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....

e
.bv Dick Cavalli

WINTHROP
I'VE t%/1 MY WeDOINGr'
AL-L. PL.ANNI='D ClWT,

tM ~IN~ TOHA'¥6 A 81~
CHURP-1 WEDDING-,

WIYl-1 AL..L.. THE ~IMMINI!:f6.

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6WANt&lt;IE5T f-JOTEL IN TOI./Jl"-.l.

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NO. 54

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POMEROY-MIDDL[PORT, OHIO

MONDAY. JUNE 30, 1980

FIFTEFN CENTS

Frog event
led interest
The frog led the way in interest
at the 16th annual Big Bend
Regatta staged over the weekend
in Pomeroy. ·
One of the largest crowds since
frog eventa began was on hand
Saturday evening for the frog
jumping and frog racing contesta.
Sunday evening a dinner was
held at Royal Oak Park to honor
past and honorary grand
croakers and a special guest was
Columbus Mayor Tom Moody.
Storms threatened Saturday
evening but held off long enough
for major eventa tO be staged
without any interruptions.
Rains threatened Sunday ,
however, brief sprinkles did not
interfere and Heritage Sunday
held by the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society went off
well. Aband from Springfield entertained during the !lfternoon
and other highlighta of the well
received event included a film on
Meigs County History shown in
the mini theater, a display of old

&lt;

THEN I'LL HAVE; A FABU!..OU5
RECEPTION AT THE

VOL. 31

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fashioned clothes, a music center
of old instrumenta and music and
an exhibit of crafta .
The Flying W Amusement Co.
operated over the weekend on
grounds behind the Pomeroy First Baptist Church and the upper
parking lot in Pomeroy was filled
with various concessions.
The first cake show staged in
conjunction with the Regatta at
St. Paul Luther Church was successful with some attractive en·
tries and the art show held at the
Pomeroy Library saw many entries with cash prizes presented
winners in both frog theme art
and non-frog theme art.
Kathy Quivey, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. James Quivey, was
named 1980 Regatta Queen and
she will represent the event at
various festivals around Ohio
over the next year.
Rounding at the Regatta eventa
were various entertainment
groups appearing on the stage of
the upper parking lot.

HONORARY GRAND CROAKERS- Sworn in as grana croackers at
the annual frog jump were 1-r, Dan Smith, Jim Carnahan, Sheriff James

Proffitt, Danny Bown\an, Andy Dollllelly, Mike Wingrove, Joe Audris,
Gary Paschen, and Roger Kessler.

Killer .heat wave blistering Southwest
Rate increase sought
As expected, Ohio Power Co.
today asked the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio for a rate increase of about eight percent.
Public notice of the company's
intent to seek the increase had
been given last March. No increase is likely to take effect
before April of next year.
If fully approved, the $55
million increase would raise the
typical residential customer's
bill by about a dime a day ,
Charles A. Heller, Ohio Power
Presldeut, said the small boost is

needed cto counter inflation,
which recently has been running
at a rate almost double the increase being sought.
Heller said the increase also
would allow the company to
carr}' out maintenance work
which has been delayed due to a
lack of funds.
Even after the increase, Heller
observed, Ohio Power's rates
would remain among the lowest
in the state, and well below the
national average.

ByC.W. MlRANKER
Associated Press Writer
Aweeklong killer heat wave is still
blistering the Southwest, decimating
chicken farms and shriveling
peaches, straining air conditioners
and aggravating fires on tens of
thousands of acres in the Colorado
Rockies and Arizona.
Up to 42 deaths have been blamed
on the triple-digit temperatures.
The heat killed miliions of
chickens at Arkansas poultry farms,
and farmers were predicting losses
as high as $5 million. Dairy cattle in
Wichita County, Texas, reportedly
were giving less milk.
Peaches dried on the trees in
Texas, and as the sun scorched

activities end on sweet note
~THE

f..

LOOKS
LITTLE

THE UNSTRUN&amp;

HERO.'

UNSf~UNGl

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By KaUe Crow
Frog eventa ended on a sweet note
with a dinner at Royal Oak: Park
Sunday evening.
Approximately 150 guests at·
tended the first reunion of grand and
honorary grand croakers. The event
was sponsored by Meigs Ja)rcees,
Fred Crow and Fanners Banlt and
Savings.
Guesta were honored with the appearance of Columbus Mayor Tom
Moody and his wife, Jean.
Fred Crow, the first grand
croaker, stated" it is nice to see good
old friends of frogs."
·

Crow also remarked that this was
the 13th y~r for grand and honorary
grand croakers. He introduced Ed
Slater, thjs year's grand croaker.
Joe Struble introduced Mayor
Tom Moody who was given a standing ovation. Struble and Moody
have been friends for the past 30
years, having attended Ohio State
University and worked together
.
during their school years.
Moody, leader in the World Con·
ference of Mayors, just returned
from Switzerland. He gave an informative and humorus talk.
A barbecue chicken dinner was

Weather forecast
Clear tonight and sunny Tuesday. Highs Tuesday in the mid~.
Lows tonight in the upper 50s. Chance of rain near zero percent tonight
and 10 percent Tuesday. Winds west to northwest 111-1~ mph tonight.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Wednesday through Fniday: A chance of showers or thunderstorms Wednesday and Friday. Fair Thursday. Highs near 80 nor·
th to upper 8Qs south. Lows in the 50s.

YS I'M ATAK~·CHARQE
0~ TS ~FT TO SOW!"

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' MY ,CWm, MA'AMII'M fROM R~NT·A·WITNESS, INC,J"
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prepared by George Harris, Paul
Eich, Danny Crow, Roger Morgan,
and Virgil (Bo) Brown.
A frog derby was held with
honorary grand croakers participating. Winners of the derby
were George Strode, sportswriter
for the Associated Press, first place,
Barbara Chapman, second place
and Joe Murray, third.
Music was provided by Armand
Turley at the organ.
At the annual frog jtunp a huge
crowd was in attendance. Winners of
the frog jump in the senior division,
first, second and third place respectively were Bob Painter, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, Joyce Moore, Torch, Ed
Hetzer, Belpre, and Vickie Robinson, McConnelsville.
Winners in the junior division, fir·
st, second and third place srespectively were Scott Frederick, Racine,
Stacy Bowman, West Carroltor., and
Tara Hetzer, Belpre.
The aMual frog jump and derby
was sponsored by the Meigs County
Jaycees,

pastureland, some fanners were
rushing to cut hay early.
More than 25,000 acres were
blazing in Arizona brush fires, and
firefighters from Oregon, California
and Montana joined forces in
Colorado to battle uncontrolled fires
over9,600acres.

Kansas had a score of brush fires
over the weekend and fire officials
were pleading with people to forgo
Fourth of July fireworks after a long
dry spell and seven straight days of
!()()-plus temperatures.
In Texas, temperatores soared to
new records across the sun-baked
state. Wichita Falls's 1!2-degree
reading shattered a 56-year-old
record by six degrees. The mercury
soared to 106 degrees at the Dallas-

Patrol cites
two drivers
Two drivers were cited following
two weekend accidenta investigated
by the Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol.
Officers were called to the scene of
a two-vehicle accident on SR 7, at
milepost 28, at 2:06 a.m. Saturday.
The patrol reports a north bound
auto, which had stopped along the
birm, operated by Janet M. Ambrose, 21, Pomeroy, pulled onto the
roadway into the path of a north
bound vehicle driven by Nicky C.
Smith, 22, Rio Grande.
Ambrose was cited on a charge of
OWl. There was moderate damage
to the vehicles.
The patrol investigated a twovehicle mishap on SR 180, at CR 41,
Sunday at 4 p.m.
Officers report a north bound auto
operated by Ruth M. Miller, 67,
Gallipolis, had stopped in traffic. A
vehicle driven by Gary M. Mount,
16, Bidwell, failed to stop and struck
the Miller auto in the rear.
Mount was cited on a charge of
failure to maintain an assured clear
distance. Both vehicles incurred
slight damage .

Fort Worth Regional Airport, 100 at
electric-free-lor-au " but would work
El Paso, 104 in Lubbock and Abilene
out special payment plans.
and 103 in Waco.
In Wichita County, sizzling temHeat stroke has claimed six vic·
peratures were wilting crops in the
tims, Texas medical examiners say, , field. "Rain and irrigation is the
and the deaths of 28 other people
only thing that will save us now,"
may be related to the heat.
said county agent Don Decker.
In the Texas heat wave of July
"Fruit crops are severely damaged
1978, 24 people died of heat-related
and peaches especially are turning
causes.
into little knota."
In Arkansas and Oklahoma, at
In Arkansas, more than 2.2 million
least four people died in each state
broilers and 185,000 breeder hens
over the weekend because of the had died, and as many as 5 million
heat.
breeders and 500,000 hens could sucThe hellish temperatures pose the cumb, said Don Allen, executive
greatest threat to the elderly and vice president of the Arkansa
poor, health officials lj&amp;y. But in Poultry Federation.
Dallas County, a 6-month-old child
In Oklahoma, where weekend
was among those who fell victim to temperatures climbed as high as 111
the heat.
degrees, the concrete-slab roadway
Texans were urged to stay out of on a portion of Interstate 40 "blew
the blazing sun and keep their air up" as searing temperatures caused
conditioners or fans going. And it to expand. And a motor home bur·
Dallas Power &amp; Light Co. said st into flames when loa-degree heat
people who need air conditioning to ignited propane from a storage tank
stay heslthy should not turn off the beneath the vehicle. The two
cooling unita to save on electric bills. Wichita, Kan., families inside
Spokeswoman Joan Hunter said the escaped uninjured.
company wasn't encouraging "an
...,.

Strikes threaten
copper industry
By The Associated Press
As a walkout by doctors at Boston

City Hospital entered ita sixth day ,
nurses threatened to join them, and
municipal workers in New York and
Detroit were at an impasse in
negotiations just hours before their
contracts were due to expire.
Contract talks between top copper
producers and a coalition of unions
collapsed Sunday and a nationwide
strike appears likely, union officials
said.
The country's 39,000 copper
workers have struck for the past five
three-year contracta, and have
authorized another walkout when

• • YOU'VE DONE BETTER TH~ T~AT, HAROLD,
~ TOS~ED SAL,ADI"

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I

OFF AND RUNNING- One of the many derby
races that was held at the annual frog: jump held at

Marauder Stadium Saturday. Winner of the derby race
was "P,arts Plus" o·Niled byG&amp;J Auto Parts.

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COLUMBUS MAYOR ATENDS REUNION Colwnbus Mayor and Mrs. Tom Moody attended the
first reunion of grand and hono.rary grand croakers

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'current pacta begin to expire at midnight tonight.
Copper unions are demanding a
total pay-and-benefit increase of
about 95 centa hourly over three
years. Workers make an average
$10.23 an hour now.
Leaders of eight New York unions ,
comprising police, firefighters,
sanitation workers and prison employees, broke off contract talks
with the city this morning, less than
24 hours before contracts expire at
midnight.
A meeting of the unionil' ~em­
bership, totaling 44,000 people, was .
to be held tonight.

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3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Munday, June 30, 1980

r
2- The Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, June 30,

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Opinions &amp;
Comments

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Summer ·league results
Recent action in the Meigs-Mason
pony league saw the Pomeroy
Royals bombard New Haven 1&amp;-3.
Pomeroy now owns a perfect 8-0
slate. Randy Stewart, who relieved
Scott Harrison, was the winner with
11 strikeouts and six walks.
Pomeroy plated 11 runs in the first
inning before being retired. The
game was called after • .,. innings
due to the league's 12 run rule.
Mike Hawk had a double and two
singles, Shawn Gilmore two triples,
Mark Boyd a double, singles by
Roger Kovalchik, Randy Stewart,
Rhett Milhoan, and Nicky Riggs.
Losing pitcher Brad Layne was
relieved by Spradling, combining for
three strikeouts and six walks.
, , Weaver collected two singles for
NewHaven.

.Of parties
and platforms
Over the next few weeks, both major partie::. will be
hammering out their platforms for the 1980 campaigft.
Many serious reports will be published and broadcast on
their deliberations, indicating that one candidate or
another or one power group or another has made a major
conce~ion on some important issue.
.
These reports will tend to support the idea that platforms are made up of binding obligations that must be
chiseled oh-so carefully into stone. In fact, party platfonps
are nothing more than transitory political documents that
promise as much as possible to many as possible.
Wh!-ch is th~ whol_e point. The, stories coming o~t of t~e
draftmg sess10ns w1ll make the platforms seem like bmding obligations on the party that is victorious in November. Instead, they should be viewed in about the same light
as the promises of an ardent suitor in a singles bar m
minutes before closing.
.

Does that include
the sales tax?

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And now for something completely different on the subject of dollars.
Canada supposedly exists in some concern of eventually
being absorbed by the United States. So a Toronto resident
has come up with a novel suggestion for turning that concern to the profit of Canadians.
He is one Ben Pich, appropriately a real estate broker.
According to a recent brief in the Wall Street Journal, he
proposes nothing less than selling Canada outright to the
United States. For $15.6 trillion. Which, he figures, split
among all Canadians 18 and older would work out to $1
million each.
There's a precedent on the American side; he observes,
since Manhattan Island, the Louisiana Territory and
Alaska, among the more notable examples, were all
acquired by purchase.
Canada, considering what's happended to the dollar since those transactions and even at the multi-trillion
proposed price tag, would probably be the cheapest deal in
real terms of all.

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Letter to the editor
Upset resident
June 23, 1980
Middleport, Ohio

Mr. Editor:
Jime 23 Sentinel had a notice
"Mayor requests no dirt piles along
curb." (Middleport).
What are you supposed to do with
the broken beer botues, soft drink
cups, cans and dirty pampers left
over from night before plus leaves
and dirt (all this Is town's dirt) . Sit
on pOI'ch and look at it?
Surely you don't expect the
property owner to pick it up and haul
It away.
The city streets look bad enough
with Junk cars and trash!

Gripe No. II.
There is a sidewalk on one of our
main streets so cluttered you are
required to run risk of getting hit for
walking out in main street.
On rainy days, it's mud, in fair
weather it's four or five bicycles
plus water pools from their swimming pool.
It seems to me this would draw the
attention of some of the town of.
ficials as well as a pile of dirt swept
and piled neaUy which you don 'I
have to walk through.
You gag at a gnat and swallow a
camel. - Name withheld on request.
P.S. Bicycles are a common thing
all over our sidewalks and streets
and could cause some one a serious
fall .

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"I hate to see it happen -

the amateurs will ruin our profession."

St. Helens' fallout: millions in insurance
ByRobertJ. Wagmao
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Long
after the volcanic ash from the
Mount St. Helens eruptions is cleaned up, fallout will likely remain in
the form of hundreds of milions - if
not billions - of dollars in insurance
claims.
Stale and federal officials are just
starting to aases:; the estent of the
damage and insurance companies
are just starting to process wluit is
sure to become a flood of claims.
While slate officials are hopeful that
all claims will be settled quickly,
they concede that thousands of
lawsuits may eventually be filed
against insurers.
The man in the middle is Richard
Marquardt, insurance commis·
sioner for the state of Washington. In
a recent telephone interview from
his Olympia office; Marquardt was .
optimistic that the insurers will set·
tie claii)Js quickly and fairly.
"We have been meeting abnost
daily with the big insurers," he said.
"The feelil)g I get is that in probably
80 percent of the claims under either
auto or homeowner poUcles for the
initial incident, the insurance companies will prompUy pay. The other
20 percent will be those cases wb!lre
the claimant will have to prove that
the damage was caused by Mount St.
Helens. At a time like this, insurance

companies are plagued by phony
claims."
Many more problems would arise
had not the state's standard
homeowner policy been rewritten
four years ago; among the changes
was the inclusion of coverage for
~olcanic activity. Since homeowner
policies are usually renewed every
year or two, most of them now cover
volcano damage.

than homeowner and ·auto. For inbecause the ash could hariil enimes,1
.stance, farmers in eastern
is it then an accident if they 'drive
Washington have suffered extensive . and harm their engines?"
crop damage. Their crops are in- , . But Marquardt thinks moSt insured against loss from frost and : surance companies will be generous
flood. But what about crop loss from
in granting benefits - if for no other
volCanic ash?
. reason that competitive pressure · ·
Many Washington companies · within the industry.
have business • interruption in"Insurance is amost competitive
surance. But often these policies
business," he points out. "U one
have narrow restrictions on the excompany pays off Mount St. Helens
claims and another doesn't what do '
you think is going to happen to that
company when it comes time to
renew its policy holders? For all intents and purposes, if one pays they
all will."
1

Today's commentary

"The real problem," Marquardt · · tent of coverage. Most say nothing .
continued, " is going to be caused by
about volcanos. Will insurers pay on
the fact that this volcanic activity is
these policies?
continui/lg. The first major blow-up :
The insurance industry's side Is
was cl1!9rll! an 'explosion' within the
voiced by Donald ·y ocom, a claims
meaning'
Ol msurance
policies. But ' vice president for Safco, a major
,I
,
in these later and continuing inunderwriter in the Northwest. In a .
cidents, which are technically fur· j ' recent interview, he asked: "How
.!her explosions and which are 'ven·
far does liability elltend? There
lting'? It well may be that an auto
were no shock waves in Spokane,
damaged by dust from the continued
and the eastern part of the slate Is
venting is not covered unde rmost
normally windy and dusty. So at
standard policies. There are a lot of
what point does the ash become rior- '
gray areas tliat well may end up as
mal dust?"
court tests.' '
He also raised the question of
There is mr•e potential for conasswnption of risk: "U drivers '
flict over types of insurance other . recognize they shouldn~ drive :

NEW YORK (AP) - Amidst the ·are guessing, will be better.
stock and bond markets. The nse in
wailing that accompanies some of
savings lowers interest rates."
Aubrey Zaffuto, economist at
the worst economic news in years, Schroder Naess &gt; Thomas, com·
John Wright, whose Wright In-;
you can hear the roar of the bulls on ments that the high expectations
vestors' Service endorses a con·Wall Street.
servative point of view, now recom-'
result in part from the reactions of
Recessions, the bulls say, are a businessmen and consumers during
mends a fully invested position in
time for looking up, a time to think of a recession.
equities "in antl~ipation of a higher
the future, a time for investing.
level of stock prices by yearend.
"For those who are not badly imForget the present, the bulls say "During the last six recessions,"
pacted, either by facing layoffs or
there's profit in the future.
Wright
comments, "the Standard :._
sharply reduced demand, it is a
"Incongruous as it may seem the period of saving.
Poor's 500 avefllie bottomed at a
market has repeatedly posted large
point '"hich always occurrred well
'Both the consumer, who pulls In
gains during recessionary periods," his horns a bit, reduces borrowing
before the end of the recession, ·
a brokerage house economist remin- and increases his savings, and the
usually close to~ hallway point."
ds us. And, with unemployment corporate trasurer who tries to imSmart investors note that when
1rising, it takes reminding.
.
short-term interest rates peak a
prove his balance sheet, contribute
The explanation Isn't hard · to to a higher level of saving.
major marltet bottom may aliJo be'
grasp when you consider that su~
reached, a correlatiop that is hardly
"This increase in savings is
cesslullnvestors live way out in the usually associated with a dramatic . ,a colncldence. The two, in fact, are
future, using the present only as a rejuvenation of the . savings in-. . facet! of the same phenomenon.
reference point. And the f,uture, they stltutions and hence houaing, and the ·
High interest rates, for example,

·Reagan's tax cut: Carter call

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C 11101J} fi! A.Ino: ..

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"Arx;of'dlng to our projections, by 1987 EVERYBODY will be suing EVERYBODY ELSE."
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Another eru!ltion-caused p.:Oblem '
facing Washington state officlala ia
redrawing property lines, which are
usually defined in ' terms of ·
geographical landmarks. In an area .
of several hundred square miles,
many landmarks have simply ceu- l
edtoexist.
The shte and the property owners :
will likely have to resurvery the en- •
tire area and redraw the boundaries. '
~ith so many changes in major :
geographical features - for instance, some rivers have changed
course or disappeared completely boundary disputes could clog
Washington courts for years.

In Big Bend litue league action the
, ... New Haven Reds beat the Pomeroy
Pirates 4-1. Matt Thompson picked
up the win during the hard-fought
. . contest fanning 10 and walking only
two.
" Todd Cull urns suffered the loss for
the Pirates. Hitters for the winners
were J . Esterguard a triple, J .
Mueck, M. Thompson, J. Burris, K.
Vickers, and R. Vickers each a
single.
For Pomeroy, Huey Eason had a
• · double, while Rex Haggy and Rod
Harrison each had singles, accounting for the only Pirate hits.
v

Wlnnln&amp;,hurler and home run hit·
ter Jlil6y Wolfe helped propel
. S~ Hubbard's Greenhouse
Cbelter's ~ 19-2. Woife
fanned nine and· walked only three.
Besides his home run and single,
Barry McCoy singled and tripled,
Mike Chancey and John Riffle
singled twice, T. J. Robanna
dou~led, Mike Kloes, Doug Owens
singled.
Beeler suffered the loss with relief
oolp from Beaver. B. Beeler and J .
Mays singled, while D. Beaver slammed a triple for Chester.

·aver

in a make-up game Syracuse Hubbaird's Greenhouse again defeated
~ler's Chieftains this time by aS.
2score.
.
Syracuse raided its record to 111-4

Wall Street bulls roar in face of recession

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!&lt; •· In area Little League action
., Racine's Reds defeated the Tuppers
" Plains Tigers 12-2. Racine raised its
record to 11·2 while Tuppers Plains
dropped to a respectable 12-2.
Scott Wickline was the winning
pitcher for Racine. Ryan Oliver was
three for three with two doubles and
a aingle, Wickline a triple and two
singles, Brian Diehl a single and
double, and Jay Bostick a triple.
Kevin Barber was the losing pit·
cher for Tuppers Plains. il. Durst hit
a home run and double, and Eddie
Collins collected two aingles.

an election year, If tbii peoplem:&amp;ki!
WASillNGTON (AP)- Now that · tl.eagan has been campaigrung for
a
big
tax
cut
all
year,
with
Carter
their feelings known, the legislature
Ronald Reagan has anted up a $22
and
the
Democrats
accusing
him
of
J;eSpOnds," Reagan said. ·
billion election-year income tax cut
an
irresponsible
plan
·
But Democrats don't pass
advpcating
proposal,' it's a good bet President
that . would fuel inflation. "'The , ~tepublican tax cuta.
,
.
Carter will call - and perhaps raise
Reagan proposal, patterned on a •. . Reagan liaid · the economte ,
- the political hand.
plan advanced by conp-essional · silu!lllon 1a 'desperate, and the tax '
It also Is likely that the taxpayerRepublicans, is for·a 30 percent cut 1 cut llhould be apprOved to take effect'
voter won 't see any of the pol for a
In income tax rates over a three- ' the flrllt of nest year. "I am aying.i
long tiple.
year period. ·
to Congress, don't wait," be sald.j
That's the way tai cut poker
What he proposed Wednesday was
"Dolt now."
. I
usually is played in a presidential
one-third of that plan, along with
The Carter administration !11
,
campaign year:
business tax incentives to encourage
movillg toward a tax cut propoeal.
Four years a.go, · then-President
too, but the IlemQcraUc plan 1.1 tb
Gerald R. Ford advocated a $28 ,hiring and plant modernization.
Congressio,n al Republicans , iecOIIIIllendltnowanddoitlater. 1
billion income tax cut, while Carter
followed that up by annouilcing they
The president hu ruled Clllt a fu ·
tied tax reduction to tax reform and
said he wanted sharply lowered · will propose the tax cut as an amen- . cut this year, but admlnlllraUoa ofrates for middle and low income' dment to every money bill that I 'lclala are talking of a $211 billion &amp;o
comes up for the rest of the year.
125 billion reductloD in 19111.
families.
.
The three-year GOP tax cut plan i
"We've got to cut down fedenll
Ford lost too election and Carter
has been pcoposed before, but never
spending, which we will do befCJnF. -~
lost most of his· tax reform
with a relll chance of passage in·ll
conllider any tax cut," Carter iiAICI
, proposals. l'lut Congress approved
heavUy Democratic Congress. The 1 June 1. And be 118ld any redilcttoll
revised versiOns of two Carter tax
prospects are no better now.
. 1must be designed so as to av!lid
•cuts du.ring l1ls first tenn, the reduc·
!Lions totalin8 about $40 billion.
· . " I have faith that, particularly in • fueling inflation.

.

i!xpenses and alsO
drain money away from stockS lilto
bonds. When rates begin to decline
so do buainess expenses. And funds
1are released for investing In stocks.
The expl•nalion for lho6e who
dislike details Is that a recession
corrects bnbalances and creates the
mood for a new beginning. People
and COiliOflltions get their financial .
.houses in ordei- for a big push.
· in the Dj!W'perspective people are
less worried about the worst that can ·
befall them because, as Is often the 1
,case, they have met the worst and I'
thlly have survived, although often I,
1
:with w._ounds.
.
·

Today
in history,
- - ·-

'·

t

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• ·'

land daf of 19110. There are 1M dQI

left ifttbe year.

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Todl1's JqhUght in liiltory: In

1m, the British evacuated N.., J«- ·

sey in the ~ War, 1
fleeilll ICI'Illl staten llllild to their '
ltl CJIIIbold ID New Yart.
Ontbtadlte:
•
ID liM, the Iodlan tonltay - · ..~
ereated br 10aet ol ~-

tut year, ill8r ..... _...
witbout PlY.
tnetm
bepn calling f&lt;ir I reblm Ill wort in
response to the govawwt'' alz·
point plan to end their mtlwwlde

u....-.....

.mrtdown;

.

Tbought flit today: I belleft 1D the
dllclpline of silence - IIIII ean tdl
for hours about It--Georp BerUrd
Shaw p856-196e)

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---- ·-·w-•-

The Middleport Indians captured
a 1~ victory over the Pomeroy
Giants.
Rick Wise took to the mound for
Middleport picking up the win with
10 KO's. Wise had a home run and
double, Steve Crow a home run and
single, Eric Johnson a double and
Bingle, Jeff Hood two doubles, and
Ed Kitchen with two doubles. Scott
McKinley had two singles for the
winners.
For Pomeroy Rodney Roush suf·
fered the loss with relief from
Gerald Moore. Rodney Roush had
two singles, . Bryan Korn a double
and single, Scott Powell a double,
and Gerald Moore a Bingle.
In the. Senior Softball league
Forest Run defeated Dravo 111·11.
Tonja Salser was the winning pit·
cher for Forest Run. Traci Mearns
suffered the loss.
·
Forest Run unleashed a ~hit attack led by Tonja Salser with two
home runs, triple, and double, Terri
Wilson a home run, two doubles, a
single, Cindy · Thompson three
doubles and a single, Tammy Smith
two doubles and two singles, Jody
Grueser a double and three singles,
Julie Thoren four singles, Sonja Hill,
Brends Riffle, and Sara Diddle two
singles.
For Dravo Laren Wolfe had a
home run and two singles, Tina Hill
a triple, Linda O'Brien two doubles
and a single, Pam Milliron a double
and single, Debbie Michael three
singles, Miasy Cummins, Lori Warden, Mearns, and Michelle Johnson
each two singles.
Also in Senior league softball
Pomeroy glided by New Haven 14-4.
Kelly Rought was the winning pitcher. For the winners R. Buffington,
U.ri Pickett, Kelly Rought, and N.
Smith each had two singles apiece,
Beth Gloeckner a double, and S.
Jones, Andrea Riggs, and A. Hat·
field each with singles. B. Gordon
slammed two home runs for New
Haven while Pam Wamsley added a
home run. J. Clark had three singles
and D. Kimes a single. C. Hoffman
was the New Haven pitcher.
Pomeroy is now 4-3.

Trevino ·looking
for British Open

,add to buainess

Today is · MOnday, June 30, the

although it was reported the game
was played under protest by
Chester.
Todd Adams was the winning
hurler, although he picked up relief
from Mike Chancey.
The duo combined for 10 strikeouts
and only one walk. Mike Chancey
bang!)(! a home run, John Riffle a
double, and Mike Kloes, Jimmy
Wolfe, Doug Owens each had
singles.
T. Chrisman was the Chester
moundsman fanning six and walking
four. T. Chrisman also had three
singles, N. Chrisman a single, and C.
Carnahan a single.

MEMPIHS, Tenn. (AP) - Lee
Trevino, with his second golf tiUe of
the season safely tucked away, has
set his sights on the BritiBh Open.
"I'm looking forward to going into
the British Open, because I'm going
in a wtnner;" Trevino said after
scoring a one-stroke victory Sunday
in the Danny Thomas-Memphis
Classlc.
And well he may. The Open Is at
Mulrfield, m the east coast ·or
Scotland. The last time it was played
there, Trevino scored a one-stroke
victory over Jack Nicklaus.
He will go into the British - his
next start - with one of his more
succesaful American campaigns
well under way, his game in order,
his confidence high and the una bounded respect of his fellow pros.
"Lee is just as good as any player
in the wprld today," said Tom Pw't·
zer, who eventually finished sec&lt;ind
to Trevino's post-lightning rally
here. "l'gave him my best shot. It's
just unfortunate I caught him on the

;;i wroncweek."
:·
Leonard Thompflon, In the title
· .~ hunt earlier in the event, was even
'' : more out-going in his praise of the
.O.year-old veteran.
"He'' he greatest striker of the ·
ball I've ever~" 'nn•Jj180118111d.
1
' 1never saw (Bee) Hopi~, but Lee's
the beet of the nst of 'em. It he was a
c: great putter, a Nlcldaus-type putter,
· r.' ' you'd never even blive heard of Jack
,v. Nicklaua after Lee came oh the

,, • tour."
• Trevino joined the tourists in 198'7
"'"' and now hu collected 24 American
.:i~ tour titles. The victory here, secured
:;;. oo a last·round, 3-under-par 69 and a

272 total, 16 strokes under par on the
rain-soaked Colonial Country Club
course, enabled him to join the absent Tom Watson and Craig Stadler
as the only multiple winners of the
year.
He collected ~.000 from the total
purse of ~.ooo and immediately
donated $5,000 of it to St. Jude's
Children Hospital, the charitable
beneficiary of this event.
The big check pushed his winnings
for the year to $2115,743, the most he's

ENJOYING SEASON - The Meigs American Legion team, which
currently owns an impressive 12-2 won-loss record was rained out at
U.gan Saturday afternoon. No make-up dale has yet been announced .
Next scheduled game will be Saturday, July 5, against Athens at
Syracuse's King Field. The double-header is slated for 1 p.m. District
Tournament will begin Friday, July 18, in Athens. Tournament pairings
will be announced later this week. Team members are (left to right),

front row - Roger Kovalchik, Nick Leonard, Jr., John Beaver, Rogie
Gaul, Joe Bob Hemsley, Jeff Wayland, Phil King, Kent Wolfe, and Cliff
Kennedy. {lack row - Coach George Nesselroad, Greg Wigal, Tom
Owens, Jerry Fields, Kenny Brown, Art Foglestrom, Steve Litue, Bob
Foster, Randy Murray, Terry Wayland, and Coach Homer Smith. Absent
from picture were Coach Mike Nesselroad and scorekeeper Allen Stobart
who are both very active in the Legion program.

Borg seeks all-time record
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) Bjorn Borg faced Hungarian tennis
star Balasz Taroczy Monday in a 'bid
to set an all- lime Wbnbledon ,
record - 32 consecutive match victories.
The 24-year-old Swede began his
run when he won the first of his four
straight Wimbledon titles in 1976. He .
has been winning at Wimbledon ever
since.
When he defeated Rod Frawley of
Australia Saturday to reach the last
16, Borg equaled the record of 31 victories set by Rod Laver in 1970. ·
The second week of the tour·
nament began with a backlog of 10
matches, following days of rain.
Both the men's and women's singles
are down to the last 16, instead of the
quarterfinals which would be normal. The survivors have batUed
through on damp and trea~herous
grass courts.
"Maybe the courts will be harder
in the seCond week," said John
McEnroe, who is seeded to meet
Borg in mixt Saturday's final.
"I have not been mentally setued,
with all these stops and starts. I
know Wbnbledon Is considered the
great tournament, along with the
U.S. Open, but who wants to play
tennis in the wet? "
McEnroe faced Kevin Curren, 22,
South Mrica's sixth-ranked player,
who fought through the qualifying
competition to get into the tour-

nament.
Borg's run of 31 victories at Wimbledon in four years Is in fact unprecedented.
Laver's record was Spread over
almost a decade. He won the title in
1961 and 1962, was shut out of the
tournament as a professional for
five years, then came back to win
the crown twice more when tennis
went open in 1968. His run ended
with defeat by Britain's Roger
Taylor in the fourth round in 1970.
Willie Renshaw· won Wimbledon
six years running in the 1880's.
Laurie Docherty won the tiUe five
times in a row from 1902.
But in those days the defending
champion was required to play only
one match, in the challenge round
against the winn~r of the
preliminary tournament.
Jimmy Connors, the No.3 seed,
faced an awkward opponent MQnday
in Hank Pllster, whose booming service could do a lot of damage on the

players usually collide with each
other for the first time. But in the
difficult conditions only eight of the
16 seeds survive.
The only all·seed match. Monday
was between Vitas Gerulaitis, No.4,
and Wojtek Fibak of Poland, No.13.
One clash was between Brian Got·
tfried of the United States and Phil

Dent of Australia, both unseeded
giantkillers. Gottfried downed Stan
Smith, the 1972 champion, Saturday
and is the only one of the 16 survivors in the men 's singles to have
come through three rounds without
dropping a set.
Dent's victim was Victor Pecci,
the tall heavy·serving Paraguayan.

soft turf.

This is the round where seeded

won in any single season .
Puttzer, two shots back most of
the way, birdied the final hole for a
67 and second at 273. Jerry Pate and
49-year-old Miller Barber were next
at 275. Pate shot a 68 and Barber
llllltched par 72.
Barber and Trevino shared the
lead going iilto the last round and
·Barber quickly built a 2-stroke lead
while the ominous clouds rolled in
and thunder rumbled in the distance. Trevino, who was struck by light·
ning while playing in the 1975
Western Open, quickly sought
shelter woon the first bolt struck and
a 56-minute delay was called.
Mter the delay, Trevino birdied
three of the next four holes. When
Barber hit it In the water and made
double bogey on the 12th, Trevino
was in front to stay.
"They got to birdie to catch me,"
he said. "I ain't gonna give it to
'em."

SPECIALS!
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POLYESTER CORD
WHITEWALLS
Our Reg. 37.76
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Plus F.E.T. 1.62 Ea.
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-

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Wheel Balance · 36·Mo. Battery
Calcium-lead con·
structed. Fits most
U.S . cars , light
trucks. Save now.

�..

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3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Munday, June 30, 1980

r
2- The Datly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, June 30,

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Opinions &amp;
Comments

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Summer ·league results
Recent action in the Meigs-Mason
pony league saw the Pomeroy
Royals bombard New Haven 1&amp;-3.
Pomeroy now owns a perfect 8-0
slate. Randy Stewart, who relieved
Scott Harrison, was the winner with
11 strikeouts and six walks.
Pomeroy plated 11 runs in the first
inning before being retired. The
game was called after • .,. innings
due to the league's 12 run rule.
Mike Hawk had a double and two
singles, Shawn Gilmore two triples,
Mark Boyd a double, singles by
Roger Kovalchik, Randy Stewart,
Rhett Milhoan, and Nicky Riggs.
Losing pitcher Brad Layne was
relieved by Spradling, combining for
three strikeouts and six walks.
, , Weaver collected two singles for
NewHaven.

.Of parties
and platforms
Over the next few weeks, both major partie::. will be
hammering out their platforms for the 1980 campaigft.
Many serious reports will be published and broadcast on
their deliberations, indicating that one candidate or
another or one power group or another has made a major
conce~ion on some important issue.
.
These reports will tend to support the idea that platforms are made up of binding obligations that must be
chiseled oh-so carefully into stone. In fact, party platfonps
are nothing more than transitory political documents that
promise as much as possible to many as possible.
Wh!-ch is th~ whol_e point. The, stories coming o~t of t~e
draftmg sess10ns w1ll make the platforms seem like bmding obligations on the party that is victorious in November. Instead, they should be viewed in about the same light
as the promises of an ardent suitor in a singles bar m
minutes before closing.
.

Does that include
the sales tax?

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And now for something completely different on the subject of dollars.
Canada supposedly exists in some concern of eventually
being absorbed by the United States. So a Toronto resident
has come up with a novel suggestion for turning that concern to the profit of Canadians.
He is one Ben Pich, appropriately a real estate broker.
According to a recent brief in the Wall Street Journal, he
proposes nothing less than selling Canada outright to the
United States. For $15.6 trillion. Which, he figures, split
among all Canadians 18 and older would work out to $1
million each.
There's a precedent on the American side; he observes,
since Manhattan Island, the Louisiana Territory and
Alaska, among the more notable examples, were all
acquired by purchase.
Canada, considering what's happended to the dollar since those transactions and even at the multi-trillion
proposed price tag, would probably be the cheapest deal in
real terms of all.

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Letter to the editor
Upset resident
June 23, 1980
Middleport, Ohio

Mr. Editor:
Jime 23 Sentinel had a notice
"Mayor requests no dirt piles along
curb." (Middleport).
What are you supposed to do with
the broken beer botues, soft drink
cups, cans and dirty pampers left
over from night before plus leaves
and dirt (all this Is town's dirt) . Sit
on pOI'ch and look at it?
Surely you don't expect the
property owner to pick it up and haul
It away.
The city streets look bad enough
with Junk cars and trash!

Gripe No. II.
There is a sidewalk on one of our
main streets so cluttered you are
required to run risk of getting hit for
walking out in main street.
On rainy days, it's mud, in fair
weather it's four or five bicycles
plus water pools from their swimming pool.
It seems to me this would draw the
attention of some of the town of.
ficials as well as a pile of dirt swept
and piled neaUy which you don 'I
have to walk through.
You gag at a gnat and swallow a
camel. - Name withheld on request.
P.S. Bicycles are a common thing
all over our sidewalks and streets
and could cause some one a serious
fall .

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"I hate to see it happen -

the amateurs will ruin our profession."

St. Helens' fallout: millions in insurance
ByRobertJ. Wagmao
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Long
after the volcanic ash from the
Mount St. Helens eruptions is cleaned up, fallout will likely remain in
the form of hundreds of milions - if
not billions - of dollars in insurance
claims.
Stale and federal officials are just
starting to aases:; the estent of the
damage and insurance companies
are just starting to process wluit is
sure to become a flood of claims.
While slate officials are hopeful that
all claims will be settled quickly,
they concede that thousands of
lawsuits may eventually be filed
against insurers.
The man in the middle is Richard
Marquardt, insurance commis·
sioner for the state of Washington. In
a recent telephone interview from
his Olympia office; Marquardt was .
optimistic that the insurers will set·
tie claii)Js quickly and fairly.
"We have been meeting abnost
daily with the big insurers," he said.
"The feelil)g I get is that in probably
80 percent of the claims under either
auto or homeowner poUcles for the
initial incident, the insurance companies will prompUy pay. The other
20 percent will be those cases wb!lre
the claimant will have to prove that
the damage was caused by Mount St.
Helens. At a time like this, insurance

companies are plagued by phony
claims."
Many more problems would arise
had not the state's standard
homeowner policy been rewritten
four years ago; among the changes
was the inclusion of coverage for
~olcanic activity. Since homeowner
policies are usually renewed every
year or two, most of them now cover
volcano damage.

than homeowner and ·auto. For inbecause the ash could hariil enimes,1
.stance, farmers in eastern
is it then an accident if they 'drive
Washington have suffered extensive . and harm their engines?"
crop damage. Their crops are in- , . But Marquardt thinks moSt insured against loss from frost and : surance companies will be generous
flood. But what about crop loss from
in granting benefits - if for no other
volCanic ash?
. reason that competitive pressure · ·
Many Washington companies · within the industry.
have business • interruption in"Insurance is amost competitive
surance. But often these policies
business," he points out. "U one
have narrow restrictions on the excompany pays off Mount St. Helens
claims and another doesn't what do '
you think is going to happen to that
company when it comes time to
renew its policy holders? For all intents and purposes, if one pays they
all will."
1

Today's commentary

"The real problem," Marquardt · · tent of coverage. Most say nothing .
continued, " is going to be caused by
about volcanos. Will insurers pay on
the fact that this volcanic activity is
these policies?
continui/lg. The first major blow-up :
The insurance industry's side Is
was cl1!9rll! an 'explosion' within the
voiced by Donald ·y ocom, a claims
meaning'
Ol msurance
policies. But ' vice president for Safco, a major
,I
,
in these later and continuing inunderwriter in the Northwest. In a .
cidents, which are technically fur· j ' recent interview, he asked: "How
.!her explosions and which are 'ven·
far does liability elltend? There
lting'? It well may be that an auto
were no shock waves in Spokane,
damaged by dust from the continued
and the eastern part of the slate Is
venting is not covered unde rmost
normally windy and dusty. So at
standard policies. There are a lot of
what point does the ash become rior- '
gray areas tliat well may end up as
mal dust?"
court tests.' '
He also raised the question of
There is mr•e potential for conasswnption of risk: "U drivers '
flict over types of insurance other . recognize they shouldn~ drive :

NEW YORK (AP) - Amidst the ·are guessing, will be better.
stock and bond markets. The nse in
wailing that accompanies some of
savings lowers interest rates."
Aubrey Zaffuto, economist at
the worst economic news in years, Schroder Naess &gt; Thomas, com·
John Wright, whose Wright In-;
you can hear the roar of the bulls on ments that the high expectations
vestors' Service endorses a con·Wall Street.
servative point of view, now recom-'
result in part from the reactions of
Recessions, the bulls say, are a businessmen and consumers during
mends a fully invested position in
time for looking up, a time to think of a recession.
equities "in antl~ipation of a higher
the future, a time for investing.
level of stock prices by yearend.
"For those who are not badly imForget the present, the bulls say "During the last six recessions,"
pacted, either by facing layoffs or
there's profit in the future.
Wright
comments, "the Standard :._
sharply reduced demand, it is a
"Incongruous as it may seem the period of saving.
Poor's 500 avefllie bottomed at a
market has repeatedly posted large
point '"hich always occurrred well
'Both the consumer, who pulls In
gains during recessionary periods," his horns a bit, reduces borrowing
before the end of the recession, ·
a brokerage house economist remin- and increases his savings, and the
usually close to~ hallway point."
ds us. And, with unemployment corporate trasurer who tries to imSmart investors note that when
1rising, it takes reminding.
.
short-term interest rates peak a
prove his balance sheet, contribute
The explanation Isn't hard · to to a higher level of saving.
major marltet bottom may aliJo be'
grasp when you consider that su~
reached, a correlatiop that is hardly
"This increase in savings is
cesslullnvestors live way out in the usually associated with a dramatic . ,a colncldence. The two, in fact, are
future, using the present only as a rejuvenation of the . savings in-. . facet! of the same phenomenon.
reference point. And the f,uture, they stltutions and hence houaing, and the ·
High interest rates, for example,

·Reagan's tax cut: Carter call

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C 11101J} fi! A.Ino: ..

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"Arx;of'dlng to our projections, by 1987 EVERYBODY will be suing EVERYBODY ELSE."
"

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Another eru!ltion-caused p.:Oblem '
facing Washington state officlala ia
redrawing property lines, which are
usually defined in ' terms of ·
geographical landmarks. In an area .
of several hundred square miles,
many landmarks have simply ceu- l
edtoexist.
The shte and the property owners :
will likely have to resurvery the en- •
tire area and redraw the boundaries. '
~ith so many changes in major :
geographical features - for instance, some rivers have changed
course or disappeared completely boundary disputes could clog
Washington courts for years.

In Big Bend litue league action the
, ... New Haven Reds beat the Pomeroy
Pirates 4-1. Matt Thompson picked
up the win during the hard-fought
. . contest fanning 10 and walking only
two.
" Todd Cull urns suffered the loss for
the Pirates. Hitters for the winners
were J . Esterguard a triple, J .
Mueck, M. Thompson, J. Burris, K.
Vickers, and R. Vickers each a
single.
For Pomeroy, Huey Eason had a
• · double, while Rex Haggy and Rod
Harrison each had singles, accounting for the only Pirate hits.
v

Wlnnln&amp;,hurler and home run hit·
ter Jlil6y Wolfe helped propel
. S~ Hubbard's Greenhouse
Cbelter's ~ 19-2. Woife
fanned nine and· walked only three.
Besides his home run and single,
Barry McCoy singled and tripled,
Mike Chancey and John Riffle
singled twice, T. J. Robanna
dou~led, Mike Kloes, Doug Owens
singled.
Beeler suffered the loss with relief
oolp from Beaver. B. Beeler and J .
Mays singled, while D. Beaver slammed a triple for Chester.

·aver

in a make-up game Syracuse Hubbaird's Greenhouse again defeated
~ler's Chieftains this time by aS.
2score.
.
Syracuse raided its record to 111-4

Wall Street bulls roar in face of recession

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!&lt; •· In area Little League action
., Racine's Reds defeated the Tuppers
" Plains Tigers 12-2. Racine raised its
record to 11·2 while Tuppers Plains
dropped to a respectable 12-2.
Scott Wickline was the winning
pitcher for Racine. Ryan Oliver was
three for three with two doubles and
a aingle, Wickline a triple and two
singles, Brian Diehl a single and
double, and Jay Bostick a triple.
Kevin Barber was the losing pit·
cher for Tuppers Plains. il. Durst hit
a home run and double, and Eddie
Collins collected two aingles.

an election year, If tbii peoplem:&amp;ki!
WASillNGTON (AP)- Now that · tl.eagan has been campaigrung for
a
big
tax
cut
all
year,
with
Carter
their feelings known, the legislature
Ronald Reagan has anted up a $22
and
the
Democrats
accusing
him
of
J;eSpOnds," Reagan said. ·
billion election-year income tax cut
an
irresponsible
plan
·
But Democrats don't pass
advpcating
proposal,' it's a good bet President
that . would fuel inflation. "'The , ~tepublican tax cuta.
,
.
Carter will call - and perhaps raise
Reagan proposal, patterned on a •. . Reagan liaid · the economte ,
- the political hand.
plan advanced by conp-essional · silu!lllon 1a 'desperate, and the tax '
It also Is likely that the taxpayerRepublicans, is for·a 30 percent cut 1 cut llhould be apprOved to take effect'
voter won 't see any of the pol for a
In income tax rates over a three- ' the flrllt of nest year. "I am aying.i
long tiple.
year period. ·
to Congress, don't wait," be sald.j
That's the way tai cut poker
What he proposed Wednesday was
"Dolt now."
. I
usually is played in a presidential
one-third of that plan, along with
The Carter administration !11
,
campaign year:
business tax incentives to encourage
movillg toward a tax cut propoeal.
Four years a.go, · then-President
too, but the IlemQcraUc plan 1.1 tb
Gerald R. Ford advocated a $28 ,hiring and plant modernization.
Congressio,n al Republicans , iecOIIIIllendltnowanddoitlater. 1
billion income tax cut, while Carter
followed that up by annouilcing they
The president hu ruled Clllt a fu ·
tied tax reduction to tax reform and
said he wanted sharply lowered · will propose the tax cut as an amen- . cut this year, but admlnlllraUoa ofrates for middle and low income' dment to every money bill that I 'lclala are talking of a $211 billion &amp;o
comes up for the rest of the year.
125 billion reductloD in 19111.
families.
.
The three-year GOP tax cut plan i
"We've got to cut down fedenll
Ford lost too election and Carter
has been pcoposed before, but never
spending, which we will do befCJnF. -~
lost most of his· tax reform
with a relll chance of passage in·ll
conllider any tax cut," Carter iiAICI
, proposals. l'lut Congress approved
heavUy Democratic Congress. The 1 June 1. And be 118ld any redilcttoll
revised versiOns of two Carter tax
prospects are no better now.
. 1must be designed so as to av!lid
•cuts du.ring l1ls first tenn, the reduc·
!Lions totalin8 about $40 billion.
· . " I have faith that, particularly in • fueling inflation.

.

i!xpenses and alsO
drain money away from stockS lilto
bonds. When rates begin to decline
so do buainess expenses. And funds
1are released for investing In stocks.
The expl•nalion for lho6e who
dislike details Is that a recession
corrects bnbalances and creates the
mood for a new beginning. People
and COiliOflltions get their financial .
.houses in ordei- for a big push.
· in the Dj!W'perspective people are
less worried about the worst that can ·
befall them because, as Is often the 1
,case, they have met the worst and I'
thlly have survived, although often I,
1
:with w._ounds.
.
·

Today
in history,
- - ·-

'·

t

""'
• ·'

land daf of 19110. There are 1M dQI

left ifttbe year.

..

•

Todl1's JqhUght in liiltory: In

1m, the British evacuated N.., J«- ·

sey in the ~ War, 1
fleeilll ICI'Illl staten llllild to their '
ltl CJIIIbold ID New Yart.
Ontbtadlte:
•
ID liM, the Iodlan tonltay - · ..~
ereated br 10aet ol ~-

tut year, ill8r ..... _...
witbout PlY.
tnetm
bepn calling f&lt;ir I reblm Ill wort in
response to the govawwt'' alz·
point plan to end their mtlwwlde

u....-.....

.mrtdown;

.

Tbought flit today: I belleft 1D the
dllclpline of silence - IIIII ean tdl
for hours about It--Georp BerUrd
Shaw p856-196e)

••

'

.

I

' .,- ·-11
---- ·-·w-•-

The Middleport Indians captured
a 1~ victory over the Pomeroy
Giants.
Rick Wise took to the mound for
Middleport picking up the win with
10 KO's. Wise had a home run and
double, Steve Crow a home run and
single, Eric Johnson a double and
Bingle, Jeff Hood two doubles, and
Ed Kitchen with two doubles. Scott
McKinley had two singles for the
winners.
For Pomeroy Rodney Roush suf·
fered the loss with relief from
Gerald Moore. Rodney Roush had
two singles, . Bryan Korn a double
and single, Scott Powell a double,
and Gerald Moore a Bingle.
In the. Senior Softball league
Forest Run defeated Dravo 111·11.
Tonja Salser was the winning pit·
cher for Forest Run. Traci Mearns
suffered the loss.
·
Forest Run unleashed a ~hit attack led by Tonja Salser with two
home runs, triple, and double, Terri
Wilson a home run, two doubles, a
single, Cindy · Thompson three
doubles and a single, Tammy Smith
two doubles and two singles, Jody
Grueser a double and three singles,
Julie Thoren four singles, Sonja Hill,
Brends Riffle, and Sara Diddle two
singles.
For Dravo Laren Wolfe had a
home run and two singles, Tina Hill
a triple, Linda O'Brien two doubles
and a single, Pam Milliron a double
and single, Debbie Michael three
singles, Miasy Cummins, Lori Warden, Mearns, and Michelle Johnson
each two singles.
Also in Senior league softball
Pomeroy glided by New Haven 14-4.
Kelly Rought was the winning pitcher. For the winners R. Buffington,
U.ri Pickett, Kelly Rought, and N.
Smith each had two singles apiece,
Beth Gloeckner a double, and S.
Jones, Andrea Riggs, and A. Hat·
field each with singles. B. Gordon
slammed two home runs for New
Haven while Pam Wamsley added a
home run. J. Clark had three singles
and D. Kimes a single. C. Hoffman
was the New Haven pitcher.
Pomeroy is now 4-3.

Trevino ·looking
for British Open

,add to buainess

Today is · MOnday, June 30, the

although it was reported the game
was played under protest by
Chester.
Todd Adams was the winning
hurler, although he picked up relief
from Mike Chancey.
The duo combined for 10 strikeouts
and only one walk. Mike Chancey
bang!)(! a home run, John Riffle a
double, and Mike Kloes, Jimmy
Wolfe, Doug Owens each had
singles.
T. Chrisman was the Chester
moundsman fanning six and walking
four. T. Chrisman also had three
singles, N. Chrisman a single, and C.
Carnahan a single.

MEMPIHS, Tenn. (AP) - Lee
Trevino, with his second golf tiUe of
the season safely tucked away, has
set his sights on the BritiBh Open.
"I'm looking forward to going into
the British Open, because I'm going
in a wtnner;" Trevino said after
scoring a one-stroke victory Sunday
in the Danny Thomas-Memphis
Classlc.
And well he may. The Open Is at
Mulrfield, m the east coast ·or
Scotland. The last time it was played
there, Trevino scored a one-stroke
victory over Jack Nicklaus.
He will go into the British - his
next start - with one of his more
succesaful American campaigns
well under way, his game in order,
his confidence high and the una bounded respect of his fellow pros.
"Lee is just as good as any player
in the wprld today," said Tom Pw't·
zer, who eventually finished sec&lt;ind
to Trevino's post-lightning rally
here. "l'gave him my best shot. It's
just unfortunate I caught him on the

;;i wroncweek."
:·
Leonard Thompflon, In the title
· .~ hunt earlier in the event, was even
'' : more out-going in his praise of the
.O.year-old veteran.
"He'' he greatest striker of the ·
ball I've ever~" 'nn•Jj180118111d.
1
' 1never saw (Bee) Hopi~, but Lee's
the beet of the nst of 'em. It he was a
c: great putter, a Nlcldaus-type putter,
· r.' ' you'd never even blive heard of Jack
,v. Nicklaua after Lee came oh the

,, • tour."
• Trevino joined the tourists in 198'7
"'"' and now hu collected 24 American
.:i~ tour titles. The victory here, secured
:;;. oo a last·round, 3-under-par 69 and a

272 total, 16 strokes under par on the
rain-soaked Colonial Country Club
course, enabled him to join the absent Tom Watson and Craig Stadler
as the only multiple winners of the
year.
He collected ~.000 from the total
purse of ~.ooo and immediately
donated $5,000 of it to St. Jude's
Children Hospital, the charitable
beneficiary of this event.
The big check pushed his winnings
for the year to $2115,743, the most he's

ENJOYING SEASON - The Meigs American Legion team, which
currently owns an impressive 12-2 won-loss record was rained out at
U.gan Saturday afternoon. No make-up dale has yet been announced .
Next scheduled game will be Saturday, July 5, against Athens at
Syracuse's King Field. The double-header is slated for 1 p.m. District
Tournament will begin Friday, July 18, in Athens. Tournament pairings
will be announced later this week. Team members are (left to right),

front row - Roger Kovalchik, Nick Leonard, Jr., John Beaver, Rogie
Gaul, Joe Bob Hemsley, Jeff Wayland, Phil King, Kent Wolfe, and Cliff
Kennedy. {lack row - Coach George Nesselroad, Greg Wigal, Tom
Owens, Jerry Fields, Kenny Brown, Art Foglestrom, Steve Litue, Bob
Foster, Randy Murray, Terry Wayland, and Coach Homer Smith. Absent
from picture were Coach Mike Nesselroad and scorekeeper Allen Stobart
who are both very active in the Legion program.

Borg seeks all-time record
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) Bjorn Borg faced Hungarian tennis
star Balasz Taroczy Monday in a 'bid
to set an all- lime Wbnbledon ,
record - 32 consecutive match victories.
The 24-year-old Swede began his
run when he won the first of his four
straight Wimbledon titles in 1976. He .
has been winning at Wimbledon ever
since.
When he defeated Rod Frawley of
Australia Saturday to reach the last
16, Borg equaled the record of 31 victories set by Rod Laver in 1970. ·
The second week of the tour·
nament began with a backlog of 10
matches, following days of rain.
Both the men's and women's singles
are down to the last 16, instead of the
quarterfinals which would be normal. The survivors have batUed
through on damp and trea~herous
grass courts.
"Maybe the courts will be harder
in the seCond week," said John
McEnroe, who is seeded to meet
Borg in mixt Saturday's final.
"I have not been mentally setued,
with all these stops and starts. I
know Wbnbledon Is considered the
great tournament, along with the
U.S. Open, but who wants to play
tennis in the wet? "
McEnroe faced Kevin Curren, 22,
South Mrica's sixth-ranked player,
who fought through the qualifying
competition to get into the tour-

nament.
Borg's run of 31 victories at Wimbledon in four years Is in fact unprecedented.
Laver's record was Spread over
almost a decade. He won the title in
1961 and 1962, was shut out of the
tournament as a professional for
five years, then came back to win
the crown twice more when tennis
went open in 1968. His run ended
with defeat by Britain's Roger
Taylor in the fourth round in 1970.
Willie Renshaw· won Wimbledon
six years running in the 1880's.
Laurie Docherty won the tiUe five
times in a row from 1902.
But in those days the defending
champion was required to play only
one match, in the challenge round
against the winn~r of the
preliminary tournament.
Jimmy Connors, the No.3 seed,
faced an awkward opponent MQnday
in Hank Pllster, whose booming service could do a lot of damage on the

players usually collide with each
other for the first time. But in the
difficult conditions only eight of the
16 seeds survive.
The only all·seed match. Monday
was between Vitas Gerulaitis, No.4,
and Wojtek Fibak of Poland, No.13.
One clash was between Brian Got·
tfried of the United States and Phil

Dent of Australia, both unseeded
giantkillers. Gottfried downed Stan
Smith, the 1972 champion, Saturday
and is the only one of the 16 survivors in the men 's singles to have
come through three rounds without
dropping a set.
Dent's victim was Victor Pecci,
the tall heavy·serving Paraguayan.

soft turf.

This is the round where seeded

won in any single season .
Puttzer, two shots back most of
the way, birdied the final hole for a
67 and second at 273. Jerry Pate and
49-year-old Miller Barber were next
at 275. Pate shot a 68 and Barber
llllltched par 72.
Barber and Trevino shared the
lead going iilto the last round and
·Barber quickly built a 2-stroke lead
while the ominous clouds rolled in
and thunder rumbled in the distance. Trevino, who was struck by light·
ning while playing in the 1975
Western Open, quickly sought
shelter woon the first bolt struck and
a 56-minute delay was called.
Mter the delay, Trevino birdied
three of the next four holes. When
Barber hit it In the water and made
double bogey on the 12th, Trevino
was in front to stay.
"They got to birdie to catch me,"
he said. "I ain't gonna give it to
'em."

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�"T The Daily Sentinel, Middlcport-Pumenoy, 0 ., Munday, Ju11e :W, 1980

&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, MiddleJiort-Pumeroy, 0., Monday, JulldO,l!lllO

Future looks bright
·for Chisox pitching
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Chicago White Sox are expected tc have a bright future
because of the pitchers they are
developing, but all those strong
young arms must look pretty good
right now to the Oakland A's.
The While Sox held the A's to 12
hits over the weekend in winning two
of three games, including consecutive~. four-hit victories Saturday night and Sunday.
."It's 'not easy to explain, but we
have do good arms," said White Sox
Manager Tony LaRussa. "We have
a whole staff that can throw. We're
just in a good groove now,
everybody's healthy and getting
their pitches over the plate. We have
that good combination of young starters and a veteran bullpen. "
Sunday's shutout was a combo job,
with lanky lefty Britt Burns getting
help from Mike Proly. Saturday's
four-hitter was shared by another
tall left-bander, Richard Wortham,
and ace reliever Ed Farmer, who
has 17 saves.
... We have some good young arms," said Proly. "They are going to
throw well, and with more and more
experience, they are going to be
super pitchers."
One of those strong arms belongs
to Burns, who ran his record to 9-5
and lowered his league-leading earned run average to 2.02. He did quite
well Sunday considering he had the
.flu and sinus trouble, allowing two
singles in five innings before Proly
gave up two singles the rest of the
way.
"I thought if I could get through
five, get a lead and get out with a
win, I was going to do it," Burns
&amp;aid. "Today was a struggle just to
get through two - so I'm niX
ashamed about having to fly after
five.' '
Despite the stingy hurling against

the A's, at least one Oakland player
was willing to say it was the bats
rather than the pitching that were
responsible for the lack of runs.
"I'm not going to say it's their
tough pitching," said A's outfielder
Dwayne Murphy, who got one of
their base hits. "I guess that when
you're going bad, you're going bad.
You just start to wonder and you
start to think too much instead
of just going out and playing the
way you've always played."
Chicago got all its runs in the fourth off Brian Kingman, 3-8, who
ironically pitched a complete game
despite allowing 12 hits.
Thad Bosley and Bruce Kirrun
singled, Greg Pryor doubled in a run
and Bob Molinaro singled in two
more, getting his first RBI since
June 1.
In other American League games
Sun 1, Toronto blank cd Detroit 2..{),
the New York Yankees beat
Cleveland 7-2, Milwaukee defeated
California :&gt;-2, Seattle downed Kansas City 7-2 and Minnesota beat
Texas 5-3 at night. Baltimore at
Boston was rained out.
Yankees 7, Indians 2
Cleveland lost the 23rd game of its
last Tl at Yankee Stadium as New
York got home runs from Jim Spencer, Joe Lefebvre and Brian Doyle,
all of which fell into the first few
rows of the friendly right field stands. The homers accounted for six
runs, but Cleveland Manager Dave
Garcia said only one of the drives
would have had a chance to go out of
Municipal Stadium in Cleveland.
"You've got to give them credit
for designing a club to fit their
park," Garcia said.
Losing pitcher Len Barker was not
so gracious about the homers, which
gave the Yankees 100 in 71 games, 44
games before they hit that many last
season.

'That short right field fence, that's
why they have so many homers," he
said.
Blue Jays 2, Tigers 0
Dave Stieb pitched a seven-hitter:
to end Detroit's nine-game winning
streak. The young Toronto right·
bander scattered seven singles for
his second shutout and eighth complete game of .the season. The Blue
Jays got their runs in the fifth inning
on an error by Detroit second
baseman Lou Whitaker and in. the
eighth on a wild pitch.
Brewers 5, Angels 2
Milwaukee used seven doubles, a
homer by Jim Gantner and Reggie
Cleveland's eight-hit complete game
to beat California. Cleveland, &amp;-2,
won his third straight start after
joining the starting rotation when
Jim Slaton was injured.
Mariners 7, Royals 2
Bob Stinson, hitting only .143. at
gametime, capped a four-run second
inning with a three-run homer to
lead Seattle over Kansas City, which
still leads the AL West by eight
games over the White Sox. The
Mariners 'also got a homer from
Tom Paciorek, while Glellll Abbott
scattered eight hits for his seventh
victory in 10 decisions.
Twills 5, Rangers 3
Rob Wilfong went 4-for-4 and
knocked in a run and Roy Smalley
had two RBI to lead Minnesota over
Texas. The Twins took a W lead off
loser Doc Medich, 7-4, but the
Rangers came back with Buddy
Bell's two-run homer in the fifth, his
eighth of the season and thii-d in two
days. Doug Corbett replaced winner
Roger Erickson, 2-5, in the seventh
and registered his sixth save
although he gave up three singles,
including a run-scoring hit by Rusty
Staub, in the seventh before getting
out of the jam.

;Doyle, Lefebvre causing problems
NEW YORK (AP) - Brian Doyle
has. been a World Series hero but
he's never spent a full season in the
major leagues, or even held down a
regular job. Joe Lefebvre was called
.up to lake the place of injured
:slugger Oscar Gamble and all he's
-done is belt seven homers and drive
in 20 runs in just 99 at-bats.
The two youngsters - Doyle is 25,
Lefebvre 24 - are causing
American League teams all sorts of
.problems. In fact, they're even
:posing a few for their employers, the
·New York Yankees.
With shortstops Bucky Dent and
Fred Stanley injured, Doyle has

filled in nicely over the past two
weeks. And Sunday, he hit his first
big league homer - Lefebvre and
Jim Spencer also homered - as the
Yankees clubbed the Cleveland Indians 7-2 behind the riine-hit pitching
of Ron Guldry and Ron Davis.
Qent comes off the disabled list
today and Manager Dick Howser
says he will start against the Boston
Red Sox. That pushes Doyle to the
bench, but what happens when
Stanley returns after the Ali.Siar
break• And will Lefebvre, who
boasts a rifle arm in addition to a
potent bat, get his walking papers
back to Columbus of the In-

ternational League when center
fielder Ruppert Jones comes back in
about 10 days?
Lefebvre, who still wears a Columbus Clippers·T-shirt, has to share a
locker with assistant trainer Barry
Weinberg while Doyle's locker
doesn't even have a nameplate. Is
someone trying to tell them
something'
"Like I said back in '78, I need to
see some pitches ~nd I'll start
making pretty good contact," said
Doyle, who hit .438 while replacing
the injured Willie Randolph in the
World Series that year.

Announce LL tournament pairings
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Morgan's double sinks Reds

POWELL'S PEE WEE - This is the 1980 team of
Powell's Super-Valu in the Pomeroy Pee Wee group.
They are : front, 1 to t, Mark Russell, Cary Betzing,
Hank Cleland, John Anderson, Carl Bourne, Bracy

Korn, Steven Foulkrod, second row, I to r, Mike
Parker, Todd Smith, Decker Cullurns, TeiTY Field,
Duana Johnson, Wesley Young, David Roush; third
row, Pat Soulsby and George Korn, coaches.

Hot Durham leads Cards
in weekend series wiih Cubs
By Associated Press
Padres 4-2, the Houston Astros outLeon "Bull" Durham has a scored the Cincinna.ti Reds 12-10, the
problem - St. Louis teammate Philadelphia Phillies downed the
Keith Hernandez.
New York Mets :&gt;-2 and the San
It's nothing personal, mind you. Francisco Giants and Los Angeles
It's all a matter of position.
Dodgers split a doubleheader, the
"First base, that's my home," Giants winning the opener 4-3 and
says Durham, a 22-year-old rookie ·the Dodgers taking the nightcap 3-0.
who is one of the Cardinals'
Durham, a star in the Cards'
brightest young prospects. But first minor-league system since being a
base is also the position played by first-round draft choice in 1976, was
Hernandez, and all he did was win making his first trip to Chicago over
the National League batting title last the weekend. "I'll remember it all
season with~ .344 average.
my life," he said. "I'm glad I was
Durham got his chance to play this around to play," said Durham.
weekend after Hernandez was hurt
Herzog said he was impressed by
in a collision with Chicago's Bill Durham, but was not about to move
Buckner at first base Saturday, and his regular first baseman. "When
he made the most of the opportunity. you have a Keith Hernandez around,
He drove in the tying and winning he (Durham) will have to move to
runs with a ninth-inning double as the outfield."
the Cards won the opener of a SaturTed Simmons and Ken Oberkfell
day doubleheader before the Cubs were other batting stars for the Carcame back to snap St. Louis' seven- dinals. Simmons had a run-scoring
game winning streak by winning the double and a towering home run
second game.
while Oberkfell drove in two runs
Sunday, Durham belted his first with a double and a ~ingle.
major league home run, a two-run
Expos 4, Pirates I
shot in the fourth inning that put the
David
Palmer
and Fred Norman
Cards ahead to stay as they beat the
combined
on
a
five-hitter
as the ExCubs 9-7. The&amp;-foot-1, 18:&gt;-pound leftpos
beat
Pittsburgh
to
extend
their
bander added a pair of singles and
lead
in
the
NL
East
to
three
games
scored three times as the Cards
over Philadelphia and 3_ over the
raised their record to 13-7 since
Pirates. Ron LeFlore stole three
Whitey Herzog replaped Ken Boyer
bases for Montreal and Omar
as manager.
Moreno swiped one for Pittsburgh,
Despite his big weekend, Durham
giving them 45 apiece + tops in the
knows his place With the Cards +
majors.
and it's not as the regular first
Braves 4. Padres 2
baseman.
"I'll be at first base unW Keith
Dale Murphy drove in three runs
comes back," said Durham, "then
I'll go to the outfield or back to the
bench. If it's back to the bench, I'll
just keep myself in the groove until I
get another chance."
In other National League games
Sunday, the Montreal Expos beat
the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-1, the Atlanta Braves topped the San Diego

With a solo homer and a two-run
single and Bob Horner also homered
as the Braves downed the Padres.
Atlanta's Larry McWilliams allowed
eight hits, struck out three and
walked three in hurling his first
complete-game victory of the
season.
AstrOs 12, Reds 10
Joe Morgan drove in two runs with
a pinch-double in a three-run seventh inning that put the Astros to slay
in their wild-scoring game against
Cincinnati. Art Howe had four hits
and drove in two runs for Houston.
PbJllies 5, Meta z
Philadelphia broke a four-game
losing streak in a night game as
Manny Trillo hit a pair of singles,
scored one run and drove in another.
Bob Walk won his third decision
without a loss since being recalled
from Oklahoma City last month, getting relief help from Lerrin LaGrow
in the final two innings.
The Mets had a four-game winning
streak snapped, and completed a If).
game road trip with a 7-3 record.
GlaDis t, Dodgers 3
Dodgers 3, GlaDis 0
Willie McCovey, in his ' final
homesland as an active player,
came off the bench to rip a two-out
double that scored the winning run
in the ninth irming in the opener.
In the second game, Burt Hooton
gave up four hits, struck out five imd
did not walk a batter as he posted his
loth consecutive victory over the
Giants and increased his career
mark against them tc 14--.1.

HOUSTON (AP ) - Houston pitcher Nolan Ryan never could find
the strike zone used by home plate
umpire Lanny Harris Sunday, but
the Aslros finally discovered a way
to defeat Cincinnati 12-10 in a hardfought, emotional series finale.
Joe Morgan put the Astros ahead
for good in the seventh inning with a
two-run, pinch hit double. But by
that time, both Ryan and Aslros
Manager Bill Virden were out of the
game following discussions with
Harris concerning the strike zone.
Ryan complained about Harris'
calls periodically during the early
irmings. Then, in the fifth inning,
Harris pointed his finger at Ryan
and told Him to go back to the
mound. "I asked him where the pitch was and he wouldn't tell me,"
said Ryan, who did not figure in the
decision. " I asked him again and he
said something 1 didn't understand."
Harris said later that he had seen
Ryan pitch several times before and
he always complained of calls. "He
tried to show me up by asking all the
time," Harris said. " I made up my
mind I wasn't going to put up with
it."
Later in the fifth inning, Virdon
came to the mound to remove Ryan
from the game and Harris almost
immediately headed for the mound.
After a brief discussion, Harris
ousted Virdon.
"He said something about balls
and strikes," Harris said. "That's
all there was to it. He was out of
there."
Virdon said he intentionally
wailed for Harris to come to the
mound .
•'I was waiting for him to come out

because I wanted him to find out that
I thought he was doing a very bad
job on this particular night," Virdon
said. " I said something about balls
and strikes and he didn 't like it so he
threw me out."
By the time the Astros got out of
the fifth inning, they were trailing
the Reds 6-5 in a see-saw battle. Cincinnati took a 2~ first inning lead on
a triple of Dave Concepcion, the first
of four runs batted in , and a sacrifice
fly by Dan Driessen.
Houston rallied against Charlie
Liebrandt in the second with five

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) - Steve
Scott and Mary Decker ran away
from the competition in the final day
of the U.S. Olympic Track and Field
Trials and set their sights on
showdowns against the Olympic
medalists later this summer in
Europe.
" We're not going to Moscow and
thPre's nothing I can do about it,"
Scott said Sunday after he ran the
fastest 1,500-meters in the world this
year. "But I'm going to have a chance to run against the Olympians and
I'll have a chance to set some records. too."
That chance will come in one of
several European meets scheduled
after the Moscow Games. When that
time comes, Scott hopes to meet
Britain's world record holder
Sebastian Coe.
"I've challenged him to let me
know a month in advance where he's
going to be," Scott said after his
3: 35.15 clocking which just missed
the American record. "I'll race him
anywhere."
Scott, 24, expected to be
challenged by Trials 1100-meter
champion Don Paige, but Paige
dropped out with 400 meters
remaining Sunday because of a sore
left Achilles tendon.
Decker, 21, also won the 1,500meters in impressive fashion,
breaking the Olympic Trials and
Hayward Field record at 4:04.91.
Julie Brown, who stayed behind the
pace-setting Decker throughout the
race, was seceJ1(! at4:07.13.
The victories of Scott and Decker
came in two of the eight final events
held Sunday at the Trials, which
were held. at the University of
Oregon for th2 third straight Olympic year.

I

* * *

ORSE SHOW

Columbus
Ohio

TROPHY WINNER - Mica Jones, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Jones, Racine, was the winner of
the "Small Fry Horsemanship" show for ages nine and
under held at the All-American Youth Show at the Ohio
State Fairgrounds in Columbus. The horse Miss Jones
rode is "Cozy Honeymoon" owned by Mr. and Mrs.
RIVERDOWNS

CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
Sugar took the lead in the last 70 yards and made a rush to the finish to
win the featured race by a nose at

Jerry Lewis, Letart, W. Va. Mica received a plaque for
her recognition. She will continue showing Cozy the
rest of the season. Mica is seven years old and has been
riding since the age of two. She attends the Syracuse
Elementary School where she will be a second grader
in the fall. Here Mica Jones received her award at the
Ohio State Fairgrounds.

River Downs on Sunday.
Ridden by Charles Wood Jr., Ohio
Sugar paid $8.40, $3.60 and $3. Abby's Choice placed for $3 and $2.40,
and Still ~umbting showed for $3.60.

In the 9-4 daily double combination, Ginger's Pel and Alternator returned $570.60.
A crowd of7,909 bet$901,172.

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something about it. We're offeri ng you real
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CASTING DERBY WINNERS - An annual Regatta Weekend activity for·youngsters is the casting derb,
conducted by the Department of Natural Resources,
Division of Wildlife. FiBbing gear was given as prizes
to the winners who were, under 11 years of age, front,
left to right, Jack Nonnan, Pomeroy, third; Jim Norman, Pomeroy, first; and Tony Shoemaker, M1d-

Sports
World

.LU\JLU

runs on a two-run triple by Craig
Reynolds and single runs on hits by
Rafael La ndes toy, Luis Pujols and
Ryan.
The Reds , trying desperately to
gain ground on the Western Division
leading Astros, took an 8-5 lead with
four runs in the fifth and two more in
the sixth. Concepcion highlighted
the two-inning spree with three RBI .
But then the new-found Astros
resilience took over . Pinchhitter
Denny Walling hit a two-run home
run after Reynolds had singled in the
sixth. Art Howe drove home one run
in the seventh and Enos Cabell
singled before Morgan put the
Astros back on top for good.
Joe Nolan's seventh innin g
sacrifice fly and a wild pitch by
Frank LaCorte in the ninth gave the
Reds their final two runs.
Cardinals 9, Cubs 7 - Leon "Bull "
Durham got his chance to play this
weekend after Hernandez was hurt
in a collision with Chicago's Bill
Buckner at first base Saturday, and
he made the most of the opportunity.
He drove in the tying and winning
runs with a ninth-irming double as
the Cards won the opener of a Saturday doubleheader before the Cubs
came back to snap St. Louls' sevengame winning streak by winning the
second game.
Sunday, Durham belled his first
major league home run, a two-run
shot in the fourth irming that put the
Cards ahead to slay as they beat the
Cubs 9-7. The 6-foot-1 , 18&amp;-pound leftbander added a pair of singles and
scored three times as the Cards
raised their record to 13-7 since
Whitey Herzog replaped Ken Boyer
. as manager.

Joe Morgan
Winning hit

Jt..~tl

*"******~&lt;•***

Bu~er

TotbJy's

Scott, Decker
track winners

!

.,u, .lUUt;a

dleport, second; and 12 to 14 years of age, standing,
~teve Fisher, Racine, second; Gordon Splete,
Gallipolis, first; and Terry Smith, Route 3, Pomeroy,
third. Division of Wildlife officers conducting the contest were from the left, J. S. Wells, Athens game
protector; E. A. Dean, education officer, J. G. Splete,
wildlife agent, and Andy Lyles, Meigs County game
protector.

Diet:

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BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

By Will Grimsley
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) "When you play against Bjorn
Borg," said the dour, sinisterlooking hulk of a man with the bettie
brows and Fu Manchu mustache,
"you don't play a man, you play an
institution."
Ion Tiriac, who came from the
same Romanian village that
produced Count Dracula, might as
well have been talking about the
pyramids, the Sp~ or the Rock of
Gibraltar.
After all, Borg, the implacable, 24year-old Swede . who goes after his
fifth straight Wimbledon tennis
championahlp this week, might fit
any or all of these unmoveable,
tinemotionallandmarl&lt;s.
"He is not inviilcible + Borg,"
Tirlac added. "There just seems to
be no one with the steel, the stamina
and patience tc lake him.
"U you hit 20 balls at him, he will
hit the 21st. If YoU hit 40, he will hit
41. The man is amazing the way he
can break you with persistence."
As the ancient All England Champi0118bipe move into their climactic
pbue this week, Borg's perennial
challengen + John McEnroe, Jimmy Connors, Vilas ·Gerulaltis and
ltoscoe Tanner + again are
threatening.
London's legal bookmakers, who
don't thrive on bad judgments, have
made the Swede 'the sbort.OOds
favorite at 8-11. McEnroe is 3-1, Connors 6-1, Tanner 1~1 and Gerulaitis
20-1.

Tiriac, 40, - fonner star of the
Romanian Davis Cup team and
longtime partner of \!le fiery IUe
Nastase - can lean back in 9ne of

.

the old green stadium's wooden
seals and observe Wimbledon
developments dispassionately.
. Tiriac's interest was quickened as
he watched a rejuvenated Connors
win his third round match Saturday
againat a hard-serving YOWII! Swiss,
Heinz Gunthardt.
"Jirruny is better now that he
realizes he does not control the
game," Jon said. "He must claw his
way back. Marriage and the kid
have changed his personal life.
"For some, that may be good. For
others, worse. I am interested to see
how marriage affects Borg. It
shouldn't right away because Bjorn
81}d Mariana (Simionescu} have
been traveling together for three
years. But if they have a child, then

what?"
·
· He ran his rtngers down the list of
other title threats.
"Tanner has the big service- a
fast court helps him but he ia no Jobn
Newcombe," Tiriac . added.
"Gerulaitia? very quick and •
fighter but tell me what Bingle great
shot does he have.
"McEnroe, now that's SOIJiethlnil
else. He can beat anybody. He bal
all the tools - qulclmess, iDIIInct,
greatservice,amn~.He~

too fast.

''U he were smart, he wou1cl not be
thinking automatically he .ia No.I.
He will be No.I soon enouch· If he
loses, he should just say, 'OK, I'll get
him next time. m
"Borg is one ul the l!'lllelt
athletes ever. The Cllly way to beat
him ill to serve-volley, ovf!fllOWer
him. Remember, in a rally, Borg
always hits the last ball."

"

Bueballat aGlute
NATIONAL LEAGUE

EAST
W L
36

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32

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34

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30

39

31

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San Diego

42

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33

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14

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llontnll4, PitUlioulh I
SI.Loolat, Cllk:ago 7
San f'nlncllc:o 4&lt;!, Loo An8eles :W
Atlanta 4, San Dieco 2
H-12, ClndnnotliO
I'Nll4eli&gt;"lo ~.New Yorll2

3

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6~

9"'

10

2¥..
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12
13

""""""(Fond! !HI) at Atlanta (Matula 4•

PN114elpllla (Noleo WJ at Mootreal

(G~O-I),(n)

San 01eto (Etdlelberpr 1-&lt;l) at I.AII
An&amp;eleo (w-eldll-2), (n)
Cincinnati (Seavor 1-1) at San Francllco
.

W L
41 li

,New York
Milwaukee

Ill

Detroit

:1'1

~~­

311
311

BaltlmOn

34
32

Clev&lt;land
Toronto ·

1miT

KanauCil)'

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32

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Ta.u

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It
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.6411
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711

.$14

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.414

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I

11

13

Tuesday's Games
Baltbnore at Toronto
New York at Boston, (n)
Cleveland at Detroit, ( n)
Oakland at Milwaukee, ( n1
California at Chicago, ( nJ

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BA'M'Il'IG U&amp;:i al bat. J, K.Hernandez,
St.Louis, .335; R.5mith, l..m Angeles, .333;
Templeton, St.Louis, .319; Cromartie, Montreal, .317; Cedeno, Houston, .315.
RUNS : Schmidt, Philadelphia, ~2 ; K.Her-

nandez, St.Louis, S!; Templeton, St.Louis,

411; Rooe, Philadelphia. 41; Leflore. Mon~~ 47; Collins, Cincinnati, 47 ; Griffey,
LlnCIIlNitl, 41.
RBI: Rendrtck, SU.oots, 60; Garvey, Los
Ani:elel, 58i Schmidt, Philadelphia, 5Ai;
SUer, Loti Angeles, 49; R.Smith, Loa

nandez, St.Louia,l9; Hendrick, St.Looi.s,l4 ;
Garvey, Lol Angeles, &amp;4; Cromartie, Montrul,83.
DQUBLES' llnWI~ Ciri&lt;innati, 23; Rooe,
Philadelphia, 22:; Stearns, New Y1&gt;rk, 21;
C1w.mblill, AUanta, :ln; K.Hemandez,
St. LOllis, If.
TRIPLES : R.Scott, Montreal, 6; McBride,
PWedelphJa, 6; O.Moreno, Pitt.sburgh, 6;
Landeltoy, Houston, &amp;; Clark., San Fran-

I

.4311
.4311
.417
.343

12
12
""'
1111

11; Ganer. U. An~eles, 16; l..uzmskl;
Philllde)phaa, 15.
'
STOLtN BASES : LeFlore, Montrea l, ~ ;
O.Moreno, PJttsburtJh, U ; Collins , Cin·
clnnali, 31; R.Scctt, Montreal, 31; R.Law,
Loe Ancelea 24.
PITCHING (7 Deciainna" Bibby, Pi&gt;
bburgh, f-1, .too, 3,00 ; Re~ , l..uoi Angele.!l,
t-1 , .too, U? ; CHrltvn, Philadelphill, 13-3,
..81J,l.l3; Welch, Loa Anceles,a.2, .800, 2..J6i
Reed, Phlla&lt;lelphla, 6-2, .750, 3.21 ; BohNen,

.4n

9"'

Gamet
11a111a10n (-IW) at fu-unto (Leoll·
2), (nJ

at Seattle (Pa rrott I·

.103
.411

Cilicolo \'2 Ctly2
'D .
s.wa?.

-·a

6-S)

C*O,tl .

T-2. llolroll 0
l'I"'Yocil 7,Cioveland2
--·1-.ppd.,raln
_ _ ., Cllllol'llla 2
- I . TauS

Texas (Jenkins

Anleleo, 11.
•
llJTS, Templeton, St.Louis, 100 ; K.Her·

ONy~M.~LEAGUE
EAST

Minnesota (Zahn 6-10 ) at Kansa11 City

(Martinll-ll , (nl

Minnesota at Kansas City , (n)
Teu.ll at Seattle, (n)

delaria'-7J,(D)

(Bonllor&amp;4), (a)

( Travers6-3) , ( n)
Call!omia ( Knapp2-4 ) atChi caR O{Kravec
3-:i or Dol.olon -1-3), ( n)

BJ, (nJ

.....,•• Gamel
st.Looil (Syteo MJ at l'itllbW1h (Can-

1), (n)

Cleveland (Spillner 7-4) at Delroit (Wilco1
11-1), (n)
New York (Jolvl l!h1) a t Boston (Stanley 6o), (nl
Oakland {Langford 4-8) at Milwaukee

I

141 ; Ric hard , Houston, J()7; ~y a n, Houston,
88; Bibb)', Pitt.'iburgh. 79; P.N1ekro. Atlanta,
79.
AMERICAN LEAGUE

BATI'ING {165 s t bat.s ): MoHtor ,
Milwaukee, .358; Carew, California, .342;
Brett Kai1Jils City, .337 ; Orta. Cleveland,
.335: ' Cooper, Milwaukee, .~; Oglivie,
Milwaukee, .333.
RUNS : Wills, Tens, ~~; Yount,
Milwaukee !t3; Randolph, New York, 53 ;
TrammeU.'Detroit, ~2 ; Oglivie, Milwaukee,
52; Wilsm, Kansas City, 52 .
RBl: Perez, Boston, 55; Oliver, Tens, 55 ;
Ogllvle, Milwaukee, !W ; Hebner, Delroit, 50 ;
Cooper, MUwallkee, 49; Annas, Oakland, 49.
HITS: Wilson, Kansu City 99 ; Rivers ,
Texas, 96; Bwnbry, Baltimore, 91; Carew ,
Calitomia,90; Oliver, Teu:J, S7.
DOUBLES: Morrison, Chicago, 24; Yount,
Milwaukee 21; Canw, California, 21;
D.Garcia, Toronto, 111; Cooper, Milwaukee,
17 ; OUver, Tegs, 17.

TRIPLES: Grlfftn, Torooto, I ; Bwnbry,
Ba.ltilmore, 6; Howell, Toronto, 5; Wathan,
Kansas City, S; Brett, Kansas City, S; ·
Washington, Kansas City, 5; Wilson, Kansas
City, 5.
HOME RUNS: Ogtivie, Milwaukt!e, 20 ;
Re. Jacklon, New York, 18; Thomas,
MUwaukee, 15; Annas, Oakland, 14; Rice,
Bostan, 13; Nettles, New York, 13;
Mayberry, Torooto.13 .
STOlEN BASES' Wllson.Kansaa City, 32 ,
Henderson Oakland,l2 ; Dilone, Cleveland,

24 · Wills, Tel8!, 2l; J .Cruz, Seattle, 20.
PITCUJNG (7 Decisions ): Stone,
Baltimore, l~ • .769, US; John, New York,
11)..3, .769, 3.te ; Gura, Kansas City, 10-3, .769,
2.09; ClevelB.nd, Milwaultet, _6-2, .'150, U2;
McGregor, Baltlmore,e.-3, .77:1, 1.40 ; Rainey,
Boston, 8-3, .777 , 4.7&amp;,: Farmer, Chlc~q~o, S-2,
.714, 2.52; DoLson, Chlcago, 7-3, .700, 3.60.
STIUKEOUTS' Guidry , Ne~ Yurk 1 93;
Keough, Oakland, 80; M. Norns, Oakland,
7'9 ; F.&amp;ruiliiter,SutUe, 74; Matlack, Texas.
74.

Montreal, 5-2, .71t, 2.27 ; Ja ck.sufl , Pit"

WHkea.dSpvrU TraDJidlou
BASEBAU.

N•Oooal Le•gue
CHICAGO CUBS - Reactivated Oavt!
~n ()IJUielder, from the dli~~bled list.
Qot 1oned' J~Us F'Icueroa, ouUh:!lder, to
Wkhita uf th~ A.lnerican Aasoclattun.
ST. LOU! CARDtNA.l.S - Rc&lt;aUe&lt;l Juhn
Urrea, pitcher, and Ketth Smllh out!Lc!der ,
from Springfie ld of lhe . Ant ~ riCfi n ·
Association. Sent George F nu tt!r, pLlchcr.
and Tom Herr, infielder, to Sprin~field.

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Baker, Los ~gelea, 17; .Hendrick, St.L:wi.!l,

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�"T The Daily Sentinel, Middlcport-Pumenoy, 0 ., Munday, Ju11e :W, 1980

&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, MiddleJiort-Pumeroy, 0., Monday, JulldO,l!lllO

Future looks bright
·for Chisox pitching
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Chicago White Sox are expected tc have a bright future
because of the pitchers they are
developing, but all those strong
young arms must look pretty good
right now to the Oakland A's.
The While Sox held the A's to 12
hits over the weekend in winning two
of three games, including consecutive~. four-hit victories Saturday night and Sunday.
."It's 'not easy to explain, but we
have do good arms," said White Sox
Manager Tony LaRussa. "We have
a whole staff that can throw. We're
just in a good groove now,
everybody's healthy and getting
their pitches over the plate. We have
that good combination of young starters and a veteran bullpen. "
Sunday's shutout was a combo job,
with lanky lefty Britt Burns getting
help from Mike Proly. Saturday's
four-hitter was shared by another
tall left-bander, Richard Wortham,
and ace reliever Ed Farmer, who
has 17 saves.
... We have some good young arms," said Proly. "They are going to
throw well, and with more and more
experience, they are going to be
super pitchers."
One of those strong arms belongs
to Burns, who ran his record to 9-5
and lowered his league-leading earned run average to 2.02. He did quite
well Sunday considering he had the
.flu and sinus trouble, allowing two
singles in five innings before Proly
gave up two singles the rest of the
way.
"I thought if I could get through
five, get a lead and get out with a
win, I was going to do it," Burns
&amp;aid. "Today was a struggle just to
get through two - so I'm niX
ashamed about having to fly after
five.' '
Despite the stingy hurling against

the A's, at least one Oakland player
was willing to say it was the bats
rather than the pitching that were
responsible for the lack of runs.
"I'm not going to say it's their
tough pitching," said A's outfielder
Dwayne Murphy, who got one of
their base hits. "I guess that when
you're going bad, you're going bad.
You just start to wonder and you
start to think too much instead
of just going out and playing the
way you've always played."
Chicago got all its runs in the fourth off Brian Kingman, 3-8, who
ironically pitched a complete game
despite allowing 12 hits.
Thad Bosley and Bruce Kirrun
singled, Greg Pryor doubled in a run
and Bob Molinaro singled in two
more, getting his first RBI since
June 1.
In other American League games
Sun 1, Toronto blank cd Detroit 2..{),
the New York Yankees beat
Cleveland 7-2, Milwaukee defeated
California :&gt;-2, Seattle downed Kansas City 7-2 and Minnesota beat
Texas 5-3 at night. Baltimore at
Boston was rained out.
Yankees 7, Indians 2
Cleveland lost the 23rd game of its
last Tl at Yankee Stadium as New
York got home runs from Jim Spencer, Joe Lefebvre and Brian Doyle,
all of which fell into the first few
rows of the friendly right field stands. The homers accounted for six
runs, but Cleveland Manager Dave
Garcia said only one of the drives
would have had a chance to go out of
Municipal Stadium in Cleveland.
"You've got to give them credit
for designing a club to fit their
park," Garcia said.
Losing pitcher Len Barker was not
so gracious about the homers, which
gave the Yankees 100 in 71 games, 44
games before they hit that many last
season.

'That short right field fence, that's
why they have so many homers," he
said.
Blue Jays 2, Tigers 0
Dave Stieb pitched a seven-hitter:
to end Detroit's nine-game winning
streak. The young Toronto right·
bander scattered seven singles for
his second shutout and eighth complete game of .the season. The Blue
Jays got their runs in the fifth inning
on an error by Detroit second
baseman Lou Whitaker and in. the
eighth on a wild pitch.
Brewers 5, Angels 2
Milwaukee used seven doubles, a
homer by Jim Gantner and Reggie
Cleveland's eight-hit complete game
to beat California. Cleveland, &amp;-2,
won his third straight start after
joining the starting rotation when
Jim Slaton was injured.
Mariners 7, Royals 2
Bob Stinson, hitting only .143. at
gametime, capped a four-run second
inning with a three-run homer to
lead Seattle over Kansas City, which
still leads the AL West by eight
games over the White Sox. The
Mariners 'also got a homer from
Tom Paciorek, while Glellll Abbott
scattered eight hits for his seventh
victory in 10 decisions.
Twills 5, Rangers 3
Rob Wilfong went 4-for-4 and
knocked in a run and Roy Smalley
had two RBI to lead Minnesota over
Texas. The Twins took a W lead off
loser Doc Medich, 7-4, but the
Rangers came back with Buddy
Bell's two-run homer in the fifth, his
eighth of the season and thii-d in two
days. Doug Corbett replaced winner
Roger Erickson, 2-5, in the seventh
and registered his sixth save
although he gave up three singles,
including a run-scoring hit by Rusty
Staub, in the seventh before getting
out of the jam.

;Doyle, Lefebvre causing problems
NEW YORK (AP) - Brian Doyle
has. been a World Series hero but
he's never spent a full season in the
major leagues, or even held down a
regular job. Joe Lefebvre was called
.up to lake the place of injured
:slugger Oscar Gamble and all he's
-done is belt seven homers and drive
in 20 runs in just 99 at-bats.
The two youngsters - Doyle is 25,
Lefebvre 24 - are causing
American League teams all sorts of
.problems. In fact, they're even
:posing a few for their employers, the
·New York Yankees.
With shortstops Bucky Dent and
Fred Stanley injured, Doyle has

filled in nicely over the past two
weeks. And Sunday, he hit his first
big league homer - Lefebvre and
Jim Spencer also homered - as the
Yankees clubbed the Cleveland Indians 7-2 behind the riine-hit pitching
of Ron Guldry and Ron Davis.
Qent comes off the disabled list
today and Manager Dick Howser
says he will start against the Boston
Red Sox. That pushes Doyle to the
bench, but what happens when
Stanley returns after the Ali.Siar
break• And will Lefebvre, who
boasts a rifle arm in addition to a
potent bat, get his walking papers
back to Columbus of the In-

ternational League when center
fielder Ruppert Jones comes back in
about 10 days?
Lefebvre, who still wears a Columbus Clippers·T-shirt, has to share a
locker with assistant trainer Barry
Weinberg while Doyle's locker
doesn't even have a nameplate. Is
someone trying to tell them
something'
"Like I said back in '78, I need to
see some pitches ~nd I'll start
making pretty good contact," said
Doyle, who hit .438 while replacing
the injured Willie Randolph in the
World Series that year.

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Morgan's double sinks Reds

POWELL'S PEE WEE - This is the 1980 team of
Powell's Super-Valu in the Pomeroy Pee Wee group.
They are : front, 1 to t, Mark Russell, Cary Betzing,
Hank Cleland, John Anderson, Carl Bourne, Bracy

Korn, Steven Foulkrod, second row, I to r, Mike
Parker, Todd Smith, Decker Cullurns, TeiTY Field,
Duana Johnson, Wesley Young, David Roush; third
row, Pat Soulsby and George Korn, coaches.

Hot Durham leads Cards
in weekend series wiih Cubs
By Associated Press
Padres 4-2, the Houston Astros outLeon "Bull" Durham has a scored the Cincinna.ti Reds 12-10, the
problem - St. Louis teammate Philadelphia Phillies downed the
Keith Hernandez.
New York Mets :&gt;-2 and the San
It's nothing personal, mind you. Francisco Giants and Los Angeles
It's all a matter of position.
Dodgers split a doubleheader, the
"First base, that's my home," Giants winning the opener 4-3 and
says Durham, a 22-year-old rookie ·the Dodgers taking the nightcap 3-0.
who is one of the Cardinals'
Durham, a star in the Cards'
brightest young prospects. But first minor-league system since being a
base is also the position played by first-round draft choice in 1976, was
Hernandez, and all he did was win making his first trip to Chicago over
the National League batting title last the weekend. "I'll remember it all
season with~ .344 average.
my life," he said. "I'm glad I was
Durham got his chance to play this around to play," said Durham.
weekend after Hernandez was hurt
Herzog said he was impressed by
in a collision with Chicago's Bill Durham, but was not about to move
Buckner at first base Saturday, and his regular first baseman. "When
he made the most of the opportunity. you have a Keith Hernandez around,
He drove in the tying and winning he (Durham) will have to move to
runs with a ninth-inning double as the outfield."
the Cards won the opener of a SaturTed Simmons and Ken Oberkfell
day doubleheader before the Cubs were other batting stars for the Carcame back to snap St. Louis' seven- dinals. Simmons had a run-scoring
game winning streak by winning the double and a towering home run
second game.
while Oberkfell drove in two runs
Sunday, Durham belted his first with a double and a ~ingle.
major league home run, a two-run
Expos 4, Pirates I
shot in the fourth inning that put the
David
Palmer
and Fred Norman
Cards ahead to stay as they beat the
combined
on
a
five-hitter
as the ExCubs 9-7. The&amp;-foot-1, 18:&gt;-pound leftpos
beat
Pittsburgh
to
extend
their
bander added a pair of singles and
lead
in
the
NL
East
to
three
games
scored three times as the Cards
over Philadelphia and 3_ over the
raised their record to 13-7 since
Pirates. Ron LeFlore stole three
Whitey Herzog replaped Ken Boyer
bases for Montreal and Omar
as manager.
Moreno swiped one for Pittsburgh,
Despite his big weekend, Durham
giving them 45 apiece + tops in the
knows his place With the Cards +
majors.
and it's not as the regular first
Braves 4. Padres 2
baseman.
"I'll be at first base unW Keith
Dale Murphy drove in three runs
comes back," said Durham, "then
I'll go to the outfield or back to the
bench. If it's back to the bench, I'll
just keep myself in the groove until I
get another chance."
In other National League games
Sunday, the Montreal Expos beat
the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-1, the Atlanta Braves topped the San Diego

With a solo homer and a two-run
single and Bob Horner also homered
as the Braves downed the Padres.
Atlanta's Larry McWilliams allowed
eight hits, struck out three and
walked three in hurling his first
complete-game victory of the
season.
AstrOs 12, Reds 10
Joe Morgan drove in two runs with
a pinch-double in a three-run seventh inning that put the Astros to slay
in their wild-scoring game against
Cincinnati. Art Howe had four hits
and drove in two runs for Houston.
PbJllies 5, Meta z
Philadelphia broke a four-game
losing streak in a night game as
Manny Trillo hit a pair of singles,
scored one run and drove in another.
Bob Walk won his third decision
without a loss since being recalled
from Oklahoma City last month, getting relief help from Lerrin LaGrow
in the final two innings.
The Mets had a four-game winning
streak snapped, and completed a If).
game road trip with a 7-3 record.
GlaDis t, Dodgers 3
Dodgers 3, GlaDis 0
Willie McCovey, in his ' final
homesland as an active player,
came off the bench to rip a two-out
double that scored the winning run
in the ninth irming in the opener.
In the second game, Burt Hooton
gave up four hits, struck out five imd
did not walk a batter as he posted his
loth consecutive victory over the
Giants and increased his career
mark against them tc 14--.1.

HOUSTON (AP ) - Houston pitcher Nolan Ryan never could find
the strike zone used by home plate
umpire Lanny Harris Sunday, but
the Aslros finally discovered a way
to defeat Cincinnati 12-10 in a hardfought, emotional series finale.
Joe Morgan put the Astros ahead
for good in the seventh inning with a
two-run, pinch hit double. But by
that time, both Ryan and Aslros
Manager Bill Virden were out of the
game following discussions with
Harris concerning the strike zone.
Ryan complained about Harris'
calls periodically during the early
irmings. Then, in the fifth inning,
Harris pointed his finger at Ryan
and told Him to go back to the
mound. "I asked him where the pitch was and he wouldn't tell me,"
said Ryan, who did not figure in the
decision. " I asked him again and he
said something 1 didn't understand."
Harris said later that he had seen
Ryan pitch several times before and
he always complained of calls. "He
tried to show me up by asking all the
time," Harris said. " I made up my
mind I wasn't going to put up with
it."
Later in the fifth inning, Virdon
came to the mound to remove Ryan
from the game and Harris almost
immediately headed for the mound.
After a brief discussion, Harris
ousted Virdon.
"He said something about balls
and strikes," Harris said. "That's
all there was to it. He was out of
there."
Virdon said he intentionally
wailed for Harris to come to the
mound .
•'I was waiting for him to come out

because I wanted him to find out that
I thought he was doing a very bad
job on this particular night," Virdon
said. " I said something about balls
and strikes and he didn 't like it so he
threw me out."
By the time the Astros got out of
the fifth inning, they were trailing
the Reds 6-5 in a see-saw battle. Cincinnati took a 2~ first inning lead on
a triple of Dave Concepcion, the first
of four runs batted in , and a sacrifice
fly by Dan Driessen.
Houston rallied against Charlie
Liebrandt in the second with five

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) - Steve
Scott and Mary Decker ran away
from the competition in the final day
of the U.S. Olympic Track and Field
Trials and set their sights on
showdowns against the Olympic
medalists later this summer in
Europe.
" We're not going to Moscow and
thPre's nothing I can do about it,"
Scott said Sunday after he ran the
fastest 1,500-meters in the world this
year. "But I'm going to have a chance to run against the Olympians and
I'll have a chance to set some records. too."
That chance will come in one of
several European meets scheduled
after the Moscow Games. When that
time comes, Scott hopes to meet
Britain's world record holder
Sebastian Coe.
"I've challenged him to let me
know a month in advance where he's
going to be," Scott said after his
3: 35.15 clocking which just missed
the American record. "I'll race him
anywhere."
Scott, 24, expected to be
challenged by Trials 1100-meter
champion Don Paige, but Paige
dropped out with 400 meters
remaining Sunday because of a sore
left Achilles tendon.
Decker, 21, also won the 1,500meters in impressive fashion,
breaking the Olympic Trials and
Hayward Field record at 4:04.91.
Julie Brown, who stayed behind the
pace-setting Decker throughout the
race, was seceJ1(! at4:07.13.
The victories of Scott and Decker
came in two of the eight final events
held Sunday at the Trials, which
were held. at the University of
Oregon for th2 third straight Olympic year.

I

* * *

ORSE SHOW

Columbus
Ohio

TROPHY WINNER - Mica Jones, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Jones, Racine, was the winner of
the "Small Fry Horsemanship" show for ages nine and
under held at the All-American Youth Show at the Ohio
State Fairgrounds in Columbus. The horse Miss Jones
rode is "Cozy Honeymoon" owned by Mr. and Mrs.
RIVERDOWNS

CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
Sugar took the lead in the last 70 yards and made a rush to the finish to
win the featured race by a nose at

Jerry Lewis, Letart, W. Va. Mica received a plaque for
her recognition. She will continue showing Cozy the
rest of the season. Mica is seven years old and has been
riding since the age of two. She attends the Syracuse
Elementary School where she will be a second grader
in the fall. Here Mica Jones received her award at the
Ohio State Fairgrounds.

River Downs on Sunday.
Ridden by Charles Wood Jr., Ohio
Sugar paid $8.40, $3.60 and $3. Abby's Choice placed for $3 and $2.40,
and Still ~umbting showed for $3.60.

In the 9-4 daily double combination, Ginger's Pel and Alternator returned $570.60.
A crowd of7,909 bet$901,172.

··r--·,
.

•,..ey•

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price of grocery shopping goes up and it
doesn't seem to stop. Burger Chef is doing
something about it. We're offeri ng you real
deals on delicious meals for a solid
week . You can save a total of $5.73
if you take advantage of this Meal Deal offer.

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CASTING DERBY WINNERS - An annual Regatta Weekend activity for·youngsters is the casting derb,
conducted by the Department of Natural Resources,
Division of Wildlife. FiBbing gear was given as prizes
to the winners who were, under 11 years of age, front,
left to right, Jack Nonnan, Pomeroy, third; Jim Norman, Pomeroy, first; and Tony Shoemaker, M1d-

Sports
World

.LU\JLU

runs on a two-run triple by Craig
Reynolds and single runs on hits by
Rafael La ndes toy, Luis Pujols and
Ryan.
The Reds , trying desperately to
gain ground on the Western Division
leading Astros, took an 8-5 lead with
four runs in the fifth and two more in
the sixth. Concepcion highlighted
the two-inning spree with three RBI .
But then the new-found Astros
resilience took over . Pinchhitter
Denny Walling hit a two-run home
run after Reynolds had singled in the
sixth. Art Howe drove home one run
in the seventh and Enos Cabell
singled before Morgan put the
Astros back on top for good.
Joe Nolan's seventh innin g
sacrifice fly and a wild pitch by
Frank LaCorte in the ninth gave the
Reds their final two runs.
Cardinals 9, Cubs 7 - Leon "Bull "
Durham got his chance to play this
weekend after Hernandez was hurt
in a collision with Chicago's Bill
Buckner at first base Saturday, and
he made the most of the opportunity.
He drove in the tying and winning
runs with a ninth-irming double as
the Cards won the opener of a Saturday doubleheader before the Cubs
came back to snap St. Louls' sevengame winning streak by winning the
second game.
Sunday, Durham belled his first
major league home run, a two-run
shot in the fourth irming that put the
Cards ahead to slay as they beat the
Cubs 9-7. The 6-foot-1 , 18&amp;-pound leftbander added a pair of singles and
scored three times as the Cards
raised their record to 13-7 since
Whitey Herzog replaped Ken Boyer
. as manager.

Joe Morgan
Winning hit

Jt..~tl

*"******~&lt;•***

Bu~er

TotbJy's

Scott, Decker
track winners

!

.,u, .lUUt;a

dleport, second; and 12 to 14 years of age, standing,
~teve Fisher, Racine, second; Gordon Splete,
Gallipolis, first; and Terry Smith, Route 3, Pomeroy,
third. Division of Wildlife officers conducting the contest were from the left, J. S. Wells, Athens game
protector; E. A. Dean, education officer, J. G. Splete,
wildlife agent, and Andy Lyles, Meigs County game
protector.

Diet:

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BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

By Will Grimsley
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) "When you play against Bjorn
Borg," said the dour, sinisterlooking hulk of a man with the bettie
brows and Fu Manchu mustache,
"you don't play a man, you play an
institution."
Ion Tiriac, who came from the
same Romanian village that
produced Count Dracula, might as
well have been talking about the
pyramids, the Sp~ or the Rock of
Gibraltar.
After all, Borg, the implacable, 24year-old Swede . who goes after his
fifth straight Wimbledon tennis
championahlp this week, might fit
any or all of these unmoveable,
tinemotionallandmarl&lt;s.
"He is not inviilcible + Borg,"
Tirlac added. "There just seems to
be no one with the steel, the stamina
and patience tc lake him.
"U you hit 20 balls at him, he will
hit the 21st. If YoU hit 40, he will hit
41. The man is amazing the way he
can break you with persistence."
As the ancient All England Champi0118bipe move into their climactic
pbue this week, Borg's perennial
challengen + John McEnroe, Jimmy Connors, Vilas ·Gerulaltis and
ltoscoe Tanner + again are
threatening.
London's legal bookmakers, who
don't thrive on bad judgments, have
made the Swede 'the sbort.OOds
favorite at 8-11. McEnroe is 3-1, Connors 6-1, Tanner 1~1 and Gerulaitis
20-1.

Tiriac, 40, - fonner star of the
Romanian Davis Cup team and
longtime partner of \!le fiery IUe
Nastase - can lean back in 9ne of

.

the old green stadium's wooden
seals and observe Wimbledon
developments dispassionately.
. Tiriac's interest was quickened as
he watched a rejuvenated Connors
win his third round match Saturday
againat a hard-serving YOWII! Swiss,
Heinz Gunthardt.
"Jirruny is better now that he
realizes he does not control the
game," Jon said. "He must claw his
way back. Marriage and the kid
have changed his personal life.
"For some, that may be good. For
others, worse. I am interested to see
how marriage affects Borg. It
shouldn't right away because Bjorn
81}d Mariana (Simionescu} have
been traveling together for three
years. But if they have a child, then

what?"
·
· He ran his rtngers down the list of
other title threats.
"Tanner has the big service- a
fast court helps him but he ia no Jobn
Newcombe," Tiriac . added.
"Gerulaitia? very quick and •
fighter but tell me what Bingle great
shot does he have.
"McEnroe, now that's SOIJiethlnil
else. He can beat anybody. He bal
all the tools - qulclmess, iDIIInct,
greatservice,amn~.He~

too fast.

''U he were smart, he wou1cl not be
thinking automatically he .ia No.I.
He will be No.I soon enouch· If he
loses, he should just say, 'OK, I'll get
him next time. m
"Borg is one ul the l!'lllelt
athletes ever. The Cllly way to beat
him ill to serve-volley, ovf!fllOWer
him. Remember, in a rally, Borg
always hits the last ball."

"

Bueballat aGlute
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Tuesday's Games
Baltbnore at Toronto
New York at Boston, (n)
Cleveland at Detroit, ( n)
Oakland at Milwaukee, ( n1
California at Chicago, ( nJ

TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BA'M'Il'IG U&amp;:i al bat. J, K.Hernandez,
St.Louis, .335; R.5mith, l..m Angeles, .333;
Templeton, St.Louis, .319; Cromartie, Montreal, .317; Cedeno, Houston, .315.
RUNS : Schmidt, Philadelphia, ~2 ; K.Her-

nandez, St.Louis, S!; Templeton, St.Louis,

411; Rooe, Philadelphia. 41; Leflore. Mon~~ 47; Collins, Cincinnati, 47 ; Griffey,
LlnCIIlNitl, 41.
RBI: Rendrtck, SU.oots, 60; Garvey, Los
Ani:elel, 58i Schmidt, Philadelphia, 5Ai;
SUer, Loti Angeles, 49; R.Smith, Loa

nandez, St.Louia,l9; Hendrick, St.Looi.s,l4 ;
Garvey, Lol Angeles, &amp;4; Cromartie, Montrul,83.
DQUBLES' llnWI~ Ciri&lt;innati, 23; Rooe,
Philadelphia, 22:; Stearns, New Y1&gt;rk, 21;
C1w.mblill, AUanta, :ln; K.Hemandez,
St. LOllis, If.
TRIPLES : R.Scott, Montreal, 6; McBride,
PWedelphJa, 6; O.Moreno, Pitt.sburgh, 6;
Landeltoy, Houston, &amp;; Clark., San Fran-

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'
STOLtN BASES : LeFlore, Montrea l, ~ ;
O.Moreno, PJttsburtJh, U ; Collins , Cin·
clnnali, 31; R.Scctt, Montreal, 31; R.Law,
Loe Ancelea 24.
PITCHING (7 Deciainna" Bibby, Pi&gt;
bburgh, f-1, .too, 3,00 ; Re~ , l..uoi Angele.!l,
t-1 , .too, U? ; CHrltvn, Philadelphill, 13-3,
..81J,l.l3; Welch, Loa Anceles,a.2, .800, 2..J6i
Reed, Phlla&lt;lelphla, 6-2, .750, 3.21 ; BohNen,

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Gamet
11a111a10n (-IW) at fu-unto (Leoll·
2), (nJ

at Seattle (Pa rrott I·

.103
.411

Cilicolo \'2 Ctly2
'D .
s.wa?.

-·a

6-S)

C*O,tl .

T-2. llolroll 0
l'I"'Yocil 7,Cioveland2
--·1-.ppd.,raln
_ _ ., Cllllol'llla 2
- I . TauS

Texas (Jenkins

Anleleo, 11.
•
llJTS, Templeton, St.Louis, 100 ; K.Her·

ONy~M.~LEAGUE
EAST

Minnesota (Zahn 6-10 ) at Kansa11 City

(Martinll-ll , (nl

Minnesota at Kansas City , (n)
Teu.ll at Seattle, (n)

delaria'-7J,(D)

(Bonllor&amp;4), (a)

( Travers6-3) , ( n)
Call!omia ( Knapp2-4 ) atChi caR O{Kravec
3-:i or Dol.olon -1-3), ( n)

BJ, (nJ

.....,•• Gamel
st.Looil (Syteo MJ at l'itllbW1h (Can-

1), (n)

Cleveland (Spillner 7-4) at Delroit (Wilco1
11-1), (n)
New York (Jolvl l!h1) a t Boston (Stanley 6o), (nl
Oakland {Langford 4-8) at Milwaukee

I

141 ; Ric hard , Houston, J()7; ~y a n, Houston,
88; Bibb)', Pitt.'iburgh. 79; P.N1ekro. Atlanta,
79.
AMERICAN LEAGUE

BATI'ING {165 s t bat.s ): MoHtor ,
Milwaukee, .358; Carew, California, .342;
Brett Kai1Jils City, .337 ; Orta. Cleveland,
.335: ' Cooper, Milwaukee, .~; Oglivie,
Milwaukee, .333.
RUNS : Wills, Tens, ~~; Yount,
Milwaukee !t3; Randolph, New York, 53 ;
TrammeU.'Detroit, ~2 ; Oglivie, Milwaukee,
52; Wilsm, Kansas City, 52 .
RBl: Perez, Boston, 55; Oliver, Tens, 55 ;
Ogllvle, Milwaukee, !W ; Hebner, Delroit, 50 ;
Cooper, MUwallkee, 49; Annas, Oakland, 49.
HITS: Wilson, Kansu City 99 ; Rivers ,
Texas, 96; Bwnbry, Baltimore, 91; Carew ,
Calitomia,90; Oliver, Teu:J, S7.
DOUBLES: Morrison, Chicago, 24; Yount,
Milwaukee 21; Canw, California, 21;
D.Garcia, Toronto, 111; Cooper, Milwaukee,
17 ; OUver, Tegs, 17.

TRIPLES: Grlfftn, Torooto, I ; Bwnbry,
Ba.ltilmore, 6; Howell, Toronto, 5; Wathan,
Kansas City, S; Brett, Kansas City, S; ·
Washington, Kansas City, 5; Wilson, Kansas
City, 5.
HOME RUNS: Ogtivie, Milwaukt!e, 20 ;
Re. Jacklon, New York, 18; Thomas,
MUwaukee, 15; Annas, Oakland, 14; Rice,
Bostan, 13; Nettles, New York, 13;
Mayberry, Torooto.13 .
STOlEN BASES' Wllson.Kansaa City, 32 ,
Henderson Oakland,l2 ; Dilone, Cleveland,

24 · Wills, Tel8!, 2l; J .Cruz, Seattle, 20.
PITCUJNG (7 Decisions ): Stone,
Baltimore, l~ • .769, US; John, New York,
11)..3, .769, 3.te ; Gura, Kansas City, 10-3, .769,
2.09; ClevelB.nd, Milwaultet, _6-2, .'150, U2;
McGregor, Baltlmore,e.-3, .77:1, 1.40 ; Rainey,
Boston, 8-3, .777 , 4.7&amp;,: Farmer, Chlc~q~o, S-2,
.714, 2.52; DoLson, Chlcago, 7-3, .700, 3.60.
STIUKEOUTS' Guidry , Ne~ Yurk 1 93;
Keough, Oakland, 80; M. Norns, Oakland,
7'9 ; F.&amp;ruiliiter,SutUe, 74; Matlack, Texas.
74.

Montreal, 5-2, .71t, 2.27 ; Ja ck.sufl , Pit"

WHkea.dSpvrU TraDJidlou
BASEBAU.

N•Oooal Le•gue
CHICAGO CUBS - Reactivated Oavt!
~n ()IJUielder, from the dli~~bled list.
Qot 1oned' J~Us F'Icueroa, ouUh:!lder, to
Wkhita uf th~ A.lnerican Aasoclattun.
ST. LOU! CARDtNA.l.S - Rc&lt;aUe&lt;l Juhn
Urrea, pitcher, and Ketth Smllh out!Lc!der ,
from Springfie ld of lhe . Ant ~ riCfi n ·
Association. Sent George F nu tt!r, pLlchcr.
and Tom Herr, infielder, to Sprin~field.

Ooo ooupon , .. '"'''"'' '" ""'
Not ,aJ,o wne&lt;c otr&gt;cr doscounts apptv
Off.,.r gooo oll 6911 West Mi'lrn St.
PGmero y

UU
1'1.: ~
Ul I ®

I

•••••••••••••••··~··••••••••••••••I
1 Any Day Meal Deal
1

1 Any Day Meal Deal

1

Top Shef -

cw ,th coupon)

(W1th co upon)

I

The Burger With The Bacon

I BUY ONE GET ONE FREE

I

I

Big Shef Meal Deal $1 .62

1

B1g She!. regu la&lt; l"es. medium soft drink

lsave$1.69 ~ !Save 51¢ ~ !

II
I

One"""""
...otflef
'""'""'·
......,
Not vilhd whefe
discounts apply
Offer good at 698 West Main Sl.,

Pomeroy

a.:~er
UU
ra.=
~
Ul 1 0

I
I

o... "'"""" ,., '"""""' .., ...appl~
.,

Not vahd whefe other d•SCOUniS

Bu~er I
r~

Otter gOOd ill 698 west MaiM sr

~

Ul I ®

Pomeroy

I

~···••••••••••··~···•••••••••••••I
1 Any Day Meal Deal
1

1 Any Day Meal Deal

1

IW•th co upon)

,w,,h cou pon)

I

Fish Filet

I BUY ONE GET ONE FREE

I

I

Top Shef Meal Deal $2.02

1

Top She!. reg ular'""'· med1um soh drink

II Save 89¢ a.:~r
~ ! Save 66¢ ~er
~ iI

I
I

One coupon per customer per

VISi t

Not vall(! wh&amp;fe otner dtSCDtJnts apply

I
ra.=
~
I
U I I@

Ull

Offer gOOd li t 698 WU I Main St •
Pomeroy

One coupon per customer pet" VISit
~ahd where other discounts apply

Not

~

O!Jer 9ood at 698 West M ain St.,
Pomer oy

I®

•

Any Day Meal De
1-···············~················1
1
1 Any Day Meal Deal
1
1

11
I

HOME RUNS, Schmid~ Phlla&lt;lelphia, 21 ;
Baker, Los ~gelea, 17; .Hendrick, St.L:wi.!l,

Wbui'Mh, ~~ •• 7'14, 2.51; Sultoo, Lm An~ele!J ,
f&gt;-2,.714, 2. ~1.
STIUKEOUTS ' Carltoo. PhiLuklphl• ,

I

I

Big Shef

a~

(Wilh coupo n)

Fish Filet Meal Deal $1.50

&lt;with c oupon)

I

Fish Sandwich. regu lar fries. medium so ft drink

Super Shef Meal Deal $1 .82

I

Super Shef, regular fries. medium soH drink

I1 Save 38¢ D~.:'"r
~ 1ISave
46¢
~
I
~er
DD.!r I
I

I

wt~e

lli~nts

one coupon oer cus tomer. per vrstt.
Nl'll vatr('l
ctner
Apply

Ollt!r wood i'1 169tl West Main St .
Poml'r oy

va~d whefe ~ther discounts apply.

Orte coupon

.UU

1
I

Not

c us1om1u. per v•sil.

Offer good at 698 West M ain S"T ,
Pome ro y

Dll

1
I

...................................
®

®

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday. J une :10. 1900

Regatta art show winners announced

PROUD
OF OUR
.

'

Tavern Hams............................~:...~ 1
Superior Bacon.....................'..??:. 89~
MIXED FRY~R PARTS,
·.
.
e

GROUND

39

BEEF

HERITAGE
The Vaughan Family
Serving Meigs County Since·

"
FROG ART - Here are some of the people who
created art carrying out a frog theme to win prizes in a
Regatta art show. Front, I to r, Jason Circle and Jarrod

t

•

I

'

'

'· .

lb

FOR THE GRILL

49

lb.

$269

LB.

BOILED HAM

VISIT US AT VAUGHAN'S
CARDINAL IN MIDDLEPORT

Circle, with winning frogs created by their grand·
mother, Mary K. Yost, and Nichola Pickens; back, Ito
r, '::arol Smith, Ann Diddle, Ruth Ann Fry and David
Hubbard.

SPLIT FRYERS or LEG QUARTERS ........:..

STORE SLICED

The Turn of the Century!

STEAKS

2

$119 :J

lb.

CHARCOAL

KAHN'S

$199

SUPERIOR

LEAN

WIENERS

WIENERS

BEEF

LB. '139

WE HAVE

PATTIES

,,

PLUM ROSE

GREAT ON THE GRILL
Middleport, OhiO

SLICED

HAMS

4 • 6 OZ. PKGS.

LEAN AND GOOD
FRIENDLIEST SERV'ICI IN TOWN
BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN_

SPECIALS

SALE DAnS
JUNE 30 •
JULY 5, 1

QUANTITY RIOHTS ·
RESERVED

scon JUMBO
AN CAM

I BEAlS

p~hool, K. C. Arnott, Pomeroy;
Julie Buck, Pomeroy, no third;
grades, give through ninth, Debbie
Werry, Pomeroy; P. J. Harris, Middleport; Matt Harris, Pomeroy;
adult, L. Rebecca Circle, Racine;
Rhojean· McClure, Pomey; Mark
Ellcessor , Gallipolis; senior ,
citizens, Enna Turnbull, Mason ;
Margaret Ella Lewis, Middleport;
Evelyn Thoma, Pomeroy; 3-D, Rex
Justis, Long . Bottom; Matthew
Harris, Pomeroy; Brenda Neutzling, Pomeroy.

~

BOTI'EL

have the right to open your locker,
should the administration consider
searchjustified.
DEARHELENANDSUE :
What exacUy is an emancipated
minor and how do you get to be one?
- lEROY FROM OREGON
DEAR LEROY:
Alegally emancipated minor is an
under-age pel'liOn who declares independence from his or her parents
~ court decree. He is then responsible lor his own life, may sign a
lease lor an apartment, attend the
school of his choice or even buy a
home without obtaining adult
signatures.
Parents relinquish all control over
such a youth, and they caMot be
held liable for his debts or misdeeds.
(Thla doesn't apply unless his status
has been formalized by a judge.)
Hmr do you get emancipated? By
flllng a petlUon with your county
clerk - cost, usually under $50 and appearing In court to have it
granted. You must prove that you
are able to support yourself (within
the law), are livillllawll)' from home

Special correapoadeilts
DearHelenandSue:
I like my privacy. I don't like my
· parents very nwch. They are
suspicious of everything I do, mainly
because I got into trouble with dope
last year. [ quit, but they keep searchlng my room. They think I've just
got it well hidden.
We had It out last night, and they
said they'd get the police to come in
and find the stuff, because COIJII
know all the hiding places.
Can they do that without my permission? Also is there some legal
way I can keep my parents from
snooping il) my room? - HASSLED
• 16 IN LOS ANGELES
: DEAR16:
First question: Not The California
Supreme Court has ruled that police
cannot search a minor's room
without his or her permission, even
if parents request it. (And by
refusinc to bear an appeal, .the U. S.
SUpreme court has let the decl.!ilon
stand.)
In Callfornla (and a number af
states) ·a teen-ager's cail&amp;ituUonal
rlgbts agalnsf watrantleu ae8fdl

• 111111 se~ are stronger than~

talr!ihiiOfdlsclpline.
, Sec:00c1 question: No. The home
belOIJCII to ypur parents, therefore
they have a legal (though not very
hunorable) right to snoop in your
room. - HELENANDSUE
·
NOTE FROM SUE: Incase you're

'

MIXEs59~
TRASH 20 ct t 169

YELLOW

BAGS
.
TOILET
TISSUE 4 CT.

77 ~

32-oz.

Jareee •• •••••••

.
In 1531, an earthquake destroyed
Lisbon and other Portuguese cities,
killing 30,000 people.

PICTURED ON THE FAR LEFT IS DICK VAUGHAN, SR. WORKING FOR
THE EVANS GROCERY, 2ND ST., POMEROY

790
PARTY ICE············································
8-16 oz. Bns.
. ............."119
TAB, SPRITE OR COCA-COLA
.

WHITE • DEC. OR WHITE
• ASSORTED

8 LB. BAG

Jumbo49¢

2
89¢.
CARDINAL BUNS..................

Roll

HAMBURGtR OR WIENER

.

sn
PKG.

---DAIRY &amp; FROZEN FOOD VALUEs-----

~·i9

BLUE BONNET

1-Lb.

~~IIIIIIE.........................Pkg.

Mwwe!!!'

HILLANDALE EXTRA LARGE
CARDINAL

First Birthda_y /
Oos~roed

By

Nikkt Lrump

Leslie·Nicolo ~.-rump, ruiugbter li

·

. O

..

'

LEFT
.... TO RIGHT: DON, DICK SR., DICK JR.
CENTER IS DODGER VAUGHAN.
~

·~

COQI(~ "-~CK:AGI : . .
WRAPPED &amp;FROZE~ A"D READY FOR YOUR FRniER
'

-

:

..

s

5 LB. HOT DOGS
5 LB. CHARCOAL stEAKS
0
5 LB. CHICKEN STEAKS .
10 LB. GROUNO.BEEF
·N
5 LB. LEAN BEEF PATTIES 5 LB. SMOKED SAUSAGE
L
6 LB. SPLIT FRYERS
5 LB. COUNTIY SPARE RIBS Y .· ·

BIRDS EYE

ICE CREAM- COOL WHIP
8 oz. bowl 69$
·. GaL
•21·
BUTTERMILK ·SOUR CREAM
QL
GARVIN'S

.~ ....

'

,,. '

8oz.

49° .

LEITUCE

PHUDBJfHIA CREAM CHEESE....................................~;: 69c
liANQUET

.

.

_
... 2
FliED CHICKII!'IY •• ,.................
~

_____ _______._
'

.
Lb.
f»tcSJ.

$1'19

PEACHES

PER HEAD

90

JUICY SWEET .

.... •-

......_

ICEBERG

GARVIN'S FRESH

.

ICIN'f

_____

FRESH PRODUCE

59c

EGGS ..~ ............................................. 69

Nikki Crump

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wayne Crump,
Maso! . observed her first birthdaJ.
Wlllr.dle:•iil••,.,:yw pllj!t· ,., !\1ar2'1.
;
···"lli.W is . tile gnmddaughti!t il,t ·
dec!"""\ lillest far.all cooeftlied..
it¥elyn stewart. Mason. and JMJ!i
States Wlllch piesently have an Stewart, Walton. W. Ve&lt; . Patemall
Emancipation d Minors Act are
(lf~ndparents are M,r. and Mrs.;
Oregon; Californla, Cllllnectlcut, ' Frank I ,on~ . Point Pleasant.
•~
Ml•tuippl, ~. ~.
Oreal-grandparents include Mr. ·
: Kansal! ·and Arkanll8a. caJlfornla and Mrs. harly Weav~r . Buffalo;
has the youngest age for
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Cununlns,
"freedom": U. - HElEN AND Letart Falls, OhloanoiMrs. Francia
SuE
~ "-·

--JIId .........• '·

oz. .

KRAFT

'

interested, California schools also

CHEESE 7V. oz.
WHITE, CAKE 16'72

!;AIJ«:I: ..............•.........

' .

BY HELEN AND SUE

EVERYDAY LOW
REGULAR PRICE
MAC. &amp;
23~ ·

18 oz.

BAR-B-QUE

~

Helen Help ,Us
Police can 't search teen 's
room without his petmission

29

KRAFT

Julie Buck, back, I tor, P. J. Harris, Brenda NeuWing,
Rebecca Circle and Rex Justis.

Arnott, Pomej'O.l'.i..__B!!I_tles, one
through lour, Terry Newwme,
Pomeroy; Mayla Yoacham, F..1cine;
Eddie Baer, Middleport; teens, Ann
Diddle, Pomeroy; Kathy Parker,
Pomeroy ; Dav id Hubbard,
Pomeroy; adult, Carolyn Nichol.!ion,
Middleport; Helen Handley ,
Pomeory; Erma Turnbull, Mason;
3-D, Mary K. Host, Racine; Carol
Smith, Middleport, Ruth Ann Fry,
Pomeroy.
Non-frog art winners, first
through third, respectively, include:

1

INTRODUCING A
fULL LINE OF ,
GENERIC PRODUCTS

PAPER
PLATES ..............!~..~ ..99°

79
.Twenty-nine residents were
presented prizes for their entries in
the annual Meigs County Big Bend
Regatta Art Show Saturday afternoon.
The display of art by contestants
featuring frog art and non-frog art
was at the Pomeroy Public Library
over the weekend.
Winners in art work carrying out a
frog theme, first thtough third
respectively, include: preschool,
Rod Newsome, Pomeroy; Nichola
Dawn Pickens, Pomeroy; C. K. C.

•

BLUE BIRD

PORI
ALL GRINDS

..••

ct.

NAPKINS.....................

WALTER VAUGHAN IS PICTURED DRIVING THE EWING GROCERY
STORE WAGON ON MAIN ST., POMEROY

NON-FROG ART - Some of the winners in the
non-frog theme of the Regatta art show are: front,

300

.
CANTALOUPE ...Each
YELLOW

SWEET

4 Ears 89c

LB.

c

49o'

~A_L_IFO.·~·IIA FRESH

QT.

89 . STRAWBERRIES •1 09
SOLID GREEN

·CABBAGE

6 LBS. FOR 99~

\

~
••

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday. J une :10. 1900

Regatta art show winners announced

PROUD
OF OUR
.

'

Tavern Hams............................~:...~ 1
Superior Bacon.....................'..??:. 89~
MIXED FRY~R PARTS,
·.
.
e

GROUND

39

BEEF

HERITAGE
The Vaughan Family
Serving Meigs County Since·

"
FROG ART - Here are some of the people who
created art carrying out a frog theme to win prizes in a
Regatta art show. Front, I to r, Jason Circle and Jarrod

t

•

I

'

'

'· .

lb

FOR THE GRILL

49

lb.

$269

LB.

BOILED HAM

VISIT US AT VAUGHAN'S
CARDINAL IN MIDDLEPORT

Circle, with winning frogs created by their grand·
mother, Mary K. Yost, and Nichola Pickens; back, Ito
r, '::arol Smith, Ann Diddle, Ruth Ann Fry and David
Hubbard.

SPLIT FRYERS or LEG QUARTERS ........:..

STORE SLICED

The Turn of the Century!

STEAKS

2

$119 :J

lb.

CHARCOAL

KAHN'S

$199

SUPERIOR

LEAN

WIENERS

WIENERS

BEEF

LB. '139

WE HAVE

PATTIES

,,

PLUM ROSE

GREAT ON THE GRILL
Middleport, OhiO

SLICED

HAMS

4 • 6 OZ. PKGS.

LEAN AND GOOD
FRIENDLIEST SERV'ICI IN TOWN
BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN_

SPECIALS

SALE DAnS
JUNE 30 •
JULY 5, 1

QUANTITY RIOHTS ·
RESERVED

scon JUMBO
AN CAM

I BEAlS

p~hool, K. C. Arnott, Pomeroy;
Julie Buck, Pomeroy, no third;
grades, give through ninth, Debbie
Werry, Pomeroy; P. J. Harris, Middleport; Matt Harris, Pomeroy;
adult, L. Rebecca Circle, Racine;
Rhojean· McClure, Pomey; Mark
Ellcessor , Gallipolis; senior ,
citizens, Enna Turnbull, Mason ;
Margaret Ella Lewis, Middleport;
Evelyn Thoma, Pomeroy; 3-D, Rex
Justis, Long . Bottom; Matthew
Harris, Pomeroy; Brenda Neutzling, Pomeroy.

~

BOTI'EL

have the right to open your locker,
should the administration consider
searchjustified.
DEARHELENANDSUE :
What exacUy is an emancipated
minor and how do you get to be one?
- lEROY FROM OREGON
DEAR LEROY:
Alegally emancipated minor is an
under-age pel'liOn who declares independence from his or her parents
~ court decree. He is then responsible lor his own life, may sign a
lease lor an apartment, attend the
school of his choice or even buy a
home without obtaining adult
signatures.
Parents relinquish all control over
such a youth, and they caMot be
held liable for his debts or misdeeds.
(Thla doesn't apply unless his status
has been formalized by a judge.)
Hmr do you get emancipated? By
flllng a petlUon with your county
clerk - cost, usually under $50 and appearing In court to have it
granted. You must prove that you
are able to support yourself (within
the law), are livillllawll)' from home

Special correapoadeilts
DearHelenandSue:
I like my privacy. I don't like my
· parents very nwch. They are
suspicious of everything I do, mainly
because I got into trouble with dope
last year. [ quit, but they keep searchlng my room. They think I've just
got it well hidden.
We had It out last night, and they
said they'd get the police to come in
and find the stuff, because COIJII
know all the hiding places.
Can they do that without my permission? Also is there some legal
way I can keep my parents from
snooping il) my room? - HASSLED
• 16 IN LOS ANGELES
: DEAR16:
First question: Not The California
Supreme Court has ruled that police
cannot search a minor's room
without his or her permission, even
if parents request it. (And by
refusinc to bear an appeal, .the U. S.
SUpreme court has let the decl.!ilon
stand.)
In Callfornla (and a number af
states) ·a teen-ager's cail&amp;ituUonal
rlgbts agalnsf watrantleu ae8fdl

• 111111 se~ are stronger than~

talr!ihiiOfdlsclpline.
, Sec:00c1 question: No. The home
belOIJCII to ypur parents, therefore
they have a legal (though not very
hunorable) right to snoop in your
room. - HELENANDSUE
·
NOTE FROM SUE: Incase you're

'

MIXEs59~
TRASH 20 ct t 169

YELLOW

BAGS
.
TOILET
TISSUE 4 CT.

77 ~

32-oz.

Jareee •• •••••••

.
In 1531, an earthquake destroyed
Lisbon and other Portuguese cities,
killing 30,000 people.

PICTURED ON THE FAR LEFT IS DICK VAUGHAN, SR. WORKING FOR
THE EVANS GROCERY, 2ND ST., POMEROY

790
PARTY ICE············································
8-16 oz. Bns.
. ............."119
TAB, SPRITE OR COCA-COLA
.

WHITE • DEC. OR WHITE
• ASSORTED

8 LB. BAG

Jumbo49¢

2
89¢.
CARDINAL BUNS..................

Roll

HAMBURGtR OR WIENER

.

sn
PKG.

---DAIRY &amp; FROZEN FOOD VALUEs-----

~·i9

BLUE BONNET

1-Lb.

~~IIIIIIE.........................Pkg.

Mwwe!!!'

HILLANDALE EXTRA LARGE
CARDINAL

First Birthda_y /
Oos~roed

By

Nikkt Lrump

Leslie·Nicolo ~.-rump, ruiugbter li

·

. O

..

'

LEFT
.... TO RIGHT: DON, DICK SR., DICK JR.
CENTER IS DODGER VAUGHAN.
~

·~

COQI(~ "-~CK:AGI : . .
WRAPPED &amp;FROZE~ A"D READY FOR YOUR FRniER
'

-

:

..

s

5 LB. HOT DOGS
5 LB. CHARCOAL stEAKS
0
5 LB. CHICKEN STEAKS .
10 LB. GROUNO.BEEF
·N
5 LB. LEAN BEEF PATTIES 5 LB. SMOKED SAUSAGE
L
6 LB. SPLIT FRYERS
5 LB. COUNTIY SPARE RIBS Y .· ·

BIRDS EYE

ICE CREAM- COOL WHIP
8 oz. bowl 69$
·. GaL
•21·
BUTTERMILK ·SOUR CREAM
QL
GARVIN'S

.~ ....

'

,,. '

8oz.

49° .

LEITUCE

PHUDBJfHIA CREAM CHEESE....................................~;: 69c
liANQUET

.

.

_
... 2
FliED CHICKII!'IY •• ,.................
~

_____ _______._
'

.
Lb.
f»tcSJ.

$1'19

PEACHES

PER HEAD

90

JUICY SWEET .

.... •-

......_

ICEBERG

GARVIN'S FRESH

.

ICIN'f

_____

FRESH PRODUCE

59c

EGGS ..~ ............................................. 69

Nikki Crump

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wayne Crump,
Maso! . observed her first birthdaJ.
Wlllr.dle:•iil••,.,:yw pllj!t· ,., !\1ar2'1.
;
···"lli.W is . tile gnmddaughti!t il,t ·
dec!"""\ lillest far.all cooeftlied..
it¥elyn stewart. Mason. and JMJ!i
States Wlllch piesently have an Stewart, Walton. W. Ve&lt; . Patemall
Emancipation d Minors Act are
(lf~ndparents are M,r. and Mrs.;
Oregon; Californla, Cllllnectlcut, ' Frank I ,on~ . Point Pleasant.
•~
Ml•tuippl, ~. ~.
Oreal-grandparents include Mr. ·
: Kansal! ·and Arkanll8a. caJlfornla and Mrs. harly Weav~r . Buffalo;
has the youngest age for
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Cununlns,
"freedom": U. - HElEN AND Letart Falls, OhloanoiMrs. Francia
SuE
~ "-·

--JIId .........• '·

oz. .

KRAFT

'

interested, California schools also

CHEESE 7V. oz.
WHITE, CAKE 16'72

!;AIJ«:I: ..............•.........

' .

BY HELEN AND SUE

EVERYDAY LOW
REGULAR PRICE
MAC. &amp;
23~ ·

18 oz.

BAR-B-QUE

~

Helen Help ,Us
Police can 't search teen 's
room without his petmission

29

KRAFT

Julie Buck, back, I tor, P. J. Harris, Brenda NeuWing,
Rebecca Circle and Rex Justis.

Arnott, Pomej'O.l'.i..__B!!I_tles, one
through lour, Terry Newwme,
Pomeroy; Mayla Yoacham, F..1cine;
Eddie Baer, Middleport; teens, Ann
Diddle, Pomeroy; Kathy Parker,
Pomeroy ; Dav id Hubbard,
Pomeroy; adult, Carolyn Nichol.!ion,
Middleport; Helen Handley ,
Pomeory; Erma Turnbull, Mason;
3-D, Mary K. Host, Racine; Carol
Smith, Middleport, Ruth Ann Fry,
Pomeroy.
Non-frog art winners, first
through third, respectively, include:

1

INTRODUCING A
fULL LINE OF ,
GENERIC PRODUCTS

PAPER
PLATES ..............!~..~ ..99°

79
.Twenty-nine residents were
presented prizes for their entries in
the annual Meigs County Big Bend
Regatta Art Show Saturday afternoon.
The display of art by contestants
featuring frog art and non-frog art
was at the Pomeroy Public Library
over the weekend.
Winners in art work carrying out a
frog theme, first thtough third
respectively, include: preschool,
Rod Newsome, Pomeroy; Nichola
Dawn Pickens, Pomeroy; C. K. C.

•

BLUE BIRD

PORI
ALL GRINDS

..••

ct.

NAPKINS.....................

WALTER VAUGHAN IS PICTURED DRIVING THE EWING GROCERY
STORE WAGON ON MAIN ST., POMEROY

NON-FROG ART - Some of the winners in the
non-frog theme of the Regatta art show are: front,

300

.
CANTALOUPE ...Each
YELLOW

SWEET

4 Ears 89c

LB.

c

49o'

~A_L_IFO.·~·IIA FRESH

QT.

89 . STRAWBERRIES •1 09
SOLID GREEN

·CABBAGE

6 LBS. FOR 99~

\

~
••

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepurt·Pumcruy, 0 ., Munday, Ju11e 30,1980

I Ulll' L'l yuur &lt;~ll) ,

.ASTROC·RAPH
July t , 1980
This coming yellr, ke1:p your eyes peeled Cur
situations thHl c;ould offer you a ::;ccond J&gt;Ourcf' of
income. Several mltrt!!!Un.~r: thtnga may d!!velop
to opeo up entire!)· new channels.
CANCER lJwae tl·July !%) Rt:sponsibJJities
and serious n\il lten )fiQuld be !!liven top priority
today. lnjt:cting fr ivnluus aclltivities into your
!ll:l~ndi could prove very Wlwise. RQmant.-e,
tn vel, luck, resources, posstble piUalb t~nd
career for the comng months ilr'e aU dia:cussed
m yoor Aslro-C raph, which begins witb your birlhday. Mail II for each to AslroGraph. Box 489,

llllllnent todtty, sl&lt;lnd by your word regardles.s ur

tht! ('ust. Looking fuf Wll)'ll to back oul of ~ 11
agrl.'emcnt willlumish your ima~e.
VJR(.i0 ~ Aug . 23-Scpt. Z! t Put a fair price on
your ~~ or scrvl~ll hll.iay. but tJun 't seek
wueasunable proUts. 8l''t1!! too gn:edy coul d
le&lt;JU tu your undoing.
LlBKA tSept . f l-(}(t. Ul Your·re lucky in
many are01s today, but ~kmg r.nancJal nsks
I.Sil't unc ur t hem . Don 't ~amb le un thinw; t hat

could cost you money .
SCORPIO tOcl. 23-Nov. !!f Be very palienll~
day If you' re involved in ltO!nething thi:tt could
add to your resources p~ enhance your security.

bt rth tl~:~ te .

pul ull your card.1 un lht! ~bll- when
Ueulmg w1lh rncnds. T-hey' 1.1 t!U.Spt.'t'f. t~.s mu~h .
lAPRIC..:ORN IDee.' 22-Jan. 191 Gu to old.
rcht~bl e !r1cnd.s tl.l()ijy lf you tll'td iiS.SI!!lance, nut
to your nt:w~r Ht:quamUmcct~. Pab of lvn~:~: ~Lan­
din~ can be cvuule don.
AQUARIUS IJaa. !fl.-Feb. 19) You're quite
clever today ¥1 figuring out how things should be
dcJne, bUt for some strange re.soo you may attempt to do Ult!rn dlfferenUy . FuJiow your
un gma l bJucprmt.
PISCES t Fcb. ZO.March ZCII Rising to
chltllenges today is something you're eui.ly .able
to do once yoo subdue ~ll-dwbU. Don't
W1derrlilunat.e your worth or fortitude .
,
A.Rif'..S IMarch fi ·Aprill9 ) Beware oftendencles todi:ty to !Uddenly alter situations that are
rurwng smoothly. tmpulsive changes couJd
lila)' Ill.(

LEO tJuly l3-A ug. lt! On(·e &gt;"ou makt' a tun-

Rl:ld.iu Cit}' Statiun, N. Y. 10019. Be sure tosped!y

bui. uupulMIJI!Rt$S ts.n 't.

SAGilTAH.ILS 1Nt1\l . U. OI'C. 1:11 Nnrnwlly
you 're Y(!r~ rt·ank am.l forthrll(ht, butluday yuu

TOPS news reported
Sandy Peyton was queen for the
week at the meeting of TOPS OH
1466, Rutland, Wedn~y, with
Shorty Wright as runner-up .
Mrs. Peyt9n received a dollar, a
create negutJvt eUt'Cts.
TAURUS l Aprll 2G-M1y JOI You work ve'i)'
well today with persona whose g011.b are in har·
mony with youra, so se lect co-Mo·orker.s m1 lht5
basis. SLHy aw11)' from lmlividW!Is on otht&gt;r
wnelqlhs.
·
GEMINI (1\tay U-June 20) Things in general
wiU 110 vety nicely today If you don't take what
you do too seriously . Get uphghtand Utlle w ill~

accomplished.

ribbon and members sang in her
honor. Winner of the buddy board
was Phyllis Clay who wiU have her
weekly dues paid for the month of
July. Members were reminded that
Wednes4ay will be the last meeting
of the weigh-ins to be counted for the
July 4 ~oats. Games were .played
with prizes being donated by mem·
bers. Infonnation on the club may
be obtained by calling 742-3062. It
was noted that gainers of the week
will have to compose a 200 word
theme entiUed " Why I Gained" as a
penalty.

9- The Daily Sentinel, Midctleport-Porneruy , 0., Monday, June 30, 1980

10019. lk! II Lire to specify btrth date.

LEO tJul)' %3-Auc. ZZ) You're: &lt;~drtxt h.lday at
hur'!k: trading or putting t.'OOll)hc.ated l.lcab

ASTROGRAPH
Juea,118t
Joint ven&amp;ures hold Plrticular promiJe for you
U\ilcorniJII year,eapedaUy those w.ith membera
of the
101. Collectively, you should be
ablelo
rewarding proJO&lt;fJI togolher.
CAN
jJue 21.JIIIy !2) It's Important to

logi..'lher. It' s easy $lnce yw're not ju.st luukinw
uut ror Nu. 1.
'r'IRGO 1Au a. ~- Z%) Busi ness an&lt;!
pleu urt mu. weU tudKy , :tO if you have a c lient
yuu're wurkl nK with, do w in a congeni.JI J at·
Hll*phere, Tum lhe sale Into a fun tulppening.

nwke :yoor need~ known tQ othert: today, but d.o
ao wit.hoot being demanding. They ' ll wa nt to help
if the~ Wlderstand your wants. Find out more of
wtultlleaahead for you in lhe year follawirll! your
birthday by aemin(!l for )'OUr copy of
AstroGraph, ,Box W , Radio Cit)· Station, N. V.

!rite

UBRA !Sept . .tlo&lt;kt 23) It may be necessary
to play a little politics todoy tn urder tu fulflll

your ambiUons. You' Uknow how to do it without

being phOfly.
SCORPIO lOci. 23-Nov. tlJ 'fuur fifliincilll
Wij)e(.1JI4:tre promiSlng todHy, but yw'll have to
w;e your Lmaglnalioo kl a.rry lhlnKJ off to the

best advanLill!:e. !)tm't rttStriut yoor thinking.
SAG mARIUS (ND\1. t3-D«. U J. It Shouldn' t
prove too dU'ficult toda~ tiJ motivate ames or
IUSOCiates regardi ng things ror yuu,r mutual
good PointO\.;Illheadvant.age~ .
CAPRICORN (Dee, !2-Jaa. U~ Be prepared to
make adjustments or compf'Orllisea today in

munet41ry mattens. You won't come out oo the

short end dyoo 'recooperative. ··
AQ UARIUS (Ju. ~Feb . I!l«omeone yo u
klluw socially CHn prove helpful to you m rommeN'ia l .IIJ'eall as well. Strengthen your bond5 ~
day wilh this va luable contact.
PISCES IFeb. ~March 201 Events could aplQ get a little out IJf ha nd today, but if you
your cool everythin)!: will WQrk uut fine in

5

ong fllll.

ARIES !March 21-Aprtl II) Friends will be
. very sena ilive to yoor needs -~oday. !hey'IJ dQ

what they can to remove roed.bloc:U trom yow
p~;~th.

TAUR US (April lit-May ll)lt may be
neCtlSSary lo twc.e a ealoilitted riJk Qf a
gan:tble today in order tu a chieve your &amp;oall. be
darllll!:, but keep both feet on the &amp;round.
GEMINI (Miy 21-Jaot :0) Even lhougb you
nlB,Y De materiaUy motivated today, ~ou · sbould.
be .11 ble to get what you want without being
forceful or selfish. Care and share.

.unt

OPE N DAI LY'
10·9
SU NDAY 1· 6
A'ITENDING OU - Beth
Perrin, who has completed her
junlor year at Meigs High School,
Is presently enroUed in art cour·
scs at Ohio Unlversity under the
Summer Scholar Program. The
.program is designed for students
who have maintained a high
a cademic level iD their first three
years of .high school and are
awarded free summer class instruction at the unlversily . Beth
is the daughter of the Rev. and
Mrs. W. H. Perrin.

Jr

·:-TUES., WED. PRE-HOLIDAY SALE
--~.~BLAsrs

FLATIO
K mart® AD&gt;ili''Rl'lsiffi
MERCHANDISE POLICY

Bring ~our Pickup or Borrow One from
your Neighbor. At These Prices You Can't
AHord Not to Shop Hogg &amp; Zuspan's

Our ttrm lnten Uon it to tl l'lt t'ltry
adverUted Item In tlo ek a n our atle lvn .
If t n'tdvertlted Item 11 nat uall11* for
purchase due to an y unta relftn
reuon, K mart wlll lss ue 1 Atln Ctlec:k
on reque•t lor ttle merch1ndl1e to ~
putchated at the sa le price whtnt'ltr
awallable or will tell you 1 eomp~rt ble
qualil'f Item ala comparlble reduc tion
out
In p rlr.e . Our po tlc'f l1
c us tomers .~ NII1f1 cHon I

64
~
Potato Chips

Cash-n-Carry.

Day_J; Only
2 Days On ly

80 Plastic-coated, 9" Paper
Plates. Daisy print. Save.

or b ar b e·

2 Days Only

PENNY SMITH, daughter of
. Harrison and Ruth Smith,
Racine, has completed her first
year al the Hocking Technical
College with honors. Penny Is a
graduate of Southern High
Sehool.

Sale Starts Tuesday, July 1st
and is in effect thru Saturday, J·uly 5th.

2 Days Only

ggc 132=0zl~

F~R

50 Plastic

Picnic Cups

oz. size for
cold beverages.

Pl astic foam
6. 1 oz. size
51 count

Cups. 14-

SPECIALS! I I

2 Days Only

$J

(CLOSED FRIDAY, JULY 4TH)

4Bp~
• 2-Pack

OUR BEST NO. 1

Batteries.

Choice of

PRECUT STUDS

'129

SALEJULY2
RACINE - Southern High School
cheerleaders wiU have a sale July 2
at the home of Bob Roy in Racine
beginning a t 9 a.m. Th e
cheerleaders need items for the sale.
Those wishing to contribute are
asked to take their items to the Roy
residence before 9 a.m. The
proceeds will be used for
cheerleader camp.

~697

IIGI..l..tll SC( .. I

2 Days

Our Styling
Wand.

With o r
witho u t
mist. Save.

~

LIMIT 2

~~eg238

Men's 1-shirt
Polyester /cotton With pocket .
Solid colors Shop now .

Misses'
Sizes

Our Reg
3.96
.

Terry Shorts
f oiyes ter , PO/ y ese r / c ott on . CoJors.

1 ~r~eg

,2~
2 1/o -Oz . •

Roll- on
Deodorant.

1.96

In regu ·
lar or unscented.

cool Tube

Colortul stripes .
ester/cotton /rubber.

'Fl. o.t.

PRESSURE
TREATED

OZITE
INDOOR.()IJTD()OR

LUMBER

CARPET

2"x4 " x12'
2"x6"x12'
2"x6"x16'
4"x4"x8'

COLORS :

•Turf Green
•Green &amp; B Jack Tweed

$3.36
55.04
$6. 72
$5.56

5 GALLONS OF
TOPPING OR JOINT

CARPET
•Candy Stripe
•Earth Tone

Your

Choice
YO .

2030
2020

Rubber/Vin~ Hose

KAISER ALUMINUM TWIN RIB
ALUMINUM ROOFING

4'X8' SHEET
4'x7' SHEET
.4' x6 ' SHEET

4/12 Pitch With Maximum of 2' Overhang

S12.16 EACH
$10.64.,EACH
$9.12 EACH

Price
24'••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 128.98

Size

26'••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• $30.34
1
28'••.•••••••••• ···········-···-·-········· 33Jl

8 PENNY
COMMON NAILS

27 Ga l.
Our 6.69

l

square

TRUSSES

26.34
1
21.62

I ... G
COAL &amp; WOOD
BURNING

Texture Paint

STOVES
WITH BLOWER

16 PENNY
COMMON NAilS

PLAN TO ATI'END SCHOOL
- Bruce R. aod Dao D. Carman,
sons of Sylvia Carman and Ivan
Carman, Rt 2, Pomeroy, both
graduates of Meigs High School,
1979 ami 1980, respecllvely, will
be attending lhe Ohio Unlvemlty
. of T~hnology In tbe coming mouths. Bruce bas been a student
there since October, 1979, a nd has
made the Dean's Ust through
each trimester. Dao will enter In
J uly, and both brothem will be
m aj o ri P ~ \ lo
e l ec troni c
w•
~Y will reside In ~o
the school while
s there.

'2670per

STANDARD

1

Per
Sheet

5

•6"

SQ .
SQ. YD .

3/8"x4'x8'
PLASTER BOARD

7~~Reg. 9.97

•White •Black •Mist Green
•Burnt Brown

COMPOUND

COLORS:

ALUMINUM SLIDING WINDOW WITH SCREEN~~
3030- 130.16
3020 - 124.78

CELOTEX
ROOFING SHINGLES

RUBBER BACKED

'369

95

4" SOLID
AND
PERFORATED

PLASTIC
DRAIN PIPE
10' SECTIONS
4" DIAMETER

2 Days Only

-86c
4 8 •• z.

• .

Sllti·Fiusll. •
Granules
clean, dis·

_..

Infect toilet.·
_

\

--·-- --·----- - --

•

*•

10' SECTION
ALUMINUM

'4"

Per

Section

1/2" INSUlATED
SHEAlHING

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepurt·Pumcruy, 0 ., Munday, Ju11e 30,1980

I Ulll' L'l yuur &lt;~ll) ,

.ASTROC·RAPH
July t , 1980
This coming yellr, ke1:p your eyes peeled Cur
situations thHl c;ould offer you a ::;ccond J&gt;Ourcf' of
income. Several mltrt!!!Un.~r: thtnga may d!!velop
to opeo up entire!)· new channels.
CANCER lJwae tl·July !%) Rt:sponsibJJities
and serious n\il lten )fiQuld be !!liven top priority
today. lnjt:cting fr ivnluus aclltivities into your
!ll:l~ndi could prove very Wlwise. RQmant.-e,
tn vel, luck, resources, posstble piUalb t~nd
career for the comng months ilr'e aU dia:cussed
m yoor Aslro-C raph, which begins witb your birlhday. Mail II for each to AslroGraph. Box 489,

llllllnent todtty, sl&lt;lnd by your word regardles.s ur

tht! ('ust. Looking fuf Wll)'ll to back oul of ~ 11
agrl.'emcnt willlumish your ima~e.
VJR(.i0 ~ Aug . 23-Scpt. Z! t Put a fair price on
your ~~ or scrvl~ll hll.iay. but tJun 't seek
wueasunable proUts. 8l''t1!! too gn:edy coul d
le&lt;JU tu your undoing.
LlBKA tSept . f l-(}(t. Ul Your·re lucky in
many are01s today, but ~kmg r.nancJal nsks
I.Sil't unc ur t hem . Don 't ~amb le un thinw; t hat

could cost you money .
SCORPIO tOcl. 23-Nov. !!f Be very palienll~
day If you' re involved in ltO!nething thi:tt could
add to your resources p~ enhance your security.

bt rth tl~:~ te .

pul ull your card.1 un lht! ~bll- when
Ueulmg w1lh rncnds. T-hey' 1.1 t!U.Spt.'t'f. t~.s mu~h .
lAPRIC..:ORN IDee.' 22-Jan. 191 Gu to old.
rcht~bl e !r1cnd.s tl.l()ijy lf you tll'td iiS.SI!!lance, nut
to your nt:w~r Ht:quamUmcct~. Pab of lvn~:~: ~Lan­
din~ can be cvuule don.
AQUARIUS IJaa. !fl.-Feb. 19) You're quite
clever today ¥1 figuring out how things should be
dcJne, bUt for some strange re.soo you may attempt to do Ult!rn dlfferenUy . FuJiow your
un gma l bJucprmt.
PISCES t Fcb. ZO.March ZCII Rising to
chltllenges today is something you're eui.ly .able
to do once yoo subdue ~ll-dwbU. Don't
W1derrlilunat.e your worth or fortitude .
,
A.Rif'..S IMarch fi ·Aprill9 ) Beware oftendencles todi:ty to !Uddenly alter situations that are
rurwng smoothly. tmpulsive changes couJd
lila)' Ill.(

LEO tJuly l3-A ug. lt! On(·e &gt;"ou makt' a tun-

Rl:ld.iu Cit}' Statiun, N. Y. 10019. Be sure tosped!y

bui. uupulMIJI!Rt$S ts.n 't.

SAGilTAH.ILS 1Nt1\l . U. OI'C. 1:11 Nnrnwlly
you 're Y(!r~ rt·ank am.l forthrll(ht, butluday yuu

TOPS news reported
Sandy Peyton was queen for the
week at the meeting of TOPS OH
1466, Rutland, Wedn~y, with
Shorty Wright as runner-up .
Mrs. Peyt9n received a dollar, a
create negutJvt eUt'Cts.
TAURUS l Aprll 2G-M1y JOI You work ve'i)'
well today with persona whose g011.b are in har·
mony with youra, so se lect co-Mo·orker.s m1 lht5
basis. SLHy aw11)' from lmlividW!Is on otht&gt;r
wnelqlhs.
·
GEMINI (1\tay U-June 20) Things in general
wiU 110 vety nicely today If you don't take what
you do too seriously . Get uphghtand Utlle w ill~

accomplished.

ribbon and members sang in her
honor. Winner of the buddy board
was Phyllis Clay who wiU have her
weekly dues paid for the month of
July. Members were reminded that
Wednes4ay will be the last meeting
of the weigh-ins to be counted for the
July 4 ~oats. Games were .played
with prizes being donated by mem·
bers. Infonnation on the club may
be obtained by calling 742-3062. It
was noted that gainers of the week
will have to compose a 200 word
theme entiUed " Why I Gained" as a
penalty.

9- The Daily Sentinel, Midctleport-Porneruy , 0., Monday, June 30, 1980

10019. lk! II Lire to specify btrth date.

LEO tJul)' %3-Auc. ZZ) You're: &lt;~drtxt h.lday at
hur'!k: trading or putting t.'OOll)hc.ated l.lcab

ASTROGRAPH
Juea,118t
Joint ven&amp;ures hold Plrticular promiJe for you
U\ilcorniJII year,eapedaUy those w.ith membera
of the
101. Collectively, you should be
ablelo
rewarding proJO&lt;fJI togolher.
CAN
jJue 21.JIIIy !2) It's Important to

logi..'lher. It' s easy $lnce yw're not ju.st luukinw
uut ror Nu. 1.
'r'IRGO 1Au a. ~- Z%) Busi ness an&lt;!
pleu urt mu. weU tudKy , :tO if you have a c lient
yuu're wurkl nK with, do w in a congeni.JI J at·
Hll*phere, Tum lhe sale Into a fun tulppening.

nwke :yoor need~ known tQ othert: today, but d.o
ao wit.hoot being demanding. They ' ll wa nt to help
if the~ Wlderstand your wants. Find out more of
wtultlleaahead for you in lhe year follawirll! your
birthday by aemin(!l for )'OUr copy of
AstroGraph, ,Box W , Radio Cit)· Station, N. V.

!rite

UBRA !Sept . .tlo&lt;kt 23) It may be necessary
to play a little politics todoy tn urder tu fulflll

your ambiUons. You' Uknow how to do it without

being phOfly.
SCORPIO lOci. 23-Nov. tlJ 'fuur fifliincilll
Wij)e(.1JI4:tre promiSlng todHy, but yw'll have to
w;e your Lmaglnalioo kl a.rry lhlnKJ off to the

best advanLill!:e. !)tm't rttStriut yoor thinking.
SAG mARIUS (ND\1. t3-D«. U J. It Shouldn' t
prove too dU'ficult toda~ tiJ motivate ames or
IUSOCiates regardi ng things ror yuu,r mutual
good PointO\.;Illheadvant.age~ .
CAPRICORN (Dee, !2-Jaa. U~ Be prepared to
make adjustments or compf'Orllisea today in

munet41ry mattens. You won't come out oo the

short end dyoo 'recooperative. ··
AQ UARIUS (Ju. ~Feb . I!l«omeone yo u
klluw socially CHn prove helpful to you m rommeN'ia l .IIJ'eall as well. Strengthen your bond5 ~
day wilh this va luable contact.
PISCES IFeb. ~March 201 Events could aplQ get a little out IJf ha nd today, but if you
your cool everythin)!: will WQrk uut fine in

5

ong fllll.

ARIES !March 21-Aprtl II) Friends will be
. very sena ilive to yoor needs -~oday. !hey'IJ dQ

what they can to remove roed.bloc:U trom yow
p~;~th.

TAUR US (April lit-May ll)lt may be
neCtlSSary lo twc.e a ealoilitted riJk Qf a
gan:tble today in order tu a chieve your &amp;oall. be
darllll!:, but keep both feet on the &amp;round.
GEMINI (Miy 21-Jaot :0) Even lhougb you
nlB,Y De materiaUy motivated today, ~ou · sbould.
be .11 ble to get what you want without being
forceful or selfish. Care and share.

.unt

OPE N DAI LY'
10·9
SU NDAY 1· 6
A'ITENDING OU - Beth
Perrin, who has completed her
junlor year at Meigs High School,
Is presently enroUed in art cour·
scs at Ohio Unlversity under the
Summer Scholar Program. The
.program is designed for students
who have maintained a high
a cademic level iD their first three
years of .high school and are
awarded free summer class instruction at the unlversily . Beth
is the daughter of the Rev. and
Mrs. W. H. Perrin.

Jr

·:-TUES., WED. PRE-HOLIDAY SALE
--~.~BLAsrs

FLATIO
K mart® AD&gt;ili''Rl'lsiffi
MERCHANDISE POLICY

Bring ~our Pickup or Borrow One from
your Neighbor. At These Prices You Can't
AHord Not to Shop Hogg &amp; Zuspan's

Our ttrm lnten Uon it to tl l'lt t'ltry
adverUted Item In tlo ek a n our atle lvn .
If t n'tdvertlted Item 11 nat uall11* for
purchase due to an y unta relftn
reuon, K mart wlll lss ue 1 Atln Ctlec:k
on reque•t lor ttle merch1ndl1e to ~
putchated at the sa le price whtnt'ltr
awallable or will tell you 1 eomp~rt ble
qualil'f Item ala comparlble reduc tion
out
In p rlr.e . Our po tlc'f l1
c us tomers .~ NII1f1 cHon I

64
~
Potato Chips

Cash-n-Carry.

Day_J; Only
2 Days On ly

80 Plastic-coated, 9" Paper
Plates. Daisy print. Save.

or b ar b e·

2 Days Only

PENNY SMITH, daughter of
. Harrison and Ruth Smith,
Racine, has completed her first
year al the Hocking Technical
College with honors. Penny Is a
graduate of Southern High
Sehool.

Sale Starts Tuesday, July 1st
and is in effect thru Saturday, J·uly 5th.

2 Days Only

ggc 132=0zl~

F~R

50 Plastic

Picnic Cups

oz. size for
cold beverages.

Pl astic foam
6. 1 oz. size
51 count

Cups. 14-

SPECIALS! I I

2 Days Only

$J

(CLOSED FRIDAY, JULY 4TH)

4Bp~
• 2-Pack

OUR BEST NO. 1

Batteries.

Choice of

PRECUT STUDS

'129

SALEJULY2
RACINE - Southern High School
cheerleaders wiU have a sale July 2
at the home of Bob Roy in Racine
beginning a t 9 a.m. Th e
cheerleaders need items for the sale.
Those wishing to contribute are
asked to take their items to the Roy
residence before 9 a.m. The
proceeds will be used for
cheerleader camp.

~697

IIGI..l..tll SC( .. I

2 Days

Our Styling
Wand.

With o r
witho u t
mist. Save.

~

LIMIT 2

~~eg238

Men's 1-shirt
Polyester /cotton With pocket .
Solid colors Shop now .

Misses'
Sizes

Our Reg
3.96
.

Terry Shorts
f oiyes ter , PO/ y ese r / c ott on . CoJors.

1 ~r~eg

,2~
2 1/o -Oz . •

Roll- on
Deodorant.

1.96

In regu ·
lar or unscented.

cool Tube

Colortul stripes .
ester/cotton /rubber.

'Fl. o.t.

PRESSURE
TREATED

OZITE
INDOOR.()IJTD()OR

LUMBER

CARPET

2"x4 " x12'
2"x6"x12'
2"x6"x16'
4"x4"x8'

COLORS :

•Turf Green
•Green &amp; B Jack Tweed

$3.36
55.04
$6. 72
$5.56

5 GALLONS OF
TOPPING OR JOINT

CARPET
•Candy Stripe
•Earth Tone

Your

Choice
YO .

2030
2020

Rubber/Vin~ Hose

KAISER ALUMINUM TWIN RIB
ALUMINUM ROOFING

4'X8' SHEET
4'x7' SHEET
.4' x6 ' SHEET

4/12 Pitch With Maximum of 2' Overhang

S12.16 EACH
$10.64.,EACH
$9.12 EACH

Price
24'••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 128.98

Size

26'••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• $30.34
1
28'••.•••••••••• ···········-···-·-········· 33Jl

8 PENNY
COMMON NAILS

27 Ga l.
Our 6.69

l

square

TRUSSES

26.34
1
21.62

I ... G
COAL &amp; WOOD
BURNING

Texture Paint

STOVES
WITH BLOWER

16 PENNY
COMMON NAilS

PLAN TO ATI'END SCHOOL
- Bruce R. aod Dao D. Carman,
sons of Sylvia Carman and Ivan
Carman, Rt 2, Pomeroy, both
graduates of Meigs High School,
1979 ami 1980, respecllvely, will
be attending lhe Ohio Unlvemlty
. of T~hnology In tbe coming mouths. Bruce bas been a student
there since October, 1979, a nd has
made the Dean's Ust through
each trimester. Dao will enter In
J uly, and both brothem will be
m aj o ri P ~ \ lo
e l ec troni c
w•
~Y will reside In ~o
the school while
s there.

'2670per

STANDARD

1

Per
Sheet

5

•6"

SQ .
SQ. YD .

3/8"x4'x8'
PLASTER BOARD

7~~Reg. 9.97

•White •Black •Mist Green
•Burnt Brown

COMPOUND

COLORS:

ALUMINUM SLIDING WINDOW WITH SCREEN~~
3030- 130.16
3020 - 124.78

CELOTEX
ROOFING SHINGLES

RUBBER BACKED

'369

95

4" SOLID
AND
PERFORATED

PLASTIC
DRAIN PIPE
10' SECTIONS
4" DIAMETER

2 Days Only

-86c
4 8 •• z.

• .

Sllti·Fiusll. •
Granules
clean, dis·

_..

Infect toilet.·
_

\

--·-- --·----- - --

•

*•

10' SECTION
ALUMINUM

'4"

Per

Section

1/2" INSUlATED
SHEAlHING

�11

,...

HI- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddlcpurt-Pumcru&gt; , 0 ., Munday. JuncJO, l9jl0

_,.. .

- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddlepurt-Pumcruy, 0 ., Munday, June 30, 1980

Scenes. from Meigs' 1980 Big Bend Regatta

~\

~

•

•

•
'

-••
....
-••

'

~·

....

I

...

~

..

~

~~

VARIED - A well-received varied program was
presented by the 44th Ohio Volunteer Infantry
Regiment Springfield Band Sunday during the annual
observance of Heritage Sunday. The group presented

hymns, patriotic numbers and marches in two appearances under the trees on grounds of the Meigs
Museum. A film on Meigs History was featured in the
mini-theater.

PRETI'Y - Pretty girls in Southern belle goWtls
added to the appearance of the 44th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Regiment, a band from Springfield, at Heritage
Sunday held by the Meigs County Pioneer •and

. if&gt;'riil-'l'i

..
~1i •.i'J,
l~-tm·~~ ,.,.-

..1

NOVELTY- THis cake- right out of Camelot castle and soldiersentered by Carolyn Dougal, Cheshire, was second place winner in the
novelty diVISion for advanced bakers·of the Big Bend Regatta cake show
held Saturday at St. Paul Lutheran Church.

BEST OF SHOW - Kila Young, Reedsville, only 14, was the best of
show winner in the first Big Bend Regatta cake show held Saturday afternoon at St. Paul Lutheran Church.
.,

First annual Big Bend cake show successful

Fourteen-year-old Kila Young,
Reedaville, was best of show winner
among some stiff competition in the
first Big Bend Regatta cake show
held Saturday afternoon at St. Paul
Lutheran Church.
Winners of their respective
divisions of the show were presented
trophies by judge, Mrs. Nancy
Roush, and after winning her
division, uteens," Miss young was
selected as the overall winner of the
·• show and received a larger trophy
.. for that honor. other prizes were
donated by The Carousel Confectionery, Middleport; Elberfelda,
Pomey, and Donelli's Pizza, Mid.. dleport.
other division winners were Lori
· Adams, Racine, children's; Sharon
·
Pat
ad.-

-·~

vanced, and Judy Buckley, intennediate.
First and second places went to
Adams, first, and Terry Newsome
and 'Rodney Newsome, Pomeroy,
tied for second, children's division;
Donna Shato, Gallipolis, first; Martha Klein, Middleport, second;
beginners, holiday cake; Sharon
Reiber, Racine, first ; Donna Shato,
Gallipolis, one pan mix ; Pat
Thomas, Middleport, first, and
Mace! Barton, Reedsville, second,
intermediate, novelty ; Judy
Buckley, Chester, first, and Pat
Thomas, Middleport, second, intermediate, holiday; Pat Friend,
Letart, W. Va., first, advanced
novelty; Carol McDougal, Cheshire,
second, advanced novelty.

Historical Society in conjunction with Big Bend RegalIa Weekend.
MOUNTED POSSE - Taking second place in the riding unit division was the Meigs County Sheriff
Mounted posse.

Alfred
Youth
group
makes
donation

FIRST PLACE WINNER - Middleport's Baptist Church took first place in the theme float category at
l:iaturday's 1980 Big Bend Regatta Parade.

Meigs Property Transfers

A 150 contribution to the youth
camp fund of the Alfred Youth
Group was made when the United
Methodist Women met at the home
of Mrs. Nellie Parker, president.
Nina Robinson, lrea8urer, reported that a profit of $168.97 was made
on serving the RobiiiBon sale May 24.
A letter was read from Enuna Lou
Finch, a fonner member.
Coming events · annoWJced included day apart to be held in June,
mission schools in July, and a corporate responsibility seminar in
August. Ruth Brooks had the prayer
calendar and chose Jeanne Conover,
Virginia, for whom the society
signed a birthday card. Thelma Henderson read the prices for the Food
Co-op program.
It was noted that 13 sick calls had
been made. Osie Mae Follrod read a
poem, "Footprints" which a coworker had given her. ·
The program on human rights was
presented by Mrs. Parker. The worship center featured Bible school
children's crafts and souvenirs of
American Indians, and from
Labrador, China and Thailand. Ruth
Brooks read the scripture selections.
It was concluded that all must continually work to better human
relations, with one method being to
communicate with Congress.
Nina Robinson and Thelma Henderson served homemade ice
cream, strawberries, and cookies
during the social · hour. Others attending were Annie Thompson,
Clara Follrod and Janet Moore.
Next meeting will be July 15 at the
home of Ruth Brooks. Thelma Henderson will lead the program.

Insurance Package ·
For You ·.
Do vou own or operate a
smail or medium-size
retail store, office, apartment or church?
Then - -vou mav qualify
for State Auto Mutual's .
, SERIES ONE Business
Polley .. . a modern-as·
tomorrow package plan
that combines an array of
broad property and llablll- .
tv coverages required to
safeguard vour opera. tlons. All for a :~er.y attractive, affordable premium.
Let us explain the
superior
features of
SERIES ONE ... the short
time we spend together 1
could prove Interesting
and rewarding to vou.
Just give us a call or
mall the handy coupon.

."•"

YESTERYEAR - Miss Marie Richman of Pomeroy was a perfect
picture of yesterday in this bonnet and black velvet cape as she worked in ·
"The Emporium" - an outstanding exhibit of clothing of by-gone days,
featured as a part of the Heritage Sundy observance of the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society at the Meigs Museum Sunday. The bonnet
belonged originally to Miss Eichman's grandmother, Carolinll Gravilll'

-'

..
.
•.

l

,.

''

r'

CRAFTS - Mrs. Scott Wheeler, the fonner Virginia Johnson,
E; daugbter of Mr. and Mrs. Thereon Johnson of the Racine area, worked at
~ macram~ Sunday to the delight of visiton to the annual Heritage Sunday
' : observance of the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society. Mrs.
r · Wheeler had a large colorful display of her work on hand for the ob'; servance.

..

'•.
'

•'

~·

Social Calendar

11JESDAY
INSTALLATION of officers when
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion, meets · in regular · session
wlth dinner to ~ served at 7 p.m.
.Tuesday.

'

HAVE RECENT GUESTS
The Rev. Niles Kitzmiller and
daughter, stephannie, Erwin, Tenn.,
have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
J

'

'

Dale Walburn: Mlsa Kitzmiller is the
fiancee of the Walburns' son, Steven,
and a bridal shower was·held for her
during her visit in Middlfport.

CA TILE PRICES:

Feeder Steers : [Good alld Choice) )lO..S()O lbe.
66-76 ; f!00-700 lbs . sa-sa.

Feeder Heifers: (Good and Choice) 300-000 lbe.
66-70; 500-700 lbo . 5&lt;; . ~
Feeder Bulb : (Good and Choice) 300400 lbl.
60 . ~76 : 500-700 lbs. :10-72.50.
Slaughter Cows : Utilities 4.5-&amp;6 ; CaMera and

Cutters 40-45. ~ .

Cow and Calf Pairs: (By the Unit) 470-595.
Vcab: (Choice and Prime) 69.50-83.50.
Baby Calves : (8)· the Head ) 47 »102.50.
HOOPRICES;
Hogs : (No. I, Barrows and GUts) 200-230 lba.
39.75-42.

Butcher Sows 26.5G-J.4.80,
Butchel Boars 24.50-27.80.
Feederl'i.&lt;s; (BylheHead) lhlG.

SHEEPPIUCES;
Sll!ughter Lambs 5+56.7$.
Feeder Lambs 50-57.

STORE HOURS

.MONDAY
THRU
SUNDAY

,....,.__

Open Mon. thru Sat.
8 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Open Sunday
8 A. M. to 6 P. M.

-- -·

VISIT OUR OUTSIDE

PRODUCE MARKET.
Fresh Produce Arriving Dallyl
Dally Specials Plus Weekly Specials!

LOW-LOW PRICES!

~~--------------~!1I
NAME

HAVE A BOOMIN'

I
I
PHO N E
--------- I
-~~~1!1!"--~~-.~ .-J .
"'•o""oR""Es""
c -------------

4TH OF JUI.Y

COOK OUT ON THE 4TH
SUPERIOR

TO UNDERGO SURGERY
Daran Jay Rees, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Rees, Jr., is a patient at
Riverside Hospital, Columbus,
where he will undergo knee surgery
on Tuesday.

....••

CUBE STEAK

..:
' I

••

'.

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT,

OHIO-

......_~"N~OTICf~--­

'"'••'
~

.~
·~'
~

LB.

'2,09

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

FARMERS BANK

BANK ONE
POMEROY

RUTlANI&gt;

POMEROY, 0.

INDEPENDENCE DAY
BIRntDAV

FRANKIES

3 LB. PKG.
OR LARGER

7:91;

. .. . L8

'

49

Whole Slab Bacon ••••••• .!-!1;.69~
-Sliced Slab Bacon ••.••••••L!~ 79~

itROUGHTON HOMOGENIZED

.;

••

.."

~

MILK .....................................;~~;;....!.1

....•
~

...

::;
•"'

RACINE, 0.

lHE CEN1IAI. 1IUST
·cOMPANY N.A.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

99

...."'

..•...."
......
~

REGULAR OR SUGAR FREE

DR.
-

lHE RACINE HOME
NATIONAL BANK

.

FOR YOU BACON LOVERS

KIELBASSI
LB.

'129 ..
.

SUPERIOR

~..."' ·Charcoal Steak ..!!1;.~.1 89
.,.

GROUND
BEEF

12 Ol. PKG.

BONELESS

,;.

nJPPERS PLAINS
Mrs. Anna Grim, who has resided
at the Pomeroy Health Care Center
since January, wlll oblerve her 94th
birthday or Jlily 4. Friends and
relatives are encouraged to remember Mrs. Grim with cards and visits
auring the day.

BONELESS

'#Jl

:.;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;===iiiii~~======

Blchman.

...
;.·

Sewer Dist., Option for Ease.,
Racine Village.
Trustees Methodist Episcopal
Church to Syracuse Racine Regional
Sewer District, Option for Ease.,
Syracuse.

PRICES EFFECTIVE

DALE C. WARNER.
INSURANCE

An Admira l d~hurnidifier can make ,your base-.
ment or otlle•.· damp area more comfortabl·e by
taking theE x•;ess moisture out of the air. It helps
protect fumi 'ture and workwork from the damaging effect$ of contant dampness. It retartts
mildew, mold, musty Odors and rust-gives your
home more living area.

.·,

Etta Taylor Cramlet, dec., to
William Cramlet, now dec., Gerald
Ray Cramlet, Richard R. Cramlet,
Aff. for Trans., Lebanon.
Gerald Ray Cramlet, Lucy A.
Cramlet to Hichard R. Carnie!,
Sarah E . Cramlet, 22 A., Lebanon.
Racine Wesleyan Methodist Church to Syracuse Racine Regional

Atht:IU Uvettock Sales
Market R~port
JUIIf 1.:1, 1980

I

ADMIRAL DEHUMIDIFIERS

_

.
·-

to Herald Oil and Gas C., R.W.,
Salisbury, Harold Roger Long,
Delores Long to Herald Oil and Gas
Co., R. W., Salisbury.
Paul M. Darnell Jr., Linda Darnell
to Herald Oil and Gas Co., R.W.,
Salisbury.
James Robert Betz to Herald Oil
and Gas Co., R.W., Salem.

Roy, Mary Pugh, Myrtle Fitch,
Shirley Powell, Joanna Rhodes,
Eva Schreiber, Mary Day.
Maude Moore.
Sunday Admissions-Pauline
Russell, Middleport; Ronald
Coats, Tuppers Plains ; Brenda
Fry, Middleport; Opal Capehart,
New Haven ; George Daylong,
Middleport; Olive Winebrenner,
Middleport; Thelma Capehart,
New Haven; Rodeney Pierce,
Long Bottom; Ressie Shaffer,
Racine.
Simday Discharges-William
Soulsby, Teresa Amos, Martha
Roush, Hilah Jones, Joan Morris.

FRESH· LEAN

··...

'

James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, Curtis
Males, eta!, to Jeff Casto, Larry A.
Moore, Lot, Columbia.
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, Edward
Bowel, eta! to James G. Mourning, 3
A., Pomeroy.
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, Allen E.
Braley, eta! to James A. Swaney,
Carol T. Swaney, 9.94 A., Rutland.
Berny P. Hickel, Brenda K. Hickel

VETERANS MEMORIAL
turday
Admissions--Lena
McKinley, Middleport; Earl
Adams, Racine; Dennis Eynon,
Racine; Linda Watson,
Pomeroy; Oswell Durham, Middleport; Ethel Nelson, Rutland;
Robert Van Meter, West Columbia; Diana Pope, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges-Bobby

8 BOntE

· CARTON

8 CT.
PKGS.

PEPSI COLA
8 PACK
.
.16 OZ. BOm.ES .$.·]19

�11

,...

HI- The Daily Sentinel, Mtddlcpurt-Pumcru&gt; , 0 ., Munday. JuncJO, l9jl0

_,.. .

- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddlepurt-Pumcruy, 0 ., Munday, June 30, 1980

Scenes. from Meigs' 1980 Big Bend Regatta

~\

~

•

•

•
'

-••
....
-••

'

~·

....

I

...

~

..

~

~~

VARIED - A well-received varied program was
presented by the 44th Ohio Volunteer Infantry
Regiment Springfield Band Sunday during the annual
observance of Heritage Sunday. The group presented

hymns, patriotic numbers and marches in two appearances under the trees on grounds of the Meigs
Museum. A film on Meigs History was featured in the
mini-theater.

PRETI'Y - Pretty girls in Southern belle goWtls
added to the appearance of the 44th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Regiment, a band from Springfield, at Heritage
Sunday held by the Meigs County Pioneer •and

. if&gt;'riil-'l'i

..
~1i •.i'J,
l~-tm·~~ ,.,.-

..1

NOVELTY- THis cake- right out of Camelot castle and soldiersentered by Carolyn Dougal, Cheshire, was second place winner in the
novelty diVISion for advanced bakers·of the Big Bend Regatta cake show
held Saturday at St. Paul Lutheran Church.

BEST OF SHOW - Kila Young, Reedsville, only 14, was the best of
show winner in the first Big Bend Regatta cake show held Saturday afternoon at St. Paul Lutheran Church.
.,

First annual Big Bend cake show successful

Fourteen-year-old Kila Young,
Reedaville, was best of show winner
among some stiff competition in the
first Big Bend Regatta cake show
held Saturday afternoon at St. Paul
Lutheran Church.
Winners of their respective
divisions of the show were presented
trophies by judge, Mrs. Nancy
Roush, and after winning her
division, uteens," Miss young was
selected as the overall winner of the
·• show and received a larger trophy
.. for that honor. other prizes were
donated by The Carousel Confectionery, Middleport; Elberfelda,
Pomey, and Donelli's Pizza, Mid.. dleport.
other division winners were Lori
· Adams, Racine, children's; Sharon
·
Pat
ad.-

-·~

vanced, and Judy Buckley, intennediate.
First and second places went to
Adams, first, and Terry Newsome
and 'Rodney Newsome, Pomeroy,
tied for second, children's division;
Donna Shato, Gallipolis, first; Martha Klein, Middleport, second;
beginners, holiday cake; Sharon
Reiber, Racine, first ; Donna Shato,
Gallipolis, one pan mix ; Pat
Thomas, Middleport, first, and
Mace! Barton, Reedsville, second,
intermediate, novelty ; Judy
Buckley, Chester, first, and Pat
Thomas, Middleport, second, intermediate, holiday; Pat Friend,
Letart, W. Va., first, advanced
novelty; Carol McDougal, Cheshire,
second, advanced novelty.

Historical Society in conjunction with Big Bend RegalIa Weekend.
MOUNTED POSSE - Taking second place in the riding unit division was the Meigs County Sheriff
Mounted posse.

Alfred
Youth
group
makes
donation

FIRST PLACE WINNER - Middleport's Baptist Church took first place in the theme float category at
l:iaturday's 1980 Big Bend Regatta Parade.

Meigs Property Transfers

A 150 contribution to the youth
camp fund of the Alfred Youth
Group was made when the United
Methodist Women met at the home
of Mrs. Nellie Parker, president.
Nina Robinson, lrea8urer, reported that a profit of $168.97 was made
on serving the RobiiiBon sale May 24.
A letter was read from Enuna Lou
Finch, a fonner member.
Coming events · annoWJced included day apart to be held in June,
mission schools in July, and a corporate responsibility seminar in
August. Ruth Brooks had the prayer
calendar and chose Jeanne Conover,
Virginia, for whom the society
signed a birthday card. Thelma Henderson read the prices for the Food
Co-op program.
It was noted that 13 sick calls had
been made. Osie Mae Follrod read a
poem, "Footprints" which a coworker had given her. ·
The program on human rights was
presented by Mrs. Parker. The worship center featured Bible school
children's crafts and souvenirs of
American Indians, and from
Labrador, China and Thailand. Ruth
Brooks read the scripture selections.
It was concluded that all must continually work to better human
relations, with one method being to
communicate with Congress.
Nina Robinson and Thelma Henderson served homemade ice
cream, strawberries, and cookies
during the social · hour. Others attending were Annie Thompson,
Clara Follrod and Janet Moore.
Next meeting will be July 15 at the
home of Ruth Brooks. Thelma Henderson will lead the program.

Insurance Package ·
For You ·.
Do vou own or operate a
smail or medium-size
retail store, office, apartment or church?
Then - -vou mav qualify
for State Auto Mutual's .
, SERIES ONE Business
Polley .. . a modern-as·
tomorrow package plan
that combines an array of
broad property and llablll- .
tv coverages required to
safeguard vour opera. tlons. All for a :~er.y attractive, affordable premium.
Let us explain the
superior
features of
SERIES ONE ... the short
time we spend together 1
could prove Interesting
and rewarding to vou.
Just give us a call or
mall the handy coupon.

."•"

YESTERYEAR - Miss Marie Richman of Pomeroy was a perfect
picture of yesterday in this bonnet and black velvet cape as she worked in ·
"The Emporium" - an outstanding exhibit of clothing of by-gone days,
featured as a part of the Heritage Sundy observance of the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society at the Meigs Museum Sunday. The bonnet
belonged originally to Miss Eichman's grandmother, Carolinll Gravilll'

-'

..
.
•.

l

,.

''

r'

CRAFTS - Mrs. Scott Wheeler, the fonner Virginia Johnson,
E; daugbter of Mr. and Mrs. Thereon Johnson of the Racine area, worked at
~ macram~ Sunday to the delight of visiton to the annual Heritage Sunday
' : observance of the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society. Mrs.
r · Wheeler had a large colorful display of her work on hand for the ob'; servance.

..

'•.
'

•'

~·

Social Calendar

11JESDAY
INSTALLATION of officers when
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion, meets · in regular · session
wlth dinner to ~ served at 7 p.m.
.Tuesday.

'

HAVE RECENT GUESTS
The Rev. Niles Kitzmiller and
daughter, stephannie, Erwin, Tenn.,
have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
J

'

'

Dale Walburn: Mlsa Kitzmiller is the
fiancee of the Walburns' son, Steven,
and a bridal shower was·held for her
during her visit in Middlfport.

CA TILE PRICES:

Feeder Steers : [Good alld Choice) )lO..S()O lbe.
66-76 ; f!00-700 lbs . sa-sa.

Feeder Heifers: (Good and Choice) 300-000 lbe.
66-70; 500-700 lbo . 5&lt;; . ~
Feeder Bulb : (Good and Choice) 300400 lbl.
60 . ~76 : 500-700 lbs. :10-72.50.
Slaughter Cows : Utilities 4.5-&amp;6 ; CaMera and

Cutters 40-45. ~ .

Cow and Calf Pairs: (By the Unit) 470-595.
Vcab: (Choice and Prime) 69.50-83.50.
Baby Calves : (8)· the Head ) 47 »102.50.
HOOPRICES;
Hogs : (No. I, Barrows and GUts) 200-230 lba.
39.75-42.

Butcher Sows 26.5G-J.4.80,
Butchel Boars 24.50-27.80.
Feederl'i.&lt;s; (BylheHead) lhlG.

SHEEPPIUCES;
Sll!ughter Lambs 5+56.7$.
Feeder Lambs 50-57.

STORE HOURS

.MONDAY
THRU
SUNDAY

,....,.__

Open Mon. thru Sat.
8 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Open Sunday
8 A. M. to 6 P. M.

-- -·

VISIT OUR OUTSIDE

PRODUCE MARKET.
Fresh Produce Arriving Dallyl
Dally Specials Plus Weekly Specials!

LOW-LOW PRICES!

~~--------------~!1I
NAME

HAVE A BOOMIN'

I
I
PHO N E
--------- I
-~~~1!1!"--~~-.~ .-J .
"'•o""oR""Es""
c -------------

4TH OF JUI.Y

COOK OUT ON THE 4TH
SUPERIOR

TO UNDERGO SURGERY
Daran Jay Rees, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Rees, Jr., is a patient at
Riverside Hospital, Columbus,
where he will undergo knee surgery
on Tuesday.

....••

CUBE STEAK

..:
' I

••

'.

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT,

OHIO-

......_~"N~OTICf~--­

'"'••'
~

.~
·~'
~

LB.

'2,09

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

FARMERS BANK

BANK ONE
POMEROY

RUTlANI&gt;

POMEROY, 0.

INDEPENDENCE DAY
BIRntDAV

FRANKIES

3 LB. PKG.
OR LARGER

7:91;

. .. . L8

'

49

Whole Slab Bacon ••••••• .!-!1;.69~
-Sliced Slab Bacon ••.••••••L!~ 79~

itROUGHTON HOMOGENIZED

.;

••

.."

~

MILK .....................................;~~;;....!.1

....•
~

...

::;
•"'

RACINE, 0.

lHE CEN1IAI. 1IUST
·cOMPANY N.A.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

99

...."'

..•...."
......
~

REGULAR OR SUGAR FREE

DR.
-

lHE RACINE HOME
NATIONAL BANK

.

FOR YOU BACON LOVERS

KIELBASSI
LB.

'129 ..
.

SUPERIOR

~..."' ·Charcoal Steak ..!!1;.~.1 89
.,.

GROUND
BEEF

12 Ol. PKG.

BONELESS

,;.

nJPPERS PLAINS
Mrs. Anna Grim, who has resided
at the Pomeroy Health Care Center
since January, wlll oblerve her 94th
birthday or Jlily 4. Friends and
relatives are encouraged to remember Mrs. Grim with cards and visits
auring the day.

BONELESS

'#Jl

:.;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;===iiiii~~======

Blchman.

...
;.·

Sewer Dist., Option for Ease.,
Racine Village.
Trustees Methodist Episcopal
Church to Syracuse Racine Regional
Sewer District, Option for Ease.,
Syracuse.

PRICES EFFECTIVE

DALE C. WARNER.
INSURANCE

An Admira l d~hurnidifier can make ,your base-.
ment or otlle•.· damp area more comfortabl·e by
taking theE x•;ess moisture out of the air. It helps
protect fumi 'ture and workwork from the damaging effect$ of contant dampness. It retartts
mildew, mold, musty Odors and rust-gives your
home more living area.

.·,

Etta Taylor Cramlet, dec., to
William Cramlet, now dec., Gerald
Ray Cramlet, Richard R. Cramlet,
Aff. for Trans., Lebanon.
Gerald Ray Cramlet, Lucy A.
Cramlet to Hichard R. Carnie!,
Sarah E . Cramlet, 22 A., Lebanon.
Racine Wesleyan Methodist Church to Syracuse Racine Regional

Atht:IU Uvettock Sales
Market R~port
JUIIf 1.:1, 1980

I

ADMIRAL DEHUMIDIFIERS

_

.
·-

to Herald Oil and Gas C., R.W.,
Salisbury, Harold Roger Long,
Delores Long to Herald Oil and Gas
Co., R. W., Salisbury.
Paul M. Darnell Jr., Linda Darnell
to Herald Oil and Gas Co., R.W.,
Salisbury.
James Robert Betz to Herald Oil
and Gas Co., R.W., Salem.

Roy, Mary Pugh, Myrtle Fitch,
Shirley Powell, Joanna Rhodes,
Eva Schreiber, Mary Day.
Maude Moore.
Sunday Admissions-Pauline
Russell, Middleport; Ronald
Coats, Tuppers Plains ; Brenda
Fry, Middleport; Opal Capehart,
New Haven ; George Daylong,
Middleport; Olive Winebrenner,
Middleport; Thelma Capehart,
New Haven; Rodeney Pierce,
Long Bottom; Ressie Shaffer,
Racine.
Simday Discharges-William
Soulsby, Teresa Amos, Martha
Roush, Hilah Jones, Joan Morris.

FRESH· LEAN

··...

'

James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, Curtis
Males, eta!, to Jeff Casto, Larry A.
Moore, Lot, Columbia.
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, Edward
Bowel, eta! to James G. Mourning, 3
A., Pomeroy.
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, Allen E.
Braley, eta! to James A. Swaney,
Carol T. Swaney, 9.94 A., Rutland.
Berny P. Hickel, Brenda K. Hickel

VETERANS MEMORIAL
turday
Admissions--Lena
McKinley, Middleport; Earl
Adams, Racine; Dennis Eynon,
Racine; Linda Watson,
Pomeroy; Oswell Durham, Middleport; Ethel Nelson, Rutland;
Robert Van Meter, West Columbia; Diana Pope, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges-Bobby

8 BOntE

· CARTON

8 CT.
PKGS.

PEPSI COLA
8 PACK
.
.16 OZ. BOm.ES .$.·]19

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Munday, Jun~ 30, 1980

Additional scenes from Big Bend Regatta

'ftft.l f f.\.(t fi;}'i1

Gt..AO TO HELP- AND YOUR '-"''-'-1
GIVES N\E THE OPPORTUN

To sAv GOODBYe

~

Tel~vislon

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriAmoldilndBobLoe

~~~~ a

I I

Viewing
JUNE 30, 1980

.I
..

EVENING

I
I 0

· =-.:...~-· · -· -

8:00

ROVLE

rJ

DEBALFI
__ J

YOU'RE-

TALICIN'
A&amp;OUT. WA!!lH l

&amp;AfV AT

THEi
AIA'PO~T 01-1
HI,_ RETURN

/

PO I KNOW

CO~ORAPO ...

6:30

'NHeN YOU 5'TAY
iOO LONG IN iH5
SUN WI.,_, A eooK,
YOU MAY END UP
351NC. THIS-

tJ
r I x I)"[ x I J"

(J I

HeiU

FROM

rJ []

I I

WHO'S THIS
YOUNG ~AOY

W.WH M&amp;&amp;T8

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the sUrprise answer, as sugM
gested by the above car1oon.

6:58
7:00

I

Saturday's
.

(Answers tomoiTOW)
Jumbles: TONIC SURL ~ KITTEN FILLET
Answer· S•mple Simon sprayed the clock because he
said It wa s lhls- FULL OF "TICKS"

7:30

Jumble Book No. 13, containing 110 puul••· 11 •nlltble tor $1 .75 poatpald
tromJumblt,clo lhla ntwapaper, Box34, Norwood, N.J.07&amp;48. Include your
ntmt, lddl'lll, zip code and mtke check• pt~ablt to Newaptperbooka.

If.! ~ ~ HCXJI'$ I 11/rf-

·~-

~IJ SITTIOO ~-~~I I'~
~HIG~ {&gt;..'51&lt;&amp;0 f&gt;.. OOZE:IJ
~~~1"1Mf3 •..

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

FIRST REUNION - Honored at the first reunion of
grand and honorary grand croakers Sunday evening at
a dinner at Royal Oak Park were, front, l·r, Joe
Murray, Jotm Welsh, Tom Williams, George Harris,

Frank Morgan, George Strode, and Tom Meters; back,
Columbus Mayor Tom Moody, Dr. Donald Thaler, Art
Strauss, Dene Wagner, Charles Swatzel, Larry Powell,
Ed Slater, John Kerr and John Starlin.

!

i

•

NORTH

-~------------~_.--~~ Q'

6· 30·80

+AH
• J 84
+QJ86

+to 8 4
-HE'S 1'/CRRIED
ABOOT TH' SICILIAH
INVASION .W IT'S
AFFECTIH' HIS

··AND ALL DUE TO THE

WEST

MARKETING TECHNIQUES OF

+H
.AK1096
K 10 54
.Q2

OUR BELOVED CHAIRMAH,

EAST
+6 52
.Q75

+

B.S. !!AMGAVEL!

COHCENTRATIOM-

+973
+H 6 &gt;

SOUTH

+ K Q 10 9 8

1:--7.(""'--'r.!&lt;'t\""'"""l..;:::;~

• 32

+A 2
+AK73

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

INDIAN RIDER
Jobo
Houck, Gillllpolls, won an award
lor bls lndlaD costume In Saturday's Big Bend Regatta parade In
Pomeroy.

Nortb

East

Soutb

Pass
2+
3

Pass
Pass
Pass

Obi.
2+
4

.·•

Knight, l·r, lined up and ready to "go" in the big wheel
race held Saturday on the tennis courts in Pomeroy.

Whl! don't we forqet it?
Just drop me off in the

"In th' bus of

th' back ... ih'
case is blad1!"

nearest
nver!

' WJlOOE
'JUMP?' WHAT
ON EART!f ARE
YOU TALKIN6
ABOUT?

are shown taking a measurement. In the background is
a man and his son following a jump.

KEEPER OF ·THE RECORDS - In charge of
keeping the records Saturday were Donna Jean Smith,

and jack of diamonds."
Alan: " I assume that read-

~.by THOMAS JOSEPH
~CROSS

TAKING A MEASUREMENT - Members of the
Meigs County Jaycees, who sponsored the frog jump,

Alan: "As I remember the
article we showed that South
ruffed the third heart, entered
dummy with a trump in order
to take and lose the diamond
finesse. This gave the defense
their third trick and since
South had to lose a club later
on he lost his contract."
Oswald: "South should have
known from the bidding that
West held the king of diamonds and therefore, should
have simply led to low diamond from his own hand. East
would take his king and do
anything he wished but South
would cash the diamond ace,
draw trumps and discard his
two low clubs on the queen

ers have asked how South
would have proceeded if West
ducked that diamond ?"
+
+
Oswald: "They sure have.
Pass Pass Pass
We failed to discuss this due
to space lim itation and
Opening lead:• K
because we assumed that 99
percent of Wests would take
their kings."
Alan: "In any event, if West
By Oswald Jacoby
ducked South would simply
and Alaa Soolag
cash his ace of diamonds and
ace and king of clubs and lead
Oswald: "Here is a hand we a third club. This would leave
used early in April that has a high trump in dummy with
caused some questions from which to ruff that last club."
readers ."
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

MAKING PREPARATIONS - Larry Hudson and-Ray Manley member of Gallia-Meigs .F raternal Order of Police making last minut~ plans
for the big wheel race for youngsters Saturday held at the tennis courts in
Pomeroy.

UNED UP
Four-year-old Trenton Cleland,
Jared Stewart, Randon Cook, Ricky Arnold and Chris

West

1•
Pus
Pass

WHY 0117N' T

YOU

ANSWER

THE POOR·
BELl?

I 6UESS I WAS
PREOCCUP/EP

I... I 17/PN'T

HFAR IT/

Jim Carnahan and Dan Smith, 1-r. Dan and Jim also
had a dtial role, they did all the announcing.

DOWN

1 Song refrain I A "Caaa·
5 Feather
blanca" star
10 Classic
%Of birds
author
3 Cary Grant,
11 Corpulent
for one
13 Latvian city 4 Susan
14 Te:raa city
Hayward fUm
·15 Dallas Cow· 5 Novelist
Yeaterday's ADswer
girl's cbeer
Marcel
11 Stratagem Z'l Way
II Toupee: sl. 6 Fraternal
19 Crosby crony about one
17 Country
meeting
!2 One kind
29 " Age of
place
place
of
"shark"
Reason"
18 Rhapsodize 7 Indian
%0 Chesblre,
8 Mennan's
!3 Slip
autbor
30 Beatie name
away
Maltese
forte
!4 Plate of
31 "Mls.s
or Manx
9 Lay a
an oyster
Brooks''
Zl E!pense
trap for
!2 ~~- Nome" 1! French
u "Fate Is
alias
the Hunter" ~ - Latin
!3 Abaeond
Revolutiony
37 Pierre's salt
autbor
Z5 Early name
leader
In medicine ~.,.-;--r.--,::-!1 Dress fabric
Z'l Pla)'11'right
CoiUielly
zs Soul: Fr.
29 Bligh's sailIng vessel

32 Foot
(comb. lonn)
33 Veda
- Borg
34 Russian
commune
35 Enter
sneakily
Dlmllss

. liARNEY
WHAR 'IE GOIN'
WITH THAT THAR
TURTLE,JUGHAID?

WE·UNS

ARE GOIN'

tO E:rasperation

II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

AMUN

AE

Vickie Robinson, McCoMelsvill". Pictured, l·r, Bill
Young, c«K!hairman of the event, .Painter, Moore, Het- ·
zer, Robinson and Mick Reed, Jaycee member.

AN

Stacy Bowman, West Carrolton and Tara Hetzer,
Belpre. Pictured l·r, front, Stacy an&lt;J Tara, back, Danny Bowman and Ed Hetzer.

r

HCKVFYC,

VL

KNQVODN
AM K 0 N

HCN

XMHFKN
WOZN

M

D F K 0 N

Yeaterda)''aCeyptGqaote: MEN ARE NOT TO BE MEASURED
BY INCHES.-NAPOLEONIC PROVERB
e&gt; 1,. Klnt , ..tu,.. svncncm. Inc.

l

SECOND AND TIDRD PLACE winners In the
junior division of the frog jump respectively were

WOLN

IOYCHI

DCOWU .
SENIOR DIVISION WINNERS - Senior division
winners of the anriuallrog jump, first, second, third
. and fourth, respectively were, Bob Painter, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, Joyce Moore, Torch, Ed Hetzer, Belpre, and

I·

··.

ROCK CHURCH
([) MOYIE ·(COMEDY)
" Wivea end Lovera" 1963
(l)ll})GJ CAMP GRIZZLY A youth
receives a sink·or-swim lesson In
life amidst the hilarious shenan·
lgana ot a summer camp, while two
romantically Inclined counaeiQre
discover that the price for seclu·
sion Is a esse ot poison ivy. Stare: .
Carl Ballantine, Richard Cox .
. 0 ())@ WKRP IN CINCINNATI
WKRP helps to publicize the concert of ' The Wtfcr rock and r oll
group. When trage dy strikes
preceding the conc ert, the usually
tun lovi ngatmoaphereatthe station
t akes a very serious turn.

••Ill .

ffieJ!!!01)

(I] 111! NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
'S trange Creatures of the Night'
Highl y. spe ci alized c ameras are
used to t ake an extraordinary look
at the world ot nocturnal animals.
(e_Omlns.)
8:30 IJ) MOVIE -(DRAMA) 00 " International Velvet" 1978
CiJ G2J OJ MON!IAY NIGHT
BASEBALL .
0 (1)@ PHYLAND MtKHYWhen
an unscrupulous woman photographer snap a Mikh~'a picture In
the shower and it appears as the
centerfold ol a woman 'a magazine,
Mikhy Ia furious and plans to sue.
8 :58 ClJ NEWS UPDATE
11:00 (l)l )ffi MDNDAYNIGHTATTHE
MOVIES 'A Woman Ca lled Mo11ea'
19 78 Stars: Cice ly Tyson, Robert
Hooks.
Cil 700CLUB
0 (1)@ M.A.S.H. Hawkeye is ap·
pointed temporary co mmander o f
the 4077th when Co lonel Potter
rushes off toTokyo on a mysterious
mission. (Repeat)
(I) 1]11 XI' AN Once th e greateal
capitol of the world and pre sen ti)

the source of incredible ar·
c heotogicel treasures , lhl!
d oc umentary takes the viewer 1&lt;
Xi 'e n, the an ci ent imperial city o
China. ~0 min a.)
9:30 0 (1)@ HDUSECALLSApleyfu
patient puts the Ora. Michae la,·
Solomon and Weatherby , Ann and
Mrs. Phipps together in qu ~ra nt in.,.

ffi•.J!!!!!l

10:00 U l!JIW LOUGRANTWhilehelp·
ing test a r'jew drug, Lou learns
about the publish-or-perish research at a medical center with a
;:'"h licit y·ae eking
director .
(Repeat; eo mins.)
(l) JAZZ AT THE MAINTENANCE
SHOP 'Great Guitars' Part I. The
leatured perf ormers are Barney
·Kessel, Herb Ellis and Charlie

~

rd .

NEWS
10: 15
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE .
10:28 Cll NEWS UPDATE
10:30 (l] RISE AND BE HEALED
® OVER EASY Guesl : Victo r
Borge. Host : Hugh Down s. (Closed ·
Captioned)
10:58 (l] NEWS UPDATE
1t :oo IJJ O CIJCD U CIJ ®JWCD
NEWS
(l] FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
iJl MOVIE-(COMEDY) 00 1&gt; "Frlo·
co Kid" 1979
CIJ LAST OF THE WILD
ill N.A.A.C.P. CONVENTION
HIGHLIGHTS
DICKCAVETTSHOW
11 :28
NEWSUPDATE
11 :30 ; 8 CZJ WIMBLEDON UPDATE
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
MO~E

ABC

.

00

1&gt;

~

NEW&amp;-

NIGHTLINE
CBS LATE MOYIE 'HARRY
0 : The Last Heir' While visiting the
desert mansion ot an eccentric re·
cluae, Harry finds himself In the
midst ol a st ring ot murders.
(Repeat) ' ALEXANDER: THE
OTHER SIDE OF DAWN' 1977
Stero: ~olgl&gt; ·J. McCloskey, Eve
Plumb.
,.
ill ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
@)MOYIE ·(DRAMA-ROMANCE)

••

One letter limply standi for another. In this sample A 11
used for the three L 's, X for the two O's, et&lt; . Single letters.
apo1tropheo, the len&amp;th and formation of the words ar.e all
hints. Each day the code letlel'l are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

XNR

(Bepeat; eo mins)

ClJ

0 (I)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :

ARE DIRT\" I

ffi

Cil il1l CD

n Frencb city

I{OOR FIN6ERNAIL5

7 :58
8:00

"BIIChhtad" 19M

38 May person

MWW

I

·(ADVENTURE•DRAMA)

S9 Advantage

HOW ABOUT
6RAPE JELLY?

m

(l)

n

SKINNY-DIPPIN:
UNK SNUFFY

CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(,tOINED IN PROGRESS)
ill ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
ABCNEWS
®ZOOM
I) CZJ NBC NEWS
ill iLOVEWCY
&lt;IJ CAROL BURNETT AND ·
FRIENDS
O CJ)@l CBS NEWS
ill WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
VILLA ALEGRE
CD ABC NEWS
NEWS UPDATE
IJJ I) CROSS WITS
(l] THE THIRD STORY
HOGAN 'S HEROES
. il1l CD FACE THE MUSIC
LUCY SHOW
())TIC TACDOUGH
MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
NEWS
·
lfil DICK CAVETT SHOW
(}) I) THAT GOOD OLE NASH- :
VILLE MUSIC
CIJ WORDS OF HOPE
ffi INVISIBLE EARTHQUAKES
AND VOLCANOES Combining vin·
tage and original footage with
science fiction film clipe to register
a 10 on the entertainment scale Is
th is new dramatic documentary
specia l. lt'e ane.x.alu sive, terrifying
look at perhaps the most destructiv-e of natural phenomena .
ClJ ALL IN THE FAMILY
MUPPETS SHOW
NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
()) JOKER'S WILD
(I] DICK CAVETT SHOW
@G2) GJ FAMILYFEUD
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
NEWS UPDATE
I)(D LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE The Ingalls' elderly neigh·
bors are thrilled to team that their
16-year·old grandson is comin g to
live with them, until t hey learn he i!
a hate-filled bull y and a· thief .

W

Puzzling problems solved

l

CV U C!J ilJCiliiOiimGJ NEWS

~
~

Print answer here:

VISITING FESTIVAL QUEENS participated in Saturday's Big Bend Regatta Parade in Pomeroy.

..

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square. to form
four ordinary words.

"FI_~_eln"

1Q68

, 1:•5 (}) 8 [!) THE TONIGHT SHOW
GuestHolt: Rich Little. Guest: Bon·
niel-ratil(lt.••· ~~~;.. ,.;,.,.,.;~
11:50 (I) il}) Ql BARNEY MILLER The
detactlvee of the 12th preclf'CI ar•
totally befuddled when they arrive
at the station house one morning
and find it turned upaide doWn by an
unknown vandal. (Repeat)
12:20 (J)Il}) CD POLICEWOMAN When
tne w•te ot a proml'nenfbualneea
executiveiaktdnappedandheldfor
ranaom ,PapperandCrowteyewlng
Into action. (RtJpeat)
,.
1:00 ffi TRANSFORMED
1: 111 iJJ G TOMORROW ·Hoal: Tom
Siiyder. Gueit':" Ralph ·eakoht,
noted animator. (80 mlna.)
CilNEWS
·
· ·
, 1;20 (I) NEWS
1:25 CIYilovtE {WESTERN) "Furw or
the Apeche" 1885
1:30 Cll D. JAMES KENNI!DY
1:.3 5 lftliB NI!W"

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Munday, Jun~ 30, 1980

Additional scenes from Big Bend Regatta

'ftft.l f f.\.(t fi;}'i1

Gt..AO TO HELP- AND YOUR '-"''-'-1
GIVES N\E THE OPPORTUN

To sAv GOODBYe

~

Tel~vislon

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriAmoldilndBobLoe

~~~~ a

I I

Viewing
JUNE 30, 1980

.I
..

EVENING

I
I 0

· =-.:...~-· · -· -

8:00

ROVLE

rJ

DEBALFI
__ J

YOU'RE-

TALICIN'
A&amp;OUT. WA!!lH l

&amp;AfV AT

THEi
AIA'PO~T 01-1
HI,_ RETURN

/

PO I KNOW

CO~ORAPO ...

6:30

'NHeN YOU 5'TAY
iOO LONG IN iH5
SUN WI.,_, A eooK,
YOU MAY END UP
351NC. THIS-

tJ
r I x I)"[ x I J"

(J I

HeiU

FROM

rJ []

I I

WHO'S THIS
YOUNG ~AOY

W.WH M&amp;&amp;T8

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the sUrprise answer, as sugM
gested by the above car1oon.

6:58
7:00

I

Saturday's
.

(Answers tomoiTOW)
Jumbles: TONIC SURL ~ KITTEN FILLET
Answer· S•mple Simon sprayed the clock because he
said It wa s lhls- FULL OF "TICKS"

7:30

Jumble Book No. 13, containing 110 puul••· 11 •nlltble tor $1 .75 poatpald
tromJumblt,clo lhla ntwapaper, Box34, Norwood, N.J.07&amp;48. Include your
ntmt, lddl'lll, zip code and mtke check• pt~ablt to Newaptperbooka.

If.! ~ ~ HCXJI'$ I 11/rf-

·~-

~IJ SITTIOO ~-~~I I'~
~HIG~ {&gt;..'51&lt;&amp;0 f&gt;.. OOZE:IJ
~~~1"1Mf3 •..

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

FIRST REUNION - Honored at the first reunion of
grand and honorary grand croakers Sunday evening at
a dinner at Royal Oak Park were, front, l·r, Joe
Murray, Jotm Welsh, Tom Williams, George Harris,

Frank Morgan, George Strode, and Tom Meters; back,
Columbus Mayor Tom Moody, Dr. Donald Thaler, Art
Strauss, Dene Wagner, Charles Swatzel, Larry Powell,
Ed Slater, John Kerr and John Starlin.

!

i

•

NORTH

-~------------~_.--~~ Q'

6· 30·80

+AH
• J 84
+QJ86

+to 8 4
-HE'S 1'/CRRIED
ABOOT TH' SICILIAH
INVASION .W IT'S
AFFECTIH' HIS

··AND ALL DUE TO THE

WEST

MARKETING TECHNIQUES OF

+H
.AK1096
K 10 54
.Q2

OUR BELOVED CHAIRMAH,

EAST
+6 52
.Q75

+

B.S. !!AMGAVEL!

COHCENTRATIOM-

+973
+H 6 &gt;

SOUTH

+ K Q 10 9 8

1:--7.(""'--'r.!&lt;'t\""'"""l..;:::;~

• 32

+A 2
+AK73

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

INDIAN RIDER
Jobo
Houck, Gillllpolls, won an award
lor bls lndlaD costume In Saturday's Big Bend Regatta parade In
Pomeroy.

Nortb

East

Soutb

Pass
2+
3

Pass
Pass
Pass

Obi.
2+
4

.·•

Knight, l·r, lined up and ready to "go" in the big wheel
race held Saturday on the tennis courts in Pomeroy.

Whl! don't we forqet it?
Just drop me off in the

"In th' bus of

th' back ... ih'
case is blad1!"

nearest
nver!

' WJlOOE
'JUMP?' WHAT
ON EART!f ARE
YOU TALKIN6
ABOUT?

are shown taking a measurement. In the background is
a man and his son following a jump.

KEEPER OF ·THE RECORDS - In charge of
keeping the records Saturday were Donna Jean Smith,

and jack of diamonds."
Alan: " I assume that read-

~.by THOMAS JOSEPH
~CROSS

TAKING A MEASUREMENT - Members of the
Meigs County Jaycees, who sponsored the frog jump,

Alan: "As I remember the
article we showed that South
ruffed the third heart, entered
dummy with a trump in order
to take and lose the diamond
finesse. This gave the defense
their third trick and since
South had to lose a club later
on he lost his contract."
Oswald: "South should have
known from the bidding that
West held the king of diamonds and therefore, should
have simply led to low diamond from his own hand. East
would take his king and do
anything he wished but South
would cash the diamond ace,
draw trumps and discard his
two low clubs on the queen

ers have asked how South
would have proceeded if West
ducked that diamond ?"
+
+
Oswald: "They sure have.
Pass Pass Pass
We failed to discuss this due
to space lim itation and
Opening lead:• K
because we assumed that 99
percent of Wests would take
their kings."
Alan: "In any event, if West
By Oswald Jacoby
ducked South would simply
and Alaa Soolag
cash his ace of diamonds and
ace and king of clubs and lead
Oswald: "Here is a hand we a third club. This would leave
used early in April that has a high trump in dummy with
caused some questions from which to ruff that last club."
readers ."
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

MAKING PREPARATIONS - Larry Hudson and-Ray Manley member of Gallia-Meigs .F raternal Order of Police making last minut~ plans
for the big wheel race for youngsters Saturday held at the tennis courts in
Pomeroy.

UNED UP
Four-year-old Trenton Cleland,
Jared Stewart, Randon Cook, Ricky Arnold and Chris

West

1•
Pus
Pass

WHY 0117N' T

YOU

ANSWER

THE POOR·
BELl?

I 6UESS I WAS
PREOCCUP/EP

I... I 17/PN'T

HFAR IT/

Jim Carnahan and Dan Smith, 1-r. Dan and Jim also
had a dtial role, they did all the announcing.

DOWN

1 Song refrain I A "Caaa·
5 Feather
blanca" star
10 Classic
%Of birds
author
3 Cary Grant,
11 Corpulent
for one
13 Latvian city 4 Susan
14 Te:raa city
Hayward fUm
·15 Dallas Cow· 5 Novelist
Yeaterday's ADswer
girl's cbeer
Marcel
11 Stratagem Z'l Way
II Toupee: sl. 6 Fraternal
19 Crosby crony about one
17 Country
meeting
!2 One kind
29 " Age of
place
place
of
"shark"
Reason"
18 Rhapsodize 7 Indian
%0 Chesblre,
8 Mennan's
!3 Slip
autbor
30 Beatie name
away
Maltese
forte
!4 Plate of
31 "Mls.s
or Manx
9 Lay a
an oyster
Brooks''
Zl E!pense
trap for
!2 ~~- Nome" 1! French
u "Fate Is
alias
the Hunter" ~ - Latin
!3 Abaeond
Revolutiony
37 Pierre's salt
autbor
Z5 Early name
leader
In medicine ~.,.-;--r.--,::-!1 Dress fabric
Z'l Pla)'11'right
CoiUielly
zs Soul: Fr.
29 Bligh's sailIng vessel

32 Foot
(comb. lonn)
33 Veda
- Borg
34 Russian
commune
35 Enter
sneakily
Dlmllss

. liARNEY
WHAR 'IE GOIN'
WITH THAT THAR
TURTLE,JUGHAID?

WE·UNS

ARE GOIN'

tO E:rasperation

II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

AMUN

AE

Vickie Robinson, McCoMelsvill". Pictured, l·r, Bill
Young, c«K!hairman of the event, .Painter, Moore, Het- ·
zer, Robinson and Mick Reed, Jaycee member.

AN

Stacy Bowman, West Carrolton and Tara Hetzer,
Belpre. Pictured l·r, front, Stacy an&lt;J Tara, back, Danny Bowman and Ed Hetzer.

r

HCKVFYC,

VL

KNQVODN
AM K 0 N

HCN

XMHFKN
WOZN

M

D F K 0 N

Yeaterda)''aCeyptGqaote: MEN ARE NOT TO BE MEASURED
BY INCHES.-NAPOLEONIC PROVERB
e&gt; 1,. Klnt , ..tu,.. svncncm. Inc.

l

SECOND AND TIDRD PLACE winners In the
junior division of the frog jump respectively were

WOLN

IOYCHI

DCOWU .
SENIOR DIVISION WINNERS - Senior division
winners of the anriuallrog jump, first, second, third
. and fourth, respectively were, Bob Painter, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, Joyce Moore, Torch, Ed Hetzer, Belpre, and

I·

··.

ROCK CHURCH
([) MOYIE ·(COMEDY)
" Wivea end Lovera" 1963
(l)ll})GJ CAMP GRIZZLY A youth
receives a sink·or-swim lesson In
life amidst the hilarious shenan·
lgana ot a summer camp, while two
romantically Inclined counaeiQre
discover that the price for seclu·
sion Is a esse ot poison ivy. Stare: .
Carl Ballantine, Richard Cox .
. 0 ())@ WKRP IN CINCINNATI
WKRP helps to publicize the concert of ' The Wtfcr rock and r oll
group. When trage dy strikes
preceding the conc ert, the usually
tun lovi ngatmoaphereatthe station
t akes a very serious turn.

••Ill .

ffieJ!!!01)

(I] 111! NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
'S trange Creatures of the Night'
Highl y. spe ci alized c ameras are
used to t ake an extraordinary look
at the world ot nocturnal animals.
(e_Omlns.)
8:30 IJ) MOVIE -(DRAMA) 00 " International Velvet" 1978
CiJ G2J OJ MON!IAY NIGHT
BASEBALL .
0 (1)@ PHYLAND MtKHYWhen
an unscrupulous woman photographer snap a Mikh~'a picture In
the shower and it appears as the
centerfold ol a woman 'a magazine,
Mikhy Ia furious and plans to sue.
8 :58 ClJ NEWS UPDATE
11:00 (l)l )ffi MDNDAYNIGHTATTHE
MOVIES 'A Woman Ca lled Mo11ea'
19 78 Stars: Cice ly Tyson, Robert
Hooks.
Cil 700CLUB
0 (1)@ M.A.S.H. Hawkeye is ap·
pointed temporary co mmander o f
the 4077th when Co lonel Potter
rushes off toTokyo on a mysterious
mission. (Repeat)
(I) 1]11 XI' AN Once th e greateal
capitol of the world and pre sen ti)

the source of incredible ar·
c heotogicel treasures , lhl!
d oc umentary takes the viewer 1&lt;
Xi 'e n, the an ci ent imperial city o
China. ~0 min a.)
9:30 0 (1)@ HDUSECALLSApleyfu
patient puts the Ora. Michae la,·
Solomon and Weatherby , Ann and
Mrs. Phipps together in qu ~ra nt in.,.

ffi•.J!!!!!l

10:00 U l!JIW LOUGRANTWhilehelp·
ing test a r'jew drug, Lou learns
about the publish-or-perish research at a medical center with a
;:'"h licit y·ae eking
director .
(Repeat; eo mins.)
(l) JAZZ AT THE MAINTENANCE
SHOP 'Great Guitars' Part I. The
leatured perf ormers are Barney
·Kessel, Herb Ellis and Charlie

~

rd .

NEWS
10: 15
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE .
10:28 Cll NEWS UPDATE
10:30 (l] RISE AND BE HEALED
® OVER EASY Guesl : Victo r
Borge. Host : Hugh Down s. (Closed ·
Captioned)
10:58 (l] NEWS UPDATE
1t :oo IJJ O CIJCD U CIJ ®JWCD
NEWS
(l] FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
iJl MOVIE-(COMEDY) 00 1&gt; "Frlo·
co Kid" 1979
CIJ LAST OF THE WILD
ill N.A.A.C.P. CONVENTION
HIGHLIGHTS
DICKCAVETTSHOW
11 :28
NEWSUPDATE
11 :30 ; 8 CZJ WIMBLEDON UPDATE
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
MO~E

ABC

.

00

1&gt;

~

NEW&amp;-

NIGHTLINE
CBS LATE MOYIE 'HARRY
0 : The Last Heir' While visiting the
desert mansion ot an eccentric re·
cluae, Harry finds himself In the
midst ol a st ring ot murders.
(Repeat) ' ALEXANDER: THE
OTHER SIDE OF DAWN' 1977
Stero: ~olgl&gt; ·J. McCloskey, Eve
Plumb.
,.
ill ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
@)MOYIE ·(DRAMA-ROMANCE)

••

One letter limply standi for another. In this sample A 11
used for the three L 's, X for the two O's, et&lt; . Single letters.
apo1tropheo, the len&amp;th and formation of the words ar.e all
hints. Each day the code letlel'l are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

XNR

(Bepeat; eo mins)

ClJ

0 (I)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :

ARE DIRT\" I

ffi

Cil il1l CD

n Frencb city

I{OOR FIN6ERNAIL5

7 :58
8:00

"BIIChhtad" 19M

38 May person

MWW

I

·(ADVENTURE•DRAMA)

S9 Advantage

HOW ABOUT
6RAPE JELLY?

m

(l)

n

SKINNY-DIPPIN:
UNK SNUFFY

CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(,tOINED IN PROGRESS)
ill ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
ABCNEWS
®ZOOM
I) CZJ NBC NEWS
ill iLOVEWCY
&lt;IJ CAROL BURNETT AND ·
FRIENDS
O CJ)@l CBS NEWS
ill WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
VILLA ALEGRE
CD ABC NEWS
NEWS UPDATE
IJJ I) CROSS WITS
(l] THE THIRD STORY
HOGAN 'S HEROES
. il1l CD FACE THE MUSIC
LUCY SHOW
())TIC TACDOUGH
MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
NEWS
·
lfil DICK CAVETT SHOW
(}) I) THAT GOOD OLE NASH- :
VILLE MUSIC
CIJ WORDS OF HOPE
ffi INVISIBLE EARTHQUAKES
AND VOLCANOES Combining vin·
tage and original footage with
science fiction film clipe to register
a 10 on the entertainment scale Is
th is new dramatic documentary
specia l. lt'e ane.x.alu sive, terrifying
look at perhaps the most destructiv-e of natural phenomena .
ClJ ALL IN THE FAMILY
MUPPETS SHOW
NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
()) JOKER'S WILD
(I] DICK CAVETT SHOW
@G2) GJ FAMILYFEUD
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
NEWS UPDATE
I)(D LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE The Ingalls' elderly neigh·
bors are thrilled to team that their
16-year·old grandson is comin g to
live with them, until t hey learn he i!
a hate-filled bull y and a· thief .

W

Puzzling problems solved

l

CV U C!J ilJCiliiOiimGJ NEWS

~
~

Print answer here:

VISITING FESTIVAL QUEENS participated in Saturday's Big Bend Regatta Parade in Pomeroy.

..

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square. to form
four ordinary words.

"FI_~_eln"

1Q68

, 1:•5 (}) 8 [!) THE TONIGHT SHOW
GuestHolt: Rich Little. Guest: Bon·
niel-ratil(lt.••· ~~~;.. ,.;,.,.,.;~
11:50 (I) il}) Ql BARNEY MILLER The
detactlvee of the 12th preclf'CI ar•
totally befuddled when they arrive
at the station house one morning
and find it turned upaide doWn by an
unknown vandal. (Repeat)
12:20 (J)Il}) CD POLICEWOMAN When
tne w•te ot a proml'nenfbualneea
executiveiaktdnappedandheldfor
ranaom ,PapperandCrowteyewlng
Into action. (RtJpeat)
,.
1:00 ffi TRANSFORMED
1: 111 iJJ G TOMORROW ·Hoal: Tom
Siiyder. Gueit':" Ralph ·eakoht,
noted animator. (80 mlna.)
CilNEWS
·
· ·
, 1;20 (I) NEWS
1:25 CIYilovtE {WESTERN) "Furw or
the Apeche" 1885
1:30 Cll D. JAMES KENNI!DY
1:.3 5 lftliB NI!W"

�14-The DaDy SenUnel, Pomeroy-Middleport,

l .

o., Mooday, J.- Jt, 11110 '

ACA press-call seeks answers to problems
WASJUNGTON ( AP) The
Agriculture Council of America says
today is the beginni.Qg of "Press Call
Week" when many ol ibi members
will call on the news media " to explore the current farm economic
situation and bow it affects con-

plies food and fiber for a record 6!i
people."
, ."This situatioo cannot continue, a
point that must be gotten across to
people in the cities and suburbs,"
the ACA said.
The ACA was founded in 1973 and
describes itself as " a privated and
nonpolitical organization that seeks
to explain what modern agriculture
contributes in a modern society."
In its background material, the
ACA cites headlines 1hat say,
" Runaway Food Prices Lead
Another Jump in the Consumer
Price Index" and " Good News for
Consumers: Farm Prices Drop
Again" as examples of what it considers uninformed or biased repor-

swners.''
In preparation for this effort, the
ACA, as the group calls itself, has
distributed background material to
explain what the campaign is all
about. Here are some examples :
- "Despite productivity d ouble
that of nonfarm industry, the farmer
is getting a return on his investment
(4 percent or lower) about one-third
of what manufacturing industries
get.
-"The bottom-tine message is
simple : the farmer, like everyone
:else, needs to make a profit to stay in
business •.. and keeping the family
farm in business is in the interest ol
every American.
-"Today, one farm worker s up-

ting.
" The news media should care
more - and know more - about
what they report," says the ACA.
Clifton Meador, a rice, cotton,
soybean and wheat fanner from
Dumas, Ark., is chainnan of the

ACA.
Other officer s indude : Roger
Clark, chairman-elect, Farmland
Industries , Brady, Neb. ; Lawerance
(cq) Gray, vice chainnan, L.V.
Gray Farms, Nampa, Idaho; Phil
Peterson, secretary, Associated
Milk Producers Inc., Oregon, Wis. ;
Melvin Sprecher, treasurer, Land 0'
Lakes, Sauk City, Wis.; and Allen
Paul, president, ACA, Washington,
D.C.
Among the points emphasized by
ACA is that U.S. food prices have not
climbed as fast as the nation's
general rate of inflation and that
compared to consumers in many
other countries Americans are much
better off.
But the ACA says " the cheap food
policy is not working and will end up
cosing consumers more in the long

munication routes," he added.
" There is no stalemate. The insurgency is showing more signs of
strength. The partisans are inflicting more casualties on the
Russians. I can't see the Soviets
allowing this to continue. Tbey will
have to put in more troops."
U.S. analysts suggested that the
Russian army, which has kept
largely to the few main roads across
Afghanistan, will have to change
tactics and strike out more boldly into the countryside. , As things stand
now, they said, the rebels have a
free run and effective control of wide
areas of the country outside the
major citi~ and away from the
main routes.
The analysts, who asked to remain
anonymous, dismissed as insignificant the pullout of Soviet

....

Public Notice

_
• •

PUBLIC NOTICE
T he M eigs County Coun·
c il on A ging, I nc . whi ch is a
pr i vate nonpro f it c or ·
porat ion intends to submit
an appli cation for a capital

sporta ti on Act of 1964, as
amended, t o provid e transporta ti on serv ice for t he

Urba n

.M a. ss

· · ····~

for domestically pr oduced foods; the
rem a ining 68 ce nts pays for
processing, transporting, packag ing
and selling."

Cheerleader s w i ll have a
yard sale Tu esd ay, July 2,
at the Bob Roy residence.
A ll kin ds of item s. St arts at

9a. m .

SHRUBS

Elementary ,
SHINE .

992-2181

1 PAY highesT prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, r ings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber

Shop, Middleport.

•

Piano Tuning
Lane
DaniE!Is 742 -2951 . Tuning
and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone

992·20a2.
VETERANS!

If you can
spare 39 days a year, it
could be worth over $1400 to
you . Plus free tuition to any
West Virginia. college, or
acc redited business or
trade school . Continue your
retirement benefits. Help
your community in times of
emergency . The National
Guard needs your ex·

perience. Good pay , gOOd

benefits. For details, call

SFC Yoho, 304·675 ·3950.

45769, to obta in full details
of the type of Iran ·

FRIEl

sportation service that is
needed prior to preparing a
proposal .
Written comments and-

ICE CREAM

or proposals must be s'Ub-

With Any UN ICO
FREEZER Plus:
$25 DISCOUNT
Stop in for Details

mitted within 30 days to the
agency at the above address with a copy to the
Ohio Department of Tran ·
sportation, Bur e au of

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Public Transportation , 25
South Front Street, Colum-

bus, Oh io 43215 ; Allen! ion :
Grant Administrator .

June 29, 30, 21c

4

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice
ot Public Hearing
on the
Scipio Twp. Budget
Notice is hereby given

thai on the "h day of Ju ·
ly, 1980, at7o'c lock p.m
a hear ing will be held on

8

be held at lhe Down ·
ingt on Town Hall.

Glenn E. J e well
Scipio Twp . Clerk

Rl , 2, Albany, Ohio
16) 30, 11
and Joe Murray, third place. Strode is sports writer for
the Associated Press. Pictured, 1-r, Bill Young, chairman of the frog jwnp, George Strode, Barbara Chap,man, and Joe Murray.

Public Notice

IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF AC·
COUNTS, PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Accounts and -vouchers of
the
following
named
fiduciaries have been fil ed
in the Probate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio, for approval
and settlement :

CASE NO. 22959 Fina l ac·
count of Carolyn S. Young,

RAIN

OR

Public Sale

Giveaway

t ime. Good working con·
diti ons. Contact Mr . Zidian
at th e Pomeroy Health
day through Friday from 9·

5.

BE A WINNER! BEAT IN·
FLATION! Work your own
hours

demonstrating

MERRI ·MAC toys and gil
Is. We need party plan
demonstrators and super·
visors in this area . Highest
commiss i on .
No
in vestment, no delivering, no

Iowa, 52001 .

St.,

Wanted to l!uy

9

Iron and brass beds, old
furniture, desks, gold
r i ngs , iewelry , silver
dollars, sterl ing , etc ., wood
ice bO)(es. antiques, etc.
Compl e te
househo lds.
Write M . D. Miller , Rt. A,

Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992 ·
7760 .
10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,

216 E . St:!cona

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

&gt;or·eelll

Phone
.1-(.614) -992-3325

Gold, silver or foreig n
coins or any gold or Sillier
items. Antique furniture ,
glass or china, w i ll pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No item too large or too
smalL Check prices before
selling. Also do appraising.
Osby (Qssie) Martin . 992 -

and extra lot. One 5
bedroom home, a 2
bedroom home and a
business rental. Large
trees on 1.375 acres.

6370 ,

locat ion in Middleport.

INCOME -

old

3 rentals

NEW LISTING- Small
2 bedroom home in good
Bath, gas

BUY

WILL

heat,

city

water and corner lot .
For a quick cash sale

Iran ·

smissions ,
batteries,
engines, or scrap metals,

will lake $12,000.
NEW KITCHEN - Nice

etc . Call245-9188.

4 bedroom family home
near playground for
your children . 111:2 baths ,

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
t inel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

THREE

old

AVON sa lespeople wanted .

Russian Blue kittens. Also,
white, multicolored kitten .

Openngs In Tuppers Plains,
Chester ,
Reeds11 i lle ,
H arr i sonv i lie , Pomeroy

Call 99no7a and ask for
Judy .

and Middleport. Call 742·
2354 or 742·2995.

a-week old

Real Estate

6
Lostand Found
FOUND - One white male
german Shepherd :n area
of Rl. 7 Bypass and SR 124.
If this is your dog, call 992·

heat, modern kllchen
and large front porch .

ASking $42,000.
BRICK VENEER rooms, 3 bedrooms,.

baths,

full

with fami l y room . 1
in Pomeroy .

DO YOUR
WHILE
INTEREST
RATES ARE DOWN .
Caii99Z-332S or 99Z·l876.

- Hous,ng
H adquattets

742-2003

NEW LISTING -

from Racine on Apple
Grove · Dorcas Road, No.
28. Television, car, bicycle,
truck,
somethi'ng
tor
everyone!

only .
NEW

and 27 . 9 a. m . · 5 p. m. on

right on top of Chester Hill.

CASE NO . 22982 Final

SIX family carport sale,
July 1·2·3. 1 mile off Rl. 7
bypass on 143. 9·5 daily.

Deceased .

CASE NO . 23006 Final
Account of Rhoda H.
Hackett, Executrix of the
· Estate of · George W .
. Hackett, Sr ,, Deceased .

CASE NO . 21808 First
and Final Account of Olha
Milard, Guard i an of the

Person and Estate of Ray ·

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - A
federal Jury today found four men
·guilty and acquitted two others on
.charges stemming from an attempt

37, of New York and ~teven Henry
Riddle, 30, of LouisviiTe, ky,, were
found guilty of conspiracy, court offlclaluaid .. .

;:==

to smuggle JO tons of !JlBrlJ~.~- _

West VIrginia.
· . •: ~~ ' ,"J
A spokeswoman for U.S. Diltiltt
Court in Charleston said four of the
defendants were found guilty and tentiod
James F. Chadwick, 48, of Belle,
two were acquitted. Jurors were a till
attenipting to reach a decision In the and Russell Kook, 32, of Madison,
Wis., were found innocent of cun' c;ase of a seventh defendant.
Jerome Otto ·LU!, 26, of Cleveland, spiracy. ·
., Ohio, Shahbaz Shane Zarintash, 37,
Jurors
resumed
their
of New ~'ork, M!irshall Mechanik, deliberations to try and reach a

and~=~

-

j

'~

decision on charges against Mark
Chadwick, 2S, of Belle, the son of
James Chadwick. The Chadwicks
are membe,rs of the Kanawha Coun-

mend L. M ilard, a Minor .

CASE NO, 16606 Twen·
tie t h Account of The Hun-

tington

National

Trustee

of

the

Bank ,
Trust

created under the Last Will
and Testament of Thomas
A. May , deceltsed . ·
Unless exceptions are fil ·
ed thereto, sa id acc ounts
will be tor hear ing before
said Court on the 29t h day
of July, 1980, at which time
said accounts w i II be con·
sidered and continued from

day to doy until finally

wtre ella~ after the
~· illilifl- ul a vee cargo plane at llie
Kanawha County Airport last summer. The plane was laden with some
10 tons of marijuana with an
estimated value !i $8 million,
authorities~ id.
Those found guilty of conspiracy
face up to five years imprisonment
and a $.10,000 fine or both.

·'ci~OI .

·Atoi

peno;,. interested

i'n&amp;y file written exceptions
to said accounts or to matters pertain ing to the ex·
ecution of the trust, not less
than f i ve days PriOr to the
date set tor hearing ,

Roberl Buck, Judge
Common Pleas Court,

Probate

Division~

Meigs County, Ohio

(6)

30, 11

Acreage tor that new
home!! SeiUng in 1 ilcre

misc. _ mile off Rt. 124 at

YARD SALE ~uly 1·2-3An·
IIQues. oil lamps, clocks;
churn, torn lea kettle, etc ,
Set of wide tires mounted
on wnile spoke wheels, 90.q
20 lire 6 hole. glassware,
swi ng set dies, ouns, stov'

Iars, chain saw. breakfast

set, old sewing machine,
electtic sewing · machine,
wire cages. LoCated on Co.
Road 25 1.2 miles from new
high school. From 9·5.

porch. 3 BR. large level
lot,convenient location,
could be a class home
with some repa i rs .

$26,500 .00.
SUNNY KITCHEN For the bright cook, 2
slory well kepi home on

tracls . A lillie bit coun ·
Leading Creek Rd . Call

$44,900 .00.
HANDY
SPECIAL

for mare details .

MIDDLEPORT - Love·
ly 2 story home on High
St. J bedrooms , living
room with fireplace, k.it·
chen, dining and Ph
baths. Garage apart·
ment for extra income.

Only $53,000.00 .
POMEROY -

Solid

br ick home on Condor
0

1

an e)(cellent street, too
many features to list.
Call for an appointment .

try, but not far from
town.
Located
on

July s. Bedding, linens,
dishes, clothing, silverstone, toys,_ small ap·
pliances, Avon, tools,
jewelry .

Ashland Bulk Plant, Miner·
sville.

beaut ify! Ohio is a spec ·
tacular v iew from this
large
front
sitting

Asking $45.000.00.
NEW LISTING

YARD SALE, a10 S. 2nd ,
Middleport. June 30 tnru

Toledo 3 lb. scales and

location, $17.000.00 .
NEW LISTING - The

11 room brick home in
Rutland . Blown-i n insulation, modern kit·
chen with dishwasher .
Must see to apprec iate.

dleport. Furniture, Ap·
pliances, New TV, Stereo.
bOys' size 5 Slim clothing,
numerous other things. 8 a.
m . to6p.m . daily .

clothing, large oak mirror,

acres (level). storage
building, and a mobile
home with central aid, 2
extra rooms, all fur nitur e including TV,
washer -dryer, etc., good

$26,500.00,
NEW LISTING - Large

LARGE Yard Sale I July 1·
2·3, 912 south 3rd, Mid·

GARAGE sale July 1 and 2,
9·4, Misc . dishes, linens,

features. $30,500.00.
NEW LISTING - 2.4

Large, well bu il t 2 story
home on Union Avenue.
3 bedrooms. gas forced
air furnace. Nice size
lo1. Garage for off-street
parking . Selling pri ce

THREE fam ily yard sale .
Thurs. and Fri., June 26

Sl.
Well
worth
. $26,500.00.
NEW HOME - Total
electr ic, 3 bedroom on
an acre in the country.

$43,000 .00.
FARM - 20 acres with
nice home, S49,SOO .OO . . ..

liS ACRES -

Minerali;

and hou5e With old'buildings.
Enioy your summer and
let us worry about sell;
ing your home. We will
help buyers find financ·

lng, just give us a call.
~elma

Nicinsky, Assoc.

~hone

~

.......

74Z-3092

eryllemley, Assoc.

Phone 74Z·3171

tOday , 304·485-2170.

ALL STEEL
Sl1e1

Misc. Merchanise

diameter 10"

Drehei's Ceramics. 59 N.

What an

excellent rental unit in
town, invest In rel!l

eslate today . $8,500.
SO YOU WANT A LAND
CONTRACT- $2,500.00
down , owner will
finance balance to suit

your needs. $17,200. ,
BEAUTIFUL- Ranch,

in Syracuse, low utility
bills and many features,

story home, J1h acres of

level land. l'h mile up St.
Rt, 143 Off Rt. 7 bypass,
S25,000, 9'12·3857.
5 ROOMS ond bath, double
lot, 2 car garage and
drlvewoy. &amp;:lO S. 3rd, Mid·
dleport. Call9.ct·21~ .
FIVE ROOM house In
Brodbury . Garage, corport
·and utility building. Near
WMPO. 992·5310.
.
Vo Acre on College Rd. In
Syracuse. 5 yr. old 3·2
modulor over 1500 S.F . All
electric, economical, C. H.
ond A. All corpeted. Wolk·
in closets. DoUble ovens,
lsiand ronge, and b'fast
bar. Woodburner with
blower. 24x32 gorage, 10x10
storage building. Excellent
family neighborhood. Un·
der 40 k by owner . Call 992·
3502.

Approximately 10 acres
located on Rt. 248 . Building
site, city water. Call 985·

3368.
TRAILER park lOr Nle,
locoted In Cheshire. Seven·
teen paths and hOOkups. 1
garage. Asking $33,900 . 379·
2341'

UNFURNISHED apart·
ment for rent In Syracuse,
$150 fer month, plus
deposl . Ph. 992-7511 .m
46
Spilte for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pork, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Laroe lots. Call

99HA79 .

tank. Used 3 months. 949 -

OFFICE space for rent. 3
tro I heot ond air con·
dltionlng. $200 per month,
Including utilities. Call 992·
5545 between 7 a. m. and 3
p.m.

....... ..
....,. . ... . .........
,_, _,

'

~

LADIES'

beautiful high·
16 dresses,
Dav id Crystal,

brands :

Verona, Lilly Pulitzer. One

is 100% silk . $10 each.

"water

pills" .

Nelson Drug. .

:---======::--

5::5
Building Supplies
3/ a inch rebar- 17c per foot
by ZO fl . section only . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Noble
Summil Rd.. Middleport,
OH . 992 ·5724.

smit and receive channels,
additional four receive

channels, and eight scan
channels. Power supply for

4\
Houses for Rent
TWO bedroom furnished
house for rent. Call 9'12·
5434, 992·5914or9'12·3129.

this included. Also,
Heothklt ompllfier with
power supply. One vertical
and one beam antenna for

two meters. 992·3061.

Indoor-outdoor

fl!cillties.

PIGS FOR SALE, wormed
and castroted . Ph . 949·2857.

1'1&gt; yr, old male red Dober·
man with papers $100. 77J.
9506.

slaughtering, custom
processing, retail meat.

ponies

and

lessons .
Everything
imaginable In horse equip·
ment. Blankets, belts,
boots, etc . English and
Western. R u lh Reeves
16141 698·3290.

eRENTALS
41-Hov"' for

2-lnMMWWIIIft
J--AMtultCetlltfttt
......OivtiWIY

•2-Moblte Horntt

··-

~llllllloolloBIIY

el!MPLOYMENT
SEIIVlCiiS
11.,..Httpw•"'-'

,.._,.

.,.......,

1s-sce-11 1nstrvetiOn

e I' ARM SUPPLIES
aLlVESTOCK

ll!ld ... TV

1~1tttecl To 0.

n-Par'" • .,.,......,
.a-w.,....
....kley
72-TnteU

eFINANCIAL

_......
,,_,............

fer
o-U'tftf9Ck
M-ttay &amp; Ora In
fl-·1. . . . ,.,.111..,.

.........

-.......

Mlftlp Nl.Mft

eTRANSPORTATION

,1___.. .............

e REAL ESTATE

::r.., ....,
,._.....,...ac,....
..........

11-Yent&amp;fW.D,

11 Meleecwctn
JtAuto ram

10.._

•ac~

Sl-fllrtM ...... ..

...

77-Avte .... lr

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

a~Lets•

1
(
I
(

Want-Ad .Wvertlllnt
DeadIInet
4P.M. DIItv'
11.._. ...
WMIRNY '

...,...y

1·

..............
--1
_....

_ __

_

.SERVICES

3. _ _ __ _

11-HOMt .... ,.....,.... "
lt-P'twM ..... &amp; IIICIVaftftl

4. _ __

_

_

_

5. _ _ _ __

Il-l ~~CPa-.

6. _ _ __

11 Oanaral M•vl._
M-M.H ••.,..,

_

_

7. _ __ _ _
8. _ _ _ __

......

9. _ _ __ __

10: _ _ _ _ _ __

All prices and sizes. Call

R•tt• and Other Information

.........,.

,........ u...

..•••..

taM

I.U

1.11

I.U

us

.... ,.............,..,. ~""'*"wtnlie~,....etlllll"'
f

,._,_,;~,_,•.,....,,.,, •-l'ir·11!'Ho·u

_,.,...-v,,...,...,._..,___
:,: __ ..,,. ..,.,.. ... !'•-••c....,,..
,. 111

P&amp;S .BUILDINGS
Rt.3, Box 54
Raclne,Oh.
Ph. 614-843·Z591
6·15-lfc

tery, GOOd tires. Call 9'122805 or992·5374.
74

- · - -·

·

-CLUB REPAIRItems: clubs,

Playing
~ bags,

Camping

balls, shoes, carts,

.-·

1. Professional teaching
certificate.

z.

per, three burne r stodve abnd
oven, refrigera 1or, ou 1e
bowl sink, shower, furnace,
hot water tonk, sleeps 4·6,

va., Kentucky.
• JOHN TEAFORD
61 ._,85-3961

Deluxe Ford fiberglass top-

GuHer&amp;
Replacement
Windows and
Roofing

1

'

5·1-lfc

ummer Enrofiment
For

CARPENTER'$
DANCE
STUDIO

FREE
ESTIMATES
:
carl R·~
•
~ 667 3327
Tom Burroughs 66H1SO
6·15·1 mo. pd .

IS NOW UNDERWAY
The Last Day To Sign
Up Is July 14th
"BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAZZ"
For More Information

CALL 949-2710
o·18·1 mo.

===+:====-------+----------

~=::::::::::;:::::6:·3:·:1

set
withseen
screen·
porch , 11Canup be
at inHidden
Lakes Sun., June 29. 304·
422·3929.
per to fit eight foot bed ,
Caii99H201 .

'

Played professional

· tournamentslnOhlo,W . ~

23FT. Leisure Time cam·

above ground P901S.

. SIDING, SOFFIT

students.j•

etc.

~~;;;ii;~CiiSiOril"lJa'!:s'-~G:-::e!!ne,r_,ae.l,_,H,_au.,l"'in,g.__
WILL KAUL limestone and
Print. gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreodlno. Leo Morris
Shop Trucking. Phone 742·2455 .

1978 FORD pickup super
cabV8 camper special.

and · novelty
shirts for pollllcans, ball
tams, businesses or ln-

gas tank . Excel lent con·
dillon , $3500. Coll949·2042.

di"iduals.

TI1ese cash rotes

General Hauling

8S

LIVESTOCK

hauling,

anvwhere,

anyplace,

anytime. 30 yrs. exp. Carl 1·
593-5132 collect.

Shirts 54.00 E.ch
"We print ALMOST
anything on ALMOST

84

include discount

·"

- - -- - 1

.

21 . - - - - - 11
22. - - - - --,, •
.23. - - - --1
24.
'I
25.
_ _ _ __ II
26.
27 .
28.
29. _ _ _ ____, I

Will do remodeling,
rooting, painting, plumbing
and elect. Free Estimates.
Coli Chorles Sinclair, 9854121.
~--------

Flooring, ceiling, paneling,
doors and windows, also
painting. 9'12-2759.

-----.
-------,·
------~ ·1

. 30. .
31. _ _ _ _ _-

I
II

32._..,,.----33.-=-_ _;;__..::._

I

_ _ __

_

.

.

Electrical

INSURANCE

SOUlliEAsTEMfOHto ·SINCE
FOR

&amp; Retrl.eratlon

1
,.______ 1

The Dally St•&lt;ltinel
Box 729
Pomeroy,Oh.4S7AO

l

III'
II
1
I

Cement

work,

·vinton

Cement Floor Company,
Bidwell. Ohio, 388·9877. All

concrete work; basement,
drlvewavs, etc., etc .·

WILL DO painting. No Job
to big or small. Houses,

barns, roofs, etc. Have own

ladders anil brusnes. For
free estlrhat"' call 992·5126
or 992·394i . .

j3
Excavating
Water. well drilling. Tom
Lewis ,
304 · 89S· 3802.
Seasonal discount on all

pumps and accessories.

J and F BaCkhoe Service.
Licensed and bolided. Septic tank Installation. Water
and
gos lines. Excavating
1
work and transit loyout.
1, , Call99?·7201 .
·

L..._!IIO:I:IM=I~.----------,.....----..,...~ IL~~-~-·-....,,--~---..-----------~
;

on . ,

·ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH?
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

~H This Coupon l!l'ith RemiHanct&gt;

•

Motorcycles

Equipment

35::_ _ _ __

,

down

31711 Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport, Oliio
. 992·5724
$ales, service and sup-,ues. In ground and

T. L BURROUGH'S

Beginning • Advonced
"Scholarships possible
for
high
school

197a KAWASAKI
650
motorcycle, $1700. Call949·
2042.
78

' 16.

..

Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
6·25-1 mo.

Ph. 614-949-Z351
Evenings&amp; Weekends
6·16·tfc

~4 .

15,

l

.... ..,...,., ...... u...... 1s...,.tscnnttpar--....-llly.
... .

11 '
12.
13.
' 14.

~

...~·

,.

1. . ,

......

1978 Z28 CAMARO for sale.
77J.5823.

•Storm Windows
•Replacement

anything I"

&gt;wanted
) For Sale
) Announcement
) For Rent

2. _

~

UtUity

Sizes trGm 4x6 to 12x40

Heavy duty springs, dual

17.
la.
19.
20.

1. _ __ __ _

SMALL
Buildings

ale, tape. Ice bOx, bar,

name and address or

..........

,,_,.,.,renee
,._..,...... Trolnhtt

3%

·
POOL PEOPL£ ;

THE

Aluminum Siding
•Insulation
•Storm Doors

capt. chairs. Bench seots
that convert to bed. Fully
carpeted Interior, $3500.
Call992·3950 after 5 p.m ,

spoce below. Each In· ·
lllol or group of figures ,
counts as a word. Count

16-Mitc. MWtfiMIIIIM
u-aul.. lftt.IUIIIMin

lf-lltvltMI .......

v·lny I &amp;

Sizes

AKC registered Cocker
Spaniel puppies, 8 weeks
old. Champion blOOdline.
843·2684,

phone number If used.
You'll get better results
If you describe fully,
give price. The Sentinel
reserves the right to
classify, edit or reject
ad. Your od will be
In the proper
If you' ll
the proper box

-Plumbing and
' ·. electrical work
: (Free Estimates)
- V C 'V10UNG Ill
::
• .L..I:
0
992-6Z1Sor

"From 30x30"

1976 CHEVROLET No. 10
custom van. AM·FM radio,

Print one word In each

D-AntkiWH

$2S,OOO; 5% down on
balonce. FHA Z65 Subsldy Program. FHA :!#Gradual Payment Mort,
Open M-W-F 9:00 to 1:00
Other Times
By Appointment
Office99HS44
Home992-6191
107SycamoreSt.

111t
r'

11

.Phoae~~o----------

•'-"..,...... Gooclls
u-ca, TV,R-'I•Ittvl,mHt

Loans,

remOdling
-Roofing and guller
work

Ir~======~~~t~P:o:m:e~r~o~y=,O~h~·~99~2~-7:3:14~t~~~P~o~m~e~r~o~,~O~H~.~=~
1978 auto.
PINTO
for sale,
.,
ALL STEEL
J&amp;l DlniiiN
D. BUM"&amp;-DDNER
p.b.,
trans.,
33,000p.s
ac·
UUII1
wm
tuol miles. Excellent con·
Farm Buadll.
INStJ'
ATIQN
ditlon. $2700. Calll"/2·3440.
U\11
SAl£$

Ad~•·------------~
-.

eMERCHANDISE

-Addons and

smission.
3a57.
$300. Call 992·

1

41-.IQUI,.,_.t liN' l ... t

PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic
Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing

-concrete work

Call for Free Siding
Estimate, 949·2101 or
949·2860. No Sunday
calls.
6_13.1 mo.

1969 CHEVELLE Malibu,
307 eng., 350 turbo Iran·

4$-~RMml

1-,._ttuc Ia,.

,._
,,._.

snow tires. good condition,

Write ,your own od and order by mall with this :
couporf, Cancel your ad bY phone when you get
results. Money not refundoble .

4t-SPKt: for Rent
47-W•ntM to lit tnt ·

6-311-1 mo.

"
SERVICES

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

80,000 miles. 992·5003 or 992·
3293, or see at 105 Union
Ave.: Pomeroy.

Savel fl

44-AP&lt;~nntMf lor,. ..,

1-HI,..,Atll
~LeltMdfl ......
7-Yinllhle

~~~

.......

•New Homes - extensive remodeling
•Electrical work • Masonry work
12 Years
experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

CAR PENTER

Siding

350, air cond ., power
steering, AM· FM, a-track,
stereo; tinted windshield,
tilt wheel, good tires and

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Claulfled• and

ller~t

Superior Vinyl PrOducts

7,~1c__~A,u:::to,s,_,f.::c•r:..:S:ooa,.,I":Ce- i975 CHEVY Monte Carlo

6, motor rebuilt, new bat·

eANNOUNCEME1!11TS

6-30.1 mo.

Vinyl and Aluminum

details, call Fred W. Crow

1-c.nlof TMRb

t

.........
. . . ,_,, .....•. ,. ......
. . . . rI~=~~·~·~·~~·~~:n~~·=·:;;;;;;:;==~nP:=:~:;.~~~~;~
Real state oans
''YOIJfiiGS
11 '1&gt;% lnterest-30 Yrs •

·1-----------i-----------l 7Z1961 DODGE
TruckSfor Sale
pickup. Slant

Ill, 9'12-6059, day; m-7511,
nlght.i

5 1 im ~

~'

Rascals" . All sizes, shapes
and colors, tiger and longhaired cats and kittens.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

H

6133 .

E

es
51
7
73
31
304
1
1
or(304)992· 2276

PFhr.e e

Eugene long (614) 843-3322

washington Co. Rd . 248,
Lillie Hocking, OH . 667 ·

riding

-ROOfiNG ,
REMODEUNG
--CONCRETE

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

JONES Meat Packing -

HOOF HOLLOW: Horses

- DRY WN.LJNG

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

ROOfiNG
REPLACEMENT ~INIXMS

Livestock

Also AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795 .

and

VINYL SID!NG

13-INCh WHEELS and
tires for a Ford Pinto. Call
992-3717.

u

·.ct-!9 .

C)t:FICE L_Qj:ATION

OHIO,ORCALL992·3476.

HILLCREST KENNELS,
Boarding, all breeds . Clean

949-2801

MoslQatef
CaHs

f~==~2~==:=~r::=~======~:~==::;:;;;~~~~

BURKETT
BARBER
PRICES
CONTACT ED,
SHOP
, . MIDDLEPORT

LARGE farm house for
rent In Letart Falls, OH. In
excellent condltloa . For

or Write Dally Sentinel ttassifled Dept.
111 court St ,, flomeroy., 0., 45769

11~

H&amp;_R

56
Pets for Sale
POODLE GROOMING ,
Judy Taylor. 614-367·7220.

DOLlARS

~~~=;::;~~~-1~4-~1~m~o~·~·~·~~=::=:~1~·~22~-t~fc~t===;;~~~~~
·~
'
Tri;.Cciuiify
D&amp;M
:~:::~
k
COiirrDAI"mftS
Book eeping
nlrv.IV

.Servl·ce

REDUCE safe and fast
with GoBese Tablets and
E -Vap

F U R·
china,

Buildinp

Gosney,
N.
anything. antiques,
see or call26Ruth
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992 ·
316
1.
_I. ' · '
• •
OLD COINS, pocket wal, ·. - ches, class rings, wedding
'
bands, diamonds . Gold or
. ··e~ f@ ,
silver . Call J . A ..Wamsley,
F:
742·2331. Treasure Chesl
PffiW __-' .
"~ .. ,
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
Buiiness-Farms~Partnerships
6462
'
and Corporations
GOLD AND SILVER ' Payrolls, profit and loss st;~tements, all
COINS OF THE WORLD .
;federal and state forms.
RINGS,
JEWELRY ,
·
~LOCK
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC . ITEMS. PAYING
618 E M i
p
RECORD
HIGH,
• an
omerov.Oh .
992-,7°~ 1
HIGHEST UP·TO· DATE
o1·2:tfc

size

Sl
Household Goods
SIAMESE stud service
NEW 3 point 12 Inch post available. Sealpoinl color,
hole diggers, S225, New 3 sweet disposition. Ph. 992point wheel rakes, $600 . 7657.
New 3 point 5 foot rotary
mower, s.JO. 6 foot, 3 point, 1PUT a cold nose in your
SS75. Boom poles, $45. future! Healthy, wormed
Several
used sickle animals. Meigs Co .
mowers. 698·4061. Charles Humane Society, 992-6260.
Chase.
Donations
required.
Shepherd types, Blue Tick
type, plot hound, red
52
CB,TV, Radio
Doberman,
male,
Equipment
neutered; miniature collie,
TWO meter ham rodlo Laborador
type ,
equipment, one Heo!hklt Dalmation, Beagle type,
transceiver with six tr-an- tne dog from "Little

PHONE 992-2156

16-

ANT I Q U E 5 ,
NITURE, glass,

2705.

.

rooms, reception area, cen-

WANT AD INFORMAnON

3 BR, excellent condi·
lion, 2 baths. Should be
sold . $45,000.
BUILDING SITES today .. ,. ..
WE ARE A FULL TIME
LOCALLY OWNED,
PROFESSIONAL
REAL ESTATE 011·
GANIZATION OFFERING ALL THE SERVICES OF THE LARGE
FRANCHISES.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
ASSOCIATES
,
Roger or Dottie Turner
742· Z474
Jean Trusseii949-ZUO
Oflice Phone 99Z.Z259

Pomeroy 99 2-2689,

nished, ac. washer, metal

outbuilding, under pinning.
Colll"/2-2881 .

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Roclne, Oh.
Ph. 614-143-2591

Free Estimates
Reasonable Price5
Call Howard ,
949·286Z
949·ZI60

-

SHALLOW well pump and

Never been worn . 992-3283 •

PARTIALLY furnished
apartment, 4 rooms and
bath. ca II 992· 5908.

Sires from 4x6 to 12X40

All types of roof
new or
autte1ri •I
' lnd
cleonJng
All work

on largest

end . $12 p·er ton. Bundled
slab. SID per ton. Delivered
to Ohio .Pallet Co., Rt. 2,

Second Ave., Middleport,

.2 BEDROOM furn ished
apartment for rent, Mid ·
dleport. S175 per monlll
plus utilities. Call 992·5545
between 7 a.m. and 3 p.m .

couple. No pels. Call 42J.
8257, Belpre, tor ap·
polnlment. $125 monthly
plus deposit.

"From 30xl0"
SMALL

62
Wonted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Pole• max.

greenware sale. Bring a
container. 9 a. m . to 9 p. m.

snLL PAYING .
$2fr &amp;UP
FOR·.
SILVER

H. ~ WRITESEL '
ROOFING

Farm Buildinp

Quality

FURNISHED apartments

Business Services

767 -3167 or 557·3411 .

RENTER'S asslstonce lor
senior Citizens in VIllage
Monor opts. Coll992-7787.

in Racine . Prefer married

MUSical
Instruments

We are pick ing up seve ral

MAY 23 to June 30, 30% Off

0

31
Hames lor Sole
1972 14xol5 mobile home,
on approx. 3 ocres
Beautiful large home. Low situated
Rurol water. Bailey
utilities, brick ranch style, land.
3 bedrooms, 2 boths, Run Road, 992-5253.
fireplace, full basement, ·
fomlly room, air con- MOBILE home for sole,
ditioner, 3 car garage. SoiSOO, land contract with
Baum Addition, Meigs SSOO down or will negotiate
cosh sale . Also one
County. Call985·4169.
bedroom, built-In bunks,
48x10
mobile home, $2800,
8 Pet .
Assumption, land contract.
1300 down.
Beautiful large brick ronch
J. Bowland, 15068
style, low utilities, 3 Write
Empire Rd., Thorhvllle,
bedrooms , . 21h baths,
OH.
43076.
flreploce, fUll basement,
fomlly room, air con·
dltloner, 3 car garage. 1970 12' wl~e; 2 bedroom
Baum Addition, Meigs Co. furnished mobile home on
rental lot at Mason. ready
985·4169.
To move Into. S3500. Coil
Assumable mortgage 9'h 304-882·24611.
Pd. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
full basement, 2 car 35
Lots • Acreoge
·garagie .. Riggscrest Manor.
Approximately 23 acres on
61H85·.4J29.
Rt. 248. Stondlng timber,
water, building site,
'I A approved 8 room two · city
Coll985-3368.

home. It is neat and
clean with a r ec. room
finished in t he base·
ment. 6 rooms, 1111
baths, bar and other

LISTING

repossessed and trad e-in
piano~ and organs in Your
area. Prices from S2SO and
up. Call credit manager

54

Apartment
for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished apts. Phone992·5434.

highlights of this 3 BR

bed room home, Hal l·
mark pool, orchard,
garage and work shop.
Man y, many featur es
too numerous to men·
ti on. Call tor more into.
Shown by appointment

Yard Sale
YARD sale, June 2a·30, 9 a .
m. to 7 p.m. Three miles

Maple bar stools, house
paint. toys, misc.

24

acres of luxurious coun-

7

...

geal Estate

bath are some of the

try estate. Beauttfu l 3

Adolph's Dairy Valley.

-

NEW LISTING - The
beautifu l kitchen and

Broker

Lost in the vicinity of
Nelsons Drug Store and

-· .... .... .

992-2259

PHONE
George s. Hobstetter Jr.

case. If found call 992·2264.

WILL care for elderly per· . 32
Mobile Homes
son In my home. Coli 9'12·
lor Sale
6022.
1973 Folrpolnt, 14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr.
19'71 FleetwOOd, 14x65 3
23
bdr ., bath 1;,
Prolusionll
1971 Shokespear, 14xol5 2
Services
bedroom
DitCh digging service. Call
19115 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
773·5839 or 773·S788.
1968 FleetwOOd 12x~. 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
Ditch digging service. Call
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
773·5839 or 773-5788.
wv. 304·675·4424.
'
"Moggle's Upholstery"
Loll and·or Trailer In MidRebuilding, Refinishing,
dleport. 1147 S. 2nd. 773·9506.
Reupholstery, Fabric and
vinyl samples. Call 742·
2852.
1969 12x60 two bedroom
Hollypark trailer. Fur·

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY.O.

REALTY

3916.

Wanted to Do

General

HOB_STffiER

Eslate of Garold Hayes,

Four defendants found guilty

Manor.

Mobile Hames
for Rent

42

Dubuque,

Ohio, Crill Bradford ,

the eligibility list at 9n
2156 or 992·2157 .

one female,

Needed RD or LPN for lllo
7:30 shi.fl . ParHime ortuil·

Jackson

FLL BLOODED Female
Irish Setter- black pup ,
985·410a.
a · week

Help Wanted

11

Complete Service . Phone
949-2487 or 949 -2000. racine,

&amp; Auction

11

Administratrix of the
Estate of Minnie Hazel
Board, Deceased .
Account of Audra E.
Hayes, Executr ix of the

George Harris and Virgil (Bo) Brown. The crew
prepared brabecued chicken for the approximately 150
guests.

Riggscrest

S300 per month : Call 985·
4323.

lnsuranco

11

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,

Kodak Camera with bUilt·
in flash with the initials
PAP on the.camera and the
name and address on the

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

IN CHARGE OF THE FOOD at the first annual
·reunion of the grand and honorary grand croakel'll
were, l·r, Roger Morgan, Paul Eich, Danny Crow,

rent.

pay cash or cert if i ed check
for antiques and collec·
t lbles or entir e estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns·, pocket w atches and
coin collecti ons. Call 61A·

44

collecting . Call loll free
now! 1· 800 · 553 · 906~. or
write: MERRI ·MAC, 801

of revenue sharing for
1981 . Such hearing wi ll

'-

THREE bedroom house for

Will do odds and ends.
Paneling, floor tile, and
ceiling 111e. Call Fred
Miller 9'12·6338.

s1

992·2751.

the budget and the use

derby races !Mild at the first reunion dinner honoring
grand and honorary grand croakers were George
Strode, first place, Barbara Chapman, second place,

Sltuotlons Winled

12

ref~reflces .

TWO bedroom trailer.
Adults only. Brown ' s
Troller Court . Call992·3324.

full basement. hot water

Main St.
Pomeroy 992-2181

Public Notice

WINNERS OF DERBY RACE - Winners of the

Must have

13

Care Center , 992-66116 Mon·

ch.ildren ' s, men ' s and
women's clothing . Baby
walkers, swings, food grinder. L ots of dishes, ap·
pliances, curtains, m i sc .
items. 300 Wright St ., first
street
past
Pomeroy

20% OFF
_POMEROY
LANDMARK
Main St.
Pomeroy

·

LARGE YARD Sale, July
1·2-3. Lots of baby ,

&amp;TREES

eld erly and-or handicapped

Yard Sale
SOU T HERN

THE

FINAL
CLEARANCE

Tran -

w ithi n M ei gs County . The
grant a ppl ic ati on will
request two 14 pa ssenger
van s and one standrd
autom o bile
(s tation
wagon ).
It is projected that 170
elderly and handicapped
w ill use the service 5 days
per wee k tor various ac t ivi ties. incl ud ing f ran ·
sportat ion to med ic al
fa cilities, social servi ce
and governmental agen ·
c ies , and shopping centers.
The M eigs County Coun·
cil on Aging , Inc. invites
com me n ts
and -or
proposa ls from all in terested public, private
and paratransit operator s
including taxi operator s,
tor the provi d ing of tran·
sportation ser vic e for the
elderly and-or ha ndi capped
with in our service area .
Operators who are in·
tereste d i n off e ring
proposals to provide service
should
c onta c t
E l eanor
Thomas ,
Executive Director, Meigs
County Council on Ag ing,
Inc., at Box 722, Mulberry
Heights. Pomeroy, Ohio

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

• • • y . . . . ... . . . ~ . . . . . . . ~.

Announcements

l

grant under th e provision

Some further points made by ACA
in its' material :
- " Asia's farm workers (each )

__,...._ _

two

ba seme nt .

I

of Sec lion 161b) 12) of the

troops announced by the Mosow
government last week.
They are satisfied that the withdrawal was limited to about 5,000
men and that these troops + along
with their rocket artillery and antiaircraft weapons + were excess
baggage In a war being waged
against mostly small bands !i
tribesmen. A number of Soviet
fighter planes also are reported to
have left for home.
Armed helicopters are more
suited to this kind of warfare, but
Soviet chopper crews are said to be
learning new lessons at some cost +
estimated at between 10 and IS
helicopters a month shot down.
The Russian army is now believed
to have about 80,000 troops in
Afghanistan, built around five combat divisions.

ds; compared t o America 's fa rm
workers, 375,000 pounds.
- " On the average, fa nne rs
receive 32 cents of each dollar spent ,

bedrooms,
full

Eastern Local School
District. Coli 614-985·4329.

Small investm·e nt, large·
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

nm."

Rebels baffle Russia
WASHINGTON (AP) - The antiMarxist insqrgency. in Afghanistan
appears to be gaining strength six
months after Soviet army divisions
entered the mountain country to
quell rebel tribesmen.
That is the assessment of U.S.
military specialists who say they
believe the Soviet Union will be forced to commit thousands of addition~ troops. Even then, these
specialistB predict, it will take years
for the Russians to suppress the
rebellion.
''The Soviet security situation continues to slide," said one officer who
closely studies detailed infonnation
on developments in Mghanistan.
" Present Russian forces are
·barely adequate to maintain
security in the major urban areas
and along the main supply and com-

produce an a verage of 4,400 pounds
of food crops each year ; Russia 's
farm workers, 33,000 pounds;
Europe's farm worke rs, 35,000 poun-

THREE
ba1hs.

S3
Antiques
ATTENTION :
l iM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

SEWING
Repairs,

MACHINE
service,

All YOUR INSURANCE
·. tALL us.

all

makes. 992·2284. The ,
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. ,
Authorized Singer Sales '
and Service. We sharpen

.

NEED9

992-2342

-

IXMNINGatllDS AGENCY. lftt

Sci soars.
- ·-,

'

M

OHIO'

.. -·

ELWOOD
REPAIR toasters, Irons,
applionces. Lawn m&lt;IW&lt;Itr.l ' l"'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;;;;;..,...,..,.....,~---"l1
Next. to . State Hlghwoy
7 985
on Route '
.

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

CARPET ·sHoP-

~8~;~ge

N
M. H. Repair
NOW IS THE TIME for
preventive
meln ·
tenance-mObile home roof
coating, labor and
material : 14' Wl(!e, 12 per
fO(!I : 12' wide, $1.75 per
foot; 10' wide, S1 .SO per
foot. See us also for free
estimates on awnings, car·
ports and skirting. We are '
your auttlorlzed dealer for ·.
the best awnings on the
IT)arket by Urban In· ·
dusto'les. · Kingsbury Home '
Sales, 1100 E. Main st..
' Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·
7034.

I

'

"Drive A LIHie Save A Lot"
S"OPISFULLYSTOCKED
CANDY $.TR.IPED '
CARPET
~block padded
sq: Vd. $491 -

VINYL

FLOOR

· COVERINGS
••Sq. Yd. $491 .

'

.I

�14-The DaDy SenUnel, Pomeroy-Middleport,

l .

o., Mooday, J.- Jt, 11110 '

ACA press-call seeks answers to problems
WASJUNGTON ( AP) The
Agriculture Council of America says
today is the beginni.Qg of "Press Call
Week" when many ol ibi members
will call on the news media " to explore the current farm economic
situation and bow it affects con-

plies food and fiber for a record 6!i
people."
, ."This situatioo cannot continue, a
point that must be gotten across to
people in the cities and suburbs,"
the ACA said.
The ACA was founded in 1973 and
describes itself as " a privated and
nonpolitical organization that seeks
to explain what modern agriculture
contributes in a modern society."
In its background material, the
ACA cites headlines 1hat say,
" Runaway Food Prices Lead
Another Jump in the Consumer
Price Index" and " Good News for
Consumers: Farm Prices Drop
Again" as examples of what it considers uninformed or biased repor-

swners.''
In preparation for this effort, the
ACA, as the group calls itself, has
distributed background material to
explain what the campaign is all
about. Here are some examples :
- "Despite productivity d ouble
that of nonfarm industry, the farmer
is getting a return on his investment
(4 percent or lower) about one-third
of what manufacturing industries
get.
-"The bottom-tine message is
simple : the farmer, like everyone
:else, needs to make a profit to stay in
business •.. and keeping the family
farm in business is in the interest ol
every American.
-"Today, one farm worker s up-

ting.
" The news media should care
more - and know more - about
what they report," says the ACA.
Clifton Meador, a rice, cotton,
soybean and wheat fanner from
Dumas, Ark., is chainnan of the

ACA.
Other officer s indude : Roger
Clark, chairman-elect, Farmland
Industries , Brady, Neb. ; Lawerance
(cq) Gray, vice chainnan, L.V.
Gray Farms, Nampa, Idaho; Phil
Peterson, secretary, Associated
Milk Producers Inc., Oregon, Wis. ;
Melvin Sprecher, treasurer, Land 0'
Lakes, Sauk City, Wis.; and Allen
Paul, president, ACA, Washington,
D.C.
Among the points emphasized by
ACA is that U.S. food prices have not
climbed as fast as the nation's
general rate of inflation and that
compared to consumers in many
other countries Americans are much
better off.
But the ACA says " the cheap food
policy is not working and will end up
cosing consumers more in the long

munication routes," he added.
" There is no stalemate. The insurgency is showing more signs of
strength. The partisans are inflicting more casualties on the
Russians. I can't see the Soviets
allowing this to continue. Tbey will
have to put in more troops."
U.S. analysts suggested that the
Russian army, which has kept
largely to the few main roads across
Afghanistan, will have to change
tactics and strike out more boldly into the countryside. , As things stand
now, they said, the rebels have a
free run and effective control of wide
areas of the country outside the
major citi~ and away from the
main routes.
The analysts, who asked to remain
anonymous, dismissed as insignificant the pullout of Soviet

....

Public Notice

_
• •

PUBLIC NOTICE
T he M eigs County Coun·
c il on A ging, I nc . whi ch is a
pr i vate nonpro f it c or ·
porat ion intends to submit
an appli cation for a capital

sporta ti on Act of 1964, as
amended, t o provid e transporta ti on serv ice for t he

Urba n

.M a. ss

· · ····~

for domestically pr oduced foods; the
rem a ining 68 ce nts pays for
processing, transporting, packag ing
and selling."

Cheerleader s w i ll have a
yard sale Tu esd ay, July 2,
at the Bob Roy residence.
A ll kin ds of item s. St arts at

9a. m .

SHRUBS

Elementary ,
SHINE .

992-2181

1 PAY highesT prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, r ings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber

Shop, Middleport.

•

Piano Tuning
Lane
DaniE!Is 742 -2951 . Tuning
and Repair Service since
1965. If no answer phone

992·20a2.
VETERANS!

If you can
spare 39 days a year, it
could be worth over $1400 to
you . Plus free tuition to any
West Virginia. college, or
acc redited business or
trade school . Continue your
retirement benefits. Help
your community in times of
emergency . The National
Guard needs your ex·

perience. Good pay , gOOd

benefits. For details, call

SFC Yoho, 304·675 ·3950.

45769, to obta in full details
of the type of Iran ·

FRIEl

sportation service that is
needed prior to preparing a
proposal .
Written comments and-

ICE CREAM

or proposals must be s'Ub-

With Any UN ICO
FREEZER Plus:
$25 DISCOUNT
Stop in for Details

mitted within 30 days to the
agency at the above address with a copy to the
Ohio Department of Tran ·
sportation, Bur e au of

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Public Transportation , 25
South Front Street, Colum-

bus, Oh io 43215 ; Allen! ion :
Grant Administrator .

June 29, 30, 21c

4

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice
ot Public Hearing
on the
Scipio Twp. Budget
Notice is hereby given

thai on the "h day of Ju ·
ly, 1980, at7o'c lock p.m
a hear ing will be held on

8

be held at lhe Down ·
ingt on Town Hall.

Glenn E. J e well
Scipio Twp . Clerk

Rl , 2, Albany, Ohio
16) 30, 11
and Joe Murray, third place. Strode is sports writer for
the Associated Press. Pictured, 1-r, Bill Young, chairman of the frog jwnp, George Strode, Barbara Chap,man, and Joe Murray.

Public Notice

IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF AC·
COUNTS, PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Accounts and -vouchers of
the
following
named
fiduciaries have been fil ed
in the Probate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio, for approval
and settlement :

CASE NO. 22959 Fina l ac·
count of Carolyn S. Young,

RAIN

OR

Public Sale

Giveaway

t ime. Good working con·
diti ons. Contact Mr . Zidian
at th e Pomeroy Health
day through Friday from 9·

5.

BE A WINNER! BEAT IN·
FLATION! Work your own
hours

demonstrating

MERRI ·MAC toys and gil
Is. We need party plan
demonstrators and super·
visors in this area . Highest
commiss i on .
No
in vestment, no delivering, no

Iowa, 52001 .

St.,

Wanted to l!uy

9

Iron and brass beds, old
furniture, desks, gold
r i ngs , iewelry , silver
dollars, sterl ing , etc ., wood
ice bO)(es. antiques, etc.
Compl e te
househo lds.
Write M . D. Miller , Rt. A,

Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992 ·
7760 .
10 karat, 14 karat, 18 karat,

216 E . St:!cona

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

&gt;or·eelll

Phone
.1-(.614) -992-3325

Gold, silver or foreig n
coins or any gold or Sillier
items. Antique furniture ,
glass or china, w i ll pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
No item too large or too
smalL Check prices before
selling. Also do appraising.
Osby (Qssie) Martin . 992 -

and extra lot. One 5
bedroom home, a 2
bedroom home and a
business rental. Large
trees on 1.375 acres.

6370 ,

locat ion in Middleport.

INCOME -

old

3 rentals

NEW LISTING- Small
2 bedroom home in good
Bath, gas

BUY

WILL

heat,

city

water and corner lot .
For a quick cash sale

Iran ·

smissions ,
batteries,
engines, or scrap metals,

will lake $12,000.
NEW KITCHEN - Nice

etc . Call245-9188.

4 bedroom family home
near playground for
your children . 111:2 baths ,

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
t inel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

THREE

old

AVON sa lespeople wanted .

Russian Blue kittens. Also,
white, multicolored kitten .

Openngs In Tuppers Plains,
Chester ,
Reeds11 i lle ,
H arr i sonv i lie , Pomeroy

Call 99no7a and ask for
Judy .

and Middleport. Call 742·
2354 or 742·2995.

a-week old

Real Estate

6
Lostand Found
FOUND - One white male
german Shepherd :n area
of Rl. 7 Bypass and SR 124.
If this is your dog, call 992·

heat, modern kllchen
and large front porch .

ASking $42,000.
BRICK VENEER rooms, 3 bedrooms,.

baths,

full

with fami l y room . 1
in Pomeroy .

DO YOUR
WHILE
INTEREST
RATES ARE DOWN .
Caii99Z-332S or 99Z·l876.

- Hous,ng
H adquattets

742-2003

NEW LISTING -

from Racine on Apple
Grove · Dorcas Road, No.
28. Television, car, bicycle,
truck,
somethi'ng
tor
everyone!

only .
NEW

and 27 . 9 a. m . · 5 p. m. on

right on top of Chester Hill.

CASE NO . 22982 Final

SIX family carport sale,
July 1·2·3. 1 mile off Rl. 7
bypass on 143. 9·5 daily.

Deceased .

CASE NO . 23006 Final
Account of Rhoda H.
Hackett, Executrix of the
· Estate of · George W .
. Hackett, Sr ,, Deceased .

CASE NO . 21808 First
and Final Account of Olha
Milard, Guard i an of the

Person and Estate of Ray ·

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - A
federal Jury today found four men
·guilty and acquitted two others on
.charges stemming from an attempt

37, of New York and ~teven Henry
Riddle, 30, of LouisviiTe, ky,, were
found guilty of conspiracy, court offlclaluaid .. .

;:==

to smuggle JO tons of !JlBrlJ~.~- _

West VIrginia.
· . •: ~~ ' ,"J
A spokeswoman for U.S. Diltiltt
Court in Charleston said four of the
defendants were found guilty and tentiod
James F. Chadwick, 48, of Belle,
two were acquitted. Jurors were a till
attenipting to reach a decision In the and Russell Kook, 32, of Madison,
Wis., were found innocent of cun' c;ase of a seventh defendant.
Jerome Otto ·LU!, 26, of Cleveland, spiracy. ·
., Ohio, Shahbaz Shane Zarintash, 37,
Jurors
resumed
their
of New ~'ork, M!irshall Mechanik, deliberations to try and reach a

and~=~

-

j

'~

decision on charges against Mark
Chadwick, 2S, of Belle, the son of
James Chadwick. The Chadwicks
are membe,rs of the Kanawha Coun-

mend L. M ilard, a Minor .

CASE NO, 16606 Twen·
tie t h Account of The Hun-

tington

National

Trustee

of

the

Bank ,
Trust

created under the Last Will
and Testament of Thomas
A. May , deceltsed . ·
Unless exceptions are fil ·
ed thereto, sa id acc ounts
will be tor hear ing before
said Court on the 29t h day
of July, 1980, at which time
said accounts w i II be con·
sidered and continued from

day to doy until finally

wtre ella~ after the
~· illilifl- ul a vee cargo plane at llie
Kanawha County Airport last summer. The plane was laden with some
10 tons of marijuana with an
estimated value !i $8 million,
authorities~ id.
Those found guilty of conspiracy
face up to five years imprisonment
and a $.10,000 fine or both.

·'ci~OI .

·Atoi

peno;,. interested

i'n&amp;y file written exceptions
to said accounts or to matters pertain ing to the ex·
ecution of the trust, not less
than f i ve days PriOr to the
date set tor hearing ,

Roberl Buck, Judge
Common Pleas Court,

Probate

Division~

Meigs County, Ohio

(6)

30, 11

Acreage tor that new
home!! SeiUng in 1 ilcre

misc. _ mile off Rt. 124 at

YARD SALE ~uly 1·2-3An·
IIQues. oil lamps, clocks;
churn, torn lea kettle, etc ,
Set of wide tires mounted
on wnile spoke wheels, 90.q
20 lire 6 hole. glassware,
swi ng set dies, ouns, stov'

Iars, chain saw. breakfast

set, old sewing machine,
electtic sewing · machine,
wire cages. LoCated on Co.
Road 25 1.2 miles from new
high school. From 9·5.

porch. 3 BR. large level
lot,convenient location,
could be a class home
with some repa i rs .

$26,500 .00.
SUNNY KITCHEN For the bright cook, 2
slory well kepi home on

tracls . A lillie bit coun ·
Leading Creek Rd . Call

$44,900 .00.
HANDY
SPECIAL

for mare details .

MIDDLEPORT - Love·
ly 2 story home on High
St. J bedrooms , living
room with fireplace, k.it·
chen, dining and Ph
baths. Garage apart·
ment for extra income.

Only $53,000.00 .
POMEROY -

Solid

br ick home on Condor
0

1

an e)(cellent street, too
many features to list.
Call for an appointment .

try, but not far from
town.
Located
on

July s. Bedding, linens,
dishes, clothing, silverstone, toys,_ small ap·
pliances, Avon, tools,
jewelry .

Ashland Bulk Plant, Miner·
sville.

beaut ify! Ohio is a spec ·
tacular v iew from this
large
front
sitting

Asking $45.000.00.
NEW LISTING

YARD SALE, a10 S. 2nd ,
Middleport. June 30 tnru

Toledo 3 lb. scales and

location, $17.000.00 .
NEW LISTING - The

11 room brick home in
Rutland . Blown-i n insulation, modern kit·
chen with dishwasher .
Must see to apprec iate.

dleport. Furniture, Ap·
pliances, New TV, Stereo.
bOys' size 5 Slim clothing,
numerous other things. 8 a.
m . to6p.m . daily .

clothing, large oak mirror,

acres (level). storage
building, and a mobile
home with central aid, 2
extra rooms, all fur nitur e including TV,
washer -dryer, etc., good

$26,500.00,
NEW LISTING - Large

LARGE Yard Sale I July 1·
2·3, 912 south 3rd, Mid·

GARAGE sale July 1 and 2,
9·4, Misc . dishes, linens,

features. $30,500.00.
NEW LISTING - 2.4

Large, well bu il t 2 story
home on Union Avenue.
3 bedrooms. gas forced
air furnace. Nice size
lo1. Garage for off-street
parking . Selling pri ce

THREE fam ily yard sale .
Thurs. and Fri., June 26

Sl.
Well
worth
. $26,500.00.
NEW HOME - Total
electr ic, 3 bedroom on
an acre in the country.

$43,000 .00.
FARM - 20 acres with
nice home, S49,SOO .OO . . ..

liS ACRES -

Minerali;

and hou5e With old'buildings.
Enioy your summer and
let us worry about sell;
ing your home. We will
help buyers find financ·

lng, just give us a call.
~elma

Nicinsky, Assoc.

~hone

~

.......

74Z-3092

eryllemley, Assoc.

Phone 74Z·3171

tOday , 304·485-2170.

ALL STEEL
Sl1e1

Misc. Merchanise

diameter 10"

Drehei's Ceramics. 59 N.

What an

excellent rental unit in
town, invest In rel!l

eslate today . $8,500.
SO YOU WANT A LAND
CONTRACT- $2,500.00
down , owner will
finance balance to suit

your needs. $17,200. ,
BEAUTIFUL- Ranch,

in Syracuse, low utility
bills and many features,

story home, J1h acres of

level land. l'h mile up St.
Rt, 143 Off Rt. 7 bypass,
S25,000, 9'12·3857.
5 ROOMS ond bath, double
lot, 2 car garage and
drlvewoy. &amp;:lO S. 3rd, Mid·
dleport. Call9.ct·21~ .
FIVE ROOM house In
Brodbury . Garage, corport
·and utility building. Near
WMPO. 992·5310.
.
Vo Acre on College Rd. In
Syracuse. 5 yr. old 3·2
modulor over 1500 S.F . All
electric, economical, C. H.
ond A. All corpeted. Wolk·
in closets. DoUble ovens,
lsiand ronge, and b'fast
bar. Woodburner with
blower. 24x32 gorage, 10x10
storage building. Excellent
family neighborhood. Un·
der 40 k by owner . Call 992·
3502.

Approximately 10 acres
located on Rt. 248 . Building
site, city water. Call 985·

3368.
TRAILER park lOr Nle,
locoted In Cheshire. Seven·
teen paths and hOOkups. 1
garage. Asking $33,900 . 379·
2341'

UNFURNISHED apart·
ment for rent In Syracuse,
$150 fer month, plus
deposl . Ph. 992-7511 .m
46
Spilte for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pork, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Laroe lots. Call

99HA79 .

tank. Used 3 months. 949 -

OFFICE space for rent. 3
tro I heot ond air con·
dltionlng. $200 per month,
Including utilities. Call 992·
5545 between 7 a. m. and 3
p.m.

....... ..
....,. . ... . .........
,_, _,

'

~

LADIES'

beautiful high·
16 dresses,
Dav id Crystal,

brands :

Verona, Lilly Pulitzer. One

is 100% silk . $10 each.

"water

pills" .

Nelson Drug. .

:---======::--

5::5
Building Supplies
3/ a inch rebar- 17c per foot
by ZO fl . section only . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Noble
Summil Rd.. Middleport,
OH . 992 ·5724.

smit and receive channels,
additional four receive

channels, and eight scan
channels. Power supply for

4\
Houses for Rent
TWO bedroom furnished
house for rent. Call 9'12·
5434, 992·5914or9'12·3129.

this included. Also,
Heothklt ompllfier with
power supply. One vertical
and one beam antenna for

two meters. 992·3061.

Indoor-outdoor

fl!cillties.

PIGS FOR SALE, wormed
and castroted . Ph . 949·2857.

1'1&gt; yr, old male red Dober·
man with papers $100. 77J.
9506.

slaughtering, custom
processing, retail meat.

ponies

and

lessons .
Everything
imaginable In horse equip·
ment. Blankets, belts,
boots, etc . English and
Western. R u lh Reeves
16141 698·3290.

eRENTALS
41-Hov"' for

2-lnMMWWIIIft
J--AMtultCetlltfttt
......OivtiWIY

•2-Moblte Horntt

··-

~llllllloolloBIIY

el!MPLOYMENT
SEIIVlCiiS
11.,..Httpw•"'-'

,.._,.

.,.......,

1s-sce-11 1nstrvetiOn

e I' ARM SUPPLIES
aLlVESTOCK

ll!ld ... TV

1~1tttecl To 0.

n-Par'" • .,.,......,
.a-w.,....
....kley
72-TnteU

eFINANCIAL

_......
,,_,............

fer
o-U'tftf9Ck
M-ttay &amp; Ora In
fl-·1. . . . ,.,.111..,.

.........

-.......

Mlftlp Nl.Mft

eTRANSPORTATION

,1___.. .............

e REAL ESTATE

::r.., ....,
,._.....,...ac,....
..........

11-Yent&amp;fW.D,

11 Meleecwctn
JtAuto ram

10.._

•ac~

Sl-fllrtM ...... ..

...

77-Avte .... lr

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

a~Lets•

1
(
I
(

Want-Ad .Wvertlllnt
DeadIInet
4P.M. DIItv'
11.._. ...
WMIRNY '

...,...y

1·

..............
--1
_....

_ __

_

.SERVICES

3. _ _ __ _

11-HOMt .... ,.....,.... "
lt-P'twM ..... &amp; IIICIVaftftl

4. _ __

_

_

_

5. _ _ _ __

Il-l ~~CPa-.

6. _ _ __

11 Oanaral M•vl._
M-M.H ••.,..,

_

_

7. _ __ _ _
8. _ _ _ __

......

9. _ _ __ __

10: _ _ _ _ _ __

All prices and sizes. Call

R•tt• and Other Information

.........,.

,........ u...

..•••..

taM

I.U

1.11

I.U

us

.... ,.............,..,. ~""'*"wtnlie~,....etlllll"'
f

,._,_,;~,_,•.,....,,.,, •-l'ir·11!'Ho·u

_,.,...-v,,...,...,._..,___
:,: __ ..,,. ..,.,.. ... !'•-••c....,,..
,. 111

P&amp;S .BUILDINGS
Rt.3, Box 54
Raclne,Oh.
Ph. 614-843·Z591
6·15-lfc

tery, GOOd tires. Call 9'122805 or992·5374.
74

- · - -·

·

-CLUB REPAIRItems: clubs,

Playing
~ bags,

Camping

balls, shoes, carts,

.-·

1. Professional teaching
certificate.

z.

per, three burne r stodve abnd
oven, refrigera 1or, ou 1e
bowl sink, shower, furnace,
hot water tonk, sleeps 4·6,

va., Kentucky.
• JOHN TEAFORD
61 ._,85-3961

Deluxe Ford fiberglass top-

GuHer&amp;
Replacement
Windows and
Roofing

1

'

5·1-lfc

ummer Enrofiment
For

CARPENTER'$
DANCE
STUDIO

FREE
ESTIMATES
:
carl R·~
•
~ 667 3327
Tom Burroughs 66H1SO
6·15·1 mo. pd .

IS NOW UNDERWAY
The Last Day To Sign
Up Is July 14th
"BALLET, TAP
&amp; JAZZ"
For More Information

CALL 949-2710
o·18·1 mo.

===+:====-------+----------

~=::::::::::;:::::6:·3:·:1

set
withseen
screen·
porch , 11Canup be
at inHidden
Lakes Sun., June 29. 304·
422·3929.
per to fit eight foot bed ,
Caii99H201 .

'

Played professional

· tournamentslnOhlo,W . ~

23FT. Leisure Time cam·

above ground P901S.

. SIDING, SOFFIT

students.j•

etc.

~~;;;ii;~CiiSiOril"lJa'!:s'-~G:-::e!!ne,r_,ae.l,_,H,_au.,l"'in,g.__
WILL KAUL limestone and
Print. gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreodlno. Leo Morris
Shop Trucking. Phone 742·2455 .

1978 FORD pickup super
cabV8 camper special.

and · novelty
shirts for pollllcans, ball
tams, businesses or ln-

gas tank . Excel lent con·
dillon , $3500. Coll949·2042.

di"iduals.

TI1ese cash rotes

General Hauling

8S

LIVESTOCK

hauling,

anvwhere,

anyplace,

anytime. 30 yrs. exp. Carl 1·
593-5132 collect.

Shirts 54.00 E.ch
"We print ALMOST
anything on ALMOST

84

include discount

·"

- - -- - 1

.

21 . - - - - - 11
22. - - - - --,, •
.23. - - - --1
24.
'I
25.
_ _ _ __ II
26.
27 .
28.
29. _ _ _ ____, I

Will do remodeling,
rooting, painting, plumbing
and elect. Free Estimates.
Coli Chorles Sinclair, 9854121.
~--------

Flooring, ceiling, paneling,
doors and windows, also
painting. 9'12-2759.

-----.
-------,·
------~ ·1

. 30. .
31. _ _ _ _ _-

I
II

32._..,,.----33.-=-_ _;;__..::._

I

_ _ __

_

.

.

Electrical

INSURANCE

SOUlliEAsTEMfOHto ·SINCE
FOR

&amp; Retrl.eratlon

1
,.______ 1

The Dally St•&lt;ltinel
Box 729
Pomeroy,Oh.4S7AO

l

III'
II
1
I

Cement

work,

·vinton

Cement Floor Company,
Bidwell. Ohio, 388·9877. All

concrete work; basement,
drlvewavs, etc., etc .·

WILL DO painting. No Job
to big or small. Houses,

barns, roofs, etc. Have own

ladders anil brusnes. For
free estlrhat"' call 992·5126
or 992·394i . .

j3
Excavating
Water. well drilling. Tom
Lewis ,
304 · 89S· 3802.
Seasonal discount on all

pumps and accessories.

J and F BaCkhoe Service.
Licensed and bolided. Septic tank Installation. Water
and
gos lines. Excavating
1
work and transit loyout.
1, , Call99?·7201 .
·

L..._!IIO:I:IM=I~.----------,.....----..,...~ IL~~-~-·-....,,--~---..-----------~
;

on . ,

·ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH?
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

~H This Coupon l!l'ith RemiHanct&gt;

•

Motorcycles

Equipment

35::_ _ _ __

,

down

31711 Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport, Oliio
. 992·5724
$ales, service and sup-,ues. In ground and

T. L BURROUGH'S

Beginning • Advonced
"Scholarships possible
for
high
school

197a KAWASAKI
650
motorcycle, $1700. Call949·
2042.
78

' 16.

..

Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
6·25-1 mo.

Ph. 614-949-Z351
Evenings&amp; Weekends
6·16·tfc

~4 .

15,

l

.... ..,...,., ...... u...... 1s...,.tscnnttpar--....-llly.
... .

11 '
12.
13.
' 14.

~

...~·

,.

1. . ,

......

1978 Z28 CAMARO for sale.
77J.5823.

•Storm Windows
•Replacement

anything I"

&gt;wanted
) For Sale
) Announcement
) For Rent

2. _

~

UtUity

Sizes trGm 4x6 to 12x40

Heavy duty springs, dual

17.
la.
19.
20.

1. _ __ __ _

SMALL
Buildings

ale, tape. Ice bOx, bar,

name and address or

..........

,,_,.,.,renee
,._..,...... Trolnhtt

3%

·
POOL PEOPL£ ;

THE

Aluminum Siding
•Insulation
•Storm Doors

capt. chairs. Bench seots
that convert to bed. Fully
carpeted Interior, $3500.
Call992·3950 after 5 p.m ,

spoce below. Each In· ·
lllol or group of figures ,
counts as a word. Count

16-Mitc. MWtfiMIIIIM
u-aul.. lftt.IUIIIMin

lf-lltvltMI .......

v·lny I &amp;

Sizes

AKC registered Cocker
Spaniel puppies, 8 weeks
old. Champion blOOdline.
843·2684,

phone number If used.
You'll get better results
If you describe fully,
give price. The Sentinel
reserves the right to
classify, edit or reject
ad. Your od will be
In the proper
If you' ll
the proper box

-Plumbing and
' ·. electrical work
: (Free Estimates)
- V C 'V10UNG Ill
::
• .L..I:
0
992-6Z1Sor

"From 30x30"

1976 CHEVROLET No. 10
custom van. AM·FM radio,

Print one word In each

D-AntkiWH

$2S,OOO; 5% down on
balonce. FHA Z65 Subsldy Program. FHA :!#Gradual Payment Mort,
Open M-W-F 9:00 to 1:00
Other Times
By Appointment
Office99HS44
Home992-6191
107SycamoreSt.

111t
r'

11

.Phoae~~o----------

•'-"..,...... Gooclls
u-ca, TV,R-'I•Ittvl,mHt

Loans,

remOdling
-Roofing and guller
work

Ir~======~~~t~P:o:m:e~r~o~y=,O~h~·~99~2~-7:3:14~t~~~P~o~m~e~r~o~,~O~H~.~=~
1978 auto.
PINTO
for sale,
.,
ALL STEEL
J&amp;l DlniiiN
D. BUM"&amp;-DDNER
p.b.,
trans.,
33,000p.s
ac·
UUII1
wm
tuol miles. Excellent con·
Farm Buadll.
INStJ'
ATIQN
ditlon. $2700. Calll"/2·3440.
U\11
SAl£$

Ad~•·------------~
-.

eMERCHANDISE

-Addons and

smission.
3a57.
$300. Call 992·

1

41-.IQUI,.,_.t liN' l ... t

PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic
Loans, No Down Payment. Federal Housing

-concrete work

Call for Free Siding
Estimate, 949·2101 or
949·2860. No Sunday
calls.
6_13.1 mo.

1969 CHEVELLE Malibu,
307 eng., 350 turbo Iran·

4$-~RMml

1-,._ttuc Ia,.

,._
,,._.

snow tires. good condition,

Write ,your own od and order by mall with this :
couporf, Cancel your ad bY phone when you get
results. Money not refundoble .

4t-SPKt: for Rent
47-W•ntM to lit tnt ·

6-311-1 mo.

"
SERVICES

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

80,000 miles. 992·5003 or 992·
3293, or see at 105 Union
Ave.: Pomeroy.

Savel fl

44-AP&lt;~nntMf lor,. ..,

1-HI,..,Atll
~LeltMdfl ......
7-Yinllhle

~~~

.......

•New Homes - extensive remodeling
•Electrical work • Masonry work
12 Years
experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

CAR PENTER

Siding

350, air cond ., power
steering, AM· FM, a-track,
stereo; tinted windshield,
tilt wheel, good tires and

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Claulfled• and

ller~t

Superior Vinyl PrOducts

7,~1c__~A,u:::to,s,_,f.::c•r:..:S:ooa,.,I":Ce- i975 CHEVY Monte Carlo

6, motor rebuilt, new bat·

eANNOUNCEME1!11TS

6-30.1 mo.

Vinyl and Aluminum

details, call Fred W. Crow

1-c.nlof TMRb

t

.........
. . . ,_,, .....•. ,. ......
. . . . rI~=~~·~·~·~~·~~:n~~·=·:;;;;;;:;==~nP:=:~:;.~~~~;~
Real state oans
''YOIJfiiGS
11 '1&gt;% lnterest-30 Yrs •

·1-----------i-----------l 7Z1961 DODGE
TruckSfor Sale
pickup. Slant

Ill, 9'12-6059, day; m-7511,
nlght.i

5 1 im ~

~'

Rascals" . All sizes, shapes
and colors, tiger and longhaired cats and kittens.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

H

6133 .

E

es
51
7
73
31
304
1
1
or(304)992· 2276

PFhr.e e

Eugene long (614) 843-3322

washington Co. Rd . 248,
Lillie Hocking, OH . 667 ·

riding

-ROOfiNG ,
REMODEUNG
--CONCRETE

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

JONES Meat Packing -

HOOF HOLLOW: Horses

- DRY WN.LJNG

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

ROOfiNG
REPLACEMENT ~INIXMS

Livestock

Also AKC
registered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795 .

and

VINYL SID!NG

13-INCh WHEELS and
tires for a Ford Pinto. Call
992-3717.

u

·.ct-!9 .

C)t:FICE L_Qj:ATION

OHIO,ORCALL992·3476.

HILLCREST KENNELS,
Boarding, all breeds . Clean

949-2801

MoslQatef
CaHs

f~==~2~==:=~r::=~======~:~==::;:;;;~~~~

BURKETT
BARBER
PRICES
CONTACT ED,
SHOP
, . MIDDLEPORT

LARGE farm house for
rent In Letart Falls, OH. In
excellent condltloa . For

or Write Dally Sentinel ttassifled Dept.
111 court St ,, flomeroy., 0., 45769

11~

H&amp;_R

56
Pets for Sale
POODLE GROOMING ,
Judy Taylor. 614-367·7220.

DOLlARS

~~~=;::;~~~-1~4-~1~m~o~·~·~·~~=::=:~1~·~22~-t~fc~t===;;~~~~~
·~
'
Tri;.Cciuiify
D&amp;M
:~:::~
k
COiirrDAI"mftS
Book eeping
nlrv.IV

.Servl·ce

REDUCE safe and fast
with GoBese Tablets and
E -Vap

F U R·
china,

Buildinp

Gosney,
N.
anything. antiques,
see or call26Ruth
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992 ·
316
1.
_I. ' · '
• •
OLD COINS, pocket wal, ·. - ches, class rings, wedding
'
bands, diamonds . Gold or
. ··e~ f@ ,
silver . Call J . A ..Wamsley,
F:
742·2331. Treasure Chesl
PffiW __-' .
"~ .. ,
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
Buiiness-Farms~Partnerships
6462
'
and Corporations
GOLD AND SILVER ' Payrolls, profit and loss st;~tements, all
COINS OF THE WORLD .
;federal and state forms.
RINGS,
JEWELRY ,
·
~LOCK
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC . ITEMS. PAYING
618 E M i
p
RECORD
HIGH,
• an
omerov.Oh .
992-,7°~ 1
HIGHEST UP·TO· DATE
o1·2:tfc

size

Sl
Household Goods
SIAMESE stud service
NEW 3 point 12 Inch post available. Sealpoinl color,
hole diggers, S225, New 3 sweet disposition. Ph. 992point wheel rakes, $600 . 7657.
New 3 point 5 foot rotary
mower, s.JO. 6 foot, 3 point, 1PUT a cold nose in your
SS75. Boom poles, $45. future! Healthy, wormed
Several
used sickle animals. Meigs Co .
mowers. 698·4061. Charles Humane Society, 992-6260.
Chase.
Donations
required.
Shepherd types, Blue Tick
type, plot hound, red
52
CB,TV, Radio
Doberman,
male,
Equipment
neutered; miniature collie,
TWO meter ham rodlo Laborador
type ,
equipment, one Heo!hklt Dalmation, Beagle type,
transceiver with six tr-an- tne dog from "Little

PHONE 992-2156

16-

ANT I Q U E 5 ,
NITURE, glass,

2705.

.

rooms, reception area, cen-

WANT AD INFORMAnON

3 BR, excellent condi·
lion, 2 baths. Should be
sold . $45,000.
BUILDING SITES today .. ,. ..
WE ARE A FULL TIME
LOCALLY OWNED,
PROFESSIONAL
REAL ESTATE 011·
GANIZATION OFFERING ALL THE SERVICES OF THE LARGE
FRANCHISES.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
ASSOCIATES
,
Roger or Dottie Turner
742· Z474
Jean Trusseii949-ZUO
Oflice Phone 99Z.Z259

Pomeroy 99 2-2689,

nished, ac. washer, metal

outbuilding, under pinning.
Colll"/2-2881 .

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Roclne, Oh.
Ph. 614-143-2591

Free Estimates
Reasonable Price5
Call Howard ,
949·286Z
949·ZI60

-

SHALLOW well pump and

Never been worn . 992-3283 •

PARTIALLY furnished
apartment, 4 rooms and
bath. ca II 992· 5908.

Sires from 4x6 to 12X40

All types of roof
new or
autte1ri •I
' lnd
cleonJng
All work

on largest

end . $12 p·er ton. Bundled
slab. SID per ton. Delivered
to Ohio .Pallet Co., Rt. 2,

Second Ave., Middleport,

.2 BEDROOM furn ished
apartment for rent, Mid ·
dleport. S175 per monlll
plus utilities. Call 992·5545
between 7 a.m. and 3 p.m .

couple. No pels. Call 42J.
8257, Belpre, tor ap·
polnlment. $125 monthly
plus deposit.

"From 30xl0"
SMALL

62
Wonted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Pole• max.

greenware sale. Bring a
container. 9 a. m . to 9 p. m.

snLL PAYING .
$2fr &amp;UP
FOR·.
SILVER

H. ~ WRITESEL '
ROOFING

Farm Buildinp

Quality

FURNISHED apartments

Business Services

767 -3167 or 557·3411 .

RENTER'S asslstonce lor
senior Citizens in VIllage
Monor opts. Coll992-7787.

in Racine . Prefer married

MUSical
Instruments

We are pick ing up seve ral

MAY 23 to June 30, 30% Off

0

31
Hames lor Sole
1972 14xol5 mobile home,
on approx. 3 ocres
Beautiful large home. Low situated
Rurol water. Bailey
utilities, brick ranch style, land.
3 bedrooms, 2 boths, Run Road, 992-5253.
fireplace, full basement, ·
fomlly room, air con- MOBILE home for sole,
ditioner, 3 car garage. SoiSOO, land contract with
Baum Addition, Meigs SSOO down or will negotiate
cosh sale . Also one
County. Call985·4169.
bedroom, built-In bunks,
48x10
mobile home, $2800,
8 Pet .
Assumption, land contract.
1300 down.
Beautiful large brick ronch
J. Bowland, 15068
style, low utilities, 3 Write
Empire Rd., Thorhvllle,
bedrooms , . 21h baths,
OH.
43076.
flreploce, fUll basement,
fomlly room, air con·
dltloner, 3 car garage. 1970 12' wl~e; 2 bedroom
Baum Addition, Meigs Co. furnished mobile home on
rental lot at Mason. ready
985·4169.
To move Into. S3500. Coil
Assumable mortgage 9'h 304-882·24611.
Pd. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
full basement, 2 car 35
Lots • Acreoge
·garagie .. Riggscrest Manor.
Approximately 23 acres on
61H85·.4J29.
Rt. 248. Stondlng timber,
water, building site,
'I A approved 8 room two · city
Coll985-3368.

home. It is neat and
clean with a r ec. room
finished in t he base·
ment. 6 rooms, 1111
baths, bar and other

LISTING

repossessed and trad e-in
piano~ and organs in Your
area. Prices from S2SO and
up. Call credit manager

54

Apartment
for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished apts. Phone992·5434.

highlights of this 3 BR

bed room home, Hal l·
mark pool, orchard,
garage and work shop.
Man y, many featur es
too numerous to men·
ti on. Call tor more into.
Shown by appointment

Yard Sale
YARD sale, June 2a·30, 9 a .
m. to 7 p.m. Three miles

Maple bar stools, house
paint. toys, misc.

24

acres of luxurious coun-

7

...

geal Estate

bath are some of the

try estate. Beauttfu l 3

Adolph's Dairy Valley.

-

NEW LISTING - The
beautifu l kitchen and

Broker

Lost in the vicinity of
Nelsons Drug Store and

-· .... .... .

992-2259

PHONE
George s. Hobstetter Jr.

case. If found call 992·2264.

WILL care for elderly per· . 32
Mobile Homes
son In my home. Coli 9'12·
lor Sale
6022.
1973 Folrpolnt, 14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr.
19'71 FleetwOOd, 14x65 3
23
bdr ., bath 1;,
Prolusionll
1971 Shokespear, 14xol5 2
Services
bedroom
DitCh digging service. Call
19115 Yanor 12x52, 2 bedr.
773·5839 or 773·S788.
1968 FleetwOOd 12x~. 2
Bdr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
Ditch digging service. Call
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
773·5839 or 773-5788.
wv. 304·675·4424.
'
"Moggle's Upholstery"
Loll and·or Trailer In MidRebuilding, Refinishing,
dleport. 1147 S. 2nd. 773·9506.
Reupholstery, Fabric and
vinyl samples. Call 742·
2852.
1969 12x60 two bedroom
Hollypark trailer. Fur·

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY.O.

REALTY

3916.

Wanted to Do

General

HOB_STffiER

Eslate of Garold Hayes,

Four defendants found guilty

Manor.

Mobile Hames
for Rent

42

Dubuque,

Ohio, Crill Bradford ,

the eligibility list at 9n
2156 or 992·2157 .

one female,

Needed RD or LPN for lllo
7:30 shi.fl . ParHime ortuil·

Jackson

FLL BLOODED Female
Irish Setter- black pup ,
985·410a.
a · week

Help Wanted

11

Complete Service . Phone
949-2487 or 949 -2000. racine,

&amp; Auction

11

Administratrix of the
Estate of Minnie Hazel
Board, Deceased .
Account of Audra E.
Hayes, Executr ix of the

George Harris and Virgil (Bo) Brown. The crew
prepared brabecued chicken for the approximately 150
guests.

Riggscrest

S300 per month : Call 985·
4323.

lnsuranco

11

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,

Kodak Camera with bUilt·
in flash with the initials
PAP on the.camera and the
name and address on the

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

IN CHARGE OF THE FOOD at the first annual
·reunion of the grand and honorary grand croakel'll
were, l·r, Roger Morgan, Paul Eich, Danny Crow,

rent.

pay cash or cert if i ed check
for antiques and collec·
t lbles or entir e estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns·, pocket w atches and
coin collecti ons. Call 61A·

44

collecting . Call loll free
now! 1· 800 · 553 · 906~. or
write: MERRI ·MAC, 801

of revenue sharing for
1981 . Such hearing wi ll

'-

THREE bedroom house for

Will do odds and ends.
Paneling, floor tile, and
ceiling 111e. Call Fred
Miller 9'12·6338.

s1

992·2751.

the budget and the use

derby races !Mild at the first reunion dinner honoring
grand and honorary grand croakers were George
Strode, first place, Barbara Chapman, second place,

Sltuotlons Winled

12

ref~reflces .

TWO bedroom trailer.
Adults only. Brown ' s
Troller Court . Call992·3324.

full basement. hot water

Main St.
Pomeroy 992-2181

Public Notice

WINNERS OF DERBY RACE - Winners of the

Must have

13

Care Center , 992-66116 Mon·

ch.ildren ' s, men ' s and
women's clothing . Baby
walkers, swings, food grinder. L ots of dishes, ap·
pliances, curtains, m i sc .
items. 300 Wright St ., first
street
past
Pomeroy

20% OFF
_POMEROY
LANDMARK
Main St.
Pomeroy

·

LARGE YARD Sale, July
1·2-3. Lots of baby ,

&amp;TREES

eld erly and-or handicapped

Yard Sale
SOU T HERN

THE

FINAL
CLEARANCE

Tran -

w ithi n M ei gs County . The
grant a ppl ic ati on will
request two 14 pa ssenger
van s and one standrd
autom o bile
(s tation
wagon ).
It is projected that 170
elderly and handicapped
w ill use the service 5 days
per wee k tor various ac t ivi ties. incl ud ing f ran ·
sportat ion to med ic al
fa cilities, social servi ce
and governmental agen ·
c ies , and shopping centers.
The M eigs County Coun·
cil on Aging , Inc. invites
com me n ts
and -or
proposa ls from all in terested public, private
and paratransit operator s
including taxi operator s,
tor the provi d ing of tran·
sportation ser vic e for the
elderly and-or ha ndi capped
with in our service area .
Operators who are in·
tereste d i n off e ring
proposals to provide service
should
c onta c t
E l eanor
Thomas ,
Executive Director, Meigs
County Council on Ag ing,
Inc., at Box 722, Mulberry
Heights. Pomeroy, Ohio

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

• • • y . . . . ... . . . ~ . . . . . . . ~.

Announcements

l

grant under th e provision

Some further points made by ACA
in its' material :
- " Asia's farm workers (each )

__,...._ _

two

ba seme nt .

I

of Sec lion 161b) 12) of the

troops announced by the Mosow
government last week.
They are satisfied that the withdrawal was limited to about 5,000
men and that these troops + along
with their rocket artillery and antiaircraft weapons + were excess
baggage In a war being waged
against mostly small bands !i
tribesmen. A number of Soviet
fighter planes also are reported to
have left for home.
Armed helicopters are more
suited to this kind of warfare, but
Soviet chopper crews are said to be
learning new lessons at some cost +
estimated at between 10 and IS
helicopters a month shot down.
The Russian army is now believed
to have about 80,000 troops in
Afghanistan, built around five combat divisions.

ds; compared t o America 's fa rm
workers, 375,000 pounds.
- " On the average, fa nne rs
receive 32 cents of each dollar spent ,

bedrooms,
full

Eastern Local School
District. Coli 614-985·4329.

Small investm·e nt, large·
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

nm."

Rebels baffle Russia
WASHINGTON (AP) - The antiMarxist insqrgency. in Afghanistan
appears to be gaining strength six
months after Soviet army divisions
entered the mountain country to
quell rebel tribesmen.
That is the assessment of U.S.
military specialists who say they
believe the Soviet Union will be forced to commit thousands of addition~ troops. Even then, these
specialistB predict, it will take years
for the Russians to suppress the
rebellion.
''The Soviet security situation continues to slide," said one officer who
closely studies detailed infonnation
on developments in Mghanistan.
" Present Russian forces are
·barely adequate to maintain
security in the major urban areas
and along the main supply and com-

produce an a verage of 4,400 pounds
of food crops each year ; Russia 's
farm workers, 33,000 pounds;
Europe's farm worke rs, 35,000 poun-

THREE
ba1hs.

S3
Antiques
ATTENTION :
l iM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

SEWING
Repairs,

MACHINE
service,

All YOUR INSURANCE
·. tALL us.

all

makes. 992·2284. The ,
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. ,
Authorized Singer Sales '
and Service. We sharpen

.

NEED9

992-2342

-

IXMNINGatllDS AGENCY. lftt

Sci soars.
- ·-,

'

M

OHIO'

.. -·

ELWOOD
REPAIR toasters, Irons,
applionces. Lawn m&lt;IW&lt;Itr.l ' l"'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;;;;;..,...,..,.....,~---"l1
Next. to . State Hlghwoy
7 985
on Route '
.

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

CARPET ·sHoP-

~8~;~ge

N
M. H. Repair
NOW IS THE TIME for
preventive
meln ·
tenance-mObile home roof
coating, labor and
material : 14' Wl(!e, 12 per
fO(!I : 12' wide, $1.75 per
foot; 10' wide, S1 .SO per
foot. See us also for free
estimates on awnings, car·
ports and skirting. We are '
your auttlorlzed dealer for ·.
the best awnings on the
IT)arket by Urban In· ·
dusto'les. · Kingsbury Home '
Sales, 1100 E. Main st..
' Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992·
7034.

I

'

"Drive A LIHie Save A Lot"
S"OPISFULLYSTOCKED
CANDY $.TR.IPED '
CARPET
~block padded
sq: Vd. $491 -

VINYL

FLOOR

· COVERINGS
••Sq. Yd. $491 .

'

.I

�":"'

'"'

"'-

~

..""

lt- l

JUST AFEW OF THE SPECTATORS that were on hand at the aruma! frog jwnp held at Marauder
Stadiwn in Pomeroy. ·
STRAIGHT RACE WINNERS - Winners of the
straight race held at the frog jump were Gary Brown,
Little Hocking, and Fran McEwen, Gallipolis. Pic-

tw:ed, 1-r, Mike Williams, Jaycee member, Brown,
McEwen and Bill Downie, who assisted in the races.

Regatta Photos by Katie Crow, Jayne and Bob Hoeflich

Deputies check
two accidents
Meigs County sheriff's Department investigated two acci.dents
over the weekend.
Saturday at 1 a.m. a car
registered to Roger D. Adkins, Rt. 3,
Racine, went off the highway on Sutton Township Road 119 and knocked
down a remote water register owned
by Chester-Tuppers Plains Water
District. The vehicle traveled an additional 10 feet and struck and tore
down a fence owned by Deibert
Smith, Rt. I, Racine. The vehicle
was removed from the scene before
officers were notified.
Saturday at 4:05p.m. on SR 7, just
north ci the Meigs-Gallia line
Harland R. Aleshire, Jr., 44, Holden,
W. Va. was traveling north when his
car was struck in the rear by a
pickup truck. The driver of the truck
failed to stop. The incident is under
investigation.

ASK TOWED

A marriage license was issued to
Ralph Edward Cundiff, Jr., 18, Rt. 1,
Middleport, and Shelia Darlene
Powell, 16, Middleport.

MEET TONIGHT
Eastern Athletic Boosters will
meet in special session this evening
at 8 p.m. at the high school. Plans for
4th of July activiies will be finalized.

ELBERFELD$

Three emergency calls
JUNIOR DIVISION WINNER - Scott Frederick
was the first place winner in the junior division of the
frog jump. Scott's frog, " Bess Frog" had a jump of 12

feet and 11 inches. Pictured, 1-r, Mick Reed, Jaycee
member, Scott and Terry Spencer, Jaycee member.

The Middleport Emergency
Squad answered three calls
Saturday.
At 1:32 p.m, the unit was called
to the corner of S. Third and
Locust St., where Mrs. Ressie
(CQ) Shaffer had fallen from her
car as she attempted a turn and
the door came open. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for treatment of a back
injury.
A hedge and the Warner home
nearby received minor damages
as the result of being struck by
the car. The squad also took Mrs.
Lena McKinley, N. Front St., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was admitted and went
to 339 Pearl St., for Lincoln Smith
who was treated on the scene.
ACTIONS FILED
Two suits for divorce have been
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Filing for divorce were Walter
Greg France, Rutland, against Rita
M. France, Myrtle Beach, S. C.;
James N. Grueseer, Middleport,
against Diana Grueser, Middleport.

IN CHARGE - The Meigs County Jaycees sponsored the annual frog jwnp held at Marauder Stadium

in Pomero~, :saturday. Pictured, 1-r, Paul Gerard,
Jaycee president, Bill Young, Mike Mullen and Charles
Wayland, Jaycee members.

I

Four westerners

Area deaths
Hulda K lein
Hulda Klein, 88, 462 Pearl St., Middleport, died Saturday in Cincinnati.
She is survived by one brother
Peter Klein, Middleport, and on~
niece, Eva Mae Stoecker Cincinnati.
'
'
Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church with the Rev.
Father Paul Welton officiating.
Burial will be in Sacred Heart
Cemetery.
Rosary services will 11e held
Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home. Friends may call at
the fun eral home Tuesday from J. to
4and 7to9.

released by Viets

Arthur J, McGirr
Arthur J. McGirr, 83, Uttle
Hocking, died Sunday morning at
Marietta Memorial Hospital
following an extended illness.
Mr. McGirr was born at Little
Hocking the son of the late Frank
and Mary Jane Bean McGirr. He
was also preceded in death by one
daughter, five sisters and two
brothers.
He was a retired employe of Uttle
Hocking Elementary School. He was
active in little league and other community activities.
· He is survived by his wife, Goldie
Pierce McGirr; two sons, Arthur
Wade McGirr and Orland Lee
McGirr; one daughter, Mary Louise
McGirr Frame, six grandchildren,
and one great grandchild all of Uttle

ARANY APRA THET, Thailand
( AP )
Two American
photographers and two International Red Cross refugee
workers were reported in good condition today after being seized by
Vietnamese troops at the ThaiCambodian border and held for four
days in the Cambodian jungle.
The four - Richard Franken Jr.,
35, of Miami, Fla .; George
Uenamann, 33, of Los Angeles,
Pierre Perrin of France and Robert
Ashe of Britain - were freed Sunday
after refusing to sign " political
statements."
Tiley were captured Thursday at
the virtually deserted Cambodian
refugee encampment of Nong Chan,
15 miles north of here, and were
marched about 15 miles over raindrenched trails but were well
treated by the Vietnamese and Cambodian government troops, they
said .
Vietnam today accused the United
States and China of trying to create
a "military alliance" in Southeast
Asia to replace the now-defunct
Southeast Asia Treaty Organization,
&lt;UsmanUed after the United States
lost the Vietnamese war.

SPONSOR DANCE
Hocking.
The Royal Oak Ballroom DanFuneral services will be held
ce Club will sponsor a public danTuesday at 2 p.m. at White Funeral
. ce Thursday at the Royal Oak
Home, Coolville, with the Rev. Gary
Recreation Building featuring
Peck officiating. Burial will be in
the music of the Ray Cincione , Rockland. Cemetery, Belpre .
Band from Colwnbus. The or- •
Friends may call at White Funeral
chestra features older music and
Home in Coolville at anytime.
will be playing from 9until! a.m.
Tickets may be purchased at
the New · York Clothing House,
SPECIAL MEETING
Bahr Clothiers, K and C. Jewelry
Aspecial meeting of the Racine
Emergency Squad will be held at
and In ge ls Furniture .
7 p.m. this evening at the
headquarters. All members are
REGULAR MEETING
asked t.o be present. ·
M£~ WEDNESDAY
A regular rpeeting of Middleport
Pomeroy
'.odge 164, F&amp;AM, will
l.Aidi• 383, F6AM, will be held at
meet
in
regular
session at 7 p.m.
TuESDAY SESSION
'1:30 p.m. Tuesday. TIIere will be
Wednesday.
All
Master
MasQns are
Chester Township Trustees will
~ -In the fellowcraft degree. All
invited.
meet Tuesday, July 8, at 7:30p.m.
.._...r Maions are invi!,ed.
~

SHERWOOD

The new ''wood pole"
Wan t th e ol d -fashioned beauty of wo~d po les?
Along wi th the up-to-date con ve ni ence that on ly a
metal trav erse rod can giv e? You ' ve just d escribed
our new Sherwoo d de cora ti ve rods! Ric h woo d
grain finish ove r s teel. .. as dependab le as onl y a
K1rsc h prod uct ca n be. In sizes to fit yo ur wi ndows.
Matchin g accessories. too.

by

Kirsc~

See our complete selection of Kirsch
Drapery Hardware - Home Furnishings,
1st Floor.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

The Farnters Bank
Growing
with
,

PoiUerfJ)'
and

Meigs Co

Far01ers
Bank
Pomeroy, Ohio

M"m'"'' FD IC

The Comn1unit v 0\\-'llt'd Bank
"

ty.

.;

0

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