their last 10 games and
their 12th in a row over Toronto sin·

Sports briefs.

St. Lou1.s, 18.

6-1, .889, 2.00 : Carlton. Philadelphia , ll-2,
.S67, 1.83 ; Reed, Philadelphia, 6- 1, .85, 2.83 ;
Welch, Los Angeles, a-2, .800, 2.16: P&lt;tslorc,
Cmctnnat1, 9-3, .750 , 1.51. Bahnsen, Muntrcal , ~2 • .714, 2.~ .
•
STRIKEOUTS : Carlton , Philadelia, 13a;
Hichanl . Houston. 106 : Ryan, Houston, 87;
P. Niekro, Allanta , 75; Blyle\len , P ittsburgh,
74
.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BAT II NG 050 a t bats ) : Molitor,

New York at Philadelphia, r n 1
Cmcmnat1 at Houston , 1n 1
Atlanta il l Sitn DieJ;:o , l n 1
I A t~ An geles &lt;ll &amp;In Fri:lnCJSl"ll , 1111

just trying to work my way through
it."
Ken Griffey, leading the Reds with
a .318 average, knocked in four runs
with three hits in the game, which
the Reds broke open in the first two
innings.
Braves starter Rick Matula, 5-6,
lasted just 11·3 innings, long enough
for the Reds to score 7 runs. Matula
loaded the bases in the first on walks
to Dave Collins and Griffey and a
single by Junior Kennedy, and Ray
Knight followed one out later with
his second grand slam of the season.
Griffey, Dan Driessen and Knight
singled home runs in the second, and
the Reds added solo runs in the third
and fourth. Griffey's two run homer
in the seventh and a four·run eighth
finished off the Braves.

SPECIAL $18 9
PIICE

HUNS ; Schmidt , Philadelphi&lt;1, 42; K. Her-

W. L P&lt;·t.
GR
J7 '!.7 .578

:'&gt;l ew York

the Reds' lineup while he waits out a
month·hmg hitting slump, pointed to
his two doubles Wednesday as a s ign
uf better things to come.
" Tonight I gut two doubles. I know
that pretty soon I'll be hitting the
ball out of the ball park, " t"oster
said. "Now , I've just got to start
with base hits. The homers will
. come."
Tom Seaver, 3·4, struggled
through seven innings with a tender
shoulder to notch his fi,rst victory
since May 10.
" The shoulder hurts on some of
the pitches I throw if my mecha nics
aren't right," Seaver said.
" One of the things a pitcher likes
to do when you're having trouble is
to pitch through it and get some time
under your belt," Seaver said. " I'm

Cru111arlie, Montreal. .316.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
Muntre&lt;J I
P h iladelphia

CINCINNATI 1Al'1 - Sc.., ing the
Atlm•ta Bra ves wa s just the elixir
needed by the Cincinnati Heds'
ailing bats.
The previously ~truggling Reds
expluded for their highest run total
of the season Wednesday, mer·
dlcssly pounding live Atla nta pit·
cl•m·s f11r 18 hits in a 15-3 victory .
Combined with a 16-hit, 8-2 drubbing of Atlanta the night before, the
victory left the Reds believing their
recent offensive slump had ended.
.. We'll probably break out of it,
starting last night," said Ray
Knight, who drove in .5 runs with a
grand-s lam homer and a single.
" I don't think the Braves pitchers
were that bad. It's just a matter of
us having guys on this club who can
hit when they get it together, no ma t·
tcr who is out there, pitching,"
Knight said. ·
Atlanta manager Bob Cox, who
was ejected from the game in the
eighth inning, was in a sour mood
over his club's ninth loss to Cin·
cinna ti in 10 games this season.
" It was a clear case of getting the
hell beat out of us," Cox said. " They
play dead for a month, then explode
against us."
George Foster, dropped to sixth in

WHY IN THE WORLD

WOULD ANYONE GO

TO A STEAK HOUSE
FOR BREAKFAST?

When it's a Bob Evans Steak House
that's reason enough!
.
Because at Bob Evans we serve great tastmg
farm breakfasts you can 't get anyvvhere else
Fresh, fluffy hot biscu its with our own
sausage gravy
Fned mush made from wholesome cornmeal
and served with delicious warm syrup .
How about an order of delicious farm fresh
Bob Evans'Sausage with .. you name it ... eggs,
hotcakes waffles, french toast.
And everything is served with all the good
1
coffee you can drink.
Of course, if yo•J'v€ got the appetite you can
always order steak and eggs.
If you want a real hearty, old-fashioned farm
breakfast come to the Steak House. It's so good
you'll want to stay for lunch and dinner

TENNIS
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) Hank Pfister upset Victor Amaya, 36, 6-4, IHJ, ~. 6-3; while Shlomo
Glickstein of Israel upset Raul
Ramirez of MeKico, &lt;Hi, &amp;-2 , ~ . 7-5,
11-6 at the Wimbledon tennis cham·
pionships.
In other matches, Stan Smith
defeated Andrew Pattison, 5-7, &amp;-3 , &amp;3, 6-4 ; Jose-Luis Clerc of Argentina
overcame Vijay Amritraj of India, I·
6, ~. -7-5, 7-5, 6-4; Pat DuPre ·
downed Vince Van Patten, 6-4, 3-il, &amp;1, 6-4; Dick Stockton topped Sandy
Mayer, 7-&lt;;, ~. &lt;Hi, &amp;-3, &amp;-2; Brian
Teacher beat Tim Wilkison, 6-4, 7-il,
7-5; and Italy's Adriano Panatta
beat Erik van Dillen , ~ . 2-&lt;;, 7-ii, 7-5,
!1-7.
In women's play, Andrea Jaeger
defeated Britain 's Anthea Cooper,&amp;3, &amp;-3; Evonne Goolagong of
Australia had an easy &amp;-1, &amp;-2 triumph over Sharon Walsh ; Britain's
Virginia Wade defeated Ivanna
Madruga of Argentina, 6-4, 6-4 ; Pam
Teeguarden beat Mary Car illo, S.2,

I AJUJs, .337: R. Smith , Los An~cles , .336 ;
Va ll, Olitagu, .327; Griffey, Cmt:tnnati, .316:

• •

6-1 ; and Bettina Bunge topped Jo
Durie of Great Britain, .6-4. &lt;Hi, 6-4.

Scott Harrison had two doubles for
Pomeroy,
Roger
Kovalchik ,
Stewart: and Milhoan two singh!s,
and Gilmore one single. Gerald
Singer suffered the loss, Benny Ben·
nett and Pat Tabler came on in
relief. They fanned nine and walked
eight. The lone Coolville hit was by
Pat Taber. Pomeroy is now 7~.

to express exactly

(SLIGHT IRR.)

3 $1 00

SIMPLICITY

..

EAGll THE ONlY FAMilY COMPACT
I WITH AUTOMATIC 1-WI/EEl ORNl

A....
BEAUTIFUL
PRICE ON EAGLE AIR CONDITIONING: $29!/* ~~EPA1ce
.
'

'

' Special 1111 com1111on1ng liS I price a.pphes 10 Eagle mode ls eQuipped
wilh lactorv·inslallea air coM itlomng SOld and delivered by J'-J iy 5, 1980
t See you r dealer l or warranty and rust prog ram del a1 15

FillEt 1'15' AMERICAN
f"t Alumlntzed e•hau st syslem Is warrant eel tor 12 months or 12.000 miles
RAG WITH A TEST DRIVE. llebart Is a 'tOisttred trltdem11k ol llebart !nternallon a1 Co1P01ai10n
IIY ff PROUDLY.
US PARTS AND SERVICE SPECIALS.
NOW THRU JULY 5TH
'E A1.L THREEGIE. SPIRIT AND
'CORD-AT

RIVERS,DE AMC • JEEP

Upper River Ro1d

'

IIIIYE1I lttoTBmfJIII I'I.AM'
• IIIITII111f IIRriiJU 11-I!IIIITW
,,..,._ -.....rY.

PATTERNS
Y2 PRICE

SALE
VALUES TO 117.95
LADIES' ·
•

Co¥er5~~tmY part eicept llres.

WRANGLER
SHORTS
'

Even If II just wears OUt. t
• 11f7111Xt:tUSit'E l/EJMr
FA1:7'1MY /IU$1 1"11Dm7JDI.1
• ,
THI. UCI.U!INllfll. IWf-nM

,--.;--

$199

l6J /I!IJST- T1IIIU ........,., • tt

SWIMWEAR

SK.EIN

• AU AT 11/J um4 COST.

Gallipolis, Ohio

GROUP WOMEN'S - GIRLS'

~~AL~S~s...

DRESS • SPORT • CANVAS

'400

PAIR

GROUP

MEN'S SHOES
INCLUDES ENTIRE STOCK OF WHITE DRESS SHOES

'400

PAIR

SALE
Reg. S12.95

TUBE
TOPS

$995

GROUP
MEN'S-WOMEN'S
CHILDREN'S

.....

--~·,·------·

lh

CONVERSE-JOX-KEDS

'700

heritage house
.OF SHOES
OHIO

1 RACK MEN'S

LADIES'
WEATHER &amp; PANT

SUITS &amp;
SPORT COATS

COATS
REDUCED

30%

REDUCED40% TO 70%
LAD I

GIRLS'
SUMMER

Also Small Flare
Blue

REDUCED 20%
ME

LEVI CASUALS
&amp; PRE-WASHED

SHORTS &amp;
KNIT TOPS

REDUCED 20%
LADIES'

MEN'S BIB

LADIES'

1 RACK MEN'S
Long Sleeve Western, Etc .

SLEEPWEAR
SIZE 3-14

NOW

Missy &amp;

KNIT PULLOVER

TERRY &amp; KNIT

SHI_RTS

TOPS
ONLY
VAlUES TO 8.00

-·

SizeS, M,

REDUCED

'444

-~--

_,______
II

,..........
' •"

SHIRTS

REDUCED

20%

SPORTSWEAR
1h price
MEN'S

LAOIES'

'

Sport

1 RACK LADIES'

1 RACK MEN'S

L~D

1

Sizes

REDUCED 30%

1f2 PRICE

$

SALE
Reg.$19.95

JOGGING SUITS

Sjze 8 • 20

SizeS, M, L,'&amp; XL

~.

REDUCED

~-'

--.

-:--~ ---

REDUCED

30%

1 RACK

KNIT TOPS
&amp; SHELLS
REDUCED 40%
MEN 'S SHORT SLEEVE
COLOR OR WHITE

DRESS SHIRTS
REDUCED 20%
LADIES'

PANT SUITS
'
·~

MMER

SLACKS

OVERALLS
32·48

REDUCED 20%

DRESSES
Half

Sz.6·18

BEND OVER
PANTS &amp; JEANS

Size

·88'

PRICE

SUMMER PURSES 40% OFF REG. PRICES

WINDBREAKERS

•

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

DRESS &amp;
CASUALS

TENNIS SHOES

BAHR
----·- · -'"'f"=---

GROUP MEN'S

REDUCED 30%

MEN'S UNLINED

OFF
REG. PRICE

40%

LADIES '

Missy and Half Sizes

99'

DRESS SHOES .

. LEVI'S
SALE
$}588
Reg. $18.00

LADIES'

.. ''\4.

i

~ 2°~ALR

GROUP CHILDREN'S SHOES

20%

JANTZEN
MERCHANDISE
ARRIVING FOR FAll

IE·RS
W. 2nd AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

OPEN MON .·SAT. 9:30to S

•

. • ..

MEN'S COLOR ED

REDUCED20%

WINTUK
YARN

Ke nneth McCullough . R. Ph .
Charles Riffle . R. Ph .
Ronald Hanning . R . Ph
Man thru Sat . 8 :00 a . m . lcJ 9 p . m .
Sunday 10 :30to 12 : 30and 5to '9'p .m .
PRE &gt;C RIPTIONS
PH . 9''2; 29j5
Friendly Se rvice
Pome,oY o.
f . Mr1111
tsflll•

n American Motors
RENAULT
.,

446-taoo

LADIES'

COATS &amp; CLARK

PANTY HOSE

'

Eagles make tracks In th'e sand, thro ugh mud and over
the s lickest roads. Even with a trailer in tow. So e njoy
Eagle's unique kind of 4-wheel -drive freedom. While
staying cool for leAs.

Syracuse Hubbard 's Greenhouse
beat Middleport's Mustangs 11).5.
Syracuse is still holding down first
place with an 8-1 record. ·
Chris Stewart, Shane Simpson,
Eber Pickens, Chad Taylor, Bryan
Weaver, and Chris Stout were the
Syracuse hitters along with team
leaders Todd Lisle with three singles
and Kevin Grueser with a home run.
Todd Lisle was the winning pitcher fanning ten. Scott Neigler, Matt
·Baker, P. J . Gibbs and Chis Becker
accounted fo the Middleport hits.
Matt Baker was the Mustang pitcher ·
"'
fanning ten .

PANTS

WRANGLER
JEANS

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

President Nellie Brown an·
nounced that a professional
Australian golfer, Nancy Tawney,
will conduct a clinic at the Jaymar
Golf Course beginning at 9 a .m.
Saturday when the Pomeroy
Women's Golf Association met
Tuesday.
The clinic is open to the pubtic at
$2 a person. Ms. Tawley has played
in the LPGA, the U.S. Open anc! is
one of the top 20 women golfers in
California.
Mrs. Brown thanked members for
their contributions of food and for
their work with a reception held at
the Jaymar Course folowing the
Dave Diles tournament.
Prizes for the day went to
Charldene Hanning, low score, and
to Peggy Moore and Garren Snyder.
Twelve members and a guest at·
tended.

In htUe action Tracy Cleland's
home run led Racine to a 13-3 win
ovr Tuppers Plains Bears. Cleland,
whose record is ~ from the mound
picked up the win for Racine. Racine
is now 11).2.

•
•

SENSATIONAL VALUES!

• •

REDUCED 30%

LADIES'

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

Willford hit a long home run to keep
Middleport in the game. Bishop and
Cremeans combined on the mound
for Middleport.

c 19SO 608 [ VA.T\JS FARM FOODS 1NC

.'I',.

'

Golf clinnic set

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

·~

'

dians won a 6-5 decision over Middleport. Mark Holter in retief of
Jerry Larkins picked up the win.
They fanned 12 and Walked two. The
game was decided when Mark Gad·
dis drew a bases loaded walk to for·
ce home the winning run for
Eastern.
Jimmy Carter tripled for Easter,
Jay Carpenter doubled, and Mark
Holter, Vic Gillilan and Mark Gaddis singled.
D. Hoffman doubled and singled
lor Middleport, Burdette singled
twice, while Eads, Cremeans,
Reuter, and Thomas singled. Mr.

ku4GSBURY HOME SALES &amp; SERVICE

EASTERN AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

•

WOMEN'S SUMMER

The talented Pomeroy Royals
remained undefeated with a 11-2 victory over Coolville in the M&amp;M pony
Iague. Wining pitcher was J.R.
Wamsley with relief help from Scott
Harrison.
The duo combined for 11 KO's and
six walks .

Mobile Home Trades .Welcome
Show Models

STEAK HOUSE

f1vc t:unsccutlvc wa lks IJy C lcvcl~ud
starter Dan Spillner and t11e Indians
never caught up.
Milt Wilcox , 11-1, scattered nin e
hits in posting his sixth t.:unsecuttv c
Ct1mplete-game vidury .
Rangers 6, Mariners I
Ferguson Jenkins scattered nine
hils, struck out two and walked one
as Texas beat · Seattle while
sweltering at 101 degrees.
Richie Zisk drove in three runs
with a pair of singles to lead the
Rangers' attack .
Royals 4, Twins I
Paul Splittorff shut out Minnesota
until Jose Morales' double with two
out in the ninth, when Dan Quisenberry came on to get the last out.
The two combined for a six-hitter.
Hal McRae slammed a two-run
homer to pace the Kansas City at·
tack, and the Royals supported Split·
torff with three double plays.
White Sox 5, Angels 2
Chet Lemon hit a two-run homer,
Wayne Nordhagen belted a solo shot
and Jlm Morrison doubled home two
more runs for the White Sox.
Chicago starter Richard Dotson, 7·
3, held the Angels hitless for 52·3 in·
nings before giving way to Ed Farmer in the seventh. Farmer went on
to post his 16th save, tops in the
American League.

Summer league results.

MODULAR
HOMES

howyOufeeL ·u·

/lOW FROM AMERICAN MOTORS -

Stapleton hit a tw&lt;&gt;-uut double in the
lOth inning to drive in Gary Allenson
with the winning run lor Boston.
Allenson had reached second when
his one-out grounder went through
the legs of third baseman Graig Net·
ties and then was bobbled by left
fielder Dennis Werth. Allenson advanced to third on Rick Burleson's
grounder and scored when Stapleton
pulled Tommy John's first-pitch i~
tpe left field corner.
Boston reliever Tom Burgmeier
got the victory, stifling the Yankees
on one hit over the 'Tina! 42-3 innings
and striking out eight.
Brewers 5, A's 2
Ninth-inning home runs by Sixto
Lezcano, Mark Brouhard and Buck
Martinez, plus a run-scoring single
by Cecil Cooper, gave Milwaukee a
sweep of the three-game series and
dealt the A's their 11th loss in the
last 13 games .
Moose Haas, 11-6, pitched a four·
hitter lor Oakland and struck out 12.
Tigers 13, lodlaos 3
Cleveland's pitchers gave up 14
walks, five of them with the bases
loaded, to make Detroit's seventh
straight victory an easy one. The
Tigers got three runs in the first inning on a single by Steve Kemp and

Also in M&amp;M play Eastern's In·

-g,&amp; 6YfAAttl

Greeting cants

NATIONAL LEAG UE

BATTING 115«h!.t balS I: K. Hernandez, St.

'

Houklc secund bascn 1.r.m Dave

MEN'S SUMMER

TOUA \''S MAJOR l;EAGUE, LEAD E RS

·.

ce Julv. 197B.

Regatta Week End
SIDEWALK SALE!

•

�~Tile Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy.

•

0., Thursday, JW!e 211, 1110

1- The Daily Sentimil, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday, J unc 26, 1900

Auxiliary contributes
to fire department

' ''

. .' '

The l athe~ Aux1hary nmdc ~ con·
tribuliun of $200 to the Ohve Township Volunteer F ire Deportment for
the purcha se of new buul'i at ,;,j recent
Blt!Cling.

Meeting at the fire house in Reed·
sville, it was noted that the Eled ion
Day bake sale was a success. A vote
of thanks was extended to residents
for their support of the fire levy.
Plans were made for a flea market
and bake sale at the fire house on
Aug. 1 and 2 with soace av:lilahlc al

•

.'

.

$J

Receive 20-pound ribbons'
Cunmc GoudnllL' .i.l!:d I~im V~:.~ r ic111 ,
In the Tuesday morning Mason
rcccivctl 20 pou11U r ibl.xm:; and cer- class, Sa rah J ohnson lost the most

fur one day ur $5 for buth days.

Pncc includes a table and lh~e inte rested in :; p(;] t:c shoulcJ contact
Tcr l.!sa Snuth, pres ident. ur unc uf
the members. Donations a re being
arceptcd now for a yard ~ale .

Attending the meeting were DeJ&gt;.
bie Barringer, Ferra Luu Ba rringer,
Margaret Cauthorn, Pat 'Martm,
Teresa Smith, Mary Bise, Marl ene
Putman, Erika Boring. and Edna
.fuhnsun.

Evanses to be honored
PROCESSIONAL OF 53 FLAGS was held at the Riverview Community Vacation Bible School in tribute to the Amrican hostages being
·held in Iran. Mrs . Lavina Brannon composed a poem in their honor
which was read by Mrs. Pat Martin, DVBS director.

•

Tribute to hostages
concludes Bible school
The Riverview Community
v•cation Bible school with a total atte-.".aalce of 139 concluded Friday
··•ening with a program which
featL:ed a tribute to the American
hostages in Iron.
A flag lor each hostage wa5
earned in a parade into tbe
auditoriwn before the program
opened. AB the middler, junior and
youth clases of the Bible school entered, Mrs. Pat Martin, director,
read a JMllll composed by Mrs.
Lavina Brarmon. The processional
was the theme song, " Jesus, I
Belleye in You."Following UJ,
pledges and prayer, there were words of welcome from Pat Martin and
Marlene Putman, craft director.
The Jones Triplets had a song and
Mrs. Putman presented the classes
with their teachers and helpers, for
a part on the program. ·
The sharing project money taken
during the week_ will be given to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
another needy organization. Nancy
Buckley was music director for the
school, Maralene Kimes, pianist,
and Glenda Hunt, Patty Lawrence,
Lucille Kimes and Jody Smith, craft
helpers.
Children enrolled in the Bible
school, their teachers and helprs,
are listed below:

The spirit of Marlboro in alow tar cigarette.

NURSERY CLASS : Ma tthew Martin, Sean
Maxey, Ma~ Milliron, Stacy Holter, Chlpper
Suttle, Jessica Schmidt, Chad Barber, J anel
Spencer, Brent Storer, Willie Adani.s, Gooff~y
Wat!lon. Teachera and Helpers : Cillhy Spencer,
Mary Maxey, Jennifer Schmidt, Judy Hofler and
Rho!lda Milliron.
BEGINNER CLASS: Michael Brabham,
Olastity Mllhone, Teresa Putman, Miranda
DrHke, Letitia Hobinger, Johr, Holsinger, Ja)'
Swain, Tony Maxey, Kristina Connolly, Carrie
Gilli~n. Jamie Brannon, Brett Pirce, Patrick
Barringer, Andrea Rockhold, Jay Holsineer ,
Kyle Bausnaugh. Tony Rockhold, Jimmy
Rockley, Kenny Whaley, Danny Lawrence,
Keith Hunt. Teachers and Helpers : Gerakiine
Holsin@er, AJesha Holsinger, Patty Powell,
Kathy Keen, Kim Keen, Conrtil! ConnoUy, Penny
Prict, Bonnie Putman, Barbara Barringer.
PRIMARY CLASS: Amy Richardson, AprU
Richanbon, Sherrl BWtU, Chris Adarm, Missy
Wells, Shawhna Srabharn, Tina Newlun. Edna

ori~s . Susie Kimes, Misty Bentley. Richie ·
Hunt, Jerro:::l Bar~r . LIS.il Walsun, Jared Spencer, Christina Barber. Christy Adams, BPiinda ·
Barber. Teachers and Helpers: Sandy Cowdery,
V i r~~:ini.a Walton, Violet Satterfielll, Carol
Richardson, Jeff Cowdery .
MJDDLER CLASS: Michae l M01rtin , Bret
Hood, Kathy Rockhpld, Lori Mundry, Bubbi
Price, Mikl Schmidt, Ann Buckl ey, Kay Cq ul.~;og ,
Matlhew Sisson, Cassie Fausna ugh, J oy Swain,
M i n~y Wells, l.isa Dnggs, Jenny Cowdery,
Missy Barber, Kt!ilh Putman, Howie Lawrence,
Jdf Horner. Donna Curtis. Tea chers and
Helpers : Marlyn Coulson, Sandy Roberts, Anit.a
Nell:tzling.
JUNIOR CLASS : Burl Putman, Travis.
Newlun, Becky Kimes, Deanna Rockhold, Joy
Coulson . Tammyh Robert-;, Kim Dobbin,
Michelle Sisson, Jay Neutzling, Kenny Roc.khold.
Christy Newlun, Jeremy Barber, Joe Young, Abby Cauthorn, Ronnie Putman, Caralyn Barton,
Amy Connolly, Maral~ Barton, Ginger
Hayman, Brad Holsinger, Chris Catlett , Tammy
Pierce. Teachers: Sue Suttle and Eloise Connolly .
YOU11-I Cl..A$: Margaret Horner, Joy Brannon, Kristi Sheppard, Brian Reed. DAvld Wells.
Betty Ju Hunt, Linda Rolin, Tammy Wells,
Sherry Dr\g ~s. Paula Cowdery , Mellssa Cubb!son, Linda Pierce, Mike J ones, Mark Jones,
Ann Jones. Teacher, De lores Fra nk .

We 1:1re nlllrch~ and are praying
That our hostages be free,
Se-ven month,.; they'v~ been heldcaptiv~
And can "t wo~hip such as we.
Let's bernme more p.atrlotic,

Raise our flags that all may see.
'I11&lt;1t w~ app~iate uur rr~om
And we want vurcaptiv es free.

LIGHTS

LOWERED TAR &amp; NICOTINE

,.·,

I

~.

• Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined .
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
12 mg ·'tar:' 0.8 mg nicotine av. per cigarette. FTC Report Oec:79
'

.I

1

;

'

'

Before yvu close your eys in slumber
Breathe a prayer to God on High.
Ask Him for our daily guidanc~.
Thank Him for His keeping power.
&amp;g Him todellver safely,
Tnose who need His help this hour.
by Mrs. Lavina Brannon
ReeW:ville, Ohio

FOR All OF YOUR
SUMMERTIME PAINT NEEDS!
WE HAVE TOP QUALITY

· fAilvenlenl \ Seniee

Indoor and Outdoor
PAINTS BY:
~
~--

ASK
ABOUT
OUR

•HIGH GLOSS
•READY MIXED
•MULTIPLE PIGMENT

, SENIOR
CITIZEN
DISCOUNT

"Every Color In The Rainbow"

MIXED RIGHT IN THE STORE

PhOne iii your prescription and we·n nave
it. reat~V when· you an:ive. We maintain
r.mily prescription records and we honor
most insurance-paid orescriptions.

VILI,AGE PHARMACY
992-5759

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CLEARANCE SALE
REDUCTIONS TO 50%
ENTIRE STOCK
HART'SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX CLOTHING ,............ :.. ... REDUCED. 25'%
PALM BEACH CLOTHING ....... ........................... REDUCED 25%
JOHNNY CARSON CLOTHING •. :···· ......... .............. REDUCED 25%
AU MEN'S LEVI'S

FASHION JEANS
REDUCED 20%

MEN'S LEVI'S

HEAVY WEIGHT UNWASHED

JEANS

•Straight Legs
•Flare •Big Bell

$}750

SPORTS COATS ••••• ENTIRE STOCK 2.5% to .50% OFF
SWI MWEAR •••• ••••••••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK 2.5% OFF
WALK SHORTS ••••••••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK2.5% OFF
LADIES' WEAR ••••••• (Except Levi's) - (T.C. On~) 2.5 ~. OFF
SPORT SHIRTS •••••••••••••••••. ENTIRE STOCK 25% OFF
DRESS SHIRTS ••••••••••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK 25% _!)FF
DRESS SLACKS •••••••• ENTIRE STOCK20% &amp; 25% OFF .
CASUAL SLACKS •••••••••••••••. ENTIRE STOCK20% OFF... ,. ;,,_.._.
LUGGAGE •••••••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK25% • 33% OFF
STRAW HATS•••••••••••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK 20% OFF
/
KNIT SPORT SHIRTS •••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK 25% OFF i

Mrs. Rose Patterson and Mrs.
Margat e! Parsons hosted a bridal
shower honoring Miss Jana
Wiseman, daughter of the Rev. and
Mrs. David Wiseman. The wedding
wiU take place on June '!1.
Games were played with prizes
going to the winners and the door
prize was won by Mrs. Denver Parsons. Cake, inscribed " Happy
Future, Jana and Todd" was served.
with punch.
Presenting gifts to Miss Wiseman
were Mrs. Claude Sloes and
daug~ters, Mrs. Docha Parsons,
Mrs. Denber Parsons, Lisa Parsons,
Mrs. Roy Wiseman, Mrs. Larry
Clark, Penny ·Clark, Mrs. Robert
Clark, Mrs. Harold Sauer, Mrs.
Marie Bishop, Mrs. Dorothy
W!lodard, Mrs. ·Audrey Patterson,
l\1rs. · Jeff Patterson, Mrs. Jun&amp;
Qewhurst1 Robin Dewhurst, Mrs.
Margaret Edwards, Mrs. Marjorie
Rice, Mrs. Ruth Erl~wine, Mrs.
Marcia Denison, Mrs. Robert
Denison, Mrs. Harvey Bowersock,
Mrs. Pauline Atkins, Mrs. Sharon
Jewell, Mrs. Stella Aikins, Mrs.
l.Y.Y.onJa Bunce, Mrs. Arm Webster,
1\Jrs. C. 0. Chapman, Mrs. Rosalie
N.lchola, Mrs. Donna Jenkins, Mrs.
Wuiiam Bailey, Mrs. Beatrice
~n. Miss Mae Weber, Miss Edna
Mae Swick, Mrs. Edith Williamson.
Mrs. Warren Black, Mrs. Eloise
Billing, Mrs.· Minnie Russell, Mrs.
Qharles Parsons, Mrs. Virginia
Snoke1 Mrs. Walter France, Mrs.
Marjorie Milhone, Mrs. Arm Tucker,
Mrs. Roberta Wilson, and Mrs. Mort
lfobeson.

t

·the parents of three children, Mrs.
Delbert !Eleanor 1 Lawson, Mrs .
Charles !Marsha ) Frccker, and
Marlin, all of Minersville. They have
four grandchildren, Adria and
Maria Fecker, and Tinuny and
Elizabeth Lawson.
Friends and rela tives of the couple
are invited to attend.

talk to representatives from any
groups which might be interested in·
having programs and discussions
about foreign affairs.

Yes, we are our brothers' keeper,

honoree
of shower

Marlboro

TO SPEAK AT LWRARY
Ben Black, Council of World Affairs, will be at the Pomeroy Library
on J uly 2, II a.m. At that time he will

weight, and Nita Condee was runner-up. At the Middleport cl~ss.
Rhonda Roush lost the most weight,
and J uanita Sayre was runner-up-,
while at the ahester class, Joyce Ritchie lost the most weight, and Betty
Barker and Melissa Bar)\'\,r were the
rwmers-up. Jo Ann Newsome is lee·
turer and information on Slinderella
may be obtained from her, 992-3382.

And we caMot pass them by.

Wiseman

tD

• Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Evans of
. 47295 Eagle Ridge, Minersville, will
be honored with a party Saturday
evening , 7:30 to· 9:30 p.m. in the
social room of the Eagle Ridge Community Church in honor of their 4oth
wedding anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Evans were married
on June 26, 1940 at Racine and are

llficotes at tile Munday mght Mason
class of Slindt• rcl lo.
Pearl Plio len and K1mberly
Van an lost the mo~t weight O::t nd
there was a tic m the class for runncr-up between Nancy Powell and
June Pickens. Mrs. Goodnite was
also accepted into the slim and trim
rncuntenanCI.! program for having
reached her gual weight. She
received a ribbon and certifi cate.

LT. wt. JACKETS ••••••••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK.20%
TENNIS WEAR•••••••••••••••••••. ENTIRE STOCK 25%
GOLF WEAl. •••••••••••••••••••••. ENTIRE STOCK 25%
SHOES ••••••••••••••••• , ENTIRE STOCK 15% to 50%

OFF
OFF
OFF
OFF

New York
Clothing House
POMEROY OHIO
'·

•

•

�~Tile Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy.

•

0., Thursday, JW!e 211, 1110

1- The Daily Sentimil, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday, J unc 26, 1900

Auxiliary contributes
to fire department

' ''

. .' '

The l athe~ Aux1hary nmdc ~ con·
tribuliun of $200 to the Ohve Township Volunteer F ire Deportment for
the purcha se of new buul'i at ,;,j recent
Blt!Cling.

Meeting at the fire house in Reed·
sville, it was noted that the Eled ion
Day bake sale was a success. A vote
of thanks was extended to residents
for their support of the fire levy.
Plans were made for a flea market
and bake sale at the fire house on
Aug. 1 and 2 with soace av:lilahlc al

•

.'

.

$J

Receive 20-pound ribbons'
Cunmc GoudnllL' .i.l!:d I~im V~:.~ r ic111 ,
In the Tuesday morning Mason
rcccivctl 20 pou11U r ibl.xm:; and cer- class, Sa rah J ohnson lost the most

fur one day ur $5 for buth days.

Pncc includes a table and lh~e inte rested in :; p(;] t:c shoulcJ contact
Tcr l.!sa Snuth, pres ident. ur unc uf
the members. Donations a re being
arceptcd now for a yard ~ale .

Attending the meeting were DeJ&gt;.
bie Barringer, Ferra Luu Ba rringer,
Margaret Cauthorn, Pat 'Martm,
Teresa Smith, Mary Bise, Marl ene
Putman, Erika Boring. and Edna
.fuhnsun.

Evanses to be honored
PROCESSIONAL OF 53 FLAGS was held at the Riverview Community Vacation Bible School in tribute to the Amrican hostages being
·held in Iran. Mrs . Lavina Brannon composed a poem in their honor
which was read by Mrs. Pat Martin, DVBS director.

•

Tribute to hostages
concludes Bible school
The Riverview Community
v•cation Bible school with a total atte-.".aalce of 139 concluded Friday
··•ening with a program which
featL:ed a tribute to the American
hostages in Iron.
A flag lor each hostage wa5
earned in a parade into tbe
auditoriwn before the program
opened. AB the middler, junior and
youth clases of the Bible school entered, Mrs. Pat Martin, director,
read a JMllll composed by Mrs.
Lavina Brarmon. The processional
was the theme song, " Jesus, I
Belleye in You."Following UJ,
pledges and prayer, there were words of welcome from Pat Martin and
Marlene Putman, craft director.
The Jones Triplets had a song and
Mrs. Putman presented the classes
with their teachers and helpers, for
a part on the program. ·
The sharing project money taken
during the week_ will be given to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
another needy organization. Nancy
Buckley was music director for the
school, Maralene Kimes, pianist,
and Glenda Hunt, Patty Lawrence,
Lucille Kimes and Jody Smith, craft
helpers.
Children enrolled in the Bible
school, their teachers and helprs,
are listed below:

The spirit of Marlboro in alow tar cigarette.

NURSERY CLASS : Ma tthew Martin, Sean
Maxey, Ma~ Milliron, Stacy Holter, Chlpper
Suttle, Jessica Schmidt, Chad Barber, J anel
Spencer, Brent Storer, Willie Adani.s, Gooff~y
Wat!lon. Teachera and Helpers : Cillhy Spencer,
Mary Maxey, Jennifer Schmidt, Judy Hofler and
Rho!lda Milliron.
BEGINNER CLASS: Michael Brabham,
Olastity Mllhone, Teresa Putman, Miranda
DrHke, Letitia Hobinger, Johr, Holsinger, Ja)'
Swain, Tony Maxey, Kristina Connolly, Carrie
Gilli~n. Jamie Brannon, Brett Pirce, Patrick
Barringer, Andrea Rockhold, Jay Holsineer ,
Kyle Bausnaugh. Tony Rockhold, Jimmy
Rockley, Kenny Whaley, Danny Lawrence,
Keith Hunt. Teachers and Helpers : Gerakiine
Holsin@er, AJesha Holsinger, Patty Powell,
Kathy Keen, Kim Keen, Conrtil! ConnoUy, Penny
Prict, Bonnie Putman, Barbara Barringer.
PRIMARY CLASS: Amy Richardson, AprU
Richanbon, Sherrl BWtU, Chris Adarm, Missy
Wells, Shawhna Srabharn, Tina Newlun. Edna

ori~s . Susie Kimes, Misty Bentley. Richie ·
Hunt, Jerro:::l Bar~r . LIS.il Walsun, Jared Spencer, Christina Barber. Christy Adams, BPiinda ·
Barber. Teachers and Helpers: Sandy Cowdery,
V i r~~:ini.a Walton, Violet Satterfielll, Carol
Richardson, Jeff Cowdery .
MJDDLER CLASS: Michae l M01rtin , Bret
Hood, Kathy Rockhpld, Lori Mundry, Bubbi
Price, Mikl Schmidt, Ann Buckl ey, Kay Cq ul.~;og ,
Matlhew Sisson, Cassie Fausna ugh, J oy Swain,
M i n~y Wells, l.isa Dnggs, Jenny Cowdery,
Missy Barber, Kt!ilh Putman, Howie Lawrence,
Jdf Horner. Donna Curtis. Tea chers and
Helpers : Marlyn Coulson, Sandy Roberts, Anit.a
Nell:tzling.
JUNIOR CLASS : Burl Putman, Travis.
Newlun, Becky Kimes, Deanna Rockhold, Joy
Coulson . Tammyh Robert-;, Kim Dobbin,
Michelle Sisson, Jay Neutzling, Kenny Roc.khold.
Christy Newlun, Jeremy Barber, Joe Young, Abby Cauthorn, Ronnie Putman, Caralyn Barton,
Amy Connolly, Maral~ Barton, Ginger
Hayman, Brad Holsinger, Chris Catlett , Tammy
Pierce. Teachers: Sue Suttle and Eloise Connolly .
YOU11-I Cl..A$: Margaret Horner, Joy Brannon, Kristi Sheppard, Brian Reed. DAvld Wells.
Betty Ju Hunt, Linda Rolin, Tammy Wells,
Sherry Dr\g ~s. Paula Cowdery , Mellssa Cubb!son, Linda Pierce, Mike J ones, Mark Jones,
Ann Jones. Teacher, De lores Fra nk .

We 1:1re nlllrch~ and are praying
That our hostages be free,
Se-ven month,.; they'v~ been heldcaptiv~
And can "t wo~hip such as we.
Let's bernme more p.atrlotic,

Raise our flags that all may see.
'I11&lt;1t w~ app~iate uur rr~om
And we want vurcaptiv es free.

LIGHTS

LOWERED TAR &amp; NICOTINE

,.·,

I

~.

• Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined .
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
12 mg ·'tar:' 0.8 mg nicotine av. per cigarette. FTC Report Oec:79
'

.I

1

;

'

'

Before yvu close your eys in slumber
Breathe a prayer to God on High.
Ask Him for our daily guidanc~.
Thank Him for His keeping power.
&amp;g Him todellver safely,
Tnose who need His help this hour.
by Mrs. Lavina Brannon
ReeW:ville, Ohio

FOR All OF YOUR
SUMMERTIME PAINT NEEDS!
WE HAVE TOP QUALITY

· fAilvenlenl \ Seniee

Indoor and Outdoor
PAINTS BY:
~
~--

ASK
ABOUT
OUR

•HIGH GLOSS
•READY MIXED
•MULTIPLE PIGMENT

, SENIOR
CITIZEN
DISCOUNT

"Every Color In The Rainbow"

MIXED RIGHT IN THE STORE

PhOne iii your prescription and we·n nave
it. reat~V when· you an:ive. We maintain
r.mily prescription records and we honor
most insurance-paid orescriptions.

VILI,AGE PHARMACY
992-5759

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CLEARANCE SALE
REDUCTIONS TO 50%
ENTIRE STOCK
HART'SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX CLOTHING ,............ :.. ... REDUCED. 25'%
PALM BEACH CLOTHING ....... ........................... REDUCED 25%
JOHNNY CARSON CLOTHING •. :···· ......... .............. REDUCED 25%
AU MEN'S LEVI'S

FASHION JEANS
REDUCED 20%

MEN'S LEVI'S

HEAVY WEIGHT UNWASHED

JEANS

•Straight Legs
•Flare •Big Bell

$}750

SPORTS COATS ••••• ENTIRE STOCK 2.5% to .50% OFF
SWI MWEAR •••• ••••••••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK 2.5% OFF
WALK SHORTS ••••••••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK2.5% OFF
LADIES' WEAR ••••••• (Except Levi's) - (T.C. On~) 2.5 ~. OFF
SPORT SHIRTS •••••••••••••••••. ENTIRE STOCK 25% OFF
DRESS SHIRTS ••••••••••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK 25% _!)FF
DRESS SLACKS •••••••• ENTIRE STOCK20% &amp; 25% OFF .
CASUAL SLACKS •••••••••••••••. ENTIRE STOCK20% OFF... ,. ;,,_.._.
LUGGAGE •••••••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK25% • 33% OFF
STRAW HATS•••••••••••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK 20% OFF
/
KNIT SPORT SHIRTS •••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK 25% OFF i

Mrs. Rose Patterson and Mrs.
Margat e! Parsons hosted a bridal
shower honoring Miss Jana
Wiseman, daughter of the Rev. and
Mrs. David Wiseman. The wedding
wiU take place on June '!1.
Games were played with prizes
going to the winners and the door
prize was won by Mrs. Denver Parsons. Cake, inscribed " Happy
Future, Jana and Todd" was served.
with punch.
Presenting gifts to Miss Wiseman
were Mrs. Claude Sloes and
daug~ters, Mrs. Docha Parsons,
Mrs. Denber Parsons, Lisa Parsons,
Mrs. Roy Wiseman, Mrs. Larry
Clark, Penny ·Clark, Mrs. Robert
Clark, Mrs. Harold Sauer, Mrs.
Marie Bishop, Mrs. Dorothy
W!lodard, Mrs. ·Audrey Patterson,
l\1rs. · Jeff Patterson, Mrs. Jun&amp;
Qewhurst1 Robin Dewhurst, Mrs.
Margaret Edwards, Mrs. Marjorie
Rice, Mrs. Ruth Erl~wine, Mrs.
Marcia Denison, Mrs. Robert
Denison, Mrs. Harvey Bowersock,
Mrs. Pauline Atkins, Mrs. Sharon
Jewell, Mrs. Stella Aikins, Mrs.
l.Y.Y.onJa Bunce, Mrs. Arm Webster,
1\Jrs. C. 0. Chapman, Mrs. Rosalie
N.lchola, Mrs. Donna Jenkins, Mrs.
Wuiiam Bailey, Mrs. Beatrice
~n. Miss Mae Weber, Miss Edna
Mae Swick, Mrs. Edith Williamson.
Mrs. Warren Black, Mrs. Eloise
Billing, Mrs.· Minnie Russell, Mrs.
Qharles Parsons, Mrs. Virginia
Snoke1 Mrs. Walter France, Mrs.
Marjorie Milhone, Mrs. Arm Tucker,
Mrs. Roberta Wilson, and Mrs. Mort
lfobeson.

t

·the parents of three children, Mrs.
Delbert !Eleanor 1 Lawson, Mrs .
Charles !Marsha ) Frccker, and
Marlin, all of Minersville. They have
four grandchildren, Adria and
Maria Fecker, and Tinuny and
Elizabeth Lawson.
Friends and rela tives of the couple
are invited to attend.

talk to representatives from any
groups which might be interested in·
having programs and discussions
about foreign affairs.

Yes, we are our brothers' keeper,

honoree
of shower

Marlboro

TO SPEAK AT LWRARY
Ben Black, Council of World Affairs, will be at the Pomeroy Library
on J uly 2, II a.m. At that time he will

weight, and Nita Condee was runner-up. At the Middleport cl~ss.
Rhonda Roush lost the most weight,
and J uanita Sayre was runner-up-,
while at the ahester class, Joyce Ritchie lost the most weight, and Betty
Barker and Melissa Bar)\'\,r were the
rwmers-up. Jo Ann Newsome is lee·
turer and information on Slinderella
may be obtained from her, 992-3382.

And we caMot pass them by.

Wiseman

tD

• Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Evans of
. 47295 Eagle Ridge, Minersville, will
be honored with a party Saturday
evening , 7:30 to· 9:30 p.m. in the
social room of the Eagle Ridge Community Church in honor of their 4oth
wedding anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Evans were married
on June 26, 1940 at Racine and are

llficotes at tile Munday mght Mason
class of Slindt• rcl lo.
Pearl Plio len and K1mberly
Van an lost the mo~t weight O::t nd
there was a tic m the class for runncr-up between Nancy Powell and
June Pickens. Mrs. Goodnite was
also accepted into the slim and trim
rncuntenanCI.! program for having
reached her gual weight. She
received a ribbon and certifi cate.

LT. wt. JACKETS ••••••••••••••••• ENTIRE STOCK.20%
TENNIS WEAR•••••••••••••••••••. ENTIRE STOCK 25%
GOLF WEAl. •••••••••••••••••••••. ENTIRE STOCK 25%
SHOES ••••••••••••••••• , ENTIRE STOCK 15% to 50%

OFF
OFF
OFF
OFF

New York
Clothing House
POMEROY OHIO
'·

•

•

�9- T~e Daily Sentinel ; Middlepurt-Pomcroy, U., Th ursday , Ju11e 21; !!leO
I&gt;ICK TRACY
'

r----------------.- -,
R- 1'he Da1ly Sentinel, Mi&lt;ldlc•ptolt-P"" '"""l, U., Thu rsdny, Juu,•26, l!I!Jll

I

1

B.eat. • •

I

Of the Bend

I

I
I

Holstein Club picnic
held in-Crown City

II

I
I

I

By Bob Hoeflich

.
By BOB HOEFLICH

I
State Jaycee President at the sta te
convention for his involvement.
Victor, Sr. , is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. M. Gaul, of the Sumn er area.
He and his wife, Darlene, also have a
daughter, Lisa, tO. Victor and his
family have been back in Meigs
County for the past two and one-half
years; but witt now have to move to
Pennsylva nia due to his empl oy-

Special Correspondent
The annual Big Bend Regatta
Parade is moving out of Middleport
at 11 a. m. Saturday.
Participants are to pick up their
parade number at the Valley
Lumber Co. between 9 and 10 a. m.
and then get into their positions.
The Central Trust Co. drivethrough banking facility will dose
Sa turday due to the parade and the
problems that might result if the
company attempted to use the facility for its customers.

m ent.

Waller D. Roush, Middleport, has
had a golfer's dream come true three limes.
Roush made a hole in one on
number 14 at the Riverside Golf
Course in Mason on J w1e 20. He was
playing with his brother, Marvin of
Atlanta , Ga ., Hennan Knapp and
Chuck Stodola. Roush has two other
holes-in-one on his record.

Jeanne Robbana and her son have
returned from a trip to Portland ,
Ore ., to visit her folks.
About two hours after they landed,
Mt. St. Helens erupted again.
Portland did get some of the ash but
the normal wind blow is not in the
direction to cause too many problems for Portland which is about 40
miles south of the volcano.
J eanne, who heads the Meigs
County Bookmobile Service, reports
that the situation is not as bad as it
appears on the television coverage,
but bad enough. And, of course, it
has affected business.

1

THE PAST MASTERS' Umt of Aladdin Temple Shnne of Columbus was the recent guest of the five Masonic Lodges of Meigs County.
Held at the Pomeroy Lodge, the gathering was attended by 120 Master
Masons. Pi ctures a re, front, I to r, Dav id Price, candidates; John
Jenkins , worshipful master of Pomeroy Lodge; Cha rles Knighting,
worshipful master of Racne Lodge; ba ck, I to r , Ed Braithwaite, direc. tor of Past Masters Unit ; Harry Roush, worshipful master of Middleport Lodge; Duane Will , worshipful master of Harrisonville Lodge,
and Gene Riggs, worshipful master of Shade River Lodge.

The Royal Oak Ballcoom Dance
Club will be staging another one of
its very successful dances on July 3
at the Royal Oak Recreation
Building.
This dance will be a benefit for the
Women's Auxiliary &lt;i Veterans
Memorial Hospital and will feature
the musi c of Ray Cincione, a sixpiece orchestra out of Columbus,
which plays the old tunes. Hours will
be 9p. m. to 1 a. m.
Tickets can be purchased at $15 a
couple at Ingels Furniture and
Jewelry, K. and C. Jewelry, New
York Clothing House, Ewing
Funeral Home, anct Sports, Inc.,
Athens.
The Cincione band played regularly at a large Columbus hotel for a
number of years.

In case you wondered about the
fire truck going through the towns
Saturday ......
The Middleport truck carried on it
Betsy Arnsbary and Don Stivers,
who had been married earlier
Saturday afternoon and the ride on
the truck was a part of the celebration. Don has been a dedicated
member of the Middleport Department.

--- ......
Victor E . Gaul, Sr., of the Shade
River Jaycees, has been selected as
an Outstanding Young Man of
America for 1980 in recognition of
outstanding professional achi evement, superior leadership ability
and exceptional service to the community.
Victor was charter president of
the Shade River Jaycees and received the Jaycee of the Year award
from his chapter. He has received
numerous other awards in his past
eight years as a Jaycee.
Victor, Jr .._ 14, is also an active
. Jaycee. He rece~ved a special award
from the Shade River Jaycees and
also a special award from the Ohio

July 5 at I p. m. former students of
the one-room school in the Kyger
area, which was known as_Fanual
Halt, will be held at the Mason
Museum, located in the area of the
fonner T.N .T. grounds near Point
Pleasant. It looks like quite a reunion is developing thr0ugh the chairmanship of Bob Th ompson,
Pomeroy, Iris Baker of Syracuse,
and Esther Gordon, Little Kyger.
The original school, of cours~ has
long gohe from the scene.

The District 6 Holstein Club picnic
was held Sunday at tbe Mills Hannan
Hill Holstein Farms nea r Crown City
in Galli a County.
Hosts were Frank and Eloise
Mills, Buz and Barpara Mills, David
and Lisa Mills. Fifty-five persons
signed the register presenting five
counties .
Leland Parker, president, conducted the business meeting with the
club voting to donate $:1» for a State
Fair Junior Show trophy. Jim Carnaban gave a report on the District 6
Black and White Show to be held at
the Meigs CQunty Fair on' Aug. 14.
He rell)inded members they are to
have at least 60 registered animals
. for the show to be entered by Friday,
Aug. 8, at 4 p. m.
· Janice Keene, Holstein News
Editor, Wooster, gave the dates for
state shows and sales and reminded
members of the 1980 National Con·
vention to be held on July 28 at
FWAT ENTRIES ASKED
Those persons or organizations interested in entering a float in the
July 4th parade in Racine are asked
to contact Pete Simpson at 949-2118
after:; p.m.
Donations are also being accepted
for the flea market to be held at llle
fire station. Persons wishing to
donate are to contact any member of
the fire department.

~ tJ t\lN f ) ~) l f _1~THAT SC RAMBL ED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
byHennArnoldandBob Lee

THE BULK

OF HIS
WORK
BET WEEN
11 AM. AND
2. P.M.-

LUNCH

r

HOUR -

Nashville, Te~n .
Chris Streitenb erger, COBA
classifier, Hilliard, judged two
classes of Holsteins prior to the judging contest.
Winners for the two year Qld cow
classes were Mary Kay Yost, Kathy
Pa rker, Pat . Holter, Bill Pratt,
David Pratt, Gene Yost, Leland
Pa rker, Ed Stowers, and Roy
Holter.
The aged cow class winner was Ed
Pratt, eight-year-old son of John and
Susie Pratt, Lawrence Co.
,
David Mills explained the feedi)tg
program lor. the confined . housing
milking herd . He said that Nationru
Feeds, Columbus, delivers Brewers
grain once a week which is then mi)&lt;ed with high moisture corn and hay
ensilage and fed at the rate of 140
pounds per animal in outside feed
bunkers: Nothing is fed in the milking parlor. The Mills herd consists of
75 cows milking, six dry, and 23
heifers due to freshen within tile
next four months.
'
· VaUey Bell Milk Co. of Charleston .
furnished milk and ice cream for the
·picnic dinner which was enjoyed qn
the shaded tawn of the 130-year-old,
four-generation homestead.

SIDEWALK - - ,__., /
IS CROWDED "'"'"''· &lt;

WHEN

~~~~~~
HUHt...WELL,
5 UR5·-0KAY;

C ONS/PERIN@ WHAT
HAPPENED THE-R.E,
MISS DEAN~ 56-SIDES,
I ADMIRE A WOMAN
WIT H SPUNK I

r•s.ee THEEASY I

ME ''M"S

SUT HOW
COME;

DEAN " ~

KJ

Yeste,day·s

1&lt;00P UP 1116 eoJD IJJORK,
M.'( 60(... - - -

.,,AIJD 1l1Bre WIU.. ~A I..IJT[.E.

HE; C.AA'T @IW re:t.L.. TIU~

~IIJ0 ~Y.TRA ll.l1H6

1RIJTl.l WllliOOT

OI..D PA'(
Til~

~~ 01$

DAY?!

Dull defenders miss boat

+109762

WKAT 1&amp; IT, SANDY?
UH·OH •• YEAH, I HEAR
IT~ SOMEONE PROIILIN'
AROUND DO!iNSTAIRS--

SURE-· JUG(A BIT
YOU, MAY...
'IIORRIED ABOUT
ARE YOU
THAT JOB INTERVIEW
ALL RIGHT?
TOMORROW -·

OH.' ... IT 'S

... TKINKIN6 ABOUT HOI'!
TECKHOL06Y HA£ CHAH5ED
SINCE l WORKED LAST-·

I'M ONLY 32 ...
,I

ALREADY
BE OVER
HILL-

+KQJ10172

\'7
t K &gt;3

+J3

Casey Kasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS
.

.

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alaa Soatag

OSCAR., BUT I 'LL HAVE
10 REBUILD THIS UNI,- BEFORE WE CAN
..-...-.-.,~ CHECK ON OUR TIME- TRAVELERS!
NOTHING SERIOUS,

Noon

TIL

.1

How was this contract
misdefended ' When West was
in with the queen of clubs he
could have led a diamond and
broken up the squeeze.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

•

,, GASOLINE ALLEY

••
1:
••

It:s part

o'th' Cit4

Dump!

Spill. .....,._
Melba!

How about it, Whenth'
Lil4? 15 this voice t.a lk
what4ousaw to 4ou?
in 4our vision?

'·.

..~..
......
..,.

..' ".""-"~
.....

. lk

1I !'&gt;•
.,,

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

170 YOU THINK TH ERE 'S A
CHANCE WE N ['~ KNOWS ABOUT

TIPPY BEING

M ~RRIED?

WEN DY'S TOO POSSES;:;IVE ,

PROUI7 AND /NPEPENPENT
TO CONTENT HERSELF PlAYIN 6
THE ROLE OF "THE OTHER
WOMAN H.'

WE'VE GOT
TO r/NP HER .. .

WMN

H E~

.. .

THA NK~ TUTU,

BUT '!l' IS IS
(;W£ JO I&gt;
WE'Ll HAVE
TO HANDLE

0VIr5ELVES!

6leww~t~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
42 Fasten
1 Portico
43 Czech river
DOWN
5 Failed in
the clutch
1 Scatter
11 Circuit_
z"-in
12 Nunery
Paradise"
rhyme Jack 3 Unconscious
13 Mechanical 4 Region
routine
5 Slliton, e.g.Yesterday'• ADIIwer
14 Again!
6 John Wayne
15Twined
film
%Z Suffix
28 Baggier,
17 Heston
7 Grampus
for cow
as trousers
film role
8 Mickey Finn Z3 Card game 30 White sauce
18 Old Chinese
ingredient
Z4 Student
32 Strlldngly
kingdom
9 Most
of the
odd
19 Japanese
spectral
Near East 33 Do a
national park 11 HarborZ5 Element's
campaign
ze Cooper's
clearing
dirty trick
chemical
product
machines
property
31 Far East
Z1 Welles
11 Insincere
26 More
language
film role
talk
than enough 38 Alkali
Z3 Be defeated
Z4 Slave off

M Clodhoppens
Z7 South

THE

w-..

'IMCia~ &amp; sat.
·· ''• 8: JO fo 5:00 Thtlrsdlly·tilll2 Noon

· c~·Mott4 PARK

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ON!.

U.S. 60WEST
HUNTINGTON
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT HOLIDAYS

Mason,w : va.

---------

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

--

,..

.. - ............ ·---·-

8o58
9o00

700CLUB

zt "Is That-

([J @ Q) 2G-20
0 ([) @) KNOTS LANDING

Sudd en Sto rm '

Ka re n' s i n vo i~J e m ent in a scho ol
b oard elec t ion-- opp osing her and
Sid "s friend and nei gh bor,
Ric hard-- lea ds her by stages into a
reeva luation o f hersell and her mar·
ria oe . (R epea t; 60 mins.)
00 SOUNDSTAGE 'EIYin Bi shOp '
(60 mins .) (Closed captioned)
[jj) NEWS
10o2B I]) NEWS UPDATE
10o30 . C!J NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
W MOVIE · (SUSPENSE)'"' 'lo

-Passos
34 "- Mir BL!t
DuSchoen"
35 Orator's

t-

" Or. No' ' 1963
(]j) OVER EASY Gue st : Anthony

~Tabled'-

MConnive
n Guam harbor

. z6

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
A X Y- D L B A A X R
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten.
a~oolrophu , the length a'nd formation or the worda are aU
hmta. Each day the code letters are dltreren!.
CRYPI'OQUOTES

.

•~

••.

•
•

PS5T !! GIVE 'IM TilE
OL' SCJ.IMUCKLE BALL!

m

BARNEY MILLER
O utrageous eve nt s o~Je rtak e th e
precinc t when a woman cla im s th at
h er husband has disap pea red, and
a ro bo t has taken his pl ac e .
(ReMW (Cl osed-Ca pti oned)
0 LU® BARNABY JONES Bell y
Jones is th e Key witn ess a gainst a
murder susp ect and beco me s the
ta rget or a b izarre campaign after·
ror . (Repea t ; 60 mins.)
,
(]) RIGHTEOUS APPLES 'Drea m
Fulfill ed' ' Big Nec k ' M c M orris
org anizes a tri bute to M artin Lut her
King but runs into unexpec ted op R2_si tion fr om his girlfri end .
l!1J SNEAK PREVIEWS Co -ho st s
Roger Ebe rt .a nd Ge ne S isk et 1ak e a
look back at the best movies of the
sev enti es, tn cl ud ing ' Ann 1e Hall'
and "Break ing Aw ay '.
9o3o OO ® m NOBODY'SPERFECT
Ron Moody star s as Roger Hart of
Scotl and Ya rd, a brilli ant but klutzy
d ete c tive on t empor ary du t y w it h
th e San Francisco Police Dep art men t, who takes a hilarious plung e
in tohis new assignm entto d ealwit h
a JUmper on th e Golden Gal e Bri dg e
and a hijack ed plane at th e airp ort.
{Premi ere)
(j) GOOD NEIGHBORS
ill.J CAMERA THREE ' Erte ' Th is
p rogram p resent s a p ort r ait of one
of th e most influ ent ial set and cos tum e desi gn ers of th e century .
10:00 (!) TENNIS 'Wimbled on High·
ligh ts' Th is th rilling excl usi ve p res ent s th e mos t ex t en sive on -air
co ~J e r age ot th e eve nt wi th sa me·
day action highlight s and com ·
p re hensive semi-fina l mat ch·play
co~J e ra ge .

S'7 French P.inter 1-++-+-1-

"IMPLOYEES OUTING"
_
OF _
KENTUCKY, WEST VIRGINIA GAS CO.
.
AND
KENTUCKY HYQROCARBON CO.
·•• · -·OJEN TO PUBl:lC. AFTER 4 PM

8 o30

@ UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS 'A

platform

POMEROY, OHIO

SATURDAY • JUNE 28th

MASON FURNITURE_

773-5592

THAR 'IE GO, BOSSIE-A LEETLE 01 L AN' VINEGAR
ON "/ORE SALAD

992-3629

PARK ~ESERVED

m

Z8 Booty
'lbere Is''
30 Barracl!a
item
n John

MEIGS INN
PH.

m

C!J

African
usembly

FROG PLANTERS - Mary Kauff, Pomeroy, is 'getting into the
swing of the frog jump · that will be staged Saturday at Marauder
Stadium in Pomeroy. Mary holds two frog plahters, one that she
. made, \IIIII may po:ssib(y be on display.

WATCH AND EVERYTHING Sta rs :
Rob er!H a)' s . PamDawb er .A young
ma n learn s t hat the g old wa tch he
inherited from his uncle p ossesses
magi cal QlJa liti es
[3) BACKYARO
W BOXIN G 'SGREATESTCHAMPIONS 'Best ol the Heavyweig ht s'
Par! II. Th e worl d's he av yw ei g ht
c hamp s · Demp se y, Marcian o,
Lo UIS, Ali, and mor e· g o the rounds
for to p-class b ox1ng actio n on this
highl y-accl ai med ht sto rice l boxi ng
sen es.
@ HOGAN 'S HEROES
@@ m FACE THE MUSIC
CD LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
I!) 00 TIC T AC DOUGH
(j) MACNEIL -LEHR ER REPORT
(jij) NEWS
ffi) DICK CAVETT SHOW
C!J ZOLA lEVITT
([) AlLIN THE FAMILY
([) IN SEARCH OF
CD COUNTRY ROADS
0 00 JOKER ' SWI~O
(j) DICK CAVETT SHOW
00 $100,000 NAME THAT TUNE
(jj) MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
@ Q) NASHVILLE ON THE
ROAD
C!J NEWS UPDATE
C!J MISSIONAIRES IN ACTION
W MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE! ••
"Jeremiah Johnson " 1972
MOVIE
·(WESTERN-ADVENTURE) •• ~
" Cof!per Canyon" 1950
([) iW
MORK AND MINDY
Exidor is stunned th e clay be fore h is
wed ding by th e arriv al of his longlost mother, who tri es t o stop the
marr iage by chaining h erself m
M indy"s living room. (Rep eal)
CD BUCK ROGERS IN THE 251h
CENTURY Tw1ki is kid napped by a
trio ol trea cherous fe male s in the
empl oy of a deYi o us t ycoo n.
(Re~a t · 60 mins .)
O LU@J CHARLOTTE ' S WEB
00 PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
(jj) BILL MOYERS' JOURNAC
C!J WAKE UP AMERICA
@ [!}) 6) BENSON Aft er a wild
nigh t on the town, a hung over Benson brings his old Arm y bu dd y, Ed·
di e , b ack to th e ma ns 1o n whe re
Edd ie Hods sizzltng roman ce w ith
M arcy . (R epeat)
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CIJ O lfl THURSDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES ' Stan ding Tall ' 1978
Sl ars :RobertF ors ter , Lind e Evans .

([) @

;:: WINNIE

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHT

7o58
8 o00

contract.

There are several ways to
skin a cat and about as many
to chuck the defense. Here is a
team match hand where both
South players opened . with
four spades and both Wests

FOR THE BEST D~ALS IN THE _
TRISTATE AREA
'
.
.

-

Pass

ALLEYOOP

...

MASON FURNITURE

PRESERVE FLAVOR
To preserve the natural flavor of
canned vegetables, pour off liquid
into a saucepan, boil to reduce
volwne by half, add vegetables, heat
and season.

Pass

Opening lead:• K

,. ,._

,., ~· ·Man. T.ttJei.,

+AK84

SOUTH

Pass

WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION of Mid· . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- --1
dlennrt
Presbyterian 0Church'11 Thur- 11:7:~~~~~!!!!!~~~~~~~-~~!!!!!-~~.:..~~-~~~~~~
~7:30p.m.
~=====
sday
Group ne w1 serve
as hostesses and Group Two will
SHOP

FRIDAY .
BIG BEND Citizens Band Radio
Club, 7: 30 p.m. Friday 'at the Rock
Sprinp Grange Hall.

South ruffed and had no trou ble scoring 10 tricks.
At table two West took his
spade ace and got out with a
trump. South played one
trump and shifted to the jack
of clubs. West took his queen
and got out with his low club.
East won and led a heart
which South ruffed.
Now South ran all his
trumps . On the last trump
lead West had to chuck a diamond to hand onto the queen
of hearts.
At this point dummy, which
had already chucked one
diamond , threw away the jack
of hearts.
Dummy still held the club
10 so East also had to chuck a
diamond and South had three
diamond tr icks and his

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
Wesl North Ea·~ Soucb
Pass Pass

]amey Holter

'

+Qs

7 o30

ner was showing a doubleton
heart and played hls queen.

+9
•to asa
.QJ62

• 10 7 4

·- BUT I
COULD

'

a skit. Devotions by Judy

EAST

\'KQ94Z

....••

t;:':~

led the king or hearts.
At table one East played his
eight to show an even number,
after the ace was played from
dummy. A srade was led and
won by Wests ace.
West decided that his part-

t A 98

THIS WEEKENQ
AT THE
INN PLACE

LEEW AY

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

OF

\' AJ 3

G

HALV ED

CW m

BRIDGE

L.'{l~.

NORTH

:;

TIIURSDAY
•TWIN CITY Shrinettes, picnic,
Thursday, 6:30p.m. at the Twin City
Shrine Club, Racine . Members only
with guests to be members of the
French City stu·ineltel~ Glll!i,J)QliiS.
FREE ctoTiiJNO
sday, 10 ~.m.
Army., Buttei'IIUlAft., ,
area residents in neet1
are welcome.

OZONE

Hopkin s. Hos t: Hugh Downs .
{Closed ca pt iOned)
ABC NEWS
6 o58 C!J NEWS UPDATE
THE GIRL, THE GOLD
7 o00 CIJ 0

What he got in his s houl der, as was to be
expected- A " WR ENCH"

+u

~

Social Calendar

Jumbles: M ERCY

I An swer

6 o00 I 2) 0 [1J I!) (})(j1!J[fi) m NEWS
( 3)
RO SS BAGLEY SHOW
(JOINED IN PROGRESS)
(§) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
\i ) ABC NEWS
'
( 9)(1V ZOOM
6 o30 (2) 0 17) NBC NEWS
\ 4] NASHVILL E C OUNTRY POP
F ESTI VAL
I];) I LOVE LUCY
a ) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
0 l!!I~QI CBS NEWS
(9 )
WILO WlLO WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(1'!] OVER EASY Gue st : Anth o ny

•

This is
c Wikhe5'

r-

I I I 1 &amp; r I I I Xd
( Answ ers tomorrow )

ASSIST WITH BLOODMOBILE
Kathryn Mees and Jeannie Braun
wre among the women assisting
with the canteen at lhe Bloodmobile
Monday. Their names were not included in a list of those serving announced earlier. Mrs. ·Braun was
cbairman for the · canteen. The
Auxiliary rl Veterans Memorial
Hospital handled the serving.

RETIRlNG .- Congenial Elma Weese, Syracuse, is retiring from
Elberfelds in Pomeroy. Her last day will be Saturday, Eima has
worked at the department store over 20 years and has spent most of
her time in the lingerie department. Her husband, Donald, retired
from the .Ben Franklin Store four yha rs ago. She plans to "enjoy life
and come and go as he pleases." Elma will be missed by her many
customers.

Jamey Holter, son of Roger and
Helen Holter, observed his sixth birthday on June 19 with a party at the
bome of his parents, Carmel Road,
Racine.
Gifts were presented to the
youngster and refreshments of ice
cream, cupcakes, Kool-Aid were
served to his grandmother, Evelyn
Holter, Ronnie, Linda, Debbie, Tammy and Ryan Holter, Karen and
Ricky Werry, Sharon, Aaron, John ·
and Tracey Card, Cassie and
Jeremy Hubbard, Amy and Todd
Harrison, Rachel and Robert
Reiber, Shane and Grant Circle,
Kevin Grady , Eric Wagner, Martha
Ellen Clonch, Kenny Rose, and Mr.
and Mrs. Holter.
His sister, Angie, telephoned from
Cary, N. C. and he also received gifts from a sister, Robin, Columbus,

I HE SEA MONGTEI&lt;:'G
F'AVOR: ITE DI5H.
Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

Print answer here{

!

Misty Hysell

J

~BUPS I

Now , if those frogs can wear a
smile, you should have no trouble to
keep smiling.

Two birthdays celebrated

Misty ' Dawn Hysell, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Hysell , Rt.
1 Racine celebrated her first bir•
'
thday on June 16.
A birthday party was held in her
honor. Cake and ice cream were served to Mr. and Mrs. Charles M.
Hysell, Mrs. Bessie Saxton, Mrs. Bill
Saxton and Garland and Sharon, Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Zirkle and Susan,
Mrs. Terry Shain and Jason, Mrs.
Charlene Lewis and Trent. Sending
gifts were Mark Proffitt and Clarence Napper.

I

LOOI&lt;S LIKE l 'M 60 INS TO HAVE
TO TE-ACH YO U TO STOP C A ~ ~ I N6

WEST
.A6 &gt;

TO MEET TONIGHT
The Women's Association of the
Middleport Presbyterian Church
will meet this evening at 7:30p.m.
A skit will be presented by Group
Two and members of Group One will
serve as hostesses. Devotions will be
given by Judy Crooks.

JUNE 26 , 1980
EVENING

t-?tSSAe±

6HUCKS , rr
WAS NAT URAL --

YOU

rx
··-·-

.........._.. ... . .... '"'1

HYSIF

CAPTAIN EASY
SOilR.Y I
&amp;~ew MV

Viewing

-~

WHEN THE

AND

Television

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one tene r to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

J

M J R

RGWRLK

DWKLWKDPW
PGY

LCL;

DK

PT
DR

w

p

XQLJRDWB
KML

YLRGQK

PT XYLADRL TPYALR , - UJW YJC _
Yemruy'1 ~: . WHEN EVERY BONE IN YOUR,
BODY ACHES YOU CAN TIIAl'iK TilE LORD THAT YOU'RE
NOT A HERRING:-QUIN RYAN

.

e 1W IC.Int fiMhnt Syndlu... Inc.
'

Hopkin s. Host · Hugh Do wn s.
{g_losed ca ptioned)
10o58 (}) NEWS UPDATE
11 o00 rn 0 (II CD I!) CIJ ®I IW
NEWS
I
C!J JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
(II
LAST OF THE WILD
' Alligator '
I]) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(j]) DICKCAVETTSHO)V
11 o28 (]) NEWS UPDATE
,
11 o30 CIJ U CD THE TONIGHT SHOW
Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Bob
Uecker, Neil Simon. (90 min s.)
@ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(II
MOVIE
-(BIOGRAPHICAl·DRAMAI"'' 'lo

""' m

" Gentleman Jim " 1942

C1J rJZJ

m

ABC NEWS
NIGHTUNE
0 (]) CBS LA TEMOVIE 'THE JEF·
FERS ONS : Mee t The Pres s '
George trie s to harness the pow er
o f the press f or his own end $ .
(Rep eali ' THEBABYMAKER ' 1970
Stars: Barbara Hershey, Sam
,
· Groom.
CIJ ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®J MOVIE -(DRAMA) .. , "All tho

Way Home"

~963

·

�9- T~e Daily Sentinel ; Middlepurt-Pomcroy, U., Th ursday , Ju11e 21; !!leO
I&gt;ICK TRACY
'

r----------------.- -,
R- 1'he Da1ly Sentinel, Mi&lt;ldlc•ptolt-P"" '"""l, U., Thu rsdny, Juu,•26, l!I!Jll

I

1

B.eat. • •

I

Of the Bend

I

I
I

Holstein Club picnic
held in-Crown City

II

I
I

I

By Bob Hoeflich

.
By BOB HOEFLICH

I
State Jaycee President at the sta te
convention for his involvement.
Victor, Sr. , is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. M. Gaul, of the Sumn er area.
He and his wife, Darlene, also have a
daughter, Lisa, tO. Victor and his
family have been back in Meigs
County for the past two and one-half
years; but witt now have to move to
Pennsylva nia due to his empl oy-

Special Correspondent
The annual Big Bend Regatta
Parade is moving out of Middleport
at 11 a. m. Saturday.
Participants are to pick up their
parade number at the Valley
Lumber Co. between 9 and 10 a. m.
and then get into their positions.
The Central Trust Co. drivethrough banking facility will dose
Sa turday due to the parade and the
problems that might result if the
company attempted to use the facility for its customers.

m ent.

Waller D. Roush, Middleport, has
had a golfer's dream come true three limes.
Roush made a hole in one on
number 14 at the Riverside Golf
Course in Mason on J w1e 20. He was
playing with his brother, Marvin of
Atlanta , Ga ., Hennan Knapp and
Chuck Stodola. Roush has two other
holes-in-one on his record.

Jeanne Robbana and her son have
returned from a trip to Portland ,
Ore ., to visit her folks.
About two hours after they landed,
Mt. St. Helens erupted again.
Portland did get some of the ash but
the normal wind blow is not in the
direction to cause too many problems for Portland which is about 40
miles south of the volcano.
J eanne, who heads the Meigs
County Bookmobile Service, reports
that the situation is not as bad as it
appears on the television coverage,
but bad enough. And, of course, it
has affected business.

1

THE PAST MASTERS' Umt of Aladdin Temple Shnne of Columbus was the recent guest of the five Masonic Lodges of Meigs County.
Held at the Pomeroy Lodge, the gathering was attended by 120 Master
Masons. Pi ctures a re, front, I to r, Dav id Price, candidates; John
Jenkins , worshipful master of Pomeroy Lodge; Cha rles Knighting,
worshipful master of Racne Lodge; ba ck, I to r , Ed Braithwaite, direc. tor of Past Masters Unit ; Harry Roush, worshipful master of Middleport Lodge; Duane Will , worshipful master of Harrisonville Lodge,
and Gene Riggs, worshipful master of Shade River Lodge.

The Royal Oak Ballcoom Dance
Club will be staging another one of
its very successful dances on July 3
at the Royal Oak Recreation
Building.
This dance will be a benefit for the
Women's Auxiliary &lt;i Veterans
Memorial Hospital and will feature
the musi c of Ray Cincione, a sixpiece orchestra out of Columbus,
which plays the old tunes. Hours will
be 9p. m. to 1 a. m.
Tickets can be purchased at $15 a
couple at Ingels Furniture and
Jewelry, K. and C. Jewelry, New
York Clothing House, Ewing
Funeral Home, anct Sports, Inc.,
Athens.
The Cincione band played regularly at a large Columbus hotel for a
number of years.

In case you wondered about the
fire truck going through the towns
Saturday ......
The Middleport truck carried on it
Betsy Arnsbary and Don Stivers,
who had been married earlier
Saturday afternoon and the ride on
the truck was a part of the celebration. Don has been a dedicated
member of the Middleport Department.

--- ......
Victor E . Gaul, Sr., of the Shade
River Jaycees, has been selected as
an Outstanding Young Man of
America for 1980 in recognition of
outstanding professional achi evement, superior leadership ability
and exceptional service to the community.
Victor was charter president of
the Shade River Jaycees and received the Jaycee of the Year award
from his chapter. He has received
numerous other awards in his past
eight years as a Jaycee.
Victor, Jr .._ 14, is also an active
. Jaycee. He rece~ved a special award
from the Shade River Jaycees and
also a special award from the Ohio

July 5 at I p. m. former students of
the one-room school in the Kyger
area, which was known as_Fanual
Halt, will be held at the Mason
Museum, located in the area of the
fonner T.N .T. grounds near Point
Pleasant. It looks like quite a reunion is developing thr0ugh the chairmanship of Bob Th ompson,
Pomeroy, Iris Baker of Syracuse,
and Esther Gordon, Little Kyger.
The original school, of cours~ has
long gohe from the scene.

The District 6 Holstein Club picnic
was held Sunday at tbe Mills Hannan
Hill Holstein Farms nea r Crown City
in Galli a County.
Hosts were Frank and Eloise
Mills, Buz and Barpara Mills, David
and Lisa Mills. Fifty-five persons
signed the register presenting five
counties .
Leland Parker, president, conducted the business meeting with the
club voting to donate $:1» for a State
Fair Junior Show trophy. Jim Carnaban gave a report on the District 6
Black and White Show to be held at
the Meigs CQunty Fair on' Aug. 14.
He rell)inded members they are to
have at least 60 registered animals
. for the show to be entered by Friday,
Aug. 8, at 4 p. m.
· Janice Keene, Holstein News
Editor, Wooster, gave the dates for
state shows and sales and reminded
members of the 1980 National Con·
vention to be held on July 28 at
FWAT ENTRIES ASKED
Those persons or organizations interested in entering a float in the
July 4th parade in Racine are asked
to contact Pete Simpson at 949-2118
after:; p.m.
Donations are also being accepted
for the flea market to be held at llle
fire station. Persons wishing to
donate are to contact any member of
the fire department.

~ tJ t\lN f ) ~) l f _1~THAT SC RAMBL ED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
byHennArnoldandBob Lee

THE BULK

OF HIS
WORK
BET WEEN
11 AM. AND
2. P.M.-

LUNCH

r

HOUR -

Nashville, Te~n .
Chris Streitenb erger, COBA
classifier, Hilliard, judged two
classes of Holsteins prior to the judging contest.
Winners for the two year Qld cow
classes were Mary Kay Yost, Kathy
Pa rker, Pat . Holter, Bill Pratt,
David Pratt, Gene Yost, Leland
Pa rker, Ed Stowers, and Roy
Holter.
The aged cow class winner was Ed
Pratt, eight-year-old son of John and
Susie Pratt, Lawrence Co.
,
David Mills explained the feedi)tg
program lor. the confined . housing
milking herd . He said that Nationru
Feeds, Columbus, delivers Brewers
grain once a week which is then mi)&lt;ed with high moisture corn and hay
ensilage and fed at the rate of 140
pounds per animal in outside feed
bunkers: Nothing is fed in the milking parlor. The Mills herd consists of
75 cows milking, six dry, and 23
heifers due to freshen within tile
next four months.
'
· VaUey Bell Milk Co. of Charleston .
furnished milk and ice cream for the
·picnic dinner which was enjoyed qn
the shaded tawn of the 130-year-old,
four-generation homestead.

SIDEWALK - - ,__., /
IS CROWDED "'"'"''· &lt;

WHEN

~~~~~~
HUHt...WELL,
5 UR5·-0KAY;

C ONS/PERIN@ WHAT
HAPPENED THE-R.E,
MISS DEAN~ 56-SIDES,
I ADMIRE A WOMAN
WIT H SPUNK I

r•s.ee THEEASY I

ME ''M"S

SUT HOW
COME;

DEAN " ~

KJ

Yeste,day·s

1&lt;00P UP 1116 eoJD IJJORK,
M.'( 60(... - - -

.,,AIJD 1l1Bre WIU.. ~A I..IJT[.E.

HE; C.AA'T @IW re:t.L.. TIU~

~IIJ0 ~Y.TRA ll.l1H6

1RIJTl.l WllliOOT

OI..D PA'(
Til~

~~ 01$

DAY?!

Dull defenders miss boat

+109762

WKAT 1&amp; IT, SANDY?
UH·OH •• YEAH, I HEAR
IT~ SOMEONE PROIILIN'
AROUND DO!iNSTAIRS--

SURE-· JUG(A BIT
YOU, MAY...
'IIORRIED ABOUT
ARE YOU
THAT JOB INTERVIEW
ALL RIGHT?
TOMORROW -·

OH.' ... IT 'S

... TKINKIN6 ABOUT HOI'!
TECKHOL06Y HA£ CHAH5ED
SINCE l WORKED LAST-·

I'M ONLY 32 ...
,I

ALREADY
BE OVER
HILL-

+KQJ10172

\'7
t K &gt;3

+J3

Casey Kasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS
.

.

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alaa Soatag

OSCAR., BUT I 'LL HAVE
10 REBUILD THIS UNI,- BEFORE WE CAN
..-...-.-.,~ CHECK ON OUR TIME- TRAVELERS!
NOTHING SERIOUS,

Noon

TIL

.1

How was this contract
misdefended ' When West was
in with the queen of clubs he
could have led a diamond and
broken up the squeeze.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

•

,, GASOLINE ALLEY

••
1:
••

It:s part

o'th' Cit4

Dump!

Spill. .....,._
Melba!

How about it, Whenth'
Lil4? 15 this voice t.a lk
what4ousaw to 4ou?
in 4our vision?

'·.

..~..
......
..,.

..' ".""-"~
.....

. lk

1I !'&gt;•
.,,

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

170 YOU THINK TH ERE 'S A
CHANCE WE N ['~ KNOWS ABOUT

TIPPY BEING

M ~RRIED?

WEN DY'S TOO POSSES;:;IVE ,

PROUI7 AND /NPEPENPENT
TO CONTENT HERSELF PlAYIN 6
THE ROLE OF "THE OTHER
WOMAN H.'

WE'VE GOT
TO r/NP HER .. .

WMN

H E~

.. .

THA NK~ TUTU,

BUT '!l' IS IS
(;W£ JO I&gt;
WE'Ll HAVE
TO HANDLE

0VIr5ELVES!

6leww~t~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
42 Fasten
1 Portico
43 Czech river
DOWN
5 Failed in
the clutch
1 Scatter
11 Circuit_
z"-in
12 Nunery
Paradise"
rhyme Jack 3 Unconscious
13 Mechanical 4 Region
routine
5 Slliton, e.g.Yesterday'• ADIIwer
14 Again!
6 John Wayne
15Twined
film
%Z Suffix
28 Baggier,
17 Heston
7 Grampus
for cow
as trousers
film role
8 Mickey Finn Z3 Card game 30 White sauce
18 Old Chinese
ingredient
Z4 Student
32 Strlldngly
kingdom
9 Most
of the
odd
19 Japanese
spectral
Near East 33 Do a
national park 11 HarborZ5 Element's
campaign
ze Cooper's
clearing
dirty trick
chemical
product
machines
property
31 Far East
Z1 Welles
11 Insincere
26 More
language
film role
talk
than enough 38 Alkali
Z3 Be defeated
Z4 Slave off

M Clodhoppens
Z7 South

THE

w-..

'IMCia~ &amp; sat.
·· ''• 8: JO fo 5:00 Thtlrsdlly·tilll2 Noon

· c~·Mott4 PARK

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ON!.

U.S. 60WEST
HUNTINGTON
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT HOLIDAYS

Mason,w : va.

---------

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

--

,..

.. - ............ ·---·-

8o58
9o00

700CLUB

zt "Is That-

([J @ Q) 2G-20
0 ([) @) KNOTS LANDING

Sudd en Sto rm '

Ka re n' s i n vo i~J e m ent in a scho ol
b oard elec t ion-- opp osing her and
Sid "s friend and nei gh bor,
Ric hard-- lea ds her by stages into a
reeva luation o f hersell and her mar·
ria oe . (R epea t; 60 mins.)
00 SOUNDSTAGE 'EIYin Bi shOp '
(60 mins .) (Closed captioned)
[jj) NEWS
10o2B I]) NEWS UPDATE
10o30 . C!J NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
W MOVIE · (SUSPENSE)'"' 'lo

-Passos
34 "- Mir BL!t
DuSchoen"
35 Orator's

t-

" Or. No' ' 1963
(]j) OVER EASY Gue st : Anthony

~Tabled'-

MConnive
n Guam harbor

. z6

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
A X Y- D L B A A X R
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single !etten.
a~oolrophu , the length a'nd formation or the worda are aU
hmta. Each day the code letters are dltreren!.
CRYPI'OQUOTES

.

•~

••.

•
•

PS5T !! GIVE 'IM TilE
OL' SCJ.IMUCKLE BALL!

m

BARNEY MILLER
O utrageous eve nt s o~Je rtak e th e
precinc t when a woman cla im s th at
h er husband has disap pea red, and
a ro bo t has taken his pl ac e .
(ReMW (Cl osed-Ca pti oned)
0 LU® BARNABY JONES Bell y
Jones is th e Key witn ess a gainst a
murder susp ect and beco me s the
ta rget or a b izarre campaign after·
ror . (Repea t ; 60 mins.)
,
(]) RIGHTEOUS APPLES 'Drea m
Fulfill ed' ' Big Nec k ' M c M orris
org anizes a tri bute to M artin Lut her
King but runs into unexpec ted op R2_si tion fr om his girlfri end .
l!1J SNEAK PREVIEWS Co -ho st s
Roger Ebe rt .a nd Ge ne S isk et 1ak e a
look back at the best movies of the
sev enti es, tn cl ud ing ' Ann 1e Hall'
and "Break ing Aw ay '.
9o3o OO ® m NOBODY'SPERFECT
Ron Moody star s as Roger Hart of
Scotl and Ya rd, a brilli ant but klutzy
d ete c tive on t empor ary du t y w it h
th e San Francisco Police Dep art men t, who takes a hilarious plung e
in tohis new assignm entto d ealwit h
a JUmper on th e Golden Gal e Bri dg e
and a hijack ed plane at th e airp ort.
{Premi ere)
(j) GOOD NEIGHBORS
ill.J CAMERA THREE ' Erte ' Th is
p rogram p resent s a p ort r ait of one
of th e most influ ent ial set and cos tum e desi gn ers of th e century .
10:00 (!) TENNIS 'Wimbled on High·
ligh ts' Th is th rilling excl usi ve p res ent s th e mos t ex t en sive on -air
co ~J e r age ot th e eve nt wi th sa me·
day action highlight s and com ·
p re hensive semi-fina l mat ch·play
co~J e ra ge .

S'7 French P.inter 1-++-+-1-

"IMPLOYEES OUTING"
_
OF _
KENTUCKY, WEST VIRGINIA GAS CO.
.
AND
KENTUCKY HYQROCARBON CO.
·•• · -·OJEN TO PUBl:lC. AFTER 4 PM

8 o30

@ UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS 'A

platform

POMEROY, OHIO

SATURDAY • JUNE 28th

MASON FURNITURE_

773-5592

THAR 'IE GO, BOSSIE-A LEETLE 01 L AN' VINEGAR
ON "/ORE SALAD

992-3629

PARK ~ESERVED

m

Z8 Booty
'lbere Is''
30 Barracl!a
item
n John

MEIGS INN
PH.

m

C!J

African
usembly

FROG PLANTERS - Mary Kauff, Pomeroy, is 'getting into the
swing of the frog jump · that will be staged Saturday at Marauder
Stadium in Pomeroy. Mary holds two frog plahters, one that she
. made, \IIIII may po:ssib(y be on display.

WATCH AND EVERYTHING Sta rs :
Rob er!H a)' s . PamDawb er .A young
ma n learn s t hat the g old wa tch he
inherited from his uncle p ossesses
magi cal QlJa liti es
[3) BACKYARO
W BOXIN G 'SGREATESTCHAMPIONS 'Best ol the Heavyweig ht s'
Par! II. Th e worl d's he av yw ei g ht
c hamp s · Demp se y, Marcian o,
Lo UIS, Ali, and mor e· g o the rounds
for to p-class b ox1ng actio n on this
highl y-accl ai med ht sto rice l boxi ng
sen es.
@ HOGAN 'S HEROES
@@ m FACE THE MUSIC
CD LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
I!) 00 TIC T AC DOUGH
(j) MACNEIL -LEHR ER REPORT
(jij) NEWS
ffi) DICK CAVETT SHOW
C!J ZOLA lEVITT
([) AlLIN THE FAMILY
([) IN SEARCH OF
CD COUNTRY ROADS
0 00 JOKER ' SWI~O
(j) DICK CAVETT SHOW
00 $100,000 NAME THAT TUNE
(jj) MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
@ Q) NASHVILLE ON THE
ROAD
C!J NEWS UPDATE
C!J MISSIONAIRES IN ACTION
W MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE! ••
"Jeremiah Johnson " 1972
MOVIE
·(WESTERN-ADVENTURE) •• ~
" Cof!per Canyon" 1950
([) iW
MORK AND MINDY
Exidor is stunned th e clay be fore h is
wed ding by th e arriv al of his longlost mother, who tri es t o stop the
marr iage by chaining h erself m
M indy"s living room. (Rep eal)
CD BUCK ROGERS IN THE 251h
CENTURY Tw1ki is kid napped by a
trio ol trea cherous fe male s in the
empl oy of a deYi o us t ycoo n.
(Re~a t · 60 mins .)
O LU@J CHARLOTTE ' S WEB
00 PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
(jj) BILL MOYERS' JOURNAC
C!J WAKE UP AMERICA
@ [!}) 6) BENSON Aft er a wild
nigh t on the town, a hung over Benson brings his old Arm y bu dd y, Ed·
di e , b ack to th e ma ns 1o n whe re
Edd ie Hods sizzltng roman ce w ith
M arcy . (R epeat)
CIJ NEWS UPDATE
CIJ O lfl THURSDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES ' Stan ding Tall ' 1978
Sl ars :RobertF ors ter , Lind e Evans .

([) @

;:: WINNIE

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHT

7o58
8 o00

contract.

There are several ways to
skin a cat and about as many
to chuck the defense. Here is a
team match hand where both
South players opened . with
four spades and both Wests

FOR THE BEST D~ALS IN THE _
TRISTATE AREA
'
.
.

-

Pass

ALLEYOOP

...

MASON FURNITURE

PRESERVE FLAVOR
To preserve the natural flavor of
canned vegetables, pour off liquid
into a saucepan, boil to reduce
volwne by half, add vegetables, heat
and season.

Pass

Opening lead:• K

,. ,._

,., ~· ·Man. T.ttJei.,

+AK84

SOUTH

Pass

WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION of Mid· . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- --1
dlennrt
Presbyterian 0Church'11 Thur- 11:7:~~~~~!!!!!~~~~~~~-~~!!!!!-~~.:..~~-~~~~~~
~7:30p.m.
~=====
sday
Group ne w1 serve
as hostesses and Group Two will
SHOP

FRIDAY .
BIG BEND Citizens Band Radio
Club, 7: 30 p.m. Friday 'at the Rock
Sprinp Grange Hall.

South ruffed and had no trou ble scoring 10 tricks.
At table two West took his
spade ace and got out with a
trump. South played one
trump and shifted to the jack
of clubs. West took his queen
and got out with his low club.
East won and led a heart
which South ruffed.
Now South ran all his
trumps . On the last trump
lead West had to chuck a diamond to hand onto the queen
of hearts.
At this point dummy, which
had already chucked one
diamond , threw away the jack
of hearts.
Dummy still held the club
10 so East also had to chuck a
diamond and South had three
diamond tr icks and his

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
Wesl North Ea·~ Soucb
Pass Pass

]amey Holter

'

+Qs

7 o30

ner was showing a doubleton
heart and played hls queen.

+9
•to asa
.QJ62

• 10 7 4

·- BUT I
COULD

'

a skit. Devotions by Judy

EAST

\'KQ94Z

....••

t;:':~

led the king or hearts.
At table one East played his
eight to show an even number,
after the ace was played from
dummy. A srade was led and
won by Wests ace.
West decided that his part-

t A 98

THIS WEEKENQ
AT THE
INN PLACE

LEEW AY

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

OF

\' AJ 3

G

HALV ED

CW m

BRIDGE

L.'{l~.

NORTH

:;

TIIURSDAY
•TWIN CITY Shrinettes, picnic,
Thursday, 6:30p.m. at the Twin City
Shrine Club, Racine . Members only
with guests to be members of the
French City stu·ineltel~ Glll!i,J)QliiS.
FREE ctoTiiJNO
sday, 10 ~.m.
Army., Buttei'IIUlAft., ,
area residents in neet1
are welcome.

OZONE

Hopkin s. Hos t: Hugh Downs .
{Closed ca pt iOned)
ABC NEWS
6 o58 C!J NEWS UPDATE
THE GIRL, THE GOLD
7 o00 CIJ 0

What he got in his s houl der, as was to be
expected- A " WR ENCH"

+u

~

Social Calendar

Jumbles: M ERCY

I An swer

6 o00 I 2) 0 [1J I!) (})(j1!J[fi) m NEWS
( 3)
RO SS BAGLEY SHOW
(JOINED IN PROGRESS)
(§) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
\i ) ABC NEWS
'
( 9)(1V ZOOM
6 o30 (2) 0 17) NBC NEWS
\ 4] NASHVILL E C OUNTRY POP
F ESTI VAL
I];) I LOVE LUCY
a ) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
0 l!!I~QI CBS NEWS
(9 )
WILO WlLO WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(1'!] OVER EASY Gue st : Anth o ny

•

This is
c Wikhe5'

r-

I I I 1 &amp; r I I I Xd
( Answ ers tomorrow )

ASSIST WITH BLOODMOBILE
Kathryn Mees and Jeannie Braun
wre among the women assisting
with the canteen at lhe Bloodmobile
Monday. Their names were not included in a list of those serving announced earlier. Mrs. ·Braun was
cbairman for the · canteen. The
Auxiliary rl Veterans Memorial
Hospital handled the serving.

RETIRlNG .- Congenial Elma Weese, Syracuse, is retiring from
Elberfelds in Pomeroy. Her last day will be Saturday, Eima has
worked at the department store over 20 years and has spent most of
her time in the lingerie department. Her husband, Donald, retired
from the .Ben Franklin Store four yha rs ago. She plans to "enjoy life
and come and go as he pleases." Elma will be missed by her many
customers.

Jamey Holter, son of Roger and
Helen Holter, observed his sixth birthday on June 19 with a party at the
bome of his parents, Carmel Road,
Racine.
Gifts were presented to the
youngster and refreshments of ice
cream, cupcakes, Kool-Aid were
served to his grandmother, Evelyn
Holter, Ronnie, Linda, Debbie, Tammy and Ryan Holter, Karen and
Ricky Werry, Sharon, Aaron, John ·
and Tracey Card, Cassie and
Jeremy Hubbard, Amy and Todd
Harrison, Rachel and Robert
Reiber, Shane and Grant Circle,
Kevin Grady , Eric Wagner, Martha
Ellen Clonch, Kenny Rose, and Mr.
and Mrs. Holter.
His sister, Angie, telephoned from
Cary, N. C. and he also received gifts from a sister, Robin, Columbus,

I HE SEA MONGTEI&lt;:'G
F'AVOR: ITE DI5H.
Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

Print answer here{

!

Misty Hysell

J

~BUPS I

Now , if those frogs can wear a
smile, you should have no trouble to
keep smiling.

Two birthdays celebrated

Misty ' Dawn Hysell, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Hysell , Rt.
1 Racine celebrated her first bir•
'
thday on June 16.
A birthday party was held in her
honor. Cake and ice cream were served to Mr. and Mrs. Charles M.
Hysell, Mrs. Bessie Saxton, Mrs. Bill
Saxton and Garland and Sharon, Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Zirkle and Susan,
Mrs. Terry Shain and Jason, Mrs.
Charlene Lewis and Trent. Sending
gifts were Mark Proffitt and Clarence Napper.

I

LOOI&lt;S LIKE l 'M 60 INS TO HAVE
TO TE-ACH YO U TO STOP C A ~ ~ I N6

WEST
.A6 &gt;

TO MEET TONIGHT
The Women's Association of the
Middleport Presbyterian Church
will meet this evening at 7:30p.m.
A skit will be presented by Group
Two and members of Group One will
serve as hostesses. Devotions will be
given by Judy Crooks.

JUNE 26 , 1980
EVENING

t-?tSSAe±

6HUCKS , rr
WAS NAT URAL --

YOU

rx
··-·-

.........._.. ... . .... '"'1

HYSIF

CAPTAIN EASY
SOilR.Y I
&amp;~ew MV

Viewing

-~

WHEN THE

AND

Television

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one tene r to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

J

M J R

RGWRLK

DWKLWKDPW
PGY

LCL;

DK

PT
DR

w

p

XQLJRDWB
KML

YLRGQK

PT XYLADRL TPYALR , - UJW YJC _
Yemruy'1 ~: . WHEN EVERY BONE IN YOUR,
BODY ACHES YOU CAN TIIAl'iK TilE LORD THAT YOU'RE
NOT A HERRING:-QUIN RYAN

.

e 1W IC.Int fiMhnt Syndlu... Inc.
'

Hopkin s. Host · Hugh Do wn s.
{g_losed ca ptioned)
10o58 (}) NEWS UPDATE
11 o00 rn 0 (II CD I!) CIJ ®I IW
NEWS
I
C!J JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
(II
LAST OF THE WILD
' Alligator '
I]) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(j]) DICKCAVETTSHO)V
11 o28 (]) NEWS UPDATE
,
11 o30 CIJ U CD THE TONIGHT SHOW
Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Bob
Uecker, Neil Simon. (90 min s.)
@ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(II
MOVIE
-(BIOGRAPHICAl·DRAMAI"'' 'lo

""' m

" Gentleman Jim " 1942

C1J rJZJ

m

ABC NEWS
NIGHTUNE
0 (]) CBS LA TEMOVIE 'THE JEF·
FERS ONS : Mee t The Pres s '
George trie s to harness the pow er
o f the press f or his own end $ .
(Rep eali ' THEBABYMAKER ' 1970
Stars: Barbara Hershey, Sam
,
· Groom.
CIJ ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®J MOVIE -(DRAMA) .. , "All tho

Way Home"

~963

·

�10 lhcDaliyS.,nllucJ M"llile~ull I ""'""l 0

lhu1 &gt;tld)

lune&lt;ffi 1!!80

Statement surprises University of Cincinnati officials
Meigs
Property
Transfers
Lorena Mae R1ce to Florence Me
Dame!, cert of trans , Middleport
Theresa Renshaw, dec to Helen
J Burson, Margaret A Dodson
teresa E Bumgardner, Marlyn S
Searl&gt; cert of trans Sutton
Waiter Hoffman Hazel Hoffman
to Roger L Hoffman, Pamela L
Hoffman parcels Chester
Carl Hubbard Adnenne M Hulr
hal d to Robert Willis, Shirley W llhs
lot, Syracuse
Robert Willis Shirley Willis to
Clyde W Hubbard, Mildred Mae
Hubbard lot Syracuse
Clyde W Hubbard M1!dred Mae
Hubbard to Robert W1111s Shirley
W1ll1s lots Syracuse
Debra S Halley, Wilham Halley
to Robert L Cunmngham Sharon L
Cunmngham, lots, Syracuse
Walter J Robb, R1ta I Robb to S
W Jack Dnllmg Co , nght of way,
Co!wnb1a
Lola Barber Delbert Barber , to
Jerry E
Barber Maqone M
aarber 25 acre
Patnc1a Rentz to R1chard E
$wanson , Dons J Swanson 29 acre
Pomeroy
Carl 0 Gheen to lillie Gheen

cert oftrans , Racme

By BILL VALE
Associated Press Wnter
CINCINNATI tAP ) - Student a1d
fraud IS continUing at the Umvers1ty
of Cmcmnall accordmg to Oluo
Auditor 1 homas E ferguson, who
strongly has suggested that the
school start aud1t1ng every B!&gt;phcatiOn
Cmcmnat1 Is the only place
where we ve had thiS problem he
sa1d at a news conference Wed·
nesday
We ve checked other
wuvers1lles m OhiO and have found
very few

Umve!'lilty spokesman Ken Scr
v1ce said the problem was nummal
Cl([lressmg surpnsc at f crgusun s
statement
I don t understand why the
aud1tor has to make the an

Ferguson sa1d a follow up audit of
150 of 1,400 students on the program
found that 22 students had subIOIIted less tban accurate 111-

nouncement at a news conference

furmatwn so as to show maxunum

and

inv1t~

not

us

smce

EducatiOnal

VIce said

In 1975-76 state aud•to1s clauned
to fmd 26 students, w1th the help of
the former fmanc1al a1d officer
fraudulently had collected $67,600
from the federal Supplemental

25 others forfeited bonds m the court
of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence An
ctrews Tuesday mght
Fmed were Mike McDonald l\'llddl-eport $50 and costs, dnvmg under
suspensiOn $200 and costs petty
theft $300 and costs assault, $36 and
costs, speed $25 and costs failure t o
appear $50 and costs, expired tags,
Roy Baresw1!t Middleport $30 and
costs loud muffler, Tomn McCloud
Middleport 69 days confmement
failure to pay old fme
Forfe1tmg bonds were Retta Day,
Syracuse Frank Wakos, Cleveland,
DenOIS Musser, Pomeroy, Donald
S101th Racme, Michael Codner,
fulcme, and Lou1s Jones, Columbus,
$26 each, speed Gary Hickman,
Lucasville, $27
speed
Roger
Preas!, Alban&gt; $30 makmg left
turn off Butternut onto MA 1n Kevm

e1gnt persons
:service added
Clearly we are not eqUipped to con
duct that kmd of Investigation
In fnost case~. the students did not
mtend to defraud , SefVIcc sa1d
Most of them didn t understand
that welfare and Soc1al Secur1ty fun·
ds must be l'OnsJdered mcome to be
reported "On the form he said
But Ferguson said that m most
cases, those students Involved were
not makmg progress toward a
degree and should have been dro!&gt;ped by the umvers1ty At least one
case was reported where a recipient
used the money to make car
payments he added
According to Serv1ce the program
mvolves about $1 rmlhon annually
I JUSt worry that the kids who
really need the funds 101ght wmd up
not getting 1t he sa1d

&lt;btwnal mvestigatmg office would
cost more than the loss
We bave called mall the studen
ts We found others who supphed

wrong mformat10n tn our own audit
and we re clearing those up, too,
Service said, addmg that a full·hme
member of the aud1tot s office 1s
assigned to the university
Of the 26 cited m the 1975-76 audit,
seven were prosecuted by the
federal government and 19 cases
were dlSinlssed
Robert Ell1s, the fonner fmanc1al
aid officer, was conviCted m federal
court and sentenced to two years m
priSon, Ferguson said
We have turned the present aud1t
over to the FBI and they have begun
rev~ewmg the cases he said
The last time 11 took a complete
mvestigat10n by the FBI ' to catch

data which m turn, would allow
them to receive maxiiTlum fmanc1a!
ass1stance based on need
Ferguson, who sa1d thiS amounted
to $17 065, adv1sed the umvers1ty to
begm a 100 percent check of all the

we

cooperated w1th the mvest•gat10n
and were m 1t With the aud1tor Ser·

Hudson, Mmersv1lle, $50, fmiure to
transfer tags Pauline Smith, New
Haven, $30 speed Charles Wheeler
West Co!wnb1a, $50, no operators
hcense, Cheryl Roseberry Racme
$26, speed, Dav1d Lew1s Pomeroy
$27, speed Junmy Evans, Pomeroy
$36, speed Pamela Alexander,
Manetta
$37 speeds Rrchard
While, Pt Pleasant, $30, speed
Frank Conkle, Humcane, $25
speed, Marvm Satterfield Mmer
svl!le $30 unsafe vehicle James
AnlSbury Pomeroy, $28 speed Or·
tha Smder, Racine, $35 speed '
Jason Roush, Belpre, $30 speed,
James Fisher, Hurncane, $30
failure to yield, D1ck Herman , no
address recorded, $100, failure to a!&gt;"
pear Terl') I.ayf~eld, no address
$25
speed
Jack William s
Syracuse $50 traffic light v~a!at10n

Grant

program

appltcabons from now on "
He speculated that as much as
$94,000 may have been wrongfully
obtamed by students OtherwiSe, his
aud1tors gave the un1vers•ty good
marks mall other fmanc1al areas
Serv1ce, noting that the auditor
found only $17,060 m overpayments
said the cost of settmg up an ad·

Court news
1 hree defendants were fmed and

Oppurtumty

This IS an mcrease of 63 per cent m
drtnking dnver arrests
W1th the July Fourth holiday
"eekend neanng each trooper will
concentrate all efforts to watch for
the erratic dnvmg of a person under
the mfluence of an alcoholic
beverage or drugs
A drmkmg dr1ver Is more prone to
have an acc1dent and over half of all
fatal accidents Investigated mvolve
a dr~ver under the mfluence of an m
tmocatmg bevrage or drul(s of

Lt Wigglesworth added, If you

'
1'

ORDINANCE
NO 515
F1x.ng and regulat1ng tne
pnce that may be charged
by Columb1a Gas of Oh1o

Inc
ts succe ssors or
a.sstgns tor gas to the

V.tllage of Pomeroy Oh•o
and to 1ts mhab1tants tor
th e penod of Two (2 ) Years
ttom and after the ett ecf•v e
ot th1s ord•nance
. BE IT ORDAINED BY
r HE COUNC I L OF THE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
OHIO
~ECTION I That for the
penod of One (l} Year
l('om and aft er the eff ect ve
dO te of fh1 S ord 1n ance the
max1mum pnce wll1ch
1'1olumb a Gas of Oh o tnc
,~ successors or ass•gns
s all be perm1ttcd to
c arge t or and the
m1n1mum pr ce a t wh ch tl
they sh'-'11 be requ r ed to
turn1sh gas to the Vt .age of
Pomeroy
Ohto
(~unte1pal ty)
and to tiS
, hab t ants sha I be and
t e same 1S hereby fl)(ed
f(lr each tnd•'-' dual con
s\Jmer as fol lows
-A Cus tomer Charge of
)4 60 per meter per mo nth
l'ega r dless ot gas co n
~ um ed and tl ~91c per 100
~ub1c feet per meter per
month for all 9as con
sumed
A
Custom er Charge
for each customer each
month of Four Do Iars and
S1xty Cents ( S4 60) shall be
Made 1f sen1 ce under th s
r.ate schedul e 1S d scan
t~nued at the request of
the Company
oustomer
shall not be under any
Qbl1gat on to resum e ser
v.ICe to the same customer
ct1 the same prem ses until
tfle customer has made
qayment of an amount
equal to the
Customer
Charge for each month of
the lnterven1ng per od but
not to exceed twe lv e 1 1~)
months
From and after the ex
p rat1on of the atoresatd
one Year pertod and t or a
further penod of One 11)
Y e ar
ther ea ft er
as
fo11ows
• A customer Charge ot
$ A11:13 per meter per month
regardless of gas con
sumed and 10 083c per IOU
cubic feet per meter per
month for atr gas con
sumed
A
Customer Charge
tor each customer each
month at Four Dollars and
Ei19hWthree Cents ($4 ~J I
shall be made tf serv .ce
under th1s rate schedule s
dtscont tnued at th e reQuesT
of customer th e Company
snail not be under any
oP.Itgaflon to resum e ser
v•~e to the same customer
on the same prem tses unt•l
tne customer has made
payment ot an amount
equal to the
Customer
Charge for each month ot
the mterven 1ng per iod but
not to exceed twe lve ( ILJ
nronths
The a&amp;ove rat es exc lude
gas Costs and the Ohto
vross Recetpts rax All
bills renderee1 pursuant to
this ord1nance shalt be ad
~ljSfed to reflect t11e ett ect
at the Ohro Gross Rcce pts
T,a..x and are subtect to
d~rease or tncreasc tn ac.
cordance with the vas
cost Recovery Prov1s1ons
of the company s Rules
and Regul aTions or t1l t
w11n rhe Publ•c Uttllf1es

or

Comm ss on of Oh a
SECfiO NL fhaf1t Se)(
prcsslv cond• t• oned the ser
vtee 10 be rend ered by sa d
Company Is successors or
ass1gns pursuant to th1s or
dtnance shall be pnma r l y
tor domesltc and com
mer e al purposes and tha t
serv1ce shall not b e e)l
tended to orher consumer s
of d1tferent classes unt 1 at
ter
all
reasonable
r eq u r ement s tor domest c
and com mcrctal purposes
are fully met and fh1S
prov 1510n sha lt be b.nd ng
upon sa d Company
ts
succ essors or ass tgn s
dur ng each month of each
year but dunn9 any mon
th or year subtect to the
tor ego .ng 11m1tat ons and
af ter com pli ance w tth the
tor ego mg prov 1ston s gas
may be delivered to any
other consumer and ao
d•ftonal classes of con
sumers at each ttmes and
under sucn cond1t 10ns and
l or sucl r ates as may be
agreed upon belween the
Company and such con
sumcr or consumers
SEC f tON J The lerms
and cond I ons at the ser
v ce to be render ed sha ll
conform w th and be sub
!CCI 1o the Rules and
Regulat •ons lor turn 1sh ng
gas servJCe of the Com pany
on I e w th and approved
by the Publtc Ul11111es Com
m ss on ot Oh10
SEC fiON 4 That th e gas
turn shed or delivered pur
suant to rhe rerms of tht s
by th e sa1d
ord.nance
Company sha ll have an
average heal1ng va lue of
1 ooo Brtt1sh th ermal un Is
per cub c toot fo r any con
secut 1ve twelve ( l :l) month
pertod sub1ect fa a var an
ce of noT more than f•ve t5)
percen t upward or down
ward
SECT ION 5 In the eve nt
the sta re ot Oh1o or the
MuniCipa l ty
sho uld
herea ft er mpose a tax
upon the Company that 1S
nor now tmposed or should
hereafter mcrease the r ate
ot any tax now mposed
upon the Company above
the fa)( rate now ex 15t1ng
other than th e ra te on
property I sted n t11e real
estate
t ax
lt s t and
dupli cate then the ra tes
prescr1b ed n Sec11on 1
shall be mcreased to the ex
tent necessa ry to com
pensa te th e Compa ny t or
the .ncrcase tn cost due to
such new tax or h1gher tax
r ate fh s shall be done n
the t ollow.ng manner
tat tt the new tax or
t11gh er ta)( rar e •s compuTed
n dtrect rel at on ro gas
sold or revenues r ecc 1ved
tor the sa te at gas the rates
set torth herem shall be ad
tU st ed 10 the extent
ncce!&gt;sa q to recompense
the Company tor the
amount !lt!reof
11.11 1t the new ta x or
h1gher tax rar e 1S nor
r elated d1rec11y to ~as sol d
or to revenues rcterved t or
the sa te ot gas then the
total dollar E!ltC&gt;ct thereat
upon the cost ot scnnng gas
by rhc Companr 1n rhe
M un1 c pal ty sha t be d€ ter
m i ned
based
up on
opera ttons at The Com pany
111 the MuniC ipality durmg
the most rccenlly available
twttvc month p.;! rtO&lt;.I en
un1y em the tas t dJY 01 th ~
L&gt;~cctnb(.lr precc t;hng rhe
t; tf cc llv(.: datt! ot tilt' new

ta x or h gher tax rate th e
totr1l do llars so comp ut ed
sha ll then be d1v1ded by th e
fatal sales made to the
types of cus tamers cover ed
by thts ord tn ance durtng
the same twelve month
per1od and the ra tes
prescr bed her em shall be
correspond1ng ly adtusted
r he adtustmenf of the
rates prescnbed 1n th s or
d~na nee
as prov ded tn
subparag r aph (a) and (b)
above shaft be made by
round ng the mathema tiCal
r esult of the computaflons
so prescr bed to th e nearest
one quarter cent ( ) per
one ~n o us ana cuo c teet
The adtusfed rate shall
be placed n effect and
sha ll apply to all meter
readtngs occurnng on and
after th e etf ectt'w'e date of
the statute or dnance or
r esol ut ton pursuan t to
whtch th e new tax or 10
creased tax rate s 1m
posed
Wr tten not f catton of
The ad/ustment shal be
sent to he Clerk of Counc1 1
ot the Mun c1pallty as
qu ckty dS pass ble af ter
the eff ec t of the new tax or
higher tax rate can be
de term ned
SECT ION 6 r hata ny or
d1na nce or reso tul•on or
part of an ord nance or
nco ns•s len t
r eso lut on
herewtlh IS to the extent of
such 1ncons,stency hereby
r epealed
SEC TION 7 That should
any sec t on or part of a sec
f on or prov " on ot a sec
t1on of th1 s or dna nce be
decla r ed votd fhe rema1n
der of th s ord na nce sha ll
not be affected thereby
SECT IONS T hatth sor
d1nance shal l become et
tect1ve at the ea rtt es t date
all owed by law or upon the
exp ra t ton of the curen t or
d•nance wh che... er date s
late r provtded however
that th s ord nance shall
have no Ioree or effect
whatsoever unless wn tt en
acceptance of th s or
d1nance s f1l ed by th e Com
pany wtth the Clerk ot
Council at the V llage of
Pomeroy Ohto pr1or to the
exp rat1on of thtrly CJU)
days from th e date lh•s or
d nance s passed

- FOR SALEThe real estate of th e late
v ctor H Letfhe r sttuated
n Sr1 l1 sb ury Tow nship
Meu)s County Oh10 con
ta1n ng 5 ac r es mor e or
less an d loca ted on Star
c her Road as s descrtbed
n deed recorded n Vol
'159 Page 481 of the Deed
Records of Me gs County
Ohto and upon wh•c h IS
s•tuated a two story fra me
s1x r oom house and out
bu ld1ngs Will be sold as IS
a t aucl1on on the Court
House Ste ps n Pomeroy
Oh10 atlO 00 AM on Mon
day June 30th 19BO and
the mmtmum pnce for
wh1ch thtS house wdt be
sold at tht s sate 1S S7 5QO 00
Ter ms of sale Cash upon
deltvery of deed and r ea l
estat e taxes wilt be pro
rated as of the da te th e
deed
IS
de ltv e red
Possesston '" twenty days
For nlorma t.on call Frank
W Porter Jr at99L 5132
Edwtn P Le1the t
Executor of the Last
W II and Tes tame nt of
V tctor H Letfhe t
Deceased
(61 19 26 21C

Jump into Coolness
Pri

Pattern

COMPANION tor elderly
man
preferab l y mate
Live m but wtll cons1der
days only Light duty 742
2944

'

-... . . _, l ~.' ~--•...-

---

PRESENTED FROG MEMBERSHIP B1ll
Young left, c&lt;&gt;-eha1rrnan of the annual frog Jump,
Cbarles (Frog) Wayland, center, presented a frog

membership ticket to Ron Zidian, admiOIStrator of the
Pomeroy Health Care Center, Monday ZlCiian plans to
take several of the residents to some of the B1g Bend
Regatta events this weekend

2

3

Announcements

I PAY htghest pn ces
poss1ble for gold and Stiver
cams nngs rewetr-; etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop Mrdd le port

DUE To th e ca ncellat1on of
A r Force orders Baker s
Busy BEe Ceramtcs Tup
pers Pla 1ns wttl resume
classes on Tuesday and
ThurSday 10 2 and I 10 We
w II r em a n open the r est of
the year def n tely

-----48 hrp) 44 (48 bust 50 h1p) 46
(50 bust 52 h1p) 48 (51 bust
54 hrp) 50 (54 bust 56 hrp)
S1 75 far udl Jlltlttl Add !14M
for each Jlltltm for f11sklass
llllllllllftd holltlltlr, Send Ill:

A TT E~T

Jane Walton
CLERK
~IC

AIIMAdems
NOTICE
Not ce tS he r~by gtven
th at on • ues Jul y 8
1980 ar 10 A M a publtc
sale w111 be held at the
offices of Central Trust
Co NA Middleport to
se ll tor caS h the follow
lng t.OIIatera t towtf
1 t'J69 Chevrolet H
passenger
Gr eenbner
stat ion wagon Ser at
Number 13d:Jd91&lt; 4J89,:,9
C.cntrat
frust Co,
MtcJdlc port
Ohto
rest rv ~,;~ the n ght to btd
11 !l) tS sa te
LEGA~

6 J '16 'lJ "lY :Jf

1 'l 1

P1tltlll Oopt

SIZES 3+50

6'1../1..-.
./1.1-s
bp up IMi
short vors10n
01

Pnnled Pottern 4680 Wom
en s S1zes aro 34 (3&amp;-mch bust
with 41}10ch hlp) 36 (40 IHJst
42 hrp) 38 (42 bust 44 h•P) 40
(44 bust 46 hlp) 42 (46 bust

243 West 17 Sl, Now Tn IT
10011 Pnnl ~L MIDRESS
ZIP, Sill, 11M1 miL IUitBEI
Busy women the tallest ,.,.,..,
fashiOns are 1ft our NEil'l SPRING
SUMMER PAnERN CATAlOG '

, O.esses

top~

1ackets pants

Ptus $1 75 ""'pattern coopon
Send $1 for Cataloa.
'ri Dllhl s1
12t-Qo1U/EIIJ Tllilflos $1 SO
130-SwM-.Sim 31-SI Sl SO
132 Qo•lt On&amp;~ftlls
Sl 50"

m.-...

Memor~am

In Prec ous Memor

so

1

7 ___Y
'-"a,_,rd"-"S"-'ale

es of

our dear Dad
Home r
Icen hower
wh6 passed
away 7 years ago June 29
1973
Gone are h1s days of ear
fhyly pa1n
Ever hope we II meet
agatn
Over on the golden shore
Reto1c 1ng that all pam ts
0 er
G1ve your best unto the
Lord
Ever trust H 1s preCIOUS
word
J usfJCe comes to one and
all
Old and young and greet
and small
Ever heed our Sav •our s
call
Yearn for perfect peace
and,oy
Our Lord a•ds when
thngs annoy
useless th1ngs he wtll
destroy
Note all bless ngs on
Id es way
Gtor1fy our Lord eac h
day
Very sadly mts~ed by
dal,lghter Mrs Helen Jef
fers and famdy

YARD SALE Fnday June
27 10 a m
? Nor th 2nd
St Mason

Yard Sale

-----

YAR D Sale June 27 9 to
dark at the Gordon Hotter
res dence on CR28 above
Eastern H gh School Baby
art1 cles clo lhtng a1r con
d1t oner tru ck ut l1ty bo x
and m1 sc 985 4214

THREE fam•IY yard sate
Thurs and Fn June 26
and 27 9 a m 5 p m on
r ght on top of Chester Htlt
Maple bar stools house
pa nt toys m1sc
YARD .. ate to be hel d
Fnday June 27 at the
Doyle Hudson res•dence
S R 124 Rutland

13

12

LARG E Yard Sa le ' July 1
2 3 912 South 3rd Mod
dteport
Furn1ture
Ap
pltances New TV Stereo
boys StZe 5 slim clothmg
numerous other fh1ngs 8 a
m to6pm da il y

YARD sale June2830 9a
m to 7 p m Three mil es
from R aCine on App le
Grove Dorcas Road No
28 Telev1ston ca r b1cyc1e
tru ck
someth ng
f or
everyone 1

FIVE famtly sale - over
1000
terns
Hull Mc Coy
depreSsion
old book s
magaz nes hu nt ng bow 1
m1
south of Tuppers
Pla1ns Co Rd 46 Starts
Saturday June 28

~arge G~::•w•:erman
shepherd st
bernard
m1xed Approxrmately 10
months
992
59BJ old

Gentle

Call

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE
CALL US.

-

YardSafe

----~

LARGE yard sale Monday
Fnday, June 2J 27 on old
JJ 9 dark Infant to edult
clothing a1r cond1t10ner
curtains baby needs gas
powered B B gun 10 hor
sepower r idi ng mower
motor Rtggs Royal Cadet
unttorm boots and arm
bands
For more In
torma t 1orf 992 7668 Follow
s•g ns

~

Pubhc Sate
&amp; Auct•on

ANTIQUE AUCTION
SATURDAY, 10:00 A.M., JUNE 28, 1980
The tollowtng personal property of the late Clatr
Park1nson will be sold at the farm located 3 miles
tram Rutland (1 mtle on Rt 124 and turn !elf on
Parkmson Road) Follow srgns from Rutland
Farm wagon
Road Cart
Horse drawn tm
pelements of all K1nds 4 Ox Yokes Hay Dump
Rake 50 Gat Barrels &lt;wood &amp; metal) Coa t Range
Coal Buckets Wash Boards Oval Top Trun k
Wooden Keg '1 Old Organs Several Old Rockers
Old Electnc Range Buggy Ha rness Hand Tools
Fodder Cutter Gnnd Stor)e Cross Cut Saws Gr a1n
cradles and Rakes Extra Bubby Wh eels Bubb-;
Poles and Shafts Ladder s Stone Churn &amp; Jars &amp;
Dtshes Old Dresser w•th Marble Top Insert Books
Oak Love seat
MODERN FURNITURE
Wh rlpoot Refngerator 3 pc L1v1ng Room Su 1te
fel ephone Stan d Sm all G E Elecfn c Range
Bookcas e Bed Dresser &amp; Chest Lamps Clo th es
Hamper
Thi S merchandise •s all old and mostly m good con
dlftOn some very rare p1eces
MRS O~IVE PARKINSON OWNER
Ternls Cash
Not responstble tor acc1dents
C C Bradford# Auchoneer
Sc1le by Bradford Auctton Company. Racme, Oh1o
Phone (6"1949 2487 &lt;6141949 2000

I

I

One ser of lett hand ed golf
clubs Call 74~ 3154
J .o~TON

Scottsdale 20 Chevy
truck wtfh 2600 mtles loaded w•th extras for
58000 One 1976 20 foot Tag
along travel tratler has
gas electrtc and battery
power tor S3500 Wtll sell
bofh tor S11 000 Small two
wheel frailer for $75 One
set ot e1ght foot tru ck bed
ralls for S40 115 amp
generator for $175 Ca ll 742
2761

23

----------

D•tch dlggmg serv1ce Call
713 5839 or 713 5788
Mag g e s Upholstery
Rebuild ng
Ref1n1shmg
Reuphol stery Fabnc and
vtnyt samples Call 742
2852

31

Homes for

S-~a:-:l~
e __

Beau11ful large home Low
utd1t es brtck ranch style
3 bedrooms
2 baths
f replace full basemen t
famil y room
atr con
d1t1oner 3 car garage
Me1gs
Baum Add1t1on
County Call965 4169
Pet
Assumptton
Beaut1fut lar.ge bnck ranch
style
low Ufll 1f1es
J
bedroom s
2'12
baths
f~replace
full basement
tam1ty room
a1r con
d1t oner 3 car garage
Baum Add flon Me1gs Co
9854169

8

Assumable mortgage 912
Pet 3 bedrooms 2 baths
full basement
2 car
garage Rtggscrest Manor
614 985 4329
Well cared tor home car
pet throughout w1th three
bedrooms 1 h baths wtth
shower hv1ng room for
mal d1ntng room large eat
n k1tchen Refngerator
electrtc stove water sof
ten er
drap enes
four
rooms •n basement two
ftn1shed
Furnace room
and workshop Must see to
apprec1ate Call 992 5865
VA approved

a room

two
story home l 1/ 2 acres of
level land 1 h mtle up St
Rt 143 oft Rt 7 bypass
125 000 992 3951
5 ROOMS and bath double
lot 2 car garage and
drtvewa-; 830 S 3rd Mtd
dleport Call949 .2163
FIVE ROOM house 1n
Bradbury Garage, carport
and uttltty bulldmg Near
WMPO 992 5JIO

**$*$*********
$· $ $ 1

It

Jt

*

MONEY MONEY

*
*First

MOb1le Homes
tor Rent

rwo bedroom trail er
Adu l Ts only
Browns
Tra•ler Court Call992 3324
44

Apartment
for Rent

3 AND 4 RM turn •shed ap
ts Phone 992 5.43.4

--~--

-

Three r oom up sTa ~r s apart
ment w1th bath Ca ll 992
5621
2 BEDROOM furmshed
apartment tor rent Mtd
dleport $115 per month
plus uttltt 1es Ca11 992 5545
between 7 a m and 3 p m
EFFICIENCY apartment
for rent Suitable for on e
work•ng person 992 5738
16
Space tor R
" -e
" 'n"''- COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park RouTe 33 North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992 7479
OFFICE space for ren t 3
rooms receptton area cen
tral heat and a~r con
d1t1ontng S200 per month
1ncludmg Uf l1t1eS Call 992
5545 between 7 a m and 3

P m

Y

' 608E

, MlLl.I'L- ...,.bf ., .
POMctc: ,v r

992·22)Y

r

NEW LISTI,_,G - NEW
CONSTRUCTION
NEW SUBDIVISON - 6
rooms, Jl/2 story
3
bedroom home w•th w,
baths on a beauf tful
wooded 1 75 Acre lot on
Golf
Course Road
Ftreptace, back deck
overlookmg wooded lot
All tor only $-42 000 00
NEW LISTING - MID
OLE PORT - 5 room 2
story home w•th base
ment
2 3 bedrooms
bath F A gas furnace
on a 62x52 lot $19 000 00
LETART
12X60
Mob1le Home on 60x120
tot 3 bedrooms ut l1ty
bu1ldmg Close to nver
n ew
br1dge
an d
hydroptant $16 000 oo
CLOSE IN - l'h story
frame on 6l,. acres 5
rooms 2 bedr~m s part
basement forced atr
heal Just $21 500 00
VERY NICE
J
bedroom full basement
w b f p
st1t.ng porch
Wtth VICW Of rtver Jln
stones of e)(cellent
liveability
Must be
seen Only $18 500 00
BEAUTIFUL 3/S ACRE
YARD - 2 story brrck tl.
frame house Has ~
f replaces,
ortg•nat
woodwork :J baths 4
bedrooms, d1n1ng room,
fam1ly room and part
basement $27 0011 00
WE HAVE A BIG
SE~ECTION OF PRO
PERTIES, JUS r DROP
IN I
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland Jr
9926191
ASSOCIArES
Jean Trussell9~9 2660
Roger or Dotf1e Turner
I 742 2474
Othce Phone 9Yl 22SY

USED D1nette set 520 See
at 256 So Fourth Mtd
dleport

FURNITURE tor sale
Ltv1ng
room
su11e
bedroom sutte tw.n bed lt•
bed
chest of drawers
waterbed
refngerator
stove washer and dryer
9921518
CB TV, RadiO

~_____§_g utpm~ -­

Good used sound des gn
stereo AM FM rad10 e1ght
track tape player turn
fable two speakers and
head phones Call992 7534
TWO meter ham rad10
equ1pment one Heathk1t
transce1ver wtfh s•x fran
sm1t and rece1ve channels
add 1t1onal four rece1ve
channe ls and e1gh1 scan
channels Power supply for
rh t S 1nc I U ded
A I SO
Heathk•t amplifier w th
power supply One vertical
and one beam antenna for
two meters 992 3061

ANTIQUES
FUR
N 1T U R E
glass
chma
anythmg ~ee or call Ruth
Gosney ant1ques 26 N
2nd Middleport OH 992
Jl61

23 FT Lesure T me cam
per three burner stove and
oven retngerator double
bowl s•nk show er furnace
hot water tank steeps 4 6
set up w1th screen m porch
Can- be seen at Htdden
Lakes sun June 29 304
422 3'129

OLD COl NS pocket wat
ches, class rmgs wedd•ng
bands chamonds Gold or
Stiver Call J A Wam sley
742 '1331 Treasure Chest
Com Shop Athens OH 592
6462
GOLD
AND
SI~VER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS
JEWELRY
STERLING SILVER ANO
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH
HIGHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
MIDDLEPORT
OH 10 OR CALL 992 3476
63
Lrvestoc~·k~-­
PIGS FOR SALE wormed
and castrated Ph 949 2857
JONES Meat Packtng staughtertng
custom
process•ng retail meat
Wash ngton Co Rd 248
L•ttle Hock1ng OH 667
6133
~.- - ·

71
Autos for Sale
1973 Mercury Monterey
Custom oi door p s p b
atr cond tt lontng
55 000
mtles
ortgtnal owner
$850 00 Lindsey Lyons at
667 3303 Tuppers Pla.ns
OhtO
1975 CHEVY Monte Carlo
350
a1r cond
power
steertng AM FM fl track
stereo t1nted wmdshteld
t1lt wheel good ftres and
snow t1 res good cond•f•on
80 000 moles 992 500J or 992
3293 or see at 105 Un1on
Ave Pomeroy
1969 CHEVELLE Malobu
307 eng 350 turbo fran
sm1ss on $300 Call 992
3851
1967 VOLKSWAGEN Ex
cettent cond1t1on m 7384
AUTO tor sale 1971
Dodge Charger Phone 992
7518
1978 PINTO for sale p s
p b auto trans 33 000 ac
tuat m1tes Excellent con
drt on $2700 Call992 3440

for antoques and collec
t1bles or enttre estates
NothtnQ too large Also
guns pocket watches and

1916 CHEVROLET No 10
Custom van. AM FM rad10
ale tape Ice box bar
capt cha1rs Bench seats
that convert to bed Fully
carpeted tnterror $3500
Call992 3950 after 5 p m

Gutter &amp;
Replacement
Wmdowsand
Roofmg

Four

Camptng
Equ1pment

78

FREE ESTIMATES
Carl Reed 667 3327
Tom Burroughs 667 6150
6 15 I mo pd

14X65

2

1971 Cameron
14x65 2
bedr
1911 Fleetwood 14x65 3
bdr bath n
1971 Shakespear, 14~65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood 12&gt;63 2
Bdr
B t1. S MOBILE HOME
SALES PT PLEASANT
wv 304 615 4424
L01t and or Trailer m M1d
dleport 647 S 2nd 773 9506
1969 12x60 two bedroom
Hollypark tra11er
Fur
n•shed ac washer metal
outbu1ldmg under pmnmg
Cal1992 2881
Kodak Camera w1th bu tlt
n flash wtth the mttlats
PAP on the camera and the
name and address on the
case It found call 992 2264
Lost 10 the VICinity of
Nelsons Drug Store and
Adolph s Da~ry Valley
1972 14d5 mob•le home
Sttuated on approx 3 acres
land Rural water Batley
Run Road 992 5253

Fir-msto rsa~

There w•ll be a sale of
property
formerly
belong,ng to V1 ctor Leifhett
on the Courthouse steps 1n
Pomeroy at 10 a m Mon
day June 30 Property
located one m11e from
Courthouse on Sprtno
Avenue •n Pomeroy Seven
acres of ground old farm
house and old barn
M1mmum that would be a c
cepted Is 17500

3~-~ :;-L ;,~&amp;-~rea9e

==

Approxnnately 10 acres
located on Rt 2ol8 Building
s1te cltv water Call 985
3368
--- --- ~

LADIES beautrful hrgh
quality stze 16 dresses
brands
Dav•d Crystal
Verona Lilly Pulitzer One
IS 100% Silk S10 each
Never been worn 992 3283

Sizes from 4x6 to 11X40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

81
Home
__
tmpr.oy~s-~

Rt 3 Bo)( 54

PhRac1ne,
614 843Oh
2591

MISSES size 11112 h1gh
QualitY tat tared blouses
stacks pantsutts Brands
are
John
Meyer
Hathaway
Some never
worn 992 3283

W1ll do remodeling
rootmg patnftng plumbmg
and elect Free Est1mates
Call Charles S1ncla1r 985
4121

56Pets lor Sale
- ------ --POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 3677220

Floonng ce1hng, panelmg
doors and wmdows also
parntrng 992 2159

HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a homeless pet
Healthy shots wormed
Oonat1ons requ.red 992
6260 noon 7 p m except
Tuesday emergency calls
only

SIAMESE stud serv1ce
avatlable Sealpomf color
sweet diSPOSitiOn Ph 992
1651

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
618 E Mam

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Ma1n St.
Pomeroy
992 2181

VINYL SID!NG
ROOFING
REPlACEMENT WINDOWS
Servmg your area for 25 years.
Call Now for Large Savmgs
For Free Eshmate Call

Free Est1mates
Reasonable Prtces
Call Howard
949 2862
949 2160
1 22 tic

STILL PAYING

$20J! &amp; UP

Eugene Long (614) 84l-3322
Super~

SILVER
DOllARS
94S.2801

Most Dates
No Sunday Calls
6 9 1 mo

or V1nyt Products

"YOUft!GS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

- Addonsand
remOdltng
-Roohng and gutter
work
-concrete work
-Piumbtng and
electrical work
'-"' (Free Estimates)

Call tor Free Sldrng
Estimate, 949 2101 or
No Sunday
949 2860
calls
6 13 1 mo

Water welt dr ttl tn g Tom
Lewts
304 895 3802
Seasonal dtscount on all
pumps and accessortes
J and F Backhoe Serv1ce
Licensed and bonded Sep
t1c tank 1nstatta1 on Water
and gas l.nes Excavattng
work and trans1t layout
Call992 7201

E lectnca I
&amp; Refrtgerat•on

84

SEWING

MACHINE
servtce
all
makes
992 22llo4
The
Fabrtc Shop
Pomeroy
Authonzed Stnger Sales
and Serv1ce We sharpen
Setssors
Repa~rs

Real state .... oans
11•12% Interest 30Yrs
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic
LOilns, No Down Pay
ment Federal Hous1ng
Loans, l% down on
$25 000, 5% down on
balan&lt;e FHA 265 SubSidy Program FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort
OpenM W F9 OOiol 00
Other Times
By Appolntmen!
~
Office 992 7544
Home 992 6191
':::
I075yc 0 more St
:
Pomero ,OH
n

A~~

44----Apartmlrlt 1..- R.,.l

4J-FROHII
~SINCIIOr

Utility Buildings
S11es from 4k6 to 12xo40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

lttnt

41-Wan,...to•ewt
.._E-.uiiMftlfll for lent

eMERCHANDtSE
s1-Housth01d Geads
52-CI TV RICIIOI!.WIItPnlnt
SJ-Aft~\111

M-Misc Men:NMIIM

n-taulldlnt Swptllln
54-~etl fer Slit

eFARMSUPPLtES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

TV

I Cl "'"''
Ta Do

_,-.,m

l~WiftMCI

ltt~llmenl
61
62- WIIINCI to lwy

eFINANCIAL
21-

n- Trvcktlor IItie

n-~rofnatonll

64-HIY &amp; Grain
u- SINd &amp; '""lllter

e REAL ESTATE

71--Autos tor SilO

...........
o,orfvnlty
U-Money te LNII

u-Livettocll

S.nlcn

wnte your own ad and order by ma11 wtth th1s
coupon Cancel your ad b-; phone when you get
results Money not refundable

Prmt one word 1n each
space below Each m
1t1a1 or group of f1gures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number 1f used
You II get better results
1f you descr' be fu 11 y
91ve pnce The Sent1net
reserves the rtght ro
classtf-; ed•t or retect
any ad Your ad will be
put 1n the proper
ctassrf1ca11on 1f you II
check the proper box
below
I Wanted
J For Sale
) Announcement
) For Rent

eTRANSPORTATION
7l-VMt&amp;•W D
71 Mot.. c,cltt

ll-~lt+ttMMI

1s-

llf'SOie

M--lu1JM11 lwlkll ....
lS-Leh &amp; ACI"HH
u-RMI lttl" Wllltecl
37-IIMiton

eSERVICES

Wont Ad Advertising
Dttdllnes
4,. M Deily
12 NOift SINrCIIV

lorM...Ur

3

11-HomtlmPf'evem.,.ts
12-,.._,....,,lbcn•tl"l

4

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

u-lllc•vlflltl
M-lledrlal

5

6

Electncal
&amp; Retngerahon

These cash rates
mctude d1scoun1
17
18
19
20

I
I
I
I
I
I
-----1

E LWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters trons all small
apphances L.awn mower
NeJCt to State H1ghway
Garage on Route 1 985
3825
85

General Haultng

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel Also, lime haulmg
and spreading leo Morrl~
Truck•ng Phone 742 2455
LIVESTOCK
hauling,
anywhere,
anyplace,
anytrme JO yrs exR Calf t
S93 5132 collect

28
29

9

JO

16

J1 _ _ _ _ __

NOW IS Ttl E TIME for
preventive
main
tenante--moblle home roof
coating
labor and
matenal 14 wide, $2 per
foot 12 wide, $1 15 pee
toot to w•de, $1
per
toot See us also lor lrH
estimates on .wnlnvs, car
ports and skirting We are
your authorlztd dHter tor
the best awnln~ on the
market by Urbon 1n
duatrles Kl.......,ry Home
Sales 1100 E Meln St , '
Pomeroy Ohio C.ll 992
10:W

241tYS

,a,.
lNYI

......
...'"

,....

cur,.

'"
'"

121

'"

11 werflls 4 ,.,...,.,...,.. " ' ..,
tOftHC'utlve Uyt will be dllr ... •lttwl ..,

worcltwtr tftt rnlnlmlllm

In,.,.,....., C•rllllol T,....._, •lid otMtvarv

"'tftlh ,_ ..nl Q M

mir'IIMIU" Ctah In eciVIIICO

Matlile HOftlo u+n •"" Y ~rd Nlet .,..c~ et~ly wlftl calfll wtttl
c..,t cMf'90 t.r Ml nrrylltl lo• N•mMr rn Care of The

SntiMI

I
I
I
I

GOLF LESSONS
8eg1nnmg &amp; Adv~nced
Scholarships possible
for
high
school
students •
-CLUB REPAIRPlaying ttems clubs
.,.gs, balls. shoes, carts,
etc
1 Profess1ona1 teaching
certtftcate
2 Playecl professiOnal
tournaments In Ohto. w
va , KentutkV
• JOHN TEAFORD

8

1d•y

.,..... H

I!'~========

I

15 Worclt .r UHer

....

31711 No~te Summ•t Rd
Middleport, Otno
992 5724
Sales. serv1ce alkl su~
phes In ground ancl
above ground pools
5 I He

17- UitM!IItr't

Rates and Other 1nformatlon

lac~t

THE POOL PEOPLE

u--o.n.r.l H.. llne
~ H IIIHir

10 _ _ _ _ __

~ .. rvn•l"' ohr ......

SALES

84

21
22
2J
24
25
26
27

2

D. BUMGARDNER

614 985 ]961
6 3 1 mo

A•ttPirtt

&amp; ACCftiOf'IH
17-&amp;uto R-..lr

U-F•rmtlor Slle

Free Est•mate
James Keesee
Ph 992·2772
6 25 1 mo

Rt J, Box 54
Rac.ne, Oh
Ph 614 843 2591
6 IS tiC

Phon•------------------

1~Sc:hooltlnltructlon

RHio

V1nyl &amp;
Alum mum Sldmq
•lnsulatton
•Storm Doors
•Storm W•ndows
•Repladment
Wtndows

SMA~L

I
I

I Auction

16-

INSUlATION

S11es
From 30x30

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

tor""''

4---Qiveawa.,J-HappyACII

n -- lniVranct

992 6215 or
992 7314

J&amp;L BUMN

Farm Buildings

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

U-MHUt Hll'l'ltl

• ' - " ' ' ' wantl&lt;ll
11-Situat.cl
wantH

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Pomeroy Oh

STEEL

Addreu._ _ _ _ _ _ __

l-An~ttunum~h

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

n

Excavattng

83

eRENTALS

9-Wan&amp;edtoBuy

5-29 1 mo

Vmyl and Aluminum
S1d1ng

FOR

20% OFF

41- HouMit.rRtnl

._rwe.uc Slit

992 • 379S

Pomeroy, Oh

4 2 t~

A II types of roof work
new or repa tr gutters
and downspout5, gutter
cleanmg and pa1nt1ng
All work guaranteed

GOOD SUPPLY
SHRUBS
&amp; TREES

t-C.rd or Thanks

11t2 yr old mate red Dober
man w•th papers SlOO 773
9506
HOOF HO LLOW Horses
and pontes and riding
lessons
Eiveryth•no
1magmable [f1 horse eqUIP
rn enr
Btankers
belts
boors etc E nollsh and
Rutn Reeves
Western
16141698 32VO

Bus• ness-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporalions
Payrolls, prof1t and loss statements, all
federal and stale forms

ROOFING

Cement work
V nton
Cement Floor Company
Brdwell Ohoo 388 9877 All
concrete work basement
dnveways etc , etc

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

21-Homn fer S..let

HILLCRE ST KENNELS
Boardmg all breeds. Clean
1ndoor outdoor h!lc•llt •es
Also
AKC
reg 1steted
Oobermans 614 446 7795

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

P-YardS.M

Ph 614 949 23»
Weekends
6 16 tfc

Even~ngs &amp;

CALL949 2710
6 18 1 mo

H. L WRITESEL

or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept
111 Court St., PomeroY&gt;, 0 ., 45769

6-Lcttt and Found

anyth~ng•

~~===========~==~m~o~~~::::::::::::::::::~;;~~~~~~~~~~t

PHONE 992-2156

14-IUIIntll Trllftlnt

GOLF SKIRTS rn soze 12
Never worn Brand names
1nclude James Kenrob
Austm Hill Dav1d Smtth
and Quantum $6 each 992
3283

IS NOW UNDERWAY
The Last Day TO S1gn
Up Is July 14th
'BALLET TAP
&amp; JAZZ
For More lnformahon

6 14 1

WANT AD INFORMATION

2-ln MllmCN'IIrtt

Shop

SMA~L

Utility Buildings

I

Custom
Print

T shift and noveltv
5h1rfs tor poht1cans, ball
tams, bus1nesses or 1n
d•vtduals
Sh1rts $4 00 Each
We prrnt ALMOST
anything on ALMOST

Sizes
From 30xl0

1-!_::~=======-+========-~

SHALLOW well pump and
tank Used 3 months 949
2105

I

CARPENTER'S
DANCE
STUDIO

Farm Bulldmgs

Ford flbefgla!%$ top
per to f•t e ght foot bed
Call992 720 1

S tl. G Carpet Cleanrng
Steam cleaned
Free
1
rates Scotchguard 992
est mate
Reasonabl e
6309 or H2 2211

summer Enrothnen-t
For

AL~STEEL

O e i~J xe

Ant1ques

ATTENTION
( IM
PORTA"'T TO YOU) W II
pay cash or certtf1ed check

SIDING, SOFFIT

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessones

CH r P WOOD Poles max
d•ameter tO
on largest
end S1:l p cr ton Bundled
stab $10 per ron Delivered
10 Oh10 Pallet Co Rf 2
Pomeroy 992 ~6tl9

---· .............

bedroom

33

T. L BURROUGH'S

======::;===

""'~'"

Farrpornt

IY7Y Kawasaki motorcycle
400 L TO hke new W1th 1100
m.tes Lots ol extras Call

t1res
like new
6 00)(14 6 ply nylon S'l5 91:15
4329

----- --

53

Business Services

Motorcvctes

74

Wanted to Buy

•• ·., r o ••••• ••••-,.

52

11,1/~ MU!&gt; f AN~, II
kouglt
body bv runs qood 21 mpg
&lt;oll9 1n SIH6

76
62

42

•
* 767
co•n3167or551
collectoons
mortgages,,.
3411Call 614

~second

Insurance

rcpossc~s .... d and tr .ld~..:
1
ptilnos and ory.lns n your
arcil Pncc!. tru t ':ll'~O (1nd
up c.,~t ere&lt;) t r11clndy1.:r
IOdd\1" 304 485 :ttiO

Autos lor 5 11c

14'J. 315d

mortgages,! =
~~r 54
M15c Merchantse
,.and
ref1nance*
IN
AUTOMOBILE
SU RANCE
been can
*cases. Call Com·: MAY 23 to June 30 30% oft
greenware sale Br.ng a
your
celled,
Lost
Mortgag~* conta1ner 9 a m to 9 p m
operators license' Phone :plete
,.serviCes
•nJt. Orehel s Ceramics 59 N
992 2143
Second Ave
Middleport
*Galhpohs, Oh10 at: 992 2751
:446 1517 for more,..
Real E5tate General
*'nformat1on
and* TAG A LONG Camper tor
sate like new Sleeps tour
*your appomtment.
51200 Ph 985 3538

13

Wt.:. arl" Plt.k•ng up sc vt.:r al

Four bedroom house tor
rent No pets Call 9~9 2253

--- ......

D1fch d1ggmg serv1ce Call
713 5839 or 713 5788

71 ...

MU SICtll

Instruments

Hou ses tor Rent

41

RENTERS ass stance for
Sen1or C•tt zens m Vtllage
Manor apts Call992 7787

Profe sslon"ii- Servtces

1913

l~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~!!!!!!!!~!!!!~

FLL BLOODED Female
tnsh Setter- black pup
985 4108

7

Some part 11 me fObs m Pf
Pleasant come w1th a
$1 500 bonus' Plus free
college tu1t1on 1 lfyou are
age 17or older a tumor or
sen 1or en h1gh school or a
school
dtploma
htQh
graduate you may qualtfy
The West V1rg101a Nat1onat
Guard IS no ordtnary part
hme 1ob' Good pay good
benefits' For deta1ts call
SFC Yoho at 304 675 3950

NEED~

MlDDLEPORT1 OHIO

FREE MULCH 992 5926

THREE
8 week
Old
Russtan Blue kltfens Also
one female a week old
wh11e mult• colored k1tten
Call 992 2078 and ask for
Judy

Will do odds and ends
Paneling floor ttle and
ce11tng tile
Call Fred
M•ller992 6338 '

Approx matcty 13 acres on
Rt 248 Sfandtng ttmbcr
City water butld1ng s•tc
Call Y65 JJ68

Miscellaneous

tor Sale

992-2342
IXMNINGQIILDS AGEN('V, INC,
e

9 KITTENS to Qtve away
Black
and black and
whrte Call985 .4348

S1tuat1ons Wanted

DOWNINGCHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
'

A REVIVAL w II be held at
the Pagev1lle Freew111 Bap
t1 s1 Church~ beg 1nnm g June
29 at 7 30 p m Rev Merl tn
Teets Evangeli st

17

-!
*************~'
32
Mobile Homes

Insurance

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH'&gt; DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE'&gt;

3___ ~nnouncements

AVON salespeople wanted
Openngs m Tuppers Platn s
Chester
Reedsville
Harnsonvllle
Pomeroy
and Middleport Call 742
2354 or 142 2995
EXPERIENCED
auto
pamt body man Pomeroy
Motor Co 992 2126

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868

Sl X famtly carport sale
July I 2 3 1 mrle off Rt 7
bypass on 143 9 Sdatly

The Dally Senlillel

4680

In

--

NOTICE OF
PROPOSED USE
HEARING
The res1dents at M e gs
Count-; are •nv.ted to
prov de wr tten and oral
co mments concern1ng the
poss •bl e uses of general
reven ue shar ng funds at
th e proposed use heanng to
be held on July B 1980 at
the Me1gs County Com
m1ss• oner s Off cf!! from 2
PM to3PM
Ava1lable funds amount
to $90 000 00 Th1s f1Qure 1n
eludes funds e)(pected to be
recerved th s year ptus
unapproprtated funds from
prev1ous
ent tl ement
per ads
Sen ter C1t1zens are en
couraged to atten d
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMI SION E RS
Mary Hobstetter
Clerk
June 26 1 f1me

Regali a FROG
BAL L
Saturday June 28 9 1
Royal Oak Lodge
Joe
L av 1nger
and
the
Tunet1mers
Tt cke ts
ava lable at S mons P1ck
a Pa1r 992 3830 Chamber
Otftce 992 5005 New York
Clothmg House 992 2049

Clarence Andrews
MAYOR

16) 19 :.!6

Publ1c Not1ce

Anvone 1nterested 1n Trum
pet lessons for begmners
grades 4 6 call 9~Y 2Db6 at
ter noon

Help Wanted

s

P•ano Tun1ng
Lane
Oamets 7.42 2951
Tunmg
and Repa1r Se rv1 ce s1nce
1965 It no answer phone
992 2082

PA~~ED
~0

6 16

Gold Sl iver or forergn
coins or any gold or sliver
Items AntiQUe turn1tur e
glass or chma w11t pay top
dollar or complete estates
No ttem too large or too
small Check pnces befor e
selltng Also do appratsmg
Osby &lt;Osslel Mart~n 992
6370

Needed RDor LPN tor 1110
1 30 sh1ft Parfftme or full
ttme GOOd work1ng con
d•hons Contact Mr Z1d1an
at the Pomeroy Health
Care Center 992 6606 Mon
day through Fnday from 9

-----

are dnnkmg and dnvmg and get
arrested, the maxiiTlum fme, 1! convicted, IS $1,000 and siX months m
Jad w1th a mandatory of three days
m Jail This ISm additiOn to a dm ers
hcense suspensiOn of three yeasr
and high r1sk Insurance ,
Lt Wigglesworth adviSes If you
dr1nk, don t dnve Let someone el&gt;e
!bat ISn t drmkmg do the drmng for
you Don't become a stastishc '

Publ1c Not•ce

10 kara t 14 karat 18 karat
gold Dental gold and gold
ear pms 675 3010

EXCELLEN T
EAR
Nl NGS 1 Ma11 ng C1rcutars
Postage and Supptres
Free
Wnte
Box 82
Owosso M I 48867

abuse

PubliC- NOtiCe
-

- -

GET VALUABLE train ng
as a young busrness person
and earn good money plus
some great 91fts as a Sen
tmel route carr1er Phone
us rlgh1 away and get on
the ehg•b•hty hst at 992
2156 or 992 2157

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public NOtiCe

W~nl;;;l~~~

Iron and brass beds old
furmture, desks
gold
rtngs
te welry
silver
dollars sterlmg etc wood
1Ce boxes ant ques efc
complete
households
Wr•te M 0 M1ller Rt o4
Pomerqy OH1 or call 992
7160

11

•

Pub I c NOftC('

c_

•

Ohio Patrol will continue crackdown
It E W W1gg!esworth Com
rnander of the Gallipolis Post of the
Clh1o State Highway Patrol an
nounced a contmumg crackdown on
dnnkmg dnvers m the area
, As of thi• year, dnnkmg dnver
arests have mcreased over last year
durmg the same period m Galha and
Me~gs Counties
Statewide, 10 1979 from January
to May there were 11,282 arrests
From January to May 1981) 18 488
;)rrests have been made by troopers

8RAOFORO Aucttoneer
Complete Servrce Phone
949 2487 or 9.49 2000 rac ine
Oh10 Crrtt Bradford

WILL BUY old Iran
sm,sstons
batter1 es
~ngmes or scrap metals
etc Call 245 9188

/

51

Lots &amp; Acreage

8

11
12
13
t4
15
16

32 _ _ _ _ __
J3.. _ _ _ __

34. _ _ _ _ __
35·. _ _ _ __

Ma11 Th•s Coupon W1lh Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

I•

li

II
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I

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

M H Repair

so

1

'

�10 lhcDaliyS.,nllucJ M"llile~ull I ""'""l 0

lhu1 &gt;tld)

lune&lt;ffi 1!!80

Statement surprises University of Cincinnati officials
Meigs
Property
Transfers
Lorena Mae R1ce to Florence Me
Dame!, cert of trans , Middleport
Theresa Renshaw, dec to Helen
J Burson, Margaret A Dodson
teresa E Bumgardner, Marlyn S
Searl&gt; cert of trans Sutton
Waiter Hoffman Hazel Hoffman
to Roger L Hoffman, Pamela L
Hoffman parcels Chester
Carl Hubbard Adnenne M Hulr
hal d to Robert Willis, Shirley W llhs
lot, Syracuse
Robert Willis Shirley Willis to
Clyde W Hubbard, Mildred Mae
Hubbard lot Syracuse
Clyde W Hubbard M1!dred Mae
Hubbard to Robert W1111s Shirley
W1ll1s lots Syracuse
Debra S Halley, Wilham Halley
to Robert L Cunmngham Sharon L
Cunmngham, lots, Syracuse
Walter J Robb, R1ta I Robb to S
W Jack Dnllmg Co , nght of way,
Co!wnb1a
Lola Barber Delbert Barber , to
Jerry E
Barber Maqone M
aarber 25 acre
Patnc1a Rentz to R1chard E
$wanson , Dons J Swanson 29 acre
Pomeroy
Carl 0 Gheen to lillie Gheen

cert oftrans , Racme

By BILL VALE
Associated Press Wnter
CINCINNATI tAP ) - Student a1d
fraud IS continUing at the Umvers1ty
of Cmcmnall accordmg to Oluo
Auditor 1 homas E ferguson, who
strongly has suggested that the
school start aud1t1ng every B!&gt;phcatiOn
Cmcmnat1 Is the only place
where we ve had thiS problem he
sa1d at a news conference Wed·
nesday
We ve checked other
wuvers1lles m OhiO and have found
very few

Umve!'lilty spokesman Ken Scr
v1ce said the problem was nummal
Cl([lressmg surpnsc at f crgusun s
statement
I don t understand why the
aud1tor has to make the an

Ferguson sa1d a follow up audit of
150 of 1,400 students on the program
found that 22 students had subIOIIted less tban accurate 111-

nouncement at a news conference

furmatwn so as to show maxunum

and

inv1t~

not

us

smce

EducatiOnal

VIce said

In 1975-76 state aud•to1s clauned
to fmd 26 students, w1th the help of
the former fmanc1al a1d officer
fraudulently had collected $67,600
from the federal Supplemental

25 others forfeited bonds m the court
of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence An
ctrews Tuesday mght
Fmed were Mike McDonald l\'llddl-eport $50 and costs, dnvmg under
suspensiOn $200 and costs petty
theft $300 and costs assault, $36 and
costs, speed $25 and costs failure t o
appear $50 and costs, expired tags,
Roy Baresw1!t Middleport $30 and
costs loud muffler, Tomn McCloud
Middleport 69 days confmement
failure to pay old fme
Forfe1tmg bonds were Retta Day,
Syracuse Frank Wakos, Cleveland,
DenOIS Musser, Pomeroy, Donald
S101th Racme, Michael Codner,
fulcme, and Lou1s Jones, Columbus,
$26 each, speed Gary Hickman,
Lucasville, $27
speed
Roger
Preas!, Alban&gt; $30 makmg left
turn off Butternut onto MA 1n Kevm

e1gnt persons
:service added
Clearly we are not eqUipped to con
duct that kmd of Investigation
In fnost case~. the students did not
mtend to defraud , SefVIcc sa1d
Most of them didn t understand
that welfare and Soc1al Secur1ty fun·
ds must be l'OnsJdered mcome to be
reported "On the form he said
But Ferguson said that m most
cases, those students Involved were
not makmg progress toward a
degree and should have been dro!&gt;ped by the umvers1ty At least one
case was reported where a recipient
used the money to make car
payments he added
According to Serv1ce the program
mvolves about $1 rmlhon annually
I JUSt worry that the kids who
really need the funds 101ght wmd up
not getting 1t he sa1d

&lt;btwnal mvestigatmg office would
cost more than the loss
We bave called mall the studen
ts We found others who supphed

wrong mformat10n tn our own audit
and we re clearing those up, too,
Service said, addmg that a full·hme
member of the aud1tot s office 1s
assigned to the university
Of the 26 cited m the 1975-76 audit,
seven were prosecuted by the
federal government and 19 cases
were dlSinlssed
Robert Ell1s, the fonner fmanc1al
aid officer, was conviCted m federal
court and sentenced to two years m
priSon, Ferguson said
We have turned the present aud1t
over to the FBI and they have begun
rev~ewmg the cases he said
The last time 11 took a complete
mvestigat10n by the FBI ' to catch

data which m turn, would allow
them to receive maxiiTlum fmanc1a!
ass1stance based on need
Ferguson, who sa1d thiS amounted
to $17 065, adv1sed the umvers1ty to
begm a 100 percent check of all the

we

cooperated w1th the mvest•gat10n
and were m 1t With the aud1tor Ser·

Hudson, Mmersv1lle, $50, fmiure to
transfer tags Pauline Smith, New
Haven, $30 speed Charles Wheeler
West Co!wnb1a, $50, no operators
hcense, Cheryl Roseberry Racme
$26, speed, Dav1d Lew1s Pomeroy
$27, speed Junmy Evans, Pomeroy
$36, speed Pamela Alexander,
Manetta
$37 speeds Rrchard
While, Pt Pleasant, $30, speed
Frank Conkle, Humcane, $25
speed, Marvm Satterfield Mmer
svl!le $30 unsafe vehicle James
AnlSbury Pomeroy, $28 speed Or·
tha Smder, Racine, $35 speed '
Jason Roush, Belpre, $30 speed,
James Fisher, Hurncane, $30
failure to yield, D1ck Herman , no
address recorded, $100, failure to a!&gt;"
pear Terl') I.ayf~eld, no address
$25
speed
Jack William s
Syracuse $50 traffic light v~a!at10n

Grant

program

appltcabons from now on "
He speculated that as much as
$94,000 may have been wrongfully
obtamed by students OtherwiSe, his
aud1tors gave the un1vers•ty good
marks mall other fmanc1al areas
Serv1ce, noting that the auditor
found only $17,060 m overpayments
said the cost of settmg up an ad·

Court news
1 hree defendants were fmed and

Oppurtumty

This IS an mcrease of 63 per cent m
drtnking dnver arrests
W1th the July Fourth holiday
"eekend neanng each trooper will
concentrate all efforts to watch for
the erratic dnvmg of a person under
the mfluence of an alcoholic
beverage or drugs
A drmkmg dr1ver Is more prone to
have an acc1dent and over half of all
fatal accidents Investigated mvolve
a dr~ver under the mfluence of an m
tmocatmg bevrage or drul(s of

Lt Wigglesworth added, If you

'
1'

ORDINANCE
NO 515
F1x.ng and regulat1ng tne
pnce that may be charged
by Columb1a Gas of Oh1o

Inc
ts succe ssors or
a.sstgns tor gas to the

V.tllage of Pomeroy Oh•o
and to 1ts mhab1tants tor
th e penod of Two (2 ) Years
ttom and after the ett ecf•v e
ot th1s ord•nance
. BE IT ORDAINED BY
r HE COUNC I L OF THE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
OHIO
~ECTION I That for the
penod of One (l} Year
l('om and aft er the eff ect ve
dO te of fh1 S ord 1n ance the
max1mum pnce wll1ch
1'1olumb a Gas of Oh o tnc
,~ successors or ass•gns
s all be perm1ttcd to
c arge t or and the
m1n1mum pr ce a t wh ch tl
they sh'-'11 be requ r ed to
turn1sh gas to the Vt .age of
Pomeroy
Ohto
(~unte1pal ty)
and to tiS
, hab t ants sha I be and
t e same 1S hereby fl)(ed
f(lr each tnd•'-' dual con
s\Jmer as fol lows
-A Cus tomer Charge of
)4 60 per meter per mo nth
l'ega r dless ot gas co n
~ um ed and tl ~91c per 100
~ub1c feet per meter per
month for all 9as con
sumed
A
Custom er Charge
for each customer each
month of Four Do Iars and
S1xty Cents ( S4 60) shall be
Made 1f sen1 ce under th s
r.ate schedul e 1S d scan
t~nued at the request of
the Company
oustomer
shall not be under any
Qbl1gat on to resum e ser
v.ICe to the same customer
ct1 the same prem ses until
tfle customer has made
qayment of an amount
equal to the
Customer
Charge for each month of
the lnterven1ng per od but
not to exceed twe lv e 1 1~)
months
From and after the ex
p rat1on of the atoresatd
one Year pertod and t or a
further penod of One 11)
Y e ar
ther ea ft er
as
fo11ows
• A customer Charge ot
$ A11:13 per meter per month
regardless of gas con
sumed and 10 083c per IOU
cubic feet per meter per
month for atr gas con
sumed
A
Customer Charge
tor each customer each
month at Four Dollars and
Ei19hWthree Cents ($4 ~J I
shall be made tf serv .ce
under th1s rate schedule s
dtscont tnued at th e reQuesT
of customer th e Company
snail not be under any
oP.Itgaflon to resum e ser
v•~e to the same customer
on the same prem tses unt•l
tne customer has made
payment ot an amount
equal to the
Customer
Charge for each month ot
the mterven 1ng per iod but
not to exceed twe lve ( ILJ
nronths
The a&amp;ove rat es exc lude
gas Costs and the Ohto
vross Recetpts rax All
bills renderee1 pursuant to
this ord1nance shalt be ad
~ljSfed to reflect t11e ett ect
at the Ohro Gross Rcce pts
T,a..x and are subtect to
d~rease or tncreasc tn ac.
cordance with the vas
cost Recovery Prov1s1ons
of the company s Rules
and Regul aTions or t1l t
w11n rhe Publ•c Uttllf1es

or

Comm ss on of Oh a
SECfiO NL fhaf1t Se)(
prcsslv cond• t• oned the ser
vtee 10 be rend ered by sa d
Company Is successors or
ass1gns pursuant to th1s or
dtnance shall be pnma r l y
tor domesltc and com
mer e al purposes and tha t
serv1ce shall not b e e)l
tended to orher consumer s
of d1tferent classes unt 1 at
ter
all
reasonable
r eq u r ement s tor domest c
and com mcrctal purposes
are fully met and fh1S
prov 1510n sha lt be b.nd ng
upon sa d Company
ts
succ essors or ass tgn s
dur ng each month of each
year but dunn9 any mon
th or year subtect to the
tor ego .ng 11m1tat ons and
af ter com pli ance w tth the
tor ego mg prov 1ston s gas
may be delivered to any
other consumer and ao
d•ftonal classes of con
sumers at each ttmes and
under sucn cond1t 10ns and
l or sucl r ates as may be
agreed upon belween the
Company and such con
sumcr or consumers
SEC f tON J The lerms
and cond I ons at the ser
v ce to be render ed sha ll
conform w th and be sub
!CCI 1o the Rules and
Regulat •ons lor turn 1sh ng
gas servJCe of the Com pany
on I e w th and approved
by the Publtc Ul11111es Com
m ss on ot Oh10
SEC fiON 4 That th e gas
turn shed or delivered pur
suant to rhe rerms of tht s
by th e sa1d
ord.nance
Company sha ll have an
average heal1ng va lue of
1 ooo Brtt1sh th ermal un Is
per cub c toot fo r any con
secut 1ve twelve ( l :l) month
pertod sub1ect fa a var an
ce of noT more than f•ve t5)
percen t upward or down
ward
SECT ION 5 In the eve nt
the sta re ot Oh1o or the
MuniCipa l ty
sho uld
herea ft er mpose a tax
upon the Company that 1S
nor now tmposed or should
hereafter mcrease the r ate
ot any tax now mposed
upon the Company above
the fa)( rate now ex 15t1ng
other than th e ra te on
property I sted n t11e real
estate
t ax
lt s t and
dupli cate then the ra tes
prescr1b ed n Sec11on 1
shall be mcreased to the ex
tent necessa ry to com
pensa te th e Compa ny t or
the .ncrcase tn cost due to
such new tax or h1gher tax
r ate fh s shall be done n
the t ollow.ng manner
tat tt the new tax or
t11gh er ta)( rar e •s compuTed
n dtrect rel at on ro gas
sold or revenues r ecc 1ved
tor the sa te at gas the rates
set torth herem shall be ad
tU st ed 10 the extent
ncce!&gt;sa q to recompense
the Company tor the
amount !lt!reof
11.11 1t the new ta x or
h1gher tax rar e 1S nor
r elated d1rec11y to ~as sol d
or to revenues rcterved t or
the sa te ot gas then the
total dollar E!ltC&gt;ct thereat
upon the cost ot scnnng gas
by rhc Companr 1n rhe
M un1 c pal ty sha t be d€ ter
m i ned
based
up on
opera ttons at The Com pany
111 the MuniC ipality durmg
the most rccenlly available
twttvc month p.;! rtO&lt;.I en
un1y em the tas t dJY 01 th ~
L&gt;~cctnb(.lr precc t;hng rhe
t; tf cc llv(.: datt! ot tilt' new

ta x or h gher tax rate th e
totr1l do llars so comp ut ed
sha ll then be d1v1ded by th e
fatal sales made to the
types of cus tamers cover ed
by thts ord tn ance durtng
the same twelve month
per1od and the ra tes
prescr bed her em shall be
correspond1ng ly adtusted
r he adtustmenf of the
rates prescnbed 1n th s or
d~na nee
as prov ded tn
subparag r aph (a) and (b)
above shaft be made by
round ng the mathema tiCal
r esult of the computaflons
so prescr bed to th e nearest
one quarter cent ( ) per
one ~n o us ana cuo c teet
The adtusfed rate shall
be placed n effect and
sha ll apply to all meter
readtngs occurnng on and
after th e etf ectt'w'e date of
the statute or dnance or
r esol ut ton pursuan t to
whtch th e new tax or 10
creased tax rate s 1m
posed
Wr tten not f catton of
The ad/ustment shal be
sent to he Clerk of Counc1 1
ot the Mun c1pallty as
qu ckty dS pass ble af ter
the eff ec t of the new tax or
higher tax rate can be
de term ned
SECT ION 6 r hata ny or
d1na nce or reso tul•on or
part of an ord nance or
nco ns•s len t
r eso lut on
herewtlh IS to the extent of
such 1ncons,stency hereby
r epealed
SEC TION 7 That should
any sec t on or part of a sec
f on or prov " on ot a sec
t1on of th1 s or dna nce be
decla r ed votd fhe rema1n
der of th s ord na nce sha ll
not be affected thereby
SECT IONS T hatth sor
d1nance shal l become et
tect1ve at the ea rtt es t date
all owed by law or upon the
exp ra t ton of the curen t or
d•nance wh che... er date s
late r provtded however
that th s ord nance shall
have no Ioree or effect
whatsoever unless wn tt en
acceptance of th s or
d1nance s f1l ed by th e Com
pany wtth the Clerk ot
Council at the V llage of
Pomeroy Ohto pr1or to the
exp rat1on of thtrly CJU)
days from th e date lh•s or
d nance s passed

- FOR SALEThe real estate of th e late
v ctor H Letfhe r sttuated
n Sr1 l1 sb ury Tow nship
Meu)s County Oh10 con
ta1n ng 5 ac r es mor e or
less an d loca ted on Star
c her Road as s descrtbed
n deed recorded n Vol
'159 Page 481 of the Deed
Records of Me gs County
Ohto and upon wh•c h IS
s•tuated a two story fra me
s1x r oom house and out
bu ld1ngs Will be sold as IS
a t aucl1on on the Court
House Ste ps n Pomeroy
Oh10 atlO 00 AM on Mon
day June 30th 19BO and
the mmtmum pnce for
wh1ch thtS house wdt be
sold at tht s sate 1S S7 5QO 00
Ter ms of sale Cash upon
deltvery of deed and r ea l
estat e taxes wilt be pro
rated as of the da te th e
deed
IS
de ltv e red
Possesston '" twenty days
For nlorma t.on call Frank
W Porter Jr at99L 5132
Edwtn P Le1the t
Executor of the Last
W II and Tes tame nt of
V tctor H Letfhe t
Deceased
(61 19 26 21C

Jump into Coolness
Pri

Pattern

COMPANION tor elderly
man
preferab l y mate
Live m but wtll cons1der
days only Light duty 742
2944

'

-... . . _, l ~.' ~--•...-

---

PRESENTED FROG MEMBERSHIP B1ll
Young left, c&lt;&gt;-eha1rrnan of the annual frog Jump,
Cbarles (Frog) Wayland, center, presented a frog

membership ticket to Ron Zidian, admiOIStrator of the
Pomeroy Health Care Center, Monday ZlCiian plans to
take several of the residents to some of the B1g Bend
Regatta events this weekend

2

3

Announcements

I PAY htghest pn ces
poss1ble for gold and Stiver
cams nngs rewetr-; etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop Mrdd le port

DUE To th e ca ncellat1on of
A r Force orders Baker s
Busy BEe Ceramtcs Tup
pers Pla 1ns wttl resume
classes on Tuesday and
ThurSday 10 2 and I 10 We
w II r em a n open the r est of
the year def n tely

-----48 hrp) 44 (48 bust 50 h1p) 46
(50 bust 52 h1p) 48 (51 bust
54 hrp) 50 (54 bust 56 hrp)
S1 75 far udl Jlltlttl Add !14M
for each Jlltltm for f11sklass
llllllllllftd holltlltlr, Send Ill:

A TT E~T

Jane Walton
CLERK
~IC

AIIMAdems
NOTICE
Not ce tS he r~by gtven
th at on • ues Jul y 8
1980 ar 10 A M a publtc
sale w111 be held at the
offices of Central Trust
Co NA Middleport to
se ll tor caS h the follow
lng t.OIIatera t towtf
1 t'J69 Chevrolet H
passenger
Gr eenbner
stat ion wagon Ser at
Number 13d:Jd91&lt; 4J89,:,9
C.cntrat
frust Co,
MtcJdlc port
Ohto
rest rv ~,;~ the n ght to btd
11 !l) tS sa te
LEGA~

6 J '16 'lJ "lY :Jf

1 'l 1

P1tltlll Oopt

SIZES 3+50

6'1../1..-.
./1.1-s
bp up IMi
short vors10n
01

Pnnled Pottern 4680 Wom
en s S1zes aro 34 (3&amp;-mch bust
with 41}10ch hlp) 36 (40 IHJst
42 hrp) 38 (42 bust 44 h•P) 40
(44 bust 46 hlp) 42 (46 bust

243 West 17 Sl, Now Tn IT
10011 Pnnl ~L MIDRESS
ZIP, Sill, 11M1 miL IUitBEI
Busy women the tallest ,.,.,..,
fashiOns are 1ft our NEil'l SPRING
SUMMER PAnERN CATAlOG '

, O.esses

top~

1ackets pants

Ptus $1 75 ""'pattern coopon
Send $1 for Cataloa.
'ri Dllhl s1
12t-Qo1U/EIIJ Tllilflos $1 SO
130-SwM-.Sim 31-SI Sl SO
132 Qo•lt On&amp;~ftlls
Sl 50"

m.-...

Memor~am

In Prec ous Memor

so

1

7 ___Y
'-"a,_,rd"-"S"-'ale

es of

our dear Dad
Home r
Icen hower
wh6 passed
away 7 years ago June 29
1973
Gone are h1s days of ear
fhyly pa1n
Ever hope we II meet
agatn
Over on the golden shore
Reto1c 1ng that all pam ts
0 er
G1ve your best unto the
Lord
Ever trust H 1s preCIOUS
word
J usfJCe comes to one and
all
Old and young and greet
and small
Ever heed our Sav •our s
call
Yearn for perfect peace
and,oy
Our Lord a•ds when
thngs annoy
useless th1ngs he wtll
destroy
Note all bless ngs on
Id es way
Gtor1fy our Lord eac h
day
Very sadly mts~ed by
dal,lghter Mrs Helen Jef
fers and famdy

YARD SALE Fnday June
27 10 a m
? Nor th 2nd
St Mason

Yard Sale

-----

YAR D Sale June 27 9 to
dark at the Gordon Hotter
res dence on CR28 above
Eastern H gh School Baby
art1 cles clo lhtng a1r con
d1t oner tru ck ut l1ty bo x
and m1 sc 985 4214

THREE fam•IY yard sate
Thurs and Fn June 26
and 27 9 a m 5 p m on
r ght on top of Chester Htlt
Maple bar stools house
pa nt toys m1sc
YARD .. ate to be hel d
Fnday June 27 at the
Doyle Hudson res•dence
S R 124 Rutland

13

12

LARG E Yard Sa le ' July 1
2 3 912 South 3rd Mod
dteport
Furn1ture
Ap
pltances New TV Stereo
boys StZe 5 slim clothmg
numerous other fh1ngs 8 a
m to6pm da il y

YARD sale June2830 9a
m to 7 p m Three mil es
from R aCine on App le
Grove Dorcas Road No
28 Telev1ston ca r b1cyc1e
tru ck
someth ng
f or
everyone 1

FIVE famtly sale - over
1000
terns
Hull Mc Coy
depreSsion
old book s
magaz nes hu nt ng bow 1
m1
south of Tuppers
Pla1ns Co Rd 46 Starts
Saturday June 28

~arge G~::•w•:erman
shepherd st
bernard
m1xed Approxrmately 10
months
992
59BJ old

Gentle

Call

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE
CALL US.

-

YardSafe

----~

LARGE yard sale Monday
Fnday, June 2J 27 on old
JJ 9 dark Infant to edult
clothing a1r cond1t10ner
curtains baby needs gas
powered B B gun 10 hor
sepower r idi ng mower
motor Rtggs Royal Cadet
unttorm boots and arm
bands
For more In
torma t 1orf 992 7668 Follow
s•g ns

~

Pubhc Sate
&amp; Auct•on

ANTIQUE AUCTION
SATURDAY, 10:00 A.M., JUNE 28, 1980
The tollowtng personal property of the late Clatr
Park1nson will be sold at the farm located 3 miles
tram Rutland (1 mtle on Rt 124 and turn !elf on
Parkmson Road) Follow srgns from Rutland
Farm wagon
Road Cart
Horse drawn tm
pelements of all K1nds 4 Ox Yokes Hay Dump
Rake 50 Gat Barrels &lt;wood &amp; metal) Coa t Range
Coal Buckets Wash Boards Oval Top Trun k
Wooden Keg '1 Old Organs Several Old Rockers
Old Electnc Range Buggy Ha rness Hand Tools
Fodder Cutter Gnnd Stor)e Cross Cut Saws Gr a1n
cradles and Rakes Extra Bubby Wh eels Bubb-;
Poles and Shafts Ladder s Stone Churn &amp; Jars &amp;
Dtshes Old Dresser w•th Marble Top Insert Books
Oak Love seat
MODERN FURNITURE
Wh rlpoot Refngerator 3 pc L1v1ng Room Su 1te
fel ephone Stan d Sm all G E Elecfn c Range
Bookcas e Bed Dresser &amp; Chest Lamps Clo th es
Hamper
Thi S merchandise •s all old and mostly m good con
dlftOn some very rare p1eces
MRS O~IVE PARKINSON OWNER
Ternls Cash
Not responstble tor acc1dents
C C Bradford# Auchoneer
Sc1le by Bradford Auctton Company. Racme, Oh1o
Phone (6"1949 2487 &lt;6141949 2000

I

I

One ser of lett hand ed golf
clubs Call 74~ 3154
J .o~TON

Scottsdale 20 Chevy
truck wtfh 2600 mtles loaded w•th extras for
58000 One 1976 20 foot Tag
along travel tratler has
gas electrtc and battery
power tor S3500 Wtll sell
bofh tor S11 000 Small two
wheel frailer for $75 One
set ot e1ght foot tru ck bed
ralls for S40 115 amp
generator for $175 Ca ll 742
2761

23

----------

D•tch dlggmg serv1ce Call
713 5839 or 713 5788
Mag g e s Upholstery
Rebuild ng
Ref1n1shmg
Reuphol stery Fabnc and
vtnyt samples Call 742
2852

31

Homes for

S-~a:-:l~
e __

Beau11ful large home Low
utd1t es brtck ranch style
3 bedrooms
2 baths
f replace full basemen t
famil y room
atr con
d1t1oner 3 car garage
Me1gs
Baum Add1t1on
County Call965 4169
Pet
Assumptton
Beaut1fut lar.ge bnck ranch
style
low Ufll 1f1es
J
bedroom s
2'12
baths
f~replace
full basement
tam1ty room
a1r con
d1t oner 3 car garage
Baum Add flon Me1gs Co
9854169

8

Assumable mortgage 912
Pet 3 bedrooms 2 baths
full basement
2 car
garage Rtggscrest Manor
614 985 4329
Well cared tor home car
pet throughout w1th three
bedrooms 1 h baths wtth
shower hv1ng room for
mal d1ntng room large eat
n k1tchen Refngerator
electrtc stove water sof
ten er
drap enes
four
rooms •n basement two
ftn1shed
Furnace room
and workshop Must see to
apprec1ate Call 992 5865
VA approved

a room

two
story home l 1/ 2 acres of
level land 1 h mtle up St
Rt 143 oft Rt 7 bypass
125 000 992 3951
5 ROOMS and bath double
lot 2 car garage and
drtvewa-; 830 S 3rd Mtd
dleport Call949 .2163
FIVE ROOM house 1n
Bradbury Garage, carport
and uttltty bulldmg Near
WMPO 992 5JIO

**$*$*********
$· $ $ 1

It

Jt

*

MONEY MONEY

*
*First

MOb1le Homes
tor Rent

rwo bedroom trail er
Adu l Ts only
Browns
Tra•ler Court Call992 3324
44

Apartment
for Rent

3 AND 4 RM turn •shed ap
ts Phone 992 5.43.4

--~--

-

Three r oom up sTa ~r s apart
ment w1th bath Ca ll 992
5621
2 BEDROOM furmshed
apartment tor rent Mtd
dleport $115 per month
plus uttltt 1es Ca11 992 5545
between 7 a m and 3 p m
EFFICIENCY apartment
for rent Suitable for on e
work•ng person 992 5738
16
Space tor R
" -e
" 'n"''- COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park RouTe 33 North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992 7479
OFFICE space for ren t 3
rooms receptton area cen
tral heat and a~r con
d1t1ontng S200 per month
1ncludmg Uf l1t1eS Call 992
5545 between 7 a m and 3

P m

Y

' 608E

, MlLl.I'L- ...,.bf ., .
POMctc: ,v r

992·22)Y

r

NEW LISTI,_,G - NEW
CONSTRUCTION
NEW SUBDIVISON - 6
rooms, Jl/2 story
3
bedroom home w•th w,
baths on a beauf tful
wooded 1 75 Acre lot on
Golf
Course Road
Ftreptace, back deck
overlookmg wooded lot
All tor only $-42 000 00
NEW LISTING - MID
OLE PORT - 5 room 2
story home w•th base
ment
2 3 bedrooms
bath F A gas furnace
on a 62x52 lot $19 000 00
LETART
12X60
Mob1le Home on 60x120
tot 3 bedrooms ut l1ty
bu1ldmg Close to nver
n ew
br1dge
an d
hydroptant $16 000 oo
CLOSE IN - l'h story
frame on 6l,. acres 5
rooms 2 bedr~m s part
basement forced atr
heal Just $21 500 00
VERY NICE
J
bedroom full basement
w b f p
st1t.ng porch
Wtth VICW Of rtver Jln
stones of e)(cellent
liveability
Must be
seen Only $18 500 00
BEAUTIFUL 3/S ACRE
YARD - 2 story brrck tl.
frame house Has ~
f replaces,
ortg•nat
woodwork :J baths 4
bedrooms, d1n1ng room,
fam1ly room and part
basement $27 0011 00
WE HAVE A BIG
SE~ECTION OF PRO
PERTIES, JUS r DROP
IN I
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland Jr
9926191
ASSOCIArES
Jean Trussell9~9 2660
Roger or Dotf1e Turner
I 742 2474
Othce Phone 9Yl 22SY

USED D1nette set 520 See
at 256 So Fourth Mtd
dleport

FURNITURE tor sale
Ltv1ng
room
su11e
bedroom sutte tw.n bed lt•
bed
chest of drawers
waterbed
refngerator
stove washer and dryer
9921518
CB TV, RadiO

~_____§_g utpm~ -­

Good used sound des gn
stereo AM FM rad10 e1ght
track tape player turn
fable two speakers and
head phones Call992 7534
TWO meter ham rad10
equ1pment one Heathk1t
transce1ver wtfh s•x fran
sm1t and rece1ve channels
add 1t1onal four rece1ve
channe ls and e1gh1 scan
channels Power supply for
rh t S 1nc I U ded
A I SO
Heathk•t amplifier w th
power supply One vertical
and one beam antenna for
two meters 992 3061

ANTIQUES
FUR
N 1T U R E
glass
chma
anythmg ~ee or call Ruth
Gosney ant1ques 26 N
2nd Middleport OH 992
Jl61

23 FT Lesure T me cam
per three burner stove and
oven retngerator double
bowl s•nk show er furnace
hot water tank steeps 4 6
set up w1th screen m porch
Can- be seen at Htdden
Lakes sun June 29 304
422 3'129

OLD COl NS pocket wat
ches, class rmgs wedd•ng
bands chamonds Gold or
Stiver Call J A Wam sley
742 '1331 Treasure Chest
Com Shop Athens OH 592
6462
GOLD
AND
SI~VER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS
JEWELRY
STERLING SILVER ANO
MISC ITEMS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH
HIGHEST UP TO DATE
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
MIDDLEPORT
OH 10 OR CALL 992 3476
63
Lrvestoc~·k~-­
PIGS FOR SALE wormed
and castrated Ph 949 2857
JONES Meat Packtng staughtertng
custom
process•ng retail meat
Wash ngton Co Rd 248
L•ttle Hock1ng OH 667
6133
~.- - ·

71
Autos for Sale
1973 Mercury Monterey
Custom oi door p s p b
atr cond tt lontng
55 000
mtles
ortgtnal owner
$850 00 Lindsey Lyons at
667 3303 Tuppers Pla.ns
OhtO
1975 CHEVY Monte Carlo
350
a1r cond
power
steertng AM FM fl track
stereo t1nted wmdshteld
t1lt wheel good ftres and
snow t1 res good cond•f•on
80 000 moles 992 500J or 992
3293 or see at 105 Un1on
Ave Pomeroy
1969 CHEVELLE Malobu
307 eng 350 turbo fran
sm1ss on $300 Call 992
3851
1967 VOLKSWAGEN Ex
cettent cond1t1on m 7384
AUTO tor sale 1971
Dodge Charger Phone 992
7518
1978 PINTO for sale p s
p b auto trans 33 000 ac
tuat m1tes Excellent con
drt on $2700 Call992 3440

for antoques and collec
t1bles or enttre estates
NothtnQ too large Also
guns pocket watches and

1916 CHEVROLET No 10
Custom van. AM FM rad10
ale tape Ice box bar
capt cha1rs Bench seats
that convert to bed Fully
carpeted tnterror $3500
Call992 3950 after 5 p m

Gutter &amp;
Replacement
Wmdowsand
Roofmg

Four

Camptng
Equ1pment

78

FREE ESTIMATES
Carl Reed 667 3327
Tom Burroughs 667 6150
6 15 I mo pd

14X65

2

1971 Cameron
14x65 2
bedr
1911 Fleetwood 14x65 3
bdr bath n
1971 Shakespear, 14~65 2
bedroom
1965 Yanor 12x52 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood 12&gt;63 2
Bdr
B t1. S MOBILE HOME
SALES PT PLEASANT
wv 304 615 4424
L01t and or Trailer m M1d
dleport 647 S 2nd 773 9506
1969 12x60 two bedroom
Hollypark tra11er
Fur
n•shed ac washer metal
outbu1ldmg under pmnmg
Cal1992 2881
Kodak Camera w1th bu tlt
n flash wtth the mttlats
PAP on the camera and the
name and address on the
case It found call 992 2264
Lost 10 the VICinity of
Nelsons Drug Store and
Adolph s Da~ry Valley
1972 14d5 mob•le home
Sttuated on approx 3 acres
land Rural water Batley
Run Road 992 5253

Fir-msto rsa~

There w•ll be a sale of
property
formerly
belong,ng to V1 ctor Leifhett
on the Courthouse steps 1n
Pomeroy at 10 a m Mon
day June 30 Property
located one m11e from
Courthouse on Sprtno
Avenue •n Pomeroy Seven
acres of ground old farm
house and old barn
M1mmum that would be a c
cepted Is 17500

3~-~ :;-L ;,~&amp;-~rea9e

==

Approxnnately 10 acres
located on Rt 2ol8 Building
s1te cltv water Call 985
3368
--- --- ~

LADIES beautrful hrgh
quality stze 16 dresses
brands
Dav•d Crystal
Verona Lilly Pulitzer One
IS 100% Silk S10 each
Never been worn 992 3283

Sizes from 4x6 to 11X40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

81
Home
__
tmpr.oy~s-~

Rt 3 Bo)( 54

PhRac1ne,
614 843Oh
2591

MISSES size 11112 h1gh
QualitY tat tared blouses
stacks pantsutts Brands
are
John
Meyer
Hathaway
Some never
worn 992 3283

W1ll do remodeling
rootmg patnftng plumbmg
and elect Free Est1mates
Call Charles S1ncla1r 985
4121

56Pets lor Sale
- ------ --POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 3677220

Floonng ce1hng, panelmg
doors and wmdows also
parntrng 992 2159

HUMANE
SOCIETY
Adopt a homeless pet
Healthy shots wormed
Oonat1ons requ.red 992
6260 noon 7 p m except
Tuesday emergency calls
only

SIAMESE stud serv1ce
avatlable Sealpomf color
sweet diSPOSitiOn Ph 992
1651

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
618 E Mam

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Ma1n St.
Pomeroy
992 2181

VINYL SID!NG
ROOFING
REPlACEMENT WINDOWS
Servmg your area for 25 years.
Call Now for Large Savmgs
For Free Eshmate Call

Free Est1mates
Reasonable Prtces
Call Howard
949 2862
949 2160
1 22 tic

STILL PAYING

$20J! &amp; UP

Eugene Long (614) 84l-3322
Super~

SILVER
DOllARS
94S.2801

Most Dates
No Sunday Calls
6 9 1 mo

or V1nyt Products

"YOUft!GS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

- Addonsand
remOdltng
-Roohng and gutter
work
-concrete work
-Piumbtng and
electrical work
'-"' (Free Estimates)

Call tor Free Sldrng
Estimate, 949 2101 or
No Sunday
949 2860
calls
6 13 1 mo

Water welt dr ttl tn g Tom
Lewts
304 895 3802
Seasonal dtscount on all
pumps and accessortes
J and F Backhoe Serv1ce
Licensed and bonded Sep
t1c tank 1nstatta1 on Water
and gas l.nes Excavattng
work and trans1t layout
Call992 7201

E lectnca I
&amp; Refrtgerat•on

84

SEWING

MACHINE
servtce
all
makes
992 22llo4
The
Fabrtc Shop
Pomeroy
Authonzed Stnger Sales
and Serv1ce We sharpen
Setssors
Repa~rs

Real state .... oans
11•12% Interest 30Yrs
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic
LOilns, No Down Pay
ment Federal Hous1ng
Loans, l% down on
$25 000, 5% down on
balan&lt;e FHA 265 SubSidy Program FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort
OpenM W F9 OOiol 00
Other Times
By Appolntmen!
~
Office 992 7544
Home 992 6191
':::
I075yc 0 more St
:
Pomero ,OH
n

A~~

44----Apartmlrlt 1..- R.,.l

4J-FROHII
~SINCIIOr

Utility Buildings
S11es from 4k6 to 12xo40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

lttnt

41-Wan,...to•ewt
.._E-.uiiMftlfll for lent

eMERCHANDtSE
s1-Housth01d Geads
52-CI TV RICIIOI!.WIItPnlnt
SJ-Aft~\111

M-Misc Men:NMIIM

n-taulldlnt Swptllln
54-~etl fer Slit

eFARMSUPPLtES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

TV

I Cl "'"''
Ta Do

_,-.,m

l~WiftMCI

ltt~llmenl
61
62- WIIINCI to lwy

eFINANCIAL
21-

n- Trvcktlor IItie

n-~rofnatonll

64-HIY &amp; Grain
u- SINd &amp; '""lllter

e REAL ESTATE

71--Autos tor SilO

...........
o,orfvnlty
U-Money te LNII

u-Livettocll

S.nlcn

wnte your own ad and order by ma11 wtth th1s
coupon Cancel your ad b-; phone when you get
results Money not refundable

Prmt one word 1n each
space below Each m
1t1a1 or group of f1gures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number 1f used
You II get better results
1f you descr' be fu 11 y
91ve pnce The Sent1net
reserves the rtght ro
classtf-; ed•t or retect
any ad Your ad will be
put 1n the proper
ctassrf1ca11on 1f you II
check the proper box
below
I Wanted
J For Sale
) Announcement
) For Rent

eTRANSPORTATION
7l-VMt&amp;•W D
71 Mot.. c,cltt

ll-~lt+ttMMI

1s-

llf'SOie

M--lu1JM11 lwlkll ....
lS-Leh &amp; ACI"HH
u-RMI lttl" Wllltecl
37-IIMiton

eSERVICES

Wont Ad Advertising
Dttdllnes
4,. M Deily
12 NOift SINrCIIV

lorM...Ur

3

11-HomtlmPf'evem.,.ts
12-,.._,....,,lbcn•tl"l

4

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

u-lllc•vlflltl
M-lledrlal

5

6

Electncal
&amp; Retngerahon

These cash rates
mctude d1scoun1
17
18
19
20

I
I
I
I
I
I
-----1

E LWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters trons all small
apphances L.awn mower
NeJCt to State H1ghway
Garage on Route 1 985
3825
85

General Haultng

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel Also, lime haulmg
and spreading leo Morrl~
Truck•ng Phone 742 2455
LIVESTOCK
hauling,
anywhere,
anyplace,
anytrme JO yrs exR Calf t
S93 5132 collect

28
29

9

JO

16

J1 _ _ _ _ __

NOW IS Ttl E TIME for
preventive
main
tenante--moblle home roof
coating
labor and
matenal 14 wide, $2 per
foot 12 wide, $1 15 pee
toot to w•de, $1
per
toot See us also lor lrH
estimates on .wnlnvs, car
ports and skirting We are
your authorlztd dHter tor
the best awnln~ on the
market by Urbon 1n
duatrles Kl.......,ry Home
Sales 1100 E Meln St , '
Pomeroy Ohio C.ll 992
10:W

241tYS

,a,.
lNYI

......
...'"

,....

cur,.

'"
'"

121

'"

11 werflls 4 ,.,...,.,...,.. " ' ..,
tOftHC'utlve Uyt will be dllr ... •lttwl ..,

worcltwtr tftt rnlnlmlllm

In,.,.,....., C•rllllol T,....._, •lid otMtvarv

"'tftlh ,_ ..nl Q M

mir'IIMIU" Ctah In eciVIIICO

Matlile HOftlo u+n •"" Y ~rd Nlet .,..c~ et~ly wlftl calfll wtttl
c..,t cMf'90 t.r Ml nrrylltl lo• N•mMr rn Care of The

SntiMI

I
I
I
I

GOLF LESSONS
8eg1nnmg &amp; Adv~nced
Scholarships possible
for
high
school
students •
-CLUB REPAIRPlaying ttems clubs
.,.gs, balls. shoes, carts,
etc
1 Profess1ona1 teaching
certtftcate
2 Playecl professiOnal
tournaments In Ohto. w
va , KentutkV
• JOHN TEAFORD

8

1d•y

.,..... H

I!'~========

I

15 Worclt .r UHer

....

31711 No~te Summ•t Rd
Middleport, Otno
992 5724
Sales. serv1ce alkl su~
phes In ground ancl
above ground pools
5 I He

17- UitM!IItr't

Rates and Other 1nformatlon

lac~t

THE POOL PEOPLE

u--o.n.r.l H.. llne
~ H IIIHir

10 _ _ _ _ __

~ .. rvn•l"' ohr ......

SALES

84

21
22
2J
24
25
26
27

2

D. BUMGARDNER

614 985 ]961
6 3 1 mo

A•ttPirtt

&amp; ACCftiOf'IH
17-&amp;uto R-..lr

U-F•rmtlor Slle

Free Est•mate
James Keesee
Ph 992·2772
6 25 1 mo

Rt J, Box 54
Rac.ne, Oh
Ph 614 843 2591
6 IS tiC

Phon•------------------

1~Sc:hooltlnltructlon

RHio

V1nyl &amp;
Alum mum Sldmq
•lnsulatton
•Storm Doors
•Storm W•ndows
•Repladment
Wtndows

SMA~L

I
I

I Auction

16-

INSUlATION

S11es
From 30x30

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

tor""''

4---Qiveawa.,J-HappyACII

n -- lniVranct

992 6215 or
992 7314

J&amp;L BUMN

Farm Buildings

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

U-MHUt Hll'l'ltl

• ' - " ' ' ' wantl&lt;ll
11-Situat.cl
wantH

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Pomeroy Oh

STEEL

Addreu._ _ _ _ _ _ __

l-An~ttunum~h

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

n

Excavattng

83

eRENTALS

9-Wan&amp;edtoBuy

5-29 1 mo

Vmyl and Aluminum
S1d1ng

FOR

20% OFF

41- HouMit.rRtnl

._rwe.uc Slit

992 • 379S

Pomeroy, Oh

4 2 t~

A II types of roof work
new or repa tr gutters
and downspout5, gutter
cleanmg and pa1nt1ng
All work guaranteed

GOOD SUPPLY
SHRUBS
&amp; TREES

t-C.rd or Thanks

11t2 yr old mate red Dober
man w•th papers SlOO 773
9506
HOOF HO LLOW Horses
and pontes and riding
lessons
Eiveryth•no
1magmable [f1 horse eqUIP
rn enr
Btankers
belts
boors etc E nollsh and
Rutn Reeves
Western
16141698 32VO

Bus• ness-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporalions
Payrolls, prof1t and loss statements, all
federal and stale forms

ROOFING

Cement work
V nton
Cement Floor Company
Brdwell Ohoo 388 9877 All
concrete work basement
dnveways etc , etc

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

21-Homn fer S..let

HILLCRE ST KENNELS
Boardmg all breeds. Clean
1ndoor outdoor h!lc•llt •es
Also
AKC
reg 1steted
Oobermans 614 446 7795

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

P-YardS.M

Ph 614 949 23»
Weekends
6 16 tfc

Even~ngs &amp;

CALL949 2710
6 18 1 mo

H. L WRITESEL

or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept
111 Court St., PomeroY&gt;, 0 ., 45769

6-Lcttt and Found

anyth~ng•

~~===========~==~m~o~~~::::::::::::::::::~;;~~~~~~~~~~t

PHONE 992-2156

14-IUIIntll Trllftlnt

GOLF SKIRTS rn soze 12
Never worn Brand names
1nclude James Kenrob
Austm Hill Dav1d Smtth
and Quantum $6 each 992
3283

IS NOW UNDERWAY
The Last Day TO S1gn
Up Is July 14th
'BALLET TAP
&amp; JAZZ
For More lnformahon

6 14 1

WANT AD INFORMATION

2-ln MllmCN'IIrtt

Shop

SMA~L

Utility Buildings

I

Custom
Print

T shift and noveltv
5h1rfs tor poht1cans, ball
tams, bus1nesses or 1n
d•vtduals
Sh1rts $4 00 Each
We prrnt ALMOST
anything on ALMOST

Sizes
From 30xl0

1-!_::~=======-+========-~

SHALLOW well pump and
tank Used 3 months 949
2105

I

CARPENTER'S
DANCE
STUDIO

Farm Bulldmgs

Ford flbefgla!%$ top
per to f•t e ght foot bed
Call992 720 1

S tl. G Carpet Cleanrng
Steam cleaned
Free
1
rates Scotchguard 992
est mate
Reasonabl e
6309 or H2 2211

summer Enrothnen-t
For

AL~STEEL

O e i~J xe

Ant1ques

ATTENTION
( IM
PORTA"'T TO YOU) W II
pay cash or certtf1ed check

SIDING, SOFFIT

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessones

CH r P WOOD Poles max
d•ameter tO
on largest
end S1:l p cr ton Bundled
stab $10 per ron Delivered
10 Oh10 Pallet Co Rf 2
Pomeroy 992 ~6tl9

---· .............

bedroom

33

T. L BURROUGH'S

======::;===

""'~'"

Farrpornt

IY7Y Kawasaki motorcycle
400 L TO hke new W1th 1100
m.tes Lots ol extras Call

t1res
like new
6 00)(14 6 ply nylon S'l5 91:15
4329

----- --

53

Business Services

Motorcvctes

74

Wanted to Buy

•• ·., r o ••••• ••••-,.

52

11,1/~ MU!&gt; f AN~, II
kouglt
body bv runs qood 21 mpg
&lt;oll9 1n SIH6

76
62

42

•
* 767
co•n3167or551
collectoons
mortgages,,.
3411Call 614

~second

Insurance

rcpossc~s .... d and tr .ld~..:
1
ptilnos and ory.lns n your
arcil Pncc!. tru t ':ll'~O (1nd
up c.,~t ere&lt;) t r11clndy1.:r
IOdd\1" 304 485 :ttiO

Autos lor 5 11c

14'J. 315d

mortgages,! =
~~r 54
M15c Merchantse
,.and
ref1nance*
IN
AUTOMOBILE
SU RANCE
been can
*cases. Call Com·: MAY 23 to June 30 30% oft
greenware sale Br.ng a
your
celled,
Lost
Mortgag~* conta1ner 9 a m to 9 p m
operators license' Phone :plete
,.serviCes
•nJt. Orehel s Ceramics 59 N
992 2143
Second Ave
Middleport
*Galhpohs, Oh10 at: 992 2751
:446 1517 for more,..
Real E5tate General
*'nformat1on
and* TAG A LONG Camper tor
sate like new Sleeps tour
*your appomtment.
51200 Ph 985 3538

13

Wt.:. arl" Plt.k•ng up sc vt.:r al

Four bedroom house tor
rent No pets Call 9~9 2253

--- ......

D1fch d1ggmg serv1ce Call
713 5839 or 713 5788

71 ...

MU SICtll

Instruments

Hou ses tor Rent

41

RENTERS ass stance for
Sen1or C•tt zens m Vtllage
Manor apts Call992 7787

Profe sslon"ii- Servtces

1913

l~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~!!!!!!!!~!!!!~

FLL BLOODED Female
tnsh Setter- black pup
985 4108

7

Some part 11 me fObs m Pf
Pleasant come w1th a
$1 500 bonus' Plus free
college tu1t1on 1 lfyou are
age 17or older a tumor or
sen 1or en h1gh school or a
school
dtploma
htQh
graduate you may qualtfy
The West V1rg101a Nat1onat
Guard IS no ordtnary part
hme 1ob' Good pay good
benefits' For deta1ts call
SFC Yoho at 304 675 3950

NEED~

MlDDLEPORT1 OHIO

FREE MULCH 992 5926

THREE
8 week
Old
Russtan Blue kltfens Also
one female a week old
wh11e mult• colored k1tten
Call 992 2078 and ask for
Judy

Will do odds and ends
Paneling floor ttle and
ce11tng tile
Call Fred
M•ller992 6338 '

Approx matcty 13 acres on
Rt 248 Sfandtng ttmbcr
City water butld1ng s•tc
Call Y65 JJ68

Miscellaneous

tor Sale

992-2342
IXMNINGQIILDS AGEN('V, INC,
e

9 KITTENS to Qtve away
Black
and black and
whrte Call985 .4348

S1tuat1ons Wanted

DOWNINGCHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
'

A REVIVAL w II be held at
the Pagev1lle Freew111 Bap
t1 s1 Church~ beg 1nnm g June
29 at 7 30 p m Rev Merl tn
Teets Evangeli st

17

-!
*************~'
32
Mobile Homes

Insurance

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH'&gt; DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE'&gt;

3___ ~nnouncements

AVON salespeople wanted
Openngs m Tuppers Platn s
Chester
Reedsville
Harnsonvllle
Pomeroy
and Middleport Call 742
2354 or 142 2995
EXPERIENCED
auto
pamt body man Pomeroy
Motor Co 992 2126

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868

Sl X famtly carport sale
July I 2 3 1 mrle off Rt 7
bypass on 143 9 Sdatly

The Dally Senlillel

4680

In

--

NOTICE OF
PROPOSED USE
HEARING
The res1dents at M e gs
Count-; are •nv.ted to
prov de wr tten and oral
co mments concern1ng the
poss •bl e uses of general
reven ue shar ng funds at
th e proposed use heanng to
be held on July B 1980 at
the Me1gs County Com
m1ss• oner s Off cf!! from 2
PM to3PM
Ava1lable funds amount
to $90 000 00 Th1s f1Qure 1n
eludes funds e)(pected to be
recerved th s year ptus
unapproprtated funds from
prev1ous
ent tl ement
per ads
Sen ter C1t1zens are en
couraged to atten d
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMI SION E RS
Mary Hobstetter
Clerk
June 26 1 f1me

Regali a FROG
BAL L
Saturday June 28 9 1
Royal Oak Lodge
Joe
L av 1nger
and
the
Tunet1mers
Tt cke ts
ava lable at S mons P1ck
a Pa1r 992 3830 Chamber
Otftce 992 5005 New York
Clothmg House 992 2049

Clarence Andrews
MAYOR

16) 19 :.!6

Publ1c Not1ce

Anvone 1nterested 1n Trum
pet lessons for begmners
grades 4 6 call 9~Y 2Db6 at
ter noon

Help Wanted

s

P•ano Tun1ng
Lane
Oamets 7.42 2951
Tunmg
and Repa1r Se rv1 ce s1nce
1965 It no answer phone
992 2082

PA~~ED
~0

6 16

Gold Sl iver or forergn
coins or any gold or sliver
Items AntiQUe turn1tur e
glass or chma w11t pay top
dollar or complete estates
No ttem too large or too
small Check pnces befor e
selltng Also do appratsmg
Osby &lt;Osslel Mart~n 992
6370

Needed RDor LPN tor 1110
1 30 sh1ft Parfftme or full
ttme GOOd work1ng con
d•hons Contact Mr Z1d1an
at the Pomeroy Health
Care Center 992 6606 Mon
day through Fnday from 9

-----

are dnnkmg and dnvmg and get
arrested, the maxiiTlum fme, 1! convicted, IS $1,000 and siX months m
Jad w1th a mandatory of three days
m Jail This ISm additiOn to a dm ers
hcense suspensiOn of three yeasr
and high r1sk Insurance ,
Lt Wigglesworth adviSes If you
dr1nk, don t dnve Let someone el&gt;e
!bat ISn t drmkmg do the drmng for
you Don't become a stastishc '

Publ1c Not•ce

10 kara t 14 karat 18 karat
gold Dental gold and gold
ear pms 675 3010

EXCELLEN T
EAR
Nl NGS 1 Ma11 ng C1rcutars
Postage and Supptres
Free
Wnte
Box 82
Owosso M I 48867

abuse

PubliC- NOtiCe
-

- -

GET VALUABLE train ng
as a young busrness person
and earn good money plus
some great 91fts as a Sen
tmel route carr1er Phone
us rlgh1 away and get on
the ehg•b•hty hst at 992
2156 or 992 2157

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public NOtiCe

W~nl;;;l~~~

Iron and brass beds old
furmture, desks
gold
rtngs
te welry
silver
dollars sterlmg etc wood
1Ce boxes ant ques efc
complete
households
Wr•te M 0 M1ller Rt o4
Pomerqy OH1 or call 992
7160

11

•

Pub I c NOftC('

c_

•

Ohio Patrol will continue crackdown
It E W W1gg!esworth Com
rnander of the Gallipolis Post of the
Clh1o State Highway Patrol an
nounced a contmumg crackdown on
dnnkmg dnvers m the area
, As of thi• year, dnnkmg dnver
arests have mcreased over last year
durmg the same period m Galha and
Me~gs Counties
Statewide, 10 1979 from January
to May there were 11,282 arrests
From January to May 1981) 18 488
;)rrests have been made by troopers

8RAOFORO Aucttoneer
Complete Servrce Phone
949 2487 or 9.49 2000 rac ine
Oh10 Crrtt Bradford

WILL BUY old Iran
sm,sstons
batter1 es
~ngmes or scrap metals
etc Call 245 9188

/

51

Lots &amp; Acreage

8

11
12
13
t4
15
16

32 _ _ _ _ __
J3.. _ _ _ __

34. _ _ _ _ __
35·. _ _ _ __

Ma11 Th•s Coupon W1lh Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

I•

li

II
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I

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

M H Repair

so

1

'

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middlcpurt·Pumcruy, 0 ., Thurscl•y, J uuc tG, 19!10

·~
'

e

JUDGES NAMED- If these fae;es give you an eerie feeling, don't run and hide. Three guests, Frankenstein, the creature from the
'

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The jump, held in connection with the annual Regatta activities begins at 6 p. m.

Sixteenth Annual

(ConTinued from pag e 1)

last stop on Carter's European tour.
Eanes, who was elected after put·
ling down an attempted countercoup
in 1975, welcomed the first American
president to visit the Portuguese
mainland in two decades.
Carter met privately with Eanes,
Premier Francisco Sa Carneiro and
Mario Soares, leader of the opposition Socialist Party.
FLAG RAISING
Members of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion , will conduct
the official flag raising ceremony for
the Big Bend Regatta at 7 p.m.
Friday at the stage on the upper
parking lot.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-,'.lma Frazier, Middleport; Hazel Taylor, Mason; Marjorie Smith, Pomeroy; Helen
Knapp, Letart, W. Va.; Robert
Bailey,
Reedsville;
Maggie
Gilmore, Racine; Annette Boyd,
Pomeroy;
Naomi Bentley,
Pomeroy.
Discharged-Linda Lou Parsons,
Margaret McDaniel, Phyllis
Whaley, John Koehler, John
Blosser, Richard DeMoss, Alice
Globokar.
CHICKEN BARBECUE
The Pomeroy Fire Department
will be having a chlcken barbecue on
Saturday at the fire station on Butternut Ave., with serving to start at
11 a.m. The dinner will consis.t of
chicken, beans, slaw and roll for
$3.2!i. Chicken only will be $2.50.

r--A~~-a-Death~--~ Emergency squad runs
Mrs. Margaret Louise Barrett, 59,
Route I, Middleport, died Wednesday evening at Vet erans
Memorial Hospital following a long
illness.
Mrs. Barrett was born Aug. 26,
1920 in Sharon, W. Va., a daughter of
the late Charles and Ollie Voiers
Tyree. She was married on Jan. 29,
1940 to Robezrt Barrett who sur-

vives.
Other survivors are a son, Robert,
New Haven; four daughters, Mrs.
Charles (Norma Jean) Stanley,
Mason, W. Va .; Anna Mae Collins,
Cheshire; Connie Sue Staats,
Syracuse, and Mrs . David
(Georgina) Lipscomb, Route I,
Langsville; 10 grandchildren; four
brothers, James Tyree, Syracuse;
Junior and John Tyree, Middleport;
Robert Tyree, Route I, Middleport;
two sisters, Mrs. Robert (Ruby )
Hyatt, Colwnbus, and Opal Jean
Tyree, Route I, Middleport, and
several nieces, nephews and

cousins.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by two sisters, two
brothers and a granddaughter.
Funeral services will be held at
2:30 p.m. Saturday at the Rutland
Bible Methodist Church with the
Rev. Amos Tillis and the Rev. 0 . H.
Cart officiating. Burial will be in
Miles Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Walker Funeral Home in
Rutland at anytinie after 2 p.m. on
Friday until I p.m. Saturday when
the body will be taken to the church
to lie in state until time of services.

GAS TAX RECEIPTS
June gasoline excise tax cheeks
totaling $10,272,112 were distributed
today by State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office to Ohio counties,
townships, cities and villages.
Amounts received by Meigs County villages include: Middleport,
$2,179; Pomeroy, $2,322; Racine ,
$620; Rutland, $550, and Syracuse,
$715 for a total of $6,386.

MYSTER'( FROG - Can you guess the identify of the MYSTERY
FROG? If you can identify arid write 2!i words or less why you would
like to be an honorary Grand Craoker, you will receive a $2!i bond. If
you can, or think you can, identify notify Fred Crow. Here are some
additional clues. He is a member of the Independent Church, attended
West Shade Elementary and has been sell employed since he was 18
years of age.

The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to 893 S. Third Ave., at
4:18 p.m. Wednesday for Mrs. Carl
Owens who was ill. She was taken to
the Holzer Medical Center.
The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Headquarters
reports three runs by units on Wednesday .
At 3:14 p.m. , the Racine. Union
went to Fifth and Vine Sts. for
Maggie Gilmore who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 7: 07p.m. the Pomeroy Unit was
called to the Pomeroy Health Care
Center for Naomi Bentley who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 10:54 p.m., the Tuppers
Plain Unit was called to Route 7 for
William Grueser and he was taken to
the Holzer Medical Center.

.

JEWELRY

BIG WHEEL RACE
The Gallia-Meigs Fraternal Order
wheel
racewill
on stage
the tennis
courts, big
E.
of
Police
the annual
Main St., Pomeroy, in conjunction
with the Big Bend Regatta.
The race is for four and five year
old children only and prizes! will be
awa rded winners. Starting time is
3:30p.m. Saturday.

ALL SEAT$ JUST $1.50

CONTINUES
JUNE 26-27-28-29

ALL WATCHES
REDUCED

20%
•BULOVA
•.CARAVELlE
• BULOVA QUARTZ
• POCKET WATCHES
• PENDANT WATCHES
1t MANY OTHERS
This Is The Final Week For
This Great Watch Sale
•VISA
•M/C
•LAYAWAY
c
•

t

~
'W Watch Repair

Jewelry Repair
Your Diamond Jeweler Engraving

342 2nd Ave., Gallipolis

113 Court 51., Pomeroy

~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;~;~~~~~~~~

American Flags
for July 4th

Dee Dee Qualls, 1979 Big Bend Regatta Queen·

JUNE 26-27-28-29

.~~~~ffifflffifi A Home Bank
Fur

DISPLAY OUR COUNTRY'S COLORS
PROUDLY
FRIDAY. JULY 4TH

County

,People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
.

WELCOME TO REGATIA CITY

The response was so great last week
that we have decided to continue our
watch sale 1 more week . If you need
a watch stop in today at Gallipolis or
Pomeroy.

ENJOY YOURSELF
AT THE

IUI'Ielfi!S

PHONE 992-2156

Big Bend Regatta

BIG BEND R.EGATTA
BAROAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN

enttne

THE GREAT WATCH SALE

COURT NEWS
Two suits for money have been
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court as the result of two accidents.
Mary Qualls, and Paul R. Qualls,
Pomeroy, filed suit in the amount of
$21,500 against Robert L. Brown,
Letart, W. Va ., for injuries suffered
in an accident on Nov. 21, 1978 in the
village of Middleport.
William C. Hill, Rt. I, Rutland
filed suit in the amount of $5,000 for
damages against James Silchuk and
Sharon Silchuk, Rittman, as the
result of an accident on Oct. Z!i, 1978
onSR124.
Filing for divorce were George z.
Stitt, Pomeroy, against Lynn Radar
Stitt, Upper Sandusky; Ella Norma
Mae Wilson, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, against
John Wilson, Jr ., Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

~

at y

•

THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1980

Black Lagoon, and Igor, the Terrible, will serve as judges at the annual frog jump slated Saturday at Marauder Stadium in Pomeroy.

Carter••.

•

•3'x5' 100% COTTON FLAG WllH EMBROIDERED STARS.
PERFECT FOR DISPlAY ON YOUR PORCH. $12.95
•DEWXE FLAG KIT. CONTAINS 3'x5' NYLON FLAG,
&amp;fOOT AWMINUM POLE WllH GOLDEN EAGLE,
DISPlAY INSTRUCTIONS. $25.95

I

Racine, Oho~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

'I

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middlcpurt·Pumcruy, 0 ., Thurscl•y, J uuc tG, 19!10

·~
'

e

JUDGES NAMED- If these fae;es give you an eerie feeling, don't run and hide. Three guests, Frankenstein, the creature from the
'

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The jump, held in connection with the annual Regatta activities begins at 6 p. m.

Sixteenth Annual

(ConTinued from pag e 1)

last stop on Carter's European tour.
Eanes, who was elected after put·
ling down an attempted countercoup
in 1975, welcomed the first American
president to visit the Portuguese
mainland in two decades.
Carter met privately with Eanes,
Premier Francisco Sa Carneiro and
Mario Soares, leader of the opposition Socialist Party.
FLAG RAISING
Members of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion , will conduct
the official flag raising ceremony for
the Big Bend Regatta at 7 p.m.
Friday at the stage on the upper
parking lot.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-,'.lma Frazier, Middleport; Hazel Taylor, Mason; Marjorie Smith, Pomeroy; Helen
Knapp, Letart, W. Va.; Robert
Bailey,
Reedsville;
Maggie
Gilmore, Racine; Annette Boyd,
Pomeroy;
Naomi Bentley,
Pomeroy.
Discharged-Linda Lou Parsons,
Margaret McDaniel, Phyllis
Whaley, John Koehler, John
Blosser, Richard DeMoss, Alice
Globokar.
CHICKEN BARBECUE
The Pomeroy Fire Department
will be having a chlcken barbecue on
Saturday at the fire station on Butternut Ave., with serving to start at
11 a.m. The dinner will consis.t of
chicken, beans, slaw and roll for
$3.2!i. Chicken only will be $2.50.

r--A~~-a-Death~--~ Emergency squad runs
Mrs. Margaret Louise Barrett, 59,
Route I, Middleport, died Wednesday evening at Vet erans
Memorial Hospital following a long
illness.
Mrs. Barrett was born Aug. 26,
1920 in Sharon, W. Va., a daughter of
the late Charles and Ollie Voiers
Tyree. She was married on Jan. 29,
1940 to Robezrt Barrett who sur-

vives.
Other survivors are a son, Robert,
New Haven; four daughters, Mrs.
Charles (Norma Jean) Stanley,
Mason, W. Va .; Anna Mae Collins,
Cheshire; Connie Sue Staats,
Syracuse, and Mrs . David
(Georgina) Lipscomb, Route I,
Langsville; 10 grandchildren; four
brothers, James Tyree, Syracuse;
Junior and John Tyree, Middleport;
Robert Tyree, Route I, Middleport;
two sisters, Mrs. Robert (Ruby )
Hyatt, Colwnbus, and Opal Jean
Tyree, Route I, Middleport, and
several nieces, nephews and

cousins.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by two sisters, two
brothers and a granddaughter.
Funeral services will be held at
2:30 p.m. Saturday at the Rutland
Bible Methodist Church with the
Rev. Amos Tillis and the Rev. 0 . H.
Cart officiating. Burial will be in
Miles Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Walker Funeral Home in
Rutland at anytinie after 2 p.m. on
Friday until I p.m. Saturday when
the body will be taken to the church
to lie in state until time of services.

GAS TAX RECEIPTS
June gasoline excise tax cheeks
totaling $10,272,112 were distributed
today by State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office to Ohio counties,
townships, cities and villages.
Amounts received by Meigs County villages include: Middleport,
$2,179; Pomeroy, $2,322; Racine ,
$620; Rutland, $550, and Syracuse,
$715 for a total of $6,386.

MYSTER'( FROG - Can you guess the identify of the MYSTERY
FROG? If you can identify arid write 2!i words or less why you would
like to be an honorary Grand Craoker, you will receive a $2!i bond. If
you can, or think you can, identify notify Fred Crow. Here are some
additional clues. He is a member of the Independent Church, attended
West Shade Elementary and has been sell employed since he was 18
years of age.

The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to 893 S. Third Ave., at
4:18 p.m. Wednesday for Mrs. Carl
Owens who was ill. She was taken to
the Holzer Medical Center.
The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Headquarters
reports three runs by units on Wednesday .
At 3:14 p.m. , the Racine. Union
went to Fifth and Vine Sts. for
Maggie Gilmore who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 7: 07p.m. the Pomeroy Unit was
called to the Pomeroy Health Care
Center for Naomi Bentley who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 10:54 p.m., the Tuppers
Plain Unit was called to Route 7 for
William Grueser and he was taken to
the Holzer Medical Center.

.

JEWELRY

BIG WHEEL RACE
The Gallia-Meigs Fraternal Order
wheel
racewill
on stage
the tennis
courts, big
E.
of
Police
the annual
Main St., Pomeroy, in conjunction
with the Big Bend Regatta.
The race is for four and five year
old children only and prizes! will be
awa rded winners. Starting time is
3:30p.m. Saturday.

ALL SEAT$ JUST $1.50

CONTINUES
JUNE 26-27-28-29

ALL WATCHES
REDUCED

20%
•BULOVA
•.CARAVELlE
• BULOVA QUARTZ
• POCKET WATCHES
• PENDANT WATCHES
1t MANY OTHERS
This Is The Final Week For
This Great Watch Sale
•VISA
•M/C
•LAYAWAY
c
•

t

~
'W Watch Repair

Jewelry Repair
Your Diamond Jeweler Engraving

342 2nd Ave., Gallipolis

113 Court 51., Pomeroy

~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;~;~~~~~~~~

American Flags
for July 4th

Dee Dee Qualls, 1979 Big Bend Regatta Queen·

JUNE 26-27-28-29

.~~~~ffifflffifi A Home Bank
Fur

DISPLAY OUR COUNTRY'S COLORS
PROUDLY
FRIDAY. JULY 4TH

County

,People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
.

WELCOME TO REGATIA CITY

The response was so great last week
that we have decided to continue our
watch sale 1 more week . If you need
a watch stop in today at Gallipolis or
Pomeroy.

ENJOY YOURSELF
AT THE

IUI'Ielfi!S

PHONE 992-2156

Big Bend Regatta

BIG BEND R.EGATTA
BAROAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN

enttne

THE GREAT WATCH SALE

COURT NEWS
Two suits for money have been
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court as the result of two accidents.
Mary Qualls, and Paul R. Qualls,
Pomeroy, filed suit in the amount of
$21,500 against Robert L. Brown,
Letart, W. Va ., for injuries suffered
in an accident on Nov. 21, 1978 in the
village of Middleport.
William C. Hill, Rt. I, Rutland
filed suit in the amount of $5,000 for
damages against James Silchuk and
Sharon Silchuk, Rittman, as the
result of an accident on Oct. Z!i, 1978
onSR124.
Filing for divorce were George z.
Stitt, Pomeroy, against Lynn Radar
Stitt, Upper Sandusky; Ella Norma
Mae Wilson, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, against
John Wilson, Jr ., Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

~

at y

•

THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1980

Black Lagoon, and Igor, the Terrible, will serve as judges at the annual frog jump slated Saturday at Marauder Stadium in Pomeroy.

Carter••.

•

•3'x5' 100% COTTON FLAG WllH EMBROIDERED STARS.
PERFECT FOR DISPlAY ON YOUR PORCH. $12.95
•DEWXE FLAG KIT. CONTAINS 3'x5' NYLON FLAG,
&amp;fOOT AWMINUM POLE WllH GOLDEN EAGLE,
DISPlAY INSTRUCTIONS. $25.95

I

Racine, Oho~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

'I

�PAGE TIIREE - REGAITA EDITION ·

PAGE TWO - REGAITAEDITION

'80 Regatta begins tonight

'

POMEROY- Everything is "go"
for the 16th annuai-Big Belld Regatta
which will be staged in Pomeroy .
begining tonight. The event is sponsored by Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
Here's the schedule of activities:
111URSDAY, JUNE 26
Carnival rides all day; ·Concessions open on parking lot; 5 p.m.

- Tennis Tournament (preliminary
matches); 7:30 p.m. - Stage Entertainment (Musical, "WHEELS"
on stage).
FRIDAY, JUNE 27
Carnival rides all day; 3:30 p.m.

- Stage Entertainment; 5 p.m. Tennis Toufll3ment (preliminary
matches); 6 p.m.- "Anything-thatfloats-race"; 7 p.m. - Bluegrass
Show (football field).

queens reception; 3:30 p.m. - Big
Wheel Race (tennis court); 4 p.m. Stage entertainment; 6 p.m. - Ohio
State Frog Jumping Championship;
8 p.m. - Frog Derby; 8 p.m. Stage Entertainment; 10 p.m. Record Hop; 9 p.m. till 1 a.m. Frog Ball (Roya!Oak Park ).
SUNDAY, JUNE 29
9 a.m. - Tennis Finals ; 9 a.m. Softball Finals; 1-5 p.m. - Heritage
Sunday (Meigs Museum) .
An Arts and Crafts show will be
going on Friday and Saturday and a
quilt show is planned.
Persons interested in participating in the boat race, parade,
tennis and softball tournaments are
to contact the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce at 992-5005.

SATURDAY,JUNE28
Carnival rides all day ; 9 a.m. Tennis Tournament (semi-finals); 9
a.m. - Softball Tournament
(Syracuse); 10 a.m . ...:_ Casting Derby (Pomeroy tennis court); 10:30
a.m. - Boat Parade; 11 a.m. Grand Parade. Following Parade :
Introduction of visiting Queens,
Queens Events; 12 noon - Frog art
show judging; 12:30 p.m. Coronation of new queen; 2 p.m. Cake Show; 3 p.m. - Visiting

Cash prizes will he given
Cash prizes will be awarded to the
winners in the Meigs County Art
Show to be staged Regatta Weekend
at the Pomeroy Public Library.
The categories for entry are frog
art, non-frog art, 11nd three dimensional.
In frog art and non-frog art, cash
prizes of $5 for first, $2.50 for ~cond,
and $1 for third, provided by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce,
will be awarded in the classes fl.
preschool through kindergarten, fir-

READY TO GO- The Flying •~usement Co ill be
t'
d . th a·
. St.
·
"""
· w·
opera mg urmg e •g Bend Regatta,. The carnival will be located behind the Pomeroy First
. ·t Church, E. Mam
Ba ptlli

.. '.

CLOWNS - Clowns seem always destined to be·
part of the Big Bend Regatta Parade and no doubt this

Ye_ar will be no exception in the parade which leaves
Middleport at 11 a.m. Saturday.

...

'·

VISITING QUEENS - Queens of various festivals
su~h as the one pictured annually take part in Big Bend

exhibit Monday through Saturday at
the library.
The entry deadline is 5 p.m.
Friday, and entries may be left at
either the Pomeroy or Middleport
Library. Judging will take place on
Saturday morning and will be completed by noon at which· time the
prizes will be awarded and pictures
of the winners taken. ·
Each entry is to be free standing
with the name of the artist, the
telephone number, address and
grade completed on the back.

Get high interest at the
bank with high interest
in the community.

fa
. CASTING DERBY - Meigs County youngsters friiTI 6 through 14
will have a chance to win valuable prizes at a casting derby to be held
at 10 a.m. Saturday on the tennis courts, E. Main St.

st through fourth, fifth through
eighth, and ninth through 12, and
adult.
In the three dimensional category
with this to include sculpture,
macrame, or anything more than a
flat surface, only a first, second and
third .will be awarded.
Mrs. Pat Holter is chairman, and
Mrs. Ellen Bell co-chairman for the
art show which will be open for
public viewing from 10:30 to 5 p.m.
on Saturday, and will remain on

POIIIEROY, 0.

Memhe• FDIC

Tht· C&lt;)nlmun.it ,,. Owm:d Bank

Regatta activities. Several are scheduled to appear
this year.
..

0

•

'

.'

~

I

o

I

'

o

I

,

0

I

I

I

' ' '

�PAGE TIIREE - REGAITA EDITION ·

PAGE TWO - REGAITAEDITION

'80 Regatta begins tonight

'

POMEROY- Everything is "go"
for the 16th annuai-Big Belld Regatta
which will be staged in Pomeroy .
begining tonight. The event is sponsored by Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
Here's the schedule of activities:
111URSDAY, JUNE 26
Carnival rides all day; ·Concessions open on parking lot; 5 p.m.

- Tennis Tournament (preliminary
matches); 7:30 p.m. - Stage Entertainment (Musical, "WHEELS"
on stage).
FRIDAY, JUNE 27
Carnival rides all day; 3:30 p.m.

- Stage Entertainment; 5 p.m. Tennis Toufll3ment (preliminary
matches); 6 p.m.- "Anything-thatfloats-race"; 7 p.m. - Bluegrass
Show (football field).

queens reception; 3:30 p.m. - Big
Wheel Race (tennis court); 4 p.m. Stage entertainment; 6 p.m. - Ohio
State Frog Jumping Championship;
8 p.m. - Frog Derby; 8 p.m. Stage Entertainment; 10 p.m. Record Hop; 9 p.m. till 1 a.m. Frog Ball (Roya!Oak Park ).
SUNDAY, JUNE 29
9 a.m. - Tennis Finals ; 9 a.m. Softball Finals; 1-5 p.m. - Heritage
Sunday (Meigs Museum) .
An Arts and Crafts show will be
going on Friday and Saturday and a
quilt show is planned.
Persons interested in participating in the boat race, parade,
tennis and softball tournaments are
to contact the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce at 992-5005.

SATURDAY,JUNE28
Carnival rides all day ; 9 a.m. Tennis Tournament (semi-finals); 9
a.m. - Softball Tournament
(Syracuse); 10 a.m . ...:_ Casting Derby (Pomeroy tennis court); 10:30
a.m. - Boat Parade; 11 a.m. Grand Parade. Following Parade :
Introduction of visiting Queens,
Queens Events; 12 noon - Frog art
show judging; 12:30 p.m. Coronation of new queen; 2 p.m. Cake Show; 3 p.m. - Visiting

Cash prizes will he given
Cash prizes will be awarded to the
winners in the Meigs County Art
Show to be staged Regatta Weekend
at the Pomeroy Public Library.
The categories for entry are frog
art, non-frog art, 11nd three dimensional.
In frog art and non-frog art, cash
prizes of $5 for first, $2.50 for ~cond,
and $1 for third, provided by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce,
will be awarded in the classes fl.
preschool through kindergarten, fir-

READY TO GO- The Flying •~usement Co ill be
t'
d . th a·
. St.
·
"""
· w·
opera mg urmg e •g Bend Regatta,. The carnival will be located behind the Pomeroy First
. ·t Church, E. Mam
Ba ptlli

.. '.

CLOWNS - Clowns seem always destined to be·
part of the Big Bend Regatta Parade and no doubt this

Ye_ar will be no exception in the parade which leaves
Middleport at 11 a.m. Saturday.

...

'·

VISITING QUEENS - Queens of various festivals
su~h as the one pictured annually take part in Big Bend

exhibit Monday through Saturday at
the library.
The entry deadline is 5 p.m.
Friday, and entries may be left at
either the Pomeroy or Middleport
Library. Judging will take place on
Saturday morning and will be completed by noon at which· time the
prizes will be awarded and pictures
of the winners taken. ·
Each entry is to be free standing
with the name of the artist, the
telephone number, address and
grade completed on the back.

Get high interest at the
bank with high interest
in the community.

fa
. CASTING DERBY - Meigs County youngsters friiTI 6 through 14
will have a chance to win valuable prizes at a casting derby to be held
at 10 a.m. Saturday on the tennis courts, E. Main St.

st through fourth, fifth through
eighth, and ninth through 12, and
adult.
In the three dimensional category
with this to include sculpture,
macrame, or anything more than a
flat surface, only a first, second and
third .will be awarded.
Mrs. Pat Holter is chairman, and
Mrs. Ellen Bell co-chairman for the
art show which will be open for
public viewing from 10:30 to 5 p.m.
on Saturday, and will remain on

POIIIEROY, 0.

Memhe• FDIC

Tht· C&lt;)nlmun.it ,,. Owm:d Bank

Regatta activities. Several are scheduled to appear
this year.
..

0

•

'

.'

~

I

o

I

'

o

I

,

0

I

I

I

' ' '

�.

.

PAGE FOUR - REGATI'A EDITION

14 vying for Regatta Queen
Fourteen contestants are seeking
the title of Big Bend Regatta Queen.
The new queen will be crowned at
12:30 p.m. Saturday on the upper
parkmg lot stage. Crowning the new
queen will be the 1979 queen, Dee
Dee Qualls.
A court will be selected and
flowers , trophies and other awards

will be presented during the
ceremonies.
· Tuesday night, contestants were
guests at a pool party at the Middleport Swirruning Pool and judging
was held Wednesday evening.
Judges were guests at a dinner Wednesday at the Meigs Inn.
Judging Wednesday night at the
Meigs Banch, Athens County

savings and Loan was on the basis ci
personality, poise and appearance.
The contestants will ride on a
specially constructed float in Saturday's parade.
Contestants for the title include :
Becky Dorst, Rt. I, Shade; Kathie
Lawson, Racine; Deanna White,
Racine; Denise Riffle, Rt. 3,

PAGE FIVE- REGATI'AEDITION

Racine; Beth Ritchie, Rt. ~
Coolville; Carrie Beth Bearhs, Mid:
dleport; Robin Herald, Middleport·
Kathie Quivey, Rt. 1, Shade; Ellor~
Faulkner, Pomeroy ; Robin
Southern, Middleport ; Edna
Greene, Racine; Deborah Ann
Pickens, Racine and Cindy Cross
Racine.
'

ROBIN HERALD

DENISE RIFFLE

YOUR COOL
MilieEndofilieYrnmer~v1

Bridge During Big Bend
Regatta J'une 26-27-28-29
COOL REFRESHMENTS PWS
DELICIOUS SANDWICHES

WITH All THE EXTRAS
BECKY DORST

KATHI LAWSON

DEANNA WHITE

BETH RITCHIE

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
RALEEN OLIVER

W. Main

EU.ORA FAULKNER

Ph. 992-2556

Pomeroy, Ohio

Enjoy The

Big Bend Regatta

IMn,tor has
thetrma I protector

• Motor Guaranteed
5 Years.

shut ott if
rheating

June 26-27-28-29
•

Parts 1 Year
U.L Approved

Beige Cabinet
White Grills
and Blade.

LOW PRICED

CU STOM

20· 1N

.

PORTABLE

• Full9000scillation
• Can be operated in fixed position
•1 Yr. Guar. • 2 Speeds
·
• Chrome steel removable safety grill

Everything From Motor Homes
To Fold-Down Campers.

ILLATING TABLE FANS

• Directs air in any
vertical direction
• Chrome front &amp; rear
safety grill
•One speed

WE ALSO HAVE

TRUCK CAPS &amp; BUG -SHIELDS

~

PH. 1-614-343-3011
~

... ...

(Propane)

..·:·:; ::

f-- - - - - - - - - -- t - - - -- - - -· ...

for
,fl.~:ll;;!
inal
cook
0

0

0

0

0

for
heamgl

·I

I

____ )

Better energy • A better future
• Efficient • Abundant
• Economical

WELCOME TO REGATTA CITY

M

14

CITY ICE .&amp; FUEL CO.

~f.PbringN
FRANKLIN

LONG BOTTOM, OHIO

'

9" Multi-Purpose·
Air Circulator
q J:4:~

,

Propane is gas ...
the efficient energy.

~I '~ ~ :(j):
- ,_,

Discover. RALL's

RAINBOW RIDGE
. ..

'1811

LOW PRICED

pyrofax
uas

f1 Sli::OOary of
.
Texas Eastern Transmission Corp.

'21 11

GALAXY
BRAND
BREEZE BOX FAN S.

/

Propane is better.

variety to lljel

PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
675-2460

Ohio

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
992·2145
Call us: Our Factory Representative will be right out.

t • '

'

t

I

t

0

�.

.

PAGE FOUR - REGATI'A EDITION

14 vying for Regatta Queen
Fourteen contestants are seeking
the title of Big Bend Regatta Queen.
The new queen will be crowned at
12:30 p.m. Saturday on the upper
parkmg lot stage. Crowning the new
queen will be the 1979 queen, Dee
Dee Qualls.
A court will be selected and
flowers , trophies and other awards

will be presented during the
ceremonies.
· Tuesday night, contestants were
guests at a pool party at the Middleport Swirruning Pool and judging
was held Wednesday evening.
Judges were guests at a dinner Wednesday at the Meigs Inn.
Judging Wednesday night at the
Meigs Banch, Athens County

savings and Loan was on the basis ci
personality, poise and appearance.
The contestants will ride on a
specially constructed float in Saturday's parade.
Contestants for the title include :
Becky Dorst, Rt. I, Shade; Kathie
Lawson, Racine; Deanna White,
Racine; Denise Riffle, Rt. 3,

PAGE FIVE- REGATI'AEDITION

Racine; Beth Ritchie, Rt. ~
Coolville; Carrie Beth Bearhs, Mid:
dleport; Robin Herald, Middleport·
Kathie Quivey, Rt. 1, Shade; Ellor~
Faulkner, Pomeroy ; Robin
Southern, Middleport ; Edna
Greene, Racine; Deborah Ann
Pickens, Racine and Cindy Cross
Racine.
'

ROBIN HERALD

DENISE RIFFLE

YOUR COOL
MilieEndofilieYrnmer~v1

Bridge During Big Bend
Regatta J'une 26-27-28-29
COOL REFRESHMENTS PWS
DELICIOUS SANDWICHES

WITH All THE EXTRAS
BECKY DORST

KATHI LAWSON

DEANNA WHITE

BETH RITCHIE

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
RALEEN OLIVER

W. Main

EU.ORA FAULKNER

Ph. 992-2556

Pomeroy, Ohio

Enjoy The

Big Bend Regatta

IMn,tor has
thetrma I protector

• Motor Guaranteed
5 Years.

shut ott if
rheating

June 26-27-28-29
•

Parts 1 Year
U.L Approved

Beige Cabinet
White Grills
and Blade.

LOW PRICED

CU STOM

20· 1N

.

PORTABLE

• Full9000scillation
• Can be operated in fixed position
•1 Yr. Guar. • 2 Speeds
·
• Chrome steel removable safety grill

Everything From Motor Homes
To Fold-Down Campers.

ILLATING TABLE FANS

• Directs air in any
vertical direction
• Chrome front &amp; rear
safety grill
•One speed

WE ALSO HAVE

TRUCK CAPS &amp; BUG -SHIELDS

~

PH. 1-614-343-3011
~

... ...

(Propane)

..·:·:; ::

f-- - - - - - - - - -- t - - - -- - - -· ...

for
,fl.~:ll;;!
inal
cook
0

0

0

0

0

for
heamgl

·I

I

____ )

Better energy • A better future
• Efficient • Abundant
• Economical

WELCOME TO REGATTA CITY

M

14

CITY ICE .&amp; FUEL CO.

~f.PbringN
FRANKLIN

LONG BOTTOM, OHIO

'

9" Multi-Purpose·
Air Circulator
q J:4:~

,

Propane is gas ...
the efficient energy.

~I '~ ~ :(j):
- ,_,

Discover. RALL's

RAINBOW RIDGE
. ..

'1811

LOW PRICED

pyrofax
uas

f1 Sli::OOary of
.
Texas Eastern Transmission Corp.

'21 11

GALAXY
BRAND
BREEZE BOX FAN S.

/

Propane is better.

variety to lljel

PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
675-2460

Ohio

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
992·2145
Call us: Our Factory Representative will be right out.

t • '

'

t

I

t

0

�PAGESEVEN - REGATI'AEDITION

'". usicat scheduled June 26th
The musical, tracing the development and impact of the
invention and use of the wheel from pre-historic times to the
present, will be presented by the Meigs Junior High Chorus
on the parking lot stage June 26 at 7:30p.m. It is under the
direction ofT. Edwin Harkless and John Mora, principal of
Meigs Junjor High.

ROBIN SOUTHERN

EDNA GREENE

DEbORAH ANN PICKENS

CINDY CROSS

FUN

Softball tournament
A men's softball tournament sponsored by the City Limits DriveThru will be held at the Syracuse Ball Park. The event begins Saturday at 9 a.m. Entry fees are $65 plus two softballs. Trohies will be
awarded. Contact Pat O'Brien for more information at 992-2381.

Tennis tournament

COMPLm

INSUIANCI SIIVICE

BIG
BEJ\~:1

R
E
G
A
TT
JUNE

•
GRAND CROAKER - Ed Slater, right, ; this year's Grand
Croaker. He will preside at the annual Frog Jump and Derby. With
Slater is Fred Crow, mastermind of the annual event.

A tennis tournam1111t will be held at the Syracuse terinis court
during the Big Bend Regatta. It will begin Thursday night at 5p.m. for
the preliminary matches and will continue thorugh Sunday at 9 a.m.
when the finals will be played. For more information on this event contact Pat O'Brien.

26-27-28-29

. Reuter-BIU~M lnsunne

®

POMEROY

"QUALITY 1nd
SERVICE"

A

*~8

.

-';":-·
~ ._

ENJOY THE

Enjoy The

Big Bend Regatta

June 26-27-28-29
Stop In and See Our
Complete Line Of
~(;RAVELV

298 Second St., Pomeroy

\ , ,.,. 1&gt;.:.'1 1-rli:- /nr rhdung nm

~­

BIG BEND REGAITA

JUNE 26-27-28-29

PAT HILL FORD
4615 S. 3rd Ave.

992-2196 MiddlePort, Ohio

12 HP Riding Gravely
With 50" Mower
List Price '3385.00

SALE PRICE '2799

•

8 HP .Hand Start
WalkinR Tractor With
30'' Mower

The Croaker Who
Started It All. • •
Here's To Fred Crow

List Price' 1954.25

SALE PRICE

'1569

This fellow is the one who gave
dignity· and glamour to Mr. Frog.
Fred Crow will be there Saturday
afternoon to help engineer another
great Frog Jump and Races. Come,
help us celebrate our program .

MANNING ROUSH - OWNER

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
204 CONDOR ST.

PH. 992-2975

P.OMEROY, .OHIO

'-------·-- - · j

FR~D ~ROW

* ,•
~

j

... '

. . . ~.•.: ... •

, .;.-~

..... o

t

•

•

~· '

• '

'./~··

...

&lt; ..

• ' ~",. '#:~ ...·~

0

I

6.4ot o I " '

1

f

f

t

I

t I

f

f

I

t

t

&lt;

0

0

•

�PAGESEVEN - REGATI'AEDITION

'". usicat scheduled June 26th
The musical, tracing the development and impact of the
invention and use of the wheel from pre-historic times to the
present, will be presented by the Meigs Junior High Chorus
on the parking lot stage June 26 at 7:30p.m. It is under the
direction ofT. Edwin Harkless and John Mora, principal of
Meigs Junjor High.

ROBIN SOUTHERN

EDNA GREENE

DEbORAH ANN PICKENS

CINDY CROSS

FUN

Softball tournament
A men's softball tournament sponsored by the City Limits DriveThru will be held at the Syracuse Ball Park. The event begins Saturday at 9 a.m. Entry fees are $65 plus two softballs. Trohies will be
awarded. Contact Pat O'Brien for more information at 992-2381.

Tennis tournament

COMPLm

INSUIANCI SIIVICE

BIG
BEJ\~:1

R
E
G
A
TT
JUNE

•
GRAND CROAKER - Ed Slater, right, ; this year's Grand
Croaker. He will preside at the annual Frog Jump and Derby. With
Slater is Fred Crow, mastermind of the annual event.

A tennis tournam1111t will be held at the Syracuse terinis court
during the Big Bend Regatta. It will begin Thursday night at 5p.m. for
the preliminary matches and will continue thorugh Sunday at 9 a.m.
when the finals will be played. For more information on this event contact Pat O'Brien.

26-27-28-29

. Reuter-BIU~M lnsunne

®

POMEROY

"QUALITY 1nd
SERVICE"

A

*~8

.

-';":-·
~ ._

ENJOY THE

Enjoy The

Big Bend Regatta

June 26-27-28-29
Stop In and See Our
Complete Line Of
~(;RAVELV

298 Second St., Pomeroy

\ , ,.,. 1&gt;.:.'1 1-rli:- /nr rhdung nm

~­

BIG BEND REGAITA

JUNE 26-27-28-29

PAT HILL FORD
4615 S. 3rd Ave.

992-2196 MiddlePort, Ohio

12 HP Riding Gravely
With 50" Mower
List Price '3385.00

SALE PRICE '2799

•

8 HP .Hand Start
WalkinR Tractor With
30'' Mower

The Croaker Who
Started It All. • •
Here's To Fred Crow

List Price' 1954.25

SALE PRICE

'1569

This fellow is the one who gave
dignity· and glamour to Mr. Frog.
Fred Crow will be there Saturday
afternoon to help engineer another
great Frog Jump and Races. Come,
help us celebrate our program .

MANNING ROUSH - OWNER

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
204 CONDOR ST.

PH. 992-2975

P.OMEROY, .OHIO

'-------·-- - · j

FR~D ~ROW

* ,•
~

j

... '

. . . ~.•.: ... •

, .;.-~

..... o

t

•

•

~· '

• '

'./~··

...

&lt; ..

• ' ~",. '#:~ ...·~

0

I

6.4ot o I " '

1

f

f

t

I

t I

f

f

I

t

t

&lt;

0

0

•

�PAGE EIGHT- REGATTA EDITION
PAGE NINE - REGATTA EDITION

Space available
for crafts show
Community Wives Club is sponsoring the Second Annual
Arts and Crafts Show at the Big Bend Regatta.
Space is available by calling or writing to: Jane Coats,
3846 TR404, Long Bottom, Oh. 45743, 614-985-4327 or Lila VanMeer, Box 26, Chester, Ohio 45720, 614-985-3951.

Fun For The Whole Family

BIG BEND REGATTA
JUNE 26-27-28-29
Stop by during the RegaHa
and see our fine selection of
gifts, Bibles, books, cards, and
remember have fun.

HERITAGE SUNDAY - There's always plenty to
see at the annual observance of Heritage Sunday held at
the Meigs Musemn in conjunction with the Big Bend
Regatta. the observance this year will be from 1 to 6
p.m.

FROG THEME - The frog theme has become prevalent in parade entries of the Big Bend Regalia Parade. Pictured is one of the entries
from last year carrying out that theme.

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
99 Mill ST.

Looking for a

n(@)\~~111
idea?
'« --

EWING
FUNERAL

We've got

~~(Fn1)~ II~ ~ 1J
TO GIVE. TO KEEP.
OR TO SHOW YOU CARE.

MARCHI DISTRIBUTING CO.

FALLS CITY BEER

HOME

Fun Time at the Biq Bend Ret:~atta, Don't Miss It!

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
Ph. 92-2039
or 992-5721

Mrs, Millard VanMeter
106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, Oh.

Dignity and
Service
Always

Somethin For Everyone!

992-2121

-- -==---? -- -·-- -:::-

- --....::.

-·-

106 MULBERRY AVE.

The Big Bend Regatta
June 26-27-28-29

· POMEROY

NOBODY MAKES BEER THIS GOOD

MODERN SUPPLY

Established
1913

Attend The Big Bend Regatta June 26-29

399 W. Main Sl

992-2164

MARCHI ·DIST~IBUTING CO.
.

- . "'"" "" \

\

" N'I'•I &lt;r'tr

\ "''

•

•

•

4'"'·~1&lt;).k\pllfttl'

er River Road

OF GALLIPOLIS

.

.

446-1129

�PAGE EIGHT- REGATTA EDITION
PAGE NINE - REGATTA EDITION

Space available
for crafts show
Community Wives Club is sponsoring the Second Annual
Arts and Crafts Show at the Big Bend Regatta.
Space is available by calling or writing to: Jane Coats,
3846 TR404, Long Bottom, Oh. 45743, 614-985-4327 or Lila VanMeer, Box 26, Chester, Ohio 45720, 614-985-3951.

Fun For The Whole Family

BIG BEND REGATTA
JUNE 26-27-28-29
Stop by during the RegaHa
and see our fine selection of
gifts, Bibles, books, cards, and
remember have fun.

HERITAGE SUNDAY - There's always plenty to
see at the annual observance of Heritage Sunday held at
the Meigs Musemn in conjunction with the Big Bend
Regatta. the observance this year will be from 1 to 6
p.m.

FROG THEME - The frog theme has become prevalent in parade entries of the Big Bend Regalia Parade. Pictured is one of the entries
from last year carrying out that theme.

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
99 Mill ST.

Looking for a

n(@)\~~111
idea?
'« --

EWING
FUNERAL

We've got

~~(Fn1)~ II~ ~ 1J
TO GIVE. TO KEEP.
OR TO SHOW YOU CARE.

MARCHI DISTRIBUTING CO.

FALLS CITY BEER

HOME

Fun Time at the Biq Bend Ret:~atta, Don't Miss It!

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
Ph. 92-2039
or 992-5721

Mrs, Millard VanMeter
106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, Oh.

Dignity and
Service
Always

Somethin For Everyone!

992-2121

-- -==---? -- -·-- -:::-

- --....::.

-·-

106 MULBERRY AVE.

The Big Bend Regatta
June 26-27-28-29

· POMEROY

NOBODY MAKES BEER THIS GOOD

MODERN SUPPLY

Established
1913

Attend The Big Bend Regatta June 26-29

399 W. Main Sl

992-2164

MARCHI ·DIST~IBUTING CO.
.

- . "'"" "" \

\

" N'I'•I &lt;r'tr

\ "''

•

•

•

4'"'·~1&lt;).k\pllfttl'

er River Road

OF GALLIPOLIS

.

.

446-1129

�I

•

I •

I

'

• ' ,. ( .., • l

f

PAGE ELEVEN- REGATIAEDITION

uza;e

PAGE TEN - REGATIA EDITION

}1/ -~~

+

'

ROYAL CROWN COLA

.

ANY POSITION will do wher. you have a frog on the pad trying to
make him jump in the annual frog j1unp which will be staged on Saturday at Marauder Stadium in Pomeroy. You can blow, yell, or sing a
song- anything to get the frog off the pad and hopping.

Frog jump, derby
slated Saturday ·
CASTING DERBY - Youngsters from 6 through 14 are invited to
enter the annual casting derby which will be held at 10 a.m. at the ten-

Tbe annual frog jump and derby
will be held Saturday at 6 p.m. at
Frog Downs (Meigs High Football
Stadium) Pomeroy.
Tbe first, second and third prize in
the senior division, respectively,
are, $150, $75, and $35; junior
division, $100, $50 and $25.

nis courts on E. Main St. Saturday..Pictured are wildlife officials with
some of last year's wi: mers.

A prize of $300 will be awarded to ·
anyone breaking the world's record
which is 33 feet and 5 and threequarter inches by Leapin LemaPeru.
Frog straight racing, championship, $25. First entry fee, entry
thereafter 50 cents.

Entry Number- - - NAME OF FROG

Qualifying Jump
Inches
Feet

Enjoy The

.. .. ......... .... .... ....... .... ................... .. ........ .
Fun At The

Previous Jump Derby Experience (list below )

___._ -· - ---

-e ~ ~ ?f -

BIG BEND REGATTA

-.

--

SERVING

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO AND

ENTERED BY .. .... ..... . .. . . .......... .... ... ............. ..

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
For

Pomeroy

992-7034

. .Casual. • .Comfortable

•Women's Apparel
. • Children's Apparel
•.Men's Apparel
•Boys Wear
• Bedding &amp; Unens
• Housewares
~Home Sewing
• Home Furnishings
• Notions
• Fashion Accessories
•Furniture
•Carpet .
• Appliances
• Intimate Apparel

Your Invitation
To Fun Time!

BIG BEND
REGATfA
JUNE 26-29

Hush
Pu.
ies
. PP.RANO
SHOES

For All The Family

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Position in grand final ........ .... .. ... . . .. . . . .... . .... ........ .

WEST VIRGINIA

JUNE 26-27-28-29
1100 E. Main

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

ADDRESS ... .. . .. . . . .......... .. ... . .. . . .. . . ... .. . . . ..... . . . •
TOWN ..... .. .. .. .. .. ........... ........ . .. . . .......... . . .... .
Age- - - - -

-imeaoda

.

ENTRY FEE . .. . .. , ............ . ..... ... . . .. . ... ... . ......... .

Announce Regatta stage attractions

USE OUR FREE PARKING LOTS
AT THE MAIN STORE AND
MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

ELBERFELDS
IN -POMEROY

Free stage attractions to be
featured at Big Bend Regatta
Weekend as announced today include:
Friday, 7 p.m., square dance
exhibition by Meigs Senior Citizens,
10 a.m. "ltomic" Sounds, disco

lighting demonstration.
Saturday, 4:30 p.m., Young
Believrs vocal group; 6 to 8 p.m.
Charlie Lilly, Bluegrass Music; 8 to
10, Dark Hollow Boys; 10 p.m. Rampage, rock 'n roll.

STAY OFF MAIN ST.
Pomeroy Police Chief Charles
McKinney asks that no cars be
parked on Main .,$treet Saturday
from 6 a.m. until after the parade.
The boat parade is at 10:30 and the
grand parade is at 11 a.m.

NO TIIRU TRAFFIC
No thru traffic will be permitted in
Pomeroy from 10:30 a.m. Saturday
until after the parade is over, Chief
of Police Charles McKinney reports.

~ \ ~.' · · ·

(r J

'

j8iJ"

1-

~ ' . 4.
t
fl }
lt'l'S,':l~ll:u..tU UTJ.tl;.,rlJ'i~~

ROYAL CROWN BOmiNG CO.
of Middleport, 0.

SAVE YOUR RC, DIET RITE, NEHI,
UPPER TEN AND DAD'S BOmE CAPS.
THEY ARE VALUABLE!

WE WILL PAY lf2 CENT
EACH TO YOUR FAVORITE CHARITY

�I

•

I •

I

'

• ' ,. ( .., • l

f

PAGE ELEVEN- REGATIAEDITION

uza;e

PAGE TEN - REGATIA EDITION

}1/ -~~

+

'

ROYAL CROWN COLA

.

ANY POSITION will do wher. you have a frog on the pad trying to
make him jump in the annual frog j1unp which will be staged on Saturday at Marauder Stadium in Pomeroy. You can blow, yell, or sing a
song- anything to get the frog off the pad and hopping.

Frog jump, derby
slated Saturday ·
CASTING DERBY - Youngsters from 6 through 14 are invited to
enter the annual casting derby which will be held at 10 a.m. at the ten-

Tbe annual frog jump and derby
will be held Saturday at 6 p.m. at
Frog Downs (Meigs High Football
Stadium) Pomeroy.
Tbe first, second and third prize in
the senior division, respectively,
are, $150, $75, and $35; junior
division, $100, $50 and $25.

nis courts on E. Main St. Saturday..Pictured are wildlife officials with
some of last year's wi: mers.

A prize of $300 will be awarded to ·
anyone breaking the world's record
which is 33 feet and 5 and threequarter inches by Leapin LemaPeru.
Frog straight racing, championship, $25. First entry fee, entry
thereafter 50 cents.

Entry Number- - - NAME OF FROG

Qualifying Jump
Inches
Feet

Enjoy The

.. .. ......... .... .... ....... .... ................... .. ........ .
Fun At The

Previous Jump Derby Experience (list below )

___._ -· - ---

-e ~ ~ ?f -

BIG BEND REGATTA

-.

--

SERVING

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO AND

ENTERED BY .. .... ..... . .. . . .......... .... ... ............. ..

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
For

Pomeroy

992-7034

. .Casual. • .Comfortable

•Women's Apparel
. • Children's Apparel
•.Men's Apparel
•Boys Wear
• Bedding &amp; Unens
• Housewares
~Home Sewing
• Home Furnishings
• Notions
• Fashion Accessories
•Furniture
•Carpet .
• Appliances
• Intimate Apparel

Your Invitation
To Fun Time!

BIG BEND
REGATfA
JUNE 26-29

Hush
Pu.
ies
. PP.RANO
SHOES

For All The Family

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Position in grand final ........ .... .. ... . . .. . . . .... . .... ........ .

WEST VIRGINIA

JUNE 26-27-28-29
1100 E. Main

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

ADDRESS ... .. . .. . . . .......... .. ... . .. . . .. . . ... .. . . . ..... . . . •
TOWN ..... .. .. .. .. .. ........... ........ . .. . . .......... . . .... .
Age- - - - -

-imeaoda

.

ENTRY FEE . .. . .. , ............ . ..... ... . . .. . ... ... . ......... .

Announce Regatta stage attractions

USE OUR FREE PARKING LOTS
AT THE MAIN STORE AND
MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

ELBERFELDS
IN -POMEROY

Free stage attractions to be
featured at Big Bend Regatta
Weekend as announced today include:
Friday, 7 p.m., square dance
exhibition by Meigs Senior Citizens,
10 a.m. "ltomic" Sounds, disco

lighting demonstration.
Saturday, 4:30 p.m., Young
Believrs vocal group; 6 to 8 p.m.
Charlie Lilly, Bluegrass Music; 8 to
10, Dark Hollow Boys; 10 p.m. Rampage, rock 'n roll.

STAY OFF MAIN ST.
Pomeroy Police Chief Charles
McKinney asks that no cars be
parked on Main .,$treet Saturday
from 6 a.m. until after the parade.
The boat parade is at 10:30 and the
grand parade is at 11 a.m.

NO TIIRU TRAFFIC
No thru traffic will be permitted in
Pomeroy from 10:30 a.m. Saturday
until after the parade is over, Chief
of Police Charles McKinney reports.

~ \ ~.' · · ·

(r J

'

j8iJ"

1-

~ ' . 4.
t
fl }
lt'l'S,':l~ll:u..tU UTJ.tl;.,rlJ'i~~

ROYAL CROWN BOmiNG CO.
of Middleport, 0.

SAVE YOUR RC, DIET RITE, NEHI,
UPPER TEN AND DAD'S BOmE CAPS.
THEY ARE VALUABLE!

WE WILL PAY lf2 CENT
EACH TO YOUR FAVORITE CHARITY

�PAGE TWELVE- REGATIA EDITION
PAGE TIIIRTEEN- REGATTA EDITION

Wh•n you

tit

~ROG

BIG BEND
REGATTA

1980

�PAGE TWELVE- REGATIA EDITION
PAGE TIIIRTEEN- REGATTA EDITION

Wh•n you

tit

~ROG

BIG BEND
REGATTA

1980

�'•
PAGE FOURTEEN - REGA'ITA EDITION
PAGE FIFTEEN- REGATTA EDITION

CAMDEN
PARK
* 25 FUN FILLED RIDES
FREE PARKING
* PICNIC GROUNDS
* AMUSEMENT GAME~
* ROLLER SKATING

* MINIATURE GOLF
* REFRESHMENTS
* CAFETERIA
*

CROAKERS LAMENT INJURY - Members of the Croaker Club
gathered to lament the injury of Kermit the Frog during a recent
storm. From left, Walter Grueser assures Grand Croaker Ed Slater
w1th Kernut the Frog, Kermit Walton and Paul Gerard, grandcroaker
of v1ce, that the frog has been insured.

Cake show on Saturday
QUEEN CANDIDATES - Candidates fot the Big Bend Regatta Queen title annually ride on a float in the parade. Pictured are some of
the contestants from last year.
.

;if!· by StrideRite®

. Enjoy The

- . The sneakers .moms
and kids can agree on.

Big Bend Regattta

.CHAPMAN
SHOES

JUNE 26-27-28-29

~~~~~~~

In

Pomeroy''

BIG BEND REGATTA

Attend
The 16th Annual
Big Bend ·Regatta

JUNE 26-27-28-29
FOR ALL OF YOUR HAR[MARE
AND WMBER NEEDS, VISIT

VALLEY LUMBER
Middleport, Ohio
II

"

The annual casting derby will be ticipating should meet at the. Grace
held at 10 a .. Saturday on the tennis Episcopal Church parish house at 10
courts, E. Main St., Pomeroy by the a.m. where wildlife officers will
Divison of Wildlife.
speak on the history and techniques
The casting derby is open to all of fishing and fishing 'tackle.
youth, 6 through 14, with all
Sponsors for this year's events are
youngsters receiving prizes. Place Moore's, Meigs County Fish and
winners will be awarded additional Game Association, The Tackle Box
prizes. All youth interested in par- and Royal Crown Bottling.

SOMETHI'NG FOR
EVERYONE

_We want to see you at the

992-6611

categories :
Children, age 7-12, your choice.
Teens, age 13-17, your choice.
Adults, Beginner - holiday or one
rrux pan.
Adults, Intermediate \over one
year's experience decorating) novelty or holiday .
ADults, Advanced \teach as a hobby but du nut consider oneself a
professional or sell over $500 li
cakes per year i - special occasion
ur novelty.
Professional i Judges or teaches
on a larger scale) - wedding or
baby shower, or novelty.
Cakes must be in place by 12 p.m.
Saturday.

Casting derby opened to youngsters

"Next to
Elberfelds

923 S. 3rd

A cake show will be part of the Big
Bend Regatta program, and is
scheduled for Saturday, June 29 at 2
p.m. at the St. Paul Lutherna Chur·
ch in Pomeroy.
Entrants have until 12 p.m. Saturday to register their cakes, or they
may register in advance with the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce .
Entry fees aer 50 cents per cake for
children and $1 per cake for adults.
Nancy Roush, Coolville, veteran
cake exh_ibitor and winner of the
Ohio State Cake Decorating Championship, will be judging the show.
A trophy will be presented to the
Best of Show, and trophies and ribbons will be awarded in the following

...

~

.

' '

.'JT t 'J:o-- ·•.

'

I •

t

I

I
1

o

'

t

' t.t r·J ~ 'J ' 1 ~ .t ' , ~ ...; ; •. :· ow ·~ ~..

(

I

FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT. •••
GENERAL ADMISSION

10 ~

PAY
ONE
PRICE

PER PERSON

$ 50
YOUR HAND STAMP

ENTITLES YOU TO ALL THE RIDES
YOU WANT FROM OPENING
. UNTIL 10 P.M.

].

212 I._Mtln, Pomeroy

. ·•

FOR CLEAN .WHOLESOME

CAMDEN

~&lt;!'
'

NO FINER PLACE

~

I

1

. • t :· , ._ ..

GETTING A TRIM - Lilly-de Pad was at the Chateau Frog Style
Center recenUy getting her hair trinuned ·and curled for the upcoming
Big Bend Regatta. Doing the honors were Kay Proffitt, left and Sandy
Miller, right. Looking on is BW Yoqng, co-chainnan of the annual
"frog jump';, which will be held at Marauder Stadium on Saturday,
June 21. Lilly was well.pleased with her coiffure.

PARK
U. S. RT. 60 W,

HUNTINGTON, WV.
PH. (304) 429-4231

Enjoy The Regatta-June 26-27-28-29

�'•
PAGE FOURTEEN - REGA'ITA EDITION
PAGE FIFTEEN- REGATTA EDITION

CAMDEN
PARK
* 25 FUN FILLED RIDES
FREE PARKING
* PICNIC GROUNDS
* AMUSEMENT GAME~
* ROLLER SKATING

* MINIATURE GOLF
* REFRESHMENTS
* CAFETERIA
*

CROAKERS LAMENT INJURY - Members of the Croaker Club
gathered to lament the injury of Kermit the Frog during a recent
storm. From left, Walter Grueser assures Grand Croaker Ed Slater
w1th Kernut the Frog, Kermit Walton and Paul Gerard, grandcroaker
of v1ce, that the frog has been insured.

Cake show on Saturday
QUEEN CANDIDATES - Candidates fot the Big Bend Regatta Queen title annually ride on a float in the parade. Pictured are some of
the contestants from last year.
.

;if!· by StrideRite®

. Enjoy The

- . The sneakers .moms
and kids can agree on.

Big Bend Regattta

.CHAPMAN
SHOES

JUNE 26-27-28-29

~~~~~~~

In

Pomeroy''

BIG BEND REGATTA

Attend
The 16th Annual
Big Bend ·Regatta

JUNE 26-27-28-29
FOR ALL OF YOUR HAR[MARE
AND WMBER NEEDS, VISIT

VALLEY LUMBER
Middleport, Ohio
II

"

The annual casting derby will be ticipating should meet at the. Grace
held at 10 a .. Saturday on the tennis Episcopal Church parish house at 10
courts, E. Main St., Pomeroy by the a.m. where wildlife officers will
Divison of Wildlife.
speak on the history and techniques
The casting derby is open to all of fishing and fishing 'tackle.
youth, 6 through 14, with all
Sponsors for this year's events are
youngsters receiving prizes. Place Moore's, Meigs County Fish and
winners will be awarded additional Game Association, The Tackle Box
prizes. All youth interested in par- and Royal Crown Bottling.

SOMETHI'NG FOR
EVERYONE

_We want to see you at the

992-6611

categories :
Children, age 7-12, your choice.
Teens, age 13-17, your choice.
Adults, Beginner - holiday or one
rrux pan.
Adults, Intermediate \over one
year's experience decorating) novelty or holiday .
ADults, Advanced \teach as a hobby but du nut consider oneself a
professional or sell over $500 li
cakes per year i - special occasion
ur novelty.
Professional i Judges or teaches
on a larger scale) - wedding or
baby shower, or novelty.
Cakes must be in place by 12 p.m.
Saturday.

Casting derby opened to youngsters

"Next to
Elberfelds

923 S. 3rd

A cake show will be part of the Big
Bend Regatta program, and is
scheduled for Saturday, June 29 at 2
p.m. at the St. Paul Lutherna Chur·
ch in Pomeroy.
Entrants have until 12 p.m. Saturday to register their cakes, or they
may register in advance with the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce .
Entry fees aer 50 cents per cake for
children and $1 per cake for adults.
Nancy Roush, Coolville, veteran
cake exh_ibitor and winner of the
Ohio State Cake Decorating Championship, will be judging the show.
A trophy will be presented to the
Best of Show, and trophies and ribbons will be awarded in the following

...

~

.

' '

.'JT t 'J:o-- ·•.

'

I •

t

I

I
1

o

'

t

' t.t r·J ~ 'J ' 1 ~ .t ' , ~ ...; ; •. :· ow ·~ ~..

(

I

FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT. •••
GENERAL ADMISSION

10 ~

PAY
ONE
PRICE

PER PERSON

$ 50
YOUR HAND STAMP

ENTITLES YOU TO ALL THE RIDES
YOU WANT FROM OPENING
. UNTIL 10 P.M.

].

212 I._Mtln, Pomeroy

. ·•

FOR CLEAN .WHOLESOME

CAMDEN

~&lt;!'
'

NO FINER PLACE

~

I

1

. • t :· , ._ ..

GETTING A TRIM - Lilly-de Pad was at the Chateau Frog Style
Center recenUy getting her hair trinuned ·and curled for the upcoming
Big Bend Regatta. Doing the honors were Kay Proffitt, left and Sandy
Miller, right. Looking on is BW Yoqng, co-chainnan of the annual
"frog jump';, which will be held at Marauder Stadium on Saturday,
June 21. Lilly was well.pleased with her coiffure.

PARK
U. S. RT. 60 W,

HUNTINGTON, WV.
PH. (304) 429-4231

Enjoy The Regatta-June 26-27-28-29

�PAGE SIXTEEN - REGATTA EDITION

_...... ~....:.;,;...-~ · SEE YOU
AT THE

PAGE SEVENTEEN - REGATTA EDITION

.,
Smile ,
a Frog
loves you

'

•

.,
•

JUNE 26-27-28-29
Frog Bee r
Is made t.rom
H ops

THIS PAGE BROUGHT TO YOU BY THESE FINE BUSINESSES·.

-THIS PAGE BROUGHT TO YOU BY THESE FINE BUSINESSES·•
-

MEIGS AUTO PARTS

•

POMEROY, OHIO

'

RAWLINGS-COATS-BLOWER
FUNERAL HOME
MIDDL~PORT,

'

MIDDLEPORT LUNCH ROOM

'

SUGAR RUN MILLS
. POMEROY, "OHIO

OHIO

.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
Open at 6:00 AM FOR Breakfast
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ACE HARDWARE

. POMEROY, OHIO

~IDDLEPORT,

OHIO

-

FULTON-THOMPSON ·
TRACTOR SALES

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

.

"

FRENCH'S SUNOCO

SPENCER'S GROCERY, INC.

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RACINE PLANING MILL

.'

SYRACUSE, OHIO

RACINE, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO .

'
,'

•
.

. TEAFORD REALTY

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MARK V
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-3325

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

.'

•

SWISHER-LOHSE PHARMACY

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO
•

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
POMEROY, OHIO .
·~

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;HEATING

ATHENS COUNTY
SAVING &amp;LOAN

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

;un:a;

'

.'

.

W'\'\~

.
v;;

.
_

s..-.!lkl· ~ · ·...

..... ....

'

~

·'· olltltl :i ~

.

···-... •~ ,;.....~unn r ~.u, :~o~'lo.'

.,

�PAGE SIXTEEN - REGATTA EDITION

_...... ~....:.;,;...-~ · SEE YOU
AT THE

PAGE SEVENTEEN - REGATTA EDITION

.,
Smile ,
a Frog
loves you

'

•

.,
•

JUNE 26-27-28-29
Frog Bee r
Is made t.rom
H ops

THIS PAGE BROUGHT TO YOU BY THESE FINE BUSINESSES·.

-THIS PAGE BROUGHT TO YOU BY THESE FINE BUSINESSES·•
-

MEIGS AUTO PARTS

•

POMEROY, OHIO

'

RAWLINGS-COATS-BLOWER
FUNERAL HOME
MIDDL~PORT,

'

MIDDLEPORT LUNCH ROOM

'

SUGAR RUN MILLS
. POMEROY, "OHIO

OHIO

.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
Open at 6:00 AM FOR Breakfast
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ACE HARDWARE

. POMEROY, OHIO

~IDDLEPORT,

OHIO

-

FULTON-THOMPSON ·
TRACTOR SALES

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC
POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

.

"

FRENCH'S SUNOCO

SPENCER'S GROCERY, INC.

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RACINE PLANING MILL

.'

SYRACUSE, OHIO

RACINE, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO .

'
,'

•
.

. TEAFORD REALTY

VILLAGE PHARMACY
MARK V
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-3325

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

.'

•

SWISHER-LOHSE PHARMACY

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO
•

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
POMEROY, OHIO .
·~

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;HEATING

ATHENS COUNTY
SAVING &amp;LOAN

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

;un:a;

'

.'

.

W'\'\~

.
v;;

.
_

s..-.!lkl· ~ · ·...

..... ....

'

~

·'· olltltl :i ~

.

···-... •~ ,;.....~unn r ~.u, :~o~'lo.'

.,

�PAGE EIGHTEEN- REGA'ITA EDITION

Heritage program is Sunday
The Meigs County. Pioneer and Historical Society Inc. proudly
presents for the entertairunent of Big Bend Regatta visitors
TilE VILLAGE EMPORIUM
An exhibit of the finest styles of the late 1890's and early nineteen
hundreds:
Embroiden;d morning dresses
Bustled dresses
Undergarments featuring ribboned pantaloons, corset covers, embroidered slips
Dry goods department
Cloth, ribbons, buttons, and lace trinunings
Accessory case
Beaded bags, fans, buckles, dresser sets
Millinery
Plumed, ribboned, and bead ornament hats
Shoe department
Featuring high buttoned styles in·brown, white and black
Sears catalog 1902
Music Department
Latest sheet music, records and instrumental numbers
will be played during the afternoon
CRAFT DISPLAY AND DEMONSTRATIONS - in the garage.
Mrs. Scott Wheeler, demonstrator
Repeat showings in the Julia Baker Bean Mini-theater
HISTORY OF MEIGS COUNTY
A slide and musical presentation of our history
prepared by Don and Tricia Aleta
A gift to Meigs County by:
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company
Cunununity and school showings are available

PAGE NINETEEN- REGATTA EDITION

PROVIDING MUSIC
" Rampage" a rock group will be
providing entertainment at the Big
Bend Regatta on Saturday, on the
main stage, at 10 p.m.
Members of the group are Gary
Fife, lead singer; Jim (MoJ Haley,
drums; Keny Koehler, lead guitar;
Duane Qualls, bass guitar ; Mike
Norton, rhythm guitar ; Eddie Fife,
on lights and Todd Fife, sound.

IN THE UBRARY
Available for your perusal
1979 Meigs County Ohio History Book
1949 Pioneer and Mason History by Judge Erwin
1908 Larkins History of Meigs
1890 Railroad Reflector-Pomeroy-Middleport
and other towns
1891 Hardesty's History of Meigs County
written by James Evans
1820,1&amp;'10, 1840 Meigs County Census lists
Early niarriages in Meigs County

TERRY
TIME
20 % DISCOUNT

•

·oN TERRY AND TERRY TRIM
DURING REGATTA WEEKEND WHEN YOU
BRING THIS AD TO

'

THE SEWING
CENTER

OLD CARS - Antique autos will make up a segment
of the annual Big Bend Regatta parade which leaves
Middleport at 11 a.m. Saturday.
•

Valley Lumber Company
parade checking point
Saturday's Big Bend Regatta ' Marching units will only perform
Parade participants are to check in through Middleport and Pomeroy .
at the Valley Lumber Co. in Mid- and not during the walk between the
dleport for a parade lineup number Middleport corporation limits and
between 9 and 10 a.m. Saturday mor- Crow's Steak House.
ning.

On the T in
GOOD
4REASONS

•

992-6685
Lik• a 900'1 neighbor.
Statf! Farm Is IM11!.

"""

.....

A

.

j',

.-.•JICICO~

.:-.. oec..: ••

149 S. 3rd St. Middleport, Ohio
ENJOY THE

-SPRING

BIG BEND REGATTA

n.vtr-

.~

For The
BEST
In Outdoor
Recreation

_BOATS

MIKE SWIGER

-SPRING

JUNE 26-27-28-29

BOATING
SAVINGS

stop in· and see the

FOR YOU!

fine selection of boats

At The Big B~nd Regatta ·

and canoes at:

June 26-27-28-29

BAUM TRUE VALUE

MARGUERITE SHOES

. ,,

....

~ME~

,

. SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
Ph. 992-2811

Pomeroy, Ohio

Visit Us During The

BIG BEND REGATTA
June 26-27-28-29
Can't cook tonight?

ROYAL OAK PARK
*CAMPING

Elec. Hookup, Water Hookup,
Sewer Facilijies

*SWIMMING
~~~~~ BoARDS
* BEACH OPEN DAILY 12 TIL 7
*FISHING &amp; BASKETBAll
*SHUFFLEBOARD &amp; SOFlBALL
SWIMMING LESSONS STARTING
AFTER THE 4TH OF JULY

REGUlAR, BARBECUE or EXTRA CRISPY
HAVE A BARREL OF FUN

Stop in and see the fine
selection of quality shoes at:
~Nn

J1me 26-27-28-29

VISIT

During the Regatta

LOOKING

The Big Bend Regatta

110.W. Main

TO SEE YOUR GOOD
NEIGHBOR AGENT

CAR • HOME
LIFE • HEALTH

1;=-~ ENJOY!

985-3301

-£HESTER, 0.

Attend the 16th Annual
BIG BEND REGA'ITA

kW•ek¥ fried Ckielca
•

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
OHIO

�PAGE EIGHTEEN- REGA'ITA EDITION

Heritage program is Sunday
The Meigs County. Pioneer and Historical Society Inc. proudly
presents for the entertairunent of Big Bend Regatta visitors
TilE VILLAGE EMPORIUM
An exhibit of the finest styles of the late 1890's and early nineteen
hundreds:
Embroiden;d morning dresses
Bustled dresses
Undergarments featuring ribboned pantaloons, corset covers, embroidered slips
Dry goods department
Cloth, ribbons, buttons, and lace trinunings
Accessory case
Beaded bags, fans, buckles, dresser sets
Millinery
Plumed, ribboned, and bead ornament hats
Shoe department
Featuring high buttoned styles in·brown, white and black
Sears catalog 1902
Music Department
Latest sheet music, records and instrumental numbers
will be played during the afternoon
CRAFT DISPLAY AND DEMONSTRATIONS - in the garage.
Mrs. Scott Wheeler, demonstrator
Repeat showings in the Julia Baker Bean Mini-theater
HISTORY OF MEIGS COUNTY
A slide and musical presentation of our history
prepared by Don and Tricia Aleta
A gift to Meigs County by:
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company
Cunununity and school showings are available

PAGE NINETEEN- REGATTA EDITION

PROVIDING MUSIC
" Rampage" a rock group will be
providing entertainment at the Big
Bend Regatta on Saturday, on the
main stage, at 10 p.m.
Members of the group are Gary
Fife, lead singer; Jim (MoJ Haley,
drums; Keny Koehler, lead guitar;
Duane Qualls, bass guitar ; Mike
Norton, rhythm guitar ; Eddie Fife,
on lights and Todd Fife, sound.

IN THE UBRARY
Available for your perusal
1979 Meigs County Ohio History Book
1949 Pioneer and Mason History by Judge Erwin
1908 Larkins History of Meigs
1890 Railroad Reflector-Pomeroy-Middleport
and other towns
1891 Hardesty's History of Meigs County
written by James Evans
1820,1&amp;'10, 1840 Meigs County Census lists
Early niarriages in Meigs County

TERRY
TIME
20 % DISCOUNT

•

·oN TERRY AND TERRY TRIM
DURING REGATTA WEEKEND WHEN YOU
BRING THIS AD TO

'

THE SEWING
CENTER

OLD CARS - Antique autos will make up a segment
of the annual Big Bend Regatta parade which leaves
Middleport at 11 a.m. Saturday.
•

Valley Lumber Company
parade checking point
Saturday's Big Bend Regatta ' Marching units will only perform
Parade participants are to check in through Middleport and Pomeroy .
at the Valley Lumber Co. in Mid- and not during the walk between the
dleport for a parade lineup number Middleport corporation limits and
between 9 and 10 a.m. Saturday mor- Crow's Steak House.
ning.

On the T in
GOOD
4REASONS

•

992-6685
Lik• a 900'1 neighbor.
Statf! Farm Is IM11!.

"""

.....

A

.

j',

.-.•JICICO~

.:-.. oec..: ••

149 S. 3rd St. Middleport, Ohio
ENJOY THE

-SPRING

BIG BEND REGATTA

n.vtr-

.~

For The
BEST
In Outdoor
Recreation

_BOATS

MIKE SWIGER

-SPRING

JUNE 26-27-28-29

BOATING
SAVINGS

stop in· and see the

FOR YOU!

fine selection of boats

At The Big B~nd Regatta ·

and canoes at:

June 26-27-28-29

BAUM TRUE VALUE

MARGUERITE SHOES

. ,,

....

~ME~

,

. SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
Ph. 992-2811

Pomeroy, Ohio

Visit Us During The

BIG BEND REGATTA
June 26-27-28-29
Can't cook tonight?

ROYAL OAK PARK
*CAMPING

Elec. Hookup, Water Hookup,
Sewer Facilijies

*SWIMMING
~~~~~ BoARDS
* BEACH OPEN DAILY 12 TIL 7
*FISHING &amp; BASKETBAll
*SHUFFLEBOARD &amp; SOFlBALL
SWIMMING LESSONS STARTING
AFTER THE 4TH OF JULY

REGUlAR, BARBECUE or EXTRA CRISPY
HAVE A BARREL OF FUN

Stop in and see the fine
selection of quality shoes at:
~Nn

J1me 26-27-28-29

VISIT

During the Regatta

LOOKING

The Big Bend Regatta

110.W. Main

TO SEE YOUR GOOD
NEIGHBOR AGENT

CAR • HOME
LIFE • HEALTH

1;=-~ ENJOY!

985-3301

-£HESTER, 0.

Attend the 16th Annual
BIG BEND REGA'ITA

kW•ek¥ fried Ckielca
•

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
OHIO

�PAGE TWENTY.ONE - REGATTA EDITION

. ...JJ. I

--

--=~......_
.~ '""''""""'
--~
'v"
---,-·
..
;,.,... .
--.. , -~ -~ · ·· ' ' ..
.............

-~

•

HOP OVER
NE~ STAGE - !d~sic.al groups such as the one pictured will be enterta1mng m the evenings and on Saturday at the new stage on the Pomeroy parking lot in conjunction with Big Bend Regatta Weekend.

TO
JEWElRY

TO INSPECT THEIR
FROG WINDOW.
FREE MEMBERSHIP GIVEN~ frlembership tickets to the Ohio
Society for the Promot!on of the Bullfrog were presented to the
resideuts of the Pomeroy Health Care Center Monday by Bill Young,

Frog Wayland. ·
Pictured,l-r, Frog Wayland, Henry Cunningham, resident, Bill Young
and Linda Willis, resident. Linda stated that she could not believe she
was going to be a member of the Bullfrog Society.

/} 11~ ., JJv'"~

•V'ISa

Hours:
M·W9-5
Thur. 9-12

p,t.Diy':n
~mond Store
. JEWELRY

•Maste!Charge

•lAyaway

Fri. 8-3

Sal 9-5

113 Court St., PomerOY 992"".:"2054

Dale C. Warner, The EXGrand ·Croaker Says:
Welcome to Regatta City, USA
June 26-27-28-29

&gt;

BIG BEND REGA'ITA
June 26'!27-28-29

mE
MEIGS INN

LOW COST MARINE INS.
STEER HERE! .• .FOR
FULL PROTECTION!

POMEROY, OHIO

DALE C. WARNER INSURANCE AGENCY
PH. 992-2143
Pomeroy, Ohio

FROM

Say It With . ..

Francis Florist
For All
Occasions

Your fTD Florist
Att end th e
16th Annual
B1g Bend
R eqa It a

•
•
•
•
•

Cut Flowers
Potted Plants
Bouquets
Terrariums
Dish Gardt'ns ·

•

/tai(.C~ _FLORIS,;,

.'

Visit The Inn Place
During the Regatta

Pomeroy ,' Qhio4~769
Ph . 992-2644 or 992-6298
Helping You Say It Right

SOMETHING FOR
EVERYONE! ! !
Attend the Sixteenth
Annual Big Bena Regatta

coOL I'f vl\fl\IEil
'fJIIS S
WllH

FREE ICE CREAM
FROM LANDMARK

992-3629

Get a half· gallon

FREE w~h each
Cubic Foot of
Space you buy

DINE
Enjoy Live
Entertainment
Friday &amp; Saturday·
Nights 10-1

in a UNICO
FREEZER!

The Amber Lounge
Opens at 11 : 00 A.M .
Lunches 11 A.M . to 2 P.M.
Dinners s to 10 P.M .
(Buffet Luncheon
11:00 to 1: 30,
Monday thru Saturday)

37 Guest Rooms- new, modern, by day or week . Party
and Banquet Rooms by reservation.
Meigs Inn Pizza Snack
Open Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs. 4:00-11:00. Fri. &amp; Sat.
4:00-1:00. Sunday 4:00-11:00. Call992-6304.

DISCOUNT

~ . POMEROY

.. .• LANDMARK
· . "Serving Mtlga, 011111, and Mason Countltl"

Millin Street

·

itore Hours : 1::11 to5.:30
Mill Cloud ol 5:00P.M.
Pllono H2-2111

Pomeroy

�PAGE TWENTY.ONE - REGATTA EDITION

. ...JJ. I

--

--=~......_
.~ '""''""""'
--~
'v"
---,-·
..
;,.,... .
--.. , -~ -~ · ·· ' ' ..
.............

-~

•

HOP OVER
NE~ STAGE - !d~sic.al groups such as the one pictured will be enterta1mng m the evenings and on Saturday at the new stage on the Pomeroy parking lot in conjunction with Big Bend Regatta Weekend.

TO
JEWElRY

TO INSPECT THEIR
FROG WINDOW.
FREE MEMBERSHIP GIVEN~ frlembership tickets to the Ohio
Society for the Promot!on of the Bullfrog were presented to the
resideuts of the Pomeroy Health Care Center Monday by Bill Young,

Frog Wayland. ·
Pictured,l-r, Frog Wayland, Henry Cunningham, resident, Bill Young
and Linda Willis, resident. Linda stated that she could not believe she
was going to be a member of the Bullfrog Society.

/} 11~ ., JJv'"~

•V'ISa

Hours:
M·W9-5
Thur. 9-12

p,t.Diy':n
~mond Store
. JEWELRY

•Maste!Charge

•lAyaway

Fri. 8-3

Sal 9-5

113 Court St., PomerOY 992"".:"2054

Dale C. Warner, The EXGrand ·Croaker Says:
Welcome to Regatta City, USA
June 26-27-28-29

&gt;

BIG BEND REGA'ITA
June 26'!27-28-29

mE
MEIGS INN

LOW COST MARINE INS.
STEER HERE! .• .FOR
FULL PROTECTION!

POMEROY, OHIO

DALE C. WARNER INSURANCE AGENCY
PH. 992-2143
Pomeroy, Ohio

FROM

Say It With . ..

Francis Florist
For All
Occasions

Your fTD Florist
Att end th e
16th Annual
B1g Bend
R eqa It a

•
•
•
•
•

Cut Flowers
Potted Plants
Bouquets
Terrariums
Dish Gardt'ns ·

•

/tai(.C~ _FLORIS,;,

.'

Visit The Inn Place
During the Regatta

Pomeroy ,' Qhio4~769
Ph . 992-2644 or 992-6298
Helping You Say It Right

SOMETHING FOR
EVERYONE! ! !
Attend the Sixteenth
Annual Big Bena Regatta

coOL I'f vl\fl\IEil
'fJIIS S
WllH

FREE ICE CREAM
FROM LANDMARK

992-3629

Get a half· gallon

FREE w~h each
Cubic Foot of
Space you buy

DINE
Enjoy Live
Entertainment
Friday &amp; Saturday·
Nights 10-1

in a UNICO
FREEZER!

The Amber Lounge
Opens at 11 : 00 A.M .
Lunches 11 A.M . to 2 P.M.
Dinners s to 10 P.M .
(Buffet Luncheon
11:00 to 1: 30,
Monday thru Saturday)

37 Guest Rooms- new, modern, by day or week . Party
and Banquet Rooms by reservation.
Meigs Inn Pizza Snack
Open Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs. 4:00-11:00. Fri. &amp; Sat.
4:00-1:00. Sunday 4:00-11:00. Call992-6304.

DISCOUNT

~ . POMEROY

.. .• LANDMARK
· . "Serving Mtlga, 011111, and Mason Countltl"

Millin Street

·

itore Hours : 1::11 to5.:30
Mill Cloud ol 5:00P.M.
Pllono H2-2111

Pomeroy

�~

·~.

..
•

•

.•

'/'

'

f

PAGE TWENTY-THREE - REGATTA EDITION

• Saving with .
growth and
security
• Business Loans
• Personal Loans

st Baptist Church. ahe float will feature numerous frogs and waterfall,
and will have the theme, "There's A Pad for Every Frog at the First
Baptist Church." Last year the church built another elaborate float for
the parade.

FLOAT BEING CONSTRUCfED - An example of the many
floats to be found in this year's Regatta Grand Parade, SatUrday at 11
a.m., is shown here in construction by Members of the Middleport Fir-

Have A Great
Time At The
Big Bend Regatta

EVERYONE

June 26-27-28-29

BIG BEND

FUN FOR

. "THE FRIENDLY BANK
\

JUNE

~

'

THE

~.

..

.

1/•.

t,."\.. . . "·~- '-~'-.'•. I'I:J••.f., 't.f•!•.'•.l.. ~t.lt t. ... '&lt;\ •...,. ,._,,..

a.ter, Ohio .

~-OEAU: ..

,II. ..

,~~~· ' • •• ' • . .,. '

· ' ... . .

'tl J ,J, t ,t

t.

.

i •• •' •' .~.t. • .t.. t ..t.t •• •' •• ' ' •' •••• ••••• '-.!.J.i.t.t •• •• /;' ••

'

NA

We don't like to brag, but when it comes to your financial matters, we re
the guys to see! Our _trained staff will give you friendly, personalized
service in handling ALL your banking needs•• .and they'll help you get
the most for your money. So come. on in and get to know us.
You'll be glad you did!

' ..

RIGGS
USED985 4100CARS

FABRIC SHOP

THE CENTRAL
TRUST COMPANY,
OPEN M·W., 9 til 3;
Thurs. &amp; Sat. 9 til 12;
Friday ~ til 3 &amp; 5 til 7
MEMBER FDIC
-DEPOSITS INSURED TO $100,000.

26-29

&gt;top in for a
short visit.

Pomeroy, 0.

•

THAN YOU CAN AT

While
you're here

115 w. 2nd

Travelers Checks
Money Orders
Safe Deposit Boxes
Auto Loans

• Home Improvement
Loans

REGATTA

992-2284

•
•
•
•

,., •• •• ~ .' I J. I I I 11 .A~' J! .M A...(.·'

.
! .t J

...
,f

f

SEE YOU AT THE REGATTA
JUNE 26-27-28-29, 1980

.

•

�~

·~.

..
•

•

.•

'/'

'

f

PAGE TWENTY-THREE - REGATTA EDITION

• Saving with .
growth and
security
• Business Loans
• Personal Loans

st Baptist Church. ahe float will feature numerous frogs and waterfall,
and will have the theme, "There's A Pad for Every Frog at the First
Baptist Church." Last year the church built another elaborate float for
the parade.

FLOAT BEING CONSTRUCfED - An example of the many
floats to be found in this year's Regatta Grand Parade, SatUrday at 11
a.m., is shown here in construction by Members of the Middleport Fir-

Have A Great
Time At The
Big Bend Regatta

EVERYONE

June 26-27-28-29

BIG BEND

FUN FOR

. "THE FRIENDLY BANK
\

JUNE

~

'

THE

~.

..

.

1/•.

t,."\.. . . "·~- '-~'-.'•. I'I:J••.f., 't.f•!•.'•.l.. ~t.lt t. ... '&lt;\ •...,. ,._,,..

a.ter, Ohio .

~-OEAU: ..

,II. ..

,~~~· ' • •• ' • . .,. '

· ' ... . .

'tl J ,J, t ,t

t.

.

i •• •' •' .~.t. • .t.. t ..t.t •• •' •• ' ' •' •••• ••••• '-.!.J.i.t.t •• •• /;' ••

'

NA

We don't like to brag, but when it comes to your financial matters, we re
the guys to see! Our _trained staff will give you friendly, personalized
service in handling ALL your banking needs•• .and they'll help you get
the most for your money. So come. on in and get to know us.
You'll be glad you did!

' ..

RIGGS
USED985 4100CARS

FABRIC SHOP

THE CENTRAL
TRUST COMPANY,
OPEN M·W., 9 til 3;
Thurs. &amp; Sat. 9 til 12;
Friday ~ til 3 &amp; 5 til 7
MEMBER FDIC
-DEPOSITS INSURED TO $100,000.

26-29

&gt;top in for a
short visit.

Pomeroy, 0.

•

THAN YOU CAN AT

While
you're here

115 w. 2nd

Travelers Checks
Money Orders
Safe Deposit Boxes
Auto Loans

• Home Improvement
Loans

REGATTA

992-2284

•
•
•
•

,., •• •• ~ .' I J. I I I 11 .A~' J! .M A...(.·'

.
! .t J

...
,f

f

SEE YOU AT THE REGATTA
JUNE 26-27-28-29, 1980

.

•

�President receives tax cut notice

PAGE TWENTY·FOUR . . .ATI'AEDffiON -

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

WASHINGTON (AP) - While
holding fast against the tax plan of
Ronald Reagan and his fellow
Republicans, majority Democrats
have put President Carter on just a
few weeks' no(ice to serve up a 1981
cut of his own or risk having one for·
ced upon him by Congress.
That was the message Thursday,
when Senate Democrats rejected the
10 per cent laHul bid by a virtually
united minority and instructed its
Finance Committee to write a more
acceptable version by Sept. 3. The
decision was yet another unofficial
conceS$ion that there is very little
hope left for a halanced 1981 budget,
even as that remains a fonnal
target.
Carter may well beat the Senate's
timetable for advancing a tax cut.
Though the president has consistenUy opposed any action this

year on tax relief, sources withirl the

rising pressures of an election year,
and Carter could well be out with a
now say privately they expect a comprehensive proposal at about
rather broad proposal to emerge in
the time the GOP meets in Detroit.
his mid-year budget revision, due no
On a 58-38 vote, the Senate refused
later than July 15.
to attach Reagan 's proposed $35.8Key advisers to the president say
billion lax cut to a bill extending the
they want a multi-year tax cut to
federal debt ceiling. With the ex·
help spur investment and producception of Sen. Lowell Weicker, R·
tivity through the mid·1980s, but
Conn., who voted with the
they remain convinced it would do
Democrats to table, or kill, the
lillie in the short run to pull the coun· · proposal, the vote was along party
try from the current economic
lines.
slump. They would prefer enact·
"The people of this country will
ment by the next session of
not forget" that it was a
Congress, with retroac,tivity to Jan.
Democratic-controlled Senate that
1, on ground that moving sooner
turned thwnbs-down on the tax cut,
could set off a new round of in·
said Republican l£ader Howard
flationary expectations just as
Baker.
wholesale and consumer prices have
Reagan, in a statement issued in
moderated.
Los Angeles, said much the same
But that preference, they concede,
thing, adding Plat the Senaie vote to
likely will be overwhelmed by the
delay consideration of a tax cut
chief executive's economic • circle

"rivals Jimmy Carter's empty
rhetoric for sheer cynicism."
·
Democratic leaders accused
Republicans and Reagan, the GOP
nominee in waiting, of gimmickry
and of playing Russian roulette with
the economy. Majority Leader
Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia
decried the Reagan approach as a
"Simon Simon, Tinkertoy" attempt
to write major economic policy
without benefit of full hearings.
Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., the
assistant Democratic leader, said
Republicans "are counting on the
Democrats to Save the country by
voting down their rash proposal - so
they can claim that the Democrats
are against cutting taxes. "
The GOP proposal - which may
be considered several more times in
the Senate this year - would reduce
individual income tax rates by an

average of 10 percent and allow
businesses a faster tax write-off of
buildings, machinery and vehicles.
The Republican plan would
provide $35.8 billion in tax relief in
calendar year 1981, with 1l percent
of it going to business. The cost
would be $22.3 billion in fiscal 1981 ,
which begins on Oct. I , 1980.
The size, timing and details of the
tax cut envisioned by Senate
Democrats would be set by the
Finance Committee.
Earlier this week, Allred E. Kahn,
the president's chief anti-inflation
adviser, said for the first time that a
tax cut in 1981 would be necessary
and inevitable. And he suggested a
figure of perhaps $25 billion.
Pressure on Carter to recorrunend
lax reduction heightened on Wed·
nesday when Reagan, in a coordinated effort with his supporters in

Congress, called for an immediate
lax cut for individuals and businesS
to lake effect next Jan. L
Senate Democrats hurried
a
closed caucus Thursday and agreed
that taxes should be cut starting
next January. But in order to hear
from the Carter administration, the
public, business and labor, the
Democrats agreed to give the Senate
Finance Committee until Sept. 3 to
produce a bill.
In addition to endorsing a lax
reduction, the Senate Democratic
Caucus named a 21-man task force,
headed by Sen. Uoyd Bentsen of
Texas, to develop a long-range
economic plan that would promote
vigorous growth without inflation.
House Democratic leaders, who
are still to be heard from in the tax·
cut debate, dlscusserl tax policy for

mto

(Con Tinued qn page 12}

•

e

at

~~----------------------------------------~~------------------------------------------~, ~
VOL 31 NO. 53

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS"

House voting on
balanced budget

.

From the Associated Press

.' ,&gt;

Soviet bomber crashes; two ·dead
TOKYO (AP) - A Soviet bomber crashed Friday into the Sea of
Japan off Niigata, 1110 miles northwest of Tokyo, and a Japanese
rescue craft recovered the bodies of two Soviet crew members, the
Defense Agency said.
An official of the agency said one of its patrol boats saw the Russian
bomber, a TU·16 "Badger," crash into the sea 70 miles north of Sado
Island at about 1:50p.m ..
The Tupolev 16 is a long-range, twin·jet aircraft originally designed '
'as a bomber but also used for electronic reconnaissance missions off
the coasts of non-communist nations such as Japan.

l)

'\
DANlliOMAS

CHERIE UGHTFOOT

FACULTY AWARD RECIPIENTS - Dan Thomas and Cherie
Ughtfoot have been presented the faculty senior award for their
academic achievements at Meigs High School. The honors were bestowed
during a recent academic awards assembly. Botb are members of the
19110 graduating class.

Vietnamese troops capture pair
We're proud to announce that we have_
just joined BANC ONE CORPORATION,
a growirg statewide holding company of
twenty-one banks. Since all of the
affiliate banks throughout Olio have a
common identity as BANK ONE banks,
we too have changed our name to
BANK ONE. And we think our new
name better identifies us to our
customers and our shareholders.
Even though our name has
changed, we will continue to operate as
an individual local bank. We are still
responsible for meeting the unique

banking needs of our community. Our _
bankers still run the bank ...the bankers
you've come to know and trust. As a·
matter of fact; you can continue to use
your present chec:ks, paBStrooks .-.a.
other items that carry a., ala name.
Complete converJIQft t&gt;BAhK
take time. And like you, we !'lave t) gM
used to it, too.
We're still the $ame .b ank .• .only nf1N
we will be able to bi'lng t&gt; you tt.e a111an- .
tages that a strong statewide banking.
organization can giVe us ... leadersh~
in products and serVbe$ for you.

CH:_.,

BANGKOK, Thailand - Vietnamese troops captured two relief of·
ficials of the International Red Cross and at least two foreign jour·
nalists at an emhattied point along the Thai-Cambodian border Thor·
sday, the Red Cross said.
'
.
Witnesses said the Vietnamese soldiers approached the group while
they were inspecting the abandoned refugee encampment at Nong
Chan and led them away, the Red Cross said
The captured Red Cross officials were identified as Robert Ashe of
Britain
and
Pierre
Perrin
of
France .

200 people said drowning victims
DACCA, Bangladesh - About 200 people were feared to have
drowned Thursday night when a passenger launch collided with an oil
tanker in the turbulent Meghna River, 20 miles from Dacca, officials
reported.
•
The launch, the Shapla, was carrying more than 500 passengers
from Dacca to Faridpur when the accident occurred. AI least 100
passengers swam ashore and seven of them were hospitalized.
An official said he feared people were still trapped inside the hull of
the sunken launch.

Anned police stonn college campus
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador - Police and anny units hacked by

BANKONEOFPOMaoV
FORMERLY
POMEROY NA110NAL BANK

•
Member FDIC

BANK ONE,.

tanks and helicopters stormed the University of El Salvador campus

.-...
,..,

and a nearby high school Thursday in pursuit of leftist students, killing
14 people, wounding dozens of others and arresting 40, leftist sources
said.
Witnesses said three people were killed, another was wounded and
at least 100 were arrested. The goverrunent denied any deaths occured
and a National Guard communique said only one soldier was "gravely
wounded." They said nothing of student arrests.

Pair indicted on murder charges
AKRON, Ohio - A Sunnnit County grand jury has indicted two
Akron men on charges of aggravated murder, aggravated robbery
and kidnapping in the abduction and-slaying of an Akron woman.
Hazel Hylton, 49, was abducted from an Akron shopping center on
June 16, witnesses said. Her body was foUnd in a field Tuesday night
with two bullet wounds.
The grand jury Thursday indicted Rickie Hunt, 32, and Jerome
McKinislry, 35, in connection with the death. A third man, Greg Ed·
ward, 24, of Oak Park, Ill., has been· indicted for receiving stolen
property and on a weapons charge.

School funds received
The June State School Foundation
sutisidy payment of $89,441,960.19 to
612 Ohio city, exempted village and
local school districts; and 87 county
boards of education was reported t~r
day by State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson.
Following deductions, the three

WASHINGTON (AP)- President
Carter rested at Camp David today
after an eight-day European journey
designed to bolster relations with
America 's allies. But even as Carter
was flying home from Europe, the
French took issue with a major
initiative of Carter's trip.
The president landed at Andrews
Air Force Base Thursday night and
declared that the partial troop withdrawal from Afghanistan the Soviets

RE-()PEN TALKS
Tbe negotiating team of lbe Meigs
Local Board of Education and Meigs
Local Chapter No. 17 of the Ohio
Assoctatlou of Public School
Employees met Tuesday lo reopen
negotlatlollll ou two (2) Items of the
current agreemeut as prescribed In
the eoutracl uegotiated ID the fall of
1979. The items are salary IUid
calamity days.

Thursday mishap

MECHANIC'iBURG, Ohio - A Clark County truck driver was killed
when he apparenUy swerved to miss a cow and lost control of his
gasoline tanker, said Champaign County sheriff's deputies.
The rig, carrying 8;600 gallons of regular gasoline, burst into flames
Wednesday night after It left Ohio 4 about two miles north of
Mechanicsburg and overturned at least twice.
,
.
Gerald R. Burnett, 33, of Springfield, was dead at the scene, deputies
said.

Weather forecast
Clear tonight. Low in the upper 60s. P~rtly cloudy with a chance of
showers or thunderstonns Saturday. High near 90. The chance of rain
ill near zero percent tonight and 30 percent Saturday.
OHIO EXTENDED FORECAST
By lbe Associated.Press
Sullday through Tuesday: A cbaace of sbowen or tbundentonns
Saoday. Fair Moaday 1111C1 Tueeday. Hlgbs ID lbe 80s Suuday and ID lbe
upper '781 aDd low 80s Monday IUid Tuesday. Lows ID the upper 50s-and

....

T''

Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, and
other bill sponsors.
The 3 percent across-the-board
spending cut and a 5 percent hike in
state liquor prices will make up
another $146 million. That would still
leave a deficit of $18 million, but
majority Democrats are hoping for
a turnaround in the economy which
would ease the state revenue pinch.
They also noted that the governor
has the statutory authority to boost
the size of the spending slash, if
necessary, to keep the books in
balance.
Rep. Wa.Jdo Bennett Rose, R·
Lima, offered an amendment to
require the governor to hike the
spending cut to 9 percent and order
it in effect July 1. ·
Rose said he thinks the state faces
a deficit next year of about $420
million, including a $100 million
shortfall in welfare where case.loads
are on the rise. His 9 percent slash
would save $378 million, compared
with the $126 million derived from a
3 percent reduction.
The Allen County lawmaker's
amendment was defeated 18-1, with
his vote the only affirmative one. If
the state doesn't take stronger action now, "the cuts we will have to
make later will be draconian," he
said.

Carter ends trip; rests at Camp David

Five injured in

Cow causes fatal accident

local school districts received
$346,493.68 including $72,586.54 for
Eastern Local; $196,558 for Meigs
Local, and $77,349.14 for Southern
Local. In addition there was a direct
allotment of $18,705.22 to the Meigs
County Board of Education.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
House called for a vote today on a
Senate-passed bill helping to bring
Ohio's recession-hit budget into
balance.
The measure, however, was substantially amended Thursday by the
House Finance Committee and could
hit. a snag when It gets back to the
upper chamber.
House and Senaw leaders said it
was one of the top remaining
priorities as they sought to bring
other looSe ends together and begin
a sununer recess.
The House panel added about two
dozen amendments to the measure,
which shifts funds, delays certain
obligations and reappropriates fun·
ds unspent by various agencies in
the fiscal year which ends June 30.
None was really major, with one
possible exception.
Republicans sought to make cuts
in state spending, recenUy an·
nounced bf-'G~~~o·.;James A. Rhodes
and legislative leaders, deeper than
the 3 percent being proposed. But
their amendJnerts w.ere rejected.
The bill, as it now stands, asser·
tedly would save about $108 million
in the 1981 fiscal year. That would be
applied against an expected deficit
of about $266 million, said House
Finance Chairman Myrl H .·

Five persons were injured during
a lw~rvehicle accident investigated
Thursday by the Gallia·Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
Called to the scene in Meigs County on SR 124 at 4:30 p.m., officers
report an east bound auto operated
by Linda Vaninwagen, 29, Pomeroy,
had stopped In traffic. An east bound
vehicle driven by Ellen Tho~. 38,
Rutland, failed to . slop and struck
the Vaninwagen auto in the rear.
Both drivers, and three
passengers-Jerrod, age S, and
David Vaninwagen, age 11 months,
both of Pomeroy; and, Sheryl R.
Thoma, age S, Rutland-claimed injUry and wete transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by ~
Pomeroy Emergency Squad for
treatment.
Thoma wa• cited on a charge of
failure to mamtain an assured clear
distance. Both vehicles incurred
severe damage.

announced last weekend was "a
token withdrawa'l (that) has
relatively litUe strategic significance unless it is pennanent and is
rapidly followed by step-by-step
withdrawal of all Soviet forces."
He said the allies were agreed that
"a major threat to world peace has
been perpetrated by the Soviet
Union in their unwarranted invasion
and present occupation of
Afghanistan. This major threat we
all agree must be resolved by the
withdrawal of Soviet forces, total
withdrawal. "
It was a theme Carter had
stressed repeatedly during his four·
nation tour, but he did not mention
again his proposal to help set up a
" transition

arrangement"

Afghanistan if the Soviets remove·
their troops .
Just hours after Carter left
Lisbon, Portugal, for the seven-hour
flight home, French President
Valery Giscard d'Estaing dismissed
Carter's suggestion for such a "tran·
sitional arrangement" and also
voiced a different view of the limited
Soviet troop withdrawaL
"At the moment, it seems to me
that we should not seek a transitory
solution," Giscard said at a news
conference. "What should be sought
is a definitive solution. "
The French president said an interim phase would require some
Soviet troops to remain in
Afghanis!Rn and that would provoke ·

continued guemua resistance and
heighten tension.
Giscard, who has tried to carve a
role as an intennedlary between the
United States and the Soviet Union,
praised the partial troop withdrawal
as a step in the right direction.
While ignoring Giscard'.s
criticisms and again stressing the
solidarity of the allies, Carter said
he recognized that "there are bound
to be some differences" among .
democratic nations.
"But the common understanding
which we have, and the agreements
which we have reached, show a
remarkable degree of unity as we
face present problems and prepare
for the future," the president said.

in-

Anderson lawyers argue
for Ohio ballot position
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - AI·
torneys for the state of Ohio told a
federal judge there is no substance
to a claim by independent presiden·
tial candidate John B. Anderson to a
spot on the state's November hallot.
Anderson is challenging Ohio's
election laws, which he says are un·
constitutional and discriminate
against independent campaigns.
On April 24, the Illinois represen·
tative switched from Republican to
independent status, more than a
month after Ohio's March 20 filing
deadline.
Secretary of State Anthony
Celebrezze ruled that state law now
prevents Anderson 's name from appearing on the general election
ballot as an independent.
U.S. District Judge Robert Duncan took the case under advisement
and said he will deliver a decision as
soon as possible. ·
A brief filed in the case by at·
torneys for Anderson and the
American Civil Liberties Union
alleges an "elaborate history of

legislative intent" in Ohio to exclude
candida tes who do not belong to

CLEVELAND (AP) - The wloDiug number drawn Tbunday iD the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "Tbe
NliDiber" was 358. .
1D the weekly "Pyramid" game,
the wiDDlDg numben picked Thursday were 611, 037, and 4512.
The lottery reported eamlngs of
$44,224 ou the daUy game.
Tbe earofDgs came on sales of
~,995, whlle holden of wiDDlDg
tickets are euliUed to share a total of
$500,771, lottery officials said.

either of the major two political par·
ties.
State attorney general deputy
chief counsel Joel Taylor argued
Thursday there is no basis for that
argument and said ~derson has no
right to change affiltaUons 10 the
midst of the race just to ''use the
ballot to continue intra-party
• ."
f euds
.
In April, Duncan said, Anderson
faced the situation when he knew be
was not going to be his party'S
nominee. "One could argue he didn't
falter, but that be expected his campaign to prosper.'' the judge said.
Taylor said there was no indication of that belief in any of the
legal briefs filed on Anderson's
behalf.
" Maybe we should get him In here .
and ask him," Duncan said.·
Lawyers for the state said the
March 20 deadline, which ill a1Bo the
final filing day for candidates
wishing to run in the Republican IUid
Democratic primaries, starts aD
candidates off on an equal basis.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="154">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2744">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48494">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48493">
              <text>June 26, 1980</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1327">
      <name>barrett</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
